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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-06-08 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa\ 17 ------ - -. -- ---- .. , - , , --- I • • --. ·----:: ---. ---..... -·-"' ,;.... i-:: ::-' ~ ~ -..._ • . ...::. ·-•I .. -'"'.":, o- ~-~hn& i I•~ Ei.ee8 Bt.f.Jr· • ----• . ·---·-- .. •• . --·- MONDAY. AFTERNO<DN, WN! 8, J 970 Witll beinocrai H•rtl•••· .... U. ... 1M. I SaCTIOllS. • PlteD ; new:··. ---..... ·-_,_ .... . . . ' . - -. --- . :. ' • • -. -. -·- ., ·--·. . •• -• -----·· -. lop _federal, State Aides Candl~light Killer '-Eyed . -~.~-:-: Elail.· .Pm.~ey . - Police Quizzing Liberty Friends In Huntington . Huntington Beach detectives were dispatched to various areas of Orange CQU.OIY today lb re·interview all persons who had contact with..Robert W. Liberty, the '"Candlelight Killer" w)Jo 'suspected of claimin_g a third victim\! over -1he weekend. : "We reel strongly ttiat . Sbtfie~le have not told us the truth," Sa.id~ lfet. Sgt. Monty McKennon. "ll's P.0$Mble..qia1 gome people have actually tried 'to shelter tr'its man, thinking that he rta.11! ~·t commlLany_ murders." ~ "He is an extremely dan&Cf!Ollf man. Those who sheltered him could easily t!id up the victim next time. C~les are cheap." Llberty, 23, is aceUsed by po~ide of being ·the .trigger man ill the J1'iurder 6t Thomas Carmine ·~orina Who \faS shbt by a .22 caliber pistol Ma.th 12 on a deserted Huntington Bea.ch road. -,___~ ·r ~ -.. • .,e < By ld!llf 'VALTBllU · °' .. DtlJ\f 1'1111.~ Ir; • By Alml1l1\ R. VINIEL ' Of.,...,, .. .,.... . < . ... . \ -. ~otol""" Candlellgh\ Killer, Rober! s.. .. ty·~-ranklng federal 'aoa illltt , oUkWii .:. )irObaOly lneludmg, aov. l\!il!i!ld ~'I".~ Ylce [.:· Jl!llit Spiro AP'fr, are u~ . arrive lo Nell)Jlft~ •'"'Ian en\< today ' L<& 'l\.M.l:..o; "'"T < • ' •' W. Libetty is aougbl ·11uoo....., the wat today, after beill( suspeded of bis tlJiitd rltualiatk: murder in four years:' He is believed re3p00Sible for the st.al>. bin& and strqulaU~ in San Diego Of a man ':WHO once tief~li when both were inmates al a state ·hospital for the criminally iosane. ''The Candlelight Killer strikes again," "'itS 9Cribbled in pencil on a door tn the-apartment of Rober! J. Irion, 52, while two candles flickered eerily beside his corpse. 1..iberty, 23, whose-last known address was 350 Avocado St., Costa Mesa gained ·gruesome fame four years ago when he murdered a paramour 12 "years bis senior at a Westminster apartmenL Costa J!f esa R,jja.(•c.. Ji, beami;,g Kild "J!Owering, 16, is ~!hi-nJ!'# Ml.-S C06ta Mesa, .crowned Sunday at 1 the 25th annu&l Lloos Club Fish Fry. FJanking her are iunn~ers·up . --- ' -----. .. ----~&ne-S!Otiaker, 16, (left) and Sandi Gragg, ls,.-;j;._ · from Costa Mesa. The blue-eyed blonde alao claim· , ed the, ~ss Mermaid tiUe. --. He struck , again ·Saturday, one day past the fourth aMiversary of the slaying of Mrs. Marcella Landis, '31, apparently dlOOsing not to klll yet a fourth victim. . . : . ! -' • - .. 'f!pposes: Bartman · LE;FTBOUND llicbard Graystaek, 17, ol Long Beach, was left bound with neckties In Jrlon 's Bank of America apartm~t after being forced to drive . . th;e killer and a._ woman compeai®.. to San Diego. ·• I iu R · t · The Y.(!Uih fold police he plel:ed up_ n l' ew w in.g the bltc""iklni. pa;r in I.<>ng Beach and • · Youths -4ttctck - -Schm;itz· ·Facing ~ - anu .. _...,.,.. , . . {~-indicat~ the ranking offlcfati"WOOld 1>0ld several <fuys ()( coo- f~ ·OJI lnteraq~l rela'ti~ problbly-at the-Western White Home """"""""·~er~--­.~ js, ~ to arrive 10nle time Jate • tddiy 'at the Newporter 1nn in Newport -Beach. 'Gov. Reag8.n was rePofted to be the offlcial host ol the meetlna serifl, but PteSl!I aides at the capitol todi"y would neithtl' confirm, nor dehy lhe reportl. There were no repotts on ,the chances that the Agnew arrival is linked, to ' tht conferences at the San Clemente Inn and the .Wesiem White HoUJe. of the government relaUons grwp. In ~st villt.s Agnew bas,. spent' quiet vislt.s aJ the Balboa Bay Club. J:lis pres.s. aides. said he : was due to . retui:n..J o' Washington, D.C., 'from Callfomla TUes. day. The appearance in Newport wU presumed lo be a stopover. , " 1be San Cleinente events reportediy will get under way, llife Tuesday wlih conferences between about 20 Callfornla State °""iciall and af>out 50 from the rest of the nation. · . -~'-• •··d_J San Il" . S~A ~J!U !l -Angry W&s-Ulvu~~to-ncill OL -leap, n;;~,r.=-wbeft he•was directed to the"'8partmeilt' ~ ·-.. UIWI tac l I c II June ~36:Runoff Several senators and representati~e~I were expected to attend, but their names _..__ wera-not-Jtnown, ...__ ____,.____.___ __,... of, tbe man marked for death. • showered lherilf's deputies Will) rocks He Imally struggled free of his bonds and· bther missiles late Sunday after The offielal UUe or tlle lfOIJP b !he 'v Advisory. (ComnUaaion on I.ntergOv mental RelatiOn:s., r 1 r early Sunday and called police, who officers dispersed a hostile crowd of arrived to find the weird tableau so up to 1,0llO in the lsla Vista comm.unity _ typical of Liberty's horhkkial pa~m. near the University ot catlfornia. State Sen. J_ohn-SChrnltz · CR-TUil~). to conduct an extensive tear.ch· rOr the, Liberty has -also Deen 'sougtil s~e Depttt.ies ·said a., tot&J oC 27 persons will face Democrit David Hartman in, .;ptcia1 election balk>ts rrun _:U)oae March J2, listed as the prime auspeci. had bee.n· il+ested · by early today,· tn-. a special· run off election June 30, final ~"and to hand cOunt' t~m: 1 • in the murder of Thomas A&torina, 25, el uding two "ita jail faCllily -for in· unoffklat "'rnulb iil ~Y'.s special who was shot and dumped near Sunset ~erint: with an officer: They said the 35th Congressionel District election show. The si>eclal hand count was completed The meetinp wlll be held• Tt.w..i;;:· at tthe San Clflne:nte Inn rand Utt · • House compoc;nd ·on Jl"l"ldayi. • 1 .. ' . . . , -• -- ' . Aquatic Park in Huntlngton Beach. arml8'were mainly ror curfeW violations The .special-ballot was i to telici ·· i thla morf_j.ing· lhowiq that •the "Ttln off W Asforina shared a trailer at the Costa with some for resisting arrest and sucessor for the ufteil>lftd term e6ding was necessary. Driver on rong Mesa address with Liberty and•two oilier narcotics vlolatklm. Three were Iden-~··· .Jan~ary to .the .late •l\<P· J~me, Scru.111' 1wi11 ~ another 0em;..!af, , qi en, one-of whom ii In custody .and Ufted as females and .cine )V.as a juveillle. -B. Utt whO died last.:.March. ·· \ ' TOOmu tenhart; Jn Novembef in-a rUn T k Killed' ' a¥-~a{ting trial in connection with" the They sal~ 1hll at· one point .more · EarUer lndicalioill were that· $Chr&itz off •.. ~ • lhe regular . t w 0, ~ }' e 1 r ! , 1 1-ac ' murderz •• than 200 officer• were in ~ Isla VtsCa ' would tally enough: votes In the two-coun: -i ' . 't'LED SCENE• area be(ole lhe siblal!Go#Uzed. ty election to ivliid the ""10ff, but Co"fr.e!lloilal tern. . ln:;;:\..~11:.;t~ ~s··~~~1 A Portland, Ore., man whose car w,as La-men i'O'-San•"'-•o·--:..1 , __ thal Al least three injurte& .....,reported, t County,C'l~rki WilU•Qt St John saMt this -"~-will ~-5 ,.. ·~ unex,Plainedly hCaded down a rural Liberty and lhe :U~;oman but none was ~,One waa a aberiff's "¥M"qing final flaures s,ttow: that Scfunitz H' , . . B' . =:;;~atUrePr&ng ·"!~'j railroad track in Mls!!lon Viejo was killed wbo was-with him whei Grejstack 'Jiiek~ •,deputy· <;;"ho • had a lea;r 1u cMilter failed by l,841 to pin a clea'r majority lli1,.!!Dgton. ~y along the abate to 73 lw:lher in- ln*ntly SUnday night . in a headoo col· ed them up Oed tbe mUrder toene: i .. ~ ea:plode ln his b 1 n d . 11M otheJ r two, or .the tota\ v*s ~-, land. lisiort wilb a freight tram. irioo's late model Peugeot automobile. ~n R. Jack§On, ~. _..O on11than ' The unofOcial Ubulatioo .00, ttie'llate N • W•ync McCullough, 42, was kill<d ii!" ln•eJtigaton' not.d " lhat Irion, Uk .. A. Halas, ii, both Iola VIiia reatdente, .... tor with IGS,11'1 votes to •Ulll, ... early ·Drowns f!'SIDB TOD,AY I ated\ly, accorrung to the Ora e County' ubei'IY'i lint v;ctlm met his slayer were reportedly struck. With tear au lot Illa alr:C. • . , •• · : •• · ··•· ·_ . McGaut>n an<I Crompl<m •;i;ra' 1 1 Coroner's 1offlce. whpe both wert"under J,sychiatric<care~ -earumrs -Miss JICUoo in the knee Schmitz HI ly-~ Ute others in 0r.,.. .A t-. year. ~Id uu .. 11,...;_ Besch ....... be •. ·.,-.r; r 1, , ~ ~r,gineer Curtis ~yct.afoose, of _Sa'l Mrs._ LMdis-tfu an out-aatient at and Halas in lbe head. / County but thty . f1f1ec1 up· a ~ve ~,.. •• '?"'6"'1' .,.,, ' come aa · 101l knolbft as ur d 1!6-tiardino told the C&lllotnlo Hlghwa1 0r...,; County Medical Center aloof Deputies sild !6<0iigmal erowd had O\l)orlty in San • Diego Courily'i ·aih heafly dr0wnedSund ay nlghtodu falllDa; 'Sco~_ID,,.,,_. lll< Svpr""e Coljr< Patrol he didn't see .the car in time with ~y, bolb of them blviac at· Kattered qWckJy aa the 9COrU of officm prtelncta. imo i nfilnmJA& poot · iil 'Jlil -perenW' 'maktl a ,la,nd7Mrk decri}'iota !>" hi ·slop the ·apeedlng, Santa Fe San ·tempted JJU!cid<. . ·arrived at the embattled Bank ol 'l'bL tolala· Or .... C<!Joty,"Sehmllll,--!iacl'>"!''!---77_::,..:... _ _::,.-:..,..--+..u.u<alili...p ... '1£::"•~!'<fo 12. o;egan. . Early on tlJe rnorn.hlg of J ... s, Itel, Amerk:a bnoch m !ala Villa, a 77:080: opponen!l IO,tl3. San Dtqo Coan· · llarr01l Fi. 'R;eti>rd.1, tmi Worcatet -1 1n , __ ,...; ' '•I lnvestigal.Ors for the CHP s a id \Vestm.iiiitii' po 1ct ttetWiG'i telephone predomlnanU)i stUiiinl cotiffiijmftj a<I· tf, SCblnltz 2',041; OJplnenb tJ;'TIS. ~1.,+---w-11 ·f~ 111 'lhe bottom o(: 5 . =-, · '! ... ..,... .,._ , rs )lcCullollgh'1 car was northbound on call. jact.nl to the J4,00G-studenl school. The final vote ln Coacrmional districl pool ~ 7:~ 'p.m. by hil tmothee CMtlllllt u. _ r or .... = '' t~ tracks 100 feet south of the Crown "How do you report a kllling1" the Howtver .• as the_,ofHcers -from Santa was d•I~ tevenl day• beclUK raultl who retritVed him and bqan ac1~ ~ "f," ;::: .._: .-alley Parkway lnterleCUoa,~pe.ralltl to caUerasted. Barbara County, the Cautomla Hi"hway from 31 ol the 421 l'INl>inct! in r--e mJnJ.ste..t... .. mouth-to.mouth renactta. c.....-. '' '""* ....... u.n -. ., ,........ .......... ·--0.-. ,....... ' ,.. .,.....,.... •1 -mino Capiltrano. Lawmen considered the rtportin& done. Pllrol Ud other ne.ighboting agencies County w~ ~ recel~ at election UOn. ...._ 11 ::::;s , .,, "No· one el.le witnessed the high.speed They rolled up lo 8182 Westminster -began thelr~swetps through the 'area, headquarters Af prevfouSly planned. Ambulance ttteridant David Merchant :=::.::-:A • W11"9 •• '1: collision1 which demolished McCullough's Ave .. and found Uberty. UM:n 11 years they were m« With show'ers of rock' Because the precinct "lflll'ker• In the ma"'1811 to i:.evtve the chlld 1'hlte-en-.. .._. ' au ....... , ,.... U·lf 6:ltomobile and inllleted mu!Uple Injuries old, strumming his guitar u candlea-from amall gr_oupa of. youna: peoe_le 31 lnstances did not phone the resulG route to lhe hoapJt•l by rurlher re1U1Clt.. 1::-r::... ;; ..... ,.... .. .. the ~k:Um. • (iloo-CANl>tl!LlGlfr, P•le z1-(Se• \JCSB,..,.,, J) . in lul TueiCliy nl&ht it WU -111'1-~ ... Ind' bear!' lllUll&•;"' ·. .f ,_j I; .. ) ., ' ' • -, DAILY PILOT ~ S " Peru Devastation Viewed From Air )JIOAJID A USAF Cl» OVER PERU (AP) -A, arandlJan4 · v!.W of death. ond des1ruction awept beneath a big U.S. ClJO cargo plane as it dropped eupplies to survivOf'! of earthquake-tom North Ceotral Peru Sunday. •'UnbeUtv>ble," aaid Ule pilot, Capt. Bill Hudlpedt, 1 Vietnam . veteran, as l>e l!Ulded the bl& Hercule1 up the a>-mUe Huaylas Call)'<m. "Wone than auything l have leen in my llfe.11 Budl!Moth lhook his head In dJl!>elief u tbe 1ramport ~ over what was t.it ol Huru. ance a city ol 50,000 at the IOUtbern entranc~ to the canyon. . lit mllea north of Lima. Half the bulld!np had crumbled. Not · a single roof remained Intact. 'I.be government says the earthquake • Wett aeo may have killed 30,000 or more people; a United Nalioos observer a1J1 the cowit more likely will exceed 61 Captured -on~Raps I In Huntington In a atepped-up program Jo make Buntlqton Beech "bot f« druc UHrS," officer& from the police department's Special . Enforcement Detail ( S E D ) J"OUOded up 61 persons on drug charges aver the weekend. Del capt. Grover Payne and Sgt. Ja<t Reinholtz aaid the haul of 29 adults • and 32 juveniles was the largest Jn lhe city's hillory. Forty.five of the arrats ....,. made by Ille SED led by Sgt. G<or&e Renek. His men swept the beaches over tqe Weekend arrestini suspected users of drugs and obtaining information leading to the arrest away from the beach ol ausped<d ..Um ol drugs and marl· juana. Narcotics Detective F..d Williams and officers acting on informltion gain.ed Jn the l:N;adt raids and anned Wllh a search wurapt. arrested teven penons ln Westmlnlter eatly Sllllclay mornlna on drug use and sales charges. Seven more persons were arrested at a bouee on Cameron Street in HunUagton Beach by both SED aJ!l _nU<Otlca detail offlcerl 11 a result (JI lnformatlon pllled from those arrested on ttie beach. Four suspects anesled on c~rges af. potl!ll!Slion d druas and poaesl100. with Intent to ..U are: -Thcmu WUIJama 12, 150 7tb Street, Norco -Bemadelle Pamy, 19, 11411 Valencia Street. Huntlnaton Bqch --Gary Bamtt. 13, mn Olive Slie<I, Wealminlter -Danny 0. Bruyn, 25, 111 N. O.t -~ 0ranae Ali othm held on cbll'les of simple • 50,000. A:tl estimal6d 100,000 mart are homelelai injured or both. Hudspeth reached for the throttle and headed his giant craft 11 miles up the gorge to :Anla, the target of the airdrop. Ant:a, a village of , about 2,IJj)O w~s devastated, but by some freak of terrain enoulh of , the town's tiny atrsttip wu spared from avalanc~a that .hurtled down the 18,000-foot ·Andes to )t!ave it .Ull uuble by 1maU aircraft. A quatter ton of sleeping bag~, blanket. and food rptlons was packed m plastic· "'._rapped survival kits and stapled inlo U tar1e crates. The back bay of . the plane lifted open as Anta r.ame into view· and the .crates were shoved oyt, two ,at a ~me', as the Hercules made six p'aues over the runway. Carhuaz, another town of about 10.000 people,' came into view u the plane pulled out of· ita last drop run. "Incredible, unbelievable ," was all the crew ·could say as they looked down on the nmbles. A few ml.Jes further up the canyon was Yungay, which uSed to be home tOr some 33,000 people. All that could be seen of it were the tops of four palm trees where the town square had been and a statue of Christ, with arms outstretched, which marked the hilltop cemetery. •A slide of rocks and mud two to three miles wide had hurtled clear across both banks of the Santa River at the bottom of the canyon, buried Yungay and smashed against a mountain ledge on the other side. Only about 2,500 residents of Yungay 11re believed to have survived. The Cl30s fly twice a day, dropping suppijee over the canyon t~n picking up Sarvlvors at the evac uation center in <Jdmbote. 'They are brought there by heUcoptera and vintage C47t that can just manage to land and take off at Anta. . More than half of Chimbof.e, a thriving Industrial port of 80,000 people ls gone. Jts fishmeal processing plant Is partly ruined, Engineers estimated it will lake many months to get Peru's only steel plant there to operate again. But the undamaged airfield bu been turned lnto headquarters -for planes and reacue teams from 1 { nations. Woman Escapes ' Death .As Auw . . Flies Off Rodd A &t-year-old Los Angeles ~man nar- rowly eilcaped death ln a apictaculM morntnc crash in San Clemente today when her car vaulted a freeway pard rail, aailed 150 feet .thro~ lhe air, then roU«I up an embankment. • ------cc---..,.-------..... --,--_,,..----:-...,,:=:------.,-.,...-----c------· -' .. • .. • tlAll.Y ,II.OT '!le"' •1 •khrf KM!lltr LAGUNA FIREMEN HAUL INJURED JOSEPH RAMOS JR. UP CLIFP AT IRVINE _COYE By B•sk-et to the Teahouse and Through the Living Room to S1fety ~~~~~-'-~~- Cambodians Push Communists Out Of Major Cities PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Cambodian troops 'have driven North Vietnamese iincf Viet Cong Coren out of the outskirts or the clty of Siem Reap and ils airport near the ruins of the ancient ci ty of Aogk1>r Wat, military sopkesmen said today. Military ofOcials said government forces had also recaptured the t o w n cf Kompong Thom, &5 miles north of Phpom Penh. An official spokesman said the Cam· bodian troops counterattacked Sunday and retook Sierii Reap Airport, which had been in Communist hands since Friday night, then ousted Viet Cong and Nbrth Vietnamese troops from bar~ racks on the outskirts of Siem Reap. Siem Reap, 150 miles northwest of Phnom Penh, ls the gateway to the 9th cenf,ury ruins of Angkor Wat and AnlJ<or Thorn~ v~lled Y, • ~:.of loUrlsts annually. • • ·• In Saiaon. south Vietnamese spokesi;nen said a s,ooo.man ~ Viet·· n~ tulc !orCe Na finished ·-drive to clear the e.aat banlt or the Mekong River but •as fem~g inside Cam~ bodia to link up with aovernment marines opera Ung nearby. Four Saved From Surf As Rented Boat Sinks Four men were rescued fro1n the treacherous water and rocks below Laguna's Abalone Point Saturday .ar. etrnoon when their rented boat -struck a reef and sunk, injuring two of them . Lifeguard Jack Linke 3ided Anthony A. Speer, 42, of Tustin, who was swim- ming i11 the water. He was assisted by a Harbor Department rescue craft Lifeguards, Jeff Q u a m and Mike tlartley Y:ent to the assistance of a father and son wtto were injured and cliftging to the rocks. They were identified as Joseph Ramos Sr., 53, and ~seph Jr.. 22, both of La Puente. Both were injured. Thi: junior Ramos reportedly had a broken leg and his father suffered shock and lacerations. A fourth victim. unidentified. was pick· ed up by the commercial fishing boat "Newporter" out of Newport Beach, guards said. Guards said the father and sOn could not be taken off the rocks because cf injuries. Laguna Beach firemen responded to aid in a cliff-face rescue. Working below lhc Merel K. Gaede home cantilevered over Abalone Point, firemen de scended from the Gaede tea house in the cliff face below the home and lowered re~ue baskets by rope. · They worked the injured father and son successfully to the top and carried the victims · through the living room or the posh home to transport t h e m to the hospital. ·Saddlebac~ . OpenForum . -. · Reqilested Saddleback Collece atuden.ts ha.ve can. ed.Jof citizen 'backing tonight in securing what'" tome have call~ "semi-free 1peecli,' on campus or a proposed. "open forum .'' Trustees of the college, who have had a cwnmlttee working en the matter, are to take it up tonight at the 7:45 meetinc. John Bothwell, student body irestdent. In asking citizen support. of lhe open forum, said Saddleback student,, have proved for two years that they are pa·tien( and cooperative. 1bere has never been a major incident on campll!, he said. The forum, proposed by Bothwell April 27, would apply only to students at Saddleback. Application (or the forums would be made through the school 24 bours in advaoce. " The guidelines propo!td are: -At least 24 hours In advance oC the proposed forum an application from the Coordinator of Student Activities must be initiated. -Use of the propcsed forum , open of Student Activities and the Supertn- mu.st be approvved by the Coordinator of Student· Aoti.vltes and the Superin· tendenVPnsident.. -The grassy ire1 oortbeast of the Student Center will be 1 used for forums. In the event it is unavailable, the Coordinator of Student · Activities will designate another location. -Classes may not be dismissed for the purpose of participation in any forull!: -Each forum shall be no more than 30 minutes in length. -Designated hours for forums shall be between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Monday thrcugh Thursday. -No amplificalion system, electronic or othefwise, shall be used. ~No.. presentation_ may advocate the overttirow of our e-s ·tablished governments, call for violence on ar off campus. contain obscenities, stimulate the disruption of the classroom process or engage in characler assassina- lion. -Only one person may be allowed to speak at one time. -Speakers must allow questions from the audience. -Violation of the above rules wilt result in the suspension of the privilege of using the open forum for a period or one quarter. possession of narcotics are: Arrested in the narcotics sweep wtte: -Michael Kortje, 22, 113 N. Gates St., Santa Ana Califomla llJihway Patrolmen ·,.Id Marg'aret Blanche ·Kelley, whose last addres wu In Los_ An&eles. suffered facial fractures and other hurts in the 7:55 a.m. c r a ah on the AvenUda Magdalena offramp of the San Diego Fretway. The U.S. Command in Saigon reported today that a helic~ter. gunship of the tst Air Cavalry D1vl&on Sunday ac- cidentally opened ~ lnlo aliied•lrOo!l< in the Cambodian Fish Hook region and --killed two South Vietnamese-soldlers and- wounding 17, one of them an American adviser. -Di~ Parker, 18, 421 7th Street, Huntinalon Beoch · -Wiilfam Helm, 18, 9915 Maplewood 5trfft Bellflower. -Jo'iei>h Ryclak, 11, 16118 Chadmorit &tree~ Covina -George Hernandez. 19, 7112 Bon.villa Street, La Palma ' -Donald Carton, 19, 11171 Midway Street, Los Alamltos -Michael Larkins, 18, 2&n Eucalyptus ltree~ Long Beach -Tommy Huneycutt, 19 -Richard Scaife, 21 --Olarlts '11teri.ault. 23 -Michael Powers, 2l -James Jones, 21 -Robert Woods, 22 -Gall Levesque, 19 -!Van Dowdy Jr.123, M5 Locust Street, Long Beach DAILY PILOT The woman'• auto narrowly mlsSed a state. )'lighw1y•maintenance crew, then flew past another oncoming auto on the offramp before hitting the ground and roJling: Firemen pried the woman from the demolished' auto, which was resting on its top in thick bushes. The woman was still undergoing emergency treatment this morning. Aidt:s at South Coast Community Hospital described her condition as salisfactory. Patrolmen said the woman, alone in the late model car, was making a tum out of the northbound Jane of the freew3y and apparently misjudged the offramp curve at high speed: The auto hit a steel rail, went airborne, sailed at treetop level across a wide island, then hit the ground at the onr&np to the freeway-. - At that point the car flipped, missing an oncoming car, then rolled several ....,..,. h•ll H•...,._ .._. times up a bank. '- L.,... .._, ,._..... y.n.y At one point in !ls flight the car c ... "-s.. c-.... nicked the top of a tree abo\It 10 feet off •'-' -··•. t>lt,t.lllGE C04ST 'Ua'-ISMIKG COM,AN'I' IJ.~ 6' """"' ll•Mrt N. w • .4 Patrolmen at the scene descri~ the .,., . ..,t _, Publl•h.r' victim aa ... very lucky woman." ·-----:Jiil-ll~Ciilr;'-----1--"==~"--"--=-'-"-"--~--­ Vlc• ,.~iloRl!I ....i Gf;-tl Mwl ... 1h• .. •• K••vil Ed1'fr Tllo"'•' A. M11rphin• M .... 11111 f.dHO< lich•r4 '· Ntll Swill ~ C-lr Editor """" C•t• M-t :DI Weit .., ltrell .....,.._1 •••~"'nu w.1 tallilf1 ...,1~.,.. ~ hotdl: m ,_, ,.._ "-"""'*' .,_,,, 11111 .. ,ch .,.,,.....,. i..i ~I JU fW'!ll El C...."" I: ... -· l. From P .. e J CANDLELIGH'.f flickered bealde the straagled bcidy of his woinl.JI. ~ Bibie lay opon her breast and potted pJints 3Urrounded her. ~ "Be quiet -she knows what we are doing," the yowig slayer e1ulloned pGUce. Ht was cllargcd with murder, but determined incapable of standing trial by reason of tnsulty aJtd committed to Atascadero State Hospital for treat- ment. · He wu released s.ix months later to 1tand trial. but re-oommitted t o Metropolitan State Hospital In· NorWalk after a jufy ,decided again lhat he was lnSane. ' •• Liberty waa freed again by tceidenl on June 2, 1960 when 1 •urae handling paperwork ml!takenly checked h1m out ' as a routinely dlscharged paUent. Author!U~s Whipped up 1 furore over Liberty's release and he read the stories in newspapers and turned himM:lf in to a Sanla Ana atto.mey. •:a.·1 perfectly meek afld mild," 11\t lawyer told lawmen. t Last Thursday, four allied troops in· eluding twG Americans, were· killed when a lOlst Airborne Divlslon gunship strafed ground forces near the demilitarized zone (DMZ). The U.S. Command said today U.S. troop strength in Vietnam was at its lowest level in more than three ~ears with 425,450 U.S. servicemen in the war zone, down 2,600 from the previous w~ek and the lowest since the week ending March 31, 1967, when there were 420,900 men on duty there. . . . The allied campaign tn cambodta entered Ill seventh week today and military 1pokesmen said, 11,442 Com· munist troops had been kill~ and 1,292 captured along with 18,994: lnd1vfdual and 2,521 crew-served we1pons "aaj, 6,727 tons or rice. The command sald' 268 Americans llad been kiiled and t,023 wounded in Cam· bodia while South Vietnamese losses were placed at 685 killed and 3.107 wounded . · The U.S. command reported loss. of three American planes to ground f~re in South Vietnam. two of them 1et fighters. Two men were li!ll-ed as missing and one killed in the crashes. ... UCSB .•. darting through the shadows down side streets and in and out of apartment buildings. Tear gas was tise4 1n Aumerous loca· lions, deputies said, w:here the officers were met with larger pockets of resistance. The streets were otherwise barren due to the sundown-to.sunup curfew first im· posed when violence escalated Saturday night after relatively mlnor incidents occurred last Thursday and Friday. At one point many in the large crowd had~ered the bank with rocks break· ing most of its windows: ~ A 'Molotov cocktatl-was tos:sed on Its rpof -bumlnt, out before any damage was doni -and a 1m8.ll fire 'caused by a nare which en.ipted on its steps it was extinguished as deputies arrived. Another firebomb burned out harmle1'1y in an.intersecti011 several blocks away. Authorities said the crowd. had march· ed to lhe area of the bank after attending 1 "Renaissance pleasure ·flirt' seven blocks away In a large vacant lot. ·---------- " • There is now only one airline serving Orange Counly. And they've just In-OChiJrllltlr111 creased the ir fares . Now, If you want to save $10 .50 round lrip, we suggest &IWJllll you fly PSA from LA instead. The PSA air fare from LA 10 San Francisco Is I tqu11•. still $15.75, including tax. • ' . PSAll¥-.Jllll lllft, • .. -~ .. ' \_ _______ _ I I T ·-• . BnntingtoD , . ' V~L 63, NO. 136, 3 SECTIONS. 31 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS I \/Pl T...,,..,. • NarcOtics · ~w~e.p_ ~ets 61 Huntington St.eps Vp ProgramAgai~tDrug Users ' ' lh I stepped-up P"'CllD1 to make Huntington Beech "bot for dntc _..," otficen from .tba pollct departmem.,1• Special Enf........,t Detail t S II: D) rounded up et per-on drug dlar,.. over the weekend. Det. Capt. Grover Pa)'ne and Set. Jack Reinholtz said'the haul of It adults and 32 juveniles ' was the Jargesi in the city's history. Forty-five of the arl"ests · Wert .ni~e by the SEO led by SgL George Rentk. •Hs men swept the beaches over the weekend arresting suspected users o! drugs and obtaining information leadin& to the arrest away from the beach ~f suspected sellers of druta and mari~ Juana . Narcotics Detective Ed Williams and New Rioting Breaks Out . . At Islµ Vista olflcen actlnl '"' llllormalloo pined In the· •tiu<b Tildi .... armed with I llll"Cfl W,WNDl, aJTMtecl 'lrVell ptl'90nS in W-'oarly Sunday .mornin& on drug UM and Illes chars•· Sevtn -men penom were arrested It a houee on 'Cameron Street in .Huntington Beach by both SED and 'aarcotic1 .detail officers as a result of Jnformitlon gained lrom UKlle arre1ted on the belch;---. • Fo'ur lsusj>ects arreated on charges or pOQaeaion (If drugs and pClfisession with intent to• sell are: · -Thomu WJW1ms 22, 150 7th Street, Norco -BerMdetle Paskey, 19, 1441 Valencia Su..t,. Huolin&f<in Beach -Gary Bamtt. 23, ll472 Oli~ Strott. W..tminater IA1Je1•t1 SOt1glJt t 2 -Dlm\f De Bnzyn, ll, 171 N. Oak Si..et,OrQF . All otbtn bold oo dlar,.. of lilllple poastl&iGo of nar<Oticl are : Arnlltd In lhe ---W.rt: -Michael JCortJe; 221 lfJ N: "Gates St., Santa Anl -Diane Parker, 11, '21 7th Street, H1.tntfngtoa BeaCh · --W1111am Helm.-11, 9915 Maplewood Street, BeUflower. · · -J6stph R,yciak, ·11, 11111 Chadmont Street, Covina -George Hernandez, II, 7111 Bonvllla Street, La Palma -Donald Carton, 19, 11171 Midway s1r .. 1, LQs AJamlto& · -Michael Larkins, II, 2112 Eucalyplul Str..t,Lon&Beach 3rd Candleligh~· Killi.ng Rep0-~ted- -Tommy Huneycutt, 19 -Rlj:hard S<alf•, ll --Ch4rles Theriault, 23 -Ml~ael Powers, 23 ~~mes JOl!ff'-21 .,-Jloberl WOi>ds, ll ~~ Lev~ue, lt -Ivan Dowdy Jr., 23,"' Locust Street, .Long Beacll . -Steven Harris. 18, 9071 RhodW Str~t. HunUngton Beach -Beverly Brewster, 18, 5611 Abrlhaal Street, Westminster -Bobby Shepherd, 11, 1738l K .. laoo Lane, Huntington Beach -Kenneth Perry, 18, 211 Cheltnut Street, Monrovia -Carl Scialla, 19, MOf Granada Slrttt, El Monte Agnew Due ·On Coast For Meeting By JOUN VALTERZA OI "" O.ltr "1111 s .... BROLIN AND YOUNG IN SCENE FROM !MARCUS WELBY MD' In Huntington Buch, Young Actoril Parenti Rejoice Seventy high-ranking federal ind state olficial1 -probably Including Go>. Rooald Reagan and Vice Pl'elidcmt Spiro Apew, are upecled to arrive in Newport Beach and San Clemente today and Tuesday. Informed sources indicated the. ranking officials wOUld hold several days of COO· ferencea on intergovernmental relatloM, p<Obably 1t tilt w..wu Wbite - ~lnSanClantnte . E1••.••1y Qi ,~ a~h .AiDOw is expected lo arrive ...,. -late today II tht Newporter Ina la )'fewport ~ James Brolin Gets '.llV. Honor GOY. 11e9ca wu "JIOried to be the olflefal iloet fll the mettl,_ ,.r1ea, bul pmi ..,_ at lbe eapltoJ today .... Id neither i.:;;;;;inn, iior cJOriy the reports. The Huntington Beach parents of an Emmy award winner were ft1tiDc this morning after a night of dining and dancing to celebrate the success ol ~J8. year-0ld James Brolin. BroUn, oldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bruderlin, 8122 Indianapalis Ave .. won· the award for the outstaoding sup- portting perfo.rmance in a dramatic ser- ies. Brolln plays obert Young's assistant in the "Marcus Welby, MD'' series, which garnered four Emmys. "It was the first year of the series -James didn't think anyone could win his firat year," his mother, Mrs. Helen Bruderlin said this J!l0l1ling. Brolin won the aw'ard over such other nominees as Greg Morris ol Mission Impossible and T1ge Andren of Mod Squad. •• "We had a beautiful nlght," Mrs. Bruderlin said of the ceremonies at the Century Plaz.a in Los Angeles. .....Srolin. a· graduate of Harbor High School, Newport Beach, atudied theater J .uts at UCLA and signed a contract with 11th .Century Fox in 1951. He has played several small parls -he was in The Monroe& series -but Marcus Welby, MD gave him his first major -role. Brolin is still under contract to 20th Century Fox and will be busy on "Marcus Welby, MD" fot some lime. The Bruderlln family maintained a home at IJl Via Undine on Lido ISie be- ffn moving to lJuntington Beach 1n 1963. Although Henry Bruderlin is a home designer and engineer, his children have .... found success in the entertainment I~ dastry. James's sister;' Susie Brnderlin, a former Miss Huntington Beach, Aloha ~Queen of Orange County and 1'.laid of California, nOw is featured in TV oom- me'rcials. Another son, Brian, owns a recording studio in Hollywood. The Bruderllns' fourth child, Barbara is an bonor student at Edison High School and will graduate Thursday. School Budget Studied Tonight STILL A,T LAllOE Su1poctod Kllltr ~llltrty ' Who WU lhot and cJwnp!'d ntar·S-1 Aquallc· Park In Huntington Beach • M1orina llhared 'a trailer It tbe ieo.ta M..a adiJras with Liberty: and two other men, . me of whcm is in cuJtody .and • awallinC trial 'in connection with the murder'. . Lawmen in. San Diego said today thit Liberty and the auburn-haired woman who waf with him whe• Greystack pick- ed them up fled the murder BOent la lrioo 's"late model Peu1eot automobile. Investigators noted that Irion, like !See CANDLEUGlll', Pap I) There were no1repiorts on the ~ that the Agnew arrival Is. llnltild to tbe conferences · at the San Clemente lM and the Western White House of the government relations group. «.. In past vislts Agnew has spent quiet visits at the Balboa Bay Club, IDs press akfes said he was due to return to Washington, D.C., from California Tues- day. The appearance in Newport wu pr-es~med to be a stopover. The San Clemente events reportedly will' ·get under way late Tuetdly with conferences between about 20 Califorma State officials and about 50 from the rt:!t of. the nation. Several senators and repreeentatives were expected to attend, but their names were not known . Huntington Boy Nearly Drowns Experimental Desalt Plant Under Study Off Beach A preliminary budget of nearly $4.7 million will be given to trustees of the Huntington Beach City School District for review at their 7:30 p.m. meeting, Tuesday In Dwyer School. The new i>udgf.t represents an increase of about $700,000 with a 40-cent i.cre1se In the Cunut $2.13 tu rate. The tu increase w&! approved by voters in April. Jt becomes effective in 1970-71 along with the budget. * * * * * * Lib_erty Friends Grilled Huntington Beach detectives ,...·ere dispatched to various areu of Orange County today to re-interview all persons who had contact With RObett-w. 4berty, the "Candlelight Killer" who is suspected of claiming a third victim over the weekend. this man, thinking that he really didn 't commit any murders." A tw~y,ear-old Huntington Beach boy nearly drowned Sunday night art:er falllnt into a swimming pool in hls parents' backyard. Darrell R. Richards, 19371 Worcester St., was found in the bottom of the pool afound 7:50 p.m. by his mother who retrieved him and began ad .. ministering mouth-to-mouth resusclta· lion. By TERRY COVILLE Of 11141 De(ty "Mtt Sl•ff An experimental water desalinization plant might be built ·near thf' ocean in Huntington Beach or Newport Beach If federal officials can find a local agency "° help finance it. La111don W. Owen,~ secretary-manage~ of the Orange County Water Dislfict (OCWD), &aid this morning his agency is considering the proposal made by the Federal Office or. Saline Water. "They're looking at sites from Los Angeles to San Oles:o," he said . "This area Is just one posslbllity.1' Owen said the plant, i£ built along • lhc oiange Coast. would produce a sma ll quantity of fresh water -about three Faulty Outlet Causes Blaze ' A faullJ. tlectrlcll <OllJJtciion Jn the upetair1 bedroom cost the ·oner of a Jluntlnglon Buch l!!>nie $1,QOll.loJlamago Sunday nllht when a fire broke out al'!d ruined the {urnisbins:s. F'lr'emen were suriffl'iOntd to thf blaze at 11162 Peppertree Drive at 7:M p.m. •nd quenched the names within 1% mh11ut.es. The occupant, ~1r1. Edward Krause, auffered no injuries, firemen 1ald. --.. million gallons a day -converted from salt water. "It could be expanded lo 12 million gallons of water a day,•!' he added. The purpo.se of the plant would be to develop · w4t11r desalil\iZ&tion technl· ques for use on a large sca1e. "we coUlll, hOwever, use 90me ol this water to mix with waste water for reclamation. But 12 million gallons a day is less than one percent of the water used in Orange County," 0 w c n •plained. lniUal cost ot the small desalinization .. ant is estimated at $12 million, ac- cording lo Owen. An exact site for il hasn 't been picked, and may not District officials have estimated !heir needs in 19'fo..7t at an• exact figure of $4,692,T13. Trustees will have a chance Tuesday to change any part of the budget they feel necessary. . More than $1.6 million of the budge:t will come from the di.strict tax, while the. remailtder will come 1tom state, coonty ud other s"1f<:u. Sclaoob Helping "We feel slron.gly that IOllle people have not told us lhe truth,"' said Oet. Sgt. Mooty McKennon. "ll°1 p>ssl,blt. !hat une people hive actually tried. to stielter "He is an e:itremely dangerOIJ! man. Tb>se who shelteTed him could easily end up Uk victlin next Ume. Candles are cheap." · Uberty, Z3, is accused by polict of being the trigger man in the murder of Thomu Carmine Altorin:l who WIS shot by a .22 Clilber pilfot March II on a dtstrlecl HuntJnCIOO·Beacb rood. Handicapped t~ Get Cam.P bt in Orange County, he cautioned. This year send the kids to summer arta and crafts, sports, n:curaions Ind ln their nellhborhopds wltMu~ 1nyOM Other agencies, such as t h e special ' eveat.s duilned to meet each making Uy dilUncUonl;'' he Aid. Metropolitan Waler District (MWD), are camp. child'• creative and ricreatiqnal needs. "Thlt is• whit burns me up, ~·, also considering the federal proposal. It's an easy way to lain 1 few "We're not going to tqregate because such a sUCma attaChed to them. I wish "'Ibey hope to start the J><Oject by moments of p<ac• and quiet .,,,..nd of any kind of timltaildt," 1111 Ll!Obn •vei'J ll:hoor dialljct ,...Id btp Its chlld- ll<X\ fall. Results of such 111 experlmtnt the houo< and !ht kids l<am all ltlnds -camp wlU be •op<11 'to normolly rtn tocet11erl•. . · .. eouJd prove quite helpful ln the reclama· of new K'livities. ~ · ia wet! is-haad.ial~ In the F~ta.in 'Vliltey ~ Pis~. 1 tlon of alt water throughout the s\ate,'' Yea, tt•s easy. tJnlnl, of CO&rle the ··Chll*'m. ' · 1 • • r Gisler SchoOI · petetts:hlve ' al~ : Ambulanct attendant David Merchant managed to revive the child while en route to the hospital by further resu.scita.. tion and heart massage. Oruge. It'll still try to rain Tue!ld•:v morning, but not very hard, while afternoons wlll be slightly 11Unny and temperatures ranging Crom 15 along the shOre to 73 further ·in- land . INSmE TOD~Y McGautM and Crampton '"°' become 121 wtU knman "' Drtd Scott whtn the Supreme Court maktl a landmark decirion o,. th• .<kith. t><ilaltw. Page 12. °"""'said. child is handicapped or ~ · .,,..~Jtoklhlt>tht llandlcapPed chit<I • iiunclled •'J>rojtct'COmp°' to~ 11\i I Owen ·pointed · to the· iri sing cost or disturbed;! 't\t:n1 tbe·.~p ~ are. : neats tO' bit dncluded in activities wUh of thdr. handloa~·llhlktrtn 1te' the; =::-, • '*'" ,·;i1 1 1::•• I t · imported water as the prime rtason,-...closed. _ _ , . riOf'inel chJliltiir""ai that•.Lhef :&n eerve m • ~ -o; .,-• ~ '-:-• e.t1~1M • ~~ ., ~· · ..... "'4l't 4f 11 tor deiiliilizatlon~ Allan Lif-'Ol"i. an ·. t ·d u c a t ro ti 1 I . as · ..me.what of a model · ftr than," 'Ibey hive .t•lled monq-by hokUng ~ =::. in -.. ::= = : "It ~ costs about $S5 8"i'l acre foot coordinator for the &ale ·Diagnostic he expl1lned; • • "".11 . varloiJa · tund.P.iiina events, ·~hklln1 • c-kt 1' tr::~ it: to bring~CoJorado River water to Orange School f« NearukiglCJfly lfancHcapped Secrqallng the chllClren. Li fs_o n Satutdly chi~·· mmes. ~ ... ~ =--,...... l' T.......... . County, In the next 15 years that price Childre.1, is dedicateCI lO Qpening those claims, tenda to place labell on tbcm Parent.a who , have chlklrtn rangln1 1 :=:. ,..,. 'l :.:.=; ~ might rise to $90 or $100 an acre foot." doors in the Huntington Beach area. which' they do not dettrve. betwetn four. nd 1 "•H and lt yurs f • ....,......_. n 'Ml• • .,. 11 Owen said directors ol the OCWD Beginning June is, he will open the ~ "Btfore we libeled •them tiley were of ~i can ebtltn ,.,. ~formiltkln :'.. u.:: ~ .......... ,,.~ hayen't decided ~et on whether to help Smlle-A:WhiJC Day Cafnp at 14512-BiM:h , topther and bufc11ly ·pt ~lon·· with abou , the 1cafftR1.by pbODtdl 63N331"~ • ..._.. 11 build such a dffahnlzatlon plane Bl•d.; wlllch w!ll I~-a .~4'l!!ll'.,r, 0111 ano411t!•.~,)1 ~\'t and plll\·liifethtr 184 a. , • . ..1 t • • ~,__ __________ _, .• ' ........ ~:.< .. ~ "'f ~ °; I u ~f -' ' , ' .. • • • • I DAll.Y l'ILDT " Sheriffs Recognition Hits Snag A btaten candk!ate ln last week's Primary Election today asked that recognltlon of James c . Musick as re- •locted sh<rill be withheld pending a court hearing inlo the legality ol his ret.um to office. Super!« Court presiding Judge William C. Speirs issued the t e m po r a r )' restraining order asked for by candidate Marshall Norris and set the issue for hearing July 1 before Judge Robert L. Corfman. Noni! argues that he was placed at a "tremendous disadvantage" in the primary election by virtue of Mu.sick being listed in first pl.ct on the sheriff. coroner ballot in all five Orange County districts. He unsuccessfully appealed to Judge Harmon G. Scoville lut May 27 for the scrapping of all ballots prepared by county clerk William E. St John and the rctaUon ol the names of the two candidates according to election law. Judg• Scoville rejected the peUtloo despite st John's asairances that the correc:Uon COUid be made thtou&h the prlnUng ol special ballots. St John admitted that the top llsUng of Musick was in error and ahould hive been spotted when ballots were checked by h!s office. A col'ftCt distribution would have given Norris top spot in the second and fourth districts. Norris Jost the election by 208,941 votes to 58,733 with 976 ol 1022 precincts counted.. A big factor In tbat defeat he sajd today, was "the great adv1ntage given to Musick by ballots which lilted him ID all intent. and purposes u an incumbent." . Norris argued th1t Musick coold not be regarded u an incmnbent because the DOW combined post ol aherlff-corontr was p ing on the ballot for the first time. The post was created early this year by the Board of Supervisors. Norris will ask Judge Corfman lo veto the e:ntlre vote collected by MUl:lck in the. second and fourth di5tri~ or, altemltively, dilcount the June 2 election for aberiff-coroner and allow the race to bt contested ag1in in November wtth the: n1mes of both candid1tes correctly rotated. From Pqe 1. U~B ... -began their iweept throu&h the area, they wtre met with mo.era ol rocks from mall ch>uPI ol )'OWll poople dartia( lhroup the abadowl down lid< atreeta and In and out d aportment buildings. Tear e•s wu 11sed Jn aumerot11 loca. tlons, dtpuUes aaid, Where the offioer1 were met with larpr pockets of retlstance. The 1treets were otherwise barren due to the aundown-to-IUmlp curfew flnt im· posed when violence. escalated Saturday ni1ht after relatively minor Incidents occurred last Thursday and Friday. At one point many in the Jar1e crowd had showmd the bank with rocks break· Ing most of its windows. A Molotov cocktail wu tossed on its roof -burning out before any damaae was done -and a small fire caUled by a flare which erupted on Its steps It wa.s extinguished as deputies arrived. Another firebomb burned out harmleuly in ID intersectioll teVeral blocks IWlf. Authorities said th! crowd had march· ed to the area of the bank after attending a ··Renaissance pleasure faire" ae.ven blocks away in a large vacant lot. Less than 500 in number when it began. the crowd grew quickly to between M>0-1,000 u the young people moved throu&h Perfect Park ln the center d Jsla Vista down the main 1treet. to t.he bank. DAILY PILOT O•AlifGI! COAST l"Ulll5HING mMP'Afll'I lt1~rt N. W1M l"rc.lldelll .,... l"ubllllw ·J1,k a. Cvrlt y Vb ~...,!Olnl ..... O..W11 M ...... Tlio11111 K11"1I Editor lho111•• A. Mv1,•i111 .......,.,_ Edllw Alktt W. l 1f1t ~-lfdlllr w.-..,...._.Offlc• 17175 .... it a..,1, •• ,4 M1ili11t .Ycl•1111 r.o. ''! 1,0, ,2,~• °'"' Offlu. u..,... lut~: m ,,_, ,._ e<ui. ...... , l» Wu! l1y ltrwt ~ hNfl: 2111 Wtll l•ll1e1 • ...,._,.. .... a.-k: lO$ NOf1~ El """'-••I ~~A. DAll."I" ~LOT. Willl w.11ao 11 ~ ...._ "··~ .. pyll01"<;4 d•llY '" .... $ulto .. y Ill ...... IC! "''~ ,.,.. l t .... ._ ... Mt_. IMC:' Geo•t !MM. H1M111>f:111 .. ,~ ... ,,_ .. , .. ¥1!111, ..... """' ,..., "911Mi .... ltN. Or ..... COIOI P''411:i.fllllf ~ """"""' lloU••tt ••• ,, nu w.i• ..... •:1i111 .. ~ hit~ ..... la Wtll .. y ........ C:..11 NotW. _T .. J' ITI41 '42""4111 ,,_ W••I 1ts 1 Csll Sce.IJH c 1..-..i •~ .. '41·••7• ~ilfii. ,.,.. o.,.,.. (•111 ~ ~ .... --.~. ""'""" ....... d tW ... -"" II" """"'~" .,,.,.... _, .... ~ .. wl-........... ll'lltlilol ., """"'""' ... ,.... ' a-If dlM. ... , ... MN ti Ntw,.., lltdl ~lf<-i.~.C•llWll..._, ~ W '"" ....... U M "*'''ll'l .. INlll U.M ,...lfrlr,, 1'1111111'1' •t11111111itl'I•, u.• _...1,, I • -. - Tops Fish Fr11 Entries • S~ltoGI Bmads . l •Lost~ Precincts • To ~wi ng Vo·te A gap of U votes -and two mbsirir precincts -still has the HunUnston Beach ·City School District bond election in a cllffha111er ail days ~after the eleo- Uoo. . The outcome will not only decide the late or 14.75 million In . local 1ehool conalnlctklo bonds, but -.I.so the abUity ot the city district to borrow state money. "Without those two precincts we have 46.2 percent ol the_ voten who favor- raisins the bond interest rate,'' Charles Frona Page 1 CANDLELIGHT Liberty's first victim, met his slayer while both were under psychiatric care. Mn. Landis w1s an out·patient at Orange County Medical Center along with Llberty, both of them haviai at~ tempted auJcide. Palmer, buslnes.s superintendent of the district. explained today. "We need M.• perceut to win." Palmer also said county oalciali are unable to .tell him which twi dlatrlcto are mis.sins. "U we knew that "\te mi&ht be able to gueu how we'll do." · The cowu remalns the same u (iven lut Friday -5.2$8 favortns the Increaae and 2,181 acamst It. lf approved, the meUJre would place the bond interest limit at 1tven percent instead of tbe current live percent. A year ago voters approved a meuure which allows school officials in the city district to borrow as much 11 $9.75 million from the state to build school.I. "But if we can't sell our own bonds, the state won't cive us money," Palmer explained. Tho city school district must .. u at least $1.5 million of lta own school bond money to be eligible for state aid. At a five percent lntere1t rate the chances of that are slim. Float entered by Banjo Players SqUare Dance Club of Westminster was declared sweepstakes winner in 25th renewal of annual Costa Mesa Fish Fry Parade. Colorful Westminster entry competed with mote than two dozen other floats Saturday in win· ning the top parade. prize. Early on the mornhlg of Jwie 5, 111116, Westmlnater police received a telephone call. "How do you report a killing?" the caller asked. "State official& have appro,ved funds to build an elementary adklol and an intennediate achoo! here. If we 1oae the bond el:ectlon, we ·lose a chance at that money," Palmer said. Do uglas Aides Desc ribe New Manned Lunar Lab -A manned Junor laborat«y which would orblt for 90 day1 during tbe mid 1970s could provide a "substantial ad· vance" in understanding the origin and evolution or the moon, two space scien- tists said 1"\laY. H1rold E. Bauer and Doyle E. Lockwood, both of wh<lm work on the S"11ab program at McDonnell Douglas in Huntington Beach, recommended a modlifcation of the Skylab to carry three men who would study the surface of the moon from a low altitude during dayupt and darkness. 1be first Skylab is plaMed foe launch ln 1m. It would be the first U.S. manned JaboraQy orbiUng the eartn. In a paper presented to the 16th annual ~Una. of, ~e, Am~an, AMconaµUcal ~ In Ananelm, the two u.id the lunar ori>itlng mbolon could fill a gap between the ocheduled end of the Apollo ., Reili; Indi.ans, Cubs Capture Little f:ieague The first 'half of the baseball season Is over for the Sea View Little League with the Reds winning the major division, The Indians capturing the flag in the minor American division ll'nd the Cubs won the minor NaUonal division. All other leasue! have opened action tor the second half of the season with most leagues featuring several close tan&]es for the top spot. League standlnp through Saturday are: flOUMTAIM VALLI V LIAGUI • L T Qnlllllll , ' • , .... , ' • Plr11ft ' ' • Melt '"' ' ' • ,l r•v1t ' ' • 01'1,.,!t ' ' • Ooll;t ri ' ' • Phllllft • , • HUNTtNGTOfll VAllt:Y LIAGUI • l T Ang1l1 , • • 1ncr11n1 ' • • White .,,. ' ' • ·~"' ' , • ,..,, • ' • Y•nlo.-• ' • OCI AM VllW MATIOMAl llAGUt: • l r. ···-' ' Plr.i .. ' • • C~u'JI 1111 It , ' • Gl1111ts ' ' • -.. ' ' • '""'• ' ' • """ • ' • ""' • , ' ll;OllNWOOD LI AIUI • l T Glt 11t1 • • ' ~Sit • ' ' ' ' ' CfrdlMll ' • ' ~lratf'll ' ' • y-• • ' Af1911t • • ,. _c. .. ' " • ..... v1aw LI AtUI • l ' .... ' ' • -~· • • • (1'11l11tll ' ' ' l •t'ttl ' ' • Plrtlfi • • ' Glt~li ' OOLOIN WIST l"OMY LIAGUI 1 • • l T '"'' ' ' ' t>od•trJ ' ' • Plrt!Q · l ' • .... ' •• ··-' ' ' (1rt1~11 ' ' 0 l"lll.llhl1 ' ' 0 G1tn" 0 ' ' Swim Gym Set -At Marina High Swim Gym, a way for women . to atay fit, ia under way at Marina High School and Edlaon High S.hool,-accordlng- to the Huntlnglon Beach Recreation and Parks Deparunent. The claue1 are he:ftl from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. •acb Monday and Wednesday. A SS realtlraUon fee, coverin1 the entire !Ive wttk stsslon, may be pald at the Rtcrta!lon Center offlci. A second •wk>n wlU at.Ii rt July 7. Cluses will be limited. • pfOITam in 1974 and the beginning of more advanced moon uploratlon in the 1980s. "When correlated with the information obtained Crom surface operations," they said, "t~e orbital data would .provide a substanU1l advance in the un· <!erst.anding of lunar origin, evoltU,ion and current morphology, as well as in· dical!ng the appropriate direction for future lunar exploration.'' Forms Available For Huntington Art Cont.est Entry forms are aow av11lable for the 1tale-wide 11'1 fprwn ProlpectUJ.Ar~ '70 1Ponsored by the city of Huntlnfton Beach and Internationa l Art Scholarships , a group or businessmen interested in both art and promotion of the area. The forms ai.d list of rules are available by wrihng PO Box 1362, Hun· tington Beac'h. Final date to retur• the cards is June 27. Two entries are permitted each pro- fession1l artist. Every entry must be registered by the card form and ea ch must carry a fee of $4. The show offers the more than 1,000 California artists expected to enler an opporlun ity to compete for $2,500 l• prlie money. More tha n 200,000 visitors are expected to see the show at the Hun· tlngton Center maU from Sept. 13-25. So'me 15;000 will be sranled to students of art as-a result of the competition directed by Jason Wong, of the Long Beach Museum of Art. The scholarship money will be donated by buslnessmeB of Huntington Beach afld Orange County and the scholarships will go to art students throughout Southern CaUfornia. The entry forms are also available at the City Hall. 520 Pecan Ave. in downtown Huntington Beach. 