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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-05-06 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa3 • • .~ • ' ' --.. .. -.ather .. -,. --!.. • .. • ·-: :;.; ~ ha J&gi.08 . . ---Marii~~IJDB. Jl~p .. ' -.-. -· --"'· ·-w-1 -~ • • ' . ----' • ""'.. . . .. -. --· # ~-,. ~. • ~.am • --- * -- ,, • weim-esoA y AFTERNOON,. MA y 6, :i 970 • • •• ,. f "VOL. "" MO. •-' l•CTIOP. II-PANS ... ,, " -,. . . Allies Move ' On 3 FrolitS In Cambodia SAIGON (UPI) -The United States and. Sooth Vietnam launched three new offensives into Cambodia today in the biggest allied ·operation--of the war. An armada of U.S. Navy river patrol boats moved into Cambodian territory to join 11Je· oo,ooe allied troops involved. The three new drives crossed the border in areas ranging from 65 miles northwest to 95 miles north of Saigon and were preceded by massive aerial ass&'4ltl using bombs and napalm whlch wlpesl .. out the W.,. o/ Snuo! where 30Dle looting by American t1'oopl WR! reported. One new offensive today was by a 4,500-man task force of the 25th U.S. Infan_tl'y Division irto the Dog's Head _ o..!Ly,......, ,,...,._ sector 65 mile:1 northwest of Saigon. ~. sniomm-~RoWD.c-Ns TO HEAR s'rRIKI!. PLANs. . ~:: w~l'i'.::'m":"r:t ~ • j!;; K<j'..-11,.,.~ .ilithtDraw1 Allout 300 of-5,ooo_:St-1 oi th< sweep. --.. .-...( -· Two ol the "' Americans were killed ·" d:"-'$ ~ ;4.-.. -· when U.S. artillery rounds fell short n J~~.J J ~ ';J __ . s .k of their target in the initial stages of t,1t.:__ .'_:_·,.. ~_r,,y :o tu~nt. :t_rl e ~alti.:T~0~ m~.~~~1..i:i:~ "Vf ;J to 30 killed and 70 wounded. • ' ' • At 'leaat 50 U.S~ Navy river patrol . ri_ __ :..J . d • UC I • ... ~ts, heavUy armed . 50-foot vessels, ~prr:atrete ,at; . . .rv.z.ne ~~ ~~ ... c:.m:la .;~. :r?u:. • · , Kayl6r reported. 1'ley ran Jnto Com- 4 I ! muriilt fti'e two miles indde Cambodia ~By JO~NNE RE'i'NOLDS niirnbe!-· oi pro/..,... were calllng 1he but caouahles were oot known. ~ or .. .,...,'*"'"'" striU headlfuartm' to ,aa.y they ·would 'lbe ·eecorx1 drive today · crossed the "'~"' simfly~g ·oot 1a,i,Yery: ~ ~·c1ui1es. -• · -· fruitier ~ mJles north of Saigon and fitderw"demonstratloo Of1theiritenlhn!nta: -1'\V!ille slrlkerla·maat·"'l8ns lo}-a cofn.. the third was about 80 miles north Ob U:' war, and I'm oot making ·~lliY piete shutdown of the c.:'mpo1. 'lbunday, of Saitod near the Loe Ninh district ju.bMc prooouncements." . . student body officcn ·called for a .student ~~area ar:!re d:~ h: That wu the Btatement.tbis momlng referendum on the ltrlke on Friday. -~ .... ot 00.Jrvine a.....,.llor' Qoalel ,AJdr¥:h . Student body .Pmldent. ·I". r-e d ~le been .1earohlng fur.a Communist central O. ~-· e iq<1""'·bilo, Ma,.i11Jino,,1i<e-]!l'tlldent <lames GO!-'beadquarten fur six d1y1. n11 1 ,,,_.~~, "l.llUUI;: ~-1ensiV8, <rdered by PrHident Nixon M · · • , . · ~." . lilied•' and ..,_._ ·~--~-''""'"· ,·n· ' U.S. military olllctals said the of, . --~ «#lll•~by"tht·Ucreom.~ a stateme;pt' relea~1 this morJ1tfta, ex~ -to wipe out Communist sanctuaries -OiillUon,.,:;1!1 . .,IJOlng hekl· ilo' .. pre>Sed <onc:ern. ~"! -· "wblch hon! ~~to p~""'tf0iit·N1z.' · a' l>Oing 111tadledifo~lll ci;inca.ua-·-1he er, have killed l ,IOO Com· .. ·,~~in!IOlj~Asla. , >ti~theC11111bollfl~~·":·.:. · i!;:' !"':;~~'·:. w~a~ 'Jlie Community coalition i.. made '111' • sta-~iCally, ~ flit, ·and mwitlonl and &I tnicu and el •·•-groups, )ncl..Ung ilie " ·. Jnvolv,ing).11.S, 'lin~, tlJe deslrvyod, hundreds oi bunken and bas< New u~ eonreronce. tho M• n~oi JOllllcal jlrisonen, lhe•""'"'" · • <omPI · ""!II '"'~~"""°"'allc Mi_lllary, Bl~ ol.~ frOm C>'l'itl3d and 1he -vii: -: c nie ;......atlonl began last w-..k. tit I -~atlc SodN.. .and -the .. ~ Jn~ ~ ;and.• .war nit.led • ; n.e tint maj~ atrlke wu in the 118dlctl StiJdiijls UJfiO'!-' • , ~:Jr!'ln· ~-. ~-M1 ~ · 'Parrot'• Beak s>ctor of Cambodla that \E. ol IJle..WJke,.1 .. i.;.r-lley·ev...r 'IClpPo/181 ''7 all >tudeotsi w!icl 111pport jut. out to within 35 miles oi Saigon IO , WQ dlftlcult to estimate Tuesday the· strike. and was the staging area for the Tet u . about-30 percent of the campus, Plead.in' for "peaceful effort... and offensive on Saigon m 1961. Others were l50 .,. held on that day of . "rational declak>nl," the ata\emeut-con-farther north in the Fi9hhJok and Se ltll ~ 'TodllY'• Jlupigili wu equally eluded, "We oupport the •incere CClll<ml San ore11, fl and S30 mlJell northeast dlfflcldl,lo, ucertaln. tNi\ 1lud«ill 1ro erpressq obout ll)e o/ Saigon. South Vlelnam,.. also ·Alt iclmlnllltllllon •1pol<esnan uld '"'"' 111 .. 11oo !hit e~ In Cambodia.. penetr1ted Cambodia frol\t the Mekong lnOol fl( the llli!ke supporten ""'e off We do not support th.,e who would Delta oreo. • . aimpna working on strike Pll>SfalM. ... thb · slncm ....,.,,,. I<> lidvoca~ FlghUng alJo fland In the northern 'Sltlke spollman Rich Yensen claimed their own l'ldlcal pcllltlcl." portion oi South• 'Vlet111111 and !16 J,ooo Ii OCh llGlll student. were out At a 1\lf>dlJl 111"11 me<ting In strike "-Ic1111 "'"' ldl~, 2t ol them in o/ .... Jodl)l wbll•~ l!Ddelermlntd (Sot S'IBllE,.l'lp.J. (Seo CAMllOOIA, .... J)" • .. • •.• _, • • . . . ~ --..... -·-·• -..... '.}( • ..;=c· .. T -... -- ••nte~ly~ -. -----t•. ·- ~·StUdent -.. -=--·· . . . .. -~ ·-~trQie _IQCs -UCl . ---· . .. -.. . As War. Protest . '· * . . . . ' r .. ; I\ " , ' ... ' . Tait Wi-. f)llio • -. ,.. ,,,.,;.,..,,,,. '.\' -t_.,,; ~,.,.·, r 1 · .. ' ' .. • " 1 :,;~.J~'il l l .... ,·s_t1\, .en . . . .. * Wallace Forced 7 4· Arr.eiJ~, 16 'njured In' Outbreak Into Vote Runoff LOS ANGELES (UPI) --.. If · pollco petrolled neor. and oe the UCLA campils early toil:ay fol:Jowing a Une- hour ·window smashing spree and violent confronWlon between antiwar protatonr and · officer.11. At least 74 pet.IOnl .. were arreoted ll1d 11 IJijund' By Unltff Pru1 lat.eraaUoaal Ohio voters rebuffed 'their Republican governor, James A. Rhodes, and sent former astronaut John H. Glenn down lo upset defeat while Alabamans put a. crimp into Ge<lrge C. Wallace's bid to regain public .offic'e. The. Ohio and Alabama v o t I n a: highlighted a scatterlrl& Ii primary elec.- tions Tuesday. Rtiodes was beaten by Congressman Robert A. Tait Jr. for the Republican nomlnallon for the Ohio Rnate seat belng vacated by Sen. Stephen M. Young, a Democrat who said be wu retiring at age 80 in spite of good health to let a .)'ounger person move Jn. Glenn, at first an odds-on favorite to win lhe Democratic nomlnatloo to succeed Young, waS overhauled by Howar.d W. Metunbaum, · mUliooaire from .. elev.eland. Glenn, flnt American f'! Orbit· the .. rthl hod lniended \!) riln •lalnlt. Y011111 .in tho lllM' OC!mocritlc primary -but·w1thdrew· afW:-beiJJg lpjured h\ a llo\!sellold,acclclent. • In AlabantB? Wallace -the 'third p_arty cal)dldate who kept neither Presklent Ni1on nor Hubert It Humphrey ""'!' getUng a majority In the 1968 pm.ltleritlal elect.Ion -failed himself to 1et a ms· jority in Tuesday's D e m o c r a t I c gubernatorial primary. Jn tact, Wallace's narrow lead over -Albert Brewer, the Incumbent governor aeeklng reOOminaUon, ti.p.lshed todiy as ·late . re~· were· counted and he 1ftll behind bY ,17,000 :Vote.;. Wallace ~and Brewer now wlll be matched in a runoff. Chaz:Ie.s E. Woods ran a fairly strong third with more than 100,000 votes to deny Wallace or Brewer·a majority. The ruooU U tJ.pecled to be. close and a Wallac.e defeat could doom any futui-e national poliilcal aspirations. In Indiana, all 11 Incumbent ~ gressmen -four Democrats .and. seven· Republicans -won renomination. IJ1 Connecticut, where 11 communities flad primarles., slates pledged to b)cumbePt Democratic· Sen, 'lbomu H. Dodd were beaten in •nine1 of If .rices. 'Iht st.t:te party's· oonveiiUon to eridone tandhtafts for Im N1vernber elec'uon ii scheduled .in June. . Ohio's lubernatorial flneup in tbe fai1 election will ·be State Auditor Roger Cloud for the Republic&ru11, and fonner Rep. John J. Gilligon for the Democrall. Acting Chanctllot David S a x on declared ·a state ot ·can\pus · etner~ Tuesday after a rally of abOut-2,eeo persons turned w· fltt flghtl lllld the starUng of small fires. A fore. of l50 city police . oi!lceit moved onto the campus and cleared an area aroUl)d .the men's 11m after several scuffles and a leries of window breaking. , , 'I'!1e building houses classrooms and the R01'c · offices, focal point of the stud,ents. protesting, against Amer.le.an ·m.- volvement in Ca'robodla and the slaylni of fOW' students at Kent State iA Ohio. Police statloried t.bemaelve! at m.· ~ surrounding ·the campus after it was reported quiet at a p.m. aDd "let persons leave, but notiody wu iDowed to enttr dilling the nJib1. · • · Of thooe arra~, inch•ding, 11=· and two prohllOl s, 11 were ed wl!h mlsdemeanon •idle 13' were boo · on -leklnlia, includJOg _,...ult 1g~ & pclbhan. . , .. . 1 . IWll»rlties said 11· --' -- t ' ~· '(See UCLA,, .... ,. ' I ' 0r .. ,. •oJegal Hobby~~ .,._ nude sunbather-basking bt.!ide aome potted pot TueJday aftemooo was quot.ti later by Lagtl!I~ Be\actl police as ~)'lftl·~ "r' gues1 you could caq R j11>t 111 · lllegal bobby." Police.·~ that. marijuana garden- ing h illegal u they -ed Doqlu Wa~'M Sleeper, 20, 1088 GlenneYft, on chlrgss oi both culUvathi1 and ......... Ing marijuana with intent to aen tt. 118ndall Kim Blake, it, of the same address, who arrived 10 minutes lat.er, w• bOoied on tbe same charaa, sakl Detective. Neil Purctll. Purcell said be obtained inillel ln- formttion about the plants from a cltlztn'I phone tip. He checked and sure enough. said the detective , he could ... 'the' marijuana -both the potted pl.,.ta ·and others in th• 1Jacky1rd. AmlWJ& o/ilcen Robert Brlao>t ll1d • I . ' Mlke ,Louisiana al!O Bti;fd about sl,x ll00\"1' oi 'cur«! l\Jariju~na, two. loaded pi.tOls .. ancf· .'8rloui , lteml o/. ·dru( 0porapbefnoua including a water pipe i.nd seven other pipea, some m~ from n>Cb. • . -.. . Purc<ll·&ild Sleeper ·wu lying nal<ed ' bellde the lll'ge pot oi f,.shly wlllered marljuana plants when the offlcers ar- rived 'at 2:15 p.m. The auns and other jtema were tn a bedroom. nte plants, said Purcell,· included the fem81e mari- juana plant which produces the seedr !<1< ~ and aJJo 1 'IUllity leaf pref~ by marijuana smokers. l'urc<ll old both ouspects would be 1 arraigned In ri\unlclpal court 10mtUlne today. B/ake 111d he WU .~.;llllclerit ' and Sleeper told police be ... i · con- ·ttrucUon ,Worker. ~ · ..... r .. I " ... •/, I I " 1 l r,(.Jc:;::=-;;::;::::;::;::;:-::;;=----·.......-..-,---~r--..-.... ..., ""'-....-.-.,.-yr..--"• "-r·~-----~------------... ---------------------------;o===..,~--=·=~~~-<'I ' f._ 2 llAA.Y PIUlT s From Page l UCLA • • • ~ J treated for minor Injuries and four ram· pus guards and • ctly policeman sus. I.lined minor injuries. City Police Chief Edward M. Da vis moblliztd the ai.Urt Los Angeles depart· ment and patrols in all parts o( the city were doubled. Da\'is said his action ~·ould remain in effect until "a state of peace is obvious," Protests also erupted at Sall Fernando Valley State and tht Ualvenlty of California at Santa Barbara. At l!CS B, sheriff's deputies and highway patrolmen were called to the campus \.\"hen an estimated 1,000 students sathered 1n front of t)1e administration building fotlo\\'ing a rally. The lv;o profe ssors arrested at UCLA were identified as \\1illiam ll. P.fcWhin· ttey, fO, assistant dean of planning ud a me mber ol the graduate school of administration: and Peter Ladelo~, a prolessor of languages. Officers said Ladefoged was arrested for allt'gedly scuffling v.·ith a policeman. Smaller demonst rations abo were reported al lhe University of Southern Califor11ia and East Los Angeles Junior College. From Page 1 STRIKE •.. headquarters at the campus Gateway Commons, steering committee c c • chairman Rich Kilarsld tcld an audienct of about 300 that today's programs are geared to gaining student and· com- munity SUJ>Pol'I lo. the strike;-- ''We can't really conskfer shutting down this campus unill we get the people behind us," he said. Several meetings and events are sched· uled as part of. lhe ''education" program. According to student rpotesmen, ab<Krt 200 studenl.S will be passing out kafll!ts explalning the strike in shopping cente!'I and at b1gb schools. A leaflet given to strikers by the Defense Committee lists sug&eatJons for students who are working in tbe com- munity : -Do not leaflet par~ cars. -Do not oblk'uct people or cars. -At high schoobA.1do not enter school grounds, stay across the street, continue mcving. -If a policeman stops to question you, slay cool. He's probably checking to see what you're doing. A "rap.in " open to the public is scheduled for tonight in Crawford Hall. Kilarski said the 1:15 p..rn. meeting would be held to get an Idea of the strength of support for the strike. A meeting for service staff aod faculty was to be held at 10 a.m. campus officials were expected tO tell the group v.•hat level or participation in the strike would be acceptable to t h e ad- mir,istration. Tuesday Dr. Roger Russell, vice chancellor for academic af(a irS, told faculty members they were free to participa~ In workshops and other cam- pus activities involved in the sludy of the Cambodia problem. Russell said faculty who wished to participate in "alternate education programs" could dQ so on vacaUon time, compensatory time, or on time without pay. Rus~\l's statement inferred the policy v-ot:ld be in effect until it is rescinded. Also schedu led aa part of the strike activities were: -A demonstration this morning at the county Board of Supervisors meeting to demand that supervisors apply for federal funds for child care centers. -Student support of a strike vote at the academic Senate meeting at 4 today in the Science Lecture Hall. -Strike spokesmen said picketing and a teach-in in UCl's Central Park would be beld throughout the day. f 'roni Page l CAMBODIA • • • 11 North Vietnamese assault from the demilil.arir.ed zone in apparent reaction to the allied. drive Into Cambodia. Two men were missing and 31 were wounded. It \\·as the heaviest Joss taken by 111 U.S. unit in a single action In Vietnam in 2t> months. DAILY PILOT ,,._.,,,. t1ocll l ........ ~ .. 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Ml !5•7t • 5ft c ....... .u lk-Jl•mffll": Ttl.,.1111 4tJ ... 4Jt (Mtfr1fll:, lftO. CltftOe Cloffi P'llM!ttl .... ~. ... M•I ....... Rhflttll""'- Ullftr'ltl m41l!M' Gt ,d,,.,,~t ,,..,.lo\ ,,..., -••lf«l..e•d wi1""'1 ''*"' ..... f'\!Ulln ., (efl'f'llfl!I .,....,, i.t(8llt <llU potltt• H I• f l ............ Kii '"" CM .. #111, (t!l!tmlt , SllMUltlr. '' ttrf'W U ot -•ll•f1 ll'f "'-" tlM .....,ltllfl "'lflllfY j1Ctlltlt110<t .. '' .. IMl'lllllV. I • ~ /, , ___ UP'l l1llNM UCLA DEMONSTRATOR TAKEN INTO CUSTODY BY POLICE Fist Fights, Broken Windows, Small Fires at Westwood Campus Slashes on Margin Curbs Push Stock Market Up NEW YORK (UPI) -\Vall Slrect responded enthusiastically today to a major slash in the minimum amount cf cash required for purchasing stock. At lhe end of the fint 'hour of trading on the New York Stock Exchange ad- vancing issues all but buried declines 1.179 to 99. Volume topped five mil lion shares, a \'Cry heavy first hour turnover. Jn recent weeks average turnover bas been around two million shares. All major indexes of market aclivlty were solidly on the plus side. The UPI marketwide indicator sported a gain of 2.94 percent while the Dow Jones Industrial Average -reflecting selected blue chips -bounded up more than 14 points. Many issues ·gained several dollars each, including Du Pont $3.50, Walt Disney $6. National Cash Register $4.63, U.S. Steel $1.13, Crl!neral Motors 'J.38, RCA Corp. $1, IBt.1 $3.50, Xerox $1.50 and American Telephone $1. Analy!t Newton Zinder of the E. F. Holdup Suspe ct s Jailed in Gro1 · After Fistfight Carden Grove police jailed four armed robbery suspects early th is morning after a free.for-all fight in a motel room where the men were found after a rob- bery of tv.·o bar owners. Officers srud Foster Slyh, 53, of Santa Ana . and Vemon Cherry, 52, ol Santa Fe Springs, were held up by a man carrying a rifle in front of their Ebbtlde Bar at 12771 Harbor Boulevord, about 2 a.m. The suspcel is Michael P. Della.Mag- • glora, 19, of Garden Gro ve. Pollce were told that an armed man was seen going into the Fire Station Inn motel, 12625 Harbor a few minu tes later. Officers Gerald Lobb and Allan Herbach approached the motel room where the quartet were heard engaged in a loud argument. When police entered the room a rough and tumble fight broke out. Finally sub- dued and jailed on suspicion of armed robbery and resisting arrest v.·ere DelJa. f.fagg iora and Michael E. Elliot, 22 Michael J. Gaddis. 18, and William A'. Scou, 22, all of Garden Grove. 1-l uttOn & Co. brokerage commented that the decision of the Federal Reserve Board to slash margin req uireme nts "shows the government may be taking a hand in alleviating the tight credit conditions which have plagued Wall Strttt." The Fed cut margin requirement to 65 pert'ent from 80 percent. The decision wu announced after the marke t's close Tuesday. The margin reqyirement ls the cash down payment reqlfred to purdlase stock on credit. 'I'o buy stocks on lhe margin beg inning today, a purchaser must pu t up 65 per- cent of the price in cash. He may obtain a loan from his broker or a bank to finance the other 3S percent. Usually, the stock certificates are used as oollaleral for the Joan. Committee Stalls Tidelands Oil Tax Boost Bill SACRAMENTO CAP) -A proposal to increase by five times the tidelands oil payment v.•hich coastal cities and counties now get to buy and develop public beaches has stalled in an Assembly commillce. Assemblyman Robert H. Burke (R· Huntington Beach), told tbe Assembly Revenue and Taxation Committee Tues- day that such cities as Hu.ilington Beach now pay for regiorial recreation facilitie3 from city funds . He said .Hu ntington Beach, which now gets $6.1,000 a year from the offshore wells in adjoining waters, spends $450,000 a year on city beaches where 17 out of 20 persons are out-of-towners. He estimated his proposal to Increase the city and county share of 'state oil revenues from one percent to five per- cent would cost the state $400.000 a year from the University of California building fund. "It may belp a couple of dUmb cities acquire a beach here or there, but it's going to hurt blgher education.'' said committee chairman Wiiiiam T. Bagley (R-San Anselmo). "I just don 't think this is the lime for thlJ blll, ·• Bailey said. Campus Strife Disturbs Nixon Travel Sched1ile " \VASHINGTON (UPI\ -President Nixon nlay have to forego attending his daughter Julie's gradualioo from Smllh Colltge If campus proltsts persist over his d~ision 1(1 send troops to Cam- bodia . Both the President and Mrs. Nixon had hoped lo attend their 21-year-old daughter's graduation r..tay 30 at Northampton, l\tass., but White House aides indicated !ht posslblllty or lhe Prts.idcnt'5 presence 11·a~ fatllng fast. Julie's hush.and, Oavld Eisenhowtir p:ans to skip his n"'n graduation (lx'. t!rcises at Am herst Collese with its tvt'n more militant student body. because the col1ege scheduled J. F. Stone, lhe :.iuthQr· ~wspaper editor. as it.s commenccmeill a:peak~r. David dld not feel he cOIJld subjecl hls grandmolher, htrs. Jn·lghL o. Eisenhower, and other members or U1e family, to possible embarrassment oo can1pus. Mrs. NIJoit was forced to cancel a !rip to Fredericksburg, Va .• today where she had plaMed to tour historic Kenmort ltouse. the colonial mansion o( Georse \Vashlngton's sister, Beuy Fielding Lewisb and the James Monroe museum and U rary . The White House got advance word lh1t severaJ hundred studen~ from ~1ary \Va.;hlnglon College reinforced by col· legtans from other Virginia school11, v.'ere going to demonstrale when the first lady made her appearance a t Fredericksburg. The college new spaper at Fredericksburg also made jt3 paint of ''le"'' clear with an "lmpcacb Niion'' tditoriaL I L Lo~al POW Counti.ans Back From Awar£lness Rally in Capital Thlrty·thtte wlves and parmt.s Of urvicemen mlsain1 in Vietnam art back In Orange County today after attendiag a rally in Washington, D.C., over the weekend. The rally was part ol a national cam· paign to increase public awarene$s of the prisonen' and families' plight. 1'll relatives are now mapping p!ans to raU1 support throughout Orange County. The Fountain Vall.ty parenb of a hlarine missing in Vietnam for three years eight months were among those who made the flight to Washington. Mr. aod Mrs. John Bodenschau of. ~ Raven Circle, have had no word on I.he rate of their son John, 23, since his four•man patrol falled to return. ;'We are trying IO get people to notice how many people like th.ii are mlssln1," Mrs. Bodeiuchatl aald tllb mornlnJ. "People really don't know what It'• all about. We weren't allowed lo speak out for 10 long -for fear It mijht harm the pri!Oners -but now we can and we are talking real loud." Mn. Carol HanllOn, the wife of an El Toro pilot m.i.uinl in actloll. w11 also among the: party of 33 that new 1...,. Loe Alamilol Naval Air Station last weekend to the rally. The rally, pubUclzed as an "appeal for international justice," was sponsored by a bipartisan congressional committee and the Veteram oI Foreign Wan and the: Daughters of the American Revoli.r Uon. · Vlco Preddeot Spiro Agnew, Dtleme Secrelary MeMn Lain!, Sen. Ban; Goldwater. Attronaut ~•pt. James A. Lovell end H. Ross Perot, tht Texu multimillionaire, were amona: the speaken. About 1,000 famliles were flown to the rally in miUtary pla°". "The Air Ne.Uonal Guard flew us out Of Loa Alaruitol," Mrs. Bodenschatz llld. She said that the families have formed an Orqe County chapter ol the National League or Families of A m e r i c a n PrOOners in Southeast Asia. "We plan to put up signs on freewa ys urging people not to fora-et the boy1 and generally spotlight Ui. sitUIOoo," she added. ' She ·said that Mrs. lfl1*G will coordinate dlor11 In the <X>llltty. Convict~d Rapist Fails to Sho'v For Sentencing 'Attitudes Change' Irvine Not Objecting 'Orange County and Los Angeles County law enforcement agencies are working together today In the hunt for a 19-year· old college student who wu convicted of assaulting a UCl coed wtth t.be jn.. tention of raping her. To Bay Swap Bond Vow Michael Anthony Engllsh, 19, of Los Angeles, failed to llhow up for sentencing Tuesday in the Santa Ana courtroom of Superior Crurt Judge R o n a 1 d Abernethy and the jurist immediately issued a $25,000 bench warrant for the youlh's arrest. English also forfei ts the $10,000 bail which Wis posted by his parents in pre-o-ia1 proceedings. Engll!h was convicted April 15 or aS1ault with intent to commit rape after severa1 residents of women's dormitories at UCI told of his conduct during a three-hour tour that ended with his at- tempted rape or a 20-year-old student. He was flushed from busbe.s near the C!elo dormitory and arrested by UCI police afler hi s victim raised the alarm . It was larned today that Engllsh, who r'lce:; a possible slate prison tenn of one to Hve years for the Orange County offense, also fe.ced sentencing in Los Angeles on charges of assault. A bench wa:-rant has been Issued for his arrest by Los Angeles authorities. Police Sw·prise Wilson Intruder BISCOVEY, England (UPI) -Police guarding the 83-year-old father of Prime Minister Harold Wilson after a kidnap threat surprised an intruder at the cider Wilson's bedskle early today. Herbert Wilson was unharmed, police said .. The intruder escaped. One of two policemen guarding Uie \Vil.son cottage heard a noise at the rear ci the house and noticed a window open. 'I'he policeman saw a light come on and, peering through the window, saw a young man kneeling beside the bed of the prime minisler's father. As a policeman climbed in through the win- dow, the young man fled out the bedroom door and escaped. 'l11e Irvine company 1111 no ol>Jection to Orange County Supervisor Alton E. Allen's proposal 1o put 1o • publlc vote a bond i!fUe to buy from the oompany the private lands surrounding Upper Newport Bay. Irvine Company President William R. f.1ason said public purchase Is an alternative to the land u:Changc pending in court that would realign property lines creating public parks a n d waterways and separate private parcels. Ownership of state Udtland.1 entrusted to the coonty for development and of Irvine Company uplands, islands and patent lands is now jumbled. Mason aaid since discussions on Upper Bay dtvelopment first began nearly 20 years ago, the Irvine Company has been informed by county olficlals they did not believe the public would support land purchase. "But public attitudes Clo change with time," Maaon said. ;•Perhaps the public Bad Checks Draw 4-month,Jail Stay A Newport Beach maa who repeatedly issueJ worthless checks to Ore.na:e County car de1Jer1 was aentenced Tuesday to four mmlbs in Orange Coulty JaiL Superior Court Judge James F. Judae also ordered three year1 probation for Stev'1 Benqett Weinberg, 23, •l Apt. Q IOI:, 2110 18th St., after W'effiberg pleaded JUllty to bad check charges. Weinbera:, · who Identified himseU as Dr. IrviRg: Welnberg in severe.I cases investia:ated by the dl1trlct attorney's office, issued at least aevew.cheeks in e1cess of $400 each while he had just $31 in the bank. Two of those checks wert for the purchase or new cars. Judie Judge rejected a request that Weinberg undergo p s y ch I a t r I c ex· amlnation and accepted the defendant's plea of guilty. Other charges filed against \Yelnberg were dJsmi1sed. Ls ,now prepared Jo buy land, Instead of.. exchanging Jt. But I don't kn o w • N®ody knows. In No'vemi.r, we may find. out." Mason said in the meantime, so the public may be assured of an alternative, pending Utigalion testing the con- stitutionality of the land trade should proceed. He remarked that he: doem't think it would be in the public interest to permit the proposed bond election to become "an all-or-nothing issue." Either way, he said, "the clUzens of Orange County are e.nUUed to a positive solution to Upper Bay develop- ment, whicb has been stalemated for 20 years." Anaheim Loses Battle Over Tax On Angels Team A Ion1 drawn out hearing before an Orange County Assessment Appeals Board resulted In a 2 to 1 vt>te TiJesday which ruled that Anaheim must Pl1 $205,330 in posseasory interest tue:s on behalf of the California Angels bueball team for the team's use ol Anaheim Stadium. The action was anticipated as th• same board had made 1. similar ruling last year aod the evidence presented dwing tec~t weeks was much the same. Last year, the city paid '206,871 under protest. Winner both years is County Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw who claims the ball club has a possessory interest in the stadium although they onJy use it ~ days a year. The assessment last year has been appealed in Superior Court by the city but bas not yet come to trial. City officials said they will also appeal this year's ruling and attempt to con- solidate the two cases. MAKE THE lOtn OF MAY A DAY MOTHER WILL NEVER FORGET A. 14 dl1flllfld1 14'C s.llf o.1111 l•fftlt Wltr.11 NU •• 5fll·•~"'41 l•IJm41tlc: ... "" c .......... c • ......, Yell•• T ... Sttl~ 11 ... •act CIM Ill.I C. 14" 141N OIN. ~,,_..,. .. j.(,,.. Cryll-4 HU D. 2 D11~1o 1~ "1'-'lw If Wllftt S.11111 .... • IUI foot....,_ v:t'O-bocl Sn 11-<111 "'""td· l•K1. SI' l•"ijhl) •·OO<lt $2$ Mand carYed Coral roses with leaves of genuine Jo.de •.• in settings of rich, loi1g-lasting l<IKt. Gold overlay. From our selection of Gnc quality jewelry CONVENIENT TERMS J.C. fiumphri e ~ Jewelerj • 24 YEARS SAME LOCATION I BANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE llll NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA ' PHONE ~41-340 I ' -' . . --.r. --..,. --,,.---::--,_,--i ----·-. ' \ Doniingion Beaeh • . VQL:. 43, No. 108, ~ SECTIONS, 82 P!-GES ORANGE COUNTY, t;:ALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 1970 TEN CENTS Huntington Hot Wire Kills Man A carpenter tried to sit up and gasped ''What happened?" alter apparently receiving a series or shocks while work· ing a 111),.volt power saw at a construction site Jn downtown Huntington Beach this morning. Tben he slumped back and died - ~""te mouth-to-mouth resuscitation and heart massage by site workers and the Huntington Beach Fire Department's rescue team. The mao, Reyna Cantu, about 30, of 6251 Marshall Ave., Buena Park, was pronounced dead at Huntington Intercom· munity Hospital. Police officers were examing the saw and cable to see ii it possibly had a faulty ground wire. The tragedy happened on a lot at 425 13th St. A plumber, Richard Osborne, 15972 Willett Lane, Huntington Beach, told the story. "We beard him cry out. Then three or !our or us ran over and yanked the wire from the portable generator. We pulled him out of the trench, and threw a blanket over him. "He was breathing and seemed all right. He wanted to sit up and said something like 'what happened?' and then he slumped back." Osborne a p p Ii e d mouth-to-mouth resuscitation while others called the fire department. Tbe four-man fire res,cue team used Us portable resuscitator aild also applied e~mal heart massage. Fireman Jobn J'ark rode in the ambulance to the hospital continuing the resuscitation efforts but Cantu did not recover. Workers at the site sa.id they 'knew Cantu bad a f1U1ily, but they did not inow -him well. "He just joined us 1 cou(:ile of weeks ago," Osborne said. Marina Finds Cash in Trash, Fights Pollution Students of Marina Hlgh School, Hun- tinaton Beach, believe they have found cash in trash. They hope to sell a budding buslnesmlan on the idea and thw help 50lve the pollution,..problem. The idea, says Miss Dolores DeCastro. a teacher, is to persuade homeowners to separate newspapers from normal trash so it can be collected for reclama- tion. Miss DeCastro and members of Students for Ecological Action have won the moral support of the city council on the plan. Miss DeCastro said that in an ex- periment the students coJlected S70 pounds of newspapers from 45 nomes. "This would make a total of a 185-ton wastage every week," she said. '"J'he~e is an agency in Santa Ana that will pay $12 for a ton and we reckon that for the entire city that a gross income of $2,000 a week coold be made." Councilmen pointed out that the dif. flcuJty would be in persuading homeowners to separate newspapers and bundle them but commended the effort and instructed the city staff to work with the students to see if something could be worked out. Holdup Suspects Jailed in Grove After Fistfight Garden Grove police jailed four anned robbery suspects early this morning after a free-for-all fight in a motel room where the men were f<IUJld after a rob- bery of two bar owners. Officers said Foster Slyh, 5..1, of Santa Ana, and Vernon Cherry, 52, of Santa Pe Springs, were held up b.Y a ~an carrying a rlne in front of their Ebbhde Bar al 1:1771 Harbor Boulevard, about 2 11.m. The suspect ls Michael P. Della-Mag- giore, 19, of Gardeo Grove. Police w~r~ told that an armed man was seen going into the Fire Station Inn motel, 1262$ Harbor a few minutes later. orficert Gerald Lobb and Allan Httbach approached the motel room whert the quanet were heard engaged in a loud argument. · When police entered the room a rough and tumble fight broke out. Finally sub- dued and jailed on suspicion of anned robbery and resistjng arreiit were Della· Magglora and ~chael E. Elllot, 22, 1.-!lchael J. Gadt1is. 1a. and William A. Scott. =, all ti Gardeo Grove. U"I Ttltll ... le UCLA DEMONSTRATOR TAKEN INTO CUSTODY BY POLICE Fis t Fights, Broken Windows, Small Fires at Westwood Campus Cambodia Brings De~ate t ·-'" At Valley Coitncil Meet By TERRY COVILLE Gt !tit D9llf """ 11111 The Vietnim war Jed to a few muffled volleys in Fountain Valley Tuesday night as city councilmen considered a resolu- tion supporting the President's war poli cies. It was staned by Vice Mayor John Harper, who said, "Three months ago the council supported the President's actions by resolutio n. I'd like to see us <f9 it again." "Are you asking us to support the President 's efforts to end the war or his sending toops to Cambodia?" Coun· cilman Ron Shenkman quickly asked. ''I think the troops to Cambodia are part or effort to end il.'' Jiarper replied. Shenkman shot back. "I'm strongly against this. It's a \'ery controversial item and you're asking five city coun- cilmen lo say that 32,000 people support Nixon's action. I don't feel that's ao. Shots Fired At Truck Guard Shots were fired late Tuesday night at the Consolidated f re i R h t w a y s warehouse at 2200 N. Batavia Ave., Orange. Police believe the shooting i!t connected with the wildcat strike of teamsters in Orange County. Target of the bullets from a speeding car was a night guard at the facility . He and 2S other men working at the plant were not injured. The Santa Fe Sprlngs plant in Los Angeles County of the same trucking firm has been the target of violence and vandalism since the wUdcat strike started in April 3. You're asking the eouncil to coneern itself with national policy." lfarper tried to overcome Shenkman's objections by proposi~g a general resolu· lion supporting the President, but making no reference to Cambodia. "If It's going to be that general then why have one," retorted Shenkman, reminding the council that a similar re!'!Olution was passed three months ago. Mayor Just added ltis sentiments to Shenkman's, "I share his view. It doesn 't say anything." "Are "'e going lo enter the battle between Congress and the President?" Just asketl Harper. "\Ve should Jet Congress know how we feel ," ans,,.,·ered Harper. At this point. recently elected Coun· cilman Albert Hollinden, a retired Air Force officer , offered a suggestion. "As a new councilman 1'd like to reaffirm our support of the President . As to specific strategy on how to end the war I'd prefer to let the President decide that," said Ho! Ii n den diplomatically. Just tried to carry the peace-making one step fur,~her with a proposal that a resolution De drawn up and presented at the next council session. His motion lost 4-1. "See what happens when you try to be a peacemaker," Shenkman joked . Harper then moved for a resolution supporting the President. Shenkman said, "I'm really shocked. Five grown men trying to pass somelhlng already passed. You're trying to say something else. If you want to talk about Cambodia -say it!" The vote was Harper9 Holllnden and George Scott favoring the rewlution; Just opposed and Shenkman abstaining, saying he voted on it three months ago. Group Asking City Aid UCLA Under Curbs PoliceBreakVp Wild Demonstration LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Scores of police patrolled near and on the UCLA ca1npus early today following a three- hour "'indo.w smashing SP.r:ee and yiolent confrontation between antiwar pr otestors and orflcers. At least 74 persons were arrested and 16 injured. Acth1g Chancellor David S a x o I]_ declared a state or campus emergency Tuesday after a rally of about 2,000 persons turned to fi.st fights and the starling of small fires. A force of 250 city police officers moved onto the campus ancl cleared an area around the men's gym arter several scuffles and a serief of window breaking. I The building houie.S classrooms and the ROTC offices, focal point of the students protesting against American in· volvement iu Cambodia and the slaying of four students at Kent State in Ohio. Police stationed themselves at in- tersections surrounding the campus after it was reported quiet at 8 p.m. and let persons leave, but nobody was allowed to ente r during the night. or those arrtsted, including 12 women and two profe5.'lors, 61 were charged with misdemeanors \li'hile 13 were booked on felonies, including assault against a policeman. Authorities said 12 students were treated !or minor injuries and lour cam· pus guards and a city policeman gus- tained minor injuries. City Police; Chief Edward M. Davis mobilized the entire Los Angeles depart· ment and patrols in all parts or the city were doubled. Davis said hi s action would remain in effect until "a state of peace is obvious." Protests also erupted at San Fernando Vailey Stale and lhe ·University of California at Santa Barbara. At UCSB. sheriff's -deputies and highway patrolmen were called to the campus when an esti mated I.DOD students gathered in front of the administration building following a rally. U.S. Opens 3 Ne~ Fronts Biggest Operation of War Pours Into Cambodia I SAIGON CUPll -The United States and South Vietnam launched three new offensives into Cambodia today in the biggest allied operation of the war. An armada of U.S. Navy river patrol boats moved into Cambodian territory to joln the 50.000 allied troops involved. The three new drives crossed the border in }reas ranging frMn 6S miles northwest to 95 miles north of Saigon and were preceded by mass ive aerial assaults using bombs and napalm which wiped out the town of Snuol where some looting by American troop! Wfll repo'1ed. "' °""" new o1r ... 1~ todlY WIS by 1 4,00Q.man task folte of lhe lllh 11'.S •. ' This ·1s ilie Roof That Hall Built Witllout Okay The tile roof Dist. Supt. Clarence Hall built over the new Vista Vlew School could easily have come crashing down on his head. Ocean View District trustees le&l'Red Tuesda y. that he had ordered construction of the roof without their authority. At Tuesday's trustee ~Ion Dr. Hall finally asked them for approval. "Since it's already installed, we might as well terminate our dlJCussion," wu the reaction of Trustee Robert Knox. Dr. Hall, who was forgiven by the trustees, explained he took the roof since another company, who had bee11 charged with supplying the roof tiles, couldn't deliver the product on time. "We would have held up a significant portion of the job if we would have waited two weeks for the board meeting," he explained. "Rig ht now , two weeks don't seem like much. But it was two weeks wlth good weather and two weeks without strikes." "Frankly, I'd feel a little more Ir· ritaled if I'd found out that the roof hadn't been installed," replied Knox. ''That's exactly the way I reacted when I was told about it," ,aaJd Dr. Ital!, making sure everyone understood his comment was a joke. STOCK MARKET NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market pulled back from its steep early gain but remained on the upswing this aft.einoon. Trading wa.s moderately active. (See quot.aUons, Pages 26-27). Infantry Division Jnto the Dog's Head sector 65 miles northwest of S11.igon. At least 43 Communist troops and four Americans were killed In the first hours of the sweep. Two of the Americans were killed when U.S. artillery rounds ren short of their target in the lnJUaJ stages of the operatlon. This brought U. s. casualties in the multi-pronged offensive to 30 killed and 70. wounded. At least 50 U.S. Navy river patrol boats, heavily anned SO.foot vessels, moved in.to Cambodia "along the Kha~· Spean ¥Uver as part ol ~ oper~tton, Kaylor reported. They ran into Com· munist fire two mues lns\de ~ . ...-.. -. but casualties were not known . The second drive today crossed the frontier 95 miles north or Saigon and the third was about 80 miles north of Saigon near the Loe Ninh district town. Both areas are north of the Fishhook area where allied troops have been searching for a Communist central headquarters for six days. U.S. military o[ficlals said th,e oi· fensives, ordered by President Nixon to wipe out Commwiisl sanctuaries across the border, have killed 2,800 Com- muni!t troops, captured 6,000 weapons. seized or destroyed 700 tons of . food and munitions and 64 trucks and destroyed hundreds oI bunk.era and base camps. Huntington Teachers Decide to Negotiate By RUDI NIEDZJELSKI ot 11111 INllr "llel Jiii! Teachers of the Huntington Beach Union High School District decided Tues. day to preiis on with their negotiations with district trustees for higher wages and better fringe beoefits. Meeting in the F..dison High School gymnasJum, representatives of the District Educators Assoc1atktJ1 CDEA), selected as their next move a counter- proposal which includes an 11-step salary range of f7,400 to flS,300. To date the trustees have offered a Huntington Sued Over Cycle W reek A seriously Injured motorcyclist and his crippled .passenger have sued the city of Huntington Beach and a con· struction company for '500,000 in a Superior Court suit that charges the defendants with negligence. John Lance Young and Edward Arthur Drouillard name the city .and the Sully Miller Contracting Co. as re5p005ible for road conditions on Goldenwest Avenue lasl Sept. 2S that led to the pair being Dung from DrouWard's machine. Both men argue that there was no warning sign posted to Indicate the presence of road construction or tbe seven-foot-deep trtnd'I Into which the motorcycle was driven. • $7,293 starting pay with a $14.586 ceiling in ll steps. Dist rict Superintendent ~lax Forney said lhe proposals would probably be discussed at the next negotiating session this Thursday. Although teachers and trustees are quite close on the beginning and ending salaries, the teachers want their pay doubled alter ten years or service with the district. The trustees have held out for II years. Other areas of disagreement include fringe benefits, substitution pay, work credit for teachers new to the district, sabbatical leave pay and allocation of funds for summer curriculum workshops. DEA President Carl Manemann said the teachers are anxious to end negotia- tions by May 15, the date tenured iR· structors are expected to sign their con. tracts for the coming school year. "They would like to know how much they're going to be working for. You wouldn't agree to work without knowing how much you 're being paid, would you?" he asked newsmen. Last week Manemann said the purpose oJ !he Edison meeting would be to "either ratify a proposal or look for alternative solutions.'' The choice was to continue negolia· lions. Last year the 500-member DEA chose a work-slowdown and walkou t. Orange Coast , Weather Youth Faces Brunt of Council Ire U you like today 's weather, you'll love Thursday's sin ce it'i; another dose of the same stuff - low coastal clouds and hazy sun- shine with a top mercury reading By ALAN DIRKIN Of tlle INllY "ll•t Stiff , Had he been named Daniel, Samp&0n might have felt ht was in the lions' de•. ln fact, 1$-year-old James Sampso", vice chairman of the Youth Coalition Commit.lee, had stepped into t h e maelstrom of municipal afratrs and he can hardly have found anythlng bib lical about It. Samj>50R went before the llunllngton Beach City Coultdl Monday to ask for $3,000 for the comn\lttff to stage. a summer musical. Whal he got was a tongue lashing for the abasence of a cost breakdown, Councilman At Coen led the attiek. 1'What " want .. la 1 well documented propoal," he said. "f'm reluctant to allocate $3,000 without a proper prop<>sal. The purpose of the committee is to encourage youths to work as adullJ and that'• a lesson you will have to learn." Sampson told the council that prG- ductlonS beirig considered are "The King and I." "The Music Man," or "West ~jde Story" and that tbe committee wanted to hire Rick Schraier, a Los Alamitos school teacher, I.! the producer. He said that his orgtnlzalion was before the council' al an early stage tn the planning because it •as anxlou~ to begin work on recruiting local youRgsters to take part in the effort. From ·the podium , the Huntington Beach High Schoolsophomort IOld COUn· ·ctlman °C0'11, •·r r~ four <Pinloos, . ,.. • but I don't think It's necessary to get all the details on how we sell ticketa or hbw we make posters to you." Coen shot back. "If I want to be bored that's my problem. Your problem is to get It to me and you haven't done that." Other COflf'ICilmen joined tn t h e criticism, though emJ)hasizing thal lheir complainU were aimed at the cornmlttet as a whole and adult advisers and not Sl'lmpSOn personi Uy. ())uncllman Ted Bartlett revetted that money was lo5l on a Tock festival presented by the group last year adding. "If we have to put up $3,000 and only 200-300 people show up it gets e:rpenslve." The rock festival cost $9,000 last year and recelpts amounted to only P1000. The cily-paid tbe halanc. of 16.000. Sampson 5lood his ground. "The reason we had kids from out ol the area working aa volunteers last year was because we bad only six wetks to. do it. Tha t's why we are here early . The people must know now.'' But Coen aiid Mrs. Norma Gibbs sym. pathi.zed with Sampson for taking the brunt of the crltlclrm. ''It's quite an lndoct.rlnalion far )'OU, Jim," Mrs. Gibbs said. "I feel for you and I fttl the c»uncll Is wllh yoo, I feel you have been put on lhe spot." On a motion by Councilman Jact Green, the council postpOntd action for two wetka until 1 budget 111 submitted l'lnd a majority of the adult advlsen ia beard from. of 70 degrees. <"- INSIDE TODA.l' Orange Countt1'! weekend live thea ter fa re -and the count11'• jive entries in the Riv- er.side one-act tournament-are: detai!td today. See Entt:rtoi n· ment, PageJ 28-29. ••Ill"" u Ca1iftmll t e-C.tlllf 11 Clltdllr>W U' 1 Cfl'ftlflM U4l c-k• w --M °''"' Nttlc.' 11 ti'dill,,-4 ""' ' Bll1'"1tlll!lltnll 1•1t fl lMllCI •ff Hen_. U """ Lattdl" Jt M111111f• ' Miii 111 llrvkt JWI Mfflllltl 11 Me¥1K M·lf Mvhl1t '111'1111 H Narltflll Htw1 .. ! or.-,. CH!llY '' '"TA M IMm »M Ot. St.Ill<,... 11 lllO Mlrlltf'I U.tf T~•lfll • ,....."" ...,. Wu!Mt t wt.1tt Wltlt 1:11 w_ .... , ""' .,. W•N NIWI .. I " \ % DAILY PILOT H r'"'°""'· ~-I, l tlV • I Eve11 Council Meetmgs ·· Can Be Entertaining By ALAN OIRIUN 01 1M 0.llY l'!ltt Si.ff SITTING IN on council meetings in Huntington Beach is not fu:n, but It's sometimes funny. Not often. just sometimes. \lo"''ever in a six-hour session those times add up. Nnt tn much, they just add up . Donald Shipley , master of the dangling ia,etapbor, usually manages to get a few ringing referene.ea to wildlife in, if he is not extolling the virtues of the way they do lhings in Britain. A case of going from the sublime to the cor' blimey. · Mrs. Norma Gibbs was the most entertaining Mon- day night. ln addition to voting, she was joking. AT FIVE ft11NUTES to midnight, for example, she \\'as able to remark, when told that the council had acted on a 73·page sign ordinance in haste, that she could not conceive <lf the coun· cil doing anything in haste. As the clock struck one, or thereabouts, Mrs. Gibbs stopped Mayor Shipley in mid-breath when he assumed that the council would airee to an auto dealer's request !or a delay in an appeal for an office building addition. "Why asrume that?" she asked, innocently. "Well, we usually do when requested," the surprised civic leader re- sponded. "It's a courtesy, 1 can think of no other reason." Mrs. Gibbs voted against the delay. THE NEW COUNCIL member came up with an original name for the proposed central park when George McCracken asked hi1 colleagues to con- sider jointly honoring Ted Bartlett and ~yor Shipley when it cc.mes time to name the recreation area. "Barship?'' she suggested. THE IUGH POINT in hilarity came early in the evening when Al Coen proposed that no council member be permitted to abstain from ·voting. City attorney Don Bonfa ad•ised-against it saying such an edict would be unenforceable. "If a councilman isn't allowed to abstain, he simply will get up and go get a cup of coffee and get out of it that way." Bonfa's observation on the difficulty or enforcement appeared shrewd when it came time to vo te on Coen's resolution. THE MAJORITY voted against requiring compulsory voting, but Jerry Matney delivered the m05t telling blow. He shot his hand up and cried, "I abstain." 'Attitudes Change' Irvine Not Objecting To Bay Swftp Borid Vote ' Tt!e Irvine Company has no objection to Orange County Sui>trvisor Alton E. Allen's proposal to put to a public "ote a bond issue to buy from the company the private lands surrounding Upper Newport Bay. Irvine Company uplands, Islands and patent lands is now jumbled. ..._ Irvine Oompany President William R. Mason said since discussions on Upper Bay development first began nearly 20 years ago , the Irvine Company has.been inlonned by county of6cl1la they did not believe the public would support ]and purchase. Mason said public purchase is an alternative to the land exchange pending in 1court that would realign properly Jirn;s creating public parks a n d waterways and separate private parcels. Ownership or state tidelands entrusted to the county for development and of Women Urged To Shape Up Women of all ages can begin shaping up for the summer months by ~nrolling in a "slimnastics'' exercise class to be offered by the Huntington Beach YMCA. Taught by a pror~ional, the eighl- '~1eek course is designed for women who wish to loose and redistribute weight, firm and tone muscles and generally improve their fitness level. The Thursday morning classes begin at 10 a.m. June 4. Tuesday and Thursday evening sessions start at 7:30 p.m. Atay 18. Registration fees are SS for Y members and $9 for non-members, both payable at the YMCA, 17931 Beach Boulevard, Suite R, DAILY PILOT C~AHGE (0.UT l'Ull.1$HINGA;OMP4H't ••btrt N. w,,, l'•uk*IT •r.d P'\llllttl\fl' ·J eck •• c .. ,1 • ., v;c1 Pn1~,, ... .-.fl<I ~., MJN.., ld!lor lho1111• A. 1ro1.,,,.Ji;-. M~Edltor A1btrt W. l•i1a Attodthl Ed11tr H•lltltlff .. IMc• Office I 7175 •••th l oul1••"' M•ili11t Add•1u: f'.O, lo• 7t0, t2641 OtW OfflcM l•...,... ••r<~• m ,..,..., •-... ~It MHt: UQ WU! Irr """' N...,.,n lt•c~: ?711 WtH fltl!IOI llltlll~ .... Ifft Ck_.. .. : JOS Nclf"!R El C-lnl It.al ~~· OAIL"f l'!LOT, •:'Ill •.11t11 I• ~!Mf ,,,_ .. ._ .. ,,,._, .. 1111t1lllllol dllf'f .. ~.,, """'" dlf In MP•••lt c.dllllft!. lot L ....... l.acll. NC-' e.)(fl. GHIO '°'"'' Hvnt!rft:on .. tell fN ,.....,!tin VllMly, llfrot •!Ill 1 .. , .. -.1 HlllloU. Of..... C1tt1 l'llb:1111in. C-• punting ~lfl!t •l'I 11 HI! W•I l11b0' l :vo .• Ht..,..i Atl(ll. _,,cl UI Wtll &IY llttt!, Colll Mnl. tet.,h•• t71 4J 641-4~11 ,, .. w ...... ,.,,, c.11 !I•• 1111 Cl .. •lfie4 Alffrthl1t 642·16lt (°"'"'"" 1t11,. Of"I"" Ctttl l"llOlll~I .. eo-,. Ht l'lfW) 11 ... 1,,, lillllllfl*'" Wfl ... l•I ,,..1,..,. fl' ld"'1'1i~l ~"'" ,..,., bO ,., ...... ...c:e( ""'""""' tHCltl ,.... ll'ltiiM ff -rlgl\I tWntl'. S.C.... ~ "'""°' .,.Id •I H....., .. _.~ ..... ""'" MtM, c..I!~. ~lli<l'lt'lltoo .., um.~--lh!fl W ""11 U.lt INl'lfl'llfl 111111~1'1 *'"'"1-., u.eo _,111,. ''--~~~~~~~~ "But public altitudes do change with time," Mason said. "Perhaps the public is now prepared to buy land, instead of exchanging it. But I don't know. Nobody knows. In November, we may find out." Mason said in the meantime, so the public may be assured of an alternative, pending litigation testing the con· stitutiona1Jty of the land trade should proceed. He remarked that he doesn't think it would be in the public Jnterest to permit the proposed bond electlon lO become "an all«·nothing issue." Either way, he said, "lhe citizens of Orange County are entitled to a positive solution to Upper Bay develop- ment, which has been stalemated for 20 years." Council Repeals Anti-bike Rule In Huntingto11. Pedal cyclists will be able to take easy rides up and down the service road by HunUngton Beach's city beach this SUfM1er. The council has repealed an ord inance which banned riding bicycles on the road between JO a.m. and 6 p.m. from J une 15 to Sept. 15. "We've pad oo accidents i.n five ·years,'' Harbors and Beaches Director Vince Moorhouse explained. ..Jru;te&d. we've receiv,ed a demand for its use so we are ripeaJJng' it." Continuing the recreational thtme, there was also discussion oo parks at the council meeting. The council agreed to combine and rename the Farquhar and Circle parks downtown into the James S. Farquhar Park. . Parks aOO ~reation director Norm Worthy said that a public street recenllY was moved aUO\\'ing the combining of the parks. The e<iuncil also approved dedication ceremonies for four ne:w parks on May 22 at the following times : Joseph R. Perry Park In the eaat-ttntral arta at 9:30 a.m.: the Lois and Harry LfB1rd Parlt in the !Otltheast at 10:30 1.m.; the James S. Farquhar Park at 1:15 p.m. and the John A. Murdy Jr. Park in the north at 2:30 p.m. Buddy Popp y Sale Set Cit.izenll of Huntington Btach art urged to bu y Buddy Poppies Lo r&lse funds for the Ve1erans of Foreign Wars. A city proclamation i;etl May 21 and 23 as the days when the poppiu •'lll bt on sale. • At the Ready Pipes for new sewer line stacked along Slater Avenue and Springdale Street in Huntinston Beach appear like cannon ready to fire a broadside. Thirty. six-inch pipes are just waiting to be placed under- ground, however. New line is being laid to replace older, inadequate one. About 15,000 feet of pipe will be' laid from Edinger Avenue to Springdale Street, down Springdale ·to Slater Avenue and along Slater to Goldenwest Street, where line will feed into lift station. Murder Trial Motion Rejected; Evidence Okay A motion for the supression of evidence by two of three men accused of the killing of a Fountain Valley market clerk was dismissed Tuesday in Superior Cow-I. Judge James F. Judge denied the moUon made on behaU of Jerry Lee Johnson, 18, of 11471 Titus St. and Robert Woodrow Clements, 21, of 14811 Alcester St., OOth of Westminster, with the com4 ment: "You don't have a right to expect privacy in a jail." Both meR are accused with Herman J. Grant, 22, of Santa Alla, ol the slaying •lasl Feb. 15 of James W. Oates, 57, of Garden Grove. Oates, who was assistant manager. of the Tic Toe market, 9457 Heil St., was gunned down during an alleged armed robbery of the premises by the accused trio. All three were captured in Garden Grove following a gun battle with police. A11 allegedly 111criminaUng conversation between Johnson and Clements was recorded by Fountain Valley police and its proposed use by the prosecution Jed to the moUon thrown out Tuesday by J udge Judge. Judce Judge agreed to physical and psychiabic examinations tor Johns011 altd psychiatric evaluation of Clements before further court action is ordered. Granl has pleaded not guilty to murder and anned robbery charges and a July 27 trial date has been scheduled for the trio. Slashes on Margin Curbs Push Stock MarkefUp NEW YORK (UPI) -Wall Street responded enthusiastically today to a major slash in the minimum amount of cash required for purchasing stock. At the end of the first hour .of trading on the New York Stock Exchange ad· Beach Volunteers Nearing an End The familiar sound of the civil defense siren calling volunteer f i rem e n throughout Huntington Beach to respond to a general alarm fire will be heard no more after July 1. That 's when the city will terminate the volunteer fir.e program , Fire Chief Ray Picard reported to the council. The council agreed that an awards banquet should be set up for the volunteers. It was tentatively set for June 8 with 'all past and present volun· leers invited. Councilmen also approved that the new Gothard Street station should b e dedicated to the volunteers with a plague honoring them placed in the cornerstone. As recently as .1967 Huntington Beach had 80 volunteer fire officers. Now the total is down to 27 with the phase-out due to be completed July 1. The city has 125 regular officers. The duties of the volunteers include attending two two-hour drills a month and responding to all general alarm fires, Picard said. vancing issues all but buried declines 1,179 to 99. Volume lopped live m,illion shares, a very heavy first hour turnover . Jn recent weeks average turnover has been around two million shares. All major indexes of market activity were solidly on the plus side. The UPI marketwide indicator sported a gain of 2.94 percent while the Dow Jones Industrial Average -reflecting selected blue chips -bounded up more than 14 J>9inls. Many issues gained several dollars each, including DI.I Pont $3.50, Walt Disney $6. National Cash Register $4 .63, U.S. Steel $1.13, General Motors $1.38, RCA Corp. $1, IBM $3.50, Xerox $1.50 and American Telephone $1. Analyst Newton Zif¥1er of the E. F. Hutton & Co. brokerage commented that the decision of the Federal Reserve Boa rd to slash margin requirements "shows the government may be taking a hand in alleviating the tight credit conditions which bave -plagued Wall Street." The Fed cut margin requirement to 65 percent from 80 percent. The decision was announced after the market's close Tuesday. The margin requi rement is the cash down payment required lO purchase stock on credit. To buy stocks on the margin beginning today, a purchaser must put up 65 per- cent of the price in cash. He may obtain a loan from his broker or a· bank to finance the other 35 percent. Usually. the stock certificates are used as collateral for the loan, Beach Bo~ • J Club to Gef \ ,More Land · ' The Huntington Beach· oouitcil akreed MOllday nisbt to sell lhe Boy1• Club an acre of land for $17,000 in a proposed neighborhood par'k in the city 's west$.ide. Al Klingensmith, boys' club pres!d~t, said that grants the club hoped to..reteeive lO build a new clubhouse In the park, at Spri"-gdale Street and Heil Avenue, depended on the club ow11;ing the land or having a long-tenn lease. • Before voting on the sale to tM: boys' club, the council adopted a pobcy on the management of recreational and park properties. The policy is aimed at the transfer or surplus laft(f to other civic groups provided lhat any sale or lease would not adversely affect the park master plan. Robert Dingwall, ·president of the HOME Council, opposed the sale to the boys' club saying it would opeq. up a Pandora's box. "If you sell surplus land to a non-profit, wor~hy organization you wJll be o~li~ed to do the same thing to other S1D'lllar organizations -the YMCA, the Boy Scouts. Little League, Pop Warner foot- ball. They 're all worthy." Councilman Al Coen disagreed with Dingwall and' .said that encouraging grou~ that serve special interest.! would benefit the city because the staff couldn't cater Lo all recreational needs. 1 After · maintenance and architectural controls had ~n added to the policy stat.errient and land sale, the measures ~ere passed unanimously. DAILY "ILOT •1111 PMl9 J\iem Eagle Corvan Jones, 15, a freshman at Marina High School, will be- come an Eagle Scout Monday in ceremonies in Huntington Beach. A member of Troop 134, he is the son of Mr. and ·Mrs. Rodney E. Jones, 6321 Shields Drive, Huntington Beach. School Boundary Change Proposal Brings Concern MAKE THE 10th OF MAY A DAY Suggested boundary changes f o r children in the Ocean View School District attendance area Tuesday brought a hooBe full of parents to a metting of dislrict trustees. MOTHER WILL NEVER FORGET Many parents were concerned about lheir children being shifted from sehool to school. "I'd like to sit down with t11e parents and see what their choices are if it's at all admJnistraUvely possible," said district Superintendent Clarence Hall . He reminded the ))ilrents that the boun- dary Changes were only tentative and that fina l action would be ' taken by · 1 the lruBttes at a later date. '"All I ha ve to do Is know Yti1'f'addttSs and I can tell you how you .fe:el,'~qufpped the superintendent. ''There't Cbly. ~e. "'ay to avoid the yearly bouJldiry,change and !hat's to move to another area "'hi ch Is more saturated w!~ p(ioi;Te1" Of the district's 22 .achools, 13 will remain unaffected , by · ,bou.ndary Id· jwtments, administratOrs revealed. They include Circle Vtew, Gled. Vie.w, Harbour Vie_w, Haven View, Hope :V.JtJW, Lake View, MeadoW View, Marine View Oak View. Park Vie'w, Sun view', Village View and Robin\\'ood Schools. The annual boundary hassle. Hall ex· p1a1ned, is traced to the rapid growtl'I of the distri ct. "Our boundaries w!ll not be fix'ed until we know which bean. fields will be('ome housing devtlop- .m.ent.s," be said. Extra-sensory Lecture at GWC Ru.uell Burgess, formerly with the Department of Justice and widely known for hi~ leeture-demonstration in extra- StnlOI')' perception, will appear at Golden West College May 15. The program at 8 p.m. In the college center will be the final event or lhe current school year at the Golden West arUst·lteture series. Admission will be 11. Burges$ has 20 years' exptrience ex· ploring the intangible reaches of the mind . H• calls himself a Pl)'dlic who is a akeptic. 14, :M ... ...,.. lat SflN .... Srte.,.. WMdl 1. hll<Wllllllfll L••r,...l'le W1t1t hit °''"'"" c1....-v11 ... ,.,.. •1•1!illtfl lfMt ••ell ee .. c. 1at ,.,.. e.111. ''""'"" "" .... c..,.1.1 I). 1 DMlll'lttlltit Ull; ,. ..... W WJll .. lfllill .... UH 141l H» 'I I ......,_ ,.,..,.boti sn a.r~ ,;.,cte1, l4K1.S!5t•>;MI ,_.,, I land carved Coral 10$'G9 "'ith leaves or genui~' Jade ... in settings or rich, long-lasting l4Kt. Cold overlRy. Fron1 our selt'Clion of fine quality jewelry CONVENIENT TERMS J.C. .JJumphrie ~ JeweferJ 24 YEARS SAME LOCATION l,l\NKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE 1823 NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA PHONE 541·340 I · ----:-~··~. ------..,..sc..,.,....-~.,,,,_,.,..--.,...·--·--·~•·• ---~--~·--~•-~• ~· ~'""""'"""°';;;;:::::-;-.~,_,,.,,,...,-,7---c=.-=;ir: • .,-,--0::---:.· ---::---~~ -r----·---• --·~...,..,,,,. • DAILY l'ILOT St11f l'hole UCI STUDENTS CROWD COMMONS TO HEAR STRIKE PLANS Low Key Meeting Tuesday Night Draw1 About 300 of S,000 Students Orderly S tudent Strike Cond ucted at UC l1·vine By JOAr\'NE REYNOLDS or 11>1 D11!y Plltl S1•H ''Th('y"re sim ply carrying out a very orderly demonstration of their sentimen ts on the v.•ar, and I'm not making any public pronouncements.'' That was the .statement lhis morning of UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel Aldrich as the UCI student str:ke mo\•ed into fts second day. The strike. organized by the liCl Corn· m~nity Coalition, is ~ing he}d to "demons,trate opposition to President Nix.· on's war policies in southeast Asia. 'The Community Coalition is ni ade up of various campus groups, including the New University Conference, the ~1ove­ ment for a Democratic ~lilitary, Students for a D~:nocralic Society, and the Radi1.:al Students Union. Support of thl' strike. a lo w k~~ cvt•nt 110 far . \Vas dilficult to estin1ate Tuesday as only al>oul 30 percent of lhc can1pus. 850 classes arc held on that dav fJf the \\'eek. Today's support was eqiially difficult lo ascertain. An adrninistrztion SP'Jkcsman said most of the strike supporte rs were off campus \vorhing on st ri ke programs. Strike spokesman Rich Yensen claimed 3.000 of UCJ's 5000 students were out of classes todav v.·hJ!c an und etermined num ber of prOfessors v.•ere calling the .strike hciidquarters to say they would not hold classes. \li11ile strikers n1adc plans for a com· Nude Sunbather Nabbed h y Law On Pot Charge A nude sunbather basking beside some potted pot Tuesday afternoon was quoted later by Laguna Beach poli« as saying: "I guess you could call it jus_t an illegal hobby." Police agreed that marijuana garden· Jng is illegal as they booked Douglas Wayne Sleeper, 20. 1086 Glenneyre, on charges of both cultivating and possess· Ing marijuana with intent to sell it. Randall Kln1 Blake, 21, of the same 8ddress. who arrived 10 minutes later. \\•as booked on the same charges, said Detective Neil Purcell. Purcell said he obtained Initial in· formation about lhe plants from a citizen 's phone tip. He checked and sure enough, said the detective, he could i;ce the marijuana -both lh1. potted pl snts and others in the backyard . Arresting ofiretrs Robert Briscoe and fl.1ike Louisiana also seized about six pounds of cured marijuana. two _loaded pistols and various items of d~ug paraphernalia includlng a \\'aler pipe , and seven other pipes. some made from rocks. Purcell Mid Sleeper v.•as lying na~ed besidr the large pot of freshly watered marijuana plants v.·hen the oHicers &.r· rived at 2:15 p.m. The guns and other ·Items were in a bedroom. The plants, •said Purer II, lncludi?d lhe ren1ale mari· tuana plant which produces the seeds lor rcproclucl\on and also a qu alit y leaf prrferrcd by n1ariJunnn smo kers. Purcell sa1d both suspccls \Vnuld be lrrati::ncd in municipal court son1('tln1e todny. lllnkc :'!tlid he \\'as a s!udenl and Slccp<>r told police hr is a con· 1truction worker. plete shutdnwn of the campus Thursda)', student body o[ficers called for a student referendum on the strike on Friday. Student body President Fred d i e ~lassimino. vice president James Got- tfried and Secretary Claude D:::irais in a statement released this morning, ex. pressed concern over demands 'twhich ar!! being attached to student demonstra- tions on the Cambodia matter." The statement specifically notes the demands involving U.S. imperialis1n, the release of political prisoners, tho removal or ROT.C from campuses and the removal of military recruiting and 'vllr related research fron1 canipuses, may not be supported by all students who support the strike. Pleading for "peaceful efforts" and ''rallonal decisions," the statement con· eluded. ··we support the sincere concern that students are expressing about the grave situati on that exists in Cambodia. \Ve do not suppo rt those \\·ho would use this sincere concern to advocate their O\Vn radical politics." At a Tuesday night meeting in strike h~adquarters al lhe campus Gate\11ay Commons, steering committee co· chairman Rich Kilarski told an audie-()CC of about 300 that today·s progra1ns arc geared to gaining student and com· munily su pport for the strike. "\Ve can't really consider shutting c!o1\'tl this campus until v.•e get U1e people behi nd us," he said. Several meetings and events are sched· uled as part of the ''education" program. According to student spokesmen, about 200 sLudent!' ,1·ill be passing out leaflets explaining the strike in shopping centers and at high schools. A leaflet given lo strikers by the Defense Com1niltee Jisls suggestions for students who are \\'Orking in the com· 1nunily : -Do not leaflet parked cars. -Do not obstruct people or cars. -At high schools do not enter school groonds, stay across the .street. continue moving. -If a policema n slops to question you. stay cool. He's probably che(k.ing to see \\·hat you 're doing. A "rap-in" open to the public is scheduled for tonight in Crawford Hall. Kilarski said the 8: 15 p.m. meeting would be held to get an idea of the strength of support for the strike. A meeting for service staff and faculty \\'as to be held at 10 a.m. campus offh:ials v.·ere expected to tell the group \\'hat level of partlclpallcm in !he !';trike 1rou ld be acceptable to the ad· mii .L!.tration. Tuesday Dr. Roger Russell. vice ('hancellor for academic affairs, told faculty me1nbers they v.•ere free to participate ln v.·orkshops and other cam- pus activities involved in the study of 1he Cambodia problem. Russell said faculty who \\'ished to partici pate In "alternate education programs" could do so on vacation lime. compensatory time, or on lime \.\'ithout pay. RJsse.ll's statement inferred the policy v·Ol.ld be in effect 1111til It is rescinded. Also scheduled as part of the strike activities were : -A demon!ltration this morning at the county Board of Super.,.lsors meeting to demand that supervisors a,pply for federal funds for child care centers. -Student support of a strike vote at the academic Senate meeting at 4 todav in the Science Lecture Hall. -Strike spokesmen said picketing and 11 teach·in in UCl's Central1 Park would be held throughout the day. 1 • \\'~dn~sday, May 6 1970 H DAILY PILOY ~ 33 Attend POW RallY. Froni County Thirty-three wives and parents ol servicemen missing in Vietnam are back to Orange County today after attending a rally in Washington, D.C., twer the weekend. The rally was part of a national cam- paign to lncrease public awareness or the prisoners' and families' plight. The relatives are now mapping plans to rally support Utroughout Orange County. The Fountain Valley parents of a ~larlne missing in Vietnam for three years eight months were among those who made the flight to Washington. ' Mr. and ~1rs. John Bodenschatz of 9659 ·Raven Circle, have bad no word Oil the fate of thelr son John, 23, since his four-man patrol faUed to return. "We are trying to get people to notice ho\\• many people like this are missing,'' fl.frs. Bodenschatz said this mof'1ili\g. •·People really don't know \vhat it's all about. \Ve weren't allowed to speak out for so long -for rear it might hann the prisoners -but no\v \\'e can aud v.·e arc talking real loud." Mrs. Carol Hanson, the wife of an El Toro pilot missing in action, waJ; also among the party of 33 that fle1v from Los Alamitos Naval Air Station last weekend to the rally. The rally, publicized as an "appeal for international justice," was sponsored by a bipartisan congressional committee and the Veterans of Foreign \Vars and lhe Daughters of the American Re1'0lu- tion. Vice President Spiro Agne\1', Defense Secretary ~felvin Laird. Sen. Barry Goldwater, Astronaut Capt. James A. Lovell and H. Ross Perot , the Texas multimillionaire, Y•erc among t h e speakers. About 1,000 families "'ere flo1vn to the rally in 1nilitary planes. •·rhe Air ?\ ational Guard flew us out of Los Alamitos." Mrs. Boclenschat1 said . She said that the families have formed an Orange County chapter of the National League of Families of America n Prisoners in Southeast Asia. •'\Ve plan lo put up signs on fr eeways urging people not to forget the boy~ and generally spotlight the situation,'' she added . She said lhat Mrs. Hanson will coordinate efforts in the county. Huss Want Japanese To Appeal lo Nix on TOKYO (AP) -T11e So\•iet Union asked Japan today to use its innuence lo help stop U.S. operations in Cambodia. Foreign rvtinistry officials said the re· quest was made by SOviet Ambassador Qleg A. Troyanovsky when he called on Deputy Foreign Mlnlster Nobuhlko U~hibo. Taft Wins Ohio Wallace Forced Into Vote Runoff By United Prts1 Iotematlonal Ohio voters rebuffed their Republican governor, James A. Rh?des, and sent fonner astronaut John }l. Glenn down to u~set defeat while Aliibamans put a crimp into George C. Wallace's bid to regain publlc offJce. The Ohio and Alabama v o t i n g highlighted J scattering of primary elec- Uons Tuesday. Rhodes was beaten by Congressman Robert A. Taft Jr. for the Republican nomination for the Ohio senate seat N!ing vacated by Sen. Stephen ~1. Young, a Democrat who said he was retiring at age BO in spite of good health to let a younger person move i'Jl. Glenn, 11t first an odds.on favorite lo win the Democratic nomination to succeed Young. \\'as overhauled by Ho11ard \\'. Metzenbaum, millionaire fn,1n Cleve land. G!enn, first Ameri can to orbi'. the earth , had h1tended to run again::.L Young in the 1964 Dernocratic pr in1ary but 11·ithdre\\' after being injured in a household accident. in Alabama. \\'allace -the third party c:iudidate who kept neither President Ni).on nor Hubert II. Humphrey from I getting a majority in the 19611 presidential election -failed hirnself to get a n1a- jority ii\ Tuesday 's Demo c rat i c gubematorlsl primary. In fact, Wallace's narro\1' lead over Albert Brewer, the incumbent governor seeking renomination, vanished today as late returns ~'ere counted and he fell behind by 17.000 votes. Wallace and Bre'A'Cr llO\V \¥ill be matched in a runoff. Charles E. \Voods ran a fairly strong third with more than 100,000 voles to de ny Wallace or Brewer ·a majority. The runoff is expectec; to be close and a Wallace defeat could doom any future national political aspirati11ns. In Indiana, all 11 i'llcumbent con- gressmen -four Democrats and seven Republicans -\\'On renomination. In Connecticut. \\'here l I con1n1unilics h'1.d primaries, slates pledged to inctunbent Ol'n1ocro.tie Se.1. ThonHLs 11. !)odd wrrc bt-::iten in nine of l l races. The slate party's convention lo endorse ca11~ir1:1 \cs for the Nove1nbcr election is scheduled in June. Ohio's gubernatorial lineup in the fall clcctlon 11.'ill b!.' Sta1r Aurtitor Roger Cloud for the Republican~. <r11d former Rep. John J. Gilligan for the Dcn1ocrats. Ca11ip11.s Strife Di stii rbs Nixo11 T1·avel Sched11le \\'ASHINGTON !UPI) -President Nixon may ha \'e to forego ilttending his daughter Julie's graduation from Smith College if campus protests persist over his decision to send troops to Cam· ~ia. Both the President and Mrs. Nixon had hoped to allend their 21-year·old daughter's graduation ,..lay 30 at Northan1ptoh, f\·lass., but \Vhite House aidl's indic illcd the possibili1y of the PresiC:ent's presence "·as fading fast. Jul ie's husband, Oal'id El senhu1vcr, p:ans lo skip his ov.·n gradualion e,. erci.scs al Amherst Collrge '.l·ith its e1·"n morl' n1ililant student body, because the college scheduled I. F. Stone, th '.! aut hor· ne11 !'paper editor, as ils con1mence1ne-,1l speaker . David did ,nol feel he could subject hi" grandinoth~r. ~1rs. Dwighl D. Eisei:ho11·er, and other members of tht'! la1nily, to possible embarrassment on can.pus. ,..lrs. /l\ixon \vas forced to cancel a trip lo I•'re<lericksburg, Va .. today where she had planned to tour hi storic Kenmore House. the colonial man sion of George \Vash.ingta.1's sister. Betsy Fielding Le\\'is, and the James ~1onroe museum and library. The \Vhitc llouse got advance 'ol'ord that se\•eral hundred students from ~lary \Va..;.hington College reinforced by col- legians from other Virginia schonls. were going to dc1nonstrate \\'hen the fir~\ lady tnnde her appcar;ince a t Frcdcrick~burg. The college n"e\v spapcr ;11 J,.redcricksburg also ni<lrle it~ P"i"t ,,f \'ie1\.' clear 11.•ith a,1 "lmpeal'.h l'\b.on" Pdito rial. Sihanouk J<'onns Unit TOKYO (AP) -The deposed Cam· bodian head of state, Prince Norodoin S'hanouk. announced in Peking Tuesday l~c establishment or :in I !·minister •·royal govermnent of Cambodjn," Kyod'l News Service reported. ,-~~~~~~~~~~~~~- ' Tidelands Oil Bill Delayed In Committee SACRA~fENTO fAP) -A proposal to inerease by five time s the tldeland s oil payme11t v.'hlch coastal citle!'I and counties now get to buy and develop public beaches has stalled in an Assembly commiltee. Assem blyman Robert H. Burke fR· Huntington Beach), told the Assembly Revenue and Ta.'<ation Committee Tues· day that such cities as Hu111ington Beach now pay for regional recreation facilities from city rw1ds. He said Huntington Beach, which now gets ~ $63,000 a year from the offshore \Velis in adjoining ~'aters, spends $450,000 a year on city beaches where 17 out or 20 persons are out-of-towners. He estimated his proposal to increase the city aJ1d county share of state oil revenues from one percent to five per· cent would cos t the sta!e $400,000 a year from U1c U11i\'Crsi ty or California building fund . "Ii n1ay help a couple or dun1b citie s ;icquire a beach here or there. but II\ going to hurt higher education," said con1milt~c chai rrnan William T. Bagley I R·San Ansclnto). "I just don't 1hink this is the tin1e for this bill," Bagley said. Anahein1 Loses Battle Over 1'ax For Stadi11 111 A long dra1rn 1•111 hearing before an Orange County Assessment AppeaJ5 Board resulted 1n a 2 to I vote Tuesday which ruled that Anaheim must pay $205,330 i11 possessory interest taxes on behalr of the California Angels baseball lcan1 lor tile tea1n·s use of Anaheim Stadiurn. Th'! action was anticipated as the :;a1ne bJ.:ird had made a .similar ruling last year and the ev idence presented during recent week& "'as much the san1c. Last year, the city paid $206,871 under protest. ' \Vinner both years is County Asse!'sor Andrew J . Hinshaw who claims the ball club has a possessory interest in the stadium although they only use ii BO days a year. The assessment last year has bren appealed in Superior Court by li1c city but has not yet come to trial. City officials said they will also appeal lhis year's ruling and attempL to co~ solidatc the two Cases. i J ; ' I I ,,- You probably won't notice that the air over Southern California will be a little cleaner. But it'll be a little cleaner. 23 neighboring communities ore convert• ing some of their Ueet vehicles to noturol gos. Not somelime in the diSlont fut ure. Righi "'lW· Right now we're providing up to six con· version kits apiece 10 23 cities, towns and counties in Southern Colilornio for o one yeor ll io l period todemonst1oto hownolurol gos con cut 90"/, of o vehkle's polh.rtonts. Over lhe yeo1, we'll orrong11 for continu· ing technicol o»is!once ond Ivel supplit$. We're olso converting more thon 1, 100 of our own fleet vehicles. With over 31/i million regil!ered vehicles In Los Angeles County alone, we're under no delusion5 lhot ,wo're going lo elimlnoto lmOg. But it's o beginning. Our business is the gos business. Sut port of our business is lo help mo~e Sou!hern California o better ploce to live. In th• fulure, we and. we hopo, Olhers in Southern Colifomio wnl be working even ho1der, to convert more vehiclo fleets to cloon·burning JlO!urol gos, There's on old n.ile obovt pro(cc!s like this one. To storf, you hove to stott. Southt~ c..tia Ga C.""" "l<;lloldl..., ol,...l~j llflo• ... , ............. j ' DAJ\.V PILOT WtdnKlolJ', MQ 6, 1970 ' 4 • Clothes designer Mary Ouant -.:iecently launched a new product -"t.fake-up to Love in." It i5 said ···11ot to "run, smudge or smear, even al the height of passion." •: 8 : > -· The Stoke.on-Trent, England, city fathers havt' dteided that the topic of a musical documen- ta.TJJ to be featured at the city'• festhxd later this mohth will be the escapades of a legendary toton drunk, who died 19' year.! ago with 300 convictions for public intoxication behind him. :. • ' 1 Bachelor Patar Godwin of South ·cemey, England, asked local or- -flcials recently to lower taxes on bis house because midnight nude ·<bathing parties in waters adjacent to his property kept him up at ' night. • -Leroy J. Peters, 20, a \Vichita !"""State University student. brought f an American fl ag to school recent- 1 ly and was p romp t I y arrested. ' Peters was jailed in lieu of $250 i bond on a charge of defacing the I flag. The flag was sewed to the ieat of Peters' pants. ' • ' i ' • • ' I • i ! -. I . ,., •. 'It~ • ,,,.,.,~:e.._.­l .. . . . ,. ,_, • ~lo one en1oys tmmun1za ion l•w i : and Afarint' \Vorld's 3,000 lb. el<· ; phant seal, "Big Lou" it no 111zup1ion ;. as curator lt1ichael S&offcrrd inocu· 1 lates the huge animal. It it no earv i task, for the man must stand well ~.twaY from the powerful flippers •!ftltn ofter I.he hugt: tank ha$ bl'.'en :"trained to decrease tM seal'& mobili· tr· • 'f Four-year-old Malcom Wil1on, of Carlisle, England, fell ZO feet 'through an open window, but escap-.<M \Vith a broken foot . "He must J!ave sleepwalked. over to the win· !low and thought it was the bed," !said ~1alcom's mother, ~1rs. Gwen Wilson. "From now on we are lock- l lng the v.·indo1vs." r o 'fDJ'=:-ro::lllcm::l!lr.wr~ Police checked a train from Lo11do11 Sunday after it teas : l stopped just faur mile.s from the I $ scen e of rhe 1963 grtat train i robbery. Son1tone had pulled t ' 1 011 the emergtncy cord iii the 1 i mail compartnie-nt. Tht door of • the compartment had bten fore· : ed open but police .said only a ; small quantity of Sunday news· papers was 111 issing. Cambodia Briefing President Fails To Sway Critics WASKJNGTON (APl -President Nill· on·s pronilse that U.S. troops will be out of Clr\lbodla by July 1 at the latest has made no noticeable dent in prior Capitol Hill opinion -critics remain critical and supporte:1 are &taoding finn behind the new war policy. In stparate briefings with two groups M representatives and senators Tuesday, lhe President spelled out the limitaUons on the Incursion -American units could go no further than 21. 7 miles in ta Cam· bodia withwt prior congressional ap- proval and all U.S. troops would be pulled back before the first ol July. Sen. J. W. Fulbright. chairman of the Seriate Foreign Relations Committee and one or the toughest criUcs of Nixon's Southeast Asia policy, indicated there * * * House Debate On Cambodia Proposal Set WASHINGTON (UPI) -The House squared off today over an amendment that would both authorize and curb the use of U.S. troops in Cambodia. Its critics called it a "Cambodian Tonkin Gulf resolution." But its sponsor said it was a message to President Nixon -"this far and no farther." The amendment was proposed to the pending $20.2 billion weapons authoriz.a. tion bill on which the House was to resume debate today. The amendment woukl bar using any funds in the bill to finance the introduction of U.S. ground combat troops into Laos, Thailand or Cambodia without the prior consent of Congress -unless the President deckled, and promptly reported to Congress, that such action wa.s necessary •·to protect Jives or American troops remaining •within South Vietnam." Crilics said the amendment "'ould gi\'t: President Nixon the authority lo wage war in Cambodia. Thailand and Laos that President Lyndon B. Johnson claim· ed for Vietnam on the basis of the 1964 Tonkin resolution. Nixon. according to rongressmen ~·ho met with him Tuesday, saw the amend· merit as an tndor~ment of the limited action he says he has taken in Cambodia. ; Nil.on 6UpPortli it and so does House • Republican Leader Gerald R. Ford of Mlchig•n. 'Jbe' sponsor of ihe arkendment. Rep. PauJ Fihdley, a Republican do\•e from downstate Illinois, acknowledged it ap- proves what Nirwl has done so far. But Findley says it carries 1n additional 11le5.$1.ge from Congre5s -''this far and no farther." Findley said, however, Nixon took him aside at the White House briefing on Cambodia Tuesday night and told him the amendment was "splendid." Ji.1lie Released From Hospital NORntAMPTON. 1i-1ass. (AP) -Julie Nixon Eisenhower, daughter of the Presi- dent, ~·as released from Cooley-Dickinson Hospital today after an overnight stay for what hospital officials called a ··minor medical problem." The hospital refused any further com· ment on ~1rs. Eisenhower. who was brought there Tuesday night by Secret Service mtn. Mrs. Elsenho\\'er. a senior at Smith Colk!ge, was due to leave this weekend for Washington, returning ~1ay 31 for graduation. Her husband. David. is a senior at nearby Amherst College. ... was nothlng new in the Pre!ldent's pres- entation. "In ~se expo6itloru there was, I think, nothing th.at had not btti1 covered in the President's speech," the Arkansas Otmocrat said. He referred to the state- ment Nixon made last Thursday on na· tlonal television and radio saylng a joint Sooth Vietnamese·U.S. troop operition had moved into Cambodia. Nixon said then the actlon would be over in six to eight weeks and was designed !"lmarily to protect th< security of U.S. troops ln South Vieblam by destroying enemy sanctuaries across the border in Cambodia. Most of lho&e attending the briefings said Nixon pressed this wu still his objective during his 2(}..minule discourse. But "there was really no joining or the issue;' Fulbright said. "You ask a quest.Ion, then they pass on to the next one." "Personally," he wen t oo, "I don't feel that I benefited very much" from the session. Rep. Thomas E. Morgan, t h e Pennsylvartia Democrat who heads the House Foreign Affairs CommiUee, said he was impressed by the meeting '"'ilh Nixon -and so were the other members of his panel. Indiana Rep. Ross E. Adair, senior Republican on the Foreign Affairs Com· miltee, called the briefings impressive afll'I forthright. . "They answered," he said "many of !he questions and objections that have been raised.'' He said the Cambodian operation wa s going better than expected , with low casualties and less hostile diplomatic reaction that anticipated. "When the operation is going well both militarily and diplomatically," Adair said. "it seems to me we have reason for opllmism." The Senate Foreign Relations Com· mittee and the I-louse Foreign Affair1 Committee met with Nixon in the af- ternoo11. The Armed Services committees of bolh chambers conferred with the President in a morning session. 'The Senate's No. 2 Republkan. ~1ichigan's Robert P. Griffin, who also attendtd the aremoon session, said Nixon was excellent in presenting the ad - ministration's policy. Corporation For Railroa d s Wins Senate OK WASHINGTON (UPI\ -The Senat. approved, 1a to 3, today a bill to take passenger train seFVice away from the railroads and turn it over to a newly created ooriioration. '11le measure now goes to the Hoose. The Senate pa~ it 1fter adopting an 21mendment by Sen. Claiborne Pell (0- R.l.), to allow regional transportation authorities to contract for service Ydthln their areas . Also approved was a second Pell amendment to sllpulate th1t government financial support for the new entert>rise could be used to modernize roadbeds as well as trains. Pell said most U.S. railroad beds are so antiquated the passengers are "shaken up like a martini cocktail." The only voles case against the bill on final passage were by Sens. Allen J. Ellender 1D-La.), James B. Allltn (D·Ala . I. and John L. McClellan ID-Ar)!;.) The bill was endorsed by the Nixon administration. the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC), railroad unions, the Association Gf American Railroads and the National Association of Railroad Passengtrs .. The latter l§ttks better pa8'e.flger service whtch the railroads claim they caMot provide without losing money. ' l ! Thunderstorms in Missouri Cool Air Sends Mercur y Beloiv Freezing t:ocuud "loon. 'l'lcles WltlHllOA'I' StcONI hi"' ' °' 1.111. •••• ,,, THUltSOAY !"Ir" """ ....... S:)01.m .••••• , ·lO f lrsl llltll . , , , U:O. p.m. , ..... 3 1 ,_,., ""' • . • . •. ,, "·"'· • • ) f ~ llltl'I , , , . lO•tJ t .fTI, : I Nl'W """" 1" Otr. '~" Lttl Otr, ,,,.., s. ,.,,.., u .V..1 tl ~y ,,,,, COA.ITAL SUMMAll 'I' TIW't win bl. Utflf, lfllfi.bt. •! ..... "'""' '"' '"°'"'"' Miu" ... ,... ,,.., Ol"I -(Mil 100.... I N'I W ...... ...,.Y. totcorn'"' -11eor1v 10 lo 10 tl\Oli !ft "'4 •I~. 11 wl!I tit mo1111 cJOvOY ._.,,, earllf mom•"' dr!ul*1 bl.II 1!l<'M ""'' f U""'IM In Ill~ .tll•lnootll. Wiii\ 11111• t.mMr1tyft cn•n••· ll.S • .Summar11 .. tlW llWl'dotllOrr•"· 1t!Cll.oll'l"t ..,..., , ........ u. 1:1tt11rt<1 "'' K111111 cur, • Mo ..... ll!f ,.,~., "'*'· 1!1""4'Ntlo l•ftf ... °'~""'" ,,_IJ _.,_ pj(IUrt t(~OH lftt Nl!lt!>. TM 1lor1M clt¥tloo~ l•O'ft I l~nltl IYllM'I ll(f!ClllMI from tllt norfhffll 10 '"-J6~lllft11 Mld..,..1t. l~"'"'rlllJ"'H Ill-l flf!'l!I>... 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" ., " M " " ~ " .. " " " ~ " .. ,. " " " .. .. , . " • " • .. " " " " .. " ., .. ·" ,, Ru• Threat Cited Nixon to Resume Israel Jet Sale? 'NOTHING NEW' Stnotor ~ulbrlght FBI Adds Bro'm To Most Wanted List-Number 11 WASHINGTON !AP) -The FBI ex- panded Its list or "IO Most Wanted Fugitives'' to 11 today to make room for Ii. Rap Brown, the black militant who failed to appear Monday !or his riot and arson trial. Brown, the FBI said , should be "considered armed and dangerous." The addition of the 26·year~Jd black militant leader came Jess than two days after the Maryland attorney general's office obtained a federal warrant charg· ing him with interstate flight to avoid prosecution. It also marked the first time in two years -since James Earl Ray was being sought for the slaying of Dr. Mart in Luther King Jr. -that the FBI failed to wait for a to~lO vacancy befort add ing another man. A form er chairman of SNCC -the Student National Coordinating Committee -Brown was to stand trial in Ellicott City. ~1d .. on charges stemming from a fiery 1967 speech he made In Cam· bridge, Md., shortly before <lisorders cn1J;led in a black area of the city. \\'hen he failed to appear, Howard County Circuit Judge James MacGill revoked Brown·s $10.000 bond and issued a bench "'arrant for his arrest. • WASHINGTON (UPI) -Congressional IOW"ctS indicate they believe President Nixon wilt decide to rel\llM the sale of Phantom jeb to Israel "fairly aoon." The final decision will depend on two things: -The outcome of private taIU now Under way withlo the f ou r-p ower framework of the United States, Britain, France and Che Soviet Union. --Oitmit e/lom <>I U.S . diplomats to clarify Soviet intentions in the area -particularly Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin's news c.ooference answer to a queation conoeming rtoprb of Soviet pllots Dying Egyptian MIGs in opera· tlonal missions. Kosygin slid the pilots "are there ror lhe purpooe of aiding lhe UAR (United Arab Republk) in the struggle a1ainst Israeli aggression, an aggression which in turn is massively supported by the United states wbkft is providing Israel with anns and extending all-out support in creating aggresaioo against that coun- try." Some observers in Washington believe lhe pr<sen<o of Soviet pilots has upo<t a precarious balance « power in the M1ddle East that Niton had tried to rnaifl\ain. * * * Israeli Bombers Hit Egypt Guns Israeli Air Force jets were sent in today to silence Egyptian gum bom4 barding Israeli troops in the northern sector or the Suez Canal, an Israeli military spoke.sman announced in Tel Aviv. It was the first aerial activity an- nounced today and the fir st major artillery battle or the day. Earlier, Israel announced two Arab guerrillas were kill· ed in clashes with Israeli security forces. In Cairo, an Egyptian gover.nment spokesman said Soviet instructors "''ere working with all branches of the Eg)'p- tian armed forces but denied Israeli charges Soviet pilot! were flying opera· tional missions over Egypt. The Israeli government made the charge last wtek and Premier Golda Meir warned Intl would figbt the Rll!siam if necessary to defend the Sue.1 fronl Every\lody is looking for a bargain. Heres one YQUcaD lielieve in. Milt make6 thr Bwd Le-Sabres •'E!. llell such ~n~".' We're <lea.In~. f;ll' Ol'lf' th in!!. 8pr;~· "httP 11nd wt>no mal..i1~ up for lost. limo~ riurillJ: t~ rokl 11.1nll'r montffl wtw>n f'VH Yi-o:I\' :ol.ayed ho-.rrM• h,\ tht fire. \\'r·l'f' .l{OiTUt to mt1k" 11 rl"'.il Cll.'<Y for ~ ll)~I into a Ouick11ridrelehratc::>prin;i:::. But that·~ rmly l1flrt of •·Mt mnke.!> a hergiin R hoiii;:ain. \\'ht~ atxu. the ar? C'.an JOO beiieTt in ii.? E¥el"J 8'M*i$ buift,.;th ~y . 'fou get. tmngs like a MO!irtg ~ tM should !'leYU° owrbnt. ~ with air --· M. ~ Birid:·s .,.;q.e w;pe1aion ~r1t-AccuDrive-that mUes this LeSatn .... ol lhe --.. &<ks -· h ~ C*' order a B aibic..fnch. vs. ...... loarl.rrel -Thot lt O')ll!d be redressed at least In part by a U.S. detisk>n to lift the bl.n on the sale of additional jets to brae!. The sources said Nil.On abo has avoid· ed a decision on the jets _because of lhe reported presence of Soviet penomel at Egyptian antiaircraft m i s s 11 e in- stallations that !no-eased the danger ol. a two-power confrontation. Reds Boycott Peace Talks In Protest PARIS !UPI) -Nortll Vietnam and the Viet Cong boycotted the Parb peace talks session scheduled for today, break· ing the regular sequence of meeting• and leaving the negotiations without an agreed resumption date. Both sides i=ed statements containin( vague warnings that the negotiations might be -.ed. An official North Vietnamese statement 111ald tbe two Communist delegatlOM dcided not to attend today's 66th sesaion ln order "to express (their} firm protest against the extremely grave acts of the Urtited States" in Indochina. The statement, which was ~ad to newsmen at a specially convened news conference, said the United States had violated its "commitment to stop· COOl4 pletely its bombardments against North Vielnam" -the commitment whk:h pa v4 ed the way far the opening or the four.party peace talks. The Hanoi statement also chargtd that the United St.ales was seeking to "extefld the war to tJ1e whole of Indochina by invading Cambodia ." The North Vietnamese proposed that the next meeting of tile peace talks should be held next v;eek on May 14, but concluded y;ith this warning : •:tf the Nixon administration continue~ its bombardments a·gainst the territory 1>f the Democratic Republic of (North ) Vietnam, it must bear full responsibility tor all the serious c~~nces arising Crom its acts." Cllief American negotiator Philip C. Habib rejected the Hanoi chi11"ges and their reasons for cancelling the meeting. • Bqjr.k \hl1Je/BoickJ>ea!ers. Somethin'g-trilWJiewe m. • • --------------------------:'."'"-~-------------------------------~-------------. ---~ ' • t ' • • I I ,, Y/tdnesd1y, Mo1y 6, 1970 DAil V PllOT 1j Student Protests Mounting ... By The Astoelated Prus severe psychological pressures Police also used tear gas President Nixon's daugh~ Studenta at a grow i n I Je51 responsible (or the encl clubJ In the state Capitol Julie, and her husband , David number of campuses across mauacre than our G 0 v, building in Austin, Te:c., to Eistnhower, remained at their Am,rlca today responded to Rhodes and Gtn. Del Corso, break up a demonstration by Northampton, 1t1ass., apart- call:; for a nalionwkle slrlke whose 1nf 1amm 110 r y in· several hundred prtMJters ment as students at both against President N I x o n ' s doclrination produced those who had marched frorn the Smith, where she attends. and Cambodian policy and the pressures," the 550-member University or Texas campus Amhe-rst, where David ts Kent State killings. sena te sakl in 1 re90lution. six blocks away. · enrolled, voted to strike. Some universities shut down Fifteen persons were injured Princeton University faculty ~ was also a strike by altogether, others held rattles. early today when helmeted voted to suspend classes for ·students at rashlonable Finch prayer meeUngs or vigils. police armed with clubs and the remalnder of the semester College, a girl's school in New There were clashes with police sidearms routed some 500 and took a stand as a group York from which Tricia Nixon on some campuses. On some Seton Hall University students condemning the . war · In was graduated tn 1968. others. there were indications in South Orange, N.J. The Southeast Asia . They also ap-In Washington, Mrs. Nixon of support for the move into sludent.s had camped around proved a two-week recess canceled her scheduled trip Cambodia . a street bonfire to protest the prior to the November election to Fredericksburg, Va .. today National Guardsmen patroll· so students can work in because of plaMed antiwa r ed at the University or w~~ffalo. N.Y., police fired political campaigns. demonstrations at Mary \Visconsln in ~1 adison after, tear gas and battled students Boston University canceled Washington University thtrc . police said, more than 35 on the campus or Buffalo State final examinations and Its At Haverford College. in persons were arrested in two University and nearby streets :scheduled J\.1ay 1 7 com-Philadelphia. everyone from days of window sm<1.shlng and Tuesday night. The incident mencement exercises at which the administrators to the firebomb vandalism. involving· about ~ students Sen. Edward M. Kennedy ([).. maintenance men will gO by University s pok esme n followed similar encounters J\.fass.), was to have been the but to Washington Thursday estimated 10,000 persons at-duri ng the day . principal speaker. to protest the war. tended a campus rally Tues· "It is neither a strike nor day night to protest the 1;:( -t:f -t:f 1;:{ 1:f 'ti business as usual," said "Or. President's deployment of John R. Coleman. president ' .. troo ps in Cambodia and to s • H 1 9\. of the all-male. Quaker liberal heac • "pe•pl•·· pe•ili•n" 111.pi·i~e e p. ~ "" ooll•g• which has •tioo• against the Kent deaths. The ~ 600 sludents. "I fee I ' rally was peacefu l but there reasonably certain that the was vandalism afterward . WASHING TON (UPI) _ governmerit must be oot.iried school will show that these The current wave of pro-. 15 days in advance of such are not 'bums· but concerned tests was touched off Monday The Nixon administration, ap-students who are expre111ing I demonstrations. when National Guard smen parently to show young peop e their opi nions in a positive ailed t b Oh. "· J The White House rally .. "' c ou y 10 uvV. ames it can tolerate peace f u I way. A Rhod l I I t. orlginallywas announced · . es o con ro an 1war dissent, plans to go to court There were some indications demonstrations at Kenl State, Saturday -only eight days of support for the Presldenrs fired into a crowd. Four lo smoothe the way for an before the :scheduled date. Jn CambOOian intervention. student..'i were killed. antiwar demonstrallon student the interim the plans have At the Mormon Brigham The Faculty Senate Tuesday leaders want to hold Saturday grown and backers have in· Young University in PrQ\'O, blamed Rhodes and his arl-in rront of the White llouse. creased because of the Utah, the student newspaper , • jutant general, s. T. Del The Justice Department, slayings of rour students dur· Daily Universe sald: •\We u1"1 r.i. .. ~o,.. Corso, for the deaths. UP I learned Tuesday, plans ing an anllwar demonstration understand the ra tion a I e .\ J QUIET AT MARYLAND U-TIME TO CHAT Coed, Guardsman in Friendly Confrontation EFFIGY BURNS ON MINNEAPOLIS CAMPUS •·\Ve hold the guardsmen . to ask rede ral district court at Kent State University in behind Mr. Nixon's decision Just ice Marsh a II, Nix on, Agnew,, _ _:H.::•::f.::f m=•::n_'.:Vc:i:.ct::im=•-' _.:•ct=in,,g.:'::"'=der_o::rd.:c•.::n.:c.:•::nd'--'-un'--d"e'-r-t-'o-•_·_aiv_e_a_l"'!_,_•_ire_m_e_nt_ti.. __ o_h1_· o_. ________ __.:'::"::d..:s::•,,PJ>Oc:::.rl:.h::i:::m:...::in:.i:::t._" __ FIRST AID AFTER KENT UNIVERSITY SHOOTING Campus News Releases Picture of Victim, Helpers Dream Shi~ Gown 7 .00 rz;,,,,,.(, · "ST AR Sleep Coat FLOWER " Permanent Press Kodel:®/Cotton Batiste, feat ur ing magnific.ent new ''Star Flower" embroidery and cover-up sleeves. Pink, Aqud. lemon. 7.00 • ;;Windsor Shop . I •1 HARBOR CENTER I COMMUNITY EVENTS MAY 9 ARTIST 20TH ANNUAL PANCAKI lllAKFAST KIWANIS CLUI OF THE MONTH Clotr Stev..,,, ""'" I., Clinton. Ml ... ~ti 111 lt?l tnd ,....lor..i In t r! 11 COSTA MESA l'Alt!C 7·11 A.M. T.¥. GlAND l'lllIE JUNE S, 6 & 7 25TH ANNUAL FISH FAY COSTA MESA·NEWP'ORT HAltlOlt LIONS CLUI ,. e l'AlADE • IAIY CONTIST • CAllNIYAL e Ml!-5 MERMAID CONTEST e IAnLt OF THE IANDS e DRAWING fOR NEW CAR SM' ow~ "Tht C1r1mk Hut" 111 Pt•tdr,,.. Ctlil6r11l1 tor m~ny vr1r1 wlltrt sM de'll;nfd tl>d crr•IM ~•• own orlglnlll 1 I01>9 wl!h ln"•IK!l'1ll Sht retl'MI Ir! U lt 1t\CI whlht tOI"> v1lntll'IQ '"'"' '" lnh!Mlv• '''°"'' 1r1r!..:I lr'f'lnt lo u11 Mr ht!ld• ind bft!r19 11Mbl1 to 1111 11"9 embrold....,. lhr11d, ... uri i..1vv wool r•r" 11>!1 ltMq!nll~. 1h1 crHtl1; 'her '" -II; WllllOlll t ny jNtllfft, 5 • 2 5 3 ~:;.:7•eed 90 Day Certificate Accounts• 5.39% Annual Yield Ir all savings and interest remain a year. No min imum deposit. Dally compounding. Earn from date of deposit. 6 3 guaranteed 0 annual rate o 2 to 10 Year Certificate Accounts• 6.189/o Annual Yleld . if all savings and interest remain a year. $51000 minimum deposit Dally compounding. Earn from date of depo1lt. NOW! 4WAYSTO EARN HIGHER INTEREST AT CALIFORNIA FEDERAL! 5 • 7 5 3 ~:.~~~711ad 1 to 10 Year Certificate Accounts• S.92°!. Annual Yield If all savings and Interest remain a year. Sf,000 minimum deposit Daily compounding. Earn from date of deposit. 7. 5 3 guaranteed 0 annual • rate 1 Year Certificate Accounts• (Adjustable rat11lor1hor1er terms) 7.79% Annual Ylald if all savings and.interest remain a year • $100,000 O'linimum deposit Daily compounding. Earn from date of deposit. .... CAUFDANut FEDERAL , SAVINGS . ......... · ... --'******* 5% Passbook Account. Current Annual Rate, No minimum_ deposit, Dall~ com~ound_ing. Interest day-in to day-out. Cal!fQ!!!!~.F.~,4£!!!!.,1,§.~.y,!ngs NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL COSTA MESA OFFICE: 2700 Harbor Blvd. near Adams • 546-2300 CLIFFORD M. WESDORF, VICE PRESIDENT & MANAGER Convenient Offices throughoul Los .-.ngalt1, Orang1 and Ventu ra Counlles Aec.ount..,.111•1"-.:t llP 111 110,00011nd1r pr11¥1.kl111 el Ille Fed1ral S.'lll!ff •loin IMVr...U Corl'0'1tlor1, I l*'fMl'\tll'IC egency or lhlo Un ll'fd fil1lu OowmrM~t. I 2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa • 546-2622 I -------------------------------!~----------------------------------------------------' • -· • ·-~DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE f Mo.Ye the Freeway? .•;i.G ,., , , . ' • ... , CIUzem of HunUnJton Beach have been left won· derlna whether the state ll on the wrong road over the Pacllic Coast Freeway. Many were upset lo learn las1 week that efforts by Newport Beacl! Aosemblyman Robert Badham to re· route the freeway so it will bypass the Harbor Area might adversely ·affect traffic patterns in Huntington Beacb. The bypass would requi re altering fra!!ic nows In HunUngton Beach. Badham's plan calls !or delellng .rttie lreeway east of Route 39. a north-south freeway / that will be localed ball a mile east of Beach Boule- vard, near Ne11•land. Instead of going down Route Freeway 39 from Adams Avenu~ and along the coast into Newport. lral· fie wou1d be sent north onto the San Diego Freeway and then onto the Corona del Mar Freeway, under Bad.ham's plan. Assemblyman Robert Burke of Huntington Beach and city traffic engineers reacted with logical skeptic- Wn to these changes. They made several point!. People will still come to the beaches whether the freeway is there or not and this will mean clog~ed sur- face streets. No matter how these surface arterial~ are improved they will not take the load a freeway I can carry. The plan would also divert extra ,volwnes onto the RDute 39 and San Diego freeways, creating an over· Joa.ding problem that could not be solved with the mere addition of a couple of Janes. Burke made the slrongest pq~t when he observed that an unfortunate precedent wotild be set if Badham succeeds in altering-a freeway route through legislative action. . Back in the early stages of the highway program, the state Highway Commission was given the authoritY. to· adopt freeway 'routes and the intention was to guar antee that the routes would not be directed by poli· tical pressures. Any move, therefore, that wou1d put this power in the bands of legi slators, who, by virtue of their office are responsive to pressures from their constituents, Job- byisl& and party poliUcs should be regarded with inve doubts. It's hard to see freeways gelling bulll ai all In those circumstances. So far this newest freeway proposal is largely based on emotion. A lot of engineering evidence will have to be produced, complex economic facts will have to be developed and silted, and fundamental stale govern- ment policies will have to be mulled over before the action proposed by Badham merits serious legislative scrutiny. Pay as You Pollute? While our lawmakers appear to be Wting at wind- mill• in their search for a legislative solution to poUu- tlon problems, a Newport Beach man already has an answer. Jt's so simple that it just might work. Why not "paiy as you poUute"? asks Daniel Emory. a member ot the Noi!e Advisory Committee to the state Department of Aeronautics. And indeed, wb.y not? If the amount of pollution dis- charged by any individual or firm were metered -like gas, water or electricity -it wouldn't take long for the offender to reduce his output. Reckless po11ution of the atmosph'ere and our water- ways presumably would soon become unprofitable if Emory's sugi:i;estion of paying for the disch&r(e were put into practice. The idea, he says. is to manipulate self-interest. or the .p,rofit motive, to coincide wtth the public interest. ·An attend'ant benefit, of course, is that a tremend· ous amount of revenue would be raised from the "pollu.• tion payrnents'"wbich could easily be funneled into pol· lution research. The current me'lhOd of fighting pollution by setting up specified standards does not make allowances for the profit motive. It only asks that firms comply with the standard without giving incentive to do better than that. Emory's plan might just clear the air about pollu· lion. H Se1iate Politicia1as Ruta tor Cover Juveniles Sitffer Law Nixon's Immense Courage WASIUNGTON -Nothing could ht m<n disastrous at this moment in history than any congressional action lhniti.ng or circumscribing the authority Qf the President of the United Slates in his e<>nstitutional role as commander· in-chief of the armed forces and executor cl foreign policy. Such limitations or attempted limita- ilom would create a constitutional crisis which could 50 vitiate presidential authority that the effectiveness of America'& world leadership would be deatroyol. The President would not recognize such limitations. The a n l y congressional re:spmse which amounted lo anything would be cutting off appropriations and authorizations for the Vietnam War. Thal is impossible because the .security of a million men in the Western Pacific is involved. Nothing but chaos would re.suit and the e1ercise of American will in world affairs would be par1lyzed. HOW TKE MEN IN the Senate can move in this direction escapes all ra- tiODaUty and reality aod ls but another sign of the frightful eonfusJon affecting the tb.intitll or politicians who cannot stnd modern pressure and run for cover when tbe Vietnam War protest is carried iato tbe streets by violence prone .ac- tivisb. Make no mistake about this, what bothers some or the men in the Senate is that they may lo:5e their status, pm:!· tioo. and me.ans of livelihood if they supprt a president in an mtpopula.r .,. .... 1beir hearts bleed for America; their miDda are coocerned less wttb America '1 ( -I • '\ opportunity that neither the CongreM nor the public would touch it they had , ! ·to ma~e the decisions themselves. Ricliard Wilson " I -· J.,' JT AU BOll..S DOWN to a matter of success or failure in a major military operation. This is likely to be Nbcon's Dlenbienphu or bis Battle of the Bulge. That is lo say, conclusive either way in determining the succe21s or failure ot his policy in Southeast Asia, and his own political future and prestige. defeat than their own. In these circumstances Congre5$ is not capable of limiting the President's constitutklo.al freedom of action on a rational basis. In these times when only hair-trigger action may 5ave a modern nation from ex1inction, the century aid argument over 1he President's authority and responsibility has no relevancy. He must be .a. !tee to act. Not only free to act. • oe must be required to act with or without congressional sanction. The idea recognized by Nixon that he mf&trt"·be a ane-ttrm l't'ffident is not confined to his way ol bringing the Asian war to a constructive conclusion. He has taken that risk in his definition of a new and more practical policy on racial eguality. in his policy on Israel. THE FOREIGN RELATIONS Com· his facing down the war protesters and ·ttee of tbl·c:.-,,t ·sh to bstit t the campus revolutionaries. his attitudes !11' . ~·-e Wl e.s ~ . u e on Jabot. He has gambled on there its. jud~t for that of the Preaide:nt. being a sir.Orf& majorit)'. silent or l'Mus 1ridkulta0 •1 1 pr •. ~~~t. otherw1,e, which no Jonirr will accept or 10 ~s cordfrlsint1 Y «.the dtrangement of nation:aJ l>Ol.iciP by of the ~ wouJtl. detennl when . mJNarilim or any politk:al combination the United ltites woWd fi&ht. w~ thud ' it wooJd fight aod jJow It woo1d fl(lll • Sen. J. W. Fulbr}ght was right in RJGtn' OR WflONO, this. bas required 1961 when he aaid: "With their •1-~ couragi on the Preskient's part cessively parochial orientation, con-and pever more than when he faced grtsSmen are acu~ sensitive to CJ!e the nation, challenged his detractors and influence of privafe pressurt and to led the coUntry where it was doubtful the excesses and inadequaclea al a public of goillg. opinion that is all too ·often ignorant This Is presidential leadership under of the needs, the dangers, and the ~ conditions Which havi been rarely teen portunjty in 0\11' foreign relatiOO!." but it was nol without precedenl Isola· Nothing could bave described the tionist leaders, including the late Se:n. present condition better. An apportunity William E. Borah, tried to intimidate has p-esent.ed itself in Cambodia to aet preQ:ients with their superior knowledge back the. CommurUst aide in a major and judgme:nt, with about the same pros- way. President NiJ:on bas gruped tbe ptetlve remit u in the present instance. Women Pick Wrong Target By JAMES E. WHETMORE Senator U Susan B. Anthony were alive today. fihe'd probably be campaigning as hard as ever for women's rights. Although mOBt men now think that women were "liberated'' when they got the vote, 1n01t of the fair sex would undoubtedly di!agree, judging from the amount of legt&lation and subsequent publicity <>n tbe sceDe today. Wt year much was made over a measure to abolish coin-operated toilet facilities in public places. with the measure's author -a woman -charg· lng discrimination against her sex because not all accommodations in men's rooms require a ''moneta r y con- &ideralion." De.spite considerable support from women's organizations and even a>ine sympathetic males who have been caught without a dime at one time or another, the measure failed to receive approval. --~-- Wednesday, May 6, 1970 'J'M cditorl4! page •I the D<dlv Pilot ae1b to tnf0rnt end .s£im.. lllaU readnt bu presmting this tw10IJ)(lptr'• opiniom a11d com- WNnfartl on. eopia of inUrest and 1igftl/JCG11«, bv prooidlno o fOrtJm for the t%P"e.srion. of our readnt' opinions, and by prese?ttfno tM diverse view- pcinll of lnf"""'d obs....,. and IJ)Ol<unun OJI toplCI of th• dov. Robert N. Weed, Publl1her ___,. -- ' • THE PRIMARY women's rights bill this legislative session deals with discriminatory hiring practices. a subject near and 4ear to the heartl! of women's ci -· .. :s and factions of the female libera- tion movement ~·lost of us would agree th·.t there·i& merit in legislat.ion directed at this are.a. and re«ntly the hiring practices bill was passed in the lower house by a wide majority. The bill adds sex .to the discriminatory hiring practices prohibited in the .Fair Employ- ment Practica Law. One of my. braver colleagues. taking his private and political life in his hands, v.•as called uPorf to explain why he voted against the measure. HE NOTED THAT he had tried for three years to fight against the discriminatory practices against women employu, but had directed that fl&:ht to the proper place. the Industrial Wc;J'are Code. All the prac:Hces whl~h are discrimlnalory agalnst women are defined in thlt Code ~nd not, he said, in the Fair Emplayment PracUcts Llw. My colleague also e<>ntend~ thit if employers follow the letter nf the law embodied in the new bill . tMy may well flhd themseh·es In violation of the lndustrial Welfare Code. If an employer refused to hire an appUcant, for instance. because she was .. \"Joman. he would be in violation or th-FEPC law. If he: hired her and the job required more than •ilhl hours al work 1 d.aJ, or the lifting of certain weighi., ho might be Jn violation of the Industrial Welfue Code . ON TUE tn'llEll bond, 1111' coUo&IUI says, an employer might face the pr~ bl em of an FEPC violation H~ he had a job suited to a woman, but a man demanded it. Some opponents or t.be measure have even gone ao far as to turn the tables on the equal rights conctpt and apply some or the women's accepted practices to male employes. An employer. as an example, might abolish the long· established J>minute coffee b re a k presently provided for women on the basis that granting it 'would conslilute discrimination against men. Or men could well demaDd that cob m: ·couches and chairs be piOvided in men's restroom facilities. · NO ONE ·IERIOU8LY believes that such conjecture win deter the movement fo1· equal employment rights for women. But sevtral of my fellow lawmakers beliieve that such efforts ahould be: directed at·t11e Industrial Welfare Code. As one sage wit once put it, the only way to understand a woman is to love ber -and then it isn't necessary to understand her. Dear Gloomy Gus: If our .cars could sing. the. song would be. "Drink to Me Only Wt lb Tlttne !!:)'es." -N. F. S. Tilll '"'"" "'*" "'"•"' Yf9Wa. ,.., """" .. ,.,, ""'--ltf .. ~ ........ ...,. ,_. .... ... -............ °'"' '""'· Prejudice Mai lbox To the Editor: There are a few questions to which I would like some answers. \Vhy mu.st teenage traffic citations re- quire going all the way to Orange to Juvenile Court? If a young person ia mature enough to have a driver's license, why can't he answer the charges· in a rqular traffic court in the district where he recei ved the citation? WHEN A YOUNG perso111 asks for a hearing and trial for a dispuled cita- li~ why is he not given as much courtesy as is give111 a common drunk? The court trial consists of one man, and the arresting officer, IF he chooses to answer the summons, againsl the you11g "offender" and his parent. (Nothing appears to be done if the officer chooses NOT to appear on a summons of this sort.) The MAN seems to have already made up his mind that the contestant is guilty for the atmple reason that she or he ia under 18 or 21 years of age as the case may be. ' WHY IS THERE .a charge made for certain eqllipment violations which have been remedied and signed by an officer? Whe111 a malfunction is p o s s i b I y .something that has occurred withou t the driver 's knowledge. such as a burned out bulb, a fine seems urifair. In fact, a citation for such an offense seems unfair. Bulb.s do go out quite suddenly and unannounced. 11 a case where a malfunction ha s obviously extended over a period of time, such as faulty brakes, dragg\;1g fenders, r1,1sted out mufflers, there might be a valid reason for a cilalion and line. ARDATH G. FAUMUI ~ledlcnt Exp enses To the Editor; Your editorial of April 29 commended the effort undertaken by stude11ls le> help pay medical experises for an injured high school youth . I always react negalively lo these kinds of efforts for persons with overwhelming medical ex- penses, however good II may make these "dc>-gooders" feel. This young man has a right to good medical care, and also a right for the family not to have lo worry about the burden of these expenses. Insurance benefils they may have need to be utilized. BUT ABOVE THAT, il seems to me to be a respo11sibillty most taxpayers should gladly undertake through pro- grams such as state ~1edi..Cal or through expanded Medi care program to disabled people as well as the elderly. These should not be considered to be "welfare" by a need y person. There should also be more government control over the exorbitant cost of medical care, 10 that !here i.'i 110me guarantee that these medical expenM!ti are jusUfiable. MRS. MARGARET LUKAS Ltt~rt jrom. readers are welcome. Normally writers tllo11ld conVt JI their n1t.s1oge.s in 300 word.t or lt.~s. The right to condtn.se letters to /iC .space or i:liminaie libc:l 1.~ rtstrvtd. All ltt- ltrs must include .signahtrt crnd mai£. ing oddrtss, b11t names may bt with-- hel.d. on rtques t f/ sufficient reason i.• apparent Poetry tviU not bt pub· U.shtd. ·I l The Real Drama Is the Conflict Tbou&bts at Lar1t: The real drama In the courtroom is the conflict between the witness' attempt to tell the whole truth, and the attorney's determination to elicit only those portions al it that are helpful to his client. • • • "Obscenity" is whatever shocks some- one today, who would have been shocked 20 years ago by something he considers acceptable now. • • • Doct.or! make the worst patienls in a hospital for the same reaS<ln that pilots make the worst passengers in a plane -both know exactly how many things go wrong and how fallible their colleagues are . • • Beyond a certain agt'!, a woman's chief social satisfacUon se:ems to consist in spotting other women in her age·bracket \vho are hea vier than she is. ~ " ;, Everyone imagines he knows what Jesus would do if He should return. but no one imagines that he might be the first one Jesus would rebuke.· I ._, The poinUessness of most corporal punishment was neaUy pinned by Don Marqu.is, when he observed : "Many a man spanks his children for the things his own father should have spanked out o{ him." • • • A quarrel is t.be failure: of an argument, just as a war is the failure of a con- ference. · • • Rumor, crushed to earth, "ill ris~ again -if it's got ~! . .::: proper sexual ingredients. • • • • We're entering th' Age of Outer Space Exploration before \1•e've tven found a v.·ay to i'ive on this litUe planet without catching a cold. • • • A woman isn't totally resigned fQ spinsterhood until she begins buying shoes primarily for comlort. Odds Favor Uncle Sam Great news! New York City. \1•hlch can't make ends meet on its cut from the new slate lottery. is going to open a string or bookie joints . ,.1ayor Lindsay figures the city's take from the now·legal off.track betting will run $200 million a year. l~ere's a110ther giant stride toward the only conceivable solution to the nation 's riscal crises -natio11alizing organized crime. Once Mayor Lindsay gets a taste of the fat profits fl owing in from his bookie joints. there's no question but he'll take over the numbers racket. And why not? Playing the number s is no more sinful than playing the horses . Naturally there have been protests from such organizations as the churches and the Mafia. "The mayor's muscling In our ter- ritory," growls Tbree·Fingers Jat!k Daniels, chairman of The Wednesday Everiing Christian Fello\vship and Bingo Social. Bui , as the well·klllOwn n1obster stooli,, Chicken Cacciatore, puts it v.ith a shrug "You can't fight City Hall." TKE NEXT STEP. of course, is taking ()Ver the millions of dollars that now go to disreputable types f r o m pros· litution. This may require federal aid. Envision, If you wilt, a vast Sexlcare program. A Bordello Co ns tr uc ti on Program. funded by Io a n s from the Department of Health. Education and \Velfare. would do wonders for impacted areas . They could \l'tll be starred by conscripts fro1n VISTA through a draft lott ery. Objections will be raised. But if the govcrnn1ent can conscript the bodit!s or men for tht! v.·elfart!: of the Laxpayers, it can certain ly peddle the bodit!s or young ladies for the same purpose:. Dope peddling po11es problems. But in Brit.a.In the governmt!:nt.-'1 been doing it for years. All that needs be done to make a tidy profit is to rt1 lsc the prtces lo v.·hat the lraHic v.ill bear. And seeing thal many slates now peddle the drug called alcohol U1rough stale liquor stores. tllcre's no reason 1!)ey can't peddlt: the drug called marijuan1_, too. lt would double revenues. Purse-snatching and sllckups b y governmcnl men lire more easily justified. So1nt'! v.·ould call this ro\>berY. I think or it as t.axatlon. After all, Art Hoppe !ht! def inition of robbery is taking your money by force or the threat of force. You know, like the IRS does. Personally, though, I'd draw 1he hne at having paid government agents rub out innocent people. There just i~n 't enough money in an operation like that to justify Ule cosls. Look at Vietnam. SO HATS OFF to Mayor Lindsay It's. a small step for the taxpayer. bui a g1an_t step toward nationalizing organiz. ~d crime. And there 's enough billioni1 in that to balance every go vernmental budget in the land. And cul taxes, too. ~e. the outcries will mount. "\\'e can t have our government engaged in organized gambling, pandering, dope ped- dling, robbeq" and murder," the foes of progress vodl shout. No"5ense. It 's solely because these long-established functions of government are so disorganized that we taxpayers are losi.Jlg our shirts. r---B11 Georne ---, Dear George : You keep saying you can solve anybodr's income tax pr oblen1s. \Vl'l.1. Ive written you three lcltt!rs ~sk1ng.f~r your solution to sneakini;: 1~ add11Jonal entertainml.'nt deduc- tions. Why haven't you answered? HARRIED TAXPAYER Dear J1arried : Sorry. Y.'e've got a nc\v warden and he revoked my mail privilege~ except once a month . Would you rt!pe.at the question in "iay? Everybody's an expert in April. Dear George· Our :!hores ~re httered "·1th beer cans. our highways are a dl sgract, our v.·aterways art pOIJuted! \Vho caused this! FURIOUS AMERICAN Dear Furious American: I haven't been off my !)lock for l~·o weeks, and I can prove It . Your Horoscope Tomorrow ' -----------. ---~ DAILY ,ILOT 35 Scorpio: Spend to Bring More Joy ONE MORE SEAM -Putting the finishing touches on the outfit she v.·ill \vear "in the fashion show sponsored by Indian Maidens Saturday, May 9. is Linda McGavran while her mother, l\1r s. Charles ~lcGavran checks a piece of material for her own ensemble. Home-sev,1n fashions will be fea tured in the parade following luncheon in Estancia High School. · Fashions Designed Maidens Model Outfits Home-sev.·n fashions will be paraded when Indian Maidens s t a g e a mother • daughter 1uncheon fa shion show Satur- MIMOJ:Y LANI HAllOl CINTlil "''• You Dlaetwr1• UI Ytl? day. May 9, in Estancia High School. Modeling their own crea- tions following U1e 11 :30 a.m. luncheon will be mothers and daughters of the Orange Coast YMCA group. The stage will be set in an ocean decor, follow ing the theme the Sea, ""ith simulated wa ves, giant sea shells and sailboats creating the mood. ~!rs. Kent PoY.·ell of the Zuni Tribe is in charge of arr:r.1gement~ for the fashion show and will do the com- mentating, and decorations are under the direction of A-1rs. Richard Wallis of lhe P001Q Tribe. Earil of the Z3 tribes in the nations will contribute decorations for the tables aod COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY SERVICE e WlDD!Nc; e PASSPOlT$ e POlT•AITS e ALL IN NATUU.L LIYING COLOl. 142-4212 7511 Cl1y, Suite 3, Huntington Be1ch SURPRISE a prize w!U be given to the tribe best interpreting the nautical theme. In charge of reservations is ~lrs. Kenneth Say of the l roquoi~ Tribe. Ticket s are $1 for adults and 50 cents (or children. The event. 1•lhich is expected to attract more than 300 guests, is a combined effort of the two na tions of the Orange Coast YMCA which are headed by Mrs. Charles A1cGavran and Mrs. Ronald Barnett. Recruiting will take place for Indian Maidens from 7 to 9 p.m. on Monday, May 18. r.1 Adams and Sonora schools, on Tuesday, J\1ay 19, from 7 to 9 in Wilson School and at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 20. in the YMCA. The organization is geared lo girls in grades one through th ree. Aiothers participate in ea ch activily, including cam· pouts, roller skating. holida y parties. field trips and craft sessions. Leader Saluted Michael Trujillo, newt y elected president of t h e Mystick Krewe of Komus, will be in the spotlight when the President's Ball is staged Saturday, May 9. FesUvities will begil\· before the formal dinner dance llith a champagne cocktail party in the home of Mr. and Mr s. Ri chard Luther, hosted by th e THURSDAY MAY 7 By SyQNEY O~IARR Many a1trologer1 claim thal the Ale Trinity sips are rtpttitDf.atl\'t of the most I• ttlligent pefsons. Alr TrlJllty sips •re Gemini, Ubra and Aquarius. By contrast, the W1ttr Trinity accents tbe emotional rather thin the iD- tellecL Water Trinity signs are Cancer, Scorpio 1 D d Piscts. ARIES (~1arch 2l ·April 19): Journey could result in rom an- tic interlude. Your ideas are stimulating. You are not satisfied with status quo. Gemini individual p I a y s significant role. H i g h I i g h l versatility. TAURUS (April 2().Jl,1ay 20J : Financial picture Is activated. Opportunities that were dor- mant become animated. Cheek details. Then proceed toward goal. You could obtain va luable J)OliSession. &,DUNI !J\1ay 21.Juoe 20): You are stimulated by Ariel individual . Accenl on personality, appearance. You encounter nev.·. challenging ex- periences. Dynamic approach is beat-give your all. Much to gain, Uttle to lose. CANCER (Jtine 21.July 22J: Difficult to keep secret today. Best to confide in family member. otl1er lt>ved one. Then pressure ~is relieved. Cooperate in projec t v.·hich benefits those who are han· dicapped. LEO (July 2J-Aug . 22 1: Some friends have very firm ideas on unu s ual sub- Charles Crif asi Claims Bride 1n Costa Mesa St. Joachim's Catholi c Church was the afternoon set· ting for the double ring wed- ding of Sandra Kaye Lease and L'harles Anthony Crifasi, both of Costa Mesa. The new Mrs. Crifasi \\'as attended by Miss Linda Lease, her sister as maid of honor. Bridesmaids were the Misses Jackie Arensdorf, Ka l h y Blakeman. lifarilyn Brooks and Linda Fori1aci. ~liss Deborah Snyder v.·as junior bridesmaid. Serving as fkl\\•er girls v.'ere Lau ra Jean Bernabie and Lucia Calibrese "'hile Vincient Bernabie was the ring bearer. The bridegroom asked Rod Zeka to stand as best man. Ushering \\'ere Joe and Larry Lease, the bride's brothers, Kenneth Gray and Brice Campbell . JutJior usher was Paul Crifasi, the benedict's brother. The bride. daughter or the Charles Leases of Costa ~1esa, is a graduate of Corona de! litar High School. Her husband. son of f\tr . and J\1rs. Steve Crifasi of MRS. C. A. CRIFASI Mey Bride Duarlc, is au alu1nnus of Duarte •ligh School and com- pleted tv.·o years in lhe Army. With Wine, Cheese New Season T casted A toast to tbe new season is planned by the Women 's Au:tiliary of Seaview Little League. The group "'ill climax the league's opening \\'eek of baseball with a wine-tasting party taking place Friday, ~tay 8, betv.·een 7 and 9 p.m. in the Air National Guard bu ilding, Newport Beach. Premium \~1 ines and cheeses Merchants Fete Moms wil l be furnished by respective companies. h1 rs. Von De rrieg , chairn1an, has announced that tickets at $2 each may be obtained from any team 1nother or al the door. Proceeds will be used to purchase equipment fo r the league. Additional infonnation may be obtained by calling Mrs. Derrieg. 968-1383, or Mrs. Sam flcddick. auxil iary president, at 968-2119. The public i.s in· viled to attend. New Colors Flatter Legs In celebration of 11-lother's Day a two-day cooking school will be set up in Island lfouse. Fashion Island Friday and Saturday, May 8 and 9. New in pantyhose arid stock- In addition a 4-H dress ings is a trend toward blued review will be staged by 250 colors with lavender and young girls from the 4-H clubs periwinkle strong fa vorites in or Orange County on Saturday the high fashion category. rrom l to 3 p.m. A blued pink, says the The Fashion I s I a n d manufacturer, is a potent nat- merchants have invited the terer and ought to be used Southern California Edison Co. as an accent for navy aitd Kings Club. . to sponsor the cooking school. white outrits. Partygoers then will travel The free showings are open Peach coral is another of STARTS TOMORROW a a erta WESTCLIFF PLAZA 17th & IRVINE NEWPORT BEACH --· lo the Del Rae restaurant , lo the public. the new color combinatiol!S. Fu llerton for the salu te lo --=============:.:==:====-;-: the new leader. - Giant glittering gold coins \\'ill form the table cen- lerpieces and paper bills v•ilh the new president's silhouette \\'il l decorate the stage. 'l'he Komus Players will present a dramatic recoont of Trujillo's backgroond, and dancing to the mu sic of the 1doon lighters will conclude Ute e\•ening. Bakery Goods Bolster Sale Browsers will find a selec· lion of clothes, furniture, ap- pli ances. kitchen ware a baked goods at an annual rummage sale sponsored by the El Camino Real Junior \Voman's Club on Friday and Saturday , May 8 and 9. Doors of the Dana Point Community House will open from noon to 5 p.m. on Friday and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday . Special b a k e r y lte1ns v.'ill be featured y,·ith coffee a va il a ble for customers. Those wishing to donate llems may ca ll ~1rs. Edward Russell,. 493-3200. -... .. ) ( • llttrod.Dd:nl • lfKI Dew CC11cq1 bl IJ" beauty, n.UTTD LAIHESI . ey .. lashet tbat art tndhida1ll7 applied. n.t1TTEI: L~ will enh&llOI th• beautf of &JI)' woman. they sn 11.011· •llerge111c. proleu:hma.117 1pplied to your 01~1ri •Y• l11h1t. tad 1tyl1d lo your • leatut•. •snrinl 7011 tht 01tara.I looL 011c1 JOI b••• WOtll them. JO" will nn1r fO back to old-l1sllion.d mfps tblt baft to bt remo•IMI llightlJ hrtreUotOl'f Price '10. Npluly "' " qipohdmaad oo)J crifrlcg lfP CfJealf!,i(ul uJiUt., Plutter Clashes ; jects. litany opinions get aired. Be attentive-and analytical. Don't jump to conclusions. El:- cltement ls not ne<"essarily I°"'. VIRGO f Aug. 23-Sept. 221: Accent on surge in pro- fe ssional activities. Don't get caught in middle of lover's c:iuarrel. Try to be neutral. Othenvise, you could be cast as villain. f\i e!&ge clear by tonight. LIBRA IS.pt. 23-0ct. 22): Open new horizons. There is no need to feel restricted. con· fined. Elevate self~steem . Call or letter today shows you the way. Look beyopd surfAce ind ications. Plan j o u r n e y , vacation . SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov . 21): Luxury items could dent budget. But you should know gratitude toward one who aid· ed in past. Means spend to bring joy. But do some shop- ping. You can locate genuine bargain . SAG1ITARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): Sho\f of affection on your part could correct m i sunderstanding involving one close to you. Area of chart related to marriage, permanent ties is emphasized. Nothing halfway today. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Works u r rounding s become more i nteresting. Those you take for granted could come up with some surprises. Routine changes. As soci a t e makes an- Peering Around 1'11TCH VOGEL, a young actor from Costa Mesa. will be the featured entertaiher \Vednesday, May 13, during a father-daughter party in St. Joseph liospilal. Vogel has appt'ared In "The nounceme11t which could result in travel . AQUARIUS (Jiln. 20-Feb. 18): Emotional r eac ti o n s dominate. Express yourself. Romance is highlighted. You may also have to deal "''ith youllf persons who ha ve some definite and unusual ideas. PISCF..s (Feb. 19·~~rch 20 ): Environment is lively: home b as e co uld undergo transformation. Day features plenty of variet y. If you 've been bored, today provides co1npensalion. You may ha ve more than \'OU can handle. IF TO .DAY IS YOUR BIRTllDAY you are really a serious th inker. introspectiv~. even lhQugh many could be :surprised al this description of you. II\ June. your status changes-financially and emo- liooally. To flfwl out wl'IO'f lucky !or ""' In mont~ and lo•~. oroer 5Ydn~v Om•rr's bookie!, "Stcre! HIM$ lo• Men '"" Womtn." S..C"" blr!nd.ie Ind lO c1n11 ID Om•" A1trok>QV raultless. ~ Lets you take ironin& ejlsy LITTLE GUYS 'N DOLLS S!'Crtfs, Ille OAtL.V PILOT, eoa n -. Gri ne! C1n1t1I Sl•llon, New Yorll, N.Y. 10011. DRESSY~ PANT·SUITS • tbty're here in an u:dusive >:JI? mowm, expttafy ~ for Mother's Oq. Con1fort t•fothr~ with a you1liji1l /.uok. Yo11 can 't j11id 'em an_i• other p/acl! in ~o n1..1n1• color:t •11J Sf)'fe.r A M"Y Mackenzie Boutique Original ATllNtn SHOP NEWPORT BEACH J:JI faalll111 111•14 COSTA MESA H•r~ Slloppl .. C-ttt GARDEN GROVE o, ..... Pia• ORANGE TN City' CHILDREN'S HAIR STYLING Pi.ln11eM1 kilsor styllftt Diiiy t " I -C .. 1MI Ml-lotl111 'O• AP'J'Ol"TMINT 64.l·lllt Costa Mew Reivers" and Disney's 130 E. 17th St. ~~~·;:v:'.'1 "Menace on the Mountain"\~;:::::::;::::::::::::~::::::::::~~~~~~~ in addition to dozens of stage:li-- n1otion picture and television appt'arances. ' ARRIVING TODA y I "I Houston lor the 1970 Assembly of Wo1nen 's Society of Chris· tian Service for the Costa f\1esa First United Methodist Church are three a r e a delegates. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Cook 'and J\1rs. Virginia Wedesweller will partipate in programs in Sam Houston Co l iseum , foll owed by visits with friends and relatives on the return trip. CM Auxiliary Free clown circus Fe•turing Powdy the Clown ihe kiddios fevorito performtr in his speci•I ''Silly C ircus''-thurs·fri· 'et M•y 7-8-9 fr•• on th• mall efternooni •+ 1-2-3-4. 8rin9 the children for fun end frolic at Huntington Cent1r, 8•ach an4' The thi rd 111ursday of the 1nonth members of t he Amer ican Legion Auxiliary, Costa Mesa Unit 455 gather in the American Legion Hall at 8 p.m. ~~~~~~~ Edingor et Sen Diego Fr11wey H!: ' ~ ---- H11tl .. t•• Cnt.t IHC.ll • 141"fl" H11tl11tt•1 a..cJil lf.1·1111 Two rings for two lovers . . . both rings • $88.00 1.4·korot white oi yellow gold. Illus· trations enlarged. Emy credil terms• 1tudent occount' ovoilobl1 •up to 12 months to Pat lonkAmericard • Mo.Per Charge "The Storti That Confidence Built" Ope11 Mff.. Thurs., Fri. TUI t p.m. H•Mr SMff' .. c- JJOO H..Mr ~f'll, C"NM..41 141·f411 ·. ·~· . :· I H Wtdntsday, May b, 1970 !Students and Parents Take Year-end . . Bow ' • . '.College Vw .. PTO • Mn. Rkbard Hegle President :coMING UP: lnslallati:in nf officers will hig hl i ght general meeting Tuesday, May 12. at 7:30 p.1n. Recognition a\\1ards "'ill be presented to outstanding students as "·ell as parents : and other indiv id.uals who : have assistltd the sCbool. :nEPORTS:'olrteel'I el&t~ at : general meithig are Gene : Hartnell. president; I h e : Mmes. Eugene Sbow and : Olarles G r a f f • vice : preslden~and Keno et h ~ Davis Md Jim :be•. secret.aries... Principal,.Cecil Klee will Serve as thir-a vice president and Paul Tayne as treasurer. Bu 11 Ines s meeting was folklwed by open house and showing of films of students al EDU-70 exhibit in Huntington Center. Cook PTA ~1rs. Robert Eurs President COMING UP-: Executive board will meet tomorro\w at 7:30 p.m. in the teachers' room ... Final uni\ meeting of the school year will -take place at 7:30 p.m. Pt1onday, May 18, in the cafetorium. liigh1ight \\till be presen- tation of a fashion show in honor of the room mothers. Dwy er PTA !t1rs. Ray l'ityers President COMING UP: First Wlit meeting or newly formed PTA will take place al 7:30 p.m. Monday, May II, in the auditorium. Parents are urged to attend. Relreshments will be serv- ed. REPORTS: PTA is collecting redemption stamps. Banana Carnival Booths Open for Games splits will be awarded the homeroom class collecting tht' most . , . VolWlteers are needed to make teaching aids. Workers meet in the curriculum laboratory the last Tuesday and Wednesday of each month. Further In- formation may be obtained b\i contacting Mrs. Terry Smith at 968-2432 before 8 p.m. Fulton PTO Pttrs. Robert Welch President C0~11NG UP: PTO-sponsored bowling league will participate in sweepstakes bowling day Tuesday, 1.tay 12. Trophies will be awarded and refr es hment s served ... Summer bowling league will meet at 9 a.m. Tuesday. May 26, in Kona Lanes. Costa Mtsa. Weekly bowling fee will be $2.30 and portion of proceed's will be donated to PTO. Babysit- ling \l'ill be available. REPORTS : Sales Of U.S. sav· Striped carnival booths will se'I tile mood for a PT A·sponsored Candy Cane Circus taking place Saturday, :rt1ay 16 in Eader School. P a rticipating in a kame booth are Valerie Ahrn s and Kurt Pethtel. Mrs. B. D. Pethtel is carnival chairman. '\ i I I ' 'ii ' I Sunny Day's Ahead for Sun View School in&S stamps will continue in school each Wednesday until Atay 27, according to Mrs. James Sealey, chairman . . . Committees are being organized to han- dle arrangements for Junt' graduation ... Annual PTO bake sale netted more than $50, according to Mrs. Clyde Eaton , hospitalit y c hairman ... PTO has donated $140 for purchase or physical fitness awards patches. Pate.hes will be presented to more than 200 students from fdth through eighth grades who com- plt'ted the tests satisfac- torily , . , PTO members are assisting w i l h bobby-sox softball games. Public is in- vited and can obtain scheduling lnfonnation by contacting James Lilly. Meadow View PTA Mrs. l\farion Harris President 180 bicycles v.·ere licensed oo; by the police departn1ent during the re<.'f:nt Bicycle Safety \Yeek. Trophy win- ners with highest scores in the bike ratly were Tunmy Renaldo. Dana· Br am e l , Barbara Mille1', Karen Stein, Timmy Trueman, J a y Peters. Alan Gerslen and John Golonka. In charge of arrangements ' were S g t , James Mahan, of the Hun- 1ington Beach Po I i c e · Department and M r s • Stanley Hettinga, s a I e l y chairman. Schroeder PTA Mrs. Charles Spade President COMING UP: Last u n It meeting of the school year is scheduled Monday, May 11, in the mullipu~ room. Keeping in Time With i\fusic will be theme of the meeting, and a mu sical pro- gram will be presented by the school choir and in• strumental groups. F I a g ceremonles "·ill be C()(l.. ducted by student council. and sirlh grade. r o o m molhers V.'itl serve a s -' hostesses. Mrs. Frank \Vask is program chainnan. REPORTS: IC! cream social and talent show took place last Friday under the direc- tion of Mrs. Robert Norton and Mrs. Oliver Cushing. Pina ta Holds Cinco Surprises REPORTS: Capt. Douglas D' Arnall or the HWltington Beach Lifeguard 0e9art- ment presented a program on beach safety al unit meeling yesterday. Students from fifth through eighth grades aUe.nd!Jd , .. Officer~ installed during a luncheon meeting in thi:i Golden Sails Inn are the Mmes. Marion Harri.s, president; Carl Tho- mle, first vice president; Kenneth Cubbison, secretary; Frank Zangger, Tamura PTO Breaking a pinata lo open a Cinco de Mayo Fiesta al Tamura School are (left to right) Mrs. Manuel Sianez, Gloria Zepeda and \Vendell Edwards, pf'in. cipal. Proceeds from the festival taking place Saturday, May 9, between noon and 6 p.m. will benefit a special gifts list. There will be Mexican food booths, hot dogs, soft drinks, coffee, dessert and game booths . treasurer, and T h o m a ~ l'itn. Birch Matthews Neilon, historian. Also in-President students. Volunteers "'ho June dinner dance to honor grade com petition ... Recent· stalled were Ned Jones, se-COMING UP: Gener a 1 assisted PTO will be 1970 graduates. Jy named as members.of the cond vie! president; Jame:> meeting will take place al honored al a '!loc:al, and REPORTS: Forty· n i n e per pet u a I membenhip ~~~ang j as aud+~'antv~rt~ 7:30 p.m. Thursday, May a perpetual membership students who participated in a\\'ard commiuee are the It Twelve drama and art award presented ... l.1rs. the district science fa ir were l.f mes. \Viii Romine , Rich· Par Ii am ent.arian. Mrs. scholarships and presiden-James Buddingh, graduation feted by PTO with ice ard Gillum, Buddi ngh, Chris Gilbert Turnbull served as tial physical £ilness awards party chainnan, r e p or I s cream. Student \Viii Gil bert Schneider and Clay Stew- installing officer. Special will be presented to plan! arc Wlder'o'·ay for a \\'OO third place in the fifth n1on. guests were George ------'-------'--------'---------'---------'--------- Williams, principal, and Dr. Clarence H a 1 I , superin- tendent of schools for Ocean View School Di.strict. Robinwood PFO Atrs. Lee Mock President COi\tlNG UP: Annual spring carnival, rummage sale and dime-a-dip dinner will t.ake place Saturday, May 16. Anyone wishing to assist wilh arrangements m a y contact Mrs. Lee A1oc k at 89'l-6442. lnJ1v1du all:' 'o''ishi nl to donate i.u:niT'l:iJ!c should con tact ~trs. J ack Harris at 897·8794 . HEPORTS: General meeting took place hul night in the cafeto-.·inm ... More t h a n Mrs. Jaycees Huntington Beach ~I r s . Jayetts meet the second Mon- day of the manlh at a p.m. Location infonnation may be received by telephoning Mrs. Michael Brooks, 53&-7022. • Sun VieW' School ls partic ipating in the ~luntington lleacll ~rdlnating Council Festival Saturday, May 23, from 9 . a .m . to i P·'!'· on the civic ce nter SJte. Helping butld a booth are M rs. Henry Knack, chainnan: Michele Burgard , and J hn Bu rgard. pres ide n1 of the school's PFO. The booth's thctnc. which also is the theme of the PFO, Is Sunny D~rs 1\hcad. FA~MION ISLAND N£:WPORT IEACH HUNTINGTON CENT[R HUNTINGTON IEACH SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA ME SAi Fo11•••a-.n V';tlley . EDITIOl'I To¥y's Final N.t'. Stoeks .; . VOL 63 , NO. 1,08, 4 SECTIONS , 82 fAGE~ ORANGE cq~, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 1970 TEN CENTS Huntington Hot Wire Iffils Man A carpenter tried to sit up and1gasped ''What happened?" after apparently receiving a series of shocks while work· leg a 110.-volt power saw at a construction sJte in downtown Huntington Beach this morning. · Then he slumped back and died - despite mouth·to-mouth resuscitation and heart massag.e by site workett and the Huntington Beach Fire Department's rescue team. The man, Reyna Cantu, about 30, of 6251 Marshall Ave .• Buen11 Park, was Pronounced dead at Huntington Intercom- inunity Hospital. Police officers were examing the saw and cable to see if it possibly had a faulty ground wire. The tragedy happened on a Jot at 425 13th St. A plumber, Richard Osbome, 15972 Willett Lane, Huntington Beach, told the story. "\Ile heard him cry out. Then three or four of us ran · over and yanked the wire from the portable generator. We pulled him out of the trench, and threw a blanket over him. "He was breathing and seemed all right. He wanted to 5it up and said somelhing like 'what happened?' and then he slumped back.'' Osborne a p p I i e d mouth-to-mouth resuscitation while others called the fire department, The four-man fire resCue team used fli portable resu'Scitator and also applied ~nal heart massage. Fireman John Pafk rode in the ambulance to the hoseital continuing the resu scitation efforts but Cantu did not recover. wwkers at the site said they knew Canfu had a family, but ~y did not know him well. "He just joined us a couple of weeks ago ," Osborne said. ' Marina Finds .- Cash in Trash, Figl1ts Pollution Students of Marina High School, Hun· 1ington Beach, believe they have found cash in trash. They hope to sell a budding businessman on the idea and thus help 50lve the pollution problem. The idea, says Miss Dolores Decastro, a teacher. is to persuade homeowners to separate newspapers from normal trash so it can be collected for reclama· lion. 1'-1iss DeCastro and members of Students for Ecological Action .have won the moral su pport of the city cooncil on the plan. Miss DeCastro said that in an ex- periment the students collected 570 pounds of nev.·spapers from 45 nomes. "This would make a total of a 185--ton wastage every week," she said. "There is an agency in Santa Ana tha~ will pay $12 for a ton and we tecko_n that for the entire city that a gros,, income of $2,000 a week could be made." . Councilmen pointed out that the . dif· ficulty would be in persuading homeowners to separate newspapers and bundle them but commended the effort and instructed the city staff to w~k wilh the students to see if something coold be worked out. Holdup Suspects Jailed in Grove After Fistfi ght .Garden Grove police jailed four annEid robbery suspects early this morning after a free.for-all fight · in a motel room where the men were found afler a rob- bery of two bar owners. Officers said Fos~r Slyh, f)3, of Santa Ana, and Vernon Cherry. 52, of Santa Fe Springs, were held up ~y a "!an carrying a riOe in front of their Ebbt.ide Bar at 12771 Harbor Boulevord, about 2 a.m. 'llle suspect is Michael P. ~lla-Mag­ giora, 19, of Garden Grove. Pohce w~re told that an armed man was seen gomg into the Fire Station Inn motel, 1262$ llarbor a few minute$ later. Officers Gerald Lobb ;ind Allan Herbach approached the motel r001n where the quartet were heard engaged in a loud argument. When police .entered the room • rough 11nd tumble fight broke <lUt. Finally sub- dued and jailed -0n suspicion of armed robbery end rtsistlng arrest \\'Crt Della· Maggiore and Michael E. Elliot. 22. l\llc:hael J. GaddiJ , ll, and William A, Scott, 22, all of Cardeo-Crove. Ul'I Telt1>110to UCLA DEMONSTRATOR TAKEN INTO CUSTODY BY POLICE Fist Fights, Broken Windows, Smell Fires et Westwood Campus Cambodia Brings J?~bate At Valley Coiincil l~et By TERRY CQ\IIU.E or tll9 o.u., l"llar tt•tf .. ' The Vietnam war led to a rew mufOed volleys in Fountain Valley Tuesday night as city councilmen considered a resolu- tion supporting the President's war policies. It was started by Vice Mayor John Harper, who said, "Three months ago the council supported the President's actionS"by resolution. I'd like to see us do it again." "Art you aSking us to support the President's efforts to end the war or his sending toops to Cambodia?" Coun- cilman Ron Sh.enkman quickly asked. "I think the troops to Cambodia are part of effort to end it," Harper replied. Shenkman shot back, "I'm strongly against this. It's a very CQntroversial item and you're asking five city coun- cilfuen to say that 32.000 people support Nixon's action. 1 don't feel that's so. Shots Fired At Truck Guard Shots were fired late Tuesday night at the Consolidated F r e i g h t w a y s warehouse at 2200 N. Batavia Ave., Orange. Police believe the shooting is connected with the wildcat strike -0£ teamsters in Orange County. Target of the bullets from a speeding car was a nigbt guard at the racility. He aAd 25 other men working at the plant were not injured. The Santa Fe Springs plant in· Los Angeles County · of the same trucking firm has been the target of 'violence and vandalism since the wildcat strike started in April 3. You're asking the cooncil to concern itself with national pO!lcy~" Harper tried to overcome Shenkman'• objections by prcrposiog ·a general resolu· tjon supporting the President, but making no reference to Cambodia. ··u it's going to be that general then why have one," retoi;ted Shenkman, reminding the council that a sim ilar resolution was passed three months ago. Mayor Just added his sentiment! to ShenkfM.n's, "I share his view. It doesn't say anything." "Are we going to enter the battle between Congress and the President?" Just asked Harper. "We should Jet Congress know how we feel," answered Harper_ At this point. recently elected Coun- cilman Albert Hol!inden, a reti red Air Force· officer, offered a suggestion. "As a new couricilman rd like to reaffirm our support of the President. As to specific strategy oo how to end the war I'd prefer to let the President decide that," said H o 11 i n d e n diplomatically. Just tried to carry the peace-making one step further with a proposal that a reS<llution be drawn up and presented at the next council sessioo. His motion lost 4-1. - "set what , happens when you try to be a peacemaker," Shenkman joked. Harper then moved for a resolution supporting the President. Shenkman said, "I'm really shocked. Five grown men trying to pass someLhing already passed. You're trying to say something else. If you want to talk about Cambodia -!ay it!" The vote' was Harper, Hollinden and George Scott favoring the resolution; Just opposed and Shenkml!ll abstaining, saying he voted on it ·three months ago. Group Asking City Aid U.CLA UriderCurhs Police Break Up Wild Demonstratwn !,\JS ANGELES (UPI} -Scores ol police patrolled near and oA the UCLA campus early today following a three- hour window smashing spree and violent confrontation betwkn antiwar protestors and officers. At least 74 persons were arrestfl(I and 16 injured. AcUng ChaJ1cellor David S a x o n declared a state of campus emergency Tuesday after a rally of about 2,000 persons turned to fist fights and the starting of small fires. A .force -Of 250 city police officers moved onto the campus and cleared an area around the men 's gym after several scuffles and a series of window breaking. ~ The building_ houses classrooms and the ROTC -Offices, focal point of the students protesting against· American in· volvernent in Cambodia and the slay ing oC four students at Kent State in Ohio. PQlice ·stationed themselves at in- tersections surrounding the campus after it was reported quiet at 8 p.m. and Jet persons leave, but nobody was allowed to enter dutiAg the night. or those arrested, including 12 women and two professors, 11 were charged wlth misdemeanors while 13 were booked on felorties, including a!lsault agalnst a policeman. Authorities said-12 students were treated for minor injuries and four cam· pus guards and a city policeman sus- tained minor injuries. City Police Chief Edward . M. Davls mobilized the entire Los Angeles depart.. ment aJld patrols in all parts of the city were doubled. Davis said his acti-0n would remain in effect until t•a stalt of peace is obvious." Protests also erupted at San Fernando Valley State and the University of California at Santa Barbara. At UCSB, sheriff's dE:puties and highway patrolmen Were called to the campW'l when an estimated 1,000 stude nta galhered in front -0f the administration building following a rally. U.S. Opens 3 New Fronts Biggest Operation of War Po1irs Into Cambodia SAIGON (UPJ) -The United States and South Vieblam launched three new offensives into cambodia today in the biggest allied operation of the war. An armada of U.S. Navy river patrol boats moved into Cambodian territory to join the 50,000 allied troops involved. The three new drives crossed the bon:ler In areas ranging from 65 miles northwest to 95 miles north of Saigon and were preceded by massive aeriat assaults using bombs and napalm which wiped out the town of Snuol where some l.OQUng by American troops was. reoorl<d. .. "''".. . ' . OM' * 'ttlalft tiiday w~ by 1 4,SGO,ma lask .. lori:e ~ the ~ U.S. ' 0 This Is the Roof That Hall Built Without Oka y T·he tile roof Dist. Supt. Clarence llall bulll over the new Vista V·iew School cou ld easily have come crashing down on his head . Ocean View District trustees Jeanie.4 Tuesday that he had ordered construction of the roof wiLhout their authority. At Tuesday's trustee session, Dr. llall finally asked them for approval. "Since it's already installed, we might as well termiaate our discussion," was the reaction of'Trustee Robert Knox. Dr. Hall, who was forgiven by the trustees, explained he took the roof slnee another company, who had been charged with su pplying the roof tiles, couldn 't deliver the product on time. "We would have held up a significant portion of the job if we would have waited two weeks for the board meeting," he explained. "Right now two weeks don 't seem like much. But it was two weeks with good weather and two weeks without stri kes." "Frankly, I'd feel a little more ir· ritated if I'd found out that the roof hadn't been installed," replied Knox. "That's exactly the way I reacted when I was told about it," said Dr. Hall , making sure everyone understood his comment was a joke. STOCK MARKET NEW YORK (AP) -The stoCk market pulled back from Its steep early gain but remained on the upswing this afternoon. Trading was moderately active .. (See quotaUons, Pages 26-27). Infantry Division into the Dog's Head sector 65 miles northwest of Saigon. At least 43 Communist troops and four Americans were killed in the first hours of the sweep. Two of the Americans were killed when U.S. artillery rounds fell short of th.eir target in the initial stage!! of the operation. This brought U.S. casualties in Ule multi·ptonged offensive to 30 killed and 70 wounded. At least 50 -U.S. Navy river patrol boats, heavily armed 50-foot vessell, moved Into Cambodia alons the Kham Spe~ River " part· of UU. •PW• ...... Kaylor . r~. '"1ey ran into C4;rn· lhunist fire ·t:NO miles iri11ide Clnibodill but casualties were not known. The second drive tOO.ay crossed the frontier 95 miles north -0f Saigon and the third was about 80 miles north of Saigon near the Loe Ninh district town. Both areas are north of the Fishhook area where allied troops have ~en searching for a Communist central headquarters for six days. U.S. military officials said the of· fensives, oraered by President Nixon to wipe out Communist sanctuaries across the border, have killed :i,800 .Com- munist troops, captured , 6,000 weapons, selied or destroyed 700 tons of food and munitjo~ and ~ tr~~ . ~ destroyed h~reds of bunkers. and base camps. Hufttington Teachers Decide to Negotiate By RUDI NfEDZIE~KI 01 '"" 01lly l'lkot Still Teachers of t)\e Huntington Beach Union High School District decided Tues· day to press on with their negotiations with district trustees for higher wages and better fringe benefits. fl.1eeting in the Edison Hiih School gymnasium, representatives or t h e District Educators Association (DEA), selected as their next move a counter- proposal which includes an 11-step salary rauge of $7,400 to $15,300. To date the trustees have offered a Huntington Sued Over Cycle Wreck: A seriously injured motorcyclist and · his crippled passenger have sued the city of Huntington Beach and a con- slruction company for '50(),000 in a Superior C-Ourt suit that .charges the defendants with negllgeiice. John Lance Young and Edward Arthur Drouillard name the city and the Sully Miller Contracting Co. as responsib'le for road conditions -On Goldenwest AvenJJe last Sept.' 15 that led to the pair being flung from Drouillard's machine. . Both men argue. that there was no warning sign posted to indicate the presence of ro&d construction or the seven.foot-<leep trench into which the motorcycle was driven. ., ' '' . . ' ' ' . ! • ' ' 11· $7,293 starting pay with a $14,586 ce.ilin& in II steps. District Superintendent Max Forney said the proposals would probably be discussed at the next negotiating session this Thursday. Although teachers and trustees are quite close on the beginning and ending salaries, the teachers want their pay doubled after ten years of service with the district. The trustees have held out for 11 years. other areas of disagreeme11t include fringe benefits. substitution pay , work credit for · teachers new to the district, .sabbatical leave pay and allocatio111 of funds for summer curriculum workshops. DEA President Carl Manemann said the teachers are anxious to end negotia· tions by May 15, the date tenured i11- struct-0rs are expected to sign their con· tracts for the coming school year. "They would like to know h<>w much they're going to be working for . Yo11 wouldn 't agree to work without knowing how much you're being paid, would you?'' he asked newsmen. Last Week Manemann said the purpose of the Edison meeting would be to "either ralify a proposal" or look for altemati\19 solutions." The choice was to continue negotia.. lions. Last year the SOO.member DEA chose a work-slowdown and walkout. Orange Coast -\\'eather Youth-Faces Brunt of Council. Ire 1 tf. ,you like today's weather, yoU'll 'Jove Ttiursday's since it's another d-0se of the same stuff - low Coaat.al clouds and hazy sun-li~~iie, wit h a top mercury reading of 70 degrees. By ALAN DIRXIN Of tilt O*'IY f'lklt S•ff Had he been named Daniel, SamJl'ion might have felt he was in the lions' de ' ' •• In fact, J5-year<0ld James 5ampso", vice chairman 'Of the Youtli Coalition Committee, had stepped into t h e maelstrom of municipal affair!l ~nd he can hatdly have found anything biblical about it.. Sampson went be£ore the Huntington Beach City Council Mold~y to esk for $.1,000 lor the committee to stage a summer musical. What he cot was a tongue lashing for the abasence of a cost breakdown. Councilman Al Coen led the 1ttack. "What we want is · a well documented " proposal," he &aid. "I'm rei~·r 1'tO allocate $3,000 without a proper prtJpot~ The purpose of the committee .1& t.t· encourage youths to Work a! adults-anf that's a lesson you will have to learn." I S~mpson told the council that ~ ductioAs being considered are "The King and I," "The Music Man , '1 or "Wtst Side Story" and that the committee wanted to hire Rick Schraier, a Loa Alamitos .school teacher, as the produetr. He said that his organization was btlort the council at an early stage in the planning because lt was anxious to begin work on recruUing fOcal youngsters to I.Ake part In the effort. From the podium. the Huntington Beach High School oophnmore told Coon· cllman Coen, "I reepect )'tlW' opin!w, I I ' . , . ' "oot r idon't thinkr u·.~ec'eslary to fet all the~ det8il.s oa how· we tel.I tickets or """''iii! :it!a•«pol\•r., \o.. ...,,, . · -, . 00;,;\ '.liolr ,jj.c11 >'IM~~;nt to lie · bblcod. fh•r• mfplera. :\'oer ,l'.'oblem Is ·,1o .· ;ef If.,,. hie :•nct .. yiu haveri 'I 1 done-lhaL,. . Other councilmen joined in the arjticiltn, though emphasizing that their complaint& were aimed at the commJttee as a whole ind adult advlstr1 and not SllmpOon personally. Councilman Ted Bartlett regretted that monty was lost on 1 rock festival presented by the group last year adding, "If we have lo put up $3,000 and only 200-300 people show up tt am expenslYe.11 The rock !estlval coat '9,000 last yeftr and receipts amounted to only '31000. ·1: 'tit:fi .. I . . 1il·iiorbaJiuict ~ ·16,000: ' ': ' ' ~!>'l'fh!>~-'"(~·· .. ...,i '\'d kid,~,tronr.po! of the area Wo/llng ~· llunt<er• h.5t ye.f .,.. ·beca,... :b;.. 8!e onz~sih:eee!:r~. d~. =~: mutt know now." · But Coen -and Mn. Norma Gibbs aym • pathlzed with Sampson for taking the brunt of the crtUcism. "It's quite an indoctrlnatioo for you, Jim,'' Mrs. Gibbs 1&id. "I feel for you and I feel the council is with you. 1 reel you have ~ put on the spot." On a motkm by Councilman Jack Green. the council pMlponed acuon for two weeks unUI a budget 11 tubmltted and a majority ol. tbt ldlillt 1dviaer1 ii heanl !rom. ~SIDE TODAY Orange County's weekend Uve theater fare -and the county'1 five entries in the Riv- tTsidt one-act tournament-are detailed today. Sec Entertain- ment, Pages 28·29. .. 111111 U Mltllllt1 ll Clll,.rt1i. t .......... !Wt ,.,_ Clf"l!ltf 11 Mutull ,.,,., • CPIHl!lllt Ut 1 NlltfMI filllW'I • .., Cl1u111111 swt Ortllff Ctutll'f II Clmk• Joi ,,.,. ,. cm1..,. M 1-" •tt DHll'I Ntlkts 11 Or. Sit/~""'"' 11 •lflltrltl "IJll ' Sttdl Ml111th N41 •11ttrtl lllllltll1 tt<tt Ttlt•ltlM • ll'TMl!tf ff.f7 Tlttolli.n »ft ,....._ IJWll!tlt!' t "~" LI"''" Joi Wl'llH Whft tf AUi... ' Wtll'!WI """' J>h Ml9 Ill l.,Vltol >JI Wltlll ,._.. t.I _% DAil Y PILOT H W-.i.t. MQ 6. 1970 ~r----------..---------~ • Eve n Co1111cil Meetings Can Be Entertaining By ALAN DJRKIN 01 ""9 0.UJ P'l191 Sllff SlmNG IN on coun<'il meetings in fluntington Beach is not fun, but It's sometimes funny. Nol often, just sometimes. However in a six-hour session lhose limes add up. Nol to mu l'h, they just add up. Donald Shipley, master of the dangling metaphor, usually manages to get a few ringing references to wildlife in, if he is not e:c:tolling the virtues of the way they do things in Britain. A case of going from the sublime to the cor' blimey. l\1rs. Norma Gibbs was the most entertaining Mon- day night. tn addition to voling, she was joking. AT t~IVE l\1CNUTES to midnight, for example, she wrus able to remark, when told that the council had acted on a 73-page sign ordinance in haste, that she could not conceive of the coon-· cil doing anything in haste. As the clock struck one, or thereabouts, Mrs. Gibbs stopped Mayor Shiplry In mid-breath when he assumed that the council would agret to an auto dealer's request for a delay in an appeal for an office building addition. "Why assume that?" she asked. innocenUy. "Well, we usually do when requested," the surpriaed civic leader re- spooded. "It's a courtesy, I can th.ink of no other reason." Mrs. Gibbs voted against the delay. THE NEW COUNCIL member came up \\'ilh an original name for the proposed central park when George McCracken asked his colleagues to con- sider jolnlly honoring Ted Bar1.1ett and Mayor Shipley when It cornea time to name the recreation area. "Barship?" she suggested. THE HIGH POINT in hilarity came early in the evening when Al Coen proposed that no council member be pennitted to abstain from voting. City attorney Don BOnta advise9 31aiMt it saying such 811 edict would be unenforceable. "If a councilman isn 't allowed to abstaih, he simply will get up and go get a cup of coffee and get out of it that way." .Bonfa's observation on the difficulty of enforcement appeared shrewd when it came lime lo vote on Coen's resolution. THE J\.IAJORITY voted against requiring compulsory voting, but Jerry Malney delivered the most telling blow. He ahot his hand up and cried, "I abstain." 'Attitudes C:hange' Irvine Not Ob jetting To Bay Swap Bo™;l Vote The Irvine Company has 1\() objection • to Orange County Supervisor Alton E. Allen's proposal to put to a public vote · -a bond issue to buy from the company ·. the private lands surrounding Upper Newport Bay. lrvine C.Omp.any President Wllll•m R. lltason !aid public purchase ls an alternative to the land exchange pending in court that would reallgn property lines creating public parks a n d waterways and separate private parcels. Ownership of state tidelands entrusted to the county for development and of Women Urged To Shape Up Women of all ages can begin sh.aping up for the summer months by ienrolting In a .. slimnasUcs" exercise class to be offered by the Huntington Beach YMCA. Taught by a professional, the eight· week course is designed for women who wish to loose and redistribute weight. firm and tone muscles and generally improve their fitness levtl. The Thursday morning classes begin al 10 a.m. June 4. Tuesday and Thursday evening aessions .start at 7:30 p.rn. May 18. Registration fees are $5 for Y members and $9 for non-members, both payable at the YMCA, 17931 Beach Boulevard, Suite R. DAILY PILOT OllAffGt: COAST PUIL1$HIHG·COMP.IK'I' R.11.ert N. W.1e4 l"ruld9!t eul l"utllbr!w J.,k R. Curl•v ~,, ..... 1!.0111•• A. Mu,,1ii;~• M""'\11111 E•itM Al~•rl W. J1t1• ._kl, E•llw Hnff..,_ .._. Offk• 17175 l e1(h l.1Yl,w1rd M1iri11t Addt.1•1: P.O. 111 19Q, -916.Ct """'.,.,." ~ l11dl: J%f FOl'UI ......... Ct•" MRI: no wi11 11 • ., s1r,.1 ~ l•Kk' n 11 w111 l1!11ot1 1...,1...,. '-" Cll.-t1: XIJ N•tk El c ...... llMI Irvine Company uplands, islands and patent lands is now jumbled. Mason said since discussions on Upper Bay development first began nea rly 20 years ago, the Irvine Company has been Wonned by county officials they did not believe the public would support land purchase. ''But public attitudes do change with time," Mason said. "Perhaps the public is now prepared to buy land, instead of exchanging it. But I don't know . Nobody knows. In November, we may find out." Mason said in the meantime, so the public may be assured of an a1temative, pending litigation testing the con· stitutionality of the land trade !hould proceed. He remarked that he doesn't think it Y.'ould be in the public interest to permit the proposed bond election to become ''an all-ot-nothing issue." Either way, he said, "the citizens of Orange County are entitled to a positive solution tG Upper Bay develop- ment, which has been stalemated for 20 years." Council Repeals Anti-bike Rule In Huntington Pedal cyclists will be able to take easy Mdes up and down the service road by Huntington Beach's city beach this summer. The council has re.pealed an ordinanct Y.'hidl banned riding bicycle• on the road between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. from June 15 to Sept. 15. "\Ye've had no accipent.s in five years,0 Harbors and Beadles Director Vlnce· ~1oorhouse ex;ilained. "Instead we've received a demand lor ill use ao we are repealtng it." Continuing the recreational lheme, there was also discussion on parks at the council meeting. The council agreed to combine and ·rename the Farquhar and Crcle parks downtown into ·the Jamf!I s. Farquhar Park. Parks and recreatlro director Norm Worthy said th3t a public street recently was moved allowing the combining of the parks. The council alBG approved dedication ceremonies for four new park! on May 22 at the following Umes: Joseph R. Perry Park In the eut-central arl!a at l ::KJ a.m .; the Lois and Hany Le.Bard Park JD lbe soutbea&t at 10:30 1.m.- the James S. Farquhar Part at I: 15 p.m. and the John A. ?.furdy Jr. P•k Jn lht north at 2:30 p.m. Buddy Poppy Sale Set Citizens of Huntington B~ach art: urged IG buy Buddy Popp!~ to raJBe fund~ for the Veterans of l''orelgn W11ir1. A eity prnclamation sets ~1ay 22 and "3 as the da)"I when the poppies wtll be on sale. At the Ready Pipes for new sewer line slacked along Slater Avenue and Springdale Street in Huntinston Beach appear like cannon ready to fire a broadside. Thirty· si x-inch pipes are just waiting to be placed under· ground, however. New line is being laid to replace older, inadequate one. About 15,000 feet of pipe will be laid from Edinger,Avenue to Springdale Street, down Springdale to Slater A venue and along Slater to Goldenwest Street, whe re line will feed into lift station. Murder Trial . Motion Rejec ted ; Evidence Okay A motion for lhe supre~ion of evidence by two of three men accused of the killi111g of a Fountain Valley market clerk was dismissed Tuesday in Superior Court. Judge James F. Judge denied the motion made on behalf of Jerry Lee Johnson, 18, of 11471 Titus St. and Robert Woodrow Clements, 21, of 14811 Alcester St., both of Westminster, with the com- ment: "You doo't have a right to expect privacy In a jail." Both me11 are accused vrith Herman J . Grant, %2, of Santa A11a, of the slaying last Feb. 15 of James W. Oatell. 57, of Garden Grove. Oates, who wu assistant manager of the Tic Toe market, 9457 Heil St., was gunned down during an alleged armed robbery of the premises by the accused trio. All three were captured in 'Garden Grove following a gun batUe with police. A1 allegedly btcriminating conversation between Johnson and Clements was recorded by Fountain Valley police and its proposed use by the prosec4tion Jed to the motion thrown out TueSday by Judge Judge. Judge Judge agreed to physical and psychiatric examinations for Johnso11t ud psychiatric evaluation of Clements before further court action is ordered. Grant has pleaded not guilty to murder and armed robbery charges and a July 27 trial date has been scheduled for the trio. School Boundary Cl1ange Proposal Brings Concern Slashes on Margin Curbs Push Stock Market Up NEW YORK (UPI) -Wall S\reet responded enthusiastically today to a major slash in the mlnlmum amount of cash required for purchasing stock. At the end of the first hour of trading on the New York Stock E1change ad- Beach Volunteers Nearing an End The fam ilia r s6und of the civil aetense siren calling volunteer f i rem en ,throughout Huntington Beach to respond lo a general alarm fire will be heard no more after July J. That's when the city will terminate the volunteer fire program, Fire Chief Ray Picard reported to the council. The council agreed that an awards banquet should be set up for the volunteers. It was tentatively set for June 3 with all past and present volun- tef!rs invHed. Counciln1en also approved that the new Gothard Street station should b e dedicated to Uie volunteers with a plague honoring them placed in the cornerstone. As recently as 1967 Huntington Beach had 80 volunteer fire ~fficers. Now the tot.al is down to 27 with the phase-<iut due to be completed July I. The city bas 125 regular officers. The duties of the volunteers include attending two two-hour drills a month and responding to all general alarm fires, PJcard said. vancing issues all but buried declines 1,179 to 99. Volume topped five million shares, a very heavy first hour turnover. Jn recent weeks average turnover has been around two million shares. All major indexes of market activity were soUdly on the plus side. The UPI marketwide indicator sported a gain of 2.94 percent while the Dow Jones Industrial Average -reflecting ·selected blue chips -bounded up more than 14 points. Many issues gained seve ral dollars each, including Du Pont $3.50, Walt Disney $6. National Cash Register $4.63, U.S. Steel $1.13, General Motors $1.38, RCA Corp. $1. IBM $.l.50, Xerox $1.50 and American Telephone $1. Analyst Newton ZinPer of the E. F. Hutton & Co. brokerage rommented that the decision of the Federal Reserve Board lo slash margin requirements "shows the government may be taking a hand in alleviating the tight credit conditions which have plagued Wall Street." The Fed cut margin requirement to 65 percent from BO percent. The decision was announced after the market's close Tuesday. The margin requirement is the cash down payment required to purchase stock on credit. To buy stocks on the margin begiMing today , a purchaser must put up 65 per- cer1t of the price In <!ash . He may obtain a loan from his broker or a bank to finance the other 35 percent. Usually. the stock certificates are used as oollate.ral for the loan. MAKE THE 10th OF MAY A Beach Jlo y.s . Club to G~~ Mo1~e Land ' The Huntington .Beach couJ1Jcil agreed MOllday night to sell the Boys' Club an acre of land for $17,000 In a prqposed neighborhood park In tile city's w~tslde . Al Klingensmith, boya' club presld~I, sa1d that grants the club hoped to receive to build a new clubhouse in the park, at SpriJ1Jgdale Street and Heil Avenue, depended on the club ow,.lng the land or having a long-tenn lease. Before voUng on the sale to t~ boys' club the council adopted a policy on the i'nanagement of recreational and park properties. The policy is aimed at the transfer or surplus laNI to other civic groups prO\'ided that any sale or lease would not adversely affect the park ma.ster plan. Robert Dingwall, president of the HOME Council, opposed the sa1e to the boys' club saying it would open up a Pandora's box. "If you sell surplus land to a non-profit, Y.'orthy organization you wil l be obliged to do the same thing to other similar organizations -the YMCA, the Boy Scouts, Little League, Pop Warner foot- ball. 'nley're all worthy." Councilman Al Coen disagreed with Dingw&.11 and said that encouraging groups that serve special interests would benefit the city because the staff couldn't cater to aJI recreational needs. After maintenBJtef: and architeetural controls had been a~ to the policy statement and land sate·, the mwures were passed unanimously. .-, ·--" ' DAIL'r l"ILOT ltett '1111• Nem Engl.e Corvan Jones, 15, a freshman at Marina High School, will be- come an Eagle Scout Monday in ceremonies in Huntington Beach. A member of Troop 134, he is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Rodney E. Jones, 6321 Shields Drive, Huntington Beach. DAY Suggested bolmdary changes f o r children in Ule <kean View School District attendance area Tuesday brought a house full of parents to a meeting of district trustees. MOTHER WILL NEVER FORGET Many parents were concerned about their children being shifted from school to school. "I'd like lo sit down with the parents and see what !l.1eir choices are if It's at al~ admJnisfiaUvely possible." said district Superintendent Clarence Hall. He reminded , the parents that the boun- dary changes were only tentative and that final action would be taken by lhe trustees at a later date. "All I have to do is know your address and I can tell you how you feel," quipped tJie superintendent. "1bere's only ane way to avoid the yearly boundary change and that's to move to another area which is more saturated with people." Of the district's 22 schools, 13 will remain unaffected by· boundary ad· justment.s, administrators r@vealed. They include Circle View, Glen View, Harbour View, .Haven :View, Hope View, Lake View, Meadow View, Matjne View, Oak View, Park View, Si.m View, VJUage View and Robinwood Schools . The annual boundary hassle, }!all ex· 'P1a1ned, is traced to the rapid growth or the district. "OUr boundaries wilt not be filed until "'e know which bean- fielde 'will become housing devel~ menu:," he said. Extra-sensory Lecture at GWC n-n Burgm. 1..--i, wilh tho Det>artrnent of Justice lOd ~ known ror his lecture-OemonstraOon ln u:tra· ~ perception, will appear al Golden West College J\.1ay 15. The program at I p.m. In the college ctnter wlll be the final event of the C'UITent sthool year at the Golden West artlst·lecture series. Admission wlll be IL Burgess has 20 years' experience ex- ploring lht intJngible reaches of the mind. He calls himself a psychic who Is a akeptic. I ...,. ...... , ......... ~·-. .. ..... ••••• u.r-tk -Moir ~ c ..... T-T ... """""" ,,_ .... C.1,1 II• c. .......... ..,..,... ,~ ~ IMl& D. I ~ 1• T .... w ... .... ... 1111 --... , ..... Mldtnllolll .,_l«t S15frlelif .... ,,, J-fand carveJ Cora1 l'OSeS with leaves or genuine Jade .•• in sctting1 of rich , long-laslfng , 14Kt Cold overl1y. From our 9election (If fine quality jewelry /J?%/nMitz CONVENIENT TERMS IANICAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE J.C. .JJu1nphrie ~ J ewefertl l~ YEARS SAME LOCATION PHONE 541.]401 llll NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA ... • • New·port _ ··f?Beh "" -. EDI ION ... -. Today's -Final N.Y. Steeks VOL 63, NO. 108, 5 SECTIONS, 96 PAG ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 1970 TEN CENTS lr:vine Ol{s Allen Bay Voti11g Idea The Irvine Company has no objection to "'Orange Counly Supervisor Alton E. Allen's proposal to put to a public vote a bond issue lo buy from the company the private lands surrounding Upper Newport Bay. Irvine Company President William R. Mason said public purchase is an alternative to the land exchange pending in court that would realign property lines creating public parks a n d waterways and separate private parcels. Ownership of state tidelands entrusted to the county for development and of Irvine Company uplands, islands and patent lands is now jumbled. Mason said since discussions on Upper Bay development first began nearly 20 years ago, the Irvine Company has been infonned by county officials they did not believe the public would support land purchase. "But public altitudes do change with time," Mason said. "Perhaps the public is now prepared to buy land, instead of eichanging it. But I don 't k.n ow . Nobody knows. In November, we may find out." Mason said in the meantime, so the public may be assured of an alternative, pending litigation testing the con- stitutionality or the land trade should proceed. He remarked that be doesn't • think it would be in the public interest to pennit the proposed bond election to become "an all-or-nothing issue." Coqvicted Rapist Fails to Show For Sentenciilg Orange County and Los Angeles County law enforcement agencies are working together today in the hunt for a 19-year- old college student who was convicted nf assaulting a UC! coed with the in- tention of raping her. Michael Anthony English, 19. of Los Angeles, failed to show up for sentencing Tuesday in the Santa Ana courtroom of Superior Cou rt Judge Ron a 1 d Abernethy and the jurist Immed iately Issued a $25,000 bench warrant for the youth's arrest. English also forfeits the $10,000 bail which was posted by his parenL5 in pre-trial proceedings. English was convicted April 15 of assault with intent to commit rape after several residents of women's dormitories at UCl told of his conduct during a three-hour tour that ended with his at· tempted rape of a 20-year-0]d student. He was flu shed from bushes near the Cielo dormitory and arrested by UCI police after his victim raised the alarm . It was larncd today that English, who f'lces a possible stale prison term of one to five yea rs for the Orange County offense, al so faced sentencing in Los Angeles on charges of assault. A bench waiTant has been issued for his arrest by Los Angeles authorities. Six Rescued From Harbor As Boat Sinks Si:t people who were pulled from $4-. degree water off the Newport Harbor entrance this morning were reported in good condition late today. Harbor patrolmen said they received scan at abou t 7:30 a.m. from a resident of the bluffs area in Corona del Mar that a boat had capsized near the harbor entrance bellbuoy. Patrolmen picked the six people and a dog out of the water about 20 minutes afler their 14-foot rent.al boat capsized. A Harbor Patrol spokesman said he was not able to determine how the boat capsized in the medium chap. . Released after being treated for shoCk and expogure were : -John Van Nybu)'I, of 1023 N. Olive St.. Santa Ana. -Brady 8(h:mldt and Wiiburn Grttla, both of 2609 W. Chapman Ave., Orange. -RJcbard Ptfooles, of 449 Hill St., Orange. ~al Gotar111, of l.,o., Ang~lts. -Julie Vlnus And he r unidentified dog, both of Sausalito. STOCK MARKET NE\V YORK (AP) -The stock market pulled back from tta ateep early g;iin but remained on the upswina: this afternoon . Trad!na: "''' modf:!'ately acUve. (See quoll~ons1 Pq:ea: 26-27). UP'/ Tt1Nhcl1' UCLA DEMONSTRATOR TAKEN INTO CUSTODY BY POLICE Fist Fights, Broke n Windows, Small Fires at Wastwood. Campus Police Patrols Protect ~·t,.:~ i ·~ Troubled UCLA Campu i LOS ANGELES (UPIJ -Scores of police patrolled near and 011 the UCLA campus early today following a three· hour window smashing spree and viole nt confrontation between anthvar protesters and offi cers. At least 74 persons were arrested and 16 injured. Acting Chancellor David Sax o n decfared a stale of campus emergency Tuesday after a rally of about 2.000 persons turned to fist fights and the starting of small fires. A force of 250 city police officers moved onto !he campus and cleared an area around the men's gym after several scuffles and a series of window breaking. The building houses classrooms and the ROTC offices, focal point of the stude11ts protesting against American in· volvement in Cambodia and the slaying of four students at Kent State in Ohio. Police stationed themselves at in- tersections surrounding the campus after it was reported quiet at 8 p.m. and Jet persons leave, but nobody was allowed to enter during the nighl. or those arrested, including 12 ,women and two professors, 61 were charged "'ith misdemeanors while 13 were booked on felonies, includirig assault against a policeman. Authorities said 12 students were Lrcated for minor injuries and four cam- pus guards and a city policeman sus· taincd minor injuries. City Police Chief Edward M. Davis n1obilized the entire Los Angeles depart- ment and patrols in all parts of the city were doubled. Davis sajd his action \\'Ould remain in effecl until "a state of peace is obvious." Protests also erupted at San Fernando Valley State and the University of California at Santa Barbara. At UCSB, sheriff's deputies and hjgh"•ay patrolmen were called to the campus when an estimated l,000 students gathered in front or the administration building following a rally. The two professors arrested at UCLA were identified as \Villiam H. McWhin· ney, 40, assistant dean of planning and a member of the graduate school of administration: and Peter Ladcfoged, a professor of languages. Officers said Ladefoged was arrested for allegedly scuffling with a policeman . Smaller deinonstra tions also were reported at the University of Southern California and East Los Angeles Junior College. CdM Fi11ally Has Signpost; Wee ds Th1·eaten Message The communitr with in a city. Corona de! Mar, finally has its own sign at the east Pacific Coast Highway entrance to Newport Beach. But the sign provided by the Corona de! Mar Chamber of Commerce isn't right beside the highway like the one that says "Newport Beach City Limits." It is back a ways out of the state Divis- ion of H.ighways right-Of.way on Irvine Company properly and weeds are grow- ing up that threaten to hide It from view. Grant flowald asked at the chamber directors med.ing this week if he could put some weed kilter oil around the sign . "That's fine with me," said Gordon Jones of the lrvlne Company, another chamber director. "t put a work order through to get the weeds cleared. but you and I could go out and trample the weeds 4th Ch amber Forwu Focuses ou Students The fourth program In the series "The Univtt$ily and , the COmmunlly" will be held tonight at I In the Corona de! Mar High School LitUe The:iiter. Sponsored by the Newport HarbOt Chamber of COmmerct, the program will focus on the stud!nts at UC Jrvlne. Other programs have 1tuclled UCl'1 faculty, curriculum. and adminillr.ation. I down easier. If anybody tries to arrest yoo, let me know." "You'll put another work order throu gh lo get him out of jail," Ace Adams quipped. Jones grinned. Bad Checks Dra\v 4-montli Jail Sta y A Newport Beach ma11 °wno repeatedly JssueJ worthless checks to Orange County car dealers was senten<:ed Tuesday to four m<rttbs in Orange County Jail. Superior Court Judge James F. Judge also' ordertd thr!e yelft's probation for Steven Bennett Wein~rg. 23, of Apl. Q 108, 2110 16th St.,· after Weinberg pleaded guilty to bad cheek charges. Weinberg, who identified himselr as Pr. Irving Weinberg in several cases Investigated by the district attorney's offict, issued at least seve11 checks in e):ctSS or $400 each wlllle he had just $31 in the bank. Two of those checks were for the purchase of new cars. , Judge Judge njected a requtsl that Weinberg undergo p s 'Jc h I at r i c tx- amination ancl acetpled the, defendant's plea of guilty. Other charges Okld aaatnst W!!lnber& were--dJ.5mlaMd. -• _ .. t ' Campuses ·Closed I Reagan Shuts UC, State Co(leges SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald Reagan today announced that .Calif- ornia's university and state college cam• puses wlll be ck>sed effecUve Thursday through Sunday. Reagan said he hoped the period would "allow time for rational reflection away from the: emotional turmoil and encour. age all to di!avow violence and mob ac- tion." Reagan took the action as activists on Southern California campuses passed out armbands and leafl~ts calling for strikes, police gi rded for trouble at UCLA and UC Berkeley faced another da)I of dis· rupted classts. The governor, after a series of meet- ings with top aJdes, issued a statement in * * * Orange Coast , GWC Schools Ordered Shut BULLETIN Dr. Norman E. \Vatson, chancellor of tlie Oru11ge Coast Junior College District, late today announced .that t>otli Oraflge Coast College in Costa ~lesa and Colden West College in lluntington Beach would be closed from-midnight tonight until midnight Su nda11. facu.lt11 and staff will be ol'I. Juty and the Ubraru will be open bul f!w•• .. iU ·~<>t be conducted. By STEVE MITCHELL Of tbt o.ltr l'lltl SllH More than l ,IXIO' students and faculty members of Orange Coasl College met t:xtay in the college's free speech area a5 a part of a peaceful strike against thf! war in Southeast Asia and the deaths o! four Kent State Unlversily students. The convocation was a part of a three- day boycott of classes initiated by students Tuesday and approved by the student senate. Dr. John Jensen. professor of history ::it the junior college commended the peaceful approach by students in asking senate support for the strike. "The democratic process used by the student., demonstrates your concern in I.his problem," he stated. "What we must do now is present constructive solutions to end the war in Southeast Ash •. " He warned the students to keep cool and to fonn ulale constructive solutions to their grievances. "There are some students who want YOl.i to throw rocks and make this a violent strike," he continued. ''Don't do 1t -keep cool." Student speakers urged the crowd to "Go out and do something in support of this strike. Don't just sit around and say you're on strike." Students were asked to sign petitions during the strike period and write their congressmen. Other suggestions brought up at the JO a.m. convocatlori included student confrontation at city council meetings to get their support for an end to the war. Booths set up at the side of the free speech area contained pet.Ilion forms, note paper, envelopes and stampes for student use. The faculty 5e11ate at the junior college was scheduled to meet at 3 p.m. today to detennine if faculty support ol the strike would be approved. If so, the campus will be closed Thursday and (See OCC: RALLY, Page Z) Public Beach At Carnatwn Gets Attentwn At the end ol Carnation Avenue In Corona del Mar tbere is a small public beach. The entrance to it h a 1 been rel atlvely Invisible in recent years but it won't be now. The Newport Beach Parks, Beaches an<t.. Recreation Commission 1\tesd.1.1 night ordered shrubs and overhanging trees cut back aod an C?asily-visible sign installed, saying "Public Beach." Mrs. Lillian Griswold, 2231 Pacific Drive, In 1 letter to the cily, said she has seen the trees and bushts planted, garbage cans put at the end of the street. stgns put up sayins, "Beware of Sling Ray1" and "No Park- ing." New City Councilman Richard Croul s11ld he has watched the sltuaUon develop until "nobody wou ld ever koow it ts a public beach. I don't lhink lhi• ts r1ght or fair.'' he iald. ' ' his office announcing he had asked UC President Olarles Hitt;h and State Col- lege President Glenn Dumke to close down the campuses. He 1ald the ... two educaUo n leaders "strongly concurred'' in hls request and had "taken the necessary acUon for im- plementaUon." Reagan'11 statement read : "It Is essential for our college and university facully, student! and admlnls· trato~ to renect on the grave sequence of current events and lo consider their r~!!!ponslbilities to themselves and to our society. ''In order to afford them this oppor- tunity. away from the highly emotional conditions ·now prevailing on most cam- puses, I have today asked President Hitch and Chancellor Dumke to close: the university and state coUege campuses for two days and over the w.eekend. "President Hitch a n d Chancellor D.unke strongly concurred In my rec.om- mendation, and accordingly have taken the nece'ssary.aclion ror implementation. "All campus facilities wUI be' closed during this period. "I hope that this period will allow time for rational reflection away from the emotional turmoil, and encourage all to disavow violence and mob action . "I have · requested California radio and television broadcasters to ma.k~ time available to me this evening in order that 1 m;iy give all Californians a full ttJ)Ort on this situation." 3 New Cambodia , Fronts Opened SAIGON (UPI) -The United States and South Vietnam launched three new offensives Into C8:mbodla today in the biggest all led operation of the war. An annada Of U.S. Navy river patrol boats moved into Cambodian tertitory to join' the 50;000 allied troops involved . The three new drives crolled the border in area.$ rapging trom..~lt fn}la northwest •W I& miles DCll'th W' 'lliPb and were preceded by massive aerlal aS81ults using bombs and napalm wl\ich wiped out tbe town of Snuol whe:re some lootmg by American · troops was reported. One new offensive today was by a 4,500-man. task foree of the 25th .U.S. Infantry Division Jnto the Do&'• Head .~ector 85 tnlles northwest of Saigon. At least f3 Communist troops and four ,\merlcan.. were killed Jn the firs t hours or the sweep. Two of the Americans wf:!'e k!lled when U.S. artillery rounds fell short of their target in the initial stages of the operation. Th is brou,qht U. S. casualties in tht multi·pronged offensive to 30 killed and 70 wounded. At least 60 U.S. Navy river patrol Carpenter Calls For Rejection Of Confrontation Dennis E. Carpenter. chainnan of the Republican State Central Committee Tuesday called for college students to rejed the Hscreamlng revolutionaries who will try to build 11Ull more violent confrontations on the corpses in Ohio." Carpenter, a Newport Beach resident who is a candidate for lhe ·Republican nominaUon for the 34th District State Senate, made his statement In the af. tetmath of the Kent Slate shootin&s whlcb left Wur students-dead. "I'm saddened by the deaths In Obio but surprised that we haven't had a tragedy of thls magnitude long ago,'' he sald. The Republican leader said he saw two aUemaUves for the future, "more bloodshed or we can get down to terious discussion." "Student leaden: mu!ll ad still more firmly in the aftermath of the violent deaths on the Kent State campus. It Is evident that student violence will be met with flrm strength. "But I thin~ It la Important for atudenls to recognize that honest discussion end legltlmalt pol!Ucal actlon on. their part will be weloomed," b< eald. Shots Fired At Truck Guard -..... llrtd lilt Tueod•y nlght at the Comolld1ted F re 11btwaJ1 warehouse .at 2200 N. Batavl1 Ave., Orange. Police belleve the 1hooting it coonecltd with the wlldcat llrtke of ltamstm In Orange Coo•ty. Target of the bullets from a spttdlng car was a nlght guard at the feclllty. He and 25 other men working at the plant were not Injured. The Santa Fe Springs plant in ~ A{lgelea County of the 11ame trucklftl firm h•s been lhe target of .violence and vandalism •Ince the wildc1t 1trlke started In Aprll a. . ) • boats, heavUy anned ~fool vessels, moved into Cambodia along the Kham Spean River as part of th.is operiUon, Kaylor reported. They ran into Com- munfst fire two miles Inside Cambodia but casualties were nol known. The eecood drive today crossed the frontier 95 miles north of Saigon ind the · thfrd was about 80 mUea north of Saigon near the Loe Ninh district town. Both areas are north of the Fishhook area where allied troops have been searching for a Communist central headquarters for six days. U.S. military officials said the of· renslves, ordered by President Nixon to wipe out Communist sa nctuaries across the border, have kl/led 2,800 Com- munist troops, captured 6,000 weapons, sei7.ed or destroyed 700 tons of food and munitions and 64 trucks and destroyed hundrtds or bunkers and bast camps. The operations began last week . The first major strike was in the Parrot's Beak sec tor of Cambod.1& that juts out to within 35 miles of Saigon and was the staging area for the Tet offenstve on Saigon in 1968. Others were flU'tber north in the Fishhook and Se San areas, 67 and 230 mllea northeast of Saigon. South Vietnamese also penetrated Cambodia from the Mekong Delta area. City Attorneys Hold Mee tin g Two hundred fifty city attorneys from throughout the state are gathered for a convention at the Newporter Inn today thl'tl\.lgh Friday. 'Theme of the C1Jnference. sponsored by the League of California Cities, is "Pre- serving Environmental Quality Thnrugh Legal Control of Pollution." Orange County District Attorney Cecil Hieb will speak to \he city attorneys at a luncheon 1'hursday. Arrangements were ha,ndled by TUiiy Seymour, city attorney of Newport Beach. Orange Coast l\'eather If you like today's weather, you'll love Thursday's 11ince it'11 anOther dose of the same stuff - low coastal clouds and hazy sun· shine with a top mercury readin& of 70 degrees. INSWE TODAY . ' N 't Z DAILY PILOT 1Plan Board Eyes Pleas For Permits , Requests for dancing and drinking permits, Newport Center Fire Station and television banking are on the agenda for the Nev.'J)Ort Beach Planning Com- miss.ion Thursday night. --Operators of The Gallery bar, 810 E. Balboa Blvd., Balbo1, ire applying , for a pennlt to have live entertainment. 1bey have dancing to ncarded music presently. -The Open End Theatre Workshop, 1.815 Villa \\'ay, is asking for pennis.sion to sell beer. -Harry Alexon, owner af a former hardware store at 100 Main St., Balboa, wanls to coove rt it to a restaurant without providing off-the-street parking and to sell a1cholie beverages. A protest again.!Jt sate of alehoUc beverages has been filed by Copre private preparatory lichool across the street. -The Irvine Company ill applying for a resubdivillion of Newport Center pro- perty to create a aite for a city fir• 1t.ation. -Centinela Bank, which ls moving jnto the. ground floor of the hlgb-rbe building at the county dock pn>porty (Arches Marina), is proposing drlve1hrough television banking wlth money exdlanged by pneumatJe tube. The city planning · staff believes lhe idea is p>d but sug- gests location of the drive-through rt.a· lions be rearranged IO a.s not to stack can in parking lanes. The planning commission meeU ln the city council chambers at city hall at a p.m. Thunday. 7 CdM Merchants Serving; on Cof C Nominated Again The seven Corona del Mar merchants who are completing two-year terms on the Corona del Mar Chamber of Cam· merce board « directors all have bten noml.aated to serve again. In addition to the seven positions present direct.ors are oominated to fUI agaih there is one vacancy on tilt board. Additiooal oomlnatlon.'I wlll be acoepted from the floor 1t the dtamber't 1eneral membmhlp bttllkful May II. 1be ttnominated diredors are Ace Adams, Bob Bartholomew, Don Boltm, Dee Cook, Grant Howald, Carl Kegley and Howard Folsom. •• Holdover diredon who have 111other year af their two-year tmnt ta serve · are Hal Aebischer, Jerry Govin, Hubert . Peiml, John Sempl1. Jerry Stewart, GDl'dDo J-and Stu Towne. Watson Ordered To California AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) -The Texas Coor! of Criminal Appeals today upheld extradition orders sending Qmles Den- ton Watson to California to be tried in the Sharon Tate murders. "We have no rea!Ot\ or right to pre- judge a case to be tried in another st.ate, and will not do IO," said Judge Leon Douglas In the opinion for the oourt. Watson's lawyers had argued that the 24·year-old fonner Texas high school star athlete could not get a fair trial in Los Angeles because of widespread publicity given the Tate slayings tbere. Watson's chief atl.Orney, Bill Boyd, had frankly admilled he was trying to delay the extradition on technical 1rounds in order to prevent California authorities from trying Wat:ton with Charles Mall80n and other members of his hi pp le family. Watson. was arrested in his hometown of McKinney, Tex., after the confession of Susan Denise Atkins implicated him in the slayings of the .actress and her house guesta:. DAILY PILOT OaAK~E COAST ~llllMIMO COM,Aln' lo!ilert H. We.4 ,,Ulcllll'll 1NI 1"161hlltr Jeck I. c.rfey Vlce l"res.iklll ...... c:-11 ~ Ii The,,.t1 ICe.,.iJ " "'"" Tho191tl A. Mwplriine M ..... lnlll<fltw n-·· fortv•e fllW""'1 lffdl Cllr llffMI' """" ........ Offk• 22 11 Weit l t lHe l oule•er4 Maillttt A44rt•H P.O. Ip 1171, tl6'J .,_......, tai. MeM1 DI Wal l1f 1""9 1...-lltech' m 1"or111t A-~~lnftM lflC": 11'71 I-'> I~ ...... Oln.ik: .J0$ Mtrtll II C-IM hll WtchootdlJ, Mor 6. 1970 0411.Y Pl\.OT l .. ff Pllltf -· -, -.. - Bot1nda'11 Mixup 2-school _Pupils Will Get Choice Eight students scheduled to !tart high school in September who found them· aelves a15lgned to two hi&b JChoals. have reeelved help from the district school board. Board membert have decreed that in the fall of 1971, fmhmen living on the west side of Santa Ana A venue between 21st Street and Mesa Drive will 10 to Cosio Mesa H1lh School and ~ living on the east tide 'Will go to Newport Har- bor lliih Sdlool. In selling the boundaries, board mem· bets said the eight students who were erroneoudy assigned to both 1chools due to confUJlon over the boundary lines will be allowed to pick which of the two school& they with to 'ttend. Roy AndertOn, district administrative aui1tant of school facilities aald the con- fusion in school asstinments re1Ulted when a boundary change for fre!hmen was made between Corona del Mar and Harl>Dr' Hlah Schools. side of Santa. Ana v.·ere stlned up at two different schools. Of course these eight students get their choice o(. school&, bul from now on the bow1dary will go cfoy,·n the middle of Santa Ana,•• he said. Other new boundary changes approved by the board include : -Children in grades K-6 Jiving in the Bluffs, Eastbluff and the Bren develop- ment will attend Eastbluff School. which is scheduled to open in September. -Bear Street School will change from a K·S school lo a K-6 school. ORANGE COAST COLLEGE STUDENTS GATHER FOR ANTI-WAR CONVOCATION ON CAMPUS UCl't Stephen Sh•plro (•t podium background) Talks •f MHtlng Des igned to Cool Emotions Originally studenta llvtng on both sides ar SantJi Ana between 21.st Street and Mesa Drive were assigned to Costa Mesa. Students living between the rear property line of. the east side of Santa Ana and the Upper Newport Bay were asilgned to Corona de! Mar. Slashes on Ma1·gin Curb s Push Stock Market Up /. NEW YORK (UPI) -Wall Streel responded enthusiastically today to a major slash in the minimum amount of cash required for purdlasing stock. At the end of the first hour of trading on the New York Stock Exchange ad· vaneing issue s all but buried declines 1,179 to 99. Volume topped five million shares, a very heavy first hour turnover, In recent weeks average turnover has been around two million shares. All major indexes of market activity were 10ljdly on the plus side. The UPI marketwide indicator aported a Cain of Butf aw Hil~ c · To Get Program Harbor View Hills rasldents will get the same kind of recreaUon program at Buffalo Hilla P.ark u other 'Newport Beach resident& get at their parks and playgrounds. "That's all they were asking for, no more and no less than other areas,'' city Parks, Beaches and Recreation Director Cal Stewart said today after tali<lng with Robert Gallivan, president of the Harbor View Community Associa- tion, and Robert Stevenson. chalnnan of the associat.ioo's recreation com· munity. Stewart said after receiving a petilion from 138 residents he was concerned they wanted a recreation director at their private cabana and pool facility. But that was not their interit. No one appeared from the homeowners group at the city Parks, Beaches and Recreation Committee meeting Tuesday night A city baseball program has begun at Buffalo Hills Park. Wash Out 2.94 percent while the Dow Jones Industrial Average -reflecting selected blue chips -bounded up more than J4 points. Many issues gained ~cveral dollars <"ach, including Du Pont $3,50, \Vall Disney $6, National Cash Register $4.63, U.S. Stej!l $1.13, General Motors $1.38. RCA Corp. $1. IBr.t $3.50, Xerox $1.50 and American Telephone $1. • Analyst Newton Zinder of the E. F. Hutton & Co. brokerage commented that the decision of lhe Federal Reserve Board to slash margin requirements "shows the government may be laking a hand in alleviating the tight credit condJUons • which have plagued Wall Street." The Fed cut margin requirement lo 6S percent from lMI percent. The decision was announced afler the market's close TUesdty. The margin requirement is the cash down payment required to purchase stock on credit. To buy stocks on the marg in beginni ng today, a purchaser must put up 65 per- cent. or the price in cash. He may obtain a loan from his broker or a bank to finance the olher 35 percent. Usually, the stock certificates are used as collateral for the loan. China Gets 24 Hours To Leave Ca1nhodia PHNOr..t PENll, Cambodia (AP) - The Cambodia n government today gave Communist Chinese diplomats 24 hours lo gel out of the country. follo¥ling Peking's recognition of the exiled govem- ment of the ousted Cambodian chief of st.ate, Prince Norodom Sihanouk. At sunset. sea on Ne\\•port 1ihorclinc \\'ashes around drip castle and lrfl.sh, both remn1ants of a day at the beach. Photographer saw late afternoon ~cene as symboUc corrtrast bct\vcen man a t hls best -hJ s ability to dream and to build -and man at his \\'Orst -his penchant for pollution. From Page 1 OCC RALLY . •• Friday, accordlng to De.an Joe Kroll, dean of students, The convocation today came as a result of a student rally Tuesday morning where student speakers from OCC and the UCI campus spoke out against U.S. involvement in Southeast Asia and the dea!Ji of the four Kent State students. Following the rally, students led by Bruce Derflinger, a member of the stu- dent judicial board at OCC, lov.'ered the U.S. flag to half mast. An hour and one · half meeting or studenls wtth the school's student senate resulted in 100 percent senate approval of the boycott. The student initiative approved by the senate slated: "\Ye, the members of the OCC Student Senate, being the elected representaUves of all OCC students, stand in support of the peaceful OCC student strike and recommend that the Faculty Senate of OCC support said students in striking against the U.S. involvement in Southeast Asia and express our grief concerning the death of four fellow students at Kent State University." At that time, Dean Kroll told the senate and the student<;, "This b your decision, but you can't Interfere with students who want to attend clas~es. This mwt be a peaceful boycott." Cleared in Espionage LONDON (AP) -A £armer member of Parliament was cleared today of eight charges of passing secret information to Communist agel'lls. Frail. white-haired Will Owen, 69, had pleaded innocent. MAKE Anderson said the boundary was chang· ed. so t,hat those ninth grade students who prtYioosly would have been as- signed to Corona del Mar were instead assl(Iled to Newport Harbor. When school board members approved the boundary change, It assigned those students living on the east side of Santa Ana to Newport HJgh. "Technically the kids livin1 on the east Holdup Suspects Jailed i1t Grove A fte r Fistfig ht Garden Grove police Jailed four armed robbery suspecLs early this morning after a free.for-all fight in a motel room where the men were found after a rob- bery of two bar owners. Officers said Foster Slyh, 53, of Santa Ana. and Vernon Cherry, 52, of Santa Fe Springs, were held up by a man carrying a rifle in front of their Ebbtide Bar at 12771 Harbor Boulevord, about 2 a.m. The suspect is Michael P. Della·r.fag- giora, 19, of Garden Grove. Polic~ were told that an armed man y,·as seen going into the Fire StaLion Inn motel, 12625 llarbor a few minutes later. Officers Gerald Lobb and Allan Herbach approached the motel room v:here the quartet were heard engaged in a loud argument. When police entered the room a rough and tumble fight brok e out. Finally sub- dued and jail~ on suspicion of anned robbery and resisting arrest were Della- Maggiora and Michael E. Elliot, 22, Michael J. Gaddis, 18, and William A. Scott. 22, all ol Garden Grove. THE 10th MAY A DAILY PILOT llltf '"'tf 1J 11lc11dh1 II After a month o[ pr~clice, 11· year-old Craig Masters, 4835 River Ave ., Newport Beach, has mastered the art of bal· anc ing his unicycle. He got one, he said, because he is too young for a surfboard. DAY MOTHER WILL OF NEVER FORGET .-. ,.. ....,._.. 1• lelW .... lratNt WMdl u~ I .... ...,...,....,. \.""""tic ~ $4111 ~""' c........ y_.-T .. '11111 .... S-ha CtN SUI C. 1411: llM o.111. "'"""' .. .., .... C...,.... Mll 0. I IMI.._.., ltlt ....... tr W\llt Sellll C1eti1 tlU I /' Hanel carvtd Cornl m.es with leaves of genuine Jade , .. in settings of ril'h, lon;.::·la~lint: l4K1, Gold o\·crlay. From our selection of 6ne quality icY.'elry CONVENIENT TERMS J. C .JJumphrie; Jewefer3 24 YEARS SAME LOCATION IANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE 1823 NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA PHONif 648-HOI t .. \ '1' ..... • \.· ...... .. ., • • , DAILY PilOT S St°:dent Protests Mounting .. By ne AJsociatm Prt11 severe pgychologtcal preMUres Police also used tear au President Nb::on'a dau&hL!r Students at a g r o w i n g less rf!sponslble for t h e and clubs in the state Capitol Julie, and her busb&nd, David number or campuses across manacre than our G 0 v, building in Austin, Tei:., to Eisenhower, remained at their America today responded to Rhodes and Gen. Del Corso, b~fk up a demonstration by Northampton. Mw., apart- calls for a nationwide strike whose 1 n f 1 a m m 1 t 0 r y In· several hundrtd protesters ment u _students at both against Presi~ent NI Jt on' 1 doctrinaHon productd thole who had marched from the Smith, where she attends, and Cambodian policy and Ute pressures,.. the ~member Univer!ily of Texas campus Amherat, where David is Kent Slale ldllings. senate said in 8 resolution. sl:it blocks away. enroUed, voled to strike. Some universities shut down Fifteen persons were injured Princeton University faculty There was also a strike by altogt!ther. others held rallies, early today when helmeted voted to su!'lpend classes for stude(lts at fashionable Finch praye r meetings or vigils. police armed with club's and the remainder of the semester College, a girl'1 school in New There were clashes with police sidearms routed some 500 and took a slan<I as a group Yort from which Tricia Nixon on some campuses. On some Seton Hall Universi ty students condemning the war i n was graduated In 1968. others, there were ind ications in South Orange, N.J. The Southeast Asia . They also ap-rn Washington, 1'-1rs. Nixon of support for the n1ove into students had camped arotmd proved a two-week reces .. 11 canceled her sche<'luled trip Ca mbodia . a slrcet bonfire to protest the prior to the November elecUon to Fredericksburg, Va., t~ay National Guardsmen patroll· so students can work in because of planned antiwar cd at the University of w~~ffalo, N.Y .• police fired political campaigns. demonstratiorui at f.1 i. r y \Visconsin in f.fadison after, tear gas and battled studenls Boston University canceled Washington University there. police sald, more than 35 on the can1pus of Buffalo State final examinations and its Al Haverford Collegeo in persons were arrested in two University and nearby streets scheduled ti-fay 1 7 com· Philadelphia. everyone from days of window stnashing and Tuesday night. The incident menctment exerciseS at which the administrators to •the firebomb vandalisn1. involving about 500 students Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D· malntenanct men will go by University spokes n1 en followed similar encounters Pifass. ), was to have been the but to Washington Thunday estimated 10.000 persoris al· d . th d princi·pal opeaker. to protest the war. tended a campus rally Tues· uring e ay. "It is neither a strike .nor day night lo protest the ·!;..,.. ·"-·'t; ft * {._· business as usual," said Dr. President's deployment o r 14 John R. Coleman, presi4ent troops in Cambodia and to s • H 1 i\. nf the all-male. Quaker li~ral heor , ... people's pelition' 111·pr1 ~e e p·.-arts college which has about against the Kent deaths. The ~ fiOO students. "I ff e I rally v.•as peaceful but there reasonably certain that .the wa~ vandalism afterward. W'°HINGTON tU PI) _ t t be u·i·ed t1chool will show that t&ese 1'he current wave of pro. t\.'J governmen mus nn 1 are not 'bums' but concefned tests was touched off Monday Tbe Nixon admlnislration, ap-15 days in advance of such students who are eXJJressing I h I demonstrations. when National Guardslllen parent y to s ow young poop e their opinions in a positive !led b Oh. Go J The White House rally ca out Y 10 v. ames it can tolerate peaceful way.'' A. Rhodes to control antiv.·ar originally was 1 n n ° u n ce d There were some loditaHons demonstrations at Kent Stale, dissent, plans 10 go to court Saturday -only eight days of support for the President's fired into a crowd. Four to smoothe the way for an before the scheduled date. In Cambodian intcrV1ention. i stude nts were killed. anliv.'ar demonstration student the interim the plans have At the Mormon Brlg~am The Faculty Senate Tuesday leaders want lo hold Saturday grown and backers have in· Young Universit;y in 1'r9"o. blamed Rhodes and his ad-in front of the White House. creased because of I he Utah, the student newspaper jutanl general. s. T. Del The Justice Department, slayings of four students dur-Daily Universe said : "\Ve UI"• r111~'"'1' Corso. for the deaths. UPI learned Tursday. plans ing an antiwar demonstration understand the r al i 0 n at~ QUIET AT MARYLAND U-TIME TD CHAT Coed, Gua rdsman in Friendly Confronta tion EFFIGY BURNS ON MINNEAPOLIS CAMPUS '·Y.1c hold the guardsmen, to ask federal district court at Kent State University in behind Mr. Nixon's deciaion Ju5tice M11r5hall, Ni xon, Agnew., __ H_o_f_fm_•_n_'_V_i_ct_i_m_•_' __ ac_t_in~g_u_n_dc_r_o_r_de_r_,_.,,_d_u_nd_e_r_t_o_w_.,_v_e_a_r_eq~u_ire_m_e_nt_t_he __ o_h_io_. _________ a_nd_s_u~ppoc....rt_hl_m_in:..1_·1._"_._,:_ FIRST AID AFTER KENT UNIVERSITY SHOOTING Campus News Releases P icture of Victim, Helpers ~ ·-----·· .......... ~ ... ·~,,,;;. . Dream Shift Gown 7.00 Sleep Coat V~· "STAR FLOWER" Permenent Press Kodel®/Colton Batiste, leoturing magnificent new ''Star Flower" embroidery and cover-up sleeves. Pin k, Aqua, lemon. 7.00 llWindsor Shop • HARBOR CENTER r 2300 Harbor Blvd., Co1ta Mt1a 546°2622 ________ ,. COMMUNITY EVENTS MAY 9 ARTIST 20TH ANNUAL ,ANCAICE IRUICfAST KI WANIS CLUI OF THE MONTH C'•" $tt~el'5. bor" 1n Cl!n>ol'. Ml~ 100•1 '" !HJ 11111 m~111rlld tn 1rr et COSTA MESA ,Allk 7·11 A.M. T.Y. GU.ND PRIZE JUNE S, 6 & 7 2STH ANNUAL fl5H f-lY COSTA MESA·HfWPORT HAlllOll LIONS CLUI e PARADE e IAIY CONTEST 8 CAllNIYAL e MISS MEll MAIO CONTl$T e 14TILI! OF THE IANDS e DRAWING fOR NIW CAl • $h1 owned "Tl>t Co•em•c Hut" l" Po,1C1rn•, C•hlorn•• for "'4nv Y9a~ -·· '"" de>IQ..ed •'Ill tfNlllCI h~r """" e•11•ne~ •IOnll wilt! ln•tr11<.ll1>9 ~h' r~!lrod I" 1'~ 11\d wholt tC'}o ~"le.ting tr11'" "" ,;,1"tni1v1 "'"~•. 11trted llVl"9 10 u11 her h•M• •ntl ~"'II UMl>lt 111 U•t lln1 9tnltrOodlfY ll'>rtl>d, Wllh Mt~y wool Y"r" •ntl lmttl"lllOf!, V-1 <l"Mlft her tr! work wllhoul ,,.., p1t11rn . 5 2 5 3 guaranteed 0 annual • rate 90 Day Certificate Accounts* 5.39°;. Annual Yield If all savings and interest remain a year. No minimum deposit. Dally compounding. \ Earn from dale of deposit. 6 3 guaranteed 0 annual rate 2to10 Year Certificate Accounts* 6.18% Annual Yield 1r all savings and interest remain a year. $5,000 minimum deposit Oallycompoundlng. Earn from date of deposit. NOW! 4WAYSTO EARN HIGHER INTEREST AT CALIFORNIA FEDERAL! . .. 5. 7 5 3 :;1~~~7t•ed 1 lo 1 O Year Certificate Accounts• 5.92% Annual Yield If all savings and Interest remain a year. $1 ,000 min imum deposit. Daily compounding. Earn from dale ol deposit. 7. 5 3 guaranteed 0 annual • role 1 Year Certificate Accounts• (Adju1tabl1 rat11 lor ahortor ttnn1) 7.79% Annual Ylold If all savings and.Interest remain a year. $100,000 minimum deposit. Daily compounding. Earn from date of deposit. ' ..... CALIFORNIA F£0EAAL ' SAVIN OS ..... "' .. ·--••• HEMM 5% Passbook Account. Current Annual Raio, No minimum deposit. Daily compounding. Interest day-in to day-out. Cal!f <?!!J~~f.~n~~!!!!~.§.!!!ngs NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL • COSTA MESA OFFICE:1 2700 Harbor Blvd. near Adams • 546·2300 CLIFFORD M. WESDOAF, VICE PRESIDENT & MANAGER ~nvenlent 01nce1 throughou1 Los Angel.a. On1ngt end VenWre Counllee Acclu11t11 tN li'l•ind llD lo l:Kl,000 11t1dt1 prtrri•lont of !ht Ftd«ll lt¥tl!QI I Lo111 lritllrt~ Cbrportllofl. 1 ~111•nwit aotrlCY.Jif 1ht IJN'-d 111\ .. Oowm!ll111t. • •• , 0 • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Pay as Y Ou Pollute? ..... ... • • ,. While our lawmakers appear to be tilling al wind· mills in their search for a legtslattve solution to pollu- tion problems, a Newport Beach man already has an answer. It's so simple tha l it just might work. \Vhy not "pay as you pollute"? asks DanJel Emory, a member of the Noise Advisory Committee to the state Department of Aeronautics. And indeed, why not? H the amoµiil of pollution di•· charged by any individual or firm were metered -like gas, waUr or electricity -it \\'Ouldn't take long for the oUender to reduce his output. R'ecltless pollution of the atmosphere and our water· ways presumably would soon become unprofitable if Emory's suggestion of paying' for the discharge were put into practice. The idea, he says. is to manipulate self·intere5t, or the profit motive, to coincide with tbe public interest. An attendant benefit , of cours~ is that a tremend- ous amount of revenue would be raised from the "pollu- tion payments" which could easily be fuMeled into pol- lution r esearch. The current method of fighting pollution by setting up specified sta nd ards does not make allowances for the profi1 motive. It only asks that finns comply with the standard wi thou t gi ving incentive to do better 1.han that. . Emory's plan might ju.st clear the air about poUu· t1on. Bay Ouh's High" Rise The sheer length and mass of the Balboa Bay Club's landmark apartment building is formi dable and dis· t:acting. Five stories high and seemingly a football· field long. it hulks there blocking off all view of the bay. No\v the Bay Club management is prepared tn bu i1 rf anoUter apartment complex of about 90 unit s. Thank· fully, it doesn't \Vant to repeat the same shape on the ea st end of the property as on the west end. Bui there is only one way oul if ll Is lo build Ilia! many units on tis piece of property, and that Is to build up beyond the present 56-1001 zoned height restriction which made the earlier apartment building what it ls. The Bay Club wan(ed lo follow that plan with the firs! building, but nea rby residents successfully fought for the lower, squatter structure. There's ample evidence that the taller and thinner building is preferable. The 85-loot Centinela Bank and The Towers Apartments buildings are much better looking tha~ the Bay Club structure, for example. They nreserve glimpses of the bay for passing Pacific Coast Highway motorists. It seems unfortunate that another big building muiit be bulll. bul lhe facts are the Bay Club r,roperty is zoned for multiple residential and the Bay C ub management feels it must make its investment pay before the lease property reverts to city ownership in 1998. The Bay Club is ~oing to build a R:ain -tall and slim or long and square. Tt wouJd seem Newport Beach citv ~ov~f'!llllent ~hould expeditiously waive its SO-foot hei,etit lirrut 1n the interests of a more attractive bay fron't for all. A Merry Tradition The Newport to Ensenada yachting escapade bas a merry tradition. It is to hoist the mainsail at the start and.hojst lhe flagon al the finish. The grin gos turned thEiir Mexican destination· into one big watering hole for the 23rd time over the week· end. Bartenders renewed once-a-year acquaintances. Race officials moved the starting day ahea·d a few years back to get the first finishers in on Friday. It has worked to diminish the Jure for tag-along weekend celebrators sopping it up at the fini sh. ~me rnay question h.ow much ~a rmony the annual affair adds to a good neighbor policy between Mexico and the United States, but one thing's for sure: it cer· tainly doesn't hurt the Mexican economy. N Se1aate Politicians Run for Cover Juveniles Suffer Law Nixon's Immense Co~rage WASHlNGTO~ -Nothing could be more disastrous at this moment in history than any congressional action limiting or circumscribing the authority of the President of the Un ited States in his constitutional role as commander· in-chief of the armed forces and executor o1 foreign policy. Such limitations or attem pted limita· tions would create a constit utional crisis which could so vitiate presidential authority that the effecti veness of America's world leadership would be destroyed. The Pre..sident would not recognjze such limitations. !ht on I y congressional respon se which amounted to anything would be: cutting off appropriations and authoriza tions for the Vietnam War. That is impossible because the security of a mill ion men in the Western Pacific ii in\·olved. Nothing but chaos would result and the exercise of American will in world affairs would be: paralyzed. HOW THE J\fEN IN the Senate can move in thi s direction escapes all ra- tionality and reality and is but another sign of the frightf ul confusion affecting the thinking of politicians who cannot stand modern pressure and run for cover when the Vietnam War prote!l is carried lnto the 11lrttts by violence prone ac- tivists. Make no mistake about this, what bot.hers some of the men in the Senale is that they may lose their status, posi- tion and means ol livelihood if they &Upport a pruident in an unpopular ....... their heart.!1 bleed for America : their miDch an concerned 116& with America's 1r ' ' Richard W~lson' · · .. -...... defeat than their own. ln these circumstances Congress is not capable of limiting th e President's constitutiOnal freedom of ac tion on a rational ba3is. In these times when only hair-t;jggtt action may save a modern nation li'om ext inction. the century old argument over the President's authority and responsibility has no rele vancy. He must be !ree to act. Not only free to act, he must be required to act with or without congressional sanction. ' THE .F.!IJIEIGN ,l!Etl,TI~ .Col)>- mittee o:f\he Senate wish9f t.o IU~titute its judgmG\t for tllat of ·th4 Prelld~nt. Thl5 ridi~us premise IU~ that 8 or JO senators comprising •· mijority of the corwnlttee would detennlne when the United States would: fight, where tt would fight and'.how it 'fOold ficht. Sen. J . W. Fiilbrl1ht wu rtght In 1961 when he aald : "With thtlr ti· cessively parochlll orientation, con· gressmen are acutely sensitive to tht influenct ol private preaaure and to the e1cesses and inadequatjes of a -public opinion that is all too often ignorant of the needs, the dangers, and the op- portunity in our foreign rtlatioos." Nothing could have described the present condition ~tter. An opportunity has presented itself in Clmbodla to set back the Communist silk in a major way. President Nil'on bas grasped the opportunity that nellher the Congre.~!I nor the public would touch if they had to make the decisions themselves. TT ALL BOILS DOWN to a matter of success or failure in a ma jor military operation. This is likely to be Nixon's Ditnbienphu or hls Battle-of the Bulge. Thal is to say, conclusive either way in determining the suc~s or fa ilure of his policy in Southeast Asi a, and his own political future and prestige. The idea recognized by Nixon tha t he might be a one-term president is · not ronfined to his way of bringing the Asian war to a constructive conclusion. lie has taken that risk in -his definition ef a new and more practical policy nh racial equality, in his policy on 1srael, ,his facing a~ the war protesters and lhe campus· ~lutionaries, hia attitudes on labor. He has gambled on there being a strong majority, silent er otherwise. which no longer will accept the derangement cf national policies by m.inoritie6, or any political rombination thereof. RJGHT Oil WRONG, tJti.s has required immense couraae on the .President's part and never more than when he faced· the natioo, challenged hia detractors and led the country where it was doubtful of going. This Is presidential leadershlp under conditions which have been rarely seen but it wu not without precedent. Jsola· tioni!l leaders, inc luding the late Sen. William E. Borah, tried to intimidate presidents with their superior knowledge ilnd judgment, with about the same pros- pectlve remit as in the present instance. Women Pick Wrong Target • By JAMES E. WHETMORE Se nator If Susan B. Anthony were alive today, lh!!:'d probably be campaigning as hard as ever for women's rights. Although most men now think that women were "libera ted" when !hey got the vote., most of the fair sex would undoubledly di!agree, judging from the amount of legislation and subsequent publicity on the scene today. Last year much was made O\'tr .a measure to abolish coin-operated toilet facilit ies in public places, with the measure's author -'-woman -charg. illg discrimin ation against her HI because not all accommodations in men'a n10ms require a '·m onetary con- sideration." Despite ronsiderable i;upport from women's organizatio ns and even 11>me sympathetic males who ha ve been caught without a dime at one time or another, the measure failed to rectlve •pproval. -----Wednesday, May 6, 1970 TM tdUorlol pege Of tM DoUr Pilot '''"' Co inform 4nd t tfm.. utate rtodtn bl/ pre1ntmg this newtp0pdt'1 ophtJmu and com- mtntorv on topics of i"tcre1c and rig!llflcan<e, bv providing • f orum for the 1;tpre1don of 01tr f'eod.tn• opinlon1, and by pr<1"'11ng th• di.,.,.. vi<w- pobtll of fnformtd oblm><rl ond .opolum<n on top!CI of tM day. Robert N. Weed, PubUdltr -~ " THE PRIMARY women's rights bHl this legislative session deals with discriminatory hiring practices, a sub~t near and dear to the hearts of women's cl-~J and factlom of lhe female llbera- tion movement Most ol us would agree th t there is merit in legislat.ion dirtiCted at this area, and recently the hiring practlces bill was paMed In the IOwer house by a wide majority. The blH adds M:X to the di.M:rimlnalory hiring practices prohibited in the Fair Employ· ment PracUoes Law. One of m)' braver colleagu es. taking his private and political life In his hands, ""as called upon to explain why be voted aga inst the measure. RE NOTED THAT he had tried for three. years to (ight ag ah1st the discriminltory practices against women employes, but h•d directed thot i!ght to the proper place, the Industrial Wo}:t'art Coch-Ali the pr1cU~s which aro! dlscrtmlnalor)' against women a~ d<fined In· thal Cod• and ""' he 11id, In thef'air Employment Proctk:ft I.ow. J\iy coUea,ue 1!10 contends that 1r employers follow the letter of the law embodied tn the new bill. they may well find Lbemttlvts In vlolauon of the lndUSlrial Welfare Code. lf an employer refused to hlre an applicant. !or lnstanct, becaUH she was a \10IOID, he would be In vlol1tion of th"! FEPC Jaw. If ht hired ber and the Job tequlred more than eight hours of work a day, M the IUUng of Cf.11.\in weighll, he m!1ht be In violation of the Industrial Welfare Code. ON 111E OT11E11 und, .,, con""'' say1, an employer might face the pr~ blem of an FEPC viO'latlon If he had a job suited to a woman, but a man demaOOed it Some opponents o.f the measurt have even gone so fer as to turn the tables en the tqual rights concept and apply some ol the women's accepted practices W male employes. An employer. as an example, might abolish the long· established l>minute coffee b r ~ a k presently provided for women on the bisis that granting it would constitu te discrimination agains\ men. Or men M.tld wtll ~ that cots or couches and chairs be provided tn me.11's restroom facilities. ' NO ONE URJOlJSLY believe! that such conjeet.ure will deter the movement fo.· equal employment rights for women. But several of my fellow lawmakeri; be:li@ve tPet such efforts should be directed at the Industrial Welfare COde. As one sage wit ooce pu t it. the only "''&Y to underStand a woman is to love htr -and then it isn't necessary to understand her. Dear Gloomy Gus: ff our c.vs could 1in1, the Mml would be, "Drink to Mt Only With Thine Eyes.'' -N. Y. S. Tiii• .. tlWl'f "IM'Clt Nlffrt' •II-"" _,.,, .... tf "" ~••tft.'l'ff. ltllf ,.,, HI ,_.,. " OIMll\1 Oin. Dtllr ........ Prejudice MaiU>ox ,, ~ To the Editor : There are a fe w questions to which I would like some answers. Why must~teenage traffic citations re. quire going all the way to Orange to Juvenile Cou rt? If a young person is mature enough to have a driver's license, why can't he answer the charges in a regular traffic court in the district where he received the citation? WH'EN A YOUNG persoA asks for a hearing and trial for a disputed cila· lion, why is he not given as much courtesy as is · glve11 a common drunk? The court trial consists of one man. and the arresting officer, IF he choo!ifs to answer the .summons, against the young "offender" and his parent. (Nolhlng appears to be done if the ofricer choQses NOT to appear on a summons of this sort.) The MAN seems to have already made up his ml11d that the contestant is guilty for the simple reason that she or he is under 111 or 21 years of age as the case may be . \VHY JS THERE 1 charge made fo r certain equipment violations which have been remedied and signed by an officer ? \Vhe11 a malfunction is po ss i b I y something that has occurred without the driver's h.-nowledge. such as a burned out bulb, a fine seems unfair. In fact, a citation for such an offense seems unfair. Bulbs do go out quite suddenly and unan nounced. h1 a case where a malfunction has cbviously extended over a period of lime, such as faulty brakes, draggi.lg fenders. rusted out mufflers, there might be: a valid reason for a citation and fine. ARDATH G. FAUMUI ~ledicnl Expenses To the Editor : Your editorial of April 29 commended lhe effort undertaken by students to help pay medica l expenses for an injured high school youth. t always react negatively lo these kinds of efforts for persons with overwhelming medical ex· penses, however good It may make these "da.gooders" feel. This young man has a right lo good medical rare. and also a right for the family not to have to worry about the burden of these expenses. Insurance benefits they may have need to be utilized. BUT ABOVE THAT, it setms to me to _ be a respo11sibility rnos.t taxpayers should glad ly undertake through pro- gram~ such ai'i state Medi.Cal er through expa nded ~1edicare program to disabled people. as well as the elderly. These should not be rons ldered to be "\\'elf are" by a needy person. There should also be more government control over the e1orbltant cost or medical care, ~o that there Is some iuaranlte that these medlcal expenses are justifiable. MRS. MARGARET LUKAS Lttters Jrom. readtr.s are welcon1t. Nor1nal/y 1Qriter1 should convc11 lheir mtssaaei ht 300 wo rd.s or less. The righl lo co11de11se leth~r• io fit .spac• or tllntlnate Ubtl i.s reserved. AU Ut.- lers n1ust inchl.dl signature and mmi- ing address, but nam~s may be with.- held on ,.eq1iest if suf/Jcitnt reason fs apparent. Poet~ unll not be pttb· Ushtd. ' The Real Drama Is the Conflict tbou&bts at Larae : The real drama in the courtroom is the conflict between the witness' attemp,t to tell the whole truth, and the attorney·s determination to elicit only those portions of it that are helpful to his client. • • • • "Obscenity" is what ever shocks some- one today, who would have been shocked 20 years ago by something he considers acceptable now. • • • Doctors make the worst pati ents in a hospital for the same reason !hat pilots make the worSt passengers in a pl ane -both know exact ly how many things go wrong and how fa llible their colleagues are. • • Beyond a certain age. a woman's chief social satisfaction seems 10 consist in spol!ing other women in her age·bracke~ who are heavier than she is. . " Everyone imagines he knows what Jesus would de if He should return, but no one imagines that he might be the first one Jesus would rebuke. _....._ ., I / The pointlessness 'Of most corporal punishment was neatly pinned by Don Marquis, when he observed: "Many " man spanks his children for the thingi his own father should have spanktd out of him." • • • A quarrel Is the failure of an argument, just as 'a war ts the failure of a con· ference. • • • .Rumor, crushed to earth. will rise again -if it's got the proper sexual ingredients. • • \Ve're entering the Age of Outer Space Exploration beiorP ,~·e·ve even found " way to ~ve on this little planet without catching a a:ild. • • • A woman isn't totally resigned tit spinsterhood until she begins buying shoes primarily for comfort. Odds Favor Uncle Sam Great news! New York City. \\'hJch can't make ends meet en its cut from the new stat e lottery. is going to open a string of bookie joints. Mayo r Lindsay figures the city's take from the now-legal off-track betting will run $.300 million a year. Here's eriother giant stride toward th e only conceivable soluUon to the nat ion's fiscal crises -natio11alizing organized crime. Once Mayor Lindsay gets a taste of the fat profits fl owing in from his bookie joints. there's no que stion but he'll take over the numbers racket. And why not? Playing lhe numbers is no more sinful than playing the horses. Naturally there ha\·e been protests from such orgenlzalions as the churches and the Mafia. ''The mayor's muscling in our ter· ritory," growls Three-Fingers Jack Daniels, chairman of The Wednesday Eve11ing Christian Fellowship and Bingo Socia!. But. as the well-kJtown mobster stoolle, Chicken Cacciatore, puts it with a shrug ''You can't fight City Hall." THE NEXT STEP, or coursr. Is laking over the millions of dollars that now go l.o disreputable types f r o m pros· litulion. This may require federal aid. Envision. if you wil l, a vast Sexicnrc program. A Bordello Co n s I ru c tio n Program, funded by Io ans from the Department of •lea lth. Ed ucatio n and \Velfare, would do wonders for impac ted areas. They could well be staffed by conscripts from VISTA through a draft lottery. ObjecUon.s will be raised . But If the government can conscript the! bod ies or men for the weUare or the taxpayers. ii can C1!rlainly peddle the bodies of young ladies for the same purpose. Dope peddling poses problems. But In Brilain the government's been doing it for years. All lhl't needs be dooe l.o make a lldy profit ls to raise the prices lo 11•hat the traffic ~·ill bt'11r. And seeing that many states now peddle the dru11 called alcohol through stale liquor ~lores. there·s no reason Hity can'I peddle the drug called marijuana, too. It would double revenues. Pu.rse-snotching and stickups b J ~overnmerit men are mon: easiJ)' justified. Mme would call thl& robbery. 1 think of ll 1.s ta1ation. After all, ~ I Art Hoppe -· the definition of robbery is taking your. money by force or the threat or force. You know. like the IRS does. Personally, th ough. I'd draw the line at havi ng paid government agents rub out innocent people. There jus}. isn·t enough money in an ope ration like that to justiJy the costs . Look at Viet nam. SO HATS OFF to i'ola)·or Lindsay Ifs a sn1all step for lhe taxpaye r, bu i a gian.l step toward nationalizing organiz· ed crime . And there·s enough billion.• in that to bala11ce every governmental budget in the land. And cut laxes, too. True, the outcries \\'ill mount. "We can't . have our government engaged in or~anized gambling, pandering, dope ped. dhng, robbery and murder.," the foes of progress will shout. Nonsense. It's solely because these long~stablished funcnons of government arc so disorganized that \\'t tax payers C'.lre losiJlg our shirts. ....----By Geor11e --~ Dl'ar George : ''ou k<'ep saying you can solve anybody's income tax problems. \Vef.l. I've written you three lellcr~ ~sk1ng.f?r you r solution to sneaking 1n add1t.Jonal enterl4inment deduc- t.Ions. Why ha ven't you answertd? HARRIED TAXPAYER Dear llarried : Sorry. We\•e got a new wardtn and he revoked my mail privilege5 except once a month. Would you repeat the question 1n Mey? Everybody's an expert in April. Dear George: Our ishores ::ire Utlered \\'llh brer cans. ou r highways are a diS&race, our wattrways are pollut ed! Who cau$ed this! FUR IOUS AMERICAN Dear F'urlous American: I h11ven ·1 been off my block for !l\·o week!, and I c1n prov1 !l 3 3 t ·~ • *'?'.""t ' t ::;;;er• i • H* r-. I • fosia Mesa Today's F.htal • • • VOL. 63, NO. IQ8, 5 SECTIONS, 96 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, C.AillFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 1970 TEN CENTS DAILY .. ILOT Sl•ff PIMIO Campuses Closed Reagan Shuts UC, State Colleges SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald Reagan today annoupced th3t Calif· ornia's university .and st.ate· <:<>llege cam· puses will ' be closed" effective Thursday through Sund8y _ -Reagan said he N>i-:d the period would "allow time for. rational reflection away from the emotional turmoil and encour- age all \o disavow violence and mob ac. tion." Reagan took the· aclion as activists on Southern California campuses passed out armbands and leafl ets calling ror strikes. police girded for trouble al UCLA and UC Berkeley faced anoLher day of dis· rupt~d classes. Th e governor. after a series cf meet· in gs with t.oP aides. issued a statement in * * * h.is office aMOWlclng he had asked UC President Charles Hitch and State Col· lege President Glenn D.unke to close dawn the campuses. He said the lwo education 1eaders 0 strongly CMCUrTed" in his request and had "taken the ne<:essary action for im· plementation." Reagan 's statement read : "It is essential for our college and university faculty, students and admlnis· trators to reflect on the PoaVe sequence of current event!! and to coml~f"" their responsibilities to then'l!elves and to our society. ·• "In order to afford them this oppor- tunity, away from the highly emctional conditions now prevailing on most cam- puses, 1 have today asked President Hitch and Chancellcr Dumke to clcse thP. university and state coUege campuse~ for two days and over the weekend. "Presideht Hitch a n d Chancellor· Dumke stl.ongly coocurred in my recom· mendation, and accordingly have taken the necessary action for implementation. "All campus facilities Will be closed during this period. "I hope that this period will allcw time fur rational reflection away from the efnotional turmoil, and tncourage au to ·disavow violence and mnb action . "I have1requested Caliiornla radio and television. broadcasters to make time ·available to TI'le this eve ning in ordtr that I may gi ve all Californians a full report on Ulb situation." Orange Coast, 3 New Cambodia ' G·WC Schools ORANGE COAST COLLEGE STUDENTS GATHER FOR ANTl·WAR CONVOCATION ON CAMPUS UCl's Stephen Shapiro (at podium background) Talks at Meeting Designed to Cool ~motions Ordered Shut Fronts Opened 'Attitudes Change' .Irvine Not Objecting To Bay· Swap Bond Vote The Irvine Company has no objection to Orange County Supervisor Alton E . Allen'S proPGsal to put to a public vote 1 bond issue to buy from the company the private lands surrounding Upper Newport Bay. Irvine Company President William R. Masoo sai d pu blic purchase is an alternative to the land exchange pending in ,£0Uft. that would re align property Senators Clasli Over Kent State Shooting Deat1is WASHINGTON (UP I) -Se n a t e Democratic leader Mike J\1 a n sf i e Id proposed today a high-level commission investigate the Kent Stale University stu.denl deaths and angry debate broke out in the Senate on where the faul l lay for the shootings. Mansfield said President Nixon should create a commission including such persons as former Chief Just ice Earl Warren. form er cabinet member John W •. Gardner and Sam Brown, a leader of peaceful antiwar demonstrations. On the Senate floor, Sens. Stephen M: Young (o.ohio), and Robert Griffin (ft..Mich.), clashed over who was responsible · f0r the campus deaUts - Ohio National Guarctsmen or student revolutionaries. Young, who introduced a resolution to set up a .special Senate committee to investigate the Kent tragedy. termed the Guardsmen "trigger happy." Griffin blamed student revolutionaries who he said "are much ·worse than bums.'' Young charged that the Kent death.~ were caused by ''trigger happy National Gulrdsmen who shouldn't have been in tlW! national ,guard in the first place but got in there to.evade the draft." Deadline Set For Applicants Deadline for applications for the (M.:la. Mesa planning commission has been set tor May 13 by Maynr Robert Wilson. Wilson said the councn is seeking can- l.1idates for the post vacated when Jack J-fammett was elected to the city council. Anyone Jiving in Cost.a Mesa is eligi ble lo apply, he added. tntervicws with the councilmen will ~ scheduled with applicants after the clMing date, Wilson 1akt. AppHcatlons and tnfonnalion may be abtained Uvoogh the city Planning llepcrtment, room 100, city hall, he said. lines creating public parks a n d waterways and separate private parce ls. Ownership of state tidelands entrusted lo the county for developmen t and of Irvine Company uplands. islands and patent lands is now jumbled. f.1ason said since discussions,on Upper Bay development fi rst began nearly ,20 years ago, the Irvine Company has been inkirmed by county officials they did not believe the public would support la nd purchase. "But public attitudes do change with time." Mason said. "Perhaps the public is now prepared to buy land. instead or exchanging it. But I don't k n ow . Nobody knov.•s. In November, we may Cind out." Mason said in the meantime. so the public may be assured of an alternative, pending litigation testing the con- s!itutionalify of the land trade should prOCi!ed. He remar ked that he doesn't think it would be in the public interest to permit the proposed bond election to become "an al1+0r·nothing issue."' Either way, he said , "the citizens of Orange Coun ty are entitled to a JX)Sitivc ,solution to Upper Bay deve lop- ment, .,.,,hic h. has bei:n stalemated for 20 ye ars." M esans Get Look At Fire Fighters The men. machinery m1d equ ipment , that protect Cosla Mesa lives and pro- perty wi ll go on review Saturday· during the Costa Mesa Fire DepartmenPs an- nual Fi re Service Recognition Day. Open house will be staged at each of (our local fi re stations, w i t h demo nstrations of the aerial ladder tru ck, pumpers, plus movies, tours and rescue techniques . Mayor Robert M. Wilson has pro- claimed May 9 Fjre Service Day, urgMg all cit izens to obtain a better un- derstanding of the fire department's broad func tion. Hours of the displays -no interruption will be caused in the city's 24--hour fire protection system -will be 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., according to Chief John M:1rshall. Locations will be Station One at 280:\ Royal Palm Dri ve: Station Two, 800 Baker St.; Sta tion Three, 111 Rocheste r St.,-and Station Four, 2300 Placenti~ Ave. Mesa Fire Quenched; Dan1age Said LighL Costa Mesa firemen extinguished a flash fire this morning at the Metal Service Company, 781 W. 16th SI. The fire, which occured at about JO The fire, which occurred at about 10 into a barrel o£ oil, produced a grent deal ol smoke but ve ey little damage, firemen said. Carpenter . Calls For Rejection Of Cohf\~011tatiol\ .~;,· "'· " Dentiis E. Carpen tEr. chairman cf th6 Republican Stale Centi-al CcmmiU.ee Tuesday called for college students to reject the "icreaming revolutionaries whn will try to bu ild !!till nlore violent confrontations en the corpses in Ohio." Carpenter, a Newpcrt Beach resident \vho is a candidate for the Republican nomination for the 3~th District State Senate, made his statement in the !tf- tern1 ath of the Kent State shootings which lert. fou r students dead. "I'm saddened by the deaths In Ohio but surprised that we haven "t had a tragedy of this magnitude Jong ago," he said. The Republican leader said he saw two alternatives for the future, "more bloodshed or we can get down to serious di scussion.'' "Student lead ers must act still more finnly in the aftermath of the violent deaths on the Kent State ca mpus. rt is evident that i;tudent viclence will be met "·ith firm st rength. "But I think it is in1portant for students to recognize lhat honest discussion and legit imate political action on the ir part will be \\•elcomed," he sairl. I BULLETIN Dr, Norman. E. \Vatson. cliancellor of the Oran.ye Coast Ju11ior College Dis trict. late today"-announced that both Orange Coast College in Costa A-fesa and Golden Wtst College in f luntington Seach would be ck>sed from ~ic{night .tonight untjL midnight Sundat1. Faculty and staff wiU be on duty an<f; the 1liPrar11 wilt be open bue ckus~· wilt "cit ,,, ~UC~ ., . I By STEvJ'! MITCHEL!; 01 "!' Qlij)' P'fltl Stell _ More than l,000 students and faculty members of Orange Collllt College met today in tht college's free speech area at a part of a peaceful strike against tht'! war In Southeast Asla and the deaths of four Kent State Un.i ver&ity studen ts. The convocation was ;:i part of a three- day boycott of classes initiated by students Tuesday and approved by the student ·senate. Dr. John Jensen. professor of history at the junior college commended the peaceful approach by students in asking senate support for Ole strike. "The democratic process used by the students demoostrates your concern in this problem," he stated, "What we must do now is present conslructive solutions to end the v.•a.r in Southeast Asio..'' He warned the students lo keep cool and to fonnu late constructive solutions to their grieva"nces. ''There are some students who want yoi; to th row rocks and make th is a violent str ike," he continued. "Don't do (See OCC RAU.Y, Page 2) . ' ' I •t / ' ! UPtT ...... UCLA DEMON!STRAl'OR TAKEN INTO ~USTODY BY POLIC'E Flot Fight•, Brokon. }Vl~dow1,.S'l'•ll Flro• at Witotwood Camp~• ~ ... ' SAIGON (UPI) -The United Slates and South Vietnam launched three new offensives into Cambodia today in the , bigge~t allied operation of the war. An annada of U.S. Navy river patrol boUI moved into Cambodian tetTltory to jnln t"he 5(1,000 allied t:t'QOPS invplved . : · · The three new drives ·Cl'Olsed '" bord"f ;!JI .~eas r~ngin&. It~ U.. l!!l!!i northwest to t5 'miles north ot''Slil;q~ 4nd ~ere pr~~ by :)IUWlv" eerbal assault! using bonibs an<!' napalm wlilch wiped out the town of Snuol where SQfne looting ' by American k'<M?P8 was reporte<I •• One new offensive today was by a 4.SOO-mad t.at:k ·force of Ult 25th U.$. Inlantrt Dlvjslon Into the Dog'• Held stetor &5 miles northwest of Saigon. At least 43 communist troops and four ·Rally at UCLA Turns Violent; 74 Arrested LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Score!! of police patrolled near and oft the UCLA campus early today following a three- hour window smashing spree and violent ccnfrontation between antiwar protestors and officers. At least 74 persons were arrested. and 16 injured. Acting ChB11ceUor David S a x o n declared a state of campus emergency Tuesday after a rally of about 2,000 persons turned to fist fights and lhe starting of small fires. A force of 250 city police officers moved onto the campus and cleared an area around the men's gym after several seuflles and a series of window breaking. The building hcuses r:Jassrooms and the ROTC offices, focal point of the stude11ts protesting against American in· volvement in Cambodia and the slaylrig of four students at Kent State in Ohio. Police stationed them!lelves at in- tersections surroundillg the campus after it was reported quiet at a p.m. and Jet persons leave, but nobody was allowed to enter dllring the night Of these arrested, including 12 women and two professors, 61 were charged with misdemeanors while 13 were booked on felonies, includblg assault against a policeman. Authorities saJd U students were treated for minor injuries and four cam- pus guards and a city policeman aus- tained minor injuries. City Police Cble! Eclw•rd M. Davis mcbUlzed the entire Los Ant.ties depart- ment ud patroll In aU parts o! the city were doubled. Da"'• said his action would remain iD eltect unUl "a state of peace iJ obvlow.:. '' Protesta allO erupted at San Fernando Valley State and Ute Uliverslty of California at SiOta Barbara. At UCSB, 1beriff's depuUe11 and highway patrolmen were -called to the campus when an estimated 1,000 students gathered In front o! the admlnlslratlon bu~d!ns !ollOY(ln'. rally. /STOCK MAJUUT .. _ '' • • I ~EW YORK (AP) -The 1\ock market ' pulled h!l"k !rom Its st<ep early galnbul remained on the ':Jpswing this af~. Trading was moderately active. (See quotati~. Pq_es 26.27). The decline Memed to have lost. mc- rnentum, however, and the latest read- ing ,. •• rracUOllOl4' higbet·thao the l::JO p.m. fl8\lrt. ! · \ ' ------------------~------ Americaru; were killed in the first hours cf "the sweep. 'l'wo of the Americans were killed when U.S. artillery rounds fell .Sholt of their target in Ute initial stages ti. the Optri1tiOn. This brought u_ s. Casualties in the multi-prong~ offen.lve lo IO kill•~ •nd 10 wounded. At le"st 50 U.S. Navy river pall'ol boats,. heavily arniect 50-foot. veSsels. moved into Cambodia along the Kham Spean River as part of this Qt>eration, Kaylor reported . They ran Jnto Com- munist fire two miles inside Cambodia bu t casualties were oot known . The -second ·drive tpday crossed the frontier 96 miles north of Saigon and the third ' was about 80 miles north cif Saigon near the Loe Ninh district town. Both · areas are north of the Ffshbook area where allied troops have been searching for •a Comm unist central hea(tquarters for six days. U.S. military officials said the cf. fensives, crdered by President Nixcn to wipe out Communis t sanctuarlea across the border. have killed 2,800 Com- munist troops , captured e,ooo weapons, .s~i:o:ed er destroyed 700 tons of food and ,munitions and M trucks and destroyed hundreds of bunkers and bast camps. The operations began last week . The first major strike was lrt the Parrot's Beak sector . of. ·Cambodia that juts out · to within 35 miles of Saigon and was the staging area for the Tet cffe nsive on Saigcn in 1968. OLhers were farther north in the Fishhook and Se San areas, 67 and 230 miles northeast of Saigon. South Vietnamese -also penetrated Cambodia from the Mekong Delta area. 4th Chan1her Forum Focuses on SLuden ls The fourth program in the series "The Un iversity and the Community" will be held ton ight at 8 in the Corona del Mar High School LitUe Theater. Sponsored by the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce, the program will focus _on the students at UC Irvine. Other programs . have studied UC11' faculty, cur riculum and administration. Orange Coast Wea Cher U you ·like today'• weather, you'll love Thursday's since lt'it another dose of tl:ie same stuff - low coast.at clouds and hazy sun· shine with a top mercury reading of VO degrees.-· INSmE ' TODAY Orange -county's weekend live theater fart -and the county's five wtrie$ rn the Riv. er.side one-act tour11ament~re deWfled today. See Entertain- ment~ Pages 28·29. J • • ' ' • ;...i,•L;:;_ :r, f DAILY PILOT c Syracromeslaed . • DAI~ Y PILOT II.., l'MN> Estancia }l.igh School coeds rehearse for aqua show scheduled at the Eagle campus May 14,. 15 and 16. -Among 30 swimmers will be (front to rear) Kathy Amburgey, Carol Berner, Sandy Cassube and Karen Herrin. Aquacade will get under way at 8:15 each night. Tickets at •1 for adults and 75 cents for students will be available at tbe school. ' . Six Pulled From Frigid Ocean in Good Condition Six people who were pulled from 54- dtgree water off the Newport. Harbor --.nee this morning were reported ·ill good condition late today. Harbor patrolmen a&d they rece1ved '• call at about 7:IO a.m. from a resident of the bluffs area in Corona del Mar that a boat had capsized near the harbor -.nee bellbuoy. Patrolmen picked the six people 1od Funeral Held For Mesa Child Funeral services were held today for Mark Aaron Brown of Cost.a Mesa who died at the Orange County M$dical Center Saturday. The five-year-old boy SUttUmbed to bums received in a fire in his family home March· 25. He is survived by his parents, Mr. Md Mrs. Cleaty Brown. a sister, four brothers and a nephew, all o( the family home at 844 Santiago Road. Additional survivors include maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Milford Wheller of Santa Ana and great- grandmothers, Mrs. Eunice Stallions and Mrs. Sally Wheller. China Gets 24 Hours To Leave Canihodia PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) - The Cambodian government today gave Communist Chinese diplomats 24 hours to get out of the country. following Peking's recognition or the exiled govern- ment of the ousted Cambodian chief of state, Prince Norodom Sihanouk. DAILY PILOT OiltANGE COAST "VSLISHINO C0M"ANY Jtobert N. We•' J 1c\ JI:. C11rl•1 \lict ,.mident n 0-tl ~""ff Thom•t k1ewil IE<ll!Ot' Thofl'ltS A. M11r,~int M-.Jnt ldll'Of c .. t• M .. Offl•• lJO W11t lty Slr•tl Meill119 "'''•111: P.O. 11• IS60, •?616 OtW Offi'" H...,,..I 11«11: 2111 wn• ati*iel &ou'1P•••• L .. -IHCt!: m Fett.I A- Hlll'll~ kid!: l1'11 .. ado ·~ ... 11'1 ClelMl'llt: lOS NOl"lll El c-tlll ilt"I ' CA llY l"llOT", -4tlt -'ildl If ~IMI 1flto N•-Wl•I'"'"' 11 JiU'lltl>d lbllf fY(t,i S,,,... d•r loo M¢'ef'tle .. lllelft JDr Lltu<WO •11(.fl. Ill""°" 81Kll, CO.to Mtu. H~n!ifltltn 8NCll •!Id 'Ollnlfll\ Ville~, tlllnl •II~ , .... , t119lontl e!llllor'>4. Of'•,... (tut PullllMlflt C~nf f"lr>llt .. jtltfllt ·~ tt ?JI! W1\I a.11»< 11vt .. N•w""1 ltldl. 1"4 no wat i.1'1 '""''• CAHll M1.,1. ,.,.,.._ 1114) 642·•)2'1 c1.,ur.e4 A•....w .. 142·••1• Cooyrlfllt, 1m. Crtl!lt c ... i.t """'ltfll"' ~11.r, Nt ,,_ ,, .. i.., H1vt.!r11.-. .. l!tri<ll "'"... .. '11-1-" Ml't'ifl .... , M ·~d WI!""' 1p1Cllf ,,,,,.. !flit•IM et <Oftlltlllll --· ~ ~ ,...,.,. POld ,i N1•"'1 •tfl.'111 -'"" 'Mu, Clllfttflll, ,_ •• " .. .., u rrftl' sJ:io ....,.,llfJI tr !flfll 11.M ,....ilflil'll .... lllff'I ..... llfMlll•"• 1),141 "'°"IMJ, a dog out of tht water about 20 minutes after their 14·foot rental boat capsized. A Harbor Patrol spokmnan said ht was not. able to determine how the boat capsized in the medium chop. Rtleased after beinS treated for shock and exposure were: ' · -John Van Nyhuy11 of 1023 N. Olive St., Santa Ana. -Brady Schmid t and Wilburn Gracia, both of 2609 W, Chapman Ave., Orange. -Ricbfd l\lont.e1, or 449 Hill St., Orange. ~t Gollr111 of Las :r:les. -JuUe Vlnv1 and her entlfied dog,, bolh d Sausalito. Clea red in Espionage LONOON (AP) - A former member of Parliament was cleattd today of eight charges of passing secret information to Communist sgeits. Frail, white-haired Will Owen, 69, had pleaded innocent. • DAILY 'ILOl ll1H ll'Mlil Vn lty cHng After a month of practice, 11· year-old Craig Masten. 4835 River Ave., Ne\\'port Beach, has mastered the art of bal· ancing his unicycle. He got one, he said, because he is too young for a Slffboard. ) .. .,.....,..,,.1 OCCRALLY • • • it -kelp cool" Student» jpeUers urp! Ille crowd to "Go OMt aA4 do somttbln& in aupport d this strike, Don~ Jult lit alVWld aft4 qy )'lltl're on .ctike." \ . ~II "'-" tAil•hlt alp peUtioos dllrb1i' the •trn.i ~ jlld write their congressmen. Other suggestions b~ght up at the 10 a.m. convocation included student confrontation at city council meetings to get their support for an end to the war. Booths set up at the side of the free speech area contained petition forms , note paper, envelopes and stampe1 for student use. 'ftle faculty H:nate at the junior college was scheduled to meet at 3 p.m. today to determine if faculty support of the strike would be approved . If so, the campus will be closed Thursday and Friday, according to Dean Joe Kroll, desn of students. ntt convocation today came as a result of a student rally Tuesday morning where student speakers from OCC and the UC! campus-spoke out agairu;t U.S. involvement in Southeast A.ria and the death of the four Kent State student.$. Following the rally, students Jed by Bruce Derlllnger, a member of the stu- dent judicial board st CX::C, lowered the U.S. flag to half mast. An hour and one· half meeUng or students wHh the school's student senate resulted in 100 percent senate approva l of the boycott. The student lnlUatlve approved by the senate stated: "We, the memben of the OCC Student Senate, bei na the elected representatives of sll OCC students. stand in support of the peaceful OCC student Mke and recommend that the Faculty Senate of OCC support said students in stri):ing agalnst the U.S. involvement in Southlalt. Asia and express our grief concerning the death of tour fellow students at Kent State University." At that time, Dean Kroll told the ~ate and the students, "This is your decision, OOt you can't interfere with students who want to attend classes. This must be a peaceful boycott" Convicted Rapist Fails to Show For S_entencing Orange County and Los Angeles County law enforce.ment agencies are working together today fn tlie hunt for a 19-year- old college student who was convicted of assaulting a UCI coed with the in- tention of raping her. Michael Anthony English, 19, of Los Angeles, failed to show up for sentencing Tuesday ln the Santa Ana courtroom or Superior Cooi:t Judge Ro n a Id Abernethy and the jurist immediately issued a $25,000 bench warrant for the youUt's arrest. EngllSh also forfeits the $10,000 bail which was posted by his parents in pre-trial proceedings. English wa.s convicted April 15 of assault wiUt intent to commit rape after several residents of women's dormitories at UCI told of his conduct during a thrtt-hour tour that ended wiUt his at· tempted rape of a 20-year-old student. He was fluahed from bushes near the Cielo dormitory and arrHted by UCI police after his \lictim raised the alarm. It was lamed today that English, who f:oces a possible state prison tenn of one to five years for the Orange County offense, also faced sentencing in Los Angeles on charges of assault. A bench wa»rant has been Issued for his arrest by Los Angeles authorities. Holdup Suspects Jailed i n Grove After Fistfight Garden Grove police jailed four armed robbery suspects early this morning after a free.for-all Ii&ht in a motel room \'lhere the men were found after a ~ bery of two bar owners. Officers said Foster Slyh, 53, of Santa Ana, and Vernon Cherry, $2, or Santa Fe Springs, were held up by 1 man carrying a rifle In front of their Ebbtlde Bar at 12771 Harbor .Boulevord, 1bout 2 1.m. nt suspe<ll is Mk:hael P. Della·M1g· giora. 19, of Garden Grove. Police were told that an armed man wu sten going into the Fire Slatton Inn motel, 12GS Harbor a few minutes later. Officers Gerald Lobb and Allan Herbach approached the motel room \vhere Ute quartet Were heard engaged In a loud ariument. When pollce entered the room a rough and tumble fight broke 01,Jt. Finally sub- dued and jailed on suspicion of armed robbery and resistJng arrest were Della· Ma11ior1 and Mich1.el E. Elliot, 22, Michael J. Gaddis, 18, and William A. Scott, 221 all of Garden Grove. Nixon, 6 Kent Students M~t WASHINGTON (AP) -l're>ldtnt NII· on met for nearly an hour Wednesday with six Kent State University students lo dlscun what might ht done to prevent a recurrence of the fatal confrontation on thejr Ohio c11mpu11 lttondlly. Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said the student!, all young men. drove to Washington to see their congre1sman, Rep. William Stanton <R-Ohio), snd others about the kilting of four Kent Stale student.& by Olllo N a l i o n a I Guard&men durlna an a n l i w a r demonstration. ' DAILY P ILOT , ..... 1W LM P'•Jftl Wash Out At sunset. sea on Newport shoreline washes around drip castle and trash. both remmants of a day at the beach. Photogra.pher saw late afternoon scene as symbolic contrast between man at his best -his ability to dream and to build -and man at his worst -his penchant for pollution. Mesa or Harbor Two .. school Students Get to Cl1oose Campus Eight students scheduled to start high school in September: who found them- selves assigned to two high schools, have received help from the dislricl school oo1r11. Board members have decreed that in the fall of 1971 , freshmen Jiving on the west side of Santa Ana Avenue between 21st Street and Mesa Drive will go to Costa Mesa High School and those living on the east side will go to Newport Har· bor High School. In setting the boundaries, board mem· bers said the eight students \\'ho were erroneously assigned to both schools due to confusion over the boundary Jines will be allowed to pick which of the two schools they wish to attend. Roy Anderson, district administrative assistant of school facilities said the ·con- fusion in school assignments resu lted when a boundary change for freshmen was made between Corona de! Mar and Harbor High Schools. Originally students living on both sides or Santa Ana between 21st Street and Mesa Drive were assigned to Costa Mesa. Students living between the rear property line of the east side of Sanl.a Ana and the Upper Newport Bay were assigned to Corona del Mar. Anderson said the boundary was chang· ed so that those ninUt grade students who previously would have been as· signed to Corona de! Mar were instead assig ned to Newport Harbor. When school board members approved the boundary· change, it asslgned those student,, living on the east side of Ssnl.a Ana to Newport High. "Technically the kids living on the east side of Santa Ana were signed up at two different schools. Of course these elght students get their choice of schools. but from now on the boundary will go down the middle or Santa Ana," he said. Other new boundary changes appro\led by the board include : -Children in grades K-6 living in the Bluffs, Eastbluff and the Bren develop- ment wlll attend Eastbluff School, which is scheduled to open in September. -Bear Street School will change from a K·5 school to a K-6 school. Cas l1 Margin Cut Bo9 sts ~all Street NEW YORK (UPI) ~ Wall S•ree1 responded enthusiastically today t.o • major slash in the minimum amount ot cash required for purchasing stock. At the end of the first hour of tradin.e; on the New York StOck Exchange ad· vancing issues all but buried decline.1: 1,179 to 99. Volume topped five million shares, a very heavy first hour turnover. In recent weeks average turnover bas been around two million shares. All major indexes of market activit.v were solidly on the plus side. The UPI marketwide indlcator sported a gsin of 2.94 percent while tbe Dow Jonell Industrial Average -reflecting selected blue chips -bounded up more ·than 14 points. • Many issues gained several dollar~ each, including Du Pont $3.50, Walt Disney $6, National Cash Register $4.53, U.S. Steel $1.13, General Motors $1.38. RCA Corp. $1, IBM $3.50, Xerox' $1.50 and American Telephone $1. Analyst Newton Zinder of the E. F. Hutton &: Co. brokerage commented that the decision of the Federal Reserve Board to slash margin requirement! "shows the government may1 be taking a hand in ~lleviatlng the tight credit conditions which have plagued Wall Street." The Fed cut margin requiremerit ,to 65 percent from 80 percent. The decilion was announctd after the market's close Tuesday. t The margin requirement is the cash down payment requittd to purchase stock oo credit. To buy stocks on the margin beginning today, a purchaser must put up 65 per- cent of the price in cash. He nia:r obtain a loan from his broker or a bank to finance the other 35 percent. Usually, the stock certificates are used as collateral for the loan. Shots Fired At Truck Guard Shots were fired late Tuesday night · at the Consolldated F re i g h t w a y 1 warehouse at 2200 N. Batavia Ave., Orange. Police believe the shooting i~ connected with the wildcat strike o! teamsters in Orange CoUJJty. Target of the bullets from a speeding car was a night guard at the facility. He a1td 25 other men 'vorking at the plant were not injured. The Santa Fe Springs plant in Los Angeles County of the same truckii.g firm has been the target of violence and vandalism since the wildcat strike started in April 3. Russ, Czechs Friends PRAGUE (UPI) ROssia and Czechoslovakia today signed a 20-year friendship treaty lhat justifies Soviet intervention in any east bloc nation which strays frQm the Communist camp. MAKE TH E 10th OF MAY A DAY MOTHER WILL NEVER FORGET A. M ~ 1« s.tllf .. ., Ira<:~ W•ttll a. Jlll•Wlllllllt t.•""""~c wlt'PI Stll Cll•ft~~ C•lllld., Ytllow' T .. , S11lnlta1 SIMI l•ck C•11 C. Ull: ~1111 O.td. •11i'fttf!t FlctfM Crytlll D. I Dll.....,.lr UK Y .. llW If Wllll• S.1111 ..... ins \Ill . .. E-"'gt- -.bld S»fllolll '-9d. l0:1. 115 "9'0 . .... .,, Hand can·ed Coral roses 'vith lea,·es of genuine Jade ... in sellings of rich, long-la~ting 1,tKt . Gold overlay. Fmm our seleclion of fine quality jewelry i I I' I CONVENIENT TERMS BANKAMERICARO MASTER CHARGE J.C. fiumph 1·ie ~ JewelerJ 24 YEARS SAME LOCATION 1823 NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA PHONE 548.HOI I I I I , ... ; pa DC I'"* I I • ' .. '.\ ! \ ... ~ . ~ .. ·~ • -· Wfdnesda1, May 6, 1970 DAll V PltbT .'j Student Protests Mounting By Tbe Associated Pf'f:11 severe psychological pressures Police also used tear gas President Nllon's daughttr St.udenta at a a r o w i n g les.s ~sponglble for th e and clubs in the state Capitol Julie+ and her husband, David number of campuses across massacre lban our G 0 v . building in Austin, Tex., to Eisenhower, rema ined at their America today responded lo Rhode! and Gen. Del Corso, break up a demonstration by Northampton, Mass., apart· calls for a nationwide strille whose i 0 r 1 a m m at 0 r y in· several hundred protesters ment as student& at both against President N i .fo"W' s doctrinal ion productd those who had marched from the Smith, where she attends, and Can1bodian policy and the pressures," the SSO·member University of Texas campus Amheni:t, where David ls Kent St.ate killings. senate said in a resolution. six blocks away. enrolled, voted to strike. So1ne universities shut down Fifteen persons were injured Princeton University faculty There was also a strike by altogether, 0U1ers held rallies, early toda y when helmeted voled to suspend classes for studen(., al fashionable Finch prayer meetings or vigils. police armed with clubs and the remainder of the semester College, a girl's 11chool in New There were clashes with polk:e sidearms routed some soo and took a stand as a group York from which Tricia Ni1on on some campuses. On sotne Seton Hall University studenLs co ndemning t.hc war I n was graduated in 1988. others, there were indications in South Orange. N.J. The Southeast Asia. They also ap. Jn Washi ngton, ri.1111. Nixon or support for t.he move into students had camped around provl'd a twirweek recess canceled her scheduled trip Cambodia. a street bonfire to protest the prior to the November election to Fredericksburg. Va .. today National Guardsmen patrollr· war. . so students can work in because of planned antiwar eel at the University o Buffalo, N.Y .. police fired political campaigns. demonstrations al P.f 1 r y \Yisconsin in Madison afler. tear gas and battled students Boston University canceled \\'ashington University thett. police said, more than 35 on the campus of Buffalo State final examinations and its At Haverford College.'· 1n · persons y,·crc arrested in lY.'O University and nearby streels scheduled r.tay I 7 com-Philadelphia, everyone from da ys or window sma shing anrl Tuesday night. The incident mencement exercises at which the administrator!! to Vie firebomb vandalism . involving about 500 students Sen . Edward f.t Kennedy ID· maintenance men will gn by University s P 0 k es men folJoy,·ed similar encounters Mass.). was to have been the but to Washington Thurs&y estimated 10.000 persons at. d . lh d · · 1 k to prot~:st the war. , tended a can1pus rally Tues· uring e ay. pnnctpa spea er. "lt is neither a S.rike lior day night lo protest the -{;:{ f( "-tt ff * ti,· business a!ii usual," 11aid Dr Presidenl's deployment or John R. Coleman. p~sid!nt troops in Cambodia and to s • H 1 ~ of the all-male. Quaker libefal hear a "people's petition" u1·pr1 ~e e p·.~ "" college which h .. abqut agalnst the Kent deaths. The .:'.9 600 students. "I f e f 1 rally was peaceful but there reasonably certain that the was vandalism afterward . WASHINGTON <UPll _ government must be notified school wi ll 11how that t.1'9e The current wave of pro-h . dm ' . . JS days in advance of such are not 'bums' but concerned tests was touched off Monday T e Nixon a inistration, ap-students who are expresr.in .. I h I demonstrations. "' "'hen National Guards1nen parent Y t.o s ow young peop e their opinions in a positive II·• b oh· ~. J The While House rally ca i:uout y 1o""v. a1ncs it can tolerate peacelul way.'' · A Rh·• 1 l I 1· originallywasannounced T"· .. . "''es o con ro an iwar dissent, plans to go to court ucre were !iOffie 11X11caticml'> demonstrations at Kcnl State, Saturday -only eight days of support for the President's fired into a croy,·d. four to sn1oothe lhe ,..,ay for an before the scheduled dat e. Jn Cambodian intervention. , studcnls were killed . anti"'ar demonstration student the interim t.he plans have At the Mormon Brigh.,n The Faculty Senate Tuesday leaders want to hold Saturday grown and backers have in· Young University in Provo, blamed Rhodes and his ad-in front of the White House. creased because al t b c Utah, the: studmt newspaj;er ..... • JUtant general. S. T. Del The Justice Department, slayings or four students dur· Daily Universe said : ··we u"1 Tt1t~~•t• Corso. ror the deaths. UPI learned Tuesday, plans ing an antiwar demonstration understand the r at t 0 na1 e QUIET AT MARYLAND U-TIME TO CHAT Coed, Guard1man in Friendly Confrontation EFFIGY BURNS ON MINNEAPOLIS CAMPUS ''\Ye hold the guardsmen. to ask federal district court at. Kent State Uni\·ersity in behind Mr. Nixon's decismn Justice Marshall, Nixon, Agnew,,---'-H-'o'--ff-'m=•n'----'-V_ic_t_im_•_' __ ,._li--n"g-'u'-nd-'e'--r-'o_nl_e_"'-""-d_und __ er __ 1o_w_a_iv_•_•_req~u_ice_m_en_t_lhe __ O_l_1i_o. _________ c:andc:...o.'""P-"!>0"-rl;;._;h;:im"-'i"n-'il".'-' _.;.•_ FIRST AID AFTER K ENT UNIVERSITY SHOOTING Campus News Releases P icture of Victim, Helpers 1~~:1\. Dream Shi~ Gown 7.00 Sleep Coat 7.00 V -.,(: "STAR FLOWER" PerrMnent Press Kodel~/Cotton Batiste, feal ur;ng ml'lgnific.ent new ''Star Flower" embroidery and cover-up slee ves. Pink, Aqua. lemon. Sllliulsor Shop r. l ~ ,~, - HARBOR CENTER 2300 Harbor Blvd., Casta Mesa 546·2622 .) .. '~ COMMUNITY EVENTS M AY ' ARTIST JOTH ANNU AL 'ANCA!ll IRI A!lf AST OF THE MONTH KIWANIS CLUI COSTA Ml$A l"AR!I 7-1 1 A.M. T.V. GRANO Pltlll c1 ... .lllt¥~11,. b<!rn '" C:l1n•11n. ,.,.,,_ 111u•I 1n Tl~l 11'11 m11o•ed In I r! 11 C11ll991. JUNE S, 6 & 7 Sht own'd ''l11• (o•~o;ri•c H~!" on Pl•ldff'I, C.!+to•nl1 for fl'leny V'l'l•I whtrf •h~ de.1g....i end c•~•IM hrr own ll"glnl l• l lor>O "'''" ln>ltUCllnf 25TH ANNUA L FISH fRY COSTA MES A·NE Wl"ORT HARIOR LION S" CLU I Sl1• retlfed in 1•St •nd Wllil• co...· v•lr.tl"'l trom ·•n !nt..,•lv• 1tr~1. •lt•ttoa 1"1'1"9 ~ o.n• htr h•n•b '"" i..1"'ll 11<1•bl1 ta Ult t~ ""l>t'O!CltrY Vl••otd, •hll hff~y -4 Y"" •nod '"'"1,..i.on, -ueetu lier 1rt -•k •111!ou1 1nr p11t1•n. e PARADE e IAIY CONTEST e CA RNIVAL • MISS MERMAID CONTl $T e I A.TI LE Of THI IANDS e DU.W lt~G FOR NEW CAR I 5 2 5 3 :~~~~7teed • ra t a · 90 Day Certificate Accounts• 5.39% Annual Yield Jr all savings and interest remain l!I year. No minimum depo.sit. Daily compounding. Earn from dale of deposit. 6 3 g uaranteed 0 annual :<' rat• 2 to 1 O Year Certificate Accounts• 6.18% Annual Yleld lf all savings and interest remain a year. $5,000 minimum deposit. Daily compounding. Earn from date of deposit. NOW! 4WAYSTO EARN HIGHER INTEREST AT CALIFORNIA FEDERAL! 5 • 7 5 3 ~:.~~7teed 1 to 10 Year Certificate Accounts• 5.92% Annual YJeld If all savings and inlerest remain a year. $1,000 minimum deposit Daily compounding. Earn from date of deposit. 7. 5 3 guoranleed 0 annual • rate 1 Year Certificate Accounts* (AdJualable rot11 lor a ho rt er terma) 7.79% Annual Yield If all savings and .Interest remain a year. $100,000 minimum deposit. Daily compounding. Earn from date of deposfL ·=-·~ CAUFORNl& .-FEDERAL-," SAVINGS ········-·-•••• 5% Passbook Account. Current Annual Rate. No minimum deposit. Dally com.pounding. lnlerest day-in to day-oul. • Cal!,fQ!!!!~owf.~~~!!!!.h,,§.~!!ngs NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL COSTA MESA OFFICE : 2700 Harbor Blvd. near Adams• 546·2300 CLIFFORD M. WESDORF, 'v1CE PRESIDENT & MANAGER Convenient Oflioes throughout lot Angelea, Orange end Ventura C°'-lnUes A-ft 11'1 TnaurM UP lo 1~.000 1i1nd11 P10'<'l1lon1 et..._ f«ltr•I 51Ylrtll• • Lo.In l11w1~ Col'Pot111on, 1 perin-rtt tQlllCJ ot th• Urtlhod $111 .. 0owmt!lent • DAU.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Parks: Pace Too Slow ,, . ,. . ' . ' U the candidates fqr la•t month's Costa Mesa City Cquncil election had been digging very deeply !qr is· sues, they should have come up with some critical com- mentary -or at least some pressinc que1llons -about the city·'s park program . It Is both bad and zood. On the affirmative side, Costa Mesa has 10 11tia:h· borbood park> and two communlt} parks. Sc>me of them are good and some of them are bad. Neighborhood parU: are chiefly for children's daytime play activity. They offer playground equipment and room for base-- ball and football games. Community parks ar·e family oriented. The good on es provide cooking facilities, pic- nic areas as ,, .. ell as children's playground equipment. The venerable downtown Mesa Park, for example, certainly is one of the most used facilities in Orange County -compact yet offering a wide variety of fami· ly activities. Some of the neighborhood parks benefit from a wise program arranged between the local school district and the city government about 10 years ago. Under this pro- gram the city purchases (or wheedles from a bui1der) a small two-or three-acre park site alongside an ele- mentary school. By uWizing the city land for play· groilnd equipment and combining it with the 10-acre school playground, the neighborhoods are offered a large and highly-functional park for minimum cost. This is a good nucleus -the two community parks and the neighborhood parks. But it Is far from enough and the city seems to be lagging in acquiring n.ew sites and planning for the 10 or 12 additional parks to be needed in 'Lhe next decade and a half. Moreover, some of the sites already acquired are not gettinc maximum use because they have not been develqped fully . Te\Vlnkle Park, for example. hEts 50 acres, far and away the city's largest. Yet it suffers from the tact lbat much of it is undeveloped and unsttractive. Vista Park is one few Coata Mesans know. Located on the blufi1 above the Santa Ana River bed a~ the end of Victoria Street, these seven acres were purchased nearly 15 years ago. Today those seven acres look much as they did when they were purchased and as a consequence, few residents even know it is a city park. Considering the scarcity of parks on the west side of the city. this acreage certainly should be put to use immediately or traded for another site if the loca'lion is too far from the residents. The truth is, Costa Mesa doesn't have enough parks and most of the ones it does have aren't developed as fulJy as they shouJd be. Even the improvements that are placed on Costa Mesa parks are for the most part, pedestrian and unimaginative; there are the normal pieces of equipment, but few signs of ima,llination shown Jn other communities_ -Atlantis Park in Garden Grove, for.example. The city Parks & Recrea·tion Department has found that the city should prqvide a neighborhood park for each 4,000 to 6,000 people ; this means Costa Mesa al~ ready sho~d have almost twi<:e as many neighborhood parks as 1t now has. Perhaps the department's wishes are a little rich for the city budget. but certainly the community should not be that far behind. In ~ very few years, Costa Mesa's vacant land will have dir;appeared. There will be no park sites. Only at ~rMnendous expense could acreage be acquired. once it ts d~veloped. ~t appears that the present pace won't do the Job -not if Costa Mesa is going to have the recrea· tional facilities it needs to make it a complete city. c Senate Politicians Hun for Cover Juveniles Suffe1· Law Nixon's Immense Courage WASHINGTON -Nothing could be more disastrous at this moment in history than any congressional action limiting or circumscribing the authority Of the President of the United States tn his constitutional role as commander· in-chief of the armed forces and executor of foreign policy. Such limitations or attempte.d limila· lions would create a constitutional crisis whlch could so vitiate presidential authority that the effectiveness of America's world leadership would be destroyed. The President would not recognize such limitations. The on I y congressional response which amounted to anything woUld be cutting off appropriations and authorizations for the Vietnam War. That is impossible because the security of a million · men in the Western Pacific is involved. Nothing but chaos would result and the ei:ercise <1f Amuican will in world affairs would be paralyzed. HOW TUE rtl EN IN the Senate can move in this direction escapes all ra- tionality and reality and is but another sign of the frightful confusion affecting the thinking of polilicians who cannot stand modern pressure and run for cover when the Vietnam War protest i! carried into the 11trtels by violence prone ac· Uvists. 1'1ake no mistake about this. what bot.hers some of the men in the Senate is I.hat they may I~ their status, posi· tion and means of livelihood if they support a president in an unpopular cause. Their hearts bleed for America; their utlnds are concerned less with America'• ' \ Richa.rd · Wihon .. -.. defeat than their owb. In these circumstances Coniress is not capable of limiting the President's consliMional freedom of action on a rational basis. In these times when onl y hair-trigger action may save a modern nation from ertinction, the century old argument over the President's authori ty and re sponsibility has no relevancy. He must be free tG act. Not only free ID act. he must be required to act with or without congrusional sanction. ~ TOE FOREIGN ·RELA110Nll Com· miltee of the Senate wishH to substitute lt.s judgment for ~t of the President. This ridiculous premise IUJ>POHI that 8 or 10 sen1lon comprising a niajority of the comm1Uff woo1d determine when the United' Stale! would fight, where it would fight and how It would fight. Sen. J. W. 'Jl'ulbright was right in 1961 when he said : "With their ex· cessively parochial orientation, con- gressmen are acutely sen!itive to the influence of private preuure aDd to the excesses and inadequacies of a public opinion that is all too often ignorant or the needs, the dangers, and the ~ po@nity in our foreign relations." NOlliing could have described the present condillon better. An opporturiity has presented itself In Cambodia to set back the Communist aide In a major way. President Nixon bu grasped the opportunity that neither the Congre~s nor the public would touch if they had to make the decisions themselves. rr ALL BOILS DOWN to a matter of success or failure in a majgr military operation. This is likely to l)e Nixon's Dien bienphu or his Battle of the Bulge. That ia to say, conclusive either way In determining the sutcess or failure of his policy in ~ast Asia. and his own political future and prestige. Tbe idea 1 recognized -by Nixon that he 'ditght tie a one.term president ii not confined to his way of briuging the Asian war to a constructive conclusion. He ha s taken that risk in his definition of a new and more practical policy nn racial equality, in his policy on Jsrael, his faciq dolrn the \l.'ar protestus an4 the campus revolutionaries, his attitudes on labor. He has gambled <1n there being a strong majority, silent or otherwise, which no longer wil l accept 'the derangement of national p<>licies by mlnoriUes, or any political combination thereof, RIGHT OR WRONG, trus has required immense COW"a1e on the Prt1ident'1 parL and never more thin whtn he faced the natlon, challenged hil detractots· and led the country where it was doubtful of going. This is presidential leadership under conditions which have beth rarely seen but it was not without precedent. Isola· lionist leaders, including the late Sen. William E. Borah, tried to Intimidate presidents with their superior koowledge and judgment, with about the same: pros- pective reault as in the preaent instance. Women Pick Wrong Target By JAMES E. WHETMO~E Stna\or If Susan B. Anthony were alive today, lllP.'d probably be campaigning as hard as ever for women's rights. Although m0$t men now think that women were "liberated" when they got the vote. 4nost Of the fair sex v;ould undoubtedly di~agree, judging from the amount of legl!laUon and subsequent publicity on the scene tGday. La st year much was made over a measure to abolish coin-operated toilet faciliti es in public places, with the measure's aulh<>r -a .woman -charg· ing discrimination against her &e:to bec11use nat all accommodations in men's rooms require a ' • m o n e t a r y con- sideration ." Despite considerable !iupporl from wom en's organizations and even some: sympathetic males who have been c:au&ht wiUiouL a dime at one time or another, the measure failed to receive approval. --·--Wednesday, May 6. 1970 The editorial page o/ th• Dolly Pt.lot s1ek1 to inform and ttim- "late read.en b11 presentino thl.$ ntw.spaper't opinions end com- mentaru on. topic$ of intcrt1t and 1ignlfican«, bv prooidhto a forum. for the e~1ukm of 01.tr readns' oplniom, and b11 presenUno th• div.r11 '1Mlw- potnts of lnformtd obsfn'trl and 1pok<....,. on tapia of thl <1au. Robert N Weed, Publi1ber q uest•Report • THE PRIMARY women's rights bill lhis JegiSlalive session deals with discrim.lnatory hiring practices, a subject near and dear to the hearts ·of women'a cJ_ .• J Ind factions of the female libera- tion movement. Most of us would agree th t there is merit tn legislation directed at this: arta, and recently the hiring practicts bill was passed In the k>wer house by a wide majori1y. The bill adds sex to the discriminatory hiring practices prohibited ln the Fair Employ. men t Practltts Law. One of my braver coll~agues, taking his private and political life in his hands. was called upon to explain why he voted against the measure. HE NOTED THAT he had tried for three years to fight against the di.scri.min1tory pracUces qalnst women employt>, but had directed that fight to the proptt place, the Industrial We;fare c.ode. All the practkts which arl dieaimlnatory a1a.inst women are defined in Ulat Code and not, he 11id, in the FAlr EmpJoymtnt Practices Law. 1'fy coJJugue alr.o contends tha t if emp~yers follow lhe letter of the law t.mbodied In the new bill. they may well find themselves In vlolalioro of the Industrial Welfare Code. If an employer refused to hire an applicant. for Instance, bee.I~ aht 1'as a '7oman. be would be. In v}Olatlon of Ill'! FEPC law. II he hired bet and the job requlrod more than tight hours oC work a day, or the WLl.nJ oC ctr1&lrt weight~.-he mlabt be In vtolaUon of tbt Jndua:tr:111 Welfare Code. ON THE OTllEll band. my .. n .. 1111 says, al'! employer might face the pro. blen1 of an FEPC violation if he had a job suited to a woman , but a man demanded it. Some opponents of the measure have even gone so far as to turn the tables on the equal r ights concept and apply some of the women's accepted practices to male employes. An employer. as an example, might abolish the long· established IS.minute cof(ee b re a It presently provided for women on the basis that granting It would ·constitute discrimi.naliml against men. Or men could well demand that cot. or couches and chairs be provided in men's rt5troom facilitie s. NO ONE SERIOUSLY btlieves that such conjecture will deter the movement fCk· equal employment rights for women. But severa.I or my fellow lawmakers beli~ve that auch effort& should be directed a\ the Industrial Welfare Code. As one 5age wit once put lt, the only way to. understand a woman i& to love her -and then it is:n't necesd.ry to understand her. Dear Gloomy Gus: When Balearic School pl&ylJ'OOnd Is leu than a half block away, why do fathtrs and sons penlst ln plsying ba.stball In the street? They're a menact to motorists and bysUinder11. -D. S. S. T~lt fl-N rl!'ltc'll> ""'"' 'llf'Wao -lllM-11" """" .. ~ 111•••""'· kflf YMW .... -"' " •IMlllr hi, o.flr ,,,., Prejudice ' Mailbox -1 To the F.ditor : 'lbere are a few questions to which I would like some answer s. Why-must teenage traffic citations re· quire going all the way to Orange to Juvenije Court? If a young person ls mature: enough to have a driver's license. \\'hy cin't he answer the charges in a regular tra ffic court in the district when! he received the citation? WHEN A YOUNG perso111 asks for a .hearing and trial for a disputed cita· tion, why is he not given as much courtesy as is give• a common drunk? The court trial consists of one man. and the arresting officer, IF ht chooses to answer the summons, against the yOU11g "offender" and his puent. CNothing appears to be done if the officer chooses NOT to appear on a summons of this sort.) The MAN seems to have already made up hls mind that lhe contestant is guilty for the simple reason that she or he Is under IS or 21 years of age as the case may be. WHY IS THERE a charge miilde for certain equi pment violations which ha ve been remedied and signed by an officer? Whe11 a malfunction is p o r; s i b 1 y something that has occurred without the driver's knowledge. such as a burned <1ut bulb. a fine seems uP1fair. Jn fact, a citation for isuch an offense seems unfair. Bulbs do go out quite suddenly and unannounced. 1• a case where a maUunction has obviously extended over a period of time!, such as faulty brakes, draggi.1g fenders. ru.'!.ted out muffle rs, there mighl be a valid reason for a citation and line. ARDATH G. FAUMt;I ,uedical Expe11se1 To the Editor : Your editorial of April 29 commended the effort undertaken by students to help pay medical expe11ses for an injured high school you th. I always react negatively to these kinds of efforts for penons with overwhelming medical ex. penses, however good it may make these "do.gooders" feel. This young man has a rig ht 10 good medical care. and also a right for the fam ily not lo have to worry about the burden of these expenses. Insurance henefits they may have need to be utilized. BUT ABOVE THAT, it seems lo me lo be a respo11sibillly most taxpayers should gladly · undertake thnugh pro- gra ms such as !ilate Medi.Cal or through apanded Medicare program to disabled people as well as lhe elderly. Theae should not be considered to be "welfare'' by a needy pttaon. There should also be more government control over the exorbitant cost of medical care, :<i"O that there is some guarantee that these medical expenses are Ju_stlfiable. MRS. MARGARET LUKAS Letters /rom readers ore wtlcome. Normally wr1ter.s .shotdd conve»' their ~.!.soge1 in 300 words or less. Thi right to condrnse letUrs to fit ipo.ce or eliminate libel is reserved. All leC.- t~rs must include signature cM mail· t11g oddr11s. b11t name& may be with· held on requc.tt if aufficitnt reason is apparent. Pot!try will not be pub- 11.lhccl. The Real Drama Is the Conflict TbouP,ts at Large: The real drama In the courtJoom is the conflict between the witness' attempt to tell .the whole truth, and the· auorney's detennlnation to elicit only those portions of It that are helpful to his client. • • ''Obscenity" is whatever shocks some- one today. who would have been Mocked 20 years ago by something he considers acceptable now. • • Doctors make the worst patienl3 in a hospilal for the same reason that pilots make the worr;t passtngers ln a plane -both know exactly how many things go wrong and bow fa llible their colleagues arc . . ' Beyond a certain age, a woman's chief social satisfaction seem~ to consi~t in spotting <1lher women in her age·bracket who are hcav-ier than she is. . ' Everyone imagines he knows what Jesus would do if He should return. hut no one imagines that be might be the first one Jesus would rebuke. ( . ,_,. Sydney :J, Harrisi I ....,.,"'-.t;;:--"i: .'.:..61.i':) The pointlessness of most corporal punishment was neatly pinned by Don Marquis, when he observed : "Many a man spanks hia children for the things his own father should have spanked out of him." • • • A quarrel is the failure of an argumen!, just as a war is the failure ol a con· ference. • • Rumor, crushed to earth, will rist again -if ifs got the proper sexual ingredients. • • We're entering the Age of Outer Space Exploration before we've tven found " v.·ay to ~ve <1n this little plaMt without ca tching a cold. • • • A woman isn't tolaliy resiEJ'led t., spinsterhood until she begins buying shoes primarily for comfort. Odds Favor Uncl e S am Great news! New York City, "'·hich can't make ends meet on its cut from the new slate lottery. is going to open a string of bookie joiflls. r.1ayor Lindsay figures the city's take from the now·legal off-track betting will run $200 million a year. Here's another giant stride toward the only conceivable solution to the nalion's fisca l crises -nationaliiing organized crime. Once Mayor Lindsay get); a tasle or the fat profits flowing in from his bool..1e jolnts, there's no question but he'll take over the numbers racket. And why not? Playing the numbers is no more sinful lhan playiAg the horses. Naturally there ha\'e been protests from such organizations as the churches and the Mafia. "The mayor's muscling in our ter· ritory," growls Three·Fingers Jack Daniels, chairm an of The Wednesday Eve11ing Christian FellG\Vship and Bingo Social. But, as the well-kMwn mobste r sloolie, Chicken Cacciatore. puts it with a shrug '"You can't fight-city Hall.'' TllE NEXT STEP. of course. i.'!. taking over the millions or dollarli that now Jin lo disreputablr types f r o m pros- l1lution . This may require fedt!ral aid, Envision, if you will. a vast Sexicare program. A Bordello Const r uc l ion Program, funded by Io a n s froin the Department of Health. Education a~ \Velfarc. would do wonders for impacted areas. They could well be staffed b,V conscripts from VISTA through a draft lottery, Objections will bl'! ruised . Bui U the government can conscript the bodits or mrn for the ~;elfare of the taxpayers. 1! crtn certainly peddle the bodies or yottng ladies for the same purpo!ie. Dope pedrtlin.it poses prohlt.n1s. But in Britain the governmtnt's been doing it for years. All 1hat nccdi; be done IG niake a tidy profit Is to r;ii~ lhe prices lo wh11 lhc. treJfic wlll bear. And seeing ll'lat many statt!i now peddle the. drug called alcohol through stale liquor stores. there's no rea!;Ofl they can 't peddle the drug called marijuana, too. It would double revenues. Purse·snatching and sUckups b y, government men are mort e.11.s\ly justified. Some would call lhl~ robbery. J Lhink of it as taxation. After 111, Art Hoppe ~] the definition of robbery is taking your money by force or the threat of force. You know, like the IRS does. Personally , thoug h, I'd draw the line at having paid government ogents rub out innocen! peopl{'. Ther e just i~n't tnough money in an operation like thi.\ to justify the costs. Look at Vietnam. .so HATS OFF lo Mayor Lindsay. It s a small step for lhe la:tpaycr, but a giant step toward nationalizing organlz. ed crime. And !here's enough billio11.1 in that to bal&ACe every governmental budget in the I.and. And cul taxes, too. True, the outcries v.•ill mount. "\V• can't .have our .government engaged in or~anized gambhng. pandering, dope ped· dhng, robbe~ and murder," the foe.t of progress will shout. NoRSense. It's solely because these long-established functions of government are so disorganiied that we taxpaytrs are losb1g our shirts. ~--B y Geo rge---, Dear George · You keep saying you can solve anybody's income tax problem~. \Veil, I've written you three letters asking for your solution to sneaking in additional enterlainment dtduc- tion~. Why haven't you in!Werea: HARRIED TAXPAYER Dear Harried : Sorry. \\1e·ve got ~ new warden and he revoked my msil privilege~ except once a month. Would you repeal lhe question 1n ~1ay? Everybody's an expert in Apnl. Dear George · Our shores are lillered with bter cans, our highways ire .11 disgrac<:, our waterways are pOlluted ! Who caustd Utis? FURIOUS AMERICAN Dear Furious American : J haven't been off my block for 1wo v.·eek!. and I can prO'Vfl It. ' Saddlebaek --' .... ~ \ voe. 63, NO. 108, 4 SECTIONS, 82 PAGES •• ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . . . ~AY, MAY•6'·1970 . -. -· . . - . -. -. 0 ICC uar 1Aguna9rlns By Ph il lntorl•ndl ''Census Taker." Orderly Student Strike Conducted at UC Irvine By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ""' °'"' ltllet '''" "They're simply ClrT)'lng out a very orderly demonstration o( their sentimeD1$ on the war, and I'm not makq my public pronouncements." - 1bat was the statement, ihis mnmirlg UO Jrvioe Chancellor DMitl Aldri~ "~ the UCI student mike m11~ int& iM aeoond day. The strike, ..-eanl>ed bl' the uct Conl· munity Coalition. ts being he~ to * * * Flag Lowered, Then Raised At Saddleback 1be American Flag was lowered at Saddleback College this morning by sludents protesting the U.S. push into cambodia but it was soon raised again by another crowd of students ol different poliUcal persuasion. 