2 GWC Leaders Chide Leaflet About Demotion . . Lea flets censuring the Golden West Col lege adminl!tration for alleged "ir· responsibility'' in the demotion of Or. James Catanzaro were termed in- ae<:urate today by two student govern- 111ent officers. In a joint statement , Student Body President Lanny Fowler and President- e!cct Glen R. Burch. said the fl yers di stributed anonymously among stud ents Friday were unauthorized and did not represen\ .lhe student eovemmenr1 opi· nlon on the issue. •·The flyer indicated that the student government censured the adminis tration of this college for their rUsmissal of Dr. James Catanzaro a9 chairman of the !Octal scienctt: division," the sllte- me.nt read . .. InUTI\,,uch u l~ student government has not met to di!CUSS this Issue there could not have been. nor Is there now pending, any action of this nature." The offending leaflets labeled answers given by owe President ~ Dudley Boyte In connecOoft With the derfibl.lon Atlached to tach leaflet were the aa "not only Inadequate but absurd .'' na;mes, addresses and telephone numbers or the colleae'iliOarit of1rusfffs. Dr. Catanzaro's change In •!Slgnment , from administrative to leadl:nig duties has caused general unrest amoog 1tudenu, many of whom sald I.hey would complatn to trustees by telephone. Students 'o Use UCI Computers Next year, 1eventh and eighth grade students in the Ocean View School District. will be able to get their hands on yet another toy -the computer. In cooperation with UC Irvine, the di.strict will investigate the feasibility of teaching mathematics by computer for one year. Funded through a $60,000 grant by the National Science FoundaUon, the students will use desk-top mini-computer• with 'furnished programs. Six classes wlll be asked to participate In the project, with another six classes used as a control group. A two year follow-up ltudy will test the program. Lawmen considered the reportln1 done. They rolled up to 8112 Westminster Ave., and found Liberty, then II years old, strumniin1 his guitar as candles flickered beside the strantled body of his womaA. A Bible lay oPon her breast and potted plants surro~ded her. "Be quiet -she knows what we are doln1," the youn1 slayer cautioned police. He was charged with murder, but determined Incapable ol standing trial by reason of insaaity ud committed to Atascadero State Hospital for treat- ment. He wu releated a1J raoothl later to stand trial, but re<0mm1Ued t o Metropolitan State Hospital In Norwalk after 1 jury decided 11ain that he wu insane. Liberty was freed 11aln bJo accident on June 2, 1969 when a nurse hudllng paperwork mistakenly checked him out aa a routinely discharged patient. Authorities whipped up a fu!'Jlre over Llberty's release and he read the stories in newspapers and turned himself in to a Santa Ana attorney. '"He's perfectly meek and mild ," the lawye~ told lawme1. Voters approved a chance In the In~ I.ere.st rate! for state bonds in Jut Tuesday's election. This is the second ti.me the. HunUnflOn Beach schools have asked for the in- crease. The same measure .was defeated last February. ''If we lose again we'll just keep p.itttn1 it on the ballot until we win. We need that money," Palmer declared. Wreck Injuries Prove Fatal An elderly Huntington Beach woman .died Sunday night of lnjuriea suffered June 1 in a Santa Ana traffic accident The Or,ange County Coroner'1 Office 1aid that Mrs. Maude E. Sharpe, 70, of 5252 Edinger Ave., died ol a lractured skull and internal injuries. She had been confined to t'ie Santa Ana Community Hospital since the crash which occurred at the intersection of Edinger Avenue and Flower Street. • • There is now only one aiM lne·servlng Orange Counfy. And they've just In· -=-all. creased the1r fares. Now, if you want to save $10.50 Found trip, we suggest you fly PSA from LA instead. The PSA air fare from LA to San Francisco is a still $15.75, Includ ing tax. . .. ,...,.. a llft. • • • _, ------ Schmitz Runoff Stile, Sen .. Jol>n Sclunl\Z (R-Tuslin) wlll lace Democrat David Hartman In • special tti~ ore eJectioo June 30, final uoolflcial results In Tueadlly's sptelal 15th CoogresalOllOI Diltrlct tlectlon show. The tpeeial ballot WU to select a tueesaor for the unes:pittd. term ending next January to the late Rep. James B. UU who died last Matth. Earlier indicaU~ were that Schmitz woold tally enough votes in the two-coun- ty election t.o avoid the runoff, but County Clerk William St John said this morning linal figures show that Sclunltz failed by 2,842 to gain a clear majority of the total votes cast. The unofficial tabulaUon show the state senator with 103,127 votes to 1~.Mt for bis slx opponents. Schmitz easily led the othen in Orange County but they piled up a decisive majority in San Diego Caunty'1 301 precincts. The totals:' Orange County, Schmitz,~ 77,CMtO: opponents 60,m. San DieKO Cou,.. ty, Schmitz 26,047; opponents 45,7&1. ------. ' -.. -.. . • l U~I T.._..... W """-"• All•isw:• Gii OF IST AIR CAY TRY TO KE EP DRY ON HILL 432, 17 MILES INSIDE CAMBODIA Mon10011 S..son Comes to SouthN1t Aila, Brfngl"I StH mlng Rain a nd Mud, Mud, Mud The final vote in Congtessional district was delayed several days because results lrom 31 of tht 421 prtclncta In Orange County were not received at election lltadqusrters., previously planned. ~ b d • R I R d 31~U!<ciW~ki:~~~~·\:;fam-a 1ans epe e s tn last Tuesday oiiht it was necessary to conduct an extensive aearch for the specJBl election ballots Imm thooe precincts and to ban4 count them. The special hand count was completed this morning showing that the run off was necessary. Recapture Cit y, Airport in Count.erattack Schmitz will face another Democrat, Thomas Ltnhart, in November in a run off for the regular t w o • )' e a r Qqmmlonal tern. The U.S. Command said today U.S. troop strength in Vietnam was at .jts lowest level in lllOC'e than three year5 with 425,"50 U.S • .servicemen ln the war zone, down t ,800 from the previous week and the lowest since the week ending March 31, 1967, when there were 420,900 men on duty there. Eight Hijackers Force Airliner To Nuernherg PHNOM PEN!f (UPI) -Cambodian troops ·have dri\itn North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces oot of the oolakirts of the city of Siem Reap and its airport near the ruins r the -ancient city o{ Angkor Wat, military sopkesmen said today. Military offlclals said government forces had also recaptured the to w n of Kompong 'Thom, ~ miles north of. Phnom Penh. Harassed Coleman Vote An official spokesman said the Cam· bodian troops couriterattacked Sunday and retook Siem Reap Airport, which had been In Communist bands since Friday night, then ousted Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops from bar· racks oo the outakirta: of Siem Reap. Counting System Sold NUERNBERG, Germany (UPI) Eight hljacken, including two married couples, used guns to force the pilot of a Czechoslovak state airlines plane to 1and al Nuemberg today, Bavarian border police said. Police said the Ilyushin 14 airliner of' Czechoslovakia'' CSA Airllne was flying a -estic rout< from Klrlovy Vary (Karlsbacl) to Prague wt. the hijackers forced the pilot to alter OM'le. : The hijackers, who also had a 2-yew-. old child with them, were armed with five pjstols, a knife and brass knuckles, police said. The crew did not ""81 lho hijlc-' demands and there were no Incidents on board the aircraft, they said. Twenty~five police . surrounded the plane 1s it came Co rest on the airport apron, they laid. The hijackers left the plane and .surrendered w i t h o u t """lance. Police said the hijackers were held at the airport fOf' initial quest.lonin1, but none of them appeared to understand German. '?be aircraft was scheduled to return from Nuernbtrg to Czocbo:!lovakla at 1:40 p.m., the apokesman said. Stem Reap, 150 mlles northwest of Phnom Penh, ls the gateway to the 9th ctnlllry rulns of Angkor Wit and Aqpor, Thom, vlflttd by lllootands"« !~~~~~~~ ~tastf ~a. to c:lear the tu! bank <i the Me.tong River but wu remaining .Inside t.m: f>!ldl~ta ~ .. wllh IOVl!lta-.Dllrints -.aunc "it>Y. , . . The U.B.i,Command in Saigon reported todly tllll ;. htli<opW gunahip of the 1st Atr tclvalry Division. ·Sunday a(. cidenlally opened fire into allied troops in the Cambodian Fish Hoot rqion and kllltd l!ro'5outh -ooldien od woumliDg 17, OM of them .. American advi.:.nlun.tay, low.' 1lli0d ~ 1 .. eluding two Americans, wtre• tilled when a 101Jt Airborne Division gunship 1trafed ~.',..near the dtmilitariJod mnt --:::;;;jjiiiiiiiiiiiiii By JACK BROBACK OI Wiii o.Mr H9t htff The Coleman Vote Tally System has been sold to a Santa Barbara /inn, it .was announced today. The sutprlit sale of the much-mallgped votli\g ll)'•l«n ''llltii '•• lilliiied pvtla1l1 far ~ musive fGUI up in ~Tit:=:~ of Sanl.a Ana and tht ~. Gyrex Products ol Santa Barbara. No a.ales pt1ce WU dlscJoaod. Gyro wu identifled u a division of, V •ro Inc., a COl"pOnltion headqull'tered in Garland, Texas. 'Gyrex · Di°vfsi-0 Manager W 11 1 f,a m Underwood said nqot.iations for the purchase began five months ago, He said an-active ~ pl'Oll'am Is planned to merGhandile the 'Coleman device na- tionally •. Included In· lie plaM b a propooal t.o be mide Tuesday to 1the Orange COU!.ty Board <i Suptrvilon <i I l'OVIJllp of Orange Counly'1 pr...,,t c.leman system to put 1he macblnes "on ,Hie" with DelLaStrvlctt comput"" for lnltant El R<zncho has the hottest price • zn town! l 10 LB. BAG 2D LI. lq ... 1~7 • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • vote tabulation. County clerk Wiiiiam St John said engineers with the SSS Company or Costa Mesa who operate the system for the county during elections have told him this procedure Is nqt possible. 11\e Coleman' sysltrTi h'S been detctlb- ed by St ·John as "anUquated" and ' 0wbolly incapable of coping with the eotmtf'• CU!'mit volume ol votes:" Ht said ht will prnpose lo the supervisors Tuesday lfl.at the equipment, which cost $1.6 milllon in 1964, be "phas- ed out" over the next te'oti'al years, St ·John proposes renting 1,000 voting machines to "take up the slack in the NOV:~ber general election" and hope- fully avoid the ·snarls which delayed v<lte counting in Jaat Tuesday's primary. St John said the Coleman system had served Its purpose in ttie six years it has been used and saved the taxpayers about $2 million through consolidatkln of precincts, Coonty tuperiv01r1 have acheduled "full di9Cllllions " on the election foul up Tuesday mcrnlng at 9:30. St Jobn ·wm appear lo male his pro- posal on the voting machJne. Kingsford ••• hardwood makes the difference I Faater starting, longer burninr ••• cooks evenly ••. for better heat control ! Fire Starter .... :*}~~ ....... ~~! ... 39' For euy atartf.nc in your·be.rbecue ~ •• bums cleanly, odorleM, and no flaah·b&ck ! ···············••••!•••············e··············· Clamato Juice .. : ......... 43* Apple Sauce .................... 19* Startlingly different ••• and tasty! Quart. Slokely's ••. aerved chilled, with pork I No. 803. Super 11ariet11 frw ruper 1hoppan ix our litper..deli! franks! Knackwurst! Polish Sausage! ................. :·79• Old World sooc!neil tzom tbt Vienna people!,., 70ur cho~ 11 thiJ apoclal pricel 12-m. pockapl ,,,,,.. 1'0lua .••• for earlg-in-the week menua! POrk -Chops .. ,..~.~'. ...... 89~ ' Lcan°and tender ••• from oelected mid·weatern pork! COOU CUT l'Olll DST : , • , , , •• 19¢ 1'. Italian Sausage .................. 89'11 Stuffed Port' Chops ............... 99'• Freahl Deli!llllfully aea!!Oned and blended I With Mn. Cnbbioon'1 Dreaainrl Ready to cook I '-- -··"""' 1, 1970 H DAILY P1LOT I : ' Peru Devastatio·n { - · Viewed From Air ABOARD A USAJl'•Cl30 0\11:R Pl!llU (AP) -A pndstand vi"! of dt1th Ind d .. tructlon swept beneath a bil U.S. CUii c1rgo pline 11· It clropptd supplies to survlvon <i W'lhquak .. tom North Central Peru Sunday. ''Unbelievable," said the pilot, Capt. Bill Hudspeth, a Vietnam veteran, as he gukied the bl& Hercules up tbe ID-mile Huaylas Canyon, "Worse than anything l have seen ln my life." Hudspeth shook his head' in disbelief as the transport passed over whal was left of Huraz, once a city of 50,000 at the southern entrance to the canyon, 180 miles north or Lima. Half the buildings had crumbled. Nol 1 slncl• roof remaioed lntacl · 1be goverranent aaya the earthquake a week ago may have kihed 30,000 or more people; a United NaUons obeerver says the count more Uttty wllJ exceed SO,OO(J. An esUmated 100,000 more are homeless, injured or both. Hudspeth reacbed-·for the throttle aod headed hit giant craft 21 miles up the gorge to•Anta, the target of the airdrop. Anta, a village of about 2,0CMJ was devastated, but by some freak of teJTain enough of the town's tiny airstrip was s()ll.red from avalanches that hurtled down the 111,00l}-foot Andes lo leave It still usable by small aircraft. A quarter ton of aJeeping bags, blankets and food rations was packed ln plastlc- wraPf)ed survival kits and stapled into 12 larite crates. The back bay of the plane lifted open as Anta r.ame into view and the crates were shoved out, two at a time, as the Hercules made six passes over the runway. Carhuaz, another town of about 10.000 people, came into view as the plane pulled Out of its last drop run. "Incredible, unbelievable," was a.II the crew could say as they looked down on the shambles. A few miles further up the canyon was Yungay, which used to be home for some 33,000 people. AU that could be seen of it were the tops of four, palm trees where the town square had been and a statue of Christ, with alms out.st.retched, which marked the hilltop cemetery. A slide of roc~s and mud two to three miles wide had hurt.led clear across both bank! or the Santa River at the bottom of. the canyon, buried Yungay and smashed against a mountain ledFle on the other side. Only about 2,500 residents of Yungay are believed to have survived. The C130I fly twice • day, droppin, supplies over .the canyon then plckfn& Missing Envoy Fotlnd in Jordan WASHINGTON (UPI) -An American diplomat in Jordan cfjsappeared during the past wtekend1 but bas been located and ls making nls way back to the U.S. embassy In Amman, the State Department said today. ' There were reports that the official, Morris Draper, had been lddnaped by Arab guerrillaa. The State Department said ll had no informaUon to clarify whether he was kldnaped or almply "wandered fnto a war zone and was captured." up survivors at the evlCUltion center In Chlmbott. They .... l>rougl1I there by helicopters and vintage C47a that can just manage to land and t.ah off at Ant.a. , • · · More than half of Chlmbote, a thri'lin& lndU!lri.al port <i I0,000 people II ,_. Its llshmt1I processing plant II putly ruined, Engineen estimated it will Lake many months to get Peru's only steel plant there to operate again. .._ 2 Cosmonauts Set Soviet Space Recorcl MOSCOW !UPI) -Soviet coo. mooauts Andrian Nikolayev and Vitaly Sevastianov today flew farther and longer in space than any of. their coun- trymen , but they need another week to break the United Stsles' space flight recant The cosmonauts' Soyuz 9 craft made its tooth orbit of the earth early today with all systems normal and the men feeling well after 147 hours of flight. They had broken t)1e So"'.iet space en- durance record set by VaJery ·F. Bykovsky in the 119-hour flight of Vostok 6 in 1963. Soviet aourcei said veteran ~aut Nikolayev and his rookie flight engineer may remaJn aloft as long •• 11 days. They went up June I. Frank Bonnan and James Lovell established the record five years ago Will\ I flight' of ·13 dily1, JI hours In their cramped Gemlni 7. So~z 9 _has a small ortiltal re.entry compartment close to the size of Gemini 1 and a larger command compartment about the size of a railroad sleepin& car section. The command compartment, crammed with scientific instruments, wu a flying laboratory for what veteran cosmonaut Alexei Yellseyev told Tua News Agency was the most expensive space research program ever mounted. He said Nikolayev and Sevastianov spent up to five hours a day on scientific experiments, ·another two hours ex- ercising to test the effects of J>l:Ol~ged flight, eigh.t hours uleep 1and the rest of their time analyzing and recording their dal.a. • report from tht ...... nd ,medical erew monltorinc the CMnOUutl' .con-o ditlon said a!Jer they had been aloft a week they "withstand well the complex impact of l)le factors of •poet flight ana retain high efficiency." The cosmonauts' r'¥arch includ~ tests of the strength of their anns and experiments to determine the tone of their skeletal muscles. Their dally televb:lon show to earth also indicated Sunday they Wtte bearing well the strains of space. Nikolayev showed off a chess board and the small electric razor the eo1o monauts prefer to the A m er i c an astronauts' safety razer and brushlest cream. Sevastianov made two tiny dolls somersault gently around eadl other in the cabin's weightlessness. • All thrmigh the aummer, El Ra"Mlto will be offeri.?tg aen- &ational valuea on cdok--0ut ued.a! Keep an 61/e open.I ARCADIA: Su1111t ond Kuntina1oft Dr. (El Rancllo Cln~r) PASADENA: i20 Wm Color.ldo Blvd. .SOUTH PASADENA: Fremont and·Huntiqt~n Or. HUNTINGTON BEACH: Worntt 1nd Alzonquin (Boardwol~ Center) NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 Ntwpo!I 81'~ Ind 2555 'ElstbluH Dr. (East bluff ~11111 Contar) I '\/' I' • Peter 11uiwley, 25, of Sk~ .. ,, EJJl)end said be used a bicycle -11> 0help revive a hedgellgg he found floating In a pond ~oily. Alter 10me spoonfuls of brandy and gentle care, the anim.al was able to waddle away into the woods, Thaw.. ley laid. • TM graduation dinner at Mos· es Brown School, 8. J .• will· con- sist entirely of organic foods a1 part of an ecologtcai "eat-in." The mt"nU wiU inciude onion leek aoup, JprOUt 1alod. ~ ..,eggs from Mturcdly railed chick.- em, lobster caught in the seas of A~ and Toaehfp tea. ' • "I chailled my wife up to keep ....,, ..... 1,1910 ~ llf'IT ....... EMMY WINNERS -Individually honored with from left) Robert Young and James Brolln, b<lth her 118fe," Roliort Morrll, 'r/, told the Weishpoc>I, Wale• eourt·recent- ly.1.'Safe_kQm .WJlQmj" ~ _PrO-_ secutor Richan! Hu~ 'sate , Crom another man," Morita ~lied. He said he put the chain around his wife'• ·neck and kept her in a &bed with bis cattle. EmmYs Sunday night were (top, from left) ~aUy foL '11tarcl!! W_ajl>i:; M.D.," .and Michael Con- buke for "My Sweet Cbarlie";_Kar~g ValeQ.ttne, · stantine, "Roo1!!_222~.' __ ''ROOin 222"; Gail Fisliu, 1'Mannix" i (bottom, . • • rsaac BOMwiti graduatt1 from the Unlwmlll of California thi.! munth toith a Bachelor of Art& dtgree in magic. It wcs the fir1t 1ueh dtoree in Jhe univerlity and believt"d the first anvwMre. He was given ~rmil1ion lo take the ckgree bfcauae of the di/· iicult11 of clas1e1 involved. • A federal bureaucrat who had been socializing with some ordln· uy mortals ov•r lunch drew back 1.is chair recently and said, ''well, back to the Horse Latitudes." Dis- ielling the puzzlement of bis com· :>anions, the gentleman cited his lictionery's definition of that term: i. An area of high pressure calm oharacterized by variable and un- 1redlctable winds." • Chtlsea, Mais., ftrtrMn wont heat paJI. Tht firem.tn, members 1 of Firefighters Local 997, are negotiating with the city for a new contract. Ont of thtiT de· mands is for an utra dat1'• paJI when the tem~ure 9oe1 above 90 cUgreei. Court -to Rule On Loyalty Oath For ~ployes WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Suf><em• Court decided loday to rule nen term on a modilied &late ioy1lly oath requiring teadiers ind employes to swear support or the U.S. Con5tituUon Ind to discllim belief in oi<rtlirow ii Ille penunent. The aMC>Uneemeat that a Florida case will bt heard next fall or winter c.ame as the court sat for the last Ume in more than. a year al an elcht-man bench. Jlllltice Harry G. Bladanun will be awom in 11 Ille ninth member Tuesday. The c:<lllJ't tool: ihe1e other act!O!ll: .,.Agreed to decide in 1 c.iuornla case whether a state may requk'e local communities to get vol<r approval belote coostrucUng public housing. A rtfen!n-- dum section ol the California constitution was ttrucl< down by a special lhre<;jud(e federal poel in San Francilco on AprU 2 . ~Appointed federal · appeala judge Albert_ B_, Marls as a special master In the JU1Uce lleparimenl's off ..... lond 8ull agalnat IS AUmic states ttretdllnc from Maine to Florida. 'lbhe federal aovemment is contending that the states should· have no jurisdiction over any offshore areas be)'ond the traditional three-mile limit. The loyalty oath was chaUenged by an Orlando, Fla,, fourth grade school teacher, Stella Colnell. She ~ppealed to the Supreme Court from a ruUnc by a apecial -judge Federal Court at Orlando on Oct. 30, 1969, upholding those sect.ions or Florida's loyalty oath for state employes. The Supr«ne Court will ochedule orauments in the fall. A wrltu.n cpinion will follow. 'World,' Windom Win 'Marcus Welby,' '222' Take 3 Emmys Each HOLLYWOOD (AP) -A doctor drama :;er!!s, "Marcus Welby, M.D.1" and 1 weekly schoolroom story, "Room 222" have won the most 19'70 Emmya - three apiece. A cancled series, "My World and Welcome to It," and its star William Windom won in the comedy category in Sunday nisht't telev'ision academy awards. Ard a twi~nceled 11erie1, "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir," brought a second Emmy to &tar Hope Longe. a.tently caoceled by ABC, the lhow wu dropped by NBC last year, when Miss Lanie was similarly honored. Vetera n , acton Robert Youn& and Peter UsUnov each received a third Emmy award. Yoong won .a the 1etieral practitioner In 11Ma,reua WeJby, -M.D.," _picked u the outstandlng dramatic series. James Brolln, wtto plays his · usistant, was namod best aupporling acior. Ustinov's third Emmy was ror his performance as a Jewilb merchant who House Panel OKs ABM Fund Bill WASHINGTON CAP) -The House Appropriations Committee today recom· mended ll8U million in c:onsltuclion money for Ille -year of Ille emballled Safeguard antlballistic missile program . It is $30 million n1ore than has been appropriated for the past three fiscal years and is for use during the year starting July 1. It ii separate from weaJM)ns procurement mwy, which amounts to hundreds of mlllloos mere dollars. providts a home for a black youth from a slum ne jgh.borb.Q!:ld in "A Storm in Swnmer." The ahow was picked u the oustandlna single dram1tJc program. The 22nd awards or the National Academy of Televi1ion Arts and Sciences were telecast frmi the Century Plaza Hotel in Los Angeles and Carnegie Hall in New York. Diel'. Cavett, host in New. York, t,et the tone for an evening of emotion, applause and laughter b)' uplainin1: "Thil ls the show that each year UU the question, "la radto really ims)roved by lhl addition of p!ctum?' .. Arnone the ~t between com--merciaJ1 for bras, girdles, taft.bome fried chicllen and cigarettes, wore: -'ft)e namlng of "Room 222" u tbt outstandlng new aeries @:nd two of ill slm, Mldiaei Cotlltlnt1'>e and Karen Valentine, u best lllPPOfllllJ ldor and actrtu in a comedy. -Britoln'• David Frolt, winning for out!tandlna variety mies with his syn. dicated lafk lhow. -Susan Hampshire, ~ actrta in a 4rt;giatic series_ for lhe BrltillHnlde "The Forsyte Saga." Anne Bancroft wu honored along with producen: apd wrlten for her ipecial, "Annie, the Women in the Life of a 1'-1an," named the outs landing variety or muaic program. In categories ol entertalmntnt, news and technical crafts, NBC collected . 27 limnlYt, CBS 19, ABC lS and National Educational Television a. Gail Fisher won a1 aupportinc actress in a drama aeries, 1'Manrib. ". , The winner among clau~ll mualcil programs was ttie National Ballet of Canada's performance of "Cinderella." For achievement in • p o r ts pr°" gramming Emmys went to Css, "The NFL Games" and ABC's "Wide World ' ol Sport.S." • ..... , .... . > • .. Desegreg~tion- .. / Aid -R~quested UnilJns March In St~ Louis; Cfushes Brief ~ it . J'incb, who bis Rep!IOd -.. Sec:ntary. of lle&lth, Education and Welfar. to·llecome'ooe of•Pftaidenl Nlian's ~ 10ld a !!Diiie ~ COmriilt1ie •bililnl Uie pljii: • "In this blll,·llle f-......,.,...1 for Ille first timeu·-liilbinr:a policy to deal -·.de ficlo __ .. De facto refers to _.gallon rts11kmf !ram housing pallei'M. "'J'bia: adminittraUon," Finch• said, .. is committing federal dollars to belp lboae dl!trictll eliminating bolh de fldo and de Jure (by law) ,.gregation and tryinl to overcome the educatiOll dlsadvant.qte stemming from racial separatioo bl their schools " . "We believe that when thls , amount of money is concentrated on. areu ot greatest need and on projects holding the grqtest promise or a u cc ea a , wldespr<ad and Jt<Ofound results can be expected:,, The program, l\eing supplemealeij by a' Presideritial lask fOlCe be"'5<1 by Vice Prosident Spiro T. Agnew, ·IS coo- ST. LOUIS, •Mo. (UPI! -About IS,000 contraled cin be1plng echQol districts union ir-... and members of Wider Cc.irt order or HEW pr.wure veterans groups showed their "suP,POrt'' tQ de~ate. · , _ - for America 1 Sunday in a four-mile 1n Us prepared 1f!stbnohy, Jre'W'~ parade interrupted for brief cluhea with for • mtricti~ 1'to pre:ctude the,support Yount antiwar protMiml. --of-transportat-ton-!ef'Yictt-where-the ~-A' least a dozen persons were Jnjured, ~eut is eolely to establish racial balance'' tneludlng 1 pOltceman and a newspaper JP a school. photographer.IA 9lllall groop of marchers F~lal aid during the two years wearing hard ha~ broke from the main beguuung , July 1 woul~ go to a~I parade and attacked _several persons _ di~ricts with three special needs: one ot whom .. carried _a sign saying -Those under court ~et to "Veteran Agaihst 'the War" -watching desegregate or those which are from tbe lawn of a borne. deeegregaUng u~er pl.ans approved by .-:lone of the ·injuries was believed HEW. ('I1le administratt~ esthnatet, that serious. PQ)lce Aki only a few lrrests 861 ~l. d~icts with 5.~ . mlllion were made fOr general peace chUdre1 are eh~ble In thil: eategOry.) disturbance -Those with one or mo re Two of u;. m'felU came after Det~ pr~anUy black.school. (About t0,3'J tive John· S~ WU 1tnJck in the schools Ul 1,84(1 distncts WOO}d be eliglb)t f d . It' ti boul .... v under thts heading.) ace urmg an a erca on a ncu.1.·Wa,, -Those in which more than half of lhrouih Ille 311 hour parade. The march 11 · hoot ch"dr bl k C"D' 1r1~-t>ecan nesr Washington University and ~ sc . u en are . ac · 11 "''"' -1n this category, with heavy con--ended at St. LOyis tinlversity. ,...._.,. centrations of minority students, would Simeone t:aid the person who lllruck be eligible for funds to meet the cost.I him was not a~t~ becauee lbe man of addittonal Interracial.educational pro- apparenUy was awm11n1 at someone else. jects or, Jn exceptional circumstances Lynn Spence, . a photographer ~or the where such programs are not \)l'ac- SL Louis Poat·Dlspetch, WfS hoap1tallzed ticable, demonstration compensatory pro- after ~n object st.ruck him in the head , grams," the HEW statement said.) WJlbam ~rge ~~el Jr., 22, was Among . possible interracial projects .. the mo1t senously lnJured. Hdoel was mentioned in the te3limony was 1n H· watching the parade at his parents' change of students ot different school• home whe..n about "55 or 60" marchers within school districts or from othet ran up and attacked the group. school districts "for perhaps one day Hodel Wis beaten on the face and of classes each week or afternoon cla.sses auttered.18Vtf~ bruiaes ,and cut!. each day." Hodel'• mother Mn. Florence Hodel, Pr<oidenl Nixon has submlu.d 1 1111" wu .knocked down but not aerioualy plemental req~ to Congress for $150 hllr! wl)ep ol!e ~ mal-chers as •tliey mitlion for -this IU!lllller for OW>)' char&ed onto !he fiilnUy'i ~ropert7. of Ille 1BJ11e purposes. Phone Hap Due Two Tabbecfin Party Line Tragedy WAl.!IENBURG, Colo. (UPI) Charges were to be filed txlaY. a1alnst one of two women who reportedly retused to yield a telephone party I~ to a mother whose three children bad just fallen into a pond. Tbe three -111 boys -dl'OW!lOd before rescuers could each the aeene. ' Hl!UfllllO Coqnty Diatrlct . AUorney Ernest Sondoval said Sunday he would file fonnal charges today against one of the two persons Involved, a 15-year-old 1lrl whose voice was allegedly klenllfied by the boys' mother. Sandoval aakl he would file charges against the second- woman, an adult, some time later, II'tle dislrictaUomey ~Used to identify either suspect in the irfldent. ~ A ,!late 1lir ~ l 'muilnlOD jall lerm of 11. ~ mi a ll,OllO fll>a fl'I', conviction or failure to yield a telephone party line during an emergency. The victims -Freddie, Ruben and Richard Pino, ages 13, 12 and 10 - of rural Walsenburg, were walking into town to buy new shoes when they saw a duck swimming in the pond. One of the brothers stepped onto a plank , to retrieve the duck, but slipped into the water. , The other two boys also fell tn trying to aave their brother and ail three perish· ed. . Was Venezuelan president RolHI :alclora perhaps chiding hla - rountry a bit for ill prevailine uni· ingualism 1 On his arrival at the White House, he returned President Nixon's greetings In SJ)anlsh-then repeated. most Qf bis remarks in very fluent English. The lower court held that twO clausts must be stricken from the oath: "l am not a member of the Communist Puty" and "l am not 1 member of aoy organization or party whidl believes ln or teachel, directly or Indirectly, the overthrow of the aovemment." The Safeguard money was Included in a !Lit blllloo mllllary COlllG'ucUon bill sent to the House floor for con· sideratton later lhil week. This 11 $-US.7 million more than was prnvlded for the current year but llS'l.7 million leu lhan was requested. • 1~1 ' ' . A fourth brother · who witnessed tht accident ran to . his home to tell Mrs. 1 Pino of the accident. She iwas met· 1¥1th \!~dicule anC:I laughter whertshe attempted ~~ the line to call for aid, autll<riUes The ruling Aid the langu1ge infringed on the right of free auociation crant.ed by lhe 1st and !Ith amtndme!U. Finck Brief• s~·•oi-1 • --"' i,' ____ ,.,. t Summer Starts Arriving Reins of HEW Cliange· WASHINGTON (UPI) -After a lb,.. ~·leave caused by "exlreme fatigue," Robert H. Finch retun>s loday to brief hi• succeuor at the problem·ri<ldled depart· But Weather Cool i~ West, Pacific Northwest -. ---~-----. -.. -----ment-of Health. 'Edt.K:allon -:and Wtlfue. Undersecretary of Stota Elliot L. Rlch-7etnperaturea srdson, the man appointed unupectedly t111111 L• """· by President Nixon Saturday to take over C•Hfol"tlle Pfftlr ....,,. ...W. lltlflf vtrleMt Wilm 1119111 .... ..-IN .....,... .....,,.. ~ .....,,., ,, .. 11 kMtl Ill •ftwr· o*llll tOllilY Miii T_..r, Hlltfl W.11 ... Su11,~ .......... Tfdu _ .. . 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At1111t1 81•tn tl1ld e 1..,,,.1rck Bnla1 Bo» ton (Mato Clnc.111.,.11 c11v111~ ..... O.troll lvrtll.1 flltt Wfl'lll Frtint ··-Hw•i.A '<-(1tf L. .. v... l•A-"' MllMl IH<lt M!lw1ullw MIMtlPOUI N.w Or'IM111 NowYO<k ... ,_ ....... ~~::.· -... -......... ·~ '"'" ••M -·-11,LWI• kll Ullt City , ... Dllw lffl ,,.l'ICl.ao 1•11i. •• ,..,. 111111!• ......,. W•tldM"" .. " " " " ~ M .. " .. .. .. .. .. • " .. .. n .. " " M " " .. II " TI Ml l} u " M n .. p " ,. .. 11 " M ~ M " " " ~ " " .. " " " .. " " n .. " M .. .. " .. .. . " •• .. " .. a .. .. .. .. " • N ~ .. .. ·°' the job of running U1e sprawling bureau-- cracy with more than 100,000 emptoyes, is no stranger to HEW. He served 11 ... sistant Secretary. and then Acting Secre- .ot tary under President Dwight D. Ellen.. ·°' bower. 'Richardson, knowa -as a toogh·minded .CJ admlnlatrator, is already awan! a( some of the political, morale ·and personnel problems which have reached erilil ~ Portions in lhe health·related NCUons of .~ the department. But Finch, ln addltlon to some hou• ·'' keeping chort1 before movln& to the White House as a Preai41nUal C0'8'11ektr. still will have bla hands full outljnlnc the dl....,._ of that cl!aJlenie. ... FiDch lllo mQwant to explain·• monu· mentil _. -problem that led I ,IOt de- partment wwbrs to sign peUtiont· ques- tioning the qualtty of hJs 1eHmhlp-and asking him to meet wllh !hem. BecluM oUllnea and f1Ugue, he ~led off his m•Ung minutes before it wu scheduled and ent ered a hospital • BuL the blgsest problem lacing lhl new HEW chief Is c<ntered la Ille depart· ment's health structure, which admini8'> ters proar81111 <»1tina mon than Ill blJ. lioa. l • Uil'IT ....... ~IXON NAMES FINCH TO WHITE HOUSE POST !lllot Rlchlrd-(rlehtl New HIW Sacratary . r • . 1 • • FQti,niai~• Vi,IJey VOL. 63, NO. 116, 3 SECTIONS, 18 PAGES OP.ANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, Jl:INE •• 1910 • ' N.Y. S&eeb Narcotics Sweep , Nets 61 Huntington S~ps Vp Pr_ogram Against D·rug V sers . . . ln a sleppe<Hq> _,.,. to mu. HUQt~tog Beacp "bot ·tw drua uaera_." 4Jtficers from the .pa!ice de~'• Speelal Enforcement Detail ( 8 ! D ) rounded up 61 perSOWi on drug charces over the weekend. Det. Ca.pt. Grov~ Payne and Sgt. Jack Reinholtz sa id the haul of 29 adults 'and 32 juveniles was the larg~t in the city's history. Forty-five of the arrests were made by the SED led by Sgt. George Renek. His men swept the beaches over the weekend arresting susi)ected Ullers of drugs .ancr--obtaining information leading· o(fii:fi," ictJDc .. -pined In the bueb rlidl. Md 'armed ,wilh ._, .. .,,...., ................ _ In-W--ly &mday mornin&-on drug use ...i,..-e1>ar1es. SfJ'ven mwe perMm were arrested at a house on Cameron Street i9 Huntington Beach by both SEO and na~icS detail officers as a result of information gained Crom those arreste.d on ttie· beach. Four suspects arrested on charges of possseasioh ol drugs arid possesliion with intent to sell1 are: -Thomas Williams 22, 150 7th So-ect. Norco -DUny ,De Bruyn, a, 2TI Jll·. O.t sir.et, Oran .. All. olbera beld O!) ~ ol timple poasesaioo ohar<Otlce .,., -- - Arreste:d in tht nareotict sweep were : -Michaol' Kortje, :a; '13 N. Gates St., Santa Ana " -Diane Parkei;, 111 Cl 7th StrMt, HW1tin~ Beach -William ffelm, 18. 9916 Maplewood· Street, Bellflower. -Joseph Ryclak, 11, 1M11 Cbadmont Street, Covina ' -George Hernandez, 19, 7112 BonvlU&.:._ Street. La f!alma- -to -the .arrest -away from I.be ~beacll oC suspected sellers of drugs and mari- juana. -Bernadette-Paskey, 19, 844.1 Valencia Street. HuntingLon Beach -Gary Barrett. ~. 13471 Olive Street, Westminster -Donsld Carton, 19. 11171 Midway Street, Los Alamitos, -Michael Larkins, ta, am EucilyptWC ~treet, Long Beach IROLIN AND YOUNG IN SCENE FROM 'MARCUS WELBY MQ' In Huntington BNch, Young Actor's Parenh R•i•ict Eiqmy i• :Pe.· elt • James Brolin ·Geu TV Honor -The Huntington Be.acb parents of an Emmy award winner were restig-this ~ morning after a Dight of dininc --and dancing to celebrate the succesa d. Jl- )'ear-0ld James Brohn. Brolin, oldest son of ~1r. and Mrs. Henry Bruderlin, 8122 lndianapcills Ave _, won the award for the outstanding sup· portting performance in a dramatic ser- ies. Brolin plays obert Young's assislanl In the "Marcus Welby, MD" series, which garnered four Emmys. .ill was the first year of the serie.\ -James didn't thin~ anyone could win his first year,'' hls mother, Mrs. Helen Bruderlin said this morning. Brolin won the award over 3UCh other nominees as Greg Morris of Jdilsion Impossible and Tige Andrewt of MOd Squad. "We bad a beautiful nigbt," Mrs. Bruderlin said ol the ceremonies at the Century Plaza in Los A'll~les. Brolin, a graduate of Harbor1 ·High School, Newport Beach, atudied theater arts 1t UCLA -and signed a contract with Jlilth Cen&ury Fox in 1961. He has pt.yed iemat mu parts -be was in The Monroes teries -but Marcus Welby, MD gave him his first major role.' Brolin is still under contract to 20th C~.ntury Fox and will be busy on "Marcus 1Welby, MD" foi some time. , The Bru.lin famUy maintained a ·home at 111 'VJa Undine on Lido Isle be- 1ote ipoving to Huntington Beach in 1963. Although Henr:y Bru~lin is a home designer and englfleer, his children have found success io the entertainment in-· dustzy. James'1 sister. Susie Bruderlin, a lqnner Mila. Huntington llta<h. Aloha Queen of Orance CoWJty and Maid ol Calilornia,JlQw_:isJeatur.ed..Jn TY. com:- merci.als. Another son, Brian, owns a recordll)g studio in Hollywoc)!:t 1be BruderliN' fourth child, BarQara is an honor student at Edison High School and will pacluate Thursday. • Experimental.Desal~Plant ' Under Study Off Beach By TERRY COVlLLl: ot "" o.u~ , .... ,,.,, An experimental water desalinization plant might be built near the ocean in lluntington Beach or Newport Beach if federal officials can find a .local agency to help finance il. Langdon W. Owen, secrellJY·manager of the Or&lige County Water District (OCWD), said this morning his agency is considering the proposal made by the Federal Office of Saline Water. ''They're looting at sites from Los Angeles to San Diego," he said. "This area is just one possibility." Owen said the-plant, if bliilt along the Orange Coa'it, would produce a small quantity of fresh water -about tl\ree Faulty Outlet million gallons a day -converled from ialt water . "ll COi.lid be expanded io 12 million gallons of water a day;" he added. The . purpose or the plant would be to develop water desalinization techni· ques for use on a lar_ge scale. "We could1 however, use some of this water to mix with wa,,te water for reclamation. But ti million 1aUOOs a day ls 1eu than one percent of the water Used in Oranp County.'' 0 we n explained. ~ .~ _ Initial cos{ of the small de,afiniiatiOO plant is-e:stim1ted-at-$12 milUon;-ac- cording to Owen. An ex8ct site for it hasn't been picked, and may not be in Orange County, be.cautioned. Other agencies, such . as t h e Metropolitan Water Dillrict (MWO), are al80 oonaidering the federal pro'posal. "'llley hope 1o """ l!>o project by Ca Bl next falt Result. ol auch an experiment uses aze "'"1d ~· quite belplul ln the reclama- tion 'ill salt Wa&ar ~i the state." A JnllY eleetric:a1 ((lflne(:tion tn th• · OWen. said.. , .. upstair1 bedroom CO&l the owlM!r of a · O.V:en -PotnW;l..;..lo--the....tisnlg-coa:t of Huntin&1«1.Jl~ch home $3,000 In damace Im~.~..-11 )be · f{j'l"e rwqn. Sunday night wbe:n a fire broke out . for d.-~nin;,,. . 11\d niined lbe furniahings. · "It now COit! about $55 IT\ acre foot J?iremen were summoned to the blaze to brlng COlorado River waler to Orange It 916% Peppertree Drive at 7:54 p.m. County. 111 the next 15 years that price and quenched the names within 11 might rise to $90 or $100 an acre foot."' mh1utes. OWen said directors of the OCWD The occupant. Mrs. Edward Kriust, haven't decided yet on whether to help •uffertd no injwies, firemen aaid. build tuch a desalinization plant. • ' ' ' NarcoUcs Deteclive Ed Williams and Uberty Sot19ht -. New Rioting Breaks_ Out At Isla Vista 3rd Candlelight I ' SANTA BARBARA (UP() -Angry persons. using Wt-and-.run_ tac t i c s showered sheriff's deputies with rocks and other missiles late Sunday after officers dispersed a _hostile crowd of up to 1,000 in the Isla Vista community nea r the Univel'iiity of California. Killing Repo:r_te:d Depulies said a total of 27 persons had been arrested by early today, in- cluding two at a jail facility for in- terfering with an officer. They said the arrests were mainly for curfew violations with some {or resisting arrest and narcotics violatiw. ~ w'r-' ~rr­ lified u females aadtai was a Jllvaile. ~y Said that at G0e poilt Jnore than 200 olficers v.·~ in t.be 1sla Vista area belore the lllualici\I stablized. At least \hree injuriea wert reported, but-none waa serious. One was a lberiff's deputy who had a tear gas caaister explode-in his h-a o d-.-Tbe other two . Susan R. Jackson, 22, and Jonathan A. Halu, 19, both Iila Vi.st.a residents, were reportedly struck with l~ gas canisters -Miss JacksOn in the knee and Halas in the head. Deputies said the original crowd had scattered quickly as the scores of olricers arrived at the embattled Bank of America branch in Isla Vista, a predomµJantly student community ad· jacent to the 14,000-student school. However, as the officers -from Santa Barbara County, the California Hlgbway Patrol and other nelghboring agencies (See UCSB_, Page !) ScliooI--Bmiget - Studied Tonight By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 ltll O.ilr Plitt Staff Notorious Candlelfghl killer Robert W. Liberty is sought throughout the ~·est today, after being suspected ol his third ritualistit murder in fout years. H~ is believed responsible for the st-ab- bing and strangulation in San Diqo of a man who once befr~. 6irn when ·both -lnma\it .. '• -h~ita,1 for l.he·~ri.Diinally 1asa.ne. "The·€and'lelilht killer-a:trites.11ain,'' was scribbled ,jn pencil on a do&r' in the aparlment of Robert J. Irion, '521 while two ~odles flickered eerily beside his ~e\ Liberty, 23, whose last. known address was 350 Avocado St., Costa Mesa galned gruesome fame four years ago when he murdered a paramour 12 years his senior at a Westminster apartment. ~le struck again Saturday, one day past the fourth anniversary of the slaying of Mrs. Marcella Landis, 31, apparently choos ing not to kill yet a fourth victim. Richard Graystack, 17, of LOng Beach, was left bound with neckties in Irion's apartmerit after being forced to drive the killer and a woman companion to San Diego. 'Phe youth told police he picked up the hitch-hiking pair in Lone Beach and was ordered to head for San 'Diego, where he was directed. to the apartment of lhe man m.trked for death. ---ite fliiallfSTruiglea-rret GrfiiSOOfids- early Sunday and called poJice, who arrived to find the weird tableau so typical ol Liberty's homicidal pattern. Liberty has also been sought since March 12, listed as the prime suspect in the murder of Thomas Astorina , ZS, STl~L AT LARGE Su1poctocl Killer Liberty ... ' who was shot and dumped near SUDll4!t Aqu~tic Park in HUl\l.in&lor\ Beaci).. Astorina shared a· trail.er at ~ Coe.ta A-iesa address with Liberty ud two other men, One of whqm is in ~ ~ awaiUng trial in cozmect~ ~witb the murder. -Lawmen in· San Diego sajd tpday th.it Liberty and the auburn-haintl woman who was with llim whe1 Greystack pici· ed them up fled the murder scene ia lrion's late model Peugeot automobJle. Investigators noted that Irion, like (See CANDLELIGHI", h gt l.i A preliminary budget of nearly $4.7 miUion will be given· to trustees ot the Huntington_ Beach City School District for review at their 7:30 p.m. meeting, Tuesday in Dwyer School. {:.r{:!({:.r *** The new budget represents an increase of about $700,000 with a 46-cent iacrease in the curre1t $2.13 tax rate. Liberty Friends Grilled The tax Increase was approved by voters in April. ft becomes effective Hun tington Beach detectives were in 1971}.71 along with the budget. dis patched to vari~us ar.eas of Orange District officials have estimated their County today to re-1nterv1ew all persons needs in 197G-71 at an exact figure of--who had-contact-~witll Robert W. Liberty, '4,692,773. Trustees will have a chance the "Candlelight Killer" who is suspected Tuesday to change any part of the of claiming a third victim over the budget they feel necessary. weekend. _ More than $1.6 million or the budget "We feel strongly tllat some people- will come from the district tax, while have not .told us lhe truth/'. said Det. the temai.Jtder will come from state, Sgt. Monty McKennon. "It's possible that county a11d other sources, some peOple have actually tried to shelter Selaools Helping this man, thinking that he really dJdn't commit any murders." "He is an extremely dana:erou! man. Those who shelt~ed him could euily end up the victim next time. Candia: art cheap.'' Liberty, 23, is· accuMd by police ot being the trigger man in the ·muri:!er of Thomas Carnllne Aitorina who was shot by a· .22 caliber pistol March 1i· on a-deserted Huntiqton'Beach road. Handicapped to Get Camp . . This year send the kids lo summer camp. It 's an easy way to gain a few moments of peace and quiet around the llouse and the 'rids learn all kinds of new ·activities. Yes, it's easy, Unless, or course the child Is handicapped or emotionally di$turbeq, TheP 1the camp . doors1 are closed. Allan Li{son , an ,.educ at Ion al -c0ordtilator ..fGr tlie State ·niagnOsliC. School for Neuro\<l&itially Handicapped Ctdldren, Is dcdiCated to opening those door& in the Huntington Bt!ach area . Beginning June 15, he will open the Smile·A·\Vhlle Day Cam p at 14582 Beach Blvd.1 which wlU f~ture 1 variety of , arl.S and crafts, sports, excursiGns and spe<:ial events designed to meet each child's creative and recreational needs. "We're not going to segregate because of any kind of Umilation," says Lifson whose camp will be open lo oormally progressing as well as handicapped children. . · "We feel that the handicapped . .chikl ·needs to-be -mcluried in1ctiVlilar ·wUh no11mal children Soi that they can ,lerve as 'some.what of a mOOel for thmn1\' he explained. Segregatlng the children. Lit 9 o·n claims, tends to place labels on them which they do not deserve. "Btfore we labeled them t:1ey were tosether and blislcally \ got along with one aoolber. T~ey live and ,play loi!lber ,, In their neighborhoods wilhoutr anypne 1nakina Jny dlstinctkms,'' he aakl. "This Is what bums me up: There'• such a stigma attached to \bem. I wish every sc~ool dlstrk:t Would k,ep iU child- ren together." rn the Fountai n Valley Scbocll District, Gisler School parents have atrta<ly launctted ''Pro}eCt €~p" ·io tef!d iive ·or 1helr .han\llc.•J>i!ld' Clilld,.... to-ll>e· •ctinp. '. . Tlt<y hove raised ·money-by'bOldinf various 'fund..riiitilig• ~~~ts, inc1•k1ina Saturday children's mov-1es. r Parents who have children r~nging between four and a halriiil 14·yeefa or ase .('10 obtain further lnformatlOn about the~canlp\by pbonina ~ or 8*2312, I .. .. • -Tommy -,.Utt; It -~ Beaife, ll, --cbarlea Theriault, 23 =-Michail Powers, 2a -~JlllelJona..SI -Robert Wooda,i n -Gail. l.evetque. lt -Iv ... Dawdy.Jr .• :13, 94$ Locull Su.el. Long.-11. -si.v.n !llrril. JS,, 9G'lt -..~ Site<:~ H~ lloaP!, . -lleveitl11 ........ II, 1111 Abr- Str .. t; Weslminller · - ~. ~. II, -1130 ~laoo Lan,,, il!JntinlklJI· --lle11"'1lt . l't"'Y, ta, 211· Cbettnul Street, ~via .. ._ · --<:arl Belall&, II, 340!.GrJDida - El !4onle Agnew Due ·0n Coast For Meeting By JOHN V AL~EllU -..... ....., ,......,,_...,. Seventy blab-ri•nkinC !eden! and lltalJ officials -probably includlnJ Gov. &i!old R-and Vice ~dent Spiro Acne•. are expected to a(J'lve · in Newport Beach and S.n Clemente lodly c ud-y. Informed 101.irces indicaled lhe·rankinl of.ficills would bold aeveral da.ys of con- ferences on inter10vernment.aJ relations, probably ar the w.....,, Whllt llooM compound in San Clementei. ~::. i:.~lllilt~~"'i: la~,~. -Gov:~-WU ........ fo· be tho \boft ot the meetini aer~, but: -al .... qJjl/,lol .... , would COojlfnl. ~-ilegY !!!;~ _,,.,.were ao reportl on the chances that lbe Agoew lllTlval is llnbd lo the · cooleruces al the · San Cleiiiente JM apd the Western White HOwe ol the aovernme,nt relitiqns &I'Ol!P· '-In past visits Agnew has spent quiet visits at the Balboa Bay Club, His pre• a.idea said be was due to return to Wubingtoo, D.e:;-from-Cali{omia Tuea· day . -The appearilJ)Ce in Newport wu pruumed to be a itopover. The San Clemente evenll: reported),y will get under wQ )ate Tuesday with conferences between about 20 California State official.! • and about 50 from the res) ol. the nation. St'!f!'•I aenators and repreaenlativet "'l' eJ!pecl4d to .atlend, hilt their ...,.. were 'not known. Huntington Boy Nearly Drowns A lwo-year..,ld Hunliniton Beach boy ntarl,y drowned Sunday nlgbl after faJlina inlo a swimming pool in his parents' bactyml, Darr~ll R. Richards, 19371 Worces~er St., wss found Jn the bollom ol lhe pool arounq 7:50 p.m. by his mother who retrieved him and began .i .. ministering mouth-to-mouth resUJCita- tion. Ambulance attendant David Merchant managed to revive the child while en route to the bospilal by further resuscita- tion· and heart massage. -·-- l\'11 still tzy to rain Tuesday moraine, buL not very hard, while ,.rternoopa will be llichUY lllllllY and temperat9res ranging from IS Jlong the abOte to 73 further in~_ land. ~SUIE TO.QA l' -McGa.uth~ and C"rampto'n "fGY bfcomt °' wtU known a.s Dred '.Seo'' whtn the Supreme Court makt1 ~ landmark dtclsion on th• dffth· J>'flnllu. Pao• u. • • ' • ' . I . DAILY PILOT " Sherif rs Recognition Hits Snag A Mt.en r•nc"date.....iD last week'• Primary E}ecUoo today asked tb1t recognttioo ol James C. Musick u re- elected sheriff be withheld pendin& a coUrt hwin& into the legality of biJ rel.um to otfice. S<iperior Court pttsidillg Judie WUU.m C. Speirs 1uued the temporary TeStraining order asked for by candidate Marshall Norris and set the issue for hearing July 1 before Judge Robert I... Corfman. Norris lfluel that ht WU plac.ed It a .. tremendous disadvantage'' l.n the primary election by virtue of Musick being lisled in first place ,on the ahtrtff- coroner ballot ln all five Orange County districts. He unsuccessfully appealed to Judge Harmon G. Scoville lut May rt for the scrappffig of all ballots prepared by . county clerk William E. St John and the rotaUoa ol the names of the two candidates according to election bw, Judge Scoville ujected the petltloo despite st John'a uauanoes diat the correctio!I could be made tbroup th• printing of special ballota. St-John odmilted thet-the top Jlaling of Musick was in en-or and lhould have been spotted when ballots were checked by his office. · A correct dJstribotioltwould have civen Norris top spot in the second. and fourth districts. ' NOl"l'iJ lost the election by 208,Hl votes to 56.~ with 978 cl um precincts counted. A big factor ln that defe1t he nid today, was "the great adYant:age given to Musick by ballot.s which 14ted him to alJ intents and Jl'W1Kl'Sel u an jncumbent." Norris argued that Musick could not be regarded u an incumbent beclta1e the now combined post ot lheriff..coroner was gc:Rng on the billot for the first time. The post was created, early this year by the Board of Supervi.sor1. -Norris will ask Judge Corfman to veto the entire Yote ~collected by Muaick in the -.! and fourth di.Ulda o<, akematively, dlscount tbe June 2 election for lheriff~oner ltld allow the race to be coo.tested •a:abl in November with the names of both ·candidate. C01Teoliy r«at.d . ,. ..... r .... 1 U.~B .. . -began their sweeps throogh the area, they were met with lhowers ol rocU from am,U· fl'OUl!I a( ,...,, pOopla darliol U1rQU11> tho lhldowa down lido 11r .. 1a and in ,and oUt of 1pertmeat buildings. Tear gu was used ln 1umerou1 loc:a. tions, deputies said, where the officera were met with larger pockets ol. resist&nce. The streets were otherwise barren due to the aundown-11>-IUnup curfew first Im· posed when violence escalated Saturday night after relaUvely minor 1ncldenll occurred IBst Thursday and Frld.ay. At ooe point many fn . the large crowd had showered lhe bank with rocks brell.· ing mO!lt ol its windows.' A Molotov cocktail WI! tossed on lls rool -burning out before any damage was done -and a small fire ca.uted by a flare wh ich erupted on Its steps it was extinguished as deputies arrived . Another firebomb burned out harmles&ly in an intersecUQa aeveral blocU away. Authorities said the crowd had march· ed to lhe area of Lhe bank after attending a "Renaissance pleasure faire" Aven blocks away ln a large vacant lot. Less than 500 in number when il began, tile. crowd grew quickly to between ~1,000 u the young people moved through Perfect Park bi the center of Isla Vista down the main aln!!et to the bank. " DAILY PILOT OMAMGE COAlT PUBLllMING COM,.All't a•b•rt N, W•t4 '°"''ifW trAI PlltllWW >l•cli I. C.rl•Y V1'9 Prn!6'nl ..,.i "-•1 ~ Th•11111 k•••ll ElllllM' lh•rn•' A. Mur,.hi11e MMftL! ... £41100' Allt•rt W, l1t11 """"" (1111• 1111& ···"· 1.111 ••• , .. M1iti11t .Yilllr•111 P.O. 101 190, 92641 Otllw Off'ic .. l.IOlll'lf Btldl: )D l"orMI ·-CCUll MD.tr U0 WQf Bly &If ... M1-· .. Id!: ttll 'll'ftt l11111u 9"11'W,_ &.n CW-Ill »J Horlh El C1rnlnt 11..t ~~· Da!LY PU.OT, w.111 w.1~ h '°'"" ... 1lltt Jil1,.1-PtU&, ~ ~vt!lllM:d -.uy ''"'~ ,_ 411Y Ill .... ri le tOll ..... teor U ...... '-<It. M~-1 BIKll, C..11 Mew, M1111t ... :M .. rdl .... F-lllfl \111111. •lwll ,.1111 '"'' ~ ........ •tti.na. o._. C1:w f'l*lllllrlll ~., ...... "" ......... .,. ••, ttll W.1 11 ... 1 a:.., N""'"1 BMCI\, Ifill all Wtll .. ., lftltl, C.11 MIU. ,...,.. .. (1141 641-4121 ,,_ w...-...er Coll &41.1Jlt CteMHlff An.ntfl .. 642·1611 """"41'1,. ltH. Or..... (';101 ~I ....... ~ H• -i i.ti., llll#rllllM. f.Ol!Mr-t.I -lier at 1dv .. 1i.-t1 ........., ""' "" ~-.. ,(...... •l*ltl ,.. """61111 " ~·· --· --C'-,....... .. d I I ,,.....,..... hfCll .... C..