'fbere was no violence on the Mission Viejo Junior College campw except for some pushing at one point as students surged in to hike the Flag back Into place on its staff outside the ad- ministration building. Mel 11-fitchell, college public information ()fficer said about 15 UCI students came to the campus this morning and at- tempted to distribute literature against the Cambodian involv~t. He said they were told they could not but that it could be distn1Ju.ted by Saddleback students. Some of the studenU carried signs Jr()tefting the Cambodian situation. Mitchell estimated that about 75 students had gathered around the nag to haul Jt down and said others appeared to put It back in place. Administration ofriclals talked to the leaders of both groups; students milled around and then disper5ed. demonstrate opposition to President Nix- on's war pollcle!I In southeast Asia. 'l1le Community Coaliti:on is made up of various: campus groups. -indudiD& the New University Conference, the Move-- ment Wt '-DemocraUc Military, Students for a Democfatic Society, , and the Radical Students Union. Stlpport ol ~ strike, a low key event so fat, was difficult io estimate Tuesday as only about 30 percent of the campus, 850 cfaSSles are held on that day o( the week. Today's support wa!I equally difficult to ascertain. An administration spokesman said most oC the strike supporters were off campus working on strike programs. Strike spokesman Rich Yensen claimed 3.000 of UCl's 5000 students were out of classes today while an undetermined number of professors were calling the strike headquarters to say they would not hold classes. While strikers made plans for a com· plete shutdown of the campus Thursday, student body officer.!! called for a student referendum on the strike on Friday. Student body President F r e d d i t Massimino, vice president James Got· tfried and Secretary Claude Dorais in a statement released this morning, ex- pressed concern over demands "which are being attached to student demonstra· tions on the Cambodia matter." The statement specifically notes the demands involving U.S. imperialism, the release of polilical prisoners, the removal of ROTC from campnses and lbe removal of military recruiting and war related research from campuses, may not be supported by all students who support the strike. Pleading for "peaceful efforts" and "rational decisions," the statement C(ln- cluded, "We support the sincete concern that students are expressing about the grave· situation that exists in Cambodia. We do not support those who would use this sincere concern to advocate (See STRIKE, Page %) .. Police Nab Nude Bather On Pot Rap A nude sunbather basking beside aome potted pot Tuesday afternoon was quoted later by Laguna Beach police as saying: "I guess you could call it just an illegal hobby." Police agreed that marijuana garden- ing is illegal as they booked Douglas SEE PHOTO PAGE 2 Wayne Sleeper, 20, 1086 Gtenneyrt, on charges of both cultivating and possess- ing marijuana with intept to sell tt. Randall Kim Blake, 21, of the same address, who arrived 10 minutes later. was booked on the same charges, said Detective Neil Purcell. Purcell said be obtained initial in· formation about the plants Crom a citizen's phone tip. He checked and sure enough, said the detective, he could see the marijuana -both. tht. )'.IS)lted pl&nts and others in the backyard. Arresting ofifcers Robert Briscoe and r.Uke Louisiana also seized about six pounds of cured m4rijuana, two loaded pistols and various . items or drug paraphernalia Including a water pipe and seyen other plpea, some made from rock!. Purcell said Sl~Mlng :;f= beside the large · · · we 1 marijuana plants wtien e · "cers • ar. rived at 2:15 p.m. The guns and other items were in a bedroom. Tha. plants, said Purcell, included the female mari· juana plant which produces the seeds for reproduction and also a quality leaf preferred by marijuana smokers. Purcell said both 1USpects would be arraigned in munlclpal court sometime today. Blake said he was a student and Sleeper told police he is a con- struction worker. Cong ress Seat Candidates Meet In San Clemente Candidates for the 3Sth Congressional District, formerly represented by the late James B. Utt, wlll appear in a public forum tonight at 7: 30 in the San Clemente High School auditorium. The forum , co-sponsored by the Laguna Beach coordinating Council and the Capistrano Bay Area League of Women Voters, will be moderated by Tom Murphine. program chairmen of the Coordinating Council. Seven candidates scheduled to appear are Frank Halpern of La Jolla (Peace ;i11<1 Freedom); David N. Hartman of Santa Ana (Democrat); Thomas B. Lenhart of Santa Ana (Democrat); Mag. gie Meggs of Laguna B e a c h (Republican); John A. Steiger of Oceanside (Republican); and William Wllco•en of Laguna Beach (Republican). John G. Sdunltz. aliO a candidate, hu advised sponsors that committee obligations in Sacramento may prevent his attending. 'TAXPAYERS NEED RELIEF' City Councilman ·Lorr --• • -:(' . -~· ·~· -6 -• -·-------. • -. DAILY I'll.OT ... H 11Mttt 4-SHOULD BE PROUD' qoor.tln•tlng Councll't KMley I Crowd Jams Meeting Of ~agu~School Board By BARBARA KRE1~ IH 1M O.lfy 1'01'1 Slaff ~gu11a Beach 9Choo1 s, ac- customed lo wading through t ir tengtpy, ag~n~as in th~ .company (a ba~ul of ·scr1.bbllng '""""'"" and •~; °'i·lilo. -~jld:;ii(,fj,..1,1..il ' . '!\MiJIT' l~e ·' frlenl!• , hostile. ' . . . A hundr people. ' civic leaders, parents, teachera, students and con- cerned citizena jammed the small board room and rlowed over ;.o fill the spacious entry of the admlnlstfttlon building. Many were the~ 1 to support newly elected coUncilmt Edward Lorr. out to do battle for r ced school operaUng costs, as preslden ol the I:.aguna Beach Taxpayers AsJJOC~Uon. others, who h got wlnd of proposed coofrontation wi the trustees, turned out to support tht boa.rd and the scbool.!I. Comments al')d applause during the l<>ngthy session seemed about equally divided. Most of those ln att~ndance had rarely. if ever, been '"seen rat a school board meeting. Noting the · huge crowd, Board Presi- dent Larr)' Taylor commented, "I assume yodr attendance ls due. lo eome specific ulotlve, so I wW move oral communications up ahead or the rest of the agenda so you woo'l have to sit throtigh a lot of dry stuff." For the next hour, Taylor called upon ont member of the audience after another, permitting no discussion or responst! from tht trustees until everyone who wished to speak had done so. More than 20 ·were heard. Lorr initiated the discussion-by refer- 'COUNSEllNG-HELPS' Rev. Cornelison ring to a five-page letter addreslled to the board by his Taxpayers' Auoclatlon and demanding cuts in administrative coslll. He raid Taylor's reply, an offer. to meet with a committee from the Taxpayers to go over the budget, did (See TRUSfEES, Page %) Trains, Bikes on Agenda . . ' Of San Clemente Council Train speed timits, mlnl bike noise and San Clemente'• jurisdiction (or lack. of same) over fishing wltNn its tJa'ee. -"The noise just. drives you up tbe wall ... U.S. Opens 3 New Fronts mile limJt will be back before councllmen lonifttl. City Manager Kenneth Carr will report on results of discussion with Santa Fe Railroad officials on slowing trains that zip through San Clemente. Speed limits are 65 and 75 .miles an hour for fre1&hta and passenger trains. Carr said there seems to be something of a vacuwn-in the "Jtgislative field concern1ng operation of the unlicensed minibikes on privllle property. They a,re Illegal on public streets so youngiter:s ride them on private °property. · • Biggest 0-peration of War Pours Into Cambodia The council earlier considered lin)lting SAIGON (UPI) -The United States and South Vietnam launched three new offensives 1nto Cambodia today in the biggest allied operaLion of the war. An armada of U.S. Navy river patrol boats movtd lnto Cambodian territory to join the 50,000 allied troops involved . m three new drives crossed the border in areas ranging from 65 miles northwest lo 95 mlle• north of Sa.lgon and were preceded by massive 11erial assaults using bombs and napalm which wiped oul th< town ol Snuol where pne loOtlng by American troops was reported. One new offensive toda y wag by a C,'SOO-man task force of lhe 25th U.S. Infantry Division into the Dog's Head sector 65 miles northwest of Saigoq. At least 43 Communist troops and four Americans were killed in the first hours of the sweep. Two ol the Americans were killed when U.S. artillery rounds fell short or their target in the initial stages of the operation. This brought U.S. casualtJes In the mu!U-ptonged oCfensive to 30 killed and 70 wounded. At least 50 U.S. Navy river patrol boats, heavily anned ~foot Ve86tls, moved Into Cambodia along the Kham Spean Rlver as part. of this operation, Kaylor reported. They ran into COm- munist fin two miles lnside cambodla but casualties were not known. the speed by ordinance to 40 miles The second drive today crossed the per hour but shelved this until Carr frontler 95 miles north of Saigon and could confer with the railroad officials. In another report, P. MacKenzie the third was about 80 miles north Brown, city attorney, l'ill advise couo- of Saigon near the Loe Ninh district ctlmen on their leiaJ · c~ances of con-, town. Both areas are north of the trolling commercial fi~hlng with the Fishhook area where allied troops have three-mile limit which tbe state owns been search.ing for a Communist central but which. is In tbe' cltyL San Clemente'• headquarters for six days. sport fishing fleet opjioses the ·intruskln U.S. military officials said the of-of commercial fishermen Into >ocaJ fensives, ordered by President Nixon wa,ters. to wipe out Communist fanduarlel Carr will report on the mini and road across the border, have ktll!d '2,800 Com-bike problem on private property. munlst troops, captured 8,000 weapons. Lawyer" Nonnan E. Rudolph, who owns seized or destroyed 700 tons of food • ~ motprcy,clt, sakt ea~ller the mjniblke and munition,, aod M trucb ind' , rnd trilt bike operatlon on private pro- (See CAMBODIA, P•1• I) pertf·~llf_youngotua, isa,p!Obltln' • } .. ' . . . ' ' In other business:, the council will: -Again ~icier purchase of the1 historic beams from the f o r m e r Capiatraoo Beach Club, once a fixture In the "home of the Doheny oil family.· Councilmen cokl shouldered' the oiler at $1!.000 for beams and .$3,COJ · for · demolition earlier but the price oow. has dropped•fl,OOo. STOCK M~RKBI' ' • ! . NEW YORK (AJ') -T)>e otock market. pulled back from its steep early 1aln but ' ri!malned on .the upswtns this afternoon. ·rradlng wu "modefately actJve. (See quotations, Poges u.tl). · The dce:Jlne ,1eemed to b1ve 1oal mo- m:ntum.· howt'ltr, 1114 tht >a!ell rea<l- lng w., fr1cUon11!)< hljller lhan 1116 1<10 p.m. Ugure. • ~ • .. ----Today's . Flaal . -·-.. . . --N. Y. Stoe1'87 - us 16 Injured, 74 Arrested In Rioting LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Scores o1 politt patrolled nµr a.ad oo ·the UCLA campus early today •following a three- hour window smashing spr" an4 .violent confrontaUon between antiwar protator1 and offleers. At leaat 74. perlODI -were arrested and 16 injured . Actiq CbanCf:llor David S a J: o • declareCI a state of campus eme~ Tuesday alter a rally of about , l.Olt persons turned to fist 'fights and tbt starling of small flres. A force of 250 city po · moved onto the campus an area around the men's several scuffles and a ser.lie!: breaking. The building houses cc!Ja;~~~~ the ROTC offices, focal t Of students prottsting against Am rican in- volvement In Cambodia and the layfn1 or four studenta at Kent State in o. Pollce stationed themselves at in- tersections surrounding the campus a1·~--' it was replrted quiet at 8 p.m. and let persons leave, but nobody waa aJlOwed to enter during the night . · . Of those arrested, including 12 womtn · and two proftssors, &I we.re charged with misdemeanors while 13 were boOked on felonles, includillg assault agaWt a policeman. Authorltits aald 12 students were treated for minor injuries and foUr cam- pus guards aftd a city policeman sua- talned minor injuries. Cl!Y .Police Chief R•w•"" "· """• mobnl.zWlbe r.ntire IM~~ d~ ~ent . IJld, patrols in a}). parta of the city were doubled. Davis aaJd h1s actkln would remain in effect until "a atate of peace 11 obvious." Protests also erupted at San Fernando Vailey Sllte and the UAiversl.ty of CaJlfomla at Santa Barbara. At UCSB, 11herilf'a deputies and highway patrolmen were called to the campus when an estimated t,000 studerit.s gathered Jn front of the ad.ministration bu ilding fpllowin1 a rally.' · The two professor! arreSted at UCL.A were Identified as-WUUam H. McWhin- aey. 40, a_s.,lstant dean of planning ud a member of the graduate scMol of admlni!tratlon; and Peter Ladelogtd, a professor oJ. languages. ' . Officers said Ladefoged was arrested for allegedly acuf!ling with a policeman. 'Smaller demonstrations also were reported at the University of SouU.un California and East Los Angeles Junior College. San Clemente Child ' Injured in Acc ident A San Clemente girl, 3, .suffered minor leg injury Tuesday at about noon when her mother '! car struck a car backlni from a driveway. - Michelle K<>scavage, 117 Via San. Andreas, was taken to the family doctor. Tht mother, Mrs. 'Barbara Kascavage, 39,_ '8"!1 dr)vlng a car with five pre-school ch1ltlren, police saJd, wben Jimmy. H. Holskey, 26, Ca'mp Pendleton, backed into'her path, ln the 100 block of Canada. Oruge C.a•t Wea tiler lf you like today's weather, you'll love Thuraday's since it's another dose of the same stuU - low coutal clouda and hazy sun- shine with a top mercury reading of 70 degrees. INSIDE 'l'.ODA. Y Orange Count11'1 weekend lfvt theater fart -and the countV's fivt ntrlt1 m the Riv- trtidt one-act tourTicmn~rr detailed tod4t1. Ser Enttrtait1· ment, Pag111 28-20. IM!lfltl H IMetflttt 1• C•Hftnllt f MHIH •n C•,_ C... ti llW"' .. ,_. M Clltc•lll"I u, J ........ .... 44 ~~--»: m" ~ : ere..-.. M """ ,.,. DM9 ....... " Dr, ,..,_,..._ II ~ ,._ ' Midi Mfftl:.... ,...,. ................. ,. ........... ,\Milla .. ., "Ttlwllr9 ... ...,_... • ...""' 4 I .,. ........, >t WlllH WN • ~ ' .._..,. " .... SN! L,.,,.. ..... ...,, -...... ' ti .. l'.::::::::..:.;;:..::::;..:·:::·::;::;;;;j"';.:.Jre~ .;_. · · .....,.. -~ _ _,, -'/J ... ( ! ,Z DAILY PILOT SC ·~ ~Taft :Wins; Runoff Due Fo1' W3Ilace ' ' B)"' U,U&ed Prtu International Ohio voters rebuffed their Republican governor, James A. Rhodes, and $At former astronaut John ll. Glenn down to upset defea t while Alabamans put a crimp Into George C. Wallace's bid to rtt:aJn public office. The Ohio and Alabama v o t I n g hlatillghted a scattering of primary elec- tion11 Tuesday. Rhodes was beaten by Congressman Robert A. Taft Jr. for the Republican nomination for the Ohio senate seat being vacated by Sen. St.ephen Pt1. Young, a Democrat who said he was retiring at age 80 in spite of good health to let a younger person move in. Glenn, at fJrst an oddS-On favorite to win the Democratic nomination to succeed Young, was overhauled by Howard W. Metzenbaum. millionaire from Cleveland. Glenn, first American to orbit the earth, had intended to run against Young in the 1964 DemocratlC' primary but withdrew afttr being Injured in a household accident. In Alabama, Wallace -the third party candidate who kept neither President NJ:ron nor Hubert H. Humphrey from gettlng 1 majority in the 1968 presidential election -failed himself to get 1 ma· jority in Tuesday'a De m o c r 1 t I c gubernatorial primary. 1n fact, Wallace'• narrow Jead over Albert Brewer, the jncumbent governor seeking renomination, vanbbed today as late returns were counted and he fell behiDd by 17,000 votes. Wallace and Brewer now will be matched in a runoff. Cbarlel E. Woods ran a fairly strong third with more than 100,0<XJ votes to deny Wallace or Brewer a majority. The runoff is expected to be close and a Wallace defeat could doom any future national political aspiraUons. In Indiana, all 11 incumbent con- grt!ssmen -four Democrats and seven Republlcaru -won renomination. In _ c.onnectlcul, where 11 communitiea had prj;narll'S, stales pledged to incumbent Democratic Sen. 'nlomas H. Dodd were beaten Jn n1ne of 11 races. The state party's convention to endorse candidates for the November election is scheduled in June. ·Ohio's gubernatorial lineup In the fall electlon will be Slate Auditor Roger Cloud far the Republk:am, and former Rep. John J. Gilligan for the Democrats. Ft"om Page I CAMBODIA ••. , d~ed hundreds of bunkers and base camps. The operations began last week. The first majt'.W' strike was 1n the Parrot's Beak sector of Cambodia that juts out to within l5 miles of Saigon and was the staging area for the Tet offensive on Saigon in 1968. Others were farther north in the Fishhook and Se San areas, 87 and 230 miles northeast of Saigon . Sooth Vietnamese also penetrated Cambodia from the Mekong Delta area. Fighting also flared In the northern portion of Sooth Vietnam and 36 Americans were killed, 29 of. them in a North Vietnamese assault from the demllilari%td zone in appar~nt reaction to the allied drive into Cambodia. Two men wert missing and 31 were wounded . It was the heavlerl loss taken by a U.S. unit in a sina:le acUon In Vietnam in 20 months. Russ, Czechs Friends PRAGUE (UPI) -Russia and Czechoslovakia today signed a 20·year fri endshlp treaty lhat justifies Sovii!t intervention in any east bloc nation which 1tray1 from the Communist camp. DAILY PILOT N...,..I••• H11 ............. LllP• ... ,. .. .. r.11 ,....., C.... M.. I• Cr. hie OltANG! COAST l"\JILIJHINCO CCIM'ANY R•\•rt N. WtM P'flJicltfll 9IMI l'lllltllMr Jtck a. c ... r • ., VIA ""~""' ... Geter .. Mti'lttlW Tho1111t Keo.,11 ~tltor Tho"''' A. M•rphl110 Mo!Yt"" E11Htor Richt r4 '· Nell Sol/Ill ~-C-ly £41""" °""" Cftlt Mae< U& W(JI l•Y SI ..... N..,....t ltldl< nn W•I 11*91 ._.....,. L......-IMt~: :m l'-1 _,,_ MllM ... I.., ltK~: 11111 lttdl ._....,.,. $t11 ClllMnllJ ~ Nor"llt 11 C-• ftMI DAtL.V P'l"-Of, ... Ill W>ldl h c.........., ""' Ne•..,,... 11 ..,Oii"'" •Illy ti1C0111 S-N1 Ill ........ Cf!lklm ltr L89UN I..:~ "1-1 a.di, C0.•1 ,,,,_ M.-iU•itltft hKJI .. '"-111111 V111t1, ''°"' wl• -........... , """--°'"-c. .. 1 "'* ......... ""-""" """'"" ""~1, -'' nu ..,, lt!llOI 11 ... ~ NtWJW"I ltodl,, trA D wat •• , '"'"· C.11 Mao, T...,..._ 17141 64J-4lZI ~,-.. "'""ill .. 641·••n ._ CCJI.,, -••• AK lk1•••••ru ' \ From Page J .TRUSTEES DRAW CROWD • • • not "respond le "9dfics." Zfrolnr tn cm hJsb salaries paid to admln.iitratan; he cited the creation of 10 -ldmJnlatttilvt pooillons lo Ult \.put .foar ye1r1, tncJudln& i 1 psythom~ vice prlnclpals, counselor• IDd MCretarlea.: tori· of these 10 positiom · w the 1•70 budget, he said, amounted to 1101,0!5. "I ask how Uie school board can Jusilly adding personnel I n . ad- mlnlstration," said Lorr "when our enrollment has not Increased and we don 't seem to have enough funds for our teacherL .. lie cited a 1961 report \i.'hich said no additional certified staff would be needed even U enrollment tncreased by 500 students. "We should cut down on nc:in..essen- tlals," sakl a woman. "ls it your Intent to let all this dead wood remain and Jet the kid s walk to school and cut down on teachers?" Referring to cost-per-pupU figures, a man asked, "Are our kids that much dirtier that It costs two or three times as much to clean our classrooms?" DISASTER AREA ':The administration area of the school Is a disaster area," said Dr. G. R. Ekeberg. "The kids mill around and the counselors don't show up for ap- pointments.'' ... t.ake;s much 1tudy. "Let'1 1« fear and hatred and • llllmoolt)' Oii!, ind "' to wotk brl.oalllg --cit)' back to • ,IJ)irll ol ba/niOoy so we can accomplish whal needs to be done," 1be Rev. Bob Cornelison or St. Mary'1 Epi!JC<>Pal Church said he was concerned with the deterioratioo. of the family. ''l know the schools have to pick up and compensate for the frightful hollowness that Is In the home. Counsel· ing i.<1 the greatest help. I feel we are not spending too much. We are not spending elKlugh to mlnister to our children." N011CES QUESTIONED Questioning termlnaUon notices given 29 teachers some weeks ago, Mrs. Betty Heckel said, ''I lhlnk it is the wrong place to save money. We want backing and good salaries for our teachers." Taylor later explained that the notices had been sent the teachers, and to all administrators, In order to meet a state-imposed deadline for notification of possible termination. Most were later advised, after budget studies got under way, that they would be re-hired. Realtor Vern Taschner said the bond Jssue failed because "the school system is not as great as you say ... peopJe don't trust it ... the high school group reflects the hippie movement." DAILY 'ILOT SltH '1MN 'THANKS, FOR THE KIDS' Thur5ton Student Belnap Dr. Eke!>erg said a coonselot had been coaching a tenniJ team when she tried to see him. Two pa.ren~ rose to pralse the services they had been given by counselors. • OAILY P'ILOT lte" '"'" Ed Van Deusen said it seemed to him the certified personnel employed In the 10 positions were "of help to the whole district" and if there were a total of 100 in their category in the whole system a five per cent increase would not be extravagant. Said a woman teacher : "I tlllnk the Laguna Beach school system ls one of the best in the country. I make a great sacrifice to work here, driving Jong distances, and I hope to find the money to move here so my children Thurston volunteer parent guide Judy Penney urged members of the audience lo visit the schools. "l thlnk a day on campus ·would enlighten some of you," she said. "l urge you to come and visit Thurston, see it in action, see what goes on. You wlll , ha ve a OFFICER MIKE LOUISIANA CHECKS OUT -NEW DRUG HAUL MarljUIM Plant Cover F1i11 Nude SunlNther In La.gun• Thurston Intermediate School student Jell Belnap stood up and addressed the board briefly. "I know I speak for most of the kids at Thur.rton when I say thank you for the kids in the can attend these schools." · A student said, "Qur family moved to Laguna because of the good school i;ystem." truer 1.1._i:iderstanding." " Carpenter Asks Colleges To Reject Revolutionaries school district.'' The audience applauded. NOT QUALITY Mrs. Helen Keeley, president of the U>rr said the question was not the Laguna Beach Coordinating C.ouncil, ex· quality of education, but administrative school teacher and former city coon-salaries. He wanted to know why cilwoman, V{)lced a plea for harmony, Superintendent Dr. William Ullom is paid TIMES DIFFERENT $26,500 when the superintendent of the "We must remember the times are much larger Newport-Mesa district gets: quite different," she said . "We can't SJ?,.:'· you really need such . highly NO COMPENSATION Concluding the session, Board Presi- dent Taylor cited the fact that board members serve without compensation meeting late at night and often on weekends, and are dedicated lo the service of children, as are the district le;tchers. "I indicated in my lette r to Mr. Lorr that we wouJd welcome an opportunity to meet with a committee from his organization," said Taylor. ''Tho Chamber has made such al'J agreement \\•ith us and we sti ll want to set up a committee with the Taxpayers ... " Dennis E. Carpenter, chairman of the Republican State Central Committee Tuesday called for college students to reject the "screaming revolutionaries who will try to build still mo re violent confrontations on the corpses in Ohio." Carpenter, a Newport Beach resident who is a canclidate for the Republican nomination for the 34th District St.ate Senate, made his statement in the af· termath of the Kent State 1hootlngs which left four students dead. · "I'm saddened by the deaths in Ohio but !Ulllrised lhat we haven't had a tragedy of this magnitude long ago," be said. 'lbe Republican leader said he saw two alternaUves for the future, "more bloodshed or we. can get down to serious discussion." "Student leaders mull. act sUll more firmly In the aftennath of the violent deaths on the Kent St.ate. campw. Jt Ecology Students Plant Kelp Bed Off Dana Point Action to lncreue the orya:en p~ duction of the se.1 was taken today by marine ecology student.I of San Clemente High School. Clauea of Philip Grignon plAnted a giant kelp bed off Dana Point. The planUng is culminaUon of a year of study and preparation ol materials. Student Mike Sullivan, leader of the project, said the teams wil'. continue to plant this evening beginning about 5:30, diving from Black Bart's boat from the Dana Harl>or. With consult.ation by K er k ho f f Laboratories, the students conducted studies last year to determine planting procedures. They experimented In a giant aquarium, proving that the planting pro- gram is feasible. Cement blocks were formed to ancho r the kelp, and steel needles used to weave the kelp lDto nets attached to the an- choring. Purpose of the project Is to replenish dwiDdling kelp beds, because scientists credl.t the kelp with IO percent of the oxycen production of"tb.11 planet. New Recreation Center Planned A new recreation center complete with • 7&-by-60-foot swimming pool Is now under construction ln Mlsslon Viejo. The t.5-acre facility will be located on Marguerite Parkway and La Sierra Drive facing Recodo Lant. lt will include a 1"adlng pool, deck lanal, two leglb courts 'and a barbecue area. 'nle main bulldln& will house offices, a game room, drualng and restrooms, kitchen facili ties and a snack bar which will "be open on weekends and during summer montha. The director of the Granada Center wiU be Danny L. Be.moll, a graduate of Cal State College who hu aerved as rtereatlon tuptrvltor for Te.mple City. He la currently an Instructor at Coronado Junior ltlgll School Jn Wt1t Covln1. Jtc will assume his duties June II and will be at the Ptfontenoso Center unUt the Granada center J1 completed In July. ls evident that student violence will be met with firm strength. "But I think it ls important for students to recognize that honest discussion and legitimate political action on their part will be welcomed," he said. From Page 1 STRIKE ... go back to 1961. The problems of the id past four years require a dliferent at-Quallfied people who ho doctors.1 titude. degrees and draw such high aalaries ?" "Three or four years ago, students Lorr demanded . "These are not teaching were being criticized by the community personnel. And why do we need four and rightfully so. With the aid of trained coun!elors for 1,000 students in the high counselor.s the schools were able to he lp school -one for 250 students ?" children and their parents in the !ace The taxpayers' shirts are being strip-- "lf your children go down the drain, ped off their backs. he said. "They lf your children go down the drain, can't go any further." the cost to you and society is infinitely Mrs. Keeley noted that the board of greater than the cost of pe~nnel in education Is an e.leclive body and "the the district. Narcotics arrests among people have indicated what they want Taylor said the board sets up many meetings with parents and others to hear complaints and "a school board meeting with a thick agenda ls not the place." A commi tt.ee, he said, ''could go over the most minute details of the budget." students have dropped because of fine in electing the board. their own radical politics." counseling i;ervices. It's one thing to "If you don't like the way they are blr. police OIJl·ce-b J quite noth administering the schools," she said, The board. he said. works on the budget from January till August, "trying to watch the money aAd still provide the best In education." At a Tuesday night meeting in strike • "· u a er to have couruelora the children can talk "You will have an opportunity to vote headquarters at the campus Gatewa y to and find help. Money is well spent for someone who will give you a less Commons, steering committee co. if it saves your children from what expensive education -but you mav pay \\'RI'ITEN STATE!\1ENT chairman Rich Kilarski told an audience iJ happening in other districts." mort In welfare and mental health." In a ~·ritten statement issued at the of about 1300 that today's programs are Lagunans should be proud of their INCIDENT CITED meeting by lhe board and administration ••hools sao·d M Keel y ti Jh 1 of the district, reference was made to geared to gaining student and com-..... ' rs. e ' no ng a Teacher G-rge NettJeman rem8'ked people from across the U.S. and from "" !..'misleading and erroneous" statemel'lts munity support for lhe strike. abroad come to visit and study the that, when he had a printing business, made by officers of the Taxpayers' 11We can't really consider shutting local school system. he had known paper salesmen who made Association over the past several months, down this campus until we get the people $26 ,000 a year. "lt doesn't seem out some refuted by the County Schools behind us," he said. llARl\IONY PLEA of line lo me to pay a man who is Office. Several meetings and events are sched· Ending her remarks with a plea for responsible for the welfare of thousands The records, says the statement, "do uled as part of the "education" program. harmony that won general applause. Mrs. of children as much as a P:~per not support the broad allegations According to student spoke!men, about Keeley said, "Laguna has been divided salesman," he said. regarding exce ssive increases In assessed 200 students will be passing out leaflets by fear and hate. Let the Taxpayers A man who identified himself a "a valuation , diminishing average daily at. explaJnlng the strike in shopping centers appoint a committee to work with the taxpayer" said he felt grateful to rr tendance and exorbitant salaries." and at high schools. school board. The Chamber of Commerce for initiating the investigation that "has The statement reiterates the suggestion A leaflet given to strikets by the has a commit.tee. It is not necessary brought out how good our schools really that interested citizens or groups meet Defense Committee lists suggestions for to occupy tlme with obstructionist tac· are!' He said he would like to join with thE! board and staff to "avail students who are working In the com-tics. School financing is complex and the Taxpayers' group. themselves of all information." munity: 1--;:===========================================::, -Do not leaflet parked cars. I -Do not obstruct people or cars. -At high schools do not enter school grounds, stay across the street, conUnue moving. -If a policeman stops to ' question you, stay cool. He's probably checking lo see what you're doing. A "rap-in" open to the public Is scheduled for tonight in Crawford Hall. K.ilarski said the 8: 15 p.m. meeting would be held to get an idea or the strength of support for the strike. A n1eeting for service staff and faculty was to be held at 10 a.m. campus officials were expected to tell the group what level of participation in the strike would be acceptable to the ad· mlr,lstration. Tuesday Dr. Roger Russell, vice chancellor for academic affairs, toli1 faculty members they were free to participate in workshops and other cam· pus activities involved in the study of the Cambodia. problem. Russell said faculty who wished to participate in "alternate education programs" could do so on vacation time, compensatory time, or on time without pay. R11s5'!Jl's statement inferred· tlte policy l"OLld be In effect tmlil lt is rescinded. Also scheduled as part of the strike activities were: -A demonstration this morning at the county Board of Supervisors meeting to demand that supervisors ·apply for federal fund s for child care centers. -Student support of a strike vote at the academic Senate meeting at 4 today In the Science Lecture Hall . -Sl!ike spokesmen said flckellng and a teach-in in UCI's Centra Park would be held throughout the day. China Gets 24 Hours To Leave Cantbodia PHNO~f PENH, Cambodia (AP) - The Cambodian government ~y gave Communist Olinese diplomats 24 houri to get out of the country, following Peking's r~cognition or the exiled govern- ment of th~ ousted Cambodian chief ol st~le, Prince Norodom Sihanouk. Communist Chinese Ambas:iador Kang Mao Chao said after a one·hour mtcllng with the &ecretary.general of the Cam· bodlan Forcl«in hflnistry that the em- bassy ataff would leave for China on a special fUght. MAKE THE 10th OF MAY A DAY MOTHER WILL NEVER FORGET 'I A, M .,.,,...,.. 141C S.1111 .... lrtnftt Wffdl •U I . Stll·-llol Ll..,._M Wiiii Self C11t"'i!ot (llWW Ye!-1-., l ... l~i.t• S-laft C.1t UH C. UK IMlill .. If .•• ....,.. l'ttlltf c,.,..111 f'1.I 0. I CW.IWIM&, Ull Ylllltw W WlllM kllll o.1111 tllJ ! ........ - 10t"*"•bo<l l:7 n.111 M<ud. 10:•.SIS~ ,_.u, Hand carved Coral rose!': u•ith lca~·es of genuine Jade.,. in settingi; of ricl1, long-lastinp; J4Kt. Gold OV<lrl::iy. From our selection of fine quolity jewelry CONVENIENT TERMS IANKAMERICARO MASTER CHARGE J. {!, fiumphri e ~ J ewefer3 24 YEARS SAME LOCATION PHONE 648-340 I 1823 NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA ., • .l . • • . " -• • . -. . :.: . '·I -. y' . -• -~ ·· La,guna Beaeh _bL 63, NO. 108, 4 SECTIONS, 82 .PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • WED~SOAY, MAY 6, 1970 uar La9una9rln1 By Phil lntor landl "Census Taker." ·Orderly Student Strike Conducted at UC Irvine .. By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 '"' O•I" ,.lllrt Sllft "They're simply carrytng out a very ordely demonstration of their sentiments on · the war, and I'm not making any pubijc pronouncements." · 'Mlal was the statement this morning of UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel Aldrich u lhe UCI student strike moved inlo its second day. The strike, organized by the UCI Coni· munity Coalition, is being held to * * * Flag Lo,vered, Then Raised At Saddleback The American Flag was lowered at Saddleback College this morning by students protesting the U.S. push into Cambodia but. it was soon raised again by another crowd or students of different political persuasion. There was no violence on the Mission Viejo Junior College campus except for some pushing at one point as students surged in to hike the Flag back into place on its staff out!ide the ad· ministration building. Mel li.1itchell, college public information officer said about 15 UCI students came t() the campus this morning and a~ tempted to distribute literature against the Cambodian involvement. He said they were told they could not but that it could be dlslributed by Saddleback students. Some of the student! carried signs protesting the Cambodian situation. Mltchell estimated that about 75 students had gathered around the flag lo haul tt down and said others appeared to put it back , tn place. Administration ofriciats talked to the leaders of both i;uoups: students milled around and then dispersed. demonstrate opp&sition to President Nix· on's war policies in southeast Alia. The Community Coalition is made up of various campus groups, including the New University Conference, the Move- ment for a Democratic Military, Students for a Democratic Society, and the Radical Students Union. Support of lhe strike. a lo"A' key event so far. was difficult to estimate Tuesday as only about 30 percent of the campus. 850 classes are held on that day or the week. Today's support was equally difficult to ascertain. An administralion spokesman said most of the strike supporters were orr campus working on strike programs. Strike spokesman Rich Yensen claimed 3.000 or UCl's 5000 students were out of classes today while an undetermined number of professors were calling the strike headquarters to say they would not hold classes. While strikers made plans for a com· plete shutdown or the campus Thursday, student body officers called for a student referendum on the strike on F'riday. Student body President F r e d d i e Massimino, vice president James Got- tfried and Secretary Claude Dorais in a statement released this morning, ex- pressed concern over demands "which are being attached to student demonstra· lions on the Cambodia matter." The statement specifically notes the demand s involving U.S. imperialism, the release of political prisoners, the removal of ROTC from campuses and the remova l of military recruiting and war related research from campuses, may not be supported by all students who support the strike. Pleading for "peaceful efforts" and "rational decisions," the statement con· eluded, "We support the sincere concern that students are e:1pressing about the grave situation that exists in Cambodia. We do not suJ>POrt those who would use this sincere concern to advocate (Ste STRIKE, Page !) Police Nab Nude Bather On Pot Rap A nude sunbather basking beside some potted pot TuesdiY aftUnoon was quoted later by Laguna Beach police as saying: "I guess you l'Ould call it just an illegal hobby ." Police agreed that marijuana garden· ing is illegal as they booked Douglas SEE PHOTO PAGE 2 Wayne Sleeper. 20, 1086 Glenneyre, on charges of both cultivating and possess· ing marijuana with intent lei sell it. Jlandall Klm Blake, 21, of the same address, \vho arrived 10 minutes later, was booked on the same charges, said Detective Neil Purcell. Purcell said he obtained initial in· formation about the plants from .a citizen's phone tip. He checked and sure enough, said the detective, he could see the marijuana -both tht. polled pl&nts and others in t,bc backyard. Arresting ofifcers Robert Bri.!coe a~d tdike Louisiana 81'! .Oi41d •l!i>ul 111 poonds or cured mi:!-i{aana, two loaded pistols and variog1, items of dru1 paraphernalia including a water pipe and seven other pipes, some made from rocks. Purcell said Sleeper 1P'nll lying naked beside the large pot of freshly •atered marijuana plants when the officers ar· ri ved at 2:15 p.m. The guns and other ilcms were in a bedroom. The plants, said Purcell, included the female mari· juana plant which produces the seeds for reproduction and also a quality leaf preferred by marijuana smokers. Purcell said both suspects would be arraigned in municipal court sometime today. Blake said he was a student and Sleeper told police he is a con· struction worker . Congress Seat Candidates , Meet In San Clemente Candidates for the 35th COngressional District, fonnerly represented by the late James B. Utt, will appear in a publlc forum tonight at 7:30 in the San Clemente High School auditorium. The fdrum, co-sponsored by the Laguna Beach coordinating Council and the Capislrano Bay Area League of Women Voters. will be moderated by Tom Murphine, program cha.innan of the Coordinating Council. Seven can!ifidates scheduled ~u appear are Frank Halpern of La Jolla (Peace and Freedom): David N. Hartman of Santa Ana (Democrat); Thomas B. Lenhart of Santa Ana (Democrat); Mag· gie Meggs of Laguna B e a c h (Republican ): John A. Steiger of Oceanside !Republican): and William Wilcoxen of Laguna Beach (Republican). John G. Schmitz. also a candidate, has advised sponsors that committee obligations in Sacramento may prevent his attending. U.S. Opens 3 New Fronts Biggest Operation, of War Pours Into Cambodia SAIGON (UPf) -The United States and South Vietnam launched three new offensives Into Cambodia today in the 1biggest allied operation of the war. An armada o( U.S. Navy river patrol boats moved into Cambodian territory to join the 50,000 11lli<ld troops involved. The three new drives crossed the border In are.as ranging from 65 miles northwest to 95 miles north of Saigon and were preceded by ma~sive aerial assaults using bOmbs ancl napalm whlch wiped out the town (lf S11uol wl1er~ llO~ looting by Amertc:in troops was reported. One new orrerulve today was by a 4,500-man task '""' of the 2$th U.S. -· Infantry Division into the Dog's Head sector 65 miles northwest ()( Saigon . At least 43 Communist troops and four Americans ·were killed in the first hours of the sweep. Two of the Americans were \flied when U.S. artillery rounds fell short of their target. In the initial stages of the operation. This brought U.S. casualties In the multl·pronaed offensive to 30 killed and 70 Wounded . At least 50 U.S. Navy river patrol boats, heavily anned SO.foot vc~w.ls, 1noved into Cambodla alon g the Kham Spean River as part of this operation, Kaylor reported . They ran Into Com· mt.1llst Ort two miles ins.Ide Cambodia but casualties were nol known . The second drive today crossed the {ronlier 95 miles north of Saigon and the third \\•as abolit 80 miles north ' of Saigon near the Loe Ninh district . ' towu. Both areas ~re north GI.. lbe 1 Fls'hhook area where allied troops hate been searching for a Comrounitt central headquarters for six· tla~ • U.S. military offlclals 'aald lht of. renslves, ordered by ·Presklcnl Nlxon to wipe out ComrrpnUJ~ sanctuaries acr0$S the border, ha•e•'k™Cd 2,800 Com- munJrt Lroops. captu.reG. libOO weapollS, !clzed. or destroyed 700 tgns of food and munitions and-.M-trucb and (Set CAMBODIA, Pap IJ l • ._ .... _ ... ~ .. -•·· -- 'TAXPAYERS NEED RELIEF'' City Councilmen Lorr • "&.?' ... 'i<-. DAILY "ILOT 511" ,. ... ,_, 'SHOULD BE PROUD' Coordin11tin9 CQ\fncll'a KHl•y Crowd Jams Meeting Of ~aguna SchooJ . Bou~d . ' By llARllARA KllEIBICU ' OI *" OMll' "llM' lt1ff L,aguna · Beai;h &ebo9l trustees, 1c· eustomed to wading through their lengthy agendas in the company of a handful of scribbling reporters and a teache'r or 1"10. gazed out over a sea of faces Tue~ay nllht. some friendly, some hostile. . , A hundred people, civic leaders. parents, teachers, students and con· cerned citizens jammed the small board room and flowed over to fill the spaciowi: el'1rv of the administration build ing. Many were there to support newly eler:ted councilman Edward Lorr. out to do battle for reduced school operating r1Jsts, as president of the Laguna Beach Taxpayers Associa tion. Others. who h'ad got wind of proposed confrontation with the trustees, turned out to support the board and the schools. Comments and applause during the l0 11D'rhy session seemed about equally divided. Most of those In attendance had rarely. if ever. been seen at a school board meeting. NolinJ;t fhe huge crowd, Board Presi· dent Larry Taylor commented, "J assume your attendance is due to some specific motive, so 1 will move oral communications up ahead of the rest of the agenda so you won't have to sil through a lot of dry stuff." For ~he next hour, Tayklr called upon one member of the audience after another, permitting no discussion or response from Lhe trustees until everyone who wislied to speak had done so. More than 20 wue heard. Lor:r initiated the discuaion by refer· •I ' ·: • • '' l ' 'COUNSELING HELPS' ReV: Corneflaon ring to a five·pag:e Jetter addressed to the board by hls Taxpayers' Association and demanding cuts in administrative costs. He .said Taylor's reply, an offer to meet with a committee from the Taxpayers to go over' the budget, did Iliff TRUSTEES, Poge IJ • Trains, Bikes on Agenda Of San Clemente Council ~~. Tr~in 6peed limit!,. mini bike Mise and San Clemente's jurisdiction (or lack -·of same) over fishing within Its three. mile limit will be back before councilmen tonight. City Manager Kenneth Carr will report on result.s of discussion wi!Jl Santa Fe Railroad officials on slowing trains that zip through San Clemenle. Speed limlls are 65' and 7~ mllu an hour for freights and passenger trains. Tbe..council earlier ~idered llptiting the speed by Ordinance to 40 mJles per hour but Shelved this unUl Carr could•confer with -the rai11'98d o{ficlals. .)n ariother report; P. MacK'enzle Brown, city attorney. will adylse coyn· ·citnien 1on lhel( Jtgal chances of coq· troUVig commercial flShlng with the •thtee-mile limit wh1~ the. state own1 ·but which is In the city. San Clemen~·· sport fi.!hing neet c:>ppMes lhe intrusion of "COmmerclal fishermen into JocaJ waters. Carr will report oo the mlnl and road bike problem on prlvate property. Lawyer Norman E. Rudolph, who ()Wf!J a motorcycle, sald earller the mlnlblke at1<f dirt1 b'lke operation on private pro. perty, mosUy by younasttn, i. a.problem • -':'Ille ilolse just drives you up· the wall.'' Carr said there seems to be 11omethlng of a vacuum in · the legislative Held concerning optratlon of the unllctnstd minibikes on private property. They are lllei:al on public streeta so youngsfers ride them on private property. In otlfer bus.Jness,'tbe councU wlU: -Again . ~iaer purphase of l;be hlstotlc bean\s from the f o r m e r cap11trano Beach Club, once a fl:1tw-e In. the home Of the 'Doheny oll famlly. Councllmeh cdld · sho'uldered the ' ofrer at ·flj1QO(J', for. beams . and .$3,poj> ror ·demol Uon 1 earUP.r but the 1 price now 'has dropped l'/,000':" ' NEW YORK.(AP) -The stock market pulled back Crom Its steep early gain but remained on the ups~lng thlt afternoon. Trading ' was moderately active. (Ste quotations, Pages 28--%7). The decline seemed to have lost mo- mentum, however and the lstest read· Ing '"' lracU0nailr ' hlfhtr than tlie t :!O p.m. flilJre. · • I 'l'oday'8 Final TEN CENTS us 16 Injured, 74 Arrested In Rioting LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Score1 of police patrolled near and 011 the UCLA campus early today following a threeo hour window smashing spree and violent confrontation between antiwar protestors and officers. At least 74 persons were arrested and 16 Injured. Acting Chancellor David S a x o n declared a state of campus emergency Tuesday after a rally of about 2,000 )Xlrsons turned to fist fights and the starling Of small fires. A force of 250 city police officers moved onto the campus and cleared an area around the men'a gym after several scuffles and a series of window breaking. The building houses classrooms and the ROTC offices, focal point of the students protesUng against American in· volvement in Cambodia and the slayina of four students at Kent State ln Ohio. Police stationed themselves at in- ~ersections surroundlng the campus after 1t was repor~ quiet at 8 p.m. and let persons leave, but nobody.was allowed to enter durlftl the night. Of those arrested, including lt women and two professors, 61 were charged with misdemeanors while 13 were booked on felonies, includh1.g assault agiinat a policeman. · Authorilles said 12 students were treated for minor injuries and four cam- pus guards and a city policeman 1115- tained minor injuries. City Police Chief Edward M. Dav.ls mo6llized the entlre Loll Angeles depart· meut, and patrols in au parts of the city were doubled. Davis said hi11 action would remain in effect until "a sbte CJf peace ls obvious." Protesll!I also erupted at San Fernando Vailey Slate and the University of California at Santa Barbara. Al UCSB, sheriff's deputies and highway patrolmen were called to the campus when an estimated 1,000 studenta gathered in front of the administration building following a rally. The two professors arrested at UCLA were identified as William H. M<:Whin· 11ey, 40, assistant dean of planning 311d a member of the graduate school of administration; and Peter Ladefoged, a professor of languages. Officers said Ladefoged was arrested for allegedly scuffling with a policeman. Smaller demonslratlons also were reported at the University of Southern California and East Los Angeles Junior College. San Clemente Child Injured iu Accident A San Clemente girl, 3, suffered minor leg injury Tuesday at about noon when her mother's car struck a car backing !rom a driveway. Michelle Koscavage, 217 Via San Andreas, was taken® lhe ramily doctor. The moth~r. Mrs. Barbara Kascavage. 39, was driving a car with five pre-school children, police said, when Jlmmy H. Holskey, 26, Camp Pendleton, backed into her path, In lhe 100 bliSck of Canada. Orlllll(e Coast We11tlaer Ir you tlke today's weather, you'll love Thuraday's since It'• inother d09t Of the same sluff - low coastal cJouda aQd buy sun- shine with a top mercury reading of 70 degr .... INSIDE TODA. 'l' Orange County's weekend livt thtaUr fare -and the count]/111 Jive entrie1 in the Riv- erside one-oct tournamenf..--art detaile'd todau. See Entertain· m.ent,· Paqtt1 28·29. l>MtlM • II ,_,,..,. It C11_... I Mrt1111 "'" Cl,_ C-r II Moil!llM ,..,.,. M CJlldlJle u, ' .......... w... .. , Ci.t,111"41 ...., OftllM C-17 II C-kt .... "" ,. ~ J4 1119111 »H 0..ttl Nitl!Cft II Ot. li.Mrellll 11 ·-~ "'" ' l!oldl Mlfll.tl ,...,. lrlll9rtl~ U.Jf T~ • ,.l_I at.11 TIIHMtt .. ,. "'"'1.u" M w.,IMr 4 AMI L1..-.n If W-tt. '#ttlt 1't Mll"-l • • ........ 1 ...... »<II .. "' ttn'ln •ti ...,... tlewl tf .. ... .... Z DAil Y PILOT SC -<1 Taft Wins; Runoff Due . For Wallace By Un.lied Prts1 lnternalional Ohio voten rebuffed their Republican governor, James A. Rhodes, and sent former astronaut John }I, Glenn down to upset defeat while Alabamans put a crimp Into George C. Wallace's bid to regain public ofrlce. 1be Ohio and Alabama v o t I n g hlghlighted a scattering of primary elec· lions Tuesday. Rhodes was beaten by Congressman Robert A. '.Taft Jr. for the Republican nomination for the Ohio senate ieat ' beiog vacated by Seo. Slephe.n M. Young, a Democrat who said he was retiring at age 80 in spite of good health to let a younge r person move in. Glenn, at first an odd5-<>n favorite to win the Democratic nomination to 8Uecttd Young, was overhauled by Howard W. Metzenbaum, millionaire from Cleveland. Glenn, first American to orbit the earth, had intended to run against Young in the 1964 Democralic primary but withdrew after being injured in a household accident. In Alabama., Wallace -the third party candidate who kept neither President ~ixon nor Hubert H. H!Jmphrey from getting a majority in the 1968 presidential ·I eledion -failed himself to get a ma· jorl ty in Tuesday's Democratic gubernatorial primary. In fact, Wallace's narrow lead over Albert Brewer, the incumbent governor seeking renomination, vanished today as lale returns were counted and he fell behind by 17.000 votes. Wallace and Brewer now will be matched in a runoff. Charles E. Woods ran a fairly strong third with more than 100,000 votes to deny Wallace or Brewer a majority. The runoff is expected to be clooe and a Wallace defeat could doom any future national politJcal aspirations. In Indiana, all II incumbent con- gressmen -four Democra ts and seven Republicans -won renomination. In Conoect.icut, where 11 communities had primaries, slates pledged to incwnbent Democratic Sen. Thomas H. Dodd were beat.en in nine of 11 races. The stale party's convention to endorse candldales for the NOvember election i.5 scheduled 1n June. Ohio's gubernatorial lineup in the fall election will be State Auditor Roger Cloud for the Republlcans, and former Rep. John J. Gilligan for the Democrats. From Page 1 CAMBODIA •.. destroyed hundreds or bunker' and hue camps. The operations began last week. 'lbe first major strike was in the Parrot's Beak sector of Cambodia that juts out tC> within 35 miles of Saigon and was the staging area for the Tet offensive on Saigon in 1968. Others were farther nor!Ji in the Fishhook and Se San areas, 67 and 230 miles northeast of Saigon. South Vi etnamese also penetrated Cambodia fr<m the ?i-fekong Delta area. Fighting also nared in the northern portion ol South Vietnam and 36 Americans were killed, 29 ot them in a North Vietnamese assault from the demilitarized zone in apparent reaction to the allied drive into Cambodia. Two men were missing and 31 were wounded. It w rui: the heaviest lcm taken by • U.S. unit in a single action in Vietnam in 20 months. Russ, Czechs Friends PRAGUE (UPI) Russia and Czechoelovakia today signed a 211-year friendship treaty that justifies Soviet intervention in any east bloc nation which strays from the Communist camp. DAILY PILOT 1')111;-.,NGE COAST .. U9Ll5Hll"Q CM!,.ANY ~o\ttrt N , Wt1d ..... idelt ..... ,.llbll~ J1ck •. Curt.y Vk• 1" .. 1io•I _,... Gtfllftl MIJlllW lh•••• 1C ••• ;1 "'"' llt•111•1 A. ,. ...... ;,.. M"""'"' l:dlltr ' Ri1~1r4 P. Nill ioollll Ori""' C:0¥'1tr Ellltw c.r. Mae: a Wfit ...,. ..._. N"'91'1 a11dl: 7'11 Wttl 81 .. 1 ... tr¥tt'C U9WM ··-: t2'J ,_, A-. Mllftlllltlln ~: 171TJ ••lldl ~ ... 11 CIMW!lol:' JOI ,...,_ 'El c..Mie It_. Dl'll,Y "II.OT,""""' w)lc:h It~·""' ... ...,.,., .... fll'°I~ •Ull' PCf'PI S- ................ 'd\1-for L"""" -.:4JI. .....,.., ktdl, C:..tt Mal, HtRI.,.._ •llldl ft .._ .... \'I...,, '""' W't111 -'-0 ... "'11 ... 0r""'09 C..MI ,.,,....., .... ~ ~tilt .... .,W.l\lt -11 2U1 _,. 8•1Wt .I ... ., H9WPO'I •HCll. WA Uf Wtlf .. , $tr111. C.11 MIWI. l1la;l C7141 141--4111 ~ .. .wmti.i.. 14J.Jt1t S.. Clo ,.,. .AU rNo,~ ,...,, ••• 492 ... 421 ~!, ,.,., °'..... eo..1 P\llMltl\lfot C-¥. ... -11tri11. """""'-1'1twi.t .... ,.. .,. '"""''"'-It .. .... fMf lie ,.~,, wll'*" ...... ..... --~ " °""""'' .-. 14(-''"' -ia.c "" ., ,.,......, .. ,,,. W.f 0.,tl Motl.I, C.H'*""l&_ ......,,,"'IM ... ,,_,,. P• -1o111t1y1 t¥ -'I 11• _.tri Mll!Mry .w.1---... ''·· .....,,.,.,. , 01111.Y .. !LOT ll•ff 1"!11 .. " FroNt Pafl'! 1 . ' . TRUSTEES DRAW CROWD . ~ . not "respond to IPC!¢flcs." Zerolng in oi' hlib salaries paid to edmlnJstraton, be cited the cr'..ea®r\ Of. 1e .-admlnbtrau.re positions lo lllt put fOW' ycars1 tncludtng a peychoDJetrl!t, vice ~nc.ipals, counselors ~l~tarlu. C.OSt of these 10 positions on we ~70 budget. he said, amounted to 111)7,055. • • "I a;i:k h9w the scbQOI board can justil'y adding personnel I n ad- ministration." said Uirr "when our enrollment has not increased and we don't seem to have enough funds for our teachers.'" He cited a 1961 report which said no additional certified staf( would be needed even if enrollment increued by 500 students. "\Ve should cut down on non-essen- tials," said a woman. •:Js it your intent. to let all th.ls dead wood remain and let the kids walk to school and cut down on teachers?'' Referring to cost-per-pupil figwes, a man asked, "Are our kids that much dirtier that it costs two or three times as much to clean our classrooms?" DISASTER AREA "The administration area of the school js a disaster area," said Dr. G. R. Ekeberg. "The kids mill around and the counselors don't show up for ap- pointments." ... takes much atudy. '"Let's tet fear and hatred and .mm..,.;IJ' .... IJld pl ·to -~rin,iini 0\11" dty badt to a 'lllrll-ol, !J,nnony so we can accomplish what flttds to .be done ." The Rev. Bob Q:lntelis:on of St 1ifary's Episcopal Church said he was concerned with the deterioration of the family. "J know the schools have to pick up and compensate for the frightfu l hollowness that is in the home. Counsel· ing is th~ greatest help. I feel v.·e are not spending too much. We are not spending enough to minister to our children." NOTICES QUESTIONED Questioning termination notices given 29 teachers some weeks ago, Mrs. Betty Heckel said, "I think It is the wrong plitce to save money. We want backing and good salaries for our teachers." Taylor later explained that the not.ices had been ~nt the teachers, and to au adminlstra\Qrs, in order to meet a state-imposed deadline for nolificallon of possible termination. Most were later advised, after budget studies gOt under way. that they would be re-hired. Realtor Vern Taschner said the bond issue failed because "the school system is not as great as you say ... people don't trust it ... the high school group refl~cts the hippie, move.men!." DAILY PILOT Stiff l"M1'9 'THANKS, FOR THE KIDS' Thurston Student Belnap Dr. Ekeberg said a counselor had been coaching a tennis learn when she tried to see him. Two parents rose lo praise the services they had been given by counselors. -OFFICER MIKE LOUISIANA CHECKS OUT NEW DRUG HAUL M.rljuaN Plant Cover fail1 Nude Sunb.ther Jn Laguna Eel Van Deusen said it seemed to him the certified personnel employed in the 10 poaitlons were "of help to the whole diitrid" and ir there v•ere a total of 200 in their category in the whole system a fi\•e per cent increase ~·ould not be ext ravagant 'Thurston Intennediate School student Jeff Belnap stood up and addressed the board briefly. "I know I speak for most or the kids at 'Thurston when 1 say thank you for the kids in the Said a woman teacher: "I think the Laguna Beach school system fs one of the best in the country. I make a great sacrifice to work here, driving long distances, and I hope to find the money to move here so my children can attend these schools." A student said, "Our family moved to Laguna because of the good school 5ystem." Thurston volunteer parent guide Judy Penney urged members of the audience to visit the schools. ''I think a day on campus v.·ould enlighten some of you," she sai d. ''l urge you tc>. come and visit Thurston , see it in action, see what goes on. You will have a lruer understanding." Carpenter Asks Colleges To Reject Revolutionaries school district.'' The audience applauded. NOT QUALITY Mrs. Helen Keeley, president of the Lorr said the question was not the Laguna Beach Coordinating Council, ex· quality of education, but administrative school teacher and fonner city coun· salaries. He wanted to know why cilwoman, voiced a plea for hannony. Superintendent Dr. William Ullom is paid TIMES DIFFERENT $26,500 when the superintendent of the much larger Newport-Mesa district gets "We must remember the times are quite different ," she said. "\Ve can't $30,000. NO COllf.PENSATION Concluding the session, Board Presi· dent 'Taylor cited the fact that board members serve without compensation meeting late at night and often on weekends, and are dedicated to the service of children, as are the district teachers. "I indicated in my letter to Mr. Lorr that we would welcome an opportunity to meet with a committee from his organizalion," said Taylor. •'Th a Chamber has made such aPt agreement v.·ilh us and we still want to set up a committee with the 'Taxpayers .•• " Dennis E. Carpenter, chairman of the Republican State Central Committee Tuesday called for college student! to reject the "screaming revolutionaries who will try to build stiU more violent confrontations on the corpses in Ohio." Carpenter, a Newport Beach resident who is a candidate for the Republican nomination for the 34th District State Senate, made his statement in the af- tennaih of the Kent State shootings whkh Jert four student.!! dead. "I'm saddened by the deaths in Ohio but surprised that we haven't had a tragedy of this magnitude Jong ago,'' he said. The Republican leader said he saw: two aHerna uyrs for the future, "more bloodshed or we can get down to eerious di5CUSSiqn. II "Student leaders must act still more rirmJy in the aftermath of the violent deaths on the Kent State campus. It Ecology Students Plant Kelp Bed Off Dan.a Point Action to increase the oxygen pro- duction of the sea was taken toda y by marine ecology students of San Clemente High School. Cla1ses of Philip Grignon planted a giant kelp bed off Dana Point. The planting is culmination or 8 year of study and preparation of materials. Student Mike Sulllvan. leader or the project, said the teams wil'. continue to plant this evening beginning about !1:30, diving from Black Bart's boat from the Dana Harbor. With co~ultation by Kerkhoff Laboratories, the students conducted studies last year to determine planting procedures. They e•pedmented in a glanl aquariu?n, proving that the planting pro- gram is feasible. Cement blocks were formed to anchor the kelp, and st.eel needles used to we1ve the kelp into nels attached to the an- choring. Purpose of the projet't is to replenish dwindling kelp beds, because scientists credit the kelp With 80 percent ol tbe oxygen producUon of this: planet. New Reereation: Center Planned ·A new recrutlon center complete with a 75-by .... foot swimming pool is now under construcUon in Mission Viejo. The 1.5-acre facility will be located on ~targuerite Parkway nnd La Sierra Ofive facing Recodo Lane. 1l will iMlude a y,·ading pool, dt<:k lanai, two temls courts and a barbecue area. The main building will house officts, .a game room, dress.ing and restrooms, kitchen facilities and a anack bar which will be open on weekends and during 5Ummer months. 1'be director of the Granada Center wUJ be Danny L. Bemoll, a graduate or Cal state Colleae who has aervcd JS recreation supe:rvi.9or for Temple City. He Is currently an instructor at Coronado Junior lllah School in West Co\1ina. lie will assume hi1 dulil's June 18 and wlll be at lhl' 111ont.tnoso Center until the Cranada Center ii completed ln Jul7. Is evident that student violence will be met with firm 1trengtb. •'But I think it is important for students lo Tecognize that honest discussion and legitimate political action on their part will be y,·elcomed ," he said. ~. From Page I STRIKE ... go back to 1961. The problems of the "Do you really need such highly past four years require a different at-qualified people who hold doctoral tiltJde. degrees and draw such high salaries?" Uirr demanded. "These are not teaching "Three or four years ago, students personnel. And why do we need four ~·ere being criticized by the community counselors for J,000 students in the high and ribthtlully so. With the aid of trained school -one for 250 students?" counselors the schools were able to help chiklren and . their parents in the face , The taxpayers' shirts are being slrip.. "U your children go down the drain, ped off their backs. he said. 'J'hey lf your children go down the drain, can't go any further." the cost to you and sOciety is infinitely Mrs. Keeley noted that the board of greater than the cost of personnel in education is an elective body and "the the district. Narcotics arrests among people have indicated ~\'hat they want studeDts have dropped because of fine Jn electing the board. their own radical polltiC!." Counseling services. It's one thing to ''If you don 't like the way they arc h,_ 1· ffl but ·1 oth 1dmil'listerin11 the schools," s~ said, At a Tuesday night meeting in strike ue po ice o cers, qui e an er 4 IJ to have counselors the children can talk You will have an opportunity to vote headquarters at the campus Gateway to and find help. Money is well spent fC>r someone who will give you a less Commons, steering committee co -if it saves your children from what expensive educatipn -but you may pay chairman Rich Kilarski told an audience is happening in other districts." morf}n welfare and mtital beaf1." of about 300 that today's programs are Lagunans should be proud of their INCIDENT CITED geared to gaining student and com-schools, said Mrs. Keeley, noting that Teacher George Nett1eman remarked people from across ttti; U.S. and from rnunity support for the strike. abroad come 10 vlsi{ and study the that, when he had a printing business, •·we can't really consider shutting local school system. he had known paper salesmen who made down this campus until "':e get the people $26,000 a year. "It doesn't seem out behind us," he said. HARMONY PLEA of line lo me to pay a man who is Several meetings and events are sched· Ending her remarks with a plea for responsible for the welrare of thousands uled as part of the "education" program. hannony that won general applause, Mrs. of children as much as a paper According to student spokesmen, about Keeley said, "Laguna has been divided salesman," he said. 200 students will be passing out 1eancts by fear and hate. Let the Taxpayers A man who identified himself as "a explaining lhe strike in shopping centers appoint a committee to work with the taxpayer" said he felt gratelul lo Lorr and at high schools. school board. The Chamber of Commerce for initiating the investigation that "has A leaflet given to strikers by the has a committee. It is oot necessary brought out how good our st'hQols really Defense Committee lists suggestions for to occupy time with obstructionist tac· are." He said he would like to join Taylor said the board sets up many meetings wilh parents and others to hear complain ts and "a school board meeting y,·ith a thick agenda is not the place." A committee. he said, "could go over the most minute details of the budget." The board. he said, works on the budget from January till August, "Lrying to watch the money .ud ~till provide the best ill education." \VRIT'TEN STATEll1ENT In a written statement issued at the meeting by the board and administration of the district, reference was made tt> •·misleading and erroneous" statements made by officers of the Taxpayers' Association over the past several months, some refuted by the County Schools Office. The records, says the statement, "do not support .. the broad allegation! regarding excessive increases in assessed valuation , diminishing average daily at. lendance and exorbitant salaries." The statement reiterates the suggestion that interested citizens or groups meet with the board and staff to "avail themselves of all information." !'lludents who are working in the com-tics. School financing is complex and the Taxpayers' group. munity: 1-;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::'.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::, -Do not leaflet parked cars. -Do not obstruct people or cars. -At high schools do not enter school grounds, stay across the street, continue moving. -If a policeman stops to question you, stay cool. He's probably chttking lo see what you're doing. A "rap-in" open to the public is scheduled for tonight in Crawford Hall. K.ilan;ki said the 8: 15 p.m. meeting would be held lo get an idea of the strength or support for the strike. A meeting for service staff and faculty was to be held at 10 a.m. campu!i officials 'were expected to tell the group what level of participation in the strike would be acceptable to the ad· mir.istration. Tuesday Dr. Roger Russell, vice chancellor for academic aUairs, told faculty members they were free to parl.icipate in workshops and olher cam· PIJS activities involved in the study of the Cambodia problem. Rus!M!ll said racully who wished to participate in "alternate education programs" could do so on vacation time,. compensatory time, or on time Yi.llhout pay. Rus~u·s statement inferred the policy v·oLld be in errect lmtil it is Ti!!sclndtd. Also scheduled as part of the slrikc act.ivitjes -were : -..\ demonstrallbn thi\ momlni at lbe county Board of Supervisors meeting to demand that supervisors apply for federal funds for child ca.re centers. -Student support of a strike vote at the academic Senate meeting ·at 4 today in the Sci~nce LectUrt H&ll. -Strike 11pokesmen said picketing and a teach-In in UCJ'1 Central Park would be held thrC>ughout the day . China Gets 24 Hours To Leave Cauiliodia PHNOM PENH, Cambodia !AP) - The Cambod ian government. today gave Communist O'llnese diplomats 24 hours lo gel out of the cOllntry, followlng Ptking's recognition of the etlled 1ovem- mtnt of the ousted Cambodian chief oI state, Prince Norodorn Sihanouk. Communist Chinese Ambassador Kang 1i1ao Chao said after a one-hour meeting wlth I.he secretary-general of the Cam· bodlan Fortlgn l\-1Jnlstry that the em· bl•y staff would leave for Otina on a special ntghL MAKE THE 10th OF MAY A DAY MOTHER WILL NEVER FORGET A. M """"'* t41C Stlll lhll I~ W•ld! •a a. Jt"·orlftoll!ll Lll~fMllc Wllll Sllf C""'wltlf ~ Yll-,..,, 111111 .. t Slftl fldl CI M t\21 c. 1c Wll .. 11. ,......,., ,_ c..,..111 .. 11 D. l .,.._, 141( T .... W Mlae itllll .... t1'1 lo"i"Ol- "'"'""-• 17'11eh) ..... l.U::>.SU!rvNt •'-"us •rand carved Conil rosa "'ith leaves of genuine Jade ' •. in settings or ri~·h, long-laslin~ J·IKI. Gold overf:iy. Fmm our selection 1Jf fine quiili!y jc,vclry C.I/ ~1 6JI c../{fwnze1i<,z CONVENIENT TERMS !}. C .J/umphrie; Jewe/e,.,, H YEARS SAME LOCATION BANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE Jill NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA PHONE 648-340 f ' I •• .. -- Green Belt )! _To Count y •l · . :. By JACK BROBACK •i ot tlle Dtllf' l'li.t SllH :> .· A beautiful, full color eight-page :!•·brochure on the "Laguna Greenbelt Pro- ject" was presented to the Orange Coon· ty Board of SuperviscrJ Tuesday by Jam.ts W. Dilley, secretary for the steer- ing committee for the program. ''The publishing of this brochure launches our campaign for funds to purchase the vital Sycamore Hills area .in the northeastern heart of our proposed cr.eenbelt project," Dilley told board members. Sycamore Hills is located in the triangular 'Y' area formed by Laguna Canyon and El Toro roads in the upper Laguna Canyon area. "To preserve its beautiful landscapes and recreational possibilities, the com- mittee is resolved lo urge public ac- quisition of the Sycamore Hills area." he explained. "But where is the money~ ;'If the committee had an operative land trust and adequate private funds this land could be quickly pmchased. But since the committee has neither, its only recourse was Lo appeal for purchase with public funds.'' 1-Ie explained that in June ol 1969, the Laguna Beach City Council applied to the Stale Lands Commission for funds and "discussions were opened with the state Department of Parks and Recrea. tion." Dilley appealed for the supervisors support for the project. The brochure states, in part: "The citizens committee, quickly felt at ease y:ith the thinking of the l\1'0 ranches -the 1'.1oulton Ranch and the Jrvine Ranch -\1•hose lands CQmprise most of the desired greenbelt . Preserva· tion guided by planning seemed lo the rommittee lo characterize the policies ()f the ranches. "But it was the Sycamore Hills area, lying like a wedge between the ranch lands and at the very heart of the desired greenbelt, that became the im· mediate concern of the committee. "This vital triangle of land was recently purchased by the Great Lakes Property Corperafion and the roprporation is mov· ing toward its development. The plan sho1vs two large shopping centers 'A'hich could destroy forever the landscapes of the h•lo canyons." Dilley "'ent on to explain about the city's general plan and its park and recreation element which calls for three large areas of neighborhood and regional parks, ample for all recreational uses. "1le brochure, touching on eC<llogy, SIJtes: "It is our sacred duty to preserve this rare and wonderful world for ourselves and for future generations. The place for each to start is in his ()wn particular part or the "'orld - his own backya rd. "\\re propose to start in ours, the fi ve beautiful canyons immediately ad· jacent to Laguna Beach but equally vital to Laguna Niguel , South Laguna, Laguna Hills, El Toro, Irvine -the entire South Coast area of Orange Coun· ty. It is expli.ined that "'Ork of the com· mittee stafted in i\lay of 1968, when goals were outlined. The greenbelt area is described as "stretching in a chain of five beautiful canyons from Aliso Beach on the south. It includes, to the tops of their ridges, Aliso, \Vood. El Toro, Laguna and 1'.forro Canyons and the interior area of Sycamore Hills terminating at Morro Beach on the north." It points out the committee "'as quoted 11 price of $4 .5 million on the Sycamore Hills property in early 1969. "Enthusiasm is growing and funds arc coming in,'' Dilley told supervisors. "The church 1vome.1 have shown interest and the Laguna Beach High Schoo' students donated $150 from their meager funds. Such backing is invigorating." Russ Want Japa nese To Appeal to Nixon TOKYO (AP) -The Soviet Union asked Japan today to use its influence to help stop U.S. operations In Cambodia. Foreign Ministry officials said the re- quest was made by Soviet Amba,s.,ador Oleg A. Troyanovsky when he called on Deputy Foreign Minister Nobuhiko Ushiba. TRICIA JOHNSON FEEDS TOTS AT ORPHAN HOME Ro•• Park Orphanege Survives, Birely, on Oonetions Kids Helpi11g Kids Church Teens Aid Orphanage By RICHARD P. NALL Of tM 01Ur Piii! lll'ff Hand laundering the meager clothing ()f 80 underfed orphan boys dally is an imposing task, one the local Teens For Christ "'ant eagerly to do something about. The youth group of San Juan Christian Church, 31612 El Camino Real, also is determined that the youngsters at Rose Park Orphanage in Tijuana will have enough to eat and enough to wear. The youth group visited the orphanage six weeks ago. The 80 orphans 15 of them under 15 months old, are housed in one building. When !here is no baby food, the infants survive ()n powdered milk, said Mrs. Blaine Roberts, who with her l'tusband sponsors Teens For Christ. When there is not enough food the older boys go to church aocl pray Police Seeking Laguna Girl, 19, As Hash Suspec t The Orange County District AUomey'11 Office has is.sued a warrant for the arrest of the wife of one of two Laguna Beach brothers arrested Monday and charged y,•ith possession of 70 pounds of hashish valued at $90,000. Ann Carey, 19; \Vi[e of Tod Carey. 23, is sought as anJccomplice in ~he attempted transport ffie hashish. In South County Municipa l Court Tues· day. Judge Richard Hamilton set bail at $25,000 each for Tod and his brother, Robert Carey, 18. The two were taken into custody !\·Ion· day after a weekend stakeout or the elder brother's residence 1476 N. Coast Highway. Acting on a tip that a large drug shipment had been taken into the North Coast Highway address. detectil'e Neil Purcell o( the Laguna Beach narcotics detail kept \\'atch until the brothers emerged Monday morning and loaded three large plastic trash bags into a car. When the vehicle, apparently out of gas, y,•ould not start, the bags 'A'ere placed In a second car. The vehicle stal· led as they attempted to drive ' off, and police closed in. The plasLic bags \Vere found to c()ntain 70 foil-wrapped packages. ea ch containing about one pound of suspected hashish. The drug, residue of the marijuana plant pressed into blocks, and much more potent than the parent plant. cur· rently sells for about $80 an ()unce, or more when it is sold by the gram. Purcell said. 11ie Monday morning haul, h e estimated, W()Uld have brought $90,000 to $100,000 had it reached the street. The hashish, Purcell said, was of "fair· ly good'' quality and apparently of 1'.fiddle Eastern origin. Much of the drug. hi: added , is concealed in cars .shipped lo the. U.S. from Europe. lhat more will come. The Rose Park Orphanage, said Mrs. Roberts, was started in 1962 by Juan and Joan Sandoval with five youngsters. It survives, barely, on donations. Teens for Christ with 20 members in the high school group and 2~ in the junior high is raisi ng funds to buy a washer and soap fo~ the youngsters. The local youth are also energetically collecling clothing, bedding, food and funds for food. They plan to return to their adopted orphanage May 16 with the supplies collected including ()ranges the local youngsters 'A'ill pick this v.'eekend. Food needed includes canned goods of every type, lard, sugar, flour, soda, beans, rice, macaroni , can11cd n1ilk . juices, and spices. Baby clolhcs and beddin g are needed. So are mops. lnun- dry pails, soaps, hair clippers, clothes pins, brooms. floor cleaners and scouring pads. Also needed are funds. \\lhen !he local teen return to 1hr Tijuana orphanage, said Mrs. Roberts, they plan 1lo pitch·in by scrubbing floors, <:hanging bedding, making benches and feeding the babies. Persons interested in donating su pplies or funds may call !he following nu1nbers to arrange a pickup, 4!}2.1278. 494·9794, 496-1662, 496--3967, 496-4860, 495-5946, 830· 5171, 847·4768 or 496-3886. ) L DAILY PILO! ~ Ever Used Salt Creel{? County Seeks Witnesses With Access Evidence Orange County ~unsel Adrian Kuyper has been authorized by the Board or Supervisors to place advertisements seeking evidence concerning the public's "prescriptive eiuement" to Salt Creek Beach belween hfonarch Bay and Dana Poh1t. This area includes Sall Creek Roat;! and the shoreline area that has been the subject ol much acrimonious discussion and one lawsuit in the past several months. f.uyper, in his request lo the .supervisors Tuesday, pointed out, '·The eXJstence or these 'prescriptive rights' depends on factual proof that members or the public, in fact, crossed property and used the beache.s v.•ithout. any c;harge or permission of the owner." Kuyper noted that "previous in· dlcations are that charges were made, either for parking or access or both." "To completely explore the rights of the public, ll'e need to determine M ···ere was u'se without charge or restric· .. Alcoholic Unit Oka y Dela yed Activation of a $300,000 Alcoholic Rehabilitation unit at the Orange Ccunty f\.1edical Center ""as delayed for tv.·o weeks by the Board of Supervisors Tues· day because Supervisor Robert W. Battin thought "the subject needs more study ." The activation of the unit, provided for in the current rounty budget calls for 23 positions, 19 for In.patient care and four for oot·patienl. Thirty beds would be utilized in the project. Battin objected because he did not think "the private sector in this field has been fully utilized." Activation includes hiring personnel. purchaSI': of equipment, alterations at the medical center and a transfer of some budget funds. The supervisors will consider the pro... ject next on May 19. Uutch Charge Spy ing; Ex pel Soviet Envoys THl:: HAGUE (AP) -The Dutch governnient has expelled two So vie t diplomats because · of espionage, the Foreign Office announced today. It said B. Netrebski and V. S. Sharo\·atov \!;ere (ound to have in their possession data on a map with notes "r military object~ the secr~y or \\'ht ch "'as imperative in the interest of the sta te." Uo.1. This will depend upon contactin& members of the general public who can testify to these (acts," Kuyper added . lie said he had written the atto1""11eys (William Wilcoxen of Laguna Beach, et al) who brought the lawsuit concerning the abandonment or the Pacific Coast Highway segment in the vicini~y of Salt Creek, but had not r~eived an answer to his inquiry. Kuyper noted that the lawsuit irlvolved only the abandoned public right of v.·a.v. and not property between the road and tidelands. "Nonetheless, we thought those 1entlemen might have such e\'idence,'' he ,dded. (T'he Board of Supervisors abandoned the short segment of the old Salt Creek Road In 1968 to the Laguna Niguel Corporation, owners and developers of the surrounding property). Kuyper said his office was writing all organizations known to be involved in beaches and surfing activities in the area . ~le said the advertisements would ht placed i·,1 "various newspapers and, possibly , magazines which are of local interest to surfers and others who se readers might include such witnesses." Kids Play Ball Little Leaguers Open Saturday Little League season In Laguna Beach will get under way at noon Saturday at Riddle Field, with special opening~ay ceremonies preceding the first games at I :30. Guest of honor, as is tradition, will be former Laguna Mayor Jesse Riddle, for whom the field is named and who annually tosses out the first ball of the opening game. · Other special guests \Viii be Ma1or Richard Goldberg and members of the City Council and Mrs. Amy Norworth, whose late husband, Jack , wrote the classic "Take Me Out To The Ball Game," and who always distributes Crackerjack to the Little Leaguers. l\1rs. Nor"·orth will present the city championship trophy lo Uie Rotary leani for their 1969 win. After ihtroduclion of p I a y e r s , managers, coaches. bat boys and team mothers. a doubleheader \\'ill launch the 1970 play, with the Lions team facing the VFWs, followed by a game between ·the Kiwanis and Laguna Federals teams. Spl!(ial recognition will be given during opening ceremonies lo Paul Wright, who has been chief umpire since the beginning of Little League in Laguna Beach, but has wilhdrawn as active umpire and "'ill be named honorary chief umpire. A change in sponsorship finds the San Cleinente Elks Club sponsoring the Elks team, which was temporarily lefl \\'lthout a sponsor when the Laguiia Elks Club disbanded. Asked if the team could use their name, the San Clemente Elks responded, not only with the name, but ~'ith a $100 donation for the sponsorship fee . The first Little League in Orange Coun- ty was organized in Laguna Beach in 1952 with four teams . Today there are two leagues, each with four teams. After the Saturday opening; games will be pla yed on Monday Wednesday and Friday nights through June 12. From thal dale until the city championship is played July 11, games will be ()" Tuesdny and Thursday nights and Satur· day afternoons. W omau. In jtu·ed In Laguna Crasl1 A South Laguna woman who told police she fell asleep ~·hile driving on South Coast High\\·ay sho rtly before 2 a.m. tod ay, sufferet:t a broken arm and severe chin laceration \\'hen her small foreign car smashed into a vehicle parked on !he highway. Taken lo South Coast Co1nmuni ly llospita l. 1'.1arilyn l\.1ae Sibson, 44, Or 32177 South Coast High\ltay , South Laguna, was released after treatment (or her injuries. ~1rs. Sibson is the owner of The Burger Nook, 211 Broadway. Police reported major damage to her car and also to the parked car owned by Roger David Bojorques, 2613 Victoria Drive. Patcrnitv Suit Filed • Aga inst Cary Grant SANTA MONtCA, Calif. CUPll -Cary Grant was natned in a paternity suit filed in superior courl Tuesday by 1 for1ncr employe of a HolJ~·ood filni studio. Cynthia Bouron , 32, of Beverly ·Hills. clahned Grant was the father of Stephanie Andrea Grant, who was born ~·larch 12 in a Los Angeles hospital. . ' ' ' ! I } Sterling Holloway Speaks At County A1·ts Meetii1g Laguna Beach actor and art rollector Sterling Hollo\\'ay will be the featured speaker at an organizational meeting for the proposed Orange County Arts Council Saturday morning. 1'.fay 16, in the Bowers Mu!eum in Santa Ana. Holloway will speak al 11 a.m., follow· h1g registration and roffee at 9:30 and a discussion of the Plew organization, presentation of bylaws and elecUon of ()fficers. For the past four years, a steering rommittee elected at a meeting In Garden Grove has been evaluating the purposes an arts council h1 the county might serve. The committee worked with the counsel or representatives of the Callfomla Arts Ccmmi11sion. Chainnan of the steering committee Is L. W. McLtnnan of Fullerton. Other mtfTlbers ll"fl 1t1.mes. Velma Sun •nd Robert Joyce, Laguna Beach; Virginia Lo"·e. Buefta Park; Ann Terril, Sa11ta Ana·Tustin ; John 8. Opfel\, Orange ; and Merton Hinshaw, Santa Ana. The committee has sent invitation~ to all arts groups in the cou11ty. asking them to !end a delegate alM:I alternate, if de!ired, to the May 16 meeting. The role of the Orange County Ari s Council ls seen as one of encouraging arts activities by correlating information and lmprovh1g communication among varlou"I groups, suppOrUng dissemination of art news and panels on art topit11, helping oew urban center• to organlie art groups and 1upplemenling the ac· ti vltle11 of established groups without 1..- tnislon or duplication of eHort. Reservations for the organliatlonal meeting art suggested1 since. se11ti11R al the Bov.·en Museum u !united. These may be made with P..1rs. Opfetl, 638-199a. You probably won't notice that the air over Southern California will be a little cleaner. But it'll be a little cleaner. '23 neighboring communl!les ore convert· Ing some of thl!ir fleet vehicles 10 noturol gos. Not some!ime in the dislont future. Right now. Right now we're providing up 10 !.ix con· \lerslon kilt opiece to 23 cities, towns ond counties In Soulhe1n California for o one yeo1 !rlol period to domonslrole how noturol gos con cut 90% ol o vehicle's pollutonts. Over the yeor, we'll orronge for continu· ing !ochnicol aUiSlonce end fuel supplies. We're olso converting more lhon 1,100 of cur own fleet vehicles. With over 31,/1 million registered vehicles In los Angeles County alone, we're undM no delusions lhot we're golnsi to el imlnota smog. But It's o beginning. Our busint" is the gos b.isiness. Sul port of our buiiness is to help mokt Soutliern Col ilornlo o bott er ploce to live. In the future, we ond, wt hope, others in Soulllern Collfomlo will be working even harder, lo convert more vehlcle fleet• to clean-burning noturol gos. There's on old rule oboul projeds like th is one. To srorl, \'OU hove to start. w.·,. lnV9tllnt lft tornerrow. ·---.. I I 1 ' L..!_ 'Q DAILY l'!LOT Wednt1d•y, May 6, 1'170 .. -• ""d ·l i.v.. '"' ' I l 1.rN: ,.,. ~ I . " I ~~~ .,....: ,,., 'TODAY'S NEW$ .. ' (C.-..llMll n tM D1HY Plltt SllfO -~:!Clothes designer Mary Ouant .: rJCentiy launched a ne'v product ~::..:;."Make-up to Love in." It is said not to "run. smudge or smear, •'even at the height of passion." • The Slokc-011-Trent. E11gla11d, city fathCrs .have decided tli.at t,,j the topic of a musical documen- {.' tory to be feat u·red at tlie citu'.s : f j. festiual later tllis montli will be l , .ff the escapades of a legendary : ~ towii drunk. who d ie~ .19 years t , -.b ago 11.rith 300 convictions for ' • public i11toxication behind him. ~t I ~~-.:e;:=•1;ai:;:: ~ • Bachelor Peter Godw in of South -C-erney. England, asked local of- .;.·ffcials recently to Jo,ver taxes on ·ms house b~ause midnight nude · fllathing parties in waters adjacent '..tb hi s property kept him up at ·night. • -_,,.Leroy J. Peters, 20, a \Vichita ! S}ate University student, brought ~ ap American flag to school recent· 1 11 and 'vas p r o m pt I y arrested. Peters was jailed in lieu of $250 ~bond on a charge or defacing the : flag, The flag 'vas sewed to the ! seat of Peters' pants. : . ' • ' ' l ' l I i l ! --~< -liiP..,: .. -•• ' •:.• .. ·~ "lfC"--... ~. --.: ,1, ... ~ {No ~:; enjoys immunizotibn ·•hots fi ond hJarinc \Vorld's 3,000 lb.-ele· l phaut seal, "Big Lou" is no exception J11s curator llfichML Stafford inocu· •fates the hug e animal, It is no easy ~E' for the man must stand well ~ y from the powerful flippers ~ -en. ofter the hU1Je tank has betn. ~J~ined to decrease the seal's mobili· :-. : Four-year-old Malcom Wiison, of ;~arlisle, Englan~, fell 20 feet ~rough an open window, but escap- ~ with a broken foot. "He must ;bit.ve sleep\\'alked over to the win· pow and thought it \\'as the bed." !s'3id Malcom's mother, Mrs. Gwen ~Vilson. "From OO\V on \Ve are lock· ~ng the windo\VS." : 0 Police clicck.ed. a train f rom '1 Londo1t Sunday after it wos ~ stopped jusi four miles from the i: scene of the 1963 great t rain ~• robber11. Sonieone liad pulled oii tl1r. cn1er9e11cy cord in the m.ail compartm~nt. Tile door of ff ;. the compartrnent had been fore- • ed ope1i b11 t police said only a i small quantity of Sunday news· " papers was m is sing. Ca11abodia Briefing President Fails To Sway Critics WASHINGTON (AP) -Pttsidenl Nix- on's promise that U.S. troops will be out of Cambodia by July 1 at Ute latest ha s made no noticeable dent in prior Capitol Hill opinion -critics remain critical and supporters are standing firm behind the new war policy. In separate briefings with tw o groups of reprewitatlves and senators Tuesday, the President spelled out the limitations on the incursion -American units c<>uld go no furt.her Utan 21.7 miles into Cam· bodia without prior congressional ap· proval and all U.S. troops would be pulled back before the first of July. Sen. J. W. Fulbright, ehaJrman of the Senate: Foreign Relations Committee and one of the toughest critics of Nixon's Southeast Asia policy. indicated there * * * House Debate On Cambodia Proposal Set \VASHINGTON (UPI) -The House squared off today over an amendment that would both authorize and curb the use of U.S. troops in Cambodia. Its critics called it a "Cambodian Tonkin Gulf reS"Olution." But Jts sponsor said il \Vas a message to Pre~ident Nixon -'"this far and no farther." The amendment v.•as proposed to the pending $20.2 billion weapons authoriza· tion bill (ln which the House was to resume debate today. The amendment would bar using any funds in the bill to finance the introduction of U.S. ground combat troops into Lao.s. Thailand or Cambodia without the prior consent of Congress -unless the President decided. and promptly reported to Congress, that such action '!Yas necessary "to protect Jives CJf American troops remaining v.ithin Soulh Vietnam." Critics said the amendment would gi ve President Nixon the author ity to wage "''ar in Cambodia, Thailand and Laos that President Lyndon B. Johnson claim· ed for Vietnam on the basis of the 1964 Tonkin resolution. Nixon, according to congressmen "''ho met with him Tuesday. saw the amend- ment as an endorsement of the limited action lie says he has taken in Cambodia. Nixon supports it and so does House RejiubHcap Luder Gerald R. Ford of Michig"ail. The sponsor of the amendment, Rep. Paul Findley. a Republican dove from downstate Illinois, acknowledged it ap- proves what Nixon has done so far. But. Findley says it carries an additional message from Congress -"thls far and no farther." . Findley said, ho\vever, Nixon took him aside at the White House briefing on Cambodia Tuesday night and told him the amendment was "splendid ." Julie Released From Hospital NORTHAMPTON. Mass. (AP} -Julie Nixon Eisenhower, daughter of the Presi· dent, v.'as released from Cooley-Dickinson Hospital today after an overnight stay for what hospital officials called a .. minor medical problem ." The hospita l refused any further com· ment on Mrs. Ei senhower. who wa s brought there Tuesday night by Secret Service men. Mrs. Eisenhower , a senior at Smith College, was due to leave this weekend for Washington, returning May 31 for graduation. Her husband, David, is a senior at nearby Amherst College. .. was nothing new in the Pre11ident'11 pres· entatlon. "In these expositions there was, T think, nothing thal had not been covered in the President's speech," Ute Arkansas Democrat said . He referred to the .state- ment Nixon made last Thursday on na· tional television and radio saying a joint South Vietna1nese-U.S. troop operation had moved into Cambodia. Nixon said then the action would be over in six to eight weeks and was desiJ(ned primarily to protect the security of U.S. troops in South Vietnam by destroying enemy sanctuaries acrOM the border in Cambodia . Most of those attending the briefings said Nixon pressed this was still his objective during his 20-minute discourse. But "there was really no joining of the issue," Fulbright said. "You ask a question, then they pass on lo the next one." "Personally," he went on, "J don't feel that 1 benefited very much" from the session . Rep. Thomas E. Morgan, t h e Pennsylvania Democrat who heads the llouse Foreign Affairs Cdmmittee, said he was impressed by the meeting with Nixon -and so were the other members of his panel. Indiana Rep. Ross E. Adair, senior Republican on the Foreign Affairs Com· mittee, called the briefings impressive and forthright. "They answered." he said "many of the questions and objections that have been raised." He said the Cambodian operation was going better than expected, with low casualties and less hostile diplomatic re action that anticipated. "When the operation is going well both militarily and diplomatlcaJ\y," Adair said, "'it seems to me we have reason for optimism." The Senate Foreign Relations Com· mittee and the House Foreign Affairs Committee met "''ith Nixon in the aJ. te111oon. The Armed Services committeei; of both chambers conferred \vith the President in a morning session. The Senate's No. 2 Republican. l\Uchlgan"s Robert P. Griffin, who also aUended the afernoon session. said Nixon was excellent in presenting the ad - ministration's policy. Corporation For Railroads Wins Senate OK WASHINGTON (UP!) -The Sena"' approved, 78 to 3, today a bill to take prum:nger train service away from the railroads and turn it over to a newly created corporation. The measure now goes to the House. The Senate passed it after adopting an amendment by Sen. Claiborne Pell (0. R.I.), to allow regiona l transportation authorities to contract for service within their areas. Also approved v.·as a second Pell amendment to stipulate that government financial support for the new enterprise could be used to modernize roadbeds as well as trains. Pell said most U.S. railroad beds are so antiquated the passengers are "shaken up like a martini cocktail." The only votes case against the bill on final passage were by Sens. Allen J. Ellender (0.La.), James B. Alllen (D·Ala.). and John L. McClellan (D-Ark.) The bill was endorsed by the Nixon admini3tration, the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC), railroad unions, the Associ atiQn of American Railroads and the National Association of Railroad Passengers. The latter seeks better passenger service which the railroads claim they cannot provide without losing money. Thunderstorms in Missouri I • ' Cool Air Sends Mercury Below Freezing in Michigan • Callfortala j Tem1>er1lur" cocltd l!ltf\l!"f 1114 " "!t h Clou<ll lfl(rH!lfd tOIMY H so..,n,_ ,, _,., Celllornl1 cor11!~ .. rr with .v1ty wlnd1 In '"' moun11ln1 111d Hser11. SOOTHE.JIN CALIFOl!NIA -Mor,.. Int !<>¥< clevds end loci! fot' <Nitti ( t Kllorls 111~,-.. 1w lalr with -hlth ( c••••h t11rowh TrK;o<11v. Sllt!!!lv cool. ! t r lnlend 1re1• WfldntM11y. LOS ANGElES AtlO VIC.!N!TY - MOl'"Oll"'9 I-Cfouds !><JI htlY wn11!in~ t 111 !!'le'""'"°°"'' WedM~ ... f r>d fhVf'l.+ ' dtY. Ll!lll lf'mPl!••l11•• cl!•.,9• l<t"" Wedroncln nll'I'!! Jl. 111111! WPOn~\.(fjY I ~-POINT CONCt'PTIO'l TO MEJ(IC,t.N I •OflOIE.11-L'91!1 v1r!1b .. wr...,, "'°'"· '"' l'IOl.I•• lwc.omln11 we11e.iv 10 fo '° O .. "<lh In 1fl..--We<l!'o!ildlY Ind ~ Th<.ll't<hlY. 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Tiit llO!'mt devt!OPW tram -lroru11 1v11...., 11,..!Clllftl fret!\ It'll nortl'ltt!I to !II• loO<illltl" Ml~"""'· C.l'O! 1lr btlllr.d "'' Iron! drot>lll'd 1,m1>Crt1vrt1 lielOW ''"111111 '"' H rl' of M1d1!M" 1<'111 WIKOtltlP\, l'r•I d•~ """ 11110 Ulll'Oll, Wtrm wattlltr tOl'lt!l!llf'd lo dO!tllnt lt 1!!t IOUl ..... n lltl d lllM lfllll ~· OI IM '"'' ot 11'11 11o111at1 tnlo'ted drl' (1111+ dlll0t't1. 1-rlv ""°'"t"' 1,m~.,1turt1 1•~ !~Ill )6 41 Htl'>t:OClt, Mltl'I. It 11 II l'(tfdltl Ind Tl! .. l'NI!, C.alfl. Temperatures A!bulil111....,1 A~llll Al\1nt1 1!11k .. 1fltld l"1m1rtk l!loli.e llotlon l!lfOWPllVll19 Cl!IQH ClnelMt!I o ....... 0.1 Molfltt 09'ro11 Ftlrbe-.,k• For! Worth "'''~ Htl.,.1 Honolulu 1Ctn111 Cl!y L11 Vtt1~ Los A-!" M l1ml M lnflfff'Ollt N-Orltl P\I N"" Vorlt NCO'!ll P!tll• 0.ltl•llCI Ol"lt11Qm9 CllY Orntll~ ,t!m SJtrl"tl P.t'IO"otlol~ Pl\Mn!# Pllltbu•tlt f'O"liAn~ lifAl>id (llY Rf'd e1u11 ·-S•C•t ... l'fl'~ _.....) Stlt l~~• (itV ''" O!tH ~" l'r1nel1to St1!!l1 -·~ ,.,,.'"""', Wtll'llM!or! Hl•LIW~ II SI .. " n n ... 11 ., ti !2 n '° ,,, .... St 27 .oi '' n .. " 11 •l 15 'J " . " " .. " 7$ 31 ., ,, .. " " ., n ~s . fl If .. u t7 SJ n ~ " " " .. n " " " •s •• 7J •• " .. n '' .o.t " . 61 SJ " ~ .. " 11 S1 12 SJ ., " " .. Jt ~J 11 •l •1 ,, " .. n .... Threat Cited Nixon to Resume Israel Jet Sale? 'NOTHING NEW' »nator Fulbright FBI Adds Brow11 To Most Wanted List-Number 11 WASHINGTON CAP) -The FBI ex- panded its list of "JO Most Wanted Fugitives" to 11 today to make room for JI. Rap Brown, the black militant who !ailed to appear Monday for his riot and arson trial. Brown, the FBI said, should be •·considered armed and dangerous." The addition of lhe 26-year-old black militant leader came less than t~10 days after the llfaryland attorney general's office obtained a federal warranl charg· ing him wlth interstate flight to avoid prosecution. Jt also marked tJ1e first time in two years -since James Earl Ray wa.s being sought for the slaying of Dr. f.fart.in Luther King Jr. ·-lh at the FBI failed to wait for a top-JO vacancy before adding another ma:.1 . A former chairman of SNCC -the Student' National Coordinating Commi ttee -Brown was to stand trial in Ellicott Ci ty, Md., on <:harges stemming from a fiery 1967 speech he made in Cam· bridge, Md., shortly before disorders erupted in a black area of the city. \Vhen he failed to appear, Howard County Circuit Judge James MacGill revoked Brown's $10,000 OOnd and issued a bench warrant for his arrest. • WASHINGTON CUP!) -Congressional &OW'Ces Indicate they believe Pres.ident Nixon will decide to resume the sale of Phantom jets to Israel "fairly soon." The fin!ll decision will depend on two things: -The outcome of private talks now under way within the f our -power framework of the United Stal,€!, Britain, France and the Soviet Union. -Current efforts of U.S. diplomats to clarify SOviet intentions in the area -particularly Sovie t Premier Alexei N. Kosygin's news conference answer to a question concerning ~rts of Soviet pilots flying Egyptian MIGs in opera· tional missions. Kosygin said Ute pilots 0 are there for the purpose of aiding the UAR (United Arab Republic) in the struggle against Israeli aggression, an aggress ion which in turn is massively supported by the Uni ted States which is providing Israel ,~·ith arms and extending all-0ut support in creating aggression against that coun· try." Some observers in Washington believe the presence of Soviet pilots has U!"el a precarious balance of power in the Middle East that Nixon had tried ti) maintain. * * * Israeli Bo1nbers Hit Egypt Guns lsracli Afr Force jets were sent in toda y to silence Egyptian guns born· barding Israeli troops in the northern sector of the Sue:i; Canal. an lsrae1i military spokesman announced in Tel Aviv.· , ft was the first aerial activity an· nounced today and the first major artillery battle of the day. Earlier, Israel announced two Arab guerrillas were kill- ed in clashes with tsraeli security forces. Jn Cairo, an Egyptian government spokesman said Soviet instructors were working with all branches of the Egyp- ti an anned forces but denied Israeli charges Soviet pilots were flying opera- tiotial missions over Egypt. 'I'he Israeli government made the charge last week and PremleT' G<*la Meir warned Israel would fight the Russiaoo if necessary to defend the Suez. front. Everybody is looking for a bargain. • Heres one you can tielieve in. wt.I. rmkes thr Bnid: Lo.Sabres we , 9eII ~ bargains'.' \\'r're rlcaling. for one t.hinJ,::. Spri~i ;..: hc:T-r ancl wr're making i1fJ for lost time 1lurini;: 1ho,q. <'Oki "'inl('f months when E"lt'Tytxxl~· ruiyed home hy lhc rirt. \\"c'rt ~nt: lo make it rtal easy for ,,otl to get intna Bukk Md cdrbrateSpring. But. lhaCs only part of wlmt nwtkes a lxri;ain a bargain. Wba~Lbcar?Ca't p ~. in it.1 I ~·Bui<-k isbm1twith~r. Yoo i:.-et. thirl~ like a cooli~ t<-y!itt'n'l tMt l';hcMd ne-..·er 00t'e!'heal. fNlell with a.ir ~. 'Kiili get. Buit.i.t·~ 9friqne ~ion lt'Y!llcrn -AccuDrive-t.hal makes this LeSabre one ol lhc best bandlir1; Buid.s ...... bl <at etie1 a-dEr • a mtiic-inc+i.. \'& With br..t:.m c:arbnQon. Th~L --- It could be redressed at least In pert · by a U.S. decision to lilt the ban on the sale of addit ional jets to Israel. The sources said Nixon also has avoid- ed a decision on the jets because of the reported presence of Soviet penonnet at Egyptian antiaircraft m i s s i I e in· stallations that increased the danger of a lWC>-flO\\'er confrontation. Reds Boycott Peace Talks In Protest PARIS (UPI) -North Vietnam and the Viet Cong boycolled the Paris peace talks session scheduled for today, break· ing the regular sequence of meetings and leaving the negotiations without an agreed resumption date . Both sides issued statements contairting <.. vague warnings that the negotiatioos mlght be doomed. An official North Vietnamese statement said the two Communist delegations ricided not to attend today 's 66th session in order "to express (their) firm protest against the extremely grave acts of U1c United States" in Indochina. The state8'nt, which was read to newsmen at a specially convened news conference, said the United States had violated its "commitment to stop com· pletely its bombardments against North Vietnam" -the commitment whidl pav· ed the way for the opening of the four·party peace talk s. The Hanoi statement also charged that the United states was seeking to "extend the "''ar to the whole of Indochina by invading Cambodia." The North Vietnamese proposed that the next meeting of the peace talks i;hould be held next week on May 14, but concluded with this '"'arning: "lf the Niron administration continues its bombardments against the territory of the Democratic Republic of (Northl Vietnam. Jt must bear full responsibility for all the serious con.sequences arising from its acts." Otief Ametican negotiawr Philip C. Habib rejected the Hanoi chaqe5 and their reasons !or cancelling the meeting, l I I I I ------------,,--,,.?'"~--~1!""""'"'1"1""1"'""'1""_!'1"1""_,,'!I"!"'_""""~---..,...---,--...-----:-------- I San Clemente Ca istrano • EDITION1 • ' • NOC 63, NO. 108, 4 SECTIONS, 82 PAGES , -ORANGE COUNTf. C,._LIFORN]A • I ·--' WeONESD~Y,,MAY 6, 1 ~70 ·." . ' --· :: . l uar • INSIDE TODAY FIATURED NEWS ALONG THE SOUTHERN ORANGE COAST Teens Aiding Orphan Kids Youngsters from the San Juan Christian Church have launched a project to help 80 orphans south of the border where babr food is non-existent and powd- ered milk is a way o life. Story and photos, Page 3. Taxes Paid by the Bottle A San Clemente man has come up with a new tax wrinkle that might provide funds for a cleaner en- vironment. Story Page 3. AQtos to Replace Sunset Sce1te Some people in a San Clemente neighborhood are fearful that a new parking lot might replace theit ocean view with scenery provided from Detroit. Story Page 3. Patriotisni Wins Donor Four students from Valencia Elemen•tary School have won $25 savings bonds for their essays and posters on "I Am an American." See Mission Trail, Page 3. Orderly Student Strike Conducted at UC Irvine By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tlle 0.llY l"l!el SH1tl "They're !;imply carrying out a very orderly demonstration of their sentiments on the war, and I'm not maklng any public pronouncements." That was the statement th.is morning of UC lrvlne CbaOcellor Danlel Aldrich as the UCI student strike moved into Jt.s second day. The strike, organized by the UCI Com- munitt Coalition, is being held to * * * Flag Lowered, Then Raised At Saddleback The American Flag was lowered at Saddleback College this morning by &udents protesting the U.S. push into CambOOia but it was soon raised again by another crowd of students of different political persuasion. There was no violence on the Mission Viejo Junior College campus except for some pushing at one point as students surged in to hike the Flag back into place pn its staff outside the ad- mlni.sb"ation building. Mel Mitchell, college public Information ofricer said about 15 UCI studenti came to the campus thls morning and at. tempted to distribute literature against the Cambodian involvemenl He said they were told they could not but that it could be distributed by Saddleback studenlJI. Some of the students carried signs protesting the Cambodian situation. Mitchell estimated that about 75 students had gathered around the flag to haul It down and sald others appeared to put it bad in place. Administration officials talked to the leaders cl both groups; studellls milled around and then di!persed. demonstrate opposilion to Presklent Ni%- on's war policies in 50Ulheast Asia. The ·Commwdty Coalitiot\ is made up of varioua campus groups, includinJ the New University Conference, the Move- ment for a Democratic MWtary, Students for a Democratic Society, and the Radical Students Unlon. Support of the strike, a low key event so far, was difficult to estimate Tuesday as only about 30 percent of the campus, 850 classes are beld on that day (If the week. Today's support was equally difficult to ascertain. An administration spokesman said most of the strike supporters were off campus working on strike programs. Strike spokesman Rich Yensen claimed 3,000 of UCT's 5000 students were out of classes today while an undetermined number (If professors were calling the strike headquarters to say they would not hold classes. While strikers made plans for a com· plete shutdown of the campus Thursday, student body officers called for a student referendum on the strike on Friday. Student body President F r e d d i e ~1assimino, vice president James Got- tfried and Secretary Claude Dorais in a statement released this morning, ex- pressed concern over demands "which are being attached to student demonstra- tions on the Cambodia matter." The statement specifically notes lhe demands involving U.S. imperialism, the release of political prisoners, the removal of ROTC from campuses and the removal of military recruiting and war related research from campuses, may not be supported by all students who support the strike. Pleading for "peaceful efforts" and ''rational deeisions," the statement con- cluded, "We suppart the sincere concem that students are expressing about the grave situation that exists in Cambodia. We do not support those who would use this sincere concern to advocate (Set STRIKE, Pare Z) Police Nab Nude Bather On Pot Rap. A nude sunbather basking beside 11ome potted pot Tuesday afternoon was quoted later by Laguna Beach police as saying: "I guess you could call it just an UJegaJ hobby." Police agreed that marijuana garden- ing is illegal as they boQked Douglas SEE PHOTO PAGE t Wayne Sleeper, 20, 1086 Glenneyre, on charges of both cultivating and possess- ing marijuana with intent to sell it. Randall Kim Blake, 21, of the same address, who arrived 10 minutes later, was booked . on the same charges, said Detective Neil Purcell. Purcell said he obtained initial in• formation about the plants from a ciliien's phone tip. He checked and sure enough, said the detective, he could see the marijuana -both tht. potted plants and others in the backyard. Arresting ofifcers Ro~rt Briscoe and Mike Louisiana also seited about six poo,nds or ·cured marjjilana, two loaded ' . plslols apd var~ ~! .of ••r paraphernalia lncludlq '. • ,..ter P.lpe and seven other piP,eS, il!lme .J!lade (raJI. rocks. Purcell said Sleeper wa.s tying naked beside the Jarae pot of freshly watered marijuana plants when the officers ar- rived at 2:15 p.m. The guns and other ilems were in a bedroom. The plants, said Purcell, included the female mari- juana plant which produces the &eeds for reproduction and alto a quality leaf preferred by marijuana smokers. Purcell said both susJ)ect.s would be ~raigned in municipal court sometime today. Blake said be was a student and Sleeper told police he · is a coo- sLrucUon worker. Cong ress Seat Candidates Meet In San Clemente Candidates for the 35th Congressional District, formerly represented by the late James B. Utt, will appear in a public forum tonight at 7:30 in the San Clemente High School auditorium . The forum, co-sponsored by the Laguna Beach coordinating Council and the Capistrano Bay Atta League of Women Voters, will be mock!rated by Tom Murphine. program chairman of the Coordinating Council. Seven candidates scheduled to appear are Frank Halpern of La Jolla (Peace and Freedom); David N. Hartman of Santa Ana (Democrat); Thomas B. Lenhart of Santa Ana (Democrat); Mag. gie Meggs of Laguna B e a c h (Republican): John A. Steiger of Oceanside (Republican): and Wiiiiam Wilcoxen of Laguna Beach (Republican). John G. Schmitz. also a candidate, has advised spon:im"S that committee obligations in Sacramento may prevent his attending. U.S. Opens 3 New Fronts Biggest Operation of War Pours Into Cambodia SAIGON (UPI) -The United state.• and South Vietnam launched three new offensives into Cambodia today in the biggest allied operation of the war. An annada ol U.S. Navy river patrol boat! moved into Cambodian territory to join the J0,000 allied troopa involved. Tht three new drives C1'06&ed the bord• in arw ranging from 65 mile11 northwest to 95 milts north of Saigon 111nd were prec«lttf by massive aerial assaults using bombs and napalm which wtped out the town of Snuol where tlOme looting by Amcrk:an troops was reported. One.. new offensive todsy was by a 4,500-man task force o( Ule 2Stb U.S. --·· Infantry Division into the Dog's Head sector 65 mile& northwest of Saigon, At least 43 Communist troops and four Amerk:ans were killed in the first hours of the sweep. Two of the Americans were killed when U.S. artillery rounds fell ahcrt of their target in the initial st.ages of the operation. This brought U.S. casualtlei In the multi-pronged offensive to 30 killed and 70 wounded. At least 50 U.S. Navy river patrol boatt: heavily armed, • 50-foot vessels, moved into Cambodia along the Kham Sptan River as part. ol th.is operation, Kaylor reported. They ran into Com- muniat lire two miles Inside Cambodia but ca!Uallies were not known. The 8eCOlld drive today crosaed the frontier 95 miles north of Saigon and the third' was about 80 mnes north or Saigon near the Loe Ninh dJstrict town. Both are.as are north or the Fishhook area where allied troops have been searching for a Commtm1at cenltJ) , headquarten f« Bil ·daJa:. U.S. military officials said the ·.r. fenslvd, ordered bf ;}>reaklent Nl1on lo wipe wt Communist aanctuarits '""" t1ie li<lrilff. m,.; ·un.a uoo eom. , munl!t troops, c:apt~ t,000 weapons, selttd or destro)!ed 700" t<m.1 of Jood and munition! .~~ ...f4 tru.ck1 and IS.. CAMBODIA, P11e I) '· I .. -· • , -· • .. . -· 'TAXPAYERS NEED RELIEF' City Councll"man Lorr .. • • • --..... -· --.~ -----__ .... _., DAILY PILOT Stiff 1"1191n 'SHOULD BE PROUD' Coordinating-Councll't KHley Crowd Jan:is Meeting Of ~aguna School [Joard ' ' '' ' . -• ,!ll:.,11.AllB~R.l K_l\EIB Ii,;. ; . , " \.'. ...D'. liil~llllllJ ·,."9_,. 4 .111: I" ··~-·~~ .... ,tru ....... • ... custom lo WfdJn,j through thfJr Jepgtl>y agtnd 1n '1lie company of a handful of JCribbling reporters and a teacher or two, gazed o6t over a sea of faces Tuesday night, some friendly, some bootile. --- A hundred peoplt, civic leaders, parents, teachers, students and coo- cemed c!Uien.s jammed the small board room and flowed over to fill the spacious entey. of the administration building. Many were there to support newly elected councilman Edward Lorr. out to do battle for reduced achoo! operating C<ISts, as prHident of the Laguna. Beach Taxpayers Associatioo. Qthen:, -who had got wind of :proposed confrontation with the trustees, turned out to support the board and the schools. CommenLs and applause during -the lengthy session seemed about equally dividecJ.. . . Most of those in attendance had rarel)', if ever, been seen at a school board meeting. Noting the huge crowd, Board PrHi- dent Larry Taylor commented, "( assume your attendance is due to some specific motive, so I will m"ove oral communications up ahead of the reat of the ageiida so you won't have \o sit through a lot of dry stuff." For the next hour, Taylor ca!Jed upon one member of the audience after another, permitting no discussion or response from the trustees until everyone who wished to speak had done so. More than 20 were he.ard. . Lorr initiated the discussion by rerer- 'COUNSELING HELPS' Rev. Corneli son ring to a five-page letter addressed to the board by hfs Taxpayers' Association and demanding cuts in admlnlstraUve costs. He said Taylor 's reply; an offer to meet with a committee from the Ta1payers to go over the bud&el, did (Stt TRUSTEES, Page J) Trains, Bikes on Agenda Of San Clemente Council Train speed limits, mini bike . no!Se and San Clemente's jurisdiction (of" lac~ of same) over fishing wilhtn its three. mile limit will be back before councilmen tonight. City Manager Kenneth Carr will report on results of diseus.slon with Santa F~ RailrQad oCflcials on slowing Lrains that zip through San Clemente .. Speed limits are 65" and ~ miles an hour for freighta and passenger trains. 1be counciJ earlier considered liJnitinl' the speed by ortlirilonee to lO mJlel per hour but shelved this until Can could conler with •the railro6d offlciala. i Jn ailother repbrt;' P. MacKenzie Brown, citY, attorney,_ wW rt11ise coun-- ctlrhen 'on: tl1elr Jtgal chapces of ~ trollblg ' c0mmerclal fiibl(I( with the U........lle ·limit which 'Jiit slllt ownli but·whlCh ·l1 In the clty;6an Clt111~'1 iporl liililnl' fl~'o!>poiiel tJle .lntrUslon ol 'COdlmerclat • lbhermea inlO JocaJ water~. ~ Carr will -... \~mi and rood ~1~~ 'p/oblem . 'on 'prf'~t . ~ptrlr. Lawyer ~orman E. R1't01 , ·yrho OWT!ll a moto~~le. ;saJJ ••t!I' ·!:'niblje abct~dirt blke CIP!"•lion on vate pn>-l>'!'IY, ....U,.b110W1&•1e!1,· .. irprobletll • ' -"The. iiolse jusL.drlfts · you up the walJ." Carr said there seern.s to be something of a vacuwn in the legialative fieJp concerning operation of the unlicensed mlnlblkes on private property. Ther are illegal on ptiblic strew so youngsters ride them on private property. • ' . In ~-buslness. the eo:uncll will : -Again · ~ider puttbaae of the historic beams from the f or me r Capistrane Bt.cb, Club, once a fi.lture In the home .of the oOh~ oil lamJI)'. Councllmeii cokl ' shoulder~ the · offer · at ,12,000. for ·beams and. ·'3JJOO foi' :demoll~ ;i&!Uer but1 ~ price r!O'f bu dropped·l7,90Q. • S'.(OCK "(Aft.KET ~ • . l ! • . ' ' ' • Today'• Final .. Teto! CENTS us 16 Injured, 74 Arrested In Rioting LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Scotts of police patrolled near and 011 the UCLA campus early today following a three- hour window smashing spree and violent w_nJrQ.Q~ill!n bt:tweeg a_ntiwar PIC>iei!tor1 and officers. ~t least 74 persons were arrested and 16 injured. Acting Chancellor David S a 1 on declared a state of campWI emergency Tuesday after a rally of about 2,000 peraons turned to fist fights and lhe starUng of small fires. A force of 250 city police officers moved onto the campus and cleared an area around the men's gym after several 9CUlf1es and a series of window breaking. The building houses classrooms and the ROTC offices, focal point of the ,;tlfdents protesting against American in· volvement in Cambodia and the slayina of four students at Kent Slate in Ohio. Police stationed themselves at in- tersecUons surrounding the campus after it was reported quiet at 8 p.m. and . let persons leave, but .nobody was allowed to enter during the night. Of those arrested·, including i2 women and two professors, 61 were charged with misdemeanors while lS were booked on "felonles,-1ncludillg assault against a policeman. - AuY>o...rlJi~• said tt ltudentl ~ treated ·for .minor iajur~ and-four camo pus guards aid a clty polictman sus- tained minor injurita. City P~ollct Chief Edward M. DaVil mobilized the entire Los Angeles depart· meni and patrols in all parts of the city we.re dOubled. Davis said his action would . remain -in effect unW "a state of peace is.obvious." Protests also erupted at San Fernando \'ailey St.ate and the Uliversity of California at Santa Barbara. At UCSB, sheriff's deputies and highway patrolmen were called to the campus when an estii:pted 1,000 studeRts gathered Jn front of the administration building following a rally. The two professors arrested at UCLA were identilled as WWiam H. McWhin· 1ey, 40, assistant dean of p18nning ud a member ol the gTaduate school of adtr\inistratlon; and Peter Ladefoged, a proff!lSot of langua·gts ...... Officers sald Ladefoged was ane.sted for allegedly scufrting with a policeman. Smaller demonstrations also were reported et the University of Southern California and East Los Angeles Junior College. ' San Clemente Child Injured in Accident A San Clemente girl, 3, suffered minor leg injury Tuesday at about noon when her mother's car &truck a car backin& from .a driveway. Michelle Kascavage, 217 Via San Andreas, was taken to the"family doctor. The mother, Mn. Barbara Ka.scavage, 39, was driving a car with five pre-school children, poli ce said,' when Jimmy H. ~i()lskey, 26, Camp Pendletcin, backed 1nt:i her path, In the 100 block of Canada. Oruge Weatlter If you llke today's weather, you'll love Thursday's 1lnce tt'a another dose of the same aturf - law coastal clouds and bazY sun-- shine with a top mercury readiog of 70 degrees. INSIDE 'tOD~Y OranQt Count11'1 wetkl7ld u" ihcattf fart -and ihe county'a five ntriu tn the Riv- tr1fd.t ont-act tournamtni-ort dtta.iled toda.11. Stt EnttttcMn· mtnt, Paries 28·29. ~ •• J' DAILY PILOT SC Taft Wins; Runoff Due For Wallace By \Jailed Prtts lntemational Ohio voters rebuffed their Republican governor, James A. Rhodes, and sent former astronaut John H, Glenn down lo upset dereat while Alabamans put a crimp into George C. Wallace's bid to regain public of!ict. The Ohio and Alabama v o t i n g highlighted a scattering ol primary eleo- tions Tuesday. Rhodes was beaten by Congressman Robtrt A. Tart Jr. for the Republican nomination for the Ohio senate seat being ¥acated by Sen. Stephen Af. Young, 1 a Democrat who said he was reUring at age 80 in spite of good health to let a younger person move in. Glenn, at first an odds-on favorite to win the Democratic nomination to succeed Young. was <lverhauled by 1-foward W. Metzenbaum, millionaire fr om Cleveland. Glenn, first American 1(1 orbit the earth, had intended to run against Young in the 1964 Democratic primary but withdrew after bejng lnjund in a househ<lld accident. Jn Alabama, Wallace -the third party candidate wh<l kept neither President Nixon nor Hubert H. Humphrey from getting a majority in the 1968 presidential election -failed himself to get a ma· jorily in Tuesday's D e m o c r a t i c eubematorlal primary. In fact, Wallace's narrow lead over Albert Brewer, the incumbent governor ~eeking renomination, vanished today as late return.s were counted and he fell behind by 17,000 votes. Wallace and Brewer now will be matched in a runoff, Olarle.s E. Woods ran a fairly strong third with more t.han 100,000 votes to den y Wall~ or Brewer a majority. The runoff is expected to be close and a Wallace defeat could doom any {ulure national political aspirations. In Indiana, all 11 incumbent con- gressmen -four Democrats and seven Republicans -won renomJnaUon. Jn Connecticut, where 11 communit.ies had primaries, slates pledged to incumbent Democratic Seri. Thomas H. Dodd were beaten in· nine of 11 races. 1be state party's convention to endorse caodldates fDr' the November election is scheduled in June. , Ohln's gubernatorial lineup in the fan election will be State Auditor Roger Cloud for the Republicans, and former Rep. John J. Gilligan for the Democrats. From Page l CAMBODIA ••. -d...,.yed hundredo ol bunken and !we camps. The operations began last week. The first major .mike was fn the Parrot's Beak sector of Cambodia that juts out to within 35 mlles of Saigon and was the staging area for the 'ret <lffensive on Saigon in 1968. Others were farther north In the Fishhook and Se San are:as, 87 and 230 miles northeast of Saigon. Sooth Vietnamese also penetrated Cambodia from the Mekong Delta art:a. Fighting al!JO fiared tn the northern portion of South Vietnam and 36 Americans were killed, 29 or them in a North Vietnamese assault from the demilitarized .zone ln apparent reaction to the allied drive Into Cambodia. Two men wen mlMtng and 31 were wounded. It wa1 the hea viest loss taken by 1 U.S. unit in a single action ln Vietnam jn 20 month!. Russ, Czechs Friends PRAGUE (UPI) Russia and Cz:ec:hoslovakla today signed a 20-year friend.ship treaty that justifies Soviet tnterventlon In any east bloc nation which 1tr1ys from the Communist camp. DAILY PILOT N....,.1._. H_,.111w.._. ""' .... ,. .. ......... ,...., CMteM.. S..Q * t)•ANOI! COAIT flUILISMIMO: COMflANY lto\o•rl N. W••• flrtl!Cl~I n Publltlltf J •ck R. Cwrl•1 Vk• flru:Ot<1t -~I #llMtW lll..-11 K11•'1 ..... 1\-•• A. M"'llhh .. MIMl1"1 lllfflOI' l ich1r4 P. N•tl :1011111 °"'"""" c-•r Edftw OHie" cin .. Mn.1 ,. WcJI ,,, '""' H .... rl ''''"' n11 W"I .... , ............ i..e-IMdll m l'"H•I A-"'°'"'""r., 1~11: 17'171lt tcfl 01-1 ..... T'f Ill' (*-iMl »J ,,..,_ IJI c-N ltMI DAI\.,. llll.QT, ..tlll W"l!cfit 11 _......., H Ht •l-flt"tu. II "'4111t!>d lf11ly 9llCOfll ...... •• , Ill """'''~ d'lt-, ... ......,,,. ko.:OI. H.-t lhfUI, CM!t M .. , .,._.,..... ~ NA l'"-l•ln V••••• tll'!ll wlltt ·-rtlfllolel tolllt ..... Or ..... C1n1 ,.......... ~1 """'"" 111t111t -•I %111 ._, &eltlet llWI~ Nt-1 ltKll, lll'A all Wtd .. , "'"""" ~ .. ""'"'· T...,.._ 11141 64J.-4SJ1 c~ u-.;."" 64t.un S. Clase• .. • All l>f#*IZ.._. ,.......,. 4tl!MJI (wfrllfll, Int, OrOfllt (6f•I 'Wlltttlftt ~. "'' ..... ,..,lft, itllllll'll .... cfltwlel """'"" ., tir...ort._.. "'""' mty "' t~M ..tt~I ...... ,.... INHllll 91 °""'llftt -, ....__ '""' ...... ptlif •I Ml'Wl'Of'f 9-11 •f• '911• M ... , (•lfflrtll•, ~11111 "' twrW N.• -"""'11 9r -'1 u .. -"'"' ,,.1111_,., -!NllMl. U .• ~ DAILY flli..01' tll8fl.....,. OFFICER MIKE LOUISIANA CHECKS OUT NEW DRUG HAUL Marllu•ne Pl•nt CO¥er Falls· Nude Sunb•th1r In L .. une Carpenter Asks Colleges To Reject Revolutionaries Dennis E. Carpenter, chairman of the Republican State Central C<lmmittee Tuesday called for college students lo reject the j!screaming revolutionaries who will try to build still more violent conrrontations on the ci>rpses in Ohi<l." Carpenter, a Newport Beach resident \\'ho is a candidate for lite Republ!can nomination for the 34th District State Senate, made his statement in the af· tennath of the Kent State shootings which left four students dead. "I'm saddened by the deaths in Ohio but surprised that we haven't had a tragedy of Utis magnitude Ione ago," he said. The Republican leader said he saw two &lternaUves for the future, "more bloodshed or we can get down to serious diSCU!sion. ,, "Student leaders must act aUU more firmly in the aftermath of the violent deaths on the Kent Slate campus. It Ecology Students Plant Kelp Bed Off Dana Point Action to Increase the oxygen pr1r duclion of the aea was taken today by marine ecology lludents of San Clemente High Sdlool. Clas.ses of Philip Grignon planted a giant kelp bed off Dana Point. The planting is culmination of a year of study and preparation of materials. Student Mike Sullivan, Jeacft!r of the project, said the teams ~·ii'. continue to plant thi:s evening beginning about 5:30. diving from Black Bart's boat from the Dana Ji arbor. \Vilh con.sultation by K e r k ho r r Laboratories, the studenb conducted studies la.st year to delermine planting procedures, They experimented In a giant aquarium, proving that the planting pro- gram is feasible. Cement blocks were formed to anchor the kelp, and steel needlet used to weave the kelp into nets attached lo the an- choring. Purpose of the project is to replenish dwindling kelp bed.~. because scientists credit the kelp with 80 percent oC the oxygen producUon of this planet New Recreation Cenier Planned A new rtcreation center complete wlth >a 75-by-61).(oot s~1mmlne pool 11 now under conatrucUon in Mission Viejo. 'nle 1.5-acre facility will be l~ated on MtrgUerit.e P1rkway and LI Sierra Drive fadn, Recodo Lane. , It. will Include a wadJng JIOOl, dec:k llnat, two teml..s courts and a barbecue area. The maln building will house offictt, • game room, dressing and ret1trooms1 kitcbtn facilities and a mack bar whld1 will be open on Wffkencls and durin& summtr months. The director oC the Gra.nada Center will be Danny L. Berooll, a ifaduate of Cit State CoUea:e who hss servtd as recmtlon aupervllOf for Temple City. He ls eurrenlly an instructor at Coronado Junior Jflgh School in Wett Covina. J-lc will auume hia duUe1 June 18 and wUI be at the Monla.noso Center untJI the Granada Center 11 completed Ill Julr. I!! evident that student violence will be met with firm strength. "But I think it is important for students to recognize that honest discussion and legitimate political action on their part will be \lleloomed," he said. Fron• Page 1 STRIKE ... their own radical politics." At a Tuesday night meeting in strike headquarters at the campu.s GatEway Commons, steering committee c o • chairman Rich Kilarskl told an audience or about 300 that today's programs are geared to gaining student anli com· munity support for the strike. "We can't really consider shutting down thi.s campus until we gel the people behind us," he said. Several meetings and events are: sched· uled as part of the "education" program. Acc;:ording to student spokesmen, about 200 students will be passing out leaflets explaining the strike in sh<Jpping centers and at high schools. A leaflet. glven 1(1 strikers by the Defense Committee lists augge.stions for students who are working in tht com- rounlty : -Do oot leaflet parked cars. -Do not obstruct people or cars. -At high school.s do not enter school grounds, stay across the street, continue moving. -If a policeman stops to question you, stay cool. 11e·s prQbably cheeking to see what you're doing. A "rap-in" open to the public Is scheduled for tonight in Crawford Hall. Kilarski said the 8:15 p.m. meeting would be held to get an Idea of . the strength <lf support for the strike. A meeting for service staff and faculty was to be held at 10 a.m. campus officials were expected to tell the group what level ()f particlpaUon in the strike woold be acceptable to t h e ad· mlr,istration. Tuesday Or. Roger Russell, vi Cf: chancellor for acadetnic affain, told faculty members they were Cree to participate in ~'Orkshops and other cam· pus actlviUe!! involved in the itudy of the Cambodia problem. Russell said faculty who wished to participate in "alternate education programs" could do so on vacation time. compensatory time, or on time without pay. Ru.ss.!ll 's statement inferred the paUcy vOl.ld be in effect until it is rtscinde~ Also scheduled as part of I.he .strike activities were: . -A demonstraUon this mornln& at lhe ('O\lnty Board of Supervisors meeting to demand that superVlsors apply for federal fund$ ror child care center1. -..l;jtudent support of a strike vot1,: •l the academic Senate mfftlng at 4 today in the Stlence Ucture Hall. -Strike spok~en said flcketina: and a teach-In tn UCI"I Centra. Park would be held throughout tile d1y. China Gets 24 Hours To Leave Cambodia PHNOM PENH. C•mbodla CAP) - The Cambodian government today gave Communist Ollnne diJ>lomab 24 hour1 to eet out of the country, following Pe\lng'• reC"OgnitJon of tilt exUtd govern- ment oi tht ousted Cambodian chief ol state, Prince: Norodom Sih!nouk. Communist Chinese Ambassador Kang Mao Cbao said after a one-hour meeting with ,tht secrelary-general ot the Cam· bodlan Foreign ~1lnistry that the em- bassy staff would Juve for Clllna on • opecial filghl. - Frottt Page J ... ~1!J!.~ DRAW CROW~ •.. z.otn1 In aa hl&ti sal1rles paid io Lakes much studY. 1 4" 1dmbUltraton. bt cited the creation ol "Lft1a get (ear and hatttd and 10 -admlnialraUva pooltlono Ill Uio 'anlD1dlll)' oul, ...t rt to -k brl~t> plit lour ~. In c I u d In i ' ' a our dlr back 1o a oplr1t ol hannOey • ~ vke i:-olnelpals, counselors so we can accomplish what needs to and fleretarla. C(»lt of these JO positions be done." on tbt 1•70 bud&et, he said, amounted 1'he Rev. Bob Co'1¥!li110n of St. Mary's to $107,055. Episcopal Church said he was concerned "I alk how ~e school bo:"rd can with the ~terloratlon of the family. fustlfy . ad~?°I . personnel " 1 n ad· · "I know the school!! have to plck ptlnlstratlon, aaid .Lorr when our up ·l!llftd compensate for the frightful enr~llment hu not increased and we hollowness that Is in the home. Qiunsel- don l seem to have enough funds for ing is the areatest help f reel ,,e our teacbers." . . are not "spending too m~ch. We are He c!ted a 196~ report which said not spending enoui}I to minister to our no add1Uonal certified staff would ht chUdren " needed even it enrolbnent increased by · lOO student.. NOTICES QUESTIONED "We should cut down on non-essen- tials," 1akl a woman. "ls it your intent lo let all this dead wood remain and Jet the kids walk to school and cut down on teachers?" Referring to cost-per-pupil figures, a man asked, "Are our kids that much dirtier that ft coots two or three times as much to clean our classrooms?" DISASTER AREA ' "The administration area <lt the school Is a disaster area," said Dr. G. R. Ekeberg. "The kids mill around and tht counselors don't show up for ap- pointments." Ed Van Deusen said it seemed to him the certified persoMel employed in tJ1e 10 positions were "of help to the whole district." and if there were a total of 200 in their categor}' In the whole system a five per cent increase would oot be extravagant. Thurston Intennediate School student Jeff Belnap_ stood up~-~~ the board brieny. "I know I speak for most of the kid.s at Thurston when I say thank you for the kids in the school dlstricl.'' The audience applauded. Mrs. Helen Keeley, president of the Laguna Beach Coordinating Council, ex· school teacher and former city coun. cilwoman, voiced a plea for baimony. TIMES DIFFERENT "We must remember the times are quite different." she said. "We can 't go back 1(1 1961. The problems of the past four years require a different at- Utude. "Three <lr four years ago, students were being criticized by the community and righUully so. With the aid of trained coun.selors the schools were able to help children and thelr parents in the face "If your children go down the drain, lf your chlldreA go down the dTaln. the cost to you and society is infinitely greater than the cost of personnel in the district. Narcotics arrests among students have dropped because of fine counseling seivices. Ifs one thing to hire poliCf: officers, but quite another to have counselors the children can talk to and find help. Money Is well .spent If it saves your' children from what is happening in other districts." Lagunans should be proud of their schools, said Mrs. Keeley, ooting that people from across the U.S. and from abroad come to visit and study th, local school system. HARMONY PLEA Ending her remarks with a plea for harmony that won general applause, Mrs. Keeley said, "Laguna has been divided by fear and hate. Let the Taxpayers appoint a committee tOwork with the school board. The Chamber of Commerce ha!! a committee. It is not necessary to occupy time with obstructionist tac· tics. School financing b: complex and Questionlng termination notices given 29 teachers eome weeks ago, Mrs. Betty Heckel said, "I think It is the wrong phtce to save money. We want back..ing and good salaries for our teachers." Taylor later explained that the notice.s had been .sent lhe teachers, and to all administrators, in order to meet a stat.lmpGSed deadline for ooUfication of J>06Sible tefmlnation. Most were later adviaed, after budget studies got under wa)", that they would be re-hired. ·Realtor Vern Ta.schner said the bond issue failed because "lhe school system is not as great as you say ... people don 't tru st it ... the high school group reflects the hippie movement ." Sait;t a, woman t~ch~r : "I think the Laguna Beach school .sy.stem Is one of the best in the country. I make a great sacrifice to work here, driving Jong dJstance.s, and J hope to find the money to move here so my children can attend these schools." A sludent said. "Our family moved to Laguna because of the good school system." NOT QUALITY Lorr said \he question was not the quality of education, but administrative salaries. He wanted to know why Superintendent Dr. William Ullom is paid $28,500 when the superintendent of the much larger Newport-Mesa district gets $30,000. "Do you really n,eed such highly qualified people who • hold doctoral degrees and draw such higb. salaries?" Lorr demanded. "These are not. teaching personnel. And why do we need four counselors for 1,000 students In the high school -one for 250 students?" 1'1e· taxpayers' sh\rt.s are being strip- ped off their backs. he said. "They can't go any further ." A1rs. Keeley noted that the board of education i!I an elective body and "the people have indicated what they want in electing the board. "If you don't like the way they are administering the schools," she said, "You will have an opportunity to vote for someone who will give you a less e:rpen.sive education -but you may pay more in welfare and mental health." INCIDENT CITED Teacher George Nettleman remarked that, Whet;· h4 had a printing bualness, He tiad knownSl>aper. 1alesmen wb6 made •28,000 a year. "It doesn't seem out of line to me to pay a man who is responsible for the welfare of thousands of chHdren a.s much as a paper .salesman,'' he said. A man who• identlried himself as "a taxpayer" said he felt grateful to Lorr for lniUating the lnvestlgation that "has brought out how good our schools really are." He said he would like to join the Taxpayers' group. rlAIL Y flllOT ~lfff ~ ... N 'THANKS. FOR THE KIDS' Thurston Student Belnap Or. Ekebtrg said a counselor had bfcn coaching a tennis tea1n when she tried to see him. Two parenta rose to praise the services lhey had been given by counselors. Thurston volunteer parent guide Judy Penney urged members of the audience to visit the schools. "I think a day on campus would enl ighten some of )'OU," she said. "I urge you to come and visit Thurston, see it in action. see ~·hat goes on. You ~·ill have a truer understanding." NO C0rt1PENSATION Concluding the session, Board Presi· dent Taylor cited the fact that board members seive wit hout compensation meeting late at night and onen on weekends, and are dedicated to the service of children, as are the district teachers. "I indicated in my Jetter lo P.1r. Lorr that we would wElcome an opportunity to meet with a committee from his organizalioa ," said Taylor. ''The Chamber has made such ari agreement with us and we sli ll want to set up a committee with the Taxpayers ...... . Taylor said the board sets up many meetings with parents and others to hear complaints and "a school board meeting with a thick agenda js not the place." A committee, he said, "could go over the most minute details of the budget." ' The board, he said , works on the budget from January till August, ''trying to watch the money Md still provide the best in education." \VRITTEN STATEi\IENT In a y,•ritten statemtnl issued al the meeting by the board and administration of the district , reference was made tc> "misleading and erroneous" statemerits made by officers of the Taxpaye rs' Associatton over the past several months, some refuted by the County Schools OHice. The records, says lhe statement, "do not support the broad allegations regarding excessive increases in assessed valuallon, diminishing a\'etage daily at· lendance and c:<orbltant salaries." The statement reiterates the suggestion that interested citizens or groups meet "1'ilh the board and staff to "avail themselves of all information.'' MAKE THE 10th OF MAY A DAY MOTHER WILL NEVER FORGET 1 . 1'4 "'"'*"' 1tlC Will ~ .,.. .... W•td! MIJ •• lt".WhWlfll i...r-t1c: -lfl "'-Clllf (I..., ........ T ... Sltl!lllM ..... l ldl C.M 11K C. 14111[ lflN hN. """""" ~H-c..,,.ttl .. II D.l~l«T...,wWtil......... tl# l .. ~-.... ~c~ 12) fief~ M <ud, 1-.1 SU~ ..... .,, I land carved Coral roses Ylith leaves of genuine ' jade ... in seUini.;~ of rld1, lnng-la~l in~ 1-IKt. Cold O\CrlJy. Fr•lrn our S!lli:cllon of line ip1:i.IHy 1cwc lry CONVENIENT TERMS J.C. J/umphrie; JeweferJ 24 YEARS SAME LOCATION IANICAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE 1823 NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA PHONE 60-3401 • ' LEGAL NOO'ICE LEGAL NOO'ICE ' ~ LEGAL NOO'ICE ' • ' Heritage Christened New Yaclit· Seeks Crack at Cup Race Second . of tbe 12·meler yachts buUt dU1 year u can· didatea to dtlend t h e Americ..a't Cup Wll launchtd Saturday,, at SL PeterDarg, Fla. The new yacht -first •to be built In the South -11 the Herl.tMe, desi.ped and built by Charles E. Mcqan Jr. ot SL Petersburg. Heritage wa1 christened by the de1ig.ner -bulldtr11 daughter, 11-ytar~ld Jennifer Morgan. She bad tp lit on her father'• shoo.Iden to reach the bow and amen the trad.i· tional bottle ol chfliipagne. The launching « 'Herltap wa1 an open aflair, compared to the secrecy =1'0W1dtllc most America's Cup eon- tenders. ''There are 10 many people who have beJped in countleu ways, not in strict monetary l.ernis, but in time, well wishes and advice, that I feel the moment should be shared wtth all of them, as well as the communitY whert Heritage was built," sakl Mora:an. ' . "For God, honor and coun· try, l chrbten thee Herilage." Tho lalll1Ching ol H"ttage marks another phase in the caml)l.ign to defend the Cup. .Pr~llmfuary tr 1 a 1 s are tcheduled to get under way off Stamford, Conn. in June. Heritage b the Z3nl IJ. meter to be built. Numerous hull designs were tank-tested at Steveru: Institute o f Technology, Hoboken, N.J., before the yacht Mnt Into praducUon at Morgan's yard in SL Petersburg. Her hull form and deck layout ~ furfher ex· trapolations of Intrepid C'Ol\- cepb. Intrepid ii the Stepil<n>. designed 12 11181 lll<CeUfully defended the CUp in 1M7 against the Australian challenger Dame Pattie. She was built to Lloyd's rules for racing yachts. Her hull is double-planked of western nd cedar and Sitka ~ over laminated spruce frames, with steam-bent uh intennedJated ribs. The deck la flush and flat1 of laminated rtd c e d a r covered with fiberglu1. Mast and boom are or aluminum and b o t h are designed for controlled flex. ure. Rlulni la 1talnlesa ai..J and Utanlwn. Her under-detk C O f f e I (linder sheet winches were custom bullt by Barlent Co. of Calllornla. Approxlmate dimensions ot Heritqe art 62 feet I Inches overall, ~ feet waterline, II feet sir inches beam, tl1ne feet four tochn draft. 72,,50IJ pounc!J displacement, 112,llOO poundl In the keel, and 1,ns to 1,750 square feet sail area. The foretrlangle base ia 2' feel s!i: inches. First 1alllng trials nf the new yacht will be on Tampa Bay. Wtdntldly, M'>' 6, 1970 DAil Y PILOT 1§ Cup Contender • ID Water 'Ille Rev. Robert J. Maurais, headmaster of the Canterbury School of Florida, blesaed ttie new yacht and Morgan's daughter chriatened btr with the words: Gaff Riggers Slated For Race on May 23 What's become of alt the start at ti a.m. May 23 Wide the Los Angeles H a r b o r Breakwattr. The finish will be at Emerald Cove, Catalina Island. Deadline for filing en- tries i1 May 15. "~OR GOD, HONOR AND COUNTRY"-Heritage, the South's first 12-meter with hopes of defending the America's Cup, had her launching trials Satur· U,IT.....,_. day. In upper photo she is being towed through St. Petersburg street on way to launching. o I d gaff-rigged schooners, ketches and sloops? A goodly number of them are still armmd, as will be DOted .at "characte-r boat'' parades throughout the South- land. But the old gaffrlgger1 are destined to have their day of glory again real soon ii plans of the Pacific Yacht and Ba1loon Club of Newport Beach work. PYBC Js sponsoring a race May 23 for gaff-rig1ed boats. I~ will be called the Ancient Mariners Resatta. The rules are that the boats may be either full or partially · 1aff.rlgged and yacht club af· nu,uon ii not a requirement to eriter. Plans call for the race to Trophies will be awarded to the first boats in various classes, such as ketchts, yaw!J, sloops or, schooners . The winner on correcttd »me "-ill have hil name engrivtd on the Ancient Mariners Perpetual Trophy. Handsome take--home trophies will be presented as well. Entry blankJ may be had by writing the Pacific Yacht a.nd Balloon Club, P.O. Box 1524, Newport Beach. PYBC is the letterhead yacht club which each year JpOnJon the Sall of the Sabots al Newport . Weleome iloard New Gripes In Yachting By ALMON LOCKABEY They say that yachting 11 a genUeman's sport. They ~so say that yachUng is fun . Both statements are true -within limiU. But there has been a Jot of growll111 amon1 Southern California yacht:imen of late that tile sport is (1) getting far too expensive ; (2 far too complicated ; and (3) no loo1er the fun activity it once was. The growling Is mostly among the offshore handicap 1roup, known locally u "tr cean racing" who have to con· tend with · the va1aries and changes of the Crul!ling Club of America measurement rule -which supposedly makes one yacht the equal of another on the race course. It cotts money. Incidentally, to have a yacht measured to the rule. THE GROWLING has grown a little more vehement of late with the news that the CCA rule will IOOfl be abandoned and all yachts will have to be mea5Ured to a new lrt- temallonal rule known u the IOR for International Ocean Rule. W h I c h , incidentally, costs more money. Now it is 1 foregone con- clu1k>n that the majority of aaUon who are able to afford an ocean racing yacht can alao afford to have I t meatUred. But It 11 the occa1lon1l dispute among measum, plus protests from the computer· minded yachtsmen that roils tbe waters more than a ~ knot gale wind. Some Joca1 yadttsmen have been heard to remark that they would either sell their boat or take up cruising If the powtn that be dJdn't 1top tlnkerin1 with the rule. Btrr rr took a couple of Florida yacbl!mm to bring thing1 out In the open. They did 1tll their bo1~ right In tht middle of Florida's Soutliem Ocun R ac Ing Circuit., with the p u b 11 c atatement: "All ol 1 IUddtn It wun't fun 11Uln1 any more under the condlUOM." Tht ltltement w11 at· trlbuted to Bniet Bldwtll and Hu&f\ Obrtnl&, CC)-()WJ'lert of the Mor1an·ll Hombr< which .at the time was the Class C point leader and the 10th ranking boat In the highly looted SORC. Red Marston , outdoor editor of the St. Petersburg Times, further quoted the disen· chanted yachtsmen : "People will read whatever they want to into our decision but we have to live with ourselves. We don't sail and race boats for a Jiving." WHAT HAPPENED went something like this: Hombre. which her owners contended could, properly 111\ed, beat any boal of her size, was the object of a rating protest following U!e St. Petersburg· Fort Lauderdale race. Six other boat owners In the SORC said they would protest any subsequent races Hombre entered, cootendlng that the CCA rating of the yacht was too low. Bidwell and Obrentz, rather than getting themselves and the SORC in a protest hangup over 1 period of time, harl the sloop remeasured and reweighed 1n a Miami boat yard with two measurers checking each other. THE RESULTS showed that Hombre's raUng was indeed too low. She went up 1i1:-tenth1 of a foot. But a hasty ln- spectlon of the races she had WCI!, showed that she 1tlll WOl.jld have beaten all the other boats In her clau by from 29 minutes on up, ac- cording to Bidwell a n d Obrentz. "We could have lived with the ntw ratln1, assuming the SORC cared to ovemile ltsell on Its own rule that raUng1 cannot be changed during the 1ix-race period," said Bidwell. The upshot was that ure ovmers were agaln threatened with protest.a alter th e rimeasurtment. "We did What we lhousht was right. One thln1 led to another and 5Uddenly the whole bit wa1 DO longer ftm," Bidwell and Obreoti told Marston. At a Mloml bolt "'°" th• ownert were offered a 1ood price for Uie boat. They aold It. Vnder happi• clrcum1ltn· ct•, they 11ld, It would not have been for 1alt at W .... .. "''"· ---..,_,.. ""'.... t ... . . •' .. LOOK OUT BELOW -Launching of Heritage was almost thwarted when crane used to lower into the waters of Tampa Bay almost topp led Into the water Itself, BIA Votes Top Post To Kaufman Matt J. Kaufman has betn named executive director of the BoaUng Industry Associa- tion, according to C.N. Ray, BIA president. Kaufman, 44, joined the BIA staff in 1955 as a public rela· lions assistant Ile was prtr moted to consumer and dealer relations manager in 1958 and became director of marketing and publ ic relations in 11164.. In September of last year he was named act.Ing executi ve director following the resigna- tion of Fred B. Ufton. BIA, with more than llOO manufacturer members, Is the largest trade iroup in the recreational boaUng business. It's full time staff of » is engaged in market researeh, engineering standards work, and government and public relations. The association also produces the Chicago Bo.at. Travel and Outdoors Show and the Marine Trades Exhibit and Conference. 