•• .... (11-.. """'ri,i ... "' ..,,.., U.M "*""lrl .... -'1 q_a _..,, mll!Mry n.11t1e1iM1,.,.U• --.1r. • Tops Fish i'ry Entries DAIL'f ~IL01 II•" Piii" " School Bonds • 'Lost' Precincts To Swing Vote A gap of 42 votes -and two mlssln1 precincts -still his the Huntington Beach' City School District bond election in 1 cllf'lblnaer six day1 aft.er the elec> Uon. The oulcome will not ooly decide the la,. ol 14.'IS mlllkln In Joell IChool construction bonds, but also the 'blllty of the city district to borrow slate money, "Without thole two preclocts we have 61.2 percent ot the voter• who favor ralJin& the bond interest rate," Charles ....... p .. ., J CANDLELIGHT Liberty's first vlcth;n, met His slayer while both were under psycbJatric care. Mrs. Laridls was an out-patient at Orange County Medical Center along with Liberty, both of them bavin& at· tempted suicide. Palmer, buslne.u superintendent ol the district, explained today. "We need M.I percent to wln." ' Pabnef alao aaid county olliciall are unable to tell him which two dlllrtcta are missing. "U we knew that we mlaht be able to gue15 how we'll do.:· ---r ·· 1bt count remains the same u a:lven last Friday -5,258 favoring the increue and 2,IM against It. 11 approved, the measure would place th-. bood interest limit at stven perce.nt in.mad of the current five pereenL A year ago voter, approved a meuurt which aUows school officials in the city district to borrow as much as '9.75 mllllon from the. state to build schools. ' "But if we. can't sell our own bonds, the state won 't give ~ money,'' Palmer explained. The city school district must sell at least $1.5 million of 111 own school bond money to be eligible for state *-id. At a five )e.rcent interest rate the chances of that are slim. F1oat entered by Banjo Players Square Dance Club of Westminster was declared sweepstakes winner in 25th renewal of annual Costa Mesa Fish Fry Parade. Colorful Westminster entry competed with more than two dozen other floats Saturday in win- ning the top parade prize. • Early on the morning of Juae S, 1961, Westminster police received a telephone call. "How do you report a killing?" the caller asked . "State ofHcials have approved fU11ds to build an elementary scbool and an intermediate school here. If we loae lhe bond eiecUon, we lose a chance at that money," Palmer said. Douglas Aides Describe New Manned Lunar Lab A manned lw1lr laborot.ry whldo woold ort1U for 1111 dly1 during llle mid · l970s could provldt a "sub!tantial ad- vance" in understanding the origin and evolution of· the moon, two apace acien- u.t. said today. Harold E. U.UOT and Doyle E. Lockwood, both of whom work on the Skylab program ~ McDonnell Douglas in Huntington Beach, recommended a modilfcatioo m the SkYlab to carry three men who would ltudy the. 1urf1ce oC the moon from a low &Kitude durin& dllyli&ht and dar.knesa. The firll Skylab is pilMed for l1unch in 1'12. Jt would be the first U.S. rn&Med laborllory orbitinc the euib. In a paper preeented to the 16th IJUl.llil ~ of t11e Amfrica -""""lllllcal &odety Ml Antbeim, the two ukl the ltinlr orbUln( m!saion could fill 1 11p between the ICbeduled end of lhe Apollo ' . Redi, Iif,dUlns, Cub s. Capture Littl.e League - The first batr of the baseball sea.son is over for the Sea View Utt.le Leaaue with the Reda wlnnin1 the major division, The Indians capturing the flag in the minor American division 8Tld the Cubs won the minor National divilion. AU oU'ler Jeaiues have opened action for the second hair ol the season with most leagues fe1turing aeveral close !angles !or the top spot. Leogue llandlngs through Saturday are : POU"T•IN VALl.IY LI A•UI • L ' C:.nllntlt • ' • , ... • ' • ,.1 .... • • ' • M1t1 • ' • . .. .,. ' ' • Glllnta ' ' • ...... ' ' • Phllll• • • • NUNTOltTOll VALLIY LIAIUI! • L ' Ang1l1 ' • ·' lndl•l\a ' • • Wfl llt SOii ' • • R.:I Soll • ' • ,..,, • ' • Y1n1t-• ' • OCIAN VllW NATIONAL LIAOUI! • L ' ...... ' • • Plrlln ' • • C..nllntl1 ' ' • Gl1nh • ' • OodO••• ' • • Pldr• ' ' • ... ,,,. • ' • '"' • • • I OllNWOOO t..I AtUI W L • • program in 1174 and the beginning of more advanced moon. eiploratJon in the 1980s. -.. ~ ··Wllen correlated with the information obtained from surface operation!," they Said, "the orbital data would prowide a aubatantlal advance In the un· derstandirc d lunar origin, evolutiqn and current morphology, as well as in· dlcatlitg the appropriate direction for future lunar eiploration." Forms A vailahle For Huntington Art Contest Entry forl'l'lll are •ow avaJlable for the state.wide art forwn Proe:pectu•Art '70 1pon.....t -Y ti• city of Huntington Beacl!i and International Art. Scholarships, a group of businessmen interested In both art and pro~otlon ol the area. The forms ud list of rules are , available by writing PO Box 1382, Hun- tington Beach. FinaJ date l.o retura the cards is June 2'7. Two entries are permitted each pro- fessional artist . Every entry mu.at be registered by the card form and uch rnwt carry a fee or $4. The ahow offers the more than 1,000 California 1rti1ts expected to enter en opportunity to compete for '2,500 ia prize money. Mare than 200,000 visitors are expected to see the show at the Hun- tington Center mall from Sept. 13-2$. Some N,OllO will be Flnted to atudentl of art as a result of the competilioo directed by Jason Wong, of the Long Beach Mu!lt:um of Art . The scholarship money will be donated by businesamea of HWllinglon Beach ud Oran1e County and the 1eholarships will 10 to art students throughout Southern California. The entry form s are also available at the City Hall, 520 Pecan Ave . in downtown Huntington Beach. 2 GWC Leaders Chide Leaflet About Demotion • • ' . ' . ' 7 ' ' ' ~ Leaflets censuring the Golden West o College. administration for alleged "ir· '"' -~ C1nlln1l1 '''"'' Pitt In Gl1nr• l l A Vll W t..IAtUI • • ~ responsibility" In the demotion of Dr,. • • ' " o James Catanzaro were termed ln· • ' • ' ' • ' t. , aceurate today by two atudent govern- ~ : ment officers. s • In a joint statement , Student Body ! : President Lanny Fowler and President. .oLDIN WllT JOONY LIAIUI 1 • elect Glen R. Burch , said the flyers t. 1 disl.ributed anonymously among students ~ :-rr1day we.re ullatilhorfze.d and diifMt ""' DodMtl Plr11111 .... • ' ' ' • 1 o represent the student government's opi· ; f nion on the issue . ···-C•Nlfllll "llllflu ··-' ' ' • ~ ! "The flyer indicated that the student i 1 government censured the administration of this college for their dismissal of Or. James Catanuro as chairman of tht social sciences division," the state- ment re.ad. Swim Gym Set At Marina Hi gh Swim Gym, a way for women to 5tay flt, 11 under way at Marina Hia:h School and Edloon lllglt School, 1ccordln& to the Hunlin~n Beach Recreation and • Pll'lu Deparunent Ttle. clUJU are held from 7 p.m. 141 p.m. "ch Monday e><1 Wednead1y. A » rt:jl_1_tlatlon ree, coverlfll the entire five tifiek IUSion, may be paid 1t the ~Ilion Center ofllc1. A tocond .es.ion will ltlrl July 7. c1..... will bt limited. "Inasmuch 11 !he student government has not met to discuss this issue there. could not have been, nor ls there now pending, any action ol this nature ." The offending leanets labeled IJllwers given by GWC President R. Dudley Boyce In ~ion with the demolioo. Attached to each leaflet were I.he as "not only inadequate but absurd;-'' 4 names , addresses and telephone numbers oI the c:olle1e's board of trustees. Dr. Catanzaro's chanie In auigrunent from administraUve to teachnil duUea his caU&ed general unrtst trnOl'll students, many of whom said they would compl1ln 14 trusle., b~ telephone. Students to Use UCI ·Computers Nert y~ar, seventh and eighth grade students in the Ocean View ·School # District will b& able to 1et their hands on yet another fJJy" -the computer. In coope:ratfon with UC Irvine, the di.strict. will investigat.e I.he. feasibility of teaching mathematics by computer for one year, Funded through a $60,000 grant by the National Scieilee F0undalion, thi students will use desk-top mini-eomputers with furnished programs. Six classes will be asked to participate In the project , with another six classes used as a control group. A two year follow-up study will test the proaram. Lawmen considtrtd the report1n1-done. They rolled up to 1182 Weatminl ter Ave., and found Llberty, then 11 years old, strumming his guitar as candles flickered beside the slraqled body of his worn ... A Bible lay opon her breasl and potted plants :;urrounded her. "Be quiet -she knows what we are doing," the. young slayer cauUoned police. He was charged with murder, but determined incapable of s~a trl1l by reason of inss1ity ud committed to Atascadero State Hospllal for treat· ment. He was released ail. raOoths later to stand trial, but re<ommitted t o 'MetrOJ)Olitan State Hospllal in Norwalk after a jury decided again that he. waa insane. Llber~ was freed again by. accident on June 2, 19&1 when a 1urse hudlin1 paperwork mistakenly checked him out as a routinely discharged patienL Authorities whipped up a f_11Mre over Liberty's release and he read the stories in newspapers and turned himself in lo a Santa Ana attorney. "He's perfecl!y meek and mild," lha lawyer told Jawmea. Voters approveO a chance in the tn- te.re.st rates for state bonds in last Tuesday's election. This is the second time the Huntington Beach schools have asked for the in- crease: The same measure wu defe1ted last February. "If we k>se apin we 'll just keep putting it on the ballot until we win. We need that moner," Palmer declared. Wreck Injuries Prove Fatal An elderly Huntington Beach woman died Sunday night-of injur.iea auffered June 1 in a Santa Ana traffic accident. The Orange County Coroner's Office said that Mn. Maude E. Sharpe, 70, of 5252 Edinger Ave., died ol a fra ctured skull and internal inj uries. She had been confined to L'1e Santa Ana Community Hospital since the crash which occurred at the intersection of Edinger Avenue and Flower Street. ' . There Is now only on~ airline serving Orange County, And they've Just ln2 ='-?? creased their fares. Now, If you want to save $10.50 ro\Jnd trip, we suggest · you fly PSA from LA insle~d. The PSA air fare from LA to San Francisco is pfA ~ sllll $15.75, Including lax. fiil,.. I ' I I I I -. Ne rt Beaeh 'f•day's Fl•wl ' . EDIT ION N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 63, NO. 136, 3 s.ECTIONS, 31 PA6ES Oii.ANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS MONDAY. JIJNE I , 1970 ' . Newport Cotincil ·Faces Lopsided City Budget NeWPort Beach city councilmen haye been presented a city budget for nut fiscal year that is $1.Z mllllon out ol balance even before salary increases. • CouncUmen will tackle the document with lts extraordinarily lopsided .ledger in a special meeting at 4 p.m. 'J'ut!day al city hall. If \he coUncit isn't a good du.I more successful in red pUcillng items t h a t City Manager R¥vey. L. Hurlburt has been, some whopping new tu.es may be in stort for the ~ewport citizenry . Hl!fll>urt bll pnstntod to the councU, along with tbe tudget, many ·paaes of material on oew taxing plans. It is the ftrst ')'ear the city manager bu not pllllented to the co u n C·i I a balanced budcet, He says it is re&rettable but due to "an acute shortage of funds" be ftlurtd lt best to let councUmen see "'hat they art up u.ginst and let them decide behreell. various revenue 9Chemes or bctw to cut city wvk:e. The proposed budget ol $11.1 million without pay raiaes represents an 18 per· cent increase over the $10.5 ml)Ji!)Q it is estimated will have been spent when fiscal loot-70 ends June 39. .:·- Tbe income projection of Sll.2 million Is an ll percent increase"' oVer Lhe $18.1 million il ts. esUn:ta ted will bt taken in this year. City population meanwhile is expeetecl lo grow 10 percent Crom an estimated 47,m u.e f!nt o1 this year to sa,sa by Jan. I, 119'11. Thus income without new tuts .b keeping· up with populalioo increase but proposed budget expenditures are greater. Hurlburt notes in a transmittal letter to city councilmen lhat this is lparUallY attributed. to inflaUon. He-includes a chart that mows that constant dollar ex. pendilum i1djulled for iullatiooary loss of buyin& po\NI") hive over the years followed much closer the rate of popu. lation increase than ·actual city eovem· ment expendi_tures, He also includes· a graph th~t shpw11 Newport Beach's property ta<t . rate ol $1.23 per flOO of assessed valuaUon ·is low compared to the rate. in surroundin& cities. Huntington Beach's tax rate is $1.45 ; Costa ~tesa's Ls Sl.99, and Lacuna Beach's is· $2.11. ~o amowil ·i.s inclu~ed in Hurlbun'a lx.u:tcet for salary Jnereaae1 other U.n autoroailc adjwtmenta that accrue with tenure on the job. • Thi Newport Beach City Employ" ,.,; sociaUon is uking for a lS percttlt 'PIY bike, pills frJ.nce benefita includlng time- and--a-half instead of stralgbt-time over. time pey .. City poJicemtn an asking for a 17% perecent to ziin percent salary booet r iremen are not aeetin1 a raia:e (lleo l!IJDG&T, ..... I) Agnew Due Here Reagan Also Set for Newport Meet DAI\. Y .. !\.OT llltt ...... By JOHN VALTERZA 01 Ille Delt' "llet IT•lf Seventy high-ranking fedetal anct state officials -probably including Gov. Rooald. Reagan and Vice President Spiro Ag~w. are expected to ·arrive 1n Newport Beach and· San Clemente today and Tuesday. Informed sources indicated the r.anking officials would hold several days of con- ferences on intergovernme.nlal relations. probably at the Westeri1 White House compound in San Clemente. Agnew i! e_xpected to arrive some Ume late today at the Newporter Inn ROCK GROUP PROJECTS ITS !AMPLIFIED SOUNDS TO AUDIENC E AT FR EE US CONC ERT EYerythlng Wis 'CMI' 1t Balboll Pier P1rk i nd 1 R1pl1y 11 En'lisioned ~~~~~~~-=-~=-~ New Rioting Breaks Out At11sla Vista Mesa Fish Fry Largest · E ver ; 100,000 Came . The splendor, spectacl~ and fun. of the 25th Annual Costa Mesa-Newpon Harbor Uons Club Fish Fry -biggest edition of one ol the biggest events of ill kind in the west -is history. An estimated 100,000 people particlpat. ~ in the th.ree-da.y fiesta, as beleaguered Lions Club chefs: ran out ol fish finally Sunday night. "We-might have even had 125,BOO peo- ple, but I'd be afraid to go that high,'' said Lions Club official Dom lbciti \O- day in the wake or the huge celebration. A vast order of 4,100 pounds of fish was flown in for-the Silver Anniversary edition of the community benefit festival, bul still wasn't enough to feed tbe multi· tuctes. Sunday's highlight was the crowning of a new Miss C<ma Mesa-Miu Mermaid, who will hold the two Utle1 aimW,tan~ Jy during the coming year. ' She is Costa Mesa High School junior Kilti Bowering, 16, a blue-eyed blonde chosen from among a field of nine girls entered in the beauty competition. Miss Bowering, of 228 Tulane. J\oad , plans to enter UC ·lrvine, where.she will major in fine arts and dance, with a )f- 24-35 frame to feat~e in her choreog. raphy. ""Free llJ s ~ Ro~ks Nois e, No Tr ou ule in Balboa Fest N .... loolnd ,..... ti -Us lleol a rock band -without un-IGwn -t In Ballloa oo Saturday. Spotelman limy Weinberg said today evuyo.e bad IUCh I cood time they woold like to do It qain. . Newport Bu.ch. pobce ~ oo arrests \>ut there were ei&bt complaints about the IOud mualc: !rom ruidenls and police ~ a level of soud that exceeded the city regulaUoo for amplifi~tion. Pollet Capt. Donald Oyaas estimated the crowd of youths numbered 350 while Weinberg gave an eaUmate of 1,500 persms. The -concert was at Balboa Pieri Part and lasted from noo• to ~ p.m. flainclothes Patrolman Jim Bradley said he moved in on one group passir g around a marijua.na cigareUe but ''the . lello!r ai. Ille. joW. 11 wasn't Ille lime or pllce lo try to retrieve the evidence .'' Mwy was solicited to help pay at. torney fees for thoSe arrested during a melee with police at a Free Us rally at the park April 18. Perm.issioa to solicit was given in a 1as't minute reprieve by the Newport city manager's office. Free Us leaders filed an application as a non.profit charitable organization and there wasn't Ume to check. out the individuals doing the soliciting prior to the concert, Assis· tant City Manager James OeCbaine said. Permission to solicit the ooe lime Satur- day was granted on an ilmocent until proven guilty basis, he said, Policeman Bradley said he used a sound measuring device and got readi11g s IS.. FREE US, Page I) E~perimentalDesaltPlant Under Study Off Beach SANTA BARBARA !UPI) -Ansry perSODl ush!I· hit-and-run ta c t 1 c s showered sheriff's deputies with rocks and other missiles late SW>day after officers dispersed a hostile crowd of up to 1,000 in the Isla Vista community near the Unlversily of California. Deputies said a total of 27 persons had been arrested by early today, i~ eluding two at a jail facility for in· terfering with an officer, They sald the arrests were mainly for curfew violations with some for resisting arrest and narcotics violations. Three were iden- tified as females and one Was a juvenile. They said that at one point more than 200 officers were in the Isla Vi5la area before the situation stablized. At leut three lnjurlet were reported, but none was serious. One was a sheriff's deputy who had a tear gas caai.ster explode in IUs b a I\ d . The other two, Susan R. Jackson, 22, and Jonathan A. Halas, 19, both Isla Vista remdtntl, were rePortedly struck with tear gas canisters -Miss Jackson in the knee and Halas in the head. Deputies said the original crowd had scattered quickly as the scores of officers arrived al the embattled Bank of America branch In Isla Vista, a predom inantly student commlMity ad- jacent to the 14,QOO.student school. Runnerup honors were ~on by fellow By TERRY COVU.LE Of .. 0.11¥ ...... IMff classmates Sandi Gragg, 11, a 1enior. .. of 432 Princeton Drive. and Jane Ston-An uperimental water desalinii.ation Imported water as lhe prime reason for desalinization. However, as the officers -from Santa Barbara County, tbe California Highway Patrol and other neighboring agencies -began lheir sweeps through the area, they were met with showers of rocks from small groups oC young people darting through tne shadows down side streets and in and out oC apartment buildings. aker, 16, a junior, of 1462 Norse Ave., plant -~ be built near the ocean C<;~o~~S:~rs have seen both a M,iss in Huntington Beach or Newport Beach ••Jt now costs about $55 an acre · foot to bring Colorado River waler to Orange County. In tbe next 15 years that price might rise to '90 or $100 an acre foot ." • Mermaid -if she was from outaide if federal oUlcials can find a klcal agency Owen said directors or the OCWD ha ven't decided yet on whelher to help build such a desalinization plant. Costa flie sa -and a Miss Costa Mesa, to help flnanct it. who must live within Lhe city to qualify. Langdon w. Owen, secrelary·manager The always-popular baby contest Su~ of the Orange County Water Districl day dre\V some 200 entries in two ait:e <OCWD), said this morning his agency • categories. six to 12 months and l2 to 24 is considering the proposal made by months. . . the Federal Office of Saline Waler. Bay Club Will. Propose The reminist fringe movement will be ·•They're looking at sites from Los pleased to learn that 1wllss Judy Marie Angeles to San Diego," he said. "This Brausch, 22 months, daughter of Mr. and aiea is just one possibility." flfrs. James Brausch, ol 22'1 E. 22nd SI., Costa flfesa, won the_ older division title. Owen said the pl~nt, if built along Bria n Gregory Paine, a months, son of the 0r8.11Je Coast, would produce a small Single 160-foot Tower ~,r. and Mrs. Bruce Paine. or 118 Albert quantity of frelb water -about three (Ste FISH FRY, Pase t } million aallonl a d&,y -converted from salt water. Ne,vp ort Ma n Nearly Drowns A NewPort Beach resident Is !isled In seriOU$ condition today followi•g his near drowning Saturd~ i1 his apartmen\ swimming pool. Police said Michael J . Des.mood, 11, nC 700 Sea Lane was found by a neighbor, Charles Vanderber1-; on the bottom o{ lhe apartmenl swimm"' .pool. Vanderbert ha u I e d the ~ man lo the pool deck wbue he » ministered moulh-lo:(QOUth re11.11Cltatlon until fire dtlpa.rtment rescue: tmUs lr- ri ved. Desmond was t•ken lo Hoa1 llMpiW for treatment Police speculate thal DestnOftd either hit his head or blacked out while swim· ming. and credited Va8derbert'1 quick acnon with savina his life. "It could be expanded to 12 million The Balboa Bay Club ha s worked Its Club and the bay behond. aallons of water a day," he added. varied proposals for high-rise apartmenl'l Residents of the view homes and a The pwpoee: of the plant would be down lo a specific pl.an -a single, few others who have taken an interest to develop water desallnization techni· 160-foot tower. voled 30 to 8 lo oppose the Bay Cl~ ques for use Oft 1 lar&e scale, .. The management o( the Bay Club building any higher than the zoned 50-foot "We 'couJCI, bowevtr, use some of this will present thi!i prOJ>OSjjl to Newport height limit. water liO mil wlth waste water for Beach city councibn~ ~planning com· The vote followed a B~ Club preSen· reclamaUon. &t 11 million gallons a missiooers next Monday, June 15. tatlon lo Cliff Ha ven Community Associa· da)' iJ leu than one percent of the In previous study Se.ssions with the lion of Its high·rlse plans for the east water ustd In Orange County," Owen City Council, Bay Club officials learned end of_ its property. e1plained. what they needed to know -th.at But councilmen to a man have m.. Jnitial COit ol the small desalinization Newport councilmen are ()!pen minded dicated they are not necessarily opposed plant is estimated at SU million, ac· whe"ft It comes to hlgh·rlse bulldlngs. to high·rlse. corcUq '1o ()Un .. An Qlc_l,iill-for Tho pro(X*!d tower is 16 ~t.olre& tall In-two earlier so~ndlnas .out of the it haSn't been picked, W tllfy not with six apartm<!IU 'Jl<f -1 lllld two <O<mCll by Rlcl)Brd Steyenl', Bay Club be In Orin@ Cow!. he cautio~ .... ' l•\l~°'"Paii.~,_~ Dan O'Faru.O. txecuti:ve _vjce p~t, l;bty. have no( Otl>er qiicl<i, as th~ the Bay Club's ~ ol ttal uta1e 1ofc\.nila '1ow tall ·~'J>ulldin(, they TI\l&hl MetropOlltan ll'attr Dlltrict IMWD), are . ·o!ueJQ11men1-previollaly, .lhe ll-1. <Jlub' •'"' -Cltx Att.mei; 'MJY S.ymou, mo COlllliderln& Ille federal P,..po11al. had 1.u.o<1 1o the c00ilail aboul four adViJod-0..1 m!alii preJlidlce i i>U~k: "They hope to start the project by aparlments per floor ~ ii sin~ tow.er hearin(' .' ' next fall. Results of such an e1periment 2\ll.feet high or twn\ or triple to"·ers But ,as C~Uman , Milan ~tal, an could prove quite helpful in the i"eclama· that were 1horter.· · attofhV, J>U.t It. Ste~ tiaJ betn able tion of salt water throuahout the stale.," The ne_w pl an u~ubtedly will be op. \o "qualify (1'!6, jury'""'8d-fil'ld-~ (}y,'et\ said. posed by Cliff Haven•t-esidenfs who look ~uncilman W a definlte ,opln1ofi af~t Owen pointed to the tising cost of down rrom the btufC toward the Bay IUgh·rlse. · . ,_ • __,_ --, • in Newport Beach. Gov. Reagan was reported to be tbe official host of the meeting ser~s, but press aides at the capitol. today would neither con.firm, nor deny the reports. There were no reports oo the chances lhat the Agnew arriv~ is linked to the conferencts at the San Clemente IM and the Western White House of the government relations group. In pasl visits Agne.w has spent quiet visits at the BaJboa Ba, Club. His pms aides said he was due to return lo Wasl!ington, cic., from California. Tu• day. The appearance in Newport was ' preswned 1o·be a stopoV<t. The San Clemente-tV<llb .._iedly wj.ll pt under way ·la.te 'I'UesQty with conferences between about JO Callfomia Staie olliciala and about IO lrom the rest of the nation. Several senators and rep eautativea were upected to attend, but their namU were· oot known. ~ ollicial UUe of tile group 13 the Advisory Commission on lnter1overn-tnental-Relati001. The meolings will be beld Thursday at the San Clemente lnn and the White iloo>e .compound oo Friljay. Whetmore May Rule ~On Voting STILL AT LAROE Suopoctod Kiiier Llliorty 'Candlelight' Killer Sought In 3rd Slaying By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 ""' De llY """ SMff Notorious Candlelight killer Robert W. Liberty ls sought throughout the west today, after bel111 suspected ol bis third rilualistlc murdtr tn four yeal'll. He is believed responsible for the stab- bing and strangulation in San Diego of .a man who once befriended him when both were inma~ at a state hospital for the criminally insane. ''The Candlelight KUler strikes a1aJn,'1 was scribbled in pend! CJ\ 1 door m the apartn1ent of Robert J. lrioll, ~. while two candles flickered eerily beside his corpse. Liberty, 23, whose last know n address was 350 Avocado SI ..., Colla. M_eaa &ained gruesome fame four years ·ago when be murdered a paramour 12 yeara bis 5enior at a W~Jer apartment. He itruck again Saturday, one day past lhe fourth annjversary of the ala.yin& of M(S. Marcella Landis, 31, apparently choosing not lo kill yet a fwrLh vlctbn. Richard GrayBtack, 17, of Lon& Beach, waa left bound with neckties in lrlon's apartment after ·being forced to drive !he killer and a 'A"oman companion to San Diego. Th.e youth told police he picked up the hitch-hiking .P.a.lr in Lona Beach and was ordered to head for San Die10. where he was ,directed to the ap.artment of the man marked (or de.a.th. lie final!Y struggled freo of his bonds early Sunday and cal\ed _police, who arrived to find the weird tableau .IO typical ol Liberty's homicidal pattflm. Llbel'ty has also • aoucbt since March II, llsl!<f. " tbe priple IU!IP<Ct 10 tho murder of Thomas Altorin1, 1$, wile wu Jiot arid Qum~ near SWlHt ~q.aUc Park ID lluntinCIOO Beadi, . AstoiiQI shaxed" a· trailer ~t the Coell 1!1esa addresi with Liberty and two Qther men, one of whom is in c:u~ody, and awaltlng trial in connection 't'it.h the mutdtr-.--. • Lawme(I 'l1:1 San _Dite:o sal toQij that ~See CANDLELIGJll', P ... I) . ~· ' . , .. ,.,_ .......... '"" UCIWIENTO -Ao Orance C.U.ty Jetl"*.h ,,.. llUdl tbe Sena1e llediona and11eaf>llClriloanMol CGmmittee today pndlded the stale Suprome Court may liavo lo rule on l'elUlb ol laal Tueaday'1 fouled-up primary eledlqn. Sen. Jama W. Whetmore (R-Garderi Grove) to)d a news eonlerence in the cap(\al !bat ~ ballot in- apectJons and overcrowded computer Ol)erations cootributed to .slowneet in ballot """1tq, Wbtbnore drew his conclusions from a report filed by comm1Uee: comultant Alan Rosin, who observed the entltt vot.countlni process In Los Allleles County primMy election night. Whetmore said before the ballots are fed into the counter they 0 fint mwit be ti.ken \() a. large room in whJcb about 200 people eumloe each ballot by hand for tears, ripe:, incompletely pmdled holes or other def..U which mi&ht c1uae the ballot to be rejected counting by the computtr .'' He suggested a way to correct this would be to scan lhe ballots at tbe precinct level 1'btlore the cards are aeaJed,and 1ent to the central area." "Certainly this would aave the cost of h\flng additional people. and would only amount to a few minutes work on the part of the people a.signed to each pilling place," the lawmaker sakt. Wbetmore a.ho said his staff is looking Into tile ~bility tbat human fatigue may have played a part in sJowinc down the vote count. "We will al.!o be. interested to find out whether the people scanning the ballots had worked a full day prior to their working on elect.ion night," hi oak!. Weadter lt'll 11111 try to rain Tuesday morning, but not very hard, while afternoons WUI be StlihUy OUM)' a~ temperatures ranging from &S along the abon to 73 further in- lanci. INS m E TODAY McGaVlho and 01'om_pfpn may become as wtll lmown as Dred · ~cott wlult &he S1'primt Coilrt makt1 o landmark dccilion on the death penalty. P"ll• a. • • ' • • 2 IWl V 1'!1.0T " -• f're• P ... J FiSli FRY IN MESA • • • Platt, w• Judie<! winner la the -er bracktL t • Lions ctub officials Slid today the arou· ,..,_ ~ the Fish Fry lotala 115.000..- wlth a D<t Ollllclpoted of .111,0llG to !«I.Oii . wtileh 'WU1 beotftt various Harbor Ma organi.r.ations. Besides the ever-popular fish dinner, tons of hamburger and hot dogs were con- sumed by the hungry celebrants. "About 1,400 pounds of each," remark. ed tions leader RacJU. The Fish Fry visitor who took home the biggest prize - a 1970 Maveri,c k autom6bile !or her $1.50 difll)cr .tJckel - Was Mrs. Ruth Holmes of %304 Redlands Drive, Newport Beach. She will be formally presented with the prize Tuesday night when the Lions Club meets for dinner at the Mesa Verde Coun- try Club, according to Raciti. Largest single event or the annual sum- mer celebratioo is always the Saturday Fish Frt Parade, vhich this year drew about 100,000 visitors, mOl!il of whom stayed fof the entire event. Sweepstakes honors were won by the Banjo Pickers Squart Dance Club of Westminster. ' Here are the other winners In the big Fish Fry Parade, which stretched out for three miles from start to finish as it wciund through downtown C.OSta Mesa: Floats: • ~,,·Firm, 11!: Mcllould'a I Cotta Yell, 'Ind; Sha.key'• Pizza P•lor. Coo1a Mui, Jrd. , .... ,, ...... <rtlicloW _, Cbtlat Lutheran Qurcb of Coola M-. u... """' (beat ,.wll ....,., CUii Scout Paci ·u~ Garden 0-. lit; Fairview Stafa·llolpilal, 2nd; Colla llaa Future Farmer1 of Amerie1, Jrd. Ju•or m1)1ftUe1: ui pa.ee, Calicoetlel; 2nd place, C1.ll- coettes Junior B; 3rd place, Joan Cody Twirlettea; S.olot majordjol; lit place, <;olicoetlel; llld lllace, S.r· d.,,. Williama Junior Twlrfcttot; lrd place, ~eU HJgh Scbool. Senior Drill Team.1 : hi place, La Quinta High School; 2nd place, Gahr Hlgl). Sd>oo,1; 3rd place, Santa .Ana ~ Scbool. llrUI ud lo&le: Fairview SJ.ala Hoo- p1tal. Elem'"'"'1 liuda: Seal Beoch El .. mentary School. Jam« --= !st place Brooi· hunt Junior lllgb; Ind place, Dale Juhior Hilb : Jrd place, Johnson In!ermedl>te. f'!owt P .. e J FREE US ... ' OAllY PILOT Siii! P ...... ,.,..,.. P.,e J BUDGET • • • but want shorter hours for the llme money. A 15 percent salary increase for all t:lly employea would.COit about "50,000 om and '"°" the Ill million ddlclt Hur~ burt shows. Even if the pay rafae were seveq per· cent, as it appears a consultant's 1al1ry 11urvey will show is in order to keep com· petitive with other cities, about $450,000 would be added to t.he deficit. Hurlburt's budget shows S9 additional city employes to be added to the 54~ present cliy staff, positions. Twenty or these would be hired In February to staff the new city fire station at Newport Center and 12 are new police Po1iUons. This 11 percent Increase in ataU Is in Une with the projected 10 POfCent In· crease in papulation and t I pefcent ln- crea.se In income in terms or number or workers. Among new personnel reque sted, how· ever, are three top-level pcWUons. One, a community development c:oordlnalor, was cut out of last year's proposed bud- get by the City c.uncil. The other new poaiUons are a reel estate director and mail clerk to be In charge or mo vln,g all city correspondence. InformaU011 on pouU>le income sources, prepared by Hurlburt, show1 : -Each penny increase on .the tax rate would raise $23 ,000, A 10-cent hike would. brinR in an additional $230,000. Sweepstakes, Banjo Pickers Square Dance Club, Westminster. Theme priie (This Amazing World), Vasa Order of AmerJca. varying from '18 lo 100 decibels 175 feet from the amplifiers. The City ordinance aaya amplified sound shill oot project more than 150 feet. PASSENGE·R WAITS TO BE CUT FROM PAINFUL TRAP AFTER EARLY MORNING CRASH One Injured, One Book.cl •• Car Hits Flagpole at Via Lido 1nd Newport-Bouleverd -An increase Jn the building uclse tax on new construcUon to be decided by city councilmen tonight, would in- crease revenues $150,000. Civic a1.t1ory, Queen's Trophy, City of Orange, !Jt; City o( Anaheim. 2nd; City of Cotita Mesa, 3rd. Mayor's tropby, (commercial entry) Philip Bettencourt, asalsta1t to the city manager, said recorded ground noise levels of jets passing over the YMCA headquarters in the Back Ba y were 93 to 102 decibe~. Harbor Em1ny Newport Crash I Hur ts T wo Me n; -A change ol. business license f e e 1 from a fl&t rate of S15 per year per bu!i· neM to computaUon based on a percent· age Of gross receipts for retailers and number of em.ployes for others would prodUce an estimated $200,000 additional. f'ro• P. .. e J CAN DLELIGHT But BetteltC.OW1 added that he visited the Free U1 conCert and when je\,s passed over there they almost drowned out the music. The sound was amplified in one direction, he noted , aad 175 feet behind the Amplifiers one probably could have carried on a comfortable con. venation. Newport Grad Sc ores First Time Drive r Charged -A new tax of five percent on use of utiUUea -tel'ephone, water, electricity and eas - by residenl! would produce 13'1S,OOO. Liberty and the auburn-haired woman who w.as with him whea Greystack pick· ed them up lied the murder scene hi lrion's late model Peugeot automobile. Investigators noted that Irion, like Liberty's first victim, met h1s slayei' while both were under psychiatric care. Mrs. Landis was an out-patient at Orange_ County Medical Center along with Liberty, both of them having at- tempted suicide. Early on the mornh1g of Ju1e 5, IMS, Westminster police received a telephone call. "How do you report a killing?" the caller asked. Lawmen considered the reporting done. They rolled up lo BUIZ We$lmiNter Ave., and found U berty, then 19 years old , strumming his guitar as candJts flickered beside the 1traagled body of his womu. The sound was provided by the baads "Hook,'' "Prophet" and "Soft Courage ." Youths sat on the park grau and shared food and later i• the afternoon some got up and ahook and danced to lhe rhythm. "We'd aure Jike to do It again. A lot of people really enjoyed it. Everything came off real smoothly so there b no reaso• for the city to aay 'no,' " Weinberg said today. He said, '"I'he police were real good." Capt. Oyaas said there was one uni- formed oficer plus plainclolhe.s officers on hand. He wouldn't disc~ the num- ber. Weinberg said he thought there were five or 1ix plainclotbu offtcers and two or three in uniform. The Huntington Beach parents of an Emmy award winner were rest.in& this morning after a night of dining and dancing to celebrate the success O{ 2&- year-Old James Biotin. Brolin, oldest son of Mr. and Mrs . Henry Bruderlin, 8122 Indianapolis "Ave., won the award for the oulstanding sup- portting performance in a dramatic ser· ies. Prolln plays obert Young's assistant in the "Marcus Welby, MD" series, wh ich garnered four Emmys. "It was the first year of t.he series -James didn 't thlnk anyone could win his first year," his mother, Mrs. Helen Bruderlin said this morning. Brolin woo the award over such other nominees as Greg Morris of Mission Impossible and Tige-Andrews of P.iod Squad . Jumping for YMCA Irvine Company executive Ray Watson takes to Killins, 12, Santa Ana Heights, is leading ca1npaign trampoline to announce fund raising effort on be-aimed at raising $597,000 to pay off YMCA mort- half of Orange Coast YMCA. Watson, supported by gage and , add facilities to existing Y. Pancake <from Jett} Emily Killingsworth, 15, Newport breakfast at 7:30 a .m. next Thursday at the Y will Beach; Monica Gorman, 7, Costa Mesa, and Eddie kick off campaign. ~~~~~~~~-'-''---~~~~~~~~ DAILY PILOT OllANGl COA$f PUlllSHtNO COMPANY 11.obort N. W••' J•clr a. C11rl1y Yiu l'ta.."'111 ond G-•I MfMtW l llot1111 Ke•wil 1~011111 Fortu"• H..,.... ltf>Kll CHY E•!lor Nsw,.rt leMll Ofll•• 2211 W11I 111110• l o11!•¥1rd M•lli11t A•dreu: P.O. 111 I 17S, tZ66J OtMr otflCM Cosll M•'1 UI W•I ••f "'•I l ........ ••c.11: UI flltbl Avt"UI .,,,,1111191 ... a .. cn: 11111 .. K~ l:t11il<I••• ltfl Cllll*!ll: Jal Hwlll l!"I (lf!llM It ... 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Ceremonies Mark Stm·t Of SRI County Laboratory Simple ceremonle1 today marked the formal opening of Stanford Research Jnatltute's new $1 million bran c h laboratory designed primarily f o r research into environmental pollution, Named SRI -Irvine, the fa cility a' MacArthur Boulevard and Jamboree Jl9acf covers 53,000 square feet and will employ a research team of 100 persons. P4blic open house will be Tue3day from 10 1.m. to t p.m., accordlna lo company spokesmen. UUlillna tome of the m o 1 t aopbiatkated lclentilic equlpnenl in U · Crash Kil ls Three RENO, Nev. (UPI) -Thret member1 ota California family were kl.lied Sunday and four of the -family we.re lnjur.ed .ertoualy Jn a one-car 1ccident on tntentlte 90 east of here. The Nevada Highway Patrol ldtntlned the dead 1 all of the Dela&arcla family of l?arller, as Francesca, 11: Marla Nina, 10, ind Frect,•1 • Jstence, the tab will feature a large chamber tapable of arilficially simulat- ing the formation ol 11mog. The staff of scientists will al any lime be working on 70 to 85 different research problems ranging from the ef- fe cts ()( other pollutants on plants and animals to exhaust emission controls and cleaner automotive fuels. "This laboratory emphasizes SRJ's con - tinuing commitment *> the search for solutions to one of society's most critical problems," remarked SRl President Charles A. Anderson. He said the nonprofit organizatlon doing Ttsearch on contract to other agen- cies pioneered smog research In Los Angeles during the late 19'40$ and' has handled other environmental problems •Ince. Stanford Research InsUtute is head- quartered ift ·Menlo Park near Stanford University and has annual revenues of SM million, utlllilng a starr ot 2,600 person1. The organlzaUon was founded by the trustees of Slanford UniYersity In 19'6 and operated as an affiliate until early th is year when formal ties between th1 two aa:encies were Jeaally dissolved. "We had a beautiful night," Mrs. Brude.rlin said of the ceremonies at the Century Plaza in Los Angeles. Brol:in, a graduate of Harbor High School, Newport Beach, studied theater arls at UCLA and signed a contract with 20th Century Fox in 1961. He has played several small parts -he was In The Monroes series -but Marcu:o1 Welby, MD gave him his first major role. Brolin Is sUll under contract to 20th Century Fox and will be busy on "Marcus Welby, MD" for some lime. The Bruderlin family maintained a home at 111 Via Undine on Lido Isle be- fore moving to Huntington Beach in 196J. Allhough Henry Bruderlin is a home designer and engineer, his children have found success in the entertainment in- dustry. • Newport Beach firemen worked for more than 30 minutes this morning to free a passenger trapped in a car which had collided with the flag pole at Via Lido and Newport Boulevard. Police said James Euart, 41 , address unknown, Was a passenger in a car driven by Corona del Mar resident Douglas Smith, 22. Smith was booked on sus picion of felony drunk driving following the 2:30 a.m. crash .• Smith, according to police repor~, was . driving SQ~thbound _ QJL N~ w [Io.rt Boulevard and attempted to negotiate a left turn onto Via Lido, when the vehicle went out of control and smashed headon into the flag pole. Smith received minor injuries in the crash in which his companion suffered more severe injuries lo his left arm and both feel, according to police reports. 1t would take all of these taxes, In- cluding a llk:ent increase on the prop- erty tax. and more, lo erase t.he deficit If councilmen don't make big aluhu lzi the city budget. City councilmen wUI be scheduling • number of public budget meeting, the remainder of this month before the new fiscal year begins July 1. The first wilt be at 4 p.m. "Tuesday In the council chamber at city hall. Some of the meet. ings will be public hearings at whlch the pubUc will be Invited to speak out. Copits of the propo!ed budget are avail- able-to be read at each city library and at city hall. Flag Day Slated \VASHINGTON (UPI) -Presir'cn~ Nixon today desigiia'.ed next ~·1ncl1.v 8'1 Flag Day and _the s'art of ~!a. :.nal Flag Week. • There is now only one airl ine se rving Orange County. And they've just In-~llrn1 creased their fares. Now, if you want to save $10.50 round trip, we suggest you fly PSA from LA Instead. The PSA air fare from LA to San Franc isco Is a still $15.75, In cluding tax. . PIA,..,.. a Ilk I • •• \ " -., • -... May98 ...... . N.V. Sieek• VOL 63, NO . ·136, 3 SECTIONS, 31 PAGES OR~_ct>\JNTY, CAl:IFOltNIA J MONDAY~ JUNE 8, 1970 TEN CEmS • . . J ~iggest Mesa Fish Fry -Feeds 100,000 Souls .... ~ ·~' . ·. l (Splendor. spe<lacl• and run.~ f>• 25th A •Costa Mesa.Newport ~ L~ ~Fllh Fry -biuest "dlU .. of . one;r ,the bipesl events· of Its kind ln p;; weat ia hlttory. 1. """<jtlmated 100,000 people pail!clJ!iC Id In i-. tbroe4ay f,.su, .. t>ele~od Liolw Club c~s ran out of fish fl Uy ~nJabt. . "1-WtllSlilht i.Ve even had 125,00D\i: pl~. ht& I'd be afraid lo 10 that · , " 'lllid Lf" Club olflclal Dom Roe ' t"' ! . ' .. -~ -• • llold ol nine lirb entaed lo the ""Cty ,...peUUon. Mi• Boweriac. ot-m Tulane Road, plaos to enter~U.C Ir'line, when abt. will l1lljor In fl"' iN IOd ilance, with a lf. -!rune to , .. ...., ;,.. her choreog- raphy. • ~-· -..., -. were won by fellow c-ia.-1"'9·• Slid -Grll&, l&. a aenjor, ol IQ Pr-1lriYe. ud J ... -.__... lf~ a ;jiaior_J of Mil Nora AVI:., ·c.u-. tr . • • Prior rean blve aeen ~ ·a Miss Cos&.a Meu. WtD tbt older division title. Mumaid -il she was from outside Brian o......,. Paint, I montho, """ al Costa Mesa -ODCI a Mi5' Cosla Mesa, Mr. ODCI Mn. Bruce Po.ioe, ol 1.11 A1J>ert who mµst live. within .&be city to qualify. Place, wu jtadpd winnt_r in the Youncer The always-popular baby contest Sun-bracket. day ctreW some • entries in two age Lionl Chlb offtciaJa said toda)" &he: sroea cat.tgories, ail i! months and 12 to 24 revenue .from the .Fish Fry tptak lltOOI, months. . with a net aaticipi&ed of •;ODDrto ... 000 The femlnllt · e movement" will bt t • which wi!J beotftt varkus Harbor Art-. pleased to learn that Misa Judy Marie oraaniJations. .,_ Brauscl1, D mootbs. dlllghter ol Mr. and Beaidta the evw~ lllh dhH1tr. ·Mn. Jill* Brauaclt, ol D'I E. rind St., IODS ol baalilurttr ud bot q1 wore - llllllld 'bf •the llluocrY· colelraote. "About t,tllO pounda of each." remark. ed Llilna INder llac:IU • Tile-P'ilh Fry vlaltor who toot -the biqest prlae -• 1971 Maftrict automobile for htr Sl.50 dinner UcW - WU Mr. Bulb Holmes al DK l!ecllancls Drive., Newport Beach. Sbe· Will be l'"""lly p;...ted Wilh the priJe Tlletday nJabl when the Liou Club meetl fO< dionor at tlle M.,. Verde Cluo- (lot 11111 l'JIY, Pip I~ Police Seek l(iIIer 'Candlelight' Victim Liberty's 3rd? By AR111UR R. VINSEL Of ... 0.llr ...... ,.... NotorioUs Candlelight killer Robert W ~ Liberty is sought throughout the west today, after being suspect.ed of hi.s third rltualistk: murder in four years. . He is believed responsible for the stab- bing and strangulation in San Diego of a man who ooce befriended him when both were inmates at a state hospital for the criminally insane. "'llle Candlelight KUler strike.s again," was scribbled in pencil on a door in the apartment ol Robert J . Irion, S2, while two candles Dickered eerily bes.Ide his corpse, Liber:ty, 13, whose last known add.rm was, 350 Avocado st., Co.sta Mesa 1ained grue:iome fame....Jour years ' ago when he murdered a paramour 12 years his senior at a Westminster apartment. He struck again Saturday, one day pasl the fourth anniversary of lbe slaying of fl.1rs. Marcella Landis, 31, apparently choosing not to kill yet a fourth victim. Richard Graystack, 17, o{ Long Beach, was left bound with Mcktlea In lrion'1 (See cANDLEuGHr, Pop I) IC Jl(I llOWEltlNG, 1', WEARS D.UAL· CROWN ~MISS MERMAID AND MISS .COSTA MESA · ~u•ty Winne r FlankH by Runner1-up .JaneStOINllHtr,.~K, (left) and Saftcli .... _.. ll · Young Rioters .Again ~it ·Isla Vista Bank Branch DAILY IOllOT '""9ltl "' .... " Tillll ..SANTA BARllAllA (UPI) -AJ!&?Y PK90l\S usiQ& bit-and-run ta c t i c t lhowered aherUr'1 depuUes witb rocks and G(ber miuilt1 late Suodly alter officers fiallersed a hostile crowd of up to l,• in the Isla Vilta community near the University of California. Deputies said a total of 27 .,persons had been arrested by early today, in- cluding two ai a jail facility for. in· te.rfering with an officer. They said the arrests were mainly for curfevo violations with some for resisting arrest and narcotics violaUons. Three were iden- tified as females and one was a juvenile. They .said that at one point more than 200 officeN were In the Isla Vista area before the situation stablized. At least three injuries were reported, ))ijt oone was serious. One was a sheriff's depi1ty who had a tear gas cuister rxpl()(le In his h a n d . The other two, Susan R. Jackson, 22, and Jonathan A. Halas, 19, both Isla Vista residents, Ag ne,v, Reagan Du e on Coast For Top Parley By JOHN VALTERZA OI 1111 DI!" .'lilt 11.U HAPPINESS IS WINNING THE COSTA MESA l'ISH FRY BABY CONTEST -OR IS IT? Seventy high-ranking federal and stale officials -probably including Gov. Rooald Reagan and Vice President Spiro Agnew, are expected to arrive in Newport Beach and San Clemente today and Tuesday. J udy Meri• Brautcft, 22 MOnth1 Awed by Outl:tur1t fNin Fal~ WinMr, flr lan Gr...,-y Paine, I Montftt Driver on Wrong Track, Killed A Portland. Ore., man wt¥>se car was une~Plainedly headed down a rural railroad track in Mission Vieio was killed instanUy Sunday night in a headon col· liakln with a freight train. Wayne McCullough, 42, was killed in- stanUy, aceording'to the Orange County Coroner's office. Engineer Curtis Syckafoose, of San Bernardino told the California Highway PatrOJ he didn't see the car in lhne to stop the speeding Santa Fe San Die1an. Investigators for the . CHP s al d McCullou11h's car Wli!S northbound on the tracks too feet south of the CroWTI Valley ParkWay intersection, parallel lo Cimino Capistrano. No one else wltness\d the hig= colllsion, wtucli' dimollshed McCul h's aulalJl!l\Jil! and inllicl"$ mulUple i ri" W\ I.be ·iiellm~ An •'*">' ·~ tchecluled toctg by coroner'• deputies and CHP offkers were .still attempting to determine why Mc:CuDough;s car waa on the Santa fe traclts. Mesa Council to Study $9 Million City Budget Informed sources ioclicated the rankin& officials would hold several days of con- ferences on intergovernmental relations, probably at the Western White House compound In San Clemente. Agnew is expected to arrive· some lime late today at lhe N_twporter Inn in N e.wpart Beach. Faced with a $1 mlll~ha municipal budget for 1971)-71• the CQita Mel& City Council wilt slt down _inlormol17, looight for the first study ltll6qcl go the thick docUment. 1 Councilmen. wlU meet at I p.m. tn their conference room ~ behind council chambers, where the en.ta~Mesa Planni"I CommlsllQ!I wlli be In rqular se5Sion. AcUng City Manqer ·Fred &orsabal pr~nted councllmen with their copies ol the 3*pqe budget 1 week qo, while citizen• may check out other• tor perusal if they JO deaire. llonabal'a bud&et 1hows ... 431,IOI In planned ex~ltura, ccnpar~ l o $t,154,32t In •9'Yenues, but he 1trf1f!1 it is balaoced due to money on r~ f""1l ...... J'."¥1 . .-- H''l'"'.J,11 _~' ~ ••• t6n~t~:'.11.,~~~~·~ mu.t be held on the budpt belor« .it is adopted in any form. • Sorsabal noted in presenting the buda:et to councilmen ~at it hat_ been prepared in completely new fa!lhlort to make the various eo1ts and revenue1 clear. William Johncox Funeral Tuesday Gov. Reagan was reported to be the official host of the meeting aeries, but preS! aldei at the capitol today · would neither confinn, nor dtny the reports. There were no reports on the chances that the Agnew arrival is linked to the conferences at the San Clement·e IM and the Western White House of the government relaliom gt(IUp. Jn pall vl1ils Agnew hN spent quiet visits at the Balboa Bay Club. His prus aides said he wu due to ~turn to Funeral servic:es will bt held Tuuda:V Washington, D.C., from California Tues- ror William J, Johncox, a CoJtl Mesa day. The appearance in Newport was Hlah Sc:hool teacher who died Saturday presumtd to be a stopover. at the age of 39. The san Cltmente events reportedly Mr. Johoco::t1 who had taught at Costa will get \lllder way l~le 'ruesday wlt,h ~1e.ta ·~ t•lit ·w~ an Englifh and 'eonferences between aboQt,»· ~lfo.rn~ ~ •n.~llM','JI'•. also taoaht sts;!nllh . s1a1e ollicil\11 ·•lid abolll Ill -Jhe .'1111!< ..... ·~ 0ro,-. c..,. ~-. •lslial >Ille nation.. • . ~ • y,lfO •'l"'!ed lt1' qp~' · smnt ""•tori an4'...-ilv• duh In ildchllon la ~i< ~ . -.. pee\Od Id atteocl, bol tla ...,.. 111 1lso Ullll>iroc!»liill> ,ac!MJ II were nof kllo..n. · cam" ~~"'W'IY· 'l'1)< ~t titie, o1,111e......,, ~rlhe • were rePort.ity atruc• with tor cu canialen -Mislo 'Jod<,ton ill Iba. toe. and Hilu .in tbt llfad. Deputies said the orlltnol crowd llad ICalttJ;cd quicltly &$·lbe ICOttS ol. olficerl arrived at the embattled llank ol. America branch in 'lila ~ Vlsll, a predominantly stud(nt coro.rRunity ad'.. jacent to the l4,0QO-itf4ldeot achoo!. llowever, a.s the Qifice,rs -from .Santi Barbara County, lhe Callfornia.Hl&hw1y Patrol and. other ne,J1hborin1 aaencies -began their sweeps thrOU&h the area, they were met with showers of rocks from Small (fOUJ>J ol youna: people darting throogh the. shadows down 1kte streets and in and out of apartment buildings. Tear gas was ased in 11umerous Joce- tions, deputies said, where the offletrs were rnel with larger pockets of resistance. The streets were otherwise barren due to the sundown-to.su nup curfew first im- ~sed when violence escalated Saturday night after relatively minor incidents occurred last Thur&day and Friday. At one point many-in the large crowd had showered the bank with rocks break- ing nlO.!lt of its windows. A Molotov cocktail was tossed on its roor -burning out before any damage was done -and a small fire caused by a flare which erupted on lb steps it was extinguished as deputies arnved. Another firebomb burned 'out harmlessly in an intersectioe several -blocks away. Authorities 1aid the crowd had march- (Ste UCSB, Pap ZI LSD Tr ip Ends In Jail After Windo iv Cra sh A 22-ytar-old man Who leaped throogh a second story plate glass window' in Co.sta Mesa Sund•~ in an apparept suicide attempt .is hOspitalized loday and a companion is in jail for his unfriendly attitude tpward pO]lce. • Investigator said both had taken LSD before tbe, Incident. The vlci.l.m who dov«: throoih the plate glass wlridow in an apartment building at lft E. Bay St., suffered lattraUons on his head and Jfmbs; according to police. He was admiUed to the ~chlatric ward at Orange County Medical Center for observaUoo, while his cuts were not too severe., lnvemigator1 said. John F. Bleibdry, al!I022, of Bellflower, was arrtsted at the scene a(ld booked <Ol o""l'iolon' of ..... u aaa1~,1 1 police STILL AT LAltOI $u1poctocl Klllot Li!Mrty Police Quizzing Libert y Friends • In Hunting ton HWlting.ton Beach detectives wert dispatched to various area.s of Orana• County today to re-interview all persons who had conlact wllh Robert W. Liberty. the "Caadleli_Jht Killer" who is suspected of claiming a. third victim over the weekend. "We feel strongly that some people have not told us the truth," said Det. Sgt. Monty McKennoo. "It's possible that .!IOffie people have aclually tried to shelter this man, thinking that he really didn'• commit any murders." · "He is an extremely dangerous man. Those w.bo sheltered him cou1d ea,,Uy· end up the victim next time. Candlt1 are cheap.'' Llberty, 2.1, is accused by police ot being the trigger man in the mu.rder ol Thomas Carmine Astorina who was shot by a .22 caliber pistol March 12 on a deserted Huntington Beach road. Lighted Pool Opens At Costa Mesa High C08ta ~1esa High School's lighted pool facilities will be. u.nvelled tonight follow· ing a 7:~ Booster Club meeting at the school. The new lights · have been donated by the Booster Club. Oraage -C:.ut Weatlle r ., · It'll 1Ull try to rain Tuesday morninJ, but not very hard, whUe afternoons w.111 be 1lightb; sunny and temperaturu ranging from 6S slong lhe shore to 73 further in- land. INSIDE TODAY l\lcGautha 011d Cramptu11 may beconu aJ weU known as Dred Scou when the Supreme Court ~ke1 a fandniork decition 01& the death pe1talt$1. Page 12. offiCer.' j' , _ ' • .~ l : .!'---Rudy. '\;Wi~ iiid i;s:~ ' -~I _JI l rs"~ .. .:, • temptild to ·~ 'the ,.,p.q • . • --• f hpd' • aak, slX timer if ~.had~ ~ • .,,. .... .......: " been afl1illed bliore but MYW 6\t an ~ »-r, ::= -:--' ,;: · r · c...._. 1, --.. _..... -.u amwer.. • ._. MttMtt -11 ,....,.... n • tnveatia:ators sald Qie car may havt It.ailed on the traclEs, bot were uncfriain If It t'OUkl be (felermlned what 1clU1ll/ led to Ille occidml. Extreme. detail hu been ulld ln plan- ning oot the budiet. which is broken down to v\rtuall)' every trpeb!e or In- come item and councilmen anUcipate no m.ior tblJllU. - He lea Yet '•ii& 'IH!e, 114'rtha, anll two AcMOOQ' • Commlaoloil I"\, lnlg"°'" IOllll, Wllliara a.,d Martin of the f1imi1y' mental Rellti~' · home, IUI ~ Circle, J!untlnston 'll>e ...-unp will bo 1'otd 'l'INnU)' Be•ch. AIJO '!Uivivin& ii ~II moU,.-~ 11 !he !!J• C1-te l,"'1 llld Ibo Wbllt ~Q!y,;Lbow~..P whtn aomeone -= ,._ 1l = JJ knocllld It ws 'door. lM ~ ....... IMltal n WM111 w=-... ~--e~·-<--+I out of ... ~ .. IP!iarent -tra,. aftd twUnJ _,__ ·~ •u ._... .. "--"''' Mra: John Nellon. _ _ _ u..,. compouod oa l'rillo1, . , llt Of&oir Ma.Ilk w1th 1'11 ftllll/ laWmen ~ l~ •• ..... .. oid. • • l -.,.....--- 1-, I .. I _DAILY. f:IL.OT,.... 