1 Burton Ends Boat Course Tom Burton of John R. Payne Marine Service, 2439 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach, hu: recentJy completed a MerCnliser aLem drive train in1 course at the Santa Ana Sttvlct School o f Klekhaefer Mercury, a di vision of Brunswick Corp, manufacturer Of MerCrulser and 1'.1ercury outboard motors. The course Included ln- 1tallation, tUDCHJp work. 10- ctssories, trouble shooting and complete motor and stern drive overhaul procedures. , ' LITTLE GIRL MAKES BIO SPLASH -Eleven·year old Jennifer Morgan 1111 atop her father's shoulders as she christens Heritage for "God, honor and country." A FLOAT ON TAMPA BAY -With 1 pronounced "knucklo bow",' Herlll&• floats iirace!uUy on Tampa Bay soon alter launching at St. Petersburg. I .. I -.ii oAJL Y PILOT Ll;l;AL NOTICE OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List LEGAL NOTICE .. J71" CERTIPIC•TE 01' I USINl!SI l'ICTITIOUI NAME Promoted llunhn~ton B each d ent Frednck A re~1· De J~t u..Otrllfnec:i .,.. (trllfV fMV .,. 1'1:10!duci"' • bu•lnen '' 711 Ml rl"f Boom IS th " ( A Bl1"°" 1s!1nd C1lllornl1 U"°"' e mana,.,er 0 ,~'j.';1cUllou1 llrm 11•mt pf THE G•ZESD United ca J 1 f 0 r n l a •r.d .~., 11ld ll•m It ,.,......,,ec1 r ""' lollawl111 oer-• .,...,., .. nlrnn " Bank s new 0£!1ce In 1~11 tncl plt c.tl of rt1ldt1'CI 1'1 •i 1c1~,:...d EY•" o.in"' ,,., '° "-"• The City develo pment w~ld~~·· .. ~1~11 'i:sW1,,. 1 14~ $1> R111 He previously s e r v ed as wlY Sttl'• Ant c..n1 assistant man ager oC C1ted ~ ~ 1'111 1.1PYc1 E 0.111... tbe bank s O r a n g e Miid~ A Olfllnt !'.-TATE Of' CALIFORNIA, County Airport office O"-AHGI! COUNTY °" Mtv ~ ""' .,."'" .... • N•11"' He JS a membe r of the ~ut!llc 111 '"° tor 11lcl SllN llf•tOlll ll'I' _,M t.llMI E ... ~ o.1n ... _, 1r1uldt.i National Assooat1on of A""111 0.lUM kftDWn lo IM 19 1'o t1>t ..,,_, ...-.,._ 1'' 'u1>1c:•1bed Acco un tants lo ""' ..,11111" l1111r.,..,....1 1t'ICI ttknowle<lll !.--------------- "" """ tJtenlfed lM N"" !OFFICIAi. 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Mo~ '•'' ,12 Hotobm Jo h ,I"' scrlp!o A •'4 si. w1101 • "• , ..... :~~,1:-~11 ,',"•'• ,..-~ f.': l Hoovtr lO ~) Se•rlf ~I l\ ~ 1~ w,,., NII ~, '"' n e x.l Nove mber 1s the subject A~c0aot ..! 1 1,•, HO"trd GI I'" ti• S•• Cmo •, 10.., w11n Mto 1, ' .o.gen111• ~ f th t f Auto Sd ••, ' Mua M( 61A Se11J!rn t \G W•!n p I) 9 ~ t A Ill ~ ofl 80 o a ree par p rogram o 8•1,11 At •• ,., Hiid PP 3J ~s Svc c.r o 1 • ~, w n• w~ • ~ ~ ~mH0111 10 f d b C I f B Hu~ G111 1~>1 11 "I ~•v•" IJf> 3" Ml, Wlnb41o 17 1 1• Homr I 10 er e y a 1 om1a Sta l eB•,•,•,•,,,, '',,,'',!!Hur11 P 10 ,111-?~"'tt "r' 1•\1J1 w1ic PL 1•01t ~AHome .11 C II I .. Hy1!1 CP \lllo 11 ' ~II(! St s )" • \ Wrlllw E '' '' •m HOJO 21 o ege Fu lerton B!~~ckP ! l~ Hv111 1111 1 ''• ~c.1 w11• 111o 1'.'P, W•l•M w ,,, ,,,, ~~~~Cl':' 1 ~ S tarting M ay 2 with a 111umr• 18 ~,.~~ru-2',,"' • ••SoNE ,,1 lf lt 1Yro11v E s . •'1 AMerciw .,..~ Bav~u 1) 1)1 j'~ 11 • A,., Melo" r e vltw o f practice a nd theor y BC'O'd'!m 21 ' n ~ 1,~.,.~01 s·~ 16\) N.._ ,.-._.. _....., AN•IC•• 11n Bell• t i.. 11 '" 6 • 1 "'"' P~ato 11 the progra m incl udes auditing B~~ 1!.o 1 '~"' :~:~~% }: !'• ~~~·f,~1 ,. (Aug 8) and law ISt>pt 9) ~rn' ~~·~ ~ ;J,~ lnr con1 ' ) • MUTUAL r.m S11r1o "1 C llb h I F BfllP1W I !nt•m In i '' A Smrl1 l llO las~s WI c e d r11 !he C S Blrov Son 26 ,.:11 1111 Bw ~ ~11,,; • Am~Jr 10 Ubrary from a lO am to 3J~r i-<7 :f• ,:" l~ ~~11' n 11 , ~:;:s~:~ ~" 10 12 'In Boeu~ El J l lnl $1 llf U 16 r AmS!d ol• 15 <>II pm Ao/1 Be ': ,~ !nt TIDll '• I I FUNDS Am SI••' .. Tile rt !'l"""llve fac ulty m e m Baotttr c 111~ 1•v. 1,~e,,•,t 11• ''• ., Sug., 1 60 t''-'-BOOl AH " .. 70 ~· 1Gl1 l l o\mSu~ .,.. ~ hers CondUCIJng the prngr.m 8111 C•o 11< t •· ,'~ .... '°"",1 11 ll•• A T&l wtwl illl'd S "~ },Jo Amf&T,1.11 a r Dr Dorey E \\J e ' ~' " 3' J""'1" c '• 11~ Am r&r ,, e s s m a n :•~WY G 15 ~ U l'I J•m w11 •-. 1 ~::""1:',...,~ • ~J AmW~• '>4. pro ressor of accounting and ,;!.'ft si: 1t, l~: j,-:::•,,•,F 11.0,"" AW orff 1 is f W I J B<11<e II •• 6 ''IO ' M•Y I /MTGN f ll I •.I Am line tnance a ler Dennison Brust< e • 16>: 11 ~ j~~:" ~IJ ,:" ,f: NEW YDRIC fA PI n-. CcA 10 ~ 11 *" Am~ron 6G a ssociate professor of a c =~~ s 1~~ ,f· ic:111r• ~' s..'h sJ " _ ,.,,, 1o1lftw1n" a .... Jnu ctu d 1 n 1 n "'""'""' 60• c ounting and Kent E ri.1c Kce ~~f ,,\tS: ,•,,. ,,.;: ~::~~~"' :; :'h :~!~'111~!11~~ .. ,~l :~:~1""~~ '~~ 1; ~ ~~~,'~o 1111 a sSCX"tale p ro fessor o f business c,•mco " 1•' 11 ~=~~rnG'" jl" J' ~'~~ ..... 1~"'11'1~~! rn;o;'°"...,1Gl"'t4"1as AMP f,: 11'. I E b 1no11 b9 11 K•ar T ' :•• "'• orkes t i ..., cJI My! 1 ~' t •l Arno•~ C-oro aw a c IS a CP A <•11nM B 6' 11 K•fiet' 31, 1 ' •~' • •PCuriu., Pr(HI 1 o ' 1s ~mrr J '° (tflracl Olo t'ol(t ..., ?J•oJO,COl!ld hlV~ "°'""~Inc.~ 1•A•l ll'W'Ame C•o Sow ~'• •!~ l(fUlt E 10 ~ 11 , <.oltt !hld ) or bou11h1 ~ltt! 1 1• t " iO.~~~~ ~ '\' CtD lll!A l>, ~, ~t¥f Fib !) 131, (l!kt<l l Tu•!dt Y V~r Py "1~ I 6• Anco ON°t I ~:~;<;;,~ ~'• ~ ~ l<~~t C,l'l 1J 1~ """ 011 ~11~ ~~ l~1',1 Rt•h 1i rs ,:~! .t.nd b1v vi 10 Cert~ 111 l J -., King l•I 1 ' 5 Adm r•llY Fu11cii IYY 6 ?O 6 10 A~•choCo 2S Ct rlr Gp 1'1o 15'11(111111 El .; 5 Grwlh 60' 66l J H"cock ~Sl 10•:~'i.o0il 1111 c~sc ~ct • ~ 1ov. Kirk co '" 1 incom l 5' ~ tn J.,,,.,,,n '' 4• 11 '~ APL ~rt, 06 Ct11lt• 19 70 lo;"tP Vol 11 II , lllS\Jr 6 U J Ool l<P••!nn• F f'l(t1 AP L ol B JO "I le 40 tl ,, t.•n VPS 19~ ,.., IC•~lslr J llo .. CYI!" 4"1 1 •1 APOiio 151 ~l1 A<JY• (/\om J.,0 s l 1 c a1· C~••I RA •'• '. LMC D•I 1 . ,,, "" l!d 6 1' 6 1J CuJ ~I 1~"""" All;A S•c 96 rher11!~ J • •~L•...:• 111 '' 1•'• Alutr• S~ 500 Cu• Rl 19~1 10 11 Arctl&N Olo C~1r1 0 6 .. 1"-Lond ltf< 5'• 6 , All A.m I" 6? 61 r • 11• ~ ·~ '!I o\1cnDan 1 60 F JD C~m L•• '" 9 1L111e Wd I '• o, All•l•t 0 11] t m (YI 10 6" l6l Arlr .. Svc I OS ra1lCIS a111s Vice pres1 c~., I"" •• ~'· L••-1, •• A11>1<• Fd '"I~ Gl r u, "? • M • ., Arl•n• DS 1G d en l a nd manage r of Secur 1ly ~~r· B~;11 li ' ;: ' ~:~;: ~ lf.: U 1 ~::;''Bu• ; ~ ~ :~ ~~! 1~ 1,i ,~ 1i ~ :~~~s 0 ,'118 Pac1f1c National Bnnk s S a nta c~''' s "1n1 L•~ CP11t i ' lit Am Dlvn 110 t •1 cu1 SJ 1 71 111 A"fl"'" 1111J C~rls! lrl fl 95 Lt!<Ur ct 1 !'Cl A1'1tr E~P•~n r • SI 1 •< ~ °" Arm• ot •JS Ana M a in Office has marked C:11"41~1 ~·1 6'• Levi~ Tn 1•. 1 , <•1o 1 1 ~1 1"' Po1or l 1111 111 11r rn'+c~ 10 CUil U A -2:] 1 )I\\ Lewi• BF ll•, u" lncm• I ~l 1 11 l(n r~b < "O ~ « Armll.ub I to his 40th anniversary with c1111 u B ' '• ,. • L111v Elf ti! , t1 , inv••1 1"' I lo! Knick llt 1 n 1 t1 "•o Coro 90 Cl!v Inv ll Ill., Lobl1w 5'• ' • S""<.l 1 » I ~• r,,.., 1 "' I 1< "'•In 11>11 1 Sec u rity Pac ific C<trt Ml 11 ., 11 ~ loll CdY n , 1 , Sloe~ 111 • ~1 L•• 11Kn 11 16 ll 7' AsM11 ou 1 ?<I The Corona de l ~far r esident ~l~1t"M.~ r: I~ t~"' c" {: ~1 . ., :~ f:.:111 ! ~~ ~ ~ ~ ::-·~~... : :; ~ ~ :~~ 1a~:!. '° •·longs to the San•. A na c11111,.,, o !'• s11 M8cl GE i ll'• ,.,, Am M ,1 1 o 1 H ' "• '"" ~ , 1 ., .._5,a DG , ?<I ~ .,. Clow (11 U l l1'•M•I Riiy I> 1,Am"lr:~ 11• ?.,,l.lnc:Ntf I 'll t?~A•dlrln '!" Cha be fc d c ...... o •l·S~Mtltlotl s•~•! Am P•( '"'"LI~ l11 J .. Al!CvEllJ• m r o ommerce an r ..... , (ft '' 11 M9m1 Ai 1 , i Ar ~, ic • .,... 1. ....... 1, s~• ~$ A" Rlc11110 1 d l I d f th Col""' E l l"i Ma11n M ''• 1, c~"" &"6 J S? r~ .. •d l'' 1'•1 lllRcn ofl /5 Jn US r1a 1v1s1on o e r c•lln• F ,, u Mi nor c , ~ 1 r..~ ,., , ,.. 1,.,, C•ol! 1 u 1 •1 All ~!ch or l Or~,ge '·"nly -'b a mber of 'c~o Slr !'00> >001 ~!m,,,••.1 l o l • lntm• 1~111 Mu! l'"'Pl'OAllltcfl<>!llG ... "'11.1 -~·... ..... 1 • l ~ "'" l~V l <• • ,, M&~"· !n-I e1 I llll Alttt Clltm 1 Commerce the Rotary Club com c1r 31 ll M•-c 6 • ADO!kl Fcl '11 1 •1 M&nntn •"' <" All•• Corp ' Com r:., Jl 11'• Mar Ml~ tG,._ lO>o ....... 1. I !I I?• Mft" F~ o 11 !aOl ATO In< Olt or S anta Ana the Salvation Com TP1 )1 • 711\ M1rm Gr t\, 10\,o A•tron • 1' • St! Me .. r:in ... 1n n .... ror1 Ple1 Com "'"~ ~\t 1 ' M Brow• l• 1' "7• Hou~ht..... MUI Tr 11 ,, U 11 Automln Ind Bank 0 1 ficial A rmy Advisor y Boa rd and the Com P•w ' o , Mayer o u•o 1•. Fu"" • '11 s n Mo!•• 1"' l ~ A~'o Co 1 20 ~larko P roducts ol Cos ta <'.om11 A J ' M<P11v 21 ) 1s ~ ~u"" B •" , .,, M~t~en • s1 , v Avco 011 20 Santa Ana Co m m un ity Cm• crn 11Vt lf...,Mt01 G 1l '>2J)\r s10(~ s •11t2M•ld ~d 11,..11,1 "v•r•Pd 20 LEGAL NOTICE 'fesa molder and fabr1ca•·r H CmD '"'t '"' 1 ~ ,( s ' ~ 1 sci co • " • -~ Mio A M u • ,, s n .o.,v""'..!,~, ,,~ • J'1M '' "' osp1tsl Assoc1alion lfe is a crno T« • • , Med M1t :n :n , P<~b1011 ''' 16' MoodY co 1~"' • ,, vl)n ·- Ct RTll'ICAT• o, •UStNl!SI o f f"'m p roducts fo r cor••r d ect f th T be I cornr•• ''~ ••Mt<llrn Js,36 , P<••con ,,,111•,""oodv• 11<4 1,61 A1rcco11 131 l"ICTITIOVS NA"'' VO '"' Jr or or e u rcu OSlS Con Roe-,1 '> )) Merld Tn !l. 14 B~•Q ICnl 1 to I llO M!C "'~ I '1 I . '"" uMtr•ll""" do c""+1v '"" '" packa gmg ha s been a cquired and R e s p1rat OJ s e a s e ('1 S•••1; '• l MO!ld c. , ' n, iu.1, co ~ '" • "' M1F G111 411 • 18 a .. rx~ w '16 cO!'llUCll"' 1 llui!MU 11 "" Borbtd<ll ory S Cont1fd ,,, 1 o Monte~ J 1 , Bonthl~ s I' I " Mu Om(; un•v• I B ~ 0 1 1 "' C••• Mn• c1111em•e C';;'Zu,1;'~ by R epub lic Pac ka g ing Co rp , Association a nd for the Big t=~n L 1; ~ 1~ ; ~~,r GG~~ i;11 ~;,. :~1°F.~ ~ ~ 1~ ;; ~,ut 0~~:~ ,, Y:~;~~ :!: ~ct Ee 1 ~,, •'g!\19111 tlrrn "'"" "' E s " Chicago Brolhers of Ocange County ',~• 'v 17 > ll • Miu v1G 11 11 R.,.10" 1 n. 1 •• Mut '"' 119 1 H 8 1 P4 • < <<TllON1C !E(UR!l l' PROOUCl11 I ---===========================·~-01m ' 11 ?P o Mo lt \Cfl l> , 1 Br°"d S1 11 11 17 H' FA N I ••1 tll Cll~noPun! Kl • .' 1 comPG•ed of Ctwl d 1' ~ !& • II nor• Co!vln Nat 1..0 t ~1 I 07 ""OP of 1 •!)cl 1n1t N I rm ' C Mod ~(I ,•, ,,• Oo••<I ''''''''"'' '"'" ''' ''' B~119P p!l15 ••• -••-lno MrJOfl1 wl>o1t n•m~• In re• Mgl I ~ t Mo~wlo 11 0 1 ''.••,_:·,,,,,,of rtt!d~ll~• t rt a• rr~~• M~ 7» 1l1 Monf Col 9 ·~ (•"(In 11 •1l•~1 N•I Sfcur S"< ll~n~01 f~)Y! •N C•eJ! Fo 6 ' ' Monm PK 11 IJ Olvl<I J " J .. "•l•n 0 ,~ 1"" .., ,. fftllQwt .. _ Pl c..., • (~ 3• jf; MOO't p I ' 1 "l •fW 5 f tl o U 1'1011d l '1 S )1 ll•n~ Tr 1 I• Oon H•rrl~to<I )163 BotNuu• Crute~ It J>o Slo Mcort S IO 1'' NY Vnt 1]01 141! Olvrn l17 1 0> B~rll()I 1 011 .... 1. Mtwf C111! "' l'.1r>r•s ( • IQ Ml!lt l A 1! ' II ~ ;M "" A ... 1 :tO Grwll! 1 '° '09 Btrd CR '~ '\':.,.ont Htrfinflcn llil 8t r CS Oa11I¥ M IO, 11 Mlvlr .,1 ~ S CG FO' 1 SI 1 17 Pf S•~ S '9 ~ S< B•I c cnl ID 111 c ost• MnA c111 °•1~ 0 Q ' 0 Mooe~ M : ' 6 : ~.~71m;,,, •, ~ ,",,' ~i:C~ ; ~~ ~ ~: ~~1~ ~1~1 1 DatM MIY I 1f~ Ofll G~~ ll<. 1"' MO! Clutl 11 ~ 11 ' r oolt 5~r S iJ. • "1 N•I r.•tfl 1 •I t 11 B&tfl !nil oc"H•rrl~to~· 2:~~~F~ ~· :'•Mu~lo:• 1 I c~"1 y,, t tl l(IS7 "'•uwt~ 1'>Jl•t1 6.otM11nl!SO Lud<t~ M1"1...,1on O~v Mir 1 ~, 1• : Mu•RI (, 1 ' ' C~•n" "II F n<I• "lfw W cl 10 91 11" B~ '<~Lb 10 FORl'llA Oec-or 111 S'• ,, V.Yrr lE 1• 19 • ll&ltn tll lC t!!N•wlon 1'•0 11« Ba•lrl~b 10 ~l',\TE OF CALI D!ln •P ~" •lo "ICC tr& I 1 6 • ram SI 1 '1 1 14 Nk~ Stt9 t•I 11'1 BavukC o SO ORANGE COUNTY Oerux (fl .cl o l<arrfo C 1l I~ Grwt~ , ,. 1 6, Nor~~·· 1' •11• <? Dt "' ~g, I On MOY 1 ltJ'I "°''"''""' 1 Nollrv Dr! c~"T JI 1• N~I llrl'd 7>, 1'• tncom ~~I'"'°'~'"" SM IU Btfl"ds 1 ,wtllk \" t ncl for 1•IO $It~ -~11¥ Oet tBr 70i, 11 ~ N1•C1r R 11>, 11 • Sopel I )J I n ()mfao •••A I Beck.,.,e11 St! ·-~ OD<\ ... ,,,111111:t11 "Id L~'le Dev Am 5 t NCmD Co l 1'o c~~" Gr B"' 100 "<1 1 )1JJJ1~ ~CI Dld< JO Htnltttloll M"°""' to mt le be lho Ot'Yitt E 6 , 7 N&t EQul 19 tl C&1tlt ~"' S 01 101 Fd I J9 o 11 BeechA t 1511 ~ nim.. irt iubic<lboed Ol•m Cr 1& 10 , tlfl G&O 1,: ',', "uncl 161 ~ 11 On~ Wm' 11.S1l 11 Belco Pel ~ ~itltl I I tn1 •..0 1(kn11Wttllt 0 1!.< lft( l • 4 ,Not LI, 'Frnt 6l~66J£(1 Ntll 11<111'1 BtldnoH 60b le ""' "' !\ "' '"'" O!vrr CM 1 1 l N~I! Mt<I l'O t71 ' ~~•1'd ~" I !l Cll>O~n.., 6 ?I '110 ~II ltow 611 ... !MY UK ..... '"' i.-mt. Oocultl '" •• Ne • Pr• I'· 1 • Siw<I 'tJ 1 JI Ono AIM. I JO 0 ~ llt1t lhlff(on tOl"F1C1AL SEALl Oollv Md l t 4, N81 !.oclt >' • •,'> fl•1•ttl ll?1 1ioJOTC Stt lOOJ \090 Btmll Co I Nol•"' Public C1 I for11l1 GOODlJJR4 Oovlr DB 1~ II N•I Sllv• '" ! • e~~tv J l' J ~, P•ul !'Irv j ts '!>II Be"". O! ) MlrY K M•11N Ii copy DOW Jon ~ 1 10 0 NII Sl>ow • l • ,olonl1I P•<• Ft'>!! & ff 1.AI Bend~ I I.II) Prlnc!M I ()lflct I!\ centers Orrw NL 11 ·~NE" GE 11 t 11 ~u11d •UIO??Ptn11 Sq 091 ''' Bt,...11(11 !Kl Dunk n O 16 1~ , NJ Net(, 11 10 ' (;rwlfl l u 1 ?7 P1 Mui • O • •l Br~n pU lO O•lllW C1111"1Y Ourtron 11'l \' , N\cfl~11 F '' 71 > lncom t OJ t 11 Pnllo U"" 11 n Beno~ MY(omml"lon f •Plre• E!Pelnl 1<'•16• Ntl~A Jl J1 Vtn! •l••l)Plf!'t!m 1""101 8rngUf'!lfl Nov 10 1tn Efgl( wt S 1 6 ) "'"!!II )l l• Col Crtfl 10171011111tot •o• ~60 Bff~tv Pne ~I J1't<I Or1111• (oHI Dtl1¥ Pllol 2131 S1n Jo.qu1nH11\1Rd -N1wportCenter F~·· s~ •• ' NA RO\C l'• ''• Commc 1e1 I S.\PI"" SI O/iol 960 Be mtc (Oto ~•·y' 11 1(1 11 1tl0 1J6.J'I Econ leb ?l > 1• ~ NCu NG I I CcimS Bd o 11 I 11 Pen "'"' I '7 • '' Beth Sii ! 10 " 6464l Edu<S•' 31,31,HEurDI 7 o 7o(y,lh•'l l ltl19 Pl""FN1 101,11"6 6 oa l ntt«J 4 4 El P1~f;I lJ • II • NPA G~< l~ II (wlm CO I •l I !1 Pl~n l"v I Ill! 9 1l Ble<kD~ l 7G LEGAL NOTICE ,,_ CERTll"l(lll 01' r o11PDll•T10N ,.Oii TRANSAC•IOM 01' •USINl!SS UNOl.R l'ICTITIOlJI NAM! THI!' UNDER!IGNEO CORPOllAT ON <'lat'-MrtbV cer11•v lrt~I II • to""u<•l11q 1 bclll"fll loc•!f'tl 1! ~i W Com """'-"" Futlerlan (I Uor"l• uOOt• 1ht llct!lktu• !1"" namr o• IN T E~ATION"L YARD .. GE F .. 111 t nd ttWI 9'11d fl•m 11 comPO!ed ol I~• l<>lit*l"' (.OfPOfl!IOf\ wh<»t o•!n< HI o1~_o+' llu1lnu 111 15 ~HoWI ~,,.,,. Warkh F•IYk ~....., Full·~ Trlde Fefl' 164.S W Ch•~-~ O•u1<1' WITNESS 111 h•M lh11 • di¥ cl ~.,. 1m ICOl'IPOl!ATE SEALl Worlcb F1brlo1 1"'1 F•o~loot T•1at f l• Elleo'fl Tyrl11 P tc>lclt11I STAllE OF C•t.IFOltNll COUNTY OF ORA"'°I! I" Ori 11111 4111 di¥ !JI 1/-tY "-0 ltlO bt4G<"t ""' Mtrv It M•nrt 1 lloll•• •ut>lit t~ •ncl 1.,,-i• d (OU<ll'f O"d :!.ll't rrJl<lln• """" G~lv comm 1•111.,.:l t tld IWOl'" otr....,..11>" 1'11Prt •l<I £oleo" T!lff• k-~ to "" 111 be -Prr1ICfn, .,. IM c~1!lon 1'1<•• executed th( w!rt<fn l11•!rvmt11 t Ot\ btfll~ ol lh• ior ..,retloft fM•e" 111mf<I o..O oc~!IQwl""" <fd fD "" !~II lll(~ COIP<trt llon t•ecYI"" ~ ''"" •~ wn~s w""'"" 1 ,,.,... ~-fo Ml "'Y honcl ""' 111 •e<I ..,., flffl(ll l Mil !hf di¥ 1..0 v,fr In lfl ' cprtfflc.llt l!"I .,,,,.., w•lltorll (Ol"FICIAL SEAL! Mt ,,. I( ...... .., Nol•,... p, bllc.C•ll!or~I• l"r!Mklll O!loc• In Ortllft Cou11ty MY Cl!f!lllllH lon tiu>lrP'I fi0¥""bl' 14 1•11 lt•H•llecl °'""" Co.'1 0 11!1 P l!ol MU(' 11. 29 11 1t111 ll1 ~ • • LEGAL NOTJCE "'IO• Be I 6 , tlW Ne G I • Ii (amp iO.t t 11 1n •I Pr er Fu"°' Bl.) •Jol'n •I Et NII• • '" tlW Pus~ 1•. ?O Comooel J 11 6 JI r.r .... •h ~~ ll :in 11 61iu llYQ 1 FINvc 9 ~10 Nu(I R•C 1 >10 ComnAd 1~~117 N E•• 1 51151 61 kl-<R l El,l(OY 2•, J Ohle Ari lllo o•, Comp Fd ~u I I! NH"'" 10 111~88 lll~B 11 I~ ~i"(sv5 ;~ ~: g:tos~1~ J? 1; ?~~~ ~~ :~~ ~:~v:..","° !gl !~ Blu Bfr'o11 1i Fl D1~ 61 )0 D•monl ''• !>ron•ol lnl~N1 !nyi Pur11n t i ! t 6J =~~e,Brk;0 l i',.,~00~11 1~ 1 r~: 8~:. ~: 1;'l 1~ : ~:~~Iv,,;~ 1 E~ l l~ Pu~~~\j' ~u"".,',,•v• I Bo1'C~1 °?!b Fn~r9v ( JO :lJ O~YCtt l) , ll, <:0111 G!h 1 19 • 96 r.~ t una"~ll Bend lnO' 61 E11•tg llr l • ?'.. rEc l•d I? > ll 1 Cor11 Ld 13 31 "66 G~rn un•v•ll llockM!n ?I Want Financial Power? •PFP -Per•onll tM f n1n<l1I P!1nnl~~ -~ un 11111 tow £OJ! strvltt <It-TRY " ABSOLU TELY ND SELL ltlG IMvOl•ed &ntl E"n' B ~ I P•b,t Br II ~! 1 Cnlv C•r, 1Gl?I09\ lncom un~v~1 llo•dtn 1i0 EMwl•I ~ 9 P&~ "-u•~ 111 I 'I (1" WO v un••~ I lnv•1! un•••ll 81>raWa• I l! Eon Cor~ I , 1 P•c F1 E JI) Jl Cr" WD•I un••~ll Vh1• • "~v~ llc•m•n• !O -=============== d~Vffl M !l •? Jl 11 Vov~g unev•ll Bes Edis ? 'I • O~l<IW•rt Croup llo0 Ttc~ 1~ ltO Bou•ns l"c O'c11 10 11 11 10 11.rvore • 16 10 01 Bran !Al• St! Carter Elected Dtfwr 10 6! 11 41 Rini••• ll !I ll r~ Brl~~St ) Ill~ 0tn1 6 •J 1 Of 1to1rnlh J o s 91 Sr!sl Mv 1 ?o OowM F lll 1? 5ntrn FO •t• ,~1 Brl1IM• pf ? D••••I 11tt 111• Sc~u•I• l7 6l 1lt? Brit Po! l)• Orrvl F<I • oo 10 9J Scu<IO~• Fu""! Br P•! tn :n. Ort vl Lv !GU 11 11 In! tnv u ..... v111 BOwv H•I~ 1 E1lon&How•td Snr! '°'ti'?• 8WYHI o1 A? e111~ 11• '66 Bal !l 11 n11 e~1vnuc; 1 n CALL Ol WRITE PFP POlt FURTHER INFORMATION P at \V Carter pres 1d<!nt of T he Carte r Corp Santa Ana a nd a Costa rilesa resident has been e lected president of the Cahfor n1a Owned Outdoor ctrw•h ID 1? 11 01 <om sr I •I I" ll•own Co t11<om S •I 5 ot Se(url!v Fu..01 6rcwn Co ct Personalized Financial Planning Ploc:.,~,, s;:1ir:2670 714-528-0218 A d\ert1s1ng A ssoc1at1on S""tl I 11 1.. 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W~~ay's ~Clos~ Prices-Co1nplete Ne,v York Stoel{ Exchange List Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List Briefs NEW YORK IUPI) -Co,,. cord Fabric, Joe., will om'it lhe dividend on common doe· In' July. Tbe company his~ been PIYJnr 10 ctnt8 • shan.: quarterly on common stock. NEW YORK (UPI! Gener1l Telephone & Elec· tronlca Corp. has obtained .11 $5.7 million contract to buUd a satellite commun.lcatlon4 slation io miles southwest or Caracas. Vcneiuela SANFORD. Maino (UPI! r Stirling Homex Corp o( AvOll N Y., has bffn &lven an order by th< Sanford Hou 1 I •t Authority for IO modul1r • townhoU1e apartment houses- '111< "Instant howdnf" wlll ~ hauled virtually ~plete on trailers from the faclOC'y 1nL "' up on prepand sltn Thet will b< compooed ol I...,, lhrM and four bedroom u;ll.Ls. , SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) ~ Dl&lor1lo CO<p. hH •&•H<I lb' bu 1 Gumintetd ProdutU, l11t., an El Monte, Calif, maker ol alu1nlnun1 doora. windows and screens with salea last year oC $2.f mlUJon~; .. . . . ... DAI~¥ LOG. "'EONESDAY ..... ' , I \ ' 'l f, Ulttf'1 Nett: 1MC: ,,.._.1nr UJ M m•pd t-4/• ,,._,tM It 1 lliln ttM 111 ....W tw the U.-Jll.Y. C•1•· i,_.,, N.ut!Mn 11rin. Tiit llv1 .,.... .ti! llOI bl show11 !ft tM lM AAp"5 IJM; """llf, 1 ..,. It ...... 91 "' tut ti .. , ,, •• ....., Jll11111J IM 1111 Prtlm« 1M IMW!r tlMr ,,1ir1111111l111 11 111 ltollr latft" Hi1n sc:bed~led. Tht 1111,ie scllldu!ttl 11 rtpltU th1 JlllA PllJln is "Wlfl4 WitMvt S.11,,. ,. Ac.ldt111J Aw11'-wi11nl111 ffl• bJ Jk.q11&f'l'll CtllstUI llltwiq liow """ e111 wit; 1M "'" h!leltll hit .... ~-1 •Jt; J111n (C') (liO) krry D11nphJ.1 , . m HMltltJ·•ritllltf 1C> (301 Clll Yo• T9P Thia! (CJ (30) i 111k M11til!d1l1 llosts. Red Bu!·I ' Ions. Shi Gilli•m Ind Maiey Am· I dt1d1"' 1r1 p1neh111. fJ ANTHONY QUINN & :* JACK PALANCE ;n "BARABBAS"-Part I , l y, Tel tllt T11t11.{C) (JO) Tiit ftnlJtt Slp'(60) (~ a.. OW. lkl Cried• <CJ (30) 1:05 ml D Tmlllt {!IS) l :JO 11 9 ([Int llWriJ HilllllMltt (C) (30) (R) PhN Sllwill f Uut1 IS 1 ain 11111 who ttillt IN Cl1rnpetu Ctnl11I Pl111. 8Clui•pltufli, Wrwtlhl1 (C) Cto) U1I CII m 111: ... zzz (CJ t30) (R) ''Triple Dtlt." Jason is fluf'I •hen ht IM'ovtS unaceephblt to llis 'd1t1'1 midcllt da.-COMl!Ytlivt htlttf. I D...W Fr1J1 Slttw IC) (90) n1 Ila v111., (CJ (60J S.Mlut (C) (30) t:oo o a rn Mffical c.11t ... 1C> (60) <RJ Guest let GJ'lnl por1rays 1 we1lthy widow who brains to 1111 mvolv11111nt wtth peoplt 1r1ln whtn illt becomes alltched 10 1 lO·yrlf·&ld llospitfl p1ti1nt (ft~· 11n GtelOfJ'). 0 @ (i1 m Kttlt Miiiie Hall (C) (60) "Piilf Hall'is Prtsentl Bobbit Gtnlry." Tht sec:ond of two PfO· crtms tlarfillf Phil Ht1ril with sin11r Bobbit Glrltry. Roy Clart., Bemtdll1t Plleis i nd John Hirt· lord 111 auats. lmariu's Jun ior Miu. JKklt Btnincton, tlto 1u1sls. D 1111 (})Ir!-to• "'• (Cj (60) Guab lft llltrlt H1u1r-. Clllrtit ,ridt ltld lrtl'lda lH. @I ""' Ill r.n,.dift (C) (liO) "E1st·Wat Dilfotu1." m .. , "' Mllk4I (60) al) ~tl..CiffN llpafttl (Z h1) m "°fltlw 'llf• I flfMIJMt" !tOfll· tdJ) '-'~rid M~MurrtJ. Mia· ret11 O'H1r1. Ktt1lit Wood. '-"""==,...,.,==-11:00 0-n. Ult, ........ (lllJJtt!Y) OAmME MOVIES '31-Mk:llMI Rtc11rwt. PIOl l..U&. 1!11 D '1l K.,,...i "' ._,,,".. m ..,... ..... JttrJ" fd11m1) ~. (11111ic.11-comed)') '47-hal'lk Sin1· 'S6-GtN ltr17, 91rb1rt Hilt, 111, Jimnir Dur1nl1, Ktthtyll Gr1y Edwtrd Arnold. ... ht.-l•wford, ?:«I G ('I "11tt Mct.•Hll bJ" (drlml) 'S>-.t.!111 ltdd, Ju'lt Al· f :(IO 8 -S. &Ii MJ lM" (myJltfY) ........... , Mlll111d. I -· I ,;,. • fC} .,«U. .. MtlJffflc.onl'" t:JO e (C) -..nfl.....,... (d11m1) <•d'IW!tur•) ·~ Scott. Jod: '16-Victof Mlt11rt, Ktrtll St•l1.. MahontJ. For Top Sports Coverage Read the DAILY PIWT • • ......... 1 Theater Notes Huntington Ends Season; Other Theaters Continue ' By TO~t TITUS 01 "'• o.n, "''°' 11111 It's all over for the Hun· tington Beach Playhouse this weekend • -at least for the 196~70 season. With two final performances of ''Waltz of the 'foreadors" Friday and Saturday, the Hun. tingtbn players become the first of Orange County's local theater groups to close the books on their cu rrent schedule of productions. Howeve r, there won't be much time for cobwebs to accumulate around ' • T h e Barn." Tryouts are scheduled next week for the Huntington Beach children 's show, "Tom Sawyer," and lhe adu lt thes- pians will be back early in September with '·Once f.1ore With Feeling ." Directi ng the current of- fering is Ruth Dorward, with Halph Quick he'ading the cast as a general who has COO· ducted mGSt of his campaigns in the boudoir. Also featured are Sally Cro\vlcy, Terry Phelps and Jean Koba , while James E. Smith, Cynthia Bar· ron. Greta Smith, Jill \Vhite, Alex Koba, LaOonna deBarros and Dawna Wade co1nplete the cast. The curtain-c lo s ing performances \Viii be given at the playhouse, 2110 Main SL, Jlunlin gton B e a ch. ' • 4 .../ Reservations are being ac- cepted at 536.aa&I. * A rcw miles lo the north, the Tennessee Williams classic "A Streetcar Named Desire·• enters its third weekend for the \Vestminster Community 'rheater. Dori s Allen is direc- Ling. Beth Ciciliol and B u rt \Varner play the antagonistic opposites Blanche DuBois and Stan ley Kowalski, with Rolin- da Orlow cast as 'Stel!a and Tom Titus playing Mitch. Others in the Westminster drama are Millie Fi'aki, Roger McBride, Ron Langseth, Eric Lampel. Lois Worthington, James Allen and Alice Rei ch. Two performances will be given this weekend, Friday an d Saturday. at Fin I e y School. Edwards at Trask avenues. Westminster. The number for reservations is 897- JJ64. SUNDAY ts ?ilOTHER'S DAY! 1111111; ?\lother ind the family 10 Kno1t", Ben-r r1r111 lt>r ,\(othcr't u.y. R-..1.-1tioD! IJC being l~Ctpt~d lnr the Ste.:ik Hou&e. C.JJ !llolly 11 {7141 ~2:z.IJ:ll. Co11th~u•w Show $u11doy Fro111 J p.111. JI> taken at the box orficc, 646- IJGJ. * In the lugh comedy depart- ment, "The Girl in the Freu· dian Slip" continues I t s engagement at the S a n Clemente Community Theater, under the direction of Tony Brandl. liene Applegett and Carol Dahl play the principal roles in the comedy about a psychiatrist wit h delusions or his own. Filling out the sup- porting cast are M o n i c a Hutchens, Bill Lynam, Joyce Winton and Ralph Appell. Performances v.•i\I be given Thursday through Saturday evenings at the Ca b r i 11 o Playhouse. 202 Av e ni d a Cabrillo, San Clemente. Call the box office at 492-0465 for reservations . * Deliberating for the last two times this weekend .,..·ill be FREE FOR All -Greta Smith (right) and Cynthia Baron battle for the af· the ·'Ladies of the Jury" at feclions or an embarrassed Terry Phelps in this scene from •·\Valt.z of the Tor· the Long Beach Community eadors," closi ng a five-weekend run Friday and Saturday at the Huntington Playhouse. Bertram Tansl'(ell Beach playhouse. directs the vintage comedy. ---~-~---------------------------- Phyllis Allen. Don Danielson and Ann Filian are featured in the cast at the plush playhouse. 5021 E. Anaheim St., Long Beach. The reserva· lion number is (213) 43&-0536. H untin,gton Seeks Kids For 'Hansel' Coast -Sefaools Co11vene 'No11-drama Festival' at OC~ 1'-1ore than 500 high school lo best actor. best actress South Coast Repertory drama students will gather and many others. Peter ChUrch an'd Tony Ze at Orange Coas.t Col_lege Fri· This year, Purkiss said, six or Charles Aidman or rlay for a ne~ idea 1n drama judges _ three from the Center Theater Group in -a non-festival. academic world and three pro-Angeles. The event will run from fessionals -will watch the "\Ve will be using tJ 11 :45 a.m. lo 5 p.m. in the scenes, then go back intn critics as devices to show OCC auditorium and music rehearsal 1vith the high shcool processes of theater." Purkiu studios. There is no admission act.ors and work with them. said. "They will learn r?Jr Tryouts ror the Huntington h h Beach Playhouse's third an· c arge and t c public is in-The actors will thus get in-more this way than competinz vited to attend. slruction from both ends of for trophles." • nual summer children's pro-~ duction, "Hansel and Gretel" Festi'(;ll director William the thea_trica l spect rum -:-the High schools attending . will be held Monday evening. Purkiss said six area high academic and professional include Santa Ana Vall , Ron Albertsen, who is direc-schools are bringing their en4 \\'Orlds. Newport Habor, Edison, · ling the show, announced that tire drama departments to the Judges v.'ill include Ors. Do.n Mesa, Corona de! Mar Md event. The festival in the past Henry. J erry Ptckering and r.later Dei. ..,. . a cast· or eight .youngsters .,. saw. a succession of one-act Ronald Dieb of Ca l State between the ages of 9 and 17 years and six adults is re-_P_l_ay_s_an_d_sce_n_es_._w_;_1h_a_w_ar_d_, __ F_u_lle_r1_o_n_._H_•l_La_ndo_n_J_r._o1 quired. The auditions are scheduled ror 7 p.m. Monday at the playhouse, 2110 Main St., Hun- tington Beach. "•lansel and Gretel" will open July 10 for n in e performances. The play will be staged July 10.12. 17-19 anrl 24·26 at 7 p.m. on Fridays and 2 p.m. Saturdays and SWl· days. 'Carousel' Tryouts Set The Buei1a Park Civic Light Opera will hold auditions 1'hu rsday and Friday ror its upcon1ing summe r musical, Rodgers and Hammerstein's "Carousel ." A cast of JO non-union ac· tors, singers and dancers are needed for the production. Tryouts are scheduled ror 7:30 p.m. both nights at the Ray· mond Temple School, 7800 liolder St.. Buena Park. ··c arousel'' will be presented ror thret weekenm, ope.1ing July JO. Further in· formation may be obtained by calling 879-4237. ., . Sfae ~pies Eartha Kitt portrays a \voman in cahoots \\•ith a Chin~se general in tonight's installment of "I Spy," showing at 10 p.m . on KHJ-TV, Channel 9, Robert Culp and Bill Cosby are 'the resident agents. UCI Cl1oru 'fakes Sho On the Roa UC Irvine's U n iv erst Chorus. malting its first will presen t concerts northern California cam l\1ay 6-9. The schedule incl ude UC Davis ;r,1d F College in Los Altos Hill:i. The 64 members of chorus will be accom by JO members of University Orchestra. will perform under the di 1ion of ~1auriee A 11 a rd , associate professor of mu.s assisted by Carole Roel lecturer in music, and st.u <.'Ollduct.ors. Their program will inc "Gloria in Excel.sis Oeo'' Bach, "Misa Criolla," f .. HELO OVER WINNER OF S ACADEMY AWARDS ORANGE COUNTY'S BIGGEST SHOW 11;18l@lll•I;I111:0h1Ii:14:\ i ;l iJ Shows Slarl •I Dusk• ChUdron under 12 frool PAUl. NEWMAN ROBUTREDR>RD Ml1tARINE ROSS" BllTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID -AL$0 - MAGGIE SMITH ACADEMY WINNER BEST ACTRESS ,,, I' .. , ... , " --~~-U1·1111 18.§.) --.... .... ,,, l:-clw1l•1 Or•"'• (WM1 Dr1¥t·I~ l~I"' "A '-"~ <•Hid 1'4trH'' (01' I C•lor ... "Tllil lttlY.,.I" 10"1 CMr ALL COLO• SlolOW ""TMI MA,.l''r INDINO" !GI') • "THI Sl!Cl!T O' SANTA VITTDlt A" ((f,I AH Cfl9t Slltw "TICI( e Tkk • Tick" 101 • "TNI ODO COUP'LI" All (tl9r SIMw "TMl'I' tHOOT HOltSE•, DOl'l'T TMl'r" !GI') • ''TAl(I T~I MONIT ANO ll:UM" 40,) • The strangest trio ever to track a killer. Aloo LIZA MINNELLI In lt$T ACTOR CG Pl t I I I TEENS COLLECT GOODS FOR TIJUANA ORPHANAGE Susan Reeve, Rod Roberts, Jolie Mclane (from left ) TRICIA JOHNSON FEEDS TOTS AT ORPHAN HOME Rose Park Orphanage Survives, Ba rely, on Donations Kids Helpi11g l{ids Church Teens Aid Orphanage By RICllARD P. NALL 01 lllt Ol llY PUDI 111!1 Hand laundering the me<1gcr clQIJ1ing of 80 underfed orphan ho.vs cla-n.v is an imposing task, one the lucal Tt('tl~ For Christ want eagerly to do sornelhing about. The youth group of San Juan Chrisuan Church, 31612 El Can1ino Real. also is determined that the youngsters at Rose Park Orphanage in Tijuana \Viii ha\'e enough to eat and enough In \\·car. 111e youth group visited the orphanage fiix weeks ago. The 80 orphans J:> of them under 15 months old, arc housed in one buildini;. \\l hcn t~crc is no hab~· food. the infants survive on JXlwdcred milk, said Mrs. Blaine Roberts, \1•ho \\11th her husband sponsors Teens For Christ. \Vhen there is not enough food the older boys go to church and pray th;:il more will come. The Rose Park Orphanage, said ~1rs. Roberts, was started in 1962 by Juan and Joan Sandoval with five youngsters. It survives. barely, on donations. Teens for Christ with 20 members In the high school group and 24 in lhe junior high is raising (unds to buy n 11ashcr and soap (or the youngsters. The locci! youlh are also cnergelically colleciing clothing, bedding, food and fu nds for food. They plan to retu rn In their adopted orphanage May 16 with the supplies ccilecled including oranges the local youngsters will pick this weekend. Food needed includes canned ~°"ds al every type, lard , sugar, flour, soda, beans. ri{'e, rnacaroni. canne(t rnilk. JUiccs. and spice::. Baby clothes and bedding are needed. So are n1oµs. lciun- dry pails, soaps. hair clippers, clothes riin~. broon1s. floor elc;incrs and scouring r3ds. Also needed arc funds . \\'hen the local teen return lo !lie TiJuan;1 orphanage, said l\1rs. Roberts, they plan lo p1lch-in by scrubbing floors, cha11;;:111g bedding, making benches and !ceding the babies. Persons interested in donating supplies .or funds may call the following nu111bers lo arrange a pickup, 492-1278, 494-9794 , 49S-1662, 49S-3967. 496-4860, 495-5946, 830- f.171, 847-4768 or 496-3886. Pla11 Sl1ows Ocean Wall\: From Capo_ Beacl1 Village Pedestrian sidewalks from the Capistrano Beach village to the ocean, through the new freeway-highway in- tercha nge al Doheny Park Road, ha ve been incorporated in I.he latest plans for the interchange. The sidewalks are one provision of three requests by the Capistran:> Beach Chamber of Commerce which have won .approval by the design project engineer- ing department of the State or California Division of Highways. A traffic signal at Doheny and Coast llighway will further aid pedestrians walking to and from Doheny State Beach. A thJrd provi.~ion is channelization of traffic to allow left turns from the souUtbound lanes of Coast Highway into tile commercial area adjacent to the Richfield Station. Jerrold A Royce, dc~ign project engineer, said the three changes ha~·e been drawn Into the plans, and "if no aecldent problem results from chan· nelization al the Richfield station, the left tum wlll be allowed after the in· terchange Is constructed." Two 0U1cr changrs "'hich former ~hamber presidrnl K~nncth Lnwrence l.C'rn1ed "essenth1I to businesses in the \'lllage" are still in negotiation bet11·cen • the Stale Parks Department and Sta!e Division of Highways. Royce said a vehicle exit from U1e park, south of the San Juan Channel and pedestrian access arc tv.·o clements under conside ration in ;1 land trade nt:gotiation . "The park department wants one lane of the old highway bridge," said Royce, and explained th:it lhc freeway in- terchange will include a new bridge over the channel. The lane \lrould conneet the two sec- tions of the Doheny State Beach. Re- maining lanes of the old bridge will become souUibound lanes of Coast Highway. Steuui s Haps Co11rl WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. John C. Stennis (0-f..tiss.J, charged Tuesch1y the Supreme Court has consciously and deliberately dodged a decision on segregated schools outside the South. Stennis said that segregated schools above the Mason.Dixon line enjoy "virtual immunity" while lhe "states in the ~Outh nre being prosecuted and pursued .• , with drastic and effective demapds for total integration , , , " Sea of Autos Due? Sa1i Cwmenteans Fear Loss of Ocean View A three-deck parking tier In the California Park.s Department plans for lower Calafia deV!lopment in San Clemente has evoked concern in the Montalvo-Lobelro neighborhood. "The prospect of a sea of automobiles in exchange ror rippling wives does not delight us,'' quipped Lobeiro resldenl June Fleming. ''The people on Montalvo Lobciro circle have always assumed that we would have an open view acr05S the sheer bluff to the ocean." San Clemente Realtor Steven P.1.ichalec, representing titrs. Noel Pa,yne, owner of a parcel ol acreage fronting the 2 Ce11ts W ortl• I bluff, said he Is interested both ln view below and In landscaping of the upper bluff and slope. Michalec was a participant in the court proceedings in which bluff land at Uie base of Calafia was coodemncU by the state. In the 1959 proceedings, State Attorney lfenry Workman entered into evldeoce architects' renderings or the plans for a landscaped parking area, including a cur\'ed stairway built Into the slope between Lobeiro and Calavla east of the Norman Wright home, kno"'n as "the old Spanish castle." "The drawings showed ground plan- Clemente Man Suggests Bottling Up .So1lte Taxes A San Clemenle n1an interested in tidy beaches has suggested that tile city seek a st.ale I.ax of one or hl'o cents on every beverage bottle to ht>:µ pay for cleaning highways, parks and beaches of litter. In a letter to the council lo be taken up tonight. J. P.1. "Mac" Jones poinis out the advantage of seeking such legisla· 'Bloodmobile Set For May Visit In San Oemente lion in an election year. "\Ve harl better try no1v or v.•e h:ive to wait two more years.·· he \\Tete. City officials said Jones frequently dc~ct!nds on the be:ich armed l\'ilh a sack to pick up bollles, cans and other de'.lris to tidy th"C beach. Jones enclosed \'odlh his letter lo tht council a nc1vs cllppirlg of a citizen effort or abou t 4,000 youn.i::slers and adults in Stanislaus County who cleaned hi,llhwa.vs and rural roads of an estimated 600 or 700 tons of litter. Jones said if his ta:< plan ra ils, a civic group could be formed in San Clcmetile to go lo lhc beac hes every 11110 11:eeks and clean up. I tings and palm trees along the stair,,'' said Michalec. "Severance damages to the Payne property were determined on the basis of those drawlngs, as evidence that beach access would be guaranteed.'' Accordin; to Patrick Dougherty, Stcite Parks Department Orange Coast area manager, projected need for 1800 parking stalls to serve the beach makes parking decks a necessity. He . said the plans ore not final, thnt current plannlng would mainl.Clin the view fro1n U1e bluff \up, with the dt.>cks l'ising to "just below the bluff.'' 4 In voicing the coocem · of residents, Mrs. Fleming noted that view is diagonal to the su rf, nol horizontal from Ute bluff top. J.>ougherty predicted there \\'ould be changes in the current plans. lie called lheni "tentath•e ... and said itnn1ediate inJf>rovement would be ground-level, I-:> provide 250 parking ~paces for the Ci:lafia beach . Dougherty noted that the San Clen1c11tc exchange agreen1cnl with U1c State in- cluded assurance thot pedcstrlr.n uc~r~s fro1n Lobeiro bluff would be niaint;iit:cd. Tentative n:1turc of the plans wcis a\~o noted by James Whitehead, District G superintcnder.t for the p:irks dcnart- 1ncnt \Vhlehead ~ilicl the three parkinr,: decks would be neerted tu provide 600 deck! ~·ould be needed to provide 600 parking s1>c:ces. Of landscaping 1ruttl Rt."CeSS, \Vhiteheru:I said the state'~ bluff-top lots v.1ould be 1naintained and landscaped. as \\'OUld a wa\k1\.'11y access to the beach from the bluff lop. Securit y fencing l\'ould be construccd below the b!uff-edge in interest of beauty. 1'01·tahle Classroo11 1s Bo11~h l r Ol' S<.: l li g11 S • s d d Trustees of the Capistrano Uniiictl The Bloodmobile will make its semi-an· tg'flltpS pee e School Ditsrict have accepted a bid for nual trek lo San Clemente on May 15 eight portable classrooms wh ich will h<• and will be located at the Unitrd Foi· Sloiv-P;lc•/• placed at San Clemente High Scho;il Presbyterian Church. 119 Avenidll. de ., " when built. S DAit Y PlUIT 3 Down the Mission Trail 4 Students Win Patriotic Essay CAPISTRANO H1GHLANDS -Four Valencia Elementary School students were aw3rdcd $25 savings bonds for their entries In lhe "I Am an American" essay and poster QQnlest. \\'inners in the poster contest were Tern Se\l'alk, 12. son of Mr. and t.lrs. William J. Sewalk of Aegean Hllls and Nanci Nichols. II, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Berry of Mission Viejo. Essay winners were Mark McCreary, 11 , son of t.1r. and r..1rs. Don f..fc:Creary or Capistrano Highlands and Duff P..lagorien, 10, so n of Mr. and Jl.lrs. Rich;ird Magorien of Aegean llllls. The contest was sponsored by the l•>:rhrn:;c Club or Laguna Hills, El Toro. (9 1'olle!Jlucll•••·• Sougltt ~!lSSIO~ VIEJO -A co u p I e 1' \':''\~)\Ja il lc~1 guc is forn1ing nl the f.lission Viejo Recreation Center. The center's 600 famil ies arc tn· rouraged to sign up for the third annual Jca~uc play. 1 here \Viii be U1ree couples on a leam a:i:l you can enter wilh other couples or just sign up in the office and teams \ril! be composed fron1 the sign up ~hL'CI. Trophic~ \Vil! be ;i11'<1rded for first anrl second plaec teatn.s. Tl1e first evening, Tuesday. May 12 \\'ill bc open 11lay before the league r.r:icticc round begins. Rerresh1ncnts will be served at the f;r·;t 111cct1n!l which begins at 7:30 p.m. <1: Ilic ccnlcr. la Estrella, from 3 p.1n . to 7:30. Low bidder at approxim;1tely $\Jj.flOC) Mrs. Edna Dockeray, v o I u n teer 'The slow pitchers ;ire wanning uµ 1vns Aurora Con1pany or llivcrsii.lc, G 'felllliS Foes U'attterl coordinator. urged potential blood donors In San Cle n1ente as the p<Jpular '·Not-So-\\'hich alStl builds mobile homes. to make appointments to avoid delay Go::id"' ~!en's Softball League gel under 'f'he classrooms Will be in four LAKE FOREST -A meeting of all at the blood bank by calling 492-MI7. \\'1\' rel ocatable building! Y.'hich make into tennis players will take place in U1c "The spring drive for blood is essential 'ih.e ~low pitch league is snon~orccl lv:o 900 square foot hcatecl and air Lake Forest c<1mmunity on Thursday, to offset the seasonal summer slu1nl) bv tl1c recreation departinent o I cor:ditioned classroon1s. ti1ay 14, at 7:30 p.m. in the Beach and fh•e mobile units leave the blood Cani~\rano Uniiietl Schcol llis:ri<·I. ll and Tennis Club. center each \\'eekday to visit industries 1rill be ~upcrviscd by (;enc O'Brian, I k F l l • The pur-ol the mcetm· " w1·11 be . ,. "'1· l'lllOll . 'Ol'lllS 1111 ~--• and C{lmmunities across a lv.'o-eounly a teacher nt Con cordia ilementary V ... to elect officers for a tennis club tha t area in an attempt. to meet the continuing Scho:il. will promote tennis at Lake Forest, need for \\'hole blood and blood com-r~cgi~lration \vi\1 continue Thu rsday at TOKYO (APl -The deposed Cam-hold inter-club tournament~ and play ponents." said f\1.rs. Dockeray. the ~.:hool, 3120 Via de Frente, from hodian head of state, Prince Norod:im various tennis clubs in the area. Age limits for do1111r eligibility 11a1c s ·:::t lo 7:30. An y 1nale San C!cn1c11tc !-''h:inou/;, announced in Pekinli: Tuesday h~en to111ered from 21 to 18 and raised res: dent 21 years old or older is eligible. i:1c establishment of an J 1-minis!er \Yomen's and men 's days at the eourt.a from 59 to 65. The blood is used t.o Thrrc is no fee. O'Urian may be phoned "royal government or Ca111b:>dia," Kyod::> 111HJ be discussed along with ladder play, '-"~l'P~l~y_2_6_ho_:sp~i_ta_ls_in_o_ra_n~g~e_C_oo_n~ty_, ___ aftcr 8:30 p.m. a:\~1:92:·~5~71~9~. ------~N·,·~w~s-=Se~r~•~ice=-~'-'~t>O_rt_e_d_. _______ c_·li~q~u_e1_1e_a_nd_soc_i_a1_.,_"'_"_· ____ _ • ! I r, I You probably won't notice that the air over Southern California will be a little cleaner. But it'll be a little cleaner. 23 neighboring communities ere convert· in!) some of Their fleet vehicles lo noturol gos. Nol somelime in lhe distanl fut1Jre, Right now. Righi now wc'1e providing up to siit con· version kits apiece to 23 cities, towns ond counties in Sou1hern Colifornlo for a one year ttlol period todemonstrole how natural gos con cut 9091. of o vehicle's pollutonls. Over the year, we'll orronge !or conrinu· ing 1ochnicol assistance and fuel supplies. -·· We're olso converting more than 1,100 of our own fleet vehicles. Wirh over 3111 mlllion registered vehicles In los Angeles Counly clone, we're under no delusions th01 we're going lo eliminole smog. Bur il's o beginning. Our business is the gos business. But pert of our business is to help mo1,ct Sou!hern Colilornlo o better piece to live. In the lu!ure. we and, we hope, others In Southern Colifornio will be working even herder. to convert more vehicle fleets to cleon·bvrntng noturol gos. There's on old 1ulc obout pro jects Ille this one. To start, vov hove to slor!. So111m Contils Ga C.,"Y A ~le<f.it..onc u,-.~i.. • iL 4 DAll.Y P1tOT Wtdntsda1, MlJ 6, 1'70 ,~ ....... o.tlJ , •• u.tfl ~~'c1othes deslgner Mary Quant ,;ecenUy launched a new product -!."Make-up to Love in." 1t is said r!tot to "run, smudge or smear, ·~en at the height of passion.'' • Tht Stokt.on-Trt nt, England. ~city fathtrl h.a ut dtcidtd that tM topic of a mwical documtn· tary to·bt ftaturtd at tht city'• ftstiool latn-thi.s month will bt th.t escapadtt of a ltgtndarv tcum drunk, who ditd 19 years .ogo toilh 300 ,convict!oru tor ~public l11to.rica!1on behind him. • " " Bachelor Peter Godwin of South Cerney, England. asked local of- ficials recently to lower taxes on lib: house because midnight nude INl.thing parties in waters adjacent t(j bis property kept him up at itlgbt ,_ • Leroy J . Peters, 20, a Wichita. State University student, brought ~ American flag to school recent~ I}' and was p r o mp t 1 y arrested. fettrs was jailed in lieu of $250 lond. on a charge of defacing the lag. The flag was sewed to the ieat of Peters' pants. • Ont' 1njoy1 immu11i:ation thot.i "1d 1tfariM Wottd't 3,000 lb. tlt· Jiiant :rtal, .. Big Lou" is no tueption ai curatoT i\fichatl Stafford i1tOCU-" lltc1 the huge animal. Tt i.s no ta.tv t~k. for tht man miut ttand wt"tl aloay from the pOtDtr/11.t fiipptrs 4'!n after tht hug_t tank hat bit~ dfDintd to dtcttllft tM 1tcl'1 mobiU. 't' • !four-year.old Mol....,, Wll•on, of Qlrfule, England. fell 20 feet t&rough an open window, but escap- ed. 'Aith a broken foot. "He must ha\.·e s.leep...,,alked over to the win· dl)W and thought it was the bed ," stid ~taJcom"s mother, Mrs. Gwen \ti.Ison. "From now on we are lock· i.dJ the '-'·indo"A·s." 0 Polict cht cktd a train frOT'fl. Landon Sunday afttr it was slopptd ;use fou r milts from tht , :rctnt of the 1963 grtal train robbtry. So1nto11t had pulled ~ on the emtrgtncy cord in W ma.U compartment. The door of tht' comparfment had bttn f<Jrc· 1 td optn but police aai.1 only a 11mall quantity of Sunda~ nt\01· 'papers was missing. Ca,.fJodia Briefillfl President Fails To Sway Critics WASHINGTON CAP) -Pruldent NI>· on's promlse that U.S. troops will be out of. Cambodia by July 1 at the latest has made no noticeable dent in prior capitol Hill opinion -crtt1cs r.maln crilical and supporter• are IWldlng llnn behind the new war policy. Jn 5eparat. briellnp with two 11f<1U1>9 of iepnaentativts and scna.ton Tuelday, the Prt!kient spe1led out the llmftat:lons on the incursion -American units could go no further &ban 21.7 miles into Cam- bodia without prior con.grusional ap- proval and all U.S . .....,,. .,ould be pulled back befort the first of July. Sen. J . w. Fulbright. dWnnan or the Senato Fweign Relations Conunttt.o aDd one of the toughest crtUcs of Nixon's Southe..t Asia policy, lndlcated there * * * House Debate On Cambodia Proposal Set WASHINGTON (UPI) -The H°""' .quarf.d df today over an amendment that would both authorize and curb the use of U.S. troop6 in Cambodia. Its critics called it a "Cambodian Tonkin Gulf n:solution.'" But tt.s sponsor said it was a message to President Ni.Ion -"this far and no farther." The amtndment was proposed to the pending $20.2 bllUon weapons authorl:ta- Uon bill on whlch the House was to resume dtbate today. 'The amendment would bar using any funds Jn the bill to finance the Introduction of U.S. ground combat troops into Laos, Thailand or Cambodia wllhoat the prior consent of Congrus -unJeu the President decided, and prompUy r~ to Congress, that such action wu necessary "to protect lives nf Amerlcan troops remaining within South V1etnam.'' Critics said the amendment would give President Nixon the authority to wage war in Cambodia. Thailand and Laos that President Lyndon 8 . Johnson claim· ed for Vietnam on the basis of the 1964 Tonkin re.solution. Ni.Ion, according to congressmen who met with him Tuesday, saw the amend- ment as an endcnement or the limited action he says he has taken in Cambodia. NiJon supporta tt and ., does HouM ~bllcan Leader Gerald Jl Fon! ol Mlducin. ,,,. -ol the -· Rei>. Paul ·fl'lhal<y. a R<piblican dove from -Jllinols. actn ... Jedged ti ap-proves: what Nlxoo has dope IO far. But Findley says tt carrltt an addlOOnal mesaage from Congress -"CUI far and no farther-'.' F'mdlej .ald, howev,.., Nam took him aside al the White Home briefJng on Cambodia Tuesday nig!>t and lold him the amendment WU "i;pleodid." Julie Released From Hospital NORntAMPJ'ON. ?.tu&. (AP) -Julie Nixon Eisenhower, daughter of the Pres I· denl wag released from Cooley-Dickinson Hospital today after an overnight stay for vohat hospital officials called a ··minor medical problem ." The hospital refused any further com· me.nt 011 Mrs. Elaellhowtt, who ••as brought there Tuesday night by Secret Service men. rilrs. Eisenhower, a senior at Smith CoUegt, was due to leavt this weektnd for Washington, returning May 31 for graduation. Her husband, David, is a senior at ntarby Ambent Colle&e. .. wu nothing new in the Preslderit's pres-- entaUon. "In these e:rS*itions there was, I lhlnt, nothing that bad not been coveml In the Pmldent's speech," the Arkansas Democnt ulcl. He re/erred Ill the otat.. ment Nixon made last 'nlursday on na- tlon&l tdeviskm and radio saying a joint Sooth Vletnamese-U.S. troop operatlm had moved into Cambodia. Nixon said then the action would be over in six to eight weeks and was desiwied primarily to protect the security ol U.S. troops in South Vietnam by . destroying enemy sanctuaries acr06s the border in Cambodia. Most of tholie attending the briefings said Nixon ;nssed this Wall still his objectlvt during: his 20--mlnute discourse. But "there was reaUy no joining of the issue," Fulbright said. "You ask a queslion, then they pass on to the next one." "Pttsonally." he went on, "f don't feel that l benefited very much" from the session. Rep. Thomas E. Morgan, t h e Penn.!}'lvania Democrat who heads the: House Foreign Allain Committee, aaid he WU impressed by the meeting with N\J:on -and '° were the other members of his panel. - Indiana Rep. Ross E. Adair, 8enlor Republican on the Fortlgn Affairs O>m· mlttff, called the briefings impresslve and lor1hrlgbt. "They answered." he aaJd "many of the questions and objections that have been raised.'" He said .the Cambodian operaUon wa s going bett.T than ~. with low casualties and lus hostile diplomatic reaction that anticipated. "When the operation i.!I going well both mWtarily and diplomatically," Adair Miki, "it seems to me we have reason for opllmlsm:'' The Senate Foreign Relations Com· mlttee and the Hoose Foreign Affairs Committee met with Nixon in the af. temoon. The Armed Services committees ct both chambers conferred v.ilh the Presldtnt in a OllXlling sess.ioo. ·The Senate's No. 2 Republican, 1.ticllig1n's Robert P. Griffin, who al.5o attended the afemoon ~ion, &aid Nixon was e1cellerrt in presenting "the ad· ministri1Uoo'.11 policy. Corporation For Railroads Wins Senate OK WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate approved, 78 to 3, today a bill to take paseenger train service away from the railroads and tum it over to a newly cruted corporaliOll. 1be measure now goes to the House. 'lbe Senate pu1f:d it after adopting an amendm<nt by Sen. Claiborne Pell (0. R.I.), lo allow rqional transportation authorities to contract for serVice within their areu. Also approved was a second Pell ame~nt to stipJ.late that government financial support for the new enterpriae could be ~ to modernize roadbeds as well as trains. Pell said most U.S. railroad beds are &a antiquated the passengm are "shakfil up !lit a martini cocktail." The only votes case against the bill on final passage were by Sens. Allen J. Ellender (D·La.), James B. Alllen ([)..Ala.), and John L. McClellan (0-Ark.) 11lf: bill was endorsed by the Nlxon adminiltrat.kxi, the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC). railroad unions, the A!IOCl&tion of American Railroads and the National Association of Railroad Passengeni. The 1atte:r seeb better paSRnger service which the railroad,, claim they cannot provide without loolng mQOf:y. !Thunderstorms in Missouri ; Cool Air Sends Mercury Below Freezing I C'allto .... &.· T••Tu1e-r1turn ccelld tllthlt1' •nd jtoltll dOUllJ IM .... 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'NOTHING NEW' Senator Fulbright FBI Adds Brown To Most Wanted List-N umhe1· 11 WASHINGTON (AP) -The FBI ex· panded Its list of ''10 1.fost 'Vanted Fugili\•ts" ~-to I I today to make , room for H. Rap Brown, the black militant • failed to appear Monday for his riot and arson trial. Brown, the FBI said, should be "considered armed and dangerous." The additlon of the 26-year~kl black militant leader came less than two days after the ?-.!aryland attorney general's office obtained a federal warrant charg· lng him with interstate flight to avoid prosecution. Jt also marked the first time in two years -since James Earl Ray was being aought for the slaying · of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. -that the FBI !ailed lo wait for a t.op-10 vacancy before adding another man. A former chWrman of SNCC -the Student National Coordinating CommiUee -Brown was to stand trial .in Ellicott City, Md., on..charges stemming from a fiery 1967 speech he made in Cam- bridge, Md., shortly before disorder! erupted in a black area of the city. When he failed to appear. Hl>t'·ard County Circuit Judge James ifacGill rtvoked Bro111·n·s SI0,001 botld and issued a bench warrant for his arrest. • Eve WASHINGTON (UPll -Congresolonal sources indicate they believe Praident Nixon will decide to rtsume the sale or Phantom JN to Israel "fairly 1000." The final decision will depend OD two things : -Tbe outcome « private ta1b now under way within the four.power framework: of the UnJted States, Britain, France .and the Soviet Unk>n. -current etrorta ot U.S. diplomats to clarify Soviet intentiam: in the area -partio.ilarly Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin's news conference amwer lo a question concerning ""!>'ls ol Soviet pilot.! flying Egyptian MIGs in opeTa- tional missions. Kosygin s&..id the pilots .. are there for the purpose of mdlng the UAR (United ,\rah Republic) in the struggle agaiM Jsfaeli illtf'lion, an aggression which in turn is mauively supported by the United Stat.es which is providing Israel v.ilh arms and exte nding all-out support in creating aggression against that cowr try.'' Some ~rvers In Washington believe the presence of Soviet pl.)ot.s bas upset a precarlou'J balance ct powtr in the Middle Easl that Nixon had tried to maintain. * * * Israeli Bombers Hit Egypt Guns Israeli Air F<tte jets were sent in today to ailmce Egyptian guns lQn. barding Js,..eli troops In the northern sedor of the Suez Canal, an Israeli military spokesman announced in Tel Aviv. , It was the first aerial activity •~ nounced today and the first major artllleey battle ot the day. Earlier, Israel announced two Arab guen-illas were ki~ ed in clashes with Israeli 8t:CUJ'ity forees . In Cairo, an Egyptian government :spokesman said Soviet instructors were working with all br~es or the Egyp- tian armed forces but denied Israeli charges Soviet pikM were flying opera· tional missions over Egypt. The Israeli government made the charge last week and Premier Golda f.feir v.·a.rned l:stael would fight the Russ1ans if necessary to defend the Sue1 front. is looking. fora bargain. Heres one you can lielieve in. 'ill-luit.1119.kes the BWd; ~If'(! ~sud!~in.,;? ' W(''rr dealing, for one Lhim;. S~ j Ii hf're and we·l"'l' maki~ 11p for k>:>l tinlll tl11ri~ U'O'!C oJlrl wfnt...,. ln.X11 h~ •~n f'\"(J")'l:o:I)" S{.'lyed htlmr ~·tho-> fil't'. ""·e·re golim:t to makP 11 rt'al l'fl5Y !Qr ~to~t inl<l a Buid; al'ldC'l"'!ehr.ec Sprin~ . But that0.<1 nnly part of \I.hat make; i. b&rgnin a ~n. Whal.abou. 0>e rar? t:as1 ~ w~ in iC --.-;.--~,: YOll •~like a motilw ~ !19 ~ IW."WI'" cwerhcat.. f:'Wltll wit.b air runditac.iint:. Mu get Bud:'s ~ .!ltll!Jl>e1&~1 .. ~-A<'CuOri ... e-1~at n.ake!ll thi5 I .e..."-'re one ol lhe best. handlitw &ids '~' \nu C3ft ('W'f'I mtc-r 1 350 cubie-inch. \ '& ~10! lour-berrrl rarhuretion. Thal It could be redre;ssed at least ln part by a U.S. decision to lift the ban on the sale of additional jets to Israel. nie sources said Nixon also has avoid- td a decision on the. jets becau.18 or the reported presence of Soviet per900MI at Egyptian antiaircraft m i 11 l I e in. st.tllatiom that ina-ea~ tbe danger of a ~er confrontation. Reds Boycott Peace Talks In Protest PARIS (UPI) -North Vietnam and the Viet Cong boycotted the Paris peace talka session scheduled for today, break· ing the regular sequence or meetings and leaving the negotiations without an p.gr-eed resumption date. Both sides issued statements containing vague warnings that the negotiatiCW> might be doomed. An official North Vietnamese statement --the "" COmmunl>! d<leg@tioo• dcided not to aUend today"s fi6tlt session in mier ''to expres,, (their) firm protest against the enremely grave acb of the United States" in Indochina. The statement, which was read to newsmen at a specially convened -news cooference. said the United Slates: had violated its "coounitment to stop com· l)letely its bombardments against North Vietnam" -the commitment which pav· ed the way for the opening of the four-party pea« talks. The Hanoi statement al!o charged that the United States Was seeking to "extend the war to the whole of Indochina by invading Cambodia.'' The North Vietnamese proposed that the next meeting ol the peace talks should be held next week on May 14, but concluded with this warning: "If the Nixon administration continae:!I !i. bombardment. against the tenitary of the Democratic Republic of (Norlti) Vietnam, it mu.5t bear full respcmlbllhr for all the 8erious comequences arising from its actl." Olief American negotiator Phiilp C. Habib rejectC(I Ute Hanoi charges and their rtasils for cit:ncelling the meeting, • ' r. Buick \hlne/Buir.k Dealers. Something IDWiewe in. --- • -------..... \ . • l .r:l'' ... -. I ~ :-1 • ' - - I . - .... -.. I - Wednesday, MAY 6, 1970 DAILY rlLOT /l . Student Protests Mountin~ By 'nte A.1i0Ciakd Prtll Hva'e psytholol\Cal pressurts Police e.Jso used tear 111 President NllfMJ'I dau1b\er Students at a g r o w I n g Jess responsible ror t h e and clubs in the state Capitol Julie, and her husband, Dant nwnber or campuses across massacre than our G 0 v. bulldlng in Austin, Tei., to Eisenhower, rema.ined at tli!lr America today responded to Rhodes and Gen. Del Corso, break up a demonstration by Northampton, Mass., apart. calls for a nationwkie strike whose Inf I am m 8 t 0 r y ln· srveral hundred prote.stars ment u atlr:lenl& at ~h against President N 1 x o n ' s doclrlnation produced those who had marched from the Smith, wbert She attends, iWld Cambodian policy and the pressures," the 550-mcmber University of Texas campus Amherst~ w~e David ls Kent State ltllllngs. senate said In 8 resolution. six blocks away. ehroDed, voted :to strike. 1 Some universities shut down Fifteen persons were injured Prlncelon University faculty There wu atso • strille iby altogether, others held rallies, early today when helmeted voted to suspend claS!CS for stude"8 at· fashionable Firich prayer meetings or vigils. police armed with clubs and the remainc:ie'r of tht semester College, a gtr1'1 school Jn New There were clashes with police sidearms routed some 500 and took a stand u a group York from wh!Ch Tricia Nl•on on some campuses. On some Seton Hall Unive rsity students condemning the war in was graduated in 1968.. others, there v.'ere indications in South Orange, N.J. The Southeast As.ia. They also. ap.. In Washington, Mrs. Ni~on o( support for the move into student.! had camped around proved a two-v.•eek reeess canceled her .!ICheduled trip Cambodla. a st.reel bonfire to protest the prior to the November elecUon to. Fredericksburg, Va., today National Guardsmen patroll· so 11tudenls can work in because of planned antiwar ed at the University of w~~ffalo, N.Y .. police fired polJUcal campaigns. rlemonstrations al Mar1 Wisconsin In Pltadison afte r, tear gas and battled atudcnts Boston University canceled Washington University there. police sakl, more than 35 on lhe campus or Buffalo State rinal examinations and its Al Haverford College .. in persons were arrested in two University and nearby streeLs scheduled Pl1ay I 7 com. Philadelphia, everyone ·from days of ¥.-indow smashing and Tuesday night. The incident mencement exercises at which the adminlWators to tlie firebomb vandalism. involving about 500 stu<lenl.! Sen. Edv.·ard ~I. Kennedy (0. maintenance men will g<i by University spokesmen followed similar encounters Pi lass.), v.·as to have been the but to Washington Thursdly estimated 10,000 persons at-during the day. principal iptaker. to protest the war. tended a campus rally Tues· "It is neither a strike nor da y night to protest the * * ~ * * tr bl.isine~s as usual," said or. President's deployment of John R. Coleman . preslde:at troops in Cambodia and to s • H 1 i'\, of the all-male. Quaker llbenl hear a "people's petition" u1·pr1 ""e e p·.-"" college which ha< aboal against the Kent deaths. The ~ 600 students. "I f e: e I rally was peaceful but there reasonably certain that the \\'as vandalism afterward. WASHINGTON (UPI) _ government must be notified school will show that UteR The current wave of pro-1• day• 1·0 ad"ance of -·...i. are not 'bums' but concernea t •• 1 1 ed ff •r d The Nixon administration, ap-.. • ou .. .-11 1 d •· "'' es..,, was ouc i o 11 on ay demonstrations. s u ents w • ..., are express:-m when National Guardsmen parently lo show young people !heir opinions In a positive called out by Oltio Gov. Jan1es it can tolerate peace r u l The White House rally way ." A. Rhodes to control antiwar originally was an n ° u n c e d There were some indications dissent, plall! to go to court Saturda on! ··•t days demonstrations at Kent State, Y -Y ei5"' of support for the Presideri.'1 fired into a crowd. Four to smoothe the way for an before the scheduled date. In Cambodian Intervention. : sturlents were killed, antiwar demonstration student the interim the plans have At the Mormon Brigha!l'l The Faculty Senate Tuesday leaders want to hold Saturday grown and backers have in· Young Univerllity In Provett blamed Rhodes and his ad-in front of the White House, creased because of I h e Utah, the student newspaper jutant general. S. T. Del The Justice Department, slayi ngs of four students dur· Daily UniverM: said : "WR u"' ,,...,..,.-Corso. for the dealhs. UPI learned Tuesda}'., plans ing an antiwar demonstration u~rstand the rat i 0 n a-I~ EFFIGY BURNS ON-MINNE°APOTIS CAMPUS "We hold the guardsmen. to ask federal district court at Kent State University in behind Mr. Nixon's decision Justice Marshall, Nixon, Agnew, . ..c.H .. offc..cm=•:.•_'_V_ic:.t_im--"•-' _:.•cccti'-n"g-'u'-nd"e'-r-'o .. rd"e .. rs=an .. d_u_n_d_er __ to_w_ai_·,_c_a_req~u_ire_m_en_t_t_h_e_Oh_io_. _________ and=c.'cc".cPpo=rt=hi'-m=in:.l::t.:." __ FIRST AID AFTER KENT UNIVERSITY SHOOTING Campus News Releases Picture of Victim, Helpers ·r'7~-:. 0 KODEL Dream Shi~ Gown 7 .00 Slffp Coat v ,.,,:I{,. "STAR FLOWER" Permanent Press Kodel®/Cotton Batiste, featuring magnificent new "Star Flower " embroidery and c.over·up sleeves. Pink. Aquo , lemon. 7.00 ;;Win~or Shop • HARBOR CENTER 2300 Horbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546°2622 -------------• COMMUNITY EVENTS MAY 9 ARTIST 20TH ANNUAL PANCAKI lltlAM,.AST KIWANIS CLUI OF THE MONTH (ll lf St1v~1, barn 111 Clln!Oft. M~· tour! In UU 1nd mt!orftf In t r! ti Colle;t. COSTA MISA rAll!I: 7·11 A.M. T.Y. GR.AND PJUll JUNE 5, 6 & 7 Slit °"'"t<I "Tiii Ctrtmlc H'11" 11! P111~rn1, Ctlffernlt IQ~ m.tny VII•• ..... tft tile H!i!lllrd tnd tfMl..:I htf OW1'1 orlgii>tlt tlollo wl!ll lllt!rvc:!lng 25TH ANNUAL ,_ISH PAT COSTA MISA·NIWPOltT HAJllOlt LIONS CLUI e PAUDI e IAIT CONTIST 5flf r111r..:1 111 "~' 1...t wMlt c1111- w1leoclfl9 t•om '" 1nt-.i1!,... '''°"'' lllrl«I trylflg hi lllt l!tr tt1nds tnd btlf>G U'lltbi. 1'l us• llftf embrolole•'f l~rffd, Wiii\ i'INV'!' -I 'fl(~ l"lf l-gi11tli0n. .~. C .. llft fllr lrl -k wllllovl .,..., pe!ltrn. e CAJINIYAL e MISS MlllMAID CONTIST e IATILI Of THI IANDS e DU.WING-fOlt NIW CAI I 5 2 5 3 guerantaed 0 annual • rate 90 Day Certificate Accounts* 5.39% Annual Yftld If all savings and Interest remain a year. No minimum deposit. Dally compounding. Earn from dale ol deposit. 6 3 siu1r1ntHd 0 1nnu1I rite 2to10 Year Certificate Accounts• 8.18% Annu1I Yield if all savings and lnlerest remain a year. $5,000 minimum deposit Oaitycompaunding. Earn from date of deposit. NOW! 4WAYSTO EARN HIGHER INTEREST AT CALIFORNIA FEDERAL! ' 5 7 5 3 :~~~~71aed •· rate 1 to 10 Year Certificate Accounts• 5.92% Annual Yfeld If all savings and Interest remain a year. $1,000 minimum deposit Daily compounding. Earn from date of deposit. 7. 5 3 guarantaed 0 annual • rate 1 Year Certificate Accounts• (Adju1tablt rat11 for 1hortor term1) 7.79% Annual Yield If all savings and.interest remain a year. $100,000 minimum deposit. Daily compounding. Earn from date of deposit. .. ...... CALIFORNIA FEDERAL SAVINGS • .......... --•••••••• l ' • , • I • 5% PaHbook Account. Current Annual Rate. No minimum deposit. Daily compounding. Jnlerest day-in lo day-<>uL Cal!f~l!!!!!~:f~.4..~!!!!.1§.~!!ngs NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL COSTA MESA OFFICE: 2700 Harbor Blvd. near Adams • 546·2300 CLIFFORD M. WESOORF, VICE PRESIDENT & MANAGER ~venlant Off1<:ea througttou1 lo• Angel11, Orange •.nd Ventura Counlies AU.Ollnta •rt IMUr.d Up to s~.000 Ulllllll' J!ro\ll•loM"' ~ Ftdlttll SIJ'flno• • Lotti 111111,,not Carpctft llofl, • Pfnllllltnt ltgt!M)W ot in. Unlll'd StalM Gowml!Mnl. · I • '· \. 1-' • j DAD.Y Plf.,OT EDl-TORIA.L PAGE , ... I San Clenlerite's Police . , )J .~ Ii • •Ill I• .. ~I ' '" • 111 a unlqu~ move, the Justice Department grant· ed neal1y '100,000 In lederal lunds to San Clemente's pollce department to help pay for the awesome respon· slbWty o!1lelping with presidential security. 'Ibe grant was made with the general intention of beefing up the department's ,'personnel, equipment and salary. fringe benefits. Its sj>ecWc purpose was to - for tbe first time -reirnbur~e local officials for their e.zpenses in guarding the President 1 San Clemente's policemen have served well during all the presidential visits to the Western White House, and have coped with floods of demonstrators coming to the city. The grant serves one immediate purpose -to help make the department's pension and benefits program more competitive so that it can attract top talent into Its ranks. And top talent among police.is indispensable. Planning th~ Big Step Make-up of the new board of directors of the La}!:U· na Beach Chamber of Commerce gives an idea of the way the ocean breezes are expected to waft over the Art Colony in coming years. Notable additions lo the 24-member -board are Kno'M.ton FerDald, vice president of the Laguna Niguel Corporation, and William Watt, director of muJt.iple housing construction for the Irvine Company. While the professional activities of these two ap. pointees are directed outside Laguna's city limits, it is clear that development in their areas, to the north antl south. will be of utmost importance to the town, ''Ibis will especially be true of the coastal area be- tween Laguna and Corona del Mar, where the Irvine Company is planning major development. Though the general plariC:oncept mosr closely fol~ lowing the goals statemell't of the community would tend to 11imit Laguna's growth and retain ks village atmosphere, the planners considered a total rea of 20 square nllies in drawing up their recommen tions for Laguna proper . This area, they predict, eventually will grow io a population of some 60,000, and whether all, none, or part of it is annexed to Laguna, its influence will be felt. The chamber is wise to seek counsel from those in· votved in planning the big step into the next generation. High Quality Recreation A shiny, expanded park will open 8't Doheny Beach Saturday in ceremonies which will herald the spending of $1.4 million to give today's tourists high-quality re~ creation. Three-hundred new trees have been planted to join the old park's existing adult varieties. The parks service has added scores ol new wind· shielded picnic areas and a modern, landscaped park· in_g Jot. One other aspect of the new park -which was com· pleted dfispite last year's combination disasters of floods and strikes -is particularly important to ils users. . The designers, understanding Cull well the mean· ing of death sta,ti$lics in traffic crashes, built a new safer.entrance and exit to the park to replace a danger: ous situation on Pacific Coast Highway. The new park's access is through the traffic-signal· controJJed entrance to Dana Harbor. The new park is but a prelude 'lo much greater im· prove~ents i!'l th~ state park sce.n~ along the Orange Coast m coming months. ~ $2.~milhon rebuilding pro.1· ect for even greater magnitude 1s on the drawing boards for San Clemente State Park. Both additions wiJJ prove a boon to 'I.he recreation· hun,::ry -public and local businessmen '"ho-should btrTe- fit Crom the influx of tourists. s Se11ote Politicians Ru11 for Cover Juveniles Suffer Law Nixon's Immense Courage WASHINGTON -Nothing could "be more disastrous at this moment in history than any congressional action limiting or circwnscribing the authority of the President or the United States in his constitutional role as commander· i~ef of the armed forces and executor of foreign policy. •.:.. Such limitations or at tempted limita:. tJons would create a constitutional crisis which could so vitiate presidential authority that the effectiveness of America's world leadership would be destroyed. The President would not recognize such ·'1iiiitations. The o n I y congressional response which amounted to anything would be cutting off appropriations and authorizations for the Vietnam War. That is impossible because lhe security of a million men in the Western Pacific is involved. Nothing but chaos would result and the exercise of American wiU in world affairs would be paralyzed. now THE J\.tEN TN the Senate can move in this direction escapes all ra· tionality and reality and is but another sign of the frightful confu&on affecting the thinking of politicians who cannot stand modern pressure and 1'11-D for cover when the Vietnam War protest is carried Into the streets by violen~ prone ac- tivists. Make no mistake about this, what bothers some of the men in lhe Senate is that they may lose their status, posi- tion and means of livelihood if they support a president ln an unpopular a..,.. Their h~ bleed for America ; their minds are concerned less with America's ( Ri chard WiJ.on defeat than their own. In the se circumstances Congress Is not capable of limiting the President's constitutional freedom of ac tion on a rational basis. In these ti1nes when only hair-trigger action may save a modern nation from extinction, the century old argument over the President's authority and responsibil ity has no relevancy. He mu st be free to act. Nol only free to act, he must be req uired to act with or without congressional sanction. THE FOREIGN RELATIONS Com· mittee of the Senate wishes to subsUtute its judgment for that of the Pres,ident. This ridiculou1 premise auppOSea _ that 8 or 10 senators comprising a majority or the committee would ' determine whm the United States would fight, where it would fight and how It would light. Sen. J. W. FUibright was right in 1961 whea he said: "With their ex- cessively parochial orientation, con- gressmen are acutely sensitive to the influence of private pressure and to the excesses and inadequacies of a public opinion that is all too often ignorant of the needs, the dangers, and the op- portunity in our foreign relations." Nothing could have described the present condiUon better. An opportunity has presented itself in Cambodia to set back the Communist side in a major way. President Nixon has grasped the opportuni ty that neither the Congress nor the public would touch lf they had to make tbe decisions Ulemselves. TT ALL BOI(S DOWN to a maUer of ~uccess or failure in a major Jnilitary operation. T!lis is likely to be Nixon's Dienbienphu or his Battle of the Bulge. Thal is to say, conclusivF either way in determining the success or fail ure of his JX.llicy in SoutheaSt Asia, and his own pOlitical future andrprestige. · The. Jdea .. tecognized by Nixon that _he might be a one·term pres ident is not confined to his way of bringing the Asian war t.o a constructive conclusion. He has taken that risk in hi11 definition of a new and more pracUcal policy on racial equality, in hls policy on Israel, )\ls facing down the war protesters and the campus re volutionaries, 4lis attitudes on labor. I-le has gamble<! on there being a strong majority, silent or otherwise, which no longer will accept the derangement of national poUcies by minorities, or any political combination thereof. RJGIIT OR WRONG, this has required immense courage on the Preakient's part and never more than when he " faced the nation, challenged his detractors and led the country where it was doubtful of going. • This is presidential leaders!)ip under conditions which have been rarely seen but it was not without precedent. Isola- tionist leaders, including the Jate Sen. William E. Borah, tried to intimidate presidents with their superior knowledge and judgment, with about the same pros- peeUve result as in the present instance. Women Pick Wrong Target By JAMES E. WHETMORE Senator If Susan B. Anthony were alive today, she'd probably be campaigning as hard BB ever for women 's right.s. Although most men now think that women we.re "liberated" when they got the vote, 1oost of the fair sex would undoubtedly ditagree, judging from the amount of ltgi.slaUon and subsequ ent publicity on the scene today. Last year much was made over a measure to abolish coin-ope.rated toilet flcilitles in public places, with the measure's author - a woman -charg· tng discrimination against her sex because not all accommodations in men's moms require a • ·monetary con- sideration." Despite considerable support frwn women's organizations and even ._ ,90me sympathetic males who have ~n causbt without a dime at one time or·~· the measure failed to receive approval. -----Wednesday, May 6, 1970 TM editorial page of th< Dollv PUot Jttk.s to inform and 1tim- ulate 1'eaden bt1 pre1enitno chis ntWtpaptr'J opinioni and com- mentary on topics of interett 4'11d rignificance, b11 iwotri4hto a forum for Utt e.s:pre1riml of our readtrt' opfn!Ons. and br pre&enUn g tM diverse vieU> pointa of Informed oburwn and ipokt.,... on t.oplca o/ ti.. day. Robert N. Weed, Publisher I I ' ' . I Gu68t~epbrt t,;. _.._ •' THE PRIMARY women's rights bill this legislative session deals with discriminatory hiring practices, a subject near and diar to the hearts of women's cJ R:..> en"! factions or the female libera- tion movement. Most of us would agree th .t U1ere is merit in Jegislalion directed at this am, and recently the hiring practices bill was passed in the lower house by a wide majority. 1'he bill adds sex lo the discrim inatory hiring practices prohibited in the Fair Employ- ment Practices l,.aw. One of my braver colleagues. taking his private and political life in his hands, was called upon to explain why he voted against the measure. llE NOTED THAT he had tried for three years to fight against the discriminatory practices against \vomcn employes. but had dirceted that fight to tbe proper place, the Industrial W..i.:tare Code. All the pracllces \Yhich ara dlscMmlnatory against women are defined in that Code and not; he~ said, Jn the Falr Employment Pr11clices Law. ~ty colleague also contend~ that if employers follow the letter or lhe la\¥ embodied in the new bill, they may wcll find them~lves in violatio.1 of the Jndustrlal Welfare COcle. J( an employer refused to hire an ap pllcant, for instance, because she was a \'/oman, he would be in violation of th"-FEPC law. Ir he hired her and the job required m9re than eight houn of work a day, or 01' llltlng of certain weights, ht might be In vlola!lon or the Industrial Welfare Code. ON THE OTllER band, my coll.,gue says, an en1ployer mighl face the prt>- blem of an FEPC violaUon if he had a job suited to a woman, but a man de1nanded it. Some opponents of the measure have even gon~ so far as to turn the tables on the equal rights concept and apply some of the women's accepted practices to mate empl oyes. An employer. as an example, might abolish the Jong- established IS.minute coffee b ·re a k presently provided for women on the basis that granting It would constitute discrimination against men, Or men cou ld well demand that cots or Couches and chairs be provided ln men's restroom facilities. NO ONE SERlOUSLY believes that ~uch conjecture will 'deter the movement for equal employment rights for women. But seve ra l of my fellow lawmakers beli.c;!ve that such efforts should be directed at the Industrial Welfare Code. As one sage ~·it <111ce put it, the only way to understand a woman is to love her -and then it isn't necessary to understand her. Dear Gloomy Gus: It's dist urbing to find woold·be county marshals trying to get In· to office by nailing posters on trees. 'J'here musi be a law again& th~t and whoever wtns ought to enforce it -against his oppon-- ents, or cou rse. -A. J. D. T~ll ft.eun nlltc" ,.tOtl"l' •••W1• Mt Mffl .. rlh' ~ II lllt "tW\IMIHr. hlld ,..,, Ht 11MYt .. o-., ~ CMll• 'fllll. , Prejudice I · 1 .· ..1. To the Editor : There ai:e a few questions to which I would like some answers. Why must teen age traffic citations re- quire going alt the way to Orange to Juvenile Court ? If a young person is tnature enough to have a driver's license, why can't he answer the charges in a regular traffic court in the district where he received the citation? WHEN A YOUNG periioft asks for a hearing and trial for a disputed cita- tion; why is he not given as much courtesy as is glven a common drunk? The court trial consists of one man, and the arresting officer, IF he chooses to answer the summons, against the young "offender" and his parent. (Nothing appears to be done if the officer chooses NO'f to appear on a .summons of this sort. l The MAN seems to have already made up his mind that the contestant is guilly for the simple reason that she or he is under 18 or 21 years of age as the case may be. \VHY IS THERE a charge inadc l'or certain equipment violations which l1ave been remedied and signed by an officer? \Vhen a malfunction is po ss i b r-y sornelhing that has occurred without the clriver's knowledge, such as a burned out bulb, a fine seems unfair. In fact , a citation for such an offense seems unfair. Bulbs do go out quite suddenly and unannounced. IA a case wh ere a malfuncllon has obviously extended over a period of ti me, such as faulty brakes, draggi.1g fe nders, r\lsted out mufflers, the re might be a valid reason ror a citalion and fine . ARDATH G. FAUMUI .Uetlicnl E.l"J•enNes To the Editor : Your ed itorial of April 29 commended the effort undertaken by students to help pay 1nedical expenses for an injured high school youth. I alwa·ys react negatively to these kinds of effor ts for persons wllh overwhelming medic al ex· pe:nses, however good it may make these "do-gooders''. feel. This young man has a ri ght to good medical care, and also a ri ght for the ramlly not to have to worry about the burden or these expenses. Jnsurance benefits they 1nay have need to be utilized . 6UT ABOVE THAT. it seems lo me to be a responsibility most ta>:payers should gladly undertake through pr~ grains such as state Medi -Cal or through expanded Medicare program to disabled people as well as the elderly, These should not be considered to be "weHart" by a needy person1 There should al~o be more government control over the exorbltllnt cost or n1ecUcal ed. so that there is some guarantee tfrst these 1nedical expenses are justi fiable. ~ms. MARGARET L UKAS Letters /rom readers art welcornc . Normally toriters should convey t/leir rnes.~agts in 300 word$ or LeH. The ri9ht to condense letters to fit $pace or eUn1it1ate Libel Is reserved. All let- ters must inc lude signature and mai£. 1119 ndtlress, b11t 11an1ts 1My l>e wlt1t· l1ald on reques t if s11fficiet1 t reoso)1 is itp pare11t. Poetry will not be pub· 1;.shtd. The Real Drama I.s the Conflict TboaghtJ at Large: The real drama ln the courtroom is the conflict between the witness' attempt to tell the whole truth, and the attorney's determination to elicit only those portions of It that are help{ul to his client. • • • "Obscenity" is whatever shocks some- one today, who would have been shocked 20 years ago by' something he considers acceptable now. • • • Doctors make the worst patients in a hospital for the same reason that pilot.s make the worst passengers in a plane -both know exactly how many things go wrong and how fallible their colleagues are. • • • Beyond a certain age, a woman's chief social satisfacfion seems to consist in spotting olher women in her age-bracket who are heavier than she is. • • Everyone imagines he knows what Jesus would do if He should return, but no one imagines that he might. be the first ooe ~as would rebuke. T~e pointlessness of most corporal punishment was neally pinned by Don Marquis, when he observed : "Many a man spanks his chHdren for the things his own father should have spanked out or him." • • • A quarrel is the failure of an ar~erit, just as a war is the failure of a coi1- fe.rence. • • Rumor, crushed to earth , will rise again -il it's got the proper sexual ingredients . • • We're entering the Age of Outer Space Expl oration before we've even found a \Vay lo li ve on this little pi<1net without catching a cold. • • • A .woman isn 't totalJy resigned to spinsterhood until she begins buying shoes primarlly for comfort. Odds Fcivor Uncle Sam Creal ne\vs! New York Citv, \\'hich can'1 make ends meet on Hs Cut from fhc ne\V state lottery, is going to open a string of bookie joints. t-.layor Lindsay figu res the city's take from the no\Y-lega\ off-tra ck betting will run $200 million a year. Here's another giant st ride toward the only conceivable so lution to the nation's fiscal crises -nationalizing organized crime. , Once Mayor Lindsay gets a tasle o( the fat profits flowing in fro1n his bookie joints, I.here's no question but he'll take over the numbers racket. And why not ? Playing the numbers is no more sinful than playing the horses. Na turally there ha ve been protests from such organizations as the churches and the Mafia. "The mayor's muscling in our ter~ ritory," growls Three-Fingers Jack Daniels, chainnan of The Wednesday Evening Christian Fello\vship and Bingo Socia l. But, as tl1e well-k110\vn mobster stoolie, Chicken Cacciatore, puts it with a shrug "You can't fight City Hall." TllE -NEXT STEP , of course, is taking over the millions of dollars that now go to disreputable types fro n1 pros.. tltution . This may require (ederal aid. Envision, if you will, a vast Sexlcare progra n1 . A Bordello Co n s truction Program, funded hy lo a n s from th<' Department or Health, Education and \Velfare. would do wonders for impacted areas They could \\'ell be ~ta(fed by conscripts rrom VISTA through a draft lottery. Objections \vill be raised. Uut H the government can consc ript the bodies of n1c11 for th(' \\•elfare or the taxpayers, it can certainly peddle the bodies of ~oung ladies for U1c same purpose. Dope peddling poses problems. But in Britain the govemment's been doing 1t for yea rs. All that needs be done to niakc a tidy profit is to rflise the prices to wh11t the tr11ffic will bear. And seeing th at mAny states n-0w pcdtllc the flru~ called alrohol through $late liquor stores. there's no reason they can'l peddle lhe drug called marijuana, too. It \\'Ollld double revenues. Purse·sntitching and sllckups b y govcrnn1cn! incn :ire more e~suy justified. Sonn• \\'Ould ca ll fhis robbery. 1 &hlnk ol u as l;u;alion. AJ'te.r aU. Art Hoppe the definllion of robbery is taking your money by force or the threat ol force. You know. like the IRS does. Personally, 'though, I'd draw the line at having paid government <igcnts rub out innocent people. There ju:>t isn't enough n1oney in an ope ration like that to justify the costs. Look at Vietnam. .so HATS OFF to Mayor Lindsay. Its. a small step for the taxpayer , but a gian.t step toward nationalizing organiz4 ed crime. And there's enough billions in thal to balance every governmental budget in the land . And cut taxes, too. True, the ou tcries will mount. •·we can'l .have our .government engaged ht or~an1zed gambhng. pandering, dope ped· dhng, robbery and murder." the foes of progress will shout. Nonsense. It's solely because these long-established functions of government <ire so disorganized that we ta xpayers are losing our shir ts. r---By Gem·9e --~ Dear Geo rge: You keep saying you can solve anybody's incomC' ta~ problems. Well, I've written you three lclters asking for your solution to sneaking ln additional entertainment deduc· tions. Why haven't you answered? HARRIED TAXPAYER Dear Harried: Sor1·y. \Ve've got a nc1v wa rden and he revoked 1ny 1noll prlv il eges except once a month. Would you repeat the question in May? Everybody's an expert in ApriL Deilr Georgr · Our shares are hllcrcd \v1th hee r cons. our highways are a dissracc. our \\•aterways arc Polluted! \\!ho caused lhis? FURIOUS AMERICAN Dear Furious American: l haven't beC'n orr my block frir l\\'O 1vccks. and I <.:an proV'c II. DAILY '1LO T 7 CHECKING •UP• WASl-IJNGTON (AP) owned corporaUons, 11etting th3n 1$0 campustl were on l!t 11ntlwar sent iment on the !!ludent.~ to tell them It was operiilions. David Hawk, wn() Charlt-1 F. Palmer, 13-year·old legal aid for students and 5trike. , rise again~ wrong." left NSA to joln t he president of the once-stodgy pushing for cur r I cu I um Cnlls poured In to NSA brad· "The shock stlll hasn 't worn Another call, this one from Moratorium g:l'9\.tp, is back: Nations.I Student Association, rtform. quarters -a to~·nhouse hdlt off on Carnbodia and I think 11 CQngres$tnnn also oPJ>OSetl helping coordinate the strikes. is in the center of a growing: But the U.S. attack Into a block from Connecticut Kent Stale is going to ex· to !he war . nationwide campus strike Cambodia last · week followed Avenue's expensive art acerbate lhlngs. I th 1 n k Violtnte'.' Palmer streQt'd that NS.\ movement against the es-by renewed American air galleries and hippie head there's a consensus. at tcu~t "I don't think ii is v~ry wa$ acting as coordinator, not panded Southeast Asia l'l'ar. raids in North VI et n am shops so fa st th a I among students. that Ct.Un· !iinart. IL just plays into the as a director. "\Ve're rn>t just an anUwar galvanized NSA into action telephones Degan to malrunc· bodla v.•as bad." hand s or people who want to "l have only \0 pick u11 group," Puln1er sa id. ''\Ye're and it volunteered to lion. 'l'hl! telephone nu1g. A 1nount the repression even lh.is 1telephone," he Joked. moving into this· bccouse our coordinate the student strikes pa 1 m c r. tired ri·oin television nct11'0rk asked hini worse.'' "and fampuses all over .. ," s1udent constituency is sort that began springing up to O\"erwork and too little sleep, to appear for a 1norning in· Palmer conceded NSA is in The joke trailed off, un· or demanding it. They sald protest President Nlxon's turn was dressed infornially in blue ter~·lew in New York . ~iaybc. some reipcets moving into the finished. Palmer rubbed hi~ Le ss .Women Sl1qp h1 u~s. Oil F1·ida y Once-stodgy NSA Center o.f War P~otesi By L. 1\1. 80\'D CONSIDER TH IS -01 these four, which is the n1ost important in a husband~ I. Good looks. 2. Romantic stamina. 3. P l easant personality, 4. Earning pow er. The older a wire gets the more likely she is to pick No. 4 -earning pov.·er. Surveys show that. ·~1ove'andwe hadtomove.'' in war policy. jeans. buck moccasins and a Why campus strikes? v;:1cuumleftwhen theNational eyes and thought about ho\'I t..:nited States. ls it '!" A. One NSA w<1s long on reCQrd Tuesday, the day alter Na· Zapata-style moustache. His ··People felt they h;id to Vietna1n Moratorium Com· to gd some sleep before fly in~ of lhe six most f)Opular, against the war but had con-lional Guard bullet.. killed four desk top was buried under respond to Cambodia . Not to miUee disbanded April 20. 10 to New York. any\\·ay. The other fi ve are centrated its actions on sud! students al Ohio Kent Sl::.~e paper, empty ~a cans and re spond "'ould have be<!n lo da ys before Nix on's an-•Hs secretary handed ovtr fred Smith, Charles Johnson. projects as selling up student· University, Palmer said more unclassifiable junk . Jegitimlze it. People looked lo nouncement of the Cambodia n a brief biographkal sketch. Harry Brown , \Villiam Jones ,-''-'------=-"'---------''-------------....:..-------='-----"'-----------------------=-''----- and J o h n Anderson ... Q. WOODSMEN, please nole : . .\ CQyote runs wi!h its tail down. a wolf runs with its tail up .•. OU R PL ANET i\1AN is or lhe opinion that Libra Sirls always should be kissed on the fi rst date. And when he says kisses. he means ~'Ith feeling ... HAD N 0 IDEA so many people have gallstones, One out of every five hospitalized patients suf· fer From same, it's reported . ABOUT HALF the won1cn V"ho go into a department store buy something. lnciden· tally, it is also a fact that few.er women go into depart· ment stores on F'riday than any other day of t h c week ... ALL RIGHT, lcrs see you name the three historical figures upon whom af1Ples are said lo ha ve had the profoundest of lnfluences. Did you remember Isaac Newton? How about William Tell? And don't forget Adam. CUSTOMER SERVICE - "!\1y husband's name i s Robert Wilson. He says that's the commonest combination or name and surname in the Guard Ready For Years For Rioting "Why is a boxing ring called " ring when it's square?" A. Because originally the flghlcrs \Vere supposed to stay inside a c i r c 1 e drawn on lh e ground ... Q. "'What's I be most dangerous beast in the oceans?' A. A shark ranks first. it's said. Second is the Scawasp jellyfish. BIGGEST SEE D is the co- eoanut palm 's. smallest is the orchid's ... NO G 0 L F E R should forget tha,t. game was oullawed h1 Scolland tor more than JOO years ... IF A GIRL writes you a letter in green ink, young fellow. don't treat it lightly. It's supposed to con· vey et~rnal love. DIVORCE NOTE -On ex· plaining why he got a divorce , an ungallant fellow told me ove r lunch yesterday, "My ex· wife learned her romantic technique on Ha lloween, I guess. All she ever did while she was married lo me v.·as pla.v trick or treat." HOW MA.NY STATES can you name that begin either with capital M ()r capital N? If you don 't counl 16. yov'rc not trying ... ~1 EN NA/\1ED in the Bibte outnumber the "'o men named therein by 1!1 to 1 . , j}:" YOU SPILL coffee on a "'oodcn floor, lry rubbing the slain v.·ith steel wool and alcohol. s u g g e s l s our specialist ... IN A HORSE RACE. odds run about 2 lo 1 that the ravorite ~·on'\ "·in ... ACCOR Dll\"G to the Love and \\'ar resea rchers or the Stanford Uni ve rsity, f'X· 1roverts tenet 1o fall for in· troverts and vice versa. I don'! believe ]l. WASHINGTON (UPl )-The , nation's 400,000 Army Nation:il )'oii r questi.011.~ and com· Guardsmen have been equir-Jrirnts are ioe/comed rr1ul ped and trained for riot con· iuill br used in Chccki11n trol for several years . /Ip toliercvcr possible. Ad· f.fost of their riot contro l rlress your letters lo L. /\f. trai ning assumes crowds ca., Boyd. Box 1875. Newport he handled \Vithout bloodshed . Beach. Ca lif. 92660. The guardsmen do ra..'f:ivc. •------------I however. extensive training in I .----------~I ho1v to handle sniper.s when they appear in the back· ground of di sturbances . Training in the use or lh{' rifle includes using the butt of the gun as v.·elJ as lhe ba~o· net in crowd control. Rifles are usually carried even wlwn no ammunitjon is issued for them . The Army has also supplied the guard \\ith rules of con· duct "'hich prohibit fi rinfi! a gun, even when ammunition is issued, except on direct order from an officer. Both the big buildup In Sooth Viet nam , at a time 'vhen American troops were also spread over Europe and other parts of the world, and the otlt· break of racial disturbances in Detroit and other cities have sparked special pro- grams for the guard. f ormer Defense Secretary Robert S. McNam11ra starter! I.he process by creating an elite force of guardsmen who got twice as much training as wao: called for in ordin<'lry cil•ilian drill. The army at the same time was givrn ~ddi· lional funds for equipmenl. ~fuch of 1he money has gnnc fnr large stocks of tear J;as and nther normal riot control :igents. Among !he unusual item s in the new riot conlrol ;irsenal are armored vcc;ts. C'nnsidcred valuable in rlr11ling \\ilh unrulv crov;ds . and :i-hol· .,_ins. l\'hiCh had disawared frnm the armories until the TIC'"' emphasis on rinl control. Thi' Army has ;iil~n rstah· lic:hed a new system of stratc· ~ic depnts across th<> rountr\', from which riot control rriufp- mrnl can be ru c;hed In metro- polit11n centers by truck in a m11Uer of hours. 'r cxas \Vrilc-iu AUSTIN. Tex. (UPI ) -A ~tale labor ofrich1 l .o;aid l\lon· rhty the Textis AF'L-CIO ""Ill nQt su!'lport Lloyd !\l. Benlscn .Jr. in Nove mber .and may Initiate a write-in c11mraign for Se\1. Ralph \Y. Yarboroogh (0-Tex.) Bentsen, <1 conserv11tivc. defeated !he l i beral Yarborough, v.·ho has been con~lllntly backed by organi1:· ed l11bor and minority groups. I n 5.murday·s Democratic prim8ry. Yarboroup:h Mught rM"lecHon. Tut senator bh!m· f'd hl~ defe11t on votrr apathy. campaiil1 liming and ''big hes:• .-INTRODUCING FROG LOVERS TO CHOPINI \ PARENTS', DO N'T \.'/All UNTIL YOUR CHll D t.S. OUT OF THE fROG LOVERS AGE BEFORE YOLJ GIVE TH EM TH~ GIFT OF MUSI( -YOU WAIT AND H MAY BE TOO LATE! Childrt o in 1he frog lov109 S!~(J• (4-B) are th! oerfe<.t Jgt tor learnio9 mv~.c. Yamafia, alter vears or rese~rch designed the Y ~m a fl a Music Course 10 f~sur! rha1 •II children cao learn mus•t. Millooo~ of Yan,•h• l')rarluf l~S from •II ovtr 1he v.orld l'!•l•fy to •he sucw~ or the YAIAAHA MUSIC COURSE You do not have lo b'J'f an io- 1!r111ntn1. 1here +s oo home i•1.1dy ri1.1lf lot~ of fun for your ~h1ldren whilt they learn music. DON'! DENY YOUR: (ttllO TH[ CHAN(l YOU MAY HAVE MISSED IN YOUR CH llD1100D. (lasse~ •re oow tnrol!111q -W11n'I vou pl~.tse give Vi 1 catl •nd l~t us show vou tilt whole i tory ~! th1 YAMAHA MUSIC COURStl YOUR BIGGEST RfWA~O VJILL I( WHEN YOUR. fROG LOVER lOOKS UP /IT YOU ANO l[llS YOU .,, ··1 GAVE MY FA:OG A NEW NAME, B EEH~OVEN." Don'! Dtlty-Ctll Tod1y 642-1844 YAMAHA MUSIC SCHOOL IN COSTA MESA ' ' SPECIAL BUY! 7.88 Vibrant jersey prints for misses ond half sizes! A summer's.worth of fashion ot .a mar· velously tiny price! Cool, supple a cetote jerse1 prints in all your favorite colors. Shifts, skim mers, low-waist looks with flared or pleated skirts ... and so many more! Fin~ polka dots. paisleys'. fl orals, abstracts, geometrics in colors deep or pale, subdued or vrbront. Don t to ke our word for 1t -come- see for yourself! 8 ta 18 . 14 '/, to 24 '/,. like it ... c.harge it! AVAILABLE AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY s roRE • . ·-,.' ,, . ' •· t .. .. .. ,., " '' ... ·, ..., I I • I O,l.ILY PILOT Wednesday, May 6, 1970 . QUEiNIE By Phil lnt1rlandt HEADQU.\Rl'ERS • ,., r . ,. -.. < •• ' cCMMmu:11> DISPRO\/t .. uPO's ... AllD IJllU OllEll MEH ' ... ., . ' •A Mr. Grundgey-Ooloom to see you. And by the wa.y. I quitr- ). Caryl Cliessman Left Controversy in Death • SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Ten years ago C a r y l Olessman died with a wink and a cough in the San Quen- tin gas chamber while con· troversy over his execution raged around the v.·orld . A decade later, it has been three years since an execution has occurred in the United States , but more than 500 persons are waiting in their cells on various death rows. O>essman today could not be sentenced to death undt·r California 's "Little Lindbergh Law," as recenUy interpreted. A decade ago a victim's move· ment of only a few fttl was considered kidnaping . Unique aspect.s of the case made Chessman a symbol for death penalty opponents. A pro-O>essman petition with 2 million names came from Brazil. Literary figures wrote impassioned leUers, and Latin the "''indow to say, "Ifs all right." In three minutes he coughed and feU forward against the chair straps. He 'A'3S pro- nounced dead nine mi:i1utes after the gas pellets dropped. Chessman wrote in his last letter, ''Now my long struggle is over. Yours isn't. "The b:irbarous, senseless pr:u.:lH.:e ol capital pun ishment 11"11! ,·oi1lHlllC , • , unti l the f.'.1t1:tens of this stale are made aY.;irt· of ils fu tility. Until they rc:dizt• th;it retributive justice is nol justK·c ;it all." llt'orge 1·. 0 a v i ! • a Chl'ssu1a11 attorney, says the l"ase inspired more debate of 1he issue than had occurred previously in Y.'estern history. Former Gov, Bl'QWn agrees, but doesn't think. the con- troversy changed people 's opi- nions mudt. ~ American parliaments passed resolutions condemning the execution. Thirteen st.ates h a v e virtually abolished the death penalty, The last two U.S . executions were in 1967, and only 10 have taken place since 1964. c~. 38, was uecuted hfay 2, 1960, on two con- '!ictions ol kidnaping women whom he forced to perlonn se:rual acts. He had been convicted in 1948 as the "Red.light Bandit" who impersonated police with a flashing light and terrorized lovers' lanes in Los Angeles. After a trial in which Chessman insisted on acting , as his own lawyer, a jury foond him guilty or a total of 17 counts or robbery, sex perversion and a ttempted rape. Jn San Quentin, Olessman wrote four books, including a bestseller called "Cell 24$$, Death Row," and taught himself enough law to write briefs. }lis maneuvers kept him wailing 12 years for his ultimate exetUt:ion -v.·hile 94 others went to the gas chamber. Eight times the ex· CCU00n WBS postponed. The last reprieve was for 60 days and was signed by Gov. Edmund G. Brown, who opposed the death -penalty. Brown urged the legislature lo change the Jaw. but i1 quickly rejected the plea. The instant before the lever was pulled in the apple green gas chamber, a federal judge's elderly secretary was dialing the prison to order an hour 's delay to hear' still ~ another appeal. She misdialed. • Oiessman winked at friends ' and his lips were seen throu gh But Otis is because of court, rather than legislative, act.ion requiring mass new triall. The Supreme Court currently is coosidering the j>enalty's,con- stitutionality, and meanwhile the ranks of the more than 500 condemned -ol wh ich 99, including Sirhan Sirhan, are in California -keep irow- ing. Brown thinks •·we are as far from abolition as ever" but ending of the court-im- posed moratorium will cause ··a Roman holiday" of rapid- fire executions, resulting in public revulsion. Chessman's prosecutor, J. fifil l e r Leavy. says: "Whenever abolition is pro- posed in lhe legislature, some atrocious crime -a Kennedy assassination oc a Sharon Tate murder -emphasizes the need for capital punishment in certain cases." In the last month Los Angeles juries have returned eight death senlences, Leavy says, "so I cerlain!y don't thin k the people of this state are about lo Bpprove aboli- tiO'fl .. ' Former Deputy Attorney General William hf. Benne«, who represented the state on appeal, says Chessma n could not now have been executed for numerous legal reasons. "He "A'as executed, in a sense, by history," Bennett says. ---Delicious Oven-Ready ---1 M~lth SPECIAL thr• Moy llth Boneless Cornish Game Hens stuffed with applesauce and almonds or rice and mushrooms 98« ... h Special Pack 6 Hens Ta A Bax 89« ... h 1·---.-.. -.-.-.. -.-.·.·!4~!·.-,-.. -.-.-.. -.-.--... ,11 Fresh Ranch J:995 •.. 49¢ do1. Fresh Mushr0ams 59¢ 'h lb. \ . -• -~ ·-" •' "' I • • • -' . I AL!S~!!~TY.,. ~ PENNEYS GUIDE TO Mui HEA'S DAY1 I \ \ Penncrest© has a sale iust for Mom! (PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY ) . ' .H ' ''-; ' ... .,, ) \. ;;,i ' . ' FASHION MANOR TEfLON" COATED ·1 COLOR COOKWAlli A-..do Harvnt Gold Blue REG.39.99,NOW 32.88 ' 8 PC SET of porceloinized enofl'Mll cookware include1: 1'1 qt . and 3~1 qt. con red sautepans, 5 qt. covered Ouk'°' O¥t n, SH ond 10~ open fry pont. REG. 19.99, NOW 16.88 .5 PC SET of porcelolni1ed enamel coo~wort incllKle1: I ~ qt. end 3'? qi. covered soucepor.s, a~ open fry poo. V2 qt. co .. ered icucepcn,. Reg, 7.98, NOW 6 .49 31/2 ql.cOYered 1c:iucepon _Reg. 9.98, NOW &.49 .5 qt. co ... ered Dutch o"en . Reg. 12.98, NOW 10.49 8" c0¥9rad fry pan •••••• Reg. 9.98, NOW 1 .49 10" tovered fry pon ••••. Reg. 11 .911, NOW 10.49 12" c~r.d fry pon ••.•. Reg. 13.98, NOW 11 .49 CANOGA PARK CARLSBAD NOWI THESE VALUE$ AT ANY ONE OF THESE PENNEY STORES! LAKEWOOD MONTCLA IR DOWNEY NEWPORT BEACH ' 1 • • PENNCREST® HARD HAT HAIR DRYERS REG. 18.99, NOW 15.88 .. ,; BASIC HARD HAT DRYER: Jdts'lioit reo lly fcntf Four position heot conlrol. It .Miis '\IP. In seconds ••• fold, for eo1y stoto~ Bvy1onr fill mom today ••• she'll love it. · '' - HARO HAT with remol• control,, •• ,,•• Reg, 22.99, NOW 19.11 HARO HAT .. ~,. with hoir ••f mill , • , , , • , , 11:eg, 29.99, NOW 25.11 ROLl·ABOUT sa lon •tyle dryer •• ,., •-••t •• Reg. 39.99, NOW .34.11 HAJO HAT :. ·~ wi t~ eleclricturle11 •• ,,,,. ll'eg. '26.99, NOW23.ll ., • SP~CIAL BUY! CORNINGWARE 2 PC. FRY, BAKE SET 8.88 Now yo1• con gi"e your mom thil famous coo'cwarl!' a l fabulous K1vin9t. freeze, cook, and 1erve •• , oH in the sol'l'te d ish. Set ;nclvdes 1 ~i qt. covered baking d·sh and 10' cove1ed ~killet. Ope., stock value. 14.90 LIKE IT .,. CHARGI IT! FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH ORAN GE "THE CITY" VENTURA SHOP SUNDAY, TOO 12 to 5 P.M.I I ------------~--------------------------------------------------=-.. \'/tdJlesday, May 6, 1970 DAILY PI LOT I) Teen "Pill Bill" Ok~d Dangero us Protectio11 Disc overed 1,000. Stotle~ts Vo te I Beile nson Measure on Senate Floo r UC San Dwgo Sets St ri ke '· fo'CROONTO ,(AP) Legislation making It legal for girls under 18 to get birth control infOrmatioo from doc- tors and making voluntary steilliation eaSter reached the Senate floor today . The Senate Judiciary Com- mittee approved Tuesday the proposals by Sen. Anthony C. Bellenson (0.Beverly ·Hills), author of the slate's abortion law. Sen. Beilenson said present Jaw permits pregnant minors to be given birth control in- formation, but no t non- pregnant minors. "I'm not advocatMg that people engage in premarital "stx," said Beilenson, "but people do." His bill would allow female minors Lo receive birth control and pregnancy information from medical professionals.' Beilenson said his other bill, to ease rules limiting volun- tary sterilization, would wipe out "crazy and a I mo s t criminal" limitations now im- posed by hospitals. He said such rules demand women meet certain age or motherhood standards prior to being allowed to be sterilized. For example, he said, some hospitals will sterilize only women who ha ve two children and are 35 years of age. Two committee member s questioned whether a spouse should not have a say in regard to sterilization. Beile..1son said one of his own drafting errors was to include such a provision, now struck from the bill. "I'm a little · concerned about this spoose thing," wor- ried Sen. Robert Lagomarsino (R-Ojal). * * * * * * LA Doctor Arrested Following Abortion ApprovaJ of both bills came on split voice votes. The bills were part of a package of legislation in- troduced by Beilenson to curb population growth in Califo"1ia and what he con- siders its harmful effects on the "quality" of life. Teacher s, Sehool Board Submit Contract Efforts LONG BEACH IAPl -Ai>- prox imately 300 persons were ev~cuated frpm a two-square- bl~k area in downtown Long Beach Tuesday night after police discovered what they were told was a boU!e of nitroglycerin in an apartment house refrigerator. Questioned and later releas- ed \•:as Jackie Lynn Smay, 22. Officers Dennis Noble and Quint Manes said Miss Smay told the1n she had been given ·R_aucli OwDCI'" LOS ANGELES (UPI) -that each si de believed the the plastic squeeze bottle of 0 United Teachers of Lo s ot her side would find its pro-the volall!e explosive by a Aogeles and the board of posals accept.able. person whose name was not S11t~ f 01" l )atlli:.tgc disc losed. educalion today submitted= Aaron will re view the ideas ed h Noble and Manes pack t <' OAKLAND (UPI) -A cou· separate proposals to a and then make his own recom-bottle in ice from a nearby pie who owns a ranch near mediator to end the four-week-mendations for a settlement liquor stort!, placed it in a lhC' site of the tulnu ltuous Alt- old teachers walkout which Neither side will be legally sack and took it to a vacant inont Rock concert I as t has crippled the city's 616 obligated to accept I h ~ · area nearby. December filed a n1illion schools. , mediator's proposal~. whk·h Upon arrival of an Arm~· dollar damage suit Tuesday I Both aides in the dispute will be made Thursday, bul bomb squad from nearby Fort aguinsl the owners of the .All- in the nalion's second largest Aaro~ said he hoped they a1acArlhur . the bot llc was mont Spt.>e<h\·ay and cighl ruck! school district d r art e d '>'"OUICI be approved quickly or again packed in ice and groups. separate contract offers under modified to the satisfaction transferred to. a metal con· Mr . and ti.1rs. R icha r d an unusual bargaining pro-of all parties. tainer. Gilbert asked $1.035,000, in cedure set up by mediator Mean w hi I e , absentee· At the fort. ordnance <':<-datnages as a resull o( the LOS ANGELES (AP) -ftom Ontario, Canada. All said Benjamin Aaron. ism among the district's 25,000 perts confirn1ed the liquid was l)(.'cetnber 6th eonccrl .v.•hichl Police say they held off mak· they had heard of the clinic Aaron has sti pulated that teachers ·and 650.000 students nitroglycerin. sufficient t o attracted an estimated 300.000 througll national publicity. each side would ha\l't to be has decreased slowly since have caused a rnassivc ex -people and resulted in four HITCHCOCK '" l I\ X l ' ()I I I l I 1 l I~ ing an anest until surgery .None was arrested. willing to sign its offer and last week. plosion. de;iths. ! was completed on a Purduer--------------------------------__:_ _____________________ --''-'-"-=--"----------------- Un.iversity student ... "ba~ I come to West Lt:A• Angeles A for an illegal abortion. Then, police s:aid Tuesday, Dr. John Shriver Gwynne, za; 61tinne~J was 'bOoked for investigation t':'" of criminal aborUon and ALWAYS FIR ST GUALITV ordered held without bail. The delay, officers said, was out of concern for the patient The name of the patient wa s not releaaed. She was not charged. • Gwynne, a 1967 graduate of the University of Southern California School of MedicMe, publicly announced the open- ing of an abortion clinic on Sanla ti.1ortica Boulevard last 1i1arch. \Vhen·. he was taken into custody Monday, he \vas awaiting trial a11 five other counts of abortion and one of conspiracy. The physician has said h~ believes California·s abortion law is un· constitutional and welcomes a coun test. Taking part in the most re- cent raid '>''ere eight detectives and two policewomen. Police Lt. Paul Lepage said the officers foWld t h r e e women in the clinic waiting room -one from Olicago, one from New Jersey and one Patrolme11 Shot Chasing Young Biker FRESNO (UPI) -Two California Highway Patrolmen were shot and wounded Tues- day night by an 11-year-old motorcyc le rider who at· tempted to elude them after a routine stop near Pinedale. about 10 miles riorth of Fresno. The officers, Erwin Wade and Mike Root, were reported in satisfactory condition at Valley Medical Center. Wade was shot in the shoulder with a .22 caliber bullet and Root y;as struck In the hip. Fresno County sheriff's of- ficers said the patrolmen were making a routine stop on the young motorcyclist-when he swerved into an alley and they began pursuit. Drug Threat Brings Rap BEVERLY HILLS (UPI) - Gary Keifer, 23, Beverly Hills, was booked on suspicion of extortion Tuesday after he allegedly led I.he parents of a runaway girl to think he knew where she was and was going to give her an overdo~ of heroin unless he was paid $5.000. Sheriff's detectives said that at one point, the parents of the IS-year-old girl were told "We ga ve your daughter an overdose. You are on your own time. She has three hours to be saved." PENNCREST''42 DESIGN'' ZIG ZAG IS ON SALE! Prices effective thfu Satvrday • ·-"' ..• •' ~.> ·'"' ., Focmtres Sghtwe>ght CDnstruc6oll, 3 position steedle, 14. boih-irrt cams & deco. ratire design seledor, b~1t-in bvttonholer, temion d'iof, otrtomatic bobbin wil"lder, t.ilt-M fight over nee~. Sews forward, ~&rSe, zig zag. blind stitch hemming. A 9f*:ll" nxhinc tho! does so rMKhl REG.149.9$.,,NOW $124 ' LET A PENNCREST" HELP MOTHER! C.AMmaa CLIANI R. Full 1 HP output motor. All steel construe· tio". 4 pc.. a ccessory kit includes: rug/floor rtor:r.le, d .. stirtg bru!il1, crevice tool. uphobtery nottle. feature$ vinyl bumper, emy·roll wheel1, polyet'11ene llow, fric· tioi. wortd1 oncl MOtel 24.88 CUSTOM SHAMPOOfP'OL .. ISHER. Complete ..,ith 12 piece a cce''°ry kit co111ple .. poli!ihi"g ond sho111pooirtg kit all irt one package. Polisher will not 'urn on until hOfldle is lowered into operating posftiol\. No sploslt wheJI. 1Ct&1bbiitg or shampooing. 19.88 US£ PINNITS TIME PA YMINT PLAN CANOGA 'ARK DOWNEY HUNTINGTON &EACH MONTCV.111: ORANGE "'The City• CARLSBAD FULLERTON LAKEWOOD NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA SHOP SUNDAY TOO 12 to 5 P.M.! I Don't buy a floor AL~S~Sn~n· until you've seen e e e felt ••• stepped on the CUSHIONED CORONELLE @mstrong For a long time Penneys has said-the best vinyl floor you could buy is Armstrong Corone lle. Now that floor has been made eve n better! lt1s cushioned for comfort. An exclusive Cushioncord back softens every step •• , makes the floor feel warmer· to the touch •• , makes your home q uieter beca!Jse Cush· ioned Coronelfe absorbs im9pacf noises. Penneys has it in twa exciting po"tterns, pl1Js a choice of'7 colors. Wear layer Interlayer ONLY 10.95 SQ. YO. NOW! THESE VALUES AT ANY ON£ Of THE.SE PENNEY STORES! DOWNEY (869·4541) MONTCLAIR (621.:lBll) ' , NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE "The Cily" (644-2313) (639-.5091) FUlUiRTON HUNTINGTON BEACH lAKEWOOD (871-1343) (892-7n>J · (634·7000) SHOP SUNDAY, TOO 12 to 5 P.M.! I ·' .,For The '" :Record Ji • Ill Deech Netlee• WtdMsdl,1, M1y b, 1970 Line Looms For Vic tims Of Cupid SANTA ANA -County Clerk Wlniam E. St John's •Mual piece of advkt for the Jovekml ii in force today with the county o!f1cjal'1 reminder thal thoae pla.nnin1 June wtdding1 should obtain their marr111e llcerwes lm- !ll«llalaly. "()qr rqarrla1e Uctnae office 11 letting new records for ap- plicadons and couples wishing to marry ln June ahould go there noW," St John said. "Ap- plk:aUon mw will eliminate 1n7 inconvenience or d.laa~ polntment.'' Marriage licenses issued by St John's office in the county courthouse, 700 W. Civic Center Drive, Santa Ana, are valid for 90 days and can be used at any time within that pniod. The document can be used in any county within the iilal.e during that time span. The marrla1e llcenae office J1 open from I a.m. to S p.m., MO!!<lay throolfh Friday. County Hears Feminists' Grip es By JACK BROBACK bllnd, ernoUon.I prejudice.") "lt 1s ti.me that you slatted a newspaper reporter. "I did U1al deliberat!'ly,'' 01 111e o.11r l'iat• '~•« 4. Conduct in -s er v Ice looking upon women as human "I covered floods an d the staLti1Ch temlnlst quickly SANTA ANA -County training 1esslon1 to correct beings/' Mrs. Connor s searches tor lost children and replied. "I object to women supervisors llstened Tutsd1y S\lch aUltude1 where Ibey ex-challen5ed . "Change your at-many other stor ies In rugged being qualifld as l\1iss or l\1rs. to a »minute lecture on Uie i!t. ("Teach them to be more tltudes. 'lllere is no rtuon terrain. At times I w115 up when they ba-orne married. distribution o! county jobs by rational.") why women bosses ahou1d be th! hs · It i·ust makes tJ1e hunting sex by Mn. Joy Connors, a to my g In ~·ater. membtr ol the North Orange S. Participate ln public real\!d." "As you can Set I am Jl!)t easier for you!·• CouM• chapter. N a t i o n a J ach oo! career days in such The attractive w o m e n ' s ob t b t J t · Supervisor Robert Battin got "" f a way as to encourage gJrls, very r us u am cer a.i n Organlzalloo or Women 15 ~·ell as boys, to prepare rlghta champion scored a few that women could amply fill int.o the act with, "I wou ld (NOW ). for and seek employment in more point.a before retiring. the post of surveyor." be interested In the one-to-one 'Briefly, the »page ltudy all coonty categories. Issue She made a special poin t Supervisor Alton Allen said basis for discussion to remove shows that only about 10 per-pamphlet.a and press releases of surveyor posit.ions. (There that was contused by the my prejudices." cent of lhe jobs art well In-to educate the public in the are only three in the county ''Ms." before l\lrs. Connors' "Are you suggettlng that tegrated by if:X.'' she argued. opportunities for women employ). "Before I studled name in a press releasr. "Are ~·e lie down and talk this ''For the mt>!t part there are worker! which the county pro-law ~(now a student at Pep-you Miss or Mrs.?" he over," the woman snapped, GRAFFITI 'her' Jobs and 'hil' job&, ind vldes. perdine School of Law ) I was queried. as Balti'i1 blushed. strangely enough, 'his' jobs1-----------_: _______ :__ __ _: ______________________________ _ pay beUer-muc:h better.'' Alter listening to the report and s uggestions , the 1upervtsora referred the mat· ter to county Personnel Direc-· tor Will iam Hart. Mrs. Connors det.aUed. five suggestia11' for supervlsor:ial acUon : I. Change county record- keeping procedures $0 that there wiU be annual statistics showing the dlttributian of men and women in each job category. 2. Exerci~ the riJhts ol a gov ernment a1ency under the law by ending the coonty policy ot adhering to atate protecUve laws. (She ex- plained that stile law per- taining to wages, hours, and the amount of weight that may be lifted by women did not apply lo a government agency. ("\\'e don't want to be protected!"). 3. Conduct studies of depart. ment heads to 1 s eer t aln whether there i! 1ny prejudice 1gainst women v.'orkers on the part of those who do the hlrln1 of ernPloyes. l"In the past there his been considerable l\nnelfJ ,. r AUTO C•lln'Slt .!th...,ltl _, 1-ll llW 1111· •• ,, 1.;1 1-....... , ,,. ........ 1 wl"'lfl 1 ) .. ., 1-""-"'• el .,..,.~ .... n•~•• '' le '""""'' .,..i II will bo ,.,le<otl h tt of . .... r.· ,Ith .. 2 ~··"· ..... , •• e. •• I • ••P"•llofl do•• el ""• ~~••o••••· I. C. ,,.,.,.., Co"'· "'°"' ,.,11 ,.~<on •~• hon•·~ <~<>10;"9 Oftlf fe< th• ""0" G! .. .. ..,. .. ~;,, boMtl -!loe <Ur• l~ftl P'"• o1 .... ,;..,, el '""''"' , ....... ~ ..... llM ....... _, • 6 From Coast-Receive Honors For Heart Work ...... -·~·· SANTA ANA -!11 Oranae Coast rnidtnLs haye received apecla) awards in the Orange County Heart AslOCfation's honors lilt for 1970. Dr. VIMeot P. Carroll of Lacuna Beach, the out,.,lng pnskient of lhe organization, r<eelYed • '!'<cl•lly Jn!IC11bed medal to mark h11 year in office. An identlal award w1s madr: to Uoyd L. Aubert of Cof'Orll dtl Mar for hts service as vice pre:ddent during Car- roll's tenn. Both awlf'dl were presented by Dr. Stanley Ke&•I, the San- ta Ana heart ll)l«)all5t who takes over as president ror the 1m.n term. Also honored at the a.ssocla- UCI Plans · 'Fandango' OnSa~urday IRVINE -An early Callfomla theme will be used for the Fandan50, annual stu- dent feitival at UC Irvine, which will be held Jn Campus P•rk starting at 11 a.m. Sltw11ay. Proceeds from the event will go to UNI CAMP, In Interfaith Found.aUon project throulfh which UCI students provide camping e1perience to un- dtrllflvilepd children. The day's program will in- clude fol. dancing and slngln1, rock bands, stagecoach rides, flea market and food. 1ame and handcraft booths. A barbecue dinner will be served from 4:30 p.m. to I p.m. Barbecue tickets at $1.50 each may be obtained from the . student acUvltles office, -- lion's aMual banquet were Maj. Eu I en e Derric¥,$0fl, USMC-rel., of El Toro for seven years service as a Heart Sund•Y voluntttr; Mrs. Mary Washburn of Westm.inst.er and Lester R. Aderer of Costa Mesa for contributing more than 200 hours of clerlcal work to the 1970 campal1n i nd Maj. Gen. Floyd L. Wergel1nd, USMC·ret., of Laguna Hlll1 Leisure World, who received a bronu merltorlou.s strvlce medallion for his work as chainnan of the: 1970 Heart Fund campaign. Dr. Werfeland was alao elected president-elect. of the Orange County Heart Asaocla- tlon . Thirteen Orange Coa s t residents wm eltcted to assoc\aUon's board of dlrec· tors. Named It the !Santa Ana meeting were: James Bentley of South Laiun1; Frederic Cantrell, Ralph F. Di1on and Mrs. WUl!am Furniss oi Cos ta Mesa: Mrs. Nancy Forester of Lacuna Beach ; Norman L. Hammer, Mission Viejo; Rol11 R. Hays Jr. and Dr. John C. Kern, Newport Beach; Dr. Hobart M. Proctor, Corona del Mar: Jack Randall, Laguna Beach ; D1vld S. Robertson, Newport Beach; Frank L. Swan, HunUn(tOfl Beach and Dr. Gerald \Vh i pple, Westminster. Coffey Retains Center Position SANTA ANA -Herbert L. Coffey, a Westminster civic leader, has been reappointed to a four-year term on the WestmiMer-Orange 0-o u n t y Jolnt Civic Center Authority by the county Board of SuperviM>rs. l5,000 Boy Scozits To Convene in Mes(l More than 11,000 Boy Scouts will participate In \he 1970 Orange Empire Council Scout- Q.Rama, to be held Saturday 1L the Orange Cou n t y F1lrlJl"OUOOI in Co&la 1'.lesa . 'Ibe day-long program v;lll feature detnomtralions of a wide varitty of ecouun1 pro- IJ'llnl, .ccotdlng to Ste ve Br&Mlton ol Slnta Ana, dlrec· tor of the event. The program will bt under w1y from 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. A parade fealurln& 5,000 IC'OIJ\s, tome oper1Una Ooats &bey built them1tlves, will be llqed at l :JO a.m. on the faJfll"'Unds to l<lck -off t h e event, Bruelton 1akt Dltectln&.lht pande wlll be Gary McJIJion, director of the band at £dl1<>n Hip llchool tn HUnUngton Stach. The ICOUtll will dtmonstratt lkll1s at a plct.uttaque "lndian Village," to be operated throughout the da y under the direction of Larry Rupp or Newport Beach. 1'.fore than 11'.1 booths displaying unusual scout pro- grams also will bt in ope:r1- tion, according to Braselton. Other programs featuring scoul.s \\'Ill tnclude the Skill.(). Rama, under chairmanship ot Jac k Roome of Anahtlm, ~d lhe Cook-0-Rama, directed by Hayden Ringer of W,Una Beach. Another feature y,•111 be the PineY.'OOd Derby, for which !K.'0015 and their fAthers will race home-constructed cars. Y.'il\l11m \Vhltc of Lagu na Be1ch ls directing this event. The $1 admission charge will help finance 5COUl actlviUts durh'lg tht eoming year, 1c- cordlng to \Vllllam Doser, field director for ~he Or a n It Empirt Boy Scout CouncJL - B.R.W. BATTERY CLOSEOUT! erl1· 21.95, New $ 2 2 (litl ... 11 ..It~ -.J TM ,.I. W. givft 1hat extra surge cif power needed for high per· formance engine• a nd heavy oc- ce1M>ry loacf1. CARGO-MASTER XTD TRUCK TIRE 25.95 (670-1.$) tvbe type plus 2.40 fed. to11 fed. to• 700.15 ·····-·-··32.f5 .• -•... , .. 2.85 700.16 ......... -... 32.95 ....... ~ .... i J '•'"•··· 7()0.. IA .......... ,,..27. 95.-......... 2.73 670.15 •. '' ,,. '''.' .. 7a. 9$ .......... '' .1.10 33 MONTHS GUARANTEE WITH 10 MONTHS 100'/o ALLOWANCE fortmo1t Protection Gu1r1nle1 Your fo1 emosf lire p1 o!ect1on guarantee cowrs 111 fore most passenger lores (except our special hiah· performance !ires) against alt road ha1ard or defect la1Jures. You a1e p1otecled ror the entire staled months or cuarantee . II your tire !ails duri ng the guarantee period, return it lo us and we will , at our opt ion, re pair you r lire. or ma~e 1n allo wanc e based on lhe ong1nat purchase pric!, incl uding applicable Feder1 I [1c1se Ta t , toward !he purch1se of 1 new lire . We will allo w 100'1. ol the original purchase pric e. 1nc lud111g applic able federa l [1c1se T;ix, during the JOO~;. allowa ll(e period. There1fter, we will allow 50 ~0 or 25'10 ol !he original purcha se price, inc!ud· 1ng .ipp!1c able Feder.ii [1cise Tai , towar d the put· chase ol a new tire. (See chart below) Mer1's how yo1t1r cu1r1nlet 111inst failure works: fntir1 1uar1nt11 ptriod 33 mo11011 100~0 allo w;inc! pe 11od • 1·10 month s so~;, 1llowance pe1iod .•• ·-· 11·19 months 25•H, allow11nce p!riod •••... 20-33 months Trtad lift l'rot1ctio11 We budd into e~ery roremost lire sale traction in- d•c a!ors. They signal when your tire should be f !- t plac ed. If ynur tire we11rs ou t (except for incorrtct alignmenl) we will m1~~ an allow11nce based on th e orig ina l purchase prrce. inc!udinr 1pplicable Fedetill (Jc1se Til J, towa rd the purch11se ol 1 new tire. We will •llow '; durin1 the fi1sl llalf or ~• durinr; the second half ol !he slat!d months of guarantee. This 1u1 ranlee rs not tra nslcrab!e, It is only for pr~ vile p1s5en1er cars or pa sstnger station w11on s. NOW 17.44 p!u' fed. lox and old tire llackwall tu bele11 SIZE OllG. PID. TAX. 700-13 ' ................ 11 .45 ................ 1.'6 J6Q.1.S ...... , .•. , ...... 21 .A.S ................ 1.75 NOW 20.44 plus fed. 1011 ond old tire ll lockwall tubele11 SIZf ORIG. PID. TAX F78-14 (775-11) .... ,, ..... 2.5.45 .--..... ,2.,.44 NOW23.44 plv1 fed. lox ond old lire llackwall tubele11 SIZf ORIG. flD. TAX G78-14 {82.S-1 ") ........... 27.45 ••• : ....... 2.60 G78-15 (81.S.15) ........... 27.4$ ........... 2.60 Whitewall• only S3 moref REMANUFACTURED ENGINES Chevy 283-327 Ford 292 HERE'S WHAT YOU GET • Brand new valves, guides, lifters, ..-olve rockers, pushrods • Brond new pistons, rings and wrist pins •Blocks are mognofluxed o rt#pressure tested to ossure perf«fion • Blocks re-borl!d to preciiion factory tolerances •All new main and rod bearings and bushin gs • Crankihoft and comihoft re·ground to precision toleronc:es Ex pe rt inst allation a va ilable DRIVE IN •• , CHARGE lfl AY411.Al l l 4T Aln ()!ooll Of IHISI PIMMIY .I UIO CfN!(ts BUENA 'AJ!l'• CANOGA PAAK CAltL$1AO CHUlA VISTA DOWNfY TU tlf:llTON VENTU•A St!Of' 11UMOAT, tCO l t ,.J ,.M.I HUNT INGTON BEACH MONTCIAIR. NEWPOltT BEACH OU.HO[ "'TH! CITY"" 0.,, .. 9~,. ., v.n., View ((.\0$10 $UNOAYS) To Start A t i.ct v When Is a Person Too Old? ~ I .. ' f I • ay JOYCE LAIN are filled with Oops, whose \DeJr Jt)IC!I:, MJ HsblDd, birthdays ra~e rrom 21 to • n, Is ~a.Nat 1tarUA1 secrecy. Age. iso't '° much Ma tn ·"""'1el1 lfltt )'fart the deciding factor as ability, ti Mima , aa 'tmplofflt. I'm and, of course, var Io u s #r-111. •'• W old '-1tvt business COflikleralions. To il- erer •nd I W9ITf i boat rt.king lustrate, I'm going to tell you ear present 1tCUrity. What do JIO" U.bdt! -B. P. MEMPlllS lo know that they ire not about a remarU.ble man I ID 1DY, observ•lion, there are too old, and those wbo arc met di.iring a recent vlsit to ~ ldad! rJ. seniors who S\IC· too dwnb to know that they Utah. I was, and I think you teed on the ~nd try -are. too will be inspired by lus llose who are smart enough Bankruptcy court records --slory. • • • • 8 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 8 • DAVID EV ANS has just • • turned 78. At the age of 49, ---------- • a he decided lo cowit talents • • • • • • Comprehensive • • evemng programs • -not years -and opened • his own Onn. Today, David W. Evans and Associates, an • advertising, marketing and • public relations firm headquar- • tered in Salt Lake City has • eight reglooal offices· fr o m • • • • • • • toward degrees of ~~helor of Science: California to Pennsylvania and • an ,annual billing of nearly • $20 million. Why .... ·as he 'a motivated to st.art from scratch in a highly com- petitive field ? Because, after working 25 years for others, Dave Evans • 5}'5t~ic:; dynomic ntl'\ICfion ii gi\'tfl by on outstondi"O' foazlty ~ prOc;tidng Untists and englnHrs holding od11onced • dtgrwn frotr1 tq:i univenitlH tt11wghout tk• notion. • M°'9 than 12,000 technidam, engineers and odminlstra- • 10!'!-both l'/'lef1 and women-have con~ full-time employ- • rnerot whili working toward their degrees ot We!>t Coost Uni· • v1rsity, • r - • l .S. d .. r-~~..;1 ... rt.t. co""llter sci.tKe; .,,.1"4 meth9- • 111atla , ond ..+lid ""'"· • • was dissatisfied. He thou&bt • he was a failure! He bad a business philosophy he • believed would work better but • he needed to become the boss • to find out. • 'Ibe philosophy on which he • gambled everything is : "Al- ways do more for my clients • than I am paid to do." The • gambl.e paid off, leading • repeatedly to increas e d • • busine!s. His concept of "total involvement service'' ha s WCU \i occ,.,ited by the Wt,~m Associatio~ ot Sc.hools • made him vi rt u a 11 y in· • arw:i eon.on. and is approwd for vtttroM. • dispemable to his clients, • • many ol whom have reeom· • New term starting I mended him to other ad· • • vertisen. • • N•w u•cl•rgr•clu1t• cl•H•1 b1gin M•y 25 •*th• Or111g• Coun· • INSIDE THE SHOP, Evana ty Cent~. For inforM1tion, c•ll 171 4) 547-5712, Ext. 20, or fill • decided from the outset that • out •ncl ••'"' in th 1oupon b•low , he should sllare bis profits • • with his fellow workers. He • • • • ~ • •·• • • • • • 8 • • • • • • • • brought them into f u 11 • partnership and now the com- Huntington Boys Await Summer F1m Camp Norris, in the San Bernardino Mountains will be the site for the Huntington Beach Boys Club one-week summer camp, scbedu1ed for June 23 to June 30. Ninety-six boys will be taken on a flnt-come, first-served basis. Registration costs are set at $36. with a required $10 deposit. Activities included in the week.tong ooting will 1 ~ e archery, outdoor g a m e s , swimming and lessons, out· door cooking, fishing, nature study, crafts, overnight cam· pouts, boatJnc and C!?noeing, air riDe programs, campfire programs, so111s, stories and skits. · A staff ol. trained counselor and 11pecJaliat.s will assist the campers in the development of a balanced camping pro- gram. There will be one counselor for every eight cam· Wtdncsd.ly, MQ" 6, 1970 DAie Y PILOT J f_I,. Ugliness ls Only a Surface Thing · By Pettr J. Stelncrohn, MD l! there weren't thou11nds like thlnll: It'• uJty and uelea. tbe pUJ or capaz)e Cbat mat· · you, I doubt that drug I ·belllve fn 'prelty pbW ten; not U. ....,., colorful Somewhere I read that an manufacturers would trouble pilll.' " coating. My penona1 tkfbli· ugly woman seems uglier than to ofter so many color com· I respect the oplnlons ol lion ol. an ugly plD la one an ugly man. tr it ii that bi.nations. the oolol'-COnlcloul u well 11 tbat ' doao't wort. U tt does beauty is in the eyes of the One patient said lo me the color-bllnd. Neverthe)tu the job lnttnded, Jt'I beluti!ul, rteently, "[ don't tnJlt a it'• lmportant to rHmpbalbe not ugly -even if Jfa plain beholder, I think it ls also plain, white pill. In fact I U. truism : It's what'• inside white. evident that a handsome ,-'----"------------------------- woman is undeniably more handsome than a handSOtne man. I SUPPOSE it ls a far-fetch- ed airnile, but many colorful · drugs appear more palalable lo some people than plain n'ltite ones. Why attn'i all pills white ? 1 presume, that for countless patient!, pink, blue, green, red, brown, purple pills ''go down easier." U DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE be auty is skin deep, so is the effectiveness of a pill, What's deep down imide is what counts. ' DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: J ha ve been taking blue-and· while vitamin capsules for five years. \Vhcn my doctor died recently, I asked the new doctor for the sa me vitamins. He wrote out a prescription. When · I had it filled I discovered Iha! the cnpsules were ordinary while. Although the pharmacist said they con- taln e1.actly the same doses of vitamins, T'in sure they do not help me as much as the old b I u c -a n d -white capsulrs. \Vhat would you sug- gest. -Pt1HS. 8. COI\tMENT: I'm sure your doctor will agree I.hat your penchant for blue and wh.ite be fulfilled . Just tell him how color~onscious you arc. I'm not being ironic of fa cetious. BOAT BUFFS Almon Loc••b•y 11 th• only full·tilll• bo•lin9 •diio, wor•inq on a"y n•w1"•p1r In Or•n9• Cou11ty, His •1clu1i"1 co"•••9• GET MOST* FOR YOUR .MONEY ••• at KEYSTONE SAVINGS *Keystone crlway1 poy1 the mott on lnaured n;w-int• allowed by lflw.I Come In today ••• get the fa(f1 •• •,.feet tll9 1aw-ln11 plan fw ,.._ 5" • ND ....._ *'1oM """""" PASSBOOK ... ,,..,. .. """"""- • rlol•,_ _ _.,,...._.A~ 5%" •N•,..._...,_~ PASSBOOK • lf...,ltN '° ... -'tfWll ttDtkD .. wltlNhw •• ......,_Ml}Wtf#/11 ...... _,,,., ....... 5%" • """"--....... ''·"°" CERTIFICATE • M.w-"""" I,_.. G....,,,._--'rWtl&.ft .,.,,..,._..,.._,,..,.... .... ,,., .. ~ 6" • ~ ..,,_, lf,llOt CERTIFICATE • Mf/11(-,.,.,,.,..... 0""1tltftd-.l rWt/&1~ •• .,,,.._......,.,,MllMll ••• ,,,., .. ......,, __ 7%% eMW-....... ,IH.«111 , , • • CERTIFICATE • Mlttl-IWl't f ,,_.., O~.,.,..,._.,'llM1."" ' • '-'• .. ,,,q,,,,.., If wft!IMwit,,,., ... ~ • • PIH MONTHlY llOIOSOONS _...... lw ,... .... " .,,..., °""' ""'""' ···"',,.., .....,. ........ ..... • PREE SAR DEPOSIT BOX KEYSTONE IAVINOI AND lOAH ASSOCIATION t-ld W, c.p.n. ~ • £xecu1ivt Office : WESTMINSTIR • ANAHE1M OffMe n••I N Ho' P•.nny ln11 "'-· 193-1'91 ' e U • • a pany is partially owned by • west oast ru vers1ty • several d 0 ze n employees. • Another factor counting beavi· pers. of lto•tiotl) •nd . v•cht in9 n•wt • ly in his success Is his • 550 So. Me in St. • Oren91,-Cali f. 92668 • P.20 , h I • mastery m uman re alions. • Don LeFevre, a copywri ter Addltiooally, the Boy's Club 11 • d•ilv f11 tu,. of th• DAI LY of Huntington Beach Ls allow-. PILOT. ing boy1 a chance to earn !'==========:~----------------------------...; their ways to camp by selling • Pl•••• 1•~ ,•f•lo9 •nd lnform11ion '" under9radqat• proigr1m. • • • with the firm, e.xplalns: "Mr. Evans never tried to 'bigman' it with his employees, He alv"ays rolled up his !lceves boys' club peanuts in their respective neighborhoods. • a Undergraduot1 pfOOnln'I • Those interested in signing up for the camp are urged to get in their $10 deposit as soon as possible. The balan- ce of the camp fee must be paid 10 days before a boy leaves for camp. Further in- formation may be obtained • and did more than his share • • of the work. He think fairne>S • ADORE>S.--------------~ • and consideration of the other guy's viewpoint are the dues • CITY-----,.----~"·------• he pays to the 'saLisfied • employee' club, and he likes • • to be a member in good stan- ding." • ~····················~ by calling the clubhouae at 536-9415. An electric dryer with a permanent p~ cycle. It won't be long before virtually all household and clothing fabr ics will be permanent press. Already 85$ of all men's slac ks sold arc p erm anent press, 80$ of dress and sport shirts a,nd 33$ of women's dresses. And that's great for saving you time and money. But permanent press fabrics do need special attention in drying. They get it in the ne\V electric dryers with a per· manent press cycle. Programmed to give i ust the right amount of heat for the right amount of time, electric dryers gently Buff up the fibers in permanent press fabrics, Whydoweemphasi%eclectric?Becausc they're fl ameless and odorless. And because electtic dryers cost up to $30.00 less than comp arable models of gas dryers. No wonder they outsell gas drye~. n ationally 2 to 1. lncidcntally, if you're one of the lucky ones enjoying electric living in a Medallion Home, your electric dryer outlet is built-in.Just plug in that new dryer. Look into the new wrinkle in electric dryers tl1at stops \Vrinklcs in permanent press fabrics. Sec your appliance dealer today. Southern California Edi8on sCJS . ELEORIC DRYERS AND PERMANENT PRESS FOREVER! MOM WILL LOVE THESE ' LASTING Gins OF FINE JEWELRY! TAKE YOUR PICKi A. ladies fashion watch in up·to- t he·minute styling. ·--·-···$ 9.U B. 2 diamond cultured pearl pen· dant in 14K White gold setting. ----·----19.50 C. Mothers' Family Circle Ring* The only ring for mother with all birthstones sealed in gold. 16.95 O. Heart sha ped Mothers' f amily Pin; I2K yellow or wtlite gold filled. ·····-··-·-··-----·-12.50 £. 14K pierced earrings. Large choice of styles. ·······-····· .. ···• 5.00 F, Sterling silver boy and girl head charm bracelet. ··-·-·· 11.95 Heads ···-··-··--··-··---··· 1.75 G. Diamond stud pierced ear- rings; stunningly set in pur• 14 K gold .................. -........... 19.95 H. l adies Bulova 17.Jewel watch~ yellow or white l OK rolled gold with beautiful matching bracelet .•• -........................... 40.00 I • Ladies Bulova .11 Jewel Witch with 2 diamonds; shock resls~ tant. unbreakable mainsprin g. 55.00 J. Cultured pearl rin1 set In 14K · gold. .. .... -·---··-··--· 19.95 K. 12 d iamond dinner ring. The gift s he's always dreamed of. 150.00 L. 14 K bridal s et with 2 fiery diamonds. ·-·--·--235.00 fMMlDIATE DtLMM-#0 WA/TIKI *~tic• lntll,lfQ on• tynln.tle atont. Mditlon•I tlitM Mtt• NOii, I , I I 111 Ii' ,1, --I· II 11·11'lill1!'. .'"I~;_ ... · , I ~. ,,,Ji. : 1,111111: ,1,,~· • ~M . -I·· "' -F ,,.. I " I . '11 I> ,•• ~ I '' -'~·""" .... ' I I '· I " ·I .. ,., .. , . .i 111~'fi~~lf-: 111 11 I ,·~ii;?)'. "1' 1 ''"'i Ill I ···•Y ' I 1'1111 I ' I " ' ' · !1 "' I: · , -~::.._ - =--·~ : •. ~~·~---~ -v "'"~W' . ~·I --:--. CHARGE IT AT YOUR PENNEY'S FINE JEWELRY DEPARTMENT SCIKillldl'lr ,,. f1nt ~ COl'l'tplN """" ltMoll l ' I , • • ., •.. , ... : .. .. ..... •• •• "' .. •> " "' " ·1 • • • ' I I ' d 11 I I I t I I I f I I I .-------.l NOW! THESE VALUES CANOGA PAllK CAALS8AD DOWNEY FUWTON LAKEWOOO SHOP SUNDAY, TOO AT ANY ONE OF ._TH_E_s_E_P_E•_•_E_v _sr_o_•_Es_!~ HUNTINGTON BEACH MONTa.AIR NEWPORT BEACH VENT\JRA __ 1_2_·1 .. o_s_P_._M_._, _ .. • • J I OAll.V PILOT Wrdntsday, May 6, 1970 Ropes & Necklaces ~ Chooserromgofdlex- .\ .• '. lured Ropes and mul- • · •. . · t1p1e strand Neek- --:-: laces combined with 7 , : variou s colored ~. : . , . • ctlanel stones . . -~-250 •• ·~ .... ~~-· EACH • "Heaven Sent" by HELENA RUBINSTEIN It's lle1we1 tt &ft• -11• ti receive w ···- Spray Mist in a satiny new, flower-3 00 sprayed gift package. -4.75 Yaf1e • Handy & Body lOTION -A fragrant new soften ing, moisturizing lo-2 00 tion. later, price will be 3.50. How • -~- t NWB·5 Al home on any din- ing table ..• keeps bread and buns warm, fresh and flavorful all through the meal. Paisley print cover 1n assorted colors. 8.88 SALTON El1ctric "Egg-0-Matic" Aluminum body with walnut grained han· :~~1:~~;£'. fliber gouter su9~ac5e. feel·~ dialed" eggs everyfime. I ER· 1 • SALTON "Gourmet" Hot Tray with Adi.ntablt Temperature Control r.::; large 141hx8\7" healing area can IF1 ::,.':~~ floo4s6ho1 ·1911 yoo5 ~-----~f/r,i_ / egant addilion lo any !able. #H-121 I I , AT Real Jtrf1m1 ••• Ill j1st Ctl11n1I A &irl can't get too n'llCb of , the real thing ••• all -il'essed •P and ready to give. • AJhrodlsia . • Waedh1 •J ilttu • Fl1mbea1 . • Ki.kt "KIKU" COLOCN£ SPRAY t Anew exciting l Yi IL :gr~:tirJ. 5 00 after her bath. • •Win d So ng i • Prophecy 1· Spray Cologne •Beloved 3 50 Choosefromljll>rodisia,Tigress, • Golden Autu mn W110dl111e and Flamilfaol. · ---4- Wtdneldl.y, May I:., 1970 PILOT-AOVERTISER 8 HOUBIGANT tbe lr11111ee that c111nk1y11rworld! "Desert Flower" GIFT SET -An Ideal Gift fa r-EHIJ OccasiOI ••• Oght '1 lo,.ly Desert flower S..... Cologne 2 oz. and Duslin! Powder~ oi. in gift bok. 2.25,_ .. ~ Spring Boutique features the ele-gance of lor-~ ,,,.,,...,._,,,,...,...,,.....,....,.....,,,.....,_...,..., toise-tone. ~ i PRINCE MATCHABEW Wind Song "Clean Scene" COLLECTION 3 00 Make It prettier -softer -fragrant.er. Be- Eaa d T "letle S M. cause now Wind Song comes in tbings !JI splash, e 01 pray ISt a balhe and shower in loo. Evt!fy~ing super- 2 75 ,.istunzing too. Every tlllt Wind Son! girt will !.: see tile advantages wtthout ftrrtlter ado. Perfumed Dusting Powder • i · 3 SO ANNUAL V. PRICE SACE ON TUSSY Deodorants l ~~ ~ · t After Sbmr Splash • . .. .. • coTY '' Emeraude'' t Mo!stur!z!ag Bady ~ion ... 2. 00 l M01stlriZ1ng Balli 01 I 3 50 SOLID Colognes ~ : ~-· ~ Anilable iR three fragrances 50C ~ TABU ••• 20 CARATS ••• ... ~ AMBUSH 75 c ~~·-· ~ •• ,. 2.25 LICH 1.00 WHt ki• II kl 11111 If a llH? TIJ klil( •111 If I Wl•IL • § • Spray Mist 1!h •L 4. 00 Dusting Powder 5~ •L 3. 00 Parfum de Toilette 1 ~i,:'· 2. 50 2~1:'· 4. 00 For lh e Elegant Womaa Wbo Demands ' a Lasting Fragrance a'~ "Boutique" i WHITING "Sl11r Fantastic" ... choose from assorted col- orful designs. Each box con- tains 30 st\et!ts a~ 24 en- velopes, j BOI 1.49 = -· LADIES' Scuffs Cotton Jerry in .,,, p.ist~ colors. Satin (acetate) side gore, foam cushioned insole, rublle< sole. S·M-L j I ••1. 2.11 2.49 En ~· c111111 2 75 s n4 IL • BldJ Piner Mist 2 75 4 tt. • Talc 411.1.50 2-Piece Sift Set Part•• (H jo T1il1tt1 '"' lat~ P1wd1r 3.00 FLORIST llUlllTY Corsages II l rilij fir Mlthr! ""'t co~~ keep h sh br tube with 1U5ervativt • lution. Each with matdling nel and n)bon. ••11•j 1t11j 1.251.98 CLDTHlS Hangers ~ .~,. . . . . ' ·-. . ... ~ .. -·~~~~ • ... •• ·•· " '"-ti • ·"~ or Sawer Gel ........ L • ~=r Oil •• 4.()f) Shaker Talc • 2. 50 LADIES' Panty Hose Charmeen AND NYLONS Seamless demi-toe, nude hee l, of 1110% nylon for every "'' wear. Ladies' sizes i11 assorted :::.;~, 59c""'""""" "Perfonna" Ass111111Y -100% sheer slrekh nylon Cantrece II• by DUPONT. Caa't run! Can't sag! A perio:t fi4 always. 3.98 Channeen Pn!J l HISI SET Co1llaiAs one ,..ty and ont p.iir of 100% nylon Stoel<· ings waist-to-toe smooth· P!!SS without hooks, "'aps. or 1arters. Ass1 sllodes i1 PeUtll 111111. sizes. 1.99 - ' -------------------......... --~~~-~-~~~· -· ---•• • 7 PILOT -ADVERTISER . . BOYS' l GIRLS' SLEEPWEAR for SUMMER Canada Dry WhelllO' it be co1y print pa. j.,,.s, frilly &0•11S or colorful . baby dolls, llYf little &i~ will be sure to find ,...,! di""" = under her pillow wllen ~ she dm1s olf losleep in sleepwear from our collection. Si11s 2-4 1.69a Si1t1 4·14 1.98a Lotion or flil Z·tz. Sl1t 4..,, Silt ,79~.EI. 1.49 EA. ' Lotion or Oil ~j~~-2 • 49 II. &:.::.\ Tanning '6i' Butter lV.·ot. Silt 79~ Extra Protlclloa ~gtt~~l .49 -Aerosol Butter I 11.1.59 Permanent Press lot tho llttlo Miss dloose lie< i-for !lo Wilflll oigh1s aliead ••• Lorge $1/ectloo of p1j1m1 ~ ''""· calottes lld boby dol~ ii -prints tlat !>Oil fml " 1 ..,.. 11'11 day. SllH 2-4 1.98 [A Sins 4-14 " 2.39 [A • • Boys will "' ""' ..... l<t ~im sleep ii comfort after 1 r.-., ilard day of OJm- ,._ .,~· ,.., play. Select ~· r 11om z -pod pa. ":1 Jamas or cool slortee ll'i""'s 11 colorful prints. Sim 2-' .1.69 [A Sins4-14 2.19 E~ ~· "Sampler" Everybod(s favorite box of chocolates ••• ll0•2 35 with two identical layers. 1 ·1~. lu • ~ "MINIAIVIE" 2 15 CHOCOl.ITES-ISsortmenl of deficious -with milk and dart chocolate. HI. In • "Masterpieces in Cbacolites" MIXFIELD'S-1 ••iety to suit lq.1.llU. every taste ••. mild and daot choc-1 39 or1tes surroundi111 delectable centers. • • S1IH/Flllt ltwl • Ntstns Tray • $1n11f TraJ • C11•r Jar YaUI CHOI Cl 88~ UPA;ES SOFT DRINKS lntflll flnlll 11 12 IL .. P1ll·TI'" C111. ~,·~ 1. 99 UV.tz. C111 SERGEANT'S 'Sentry' ' Flta Colian !tr DOIS l CATS. CH- trol• tlch, 1111. 9 9 C 111.1.ll tL 'Golden Vigoro: LAWN FOOD C~11s1 fr1m "R111!1r" aad "Dic~oa•ra or Grass" form1111s. 1 "' 4 · 41 3 49 251~. Bats • u. - Thriftape Renuzit Air Freshener llUl.11-t-llEIU Bath Scale D1stinct1ve oval shape with embossed q11iltlng, pitk119 hal- dle. lssorfot Color$. 6.98 .lssol1meot of 5 cup llOr~ ""' 1014 trim di· signed t~tl i11 1 99 a seleclio19 of shapes. 11. • IEEDS Bagged Candies S.p of delicious individually wrapped ~ieces. flavors to choose from. hf. 27• ....... , 4i1.00 • "$"" Stitl" fo .... ~ ••• v.· Clloose from 5 fragrant scents. in dispenser. C wide by 1500" 29 llf. Jk .. N.&i!SJJJSJJ&!!Z AO PllCES PREVAIL, lhllllf, MtJ 711 tin S11hy, M1y IDtl Wtdnrs.d1y, MlY 6, l<J70 KLEENEX Paper Towels 27.~ ''Contac'' COLD CAPSULES TOOTHPASTE 111. &tc 5 1z. Ki1r Size 2i$1 ''VOSu HAIR SPRAY NEW ""' ...... = =-wltb MIRAL. .. Cl11st &i'J trom 3 tormlfl11. 111. 1.19 1 29 "1!fJ 1T1z.Siz1 • II. 3.98 ... ARDEN or CARNATION CllOOst lrom "O~ f"hioned" qual ity flavors & new ones too! *GALLON 59c ROUNDS DAILY PILOT I:S SAY-ON DELUXE HAND PACKED Rich, creamy Ice cream in ii large v11iety ot ltaVOts. You get up to 40% more when packed at SAV·ON. Piat 35~ Qt. 5gc SMUCKER$ Ice Cream Toppings Always smooth ml creamy. • Chocolate SyNp, fudge, Butterscotch, C¥all1!1 1nd 3~ Plneawle. llf. 41c ZhL Silt 11. .,,,..,.,. .... -~ .. ~··'. . .... .. • J 4 DAil Y PILOT LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE .. _ CE•Tll'ICAT• OP IUllNEU Wfdn~, M11 6, 1970 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE l'ICTITN>UI MAME IA• M1t The ul'l!llnl~ oa cenlf'f' 1"-'Y art IUl'lllOlt COUltT 01' CALll'OllNIA o:ondVdlll9 t boniness '' J'1 N. Hi!'W-1 COUNTY 01' OllAflO• 8!\ld., N~ lliladl, C.llfomll, Linder 1111 Wnt •ltlltll llrMI the lkllllous lkm ... ,.,. "' THE LOOM ,.,,II ·~· Calfwlll• Utt ROOM Ind trial UICI llrrn Is comPOMd CAS• NUMl•l o-ltlMI o1 "''° lollowlnt ...--. Wl'lose 119"'" SllMMOflS IMAllUAl•I LEGAL Nal'ICE LEGAL NOTICE • l"llDI, .,.~ in full incl pita ol n11l<$enet '" In re Ille ,,,...,1111• of Ptlltloner: ts totlDwl: , Judith Fr111CQ Sot rt n 11 n •nctJ--------------J Rllc>h J. CU!inlNMm, 300 E. P1clflc •1_.oe>11: Ki. ... G9or111 $oerMSen P•J1tlt Co.st Hlfllt..-•Y· ....... rt Sue.II, Call!. To Ille ll"Sl'Ofldent: ·-~ .......... CllTll'tCATE 01' IUllNl:ll Elolw tf, Cvnnllillham, :)lllt E, P-.;Ulc TM ...,1111oMr hft rt. ... 1 Pl _, PICTITIOUI NAMI coast Hil!h..-., N~ tNCh. Calif cmiearlllnt rour marrt..11. You m11< The ..,...,lhlned does (l!l"flfY he Is Oatwcl AMII 'u, l'10. ' rtle 1 written ••-wUh ln thirty COllllllCllM 1 bu1111tu ti no C T11Sllfl ,.,_ din al the dslt ftlal 11111 wmmons Av1., Naw,ort a..ai, Callfonlj,o, llllilltf" RllPh J, .......,lftthem Is l¥VtOI M vou. 11 l'OU ltll lo Ille the llctltlolll llrrfl Mmt of MISTEll EIOIM H. Cunnln91wm I wrifm'I ,_ wlttlln ...ch tfntt, 0 and that 1-11d lll'l'ft 11 COMllOltd STATE OF CALll"ORNIA, fOUf dllilUll fl'IOIY be ..,Nrld and thll! <Iii ttlt fGllowl"" .... ._.. wfloMI .,.,.,. COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES court ""'' enlef" • lucltmtnl (:Onfllnlntl In f\111 Incl "'''' °' rtsldenc.I II I I On APrll 14, UJO, blfor1 ,..., I Nolarl' lnlvnc!IYI 0# oll\l!r ordt11 conc:trnl!'lll lolloWI: F'ubllc In .n.t fOf Mid Stele, PtrllOnlllY 01¥111on of PfOPlf't(, -Ill WPllClrt, JOr 011!. 11.nll Cl'QIOft SlrHI, N-· ePPHl'Pd Atlllll J. C1Jr>nlnah1m .. l!!lolll dlUd cVatootr. dl11d llJl>POrl, 1 Hom1r1• l!k, Ctm. H. Cunnl119'11m known to mt to be 1111 rees, costs, Ind Midi o!Mr rtllrl 11 Daltd April 17, lt1!1 l>tf"IOllS Wi'loM "'/'Ml ........ blcrlbold "' fnlr be ll'Mlttcl lrt """ court. ~ Olli ~ wlltlltl lnslrvmtnl and acknowledlld If 1'W whll I• -t lawr., hr STATE OF CALIFORNIA. fhet' nec:llled tt1t 11/M MYio Ill tJlit -11..-, '" 1lllvN • Olt.l.NGE COUNTY: COFFJCIAL SEAL) • H -.ilY • lflll ,,_. ..,111• ,_.... On Allfll 11, Jf1t, before mt. I ff 111t. "'" .. ""'" ti-, No11rv Pultllc 111 and for 11kl s111t. ~-fl-J.pJ·~k • CtlUornt.. 0.lecl ""r11 U, 1'111. ..er-HY IPMtred Joe 0111, kMwn 1'' ""' W. E. ST )QHN, Clert: IO me fG be JM i>erson Wl\olf n1...., PrlMINI Offlct 1t'1 Ir Anl'-l' A, Tflolnplllfl 11 i\lbKrlbtd to Iha wllhln ln1lrumtnl LDI Alllltia Co!Jf>IY Oeputr tnd 1ck11D1¥1tdsied lie l:l;K\lled lht lllM. Mr CommlUlon E•Plret !SEAL) totflcltl :ittU Oecembel' n. 1'71 The ~ t nd 01htr l'ft•mllled El11t M. Cerv l'ubll11'1t11 Ori"-Coast DllHY PltDf, NH" mU1! be In wrl!!"' and Ill Not1ry l"vbllc • C11itornl1 APlll 22. 2'. Mir ,, IJ, 1t70 7lf-1'0 JM torm procrlbtd by !!It C1Hlornl1 Ot1ntt Countr --------------1Aulet (If Court. The't' m11JI be flied Mr c-1s11M E>;Plre1 LEGAL NOTICE In 11111 court W11h tho Prcl9e• 1111111 No~. 11, n7l ------~~~------Jlet and proof of 10Nla: of 1 COPI' Publlshtd Or111t1r Coad !Hlly PJlol of ••ch 1111 pelJ!loner. APrll :n. ,., MIY '· n, 1f1t 7]3..JO ,._.,.., llAYMOND J. ltO'ITAN --- ClllTll'KA.T• Of' IU!INISJ IUI Ntf'I~ ll'ltMI Slrffl LEGAL NOTICE "'ICTITlOUS NAMI!! Slftlt .1,,.., C&llltor-lt t11ll The tinOenllMd .,.. urtltY ""' he Ttl. Ne.: 0141 so .. 1u Is condut!lng I ll!JsiMU tt ''°' Ntw-1 Alle"'n' fer l'lllfie-lllvd .. tk.-t &each, C11Jfornl1, under PUl>llill«f Oringe Cati! 01111 l"llOI. Ne , Ii, SNtC f~ llcllllou1 firm ntml ol FIRE HOUSE .-..rlt 2' Mt1 , l3 2fl 1'Jlll no.ro Cll:llTll'ICATI. 01' I UUN•SI UPHOLSTl!"RY and tl\1! safd rtrm Is ' ' ' • l'ICTITIOUJ l'l•M NAMI! e<>mPOR<f o1 thl' ro11o .. tng "''""" whost LEGAL N-CE Th• und1rol11ned dot• hertbr c"lllY nema Jn full llld place ol r"ldtnee v11 llNI he I• conductl111 1 «>n""'l!IM 1enolcn ii II follOwl! budneu u lf01 Glenwood ........ Cflv Anltart M. C!vhtlna, 511 Mt'lluerlle, NOTICl TO Cll:EOITO•s cl "'NtwPOrt fle1ch, Coontr of Or1ng1, CorOM Oet "Wr. C1t1tomi1 SUPEltiOll COUlltT 01' TH• St1hl of Ctllfornlt , u"""'r tht! fldlttou. Dalfll APl'll 1$, "lt1t ST.I.Tl! Df' CAUl'Ollt•OA 1'0111:. firm namt or c!Mklnallon wtlldl OClou AnhftY M. Chrl1lln1 TH• COUNTY Df' OllANVE "°' shaw the true n1me or fllmel STATE OF CALll'OANIA. He. A 45'44 "'""" PffJOnl Interested In l lkl 1tu1rneu. OftANGE COUNTY: E1l1"' d CATHElllNE S, lllNi>Ell, -It: CA,LIFORNIA OCEAN SEll:VICES ()II APril IS, 1'10. btfore -· I NollrY DftttMd. Ind 11181 11ld firm 11 com-" d Publle 1n Incl for .. Id Si.le, ptr_.aJty NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE"' lo 1t11! ll1t loflowlnt Pfrson, Wl\Oll fll/M Ind •u•peared Anlllany M. ChrltllM •nown credU°" (If tt1t above n1med decedtnl tddreu 11 11 followl: to me to be the Pfn.o!I w!'H>H ....... ltlll 11! Pf'SOlll ... Vlllf cttlrM l!llln~I Thom.ti L Slppl. lffl Cltnwoolf LIM. b wbscrlbfd la flle within ln1INrnent 111r uid decedtlll irt rt<111!rld le fllt New....rt lttcl!. C1lltorn!1 end ~Jed9ed 11111 ~ e•ea.led the 11\tm, with 1111 111«111rr YOU<hers. lll WITNESS h11 hand IM1 14t~ dtY s1.-. the office of Ille clert: of ttlt tboYt of April, 1t111 /Olfkllll Sffl) rntllled C'O<lrt, or Iii preHnl 11\tm, wllh STATE OF CALIFORNIA Wlttlam V. Schmidt Ille llKtu.ilrY ~'"" lo the u~ COUNTY OF 011.1.NGE. SS. Na!•rv Publk • C.1U1ornO. deojjintd In uri of Jamn L Rubel, On lhll IMll d•Y of Aorll, A 0. 1170. or1ner Ceun" Jr .• .1.~ • uw, 3432 VI• Oporto, befor1 mr. "'" Undtrs11ned. 1 Nat1rv MY comrnts11on E><Plr11 Newpart lltadl. c.tllfornla, '16611, whlcl! l"ubllc In 1nd tcr »kl Cl!Mmtr tnd • J1.,. 2', ltn I~ !hr •lace o1 b\11lneu of ll'tll 11ncltr1l1ned St1te, tellcllnt therein ouly cammlnlontd W1TTMAN & SCHMIOT !11 ... 1T1tlltrt Plrlatnl ... -lo the ntafe Ind 1worn. ... ....,...llY •PM•red Tl!Om11 .., WILLIAM V. SC"MIOT o1 "Id d'ctdent. within !avr monll\s L. S!ppl known tll ""' to bt the IHI Wutcnfl Dr. al!tr l~e fir.I publlct11on of 11111 ftl>llce. person Whose nt-I• wbocrlbtd la ... ...,.,,,.. ltKll, Ctlll. nut Oiied April "· 1'70. tht wl!hln lnllNIMnl. Ind •clc-ltdl!ed ""'"'" /1f Patrlc!a Spertuhl to mt 11111 lie ue<;.11led !ht 1•mt. P ubll11\ed 0Tlntl Coast D1llY F'!IOI E~ecvtrll of the Ellllt WITNESS my htnd Ind ol!lt!1I ltll. Al"'ll n. 1'. fMr .. u, lflO T.Jl.111 af the 1b0¥e ......... doce<ltnt !SEAL) C:. ..... =._;c.:c:;_::_;::_ ..... c_ ____ ,JAMii L. •UIEL. Jiit. P1ut D, Mf;C11~y LEGAL NOTICE AlterntY 11 Ltw Notary Publoc •n 1nd for --------------·J>4U Vt.. Dptrtt Sllcl Cou~IY '"" St11t P.Jl'llN NtwMrt IMtll. Clllf., '2Uf THOM.I.I (, klNG CEllTl,ICATE DI' IUSIN•S Ttlff~-= 1no IJMln !Sl1 Wtdtllff 0r1 ... l"ICTl1'10U''~~~.,,~-: AltlrntY hr l!XtculrlK HIW"" ltac~. C1tllenl11 TM undtrollnell ;.. cert f' er1 P11bH1hed Or1fltt CGt!I 0111Y P!ktt, Aflerntr cfndUCl!lll 1 M!ne11 11 U21 El Cimino Aprll :f, Mir 6 l:J, J(I 1f70 I02·70 Publl!l\ed Or1111e Ca.nl R:ttl. sen ClerMnle, C•llfornla, under ' ' A1>rU n. 2'. MtY '· 11, 1'1G 1hr nc111kn11 firm name of LADYBUG LEGAL NOTICE SliOPPE and 11111 11111 nrm Is comoos..t1--------------I o( the fGllowl,,. --..,.,,_ nlmfi SUl'ElllDll: COUllT 01' CALll'O•NIA LEGAL NOTICE In lull Incl placr1 ot rt1!de11« .,. COUNTY 01' OllANGI 11 lallowl: 111 Wl'lf It~ llrttf IAll 2m Oennl1 C. 8.luer, 391t C1lll! JUl'IO, Stnt• A .. , Clllflt'llll IUPllllOll CDUllT OF THIE Sin Ci.menlt, C..!U. CASE NllMIEll D J4'7t JTITE OF CALll'OllNIA l'O• Jedi G. Thunn1n, 12151 JKUon SUMMONS IMAllltl.1.011 TH• COUNTY 01' 01.ANOll: Sl., G11'den G•-, (•Ill, In If "" m•••llOI of PtllllonM: NI. A-652:11 O•led April n. 1,l'O JUOITl'l ANN ARNOLO Ind l nPOAMnl: NOTICI! 01' I.I.LE OF 11£AL 1'110. 01'nnl1 C. 81upr ROIERT MARCUS ARNOLO PEll:TY AT PRIVATE SALi STATE o~'~EIF~~~~~n A~~:~ RHPOnd1nl; lOIElT MARCUS LJ~.~~ ~J~E~L~N', ~~::1:. JANET (lflANGE COUNTY: TM l>lflllont:r ti.II fllM 1 petition NOTICE IS l'lE ~EBY GIVEN lllAI On April 13. 1t111. ~or• m!. • COf!Ce'MIM your ........ 1_ Yau may !!It 11nder1lt1ned. JAMES E HEIM, ~ub!lc Nat•,., P11blk In and for u lll Sl1te. lilt 1 wrlllen reu>e"1e Within lhlrtr Admlnl1tr1lor. 11 Administrator ol rho ...... sonau,. ·-•Kl Ornnl1 c. l1uer dl~S of ""' dlt. th.I! till• tulJ'mOM E1t1tr of JANET LOUISE SUMMEllLIN. Ind Jact G. ThurlTllfl •-n tll mt 11 ''""" aft JOU, If rou tall le lfJe dKUled, wUI 1111 ti prtv1!0 lllt lo la be tt1t "'"""' ..-host ntllttl 1r• 1 .,rlltM ,.,.,_ w1111lll IUCh llmt ~ hl111ftt t nd ~t nrl bldlltr. 11!1< iublcrlbed to ltll wlll>ln IMll'Vfnlfll Ind 1 wrlll'ln "IPWIH wlltlln llldl time' dtductlen of •n• r..,uested brol!t1r'1 CM'I· act,_lldlld lhfY' •••uled Ille l-llM. 't'OU• drltull tnlY bt "'"'Id Ind 111f mls11on. uoon ltlt tem11 and ~!1'°"1 IOll!Ct..I S..11 court may en"'• 1 1udllment mnlitnlM M••l111fler mtntloned, tnd 1ubltc1 10 P'-bt J. li1!1ua lnlundlw or °"'"" on1ir1 tonct'Tlllll conflrmallon ...,. ltle • b o Y e ·en t I t t e d Nolll"!' Public -C1lltornl1 dlv1ilon of DrGPtrf'f'. IPO\l"I SUDPOl'I. S<JPll'loo" Court, en Wl'dM1d1v, M•v 70. lirlncl11I Olllce In child CVllfod7' dllld lllPl>Orl ittornert' lf111, 11 ""' !lour of tw.lve a'doc• Ortner Cl\lt\IY~ lets. eo1t1, ~ illdl * nllrl 11 noon, or ""''''""' W1!h1n lht llmt MY Commission E•Dlre<o may bt eranled by Ille c.ov•I. t llo\lltd bJ r1..-. 11 the olfkt of lt1t , Januarv I. 1'12 Ir YOU "'"' to Ht 1 llwY« tor fd· Put>Uc AdmJ"l1lr1tor, 1lf1 E111 Che1lnut Pubhsl'led' Or-Coast 0.llY P iiaf ~ In lllll .... 1111' .,.. tllould do H SlrHt, Stnll AM, Ctlll0rnl1 9VC.I. 111 AP•ll 22. 2', Mir 6. ll. 1t1t 71~1'0 _t,, 11 !hit ~ w•llt9!o ru-. r'9M. tlllt, !nlll"HI 1nd 111111 Ill' 1111d LEGAL Nal'ICE 11 tnY. rnt't' bt fllld 111 llmt. ' JANFT LOUISE SUMMERLIN, dectMed. OtNd Mardi ' 1'111 •I !he llm, of ntr dt11h, 1nd 11! W. E. si JOHN. Ct.fir rl,ht, tllt.e Ind lnttrut 11\at 111d eslllt 81 H, A. SPRINT, O"""' hal llC<IUl,.d by -rlllon of llw or SUl"ll"•ICNt COUllT 01" nt• !SEAL) ollltorwl11, olhtr lhan or In addition STATI ,Of! CAL.IFOlll:NIA l'Oll The tetHnH 1n11 other ffrmflllld lo llltl of 111d d11«dent 11 !ht 111'111 TH• CO\IMTY Off OllAMO• NPlrl 1111.1$1 be In wrlll.,. Ind In of lier dt•lh, In llnd I<> lhtl Ctrt1!11 CASI NUMUll llllfl !lie ......, ~scribed by "" Cilllornlt •ttl 11raoerh • de.scribed 11 tollow1, lo SU~I Ruin of CO!lrl. Thn" ""'" bt filed wll: C. W, M IE STE. llt , llOll!l:T 111 !hit. (Ollrf willl 1t1e ll~r 1111"9 lo! 51 !'f Tr1d 34l1 I ' """ "''" IEAUCHAMI". AlllT IWENOSEN, .I. C. flt and orvof of Hf"Yk.t of • COPY fl!Cordtd 1n 8oolo; 17'. Pt-11. 11 GIANULIAS. 1~ M. W. IMMIL.L .i,.., et eedl M pplll1-f'. Ind :IO of Ml'c .. lt~ov• ~\1p1, recordl buslNll .• PAllllCWOOO HOMEI .... H. JACK MALL Of °''""' Countv, CtUl'orn;., L. Nt.. STlllUCK 1nd M. W, IMM!l.L ......, l.9" luiilllh11 E•~tlne all on, m!ntrtll. n1Pll!h1, es !rut._ If "" lllAllllL YN HESTEll, •tt If. 11'11 Sll"ltl 111, Pt lroleum tnd ofhtr mln .. 1! tnd JANET ~STEii lf'lll CKAllLENE Clll• Miii. c1gfw11l1 nnt •lndl'fd 1ullsllMn dffOSlled 111, IY!nv HEITEll TllUST'S dllllll bvllrwu M Ttlt ....... 1 Intl "'2·144• under or llowl,,. !ll"""'h or !hi! F' A ll KW O O O OEVELOf>MEHT COM-Al'lltrNW• flf Pttl15-may H DroclllCtd from 1111 l'.....-t\' PANY, 1 fPltlt wnl1K9. ,.lalnlrffl Va. Publ111hed Ort11t1 CN~ Otllt Pilot, bofow Siii! feel from !ht 1vrf1ct ot .JOHN E HAWklHI. 11Al8ARA "· At>rn "· ~,. •• u. 21. lt1'0 IC1·1tl said llnd Without 1119 rlthl of IVrllCt HAWl(INs: 006 I fllroiJth DOE' v, et"lrY lo d-loP or lo •""'"'" '"' lnch1.Sv. • .._.,,.,.,.., LEGAL NOTICE 11me. •1 t11c11>tf!lf In ~ df.tcl '""" P EOf'LE OF THI! STATE OF CALI· M11 .. C.""'I, recorded A1>rll 1'. 1'60 l"OftNIA !IP 111t 1bove nemtd ~ In flook nm, "'" ll of Offlcltl an!&' RKOf'dt. Yw . -,..,.., .i...ctM lo fllt I P4Nlf Commonly ~-11: XU West wrll1fft ...... 11J ~ IO IM C••TO•KATI 01' •USINISS. Monlc1 La.,., Santi An., C1lltarnl1. Wffflld cion.&111111 ef Jft1 -.W ,..,,,_ l'ICTITIOUS NAM• •1111 Of' of'lw,. 1rt lnvtled far ftld fllalnffffll ...,., ,,.. cltrl!. If Ille ltlOlrl 'nit U!ldtrlllnfoll lo certlf'f' tMY ire Pro-'Y i nd f'n\111 lie 111 wrrn,,. and f'nlltlfd C0\111 <Jll t1M ~ 111tlt1H ClOl'MfUc:llnli I Mlllltt It 7"41 CJentt11, Wiii lw 1~1\lld at Ille Offkt o1 111• actlon brfluell,~ .. ,..,., l'«I 111 111d·C9111'.1, Ml•lon Vltlo, C.tlfon'lla, 11nder fh~ fie-Public Admlnl1tr1tor, 11•1 E111 Chnlnlll Wlltlfn TEN Rn -'ler flll' M""k:I .. lfflout llff'll _,. II Ml!:llCHANOISING Strfff, Slhtt An1. C1!1lerftl1 .,1'01, or 11.., of !hi. ..,,,,..... If wtwf w ....... CC*5UL TAHTS Incl 11111 "ld firm I' ml• '"' 411td WIHI lht Cltll1c or 111d fM HOwl ...... ~. ,,-Wlllllll ~ or l'IM tollO\fl'I"' llef!IOM, wflose S..,.trlar Court, Ot' ll\l't' bt dt!lwred TH/llTY 111'1"1 If """"' tliewhert. Nmtl lft fllll 11111 lltol or rtM6toe1 tll llllf Adrnlnlllrttol' ....-rtv, 11 In• You .,. ,.... Mlflfifd ttltf \lftltM ,,.. 11 follow!: llmr •fltr llrst l"Ublleltlo!I of tlllt notke -• flit ........... ~ pJtlOlnt, Pit Ytllff", 2.,.1 Cllntt•. Minion Ind befon"" 11'11111"' <II llld Jiit. Id ttllfllllff'I wlll t11t1 ~ l'llf Vltlo. Ctlltorftlll TEltM\ Of' SALE: (Kl\, laWlul "'°""''t' :. -If/I """'"" ~ .... It., Ven A~. m Vlt Uh1u. el ~ United Sl•les. Tift Ptl'Unl !IO"l.1 WW -lflld ........... M .n.lnl WOOi ..._, ltldl. CtllfWlllt of !tie t1'IOUl'lf olltlrtd fll\ltt K COfl\Nn't' c;onlrlC'f, .,. w411 •" " ... ciourt Dtl..r "-'11 •i 1'11 •!lci'l wrttt.n bill .,. ffttr, wllll ft1t fw lilfY .,,.. rtlllf 111tmt.-.i Ill ,.,. ,. ...... _ bt!lllC'" d "" .wd'lllol ••let " bl Wl1fltd Olll'l'lft6lln!. ICW VOfl AllltMrlldl N it! u-tenllrtnltlllt ti Ille 1W llld Yeu IN't' ... tM ld\'kt el tn a"Of"ney STAT£ I>" CAt.t,-OlllNIA, s.i,.,.,lor (Oyrt. _, ...., -11111' t-w ~ 1M tom-OltANGll' COUNTY: Alt bk11 or of'-" W!Ult bJ 1ubmlfled •"'' 9' tlllt Mn.,..... S4ldl •"""""" 9" ....,.. ., Im, btfore mt. I on 1 tol',.. f\lrnlthtd tw fM Mlltr. 4'ould bit COMUllM Wlltllll tM t11N li"'lf Nlllll'Y P'~lk in l ftO for 111d Sitt.. T~ rlthl to ,.ltd Mir •n<I t ll llld1 •Nd "' !11111 ....,__ Nr mh~ • writ• -~ -..trtll Pat Yt11tr 11111 K1y k hereby rtMrvtllll. pl&ff ....... IM ....... lrll. Vt111 A~ kllOw" Ill IM lo bt OAT!O: A,.,-11 '9, ltll, 0.flld ~ .. 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C•tl C.11'1' l"lkl'I, 1'1111"11\td 0.-J"9~ Cottf Ot llf l'iklt Pvbll11>ed °''"" t:ottl D•ilV lil!a!, " FDA Probing Bureaucratic 'Fixing~ Manipulating of Laboratory Results Cliarged by Chwf Patliologist WASHINGTON (AP) -The Food and Drug Admlnlsltatlon i. lnvetllg1Ung cbarges 11\at age:oq officials have man1pu11ted I ab.oratory results for years to avoid weakening or contradicting estJ:bllshed 10 v er nm en t policies On food additives and pesticide safety. The ohargeo,.J<vei.d by. lli. Howard L. Rfchardson, di.le{ pMhologlst In the FDA'1 Bureau ol Science, contend m~e-Jevel b\!reaucrata: with lbnked sclenWlc tralning have expunged oonc:lusioos a n d recommendations from reports on animal experiments because they cast dOubt on FDA policies. 'Ibe findings might have caused FDA policy makers to reconsider "safe" labtls fOr certain food additives and col- oring agents and to re- estimate permissible pesticide levels for food. "On occasions too numerous to relate, I have pointed out in a bureaucracy just how a d m inistratively pathology can be altered by FDA," Richardson said. WGB·LEVEL His Oct. 2n, 196!klated memorandum to th e n FDA Qimmlssione.r Herbert L. Ley trig1ered a hi~level, on- going investigation, headed by Dr. Dale R. Undsay, associate commissioner for science. Ley, in an interview this week, tenned Richardson's allegations "extremely sen- sitive and of major impor. tance. '• Ley left the FDA · last December and is now a private Consultant. A pathologist employed by the FDA especially lo probe the charges has f o u n d substantial s u p p O r t for Richardson's posit.ion. "There have been modifica- ~oru · of statements a n d reports" said the consull.aflt. Dr. Harold B. Stewart, retired dllef pathologist for the Na- tional Cancer Institute . Stewart emphasized in an in- terview his tindlngs were still prelinilnary. Richardson's allegations. a<:· cording to one congressional expert on the FDA, "cast doubt on the integrity or all FDA scientific positions for decades." The FDA is a primary research center on Lhe effects of additives and pesticides on human health and Richardson's charges de a 1 with these factors -not drugs. Richardson wene directly to Ley, avoiding bureaucratic channels, after reviewing an FDA seedifli experiment 1n- volvin1 lhe artiOclaJ sweet· ener cyclamate done 20 years before. U.S. ACTION 11le 1o~mment Imposed rB1trlctions on ~yclamates In 1969 aJter outside experiments linking the chemicals to blad- der cancer. genetic damage and birth defects in animals. Ricflardson, who joined the agency in 1968, said the old FDA slides and laboratory work sheets revealed. what he tenned a suspiciously high in- cidence of cancer ln the test animals. 'The cancer findings were not mentioned in the published report. TI1e pathologist who con· ducted the original researcll told Richardson a non.. pathologist superior had writ- ten the report and that he, the pathologist, had only sign. ed it. "I-le stated that he didn't want to fight v.·ith people," Richardson q u o t e d the pathologist as saying. "Tbi11 was his policy over the years." Path olo g i·s ts usually prepared their own reports and conclusions. They are n1edica\ experts in the ,cause of tissue injury and dea!h . Richarmon quoted th e superior who prepared the 1951 report as aaylng polky decisions wert "made oo high level, and it wu up to him, Dr. F. to see that the oUlclal Positions were catTted out ••• the palhologlst had lo support such decisions, as ht, (Dr. F.) had been reinterpreting data !or 30 years." USED INITL\l3 Richardson's memorandum . as supplied to t h e Associated Press by t b e Department of Health, Educa· tion and Welfare -used in- itials rather than names ot invoh'ed officials. The original memo included names. Experts believe cyclarnates might not have been wi~ely used -or possibly even permitted - if the 1951 cancer findings had been known by scientists. Richardson. j,1 an interview, offered these additional ex- amples of what he termed bureaucratic interventions in agency science to protect the regulatory status quo : -Elimination by a superior of a recommendation to Ley from Dr. Marvin L. Legatar, an eminent FDA cell biologist who had conducted research on cyclamates. "The use of cyclamates should be immediately curtail- «I, pending the outcome or aQPiUonal stud.It.a," Legator wrote Jan. 14, 1969, nloe mooths before restrictions were anoounced. Legat.or'• memoraDdum wa1 retyped, without his: knowledge, to ex. . elude the recommeriaatM>n. -.U:y's public st!fense of the controversial focid • addiUvc mollSOdlwn Jl)uiama e 11\11 rested in large part on 'Un- completed FDA experimenu. The scientists involved dispute Ley '1 interpretatioo aod pro- tested thia use of their work. -Suppres.!ion of a con- clusion by one F D A pathologist linking a widely- used coloring agent to in- creased suacepUbilil,Y in dogs ~ One type of infection. -The refusal of , midlevel bureaucrata t.o allow publica- tion of an FDA laboratory finding that ra1sed questions about the salety ·of the in· secUcide heptachlor. BLAMED CLIMATE RJchardson b!amed what he termed the disgN1ceful sc.ien- tlfic climate in lhe FDA on separation ol research experts from top policy offlc:ials by a middle level or bureaucracy. The middle oftlciala are anxious to protect their jobs by supporting top level pol'ey decisions at all costs, be said. • Chevrolet. Car. Right Price. Right Now. NOW ON SALE. Impala, America's mosl popular car. You simply buy any Jmpala VS model. And you simply order Turbo Hydra-matic 1ransmir.sion, radio. white stripe tires. fron1 and rear bu1nper guards and the con,·cnient Comfor1ilt steering wheel. All popular extras. Then y,•e include a big regular fuel 40().cubic-inch VS and dual c.\bausts. At no extra charge, during The Big Impala 400 Sale. Camara. THE ONLY SPORTSTER 1 AT ITS PRICE with all lhis: Front disc brakes, standard. 1-leavier- lo hug the road even ~tter. A larger, more rcsponsh·e standard Si:<. And you can order from IM'o automatic transmissions available. But therc·s more. A lot more. See your Chevrolet dealer about the Super Hugger right now, Nova now $159 LESS* Now you can order a oew Nova at a $139 price reduction. ' Coupe or sedan. Four·, •ix· or eight-cylinder engine. Wilh lhese Novas tbo day-ni&ht mirror. bias belted ply 1iru. ciaarcuc lighter a nd klt belt rctractOI'$, formerly standard, art still available as options. Novi. the car already priced smaller than its aize, is now priced lo\\-·cr than before. Place yollf order at your Chevy deakt't. Chevell e. Sl48 LESS* lhan our prev1ou~ lowest priced 4·door. !hen our previous lowest priced hardtop. America's most popular mid-size Now America's lowest priced sedan at a new low price. mid-size hardtop. We took America's best selling mid·slze car. Then added 1wo new lower rriccd models. Still, they both have Chevelle's smart oew grille for 1970. And Chevelle's newly styled Body by Fisher. As you can sec, they're still All Chevelle. Lower priced they arc. But lo\\·er priced looking and Ccc:ling they Drf:n'r. Townsman. The LOWEST PRICED lu ll-size 3-seat wagon you can buy. This is a Walk-in Wagon. And just )OU try to find another a1 the price with a rtttSSCd bumper step just the: · right hcighL Or a rooftinc slightly on the slant so you can walk id standing lall. You'll also be getting into an all· vinyl interior. And deep.twist carpeting. And Astro Ventilation. At not a penny C;'(tra . Walk into 1 Townsman Walk-in Wagon. You v.·on't WI.tit lo walk out. Monie Carlo Luxury for only U,Ul* At that price. Monte Carlo is Carpathian burled elm. Plush hundreds of dollars less than other deep-twist carpeting. GM pc110nal luxury cars. Monte Carlo is every bit the HHmfrtd$. lu xury car in othet mpects. too, Yet Monte Carlo's a car or You get a JSQ..cubic.-inch VS •nd th ickly padded sats. Rtcb cloth or power disc brakes standard. custom-knit nylon fabrics. An lmtru· Try the real thint at your mcnt p1nel with the. look of Chevrolet dealer's. MAlll cw race.wa '81M1d on m11nul1ctur1r'1 1u111•t•d r.tfll mtc ... ~ th.1(jlng l1!Je••I eM:!11 I•~ a ftd s1111e1t~ d11t1r n .. uahk le Pf'IPll••llon ch111es, Oe1tlnt1llO,, Ch4•111, 1tlfll 1 nd local I•••• and optlo111r eq1Jtpm1n1 add1Uona&. Putting you first, keeps us first. A.HU tt. 1', Ml~ '-JI, ltlt 1•2-1' """H 12, l't, Ml f &. IJ, 1'1'1 121·1' M., '· 1, 11. llrf ~).111 ~~~~~-.--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ . . .. mE1929 WHITE FRONT l. CllAll1Y • S!JMCE • lllSCOUllT • llITTGRITY ' ' . * CHAIGE IT* ·•••••••••c••• • WMITl F•O•T CA8D • MAITI• C1ta•a1 c•1•1r ca•• KING SIZE LUXURY QUALITY BLANKETS 511 if perfect 8.99·17.99 100'%1 polyester and cicrylic~ -including some t he rmals and fi ber wovens. Bound cill around. 90:-:108". • ~--.....---· .. SAYE OYER 50%! FAMOUS MILL POLYESTER & RAYON .. '-"""'-.. DAILY PILOT J $ • KING-SI ZE i . COUTURIER PRINTS 19 We recognize your ''round the clock" love • for fashion. So we got hold of the besf NO•IRON PERCALES if perfect $10 • Greet big 108 x 115'' sheets ct phenomenal sovin91! All in silky-smooth, forever-fresh poly. ester combed col!on blends in your choice of beoutiful solid colors, prints or while. DUPONT RED LABEL . D ACRON:.FILLED BED PILLOWS each q1.1een size compare at $S Icing iize compare at $7 Allergy free! Queen· a nd King· size pillows fi lled wi lh Dacron polyester. Jnterlined;wi11J zip· off flora l ticking · in pink or blue. Queen size 20 x 30"; king size 20· x 36". t. TM DUPONT c:omp•r• at 16.88-18.81 Mediterranean styled.Tex- tured, sculplured decora- tive patterns all luxuriant- ly fringed ... available in a tempting range of deep tones and cros> dyes. QUEEN OR KING SIZE QUILTED MATIRESS PADS WITH ANCHOR BANDS • ,. 3!!., ... compare at 5.99 cl)mpare at 6 .99 Washable, softly quilt· ed so podding won't. lump or 1hih. With an· chor bonds, tc.. keep them 1moothly i" ploc.. fabrics in swirls of color in zesty florals, geometrics and novelties, also available are rayon/cotton/flax Ruff ino prints. They're all washable and crease resistant. This is a great buy, so take advantage now! 45" widths. compare at 2.SO TEXTURED POLYESTER S8"l>OUBLE l<NITS 3'' compare at 5.9'9 • JACQUARDS • CREPES • TWO TONES Select your next eye·cotc~ing outfit. from jacquards and no'f'elty weoves, jazzed up in solids or 1wo-lone1. Moc:hine washable end wrinkle resistant,' PERMANENT PRESS POL YESTER/COTION CREPE 99 ~ompare at 1.79 yd. h's Moy lime and that mean' many beouti- f\Jl flowered prinls in o garden full of col - ors. Machine washable-shrinkage control, Flower power is here. "45" wid!h. WASHABLE RAYON TEXTURED PRINTS 88 ~ompare at 1.49 yd. Famous maker prinls for the creolive you to do o dozen end one things wi1h. We've pottern1, colors galore. '45" widtfJ. POL VESTER/ AVRIL LENO PRINTS 77c~mporeat 1.19 Leno prints that enhance your word· robe spring through summer. Delightful colo'J~ pot!erns in Forlrel ~polyester/ Avril~ rayon. And lhey're machine washoble. No Iron 45" widths. SPECIAL BUY-UP! NOW IN TIME FOR MOTHER'S DAY SEWING BOXES ••9· $7-$8 SAVE 50% TO 57% Every one o beauty. The perfectgifl to give or 11Jgge11. Rich fobrks enhanced by 1he most excilin g colors, all In a variety of shapes ond sizes. These fashfon smart upholstered sewing boxes oil come with convenient plastic troyi. Choose solids, houndstoolh, florals, DRAMATIC PRINT -COTION TERRY 99 ~ompare at 1.3~ Hey beach lovers, ytiu've a chance to mo~• waves with our groov y floral$ and gee· metrics in bright sun1hine color'-36" wldlh. DIMENSIONAL SPORT FABRICS IN WHITE '99 ~ompare at 1.99 yd. Polyester/cotton blends or colton ollomon. woven lucks, bullseye, bird1tyt, end more. Full range of jacquards, cloques, lenos in lacy patterns. Some colors too. -45" width. POL YESRR/COTION SHEER VOILE PRINTS 77 ~ompore at 1.39 yd. If you'ye on eye for the delico1e, you'll love the ferilinille approach of our 1heer voiles. Blossom ·in beauliful flowery coolness. Washable and drip dry. 45" width s. MACHINE WASHABLE DRIP-DRY PRINTS 68~ompareat1 .39yd. Cive your fa shion wordrobe a pick-me-u p .wirh 1he111 popular border, polch or ftorol collon prin ls. -45" widths. 10~1 HI II lut U..,. kite ..... ka ·-"'IN•"' f-t t . dolled swiss or alligotor. Top choice1 at low est prices. ,.,,..--.. ·' 3088 BRISTOL AVE. • JUST OFF NEWPO.RT AVE. BETWEEN SAN DIEGO FRWY. AND BAKER ST. • * ftORE HOURS * Mon. -thru Fri. Noon to 9 p.m. Sot. 10 to 9 p.m. Sun. 10 to 7 p.m. , Jft DAILY PILOT .-... oo~o.Q Q001:;0 l lid1".·. ;'. _ .. ,,,11~ .. , '' ~Nl;E 1929 WH-IT:E-.· FRO-NI aUAUTY • SERVICE • 01scour~r • INltGRllY ' • SUNBEAM PORTABlf-MIXBI • ·Distinctively hand· some mixer with powerful and effi· cient rootor. Mixillg chart guide on hilll- dle, ·ful l size beat- ers eject for clean- ing. #H HAMILTON Bf.ACH LIGllT'WtlGHT MIXBI -- j;;;i;;lil ~~ A power-packed mixer that's extra light ... handles "small " cook ing chores quickly and easily. "firm.grip" handle. 6 It. cord. #97 GENERAL ELECTRIC 3 SPEED HAND MIXBI 3 speed s~!et1or :-.witch on l!J~ for l1nge1"tip control. V1ny! guard on hottom preven:s :-.hpping or rh10· ping. Beater e1ei:· tor lever. Keyhole =::;;J stat klr wall :,tor- Jge. i'Ml7 WEBCOR CHROME HAND MIXER UNIVERSAL by G.E. UNIVERS-'L PORTABLE 3SPEED . MIXBI F~gert1p control: be.iter "Jeclor: detachable cord. [dra SP\ ot nykln beater;;; drink mixer a!· Lach!Tlent. Open handle design hangs on wall-for ready use, *UM3 • • ' • PROOF POSITIVE 'HAT WHIT~ FRONT · 8 SPEED BLENDBI Stainless steel blades, ~4 oz. etmta1ner with serving handle. Two part hd with center openi11g for adding ingredient~ ouring blending. Blerids, mixes. r.hops, grates, .·1h1ps, beats. parees and hquef1f"i. #61 3 Solid state. 52 01. container, pou r spout; pressure locked cover with 2 oz. measuri ng cao. Rer1pe boolctet mclmled. #W505 2 YUi OVEI Tiil CfMITU lll'WDWIT WAll.UITT OSTER 3 "CYCLE" ·1 Bl.EMIER • Grate, whip .or grind wdh 6 add1lion:t l -!.?' , soeeds that offer Pveo ~(,,?' · morr blending llex1bil- ~17· 1!y. large 5 cup con- t.1,ner. 100 pg. ~!us- trated cookbook includ- 'd-#641-01 /04105 WARING 14 SPHD BLENDER Po:;houtton instant on· oH action~ Solid ~tale motor. ) tup heat· rP<.islant rloverleaf 1ar 1·11tll h~ndle. 2 piece !id 1·11~h 'l ·01. mPasurm~ rup. Chrome trim: co1d •.!01age. #77-1/2!3 "INFINITE·SPEED" BLENDER [lectronic solid ·slale blender. lntm1lely van- t,\\ able speeds. Crus!es lray ~\ loads ot ice w1lhout al- tachments or water. Au!O· rnal1c shut -oil time r. #4 2m OSTER AUTOMATIC CAN OPENER WEBCOR CAN & BOffiE OPENER • Elecb1c can opeoor wilh bottle open~ al- tachment. Magnetic cap litts lid-holds it oul of the way. Opens any size can. Compact design; sturdy b.Jse. #W600 WESTINGHOUSE CAN llENER & SllAIPENBI ?o"'er p1ercei any size can, tllfns and automat1cat1y stops itsett. Opens bot- t!es. sharpens kit. chen knives. f ll1- c1ent, liurab!r ~ii· chen !ool. p:i.;~:;,; RIVAL CAN DPEflR & ICE CRUSHBI Two high-pow~ed helper.; in one' Open . · any size can at a flick of a switch. C1ushes ice 1n!o bu1ll -in bay lhat re- moves for serving. #7021705 RONSON CAN·DD MULTl·APPLIANCE B'dl=, 1•.h1ps, nush~~. • ~·n~ rdOS. sharpen~ f l11i.'rs. Complete vi11h a!ld(hmenf's , , . all oa ~ co11Ven1rn1 w•ll r1rt 4'~601 3 ! ) ' SB.ECT·RONIC TOASTER Wit~ toast-color cootrol. Gleam- ing cb1ome body, black U1m. Ad1ust tor any kind of bread, eve" fro1en. Rehea1s cold toast with· out bormng. #111611 SUNBEAM ULTRA·MDDBIN TOASTBI 2 slice io~er in a sleek new si lhouette ! Gl eaming chrome. Dial tor ~ perlect Lolor leas! ••• every time! #flOOS PANASONIC "SRF·LDWERING" TOASTER ' . Se~-lowl.'f. full· range shade se- lector. Hinged bottom tra y lh!JS opf!I tor instant clean-ing. #HlllOI DOMINION lr~acl!OP thenrl(l- :.!at toasts I to ( ~lices uniformly, Litt O·mat1r COP· v~n1encc. ld rge Vl!lrblfd)'.1 1143 PROCTOR SILEX "LIFE·LONG" TOASTER 4 shce toa stfr '<.Ith 2 Select· Rome color con- trol;;; -COIOIS 11ght for every. one! Wllile with glistening chrome trim. Toast I to 4 slices al one time. #21901 " ,.~ ' { l WESTBEND B·CUP ALUMINUM PERK ~ Brews coffee to your t aste speedily! Plas- tic base and cont our handle slays coo l. At- tractive design lor today's trim decors! #9360 PROCTOR SILEX . B·CUP CLEAR GLASS PERK Pot can double as be'l- erage servf'r ! Easily cleaned' Nn metallic ldSte to colfee, even when reheated. 9 cop capar.1ty. Watch it bre.v lo desi red strength! S<~IJ # 70503 TOASTMASTER · ' AUTOMATIC COFFEEMAKER :~ ' A11toma'1c thermostat control . '.ld1 cool hdndle .ind pede~1al. Autom at1r. signal hpht, no drip spout. PFrfecl cuo of coff~.e ~v~ryt1m~! #MSO l WESTINGHOUSE "Pressure Flo" COFFHMAKER Au1oma1 • ~rk w 1 ''pt~SSUf"-flo" u·~I. S·l~ct a t1Jvor for rolfee br .. wed l~e 11ay yo11 ~refer ii! Signal h ~ht. 3 to JO cups caoo~ t;. NHP73 UNIVERSAL by G.E. AUTOMATIC COFFEEMAKER I Automatic ~~·11 r!-- 1 .. ~tor r.J~es tr.e mild. mPlium or :.trong cuttee yo~ r~oose! Mini-bre'.~ bds ~e! makes 2 t UDS II~ P"r1ett!f as ;t 1uU ~ot will bP! Ultra design· mi! #UPt0/UP4 CREDIT·. TERMS -. ,- SE SHOPPER'S CH ICE IK " offee to I as I e ! Plas- ;e and handle I ' TOASTMASTER . ' BROILER AND OVENITTE t '' I I Joi. At-, - design . .·~~or y's trim ~ #9360 j Heats . broil s, , ba~.es and toast:; automal1c trermo- s ta I co nt ro l, l chrnme tin isn, '-stat><ool -haOOles~ #52 11 -. ~ fo~r lJDS for spec- ial massagi~g .-irt - 1~n -~Cdlp, lo11:e, ' body·oo.wi.i~ muscle tone.r~ MRt :HK . MUNSEY :· Ill BAIER AND BROILER POLLENEX 5·1N·l HEAT· MASSAGER as b~v· Easi ly metallic e, eve~ -9 cup 1 it brew rength' hermostat la y coal pede'ital. J ~s i gna l lf ·111 spout. r of coltee · #M IOI I ' I AKER I • ( 1w:•· · ~o·: E"' •H g:~ Ci:'.11! " .•J --;( c0Ht•1 r ~"t ~o to 11Ut1". 6.g c~­r1 ":. lf'NE500 llMll 1.,·. - :.. • . l J!lt,?l"' -b~(' . 1oas1·. ~' l t~m,. 2 l'!d.ll ? r. '"•'1h~·j b pas1!1n• '·l"fl"~­ ~Lll OB ,1.1 1.: i.· Ht>JI & mo; ~~!? u~·t , 1-.1111 4 Sllap Gn al- tdcrw·~nt~. lije w11h heat omv. 1nassa.se· only CH ooth. HMIQA4! OSTER · .. e9 j' Ma ss age l'l ith ar I 1\1ll10ut heat. ComP.t ,,, w11~ '11i1o'<ln ~c"r i, -:it1muldtw. N21g.o ,. ! DRUXE OVEN BROILm ,. VIBRA· TOUCH MASSAGER H~ad lo toe luxury m& .Jg~:-. Gries reld x1ng f;Jc ~1 rLdr - sages. sootheo t,1ed aching " ' ' ' I · I , prrk l'I ~ lo" d•;il. 1.ivor for ~we d the Dr el er ii ! . 3 to 10 l;'. IPg muscles, st1n1uld!n•; '.>Galp and neck. Solt coveted vib- tJ ling head, shm contour g11p. • #10\ bf~·11 ~e­ ikes tre mum or 1tfee yo~ 'ilini-hre·:1 11 a~es Z p"1eclly pot will design- IPIO/UP4 • i f\1•' '~'I - ij,I'\ t• c'l1 ,,,... --I "11tlltf.~. ,· -~:ir ·~Ira I 1•1'• 1 • Ii t ' l l·llJ~~" :·J . A. 1ii ,\ d )FARBER\YARE~: :_~-: . . . ._ ' ; ' . . OPEN HEA HTH ROTISSERIE ~.,... 1., .. , 11 \. l ; d ... •~ a.ullnd L;rt -·11.,r~!r~IJ OI r-~1 . ''~'.·A ~· a•11~'Jllflf!N4SQ l1:99 ' * CHARGE IT '* • 8A-AMlalCAa• • WHITl FaOMt CAID • MAITla CMAaGI CllDIT CAID ·r High pertormance mag- net motor, 18 facet main bod y column, ouilted leather head. Stimulates, l11ms ann tones - use on any ~art of the body. Oelux~ model #HVI 10 p J j :Tl<1~!l!· l1!'d I ti tn<r!Of, ~ ~11•(' Jret li''hi li.-11.a !'!1" J!OH'!lbie tra'"L c,....,_. ~\180~:·.; WITH BALANCED LIGHT J f For s .• ..idll\V-'1- 1 '" lioht~g. Oudl n11rro r. 1 l1fr ~i7e on one I I s1 d·~ & rnJgn1-• 1111 s on the .; ) otner. # 1020 ' f -~ : WEJCQft. ~:.:.;,." . · ' . "-"~ --. .•. . .... : .. ',, • . "IJ, 'JI ~. ~ 1' .... • ' 2 YR. OVER- THl·COUHTfR R[PlACEMfNT WARRANT Y r:.o sided lr~,·r ·rur o1 01~to~\1Jll ·~e pl.lie gjtl'71'- JI~ fl,., fhl)I~• J '11 1>~~t1ng m~~·~ .1,,p11 1t1•r, ea~' ·, In ,, .... 1 l·1e ~~ ro~1~11 d 1·.1. I (~I'. !f/! · DOMINION ·. ·. · SCHICK · PRESTO PROFESSIONAi: MIST DRYER Cond1t1ons and mo1sWri~s hB!f with heautilyi~g mist. f,lra large hood. 3 he~t ~i!lectl!lnt. wh1sprr quiet motor. ttDPM2 • -• • DAIL V PI LOT I '¢\\)oOD DOoc,() .•f.f'~l?"~ar. .. :. . • • P1, · a ~~t 1n fo~r l1d1r l1 r , . .-. ti 1.1 .. t .ind re t. 1',',1 1 , .1 " & bi;ilt .n :: Ill Ii · -'CLAIROL , 0 hlliU , In J .Ii~) hl<1I ,i'. on•.r. l 1d hd~ larger than hi•· ri•rior. Sl!e<imhned •:torap1o i ,t\e w1tn cord and chp com- pdrlmPnl\: lrdVPI~, ~tl)rr, 1·,hilv. Onliit1 'wi1 r,n and 111 o cllr1~ ligl11. KlOI b 1dr.1:e. 8 nied1· ~~1 & ll small r~11l>i ~: IR heal· ing cu~~ in bou· dn1r 1 .i~e. Hair , styl1nR boo~ in-' 1 cludrd. #PHC~O ' OUR REC. LOW PRICE li.Sl Mist & rontrql· i.i ~!lt makes hair ~ft and, lovefy ~sets lasl IO nger. Graduated size curlers In com'- pact bo!¥1oir top .case. #-70 ' -.~'· • .. 3088-8RISTOL AVE. • JUST OFF NEWPORT AVE. * stOREHOURS * Mon: thru Fri. · BETWEEN SAN DIEGO FRWY. AND BAKER ·S:T. Noon ht 9 p.m. S.t. 10, .to 9 p.m. Sun. 10 to 1 p.m. • --------------------------------------~ --.. -··--' ~ ---- • 18 DAIL V PILOT \.'Jednesd~y. May 6, 1970 ,IO-':--------- r-.... Poll!lal Mlvtrtlltmtn! • • . ' ' Candidate for County Sup'ervisor .. • C•1p•ri for S11p•rvi1or Commifl••, Robert W11h•r, <:emp•i9n m•nig1r, !Ill Ne .... port Blvd., Co1t1 M111, C1iJf. Phon• b42·8700. ...... This is the Statement of the 1969 ' , -Ora,nge County Grand Jury on the Upper Newport Bay Trade: As th• population of Orange County gro.w1, the need for public water" front and access to the Newport Bay expands. Since the proposed Ex- change Agreement does not guarantee what, if any, provis ions will be made to.frovide for future needs in this regard, it is felt that a land-use study an economic feasibility study need to be made. This Grand Jury fHlt that et the time of signing the Agreement in 196.5, pollution and ecological imbalance were not considered sttrious prob· lems ln Orange County. They are now, and therefore iti Is felt that technical studies should be made to insure that the proposed Land Exchange will result in the best possible design of the Bay to avoid pollution and ecologl· cal imbalance. There is general agrnment that only one ''Plan" for the exchange ·Of tidelands with The I rvlne Company h111 ever been considered by the parties to the Agreement. There have bettn modifications made to the basic ''Plan." However, these modificiations primarily were related to uplands or park lands subsequently asked for by the County, rather than alternate arrangements of filled tidelands which would have suggested varying per .. cent ages of .waterfront or access for the public and The Irvine Comp1ny. The Grand Jury feel' that there art many opportunitit' available to the County to fill In these tidelands now held in tru1t, which would pr°" vide more public waterfront and access. Although a case may be made for the statement that the County does not have money to develop these tidelands now, this in no way means that future. development is lmpos• slble. This Grand Jury, rather than suggesting any one plan, wi1he1 to point out that there are limitless ways of conserving waterfront and acce1s for publlc use. It is felt that the Board of Supervisors, as trustees of the 11delend1, should consider as many alternatives 11 posslble. The Gr•nd Jury ffels that further efforts should Include en ingJ. neerlng and economic fe11fblllty study of the propottd main public beach area. It 1110 '"'' that there thou Id be (I) a cost study of the fllllnt o( some County-held tidelands and/or purchase of small er••• of lrvlne l11nd ad· l·acent to tidelands; (2) methods of financing the Herbor development. As 1r as this Grand Jury can discover, 1uch 1tudl111 h11ve ,,ot been made • ONE OF THE PRIME REASONS FOR THIS RBSOLUTION IS THE GRAND JURY'S CONCERN THAT THE PUBLIC IS NOT AWARE OF WHAT IT NOW OWNS IN TERMS OF UNFILLED TID!LANDS, WHAT DEVELOPMENT POSSIBILITIES EXIST, ANP WHAT IT WILL OWN AND /OR LOSE SHOULD THE PRESENT LAND EXCHANGE BE CON· SUMA TED, Now, therefore, be It re1olvtd that this Grand Jury does hereby , .. quest that the present Upper Bay Land Exchange be studied further for the purpose of providing more water fro~~•ge, and access to the tldelandf for the public, recognizing fhat fhl1 further study may entail the expendi- ture of publlc funds. Be It further resolved that since thla Grand Jury h11 pr1vlou1fy adopted a Resolution stating that transactions concerning the disposition of public l1nds should be able to withstand public review, we therefore fael that the above ceindltlons warrant the reconsideration of th.ls Land Exchange Agreement. I CONCUR WITH THE FINDINGS OF THE GRAND JURY. THEREFORE, I SAY NO TO THE UPPER BAY TRADE. :•••••••••••••••••••••~••••••••••••r~ • Ron Caspers • • 1813 Newport Blvd. YES I • • Costa Mesa, C1llforn l1 ,.hone: 642-8700 • • : I WANT TO HELi' IN YOUR CAttil'AIGN , , , , •.. , j : • MY CONTRIBUTION IS ENCLOSED , , , , , , , , , , , . j : • : YOU MAY USE MY NAME FOR ENDORSEMENT,,, I • IPIHN M .. I •------' • • : Name ........................................... • • Addre~s ......................................... : : City ................... , , , Pllc11c ,, , .. .. .. .. . • ~··································~ -- • • • - • ... )F ~y • r· • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . .. • I Wednesday, May 6, 1970 • • • OAILY PILOT J@ U.S. Military Convinc~·d N. Vietnam Under Severe Stra.· ' WW!INGToN•. (AP); ~ ~ .• u.s. iilltiwY ~ .,_)fJllllVinced Nort.h Vietniln ii under seYere strain aDd truction of once -sec;ure bodian bases will .cut into Hano!'~ ability ·to. wage &'three-country wai~ other analysts, however, believe the North Vielnamese can conUnue fighting on fronts in South Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos if they followed a "low key strategy." Such strategy would involve !elective attacks on U.S. and South Vietnamese bases in South Vietnam, limited opera- tkins to conwlldate positions in Laos, and possibly a withdrawal deeper in Cam- bodia to establlsii new bases. Ao:orcting to U.S. estimates, the North Vietnamese still have ample sources o f military manpower, ab o u t 207 ,000 troops in the tilrtt countties, although the quality b down from what it used to be. Some experts believe North Vietnam, could, if pr~. raise another mlWotl men.. .. But Others Say They Can Still .Fight Even lf reduced to one main supply route-the Ho au Minh Tra.l~U.S. experts believe the North Vietnamese can con- Unue to pusb through enough supplies and war ,gear to maintain their forces in South Vietnam, the most important theater. <Jlilleot o.,i Eaal E aid le North V~ 11 nlng at the nte,.af - billion a year,, -wtth accountlnc for ran , Expressing one lDfluenUal As long is the Soviet Union and O:xnrnWlist China art willing to pump io enough. pdint of Vlew, Lt. G'en. Jo~n equipment, food and.'lupplles,, \f. ·Vogt, Jr.~ oper.atl~s ~e( American· analyst. feel •?Jorth " under the Joint Ch1efii, of S~arf, Viet~ coold sustain swnmed up North Vietnam's military operation throughout sltuatJqn ,this way: Indochina. "Their deployment _capabill- Top U.S. lead~rs strongly ty ls pretty much dependent doubt the North Vietnamese upon readiness of their forei!S can gear up quickly for a to be moved on dowo. I think heavy str.ike in response to it would be rather hard for the new U.S.-South Viet-thC(J'I to crank up a major namese offensive aimed at additional move down the Ho demolisbil'lg the enemy base Chi Minh trail at this time. structure in Cambodia. "I want to point out that The exception to this lies in the presence of some three divisions of Nortil Vietnamese troops n o r t h ol the demilitarized uine. Hanoi is on notice that any attacks by these troops across the DMZ might bring a resumption o f widespread Ameciean bombing of North Vietnam. the North Vietnamese are now heavily committed on three front&. They mU!t be ex- periencing at this point severe strain on their capabilities. Deep In Laos, they are very strong in Cambodia Itself and they are stretched thin in South Vietnam. "M we get. into these Jogistie areas in Cambodia and get their eapabllW.y to supply trus strained force, I think it is going to be eitremely reduCed." · Timing plays a very Im· portant part in the American thinking about the Cambodian operation and i t s COO· sequences. U.S. leaders expect the North Vietnainese supp 1 y dumps and ~unicatlons and command pos1tlon to be destroyed before the rainy season arrives .in a few weeks. As the U.S. strategists see it, a combination ol the rainy season and the denial or a long-used and critical aupply source in Cambodia will throw eU for many months the enemy's ability to maneuver on a major scale particularly in South Vietnam. Infiltration into South Vlet.- nam has been at a relatively low level, totaling only about 30,poo men in tbe first four months or this year. according to U.S. mtlltary lntellfgence assessmenta. But American olficcrs. con- sidering the Laotian and Cam- bodian troops almost totally ineffectivP, believe the North Vietn,amese could hold mucb or what they have gained 'A'ithout any significant input of troops. II was noted that even as the Americans and South Viet- namese attacked into the Cambodian base area~. North Vietnamese troops were mak- ing deeper penetrations in the Laotian panhandle to the North, These enemy moves In Laos were described· by American analysts as·intended to secure the Ho' Oti Minh trail, rather than any plan to &o~Ie up OPEN DAILY 10 AM TO 10 PM SUN. 10 TO 7 lll<ft of Laos. In South Vietnam, It Is re.It, the North Vletnameae eDuld respond lo Lhe allied aff~lve into Cambodia ,by increasing tne shelling and rocktUng ol ba.ses and cities and by In- creasing many small scale at- tacks agalnsts up posed 1 y pacified areas. ' lnCambodia,Amerlcan analysts said, It ls still within the powec of• the North Viet· namese to push on toward the capital city of Phnon Penh and possibly to open up a new supply route to the GuU of Siam. Such a route would replace an inlet for aid cut off within the past month when the new Cambodian governmeht ended Communist bloc shipments to North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forcM via the port ol Sihanoukville. By all evidence, North Viet· nam has made no big efiort to rebuild its relatively prlmiUve industry in lhe wake ol the U.S. bombing halt in late 1968, although its road network has been rebuilt and expanded. Obviously, the North Viet- namese are relying on outside aid to sustain them-and there is not much the United States can do except cut off the ·port or Haiphong and rail movements out of China into North Vietnam. Neither action is at all likely. I n t e 11 Jgence authorities estimate total R u s s 1 a n , portion. > On an ~vetage, 160,000 and 17o,ooo tons ol aup- plles enter North Vletnam every month, about llO percent ol 11 from Jluosla and In oltlp.s docking at North Vietnamest ports. Since the end of the bombing ln November 19111, t h • character of lhls aid hu shilled lrorn predominantly military hardware to food and fertilizer. If the United stat" should resum< bombing of North Vletnam, the expectation lt thAl Russia would ship more antiaircraft guns and surface to air missiles to North Viet. nam to augment the roughly 6,000 similar weapons •lreadt in place. EXPICS.MU-fO -.~---""""""'· t!.S..L K-.C:.. ... l..,;,Jo. ... UO!J!!ll---·---~C:: ~~1-~r: a.· I .. ,, ~ ' ., \ ~ • • • • • • • • • < • • ' • • • s-ru nu GllALUfl'I& •,..SAJtWU•-ouTGVALUITU .... ..., ____ _ _..., .. _ .. __ ...... -i.o_,, ... _ .. __ . .,... ___ ...... __ -.. -.·--·---_,._ ..... _ .. __ . _ _ ..... _ .. __ .... __ .,.,_ .. _ _ ... _ ... -....... ~ •nun UrEGUAUl'ITtl ...... .,. .......... __ ·-----·-.. -"-______ ...... , ------.. . ..... _ .. __ .. _ .. _ ... __ .... _ .. __ ---...... _ .. _ -- SEAT COVERS TERRY CLOTH ,,, SEAT COVER 41·1004 ·"" ' • NnO-FOAM 2'' COVERALL SEAT COVER 41·1050 GEMINI SEAT 499 COVIR '1·1130 TURTLE· PASTE WAX KIT SPORT GRIP ·soo· 222 mEf!:ING WHEEL COVER Sp<JJt arip oner alip1, ~sh· ions the wheel, gives a MCUte feelinc. 41·2003 rl~lCES wilh opplioator CAR WASH BRUSH matic car wash.en can't faze · it! Cleans .•• Wuu ..• S.alll 27·200G 8-TRACK STEREO TAPE PLAYER 9 9~!TION AYA1LABL.E Play1· 1111-Cnct ta.J)U Wlth lnll fld61..ity M>Wld. BUILT-IN FM it.er- eo radlo praducu crilp. clt•r 1!.lt. ic free FM procnmmtnc. Thumb •heelconVol&for afetr ••• IUum• ln1Un1 llsht fot atereo broa.dcuV liia. R.R82F?tfT INC:::LUDES DELOX.J!STEREO Sn.ADllS Defuxe htlyY dittJ' IMP"OR ebrome IPilJ. sp.aker ult.. mo\IJlUnc dl:lp, Jud wlr• •nd e.nmic nucneu. AF2C TIRE PUMP ALEMITE CD~l J22 77,.,.,, Deterrent resistant ••• auto-6 ,, Prolonr the briptn,. ol your EASY-TO-USE Rutores lost motor com· TURTLE CHROME POLISH,,. car finish with a car wub. lnhatu all tireL Can also preuioo and power. Con· 8 OUNCES • • ,_ bnuh. Get that "o•er the beuHdfor toy1and plulic centra\ed ·motor oil de,kr- .76-15 8.50-13 7.75-14 1.25-14 .r.·; :14 97 6.•5·1 4 ll•c•w1ll 7.00·ll Tub1!1u F-1d. EI. T•• • 1 •••• , •• , K I& HA •it111ltc••llh nrw linl111 ' .,_.," •h•rl c1lh•dn kl~ lnslltltd •T11111 •II dn1111111od -rf•t• llnlnc .. ••l~•ltr •tUrwlrr ind ~·" rrtrlldn l11fptt11<l .. • Blefd •n4 nu1h htdniwllt 1yJtr111 • R<Md Int lot br•kf ~rf<!f11'11Mt I '"" 1.000 ...Ur IMpttlk>• ind 1 i111rrunl 27·3003 .... ,. ioor' rud,.uily! 27·1000 -pools. 8l·Ul8 fenlfor 111 cm. •6-1225 --------------wr WERVE Tl;ll RIGHT ·TO LIMIT QUANTITllS ______ iiiii THESE SPECIALS GOOD AT : THESE LOCATIONS ONLY OUR PRICE EACH 9 .97 10.97 12. r 14.97 I.K l• 14.97 •M l 7,00.li '" 7.Jit-11 15.97 •JJ)I 1.~1· 2.11 1.15-IS 16.97 1.19 •.n.11 .,,,.,, •~11-1• DELUXE AUTO AIR CONDITIONER 14995 ··~·"·· tion Av1iltblt Enjof cool rummer drivin1 with the Deluxe unit. You. rontrol the amount or cool• inr with a 3·speed blower and the air direction wi\b horizontal and yertical lou•en. AIRCONDITIONE'S~ SERVICE · . . .· · WI lllO Ut'Vlc• fectOf'Y l'Tu• '''°"" • 9'Mtl " lit condi1lonlng. N....,·1 . · BRAKE . OVERHAU.l ' · c:;ooo 2288'( Most Fords, Chrtrol1c1, Plymouth• ..... BEITER z1••:) Oldsmobiln. Docl111 .. Ponti1e1 BEST 32 11 ·. Buickr, Cadilllct,, Lincolns Sclf adjuslq bnka 54.00 men, Except Dile Brakn ·1 .. ~ESTMINSTER BUENA PARK BUENA PARK COSTA MESA SANTA ANA 15540 leach ltvd. ot Mcfoddeo 892°2088 5115 Llocolo Aft. ot V.U.y Yl.w 826-5800 5301 INdo IW, ot Loltwl•lff 523-3040 2200 H-""'· .. wn ... 541,2012 . 1400 Edlo,.r ot lrl1tol 546-7832 " ., • • DAILY PILOT Wednesday, May b, 1970 . ~ ,. " • v ~ DAILY PILOT l'hot11 ~l Rlthtnl KMhlv CROSSING PATHS -New York's Dave DeBusschere and J erry \Vest of the Lakers \viii be renewing their close relationship tonight at the Forum in eame six of the NBA world litle se ries. Disagreement Witl1 W alsl1 Caused T1·ade-Rod1·i gi1ez · Ted Williams was talking, and that ;i\one would be c1use enougb to pay a!tention. But this time the Washington Senators ~kipper was chatUnc about a mat ter nr particular intere&t -his opinion of former Angel third sacker Aurelio Jtr<iriguez. Leo. as Rodriguez is better known. '\'as the property of the Ansela unlll \Vashington pulled the theft of the ctn· tury, giving up Ken ri.1c~1ullen, whoever he may be, for ~iguez and Rick Reichardt. Al the time the 50-<!alled trade seemed about as even as the Russia-Finland \\ar. rt still does. Obviously Williams has not Jost <1ny i;real amount of sleep aver the deal -or steal, as you prefer. His high re~ard for Rodriguez tells you lhaL Says the last man to ba{ over .400. •·He has great style -a nice swing. lfell, he's young (%2), doesn't know the league's pitchers yet. Whee he doe s, he'll really be something. "He·s an outstanding fielder ri 6ht now -ranks with guys like George Kell. 1"rank Malzone, Brooks Robinson. And he'll be getting better, I'll guarantee he·11 do nothing but get better. He·s got style, a nice swing with that bat." Leo says Williams has already helped him. "( study the pitchers more and l watch the ball more closely," he states. Going back to the trade last month 1hat sent him to the Senators. Rodriguez admits it was a big shock and a disap- pointment at first. He wu hitting 40 percentage points more than he'd ever hil wilh the Angels, he led American League third basemen in double plays 11969) and now the club v:as teal.ling the \Vest division. Being traded w:is the farthest "thing from his mind. sa\'e 1nurnage. "I had problems \rith Dick \Va 1 s h (the general n1anagc r 1 O\·er th e language. lie 1ranted me to learn En glish but I cou!dn "t do it. I told him I v.·as her-e to play baseball in reali ty and I i\lts$ he didn't like that" Lefty Philllps, Angels manager, denies llodriguez was lra_i:jcd for any personal -----WlIITE WASH ---=-- GL&NN WHITf; n;otive -"we needed a guy who could hit the long ball so lhat'1 why we made the trade, .. he says. Rodrl11uer; says he was l)Cver. lo!d why he was being swapped -but maybe that"s because Lefty ha s a hard c:iough time trying to explain sornething in Eng lish. let alone trying it In Spanish, Leo believes lhe Angels will hang tough in the division title race -if the pitching doesn't falt er. And he !lays he's hapj>le~ in Washington now that he"s had a chance to settle down there. Me has never been one 1o goals. bu t he does say he'tl hlt ovc-r .27D lhis year. You if f\1c~1ullen \viii do that v.•ell. declare like lo v.•onder Laliers LOS ANGELES (AP) Physically the question rests wilh Willis Reed of Ne w York, Psychologically it's the Los Angeles Lakers who need the answers tonight in the battle which coold decide the chainpionship c>f the NaUonal Basket- ball Association. Recd,. \vho already had miseries Jn his knees, suffered a severely bruised hip in the first quarter of Monday niRht 's fifU1 garne of the playoffs in New York . He v.•ent out. The Knickerbockers went on. TraJliryg by 13 polnt.s at the half, they humiliated the Lakers and beat them 107-100 wilh their big man and the ' .. ' " '' r Struggle to Survive league's most valuable player ,unable to see duly. After receivjng lrealment by both heat and sopnd for . his a!Ung up~r tbi&h muscle, Reed sakl. he was opUmistlc ol plaj'lng tonight. "We'll just play It by ear and decide a~ game time," commented coach Red Holz.man who could see his Knicks take their first NBA title. They lead the best-of-seven series three ga1nes to tv•o. \Vhen Reed v.•ent out of the game. lhe Lakers led by lD points. Now they must muster their forces and try to overcome the psychological disadvantage of losing a game they must have ex- pect.ed to win easily. Ex-Laker Dick Barnett commented: "It's quite pos.tjble that the le& of Reed hurt lhe Lakers as much as it did us. It hurt them psycholo11ically They had to figure that without Reed it would be a breeze for them." However, odds don't stand with the whirling dervish tactics of Ole Knicks holding up twice in a row -although they coold. Dave DeBussche re and Dave Stallworth alternated in defense against Wilt Chamberlain in that second half, which meant lhe Knicks were playing wlthou1 a center but with an extra forward, ' The game st3.r6 at 1 p.m. POT with the' national telecast blacked out in the Los Angeles area V.'here several closed Circuit TV outlets are available. Once again. lhe Foruin is sold out to a crowd of 17,500. Orange County Fairgrounds is the only county site. · In the two prev ious Forum meeting!!, the garnes went into overtime in this final playoff series. The K n i c k s won 111-108 the first lin1e, !he Lakers came back to triumph 121-115 in the second lo squurc things al 2·2. Now they try lo square again, but this time therE: can be no second chance. NO HARM, NO FOUL -·Jerry West takes 'I.he force or onrushing New York player Dave DeBusschere a s the latter releases 1 ahot wjth neither player assessed a foul, despite obvlou1 contact. Laker Elgin Baylor observes the col li sion in the background. Tex as Ma v ., Witl1draw Fro111 Circ11it AUSTIN. Tex. (API -A hint that the University of Texas is consldcring wilh· Orawa\ from the South west Conference surfaced Tuesday fol101\•ing a conference reprimand. ·•The resolut ion passed by the confer- ence was far too 5e\'erc and to that ex- tent I lee] lhis means some concern down the road in regards to the future of Texas in !he Southw est Conferel\Ce," J. Nella 1·hompso n. fac:ilty represent.alive of ath- 11.'tics. told lhe Austin American. The ne11·spaper sai1r Thompson did nbt elaborate on the comment "but lhe indi- catinns "'ere that the tenor of the de- hber;ilions ""'ere liUCh lhey had ominous overtones.·• Tv.·o baseball p!a.vers, James Street. also star quarterback of \he nation's No, I football team, and Tommy Harmon were censured and reprimanded by lhe con~ ference for their part in an April 17 in- cident in whic h Street knoc ked Ba'yJor Un iversity baseball coach Dutch Schroe- der off his feet with a stand·\IP football block. Schroeder was protestin& a squeeJ~ P.lay in which Harmon vigorously tagliled out a Baylor playe~. Brunet . ~parkles I I Vance, N orn1an .H~ Erij.oys Rubbing It ,n E11d Strea l{ .'o~,f ~rmer Angel Mates ~~~:K(~~~,~~~:~''"; .George Brunet will tell you unabashed- ly that "there tlr~ tw or three &\iY~ on the California team l'd rather beat than anrone else in baseball ." Brune , a former Angel pitcher, got hi.s wish Tuelday night and hi1 \Vashington Senators io\ a 6-1 victory over the Angels. He is not a vlndiclive man and he A t1ge l S late All ,.,"'' tn kM'C 1nll Mey I An"I' n . w.u111n110" Ml¥ 1 Angel• w1. We•Mng!on M1 , I Anti.it WI, Nfw York 1 31 p "'· ''3J Pm, 7:53 Pm. is not embarked on a \'cnl.letta . ife just enjQ)'s rubbing il 1n on the Angel mana.aetnenl. "Lel's just say it gi\'es me ~ great deal of satisfaction ," he smiled arter working I 113 innings lo coHecl his second vlbtory o[ the season and alone fnr sn ~eat\ier seUu1ei: admlni1tered by California. "I was tiring •ln the seventh,". Brunet admitted. "Othsrwlse 1 was satisfied with my pcrfonnahce, espOOial\y my OOfltrol. For mt It was close to perfect." For lhe Angels, it was a night of frustration. They outhit the Senators 9-7 but left 13 baserunners s!randed , in- clud ing nine in scoring position. The Angels will try to even the srore tonight when they send left -ha nder Rudy May. 2-1, against \Vashington·s Casey Cox, 3·2. California to.tanager Lefty Phillips took the de feat philo.sophicall y. "Some days it's gonna happen,'' he said. '"\\'e just didn'I hlt when we needed to.'' " \ Washington. utilizing a c0stly error by left fiel der Alex Johnson, scored three times in the fifth inning to take a commanding 5·1 lead and in s u re~ California's ninth loss in 23 games. Losing pitcher ~ndy Messersmith , 3·3, \\'aiked Ed Stroud and Frank Howard With one out and Johnson followed b)' dropping Mike Epstein's fly ball far an error that loaded I.he bases. l"ve ever seen." That wa s Bill:f Grabarkewitz' opening comment after his two-run double off Nolan Ryan had sparket.1 Lo:=i Angeles to it s first triumph over the f\1 ets in Nev.· York ill nearly two years. "i\1y gosh . is hl' fast ," Grabarkewitz, .a 24-ycar-old drawling Tex an. said after the Dodgers had tireeted pas t the i\1e~ 4--0 Tuesday night a! Shea beating Ryan for the second .season. • ~ 0 "'· ; o.m. ' lO D.m, 'lQ o.m. Stadium, time lhis Grabarke1.1·11z had been a strikeou t vic- lim of Ryan. the firebal llng right-hander. hl1 fir st 11.1·0 times at bat. and both clubs were locked In a .scoreless duel aft er fi ve inninga. . Dtn in the Loi Angelet sixth, a Jeadoff single to Andy Kosco , a forcing grounder and a doublf' by \Villie Cra wford had runners at second and third with Billy G. l_he Dodgers" lea ding hitter at ,356, eonung to thr plate. ~x-Broin Grill Her o W ashi11gton Ill Lee Maye then drilled a two-run sing le to right and a subsequent single by Aurelio Rodriguez -lhe former Angel making his first appearance In Anahei m .since the trade that sent him lo Washin g1on nine days ago -knocked in the third run of the inning and chased Messersmith from the mound. The Senators :scored a run in the first on Ed Brinkman 's leadoff double and a single by Frank Howard. Down cn1ne a ra11tball outside and Grabarkewllz jumpod on II, drilling it to the right-center field fence and the Dodgers v.·ere ahead for good. Alston got fi ve scoreless innings from rookie rlchl·hander SanJv Vance 2-1 but hi s Arm li ghtened up· and the' wily nlen tor went to hi s bullpen and came up with ~'red Norman . µ>S ANGELES (AP) -The voice wU weak but tile mind and memory lvtre as clear and sharp as a b u j I c call at day-break. f(amy Washillllml al legendary lootboll Jaine answered the phone In his room al UCLA MecUcll Center. He could saze o!Jt'-the windOW and see the practice fields whn'e, h1s athletic renown took root& lhrel decides btfore. 1bt big, friendly fellow, itOW $J, has h<x:!n qui~ sick. "I've been in and out of here so many times ••• I guesa I'll stay here t.hi• lime until It all comes out . . • ooe •'3Y ot the other." KeMy said. Ills \oOice: WU barely audible. r\eportcdly, Washing!Ofl I~ 1it1fferlng from 1 bean and rtsplratory coodU.ioo. ''I can toke a little exercise, w;i lking around. bul I gel tired prelly easily," he said. The new generation \\"On"t kno1v ;ibout Kenny \\'ashlngton. knov.•11 atf ec\Jonately to h.is fr iends as The C.cneral. l\i ngfish or Ken Bones. The latter Is a lribull' In t h~ lnni;:: !-ilcndcr legs \1 h.ich churnt'd 11111 n school record 1,915 yards 1n his rhrce. }ears as a varsity la ilback <ll l'CLA. not to forget lhc almost 1,300 1norc ~·ards galned lhrou1:h 1he air. It waro prlm :irily l\rn111·ih Stn nley W11shington ~·ho 1n 1~•37 ::fl .. !!J ran :inrl pas.'iCd UCLA ou1 nf rcl.11 11 I' Hnon} nlity into nalional a1·(Lo n1. rind 11 \I a~ l\rnnv whtl In t!i-f8 l)('r 111nr lht> lir ... 1 h!ack man to play u1 the NoL1on11 I }~oolbll U League in 13 years -"·Hh the Los 1\ngelcs J{ams. \\'ashin~lon, nlrl t1n1ers say . was an C\len b<>ltrr rollegc basrba ll prospect lhan a lt'am malc at UCLA, Jackie Robinson Bu! it 1v::i~n ·1 until ID50. whrn Kenny was 31, that he gol a try in ma jor league ba~rbrill. Leo Durocher of Ille lh::!n·NC"' York Giants gave him the chance. It was a fe"' years too late. The firs! tin1e UCLA defeated the l:niversitr of WHshing1on football team. the headline coulcln "t have been more appropriate: WASlll~1GTO:\ HF..\TS WASHINGTON \\!a.!iluni::tnn ·~ knnhbv knees 1.1•cre a i"hmn1c hnl hrr. nut o"nre nff galloping, he was hard lo Uru1g down. "lie 1vas like J im Brown, although not as st rong.'' recalls Dr. Leslie Jlorvath, Ohto State·s All-American al"ld Heisman Trophy v.·inner, who was with the Rams "'ilh Washington. In 1947. his best yea r' with I.he Ram.~. \\'ashlngton SC{lred on a 92-yard run again st the old Chicago Cardinals. ft "'as the longest run frmn scrimmage of lhe seaso n. Quarterback Jim Hardy of USC and !he R31ns calls Kenny ';a Whirling dervish. a hard runner to haul down." Bob \\'aterfield, who v.•ith Kenny ranks as an all-lirne UCLA great, also teamed up wilh \\'ashinglon wl lh the !tams. Says Bob, who is seldom lnvish with sup:orlallves· "lll:cnny \I as thr bc~t footba ll player J ever saw i11 nty life." WASHtHGTOH Urrhrbl 8'1".""'"·"ill O S•rouo. <f 2 1 o o F .Howard. !f 2 l I I Unser, ti 1 O o O Eo•l•ln. lb J 1 o o ••r,•·rt J011 Cul tn.1b 1 000 A.R011d~u~1. lb l l 1 1 8 .All .... 1b l b D I R~1Cnwn1 11 1 o o n Frl!lcn, c • o 1 o BrUMI. D J 0 I I P oot,p 1 000 CALll'OllNIA 1brnr" Alo""''· 7b S O O I J.l•lum. rf-l o t I JohnSIOllt, pfl I f I I Fr11VO•I, '~ • O l O A John'°"• If S I 1 I Mc/o\1;11.... lb ( 0 I l S~ttr. lb · I O 0 t AklH:'. t l Q I 0 """''' (f ) • , 0 Mqsert"'l'h, p 1 0 I I G•r'"'· p o o o o [OWi!\, pPI I f 0 0 WOll,o 0 0 00 Sltverlo, ph I O O O Q!H!en, p o o o I lot~ll ll 6 1 5 Tot11t » I I I w1.nir191on tll oJO 100 -• c1morn11 oc.o 100 ooo -1 E -..... Uf'1Mlth ... John1on. OP -tali!Or!\I~ ' L08 -W•~"'"""'" t, talltornlll ll 1B -Brln\"'81\, F r~I. JI -M<Mullen, $8 -$•rOIOd ?. \I' M II Ell ll 10 Bru"" (W,1·ll A 111 1 I I I I Pin.I )lltOO?I Mq1er,mlt~ (L,}.l) •I l • S l 1 J G.1.,e•I 1,l ODOD' Wah 1 !1t l0 0111 .. ~ !00 0 00 S•we -P'""· W r' -W!\lt 11.. r'ifl• P~ -~ltllC, f rf!>lih, l ln'le -~:GJ. Al!•~nc• -1.01•. . 1'he. Jett-ha nder stopped the Mel~ on one Jut over the last four In nings. LOS ANG l!Lll NEiii 'l'OlllK •'rllrlll 1ll r~tbl J01~110, d • I 1 0 "'J'l!t, d j O 1 o Wlll1, I\ ' 1 ) 0 H1•1~l•001, 11 4 O O O $LJd~•lJ. r 0 0 0 ( JO'\f1. II J 0 D • llf'tlMn. r o o o o ~'""·.•v. rt • o 1 • KO•c<I. d • 0 I 0 [lt"l!f1n.,. tu • G 0 • Molt.I! 10 0DBO\wtl!,1b JO D I W P.01-f• 10 J I I 1 l'oy lb J 0 ' ; Cr1..,..o•d.UJ1 1 0 0,~•r JO IO c,~~~··· .. 11,.ll:l • o 1 1· P;•n. 11 1 o o 1 Sl1tmor,. 1h 0 I 0 ~--~'.1(1•, pl\ 1 I O VO"ft·, I> l 0 0 0 ~ '•y '"• p 0 0 0 W01y1,, !!II I 0 0 0 (ud ,•·U, I> O O O I No'"'""· P o o o o 10·~· 1wn, p11 o o o I lo'tl• J< • ~ • Tn;~i, » G I Lot ~~0'"'• Ota OI') '0 • New y~,-n.o ov.o O""l o f -11¥"" llr' I " f>.• ~•·'~' I, N~w Vnt" l LOii I •· •"11'1~ • '<• v~.~ 10 •11 .. .......... AO!'"' (r• ... I~·~ ,.. .~ •1w •1 "'· ,,.,k~ ~I -J Al/'IHI, i -NO '"""• ' ' ... " ( l e::;t lly tcr 1a<I •Ph rty lti. tor el.! -" om. 11.m. om, om. •m. this vie· jrr, >O\h Juel dorr ld('I' Juul !I tty J56 ' and g it th'c rom 2·!· wily ame ~rill ' ' ' ' .. •• . , . ' .. • 0 • ' ' ' ~ i 1' ' ' ' . ' , I • • • • ~·· ~II • .. -... --· .... J if1 &MICUARI ..,,.,,,UllA. ·· ..... . " . ...... · ... ·. '• •. " ·· ... '• ,.,1"::-. '<f.' .-. ...,,-;- ... JEf~ MAL1t.1orf "l~Jf ~AX WtdBtsdQ, May 6, l 970 DAJLY PILOT ZJ Ci;,,_•' ''r.;,t / • -·~' ,,.,.,. ···-····· ........... . . . . . . . . .. ~ .. . -··· HOW NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH BASEBALL PLAYER STEVE HEDRICK SEES HIS SAILOR TEAMMATES -• IN CARTOON FORM. Eller Hitting .320 at Loyola; Area Ace to Slipper y Rock Costa Mesa resident Bill Eller, a graduate of Mater Dei High and Orange COast Col- lege, is smacking the ball at a .320 clip through 37 games for Loyola University. Eller's figures are even better in West Coast Athletic Conference action -.360. He's thrown out 29 of 48 rwmers attempt- Jng to steal from his c3tc}ler's position. • • ~1arina IUgb's baseball teams Is in the O\fck of the Sunset Ltague race, thanks I• three straight loop wins, J..1, !-1 and !-I. On each oceaslon the Vlklngt collttltd tbfft hlts. They tried •caln wilb three .its aaainst Newport Mond•y but fell, !-1. • • • ?.1ission Viejo High's football stadium Is gf:ttlng the royal treatment from wood shop teacher Gary Westover and his class. The Diablos are building an elaborate ----ROGER CARI.SON ·= ------=-=- press box atop the donated stadium, com· plete with separate compartments fOlf' visit· ing team spotters, a photo section, aMounc· crs section and press section. Financed by student funds, Westover and hi s crew have designed it, poured the Cf:J'J)ent and are completing it in module sections. Dedication ceremonies are set for June I. Permanent bleachers for baseball is the ~:<t project. • • Tennis forwnes appear bright for the near future at Fountain Valley wbtre the Barons are In the mld1l of • 15-i over11D sea1on. , Coach Keith Helmick'• bunch 11 senior· less and two of bis 1t•ndouts are in the Clt, Bet sin~les quarterffnaJs. • • • Edison High's tennis crew is 16·2 overall -but loses five seniors to graduation. The junior varaity is 13-3 for the Chargers. • • The Orange Coast area bas an athlete slated for Sllp~ry Rock College hi Penn· s1Jvaaia. He's Jim Sloane, an offensive tackle from Huntington Beach. At 5-il, 11%, bis former coach. Ke• ~l11ts, 1ays he Ii.as posslblUtles as u ofleasJ,·e guard. • • • Other standouts in the area headed for big· ger and better things : Chris Bowman (guard-tackle) and Roland h.1cElhany (cen· ter) of Laguna Beach are scheduled for foot· ball coach George Hartman and his Saddle- back College outfit. Mark Dunn of Mater Dei is headed for Notre Dame (football) on a full·ride scholar· ship and the Monarchs' Ralph Cbandos, of course, is set for Loyola as repll!ted sev~al v.1eeks -ago. ~tission Viejo High's Mike Gray (catcher on the Diablos baseball team) is beaded for Stanford on an academic scholarship (pre-- law). San Clemente basketball players Tom Gau lden, Rick Mason and Craig Domeni· chini are eyeing Saddleback College while baseball standouts Rick Wadsley (Mission Viejo) and Sal Lombardi (San Clemente) have been accepted at UC Irvine (basketball and baseball). • • • A water polo note of two: Ertuda Hlg.b water pole eoacli Barry Fry It looking for two er &latte mort con- tingents to compete In aummer Jeape action at Eatancia and possibly Orange Coa1t Col· kge. Fry Is bopeful of 1' entries -and If he'• succes&ful -the league wW be split Into tw• elg'llt-team iroups wltll adJOll •t bo01 silts Wtdnes!lay evenlng1, beglMlng June Z4. Tbe league plays under NCAA rules under lhe direction of lhe C011la rttesa Recreation Department. Intere11ed parties should contact Jim Ir· win at &'U-5383. • • • The swim season has been changed back lo the familiar spring sport beginning nexl year. It was tried as • winter sport this past season. but inclement y,•eather soured the future of prep swi1nming in December and January. • The Orange County Aquatics Officials Association will hold its first meeting June 1 at Estancia, followed by an officials' clinic J une 6. Persons interested in officiating swimming and water polo events should contact Don Lowry at 642-4850. SC su~~ess Se~ret Tea1n ·wo rk Do es It for San Cle me11te By PHIL ROSS Of tit• DltUJ ,.li.t Std Most high !Choo! ba5eba11 coaches are of. the opinion ii takes ju!t two superior hit- ters and a pair of outstanding pitchers to compile a winning rttord. BUI. tr1arshall Adair of San Clemente Higll feel s it takes just one ltlfl:redient lo put lolfether a winnint: com· bination -team"'Ork. Adair says, "I can't honest ly think of oiny one pRrti<.'l.l!ar individual who has helped us more than any other one this season. We've had a very e<>n· certed team effort." The rookie mentor's charges 11re currently slttinc: atop the Creslvlew League, two gameg In front of arch-rival Mission Viejo wll.h just l"-'O games lert . Adair coached the Triton rrosh·soph ttam before taking ovtr the varsity job from now--Oeparted 1' o n y Sisca. Adair figures Ult turning point for h.ls ball club came aflcr the Garden Grove Easter ,f{lu n1(y, In which the Trllons ·dropped tbtte ol four contest.a. He notes, "Wt haven't 1e- Cua\ly jelled or reeched our full poteoUal at this point and 1·m sure we can even play better." Adair adds, "as 1 matter of fa ct, I honestly feel we're getting better every game." Since his squad 1s primarily an experienced, senior unit Adair does not feel just\(ie(f Jn stlecting one player 11s a team leader. He says, "Erperle.nce and teamwork have gotten us Y.'here we are now." Thus far the beJf. hiUers, UCI Sextet Will Compete UC Irvine will send a SIJ · man 1quad to compete In U1e annual Southern Califomia Intercol1eg1ate Championships at Torrey Pines Gotr Course in San Diego on Friday. 1be Anteater team y,•lll in-- el ude Ron ai..mbe.rlln , Ron Hooven. Duke HoPklns, Dave Jobn!On, Bob Allen 1nd Steve Cutler. In 18 dual malchts thi1 .,_,, lrviDc baa 1Pllt (Hl. average-wise, have been a pair of outfielders -Bruce Jones and Dan Cludy. Although Jones has been sidelined off and on with assorted minor injuries he b still managing to lead the team offensively with a nilty .3.l3 average. Cludy fell off a pier two weeks ago but dld not suffer any bodily hann. He is cur- rently breeiing along at I .320 batting clip. Adair rates handyman Glen Tsuma as the team's best natural hitter. Tsuma has played third base end the outfield In 1ddWon to logging I healthy amoun\ of time on the pltchu'• mound. His batting average Is just nutterlng around .200 but Adair thinks Tmuna ha s been hkttng the baU well, despite that rather low mark. Junior ahortstop C r a I I Ande.r10n h.as combined a good glove ind arm to stake his claim as the Ttltons' defensive standout. Aulstln& TJWT1a with the San Clemente hill chores have been !ell¥ Ruben Paramo and J1ibtbaoder Ttr11 Nlel .... Anteaters, Wollos Fall To Aztecs SAN DIEGO -The in· evitable happened in this border city 'l'uesday afternoon when Dave \Vollos of the UC Irvine baseball team dropped his first decision in 13 outings to host San Diego State College by a 9-S margin . Wolk>!, ace oi the Irvine · mound staff, breezed through four scoreless innings as his mates gave him a $.0 lead. 'Ibe Aztecs bounced back with three in the fifth and sent Wollos to the showers in the seventh with a five run upris- ing. The loss leaves Irvine's record at 30 victories, 10 defeat3 and two Ues with five games remaining. Several of the UCI hitters had a big day at the plate wUh Afike Sheline going 4-for· 4. Tom Spence belted his fourth homer of the campaign Y.iith two mates •boa.rd in the third to give the Anteaters a 3-0 lead. He had :J..for·5 for the day. UC lllVINI CJI ••• LC Irvin• t.oJ 110 ODD-$ ll 2 5111 Olno ~tilt DCIO CJD 5111-t la I Mater Dei Rally Trips Ser vite, 2-1 Mater Dei High rallied for t\Or'O runs in the sixth inning to hand visiting Servite a Z..l loss in Angelus Le a g u e baseball action at Afemorial Park in Santa Ana Tuesday. Down 1..0, the Monarchs' Dan Meyer led off the sixth with a double and was sacrificed to third by Ron l\tuniz. He then scored on a passed ball. After Tom Cottage and Gary Simpson wa1ked, Bill Appleton ran for Cottage at second. Appleton then scored the win· ning run when Gary Simpson's grou nd ball was muffed. Meyer's double and a single by BIU Coogti were the. only hits for Mater Dei. Servile co!lect.ed. four off Monarch pitcher Ron lifuniz. Muniz struck out three and walked Uiree in going the distance. Servile scored its run in the tiflh Inning on a walk, a hit batter and a Jingit. Mater Del, now S.I in Ana:elus Leape action, faces Piu~ X Friday afternoon at Memorial Park. MAllJI Oii Ill Mr lt rM I I .. i = I i I j I ' . ' . . l ! ! I ,; I I : .. , .. ,.,. Gr11erw,/' > 11 > ~..... l I :::.,c:,, 11 • !Lo'!::· r • ! j ;,i;;,. 1 1 1 ""'· rt 2 l !1, I ! I rr°'''' ,, ' , •~ tr tlll'lh1t1 .. "I CMlO Ill ._, 4 l ....... 1 1 Tri tons Clinch Tie for Title Miss io n Viejo Upset b y· Laguna Beach, 5-4 San Clemente High clinched a tie for the Crestview League baseball crown with a 3--2 vic- tory over Tustin Tuesday while second place Mission Viejo was dropping a 5-4 decision to Laguna Beach. The victory elevated San Clemente's loop mark to 10.2 while Mission Viejo has an M rewrd with two games remaining. Host San Clemente scored the winning run in the fifth Inning . Craig Mderson walked with two outs, advanced to third when the catcher's throw went awry· at second and scored when a throw to pick him off at third was also tossed away. The wiMing Tritons scored. two runs in the firsl to tie the game on a walk to Anderson. an infield hil by Bruce Jones, Robin Reschan 's double and a squeeze bunt by Conrad Steiner . Sophomore righthander Ter- ry Nielsen went the distance for the Tritons, scattering .seven Tustin hits. In the Mission Viejo game. visiting Laguna p u n c h e d across a run in the seventh to win. Artist Chuck Corwin got aboard on a tw<H>Ut single and when a throw to first to pick him off went awry, Corwin raced to third. The subsequent throw lo lhird was also thrown away and Corwin raced in with the y.•inning run. Mission Viejo committed five errors ill the game with four of the Laguna runs being unearned. The Diab1os nearly tied the ga me in the seventh when ~1ike Gray attempted to scOre from second on an error but was gunned down on a cl00t: piate at the place. Corwin. a sophomore who is now· hitting .429, had :i $AN CLEMENTI!. UI ......,.,...,,., IS Jon.s. U Klerntn, ti R...,;~an II> ~"'"''· 1b Tium1, la S. Lo.n1>1tal, cf :r~~.'. Tol1h TU$TllOI 111 1b t1'rtl I 1 0 ~ ) 1 ' 0 J 0 0 0 l 0 1 l l 0 n I 1 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 70 J l 1 perfect day al the plate with a double and three singles. Gruy paced Mi~ion Viejo it bat "''ilh a solo home run to left center in the third, a double and a single. The win for Laguna was its second over Mission Vieju 111 Crestview play this season. T11e Artists are now J.9 in Jc;1guc action . LAGUNA IEACH U) c-.n.'111 ~;.;r.·:."li ~ ~cionlt1. " Brooll,. rt H ·I!'. lll 9,...,.,,, c• g!\~~;i.c ~lcl>Ots. pr, AM!rews U 1111111 '''""' • l • ' • 0 0 • • 1 ' 0 . . I , , . . j g • l J 0 0 ' J 0 0 • I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 J2 J • ' MllllOH VIEJO 10 1tr1'rtil Holm••· Cf • o o o H•nn11oro, 1• • 0 0 0 Gr11,c l 2j• W!IOsl~v. lD • I 0 Hlllf\, lb l 0 2 1 Sports in Brief •II , h rlli • 1 I 0 J G 1 1 1 1 0 0 l 0 0 G l o 1 a J 0 I 1 l 0 I o l o 1 a l a o o 1T J 1 1 c11ro,lb 4010 H~,~e:'i rl l f ~ ~ 8uucl'l.ll 1000 Prlct.U 10 1• Iba Gets Olympic Cage Post Again NEW YORK -Henry Iba, who retires this year after 36 years as head coach at Oklahoma State, will e<>ach the U.S. basketball team in the 1972 Olympics at Munich, Germany. Jim Gudger, coach at East Texas State, will coach the American team in the 1971 Pa~American Games at Cali, Colombia. This will mark the third time Iba has coached the American team in the Olym· pies, having won with the U.S . team in 1964. at Tokyo and 1968 at Mexico City. "We ha ve plans for new melhods of selecting the team," said Iba. "We cannot be complacent. We can exDCCt many new and varied de[enses.·• • LONG BEACH -"We're rooting for Kentu cky,'' said e<>ach Bill Sharman of the surprising Los Angeles Stars, who quickly added, "but we can't really think about that just yet." Sharman's young hotshots have at least one more date berore they can think about playing Kentucky -or ln· dlana -for the championship 0: the American Basketball Association. The Stars have another game with the Denv e r Rockets. It will be televised naUonally from Denver Satur- day afternoon -and it could just be the game that propels Los Augele1 into lhe ADA finals. The Stars took a giant step toward that goal Tutaday night, nipping the Rockets 114- 110 to take a three-game-to- one lead In their bf:.st.of-tcven Western Division teriel. • NEW YORK Com· missioner Jack Dolph of the American Basketball Associa- tion expreued unguarded o~ tlmism Tuesday that Congl'Wl would approve a merger betwetn the ABA and the rival National 811.sketb•ll Assocla· tlon . "l have no Idea bow Ion~ it will tDke." be said . "But Congre55 I! expected to recess by Labor Day and we hope to have 1 dedalon belort then. • ''There have been changes in Congress, and we ha ve the disadvantage of not being as glamourous as football, but precedent is a vilal aspect of law, and there is a prece· dent." • ST. LOUIS -Eddie Westfall and Derek Sanderson fired two goals each and superstars Bobby Orr and Phil Esposito established Stanley Cup scor· ing records as the Boston Bruins blitzed St. Louis 6-2 Tuesday night In the second game of the National Hockey League's flnafround playoffs. Rustlers E11d '70 Season In Victory Jim Hogap and Noe I Paulson banged out three hits eac h in leading Golden West College to a season-ending 9'4 Southern Ca 1 i fa rn i a Con· ference baseball victory over East LA Tuesday on the losers' diamond. Hogan had a single, double and triple, drove in two run s and scored three. Paulson bat· ted ln three runs with three singles. ~ Rustler pitcher Gn!g Henry 0 helped his own cause with j a 385-foot homer over the left ., center field fence ln lhe fifth ·~ fr~1'den West broke a M l tie with tl'i'O runs in Ule eighth on singles by Paulson and ! Tom Carroll, a two-base error ,; and a wlJd pUch. ! lllO\.OllOI WllST (ti .-uiMll1 »u Jim Hot1n. (f ,.,\llton, "' Klt'ltr. rt C1rroll, 11 c-11.. 1, HtltoOI, l lowe'I. 111 3.ttrdf•. " M..,.., st .lellrt 1-fotML. lb H..,.,.... I WOOd .. I P11r1berlon. llfl 0.l>fr°", I T011"5 ff• •rW J 1 I 0 J I l 2 s 1 l l 2 I t I 1 I I 0 ' I I I • t I I I t I o I 0 0 I I 0 I 0 , ... 2 I I I 0 I I D I 0 D t I 1 I O 11 • n ' 0" I O.lde" Wtll 110 11:!8 ~t 12 I l!ltl lA ••• ., ....... " ' • i l I ~ f 1 • ••• l u"ln J(I) CICIO 0-J 1 l BfrtP, P 1 I 0 er-n. "" I o o o M11!rnor>. 1 I I I 0 ''" ,,_,. lOO 010 •-J l t Total\ lO • 11 J Next to you I like Green Stripe best $5~ USHER'S GREEN SI'RIPE Since 1853, the qriglnal light Scotch ... .. . . -_ .. -..... , 4'. t j • i ' • ~~ D.\llY PILOT 15 quallflerl!I Saints Dominate Sunset Prelims By JOHN CASS ot flle DIH' l"llft lltlf Santa Ana tligh's po~'er!ul Saints just may make a farce of the Sunset League tritek and field finals Friday night at Western Hlgh's Handel Stadium in Anaheim Friday night. after showing their wares at the same site Tue!- day afternoon in the prtUms, On the vanity level, tht Sainta qualified In 15 posttlom in the five running events. It ill quite possible lhe Saints \\i.ll sweep both varsity hurdle events as they placed four in the high barrien ind six in the lows. Three varsity Saints made the final! in the 220 yard dash. Anaheim may have an outside chance of catching the Saints in the Bee division but it will be an uphill battle. \\'ilh lhe results of the rield events already in, Santa Ana with 25, has a 13 point ad· vantage over Anaheim and seven over Western. There appears to be no con- test on the lightweight level. The Saints lead all schools in qualifiers in the running events and havt a 31 point margin over the nearest rival at the end of the field event action. Santa Ana captured the first place medal in three of the four cla ss Cee events com- pleted Tuesday. In the long jwnp, Santa Anans fini&hed Baseball Standings SOUTMIRN CAL CON,l ltlNCE (tlM ll • u.cc " ....... • LAH-• c,,.. .. , • Goldt<I Wnl ' E1rt LA ' TM10tJ't $(HK Gold.ii Wfo! '· E&•I LI t LA Kirbo!' 7, LACC J Cytreu 6, ltlo Htndo S ,rWl l''I Pll.,.N OMii ' .. • , ' ' • " • " • LACC v•. C•rrllOI CSolttll c;o1.i Con- ftrtne• cNmplonJ 11 Qlll1l1J f'lt kl In LA II 1.m.) Sin C!tmentt NllUIOI"! Vltlt FNlllllJ '!llln Ll'AGU!W L Cl " , .. , V lit Plr'll E MDO.nt Orlllltl Lttllne I"°" T11tH11,-. Sctrn $1n Cletnenlt 3. Tu1l\n ? ' ' ' • • • • • • ' ' ' ' . ' ' . ' L19UM 8e1ch s, Mlnlan vlela l Vlll1 Plr'll $, Ora"llt 1 FaGll\1111, El Modl!n1 J ''"9\"'I OllM I Stn C~tnlt ti L .. 11111 lltt d'I Ml1:lan V!ela 11 VIiii Pt rt:; Or1r191 t i El Mocl&rlt foofhlll 11 Tu1lln ANO•LU5 LI AGUI 111~000 Amal PIUll" X St. Anlt'lon1 M11tr Otl ...... SI. Ptul TlleMitY'I ktrH l l1floll Amil l, 5.'1 """*"' 1 M1'9r 0.l 2, S..r...,le l Pl111 X 6, 51. Paul I ,,..,, .... ··-Pi~• X 11 ~t1r Oel St. P111I II St. Anlllon¥ II~ Amat •• kt\lltr ,.llWAT LU.DU• W L GI " ' 10 • ' ' ' ' ' . ' 4 10 I j 10 • W L T 01 t ! ~ i·~ ' s 0 2''t ' J 0 ,,~ S t 03V. J 6 0 J•' ' 1 0 •\• ? I 1 I "-i·· kotttt l ut"I Ptrk 11, I Htltrt f Lowtll 10, knnv Hlll1 s Fulltrton 1, K1nn1•v 5 TroJ 7, S1v1nn1 ' ,fltlJ'I Otlllll Lowell ti Kt nnedY "'/,""' 11 Lt Ht btt F11I irrton o1 S~'l!ll' H/111 l lllNI Pt tk t i TNIJ first, third ind fourth. They followed with first and fifth In the high jump Jnd 1 first, second and fi>urth in tbe shot put. The leaders didn't wln the pole vault, but did garner se- cood, third and fourth spots. No points have been tallied on tl1e var!lty level. Vtl'litf 0'1111tltr1 120 HH -!Heal l) -1 OtYI! (SA) ···'· 1 O..n11, !Wm) U.3. l S1ubbln1 (H&) ~.I, ' Mellll !SA) II.I, J. Hoti.el1 CNHI 11.l. H .. 1 , - l Wis. CHIJ 15.0, 1 FIOl'd /SAi UJ, I Tio bel.,..~n AYttYI '"/ 111d lloblnlOll 15.A.l, 1•.o. J Ortl1 ~A 1'.l 1110 -tHftl 1) -Jlllo CNHI :J\01.l, 1 TellO (SA) J:01.•, l NICOii !Wm) 1:0•.f. Httl t -I 51&blff (NH) 1:01.f, LtHt'lltrd tWm l 1:0.1.0f J Htrl (M) l :03.1, • $11'11111 CW 2:03.(, 4111 -IHttl 11 -H1rrell CSA! Jl." 1 Al'lktrmtn (Wml S"1.L Hell 1 -1 Jun IM) ll.). 1 ".IKltrt !NHJ $3.l. HI.ti 3 -1 Ramlrt1 !$Al 12.1. 1 s1rou'11 IHll) iJ.ol. J $Ci>ullJ (NHJ U .J. \IO LH -(Htl l 11 -l Lln011Y !SA) 20.l, 1 FIOJd <SA) 20.I, .A.m11 lMl 20.(, A111ryt {M) 10.I, 5 Halt H&l 20.t. HNI 2 -1 01vh ISAf 1, . .t, 1 OunllP {Wml 20.2, J Wht (H8l 20.5, •. R1ubln9M (SA) 21.1, ! Robinson ($.A.I 11.•. "' -\Heel 1) -Wl>Tlf (SA) n.o12 Vtnl mlillt CM) Zl.7, 3 R1mlru ISA 23.). H••I 2 -1 Wln1tt &d SAi Zl.6, 2 Ltcv (NI\ 2l.O. 3 NltlllOWP:I (H&l 11.3, • L•nll1rdt (Wm) lJ.(, To!tl qu1lllfers -$1n!• Ana U, Y19llmln1ler 1nO ~,[,.. 1, Hunll,..lon 6e1cl1 f. Ntwperl Htrllar $, .A.nth•lm ' •M OMlltlln lZG HH -!Ht.t I) -I Mc~• IAl l•.I. 2 Sltnbt (NI) U.t, l R It 11 ... ) 11.0. TIH lut\19 l'Kltd. ttl 1 -I Pff•itY ·iMI" l".S. Pldt!O_. (Hiii 1'.1, l L-r (W) U..•. • K~l'I (Wm) U..,. Ht1I l -I 1Vtf'1' (SA) 1~.o. 1 Hoffmtn (HI) 16.1, Bract (NH/ M.I. IOQ -H.ltl 1' -1 W• (Al I0.1I 2 II.t iter IWj JOA, Ht11 -81.U. (Al 10., 1 Oleut CSAI 10,2. l Httm1nllk \Ml 10.•. Htll J -1 Greer CU. 10.l. K1n111 (Wm) 10.5. He1! 4 - l Ktllh (A) 10.2, 2 Kt"l'I (Wm) 14.), l KlltM (M) 10.S. 6'6 -fH11I 11 -Plcktrl ... CI A! l :U.5. H11f 2 -Kt tlfllly CWml 1:1'.7. Ht ll l -McGtt CHI! 1:31.7. Hftl • -1 Cl•u CWJ 11lD.l r. 2 Gitt.on (SA) l:")O.t. Hett 5 -HO, (Wf!ll U'Jt.), 2 Tt bVkl (Ml 1:,..l, J20 LH -~e1t 1) - l P111ll'r' I ) ll.31 t I Y••1 ls.Al U.I. l Ktv• !Wf!I) 1•.1, VIiiaiobos IAI U.J. H•tl t -1 McQllftll CAI lJ.o. 1 P!clllard !Hll 1-'.0. > Ofl!lkt !$Al !,.). • Tllomp50n tWl l,.l. H"t et l -I H~lltl (A) 1'.2, 2 JlttCI CAI 14.S, J LOPII (W) U.I. 12'1 -{H11t 1) -l Kl!tno <Ml 21itf. Het t l -l Wtde (Al Zl.tj Ht ll 3 -I l ltcl! IA). H .. 1 -1 IC.ti's (Win). Ht ll 5 -1 '!titer (WI 23.J. 2 K1n1u CWml 21.s. 1120 -(Heat 1\ -1 Kr.i.otr (Wml J:H.,, Rud'( (NH 3:'6.1, l Qulnt•nl IS.A.I 3:17.6. He•t 2 -1 8• dtner M) 1:11.l, 1 Clint {NH l l:ZI.$, Ptdrct• (SA) 3:71 J. Hftl l -I Woollrr !Wm! l:n.1, 2. 1t1mlr11 ISAI 3:h .J. l Crau {NH) 3:1'-'· Taltl <1Ulllller5 -S&lltl A"' 11, .A.nthtlm tnd We111!1!1111fr 10. M1rln1 1. Wt11tr" 6. N•wPOrl H1rbor Ind Hu,..lntlton lleKJ'I '· '1111 1!,,.,.I Fllll~ L-J11mp -1 Greer CSA) 11·5", 1 51UHr (SA) t!-1, l Kii"' CAI 'l'l·V ... ' Nowicki tW ) :IQ.I'll. 5 O'Neil t!>Al »VI. High J"'"" -1 Kllneenl>trt ISAI U. 2 T11rner (NH) WI J Thom'ten IWl U. ~ Gormtn IA Joi. I 5',lrn. 1ntr111 (W) W . Sllot P11t -l Love1..i1 {IAl JO-Jl't. 7 Tl'lomPIOfl IWl l ... 10'1, J 01k1 INH) •sYt, t Smllll 1W1 •7-1~" S Nld<ey CSA) .U.10''1. Pole VtuU -I JOl\n!on CWJ 12.0, 7 Gorm1n (Al t7.0, l O'Ht nltn (Al 11-4, I Slnn1r CWm) 114. l •onO tSAI l•.O. c" .,,111110 13:20 -IHt.i 1l -1 MY\l!n1 IHI ) 3:21.7, 2 Connell' (SAi l:l-4.S. Httt 2 -1 M&rlrn CM) J:U.O, ' 81110" lN HJ 1:13 . .S. Httl 3 -l Wll"IOlr (H8) l:l•.f, l N!el1on CM) l :3'.5. Ht t! • -1 Loc:km1n (I.I) 3:10.1, l Cl1rk1 (NHl 3:32.f. JOO -Het! ! -E<lw1rd1 (S"-~ 10.5, l Kihn (SA) «I.I, J 81nt<llC1 (M) 10.f. Hett 2 -1 Mtllb~ (NI ) 10.5 2 ,.tr11 fSA) 10.1, l v1rg10 CSA\ 11.0, 4 llflt n 1NH) 11.1. Httl l - l Wllltaltt ISA) 10.6, 2 Wlrlcli CSA) 1:1..0 3 Heer Ml H~. , 6MI -Helt 1 -I 9"'1pbell (Ml 1:11.11 2 H1rrt1ll (S.ll 1: .o, l Kfdloc:~ tWml l:ll.2. Ht1t 2 - l OuUYntkl !SAi l:ll.I. l Atv1r1r CHll 1:11.1. Heel l -1 8r1unit•ln (Wm) 1 :lS.l, 2 F1lrch!ld IWJ 1:31.0. lil'O LH -Httl 1 - 1 Pere• !SA! W.J. 2 091!1 tWI M.I, l Fl.Kntn IHI! U.J. Httl 1 -1 GomeJ !SAi !' ... t. W!rltk (SA) 14.I l. Melnlr•t !Ml H.I . Hii i l - l TtYlor !Ml ll.,, 2 Jolln$0tl ISAl 1'.2, J Sm1r1 ISAl 141. 'Olldt M) 16.1. 110 -IHttl 11 - 1 T1y1or CM! lt .l, 1 Btflldlct IMI MJ, l Kthft IS.A.l lf.t. l'lt•I 2 -1 M1ttnv <Ml 13..!, 2 Whlltwtt llAl lt.&. l Mtef •M> 1t.I. Httl \.1:-I l!!ow1rts tSAI 11.~, 2 CllYI II IM) lf.0, l V•'11•• iSAl lt .L 4 G di (Ml tt.•. Tol1 I <IUtl!l'ltrs -Slnl1 Ant 11, Mt rlnl 1$, HWflllnti'Olo l t 1Ch l, N-PCrl Ht rbtf l, W11t.nlrwttr 11\d Wu1t rn 2 PltW ••1111 PIMll Loni Jum~ -1 w11111ttt CS"-1 21.$, 1 Hlrtlt C~ 11.J...,, .t •ur,inrton ~'~~.;.··l.:.H: lg-4.u l ti.A) 1 ·10, 1 M1111 J~:I. -I N1P'tr CSA! f·IC, 2 lttl tM J-1, l 1'11""""1! !NH! J.I, • M ttflllt lmtr CWm) J..(. l G1rtll tSA) J.4. ;ar: Put -I Gt rtlt (IAl #-Ill, ' rll.tnllfl CSAl '7-$1'), , HantVW•ll CN . C•hYln fSAl '6 ... Vi. J Wftkttthtn tlll'm.l '°"· Pall VIUll -1 I MW (Al 11-<l, 7 l(W1n !IAI 11..f, l LVtrl l (SA ! 11.0. I Lft>tl (SAJ 11.0. I 11.IJIU tWl 1,14, Area Net Results Vl flltf l!fi-!Hid U~I (Mii MtM 5htfltl Ltnl CEI del. En0,1t1 IC) 6-0; d'ff. Forii.&1 6-li def, Speir .. ,I def. C1r1t• H. 8ag1rd (EJ 1011 •·ti """" .. 2. 6-J. .... Ktltll Orttlood tE) won 6-1, ~.6·1, .... Hl f'TTIOll U!J wen 6-1, Ml, .. ,, H. "'"" Kirk tnO Kenl 0rfhaod CE! de-I. MtrQUtl Ind Clam (Cl .. ,, t-31 def. M:::,,,")11,~lcit~l~f· ~ii Wor> 6•(, ... ,, 1pllt "'· ... ,. J11"1« Vl"lly 1111 ... 10 (t IC•lt Mtu lllltltl Robbin& tE) <11!. Smith (C) 6'0, •·1. Cl11r (E) def. l\otllr>er (Cl .. 1, •·1. H1mlllor> !El dtl. Mevor1 IC) 6..0, 'tvllOtt CEI dlif. Kim-(Cl l ·O, .... PtlUSOll <El def. Hornt IC) 6-0, ... ... ~. Slevtn1411 tnll FrlltJ•r (Ii.I del. C~ ntfl llld Sllllh1m CCI 1·f. ,.~ 6-J. Rkt Incl WllKlll !El def, ,l.dam1 Incl Gflil'il (Cl .. 2. 6-1. Vl l'llily c,.,. tt\Cll ~n~1 LMr1 Slflll•I OYe• !Cl loit ta M1tleY IL} t-1: Iott ID Su.ldort l-41 1 ... 1 M lo frllt¥; IOI! M to Zurtk. V1t1T111nd ICI las! 0-4 :H. 2·6, 1·6. 0-Jlllllll ICJ 1011 H, H. 1-1, ... Lewh (Cl lo" H , H. M. 1-1. °""''I Nthll' 11\d 11.ulHll (C) dtf. SJ>&I• •nO T•1111 ILi ._,, Ml; 1plil with gll ,llfTlel Ind Llptll ._,, M . Pr11! tnd McC1r1V (Cl lost :U, "41 loll 1· .. M . JtHllW Yal"lltf C• MIU Ill Letr1 IJ11tltl ,,111;11111 !Cl 1o11 2·6. '"'· Shoemaker (Cl lost +6c 2-4. HHll1•9' 4C) won 6-J, J.1, <1tl1111l. M.,,h [('.) Willl J"-ftltllll. Go.ool• <CJ won 6-2, dtl1u11. g.,_ltl T1btk ''"' Tibet (C) 101! .... 6-1. M . 1'4trPff t!ld Siler CC) loll 0-f. a.6. Vttt.flJ Wtttmln•l•r 11'1 If) AllOlltlm 11"11111 Gr1nbt1111~ (W) toll II Mel'9r (A) 2·11 1011 It Rodenblrger (Al •• ttt H•llorl IA) ._\; dtf M llm1n '"' 6·!. Corvlll (W) Iott J-4, H 1 -._2, . .. 6-l~'"'" {W) 1001 W; .wor> '"" ._'L Frt11ic• (W) Iott 0-l. 1-4,11'4. J·I, Dtlitltl Jo.'lrUOll -Krov•r (W} dt f INCe• D1W$Oll IA) .. l, .. ,/ def Ger1r<J.Rlttr1 (A) 6-0, •2. Wt11h·kl>rolt IW) won ._2, 6-l, 6·0, .... V1~ltf h~ Cltm..,lt 111.,.) (lT:r,,,) TUUI~ llMltl W11ner CS! IO!I! 10 T"°"'t~ fl), 3-6, loll It Edw1rd~ (Tl. S-1; 1\~d w!lll 511hrlri. 1·1; loll Zur101 Ill, ... Llml>trt (S! won 6-0. lol'I J.7; wor> 6-1 ; loll M . Llf'nlN!r1 IS) last O·i, O·i. M . l-4. (Ollt (ll loll :H, 0-4. 1-4, 1-4. Dtubltl Kt1HV t lld Oawll1111 tS) lleO ,.,,,,~ls~! and Hrlltlr !Tl. 1·1. IO•I 7-S: 101! to Sts~kl"' tnd Chermtk CT), ... J. E~altnd tr>d PloWl:ltn ISi won 6·21 loiof ... , ,..on ... 1. t·I, Diclison Eagles, FV Qualify 8; occ In SoCal Duo Leads MD • Qualifiers SANTA FE SPRINGS Mater Dfi Higil's Ron Dick.ton Jed a limited Held o! varalty qualifiers in the Angelus League track and field prelims Tuesday aftenioon at St. Paul !Ugh. Mark to Christiano By PHIL ROSS Of !flt CtH, l'lltl Sllll 'V.,-1Uy 100 0\1 htlll -I. M••I IFVI JO.I ]. Rollrlt IS.A.VJ 10.1 l. $1nc11t1 IMI 103. 100 Und hte11 -I. JDhn~Dn San'" Ana Valle" pul 1·1Sel[ Eso 10.0 1 atv••• CL/ 10.0 3. " T G1!Dll ilh CM) 10.•. 100 )rd heat) ' Kent tCdM) i•ll 3. ltlll• ((Ml !.-10 (. P1rt:;1 {LI 5·10 }. Htll \CM) J.10. SP [~ln~I -I, ltrll~f (EDI Sl·l"' I. ROl>frl1 !SAV) ~~J\\ l . Gordorl(L) 45-7 •· Wri~hl <EOJ 4'•Sh OrJOge Coast Collcse trnnIB players Laurie Cunnlnghan1 and Jim Ogle v.-111 enter the Southern California junior col- legt: tournan1ent Thursday. Frld3y and Saturday at El Camino College. , Dickson won his heat of the varsity 440 in 51.5 to nip Bishop Amat's Joe Fabian. St. Paul's Curtis Kidwell set a league record in the shot put vi'ith a heave of 56-61/4 to lead a St. Paul 1-W 1weep in the prelims. into a good position to capture -1. Elkin• tLJ '·'· ~-e•'t• 1u.v1 its lnltial Irvine League track 111fio u.1 "''" -1. E11t1n1 <L.> 11 ~ ]. Val1;>Uen1 (FV) 21.t. '220 tlnd and field championship Tues-"(•II -1 .Jc"""'" 1£111 21.1 1- day, qua11fying the most con1-~""\1M J!!;'> il~}· 22~ 2~3n:1Ru;:1~ pelitors for the finals in the '',O:J1 1\t 2ht1n _ 1. cnr1111a"° tFV! loop preliminaries at Santa ft.'I j,1tt"° ~2~.~11~,:~~1• G~11Jr:11~ Ana College, CM Sl.l . ....., llrd M11J -, 01wn IEltl jl).) 2. Southwlrt CSAV) SI I. S. Mullllfn (FU) ...0. lJ (Fln&U -1. "'""°" lSiliVf 20·' l. Co+llnl) (Edi 20·• ). Nfum1n IE11) 20-• '· ICntChl !SAVI ~ !. Grover lE11l »2. Tn"I QUOlilltr1 -SA VtlltV 17, E1t1ocl1 9, Fount•I" V1llt¥ 1. Mt91\0lll 6, Edlwn 6. Lo1r1 4. Co111 Mt1• l, Corant lltl Mir 1. Te•m i.c:art1 1fltr l!tld t~ent tlnt11 -Cailt Mfll lO, SA Vtllt'r I, Edl1411 n. Cw-001 /Mr 1c, Lotr• I, Foun!tln l/t11e1 1, E.il111Cl1 l, M1gr111111 ~ Both are scheduled to play Thursday morning ma tches In the single elimination tourney. The two will also team to enter the doubles competition. The first doubles match is slated Thursday afternoon. The Falcons garnered 10 ....., U1h huo 1. a .... ,,. 1L1 .50.J. 11G !hi ""'"/ -1 Soolnwlt~ !SAVI qualifying spots for Saturday's 2.DO.> 1. Chr1111no cF111 1:111 0 l . ,,. 8 rtl!! ILi J•Q.1.S I lunl !SAVI I p.m. finals at Santa Ana 2·01.0 • unc1 11e1u -1, ita.. 100 1111 11eau -1. Grr010i. t?1ll C '' •••> > _, > ' "' >EO< > o 10.1 1 Sh.ill'ltrd !Ml 10.7 J. Gll"Otl ollege to place them ahead ....... :-. -•rmo = 1·1 rFv1 11 G"""''gt 1ed1 * 11n0 Varll" l . H1rdln IFV) OJ 1 •. Go!!nlc-Ml!J _ 1. llhYt SAVI IO.J ?. 100 -1111 1w110 1. Tometu (Plu•I of Estancia and Fountain 1'1TJ 2.:i~.1.tht 1111n _ 1 Den"°" C••Pt'l'I"' ICM) 1(1.7 J. Ltuderbtu11n 10.1 2. Ptl<•I CIA! 10.2 3. Frill Valley with eight apiece. IS.A.V) 14.7 2. LtFIYt r tCMI IS.I tCOMt 10., l-• CFVI 10.f. 100 {MO) •· ~-IMO) 11ftd lttitl J. 011nL111 tCdMl 1$ 7 •· Jollruon llrd l>etll -l . Llddlt (£11) \0.) 1. MorNft (SPl 10.S '· LIWI IPl111I Defending tillist L 0 a r a . ISAV) 16.0 120 ~H (2f'IO lleol) - 1. Pirtle CM) 10.1 J. k11111Yeod1 (FVJ 10.2). Ptl1f'" (S'l t, Frllol IMO). • J. Wood CE10 11.1 2. HllOCIY <Ll IOt l a1ll tCOM! 11 .1 IO!I 14111 htll) Cunningham suffered his first conference si ngles loss of the season Saturday in the South Coast Conference final match, falling to S o n n y DeGroff of San Diego City College. 2211 -()II l'ltll) 1. l'IJ.(11 !IA) Ythlch finished in a three-way )j s ). H1nn1 CFVI IJ 1 •. Sl11•rt -I. 6tdl CSAV) 1'l,,, '· AbrtilO 22.1 2. Mort•" ISP! 23.l 2. L1w1 I llh lhe F I nd F <E s!I M.O. ISAV) 11.0 3. ll.01e1~ lCdMJ l.O IPIUI) 4 •• Ol>IDfl {Pl110 Und N•I ie w a cons a oun-llO LH (hi -u-I. OtnlOll !SAV Hun~rlard (CM) 11.1. t. Tome"" CP!ul) n 1 1. F1tl1n lai'n Valley for the lrv>'ne dual Nornvr1 CEill 11 1 •. llroalls.h!rt !Edi , llCI !1st ""'/ -1. LWdle (ES'I) !IA! t:l.l l. Frill (MO) 4. FrllOI 21 t 110 LH (2nd hetll -1. WOOO ! I J. Rhue SAV ) ll.8. ti& /2nd (MO) l h d S · X IE!H If .I J. Hanni (FVI 70.l J hNtl -1. (;lrtlO!t (E11) 1'.5 (Ltetut UO -Chi heal) 1 DklcSOll (MOI mee crown, a 1 Dunlao (CdMI 20.l •. John1on <SAVI recardl 2. KflleY ICM) lt.I iao Cunningham and Ogle wori the conference doubles crown. defeating a pair from San Diego ~tesa . 11.S t. l'tbltn CIAI i H&daow \'"" qualifiers. 20 •. tJrd riean -1. &l<ll CSA.vi 1,., '•··-~•'•'•"•''••"•>'".o'',.'"'•-••"'• •,•,,,,',· f atal a11•1\tlen -SA Vellt¥ 10. 1 Car11tnl'r CCM) 1•.0. 180 (•1n J. J'i'~i.1n111 ~~O/ •· OtYlti''1MD). The overall league title is f.''"c'!.'~n:· :er"i,.'~~ ~.·11u.:..,l~•°''i~ r~r11,:s: 1. Plrllt CM) 1t.S '· MOl!lUtl Mesa COJlS W1"n S1>Q1 1>11t -10 au1111y> l. Kldwtn based on a combination or co1111 Mn• 2. eolscn 2. 660 tis• 11e11l -1 G1r"1c1 45AVl (SPI 561-l!o (leaDUI reainl) 2. Hin· l ~ll a 1. Jolley !Ml l :J.1.1. '60 (l~d cock ISP! 56..JV. 3. McP1r111rw1 1"1 points added together in both 8ee l\e1t1 -1 MolleUI CL) l ;ll.1 1. 1no H•dl cP11111 .i.4 s. ·aaw..,. IA dual meet compel•'l•·on and ,·0 100 (111 tie••! -1. N09Qle tM! ~am,.(,,',~•'•',,','i':',·'i ·.•"'.o •'·'•"•''•"•"••"• The Costa Mesa Police .CU'h 6. Dunn "A) •J.SV. 1. Ptt•or> 10.4 !, lt Ct>ci1 IEI 1C.S l. C11rrl• "' • IPlusJ U.l'/I !. Walkar CSA! '1·t" the loop finals. IFVI 10.6. 100 (1nd keatl -I. !FVI 1:11.!. 660 (lth he•!) -1. Department downed th C '· Ke"n~ !SPI •1·t \'J 10. aarren u~1on (Ed! 1c.• 1. Ntl.on !SAVI f~";;~j~Gh•m CFV! 1;12.1 1. Jon~ <E10 Newporl Beach genda •• (St•I •1·1. Although wind·aided marks 10.S 1. Grovtr ri:so 1~ 6. 100 (lrll rmes 1.r Qu1ll!ltr~; Plu1 X (101. Mll•t Otl ~'~!) -' Jo~el !SAVI IC.l 1. 1:!2tl lh l ht~t1 -1. Dav ((OM) 61 in an inter-departmenJ ca- (!), SI. Paul Ill. s1. An111Dn¥ 1na by Loara's Steve Elkins in Collin• !SAVI 10.4 3. MaGre tE1t1 l :?l.l 1. ce~na SAVI 1·1a.1 l. Ka1<>l'r w- Blll'>OP Amit u1, Servile Cll. IOJ.-.. '''' •• ,,, _ '· ••-·• ,,,., IEill l'2'·2 •· HalllO•v lCMl 3:12,Y. clash at Corona del Mar FJ lh loo (. 81 • d SA Valley's "'" ... ,......,. , ll'la 12n0 ht•!\ -I. AtvereJ (Ed) ur a t•I e · n 2l ~ 110 Ond ~eall -1 Jan,1 1:11,l J. KntoP (COM) 1:26.6 l. V1rga1 day n;ghJ 100 -(ht 11eau 1. Cor>w•J cs'l Keith Denson in the_ IBO lows <SAVJ 1·11.•. 660 una n1a11 -1, 1Eo11:11.l '· v11eruut11/SAVJ J,30.7. · /!\b/·,ir~1~:!11 1oi~ :frg"?'a':'i UPTon (Ed> 231 '· Ca!.o <"vi ?1.•. tllG Urd 11t10 -1. 1~rk ICdMl Costa Mesa's scoring terror 10.6 1. H1111h•• \Sari 10.1 (lrd 11110 <19.4J were disallowed as meet no. ~~~n!'cl."/)c sAv>1 n.~.•C•Kll tE<ll l21s:1.~1UJ.(l'e1s .... 1·:~.l if.Mb.~;,!;~·: Owen Kreza had a hot nigt>t. 1. Glove CIA) a.• 2. M..:11• t5PI records, Steve Christiano of 660 ll•I 1>ean -1 e,11 HO•tl ICdMJ 1:u .9. I d' bolh ·d 10.1. 1. Sttlnbr-r I"\ lD.t . F I V II d I ,.16.1 1. c1"1.,.. !LI 1:11.1 l, Go!lllet> 120 LH !h t 1>u11 -l . Abr~ ea mg SI es with ·3'! no -c111 1w1 i . Glovt t8AI ounta n a ey manage o l'"l 14.5 2. Hu11111r101d <CM> u .1. · ts IC.I 2, SIM.Iii (8 Al M.2 J. VI,, Allen C5AV l 1:21A. 6'0 (1n0 Mtl) ~ 1. ~ 11 (2n0 hfl!I -1. RoU•~ poln . II CtA) 4. Orldl•l' !SAi (2nd llt•O ·1 equal the 440 standard with SaYle• (FV) 1:21,D '· lllhaC> ltl \CdMf U.l 1. L.1~11 , .... , .... I :21.0. MO (lrd tiUI -I. WI to" . ...., .....,. '" f.~~'ffJ1 .~c:1o112. t/.t~r." csP1 a 49.7 ckx:king ffl his he~t. <SAVI 1:16.J ,.McL1ln <L> 1:11.1 3. 11~11~"";'.,i.:"i.:~\~11~·t~l~1f,2L~~ IMMEDIATE HO -1111 wu i . aa11orr CBAI Christiano was also upset -v~~~'(;~,11~;,1 -l Haun CE~n c VJ •· ... ·vo. za l •.7. CASH INCOM l tll.1 2. Smith !Plu~l 3. N•d1a11 3,11.9 2 Mtrln CSAVJ J:J•.2 l Firr•r 4IO ~!tv 011 lletl) -I. SA E !SAJ •. G,idltl' ISAJ Un h•"'l 1. in his 880 heat by SA Valley ·s ICM> 3:21 •. i.rn c2M 111!111 -I v111tY ~' '· Co.10 Me•• '1,6 l . 't~1rr l_5ej1_.!,~J0.,M2t.nv1~11'f"1y,::.1 John Soolhw•'ck. ,,00.5 to 8!ellter ISAVl J:".1 1. Grten <E•ll :.d1r"'car':n~ M41°~~1'rl.t ~~"iou~:r~ SPA.IE TI MI . NO SILLING ISPl 3.?6.S. 1110 {3rd Mall -1 McCklrt Vll .. r 41J ). EJlltlCll .U.6 320 2·03 Q Cl:dl l :1'.0 '· PrlHI CCM) 1.15.1 SP (Flnel) _ 1 .Tosti !CdMl •t.a·~ Ovr flllidly tll"""'illt om,.ll'f l -lltt helll I. NI I c II I u n d · · · J. GltMIOll (CdMl J:ll.,. 1. Hiii !CdMI •!.-1'1(. J. Jtnnin<1t !Edl lfft1 I ltcil """ wllt II Urlll 18AI 3:30..7 2.0 O'G11inn !SP ! 3:11 ,l El .. RI h Wood 120 HH 11" htll) - 1 Cooaer ~'' 1 smm ICMI .U-11'' If k1f>t hturs •nd 1J1tr1 ,,_,,, ~·e.~etl~ sli~:::: c~•rr1:?1~_,ci,,Ebc;~ s anc1a s c \\'as 1,~:111s,l/,· M.a11n~11~1 1fE,,~· ~:~,-"l~ ~n;..i.erd. tM> f2.r1. • 5 • .,,d 11 P•"""" 1, ,. 19 com. f&Al J:J:l.I :a. F W!tr IMO/ '· au111,r able lo get a double win in HH nna Heat) _ 1 Yllf\tkura CFVf HJ tFln1t) !. Hun!MlrlOrd ptny t1llbll1htd 1torn '"" •1Uv- ($AJ bo h ( h' h' h d l h di 1~.1 1. ll01>trt1 (SAV I 1•.1 l. LtFtvtr ICMf S-J l, Butler ISAVI >-& l . •r ''""nltrs &nly, Ill I ltw hell" 120 HH -1111 ~II !. C~btock l 0 IS Jg an OW ur C ICMI 14.1 1. Pawtll tEd) lf .D. Lrno1 ll'V) J..! 4. Alvtrtdo l.U.V) I 'llttk If -II .,.,, llm., ..,,_ IPlul) U.T 1. H1r n /MO\ U.• heats in If>.! and 19.5 while \20 lH (hi t.e•Tl -1. CoolM!r J.IS.ltenell {COM)J.6 iflt$ ,, wttlcttldt. wlltl 1•1111 .. J. Sdlnffwe11 15"-l . At11&o \SP>. CM) i..o 1. Dlrttman 1~u 1 1•2. no LJ CFln1U - l . c1,,..n1er ICMl 1y,,. Mtllnt. una he1n 1. G1r. tSAl 16. 1. teammate Dave Johnson was LH 12n0 IM!ttl - 1. Ne!IOl'I 1SAv1 ~1·•v. ;, Glra10"' <E•1> 20--1 l . Eo1n (Plu•1 ,,,, ). M•IYI" cgp ) 13,9 2. Callir\111 (Ed ) l•.O. 110 LH SIOYIYfdl «FVI 19·•1' • Alv1rodo MUST AIP_111• Ta !XCl!PTIGN· • S111111t (SA a double sprint qualilier in /3rd ntao _ 1. NCK1!1le !Ml 13.7 ISAVJ 11.1 5. Htrna...ie1 IEO) 1•1. AL "''''' '''' , '120 LH _: (hi hllltl 1. Eoan 2. Cl rl>l'n!er (E~tl 1'1 110 LH f"h FV lf lnal) -l. Longoria CSAVl I CfS. (Plu1) U.D 2. 8u,. llA> l. Pll'!Ofl 10.0 and 22.4. hoatl -1. Hern~n0e1 IFVJ I• I ll·O Clt•gue rK<irOl 1. HtYtS IE•I If you trt If .... ,.,.,.lt!IM, :i.~~ ts ... ~1tu1't.2 (l 1 a!r:'act"'i'~iu~i Estancia sophomore Eric 'p~be(~1~;1~Vl~• 11. e akt• !CdM> )~!~ 1 ~.ii ~~~·u.~Ec'~lv~1i°o...i~· M•nl.1t •rt,._, now,""' un 1nv11f • l. Ht lnt <IAI •· J1ckson (MDL Olscm captured his race of 12..0 1. Schenk c~v1 11., 3. Ai.man Tot11 Qua1111 ... -SA Vatltl' 10, mtdtrllt '"""'"' "' cm I,,,. High lump -(11 aualllv 1t !.-61 !SAV) l"'6 4 lulle•dlck (SAV I 11..Q Cor~"~ ael Mar a, Founlal~ V~ll•¥ '"""l•l•IY fsKurtd) It! 111 •1 .. Htn1h1n (MOl, Canw1y < "I• the quarter in f>0.3. s tucker !Mt 11..i. 1. E1t•ncl1 1, co,!• Me11 1, Laar1 c1111 • l>tuntltut lt lt h r lw "' Fl1n.1oan (Pl1111, $callt d I$ A • OT [Fln1U -I. Rovuer CC<IMI l. M~gnolla l. Ed!M!n 3. you• flmlty. 1'011 Pl! 50NAL Anaenon !SAi, Fontenot !SAl1..011••!0e Corona 's Howard Royster 131.n (League rKOrdl 1. Splelbl',Pfr Tt•m tcOreJ 11ter 1111<1 evonl tln~ls INTERVliW c A LL COLLl!CT !Ser), Rvolol (SPI, C~t" CSP,, V."1rd CCMl l:t2·t1.>, l . GorOan IL) llf·6'h -COS'ta Meia 15, S.t. Valley \5, MR. MASS nu) 1t1·,,1) DI. !SP), Adems ($tr . set a meet record in the Bee ' 01e, (CM) 116-1a s. e1vltn cEd! Coron~ <lf!I M•• 11. E•!anc11 11, WRITE aox M·ltl, O•UJ '11e1. Pote voutt -Cf' <1U1llf!n ! CouMl•1 lir:~;sc~u~s~w~;lh~~a;;l~3~7~-l~l~v~k~l~o~r:;· ;;;;;;;;~'~'·~·~·~·~:.::.:..::::..;:~~~~·~~;;;;"';"~";;'~'~';"~' ~·~· ~'~'~"~'";.;'~· ~M~H;ro;"~·~~~~~~~ (SA), Ttrrv l,.11111, Chtver (Flu1l. HJ (Fine!) -I. Vourtt !CMl ''° I. Aut (Pl111), Webstorr 11.A.J, C:~l.tmlne 18A), Perklnt ($Pl. Abtrnelh1 tSPJ. Pettrlon ISP!, Andtr$0n ISP!. Lona 1umg -c10 au1ll!YJ 1. aeltlno IP1u1) ~l 1. M. s ... u~ !SP) 19.S 3. Foolenot <SA! lf...j •. l er; CSAI lt.4 !. Morton tMOl 1 ... 11 '-81btlldl IPl111) 1 .. 11 7. Wl!ley i$PI 17·• t. Mtrtlndele IMO! 11·1 9. T~uttdt!t CPlu'I p .111, 10. TUrftlN!\lllh (MDI 17~. Sha! put -111 au8'tl'll I. F!111nth1n (PluU Jl·f 1. Wergntr tSA) Sl·S\li l. Sol\Srn1 (Plu'/ ... 11o,r. '· Ad1m• (SPI •1·7 S. C 1rkt l&AI U.l 6. OeliMY l$t•1 •1·11 1. ShtPPtrd (Pl111I •2·lllo I. orig !Plu1l l l·lll'J t. Cromwell CI A) •l·l"l. lt. Kurchltn (Serl •1·1.\1. Qllll!llltl: $1. P111! (21), SI ... l\ll'>Ol'IJ (If), Pl111 X Cll), l lU'IOP Amtl Cl41, Maler ~l ti), Servile P l. '"' 100 -(111 IM!atl I. Reed IPlu•I 10.I 1. Cadlll>Oll (IAl 10.1 ltnd lltt!) I. PKk (SAi 10.I 1. PttlYflltO {IA) 10.f f:lnl hHU 1. CorllH CSP I 10.• 1. Fl>l"d (11.A.1 lD.I <"~ hettl I. Vtct ISPI 10.S l . 6r1vo {Plu1l 10.1 . 180 -(11t Ilea!) 1. 8r1vo (Pl1111 1'.4 1. Htlnltln 15erl 1'.I t2nd hell I. fi:ted CPlull lf.• 2. 6rocloman (Srrl lt.t (3rd ftNtl 1. &Nlch (SPI !t.S 2. ROClrlgUtl (Pfusl lt.f ('Th htl!) l. V•ca ISP! 11.l 2. CadlsPQ!I rSer) 19.•. 660 -Os! heatl I. Kenny CSPI l :Jl.I 1. OM II.A.) 3. Willi• 15tr 1:15.1 11no h1~1) I. Poe1toen !N.D 1:30.1 1. Morel1no (PluU flr<I ""•lj 1. SUr>dall (NID1 1:3'1.t !. fUtkt (8.A. l. V..:1 lSPl 1:34.t 1310 -(Isl htt!J I. Ltmbeck !MD) l :lS.4 2. L~!erl11 ISP1 ~~37.1 J. Cl,ments CMOl •. Mtrtlnt1 (SAi. 11n0 Mall I. Hamilton IMO! l:'1.• 1. Mor>!n !SPJ l :l-1.• 1 &1111 CSPI " Gam.u (BAJ. no LH -1111 111111 1. H"""'s (Pl1,11J 1'.7 1. W&lllCt ($Pl 3. MOOll (Plu1) (2nd httl! 1. lloOrlque1 Cl.A.I U.S 1. Munt: t~r) 1•.I l. Gtttl1 !PIUI) 14..! ~3rd llet!I 1. lt~nl!I CSt r t 1'.I 1. Fffnl!Y CMOJ. HIQh lump -!'-I au1llflt1l Por!tQ'" (MOl, Cle~ll (MOI, (<HllU <SP ), W11t1ce ISP!. Fall l~P), Hti*.ln' t Pl1r1J, Wiison lPl111), PQtlfr jSAI, M1911111• CSA I, Ml hlntr CSP ), Rtt1z. leak (!1rl Sha! wt -no <111alll1I 1, M1rllno 411""1 •7·1 ~. aoeruwav CSPI •w J. At~lrre !IA) -4(.0 '· FllJ.1Nlrlck CSP) I ').JI ~-MtD~nltl !SPJ ll·l I. Ptrlll !Ph,.) 0.21~ 7, il:llt"I' (P!UI) 40-11 I. P11>1>tna !Str) 40-IV1 f . S11bfrr1 IMO) JJ.O 10. Dltlrltk (SAl U.10. LOf"r9 lufl'IP -n o 'll!•ll!rl t. f"c•d !IA> lt·91'J '· K1n1e .... 1kl (!Pl 11.0~:. l . Rat11!c1k !St rl 11-4 '· T1llt1 tSPI 11·1 S. R.Orltu•• (Plv1l 11.1 '· CoO!· tl>Oli {$er) 11-4 1. AtUlttt {BAI 17·J'~ •· Peck (5...t.) 17~ t . LI Cltlr {8.A.J 11-<l 10. 81!1 {MO) 11·4'1. Pale YIY!t -(ll!J•lllVl"lt t! 9·61 Luvbtn <SA), Davldtor> !SP), Ca11v 4SPI. T1rt1I l~P I, ConWty (Plu•I, Minnick. !Piiis). Wlldtr (SA) IQual· Uyl"!I 11 t.Ol lloOrltuel !!Al. Fall (SP). E111n (SAi. Q111Ufler1: 1. Paul ('21, Pl1,11 X 111). &l"'OP Am•! !111. i~rvlle (11), Maler Oel 1nd $1. .A.ntl'>Ol'ly IHI. ALL WEATHER SPORTS JACKET ggc CARS SIZE REG. SALE PRICE PRICE COMP'ACTS 6.!>0-13 516.95 S1 4.15 7.75-1 4 $21 .10 S1B.15 7.75-15 MEDIU M 8.25-1 4 522.40 $19.95 8.25-15 LARGER 8.5S·1 4 S23.S5 ptn $1.71 F..t. E.1. Tt tr Sl111.50·1:1 Tub<ll1U w1111 ... u REGULAR $16.95 .. ,, " ... « .. « Major League Sta11dings DEAN LEWIS • tda11I lor all outdoor ac11v1ties • Hlgh-vislbility yellow vinyl tS rainproot, wlndprool. • One s11e lits all. General WHITELETTER or AMERICAN LEAGUE Eut Dt\'l1loe w L Pct. Baltimore IS • .Ill -13 • .591 Detroit 1J • .591 Wuhlngton 13 II .542 Ntw York II 13 .soo Cleveland 9 13 .4119 ' Weit J>lvl1lon Minne&Ota IS 7 .682 Aa¢1 14 9 .609 Oaklond 12 13 .<IO Chlc110 10 13 .435 ~.....,City • " .31R Uwaukee s '20 .200 08 t 1:. '" 21> 3'~ Sii 111 41 ! 5'" ,, 7'1 I I i~ NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago New York Philadelphia Pittsburgh St. Louis Montreal Cincinnati Atlanta Dodgers East D\,·lsl()n w L 13 9 12 12 " IZ 11 13 JO " • 16 \\'est Oivl1Jon 21 • 14 11 13 11 13 14 12 If> San Francisco Hou!\ton San Diego 10 16 TllOMIJ'I A-lh 1-ieu'1ofl J, Clllt "a 1 AlllHl!t t), Pllldl!Jf'I~ I Clncl~n1H J, JI. Leul1 1 °"'"" (, New V0111 0 "" Ditto '1, tttllltdtlol!Tt I Sii" Frt..cl-I. Merllr111 I T .. 1?'1••- Pct. .591 .soo .soo .458 .455 .273 .771 .oeo .642 .431 .444 .385 GB 2 2 3 ' 7 • 611 • 9 JOlh $1" Frerocl1ct t'119i'llt H f I f Mtflt,..fl 11'1'4r• lon J.OJ. nltflt DHttn f5ll'llO,, J.J), •I Ntw Ytr11 (S..t Y't' i< Ol. fllthl Stn Oltoto (Kl .. l.J) t i •~lll<M:l•hll llllfl. ,..,.. 141, ni.111 ,.!l'tlbllNll l llllt 2·11 •l All1tttt CN1t•'1 Ml, -·~ Clnl1 ·-Kl\IOIU1-. DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARIOR ILYD., COSTA MESA ... $trvfce anti ,,,.,. for All lm1»9rted C1 r1 Mod«n My Shop for All Cars 646·9303 Oran1e County's Largest and Most Modern Toyola and Vol>'O Dealer APllL SPICIALS ITl[Ol[YllOl[!]@l COROLLA 1970 $1853 +r,.1 u, All OtNr ..... , I• St.c• Mlllt 11-Hll•.r Pkl1,_ Lu4 CnfHn c ..... VOLVO 1970 OEMO SAVE $570 142 1 dr., radio, h11ior, 4-1pt 1d. ISt r. •<47401 Ul!D CAJl 1,ICIAL 1t6t TOYOTA C•roll• c,.. 11ed1t. 11t•1.... •·•PttoJ, cri..• 11111 grltf. ll;IN .... I $1ltt WHITELINE TIRES SAVE UP TO $22t?9 ol four loa SIYI from $4 . .S lo SS.66 ptr tirt otf our rf1Ulir low price. Ullll C"CClt •• , ~tN "' t l p'ty t f t•Mt llrt 1Qt1 W lllltt ,_ llltrt .... "11 IYllll, •• wm 111!!11" 8111 •rfttt •'"" n1w ltr t&'lm flllrn 11 tit ..--11111.-•rlt•. CHARGE IT NOW. TIREc;. SEhl/ICEc; ..... <.:CESSOHIES . fASV PAYMENT S WIT~t APPROVff) C.:R~OIT BRAKE RELINE s249s COUPON Sl!RVICE SPECIALS fORtS. CllmtlCTS. CGM,ACTS. Our 1peco 1lt1t1 N lln• Oii loo.or"..,.._ ..,,.., W•-• bf~~t hnlfto•.,, ln~I •ti IOU• Oi.U.1 d'111f11 •• Cho,_ wllltil c~,...,_" ,,.., NI••~ llH'l"'t .. Clttn •nd l11b•~t!t O•Qll lnq llltlt .• Reott r lront •11...C btlli"91 , A<11 .. :w twt-•f. -. 11111111 •• ROid l<l'ot '°"' elf. \Vl'"tt lHIS COtJPO N BRAKE ADJUSTMENT jMo-1 .A.mtrlct n c .,,I Coupon Oft1r, Ex1!11 -· 1.1., '· 191(1 WITH THI~ t;OUPON 5·TIRE ROTATION 09' lmpra..a Ifft NlWllOI ss~ Cnvl>Ofl Oft•rs f•p111 1.1.., '· 1170 'IJITt1 Ttll~ t 0UI (,ri Hl·Spted WH~~L BALANCING s I oo {1l111lll•rf Wll .. 11) Priced .. .,.,_. • Gefletal TIN SIOtM. t:oMpeti"....tr puo9d at in<M~t • ..._ ~•'fln9 It'll Otinetal 11;a GENERAL TIRE 0011 Swe-dlw11d COAST GENERAL TIRE S85 W. 19th., Cos ta Mn o 540·571° '46·5033 AVERY GENERAL TIRE SERVICE loufe..,d, Huft tlntton 147·5850 ----------OENIRAl TIAU.,, WORTH DRIVING ACROSS TOWH TO GET leach ' « .. • ' ~ i ' , , • . OAl<Y PILOT 23 San Oemente Qualifies Six UCI FACES REDLANDS W ester11 Has·. Edge in Sunset 01ase For Crestview Spike Fit1als Three dual n1atches rr- main on t~e UC Irvine ten· ni.s schedule including a retu rn batl le with NAI A chan1plon Redlands Th urs- day on the Bul ldog courts. 1'hree rounds of action rr- 1nai n i n the hectic Sunset League baseball race with Wes1ern High leading ttw p:u:k b~' a full gnrnc. rr1athema licaVy · In the race but Jt would appear that only the top three have a so lid. chanc.~ at lbe title. ~1urina and Anahcirn. with the forn1er slated to n1 e e t Anaheirn , travel to Hunti.ngt.on Beach and host Westminster. By HOWARD L HANDY ot ... O.lh' l"lltt Sl•ff Crestview League dual meet champion Orange will be heavily favored to win the lion's share of qualifying posi· 'lions for further CIF track and field competiUon Friday niCbt at 1'rtd Ktlly Stadium on lh• El Modena Hl&h School campus. First running event, the 120- yard h1cb hurdles, U sdiedul· ed for 7 p.m, Field event.s btiln an. No point totala art kept in I.he cn.tvlew qua.llfylni meet. The Jeaeue champion i s dtkrmined on a dual meet ·bam. Hott El Modena could upset the strq Oranit contingent with a wealth of ,d11lance run- ners. San Clemente will have a small but powuful CODtingent competln1 1n lhe varsity races. Rlct Geddes won heat races in both the 100 and 22-0 on Tuesday. Bob Blacker v.·on his heat in the high hurdles and finished second in the lows. Brad McKenzie posted the fastest qualifying time in the 440 at II.I. John Baymon also quallfltd ii1 the quarter mile {or the Tritons. Ray Pendergraft of Mission lejo pl1ced third in a 12Q.. ard hij:h hurdle race as the ne Diablo qua1ilier while a Beach was shut out. Coast area schools did be.t- r in the Bee and Cee quali- g RJch Con:lery ol Mission lejo won he1ts in the 100 Sd 220; Ed Radermacher and y Perez captured 1320 heats the Dlabloe; and Srott • eter ol Saa Clemente was * * * t VAIHtY lOI! 11•1 HMll -I. JDl'lnlO~ CEMI .I, J. "'llJ•ll• !Vl"j IO.~. l . W~llr>eY 0 1. OM HNI) -I. JICltton 4F) Ml.I, 2. Cl'IUratw.rd (01 11.t, J. Fox tvl"). llnl H111) -I. GM<k• CSCI 110.4. f. W1hon CO) ID..S, J . WIM1l<:1tt tfl. no fhl HNI) -I. JoF\nWHI IEMI •1l .I, 1. Htl~ ff ) Jl.l, J. W~lln•v !OJ, l:tnd H .. 11 -1. Gedd•t !SCJ :n.1. 2. Chun:""'"' 101 n .J, J. Fr1'· lltlll IVI"). !Jfd Hul)-1. Jtckton !.I') :12.1. 1. Wt tlOfl COJ n .:i. l. Whl!rkl1e i l l. 4«I I\ .. HMIJ -1. McK1flli.t ISCJ !1.1. J•J•llfy (VP) $2 ... J, Wltr<•lt (0). (1 HNI) -1, Htln CTI 51.J, ~. Frt lffmtnn (CM) 53.•. J. ltk•r 0). Urd HNIJ -1. MtYtr 101 .52.1, 2. lt~ll'lln (IC) !>4.0, l . Gult>rll "' 110 HH (lit Hut) -1, 9l•dlt r lf5CI II.!, 1. WI"' tt:MI 'l~.J. 3 J l lllllf 10). 12'MI HHIJ -t. Nall•c ',Ii!''' UJ. 2 ... ,&mlffl ,,, lJ.t . 1. lllH r1G IV..-. tJl'd Hl"t -!. Hl'Cllvnd (Viti 14.1, 2. D\lf!c•n COJ ! .. , .. ). l""""-r.rt (M[). Ml l14 011 H-.f -1. Noll•c f Ml lf.,, 2t 11>~•• I~) l'0.0, ~1 """'if> r I. Hnt -1. 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Tit 91lwtll'I Wtttr Miii Ind I Sdlultr 10), 1 ~ f1JI Httll -1. Anllr-t 15t) II:'°·'· . M1rv11u11111 fEMI 1:31.3. J. WllOolfwtrtl !VI"). UNI H110 - l 1. Seott !K l . 9n<ln (LI/ l:J?,I, l , Orl.,.. (Tl. !lrd Htt1I -!. lrtd.,.w !SCI 1 :21.2, t. Moo•t IOJ 1 1 ::12.2, J. MllllM '"7· lll:20 11j1 Ht1! -1. Chl1ru1lf Cll!MI 1:1 .f, 2, 1pper (\/Pl 1:11.t , J, kid! ~Fl. !:Ind Ktlll -1. lt<lltr <• I J:,,,7, t.1,.sm,1.'h t>(SCl I l:t1.0~ ,,. I I. I .,,. -1. I ll!Ml J:2'. , t. lltntrd tlMl :to. i: i rlll\I Ill ). l1t LH 1111 Mt1!l -I. lllflln I (Tl U ... 1. Oltoll 101 IC.•. Wtbe< !MVl. !tlll Ht11 ) -1. ftOlllOll llMI 14,1, 2. Gowlll 101 U.1 , l. • H1tt.r tl'J. (lrd Hellf -I. Ol:thlvto I '"I '1·" 2. Sw1~1Y IEMl 1•.t, S. N tit Lil. QvlMfllrt: 1!1 MOdf"I 11, Vlllt l"lrlc l. Ort11tt 1, Fotl!llH 6, Titsrln 6. St~ C~fr 4, l"un• ll1Kll l. Mlnlttlc;~"V11\ii ll'lfttl tl'IM•l ITilrM ONllfy .... Ctl' l"rtllm1I I 5h0! 1"111 -I Hottlt"l fvj!t) s:-t, t. llollll'I IV;) "1·l'61 "Ktrn I i:~11 tt:~1 ~Inf (fM .$, J. Hll~ Jitll'll -I. \11'11111!'1'1 fl!Ml ~ J.lt, 2. Ttrr" !SC\ M. l . AlfOll >\T l M , 4. I r...,. I ) U . I. Ntllell Li l M . ! l'"' J--1. \lllt•OUll IOI 1"1'14, S. Vanw111hlt1 tl.l 1•·1, W.,.ci IVl"I 1f.tli, 4, Htlnt°'"rtll ltl ,.,,.,, J, Yl'!l,.,,11• 1•1 ,,.~. I f"Olt VI UI! -1. KOllf IT) 11.0f victoriou s h1 a hlgh hurdlr race. Annhein1, meanwhile , is at ri1arlna, hosts Santa Ana and winds up against Western. Here's the balanre of the slate for the contenders: 'll'Hlftn Moor!,.. An111tlm SUHllT l•AOUf • • ' ' ' ' San Clemente n1ade its strongest showing of the day in the 660 where Ron Andre~·s. Mike Scott and Ma r k Bradshaw won all three heat races. llos t El l\·lode na cou ld give Orange a batik• for top honor~ v.·it h a wealth of dis tance run- ners including thr de fL"lldin g lea gue champs in lhe sao. n1ile ;ind two-1nilc -events that were not run in Tucsday·s preliminary 1neet. • Redl ands holds one of three vlctories over coach Myron M c N am a r a ' s Anteaters whose s e a s -0 n reco rd Is 21·3. Afte r scrut iny or lhe balanet• of \.he schedule, the only con· clusion IS that Western has the advantage simply becauSt' the Pioneers have lo.st Ork' less ga1ne Lhan anyone else . Trailing Western by a game with 5·4 marks are Atarina and Anallein1 wh ile Newport Harbor, Wesbninster and San· ta Ana are two lull games back In tile lo~ ~oJumn. Wt•'••n -San!• Anl !lFlu•S<lavL N••"'1 Htreor J 5 '~ There Is little difference in !he balance of ..opposition for M NtwOQ<! HarDol' llutod•vJ, An1,..1n·1 W<'ll"ll~l!tr s 5 1\-. Six teams arc s t i I I U 1..1 Pt!m1 tMt~ 15 -nlgM).• ~dllll 1,.,. J I IV. M•rlM -""""'I'" l l""'""!Y)~-·-· _Hun!l1!8IOll BH<!> '-~ SALE STARTS TODAY- . ENDS SATURDAY WESTMINSTER 15221 IUCll Bl.VD.• PHOHE &93-1544 MONDAY ™RU FRIDAY .• 9:00 A.M. • 9 P.M. SATURDAY , •••• , , ••••• 8:30 A.M. -6 P.M. SUNo.AY ,,, ••••••••••. 9:00A.M.·2P.M. SANTA ANA FULLERTON 120 £. FllST ST. AT CYPIW • PllOIC£ 547.7417 1530 S. llARIOll IUD.• NOKE 170.0700 MONOAY THRU FRIDAY •• 1:00.\.M. -9 P.M. MONDAY THRU FRIDAY •• l:OOA.M. -9 P.M. SATURDAY ............ l:OOA.M.-6P'.M. SATURDAY •••••••••••• l:OOA.M.-6P'.lil, SUNDAY •••• ,,., •• , ••• t:OOA.M.•4P.M. SUNDAY ,,,,,, •••••••• 9:00A.M.•2P.M. ----~-..;.;..--.---.. ............... -i' TIRE AND AUTOMOTIVE SPECIALISTS FOR SO YEARS! ' SENSATIONAL SAVINGS ON BRAND NEW-FIRST QUALITY 4-PLY NYLON CORD TIRES COME IN TODAY! WHILE STOCKS LAST! BUY ON CREDIT! • d oesign . Sk'd trea • Ant•· 1 1 H'gh traction 11\ackwal s • ' • tubeless NE p.N'f SIZE LISTED···O WRITTEN GUARANTEE * PROTECTION AGAINST AL.I. ROAD HAZARDS!! '-(~ The Pep Boys guarantee Cornell Tir1s for a specified numb•r of , months against all rood ha-zardt in ~ /!J normal passenger car use. Dom• .r.i;ii!o aged tire will be r1placed with pro· '-1£> -roted monthly adjustm ent charge ..........: ~ based on regular selling pric1 at time of purcha1e. CORNELL AIR CLIPPER-CUSTOM t TUBELESS BLACKWALLS • 4 Ply Nylon Cord •America's Great Tire Value •Safety-Proven• Long Lasting 6 .SOx13 6.40x15 6.70)\15 7.10x15 $4.98 WHEEL ALIGNMENT FREE!! WITH PURCHASE OF TWO OR MORE PASSENGER CAR TIRES {MOST AMlllCAN CAii) -· SIZES SUBJECT TO STOCK ON HAND 4PLY NYLON Cornell Futura 1 CORD TUBELESS WHITEWALLS GUARANTEED 36 MONTHS* 4™ TIRE WHEN YOU BUY 3 TIRES AT OUR LOW SINGLE TIRE PRICE SIZE 7.0Q.tl I 00014 l.tJ.i4 1.00•1' l .lb!J' ' ..... .... ;l: llfi :i; ..... ..... il .. l: "' ... i ~ 95 EACH 15 MONTH GUARANTEE * ~I~• f..itral f•t;w I•~ .fSl.71lo l2li on , .... ~ tiro do~~dl"' •n "'' BIG SAVINGS ON TIRES FOR VW, DATSUN, TOYOTA, MG OPEL ANO MANY OTHER T FOU/ON CARS .. PlY ,.,YlON co•o TUIElfSS l lACl(WAllS 98 6.00 x 13 5.0x15 / l.lS I 380 '201dl 1194 " 1295 .$.00-.5.60•14 '·'°·'.90·6.00•l.5 .5.60•15 1445 1466 ' . 1. hltl11 CT) 10.t, J. ltd :tf llM CM, 4, 1Cr11t 1'111"1 '°"' J, M<ICtl~IY 1 _________________________________________________________________________________ J' \II") """ ,- =;:;; •• 2• ... ·-. ---· I How to Take the Fun Out of Golf Saddl ebac k Pair Ra te d Nationally A pair of Saddleback College athletes are currenUy ranked high naUonally in the latest junior college track and field marks. Gaucho Paul Cox has a top throw of 208-6 in the javelin, which ranks him fifth . Team· mate Bob Stevens has run the 880 in 1:54.1, which is the 11th best performance in the U.S. to date. The top javelin throw is Willie Franklin's • 2 5 2 .' 6 . Franklin is from Mesa, Ariz. Pete Jones of San Diego Mesa has the leading toss in the state (216-10) whlel Cox ranks second. c.,..,. ,,,. .., Dk**"" -............. , The swiftest half·rnile time has been turned ln by Paul Jacqu~ of Pensacola, Fla. (1 :50.9). Clay Lowrey of American River has the best clOcking in the state (1 :52.9). If you miss your first putt, quickly bacl<-hancl the next _one toward the hole. If it goes in, fine ; if not, it was a 14gimme" anyway. Tb.is, avoids the worry about sinking one of those 24-inch knee--Jmockers. Runge Leads Rancho SJ Men 's Club Championships Phil Burkwist of Spokane, Wash. Community College has turned in the first national junior college record of the 1970 season with an 8:52.4 clocking in the tw<>-mile. The former record was 8:5'4.0 by Allan Hancock's Neill Duggan, set in 1966. T• U.S. JC Tr1a Mlrtii 100 -Edmonson <Merrill), t .l ; H1rrl•O!'I (Ode-u.a, Tex,). I'' Fonl <Mtrrltt), 9.Ql1 Ma•••nolll ILono 8each), "i:(Odftsal. 9.S/ 01nnv Paul Runge is the cham· piOnship flight leader in the Rancho San Joaquin Country Club men's c I u b cham- pionships with a first round score of 74. Competition is on a low net basis in all flights . Wally Crammond leads A flight with a net of 70 while Elmer Hamina is the B flight leader with a 66. Action will continue the next four weekends. In a women's club par fours tournament, Afary Imler was the winner of A flight with a 34. Margaret Egbert won • B flight with a 34¥.t. Catherine Collins was the C winner with 38'h and Nan Beckman won • D flight with 37 ~~- Sont a An• Next big event scheduled for Santa Ana Country Club is tentatively set June 21 when the annual Father's d a y tournament is staged. Thls is a father-son or father-daughter affair. Mission Viejo Champions have been determined' in all but the con· aolation ffight in the men's club president's cup tourna· ment at Mission Viejo Country Club. In the championship flight Larry Smith defeated Joe Lawlor l·up in the final match. First flight winner was Don Henderson, tl!e club president, who defeated Chuck Wilson, 3 and 2. Second flight winner was Bob Harrold who defeated Bob Minier, I-up. Bill Pultz defeated Nick Jay, 5 and 4, lo win the third Oight. Ron Brown and B i 11 Dalrymple will play for the consolation championship this weekend. Presentation of awards will be made at the monthly men's club meeting to be heki May 20. More than 'ro members of the press enjoyed a round t1f golf and a steak dinner al Mission Viejo last Saturday in connection with the Cinco de Mayo celebration. Numerous trophies were awarded to winners in low gross and low net competition at the festive evening dinner progr!ilJll .. Costa ltl eaa Entry blanks art n o w available in the pro shop at Costa Mesa Country Club for the member-guest tournament to be held Saturday and Sun· da'y, May 16 and 17. In a sweepstakes tourney last weekend, Bo b Darnell fired a 74 for low grOM and Ruby Holtberg; Ruth Schelling and Phyllis Barnes. .Fount ain Valley Qualifying rounds for the president's cup competition at Fountain Valley Mile Square Golf Course are under way and will run thorugh May 17. Leaders with under par rounds on the first weekend of qualifying were : C. Weaver, 69; Nlb Warren and Art Lamb, 70; Ed Lagonegro, Bob Bissin, Lyle Grey and V. Voelker, 71 •.• El l\'igne l Joh.,.on L ; ln.l. t3n, ' 2CO -dmonaonl H1r rlsan1 11-11 (Mm, Arl.l 81 d wln le F11 J, 11.3; Arown (l.ACC). (GteM11e, Arlt], Ford, 21.~. -... J.:d"'9f>S(H'., '7.0; Tisdale !Ml1ml t:W:"i:· Flo.14 •1.1i ltlco IMt. ,ern('.~.a;i1o1na. 1~1· s~urt~··t ;,,,.,;1~ Whyte «S1mlnole, Fl1.l, d .1. uo -J atOl.le$ !Pem.11col1, Fla.I. 1:50.9; LOwrll'Y {A .... rlc1n Rlv~rl. Wllll1n11 (M1am1 Oacte, F l1.J, l:Sl .9; Ht11h(lelfl IGl1ndole, Ariz.I, Wv1n1 jMan11ttt, F11.l. 1:!3.2. Othero -10,lloll Ste~"' (Sackl!ell~ck), 1:s.i,.1. ....tie -WV&nl, •:~l.t; 8t1rkwisl U SPOk1ne, W1sh.l. ~:ot.O; Hitchcock hke .. 111Jd\. •:09.9; H I C k It r M~'i'!!r'J:n~i~o.on1 MoUrlno !Santa f.Jie -Burlcwlst rSD01c1ne. Wash.), 1:52.•; Hltchc:ock, •:st.I ; Co~·· (LA Valley), 9:IM.S; EVIM !P1•111e .... 1. 9:1M.I; R111ner (P1saden11\, :66,I; Grauor!o fMI. S&n Antonio!. f :Gli.7; Ct)aOQIM !Cettl!O•), t :06.ln; Ll11$kl {$11nt1 An&), •:G6.9n. lM hlo~ hunllH -Babil fLACCL l•.I · Jon!l'.S ($an Dltcr0J. ~od<les (~~" ,.~nlo, Trir.J. 1•.l : Mlll,ICI! [Ml. San An on10J, Jones IMl1ml Dad~· Fla.1. WI Ins IPhMnlxl, Wlken !Fresno), $111"'0!! !Mt. $8n Antonio), lt.5', "41 lnltrmedftles -Hallman (Glen· daleJ. fadt•on (Mesa, Arlt.), 5'.6' Gl~n t.Wrr!ll). ~7.9; Hodoes CS•n Jtclnlo. Tax.), 53.7; Palr11!1 (De Ar>tal, 53.t0 honors. Dick Miller had a 64 A first pla« tie resulted to gain first place ift low net for first place in a partner's competition. • besf ball tournament at El Polt VI !I -ltlcllards fMI. S•11 AnlonfoL Crvdtr fM~ A r 1 r . ) . H1'1:1fSOf> {Fresno1 , IMI UllW (('ll•n,.), 1~7 : Roc:k !Gltncf•ltl, MU.O!lllen !S~m1Mlt. Fl1.J, McCo.lm (Maw. Arl1.L \"· Lono U"'ll -H!tl (Ml. S•r> Anlor>J(ll. '""' W11111C• (Od ... i•, Te~.), l'-B : Perrvman jWn t HUI~). 2' 7; Den"'' !Victor VI lfV). 2'"411); WOO<'ls ILA, Souttiwt•ll, ''"'V>; H-111 (Me•cedl . 2L2 ... , Frv (E•~t LAl. 2'-l; Andtrion (£'•~· ~), ?•·lift.) Other .low net winners in. ~Niguel Country Club. eluded Bob Whitmore at 67 Eotene Kinsel and ' Ned and a three-way ue-Serween -Blactmarr were on one team Gale Bouck, Bud Sleva and and Eugene Kinsel and Robert Gordon Voss at 69, Blind Marvin on another, both clos.. bogey results found a three-ing with 62.s. ~~ ftl1'~:e""J,.;-(s'.t;on.s:-:;~1, ::.~¥.!; Buth (E••I LA), a,.7; Woodi (C.ro•1-mont), Kelley (P1sadl!n1), 4'{V.; $..,!th (Blkfr!fl~ld). 4-,1; COflOWIV IMoonw1rkJ, &'J'.'; Peirce ISe<iuolas), '"s1~ DUI _ C11'hc~rt !Cllaft.,vl , <6-': Y$.~~'ica1~~.:a7J" .~~~; 1 'po5!'~1\ r io:~ M"•lcol, .U.11~; ESIHIP'UI (Stn J11$f ), way tie for first between Oscar Kummer and Louis George Dernbacb, J o h n Lott took third place with a Pacheco and J. Middleton at 63. "'~"' -Pnwell. IM1""'"' "''•.1. 17'-9; Fair (8 11<..,rsflelrll, Hl"'a" !We•t r~\\~)' J~~~·c·s-~s~:l:i1 .w~zr·J: Jonnso" {Cerrll""l. 1~'-7. J~vtll" -F•~""nn !M"511· .lrit.1. '~'·6; Slll'Yeris !New Me•icoL 1-M·~; Buck fSeinlnolel. ~15; J-s !SC M11a), '''-10: Co• l$•<1<f!•b.-<"l . MM; Gt0•<1e !Monfoo"''"rv, Md.I. "07·• 71. In a mixed best ball touma· A criss cross tournament for the ladies found Doris Ball winning A flight with a 30YJ. Mary Evelyn Imler was sec· ond at 31 and Hazel Webster third at 331h. B flight was won by Jean Creighton with 29¥.t. Trudy Orton was second with 30 and Ann Martin third with 32. Marian Voss won C flight l\'ith 301k followed by Maxine Asthrnus with 31 and· Eileen Wilson with 321h. A two-way tie resuRed for first place in a best ball of partner's tournament between Hazel Webster and Elise Stipes on one team and Irma Havens and Vi Hoskins on another. Each team had a 58. Five teams tied for second place at 60 including Betty Brown and Germaine Garcia; fl.fary Grose and Marilyn Heis· land ; Marge Fituimmons and Nina Danielson; Fran Lewis ment, Mr. and Mrs. William Holabird won with a 63 follow· cd by Mr. and Mrs. William Egan (67) and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Carrick (~). 18th Bole Irvine Coast Country Club will be the scene of the third annual Anteater lnvitatk>naJ ..o rehv -M•rrltt, ¥\.9; Od•«•. Te~. •1.0; t.ubbor~. T·~.. '1.2: B·~··rsf!'"'rl. !'•ell'~. 8111'~· T• .... ~1 I. Mii.. (e1.,v -l'l•w M••ko, •· 1< B: ~l1•rltt, .'.\·11.l; Blinn. Tp., J:lS.31 Pl•rte. 3 :1 5.~. Area Golf Summa1·ies MtWPOrl (14) 02) M1r!"1 golf tournament Friday, May Miiier IN! 1'. 1001 10 At>Wv (Ml 22 with all proceeds going to 76l:i~n~rT.erman (NI 11. 1os1 1e G11 ... 1n he B , (M) 16, CHI. t ig I Booster club Goo<twl" (Nl IO, def, M1rkln <Ml t l, S·1. achievement award program •. t'1ve• (NJ 1•. def. Len 1M1 I}, fi>r student-athletes. ic:ent IN) 1c, def. Ma,,1,cn IMI n. S·I. · The tournament gets under "~~~ INI '°· '°'' 1° Kampman. Way at 0000 With a buffet ~~" Flf',.11>.. rr~I~ 01) UO UC Chamberlin (I) 73 de!, Scnwa•r awards dinner in the evening csFvl is. •·2. Allen {ll 76, def. Carlson (SV) from 6 to 8. 719~~·b111 : uc Irvine. S·I. A women's division has been Bundv <SFV) 11, d!I, Ho1>11•n' tll 15R~~ <SFVl 7S. det. l'loo"en (1 ) added to the tournament this 111, •• 1• year with several of.tier in· 2~~~~11'tif=3y1 16. de•. so1m en novaUons including closest-to-7';J;~·so11 11 1 79, crei . aa~ler tSFV> thtHlole, putting, longest dri ve s~,t.~cii 051 1121 COf"ln• ~ M•• and other contests. ic:n111ht 1e 1 11. dtl. R1nc11e 1c> Floss y Road Contests Spice UCI Hoop Slate An entry fee Of $35 is being '69;;_'i. (E) B'!, del. Dunn !Cl fl. charged for participation in "·kcotieid 1e 1 t•, 1os1 •~ Young tc~ the event which includes green ().~lnsev lEl 103, !IHI to w1111.111$ f'ees, ear t' one.the-course ''i.~?reu ee l ••· <iet. P1;" 1c 1 refreshments, hors d'oeuvres ,9 3-1 Mcc•rmv (Cl 90, Oef. sieve11a !El at the no-host cocktail party 3 ff '' ~·n11 Mnt (161 111 l'acltic• and the post-tourney bu et Rindl• (Cl 69, dtf Genou~• tPl, Highlight of the 1970-71 basket.ball season for UC lrvine will be a trip to Tallahassee, Fla., with a stop en route in New Orleans, a check or the 26-garne slate reveals. The Anteaters will play Louisiana State (New Orleans) on Thursday, Jan. Z8 in the city and then face Florida State Univer s ity in Taltabas:see Saturday, Jan. 30. 1be 13-game home slate "'ill b< highlighted by t h • Qui:stmas vacation U C I tournament, Dec. 28-30 and the appearance of t h e University o! COiorado in Crawford Jtall, Wedne!day, Jan.'· Coach 'Tlm Ttft'1 aquad ·will appeir in three tournaments. 'Ibo Krlt Krlnal• allalr il1 F-tal:es place Dec. IO- U ond the All-UC allair lJ ld!edaled for San Oltgo Jan. li-2' .ill addition ID U>e UCI ill'lllollclnal emil. En1r11111 JO the UCI tou""'l' Include ...,_, champioo N«tbm1 AriJonl, C.I Stall ( l!IJ]lertoo l, Occidental, Cbap- mu. cal Poly (Pomona!, Siii Ii' ......... V1Jlty Steto and cal Pol}' (llall Lall ObilpO). uc RJvenldt, thlnf place ftnlmer In the NCAA college dhlllon --· will !loll the Anteaters In their final dinner. "llunn (Cl n, lost to Linder CPl n-adline for entries is Fri· n 1.3 game, March 6. Both teams vc: W1ni1 ni cc> 11, det 01ve !Pl 91, day, May 15. Reservations for s.o will also play in the All·UC P•ve tc 1 n. crei Garv !Pl •~. affair at San Diego in addition starting times may be had 4·~ou"' cci 1t, oe1 J•ck 1P1 11, to the host school and UC by calling the phy9ical educa· >~i.1111"''"' ... <~ 1tt1 0•1 s1ftt1 A111 Davis. tion department office at UCI Rankin fHl 12, io.1 1.s. Or by ~----g wi'" t-•ma F1n1ev !HJ t2, tied 3.3, Tift will have 10 returnees "'~' ,,., v.. • e.,,. ot/ ua1, •est o.6. meat chairman Jerry Hulbert Gltford HI 12, won •·t. from last season's team in· at .,, •••s. 0eeot !Hl "·wen 6-11. gv,rvH W1111maker (H) 11. won •o. eluding two starters. Bill1 ____________ = Moore, a forward who averag· ed 13.9 points a game, and Bill George at center. Others include Brad Baker, Keith Bean, Gary Fox, Larry \Vasserman, Les Mingo, Ed Burlingham, Robbie Sagehorn and John Farwell. Th.c complete ucr 1970..71 schedule: UC! ICMIDUL• T1111., DK. 1-l9!!on'lt $1111 Fri., ()le, "-Col Sllll (LO. AfttlllM) fl\lf"I . Tlloun.·fl'rl,, OK. 10.11-Kl'll lrtrln1i. .CIMllC 11 (;al Sltll iFvU1tto11). Sii •• DK. lt-S1111l11al.t$ s11•· IM'I .. DK 21-Humboldl 11'1. Mofl.-w.il.. 0.C, ll-ll)-UCI lflWlll• lloMI TourllMNflf. Wed., J•11 ..... u. al COiorado. 111,, Jlfl, t-(11 Stat. (FU lltrtron\. ues,, J 111 11,..UC Stn Ditto t!Mot"4l &11., Jan. 1~11 F•ntnlilo Vtl IY .. ,,. ""'•· ~. Jiii lf-CIMll"Mll Cell ..... '''''fui,.· ,,..,_., UC ,.,._ ~ ,.,:n."•:r.I" -· " JI~ t;.~· -Sllll flt ~t. ~=Jlt.~;..,.~•"lt,;•·untw. •""--·""· J~ .. F•• J-.1111 F•111ndo Vil• MftJ' F-" ~S•n Dlffo St1t1, Wlil.. i'lll. 1~11 111tt (Full•IOfll ""r.!~ ,.0. »-Col"°*' I"--). ;"ti. ,.... ~lwll!Mft ,, ..... ~~ Ii'•· n -C.t l i-o•v !5111 Lult 0:.'!1~ t-UC 111 ..... 11t11t ~. "'" --II • ...... t lt(l'1 ....,..,_... ' \ SALESMEN STILL SEEKING A CAREER INSTEAD OF A JOB AN OPPORTUNIT Y TO ATTEND A CAREER SEMINAR W• IN .... ri!ttM Ill 1111¥1111 lfl,lhlte, wt11-Mttl¥1ml, ,r.i ... ,\tnll tilts• """ '""'°' "'' carffl' stmlfl•r -m•r ff ttnltmll'l•t"" 1 -.-. klcrll""I ...... Cir.<. NI ... ,...,, ... COt.lnt. For lflfl• , .... ,,,,"' .. IN'"''""'! c_,....._1¥1 ,,...... 111111 Ille ..... llllftl•tt If flftlMlll plln· -Sllll-.i 1..,lftt "°• It \'Ill cflfft•I lfl I ,,......,_ CMfllllll, tiltllll' ... " .. ,_11y 111 or._. c-,,., ... r"" -· ''' "'""'l"ltM i. wi.-~ -~ #11MlttlNl'll l1H19n11111tlK WI"' tt•I , ... wt11t O•ytlf llf f'tdlk (Ht! SNdl lx<t1111t1 ""°'""" nrn1. Sllc:-kt41tn 9t!llY t llrtt 1'1111- "'" ., <•111-lty ""'""" Taltl tli!111clll Pl-1111 It ....,.,... Int 11 I Mlle N(fft1fy If llf .. . ' ) I ~---~-- THUR$., fal., SAT. OPEN DAILY, 10-10; SUH.10·7 ' ' ''TROUT'' f ISHING DISCOUNTS "SPORTSFISHER" ROD PLUS REEL 8.96 3 Da ys 61h or 7-ft. rod, Berkley aluminum reel Sports Drpt. > • DEEP CLEATED CHEST WADERS 8.44 Discou-nt Price With hi.';h boot foot, 1nsi1le pockeL Vulcanized. 7to12. Spor/1 Dept. Discovnt Pric e Jn fish flo-rcJ, garlic-orange an d cheese-vellow. Spo"rt1 Dtpt. Discount Price 3 ,.,Joe ., Bairholdcr~ \\•irh 7" n~·lon sncll, needle sharp tempt:r· ed. In u sor1ed sizl'.s. Sport1 Dtp t. r.i ·l 2-TRAY PLASTIC TACKLE BOXES 2.86 Discoun t Price 15 coroparrmcrns, 101' of room. Lug,!;ase hand le. 15x6x6". Sports Drpt. ·NYLON CREEL Wi ll HOLD YOUR CATCH 1.37 Discount Price RubberizeJ, measu re s l ~x c;~r·. Has '12 mm 1hlcknc )s. SJHJrls Drpl. SMOKER CURES UP TO 20-LBS. MEAT-QUICKLY 1997 3 Days • <::urcs up to 20-lh~. of mc:it f in !0·12 hrs. for less lhan a penny's: worth of electricity per hour! Chrome plated I'~-. ~. """' .. .. -.. . ~ .. ~ PANTHER MARTIN ACTION LURES, All SIZES, COLORS Disco unt Price Get sure, Hut action from 1h1s lure! )'our choi ce oi folors afld si~cs. Perfect for 1ruur, al I }!an1e fi sh! Spurts Dfp t. . . I· inside. , Spart; Drpr. . GOLDEN NUGGET RED SALMON EGGS ARE GREAT VALUE Discount Price Get a!I 1hc texture, color and aura(tion properties of the eggs. Reta.ins milky nu- cleus and bri l!iJnce. ::!-uz. size. SportJ Dept. 1/,-LB. SPOOL Of LINE Your Choice Discount Price • '14c )'ou r choice of line weight! Ger Bcrl.Jey's qu11r1cr-pound of monofilamen1 line. Any you <.hoosc are $1rt:cch rCli~tanl, clear' and coounuous s1ranJ. Blue La ke Level fly lint.· inLludeJ . Sports Dtpt . DENCO Fl Y ROD, PFLUEGER REEL 13A4 3 Days C:hoirc or rod lengths. Fl1 ' ri.:c·I 1s sturJy_, de pendable. Spor1s Dtpl. MEN'S COTTON FISHING VESTS 2.68 Discount P1ice I £.1.~ large snap· pockets, de-. tJc heJ creel. ZipP<:r front.' Sports Dept. BIRDIE WOBBLER IN All COLORS JJc Discount Price f .1mous Luhr Jenson spoon is perfect for p me fish. Sp~rts Dept. ROOSTER TAIL SPINNING LURE FOR GAME FISH Discount Ptice f eatures p:inerns 10 matclt most bug hatches and water condi1ions. In cho ice of sizes and many roJors. Sp11rt1 D1,pt. WOOD TROUT NEJ Disc.ount J 57· Price • Stu rJy net features ~-ply \\•oodc o irame wi1h Wt:&r>• peJ handle. ·Double COi· too mesh. SJ1ort t Otpr. "Thank You" .for shopping at K mart lt1W '"' _, ... C8STA JIU Cll'1 llSflnl &IElltS 111Lll IMDllS!ll ·-.. ·--.,..,., __ -::-...:i:.:--·-... ................ . ......... -.. _,. __ --· .. , ....... ,. "''" llfoto>••lo• ' ........... ,,,, .. _ ... 11111111111( """ OJU . ll&LTD SlKU lXl UllU fl SftllCS -·--··--""::l'::P;..-.... -,, .. ~· .... ...,, ....... ---'"'--....... Siii VAi.UT SO. llS &IEUES TllWS.IJI ILIJS IOO'JRI llSTl!ISTEI • ........... _ ... ·-· ........ -.... _ ~·--,...,,,_,,, -..... -... "~•-··· .......... - - ~,, le. de- >nt.' 000 ~sh. • ' :ch ter of IET ' 5·ply 1ri1p0 COC• i . - I LEGAL NOTICE Heritage Christened · New Yac ht Seeks Crack at Cup R ace ' Second of t_Qe 12-meter yachts built this '"Jear as can- didates to defend t h e America's Cup was launched . Saturday at St. Petersburg, Fla. The new yacht -first to be built in the South -is the Heritage, designed and built by Charles E. Morgan Jr. of St. Petersburg. Heritage was christened by the de sig ner-builder's daughter, ll·year-old Jennifer Morgan. She had to sit on her father's shoulders to reach the bow and smash the tradi· lional bottle of champagne. The launching at Heritage was an open affair, compared to the secrecy surr~ng most America's Cup t'Oll· tenders . ' •·For God, honor and coun· try, I christen thee Heritage." The launching of Heritage marks another phase in the campaign to defend tht Cup. Prell~ary tr i a ls are scheduled to get under way off Stamford, CoM. in June. Heritage is the Z3rd 1%· meter to be built. Numerous hull designs were tank-tested at Stevens Institute o f Technology, Hoboken, N.J., before the yacht went into production at Morgan's yard in St. Petersburg. Her hull form and deck 1J!;yout W!: .further ex- ttaPaJaUons of Intrepid con-- cepts. Intrepid is the Stepbens- designed 12 that successfully defended the Cup in 1967 against the Australian. challenger Dame Pattie. She was built to Uoyd's. roles for racing yachts. 'Her- hull is double-planked of western red cedar and Sitka ' 1pruce over laminated spruce. frames, wllh steam-be:M uh intermediated ribs. The dect is flush Md flat,. of laminated red c e d a r covered with fiberglass. Mast and boom are of aluminum and b o t h ate designed for controlled flei· ure. Rigging ls slainless steel and tlbuUum. ~ Her under-<leck co f f e e grinder sheet winches were custom built by Barient Co. of California. Approximate dimensions of Heritage are 62 feet 6 inches overall, 50 feel waterline, 11 feet slx inches beam, nine feet four inches draft, '12,500 pounds displacement, $2,500 pounds In Ille keel, and 1,725 to t,750 square feet sail area. The foretrlangle bue b 26 feet six inches. Flrsl sailing trials of the new yacht will be on Tampa Bay. "There are so many people who have helped in countles.s ways, not in strict monetary terms, but in time, well wishes and advice, that I feel the moment should be shared with all of them, as well as the community where Heritage was built," said Morgan. The Rev. Robert I. Maurais, headmaster ot the CanterburY School of Florida, bJegsed the new yacht and Morgan's daughter christened her with the words : Gaff Riggers Slated For Race on Ma y 23 ~I LEGAL N0'11CE ' ., j •Alt 702 'I JtOTICI! 01' Ol!l'AULT AND l!Ll!CTION TO SILL UNDl!a DEED 01' TllUST LEGAL N0'11CE ~ NOTICE IS HEllE8Y GIVEN: Ttl.O.T CEllTl,,fCATI! 01" aUJINISS U TITLE INSURANCE 1nd TRUST COM· FICTITIOUS NAME ., PANY, • COrJOl'lfl.on It duJv 1ppolntoe! Tiw und,rtllMd d-tUllfy "~ ,, i' Tru1IH ~tide• 1 Deed of Trull d1IO'd col'IOuctlng • bu1ln1u 11 "00 W1r,,.r. I Jul'lt 11. \Ht , .KKUl.cl b~ LLOYO Foun!1ln Vlltft', C1l!fornl1, uncl1r tl'le W BOTH\ljELL 111<1 MElltCEOES 0 llC1ltlou1 firm """' of JOHNA'S 1nd BOTHWELL. hUl~lld 1"!1 w\11, l l lh1! 11ld llrm 11 com11G1ed of tne I 1'rustor, llo ·secure c~1ln cbllNllOn• h>l'-int P1ri.on, \illllOSt "'.,... In tun In f•ll'Or of ICl!NNE1'H NESS tr>d Ind place <>I rnldenct It 11 lc!lo\ill'= ~I FRANCES MAE NE$$, l\utl!And tr>d Glenn Cook, !11JJ 5•nt1 L11ci1, Foun· ii \illllt, 11 feint terwint1, '' be!Wflcltr'!', !tin V1lltY. C1lll, , rfCO"'ttl J ul'/' 1$. 1919, fl lntrumtn! 0.led M1v '· 1t70 ~1 "° f06J, In boo~ t021, NVt 6', of Gltnn COOi< '1 I Olflt;lt1 Rtcontl In ~ Olfltf of "'' STATE OF CALIFORNIA, 1 RKOnltr DI' 0111"91 Coimft>, C11llornl1, ORANGE COUNTY' ~ d1Krlbln. l1JMI -t1n I I On MIY '· 1'70, l!elore mt. I Not1rv ' IA) "" undivided 1/2t!ll ltt1el'lold Publk In 1nd l<lr 1•i<1 $l11f, 1>er1Dn1\lv ~t · lnltrlhl In 1nd lo: ll>Pt•red 01...,. Coo~ k"""'n ~ mt !) Tilll portlllft DI' Lei L of Tract ltl be Ille Mrion Wl•<:nc n1mt 11 1ubtc•lt>. 1 tlf, In the cnv of tltWPOrl B11c11, N to Ille \illllhln ln5!r11ment 1nd 11 COUftlY DI' O••M .. !!alt of Cal\f<:1rnl1. ldU'IOWleO~ftl hi UKulfll ''" 11m1. IL 11 Ptl' m11> noicord!!d In book ?t (Olflc!al s.~n ,..,.1 31 11\rcugh l' lr>clu1!vt. ot Jtan l . Joi>!! Mlt<tlltneou. M11>s. reccrds ot Orange Nci.rv Public -C11!f11rnl1 (ounty, c111tornli . !yin; e1ittrl'f c! Prlnclo1I Of!ke In 1 lint whlcl> bellln1 11 1111 mldPOlnl Ortntt Counlv M !llt soultotr!y UM of 11ld Lot Mv Comml!llOn Explrtl l \illMch I• loc•ll'd we1fe•IY la.SO Mire/I 1, 1911 fHI l!lrOOlll • c.,,l••I IMle ct :l"lS'•l" Pubti1lll'd Or1nge Cout Otl!V Pliot. ff'om thl M01llle11terl'Y corntr of 111d M1v 6, IJ, 10, 11, 1t10 &53-10 Lot Lr ""ellU norlhtrlv "" a 1tr1\9M 11,.. to ,,.. mld!>olnt of 111e 1r< "'' LEGAL NOTICE fP\.t curve on IP\.t Stitt HlollWIY deoc:rlto.l-------------- What's · become (If all the o 1 d gaff-rigged schooners, ketches and sloops~ A goodly number of them are still arotmd, as will be noted at "character boat" parades throughout the South- land. But the old ga!friggers are destined to have their day of glory again real soon if plans of the Pacific Yacht and Balloon Club of Newport Beach work. PYBC is sponsoring a race May 23 for gaff-rigged boata. l! will be called the Ancient Mariners Regatta. The rules are that the boats may be either full or partially gaff-rigged and yacht club af- filiation is not a requirement to mter. Plans call for the race to start at 11 a.m. May 2.3 inside the Los Angeles H a r b o r Breakwater. The finish will be at Emerald Cove, Catalina Island. Deadline for filing en- tries is May 15. Trophies will be awarded to the first boats in various classes, such as ketches, yawls, sloops or, schooners. The winner on corrected time will have his name engraved on the Ancient Mariners Perpetual Trophy. Handsome take-home trophie:1 will be presented as well. Entry blanks may be had by writing the. Pacific Yacht and Balloon Club, P.O. Bor 1524, Newport Beach. PYBC is the letterhead yacht club which each year sponsort the Sail of tbe Sabots .at Newport. f'd In~ 1'1e ~ r~rdf'd J ulv 1· "°'OTltE 01' 1ALI Inf In boolr 711, ~If _165, ~f,tic,",: Notice i, riertby glVen pyr1uanl 1c1...,, ..... ,... ........ 4,,, __ ., •• ., •• ..,., ...... ,.&¥11!0¥ .. lllllB<g"">CIPO'lfl!l:'0'WA•"'•l~i RKOf111, 11 mnc1ve to me Sl)U w 1e<:llon• 3011 and 3012 ct th• Clrll and hiving • rldi"' of lllO.llO fttl Code of the Sl1h! of C1llforn!1 t"' tncl t ""°'"of 1'1.~~ '"'· ulldersfgnt<I, OA LE W. ELICINS, \illlll TOGETHER WITH 1nd sub]ed to Ml! It P<tbll<: 1uctlon. ,, EllllM S~elt Ille btMflll, bl/r(len•, rloM• of "''j 119/S M11nol!e SI., Founhln Vtllty, l-ind HHmfnh lm11<1•ed YPOn Y id rel C11/lornl1, 1t 10 a,m. on S1furd1v, I; ••-riv Incl lm•~remtnl! lll..rt1111 the 111n d1y of M1y, 19111, the lolio'N!ntr Weleeme Aheard •· fOf' the m ufl.i•I ~Iii of the o....ne ... des<:rll)td oro1>1rty, lo.wit: I'' Lnve1 or Part11I AHl!IMl!I by Ille 1'11 Oodoe Truck, Jlllt31'90, no l flKlirttlon Iii covenenll, CGfl<lltlon1 ~nd olites. 1 • Rtstrlcllonl ~..:orded on tho 1'11\ dev Stld u lt Is !or tllt p11ri>01t of 1etl1fVlnt I! · of J111't, lKI ln Boolr U7~ P89!'5 lien Of Ille underslgMll for A11lom0bl!e I ·; .-:11 to dO lncl!lflVt ol Ofl;c111 RKCl'llS RtPflr P1yment l<111tll>er "'''" CO.ho of ONnllf Counlv, """lcll rlphtl of Of •dvtrll1lno •n<I ••Pl'nHI Ol 1•le, wa'f, c:ovtnanh. conclllklnl •nd •~Irle-Oiled lhll 5111 d•V of M1y, 1f70. ti-1r._ lnairDG•lled huoln Ind bv Lorril111 F. Elkln1 rdel'flf!C:I m.0. • 01rt t>ertOI, •nd PubUlhld Or1nt1 Coal! 01l)y wtolch t11en1enb ''' htretw reserved. M•Y '· 1'70 1 Ill TM •Kl1t1lve rl1lll to DCCl#t'l--------------1 ' 1 ce<'!llM •ittrMnl °" 11" :incl lloer LEGAL N~CE New Gripes In Yachtin g By ALMON LOCKABEY 'J ~ ., ,,,. ••"""'* l\ouH b!Jlldlnt en v'• •' Hid prembe1, W'lllcll Is now known l ---="°~"°"°=~=---~ ind dfff9nltfed 11 .... OlrtrMnl No. t·O NOTl(R OIVIT ING •tD5 ,,,. (Ind I Hrtllft g1r1ge lf>ICI In ltld 110 ITEM NO. 10 J ......... .,, ... ,,.,,, ..... ,., ....... ,.. ..... .., .... .,, .. ,,,.,D t.11 '"'rtme~I bu!ldln11 \illhldl 11,,.,.. knc>Wn NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEM th81\""jf W'*J4C!i' 'agw.i.mstm"M M PWOSNMk Ii ll nd dtf,llnl,_ ti t1r1gt sPICf No. lflltd P"1!>0111J \illlll be <Kll"ld by . · ~) 81 .._n bV , pl~l tlllchttl !ht Clft> of COf!I Milt, W \illll : The , . ,_ ',.Id OKl1r1!1on, 1ogethl• \illlltl I Clft> CoullCI!, P. 0. Box 1200, of Ille •'J'hey say that yachting is I ,; rlthl-of•WIY for lngresa i nd "re11 Clft> cl CO'lll Meu, on or blfpre , le Incl ,,..., ttld 8Plr1,,..enl C1nd the hour of 11:00 l.J'!'I,, on Frld1y, a gentleman S sport . •• ,..,. IPICI) Ind lllO 1111 right MtY IJ, 1910. Blds wlll be PUbllc)y • ,.._ ·-1111 "' 11,111, public """""· OPtnl'd •net re1d •tcud •' 11:00 •.m~ They also say that yachting I' -•YI Ind ill otMr PUblk PO'· or 11 SOIWI 11\truf!er 11 pr1t11c1ble. ~~ :!.*'"' Id bu!ldlnt Incl 1tll ..... 1.,,...nt on Frldey, MIY u. 191!1 lft tllt COOl1(11 is fun ~--I .. wlm otl'llr oc Ch1mbtr1 •. Clh' HIU. 71 F1lf Orl,,., • tlle,..ln, In ($M'!On . Cosra Meu, C1l1tornl1, fir Ille lurnl1h1>1g Both statements are true -•nt1. • Of n!M ft) Itel! GANG MOWERS, .. Id oblkrtllerl1 lndvd•nt ""' nolt ~ i»d 0.,,., (!) tocl! G .... NG MOWER 11\f! •rlnclp1I sum of ta,111.02 tl!ll "'' FRAME t!tntf(l'l1I lnlerHI 11n<1tr 1ucl! ~td of A st!' of the wecllklllonl ,,..,., be T'IJ'lf ind tht obllGatlons sec11red lhtrt~ obltlnto 11 tht ,office or Ille Cltv lrt prelW'nllv held bv Ille undtrilgr.ed. Cler~. 1t 77 F1lr O•iv1, Cost1 Mui. ""' 1 breecll of, i nd delaul! ln. Ille Ctlllornlt. B!d1 11'1ou1G bt rtturntG ,., obllt1llon1 fM Wl!lcl! '"'" Deed or !tit i !lmll.,,, Of Ille (llY Cler~. In Tr...t 11 HCurttY h•• occurr!!d In ~11 1 11iled '"vt!oot ld1nllfltd on the p1vmtnt 1'111 "°', ,",'" .!"1"':' re~'..,hl~ outside with lhe 'lid ll~m Num~r 1"1tallmenl ct '" nc Pl ''"' n t tno' the -ning dtlt. fto.ctme dut J1nu1r'1' I}, lOG IHI Nf.-11 Ettl> bid •htll •Qedfv e1cl! 1nd t vtrv :0 fl•ld tl!erton, and all 1u1».e<1u1nl ~,.. flt"" 11 ie! foMh In 1111 1Ptclllc1tlon1. . 11111rr11nls of prlncl<11I ~"d lnltr~I ' at Any i ncl al! t~ttllllcn• tG mt \PKll!ct · by rteson thereof, lhe 11nc1e,.1gMd, tlon1 mull bl ciearlv 1ll!l'd In tne flrtlltnl blnellcltrv undtr 1uc1' , Deed bid, and ftllurf to 1tl larth tnv llem of Trust. ht• eiK'11M' encl dtlo-nr"' In Ille Sptd f1C1!1on1 Sl!lll IH ground• tc 1116 dvl'f 11>oolnttd Tru1t..e, • V1 rltt.n fer .,,le<:!lon .,,-the bid. OKl1r1tlon of Oellull incl flemond lo• Eteh bid 11111! set fortl! tllt lull S.lt. tnd ll•s dtllOITltd w!tll ttld duly namei ind re1lMnc11 of 111 o"'°"' tPool"'l'd Tr11J!ff, 1ucl! Dttd of Trllll tnd Ptrlltl lnlt-.lled In lht pro.cul Ind Ill dOCumenll evldench'lll obllt•llons 11 orlncl1>tls. In c11e of carPOr1!lon1, 1ecuftd ll>ereby, Ind ~"' dK!llrld Ind" lncludt "'' namtl of 1111 Pr111G1nl, d611 h9'tllv dtcl1,.. 111 1um1 •KU• S.cretarv. Trtaturtr tncl Ml""''· ltitrl!bv 1mmKll1te!v d11t Ind' PIYlblt Tht City Counc!I of Ille Clft> of Ind Ill• tltdKI end dOll "-•tbY tltd Ccill Mew rt•••vts tnt r!tM 10 rtltd to CIUH '"' , ..... ,, prDOtr1Y to bf '"~ ... a!! bids. 1old '" llll•fY lh4I obllg1tlon1 lfCY•td D•ltd May I, 1910 t!'ltr~. Publllllf'll Or1ng1 Coast 01llY Pllol. NEWPORT TOWERS. Mey ~. 1910 l.5J.7Q 1 perlMrilll•. Bv: J./ Herbert N. 1or1t BY: 1/ Rldl~rot Nun!I LEGAL N0'11CE °D'tH APrll 1', 1970. The fOrtlOfM I• 1 COPY ol "nc!Ott", NOT ICE 01' TRUSTEl'I IALI me or1oin1I DI' whicn "'"fl~ fllr rKo•d o" Wtdnt~~·.,,":;,,Y•it,"197'J, 1! ll:OC on April t9, lt'JO, In tl!t ol'fltt of 1~1 A.M .. T!TlE INSURANCE ANO TJIUST cou~tt recordtr ol O••nOt CO\ln!V, Ctll• COMPANY, 11 <1UIY fOl!D!nltG Tru1lft fornll. under Ind pursuant to Ottd of Trys! TITL• 1NJUl:ANCI! & TRUST CO. dtltll Oe<tmber 70, 1kS EWKUlfCI llv: ... Ntrlfl Mii" '1rfff LINCOLN 0 . S H E R A N I .... N ANO 1111ff A111, C1"ltrnl9 t11t2 KATHLEEN SHERANIAN. l!tnblnd tnd All: Tnnt D"' 11111. ..,111 tr>d ncordtcl M1rc1' 11 , UU, 11 ··.~ .... ,,,·..!! No'•'•~.n ,,,,, OIHY Piiot !nllr. Nc. '"7, !n boat 7166, Pitt w ·~ .. ~ ' Sii, Of Off!cltl RKordl In th1 ol'flct ·•·:'c':'C' c":·;~C'C':''c':':"-:-:::::::::;--..,_-l'C of !hi Countv ll:e<ordtr of Ortntt Coun!v, ~ Ctrllornl•, WILL SELL t.T PUllL!t LEGAL NOTICE AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIDOER FOR ',--::-:::::CO-:::-:C;::;:;";;;;;;;-;;:;'.;-"-JCASH (PIVtblt 1! !lmt of Ille In ~ NOT ICE (II' Tl:USTll'I IAL'I lawllJI tnon•v of fli• Unlltd 511!11) NI. H111 1r the nortl> Iron! enlrance W ll>e On Mty ,,, 1910, II 11 :eo D'Clod Orlntt CounlY CourthOUlf, localrtl II A.M. •I lht North frollf itnlrtnct fll IOO Civic CitnUr Or!vt W11t, (formerly ttot Ofll!lll CPUhft> (ouMl'IDllH, loclf<!d Wfll $111 SlrHI), Sanlt Ant, Ctlllornlt . ti ftlll,Clvlc (ffltl<' Drl"t WHI, (forttotrf'I 111 rlvht. !Ille •nd lntw11! CllnVll"" wnr 1111 strHll S•nt1 4n1, C•llhlrnle. to 11111 "°"' held b• II uno.r Hkl ' ' •o ABSTRACT Dnll of Trvs• 111 llrt Pl"DPlm-1!h.llt.cl, LOS ANGIELES TITL '" •• ,, Co,,,, '"' $1111 lllt1Crllotd COltPOltATION 11 TruttH, uncltr the -w ~ 'of tr111t ""'de by Wlllllm ..... II: TM 110Ulhe11fe•IY ""' o! Lof t01 Ltnct•~r 1nd Elll!IM Ltncis!er, hVI-Ind •II ol LOI tOI, Incl 11\t norfllwt1terly Nnd •nd wue, i nd recorlltd JUM n. hall ol Lot "' of Tree• No. to1. '"'· ., lntltVmtnl NO. lUOI'. ln Boo~ '" , .. ,, ....... Newoorl BNcll, COVftft> ... ,, f'fft 71• ol Offldlt Rt<Vdl of " ~' °'""' Counft>, CtllfGmli , 111 ,..11Dn of Or1not. s111e of Ctlitornl•, 11 .,,-bl'Qdl DI' 1;ert11n llb!l91tlon1 1teurMI P.., mao r~roed In ftoak n, Paot• "'"'""' llOllct llf Wl!lcfl w11 recorllfCI 2S tc 3' 1nc1111ive DI' Ml1ceU1ntOU1 J .. •UlrY "· 1tl0, II '"''"'""'"' -~~ Mtlll, In lh• etftlt_1 "' "" countr l l'C!l ln Boolr tt02 PIRI '" of _.., rKOrdtr of $11d COl/ntv. Officl1I ll~ord•. S11G 11le \illJN bl IN.-, but wllllovl l.01 ANGELES TITLIE ANO A!I· covtn1nt or "'"rr1nty, h •rtu or lmt>lftd, ~'.TRACT COll:PORA.TION ••• T•~lltt r~•~!ng !lltt, -111ori. ... .... 111 sen 11 Pl/tlllc 1uc!lon to t~t ll!9he1t cumbrtnCfl, to ••• 1roe •r1nclH1 """ " lrld!• flrr u sll, fllYtblt In 11w1ul _... of IM nolt '8Cllt'l!d 6v ttld 11...i 1:e1 Ille Unlltll 5111•• 11 the time of of Tni1t, to-wtt: l!S.000.Dn, wlllr lllltrtst Hie wltl'IO\ll wtmntY .. to 11111, lrorn DKtmblr 10, 1"5, 1t I~ ukl -~ or enc:111nbl'1nus. Ille ln!e•Hl nof9 •~Idec!. adv1nc"' If 1nv, \lndtr t"""IYMI to 1nd MW held bv uld tht "''""I ol uld Dttd Of Tryst, IHI, ru.,.. uncter 11ld dMd Iii '""'• In ch1r9e1 •net ••--of 111t TrvtlH nd lo lflt fOllowlnt ftKrlbtd DrOPlrl\" •nd cl the IM!t cre11t11 11'1' Yid oc1ltd In tM Counl'I' DI' Ortllllt• Stttt ~ ol Tru1I. ci11t«nt1 '°""'ff' Tiit bPntflcltrv ,.ndfr ttld Ottd of Llll.l.1U; ol ;.,.ct :u71, •• per Tr111t, bv '"'°""' I bl'NC~ or dtf1utt fNi1""11>er110I rKordttl In Boolr N , ln ltle ollllHllOlll HWfld mtrtbY, I' .., .30. ,, 'ind » tf Ml1<t11t-1 M<e!olore eitcutfCI ~nd 11tl!v1rec1 lo 1 1 the oHI« o1 tht Coull!V !he vnd11'11tnlCI • w•llltn Otcltr1llon MPM, n ntr ol Dtfllllt Ind Demlr>d fOf' Slit , Ind ' ::o= ~~~! ;·~;:.t°'l~~~ :1:n ... !""~~ ~.!~1~':..:"4:o!Jl'll~:K= 'I =~irtd 1b¥ ,:-1,.. eM1>1n ... ot iii. Trwittt, ""'"riv fo 11ll1tt 111d ollllofllcM, tncl 1dv~:.-,. If 1nw unaer 1111 ttrlfll ol "'""It"' on S1Pt1r11btr l, 1'41. 't;,' 111o1 o.Mi of r'r11s•. lnttr .. I rllt"'°" yncltulitntd <•"'ect ••Id ""lie• of b~•c •Ill' \4.Jll0,00 In 11n•1kl ..,1nc1~1 ti tnO of 1t1tH011 ..,1e 11t1 ''f-or~1~ tht noll oe<urlCI bw 111cl Oted ol bOo11 110t, P'tt • 0 " Tru1t wltll 1nt1rnt ll\t1'11C111 ll'Olfl October lt1<111r<:i.. •• ,·., '' 1"'"'-Hr '""~m •• In 011t: Mt¥ l , 1'7'. "' • v,. .... TITLE OIJU11ANCE .... NO 11111 "61• llltl ~ ll W OrG~I.,_, TRUlT COMPANY OitfCI: At~ 31'"';:..:rs TITLl ANO ., 11id Tru1t ... AllTR .... (f CO•l'O•AflON, fl~ ~·VIE MC Fl!E II Tf\llltt Autfwli'lrect S! ..... hll'I OWtt ~. Mtr1110ff, Publ!lhtll Nawt>0~~'!1rb#>f N1vws Prtts J Pr"'ld)°'TM, cOmbll'ltd \illllll D1l)y l'Uot. NtwMfl } 'u~lltl!td Or•llfl C-t l>ellY 'ilet, 111<~. C1l!for~11, Ml~ " ti. lo. ,,~G·1t !Mtv 6. IL tO, 1t11 t.W•1'D -within limits. • But there bas been a Jot of growling among Southern California yachtsmen of late that the sport is (1) getting far too expensive; (2 far too complicated ; and (3) no longer the fun activity it once was. The growling is mostly among the offshore handicap group, known locally as ''o. cean racing" who have to con- tend with the vagaries and changes of the Cruising Club of America measurement rule -which supposedly makes one yacht the !!QUal of another on the race course. It costs money, lncideritally, to have a yacht mea sured to the rule. THE GROWLING has grown a little more vehement of late with the news that the CCA rule will soon be abandoned and all yachts will have to be measured to a new in- ternational rule k11:1wn as the IOR for International Ocean Rule. W bi ch , incident.ally, costs more money. Now it is a foregone con· clusion that the majority of sailors who are able to afford an ocean racing yacht can also afford to have i t measured. Bul it Is the occasional dispute among measures, plus protests from the computer· minded yachtsmen that roils the waters more than a 4~ knot gale wind. Some local yacht.mien have been heard to remark that they would either sell their boat or take up cruising if the powers that be didn't stop tinkering with the rule. Btrr rr took a couple of Florida yachtsmen to bring things out in the open. They did sell their boat, right In the middle or Florida's Southern Ocean R a c i n g Circuit, with the p u b I i c statement: "All of a sudden it wae:n't fun sailing any more under the conditions." The statement was at· tributed to Bruce Bidwell and Hugh Obrtntz, ro-OWMI'! of the Morgan-4.1 llombre which at the time was the Class C point leader and the loth ranking boat in the highly touted SORC. Red Marston, outdoor editor of the St. Petersburg Times, further quoted the disen· chanted yachtsmen : "People will read whatever they want to Into our decision but we have to live with ourselveS'. We don't sail and race boats for a Jiving." WHAT HAPPENED ~·ent something like this: Hombre, which her owners contended could. properly sailed, beat any boat of her size, was the object of a rating protest following the St. Petersburg· Fort Lauderdale tace. Six other boat owners Jn the SORC said they would protest any subsequent races Hombre entered, contending that the CCA rating of the yacht was too low. Bidwell and Obrentz, rather than getting themselves and the SORC in a protest hangup over a period of time, had the sloop remeasured and reweighed in a Miami boat yard with two measurers checking each other, THE RESULTS showed lhal Hombre's rating was Indeed too low. She went up sir·tenths of a foot. But a hasty In· spectioo of the races she had won, showed that she still would have beaten all the other boats In her class by from 29 minutes on up, ac- cording to Bidwell a n d Obrentz. "We could have llved with the new rating, assuming the SORC cared to ove1Tule itself on !Ls own rule that ratings cannot. be changed during the sir.race period," said Bldwl!ll. The upshot was that the ovmers were again threa~ned with protests after l h e remeasurement. "We did what we thought was right. One thing led to another and auddenly the whole bit was no looger fun," Bidwell and Obrentz told Mar!ton. At a Miami boat show the owner& were offered a good price for the boat. They sold it. Under happier clrcumstan· ct&, Wy said, It would not have been for sale at any prtce. Wednesday, May 6, llJ70 0 '' i I DAILY f,!J.OT. J5 r ·cnp Conte nder Wat~~· '. ..') • I D ,. • • • , ,1 "FOR GOD, HONOR AN D COUNTRY"-Herilage, the South's first 12-meter with hopes of defendfng the America's Cup, had he11aunching trial~ Sat~r- UPI Te .. ,M. day. In. upper photo she is being towed through St. Petersb\irg ~treet on way to launching. \ . ...i •• ~-- ' " • ........ LOOK OUT BELOW -Launching of Heritage was almost thwarted when crane used to lower into the waters of Tamp;t Bay almo~ toppled into the water itself. BIA Votes Top Post To Kaufman Matt J. Kaufman has been named exetutive director of the Boating Industry Associa- tion. according to C.N. Ray, BlA president. Kaufman, 44, joined the BIA staff in 1955 as a public rela· Lions assistant. He was pro- moted to consumer and dealer relaLions manager hi 1958 and became director of marketing and public relations in 1964. In September of last year he was named acting executi ve director following the rcsigna· lion of Fred B. Lifton. BIA, with more than 500 manufacturer members, is the largest trade group in lhe recrealional boating business. It's full time staff of 35 is engaged in market research, engineering standards work, and government and public relations. The association also produces the Chicago Boat, Travel and Outdoors Show and the Marine Trades ExbiPit and Conference. Burton Ends Boat Course Tom Burton of John R. Payne 1'1arine Service, 2439 W. Coasl ~ghway, Newport Beach, has recently completed a MerCruiser .stem drive training course at the Santa Ana Service School o f Kiekhaefer Mercury , a dlvisi-On of Brunswick Corp, manufacturer of MerCrul9l'r and ~fercury outboard mot.ors. The course lncludtd 1n:- i;lallation, tune-up work, ac· cessories, trouble shooting and complete motor and stern drive overhaul procedures, ' t- • '• LITT LE GIRL MAKES BIG SPLASH -Eleven·year old J ennifer Morgan sits atop her father 's shoulders as she: ch1istens Heri·t.a ge for "God, honor and country." ,,. •1 . ' 'l ·'' ... ,\,IJ'.··~-~ '· ' ·' \ ' .. •• ., ., ., , ' . ,. A FLOAT ON TAMPA BAY ~With a pronounced "knuckle bow", Heritage floa ts gra_cefully on Tampa Bay soon after launching al SJ. Petersburg. I l ' I I j l j • n D•ll v PJcor s WHlntlll:!Y May 6 1971) LEGAL N011CE MOTtCI 0, MAllSHALl'I JA.La "t•l.N5 CO NTINl!NTAL Clll(OIT ll•lflCI' P .. ltlllff VI ARCHIE E ~VIII ttt l l Oti.or.dtnl No IU! OVER THE COUNTER !Iv vlrtw o! 1n t•tc1111o1> ltwtd on 'fowtmc--IJ, 1'66 by Ille Munkl11I Ctilirt OltANCE COUNTY Hl.11.IOlt JUDICIAL DISTRICT (O\l"l't' 11 Or111M ll•lt ., C.lnor"I&. \lflOll • lueltfl'tHll .,....... '" ,,_. ot T•1nlC9nttl'tllltl O'Hft Stfvlu tilc. If l\lldt"""I cno:trtw(IJ lffl'll ... i...1 Ardlll E Devit "l"lhtll 0..,15. 11 I""""'"" 111.t:rllo .,_._ I net belfn«o el mt ~ldWIH di.le ., 11lcl I""""""" en ,.... Hit cf !tit 1-l'ICI of Miii tirKutltn t llivt llvlird -fll lhl rl1lll HIN l/td iftll~ ol Nici 1""91Mf11 Oflltorl 11 !hi .,_..,. IR tht Cwntv of Ol'1nt1 11.111 • C1tltol'fll• u-i:rlbtd 11 1011ow, Lot 1' TNlcl '70! 11\111 llOI* !fl •11tt. 31 11'14 311 In tl'le C!lv a! H11r11 ... ton II"<"' Cl! I COMMONL y KNOWN AS 715n K1"""9 LI,,. H,,..11 ... lotl !IHtl'I Calif 71 :==:=::==;==~=::=::=;:::::===::===:==:. WOT1CE IS HEREBY Gl\ll!N 1~11 (lfl T~IV MIV M 1'70 fl l (1(1 odGCk P.M f l Ml tlllotll Dl'fl<I II" w ... t...INltr .. _ Wf1tml<>1!ot C1lll Cl"" tJI W1111'1!nsllr (OUl\IY ef Ori,.., ,1111 ol (llllam'-I Wiii tell I I jMJ!lli( -llOll to Ille l'lllhtst blddior few «•th 111 19wl~I _, o1 llW U11lltd 1111•1 111 ,,,, rltl'll 11111 •llCI ln1111•' ol 11ld lllftmtnl d(bfo"' lfl Int 1t>ov• ~rlr.t pr_,,... or JO mud! ll'l••eo! Alo ,.,.., be ~PU•N lo tllllf¥ "kl t•«irilOll-wltl'I tccrvtd lnlotnl 1nd ~· Ol!t1d 11 Wt<l"llMlfr Ctllklrnll f"r! ell~ M1v 1 lt~ C~ARLES A. Dl!!~IGO Ml •lh•l M"'" dNI Court Wttl 0""" Co:•11•w Judklt! 011rrld •v .an11t M Cl1110ulll! -· M.AltA & MOltOIUW 1lt ~ N ,,_ .... ""lltnM>. Ctllf 1'}111IMt't A,,..,,.., "11b!!"'*' Or1"11• Cotsl D1llr MIY a 11 211 1f10 LEGAL NOTICE CEltTlf"ICAT• CF llUSIH llSS f"ICTITIOUS NAM• n.1 11..0.r1lont0 -c1rlllv \lie It t0<1ductl!>i 1 bu1l11,.., ti W W lttl'I $1 (01t1 Mt!.I C.ill""'°'!a ufldU tl'll lie! 1!ou1 llrm ,.....,. « COSTA MESA NURSES REGISTRY t r>d If>•! .. Id lltm Is tcH'nPoif'll o! lh• lol_l,,. l>f',..,,. wl>ow "'""' I• 11111 UICI Pll Ct ol ... 1oenc;1 ,, ,, lollows Evtlv11 L!...:IM-¥ I~ NtwllClrl t11 Cot11 Mesa SP tle '! Ctllr Olltcl M•v 5 1'70 Evtr...11 Lllld ... v STITE OF CALll'ORNIA OltANGE COUNTY On M11 5 1970 ~ ,.... 1 t'«itlN l'uQlJc_ 111 111!(1 for '1ld s 1111 11<1rson1!1'1' •-••od Ev•l-tn LlndM'V ~-II lo mt to W tl>e P<:"rr>0n WhoM' ,..,... It svbt<:rlb- ~ to tl'le wl!hl11 ln1lr!trl'\11nl l nr:I 1ttnowleclged she e•~ltd !ht 11mt (OFFICIAL SEAL) Mt•V K Htnrl' N1111rv Pub!lc C1lltarn11 PrlndPoll Olllce In O••,..e Cwntv MY CenvnlHIM EAlllrtl Nov 14 ltn "ul!li\1-..:t Or•"ll• Co.11 Oaltv P lot Mav a u 211 11 1'10 14110 LEGA L NOTICE ".J1lff CallT .. 11C.t.TE OP aUllNl!ff FICTITIOUS NAMI: Tkt u....,.rsl;.....t oo ctrt11Y tt>e., tre 68 65 61 59 56 53 50 47 44 0 Promoted Jluntin~ton Beach dent Frednck A res1 De mnductl<>S I bv,ln.u II '11l Mlrlm! Boom l S 1he manager or '\Vt Bt boe lsl11nd C11lllo•11l1 ur>dor ikt 11~11110Y1 11,.,,, ..-mt o1 TMI! G"'?Eeo United Ca I 1 for n 1 a 111\d 11,.1 uld Orm Is camJ>Gtecl ol tt.. to11ow1ne 11e•son• wt1oM 1111'""'" 1" Bank s ne\v office 1n twn 1"'1 olew• el ,..1IOtnc.e 1r1 11 '°1~~d Ev•" °''11"' 11,... so ,1111 The City development w1v Sant• ..,,.., c1111 fie previously served as Miidred Aintlft 0$111"' lll.t $0 II.lit w1v 1..,,, ...,.. c1llf assistant manager of Otlfd Mlv ' 1t70 Limd I! 01111.., the bank s 0 r a n g e MJldr'"9 A Chlllnw ~T•TF OF c1o1.1Po1tNt• County Airport office ORANGE COUNTY °" M•v ' 1tn t1e1on ''" • Not•,., He IS a member of the ~ubllc i.. .~ f&t Mid $Ille "'*™ltlallv 11ootore11 1.1ov11 Evin 011t1ne 1nc1 Mlldrl!d National Assoc1at1on of A1,11!1" 01tl!no know11 lo mt lo bt IM .. ,._, whm• n1mn ... 1!111'K•1""' Accountants to ~ w tllln 1n11r11ml!'tll •nd Kkn<rW~9T.--------------­~ ltlt'Y f•e<:lllH l~t 11mt !OFFICIAL $EALl M1rt K '°4tfll'Y t.1011rv Pub!lc ~ubllsl>t!d Orlntt Co.11 0t ly Pli--1 M.l1f' ' 1J 70 ,, 1'70 llll 70 LEGAL NOTICE J\1arko Bought l\farko Products of Costa CPA Classes Set at CSF Preparation for the certified pubhc accountant examination next November 1s the subJect of a three-part program of fercd by California SI ate College Fullerton Starling ri.1ay 2 with a review of practice and theory th e program includes aud1t1ng IAug 8) and law !Sept 9) Classes wiU be held_n1 !he CSF L 1brary from 8 30 a m to 1230pm The respective faculty mem bers conducting the program are Dr Dorsey E Wise man professor of accounting and finance Walter J Dennison, associate professor of ac- counting and Kent E ri:lcKee associate professor or business law Each IS a CPA Bank Official No le~ 40Lh Year Francis J Dav is vice pres1 dent and manager of Security Pacific Nationa l Banks Santa Ana Main Off1ct has marked his 40th anniversary with Secur1ly Pac1f1c The Corona de\ M11r resident belongs to the Santa Ana Chamber of Commerce and Jndustr1al dl v1s1on of the Orai.1ge County .:hamber of Commerce the Rot ary Club or Santa Ana the Salva\1on Army Advisory Board and the Santa Ana Comm unit y • J1111 J\lesa molder and fabricato r Hospital Association lie 1s a c•1tT1~11~i:10~; H~U,:~NEIS of foam producls for corner director for the Tuberculosis T~ 11flft,1'9Md c10 <t•lltv ttiev '" packagmg has been acquired and Respiratory Dt s e as e s '"°""""''\"' • ""'""'' ., 31'1 !11rba1Sot •1 c.0611 Mt11 ca111om11 11"6fr ,~, by Republic Packaging Corp , Assoc1at1on and for the Big fl(!'tl lovl fl•"' .,._ o! E $ p ClllCUITS Ch " th f 0 c ( 1ELECTllONIC SECU RITY PRODUCT$\1--"-'_g_o _________ ~u_ro~-'-"~'~c'-'"_gce~_·_u_n_Y __ •rod thal st ld firm 11 coml>OH't! <>f IN l<>llowlM "'..,"' wl>e!.<! n8m~ In f t,111 Ind 10!1ct1 of r11l<ttnt.I lrt I I follnw• 0..,.. HttrlM!o<I 3tl3 t11rb1dlll "! CMI• Me" Ct!ll L-ne H•rtlM!<>n 316' t11rD1do1 "'I COlll Mesa Ct l f O.ttd Mav 1 1'711 Doll Htrrlnolo"" LUOene toltrrlnt1~ $TATE OF Cl.Ltl'ORNll. OltANGE COUNTY On Mev 1 lt10 Wfo,.. "" 1 Mfttarv Jtllbllc In 1nd for t•d 5111• ,..,_nv ·-·""' Don tolttd"91fll'I ''"' llld•~ Her1lnotot1 known lo t'f>I IO be ll\t DietfOlll who~ n1m•1 • t 1ub1crl""4! Ill !ht wlt~ln l"~ln.imtnl 1r.d 1dv•owlld1 ..!I !hoo f •t C I~ lht Hmt !OF FICIAL $EAll Mt•v K 1-lonrv Not1rv P11b1k C1111ornl1 Prine ...,1 Oth<:1 In Qrenoe Coun!v MY C...,._mtniolo E•Olft\ Nov 21 "" '°Ul>ll1l>tcl O••not Co11! 0111\' "llo! l.,o.1y I IJ 211 11 lt10 1:16-10 LEGAL N011CE ,,_ CIJlTll'IC,Tl! 0, CCltP'Clt..ITIOM •Cit T~ANSACTION 01' aUJINES5 UNO l!lt l'ICTITIOUS HI.Mii THI! UNOER51GNED CORPOR,\T ON llae1 Mrtbv ct'111¥ th•! It ll condut llnv • bl/I net1 llK.•lf<I •1 464 w c ..... .....,.,wt~ll~ F1tlle•!Of> c111lom!1 11ndff tht t!cttllolls I rm n1me ol lo./ Tli'll.Nl.TtONl.l YI.ROI.GE Fl.JR •nd ,,,., will llrm h (oml>OOecl .,. l!>t followlnt Ul<1>0r1tlon ....,..._ p<lntl111' 1'1«• al b\111....u I• e1 lo11ow1 XEROX COPIES 4 .... COllAHD fRH .... 20¢ MINIMUM 8 . x 11 EA UNBOUND • GOOOWR~~~~~ers 2131 San Joaquin Hills Rd -Newport Center 644-6454 Want Financial Power? " A8~0lUlELY NO SELlltlG ln,o1vt<I 1nd <111• low to~! 1c•• t e oe- •lon!'<I Tl>t Worll!I F1btk tnd F•ol'llon Tr111t Ftl• 1.._S W Cht llfnll\, Or1no• WITNES~ 111 hllld IM• 4 llltv ol MIV 1f711 <.:art er Elected !COllPORl.TE 5IEAL1 World< Fttll'k• 1r>d F••l'llan Tr1ot: l'tl• El~ Turin P t S!d_,,I f>T ... TE Oil' Cl.LIFOllN11. COUNTV OF ORANGE l JI On lf!ls "~ d11 Of Mty " D 1t717 b<itant ""' Mtrv I( Htfl!V • NOferv Pub!lc. In tnd IM .. lei COi/ft!¥ t nd S .. IL "-'ld!no !l'ltte!I\ OUH «1mmlulor11d C4ll OR WRITE PF' ,Ol 'URTHER IN FOlMATION Personalized Finan~ial Plannin9 Place':.~ •• ~~1:4!2670 714-528-0218 Pal \V Carter The Carter Corp prcs1ck>nt or Santa Ana a nd t_.n "rll)nl 11'!' !ll>IM I red E I iMfo l '!ii'lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!~ Tu,ln kN:lwn lo m~ lo bt lilf' P~•ldrn! o! tl>t Co<llClflllon ttt1t f~fl:ulO<I 11\t ..,11111n ''°""_,,' on be~•lf ol "" C.O" 1111r1lloll fllrrrln nafnfd i nd Kk<'O•"'"' rd 10 ,.... ti.Ill $\ICl'I C-'lllan t-r~1>IH and a Costn Mesa resident has be.en elected president of the Cahforn1a Owned Outdoor Adverlising Associa!Jon "" ......... In w11,...,. WllHllOI • ~tvt llt<'flll\to ,., mv l'luMI 1,.. ""t•-cl ""¥ l!Mclll Mii "" di• ltnd Yttr In thll ..,,ftttutt nrst tbav• wrlti.n (()Fl'ICIAL $E ... LJ Marv IC He!WY Naltrv P'Ubll<.C•llfo<'11l1 Prll'ICINI OHie. II\ o·-· c°"' .. ,.,. MJ C°"'"'hllOl'I ElPlr• NOYl'ft'lbolo' 21,. 1t71 ~llblltl'led Or•n.e C.O.at 0 11t1 "'"" 11(,., t. IJ 10. 27 1'10 UT 1Q LEGAL N011CE \ P er A nnum- Paid Quarterly (')fi $20 000 Of!•.,.'" hll Pa id ~""t "'.,.f T~1ft c.rtrf'..c.•t.S wh•fl lil•ld te ~.t.,,1ty ·--"' .., tk -• -... ,,... ,,.. CALIFORNIA. THR01"&-La4N 470 ••-S"'-f -,.,.. JJk 711 St1k Stno.t -St_.1 I•• ..... 30<15 S1vlM1 loN -0.~ 21tJ4 S<h""°°"~ -C•~• '1.4 •• 1 I Wlhhff. 11wl -t.. A.,...i.t 110 Utt 11• ~-c..t1 ..._.. • • + ' ' I • I 1 t , I? • I) '. ~.:»>,+. ~u. !¥"" + • 1h'• ,.,,, + 17 . 111, -: Jt\, 39» -) 7S"1 ?Sli + -ft .. ~~ri -1, "'• 11'-4 + • IJ6, 1J6 \ -1 , •s • .is ,-1, ~;,,, ~ ..... -~. IJ"t 11'\ ~ .. 1#11i =l ~IV, 11 \i -41 ~. " ~-. l'"' = : Y~ ) _,I 1i ~t:t . 1Al U>, -, 11 ~ -J n 10 =f: 11. ll .. -1 . 1~~ I~;=..~ ~.ii,,_., ~f~ 1f~ -'• 1'1arket Sy11abols • .. .. -1 I ' •• -' -' -.. t" -. ,,; -' -. _, -,, • + • -1" -. -. _, -" + + + • _,. _, -' -. +'• +• -. + • _,, =· + • --_., -" • + • -. _, +' • • • -. + • _,. + • ' + -' -.. • • • + ... -' +• -. _,, • ' -1 • -. + • • -,. _, + • +•. + • , =r· _, -· =1 ~ _, -" ' -!'• _., +I ,; +• -. -· +> -. +• -.. -. -.. -. -. •• + + -. _, + -. + ' _,. _, • _, ~· _,, +• -. ' . -. ' _, t • • -" _, , • • + + +' + -· -. ._, -.. -' -. _., 1 • _, _,. -. _, . ... -' -. . ~· ... I f UI ' ,_ mi lt" ,,, bll- IO !1• ... ,, " .. IUQI lnu• . ~ lderill D 11tu1 ~ut n1 Iden• lull •.cf!'t\. dh1'1> . ., v111~11 -Hrol I C'1Y ., lh~ -" .. ' • " " " "' " • " " ~ " " "' mo • ' " • M " " " ' ' " ' • " 0 " • " ~·· "" ". " " • " . " " • ~" • " • • ••• " "'' " • ' " " .. " • • • ' " ' '" .. " l••• .. '" " . I " ' May 1970 Tuesd~y's Closing Prices-Complete ,New York Stock Exchange List . -. n ~ +i ~ 1'111 -• 1•-.-... 10 -• !"' -• ~h -• Si; +"' W ru· Fears Bl'ing I New Market Sell off NEW YORK (UPI)-Concern over lhe expand ed U S military role in Southeast As.la touched off further selling on Wall Street Tuesday although turnover remained light The UPI marketWlde indicator showed a loss of 1 52 percent on 1 587 1ss1,1es on the tape Of these I 032 decllned and 308 advanced The Dow Jones 1ndustnal average of 30 select· ed blue chips 'vluch plunged more than 19 points Monday was of! another 4 75 at 709 81 near the close Vo lume o! around 10 5 m1lhon shares compar ed with 11 450 000 shares which changed hands 1n the previous session Newton Z1nder analyst for E F Hutton & Co cbaractenzed the market as generally quiet and cau tious There s simpl y no reason lo buy stocks W1l ha.in Nelson director of equity research for Moody s In vestors Service said He added that you can\ put your f1nger on any favorable news item ' UA.L !r>e: l UARCO 110 UG (;p l2C UMC Ind 11 UM Ct 6(1 Ull Cl"IP I Un Cl bide 2 Un 011 Corp Un E.c :zt Un El 1116o!G VII El i>l~jO Un E l>f ~ UnOOC1I 60 UOCI Pl'l .SO Un Pl CCP 1 un ot1P•c1• > Ur>PK ~ ,40 u,.ontm ., u .. 1.0.1 "' U~ OVI Jlf I Un '"°"' '° , --'"'"'""'"'"'"' ... .,.., ...... C![UI\ IA.Ir( 1 IO ·' 11 I (JI toe • ' " DAILY P'lLOT l ' Briefs I I I ~ DALLAS (UPI ) -Genet;l). Motors e1pects to spend •t12 mlihon this year to elfmJna~ or redllce air pollution from. auto engines Vice Chainnl)I Richard Ger1tenberg said that amount will go into researdl; engineering testing and other actlv1t1es He said GM 'fleol $6f) mllbon last year on em1ss1on control WASHINGTON (UPI) LTV Aerospace Corp of Dallas has obtained an $82 5 mdhon addition to a NaVy contract for components 101' the A 70 aircraft 'fhe previoo~ amount of the contract wµ, ma a million . .. • • •• NEW YORK (UPI) -Lil• Saer1 Soda a llne of tort dl"lnks from Squibb Beech-Nut Inc will be test marketed In Southern Callfotn1a by a subs1d1ary of Rheingold Corp of New York Rheingo ld. makes both beer and soft drinks NEW YORK (UPI) -BP Alaska Inc said a new welt 30 miles west of Prudboe Baj on the Arctic slope of AlaskA flowed at a rate of 2 000 b.,... rels of 21 s degree gravity oil dally from sandstones of the Kuparik River formation al depths of 6 494 to 6.tel feet SANTA CLARA Call! (UPtJ; -Memorex Corp said tt'. shortly wlll market 1 ntiK low-cost hl&h speed proceu for duplication ol v I d e o tapes the proc e1s was de.~rtbed u JO lo 15 times as fast 111 present processes j I j l I I ---------- I • 21 D•IL Y PILOf WEDNESDAY MAY i Editor's ftott: Ale ""1•••int 111'1 H dl111pd .• ,. ,,...,pttd if' sittll 11111t is MtdM t. 1111 LI.·111,f, Clli'lll· pionstilp bnlettlall Mfill. Tht liW 11111 will 1101 be Uo•n 111 lllt L11 An11l11 11111; llonwer, 1 lllCIV· it WOtlld fill hi thlt lhM, Pfl• 1111,Unt "'""' and flit ,,.feuor 1ft41 iaorin& tthlr IWOlflllllllll W Ill lieut liter Hlln M"'11111td. lllt lllO¥it ulledulff 11 n pllet l~t NIU l'll')'Off is "World Without Sin," 111 Au16tlny A"'~-winninr ,.tH111 by J1c:q11ts·Ym ~11u 111owin1 111.,.. 11111t un lftri: i nd ' llw benNtli tM su. ' I •:oo 1 •i1 llfrn (CJ (60l Jerry Oun?hJ. I m ff11ntlty·lrinkltf (C) (30) i C.11 You T041 Thil? IC> (30) • Wink M1rt1nd1lt hosts. Red Bui· tons. Stu GIUitrn 1111! Morey Am· stud1m 11e/p1nelist5. ' !0 ANTHON Y QUINN j, ;* JACK PALANCE in ' THu~5DAY I Wtdntsday, Ma, 6, 1970 I T• Tell tt11 T1wt9' (C) (30) Tiit f"tYtt S.11 (60) (Rl LI triad• l lt11 trlff1 (C) (!ti) Q) "f1tllw W. 1 '1!MIKk" (c.· ecly\ '.t9-fftd M1t'Murr11r, fNl.l· rm O'H1r1. Jrh111!1 Wood. DAYTIME MOVIES 'J3-Mich1el Rtc111IV9. '•Ill luklL 1 1:000 "1ltt LMJ .. ,.._ .. (lflratefil l :IO D "ft ........_. 111 l lMllyll" m "TM MMllM Mrl' (fr Ml•) (lfltlslelf-ctlfMlty) '41-Ft111• Si n•· "S6--Gtnt B1r1J, Barb1ri title, rrt , Ji"""' Dur1nt1, ~ttiry11 Gr11 fdwud Ar"old. tl)lll, ,. .. ., lntford, l :OOfJ "tt l11 Mr LM" (m1tttQ) '48-ftlJ Mflttnd. 2;00 0 (Cl ''flit Mcttn"tll StOf1"' (drtin•) 'S>-Al 1~ l 1dd, Junt Al· '""· I -4;JO rJ <C) "'Tin•~ IN M11niticlllt'" {dr•mt) (ld't'tntlffl) '&O-Got6on Scott, Joe• Stet!&.! MthoMJ. c '"• <=W "'"'C j¥ Theater Notes Huntington Ends Season; Othe1· Theaters C ~n!inue By TOl\t TITUS 01 tt.e O.llJ PllOI 51 .. f It's all over for the Hun· tington Beach Playhouse this 1 weekend -at least for the 1969'-70 season. • taken at the box office, 646- 1363. * In U1e high comedy depart· menl, "The Girl in the Freu- dian Slip" continues i t s engagement al the S a n Clemente Community Theater, under the direction of Tony Brandt. · Gene Applegett and Carol Dahl play the principal role s in the comedy about a \Vi th two final per lormance!' of "\Vaill of the Toreadors'' Friday and Satu rday, the Huir tlngton players become the first of Orange County 's local theater groups to close the books on their c urrent schedule ol productions. However, there won't be much time for cobwebs to aceumulate around ' ' T h e Barn ." Tryouts are scheduled next week for the Huntington Beach children's show , "Tom Sawyer," and the adu lt thes· pians will be back early in September with "Once ~lore With Feeling." J psychiatrist with del usions of his ow n. Filling out the sup. porting cast are M o n i c a Directing the current of. fering is Ruth ()orw3rd. With Ra lph Quick heading the cast as a general wtw ha s con· ducted most or hi:; 'campaigns in the boudoir. Also featured ar.e Sally Cro\v\ey, Terry Phelps and Jean Koba. while James E. Smith. CynUiia Bar~ ron, Greta Smith, Jill White. Ale1t Koba, LaDonna deBarros and Dawna Wade complete the cast . The curtain ·clo si ng performances will be given at the · playhouse, 2110 Mai n St., Huntington B ea c h . Reservations arc ceptcd at 536-8861. * bcini;: ac· A rew mil es to Uie north, the Terutessee Williams classic "A Streetcar Named Desire "' enters its third weekend for the Westminster Community 'rheater. Doris Alle n is di rec· ting. Beth Ciciliot and B u r t \Vamer play the antagonistic opposites Blanche DuBois and Stanley Kowalski, with Rolin- da Orlow cast as Stella and Tom Titus playing Milch . Oihers in the Westminster drama are Millie Fraki , Roger McBride, Ron Langseth , Eri.c. Lampel , Lois \Vorlhi ngton, J ames Allen and Alice Reich. Two Perfonnances will be given thi s weekend, Friday and Saturday,· at Fin I e y School, Edwards at Trask avenues, ~Westminster. TI1e number for reservations is 897- 1164. SUNDAY IS t.IOTHER'S DAY! Uriu)!. !\!other and the family 10 Knoll',, Berry r 1rm for fllother"• Day. Rt:M:rvations •re being acceptfd for the Steak HooSI:'. Call f\loJly •I (714 ) 522-l l::l l. l•• Show Storh 1 P·'"· Co11tin"1ow1 Show s..,nday Fror 1 p.m. HELD OVE R WINNER OF S ACADEMY AWARDS ORANGE COUNTY'S BIGGEST SHOW MUl. NflUIWt ROBERT REDFORD M1'HRE ROSS .. BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID •'IC0116£ F(ft Hill· PMAMONASlt POOO\JCOO! SIBolHER .MARTIN .JEFF COREY HENRY JONES fittutiwl Producer PAUl MONMiH. Produced by JC»ifrf fOR(IWf Dirtettd by GEORGE ROY HllL Wnn.n by WlllWil GOl..DMAN G.P. •1utchens, Bill Lynam. J oyce Winton and Ralph Appell. Performances will be given 1'hursday through Saturday .evenings at the C a b r i 11 o Playhouse, 202 A ve n id a Cabrillo, San Clemente. Call the bo x office at 492..0465 for reservations. * PAILY PILOT.Stiff 'M't Deli berating (or Uie last l'A'O tin1es this weekend will be FREE FOR ALL -Greta Smith (right) and Cy nthia Ba ron battle fo r the a[* the "Ladies of the Jury" at fections of an en1barrassed Terry Phelps in this scene fro1n ''\\laltz of the Tor•. the Long Beach Community eadors ," closing a five-\veekend r un F riday and Saturday at the Tiuntington.. Playhouse. Bertram Tanswell Beach playhouse. directs the vintage comedy. -----'-'------------------------------ r. Coast Sclaools Co1ive1ie ~. Phy llis Allen, [){Jn Danielson and Ann Filian are featu red in the cast at the plush playhouse. 5021 E. Anaheim St., Long Beach. 'f'he reserva· lion number is (213) 438-0536. 'No11-drama Festival' at OC H unti1igton Seeks Kids For 'Hansel' ~lore tha n 500 high school 1o best actor. best aclrc~s drama stu dent s will gather and many others. ;i t Orange Coasl College Fri· This year, Purkiss said, six day for a new hiea in draina judges -three froin the - a non-festival. acad emic world and three pro· 1'he cveo1 wil l run Jrom fessionals -1vill 1vatch the 8:45 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the scenes, then go back in1'1 OCC auditor ium and music rehearsal \Vith the h i~h shcool studios. There is no admissio n ac1ors and 1vork with thcn1. Tryouts for the Huntington charge and the public is in-The actors \\'ill thus ,e;et in· Be<ich Playhouse's third an-vited to attend. ~1 ruction from both ends of nua l summer children's pro. the theatrical spectrum -thr duction, "Hansel and Gretel" Festival director \Vi!lia1n ·11 be h Id M d · Purk iss said six area high acad emic and professional w 1 e on ay evening. '"orlds. schools are bringing their en· ,.. Ron Albertsen, who is di rec· tire drama departmenls to the Judges will include Ors. Don ling the show. announced that event The fes tival in th~ pas1 l·lcnr y. Jerry Pickeri ng and a cast of eight youngsters sa\¥ a xuccessio n of one-act Ronald Dieb of Cal State between the ages of 9 and ] d ·1h ds Fullerton. Hal I .. a11don Jr. ol 17 years and six adults is re. -'p'--ay~s_an __ sc_e_n_es_._w_i __ a_w_a_' ___________ _ quired. The auditions arc scheduled for 7 p.m. Monday at the t playhouse, 2r10--Main St., liun· lington Beach. · '"Hansel and Gretel'' will open July 10 for n i n e performances. The play will be staged July 1().12, 17·19 and 24·26 at 7 p.m. on Fridays and 2 p.m. Saturdays and SWl· days. 'Carousel' Tryouts Set The Buena Park Civic Light Opera will hold auditions T'hursday and Friday for its upcoming summer musical, Rodgers and Hammerstei n's "Carouse l." A cast of 30 non-union ae· tors, singers and dancers are needed for the production. Tryouts are sched uled for 7:30 p.m. both nights at the Ray· mond Temple School, 7800 Holder St.. Buena Park. She Spies South Coasl Repertory l'eter Church and Tony Ze' or Charles Aidman or Cen ter Theater Group in Angeles. "We will be using ; c.:rilics as dev ices to show ijie ; processes of theater," Purki8! · said. "They \viii learn W' more this way tha n compei· · for trophies.'' High schools attending w · include Santa Ana Vall : Newport Habor, Edison, Cog' ivlesa. Corona del Mar a~ ; 1'1ater Del. :-.. UCI Cl1or Takes Sho On th e Roa , UC I rvi ne·~ Univ e r s 1 Chorus. making its first \\'ill prese nt concert.! northern California camp ~lay &-9. The sc hedule include UC Davis z,1d F College in Los Altos Hills. The 64 members of chorus will be accompa by 30 members of t Universi1y Orchestra. They \\'ill perform under the direo-. ' tion or t.1aurice A 11 a r associa te professor of mu assiste d by Carole Boelt lecturer in mu sic, and c.:on<luctors. Their program will incl "Gloria in Excelsis Deo" Bac h. ''Misa Criolla," f n1ass by Ariel Rami rez, a · · Carou se I '' will be presented for three \l'eekends, ope.1ing July 10. Further in· formation may be ob tained by calli ng 879-.42.37. .. Cantique de Jean Raei Eartha Kitt portrays a \VOman in ca hoots \rith a by Gabriel Faure . Chinese general in tonig ht's insta llment of "'I Spy.'' The program will be giv -·~ ~-­P l•lf1l sho,vin g ~t 10 p.m . on Kt!J-TV. Channel 9. Robert at ho1nc in Cra1\rford Hall Cu1p and Bill Cosby are 'the resident a gents. 8:30 p.m. Friday, June 5. Al l COLOlt SHOW "WALK lH THE SP RING ~.t.IH" !GP) • "IA!ltl&lltlE"LLA" IGPI E:u h11!11e Or•n91 Co11n1, OrlYl ·lft S~OWlllg '•ul H•wm1n-Roi..r1 llecl!or~ "BUTC H C.t.SSIPY & THIE SUHD~NCE KID" !GP! Co~r ''THIE Pll lMIE 011' MISS JEAN lllOPllE" !GPI Color E~clu1i111 Or•1191 Coun1v Drl11 .. 111 S~owl~t "A Ml ft Ct!IMI Hone" CGP) COior "' "Thi llttl111n" (GP) Ctlor .t.Ll COlOll SHOW .. THI! HAP,Y l:H OtNG" !OP) • ~;:;:=::::====~=========== The strangest trio ever to track a killer. ii:t1'T ACTOR iGPI luM ~ ..... Condletld 9f BURT I~ A NFMWl·FORE.wl PRESEKrATK»I ------------------------11 PMIVISION* COlOll I\' llUUXt . liwU1WJW111,.,...,..,fl).•"Ol fltW u..,tit.i n<wl "THI! SECltET 011' SIHT.t. VITTOltl.t." t0P) For Top Sports Coverage Read the DAILY. PIWT -AU O - MAGGIE SM ITH ACADEMY WINN ER BEST ACTRESS All Ct!Or Show "TtCK e T;;,k e fie~" lGl • "l HI! ODD COUPLf " Alf (t'\tt-l~OW ''THltY SMOOT Mo•51s, OOH'T TMf'I'" !OP) • "l!llCI TMI! MONEY AHD tt:UN" !OPI 1 .• •• " I : f/Y: ' k1S9 . "· ~: '""-aN!: 1. f a " ... ... t .. ·m1is Unaffected ... y 'Morals Oause' By BOB THOMAS HOL!JYWOOD (AP) -The newt of Tony Curtis' being arrested for poS3e!Skln of marijuana in England ral11ed a question among I i I m ob.servers: Whatever hap- pened to the rnorall clause? There's no indJcation yet whether the incident will af- fect Curtis' contract !Or an ABC television s e r i e 1 • Probably not. The series isn't schedtiled until the 19'11-72 atasM. .Besides, a marijuana >.J:s..dilferent now from what · Wu in 1H9, when Robert tchurn almost Jost hia ca- , because of one. He dnw 60-day jail sentence; CurU. cl-a 1120 line. ']f Mitchum· 1 employers had to do IO, he could been fired from his 250-a-weet contract. The is that every movie in those times had a morals clause Jn his contra<'t. The morals clause was the invention of wily Will Hays, President Harding's postmas- ter general and the man elec- ..led by the movie producera in 1922 to clean up the io- dustty after a series of scan- dals. The new film czar argued that misbehaving stars b:cLUSIVI OU.N~I COUNTY .,, INGAGIMINT N.llTIONAI. G'ENEffAL COA'POltATK>N Foi-~..e!! Silt Di.-,...,""""'. s.t-1711 W'""'-YI: 7:J0.10:00 Set. 1911 51111.: 12:10-J:ao l :J0-1:00.1 O:JO could be kept In line by the lbrtal of flrllJi. And so each actor'• contract forbade him to engage In at'tlvlties that o£fended public morals or subjected himself to disrepute. "It was a very real threat," recalls a veteran Hollywood attorney. "But as far as l know, the morals cla111e was never in- voked, I belleve lhe studios tried lo use it to get out of contracts with accused Communists during the red scare. But the wording was too broad and the cl1use didn't hold up in thole cases." But the morals clause re· mained. Producers remembered all too vividly how Paramount had gotten stuck with hundreds o f thousands of dollars' worth. of Fatty Arbuckle comedies. The funnyman was tried three times and finally acquitted in the party death of. a young woman. That happened early in Hollywood rustory. Jn later years it appeared that the morals clause was merely an instance or producer hypocrisy. It could have been invoked by RKO in Mltchum's case. Or Warner Bros. might have fired Errol Flynn when he was accused -then ac- quitted -of seducing a couple or minors on his yacht. It so happened that both Flynn and Mitchum were even more popular after the scan-- dais. Hence neither of their studios considered application of the morals clause. Despite the historical Jack of application of the morals clause, it remains as a vestigial clause in actors' con- tracts. "It's still in most of the contracts with producers," said an official of the Screen Actors Guild. "But it's pretty much old-hat now. The threat is used behind the scenes. Nobody pays much attention to it." Winner otTen Academy Awardi • MARITAL BLISS? -Jerry Leland and Sharon Threadgold start the day with a squabble in "How Tall is Toscanini!", one of five Orange County plays entered in the ruverside one-act tournament. 5 County Theaters Vying at Riverside Five Orange County theater groups will participate in the 11th aMual Southern California tournament of one-- act plays this weekend at Riverside. The three-day d r a m a festival will be held Friday through Sunday at the ru ve rs id e Co mmunJty Theater. Leading off the tournament on Friday evening will be the newly formed lrviYJe Com· munity Theater with a pro- duction Of "How Tall is Toscanini?" directed by R. Eastman Oo\v, The twtr Gabor Szabo I11CSF Show One of the most origin.al and effective jazz gultarist..s to arrive oo the American scene within the last 10 years will be featured in concert 1'1onday at Cal S t a t e Fullerton. The Gabpr Szabo Jaz.z Quintet <Wfll perfonn in the :J,.iltlt. 'Ibeater, located in Ule 'l'nutc' speech. chm.a building. The cmcert, to begin at 1:30 p.m., is sponsored by the Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia pro- fessional music fraternity at Cal·State Fullerton. l'ickeu, on sale for $2, may be reserved by telephoning the music department at 870-3511. ~,~~f 2905 East C:oast Hwy. Coron• def Mir character play features Jerry U:land and Sharon Thread- gold. Also performing on Friday will be an original western by Dohn Shaw of COiSta Mesa enliUed "You Call This a Dude Ranch?" Shaw also directs and appears in the show, which Includes D o I o r e s fl1cComb, Eileen Rockman, Sondra Barber, Dick Carapezza, Lyle Barber. Paul Bashaw, Jody Pickard and Red Thompson. The R a n c h o Community Players will enter the com- petition on Saturday with "Sara and the Sax," directed by Art Gordon. Mike Bielitz and Jean OeVries comprise the Rancho cast. On closing night, Swlday, the San Clemente Community Theater will present "~1emorial Day," under the direction of Hal Walker, with Richard Andersen and Doris Donka in the cast. Also scheduled for Sunday is an abbreviated ve riion of "Spoon River Antholo~" b the Guild Players ol San , directed by Joanne Car en. Reservations for the one-act tournament may be obtained by .calling 68&-f030 between 5 and--8 p.m. Leapin' Wl1at? HO!.LYWOOD (UPI) Propman Bob Pi-furdock has been ordered to report to the local.ion side of "Dirty Dingus Magee" Jn Mescal, Ariz., with a batch of trained lizards. 2 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS Je1n Simmons Best Actress Best Theme Song Jean SirTim~~s--1~,;-F~rsythe -Shirle). Jones -- Lloyd Bridges Teresa Wright O..k si. • ...,. "•"'1'1t r • .....,. Robft'tDHin Ti,..i...u; .. w _ _,R. h dB k "-~ K••hyFitldo K-..Stn o""""'~ 1c ar roo s Mk hrittg.....i ,,..._,...,c ..... ..i tt.IL A !>.C. r ......... _.Tf(~ Unrrlllll ...... 09-"'°"°" 1'11;!(!0( stl)I'( .. lllC"ll ll"--l•I '--,.. .. ,. --4>: ...,.Ulll 0-UlllltO Mlllll lttoll!$ ...,., _ _...,.,.. -• ALSO PLAYING The Mlfisch Corpc>1"o11101"t Pre~s St.eveMcQueen FayeDuriawey. AN:>rman.Jewison Fllm ' Wtdntsday, May 6, 1970 ' DAIL t 1'11.°' 29 'Common Programs' to Reap. Emmysi By VERNON SCOTT HOLLYWOOD (UPI) 'Ibis year tbe Emmy awards, like tbc Oscars, are more at- ti...1ed to the proletariat than In bygone seasom. gramming Is assuaged with sud\ shows as "Mls.1icn : awards for specials, movies-Impossible," "~ !Ii 2 2.'' for-television and the like. "The Mod Squad,'.' ~·Troneide'' Thus, the academy has and "Love, Americ~ Style." nominated no fev.-er lhan 168 As it has In the past, the shows and/or individuals for academy varied the number the 1969-70 season. of perfQnners vying for t.tlderso Bill Cooby. Uoyd Jlaynes and William Wlndotl. Aclr..,.. nomlnalld !:ell leadl~ roles in <XlllledY)'ilf betn in ~ rurkllng &cod: Video behoo\•ed itself in the Not a single western won awards In i n d i v I d u a 1 Hope Lange, Elizabeth Monlgomery and M a r I o Thomu. as many as two nominations. categories. ,;:::===;:z::::::::===~ past lo lay Emmys on classy thereby eliminating two of There were lour nominees ' lhows with intellectual preten-teleyislon's most \V at ch e d . for best aetor 1n a dramatic lions or at least programs shows, "Gunsmokc" a nd series: Raymond Burr, Mike with significant social com· .. Bonanza" and all I he I r Connors, Robert Wagner and • •\c ~, • " 1, J " N ' t tv.Jtt·1l -•' perfom1ers. Robert Young . ment. Onl y "~1annix ·· among Bui there were only three J PllSY IUN PICTUllS Meany.-hiJe, viewers -if the detective thrillers was in the actresses nominat.ed. for a MIMI• n...... i. ' .. polls and ratings were any ruMing with its outstanding leading role In a dramatic "JENNIE" gauge -wanted escapism in star, Mike Connors, "'inning series: Joan Blondell,. ~san eH the form of situation com-a nomination. Hampshire and Peggy Lipton. "THE LAWYER" (R) edles, detective thrllleri and Situation comedies took a wJ .. hrry N ...... horse operas. beating among the blue ribbon The male comedy nominees C•11tl1 .. 111 StwttMy, 1 :JO P·•· li~~ro~vi~ded~.;;~~ree~·-n~e~w~con~~·~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ The 1970 Emmy nominations panels which 6elected the con- renect something ol a change. tenders. The voters favored "Rowan and ~f a r t i n ' s fllllMll nrMT _....,.,T , m1 n. Laugh-In,'' for example,~ garnered seven nominations. It was No. J in the ratings j most of the year. While its I comedy is s 0 met j mes TONl1'E AT 1:1 5 ONL y cerebral. it attempts 10 be DIRECTFllOM ITS LON~UN funny first . ROADSHOW ENGAGEMENISI Ranking high, too, was ~ "Marcus Welby, Pi-1.D.'' with ·1 eight nominations, a brand • new show about a doctor and ·~ starring a most familiar face: Robert Young's. It was high in the ratings mosl or the ~ season. lf1 It appears the television lmifllfl. ~ ;_": academy has solved its dilem· .. ...!!" i • ma. '-' ,. · The public can be appeased \~".~ .~~\\. with awards for weekly serifs., l(OMO.CR"' \\~\~~,ji and the academy's own striv-"'"rs; "~ ~;:.,.~; ing for significant pro-'°' · · ......... WINNER OF BEST SONG .,Ul~Dltf'S llll fl.U.111' •11 lf'I MUO" IDT llfZ! IUIT IACW-CN IEITD!Wf! - HELD OVER Th• A~cid•m., Awaril ~Wll!."llt Slt.w! e NOyt AT POPUl.Al PllCIS I:) -STllOTIO MMTlf MF IXlf('f HOln' JOrj(!i -----.. ---.. -·~-.. -----... -.. --·-··--,. ... -...... _.~ca HARBOR ot ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE 546·3102 ON HAIBOI BLVD.· ONE MILE SOUTH Of SAN DIEGO FWY. NOTHING HAS BEEN LEFT OUT OF 11fE ADVENTURERS r 1b•acftit MCh ohrhf lgnille ......... ; ·----.. __ .. _ ... _ N .... _, FASHION ISLAND * NEWPORT CE ..• ee e ••• Bob&<:arol &Ted&Alice -!!!I 1" "llANkOVICM •..aoucTIOtl ,_c......,..•1c- 2nd Top Feeture FIRST ORANGE COUNTY SHOWING D, wm~ YOUR EY!~i..­WOll'T Bwut ALL YOU HEAR lllJHfE UWftiR • ..,. 1iRlllIDD JMillOO 1Jlllfl!OO\lff &!OIBERT. .. _ .. llil(IJll•..ilLlill)u:.M -1rMlllllJ1" "-1r•ll.llll. !Y. ~ -...... IOA. -----·---" ................ DHt ... lllll1 Hf& Wife." .; BEACH BLVD, AT ELLIS * * Hl./NTINGTON BEACH* B47·960B Direct from Its Roadshow Run 2nd Week-Now at Popular Prices An epic drama of· adventure and ex !oration! l(I• :fl' ~~· ~ K ' . stereo 103FM ••• the sounds of the harbor J ~d.~~7 youve never heard it so good I j 30 DAILY PILOT Wtdnesda1, M.!Q' 6, 1970 GETS SECOND AWARD -Gunnery ·Sergeant Clark A. Brule. who resides \vith his \vi.le in Tustin, '.:~ recejved a gold star in lieu of hi s second Navy '· .\chievement ~Iedal from Lieutenant Colonel J . C . ._ Johnson a'l Ca1np Pendleton. ·1 .. ' l Me11 Ill • U. S. Air Force Coptain ~licbael G. Anderson, son of l\1r. and l\·lrs. Arthur Dausey, !HfMi \\laterfront Drive, Hun- tington Jleach, has arrived for duty at Kelly AFB. Tex. Second Lieutenant David E. F:iugbt, son of f\fl'. and l\1rs. Harry E. Faught, 17792 Car- ranza Lane. Hunt ingto n Be.:ich. has been a\\nrded U.S. Air Force silver pilot 1vings upon graduation at \Villiam s AFB. Ariz. Second Lieutenant Dale B. Oderm an, son of l\1r. and !11rs. Sa1nuel Oderman. 4615 Rox- bury Road, Corona del ~1ar, has been av.•arded U.S. Air Force silver pilot wings upon graduation at Randolph AFB. Tex. U.S. Air Force -· sergeant Tesla E. Lutes. son of f\1r. alld l\lrs. N. L. Cooper. 16252 Eagle Lane. Huntington Beach. has arir\·ed far duty at Hokota AB, Japan . Airman Robe rl ~I . · Barnhart, son of Mr. and Afrs. Jack M. Smith, 6522 Garden Grove Blvd .. Westminster, has received his first U.S. Air Force duty assignment after completing basic training at Lackland AFB. Tex . The ainnan has been assigned to a unit of the Headquarters Command at Andre .... ·s AFB, f\1d.. for training and duty in the lranspo rta lion (ield. Airman Barnhart is a 1969 graduate of \Vestminster High School. Second Lieutenant Robert ii. Sheets, san of Doctor and f\.trs. Alfred \V. Sheets of 1725 Cresh•iew Ave .. Seal Beach. has been awarded U.S. Air Force silver pilot \\'ings upori graduation at Reese AFB. Tex. tlarine Captain Ke nneth D. O~·en, son of l\1r. and f\.1rs. Dean M. Owen of 19571 Le x- ington Lane, Hunti n gton Beach, is now serving at the f\1a rine Corps Air Station. Cherry Point, N.C. Marine CollXlral Gerald \\1• Reviea, son of Mr. and Mrs. Odia E. Reviea of 4 I 9 HamiJtoo St., Costa f\1esa , is now serving at the Marine Corps Air Station. New River. Jacksonville, N.C. Army Sergeant Robert A. ~fcDonald Jr .. whose parents live al 2588 \Vest minster , Service 1 I Costa 1\lesa. recenlly received ! the Bronze Star f\1edal in Viet-II n~rn. I Navy Petty Officer First' Class William J . ruce. son or ~1r. and Mrs. John A. Rice of 2525 Westminster St., Costa 1 ~lesa, has returned to l...ong l Beach. Calif.. aboard the Nuclear·p0\\1ered frig.'.l.te. USS Truxtun after six-months in the \Vestern Pacific. I Airman John C. Bitting, son I of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Bitting of 311 Geneva, Hun- tington Beach, has completed l basic training at Lackland AFB. Tex. He has been l assigned to Sheppard AFB, Tex., for training in the i transportation field. Ainnan Bitting is a 1969 graduate t:1f l Huntington Beach High Schoo!. U.S. Air Force ~lajo r Richard 0. Dunbar, son of Ov•en L. Dunbar. I 2 8 OI \Veebum Road. Seal Beach. h.'.ls received six awards or' the Air ~1eda l for air action in Soo!heast Asia. Major Dun~ bar, a KC-135 Str<i.totanker aerial refueling a i r c r a f t navigator. "''as cited fo r his outstanding airmanship and courage on 129 c o m b a t missions completed u n de rl hazardou s conditions. I Naval Avialion Officer Can-1 didate ~1ark D. Swoffard. son 1 of ~1r. and l\1rs. Robert L.) Swoffard of 149 Via Venezia I Nev:port Beach, has made hi~I first solo fli~ j David H. Ferriby, son of 1 f\1r. and Mrs. Carlton D. Fer- riby, 24562 Vanessa Drive , ~fission Viejo, wa s appointed to the rank of war rant officerl "'hile a student at the U.S. Army Transportation School at Ft. Eustis, Va. Ainnan Al ic b a e I R. \\1edemeyer, son of Mrs. Ca\·e J. Meek of 816 St. Clair, Costa rilesa. has completed b<isic training at Lackland AFB, Tex. He has been assigned to Sheppard AFB, Tex., for training in the transportation field. Airman Wedemeyer, a 1969 graduate o( Costa Mesa High School. attended Orange Coast College. Coast Guard, S e a m a n Recruit Paul D. Bergquist, of 20232 Magnolia, Huntington Ueach. enlisted for four years in the Coast Guard at the Coast Guard Recru iting Off- ice, Long Beach, Calif. RECEIVES NEW HONOR -Army Major Peter Kama (left), so n of Mrs. Myrtle Sang, 283 Brenl - ~·ood. Costa Mesa, receives the newly established MeritorJous Service Medal during ceremonies near HeJde1berg, Germany. J~e is receiving the award, gi ven tor meritorious activity in a nonco1nbat ser· vice, £rom Cot. John H. Robinson. ~· -----...... --------~------..-,-~~--------~--~~-·----~---------·--·-----~-~- Matle by The LARGEST Manulatturer of Betltlitig In Tile Worltl! 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'Burlington BURLINGTON MILLS FINEST-(-1+) NEYER-NEYER IRON BEDDING! -;I· Alwa ys fresh ond soft .•. and startling ly Wrinkle-Free Percale •.• en joy the true luxu ry of this exclusi ve Mattress King BONUS ... and for the utmost in sleeping comfort, tool . . TWIN-SIZE SPECIAL! "The Royal Twins" . ' . ' .., .. ' ... -. . SPECIAL 1 :nLriilP'Jn'_,r.:<_ . '· ' . \ • ' • • l \ • • $4995 COMPLETE SET MATIRESS AND BOX SPRING TRUNDLE BED COMPLETE WITH MATTRESSES $9995 • QUEEN SIZE BOX SPRINGS . . • QUEEN CASTER FRAME • FOAM MATTRESS PAD • QUEEN ORLON BLANKET • 2 QUEEN SIU PILLOWS -PLUS- lorlin gton's n+w Wrinkl e-fret • Queen Size Fitttcl Sheet • Outen Size Top Sheet • (2) Pillow C1se1 ~~ Made By The World's Most famous Name In Bedding! "'${ SINGU or -{:( DOUIU by Night Only 1he M1ttres1 King carries EVERY famous name in bedding. ORANGE 290 N. lustlo Ave. 633-4742 flN JUlllff $0UARE) I HUNTINGTON BEACH lo """"""'" enter, 192-3355 lt.t.CH IL'o'O, AT fDINCifl I COSTA MESA I 270 lost 17th Simi, 642·1327 (IN HltCilfM 50UAIEI IWIUlllltlWD MAS1ll CllAIGI TIMI PAYMlllTS .. " • ·~ .. ~P;IL;O;T-;A;OV;E;R;TJ'S;E;R;;;;;;:;---'W:_:«f:::"::::Mday, May 6, 1970 MAV E YOU VISITE D OUR NI W STORE AT: Wtdntsday, May 6, 1970 OAIL Y PILOT 3J •OUNTAIN YAL,LaY-11't4 MttMllt ll •I Tt!Mt1 ""0UNTAilN YALLIY-1'1'1 H•rMr ....... 6 •• .....,. aL TORO-al T-at •.ctcli.lf Ill• wattMINITli•~ .......... ,, 0.1111 ...... , C.OITA Mal..._,,.. Ht,.... lllrd. ti WI~ II. COITA Ml"""411 •• 11"' SI. Area Men In ~rvice Navy 'petty Olllctr First Class ClareDct A.. Steward, husband of Mrs. P e a r I steward of Bay St., Costa Mesa, is WldergQlni: reservllt training wilh the· F1rst Naval -€o~trucUon R~ in the 0c Soto Natiooal Forest near Gullpori, Miss. • , __ Marine Lance.Co r p or a 1 Charles R. Pair, ol'157D Toway Lane HunUogton Beach, Is now 'serving with the Fifth h-larine Ex pe di t ion a ry Brigade, Camp Pendleton, Calif. -s Navy Airman Marlo A. Bonilla, husband of the former Miss Sandra L. Sanknan of 90112th St, Huntington Beach, parUcipated in oompetiUve e1- ercises with Patrol Squadro:n 48 at San Francisco. Navy Seaman PllUUp G. \Vblte, or 10471 Chriltmai Drive, Huntington Beach, is ·. now serving aboard t b e destroyer escort USS Gray, recently commissioned at the Puget SOund Naval Shipyard, Bremerton, Wash. Navy Petty Officer Third Class Richard M. McGruder, .son of Mr. and Mrs. R, H. McGruder of 3060 Killy Brooke Lane, Costa Mesa, is now serving aboard the destroyer escort USS Gray, recently commissioned at the Puget 5881 WAINER AT SPRINGDALE IN HUNTINGTON BEACH ·' ,·. $JQ1'-Mod Color ,, ' $)29 FirJt Quality $J1' & '1 49 Value! 3 Pou11• Acrylic PrlatetlMnlln ........... a •• ' Sleeping Bag Photo Frames Pillowcases PDCk33c: $722 57c •f2 All flnt quali· t)'fancyprlnts. 36x80" eul size. .. lr.10'' or $r.7" 42¥38" printed Rayon or eylon,, Handaome f:ld color mualirt ••• com· liners and out-ftnished me 1 frames filetely color ers, mod colors. in the 2 most populll? ast and wash- Ideal for slum-sizes. Won't tarnish, -able. Pi nk. her parties, with non-rellecting f1ua: blue. yellow camping. Jn. decorator desiln•L or multi·COI· on. · NUNTlN•TON aaACN-111 .1 MK11 .. WIL·tf AINlltt IMITA Aif,._I ... W, ••lllW ... •l'lllflt! II. .... t.~'11lli91 hr$145 ~ La•y Wll .. lr• Seamless Nylons sac Now Jlriced evert lOwer th~n our ev.eryday low price. • M111r~, not •II sites •vtlll•ll • 1111 •II 1tylt1. NUNTINOTON l lAC.._,..1 M1mt 11 lt'Mltlwnl '$)''·'Women's 'Knit Shell$ and Tank Tops $139 0 9ice •f 00% polfe9ter or'IOO'° ~!on double knit. .~trJpes, .solids, mini rib.a, .moe.k turtle, V·necki. . " Sound Naval Sb i p y a r d , ll-.-.1,.-.....!~ Bremerton, \Vash. Remington Princess Shaver Marine Captain Charles V. Juncker, husband of t be lonner Miss Michele J. Jura of 339 Eme rald Bay, Laguna Beach, is now serving wlth Marine Training Squadron 203 at the Marine Corps Air Sta- tion, Cherry Point, N.C. Navy Seaman Apprentice Roaa1d S. ~qed, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Maged of 18231 Waikiki Lane, Huntington Beach, is serving aboard the guided milsile cruiser USS Oklahoma Qty, in the Western Pacific. Paul E. l\lammano, son of Mr. and Mn. Salvatore Mam· mano, 27&e •Briskll St., Costa Mesa, was ~Uy promoted to Army spec1811it llve while serving with the 92d Engineer Battalion near Long Blnh, Vietnam. Navy Seaman Apprentice Larry J. Hom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richa rd J. Horn of 124 46th St., Newport Beach, ls serving aboard the heavy cruiser USS Saint Paul now with the Seventh Fleet in the Western Pacific. Marine Staff Sergeant Robert C. Willis, husband of the former Mias Katharine A. Warwick of 1042 W, 18th St, Costa Mesa, was promoted to his present rank while serving at Marine C011>s A'ir Station (H elicopter), New R i ver, Jacksonville, N.C. Army Specialist Four Franklin A. Ricken, 22, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert J . Rickers. Cost.a Mesa, received the Good Conduct Medal while assigned to the 25th Infantry Division near Cu Orl, Viet· nam. Mithael F. Weise, 22, son of Afr :and Mrs. William L. Wei"f 1753 Iowa St., Costa Mesa, 'was commissioned a second lieutenant u po n graduation from the Of(icer Candidate School at tile Anny Artillery and Missile Center, Ft. Sill, Okla., Jan. 23. -Army Specl1!1'1 F o u r Ru11ell R. news, 21, son of Edward W. 'lllelli&. 2IZ Cajon St.. Laguna Beach, Cali!., was assigned to the 1st Cavalry Division (Air mobile) in Vletnam as an aircraft mechanic,.Jan. 10. Jamer W. Skluer, 22, son of Mr. and Mrs. James R. Sk.iMer, 269 Cress St., Laguna Beach, was commisslonCcl: a second lieutenant u p o n graduation from the Officer C3Jldidate School at the Army Arti llery and Missile Center, Ft. Sill, Okla. Bruet l\.f. Bradberry, son of Mr. and Mrs. Winsel T. l1radbcrry, 418 La Esperanza, an Clemente, has been .com· issioned a second llculenallt n the U.S. Alt Force upon raduaUon from 0 r r l c er r Ing ~OTS) at • $886 Plus Free dram or crown Perf\lme! '4"-'6" No lro11 .. -. 88' $149 Mlcrin •1111srP?1c . MOUTllWASHo o o o o . '':. CIMrrr Orchllnl Chocolate Chorrlos l111ta-Load "900" •a• Ca1BOra Outfit '7" Yilluo! - Rybutol Multlplo Vitamins ....... s2aa of 365 . . ., .. Basketball Oxfords s1a' o;,. .... ,.7· 7c 'eckef7 $1.60 M..,..A-Swtet C1tar1 :r .. $199 . $1.ltMltle: ...... ; .. , 'c::-88C ~s:L 2i8tc BONUS Iii PHOTO * FILM PROCESSING on .All mu w.a11nr1t11T WITH IYHY HGUIAI PRlllT Of KODACOLOI flLM 11t-111·1M• ...... raM Olllf YN 111 l ill Ctlor Priils '" lt• Piiis ... ht 1•11 '"''""' iii", Distiller's Choice , Colloctor1 StchlHJhlll• PaperPlete Holtltrs ' 16 Proof ' Stral9ht BourHll. fifth G•ll• 3i$975 $3.4' each A&cd to run maturiU'. Old Fa1hl1111• Caady Jars 2i$)50 Filled wllh augar s1nded, hard can-' dies. Cho,ce or Red Hot. Cinnt· rno11, Licorice, Sour Lemon. Wild Spe1rmlnt . 39c Ste Yal••I Snacl< Mate PlastlcS.nlf'I 3:$1 ~H old.rood ~and drinks ·in one hand. '9" G.E. Alana Clock Llllo ... Dl•I General Elet'- 1.ric qu•lib' and $496 dependabilil.)·. Loud alarm. $694 ....... ,11 .... ..., 'ff••llt•k• Roll Around Ca1torTa•l•s Adjustable lop ban to $ fit sit site., 399 or TV·s or coolers. ' Ta•I• Cloths 6M(oDacroo 398 •P.9_tye1ter, ~cotton. No iroa,aotl feleue. Coloti.· 11ae• '2"K11IH ... "''"" '°'' $1J9 Mock turtle neck lontaleeve1. S.Jl·L. · $J'5 Value!. i1i «lflHlo Patollt ~ Clutch ~ Purses t,6 s211~ · Cbalk wblte &: ,..,. Goldton e to hilb!Jaht ...,,. summerouUIL Otlitr Sfffu t7e:tft$1.t7' ' f6" YalHJ I Track ·•3,99 Yaluosl Pa•••d Stool .. IASY TO AHIUU 11r Deco rator col- ored fabric top~. $ ri-t11de orLu anrtla· 299 ho11ny, sturdily conslrUcted. Storoo Tapo1 ·•t.ca..w1 •JMlthC.111., •L L.._i $299 ·T-y.M ... •DI .... W•rw ltk ...... $6.tt Yol-t .......... Plcturofnime1 ·1-•ocli s444 a .. uttrully \'1'nl1he4 wood fioamca. • SC..tt V•lu•I 11111f' ••. s2.tt • SS." Ythtel l la1~" •. .$a." \ I ft OAl\.Y I'll.Of ' ·. ' • • . . .. ... • • Wtt!ne.sdaJ, May 6, 1970 EXTERIOR · ACRYLIC VINYL PAINT .. Cdsta Mesa . INTERIOR . ' VINYL LATEX PAINT · \ . ··-- ' .. , , l ' • , \' . ' -. INTERIOR . ' ' • I • ~ LATEX ENAMEL ------ WIN! ... .. DllN·D IPBNINI CBIBMDNIBS Officiill RibbOn Cutting Thursday, ,May 7th/11:30 a.m. LO-SOUND REDWOOD ANISH WOOD~ AVALON HOUSE 'PAINT COLOR TV Interior acoustical ceilin1 Excellent pr&Servative for flat pai.nt. Washable, exterior wood surfaces. White & Antique White. Available in clear and color. Reg. 4 .35 3.10 Gal. Reg. 6.10 3.05 Gal. Exterior fl<Jt Piint lorwood Exterior gloss enamel house surfaces. MildeW-rtsislint. paint For all wood and melal Choice or colorl. surfaces. Decoralor colors. Reg. 6:75 4.45 Gal. Reg. 7.70 5.05 Gal. ------- 12" GENERAL ELECTRIC PORTABLE , For Costa Mesa store only. ADDITIONAL GRAND OPENING SAVINGS 16 oz. Peter Breck Btar of ABC TV1.s Big Valley lttiSR Costa llesa, VicldYoak Costa Mesa Mayof Robert M. Wilson lat:• Radie "On The Spot" Broadcast ~ HIE: Refreahmenti, Balloon1, Sift• Plastic Palls 9-Qu•rt Pl•1tk Palla ~rt M11kln1T•pe 3A• RoN Plastic Drop Cloth 9'xJZ Clnv1s Glofts 8-0z:. g• Roller Tray Set 4• Nylon Wall Brush 2• N1'on S.lh Bnnh 11/t • Putty KnH• SptM:kllng Pasta Qt. reg •• 75 SPECIAL ••• ref .• 41 SPECIAL .25 reg •• 52 SPECIAL .36 reg, .27 SPECIAL _,. reg .• 38 · $P£CIAL .29 reg. 2.59 SPECIAL 1.44 re1. 3.69 SPECIAL 2.19 re1. 1.90 SPECIAL ... . ,., •• 65 SPECIAL .n . ref. 1.70 SP<CIAL ... I I I , SP~~~i!!0~!SH I ' ····i fijl ' i I . . Reg.98~ 49c NOW I ' with this coupon (1 to a coupon) .. ' . " : "t· ---- SALE A OURS : Daily 7:00 a.m. I 5:30 p.m. Open Friday & Monday Nights Till 9:00 p.m . . SINCLAIR 'S WHITIIER & SANTA ANA STORES JOIN IN THIS GRAND OPENING SALE! COSTA MESA STORE 1901 HARBOR BLVD. • PHON E (714) 642-9972 WHITIIER STORE l t>J.33 £. Vv111111ER BLVD . • PHONE (714) 691 ·l 7';;;1 /1 ,,:. . ..,v, i SANTA ANA STORE JOI EAST HTH STREET• PHONE (714) 547'.5585 ' \ I --------------------~----------- South Coo1t Plo11 Suppl•m•nt to Th• DAILY PILOT WodnHd1y, Moy 6, 1970 • i}iniature 'jilandarin_ 1or 'jilother ••• • • • . , •• for making marmalade. Thursday and Friday, May 7·8, we hav e a special gift for Mother: dwarf Jllaodarin orange pfants for tl1e first 2,oOO Mot.hers. The mandarin is per- fect for making marmalade.-S ome say jr•s a tbingof the p ast, but p'uttiog up preserves always brings the freshness of the fruit to the toble. We'd like o think when our ~other's ··~ . day remembrance bears fruit that we.played some small part in bringing back a "lost art." lncideotally, a good recipe for making mar- malade is to remove the peel from 4 oranges, One lemon, shred fine, ad·d l Vi: cps. of .water aild 1A teaspoon of soda .... heat to boil , cover aOd cook slowly JO min. Remove.white skin df peeled fruit, cut sections away from mem- brane, work over bowl to cat ch juice, then ~mbioe pulp, juice & coo ked peel, add 6 cps. sugar; cover, cook slowly 20 minutes. Mea- sure 3 cps.,'cook S min . Remove f rom heat, add 112 btl. fr uit pecti n. skim, stir 5 min. Seal in hot glasses. Recipe makes 6 jelly glasses. • • • ..,;. . South Coast ?taza ' "THE GRANDEST MALL OF All" BRJSTOL AT SAN DIEGO FREBW A Y. COST A P.f.ESA OYO It FINE STORES AND SERVICES ••• A 11 Card• Albtrt's Hosiery e Alroe's •Avco Sciving1 & Loan• C.H. laktr • l111k of America• Barrlci1I Canillt1 t lt"n'1 Tall f11hlon1•1tri1tro11'1 lalty Ntwt • lttttr Barlttrt e C1•ot'1 C•lltlrtw's Shott• C1mte Shott •Caret's • Ch11ln'1 t Chtf V • Chic Acce11orlt1 •Chris' Fashions •Clint's St1tlo111ry •Crocker Cltl11n1 National lank• CrtWllh~t Gl0ry lt1•ty Stiff t Dteortttr Lh1t e Fat J1c•'1 Ctffte S111, • fltlil11 Slttt1 • fl1111'1 f11hio11 huth1•• • Flnt Wlfftl'll lank• Fox South Coast Plora Theatre• Tht Gall10111 Gifts & Canille1 • Gtnt'• • Gt•try Ltil. • GNflt Murrey • Golil111 Ntffli • lrotlh1'1 • G1d11·hf'llttt Shes • Hallm1rtc St1tio•1r1 • Harri• & Frawk • H.F.C. • Horv11t House Coftttrio •Hickory F1rm1 • Motltt of F1ltric1 • Mtltt of Nini • House of Tollorh11 • Howst of' Terry • H•ltlt1lt t IMll S•ff• • hw1l1 •Y JtHplt •Jo1t1th Ma1ni11 • Joyce ShH Trff • J1ily'1 • J, P. Conwol• Optom1trl1t1 Kaplan's D1licote11111 & l11t1•re11t•l11ft.Wit•k1YHI hw1ler1 •Lant Bryant• L1 Pttitt • Lt Sov11con ltst••,.•t' • ltetr1 S•M••Ull1••'soll""" htritl• • Mlrltftt Fa•rl••• •May Co .• Ml11 Hawaii• On Tht Go Trove I• Pact Setter• Pacific Sotlftll & Lon• Pickwick lookshp •Tht Prtp Sho• • Q11rt1rtt1ckS111'11 & Ltl11re • 11) ef l11tll1 •l•i l•ttnHttf"'t 1 It.fen ltstwn•t • logtrs 8to1ty World I loottw'1 L199ogt • Sobrino • Stars• Slnttr •·South Coast Dru11 • S1R1tt Ht11t •Thom McA11 •Tit Rick • Tlntltr lox• Tty W•rld 1 Ucltff'1 Ht Mt f1Nl1!.iftll o U.1. Notl-1 IHk • Wolllch'• M11lc City • W1i1fi11''1 Jowolon •Tho Wot Soal • Win111d'1 C1m1r1 o Wlllt1'1 MH't Worf-of, W. Woolworth o Toun1 MotorallJ o Z1ll1'1 Vlll11or· La4rh1. . . \ \ • r \ . ----·------...--...---------·---------·~---............ -.. ------·-------- SOUTH COAST PLAZA CELE BRATI NG MO THE RS DAY \&~<!M>~ Diamond Rlngs Jo•• . · · · ·Fleu'rtfrf ,, .... $175 Starml•t frelft SJ~S ,.· Lyrlo fre111 Slll ,, ,. . . c .tch • ~P•rkl• · · from th• tnornlnef su n~ ' Hold the magic of• sudcfen•Weai•. Kt•p those mirn•kt1 •live. " · ' Th1y'r• yours for • lifetim1 with • diamond engegement ring from O r .. nge Bloisom. ltlllkAllltl'klN e Mltltr (111'1' P1,_lll• CrWll . 1 Stvlll CMSt Ple1t, l rlttM st hi! 0..,. ""''· CMlt MtM • 5*f'OW • 'fl.ltil!a., ~w4er ~lue ... · filo!.lilrt pi Jt!l, :lite~ S-.16 JUST MOM'S SIZE -Here's a gift that fits any mother·for Mother's Day ... a .set of patio fllrni- ture that is as reatfitl as it is smartly designed. The set being tried for size is "Idyll wild," one of sev- eral designs aVailable at Sears South Coast Plaza Patio Shop. The plastic furniture features Acrtlan cushions which resist mildew and fading. The ba- sic furniture is "all-weather," too. -- Unfair to Indigents At Least Fio e or . ·' W ASliJNGWN (AP) ~ The ancient practice of jailing peo- ple who don't pay their fines i! under strong attack In the Supreme Court as unfair to the poor. Lawyers rtpresenting in- -digents who w e r e jailed because they were too poor to make immediate payment! Red Orbit er Gets Label COLORADO SPRINGS (Ufll -Communist China's orbiUnl utelll\e , galne<I a name and a ·number Sw)dey Defenao Cqmmand illlele<lith• .as t1'e North ' Aintriean Air . spac< pa<kage au.com r. It, was assJpd ~ number 4,382, the number··ot 1ate!Jllte1 surveyed by NORAD since Ru1sia launched Si)utnlk I in 1957. A NORAD 1pok<sm<n said the defense center, located ou\lide Colorado Springs io a mualye .. \,lnderground com- plex beneath Cheyenne Moun- ,t.ah~. was· continuing to chart the -of the Chine,. sattilliit. St udent's Jail Und~r Fire Hones t of fines a.sked the court and touch virtually every jail Wednesday to declare the in the country. practice unconsUtutlonal. "We simply cnnot have a SACRAME.'llTO -J l m Robert G. Fisher, represen-system of jwtice which would Wheeler is an honest, if not Ung a number of Balllmore call far charge a c c 0 u n l ambillou.s student.· indigents, told the courtlhat jU!tice," answered George L. One or the requirements or letting an affluent defendant pay his fine and go home Russell Jr., Ba!Umore city his sophomore life science while ja.iling 8 poor man for solicitor. class at A m e r J c a n River nonpayment is not equivalent Both Bass and Fisher sup-College here was to write punishment. ported the necessity o f either a Jong term paper or Stanley E. Bass, .represen-threatening jail for persons letters to 2$ stale and federal Ung a Chic1eo man kept in who could pay but simply legislators. jail beyond his term because refuse, but said the law does he could not pay an additional not differentiate between such Here's the mimeographed fine, said Ume spent in jall c~ses and Persons who would letter legislators are puzzling is a mCN'e severe penally than Jle)' U 1he1 had the money· over this week : • ' T 0 paying a floe. When aU else fails , Bass whomev'er opens this letter: Society looks on it dif· said, the &tate might be This Jetter is to fulfill a re- ferently," Fisher said . "A i·usllfied in claiming labor in . · 1 qui.rement for a school t'OW'se. man who has gone to jail ieu o money, but he argued js a criminal. A man who t h a t around·the-clock im-Please disregard. Thank you, pr!--··• -Ired •1.A • Jim Wheeler." has paid a fine has had an un· iN1uu~u1. r ... .,u ... ~ 1n- fortunate experience." di gent to give up more than Wheeler, 30, e1plained, "I Fisher also quest.looed any 1 day's work. work full lime, and the easiest fonnula that equates losa of James R. Thompson , Illinois way to rneet the requirement freedom to lOSll of money, assistant attorney general, was to honestly say I wrote no matter what the rate. predicted chaos if the court to ~ legislators. I really had "One 24-hour day in jail knocks down the work-out doet not ...,ual $2," Fisher system , particularly in courts ootNng to say, and they didn't declared, ~DI for a ruling where fines are the only indicate What the content Was that would require courts to penaky used , such as traflic to be. All I had to do was provide other means Of. pay-._'_0_•""-·---~----'"'::.:::"':....:the:::_l::••::te::"::·_" ___ _ ment, ouch i! by lnstallmentt. A decision outlawing the jail-for-fine prKtlce would af- fect thouunds of prisoners It's softtr 1t!MI it I~. 100: ll's m.adf: of soft cowhide~~ kt look li~e ~llig.ttor. It comes In Wild Honc!y, lime, and BroWf'I. With jusl a touch of told elegance. Now if It bothtn you thll our look· alll.:e isn't the real th ing, considet rhe following: It costs a lot ~s than t1lligator, It's ii IOI softer lhan t1lllgt1t0f. And, of course. it's a whole 10( )Ofter on 11lig11cm. FRENCH PURSE , •• $1.IO ~EY CASE ....••• $3.50 Gtilor-lti!Dr by LADY 8UXTOle FREE MONOGRAMMING _IANUMl•ICA•D MASTll CHAl•r SOUTH COAST PLAZA UPPER LE VEL PHONE 540-3110 .o,.. hlty 11 A.M. t9 f:JI P.M.-Sot. 'tM 6 P.M. , .. Robens at Plaza Par ley Mesa Manager Tapped for 1\1ianzi Panet Gene A. Robens, genera1 Segentrom, representing the owners, managers, chain stoft. manager of South Coast Plaza , owners-and deve1opers of the real estale e x e c u t i v e s, a~ Town C"!ter, will serve shoppjng C91Tiple1 \iand the mortgage lende d ~•-, on a f_acuj!y of e~· at ~· pu~llc. rela onS and rs, an ·"'r11"r the lnternaUonal Couocll of· adYertl&1.... directii, Werner acuve In the shopping Center ..,. industry. - Shopping Centua in Miami Eacbu • . · As one of the deans of ·the Beach, May JO -13, it was Robena will join nearly .:i University of g h 0 p p i n g ~by ICSC President o,tbe.r sbopplng ~nter .J>l'O". •centers, tfe will a>oduct--a Harry Newman, Jr. and fesslqnals in,<! o,, n ti u c ~ 1 n g class session in m3nagetnent Program Chairman Ernest W. classes at the ¥,nlvers1ty ?f and promotion in the School Hahn. Shopping Centers , which will of Advanced Studies. Accompanying Robens to be attended by over 4,000 . Miami -wW be Henry J. sboppin& center developers South ~ast Plaza and Town ' Center a one of the largest Size Do esn 't Dere r This Bus y Student ' shopping complexes to be represented at the I c S.C meeUngs. Even µtough only in its initial increment or develO~t, Sou\b Co.a s t Plaza is 'a oew-landmark as th'e stJte'1 large,s:t. 11.2 milli<!n squate !~et) air-coodiUoned. enclosed shoppinJ ~DI.er.' Major aPQkefs at &be con- "ntlon • ~ill incl~· Ralph SAN DIEGO (AP) -As "Oh, I'm a monkey,"· she Nader, natioo81l)'"'k,q.o)Vh she hops out of her litUe car smiles. spOkesman foi 'the·eoh~el'·; iin her UtUe girl dress, the Rev. Leori H. $ullivan, foqnder 21-year-old student teacher Her elementary 8 ch 0 0 1 and chair~aq of Oppoi1U¢Uei. drawa looks of curiosity from pupils know she's different, Industrialization ·Center· and school children. says Lois, "but I think I have National Program Asll6ciati0ft all of them on my side." Get· f •-I De I ..._ •· Lois Geroge never stops to or 1:.11,,vnom c ve oJIU'en..: notice. ting a real job ai .i teacher and Bruce ·Dayton; chalrmllll If ~ . may . be something else, sbe of· the board of the Dayton-" _you s~w people it admits. Hudson Corp., Minneapoua....~ doesn't bother you, it won't1-j0;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;i;;;;i;i;;;ii0i;;i;;i;;;iiiii;;;i;i;ii0i;;i;, bother them," she says of ll 1• :.· her height -4 feet, l IJJ in- ches. In June, Miss Gerage will receive a degree in flne arts and social science from San Diego State College. It will be another year before stie wins her teaching credentiaJ. ~-ath r. st ?J.-' I "" ,oa . . . . . As a dwarf born \Vlth acbon- droplaeia in a family of normal-sized people, Lo I s teamed early that hurdJea always lay ahead. The Uv~y brunette recalls as a child in Pasadena, "I came home from school com- plaining that they always made me play the baby." She proudly says her mother treated her as an . equal of her big brother and playmates. Now, says Lois, "I~e got the reason and the courage to say what I feel. I'm me, and people ·aceept me for me." Two other coeds share their Mission Beach apartment, and their mutual friend! are average-sited people. But none is mOre energetic than Loil!, who is active in soclal groups and an avid water skier, swimmer and volleyball player. I . KA.PLAN'S · Restaurant, Delicatessen & Bakitry . · "A Sa ndwi ch or a Full Meal " e BREAKFAST e LUNCH e DINNER BAN(j)UET FACILITIES ANY OCCASION-SERVING UP TO 150 PARTY PLAMRS IUPRT STYLI MEAT PLATTERS -$1.85 per perton FISH PLATTERS -$2.45 por po rson OPIN t e.M. to ID .,.'111 • Phan• 540-9022 JJJJ 1•tsTOL-AT SAN DllGO FWY .. -COSTA MW 'L-e.., ...... -Op~ M.IJ Co. The 9reat new Italian san dals . . , GRANDIN! •· wida str•p1 with 9old Du,~11, b. n1rrcw 1tr•p1 with hi,h> chunky white, bone, t•n. 14.t9 heel, white, navy1 bulfelo, bl•ck patent, purple, 9r11n . ,. ., .·. 1udes cl'rnett ! ! l .... ~.u.. .:-. 'ft.. C2c. o.·o-.;.... --- •' I I South Coast Pima Hu ntl n9fon Beach f --~--C_o_sl_•~M_•_••~-~~----~H_u_n_TI_n~~t~o~n_C.:..:.en~I~•-'-~~~! .-1 • • Wtd., May 6, 1'711, South Coast Pl111 Supplement to Iha DAILY PILO'f--3 ·Get Free Oraqge Plants for Mom at South Coast Plaza Little Folk • Io Show Art At SC Plaza • Tiie art of the llW. ~ •and their teen-age coun- l«pam will be featured in -:;&be "10 Days in May" abow ;II South Coast Plaza belfin-•nins May ZI and wUng lhrougb May 30. Polly Gratner, art coordinator for the Orange County llepartm<nt of Educ•· tlon lllcl uhibit choirman ol 'the event, smd that the show will include the juried work ol studeW in ~artto 111roug11 srade u. . More than toO Orange Coun- ty acllool1 exhibiting 1,200 pieces of art will partlclpate ·in the large!! single show of lbs kind in the county. Categories will lnclude pain- ~. watercolor, collages. ·tnoaalcs, stitchery and draw- iDp of pencil, ink, chalk, crayon and charcoal. · From the entire grouping of young artists enrolled in Orange Cowily schools, Mrs. 'Gratner points out, "we will PICK UP STITCHES -These are only a few forms of "creative stitchery" which is becomi ng a high- ly t>:<>Pular personal hobby these days. Kits are available at all May Co. stores, including the one at South Coast Plaza where "everyone," from grandma to grandson, seems to be picking up the sticbery stitch. ·1e1ect wtnninc eitries to be-------------------exhibited in._ this y_e a r ' s ;J'..tlval ol ArU and Pageant "Of the Masters " The South <.out PW.. ~. she says, ~rings together at th~ time ~ of the creative work the 7tudents have been doing for jibe past year. ~ Each year thousands of ~lie school children ai.bmit ltheir artwock fO< Judliog. Last •ear more than 4,000 entries ~ere submJtted and juried in ,ne South Coast Plaza. : Mn. Gratner will b e JUSl!(ed by art comultants Jlnd art teachers of Orange Coun~ty, includlng Ra Ip h armer, Phy I i s Robinson, y Tilney, Alice Eastman, Clark, Dick Marcuson, argaret Bentz, and-Sally allock. • • '·p , B : ree ooze • • jlegal Drink • I OOWMlllA, S.C. !AP) - South C a r o l i n a rtstaurant bwnen haven't betn able to l!et the leplalure IA> legalize [be aa1e of ijquor by the drink but they are doing it anyw4y for all practical pu_.nd tegally, inf]uential legislators uy. • ~ .. u.mg .•state Supreme Court e_b1q thlt rutaurant owners can poaess Hquor on the ~· t11ef're sel!llll( aet-p and adding the liquor "free." Interior Design Shop Wins Quick Acceptance Nancy LeMey , .a pro- fessional decorator who has been in charge Of the ''Studio of Interior Desioi" ever since it opened as a part of Sears Costa Mesa, said acceptance of the service by the public was "immediate and ex· cellent." The service was inaugurated at the Sears store in Sooth Coast Plaza last September . It operates oot of the home furnisblnp department of the store. Mrs. Lenney is available there to customers to provide them help in choosing colon, fabrics, furniture and ac· cessories. Custom design s and deooratlng also can be handled through special order at Sears with Mrs. Lenbey's help. INTERIOR DECORATOR Mr1. Nancy Lenney Customers can obtain a broad'-==========! variety of fabrics f o r,1_-------·---.I upholstery and draperies and rr also can order carpeting, wall coverings and aCcessories for the "one4+tl.nd" decorating job. Advke and assistance fumishe:d by Mrs. Lenney are ON THE TUBE For the be•t 911i4e to whet'1 heppenln9 Olt TV, re•J n WEEK -Ji1trll,11t.J with tile S•hrrJey edltio1t of the DAILY PILOT. free to the customer. 1~----------1 SOUTH COAST PLAZA Replar'I09 -. NOW ONLY QUEEN. (60''x80'' am) KING 02''XM~ liED> DUAL KING (78"x84" BED) 95 The lmbe!epnce oC...i-.eacan beyomswitb the dunbility andpnictical· ity af -due to die mincle fabric nyvel-a>mpletely-bable. , , • ...ur ond IOil """'"nlil11-•ecL Now for a limi~ time• low sale prica. 4 --colon. Ud PHONl'~812 'soUTH COAST PLAZA lOWU/Mll BRISTOL AT THE SAN DIEGO FREEWAY, COSTA MESA CREATIVE STITCHERY POPULAR B.OOKS BOOKS BOOKS . ' . . Pi\SSION ~ ALL AGE GROUPS . I • The art of creall,,.. lllltdlery hu become a popular passion, Young people, motben, men. and even unall cblldren art discovering the sati&facUon that comes from pursuiai this pmona1 handlcran. , of lfllldmotbel'I, but lodO)' llmpllclty and the variety of Ships and muo_.,,.., but· everyom Mell\I io enJo1 put. the materials. Embroidery terflle1 and awtractl alt find tine needle ... canvaa and floa, crewel and lapestry expresalon tbrtlugb stitchery. • 1_L._ ""' wbol1 come In a spectrum Hundreds of ideas have been BOOKS deveivpu11 • persona) work of beautilul colon. Stitching utilif.ed In new ltltchtry kft.s .,__,._.6....._,.. of •rl ls done on burlap, homeopun, which contain all th• PICKWICK ~ Why the bunt ol enthsulurn linen, needlep:>lnt c a n. v a 1 ,. materlal1 an d l1'Jtrvcliona BOOKSHOPS for a-.Jngly lost art• More =welle.I and felt. needed. The art needlework ----· _, frtt time for one ~ and Today's stitchery . _designs department at the South Coot •nti. . "'". Creative stltchery used to be almost the ezcluslve doqian ' . ' range from the traditional to Plaza May Co. store has a perhaps ~ de!ll"e lo eacape the futuristic. Favorites are diversified choice of .Utcbery 1141 ...,_."" • from increasingly atand-lr~fl;or;;al;::;mo~t;U•~•;•d;::;•;•;im:;;•;:;ls~. ~pro:;;1~·-~·======~-~~.,.~·~-~;::;;::;=;' anllzed commercial prt> duct.s. It's the spirit of personal expression that is spurring the imagination of young homemakers everywhere. Thi! basic.Uy simple art -:an uslly be learned. even by s m a 11 Salem Fetes Old Nemesis Special Gifts for MOM .. S EM u... Pl A chikiren. The posslblUUes art AL • ,.._. (U l -endless, and the resuUa art Costume ball will be held Fri-lJmited only by the im- day to help finance a memorial to the 20 persona executed for wit_chcraft here i'.Ll 1692. agination. M OYGASHEl LINEN . , • •ho'll ful •l•9•nl ~ • ••~ or dr••• of this fin • Irish lin•n. 0 NONOA6A SILK PRINTS .. • • fo r • lov•ly dress ot ac.trf for th1t lov•ly person.. ' M ANY FABRICS TO CHOOSE FROM , •• for anythln9 1h• wish ••· No site for lhe memorial has been selected, but a possi· ble location is on Gallows Hill where 19 of the 20 were hang· ed. I The memorial will depict an _elderly woman being ar- rested by a magistrate with neighbors and merchants k>ok· ing OD. Needlepoi nt, the art of a bygone era, is becoming one of the more popular forms of creative stitchery. Crewel embroidery also is enjoying a renaissance of popularity. Embroidery ranges from the s i m r, I e 1 t c r oss-atitcbed samp en to highly com· plicated and colorful designs. Crochet has b e e n m- t h usiastically rediscovered, especially by the .Y o u n g: . Another new favorite ls rug hooking which can be done quickly and easily using a special hook and rug yarn. MOM is specia I at •.• The costume ball, the first fund raising acti\oi ty for the memorial, is sponsored by the Salem Witch Memorial Fund Committee. Part of the attraction of creaUve stitchery is t h e FABRICS , . SOUTH COAST PLAZA MALL • CAROUSEL LEVEL , The Refrigerated Se_rver Keeps Party Salads, Seafood, Desserts • Cold and Fresh to the Last Bite Sears 4%-Qt. Capacity COOUD with Sauce Jar J59S For party liml or anytime •• , Nnr COOLID cafAlrw to bwiy moms. Ila anodized aluminum lid coven a larse sJuo bowl ml & 1 ... omw •UCO dioh. -sears __ ,.._",..... ·-·-· ~·--·-•J.•-·-1 -•MM!,•-----· ·---co. --" -·-.., ...... -.. ................ ...., ............. , ........ ~ Nomonlut minutti rlllh te prepua-- ~ Fr-..d- •t•11n 1hape whm made ablod. A wonderful gift far Mother'• Day ,,, Now me can llllke deliciom salad!, BD8Cka and ..afoodo ahead ot time. COOLID .will keep them fresh for bourL Jmt till the bowl insjde the lid with wat.er and freeze. Or add ice. Then fill the 3U-qt. glaM ·bowl with 995 food, l!Cl'l!W OD the lid and lll!t it OD the table. Enameled st.eol lid COlllll8 in a choice of lime green or yellow. .Sffl r .. i.u. .... •-· •• tab°"' Iba Ice bow4 odd k>e cuboo, n- pu bowl and you•,. all •'- .... --............. ,, lid. tab .... Joa -. add watar, -11111 atloob lliL ftec..MW........,..._111 .......... .,,....... , 11-.c. CHARGE IT .., 11eozo _,Ch- ~· -·-........ --... ~ ... ,_. __ "'"" _ ... ._ . -----·-· .... " ·-·'"''".' .. " -·----1 -:.ii ........ 111•.,_...., ..... -.......... -------·· .... ,, .. -. ... -·- . . • ' • • • • • • • • . . .... ---~-,,-..---------,---·-.----..--------··----·-·--~-~-----------------~----• t LSouth Cooat l'lon Suppl-I ,to tfto DAILY l'ILOT, Wod., Mq 6, 1'1t Get Mom M:andarjn Which Site to Omit? That's Dilemma Faced · by Apollo ·Men CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) - The abortive Apollo 1 S spaceflight has left scienUst.s with the dilemma of trying lo decide which one of aeven top prlortty moon lanclln( slie!I should be omiUed ror ,the re- mJining 1lz Apollo missions. Apollo 13 astronauts James A. Lovell and Fred W. Halse were to have oplored an an- cient, hilly striltch of terrain called the Fra Mauro forma· tion but the landing was aban· doned when their spaceship was ripped by an explosion. NOt only was Apollo 13 to explore the first of seven areas of high scientific in- terest tentatively selected for exploration by astronauts, but John L. Swigert was to have photographed three o t h e r potential landing areas - Davy Rille, Censorious and Des car-I.es. the southeaatem edge ol the Seo ol Smnlfl'. ~ii ..... called Ut-, ii ol lot.rest became il' ii cover.d with dark material ''°'°glob !b1nl: ma1 be the ruult •f 1<laUvely ....,.., volcam.m. But by 1oin1 to LltlloW, the Apollo 11 aotrooouta would not be •Ille to pbo4osraph the tar~ell lb a't Apollo U was to havt scouted. TWO CATEGOlllES The remaining six fl\,i&sions are di vlded-into t w o categories, 'f~th Apollos 14 and 15 called "Ii" missions and the last four ''J " missions. The "J" misalon1 will be able to keep meQ on the moon longer than the "H" miS.tions and s m a I I , four·wbeeled .zovers WUl be c1rrltd to · ln· crease qwi'• range on the moon. Anthony Calio, director of SITES TOLD acience at the m 1 n n e d II are a '"lion ol poulble volculc domes called Marius. Hlill, a rough blPJlllrl aru called Dtscarles, the large crater Copt1111Cl1S and an.area near Mount Hadley ln the Apennlne Mounlaills . "I think It 'sJ°lnl to lak• a discUPJoa the virtues of aU th<M sites to try to establish a · priority u to where we can learn the most about the moon &t•en sl% more missions,'' Calio said. Adding to the problem ol selecting a landlftC target fM' Apollo 14 is that Apollo 14'1 experiments differ from the ones carried by Apollo 13. APoilo 14 does not have a tunar drill or an experiment to measure the heat below ~ ... 1 the surface, but does have a mortar Clesigned to explode grenades to set up subsurfa.ce vibrations fOr study by !ta ~ stismometer. Davy Rille, a · s t r an g e , Spacecraft Center iti &<rusLon, str.aight string of craters that said the landing targets for Bm'ER SUITED may be old volcanic vents, Apollos 14 and 15 probably Geophysicists consider had been tentatively selected will be selected from the can. Apollo. >J4 n~llltl better . as the landing site for Apollo didates for tbe • H landings aulted.for·Uttr6w. 15 in the Spring of 1971. The -P'ra M~uro, Littrow, Davy Pending ~ results of ~ crater-Censorinus---also was·in -Rille ·and Censorinus.~ --jnvestlgltloft.:mto-t,Jie Apo\ the running, but before final "I would Uitnk what pro-·13 faJka,f, Apollo 4( remain.I ' plans can be made for a flight bably will happen Is thit we schcduJ,td for launch Oct. 1. to either sJte, project officials would Juve the ''J" Jiliaslons Callo aakl he expects a . need closeup photography of alone because they provide ut decilion WI.thin a few weeka the areas. with a different kind of on a landing 1ite for ,Apollo Before the Apollo 13 failure, c1pa~iUty on ~ sutfl{Ce Utan 14 ar(d he:s.ld ~t if• !witch Apollo 14 astronauts Alan B. the 'H' missions, .. he >sald in is mide from. Littto'if tO Fra Shepa~ and Edgar O. Mlt--an interview. Mnuro, "I 1fOUkf think .We chell were wgeted for a Ian-Landing areas tent.alively would have ample time to ding on a wrinkled plain at sel~ed for Apo,los II through train the crew." Orange .. Plants at BIRTHDAY GIRL -Karen was just one ol hundreds of youngsters who belP: ed blow ouL bifLhday cake candles at South Coast Plau la$t month. Tbey re- ceived free carousel rides and decorative zodiac candles a,s rell)embrances of their part: of the "birthday party" which marked the third anniversary of the North Costa Mesa !hopping center. Here, Karen, is assisted by her motber, Mrs. Dona1d Pecarovich of Laguna Niguel. On Mother't Ocrf.,, .delight her with OCJr au,..to.pleose nylon• or ponty hose. Avoilobfe Jn her fovori!e ahodes. IN All THE POPUl.AR· PASTElSHAOES $199 poir Run Reaistant HOSE IMll'~.tc.i.. 79c BUY A DOZEN GET ONE PAIR FREE poir AUOTSlfllUJe~litw rlri;.ts-~91lr..icMrs .. 11 ....... ~· HOSIERY South Coast Plaza UPPf'r M4U, ma1 Ma~ Co. 9tl1tel et ... s.. DI..-frwy. c........ ........, .,.._""""""" ......... . ...........,'tlt•PM , de~orator · line SECTIONAL AND WALL SYSTEMS -iampa ............ ," Why Do Wall Units Come In Just One Sil~ 1 Newspaper Columnists Find Ruins Of Coronado Expedirion in Mexico SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -corral roughly a square mlle A corroded brw buckle. and in area and wilh a holding 1everal bJil of .wrought iron cotTal at-ooe end with IO-foot n1U. ha~ been fOWJd· ill iwbat walls. ·, 8f'e believed to be the ruins "The most likely guess is oJ a camp built by part of that tlilii camp was set up Ftaocileo V a s q u e z de by a splint.er exploring group Oorooado's lMO expedition from the C or o n a d o ex- ft"f,llD Muico into t he pedition," said Robechaud. ;American southwest. "It's likely they stopped , 11>e relics were reported by here to let the mares drop Stan Delaplane, a columnist their foals. a matter of about f~ the San Francilco Chroni-three months. The expedition cle, who with G e r a Id took mostly mares with them. Robechaud of Lake Havasu CJ.. Hortes •wen like gold and fl', Ariz., led eight jeep loads they needed repla,c<lm•nls." of exploren over the wee.tend Last wtdl:end Delaplane and Into the barren deter! f!IOUJI'· • ~ad telumed lo the t8.lns south of Like f4tad in !etne wltb a l>-man ex· nortbweltern ~.;' ~ mt,tde·up of members The emteace"* Bton~ rubu: ci the sherifPa air squadrons ln this wild sun-baked . terrain or San Fr~isCo and San hp been known for 10 yeara, 8lnce a Late Havuu ~pilot, · Buster Halle, sightod them from the a1r: Five years t.ier Delaplane ..and Robechaud, a reUred in- dustrialist who lives at the resort town on the Colorado River, reached the spot , roughly 90 miles north of Lake Havasu in four-wheel drive vehicles. 'Ibey found extensive stone ruins in a natul'al ampltheater where a COUonwood grove wu led by two bubblln( spring!. Newest Move In the Game MOSCOW (AP) -tt was an' excJUng chess match and U-year-old Sergei Grigoriev was breathing so hard he in- haled his black pawn. Mateo counties. This group took shovels and other equip- ment and carried out the flr!t dig at the site. Coronado entered t h e southwest from Mexico with 300 sold iers, horses a n d several hundred l n d i·a ns. Parts of hls expedjtion ex· plored much of ArlJona and New Mexico reaching soutbem Utah and even into Kansai via the Texas and Oklahoma panhandles. 'Ibey returned three year11 later in ra1s, reporUng only • Indian settlements where they had hoped to find the seven golden cities of Cibola. Although Indian-built stone ruins often occur throughout · the southw est, their pattern is different and they do not yield brass and iron -metals the Inclians did not know before the whjte man brought them. • .Coast Plaza Moonshine Still Pei-ili , To Reckless 'Imbibers· WASHINGTON (UPIJ -Leo-as Jake Leg from drlnl<4t& UI take trief time out from poisoned hooch. In }J recently ... !IOI, 1..,. WOl'l'l'Ina abOut ·The P • . .iw Prohibition • blill been amok.lnl and tboee cbenliClls repealed, 38 persoi., 1.dlc!d in people put In our foodJ. Georgia becauae Ibey'· dnnk ·Let ua Wtll'fY for a momont, corn Whl,skey· tbll· had lloiin at leul aboul moonshine, laCf!l . \Yllll "deadly meib71· ' alcohol " · · otheMTI.9e ~wn "White Justlhe.otberd'ti,. ...... h1 Llsttlalng, Hooch, st u m p lsl;uld. s. c.. om~ 1!16od Rum, 'or Ro""t. and dem6llshed, a .~ 11111 Ftnt there ls um to be caP.&ble , or· tumlhi out '450 said f;.. moonshine _ you gall91U Ol ~oo.gsblDt' a w~t,. , Ti>!' propnel<ft Died I ilq111d don t have to ~y state and cleanlna co.mpoµnd in' the federal t.ax.es on 1t, and drink· mJah to ~ fmnfntatlon. Ing It ii j1lll U elfect!Y11 a They cut the·-1th>g·~ way to come· down •Ith with ru1'1ng · ~-' As dtjirium lrtmeno u driJlking recenUy · tlS Mardi 23, ll>e Uquor on which all the tues mag·asine modern medkine have been paid. thought 'It tlrnely to ·publish SUll, H the federals ettch this item: • you making it (and it &till ''Maternal use of !l{ltaud is being made in quantity here or moonshine Whisk°ty \pll)' and there), you lose your still, cause fetal and neoa1t.ttl pa~ ~ nne anct m1y st1n go disease. The illepllY nroductd to Jail. whiskey contains ~igh etp The hi11tory of booUeggtng centiations or le~. which ii full of tragedy, ln the pro-evldenUy can cross Ute pl•ct:n· hi~ltlon era mJnY came down \al barrier and C#ltl.9'l · .... ~ with a kind of paraly1il known · intoxication· of the fetUs:" •1:7~9 FOR MEN and WOMEN LOST or GAINED WEIGHT? e SOUTHERN CALIF.'S LARGEST TAILORING SPECIALISTS •SUITS l SlACltS REO!SlGNIO ~ e Al TERATIONS fOR MEN I. WOMEN e NARROW lAPElS ANO SHOUl- OERS ON COATS • e R!MOYE l'lEATS, TAPER ~ECiS e COAlS, DRESSES SHORTENEtl e £XPlRT FRENCH RfWU.VING e WI All lilt SUEDE, lEATHfl l '"' All Work Guaranteed .---CUSTOM MAoE.,.-., SUITS-COATS.SLACKS ,.,. tht l!ltft .,.i.. h•• 0..ft ,,.,,..,,. "' i ... - •lff(tclO<y flt i>I • ~ fllO,,. Ooi~ DRESS SHIRTS (OITAMISA IOUTllCOAST ~ ANAllQM l\ICllOAT.,.tlt~ fUUllTOll CH.l.P/l\AHAT 51AllCOlll-O! IAllDlll llOVI llOOIONlll AICMA•IM~ MUifT. llACll. lQ.ING!lAI $~"OK.DA\! OltAllGl -lllAl t.AVllA WMITilll ""·"'"W?ClN!lt l40-l4t1 77MIJI 170-4790 iH-5111 146-0911 Sla.7722 t47-1tlS our's don't -we h•v• over 4• si111 •fld more th.n 15 6 different component• • , • th•t's why D1cor1tor Line is the tot1I d1119n will system. Tbe explorers who found melal arillacls with electnonic detectors reported llOM! ruins of ttiree houlet tnakle a stone 'lbe newspaper Sovietskaya Roulya reported the young resident of Olrulovka was taken to the Novgorod regional hospital and three surgeons remove~ the pawn. The boy ls recovering. THE MOTHE~'S DAY GIFT WITH SPECIAL MEANINS 1 Aveilellle 1111 th,.• ticli. woiHI to11e1, J1l•1 t i• pfi11tff •tte11t c•lett - el! complemt11tei with 1. "'••tk t•JI•· c= COLOa UtJ.OI WOOD TONI 1117.lt 6r••• Cll't in l'ft1nwfactur1 ..... dt1i9n i' routine •• o ••• ,..tet Lin• wh1r1 It i1 believed that workm•ri•hip end m•terltls fftvst c•tnpfement good t11te eM •tlut. Th• S.:n r:::t 90 f;tev~ey, Cost• Mes• lewer Me ll Level -140·7177 . I IANICAMUICAlp MASTllt CHA.Itel MEN ' S: , . , SH O ,E'S SefecteJ (}roup o/ Jine ShoeJ (1 T. WRIGHT aod JOHNSON & MURPHY 20% OJ;F 11•uu.1 PllCI ,1 Innes· SHOES Bristol at th. Sin Diego Fwy., Cost• Metl p....,., 54,5.9220 • Make. Mo+h•r's 0.y erlr• 1peci•I this year with • Per•~+·s ri;,9 from Welsfield'1. Set with the 1ppropri1te hlrthstone for tech child. 'the lovely sculptured r in 9 will remind her of pretl0'11 memorl11. SOUTH COAST PLAZA U,,IR LIYIL 140-71 17 ALSO IN lAKIWOOD CINTll I Woe!., Mox '· lf70, s...th CNtl ~lill Supplt mtnl lo lht DAILY PILOT-5 ., HURRY TO SO UTH CO AST PL'. -ZA FOR FREE PLANT . . . BRIGHTEN ING HI S CORNER -Harry Buller of Decorator Line, tbe South Coast PJ&za shop where fabrics and fibers transmit light, says "Light, color and motion now place first in home decoration." His shop features a Jine of decorative accessories called poly-optics, (the fibers which glow) which helped him set new sales records. ?e cond College of UC San Diego Under Construction; Thi rd Planned But L'1,'s Goo ,. Phone W ASllJNGTON (AP) -SLa- tlstl<l gathmd by the Federal Communications Commission indicate the nation'• phone serVice bu deteriorated over the past two ye1ra wilh New Y orter1 -as many or them suspect -getlln& tJ'.e worst service of all. Loo Angeles ReJllS to be gel· ting some of the best service. the FCC, in a study ,initiated taJt fal~ lw coll~ !l1111tes from the BeU Telephone Sys-- tem on lhe quality ol phone service in 10 major population areu, and is awaiting staUs- tlcs Crom seven independent telephone companies. While a flnal analysis i11 still in the: "works t.'ie commi1- s100'.s Common carrier Bureau is wlllin& to reveal the raw staUstlcs, but not inter· pre! them. But some of tbe f~ speak for tbemaelves. 'Ibey show, for uample, it takes longer to get a phone in- stalled in New York City than aJ\YWbere else. And once you Servi ce . ·worsens 1et tt, y9'1:U !lave a tim!<r , tn ooe trta ta better lhan tn Umt ltltlll a dial -er tn .-r depOQda what kind ol operal<I\ Gii. 11. U 1"'I qt tbe Hrvlct is stodlod; and who- opertlor lo htlp ·put your call tber any ..nlco ii lood or ~ 11111'~ luwe a htl.ttt' b•d dependa how fut and ,.. time ~ k from New Y•k liable one espacta ti to be. lhaa oniWtiere else. ' The FCC !las dr•wn no con- New Y..W. allO flnd ·tbeft>. clwlont yet ft)Jn1 Its rtatlalle1, selvu seoklnl phone repalra but by addinr each area's more often than anybody ex-rank in all nine categories a cept the felb in SOUthera· kind of 1core can be reached Flortda, llld, like the Flor· to serve u a nugh nil• ol ldianl, they have to call back thumb-a ~y of who letJ1\S more than lllOlt people to·ICIJ, to be bavinl the most or least it problema. On the other hllld NIW · On that bula -entirely un- Yorkers' uperlence w'ith di--oUiclal -~area ~Wdied by rect-dialod calb, both ~ the FCC , u ol Januery ll!O, ina: and outrotnc aetn'll about stacked 'llp this· way, from typical. ' thoo< wtt!>. tbe·fewesl ~lein• ·-·-------- SHE WEARING SOMETHING IN PICT.URE A PAMPERID MOM It may be 1horts with c:o · ordinat•d top, • shift or j1c:lret, mt yb• it's • tob• •nd 1lipp•r1, • jump1uit 1hort or long. Tall u1 th• 1b:o and w•'ll h•v• lot1 to 1how you. All 1lft1 b••utifully wropp•d, of cour1e. • THE HOUSE OF Los Anceles shows the bt8t to -With the mm: ..... 1 .. record tn on1y one .or Los Ah"ld; Nebraw llld SOUTH· COAST the nine major tma -Anet-Arllonl·aboUt ·e~; Wa1hln1- le1101 don't have to call back loll, D.C. ;»· Dallu : Oeorgta P.LAZA so often after they order re--Wtttem ' Pen111ylvanla, St. l rl1.t:ol · S'trwt Entrance pain. Louis, and Walhinlfon Stitt: l1tw1•11 J. M•t11l11 1iwl U.S. Ntt'I l1~l: But their se"lce can be Southem Florida; and New Co1ta Me11 546-2066 rated bNt in 1tner•I btcauaeli~Y~or~k~,~C~Jtf~-~· •Oi!if0i;io;~~~~S~~55555Si5555iiiiiiiiiii performance in each catelC)l'Y UIUl.lly 11 abtYe 1vera1e. ... 1 -U.r the phone aemct G; ~loe1,, •• _th_. Stranded Wife Irate 1111111111mij11i11:nra1i1;11:11u111;111,1411tJ But Hu bby Unaware HARTi.AND, Vl (UPI) - A MasalChuse&ts man ltft his wife str&nded on IJ'lterstate 91 Tutldiy. She wasn't happy about It. State Police said the uniden- tified co u ple from Northampton was head t d south with the hulband clrivln& and the wife asleep in the back seat. He pulled off the highway in Hartland to go to a rest room. She woke up a moment later and decided to do llkewitt. Returning to the car, the man beaded on down the b1ghway wtthcRJt noticing his wife waa no lonaer in the back. She borrowed a dime from a sympathetic motorist and called state police, •bo flag- ge4 down her unsutpeetin1 husband 36 milts away in Bellows Falls. State Trooper George Strong declined an invitaUol'I from the irate woman to "stick around · and watcb the Clttworki when he a:at.s back." Hurrah for the Americana Look Red, Whitt •nd Btu• ·$ SAN DIEGO (APJ -The up with what he calls a "good croups to find out what young r-r,==~~==~====~=~~~~-11 University of California al San natural home." people wanted in arranging G t s t• Diego's second college is Six high-rise academ ic rooms in residence halls, rea ugges 1088 springing up as a compact buildings will be grouped On Stewart said. campus with living facilitie s the eastern side of the cam-··we wanted lo establish a For Mother' '1 Dav G. 1· u .. wcrked into the over-all aca-pus. Completed or nearly com-desire to live on campus," lJ 'J 1141 demic se\ling as an integral he said. "That could be dooe pleted are a central dining only with accommodations ,,lllCll .. _ ..... ., f Obi ptrt of Ille college atmosphe<e. commons, Jeisur"ll!ld recrea· lhal make the students feel From"'' ....,., ..... laf.O 0 Concrete and steel struc-tional facilities and two high-this Is ltieir home. Th is is rise residence halls at the tures, topped by an JI-story western end. The total cost where they work and study, residence hall, are form ing is $23.l million. this is where their friehds John Muir College. The Conslruction i.s planned by are and their action is." university here eventually will September 1971 .on Iow·rise, The college opened In have 12 colleges. Revelle was four and five-story residence October 1967 and, with com· the first A Utlrd college still halls for 32{1 students at a pletlon ol. the first residence · ' halls last fall. fKlO atudents unnamed, is on the drawing cost of $2.6 million. beard. By bunching the buildings, out of an enrollment of l,llO 'nle Muir campus , built on more room iJ left for open Jive on the campus. They fill picture1que Torrey pine s park space. tht two halls and repre3ell mesa With the oce311 to the ''ft is very pleasant to be .U percent of the student body . West, eVetitually wilr have an outdoors in San Diego," says The largest a Cade mi c enrollment.of 2.200 studenll. Stewart. "This campus was buildlng, a seven-etory tower Dr. John E. Stewart. provost planned to take advantage of costing $3.1 million, is schedul- siace Muir Co}lege wa s con-sun. The buildings were placed ed for rompletlon next Sep- ""ved in 1965. began working to shield the open areas from tember. It will ho us t with a r c h i t e c t s , ad-the ocean breezes." departments of anthropolofY, ministrat<irs -and students Architect Da1e Naegle held sociology, history, literature -. from the start to come ma ny meetings wit.ft student and offices of the provost. =================:;;:=========-~ Co,l a Mesa 3 DAY SPECIAL! 640 Reg. 7.99 l•ttice a1nd1I expoees a 1unny you with 1n airf web of white leather •triPI and hl1ber faceted heel. Enjoy aavinp on UU. eool temptral QgaliCraft Shoes ~ut1I Coast ?1ni Uppor Level Mon d•1tN•1 1om•lhi~9 .p«iol ell h•• 1peciol doy. Giln from Hld1ory Forrn1 ril OIHo llaw o ..,.clol~l lor 9irl1, Th1y Iii... th• 8EfF STICK, !Olly chene oriel .oih.-fool:! .peclalitlnlTl<llT( pcik• contain. AfM r you mok• your cholct , toke 1t wlrh "°"' ot -will mo~ if mom ~ve1 out-of·IOWtl. Our frl.ndlyc\er1<1 wi!I oul1tyou. TASTY TRIO $9.98 'Here ire lhr•e gilt f1vorll••· Four pound BEEF STICK, l5V1 oz. Smoked Ch1111e Bar and a S oz. jtr of cur S\veet-Hot Mu1t1rd. CHEESE·n•CRACKERS $4,98 Two pack11111 of Belle Fleur Ch111e, two p1cksge1 of Butltr Ka11e Cheese are Jn. eluded. Al10: box cf blle·iiJe, old (11hloned cracker1. A cb1111 lover'• deU1h t1 Other Gtf t Paks on Display For You To 8eel flf tlcC1r1 t.lr111 . . ,,,_, Ltw1r(1mlt!Mtll lodl Cout?lua 8rittol at The._" Diego ff"'1,. cMto Mt •o r •11111'*6ffl Op11 M"'4f tl!ni ,,..., 11 M tt ft2CI •••kt, 1' f .. . ....., ....... ,. !MEll!CA'S LEADING Q!EF:JE STORES • FOR JUNIOR• ... fashion U. 1 three parts! Wbita v&t and skirt 0£ Amel• triaoetate. Tri-color pril\t blouse in l'i~tbru cotton voile. 5-13. 112.95. FOR Mill la ... stripeu,e the l &Oing thingl 111 rtd·wbite-bJuG with whlie lnlfo ploaled •kirt" Smashing in acetate jo..scy. Siie.~ '20.1s. no.oo •FOR HALF SIZU ... tlotleok : is IJJttetjoc.01¥ cut sliJlmlllg, So ricltt,for plNt it ....i-e nubby testantl roOG-Ill -.. 14\lto HI\ '10.95. ..... 5All~FACTION CUARANTEEO ·RFPLACEMENT on MONEY REFUNDED loatll tout ?lua ~ "'1 = SHOP IYllY IYI NIN• M.,.ll•f Br1 PfUey UlttH t 1Jt p.-. ._. .: -.... ,. t p.•.-S111., N .. 11 t. I P••• • . - J ,. ·"i ) ---------------~----~ -------~--~--------------~----------. 6-South Coa1t Plaza Suppltmtnt to tht DA ILY PILOT, Wed ., May 6, 1970 'MARMALADE' FOR MOM AT SOUTH COAST PLAZA I • Britain Sterilizati on Free Ill LONDON (AP) -The British government -Thursday made male sterilization opera- tions free under Ule National Health Service Law. It put off a companion move to pennit cootraceptive pills to be given free o{ chpge. Both decisions were an- nounced in Parliamtnl by Richard Crossman, t h e cabinet minister responsible for the social servl~. His announcement is ex- peeted to take some pressure off recently opened pri\late clinics. where thousands of men vt'bo have volunteered for the operation, lmo11,·n as vasec- tomy, are on wailing lists of six months or longer. Vasectomy prevents pregnancies but still permits an acti\le sex life. It is rapidly becoming one of the more popular methods of birt.h con- trol in Britain. About 20,000 men volunteered for th e operation last year and more than 40,000 are expected to seek one this yeor. Before the announcement, the Nallonal Health Service pennitted sterilization opera- tions -male or female - only to safeguard the health of the individual concerned. NEW NAME -The banker's name is J. P. Morgan (really, it's John P., and he's' assistant vice presi·- dent and manager of the Crocker.Citizens National Bank branch located at Bristol and Sunflower streets.) But the important name to remember is "South Coast Plaza Office." That's the new name of the branch. just made official and put on the door in the gold letters to which "J. P." is pointing. A husband could not be sterilized for his wife's nealth. The service drew the line on the same basis it forbids pla stic surgery for cosmetic purposes -it will pay for necessary operations, but not for matters of personal taste. 10,000 Dead On Streets Last Year CIIlCAGO (UPI) -Nearly 10,000 pedestriaiw1 were killed tn motor-vehicle il!lccidenta last year and 150,000 were injyred, the National Safety Council ·says. The council said t h a l aUbough pedestrians genera11y have the right-0f-way, always expect it "may be a dead]y assumption. Pedestrians must walk defensively." The couw.:il said m o s l pedestrian deaths occur al night and thal 70 percent of all pedestrian accidents hap- pen when persons cross or enter streets. "Pedestrians -especially children and the elderly - just don't stop, look and lislen as carefully as they should ," John Lawlor, NSC executive vice president said. Lawlor said one-third of the accidents occur inside crosswalks while most or the others result from jaywalking. ··Drivers are not ~ssarily at fault much of the time, .. Lawlor said. Who C..res? No other newspaper in tht world tares abollt. )'OU1 community like your community daily newspaper don. It's tht DAILY PILOT. 'Old Salt ' Surveys His Life and Times CORONADO, Calif. (AP) - The nation's oldest "'3dmiral has· a glint in his blue· eyes as he chuckles over women's fashions, criticizes the "now generation aad urges modemiiation .<:I. the fleet. "Women's fashions are like ocean waves," says Richard H. Jackson, who is two weeks away from his 104th birthday. ''There hemlines go up and come down again with a kind or predictable regularity." Of sea power, he says: "We used to think the Russians were a pretty powtrfu1 land power but now they're using their new navy in a great show of force. "We want a fleet that can be in the right ·place at the right time and with the right weapons. We can't afford to have too many ships scattered about that can't do the job." The American Battleship Association is a r r a n g in g Jackson's May 10 birthday party, with President Nixon among those invited. Although Jackson's health has been frail the1put year, his eyes still sparkle. About the only subject Jackson won't discuss is· the Vietnam .war. "I'm silting on a soft cushion here and far enough away from things to know what an armchair strategist i£," he saic! io an inler~iew in his home. Jack.900, who was &i when he retired in 1930 as com- mander of the U.S. baUle fleet, said of America 's "now" generation : "They think they know it all, but a Jct or the old sails around know they don 'l. It take a lot of years to learn the difference between opinion and experience." The admiral, born i n Tu scum bi a , Ala ., was graduated from the Naval Academy in 18ll7 and is its oldest living graduate. Jackson was married lo Catherine Sampson. daughter of a Spanish-American war hero, Rear Adm. William T. Sampson. She died in 1924. "When it comes to dying -well, there's a legend about men o( the sea," Jackson says. "They'll tell you that old sailors don't up and die like moet. ·They say old sailors tum Into dolphins."" Winsteacl"s South Coast Pl1z1 L•...., L.ftf-Cnte M"• ' C..:.1t""l(•rrts .._.,,,, ·~ 1'!:J27 specia.I gift ••• CRAIG 2603 CASSEi IE RECORDER • 11-r .... _..,,....., -Midis ...... ·~ ... ~ ... , ................... -e Cs fl1 .. wlfti AC A"9tfw ........ , .... _,...,. .. ~ .... 546-0051 ANSCO 236 FULLY AUTOMATIC Camera. Outfit • l•l'f tt1 11M -h11N11t l••dl11t, •l.Ctrlc •r• fer ,.,tact u,••.irm! OUTflT INC LU DIS . "'"' e fl•llc11H . ......... NEWPORT GRADUATE A Newport Beach student has been se lected as valedic- torian of the 1970 class at West- ern State University College of Law, according to school ofli- ciats. Phillip A. Petty, 4828 River Ave., was designated for the honor after academic stand- ards of the graduating class were released by Dean Max- 11,•ell S. Boas. Graduation ceremonies for the 1970 cla.5.$ will be June 20 at Cho.pm.an College in Orange. As a result men who wanted vasect omy had to seek it al private clinics. The Family Planning Association now has five such clinics across Bri- tain, plans 20 by the end of the year. and. a spokesman there sa id : "We have far more requests than we can possibily ful(ill." The spokesma n said each clinic now has a waiting list of 500 to 1,500 men for the operation. It costs 15 pounds IO shillings ($37.20). A recent survey oT 1,011 men who underwent vasec- tomy over the past three years showed 98 percent were completely satisfied and so were I.heir wives. fi.i any couples said the end of worries SERVICE INTERNATIONAL HOLLOWARE Gracefully !luted pieces with beautiful cut rose and scroll border harmonize with all flatware patterns. Choose from our complete selection. 1311 BREAD TRAY $18.00 11 V:i" ROUND BOWL $22.50 FRUIT COMPOTE CENTERPIECE ht. 6", diom. J l/2" $30.00 crns -CHINA -CRYSl!l -SILVER -BmDAL RfG~lRY 8ri1tol at The Son oi.go Ftwy .. Costa Mno 9ver unwanted children trn-which ii four ttmes as costly oounced 'Ibursday any Brltleh proved their ae1 lives and they in Brllain and rtquires about huroafld will be eligible for ·~1.ft.1 .1. had he d ~.1 20 days recovery in the vaseck>my under the National Wl::i.1K:U w.iey ar auuu ho-11a1. Health "ftrvice if both husband the Oll'.fration earlier. ~ '70;" Vasectomy removet no Under an-and wile agree. organs. It Interrupt.a thel~iiiiiii6iiiiii~iSi~i\" •seminal duct in such ' a W•YI J that lhe male fluid reaching the tetnale tlO looger C'(llta.iDS sperm ttlls. It is safe, sure, , and takes about 2G minutes. An operation to reverse lhe effects of ... aseCtomy has about a 50 percent dlaoce oi success, doctors say. They advise p e o p I e considering vasectomy to assume W. cannot be reversed. Jt{oflwr! · are talking about BROTHER ® Many Q>Uples have cho6en it over female sterilization, SEWING MACHINf. THAT ISi! FAMILY AFFAIR -' SALT LAKE CITY (>,!') - Model 622 The owners Of a local food markf.t. believe they have found' a way kl circum\lent lltitrs new Common Oaf Or Rest Ac~ COME IN FOii fRfl DlMON5JllA,TION 11>e law requires.mosi telail stores and many • o t be r _b:usi~ to close one day a . .week, either Saturday Ori Si!!>day. GUs and ,Tommie Sotirious. owners .. ot Broadway Shopping Center; say they will opercite the store Monday through' , Sa~. 1beit sister will operatfl the s!»re.on Sundays under a lease arrangement which t h e brotAers say. ln effect, sets up a second comp a ny operating one day per week. WORLD'S GREATEST MOTHER $595 "'1 lOYE YOUR "t.UNDMOtKEI'" $191 COMPLETE SELECTION OF HALLMARK MOTHER'S DAY CARDS CRUET SET CL.Uf U'fSlll llllUI The KNIT WIT ..... 545·2112 I __ •••1 caots A.Ill> ITI'IH l• <•OOH flOM 2J 11il OIAUlfT11 South Coast Plaza l•w•rlMll _,,,.. • ...i_,. :tW l rht•l •1 lk S•• Di ... ,,..,R (•1H M ... faEJICM CIJITCll. ANt! CO~Tlll(S, 'ENUINl COWKIDE. BOXED STATIONERY IT LI.TON l Mtffl&C' IOllT Sm.IS Ull tOlftS. I ~ClfECJ 5.IFT FOi 1110111. CHIP-N-DIP TRAYS """"'"""' :r~W.:E~f::~~: $299 STT\.ES IF ltSTIMCJM • • waaDEll CIFlS 1-------------.,;..-flll lllOTMEI. 3 PCS OIL l VlfliW SET : '"'""'-Ill &YIJt(Ulctm •lltE lUtf Cl.Ill Pini 111111 50% OFF MAlllY OTMtl snln TO CHOOSE flOM $350 ON SELECTED 07;,J ~ _;:.·::.~ :_::, -- LASSWAR S7.00VAUJE MONKEY POD OPEN SUNDAYS POLISHED WOOD $399 CHIP·lf.DIP TRAY .rt~ STATIONERS 8UCHA· PARK SHOPPtHClr CQrTlR COSTA M[SA SOUTH COAST PUZA OPEN SUNDAYS * SPKl•I C.Cll•11• •«OUllll .. llUllfttlMI. • . • } .. . .. . J .. . , •• • • :! . . ' .. . . . , .;~ ., , . , j • -• .. .: -·• ., •• . , ' • t • I • I • • • I I • ' • I • i • \ \ --,.-,....,.·----..-.....,,..-~---~-·---• Wed., M•y t, 1t10, South Coa1t Pl1z• Supplement to the DAILY PllCT-7 PLAZA GIVING AW A Y ORANGE PLANTS FOR MOM Manson Publiciry Heleed Southern California Spawns Myriad Offb eat Re ligious Cults Says Professor LOS ANGELES -Pre·tria\ · publicity glye~ accused slayer Cbarles Manson and h i s "family" has helped popular- ize black magic • witchcraft cultism among some young people, a University o ( Southern California educator i;ays. Although relelively few are adopting occult beliefs and practices, it's a good example 'Official) Gym Proposed WASHINGTON !UPI) - Tired executives at t h e Department of Health, Educa- tion and Welfare (HEW) may get a penthouse gymnasium to trim off bureaucracy-in- duced flab. of how young people ln- cttallngly a r e abandoning t radltlonal Judteo-Chrlitlan reU,ions in favor of un- conventional re Jig i o u s · phllosoplllcal movementa, ac· ·CO«fiog to Dr. Robert S. EU. wood Jr., USC au!otant pro. fessor of religion . And the California Southland -with more than 200 cults and sero -is wbere the It would include an exercise ~ room with equipment, a small jogging track and showers for $22,000 a year or more v"orke~ in the sec retary':; of- fice. action is, Dr. Ellwood says. Tilt majority of the young who reject traditional Western rellalon turn to "transplanted '' Eastern and Oriental cults, such aa Kri s h na Conscious.ntu, N i c h I r e n Shoahu and 7.en, he adds. However, the movements at- tracting more and more young adherenta are as numerous and varied as their names, "This action stems from recognition of the fact that many or th66e officials work Jong, irregular hours at seden- tary tasks in the headquarters PERCENTAGE PAYS OFF -Mr. and Mrs. Rich· complex in addition lo the ard Oliver, belng from Costa Me'sa, had the per- rcgular work week," said a centages on their side when they won Alaskan HEW memorandum trip given away at South Coast Plaza. Here, they "An exer~iSc facility would pore over brochures and plan their voyage on the help provide a health related Princess Italia, leaving from Los Angeles on June activity denied such personnel 16. They won the 14-day Princess Cruise at a show because o( their job com-attended by more Costa Mesans and Santa Anans mitment." than from any other cities along the coast. U.S. Office of Education ------''-------''-------~­ workers who occup'y penthouse space in the main HE\Y building say they have bten as):ed to move by May I. Baxter H. 0 mo h u nd r o , HEW's infonnation officer, said he was unawar e of the memo. "You are kidding?" he replied. ''I've never even been up to the penthouse." Paralyzed Arms, Leos 0 No Barrier MIAMI iAP) -When Dr. S~en Halpert examines a patient, the patlept ti the one holding the stethoscope and the doctor is the one in the wheel chair. to Doctor beard and Ouhy 1 h I rt , Helpert, now ll, makes his rounds as ID intern in U>e family service section of JacUon Memorial Hospital's emergencx. ward at the eon- trols of an electric whetl chair. ranging from the followers ol the Maharishi to SC1entoloe. Some of these movements do not cla1aify tbematlvea 1 1 religious movement.a, nor do they use tradiUonal reli,iOWI terminology. But the majority of them deal \"Tith ultimate concerns and bade questions as rtllgioo, by it.a: definltlon, does. "I don't think any one ol these culU II llke1y to become a inajer workl rellgton, but the phenomenon u a whole repn:senlt: a tet ol social and psycholoale•I trench t h a t couW lead to a brtakdown of traditional relillonJ ol West.em cuJturt," Dr. Ellwood observes. "It gott much deeper than 1 mere dlasaUsfactlon with C&thollctmn, ProWtanltlm or Judailln. "The common denominator of the new cults ls a tendency to seek religious truth wilhin one's self, a search for a k.ind of 'subjective infinity.' "The drug scene is an iu· tegral part of this ror many of the young cultists, but nol for all. "For ex'11\plc, drug taking l'\ intertwined with the black magic-withcreft cults. Some young persons, on lhe other hand, have taken drug s ·regularly, quit them, and have embraced mtdilation as ad· vocated by the f..1aharishi, or have adopted the practices ot Zen," the USC educator said. After two years research o n n o n · J u dae<rChristian religlom in So uther n California , Dr. Eltwood asaembled files with extensive data on more: than 200 such cult! and sects. The jn- fbrmation deals not only with the newer groups pdpul ar among the young, but with a wide spectrum of groups, ranging front UFO cults lo Theosophy. ,------------------- SC Plaza Alaska Trip Seekers Mostly _From Coast; So me Visit Based on a sampling of regl1trations at the Alaska 'frade and Travel ExpoAJtion Press Meets Cut Back By Pre'sident WASHINGTON 'UPI) Presidtnt.ial press conferencts are becoming a thing of the past in the Ni.10 • ad· ptinistration. President NiJ:on has held nine full dreas news con- ferences since he took offlce and only one this year - on Jan. 30. Dtaplte 90me badgeri11g by report.en for a quiz session with Nlr.on, nont is planned. The President continues to funnel his m a j o r pro- nouncements on Vlel.Jlam in televised addre9ser, not sub- ject to questioning. ffis posi- tion o• other issues, including the growing Cam60dian crlaia, has been funneled lhrouah his press secretary, Ronald L. Ziegler. In addition to the £ullscale news conferences, the White House records u presidential "relnarJ<." the four ttm<s Nhl· on summoned rtporters to im- promptu press briefings, thrff of them limited to dlscu11ioll of one subject. Last March I. he called •ewsmen to hls oval office to discuss the postal strike and opened up to other questions. bald Jut mooth It South COast Costa Mesa provided 17.2 per- Plua, "eipo" vilitors vying for ~ee trips to Alaska mostly came from the Harbor Area and Santa Ana. Some of the trip seekers, however, were visitors from L.os Anple1, Santa MOiiica, San Fernando, Covina and othe r dtJes -all lumped to1ethtr in a 15.2 percent group labeled "All Others" in the survey. Santa Anans comprised 18.3 percent of the ff'CUP sampled ; cent. Other cities aod t he I r percenta1es were: HunUn(ton Beach, 8 . 2 ; Newport Beach, 8.9; Tustin, 2.8: Fountain Valley, 4 : Gardm Grove, 3.9: Orange, S; Westminster, 4.6; Anaheim, _3.S: Irvine and Le.I.sure World, 1.4; Long Beach, 1 . 5 ; Fulltrlon, l.S; Laguna Beach, LI; San Clemente, I . 2 ; Mission Vie jo, si.1·tenths; and San Juan Capistrano, four· tenths. U.S. Hopes to Change Auto Insurance Poli cy WASHINGTON (UPI) -demonstrated the er.tent of 11he D e p 1 r t m e n t of "hwnan suffering'' usociated Transportation saya it will with auto aclcdtnts. H1 said that 22 percent of c11tts of recommend refonn1 In the dealh or serious Injury of an American auto I n • u r a n c ' accident vicUm, another faml· system becaUH: it is "working ly member had to get. I job; poorly and inadequately." 14 percent had to move to Richard J. Barber, deputy cheaper bousln1 : 30 percent ass l 1t1 n t transportation had to draw on savings, 28 secretary,. said a dtpgirtment percent htd to borrow money, study provides "a startling and "4-5 percent had to change and shocking factual picture their standard ol livtns ." of the auto insuranct system." Other findings: He said the government -Legal bills took about 2S wtuld iuue this 3WD.DM!r it& percent of judements awarded recommendatlons for chanc-by courts in accident cases. Ina the system. -Accident victims with Many critics favor changing losses of more tllan $15,000 to the ••no fautt" method, got only one-fourth of the.ir under which an individual losata: back. would collect damages Crom -Conversely, vict ims ~·ilh hjs own insurance company louts ot Jeu than $600 got rather than thole of othtn back "four and one half times involved. their loesta" because in· SUMPTUOUS SILVER· SPECIAL . Jlfl QT. CASSEROL E-CHAFING OISH PYRE X LI NED Reg. $30.DO '$1595 011 •f 01• "'01t f1b11lo1U .,.ci•I ,.otc!Mnn we',.. • .,., effet•ll r•• ... nl1 II 011• of ••r Mat w111., h•MS "" e1' tM r .. 11lor prke. H.U101Mly Sllver- ,.1.tM. l 11y ..... ,.1 for r••r Ito• .• , fer 11pc•n1l11q Merll1r'1 Doy , A111i••r10riet .. 11 lrlllol Glfb. Orll•r lllW, 1trlcfly li111ifff ll!ltutlfy 0¥cJllMI•. M•ll onle1 '~"°I ll.IS, COY ... I 5•19• Te•, BRIDA L REGISTRY GIFT WRJiP-NO CHARGE WE SHIP EVERYWHERE IANKAMERI CARO MASTE R CHARGE OUR OWN CHARGE GEORGE MURRAY SIL VEA -CHIN• -CltY~TAL -F UAN!TUllE So11fll Cecnf f'lcu-'.•w.,. l"•l-S46·1700 BOOKS B.OOKS BOOKS Both of Halpert's arms and both leas have been paralyzed :1ince 1917, wben a cervical vertebra waS crushed in a collialon between bis motorcy. cle and a tractor. Halpert.; then was a student at the University of Florida Oollqe Of Medicine. He has limited uae of hls hands and can take notea. The patients help him by m a n i pulating instrumenta such as the stetholcope, whJch they hold against Ult1r chests while he llMens. When the question or a Nix- on news conference comes up, Zl41ler refers reporters to the Pre s ident'• phllosophlcal remarks at his Dec. 8 prtss conference when he said: The department study Hid SlJ'tnce oompaniu were less death and Injury fmn ltlf prone to proaecute small highway accidents cauaed ».1 cases. ' I,_ __________________ _. billion .In financial losses of _ It took. an averag e of ---------------------- BOOKS DllO!tlTUllCC STOCI •e..ilp"ll• PICKWICK ~ BOOKSHOPS S..-. l:al111'1HI , (;est. ... Mf.:lltl 11U K.ilrw.., llW . ...,._ IJ,UJ VO NJN "l knew I wanted to be 1 doctor before the accident and it was just a matter of going back and studying academically and knowing my limits," he said in an in· terview. He got his degree last Deeember. Picturesque in flowing black SCULPTURES IN LIGHT A dr•metic, conver11tiotr pr~vokin9 new ·idee in kinetic lighting. These t,.lnlr:fl,.t spidery light bursts cre•t• your own mini .fire work• dhplay captured by th e m;r1clt of fiber optics. 6r1ceful spreys of soft brilliance ihat daxrle ihe imag in•tion. LUV-BULBS ROSES OF RED, BIRDS OF BLUE, HEARTS OF PINK, ... -.. •D.111 25.00 THAT SAY I LOVE YOU. Ha lper's specialties a re diagnosis and preoperativf and poetoperative e1re. "People seem to think that docto rs are god1 and come out of a different pot," Halpert said. "Well they aren't and maybe all this adulation makes some doctors cold, tbouah profuslonat Tiie MllM f ' #D·ll6 15.95 ... ...... •D·ll5 29.95 _. glowing token of love c1ptured In gl•s.s....'... 1 d1l i9htful idel in I most unusual nite lit e. T PERFE~T GIFT FOR MOM. $5 .98 ae~orator line $6.49 " SECTIONAL AND W All SYSTEMS -limps ind 1ceossorios IANKAME AtCAAD MASTER CMAAGl one kind or another to those 18 months to seltle a claim . involved. But it aaJd paymenta,---------------------------------~--­ Now as far as the press con- ferences are concerned, 1 try to have press conferences when I think there is public in- terest not just a preu interest not just a press inttnlt or my interest. but the public Interest in having them and aiao to use various devices ..• tota led only 12.s bllllon, and only SI.I billion of that wq paid by auto losurance. The remainder was collected from such sources u life insurance, social 5K'Urity, medical and hospital in111rance, Barber said. Barber said the report Ark Beam Theory Refuted LOS ANGELES (UPI) - An oak beam dlacovered on Mt. Ararat and believed by some to have been part of the Biblical Noah's Ark ii of much more recent origin, ac· cordlne to UCLA acienilsts. Dr. Rainer Bereer, heed of the UCLA isotope labOratory, said the beam. found at the 13,&00 foot level of the moun- tain in eastern Turkey 1h I9SS, was approllmatety 1,230 year!I old. "The beam came from a lree felled around 700 A.O., or rou1hJy 3,000 yeara after Noah tr believed to have em- barked," Berger sakt. Advocates of the Ark theory quoled frotn the book of Gene~ that the Ark landed "In the mountalns of Ararat" after the Biblical floods. FOR MOTH ER- WE SUGGEST FASHION JEWELRY HANDBAGS GIFTS SOUTHE~N CALIFORNIA'S LARGEST $ELECTION OF ACClSSO~IES Cliic ACCESSORIES SOUTH COAST l'l.UA -COSTA MISA HvntlntM c.mw -l.....ai Park • Soft Route Thtte Red Cross Shoes • are mUch walked aboutl Simple shapes w ith roomy toes , substantial heels. Gr&et put ons when you liave 10 make a day of it. ' So soft! Like a glove on the foot. Red Cross Shoes* >.AM. AAA o M ..t. • C O 1.10 I '"·1 0 \ 1\i ·•t I ·~·• 4.11 I s \J-10 1 s~··• "Thi Fuhion Shop That Fits You" SOUTH COAST PLAZA ;'~ .. ·.~ . \ r I • ,j I l -------------~~ ...... -~--·------~ ----· ---~--.... ----. ~ . -. I 1-Soulh Coast Pino SuppltmOftl h th• DAILY l'ILOT,"Wod., May ,, 1970 • • HEADS DeMOLAY Rlch•rd June Coast Y.outli To Ge~'f'ost In DeMolay Richard June. son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy E. June, Costa Mesa, will be installed as master councilor of t h e Orange Coast Chapter, Order of OeMolay, al the May 16 installation meeting in the Maso* Temple i.n Newport Be:ac.b.l't' ' 1• ·"'t>tber'~ficers to beJnstalled a.re J)an • Davidson.. Seffi91I ... or;'Lenard tlavi1,'1 •N•..:Oor: Thomas Tuz, ;d,,':"-1"'' Carl\ • j -' ' , ~-' ~~t§!'ej)S, ' \I~ eacon i Jolin Lon& senior steward; .Soot Tal~. junior steward: 'Dennis FoX. , · ~be; Ste v e'n Feskanich mirshal. '.... . ·" Steve Car~niOn. chaplain; Jotut DeGeare, ·st -and a rd ~ ~~I Steven F o'r ·s hay , oral9r; Edward 'Smith. sen- tiJ\el; and Glen JeBnes; Steven Jthoads, Pat Millican, ,Bruce Miner, Kendall.)'iame~ Chuck ~k and John Fankhauser, ·'~int through &efenth precep- tors. .. •• S:1£~ni.&~t ;"'~· ..... \, · }lanker Sells -, ' . . ,_ • ' .. Fol: Millions ' GHARL01'fE, N.C. IA P ) - Jn the Depression 193t>s a bank refused to lend T. M. "Tom'' Shelton $150 to pay. a hospital bill, so he vowed he would someday buy the bank. It took hin1 15 years to gain control of what was then the f\.lorris Plari Bank and is now the Bank of Charlotte. But in 1947 he walked in and announced to the president that he was the new boss. Shelton. now $8, is still an Independent fellow. He has every morning for ttie last 30 years run barefoot -rain, shine or snow -tlll'ough lhe fashionable Myers Park :sec· tion of Charlotte v.·here he lives. Now She/Lon is :selling the bank, reportedly v.•orth $6 1nillion. to the Southern Na· liooal Bank or Lumberton. He wil l be paid cash for his 80 percent interest and the other stockholders v.•i\l get cash or stock. at their oplion. , The merger \\'as approved Thursday by directors of both banks. It still iriust be a~ proved by stockholders and the co1nptroller of the cur- rency but no hitch is expected. The Bank of Charlotte has r1ssets of $19 million. Southern National's assets total $172 million. SJ-I ERM AN GETS HIS COLUMBIA. S.C. !AP) - The United Daughters of the Confederacy ha ve whipped Gen. William T. Sherman more than 100 years after the Civil War. The Chamber of Commerce recently 'adopted a new slogan, "Columbia, S.C. -Gen . Sherman visited here. Why not you?." The Daughters prot.ested that when Sherman visited the S<iuth Carolina capital city In ia85 1>e burned it to the ~-So fhe ·Chamber has return- ed to is Old slogan, "Talk About Columbia Today," or TACT. Snakes Okayed For Hawaii Zoo HONOLULU I AP) -One thing Hawaii doesn't ha ve i9 snakes. Even, 1n the zoo. Because it is agalni;t U1e llw to bring snakes to 1-lo\,'flli . lhe Jeg1slature passc1 a bill Monday thtit \vciuld pcnriit rhc lmportaUon or t·w o 11"'11·) poisonous sno!ie:s ror Lile Honolulu Zoo. The bill apeeified lh•l both re.otUu bt male. ' ' • . ,, • • I .\ '-I '\ \ .. I I ~ I I ~ ---.. .. ., • • ' ' ' ' ' • for Mother, your favori.te hostess electric appliances for .entertaining attractive additions to your kitchen a. Osteriur "Cyclotrol ti'9ht" Blend'er. Toto'lly_ new ... eight pushb.utton $peeds! Stirs, purees, mixe5, . blends, and liquifies. Additional eye.le speeds that grate, chop, a nd gr~nd. White, avocado, and golden harvest. Spin ccokery Cookbook included. 29.t9. b. New Udico Combination Ovtn·Broilor. The new Ht· tie oven thot1does the big jobs in your kitchen. Perteet for broiling steaks, rt also foosts rolls~ 6nkes pies ~nd • T, ' cok,es, cnd ·worm~ t.v. dinn er:;, )t.99 -..;;:. ~· ' '. .. f " <. Pruto Jumbo Automotic lulfet SkHlet. Largr· en~ugh to prepare a holiday roost. Ideal for ffying, baking, broili~st, or stewing also. Ooubles as an at- tractive server. T;flon-lined for cleaning ease. 26.99. •<d, Sale: Cornwall D•luxe Bun Warmer. Keeps rolls ci,;d .... postrieS pipiii9 fiot and flcWorful. Use for baked potptoe's .. ~nd vegeto}:iles also. Easy-clean aluminum •bowls in avocado 9r gold. reg. 8.99, 6.99 e. New Waring Electric Can Opener. All r.ew construc- tion allows yo!J to lih b!o9e assembly completely out. Cleaning becjjm es o breeze . Handsomely styled in ovpcodo.green. 1.99 f, The New Cornwall Hot food Server. You may cook rorly, guests moy a rrive lole ... food retains heat and that just-cooked flavor. Shatter-proof radiant glos1 surface hos hot spot for coffee. Adjustable thermostat. Satin r.ilver wolnu1 handles, $10.00 9, Solton Automatic Egg Cooker/Poacher. Prepare eggs with perfection ot your table. Simply odd water ond dial a setting. Up to fovr eggs at one time. Red light signals when eggs o re done. 19.95. ,. may co $outh coos! plaza, son diego fwy ot bristol, co•le mesa; 546-9321; shop mondey thru salurdoy I 0 om lo 9: 30 pm; sun day noon 'Iii 5 pm , ·' . ' ' .. \ _l ' '" . I [ •• MAVCO ( • I .... ·---..---------------~-~~--· ---------· ,, ________________ ---......... -.. 'THE BOLOGNA MAN' Show Biz Starts as Candy Butcher LEBANESE LAMB PIES DELIC IOUS APPETIZERS Betty Crocker Winn ers • b.iarbor Coeds Smart Cookies Think you know . a Jot about homemak- ing? Is experience the best teacher? Then try these questions for size .. What is the chief function of mela1un, the principal pigment in human skin? What doc s the proverb "I1's all grist for the mill" mean? What should you use lo wash a ther- mometer -boiling water. baking soda solu- tion, salt water or soap and water? \Vhat is a right to \vork law? \Vhat i.~ linen made of? \Vbat percentage of the United states labor force do women comprise? What is most likely to be a prime cause of un- happiness in marriage today? ' Now, how .smart are you .• :• det-you know all the answetst J Ninety (\J.1estio'tis 'including ·these~ were part of thf -wHtten ex.amination givtn.'in hjgh schools across the nation for senior b'()me - making ·students in the annual Betty Crocker Search for .the Homemaker of Tomorrow. Four' girls from area high schools kne\v most of the answers because they \vere nan1- ed Homemakers of Tomorrow for thfir schools and competed in a stale\vide contest for the ··California Homemaker of Tomorrow arid a $1500 scholarship. The "experts" are Carol Rychoff, Corona de! Mar High School; .Diane Pefiers, Costa Mesa High School; Beth,. Hambor~. Estancia High School, and Sheridan De Wolfe, Ne\v- port Harbor High School. Each girl received a specially designed silver C!harm from General Mills, sponsor of the contest. The 51 slate winners traveled to \Vash- ington, D.C. with an advisor fron1 their school for an expense-paid tour of the capitol and Colonial Williamsburg, Va. The 1970 Betty Crocker Homemaker of ·Tomorrow, who was named during the east- ern tonr had her scholarship increased 1o $5.000. Three runners-u p \Ve re named and re- ceived $4,000, $3,000 and $2,000. The national judging centered on person- al observation and interviews during the tour. f\1o re than $1.75 miUion in scholarship ~rants has been a\rarded since ·the inception of the search in 1954. No\v, ho'v about some more of those questions ••• ? By JOHNA BLINN HOLLYWOOD, Fla. -"A candy butcher was a (itle or e.xpressloo for people or young kids who a o I d refreshments years ago in burlesque theaters, carnivals or c.ircu!les," Danny Thomas, the forlorn-faced comedian wilt\ the famous nickel-pickle nose, said recall· ing his first taste of show biz. "The rtason we were called candy butchers. was because the big items, the 50-cent box of candy ·always had a !ew pieces of candy and some kind of prize: beaded bags, Parisian ivory manicuring sets or gen-u-ine ladies' silk hosiery. (He reeled off his spiel as if by role.) "But that died, beca1JSe the favorite was the smaller box that sold for a quarter. It always had some trinket and a few pieces or lesser quality candy.'' He waved a jwnbo-5ized cigar· as if it \\<ere a baton and explained how candy butchery led to hls becoming the ';bologns" man , and inevitably, the fun- nyman. Danny, wbo's always known for his ethnic stories, extracted huge wedges from his own slice of life in praise of the garlic.flavored pungent sausage. Danny became a bologna buft in Rochester. N.Y. "When I went to the Gaiety Theater in Rochester, I was still in kneepants. J was 13 years old and applied for the job is a candy butcher.'' The .fella said, "You're too young and I said, 'Mr. Markowitz didn't think so. I'd worked in Toledo when I was JI." So he said, 'Hey, wait a minute, which Mr. Markowitz?' "Mr. Oscar and Mr. Harry! I told the man. Oscar is 73 years old and still comes to see me when I play in Florida. He cries when he sees n1e. "So this fella gave me a chance, and I ale bologna and bwis and drank a pint of milk for lunch every day that entire year. "Working in burlesque, I, subliminally, was educated for my business today. l saw great comedians, and e\ean ones at the old Gaiety Theater. That"s why I've done TV tributes to these men, to pay homage to then1, to honor them rather than have people think that the word burlesque n1eant filth." BELIEVER IN PEOPLE The comedian had an ecumenical educatkin. He said, ''You see. I"m a firm believer in people, all kinds of people , and my heritage is not. necessari- ly Lebanese. As I say lo my audiences: my heritage is comprised of all the tongues, customs. foods, drinks. songs and dances of all ~lhnics in ID.)' nelibbortlood years a11:0. "But, hey, ten nie what's wrong .witb' eating bologna," he said in mock d1sap. proval. "I still like bologna. In fact, I adore it. To me, bologna's still the best food in this country or any count:y. I've even ordered it in the fanciest restaurants. "I still Jove it. Do you know. it's no longer peasant food. Dori't ya know that good beef bologna's as good for our health as anything you can eat, It's got all those nice spices.". . His leanest years start1...J 1n Chicago ""hen he worked as a radio actor for 'VMAQ and WBBr.1. "If ever there WIL!I a busted. out entertainer, it was me. Amos Jacobs. And If ever tbere was a busted out rat-trap night club, it was the 5100 Club in Chicago -the dtrtiest.· place you ever saw. no cl rape on the window, 70 feet of plate glass, formerly an auto show roo1n. ''But I was so ashamed or the plsoe l ustd the name Danny Thomas. (Uc cho:ie his st&ge name for his two brothers). But T went there aMi stayed for three years." · NEW GRANDFATHER Danny itlrlbutes much of his success to hill wife and family. His newest and proudest honor was bestowed on him last September when he be<:amc a grandfather for the first time, due to the arrival of Dionne, born to hi!'I daughter Terry and her husband Larry Gordon. WhcR ll was suggested that Danny might be a "lucky" father , he said, "No, J'm an efficient father. My son, To11y, who's 20 years old, and this high" • ' ' . . ' -· " '. ~ l ; . ' ' ' I .. • INTERNATIONAL FLAVOR Rose Ma rie, Danny Thoma s "'' ;> he said, exteOOing his hands well above his head "'and this wide, still du cks. as a sign of respect? when I get angry Of ~II lllm·on something. ''l don't say you should beat the hell but of your kids. but you've got to get their attention!" Danny said, "We've alwa ys been for our kids. We've always said if you get into a jackpot. we 're here to help you the best way we ca111. You see, that'.~ what's wrong wHh a miniscule part of today's generation -they 're not going to .their parents. "Instead., they're going to their con· temporaries asking for advice, looking for a shoulder to cry on. Mother and J ha\•e always told our kids, 'The str'ongestahd most u 111d erst anding shoulder you'll e~ have to cry on a~ Yot,!r parents'. And if it's something horrible, we're going to rover it up the best V.'IU' we know how, because we love tbeµl~ "l know you've ~ard It said many times. but it's rea1Jy,true: \Vilhout my wife, Rose ¥•rle l'rn rea lly a bum. I'm married to·q_6e of the grW. ladies of all tlm~. 1r·1.Jhavt a g~1f~r. she really hastdtak~t:_bow.1·~~' · ¥J>i~.~ ·~1arie's natural leanings towlW'ds ravioli and other Italian dishes, shl:.'has mastered many ~fiddlt Eastern dishes. ~ms. DANNY THO~IAS' FATA YER ., (Limb Pies ) For tbe Dough 1 package (1,4 ounce) active dry yeast Dash sugar 2 1~ to 3 cups lukewarm water About 3 cups unsifted all-purpose flour I tablespoon salt Olive tor vegetable) oil , .. Sprinkle yeast and sugar over· t,\ cwp of the v.·ater ; stir until dissolved: ae'l. aside 5 minutes . f\.lix !lour. salt in large boi,1.·J: make a well in center, add y'* mixture. 3 tabl espoons olive ( O.·r \"egetablel oil and 2 cups oi remaining v.•aler. Mix well. atld more water ll needed (dough should be rather stiff.) Knead dough on lightly floured surface until smooth and elastic. Plact in lat1e oiled bowl, turn over dough, cover wltb da_mp lowel. . ...el rise in Yi·arm place until"'doilJtlisd in bulk tabout I~; hours). r or the Lamb Fillilr :J pounds ground Jean (uncooked) JaiDb. 4 medium-sized anions, minced · 2/3 cup yogurl 2/3 cup fresh lemon juice ~~ cup pine nuts, sauteed lightly in butter 2 teaspoons salt '1 teaspoon freshly ground peppei' Dash allspice Mix all ingredient! in bowl, chill while dough is ri sing . Divide dough into four parts. RoD out one-fourth at a thne on liglltly flouted board, about 1.-s.Jnch thick: CUt In t•o J.inch rounds. Place heaping tablespooR lamb filling in center of eaCh · rOund of dough . Wet edge ol dough with water, bring dough up over meat filling, pinch edges toget~er forming a triangle ; .Jeavl,ng small Opcni11g on top. Pia~ on olleci, foi l-lined baking sheets. Brush m.eat pies with oil. Bake in preheated 175 degiee F. oven, 40 minutes or until got den brown. Serve warm. Makes 6'h. dozen .· Afterthoughts : DOOgh flay be' ferolled Ir it's first allowed to rise again. 1f there is any lamb filling left.. shape into balls and brown in butter (or vegetable oil), Protein Pills Exposed as Just a Food -Fad By DOROTHY \\'ENCK Or1nM ( .... ftF"r t4t"'r Af¥1l« Protein pills seem to be the latest food fad to hit the local scene. The protein supplerne.1t may be sold as w.liers, pills, or, more commonly, pov;der. It i!I sold to athletes and would-be athletes -sometimes by the coach'!S ttiemselves -ss well as to the average person Yi'ho somehow thinks his dlet is lacking in this vital nutrient. Whal about it? Do peoplt! i'n general ·p , _,)'•thldes ipAparticular n~ PfOlein AJ>Plemenls? Do we lack this nulNenl o\ ~""our diett Will #,'Ulng more protein ' ' build muscles faster, help endurance, t ·f make u('.lltronger1 ~ . These are important questions because .' the f)IXi;lfln supplement! are not cheap. ~ In fact itltY are VJ1fY costly, especially Jf yoU buy them ':through a coach, a 1alesmen, or s health food store . (-i ·~l)pric~ Utcm on special al 11 drug clialn. A 16 ounCe can of protein powder, v.·hlch provided. acco ding lO the label. '1& percent protein, or 12.16 ounces, co:it --.... .,..."" ...... ~--,,....., . . ' Home News and V iews ' __ ..,,,.,. ... """._ .... ·..w.~ 1 $4.50. This is 37 cents per ounce o[ The protein wafers were sold by the protein. number -200 for $2.29 -not by weight, TllEY.RE NOT i\IAGIC so it was impossible to compare prices ""' 1 here. But the bottle was not especially What's protein:" Nothing ma,;,e. mos& Y large, and the .directions stated that milk protein -calcium caselnate, lac-lalbumin ~bolh derived from milk) and the recommended dally intake was 36 tablets! nonfat dry milk. plus smaller amounts of defatted soy and egg solids. These This illustrates the fact that protein ingredients were listed on the labtl, ls bulky. We need 55 to 65 grams per in order oil predominance. · day. (There are 28.35 grams in an ounce.) Since milk protein is the clilef' in· Ont ' !JUie pill isn't going to do much gredient of this powder, a good price for you. comparison can be made with nonfat But the important thing to know about dry milk . alt this is that the average person, You can buy four pounds of .this milk as well as the average athlete, easily at the same chain for $1.89. Nonfat gets in his normal diet more than the dry milk has 35.3 percent protein -recommended 55 to 6$ grams of protein or 5.73 ounces of protein per pound. a day. 'T'hc cost per ounce of the nonh1t F ALLACV EXPOSED dry milk protein is 8.3 cents -nr And you are not going to be 1trottgcr four limes le11 than the t.'OSt of thr or healthier by ~alln1 more protein lban protein from lhe protein powder. And you need. The extra amount, over and It's just a5 good • protein. above your needs for 1rowtb aod reptJ.r --------------- or body t111ue, Is converted llto eeero at lbe rate or 115 calorle1 per ountt. So you can get rat ealing more protein than you need. To get stronger, you need more exercise, (Incidentally. the protein powder label tells you that one tablespoon cootains 53 calories,) As for athletes, for many years the evidence has been conclusive thnt athletes require no more dietary protein, even during strenuous training, than sedentary individuals, according to Or. Olaf Mickelsen, professor ot nutrition, Michigan State University. "An ordinary good diet provides suf. ficient protein for building muscle Us sue," he .says. Because an athlete expends a great deal ot energy, he will oormally consume a larger quantity of food than the 11verage person in order to get enough calories. This increased caloric Intake is likely to inSllre an adequate supply of all essential nutrltnts, accordin& to Dr, ~1ickclsen. He recommends no su p. plemenlS for athletes other than salt and Increased quantities of water. QUESTIONS WE ARE ASKED Q. Can you recommend an easy way to remove hard water and wap deposits ln>m 1 rlas1 sbower door? A. A mixture or vinega r and \\'ater is the least expensive and most effective method for removing hard w~er and soap deposjts from glass. Mix Yi'aler and ordinary white vinegar, hall and baJ~in a.Jl!~·IP!"1 ~ ... :..,, Spray ·n on, give it a· ·rew minutes lo dissolve the s-pot!. then rinse it on. Another method Is to m!1 a powdered water softener with enough water to make a paste and apply this with a soft brush. Rinse with clear water. You can avo.id all this work by getting famil y members to help you prevenl. the ' build-up of h'ard water and soap. Keep an old lowel or squeegee handy in t.he ri\o~·er for lhem to quiekly Yi'lpc il out when Ult.y 've llntshcd &bowerlng. Q. J5 It my lmagiaaUon or do markets sometlme1 make 1p for bqalti ,.:.pi the adverllted 1ptel1l1 by 1ILlllr.af!~ other mettbandJse? :~ • A. Many grocery stores do u3~ plan known as Variable Price Mel'C.'Nn- dising when they set the prices of .. they sell. What happens is this: W¥n prices of some commodities are madild down, others are marked up, ~ . Over . time, the average price oC ~ single item, and all Kerns in the ~ for ~that ~'tter, can remain the ~ -just as U no price change had ~ made. .t!• • • .•:· Q. My basband 11 on a low Hdllia dlel aotl 11 not 1uppo1td to Mve btii\. Could he llst the lmltatMI blM :• instead? . ;:;~ A. The imitation blicon bits art nifele t'lf soybeans instead of meat. llowe:ij. lllcy are very high In sodi um ~ lot of ult Is added for navor -f they would not be a good ~> a person on a low aodlum dld. .,· ·:~· ~t .... _ , I ' • -----.. ---..... -. -.......... ~...---.... ~ ·---..--.................... ~ ~ -..... --... - ------. -.• --·----.. -----.... ------.. --------~--- ;. f4 CAJLY PILOT Wrdnrtdl)', May 6, 1970 .--,Shoppers 'Flea' ) i To Market , lrviDe Terrace Philharmonic Group has ". d~vered that violin cases have many ·uses. ~ Strung, a violin plays beautiful musi c. ! attests Mrs. Deane Bottorf, but Mrs. f R1chard Cornell prefers to use the cases . as the bases of flower or fruit ar- : rangements. : Mr1. CorneH's choice will be featured : in the boutique corner at tbe group's I annual Paris.ian Flea ,Market, to take • Place from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday, : ·Xfay 20, at 521 Avocado Ave., Corona : df:l Mar. Other specialties in the boutique section ~ include handmade dalls, knitted jackets: 1 and 'original pictures and art W:Qrkl. ; ~ on sale will be books, toys, clqthing foci '"' al food . • '.;..,Proceeds will benefit the Orange ~1>"" : {y Philharmonic Society. aro:irdlng lD · Mrs. Richard Kredel, chairman. . . .. . . I ~ .. ;Jt?tt' ' ~ : , :· l'. New President . . • ' I I l A<Jrs. King Cooper Jr. of Huntington Harbour. \rho \Vill assu1ne the presidency 'of the Trojan Guild of the University of Southern California, \Viii be int.ro- duced during a luncheon Thursday, May 21, in the. New Commons Lounge on the campus. Al so ac- cepting otfice \Vill be Mrs. George Demos of J.lu nt.· ington Iiarbour, member-at-large. Preceding the li'. luncheon will be a program at 10 a.in. by U1 c uni- versity's national champion GE College Bo\vl 1ea1n \vhich won a total of $19;500 in scholarship grants. ' Introducing the team members will be their coach. Dr. J ames McBath. , i 'Underground' Artist Exhibits in ! Sterling Holloway of South Laguna (left) and Ed· i: ward Newell. who is termed as an 'underground' ,: artist, chat infonnally during the artist'ii openin):! :: in the Newport 1-larbor Art l\.1useum. An early eve-• . ... I . . ' • ~It's a ·Dog-gone Shame 11 I Son, Pet Must Compete DEAN ANN LANDERS: Don't prb,1 the name of the city or my husband will kill mt. We've been married five years .and have a young son and a dot. I sometimes have the feeling my husband doesn't know which is whlch. He treats his dog like. a son and his son like a dog. On weekends when I ask my husband to run errands, he never falh to take the dog along. Hls son he leaves at home. After dinner he sits down to read the paper and watch TV. Whenever our little boy wants to sit on bis lap ht says, "Get off -I'm tired." The next thing I know, he is holding the dog and petting him. I am becoming resentful of the way be treats our child and I don't know what to do about it. Any suggestions! -IJOG-OONED DEAR GONED: You've got two Htde ·boy1 and the oldtr ooe llad better grow up In a hurry or &here are going to be 1ome ullappy dJy1 ahead for both. A rejected son can develop some pretty sad penonaUty traltt. Homo11xuallt)' Is one of tbe better known side effectl of paterul abandonment. A father wbo treats hla dog_beUU _&ban. hit eon_ s!lould not be aurprised wben he dhcovers hla son Msplles bim. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Why is it that as soon as a woman gives away the baby furniture , the high chair and the crib, she gets pregnant? I used to hear about this strange trick of fat~ and I always laughed -until it happened to me. Why does it alway1 happen? -NOT TI!RJLLED DEAR NOT: It doetn't ALWAYS hap- pen, it ju1t teems that way to the }leraon to whom It Mppe111. I am spooked by the coincldenc, whenever I hear of tt. Perhaps "overconfidence" 11 the key. Wrtte a y'ear from ltOW. JOJl'll ltd better about It. I bope. • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have been married for three years to '.I: man who has accused me of everithlng from trashy housekeeping to adU!ltery. I can't please him -in or out of bed. Whatever I do is wrong. Whatever,.J 'sty is dlllTlb. If J invite a couple to dinner he says, "Why did you ask thole nut•?" If a Friday goes by and I haven•t intvlted anybody he says, "Why didn't ·you ask somebody? I get Ured of ~afing· your voice and lookJng at your ugly puss.'' We have no chUdren bec8use1be doesn't want any . I'm a key-puocti operator • and my hours are the same as his, yet he atways is looking in the .want ads to find me something to do in my "spare tlme.'' I got manied at 18 because 1 didn't like school and I thought being a housewife would be tun. Now I'm fed up with housekeeping and I can't stand my husband. I've suggested that we see a marriage counselor. He saYs there's nothing Wrongwlth-out matiilft- 1 think be is cracked. What do ~ suggest? -PANAMA CITY ~ DtAR PAN: Nlneteen years old ind already fed up on marrla1e. Beautiful. If your husband won't go for counseling. go alone. You're bound to learn something. If you learn the marriage Is bopeless because your partner. refll5es to move a muscle to make it better, J 1u1ge1t a trial separation. Salad Bouquet Enhances Buffet A buffet of fa vorite salad s of. members of the Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital Auxiliary will be served when the aux- iliary meets In the hospital conference room at 10:30 a.m. Monday, May Jl. New and prospective members will be welcom ed during the luncheon, which will follow a business meeting conducted by Mrs. Robert \Vilson. president. Other board members greet in g members and guests will be Mrs. Reg Jones and Mrs. George Thomas, first vi ce president and membership chairman. Among salads served will be Mrs. Alexander MacGillivray's Cold Curried Chicken Salad. COLD CURRIED CHICKEN SALAD 4 quarts bolling water I tablespoon salt I IS.Ounce package white rice 6-7 cups cubed cooked chi.cken I cup raw cauliflower cut in 1,/4" pieces 8 ounces creamy style French dressing ! cup mayonnaise 1 tablespoon curry powder 1 tablespoon salt 1 ~ teaspoon pe er 1.~ cu p mllk I cu p thin green pepper strips 2 cups celery. cut on an angle 1 cup thinly sliced red onion I head ron1aine lettuce On day before, cook rice, drain. Place ln roasting pan, cool. Refrigerate, covered . On serving da y, toss rice wllh cauliflower and French dressing. Cover and refrigerate at least two hours. In a large pan or bowl combine mayonnaise. curry powder, salt and pepper. Slowly stir in milk. Add chicken and toss. H.efrigcrate, covered, at least two hours. Before serving combine the two mix- tures and turn onto a large plaiter and garnish with romaine lettuce. Serve With side dishes of curr y ac- compan iments such as peanuts. raisins. coconut, pineapple cubes or chutney. MAK ING A LIST __. Preparing to go shopping tor the in· gredients for the salads 'they wiU make for the Cos ta Mesa t-.'lemorial Hospital Auxiliary luncheon honoring ne\v and prospective members are (left to right) the Mmes. Lonnie Gordon. Roy Erickson and Reg Jones. Guests nre invited and may make reservations "'ith Mrs. Jones, 67~5246. 1: ·1 I • •· ' •I .• ' Newport . • ' . ,. ning soiree broug ht n1any peo 1>le (ro1n the New port Ueach area as \\'Cll as frotn Los Angeles to. view the exhibit. Th e 1nuscun1 is loca ted in the Balboa f)avilion. Preball Parties Blossoming Debutantes Whirl Merrily A spring !!oral theme \Vas carried out by ho sts of a dinner dance given 'lo honor 22 E1npire debutantes who will be presented to society in the Ntwporter Inn June 19. The Dover Shores home of Mr. and Mrs. Julius George Hammerslag was the setting for the elaborate soiree, and hosting with then1 "'ere Dr. and Mrs. Jeali Richard Witl· \v er. Mr. and ~1rs. Timothy Peter Macres and ~Ir. and ~trs. Lawrence James Sullivan. , Honored debutantes were the A1isses , Susan Mary Hammerslag. Cythia Loui se Donaldson, Jennifer Jean Wittwer and l\1ary Theresa Sullivan. Arriving with their escorts. each debu- tante \vas presented \Vith a floral spray.· Spring flowers were used 'lhroughouf the home. and centeMng the lavish buffet table tvas an arrangement of tulips. Follo\vi ng dinner, party goers danced to the South- winds. Other debutantes allending \ve re U1e Misses Barbara Anne BaiJey. Bryn Bernard, Theresa Louise Blalack. Gail J ane Caras, Christine 11arie Dixon, Diane Louise Duffie. Linda Marie Fox, Renee Louise Gould . Val- n1ere Lynne KasaJa· and Melodie Ann Kell er. Also attending were the Misses Debbie .June . Metzleur, Nancy Ann NeYlbrou~h, Cynthia Pell s. Shannon Michelle Pratt Diane f\1arie Rivera. Susan Joan Sha\v . Cyn: thia Leigh Weber and Nancy Sue \Vinfiel d. Spon!or of the June ball is Harbor Key. an auxiliary to the Child Guidance Center of Orange County. a lotv-fee psychiatMc cllnlc '"hich is supported by ball proceeds the auxiliary's thrift shop profi ts and othe~ con- tlibutlons. Chaperoning the party \Vere members of the ball committee and their husbands. l\fr . and Mrs. Harry Kemn. Mr. and Mrs. J . O'Hara Smith and l\1r. and Mn. Flave Gibbs. -~ ........... -·~·-·-i --~ ·--"-·--'·-..o..•-L -_. --~·· _.. ____ -···-~---~·:..--·---••---·• ---------' .... -·--' -_.___ __ •". ----··--· ~·---· .. ., --------"--'~ --. ---·----'. --------_. _____ _ ---------..,........._..-,..-....-..... --------.... ~-------...--------- ~. MaJ" 6, 1970 DAILY ,!LOT 35 Your Horoscope Tomorrow Scorpio: Spend to Bring More Joy . THURSDAY MAY 7 By SYDNEY OMARR l\luy ulrfiOfth claim tbal the Air Trinity sips are npresen&llilve of the most In· tetllceal pertoa1. Air Trinity alp• are Gemlal. Ubra and Aquarius. By contrast. the Waler Trinity accents the emoUonal ntber tbu the In· teJlect. Waler Trinity sips llJ'e Cancer, Scorpio a• d Pisces. A~ (March 21-A pril 19): Journey could result in roman· tic interlude. Your ideas are stimulating. You are n9t satisfied with status quo. Gtmilli individual p I a y s significant role . H i g h J I g h t versatility. TAURUS (April 20-May 2()): Financial picture is activated. Opportunities that \\'ere dor- mant beeome animated. Check details. · The11 proceed toward goal. You could obtain valuable J>OSSeSslon. GDIINI (May 21-June 20): You are stimulated by Arif:1 \ndl vi dual . Accent on personality, appearance. You encounter new, challenging ex- periences. Dynamic approach is best-sive your all. l\iuch to gain, little to lose. CANCER (June 21-July 221 : Difficult to keep secret today. Best to confide in family 1nember, other loved ont:. 'fhen pressure is reUeve<l. Cooperate in project \\'hich benefits those who are han- dicapped. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22), Some friends have very firm ideas on unu s ua l 11ub- Charles Crif asi Claims Bride 1n Costa Mesa St. Joachim's Catholic Church \\·as the afternoon set- ting for the double ri11g wed· ding of Sandra Kaye Lease and Charles Anthony Crifasi, both of Costa l.lesa. · ONE MORE SEAM -Putting the finishing touches on the outfit she will wear in the fashion show sponsored by Indian. Maidens Saturday. May 9. is Linda McGavran \Yhile her mother. Mrs. Charles !\1cGavran checks a piece of material for her own ensemble. Home-sewn fashions v.·ill be featured in the parade follo\ving luncheon in Estancia High School. The new hfrs. Crifasi v.·as attended by Miss Linda Lease, her sister as maid of honor. Bridesmaids were the hfisses Jackie Arensdorl. Kathy Blakeman. hf arilyn Brooks and Linda For11acl. r..Jlss Deborah Snyder \Yas junior bridesmaid. Fashions Designed Maidens Model Outfits Serving as flo"?o·cr girls v.·ere Laura Jean Bernabie and Lucia Calibrtse 'A1hile Vincient Demabie was the ring bearer. The bridegroom asked Rod Zeka to st.and as best man. Ushering v.·ere Joe and Larry Lease, the bride's brothers, Kenneth Gray and Brice Campbell. Ju.1ior ush!~ wa1 Paul Crifasi, the benedlct's brother. Home-sev.•n fashions v.'ill be paraded \\'hen Indian l\1aidens s t a g e a m·other -daughter luncheon fashion show Satur· MEMOllY ""' HAlllOll CENTEll H•VI YO~ DIK1Vtre4 U1 Yttl day, 1'1ay 9, in Esta11cia High School. Modeling their own crea- tions follo\1ing the 11:30 a.m. luncheon will be mothers and daughters of the Orange Coast YMCA group. The stage will be set in an ocean decor, follo\'•ing the thc1ne the Sea, with simulated 11'aves, giant sea shells and sailboats creating the mood. Mrs. Kent Powell of the Zuni Tribe is in charge of arra·,1gements for the fashion show and will do the com- mentating, and decoralions are under the direction of Mrs. Richard Wallis of the Pomo Tribe. Each of the 23 tribes in the nations will CQntribute decorations for the tables and COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY SERVICE e WEDDING e PASSPORTS e POllTlAITS e ALL IN NATUllAL LIVING COLOI. 842-4212 7511 Clay, Suite 3, Huntington Be1ch SURPRISE STARTS TOMORROW a a erta WESTCLIFF PLAZA 1 71~ & IRVINE NEWPORT BEACH a prize will be given to the tribe best interpreting the nautical theme. ' Jn charge of reservations is Mrs. Ke,1 neth Say of the Iroquois Tribe. Tickets are $1 for adults and 50 cents for children. The event, ""hich is expected to attract more than 300 guests. is a combined effort of the two nations of the Orange Coast Y~1CA which are headed by Mrs. Charles ritcGavran and Mrs. Ronald Barnett. Recruiting will take place for Indian Maidens from 7 to 9 p.m. on Monday, ri1ay 18. i·,1 Adams and Sonora schools, on Tuesday, ~lay 19. from 7 to 9 in \Vilson School and at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday, !