11'1 Jttc:Mrll • ......, FIREMEN GET ON TOP OF BLAZE AT 17TH STREET SHOP With • Little Htlp From Jhtlr Frltnda •t .Ad)ec1nt Tevern Fire In Mesa Gallery Does $7,000 in Damage Flames partially controlled b y employes of an adjacent taven. -ap- propriately, The Firehouse -cauaed $7,000 damage to ,J Co!ta Mesa art gallery aid gilt shop early Saturday. 11le km at Far East Ltd., 171 E. 17th st., primarily Involved the attic and-root ol the frame building, according to Fire Deportment Battalion Chief Ron Coleman. A wltneu, Paul J, Hamilton, told in· •~1tor1 be uw three young men nwung IOUth Oii 17th street, awty from the atnx:ture, secondl before flames ~lkyward. "Our fire maraba1'1 lnvestll:allon at 11111 time n.t. tho ...... .. ..... Junta Deposes It.s President In Argentina l)UENOS AIRES (UPI) -The com· maoden of ArgeoUna'a armed forces today announced they have ousted President-Gen. Juan Carlos Onganla, the military man they put 1n power nearly four years ago. ''This ju1ta or commudera-b<:blef (of the army, navy and air force) bu resolv- ed to reassume immediately tbe political pcwr"er in the Argentine Republic," a communique said. It added : "Comequently, it (the junta) Invites Lt. Gen. Onganla to re&ip Ole post he has held ·u1Ul this date by mandate of this junta." Word o( the ousting of Ongania came ahortly after the issuance of a tougbly- worded challenge to his authority by the leaders of the armed forces, and a demand the)I be etve1 direct participa- tion In government. Oflgania, 56, a former ca I v a r '!'" lieutenant-general, replied by firing his army chief, Lt. Gen. Alejandro Lanuase, the ma1 who acted u a 1pobsm1n for the armed forces, "and takln& over the job hlm11elf. The president also handed out sub- machine gUJs to palace cuards usually armed only with sabres. DAILY PILOT OllANOl CO.UT l"Ual1SMING C0M"4NY ••••rt N. w,., l"tnllltnl INI "11111'- Jick l . Curl1y Viet ~"-"'' ,,.. CO-ti 1111....., Ttio"''' J... Mur,h!Rt M-.illlf Etlr ... c ......... Offl•• IJO W11t l1y Strief M11llRI ,4.41,,,,11 P.O •••• ,.,o. tt6!& .,,.,..,.._ Jrl""""'I "-'" 1311 W111t ..... hvt'l¥atlf L•lll'W -.c11r m .._, •- H11r11""1111 It...,., 11•'1 had! ......... ,.. a.ft (~lt1 • "°""' fl ~ 11 .. 1 01\IL'I' '°ILQT, wrllll ..,.Id! It ~· , ... w ...... ..-..... lo ......... llltfl1 •• , ....... ' "1 Ill MtM•tte edlllloll lwr Uil-aMCll. ..._., .. ~. Cate ,._., MIMlll!l!M lffd\ Miii ,_ ..... VtileY, ...... •IPI 1 .. , ,,..lllMI ........ °'-Ceul 'Ullllllllfl9 ~ tonlltllll ,.lfth 111 ti 1'111 _, ............. ~ ... ......,, &ttdl ..... Ull Wftl lt1 '"""' oi.11 M<IN. t •ptl I (7141 641-'Jl l er: ·w ""''''"'-' Ma.u11 ~· ,.,., Ot•• c ... , '"""'ltMrlt """"""'~,. ,,.. ... 11 ... -. llllllolftf-Mlillll'lel _,..,. ,,, ....... ._.. ........ ,...., .. ~.. ..,,._ ....Cifl ,,,.,.. ... ~... .. -~ .. ..,,,,,;-r::. ~ ti.t ........ Mllll t i N..,..,, lttdl _.,. C.lt ,,,,_., C.llftn••· S-tflf..,, t¥ urrler U.• _..,l\'I wr fl'!lll 1t • -ll'llyJ MUltt..., -lllwrl ..... lo 'If,• """Mtty. derte.rtnined,' " aald Chief Coleman. He. added the origin of the fire was constdered rather sU!plclous al the time, but Is now considered to have been accidental. · He credited Firehouse tavern employes LeA Hollar .and Keith Stevena with keep- iAg damage to a minimum, since they played a garden hose of the blaze until firemen arrived. The flames were quickly brou&ht under control and there were no injuries, ac· cording to Chief Coleman . Investigators said the a.rt !gi.uery and gih shop was operated by Tom Skelly whHe the owner of the atructure uaeii Is R. J. Sbeltoo. f't'OM P .. e J CANDLELIGHT • apartment after beina forced to drive the killer azxt a woman companion to San Die11<>. The .yOulh told police he picked up the hi tc!HlD;lng pair in Loog Beach and WU onferetl to head for San Diego where he was directed to the iipartmeni of the man marked for death. He rm.ally struggled free or hls bonds early"-Sunday and called police. who mived to find the weird tableau so typical ol: Liberty's homicidal pattern. Liberty h.as also been sought 'since ~arch 12, ll~ted as the prime suspect Jn the murder of Thomas Astorina, 15, "'110 was snot and dumped near Sunset Aquatic Park in Huntington Beach. ASorina shared a trailer at the Coela Mesa addteM with Liberty and two other men, one of whom is in custody and awaiting trial In connection with the murder. Lawmen in San Die10 said today that Liberty and the auburn-haired woman who was with him whe• Greystack pick· ed them up fled the murder scene it Irlon's late model Peugeot automobile. Investigators noted that Irion like L1berty's first victim, met his ~layer whlle both were Wlder psychiatric care Mn. Landi a was an out-patient ·at Orange County Medical Center alon1 with Liberty, both of them havln1 -at· tempted suicide. Earl~ on the mornh1g of June s. 1966, Westrrunster police received a telephone call. "How do you report a ldlllng?" the caller asked. Lawmeri considered the reporting done. They rolled up to 8182 Westminster Ave., and found Liberty, then 19 years old, strumming his guitar as candles fl.ickered bes.Ide the atr11gted body or his woma1. Mesans Injured As Tree Falls A Costa Mesa couple was injured this morning when a towering eucalyptus tree cut down by county workmen toppled on~ their car, severely damagins the vehicle. Mr •. and Mrs. Charles McK~, 653 W. W1!son St.. were treated i t Hoa.g Mem.or1al HOlpltal for cuts and other injunes and released following the mbhap. ' The Ca11fornla lUghway Patrol was lnvestlaatlng clrcum&tance.a surrounding -the ICCktent, which oecttrred-about lO:l> a.m. Just outskte the city llmlta. The couple'a car wu cruihed when the tree belnl cu& down at Paularlno Avenue and S.ar Street landed atop • It, !or reasons not fully e1:pl1ined. Reporta at the acene conflicted as -wliil&r"lrla1 min waa on duty '? halt traffic durlne the felllng oper1· . lions, or whether the driver almply faUed kl see him. . . €ar Agency, .. Big -Theater • f r . Ask:··Permits A pair of applications for a twin-screen movie I.heater capable of accommod1Un1 1,300 viewers and a new car agency, boLh In the Harbor Shoppin& Center1 aq before the Cos1a Mesa Pianolng Com· m1asfoo tonight. The request.. are among lt ~parate llellll on the 7:30 p.m. agenda. Harbor Shopping Center owner Si9ney Shu ii requea~ a muter. plan revilioD I« the fodllty at 2300 Harbor BIV<I., to lllowcoostrudioil ~the -theoten. '!be Edwards Cinema Theater cha.In pr_. to coosl!Uct the dooble the.lier -tint in the cily -.. land •Ill ci an existing tbeU houaing ah<>pl and · atorea:. One auditorium will contain 901 seall and the aecood will offer 401 seats. while they will share the lobby, mack bar and box office. Planning technicians recommend ap- proval of the project, noting It will occupy a parUon of a site origjnally planned for a shopplng center building never constructed. No addlUon.al parking area will be req ui red, si.uce. the Harbor Shopping Center has adequate ipice and the theaters will be operating nights, ..men many other stores are cloised. Another sUgbt. revision for the ahopping center master plan, addition of 4,500 square feet to the: ezisting J.C. Penney Company store, will abo be emsldered on the same applica.Uon. A separate zone exception permit is also being aought by Sher and car dealer David Ross , who plans to open a Pontiac dealership at 2480 Harbor Blvd., adjacent to the center. Actual location of the Ross Pontiac lot would be at tbe sootheast corner of Harbor BouJevard and Fair Drive adjacent to the 508-acre Fair Harbo; Apartments project whlcb ii now under construction. From Page J FISH FRY ••• try Club, according to Raciti. Largest single event cl the aMual !lum-m;er celebration ii alw1ys the Saturday Fish Fry Parade, which this year drew about 100,000 visitors. most of whom gtayed for the entire event. Sweepstakes honors were won by the Banjo Pickers Square Dance Club or Wutmlnl~. Hert are the other winners In the big Fish Fry Parade, whlch atretched out for th ree miles from start to finish as Jt wound through downtown C.0.ta Mesa: FloaCs : Sweepstakes, Banjo Pitker1 Square Danct Club, Westminster. Theme prlie (This Amazing World), Vasa Order of America. Civic catecory, Queen'• Trophy, City of Orange, 1st: City of Anaheim, 2nd; City ot Cosla Mesa, 3rd. M1yor'a troplly, (commercial entry) Knott'! Berry Farm, Isl; McDonald's Hamburgen, Costa Mesa, 2nd ; Shakey's Piua Parlor, Costa Mesa, 3rd. Judge's apedal (religious group) Christ Lutheran Church of Costa Mesa. Uon1 trophy (best youth entry) Cub Scout Pack 114., Garden prove, !st· Fairview State Hospital , 2nd; Costa Mes~ Future Farmers of America, 3rd. Junio r majorettes: lat place, Calicoeltes; 2nd place, CaJi. coe~tes Junior B; 3rd place. Joan Cody Tw1rlettes ; Senior majorttct1: lit place, Calicoettes; Znd place Ber- dene Williama Junior Twirlettes; 3rd place, Lowell High Scbool. Senior Drill Te1ms: Ill place, La Quint.. High School: 2nd place, Gahr High School ; 3rd place, Santa Ana High School. Drum ud Bu&le: Fairview Slate Hoa- pital. Elementary band1 : Seal Beach Ele- mentary School. Junior High B1 nd1: tst place. Brook· hurst Junior High; 2nd place, Dale Junior High : 3rd place, Jotlns-On Intermediate. High School Band1: Sweepslake1 winner. Newpor t Harbor High: Isl place, Santa Ana High; 2nd place. Estancia Hlgb~ 3rd place, Lowell Hi~h School. . Junior Drill Teams: lst place, Seal Beach Elementary: 2nd place, St. Poly- c1rp: 3rd place, Johnson Intermediate. Colorpard1: 1st place, Orange Police Dept; 2nd place (lie) Newport Beach Pollce and Calicoettes ; 3rd place, Thun- derbirds. Novelty: tst place, Valencia Shrine Club; 2nd place, Orange County Shrine Club; 3rd place, Swinging Dollies. Horses : Nove:lty lfOUll, 1st place, Rath family : 2nd place, clowns on horseback: 3rd place, Lorinda Disney. Charro Ope11, 1st place, Austin Hong. l\fov.nted lf1l'IP· 1st place, Ontario ?.tountettes: 2nd place, Ontario Mounted Pol ice. India• ORtll, 1st place. Lynette Whyte: 2nd place, JeaMette Cadnum : 3rd place. N1ncy Bungee. Matched ptlr, tst t>lace, Ann and Wayne Wagner ; 2nd place, Arlene i nd Sonny Priebe, Spanish lady, ~st place, Mary Wrlghl : 2nd place, Maraaret wrta:ht. Spanisll mu, tst place, Al Block. Workln,c_Wutm tady ... lal place,-Allce T11nner: 2nd place, HaM'tet ScMublein. F1et1 Westtta man, tat place, Chuck Ritch; 2nd .place, Emmett De La Jl'111e, !rd, "'Fran_!_ Wier. OAIL'f PILOl 1t1H l"lle• Tops Fish Frg Entries Float entered by Banjo P layers Square Dance Clllb ~ of Westminster was · declared sweepstakes winner in ~th renewal of aMual Costa Mesa Fish Fry Parade. Colorful Westminster entry com peted with ~ore than two doz~n otJier .Ooatl ;Saturday in win· n1ng the top parade prize. " f'rent P .. e J Ceremonies Mark Start UCSB ••• ed to the '"" ol the bank ofter a1tendlna a "Renaiaance pleasure fairt" seven blocks away In a lar1e vacant lot. Of SRI .County Lahorato~ Leu lhan 500 in number when it began, the crowd grew quickly to Simple ceremonies today marked the formal opeoJng of Stanford Research between 800-1 ,000 81 the young people Jfistitute's new $1 mlUlon b r an c b moved through Perfect Park In the center or ls.la Vista down the main street to laboratory designed pi'lmarily f o r the bank. research Into environmental pollution. Named SRI -Irvine, the facility at '111e diaorders began_ Thursday after MacArthur Boulevard and Jamboree students became angered at grand JUry Road covers 53,000 square feet and will lridlclmtnts handed· -cmvn·-agaiMt ·17 ~emp~oy • r~~~ch te11_11 of!~rsons. P:ubllc open house will · tie Tueaday per900.S,· lnc1~ding some studenta and Crom 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., accordlna to former studenLs, In connection with the company 1pokHmen. burning down of the original Bank of Utilizing some ol the m o s t America durinJ rk>ts here last February sophisticated scientilic equipment in u:- 'Jbe current branch was erected 8 • istence, the lab will feature a large 1 the street f .1.._ . . 1 cross ~hamber capable ot aritficWly ·1imulat.-rom 1.111:1 ong11a . 1111 the formation of amog. The staff of lclentlsta will at any time be working 'On 70 to 85 different research problems ranging from the el· fects of other pollutants on plants and animals to ezhaust em!S!llon controls and cleaner automotive fuels. "This laboratory emphasizes SRI's con- tinuing commitment to the search for solutions to one of society's most critical problems," remarked SRI President Charles A. Anderson. He said the nonprofit organization doing research on contract to other agen- cies pioneered smog research Jn Los Angeles during the late 1940s and hlil5 handled other envlronmenla.1 problems since. There Is now only one airline serving Orang e Co~nty. And they've just in-CMI• :. .... creased their fares. Now, if you want to save $10.50 rou nd trip, we suggest . P• you fly PSA from LA instead. The PSA air fare from LA to San Francisco is· a _,.illUl1'9Diua. still $15 .75, lncludiag tax. PSAP..,.. a lift. l • ' • • SOOdleha~li EDITIO·N ~ ' VOL. 63, NQ. 136, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES Oppo•e• Hartman Schmitz Facing June 30 Runo·ff State Sen. John-Schmitz {'R-Tustin) will face Democrat David Hartman in a speclal ·run off elect.ion June 30, final t1nofficial results in Tuesday's special JSth Congressional District election show. The special ballot was to select a sucessor for the unexpired term ending next January to · the late Rep. James B. Utt who died last March. Earlier indications were that SChmitz would tally enough votes in the two-coon· ty elecUon to avoid the runoff, bu~ County Clerk William St John sajd this morning final figures show that Schmitz failed by 2,842 to gain a clear majority of the total votes cast. · The unofflcial tabulation show the state eenator with 103.127 vote!! lo 105,969 tor his six opp;ments. -Ttle-special harid counl was completed - this morning showing tha t the run off was necessary. Schmitt: will face another DelllOO"at, Thomas Lenhart, in November In a run of( for the regular t w o • y e a r Congressional tern. Candlelight ' Killer Sought In New Deut.h --By-ARTllUR"R. VINSEL" OI Ille Dtll'I' ,lltt lllff .• Sctunit.i cuily.led lbe othersln Orange County but they piled up a decisive majority in San DlegG County 's 301 precincts. Notorious Candlelight killer Robert The totals: Orange County, Schmitz, W. Liberty is 10Ught throughou t the 77,0llO; opponents 60,233. San Diego Coon· west today, after being ~ted 0( ly, Schmitz 26,047; opponents 45,763. ~third ritualistic murder ln four yean. The final vote In Congressional district He is believed respOOsibJe for the slab-- wu delayed several days because results bing and strangulation in San Diego from 31 of the 428 precincts in Orange of a man who once be!ria>ded him County were not received at election when both were inmates · at· a it.ale headquarters u prevklusly planned. hospital for the criminally insane. .. ~ -'leUy'8 ..,,_ • .. --N. ~~;film• ' . . .. . . ORANGE COUNTY, CAl.IFOANIA ' . \ ~ MONDAY, JUNE 8, 1970 TEN CENTS . . ' ' . .. . . . ' •• ' ' I I. .. ."• o;;r-, '~I ._,..oas '· .Top Federal, State Aides ' . . : Plan Parl~y By JOUN VALTERZA ot tlM 0.llY '"" Slaff Seventy· high-ranking federal and atate officials ~-probably-lncludinr Gov. ·Ronald Reagan arid Viet Prm~pt Spiro Agnew, are expected to arrivt tn Newport Beach and San Cl-today and Tuesday. · lnformed aourc:es indicattd the rantina · otfl~ials would hold several days fl con- . fer~ on inte:r1ovmunental relations, probably at the~ Wellern Wblte House compouDd In San Clemente. • Agnew is expected to arrive some · Ume late today at the Newporter Irn .In Jo!ewport B~ich. Gov. Reagan was reported to be the olltdal 'host ol the meeting .. ries, but press aides at the caP!tol toda.r would neither·confirm, ~-d~ ... riports. There were no reports on the chances that· the Agnew arrival is linked to the conferences at tbe San Clemente Inn and the Western Whtte Home of the goyenY\ient. relaUpns group. In put visits Agnew has spent quiet . visits at the Balboa Bay Club. His' press aides said he was due to return to Washington, D.C., from Callloml« Tues- day., The appearance ln NeWport wu • <. ' ' , . DAILY~,IL.iiT ........ ! ...... ii.WW ptesiJ.med to be a Ito~. l:AGUNA. FIREMEN HAUL INJURED .~0$&Plt R""805 ,JR:.UP CLIFF AT IRVINE COVIi .' . 'l'he ,Son ,Clemente e'venls reportedly By B.osket lo tho T.0-,....,.'Fh ...... lho LJ,vlng Room,to •S.Joty ' will get under way ,l•le Tuesday Wltll • • • co:nferences between. about 20 California • • • • • • ' • .,,· 1 • ., ·State· Oifidals · Ind ·about '°·from-the Because the precinct workirs in the ''The Candlelight Killer llri.i.es again," 31 inst..nces dki not phone the resul~ was acribbled in pencil on, a. door in in last Tuesday night it w .. ~ Ibo aporlmmt ol _, '· Jrioa. II, to conduct an e*nsive search .for wblle ~o cudlee tlkftred eerily '. . iE \.•-: . >~eij· ~ ... , ' ' I··'·"' 'r _,..o! ~··~·. . °'I • ,. ' t•· ~-.I 1 ·--.; ' ' '&mhi· ~( ~ ... Weifttu au&\ .., · were.ex~jed to .a~tend. Wt u.l.i.r ....... ' ' ' OrlCl~ '9u••mprm4 t~·· ;, · :::~.,; ; . "" ... \. ,,.. "; ........ ,., special election ballots from • besl~ COl'JIR.-.... . -· , precincts and to,.hand count U\tm. UbiMy, D. whole 1ut known address WIS JllO Avocodo SI., CGola Mela jalned .As . Jr.oat Si~·~· -~~iue of~ fll'OUP ~.Die ' /UIY~ Con1mllsloo 00 Jnll!l'fO'ftm.·--"f • · • men\al'Relldons: • Lab .neporf· E~p,~ct~d · * * * -~~ lame rou. y ...... wlien he niutdered a paramour U yean his 1«1ior it a~ Watminster .p.rtment. Nixon's Home Precinct Likes Birch Member President Nixon has never shown any partiality for the ultra conservative John Birch Society but his San Clemente neighbors apparenUy hold a different thought Voters ol Concordia School preclnct -Mr. Nixon's precinct -1ave State Sen. John SchmiiZ (·R-Tustln), the licm's share o( their votes In the recent Cqreaklnal .special election. Schmitz is a member or the John Birth Society. ln the race to nu the seat of the 1alt Rep. James Utt, Schmitz ncelved 245 votes of 425 cast. Hls four Republican opponents only rolled up 13& votes jointly. The two Democratic opponents 1plit another 30 votes. On the Republican side, William Wilcoxen was second in the precinct with 74 votes. John Steiger had 46. Maggie Meggs had 10 and John Ratterree had !. Democrats Da vid flartman and Thomas Lenhart each received 15. W oma1i Escapes Death As Auto Flies Off Road • ri!: the~ a::v=:f ~:':ay~ of Mrs. Marcella Landis, 31, apparently cboosq no( to tJll yet a fourth victim. Richard Graystack, 17, rJ Loog Beach, was left bound with neckties in Irion's apartment after being forced to drive the killer and a woman companion to _San Diego. ' . 'The youth told police he picked up the hitCMtlking pair in l.A:log Beach and was ordered to head for San Diego, where he was directed to the apartment of the man marted for death. He finally atrul(led free ol his bonds early Stmday and called police, who arrived to find the welrd tableau '° typical ol Liberty's homicidal patterli. Liberty has also been sought since March 12, listed as the prime suSP.tet in the murder ol 1bomu Altorina, 25, who was shot and dumped near SunJel Aquatic Park in Huntington Beach. A.!torina shared a trailer at the Cost.a Mesa addtell with Liberty and two other men, one or vmom ls in custody and awa~ trial in connectkm with the murder. Lawmen tn S111 Diego said today that Llberty and tbre auburn-haired woman IS.. CANDLllLIGHT, P°" I) 200 at Meeting To Plan Fourth Sawdust Display More than 200 Laguna Beach arUst.. and craltsmen jammed the Hotel Laguna'• Rlvien Room 'lbunday night ror the Sawdust Festival's membtrshlp A S9-yearped-old Losd thAng,.eles womatn nlar-1neeUn& and briefinl on plans for the rowly eeca ea n a !pee acu ar 1 rth 1 morning crash in San Clemente today OU annua 1wnmer exhibit for the when her cat vaulted_ a-.freeway iuar.tl Sawdust artllb. . _ . rail, sailed 150 feet through the air, ~iiiaeM. tltrlen'"Terwilllcer ouU1ned then rolled up an embankment grounds plans aod stressed the im - Callfornia Highway Patrolmen f.&id portance of oriaiNlity, uniqueness and Margaret Blanche Kelley, whose last w<!"~anshi~ hi eKh!biton' boolhs. He address wu in Los Angeles, suffered said a special meeting would be held facial fr11ctures and other hurts in the to go over constni:ct.ton Of "creative" 7:~ a.m. crash on the' AvtnUda ~ilpl,ly booths for the festival aroundJ Magda1ena offramp of the San Diep lD Lquna C&nyon. Frtt:way Mtlnber1 wen aaked to Jndk:ale pttler- The w'oman 's auto narrowly misled rf!d. booth sites, on a first come, nm a state hlghway mlinteoance crew, theft aervtd buia, oo • ,rounds 11\JP to new past another oncoming auto on be poeted It the old Ward and·Harrll'(ton the ortramp before hlWng the ground lumber yard on Saturday and Sunday and ronin,. · momlnga from 8:30 a.m. to 0000. Flttmen pr ed Jhe woman from (he Hi(lbligbt ol the mt!<ll111 wu judging demolllhed 1uto, wtilch was r~tln1 on ¢'"the Sawdust FesUv11r1 poster ·conlff1., lls top In thick bushes. wllh pointer Guy Downl plckln1, up the The """'iq "'" •till underg•!iir-~~!111-"!l'*(IMlbe!I '~· ~ ~·· emerfl'llCYH"*luill ..,.,.;l\l, A~ ' Tho S'a..tfust F'l!)9l wiH r.I. .,.,. at Souat l"Aut· .. ~andy lJMpltal currently With the Fe!Uval of Art.I from df&Cribtd her condition as 1ausrwctory. July 17 lhrouah AU1Usl 30. •• . . ' . ' ( After Mystic Aris ':Fire Laguna.Beach Fire Chief Jim LaLimer .taid today he ho:pes to reoeive a report 'from the Orqe County Shertfrs Office crime lab this afternoon on the results of tests made on samples of Dooring frorp Mystic Arts World, sent jn on Thursday for examination. The tests Were ordered in an attempt to establish the origin of the midnl,ht b!aze l!";.~ destroyed much of the interior ol the art gallery and store at sro S. Coast Highway Wednesday. Latimer said tetitative figures placed the-.tnictural las; at $4t,OOO and the contents, which were not insured, were valued at approzlmately $20,000. He said the fire apparenUy oti&inated at noor level at a point five feet from an electrical panel insidt the .store. Detectives and Fire Depirtment In· 1pector1 have been lookJng into the possibility of arson anJ building depart- ment inspectors are investigating poss:l· ble r..': .. 1rical wiring defects. Building and Safety Dlr<cio!' Clyde Z. Sprlqe said today be would not be ·able , to determine. tbe . percentage 0( .slructural ·~~·aae until ,all reports were c.'Ompleted. J! less than 50 percent oC the !tryctui"e ls destroyed, the. owner is permitted to re.build, otherwise the building must be raud. .. • -Extet:ior ol the Mystic Arts .building Is concrete walls, attached to the Elks Lodre on one side and the Neal Butcher Gallery on the olher. The floor. firemen said, was of wood over two by six lr\*et which apPa.rently had been laid dirtctly OR" an-old . paved parking lot. The large barn-like structure once wa.<1 uaed ror pottery ma~facture and later wa.s occupied by 'Ibe Pepper Mill plant a!)Cl.dh1play rooms. The tntierlor was extensively remodele~ with many wood partitions by the current Jessee. In determining structural loSi, Springe said, it would be necessary to determine •Which o{ the interior .partitions were bearing wall.s. Saddleback Students Seek -·Backing for Ope~ Forum Saddleback College students have call-tendent/President. ed for citizen backing tonight in securing -The graay area northeast Of the what tome have called ".semi-free Student Center will be uted for f()rums. speech" on ca mpus or a proposed "open In the event It ls unavallab1e, the forum ." Coordinator of Student Act.IYitle!J will Trustees or the college, who have had dealgnale anoU}er Jocauon. a · committee working on the matt.er, -c.lasies may not be dlsmided for are to 1ake it up tonl&ht al the 7:45 the p.•rpote of participation 1n anr·!T· meeling """"=f:ach-f~shlll~tii no msn t ail John Bothwell, s1udeat body president. 30 mlnutes In length. In asking ciUzen suppott « the open -Deilgnated hours .for forums shall forum, said Sfdclleback student.a have be between 10 a.m. and ,2 p.m. Mond,ay proved for two yean: lhit they are throogh Th~. 1 patient and cooper.tive. There has never -No amplllk:anon syst,em, tlectronie been a major incident on campus, ,he or otherwltt:, stµill be uaed. said. ....:No pruenllUon ·!Df.y advoclte the The forum, preposed by Bothwell April overthrow of • our e 1 t a b' l l sh e·d 27, would apply cnly to . atudeMa at ·governments, can for-viok!nce on or Saddteback. Application for the forum s off campus, CCl{'talr. obsee.nlli·es .. woul4 be mAcle throogh the school 21 stimulate the dbNplloo ol llie claaroom .houri in advance. proct:a or en1a1e in character _.is&a51ina. The CUidellnes P'\llP"sed ore: lion. . . . -At teut K tioun i,n a(fy•~ ol ~ly one pe(ton may · tie-illo~~ the proposed forum 1!._aPPliedt:Son Jfrom 1 .to~at·on• time. . " the Coordinator .of St~; Act.b1ifles -S(-.ter1 must allow .q~ from ~be ln11.1""". . .. I ~ --· .. . , .. ,( ' 4i1\'1i!0 ,~•/0Nlh~Ol)On · '<r~~ of 0tbo',~bovt rutn'. Will ' ~ A-U•s ·~ tJ\e Superin-·r~u hi Ille ,suopentlilii •of !he pnv)fose !"U9t be approvved ~·ltie Coordinator or USISM the opea. ,forum for •• perlod of Slud0t1I AcUvltes and the S'!J!"rl~ . ol ono quarter. .•. : .. _ -• ~ '\ I • Of·f· .... ,1..:·alo'"n·e: pf.·1 . '11ie '"°"'ng• ,.;n _be ·he1d· ,,,,.,day . . .tU.I •' at tt>e Sn Clemente lnn and lhe Whitt Faur men were re8Clled ·from ·the treachergus . water and rocks ~ btlow LiJUna's Ab~IORt: Point .&at~ay , ar. etmoOn' wtien their rented bo~t • struck a ieef and sunk, inJurt.ng twO Ot them . . House compound.,on Friday. · Lifegit1'rd JiJck Llnkt . ajded ,Anihbriy A. Speer, 42, bf Tusiln, who w'as .w1m. ' ' . ming l• the water. He was usllted by a Harbor Departmerit f.esd!e'craft. Lifeguards, Jeff Qua .rh and ' Mike Hartley went to the aaiatance rJ .a father and son who were injured and clinging to the rocks. Ny' were ldenUfled 'as Jooeplt Ramo. . . ' , Sr., 53, and Joseph ,Jr.,,11, ~-¥ , La Puente. Both were lrtjured .''I'he,junior ff.4mos reportedly had a broken, leg ud hla father suffered shock and laceratidns. A fourth victim, u~ldentlfied, wa's plck- ·ed up by the commerdal fls~l11g""bo8t "Newporter" out' of Newport Beacb. ·guards said. · · Guards said the father and soni could not be taken off the rocks becau&e ,or lojuries. ~·a Beach : nreinen responded to ~l.d In a cliff.face ~59-1~·. , Working below , the Mertl K. · G~e home canUlevered over Abalone...Poinl, .firemen ducended' from the. Gaede tn house in the cWf face below the home and lowered rescue baskets·by rope. They ...rited the inJured..lalhOr~ lf1d son ~uily lo the Jop and ·can'jO<I the victims thl'O\'gh · the llvlng ,_ ol the pooh home Jo tra1111port I h t m lo ,lhe hospital. Choral Readers . . . . . ,. ' ' :Slate ~rpgr~m · : The Cliill'R111<iiders of Llg\llia Beich High School-will pr...,. a,,..,..,,, 1t 'tonlgh~11 'aMual meettni of the J..as\m.a 'Coordlnotlnt ColBICll al 7:30 In llle ·hlfi!! 'school audltofibm. ' . 1 , Al19 on the i1enda, lor the,mtrilbenhl\> :~f:,1:.r,i~~-·~..;:;'."; :r~ ' ' . ,Yoar'' ,c11vl~e1. · · Slata qi" olflcera to be pmentad=b 'tbe non\1nau11a conunlltee in<ludt< lie! Keeley, pr;~clenl: • TIJoi!i.. M .• nrst vfce 'WesldttU; Ba.rba ,r~ .Rlblnowll.!h, """"'11 · vice pcaloll!nt; Mary1 'f,r~1 .\n4:ter~· fe\ct°~d.}bj" , ........ ry; ll0<9!\>¥ ~il)'c<, ~ I --.tarl'1 •lllj JiM•!Jo!'d, lr"""'1!'r;;: 1 Pr•1\o•ecl"~r0.!f"0' 'ilid11i' ~~' ; ~· ,.,. ii' ""' Cool<; ,...,.,. CfjR-' ntnjham, James. Diiiey, GtOfl+ ,FoWljj- •nd jllrn~r<I Sylt\n. , ,• . n, mHilna (l,Qlien ~lb&~ ... '": Dr-iver on Wrong Track, -.UUed A·Pwtland, Ore., man whose car was unexpfainedly headect doWn a rural railroad track In Miss.Ion Viejo was killed instantly Sunday rilght In a headon ·col· lision with a freight train. Wayne McCullough, 42, was killed ln- stanUy, according to the Orange County Coroner's office. Engineer Curtis S)'(!kalooet, of San Bernardino told the California Highway Patrol ·he-didn't ·Set the 'car in time to stop the .speeding Santa Fe San Diegan. Inve11tig,ators for the CHP s a Id McCullough's car ·was northbound on the tracks 100 feet south of the Crown Valley ',Parkw8y Intersection, parallel to Camino clplstrano. · No .one else witnessed the high-speed collision, which demolished McCullough's automobile and inflicted multiple injuries on the victim. Nixon Honors Crew WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Prooldent 1nd M,.., Nixon 1'111 give a dinn« party tn:..:'the family quarters Of the White H~ Tuesday-,nJgtt , for the Apollo -J:t a.sb'onauts. We•dter • It'll 1tlll try to rain Tueaday _morning, bul~not-very hard, whll~ afternoons will be slightly auMy anti temperalures ranging from 65 along the shore to 73 further In· land. INSmE TODAY McGavtha and Cramptmi may become as wtU known QI Drtd Scott when the Suprtmc Covri makt• o landmark deci.rion on the death penatt~. Page l2. ·--c ....... _ .. ..... • .. 1 . • "' ~ • ,. • I • = ---· 2 DAl1.Y Pit.OT ·SC .....,, "'"' •• 1'70 -/~ • • Mor·e Stud! Peru De-vastafion On Student . Vie.wed From Air . . Advisor 'Set • ABOARD A USAF C130 OVER PERU ·(AP) - A grandstand view of deaUt and destruction swept beneath a big · ,.\1,S. C130 cargo plane as it dropped supplies to survivors o( W'thquaie-tom Norlb C.nlral Peru Sunday. -J•Unbelitvable,'' taid the-pilot, Capt. BW Hudlpetb. a Vietnam veteran, as he tuided the big Hercules up the 80-rni!e Huaylu-C..yon. "Worse than anything. I have seen in my life." Hudspeth shook his head in disbelief u the transport passed over what was 61 Captured On Drug Raps • In Huntington · tn a Btepped-up program to , make Huntington Beach "hot for drug users,,. officers from the police department's Special -Etiorcement Detail ( S E D ) rounded up et persons on drug charges over the weekend. Det. Clpt. Grover Payne and Sgt. Jack Reinholtz said the haul of 29 adults and 32 juveniles waa: the largest in the city's history. · Forty.five of the arrest& were made by tJie SEO led by Sgt. George Renek. Hil men swept -the beaches over the weekend arreslin& suspected users of drugs apd obtainlng information leading to the arrest away from the beach of 8U8J>tded sellen of drugs and mari- juana. . . Narcotics Delective Ed W1lllama: and officers actihg on infonnation gain.eel In the beach raids and anned with a search W1:tfant, arrested aeven penons Jn Westmi.nater early Suoday mcning on drug ufe and sales charges. , Seven more persoos were arrested at a house on Cameron Street in Huntington Beach by both SEO and nar<:Otlcs delall oflicen u a result of information p,ined Crom those arre.sted on the beach. Four suspects arrested on (:~get . of posuession ol drugs and p:>Ue&Slon with intent to sell are: -Thomaa Williams ZZ, ISO 7th Street, Norco -Bernadette Pukey, 11, 1441 Valencia Street, Huntington Beach -Gary Barrett, 23, 13472 Olive street, Wesbninster • -Danny 0. Bruyn, 15, 271 N. Oak Str<el, Orange All othen held on dlarges o! '"f Plo poatllioo of narcotics are: Arrested in the-narC'Otica sweep were: -Michael KortJe. 2Z, 113 N, Gates st.. Santa Ana _:Diane Parker, 18, GI 7th Street, Huntington Beach , -William Helm, 18, 9915 Maplewood Street, Bellflower. -Joseph Ryciak, 18, 16518 Chadmont Street, Covina -George Hernandez:, 19, 711% Bonvilla Street, La Palma -Donald Carton, 19, 11171 Midway Street. Los Alamitos - -Michael Larkins. 18, un Eucalyptus Street, Long Beach -Tommy Huneycutt. 19 -Richard Scaife, 21 -Charles Theriault, 23 -Michael Powers, 2% -James Jones, 11 -Robert Woods, 21 -Ga.iJ Levesque, 19 · . t.-lvan Dowdy Jr., U, 945 Locust Street, Long Beach -Steven Harris, 18, 90'11 Rhodesia Street, Huntington Beadt -Beverly Brewster, 18, 5681 Abraham Street, Westminster -Bobby Shepherd, 18, !'Im Keel!on Lane, Huntington Beach -Kenneth Perry, 18, 219 Chestnut Street, Monrovia -Carl Scliilla, 19, 340f Granada Street, El Mante DAILY PILOT .. ..,.,, .... . L..p ..... ,. _c....~. "--,. ....... ..,. __ ,._c~ OIUHGE CO.UT l"U9LISHIHG C0M"AHY lto\•rf N, w,.d l'.-..Jldiiil""' l'vfl;tltfwr J 1c• It. C11•l•Y \lk• l'IU.tttfll 111'11 Gener1I M•nll'f' lh•n1•1 K••"il Edllor Tho"''' A. M11rPlli11• Mlofloltlrit ldl!or 1t;c~1r4 '· Nill $0u1" Or•riee C-1)' Editw Offk• c~·· Ma.: llO Wul , • ., St••' H~r ••id!. mn w .. 1 ,,._, ...,...,,,.. L-flt•c"; n2 "-I A-M1111!1"01011 fltlt": 11'15 .. !di • ..,,..,,. .. S.11 Cltnwlt9; 311$ Hor'lfl Iii Clmlnf 11..a OAILV l'ILOT, Wlfll ••N:" I< c;iomllllld Ille .......,.,.._ i. """!~ •Ultp ••C#I $vlOo "9f fol .,..,,~ «llllt<" /or 1.....,... kc.ll• ,..,...., ... Clo. (11111 M-. Hlll'lll"I,_,. .,_,. ... flllnllln V1H11, 1i..-.t wlflil IW9 ......... flll11tfW,. Or -C.t~t PWIWI""' ~ .,11111nt pi,.,,, ••• ,, ttll W.1 ..... arwiai .. HtWP."'I atldl, "-' DI Wed ..,..,.._c. .. ~ Tll!it,,.aN 1714J &42~l21 c~ ..._.1s1-, ••1.1•11 S-Cl 11 .AN Pcjt911•1tw Tat4lan1 ·4tJ:A4n ~ ~ °'-e-1 "'*""'1"' ~.,. -,, ,.._, 1ttrlft, lll••tr11.- cfl•t11 --,,,. ,,..,...'-1, ..,.,."' ll"Ml'I' ~ ..... ~" •llMlll MOttlttl ,.,. """"""' • GllfWl':llllt -· ........ ~-•Miff ,.w ,, .......... ilff<:fl .i;I c ... M-. C•l"'"'I•. Wl!Kr' .... ~ llT Urtllr ,,. _,..,1¥1 liy .... h p_a ~ 111mi.,. t1.n11M11ao!t, u .ot "*'"'''· lelt ol llw'U, onct a city ol SO,Otltl at the soulbern entrance to the canyon, J80 miles north of Lima. Hall the buildinp had cnunbled. · Not a single' roof remained intact. The govemroent says the earlhquaktl a wet ago may bave. Jdlled 30,000 or tnOA people; a United Natklnf observer says the count more Ultely will exceed 50,000. An estimated 100,000 more are , homeless. injured or both. Hudspeth reached for the throUle and headed his giant craft 21 mil es up the gorge to Anta, tbe target of the airdrop. Anta, a village of about 2,000 was devastated, but by some freak of terrain enough .of the town's tiny airstrip Wu spaied from avalanches that hurtled down the 18.000-foot Andes to leave It still usable by small aircraft. A quarter ton of 1Jeeplng bap, blanket. and food nlion! wu packed ln plastic.. wrapped survival kits and atapled into 12 large crates: 'The back bay of the pl.tne lifted open• as Anta r.ame ·into view and the crates were shoved out, two at a · time, as the Hercules made Ill ~ over the rw'lway. Carhuu, i.notlitr town of about 10,000 people, came-Jnto view 11 the plane pulled o,ut o! ill last drop run. "lncredjb.J., .Unbelievable," was all the crew could say as they looked down on the shambles. A few miles further up the canyon WU YunatY. w)lich_y_s.ed_ to~ home for aome !3,000 people. AU that could be seen of it were the tops of four palm trees where the town square had been and a statue of Christ, with anns oulatretched, whk:h marked 0.. hilltop cemetery. · A slide of rocks· and mud two to three mils wide hid hurtled clear acro!I' both banks of the Santa River at the bottom of the canyon, buried Yungay and amuhed against a mountain l~ge on tie other side. Only about 2,500 mldenta of :Yung1y are believed to baye 9Ul"Vlved. The CIJOol Oy twice a day, dropping supplies over the caoyon then picking up survivors at the e~acuation center in Ol.imbote. 1bey are brought there by beUcopters and vintage C47s that can just manage to land and take off at Anta. More than half of O!.imbote, a thriving !ncl~l PD!'! ol llO,tll!tl people ls gone. Ila tbhmeal processing plant ls partly ruined. Engineers estimated it wiU take many months to get Peru's only steel plant there to operate again. But the undamaged .airfield has been turned into headquarters for planes and reecue teams from 14 nations. · Capo to Decide Oit Vehicle Park At Meet Tonight 11le decision on whether or not to pennlt a recreational vehicle park to be constructed off the Ortega Highway one and one-half miles from the San Diego Freeway will be. forthcoming at tonight's meeting of the San Juan Capistrano City Council. Protests by property owners near the proposed park influenced the council to ~tpone the.ir deci.!ion at the last meeting. Objections to the park center around noise, excess traffic and difficulty in -entering the site which is on a slope. The coo.ncllmen expressed a desire to investigate these problems penionally. The park is being proposed by Mn. Millie Orcutt wbo has obtained a fran- chlse Crom Kamp Grounds of America. lt will occupy 15 acres and will include ~ites for campers,_r_~reational trailers and a few tents. The facility will also l n c l.u de rest..aurant, car wash, playgrounds, swim· ming pool and recreation room. Also on the agenda will be the .adoplion of. a new business license ordinance with counclln\tn deciding on the amount to charge mobile home park operators and wbetber or not to include the old mission. Vtrele Eiler Wants You ' -Eiler-Larsen, the-famed greeter-of-Lagunao was in top fonn Saturday during an out-of-town appear1 ance. Eiler traveled to Costa Mesa where he rode as a special guest in that CQrnmunity'.s aMua1 Fish ·Fry Pat8Cie. Thus Eiler, Jong a fixture in Laguita, helped another fixture -the Fish Fry -observe its 25th anniversary. From Page l ·CANDLELIGHT who wu with him whea Greystack pick· ed them up fled the murder scene ia . lrion's Jate model Peugeot automoblle. Investigators noted that Irion, like 'Liberty's first Victim, met ·h:is slayer while both were under psychiatric care. M·rs. Landis was an out-patient at Orange County Medical Center along with Liberty, both of them having at- tempted suicide. Early on the morni•g or Ju1e 5, 1968, Westminster police received a telephone call. '1How do you report a killing?" the caller asked.~ .Lawmen CQnSidered lhe reporting done_. They rolled up to 8182 Westminster Ave., and found IJberty, then 19 years nld, strumming his gullar .as· candles flickered beside the stra11gled body of his wom aa. A Bible lay cpon her breast and potted plants surrounded her. "Be quiet -she knows what we are doing," the young slayer cautioned police. He was charged with murder, but determined incapable of standing trial by reason or insa111ity .a11d ccmmitted to Atascadero State Hospital for treat- ment. He was released six months later to stand trial, but re-committed to Metropolitan St.ate Hcspital in Norwalk after a jury decided again that be was insane. Liberty was freed again by accident on June 2, 1969 when a aurse ha111dling paperwork mistakenly checked him out as a routinely discharged patient. Authorities whipped up a furore over Llbe.rly's release and he read the stories in newspapers and turned himself in to a Santa Ana attorney. "He's perfectly meek and mild," the lawyer told lawme111. A panel cf six psychiatrists re· evaluated the young prisoner and reported he was sane and rearly for return to 90Ciety and on Sept. 15, 1969, Judge Robert M. Gardner agreed. The Superior Court j u r i s t ordered Liberty released and he moved to Costa Mesa until disappearing at the time Astorino was shot. apparently 11 .1u1 argument over a television set. Woman Dies at 116 KOBE, Japan (AP) -A 116-year.(Jld woman believed to be Japan's oldest person died al her home Sunday. Mrs. Ito Morimoto was born il'I tMa, the year U.S. Navy Commodore 'Matthew Perry came to Japan Graduation Set Viejo High .w Give 360 Diplomas Marching to the traditi0111al sound of "Pomp and Circumstance" 3 6 O graduating seniors of Mission Viejo High School officially receive their diplomas 'Thursday. Ceremonies will take place at _& p.m. in the football stadium with Associated Student Body President Bob Ta.miett.i leadlng the Pledge of Allegiance. The Board of Trustees will be prese'llt.ed by Jay lngall, assistant superinteJtdent of instruction for the Tustin Union High School District. .Next on the program will be the reetignition of all ho nor studenta, followed by the presentation or student speakers by Tom Spears, president of the senior class. The speakers will elaborate on the graduation theme "The Challenge of the Decade ". Joe Snodgrass will present "A Challenge of Responsibility" and Jane Rasmussen will speak oh "The Positive Way". The c:oncept or pl1cing • atudent ad· "Viaor on. the Laguna Beach Unified School District Board of Trustees Is being con4 slde'red, bu.t with deep con1ldetatton of the problems involved. Cathy 1'farple, newly re~lected pre.SI· dent of tht Laguna 1'each HIP School student body, went before lhe board to d.ilCU.!11 the matter last week and learned it requires more study. "I'm a 1ittJe concerned about the responsibility or a student advisor," board d!ai~an Larry Tayler told MiAs Marple. "lt would be difficult ror one person to carry all the information back to the students,'' he explal'ned, suggesting a panel in atteildance at board seasiona mitht be a better solution. Miss Marple said her proposal was based on a "lack of communication'• between the student body and the school board. "Students feel tbe board is way up there, .. me declared • ''I think it would greatly help com- munication," said LBHS student Stu.art Rabinowitsh. ··1 know all the red tape l 've had to go through to get to the board." Rabinowitsh suagested the board might look into effectiveness or student advi.!I01's in other communities. Newly-appointed director of curriculum for the district, Robert Reevet, proposed students .set up a monthly rotation. schedule for attending school board meetings. ~ , The former high school principal alM suggested student.I get together with the principal on matters Of importance. "Someplace in COOlmunica~n. the role of the principal has to be involved," added disfrlct superintendent Dr. William Ullom. He outlined the procedure for · making p-oposals to the board based oo present.alion, discussion and trustee appraisal. "It may take twc, three or four pre.!fn. tations to get supp:irt," he pointed oot, "but the important thtng is to educate people to your point of view." Reeves, Ullom and Don Haught, new high school principal. will di1CU11 the matter further with Misa Marple. Flag . Day Slated WASHINGTON (UPI) -President . Nixon tClday designated next Sunday as Flag Day and Uie start of National Flag Week. C_ou_nty Recr~ation Area Dedicated Before 500 In a three-part ceremony Sunday, the $$.5 million 10Utheast Orange County recreation center. Coto de Coza, was f«mal_ly dedicated before 500 members and l\l<lla. Outat.ancUng ..athletes were chose111 lo place their halldprlnta In ceramic dedlca· tlon plaques at the 4,900 acre facility's addle club, athletic club and hunt club. DedicaUon o( the $1.4 million saddle club t01)t-place in the 90 by 300 foot covered arena, world's largest clear-span pole structure. Equestrian atar Frank Chapot. representative 01111 four Olympic ttams and medal winner. placed his h1ndprint in Qle plaque, then executed a aeries of jumps before the cameras. A fleet of nine buses tr anspgrt.ed guests: over a hill and Into a v1Uey to the p million at.hlttic cltib where 1wirnmer Don Schollandu, wlMer llf sJx Olympic mtdal1 and eoto de Cua general manarer Robin Moore-awam 1 four4 lap race in the 25-'yard pool. A plaque with Schol11nder'• handprlnt _ wW bani ID tht athleUc clubbouae which ' houses lounges. dining room, game rooms gym handbaJl courts, bowli11g alleys: sauna~ and therapeutic pools. For Ule final ceremony, guests drove half the length of the five · mile -long recreation facility lo the hunt club to meet huntmaster Bob Sal'lchez, listed as one of the· nation's JG top shots, who gave an exhibition of trap shooting. Noted sports figures lrom many fields were repr,esented 1t the dedication, in· eluding basebaU's Andy Carey, former Yankee third baseman and Bill Singer, l..os Angeles Dodgers pitcher; football's line.backer Jack Pardee, Jack Snow of lhe tOs Angeles Rams and Rudy !Jukich,. former quarterback of the Chicago Bears and baskelba.11 star George Yard- ley. Also present were Olympic swimmer Carol,YTI Houtte, diver Pat McCormick, Gr1rmy Lansdell, three-lime A 11 • American football player at USC and Chuck Faust, rormcr Mr. U.S.A., Mr . World and national Grcco-Rom1n t)rpe • • Th ere Is now only 'one airl ine serving Orange County. And l/'iey've just in -~E'' creased their fares. Now, if you want to save $10.50 round trip, we suggest you fly PSA from LA Instead . The PSA air fare from LA to San Franc isco is ~- stil l $15.75, includi~g tax. :iitJlllU wrcsUing champion. --------------------------------------- I • .. ... • Today'• Fa.al ~ N.Y. Steeb • '<_* • VOL ~l. NO. 136, l SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ' . ' ORAN6.E ~NTY, cALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 8, 1970 TEN CENTS ~ . . . ' ueon ~oas " , • OpPoses· Hartnaa_. . Schmitz Facing Top Federal, State Aides Plan Parley June 30 Runoff By -JOHN VALTEllZA OI .... Dt{ly '"" tt.ft State Sen. John Schmitt {R·Tustin) will face Democrat David Hartman in a special run off election June 30, final unofficial results in Tuesday's special 3Sth Congressional District electiQn show. The ~ial ballot was to select 1 sucessor for the unexpired term ending next January to the late Rep. James B. Ult who died last March. · Earller indicaUons were that Schmitz would tally enough votes in the two-eoun- ty election to avoid the runoff, but County Clerk William St John said this morning final figures show that Schmitz failed by 2,842 to gain a clear majority of the total votes cast. The unofficial tabulation show the state aenator wlth 103,127 votes t.o 105,969 for his six opponents. Schmitz easily Jed the others in Orange County but they-piled up a decisive majority in San Diego County's :w:ll precincts. The totals: Orange County, Schmitz, 77,IX!IO; opponents 60,233. San Diego Coun- ty, Schmitz 26,CM7 ; opponent.s ~.763. The final vote in Congressional district was delayed several days because results from 31 of the 42.1 preclnota. in 'Orange County were not received at election headquarters as previouJJy·pUtnned. Because the precinct workers in the 38 UWlanceS did not phone the . result. in last Tuesday night it was neceaary to conduct an exteruiJve aearcb tor the special election ballots Iron\ Jhooe precincts and to hand coont them. * * * Nixon's Home Precinct Likes Birch Member Prtsident Nixon has never shown any partiality for the ultra conservative John Birch Society but his San Clemente neighbors apparently hold a different thought. Voters of Concordia School precinct -Mr. Nixon's precinct -gave State Sen. John Schmitz (R-Tustin). the lion's share of their votes in the .recent Congressional special election. Schriiilz is a member of the John Birch Society. In the race to fill the seal of the late Rep. James Utt, Schmitz received 245 votes o( 425 cast. His four Republlean opponents only rolled up 138 votes jointly. The two Democratic opponents split another 30 votes. On the Republican side, Willi.am Wih:oxen was second in the precinct with 74 votes. John Steiger had 46. Maggie Meggs had 10 and John Ratterree bad 8. Democrat! David Hartman and Thoma& Lenhart each received 15. Woman Escapes Death As Auto Flies Off Road A 59-year-old Los Angeles woman na rowly escaped death in a spectacular morning crash in San Clemente today when her car vaulted a freeway guard rail, sailed 150 feet through the 1\r, then rolled up an embankmenl. California Highway Patrolmen said Margaret Blanche Kelley, whole last address was In Los Angeles, suf(erN facial fractures and other hurts in the '1 :5S a.m. cra s h on the Aventida Magdalena offramp ot the San Diep Freeway. The woman·s auto narrowly misted 11 state. highway maintenance crew, lbm flew past another oncomlnc auto on the oUramp before hlU.ing thi ground and rolling. Firemen pried the womao from the demolished auto. •whk:h was rertin& on It. lop In lblck bosh«. The woman was •till undergoinc emergency treat.ment this momlng • ..Aidcs at Sooth Coast Community Hospitlil descrlbe\f her condlUon ., aaUo(aclory, •' Ttle special hand count was completed thls morning showing that the run off was necessary. Schmitz will race another Democrat, Thomas Lenhart, in November in a ru111 off for the regular t w o ") e ar Congres.sional tern. . Candlelight Killer Sought In New Death By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI llM 0.ltr ,lllf St9ff Notorious Candlelight killer Robert W. Liberty is sought throughout the west today, after being suspected 0( his third titualistic murder in four-years. He is believed responsible-for the stab- bing and strangulation in San Diego of a man who once befriended bim when both were inmates --at-la-state hospilal f<>< lhe criminally insane. "The Candleli&bt XUtet"JUillesiapln,'' WIS ec:ribbied jo penciJ, Ort a door ht lbe• apartmeat ti ll4llerl J. Irion, U, wtl1Je two caadla ll1ckered eerily -llil-Liberty, 23, whose last known address was 350 Avocado St., Costa Mf,SI gained pue90me fame four years. ago when he murdered a paramour 12 years his aenior at.a Westminster apartment. He struck again Saturday, one day past 1be fourth ami.versary of. the slaying cX Mn. Marcella' Landis, St, apparently choosing not to kill yet a fourth victim. Richard Graysta<:k. 17, of Long Beach, was Jeff. bound with neckties in lrion's apartment after bei~ forced to drive the killE'r and a woman companion to San Die&<>. 1be youth told palice he pickeCl up the bilcl>ltlking pair In 1-Beach and was ordered to head for San Diego. where he was directed to the apartment of the man marbd for death. He flnolly struggled free of hi• bond• early Sunday and called police, - arrived to find the weird tableau ao typical of Liberty's homicidal pattern. Liberty has also been sought since March 12, listed as the prime suspeet In the murder cl 11iomas Astorina, .25, who was shot and dumped near Sunset Aquatic Park hf Huntington Beach. . · A.storlna shared a trailer at the Cosla· Mesa address with Llberty and two'·other men, ooe of whom is in custody and awaiting trial in connection with the murder. Lawmen tn San Diego said today that Liberiy and the auburn-haired woman (See CANDLEUGHJ', Pap ll 200 at Meeting f o Plan Fourth · Sawdust Display ·~lgta ~~esdo•ed Lab Report Exp.ecte.d . After Mystic Arts Fire 'Laguna Beach Fire Chier Jim Latimer said today he hopes to receive a report from the Orange Couaty Sherifrs Office crime lab this afternoon on the reMJIU of tests: made on samples of flooring from Mystic Arts World1 sent in on Thursday for examination. The-tests were ordered in an attempt to establish the origin of the midnight blau that destroyed. much of the interior of the art gallery and store at 670 S. Coast Highway Wednesday. Latimer said tent.alive figures placed the .struchlral loss .at $45,000 and the contents, which were not insured, were valued at approximately $20,000. • He said the fire apparently originated at floor level at a point five feet fft!m \an electrical-panel inside the atore. DetectJves and Fire Department in- spectors have been looking into the possibility of arson anJ building depart- • ment Inspectors are investigating possi· ble electrical wiring defects. Building and Safety Director Clyde Z. Sprinp aald today he would not be · able to ,determine the perCentage of structural damage until .all reports were c.'Omplete:d.. If less than so percent o( the structure is destro)'ed, the owner is permitted to re-build, otherwise tht: building must be razed. Exterior of the Mystic Art! building is oonc rete · walls, attached to the Elks Lodge on one side and the Neal· Butcher Gallery on the other. The. floor, firemen saidi was of wood over two by six trusses whicb ·apparenUy ,had been laid directly .on an old paved parking lot. . . The large barn-like. structure 011ce was used for pottery manul'lcture and later was occupied by The Pepper Mill plant and display rooms. · The interior was extensively remodeled with many wood partitions by the current lessee. In det"ermin.ing stiuctural loss, Sprinlie said, it would be ntcessary to determine which of the interior ,partitions were bearing walls. Saddleback Students Seek Backing for Open Fo~ . Saddleback College students have call-tendent/Presldent. ' ' . Four Me.n Saved As Boat Sinks · • Off Abalone · Pt.'. Four men were ,rescued from 'the treacherous water ·and rocks below Laguna's Ab\J;lo-ae Point .Saturday , af. etmoon when their rented boat :struck a ree( altd sunk, injuring two of them . Llfegua'rd Ja'ck 4nke aided An!bOny A. ~peer, 42. of Tustin, who wu swih1- ming ill the wattr, He was assisted by a Harbor Department tesaie crafl Lifeguards, Jeff Qua ril and Mike Hartley went to the assistance of a father and . son who were Injured and clh1ging to the rocks. The,Y ·were 'identllied as Joseph Ramos Sr .. 53, and Joseph .Jr.;, 22, 1 b0th or ·r,..a Puente. Both were,injUred. The.junior Ramos reportedly had a broken leg arid -his father Suffered shock and' lacerations. · A fOurth vlctlin, unitlenlified, was pick· ' . ' ' 'ed up by , the commercial fishing boat "Newporter" Out of Newport' Beach, guards said. ' . ·Guilrds ·said 'the father and son could not be taken of! the rocks becauSe ot Injuries._ Lagul'La Beach firemen responded to ald in a cliff.face rescue. Working ,below , lhe Merel K. Gaede home cantilevtred over Abalone Point, .firemen dtscthded from .the· G~ tea house in the clilf face below the home and lowerec:t rescue baskets by ~· They worl<ed lhe Jojur«I !aiher a!ld •011.s1JC:ae!ilully lo lhe lop and cartled the_ _ylctlrns' Jhrough the Jiving !OOm of the posh home to transport t b e m to the hospital. More than 200 Laguni Beach artists ed for citizen backing tonight in securing -The grassy area northeast of th\! and craftsmen jammed the Hotel what some have called "scmi·free Student Center will be used for forums. Ch l R ader Laguna's Riviera Room 'Iburaday night speech" on campus or a proposed "ope.n In the event it is unavailable , the Ora e S for the sawdust Festival's membership forum." Coordinator of Student ActiviUes will Trustees or the co11ege. who have had designate another location. Slat p meeting and briefing on plans for the a committee working on the maUer , -ClasSes may not be dismissed for . . e , rogram fourth annual IWIUller-exhlbit-for-the are to take it up tcnight at the · 7:45 the pur:pose of partlcipa~ion in any forum . Sawdust artiJts. meelirc. -Each fortim ,shall be no more than ' The Choral 'Readers of Laguna Beach . President Harlen TerwWiitr outlined John Bothwtll. student body president, 30 minutes. In tengtb. High School will present a 'Pf'Oll'lm lit gt"(Undl plans and stressed the tm-tn isk:tng citizen .support ol the open -Des1gnatt.d tioufs .for forums shaD tonight's arml.Ull meeUng of. the Laitm.a portance of ~ty. uniqueness and forum, said Saddleback student.I have be betWeen 1Jo ·a,m. and 2 p.rn, Monday Coordi.nlt)ng Council at 7:30 ln the hl&h workmanship In eihibHon' booths. He proved for two years that _ Ibey are 'through Thursdi:y. school auditorium . said a special medJDI would be held paUenl and cooperitlve. 'Mltre has never -No amplification system, electronic . Also on the agenda for t~ memberlhl'P to go over CODltnJclion of "creative .. -been a major incidtnt oo campus, ·he or otherwise, shall be. used. · . meel,lng is election of ,officers foe; 01,e "display booths far thre festival froundl said. • . -No presentaUon may advocate lhe comfn& year llnd a review of. the ~t in Laguna ClnJ"OIL . The fOND!t ~ bJ Both wen AJ!ril overthrow ol ,O\.lr ts t a b'..11 1 h ~ d .year'• acU.viUes. Members 1'.'fh: aaked to lndk•te prtfer-27, would apptya Only to 1tudents at governments, call for violence on. or · Slate of orncers to be presented by Seventy high-r111kina: federal and llltt: officials -probably inc!udln& Gov. Ronald Reagan and Vice President Spiro Agnew, are upected to 1rrlve bl Newport Beach and Son C!emeolo lodoJ and Tuesday. Informed aou.rces indicated the rankinC offic:ials would hold 5"Vtral days of con- fer~ on interg~vmunental relations. probably at the Western White . House compound in San Clemente. Agnew is e%pf!Cled to arrive some time late today at the Newporter -lm in N,ewport Beach. Gov. Reagan was reported to be the official host of. the meet.Jog series, bub press aides at the capllol tqday would neither confirm, nor deny the repotta. There were no report.I on the chances that the Agnew arrival is linked to the conferences at the San Clemente Inn and the Western White House of the government relations group. ln past visits Agnew has spent quiet . visits at t.lie Balboa Bay Club. His pms aides said he was due to return to Washington, D.C., from California Tues- day .. The appe,arance in Newport wu presumed to be a stopover. 'J'he . Sao .~jem<;nle ~·-T~ wm pt undJr way late Tuadly wtlh C?ftfer~ between about 20 California ·Stale "!Jciala and about :io from the r-. al. llie nalloo. . · ' Seffl'll 11et1ators and r~tives ,..... ,orpecfol! .to ~ but tlicir namu were blit known. The ollldal ·uue of lhe l'OllP la the Alfvlaory ~mllaion on Intergovem. mental' Relauons. • Tbe · meeUnes wlll be held 'nluraday at the San Clemente• Irm and the Whlt.e House compound on Friday. ' Driver on Wrong Track, Killed A Portland, Ore., man whose car wu unerplainedly beaded down a rural railroad track in Mission Viejo was kl11ed instantly Sunday nlght In a headon col- lision with a freight train. Wayne McCullough, 42, waa killed ln- stanUy, accordlnj to tbe Orange County Coroner's office. . . Engineer Curtis Syckafoose, of San Bernardino told the California Highway Patrol he didn't ·see · the car in tim'e to stop the speeding Santa Fe Sab Diegan. Investigators tor the CHP s a ·t d McCullough's car was northbound on the tracks 100 feet touth of the Crown Valley Parkway intersection, parallel to Camino Capistrano.· No one else wibte,sect the high-speed collision, which demolished McCullough's automobile and inflioted multiple injuries on the victim. Nixon Honors Crew WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pmident and Mrt. Nixon will give a dinner party in the faml1y quarters of the White House Tuesday night for the Apollo IJ astronaut.s. ' . · It'll atill try to rain Tuc~ay morning, but not very hard, while afternoons will be slightly sunny and temperatures ranging from 65 along the shore 10 73 further In· land. INSmE TODAY McGauihc and Crompton ma11 ~C011'U! OI toell knoton OI l>ftd ... Scot' whtn ~ Supreme CoUrt m.akti ·a landmark dtdrion on l'ed ·.booth ~tes, cm a flnt oome, first Saddleback. Application .for .the Jon.uns oJf campus. ,conta.IL ,obs C; e.ri·tt 1 e.1. the nominating co,rnmlttee inclu<!~1 Helen 8'rVed boo~. on a ll'>Jllld! map lo would be mode lhrough the ilclloOl 24 slirnulall> lhe d!Jruptlon of lhe dassroom .Keeley, Oresidenl; • Tl)omas Murphlnt. . , bt poeted M. ~ okl Wlf'd and Harrln1toit -hours in advance... l -process or engage in character .aaassina~ 'first v1Ce _ P.t~ldenl;.. J _a r b a r :i • .....,. " ,_...... .,. · t,;.e· Moth penattv. Page 12. ~ lwnbtt yard on Saturday and Sundly The guidelines proposed art: tion. .Rablnowitah, Sei:ond vice presiden(; ~~ 1~ =::::.i ...,.. ~ ~ from'8:30 •.m. to noon. -At least 24 hours: \n advance ol -Only one person -nay De ailowed Mary Fran Ander.:in,. re c,o r d'l ·~ C =::. u.. aw: :;::: = : Highlight of ~ f!!"~ was iud1in1 the proposed forum in1.a'ppllcatim f~m to gpeak at one time. . JeCretary; Dorothy Joyce, c:o,rretPQnd¥lc. <-k• 11 '-" 1•• of the Sawdwt Festival 1 poste:r contnt. the .Coordinator ot Student -Activities ......speakers mU1t allow queetjon& trom sec::ret&r).'; and Jane Bo)'d, trusarer .. -~t~' =ilf!..:tliii lH~ »-;:. with painter Guy Downs pickln& up the miqt be lniUated. · : _ lbe audience. ' -~ Propoeld for. aeat& on the4 boan:L ti ~ 11 ,.......,. • •100 cash award for best ent.ry. -'Ust ot Ule. proposed •forum, open . --Violation ot the above~ n1le1 wHl ~recton ,are .w1l11a'" Qooli:, George Qlai. · :::="'.....::" ,; :::-;... 1: ~e: Sawdust Festival will run con· or Student Acllvltles andltht: Supfrln-1 ·rtsul~ ln the .~ o(•lhe: ptjvUege ningham, Jamef Dillf?Yo George .FowM!t :=-.,.. no~: =:r·-.-1".!: currently with the Festivrll of Arla from must be. a:pprovved by the Coordinator l ol using the ., fon.&m ,lor a per»d ud :Btr(l~rd .S>:f~. • AM ......,.. 11 July_ 17 throqh Alll\Ul 30. ol ,Sluderil Ac!ivita'~ jlle_llu@riJ>. . ol ...,._quarier, • • -' . -:"1lii iifeetil!I a.n.IO llli ~le:------- • ) . • .. I· I • . . 2 DAJt.V I'll.OT SC 'Jlnllel""'•flle' ' Peru Devastation Viewed From Air ABOARl),A USAF C130 OVER PERU {AP) - A grandstand vi~ of dealb and destruction swept beneath a big ' U.S. Cl30 cargo 'plane as It dropped su~s to survivors « earthquake-tom Norfb <Jentral Peru Sunday. · "'Unbelievable," said the pUot, Capt. Bill Hudspeth. a Vietnam veteran, as he guided the big Hercule> up the IG-mile Huaylas Canyon. "Worse than anything . l have seen in my life." Hudspeth shook his head in disbelief as the transport passed over what was 61 Captured On Drug Raps In Huntington ' left of Hura1, once a city of 50,000 at I.he southern entrance to the canyon, 180 miles north of Lima. Half the buildings had crwnbled. Not a slngle roof remained intact. 1'1le government says the earthquake a week ago may have killed 30,0UO or more people; a United Nations observer .sa)'.a the count more likely will exceed 50,000. An estimated 100,000 more are homeless, injured or bot)l. Hudspeth reached for the throUle and headed his giant craft 21 miles up the gorge to Anta, the target of the airdrop. Anla, a village of about 2,000 was devastated, but by some freak of terrain enough of the town's tiny airstrip was spared from avalanches that hurtled down the 18,CM»-fool Andes to leave it still usable by small aircraft. A quarter ton of t)eeping bags, blankel! and food rations was packed In plastic· wrapped survival kits and stapleQ into 12 large crates. The back bay of the ,pJane lifted open as Anla r.ame tnto vift and the crates were shoved out, In a s1.epped.up program to make two at a time, as the Hercules made Huntington Beach ''hoi for drug users,•• alx passes over th~ runwiy. officers from the police department's Carhuaz, another town of about J0.000 Special Eaforcement Detail ( S E D ) people, came into vi~ as the plane rounded up 61 persons on drug charges pulled out of ils last drop run. , over the weekend. --••lncm(l1ble, unbelievable," was all the Det. Capt. Grover Payne and Sgt. crew could say as: they lookt'd down Jack.Relnholb: said the haul of 29 adults on the shambles. and 31 juveniles was the largest in A few miles further up .the canyon the city's history. wu Yungay, which used to be home Forty.five of the arrests were made for some 33,000 people. All that coold by the SEO led by Sgl. George Renek. be seen of it were the tops of rour His men swept the beaches over the palm ~ where tile town square had weekend arresting auspecled users of been and a statue of Christ, with arms drugs and obtaining infonmtion leading outstretched. wh!ch marked the hilltop I ....__ bea h cemetery. to the arrest away rom l,lJC • c A slide of rocks and mud two l9 of suspected sellers of drugs· and mari· 1flree miles wide had hurtled clear across jU~~tics Detectiv~ Ed Williams and both bank!: of the Santa River at the officera ..,..; ..... on information gained bottom of the canyon, buried Yungay •"wue, and smashed agairult a mountain ledge 1n the bucb ralds and anned wilh on the other "aide. Only about 2,SOO a search wurant, arrested &even persons residents of Yungay are believed to Jn Westminster earJy Sunday morning have survived. .... -· .... -• • Vncle Eiler Wants You Eiler Larsen, the famed greeter of Laguna, was in top form Saturday duiing an out..of.town appear· ance. Eiler traveled to Costa Mesa where he r~e as a special guest in that community's annual Fish -~ Fry Parade. Thus Eiler, ·1ong a fixture in Laguna, helped another fixture -the Fish Fry -observe its 25th anniversary. From Poge J CANDLELIGHT Graduation Set who wu With him wbe1 Greyatack pick· ed them up fled the ,murder acene ia 1 lrion's I.ale model Peugeot automobile. Viejo High to Give 360 Diplomas Investiglitors noted that Irion, like Marching to the traditioeal sound or Tustin Union High Schoo l District. Liberty's first victim, met his alayer while both were under psychiatric care. "Pomp and Circumstance" 3 6 O Next on the program will be the Mn. Land.la was an out-patient at graduaUng seniors of Mission Viejo High. recognition of all honor students, followed , . , • • : More ~tudY, . , On Student. ' ' Advisor Set The concept or placing a student ad· visor on the Laguna Beach Unified School District Board of Trustees is being con- sidered, but with deep ronsideration of the .Problems involved. Cathy Marple, newly re-elected presi- dent of the Laguna Beach High School student body. went before. the board to dltcuss the matter last week and ]earned it requires more study. "I'm a little concerned about the responsibility of a student advisor," board chalnnan Larry Taylor told ti1iss Marple. "It would be difficult for one person to carry all the information back to the students,'' he explained. suggesting a panel in attendance at board sessions mil{ht be a better solution. Miss Marple said her proposal wa~ based on a "lack of communication'' between the student body and the school board. "Students feel the board is way up there," she declared. "I think it would greatly help com- munication," said LBHS student Stuart Rabinowitsh. "I know all the red tape 11ve had to go through to get to the board." Rabinowitsh suggested the board mi~ht look into effecfiveness of student advisors in other communities. Newly·appointe<I director of curriculum for the district, Robert Ree ves,. proposed students set up a monthly rotation schedule for attending school board meetin~s. . The former high school principal also suggested students get together with the principal on matters ol impo~ce. "Someplace in cmimunication, the role or the ·princip.al· has to be involved.'" added district superintendent Dr. William. Ullom, He outlined the procedure for making proposals to the board ba.!ied on presentation, discussion and trustee aps>raisal. "It may take.lwo,~thr.ee or four presen- tations to get support," he pointed out, "but the important thing is to educate people to your point of. view." on drug use and sales charges. · The Cl)l)s fly twice a day, dropping Seven more persons were arrested at supplies ovtw" the . canyon then picking a house on Cameron Street in Huntington up survivors at the evacuation cen~r Orange County Medical Center along School officially receive their diplomas by the presentation of student speakers with Llberfy,.botb of them having at· Thursday. by Tom Spears, president of the senior tempted suicide. Ce · ·u t k t t s p m class. "Reeves, Ullom and DOn Haught, new high school principal, will discuss the matter further with Miss Marple. Beach by both SED ~ na~cs d~tall. in Ollmbote. 'l'bey are brought there officers as a result of 1nrormatioo gained by helicopters and vintage C47s that Early on the mornit.g or Jute 5, l966, remorues w1 a e p ace a . . Westminster J)ollce received a telephone ln the football stadium with Associated The speakers will elaborate on the Fl D SJ d from those arrested on the beach. can just manage to land and take off Four sUspect.s arrested on c~ges . of at Anti. call, Student B<>dy President Bob Tamietti graduation Iheme "The Chalt'"ge ol the ag ay a le "How do you· report a killing?'" the leading the Pledge of Allegiance. Decade". Joe Snodgrass will present "A WASHINGTON (UPI ) _ Pre.sident poissession «. drugs and posseSSlon with . More than haU of Chimbote, a thriving intent to tell are~ industrial port of 80,000 people is gone. ... caller asked. The Board of Trustees will be Challenge of Responsibility" and Jane Nixon· today designated nett Sunday as Lawmen considered lhe reporting done. presented by Jay Ingall, assistant Rasmussen will apeak on "The Positive Flag Day and the start · of National -ntomas Williams 22, 150 7lh Street, Its fishmeal processing plant is partly Norco ruined . Engineers estimated it will take . They rolled up to 8182 Westminster , superinteltdent Qf. i.nstnfction for the Way". Flag Week. Ave., and found Liberty, then .19 years 1--:'?,--,,,.---,.,.:_-'------::---r--;---:------------'-------------..,.Be'mdlUe, Piikey .. U, 8441 YUH!cia many montha to get Per;u's only 1tetl Street, Huntinctoo Beach pl.ant there to operate again. old, strumming his guitar as candles ~ i1 ~ • , t nickered beside the straqled body of ' --Giry Blrrett, 23, 13472 Olive Street, But the undamaged airfield has been his womaJt, Westmlnster . -1.umed into headquarters for planes and -Danny De Bruyn, 25, 211 N. Oak rescue teams from 14 naUon1. A Bible Jay opan her breast. and potted pla.nts surro~ed her. sW.~ ·0r..p . ". ' All •tbers held 1111 charl.. of simple possession of narcoti'cs,~: "Be quiet -she knows what we are doing," the young slayer cautioned police. Arrested in the narcoUa sweep wen i -Michael Kortje, 22, 61 3 N. Gates St., Santa Ana -Diane Parker, 18, 421 7th Street, Huntington. Beacrl -William Helm, 18, 9915 Maplewood Street, Bellf.lower. -Joseph Ryciak, 18, 16518 Chadmont Streel, Covina -George Hernande'z. 19, 7112 Bonvilla Street, La Palma -Donald carton. 19, 11171 Midway Street. Los Alamitos -Michael Larkins, 18, '2672 Eucalyptus Street, Long Beach -Tommy Huneycutt, 11 -Richard Scaife, 21 -Charles Theriault, 23 -Michael Powers, 22 -James Jones, 21 -Robert Woods, 22 -Gail Levesque, 19 -Ivan Dowdy Jr., 23, MS LocU5t Street, Long Beach -Steven Harris, 18. IO?l Rhodesia Street, Huntington Beach -Beverly Brewster, 18, 5681 Abraham Street, Weslmlnster -Bobby Shepherd, 18, 1738% Keelson Lane. Huntington Bea~h -Kenneth Perry. 18, 219 01estnut Street, Mpnrovia -Carl Scialla, 19, 3404 Granada Street, El Monte DAILY PILOT -~N~•ll-H ........ .... 1., ...... ,. .. ...... ,..., ·c .... .,.,. S. Cr..nt. ORA.NOi! COAST l"Ual.'11JUHQ (OMP'ANY ll:o"btrt N. W11d l'll•kttnl ~ hbli.Mr J1clt R. Curf1y Vkt ..... :ot111 1M G.,,..ttl ,.,...,..., Thorri11 IC11vil fdilOr Tiio1'"' A. Murphi111 M~l"ll fdl!or ll:ich1nl '· N.11 &o.,i1~ Or•"!le (01Jf11~ £dttor Offlcn C.11 Mat' JJO Wu! 11-1'1' 11 ... 1 N...,...1 ••1~~' 2211 W.t l•JllO• -1-~ L""""' load>; m FM•I " ......... Mllllllnl1., •ttefl: 11'1J IHtdl •~ltY•,. "911 C: ........ 19; JiOJ Hortll 1!1 c;.mlnt ••I t)AIL'f f"ILOT, wl1'!0 w•ld> Is c.Jmllh'oel ,,.. ...._,. ....... "1tllltl...:I dtlJy .. ,. ,.,,.. .. , 111 ...,.."" ui,i.m ror ...,_ a.::ci.. ......... 9"(11, (tsll M.,,., H\lflllft9'.a<I letdlo ,.,. "-""' V•llcy, • .._.,. wl!ll ,_ ....... tdl!llM, Or-CoHI f'llMlllllnti (~ jWll'>ll"'9 f>llft!l Ire •I :Ult W.1 ll•lllM ar ..... H""'I kW\, .... -W..I ••Y '"-'• C:O.lt M-. , ••• ,, ... 17141 '4Jo4:t21 Cl...._, A4-'tl•l11t .,42.1671 S. Ch 1•1• All ~1""-fm: ,...,. ... 492-4421 co,,.r..... 1t1t. Orat9" c ... 1 P'Mlllllfllflt C:..-"I'• Mo "'""' 11orlti, ll~lrl!4"1i.. {fllorlll .... lltf' It fd.,.rllM<"\lfllJ ""'~ -1 llo '~" ""11...,. .... , ,.... MIMIM ... ..,,_., _., ·Capo to Decide On Vehicle Park At Meet Tonight · The decision on whether or not lo permit a recreational vehicle park to be constructed off the Ortega Highway one and one-half miles from 1he San Diego Freeway will be forthcoming at tonight's meeting ot the San Juan Capistrano City Council. Protests by property owners near the proposed park influenced the council to postpone their decisio n at the last meeting. Objections to the park center around noise, excess traffic and difficulty in entering the site which is on a slope. The councUmen expressed a desire to investigate these problems ·personally. The park ls being proposed by Mrs. Millie Orcutt who has obtained a fran· chise from Kamp Grounds of America. It wiU occupy 15 acres and will Jnclude sites for campers, recreational trailers and a fq1 tents. The facility will also J n c 1 u d e restaurant, car wash. playgrounds, swim· ming pool and recreation room. Also on the agenda will be the adoption or a new business license ordinance with councilmen deckling on the amount to charge mobile home Park operators ana whether or not to inelUde the old mission. --------- He was charged with murder, but determined incapable of standing trial by reason of insa11lty aJ1d ~mmltted to Atascadero State Hospital for treat- ment. 1 He was released six months later to stand trial, but re-committed t o Metropolitan State Hospital in Norwalk afte~ a jury decided again ttiat he was insane. Liberty was freed again by accident on June 2, 1969 when a 11urse hudling paperwork mistakenly checked him out as a routinely discharged patient. Authorities whipped . up a furore over Liberty's release and he read the stories in newspapers and turned himself in to a Santa Ana attorney. "He's perfectly meek and mild," the lawyer told lawmea. A · panel of six psychiatrisls re· evaluated the young prisoner and reported he was sane and ready for return to society and on Sept. 15, 1969, Judge Robert M. Gardner agreed . The Superior Court j u r i s t ordered Liberty released and he moved to Costa ~esa until disappearing at the time Astorina was shot, apparently 11 .all argument over a television set. Woman Dies at 116 KOBE , Japan (AP) - A ll~year-old woman believed to be Japan s oldest person died at her hot'r!e Sunday. f.1r s. Ito Morimoto was born 111 1853. the year U.S. Navy Commodore Matthew rerry came to Japan Cou~ty Recreation Arro Dedicated Before 500 In a three-part ceremony Sunday, the houses lounges. dining room. game SS.S mlllion southeast Orange. County rooms gym, handball courts. bowling recreatiOn center. Coto de Coia. was all eys; saunas and therapeutic pools. formally dedicated before .500 members For the final ceremony, guests drove 1 and guests. half the length of the five -mile -long Outstanding athleles were chosea to recreation facil ity to the hunt .club to place their haldprlnts ln ceramic dediCJ· meet huntmaster Bob SaRChez, listed Uon -pJaques at 1.he 4,900 acre facility's as one of the nation's 10 top shots. saddle club, athletic cJub and hunt club. who gave an exhibiti on of trap shooting . . DedicaUon of the $1.4 million saddle Noted sports figures !tom many fields club took place in the 90 by 300 foot were represented at the dedication, in· covered arena , world's largest clear-span eluding baseball's Andy carey, former pole structure. Equestrian ~tar Frank Yankee third baseman and Bill Singer, Chapot, representative OJI four Olympic Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher: foOtball's teams and medal wlnner. placed his llnebacker Jack Pardee, Jack Snow of handprint in the plaque. then executed the Los Angeles Rams and Rudy Bukich, a series of jumps before the cameras. former quart,rback of the Chicago A neet or nine !Susts transported guest$ Bears and basketball slar Gtorge Yard· over a hlll and into a valley to the ley. $2 mnmm aO\JeUc club where swimmer Also present ·were Olympic swimmer Don Schollander, winner ot sfr -Olymplc Carolyn House. diver Pat ttfcCorm ick, medals and COto de Cata aeneraJ Granny Lansdell, three-time A i l - manager Robin Moore swam 1 four.lap American toot.ball player at USC and • ' • There is now only one airl ine s'erving Orange County, And they've just in· ll'loai-ilr•llrthas creased their fares. Now, if you want to save $10.50 round trip, we suggest pyau· you fly PSA from LA instead. The PSA air fare from LA to Sen Francisco is PlA1:a still $15. 75, in9luding tax. a lift. Jail ....... 1:'9H ""Ifft ptlti •f ""'"" loffCll 1-A Ginf-M~,-atlfln"•. ~ ..... W «n1iw ltM-llfll11 •Yon.II a.• -"'!YI MlllWrf ... 111W11~" w.oe m111111111. ra~Jn UJe 25-J:ard pgoh._ ' ·---... Chuck Faust.-former Mr. U.S.A .. Mr . A plaque with Schollander's liandpnnl World a11d-natlonal-Greeo-Roman l)lpe.-.. ___ _:--:-:=:.:--:--:-:..:::::::._...:..=:...:....:====--':..--...--......;;;......;.;'-....;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;, __ _ will hllli Ill lhe.athlellc-ciubbouM-wlllch-wrutlizll champion. . - ' ' • L DAIL y mor 3 N arcotiCs ~·:ousts Pack La gun a Jai1 .. Laguna To,ilet ' ' ,. . . ' Legality FQugh.t , I Laguna's proposed public restroom facility at the Anita Beach street end probably cannot become a reality without one year of legal action, City Attorney Jack J, Rimel has advised the City Council. Plans for the $10,000 toilet were abrupLly detoured when Superior Judge Robert S. Corfman granted a preliminary injunction to halt the proposed con- 6lruction in response to a suit filed b{ Harold _~~ ~-~ Eli2abeth M. O'Brien o 1007 Gaviota Drive and Richard E. Loring, 990 Gaviota Drive. 'Ibey argue the ,facility would interfere the attorney said, woukl ·be deferred untU ,after there had been an actual trial and ~emnation a)Vard. He estimated this would ·take close to a year. · On Rlmel's advice, the council agreed to precede any acliM by obtaining an appr~I of the site and to terminate their agretment l!> sign a co'ntract for the building with Qlarles Benton. Though Benton's bk! hi!~ been .ac- repted, the COfltr/'d had not beef! sig~­ and 1t. was pointed out he cou)d not be expected to agree to erect the facility for the same price a year from now. with public right-of-way and devalue their R.imel also suggested that the recent adjacent properties. Gion vs. City of Sama, Cruz court decision The city now bolds an easement, for wou ld be a "landmark case'' in such G "f f · /ti street purposes Clnly, at the end or Anita matters. I t or ary Street, but coold institute condemnation "In this case," the attorney said, "the . . . DAILY PILOT St~' ..... proceedings for the ai:ea for "all proper court fuled that there 15-8-sort-ot--baguna-Be9:ch High School ltbranan Mar-y~Carh~rt,who ~s retiring public purposes, including use for a public right in beaches based on Jong after 12 years with the Laguna school system, displays pi n she re- restroom site,'' Rimel told the council. public USe and that such beaches were, ceived at retirement din~er for guests. to see. About 80 persons were Right of posses.slon ~ such a case, in effect, dedicated for all public use.·• on hand last Thursday night to pay tnbute to Mrs. Carhart. ~-'--~-'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---'~~~- Mystery at Mystic Arts Laguna Beach Fire Chi ef Jim Latimer discusses damage inside Ji.1ystic Arts Gallery in Laguna's Sleepy Hollow with Michael Cafrey {military j~cket), Buzz Hughes (full beard) and unidentified zirl. The eontroversial gallery and health food bar was burned out laSt Thursday. The cause of tbe bla'.ze is still under inv.estigation. 'Good Neighbor' Policy Sought • By Restaurant -~The"=" maug~ment ol Laguna's. Jack-in- the-Box drive-through eatery on South Coast Highway "wants to get along with everyone and be a good neighbor," City Manager James D. Wheato1 reported to the City Council. Wheaton said he had contacted the mMagers or the food outlet regarding complaints from nearby residents about excessive noise emualing Crom the & tablishment. The complaints said the speaker sys- tem used to transmit orders from cars, and thee noise or the cars themselves en- tering and leaving \}\e premises disturbed the111 until long after midnight. "We advised them that use of the speaker system is in violation," Wheaton said, "and that they lteed a pennlt to es· tabllsh the houri and vol\lme tit Its Ille. nie manager ·is most coopei-ative. He l! meeUng With the corporate officials and will suggest in.stalling a cooorete wan to cut the noise and also new landscaping, because what they have Is not doing well so close to the ocean: They want to be good neighbors." Alaska, Soviet Union Air Route Opened MOSCOW (UPI) -An AIB!ka Airlines Boeing 707 with l:Kl passengers arrived today in Khabmvsk from Anchorage to opeA an air route lfnkb1g Alaska with Siberia, the news agency Tau said. El Rancho ha,s the hottest price • in town! 10 LB. BAG 20 Lb . .., ••• 1.37 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Kingsford ••• hardwQOd makes the ditferencel FAiter a tarting, I onger burning .•• cooks evenly , •• for bettu heat control! . ,• Fire ~Starter .... ~J~.R~ ....... ~~R! ... 39' For ~asy starting in your barbecu~ ••• ·burns cleanl.~. odorless, and no flash.back I ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Clamato Juice ............ 43' Apple Sauce .................... 19' StarUingly different ••• and tasty I Quart. Stokely's ••• served chilled, with pork! No, 303. Suptr varilty for super. 1hopper1 in. our ruper..delil Franks! Knackwurst! Polish Sausage!,. ............... : 79' Old World goodness from the Vienna people! ••• your choice at this special price! lZ-o:z:. pacltage! Pork values-: •• for early· in · the week menus! ··Pork Chops ..... ~~R-~.: ...... 89~ Lean and tender. : • from selected mid·wefotern pork! CEJllEA CUT IOI! ROAST •• , •• , -•• 89¢ I~ Italian Sausage .................. .89~ Stuffed Pork Chops ............... tr• Fresh J Delightfully •• .. oned and blended I With Mro. Cubbiaon'• Dressing! .Ready to cook! } Pri<u I~ ef/et! M .,.., Tua., Wtd., June 8, i, 1 10. No llGlel to d<akn. Weekend Sparks 15 Drug Arrests Laguna's amall city Jail -capacity lf -was bulging at the seams this weekend as police awaited today's open- ing of South County Municipal Court. Fifteen per.sons were arrested on narcotics charges in eight separate in- cidents from Frldey through Sunday and all but two bad to be held in the three-room deteotion facili ty to await arraignment this morning. / Police perJOnnel oo weekend duty were kept busy providing the required two meals a day for their large guest list. One YoUill, booted on charges or being under the influence of drup, balled out, and a youilg woman was · trans!etred to Ora,nge County Jail. With two u:ceptions, the defendants were booked on charges or possession ol marijuana, Two may face the more serious charges ol possession of mari- juana [or sale ana possession of dangerous drugs for sale. Several of the arrests, JMstly in the beach-are.a, were-maae by narcotics officers Norm Babcock and Neil Purcell, the remainder by offictn on lhe weekend foot patrol. STARTED FRIDAY Tbe arrests got under way at 7:35 p.m. Friday, when Babcock and Purcell picked up a trio allegedly passing marl- j~ cigarettes on Cleo Street Beach and dexribed as so heavily lntoiicat.ed ooe had to be helped from the beach. · Booked on charges Clf posstssion of marijuana wee Samuel Wlnslow Gatllo, 21, a Marine from Camp Pendleton ; Daniel Alan Webb, 20, of San Die10: Sireet and El eanilno de! Mar; John Lee Woods', 22, Of 951 Catalina St, WU arrested on clw-ges of posaealon of d ... gerous dru1s for sale after he allegedlJ dropped a pla!Uc bag containing tnesca· line and LSD tablets into a bush when ap- prehended by police. On Saturday morning at l :SS a.m., l\'lhleen Sue Painter, 19, ol - and David Merle McCoy, 20, a Mar 1 n e from El Toro, were anested on charges of possesrion of marijuana. Police laid they were oblerved slUlng on .a btanR:t at Rockplle Beach, rolling a cigarette and passing It back and forth. A baa of marijuana and Zig Zag clg~te papen -were allegedly fou@ bt lliOlr possession. MIU Painter was detained In Orange County Jail A car stop in the 100 block of 'l'halia Street at s p.m.-Sunday resulted -Jn the arrest of William H 1 r v e y Blankenship, 21, ol Anah<lm, oo dlarges of polleSS!on of marijuana. Stopping to Inquire about a mln1n1 1970 license tab on thelr vehicle, officers said they found Blankenship smoklnc a suspected marijuana cigarette and took blm inl<I autody. ~sa~~~Grace Blackburn, zz, ~1augh--With-Russ- At 1:15 p.m. the officers, observing what appeared to be a narcoUcs transac-. Sl)eC!lal to the DAILY PILOT tion In the 600 block ol South <Aas! W ASIDNGTON -Rualan trawlers Highway, arrested Michael Brugwere, anned with aophistieated electronic gear, 21, a transient and W~ll Ray Karnes, snooping off the Orange Coast. have 25, of ~arte on suspicion f)f posseaslon exchanged jolly greetings on the high of man1uana and assert~y seized three seas with Arizona Senator B a r r y ounces and several cigarettes of the Coldwater, drug u evidence. . At 11 p.m. Friday, working the foot ~e frequent vllitar to New})Ort Btae!1 patrol in the Cleo Street Beach area, tes~ Frkiay. before the ~ Armed officers Arthur deLuca and Robert Serv~s Committee that he occasai0111"ll1 Briscoe arrested David Carrera II a en~nters the arrt.enna·brb~ trawler• ' ' 60 miles out ~tarine from Texas, Randall Gaylon "llcause ·I'm 1 ·eommunicatlom rii.Jt Adams, II, a Mame rrom MichlP,n my boat Is loaded with antennae and and .Roger Brooks ~er, 24, of eon.. so are theirs ," he remarked. necllcut, after 0~1ng an apparent ''So are theirs. The Jail time oot, narcot.lcs transacuon. t poJnted to my antfnnaf IDd they SALE CHARGF.! polnt<d lo u.!lrl," he "'htmu<d. Deck~r was booked on. charges of Ale. '!We both tauahed," concluded Senator the oth~r two on susplcton ol p:melllion GOidwater, wbo has not always bee.n oC mar11uana. on chuckling tmnl with the Soviet UDioa. lmmi:diately followini the$e arrests, · the officers apprehended Anthony B. Bleecker, 19, of Michigan, who was book- ed on a charge of being under the in- fluence ol drugs and later baUed oul On Sleepy Hollo Beach af 11 :1D p.m. Friday, ·the n8rcotics officers arrested Daniel Everest Nadil, 21, of El Toro, and Frank John Javoraky, 20, of Mluion Viejo, after allegedly observing them smoking cigarettes they rolled irom material in a plastic bag, seiled as suspected marijuana, along with cigaret· the papers. At 11:15 p.m. Saturday, at Glenneyre ,\ndy Williams Ends Marriage to Claudine HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Andy Wl1Ham1 and his wife of eight year1, Frt'lleh actrea Claudine Longet, have aanouoctd they an separated. A spokesman for the couple sa1d Sun- day "both parties acknowledged the separation on the friendliest of tams." The couple has threee children. AU through the mtmmer, El Rancho will be of/iring aeti.- sa.ti01ta.l valuu on cook~t needs l Keep a.n e11e open! • ARCADIA: S.out tnd HunUniton Dr. (ij Rancho Clnltr) PASADEllA: 320 Wat Colondo Blvd • . SOUTH PASADENA: f11monJ 1nd·HunUnaton Dr. HUMTINGTOll BEAClll war .. _•114 Al-i• (llolrdW111 Ccn~r) NEWPOlf IEACll: 2727 NtwpOrl Btid.-md oo·ElslbJuff ~r..(lastbluff Vill1p Clntt~ • c~ .., .. Dlltr •• PlfD Peter"fllowlty, 25, of Skegneas, England, ·said be us'!d a bicycle pump ro help revive a hedgehog be found floating In a pond recently. Aller some spoonfills of brandy and gentle care, Ule animal was able~ waddle away into the woods, Tbaw· ley .. id. • The graduation dinner at Mos- e& Brown Schl>ol, R. J., will con- "6in entirely of organic food& as pqrt of an ecological "eat.in:"' .Tlic.-m<~~ .w.il!. i~I~. -~, l<ek '""P· aprout aa!Gd, ileiiiUd s from naturoU11 raised chick.- en.s, lob1ter caught in the ieas of AntaTctfca and rbaehip tea. • "I cha!n'!d my wife up to keep her safe," Robtrt Morris, 27, told Ule Welsbpool, Wales Coilrt recent· ly. ''Safe from whom?" asked pro-, secutor Richard Hughes. "Safe from another man," Morris replied. IJ• said be put the. cbaiD around biJ wile's neck and kept her In a shed with bil cattle. • .. EMMY WINNERS -Individually honored with Emmys Sunday night were (top, from left) Patty Duke for "My Sweet Charlie"; Karen Valentine, "Room 2.22"; Gail Fisher, 61Mannix"; (bottom, ' - ' U,lte ....... from left) Robert Young and James Brolin, balh lor HMarcul Welby, M.D.," and Michael Con- stantine. "Rbom 222." Court to RUie On l.Qyalty Oath For Einployes 'World,' Windom Win 'Marcus Welby,' '222' Take_3_Etnm.ys_Each WASHINGTON CUP!) -The SUpreme -Court-dectded-today--to rule -next-term.-- t on a modified state loyalty oath requiring teachers and emplayes to swear support HOLLYWOOD (AP) - A doctor drama provides a •home ·for. • bt.ck youth from a slum neighbortiood in "A Storm in Summer." The lhow was picked as the q_µatapdlng single dramatic program. fsaae B~tl graduates from the University of California this mmith with a Bachelor o/ Arn degree in magic. JC wa.s the first such <kgree in u~ .to1iatmitu .and beliewd . tM Jir1t in111Dh~r1. He wa.s given permistion. !o take the degree becouie of the di/· ficWtil of cla.s1e1 involved. • A federal bureaucrat who bad been socializing with some onlin· ary inortals over .lWlCb Grew back li.s chair recently and said, "well, _ back to the Horse Latitudes. 11 Ois- >elling Ule pll2%lement <>1-bis e<>m· ~anions, the gentleman cited his lictionery's definition of that t~nn: 11 An area of high pressure calm !haracterized by variable and wr iredictable winds." • Chelsea. Maas., firemen want heat pay. The firemen. member! of Firefighters Local 937, ore negotiating with tht city for a new c0tttract. OM oJ their <k· · mands is fOT en eztra day's pal/ whe'n the temperature got& above 90 degrees. of the U.S. Comtitution and to disclaim belief ln cwtrtbrow of the govermnent. The anoouncemeot that a Florida caae will be beard next fall or winter came as the eourt nt for the last time in more than a year as an eight-man bench. Justice Harry G. JUackmun will be sworn in as the tµnth member Tuesday. The court took the.se Other acUons: , -Aff!r'!d: to decide in a· CaU!omia case ~r" a state may feqwre 10cal communiUes to get voter approval before · coruitrucUng public houslq. A rerereb. dum secUon of the CaU~fomla comtltutJon was 8truck down by a special three-judge federal paJ1el 1n San Francisco on April 2 . -Appointed· federal appeals judge Albert B. Maris as a special master in the Justice Department's offshore land suit against 13 AUantic states stretching from-Maine-to Florida. Thhe federal government is contending that the states should have no jurisdiction over any offshore artls beyond the traditionaJ three-mile limit. The loyalty oath was challenged by an Orlando, Fla., fourth grade school teacher, Stella Connell. She appealed to the Supreme Court from a ruling by a apecial three-judge Federal ,Cwrt at Orlando on OcL 30, 1969, upholding those sections of Florida's loyalty oath for state empioyes. The Supreme Court will Mbedule arguments ln. the fall. A written opinion will follow. . series, "Marcus Welby, M.D.," and a weekly schoolroom story, "Room 222'' llave won the most 1970 Emmys - three apiece. ti cancled !el'ies, .. My World and Welcome to It," and its star William Windom won in the comedy category in· Sunday night's television academy awards. And a twlce-canctled series, "The Ghosi and Mn. Muir,': brought a second Emmy lo iltar Hope Lanl!O. Rocenliy canceled by ABC, the $how was dropped by, NBC last year, When Miss Lange was aimilarJy honored. · Veteran actors Robert Young and Peter Ustinov each received a third Emmy award. Young wOn as the general practitioner in "Marcus Welby, M.D.," picked as . the out.standing dramatic series. James Brolin, who plays his asliatant, waa named best suPJ>Orling actor. Ustinov's third Emmy was for hJs performance as a Jewish merchant who_ . House Panel OKs ABM Fund Bill WMHINGTON CAP! -The Hou,. Appropriations Committee today recom- mended f365,.a million in construction money for the next year of the embattled Safeguard antiballistic missile program. It is $.11) million more than has been appropriated for the past three fiscal years and is for use during the yea r starting July 1. It is separate from weapons Pf!lC\lrement money, which amounts to hundreds or million! more dollars. ':n.e 22nd awards of the National Academy or Television Aris and Scienca were teleca•t !rem the c.ntury Piua Hotel In Loe Ani<les and CamtaJe Hall in New York. Dick Cavett, hMt in New Y~k. let the tone for an evening of emotion, applauae aod laughter by explalnlng: '"Ibis is the show tbt each , yw uD the question, .. ls radio really improved by tbe addtt.ion. of plcturet?' .. AmOllJ the hl&hlights, between com- mer¢ak for bras, glrdles, take-horde fried cldcten and eigarett.es, were: -'J'he ·namtng or :·Room m-· u lhe ooll!andln( new aeries ancl two or Ila stari, Mictiael Constantine and Karen Valentine, as besl •upportin& actor and actress In a~edy. · -Briiain'.1 David Fmst, wlnnlng for ootstandln& variety oerlel with his · !)'ll· dicated talk show. , -SUSI.ft Hampshire, best actress in a dramatic series for the British-made "The Foi-syte Saga." Anne Bancroft was honored along with producers and writers for her special, "Annie, the Women in the Life of a Man," named ttle outstanding variety or music program. In categories of ~tertainment, news · and technical crafts, NBC collected rr Emmys, CBS 19, ABC 13 •and 'Natiohal Education81 TelevislOn I. Gail Fisher won as supporting actress in a drama series, "Manntt." The winner among classical · musical programs was the National Ballet of Canada's performance of "Cinderella." For ach.ievement in 1 p o rt s pro- gramming Emmys went to CBS, "The NFL Games" and ABC'S "Wide World of Sports." , .. ; • I • IJ.S .auua. . --Desegregation .~ ' Aid · ~equest.ed . WASHINGTON (UPI) -Tiie •NIJ9D Robert Ii Fillch, who has llepped Admlnlllratlon ulced Con&ms today to down as Seci;etary o! Haith, Education provide $U billion .,.., lhe .nm two and, Welfare to-.. ooe ·of.Proaidenl to help acbool --due±mr111te NlxOD'a cwnee)ars, toldi:i! 1Jl:M"8 l'Ub-years • . "'-:-. .-~ • •. -tee stodylng tl!o• : , A spollesman said the .,....... would "ID ·this bill, the !Oder al goYemmt!ll deal for the lint Ume with de· facto !or the first Ume Is establi>hing"a policy aegregation: 1 1• • to deal with de faoto . se~gatlon." De However, ~·Uon ~asked facto refers to segregation resu1t1ng from that lundl· !or bllslnc 'of lluilenta not ' housing patterns. be incldued in the -Ill· Jec!slatlon ''This administration," Finch sald,."ls designed to .-lhe d_..atloa conunitting federal doUan to belp ·thoae transition of local school districts. districts eliminaUng both de facto and de ju.re (by law) segregation and trying to overcome the education disadvantages stemming from nclal separation itJ their sdiools ... Unions March ' ' ' In St .. Louis; ' ' Clashes Brief ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) -Abou! 45,000 union tradesmen and members of vetera,:is groups ~~ th~ -"~ppqrt.'.' for America Sunday in a four·mile parade Interrupted for brief clashes with young antiwar protesters. At least a dor.en Per1ons were injured, tncluding a Poll-:eman and a newspaper photographer. A small group of marcllers wearing .hard hats broke from the 1nain Wade and 'Bttackod •Yeral penons -Orie ol wboai canlied a sip saying 6'Veteran Aa:iinst the War" -watching from the lawn of a home. Nooe of the Injuries wu believed aeri<lus. Police said oply"a few armjs were made for general p .e a c e disturbance. • ·• Two or the am.Ls came alter Delee· live John Simeooe was atruck Jn the face durlnc in altercation aboUt tralf-way through the II> hour pllrade: 'I'll<! march began near W8'hlngtoo University ancl ended at St. Louis µnJvenity. Simeone said the peraoo -atruck him was not arrested becauae the ·man apparenUy waa swin&in& at aomeone elae. Lynn Speoce, a pbotogriljiier for the St. Louis POll·Dispalch, WU bospllaliud after an object struck him In the head. Wtlllam George Hodel Jr., 22, wu the moot seriously injured. Hdoel was watching the parade at his parents• home when about j'55 or Ml" marchers ran. up and attacked _the group. ,Hodel wu beaten on the face and auff_~ severe bru1aes and cull, ... Hodel's mother ll!n· Florence ·Bodi!, was knocked dOWJi, )>ut not seriously burl wheo llhe boaed tnarchers .. they charged onto lbe family's property. "We believe that when this .amount of money ta concentrated on area of l!lt•tesl need and .. projects bolcllng -the greatest.--pramiae of success,. widespread and profdund ftsuJts1 can ·be eJ:J)eCted.''" I \ ' The program, beln& supplem,.ted by a Presidential Wk force headed by Vice l1rtsident SFo T. Agoe-.v1 iS cOn- c!!llll'aled oo h_elp!ni school dlatrlda under c~ order or HEW P,relSUl'e to de~egate. · ln"'itii prepaieil t.,tl!Mny; lltW asked for a restrictiop "to preclude the_~pporj of transportation services where the lft.. tent is solely to establish racial balance'' in a school. Financial aid during tile two years beginning July 1 would go to school dlstrlda with three special need>: -n-under <OUl't order. •to C!eeegregate or thole which a r • ~gating under plans approved by HEW. (The admlnistraUoa estimates that 116r school dlatrlda with 5.5 million c:hilclr<D are eligible in lhls category.) -'lbOee with one or more predominantly black sdiool. (About 10,360 schools in I.Ill> 411lricta woold be elillblt under thiJ heading.) - .:..Those in which more than hall of all school cbildren. are black. ("Dlstrictl in th1a category, with heavy con-- centratlons of minority students. would be eligible for funds to meet theACOltl of addJUonal interracial educational pro- jecb: or, ln e1ceptional circumltancel where such programs are not iirac- ticable. demonstration compensatory pro- grams," the HEW statement said.) Among possible interracial projects mentioned in the testimony wu 'an ex .. change of istuderU of different achooll within school dJstrict.s ~ from other. ocbool diJtricls "!or perhaps one day or clssaes eech weell or afternoon ~ uch day." . • ,. Presldont Nlmn has.IUbmitlad a 1111" pJemental req-lo Congrela lor•$1!0 • rrilllion for use th.ii summer· for many · or the same purpose1. Phone Rap Due. Two Ta~bed in Party Line Tragedy WALSENBURG, Colo.· (UPI) Charges were to be filed today against one of two women who reportedly refused to yleld a telephone party line to • mother whose three childrtn bad just fallen into a pond. The three -all boys -drowned before rescuers could each the scene. Huerfano County District Allorney Ernest Sandoval said Sunday he would file formal charges today against one of the two -persons involved, a l~year-old gU:l whose voice was allegedly identi.fied. by the boys' mother. Sandoval said he would file charges against the second woman, an adult, some lime later. The district attorney refustd1 to Jilentity either suspect in ·the incident. ' A state law provides a. muimum jail term or 90 days ancl • *4000· fine• for " ' conviction of !allure to )'ield a telephone party line during an emergency. The victims -Freddie, Ruben ech- Richard Pino, ages 13, 12 and 10 - of rural Walsenburg, were walking into town to buy new shoes when they saw a duck swimming in t.be pond. One of the brothers stepped onto a plank to retrieve the duck, but slipped into the water. The other two boys also fell In trying • to aave their brother and ail three perish# ed. A fourth brt>ther who witnessed the accident ran to his home to tell Mn. Pino Of j.he accldent. She was -met with ridicule arid laughter when she allempled to use,tbe llbe to call for aid, authorities iaid. Was Venezuelan president R1ftel :aldtra perhaps chiding bis hoot :ountry a bit for !Is prevailing unJ. lngualism? On bis arrival at the White House, be returned President t-lixon's greetings in Spanish-then ~epeated most of hi.s remarks in very·fluent English. The lower court held that two clauses must be stricken from the oath: "l am not a member of the Communist Party" and "I am not a member o( any organization or party '\\'.hich belleves in or teaches, directly or iDd:i.rectly, the overthrow of the government." The ruling said the language infringed on lhe right of free usoc:i.aUon granted by lhe !st and llth amendmeuls. The Safeguard Money was included ~n a $1.99 billion mllitary construction bill sent to the House floor for con- sideration later this week. This is $435. 7 million more than. was provided for the current year but fl37.7 million less than was requested. Finch Briel• Successor ·- _Summer Starts Arriving But Weather Cool in West, ·Pacific Nortb:iyesL • Reins of HEW .C·ha.nge I . . NIXON NAMES-FINCH TO WHITE HOUSE POSJ'~­ • Elliot Rlchordoon (right) Ntw HEW Stcrtl1ry ' - ' ' • ' . ·. San' Clemente TNay'• Fl•al . Capistrano !OITI ON N.T. Steeb VOL. 63, NO. 136, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,-CALIFORlillA MONDAY, ;JUNE I, 1970 TEN CENTS • ea. ' . . an_ • . - • I ~ • .-' • • ' \ " • " " . ' Opposes Bartmata Top Feder:al, State Aides Schmitz Facing June .30 Runoff By JOHN 'VALTEuA State Sen. John Scl:unit.z {R-Tustin) will !ace Democral David Hartman in a special run orf election June 30, final ur.olficlal results in Tuesday's special 3Sth ConcressJonal District election show. The special ballot was to select a aucessor for the unexpired term ending next January to the late Rep. James B. Utt who died last March. Earlier indications were that Schmitz would tally enough votes in the two-eoun- ty election to avoid the runoff, but County Clerk William St John said this morning final figures show that Schmitz failed by 2,142 to gain a clear majority of the total votes cast. The unofficial tabulation show t11e state senator with 103,127 votes to 105,969 for his six opponents. Schmitz easily led the others in Orange eoonry but they piled up a decisive majority in San Diego County's 301 precincts. The totals : Orange County, Schmitz, 77,080; opponents 60,233. San Diego Coun- ty, Sdnnltz 26,047 ; opponents 45,763. The final vote in Congressional dlstrict was delayed several days because results from 31 of the 42.8 precincts in Orange County were not. received at election lleadquar\«S .. previoully plaooed. . fffcause the precinct workers in Ule 31 instances did not ~ the r<sults in last Tuesday night it was necessary to conduct an extensive search fOr' the special elect.ion ballots from those precincts and lo hand count them. * * * Nixon's Home Precinct Likes Birch Member President Nixon has never shown any partiality for the ullra conservative John Birch Society but his San Clemente neighbors apparently bold a different thought. Voters of Concordia School pfecinct -Mf.. Nixon's precinct -gave State Sen. John Schmitz (R·Tustin), the lion's share of their vole! in the recent CongreSl!lklnal special election. Schinit; ii a member df'lhe John Birch Society, In the race lo fill the seat of the Tate Rep. James Utt, Schmitz Teceived 245 votes of 425 cast. His four Republican opponents only rolled up 138 votes jointly. The two Democratic opponents split another 30 votes. On the Republican side, William Wilcoxen was second In the precinct with 74 votes. John Steiger had .46. Maggie Meggs had 10 and John Ratterree had 8. Democra..ts David Hartman a n d Thomas Lenhart each received 15. Woman. Escapes Deatlt, As Auto Flies Off Road A 59.year-<ild Los Angeles woman nar- rowly escaped death in a t:pectacular morning crash in San Clemente tod<ty when her car vaulled a freeway 11uard rail, sailed 150 fee[ through the air, thm rolled up an embankment. California Highway Patrolmen said Margaret Blanche Kelley, whose last address was in Los An11eles, SUffered taclaJ fractures and other hurts in the 7:5s a.m. c r a 1 h oo the AvenUda Mqdalena offramp ol Iii•· San Diep FreewaJ. The woman's auto narrowly misled a state highway maintenance crew, then flew past another oncoming auto on ' the offramp bef°"' h~lU.g tile ground and rolling. .. Firemen pried the. woman from the demolilhed auto, which was reatfn11 on Its ~ ii> !hie-bushes. _ The special band count was completed this morning showing that the run off was necessary . Schmitz will face another Democrat. Thomas Lenhart, in November in a run off for the regular t w o . y e a r Congressional tern. Candlelight Killer Sought · In New Death By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Ot tllt DlllY ,.1111 $1.+I Nolorious Candlelight ~·Iler Robert W. Liberty is sought th ghoul the west today, after being s peeled o{ hls third ritualistic murder in four years. J DAILY PILOT,....._ ai, .-. ......... Of .... DlllY ...... lleff • sevii>ty'tilgh-ianlilng lederal 'ancl atate officials -probably Including 'Gov, ·Ronald Reagan anil Vice 'Pretldti>fSpiro Agnew, are Upected to t·rrtve In Newport Beach and San Clemente' today and Tuesday. ' Informed IOl>rcej ii>dicated Ure rankin( .ir1dats woold hold several days ol con- 1~ on intergovernmental ·relation!, probably at the West.em White Houae compound In San Clemente. AgneW ·is expected to a~ve some ·ume· late today at the Newporter IM Jn Newport !)each. GOv. Reagan was reported to be die official host Of the meeting serifs but 'prfts · alaei at fhe capitol to<fay ~Id neither confirm, nor deny the reports. There Were no rePofts' on the chances that the Agoe:w arrival ls linked to the conferences ~t the San CM:meple Inn and the Western Wbit'e Houae of the government relaUons group. • In past vtslts Agnew has' spent quiet . visits at the Balboa Bay Club. Ws Pins aides said ht was due to return to ·Washington, D.C., from CallfomJa Tues- d_ay, Tbe appeJrance ·in Newport wM He is believed responsible for the stab- bing and strangulation in San Diego of a man who once befriended him when both 1 were inmates at a state 'jiool>ital ror the aiminaUy insane. LAGUNA· FIREMEN HAUL INJUR&D 1JOSEPH RAMOS JR. '1JP·CLIFF •AT IRVINE .COVE By Basket ta the THhout•·•nd1lhr•·th• Liyirw lloom \tl 1$afety ' 1 -;- • presumed to be a stopover. . 