\lay 20. in the YMCA. The organiza tion is geared to gi rls in grades one throu gh three. Mothers participate in each activity, including cam· pouts, roller skating. holiday parties. field trips and craft sessions. Leader Saluted The bride, daughter of the Charles Leases of Costa i\tesa, is a graduate of Corona de! Mar High School. Her husband, son· of i\lr. and hirs. Steve Crlfasi or MRS. C. A. CRIFASI May Brid• Duarte , is an alun1nus of Duarte High School and co1n- pleted t\\'O years in the Army. With Wine, Cheese New Season Toasted A toast to the new season is planned by the Women's Auxiliary of Seavie1v Little League. The group "'ill climax the league's opening week of baseball ;i.ith a wine-tasting party taking place Friday, A·la}' 8, bet .... ·een 7 .and 9 p.m. in the Air National Guard building, Ne;i.'POrt Beach. Premiwn voines and cheeses Merchants Fete Moms Jn celebration of ~fother's l\'lll be furnished by rc,;pecti re companies. :\1rJ. Don Derrieg , chairtnan, has announced that tickets at $2 each ma}' be obtained from any team 1ncther or at t\e door. Proceeds W'i!l be ~used to purchase equipment for the league. Additional infonnation may be obtained by calling ~frs. Derrie,;, 968-1383, or Mrs. Sam Reddick, auxiliary president, at 968-21 19. The public is in- \'ited tD attend. New Colors Flatter Legs Afichael Trujillo, new 1 y Day a t\\·o-day cooking school elected president of t he ·will be set up In Island House. Mystick Krewe of Komus, will J<'ash\on Island Friday and be in the spotlight when lhe Saturday, ~lay 8 and 9. New in pantyhose a11d stock· President's Ball is staged In addition 1 4-H dress lngs ls .a trend toward blued i Will be .(aged by "'" colors with lavender and Saturday, ~fay 9. rev ew .:..N Festivities will begin before young girls from the 4-H clubs periwinkle strong fa vorites in the forma l dinner dance \\1th of Orange County on Saturday the high fashJon category. from I to 3 p.m. A blued pink, says the a champagne cocktail party The Fashion J s land manufacturer, Is a potent flat- in the home of M.r. and Mrs. merchants have invited the tertr and ought to be used Richard Luther· hosted by tlie Southern California Edison Co. as an accent for navy altd Kings Club. to spoosor the cooking school. wh ite outfits. Partygoers then ·will travel The free showings art 0ptn Peach cora1 ts another of to U1e Del Rae restaurant, to the public. the new color combinations. Fullerton for the salute to -===============:::=~==:;­the new leader. Giant glittering gold coins v.·ilt form the table ceri- terpicces and paper bills v.•ith U1e new president's silhouette will decorate the stage. The Komus Playr.rs will present a dramatic recount of Trujillo's background, and dancing to the music of the Moonlighters will conclude the evening. Bakery Goads Bolster Sale Bro"·ser's w\11 find a sclee- lion of clothes, furniture, ap- pliances, kitchen \\'are and baked goods at an annual rummage sale sponsored by the El Camino Real Junior \Vnman·s Club on Friday aod Saturday, May a and t . Doors of the Dana Point Community House will open from noon to 5 p.m. on Friday and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on S11turday. Specia l baker y iten1s will be featured wllh coffee a v ailable for customers. Those wishing to donate Items n1ay call ~1rs. EdV.·ard Russell, f93-3200. ( LD.trod1u::b!.1 • trait 11ew con.c:ep1 bl •1• bu.aty, Pl.OTTD LAJHE59, ey&-la1he1 that u. llldiW:h1aU, applied. rLOTTD. LAIJllSi8 will enlumc. th• beant)' of IDJ woman. they a.r1 non· allersentc. proi.tconallJ applied to your 11w 11 •J• ·\uhtt, ud 1tfl1d to your re1tmw. ~ '" th• ••nttal look. One• 1011 he•• •or11 them. 7011 "-ill """ 10 beck te olct.la&hioned 1trlpt that b.avs ~o b1 Nmo..d nlthtly llitroffc••> f'ric:. no. rep]U'IJ 111 .., sppotutwml oa1J c:an 18J.2110. Gll~ /ir&miji/Ul With., 'Flutter 'Lashes ject5. l\tany opinions get ai re<t. Be attentive-and analytical. Don't jump to conclusions. Ex· citement Is not necessarily love. VIRGO tAug. 23·Sept. 22 ): Accent on surge in pro- feasional activities. Don't get caught in··middle· of lover's quarrel. Try lo be neutral. Othcr\vlse, you could be cast as vi\laln. li1essage clear by tonight. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)' Open new horizons . There i.'l no need to feel restricted, con· fined. Elevate self-esteem. Call or letter today shO\\'S you the 1vay. Look beyond surface indications. Plan j o u r n e y , vacation. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Lulo'.ury items coilld dent budget. But you should know· gratitude to\vard one who aid- ed in p.ast. lifeans spend to bring joy. But do some shop- ping. You can locate genuine bargain. SA GITT ARIVS I No\'. 22- Dec. 21): Show of affection on your part. could correct m i sunderstanding involving one close to you. Area of chart related to marriage. permanent ties is emphasized. Nothing halfway today. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Works u r ro unding s become m o r e i nteresting. Those you take for granted could come up with some surprises. Routine changes. Asso cia te makes an· ~-18: Peering Around lttITCH VOGEL, a young actor from Costa ~!esa, will be the featured entertainer Yi'ednesday, l\1ay IS, during a rather-daughter party in SL Joseph Hospifal. nooncemcnt which. could result in travel. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-F'eb. 13): Emotional r eac tion s dominate. Express yourself. Romance is highlighted. You may also have to deal with young persons who have so1ne definite .and Wlusualideas. PISCES tFeb. 19-March 20): Environment is lively: horne base cou ld und e rg o transformation . Day features plenty of variety. If you've beeii bored. today provides compensation. You may have more than You can handle. lF TODAY IS YOUR BIR THO A\' you are really a seriou.'i thinker, introspectivi?. even though many could be surprised at this description of you. In June. your status changes-financially and e1no- tionally. Te llnll eut w~o·\ lucky fo• vou In monev 1nll lov~. order Svllnev Om••"s bock!ilJ, "SKret Hinh for Men all(I Women.~ S•lld blrthdale IM $Cl ~•nh fo Omerr A•lrolwY faultless. ¥. l ...... y.O- starch Lets you take ironin& easy LITTLE GUYS 'N DOLLS DRESSY~, PANT·SUITS -rbey're hffe~ in an exchtsitt ~ sho.,.jng txprtslily ~ for Molher's Day. 'e111 any vlller place iii \U l/l,11{V i•olurs and ~f)'/f:\' •• Mary At:ackrnzie Boutique Original MATllNITY SHO• NEWPORT BEACH ;i;.za f•hl111 ltl°"" COSTA MESA Herlter Sheppl11t C011ter GARDEN GROVE o, ..... '11111• ORANGE Tlte City CHILDREN'S HAIR STYLING l'roltul9n•I Seiner Jlyt1111 Ollly f hi J -(lflell M-1¥1 "011: Al'l"OtHTMIHT 641-JUf Vogel has appeared in "The Reivers" and 0 i s n" y ' s ~:;~,., •;1W1.1 Co,ta "r.tenace on the Mountain"[~~:::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::i.i:~~ ••• 130 E. 171h St. in addition to dozens of stage,li- motion picture and television appearances. ARRMNG TODAY l n llouston for the 1970 Asse1nblyl of 'Yomen 's Society of Chr is- tian Service for the Costa fl1esa First United J\1elhodist Church arc three a r e a delegates. !\fr. and J\lrs. Roy Cook and J\1rs. Virginia Wedesweiler l 1\·ill partipate in programs in Sam Houston Co l iseum,l follo\l·ed by visits with friends and relatives on the return trip. CM Auxiliary The third Thursday of the month members of t h e Americ an Legion Auxiliary, Cost.a Mesa Unit .t55 gather in the American Legion Hall at 8 Free clown circus Fe•furing Powdy th1 Clown th• ~iddies favorite performer in his speei•I "Silly Circus"-thur1-fri- sat M•y 7-8-9 free on th• m•ll •ft•rnoon' et 1-2-3-4. Brin9 th• children for fun •nd frolic •f Huntin9fon Center, Be1ch end Edinger •t Sen Diego Freewey HI': p.m. ~~~~~~ ·~· ------· ~ --~ H111Hatr.• C:..'•' .... , .. , ... , "••tlllft" ... . •• , ••• 11 Two rings fortwo- lovers . . . both rings $88.00 14-karat white or yellow gold. Illus• !rations enlarged. Eosycredit terms • 1tudent account) owilable •up to 12 months to poy lankAmcricord • MostwrChor9• "The Slor. That Confid1nc1 Built" irlc ~ Op•11 Mon., Thurs., fri. TJO t p.m. Het~., lh•fl'll'I .. c ..... 2100 Hetffr 11,4, c .. ,. ...... 545-t411 ' . . I •• • ~ DA.IL~ ,PILOT s !Students and Parents • I :Bee r PFO l\.trs. John Hacktr , Preside.it !cOMJNG UP: Spring fashion show at 7:30 p.m. tom9rro\\, Hefreshment.:: will be ser1•ed along 1vith a dra\\'ing for prizes. Rescrvallons may be 1nade by contacting P.1rs. F'red BarU1e at 540-7180. Tickets are 50 tents per tamily ..... Geraldine the cow and Daisy Mae her calf may be viewed by the preschoolers 11onday, ~1ay 11. JlEPORTS: Bike parade v.'ith 6fl entries was judged by ?\1rs. Lincoln Mulkey, P.1rs. Charles Kesner and Mrs. Russ Fineman at thC .Iun-0- rama. Sccre in the baseball game was parents, 23. faculty. 10. Parade 11•as organized by Mrs. Rodney Dailey and f.1rs. Everett Bieger Jr. . . . . Bov.·lin~ league reports a profit or $323 will be used for school equipment. Canyon PTA l\.1rs. John Sihilling President fOMING UP: Unit meeting at 7~30 p.m. Tuesday. May 12. in the multipurpose room. Students will receive av•ards r or outslandi'.1g achievements in scholarship, citizen.ship, athletics, at- : tendance. study habits and : &pecial services. Program Tilden J. Farris, pri\1cipal 1'.1!1 d.J scuss six lh grade cur- fll'Ulu111. JlE:POATS : The library is staf~d by 30 volunteer rnothers. reports M r s . Franklin. Renier, chairman. Harbor Vi ew PFO Mrs. Charles Sword President HEPORTS : David-Hill, prin- ripa! of E:astbluff Elen1en- tary School \\'as introduced lt.1 parents at an infonnal roHee today by Mrs. Jay Kc>ar. First vice president .. Scienc e falr awards v.·ere presented at lhc flag raising ceremony by fi.1rs. Jack Dwan, awards 3'11d scholarship chairman and John Case. principal. Individual project winners \vcrc John Nelson, Cameron l\ovach. J u Ii e Douglass, Diane Jones, Kimberl y liougan. Family project win- ners were Ruth and Ramcma Reed, Sharon Chabre, John Sink, Kim Brown, Jim Wikle and Andrew S w·anson'. Sweepstake \\'inner w a s Scolt Reidman, s e c o n d grad'l', for his project Birth of a Pumpkin PI a n I . Students fron1 UC! n1ajorh1g in biologicul and phys ical sciences \Vere judges. Harper PTA lltrs. Roger George President CO~llNG UP : Kindergari en registration from 9 a.n1. ta 4 p.m. }.1onday, ~iay II through Friday May 22 . Evening reglstration will take place from 6:30 to 8 p.n1. Wednesday, fl.fay 13. REPOH'I'S: Mrs. Hoge r George is attending the stale <:onvcntian in San trrancisco. Monte Vista PT A Mrs. l\1ark l\lorti s President COJ\l!NG UP · fl·lrs. llavid Goodsell. Ivlrs. Jack Glcnu and Mrs. Peter W. Tatuin will assist in the regist ration or kinde rgarten students from 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesday, f.1ay 12. . . . Installation luncheon v.•ill take place Friday. f..tay 15. in the F i s h e rma·n, Huntington Beach. Reserv<1tions will close Friday, May 9; for information contact Mrs. Stuart Lynch at 548>4818. REPORTS : Mrs. J<uncs 1\1of· fett, health and \1'elfurc chairn1an and l\1rs. J1.Jhn Turner assisted in t h e testing of 30 first grade students for T B ... Mothers of kindergarten students hosted the open h o u s e 1neeti·,1g and Brov.11ie Troop !158 presented the flag ... , ·' hlrs. Ned Betts, ·president- clect, left today for slate convention. Our Lady· ;Queen of Angels Aux. l\trs. James Davies President COMING UP: Au:< i Ii a r y meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday. T\·lay 14. in the Jlttle theater of Corona de] Mar lligh School. Officers wHI be in- stalled and the Angel award \\'ill be presented to the outstanding nicmber. De,1nis E. Carpenter, chairman of the Republican State Central Committee will s p e a.k . Refreshment s w i 11 be served. REPORTS: Winners of the poster contest ,vere Terri Rhinehart, first place, Caron :Take Ada1n and Karen f..taloney, honorable menticr,1. Paularino PTA J\lrs. Fred G. Palmer President C0~1J NG UP: Kinde rgarten registration fro m 6:30 to 8 p.m. Yied nesday, May 13, in the multipurpose room. Prince of Peoce Aux. Harry Southron President C.:O~UNG UP: May day event Friday May 8, in the Costa l\1esa City Park. Games will include races, athletic com- petition, volleyball, softball game and cat\1ival booU1s. Hot lunches and drinks may be purchased. Mrs. Harry SQuthron, general chairman v.·ilt be assisted by Edward 1\1 c Ca u I e y and Jae.(( Brisache'r. iith!etic events and games; ~frs. · James Simakis, lunch. and t-.1rs. \Valter Dixon, booths. Pomona PTA l\lrs. C. Darrly Bradley President REPORTS : Officers installed v.·crc the fi.1mes C. Ou rrly Bradley, president; Russell Baily, Vi ct0r S co I ;i r". Roman Scheide!, Conrad Schcafe r and Rebert i'a1 ... ..' vice presidents; Thomas · cate and Lawrence Byward secretaries; \Valter Gasper. treasurer ; J\.turry Black, historian; Rex Pendergast. auditor, and Don a! d Jackson, parliamentarian. St. John Aux . l\trs .. Dennis \.\'ab; President <.;QJ\llNG UP: Rem e di a I reading and perccplio,1 ex- ploration v.·orkshop will be 'fear-end Bow Luncheon Served in Paris Setting • A buffet luncheon \11ill be served and the latest fa shions 1nodeled by children of board members, outgoing president Mrs. Charles S\11ord and incoming presi- dent Mrs. William \Vright, \vhcn fl arbo r \lie\v PFO sponsors Springtime in Paris Saturday, May J6. Enjoying the side\_ya!k cJfe setting fire Kel1Y Btal.lnen and Lisa Stotsenberg ilcft to right) \\'hile David Sword \\'alts to take their or· der. · conducted by Tom Edsen al 7:30 p.nl . \Vedncsrla.v. l\lay 13. in tho school h<iU. '?11rs, Paul Doutt, chairm~n urges all instructors and parents t.o a t tend . , . . C:eneral n1ecling ;it 8 p.ni. Thursday , l\lav 14. \\'tll in- t•lude election i1f officers ;r,1d cn1rrtainmenl by the Harbor Chorale. Victo ria PTA ~!rs. Dougl as Bo\\'ler President n r 1\1 r s . Bowler .. r£'gistratlon 12. Doug la s Kindergarten Tuesday, fi.1ay · Will be provided by the Good News Singers. Vocalists arc the Mme s. Brook s Cavanaugh, Wayne \\lest. D. G. Hurst, Dwayne 1\1ayfield ;ind Ron Mathisen. Hefreshments \I' i l l be (.'(),\!)~(; Cl': Hoard n1ccli11g J~rid ay, :\'J;1y II, in !he hon1c \-------------~------· HEPORTS: f.1rs. Dwayn e Ress, library ch a i r in an reports th.'.lt 1,033 books 11•cre collected in t he book clrive. t::;;:~e Pk . PT A • !\1rs. James Schafer , President ~0!\1ING UP: Kindergarten : registration from 6:30 to : 8:30 p.m. Monday. l\lay 11, ''1n the mu l tipurpo s e room. , . Board meeting at !1;30 a.m. Tuesday. i\lav 12. : in the home of l\lrs. G0rdon .'St. Clair. CdM Ele. PTA IUrs. R4lbett .Jones President doi\t!NG UP : Speclal meeting \for mothers of fifth grade ·'students will take place at .Jo a.m. Monda y, fl.fay 11. "in the cafeteria. \Villiam :Ritter. principal: Ra I p h :'\7or!Cy, vice principal, and Bonnets !)electing a hat to pack for convention in San Francisco is fl'lrs. Nigel Bailey, newly inslalled president of J-larbor Council PTA. \vhilc 1Vlrs. ,John France. first vice president and convention chairman, revie\vs the platform to be di~­ cussed. in Spring Draws Talent ed Students the-lapping tunes "Ill Ile part of Our Thing for S)u:ing i.•lhen Chrisl Lu the ran f''l'L ~ponsors a talent show a l 7 p.111. Friday, r'l1ay 15, in the church. G()- In,!! into their Jct for lhe student lalcnl sho\\ ;1rf' S\c\'l"ll J•'J ~cher. pinno plJycr, and old-Cashionrd ba thing IJt•auty lle1d1 Craven. rAS'110N ISLA ND N[WfORl-8f,1oCH H'Jl'TING.TO"l c-MTr~ HUNTINGTON !EACH ~OUl H CO>ST rtt7A CO STA MtSA -________ .,....._. ~-·-----· --~~--~---. -------------·------------- DAILY PlLDT 37 Ebel/ Club of Newpo rt Bea ch ~Mrs. Ray Nielsen Leads Club \(;;;Ji • Fe.,,I deliciously feminine in CREPELON° Mrs. Ray Niel.sen, a member of the ~bell Club of Newport Beach for %3 )'ears, is the new president. The Newport Beach resident will be installed d u r i n g cere monies Thursday, May 71 at nooi1 In the clubhouse. Among her more recent in- novations have been weekJy art lnslrucUons and Cultural ArtJ Day. New officers include the Ebel I Sections Planning Ahead The month of ~tay is varied Ydth activities planned by se<:- lion members of Ne"·port Beach Ebell Club. Goren Counlers will gather at ooon in the clubhouse Fri- day, May I , with Mrs. Leslie Mock serving as chairman. Bridge playing will continue through the summer months. Garden, Corona del P.'lar. Book sections conducting last of the season meetings are Book Section One on Thurs- day, May 14, in tht home of Mrs. Irving Watcher of Costa Mesa. Book Section Four under the chairmanship of Mrs. D. D. Ovando gathers Thursday, JI.lay 14, at 12:30 p.m. in Mrs. Edith Scott's Corona de! Mar home. On the same day Mrs. J. Mmes. Vernaee t-.1or1an. llar- ry Goetz, Fffil Loak" and Jack Frank, vice presidents; James Barclay , C I are n c e Forbes and Rudolph Vanasek, secretaries; Arthur Neeb , treasurer; Raymcmd Ca 11, audit and budget, and Cilrl Pearlston, parllamentarlan. More are the Mmes. L. 1-1. lifcBrlde, pastp resident ; George Stricker, rent a I c hairman; Doroth y Stanwood, luncheon chairman: D. C. l\1atloclu:. curator or sections; Leo A10ore, house chairman: Leon Rudd, health and welfare : L. \V. Jenks, j u n i or-sa1ior coordlnat.or : t-.1ary Fitz. scholarships , and Eugene Kovach, Junior Ebell president. Assisting t-.lrs. Frank. \va ys and means chainnan with ma- jor fund-raising projects will be ~!rs. W. R. Dana, cotton party in September, and Mrs. H. O. McGregor, Mrs. Philip Pike, Mrs. Mattocks and Dr. Emma }.1unson with a Christmas bazaar a·,1d card party in November. Past presidents \\•ill take charge o{ December's Oiristmas tea in conjunction with Junior Ebells. Stanley Statia, dt'CC¥:aling. Al.So 1trving are. the 1'1.mea. Nelson, Amerkanl.!m; Mat-1 tock,t, art inrtrucLion : Frank ' Merkel , Mna .Mulek and tlerbert Anderson, hospitality and ldentlficatlon: Elsie Eg- gert, California history and landmarks; E. 11. "Finster, tn- temaUonal affairs : Frank. In- dian aHairsj CI a, y ton Thompson, lite-r ature; Adrian JoyMr, veteran's affairs, and Jvan Rebert, law -enforeemeot and leglslatlon. Others are Dr. Jl.1unson, historian; aad the Mmes. Atarion Gentle, record book : Robert Jacobs, n e w s e t t e : Pike. newsette ma i Ii ng ;I Loakes, seals and emblem.1 ; John La ma r, inspiration; \Valdo Nyberg aad Daisy1 t-.1organ. luncheon reserva- tions; Goetz, prowam, and Harold· Ahrendt, pianist. Mrs. Thompson and ~irs. Robert Stabler are handling the yearbook and M r s . Thomas-Beckwith is in charge of publicity and the prt;ss:_ J I. J UPHOLSTERY M8ANSI OUALITY, INTIO•ITY, s••YtCll. c•AP:TSMANIHll", WI ACC•llT CH ... 1..1..IENGIS WE Lll(I l lAUTllllJL P:UaHITUlll FOR flAOTHER's DAy •RlbbOn Melfn1ue' of cllna· free Cr• ptlon • of [n k• Ctepeset ... nylon Is IS l!&ht as merin1ue. It's !he cover• up that doesn'I &Ive you • covered leelinr. Imported nylon lace ed111 the ·r ash1on·Fit' bodic1. Fashion color~. Demi 30-36: Short 32 36; Av. J<t.JI Fanciful Trip Fetes Mother's Day Travel SecUon members will see the Civic Ught Opera pro- duction of "Zorba" \Ved- nesday, May 13. Students of Mrs. 0 . G. Mattock are hosting their first lea aod art ex:hibit Tuesday, May 19, from noon to 3 p.m. Mr!. Philip Pike's Hobby Stttion convenes ~1onday, ~fay 11, in the ~1a Mesa home of Mrs. Jack Frank. at 10 a.m. The New Members Section is meetin~ for lunch Tuesday, Y..fay 26, at ll:lil a.m. in the Coffee J. Jakosky, chairman af Book Section Five has scheduled a meeting in the Newport llarbor Yacht Club at noon. Friday, May 15, M r s . t-.lrs. Morga n is planning an •42-5176 646·8058 international luncheon and1~~~~~~~~~~ Mothers ,.,,ill be feted during A Holiday in Acapulco. an annual dinner dance sponsored by Sts. Simon and Jude Men's Club, J-luntington Beach. The semi- torm~al_ event will take place at 7 p.m. Sa~urday, M~y 9, in the Pacific Coast Cfub, Long Beacb. Preparing for festivities are (left. to right) Chuck Senne-- wald, chair1nan, and l\.1r. and Mrs. Neal Lou ghran. Tickets, at $7.50 per per- son. may be obtained by calling Senne'''ald at 536-2850, or Bill Martin, 962-4684. . something s pe~i;I I • · _,, '" .... ... .,, • ..,, ______ .,.,_ __ ....,e·, ~ --~ Fof~m ~~!~ER Senior Coeds Bid ~~ ~ To Traditional Tea ! 'IP..~ IS iXTR.t. SPECIAL! elin9eri• 1 , ••• ,1.tt.. /I \\: ~ • ••• b.. . ' \ t'{\ \ . ~~p~!, e bikini' · I .. 1-ligh school seniors from the Orange Coast and their mothers will be guests of honor at th e annual Newport Harbor PanheUenic !\·Iother-Daughtcr Information Tea fron1 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday, May 9. rvirs. Roger Turner will open her Linda Isle home for the traditional event \Vhere the senior girls receive infonnation On various aspects of col! Jege life. · r •. r i I L 'Louise Houghton, 'Chairman ol Book Section Six, has plan· ned for a ~luck luncheon in the home of Mrs. C. R. Forbes. 1\.1embers or the Cultural Arl3 Day will conven e \\lednesday, May 13, at t p.m. in the clubhouse to hear Jl.1rs. Leon Rudd give a book review. Vows Exchanged fashion show for February and I t-.1.rs. Joseph Sahagen Is direc- ting-the-April flea market. More chairmen are the lilmes. C. R. Croul, children and youth, and ~1 o r g a n , George de Vries. Harold Ham· mer. Lois Kielsmeier, Pike, Marvin Nelson, Forbes and Atlanta Home Picked The marriage of M i s s Kathryn Lenore Ne Ison , daughter of Mr. and Y..1rs. Charlie S. Nelson of Hun- tington Harbour, and Josepll Harrison Pl(ford Jr. has been announced by her parents. and Jl.1rs. Joseph Harrison Pigford or Birmingham, Ala:, reC1!ivcd his BS in commerC1! from the University of Virginia whe re he was af· fillated with Sigma N u fraternity. He holds a commission as first lieutenant, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and has raultless. .... ....,.y.o# starch Makes short work of the wrinkles j · I . ;I I , e intim1f• f r · ~ .} I w1.1r 1 A style show ~·ill be presented by area girls now attending colleges i' cind universities, ~featuring the appropriate attire for differe nt occasions, l \vith A'lrs. Fred A. lio\vse_r as director. litrs. Charles Vandervort. former files chairman will ans\ve r ques-l lions regarding sororities and present rush dates and information fo r rush The bride j5 II graduate or \\lllSDn High School , Long Beach and attended Golden \\lest College and UCL Sile is a fonner stewardess with Eastern Air Lines. served in the E u r o p e a n 1._....,_..,. __ ,;;;._,...._;;,....,_..,....;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;..., tlleater . r-"'----~"' If All ' I\' 9 EAU"I IFU1,.l Y GIF"I Wll:AP~EO I J~ I '1;>l 1ii' S•""Y C1rl"'1' "81 Com!orlllllt In Your C:u~1" 250 Ea1t 17th Str••I Cett• Mne Hillt,... S11•oro -,41-5431 - -NEWPORT INTERIORS ' it I ., The bridegroom, son of Jl.1r. The couple \Viii 1nake their home in Atlanta. registration. · j~~~~~~1vfiriiRiGGiJ~Niirl/Ai'•~s1---,~~~~~ Highlighting lbe tea will be lhe presentation of the Minerva Medal SNIP 'N' STITCH SHOPPE and the $500 cash a\vard \Vhich accompanies it, to th e Harbor Area girl deemed mos'I. outstanding scholastically \vho is attending a fo ur-year col- lege and is a member of a PanheUenic-affiliated sorority. Decorations will be centered around sorority life including mementos, pins, pennants and sorority magazines, and table centerpieces will feature pinks and greens. . Chairman of the event is Mrs. Roy June an d assisting her are the ~Imes. Kenneth Slough, Virginia Bollman, Claud Harmon and C. Paul DuBois. .o\nyone interested in attending may further information. ·- call l\lrs. Jun e, S<ID-1483 for Sun Fash ions Brighten Day A bouquet or sunny fashions rangements are the ~1mes. \\•ill highlight the 10th annual Jack Fier, Stanlty Vitt , mother-daughter luncheon and William Colmer and David fashion show sponsored by Brenner. Temple Sharon's Sisterhood on Those interested in reserva- Jll ~ E•it C o11f Hwy. • Corona Phon• 673-8050 BUDGET A LITILE OUT OF BALANCE 1 G iv1 ut • ch•nc• to ~1lp! Our ttor1 i1 tlock•d wi!h "F1bric1 for F-•t hion." Sprint i1 fun, •1111 "'' 9 u1r1nl1t you'll 901 JO invol¥1d cr1•lint orit iri.I clotho1 for th• ftmily, you won't find tim1 to worry 1bout th• world 1itu1tio11. Al10 !ht mon of tho hou11 will bo moro thon pl111•d to ••• hit ft mily f•1h ion1bly clr1111d •t 11vin91 of SO% or mer1, over b1tft1r fltcly lo woor f11hion1, th•n•1 to • cl1¥1r incl i1l1~toJ wif1, VIRGINIA '.S. Mom, M•y I Ith i1 yo11r ch1nc• lo 9•in mort 1twinq k11owltdt1! A fr11 J1mo111lr•lioR •f 11 :00 •m •nil 2:00 pm •• 9ivift9 yeur J tt ll th1 p1of111ion1 I lou'h hy 111i11t th1 wond1rfu/ Uni.,.uo Zipp•rs, Saturday, li1ay 9, at 11 :45 a.m. lions may call Mrs. J-larold Use Yew '-kAm.,icard or Motter CHrt• Chairman or the show in Sabel,, ~642-4989~~·:_ ____ ~1 ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ the Sheraton Beach Inn. Hun---- 3326 East Coaal Highway Corona del Mar, C•llklrnl• WILTON HOLT 67S..f4Jt tington Beach. is Mrs. Harry Brown. Assisling with ar. , Mother's Day Sale 2300 Harbor Blvd. Harbor Center MAY 7-8·9 100% POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS .... 19 W' •Ml -Tod~Y't 11111111 1elllno ~ltrlc t.«1111t nl 11$ .... , •<HI wt!lf INIUre• '"" UIY 10 ''"" (-!rUCllori l•t . l.U 100°/o NYLOf'I JERSEY .... ·•~•" """'" """· ·~· •·• 2.69 yil. - Dan River Mill Ends . 69¢ yd. Daisy Pillf • . . . 1.79 yd. r w &t'' wNt -w .. 11 <tf'!ll wur ......,,, ltt. l,U .,.. ..... -'°" ~lyQ~f .,,., ... llOC1<od &Ill¥ IMfMrll. .... 1.N Whipped Cream Prints 1. 98 yd. Terry Cloth • • • • ... wife -No-I'°" (/~, lilt' llOf'rtlllf'. ""· )·" Polyester Crepe • . S.49 yd. Bonded Crep e 0 ' "lk -s.11 1111,o(l'I, .... I... U" wi.t • KettleclJth·Cl:attercloth·Weavercloth U" Wiit -"ll'llt It 1..C:~'I ftwor ll9. "°"" Plll'ftl.,IM!'o t~TIO~ . ...... " . . . 2.49 yd. •1111. 1.n 1.69 yd . ' . -------------------- AT EDISON'S ELECTRIC LIVING CENTER "SPRING INTO SUMMER" Spring Into Summer with fresh ldeas for home entertaining. Easy and effortless entertaining doesn't just happen, it takes planriing and preparation. The Edison Home Economist invites you to a pro· gram that. will help with planning and show how your electric ap- pliances will take care of the preparation and serving . The program will ~ he!d in the Island House, ft~asbion Island . New· port Center, on Friday, May 8 or Saturday, May 9, at 11 :00 a.n1. U you have any questions, please call 547·7581, Ext. 278. EdiS<'ln's home economhts will answer qUCltiorp tnd show you techniques for ihtifcy, timc-sa•in& ux of mod~n clccu:ic appli.anca. Brins a friend-. atJk.e ocw friends, •nd discovtt valuable aew homemakin.; b.int1. A1w1/1er commu11i1y service o~ Southern Ca!llorn11 Edrs on Comp1ny MOM ... (But we'll i11clu.dr daughter) "MIRACLE WIGS " The INSTAN T HAIR· DO ! .) • , . for vtc1lionift9 911!.,bouh. Ju1 I 1011 it in YO"'f D19 I ft~O it •fo.,91 lru1ho1 Into your own olyle i11 • FLASH! lf1 t o •••T lo .... ,It inti 1lyle your1•lf. 100 '!.. K•111k1lo11 fi b••. THE TRAVELER Streich ''P· curly O• 11mi curly lop with l•p•r•cl n•c•. ~ ..... ss·. ;;~ ........ $19.95 , ~: . •.· TH E VOYAGER :· W ith or wilhoul p•d , fo r th• lon9•• look. St vt 17. ;;;:;, ...... $22. 95· ~: TH E "GARBO" •' ;; . Htndm•dt for th• ltl••I in l11hio11 1tvl11. S1~• SJO. ;;;:;, ...... $29.95 ·. Melodie, Chris or Barb will cut & style your wig in '·· less than 30 minutes! .. · :: FALLS F1l!1 add th1 1tro.,,.11in9 fotuch I~ vo1•• crowftint ,rory! S•~• now on owr 1ul· 1+1ncl in9 11l•clion, Demi Falls $rro S7 • , , , • , • , NOW $22.95 ,., . :: : : 18" to 20" Falls ,.,, ., How $32. 95 -" Wig Falls .... "' ........ How $42.95 :· t.i: : • Long Falls ............... How ' $52.95 "} CASCADES • m IJ4 , WIG & BEAU TY allie j SALON 250 E. 17th STREET DAi l Y TtJ.l 5:30 TH URS. & FRI. TILL 1:00 COSTA MESA 548-3446 ... ·. .· . . , • ·: -: -• .r-~--y ---.-, --~---~--~-~--------~---... -..... ~.,-. ~,-----~·--~--·------~~------~~.,-.... ~-............ --,....,.....- ' . DAILY PILOT ~\ltdntsday, May 6, 1970 RIB STEAKS OR ROASTS , U.S.D.A. CHOICE Ol·MAYFAIR 81.UE IUlllON WELL TRI-ED, All CUTS INCLUDED lb. BREAKFAST SPECIALS SKINLESS LINK SAUSAGE ~l~ti 33' SLICED BACON :mm.;~,?. "0 """" " 1•: RATH SLICED IACON . ------" 89' RATH HAM SLICES ~'5'1.'I.''~"~-·------98' • ' MORIMIATFOR ·YOURMONIY AT MAYFAIR "YES " WE HAVE SLASHED Ptuas FQR EVERY CUT IS GUAIANTUD TO li TISFY THIS .FANTASTIC SALE, IUT WE HAVE NOT ~Ri:oo..:t~~·T~:i:~y·~~KcJ;Ef.:~ IEDUClb QUALITY. WE FEATURE ONLY TRIM OUR MEATS. REMEMIEI. THE IEST' U.S.D.A. CHOICE 01 MAYFAIR BLUE RIB -BUY IS MAYFAIR'S 81.UE RllBON MEAT AT !ON IEEF. LOW. LOW PRICES. ~LEAN BEEF CHUCK STEAKS U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR MAYFAIR BLUE RIBBON STEER BEEF ...... . PORTERHOUSE or $ '-BONE STEAKS TA~~~ff U.S D.A. CHOICE OR MAYFAIR BLUE RtBBON STEER BEEF.... TRl~ED \ BONELESS STEAKS CEN.TER cur CHUOC, SWISS, OR'fAM llY U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR MAYFAIR BLUE RIBBON STEER BE EF ....... ·-·····• 38 lb. 7-BONE ROAST BEEF SHORTRIBS U:s .D.A. CH DICE DR MAYFAIR ILUE RlllON U.S.D.A. CHOICEOI MAYFAIR BLUE RlllDN . ALLCENTER 50" CUTS-WELL 'r TRIMMED . lb. LEANNO • • " WllTE, WELL 'r TRIMMED lb. , U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR MA YFAJR BLUE RIBBON STEER BEEF . •·. IOllELISS ROUllD STEAll tuu c uT -1>. SI .19 BEU SHAllllS Cl Nm cuT ........ __ ...... __ •· S9t BOllLISS ROUllD STEAll ~18.:-lb.Sl.29 BOIELISS IOUllD IOAST ~,g~ ~$1.19 SlllOll TIP STEAll 10N1.1m ____ .... 1>. $1 .39 FRESH UOUllD CHUCK """"" ___ ,., 79t RUMP IOAST "'""" .... ---... ••. 98c WATEIMElOll RUMP ROAST ......... • $1. 19 N~l~~1,.,!!~R~N~~!l~!!!E~~ .. !~.~-~-~!.~ ................. lb. 59( s for ma_y 1r of-1176? OL19112 JOHN DOL 11124 MA.I N St. t:vr:RYWHtRt. CAIJr. 9003• ''NEW'' PERSONAL CHECK CASHIN<i CARD IF YOU HA VI NOT llCllYID A NIW CHKIC CASHING CAllO CON- T ACT THI STOH MA,NAGll OF YOUI LOCAL MA Y•A• MAtKIT fOlt A 'flHlllD CUSTOMR CHICK CASHING AP,tJCA TION FOIM. IEMEMIEI! NO CHARGE FOR CHECK CASHING AT MAYFAIR ~--------________ _, m~Fair frozc.n. food.--.... ORANGE JUICE LIBBY FROZEN 6-0Z. CAN -s --.~mIDJfair Liquors---... ~~AR~~~~ COLD DUCK 1~:1~~s $ t 79 $19.34 FlnH • ~1!'!,l!,'J!~,,L .. ~~l~K.!!., $ )99 !,q!,!,!~£,,A~l~~RU,~"$]49 ~2!~!.~~~~!~!LY~~~""" $ 31' SAVE OI AU PHOTO llllSHlllG AT lllJA YFAll KODACOLOIMIOLL DfVELOPED T $295 AND 12-4"x4" SUPER COLOR .V PRINTS ($4.72 VALUE) ."'II ....................... . UJnJIW~W WWJ GIANT PUNCH Lysol Spray DISINFECTANT 7°0L Sill v~~H~~D~~~f's Thurs . .Sun., M•J 7·10 ~:::e.'.'~. ~.a~... ~ 149 N0.1 CAN MARGARINE AU.SWffl 1-ll. D!A l PAI,,.<(~- f?ETERGENT DEAL PKG ................. .. ~~ .... m,Ji DtWiy Spoomfs! ARDEN ICE CREAM ,_4f$1 fLAVOR fRE SH HAlF GAL. FIG BARS .\UHSl1IN[ 24-ol. N:.G ••• ....... ___ 59' if.9.n11!'oqyI_~ .~ ~s~----· .. 89c tailn TISSUE SC0T S!NOtE ROil----·-1 5' STll 'ISOV 2'JS• GOLDEN GllAIN l 7/1 ot. PKG., t INC CIUllll ' l " Gl.OltT SPIAY FOAM 14 Ol. 51,lE -·I ~J~~~ .... _ .. ______ s 1 •• --43' FlflSCHMANN'S sort I ·Lt. PKG.-· llSTUT COFFIE s , Kll..GER'S 6-01. JAii 1 O IKllUI l'UKI 8 fV'INITUltE WAX 7-0L Sllf --1 • fOlGll'S COff& , 1 4.&.CAN .S.J.65, l·ll.CAN __ aJ Advertlsftl Prlctt Effective 7 Full Days ThurMlor, Mor 7 tin Wed., May 1 l MAYFAIR MARKO :'..'.:'uu 175 East 17th Stteet, Costa Mnc1 Mother's Day 45c Cookies ......... ,.,," Gift $159 Chocolates............ - 30-w. $2.99 WWUYJOOWWW Wedntsday, May 6, 1970 Wtdntsd1y, May 6, 1970 • '. DAILY PILOT ::Q ' •• . . :· • " . . " • ..:; : ' l : ' ' . . ' : .. }. " . , • ARE LOW pRICES (t , "Ralphs is the one store where you get the high quality your family wants and the low prices ; .,1 your budget demands. You know exactly what you're paying for each item because each item ' hos just one low UNliRlCE-a price that's olways lower than multiple prices. With UNl PRICE, ' ADVERTISED SPECIALS EFFECTIVE 7-DAYS THURSDAY THRU WEDNESDAY, MAY 7 THRU 13 MOllE FROZEN FEATURES ~ cuf'GREEN °BEANS . ' 'j GIA.DE"· 7 VARIE Tl~S IN llUTTfl SAUCE 9.oz .. . FRESH-PACT VEGETABLES · 6'\0ITON, l ·OZ. ' MACARONI & CHEESE 19' 29' 19' ,..---------------------, I JIFFY PRODUCTS : ! CAKE MIX 1&~~13ci i FROSTING 7 ~0~1· l L---~----------------~--J g-Ho OLD FASH IONED 11:;-~-iiflii-tii" ASSORTED 1h -GAL. 1ilCE CREAM c OOTANT.BREAKFAST -49( . l{ff!>DELI COTTAGE CHEESE @t!%!> PINT CTN. 31 ( QUART CARTON 57' ~SALADS POTATO, GERMAN POTATO, COLE 3 3 ( SLAW, MACARONI, HEALTH 15-0Z. NABISCO SPOON SI ZE, 12.oz. BOX 29c FRlilTANDERiNKS~CAl ~~::H 2 7 c SHREDDED WHEAT KIDNEY BEANS c~;;~w~:~· 13' ALMOND ROCA u~;,~~-~~·y 39c ~" BAKERY PRODUCTS VARIETY I you'll find Ralphs prices to be lowe.r than ever." ~ 1\-.tc.ll. -~ TIDE ONE 3-LB. 1-0Z. GIANT BOX llMIT I PER COUPON • l COUPON PER CUSTOMER • MAY 7 thrw lJ, 1970 4'!!Q> HOME ECONOMIST . . . . • . • • ' . .. LEO'S SLICED MEATS BEEF, HAM, CORNED BEEF, PASTRAMI, DARK TURKEY, SPICY BEEF THINS 3.oz. 33c ·.. BREAD c \\ 8UJTERMILI(, CRACKED WHEAT, 3 3 WHITE TURKEY OR CHICKEN,J-01 .......... 43 ' HEBREW NATIONAL SALAMI CHUBS ~ ICNACKWUIST, $119 ·ot~•ANICS 120T BORDEN 'S SLIC ED AMERICAN CHEESE FOOD INDl"!DUi'.llY 49c W~A~PfO 8 Ol HERDERS 1 V2·lB. lOAf MOTHER'S DAY CAKE ?~~~ $1 29 COffEE CAKE 49c LEMON PINWHEELS CORN MUFFINS '""G' o" 39c ®" HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS Gillette PLATINUM PLUS 88( INJECTOR BLADES f'KG. O~ 7 BlADES SCOPE MOUTHWASH ,,.ou "" '°"'' 99' VOTE TOOTHPASTE HOZ. TUI!. '""'·''OH 49 ' BUFFERIN an. 99c I SECRET 1.oz. 63C TABLETS o~ 100 I DEODORANT •Oll-ON U.S. NO. 1 GRADE NEW WHITE ROSE c SPRING CORN TENCER SWEET EARS VAL_ENCIACALIFORNIA 12( ORANGES ~:;, LB. RED RIPE , WHOLE WATERMELON ~~~~~ LB. 10~ .. 8~. LEAN 'N TENDER FULL CUTS FULL cur ROUND 98~. BONELESS STEAKS WELL TRIMMED Bl~ RUMP ROASTS BONELE SS SIRLOIN TIP $11~ ROTISSERIE ROAST BONELESS INDIVIDUAL SERVINGS $1~B~ BREAKFAST STEAK BONELE SS BEEF 89~. BRAISING STRIPS BREADED FROZEN 89~. VEAL STEAKS ,-------------------------, i CORNE Os BEEF ABLRISKET • 98fa. i I . IJ•• I I ~ORNED BEEF BRISKET FLAT CUT • • • • . • ,. I ~------------------------~ SEAFOOD SEA-lECTIONS f•ESH fllllT HfAl 'N !AT PACIFIC 89< FISH 47c ROCKFISH ll. STICKS LI. ·----------------, i SHENANDOAH i : ROCK CORNISH ! GAME HENS ;:~~,", 69( 20-0Z. MIN. EA WT. • ~---------------- OSCAR MAYER OSCAR MAYER SMOKIE LINK UTILE FRIER SAUSAGE LINK SAUSAGE 11.01 . 79c PKG. I -LB. 89C PKG . "PROVINCIAL" BY SHEFFIELD • I "CAMEO" SATIN-BRUSHED STAINLESS ' DINNERWARE .:\t~. 29~. TABLEWARE 1:~1!{ 99.~ t SEE THE IN-STORE DISPLAYS FOR DETAILS :::...· YOUR NEAREST RALPHS STQRE IS .-LOCATED AT 9901 ADAMS BLVD., HUNTINGT~'l BEACH, Sto(e _Ho_urs_ 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Oaily ~------•. ----------------- • ., • • .· 1-. \. .. ·• DAILY PILOT INEXPENSIVE DISH THAT'S HIGH IN NUTRITION • '\ i . . . i; • • • Unusual Pie I R~f ipe. Search Proves Fruitful A Greenwich Village ftslaurant in New York City, 1peclalWng in T e x • M e x culaine, serves an interesting dessert called Osgood Pie. When we fint ate the pie there we didn't remember ever see.Ing a recipe for it. But aearchlng amonf our 3,000 cookbooks y i e d e d result.I: two cookbooks from Tau and ooe devoted to Southern cookery had venions of the desaert. Just to add variety, here's a new way to mate Osgood Pie. Although other Osgood Pies call for a baked pie shell, our recelpe uses an easy-tcr put·together and mighty good Oatmeal Crust NEW OSGOOD PIE Oatmeal Crust, see recipe 3 tablespoons butter, soft l/S cup boiling water 2/S cup raisins v, cup sifted flour 1h teaspoon salt ~~ teaspoon cinnamon 1f.i teaspoon cloves l large egg ¥.: cup firmly packtd dark brown sugar ih cup coarsely broken pecans B r aody-fiavored \Vhipped Rum Adds Interest Th~e yams are candied in a skillet. m•m 1frepare and bake t h e Oatmeal Crust; let stand at room temperature while you prepare the folloV(ing filling. Into a small mixing bowl ~uro the buUer and boiling water; stir to mell butter; add raisln1; set asldt. Into a medium mixing bowl silt together the flour, salt, clnnamoa and cloves; with a spoon beat in egg ' and broWn su1at; ,stir in raisin mixture and pecans. Tum into Oatmeal Crust. Bake 1n· a preheated 356- decree oven until set and browned -30 to 35 minute!. If edgt ol crust browns too much toward end of baiting cover it with foil. Serve warm or at room temperature with brandy-flavored w h i p p e d cream. OATMEAL CRUST 3 tablespoons butter, melted 2 tablespoons firmly packed dark brown sugar 1 cup quick-cooking oats 2 table1poons sifted flour In a small mil.ing bowl stir to1ether the butttr, brown sug- ar, Ojlts and floo r. Press firmly onto bottom and sides (but not on rim ) ol an S.inch gl.as,, pie plate. Bate in a preheated 350- degree oven for 5 minutes. Removt from oven. Use as directed in New Osgood Pie recipe. :; .. ·~ :• Hearty Dumplings Top Budget Booster RUA1 PECAN VAA'IS 2 cans (each 16 ounces) yams 3 tablespoons butler 1r2 teaspoon salt ·: Fi!J 'em up supper soups . ' ~· ~~~~~;n~gi~~.ith high quality !!. Here we 've served hearty !:: beef shanb with dumplings ;"'!. in sizzling broth for a man , ~ p le a s i n g variation rich in "(. flavor, aroma and nutritional _,. value. Select the center cul .· t~ of economical beef shanks for :: Easy-knit -~:,"tAea B~ ~ l! A knitted suit -jacket. ~.pleated skirt -just what a :; bu.sy, little girl needs. 1 Easy-knit suit! Use sport ~yam. Jacket knitted in one .~piece from neck down in- :.:cluding sleeves. Pattern 7069: ~ ~blld's sizes 2-4 ; 6-8: t().12 ., mcl. ~ FIFTY CENTS (coins I for ~each pattern -add 15 cents ~for each pattern for first-clas.s :;~Ung and special handling; , ... otherwlle third-class delivery !"!will take three weeks or more. a-to Alice Brooks, the DAl- g;LY PILOT, 105 Needlecraft :_.,.Dept., &1. 163, Old Chelsea ~ Station, New York, N. Y. ~ 10011 . Print Name , Address, )$.'ZJ,, P•Uen N11n1ber. iG BIG lf7t Ntedlecrafl ~ C.UtltC -tO pages, over 200 ~ ~1 J fret patterns! Knit, ~ c t Iiii'.ant.s, a r a: 7 I t ·~ .. ··---. • --1wea~ • ..,.t., w..:=el, 1wun ~suit. QUiit, embroider, weave. :~Mike 1oy1, gilts, gay afghans. :.Sad•-· " 8 JJllllTANT Glnl. Make I<> di)' -give tomorrow. 50 -· "It MlfJ lqtff to knit. crodtet., weave, sew, hook. 50 ...... ,• Book of iJ l'rlu Al ...... .-.;50 eenu. ••• Borca1n1 Qvt11 eoor 1 "'' II beautilul pt!IMll. !O cenls. I extra meatiness. For tender juicy beef. the shanks are sim1ncred in • seasoned broth until the n1ca1 is easily removed from the bones. If you wish lo do this ahead. simply st rain the broth and refrigerate. Then at serv· ing time it's ea\Y to skim the broth and rjlieat along \\•ilh the beef. To make the dumplings just stir up packaged biscuit mix , ?.dd a bit of parsley and drop by tablespoons inlo the sim- mering soup. \Vhen the dump- lings are light and fluffy sup- per is ready. A crisp green salad is all that's needed to go along with this good and beefy offerin g. F'or busy da ys any season, keep a file of dc>ahead beef stew, casserole and soup ideas handy. Less expensive cuts or excellent California beef lend themselves well to these fam ily favorites and have the same important nulrienls 3!' more elegant cu ts. BUDGET BEEF' SHANKS WITH DUA-1PLINGS 2 pounds beef shanks, (center cuts) I quart water 2 medium.sized o n i o n s . sliced I carrot, diced 21/1 teaspoons sail '-!! teaspoon thym e 1i teaspoon rosemary h teaspoon basil I bay leaf 4 sprigs parsley Dumplings 1 Combine all ingredients ex - cept dumplings. Cover tightly and simmer 2'h hour s . Remove beef 3nd separate meat and marro\V from bones. Discard bones. Strain stock and add to beef and marrow . Refrigerate until fat hardens. Remove and di583rd fat. Reheat beef and broth lo simmering. Top with dumpl- ings. Cover and cook slowly 15 minutes over low heal, without removing cover. Serve at once. ~1akes about Z quarts. Dumplings Combine I cup biscuit mix v.•lth I teaspoon parsley. Add liquid as biscuit mix package cli.rects, be11ting until well blen~. 0 r o p by lable- spOOnfuls onto simmering soup. 1~ teaspoon nutmeg Pinch of allspice 2 tablespoom dark rum 1,~ cup toasted pecan halves Drain liquid from yams into a large ski llet ; set yams aside. Boll syrup rapidly ov& medium heat U'l1til reduced by half -there should be about ~cup. Add butter. seasonings and rum and stir until blended : add yams and cook about S minutes more, spooning syrup over yams. Place in warm serving dish and sprinkle with pecans. Makes 6 to 8 ~ervings. Your modern washable revival kit Happy Mother's Day Special Prices -Thurs.-Sun ., May 7-10 Mother's Day Coke A reolly 1pe<101 co~e for ovr lovorilt people -Mofher~. Gift Chocolates U"lor9t1tably good -ti'>t Yery r1ic.e~ gih lor Mo1her"1 Doy. French Butter Rolls fo, Molh"" Doy dioo", C Flaky ond delicious -g•eol 3 9 Pkg . of 8 (Reg . 45') Mother's Day Cookies Buttery ric h -terrific lo serw ot Morher's Doy !eos. Pkg . of 30 45c Butterhorn Coffee Cakes Plg, of. (I ... •9<) .... "."""" " .... 3 9' .. Pkg.or 3(1i!eg.33c) ..................... 29c Blueberry Muffins ,~ •. or•!•••·., ,1 ............................. 3 5 c 15-oz . (Reg. Sl.69) $15 9 30-oz. (Reg. 13.29) $ 2 99 Van de kcrmp's. ~ IAKllllS A DIVISION OF GfN~tAl HOSr COi,. We bake the way you would, If you had the time. r . -- " I WITH SALLIE MOMSTOLGIA IN TIIREE TIERS AND ONE UPSTAIRS ••• And remember, 1r none ol these nt\I( gift t11bles turn your idea Jiaht on, food always amweii yes . . . Why not! A be~Uful ~1om's Day dimer catered (or two or seventeen • • • or even a foil ptetly covered box bubbling ·over with bright new eatables • • , The big search for . Mom's Day always ends in ecstacy "'·hen you Yisit the Richard's Hoose ol loving mom thoughts. UPSTAIRS FOR FLUFF AND FANCIES Gift shop where the tablecloths hang on ·~at hangers so you can spread out the profusion of daisies, aztecs, cobblestones !mid leafy thinP.' and try Olem on a displaY table for color To completely \VI a p herself in ... a bath sheet . . . even biger than a beach towtl In all the colors of the bath •.. Felicity sez right now Jn patlcrn and color . . . pinks With tangerine, greens or blue black with white or yellows with blue .•• and would you believe eve"1 bathroom tissue and paper guest towels to match , • . the decorator effect • • . sweetly pretty and primly calm ... Rolls of scented drawer lining, softly pad· ded, plastic coated to clean beautifully and .re-fragrance with her own perfume • . . pinks, blues or golds . a box of S"'Cet pint priced luxury any mom would adore . Everybody could get in on her story· telling act wlth a Destiny deck of cards ... fortunes for fun and aarnes. BIG DISCOVERY . FROM THE PATIO, . Rnsemhal Netter's great earthenware fondue pols. glazed yellow or orange with matching chicken fryers, individuals. and casseroles to usf.. on the. samt! candle wanner . • • G<lld A and Z book ends, or qootes or suns and moons . . . Her com on the cob would be smashing on a white Italian corn plat- ter with matching dishes . . . Serving dishes gone foocly . . . lemon colored cabbage leaves 'ror salads and sandwiches • • . caulinower chip and dip plates . . . a cookie jar like a giant crookneck Squash ... Shades of black tulips and blue carnations mix with Shalimar and Bayberry to scent her home wilh candle deliciousness . • • Candles hi hurricanes _ . roses, eggs or giant chestnuts • . . Even a l>chive candle. but it could, be a coil of rope to burn round and round ... Candles to hang from the ceiling slung in leather straps ... What fun over a bar or in the patio ... DOWNSTAIRS FOR COOKS AND GOURMET CATS .. , .•. A yellow casserole with a duck nesting <M top .•. Cute stacking caniiters . . -Jn hot hues or reool . . . sets of three tWilh handles on th e sides and only one lid to jugg}; • .. lo hold everything {rofn pistachio nuts to dad's lfixit nuts and bolls . . , •;The big pour is . while pit&;;s 15 designs and aizes droosle the gamot from big stews to itzy glazes. { The very newes~·i· t n cook~'a re ... Westbt!frld's try ply stainless s le e I delightfully covered on the see-side wlth gold or ~Ive poroolaln ... not to be confustd with Westbeod's Country Inn _ . . ertra thick aluminum, teflon 1tned . with lire same di s hwasher luscious porcelain outside. F'tdally an electric fondue pot, thermostatically controUed In S colors . . Ashpood cheese paddles or $Ice paddles . . . hang on the wall . . • The spleer ooes color via 12 lndlvldulll p)as-- lic cootalners of red, yellow , and green. ... After you'vt done the Gift Sliop • • • the:rt's always the Yacht SDoP • . . wtUch mom ti!lls 'her goofing off ohop """"' ..,. lhops for the 11tek's fOOd and rare. Ri chard'• -' • . ' t l l l t ' ' ' g n ' I e • e • • d • ' y I, d d • • ., .. " • • " ~ d • ~ ......... .... ... ~ ..... ~ . . . W_,, M11 6, 1970 DAILY PILOT fl. • PHONE 673-6360 FOR HQME DELIVERY IN OUR DELIVERY. ARIA _ ... "' . . ..... ... . .... . .,. . ' .• ' , ' i • • • • , • .._, I :,,_ ... \, \# ' I ', ' ' ..... i I '-r \ I I ,: '. ' " . \' .... •' \ ....... •,,,,,,-···· ...... , . .....~ .. . ... ···. .. I ' ' '"'•-. PRICES EFFECTIVE MAY 7, 8, 9 llBIT RICHARD'S HAS ONL y THE TOP Of THE &RADE u.s.o.A. CHOICE BEEF ESPECIALLY FOR MOTHER -A FESTIVE TREAT! PRIME RIB ROAST WeproporeltforHrycarvlng 1.09LB.' HAVE A IARIECUE FOR MOTHER . . .. . -. . . : ·~------------------------------~ •, '• •. • I SPENCER ROAST Ru1t over glowing c01l1 TOP THE BROILED STEAKS WITH MUSHRO OM ~AOIERA SAUCE 1.89LB. • • ....... ,.,, Organ SPENCER STEAKS The eye of the rib 1.89LI. BRAISE THESE WITH A SWEET ANO SOUR SAUCE Serened• For Your f>teasur• LIDO MARKET tENTER SHORT RIBS LIAN ENGLISH STYLE S5¢LI. PLAN A HAMBURGER COOKpUT FOR MOTHER by Bernice f•y NEWPORT BLVD. AT THE ENTRANCE TO LIDO ISLE LEAN GROUND BEEF 53¢LI. PllDDUEI FANCY, LARGE.SIZE, &ASY TO ,HL CALIFORNIA HAVEL ORANGES 8 LIS. $1 FRESH, READY TO EAT ROY Al HA WAllAN PINEAPPLE 59~. _ -HRVI TWiS!'WITH PRIME Riii. HOT HOUSI 9ROWN. TENDER IROWN STIAK ·Mushrooms ·12 L•· 39¢ ~~cniaNERs 2 POR 29¢ ~ DBLIEITBllEH KNUOSIH'I ALL PLllVORl YOGURTS 5 POR $1 BUOOIG, SLICED l oL Luncheon Meat 3 '0 • s1 AUNT CHRISSIES. NORWEGIAN. FINNISH OR SWEDISH STYLE, IMPORTED DANISH COOKIES , oz. 69¢ FANCIFOOD OF PARI S STRASBOURG Pate de Foie 2~ 0 '· 3 FOR $1 TASTE DANISH CHEESES! Demo. Thun., Fri. end Sat. DANISH CAMEMBERT, CREAM HAVARTI, SLICED TILSIT. ST. PAULIN WEO&!S, SLICED PORT SALUT All SPECIALLY PRICiOI PllDIEH PDDDI BIRDSEYE. Jap1nt1t, B1v1rf1n, D1n\1h, Spanl1k or Mt•lc•n\ I 0 o .. International Vegetables RICHARD'S ICE CREAM ~ OAL. SARA LH POUNO CAKE ti OL VAN OE KAMP'S HALIBUT IOI. 39c 69c 79c SPECIAL from KOLD KIST OIMO. THUR$., FRI., SAT. BEEF STROGANOFF 21 oz. 1.39 BURGUNDY BEEF •• oz. 1.39 Creamed Chicken 21 oz. 1.39 SIRLOIN TIPS 21 oz. 1.39 CHILI and B_EANS 21 oz. 89c V.CKY FARMS FRESH HEN TURKEYS SHOPPING AT RICHARD'S IS A GIFT YOU CAN ENJOY ALL YEAR LONG . A DIFFERENT WORLD AWAITS YOU HERE. YOU 'RE ALWAYS GREETED WITH A SMILE, AND SUPERB SERVICE. AND JUST ABOUT ANYTHING YOU 'VE EVER WANTED TO FIND ON A <i'ROCERY SHELF IS HERE. MANY THINGS ARE EXCLUSIVlL Y RICHARD'S ! .. A bouquet, • pl•nt, or • rom•nfic •rr•n9ement, to tell her whit a wond1rful Mother 1he i1. · ~ ORDER NOW FOR • : , •. ~ EARLY bELIVERY ' OPEN MOTHER'S DAY 9-12 A YUMMY SPECIALI! CINNAMON • APPLE SLICES 79¢ rt9ul1r $1 .00 L1v i1h e11orl,,..tnt1 of Blum1 1 E~y's & Allen Werh Cho,ol1ft1 for moth1r, toe. 'f}M1~tfie ~i6ttt1'l~itS~ A SPECIAL PRESENT FOR MOTHER CRYSTAL, SILVER, DECORATIVE ACCENTS, PARTY QOOOS . HANDSOME SPORTSWEAR , ANO MANY MANY MORE UNUSUAL GIFT IDEAS. OPEN MOTHER'S DAY 11 -4 for •ll you le1t minute 1hopp•r1! BAKERY FULL OF FRISH BAKED FLAVOR I 00°/0 Whole Wheat Bread 41 ¢ PERFECT WITH PRIME RIB Butter Flake Rolls 6 for 31 ¢ FOR MOTHER'S BREAKFAST Strensel Coffee Coke A REALLY SCRUMPTIOUS DESSERT 45¢ Lo-Cal Cheue Cake 89- ESPECIALLY FOR YOUR MOTHER A LAVISHLY DECORATED 7" MOTHER'S DAY CAKE l.49 " . • ¥ -' • ' I A 9rt1t dinner, ind the left ovtr1 1rt wonderful, too. 59¢LI. Cooked and Peeled Shrimp 2.98u. Reidy for Shrimp loui1, Cocktails , hor1 d'otuvr•• . CHICKEN A LA KIEV Rolltd tnd filled with butt1r & chives Stuffed Round Steak With 1 1prinklln9 of elmonds Stuffed PORK CHOPS With • sev ory persley dre11ln9 GROCERY M.J.Bo COFFEE 1 LB. M.J.B. COFFEE M.J.B. COFFEE KNUDSEN LA BON BUTTER SUNSHINE SESAMEE 2 Lt. l LI. 1 LI. 1.39 .... 1.29 LI. 1.29 LI. 79¢ 1.57 2.29 83c BREAD WAFERS f l/J oz. 47c GE RBER'S STRA INED BABY FOOD 4¥•ot· 12 FOR $1 HORMEL VIENNA SAUSAGE • oz. 4 "' '1 DEL MONTE PEAR HALVES ~~ 3 ,,. 89c DEL MONTE. TANGY IN SALADS GRAPEFRUIT SECTIONS~~ 3 ,,. '1C DEL MONTE Sliced PINEAPPLE ~~· 4 ,,, 89c DEL MONTE RE<;ULAR OR PINK PINEAPPLE - Grapefruit Drink ~~-3 ,,. 89c DEL MONTE FRENCH OR CUT GREEN BEANS ~~-4 ,,. 89c DEL MONTE I b .,, Seasoned Green Beans 4 ,,. 89c DEL MONTE CREAM GOLDEN CORN :.'z. 4,,. 89c DEL MONTE EARLY GARDEN PEAS :.' .. 4,.. 89c DEL MONTE, Nie• to s1ute with on ion• New Potatoes !~ 5 FOR 89¢ DEL MONTE STEWED TOMATOES ~~-4 ,,. 89c DEL MONTE Tomato Sauce •0 •• 10~89¢ DEL MONTE TOMATO CATSUP CONTAOINA -All 8 VARIETIES, 15 o L Cook Book Sauces 3~$1 .• :: ~~· ~1 :1 ,. " .. ~ .. ':/ -1t a2r11n uJszrilttJFanritsrr>JJhtrrau1F1sAa•r12121w1ss •r--. rrs r &Si 1t ,. • -K 1 11 r1ssnz•st1s•sJ7s1&12•2•r1n• .. llsEC£J1 1?.,j,_.c,._. MARKET HOM! &, GIFT SHOP. ~· LIDO YACHT .SHOP AN 1 HONY'S SHOE REPAIR. FLOWER SHOP CLEANERS OPEN DAILY 9-7. SUN. 9-6 OPEN DAILY 9-b OPEN DAILY . 9-b DAILY 9.5,10, SAT . •·I OP!N DAILY 9.6 DAILY 1:10·6, SAT. S:JO.I ' I • \ l . --------------. • • -~ .. , • -l l -., ....... / . Wednesda1, Ma, 6., 1970 .~-~'\ ' '.,,, ' k AMERICA'S FAVORITE SEAFOOD CURRIED , Flavorsome Import Cuisine Borrowed · From lndi'a Americans cornJume about ' a million pounds of shrimp a day -which makes this ·-rosy little shellfish America's favorite seafood. Although shrimping is the most valuable single fishery in the United · States, more than half the shrimp that Americans eat is lmported. 2 cloves garlic, halved 1/3 cUp1i.lJO;Ur ~ _, I tablespoon curry powder I tablespoon vinegar 3 cups milk l/, teaspoon ginger 11, teaspoon nutmeg Freeze Planned Overs t.iexico has always been the largest exporter or ~hrinlp to this country. India is rapidly catching up, however, "'ilh some 22 million pounds .or In- dian shrimP coming into thiS' country annually. A!J ·this im- ported seafood has to meet U.S. Food apd Drug Administration regufalion~. of 1,\1 teaspoon cayenne pepper 2 chicken bouillon cubes I teaspoon salt BURLINGTON, Vt. (UPI) -A Unifttsity, ol Vennont · Extension Service nutritionist has come up with a way to solve cooking·for-one blues. "Cooking for a large family drain s your budget ancl your energy:' says Aline' Coffey. "But if you live alone, you may find that either you aren 'l fixing many of the foods you enjoy -0r the re's always too much left over.·• As a solutioo, she proposes preparing your ownl frozen dinners. In short. cook a good· sized mc8l as if friends or relatives were visiting: then dole out several servings in separate foil trays, mark and freeze. For example, roast a good- sized piece of meat. Make some gravy and mashed potatoes, as well as your favorite v_egetab!e with seasoning. Put a serving of each food into the sectioned tray, cover the tray with foil, label and freeze. To serve, leave th.~ foil a.1 while cooking at 425 for aboot.20 minutes. "~ frozen dinners will give you variety in your meals and save you work," she says, noting meat freezes better with gravy on tt. "And you'll always be prepared for an unexpected guest or two. It 's just as easy to heat three dinners as one." Clean shrimp, if necessary. Simmer shrimp 1 to 3 rhinutes rourse. in court bouilloo, or water Speaking (lf.-India and -t<> which pick1ing spices have shrimp, this Asian countiy been added (1 teaspoon per always has been the wurce quart of' water). ~ of fascinating searood dishes, Melt butter « ·nutrgerine such as the . world-fan;ious · in a sauCepan. T~ garlie Shrimp Curry. You~.Will 'fK>ie in buUer-unUUight!.Y browned! that the recipe below gives Remov_e @:arijc. :S. the shrimp ingredient in two Remove pan froJP Mat> and fonns: in the shell, aad peeled stir in flour 'and ~·powder. and deveined. ~ Add vineg411', and milk, mtxing A goeid rult to temember · until Slit~ Add ginge5,.'1mt- is tha t one poUnd ()f shrlinp meg, cayenne .pe~r.-t91!Uoc in the · shell yields one-half · cubes and salt. to three-quarters of a pound · Ret~ _pan to heat 1 an~ of cleaned shrimp. cook, st1rrmg constantly until SHRIMP CURRY 2 pounds shrimp, fresh or frozen, or 1 'h. pounds peel- ed and deveined frozen shrimp 1/3 cup butter or margarine lhickene'd, about 2 to 5 minutes. Add shrimp to sauce, reserving some shrimp for garnishing dish. Heat. Serve with hot .fluffy rice, chutney, bananas, coconut and peanuts. ?\1akes 4 to 6 servings. SAVE 20%-30o/o USOA INSl'ECTEb STEAKS! . IJ-foL""'"'" '11.98 12-12 "' ,.,.., ...... 11 98 rDRTERHOUSE STEAKS ., .. LI. ,.,.., ... Top Slr1oln STEAKS '1" LI. . ~ •... , ... · H~U .. ut SIRLOIN TIP f lLET STIAKS RUMP, EYE, .. Sf • OUND ROAST '; '.... . 98C LI. N .. 1 Slk911 ,. !a1torn Meaty IACON SPARE RIIS Ste 59c LI. ' FULLY GUARANTEED WE J.CCEP.T FO~D · sf AMPS ALL MEAT FILET T·IONE WIENERS IOLOGNA Ml!;NON STEAKS ' 49Cu. ,, ... LI. $129 LI. '•ncy Cubo Cenhr CUt SPENCER IEEF STEAKS ROUllD' STU:K· STEAKS RUMp .ROAST ,, .. LI. 98c LI.· 87• LI .. COLOR~D .. ~ l~lnaChoic• FRTIRS POlK HOPS IRISm 27Cu. and Country ROAST Stylo Rlll1 59C LI. 89c LI. CU't Up 31< Ill. ly The Plec:a JOP SIRLOIN ''"' Larnlt Rll CHOPS lalt~ '"' ·U ER · ,, .. LI. 79C LI. 59c,.. .. ····-........ . ' l2-t•1:N-·Y•rk1 •• 10.49 1.2-~0 01. "' llrloh11 11 .• 98. Buy The B•g •nd· S•ve I REF. TOP.SPECIAL· I LI. T·IONIE. STE' ... ICI 4 LI . 7·IONIE llOAST 3 LI, L.AllGIE l"Olllt CHOl'S 'La. e11,. P.1.n111;s 2 LI. SAUSAGI. J LW. WEINl!ltS II LIS. ALL FOR '15"' WORKING MAN'S I L.O. T•IONE STEAKS J LI. 7•001fl ROAST 4 LI. OONELl!fSS l'llEI' STI W 6 LI. l"Ollk CHOPS S \.0. POlll( ltOAST 6 LI. ASST, LUNCH MIAT I LI. Wl!INl!ltS I! L8. f:lltYEltS · · ·5 · to <I LI. 36 STEAK &. ROA.ST PA.CK. J LI, RO LLID'ltOAIT I LO. SIRLOIN TIP•ITIAKS •-l"LO. TOP SIRl:Ollf STEAKS 1 L ... T·OONS STl!AICI S La. r-IOMI llGAST • • $LI. ".I.MILT CHUCIC ITIAICS , •· 11 LI. SALISIUltY ITl!AICI , 1 LO. llOU•D STaAICS 42LL 141 ~' •• RETAl~,OEPT. OP[N 6 DAYS. A. WEEK C&MMEATS ~ ·,~:;:o ~ -~~&AKL~J)[ 13 25 Warehouse Rd. fS~ ...... ~ "ULL PltllM MAT DISPLAY THUlllDAY-4'11 loAY -SA TUlll DA,., •, I ), Co sta Me sa 540·61 76 1~~~ • I --· -- ------ ......... -. -. -- . . ... . , .. ·~ " •• ' . . .,. ' •• ' "' -~ --. .. ,·~aurn~ ' ' . ,Iii.EE LEMON LEAF AND FLORAL PAPlR AVAtLABLE W ITH THE PURCHASE OF ALL CUT FLOWERS ·•. '.' ... -.... -, .. ' ,. ,. . . ' .. \, ~-· \ ) :. ' ........ ' ' • j • .. I -' l'•-1.-I . ' " I .~ .. • ~-. ' ' ' ' ' . ' ' ' • .. ,•~n;;;;p;I ~i .,., .,., ;;p·(~t J~l"Ji"ji[~I );;;;oi ~: ~! i~~.a:~.: ·: ' . . WE WILL ALSO liAVE AVAILABLE I. COMPLETE SELECTION OF SP!:CIAL TY FLOWERS, SUCH AS LADY POCKEr B()Ot(, CALaot.ARIA, CALADIUM, "MAltGO KOSTER .. .-t/t ROS£ PLANTS, -4'",TULIPS, LILAC, POM PONS, ANTHUfl:IUM AND CUT TULIPS. . .,,..,.I \" -\ . ,. . . . ' ' ·: i . . ' • I I 'i . I Wld 11J.,, Mil 6. 1970 DAILY PILOT 43 1rAlpha Beta's , .. Man in Blue . $ays: STEVE HLIOT~ .' ) • Store Manlger' • • ,,J NO. HO~L YwpQp '( LOS ANGELES .. '' • -,, • - ' STOU MOUU' M,OM. tfir• ••1. II AM.t •M • SAT .... SUM. 10 AM .. 7 PM ... . . . Better Protl11t1 of DISCOUNT PRICES! " I, • ~ Fanta,stlc ~SC4Nllnts Rm Rl~·•"WHOI.!' ., . WAnRMBON l~. VINE RIPEHED · : • • CANTALOUPES ~~·: SWEET WSCIOIJS ~ • ..._;_ '\. t HONIY-DEWs-m :..:-· .;...., t • . ~-' ... .. ' ". · . A SA1:AD FAYOIUlI ~ t AVOCADO$.~ 3:1,~0 .. )l'ltl'lfl 'll!Ul EASY-TO CARVE YOUR ALPHA ea A NEICHBORllOOO BUTCHER ~. (!HE MAN IN THE RED APROHI PllOUOLY OFIIRS \.,BUTCHER'S PllDE MEATS :-._ MEATS YOU'Ll II PROUD TO SllVI 11o.. \ AT LOW PISCOUNT PRICES • QUAUTY l \ SATISFACTION GUAIAlfTEEO U.S, GOVERNMENT fHSPECTED IE£f \ ALl'llll lfJA ~.VTWrl·J'lll! ROUllD ..... 95' STEAi IH IL' USDA G8ADE A ARMOUR STAR • FRESH FROZEN CHUCI', .... 63' 'CORNISH . ROAST CUT ll . . . ; .. 11\\¥-·---l~~c ---GAME-H~N~-.. ~ ld-.. . tJ.1 mmn nm • OO'OltA&t wM.. GROUND BEEF ECONO PAK 55' ~~ . IL 20-0UNCE MINIMUM BAKE OR BARBECUE EA. . BERMUDA ONIONS SWEET NUI AllCY • RAVEL ORANGES 1tclPf 1t4l$ '#flit• PAM ponto on• JtlEO tKICllM WILSON'S • 1-lB. PACKAGE • SlJC!J) lCAll AlfD f\AY'OIM 89' .. OUNO ·ROUllO • lUICl llEAL FAVORITIS USDA GRADE A • NO BACKS. NECKS OR GIBLETS @BESTOF49c FRYER •· ' . I . \ " 4 • I ·ra~~~iit 2 Ml··f. ·. ' .. . ,, ' .· FQR • ... -1'7: . ~ ...... .. 1! 97' 1.:::. CRISPRITE 64c BACON OYllC •lAln' Ill COllVIKIPIT FOl!i,,!o\11' ·ii!:•• FRUH lllAT LOAF UV• DlllCtOUI wm1 98' • YUL ltlDS 111:m1.111 • • • • .,,_. JU. P>CKAG£ • SLICED 89 :SUPER sEm .L;;., JONES DAIRY FARM . . , ~,ft"~~ BACON r,B)~Jh''" 49• Y001I: ~ OF • ~ l.U. PMlllAQ( • SlttO ' . ~ ~66.!CIC J'•nJ'Olffl8ACON791 'Miiinsa mw"'"1~ 1'HBf MEAT PRICES !FF£CTIV£ THURSDAY tt.fough WEDNESDAY MAY 7-1 J ' . 1HESE PROOUCt PRICES E°FFftr.M THVRSCAY throug1't WEDNESDAY, MAY 7·13 SGMl /lll'M WA SAvt WITll 11.l'llA EA'S SOME AU'HAIOA !TOID DllC-HAl'E 'lllCI TOTAL DISCOUNTS EY[RY DAY !TOJllS OllCOl#T ll.t.llW: J>llCt • • j ii....;) 12,176 TOTAL !OIAL LllSCOU NTS lVl~Y OAY KRONA CH!l&Ml:. !!AND or 5 ' scH1c1 liam'R 1A11D pr' 1" . J'i'J'BaBY0POENWDER .85' 681 ..__~ DISCOUNTS Serve ev"•n ,...,.. wit• OOUlll DIJCOUNrSI TlltJ' -""" """'-' far ,... ..... 110111bt1 Dy lf*l9I (lllrdllM. ll'lfl ceet ,.w:::u-....... Oii " ,.... LllcM: ,., . tllelll tllrociel*lt ... nor.. lll'f, Hil LAii~ lltRDI --"~;;;;.;;:i .... rtATHt~ ~~· RUISTMT 299 01\. ~~·· AUDIT FREE .,.., 1" so11r: rroan CtiAHr.AM" ~ ........ KING SIZE BOX GAIN ', . ,.; . DET;llOlttr ~~ 136 31'-. ' lllPHA lfTA • WtSCOHSIN • MIU> 93' CHEDDAR CHEESE i'.(,b~ • @)CliA'ii'.Toir1'L1.As.W 161 PRECIOUS • 9-0U'NCE PACltAQE l:Cr 521 Mou1rella C"-,,.. fl• AlPHll lfTA. • 12-INCK • 20-C>UNCE CHEESE PIZZA .. vAWE 81 1 PtPPEllONI • ~-J .lt VALUE I.• cillis'EsPiiuoc' _.. 451 IMiTATION °MlLK ,JJ.i.· 371 "@wliiii '?"o"Pcili"ii~ . w 431 iio0'oiliss1NG . . ; .w 371 llrfll lllf • • :Z.l.AY!ft 145 llOTllm DAT CAlll vAJ.. 111 . . , . j •• .,. SAYLORS• 1-1.B. IQl 1.95 VALUE ClllCILAlt SUPl'lllE llltHl 1111 ° •_4:-PACC 29c DWDT HI'S t.u. 1" 21' lll'"'IUI • 1-18.LOAP' 391:: ... IAISlll DUI . VAL ... ? • • ' . ,, • ' ' 111 T Al (11' f oil'NI ' I 1 f f. T IJA Y TOMATO IOUP NO. I CAN W 10. VEOtTAlllAH BEAN 15-0%. Jk' lk • NO: 1 CAN VEOETA!IU: OJI IEAM M J&. I v Alll£TY PAC< 12 l'OPSICLES \ ' F'it'Esii FRYERS 29~ KOU> Kl!!• 12.0UNC[ P>CKAGE 75-BUTIER BEEF STEAKS · TOTAL OISCOUNIS [Y[RV DAY IOME Al.'llA 1£TA ITOll!S DISCOUNT CHAAlil nuci SPREcicil.ssu'li'AR . 29" 21 ~·LB. SAG • GRANULATED .ate '·lie SC0HiLLlNG CINllAMOll $9" 631 • . ·' 1 'j ; I • ' ! ! ' • ' • I • ' I ' ) • I l j , . I I 'I l I I_ I . ------.. -ff •AJl.Y PILOT WtdntSday, MQ 6, 1970 N PILOT -ADVERTISE~ $ I I. > ' u.s.D.A. CHOICE BEEF LUIR•Wlft SMOKED __...., HAM d .. ,0 tot ........ fU'" SHAllKLI•• "ORTIOll S\\(lS 41 U.S.D.A. CHOICf BEEF-LEAN FOR IBQ BONELlll CHUCK STEAK l h\tk o f 1hift C $'';! . • ... -·1·01E ... s·s-1·0-as1 --iiun°•ND-HAM 631t iia:a:c. .. •••F R1B1 tt1t. CROS:E 98 !r•0ii'iiiiLISS HAM 981i. !!~!~'P'ci10LE ;;:: 69c RIB c WAFER THIN BACON 1·:~a9c BONELESS HAM 'I~ u .•.•. A. CH01c• 111. · iosi SHRIMP STICKS~: 49c F'i'iitilicKs ;;; 59.~. ~ CHINISE JAN·U-WINE Dinners :=.T.ilE' ~ 79c -·I• COl.Ol!D OI DECOliTOl PAPll 3 b $I SCOllOWILS ,;,1, P00sHWHOU OlllS 33c S & W PICKUI 't.~L •ILL GEM SIZE RIPE PITTED OLIVES 4 reg. •1 cans C•CKITIM 0 IUFFERlll, 100 Ta•lets.; ••• !I" 0 ALU-SELTZER, 25 Ta•lets 57• 0 COllTAC, 10 Caps•les ........ 99• 0 VICKS llYQUIL, 6-eL •••••.• !I" D MKlll, 12·•1. .~.~~.~.!!.'1" I FOOD GIANT SOFT MARGARINE ~ I-LB. PLASTIC 2 9c REUSABLE TUB MAGIC CHtf PANCAKllYRUP 2~0L 35c .... SEA. l'llNCI! l llOltlH , DIYllNID SHRIMP ~:·39c .llRZEE INSTANT BREAKFAST pkg. of 6 39c INTRODUCTORY OffflU CANADIAN CREST IMPORHD IUNDfD CANADIAN WHISKY '3!! FROZEN FOODS GREIN Gl~NT RICI :~Er::H 312.oz.M • VERDI PKOS. ~ I AUNI JEMIMA I • CINNAMON STIC KS 1-oz.35c PKG. • CORN STICKS KERN'S SLICED RED I WIP STRAWBERRIES 1~~!!~~ 10.oz. 29c 55c "KG. U.S.D.A. CHOICI au• RIB °.!'~~. STEAK ";All· LIAll & 1111•• s , ... , ...... 99c . "';~;~:! ..... NORBEST TU.KEYS , NINI 4gc u.s.D.A. GRADE A · IL· .! WITll POP-UP -I TllDMOMITER POOD GIAllT •UCID BOLOGNA ALL riiiLJ 79c MIAT \!!!!!! FOOD llAllT PlllMlllM tllAIJTT suca WISCONSIN AMERICAN "IMllllTO OR S1'1S• CHllSI ·~~·· ·~~ ......... ROQUEFORT DRESSINI· ·:::-89' 011111 llAID, ..... ,size $pt SAVI '6-YR . .OLD $fllAIOHT .. NTIJCICUOUUON $10'8 2.H A11c11111 AIE .~.. ~ VALEN.CIA •. GR••oDENM.••nHA•Il.1NG•EE1N LETTUCE 1 oc-o IEHEllS LOTIOll, 14-eL ... !I'" sAvr '""'"'" '""°'" scor<• w""'"' $10'' 0 UPID SUVE 11 89' $1.H Kllll GEORIE .~~;. ~ ORANGIS •• L .. G, BROWN 39 " I ·•L ........ I~ ciowiiiussE :.~ $·~ SWIR 10 I Steak MUSHROOMS -~ c 0 A11• let lalr SpraJ, 13-oL 59• '"'""'""" '"'°"'•-•• "''°"' 6 11 .L $l 25 .1u1cY C I EXTRA LARGE 12 .... 2 9 O PRELL LHIUID, FamllJ 111• •p• llORW!!~~~.!!E,!l "'• LARGI . •11. I SUGARIPE PRUNES :_; c 0 Y0-5 llAllDIESSllll, Tu•• 98• J._.::~~~!!!i!!=---~__::~~ Colo Cot Food, Treot, TosJy qeef or Sardines, 6'h·OL con ... 2/37< 0 Mllll AL COHO. L, 16-0L 19' Glorietto SieWed T omototS, no. 303 con ..••••.•.••.•..•....••.. 2Vc Comstock Cherry Pie Filli119, 21-oL con .••.....•....••.•••••••••. 55c ' • Blue Bonnet Margarine, (In~ 2c-offl 1 ·lb. pkg ................... 29c .. 'lltS, 170 Swa•s • , • ., •• , •• 79' Von de Kemp's Frozen Apple Sirudel, 1 B·oL pkg. of 2 .•••..•• 75c _. ALL GRINDS COFFEE · MJB 14b. con ••• : .. 83c '2-lb. con'::.:$1.65 3-lb. con ..•. $2.40 · Von de Komp's Froztn Apple Puffs, 12-ot pkg. of 4 ........•.. 49c Delaware Puoch, 46-oi. ..................... : ....................... 39c Foultltss Spr<rf Siorch or _Fobrlc Fini~h, 22-oL .....•.••••...••. 69c Eogl1 Brand s-tened COndlntld Milk, 15-ot con ....•..•••. 39< Wtsson On, 48-oz. ................ ; ................................. 99c 2300 c:: illvd. at 1Vi lson St., H a rbo1· Sho p1•ing Cen ter, Cos ta Mesa I ---• ; .-" • • • "" • --~ .., _, -... ,....,,.......,.. ___ \I 9.,. <• 40 i -r # +' ... +'• W'" W '"" ¥ • '"' W ,,,.......... ..................... ...,..............,..,... ............. ~ .... T F ¥ • • 9 9 + ·-~--... -""' • • ------• • • -" ·• --• • "" " -• • • " • " HEI I ,~EJC . UP \ ., "'1 ~ " T 0.tn °"'9r & 'Goes Furtlilir Tool • It's The Sign Or ·.--• Good Eating! 14-tz.Btttle ...... for ' I BEECH-NUT· BABY .FOOD • Strei~ Varloty Choice Of FNlts" V~blesor Juices. Srock Up! YourClloioe •••••••• Jar EDWARDS COFFEE Vacuum Pack-Jn Choi<• Of Grinds. ·Rich Robust Flavor. 1.1 .. Ca• ....... . Z .......... II.II a..-ea ... iz.az POTATO CHIPS .· PARTY PRID! CHOICE OF REGULAR OR FOR DIPS GREAT FOR PARTIES' 111/2-0L •ks., ... SU-PU RB ' DETERGENT H6ovy . Duty Laun- • ,dry .Detergent · 'Whitens Whites & c!!!lght~ns Colors. 49-tL pq. • • •, • • c .VELKAY SHORTENliG ' • .. LOW, LOW PRICES! • l HIGHWAY NEW, Spaghtti ~:;:.::-.= ''=" 20' " Potaioes\ •••k~~·· ~~ ~"' No ,.. ..... °' .... 2 31 . S.O.S. PW. ":."\.. ·~,:< 30' .. ...,an .. -lie c •• Cr . .. O.kt-$o E·ZI -117 eamer ,,:-:.::,. ·~ 51' lutut Coffee ,:;t, ·~.· tr Pl·11o •~u '"' """·" .. ,. 63' .... Ilka ' Nutl'ftlOUI ''" ..~ .. , Spapctti :~ 28' h laid Oil ~ -:-79' Large J'AA" Eggs er.-O' ... Cntt .......... "fllll" 47° ........... ~,. 11111 11!11 .,. II• 1tL ~~=:: . . .JACK • .GILATIN GUDE· AA CHEESE SALADS BUllEI . Ill Cl(Msl. v-Slftwlf• °"' ......., l.uceml AISl V1rietits Slt"'1 lliio-f1ostl -s~s100 t: .. 99c 3 ... s1 oo lops In 83 . o,;~ 1.1~ C ,, ... Fresh~ et1. Colillioft .Catwlng-10 Fiavon &9· lel-air "":'"d' 8-ln. 3 s1 00 lea Cnam .~rl!. Fir~J!!les '" Bel-air Vegetables IXCEDRlll llro £l11I Sbwflli -•111 Plln RtllMll· " '" DRY BAN BAN ROLL-Oii ljelps R~iM Tie l'lol> 1 ... 111 ,. lem of Perspiration Odor. tt1l1l11r 7 - HAllD CRiAM PACQUIN "!. ..... Ifs '.i 4 Pin l.n& SCllCI • ·lllMClt-741 . llldfl~-- VITALll ••Grooms Without Gtelst" NOW-PIASTIC4-Gt 71• · Contains V·7! IOTru l .. acolorFllll CX.12' 1Mql1w , .... ro .. n~::-." .... s114 -POLAROID- llack & White fllm ' #107 .... '211 Old Calhoun r.111i,s1n111r•••• ,· ... ., ..,, .... . "l'nlf ....... , .. . . ' tlltl IMt-A .... ,_ .... .... · Mn ...,,.., sor..,·-TIDI Ulll .• ...... ,......... ..~ c ...... ,.,... ,.,. 2 59 (• lrttl hllt tl •tL) ,q. • • LEG OF LAMB llnaine S,ri•c Lam• U.S.D.l. Choiee .... i.. BEEF CHUCK STEAK · Slice • wn .. COJB lill All Purpc11 For Most Home ·Bak- L .... , •• 11 .... .,. nu c . . .... .,..._ ......... 11:1. • , • .n~ .•• . llllllllfll .... '•bl= ing, Frying Or Cooking Uses. 3-1 .. Oii •••••••• . Old Cllll11:a ······= ''" • ........ Scetdi =-'5" Stmlo1'1811 ::'1,=.-'3" lnl .. Yttlka .. 'C:.t-'3" •111'1 Im Fm Canalllanl!acon c:l::. .. 'I" · Hor1111I Piece lacon ,. 69' -'"""",,,.,.. ""'" "" ............ _,,. -.. -.... -... --ltd. lllllf!' ll!JW' tDi 1hulorl Yltjt). !Ai ~ ... im. Oililli Clill 1 I t; ............. Llmllt, "Poss The Solt And Butter- Here's COfn To Feast On!" SAPEWAY'S LOW PRICE Avocados . . "i=IRST OF swm CORN 3r.r~I Carrots u .... ,., 3 ·I. 2• Pac~~ ~~~aily! pff.· ., Orange Juice I~~~. ,~-79' Watermelons ·:i-ac W. l!ill AH lll!fOf_,11 I U,...Hklll' Trtlfl) (hi,,, i., k) Yellow Onions .!'.~ .. 3:,35• Apples ~":.:'::." .. ~ 4~59' Grffn Cabbage ~::, .. 8' Oran9es ';:.r·~ 8 i':i 99' Cucumbers \.'.'.~ .. ':'! 2 •• 29' Pineapple tl;,"""it '::" 49' FLOWERS for MOTHER'S DAY . MUMS FOIL WRAPPED 6-inch $199 ASSORTED COLORS · pot Camation.1 -'~ ~ .. -10-Freah Gladiolu.A ~. ._ •129 f...,.h Marguerites ~':';. -79' Frah Cut Stoob ~ -79' ,,__ 191 tM s-'-' ~ppy llaTHU.'S DAY Frc-AD el U1 • W....,t - USDA ::',~ CHOICE 1::'"' ....... C ....... ..... . ''"""''' ll :;::_u.•n Lamb Chops ~~r:i.$i:"'~,. ~ s1~ Gourmet Hams ==== .. s1n CGr1ned Hams .;.t:t~ : s4•• Cornell hef .':.-=i:h:. t 89' Fish & Chips , .• ~;..., 79' Cornell Round .. ~i:;·· "· 98' Fish Steaks c\:i. ·~ 99' Turkey Roat 2 ;:~ '2" P.....CMk .. Fiiiet .. It' IWllT't """ ....... Dirt Cllilllf ., .................. Bread of Turkey 2 ~~-•349 Lobdtr Tan Meat · ... '2" S!lllf• Mtlll ..... ~ .W MllM 11111 4 ' e 1000 Bayside Dr., · Nlwport B~ • 24 Monarch Bay Plata, So. Laguna , • 636 N. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach • 801 B Camino Real San Clemente • Santa Ana Freeway at la Paz, Mission Y-iejo • Wilson & Fairview, Costa Mesa • 1101 Pacific Coast Hwy. at Bolsa Dr • • .i --·~----_.....__ ... _.. __ • --... ---·------------... --··----.._ -----... ------- -------~ --. ........... -........ _~ ...... , ............. .._, . ' I f ., , ·Thur> .• Moy 7, 1970 • El Rancho knows meals are Planned around meats. ' That's why we specialize in super-me(lts ·in our butcher shops. But we know that grocery items are a must, t<io. I I ' I Th~t's \h:j/we're staging this weeks big sales e11fnt! C&H 5 LB. BAG •••••••••••••••••••• Ghlteri!li' crystals o! nature's O\lt'n zweetener ! Natural goodness means more nutrition ••• more fla\'or. CAMPBRL'S CREAM Of MUSHROOM • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • GIANT PACKAGE • •••••••••••••••••••••••• The "XK'' formula, wiUi. eni}·~eaction for added power! Brighter wash with Tide ... and save, too! CHIFFON !16 ROLL , ............... . Hore than soup! ••• it's a cooking aid, a gra\.·y, a sauce •• and still, it'adelicious soup! Reg. size cans. ...... Choose frof!l ~ttrac?ve colors ••• or deeo~r prints! ••• save on evezr roIJ you buy at El Rancho! llest Foods .,. known for years to stand for quality: Save at El Rancho's special price! Quart Tomato Sauce .... 0!1.M~.·.o;~ •••••• 12 : $1 Rich red sauce ••• seasoned just r ight! You use it so many v .. ays ••• so often ••• so save this '\\'eek! (i Ge . t c NllUTSOI 5 f $1 reen 1an orn ..... ~ ~..... : Goldeii corn ••• S~'eet ... peak-of-perfection goodness! Niblets in 12 oz. cans ••• cream style_ No. 303! Green Giant Green Beans 5 i $1 Garden-fresh-goodne~! Whole, French-atyl~ or cut ••• :rout choice at thia price.! No. 303 cans. Del Monte Catsup .................. 18¢ V -8 Cocktail ............................. 38' Distinctively different! 14 oz. bottle. Vegetable juices, delightfully blended! 46 oz. Gerber's Baby Food ......... 12 for '1 Your choice of flavors ••• strained varieties! Apple Juice .............. ·-·-··········39' Drink your apple a. day! Martinelli ••• quart. Pork 'n' Beans ...................... 23' Van Camp's ••• plump beans, rich sauce! No. 2~1:? Betty Crocker Sauces ....... 3 "' '1 Serving sauces for menu magic! Reg. 39c El Rancho Super-Meat Specials PrimBRib The King of Roasts ... "'ilh the accent on quality! El Rancho's finer beef ••• U.S.D.A. Choice ... naturally aged ••• trimmed to perfection t Small Select End ••••••••••••• • Sen;ing beef 1 ••• trv Martin Leveque Beau jolai 1 1vine ••• light, fru it11 flavor ••• /·iftk ••• tt.29 Spencer Steak ...... u;:~~. ~~....... $1~? Serve this ••• and kno'v "·hy it's Super-Meat when it's from El Rancho! You couldn't ask for better! Ranchero Steak ..... ~~~~~~~ ..... $1~? Beef at it& best! Hearty 1oodnesa that comes only with finer beef .•. here is dining delight! Rib fy~ Beef Roast ........ '1.891b. Ground Round ...................... 89~ Bone1eas, for greater value ... superbly tender t Fush and Jenn ••• patties, too at this price ! Sftced Bacon ......................... 89~ El Ra:n:cho's ••• ranch style, a little thicker •. Polish Sausage ..... : ........ $1.29 1~ . To try it is to love itt Slotkowski •• from Chicago. -5 1•t B ·1 FRESH CALIFOllKIA GROWN 49c p 1 ro1 ers ... ~ ............ ~ . . . . . . . . lb Broadbreaated plump chickens .•• heavy \\-'ith '\\'hite meat, rich juicy dark meat •• _ split in hal\·cs! fiUet of Sea Bass ................. 89~ Hild tla•ored ••• llrh~ flaky .•• and 10 good I Fresh Red Snapper ... . ... ... . 79~ Rushed to El Rancho to presen 'e flavor ! ' Fnlet of Halibut .................... 89~ AllV•T• & welcom• .entreo on the men• I New England Clams UTTU NECl 79~ Freah to ua via air 1 CllEB'I $IOIC£S ........ 19¢ lb. CHIFFON 2 ROLL PACK ••........ , ...... . Prints or colors ... at a price that issues an invitstiQll. to shop El Rancho thls week ••• &nd aavel Skippy Dog Fo~d .... :~!~~ ..... 12 i $1 Fifteen ounce cans ! Your pet will loye the balanced meal you'll find in every can oC Skippy! Nine Lives (.at Food .. ~~~~ .. 8 : $1 Kitty deserves a quality diet ••• and you deserve the savings? Tuna,. Tuna-Chicken, Tuna-Liver! 6 u. Yuban Coffee ........ ~~~·CA·"········· 79c The rich one ••• deep delicious flavor! No 'vonder 10 many people pref er Yu ban! 2 lb. can ••• $1.57 ! Stouffer Meat Pies ................ 49' Beef' or Chicken •• '. 10 ounces big! Frozen. Ivory Soap .. ~ ............................ 25¢ Package of four personal size bars! Cool 'n' Creamy Pudding ....... 39' Favored flavor from Birds Eye. Frozeri, 17¥2 oz. Light or Dark C~ocolate, Vanilla, Butterscotch. Uncle Ben Rice Mixes ...... 3 "''1 Flavored varieties., • easy to prepare! Reg. 39e Pepperidge Farms Tarts ... 4 1or '1 Tender flaky crust ••• delicio~s filling! Frozen. Birds Eye Vegetables ...... 5 :;-'1 French or Cut Green Beans, Chopped Broccoli, Butter Beans, Mixed Vegetables. El Rancho Produce Specials White Rose Potatoes.~~·.~0:.1.S i 29c A prime rib roast e&lls for the best of companions! Clean, smooth ••• and so appealing! Fresh Carrots .......................... 10~ Garden fresh .•• in one pound plio bag. Delicatessen SpecialtJ . Horseradish Sauce .................. 39• Zesty •.• creamy! Fishermen's \Vharf ••• 8 oz. Thin Sliced Meats ............. 3 "' '1 Leo's ... your choice of "'af~r thin 39c varieties! Pillsbury Biscuits .... . . ..... 10 for '1 Extra Light ! ... Buttermilk ! ... 8 oz. pkp. }rf av 7, 8, 9,·10. No •al.~ to dealert. .. Opeft dailv 9 to 9 ••• Svndav 9:90 to 7:00 Sweet Oranges .................. 8 111s. '1 Large size .... navel variety ••• S\Veet, juicy t Liquor Specials Cutty Sark ......... tlfil-GAL ......... '16.49 Famous Scotch at a price that saves $1.76 I Prices bL effect Thurs. th·rouglt. Sun., Ask th~ manage; ebout our c;onvenl,nt Charge Account Service HUNTINGTON HARBOUR: Warner Ave. & Algonquin St. NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 Newport .Blvd. • 2555 Eastbluff Dr. (Eastbluff Village Center) Also conveniently located stores in Arcadia, Pasadena and South Pasadena -. .. . ] J PILOT-ADVERTISER Wedntsday, M11 6, 1970 Wtdntsday, May 6, 1970 DAILY PllOT .Ct_ ' FRYING . CHI CKE CHUCK 'ROAST . ' -:""'...,..~ ' , ' ILS,D.A.CllOICI " ' OISTATll~ ~ _~; ta• a AD:llEF 'YEAlk. -.STEA . COOICSGOLDLAIB. U.S.D.A.-GRADE A WHOLE BODY ..47c LI • TINI>• TASTY •EADED .89~ t~n1RIB ROASI U.S.D.A.CllOICIOISTATIR • ~aaos1· .· Cll11ftED,. IEIF c . LB. CORN IXTRA FANCY SWEET TENDER u1G1msMnMDll_, 3 25' CARROTS-··· ,.1.1.PJ(G. 5, LA1GlFAHCYllPIHAS~ 2 APEFR IT AVOCADOS ..... -u.25 G'!_IGIFANCYSWITT u.s.N0.1•Wl<T.1"°WN 2 C ********** 8 ii:.57• ONION• ...... -..... :*********** . -¥.· DEL MONTE * *.&..-.&..~ -;-t'Pw#I * * , : 'DEL MONTE 3 ~ou11G1Ju1c1 ........... s~·I S PEAS., ................................... lc:s ' . ~ BLUEBDRlll .... . -11.QZ. 3 9' ~ CHICKIN • HEART. KIDNEY Oii ~VER ·.GR. BEANS: ............ 303CANS ~.RIHSTICKS._ _1-.oz.89c~ T ORO-FED . VIJ.tPAKT. IHGLASS '*_,,_ .... o.oz. ... ••· . 29' * EAT BALLS ORANGE ~*REDDl-WIP ...... -· .......... s.oz. * . . .. i ,.~BAG.0-PIZZA __ ..... _._=~.79' ~ AMERl~NBEAUTY ......... JUICE 48-0Z ·*c'HomocH1m_,,._4~ ctiiL\~~!i!2f.-11-0<4ft:f * LONG · . "MJ•DEALPACICAGE ........... -. .~PiintbUo·111E11-!t f!,lLADli--,-·~ ~ SPAGHETTI 12-0z" 100 COUNT e*mfi'CAKE,!,. ,,,.,., !.~~rTAoos, . ..... * · ! *cafai/EAT .... s111 ~~,E!,~1011$_u«-~ * , ............... PKG. "I ·* mwf.l'AC. 2 ,_.2r SALISIUIYSTEAK -""' 77 * DEAL PACKAGE :TEA BAGS · *micAii'Dlll'NEn .. 4f i:OC'Kta1LTACOS-"=agc * PUN H . i . . .... -.--·-i***:i:*::li:**************** . IVORYLIOUIDDETERGENT ' ~ .... * TOIUTOOOCKTAILllW·l·""'-2 .... 11' BRAVOFLOORWAX ' """"'"'I.Gt DET RGENT KING THRILL LIQUID DETERGENT -., .. , it' TOIUTOOOCKTAIL-·•·"*-·-"-<>< 23' GLORY FOAM IUOCLEANER _,..,_ 1 1.41 : . CASCADE DISHWASHER DETERGENT ;<<>< If · . RAISlll$ !11.1(1:1' ,,..,_fl', .... :W FEMS SANITARY NAPKINS ,,.. 41' ... SIZE . FLEISCHMANN'S DIYYDST - , .... 1r CLOROX BW9H """"L 38' . 15%-0~ .CANS vo-s · a=r 83, HIWBIOS.INSTANTCOfFEE ·-·-·1.1• LIOUIDPLUM• _ ....... L.,.. VIVA G""""""Ei·=ER'S HAIR ,_...., .. __ KRAFTLO-CALDIESSING l.'l'J',,_,..,_w SARANPLASTICWIAPIOO-fT. --"'""' 151:1 •PRAY wau• 3 au1GE1am:-.1tm, _____ ...... '%" .. " .,.._ KlmKARECArunta .-25 "'.•1.11 BABY FOO. D i . _ •aa•rOlllC 6 c conAaEcHEm~w.·~~... .....11· srarn•ao•. 25c TOWELS . -~~ • $1!! =-l!...69.C !l~t~.: ... s·~·· r!~:';;a~,;j:~\=_2 ,.,d3' 3•1G3Jt0Us" MJI • 1-LB.CAN a· 3 ' .. ~"" ... L Wu'~~~\~':SJr'rEIE -·-i:::: ~eov~NlusJ:nDETE":E,'koREIN!,_r01!..~KEI_;·.~.~ ~ COFFEE.......... . . ~ . AWl PRELLSHAMPOO ~:T.':J~':11.15 _ .. , ~ COTTON BAU.S ~g.~~.._ 45' ~:;'so~,~Nllfl.~~ '1: OXYDGL l!ETEROENT ..... ar EA. Z.LI. CAM ••• $1.65 3-LI. CAI ... $Ut . DIAL ..... . 9" 11n KLEEllEX-"'NEITD"'"L1 _, -~ ... :tlllE·Dtf!ROEllT ""' ar . . . . . Sac .,.. ........... ~•-oz. r·n.•-m. ......, ,.. -w llOLD....,_IGE'-1~ GAINDETERQENT ....,- BANI\ •10· U•GEPIA5'1C 69' l£MQM011EQ.M ..... R . '7..._.a lf' -~· RI '""' ' ~·-... • .. .,.,. STlllPS-1'1'"".., n .....,..,. GIAIJ 72( DAIHOETEIGEllT. ....,.Tl'· C®llTAIL l'UllUTI :ltlt\'.~.k ............ --LG. ... DRE FT SUNSHINE HYDIOX OOOKIES _,,..:.tr . Wlll'fEKINOIOAP ·--·-· --'"'""''· 71' ,., OLOllmAl'UOHU t/lt~'aua.-cl.l • . WfflTEKIN8VtAn:1apnENER --·1.oa . GLOllmAAPlllCO'!S ;mi 'JJ .. ' KWIFLOOIWAX -''""""" 11.51 S-Al!'t.-0 64 INSTAllTMAlYIEUHOlllE. -""'-•ur'. FAVOIFURMITUIEPOUIH _,....,..11•· LY C IOYAL8ELATtll .......,.. 'a,.,.! . . liOMPIQETIAMITAIYllAPKlNs · _ .... 71' TABLEn P11Do1~1CAKl lilt'\~... .... , llWllEX ROLL TIAUE lil:l.'.u, ~---2t' · IPANl1H l'UNUTI """'""' _ ... IP,~ ANAHEIM 3430 W. LINCOLN AVENUE 2564 WEST BROADWAY GARDEN GROVE , 888 CHAPMAN AVENUE ! • 1 , .P'11C~S E~FECTIVEJHUR$.~hru WEI>,. MAY7·13 COSTA MESA SANTAANA 2180 NEWPORT BOULEVARD 2630 EDINGER AVENUE 707 WEST 19TH STREET 2803 WEST 17TH STREET 1,176 BAKER STREET WESTMINSTER HUNTINGTON IEACil B522 WE STMINSTER BLVD. 6862 EDINGER AVE. WHITTIER-142 12 MINlS AV!. --·---------.. -..-........... -......... , .. _ ....... ··----.. -... --...... ~ .... -· ~ ..... _ .... ---.. -......... -~-... --__ ..... ~ .... #-_...__.... ____ _,,,_.._ ......... ._ .... _ .............. ~ .......... ..._,.._ .......... -· ~ ' I ! ..,...~r .-·..i -•v----.--~-.-,,.-*--.;: ... · .. ·.,._,-.,,;-.,.· ~-,. ~ ~"'7'.'':Ji1 4 1:'*·' ~··r?••-:r • ..-•r----------.. --------. ff .DAl\.Y PllOT Wed~. MOJ 6, 1970 I . I USDA GRADE "A" WHOLE BOl>IED: FRYING · CHICKEN . u.s~~ GRADE "A" FRYING CHICKEN 69~ USDA 6lADE "A"' 59~ •. FRYING CHICKEN IRE AST LIGS •THIGHS USDA GRADf "A" 39' ... l·LIGGI!> CUT -UP FRYERS U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS ROLLED SHOULDER CLOD ROAST BEEF USDA CHOICE BEEF BRISKET LEAN Fl.AT CUT 98' .. Fll!ISH LEAN 59' _G_RO_U_N_D~B_EE_F~~~~--·-"· F~ISH LIAN STEWING BEEF 89' ... ' 89 IAI M WISTEIN STYLI C BULK BACON ~~~·.~:· . " IAI M WISTEIN STYLI BULK WIENERS 09 IAI M WISTIRN S!Tll Braunswe1ger CHUCK STYLI ···' MVl•S USDA CHOICE • CENTER .CUI CHUCK STEAKS COTT0°USALAMI • ozc 59' FOOT LONG WIENERS USDA CHOICE ROUND IONE BEEF ROAST 69' ... 79'~ OUR OWN SUGAR CUllD 98' CORNED BEEF .~::.".. u . -=== CO .. l 9UEfN 1 U . $129 mir Breaded Shrimp c:~O: ~ POTATOES 49:. RUSSET 10 L.B. BAG WATERMELONS a~ PINEAPPLE 39:. TOMATOES 19~. I ' ' • • • ' • • • ' ' ' l ' ' l I • l l • ' ' 1 · l s ; ' PINK . 3F29¢ I GRAPEFRUIT ~ i ~ ~;~~EFRUIT 3~29¢ . Stouffer's Meat • CHICKIN • lllf e TURKEY YOUl CHOICE Pffi"PERIDGE FAii.MS PIE TARTS -- • • • Pies 39' .... 4/$1 • • I ' ' 1 i . Ul M WESTERN STTLE FRISH SLICED PEPPER LOAF-79' .... ROCK COD 59' ... \ -c:; ~:: -~~~~~~~--'-~-'-~ "MIX 'EM OR MATCH 'EM" GREEN GIANT YEGUABLES IN BUTTER SAUCE AND COOKING POUCH ROYAL CROWN COLA 6/59~ . Big 16 OL Botti~ MJB CO'Fl=EE l , .. CAN $2.39 83, $1.19 I TIDE .DETERGENT 59' REGULAR 85c GIANT SIZE D ONLY AT URGAIN USI With thi1 ~Jl•fl, 110 '"inim11m p11rtl\•••' r1q11 irtd. l ill'lil I b0Hl1 p9" •• ., ... ,. -o,_ IOllpOPI p•r c111tom1r. Void ·fl•r Sund.,., "'' 10. OD ONLY AT IAIGAIN IA.SI BETTY CROCKER INSTANT POTATO BUDS Wifli thi• tOllP9fl, no "'inifl'lum p111ch111 r•~11irt4. l imit I pk9. ,_ 1o11J1·011·~ On• coupon p•t c111tom1r. Vold 1ft•r Su11d•v. Moy 10. . IOsCAR MA YER" ·Y,.i\llID.PAK 'tUNCHEON 1MlATS 12 OL . 79~ \With tl1h •••P••, 11• f!linir•nnrt putc~••• r1q11ir1d. Li1111il I p~g. lt9f 1011,.. -0110 coupoPI p1r c111tomt r. Voicl 1ffer S1trtcl1v. -., 11. t Oftl. Al U.16AIH IASI R).n, PERCH 59, ,Jd/, ··~e. LI. .... .... LB. sticEDUBOLOGN~:59' .:~:~~~~~';~Zs . . 4/Sl ' j I OZ.--4ft 11 OZ. e- \ srllNGFIELD i:JOO TALL CANS CHILI & BEANS CASI SWAYNE · . SLICED POT A TOES "")00 TALL CANS 10~ .. OAKBURN HARDWOOD CHARCOAL ' BRl .QUETS DUNCAN HINES CAKE MIXES YOUR CHOICE OF REGULAR 39c VARIETIES GHIU.DllLl'S MILK CHOCOLATE BLOCKS ·llG 11 OZ. Ml:S SPRINIPllL~ U . IOX PANCAKE MIX NAllSCCO 12 01. VANILLA le• WAfllS F 0 R 29' 39' FO!tlMOST SO Ui CRUM PT. 49' CARTON• FRESH GRADE AA EGGS SPRINGRELD INSTANT BREAKFAST BOX .OF 6 ENVELOPES WESTERN GOLD . ,-PORK AND BEANS #303Tall Cant a·~s1 , I •ou• . •11 "· 5/$1 YA.Ml CARTONS YOGUll •.Kitchen Sliced Green Be•ns .; e Mixed Vegetables . : .............................. ..-..-.................................... ~: ' ' • HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS ___ i ' . l • NEW!! 1.',0U• AnlO 'Hou• SrRAY D£0DOlANT IEG. Sl .00 4 OZ. CAN 59' f ' • • • NEW!! HOUR ..... HOUR DOUILI DRY ANTl-PERSPIRANT srRAY DEODOll..ANT -R ... SI.It 69' i • PRELL SHAMPOO REG. $1 .55 FAMILY SIZE IOTILE ROYAL STANNOUS Flouride T oothoaste 39' PAMILY SIZE 6f4 0%. TUil LIQUOR DEPT. . i . RO YAL SATIN-FIFTH $299 ; BLENDED WHISKEY ! ROYAL SATIN LONDON DRY s3as GIN FULL OUART VODKAE-FIFTH s319 PRIClS EFFECTIVE THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY & SUNDAY May 7, 8, 9, 10 PRICES SUBJECT TO STOCK ON HAND WE ACCEPT - U.S.D.A. FOOD COUPONS I ' WE GIVE BLUE CHIP STAMPS .. .. WE GIV~ BLUE· CHIP STAMPS . ' ' ' • i • l ' COSTA MESA PLACENTIA 19th and Placentia : ~ 710 W. Chapma1 l - I • • • • • • • • . ; i , • j ' j l l • • • ' • . ' . l l l J , ! ! . l f • • • • • . J I ' ' . . . . . • • J ·. ' fJ l"lLOf-AOVERTISER N W!dnnday, M11 6, 1Cl70 WtdntsdlJ, May 6, 1q70 DAil Y .rLOT 49 r . WEEKLY 'SAYER' BOOK from THRIRIMART Rlllll1llllllllllll1ltlllllllllfflnlffiffi1111111l1!~ ·Pree THIS WEEK WITll COUl'ON FROM OUR VALUAllE BOOK AND '2.00 MINIMUM PURCHASI -Tills Week'-• Coa~ns - • PIU 4-PllCI SJLYD PU.Cl SITI CO • 1 De Off 1 LI. fAlMll JOHN S ICID. IACON • 25c Off Joi.I. TIN HILLS HOS. COFNI -Plu la• Week Ceapeao - • 10c OfF U.S.D.A. "CHOICI" 1111' ROAST • lk Off ANY HAND • SIU TOOTHPASTI IF YOU DO NOT RECEIVE YOUR BOOK FROM THE MAILMAN ••• PICK ONE UP AT ANY TH!\IFIMART FUSH GROUNlb MUTS : u.s.o.A. ln•peeted Grade ·~· GROUND GROUND j ROCK CO~NISH .. ' ll.S.D.A. 'Ch()i~ Steer Bt>cf llEF CHUCK l. GAME HENS 59~ 75~ CHUCK ROAST .... 48~ •OAS! 59' o ROAST 69f.. Seven Bene 1t1 l Round lone ,., 1 GROUND ROUND. • • • "TENDER'.LEE" LEAN IONILISS .. 85~ MIN. WT. 20~oz. :· . BUY A CASE 69' . C' OF GAME HENS 12iwf819 " .II • BONELESS CHUCK CUTS BARBECUE mAKS ! FAMILY FAVORITE 89c CORNED ROUNDS i w 111011'1 Crilprl•• 69C ! SLICED. BACON ..................... ~-~~ : ~:~~~ .f~t:\1~1.'t,\,~' .~~~.~~. ~~~~~. ~-·.~~ " .. , ......... , ....... "79:. • CHUCK STEAKS ••••• 59~ ! CHUCK ROAST • • • • • • • lb . : ROLLED & TIED 98C 89~ : FROZEN ltlEAT .SPECIALS • • C1r11atlo11 2·1b. S 11' SEAFOOD SPEl:li\l.S FISH mus ........... . R11p1rt Friod 12-01. 11• SOLi flLLnl •••.••••. P•t· SEVEN BONE • • • • • • 69~ ! CLOD ROAST. • • • • • • • lb : LEAN TENDER -89C Fr11h Fill•h '1'b' S 1 Of Mr1. Fr!d1.,'1 I ·••· 98' DOYll IOLI • • • ·• • • • • • • IJOURMEt SHllMP , , , p~9. Gerton 14-cn . 73c PISH STICKS ••••• , •• P•t· Rup ort ~ 14·01, $1 U flllD SCALLOPS .~ ••• P•t· Stor Kht t -01. s2>t LOISTll TAIU •••••• P•t· Fr•1h ''" k114', P1r S 1 Dt llX SOLi ••.••• , .,, •• lb. FAMILY STEAKS •••• $1 ~~ i STEWING BIEEF • • • • • • lb &otf111 7-n. 98' SCA,LLOP CllSPS •••• P•t· Gorton l -01. 59• flSH CllSPS .••••••. P•t· Phu r.~ 2-lb. Ste HT IUIAll ••••••••• Pkt. Coak'1 "Circl• C" l1••lli•d or P•pp•1•4 P•r 98' VEAL STIAKS • , , •• , ••• lb. f1ftcy Nerlh•rn Whit• P1r 91• HALllUT ITIAICS •••••• lb. Fr11h W11!1r" IO·e1. 79• OYSTflS ••••• , •• , ••• J11 WESTWOOD CATERING QUALITY ICE CREAM ; • • • • • • • • • • HALF GAL CTN: JANE ANDERSON MAYONNAISE • • • • STOUFFER'S BEEF or CHICKEN FROZEN MEAT PIES JANE ANDERSON MARGARINE • • • • • c • • • • • • • • FLAVORED BEVERAGES CANADA DRY •COLA •GRAPE• ORANGE •CHERRY •LEMON •CREAM • ROOTI •STRAWBERRY •TAHITIAN TREAT •CACTUS COOLER $ 28-oz • No Return Bottles 00 ' ' • • • • • MARY ELLEN JAMS AND PRESERVES •APRICOT-PINEAPPLE •BLACK CHERRY •SEEDLESS BLACKBERRY •STRAWBERRY • BOYSENBER.RY, ALL 20-0Z. JARS c .111Lr ORAPI, .llLL Y .............. '~!:" 49C ' • IRIS PINK DISHWASHER DETERGENT 32·0Z. PLASTIC > • QUART 39c .----L14!UOR DEPT. ----. SLICING SIZE 2 3 t TOMATOES • • • • • • • • • • • • 1b BOTTLE FAIRGROUND 5 YEAR 49~ ID-OZ. PKG . BOURBON. • • LONDON BRIDGE 19c I-LB. CTN . SCOTCH • • • • KARSOV Sf 99 HALF &ALLON RIPE, RED, SWEET-12.oz. BASKET 4 F 'I of STRAWBERRIES. • • • • • • : · .. • ITALIAN, SUMMER o• YELLOW 2··9' I: SQUASH • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1• JERSEYMAlO FRUIT ON THE BOTTOM or 6 F '100 STIRRED YOGURT. • ~r~~-~ VODKA • • • • SPRING -NO DEPOSIT '3~! '3!.~ 29c VINE RIPE 3 F '100 CANTALOUPES. • • • • • • :· JERSEYMAID -FIRST QUALITY ''AA'' BUnER • • • • • • • 1.u. CTN . 79c DETERGENT -INCL. 10, OFF e 69C GIANT DRIVE • • • • • • • • • PERSONALF IVORY SOAP •• 25 c TREESWEET FROZEN ORANGE JUICE • • • • • • GORDON 'S -WHITE OR WHEAT SLICED BREAD ••••• • • 12-0Z. TIN 1.u. LOAF 49c 25c BEER ••• QUART BOTTLE SUNDERLAND DRY GIN . .. '7~! GAL· MR. & MRS. "T" -FIFTH 99 BLOODY C MARY MIX•••••••• 86 PROOF-FIFTH s519 SOUTHERN COMFORT • • • • • • • VINYA $197 ROSE' WINE • • • '"'" CHIFFON ASSORTED COLORS OR PRINTS BATHROOM VELVREETA CHEESE FOOD • • 2 LB. PKG. ' OSCAR MAYER FINI MEATS 1.oz. CHUIS ALL MEAT OR ALL BEEF HAWAIIAN · 49c PINEAPPLES • • • • • • • • • • • .. BERMUDA ONIONS •• 3v:~~R 29c FRESH GREEN TOPS OFF 1 OC CARROTS ••••••••••• BUNCH SWEET & JUICY VALENCIA ORANGES •••• •• • • TREE SWEET 8 LB 79C • BAG ' FULL QT. 'I• GAL ORANGE JUICE • • • • • • 39c 69' 99c ALL SAVE 15·• WITH GRINDS COUPON ON . TISSUE BUUNSCHWEIOER or SANDWICH SPREAD BOLOGNA 1 :r.~z. FOLGER'S COFFEE· COU'°N 6000 WITH C0UPON THU ... lhN $UN. 6.c. MAY I, O, O, 10 2 ROLL PACK . £;J . .. . . ~ ; • . .\ !' ........... 49~ HAM & CHEESE ~i<0ci· · 69~ 1-lll. WITHOUT Ti11 COU'°N 134 • LIMIT ONI:, 2·Ltl. TIN c:uw,N .,. rJ,1~~ 'I" "' ADUL 3 LL nN wn• •2• "''"our '2• CUSTOMlk • COUPON COU'ON FOR LAKE TO LAKE WISCONSIN AGED CHEESE ••• :i<°l: 53c l I~ INSTANT '#lfH '1 M WITHOUT s 1" " COUPON COU"!'N ' MELLOW CHEDDAR PRICES EFFECTIVE 'THURS. thru SUN., MAY 7, 8, 9, 10 . ' 210l HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA e 13922 BROOKHURST, GARDEN GROVE e 1308 W. EDINGER, SANTA ANA 5858 WARNER, HUNTINGTON BEACH e 23811 EL TORO, EL TORO -e •• --- -----_......___._.AO,. -JO .......... ._; ----.,#~··-"" --· -·-~~--.. ... .. ... •. •'• ........ ·~ ..... .....______ ... " .._ •' ..... ' " • * 0 0 '4 2 Q Qo .... * A h ·A • A ... 0 • >oo •• I ·• ..... 0 • ;, •• * • • , • ft ' > • I ...... ft 0. * • 0 f I I ----.. -------------------... --------.. 4 --.. ~-~~~-·.-...----~------------.... --------.... --~-----.... -~-----.!""'! S0 OAIL V PILOT Wl'dntsday, May &, 1'7b Homemade Root Beer Bottles • Plast .ic J:ugs, Screw Tops ' DEAR. NAN: Loved your J teaspoon garlic powder, ~~ Marinate overnight In the ed plastic sac.ks. but fastening It down In such as directed. 5trip1 when things go l item on homemade root beer. teapooo pepper, I cup wann refrigerator, turning it a COO· To dry in the sun: Place a way the acreen won't touch ll occurs to me ou pioneer desperate. !';an Wiley 111 Cart ot the DAI· LY PILOT. MoUftr made it when 1, was water and 2 tablespoons cl pie of times for good satura-cheesecloth over grids from u:ie meal. At night, place meat forebears wou1d be highly "Why aren't my pie mer. the liquid smoke. Slice the lion. Then drain and pat dry your oven, or barbecue grids. under shelter 80 it doesn't amused at the popularity of lngues lnctieivh.igh and light Nan Wiley regrets' that she cannot provide p e r s o n a I answers to your cooking ques- tions, but questions of genera l mterest will be answered in her column. Address your quesUon.s to Nan Wiley in earl of Ulis newspaper. • boy 60 years &gtl, now I beef Into sltips :Y4 inch think, on paper toweling. Arra'nge the meat so ii will absorb moisture from the air. today's ~on of jerky. It was as those from bakeries!" Nan make It aU summer long for 'ii.I inch ,,_,,kie and 4 to Ii inches Now you qin do this one not be overlapping. NoW place To dry in OV!fl: The tern-a staple ttem for trappers a'nd spella out the answers along the grandchildren. Sure is ling. It does need that tttin of two wa ys-sun-dried ·or the filled grtd over a foil-lined perature from just the pilot scouls but only because It Was wlUI some recipes in the greaL slice to cure properly. Mix · kitchen-range-dried. E it h eT container, ia direct sun. (Foil light of. a gas oven will dry easy to pack.sack. staved off book I et, "Marvelous Mer· 1 use the gallon plastic milk all the rest of the stuff ~·ay, it must be dried till helps renect the heat.) Cover jerky in about four days. starvetion when everything ingues." For your ct1py. send thgether and pour over the quite brittle. Then store it with some sort of fine-meshed Here, too, you cover the grids else ran out. The y only 15 cents and a stamped, self. jugs with Ole screw tops, not strips. in covered jars or tightly ~I-screen to keep insects away with cheesecloth and proceed resorted to the .shoe leather addressed, LONG ~nvelwe to the pressed on type. they wori.--'=====-================--,.,.-----------'-------------------"------------ f in e. ED Fl5-HER, COUDERSPORT, PA. DEAR NAN: I m:enOy sen'td escargot and now can't get tlte garlic 1meU out of tbe lbell1. I am afraid Url1 LETS ASK THE COOK by Nm Wiley will alfttt tbe taste of the ntxl ones. PAT R ICIA DANLOE, LAKE FORF.ST, llJ.. Sinct you will DO doubt be using the garlic butter for snails.in-shell every lime you do them, I doubt it. It is much like the principle o! rub- bing wooden salad bowls with a clove of cut garlic each time but never actually washing the bowl between limes, just wiping oul very thoroughly with paper towel- ing. U you art .still worried, try Ulls: Wash and scrub the shells thoroughly, Then drain and dry in a very slow oven (2.50) leaving the door open. Give the pan a shake now and then. DEAR NAN: flave you tried this way of making moist. flavorful ground meat patties? To one pound of ground meat add % tablespoons &our cream and 1 teaspoon dry onl1n soup mi11:. Le:t &tand about 38 minutes befor~ broiling. I li ke to add about % table- 1poon1 soor crtam and a 1ml!!lll amou nt of llle onion &oup mix lo a small kettle of navy bean soup. Amount& can be varltd to suit the taste. l\1RS. GEORGE JENNINGS, KANSAS CITY, KAN. DEAR NAN : For infestation of spices, cereals, etc. a bay leaf will keep these pests away but M nowise Imparts its flavor or odOr. Bay leaf placed on shelv~ works the same way. MRS. R. V. VANSAN. Sorry not to name your local. ity but the postmark was un- readable! That bay leaf stunt is certainly worth trying if you have such a problem. The full navor and aroma of bay isn 't released until it hits liquid. DEAR NAN: About making "balloon" wine -a cheap and effecdve 1lpboa Is the k.ind of plqtjc tubing used for aquar- ium pumps. l\fARION ULLIE, MINNEAPOIJS DEAR NAN: Two years agn wben 1 ~IJJ h1 Colorado, I ran acr0&1 a treat called hffi jerky. Ever tlnce, I balle tried to find out bow to make it. Any belp you can gtlle would be appreciated, l\tR. G. F., KANSAS CITY Oh the COMt-to-eoMt re- quests I have had for thls one! 1here is .a commercial pack, o( course, available at many groceries and popular at bars. Chewing on a stick of lhat does work up a Lhirst. Until now I tiadn't found a method I would care to recommend but recently ra'tl across a helpful booklet put out by a leading maker of liquid smoke. That is one in- greclient you need for sure. It isn·t the easiest item in the v.-orld to make. The whole process may take four days but you asked for il You'll need 3 to 5 pounds very lean beef, l tablespoon salt. 1 teaspoon on km powder. For people who care how they look PRICES GOOD MAY 6 THROUGH MAY 12 3 LB. FAMILY PAC K Fresh Genuine Spring LOIN END CENTER RIB CUT FRESH CALIFORNIA '" GROUND LEGO' PO.RK PORK WHOLE - BEEF LAMB ROAST CHOPS r FRYERS -55(LB. 96:B. 55~B. 67.: 27~B. GENUINE SPRING LAMB SALE LOIN CUT PORK CHOPS ............ .rb.79 • SLICED BA CON ,., ... Joho ................. lb.77< COUNTRY STYLE SPARERIBS ... lb 69 • SIRLOIN TIP ROAST ~::.~:, ......... 1b. l°' LINK SAUSAGE ...... Joho ......... s .. 7/59 • HALIBUT FILLETS fromG.tt,lood .......... lb. 56 ' LOIN LAMB CHOPS ........ 1" RIB LAMB CHOPS ........... 1" LAMB STEAK •~<·• ........... I " LAMB BREAST ......... -•.• 29 ' LAMB STEAK •• ,., ........ • 98 < LAMB STEW .................. J9 c SIRLOIN TIP STEAK ~:::~·;;........ ., l" FINNAN HADDIE S.ofoodSpodol ........ lb 89 • WIENERS ·~~---MORE-jM.if:Ja SPECIALS P . p· M-oo.i10 I" epperom 1zza ............. . Ch P. ·-"""' 98• eese 1zza 1a ... i.~·· ........ . Sliced Bologna ;';':..."'.'::. ..... S2< Sliced Bologna ::;,:,::r.,, .... SS< Smokie Links o-...,...,_, .. 8S< luncheon Meat ~~";:......,~.49 c Salads ,_.., ... M-. ........... 39< Minute Maid Frozen Minute Maid ~LEMONADE LEMON • s1 ADE-6 Oz. I for HOLLOWAY HOUSE "'''""' "'01 "' '"'""' 69< Cabbage Roll, Ptpper1. &a.,,, I CE CREAM Albo"~' • l, 1 Galloo flal ,, .............. ,. 59< GREEN GIANT RICE :~::~.i2~:~.-.. -.. 36' ..:.~~·~:' In-Store Bakery 7 INCH·2 LAYER Mother's Day Cake ASSORTED ICED CAKE DONUTS .. ,, 6• Dinner Roll s :::':' ...... 39 • Cookies, :::' ............... I. .Edairs ............ ,« ........ 19 < fa rm Bread .......... S/J. AJAX Save 13f Schlitz BEER SOLID PACK TOMATOES »1 ............ 6/1. LIQUID DETERGENT ,,_, .................... 4/1. PINEAPPLE """'"'""'"'·-711 ................... 4/ I. FRUIT DRINKS '"""""-, ................. 4/1. STEWED TOMA TOES ,., ................... 4/ I. FRUIT COCKTAIL .,, ...................... 4/1. SALAD PEARS '"' ............................. 3/1. TOMATO JUICE ....... -................... 3/1. VEGETABLE JUICE COCKTAIL .. M ...... 3/1. PINEAPPLE JUICE ---····-········· ...... 3/ 1. APPLE JUICE/CIDER -................... 3/1. TOMATO SAUCE 1c. -.................. ,_ 12/1. 11.!~, :~E~K~.~~~ 2 9 9 · M"ll H. h l"f B "'"~"' 2" 1 er 1g 1 e eer ...,.. -····- Bali Hai Champagne ·-.............. I " VODKA So~4 1c(row•lu-811 Hall Goll ........................ _. TEN HIGH ;:;,-,:,:.·~ ................ 9" BOURBON _.,.,....., ........... "'· 4" WHISKY ~::..'"".':". •. -··-····-51 ' HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS FAMILY SIZE 49~ PEPSODENT TOOTH PASTE ... Battery ... 2/68< ' Heocl0!04~-f...,.;I., ,.,. .. Sc•I"' k~ Shampoo h .. 99< Mouth Wash ... J9< ••··-'" · · Janet [ee .i , CORN - t11:r."::'• ·-·~or .... swEEh ..... --• PEAS • .CUT GlEEN BEANS • RED KIDNEY BEANS • RED·R IPE & FL AVORF UL • PINT BASKT . Beautiful Florist Quality Plants for Mother ... AZALEAS I MUMS I LILIES I ROSES 298 ! J49 298 391 SWEET-RIPE-MEDIUM 5/1. CANTALOUPE WA TERM ELON "o"" ...... "· 7 • LETTUCE :~;\~~'.'.':' ........ _, 7/75 • Albertson's ALPO HYDROX GERBER lOWSUDS 46 ~ Bf.EfCHUNK 321 DETERGENT GT. DOG fOOO IA·OZ (Rf AM WAFER 69 ~1 01 STR,\JNFO 91 8A8Y FOOD ......._L...L. '1-1- Huntington Beach-891 1 Ac!<"ms Corona del Mar -3049 Coast Hw y. ' ~-·---------___ v._...._______....._...._ _____ .. 4 --6 '---~ -..... --..o.....4 ·~ ....... ___...___.._ .. _,,,_~....._....._... .......... _.._ . -. ' '?"- Wtdntidly, M,y 6, 1'170 DAILY PILOT lJI I Money-saving Recipes Costly ., Nb Feminine Logic Left Over • Economy NEW YORK (UPI) - A bani that !ponsore<t a money. S1vlng recipe conteit here learned as much a b o u t feminine logic u it did about kitchen economy. Many contestants w h o I e recipes called le/ 1eltmn faUed to include the value of tbe leftover~ in tbe Ult.al COit ol the cliah. one woman submitted t recipe for potaton and onion• cool<ed with a 7-pound beOf roast, but ntjlected to count the cost of the beef, which was the moot upenalve Ingredient by far. Dozen Of recipes, includin1 some Prize-wlnntn, called for frozen or packaged illi?'edienls -convenience products that UM.ially are more expensive than their canned or fresh equivalents. Others called for f~ lux· ury items including Italian veal cutlets or shrimp, both with prices hovering around $2 or more per pcqtd, Belgian endive, cashew nul.$ or pecans. Chicken was a popular In- gredient. bul many recipes c a 11 e d for hlaber-priced chkken breast. rn.t.iid of whole or cut-up chicken. Few coniestantl r~ that they'd bouib\ the more expensive cut.s on sale, or sav- ed them from whole or cut-up birds bought during sales. Variaus che""' ground beef, rice and maclroni prod- ucts were predictably ~pular ingredienta:, but fis~tcept for canned tuna -made in- frequent appeara~. Two ol the four dessert win- ners contained cheese, 8!I did the first prize winner in the casserole category. The latter also contained rlct, chopped beef. sausage and eggs among il! 17 ingredients. The contest was sponsored by the National Bank of North America, which has more than 90 branches in New York City and its Long Jsland suburbs. Each entrant was asked to submit with hls ~ her recipe SO to 100 words about its origin, Many e n t e r e d treasured r~ntily favorites.·Some of the I,IOO contestants, most of whom were women, s a i d they'd 'Nsurrected tow.cost recipes from Depressioo days to cope with today 's rising pried, or bad developed their own recipes for t.he same reJSon. Some na t iona l ity and regional dishes that represent thrift to individual contestants really depend on geography for economy. Chestnuts, pigl)OHas (pine nuts) and Greek olives cl Ued for in one recipe are readily available i n neighborhoods where large numbers o f Mediterranean peoples live, but difficult to come by in ~malJ to~·ns, and correspond· ingly expensi~e. One entry that never made It to the finals called for four dozen cherrystone c I a m s , hardly a low-price Uem near the sea and considerably hl"1er in price v;hen shipped inland. One finalist's recipe was for jambon Belgique, or Belgian Fruit Grog Nutritious ~aoberry grapefruit grog is 1 full of flavor and vitamins. Combine 1 pint or cranbetty juice cocklall, 1 cup ej\ch ol unsweetened grapefruJt juice and orange juice, 1h: cup of granulated sugar and y, tea- :ipoon of aJJ!plct in 1 sauce- pan. . . Bring tG a boil. Pour into mup and garnish wlth sliced 11pple qr cinnamon sticks. if desired. Make1 t (1-cup) serv· ing.s, ' New life for tired fabrics 1tyle ham, made with an Im- ported salad Gr vegetable item that alao ls rarely if ever available in s m a 11 com- munities -e1cept for wealthy suburbs around major cities. PRIZE-WINNING RECIPE Mrs. Virginia Kranenberg's butter coconut coffee cake took third place In the deSJert category of the National Bank of North America 's money- saving recipe contest. cup each of flour and brown lableapoon1 ol baldng powder. crtamed mllture alternately 2 ounce. of packaged eocooot. She said she devised the au1ar until mlxture resemblu: Cream in cup ol butter wlth with dry iniredfentl. Pour Bake 40 mlnutea in preheated recipe while k>oking for a cof-coarse crumbs. Reserve. 8 ounct:s of cream cheese and batter into grealtd 13 by 9 by 350-degree oven. fee cake that would re me in Sift to1ether 2 cups of sifted 1 v, cups of sugar. Blend ln 2 2-lnc:h pan. Serves l~ per90ru1 at total molst when held overnight. flour, % tealpOOn each of bak· eggs and 1 teaspoon of vanilla. Sprinkle batter flrlt with cost of about Sl.00, or about 7 Cut ¥, cup of buUer in ~ lng aoda a.nd. salt, and I" Add ;, cup of milk to • crumb mixture and then wtth ctnUI a rervin1. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- MIAT DIPARTMINT IXTRA VALUll Lean, Eastern, Corn-Feel For Exira Flavor & Tenclerne11 ~··-~::::::::::: .. ~ .• :1 ... :.. ........ ~ ..... .:~.~= ... ~ Rll PORTION Of LOIN Foll 5 Ribs Loin Pork Rout ' Rib Pork Chops Loi• Pork Gi1p1 Oscar Mayer lactn =~}; ~~~~~1~1 Mr1. f'rill•J tt.•H d Shi""P l'll ll. KG. ...... 1 •••• $2.Jt ~, Ml'I. frid"' ,..r ... Shrlfllp 1.ot. •~G. .. .......... ,J .09 CanlMt.11 ttaUll"' Pilt.r. lMll. ~ .: ... -...... 1.is C•nwtl ... S.la Fiii .. , lMll , f'CC, ............ I ,OS C. .... 1911 .,._494 ,I .. S!Hb 2-IL .... .,,,,,,,., I.ff ll.111Nl'i'a fn.tl Ha!lbwt •·OL r ro ••. , ........... 91c · ... rt'. fiM .. ,... 14.0a.."n.--a.oz. "'°".. ...... • •"'-"'',__.. ..... Sc.I .... l'-OL .............. ,_ •• • .,....., ...... MHI s.19 11-0l. NG. ............... ISc lb. "'""' 691. ......... CfHJM 191. ""' , .... .... CUTS .............. It' w.ua.1)0U. Fresh Hen Turkeys u.s·~~:~~A 59~ Luer Sliced Bacon ~ll~~-m 75c Link Sausage SK:i~~~~Rl~~K • ~~G~ 33c Choice Chuck Steaks :!~~~~ 59~ FRESH CAUFORNIA FRYER PARTS leg1, 1hl1lls or Drumstldi1 ••• HO GlltlTt Ol IAW IHTOF 59c FRYERS · I~ Ba<kt & N•.. • •••. I 0:. '""" Wlnp .•.•••. a91. CHICKIN UIASJS c lb ~'rur 61~ ~ Your Choice YOUI CHOICf IS Al.WAYS U.S..D.A. CHOICE AT VON&! lfAN, PLAVOI· rUl JUICY CUTI WITH OUR fAMOUI CUSTOM Tl lM M!AN$ MOU VALUE l . rot YOUl MONfY, ' Boneless Chuck Shoulder Clod ... -:·~:.. Boneless Round :~:: Beef Short Ribs ~:·~~ Peppered Steaks Boneless Steaks <OO•·l CllCLf ~<." l tolUI 49• $1" ... $1 !' OllDll&IUT NIBLRS VOH!1 rwtD IUO "-• ~ 18-0L oomt ~ • v ............... PkG. FRUIT .. ~ COCKTAIL ,,_ FANCY FAll,MS ,,, . •~,._,S,,V,. ... htfeitlw CAN Sll.il .. ;,.. 0..... .. • ' RANGE !UJ!~@ 1ha.C.. •.. Mc I °"'" Olil 1'111 ('loo-. -................... 15< I $-li\JNU'Tl o.w... ri.-,._~a.it. ................. 11'( Wax Remaver ,_ O..... lo!NI. •et. ..................... •1.ot ,___. ~ 0.-""''· .............. -....... MllCI 89t ..... loffltol ....... -............... 211 .... (.Ill 34081 Doheny Park Drive, Capistrano Beach ,, It"'--~·-· ·• • -, •·•1 EXTRA llAtUfS! J I STUWlllRIES 100K .... 1~:/,~:.,. =-~~=°' 3:89c ftt1h Com =.. ........ OIO'll'"" Ml ~ • c l CAIANA~ ANJOU C.CUllllitrs :0.-~ IANAN PEARS O.lon1 :::-;.:a~.--~ S: 12· c a=:·-~' 19' Watermelon:.~ ...... ,,_ •,__. . ~·-·•-.M--I.tad Lettwc.t =' .... All Detergent ,~·~;.u;;-~::n 63' Tree Top Apple Juice = 35' Welch's Grape Jelly "=."t:.o·2t Jerseymaid Butter -~~ 79' Pledge Polish ·~~~~::: 75' IUC• "'9'f'I HVnn PAlflilU ••WI I -.lllCO'n ...... .,,.. ?low ,__. r:::;:."' 41' r:ri:... lJ =. • C""""4 "'"',.. ~ -·"' ":\:° CORN Gofden 12-0L Whole Kernel CAN N•w 120-GT, Sun./r•1hl IOU f}l!Jf.!l:J "'""" •••• '""' ..• ,..... .... ___ .,. ClW l lll M .... -----"' &!M's Pl&W _..., ----.. .. rt ................. :::::="' "'O'T,._.____ .. .,. ... -..-0...... ... IN i'll P1tltt11 O'lriNI ---" ITI ClrtldlS!twYtt:tte~ -.--· Clftfl1k1 IMerrlilt 11• .............. _ ... ••• ~ ... , .. ::&'"..:4--... i...-Off ,...,_a_·-n........_ ...... Ot't ~--~11 ....................... ~ *""-"' c-~ ,... ........ co.--............ nc MM ..... Wrop ,.,. -.. , .............. ~ "',........~ ............... _ . .- HILLS BROS. COIFEE ~ Bl• I 2 ~*I" I 3 ~ •2.a .......... Clfl-.. _,..,, __ .n. I DU """ , ..,.. o.i.tl.i -...... _ ........... _ .......... , CH!f,ON I -Sponge ..,... ~ .... -.._ ................. -..... i0ra Morgorlne Olive Olt , ..... , . ..,,, ...... _ ....... <f ........... .... 29 • 1...,0H ..... ___ t,W1 ........... ilOrtJllC( 38"-J.()LllL 2"' flq wt.Iii. .... lii&Mlii' ........... ._.J'h 14CfK. »OLUlt,_fll 7 · 1011 Adams Ave., at Brookhurst, Huntington Beach 5922 Edinaer Ave., at Springdale, Huntington Beach 17950 Magnona, Fountain Valley 21082 Beaoh Blvd., Huntington Beacb ' ' I -----~ ~ -~ ~-___ ..__..___..... ..._ ....... _ _...___.__ __ ,._ ..... ~· ......... -. ------.. ----------. --. I ! I ' f I I ., 5J 'D~L: PIL~T· .. • -• --• ~,~,~~.-M0Q -~ ·l:ro . .-• . ---• . . . . ~-~~~-··-·~·--~·--..... ·-·--·-·--•-•->• ••-•....,•-•~·-·~·-·----·-•-•-•--•-• .... •-•o-•••,....••••'+-•.-.~-·--•-•,....+·••-+•••-+•••·~---~--~------1-~ Doilies Do Double Party Dut~ • • T.l'h I 1 '1 not. too-sweet" plaC"t aeveral Wetnesses of evr.1ly over the top of the Serve with cbllkd I~ ,/, cranberry juice. MW. I i •i cranQerry cake Is just right paper doilies on top ol cake. cake. Carefully lift up the lace for any party you mar be Sieve ' confectioner'• s u g a r doilles . Cut cake lnlO squares. square. planning . . . b< It for the . _c:;,,,,:...:..:==cc.c....:.._:_ ______ _,_....:.. __ ....:.......,.--------!!'. graduate, lbt bride-to-be or just to welcome 'a new neighbor. The pretty lace lop is made by placing a do\lhle thickness of paper dollies on top ol the cooled cake and .sifting confectioner's sugar o v·e r theffi. Carefully lift the dOilles from tM cake. The lace pat- tern remains! cflANBERl\Y TEA CAXE IJa cup vegetable shortenine 1 cup sugar 2 eggs 1 teaspoOn vanilla extract %/S ,cup cold tea 1 lh teaspoons grated lemon rind 2 cups silted cake flour 1A: tea.spoon salt % teaspoon baking soda · 1h cup M:IJ drained cran- berry-orange relish from a 14-ounce jar. Cream shortening until light and nuffy. Gradually beat in sugar. Stir in eggs. Gradually beat in vanilla, tea and lemon rind. Stir tn flour, salt and baking soda. Beat until v.·ell blended an1 smoOlh. Fold in cranberry- orange relish. Pour batter into a greased and floured 9-inch square baking pan. Bake In a preheated r6oderate over (350 degrees JI'.) for 40 to 45 minutes -or until clke--feel! firm to the touc!i. Remove from pan and cool on a Tack. .... .....,~--:---- t' .... I . . · There's no time like now to ladle out Pepperidge f'a(nt0'ChlcKen with Wild Rice Soup: Spunky· grains ' of dark, wild rice<)n a golden brnth · • ~IY chisken ·and ~lloW·sauterne. , ~·1 ;,';ffe~t)Jp. lt's thf,~teatlng -,;,. · .• ~· .,In~ month'of,SO!JPdays" "'1. • --· ·~. '... •'_'lt.li' -- FROST A CAKE IN A LACY PATI'ERN Place cake ~on 1 platter and Coffee Flavors Versa ti le Duo We've discovered a delec- table concoction you can use two ways. This Mocha Cream fills and frosts a layer cake in a luscious way. It may also be used to prepare Froien ~tocha Squares; here it's turned into a cookie<rumb crust. Take your choice! We're parti c ularly enamored with the use of Mocha Cream for a cake Knit Skirts Ideal for oUice. travel, town ... country! Knit In several colors kl go with everything. Use worsted for plain &lim or A-line skirts, rayon, wool or fingering yard for ribbed •ersion. Pattern 7313: sizes %3-24; 25-26; 2&30 inches. FIFTY CENTS (coins) fgr because it produces an out- standing filling and !rosting and yet no cooking is involved in its preparation. !'llOCBA CREA.'t 4 large egg's o/, cup sugar 11, pound (1 stick) butter I square (1 ounce) u n sweetened chocolate, melted and cooled 1 teaspoon instant po!A·dered coffee ~ teaspoon vanilla Separate eggs, p 11 t t i n g whites in medium bowl of electric mixer and yolks in a cup. Beat whites until foamy throughout; gradually beat in l/4 cup of the sugar so that whites hold stiff straight peaks "'hen beater is s I o w I y withdrawn; set aside. Without washing b e a le r , beat butter; gradually and thoroughly beat in remaining 1h cup sugar: gradually and thoroughly beat in egg yolks. Beat in choco1ate, coffee and vanilla, blending thoroughly. l'~old in egg whites. Use !\focha Cream as filling end frosting for two 8-or 9-incli layer cakes; refrigerate cake after filling and frosting. Or use ?i.locha Cream in recipe for Frozen Mocha Squares. FROZEN MOCHA SQUARES -1 cup chocolate cookie wafer crumbs 2 tablespoons sugar ',k pound (1,} stick) butter, melted Mocha Cream, see recipe Pistachio nuts, if desired Jn a small mixing bowl stir together the crumbs and sugar: stir in butter. Press mixture firmly and evenly against bottom and half-way up sides of an 8 by 8 by 2 inch cake pan. Bake in a preheated 351). degree oven for 5 minutes. Cool on wire rack. Turn Mocha Cream into crust, spreading even I y . Freeze until firm -about 2 hours. U desired, E)lrinkle wllh pistachio nuts before serving. Cut inlo t squares. Makes 9 servings. each pattern -add IS cents•---------- for each pattern for first-c lass malling and special handling; otherwise third-class delivery will take three weeks or more. ~nd to Alice Brooks, the ~Al· t.Y PILOT, 105 Needlecraft Dept., Box 163, Old Chelsea Statton. New York, N. Y. 10011. Print Name, Addre111 Zip, Patten Namber. BJG 1171 Needlecra ft Caialtg ~ 40 pages, over 200 designs, 3 tree patterns! Knit. crochet Instants. a r g y I e "'eat.er, hata, dreue1, swim IUJt. QuUt. embrokler, weave. Nake toys, giftl, gay afghans. knd 50 cenls. .. INSTANT Girts. Pt1ake lo- ., -give lomorrow. 50 -. "II Jlllj Rafi" to knll, crochet, weave, sew, hook. 50 ...... Book or ll Prize Afghans. IOc.ntl. Barplnl Qvlll Book I h" II boftlitld palterM. 50 cenll. Space age ironing -FAST! ~·TOP Y .ALU ~EFFECTIYE7 DAYS A WEEK DllCOUNTIUPDMUKftl v ONDAY-SUNDAY MAY ~lh THRU MAY 10th ROUND ST·EAK fUL1 cut-nNDll lllf • COSTA MESA AT 19th ST, and 'H~llOI ILVD. TORRANCE AT 221th and VEIMONT AYE. WE WELCOME FOOD STAMP SHOPPERS STORE HOURS DAILY 10 1.m. 10' p.m. SUNDAY 10 I.a. lo 7 P·!"· FRYER 4 9 PORK S! ~.~~!!. .~ c~~ 66 E ----------------------RIB STEAKS PAN fKY 01 llOIL ' FRYING ~s. POii( 2. CHJ:~!:~~ . ,~ Ci!.~_!5 11i --------------------------CLUB :SiEAKS $ 19 HEAVY --~s. PORK 80¢ LI. 'FRJ:~.~SJ. L~ C~!!'S . O LI. A51D TO llOIL T-BONE ST·EAK POITllHOUSI ••• Sl .lt LI. USDA INSPICTID .. ,BONELESS , !: ;r;c;;,~~ 5 fJ !. it~!!~ 6 98 !. i!~~:: ... 89! '~~~!~s 4'1: • ROASTS WAITI H.il lllf CH 0 iiCl SIRLOIN TIP ROAST IONIUSS lOLUD & TllD BEEF STEW LIAN DICID CUllS CORNED ·aE·EF · lllSH IU.NI IEST FOODS MAYONNAISE 9-Jar Com,,.re At 69c LIMIT I WITlf COUPON • • H·AM · · 0 STEAKS u. IONILISS llU.l,AST NO SALES TO DEALERS • • • FAWMER JOHN BACON 68 1~ 1 u.. ,.,. Compare At ltc LIMIT I WITlf COUPO .. 7 COfJPONPElf FAMILY • "LOIN YHALF LI. •ULL t Ill HAI.JI ,_SPARE "RIBS u. MUTT IASTllN RIIS 10 Lb. Cello 141t ~IMIT I WtTlf c.ou'o" 66! 66~ • • •• 1 COUPON /'ER fAMIL Y .. ' i\J. PILOT·A~ERTISER , '.;. . -. ' l ..... ' Wtdntsday, M1.1 6, 1970 DAIL y PILOT H • ' ' - ' • • ' • . ~ . ' • l • ' ·-:. .... • > f ,, :--· .. . . ,. -. .;.. .. ~ . .. • . . ' .. CADILLAC NINETEEN SE ·VENTY --,: -•' ......... ' ... IJ . ; :, ,, I ·-,. ·- ' • • ' ' . -· ' ·. Your Factory Authorized Cadillac Dealer . ' Serving the Orange Coast Harbor Area CADILLAC NINETEEN SEVENTY EXCELLENT ~ELE(:T Jl)l\ OF lJUJ)ErA'i & CO LOHS FOJ{ LEA~E ()({ fURCH.\SE Even when measured by Cadillac ·Sfand.ards or excellence, the 1970 Cadillac .is sure to exceed your greatest expectaHons. Let's get to_g~~er soon "for !l dj!:~nstration drive. ·. Buy .or .Lease . T~ay. ,Choose F1:orn Our Record Inventory ) -{ ' ' ... '. 1'~ ..,, .. .. · . . ' • .. ,1964 .. . . . FACTORY EX~CUTIYE CAR 1970 .ED!N. DE VILLE. . . This gorgeous 1970 C.CUlf•c '~•s full le1ther &·cloth 1nter-1or, vinyl roof, full C1dill1c p.ow•r:•cceJ10ri11 plus o_f cqiUrse fee· tory 1ir conditioning, AM -FM ·stereo multiplex r•dio, pow•r door leeks, tilt.tel•scopic st•erin9 wh••I, r••r win dow defo9· 9er, twilight sentin~I. ·plus much mor•. Th is car h•s h•rdl'f b••n driv•n, less .th•n 6'700 miles. Seti•! number 12074471. .. , -. CADiLLAC CLEAUNCE SALE •• 2 door hardtop. Full power. equi~Lplus · factory air conditioning, clct.lh" · ~eat.her .$1222 ()\'ER f.11 QUALITY C .\DlLL\1.~ Interior, AM·Ffl.1 radio. CQZV181) PRICE "·· ' .. CLD.RANCE SALE 1968 CADILLAC $3888 'Coupe' DeVllle. \TlTryl' top, cloth & leathtr interior, full power, factory air AJ.J.ffl.·[ radio, rear window defog~er. CYffU78) PRICE ClDILLAC CLEARANCE SALE . 1968 $3444· Convt. DeViJI('. Leather interiC?r, full .pow- er, factory air, stereo Al\f·F?i~ multipl~x. tlll·telc wheel, l\~:ilight sentinel, radial tires. (XJA187 J PRICE CLEARANCE SALE !!~~u,c!!'~~~ k i ... ,,. , 52222 er interior, full power, factory air, Ai\1 · Fi\f radio, Wt-telescopic wheel etc. (SJL· 1351 • PRICI 1969 C"DILLAC· Eldorad(t. Vinyl •tbp, cloth & leather ln· teNr, full power. faetory air, stereo AM.· n.t multiplex. power door locks, tilt tell· scoplc stttring wheel, Cl1,lise control, rn•i· light sentinel, etc. LoW mileage. (H9135715J 1965 CADILLAC Fleetwood sedan. Fun Power, factory 1air, AM·fit ~h &--leat~er biterior, tilt tel~ seopic \1>'hee1, power dOor Jocks. (NF'A306) ' CLfARANCE SALE $5888 "PRICE CLEARANCE SALE $1999 'RICI AND OTHU FIN! CARS TO SELE< :T FR01'1 L:\HGEST SELECTI<.11\ OR .\.\{;E cur.\''f'Y! •• ' NABER·s ' . . I\ $ 2600 ·Harhoi•.Blvd., . Costa Mesa ' - . . . ' ,· .. •• . ;:·540-s100 .. ~ • -f .. . . • .. • S:AtEs-nEPARTMENT OPEN CLEARANCE SALE PRICE J 966 CADILLAC Sedan De Ville. Vinyl top, leather lntl'rint', run po••tt, factory air, AAI·Ff.1 radio, etc. Local 1 owner. (\VXE473) " . 1967 C~DILLAC Cou~ OeVillc. Vlnj.1 top, leather Interior. full power, facto1·y air, Al\l·FM radio, lilt telescopic wl)eel, power door locks, etc. lTYU013) . 1969 GRAND PRIX Vinyl top, vinyl interior, full powPr, far· tory air condltlonlna, AJ\l·TM stereo radio, power door locks, tUt-telescOpic ~·heel, auto. cruise control, low mileage. (YPW· 308> 1967',EL . DOl!lADO run po\ver, factory alr, vinyl top, al) Jealh· l'r interior, Ult &: tl'lescopic whei!I, slf'reo Ai\1-PM, cruise control, every extra .l low mileage. (UZF'0041 1968 CADILLAC . . . Sedan DeVllle, Padded lop, leath('r lnter- tior, ruU~powtt,Jactory air, stereo AM-F'ftl radio, flit telhcoplc \vheel power door locks, trunk opener, flremlst paint. (WW· 'r.!21 1967 CADILLAC Sedan DeVUle. Yil\)'I top, leather Interior, FP. FA..1 tUl tele, A~f.fl\;l, power door lockt, pqwer·vebt windows. Local l owner. IUJH~91) CLEARANCE SALE $2333 PRICE CLEARANCE SA~E $2999 PRICE CLEARANCE SALE $3888 PRICE CLEAitANCE SALi $39 99 PRICE CLEARANCE SALE $38 88 PRICE CLEARANCE SALE $2999 PRICE LEASE SPICIALS .. , 197Q Cpe. De V~lt 5174 mo. -·-1970 El Dorado · '199 mo • . ' lmmldlat• D•"'Y ~ I J;tJ c•r lfl 1t9ck Fully equipped v;ilh air conditloninl, atereo, lull leather, land11.u top, All pov.'Cl" ntra.s, etc. etC • 24 Month 0,-; Eiod i.- Leue •ffer ••JINli Mar 17th, 1t71 8:30 AM to 9:00 PM Mon. thru Fri e 9:00 AM to 6:00 PM Sat and Sun. ' ' . y• •. ALL CARS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE. ALL SAtE'PRICES1EFFECTIVE-THROUGH TUESDAY, MAY 12, 1970 '---''~cW.~.---___... __ ......... ~ ~ -~ ... ...._.-~~ --~-··. ··----------- .I I I l I • . > ,• i . ·• ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • " ... ' ' ~ ' ' ·~ . . •, •. ; . . ; . · . . . . , . , . J : l . , , l , ; , l , , , , , , , l . . :. •, ., .... ---· . -~ ":• S4 DAILY PILOT Wtd~. M.., 6, 1970 .. " DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS WT:LL1 MY CHILD7! -PJ'J-D'"'<"'"'ll ARE. Wf. 'TOOAY?! FINE, SlR,~K YOO, SIR! MUTI AND JEFF You USE Har DOGS FOR BAIT? WHAT 00 YOU EXPECT T O CA11:H WITH"T>1AT KIND OF 'BAIT ?- JUDGE PARKER A&BEY, DIP I ~EIO:' 11::16HT? Tl-I EV DIPtff PIP Tl-IAT 5AIZR:A6E OF COME our OF WQJ:t>S COIAE OtJT OF MINE. SAlf\ ~ THAT ANGELIC. MOOTH?' PLAIN JANE • COM€,COMi:i!:!TfLE ONEJ MUST Wf BE SO RWMl-1 YOU MAY DISPl'NSE WITH 111£ 'SIR"! Y&:U..OW SMIGS? WHAT ARE YELLOWSMIGS? COME-0VE" ME~ AND -51T LET 60 DOWN, ~RIE~P~ I lHllrrl K WE OF ME, MTTEJ:: 6 ET TO IQIOW KNOTHEAP! EAC.H 0TI1ER' ! By Chnter GOlld By Tom K. Ryan CALL ME '"1tJUR HONOR"! '1 il l " . ly Al Smltti I AIN'T CAUG HT ANYYE T1 By Harold Le Daux r~---NOT UNTIL YOU TELL M.~ 60 FLY A KITE .\FEW TM IN6S ... L11CE IN 'ttllllt ~H YOUR. MAME AJ.IP W1-4ERE ; KITt:ME~. P16 : YOU U.lt\E FRO~~ By Frank Bac;iinskl ·-· . PERKINS 'I DAILY CROSSWORD •••• , R. A. POWER I ACROS S l Real ity 5 Llkrntss lo Refuse 14 Acidity 15 C1 lled lb Roots tock 17 "It ca n't be done!" l ' Hrnce 20 Began agafn 21 Fishing vrssrl 23 Lowe r an lmar 25 Facial le1tur.t 20 Rrachts by mrans of ladders 2' Baseball • statistics ::. 34 Carry 0<1 :• J5 •••• in a lifetime 37 The othrr sidr ll Stitt: Abbr. 39 United closely together 41 Wr ighl unit 42 Wire bending tool .44 Dlsordr1ty prof11sion -'S Vrhlclt '1116 African tree 48 Dwelltd L on 1 ' subject I I l i ' 50 Maker of worr isome r1d1r blip: Abbr. 51Setd: Comb. fcwm 53 F1r11 m1chlnt 57 lndlan of USA and Canada 61 Israeli dancr 62 Concerned with lh OUS· andths b4 Ex11dt 65 Acc11111111tion of serous lh1!d 66 Story 67 Created 68 Spl endid b' "Be11onr 1" DOWN 1 We1lher- m1n's word 2 Prak ] ·-· Ind robbers c Bother 5 At the r i9ht limr: Z words 6 Unm11rird qirls 7 Top diplo· mat: Abbr. 8 Money ~Swimmer Gertrude ' 1 10 Cooling 1i\tn$il 11 Mr. Sandburg 12 Impulse ll Arric an 18 Widge on 22 Exposed 24 Mllilary scirncr 26 Ex cha ngts 27 ....• lily 28 On thr other hand JO Prtsld rnlia l prrro9ative 31 -·· .• and 90: 2 words 32 Act hamm!ly 33 Ch11rch council 30 Frminint name J9 Stron9 paper • • I 1.,,,., +-+-l-~,;,., +-+-l-+-+- 1 horlH-t-t-++;, ., • 5/b/70 40 Heavenl y 43 Provide with schooling C5 Hollows beneath \h r should ers 47 Landlady's cuslomtr 4' M1c1w s 52 •••• • dr Mallorca, Spain 53 Pron o11n 54 European Clpilal S5 Barren 56 Br an rqueslrian 58 Kind of servant 59 The Sa int's tiade mar~ 110 Tablt spread 63 Meat cut .. " MISS PEACH STEVE ROPER Ar l-IE,.,D· QUARTERS, STEllE HAS PEANUTS ;"" Ll'L AINml SALLY BANANAS 1u-~ to.~ Cl ~ "" Rcdj.J. Nob. ... GORDO MOON MUWNS ANIMAL CRACKERS HAl.'a'V.HAIJe l,\)) CMPITED GeE ... OO, HOO ... :i:. 11-te. RUBBISH, HAVEIJ'r HAD ~?' 'lr----"I A QWJ::E- 'WoNo<RFLJ L ! o~. Col/FOLJM> JT, liMW. ! i.--------l ... By John Miles -AMl>.llS :t GA'.ZE OUT OVER 'THIS SEiA OF FACE:_ By Men \ ,., By SaMnders and Overc;iard -. -----___ .__ __ ._ ----~ ~. ---....... __ .__ .. -_ ............... __ ,__ ...... _ .. _ ..... _------...-...------..------....~-~ ... ----~-------· • • ~ ~ f f THE mAHG1 WOIU> .. MR.MUM By Al Capp By Chorles Barsotti I M.oA I-be &ag • .ct),,;;:- ~~ By Gus Arriola By Roc;ier Bollen FU~IN-MOM 10.D "1E :r: IOAS A BQl. a:¥.l'SrRI Cfal:'. , .. " 1: n l .\ • 3 " • l • I l ; ' • -.--·-----.... ,. ----v-----. -................. ·--~~-. &..,...,. H., 1Mt ·e..w.- ' • HOUSES FOR SALE I HOUSES FOR SALE_ HOUSES FOR SALE I HOUSES__FOR SALE ~~ FOR SALE 'HOUSES FOR SALE General 1000 General 1000 General 1000 General 1000 General 1000 General 1000 PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOM ES 133 CUSTOM 4 TO 7 BEOROOM HOME S FROM $135,000 TO $500,000 PRIME BUILDING LOTS FROM $35,000 TO $175,000 BILL GRUNOY, REALTOR Dover Or., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620 olJle Jaf&ng. !Jn ofoveJ \\le do & \Ve have, with this lovely Cameo Highlands vie'v hoine. 3 Large bedroo1ns. 2 baths + a powder room, family & living rooms are separaled by an unusual fire- place. Plush landscaping. Anthony Pool with pools,veep. Eight years of T.L.C. & only ~56,000. Sho\vn by app't . & exclusively by UNIVERSITY REAL TY 3001 E. Coast Hwy., CdM 67.1-6510 ~ Vermont Colonial General 1000 General 1000 General 1000 General FOREST E. 0 LS 0 N Inc. ltcaltors Reduced • For Quick Sale SEE THESE Neighboring Homes Let Owne rs A 3 BR. HOME FOR ONLY $10,995 Buill on your land~ FEATURING ./ 1080 llq. ft . !/ Double garngc WHOA •••••• Here It 1,1 Young -Big -Beautiful JUST LISTED! Giant 2 story colonial. 5 massive bedroon1 s. 3 baths, formal ::;laircase to 18 ft. n1aster su ite with huge 14 ft. \Valk-in closets. Deluxe kit· lhls may be you1· nr1~' hon1c. chen with all built-ins. Colonia l dining. It positively is the most and huge family roo1n. Unique 19 ft. lx-aut. you've t'ver SCf'n. LUMINOUS ceiling in kitch-\\•Ork shop for dad. Nestled in a quiet en .•. CUSTOf\I triplr drap-cul·de-sac of to\vering trees. Unbeatable HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE General 1000 University P.1rk NEED CAMPER OR BOAT tlOOO MOVES YOU IN S LIASI OPTIONS -SHELTER? 2-Townhousd, 4 Bdtms .. 2..,. ba'1., family rm., 2 Thi!1 wonderful homt' on a fl'plcs. qUil't cul-de-sac sll'N'I hu 1-3 Bdrm, 2 Ba., family 'J'\\'0 DOUBLE GARAGES rn1., din. rm., Broadenoor •.. plus 3 bedrooms a sep. ho1n€'. You ov.•n th.e land. ' I .1 .. • 1-:l Br. 2 Ba. famtly rm. am~ anu y or d1n111g room \Vrt bar. Assume 6~% comple trly paneled and with ~oan. a lovrly ust>d brick fireplace l ·Tl\1.vnhouse 2 BR. II. n1ised hrarlh. Ea11y-c11re You own lhe land. Ba . v.•ool carpeting throui:hout -- & beau11ru1 ccramt" tile in YOU OWN THE LANO kilchrn & balhs A very pri l'lus this a ln1ost llt'\•' 3 val!' baclcyRrd ~ith 00\'Cred Rdrrn.. 2\1 bath ho1nr. . . . Up~raded carp et & patio. Bl'auhfuJ corxhllon. • • drapl'S. 2 Frplcs. (one in A DELCCHT TO SlfO\V~ ms1r Br.I. A bsolutely lm- 533.300. IVA-FHA buyers mar. cond. & pricc>d at \lell'Ome.I jus! $42.950 \l'ith as IO\\' ns S.'J,000 dov.'n, includinf;: Tl!~ W\ND? LOWEST PRICED I Colesworthy Cliffhaven-Bay View Dual custom hoine \Vlth breathtaking vic1v. 3 Bed· rn1., den & dining room. }~ecling of pri\•acy: beauti- fully maintained. New car- pets, drapes, fine wallpaper. Call for app't, lo see, " All lath and plaster ./ Pullman bath erics .•. $16 pe1· yd. Nt'1v today at $44.000. See NOW ! & C shag cplg .•. Bit-in bookcas-O. 3 Bit 2 ba. in the area' DcspcrAll' 0\1·ner \\'ants I his JJrop. !>old RIGHT NO\V, Has lowered thr µrice lo $27,950 1\•lth V!'ry GOOD TER!\tS Hvail. ·r1tls is a ra1·c opportuni- 1 ~· &. is dr-fin tely undrr n1RrkC't valuf'. Don't mi.ss It! HOUSES FOR SALE 1237 2 FIREPLACES On' U~ 111Qt~ bdrm. & one Jn lhe hug' family rm., w/\\·et bar. 3 BR. 2'1S ha .. formal dining rm. Sweep- ing view from up&tairs. Spotless cond. I: a real pleasure to -s h o \V • t $36,950! $244 MONTH I~ lhc tolal payment IN- CLUDING TAXES upon 11.Ssumpton of the exist. loen on thL, BRAND NE\V 3 BR. &. din. rm. town· houSf'. Choice, end-unit loc. ?-l ust be-sold NOW & fJricf'd undrr market al SJ.1950 INCLUDING TI-IE t.AND • but submit any reasonable offer! OUTSTANDING 3 BR. This one defies comparison -Rbsolutely spotJess thru- out! Professionally lnd- sc1>d. 1'1any. man1 extras . !ll'l\listica.lly priced at SJS.950 INCLUDING THE LANO, v.i lh as low as $5,000 dO\\'n . 4 massive bclnns. Plus 26 rt. living room, adorably dec- orated. 2 full baths, dream kitcheJJ, cozy brick fireplace. 33 tt. covered patio, close lo schools, shopping, Jrec\\·ays. Step in and take O\'cr exist- ing loan and payment!'\, NO qualifying, \Von't lasl !his y,.·cek. Hurey and call, • , Just Reduced ,/ Spacious wardrobes CALL 537-0310 rs & cabinets .•. all rooms • REALTOR beaut 1\·allpa()t'recl. , .extra Dial 645-0303 r..'rivport Beach Ofliee BOB PETTIT, REALTOR slorag~ cabinets .•. & natur-l02S Baysidl' Drive ''SINCE 1946" 962-5585 19131 Brookhursl 1-Iunti~ton Beai•h UDO ISLE Just reduced $2,CXXI, Sunshin. ey South patio &. colorful garden atmosp~r" furnish ideal background for this 4 bedroom home. 3 Balhs. Family room & bonus room for oUice or Ewing, Break. fast area in bright, !pacious kitchen, \\ith new ice-maker rehigerator, Near tennis & private beach, $74,500. MACNAB-IRVINE Rea1ty Company (714) 642-8235 901 Dover Dri ve, Suite 120 (714) 675-3210 1080 Bayside Dri\'C Newport Bench LOOK TWICE!! TWO HOMES Both in exclusive Broadmoor/ Harbor View Hills. Both 4 BR. -21;~ ba, Both \V/family r ms. -both w/formal din. r 1ns. -both \V/view~ • boU1 under $70,000. 833-0700 644-2430 FINANCING TOUGH? Extra large 3 BR & rani rm home-in College Park and it absolutely sparkles, and here is \\'hat it \\'ill cos1. \\'ilh S50Cl0 dO\\'n assume ex. isting 51.~ % loan and pay $770 per mo. including P.l.T.I. PAUL•Wlll'l'E CARNAHAN aaALTT co. 1093 Baker, C.111 . It's Pool Time! Jn f\fesa Verde • lo~ly big 4 Bedrm + detached family room &. dining rm. & spark- ling pool. Only 10'"; do\vn. Asking $46,900. S46·S8BO (nffl' cinema the3t!!l LLEGE REALTY 1500Adal'lls at H1rbor,CM Cozy & secluded ·with Vi('\V of Bay&. Ocean. 2 Bednns., den, v.i th sbe\l('rcd patio & garden~ $39,500. •in n1ost Orange County nnd other approved areas. a!ly, •p•·ink!"'· ""' """"' FOREST E. OLSON, INC,, Realtors 67"4930 83J.0101 OAY or NIGHT & block V.'8.11. \V i th over $f.OOOl=================o I ****•*•**** I 'I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ ""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! in impro"m'n" '"'' ''•General 1000 1General 1000 Lease Opt1"on Sale i:_____ = ------- Both Exclusive With STANCO BUILDERS, INC, Closed Sundays 10666 Westminster Ave, Gardea Grove Balanced Po\~1er Home~ 1t'C n1l'ndous value at $33,900.1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I Even has a Jov.· interest VAi • Newport Be.1ch 1200 ~rsity Park Joan to save you a few 1hou-LIDO WATERFRONT APARTMENTS 011'nl"r transferred, now v11-I---------- 1237 Pete Borrett ~ ""''' Loc.ioo '" "'"' Ver-,.,,.,. Immooi''" """"'"'•"· EXCLUSIVE di', need 11·c say "'Call now Gorgeous 3 Bed rm, 2 story BACK BAY AREA REALTY on this fa ntaslic property"? 320 LJDQ NORD hon1!' 111 i1nmaeulatc condi. t1on. Lt·ase $300 nio, • full Vacant and l\"aili~ for a par. sail' pritt. $3."l.950. Ca 11 licular buyer 3 spacious bed- 5'1~8424. rootns, 2 luxury baths_ CUs.- 1605 \Vestchff Dr , NR 642-5200 ~ NICHOLS R. E. 546-9521 NOW Reduced to $175,000. Xlnt terms NEWPORT HEIGHTS $20,950 • J. K ,_NICH015 6 Beautiful units. 6 Car garages & utility room, with 80 ft. fronting on excellent s"'·im- ming beach. Units a re newly furnished. or $17.483 is assumable al lhis low ra!e when you buy I his SHARP, SHARP 3 Bed- nn & 2 Bath luxury home, brick fireplace, near • nev.• crpts, drps &. bltn kitchen. \'our lotal payments v.·itl be $142. n10. including taxes. \\'hy 11·ait? Call 0011 • Sharp, remodeled. excellent Joca1ion. Scpan1te guest/ hObby roon1. \Vall to v.·all carpets, drapes, bi~ lot. Room for expansion. \VQ\V : ~ ~~~~~~~~1 BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR 833 Dover Or., Suite 3, Newport Beach 642-4620 FOREST E. . . co:Ts OLSO N~al 1000 General 1000 Newport •• Fairview WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141-- (0pen Evenings) -Quick Sale Inc. Realtors Just Take Over Large 4 Brm I $18,500 *TAYLOR 80 LINDA ISLE Sre this new j & niaid's rn1, fan1 rn1 + RR, ::. halh~ and only 6 yrs_ yuun~. Flin-Open daily ~lfi!l,300 tast1c terms. Unbrhevable lOI LINDA ISLE LO\\' -LO\\' _ LO\V down 4 Bl'drn1 • 2 baCh • all Ultns (anytime) • fireplace • fan11\y 1m - Carpl'ted • spark1 inl:" condi- tion. Low inlerest Joan avail- abl!' • good tt'rms. Priced at S28.9;;o. Call 545-8424. Near Westcliff 3 Bedroom & fan1ily ml, nestled on lovely, qu iet, tree lined street. Spaciou~ Jiving r n1 has massive brick firc- i.~ all you need. 1 kini;: size A real buy in this one. 011·n- l:M'Clroo1ns. 2 full baths, \\'Jfe er leaving stal('. ~ Bdrn1, Mvcr kilchl'n, enlt'rtainmcnt fam rn1, pier & slip $13:i,OO'.I. patio. \\'ell kept community. THE BLUFFS search C\'i!rywht'rt' and you Co11do J Blinn & bit-in rang!' wun'f find a bargain like & O\'en. Priva1e pa!io. Pcr- th1s, Call today. Dlal fcc1 for rouple. $26.500. 962-5585 \outh ~ {-oast . -. pla!X', BBQ in family rm. 19131 Brookhurst :Xlnt shag carpeting on peg-I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiiiiiiio I ;--'•'";n;ti;ing;t;m;• •""-"•"--,I ''Our 25th Year" WESLEY N. gcd hanfv.uod. $39,500. Sec I' Leisure Living BAYFRONT PIER & SLIP TAYLOR CO. it 0011·~ Ne On Vets Lo On FHA L."lrge lot, focd !ront &. rt'ar for privacy & safety. 3 Bed- rm, i 1~ BA, shake roof, dblc ga1·. Call now! $23,950. (6) 2 BR Units w /Pool Easlsidc -sharp! Crp1s, drps, patios. $75,000. Hurry?? BOB OLSON REALTOR 546-5580 Bluffs, N.B. Overlooking "green belt". l BR, 21,£ BA. huge l1vlng + dining area. Lachenmyer Realtor 1860 Newport Blvd., Ci\t CALL 646--3928 E~s. 644-1655 Realtors NE\VPORT CENTEH llandw111t• hon1(' 11•Hh ~1 BR. 2111 San Joaquin Hills Hoail 3 ha .. on one of !he f1•1v 644-4910 Ilaysidl' Dr. fe(' l not lease) lots -taxes only $1400 per MESA DEL MAR year. 5..1 Ft. \\'a\crrmnl wilh REDUCED TO FTIA AP· Kandy llcach. $179,500. PRAISAL is lhis spo1-lcs~. ~ carpe!eil an1l d17tpcd, th ree .......---.............. bcclroorns. family roon1, 11\'o balh horn<' 11•irh built-in """""~"'"""~~~.,.I Coldwell,Banker kitchen, p..itio flnd douhlc ====~====:I MESA VERDE ~"DcOM~A•~ garage. Beautifully Jand- Goy'l, Repossessr·on JHs coLoR1.oo LN. -'""""' •ron• "'' ~'" "" Just released • avail;,iblc lo anyone, very IO\V do .... ·n pay. men!. 3 Largr-Bedrnl's. carpels, 11aJJCUing, n('\\' pa1nl Inside & out. 2~~ Car ~al'­ ogc. Covrrcd patio. fo'ull prire $20,50.J. Total paymen1 $184. mo. 11ay all. Ca 11 a40-1151 for all dclalls, Ht'r- itagr Real Es!atr. BAYFRONT APTS:- VISTA DEL LIDO Pier & Sl ip available $32,500 and up George Williamson REALTOR 673.4350 64>1564 Eves. $30,950 pond and \Valer fall, ron1- 83J.0700 644-2430 plc1ely fcnced. OUR BUY Immacula!t' '1 Br, f.'.1mily l========:::::::1 O~"' TI IE YEAR AT ONLY room, 2 fireplaces. carpeted, OCEAN VIEW $28,9."J() • $2,2:":(1 do11•n. drapes & shutters, Covcrcd patio, built-ins, lovely IJJnd-Jn exclusive Cameo Shores scaping wi1h rllvarf frui1 Lovely vieiv hornc tn'es. Assunie 5%% VA or Exquisilcly landscaped. new VA or FHA ok. wi1h 2 Bcdroorns 2 Ba1h.~ Q1vr>C'r 546-4399 Lew Int. G.I. Loan 3 B!'drn1, 2 BA, bltn rang' & oven. dishwasher. firc- plac!'. crpts, drps, shake roof e!c. $28.767 . ..,,·ith assum- able G.I. loan. Quick pos. !;('ssion! Wells·McCardle, Rltrs. JSlO Ne\\>-port Blvd., C.rtt. 548-7729 644-0684 Eves. Evenlngg can • 673-6116 O\VNER Olfers to discoun! dirccl to buyer only 6 yr old 2 sly 5 BR, 3 BA home. Nr Santa Ana Country C:lull, Full price $34.000. $26,500 loan, 7~~·r.. Submit down. Call ,"'46--6740 NEW LISTING CAMEO SHORES Exceptional vie\v train lhis lovely J BR. J Ba .. forrnal din. rn1. hon1e. 1vf1 h guest BR. ,(, i;cp. fan1, rin. Bea ut. pool aN·a. $89.'.".00. ......- Coldwell,Banker ~ 833-0700 644-2430 Back Bay View Home Fahulous 290" view of pro- posed U.C.1 . J'O\\'ing' course, moun!ains and lhe Univer- sity, Lo\\'<'SI pricl" ·I ,t-fam- ily mi in Enstblurr. The-Possible~ Dream- lvan \Velis' new 4 Beilrn1. 3 BA, + pwdr rm homf', Dov- rr Shores. Panelled lan1 r1n \\'/frplc & \\'Cl bar, sunken !iv rn1 . Lge ki1chcn \V/brkf.~I area. Secluded s..,,·im pool in 1vallrd-in garden. i\lnkc your dream come 1ruc! Roy J. \\'arrl RcaHor 1430 Galaxy l)r. fAG-1:60. Open Daily. $28,500 Assume Sl/4~, 11nnual ',~ rate loan. En1ry h;1l!, huge fam. rm., 2 fire- pl11ccs, built-ins, park ll ke yard. 546-1720 TARBELL 2955 Harbor $22,500 Buy:i; !his bcaut.iful 2 Bedrm f.r r]('n. French Q!r. rondo. Assume 5\~ '70 FHA loan. PERRON 642-1771 \outh 0 (-oast . -. $24,950 lnm quality througho1•l, • $34.500 • Try Io<;:. dov.·n. For Details---646-7171 \-o•THEREAL \"'-ESTATERS ( I" '~ ,, ', I I I 4 BORM.-FAMILY RM . DUPLEX ON CANAL OWNE.R DESPERATE 2 BR & 3 BR duplex or llSt' Beautiful home, prid(' of own. as 5 BR family home: 2 ership. Z1 fl. livi ng rm., flre-hnlh~. office, p11tio & sun- pl<lcc. bu1lt-1ns. ~(}.1720 deck. Cannl v.'ilterfront with TARBELL 2955 Harbor cl ock for your boat. $74,500. Costa Mesa FIXER-UPPER Close to downtown Costa Meso Exc.'C'Jlcnl potential in this :: Bedroom on LARGE R-2 Jor. Big double de I ached garage. -Asking $22,500. 646-7171 0 ~f1•diterraneon. Former mo. del homt>. Soa ring beamed ceilin~s. ba lcony dini~. 4- plu!I Br., family m1., wet bar. S74.9.il. Seller 11•UJ help rinanCt'. Hal Pinchin & A1soe. REALTORS 3900 E. Const Hwy, 67~~392 DON'T MISS BLUFFS Exquisite .1 Br, 2~~ ba, 1~1 TNH. 3 br, 2~~ ba, all elec. bar, dbl ovrns, aulomalic pool, appl in<'I, assume v.·a ter sof!l•ner. By Owner • !Hi•;,. loan, $23,500. Onr. $45,000. Ph. 644-098.i . 5'1!}.-2037 ·--·--------:: Br. &.iu!ifully Dccor.ilcd. Srn1i Cus!orn. By Owner. $2ti,500 :01.>-2:Lll or 557-9116. BLU~/o"S GE:'l'I, Im ma e , eustom dt"COr, 3 hr, 3 ha, on j.,'l'CCnbelt. $37 ,900 . 6-14-0575 aft 6 pm Mesa Verde 1110 Newport Heights 1210 Home Shows BY O\VNER, J Br & den, Like A 2 B11, crpts. drps, new ly red('c ., lr-nccd h R c k yd MODEL \\'/access boat or tr!r. Stt A populnr Paccsertcr \\'ith 4 lo apprec. S24,JOO. 4:i3 bcdroon1 • 3 bath • formal Tustin d1nins:: room -fan1ily room .1-~--~.~-~====- 2 fireplaces, (00(' in mn..,t('r Baycrest 1223 bcdroomf -CAREFREE ---------- landscaping -high up on !he BAYCREST 4 BR hill -A mus1 sec for $43,9:xl. 546-2313 • 646-7171 4 BEDROO:'lf, 3 Balh, 3 Car Garai?r. $45,9:xl By Owner. &1~184S. Newport Beach 1200 --------•BLUFFS -Choice com . view lot. 3 Br. 2 Ba. l !eve! v.·alled pa!lo, cus. extras Save $S • $31,950. 644-426.;. Custom Built Home \VIII lradc. Large b('aut. yard. Sccludrd St. 548-0773. Dover Shores 1227 * PRIME VIEW * Bay k lrllns • &Ynic ,t· pvl. Nearly Jl{'1v "Old \Vorld" Contemporary, spacious w/ 11triurn & court. 5 Br's ex· pandablc, 5000 sq ft, 4'h Ba, hi-cei lin gs, 4 car gar. $178,000 furn. opt. \\'ill trade ror small houf'C or vacant land in vie. Owner 54&.-7249. 15 FT. X 30 FT. MASTER BEDROOM Low down payment. Exeel- lcnt flnn.ncing, 7% '70 ll.Illlual per<'.en!Age rate. W/w car- pet, close to schools and !!hopping. Beautiful location. Only $38,995 for this 2 story, 4 bdrm. tam. rm. home. Agent: Phone (714) 833-0300 LARGE BONUS ROOM OVER GARAGE F..xcellent financing and lo- <."atlon, 7~ 'lo annual percenl- age ra!c. \V/w carpet_ 2 Story, 3 bdrm. home for only S.'W,99j. Agent: Phone (7141 833-0300. Irvine 1231 TURTLE ROCK HILLS Nrslled in lhc sky, sitting prcuy on a sun kissed hill- lop with an unobstructed VICI\', i! this almost new 4 Br. w/scp. family nn. home. Sclr-clenning ovens, inter- com, clC'c. door opener, pool. size lot; on a cul de uc streel. Only $46,000. e Red Hill Realty Univ. Park Center, Irvine Call Anytime 833-0820 --Coron• del Mar 1250 OH! GIVE ME A HOME \Vhcrt-the family can roam and the KIDS and ~ PAR- ENTS can play, WE HAVE IT on a huge 60 x 190 fee s.Jmpte lot In luxurious "HARBOR VIE\V" homes. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, fonnal diningroom, sunken den v:ith brick lift. plaC(' and wet bar. Add a cnm1nunily (no maintcn- 11 nN• I pool nearhy. SEE THIS LOVELY HOME NOW. OR CALL 673-8550 '-QTHEREAL \"'-ESTATERS ' '·. " 3 BR, 2 Ba, lrg tam. nn, 2 frplc's, pool. I Blk from priv. bc h In Shore Cli.Us. 5Y,.% loon. Will take back lrg 2nd. $59,500. 838-1345 General 1000 I General 1000 I General 1000 I General 1000 I General 1000 I General 1000 I General 1000 I General 1000 I Genor•I 1000 l'ZO ! :i 3 ;;D] #4 #J_N_o_w_1s_T_H_E_T_IM_E_T .... o_a_u_v __ ~...:: ~ NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE 646-7711 2043 Westcliff Dr. at Irvine Open Evenings $17,000 PER HOME \Vhen you buy 2 honH·~ on llTit' choice corner Joi, you gel thr •·packai::e rner" of $34,000. Ex~llent a.l'C'8 near Jfarbor High and shopping. Livr in onr and rrnl the other, Seller ""'ill J>llY points tor your new FHA or VA loan~ EASTILUFF VIEW HOME One of Newport"s mosl drsirA.blr nci~hborhoods. ElcRnnlly drenralc>d hnmp \1•ith spa.cious PARQUET FLOORED fnn11ly room, Oll('nlni; lo HUGE CO\'l'N'd patio. Lots of nearbl• family activitirs at the Ttnni1 Club and llig:h School. CAii for the va1ue priCt' nnd lrrnis. COSTA MESA OFFICE-545-9491-545-0465 2790 HARIOR ILVD. OpeR EYenfnt• 'til 9 P.M. COSTA MESA SHARPIE Clean a.~ A \\•histle. lfuge 3 bedroom hon1e \\'Ith doublr l>oths. Bl!am€'d 1·tlllng \\'ith gorgeous brick FIREPLACE. Ne\\' carprts and drapes. Doublr dclachcd 1<1'rage. Assume i 11,900 FJIA 5~ annual IJCJ'ccntas:e IOllll \\'lth payments of $155 PITT. NEED S IEDROOMS77 HUNTINGTON BEACH OFRCE 7612 Edint" Open Evenings Ol"l'OSIT• HUHTIHGTON C•HTE• NO SMOG CLEAN AIR 842-4455 540~5140 livi ng start11 Jn this ~upcr sharp 4 bedroom. 2 bath rancher nn quit't rul-de-sar. fl.lodel'n built-in kltch!'n for Mom, r»enty or room tor the kid.,, and v~ry little yard \Vork for D8d. $24.950 FULL (,RICE with VA or Jo'HA LO\V DO\VN tenns avallablc. EXECUTIVE ESTATE Su11Cr sha1·r 2,200 sq. root brauty with 3 KING SI2E bedrooou, 2 baths, 18 X 26 .'IC:parale Family Roon1, built-Ins. dishwasher. Cool covc:red palio, professional LIVE LIKE A KING landscapirn:. and PttUCl-1 rt10RE. $33.3."lO with Gr or low FHA Terms. I-le~ it I~! Beautiful 2 story, v.•lth eovt'red patio, 2 l·JlJGE baths. !\'<.':.tlrd on extra large corner lot. with irorizcou!l lendscaplni.:. ,\fo~t in\·!tins-nlodPm khchtn for Mom. No Dov.•n to "VETS" and lo\v down to FJI A. IT'S A LO'ITA HOUSE! Top of thr world location In Lai::una Beach area of fine homes. i\lany r ,11tras In· OWNER ANXIOUS elud1> HUGE pat in. bOOt 01· lrailt'r parking arc11, air condil.ioner, double firrplRCt'. Sl/4 G .I. LOAN!! Sparkles v.i tlt pridc of O\\TIJ::rshi1> in !.'Very room. The low price of $34,500 \\ill G.1. LOAN You can IJuy lhi.1 drc11m eollAl.(C !IUbjcct to the ex!atlng 5~ GI lonn and only please you a.nd seller will pay poinl.$ ror your new VA llr FHA loan! v.•ith total S.1,950 dov.'ll subject to a GI lo11n in amn11nt "r $22.000 \\'ith 7~ •;;, $134 !>f'r month. 1 Largr brdrooms. 2 bath.I, f"lREPLACE, buil t-In~. ind 1pnclou11 4 BEDROOMS Mnual inlcrest rati::. Payment or S200 includes ~.11:(•!1 11.nd ln1uranct'. Gn:&t 1 tmUo eind nDQ for sumnirr [.lllrtlt1, o.11 on LARGE oversize lot. lx>droom hon1e with 2 baths. double garagt. and huge yal'd tor kids. EVERYONE $24,950 QUALITTES. HONEYMOON COTIAGl f'reshly painlcd •nd "plrn...,urr In sor. ELOCTTI.IC BUnAT-lN kitchrn lNCLu n-$16,500 FULL PRICE ING dllh\vtlSht'r. USED BRICK F1REl'LACE. 2 hAlhF. \V /\V c·ar{X"linli. draprs. VETS-.NOT A DIME Ideal fnr R 5larll'r home tor nl'\\'lyweds. \Vhy psy rent \vhen you can O\VN your Neat fenced yard for the k'ld~ and handy to 11rhnols &nd shopping. Stlltr will pay 1 v ~ 3 ·~ 1 di own, Wlllhl'r, dryer and refrla:trator art Included, bcllev~ ll or not. •JM:l only point'l for your n{'w VA or FHA Joan. See it NOW! 10 mov" nto l\ll'Sll e.-ue ...._.,.it'OOm, ormal nlng room, plullh ear1>el'l throuith· :; "ea.rs old. C•ll now Jx>!orc lt"1 &;one. LO\V 00\VN ffiA terms available-. n11t. 8(-autitul custom dra~ also. Extl'8 LARGE LOT. Double gara~e. VA ap-,. 11..~::;;;;:::; .... ;~;~;;::;;;:..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~Yi~""~';:..:;:;:~:~~·~'~~~~n~;:·;;~H~n~~ERY 31!.."'~l~N~U::!T!'!$!!!!!!!!!!,.._..,.....,.,.. ..... _..,.l!!!!l!!~:::;g:;~:::~~~;;::::~~;;;:;~ --. . \ j l I t ' .. ' . f --I ~--" -. . ' ' ' . . ~ • RJNTALS RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS Apts. Futnlahed Apts. Fllf'lll&hed Apt1. Furnl&hod Apts. Furnished A t All'f' h.•• W~ntsday, M.11 6, 1910 !!1,QU5lkl FOR 5AL E-HOUSES~FOR SA LE RENTALS , RENTALS Apb. fumlthed 1410 Hou1e1 Furnl1hM · ~ ... Mar 1250 Fountain V1ll1y ~ -~ __ , -~~ 4~~~ ~00 l!tuROI NT'SALE I VA LOAN ·"';;::--;::;;;::~i;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Costa Mes• 2100 General "o.., to Ul'bcalCb, owber am-3 Be<lrm, 2ba0w,1.Tx31 heat. A1TRAC. l Bdnn, tum11hed. , """Tm a 2)jd look allhls '" & !Utcn<I. J>OOI. ·"'°" Eu"'"'· '"°· Sl•rl• P.~Rl/l A ~~~r/Jf imaJl2Br Mme Goodstor. moves you In. SeJler p.tys fl"ma.ll". lnqulre 2645 · 41*Ce:t)(in. ulil, rm. all C'Joslng coat&, No _2nd \\'eslmlnster. Eves & ~OM~ lJ REl.iT f';li!i~ Doc lceturcs A aOoo I.rust det!d, $256 per mo. incl wknds . ..., .. un.n• · """"· Bltlu range/~wn'W/w 'J =uNE~to N~0,, F~'um. ~..,,,., • • I & M R • crpl.11 & <.1.,11t. Pauo, block N •· h ' Id O GAN REALT.Y 'ii·a!I . !11.ndsctl-..i, vacant. o pc.., or c 1 ren . .... £ ~-·1 II ""'! I"-" Approved relerences only """"'' ~ wy .. ,;;:;;;,, """''" '"""' !>JO mo. 2116 Colle ... CM APARTMENT RENTAL LISTING SERVICE PANORAMIC VIEW 2001 Ba.ysidt.:l Dr, Beaul. 6Mke roof 1-sty. 3 Br. ~ b11. waterfl'ont borne, xlntswim· I' ',,.~~;~,~'::ii .... ~~~ .. ~~· • COMPUTER PROCESSED RENTAL INFORMATION VILLA POMONA H2-447l ( :;::1546-llOJ 1 blk ahops. Sl8S. 544-<l452. e COMPLETE APARTMENT DESCRIPTIONS " mtng beach. Newly redecorc Slli.000 SHO\VN BY APPT. NEW-5°/o DN.! Newport Buell 2200 e COURTESY LISTINGS F 3 & 4 a&. -l.,,,lom homoo . . . . · OR APi:. MANAGERS Bill Gr!'ndy, Realtor 833 Dover Dt., N.a .. 6424620 read.)' kiroccupancy. Loaded CANAL Waterfront, x 1n 1 e COPIES OF L·ISTINGS SOON TO BE AVAILABLE v1/ cxtl'a~! .l''ro1n $31,200. honie: ::: Br. 2 &.. turn. TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC IN LOCAL Deal \v/ builder & save! or unt. Dbl. gar. 1 Yr. R.EAL ESTATE OFFICES Cor. Las !•lores & Pheasant lease $450 Mo. Graham Rlty Ave. Call 537..Q385. 646-2414 2 Br. % Blk to Bay & Bch. Lagu_':1a H_i_ll•_-__ 1_100_ $180 yrly, 13M w. Balboa ---Blvd. 675.2539 • Phone: 642-4656 Be•ch 92664 OPEN DAILY 7.5 721 HAZEL DR. f:Qjoy the surf at Little Co1·- . ,011a from this cust. buil1 , .lpme. , DON V. FRANKLIN REALTOR LEISURE \I/ o r Id Con-I.;:==;:;:;===:;:;;=;:: dominium. Beaut gardC'n University Park 2237 Newport Beach 3200 0-ral ' 4008 Gener1I 4000 • 673-2227 • OPEN HOUSE 11iar, Fri & Sat. J-5, 10.'\8 \Vhite Sails Way, Harbor View Hills. tido Isle 1351 .... DECORATOR'S HOME &autifUUy done. !i Bdrms. 'r'amlly rm. Xlnt street to 'street 45 II. Jot. ' $98.500 .LIDO REALTY INC. 3337 Vla Lido 673-7300 . LOTS OF LIGHT lo lhis rontC'mp, .l Br. & : 1nv den hOme. 2% Ba. N•w blti~ in kitchen. All ~.this far $69.500~ Walker Riiy. 675-5200 !3il6 Via Lido, NB 0pP.n Sun. HOME + STUDIO !>Taster BR. w/Roman ba1h '=t 2 BR's&: 2 baths~ Artists ttadio. J ust n'duccd to • • ' $79,500 . l'!~TOl't CoRlllN·MARTIND 171i·lll2 Huntington Beech 1400 BY O\VNER. must go. lm· 1tit"N poss. 2.330 11q ft. .l Br, 3 Ba, 2 srory Jr. Exec. .It 9 m r. $29,000 assumable FHA loan 7~%. full priL-e $32,800. Shag crpl.s. all ap- gliances. furn. or '? $3000 under current mkt. 6 mos old. 1 mi to heh, Seller \\"Iii carry 2nd at less than FHA int~rest. Principals on- 1.)'. 968-6833 or 540-:xm ·ANXIOUS OWNER! Must sell spacious 5 Bedrm. with shztke roof, s1one lire. place and an desired bllins. Take over fabulous 5% 'i~ loen! Piclfic Shares Realty 811-8586 ., 53&88>1 Villa ready latll May. 2 BR, ;-::~ 2 b t• .. M lS $115 BAYSIDE Villap No. 2 BA. Special low price. ........,u11, a•~. ay SL 2 Bt, 2 Ba. Carpets, 837-3937 to Nov. 15 ·:····· ... $275 stove, rtlrl&:, Adulta 4 Bdrms & family room 613-6793 Lagun• Beech HANDYMAN'S SPECIAL 1705 June 15 to Dec, 15 •• S3251~=~~· ,..,.~-"°"'--4 Bdrm.!. & family room J BR. 2%i ba. town home. June 20 to Sept. 20 • , $35(1 Swimming pool. $300 ~fonth BOB PETTIT, Realtor Hal Pinchin Realtor 675-4392 Jlert··s a real buy. Charming "Since 1946" • 2 BR. New paint, crpts, ranch style homr, SITUAT· 83l-010l drps, retrig avail. Nr. beach. ED ON LGE. LOT. NESTI.,. yr. rnd $225. 557-8400 ED BENEATII TO\VERING Lido Isle 1351 I-'========= ~~D~~GERr:£N\~E::. LUXURIOUSLY f'urn. Ex-Univtrsity Ptrk 3137 TVRE ABOUNDS IN A ecutive 2 BR, 2 BA. dress, 3 BR. "Marquette", QUIET AIR OF SECLUS-rm. So. patio. Nr. Beach. 2~1 ba , ............... S375 ION. A pleasant walk from Adults. 1 Yr lse. $375 mo. 3BR.2ba .............. $285 the beach. ti7:>-8444 3 BR. ~ ba ........•••. $300 Olde fru;hio~ parlor type 3 BR. 2 ba •••••••••••• S350 llv. rm. 11 A S OAKEN Huntington Beech 1400 3 BR. 2 ba , ....... , •• , $325 PLANK FLOOR~. \VOOD 4 BR. Exec. homr , ••••• $575 PANELED \VALL. COZY NE\V 4 Bdrm, 4. bath, fu~Jy e Red HilJ . Realty LOG BUR l~ I NG FIRE-fum for cxec~hve, 1 mile Univ. Park Center,. Irvine PLACE IN ANT I Q U ED to beach, Avail June thru Call Anytime 833-0820 DESIGN. Center hall o-ns Dec. S61& mo. 96l-6134.~ ,... LEASES AVAILABLE to thr 2 bclnns., seNiced by " .. · 13~ central 4 FIXTURE BATH Svmmtr Rtntel1 2910 3 Br. & d1n. rm. •••·•••• ~ KOPPER KETTLE KITCH: -4 Br. A: tam. nn ....... S350 EN WITli ELEC. RANGE ./ DELUXE 2 BR. Apt. 3 Br, tam & din rm, ,. $325 6115-9/15 . $375 mo. 2 BR. 2 balhs .......... $260 & OVEN, CERAMIC TILE, \Vestcliff area. 642-6274 ' BOB PETTIT, Realtor ETC. OPENS TO SEPAR· "Since 1946" ATE BRl<FST. rut D Jex Furn 2975 83.1-0101 The spacious rear grourxls ~ es ' have sheltered arbor type patio, tel'Til.ced garderi. pick- C't lence. TH.AT LOOKS TO 'TI-IE \VOODS & QLD \VQOP· EN BRIDGE BELOW. This charming ·older home needs a little touch up here & th11re. Ifs an outstanding buy ror $25,950 FULL PRICE LO\VER ON. PYMT. 0.K. MISSION REAL TY 985 So. Coasl Hwy .. Laguna Phone (7141 494-0731 Capistrano Beach 1730 Nr bch, l mi So of Marina. Flexible custm 3 + den, 3 Ba, Dining + brkfst, 2 kitchens. Center patio. Stables & fields 2 blk~. $36,500 Jo dO\\ln! 4~3Ji7 Duplexes fOr' Sele 1975 CdP.1, 2 houstos, ga r den, $55,000. $7000 down. Bkr 6T:Hi044, 642-8223 RENTALS Houses Furnished $130 UTIL pd. 1 Br + den. Huntington Beach 3400 Avail 5/25. Singles ok, pels --------- welcomed. Bier. 534-6980 4 BR, 2~; BA. trplc, dble RENTALS gar. S26:1 month. Pacific Houses Unfurnished Shores ReaJty. ~ or '-C...-------1 847-8586 Gener~I 3000 o~L~D~,,,,,-.. ~,,-,~ .. -m-,_-,~,..,,,,,--, $150 CLEAN 2 Br. Sep. + garage & cottage, lg: house. Gar. Children & pet yard, $160 mo. 19311 Beach ok. , Blvd. (1) ·196-3949 SIU<' Beacon 6~~111 Bkt'. 3 BR. 2 BA. Orps, hrdl\'d $130--xtr~ J;; re-dee. :t-B!' firs, room for trai.ler/boal, apt. Yrd .t patio. RIO. nr Beach & Heil. $200. W/w. Child ok. Bkr . Adults. 962-4391 ~980 4 BR. 3 Ba, 2'100 sq tt. 2 BR., 2 Ba., ivhi!P \Valer Medit. All Xtra;'· l or 2 view. So. Laguna. $250 mo. yr least. Rent .or lt>ss on Owner /Broke!". 499-1990 2 yr. Refer. req. 962-8;)72 f'VC~. IM7\1EOIATE occupancy. 2 $21;;:2-BR---:;-Den. ~~rmal Br. 1~~ Ba. s22;; mo. dln. rni.. dbl gar.. frplc. 842-445.S or 847-6992 __ Children/pets ok. Bk r . PACIFIC Sands 3 Br. 2 Ba, 534-6980 comp!. fnd. Frple. S19a nio. $175 NICE :t Br. Hou*C. Lrg (213) 284-5384 yard, 2 b!ks beach. 4 BR, 1 1~ Ba. Stovt', refrig, BIUP Beacon, 64;).0lll Bkr. washer/dryr. Pool &. rec. Coste Me•• faci.I. Call %9329 3100 1.z;;~====== Walk to Beach Generel 7000 Fountain Valley 3410 Take over 71A.(°k FliA loan. -------SHARP. Clean. comp! redec.1--------- Llke new 4 BR, l%. BA , lge $11J 1 BR. Sep. Hsr. R/0. 3 BR -dining -2 BA 3BR, 2~BA house. Uase. panelled farn nn, custom Rcfrig. Pet ok. Nr. Bch. -gar. A _quiet _strert. _3195 Cpt~. drps, blt-inii, Fenced drps .. upgra.ded avocado Bluf' Beacon. 6'15--0111 Bier. mo. Call 540-1151, Heritage & landscaped. $235. 842-2035 ttpts. Prof. decorated. Block $145 UTIL pd . 2 BR. duplex. ~al Estatr aft 3 ·teuced, Q\t.'Tl(!r traJ)sfd. Easy Avall no\v. Singles ok. pets POOL TIME! ~R~E~N~T~A~L~S~---- · e."""RA's· HEAR REALTY l="='="="="='·"B°'k"'=· ="="'=''°== 4 BR. r.1onticello nr. occ Apt1 furnished $23j mo. incl club hse, pool -~--· ------ MT-8j()7 Eves; 642-0427 R•ntals to Share 2005 & main1. 