11le s.n Clemente evenµ:. reportedly 'Will l'I under way. late ~y wttlJ ~~~.about•~ :Jt*· tlficlaia' alrd · about IO ft'aOI tbt r~l it. tl\e palloo. ,.. •'"'.lit-. * 1 • ' .' ·~ \ft' ... l "The-Candlelight Kiiier strikes agaih , 1• was scribbled in pencil oa a door in ·1111 apartment of -J. Irioll, 52, wt,ile two candles fllcke~ eerily beolde hi• corpse, ,.... I I ·~ Origin ,.qae11tt .. ed ' 1 t' J I ... ;.'fbY., J ... ~~ 1.!~"~J ~ "t' t 'Cllo ·: · · ·, :F4i'ir~en··sa~eJ. . ' ·1 • J'. ; Several ieuiorJ .an( .l:~ves wert Qpected to attend. but rhelr· nama 'we(i'nol -' ' Ubetty, 23, whose last katown addreS.'I WU 350 Avocado St., Costa Mesa gained gruesome fame four years ago when he murdered a paramour 12 years his senior at a *estminster apartment. Lab Report Exp.ected · As .Bo.at: Sinks- Off .~halon¢ Pf. n,e alfkial tidi oC Ure Jin>up Is the AdYJaOry c.,nmiuion on !irtergovem. ·mental· RA!latrons. , . The r'IJ~linas wJll be held Thµr&day ·•l the $1.o demtnte.Jnn and the White ,Hou~ compound on Friday. He struck again Saturday, one day past the fourth amive.rsary of the slaying of Mrs, Marcella Landis, 31, apparently choosing not to kill yet a fourth victim . After Mystic Arts Fire Four men we~ rescued from ·the treacherous water .and rocks belo.w Laguna's Abalone Point Saturday af. etrOoon · wlien their 'rtn{ed 'boi't 'strUck a reef and sunk, Injuring two ot them. · · :Driver on Wrong ·Track,· Killed Richard Graystack, 17, of Long Beach, was left bound with neckties in lrion 's apartment after being forced lo drive the killer and a ~'Of11an companion to San Diego. 1be youth told police he picked up · UlC hitch-hiking pair in Long Beach and was ordered tq head for San Diego, where he was directed to the apartment of the man marked for death. He finaIJy struggled free of his bonds early Sunday and called police, who arrived 'to find the weird tableau so typical of Liberty's homlcidal pattern. Liberty has also been sought since March 12, listed as the .prime suspect in ,the murder of Thomas Astorina , 25, who was shot and dumped near Sunset. Aquatic Park in Huntington Beach. Astorina ltiared a trailer at the Costa Mesa address with Liberty and two other men, me or whom is in custody and awaiting trial in cormection with the murder. Lawmen in San Diego said today that Liberty and the auburn·haired woman illee CANDLELIGHT, Pase Z) Laguna Beach Fire Chier Jim Latimer said today he hopes to receive a report from the Orange County Sheriff's (){fice crime lab this afternoon on .the re1ults of tests made on sarr.ples of flooring from Mystic Arts World, sent in on Thursday for examination. · The tests wert ordered in an attempt to establish the origin of the midnight blaze that destroyed much of the interior of the art gallery and stor~ at 670 S. Coast Highway Wednesday. Latimer said tentative fi«Utts placed the strUcturaJ loss at $45,000 and the contents, which were not insured, were valued at approximately $20.000. He said the fire apparently originated at floor level at a polltt five feet from an electrical panel inside tile store. Detectives and Fire ."Department In- spectors have been looking Into the 1 possibility of arson anJ Wilding depart· ment inspectors are investigating possi- ble electrical wiring defects. Building and Safety Director Clyde Z. Springe said today he would not be able to determine lhe percentage of structural dam,.e untU ,all reports were completed. If less than 50 percent of the structure is destroyed, the owner is permitted to re-build, otherwise the building must be razed. E1terlot of the' Mystic Arts buildt.1g is ooocrcte. wans, attadled 'to. the E;lis Lodge on one side and the Neal Bulcher Gallery on the other. The floor, firemen said, was ol wood over two by sl1 trusses which apparently had been laid direcUy on an old paved parlllng Jot. The large barn-like structure once waS used for pottery manufacture and Jator was occupied by The Pepper Mill , planl and display room& .. The Ml.erior was extenisively remodele:d with many wood partitions by the current Jessee. . . In determining structur11l lo&, Springe said, It would be necessar'y to detehnine which of the interior ,partitlom .were ' Ufegua'rd JaCk Linke aided AntbOnY A. Spffr, 42, of Tustin, who was swlm- minf lR the water. H~ was· assisted •by a Har9or Departmen't ~scue craft. Lifeguards, Jeff Q u a m and · Mik"e Hartley , went to the assistance of ..a father and .sort who 1were ·injUred and clinging to the rocks. They were1identUied as .Joseph Ramos Sr.; 53, ahd. Jo&eph Jr., 22, 'both Or · t.., Pu~nie. Both were inJUred."I'lie,J1tfl10r ~mos repaft.e41y had a brpk:en leg .ud . his father suffered shock and lacerations. A fourth victim, unidentified, Wa1 pic~­ ·ed UR 'by 'the comtnerc;lal flshil,g boat , "Newporter" Out or N!wJ)011 Beacti. ·guard! .said. · ' • ·Guard1 ·sajd ·the fat.ne r and son could ·not b.e taken ofi the· rocks because o~ Ji:ijur-ies. ~gu11a Beach firemen bearing -walls. · • 'responded to aid in a cliff-lace rescue. A Portland, oie.,1 man wbOse car was unexplalnedly he.tded · down a rural ~ailroad track'ln Mluion Viejo was kUled .. instantly Sunday .night in a headon col· lision with a fretght train. Wayne McCullough, 42, was killed l n· stantly, aceording lo the Orange County Coroner's ofOce. Engineer Curtis Syckafoose, of San Bernardino told the ·California Highway Patrol he didn't see the car in time ·to stop the speeding Santa Fe San ,Dlegan ... · Investigators fl>r lhe CHP s a Id McCullough's car .was northbound on the tracks 100 ' feet south of the CroWn Valley Parkway lntersection, parallel lo Camino' Capistrano. ' No one else witnessed the high.speed oeollision,_ which derrlollshed McCUiiough'• automobile and inflicted multiple injuries on the victim. 200 at Meeting To-Plan Fourtli Saddleback Students Seek . w6r1<1n' .be10,., th• Mer;e\ K. G•eci• Nixon Honors Crew ·home cantU~vered over· Abalone Poinf, . firemen .~· from . the-Gaede l~ W ASfUNGTON iUPJ) -Praldenl and house Jn the clif{ face below the home ~rs. Nl'xon W:lll give a dinner party and lowered rescue baskets ~ rope ., ___ 1n the faml!): quarters (I{._ UIL_Whi.te Sawdust "Display • Thty WOiked the Jnju~ fathtr .l1fd u'oo!e-Tu--e!aay night lor lhe · Apolio II son ·suceeufulfy to ilie top and caf'(led astronauts. th<· victim• through Ille llvlng ,,_ .------------ o!. the-.JJOSh home tO-irwport th eom Backing for Open ~orum Saddleback CollegP students have call-More than 200 Laguna Be•ch arUsls ed for citizen backing tonight In securing and craftsmen . jammed lhe Hotel v.·hat some have called "semi-free Laguna's Riviera Room Thursday nlght speech" on campus or a proposed "open forum." for the Sawdust. Festival's membersh ip Trustees of the college, who have had meeting arid briefing on plans for the a committee working on the ·matter, fourth annual aurqmer exhibit for the are to take it up" tonight at the 7:45 Sawdust a.rtlsU. meeting. · President Harlen T~illlger outlined John Bothwell, student bOC:"J ~5'dent, grounds plans and stressed the Im-in asking citi%en Wpport Of the open portance o( originality, unlquencss and forum, said Saddleback students have \11orkmanshJp in exhibitors' booths. He proved for two years th)t they are said a special meeting would be held patient aod cooperative. ,,...tte has never to go over construction of "creative" betn a major incident· oil campus,. he display booths for the festival grounds said. in Laguna Clnyoo. The forum, proposell by Bothwell April Members !'re asked to Indicate prtfer. 21, would aj)ply only to ttudenta at red boot!) 11te1, <WI a first come, first, tSaddleback. Appllcatim :or the forums 1 served basls, on a grouods 'map to .. v.·ould be made UlniUlh the tcbool 24 j be posted at the old Ward and.Harrlnston-hotn-in-advuc .:.t. ~' I i~r yard ,oor$atllrtlay:1ri!l~Y ; .. N,.....,.-~.ano:. · momings·rnim1rooa.m.to~rt" ',' "'-'At''~i:-24\.(l(il'f in odvarlce <>11 llighligbt <!I the meeting wi• judging th. p<Oposecrroriim. an .1pplicalton rrom of lhe Slwdust Festival's poster contest. lhe Coordinat.or '.Of,• Student. .Activities with painter Guy Downs picking up the must be lnlUated. , . · • · to, the)>01pitai. tendenUPresldent. ' . Choral Readers -The grassy area northeaat of the Student Center will be used fOr 'forums. Jn the event It is unavailable, the Coor.dlpator of Student Acti.vities will designate aoother locaUon. . s· la. te p ' . , -Classes may nol be dismisted fdr . .rogram ' the purpose of participation in any forum. · ' · ' -Each forum ,shaU ·be no .more thari · The·Choral ·Readers of·Laguh.a •Beach 30 minutes in lengtfl. ' High School will pr~sent a ·progrlm it -Designated hours for forum! shall 'toril~l'1 ' ahnull meetlni ol the Lagl{Ra be between 10 .a'.m. and,2 p.m. Monday 'CoordhiaUng Councll at 7:30 in 1he'hl"1 'thrl'Ugh Thuraday. · • Lschool alfd.Uorium. · 1 ·Weather· lt'll still try to rain Tuesday morning, but not very hard, while afternoons will . be. slightly sunny and temperat.urea ranging from 65 along the shore lo 73 further in· land. INSWE TODAY · -Np a~p,Unci~on sy51erii,· _ elecitont'c ·Also on tht 1eendi for thit1mem~lp or otherwise, ihaU be used. 'meeting is e1ect"!On of' orficerl for 'the McGavtha and Ctampton may ...:.No .presepta~oa ·may advoc8te thf: oomtnj )'ear add a ·reVl~'tl. tht'pa.it ·become 05 we:U known as Dre:d ove:rthrow of , Odt e s t a b I i sh e: d year's actlvltlu. ' Scott when the Supreme Court 'govemmepts, ~all for violenCe on or . Slate· ~1 officers .to · t,, pmegl~ l>Y makes . a landmark decillon on of( <•fllll'"" <qnfllr· obs c ~ n_J l'l~ ~· ll)e ~1lt>I ooll)IDll ... ~~ H~ 'the death' penafl~. Page J:Z. ' ·;ttrnullfle'Jb(~·or~-~ ~K'e<lof 'l'"'1deftt;. 'nlomU lllri:Pl\1ne. ;prtlo-,...., l'(eiii°" i'"cl>af"9¥.~ ·~2!'f.' #'~~11'.~~i ,..., -' r n • --~ , n,. • • • • '.· I ,"}OU°"'':'~'; , .t fL;_,·:e , ; ..._=:;....1 ~~ ,:r ....... \ . "-"Only '~ p<l'sotf ' lri,jy• be:,'atlO,ed'· :Mary '~an', t~;, 'r«;•i:·!\'21,J· , ::.t:i'H •l o '.1·!!1!1!';.e-,• , to spesk •I one ~me. . _ , '.: . .ecrt!ary; DO~y !~~.~~ '-"> '•"':l'r -~,..,.. . ...,. ~pe~l'I must al'°";qfJo8Uoos !roqt• .seore~ry; aOO Jaq,'~~trwur,17 .:: .' ~" :: ~..,.... ~ the auctwnc&. .. • ' ~ · · ~d Mr· ae:1ts 'On'" the boaril· ~· .. ~ -11 ""'-"" • The woman was still undergoing _emergeocy.Jmtmcnt thls mornin.i:. Aides al South Coast Community Hospital described her condition as aallsfactory. $100 cash award for best entry. -.Use of the ~ fOl'\lm,~ apen I 111e Sawdust Festival will run con· of Student Activ:iti~ and the Supcrin· currently wffhtheFesfival orATG-rrom-ffilllt tie iipJ>"NJVVtrby1he. Cbordlna July 17 through August 30. of Student Aotlvitu tnd the_ S~ln· • ...!viol,Uon'.of .thi abbv~ r\(lts will directors ste'_Wlltiam ~~ Geof1f,C~· ' · ~:=:'..:.:' ~ :=-w-c._ 1: ruu!t in· the .lll;')>enalon ot, th~,.p~vllege ninghmt, Jarncs Dilley, Gtorae,f~l~r :='.. n·t: =r'':.... 1•~ tlt-as1n,-thropen1forum ;ior=-r-perlod--and~ma~ Sytan. , • , , ~ --:-Nill i:....,, 11 ff One quarter. ' n>• meelin& 11 open to,the pubU~. / · . .. . . . . . . .. ' ... . . ' • .. .. • $ I 2 IWl.V mar SC -........ 1'10 ' . . , ' . .. • • ·.----~-""~-""' - More S!Ud~ _ . Peru Devas·tatio·n ..._ On Student ABOARD A USAF Cl30 OVER PERU lAP) -A grandstand view of death and destruction swept beneath a big U.S. Ci30 cargo Plane as it dropped supplies to survivors of earthquake-tom North Central Peru Sunday. ' ''Unbelievable,'' 1ald the pilot, Capt. Bill Hudspeth, a Vietnam vetuan. as be guided tile bi& Hercules up the 111).mlle H\llylas Canyon. "Worit than uythlng l have seen in my life.'' Hudspelh shook his head in disbelief as the transport passed ove.r what was 61 Captured On Drug Raps In Hunti~gton In a stepped.up program to make Huntington Beach "hot for drug users," officers from the police department's Special Enforcement Detail ( S E D ) rounded up SL per1onl on drug cbaraes .over the weekend. Del. Capt. Grover Payne and~Sgt. Jack Rtlnbollz said the haul of 29 adults and 32 juveniles wu the larcest ln the city's history. i Forty.five ol. the atl'e$t& were made by the SEO led by S1t. George Renek. His men swept the beaches over the weekend arresting. suspected users ol drugs and obtaining information leading to the arrest away from the beach m suspected sellers of drugs and mari· juana. Narcollcs Detective Ed Williams and officers acting on informaUon gained ln the beach raids and armed with a search wmant, arrested seven persons 1n Westminster early Stmday morning on drug use and sales charges. Seven more persons were arrested at a houae on Cameron Street in HunUn(lon Beach by both SEO and narcotics detail officers as a re:sWt o! lnformaUon pined from thole arrested on the beach. Four suspecls arrested on charges of pwseaion ol drugs and possession with intent to &ell are: -Thomas Williams 22, 150 7th Slleet, Norco -Bernadette Paskey, 19, 1441 Valencia Street, Huntington Beach --Oary Borrell, U, !U?Z Olivt Stree~ Westminster , -Danny De Bruyn, 15, 271 N. O•k Street, Or .... ' All otb<rs held on t!Yrges o/ almpl• poaession of oarcotlcs are: Arrested in the narcotics aweep were: -Michael Kortje, %2, t13 N. Gates St., Santa Ana -Diane Parker, 18, 01 7th Strtet, Huntington lJeach -William Helm, 18, 9915 ~1aptewood Street, Bellflower. -Joseph Ryciak, 18, 16518 Chadmont Stnet, Covina -George Hernandez, 19, 7112 Bonvilla Street, La Palma -Donald Carton. 19, 11171 Midway Street, Ia Alamitos -Michael Larkins, 18, 2671 Eue&lypt.us Street, Long Beach -Tommy Huneycutt, 19 -Richard Scaife, 21 -Charles Theriault. 23 -Michael Powers, 22 -James Jones, 21 -Robert Woods, ZZ -Gail Le.vesque, 19 -Ivan Dowdy Jr.1 23, MS Locust Street, Long Beach • -Steven Harris, 18. 9071 Rhodesia Street, HunUngton Beach -Beverly Brewster, 18, 5681 Abraham Street, Westminster -Bobby Shepherd, 18, 17382 Keelson Lane, Huntington Beach -Kenneth Perry, 18, 219 Che!lnut SI.re.et, Monrovia -Carl Sclalla, 19, 3404 Granada Street, El Monte DAllY PllOT " .............. ,..,...,.,..., S-CfcR1 e ... ll:oh1rf N. W11d f'r11id•nl incl "UOU•llll' J1ck It, Curl1v Vitt !'ru 'o.,I tP'ICI G-••I M-.. lh1,,,t1 K11wi1 Etl!~r Tho"''' A. Murphiftl M1n191.., Edllor l iclt1ri '· Nill iaulll Ort fll• C"""l'f Etilff Offlcn C.1!1 M"": :llO WUI l1y ll•tet N-1 l•~c~: 2211 Wnt 11*'>1 l0t,olt'\'ll'lll ._.flll'I '""~' m ,.,.,, .. _ NUl'l!lnfl., I•..:~: nets •••c~ 1411..,.,. .. ~ !;ltmlnlll llOJ NVI~ t:I C .... 1111 II• _ _A_:- bAllV f'llOT. ""'°" ••Ith 1$ ~ rM HI~ .. II ..... 11\~N dlllf' ~ S..... ,., Ill ........ ~''""' ,., ~ ... "'" .. ......,, ~ Coo" M.,., "..,, ... .... ... o .. ,._.. ....... ..., ..... wtlll - ....... dllllM. Qt.,,,. (eHI "Wl\tMIOll °""'""' 11tllltliol ""'" ••• " nn w..1 l11ltllf• 11w11 ..... ....,, hlcll, .,~ Ja '#1111 llJ ltr"Mt, CMN llM1._ T1l:Jt Pl 17141 642·4ll1 Cl~ .MWrfi•i .. 642-1671 ... C ...... AllDtll.,._...I , •• ., •••• 492·4411 , • ...,. .. 1. '9111. °''.... te.111 _,,..,.,,"" c.m-r. '" """"' •'9•1n. mw1r11.,.,, <tller~ -~ ., ld"tl"-!t -1111 !'WW lie ,.......... wltflwl IDKlll JOff'- lll<M ... tf ...... I-. ~ tit» ~. ,,,,. •• ft,....,, 1"81 •.• c.• ....,;-c;..flfoN\\"1. 11111Kr:t1it0! "' urrlOlr O• _,,lflfyl IT .... n 11.• __,1¥1 •1illl••1 <fftllllttltlll. u. _,,,J,, • • left of l!uru, once a city ol ll0,000 at.the southern entrance to the canyon, 180 miles north of Lima. Half the buildings had crumbled. Nol a single roof Rmained intact The govermiient aays the earthriuake a week ago may have kllled ao.ouo or more people: a United Natlona obserter saya the COW'lt more likely wlll exceed • S0,000. Ao esUmated 100,tx» more are homeless, lnjured or both. Hudspeth reached for the throttle and headed hi.I giant craft 21 miles up the gorge to Anta, the target of the eirdrop. Anta, a village ol. about 2,IMlO was devastat.ed, but by some freak of terrain enoup of the town's tiny airstrip was spared from avalanches that hurtled down ·the 18,IXM).foot Andes to leave It still uaable ·by .1m11l aircraft. A_quarter ton ot1leepln1 ba1s, bl"'nketa and food rations wa.s packed in plastic· wrapped aurvlv•l kits and stapled Into 11 1arge crates. The back bay of the plane lilted Open as Anta f!ame into view and the crates were shoved out, two at 1 time, at the Herculea made llJ: puses over the runway. Carhuu, .-nother town of about 10.000 people, came into view as the plane pulled out of Ill last drop run. , "Incredible, unbellevable," was all the mw_co.uld ~Y a1 they looked down on the shamblec. A ftw miles further up the canyon was Yungay, which used to be home for some 33,000 people. All that could be seen of It were the tops of four palm trees where the town square had been and a statUe of Christ, with arms outstretcbed, which marked the hilltop cemettry. . A sUde of rocka and mud two to three miles wide hid hurt.Jed clear across both banka ot the Santa River at the bottom cl the canyon, buried Yunray and !lllaahed against a mountain led)le on the other 1}de. On.Jy about 2,500 residents of YunCay_are believed to have llll'Vlved. The Cl31ll fiy twice a day, dropping supplies over the canyon then picking up survivors at the evacuation center In Cbimbote. They are brou1ht there by helicopters and vintaae C47s that can just manage to land and take oU at An.ta. More than hall of Chlmbote, a lhrlvin& lndu>trial port cl I0,000 people la gone. Its fishmeal proceulng plant 11 partly ruined. Engineers estimated lt will take many month.s td get Peru's only ate.el plant there to operate again. But ~ \Dldama1ed airfield hu been turned Into headquartera for planes and reecue tea.ma: from 14 nations. Capo .to Decide • On Vehicle Park At Meet Tonight The decision on whether or not to permit a recreational vehicle park to be consllucted off the Ortega Highway one and one-hall miles from the San Diego Freeway will be forthcoming at tonight's meeling of the San Juan Capistrano City Council. Prote$ts by property owners near the proposed park influen~d the council to postpone their decision at the last ti. ~ mee ng. .. Obje~tions to the park center around noise, tf:xcess traffic. and difficulty in entering· the site which is on 1 slope. The councilmen expressed a des ire to investigate these problems penona\ly. The park is being proposed by Mrs. Millie Orcutt who has obtained a fran- chise from Kamp Grounds of America. It will oceu py 15 acres and will Inell.Ide ·sites for campers, recreational trailers and a few tents. The ·facility will also Inc I u de restaurant, car wash, playgrounds, swim· ming pool and recreation room. Also on the agenda will be the adoplion of a new business license ordinance wit'n councilmen deciding on the amount to charge mobile home park operators and whether or not to include the old mission. Vncle Eiler Want• You Eiler Larsen, the famed greeter of Laguna, was in top _Iorm Saturday dwing an out-of-town appear· ance. Eiler traveled to Costa Mesa where he rode as a special guest in that community's aMual Fish Fry Parade. Thus Eiler, long a fixture in Laguna. helped-another fixture -lbe Fish Fry -observe its 25th anniversary. .Fr o11t Page J CANDLELIGHT Graduation · Set who was with him whe• Greyslack pick· ed them up fled the murder ~ne i1 Irion'• late model Peu1eot automobile~ Viejo · High to Give 360 Diplomas InvesU1ators noted that Irion, Jlke Marching to the trad it!011al sound of Tustin Union High School District. • Liberty's lint victim , me~ hJs .slayer while both were Wider psychlatrl~ cart. "Pomp and Circumstance" 3 g O Next on the program will be the Mn. Landis was Jin out-patient at graduating aenlors o( Mission Viejo High recognition of all honor students, followed Orange County Medical Center along School officially receive lhelr diplo~s by the presentation or student speakers with Liberty, both "' them having •t· Thursday. by Tom Spears, president of the senior templed suicide. Ce · Ill t k I t 8 class. Advisor Set The contept or placing • student ad· visor on the Laguna Beach Unified School District Board of Trustees Is being con· Side.red, but with deep consideraUon of -the problems Involved. Cathy Marple, newly re-elected presl- denl ol the Lquna Qelch Hiih School 1tudent body, went before the boar<J to diac:uss the matt.er last . Y!'et:k and learned it requiw: more study. "I'm a liWt concerned about the responsibility of a student advisor,'' board chairman Larry Taylor told Pi1iu Marple. "lt would be difficult ror one person to carry 111 the Information baek to the students," he explained, suggesting a panel in attendance at board sessions miidlt be a better solution. Miss MaJl)le said her proposal was based on a "lack of communication" between the student body and the school board. "Students feel the board ii wftY up there," she declared . "1 think it would ~eatly help com- munication," said LBHS student Stuart Rabinowitsh. "I know sll the red tape I've had to go ' through lo get to the board." Rabinowitsh su1gesttd the board mi~ht look Into effectiveneaa d student ad visors in othei communities. Newly-appointed dir~or of curriculum for the district, RQ_bert Rt!eYff, proposed studenll set up a monthly rotlltion schedule for attending school board meetings. ' ""'The former high school principal also suggested students get together with the principal on matters of importance. "Someplace In cooun1mleli~~ the rol~ of the principal has to be involved, .. added district su,erlntendent Dr. William Ullom. He oUUined tile procedure for making proposals to the board based on presentation, discussion and tn1stee appraisal. "It may take two, three or four presen- tations to get suppQrt," he pointed out, "but the important thing is to educate people to your point of view." Reeves, Ullom and Don Haught, new high school principel. will discuss the matter further with Miss Marple. Early on the mornillg or JUAe 5, 1966, remorues w a e pace a p.m. Westminster pOUce received a telephone In the football stadium with Associated The speakers will eleborate on the Fl D SJ d call. Student Body .President Bob Tamletli graduation theme "The Challe11ge of the ag ay a te "How do you report a killlng?,. the leading the Pledge of Allegiance . Decade ". Joe Snodgrass will present "A WASHINGTON (UPI) _ President caller asked. The , Board Of Trustees will be Challenge of Responslblllty" and Jane Nixon today designated next Sunday as Lawmen considered the reporting .done . presented by Jay lngall, assistant Rasmussen Will speak on "The Positive Flag Day and the start or National They rolled up to 8182 WestminSter superlnteltdtnt of instruction for the Wa y". flag Week. Ave., and found Liberty. then 19 years 1-...:..---------------'---------------"-----------old, strumming his guitar as candles flickered beside the straRgled' body of his woma1. 1 A Bible lay opon her bJeast and potted plants :;urrounded her. "Be quiet -she knows what we are doing," the young slayer cautioned police. He was cttarged with murqer, but determined incapable of .standin& trial by reason of insa11ity and committed to Atascadero State Hospital for treat· ment. He wa s released six months later to stand trial. but re-committed t 0 Melropolitan Slate Hospital In Norwalk after a jury decided again that he was insane. Llbetly was freed again by aceldent on June 2, 1969 when a 11urse ha11dling paperwork mistakenly checked him out as a routinely discharged patient. Authorities whipped up a furore over Liberty's release and he read the stories in newspapers and turned himself in to a Santa Ana attorney. "He's perfectly meek and mild," the lawyer told lawme11. A panel of six psychiatrisls re· evaluated the young prisoner and rer.xirted he -was sane and ready for return to society and on Sept. 15, 1969, Judge Robert M. Gardner agreeli. The Superior Coun j u r l s t ordered Liberty released and h.e moved to C~la. Mesa until disappearing at the time Astorina was shot. apparently 111 11'1 argument over a television set. Woman Dies at 116 KOBE. Japan £AP) - A 116--year-old woman believed to be Japan '! oldest person died at her home Sunday. Mrs. Ito ?o.1orimoto was bom i" 1853, the year U.S. Navy Commodore Matthew Perry came to Japan .. County Recreation A rea Dedicated Before 500 ' ln a three-part ceremony Sunday, the $5.S million aoutheast Orang• County recreation center. Coto de Cota. was formally dedicated before 500 members 11\d guests. Oulatandin1 athlele1 were chose• to place their haldprinll In cuunlc dedlca· Uon plaques at the 4,toO acre facl1Jty'1 aaddle club, athletic club and hunt club. DedlcaUon of the $1 .4 million saddle club look place In the 90 by 300 foot covered arena, wurld 's largest clear-span pole structure. Equestrl8Jl star Frank Cha.pot. ~prestmtative 0111 four Olympic t.eam1 and med1l winner, placed hil; baqi:fprint In the plaque, then executed a teries of jumps be.fort the cameras. A f1e« of nine buses transported guests over a hill and Into a valley lo the S2 nillllon athlet1c club where swimmer Don Schollander, wlMer of 1lx Olympic mtdal1 and Coto de Caza general man•ger Robin Moou swam • four·lap race. In the is.yard pool. A plaque with Schollander't handprlnt .. u1 hang In the alhltUc clubhouse which houses lounges, dining room, game rooms, gym, handball cou.rts, bowllna alleys, sauna~ and therapeutic poqls. For the linal ceremony, guests drove half l~ length of the five • mile • long recreation facility to the hunt club to meet huntmaster Bob SaJIChe:r;, listed as one of the nation's 10 top '$hols, who gave an exhibition of trap shooUitg. Noted sports figures from many fields were represented at the dedication, In· eluding ba~ball's Andy Carey, former Yankee third baseman and Bill Singer, Loa Angeles Dodgers pitcher: football 's Uncbacker Jack ·Pardee, Jae) Snow of the Los Angelea Rams and Rudy Bqklch. former quarterback of the Chlcaao Bears and basketba.il star George Yard· ley. Also present were Olympic awlmmer Carolyn Houst. diver Pat McCormick. Granny Lansdell, three.time A 11 • American football player at USC and Chuck Faust. former ?\fr. U.S.A., Mr. World and national Greco-Roman type • There is now only one airl ine serving Orange County. And they've just in· CMl..,. llltknz creased !heir fares. Now, if you want to save $'10;50-ro~nd trip, we suggest llwl"I you fly PSA from LA instead . The PSA air fare from LA to San Francisco is '4Ar still $15. 75, inc luding tax. a I= JIU wreslllll'g ch'lll!pl ------------------------------------- I I, I l I, I \' I 1%· VAlLY PILOT SC ·::Your 1'1one11's Worth I Here's Tax A ~dit Tipoff -·~·. By SYLVIA PORTER Since yw tumcid • In your •. -1tel income tax Form 1040 ' wow .,., you niay cail .• , me a fha1nd1I &4dist for tell- ., ing y'ou now what qtber tax. payen ~ted for key items . in your Income bracket so .• you can compare what you · ·• clalmed against the -averages. But the latest ftguns - baled on 1911 taxable returns and 8! ~f.o.date as you can get -·have just 'become available. Even though it's too la"te for you to revise or con-.. i\DJ. GR. INCOME !: $ 5·$ 5,00> ;., . I 6·1 7,000 17·$ 8,000 ., I 8·$ 9,000 I 9·1 )0,000 110. I 15,000 115 • I 20,000 l20. ' 25,000 125 · I 20,000 l:lO ·I !0,000 ISO · 1100,000 1100,000 • up * TAXES I 369 439 497 564 625 792 1,094 1,15.'1 1,778 2,186 4,231 12,404 sider ottering • dollat totai. l •uipecl you'll be hlgllly tomj!led IO take out the carboo copy of your '19 fflUtn and compare your figures against thole btlow. (That's what I did.) At the very lea.st, this column will give you an ad· vance tlpofl on tbe oddS yoil'll be called for an audit of your '69 ~tum. FOR IF YOl)J\ deducUon1 are substantially above the ave-rages in your tax bracket, the chances. soar that yc:iur return will be plucked for an *' * *< INTEREST CONTRIB. I 368 $ 213 439 215 495 232 564 214 629 269 736 313 914 434 l,11 l 586 1,209 714 l,738 1,1196 2,975 2,277 10,112 13,895 ' examiDltiOn. hi t e measured words or the Resear-e h Jnitttule ol America, 1·'lhts Is an important test for chances of. audit." So be jite'pared If you s)ercepUbly ex~d t h es e averageS, with data a n d documents to prove every dollar Of your claims. ON TllE OTHER lwld, if yout.<feduction! are way below • these averages, start ·this day t.o keep far more careful records of your '70 spending. You wdl may be overlooking Some deductions and uo- nece~a~y payi'ng higher tax· es than you owe. The following points stood out ,when, I compared the new avirages with previous figures based on earlier years. -Average <leduclion.s for taxes have jumped sharply in all income brackets. i . OAlL'I PIL.01 SI.ti,..... PACIFIC TELEPHONE GET,$ NEVf. IMAGE . Schaefer Puts, Fluorescent Decal on, Company Truck ADJ. GR. INC. 15·1 6,000 IS·I 7,000 17·$ 8,000 18-1 9,000 I 9 • $ 10,000 110 ·I. 15,000 $15 -$ 20,000 !20 ·I ;;,ooo $25 • I 20,000 l:lO -I 50,000 ISO • $100,000 $100,000 • up MED. EXPENSE 50% INSUR. PRJ;;. 79 -Average deductions for interest also have jumped sharply -an obvious trend in view of the µpsurge in interest rates, 340 326 327 Jl4 321 294 316 37'1. 451 444 628 949 86 87 89 91 91 • 86 102 !07 110 113 112 -There 'has been little change for contributions. -There have been erratic movements in deductions for medical expense. but in many brackets these deductions are down. •ell Going Mod 'Olive Drab' Image Retired (Copyrls!Jl IJ'10 by Field Enlerprises, Inc.) -FOR THE FIRST TIME, the Treasury is indicating the average deducte<I by tax- -pe)ll!'s in various brackets ror 50 percent ol medical in· sur<ince premiums. Did you fail to take a separate itemiz- ed expense deduction . for a limited, amount or y o u r medical insurance premiums -regardless of how little your other. medical expenses were'! lf you forgot this for '69 (or '68 or '67) get Form J040X The military appearance of Pacific Telephone's olive drab trucks· and vans are in the process of being "honorably discharged," according t o Charles Juengst, supervising garage foreman for the com· pany's Santa Ana·Riverside OiviSion. ; 'Bawl Street Journal' Declares Year of Dog · right now from your local Director of Internal Revenue and file it t.o ask for a refund . The 265 vehicles in Pacinc Te lephone's Newport-Costa Mesa district will eva1tually discard the familiar green col· or and don the Bell System's "new look .'' NEW YORK Al') ~· ''Market Confirms 1970 as the Year of the pog," proclaims .Friday's banner headline of the "mourning edition" of ~'The Bawl Street Journal," a humorous publication that has been parodying the stock market for more than 50 years, Black bqrders adorn this .year's edition as the paper ·&poofs the f~ial com~ munity and the recent bleak events on Wall Street. For e1ample, one er the fictional stories has Robert ~. W. Haack, president of the " New York Stock Excha~ge, musing on a psychiatrist's . ~· t'Ouch: HJ wonder if there are • any more college presidencies oeen." ·~ First published about 1919, ' J. L. Kemper . With Boise . Addnion of J. Loren Kemper '. of Garden· Grove of the , engineering department o ( -~Boise Cascade Building Co., M o b i I ehome Communities. ·• Western Division, was an~ ·. nounced this week. · , Kemper will work as a .. designer of Bolse Cascade ' mobilehome communities, now •. being developed in lhe 18 ·.._western states, Can a d a , ' Alaska and Hawaii, s a i d Richard J. Martens, general manager of the We ste rn Division office. Beach Firm .. Acquired • Hooker American, Inc., of ..<l.os Angeles announced ac- ,:..quisition of the 1:lfallge county • · _;,. Ceramic Tile Co. of Hun- .. tington Beach for an un- disclosed amO\lnt of Hooker American common stock. , Hooker will utilize the pro- di.ii:Uon facilities in the 38,000 square foot plant to increase ! .,..OOuction of Monterey clay brick. The Huntington Beach ·".·plant will enable Hooker to tri· ..... pJe the output ' ,._. Mesa Man Gets .. . , Manager Job " Leach Corp., a subsidiary or Subscription Television, lne .. has appointed Richard E. '!pr-owe, of co;t.a Mesa, as manager of electronic design. :Afe will 6e responsible for ;.detailed circuit design for all ,• .prodoots ol the Co n l r o Is • Di'lisioo. • ~ Prior to joining Leach, lie _;, 'flS prloclpal enginl!tr tor .!..M·cDonnall Douglas :.·>Jitronautlcs. ...... ' "The Bawl Str eet Journal", has a press run of 95,000 this year, says John Eckelberry, this year's editor-in-chief. The paper is sponsored by the Bond Club of New York, an association of about 600 partners or officers of firms in the investment banking business. ' -Also for th e first time. the Treasury has broken down average deduct ions claimed by wealthier taxpayers. tr you're in the high income brackets. you'll be utterly fascinated by your averages .•.. The new vehicles are l\YC)- tone, white and gray·green. separated by st?8 of blue and ochre. "Change-over from the in· stitutionalized green to Bell's new colors will not happen overnight," Juengst said. "The process will take about five years before we convert the entire mobile fleet in the Orange Coast area." 1'he paper's format 1-s similar to any other's, right down to the television listings . On Channel 11 , for Instance, viewers can tune into ''The Endless Summer," referring to the mar~et's performance in past months. Pilot Plant Being Built By Firestone County Shows Gain ' And for a news item the paper reports that because so many conglomerates h a v e recently been buying niotion picture companies, Standard and Poor's is· updain g it,<; rating system f o r con· glomi!rate bond issues. In U.S. Bond Sales Instead of the traditional AAA, AA , A, BBB, BB, and B ratings ·given to bond securities, ii says from now on-conglomerate bonds will be rated G, M, R or X. For advertisements ,there'!! one by a leading Wall Street Brokerage firm that says, "Don't look for us in the Yellow Pages. Were in the Red." Another institutional ad for another big firm says "Our Atlantic City office recom · mends Salt Water Taffy for the Jong pull ." Enter AKRON lUPJ) -Firestone Tire Rubber Co. is building a pilot plant in .<\kron lo 'demonstrate a method dispos • ing of worn out tires without pollutin·g the air. The tires are converted in part to chemicals and materials that are reusable in industry. Joseph Laman, F i r estone manager for environmental engineeri{lg , said tbe process ultimatelY may prove feasible enough to absorb all the tires scrapped annually. He said Firestone alone intends . to build 10 lire disposal and reclamation plants around the country. Circle Orange County showed an increase in U.S. Savings Bond sales in April 1970 as com· pared to the same time last year, according to county sav. ings bond chairman. Donald P. Kennedy. The increase from $819,71<1 to $887,217 for Orange County is in dire ct contrast to the decrease in bond s a I e s registered in Los Angeles and San Diego counties. Orange County was also one of only three counties in the area lo show increase in sav- ings bond ,sales for the first pare:: to the same time period in 1969. San Bernardino and Ventura conuties were the on- ly other areas where an iJll· Marcus Mortensen (right) of Huntington Beach received a B. F . Goodrich Win- ners Circle plaque award followi ng his electiqp l"fffo tl,.e honor s"Ociety .~G . \V. Alli, export director, Weslern Reglon·Internatiol)al B. F. Goodrich Company presented the plaque at a re<:ent meeti ng of the society in U1e San Francisco Hilton. Mortensen is a sales represent.alive for B. F.-Goodrich Consumer Prcr ducts DiVision. 'The \Vinners Circle is composed ol the top three percent of the B. F. Goodrich· world·wide sales organizat.1on • • • • ... ....:.~ U.mplete-New York Stock · Li~ • ---------~ - Market S!lmbob l ..J ' ' • • • AMERICA'S CUP HOPEFUL -France's entry In the America's Cup race; the 12-meter France, is loaded onto a German freighter to be shipped to Newport, R.I. where she will compete in a best of Uf\fT1.......,. seven series wlth the Australian hope, Gret~1 II , to decide which will challenge for the cup. Gretel II i• aJso on her way to the U.S. by freighter . • Weatherman in We~ Windy Pre1iminlJI"y Trials Start In Cup Race ' ~oke on Racers in Tidelands .,__.. The weatherman said it'loud ,aild clear for Saturday's forecast : Overcast sk.les and wtndl to six knots. ~ear!y 100 .aklppers in as many sailing yacbls believed the-forecast as they ap. .._ proeched the 1tartil'lg' line for Newporl Harbor Yacht Club's Hwilington Tidelands race - most of them sans foul we8ther gear. As a result, there were some damp crews before the Ocean Racing Fleet reached Los Angeles Harbor where wester· Ex·Star Champima Bevar Sails to Solid ly winds gusting over 25 knots kicked up a short, square sea both inside and outside the breakwater. Sail changes were the order of the day as the boats were overburden •• ed. Encore, a Columbia-43 sloop sailed by Fred MacDonald of NHYC, was the over1ll and Clasa B wlnfter in the ocean racing divilion. NEWPORT, R.I. !AP) - Preliminary trials to decide an America's Cup defender were set to begin today between the yacl)ls Intrepid and Valiant on Long Island Sound about midway between Stamford, Co11n., and Oyster Bay, N.Y. The first two days of com- petition, which will continue through Friday, will be just between Intrepid and Valiant, with Heritage not expected to join the trials until Wed- nesday . Victory in Soling Race Jn addition to the OR boat.s competing Jn the Ahmanson Series, there were fleets or Pacific Handicap, M i d g e t Oct!an Racina, Rhode! and One of these three will de- fend the cup against a yacht from France lo Australia beginning Sept. lS off New- port. Don Bevar of Southwestern Yacht Club, a former world SUr Claaa salling champion, Ailed his Soling slgop, Isle de Fleuer to a declJive victory over 11 competitors Sunday in Calilomla Yacht Club 's Finn-Soling Regatta . Bob Andre ol Mission Bay Yacht ol.ub, former national , -champion was the. winner in t the FlM Class, the Olympic single-tlanded sailing dinghy. l The Soling is a new Olympic clm Wh\ch will be sailed for lbt lint time in the 1972 11ames at Kiel, Germany. Final results: SOLING ~ (I) Isle PCs and Luders-18s. The latter three cluses sailed a 14-mlle course around the Emmy oil de derrick. Final results: Fleuer, Don Bevar, S\IA'C; Oce1a Racing (2) Norsch Okse, Car I OVERALL -(J) Encore; Eichenlaub, MBYC: (3) Gold (2) ChJmaera, Fred Liebhardt, Digger, Roger Welsh, NHYC; · SDYC; (3) Atorrahte, Burke (4) Gray Fox, Bruce Peachy, Sawyer, NHYC. SDYC. . . CLASS A - ( l) NewsBoy, FINN -(1) Trout Fishing Jack Baillie, BYC: (2) Orient, In America, Bob Andre, Pe~r Davis, NHYC; (3) MBYC; (2) Spook, Henry Hilaria, Ed Callender, SWYC. Sprague IIJ, NHYC; (3) CLASS B -(I ) Encore; Serious, Ned Hall, Huntington, (2) Chimaera; (3) Atorranle. N.Y. YC; (4) Luftmeister, CLASS C -(t) Destiny II, Fred Miller Jr'., SSSC. John Hooten, BCYC; (2) Atari. John Cazier. BYC: (3) The Intrepid is skippered by Bill Ficker of Newport Beach, C.lif. i the Valiant by Robert W. McCullough ol Riverside, Conn.. amt the Heritage by Charlie Morgan or St. Petersburg, Fla. Intrepid made the last suc- cessful defense or the Cup, against Australia's Dame Pat- tie in 1967. Cup Yachts Ii Ullman Wins ·class A . ' • Sanderling, Poole & Kirk, BCYC. CLASS D - ( l) Balclutha, John Kincaid. CBYC ; (2) NowonWay To America ! lnBCYCLidoRegatta ' DaYe Ullman of Balboa Yacht Club was the Class A wiontr in Bahia Corinthian "Yacht Club's 8MUal Lldo-14 : lnvitaUonal Saturday. • 1be regatta was htld \\'ith I three races Saturdt1y <J,1\y. } Some 35 entries turned out !or the event. ·strong .winds contribuled lo some gu1ty racing Inside the blrJ-There were no juniors In this ye1r's race. AJ class A winner Ullman toot the Los Angeles Ex- arniner and the Jim Berkshire Perpetuals. Class B winner was Tom Hinshaw of Lldo Isle Yacht Club who \\'3S .awarded the W. D. Schock Perpetual. CLASS A -rt) ~tagic, Dave Ullman, BYC: (2). Honey, Gared Smith, BYC; {3) Lowly Roman. Rolly Lohman, BYC. CLASS B -(!),No. 327'l. Tom Hinshaw , LIYC: (2) Swumierful , Don Bartz, SSSC; (3) No. 2770, Phll \Vilcox, BCYC. • Wlnd1wlft, Karl Tunberg, SYDNE\", Australia (AP) - CYC ; (3) Freestyle, Lippold Gretel 11, Australia's entry & Cicero, NHYC. in the America's Cup yachting PHRF -(ll Velcaro : (1) challenge, v.·as taken aboard Robin, Jack Dalahite, SSSC ; the freighter New York Star (3) Aphrodite, Bill Langjahr, today for shipment to the SSSC. United Slates. MORF -(I) Si Bon, D. The freighter will sail from B. Talmadge, BYC ; (2) Blue Sydney Wednesday for Boston Fin, Ed Feo, ABYC: (3) An-and Gretel II is expected to dale, Everett Temme, SSSC. , be at Newport, R.I .. by the RHODE S· PC -(I) endo!July. Mistress, Bill Taylor, BVC; There it is lo sail a,li!ainst (2) Impulse, Pal!l Marx, BYCj the French 12-meter yacht La (3) Misty, Ted Congdon, France in a series of elimlna- NHYC. tion races begfnning Aug. 21. LUDERS -16 (I) The winner will meet lhe \V)ndsong. Bill Fundenberg, U.S. defender, still to be nam- NHYC; (2) Pre-Empt, Leroy cd, in races off Newport Southerland, NHYC. starting Sept. IS. LEGION BASEBALL ... !ConUoued from P11t %0) Srmon•, " ' ' • V•rn•Y• u ' ' ' HAlllOll A"O•t.S U) Doherty, tf " ' , Wlllen~n. c ' • • • .. ' ... Fo~. p • • ' • McKlnlev, •• ' ' • To•1111 ~ • • ' Fltldtr, Jlt ' ' • ~,., • .., , ... 1..,. Or•~• .. "' 100 -4 11 ' kubuke, c ' Founl1l11 Va!tev Olt ... ··-· • ' NPltl. cl ' • ' l'OUHT ... IH VAt.L•Y UJ Elfllt,.y, '311 • • • 51m1>10n, II • • • ... , ' '" Munl, II • • • Mia, :I'll • ' • • M1rllro11, rf•llt ' ' • $lllm1U, :lb • ' • • MIYI, " ' • • Chu•c'""'-H, lb ' • • • .. l ....... mtt. 11 • • • ll'rlti, II • • OulltnOtrrv, p ' • • C111lr•ll, rl • ' • ' ' Toll II " • ' svrnont. lb ' ' ' • '"''' .. ·~"I"'' G9oe11k1r, II ' • • • S1nt1 Ant ·m OOD OOCI -t ' ' Vtr111v, u ' ' • • Mlrltor An~1t I QOO 01• -J • ' Ooh1rty, cl ' • ' ' l'OU TAllll YALL8Y 16) Wlllc.,-tlOn, c ' • • • .. ' • "' s111111v, • ' • • • "41•. 1b ' ' ' • ''""'''' It • • • • Shlm111, >II ' • ' • T1!1l1 ~ ' ' • Frill, II • ' ' • Sc.,.. '' '""Intl C1111r1ll, " • ' • ' 111r.r.M "•c!llu llloO OGG 0:11 )-...t ' I (;(1(1111k1r. rf • • • • Fount1111 V1!11V 1oe 111 119 0-1 s 4 DAD-TAKE CARE OF YOUR GRAD!! out 1ef•ly end wisely on • ntw SUZUKI Sportcyclt. We •Ill l11Clt4t. e~s ... lttely PJlll, • .,_ ,, .•. ...., ., .... ,_ lltlEt Y IAY -Two Lido-14s cross tocks in Bahia Corlnlhl•n Yaellt Club'f 11th annual invitational !or I the class. Strong winds created some eiclting sll· uationa at marks. JAMES LTD. 1114 OLD NlWl'O•T ILVD., C.M,-i42·0040 , ) • ~ . •• ..=:_..::.,.......=.. -- ' Mondey, June fl, 1~70 DAIL't' PILOT ~l SHOP SEARS SUNDAYS lZ Noon to 5 p.m. Mo8day tltru Sl!lurday t :• a.m. lo I:• p.m. Sears •. SAVE $10! Tachometer Dwell Meter SA VE $10! Timing Light Regular $t9.99 Scales t-1JOO and Mm RPM. MOD DweU.,Good-Bad Point ResiJtance. N1 truais- torlRd circuit. Automatic Yoll.tge stleclio1i:' Wort• oo. 6,12,:24 or 1111 TO!ta1e. Fumbhed with Durll Cell Battery. SAVE $5! Compact DwellTachometer Regular $24.99 19~JJ Ny transistorittd c:irculL Can also be lleed for outbolrd motors and m1gneto tys· terns. Powered by standard · mucury baltery (battery included.) Selector Switc.b for .readiaJ Dwell or R.P.M. Regular $14.99 Dwell Meter SAVE$5! Check point tpacitrg /or easi~r su.rtiag; better ac- cderat.ioa and lliJh &peed perfortn1nee. For I Is 12 TOlt. $1Slemt. Ball.el')' Dlt'ILNkd. Auxiliary Starter Switch ' Low Priced Permits tutnln( eagiae over from ou.Wde •bat wortia, on~ en(ine. Vac Gauge-Fuel Pump Tester A Buy! 55 "'" Lets you q\lictly, acCuntelJ del«t minor ft111D! troubles. before Oley become major ttpain. II mea•ures et!line vac\iwn in iadres; 'aids In proper motor tune-up. Fil! any ps line. • Regular $29.99 19~~ For ·1 lo: lZ Wiil •yatema. Chrome plated body. Trigger Switch allows tube to fluh only when needc.-d. SoUd- slate circuit SAVE$2! Timing Light Regular $16.99 14~~ Tests f , 1%, 24-VOU alld ma1- neto system!. White pre- foc:uled li&ht bri&bter th.la llfllll:I lYfle. Witb ..-rt pl111 adaplerandeord. Neon Timing Light Sears Piice ! With _. 11sht. For I, 11- orJMoit l)'lteml:. 4pc •. Engine Testing Set 999 "'" ' .. ' Heavy Duty Compression ·Tester Regular $5.99 · 4~~ Jfttp your air kl lbe best cm- dllioo. Comprnsion tnter measure up to 300 lb!. per. sq. In. Of' pr'l!llW"!-Adapltt fits uy Jpl.r\: pl\11 bale, ·Engine ' Analyzer 4-in· 1 Engine Tune-Up Tester 69~ 39~1~ Alltmat.r Tester. Seplrale · poiat reliltanee Kalt-IZ· wit 1ctle. mp-tow ohml ~ Self-cont.tined battery pnJrr. Ask Aboul Sears Convealenl.Crtdll Plans -·-···-........ 'I-•-" --·-· -·--· _ .. ,._........ -·-·-' -.. ........ ...... --.-·-· -_, .. ..... , .. --... __ ., _........ ...,_ ...... ~--" .......... -............. .._.,._, .... .....,,t......,f"l'A .......... -....... ~ ---· -----··--·--'·" -·-·-.. ' ·- --..... -__ ,,,, ---·---.-· .... --....... , ' I • • Complete Closing Prices - \ I • • Mondq, """' ~: 1970 SC -~- . • ··~ ·-DAI~ Y Pll.Of .I(! American Stock Exchange List I Driver Finds . Arm Missing KOBE, Japan (AP) Yasuhlde Ikeda, 21, )VU drlv· ing on the highway today, hl" right arm sticking out. of the window, when a truck com.Jn& in the opposite direct.Ion graz... ed him. Ikeda drove more than a mile farther before he dlse<ivered his entire right ann, from the shoulder down, was missing. OoctonJ at Kako1awi Hospital aaid the. cut was so sudden and clean it cauted little bleeding and Ikeda reported little paln. The man drove hlmlell to the hoopltal and was reported in fair c;oo- dltiOO later. L-Squared Inc. Acquiring Firm lrSquared Industries, Inc., a Santa Ana corporaUOn, an· nounces Q\e final deta.Ua of the acquisition of R. W. lntematlonal, a corporation ln Orange, engaged in manufllc· turing CATV products. 'J'1t1s acquisition wu for alt ue- di8cload amount of atoct. Collins Names SuperintendeJ?-l Collins R>dlo Co. In Newj>ort Beach .announced this 1Nttt the promotion oC Jim R. Pritchard to production superintendent of semicon-" ductor •manufacturing. He Joined Collins In 1968 and h85 been a manufactut'lng fortman during hia two years with tbe company. ' Office Open~ Medical Dalo Sylllema •in.. hac 111-the openJac ot Its new Lona Bucb Brandl Data Center. The JlunUnitoft Beach based l1rm <umnll7-provldes complete dat.i proc.. euing, racl11Uea manqemint.. hospltAl admlnl.atraLlon • ,~,l'Ni ayatem1 deveJopmMt HrVice1 Jo numerous--hOtpltals In th9 Southern Ca!Uor.U., iru. • ' l • PRINCE PHILLIP ENTERS 50TH YEAR UNMELLOWED Ouoon'1 Hvtb.nd, Unwrinl<led, LHn and Still Oullpokan Ul"I T1tep!Mfft FATHER AND SON, ONCE ALIKE, NOT ALWAYS NOW Prlnct Ch•rlft, Now An Adult, G°"s His Own Way Often Men in Service Air F~ First Lieutenant 1'1temas 0 . BealJ, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Beals or Laguna Beach, is participating in the unified .Atlantic Com· mand's joint amphibious and airborne exercise E x o t I c Dancer fll which will conUnue in operation through early June in the Croatan National Forest and the Camp Lejeune area of North Carolina. Navy Lieutenant ( j u n i o r grade) Roger C. Hauge hus- band of the former Miss Jean C. Hoover of Huntington Beach, made his first solo !light. He Is receiving basic flight training with Training Squadon One at Naval Air Station Sauney F I e I d , Penascola, Fla. Air Foree Captain WlWam E. Stewart, son or Mrs . Eleanor Doche, 80l Pinion Drlve, Hobbs, N.M., is on duty at Da Nang AB, Vietnam. Captain Stewart, a a navigator, ts assigned to the 20th Taclical Air Support Squadron, a unit of the Pacific Air Forees, headquarters for air operatiom in Southeast Asia, the Far East and Pacific area. He previously served at Mather AFB. The captain's wife, Carol, la the daughter of Mr. and ){rs. Art Salisbury, 2 1 4 Narcissus St., Corona <lei Mar. , MAL am1a• HIAIUll• AIDS ---..... u-.. maintenance organilaUon in the U.S. Air Force. Major Webster is a flghter Interceptor pilot with the 4780th Air Wing, Winner of the 1969 Daedalian Main-- tenance Trophy. Staff Sergeant Joseph D. Kipp, son or Mrs. J09ephine M. Kipp 0£ Beachwood Park and Village No. 1 6 7 , Capistrano Beach, ls a member of the Perrin AFB, TeX., unit that has been se lected as the best aircraft maintenance organization in the U.S. Air Force. Sergeant Kipp is a fuel specialist with the 4780th Air Defense Wing, winner of lhe 1969 Daedalian Maintenance Trophy. Navy Petty Officer Class Eddie J. Vitt Jr., husband of the former :P.1iss Carol L. Henrie of Laguna Beach, is serving aboard the amphibious assault ship USS Tripoli with the SevC!nth Fleet in the Western Paciric. Over • 1 >40f I. COAST HWY. COllONA DEL MAR 494-9415 "'.&·· • ' • • . Phillip · Prin~e Un~hanged.1~~~ ~ .. ONDDN (UPI) - Unwrinkled, lean and far from · mellowing as lbe R o y a I Family's most o uts po kt n member, Prioct Philip enters his 50th year J un@ 10. betore," a B u ck I n g h -m Philip's cloatMSS to him has more reJued gesture of Palau llOUlCO close to PbWp waned. When Qwles w11 1' Jtlff .:llOd bu ctvm~"l!IY' to said. teen-ager, Philip wu 'l1t coo-rifly. ' Last year, Philip d!JC!osed slant compllllion .~ ...... a Pblllp remaina a lllckler lrf . BAPmCG IN&lJAANce'~ The handsome blood bus-- bond of Queen Elizabeth DO Jonser frets aboUt his receding hairllht. He trotl' around the Buckingham Palace gardena in shorts aod sweater to keep fit. Tbe face of the slender, Greek-born prince is without wrinkles. ff4 only apparent con-- cession to half a century's· age-is an occasional bout with arthritis-the latest in the rtgbt wrist he badly sprained in a fall from hls poki pony several years ago. on U.S. television that Buck-mentor and boss w!l)I waJ dallj . '!Weise. Ht '"'°" in Ingham Palace"as finlnclallr.'.. 9fltn ~ be·~~·• · !lie tndqqr pool at ~am in the red and SU.Uested "we (\at Jes : 41d ~ , 1 J W .a 7 1 Palace'·and there is elfll'cising may have lo "move r... mljiure•w to. !'Jlil1p'a·1qh •l'Pl(•tln in hi• bo-... smaller yremJses, .I migllj;> ·-of Jillysical .,.. ln-l'ec•n\)ears he ha.I dirb- have to give upJ»lo'.'~ 1 l ·dea"r"t· ... ~ .~ · J. · ed. ,JUs o~fn;quent ~ The Royal FaitilJy1s llrinll' -alar!es hH ;imf cultivale<l and cricket playlqg to oc- Jodged ln the palace and Philip his own circle of friends and caslonal games with h i s still plays polo. js no longer frequenUy seen children or close friends. He touched oII a flurry, of with his father'a pals. Somebody· years ago asked abdication speculation when Although Philip sUll pl&JS hlm why he didn't include he said there was no truth polo reguarly, hb game is golf among 1$.many sporting ln a rumor that Queen might not as aggressive as it once pursuits. step down In favor of Prince was and Charles, when . he "I'm saving that for my Charles but added : ' ' 0 ( plays at Win(lsor\P,.arkt C111w1 old age -wnen I'm 50-plus,'~ courSe:, ~~ idea has it& ad-a bigger ci'_.owd than bi$· .Philip replied. vantages. father. " ·. Palace sources said Philip Yet the candor lingers. The future king CQOUn~ stilt feels hemmed in by the Fading is Phi~p's strong in-~o develop bis keen i~fe:H rtstrictlo~ of being the flu~ on his older son, Jn opera, classical ~us~·,'aiid Que._en·,. h~and. Royalty is Prince Charles. . ballet -all ,of ~~~h bore .su~J.o~void controversy The 21-year-<1ld future king the pants off Philip ' In Jhe.. _ bll~ Phi1ir IS -a man o( finn of Britain stUI wears con--wordl; of a palace source. · ~µ~. '·: .. ,. ' e BUSINESS e HOME e AUTO e BOAT e LIFE Bob Paley and Assocl•tes INSURANCE But the sharp tongue that has gotten Philip into rows with the Queen over his candid remarks in public shows no sign of mellowing. "Ht!'S far more irritable now and• he • certainiy drops far more briciks-apparently more deliberately than ev.er \ervaUve suits from h Is Until recent~y, ~ha r'Jre s~ :W,ben ~ speaa:"9\it, as he father's conservative tailor. copies his falht!r;'rJ;, :~_, ~d o(f ~'~·~ti Lo.a 'recent Bu~y Charles has sported behind-the-back walk arid t'.he. g_ali;>efing ;~:Oi . A 1P e f ~can ibri#.shirts and oolorfuJ ties stiff nod of the head. Now journ.al.1.U,'hls wordS arew~· ~-r!~ Phone 642-6500 474 E. 17th St. COSTA MESA ~:PJ1i_llp wolildn•t touch. Charles usually walks with ·His re~soOed and reflect ~· . ~ince, Charles came of age, hands at his sides and,'~-sJ~y.,ie thoug~t. ~~;~~)', . ..:.• . . .... . .. ' '", : .:·· . . ~ ·:: ~:-(~:;:.= .·· .r-• ~· ~ •"' ,• ~ • '•<•'•.~:-!':::: \. • SHOP SEARS .'1.NDAY ~2 ~n to 5 JI.IL •• ~ Mjm~y thru ~~day ,#~~ ~.m. to 9:30 p.m. J..~ • • . I • ', ,.:. ' ' ' i '~.,;•I . . ' 'l''. ~, Sears ' our Lo,West '. ' .. AUTO AND TIRE CENTER · Priee'.s for Tires \ .. . ' Belted with Fiber Glass · '• .\Lb.5'i>Al'f; J!ASSEI'(CEll 'URE GUARA'.'ITEE 'Go-.i~ A&ain~t; AU nrc Uilu.n:s fl'qll norou.1 rOllJ 1i~1- acd1 ot defeea ia m111ed~J or workmanship. For lloot-"J.ong: Poe lhc Iii(: _(Jf-tbe otigjo.I ~. Whal Sean. "Will Do: lo (""I· danic fut die tire, rrplK1: 1t dargiag fofo\lbc proportion of cu.rrent selling price plu1 Fe<l- enJ Excise Tu thac represents tretd \lsed. B.~air -mil Jl'U'rie- ij.ifcs ac no cbarge., Guarantet.l A~Mt: Ttnd I' ~cu-our. }'w How Lonr. 11w ownber • of rooo1hs 1pecified. What Sein WUI Do: Jn cx- cha~ for 1he 1irc, rcplact it char,!til\I{ 1he current :tt"lling price plus Federal f:rci$e Ta"( lc)5 the followin.g &llowancc; i\lonthly Guarani~• 18 to24 27 10 3~ 40 Allo.,.•nee 1or~ 20% 25% __ , .. ..._., ... J. ----· -............. , .. . ..,.. __ ,, . 50 'fRADE- IN PRICE. 6.50x13 Tubeless Blackwall PIQJ 8L65 ..-... ,.,. \\ hat·· So Good Ah out 1'.ihl'r Glass ( :c>J t:o l rt1ct io11 F.E.T. And Old Tiro t:r{'(lt•·r Sa fe ty -l'win fiber glass bf:lts rt:inforcc 1hc 1rcad •.• create a11 added b;irricr 1h:i.t helps red uce runctures, impact damO\E:C. . Beller Traction -You e. · more rubber on the pavement. )>-0u gc'r greater "ttaction in ill kiads 6f weather. : I 1..75xl3 Tubeless . Whitewall Plus 1.% F.E.T. ""d Old Tire •Tread reinforced wi 1h '2 1tef:l be ltJ1:, virtually elim· inatinir; all types or road Ja agarda •Rayon cord plies 1)rovide li n100Ll1, secure, ride •Greatest nJilengc of any lire on the road today •Tread lifetime + 40,000 miJe tread wear-out guar· an lee •~" Cit 1-1-. e -" ____ ....,,, 91•-. -•• t.ft11 _.,.,, .. N -.. ·-· _._ ....... . .. _ .., .... .. -1 -ll N ln _._ OI. ..... . , .. _ .. , ....... u ...... , .. .................. A.M. .. 9*HP .... ...,11 ....... t P4 .,~··--.. , ....... ,_...., ... .. ·-·,. ... --·· --·~--.1 SIZE T .... FET '• l"riuo BLACKWALL 6.>lh lJ 1;;.so 1.65. 77,;:ir:J·~ :!1.:.n 1.97 R:!.'h:l.f :!4.:;o %.17 :.WXl.i l ;,..;o 1.r.a WHJTEWAl.L b.",il\ 1:1 l8.:.U • 1.11.i '711,z;,14 :!O.~ t.R I 73S..:l<l ~.:.o I.SI 7~.i'\:l<I :u.;.o 1.97 a:z;,,,,14 :?7.:;Q 2.17 a:.:;x1~ Jo.:.o 2.4.') 1a.:;o .... :!-\.W %.04 :!7.50 %.:.!3 JO.?;; :!.47 A•kAhou! )o!!ars t;onveJ;pe"' l;:redit ·Plans -· TUBELESS WULn.."WALL rr;a.:i·. SIZE p,;,.. F.F..T. l.7~x l3 .,. 1 .96 1.85:-14 ... ..,. 1.95~14 .... !.51 Z.05-.:14 ... ~ .. ~l:ix14 $54 101 l.9Sx li .. , .... :.!.(lj,15 '" %.97 2.IS~IS 155 --111 ' 5"1.i ... .... -OB&f'IUU-..W --1111 .. -....... . "-... ·-··---"" .. ''" • • I ' • • s OAILV PILG'T ~ San · Clemente ' .i~f" ; .. High Honors Studeqts, Grads - ~ __.._,. .... ~ San Clemenle High School haS' given special honors to 51 of the 463 members of the Class . or 1970 di.Iring a :ipecial awards ass~mbly. Additionally, tl fuembers of the j\lnior class were singled oul for h011ors on accomplishmenlS during the past school year. flighest academic hoaors went to Barbara Taylor and 23 seniors who will be graduated with academic distinction. National recognition for schol~c achieveme1t and service to school and community, ·the Outsta(ldi118 Tetnagers of America_ citation, was a'cc6rded to }i:feri Hicks, Dan Sands and Vicki Vedder. Girls' League President B a r )l a r a Stamp announced election by the girls of .the Trilon student body of Saady Ziegler to the. Girl of the Year title. Senlor Steve Kalota wo11 the American Chemical Society Award, and American Legion Athletes of the Year are Mike Wells and Gail Norman. Daroe : Ro!l Allen, UC Berkeley : Sandra Ziegler, Uaiversity or San Diego; Robert I.ineback, UC Santa B~bara, and Robin Bescham, use. Beauty scltool scholarsliips, Sylvia Garcia, Oceanside Oilkge of Beauty. and Linda Lohrman, Marinello-Comer school. Military academy illld R OT c scholarshlps to Jack Kalola. Air Force ROTC; Tom Meyers, Navy.ROTC : Dan Sands, Na,vy, Army and Air Force ROTC; Robill Rescbam and Glen Tsuma, Ali Force Academy, and Dan -Sands,· West 'Point "Military Academy. "Kiwanis Bowl representatives, Peter.' Chicas, Monica H u t c be· n s , Jon Limebrook, Richanl Tosdal, Cicki Vedder and Mike WellB. ·-.. - Of the juniors receiving awards not previously annouaced were Martha Holland, who was named Outstandh1g Junior Girl, by El Camirni ' Junior Woman's Club, and Doug Mann, who won the $200 California State Hi.story Excelle11ce award of the Daughters of Bank of America Achievement Award certificate winpers. David Banker, David H. Su~va11, Richard Dastrup, Luis Com- paran, Broawen Dentqp., Hope Jansen, James GbaUa Gallagber, Patrlck Wright, Jeanette McQueen, Coleen Kenney and Steven Kano .• B of A plaque wi.Jtners, Ron Ailen Barbara ~chael, Meri 'flicks and Cheryl Lager. Fii'.e W arnings Cropping Up Fluoride Gets OK ·Master Plan Adopted Fo r. Coast Drainage. American Legion outstandi11g athletes, Gail Norman and Mike Wells. In San O emente ' Vall~y Ac~, Cl emente Waits the American Re volution, • Charles Se11ge, who has been chosen by the American Field Service for a summer semester in Zurich, Switzerland, was introduced as the FAS finalist from San Clemente High. ' Fifty-two scholarships and final).cial awards were prese11ted by organizations and individuals. The complete li st of winners includes: California Scholarship F e d e r a l i o n Sealbearer and life membership to Ron Cushing, Meri Hicks, Hope J ansen, Cynthia Slingerland, ·earbara Taylor, Vj_clti Vedder, Sandy Ziegler, BronweJ11 Denton, James Doi, John Milligan, Cindi Davidson and Cheryl Bunkall. Honors at entrance to Robert Lineback for Stanislaus State College a11Q S¥1dra <>7' Ziegler at UC Irvine. Resident honors for high school juniors for Martha Holland at USC. National Merit Scholarship Finalist Meri Hicks and commended students James Doi and Hope Ja11sen. Firestone Scholarship to Albert Balog, Jr. The ''I Dare You'' Award to Hope Jansei. and Glen Tsuma. Outstanding Teachers of America ac· colade to Meri Hicks, Dan Sands and Vicki Vedder. American Chemical Society award to Steve Kalota. The Betty Crocker homemaking award to Jill Rinehart. Daughters of the American Revolution awards to Doug MaM, Joanne Borawski, Sandy Ziegler, Barbara Stamp and Richa rd Kramer. El Camino Junior Woman's Club award to Martha Holland, outstanding junior girl. Girl's League Girl of the Year, Sandy Ziegler. Girl's League award, J\feri Hicks and Barbara Taylor. California Savings and Loan Associa- tion award for the outstanding segjor student to Barbara Taylor.' Capistrano Lion's Club~award to Jesse ' Hernandez. - ,Chapter QQ P.E.O. award lo Pat Bohrer. California School Employes Association honors to Deruiy Reese. Community Scholarship a w a r d s (scholarships) lo Albert Ballog, Ralph Bond, Lau rel Dean, Denise Delcolle, Bronwen Dentoo, James Gallagher. Jack Hagerty, Hope J ansen, Cheryl Lager. David Naegle, Cary Smithers, Gary Brashear, Cindi Davidson, Sal Lombardi. Patricia Wright, Judy Mudge and Barbara Carmichael. . Fire closure signs are appearing in the hilly brush areas or San Clemente in th e annual campaign to help control brush fires in the city's fire-prone hills. Fire Ct\ief Merton \V. Backett said the closure areas lhis vear are in the hills behind Sun Clemeflte High School; a~ the end of the 400 block or Salvador, the end of the 900 block of Salvador and oth er hillside areas which skirt tile i11land developed areas of the city. He described the fi re danger as ex· treme in these ar-eas and noted one brush lire already had occurred, in the closure zone. Jt \llas allegedl y set . by · arsonisls early Monday n1orning. Jt'ire crews contained the sn1all blaze before it could spread to dangerous pro- portions. A.rcl1itect Gets Chamber Post Architec t Leon Hyzen of San Clemente has been named a director or the San Clemente· Chamber of Commerce. While water officials Vi San Clemente are awaiting a feasibi!Ity report on the JlOSSibWties of arding~ fluoride. to the drinking water, anolhcr city in Orange County this week has authorized U1e coritroversfal process. The Tri Cities Municipal Water DiSlrict, serving San Clemente residents, has agn .. >ed to hold off on action of · its proposal to add fluorides to Metropolitan \Valer District ·water until the M\VD returns a feasibilily report. But In Fountain Valley city councilmen this week ''oted 4-1 in favor 1f adding fluorides to their water supply after hear- ing hours of testimony from both sides. It becan1e the first Orange County city to approve fluoridation . A full-blown cont roversy over the Rd· ditJon or ttie decay-fighting c)lcmical hns not reached San Clemente yet. City councilmen here, alter votin g against the fluoride addilion 3-2. agreed to abandon the idea and suggest that U1e water di strict hold its own hearings on the matt('r. The Fountain Valley action pointed out the classic arguments for and against the water fluoridation. Advocates including Dr. David Gaynor, chairman of the dental health comiliittee for the Southern Californi a Dental Association, told the Fountain Valley lawmakers that 4,844 cilies ih the nation wiUt 81 miUion inhabitants fluoridate their water. The concept, he added, ha's won en· dorsement by 50 state boards of -public health, th~ U.S. Public Health Service and the Oange (9unly H e a J 1 h Department. 'He said that 60 percent of dental cavities could be eliminated with the addition of one part of fluoride compound lo a million parts or water. · .But opponents, citing fears"that the nuoridation is the adminis tration or medication by unqualified polilicians, claim that the addition of the rommon chemical constitutes a violation or con-- stitutional amendments , covering in- dividual rights. TIJ£y vowed to wage a campaign to hold a referendum on the matter so thai voters could decide on the addition of fluoride. rurthermore, th ey agreed, fluoride aC• cumulates in the drinker's bones and is harmfuJ to v.•ater pipes beccluse it causes excessive corrosion. Little or those arguments has reached the South Coast as of yet. If they do, they will·occur duing the Tri Cities hearlngs which will be left promised, but unscheduled until the MWD report is comPleted .• That should take several weeks. A master plan of dra inage lor the San Ju~n Capiltrano ~Capistrano Beac~ -Dana Point -S;iin Clemente are has been accepted by th e Orange Gouiity- Board of ·Supervisors and will be the subject of a public hearing within 30 days. Approved was an engineering study of the $10.t million project dpne by Lowry Engineering Science or Santa Ana. Tbe plan calls for runoff ·control inl.O foUr major . creeki draining 27 square~ miles of hilly area fringing the fo~ communities. Drain.age fees will be assessed lo future subdivisions. They will range from ${ 15. to $805 per acre, ae<:0rding to enginee'r Sid Lowry. A breakdown on area charges, sub-~ mitted by Lowry, shows $5.2 million. for San Juan Capistrano ; $l.7 millioG for San ·Clemente, and $3.2 inillion for unincorporated areas. The total assessment of $10.1 million• will provide funds to control surface runoff to areas drained by San Juan, Trabuco, Oso and Homo creeks. Soroptimist Youth Cilizenship Award to Dan Sands, Hope Jansen and Meri Hicks; runners-up Robert Lineback, Sal Lombardi, Rick Maso11, Sandy Ziegler • and Barbara Taylor. Lions Club speech contest, Susan McClure, Stefanie Harrison a11d Cindy Jotmson. Ameri can Legion · oratorical contest winner Cindy Johnson. AFS finalist Charles Senge. Girls' state representative A"mericaa Legion San Clemente Post ~beta Mudge; Boy's Sta te 'John RusseU. C o m m u n i t y scholarshi p vocational grants, Joann Anderson, S t ep hen Barlock, Michael Brown, M a r c u s Engslrum, Jeanette McQueen, Connie Niehaus, Cynthia Scheflsinger and Cathy Smith. Elk's Lodge Award to John L1neback. San Clemente Men's Go\£ C 1 u b, scholarship award to Greg Domeoichtni. Soroptimist Award tO' Cynthia Sl- in&~land. -40u~Jt-!im\ll!unitY.:jl~Pital A""6 ~ liiiioril!Oiinie<ili~d Barbllrl'; ·stamp. Approved unanimously by the b9ard, Hyzen will fill the poSt. created by the reliremcnt of Kenneth Sn1ith. The re- mainder of the term is 2~~ years. Active in numerous civic organizations, Hyzen is presently servi ng as chairman of the chamber committee on en- vi ronmental imp rovement and beautifica- tion. Notice of I ncompetancy Fi led on Ca po Teache~. Clemente Delays ·~ Trailer Move A propoSed moblle home ordinance !or San C!emen!e bas been put ovef to the · next council meeting a(ter: coufl6 cilman Thomas O'Keefe commented: Boy's State representatives from the San Juan Capistrano American Legion post Nole11 Boyer and Dave Sharke. California State Scholarship winJters Ron AJlen, David Banker, Ron Cushing, Cindi Davidson, Michael Estes, Martha Holland, ~1~ica H'utchens, Hhpe Jansen, Robert Lineback, Gail Patterso11, Clyde Sanda, Cynthia Slingerland, Barbara Smith, Vicki Vedder, Lisa Watkins· and Sandra Ziegler. ~ Scholarships to colleges, Ray Ezell, Azusa Pacific College; Brad Winton, Azusa; Barbara Smith, C h a pm a n College; Catherine Shepard, No I r e South Coast Ministerial Association award to Ron LaMotte. Memt>ers of Sa11 Clemente High SChool's graduating class of 1970 are: Gr1d11AIK With Academic Ollllncllan: Ho~ 11nwn {V1t.clldCl'"l1nJ., B!rber• T1YIQI' {Se.lut1lor anJ, \llCl!I v~, l:vntr. 1 SllllCl.,lilnel, R-ld L, Ali.n, M..-t HldU, . 81<b!lr1 S11ma, O.n1~ S!fls. R!cll1r<I Kr1mtt", John M lll!q&I\, Sandri Z le•, ROO!n RKchen, ROt\lld Cuilllna, Cindi 0.Y son, BrOl\we<! Oen!Ol"I, Chrls!IM Van Hl<1~, Lindi Gt.It!, RobtTI ·Ll,,.b&ck. (llh!l'IM She1>9nf, NlnCY Jol'tMOn Ofiyfd W. Banker. Ch>de Sllnor1. Cheryl 8ullk1ll, Deni... Otl Colle 1nd Patricia Wr1Qfl1. ~r 11rld1.11tes: OaNI J, Abboll, C1roll11e J. Aber-, Jank e l. Alnt-111, Joe A!lr(on. 'o Afln 0. Andef'!lon. Mor111ret M. And•rson, Raber! ~. AnOerson. Bob J. Arllul, TO<W Arm~trona, Jrlltl"Y A. Arrovo llld Larrv A, ,r,11111n. · 1tcibelrt C. Au~t~n. RfckY J, Averlll. M•ltolm San Clemente ~eeking Weeds Seen any weeds still standing in lhe vacant lot down the street? . ll s-0, San Clemente city halJ would like to know about them. Cit y Manager Ken Carr has invited commentary from the c o ti n c i I and public on any weed abatement work that remains undone. He said the cily's annual weed abatement program for fire safely. is due lo conclude wilhJn a couple or weeks. A notice of incompetency has been approved by Capistrano Unified School District trustees to be issued to John V. Robbins. music •teacher at Marco Forster Junior High School in San Juan Ca pistrano. Robbins was Cmp!oyed by the di strict In 1956, before unificaUon asnd was assigned to the old Capist rano high school. J{e was reassigned to ihe ele men- tary level and has taught al the junior high for the last two years. Last year, he filed a suit against the district for ,being transferred out of the high school, where he had received his tenure. The district refu sed lo E~. JUincho has the hottes t price -in town ! 10 LB. BAG 20 lb. Bag .•. 1.~7 ••••••••••••••• I ! t ~ -KingsfonJ~ ••• hardwood makes-the differen ce! Faster atarting, loti,g€r burn ing ••• cooks evenly ••• for bellc r heal control! For easy starting in your ba•becue,. ;buins cleanly, odorless, and no flash.back ! ...... ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Clamato Juice ............ 43¢ Apple Sauce ................... 19¢ Startlingly different ••. and tasty ! ~uart:. Sto"kely's • , • sen:ed chilled, ""ith pot·k ! No. 303. Franks! Knackwurst! Polish Sausage! '79¢ ............. ' .... Old World goodnt8S,from the Vienna people! ••• ,.our choice at this special p1·ice! 12-oz. package ! Pork mluu • . . for early -in -the week menus! _;-~Por~ Chops ..... ~E~~.R. ~~ •••.••• Lean and ltndor , 1 . from selected mid-western pork ! CUflfl! CUT PORK ROAST , • , • , , •• 89¢ lb. !talian Sau~age ........ : .... ;···· 89~ Fresh! Delightfully ..,asoned and bl<iidcd-1 Stuffed Pork Chops ............... 99~ \Vilh ?tf1;. Cubbison's Dressing! Jtcndy to cook f P1·ices in effect ~Ion .. Tuel!., iVed.,Junc 81 fJ, 10. No scde8 to dca ler8. I transfer hlm back. The court declined to res tore him to the high school as requested. A few months ago, trUstees were notified that the teacher had planned lo appeal the court decision. John Crain, ·director of personnel for the dlslrict. expJa ined lhe procedure following the serving of Uie incompetency noti ce. "The Edu~alion Code says that when a permanent employe receives such a notice it is a preliminary one. He then has 90 days of actual teaching time to correct the stated areas of incoinpe. le nee. "'lt appear.i lo be an invitation for trailer park operators to com e into San clem.ente." The planning Coiilmission had recommended that the city council adopt the regulatory ordinance. O'Keefe said last weeli he had oO. tained exha ustive studies On mobile homes from the cities of Oeeanside and San Juan Capistrano. "Perhi.ips we should go over them in some detail,·~ he suggested to councilmen. The council also scheduled anoU1er budget session for 7 p.m. Wedne~ay af. ter re<:eiving no written or oral comment I on the budget at a public hi!aring. · All through the sunimt11·, El Rancho •1vill be off P.riny .sen· iational 110.tueB on cook-out needs! .Keep an cy6 ove~'' I " ARCADIA: Su,..l 1nd Hunlinjlon Or. (El Rantho Cenlei) PASADENA: 32tl·Wnl C.lorido BM . . souht PASADENA: FremOnt an~·Hu.nlington Dr. HUNTINGTQN BEACKi W.mtr •nd·Mzonquin (Boardwalk G"!rr) NEWPOl!f BEACH: 2721·N!Wport Bl•~ and 255S"Eul~lutt Dr. (Eastblull Y.11111 Cent.r) \ ·- • I .. ·~----·------~--~------------------- I L • .- ................... i'"( • • ' ' ' • • • '""' 11>.wley, 25, ol Sk..,....; · • )!:ngland, said he used o bicycle · · pump io help revive a hedgehog b4 found lk>aling In a ~ ~:!i .. After some sPoOOfu!s i>l lllUdY ~ gentle care, the animal wu able to - waddle away into Ille woods, Tllaw-. ley uld. • •. •• • . • T1'e Vrtiduatio~ dirin'd at Mb,. 'es Br(non.School, R.1., will con-;1 .. si.!t entirfhl of or"'"'k: food.I C\I,. 1part. of an ecological "eat-in." The mtnu will include onion le ek soup, aprout S4l.od. deviled eggs ftMllO.tuzhtrtaly to&Ud chief,,.. ens. Wbster caught in the sea.s of. A:nk.irctica and 'rG#e~jP. tea. •••• . ' ' . . . ' . '\ ~ ,. . . $J .5;-B l1Hon ~ ~ Des~gregation -- Aid R~qu e sted WASHINGTON (UPI) -'1'ba Nixon Admlniltratioo asked (:ongreq today to provide IU bWlon "'" the next two yun to help achoo! systems detoCT<gat•. A spokesman aa1d the measure would deal· for tbo .. flnt lime wllh ·cit facto llgt'elltioo. . However, admlnlltraUon'oljJclals wed· . that IUnds "'' busln1 ct _.. not be lncldued Jn. the-spei:lal Iegillatlon deolgDOd to .... the clao8roe•Uon tramMM:m ol Jocal school dlltl'kU. • Unions March ' In. St. Louis ;-.. ' .. Clashes ·Brief -.11. "l'lnl:i., -ba1 ltepped down ai1 ~ of Health, Education and Wlllbft io &ecomi ooe of President Nixon-'•-cOunaelors, told a House sub-~:studyilc thoi ,plan: "In tbli bill, the federal government for 1114; fltst time b 0eotabJIJhing a policy to de,l wttb. de facto Rgre1ation." De facto fefen to telfflatlon resulting' from housing patlenll. '"nlll administration," Finch said, "is comm!Wng federal dollan to help those dlMrlcts elimlnalinj both de facto and de Jon (by law ) aigregatlon and trying to overcome the educaUm di!advantage1 stemming from racial separation in their sdlooll ••. "We bt,Ueve that when this amount of money la concentratecf on areas of ~-need and on projects bolding the K"atest prOmise of I U C,C e SS, '!~ and P!'Ofound results can be e~.~· 'lbe jrocram, bilng supplemented by a . Presklentlal task "force headed by Vlee Pi;eoldent Spiro T. Agnew, Is con- ST. LOUtS, Mo. (UPI)~ About.45,0oo ciftlb'114d on helping school districts union tradesmen and memben ~ under .tourt Order or HEW pressure -''I chained my wife ·UP to keep · • · , , / her safe"· Ro1>ort·Mo,,.J1 27 ,told » · •e MMY WINNERS -Individually honored with the Welsbpool, Wales Court rec.at-. ..i:lll.!DY• Sunda~ night were (top, from left) Patty Jy ''Safe fronl Wboi:n7''~8sked!~'.! ~ ~1'\ife for "My ,Sweet Cbarlle''i Karen Valentine, s~utor Richard Hughet. "Safe · ••Room 222"; Gail Fisher, "Mannix"; (bottom, from another man," Monii r,epl!ed.'' He said be put the chain arOitDil lds .wih1.._t.....S:1'opt~er in.r-.:..:---•·----· :_ UPI T ......... .from left) Robert Young and Jatrie!I Brolin, bbtb {or "Marcus Welby, M\D., '' and Michael Con-- stanti.ne, 11Room 222!' vetetans groups ~ tbe1r ''auppart'' to ~le. . for America Sunday in a four-rrille In ltl1prepared teetrmony, HEW asked parade Ul~ltd f« brief cla.sbes with for a restriction "to prtelude the support YOUOI anthrai' protesten. or lransportaUon services where the in- At least a doi.en persons were Injured tent is 10lely to establish racial be1ance" lncludlna a Policeman and a newspaJ>ft; in • achool. shed with bis cattle. COurt to Rul e • • On Loyalty Oath For Employes WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Sup""'' Court decided today to rule -tmn on a modHled stala loyalty oalh r.qulrlng teac!ien and employes to swear support of the U.S. COostitution and to disclaim belief in overtllrow ol the government. 'lbe .tmJ>llDCenlfJlt that • Florida case will be beard next fall « winter came ~~, ~ cow; ·"' I« the last Um,! ii\- -..more·ai.,i·t yur u ae eight.man bencll. :.Jl~al1)' .G)ladmun Wjil be sW.ro • In ""°"·moth liliember Tu.,.lay. -' .,.....,., . ~ ·.,. "Iba eawt • 1beH other .CUons: fsaac Bonewita graduatts from ,tM ' -~ to .dedde in a Califomfa University of California this man~. -~Jbltber-IJta&e 11llY require k>cal With a Bachelor of Art.s degree iii'-communities to get voter approv&lore magic. !' toaJ tM first ,uch degre~ in conslructinl public bousiq. A referen. tile university and b~1'"'" .tM. firit dum Jeetioo cit the California cofl.5titutlon iinywhere. Ht toaa gavm ~ • . to take U..t degree ~ca.Ult of Utt di/· was itruck down by a specal three-judge ficult11 of claase1 invotve:d. federal paJte} in San Fran~ on April •· 2. A federal bureaucrat .wbo • .W, ... ~\1'1"LJ<!ilenl -•ls judge been socializing with Mine ordiJr ,.. >Jbert "B~-Martl· u a special· master 11ry .mortals over luncb drew back tn t;P.e. Ju.slice ~t's of!~ land . his chair recently and. aeid, 'tw~l},. . sulf ~13 AulrtiC stales stretching back to the Horse Latitudes.'' Dis· . oelling the puzz1ement of his com· from Maille. to Flon~. nme rederal panions, the gentleman cited his government is cont.ending that the states dictionar}r's definition of that term: . should bave no . jurisdiclion over any u An area of high pre&sure -wlm .. offshore. -areu beyond the tralitiobal cbara<;terized by variable and 'un-~ llinil · predictable winds." .Tb&.loyallf oath waa challenged by • an Orlando, Fla., fourth grade school teacher, ~tella Collll<ll. She appealed Chelsea, Mass., fir~n """"'t tO 1be SUpreme Court from &' ruling heat pay. The fir~n. members by a special three-judge Federal Court of Firefighters Local ,$137,. are at OrlandQ vn: Oft·-30, 1969, upholding tiego!iating with the dty /OT a thoie sectkJo1 of Florida's Joya)ty oath new contract. Ont of tM ir de-for st.ate empioya mands U f0r 9n e%trg dau'• f.lGtl The Supreme Court will schedule whe-n the temptroture goes arguments in the fall A written opinion above 90 degrees. will~ l:..""'illlmmm•••••m!-'. -!J'be l~. court Mid that ~o clauses • must be: strk:ken from the oath: "I Was Venezuelan preSldent Raf.,.._ am bol a· Jllllllber -ol U.. Communist Ca ldera perhaps chiding his · horlt Party•• and. "I am not a member of t:ountry a bit for tts p\-evailing uni-. any ora:anl&a.tion or party which believes tingualism? On his arrl\ral at~tbe in or~ teacba. directly or indirectly, White House. he returned President the overtlrow of the govemment." Nixon's greetings in ~panish -tb~n Th':..rullnc aa1d the language infringed repeated most of his remarks Ul on the ritbt of he 81.!0dition granted •ery fluent English. by Ille Jal and Illh ameulmelis. photosrapber. A small group of marcherl --Financial a1d during the two year5 'World,' Windom Win w-Jng bard bats broke from !be main begJnnlng July l would go to 5chool parade and attacked several per.oni' _ districts with three spcctal needs: one of wboJn carried 1 &llfl saying -Those under court order to 'Marcus Welby,' _'222' "Veteran Against the War" _ watching desegregate or those which are from the lawn of a home. desegregating ~ pl.ans al?P"O~ed by None of the injuries was believed HEW. ('M>e administration esttmates ~at serious. Police said only a few arrests M~ scbpol ~k:~ with 5.5 million ' Take 3 Emmys Each were made for general p e a c e chdd.ren are _ell~ble m this category.) disturbance -Those with one or m o re Two of the arrests came after Detec· predominantly bl~_school. (A bout 10,360 tive John Simeone was struck ih the. schools~ 1,8'0 c;usmcts woold be eligible face durin& an altercaUon aboufhalf-way un~i: ~~~ more than half of HOLLYWOOD (AP) -A doctor drama seriea, "Marcus Welby, M.D.," and a we~kly schoolroom story •. ''Room 222" have won the most 1970 Emmys - three apiece. A cancled 11eries, ''J!f.Y World and We.Icune to It'," and its star William Windom won in the ~medy calegory in Sunday night's television academy awards. And a twtce<anttled series, "The Ghost and Mn. M ui:r, tt brought a second Emmy to star Hope Lange. Recently C91£eled by ABC, the show was dropped b;--NBC last year, when Miss Lange was aimilarly honored. Veteran actors Robert Young and Peter Ustinov each received a third Emmy award. Young won as the ge~ral practWoner In "Marcus Welby, .M.D.,'' pie.~ as the outstanding dramaUc series. James · Brolln, who plays his assislant, wu named best supporUng aclor. · , Ustinov's third Emmy waa for his .. perfonnance as a Jewish merd:l~nt w~ _ House Panel OKs ABM Fund Bill WASHINGTON (AP) -The Hoo,. Appropriations Committee Ux:lay recom- mended $365.8 million in coostructioil money for the ne_xt year of the embaWed sareguard antiballistic missile program. lt is $30 million more than hu.-been appfoprlated for the past three· fiscal years and is for use during ijle yea r •slartlng July 1. It ts sepante {rom weapons procurement mone:y, which amounts to hundreds of millions more . dollan. The Safeguard money was included in a $1.99 blllion military construcUon bill sent lo the House floor ror con- sideration later this week. This is $435.7 million more than was provided for the current year but '137.7 million less than was requested. provides a home for a blacli: youth tram a slum Qelghborhood lri '.'A 'storm in Summer." 'Ibt show was picked a.a the oustanding single dramaliC program. The 22nd awards of the National Academy of TelevWon Art! and Sciences were telecast from the Century -PJaa:.a Hotel Jn Los Angeles and Carnegie Hall in New York. i Dick Cavett, host in New York, 1et the tone for an evening oC emotion, appla"f" and lalJihter · by eaplalning: "Thi• 11 tbe ahmr that each year alb the question, "Is radio rea!Jj triipfoved by the addition of pictures?' • Among the highllghls. bet>veen COil\· mercials for bras, girdles, \tJtk~~bclttM! fried chicken and cigarettes, ftrt: -The naming of "Room 222'' as the , ®lstandlng new series and 'two of its stars, Michael Constantine and Kartn Valentine, as best supporting, ador· and actre.ss In a comedy. ' · -Britain's David Frost, wlhnlng for outstanding variety aeries with his syn· dlcated talk show. through U.. 3\; hour parade. The march JI hool ch0Jdr bl k ("01 trlcts i......an near Wastii ........ n Uni erslty and ~ sc . i en are ac . s ~ '>&"' v Jn this category, with heavy con· eJld:ed at St. Louis University. centrations of minority students , would S_u:neone said the person who lltruek be eligible for runds to meet the costs him was not arruted beeauae the man oC additional interracial educational pro. apparently was pinging at someone else. jects or, in ex'ceptiooal circumstances l:.ynn . Spence, . • photographer-for the where such programs are not prac- St. Louis Post-Dispatch, •¥ hospitalized Ucable demonstration compensatory pro- after an object struck him in the bead. grams.'" the HEW statement sald.) William George Hodel Jr., 22, wu. Among possible interracial projects the moat seriously Injured .. Hdoel w~ mentioned in tht tesUn1ony was an ex- watching the paradl at his parents change of students or different schools borne when about "55 or 80" marchers within school districts or from other ran up and attacked the group. school districts "for perhaps one day Hodel wu, beaten on the face and of classes each week or afternoon classes suftefed anere bndsea and cull. · each day." Model's mother Mn. .Florence. Hodel, Presidef!t Nixon hu submitted a sup- was knocked down but' not lerloully plemental request to Congreu for 1150 hurt whei&1,llhe. holed marthers u they million for use this summer for Dl8l1J' C!Wied ooto the famUY'i propei't,. ' of lhe same purposes. Phone Rap Due Two Tabbed in Party Line Tragedy -Susan Hampehlre, best ~actress in a dramatlc oeries for U.. Bi'illit>·made WAI.SENBURG, Colo. \UPI) conviction of failure lo yield a telephone party line during an emergency. "The Forsyte Sqa." . Charges wtte to be filed today qainst Anne Bancroft wu bonond· alone with one of tw• women who reportedly refll3e<l producen and writers for ber special, to yield a telephone party line to a •'Annie, ~ Women in the Ufe of. a mother whole three cblldren had just Man," named the outstanding variety !alien lnto a pond. - or music program. . The. three -all boys -drowned In categoriea of entertainmeut~~ news before rtscuers could each the scene. and technical crafts,· NBC coUect.!d rr Huerfano Cou nty District Attorney Emmys, CBS 11, ABC 13 and National Ernest Sandoval said Sunday he would Educational Television 8. • file formal charges today against one of GaJI Fisher won.-;u aupportinl; .~ctresa the two persons hmllved, a 11-year"Old in a drama series, "Mannix.". · · girl whose voice was allegedly idenlified The winner among classical musical by the boys' mother. Sandoval said he programs was the National Ballet of would file ctlarges against the second Canada's perfonnance of "Cinderella." woman, an adult, some time later. _For achievement in ·1pOrt11 • ."pro-_ ·'n>e~·auoratyrefuled,!OidtnUfy grammlng Emmys went to CBS,~; elttitr ~ ... the ~t, ,. NFL Games" and ABC's "Wld&"'*li:l·~--A etate~Law~~ 1 muimum Jail of Sports." _.,.: ,_, • .;. tmn of • Ldqa IDd a f l,OOI fine,. jar -::.;i.:. ... ~ --~ F i nell Brief• Ktseee••4'r The victims ~ Freddie, Ruben and . Richard Pino, ages 13, 12 and 10 - of rural Walsenburg, were walking inlo town to buy new shoes when they sa\f a duck swiinming in the pond. One oC the brothers stepped onto a plank le> retrieve the duck, but slipped into tbe water. 'lbe other two boys also fell In trying to save their brother-and all three perish· ed. A fourth brother who witnessed lhe accident ran to his home to tell Mrs. 'Pino of the 4ccident. She was met with rldlcule and.·laughter when she atlempled to• tbe line lo call for aid, authpriUes Mid. . ·' Sum~~r .. Starts Arrivin.g Reins o:f HEW ·Change • WASHING TON (UPI) -After a Uua week leave caused by "e~ fatigue," Robert H. Finch returns today to t.;!hls successor at the problem-riddJed rt- ment of· Health, EduciliOO ana elfaft. But Weather Cool in W est, Pacific No rthwest C•lffol'tllO v.s. S••••rw Ufl llfllll -· •'"' -irw .... .,.... ,.., ti.rl • lfl ell "" COOi! •ldt. -'-!Ir Ill fNIW W..""1t IM ~ -,,... of ffMI. Mtllll\. llut tftlfln ...... ~~.-~ .. ................... l'IWdl "' ,.. 1Mtl911. tt .... "4tl'IWtl'I .. ,,.. ,, fer _.,,. .. "" *"'*" '"""" .,.. ...... ~ ..ni O,_I I.Ml" '"IM. Nl!ltt'I .. . ,,... """""" -.. ...... "' """' ...... . ""'-· "'""'11f\lrfl """' ... -..,, ael !11 1!M NOt111ff1t. ll'lt P11tlfle w.rf1'1M1I lllf 1i-1"9 PHl!k (Ofll!, M N•lr IMnlllll ctiln wtt rtPOrltd "" ,,.. "'"'"' ''''"' -.ltll lttlt l,rl, N,(., rtcwll!119 I -low rft'O!'d IOf' ltll llf.ll JlllltCl-11\t IMl'CUft 4!'#1141d .. , . ii '· UnderSecretary ol Slate Elliot L. Ri~ "-Tena~ture1 aidson. the man appointed unexpectedly tt1111 L" "'-· by President Nixon Saturday ~ take over Alllnll B1k ... 1!ltld 1!0110 ... • ClllCltO (Inc In,.. ti Clt .... ltnd DltfWtf ()l!roll '"'" ,,.._,, ·-H-"-"" Kt1114S (!Ty L11 'ltNS • , LOii -'""Its Mltml BMd'I ......... M-H-O!'IMofa NirwYwti -...... ....... ''"""" 1>?11 ....... i. ......... _,, ...... lttid ''"" ·-,.,."'*' .. St. l.Olil1 Stl! Lt~t C!ly 1-'I DINO Stn ,,.rtr.;lte;O Stnta lltrt>f•• s""'' "Tllfrm~I Wtallll"IOl'I• " ., 30 .0. 1he job or running the spra .. llng bU:rtau- cracy with more than 100,000 employes, Is no strariger to HEW. He served .11 u-· slslant Secretary and then Acting Secre.: " '1 Y .01 tary under President Dwight D. Elsen-!: !~ ·°' bower. •l 5• Richardson, knoWJI as a lough-minded :! ~ .OJ administrator, Is already aware ot 90me '' si or the PoUtk:al, morale and personnel :! ~ problems which have n!ached crtsts prQ:- 96 " portions In the health-related sections of ~ ;: ·" the department. .. " But Finch, In addiUon to some house- • · ~ ~ /' keeping ~.t. ~ moving to the u ,. White llouae U•·FnsidenUal counselor. ~ : .... -.s&iJ.I wlll ha~ hit-hands full outlinln& the .. to dJmensbts .-L jDet<ehallenge. ...... " ~ Finch aJeo m_, want to expla.iD a monu· ~ !! mental morale: problem th1t led 1,800 de-- " •• partment workers to sip peUUons queto _ ~~ ~ tlonlng the quality of his leadership and ,~ r~ asking him lo meet with them. Bec.11!.IH ., 60 of illness and fau,ue, he called off bis 11 n meeUng minutes before It was scheduled !:: f. and entered t hospital . '' J' .u But IM biggest problem facing ;the ~ . ~ new HEW chief ls centered in the depart-- ,, .11 ment's he11lth. structurr. which atffninls.-1:_ !: 1t1c:s P.">&r~m~ ~~~&_f!l!)n! than •t4 bil· 11 .-on. • UPl'Ttl~N NIXON NAMES FINCH TO WHITE HOUSI! POST Elliot Richord•on (right) ~•w HEW Secretary I ' ' t f • UPIT ........ Hot Butel• Firemen look• up to biirned-out exterior of the Los Angeles Playboy Club , badly damaged by a pre- datvn (ire Saturday. Damage wa s estimated at S400,000. There were no injuries. House Pushes Reform Of Seniority Setup WASHINGTON 1UPI ) - Reform-minded and/or image-. conscious Democrats a n d Republicans in Lhe !louse vied today to be first in promising voters relief from the con- gressional seniority system. 1 which rates survival ·highest in assigning positioos o f power. · lfou.se Rlpublicans. with less lo lose by change since as the minority they don't control anything, so far ap- peared to have an edge. They said tbey definitely will .air their plan prior lo t he November elections. House Democrats were hav- Solon. Cites War's Costs NEWBERG, Ore. \UPI) - Sen. Mark Hatfield t R·Ore. ), predicted Sunday the Nixon administration's policies in Southeast Asia would cost J0.000 more American lives and $50 billion. The Oregon senior senator i;aid that the conflict meant that .. we have already suf- fered the deaths of 40,000 young Americans, I 0 0 , 0 0 0 French soldiers and have spent $140 billion or Y<>ur n1oney." ing a harder time agreeing that any better system ex.ists for picking committee chairmen (and assigning of- fice space, parking slots, and other such fringe benefits) than unbroken tenure, wh.ich now is the unfailing guide on both sides of the aisle. Republ icans, responding to an inquiry by a party task force a~gned to tackle the problem, gave a 3 to t vote for "some degree of c.hanse" in the sen.\ority ~ s~lem as a. 'means of picking committee cllainnan (or in .their case, ranking • ~ty members, Who doll 't amount to much anyway until ibe voters decree a switch in cont"°' ol the COngress.) Rep. Barber B. Conable, task force chainnan and a thi rd term member from western New York, said ooly about ·half the GOP mem- beryhip answere<I the query. But he viewed the margin for change as signilicanl and said the most conunon sug- gestion was to let each com- mittee makes its own choi~ on some basis. possi bly pick- ing from among several top ranking members. Democrats have their own seniority committee at work. but the reformers feei the need to keep prodding lest ltle estat>listiment take over ilS thinki ng. DAILY l'll9'. f Graduates Urged CIA .\Vorks in.Laos -· To Lower-Voices Using Foreign Ai.d Cover Since 1962 By Viii~ ...... Jail I • I ' tftmeo ol lell and rllht and WASHINGTON (UPI) -A prelldeollal wk ,..... • yell' la -In mlor Not too Jong qo, ~ Mid, 4"11lls center is not a Tbe c 1 n tr 1 I Jntt11ieence studying the forei&n aid pro-to meet the b • • v y re- ' •. (CIA) h 1-··•-1ram tia& made • llimilM qui""ltnJ4 . I« fonilD aid ape•lcina: at coUeae eOm-com prom.lie b • t'w e ea un-ngency as ...... ~· peflOnnel ·there. mencement exercillet eould promlsin1 uuema. not • the cover of U.S. lore.Jan aid Alted 1f Ifie usistanc. pro. "lncttUfnCly, with VJet.. te.ll lhe proud gradultel tldnas ccmpromlse with our con--programs for its aeents in ,.._.r hid bf9en hurt bY. U.S. nam.lzaUon, moN and more like: "Asyouleavetbest qulet aclence, but a conunltmenl Laosaioce 1962. mllltery ope ra.ti oaa in of what AID will be doinC ha Ila for the .noisy· outt~!le to change throu&b. ra~I John A. Ha n n a h , ad-lndDcbina, Hannah re P J 1 t d .• , will be Iegitlml&e aid and means." ' ministr'-'-;.i the A•~ for · •tho!• "It cerlalnly bas not less and lea ol II· wtD bo world "·" Sen. Rob¢ P. Griffin (ft. -•··-• beJped " the kind ol thinC Illa! we But not 1rllduauoo day, Mich.), told the m graduating D.i·vers OK 1 • ternatlonal Development,' He ~ AID bad been IO<Oed ohouid no1 be doill(," ua_.. 1970. ...OOrs at Albloo Oollele lo said Sunc111 the _.,,, 1!lvtllan .lo iequlre ila olllcen lo apend said. Becauae of a Im o 1 t ~ protect socJety from "the aid missions as • CIA cover,==================== ..._......._,ted campu.1 Violeooe, forces ol. unreuoo, prtjudiot Af R was deemed to be in the "na-~ ol graduu this and !<or." ter eSCUe Uonal lntetest." weekend beard -im&ead of .. ,.or if the educaled do not., He insisted it Is not. going the usual homQjes -pleas who will hold·the center when Off ff • on in any other country . foe a return lo ,nonviolence oociety divides against tt.dl! UWUli In reply lo a questioo during and rationaJ ~ ~ wt..:• will light the lamp or a television intervlew, Hannah WHAT HAPPENS IF I. DIE WITHOUT A WILL?? "'Ibe ead result of destnJc.. reason again if others like HONOLULU (UPJ) -Six . said: tive prote!l: ls a tendebey to you are ever aJlowed to let divers in an u n d er 1 e a "We have had people that n.. r. .. rt, h1 effect, wnt.1 ~"' will '-' , .... If y•11 .,,,.,. •'-.tli"'-t destroy the liberal or vital it flicker and die? Whett is laboratory were pronounced in have betft ~ated with the the c.urt 4•citle1 which ,.1.t;.,,,, lt11er4ia1ul will , .. 1,, v-r chlltlr- ,centa' ol our IOCiet)' and to the last lint of dluent llllnst good condition today after CIA and doing thlnp in ~ Wltei. u will h le~. chec~iitt e!ld 1avi1191 ecr.0111th ,,,: ..... l11111u111ili- polarlz.e it into two e:11l'emt1,'1 the" forces of UJU'tuon, pre-the ailed to· th that were believed to ·be in otely fr.••• ... 111e11y ti1111t1 for Y••ttl · D J E Al•· J US. · ••·11-·-..1 1 ,, u Y were r e the national lnt.erest." ~b,. .. 1.,, ce11rt co.ti. 1,..1 '••• •"' ••eml'flv u .. M1,. tri'" +. r. ames . n:n r.t, · ,_ ... .., ear u "' ii not oceaft's aurface e....1;.... an mi · f __.._ · ' ...,..ug Hannah said be felt that ce11ri, St ... ,, ''•P•'tv• cutoll'lollil• titl•1 -•II tiH 11pl Tlie IH•bl•ll'lf com.,._.SSJooe.r , o .,...,.,......... in the . co 11 e I e 1 and e:mertency three-day effort to 1 h told 1,613 graduates ·al tt..: universities!" • ~ ~them J.IP from a depth "polltical·mili:!n~at~ er• toe '•u~•re1n •• i•t •r•. ¥:~7ity of NOU..~Dame N!ask'!7 p:i,'tc~sl~ya~'. "1lle~~ up and in good ~d~;, ~ bels.andat:'ele1y~" f15,0PO HAYE MADE THEIR OWN WILLS '· Former Vice Pre •·l din l daughter oI Air Force chief shape," a spokesman for .. .,_~men r er an A11y°" ''" 4o if. A1t1•ric111 Will Fo'"'' ho¥• pultllth•' • 1iM11le liut Hubert H. Humphrey 1f'lnep\Sto ol Staff Gen. John D. Ryan, Makai Undersea Test Range, throqh AID under whatever .. 1"41119, l•t•I will :1or111 th1t c•11 lie cempleted i11 Ml11uto1. ,(VclHI iii Hamline University -t. joined graduates w t a r I n g owner ot the 70-foot, $1 million name." IO '''''' t • ' • • Paul, Minn., to lee his IOD white annbands to protest the sea lab A-ir, said Sunday Self ••plo11otoly i111tructio111, t•nerol i11fermctio" il'ltllHl•d.. Sit ri9hf d •· d I' t~--. -o-'•"'" thit v•ry 111i1"111t• •llfl 1•ncl 12.00 totl•y. If net 100% ••thfl•'• gra ua..,, e 1ver 11111 ""m· war 1·0 Jnd··••·a. ni•ht after the rescue . _. d ~w• • . Novel1"st D1'es ••tvrn within 10 ,,.,., for ... i111111-i1I• r•fvM. rt Y•ll h..,. 1lr1e4y meocement address a r. Mi··· Ry• .. ~.1..1 1.-"9 ...... Js, The sea '·b had been , ·11 • ., f ,. 1 1 1· 1 -.... -111::1' --~.. WI ""••• • 'fl'I w"y Ht .... , ••Ill• '""' r Y•"'' c .,. , •• 1¥•• receive an honorary degree. present fM her graduation, tcheduled to ascend Friday, Hum Pb r ey, ~ ~ 0 '• did not object lo the armband. but could•' aet nf! lbe ocean COVENTRY, England (Al') AMERICAN WILL FORMS Democratic presidtntia can· "When I tall:: a.bout peace fioor because a valve failure -E. M. Forster, one of Brl-A w T c.... didacy in 1968. was , hurt by my father says, 'Remember: JftVented the use of com-tain's foremost novelists since 2~: ...... 1•1,.1 4 heckle~s. was interrupted for .. I want peace in Vietnam pressed air to blow water out "A Passase to lnd.Ja" tn 1924, ......._ ,_ n .. 10 minutes by 1~ youths ~too,~·-·_· _:lhe:.,said::' ::,· ____ _:•:,':.•~ba:'.::llast'.::..'.'.tank'.'.:;. ____ _:l:s :::d•::•:::d:.•:.t :::lhe:.:age~ol:.,:9::1. __ ;::==============::c:==== (hanilng, "Free the Panthers. 1· Free ourselves. Power to the • people." . Humphrey urged the au- dience to ignore the group a_nd continued his speech, saying the, most important thing is "the people who in- llabit this earth and the rights they possess." Police later ar-, rested a 22--year-old man with a lrnife up his sleeve. New York City Mayor John V. Lindsay, often a target of those who advocate a firmer line with college pro- testers, urged W i 11 i a m s College graduates to he.Ip form a new political center com- mitted to "reasonable lac· tics." Lindsay den o\I n <: e d ex- Laird Meets With NATO I ' . VENICE !AP) -U.S. (!efense Secretary Melvin R. l!;aint met t'oday with u;e other sil: members of the North AUanUc T re a t y Organization's nuclear plan- ning grou p to discuss the Soviet Union's nuclear ml&ht and how to counter it in a European war. AuthoritaUve sources said Laird would 11ive the defense ministen from Britain, West Gennany, Jtaly, Be I 11 i um , Denmark and Turkey a detail· ed and up-tCH!ate account of the Soviet land, air and sea nuclear armory, based on U.S. intelligence reports. The 90llrces said that during th~ two-day, sem ia n nu a I meeting Laird would also describe lbe progress ol his g o venunent'a controversial Safeguard anti~lllstic:mitlile - - system. No one likes to cry wolf. But as a :financial imtitntion responsible for more than 438 million dollars we must speak out.· Today we ate facing a future full of uncertainty. Even the most famous economists can't agree on what 1 will happen in the next six m6nths. Investors in the stock ' market face serious probleim. Inflation has not been checked. Your first responsibility is to your family. M to protect it against any of the uncertainties of tomorrow:~· • 42-Gallon Capl<llty Therefore, we JeCOmmend that you immediately_ 1 put as much of your capital and savings as you can into I an insured savings and loan association account. In any insured association. Naturally, we feel that Mutual Savings has a little more to off er including a choice of savings plans from.5% to 77'2%; inSured up to_$20,(XX>. But act today. A phone callr ill start your account. . Upright Water::. Heater Repolar S79.9.5 69 88 '$89.95 sa.1m... ..... e11y ••....•.• 79.88 Fut_...,. n-t .. _., .,....ide *'I !if-. Thiolt inod1 .... _ llioed ••• ' , .. UDdtt · Connter 1ValU Ru1tt1 ' 6995 p~ --.. 315n.tC k ... I * T's? -- • ;t . l.. \ WPSI' ARCADIA CORONA DEL MAB. cotJM 2'67 &It ea. ff"cf e 111' ,. 6W 1--m.-.. . .. q ...... :;•:·=·~·=:"r-7··· 1 ?'35 ••• U-pl. C.,.. .. .. 79. 9S tisf actiori Gr.IQl'IJJIUtd C' ~ .. _.. a., 111••1 1U. Sa1.,.a7 ·• · n-L--~~ 9-.JOJ.J[a.,:30P.W. orYourMoncy,_,_,. .._ · -·..,.Si.llplllleoa .. s-P ... \ 'r I l I I l ~ ---' --------------------- • ' • ' • ·j D..,n.y PILOT liDITOBIAL PAGE -· . - ' Bad Decisions ' . Siiha of rellel couid be felt If not beard up and dawn the state tut week when returns were ln on eeveral key propoc!tioos on .the primary election ballot. At lh• aazne tt.me there were groan& of disappointment in many quarters.as deserving meaaures were rejected . The relief came as Proposition 7 won and Propool· lion 8 failed. Pa11age of No. 7, to raise ljl• tnternt aellbig on voter-approved bonds, meant the remainder of tho bond• for the Stete Water Project and·otber capital pro(ram• can be sold on today'• boDd market. It allo meen1 that the water project can be completed without raislnl tu· es for the purpose. But Orange County bad another big stake In pass- age of thb measure. We have by far the largest amount of llChool bullding projects awaiting fund s from wuold state bonds, along with beach development projects at Huntington Beach and Bolaa Chica Beach State Parka. ReJ1tetlon of P~ltion 8, lhe proposal to transfer SO percent of school operating. costs and llO percent of "welfare co ats from the local property tax to a statewide tax base, probably prevented a chaotic stale financial sJtuation. But Governor Reagan, tbe Legislature, the Calllor· n1a 'Chamber of Commerce and other violent opponents of this measure now mun be held strictly responsibte ' for promptly coming up with a better way to finance .schools and welfare. The crisis is real, and the public ·has a right to be bitter about further political posturing and procrastination. • moasum whlcb cunol bt limply nplam.t, although P._itlon a allo nemed to opoo utully ral6-1111idn1 to poU1iCJ, . Paasage ot J>-1t!on e wu bear!enin(_to all who hove recognized the need for c-ter llellblllly In text- book selection to meet the varying need• ot slow and tut learners and thoee with language bandlcapo. Defeat of. Propoeltion .1. wu'a serioul 1011 for all of us. The bood i11u1t woul4 bave•helped the University of Calllornla, Including our own ·uc Irvine, to build lhe medical ICbool fadlllin 'f!lthoul wbicJi 111 .. 1tate'cannol meet pr9aent and future need• for -more doctors, den· tistl, nurses, optometristl:, veterinarians and other specialllts. • The " No" vote certainly Included backlash agalnet ...-thei mindless violence and destruction by a small minor- ity ot campus radlca11. ·Bat the voters didn't punish the few oampus nlclicals, they penalized all Calllornlan1 . The rejected pnJ!lj)litlona should be re-studied, re- vised and re-oflered et the earliest opportunity. , A' Questionable Choice I ' . j , Oran1e CounlY'• poitnt!al member of the state ' Board of EducaflOn, Cloy Mlt.>heU, already h11 contri· buted to the embtrra11ment ot that body -eV.n before his appointment !ju been confirmed. •• ,., • Propositions 2, 8, 4 and 5 were the product of hard work by the Constitution Revision Commission (headed by Orange Coun~y Superior Court Judge Bruce Sumner), which was mandated to modernize our archaic and un.. wie1dy state constitution. · Rejection of ProposltlQJIS 3, 4 and 5 probably repro- 1enta mosUy voter distrust of comtiluttonal reruion Mit.>hell nomlnaled ·a Blreher, Robert C. Barlhol<>- mow of Tullln; to the California Commlsllon on Equal Opportun!Ueo In Education '-about the last plaae any· one. with a BiidJ attitude !Oward minority problems is likely to contribute anytlllnf constructive. Mllrllell's action caD:t help but give the Senate com· mi-consld~:!f,~ his nomination add itional reason to ,f>J,::~. v f\NIW';:i::::.,1.'::' ~WHEN 11M .Tl-IRo~M WITtt HIM, I'll EJECT HIM·'' question his q · cations. · Our Self-deluded Intellectual €ommunit11 The Illusion of a Detente WASHINGTON -How much enUstit· tnment an<t expetllse can lawmakers ex- pect to receive from the students 411d professor! who f)oc.11: here from the cam- IJUI to advise their ~ssme.n on the war, the e:oviconmeW. and other pressl:a& 1"Wld problems: Any general answer is hazardous, of course. One distinguished Brit.sh scholar Is skeptical, however, about prevailing ampus views, both here 'and in England, with ruped to his own academic fiel d, which is Russian communl!m and ita alms. In fact, Leonard Schaplro, proressor of political science at the London School of F.conoailcs, ls concerned that there could be pressure for what he caliJ "lhe illllik>n of a detente" with the Kremlin from a sell-deluded intellectual community. He calls the idea' "very disturbing." Schapiro recently exprelled thoae views in a kind of congreuional bull session -a hearing before the Senate's special subcommittee on national securi- ty and international operallons. Similar, and stronijer. views were ex:pre!!Sed by Robert W. Tufts, a subcommittee con- iuJtant, who b a professor of eeonomlt:1 at Oberlin. TUFTS BEGAN the exchange by sug- gesting that young people, here and in Europe, are substituting illusions for a real undentanding ol the dynamics oC communism. He subsequently made , it clear that he._ is more concerned about ao-year-old professors -"My younger oolluguea" -•the about 111-)'UMlcl llllldenta. Ballq bis judlJll<lll on tala wtth friends bore sod lo Britain, Schapiro qreeil, ind Ille! be lound !lull "vtry alonnlog, very alarmlng Indeed. "U thli persist.a," aid Sehlplro, "'It mearw th.It hre e1n be JftllU1" for the illusion of a detente, for all tbeM illusory solutiom to what is, after all, an expensive and unpleasant 1itu1tton which admit.s of no easy solutian. "To yield to such Ul\lllons, on the basis of ignorance or of self-<kceptjon about. the nature of Communist policy, coold be disastrOUB," he declared. . . BREZHNEV BOSS -Schapiro believe'! the illusion with respect to pouible U.S.· U.S.S.11. delente llrisea from a bellel that Russia woujd accept a permanent equilibrium with the West to achleve peace. "The Soviet Union is nol interested in peace: it is lntfftlted 1n the ablence of shooting ·war, or al any rate of nuclear shooting war. But otbe.rwlst! It is as a result of contlnuing conOM:t that Soviet Influence lncrea9el," he SUJ. "Tbe danger of Wntrrn belief in the pouiblllty or I 'detentt' II that it leads to the rlllk that concesalons will be made in order to bring It about -¢0nceJSiOD1 from whlch Ute Soviet Union alone will benefit and for which It will &ive nothing in rttum," says Schapiro. IN THE TEST!MONY, Schapiro sup- ports the thells !lull party chief Leonid Brezhnev ii taking over as the No. 1 .man in tbe Kremlin. , He auaests that "Brubnev'• voice la now the one that couril, or eounts moet.'' Scbapln> IUppor!a tbla view b7 noting !lull Brelhnn 1w been able to make 1 number of receat appotatments in · the s..ltt IOCUrily ._..... He --mmlo that, u the former head commisar for . the Navy, Brezhnev baa ties to the anned farces. In ncenl -· oaya Schapiro, the Communist party has eeemed to be asserting itaeU in policy matters so forcefully u to suggest that the party bou is the head man. Signl/lcanlly, Schapiro's leStimony , while .k wu ncently made pubHc, wn given in pttvate just befort the celebra~ Uon of the Lenbl centenary and before s..zhnev'I publlcl!y bWld-0p In !lull con- necUon bn:iuaht other ezperta to the view that his power Is dominact in ·\be Krtm- Jin. . BUT MEDIOCRE -Schapiro oays, however, thtt lmthnev will never be a leader in tbe mold of the late Josef 51alln. "He Is not of the c::aliber of Slalln," aays Schapiro. "He is probably not even of tho callber of Khrushcbev. Ht II a man of moderate irrteWgtncif. ·11e is a very~ man ." By Robert s. An.. •ad Jolm A. GoldsmHll End of the Stock Market market ~ qo relit.ion.ship to the ecoporny -..... tome ~speeted. to reality -led to paaaage ol The Bin.co Bill. New Vork, June U, Im -The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at in!nus 18 today and the New York Stock Ex- change was converted Into a federal bingo parlor. The end of the stock market as an THE BILL, or' courte, abolishes the economic institution been dropping at the rat• of m«e than stock' market and utablishee tn tta stead had been pred1cted . one point a day alnce Mr. Nl!on'• 1 National Bingo Game. by so m e experts · · u.