838-8535/546-47&1, General 4000 TRANsl". ~t TO\lfllhouse 1----·-----EASfSIDE -2 Br, frpl. beam1 ________ _ lfvtng . close ro beach. 4 E:'itPLOYED lady 1vishes to cli:~. priv pa tio, adults on!y. RD.fARKABLY BR. 21) ba. Din. nn. All share 2 bedroom Cosla Slj2. &12-8520 UNBELIEVABLY l"ll't. Dish11'shr. 2'~ car gar. Mesa apartment 11·ith same. OLDER 3 BR nr. shop·g. EXTRAORDINARILY Jl'ully cp!'d. & dra ped .. Love-One child OJ\. 557-9796 after Sl;i(I mo. See at l6.i6 Orange BEAUTIFUL JUST FOR SINGLE PEOPLE The South Bay Club Apts. are an apartment! resort built just for single adults. The apart- n1ents are single, one and t\\10 bedrooms. Furnished and unfurnished . Professionally decorated with air conditioning available. Automatic fireplaces available in selected apts. The resort ia $750,000 worth of recre•tion•I f1cllitie1 fe•turlng: Night Lighted T11lnis, Volleyball & Basketball Courts T t nnls Pro & Pro Shop Olympic Size Swimming Pcol and He•ted Whirlpool Men'• & Women's Health Clubs with Sauna B•ths Indoor Golf Driving R•nge Billiard, Card, •nd Conference Rooms P•rty Room With Dence Area Buffet ind Wet Bir Coler TV & Flrepl•ce Lounges Luxury Elev•tor Buildings With Security Guard Service And Ample Parking t\lodels Open Until 9 p.m . Daily Rents from $145 to S300 Immediate Occupancy Month to Month Le1ses Available SOUTH BAY CLUB APARTMENTS Champagne Open I-louse -Today 3 to 7 p.m. At ANAHEIM 277 S. Brookhurst St. (1 blk. So. cf Lincoln) 1714) 772-4500 GARDEN GROVE 13100 Chapm•n Avenue (4 blks. W. Senta Ana Fwy.) (7141 636-3030 NEWPORT BEArH 880 Irvine (Irvine •nd 16th !1.) (714) 645.05SO COSTA MESA'S FINEST "NEAR THE BEACH" Bachelor, 1 & 2 Bedrooms Completely Furnished from $140 (also unfurnished available) Adults only, no pets • luxuriously Furnished • All Electric Ap artments e Priva te G1rages • 2 Swimming Pools (he•ted) e Individual Patios . ....... PLUS .. . * NO RATE INC REASE fo r Summer * Generous MOVE-IN Allcw1nce * Speci e! -I Month's FREE RENT No Lea se Required ...... COME SEE ... 1760 Pomona, Costa Mesa (West cf Newpo rt, between 17th & 18th St.) 4705 4355 Laguna Beach 1---------Balboa Island BOAT Slip & 2 Bdnn. Garage Apt. 1 Bath. $350 Bill Grundy ReaJtor 642-4620 Huntington Beach 4400 $130 A MONTH Bdrm furn ap!, ovet"look- lng beaut, garden patio & htd pool. 103.:i 12th St. !across from La.kc Park), ~.,. ""SOLTEROSA Pf s:- Bachc.lor & 1 BR's. Pool. AduJt s. no pets. f'rom $140 up. 17301 Kef'lson Ln, H.B. fl blk W. of Beach, on Slater. l 842-7848. NE\V 1 BR-blk to hraeh. $150. Pr\ patio • QUIET! Gar. slngle adlts. couple. 202 A 14th. 536-1319, 673-1781 2 BR. Adults only. Util pr!. Beaut.. Quiet. $200. 17616 Cameron, 842.st21 Laguna Beech 4705 I BR Apt; a.!m sleeping nns. Util pd. Free TV & radio. 2200 SO. Coa!t Hwy. "" $28 WK. LUXURY By the sea. 494-7201 LEASE To adult.'i, 1 BR, ocean ,·ic1v, radian! heat. REFERENCES. 494-8112 Read The DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S leading Marketplace J~N;e;w;:po;;:rt:;B;;ta;;<;h;;;;;;;;•;;700;;;N;;;•;;;w;po;;;;;;r;;t ;;B;;e;;o;;ch;;;;;;;;;;;;4;;2;;00;; I Grand Opening -Immediate Occupancy OAKWOOD The best of two worlds • your home and your ~oun!(y club For your home, select from single, one and t wo bedroom apartments. Furnished or un· furnished. each is professionelly decorated a nd includes carpeting, draperies, a ll-e lectric Westinghouse a pplianc;;es, st or a g • spai:e aplenty and private balcony patio. J ust steps from your door is a whole world of exclusive c;;ountry club rec;;reation: ly patio, Sacrifice -$2J,900. 6 p.ni. Ave. Call 673-8811 Vil D'isere Garden Apts Law in!. Q\\11<'r !16~1 66~. '!Al " h Dalbo I I _, I !~~~~~~~~!';'!!~~~~~~~~~11 "' .~.-s are a s auu 2 Bi' Duplex. Xtra Jrg rooms. Putting green. waterfall & I· Tragedy Strikes apt-yl'ly. :\lusL be nialui·r. xtra lrg garage. Adl ls only, s•.ream, floweNi everywhere, • Professional size Tenn is Courts • Residant Tennis Professional e nd Shop •· O lympic size Swimming Pool Must sell 1 year old 3 Bednn r-lean .t· stra1ghl. ~. j ' no pets. S140 l\1o. 54S-6355. 45' pool, rec. room, billiards, Sl:>-721(); art 6, 673-6.i!I;. BBQ'."1, Sauna, fum.-unfurn, !':(Ba. 11 x 17 enclosed pa-3 BR. }fouSt', fenced yard. ti1>. Delx custom drps, crpts. SECT'Y \Vanis girl over 21 carpets, rfrapes_ $200 mo. J &: 2 Br . also Singles tron1 Anunne may take-ovor ex.isl-to sharr. apl. lnq . 37.'i E. 2 03 F--' 1 "•o 1059 $133. See ii! 2000 Parsons irtg~yA 71,2% loan. $239 To. 18lh, No. 4. C.,,1 . af1 fi 1 ~-uPra . .nn-Rd .. 642-8670. Between Har. tal ·monthly. No quahfying. P~·J Me si Del Mer 3105 bor & Newport. 2 Olk N. 19th BRASHEAR REAL TY '1ALE •~uun't" '" '°"· RENT FURNITURE 8·17-8507 Eves: 642-0427 straig hl. \\'/N\vpr1 yrarly. BY O\VNER: 3 Br, l% Ba 1 blk heh. &1:;.1458 r-vc-~. ~-Custom dl"ps. upgn.d- t4 crpt, cove.rt'd pat. 6% Mumable FHA. S29.950. 146-1820 f04.lntein Valley 1410 \VANT: \.\:ork!ng girl to share Balboa lslanrl l1ome \Vi1h sante. 673-2383 a11ytLn1e. SHARE NB hm. Employrd lady only. r • .11 privil. prv. rm & ba. $6:, 1110. ;>JS-0027 I f>"our Berlroom llouae Crpls & Drps. $TJO Call 7>49-2601 J Rooms from $19.95 r.tonth to month Rentals \Vide Selection Newport Beech 3100 100% PURCHASE OPTION 24 hr. Delivery TO\\'NHOUSE: ~ BR. 21 ~ _Custom Furniture ~entnl BA, frplc, patio. pool. 2 ;:i}7 \V. l~th, Ci\1. .i4S.3481 * APT unfurn 1{8, $65 per rE1r gar, all bl!ns. crpts, 1568 W Lincoln, Anhm 774·2800 S LG 8R l lOO SQ FT mQ. ln1ml'cl. occupanry. drps. Lse $275 mo. 8TI--8Bll HOUDAY PLAZA $.12,500 Pvt ply. 962-9565 Call 6·8 pn1. 336·8i06 or 642-2497 eves or wknds. DELUXE, Spacious 1 Bdrm l.;=f='==='~===oo:_===='=====~=========I Furn apt $135 phJ! ntil. a;N.er•I 2000G eneral 1000 G1ne ral 2000 Heated pool, ample pal'kln(. !-----------------------------No children -no pel.6. ~ 1965 Pomona, C.?lt. " " ' ,.,_ The Pun/e with the Built-In Chuckle Ohoc101• letten of !he four 1erombl.d worth be. low to form four simpl• '!'l'Ords. 1 ·RELHEP ' I I I I' I t LI TEN I I I $160 • CLEAN 2 BR. Avail' now. Children Welcomed. Active, BkT. 534-fi980 * APTS * !"urn & Unlurn -lrom $1j, Blue-Beacon, 645-0111 Bkr. Cost• Mes• 4100 NEW-PLUSH l BEDROOi\t ~'URNTSHED AP1'S. Single Adults Only 2035 Fullerton, CM 4100 Newport ~each Cost• Me s• 4200 • Whirlpool Baths . 2 BR, 2 Ba, 1.unken living room, frp1. balcony, oo smJ children $180 mo. Avail J\>lay 1st. 1255 Baker. 5-10-0896 eves & wknds. SPACIOUS, Attral'. Pool. Util pd. Garden Ll\iing. t BR. $lj(l & 11p. 2 Bl'. S17;). Adult~. no pet~. 740 \V. 18th St .. C.VJ FURN. Apts. Bachelor~ $115. 1 en·~. $120 -s130. 7135 Elden A"-c .. C;11. Sec ?itgr, Apt. 6. ./ Sl4j (2l 1 BR Apts. Furn & parlJy turn. UM6 Placcnlia No. H. Mrt. fi46...&:i&I SUS CASITAS Furn. 1 BR Apt11. Adulti:; only, no pets. 2110 Newport Blvd, Cr.t. &12-9286 ./ 1 BR new, beaut. furn. l\fo. to mo. Adults only. 2120 Elden, 6~6-9278 evf'~. l BR. Clean. Altrac. F'urn. $110. Lease. Rcfi;. Cpl or retired, 2:'38 Ne\\'{>Ort Blvd. 1 BR. Util pd. t t30, No pet~. l\o1aturr adult. 99:J.No. 1 Va1rncia. 540-91.iSO. $If).) PRIVATE 1 Bclnn. qu iel, den, pMI, ria1i1•. ~Ar. Adulls, No pet~. 6·1(;.:1764 MESA MOTEL * LOW \VEEKLY RATES * Kitchen, TV 's, maid .s,crvice. Heated Pool. 646-9681 LG furn 1 Br ap1, pool. ocean vie1v. Desire adult roup!c, no children & no pels. $700 incl uU. 646-2Z,Zi6 e v.•INTER RENTALSe ABBEY REALTY •642-3850• LARGE 1 Bdrm near Ocean. SlOO mo-yearly. Students OK. 67H088. • P11 ddle Tennis, Volleyball, 8111sketba ll Courts An d a 20,000 squore foot clubhouse offers thase feotures: * Sepe rate Men 's 111nd Women's Health Clubs with Saun111s • Indoor Goll Driving Range, Billiards Room • Theatre TV Lounge, Ari Studio, Party Rooms Models Open 10 A.M. To a· P.M. Deily RENTS FROM $14S·$l10 OAKWOOD GARDEN APARTMENTS 0:-.i BA V -Near Lido. 1 BR. private patio. S1S5. n1ooring avail. 673-6450. Beach DELUXE 2 Br. We!!lclitl loc. 1700 • I bth Streat, Newport Pool & bllns. Adults sm.1 1::::=::=!!!:!~~~P~ho~n~·~'!!!6~~~2~.!!!8!!!! 7!!!0~~~~!!!!!!!!i~ I n11rno lse. 642-6274 Ii Newport Hgts. 4210 CLEAN I & 2 BR. Lrg kit. Arlults. no pets. Sll:>-Sl50. 2-121 E. 16111 St., IW6-l801. Co rona del Mar 4250 ./ \VANTED. n1ature, qu iC'I \\'Oman lo rcnl :oimaU oozy furn , apt. £7~i!l-i .~~-~-I.RC. pri11. Bac.h'l'lor. So. of Hwy. Bea1n celling~. re(rig. No ki!. SJJ;.. 67~1 B•lboa 4300 If you've foun d what you're looking for in todey's PILOT Classified Ads. I , I S~YTU-.-L ....,..........-ii 1 " I I I' ·I :I A wise fother: .. It's eosier ~=·=~·==· =·=:..., to roise boys than girls. You $30 WEEK & UP l'!!l"'l'!!!! .... ~!!!!~~!!!!~ $11 3 Incl. util, 1 Br. upper. Nr. 1~1lh & Nl'\\TJOrt. !ll11tt11.., adul!. 6-U-5583 --------BA Yf"RONT: 1 BR &: Lrg Rnrhclor. :1-larun• /\dul1~. Stj() It. SW. 007 E. Balboa Bl,'d. 673-6880, Realtor MAl(E AN OFFER l· ' "t"' .. · ' ' ' I don't feel so bod when you STUDIO &. 1 BEDROOi\18 'JV le Kitchenettes incl. I .MEI EBO! C I' I' ,.1 -0C~l•r• tk• ckuckl• ~~ L inens It maid aer avaU by filling "' the m\Ming "°"d' Chll(lrtn9 & pet se<;tion _ you cS.wlop from sttp No. 3 Mlow. 1176 NEWPORT BLVD. 548-9755 • r:;w.~~=~is 1' I' r 1· r r I' r I * \YEEKLY • Lovely apt, Bachelon c.r 6 ~~!:',""'f '°'I I I I • I I I· I cpls. '""'1"'"" '''""1' "'~''' . . . • , , . • . . Kltchtnl'ltf!it. $3:) \l'k·p1t.)'J; SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 9000 ~\~':\8 El Camioo "'· .....:..=:..::.:.:.:::..::.::~..:..:.:..:::..:~.:.:.:...:.:.:.._;_~~--~--,--· f I BACl-1. Ap t. Single. lady pT't'ferrtd S60 mo. 32;, E. 19rh St. " BAc.11ELOR Apl. rum Crpt,, drp~. s11n mo, Incl util. Call 642..S400 * I .t· 2 Rr Furn. Ap.lii. POOL. 177 22nd S!. NA!'."1iU P/\t.i\IS. 617~:164~ 1 DR, u! ii pd, $125 mn. Adults, no ~Is. 310 E. Bal1K1f\ Blvd .. Balboa . Lido Isle 4351 1 Br:.. Utd paid. G&l11 1<' I 11.du!I, No pets. $175 n10, )·early. 673--0837 P\"C~ • Give that perty with the item or it ems for sele i11 phone c;;all, C hances ~ire it's just what you'va been watching tha Went Ads for. All thet's left is to make an offer. How can you lose 7 This is just enother of th• great things about the PILOT Ct,,ssified section • , • it lead1 you to tho bergains. ' PILOT ·ADVERTISER J 6 SAYD "£ASH!' ' c L A 5 5 I F E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 ,9 IS I~ S'I' 1111\'S! ci r:Jp ---..... ---....... --...... -...................... --.. -.... -......... ---................ -.......... -.... -~--.---~~-~-.... ~ • " ---..... -~ --r - Wediwsday, Ma:t 0, 1970 Wednesday, Mil)' b, lWO DAILY PILOT (;7 ~ ---·--------- DO ·N ~T PINCH YOU.RSELF (You're Not Dreaming) But You Can PINCH YOUR PENNIES with a PILOT PENNY PINCHER Classified Ad 3 LINES 2 TIMES 642-5678 YOUR CllEDIT IS GOOD DIAL DIRECT RENTALS RENTALS I RENTALS • Apls. Unfurnished Apl>. Unfum~-"""· Unlumlshod Genoral 5000 Costa Mt\f 5100 Costa Mo11 51, RENTALS _ Apf!~nfumlflhed REAL ESTATE Gen1r1I * Huntint!'"' llffch S400 Rooms for Ront 5H5 NEAR Huntington Ha,rbor. CllEERFVL Room • bath Triplrxes. Quiet area. Lrg ovtrlooldrw ocean $20/wk. 1 .It 3 BR. $140 &: up. Pt.IS, Nicely decorated qUlet bids, * * * VEN DOME IMM.AC'Ut..A.TE .t.PTS! ADULT I FAMILY SECTIONS AVAILABLE Clos• to shopping, Park • Spacious 3 Br's, l Ba • 2 Bedrooms * Swirn Pool, Put/gn't'n * Frpl, Jndiv/lndry lac'ls 1145 Anaheim Ave. Elegant Living . ''Or1n9• Cou11tv', Moat l••u• tlf11I Ap1rltn•11I Colfll'llunlty" -Pl'<lttMlontl lulkll't\ M•getlM • r children ok. (2131 592-2633, sundeck & kitchen priv. 1289 (TI4J 84&-3559 s. Cout Hwy, Lacuna CHF.Z QRO Aptll. mi Allan'. Beach. 4!»-9017 ta New l·» BR. priv. * ROOM for rent, reliable garages. Pool. U t 11 it y noIHlrlnking man. $U wk. tooms. 646-6010 SJ6.-8038 or 53&-2'l27 $015~---=P~E~R-w~k-u_p _w~/ki~. ,-,-.. -. BEACH BLUFF APTS IJO wk up ap~. New 2 & 3 BR, patios, pool, rtlotel. a48-9T'a5 ""' "~ • COSTA Pi:!E..C\A 6'0.:?82-4 merr1mac woods vie\Y, dishwashe.1·. ----8231 Ellis. 842.8477 Motels, Trailer Whtddya Wont? Whaddya Gott SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR -·· . . ' ' ' Costa Mesa 5100 BRAND nc1v • C'xciling 1 l3r, bc:un l-tllgs. shg crp!g, panl'i;:, !!•pie, priv patlu. pool. l'rl'. bldg, s n ii d \'OlleyU.111 crt. Adull'I, no pets. $1.W. ~'7 \V. Bay, 64&-0073, 613-7629 BRAND Ne\11 • Exciting 2 Br, beam ceilgs, shg crplg, pan'lg, priv patio, pool, rec. bldg. sand volleyball crt. Lush landscaping w/, 35' Pine tree1, sp1rkllng waterfalls, bubbling 1treems & serene ponds ma ke Merrimac Woods the place to llve. Thes• 1. & 2 BR, 2 BA, furn. or unfurn. apts f•ttur• •'.r.cond, 1alf-cleaning ovens, beal)'\ ceilings, dishwashers, priv. garage w/storage el•v•tors 108 " therapeutic pool, swim po 0 ol, 880'1'. seunas & a loYely clubhouse w/social activities. Adults please. From $1 .. 5·$210. Adults, no pels. $165. 387 --· ~ \V. Bay. 646-0073, 67s.-1629 Coste Mtso 5100 Newport Heights 5210 VILLA MESA APTS. ------ ' BR. "''' palio. Hid pool, FAIRWAY 2 car encfd gar. Chiklrt•n "'""""'· "" '~" "''"'' VILLA APTS $165 n10. 719 \\'. \\lilson. • 642-12al. HARBOR GREENS ~::~ '::~~· poot • Lodi•. GARDEN & STUDIO 'APTS Near Orange Co. Airport & Bach. 1, 2, 3 BR's. from $L10. UCI. Adults only. 2700 Peterson \Vay, C.J\1. 5-1G-O:l70 * TOWNHOUSE * 2 BR. 1 ~i: BA. crpts, Urps, patio. Adults, $160. 134 E. J\lelody L..·u1c. 20122 Santa Ana Avr. f.1gi·. J\lrs. Bruce 545-3894 Vacant & Clean 642-6872, S<la.1768 Spacious 3 Betlrm, 2 batb * DELUXE * apt., \\'ilh all modern appJi. NICE 2 hr. pool, sun deck, gar. blln~. epts, d r p 5, Adult~. No pets. S 16 5. 642-SOOI or 642-8006 $tro:-Triplex. 2 BR, 2 BA, priv. patio, gar. bllns, crpts, drps. 67"..>-3708 alt J East Bluff 5242 --------PRESTIGE LOCATION For lease, delu.xe 1888 sq. tt. 4 BR, 2~~ BA apt. Frplc. drapes, crpts, \\'Cl bar, pri balconies. dbl gar ott kitchrn dshwhr. dbl oven. Pool. Con11 to shop'g schls & recreation. HUNTINGTON Bay Condo. Adults. 3 BR. \Vshr/dryr. Pool. $18.}. S36-2212, 67a-&06. NE\V 1 BR·blk to beach. $130. Pri patio • QUIET! Gar, single adils, couple. 202 A 14th. 536-1319, 673-1784 Santa Ana ~20 VILLA MARSEILLES BRAND NEW SPACIOUS 1 & 2 Bdrm. Aph. Adult Living Furn. & Unfurn. Dlsh\va~her . color coordlnat· ed applinnce8 • plush sha,a carpet • ctx.lce of 2 color !;themes • 2 baths • stall sho\vers • m irrored ward· robe doo1'3 • indiroct ligh!- ing In kitche:1 -break!asi ba r . huge private fenced patio . pluSh 1'\ntiscaping • blick Bar-B-Q's. large heal· ed pools & la•1al. 3101 So. Bristol St. (I,~ f.ti. N. of So. Coo ·i Pl!l.za) Santa Ana PHONE: 557-ll200 Courts 5997 I \VEEh"LY rates. S E A LAR K ?i10T.EL. 2301 Nt>\vport Blvd, Costa J\Iesa. NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Spocl1I Rat. ". ; . ' -' ....... S Lin• -5 timet -5 bucks aULl!I -AD MUl'f INCl UOI! I-WM! ""' ....... to tT•Cll. t-Wlltt ~ ..,., 111 "'* J ~ ' ~YOUll ,.._ t!IOI ... ,.,...,,, •-4 •1111 91 MIY#tlt11'19. Misc. Rentals 59" ._NOTHING FO!t U.ll! -Tl.ADI!$ ONl'l'i STORAGE tpacr, 800 sq. ft. or less a\'allable in NB. To Pl•ce Your Trad1r'1 P1radise M -.· PHONE 642·5671 642-1893, 962-W-iG .:;=========l\''ant small remole con1roJ Income Property 6000 TV. \Viii e.'Cchange $300 _ .. ______ ·-equity in 1~ acres near Mod , 8-1d P aln1 Springs, Bal. payable ern Office SI• $15 mo. SlG-1131 2600 Sq. Ft. '63 Rambler Conv 6. OD • 2 StOlj', }~y Occupied. tlOOI" .shift for travel trlr • + 2 Residential Income \Joat & motor on trtr, P.u: Units. car auto trans can1per. $450 • Prime Corner Location. value, trd up/dy.·n. 642.2098, $1!il,OOJ 3 units equity $9000, Otc. Th F zoned lot, clear. Val. $40at 1 ox Compeny 20 acres, equity $3.'if.I. Trade {Realtors) for bonl/R.E. Dn.rlirtg Rlty, 3810 E. Coast Hwy 714/ 686-7161. Coron• dtl Mar * 673-9495 * ~~ Business R1nt1I 10 duplt>xe11 & 9 4 BR houses on golf COUl'Sl', Santa Ana {separate lolsl all rented. 6060 Will trade up ror 60-100 units, C.M. Bkr. &16-8362 '65 Dodge 6 cyl, Honk)'-~ 11iano \\'/alJQr. keys. ~ recorders &: walkie-tal~s; trade for \\'hat have yoit' T? £45-0071 Have 1962 J et>p FC-IT0.1 wheel dri\'1" P.U. $150 Val~ ur. \Vant "''itl:e bed P.:u: .. ' or van. , 494-0386 after 6 PM,, .. : \VILL TRADE 10 irrirate<i acre5 in lleml'.!t w/3 ren\allf for Orang1" County lncomG p1·operty. • ~ ' Call ITI4l 962-2561 • : :! Newer duplexes, side .t&,¥ side; 3 Br. 2 Ba. ea, l~les: Lrg 1 Br. apt. unfurn, N<.'\V ance& + fireplace. It's like crplg, nc11· drps thruout, havinc your 0\11n hon1e~ Call bltns. sep, din rn1. 998 EJ for details. 54G-414l Only $350 mo, 8::s Amigos \Vay, NB f.fgr. next door 865 An1igos. TO\VNHOUSE ... New Jrg, 2 BR, 2~ Baths, frplc, encl gar, patio. 675-5033 1200 Sq, ft. Commercial, New. Sari Cien1e11tc • 11'."0 RI lols port Blvd -Costa Me"8 -Ill'. golf course on San Dim- Prime -huge traUic <.'Ount. as. As.~un1e $146, per mo, Leasr $200 mo. Call MS..8424 loan. Trd eq, fo1· late mod. $I~RG2-sR~ Studio car or !? 492-8078 aft. 6 pm. Nr. beach. Equity apJV.'QX~ S27.000. Trade for land ' oi: indu~t. Realtor 613-4350 BEAUTIFUL ENGLlSHt• RM Hon1e near P~ for N.8 .• Cdt.t. C.M. Dup! , or vnits. Home value $29,Sblt clear. Call 548-8532. ' · Camino Or. 546-3-151 * DELUXE l & 2 BR EL CORDOVA-- Carden Apts. Bit-ins, priv. ~rand new delux apt.~, s~c· pa!io, heated pool, irplc. 1ous, 1 & 2 Br, sw1mm1ng Adults. $145 mo. 546-j163 PoOI, lrbque, .rec hall. These -. -,-arc the best 1n the area. See LG ~ Br. ci·~ts, rirps, them at 2077 Charle, manag. Corona def Mar 5250 Apt. (Triplex). Family size kilch. \\'/ hltns, crpts, drp5, 2 BR. Mountain hon1c; Run. frplr.. efl('I i;:nr. I or 2 ning Springs al'l'a: $12,00J children ok. (Nr scblsl No equity · for: ?i1obil<' Home '"30 s c s ----------Costa Mesa. \Viii CatTy cash pets. "'"' . ent{'r t., S.A. Nr \Varfl('r. aot:·>-0989 HILLGREN SQUARE difference a1 71,.i <;: •• 3;16--627? I ~IA VE A 1969 VICTQJ\: 10 Key Adding Macruric.• Orig. Cost $150. Will ~ ' for guns or ? can 557·9536 carport, pool. cluld ok. 221~ er John & Louise Sellers College. 646-0627 646-2118. ' - STUDIO , 2 ~· crpts, <lrps, IMt.lACULATE 2 BR duplex. n,. ~'-_ ~-..,, $!IS.UP . Lrg rheer!ul ne\\•ly 2 stores avail. f,: imn1ed. Tradt> 35' Fibreglass Sloop furn or unfurn. 1 Br. apt. lease ~none of city's busie~t any stage of coniplefion Crpts, drps, bltns, encl gar: shopping centerg. App, 85il fron1 $399j. \Vant late Cad- I child ok. (Nr schli;). 2230 ~· ft. ea. iliac, Lincoln, ca1nper or s C SA N 250 E. 17th St., Costa ~Iesa n10tor home. 613-6800 Trade r.1.1 lot Costa M""'-· Equity $15,000. \Vant R-1 Jot1 or home Coastal area front N\\'J)t Beach to Dana Pt. Call 673-6809. "?°I. ~\ork1ng c;iuplc pre(. Bit-in overi afld range. Drps, f"'-"'l!!!:!!. No childrrn, 2-1 ... 646--0496. new cpts. Garage. Fenced · · <'l?t~r St. · r. Call Mr. Bram {213) OL 1·2700 -\Varner. 545--0989 • -==="'~==I -600 SQ. FT. STORE ll * * * * * Laguna Beech 5705 1 ~1o~c~··~M~.~c~a1~1~o~w~"'~'~· ~646-~21g30~··l!~'!"''!'l~~~!!!i!!i!!!!!!!!~i!!!!J!~~~!!!!!!!!!!I DELUX.E 2 br, 2 ba . Adults yd. Gardener & water pd. ON TEN ACRES past 40 only, $1•10 mo. Adults. no pets. $145 mo l & 2 BR. Furn & Unfum 263--255 16th Pl. Sec mgr. + securily deposit. Avail Fil'E'places I pr!v. patlcs I ------l<EAL ESTATE BUSINESS and ./ OCEAN v 1 E v..r. Lrg. Offic• R•ntel 6070 . Generel FINANCIAL N • 54&-~n~" f r Pool,_ Tennis . Cor1t.1rl Bkfst., $11:1 PER mo. 2 Br. 1 small ow. _,,.,at J. 900 Sea Lar.e, CdM 64'1-:!Gll child ok. No pets. Bltns, • MARTINIQUE e •MacArthur nr Coa,st Hwyl cpts, drps. 5.18.9-i62 aft ;-,, p k L "k S d ' ---ar -1 e urroun 1ngs SUPER PAD' Pl -h . 3 Br Studio C?nclo. DELUXE 1·2 ': 3 BR APTS. · us • cozy !_ p~~s. bltlns. S22j mo. Call ALSO FURN. BACJ-lELOR 1 BR ap1 nr beach_ Crpls, .>IG-.:>.JO Prv patios • Hld Pools frpJc., balcony, stv / rcfr. -shutters. 673-l!lli:J LRG. 3 BR. Apl. Crpts, driis. Nr shop'g e Adults only ~-~===='=====­ Balboa 5300 Bachelor. 1 & 2 BR apts. Furn or unfurn. Crpts, drps, bltns, patios. \11 a 1 king dis1all{'r. to tovm. 100 Cliff Drive, Lag. Bch. \VALK To to1vn & beach, 1 BR, adults only. $13::1 mo. 494-3839 or 494-9471. Ask for Oa\'t'. kids ok. Pool. 1~ Maple, 1TI7 Santa Ana Ave., Cl\t Apt 3, ;i~S-280R 1'rlg:r Apt 113 e 646-5:>42 2 BR APT, fenced yd, frplc. 1010 EL CA.\flNO Or. Cl\!. crpt, rlrps. $15Cl n10. call Upst.1irs 3 BR. 2 BA. \Valk 837--0289 lo s!orcs & c h u r c h e s . -····--REAL ESIATE UNFURN.-BALBOA I Gener•I ChildN'n under 3 or ovc1· 1:> ok. $16:> mo. Open Sun Now!s THE 9-3 or sl10111n by appt. Ph. ~1'1~1--38&, :>4:>-3J6j or eves 675-Sj5j TIME . F 0 R Z BR. U"f"m. Newly ,Jee New crpts & drps. Spac New. Lower duplex. 2 BR. 2 --·----- ba. & den. Near occari. Rentels WantM:I 599Q $350 t.tonlh Bay & Beach Really JriC'. 901 Do11er Dr .. Suite 126 NB 6~5-2000 E11cs. &J6.6001 Huntington Beech 54GI: i\1.D. family wants 2 or 3 Br home NCY.'Pt Hgts or hcach area 1-3 yr lease or may buy and/or op1ion. 2 school children, dog. P.O. Box 3J2j Napa, Cal, 1707) 2;'5-8.i23. DELUXE t-2 or 3 rm, suite Commerciel 6085 nr. Orange Courity Airport -·------ & Irvine lriduatrial I BUILDEROFFERSNE\\I Con1plex. Carpet. drape11, 21,500 sq. ft. del.uxe bldg. n1usic, air-conditioninit & Leased, choice Or an g e janitorial service. Available County area. Property ?o.1ay 1st. clear. Owner w/carry Isl BOB PF.TI'lT, Rraltor TD 8~3'/oc. PrerMl int. ok, ~ • 833-010~ • __ 5.10-31'Hil am, 82R-;'>130 pn1, Modern Offices FOR "'""' sJO ... 11. Do\\'lltown Harbor Bl11d., Cl\l Good parkirig • air/cond. $7J single. $17:> 2 m1 suitt>. Air cond. Sert'y Sl.'rv1ce, parking, centrally located. Call 6·12-9060, LI S.2698 So. Calif 1st Nat. Bk. Bldg. Industrial R•ntal 6090 230 E. 17th Street .:......;.:=;;_...:.: Costa Mesa 642-1485 BLDG. For lease, Lagun11 DESK SPACE """"· 1000 '<I 11• •11 " part, all power. 494-4447 • * * * * * 222 Forest A venue Business Opportunities ., * FAMOUS BRAND NAME * CANDY .!l SNACK ROUTE !PART OR FULL TIME) VERY HIGH INCOME \\'r nct•d a 1Hslributor in {Jiu; ;i rt'a for our cantly (Nestles, Plan1cr~. Tootsie Rolls, MW. Duds, ctr.). No sellinit . .IQ; volved. \Vr furnish all~ c..'Ounts. You n1ust have 2·tu 8 h~. J)Cl' \\'CCk spare ~ ldays or eves,. • .. $11JO TO $19::.0 QU ICK CASH gt'tt"'""' Adil•."""""· 11"' mo. 2283 Fountain \\lay E . THROUGH A !H"b'" furn. IV. '" ON BEACH! YOUNG Physician \\·ants J Laguna .Beach New 3800 sq ft. $383 mo. Ne1vport Beach 642-1485 CASH REQUin.ED , ~ For niorr information wiiJe. "DISTRIBUTOR DIVISI_Qlf •2:1", P.O. Box 58, Pomo~ Calif. 91769 • Include ~ numlJcr. ~· ~ Wilroo ). \Vilroo Goro'"' or 4 Bdrm house near Hoag, 49-1-9.tliG rent or lease. July lst.1 --~===~==-6100 DAILY PILOT NEW Dix 1 & 2 B< Shg crpt, drps, bHns, lmmed. 'Jeep. Apts. • 2 BR l ~i BA FROt.I $235 642-2079 * OFFICE SUITE Lots • 2 BR 2 BA FROt.f $260 ,,::-""::.:;""",.,---~~_,....,. FOi' lease 2600 !IQ. fl. Ideal - • 3 BR 2 BA FROM $300 3 Or 4 Bdrm w/pool for location, downtOY.'n Laguna VIE\V Lot R-1 Laguna Beach transfe~ exec. 8.: fan1. Carpets-drapes-dishwasher Beach. Capld, air • cond. 8200 sq. ft ., pa11ed slNJet, Affiliate CANDY SUPPLY ROUTE WANT AD f'rnm Sl>l. ;,0-1973, 545-2321 * LRG 2 & 3 BR, 2 Baths, frplc, bltns, crpts, drps. heated pool-sauna-lcrinis or 4· Wi ll lease -July 1st Janitor. Ulil. Pt·iv dual rest. all ulil. inc. xlnt bldg. sUe. rec room.ocean vicl'v'S for a lull year. 496-5245 rm fnc. 4~9-181 Only $9500. 6:12--0138. (No selling involvtd) E.xcellent income tor k!w hours weekly work. (Daya and Evenings). Refjlling anCt · collfcling money from cote operated disJK'nsers in Cfrt. ' angu Co. and 8l,ll"l'OW)ditlg area. \Ve establish ro11tt. U·landles name brand cand~ '. and snacks). $1625.00 caW ~ required. For personal· tnter1 view in Orange Co. area, . srnd namE'. address and phone nun1be:r to MULTI· STATE DIST., INC., 1681 W. Broad\'.ray, Anaheim, CaU· fomia 92802 (TI4) 778-5060., I . . \ " ./ . • -b-1 Rtad Cla1s1fications For Expert Assistance 6500-6900 In the DAILY PILOT Encl gar .. pa!io. ;J'IG-1034 1 3 BDRM. 2 bath apr, built · ins. cpts, drps, Sli:.():, 2515 0 1·angc A11e. 673-005.1 2 BR unfurn. apt., patio & built·lns. ~ Orange Ave., C.J\.1. LG. 3 Br. 2 Ba, cpts, dps. bllns, nr OCC, \\•alk-shpg, chl<lrn ok. $179. 5.17-6151 NR. new 2 Br, 1 ~:1 BA, crpts, dl'ps. stove, dsh\11r, gar. 766 \V. \\lilson, 642-79;';8 LOVELY Li:;e, l BR. Crpts, drps, bit-ins, gar. Adults, no pc!s. $13J'> mo. 646-1762 ./ NE\V 1. 2 ~P.. $150 & $170. Util incl. Adults only. no pets 241 Avocado • 646-0979 palios-ample parking. l\tlDDLE Aged work i rig Security guards. \\'Oman looking for ~nil un- ~LIRN. also Avail. furri. apt. up to $100, vie. HUNTINGTON l!th SI. • P l•<e •ll•. 6~;,...o201 PACIFIC TEAOJER """" 1 ., '""' 711 OCEAN AVE,. H.B. or unfurn apt. Ne1vport or (7141 ~1487 Laguna area, yrly. Call Ole. open 10 am·6 pm Daily 67:>-28!).I al! 4 PM --RENTAL SERVICE 2 BR apt.. carpets, drapes, Free to Landlords dis h\\'asher, across from r.:urd:v park. $14.} mo. Blue Beacon, 645-0183 CM 84&-:<m e LANDLORDS e ATI'RAC. 2 BR. $l35. All ex-FREE PENTAL SERVICE Broker 5.14-6982 lras. Now avail, Kids ok. 17401·A :<eelson Ln, H.B. 968-7;)10, 847·7446. Rooms for Rent 5995 ~--------- 2 BDRM. Apl. carpets, IJuill· F'URN. Roon1 for rent. ins, garage, no pels. Call refrig.. hotplate, etc. Girl 962-8578. prrr. $7."1 mo. 673---093.1. ~------Newport Beach 5200 2 RR. $15.:i Y.'/ t yr lease ROOM For lady. Parking $150. Patio, pool. J I~ ba. farility. Kil . priv. if desired. e NOW RENTING e 8181 Garfield. 962-8994 646-0735, 646--4760 DESK SPACE 17875 Beo<;h Blvd. H untington Beach 642-4321, Ext 276 j ACRES Full price $6,37:;. Uvel land wf good vie11•. Vic of &1ulti-million-$ development. Good terms. (TI4) 644-4670 e11es. Bkr. OFFICE OR ~RE lj " 35' or 30 x 3Y off st pking A: util· furn Ne\\'J)Ort & Bay Center, Cilt 2~i Acres by Owner , Utllitles- 2032 Nc"i>Orl Blvd 646-1232 near running \\later & Golt •M 1 Course. $9j(t do. $14,900. SUITE L: ·""' sq. II . o (213 1 782-2727 offkc & storagr area. 1r~·,11========== Placentia A v e IC 0 A ST R•sort Property 6205 DRAPERY. 646-4401 . ~--'--- CLEANERS & shirt Iaundcy pick up s1ation • room for small plant. Ideal for h\1$- ba.ncl /wile ·team. $7950 Full price. Grosses $13,00J. .~· EXEC ofc suite . 1100 sq. ft. BEAUT. 3 level Lake Ar· crpts/drps, 444 Npl Blvd. l'O\\'head home, 4 Br. 3 Ba. CRlJ alt T pm wk d y s Tiled kit. & halhs. Bltn GT::i-4644 vacuum cleaner sys1em, S.st Locetion In CdM crptg, drps, new Rock 800 to 1400 sq. fl. Deluxe Qtf. Maple din'g Fl, JlC\\I li11ing ~ 54&·5'10 -:.' ice Spaces. Avail Immed. rm furn. frost-free re!rig., o Phone Owner. G42-99'JO dshwhr. self-cleaning overi. fftllfcintm1lhllt"9 · I·Iouse Jes~ than 2 yrs old. OLLEGE REALTY DESK SPACE Uved io 2 wko<l• ooly. ScU 1 ~~"""'1"'SOO"'.._"""lt"Ho",.."",eti,..j N El C • R I for considerably Jes11 than 1.;--· ---S •. a:;n;;l,:•_;Ac;n;;.•:;._ ___ 5:;6::2::0.!.i;:;S•:;nc::l::•_;A:;::na:;._ ___ ;::56:.::20 305 o. em1no el cost at $4:i.ooo. Call 714: FANTA~C ~us. Oppor. ·S Beaut. new 2 Br. 2 bath unit.-. ==========--'="'"==-="""====·I w/qual. cpts, & drps. Plan. nNI fol' privacy plus outside liv. areas, pool & rec. facil. Db.I. Rarai:-cs. In the heart of Np!. Bch. w/easy access to shopJlin~. beach, frwys. $250 to $300. ,... San Clement• 5-lt}...IRG7 wkdys. Owner. yr medium sized restauran BOYO REALTY 644-1617 675-5930 DOWNING APTS CORNER CLAY ST. & ST. ANDRE\\IS ROAD. Upper 2 Br. 2 Ba. Frplc • priv. <leek . pool. 12 adulls otr.upying 10 apts. QUIET! $200 mo, Adullll over lit 64WJ01 BAYF11.0NT 2 BR, 2 BA Luxury Apts. Prlv. 1e.rrncr-, clcvaton. sub- 1c1Tane:.1n pk'g. All cll'.!c. Pool, liOft \1111.ter. docks. 3121 \~. Coa11t llwy, Newport. 64~2202 GREAT LOCATION 3 Bedrma, 2 bath, 2 fin:oplac- cll, l patio$, 1200 1110. 2 Bedrn1~. 2 btl lh, baloony. all bltini;, $llr1 mo. Jean Sm ith Realtor 616-3255 IHG-0147 BEAUTIFUL Vif'w of upper bay & Nt.•wport Center. 3 txlnn hon1c, nc1Y cpts, S:nl n.o. Avail .l une. S.8-8486 2BR. N (' w Jltlinl, cr;111, drpc, refrlg av .. il. Nr. beach. yr md. $225. M pet!I 55T-8400 Apa,/11t #1tU S1H1n;,;, St}''" Luxury I '-• t 8.,.-lrnom• furnlJhsd •nd lJn/.,mUAt' A,1111 t iJ1in1 q,.,u,1 She1 l '•rpr.t-••11 f•n.tlll•i t:.ul1in1 l,.lerior De•il" JP'elh·i" Pen1r1 A Clo.tt!I Prirale D«k '"' Bttlr.on1 ,Cir Cnn,i1ion.eil f:n/uy )'our 01Cn Prlriflffl Sr. lfealful l'ool--Colnr Tl' Anlenn• 1''01~ Renting-From $140 J1t•I NMlt of &writ C"'' rfir:s• 1000 W. JlncArlhur Blod. I lol~lc f •d "' 8rit1ol Snntn Ana 540./14'JT 492-4420 In N.B. that must be sold }"'OR rent offices or stores R. E . Wanted 6240 due to loss of mgr. lOM down 130 E. 17th St .. O.t $85 ---------Call Gale Pike · 494-6373 fo & up. 64&-8181 Responsible Party ~·;••;.;1;'=",;'o;,.;o·===="'-1 DELUXE LOCATION desk Wants to Buy - space, pho11e Rl$Wering, House or incon1e property secy service. 644-4981 On or near water For low down pnymt NO. C.M. office. nice. Prof. from Owner Air-cond, cpts, dps, $79 ea. Call : 675-8575 64&-4833: alt 5. !'147-4757 Money to LHn 632Q -------------1 1st TD Loan Loy,·est Interest Available 2nd TQ Loan · ·" BUSINESS and $150 MO. 900 !IQ ft, !I.Ir ('011u., 23~ Npt. Blvd., CJ\.t . FINAN_Cc.cl_A_L __ _ ~2616 Business Term~ based on P-('(Uily. . 642·2171. 545-0611 Industrial Property Opportun1tle1 6300 Serving lfl!l'bor srea 21 yrs. COIN M.UNDRlES Sattler Mortgage Co. Frigidaire 336 E. 17th Streel -NE\V Bldg., ll.000 sq ti fat From $6500 to $31 ,500 sale or lease. ror det,!la •Buena Park • FuUc1·ton e Mort919•s, Cypress • WcstmiMfnr e :rrust DHds 6345 ilania ltralty llun llng1on Beach • Co.rden Grove • Orange • Santa &124i::i00 Ana e Costa Mella e Ana. helm • 60l5 CAU. CHARLIE -Comm•rcl1I _._ ..... --SUPERB Opporlunlty. PRIJ\.1E OCEANFRONT J\.larlnc hardwart 1 tort, 4 furnished units, 1..0ned com· Newpor t. lnve~t. of less merelal. 2.lxl~. S 6 9: 5 O Q.. tMn no,000 will net min. Owner: 673-rl:'9, 644-5972 of 30~. Write Daily PUIM MARINA In Nc\\'POrt Beach. Box M-926, Prime loc. ..-l'e Sll!S.000 C"R"EA=T~food-'-,-~&-m_al_t_•_bo_p Exel. K I n i a .i rd, R.E. operation for We. to rlgbt P.1J Z-22'.!2. party, UCI Campus. Good f'OR Sale. i;lo1-c building. business OO\Y • 111nta!lti<" 686-698 \Y. 19lh Sf. Bethel growth. ~ dn. Contttl Towers t.ttL G4S.IT68 Agt. Dan. 811-2410 Wiii Sell First Trust Deed 10'/. YIELD Scuoned · SlS,tXXl oot{', r-Y• abl4' $450. month, amortW!llt 3 yean. For dctalla • FAI Riddle &1&-8811. ANN UNCEMENTS ind N~..:C.::;ES'--- I ' ' • • ,,_ .. _ ..-. -.. -· ........ , "; ... '".",""';" ..-... ": ..... --;-·, '\ .. --~-• .-~·-•, .. • .. • .. • .. t. •, "• ; , , . +.•.a ,,. • a\ c t.;, +. '• o • +,;:, f~ '*..If!.+.• •• • .. :.,. a,+,+ .. ;., 4 s 4 4 e .' :y , •. µ • + ,+, +, ¥,. 4 . •, +, f ,P, l 0 F u s ,;, ¥ .• • u u P .@ 0 llf CAtLY P1Ltlf ~ltdriesday, Ma1 6, l97D ;:~.;;~~D ... A•l""L•Y-P~IL .. O~T~"""....:.,-:.~N~~fi~~tEtjT~• CLASSIFIED INDEX Found (Free Ads ) 6400 WtdntM!iY, M1y 6, 1970 P'IL.OT·ADVERTISER J8 ~ " EMPLOYMENT I JOBS .. IMPLOYMENT I JOiS' EMPLOYMINl Jebs Men. Wom. 7100 Jobt-Men. Worn. 7100 Jel:t1o Men, Wom. 7100 • DIAL DIRECT 642-5678 ~·ouNOLING, !>\lo'~I. lov1d.1lt', 1'1'!1•d011t, nf'(!(j.~ lov• !rllf hon){•, "'Ould lo v r r luldrt"n lo plii) '' Ith /lr111th~ S: hOLPI')' ;)\~1;)2'! When You Wont it done right ... THE AIRPORTER INN HOTEL HOUSES FOR SALE lllNl!lAL .•. ,,.,,.,,.,.,. 1• t 05TA Mii• ••'" ,,,.,., IUI MESA OIL MAl ............. 11M \ll$A Yl!IOE _,. ••.••••. 1111 'OLL-fl)IE P•IUC ........... , llH JIEWPOJIT CIACM .•••••••••. ltOO Nt:Wl'OIT MIUOMY5 ,. ••••••• 1,11 U.LIOA COYEJ .•.• ,,,,,. 1111 :!~!~:s'T INOlt,~S .:::::::::; ~: IA1SN01t[S ............... lUI 00¥Elt IHOltES •" , ...... 1UI WESlCllPF ·•·•··•· lt>f •ARIOR HIGHLANOI ........ U.U JNIVEllStlY PAil!(. · ....... IUl •RV INll!. . .. ....... lHI ~:i:.~~;, ·: ..... :::.:::::.:: ~~:; El T••• 11U 1ltVINE l'lltltArE .......... 114! COlt ONA Dt'.L MAit ........ lUO IALIOA PENINSUL.A ........ lltl tEiliCON llli'f , ....... • litl '"y ISLAl<IDS .. -,,, ........ IUI LIDO ISL E ....... , .. U" &o\LIOA 1SLAND l tU HVl<ITINGTON IEACH --· uoe 'IUNTINGTON HARIOUlt .... l•Oi LINDA ISLE IJOol "OUNTAIN VAlLIY .... ,., 1•11 SElL ll!ACH • U5I iUNSET IEACM ........ • l'U GARDEN GttOV! , ............ H IS ~~;~w1o'o"ocH ;:·;:;:::::·. :: )ltANGE COUNTY .......... . OUT OF COUfllTY ............. UCll OUT OF STATE ,. ........ , .... hOO Slo\NTON .... ,,...... 1611 #l'[STMINST&'R , . .,...... . llU MIDWAY (.lfY ............. "1' SAfllTA .,,... .. ...... 1610 SANTA o\NA HGTS ...... ,. ... 1631 OltA NGE . ., ..... · 16JS TUSTOI .............. lMI NORTH TUSTIN ........... lMS .. Mo\NEIM ........ lUI SILVEltAOO CANYON ........ UIS t.AGUNA MILLS ..... , ....... llN Lo\GUNA IE.&CM .... .,. , .. 170S LAOUNA NIGUEL ............ 1701 MliSION VIEJO ............ 1/U IA 'I Ct.EMENTE iru S,t.N JUAN CAPISTR,t.,.0 111S CAPISTR•NO IEAC.H 11:19 Q,lr.N4 POINT l/H X£ANSIOIE ................ 1/H SAN OLEGO ... • ... l II! RIVER5l01! COUNTY _. .... I ... HOUSES TG tE MOVED ..... lOOt tO,.OOMINIUM ....... nst OUPLEX•S FOR S•LE "" 1'7S ""o\RTMENT~ FOR li.&Llii -• 1110 RENTALS Houses furnished GENERAL ......... MIO RENTALS TO SHARE ...• . 'JOOS COST,t. MESA ,, ........ 2\lll MES4 DEl MAit ,.,., , 211S MESA ViiRDE .. _ .. 2110 (0\.LEGE Pl.RIC ........... 211S NEWPORT lf:ACH ........... noa NEWPORT HGTS ............. »II NEWPORT SMORES .......... 2Jll $AYSHORES ............ ms OOVER SNORES ........... »21 WESTCL IFF ............ 2ua Ult!VEltSITY ,. .. A:IC .......... ttll IRVINE ...................... HH BACK IAY , ................. 2J40 EAliT ILUFI' ................. 2141 El Toro ll« IRVINE TERRACE .......... :110 CORONA OEL MAR ........... 2150 IALIOA ........... llllt LIDO ISLE ............ 2UI IAY ISLANDS ............. 21SI IALIOA ISLAND .... ,..,. lJ!S llUNTlllGTOH IEAC1'1 ......... 24N FOUNTAIN VALLET .......... 2411 SEAL IEACM ................ 100 LONG 'EACll ............. UGO ORANGE COUNTY ............. HOii U.HT• AN• . .. ............ 1•11 ,>1ESlMtNSTER ........... 1111 MIDW•Y CITY ......... 1116 SAHT• •NA HEIGHTS ........ HJO COASTl.L .......... 17N U.GU,.A IEACll ........... ,. lit.I LAGUNA NIGUEi. ··-········· 1107 M.ISSIO'" VIEJO .... _ ........ JIOI ;Alf CLEMENTE ......... 1111 SAN JU•H CA,.IST'llANO ..... 11U tAl'ISflt,t.NO I EACH ···-· .. Vlt OAHA ,.OINT ........... tld R1VERSIOlii COUNTY , ...... Jllf v•CAllON lt ENT AlS ........ 'l'lta SUMMER llEl>ITALS ......... 1111 CONDOMI NIUM , ,. ......... 700 OUPLl:J.~) FURN, ........... H71 RENTALS House' Unfurnished GENERAL ............ >OM COST• MESA . ....... Jlot MESA DEL MAit ............. J11S MESA VEROE ............. 1111 COLLEGE PARK ....... , ... ,Jlll NEWPORT IEACH ........... J,00 ,.EWPORT NGMT5 ........ ,,,. 1111 NEWPORT SMDRES ......... 3111 IAYJHORES .......... l121 DOVER SHORE I ............. 312) WESTCLIFF ..... :r!JO U'UVERlllY ,..RI( .......... nn RVINE ... -. »ll 1•CK IAY ................ 1211 EAST ILUFF .................. 3111 El Ttro nu 1•v1NE TERRACE .... -..... nu CORONA DEL MAR ......... :11St IALIOA ............. J>N BAY ISL.ANOS ............. WO LIDO ISL[ .......... llSI IALIO.& llLANO _,., ......... lUJ NEWPOll:T WEST ........ 211! JolUNTl,.GTON IEACH ..... UOO 11UNTtNGl0/rt MAl!BOUlt .... ..140! FOUNTAIN VALlEY , _,. ... 1411 SEAL IEACH .............. 145' GARDEN GROVE .............. JU! LONG IEACM ............ JSOI OttANGI! COUNTT ............ 3'N SAHTA ANA ............. :Wlt 1¥ESlMIHITElt . -_, ........ MU MIOWAV CI TY ........ ,.>o!li SANTA .&NA HEIGMlS ........ :UlD COASTAL ..... llOO UGUN• ll:A(N ............ un L.&GUNA NJOUEl .......... 1111 MISSIOH VIEJO .............. JIOI S.&N CLEMEl>llE ..... Jiii SAN JU AN CAl"llTRANO ins C.Al'ISTR•HO IEACH ,. .. -.. J7)D OANA POINT .... 11'0 COJ<IDOMINIUM , ........ 1HO OUPLEXES UNFURi<!, ........ lfl! SUMMI• ltl.Nt•LS •-...... mi RENTAL> Apts. Furni1lied OEHERAl .. ...400I COSTA MESA ,. ....... ,,,, 4100 MESA VE'llDE ............ 1110 NEWPORT l&,lr.CH ,,.,,, ..... 1100 HEWPORT HEIGHTS ..... , ... 4110 NEWPORT $MOR ES .......... 421' ffESTCLIFF .......... t Hf UHIVEttllTY PARK _,, ... .,.41ll IACKIAY .............. 410 EAST ILUFF ........... 4111 COttON• OlL MAR .......... IUD IALBOA ........... •JOO IAY ISLANDS .............. .,.4JSO 1,100 ISLE ............. 41SI &Al.80A ISi.ANO , ., . . ., 4lSS HUNTtHOlON IE,4.CH ........ U GO '0UNTAIN VALLEY ......... 4'10 SEAL I EACH ............... 4U1 .,OHO I UCM ............ o&Sot ~RANGE COUHTY ............ C400 OAROEH COiROVE , ............... 11 "ESTMIHSTElt ............... 4111 \lo!OWAY CITY ...... , , ''11 IANTA j1,NA ""•"· "'° Sl.NTA ANA MEIGNTS ...... •QO TUSllN ... . .... , , ... COAITAl. ............. 4100 L.AOUNA IEACH ...... . 17tl LAGUN• NIGUEL ......... 4101 #llJStON VIEJO _ .......... llOI UH CLEMENTE ..... •Ill SAl>I JUAN CAPISTRANO 4nl CAPISTRANO I EACM 4/Jo OANA ,.Oll>IT ... .. ... .. .. 01~ fltl,.LEX, ltfC. .. , • OC-0 ~:ONOOMtNIUM ............ , 4'51 MOTELS ........ , • .. .. 4t1J RENTAL S A pts. U nfurnished OllNERAL ... S.000 cost• ME SA ........... , Sito MES• VEltOE ........... !11e Nl!Wl'O•T &EACM ..... " !UO NIWl'OltT HEIG HT' ........ Slll NEWl"OllT SHORES ......... SJ" WEITCLll'I' • ......... JlH UNIVERSITY l"A•IC .......... JUI tAC91:1AY ........... SMI li'ASl &LU,F .... , " JUI co•Ol>IA Ol!L M•• .......... JUI &Al.10,t. ........... ~. SJOO IAY' 11LA1'105 , ........ ,. .. ., $.1!-lt LIDO ISl.E .... ,.,. ..... )Jll IAL&OA ISLAND UloJ MUNllNOTOfl &liACM ..... Slltll ,OUNTAI N VALLEY' -... IMll ~E•L IEACM , ............ SOI t.01'10 ••ACM .,. ........ 5111 OttA NGE COUNTY .•• , .,,.,.,UOJ t./\ltOEH OltOVE , .......... ~11 t'•ITMIHSfllt .,, .......... kU '· •OWAV CITY ... , ,. .•. "11 IANTA AINA . . ....... Mii 1•HT • AHA MllOHTS ......... Mlif f\/SYtN .. • ....... ,.._ lOASTA\. , ........ ,.17" I .. ouN• al.t.CM ............. 1105 ~JOUN• IOl/OUfJ,, ........... Jttl' iAN CLIM•Jftl ........... Int ... ,. JUAN CA,llTRANO ..... sm lt ~Pl\TltANO IE.ACM S1M llAM• POINT , ... , •• l?ff REAL ESTATE, Gener1I '••tPLl'll. tM. .............. ~ CONOOMllUU,. ,, • .,, •• ,,, ttM 1•l-NTA\.S W•HHO .......... "" ~OOMJ '01t •IMl ............ tf'llS 'iuuM II ' ~OTELS, TRAILkll COURT) ,.t GUE'l MOMl!S !1'' MISC. lliNTAL! $f tNCOM• ,ROPl:ll TY •"""' 01 8U51NES$ PltOPE ATY .O' lltjl.IL EA PAotit5 llO' tUSIHISJ 1t•llTAL .. ,. ..... ... ~-ou~O: 'I Ulotllh u l ti C1•ruuu1 Sh1•phc11f 111•11r I.!('! C"iUTIPU~. f)olj has ll'hlh', t,u· 1111U b!nck n1urk111~i; N1 klrnOl!cahon Cnll Kil--OT!l:; 0"Fl(E lll'HTAl .... .01 INOUSTlttAL PltOl'E llTY ,.,,.•06 .•O\t;-iD 1 Lon~ h:l1n'1I 1111111 :OMMERCIAl ........ Uf 1HoustRIAL ltEHT•L ...... "'' f', t~. Coron11 (kl ,\\11r arrn .. ~~MES ., _ .. ::::.:..: :~: \lui-t 11.Jcn11ry. 67~3322 t1! Coll one of the experts liste d below!! ClfttUS GROVES ............. 11Jl Ii. ::0/'1\I 'ClllAOE ............. Olli SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE OIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY LAICi EL$1NOtt£ ........ ~ 1'0'( P...-"'.llf' 11·h1lf, 111alr, 11Es01tT PllDPERYY ..... '1,.,11 \'~•· L StnTt. A.dbnu Babysitting 65'0 G•-•eninn OltANOE CO. l'ROPERTY .... I <I rv "' OUT OF Ill.TE PRO" ....... •HI ~;46--~ll·I'.! o'lt'~ ,,r l:l7:J.4i73j --~-~------"OU!1lAI N • OESEltT ..... n 11 Clll\,D Cart·. iny hom1•, daus SUtOIVISION L•NO .... •711 d a,\:-1 ~ •EAL ESTATE SlllVICE .... •J!S · . , & l'l't':-1, Nl'Y.'pct rl Bl'llC:h I.I . l:XCMANOE ..... un Blif'~ C'olol'',1 '.\1 On i; r r I :il't'a. 6T;i-7jl3 l , E. WAHTF.O ........ ..i .. fourid on n1y pal1<;1. ''ir -~--- 6680 P •int in9, Pep1rh•n9ing 6150 CUSTOl\I Palntini; "Thi! Exterior·lnterior Speci1Lli•t" Rl'sidt>utial • Co1nme.rcial. 11700 MacArfhur Blvd. Newparf 1-11 (Opposite Orange County Airport) IS NOW INTliRVIEWING ALL HOTEL ANO RESTAURANT PERSONNEL BUSINESS and Harbor & A1h1n1s. ~Hj..7!162 BABYSITTING ~ly hom1·, NE\V Law n 1, 1-e-seetl1n~. Cumpleh' lt1wn t:arc. Clean up l!y JUI.> 01' 1nonth. }o'ree c~tin1att!s, for in!o cull g97-2-1l7 or s.IG-0932 FINANCIAL ul! ti 11n1 '1e~u d1•! Mar Any aJ:c IUEil>lllSS ott~ORTUN1TIES '*I II'('!' ,. 1-p 1 11·11lt;amr C'11.ll 546-3003 L.A\\'N Ma1nlc11anl'e. Oncf' a /'<'o 10b too largt' 01· loo l !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'~!!!!~!!!!!!'!l!!!ll!'!l!!!!!'T.'!l!!!'!l!!!'!l!!!'!l!!!!!!!!!'!l!!!'!l!!!!!~I Mnall Lie, Bond. Ins. Y.'on·1 -··--· IUSINESS WAN TED tMJ " • ' 4 ~ rnia I' er~lau ("<.! • --------Y..Cek i:;cue1·al up-keep INVEST Ml!. NT O~r1""'"9S 1111 n1ot!1Ptf hro11 I! .~ hlat'k. ;') Child l'lirl' 1n my hon1e be underbid! &l&.3679 Job~en. Wom. 7100 Jobi-Men, Worn. 7100 Jobl.--Men, Wom. 7100 ' ,. 11 lawns, flower bedt>, ~hrubs. lHVESlMENT Wo\NlED .. Ill Wt'f'kS dJ!l'.0. So. Laguna. \.OSlil • e111 area. MO,.EY to i..o•N ......•. •no "" ,, , . 5~s.:>l09 Call anytime bt•lore 9 pm, f'ERONSAL LOANS ............ ms 4;r:-L/l.1 1 ~J'l6.-6678 ask for Tim HtWiLRY LOANS .......... •UO -Child care, let~ yd, COLL.AT•RAL LOAN' ...... IJH ALU!<: ,. a I ;\ k L' I' t ' \I(' AL'S Garoe-" Lawn I \VILL paint a 3 bdrm house for $1.30. incl trim, stucco, labor & material. Call Gell(' ,jj7-7543 REAL ESTATE LOANS Ult A kh ' ! G ·r •Id Tl ll lunt·hes. Vic. W1u•n(>r .i:i MORTGAGES, ''"~' o .. Ot • 6141 l"f)t) ur~l . lll u .c no·· f.taintenance. Commercl&I, INT & EXT. Painting. Free lo\ONEY WANTED IUI !lli:!-O:lAO Spr1ngdalt'. M,,..,,,;.9 ,_ .. ,,., .... _, .. -ldeotiaJ. --......... u .... • ''"' f'St;S . Loe ref1. Neal & ANNOUNCEMENTS ~\!ALL-~hii;-!ilk/t:111. BABYSITTING SL J ouch1n1 w 64~3629 • Honest. Call Chuck 6-l~S09 and NOTICES 2:11vl SI. nrrn. /\-B 14lXJ Church area . .1-·1•nc1:d yftrd llr ./1111 j.18-()-10:1 FOU/110 lf'•n Aft) .......... 6tlt E~tl'llt• 1..an•·. NH $12.j() "'k 11er child j·l:-1-2~;!7 ROTOTILL I NG M-ETICULOUS PAINT t.OST ............ .-01 Nr>w l11wn11. landscaping. ,ERSON•LS ............ '415 S~1ALlB!k -\\111k!1 t f• !l, llAliYSITTING nly hot'1l' S1u·ubs & trt>es renwved. EXP. DOCKS.hou~s. int-ext. ANNOUNCl!MENTS , .......... .-ii ' ' L'-, Coa.·t Plaza an>•. (•Ii 11RtMS ............. •411 \"IC ra1n·1l'W ~ .. H<ikl·r. "" }'ree esl. 54S-l142 INS. col. i;tutlents. 6T;)-5812 :~~DE ~~~~UARY 0 ·"·::::::; !!:~ . 5-llj.j.'>-13 • ~ID-&ll70 CLEAN-UP SPECIALIST EXTER. Avg I Story S250. 2 FUNER•L D1111ct0Rs ...... •114 L'QU"D R ' 11 t -,,-•r . _, t odd . bs 1350 c I I ood FL01t1sTs ........... 1s r '~ n>wn . 111r> ~ur1· Boa t Maintenance 6555 "OY..'1ng-. '""'\' ng, JO • Story , omp ,,. g CARD OF THo\NKS ........ '41' nv Vii:. \lunni•rs .t· Rcason11ble. 5411-695.'.i paint. Inler. R1n's $2J palnt oN Ml!MORIAM "" ... •411 . J G" .. Q] ' ••• CEMElEllT LOTS ........... 6-111 Highanrl .. 1,,~ RE:FINJSJllNC:. P~1nlHlK, Exp. Ji1pane:1e lant1.se11.pc, incl. Roy-841-1.No Cl!METERY CRYPTS ....... , ... If h 'I I . CEMETERY CRYPlS -·""' ••11 varn1 s Hll:. ).(l'n C' C.10111{; cleanup, n1ai11te11ance. l/\'TER or Ext. PAlNTL"IG, :REMATORIES ........... .-Jt lost 6401 c;uardfll('I' "ork. 67;Hll:U Mack 842-3442 l~li\1ED. SERVICE. Local lilEMORl•L P•RKS .......... '411 -ref. FREE est. 548-1627 •uCTtO,.s CE ......... r: LOST· Al;1:;kan ;\l:tlan1Ul•', Br1'ck, -Ma;;,nry, Jli\f'S Gardening: & lawn 'v1•TION SERVI .. .... ..·. 'a1. ,,,,., ,,. ,,, ,, , , ". 1na1ntenancr. Res. & CGlll• PAfNTING -Ext...fnl. 1B >TS. fltAVl!'L .. ""'" Ill !', ' t (1560 •11t tltANSf'ORTATION ..... ••11 rinS\ll'rti 1., ".\talnui ud ." e C .c"-"c'cdcal=•-5-\0-4837 l'Xpcr. Ins. Lie. t~rce e~I. AUTO TRANSPORTATION ..... ..U --C '\' ~II-~""" LEG•L 1'10llC£S ' •'!0 Vic. Un1v•·ri111y Dr·' CO!>lll Bl'll.O, Ren1odel. r e 11a I r * ALLEN Bros. G1tr<lt_•n1ni::. Accousl. ei ing~. ~-GEA:MAN .. TUTOlllNG .... • I . . SERVICE DIRECTORY ~!('!(ii. ltt>1\iu~1. C odl a!tt•r Ariek. bloek. con c rt 1 t, I ca IT aboul Y!-1ur yard! NEED a Painter! Interior Ii P:'IL :H&-i.'f!lt t·arpenlry. nu job 10o ~mall. Do you. if so call ~li6!1 .t exterior. Experienced. ACCOUNTING •HI -------• -I •NSWERINO SERVICE ~t LOST ~131(' B[1~.,{'!. !I 111 .. ·~ l.ie. Conlr 962-69'1J JOHNSON'S GARDENING _,_,_1-_8638 __________ _ AP,.llANClf 111!.l'AIRS, ,l'arll 1111 , 1 ASl'MALT. 011, . Ult blk. brown. WhHe. Rewurd ~ Yartl care, CleAn-up~. Prun-PAPER llANGING AUTO RE,.•1Rs •S:lf Call 531'~3. Ca rpentering 6590 in' planting. !162-W'.£l 20 yrs exp. fl'ef' cstiniatr. AUTO, SHI Rtlll, l•Pt. Elc. 'SCI _ _ ~~· .!',;;c;~c.,;:::._.=c"-~-IAATSHllN O •JH CRA y Sl ril)l.'d frm k11trn. CARPENTRY JAPA1'ES~ Ga rd ening Call Keith anylin1e. 642-2509 IOAT MAl"TENANCE ..... Uil • I ,,., c ·' <'-' N I k Cleanup . " 1R1CI(, MA~ONRY, 01<. ...... "" 4 1110"· ~(I•' ,, .<l!.u Hl.1, MTNOR REPAffiS. No Job .~:r\'1ce. ea v.·or . RETIRED Painter: yrs IUJINESs Sl!'llVICES · •so Uig Bc:h 510 rcw11nl yd mainl, 968-2303 ex""r. 1'eal & houesL 1'on IUILOlltS •Ill . . TIX' Small. cabinet in (al'· . .,.. CAtERtNG ............ •s11 \\IHJTF:-:\luli·loy i.1oodl;-::-;gll .. es. & 0 I her cab!nel.I. LA\VN t-10\VING SERVICE drinker, call j.16-6801 abilities anlimiteo agency Secretary Dis!. Mgr. seeking vtry at· tractive, \'ery nha.rp &irl v.·/ good skills. E screw· Officer f.1ust have thoroua:h knOw· ledge Fli A loans, SaviJlis & loan exp. helpful. Gen'I Office Exp, only, Accurate typing. Purchasing &/or contract exp, helpful. D ictephone Secy \\'Ill train t:ood typist to use dletaphone. Gen·1 ofc. exp. TRISH HOPKINS 488 E. 17th, Suite 224 C.l\1'. 6'2-1470 Advertising Agency CAl lNETMAKtNG ... ...... ISH ' I v I N I ti ""llcl ble reason ---· C,t.R PENTERING ... : ........ ''" unr.11p!M'( I<' Ba J't•n111 ~175, tt no answer leave ea · e.-·• · • CEME NT, c ... c••'• ............ uo. Ans 10 "Bon" 673-tiS7~ ,,.,,2372 H 0 able. Free est. 846-0955 Plastering, Patch, E."pcrienced production arL CMILO c••t:. Li<NM'f ...... u11 _ _ _ __ msg; at .....,.. • • · R • 6llO Uit/procluction manager, for ~~=~:~c~~:iNtNG ..... :::: HHO\\':o-i. sh11r1 i•urly t1:i1red _A_n_d'-"°-n JAPANE:SE Gardc-ncr. JO yrs __ eop_a_•_•_______ Newport Be a c h agency. CARPET LAYING I llEl'•ltt '"' ,, ows n1rl n1.1lr> Joi::. Vie. QUALITr \\'oodcraf1. sn1I exp. Compl. yd !51' r v. * PATCH PLASTERING Know type specs, printlna, g:~~~~~~i" ... ·: .. :!~ Bal001 P1•n1n~uh1 67:i-S;,2il i.:i•n'! t'OllStr. t.· carpenlrj. Contml Rcliabll'. S42-43.~ All 1ypes. Fret estimates pasteup, inking for collat~ral DRAFTING SERVICE ., ....... .,, B-Rl t:F"CASJ<: Wllh musie. 11('~· fn>e llll1SUlt11t1nr1 &-11uol1'. 6682 Call !'>110-6825 anti ads. Send resume to ELECT111c•L ......... u41 Ge ner al Services EOUl,.M•HT RENY•LS ....... .-11 ... ~sary for \\'f)l'~-1-tE\\IARD. Cul: ~!'ll &l.>001.t, 54~23!) ---------Box J\f-590 Daily Pilot. FEHCING -........ '"O 67J •~"C! (I .. "7'' .,14G ---.C Pl b' 6890 FLOORS . .. . ~ ... MU -.JI'. • \I.... . CARPENTRY ab1net~·Room HANDYMAN um tng Advertising Alency ~~==:TcUE'lt:E:t,1:Jj11~1~ -·"1471 5.'IALL-Blonrtr Pupp), 1 ~ Add., Patios .•. ny size job. Gtneral Home Repair * SECRET "Y -.Ji • ltEFIHl51'11NO UJS Prkt>. Fl.Ut'~'Y Ct11htn·11 t-11ke li7J..l l66 k 646-2576. ... 675-1341 * PLL::\1BING . alteration.~ & Ne .... ·port Beach. E.'l:perienced. GAROEHING ......... MIO ... I ,. I 4-10•1 -----re1111irs. Special on 1vater h rth od OENERAL SERVICES ........ '611 ~r1, v n1.:. ;!'Wan. "'1-· '·' CF:!'\. N""•"ir, add., cab Excell. typing & s 0 a • GR 0 G D SCING 4U .~ 6730 h1rs S.· dlspQsals 64~1286 .. n p GJss1N ' 1 ..... ::::::::::.:," RF.D-J).'l',:-(!r1~1-;-:<;,11Pr pup\ t'ormK·11, panchni;. n1arlil€'. Hauling .!M)me billing, under·"'· ~ GREEN TMUM& .... -......... 17M Vw. Tlm.J SI.(' \1 , J11>-::20l. An> Thing~ Dick, li7:.l-44:"1!l. ---an}'1imr________ sure patt. Xlnt. benefitJI. OUN SMOP .............. 1111 ,, , -JO-ll 1 -·-:0.10Vl:\'C, ,i;;.u·ag1' cleao-u11 I \\1ATERllc11!t'rs -rli~posers.' C&JI (7141 &12.-3910 ~:~t~NHGCLUIS ...... : ...... :: i:rl~-j • ..,.i. i•ii-.in REPAIRS • ALTERATION S & lile hauling. n.casonable. Grn. rcp1tirs. 11 .50 per hr . .::=,..:c:.c__:c.;:_:.c__·~-- NOUSEC.LEAHING ....... ._:::::.,1u ~!O'ITl.ED-~'1•n1alt:-;:;;ilv .. 1 ... CABINETS. Any size job ~·re1• rslimates. t>Q.1602. &i2-2T.i> AIDES -tor convales~rn::t:. 1NlEltlOR DECOR•T•NG ..... •111 JO \I('. Ct!\1 Trnn1~ Cluti :r. yrs 1'>.-pl't. ~148-€113 ----------elderly care or family care. INCOME TAX ........ iao 'l -YARD/ Gar. C: Ir an up. PLUt\1BING REPAlR J1omEmalc:ers. 547-fi681 JltON, Oroumtn!tl, Elc. ., ..... tHI appl'IJ:I.. 1/211 h :i-\.Yifl ·-· R h ••0N1NG ......... ,,u -----Cement Concre1e 6600 emo,·r Irr>!'~. i~. tr11s • No job roo ~mall CT VEE ?>foci I INSUl.ATtHO .. , ... -· ..... 1110 I.OST Sl11•pher1I & p:iri --._ Crt1dr, l>aekhO!.', !l6l-$Ji-I;, • 642-3128 • ATTRA I xpcr. e. INSURANCE ' . .. '"o C"'''' , .,,.,,,. "-.,. "' ' -------=========== Like For Dress Boutique. INVE,TIGAT ING, Oett<llV• .. llH " • 1 ' · "" • 1°'"". CO:\'CRET~:. alt l)'pes. Jo'tl'I' HAULING $10 A LOAD I -IANITOR1AL ... ,1,. Vir !6th SI . c :\I .-.lfl.-f,'.!l.i t'!!>lun it•' s.~v.·ing brcakin, R od 1• & i\lail picture & ba·ckground JEWELttY REl"AIR, Etc. .. 11Gt ---• · • · Cll'nn up. Trtt Serv. Grn. Im e tng info to Box i\1-'9, Daily L.ANosc•,.•Nco; ,_ ............. UH h..tuhn:.: If: i. kip Io ti din I:· Pl1!nlng 646-2528. :>J3-so.t3 I Repair-6940 p·( I N s •-OCKSMITH .... .... "ll P e rsonals 6405 S.•rvH'r t.:, qualiry 54S-8668 I 1 0 · • · · MAID SERVICE ............. Ull --• • L-ITl~H •"''"" & .. ,,.~ .. ,. ART MASONRY. IRIC~ .......... ,. . I I l-k1h ~ "°' ... .... * Ir you r.eetl remodeling, MOVING & STORAGE ...... 11-11 ;-;1ngr.\l1<0111'Cl·U1\'01"r•'ll •·Iran-up_. :\lo~ •!iru Sal. "'~lnling, or rennirs. Call Pictur.e Framin~ PAIHTINO, P1H!'l!•"•l11t ...... llJO * MEN * CE:\II::NT \Vork· \Valks &· ,_ l I c.A0 c::n31 ~· , .. -• '''"''"' •••• .. ,, ,.,._.es ~ma ~'""'"'"' , o ·, .. , 642-1-•.1 G 11 & G•'/f E·-· Good PAt1os ' · · .::·:::::;.. put!os. \l'hatc\'er you need -'='OC~:=c'"====== 8 ery · .. .,.. •. ""OTOGRAl'MY .. 1111 Everyont.· s h1etkit1g hw 1hr in 1..'0ncrc tr> !ht prlet> ls HA ULING & CI ea n - u P · 1-----Wary. Reply Box lt1.Q, PL.ASTt:R1NG, P•!cl!, llt••lr . UM nuh1 UIH' \\It' ha\f' a 1111 y. hl' C 11 "·b •'l2-91~ 11 ~ Trees ren1oved. Reasonable. Roofing 6950 Daily Pilot, N.8 . PLUMllNO .. ,.. "' . ng -a DU O< a J, 8-'""-""''-----------l'ET t;;ROOMING .............. ,'" so 1·aU us .t· ~·i.:111 10 b\1•! • Fret cstirna1e. J.-1 1742 -• M • 1'001. SERVICE .-........ •nt ~·H·f~jij,~ CO:\CRETE "'Ork all type!. GUTTERS &. llcl\11nspoul5 Ancient anner POWEil 5W£EPINO .......... uu 'l Sawing breaking hauling H I · 6735 Installed Reasonable San PUMP SEllVICE .............. ,fnO -! hr 1'('C1Jrd1ng ~,. I ·,. L ·," . •• ousec ean1ng ROOFING ............ l'H --. '' 1p oa tni;?:: ic . .,..,rvice Clen1entr 714: 492-3706 R,t.DIO. Rfplirs, Etc. .. . iUI \\'Ajl,'T lu IOSf' I II I' hf' s? Quality. 842-l[)JO REMODELING .. ~EPA lll •UO [n1provr 1 ·1rj·ul·1t 1or+~ Tonr .:~,;.-,=--~ REMOOEt.1,.G.KtTCHlt.Ns .. 1t<1S ' *CONCRETE Work., SCISSORS SHAltPEH . : .. •tSI bl)rly• Look ,t· /t'('! brl!<•r:" Lo----'. Paho• I d--.. ,·. SEWING '911 C JI t•11 1 ·1Q.-J6'l ""'"""' •~" ~ \VANT A Sunny & bri1::h1 homf':" Can Th(' DUTCH :'11AINTENAj';Ci::: ~IAN !or )our \\ irKkt\\'>;, noors & BIKlNIS by C, Custon1 made -NEEDS - •DAY• DISHWASHER SEWING MACMINE RlP•iRs ltll ll ' . .> I -· rte. Phillips c e In p n t . SEPTIC TANKS. Sol•en. lilt. ''" --, ---.-• 1 Tl.ILORING ........ : .•• 71 A L COllOLICS A11onyrnous 548-8.~0 1·a rpet cll'aning. copiC'.o;, rr\'crs i ble1, APPLY JN PERSON !'PECIALIZES IN ALL I coverups SS & SIO. 536-8661 2001 \V COAST •rWY. ~ER.MITE CONTROL. ........... OT Phone ~.11-7~1 7 l)r writ(' 1u" __ O_R_E--c~.-,-,-"-,· .. --,-.~li-,-,-., I~ , C•••mlc .,,_ ... tn4 P () /k 1_., C \l tJLE, Ll!lolff'" & M1r1ll• .... i'7J · 1' ~"'' osta ~ ('~11. l!•ss money. Ar1 1,;t1c sctt1n~ l\IND~ 0":° f''LOORS. Nv e Dressn1aking· Alteratioflli NE\VPORT BEACH trcw . .J37-lj()S aft. :I. Designed to cuil you . --~:::C:..::~-==="'--TREE SERVICE ltH --· · • TELEVISION, RtiN!"· E1t'.'".' 1 .. 1 UP TTGHT:" l'ef'd someone I.:. hn1sh1 nj!. 64.i--OGS7 ~',',oo~!T0ERY ..... '"' tn talk lo~ Dial-A-Friend, CE:~1ENT \\'ORK. no JOb loo .. .. '"J 0.•7 ,-· ~ WINDOW CLE•NIH G • . •"' ,... -~"''· no n'('(l1u1ni::-Smalt, rcason;1hll'. FrPL" JOBS & EMPLOYMENT ~ ----~-Es1ir11. lL s1u111ek '.1-i!W:61~• :g: :!:~~g·, ~e'A'"t;.·::::::: ;:~Announcements 6410 Di::cor:li.T~rvECO-NCRETE ,;!.,°EaNw&•~'of,!'f:N .. ,, ,~~ DRIVES·\\'ALKS·PATIO SCHOOLS I 1NSTRUCllOH ... 7IOO :J. :J. J. 6~2-R.'ll·I JOI PltEl'Allf•TION ... 1100 fNEATltlCAL . tt00 0 e ••• MERCHANDISE FOR Contractors SALE ANO T RADE Tod11y is )our day 6620 ~URNITUl!E , ......... •OOll :inrl 11'1' OFFICE FUltl>lllUAE ........ IOll a\J 11'1\11( IH :.CO~ OFFICE EOllPMEl>IT ........ 1011 Ila\-!' a STORE EQUIPMENT .......... Nil CAFE, ltESTAUllAHT ........ toll IAlt EOUllMENl ............ OU HOUSEHOLD 00005 ....... IOU GARAGE SALE .......... ton FURNITURE AUCTION ....... 11)2) APPLl•11tCES .. _,,.,.,, .•101 lNTtOllES ...... -.. 1111 SEl't'INO MACHINE ...... 1111 MUSICAL !NSTllUMEN'I' ..... llU Plo\NOS & ORGANS ........... 1110 R•D IO ....... ,. ........ t1'0I TELE VISION .................. •HI Ml·l'I & Sll!REO , ....... .,.n lt ".1-·u11 11:iJ::t• •fll"rat1·• and a J.Japp';f /Ji,./J.Ja'J IU)Q;.T ADDITIONS. L. T. Con~1 ru c 1 io n. r amily room~. ~1ngl!• or 2 storj'. 1·:~1in1..ih·s, pl:in~. la,vout & .~111anl'in;:. Cull ~17-J:Jll. ,\11d!11ons • R<'modclini: t·r~'d IL Grrw1ck, Lk . 1;;:1.GO~l • !>119-2170 Carpet Cleaning J\,\'1.--& Bcach Janilorial Call Jo • 646-&446 Carpcti;, "'indo"·s. l!oors, BJKINTS CU:\TO;\f i\fADE rte, Res I.:. Commc'I. INYOURFABRIC Si9:> f'..16-1·101 PERFECT ~·IT 492-."iOOO \\'ll\DO\V \VASHING CO'.\li\IERCIAL HOi\lE Call Pett -192-1207 Tile, Ceramic 6974 i\1esa Cleaning Service * Verne, The Tile l\lan * Carpets, "~ruto111s. Doors. e1c. Cust. 11·ork. lns!aH ,',,, repaln. Re$. & Commc'l. 5-ls-llll No Job loo srnall. Plaster JOE 'S CLEANS-ERV~ iiatio, t.;::~~: shower \\"r do Evl'rythini::-. Res. & 847-1951/846-0206 Com . ~-n>I' E~I. :i:l!J-3126 ====-======= HOUSECLEANING Exp. Reas. Ref. 638-2354 Ironing 6755 homr, SI TOPSOIL 6977 TOPSOIL. Nitrogen fortiflert red\\·ood addeu. 837-7000 or 49"';i-4632. &· a!tera-Tree Service 6980 Bankers ALL DEPARTMENTS CENTINELA IANK * OPENING SOON * lnterviewin9 M•Y 9th, 9· 12 A.M. and 2-4 P .M. 3333 Wesf Co•st Hwy. Newpor1 Be•ch (213) 678-3261 TAPE RECORDERS .... 1720 (.&MERAS • EQUIPMENT ... UGI' THE GANG HOt8V SUPPLIES ........... t40f SPORTINO GOODS ......... IJOI AT "2211" 6625 IRONJ:-\G ln n1y llr. [,lre,;~m<lking !ions. :J4:>-i&ll J a nitorial 679<1 BAR.\lAID. attr .. bikini. top pay. Apply Sassy Las~y. TREE SERVICE A!I types 2001 Harbor, C.i't. 495-4900 Lise & lns. Fl'Ee Estimates ~ve 6~2-5J84 ~~=~---~-~ llNOCUU.ltS, SCO,ES ...... ,.llH'I ======'-'-=-=-=-=--=-== MISCELLANEOUS ............ liOll· M11cH1'::"NTEO .............. N it Card of T lianlcs M.&t ElllY, Etc ............. l tM 6'16 lUMIElt ............ 1111 .---------I STORAGE . ,. ..... 111) -· IUILOING M•TERl•L5 ........ , .. \\'f.. lhr fam1h' •11 lJ<'lll'l"r SWAPS 17ff . . CARPET STEAM CLEANEO TOc SQ, FT. Also 1 1u·p~'T 111stall;llion Cl.t.:AR Vu ~lnintenanL"C. \\'c 1lo f'\'Clylh1ni.:! !'iJ)('C1ahzing 1r <tpt clranup frl'I' e:>1. 2-1 hr Sl'IV. f•16-21)~!S PETS a nd LIVESTOCK iDukr1 llyd<'r 111sh 10 l'X-646-5971 PETS ,GENERA\. ............. •• pl"t'~S our deep apprrc\a!lon DISCOUi-;T-c·-a-,.-,.-,-0-,-,-"-,-rs. ~~caping C,t.Ts .. .. ........... -.... 1n1 10 all thosr 1vho T'f'membered Jo' rt l •tr 1 E · sed '---..:C~ 6810 OOGS • · ·· ............. ens u~ in our t1mr> !'If sorrov.· .. xpr -,... s iiuip. u · NE\V L a"'"~• ll'·H•f'd•n<• HO•SES ............... IUI . • Crrrli1 ('flrd~ $6. llm.646-1234 ... TP.EES. lfedge~. 1rin1, cut. stunips, removed, hauled. 30 yrs e.xp. Fully lns. &i2-4031) Upholstery 6990 ClYKOSKI'S Custom, Uphol. BUSIESI' matk.itplace in town. T11e DAILY PllJJT Clusifird section. S a v e money, time & elfort. Look now!!! ** BROILER COOK EXPERIENCED. Penn. Sor g d~ v.·eek . n!1bt shift, In. qu~ bet, 11 AM.J P1'f. The Five Crowns Rest•urant 3801 E. Paciiic Coast H\l'Y· Corona del 111ar No ph, calla Bkkpr F/C lo $650 "Exciting & atimulellng" thil is what this co'!! secy says. \\'e placed her there last 1vk & no1v they \Vint a bkkpr, \\'e al'e proud to represent lhis fine tinn • lhey are slable, pay lop benls, &. the 1vorking conds. are v e r y pleasant, CaU f.1151 Pal, 5.:>7-6121. AblgaU Abbot Per. sonnel Agency, 230 \V. \\lar. ner, Suite 711, Santa Ana. BROWN & Sharp Man, Set Up & Operate. Exper re- (!Ulred. 1018-11 E. Chestnut, S.A. llOY$ 11-14 Camtr Routar Opu "' Lquna Beach, So. Lquna DAILY Pnm """" BUFFUM'S NEWPORT Now Interviewing appl ic•nt1 for * COOK * * LADIES SHOE SALES* APPLY JN PERSON 2to4P~I NO. 1 FA.«HION ISLA.'\D NE\VPORT BEACH ** BUSBOYS ** (Day! Only) 'J1Jr" Fisherman Restaurant 317 Pac. Coast H"'Y· Hunt. Beach Casting Agent CAR WASH HELP Prnn. Posido1l. l.tany ope~ ina•. 3 Locations e>ranie Co. 2950 liarbor Blvd., C.M. e COOKS • {try rooks) Experienced e \\'AITRESSES l:xperiellef'd APPLY TO J\fr. Hendtrson or '-fr.i. Gar- rett, 3099 Bristol, C.l\f. VAN de KAMP COFFEE SHOP **COOK ** Experienced. Apply: Flying Butler, 3101 Newport Bh·d. N.B. COUPLE for janitor work. t'xp'd onJy. Good pay & \\'Orkin:-conditions, C&U aJ1er l pm. f>C-9393 * COS:\IETICJA.i~-Drug sales Experience only •53&-3080 .. Draftsman l\liuimum 2 years expert. cnce in layout &: tapmg of art "''ork for printed ('ircuit boards. C•ll Personnel Dept. (714) 494-940 I for appointment T!LONIC Industries Laguna Beach' Equal opportunily employer *Data Proce11ln9 $500 A1oha1l'k #UIJI Opr *Secretarle1 Top SH & typing :.:kills front ofe ............. f'.X,O Personnel exp, Good in P.R. & like detail •• , ••• , ... $500 *Steno ......... , $400 Lile Slf/acct Typ. SERVICE CENTER Employment Agency :;oo Ne\\'PQrt Center Dr., NB Suite 200 By appl. 6444981 * OEMONSTRATORS f'or small appliance~. food, beverages. No C'J(perience required. Somt' \\•eek-end work. Western G irl, Inc. CALIF. CASTING CO. 4667 J'\fac:Arthur Blvd. \Ve are casting directors lor Nell'])Orl Beach n1any independent industrial 540-032J & documentary film produc.1 :===~===--­ ers. Need lmmrdlately gal1 DENTAL ASS'T Front desk 18-35 for non-union job1. $75 only. ?itu&t have exper, u to $125 per day. We are not rerept. in dental office. a school or agent. Beach area. 84&3540 S am· FREE TV SCREEN 9 pm, TEST DOCJ\ boy \\'ith sailing exp. NO Cl!ARGE TO YOU prefPITed. No long hair. EVER! \\'knds no"'· full time in \\'c RN' client paid. Ph. for summer. 673--0240 ;"'"'''" 17741 =i. * DRIVERS * * Clerk Typitt * N E I Good typing, desire to learn 0 xper ence & advance in gro1ving co. Necessary! Start SJ7J. Call Gloria, P.1ut;f h•\'e r.l~an Calltoml.8' !'.W-60~ drlvtn& ~rd. ·~ COASTAL AGENCY YELLOW CAB CO. 2790 Harbor Blvd., C.i\f. 186 E. 11th St. CLAS 7100 . • C Cos1-Ml!'M CLERK TYPIST EARN $50.$400 WK. Marketing Dept. Selling I hr-8 hr day ~Jen. Accurate typist. 60 v.'J)n1 elec-1 _,,w"o•m•'c".-'-'-,"o'"·-."'.=~>'~";,1"'= 1ric typev.1·1!er. One year EXEC. SECRETARY expcrienrt'. Construction exp, nee. Sil Call Personnel Dept. 100-121 wpm, typ 70 +. 1600 to start. 171'4} 494-9401 NIGUEL PERSONNEL for appoio l meot AGENCY 27635 Forbe!i Road TELONIC '-""""" Nlg'1d Industries 131-1477 Laguna Beach f'E~tALE Companion, part- time days, for elderly lady, Equal opportunity emplayn 01\·n trans, N. Costa J\lesa ••vESTOClt .ato ~1..., Ruby llyder Con1p\e1f' l&ll'n t'atl' Clrnn CALIFORNIA .LIVING .. ,. ---110:-.11~ ,i:.APT Cleaning up by job or mo111t1, f""" Nu11sER1es _, ........... 1t1• Tutoring 6490 H\' DJA:\IOND estimates. Fnr info call European Crafl!manship 100% fin! 642-1454 1&3l Newport Blvd .. C.?>t. area. 549--0222 all :>pin. Jobi-Men, Wom. 7100 Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 FIBERGLASS worker 1 . SWIMMING ,.DOLS ............ lfftl 187 21st St.. Costa Mesa ....... _,,,17 or "If "?32. PATIOS , .......... -.... "U ----------C'7! .-, <' ....,., 'WNll>IGS ................. '"' 61."1>-\317 Fl"t'C !!SI. V.&CAllONS . •ns TEACHER \\'ill Tu 1 (Ir ---:.-• -----.--- TRANSPORTATION Hetardt'll ChlliJ"·n. A!f¥1. All B .t; l, CaI'J>!'_I and ~urniturl' Moving & Stor1ge 6840 IOAlS .. YACHTS .... . c I Cle;tr+ln!:_. ~rt'(' }.~!!n1;i1rs IAi~&OAlS ........... fllO Ml):hS<·h()u] :-.ubje'Cl.~. a I (7l I · l'i--9:i0 POWEil CRUISERS ·:::::::;::: ,.H E\'r>.'<. ~~'l,&-li l7 _'I .~ '_1 ','_ ----- SPEE D-SKI 90,t.l ........... tOH ----------!~E~IAR(" Si•r\'ll'('S. 3 l"Ol>t1\~ :g:~ ~R.~~\e:.,RJ•Nc~ .. :.::::::.:: JOBS & EMPLOYMENT s21.~i0 Full i.:t111r;t n Cr1:Ult IO•l LAUHCMI HG _ ......... ~ J b w I d M 7000 cants 05'. Sl7-~>6S.~. f,t(}.\2.1·1 MA~!NE l!OU•P. .. ...... tell! 0 an e • en ----- LOCAL & Ions;: dist rnoving. Tl1•u~. SIQ\'3~l'. Frrt> J:;.~1 SJ\-0-!01, 0 5' \"an &· !-;1orag1• 80Af $LIP, MOOltlNO ....... MU ---· Ft ' t• •0•1 SEiivic1:5 ............. m1 RETIRED C:hn'f Boa1,:11 1on ~ Carpet l a ying & ain ing, ',',~', ,',',',',',',5 ................. ,,.. 1 11 1c 1 R · 66.?_6 J Paperlia ngi"g ........ -..... n1a !'. 11v•· ·' vrs "'ll n epau· ""M1No ao•TS ............... tiff snlllll crafl 111J0';'11U"n 1-'(l.1' ------- 6850 NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH IO•T MOVll>IG ................ tMt * EXPERT CARPET .. PAINT!Nli 11\'1' k EXT. IOAf iTO•AGE .... -....... ffU 1nforn1ai1011. "r•I•' l•• J'. () A l l'hCn ., I OATS ••Nt&o .......... ,. .. ,.,. ,,,_ ?.,, (''! ~ I t II t ' & R , ,.el'J:'. !>t~· ~...,. -wty THROUGH A 111tc1t,t.Ff .............. "" °"·'.... . I' "~""'1 ns a a ion epair S3;;Q Incl all n1a1t•ri;1t & FLYING LESIONS ............. flH r-.c.. tilh !110 snlall. &16-:19il Jlrt'Pllrlltkln. $If:. JX'r rm + I MOltlE MOMES ., ............ t2tl J b W t d -===-~===== MC)TOtt HOMl'S ,,.,_ ......... •11• 0 1n I • --J»thll. U;,cel !"t'I:<. Call Jack ••CYCLEI ............... •Jn Women 7U20 Floors 6665 8'J-1-:l89:; or R.~1-692:) E:L C(T RI( C.AllS , ............ ,nJt -------MOO llKll .............. '2,, -- ~OTOR(YCLll .............. '* Tlti\VELl~l; Tin~ MlrHlll!'l' MOTORJCOOTllll . . .... t>Sf ,1 J" , IUTO Jl!llVICfS I PARfS ... 'MN --• \\'et'r..,~ l\h~ h'n\!' •UlO TOOLS . EGUll' .... t4 1o ho1ur. IJl·I~ 1•11•. 11n.11 111hl1tl' Lit; t'1fl!l1' tr..•(' r d fRAllElt, TRAVlL .......... f4U L' / I -" ,,., "'" ·,~, TRAll EttS. UlllHY ........... ftH i:.f'IK., 1t'ui:l11'r lll l H1U"' \II ->f<r"I·' '"""~o C•MPER' .................. tnt (nr \'OU Pl'f'lrr briii·h :•l''a I -----TllUCKS .. .. ... ,_ ......... tMf • , . .......... G d . lf.etts ............ tJ11 F:"fl"r 1'-rrl;. ->\!:\-•••"-' a r en1ng CAMPIER ll1JNTAL$ •Ul ~----1-----'------0UHI IUOOIEI flH ACTl\'I;: PnJ•'IU"..il /'iur~· ,\l..'S l.nnd~l'tj)illj.';. Tr r I' =;'~f1t:utos '"'.:~::::: ::~ \.ill Gr>~~:il J,:111. Thr j;i 1t!h" lten1{Nlll. \'ard Rt111nc\1•hn~ ANTlllUtil, c::usucs _ ...... HU (,1r1n1 1,1 ... 11.111"11 1r:.•.•11 llaul 1rnsh Oean·Ull!I •Ate CAttl, ROOS ......... HM · •UfO EVllfT~ .............. '°'EXP. ,\p! lllllll;l).'f'J, I ux Rt"1w.1r 11prt1kl~. 673-1166 ~~:~,.':;HTE0.,;:.:: .•• ::::::.:= ('a~hle1. l41-·11J I.· !..;" V1•i:u~1 .. UTO LEASINO ............. ,Hll ~I rip. fll'fll. 61 l.~Hm DAILY PILOT t'i\nl'I;:T S/l.A{~S /!I LO 11\'F:E DS TIME FOR QUICK CASH WANT AD 6'80 THROUGH A DAILY PILOT 642-5678 WANT AD Assemblers Burroughs Corp. New Commercl•I Computer Plant MISSION VIEJO H11 openings for ASSEMBLERS at our ne\v plant in Mi ssion Viejo, Ca lif. Some experience preferred. Applv 8 a.m. -4:30 P,.m. l\1onday through Friday EMPLOYMENT OFFICE 2sns Jeronimo Roa d M1 .. 1on Vl•i•. c.111. 130.:1112 Equal opportunity employer Male/Female Exp'd parts puller FIBERGLASS 1ouch • up man. 1943 Plac-enlia Ave. Bldg. "B", C011ta ~Te-sa. * ~IA~U PLASTICS * f'R'' Cook. exper or trainee.( v.·/so1ne rt'staunint ~xper. Abo\•e a\·i: pay. Ins, benefits. Apply Dtnny'1, 12924 Beach Blvd, G. G. FULL Time receptionist. typing & Ille filina . personable. St'nd rt'lume to Bex t-1 362, Daily Pilot FUU. TIME Saltti;lrl, O\'~r 2J. F.\\1• \\'oohwrth 2302 llarbor Blvd. C.i\I. G•I F rld•y ·To $450 Lite SIH • typing, tun job, Beech trt>•, call Lol'l\int", \V~slcltf Penonr'M'I Azeney, 2CM3 \VestcUU Dr., N.B. 641>2770. GEL COAT TOUCH-UP Exp'd. man only for skipj1cl; boat mfg. co. Apply Jack Cole Co,. 1763 Pla~nti1 AV• .• C.M. 646-~1 -~~~~~~~~~~~~-- I ' -....___..__ _______ ---------------·--- i P,4 J9 ,l,OT·ADVUTISER W~nadoy. Moy I>, 1970 J oas i !MPLOY~ I Joas & (MPLDYMINf Jo•s " 1M,Lov1i11NT 1-s • 1111,LOYMI.~ ~ & EMPLov1i1~ Jobs Men, Wom. 7100 Jobt Mer~ Wem. 7100 J•M Men, Wem. 11c» j;-,~, Wem. 7100 Jobi M.n, Wom. 7100 -. Wtdnttd1y, May 6, 1970 DAILY 'JLOT _Q JOal a IMPLOYMINT MIRCHANDISI POR MERCHANDISE FOR MEICHAHDlll ~ • ---·-• -IALE AND TRAD& SAL! AND TRAD& SALi AND TIU.DI Job• Mon, Worn. 7100 --IOOO M l ... 11•-... ~ -,urnlhrN IOOO Furniture MANAGEMENT CANDIDATiS NEIDED I nawport ' personn~ agency MUTUAL ~UNO SALIS SE\VlNO Machint ()pentor,ljiiijiiijiiij~-~::~~~~:-:•••i1~--------;1 experienced, Apply T15 S. Cout llW)'., Lquna Beach. Tun·Frl. l'-1. • THE USED • Sl!JPPING I Rtceiy in1 BecauH of contlnutd rrowth and expens.lon we are trainlnr youna: people with two yeart ot coue,e, or ~ulvalenl experlencl', ror tnanqemtnt of oUr tine reataurants. Join thli manaremtnl teanil 833 DOVER DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH 642-3870 Exp I' nsed M ruaJ Fund Otric, Exp, prtfd. WW OR s.kan':o(l)!o:oneofU.. ::'~.~,~~.·m FURNITURE FACT y htcbNt produclnr · .,-eu In Advanctd Packqtna:. 1357 So. Calif. Leilure Warid. We E. Edlngtr, S.A. .. RUSS THOMPSON HAIR STYLIST C1rHr dev•lopment progr•m• lnclud•: .. ExctpUonal Advancement Opportunities * Flnan<:lal Growth Dair Pro1pect1ve A111plic•nt1: mean U wbrn w. uy: 1 .~=~~~~-~~-1 "M~ leads & potenrtaJ USED Car lot Ma.n. ~ Hour than 'A'fi can handle". Our O Day. Marcus Moton, Zll6 yr, old Pacific Coa1t mem· Harbor Blvd., C.M. satun,, Ilk• ... fvmltvr•, , .......... ,....,. .,..,. mattt r1ntols & modtl homn ., P'fCft Mlow whol.,.,ol • Formal Cluftroorn Training ProSTarn * On·The·Job MaMi:erocnt Experience * Ideal Worklni Conditions Ple1•• b. 1ppri1 ed th1t we ere Jn th• bu1inas1 of par1onn•I 1ctlvity which include1 m1ny 1re11 in efftc· tive perttnnel placement. In f•ct, •t tht rl1k ·of b•ln9 lmmod1st, the 1t1ff •t tht N•wport PaNonn•I C•nter lwhlch lncludas the N•wport Person- nel A9e"cy, the Newport T empor1ry Dtvl1l1n, Executive Se1rch, Vocation· al C1un1alln9, Bru1hup CouN•s for the "rusty" gal1, It lots of TLC!! I in· eludes m1ny fine yrofe11ion1l p•o· pl1 who are truly Parsonntl Speci1l- l1fs. btt tlrm11 office Is located in WAITRESSES*** tM heart of Ul.sure \\'01·ld EXPERJENCED where the bu.sines& It being done. Dur hi;hly quallftf!d cUcnta will not ge1W:rally do buaine&S with flnna outskle Leilure \Vorld. Top produc- ers only. \Ve are particularly interested in men \\'\lh ma~ agttla1 abll!\y & ambition. CaU ~tr. \Vrlght ODDS & ENDS SALE! 0 Shompoo & Sot $4.00 • Heir Cut, $1.00 e L 'Or11I W•ve $15.DO Com,.tet1 benefit progr1m includ11: * Profit Sharing Plan * Paid Vacations No Phone Calls Apply Jn Person SVRF &: SlRLOIN ~ Pacific Coa.1t Hwy. • Fancy Walnut Bar with 4 Swivel Back Bar Stools ................... . • 8 Ft. Massive Spanish Sofa & Love Seat, like new 1 returned from $59. (complete) + J\tedlca.1-Suralca.1 Plan '* Ufe ln.1W'ance Newport Beach model home ................ , ...... '179. e Color (complete) $9.50 Our nt'xt traJnlni clau \\ill beiin ill ~ti.)'. To share this interullni and prontable carttr (714) 13D.IS15 •\\"AlmESS. Put time. 20 to 30 hrs a wk. Over 2S. Apply in pet'llOn J'. \V . WOOLWORni, 2302 Harbor Blvd. C.J\I . • Beautiful 10 pc. blue green Corner Group ............................. . m. Aak For Gidget or R1199r •Pl'IY '" l'trt•n l :JO a.m. te S J.m. SALiS ORDER CLIRK Expt~ In Wea order proceasln;, maintaining or- der lop & records. Type 00 wprn on elect. \VAJTRESSES Wanted iT'llVe· yard 11hilt only, Apply: • ( 1) 7 Ft. Sofa & Chair, excellent conditlon ........•............••.. , • $59. * 673-8961 FAR WEST SERVICIS, INC. Our faa1 1r1 modest aven thou9h •ur TLC i1 fr•ely 9 lv1n. We really do c1re about e1ch 1ppll c1nt ind avary onl of our fi"a employers. Corne 11• u1 1t your 91rlia1t oppor• turtlty. OOJES RES!AURAA'T l.icxl W. Cout llwy. N.B. • 4 \Valnut Dressers with Mirrors $35. each e Assorted WalnulNlte Stands .... ,7. each • Assorted 80" Sofas, like new .. $79. each 1672 Rtynoltls, S1nt1 An1, C1flf. (714) 540-9"2 Call Personnel Dept. (714) 494-9401 **'\'AITRESS CFood) Exp'd Z..IUe Square Golf Courie •56-3726• 354$ E. Coo1t Hwy. Coron• del Mir Snack Shops Reuben's Reuben E. Lee Isadore's The Whaler Coco's newport. personnel agency Corcli•lly, • Assorted Love Seats, like new , • $49. each for appointment Welder $502.67 • 3 Used Refrigerators all in top An <'qual opportunity employt r PAIPO knee machine, M TELONIC FEE NEGO Inch. &OOd ooodUion $30. condition .............. $69., $79. & $109. -GATES- LEARJET CORI'. NEEDS EUCJRO· MECHANICAL ASSEMBLERS Sbc months experience on PC boards, Harneu v.·ir- ing, large mechanical u- temblies. 833 DOVER DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH 642-3870 None W. Hoffrnen and The Stiff Newport Par,onnal Ctnfar lnd1.1ttrlet DCayl shift, goodd "'· "'0.~~~ e Chests of Drawers •••••.••. ,29. each up !:lectric iultar ml1sla1 Lagun1 Beach iance to a vance, u1e1 strings &: 45 watt amp, 1l!5, Equal opportunity employer fee & free jobll avttil. Bolt action 22 exttllent SU. SALES JASON BEST 1115 Harbor llYd., ot 1tftt St., 20 &•.,.. ""°""'" &OOd "'"" ADMINISTRATOR Employment Agency dltion $15. Call ~ 2'.1)7 So. Main, Santa Ana Cotta M"41 • 541-9417 after 3:30. 2145 ~ Salo• or sales/service e:rq>. • 9264 w Katella Anaheim ·* L .. ol Secy* "icu known attny wants: am· bilious, skilled gal. Start $550. Call Sally 54()..6(65 COASTAL AGENCY mo Harbor-Blvd .. C.M. con1umer or rttail trade 54&-MID. or ' 321.1220 Open: Wttkdaya ~:30, Saturdays 9~. Closed Sundayl.1=W-:ay"=-:. :-N-,•wporf-"-:=Bt=•=•h== J •· u_ W m 7100 channel•. Knowlcd., ol di•· WE NEED YOU ROCK HOUNDS.FREE Jobi-Men, Wom. 7100 °-n. 0 • tribulion me I hods In pricing ·-· • ~ unit A: tumbler. P"'1;"1es iniportant. Should CALIF. CASTING CO. Furniture 8000 Appll•ncu 1100 Complete nr:w rock allop. UCENS!D babysitter. after M:hool, Monte Vilta school area. 66-0M5 art 4 pm Loc1I Office J•bs 'No Ch1r91 100"/. Frff Ple112 call for appt. OUice Temporary WORK WHEN & WHERE YOU WANT On temporary U&lgnmenta '""'"" ••'""' su.nu • FILE CLERKS ftEAL ESTATE SALES?.1AN ('!\joy \\"Orklng under IOme Looking Jor <:\<cry day people ~ -· Come in 4 f't&bter Jar draw. v.uted experienced. Acli~ preaaure le. have ability to like you! For T.V. Commer. STAR mavlns to Continent. ELF.c. Kenmore wuher $4S., q . Open 7 da.YS 10 am-6 pm. eatlblisbed cUice, choice organiu & supe.rvl&e work ciaUI &: Ji.Im work. Receive Houaetul of beautiful elec Kenmore dryer is>. a:tm BolJI Ave. location. Advertising, park· of others. tree screen teat, m exp nee. dee or a Io r 1 u mlture. Good cond. Sll>-6744 a.U S. Midway Oty e 58T·l.9'm lr11. relemJa. C&ll C"Ollect S&RVICE CENTER Not a achool, no ree. 543-0362. atEST TYPE FREEZER. RUMMAGE Sa.le ~ a A: for apoplntment. 4mt•5. Employment Agency $50 to $11S PER DAY -• runs good. 1st $40 Wcn. 9 F't'iday 1 ~t Pac:Hk: Recept/Typist $450 ~ Newport Cenlr:r Dr., NB u e.coepted. Fo: 1.ppt phone Office Fumfture IOlQ Ca.II 54&-1441 S.ncts Cabana ci~b awtm So •. ~ Ilk• bl' Suite 200 By appt, 6f.4,.,.981 <n4l ... c: -·--meone ,..,...., s Pl.I 1e --===..,-===--!USED steel desb $39.50 e USED Appllance:1 l TV'1, team, parldna: lot at 11'1 contact \YIU trllln slab.le, SALES LADY. 1't1Lat be \V"HO IS AN AVON Posture chain $12.50 A up all ruarantetd. Dunltp'a, Atlanta Aon., H.B. time t ~liable girl. personable &. exper aewc::r. REPRESENTATIVE?' • Uled 2 &: 4 dra~r tiling Ul5 Newport. C.M. 548-'1'788 am 'tll 4 p.m, Piano, TV, lJW Jlarbor, Co&tl Mesa 2oos so. Rllth•y St. • TYPISTS i::qual a::o~~nl!n:mployer 1::--~:~;-;;~~;;~~;~;;;;;,~-~;~-~AN~-~=~ I• ACCT. CLERKS JASON BEST Virginia's Snip &: Stitch, Someone like you who llkft <:•blnets e Uled wood desks Freezer, love seat, clothes, Employment Agency 3334 E. Coa11t, Cd.\l. people. has some spare time McMahan Bros Deak Inc. Sewlnt MachlnM 1120 men le women's, )'OU name 2207 So. tifa!n, Santa Ana SALES and likes to am money. 1800 Newport Blvd. SINGER Auto zla·u.a:, 6 moa. It, we aot it. * G;r l Frldey/Socy * Gal w/smartl & sense of bu. mor needed by boss in coun. try atmosphere studio. Av- era.re typln&: but able to spell. $500. Call Glortt;; 54Q..605;j COASTAL AGENCY 77llO Harbor Blvd., C.l\1. GIRL FRIDAY Four girl offi~. Able to Ieam about hardware. APPLY 9 A~J to 12 Noon Experl•oce<!. $WO. M-. GEN'L LABOR 6-2PrtI-SUn. OIL App!y in penon, LONE RANGER RESTAURANT 1152U Beach Blvd, Huntlnrton Bea<:h. MAN to as1lst ri.rcr.. local appliance store. Must be neat appearlfl&. C&ll 9 A:.\I to lfJ Al\t only: 496-2313 l\IANAGEMENT OPPOR. Full or pt. time. car nee, 20 hr wk. 836-4302 t J\1AtDS + Experie.ncad, over 21. Apply Ben Brown's Motor Hotel. 31106 S. C.0.Ut Hwy, South Laguna tMtn) Holldoy & V1c1tlon Plan APPLY NO\V VOLT INSTANT PERSONNEL NEWPORT B!ACH 3U8 Campu1 Dr, Su.lte 106 546-4741 ~i~· Kat':ra, A~a1~ \Vanted: Exp'd motorcycle Be an AVON Representatlvt Coata Me1a. * 64l-8450 old. No attach needed for PIAPO knee machine st•· t1Jaleaman. 6424343 • Call Now -z!a:-u.r. button h 01 e 1 , good cond!Uon $30, Electric * Racept/Secy * Savlng11 &: Ll'llln 540-7041 or S46-534l G1rage S•I• I022 deal&:ns etc. Cuar. $39 cuh fll.itar &: 45 watt amplll'"' Stat, typist \\'Ork on chart& MANAGEMENT 5 Women wanted tor -or •mall payments. 536-6616 SIS. 2 tlaflin& J'Oda I: ree1a, &: graphs !or 1ge co. $495. TRAINEE part-time work. car needed. GarGCJe Sale SACRIFICE best oiler. Sea01u1t with Call Sally, 540-6055 Dynamic Savings and Loan * "Jenny" 547-34~ * Movlnt To Europe ann1 • very eood $15. :na COASTAL AGENCY Association ls seeking col-Xrey Tech. Reg11tered 2 Family garare u.le. Muat 1 yr old,O fully auto. ~ Bayfront Way, N.B. Snelling&: Snelling, Jnc. lere graduate• for their A really xlnt opty. Close loe. sacrifice everythina. Hoo1e. pattern. Mi COil $395, v DANISH !.todem, 9\; ft. M0>- 21'90 Harbor1lll, Coatl MeA manq:emenl tra..lnlng ~ Start $450. call Pat, 54().6):55 hold items furniture, clolh-prty, 546-81D7. tional, Belie couch with * RECEPTIONIST· gram. -COASTAL AGENCY tnc, T.V:a,'Everythlna:must p· & 0 ll30 curved end, rever1lbla CASHIER'* This poallion offrrs chal· Snelling&: Snelling. Jr'IC, be 50ld, Sale starts Friday ...!.!..~---!!1"1 cuahlona, aood cond!Uon "°' Ute typinc le filing. Age leniing and rewarding ca-2700 Harbor Bl.. Costa J\1eu. 10 a.m. PIANOS 1 ORGANS double bed with Walnut 22 to 45. SUPERIOR OP· reer to the rliht person. _ --· ~ 619 Plummer St, NEW le USED bookcue headboard, New TJCAL CO. 644-1174 Call -Scnool .. lnstrvctlon 7600 Coat.a. r-.reaa e Yamaha Ptanoe; Organs E!talander Red Lint: mat- RELIABLE HOU.ltketper/ J\1r. JteT\!iley 1213) 861-5713 RUM?o.tAGE Sale. Msy I & e Thomu 1Jrpns treu I: box aprlnp, (tall companion for 1 lady in apt. Secretary to $600 Dl1c-or • Groat N-9, Friday le Sat., Pacific • Kimball Pianos boy lefllthl pod condl.Uon l\facG~gor Yachl Corp, MAIDS, Mature. 1i or over. 1631 Placentia, C.l\1. Good salary for dependable b '•· moolh Llv• lo or oul ill k •• ·-•-·•• c·•--Oub -·•m • Kohler &: Campbell"5. ·""=833-~l350""_. -~~--I Y '"' · Exciting opty. You w· wor C1re1r With The .,...ai ..,.,_ •-· AST MUSIC .• Rl!'f!. 646-1323. In lovely new ofc. ln Irvine team, parldna kit at 81•1 CO LADIES diamond d l nntr RN'a-ICU. All ahitta avail. area for a v.vndertul bou All&nta Ave., H.B. time 9 NEWPORT I: HARBOR rl11K, Ht. with 1~ brat Eq\ia.I op.port.unity employer GIRLS_ LADIES \vom.an. Apply 3151 Harbor To \\'Ork in phone order depl 1-B_lv_d'-. -,C:-:.'-:'·-:-:~:;;:--*PART TIME· EVES. Xlnt v.vrkin,i oond's. CoD-The co. la estbl'd IL 1table. AIRLINES am 'W t p.m, Plam. TV, Cotta Me.A + 6UJ$S1 center diamond, 2 dlamondl tacl Dir. ot 'Nursing C.M. Yours will be a poa, w/in-F'rtezer, love seal, clothes, Open llMI P'rt 10.9 SUn 12.S -;, karat on each side. C.M. office, 4 hrs a day, MALLIE'S l'\femorial Ha;p. 642.-7734 finite variety & Interest. A natural for youl'lg people men .l Y10men's, YoU name Brilliant cut Sacrifice! Rep. iiiiOiiOiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiii&iiii• J Send resume or call Misa who want Vtcilcrment plus! II we rot It. HAMMOND, Steinway, Yam-ly to Box P360, Daily Pilot. 5 days a wk. No typing. JI.furl have £"ood telephone voice. 642-1508 HOTEL* JNSPECTRESS (Female) Very pleasant v.-orking conditions in first class hotel. Call 644-1700 Ext. 575 HOUSEWIVES & Mothel"!I. I need 7 women to represent a Une est'd. co. II you like people. want pt/time work w/terrif.ic earnings, no invest. call 8'17-0846 HOUSEKEEPER Full tin1e, live in, perm . Cleanln~. c::ookini. child clll"I!. Nev.-port Pt!'nln1ula. $285 mo. Refer n<'ttfill, \Vrlte Suite 304, l.l33 \V. Cout Hwy. N.B. 92660 HSKPR for busy family, live-- in or out, lull lime, pe.nn, Re f tt'Q'. 536-124S H.B. HSKPRS Emplyr pays f~ G<'Orge Allen Byland Agency 106·8 E. 16th, S.A. 547-039J HOUSEKEEPER F<1r Coovalet!CMl Hosp. full time. 642-3505 I BM Compo11r Operator Build your own compotini: buslne11s with I no lnllftl- ment. \Ve provide composer, headliner, waxer, offla-, desk. Hght table, 'Pfwne, util's. Work 2 days for us, 3 days for younell. Phone 1'1r Holcomb Sportmen·s Pubiicatlons 64z.4748. JANITOR Full time for ml&:r. marint product11. Apply Jack Cole Co 1763 Placentia Aw., c.~i. 646-2tst * JANITOR-Night work l~~ to 3 brs. Kentucky Fried Chicken, 2929 E. Coast Hwy., Corona dcl Mar. +tJANITOR with exp. l\lile Square Golf Course •545-3n6* LARGE Land Development Co in S'n. Orange Co. atP,a, Ms an hnmed. openlna: for an enl(lneertne contract ad· miniArrator. App 11 cant should have an en(iDttring "-engineering purtka11\ng bkgmd. POlitlOn offers challenge end future for lhe right pcr11en. Send ttlUmt 1o Box l\t·767 Dally pUot * LADIES '* lJ...00. show SARA1l COVENTRY 5prlnr: &: ._u seuon jewelry. flbl'Olutd, na bwtsl'mt. We train. 631..-31 or 9G-$SI NO m11tlcrr "'hat It Is. Y\'.IU clln M:ll It with a DAILY PU . .oT WANT AD!! &4Ui6'78 Beauty & \Vic Salon hat open. Ing for Hair-styliat with some fol101ving. Salacy plus comm &: pa.id vacation. Call 548-3446 See S.tty Bruce a.I Elizabeth, 567-6122 Abl&all Ticket agent? Alr b'eight?' FABULOUS Rwnmqe Sa.le, aha. New It used pianos of FOR Sale: Fanill,y mem- DistribtJ.tor for v•etl coast m 6 Abhot Personnel Agt!ncy, 230 Station a & e n t? Rnerva-Fuchsta Socif:ty; Antiques, mott makes, Best buya In btnihlp to Newport Boch mfg. co., now hi r Ing • w. \Varner, Suite 211, Santa Ilona?' Ramp or travel qent?' Fa. 1 h I 0 nab J e clothei, So. Calif. at Schmidt Mu1lc TeMil club by tndlvktull. TRAINEES for llalu and t,1,1 X€C Ana. \Ve'll train you for these Household items, Bake Sale Co, 1S07 N, Main, Santa Ana C.Onl.act Mrs. Ru I 1•11 . service. Agency for Car.er Glrlt S.ct'y /Glrl Friday and more, day or nite. \Ve Sat, May 7, 8, n. 1877 Park, l;;-54"'°0-°'l;-~===:;--;==" * MEOlA.NlC-Oass "A" $90. WIEK 410 W. Cout Hwy .. , N.B. Specla.lity Contractor Jn San. include placement assist-C.M. SAYE B Ii J COUNTRY AUCI'ION liceme, ov.:n tools. Perm. Hours 6 to .10:30 p.m, PhOne By appoint, 646-3939 ta Ana In need cf an alert ance. 8 NEIGHBOR Garqe Sale. HUNDRIDS 838 E. lat St., S.A. position for re 11 pons i b I e 5fi7-T'r82 Personnel Dept, intelligent 1 &irl office tWf. roved r Relrl&'.. turn, air cond, Now Open to Publlc tor man. Top wares. bonus plan SALES Typing, S.H., bookkeeping, E11t. 71 yrs. App or vacuum, new &iris dm~. On New .Conn O'l•nt Retail 9-9, 7 dl.)"8 a wk. 4 profit gharJng. Under ••• PLASTICS $400 to $3.00D. No Wes exp. inventory control &: tele· Veterans. EllgibW lnatltutlon dreu forms, baby ltem1. All Models 'lboulanda of lterna priCld reconstruction. WUl re-open Injection Moldlfli' needed to take Ql'ders &: phone talent are important. under the federally insured ~fuch morel 32l9 Ntw York GOULDS SANTA ANA for quick lale. l\1ay 8th . \Vrite or C3.l..l Ray Oper•a or Trainees cover leads lor world 's Salary comrnenlW'ale. w/tal. student IO&ll program, Ave .. C.M. 546-5092 21MS N. Main 5t7.o&al NEWPORT Beach Tenrrfa Carey. 494-&57. 604 S. Cout Female, MtUt be dependable, futest selling home a-Co put•' U Club m•m~-btp -~.,.. Hwy, Laeu~ Beach, Calif. One openlna: on awing shift, erclsu. Jt sells 11 ke eut &: or exper. m Airline Schools P•clflc LIDO Isle Girage Sale: 4 We are having a uo:.1-. • ...... , 'IE DJCAI c.....·-Front Of-one openilll' day llhl.ft. Ap. bananu, in bunches, for ~l.teEd~ .. ~~~.c~'.'f. ~=F 610 E. 17th, S1nt1 An• Via Lido Soud. Elee. ilove. Whale of• Silt ~ln~U:~le~l~ :! ~3 ply 8 am 'tll noon only. $103.50, with 100% fina.n-..::::...:::·3~::.:_'-"'cC::--C-:-543-659' relrla, &0fabed ., 2 br .et.s on Piaml and Orprq:. 49'-m2 rice, 90me beck. knowledge Orange Coast Plastics cing. Call: 897·1Sl6 or S.critary-Gfrl Frid1y ~-...... & mlse. 9AM-5PM, Thur&-You better come on dawn! =--~--=-,,-,=-I ~~ all ~s ~ ~e~o~ 850 W, 18th St., C.1\1. 646-4871. succeutul 1: ButY Advert.ls-~ day -titay 7th. __. WARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO ~hlSa.I~~ F-=-= ~:~' s2.~~· hr.u F~~n ·111. I--""--'--'--::'::..-:-TO $11,000 ina: Agency Needs Extraor .• S hool of Buslnesa e PATIO Sale -Tues-Wed. -1819 ~ewport, C.M. 6'2-MM p, ne l'n"nted Circuit ... ·····-···r1 Ftlday. IH...IA c Thun. 2:30 unttl dark. Open Every Nile try Club. Can be puf'chufd Send resume to Daily Pilot Sales Communicator ...,vane. ·-" • .._.... by 6% not 11 a,11M-..1 te saJ qualifications Incl appear· Carpetll'\i' -twin beds • & Sunday Afternoon e, qu ......._ Box J\t-29. Dr Illar ~ ~eti'!': ~. ca~ a.nee I: a &en!C! ol humor Feat!.lftS ~kly refrelber t~s etc 1225 E Balboa * * p I AN 0 PS Wiclr: CtU 545-2331' 10 am~ pm. * MECHANIC-lite duty, for Experienced. Immediate "'"''6 p-•-, ~ '". RM mo start· courses In the &kll1I Y'O'J Blvd 67~2 • Up,igbl CARPET Left trorn C.Omrn1. ·• 00 •wl•• •hilt Aon. Westclllf Personnel ,.,.., "J.NAJ -___ .. •~ .. I ••· job ~· • serv llla. Good pay tor Opt•une ... Agency, 21J.13 \Vestdltf Dr., Ri:!1.ly resume In confidence, ::a't. "" ..,.. .,--RUMMAGE Sos.le., St. John's Excellent! $200 contra.eta, $1.98, $2.88, ahaa ~"PPP'~· :~~'11~ S:J· ~~ Equ~T67op~~~· ~:ioytr N.B. 645.2770, P.O. Box 1547, N.B. 92663. Church, ~3 Oran~ Aw. (7141 96S-4l21. anytime » 1 .;!! ~-:C:~ OrakesBlvd CaH'P'.Bl ~===='=--'=""'"-~=======:"'::" ... r,. e S33 DoveT Dr., N·.B. e (at &y) C.M. Fri M1y 8, --------.~:'9...,.:-"_.. ·• · 990 E. Coast Hwy, N.B. --·-7100 S.Cy/L1g1I Trnff ~ .,. M 9 9 '""" Furn T I I I 1205 ~~~• Jo•a Mion, Wom. 7100 I Jobt Men, Wom. ""-"f(in< oply 10 81art In legal • 642-3870 e -1 ay • :.,.,,....:...,. • a iv I on Pit U ** r.1ECHANIC; Alignment, u. ~.. ----..:.__....:.---=-':-'"--clothe•, bric-brae, mite. ·--· -----** OTOS a palnWd. Good field. Very pleasant law -=----TV Sle Co l Danllh -• If 11~ •-brakei &. tuneup. pay, ofcs., ..nM benfa. Call Miss SPEED reading clua atar!J UPRIGHT fretaer, bnlak'fut reo nao e, expert ""ora, 1 '" ""' 00-· h,!;v~~~e station. Ca 11 I s I Ellzai:Th,' SM-6122. Abigail Tuea. May 25th. 7 to 9 set, roll·aWa.)' bed, women's ~Joel. Paekard Bell. Call Preterve1 &: Enhances. bl.O ·~ Profession a a es Abbo< "'""""'' Agtocy. 230 pm. '""'"" your ,,... clo<hlog, many olher U•m•. 847 ... 10 all •. --~"~·~"~,__=-·==~=I NURSE AIDES-Day sl\itt. W, Warner, Suite ru, Santa comp re hen t IO n .. tn· Starting Wed. thru Sun. 29M Ta-R~rdtt'I mo ** 3 PALM TREES, iiiii Experienced. App: Per'90n-Spec"iali"st Ari ;oymen1. Tustin 1tead1na Babb st .. a.r. -vAWE. you REMOVE • nol Dept H-H"'!>. N.B. •. Ceoler. llO H Sl Tustio. SAT "I'll? "' l<<h Pl., CM. ONLY $600. CAN BE SEEN Nursing H F • h• ~=A~Y.~k. t~ 544-4400. Portable diltlwuher, com-SONY TAPE D~. Model l&l61 RHONE LN, H.B. ome UfftlS 1ngs wock bo< och: bn. 2 <IA>" Cottogo Art Shoppe pl«• ml". hou,.hold l"m•. 250• "'°" condllloo. $99.llO. N!W HUFFY 24'" GOU.S R.N. • 3 daya per wk. Inc. Fri. Reply p0 Box Art teaaom. land&: .euca~ -===-• . Call 54i.mo. BICYCLE. SPYDE R Challen1f"1 position, lf you are a professional, top earning ISM C.l\1. es, signs & truck let~ril'll'. Appf11nc11 1100 HI.Fl 1 Stir.o 1210 MODEL. $40. relief supervisor, 96 aales speclalial Secretary _ $500 Emma Blankinship&: Jo~:I---------~~"'"=~rrn==EV£NIN===GS=~' bed ECF. Not satisfied with a mediocre income, Sales Dept-good co.&: 11cills ~~·1 :.1~ !!.°' ~. New Af1Pllinc1 Sile HP 580 STEREO SUMMER'S HIR•I then Grants has -call I.malne. Weatcllll e GE • Clheon. Kitchell Aid SONY • ./ Ne"Wpllt't Beach Famlf¥ LYN~ 6:30 •m • l pm, A proposition for you. Consider the fol-~r90nnel Agency. :ll43 1-IASTER ARnsr will ·teach • Ma)'ta.r • Wute Kins _ System, w/dua.I turntable, Cub Membenhlp, P:ll\. 2 daya per wk. Rtlltf lowing: WetldW Dr., N.B. 64>--277tl painting. Apply in pe.f'IOn Whlrlpool. ~~FJ\l, •P:bt:w ~ Days ~2288. eves. SST-1961 mtd. nurH. * SERVICE SfATION ATI' 2912 W · Coe.st Hwy, Spaot e Certified Appliances 4~:is9s ' FOR MO'l'HJ:R'S DAY 1. Top cemmlssion I. R•tfr1m1nt pl1n • Salei. Full l pa.rt tltne No. 3, Newport Beach. 3l3 .t. 17th ~t.. c.M. Pair otamond ea.nt.np. l/3 NURSE AIDE· Exp"d. prtflrred, )..11 :30 pm PARK LIDO CONVALESCl!NT HOSPITAL (714) 642-2410 Nursing REGISTERID NURSE 1.C . ..C.C.U. Expanding unlt. Chall~ opportunities, oontlnulnc ed. u<:atlon Procrat·t. <;:ontaet pet'IOnnel So. Cout Com- munity ltosp, Sl!72 Coast Hwy, So, Lqum. (714) 49$. UU Ext. 356 PARf Time gtrl Frldai, mornings -Dtntal office. qe »30, QuaUfle.Uons to Box Ma62. Dally PUot. e PBX OPl!RAT6R i Full time nlahts. MondQ' thru. Friday, See Diane Sh•raton Beach Inn 21112 octi:AN 11UNTINGTON BEACH' 2. PM'1 (1p1clal t . Group Life and poe!Uon for responsible, MERCHANDISE FOR M)..02.40 Mlecellineoua t60Q carat taCh. $150. Private aeltt comm.) MM!lc•I neat appearinz man. Top SALE AND TRADE , Parts 6: Sf'rv. for all Me.kt1. party. 549--0674 J. Opportunity for ln1ur1nce "'agt1, bonut plan &: profit so. COAST KIRBY GOLT ball, baa. cart. 9 25 Ge.llon aquarium and •dv1nctment lO. Employee tharing. Under nconatrue-hu crtdlt TO's &: demo Irons, • \\IOOdt:. Good con-equipment with 6 htcb 4. Employment dlscounta lion. Will r«>pen l\lay 3th. Furniture 8000 models of NW '70 Kirby d!tion$35.M2-JS12 tropical Arn>ftna $50. ne1ry.urhome 11 . N1tion1lly Write or call Ray Carey, • -Cluslcs, 259'0 oil. Fact. SURffioARD7'7"-Rii11aeii.1,,,64Ho7.:56"'9="'~-,..-,.---,, $, Qu1llty lint to 494-58S7. 604 S. Co11.at Hwy HOUSEFUL Of new model warrn't. PH: 53G-7521Jm ~_. .,. •M. SIHp1 ..... i.. .. -DIAMOND RI""'• ladles, C4l ••10•11,hed firm 1 .. ..,, .... "·ach ~-'It .,,....... ~ ...... -... nll 1111 .... ..,_,,. °" ' '-&I • hOme furniture. Rei. $683. 5th St/ H.B. Slll. ~3283 \4 Karat dl&moiwia .et 111 6. Pild vicatlon 12. Paid mllaeg1 SERVICE Slatlon Attendant, now Sl.97. 894-4417 or ~DY Ktnmor-e auto ••WANTED: P!T RATS platinum. Priv. ply. izo. 7, Sick INY day&, mec::hanlcal exp :~ 637-6200 wuher, like MW $150. AllO WlU. PAY Se EAOI f73..8800. salary "-comm. Pe~ LARGE Glau front maple older modtl Kenmore, xlnl * 5'l3-48BI * SA"°'CR=IT!=c=E'". "'"Ll"°ke_"'_"-.....,.= Car required for personal cuatomer Cult, 2nd &. s. Coul. S. hu.kh. like new. $375. OVal c o n d '40. 147-8115 or $1100. $100 down. talc• over contact. Laiuna tbt w/r <:hn to match $135. 5'16-8612 nt.ADE Car, Trailer, Uttlt pmts. S track stereo $90. lf you want to learn more about our SERVICE St.Uon manq-er. 546-3341art5:30 NORCE g•• dryet. money for a c::tment drh .... SCMMD k. lite mech pnf, pemi, xlnt d both Call aft 5. 8U-M4IS · money ma mg 8' Sofa nevu u:sed, quilted f'rl(ida.lre elect. J1'1!1r, o··--AL RUGS MOBn..E Home awnlnc. can-Proposltlon in one of the companies aallll')'. Hunl'g Tex.ac» Sta· ftoral, &eotchguarded $1JS. xlnt coDd. S35 ea. 14T~US nu.1~ • vu & po~s. tiled only 1 futest growing retail tlon, 1~ N. C.out. Hwy, Maleh. love seat $'I'S. or M&-8672 Varloul •tiff. Mu.st 1eD montl't, 'PP1'0IC •ltt fll:dO. Otganlzations -Come propared lo dl.. Lai. Bch. <11<"'1100 TJ6.-0592. FRICIDAIRE ""'' ""'°' ~ 175 - cuss your sales know-how and your pre. SERVICE Station Att.ndant. 2 BEAUT. Bdrm sets 10 pc'• Ntrlf. i.-.s cu tt. Top BAUIOA Bty Oub mtm-AMi:Ju.CAN=-"'"i....i=....,,=T-::-:0:::1 vlous experience. hill A part time. Apply In ea. $350 es. ?otllc. ltemi. treeu:r, l~ yn. $150. bers!Up tor ult: at d1'obunl ww:kr 1 ed,pr plumblrt penon Airport Texaco, t6TI p!eturts etc. 5'9--3283 ~. Weei.days (nil 8'11-tO:I, tool1, tltttnp, dratttn1 APPLY AT ••• W. T. GRANT CO. PERSONNEL OFFICE 98 !I ADAMS AVENUE· GRANT PLAZA HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIF. 92646 An ~ual opportunity employer Campua Or., N.I. DINING room •l $50, llvlttc AtrroMATJC WASH.ER HAND painted oU portn.lt board. 254 ftro.eWll.)', CM Sil VERWOOOS ...., "'"Ch $10, cockWI N .. r .,.w, xfo( <0od. $4>. •I>"" or iwrohlld,.n born 10 WATERFORD cm"'1 Fashion Island <a~• Pl. Call~ _, • pho<ocr<ph. 6!$-3829 <umblon. Tromont ,.uem. for HtiCH bl"UI lamp $50~2 14 CUBIC fl Re.irl"en.tor, !BM elee tJPftT!ttr $15, Ptrtect condtUonl $41, has immedia te oprnln; ,.._" H -• I 111 61' "'" ca.I llv1nc room cMln $50 t•ch. bottom freeur. $50. ........ •nu •WTUn1:1W11r • ......,.....,, ~. ~~l~=j~I, cl,: A 2 che11.l! $40. Call s-1$-3283 &42--M96 Steamer ttunk UO. -495-&T7 i'oR Slle:~ 2SS V.C Chev. worktnr condluona. See Mr. DINING room 11e:t, 6 ch~lrs LARGE Used nlrl1erator 4Pleca-•~$50:-ba.hV tn..i.ne, like riew. O>mpl Wllllunt or M·r. Short $.ll, Ooot lamp $15, table S&O. mT Catalina, l.a(una n.,...bed $10. bt.UUnette, $1 w/Bell liourlric. dutch, • 45 Fathlon llland, N.8 . 111..ltlp i1.50. t7S--1ST5. Bettch, _,.fff •leis $10. &4M6't8. carb. #tamr, $200. lf5..tm " I I I - ----.....-...--~--... '!" ,....-;r-•1•-l'll'IC~"-•,...,,...,~+.-.o,..o'""o~p,..o,..u~p,.., ... ,_'t.,.,_F~-•+">..,f,..* ... >~f,..>'""F~'*"'"~'f'f":.O"'.'.'EP'llP•F..,'F""f~-•..,Ji\ ... O,'"'ft~••"o°'~l'""O•P*""""'"",..'~' ... l"""'~·'..,'"""~F...,3!P_ •• ~.P""lO.,.o~.ol~i?)'l"SP!l"',""°''"''"~'oo,..,.!O~C(IPl[~j·lllld .. ~ .. . . ~ . .. . . < CJ! DAILY PILOT Wtdntsday, May 6, 1970 Wtdntsd111 Mu 6, 1910 P<LDT.ADVERTISER 20 M RC ISE FOR SALE AND TRADE FREE TO YOU ETS •nd LIVESTOCK --TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATIOl<o TRANS PORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 9010 Motorcycle_• ___ '300_ Recrt1t'n Vthlctes 9515 lmoorted Avtos roUNOLlNG, sweet. -· ms S.llbooto 9600 imported Autos 9600 lmportod Aulos 9600 VOLKSWAGEN lovab.lt1, nted. st, nttds Jov. AfltERlCAN, ~!Wean, Cana· LIKE SAILtNG? DATSUN lfli home, woWd love dlan champion Bas11et DLSLIKE TIIES£t * AUCTION *· ohlldtte to pla,y w 11 h, Hound "'"'" ll<uL •how <> I'<cym•n1" !ilP "'"""' H "a I ti, 'Y & b a p p y . flop & fam pr!~. ~. f15. d•predaUon, 11 J p rental FRIDAY 7:3t'I P.M. ~ S/6 $too. %13--3J:J-0652 PoREteanJr~ T~!~· etc. 0 1969 CllEYROl.ET CUSTOM CAMPER 1968 Datsun-owner left town, 4 Dr. Xlnt cond. $1250. ,., __ MAY 8th 1 --~---~--SHE'J'l..ANO Sl}(!t'!p Dof,'S, 2 Milo ~. 2 Fttt 1 " Ct'rman Shepherd beaul, 0uttt111. s 1nck n1ale • Low cos!, no WORK A ~ram.sue tnuwn11-[=::::::::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::::~ '"""· 3SO ,ng;,,., ... ., "''"-ENGLISH FORD Ing, spijt rims, heavy duty _ _ Lois ol ~ carpclinr.. Offir:e puppics, 3h rno's old. CAREFREE SAILINC dclbt Color TVs, Stereo1, Frlt!ndly It healthy. Alto, p~pplt:I, 5 wkt, AKC ;100 Cal 2$ little II4 \lld ~m telf. D I v a n s, thrir mother , 2 .,,... old. ea. ~ u • lY ~ • 0 Try Our Club Plan Urn with OPEN ROAD 11 \t fl, tell contained caniper. F\l.ll bath facilities lncludif1¥ s~r. aleepi1 6, has every PoUible fea ture you woukl v.·ant, Cost orlglnally $3)00, All New Ertdish l'ordt In Our B\i: Ch:un<, Chl'.'<t.11, Cof·klfl.\I lti-full Shepherd .. ~ &I lUO 8 EAU 1' IF UL \V h I t e NE\VPORT SAllJNG CLUB bh ·s. A lot of 1n11plr lurni· SD. }!arbor, S. Ana 5/7 Peking<>~. AKC, f,, n1 11. I e. llil'l', DtfW'll<'s, Bookcases, AKO 8Msrf Hound ~ yt:llt lAws ch.lldr~n. ~if1. Call • IJ75..TIOO • 2:1."""' 81\J nlr condll loncr I . I _.. 968-7429 llOD IE Cat, 1969, No. n9. Stock I/ow At f"ACfOR':..- JNVOICE! ""I.I old fem a t•, tr1~ O•""• 9 \lkt' ™'IV, llutC'h<'S, Lln1ps, . N _, I _, SKY" T · t 8 mo Old, $1065. 646-4592, Jovt'a chddttn. e ...... s en~ ... -.. "' r1T1cr, ein., OT.J-.'1824 f\l1rror•. S.•1\'ln~ n1achb1t'S, yard. After 5 p ~f , \\'Ct'ks, AKC, i·arc c:rearn :;:-::--;-;;;--;;-,-:-.,.---- Like '"'"'' dupJeJ1; ~friKcrtl· 51!}-8$38 518. \\'/black points, Possible * * 18' Ca I am a ran , Now Only $SS99 1970 HONDA SL -300 UNIVERSITY Pos.IUvely No Added Dealer Charge&! tor, Olhc-r 1'C'lrigrrators, .... ,, ot ·''°''' $125 ••• '00' Ii berglass, near nu, DOG. Pa11 Chihuahua & ""' :)I • • '''""" a 8 IOVl'S, \\ n•l\ers, Gait DI')'..-11000 (~3) ou -·· Motos:porL JQ)) miles. Xlnt O\.DSMOBILE Cboot:e From Sedans, St& Wgns, GT'a Al Our Colst While Ovt.ntocks 'IUC!I Dachshund. Approx. 6 . 8 2 Atlor"blc 1JOOdle mixed · ..... .....,..._ l'l'J, t"rct'Zt'I' ,. " . fllOrtE' ! mo's old, Had all puppy r1ups, 8 wk, beige & while, cond. custom ext..i'as $650. 2850 Iliu·bor 81., Costa Mesa Steve Sti-2647 ~ WIN DY'S AUCTION '"''' &16-4.,, "' """'65!! :.~",~:' ~';"""'· Power Cruisers 9020 20' Sabre Craft, Like new. 1~ l'tterc cruiser, fully etJUipt. 313 Robin Hood 1.n, Ci\f KA WASAKt Buiihwhacker C 115, brand new, leSll than empers fS20 """· Theodore tt'\JI·: BkO\\'SE AROUND ZOi:JL: Nev. port Blvd. Rrh111d Tony's Oii.lg t.l11t'ls CobtJ flll'i.:."\ * 646-8686 QJ>EN DAILY 9 lo 4 FLUFFY \\hltc kittens with Sllnuzzer Puppie11, AKC, b I u e eyes, 6 \\'ttks old. shots. 8 \\'ks old, SSS. 2 Al!iO some black kittens 4 males, 1 fem , of9.l-83lll, v.-eeks old. 548-0627 I -~,.~.~,,~.-I~,-.,,~.,,-, ~G~.-,-m-an- NEED Good homes far 4 Shepperd pups fOl' sale. 20 mile&. Sac. $47~. !)62....1981.1--*--C-A_M_l'_E_R __ I TRIUMPH '67 l!oo<><Vlll• >160 u.-Blvd. '""""""' "'""· -Surulci Sl'ECIAL Coola M•.. 642-0010 ROBINS FORD good cond. 962--4356 alt 4 Chevy Ji1eets1de including\"'!"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!~"'!'!"'!'!"'!'!~ I_.,...,_..,,..,.....,..,...,,.. I darling kittens, 2 males, 2 Call llftf'r 5, 536-4108 females. 8 11.•ks old, weant>d & trained. 646-140l 5/7 2 Very affectionate small pups, male, 3 mos. old. l brown, 1 black, good for children. 548-1033 5/7 CUTE Puppy needs home p/Cocker & Scotty. Owner allergic.195f Meyer Pl, No. A .. c .r.1. ~ sn SINGLE mama cat must give uf'I fl beautiful kittt'ns for adoption. Call after 6:00 M~Z2IG 5/9 4 BLACK puppie5, Father· cockrr spanieJ, mother pekingese. ll v.·k. o Id. 646-4378 518 NEED good home for lovable young med. Shep mix, hsbrkn. good watchdog. 893-0'.l76 5/8 6 Purebred kittens disguised as mL"(ed breed. 4 black, 1 tiger, l calico. 642--0176 eves. 5/7 GLASTRON 20' Deep V, 327 Chev, Berkley Jet, heavy rluty trlr. many xtru. $3750. Cail 54.5-J215. '68 TRI. BoQnl!Ville. Orig. ne~· 6-Pak Can1pcr, StO\!E:, Owner. 5000 ml. $900 or i~ box, sleeps six, deluxe FERIARJ ORDE R NOW FOR MOTHERS DAY 'J1J!li<!rs ring-with childrcns hh 1h.-;!0111·~. &111.11. custom 111t1rlc rings, ~klaces & +'nrru1i;:5 i;cl y,·ith opals, ru- Uh:s, .aqut11narine11, sapphlr. t"S jadl', etc. for the SPEC 11\L /.tOTHER. Lapidary r (/\lifl.. rough !-cul stones, tools frir 1hr rockhound, all j4'\VC1ry 1naklng :rupplle!!, ~old, silver, findings, tools & l'll~tlng llllJ>fllics. Open T11cs lhru Sat. ~ Suntl<1y 10-1 closed Mon. 1'1VE ~1 CEti1S &: l..APIDARY SUPPLY Rt?ar ol Colle,::e Center Shopping Center :?7j() 1-larbor Bh•d., 11-A Costa fllt"Sa * S.19--2039 'lil Cor\'a1r. bt.>51 offer over SlOO. ·:v Jtena ulr, '63 cng., hcst off:rr over $100. Cut multi . rotor velvel 8 ft. ('(lurh S~; end this, marble udnirt ;\!~I.I!!. $14 ea. Ken- mofl'' 1111tn. \\'Shr.. nds. l!nk·I', .~70. 'fV'&, blk & \1!1l(c; lawn 1no1vcr, dlnette thlc. t~))'S 'bikes. ~ af1 2 P.\I =~~~--~ t:O\lPLJ·:rl:: lurnlsh1ngs & llllr Ant ique rlockery, orig. 1v;!f!'r r•f'llor by Andree, lge kin:: l)l''dm1 sui!c by /\111crlcnn. 1ic1v color TV. r\1ston1 en hi net. r n. r e Chlnl·51' clu.•st & hall con.. ~!r, n1"ny n1!sc. items. 1100 l~u!lil raj fld, Apt. 3, N.8. lil~lS9'.! -~-~~~-~ C rt 0 SS-Top ftl•frigf'ralor. S.:.>. Powf'r ~lo1vcr, $20. 5 ~pc«I Sl !ngray, $li. &l2-166G. INT'l.. Royal Danish Sterling S1h•rT11 al"C'. Tr n 9 pc. place St>llings V.00. &¥1-2160 Misc, Wanted 8610 \VANT To Ruy Used N11.lional Gcograr>hic ~llli;azincs. Any rlntf' /x•lo1v 100.'i Some :il>ovr. Call alt. 6 p.m. j 19-37!!0 \VANTED: \Vh~Jchair t o r t>lder)y granrlmotht'r. !\lust tir inrxpcnslve, 548-7218 or j 10-:!'2;!1 -------• PRJV1\TE party wants h'!l lli USl'fi 12'x20' C6.rp<'!; ~nld, avoc:i<lo, or beige. GF>-1791 \V/\NT ED· T1\:o furnished of- f1cr &lUl<'5, nautical or marinc. dt"sk~. chai~ & tables. 61~!!&17 or 646-iJ67. \~'A'.'<T To buy, DRAFTING TABLE. •• ~3 1-3916 •• 11-\',-'N-'T-F.-.O-l!crfl 1Pc .. -"-,~llc". l'n::1r,. l1!hr. mclal lum ifli:. Cnll 51.~iJJ:J. Machinery, Etc. 8700 \fl" r nATT k \\'hilney Turrrl Lathr 11 /n1o t(}r & r.onu· l~l i n.t:. $12i 612-TI59 j l.i~~' .11 u'• "r,'1<·-"-,-, ~&cc~,-,•1o-,-,_­ ~ll~r. p11)(' & linings Cnll li\2-600 FREE TO YOU PUPPIES • Shepherd le Collie mix, 6 wks old. \Van·! to be lo\.'ed! 548-6674 anylin1e li/7 FREE Kittens, adorable. Calico, black, black & \\'hite, male & female. 2921 Carob St.. N.B. 644--0688 5/7 DARLING 3 mo, old Peek-a- Poo lo good home w/children and doghouse. 897-&no 5/7 Bl.ACK Mama cat 1vith 4 lovable kittens need good hon1e FAST (Bird sanctuary next door!) 548-7061 5111 EXCEPTJONALLY Cute kit- tens 7 v.·ks, weaned &. housebroken. 54S-4615 5/9 FREE Cement Rubble. Builcl a v.·all or planter. 673-6051 after 3Pi\f. 5/8 \VHITE female Be a g I e. purebred, 2 months olrl Phone 536-2691 5/7 FREE to good home • pul'e gray kitten • box trained. 642-8233. 5/8 COCKAPOO pupplcs, l n1alc, 1 female free to good homt'. 549-2595 5/8 PART Sia.mt>sc kittens to good home. 962-1932 )fun. Ungton Beach 5/8 6 "'eek old kittens • darling 2-shol·t hair 3-long hair. Also Sll'itlg set. 96U!612 5/8 TERRIER/Beagle p u Tl p y , Must be good borne -518 1ii DobC!nnan, % Shepherd male pupp ies onl y. 4!>1-1i15 518 FREE kittens, 2 blk &: 'vht, 1 blk, l striped. All long- haired. Sf.~2969 5/7 COCKA-POO Puppies 7 \\'Peks old . Good w Ith l·hildren. 540--2086 5/7 FREE Kittens to good homes. 642-9101. 2598 \Vil!o Lane, C.M. 5/7 PETS and LIVESTOCK Cats 8820 i\IAiVX Type female cat .t: 1 kitten SlO a pair, will St"parale, 962-2078 6pm-9pm Hor1e1 8830 Best oUer. 847-8495 af1 5;30 cab over style. 1--- Beaut. 43' Matthews 1966 Honda s 90 1400 mi. $f799 FERRARI $<14.000. 8!14-4094 Xlnt oond. $240, or oUer. Fu.II PtlL't" Nt'9/P(lrt 1mporu Ud. Qr. BEAUTIF1.JL Bay Reg. I-========= Ca.II 646-8513 ange Counl1'1 arllY aulhor- l'tfustang Gelding. Gyntkhaf). Speed-Ski Boets 9030 , Kustom Motors lied dl!aler. n "'inner, Girl'& horse only, GREEVES 66, ~. Xlnt 845 Baker CM 54G-5915 SALES-SERVICE-PARTS Spirited. $350 or belt oftt>r, 11:11,i' Rayson craft & trlr, cond, W/lrailer. SASO ' '1 • 3100 W. Cout Hwy. MO..i0I7 completely rblf. Ford pwr, • 536-1628 * '66 V\V Camper, 24,000 mi's, N!!WpOJ't Beach ~=~~=~~~-I Just Hke brand new. Compl 642-9405 540-1764 PINTO Geld ing, 8 yrs, very extt'l'!nl. tine cond, S2900. '66 Honda CB 160 Super "'/lent awnings etc. 1700CC Authorlud Ferrari Deal~ 847-1425 Sport, mUlt Bell. Call eves 60Unct, Gentle. S275. Call all 5; 67l-TI2l eng. 1 OWnt'r. See it to 642-6550 16' Glaapar Avalon, lr:I hp I========= believe It! Aft 6P?if, 2318 FIAT TRANSPORTATION Evlnrude w/American trlr. 1 ·Auto Servi""• fl ea l he r Lani?, N.B. l---------Jlke new, many xtras. -'""3lll "'-"" & Puls -~~ · '67 FIAT 850 9000 ',,_========= --1961 Ford camper Van, needs i · ' tune-up $42:j See at 10th 2 Door Coupe, lamp whlll! l!X-Boats & Yachts SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS lfclper -Inlet -Lusry - Become -BELT Tl!Er.I Marine Equip, 9035 BOAT Davits Sl25. Bait tank & pump S50 Head $35 CB antenna $15, 3" compass 's10 Holiday 3 burner stove \\'foven. 646-~ b t' t w n 6-10. 324 Pirate Rd. NB 67 FALCON & virgirua St. Owner at terlor w/wlnr interior. 4 spd. WINDOW VAN 3m> s. Coast Hwy, So. cfo:.1(1~ :rs~~ Automalle, big 6. dlr. Low Laa:. all 4 Phil after 10 am, M0-3100 or mu ... Wiit lat" Ind• ., * TRA VELA LL * 494-I029. fma~urlvate Pill1!· (YLT 70' brand new loaded. Hard[-::=======::;:::;;:;. 665). 9773, 5464052· to find 392 enginl!, auto, JAGUAR '36 FORD wishbone front-end stttrifl&', air, dual tanks, -------- A wlse falher: "It's easier completely rebuilt" complete much, much nio~. save JAGUAR lo raise boys than girls. You Boat Slip Mooring 9036 with 14'' wheels $80 or make $750. This "·eek at ~~~T,~E~J .~d when you ~"E;: slip Bal Isl for offer. '61 Corvair carbs Kustom Moton HEADQUARTERS occas. wknd USe of boat. rebuill,$5 each. 5-16-7219 845 Bak CM cA" u..c 1be only authorized JAGUAR 30' CJ.lIUS Craft Cav. 60, '62 CORVAIR l\f ......... ........t er, ' · """""""'1.,;1 dealer iJl the entire Harbor \Viii ma.int. Oean pwr boat ~-5"""'"' twin screw, top shape, only, 673-7475 eves . & motor & trans, Best offer. V\V Camper, new paint, '67 Area. 56.crifice $5900. Sec 10-2 Sat, wkends. 642-9008, 2517 No. C, Santa eng, ovals &: side lent. r.tust Complet1.: ,slip 71, Ken Niles Marina __ Ana, C.M. sell wilhln 1 .wk, 763 Coast nr Balboa bridge, or call Boats Wanted 90SO =========! Hwy, apt S, Lag. Bch aft SALES SERVICE PARTS 008-35311 fOl' app!. Brokers !----------Auto Tools 9 pm or call 833-14U v.·elcon1c! \VANTED: Ski boat, Tri or & Equip. M10 '69 VOL KS ''Adventure" Cat hull, 13'-14', w/out Camper, 18,500 mi 9 mo. Poole 19' THOMPSON l..ap Str11ke Cabin, sleeps 2. 0 I! p I h finder, flush toilet, 2-12 gal gas lanks, tandem trailer, no motor. S750 or take ov<.>r ;a.1 .06 per 1no/!l68-1542. u· Gl.ASTRON 1967 Carib- bean. HiO llP 111rrc. cruiser. Capacity 10. Lois of extras. Xlnt colllf. l\lu~I sacrifice. Best over lt4%. Ca 11 6·U-2876. ~~-----·59 TWlN Screw R\:prei;s Crui'>l'r. Chris Craft 28'. Sacrifi('(". :J.l0-56:'J6 days. Ev<.>s 6Tr'l7:i9. 17' Glas.spar Sunliner ¥.'/new 1970 85 hp Johnson & many xtras & trlr. Call e\·es. 518-5~5 2·1' T Cru!sl'r. Beautiful 1hroughouf, 2 hrs on new 185 ln!e!'ceptor, $3195 •644-1368 • 44' HOUSEBOAT. Perf. live aboard. Fully equip. Days (1 ) 737-0651. Eves & \11kends 548-2434 16' 7" Boston \\'h11le hull . 1968 40 hp Johnsan. 'Tilt trlr. big v.·hls. S 115 O. 49-1-3839 eves. FOR sale: li1.:.:' Birch Craft outbrd 401-IP; traile.r, .long range lank, bait tank, ec.n1- pass. $-100. Call 612-4480 12' Fibe~lass boat 15hp nut· brd, trlr, xln't cond _ $3i5. 64•1-2676. ~~~~~~-17' Chris Craft lnbrd. In1111ac. Just Like Ne\\'! $3500. Call 673-3i.'.i5 Sailboats 9010 --··-----SOMEONE mus1 v.•11111 a LIDO 14 No. 2'.!75. Good f'Ond., full ~~~eves 540-829!1, dys --;--SA_C_R~i-F-IC_E_*--1 old. Loaded w /x tra1. Complete service station ~ .• · =~=~---1 equip. incl, air Ure chang. '68 _SUNDIAL ~ camper. ers front end equip wheel Has lt all! Refng, A.1\f/F~i bal~cer & others. Newport rad, tape deck. side tent. Gulf Service, t!Jro w. Balboa. $2850 or bes! offer. 646-8226 BUICK IN Aircraft 9100 CESSNA 150, new paint & windshleld & annual. 8:;o S.l\1.0. Sac. $3500. 545--2536 COSTA MESA 2:W E. 17th Street 548-7765 Blvd., N.B. ""'640. 8' Full .,,,,,.,,,.,, "'"'"" MERCEDES BENZ fact, discontinued mode1.1 --1-------- Mobile Homes 9200 Trailer, Travel Ml5 ~ Compleli?. $8:95. 869 \Vest 18th St. Costa Mesa. * Newport Harbor. * A fe111 remaining mobile home spaces in one ot CaliL 'a fast. est gr'O\\'ing resort areas. MOBILE HOMES are on display, these horn~ are fully equipped at priees YoU \\'On't wu.nt to pass up! EXA!\fPLE; Ne\v 20x44 \\•/awnings, skirt, etc. S9UIO complete incl. tax & lie. l\lany ready for JM. l\IEDIATE OCCUPANCY! GREENLEAF PARK An adult private club 1750 \Vh!llier Ave., Costa Mesa Ph. 714/642-13.iO Take 11arbor Blvd. lo 19th St., then \\'est to \Vhittier A\'c, JOrvUCRA, INC. BAY HARBOR Mobile Home Seles ALL NEW '70 MODELS NOW ON DISPLAY 20' \Victes as low as S59'J5 12' \Vides to 34' \Vides Park Spal.'1!S Ava.ilable 1•12.'; Baker Sl., Costa J<,Iesa 1,t block East of Harbor Blvd. Cosla !\l<'sa l7l~l 540..9470 HUNTINGTON BEACH PARK )f~35· Ex:pando lb:IJ sc~ened porch 2 Br, family pet park Space rr.nt $·15. $1930 A.i:'.T.S. 842-:~939 ALPINE '68 CHEV. CAMPING VAN, 307 engine. Xlnl cond. $2595. 49-1-18"12 VACATION * * FORD Camper shell, TRAVEL CENTER lights & panelled, Xlnl cond, Excel ... Golden Falcon $175. 546-5098 Olympie -Alpine ALASKAN CM1PER, 10 ft., Apache· Wheel Cemper perfect. Worldl largest most com-494-6109 after 6 pm plete RV vehicle shopping CAMPER $350. Good cond.1-----M-G ___ _ center Sips 2., closets, ice box, 8352 Garden Grove Blvd, CG fits 'h T PU, 54~2044 Sales, Servk.i, Parts 534-6686 1962 Camper with av.<ning. Immediate De.lively, Closed Sat. Open Sunday $ll50 All Modeh "15SH:isr:~l.hillY~:l--~!"~I6S4 J2rtuport 31111µorts 1965 SHASTA 21:1, fully self- contained, sleeps 6, many Dune Bugg ies 9525 ex:lras incl 8Xl4 clmied awn-"'---'--- Ing, attached cycle rack, '66 V\V chassis, less engine, rock shleld, etc. $2000 tlrm. most el.ec~ca1 components :UOO \V, Coast Hwy, N.B, 56-24!18 aft 5 pm or see for b_u1Jd1ng dlllll! buggy. 642-S4C6 Ml).1764 at 1059 Pre.~idio, C.i\f. 673-0357, 673-lT:iS Author\%ed ti.JG Dealer TRAVELEZE 21 ', butane Jmported Autos 9600 '67 tw1GB-GT, red, 23,000 stove, Servel, 2 closets. mi's. Factory re-painled, re. perfect. $650. On beach lot ALFA ROMEO chromed. Xlnt Cond. $1800. l'tlexico. Space $15. 6-12-3701 -64Z-6200, Dr. L. Nelson VACATION Time! '69 15' '&I Alph3 Romeo Sprint.. New '69 l\fGB, 2iOO n1i's radials, Field & Stream trlr, S951l trans, radial tires, Cllch, radio tonneau. Yellow, blk Xln't cond. Call &12-1686. brks. 494-1670 alt 4 uphol. Eves. 528-2468 '66 15' &o"moo. good cooo. AUSTIN AMERICA ·,.; MG UDO. 3'.000 m;, xlol Sleeps 5. S595. condition. SlW. Cali 962-4318 67l-1·19j I HOUSE TRAILER 14' on AUSTIN AME RICA Mechanic Special! Laguna Beach trailer lot. Sales, Service, Parls '58 il!GA Sl45, 536-861!). $550. 49-l-mt Immediate Delivery All ?\-jodel• Ol'EL Trucks 9SDD racing gear, yard dolly. Lido Must Sell by May 15 GMC TRUCKS J2 rtupor t 31111ports SACRIFICE! '68 Opel Kadett LS, Xln'l cond, Bes! ofr takes. 644-5289. Brokers say its worth $1100 10.'t'".J.-i, 2 Bdrn1, lge insul. • S1200. \Viii sell lot' !1000. ~creencd porch. Carpets, Office 673-6760; !1on1e drapes, O\'en, stove, re!rig., 3100 \V. ~t Hwy., N.B. i'ORSCHE 548-7116. awnings, etc.. , b-&2-9405 541).1764 .. 1 S 0 ,, .~ 0 7 Southern Orange County s Aulho"-~ MG ~-•., 1----------- Here now. lmmedlate Delivery lmmediate Delivery ""' · · O''..-""""' am-pm n......• '"'""' U<:"IU .. 9nly Authorized G~tC ~erl-==========olPORSCHE '65 SC Coupe Tm- l'ORSCHE -----~~-·-·~--PORSC'ltE r6l. 16008 aui/tn1 lapi!. New inter, tin:'s. bait, trim, carl>I. ee.t offtt OW'r ~. 4 IJ (2131 4.33-2149. '65 PorM:hfl, xlnt cond.. aJI extra«. Pv1 pty. SMOO or bl!st offer, 646-8135 POR.. '58 S 1600. H.T. wnvt. Am-Fn1. Reblt eng, New inter. ?i.tust seU. 548-4S4! '61 Porsche, lmmae oond, r.tust see to appreciate! Just pul'Cha.sed a Targa. 5.J&-6155 RENAULT '62 RENAULT. Good ll'a11sportation. Re s pond :t \\'elJ !o gentle ttta!menl. $9j_ j.jS-!M87 SUBARU * '70 SUBARU llc1-e Now - llnmcdlate neu,·ery a 90 ti.1PH Capability • 35 f\ll!es Per Gallon e Beautiful Styling Test Dtil'e Today At Kustom Motors 845 Baker, C.l'tf .. 540-5915 TOYOTA !TIOJY!§lrlAI Mark II Wagon• Hi Lux Pickups Land Cruisers Wagons DEAN LEWIS 196" Jlarbor. C.M. 645-9303 '67 Toyota l'ickup 4 speed, radio, heater. Driv- en by little old fireman from L a g"u n a. Small dov.·n, full price $895. ITEY. 673). Cail Ph ill dlr SW-3100 or 494-1029 aft 10 am. BIIL MAXEY !TIOJY(OITIAI 11111 BEACH BLVD. Hunt. BHch 147.&SSS a ntJ ·N. ot Coast Hwy. on Bdl "69 TOYOTA Corolla Slation 'Va.,"Un, white & iiharp. $1299 this \1'eek, bank financing at~ · Kustom Motors 845 Baker, C.ht. 540-5915 1969 TOYOTA Corolla Station \Va.gon, like new. 968-1076 after 6. TRIUMl'H 1964 Triumph, good cond., hardtop, 1\'ire \\'he e I s , 642-8335 or 87:;...([051. 1964 Trlun1ph Spitfire, good conn. $72:>. * 962--0262 alt 4 111kdays '61 TR-3 $700 Good condition. 642-9990 VOLKSWAGEN '66 V.W. deltLxe camper, A-1, cond. cabana included, Sl.900. 5!12-5627 '67 V\V Sqbk. Clean. Low ml. New tires, brkll &: batt. Best offer. &U-8655 '66 VW sunroof, new clutch, Xln't oond. $950. Call 5-18-9645. -·- O Concouts. Winner e $1'ECIAL 8.L.ACK PAINT, SI'Rl.PING & LACE e VINYL TOP & DECK LtD o ANSENS e SEti1PERJTS a CAUGE:$ e SHAKY JAK!-:'S SllOW CAR. $26.jl), ON DISPL.AY AT JAMES LTD International Motorlna: AcceS60ries 1584 10ld Newport Blvd., CJl.f '65 VW Camper 1 Owner exc..-c.llcnt cond, In & out 1v I e..xterior awnings. Stna.ll down or trade.-. \YIU finance a pl'lvale party. dlr, CaJJ Phill afl110 arn. 540-3100 or 49-..,1029. WANTED I 'll pay top dollar for your VOL.KSWAGEN today, Call and ask !or Ra1ph. 549-3031 Ext, 6&67, V\Y Van 'S!l. 'M engllll!, camp. er unit, \\·ork done on trans, complete new brake system & tires. Good cond. $800. 530-1108 Btwn 5 pm &: 9 pm '(i8 VW Bus 20,000 mi, E."(. rond. 4 x 8 stereo deck, 4 spk1-s. $2:iOO or ofier fH2-1574 '69 V\V Sq back Sunroof. Radio/Ai\1. 20,000 m I. S 2 4 O D/offl'r. Typev.'J'lter. 833-1234 No. 280, Weis '69 SQUARE back, radials, AM/FM. Sopt>r clean. 15,000 mi's. hfakl! oUer. 67>5038 or 846-4748 '61 V\V sunroof. Lt, ttblt. eng.. radio: Cone!. Clean. Make 675-73I4 VOLVO blue: good oiler Best Stock ol VOLVOS in Orange Counly DEAN LEWIS 1!166 Harbor, C.hl. Auto1 Wanted 9700 WE PAY TOP CASH for used cars &: trucks jusl ~all us for tree estimate. GROTH CHEVROLET Ask for S:iles Manager 182U Beach Blvd. Hunting1on Beach Kl S.3331 WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR CAR CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor BJvd. C.Osta Jl.fesa w .. 1200 \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS II your car is extra clean, s<.>e us flf'll!. POOLE BUICK 2.14 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 548-7765 IMPORTS \VANTED Orange Counties TOP S BUYER BILL. MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blvd. R. Beach. Ph. lJ47~ New Cars 9800 OLDSMOBILE '66 V\V Bus. Radio, passenger. $1350. 1970 OLDSMOBILE '8 TOWN SEDAN 7 Factory a i r conditioning, • 9G2-3602 * '62 V\V Body. Dan111.grd. OK f.iechanlcally. $250. Call 962-1782 * V\V Camper '61. Xlnt concl, rebuilt motor. sroo. • &16-2'.lS6 .• '68 V\V Beige, Sunrf, radial tires. 27,000 $1450. Call MS-4654. radio, mi's. 11,rusr SEU. • ·~ vi.v 8 p!W van. SUOO. a.16-73i6 after a;30 PM. automatic, radio (re ll r speaker), healer, power steering, PQ\\'er disc brake!!, "'heel covers, remote mir- ror, tinted glass, \11-s-w. Serial No. 384690M276391. $4694 UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE 28jQ J.lnrbor Bl ., Costa ?ifcsa OPEN 7 DAYS ~I0-!!640 '!liST ha\'l' homr for lovable kiTlt•ns. 2 blac-k & y,·Jute. 11 n. nl'f'r\ g17-3l"ll 5/7 AL1.-\\'h1f-,·-k1hcns, G .~ks .. 1,1, 11f';il1£·tl & bo:>.·lra~d. :>-1r,....J.YiO 5/7 i\fother's Day Gift Siamese Kittens, Purebred. $12.50. Call 548-5172. • 26' SOLINGS e TRAILER Cabana Bayfront, UNIVERSITY BMW mac. Loaded w/xtra!'!. Ask-'66 VW Bug, sunroof, New hl-lloor • • • • • ••• · • $4695 n1any xtras, adult pk. OLDSMOBILE Ing $3400. Call 548-7251 alt 6. n1eehanically perftct S900 or '11!" LEASE V ur;i.2;.sa~.EMP'EST s:5 ?;v~fd~ea;rn;_~~12~ 2&iO Harbor Blvd, BMW'S #1 '67 PORSOlE 912 :>-speed, best ofler. 4!H-Z540 1970 Ford V8 1;'.}0() Pickup SIA~tESE Kittens 6 Seal & BJue Point, <'aCh. ~19 67~ n2"" Costa r.lesa 5'1().9641} re-hit t"fli:ine $3600. 548-9163 1969 VW. Body & engine ,.../camper, air. p/s, auto .......... $.t l(l(l Pkl N.B . ......., ""· • ...,., S I ~1570 '65 Ford 1'·1ck-Up ., MS-2'31 good. -· "'"" 3000 ml 1109 -· mo Pacif.ic ·yacht a t's ,,,,,.. 1 REDUCED pri~! Viking DEALER IN Call &4·1--0Zl67 SOUTH COAST~ · :? Dnrhnr, k1t1r11~. I all whirr , SHOCK :zs, lop cone!. Jllngcd Scandia, 20xii0'. Ex. cond. V-8, gte(!n color. This wttk '62 PORSOlE, beaut sha(X', - J lnn1; hail\'d j:rJ..v. Call Dogs 8125 mast. SHP outbrd 150 Genoa :) St.ii:r Adult Pk. 548-4142 $1,199. CALIFORNIA AND see 10 appree, Mlf/Fi\f, '47 VW $1200 FIRM CAR LEASING alll'r ~I Jlnl. lil.'l.:n().I ::. 7 ---------by \Valls. Askim; $2-IOO. -"'-"-'-'-·-------1 Kustom Moton O~ANGE c·OUNTY'S t;"""'==""='=·="'='-=1382====--====""""2!=· =====-""==w=·=°'='="='"'==·=NB=.=6<5-=21:::82:::1 :; Pu11p1<'s. n11x., n1rtl. sz. DODERMAN PUPPIES, 3 Terms 0. A. C. (71~1 24' Terry. ShO\\·er & Ba. 845 Sliker, C.f\1. 540.5915 LARGEST 2 tno'<. oh.I. 1616 Orchnrd nialcs. Champion sired. 846-2936. (113) 232-2005, !-"um. Nol landem \•1hls or S.A. ll;:iil\, )\!l--00!'~~ ;}/6 Call 646-2321 CAL 2~ Sa\lboe.t. Loaded \lllth Sf'lf-<:Onlained. Like new. 'G9Sa .'!") ··, %. T. TruH ',", 2 l970's Imme<i. Oeth•ery -· -I ~~~-=-""-"--"~--I I NB S1250. 642.-2098 uu e !ln .R. e w g 25 N•w & U-·• ;n Slock KITTEN". 6 >1kci 111tl~londi, GERi\tAN Sht>phcrd Pups, extras! Inim1 ""1'1,1 1°11 1 k o~erloact spnngs, Stnlght T&M M~OTORS grny. b!n<'k. I l)Jl( & iih1. AKC 337 i\iagnolia Ave., slip avt11labe. 1J e H.B. across lrom ocean, 2 stick V-8. 17,000 inl'i. M9.ll'::? ;1 ; Lido 14 trade-in. 6-l•t-2128 Bdrm, 2 ba, deluxe. all ex-~.1 •• 318 8081 Garden Grov• BJ, G.G. C.i\f. 642-8310 after 3 PM. ,,. """' ~"A.....,. -"'C" R d S I 'I boat l1u. Adulti;. !)36...64i8 ;a.n-..,...,.. Open Sunday 892-~1 I Yr. l.nbr11dur n11\. 1nafc SCHNAUZER pup!!, male al A.I' "" ea Y 11 pc sai ' CLEAN '66 Chev. 6 cyl, P.U.[:==="===;;;:O=: 1Jo~. hi.b1l.11. l·o1rs kids. 111ud. Groomllli:. Call: No. 5852 & tl'aill!r. new rig· Custom cab, r/h, l"leetslde DATSUN 89'1-St~ iw ~;;r•-l t'l:: ~17 213-33l)...&595. ging, beautiful, S 120 0. Bicycles 9225 body, Goodyr Poly !!res. A-l -494-!892 eves, N"I" llUFF" 2·1" GIRLS nd 111= 6<'7I50 1---------l Yr. t•l•J ll m1;-h111r ht'O \\n SL Bernards, AKC, male Mt "-... ~ eo · ~. "' · tbt'cr. ~tJ.<,l+•l. fnrnalt· cat. mo'«, female 4 mo's. Call 17' SLOOP, fiberglass; RICYCLE. S P YDER '67 Ford Van 897-.'>1~1 1,r ~·J;-11!1.1 5/7 49&.23SL sleeps 2, trailer, $1700. r,JODEL. S~O. --. --* 546-8114 '* &t2-1124 EVENINGS. \Vhitc Econoline, Sale lhls SEAlJTIFt J, Long Hai red I Sll.J{Y nuppies, AKC, sire Wt"ek 11.499 . .. ~ CHINESE JUNK, 30 It. = : "" ~i·h.ue Kille-rt!!. champ. Come set-make of· Good cond. Bcsl orrer Mini Bikes 9275 Kustom Motors "Lcftdl!r In Tbe Lea1"h Cities" ooa---\\ rl~I -,-.. -,-,-h-.,,~,'~,~-7 I -':"=.'-1 _;~;;:Ac,CH::_::SHU'=N~O~-pu_p_p_ies, (2131 S90-4W3 llfINl-BIKE • Cat i\OOX llP.4' 845 Baker, C.1\.t. 540-S9JS ZIMMERMAN 16' CHRYSLER Sallbolll &; '58 Che 6 Pldcu g· bed 2145 HARIOR IL VD. de , • 1,'ooci home. !I-tale. AKC regis, reds & blackll, ,,..,,.,, •. Int -.oo\tlnn. 11000 good cond. Aft 3 p.m. vy p, • !i31)-SI ~~ 5/8 ailtt 5 pm: 6T">35!M "' '' "" ~3'11 Ml.TUI good $3$). C&ll M&-8115 54°"'410 --,-;-c--,----. or be11t oUcr. !168-lll1. aftcr 6 1-~~_,c.;.:,-_:_c,;_,_~-fltE!.. K111,.n~ to go" d SIIKY Territn Af\C 'GS TACO 44 l\lini Bike. tn DOT DATSUN LIDO 14-CO~IPl..F.TF. • '66 Oat PIU Int hOmt 'l62-8l.~ 518 dlamp stoc::k. small. beaut. , xlnt cond. S125. sun • new pa • OPEN DAILY Good Cond l!lon. $Hj(\ I I -• ·~ Pvl I ---:: "! f'iJ::h l \1;11: old Dutoh rolltJi, Stud IVall, ~nu • 6~7200 * )( n l.VllU, ~~. P )'. r~,.~ 6i5-005Q 6T->-JJZ1 E\-cR .=-o== --* 5J&..ifi28 * J\NO RAbbHJ:. fil:Z..!."&. 5/7 LAB. RET. Pups. AKC LlOO l l. llt'\\ly ref!ni~llt'ff~ PAL MlNl·BTKE. like new. SUNDAYS Rl'J"J'EN~. part Sian1e5e, 5:'"'JI~ b~~ new trnUcr &. "°''er. wo. 3 HP. $85. M6-4472 ·~nd!1;'~~~~· 01~~1~~ 18$35 Cea ... h Blvd. llfd..5719 511 6+\-1378 M I 9300 ?ilakr: oflt-r. ~II 962-1782. l·tuntlngton Beach ~ V\'' Dody Cocker $ptinlels $25 SABOT. •:iiulppe{] r or Ra,.. otorc~-'-'---841-7781 or~ ~ 5/6 * 8fl-&m * Ing. f'lbe.ni;ln~~. Pnlly le F'OR Sale : '69 Triumph 2fiO Jttp1 9510 '69 DATSUN PREE atred k1Ucna, 6 DALMATIANS xltu. s.t'JO. Call 67~2623 'n'nfih.y. $·1i;i ca~h. nflcr 6, \1-"b. (ICJo.2:\ Ul ~/8 hKC, Ch. lllk .• 642-1937 SNO\VUl rt D &t11lbo11T 12 fool 5.16-00:?1. FREE Adonlblc klltl!lll. 2 Cockapoos, Ttrrlpoo1 with tr~11"r Sl50, IH7-il:i8 '1)8 r-.tONTF.SSA 250 cc La pure -.ti.Ill'!. 841--11841. 5tB &, Ptdtapm. 847-64%> dny a111l 41Yt•nln,ir. Cm6se UOO. 646-66::n ----------14 Door Sedan. 4 apd, dlr, lllr. ?1-llLITARY. 4 cyl, OllV f'nJ:, \\'ill take 1rt1de 11r w.ill fin. ~ 1ml dr .. c•n1•11s lop, roll anc-e privatn JJMtY. <XSP- b11.r. tow !}Ar. $850. M!l-2681' 829) Call 5464051or494-9m. • 1 -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ • IO • r. • 0 rs y ;o, '.M r • ' " "· ro "' "" 01 -... ~. ·m )), om : .... k. ., ''· ;, !r. '" n. .,, .. "' " 03 IO st 0 '· ' " " ,_ '· a 0 I p 0 '· 2 :\ " ' I·, ,. ' :· ••• , • • • 21• mvr<ADVERTIS£R Wed ... .,, M016,1970 Wednt!d1y, M01 6, 1970 DAILY PILOT 81 fRAlilSPORT ATION tiWISl'&fATION fRAHll'l?llTATION TllAMS!'!(IR't98'10N 1 ~TATION ~'!S)~_OltTATION TRA~RTATIONlil-7TTiRAiAiN"SPiiii'<OR"'T"A"T'"10"'N...--.T'°R'7A'l'IN-.;SP"'O"'R,;,T"'A;o]TIO..O"'N~ Auto leasing ,.10 U...i Carw 9900 UiM Con tfOO u...i Ciro , , ~ Uaed Cara ' ;,oo U...r C1rs 9900 UNd C•rw tfOO Uaed'Cora 9900 Uaed Cors '900 =~~ __:HEVROLET MERCURY 1111MU'iTiNG ~ •;'.i~!!it~i PLYMOUTH i--PO-N:...TI_A_c....;.;""' PONTIAC T·BIRD Am.erlcp.'• tara:est lt>u1ng '66 CHEV 'l'f Q>lony f~. 10 ·pus LO Mllea.a:e 1965 ·t.1u1tang LEAVlNG COunt~ ml,flt sell. ·ptYMOt.rm 1!l68 Roadrun-1968 PONT Exec. Sta. Wm. IQlllem for finance or net WAGON v.·aa. all xtra.s. Prlv. pty. Fulback, R&:I{, black .1969 Mach 1, ~ml,. $200 ncr coupe. 4 apd trana, air. AMJFfl.1 radio, pwr '65 PONT. Catalina 4 Dr. Xlnl cond., alr, full pwr, $895. 100~ Flnanc. 642-7374 '87 T-Blrd Lant!au. All po~·er. Air. ~tusl sell. Mili offer. 962-1592 e\•es. Df,ya SJ;l-3274. leasing of all type can and $1M (ZlS) 58S-:s.w upholatery.• -Oean, I O:i d 1~,. boot. "1* ())nvt, RAH. polyatus t Ire 1 , wlndowa i tNtl S 3 8 O O . truck&. Bel Nr. 6 pa.uenrer. dlr. Alr '61 Monterey, 4 Dr.. radio, mecb cond, good tlre1,~ l , oWnb,ltte ~ -~· ·.clutch headers, Shure & r i p , 64.>21&2; aft 5 pm &: wknds • Immediate dellvtry from condl.tlont.rw, MUlt eell. Will hee.~r. Powu. $tOO CNh. owner. $1095 .. 613--1518 ' ,. . tadW~, "9Ji Et.ft. 6'f3-60T6 aft 5 PM. 60-4011 1--------- ovtr 300 can and t:rucks finance private 1*?1Y. (OY-494-ll.57 BEAUTIFUL Red '68 6'13--0675" '67 PLY. Fury 3: t Dr. 1968 LE r, S RAMBLER • ~Uve ntet 8276) Call e&-9773, 545.4053. loluslani convertible, VS. l!l6S oonvertible, new tOp, hdtp. RAH. Facl a.fr, new lAN 4 Dr. Hrdtop e Neweit"~MrVLoe'SS a.iv. Iml)Ua convert. MUSTANG 1ltick1 power extrs.s, lop p1.lnt-6 tl.te1 i 1200. tires: lmmac. $1600. $22CJJ. Power f, air oond. 1968 T-BIRO, Landau. F\111 pomr & air. l111mac, cond. $2695. 962-6280 • Full>~-..Sefli"~?Jue for new top, titts, seat coven, cood. 133-121J Ml-1457 eves. · =72 6T3-2259 Eve 1 Your .,..., cal mu111on, battuy; RAH, 1006 MUSl'Af'lG , 'c onvt. 11950. '*'* """"8 PONTIAC 1964 vs Rambler Hardtop fftds body work, $300. ·~5201• 'G:'i T-Bird Convert. AU powe1·. New t1rrs. Xlll't Conti . $1200. &l&-0050 •All populJ.r make• avail-auto., v~. Xl~ C!Olld. Rum ~I Deluxe wood irnin PLYMOUTH '68 PONTIAC Conv, cTO: able 'l IQOdJ fD). J5T-9796 after int. , Wire \\'hls. V-8. All '65 J.fUSTANG 2 + 2 Air cond, p/&, p/b. srereo, '60 RAMBLER $180 Call 646-1343 !'or Complete ~ Call 6 PM power, Xlnt cond. 5t8-nl. fastback •. mint cond., new '65 PONTIAC Tempest 6, an1/fm , new tires. Xln't Maloom 1teJd '68 EL CAMINO. Sharp.I---------tires, ~ xtras. $1200. '63 VALIANT r/h, auto. l 01vner. 30,<KX> cond. $2100. 67:>-3802. 1---------~anaiet suwr wlblk int. Sec. whi.a. Is y Ou R Ao lN ='......,.~~-~~~~~ 12 Door, automatic, dlr., R. H, mi's. $800. Call 83~1162· . .,~,~c~ro=.-,,~,,~,-... -."',-... ~. T·BIRD re v.a, auto. Make offer. p..AS$IFTt01 Someone will '66 P.tust.ang, stick, beautiful ?.lust 11tll . Small doWn, low 1969 Fireblrd. Air-cond, 6500 magi. stereo. J.lust sell, 1960 Valiant, 4 door. VALIANT ROllNS FORD 615-.:5086 be ~·for it. DlaJ 6C-cond. isoo. . PaYments. <KAK750l Ca 11 miles, Xlnt thruout. sacrifice $D) • lllltline ba.l. '62 T·BIRD $375 s15 2060 Harbor Blv4. '65 IMPALA 2. dr • hdtop 5618 * 645--0810 * 54Mo5l or 494-9772. * Eves. 673-0675 * 646-5396 * Gn-1469 * Call alter 6, 64&-8610 Costa Mesa &a-Ono l--owne!'. Al.Ito trans P1sl"':~:'1o"w=:c~.,.====~-'.-========:=~=":"======O=::==:=====::=~========:;=~·-========~;;.,=:J.=~~~~~~~'J l;~~~~~~~;;;;-1 P/B ,R!H, Rt>cent tires.1-.=:....::=c...---9:.:IOO=_..;N:.;•:.;w;...:C..;•:.;";.... __ .....;tlOONtw C•rt 9800Ntw C•rs 9IOON1w C•rs .,.......... ·11200. 644-ml! Used Cars 990D '62 Chevy Impala 2 dr 1-----,---"'-I Ndtop, R&H, PIS, P/B, • EASY CREDIT • c1 ..... ...,.. """'· ..,, o11 ... ' --~~~-----We finance anyone '65 CHEV. Impala 2 dr. V-3, who is auto, pis, rad. ste~ tape. Married Spotlns Cond. $1Dll(l, Call Divorced 644-2700 New resident in Cali!. .-.65~-~C~.,.-.-. -,m-pa!-,-, -..,,-· Bankruptcy cond. low mi's, hew trans. Because We Carry Our Fantastic cond. Best oUr. Own O:>ntracl! 675-6828. No Tum Down! O.A.C, 1985.=~Cb>~v--ll~N~ov-· -.. ~,-.~" All Your =portatlon ~. good tires, good cond. CAtts FROM $99 Best oHer. 548-M96 Sat • • . sun, ""-an s Blue Chip Auto Sales ""' IMPALA, 15,000 ml, eood'.. dean rond., new tires . 2145 S. Harbor, Costa Mesa 673-4962 5"'4392 6'2-9100 ·!iii"'"'an:vy==,"v'"'"'~,-,....-...,..o11""' * FLEET SALE * tauge s, map. $325.GO. (10) 1970 CUstom Impalas ~ alter~ Jim. - Loaded ••••••••••..•. $2975 '67 CHEV Impala Convert. (I) 1970 Ford Mwtanc By owner. Gobd tires. Price Loaded ···········~·· ;:750 ~blf. SJC493-3,9n· , • .s.s." 1---~--1 · CONTINENTAi.: BUICK LATE '67 Continental, l 1--~------l o...,-ner, clean. Runs 168 LE SABRE perfectly. Air, 1 eat he r , 4 dr hn:ltp, air cond, p/s, power. Priced to 1 e11! p/b, t/h. Bek>w whOlesale 646-4400 wkdays. 64Ul766 II}~· "2-109 eves, ~ · "' wknds '83 B'!lck Riviera load shape. &46-84.10 CADILLAC ..... · CORYAIR 1960 CorvaJr, trans, brakes ok. Eng needs work. $15. -642-<1176 eves· 642-3155 days 1959 CADILLAC PARTS ' FOR QUICK SALE . • roRYEnE Battery 'llf . t \ Wind$hield. Wipers '68 Corvette conv. Xlnt :::I-;; Radio Going to Vietnam,. MU!t \Vheels SELL. Aaking i34SOJ Transmi.s,ion 497_1353 Air Conditioner & I===-~~~-~ Heating: Unit SELLING a 1961 Fa.stba&, And Many Other Items Cowette, 1 owner, undif 54z.ll2l After 5 P.M. wlllT8.nly, must sell·movint· =-,~--=-=·=-1 Call aft 5:00, 67>1054. '66 Cpe. De vine "' eo.-io Futbaok ..... See this ear to believe it, air , ·32,00> mi. Pvt. $2t25. mint cond. Powtr It air, 646-71ll0 blue coral black, matchlncl========;;; 1oather 1n""°' •""""too. COUGAR except. low mileage, needs1 --------- nothing. Blue Book says COUGAR 169 · $3100. Buy it for $2700. Can With air radio 350 cu In en(· lll'Tange linancing • Private Good· ~nd. Can aft 5:~ Party 537-7280. \ 6'14-19671. Willlil&. to 't.6 Cadillac Sedan DeVllle, c:••="=·-------· ~11 power, ale, near new 1967 COUGAR, auto, air, ttru. lmmac. cond. Blk viii. deiux inter vinyl top 37 ooo top. Ptiv. owner. sm. Call ml. il.900. &ls-21627 • • 894-4607• (5) 1970 COUGARS. Joaded, '67 CAD El Dorado, full pwr, Jaw mileage $3000 each. air, vinyl roof. tilt steering, * 6Ji.s4so * AMlf'M & stereo tape. I========::. 13;111J. 6'5-2182: . alt s pm DODGE &: Wknd!I 642-4011 ) '68 E:l. DORADO, only 9500 '68 DODGE RT convert. 440 ml, fBct air. vinyl roof, lthr mapum, torque flite, p/s, uphol., full pwr, stereo. p/b, di$cs on front, RAH, $5250. Pvt pty. ~ 1 09.'nU, xlnt cond. Mutt 1965 Calaia, full pwr, ale, sell, new car on ortler. xtra clean, top mech cond. $2400. 49'-Ql82 N~ car on order. Will ac· 1961 Dodge Lancer. cept lo book $1100. 495-4539 p:io or best oHtT. '65 CDV, fact aii. Lo ml. * 548-3956 * All pwr. Real nil't' car $1795. 1969 Dodge super Bee, xlnt Call 646-3513 after 6 PM rond .• 5,000 mi. mu11t sell '68 EL DORADO, fQlly equip. $2495 cash. 642-6505 !MOO. FORD **COUPE DE VILLEl--------- 191!6, 1 ..,,.,, "'" .,,. '67 Ford Gal. 500 pm 546-9913 Full power. factory air cond., 'ti6 S. D .. V. Vinyl top, wine ext. Exclt running oon. Stereo. air, f\!U power. gold . dition. Take mall down. $2350. 838-0!Kl6. Full price $1195. Call Phil! '60 CADILLAC, GOOD! dlr, IITD &99> 540-3100 or 4 dr Sedan $350. 5-18-3215 494-1029 aft 10 a.m. 'CAMARO '69 CAMARO Z·2B JAVELIN 'llS JAVELIN'. Xlnt oond. Sacrilice -must sell! i1495. or bestoHer. 531)..7403 Bright yellow, 4-speed, per .. 1:=====;===- lect "'""""'"· m~• """'' OLDSMOBILE date this week:, S2,li00 Liill1------..--- prl"'. 1970 OLDS Kustam Motors SPORT CPE. S<S Bak.,, C.M. 5405915 $2498 '69 CAMARO Z28 bl· performance. fully equip-f77.69 MONTHLY PAYJ\fENT ped. $2800. 638-3429 $299 is the total down .,ay. mtnt m.m is the tOtaI CHEVROLET monthly payment includi"i 1---------1 taxe1, licen9e and all carry- '66 l\tAlJBU, brand nu tire•. llli dwPt on approval of chrome rlmt. Good C.ondl Bank cre41t tor 36 monthl'. $900. 96a-5790, 962-6945. Or. if )'OU MU1d Jftfn to W n..i... pay cash, the Ml cuh price '6.1 Chevy II Sta ag. "' ... la on!y $2661.90 lncl· .. 11•-all Owner. Lo mL Asking $415. ....... 642-5295 ~ 4 PM. tu:e11 and 1970 lloeme trans. ,:::::,.:::;;..;;;;;...,=~-,.-1 -I fa. Notblna more to Pl)'. '62 Chev. 327 Im,,. • Dderro:t pa)'ml'nt prto, l& l.=~ll!I0.=7,..:Call=.:c646-7:'2865:':-"'.. =I $309S.M tocludq •ll '""Y· '8.> Bel Air, auto tranl, pr inc ehai"ge&, taxes and 1970 steer, nu t1rff, 1 owner. license tranafi!r. · Make ofter. MS--2080 ANNUAL P~AGE ,57 ou;vy RATE IS ONLY U"' "'""' &" '""'· UNIVERSITY * 5.);-1965 * . OLDSMOBILE '61 CAMARO, 371000 actual 2lrlO Harbor Bl., O>sta MC!SI. ml'11. All xtra.1. Xlnt com. OPEN 1 DAYS ' t1600:-Ph . 673-7851 CALL 540-9640 1967 Impala SS 4 gpd. Sl450. ·-* '&I Olds Cutlass, V-8, llr l'lhlll auto, pis, plb, air. Coll myllS & ·Lincoln • Mercury GOOD SEL&CtlON OF MERCURY MARQUIS & MONTIGO STATION WAGONS Summer Is fust around the corner! (Don't wait too long) '67 CONTINENTAL ~2795 4 Dr. Sed. BeauUful =Ilda ~e meta.Ille flntsh with mil ~ 1/!!tlher in· terior. Black landau~ tfldli:imry · . ~lpped and factory onlng, " -FM radio, stereo~ deCk. One• _ ~. O"Wntt car. Beautifully !lihtalned. 1 <Ci Lie. TIN -020 '6' MARK Ill $AVE Beautiful silver mink finish w/matchini.; lnt. Fully luxury equipped ln.cludlng int wheel. AM/FM stereo, a~a tic cruise control. Beautifully main ed. 1 o'N?ler, YDL-646 _-" . '66 CONTINENTAL s2395 4 Door S.edan. SUver mist w/matc;hlng , bit. Fully power cq~~· Sold & setvlcea ' by Johnson & Son. ·901 • ' '" MERCURY s2295 P.fi:intego \Vagon. Polar whlta-f1nlsh w/ · black vinyl inl., aut.omstlc trans . radio, power liteering & brakes air cond. Well maintained car. NT0-985' '61 MERCURY . s3g95 Colony Park Wagon. 9 pes.scnger. J onquil yellow w/gold vinyl int. fully f:wer ~· Fact. alr, AM/F1.1 s reo. . 1970 COUGAR "The Summit of Sports Car Luxury" Equ ipped with pow•r s•••ri119, pow•r disc bt•k•s1 · wh ite sicle wall tiras + many other desir•ble fea• ti.res. •OF9 I H5178l4 MONTEGO ACTION SPECIAL . ·- $2866 + TX ILIC. HERE NOW! Sexiest Furopean THE CAPRI BARGAIN CORNER I• 011t ....... c.,..,, we.._..."""'°'•"' 9lff cen. Some cl ... ,,..,. Ht M c~. S•llM fttot .,. d11pllcorlo•, .. _ ••'•• hod tH IHI - I• _, ...,..., tttae con .,. rffl ""101111, LOOI 'IM OYIRI '69 ~~·.~~ $2276 '66 ~·:.~·~;~ $1396 ............ ., .... ,. · UltlW 111) •·•••••• 'Bl :::;.'!' Slll& '66 :·.::~~~;, .,., $1075 lYOF If)) ·•••·••• ....... .. .. , .. . '87 ~~'.~~~ .. ~~ .. $1676 '66 ~.~:~,i~c~~ ~~~~ ... $1675 . .+ TX I blC. 1970 MONTEGO 2 DOOR HARDTOP Deluxe whesl cov•rs, white wa ll tiras, power st•erin9, pow- •r dis c brak•s, radio, v.a. '68 COUGAR $2295 Chrome yellow f1nlsh w/black bucket seatl!I, automllUc tnua .• radio, power i;tee1·- Jn~ & brakes, landau roof. Maintained by Jo nson & Son. WXG117 '65 T BIRD 51595 Rich Mldnl~ht Blue metallic f1nlsh with match iJc Interior. Full power Incl. factory air. c. 0$£--645 '67 MERCURY s1595 Monter'<'y Coupe. Bermuda blue metallic finish w /bh1ck vinyl int. AutomaUc. ra- dlo. poy,•er steC'rlng & brakes, air cond., landau roof. UCC092 '69 FORD TORINO GT s2195 Convert. Attractive Cardinal Red with color matched in terior, white lop, auto. lr11ns., Jl.S., radio, heater. Lie. XXR·231 '67 CYCLONE GT s1795 Agean bronze metallic w/makhlng Int. automatic Iran~ .• radio. power steering 0& brak<!s, air cond, landau root. ~pUonally clean. VOG450 4 Dr. Sed. Agean gold fini sh. brown '68 CONTINENTAL s3995 landau roof, leather interior. All lhe luxury features Incl. factory air. Lie. VTP-736 '69 CONTINENTAL s4995 Cou . ROlewood metallic finish with blac':Jcather A white landau root. Luxury equipped, factory air, ek. Uc. XSR-580 NOW 1.S T}'IE 8:EST TIME IN TEN YEARS TO BUY A LINCOLN-MERCURY PRODUCT ~O,hDSOD•SOD lLDOO©@~lro ©@OO'ii'DOOrnOO'ii'&~ • ~&!fil~ JIII[. ~~!m©l\!J!filW. ©@l\!J@&irm COSTA MESA 2626 Harbor Blvd. 1 Mile South of San Diego Freeway 540-5630 642-098, 540-5635 FDRm> GENERATIONS IN TUE AVT8MOBILE BVSINESS TH! OLDEST ESTAILISHED "FACTORY DllEf:T' LINCOLN-MERCURY DEALER IN ORANGE COUNTT • , ______ ._____... ______ ·----------------·-'------- . . -... -. =.: . I ..... ·-; ~~~~--~w-•-•-••-w-»-•--~-~---w~•-•-=•~··-¢0~·-·-·-·-·-•~N -••-·-·-•www•-..,..p-F-••-w-w-,=-·~~~1'~-.-•-,~rT.,-<•~~ < ' , :a DAJLV PILOT Wtdl\fsdiJ, Ml)' 6, 19,70 - -• --Wed11t~a7,, M11 6, iqJo PILOT -ADVERTISER 22 ·... • ---······~;;"~;'-;'-~---------··~·-..;.; .. ~'iii.' .;.·---~..,...;;;· ;...;;-~-~--~··iii··---------~~~~;;; .. -~~-:-:--~= -..... ·- :: . ...... .. .. ··:... . . -__........._~'SPECIALI-ZIN·G .IN Q'UALITY''.· , . _, :- ' ' . ' . ,. ' -.. • . . . . ·BRAND . ,.EW ,\ . ' , •:.,: .. ':''' 2 DOOR COUPE A"Pornatlc ·tronsmfs• siM, concHled rG• "'' ""'-· 11 ..... .i-;,liilto;t ~, , .• ,. ,..Utd ........ ... btlh, backup 111 .. . duo! .,.... tltetrlc , wipers. . ·~. -..4U270Z6001$4, .. . . IMMEDl·A J:E DELIVERY ' . . •• 'FlllST TIM!E·· ·lllOW·N .. • • THE ~LL NEW !1970 CUSTOM LIMITED RIVIERA LANDAU. NOW ON DISPLAY < • • • • \ 1 '"" , ~ ' I ' '. ' ' ., 1970 OPEL · GT:· • • · .. WE HAVE A TREMENDOUS SELECTION of the FABULOUS GT's RIGHT NOW. ALL COLQRS & EQUIPMENT TO SELECT FROM! VISIT OUR VOLUME OPEL SALES & SERVICE CENTER BRAND NEW BRAND NEW 1970 ~ODEL 1969 · Op E L .4.,.~ .• ,.h •• ~~!!!..~..i ... '.;,,, .... . spMll'fullJ 1ynchront .... ~ltil .... hater, llfatfnt• lube ch•nl1, 2 Ifill'· ...... & Wipers. INt Mitt. SPORT COUl'.E LS loedtter. L• thaft 1,000 111lles. Almost brcNtd 1ew. l!lllj ...;.f~ ladiidl19 -· -wh..r., AM·FM Sh.,twOYtrildlo, p1 .. ,;, ... _., #l42lASGJ $· AIR CONDITIONING -VINYL ROOF .. de .. U1ht,r. (Jl'261tj ll - < ··1891· s1995 IMMEDfA'IJ, DEUvERY I t PERSONALIZED '69 IMPERIAL LE BARON Thi' •utomobile has every c:onceiv1ble luxury f••tu ... tNt is • offered. Full leather interior, ell power 1quipm1nt plus fectory eir conditioning. Gorgeous. IYBEl-461 • A,UTOMOBILES • .. $4995 '66 BUICK GS· 400 Vt, 1utom1tlc, radio, h111.t•r. pOw1r 1t11rin91 factory air. fftRW715 l '69 THUNDERBIRD lANDAU Full power, f1clory 1Pr, low milee91. Sold & Str¥iced ~oc1lly. !'12HSJl: s3395 '67 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE 2 cloot htrclttp. Autom1fic, power ti•••· ln9, r1clio, ltt1fer, f1cfory 1ir, l·owntf, low mil••t•• Julf immtcultft. I UPSt71 I '68 FIREBIRD 400 Still undtr fectory w•rr1nly. 4 1pe1d, redie, healer, pow•r 1t1erin9, vi11yl lop. V1ry low lflil•at•• loc;11I I owntf 9tm. !VTLSI~) . '68 DODGE Rf' ·~ Coupt. V.t , tufom11ic, r1dio, heeler, power f1eri119, f1clorv 1ir, ..-invl top. Ab1oluf1ly 9or9eou1 loci! doctor's cir. 12,500 mil et. IYOl 122 J . '68 PONTIAC GTO : Vt, eutom1fic, r1dio, h11f1r, powtt 1t1trh19, pow•• lirt\e1, f1c.lorv 1ir, low milt•t•· I own•r, loc.elly own1d c•r• lmm1cul•f•, (WXE5l'l 9 p1ssen9er wagon. Full power, fectory air, 6"·wey pe»Yl(er. see+, power door lock1, luggage rack, local·car in outit1n.di119 condi· tion. ·1YCP4281 '68 ELECTRA CUSTOM 4 Door hardtop. Full power, factory air. Sold & serviced locally. Be len ce of-factory warranty. IVBAtl 11 · $2895 Chrome wire 'wheels, factory air conditi11ning, AM~FM radio, .. full leather interior, etc. IXXEBOSI $4795 ' 234 E. 17th ·st. :.tV'JIBORfZllD BVlCKwfJPEL-.IA6VAR SALES and SERVICE OPEN SUNDAYS . -. ' , • • • UNBEA TABLE DOI LA~A~~~' L'"' LAR C~~V~:SPECIA~~~· < O • • I I • O , O ' ) " 5, ... •, • ' '68 IMPAlA '. . '68' IMPAlA . · ( 1 !SJ · IMPALA 4 DOOR H.T. ·SPORT CPE. SUPER :sP!).RT . VI 1n9in•; eufoM•lic. r•• Vt tn9in•, tuf1m1tlc, ,., VI •ngin•, iuto,1'1•.t{c, re· clio, he•ltr, pow•r" steer• cl io, h•1i•r, pow1r 1te1r• clio, h••lor, power sf••r· in9, .(1ctory 1ir condition• in9, factory eir condition· ini;, vinyl roof. '(WJM i, .. 'i liack•f· •~h. 16J6 1191 ·~31>. 1 . · in9. IWJH?Otl $1425 s1799 $ff9.8 '&· ·4· FDRP· sALAXIE . . . 600 2' dr .. H.T. VI; au!o., radio, 'heater, pow e r steering, air condition ing. IOZl9251 $6 ' 5 .. MERCURY . '65 ,, . Parlcl1ne 4 Or. H.T. Pow· ' ar-steering, b,ake1, Win. dows,, s1ets. Factory air. IREP4271 . ' SUPER SPECIAL 1969 V.W. BUG 4 speed, r1dio1 heater, only 9,000 miles. Clean ii 1 -pio. ·(XTL 393~ • , , REDUCED 10· ' 548-7765 . . ·-·· _...._, ........_____ I l -. ..... . . .. c J ' • • I ' f' FREE DOG HOUSE i\LL DOG NEE DS 1 lift siLE , DO& HOUSE . .. . WITH ~Hl.~P.UICH?R ~ AMr'MSIO W ;,--~~~----~~t•.~••B~AT .... ---~~----~-- ''~-lao.-..s I I ··m-.~ I • SaJnt Bernard • 1 I • Pekingese ·-~ ' I ....... . j • I1:lsh Setter • Pomeranian ... ,-~ • Beagle .... I • Basset • :liuQ!wlfW llillnier • Mmll .... iwv , I • "S'rg bllta d0-900der .. C:anFJ ti lk~ Ii'* Orthopedic iii sf9.1our store. Doctor's prescripnons filled by our !t.P.ff of t;J~~duate orthopedic a:W~~ts.-. ~ FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH e 644-2464 Slit: R Errllne Bid 1SbstS .. ' .,, 41 • ·-.J • I .. .. •• ~ .. .z. ..-I ...,~ ....... c.,, .... , A aupilt-1.'btfhg.~ Piel fM. eenutpe J>trthsta• of your choice -\Ip to eight-or combine bJrthstones with white zfrcorts ~'*' •ZoM~a... ,..,, 1M W. 4tt. St. 11 ...,_ 111-4 · :1::: z+• g ·-r::e.~ VtVre nolling will iOUI: .,u lcMa. ................ '1 I• . . *DESIGNERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF WOR.Iill'S FINEST FURS* . . . ' I M.ASTER FURRIER SINCE 1933 - Every Fine Fur Designed And Custo m Crafted To Perfection In . Our O wn Fur Salons. ... j l i .• , .. .. . • .. ... . • • \ , -.. . -· - \ ' . ~ . -,, ·' . J w~·r~ h.andinC them to you At PRE-SEASON PRICES NATURAY MULTI-COLOR $l375. MINK COAT ..... . ~ ue.s.. r • Store Hours: i4 : •. m. to 5:30 p.m. M6NDA Y & FRIDAY I 0 •.m. to 9:30 p.m . NEWPORT BEACH e NEWPORT CENTER e 14 FASHION ISLAND e 644-4661 I ' • \ I I ~ • l I I i I I • I ' ' ....... ... ·--·---·----- W..lnn4'ey, May '· 1m fashions for ~ faahlon l"-1, Nt...,t •ech St.new .... c.nt.r, ... .._, ttEW WAY TO BE ISTMTl Y SHAPUER, · IWIDTM., TOO hc..t Fwlll:u.t .. ~ f'ush-~ lf1 .. y L~ .Mt ,-...., Me¥e the ltre for the WMll, itt4-tw•9'1 •r ........ figur.. ft HIUNI ye111 el tt. ... ~ ..... 1ize. W..r S.cr.+ Fc.Millmeftt wittteut ,.4'1 for 1.•ntf• curvt1 or w~ f*I• fet. a hip roufttW uplift. EiKy to cace fer la ... .,~ the ,...,. are rlJl!l•va.,le when y«i '-uH.r .... l.N. ,.OIMmet' ... ht with wit&. off-+tte-1houlder de41>1 and • bac:k that ,tun9e1 low• tt.u • .,.,, Me"9. witt. ..,., ctrA of len- L... lace a!Ml Lycra® SpeM.x in 7 lu1dou1 colon. A,l,C cup l2 to 36 7.50 .,.. """, ..... 'til ', ••• ;......,.""-''tit t :M-p .... 0.AltGE YOUlt PUltCH.-sES AT .. ~IONS r:ott'LA l<EMM~ -WI! MX1!PT ANY MAJOtt CltlDIT CMtD RND a=Jl-E. \M:EK tf Mrythfng isn't oonliltt ap roMS for you, ....... IOm9ding to tttrn the tkM. Gold-tone rose pin, $3. SLA.VlCK'S J ..... ,. si.... It 17 NE~ORT ....CW -....._IUO 11 MSHfON ISLAND e.-M..-.a.....,_.-tilt 3 ~y SPECIALl -648 ...... 7.11 lattice ..... QPOleJI a IUDDJ JOU with an .U,. web of whit. leather •triPI ud ldrher faeel:td heel. EnJoT a vinp on tlria cool temptrat ~aliC1iift Shoes Fashion Island Store Only ~•wport le1ch Titl r.1 JOIDAN DUO ............ 1MCK POW!l.L 'AIO .............. 0 f'tE"i Mother's Day Activities at + 1012 Fashion Island is more than just a place to shop 58 delightful stores. It's a hub of activity for community events, too. Plan to visit exciting Fashion Island today thru Saturday. ·· ~ 4-H Dress Revue on the mall 1 :00 to 3:00 P.M . Saturday, May 9 - ~Edison Company Cooking Scho?I. Island House on the mall ... 1.1 :00-12:00 A .M. Fnday and Saturday, May Sand 9 ~ Free .Carnations for Mothers Saturday 58 Fine Stores and Services • Open Friday and Monday nights FASHION ·ISLAND It ' ' ' , l. l t ! • ~: ' I. ;: r, '· ': " .. .I! • c • E • a. g-... ;g ... ;;; • Q 0 • • c • E .., 8: ~ "' 0 ~ ~ -.. .. • ::e ,;. • ... • • c "Z ~ ,I -------------------------------------------~---------------------. .. The Penneys Guide to Mothers Day Clairol's® True·To-light8 ma.ke op mirrof'.' has day,. office, home, evening light,. magnifying side1 111 beige • $25 Penn-Prest~ sleep gowns are polyester/ cotton .. Styled with all the . pretty trimtiiingS :1he1U love. S1 MJ l. s4 full length lounging robes of never-iron Penn Pf"esf8 Dacron& polyester/rayon in prints and colors · for the nicest m~s, 10~18.· $7 0 Napo1ean style "'oda~lft fiber· stretch 'Wig 'in black, browns, blond ... ' • pr ... tylod in herfC1¥Drile look. $19 Oval filigree mirror tray holds all her special things! Measures 16" Jong. In gold tone and gold-white finish11:so $5 Musical jewel boxes have beautiful Italian flnishes, are· velveteen lined. Podded fabric __.... -tops are reproductions ' of fomous pOintings. •a Boxed handkerchiefs are th4t perfect gifts. Pretty embroideries on imported cottons. 3 honkies per box. f2 I ~·~ 0 [! ~t Hand k~otted wMte simulated 8:_~:-1-..._ ,i,. G£> cultured pearl necklaces, a gift • v• ~·· ~ {)'.J for her to remember ••• and . ; ct (~1::\ wear· with so many things· .•• ~ ~ well. $3 ~ :11 ,,~ -~ , ·~ / " WI ·~ . ' I ~ ¥'~~¥ , Penn Prest& 2 piece cOtton ,-,,.. sleep ensembles in assorted :\:\ ~~, postefs,. lace trimmed., S-M-L ;,$' ,·~\\,~ for sweet dreams. $6 . !&"·,,:,_ - .. K"\\, '·:,\\~\~· -\ \:~ ; \\ ., ... _ Nylon tricot sleep gowns shape 0 tip beautifully. All are so prettily trimm ed. Have yours in your o favorite color. S, M, L $4 AgHon® nylon panty hose! Nude heel styling foo! fashion colors, short, a ver- age, long and extra long. $2 - Bronco groin e xpanded vinyl handbags ••• black, bone, white In handsome shapes. $5 Crushed patent \linyl ha ndbags go wilh everything .. Super new shapes ... great coror -ossortment. $6 and $7 AVAILABLE AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY Sl'ORE •• • . ~ -·- , ' • i I I ' I l ! ,, I .. - P19t I ) Wedne1d1y, May I , 1910 Supplement to Daily Piiot MOM Always Needs Something from ... 33 FASHION ISLAND /J /) q J7 NEWPORT BEACH • 644-2400 t'i ......Af,.{an Jlauni ------------ AWARD WINNING DESIGNS Flowers Anywhere by Phone 644-4060 80 Fashion Island 644-4060 448 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 548-3484 ~. ---- :ts RI ~- I ar t •tuctt, 644-DU r I .. , ' t 'U ~-----------~-•~P~•-•m_en_t_M __ D_arty ____ ,.... ___________ w_-.~~"•~Mayt 1n1 Meet Joe'Mo Ar-Weir, •1Nclel t•pt•1•tMfv• f""" ttlt H-• of Re~en. She'll be in Ifie C"'91tMI _...,.,.. .. t, Tutt4'"V Mey IHI for ,.,, .. el contVltetleia. . has. a gift for you the "ultimo ·desi.gner set" • • • fer )QI ••• 1 llleauWM ex,eriea. Riv Jon's Uttim -oes9· Set holds 1Q1ic in1redieAls l\at open up a whafe ..ew ~'ti...-,. Transf~t ... r... ... 1 &st of its lritd. llilkf Fadal Bath deep. clans dry skin. Genle1kift flallncin1 L.r. rat.shes skil. UUi• Eao De Plifv• Splay,1a 1Mcilatin1,... :tapa, -Aa Its tr JOll'S as.i iftd • lttie~ of 5.00 or •re. C.tnwttClt •" fttfte ........ I ..... ' • ' ;.'; .. ~:f~tft9W°" I.lend, N.wpert C•tt!•r • 6:44-~JDO • ...... -· .,.._. ... .............................................. . Mon., ThurL, Fri. I 0:00 tiH 9:30; Oth.r D.yt O:Oetlll 5:19 . ••...••.. ~·· ~ EXCLUSIV( _ ;r. CAT FURNltlJRI INTRODUCTORY· -SALE ·TREE HOUSE·._.·, · · 3· ;t 15 · .. ·(As INustratict . • Ii.,. 37.4') . · ~1. ~ . TREE ilOQSE .· ·331s \• (Not ·sMwn-• R.,. 39.95) .. CAT ~HOUSE ,:i 21 95 R .... ~I.?$ Model .. ; 24.95 LARGE CAT -SMALL . CAT TRE•. ..JD! .... $24.tt .... '"·" 21• · .. · 16• ' .. PEDESTAL POST Reg. a•• 9.95 HIGHNOTE Of JASHtOll <Pm~·~ ANAHEIM NEWPORT BEACH WHITTIER RIVE RSI OE OUR GIFT TO MOTHER WONDERFUL WORLD OF l'ETS SI FASHION ISLAND e NEWPORT OPI'. BROADWAY e Ol"EN 7 DAYS--644-0910 Save ~:i ........ ,~ ....... aUlgater 11za~· s•~ elleese .... ., •rew11, green, ••vy, or hi~~~ Save •5 oa matehlng hantlbags. ", '-.ARIAMUICA•o. MASTH CHAICH, PAUL AWN CHAIGI Just because it's her day .•• make it special. Surprise her with something mor-e than just a gift ••• but a gift with thought and love -A gift so special she'd never dream of buying it for herself -The Demonstration can help you select something just right from our beautiful ·.selection of-exquisite cosmetics and beauty preparations, the finest array of hair pieces and wigs, a King's ransom in jewelry and fashion accessories or give mom a gift certificate and let her choose her own gift. Just remember ..• make it a fu n day, a happy day, Her day! hshiOf\ Island, Newport lleilch (714) 644·2682 --------------·--- ----------- GIVE MOTHER SOMETHING DIFFERENT E WILL HELP • • • W KE THE SELECTION YOU MA " ... <Mtd . "'E AN A n1tACTIVE WE'LL MA" GIFT BOX or BASKET f()ll MOM! Arey rnc• RanCJ• • fffrmet,... · • ·teMCStlc •· ,.,.,... W.... .• ·c..,....-..... ~ ..... ·~ ..... • ,..,.n.4 • ..... itk c_...· • heft freM • .-ttle w.,t.t ..... ...., ............ ..... Visit Our Wine Tasting ~oom SPECIAL lMt• Credl ef Ow F•••ut Cheddar Cheese , ... , NORWEGIAN FLAT BREAD SpecW &"4 tlw1 S•d..,, Mey 1 Otlt ~i 219 Value H 'mhlH 111-4 e New,Nt C~ Oppetlte "-·.., • 644-0ttl Hours: Mon. & Fri, 10 to t :JO Tutt., W1d., Thur1., Sat. 10 to 6:30 Sunday 12 to 5 -•' I !: , .. !"'-.J• .~~ff '• •J •. • •, --- MOTHERS ARC THE NICEST PEGPCE. REMEMeE• HEit .. I ~IRRORZOOMs.IN TO MAGNIFY ANY SIZE INSTANTLY! PRESS A ~UTrON OUR SWISS-MADE MIRROR ANSWERS THE PROBLEM. WITH CASE, 7.ISO. fN OUR COSMETICS. SUPER SWEATER. Fi..-OfiN BQl 'G' e:: WHITE, BONE, CELER¥t1 •Mrs .. \MCIDY MOHAIR/RAYON, tf tit~ •. I l~EICl'f+A .. LARGE, 32..00. FlWllWt .tlC'3 I HJl!si. ... ,- ·' TOGA GOWl't WfnK MATCHING BIKINI PANTIES. Cl>C>~ ANQ PRETTY SPRINKLED WITIIPEU"fTE eosu~s~, . AND FROSTED WITH WHITE LACI:'' PINK.OR el11E, ft S-M-L. IS{ ·""' .r • . -.f3.EMBllMND't. ..... L~NG~ .... ._ •· . . .. . . -..... t I DAY, MAY 10TH • . . 1* .. .. .... APPi.Ji <:#': HEii ir.YE PAPERWEIGHT; SHllNY, RED PRETEND APPLE WITH SftlµIANT c;tiE~~1 LEAVES FOR DESK ~1"Ae(tiir1.THt DENNIS DAY FAMILY. 1N:~vEs"(£R, .-.,, STATIONERY. 14'K GOLD~ FROM A GROUP OF DANGLES, BAlfGLES AND BU1TONS. FOR PIERCED EARS, •.29, 8.79, 18.50, AND 18.!JO. IN OUR FINE JEWELRY• ' .. r, . .,, '* ~. 1• ... •& 8 Slf P ·aptt ELEGANT, . i t! " p • CoNTEMPOR\~ ~k»iT UtG> . ,, .... .. , DESIGN WITH ~GltSERVfN9 BOWL, ' . .. a ••vm s AECES. 1-..tKWt'r.,&. JN ' ' •-. I! " 'A M CL'EAll Git lt~ADO Glt~£M ._: "' ' ' . 'r.:. CftYSTAL, 7D0. FROM GLASSW~RE. ;. ~ . . . ,80BINSONS N~t <J~K .... ,.~i, . [ASH10t>Ll$~P ,,,~,., ~ .......... Q11;2SOO ~ ....... ,...,.._.._,..~.,.~.-........... ~•••!f ..,.-fr!/f st Y L £-... •• ... --.. ~~~~'' ........ ·--·---· ... ··-·--~ .. • .. ---.... -~ ... _..:.-·•···-· ·"'"'"'v·-... -·.·.,..,..:i,;_:. • I I I • l .. I '-·-1. Pa .. 12 i I . i . ' .. ··~ • . ' Smart? Vou bet! It takes young thinking, alet1 and experienced minds to pr.rJy serve money saving customers these ~' It takes peo· pie wlto are familiar with all of the 'various savings plans we have to offer )IOtJ smart savers-the tax deductible retirement plans, tha CttifiGate accounts,~tht·Guaraftteed Rate Accounts, Monthly Securffi Accounts, trust accounts end many, many more. Sure, we have thtm 1IL We havt this type of personnel-dependable, ready, wlllina end always here to help you with your savings plans-come In, caK .or write. Smart Savers Save and Earn at Newport 8atboa llwk• where Ill the new hlcb rates are avaflablt. • Smart Sure-we have these high rates! ~I ~ :.: M~nt: u.,ilHllW ' hlabOok Accollnt 5.13% 6% $25.00 l day • 4'if1 IOIM ActOWlt 5.39% 5.25% $500.00 to days 6.92" 5.75" $1,000.00 365 d1)'1 • 6.18" 6% $5,000,00 I 2 Yfl" ; 7.M 7.50% $100,000.00 1 )!Mt