~ ever since the aver-maugurawuu, continued to do juat that 'Jbere wu. tome opposiUon from ages hit zero last MOST EcoNOMIS'll contended that ~ which comptaJned of 11unf1lr month. the tero level wu "a psycbolosic&1 bar· governmmt competitkm" with their tree At' the time, how· rler" to flill'iber price drope. enterprise system. But the bill allled eve{. many 1eaders Invetton, however, found few buyers ~ ~I In Bin-it.I the~aonl <Ollly expressed confidence rvT••I w.. go na es were that the downward willing to take their stock off their more ordere!y, the odd• more predictable trend WSJ over. hands, even for nottiing ... Who w1nt1 and the mnrdl far more gratlfytnc "l belleve the mar-a bufnch ot wm:tJtless stocb!" Wu the than 1n the !l&oek marlret. --~ret-w ·-ffefinlfely -ery .rom boih-«ittes.------·"1Afliiit.1h-Bln,0,0 llid one Senator found a new base," said O>esney The market broke thrwgh the aero hamm ering home 1be chJef selling polnl: McMartin, the third Federal Reserve level the following day. Experts blamed .. somebody wim.'' Board chairman in the past three weeks . "the Jack of encouraglflg news'' and And so the President opened the "'If J had any money," said Pre!ldent explained the mark et had nowhere to led b d "'t .,. I 1 , eral blngo parlor here today in an. Nixon, on being advised that all stocks go ut own as ' soua .. t new eve s., proprlate ceremonies. r were - worthless, "I'd be buying General ~lotors closed at minus two nd rl In lie h "If 1 had any ~." he said con-itocks right mw.'.' a a qua er -mean g a 1e r ad .. ·-·~~ Unfortunately, the market, which had lo pay a buyer $22.50 to lake ten shares. 11fldlneng!~r. as he cul the ribbon, "I'd play Stockholders. worried about the lfOWlng Monday, June 8, 1970 Th< editorial -of th< DaUy PUot lttkl to •nform and 1tim- ulo1< ,,-. "11 pruenUng this M ID1paper'1 dpfnliml and CQm- ~ntar., on Wpici of fnttrei& and ilqnifkatu:e, b., protlidina a forum for tht czprl!sston of our rt~I' opinlont, ond t:iv 7"'t!Stnti..ng • the dfvme vitw- pomu of h•formcd ob11:tt1er1 and 1poktimen on ts>pica of ih1 day. • Robert N. Weed, PllbUsbtr l liability their shares now repruented, drove the market down far1bfr in the week that followed. ltle President again GJftlMd ccn- fid ence. "If 1 needed any money,'' ho said , "J'd be buying stocks right now." WHAT RAS SAVED lbe _,..,.,bu been Ult padua.lness of the dacllne - to unlika the crasti or '29. Al.Jooa__qL as lbe spring of tl'19, stoclthokHrs, brokm and the pubUc had ,grown accu1tomcd to &eeing the market aag Me to IO polnlr 1 d11 with only 1 few brief rallies. Thus thttt wu no panlc as In '29. 'ltW!: public, una.frald or 1 depression continued investing in new bualneiiteS and creating new Jobs. Tnd~. tnnauon, rather tl'lan depression, has rtmalnet the problem with prices 1olng up as lbe market wenl down. Thil dt•r -..auon tbft the otock .. I Dear Gloomy ·Gus: Can money alone put ,-candidate In otnce tn Oran.gt County! Yes slree? And ju.at wait untU Ute ptOpfe dlKOvtr whal they ~ghl! -E.L "'" .....,. ...n.m .... ~ • ._, Mt ...... ,." ..... " ""' _,....,. ..... r-t "9 fl"¥' ...... ml' .... O.lt'f P/ .... ~[ ___ _ 'Get the Lead Out' Takes oo Our . Revo·lut-ion New .Meaning Is Still Co·ntinuing C" ... ', :" · } ' 4 The Unlted Sta ta will celebrate It.. .'Gu,est:Repo~l' .' ·,; bicentennial in a half-dozen years. We r ,, , , began with a revolution in 1776; and / that revolution is still continuing in the By JAMES E. WllETMORE Se111tor, 3Stll District modern world. . As Richard B. Morris, lhe d,istinguished historian, observes . in his new book on The phrase "get the lead out" has Qie subject, "it was taken oo new meaning during this session the American War f th Le 1-1 t · for Independence o e gm a ure for many or us t)\flt lnau~ated; Ute lawmakers, ·largely . ilUt to a measure 'A'ge of ReVoruUOll! now before UJ which would phaae lead . wh.ich haa stlll not compourxls out of gasoline by the year come to an end ... " 19llO. In this book, "The Lead IJe..l>een ad"..,, •-g""'-t:--,-Emerging Nat~ons ' -UQL.J.U... aauw~-1or------and-the-American years: ostensibly to increase -.engine Revolullon " Morris performance, and until the past yea!-reminds ~s of some of the , 11lrjkii:ig or so no one thought much about it. parallels between our pOsltlon in the Bli since the "ecology crisis" has broken latt~ part of the 18th centµry and the over the land, many previously lhrioceiit pos1t1on of the oew nations now rising aspects of our lives are being challenged. rrom the a.shes or colonlaUsm in the THE REAL PROBl..Dt in this inslance Is whether the lead in gasoline is harmful to th.e environment and the public health, a point which has received-as you might imagine-a good deal of debate. Nine hours of testimony, for Instance, was given rttently before a C(lmmittee which was eooaldering the merits and demerits of my colleague's proposal. Some 24 w:ltneSSt.! discusSfd evttr"j aspect of the mea11.1tt from both sides of the fence .. late 20th century. · WE WERE YOUNG and weak : the rest of the Western world considered us "crude, undeveloped, and even primitive"; few hail faith in our lasting power to stay together, either polltlcaily or economically; and all believed that the U.S. would eventually "resume a subordinate and dependent commercial role" vis-a·vls Bl'ilain and tier colon.le&. Moreover, as, Morrill points out, "all · of, ttlf: de~ to whic~ the emerging nltlons h•v• ~rted ln achleVing in· ' dei)endence ~or themselves can be discovered in that first anticolonlal revolution waged by the Thirteen Colonies against a powerful world em- pire." WE USED TICE weapons of noll- cooperation, ci vil disobedience, pro- visional congresses, and finally war Itself. More strikingly , we used.sustained "guerrilla· operations'' over a period of years, of the same sort so successfUlly exploited by many modem revolu. Uonaries. · And, despite the elitist 'character (If our leadership, the American Revolution. ·was a broad mO'\lement dr awing support from farmers and workers, and that "originated in mass meeUngs and demonstrations, esca lating to town riots. l)lobbism. tarring and feathering , and vigalanlism... · THE "SONS or LIBE nrY.•• spearheading t h e pre·Revolutlonary movement, provided the militant nucleus of radical mob action ; and these were not led by the "riff.raff," but by afOuent mercha nts and shipowners. One need not justify violence, nor condone illegality, lo recognize that what macle us different, in the Jong run, was not the way we achieved• in- dependenc.e, but "the evolution o( governmental mec~isms to express the ~II of ~he .peqp1e.'. What a people do with their rtvolutlo'f det.er.mines wbether it was worth it, of blood>: farce. One concern about·~the bill la that lt would put an undue burden 911 the .srii_aller oil companles or the state-lhoSe who serve only an estimated 20 pereent or the slate's 13.3 million automobiles. SGme opponents of the bill 1 say that these companies would be literally forctd out of buslnes.'I if they had to mte!\ the same deadline as the major c!Oln~ panles. 'The Shattered Dream' .. _ In the d~ ol the Depreulon the ., writer Cbriato~~~1 Morley vl1ited the • ; Wblte HOUie. ij'w'mri this country needs," PROPONENTS OF "get the lead ouf"" tile President told him, "is a great cite five years ol research conducted ,~ at the Unlversity of California at San ...-~, Mrnething to 'llft people out of Diego which shows that lead is haUU'dous fear and· &elfishness · · ·" It wouldn't to I.Ind, water, and air-not to menUon have been enougti. people. In view of the well-known toxicity Ef~icient Secretary . of Commerce and and health hazard of lead pollution, they architect of the Harding-O:lolidge era • 11y, the use of lead In gasollne in or prosperHy, Herbert Hoover was the California should be suspended immedi· "perfect" Republican candidate for 1921. 1tety. He soundly beat Al Smith ror the office Opponent... on the olber hand. are that year, and all seemed right with urging that no definitive action be take!) the world. Within months came Mte Wall . unW there are proven benefits or Street crash, lhen the paJnful depression. demonstrated need for more strinpnt · There was the rout of the "bonus rtcuJaUoos than those now '-x:lsijng. ~marchers," which the adminlstr11ilon saw One of the witnesses at the hearing, as a moment of revolution. Finally the an oll company executive. says he can N:itlon'I ban ks closed the day before reconcile the requirements aDd desires the election of 1932 -Franklin of the public, the automobile manufac· Roosevelt's "Reichs\ag fire," as lloover turtrs, oil companies and pollution put. i~: _Wtiatever ll Was, the smiling, authorities. optimistic FDR defeated the unsmiling bewildered incumben t President by th~ greatest plurality in American history.· ON TJIE ARG\ThfENT that It would be loo expensive for (Ii! companies to make the change to lead-free gasoline. IN "THE SllA1TERED DREAM," the thlll same eiecutive conc«led that there hl:.1.orian Gene Smith presents a .lym· is much brea~d-beatlng and wailing in pathetic 1urvey or Hoover's White House the oil industry by those who are !amen· years. It ts 1 human account of a Ung the possibility of this assertedly polillca1 tragedy. Jtoovet, the decent if unreqonabl8 expeMe. Vet, he noted. inflcxlble man, simply losl touch with the y Would pu!lst in their route or the Amtr!can ·people. Ha wu shattered self-<lestructkln. by the economic catutf'Ol)be he could Underlylq the whole controversy. ()f not cure, nor even undentand. coune, 11 the conteriUon held by many The author seeJ lloover 11 1 prltoncr 1\-&M-Marl•& &bt!t tbl,.. Mi'"'r exists of eatablllhrntnl economlcl who retained nor Is there threatened a haiard to a clotittrid Vi.a,iOn oc a v Jn•L public health by virtue.of the lead corn-1 A 1U1r-necktd public flaure, unbending pooenta In the gasoline we use by tbe and formal. he re~ plans ~ billions or 1aJloos. "humanize" bimc \!'hen'. this d>ttrl"' stopped, people refuted to face Hoottr'• lF MY COLLEAGUE'S blll Is sue· prc--1929 pnst, the dynamic young cessful In lt1 meandering through lhe engineer. lhe liberal planner and in· leglslatJve meie, Its provisions would novalor whom Woodrow Wilson plcked' be enforced by aiunty dJst.rlCt attorneys to· reconstruct starving Europe alter the and · county scalers of weight& and·· tlrat World War . measure•. Infractions of the new law \\le watch the whitening of Hoovei-'s wCllld be clU&lfled u mbdemeanors. bair, the drooping oJ his shoulders, tf1C quick aging of a tortured Chief Ex. ecutive wh) had a genius !or makina: bad Gecisions. . .... ~ ~K ~ less history or biography than 1t lS a vtvid mosaic of the years 1928·1932 -never an anli·Hoover book altJ,loogh, the author finds that Hoove; remains .,_ an enigma and that the judg-""" men.I of nistory an hil performance ·and • - tacli.cs is President still hangs in the balance. QuUe,Un~a1rly, the Great Humanitarian ! bec~mt! the hated symbol of increasing nation~ ,doom. "Might he nol have un.. ; balaneed t1le budge! and gone for denelt ~ spending, as every one or his successors did? His !upPortera answer that flam· boyance is not an achleven1enl. that unbalanced budgets lead to weHart slates, postponed disasters." 'Ibis ia a colorful, dramatic book - the best of all books on Hoover (MOTT'O\l' · 11.91)-., r B11 George ----. • CONFIDENTIAL TO JOHNNY CASH: Good job on ruggutlnt a better lf:lecUon for President NlJ:on t~an "Wel!1rt: Cadillac." And I ink you would be right to tum .. I down Spiro Agnew's rtquc1t for ''I'll Walk jbe lJoe." SomcUmei tMst tify lellers Jes don't un- dmtand. . " (Why spend sleepless nights wor· rylng? For a small exlr1 fee George will walk tile noor for .ytu, He can't sleep, anyhov.·. No J.. • other advice ctJhunnist wlll make ,. lhat statement!) "' • I '---.·-· 1- • ~..,,.. ........ ~·~--~,..,..-~."''"'",.,---=-c,-;-~-,,,.,,,, .. , ,,...,,eo,.,,....,.., ...,....,...,..,..,...,,...,.-,_...., __ ...,_.,t1-.,.--..,,.,--..,...-=----------~~==----,_.,..~----------- ----· -~ ... • ,..,_, --, • . -. ' " < • -- ,- • •' .,,. • -- • I -------~ ______ _;;___ __ • • • CHICKING •UP• • Sigma Chi Never Chose Lana Turner By L. M. BOYD mitllng felon ies, one lawman like-diea .•.. EYESIGHT ~F the averare bog is a lot ljetter titan the eyeaigbt of the average m a n . • . , I N TOLEDO, omo, it is ille1al . . • -. . ·--- __ ,.,.. ·- . - . ..... M..,dq, :i,,,. 8, 1970 DAILY l'ILDT 'Z. - ' A MEDICAL F ELLO W claims women at the age of 19 have the least difficulty ln giving birth. He also insists brunettes do not suffer as much at such a time as do blondes ... IF SOMEBODY AS KE D you to _ name the most r11ternational game, you'd say :;occer, right? But that's v.•rong. I'm told. It's basket~ to throw a snake at .------------------..-------------------.----------i--------"I • ball. SEAFOOD_ AND T H E !\IOON -Oysters eat only ·v.tien the moon shines. More specifically, only when the moon passes over the exact meridia n on which s a i d oysters lie. Or on the exact opposite side of the earth. 11 is at such times the scien- tific farmers note said oysters open their shells lQ feed. ~'ascinating, if factual. Maybe there 's ·something to the anglers' cl aim that fish only bite when the moon is right. FOR EVERY NI N E CRIMINALS kiUed whlle ,eom- Holly High To Gather Hollywood High School's an- nu al alumni banquet, honoring the classes of 1920 and 1945, will be held at 7 p.m. June 13 at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel in Los Angeles. The evening will fea ture a social hour, dinner and dan- cing to the music of the Woody Franks Combo, ace<1rding to banquet chalrmal) Mrs. Corey E. Lyon. Awards will be presented to prominent alumni Dr. Oliver Nlcliols, Class of 1940 and Appellate Judge Clarke E. Stephens, Class of 1933. For further information, call Lucy Pastore at (113) ~1-3891. For Advertising In WEEKENDER. • • • Phone 642-4321 somebody .... AMONG THE GAMBLERS, those born und{r the sign of Sagittarius are said to be the luckiest, reports our Planet Man ... EVEN THE BEST of the violinists never stay on true pitch more thari eo percent of the time. . OPEN QUESTION -Why is it the entrepreneurs have not yet got around to putting camera film in ven d ing machf5? ' LO¥E AND WAR -In- jections of citffelne tend to make male rats romantic. They get excited. Go around lookhig for female rats. The la b oratory boys who discovered this think it me.ans coffee affects grown men likewise. Whiskey, however, does not, they insist. 1 don't kno-! how these old boys justify such conclusions, but theit\ report i~ not in accord with our Love and War Man's information on the matter. ' CUSTOMER SERVICE-Q. "Wasn 't Lana Turner once chosen lhe Sweetheart of Sigma Chi?'' A. Believe not. But 38 other fraternities so designated her. Back in the days when she wu known as TlV! Sweater Girl, Think of that! Where could a girl fasten all those pins ?. , .. Q. "As to the famous Indian, Cra~y Horse was just his nickname, ri~t ?" A. No, sir, that was his father's na me, which he inherited. H i s nickname was Curly. LANGUAGE MAN -How do you pronounce "gbotiV? Like "fish,'' that's~· 'Y'tat, you Quest.ion that?-AU r\lht, gh as in tough, o as in, wop1en, and ti as in emotion. Say it again. Gboti, ·pronounced fish. Your questions and com- ments are welcomed a1ta wilt.be used in CH ECKING UP wherever possibl.e. Ad· dress letter1 to ·L. M. Bo11ti, P.O. Box 1875, Nnoport Beach, Calif., 92660. "Yes''tO 2 9039 loans every week! How about that 12,039 happy customers get the money they need e a ch week at Morris Pl an. When you need r:noney for bill ?onsolidation, car repairs, any reason-call your M~nia Plan Manager. On approval you can borrow from S100 \o $5,000, or more, with payments sched- uled the way you want them. Chances are you'll have your money the..,,.. day. That's how fast we can say "yes" at Morris Plan. And we say It 2,039 timeo a -k. ' • • SPECIAL BUY! Sleevele" blouses to wear with everything .•• marvelous polyester/cotton in white and pastels. Buy a whole summerful, while the price is spe- cial on several cool styles .. Misses~ sizes, 32-38. -.- SPECIAL BUY! Greet the summer sun with briind new 'naw' sunglasses that a,. a real fushian acce~sary wliile shield- ing your pretty eyes froni burning ray•. , • _(:hacne several pairs frOni. aa assarlment • 'that will make a fQs!Man C0111Cious 11al loOk " ' · " "" ·1°· ·111c, a rjl1!1~r· ' ,-~ ·· ·--1 1.88 " . $3,~6 • SPECIAL BUYI Cotton baller shorts just right for a little bay ta liw in all sum- mer. Buy him plenty of the1<1 100% cotton shorts in •olids and plaids while they're savings priced. Pre-set-I siz.S 2/3, AIS, 617. 66~ .. Li KE IT ••• CHAIGE ITi - SPECIAL IUYI Partoble tr!IVircrib 11aes wher; yau do ••• sa baby's at hame anywhere. Fashianecl with a clwam,e plated. tubujar steel frame, sc~ 1ap far in- . -sect protection, and telescoping legs. Folds compactfy. Open size: 20",.36". 1.8.88 . SPECIAL BUY! Bay's knit polol ••• the kind a little 11uy can spend a summer in ••• 100% combed cation ••• i!l saljd col- ar._ and stripes. Stack up naw 'at savings prices on short. sleeved polos ·10 start his summer right. fre-schqol size$ :J-7. • SPECIAL BUY! Start your summer •ewing and save on terrific dresses and sportswear al salid color ripple pique that's cotton, 45'' wide,, and comes in the pret- tie•t spring shades imC111inable, ond white, too. An excellent value! 77:.. • I . I " I i "I "' , I -I . I I ' " ! ' ' ·1 --~-----l--~~-~-~-~-~--------1 -~ Morris Plan -- ---613·3700. -- Newport Beach -3700 Newport Boulevard AVAILABLE AT YOUR LOCAL F='ENNEY STO·RE • I 1 -! ____ _ l . ' -J ~ ,a.._.D_Al~l•~•-IL_D_T~~-·~~~-·~·~~-"-""c.·~·~·~J·~·"~8~,~'~"'c.o Fighth1g Disrupts QUEENIE ' I ( ' ., " • • .. ROTC Graduation 'Los ANGELES CAP ) - )'\ghting erupted briefly Slm- day at a Naval ROTC gradua- t.ion parade at the University or California here during an address by Gov. Reagan, Aboul five minutes of 1.igbting -involving some 20 persoos or the 4,500 attending the ceremony -culd after comments by actor John Wayne. l'~oor a n l l w a r protesters were arrested ill t h e disturbance, office!'! sald, for investigation of assault and battery and disturbing the peace. The disturbance was halted by campus poUce. testors -some wearing HallO'Neen masks -h:Jd shouted and clapped cJuru1g the J 'h·hour ceremony fron1 a concrete wall a b o \ e bleachers. The 11 g h t I ll g erupted as some of them tril•d to wa lk through the spec- talors. Each side claimed the other started the lrouble. "To blame the naUon-.1 military for war rnakes vs much sense as saying "e CQUld get rid of cancer by . getting rid of the doctor~." Reagan sald in his speech while the scuffling was going on. Reagan also had iru.-pectcd th e 194 gra du a ti n g J ,...., other per.sons were ar- rested later. A group of somr 100 pro- midshipmen. Wayne, who supports l ' S. £.-~*.-/J /1 , presence in Southeast A.sia l~~V\~·"1.l<~~,~~~~~C'.:::..'.:=~:'.::' ~'-::·.:":=•~•: ... ::!.-::::~::"'J and starred in the movie '"fht . Fr esno Vote N ow Kno'1vn Green Berets," about fighling "l'm. sunvundcd by incompetence .••• stupidity ••• there. directed no <.<o1nments and thanks to you. lovelinEm, d\Mm, beauty ., ... to protesters. He . appeared-,-----------------...;:,, __ _ serious w h i I e in!roducing ._ Jlcagan. c • R • d The parade, at "'i1l c h a1n psite eoccupwn grndualing midshipmen alsu H/ received awards, had lwt.•n FRESNO fAP) -After being reprogrammed, l-"<>rn· pulers finally have produced results of the primary in .Fresno County. .:;cheduled to be held off the B p • J d • B d campus l8't month '""""'" y . it n ian an of s t u dent demonstriltions against ROTC. but UCLA . . Chancellor Charles E. You ng .BIG. BEND, Calif. (AP) -were taken illegally from ln- The $1 million .system had been expectt'd to proces..; ballots within three hours of the poll closing Tuesday night. <.-hanged his tnind and !he . Pit River ,Indians late. Sunday dians during Goid Rulh '14>"· evenl was held On cam pus. night reoccupied a utility com- pany ownedc s·m pg round where 34 of them were ar- G iminology Pioneer Dies Af ter Illness rested Saturday morning while coo king breakfast. They clai m the land belongs to 1he1n and is held illegaUy by Pacific: Gas & Electric Co., U11: woJ'ld's largest utility Jrrm. or lhc 34 a,trested, 19 re- 1na111ed in Shasta County Jail * * * Public Tours Begin Today On Alcatraz But gremlins intervened and it wasn 't until Saturday night that veteran A&semblyman <.;eorge Zeoovich learned he had v.·on lfle Democratic nomination in the 16th State Senat.e District. to contend in November wiltl Republican Earl s. Smiucamp ol Clovis, who was unopposed. BERKELEY Clilif. r AP) -<it R~dMg on trespassing charges, while 15 posted bail bond o( $315 eaeh, SAN FRANCISCO CAP) - Jndlans who ha ve occupied Alcatraz island for the Jut seven months .say they wlli begin' conducting public toun . of "the Rock" beginnin&.today in order to raise money, P. J . Carqaroda o( Fresno was the Democratic winner in the 32nd Assembly District, and Kenneth L. Maddy of 1',resno was U1e Jl.epublicao dloice. Jo~resno County resuJLs lo major statewide races were: For Republican governor - Ronald Reagan 27, J 89, Democratic governor -Jess Unruh 28,841 ; Sam Yorty l l.46.1. f'or Republican !Senator - George Murphy 15,196; Norton Simon I 3 , 9 9 3 , Democratic ~ator -John V. Tunney 21,3S9; George BrOW"n 14,928, and Kenneth Hahn S,352. For superintendent cl public Jnstruction -Max Rafferty 36,391 : Wilson Riles 21 ,m, and Jillian Nava :;,444. .Rafferty and Riles will con· tend for the nonpartisan scllool pool in a November runoff. Bus St1;ike In 8th Day In Bay A1'Ca OAKLAND tUPIJ - A Dr. Paul Kirk, pioneer in scienlific ,,.c r i 111 1 n a J In- vestlgalion who :ilso funl'· tioned as <i bloche1nis1 In development llf the f rt s l atomic bon1b, is <lead et 68 after a brief illnes~. Internationally known in the crinlinology field, Kirk rouflll· ed the Un ive rsity of California ('riminalis tics departn1ent in 1954 <IJld l:i lcr e!Aablis&M._>d pOlict laboratories In Chicago and St. Louis. After helping witft the in1tu1I atomic bomb. he was chief of microchemical rese;;irch at the Atomic F4lergy Con1- missloo's Hanford, W ll sh . , nuclear JaboraLories. As a criinlnoN>gy expi!rt , he lestif1ed as a defense witness in lhe wife-n1urder trial of the late Dr. Samuel II . Sheir · pard in Cleveland 1n 1955. Kirk died in Kaiser Hospital Friday. Survivors include his willow, Reba, and two daughters, Mary Janke of Sacramt::nlo Calif., and Mrs. Anita Kaplun of Cleveland. Co inputer.~ Undurnaged, ~ike of bus drive.rs in_ I.he SACRA,,1ENTO <UPI l -A . East Bay enters. its eighth , special state Senate observer day ~onday despite w~k~nd of Los Angeles County's ballot meetmgs of a fact-l1nd1ng tabulations last week dlspelli1ri 1eam. 1oday a ru1nor that oomeone "We are getting a little bet-accid~ntally wiped out the ter understanding of each computer's programn:i.ing. other's viewpoints.'' said Alan "We could fjftd no substan- Bingham, generaf manager of tlalion of the rumor that ;in AC Transit. But there was individual accidentally leaned no indication o( a break in il&ainst a computer switc h 1·1nd lhe strike. inudvertanlly erased cert ain Members of Amalgamated computations,.. said S e n . 'franslt Unlon 192 walked off James K. \Vhetmore {R·La their jobs ot mklnight last Habra ). Sunday In a contract dispute. 1--~--------I The absence ol trans-bay LEGAL NOTICE bus service caused terrlfic 1--=-~==~=~-1 traffic: jams on the bay bridge :¥!~:~i:: c~~~::A~i,. ~~= and Its approaches early in THE COUNTY Of o••HGE th k H th 't NI, .t. .... 111 e wee . owever. e SI ua-NOTICE Of HE•AING Of "EflTION tion eased somewhat later in Fo• ,.•01•TE of w1 tt ""'o Fo• • L •TT EA 5 01' •OMIN\Slll.t.TION the week as many drivers WITN·TME·WILt. .t.NNEJU!O. joined car pools, others gol H~~i.te"' LtDA 11. w.t.110Low, o.c,11· an earlier start in the moming NOTICE 1s H£11~av GIVE N 11111 S F · OON.\LO f , W.\RDLOW Iii> tilf<I "°''~If> and several an rane1sco " pe1111on tc.r P•ot>ate at 1ou1 -employers began lo stagger ,.,.. iu .. a..:• of L~ner~ gl Jodm•11!tf•1rtar1 · ' · ff" W1tll·Tfl&.Wltl·Anlll!•l!<I ID '"" pelh1aner Work Shifts IO ease Ira IC: •f"teo!nce ro .. nkn " m1.s. lor lurmer flow al peak hours. ....r.C'IJTiir.:-i..<f 1na1· fllf 11111•. •nci .1111n ot hN •ln9 mt ••me h1• ._,., .tt tor ;=.=====°"-----,[June lt, l•IG, ~! t JO ~ "'. In !ne ~ourt room OI Oeti.t•tment No. J ol 1~ld courl. f t 100 Clvlt Ceo>HI• Drl~t w .. 1. In 1ne cur ol ~nt• ,.,,., C.iltoml•. Only One Oele-d June ?, ltl'O. w. e. ST JOHN. Coon!Y C•••lt .. .t.RKER I. SEELY .. NOr111 Main SI., Suilt IDI 11~1• Anl, C1iltor11l1 f2'tl Ttl, 010 SO·NOI Allarn1vt ler ,.lli!lon•• Flnal st~ks In all hOrne editions. That's 1 big dfal? ll Is In Orange County, The DAILY PILOT Is th! onlJ dally newspaptt that de/Iv- ers lht package, Put>llllltd Oti nO<f (Oll>t D•l•r Pl1n! J-.. t. 1$, ll lU 10J3./'0 ATTENTIO N DISSATISFIED SAL ESMEN n. l ltttefflet4 L-4 Cof,.retlo~. • '"~ldlorr of C1ll111:A• ....... & Ce .... QIHIC.et • N • pr.,.rot11 to tral~ ,.,.._ whi ,,_.,. .. ._ 9'11ky te Meo-LAND SALESMIN! A .,.._. .... 1-. c-wUI . '-cottd11ctff by L111J1blt•• 1911 ...... k11M1 ..WU 9_.tHI Hl11t ¥•• pou tttti State Uc .... ...-. ..... , ..... ,.. ...... k 1t•ll111ftfl lf -fet ............. ., ..... _,, 1 MN petU1 ,_-.... yo1t will "'' , • ., SS0,000 ..... ,. Tllh ,,..... .... It ll111lrff to SO tjuollflt' I""•"'• ao ..... ...., .... .... ....... . MR. GREENE ~ 171 41 547-S663 • I Al a Tribal council at Hat c·reek, 50 miles sou theast of Big Bend . the Indians .air pro ved <i niotlon to try again to occupy Lassen Natioru1l Park just south of Hat Creek. On Friday. the Indians were turned b:ick al the park gate by rungc rs cind s he riff's deputies. 1'hey then switched pl:1ns and occupied the PG&.E Cli 1np g round 10 miles southeast of here and roughly :!70 mile!'.! northeast of San l"rancisco. Before 1he s econd oc- cupation. a c o 1n p an y spokesman said PG&E would not press charges against the Jnd lans. "All we were interested in was having them remove fmm lhe premises to protect the property of our employes," he said. The Pit River ·r r i be . numbering s o ryl e w h e r e between 500 and 1.000, is <:lai m1ng extensive lands In Sh;;isl a, Lassen and Modoc l'Oun11es which the Jndlans l'.lai ms Commission has ruled The Indians announced over the weekeiid that a boot will leave Pier 40 at 10 a.m. and I p.m. for the first public guided tours of the island. Price per person is $5 and those taking the tour musl sign a waiver freeing the In- dians ,of all responsibility for injuries. No private boat.I are allowed lo land on the island, and no one can visit )here without an lndian elQOl't." .~ • ....,. The 50 or ., Alldenls ...i mone)'~~to pay ' e1~-foi supplies Wb1cJ1 .,..___..~ by boat. includinc· bolU<id water, butane and other fuel . The government cut off water and electricity recently. Tho1nas Hannon, regional head or the General Servicts Administration which still has official custody of the island. said he may ask the Oepert.- meo&. oC Justice to halt the · tours. • ora • as 1ori Joo · iri living ... call collect (714) 523-6511 ..... .._. ~ . • t ,, " )'· ' I I ! ; Our trained decorcJtor oonwllant wfl Miow JOll samples in your own homtt to help you ochi-. th• tight loolt wllh woll-to-wo/I (l)tf)Ofil'lg,: cvstO. ...._ ~roperi.1, Mlpcovcrs, reuphoWorlng. , • on, or ol fll ow-dacOf'Qlot 1Gl'¥ice"' \ - 3200 Million In n1'.t1 State Budget Op ening to Ass emblY;;~ SACRAMENTO CUfll .::-'before the l<11islatW"e. Red int -written Jn {tcurt.a;.. ~ Orr ind1cated t h e ad· lotaUnc.u rouch aa lt~ 'ministration will try to.ma<• million _ w11 i. proopecl up any delldt by cuu In speo· today as the Rea11n ding, but he rcfuaed .. to say no tnx incrcasts would be JiOUll!l. "As of tod ay, I can't anlil'.Cr tha.t,'',,he: said. Assembly Speaker Robert T. :u1~1 1hr4•c 01he.r aidq - leg1sl<lll\ t secretary c:wrge ::Hrile!l, educauon a nt Alea: Shcrlffq and educ~n:il cuaaultont John Kehoe ....., 111 survey the school finance pro- Admlniatration prepared lo OP'fl lhe state's finlDClal boo¥ ta lawmakers. State Flnance D·I re c t or v •Ill<! Orr planned, Jo ~t his estimates of income am opendlnf late thla altemoo!I lo a joint meeting of the legislature:'• two fiscal com~ mitteet, the Aslembly Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Finance Committee. Gov. Ronald Reagan has • alrtady. sakl thaJ revenue ma y be up to S200 million less than erpecteil: earlier. f outh .T ells ' -w ro ri'g ilf an About Plan Monagan t R·1'rac~'1. also ex· pec:ts the slate's f1n;101;ei: tu look Jess than healthy. "There is clea r f vklente just by an oturvitt.lon of lhe general ecuoomic C'Qlldlt ions in the state and nation that they would be down,·• Monagan said last wee~ ot e~tcd LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -A revenue figutes. 1'1-year-old Marine C o r p s He 8uggetitcd the news recruit, who allegedly told a would precl ude an incre ase feUow airline passenger he in state aid for schools and was a runaway juvenile and added : "As a matter or faC'l. was going to hijack the we might have to make ad- aircraft, W&l taken into cus· di1ional reductions in other r:1:· tody Sunday by police. penditures instead.·· tih•n1. -4 WEI GHT @. WATCHERS , " S:·l'I' lall-im;, semi! lis!~ni n9 Mid • a prC'QfJm th11 works TM t ,rtlff 8~0CHURl-CA~l lllS-5SOS ; "With the eoolin1 of the eeonomy, QUI' ~imates of nvenue for the year are down," the governor told a news conlerence in L o 1 Angeles two weeks l.l#J. Officers said G e o r g e Reagan has aMigned Orr Thomas A11thony of Allen towR, ;::======....::::..:::...._..:===::..._..:_..:::__ Pa., boarded Trans World [ Airlines flight 15 for San fr,ran- cisco here early Sunday and reportedly made the remarks to an Army Colonel. J. E. LE EDY, D.V.M. annoltn ces the OllC'!lt tl '.. of "If the economy does not pick up, the figure . may be a.a much as $200 million less. If there is an upturn in the second half of the year that may change." The Colonel reported the conversation and Anthot1y was taken from the plane. The flight was delayed about five minutes. o r f I c e r s said Anthony was stationed at the San Diego Marine Corp!{ Depot and probably would be turned over to Marine officials. MESA WEST PIET HOSPITAL 1870 PLAC ENT IA, COSTA ME SA He aaid there would have to be "readjustments" in bis bodget ror the fiscal year beglnnlng July 11 three weeks from now, lf the estimates are down. 1be budget ii now OFFICE HOUltS: -. CARPETING, PAD ' & INSTALLATIO N SPECIAL! Your Choice ! ~-'Lladen lane' Dupont .SOI " nyl on hi.few loop carpeting "-hcis a .sculptured look for surface inle resl. Jn 4 decoralor colors •• o long oo wear ••• easy to care for. 'Athens' nylon pile shag has the look a nd fee l of lu xury . Choose from 6 ·lovely colors and ha ye a ball decorali ng from the floor up: ' 'Ch•rchill' polyester pile cut an d loop pallern for an in· leresting textured look iri 5 handsome colors. Polyester \ wonderfully long weoring, ~aiy lo care for. I 7 .7·3 sq.yd. Coilpletely Installed over 40 oz. rubberized hair au l~te pad 9r 40 01. sponge rubber. 'Satelite' DuPont 501 " nylon in 9 morvo lovs !oli ds or twe&(ts ••• for ci long wear ing, easy care ne w look for your entire home now at tr emendo us sav ings. 'Penthouse' DvPonl 501 ~ nylon .• , hi·low sheared pile carpeting in your choice of 5 decorotor colors. Have the sculptored look in nylon corpeling and sa ve now. 'Premiere' 100% nylon plush pile carpe ling in your choice of 7 delicious col9rs. Try carp etin g the :)al~ hou~e in one color for a 'big house' look. 'Pebble Beach' 100 % con linuous fdamen l nylon in q__ wi de choice of 7 exciting colors to give your whole houso a brand new look at a new low pri ce now. "' -8 ~~73 sq. yd . Comple'tely Insta lled over 40 or. rubber· Ired hair and jute pad or 40 or. sponge rubber. . I USE PENNEY'S TIME PAY MEN T PLAN FOR PROFESSIONALIZED CARPET SERVICE-SHOP IN STORE OR SHOP AT HOME ,. , CALL YOl/R NEAREST PENNEYS TODAY CANOGA'Atl (llJ.MtO) • <Altt:SIAC> • t11'·1'91) fUllfl!"C~} • :·~ h-~TtN GTON SEACH (f11·•l4l) • t••:.7771) v.n wooo --•'-•II P ... I I J MONTCLAI~ f,621-3111) 1 NEWPORT llEACH ~#2l13') ORANGE"THE CITY'' (Ol,.)091) • Mo ob·U5at10,fh •We bring aomplea. • fre1 con11iltc;i;tiorr. .. < __ ,._ __ _ j l l •--------'~ ,id:j ~ Gl!Qrge a~nt Jt:~nal le -j t~ 1nce pro- • ' till!! !Tld • ks, l M t 35·5505 l . I AL l • I .. - \ CLOSEOU:r! Great Savings on Gifts By Pe11ncrest'" for Dad or Your Favorite Graduate! AM PORTABLE R'ADIO VALUE Personol size portable rodio with ear .. phone jack ond AC adopter jack. Ea.r .. phone incl uded. 3 V2" speaker, variable tone control. 10.88 ' AM/FM CLOCK RADIO BUY Woodgrain finish ; clock features 60· minute slumber switch; light clock face, radio face and ra dial sweep second hand • . 36.88 SOLID STATE CLOCK RADIO - Penncres~ full features include automat· ic wake-to·music or a larm, 60-minute slum- ber switch; luminous tipped hands. 18.88 AC/DC PORTABLE STEREO features include AM radio, 2 full range 6 V2" speakers, solid state amplifier, 3 . speeds, S control s. 36.88 • • f I Mondl.Y. Jullf 8, 1970 DAILY PILOT !) • I • • , IPRTABlE TV AND St:ERED C PC>NENT SALE! • "."ICDs~E Tl!RU SATURDAY ' - • SAVE •201 PENNCIES,. POiTABLE COLOR TV WITH Is• SCREEN MEASURED . I . DIA~Y .. • -OUlck..pjc• for instant picture and sound • Automatic color purifier • ICey9d AGC for uniform picture contrasts • Pr•s•t VHF fine tv!'ling • 3'' x S .. front 1nounted speaker • Fully molded, high impoct plastic cabinet • • • ' SAY16.•1-iCBSf• 1UCKMID~-· 1V Wllll 11• IClllH -stot!ID DIA- NAU.T •Al d llr1rtpC1q •~AGClor .......... C.•01111 • 1A,OOO Yoh& o! pictuN ~· -·Mr s1ll1i ..... lllpod plaolic.cablnot -...... ...; __ •93 ' UCOllm/Nftl • M./fJC 1pas .. 1 . ..-. • ...... eonlrol mike. lndudel _,....., ... b!.ftlc CIOIMtle and COiii,.. COM .... :st.91, NOW 34.88 .... ~ . .,~249 I f ·~ '''·'·"~ ••~r-1' l SAVI 30.951 PINNCRIST• 4 l'C. RADIO/ PHONO COMPONENT SYSTEM • Seiki •lote cha11i1 • 20 wath peak pow•r outp1.1t •. IStt UA 6.5 chang•r • 7 controls • 4 •P••d, 11• rurntobl• • 4 •peoker 1y1tem RI~. 199,9S, NOW . '169 SAVI 7.071 PINNCIUT• AC/DC ltOITAal UDK>}PHONO •Solid sloti .._amplifier • 5 cCtnlrok • AM/fM radfo • 3 lp..d, r flllntoble log. 59,,,, NOW 52.88 -L__=--- SAVI 6.951 PINNCRfST• BLACK AND WHITE TV WITH 12• SCREEN MEAS~ RED DIAGO· NALLY • "Qukk·Pic" for ln,tant picture and sound • Pr~:set VHF fin• tuning • Slide-rule UHF dial • Fully molded, high impact plat!ic cobinet REG, 84.95, NOW 578 SAVI S,071 PINNCRIST ' PORTAILI .PHONO WITH AM RADIO • AC/DC op. erotion • 2 speed turntable pla)'1 45'1 • lP'i. • Compoc:i. .. .--... l'J~uy 10 carry Reg. 27.95, NOW 22.88 .. Charge these Values al yeur local Pe11Hy lie,.. IUINA PARIC · IUUANIC CANOGA PAlllC HUNTINGTON ~ARK SAN FERNANDO CARLSB~D INGLEWOOD TORRANCE CHULA VISTA LAKEWOOD VAN NUYS COLLEGE GROVE COMPT ON CULVER CITY MONTCLAIR WEST COVINA DOWNEY r 1 tULLERTON NEWPORT BEACH 11 I GRANADA HIUS HUNTINGTON BEACH LONG BEACH LOS ALTOS NORTH HOUYWOOD ORANGE "THE CITY" VENT URA WESTCHEST ER ' • I I ~ I I I • ( I ' • ' I • • ' • I ' ~·· JO DAll.Y l'ILOT -·-- Ladies Unite~·· Theft Group Carnpaigns Against Slioplifting SANTA ANA -More than 200 wom en here have launched an intensive campaign to halt increasing shoplifting and con- vince the woman in the street that pett)' theft ii. a major contributor to today's high prices. • 'lbey are all members of the American Association of Universit.y Womer, (AAU\Y ) and the lilerature be i n g distributed thrOughout th e cou.n(,J-seat this week is aimed at two groups Who figure prominently in shopli fting prosecutions: housewives and teenagers. "Orange County has its Jair share of an iur.1uol toll of nearly $3 billion worth of goods that a.re lost t o shoplifters:• said ~1rs. 11arry Fenwi ck , an J>AU\V spokesman "To many of U1e youngsters involved in this kind of activity, it's just a game and they aren't persuad· ed otherwise by doting parents and ineredtbly lax juv~ile coort atJthorities. • "Many stores are marking up their prices by five percent to compensa te for losses from shoplifting," Mrs. Fenwick said. "What we're trying tG dG is point out that We all pay the tab anyway so Jet's try· and detect any such ac· tivi ty." Parents are bring urged thrGugh w i d e I y distributed AA UW literature to convi nce their children that shoplifl i'ng is a crime and that subsequent conviction can mar the futur e career or the p rGmi s ing youngster in many ways. Jail Deat1i Figure's .Wife Suing County SANT A AN A -A woinar. ing the ·lnQU!!St o( applying whose husband died 111 an an urmecessarlfy s e v e r e Orange County Jail fracas ··choke hold" on their prisoner that was probed by a cor· to the point that he was found oner's jury has sued Orange to be dead when they relaxed County for $200,000 i n their strangle hold. damages. District Attorney Ce c i I Lula 1'-1ac ' \Vitliams or San Hicks later refused to consider Pedro accuses 1he county cr the filing of criminal cliarges negligence 1n her, Superior in the matter. Court action and claims lhal Williams was arrested on misconduct led to the death the Riverside Freeway on the last Jan. 21 or 27-year-old day of his death for jaywalk- Vernon \Yil lian1s. ing, A California Hi ghway A divided coroner's jury Palrolman booked him into subsequently dismissed al lega-the iiiil'.aiter Williams, clad tiOns that sheriff's deputies· only 1n purf,le ihorts and track used unreasonable force in shoe&. refused'to sign the cila· restraining Willia1ns while }le lion·, ~ was awaiting interrogation on County Supervkiors rejected minor charges. last, March 30 an identical Deputies were accused du r-. 1 claim by the wid~w. De.atl• J\lotice.s ,De.ath Notice• ---I ~~·~--------Jottwcox 11Gt1/ ont brolher, 111.W We(IS!er Of K•n•••• Wllll•m J. JOl>nto•. A11e Jf, o! 11681 Perk· •nd -tli!M, H1ltn Pfel"POlnt of P11•- er Clrcle, H1.1nlin111on 8e1d•. Survlvoa bV <If~: looir 11r1odd!lld•tn; J 11r.,.l·11r1nd· w11e, Marth•i l<OflS, w llll•m J. Jolmco• chlldr1n, Sffvlces wltl bl ti.tel Bell Broeo. 1111:1 Marlin S, JOhllCO•. ol rl>e home; WOY Cl>fi>el, T1.111df¥, •I 3 1>.m. ln!lr- m!lll\tw', M". John Nel....,. Servkes, men! 11 P1cllle'1YJew ~or11t Par. Bell ~~~:~~MA~' gc::•vs~:.,~=~~· ieh:,:: ~;i:.twav MorT1"';; Co111· ~"'' Dlr•c· ''Be aware ot how much money your child took to the store and check it when be comes back," they are bel9': told. "Supervise the jjlo swaP!iqe hblt{ .ot .. Y.; · r ,tlildrfn an(! ~s(St pn,kricii g euctl~ where that'-u~ lar sweater came from." Housewives are being warn- ed that the game +s not·wo.rth the ,,candle arid that·' iiOre employes are m o r e vigilant now than ever to stamp out mouotlng shopl~'...i!!Mhl tices.> "' • ., ... -• ''There is evidenct that the courts are becoming firmer and it's not before time," Mrs, Fenwick said. "A shoplifting conviction is degrading and hu miliating arid many a woman has had to leave town because or the res ulting publicity." Judge Rules Boy Sane ,• .; ! I In Mur4er , ~'. ' ·¥NTA ANA -A Superior ~rt . judge '-'• ruled Uiat a i:>-year~d boy ,: wu sane when be brutally Usaulted a • i' y~ng Santa Ana mother and the.rt-.• slit her throat with a -.,, bottle. Judgtr William Murray sent William Verdell Draper baclr: to juvenile court and the possi- ble ruling June 18 that the youth be reman~ed to pro. tective custody for an in- definite period, The boy was arrested last March. 2 shortly after Santa Ana police found th• mutilated and disfigured body 0 r Beatrice Ann Villanueva, 17, behind a garage near her 3rd Street home. Draper was found guilly of mtllder by J udge Murray in a closed hearing. f,,.V··-Dlkl&v 6rolhers Ml1'1\la~. UlrK· _, WMe:e:L•ff .-_ t&lfs, ••?·mt. Bttftwl B. Whfti.r. 130• sj svc•mort, Officer s said ORSllER"I 5.lnl• Ana. [)ate ol de1th, un• '· Sur· s..wn L_ orsbern. ot11e 11, 01 i~b91 1..ov~• y1vec1 1)11 hui.t>end. Ml\h1rd1. llM'I D•rr111, ~•Villanueva was attacked by Mrs. rvlved DV hu~™'<>d· Jamlt P. Ortbern Brawn, Co1ll MllUI Mfl. Eunl~ St1I· • aper 3.S she Wag returning ~C!e, Santi otna Dale at a111t1, June 5. Of SI. Laul1, Mo.1 d1ut1hle~Jr; Mr•. Ruth 111£:. · i .on. J1mft P. 1v, and d..,ghter, llons •. Gideon, Mo.i •-brfrtti.rt, end ~A i.A ho . "•cev Louin: ""'"''"'' Mr. 1nc1 Mr1. '°"' 1111..-1; ll grandch!ldt"4'1, -1r1•t· ..., -r me ff'Dln a wedding ~11rd Moore ot f11tbo11 one 11fl•r, 8r•~11f:'''Strvf~ ·Tut.U.V, Jun. tlh, ~· ~·on The y0lll1' , ""'· ot 11>e hame~ ..e1 .. .,.,1 ''""ft' a 11,m-•• ,)81~91-CNNI., W-f11'1"1\I, P•-, , • g .woman s llllor, Lent Moore, of Cotti MIKI/ lff'c: Vlftr .... , ,._,., Olr~tetl by t' d beh' rf\lternat 11rondmother, N.ille C1vell el Wntcllff •ot1 M011u,ft, ...,.4fl0. . l Were le Ind her lf•lm Sprlntn. Service~ were t>e!a lof~V Mi MCCAaTHY •back and she WIS sa vagely .,.."'' Peclflc Vlt w Mempriel Pant. 01· s . ._,. """'' ....... oare ot fe•th, ted before her throat -11 AM. Paclllc v,_ Chapel. lrlfWr-arlOl'r, &.~~·~~,_,, •1 . of 1» ~· '.~ (kto:d bv Pacltlc View MOrluArv. Ju,.. 61h. S11,.,l\led ..,. hu1b1fl'f, Dr. WU· I KNIPE ll•m McCllr'fhl'I Olll 1.1111. Wlltl11m J,. of cu ' 9 eniamln F. KnlJ>ll, AP '1t. ol IBM 811boll llllndl -ClllJ911ler, }l.IWlll WtJ. • t\on•wi1, Collll Meu. Survived !rt 1.,-; IWD tr•lllkl!Hdrll!. 111.~fatlol'I of 1t11 '(NPlll&t, Chrls~bel Wood; 11111!'1', J111" Hdlr Ros...y If 1:lll "·'"·· ''· JI.Ille .;! oranvet' of Mtchlo11n1 two bro11111r1. ec1-Ill!, ''" ttMi la P•ltN en. , "' 81c:111 Iv ll M uar •nd Gery Wood; F~roj ,11rvk11 k11ulbl!rs Morlu1r~, 1•11 W, L1 Pell'nl If ey an tjMI lntMm1n1, Wat1<1elldf~., 11 Moufll Ave., A~llelm, R""fem M11s1, t 1.m.. ._.,. ~ea~nt Ml~hl11n. 8at1 irp11dW•~· C051f Tut~oy, 1r. SI • ...,,1~11 C'11}1oflf' C~rch, • • "• M...sa, '"""•ralnv ql rl'tl~k. AMlle!m., Frl...a.. mar """""beri Mrs. . . ~ .. ·r PE,.CI! ~cCarttnr !'llll'Jl4ll!'llOM ft' -"9 Cfinc1r • ,..l('I ts T · Parter IC. Pence. A!H! 71, <;>I 2'96 Ora-rote Fund. 8fct1 ,1(111.1!~ ~y,-'DlrK-c~oo. erm···--· /love ' Co1!11 Mt~•. !.1.trvlved bV wilt. Ger· lOl'I. . . ' ~ .r ~ .tvoe; wro, W!ll\11m. ot Br11; b•other, '·' Mll:Sf l[li,:Yf t;acll Pence, ot Tule Lake, Ca!ll,, and 111:•"-h M1,«rv1. All• 69, of Jiii 6th l!i!., lour or&n(!Cn!ldren. Stnok•• will bl hl1d H-,i_(ltlllPkln B••Ch. !!H.!ili'.n' .J!Y.Jh:!er, ·:.I:' or Holdup a l 6e!I 8r0d0"''11V Chapel. Tue..:t1v, al lll:ulh £, Kln111mQre, NI 8"¥h l brother, r - :tO!XI AM. lnttrn\enl 11 RO$l' Hlt11 M• Ch1rles Mes.1erve, Hun11n1tat1tll•1dtl. Sar• iono•i&t Park. Whl!llor. Bell 6•~Wl'f vk;es !"'Ill be lllld held Tutr.<1e\r,•11t 111.m .• • .,.,, • Jtorhiarv, Cm!~ M•"· 01r~tor1. Good Sl>el>r-..rd Cemel•n", Smith' Mor· ilNtA ANA -A Fountain , FULLINGTON luarv, O!reclors, , Jlenlamln W, Fu!Un11ton. Allf> 11. "' 3971 .J V;WJur • .man has been sen- !Sanaune Lone. CdM. Survived by wife, ~~ 11.arv """ Of\e b'other, Jame• F1.1!li1111r11on F Th t..,.1!'.'11~ to 90 days in Orange .. co1urn1>V,, Ohio. Fune•el . ••rvlce•. ~Jai'I and "ree years '!fednMOIV , I PM, 111 8ell 8rOAdWBV or e U• (:hape1, 1n1er"""'"' •T Ro'e H111' M1rnorra1 .1.,r , 1 ' t,ion for his part In lhe P,nt, 8~1 6roadw•f' Morluarv, 01•.c· P .1or•. SMITH , htl!'UP of an Anaheim liquor Vera c. Srn\m, A~ IQ, llved •t ?12 R d l &tMe ' .. mOl'I D•lve, Cotll Mew. SUrvlved bV ecor ' ~-<.. ,g.ier, M•1. E-P. De•con 01 co111 I &IU~-ior Court Judge James #lleo.a; one brorher, l'lerm•n Smith ot 1 .< F1orrc111. Priv•ta t1.1ntoro1 services w1•e _..,r• ' b :llbdge ordered that term tit-Id Situraav with 1ntermel'll .11 Holy c Lee ~epu1ch••· Orlfllll, Cllll, Bell B•OlllWIY " ... ~~elth Owens, 18, of Mbr1u1rv, 01r1<10". 1• 11 Orchard Ave., after a "'-si>EAR5 t t ,,.- M1r11aret ~ ..... A11• ~s. ut n10 ~eni. JJleeti•fts ~ce · g the defendant's plea 1<n1 Avt .• Cosll Mei.a. f uneral letvk:e5 •.--n t'rlf, JrlAiJty lo chat"eS (l( grand wl!I 1>t! ~eld on Wtdn<l1.daY al Sd!enec:t· MOHOAT' <IL if \ o •av, N.Y. 6ell Bro»idW•Y Mortuarv, Coll• Co1•tem11tert TOdll<N\Nlrt. Car.i "1e!t.,.. Me~a. Forwardlnv Olrecto'5, ~::. ~~~r;nJ'm2'°"5 tWl>llr Blvo.. t' Owet\s W8S Ofle or three WEBSTER E1101or.1r ScOlll&, 8•bc'ock l!l1ctronlc1, -h - Cha•lllS W, We(l1ter, Allt 191 o4 16' Pal· E•11lorer Po•t Na. IN, 8obcock men, W'10 Were pursued at m er, Cotot• Mesa Survived Dy wl!e, EltclronlCI. lSOI H1rbal' &IYd., Co1!• hin h Speed by pol\ce for earl Leone; IW<> dalllllll!f$, F•tR Mlll•r QI Mt"$~. 1: U p,m. ..., TI Y C1>ita Me~a, end Oorls Conr1a al Ore· DtMotay, Hi;n!lngt&n 811~h CMotn, ~'' m lies last Feb. 11 after A RBUCkLE & SON Westcliff fl1ortuary '2? E. 17tb St., Costa fl-1esa 646-4888 • ~ALn MORTUARIES Cofena .&I Mar OR 3-9-150 c .. ta Mesa Ml 6-!tu • B~BROADWAY .,... . '"ORTUARY rll Bried~*•>'• Cotta ~1esa 11 W"3 • Dll.DAY BROTHERS Huntington VaUey Mortuary 17911 Beach Bl vd. Huntington Beacb 8<!-7771 • PACIFIC VJE\V MEMORIAi.· PARK Cemetery e t'1ortuary Chapel M•"1>nlc Temple, 1tM L•k• Av1.. r." Hunllnoton Be~ch 7:lll .,,.,, t...-.... look $400 at gunpot'nt f O<inl•ln Vallev Junior Ch0ltnt>w o1 --.:1. cornmer!_!1.11ener11 mamborlhlo, c11~ fr~ a cle"rk in the Stadium 11•11, 111""" S!•ltl' AV•·· Faun11111 Li::.\.. v111ev, 1:X1 P.m. ~ store. D•an!ll' Coast Coln Club, M1rlnotl'i ~Edward Bet•••oort, llllrary'i 70GS Dover Drlv• •NcwPll!'I ... ,... co~r:c",.;. .. ~» ~•':'Mon~ Lodr No. ,,1. 20 Ana, was sentenced Odd F••~• H111. 2•7 N•wPO• to five years in state 8"4 .. Co111 MllA, f p.m. A""" lean chl1optyenl• Fwnd111on, pridl 1'·and Ja-•s R·•-rt Ol'1n11t1 Counl\' Ch.aoTer, llnlltd Fund ""' uui;; B11!Glng, 1UU St1ntora Av1., G1rdln Cooke,~ 21, Anabeim, WIS G"""e. :!I-I,. Ml•1lon v 1110 El~• Club. Ml1•lon v1.10 ordere.\1 ~ serve an indefinite I :":.'.:~r1on c.nter-. Mlislon vi.Jo. :f.enn ln·-.a California Youth Tve,oAY •Authort':Wacililf . .Both were C0Jt1-M1"' ~ $'.!lltt M Clul:t..-C-..n· lr...nd ·,or anned -bbe~. mu11;1y R1<ree1i,;n ·c.nt1•. °'<Ii"" ·r.. •v •, • COUl>tY F1lr1r«rnc1i. tosll -~·· 11 1.m • E•ch1nue Cl1.tb ol lrvlM tndu1tr!a1 Comal111. Slut! Shir! R*lt1ur1n1, 22•1 w. (oeu Hloh.,,1v, N•wport 81•cll, 11 rdin. • Cll•on• alil Mir l!.lfchent• CIUb Jo1el'1 ll!e.11ur1nl, 2111 E. Co1$1 Hl•hway, Coron1 def M1r, 12 noon. Co1t1 Mna E•cl\,!on11t1 Club, Coral fl..,I, '6'1! H1rbor 61Yd., Co1f1 Me1e, It ""'°"· Huntln91on BHch Norlfl Llon1 Club, Mtl!Clowlar~ Count'1r. Club. \'111 Ca~~~·i;.1 H:;~"°~':en~~C ~~. ~i. Swedlon, lU6 E. COllll Hl!lhwav, Coron. del Mar. 12: 10 om . Hunllnelon B11d1 Rot1rw Club·Not11>. Four ii\'ll'ld1 1'tttaur1n1, 11M11 Bo1s1 Cl\k l , HUnlli&n Befcl\, 12! 1~ P.m, Hun!lngl!M h Klw•nls Club, Hun-t111111ton SMCll Covnlfv CluD, 3llOO P1lm Alff .• HUlll!noton 8t1e1>. 11:1~ P.m. NtWPOf'I Hll'iM>r OJollmhl Club, Vltl1 M••ln., 10..S Bl¥11de Drive, NewPOtl Btlt'1. ll :lS P.m. . ., . . .11>15 Claim ' ' Flood Loss . ' l • •• ,.. ' .., anniversary sale '' • ' ., . Tl::IE ,·BIG ONE • • • f .._ • LOWEST' PRICES OF THE YEAR ALL 17 STORES '. I , • ' • ... versatile cardigan of easy-care acrylic The ribbed sweater with three ,~ .PJiCkets •. Of easy.care a cry I ic In white, pink, or navy, From a -in ~P. all sizes 3&-42 ' ~ ·~· l'' reg, 14.00 8. 9 9 accessories r q . ' \ \ I swirly dresses in carefree polyester Summer\ime cool. With pleats Iha! swi sh. Washable. Packa- ble. Never need ironing. In black, mai ze or while. 8-16 value 2a:oo 1 7. 9 9 boulewrddre!loes 95 .,., "* famous knit pants in carefree polyester Straight leg pants with elasti c w~ists. Easy to slip on and washable too: In soft powd er blue or yellow. Sizes 8 to 16. value 24.00 24.00 belted top ' ' 13.99 13.99 may co skirts & coordinJtes l o I jacket plus pants, tops, and a pant skirt too ' ' ' •w • , ........ .. ··-· ,.. -· -~. 1':\ "'~ J-•, • Sporty summer sets a t special --~ savi ngs . A jacket plus pa n\s, or a ~ pant skirt if you prefer. All pol yes· t" te r and rayon . Wi th bri ght slri pe • cotton tops. NOW at May Co. a. 7.00 top, while, with navy, red, or brown, sizes S·M'L 10.99 b. 19.00 double breasted jacket , navy, white, red, brown, 7·15 c. 13.00 fl are pant, white, navy, red, brown, sizes 5-15 6.99, d. 13.00 pant s kirt, navv,.white,· . .r<;9.,.Qro111.n.sizesc5·15--··~·o.99 r Value ~. 3 99 10 . $17·$19 • -.99 " 'r LJn1pus 5hop 43'" 1 ' I 3500 Pacific View Drive Ne~'port Beach, California Ml·Z'IOO • PEEK FMflLY C~ll MIM Klw1nt• Club, CO$ll Mfft Goll 1M c-rv (l11b, Caito M•t1• 12:U 1.m, SANTA AJJ;. -Orange I County Flood ~trot District · staff members are now preparing 1 IS c aims from pri vale property owners total· ing about $2.5 million for land damaged by debris ·deposits during the flood of J anuary and February 1959. EnglneeT' George Osborne said Flood C ontrol' 01.lef ' Three Men Die the claims his district is seo--COl.ONIAL FUNERAL HOME '780l Bol1a Ave. Wt1Unln1t.er 813-3525 • SHEFFER MORTUA RY Llgvn1 Beac h 494·1535 Sao Cltmenlt 49%.(1100 • MmlS' MORTUARY. G27 l\fah1 St Uuatlnaton Reach m.1538 In Hoqse dint 91!..19. J!!~c.!lloml • Fire ·ll'tllilr'0!llOllltW.'111llt. ls,1 ~lliliilliill···•• concern only non-farm pro--1 CLEA RLAKE lltGHLANDS perty ln unincorporated areas (A.P) -Three young men o( the county. Farm claims died Sunday in a burning for Ufe---.Couuty were fifed with house near Clear Lake,' the ' l!.S. tt>epafthlent of firemen said. _ Agric uJll!re. St!A others ~re The Lakeshore Fire Preven· fi led by vArloos c i t y lion District rccovtred the governn1ents. bodies o.>f Michael Jenkins. 19, The stale agency will submit Larry Jenldns, 21, 1;1nd Russell the claims lo th e Federal Of. Jone&, 2.2, in nearby Clear f l ee of E merae.ncy Lake Park Sunday morning., Preparedness. • may co south coH! pine, san di090 fwy. al bristol, cost• mesa, 546-9321 shop mondoy lhru sat urday I 0 a.m. \.::0 p.m., •undoy noon '.Iii 5 p.m • I MAY.CO ., • - -, " . . ' ,.. -· ' ' ,4,' tt·~ t~ g "" ¥"\ .. ~ •• -~ • • i a I OA!l Y ~!LOT J J ' _______ IO!ICll ________ ll--.-----. • -··---------- For the Beeord Dissolutions Of Marriage Births · If JOl•'"M MOll'ITAL .. .. " Mr. •nd Mr1, Mllvl11 L. llk,..rlbefl, '5131 Cirln om lla.10. L .. 11~ Hllll, .... MIV ,. Doctors Report Way That Mr. 11\d Mrt. lltobtrt D, '°trettl, liJli ''""'''""· 01,... Point, t lrl, Mir 11 M•. 111<1 Mrs. Mich•• A. DKktr, ,., Wll1or.. No A, Co1l1 Mtt.1, .1.1. . Relieves Itching, Pail}.. Of Swollen Hemorrhoidal Tissues Mr. 1M M<1, Wiiii-IC-11151 N..,.111\d, '" No. t-11, 1-lunll!tlll'oll leech, bcw. Mr. 1no ¥••· w n111,.. K. Mtlrholl1r, 107• V1U1lo Clrtle. (NII Mew. .... Firat Application• Give Prompt, Temporary Relief in Many Cases ;There'• a mo1t· effect.ive flammation. The a111wer is tneclioation thst sivt11 prompt doctor-telt.ed Preparation n-. ~elief for houn from tuch There'• no other hemor· tiel"l'iorrhoidal di1co mfort rhoidal formula like Prepua- 11.nd actually·helpa shrink tion Hand it need• no ewell inr of hemorrhoidal pre1cription. Ointment or ~i11u e1 cau1ed by the in-1uppoa.iton... • Mr. Ind Mrl, JI_, "· Murtv, 1111 Por1 1rM111t1 "*-• N-' I MCll, .... Mr. lrld Mr1. A11bou1 L. Wlllte, llOl4 Worthv Ori-W111 ... 1 ... rer. 11rl. ,_, M r. 1fld Mr1. kf1'Hl.iit\ It. 'T1,._, 16'1' 5111 Andrn, ,._11111 V1l!n, .... Mr . i nd Ml"I,. J1ma Ketl. t01t 1111· lercup Avl!flW, f Ollll!tln'Vtlley, lltv. Mr, Ind Mfl. J-LJ......,., 1Cll 111boe llYll, l1lboll, 1lrl. Mt. 1nd Mra. Mkn.11 J"Mer9111eft, 140Zt ............ Dr ...... , h f-• .,,,.,., GET MOST* 'FOR YOUR MONEY. • Ill • at KEYSTONE SAVINGS ~ .. •«e,ytfon• olwoy1 p•y• the mott on fn1uretl ecrvlnt• aU.Wfl;fl •y Mw.t Come In tocloy ••• get tit• foctt ••• ••feet the MYln11 ,.,.,. fw y--. . . . r 5". PASSBOOK .PASSBOOK 5%" CERTIFICATE 6" CERTIFICATE 7'h" CERTIFIC,ATE • IN .....,.__ .._,._ ""'ffl!-I . ·'"-'*·~ oTIWh _ _.,......,_.._ • "-,,..._,....._......., o /fMjU,,_ Jt .... .......,..,. ..... I•....,.,.,,_ .1...m,.-~lf-~""91'•••,.' oMi....._.,.......,...,,_., 1 .... ~ ... _,,..... ·-· ••••'-"'"'*",.,,." ··~-""!ti""""''''"'·-~ .. _._..., .~,.,...,..,, ..... , M~ ,_ t ,,_.. 1--..l---''t/eN1.~ . ,~,.,,...-....-w.wr~,..,., .. ....., , flll SA,I DIPOSIT IOX ' • • fill MONTHLY HOIOSCoril '""" """" -.... ~ ...... 1.... "'-'""' ,... .... ..,. ........ -,.,,.,,., ,,., ,,.~,,.., .._ ....... .... . . KEYITONE IAVDl91 AND l O ... M A'50CIATK)N loNld W. c • .,.,., Pr...._nr • bocutlv• Offi<o: W15TMIHSTIR • ANAHllM Offlc. 1.tOll '""'l!Jll. . ftOd,. H•' '•""1' """ ~I 193·2'91 J~.i N. hcli4 9'P· a1i:.dw•y-let'"-'t I I f ' ' .. .. - ' I • ' anniversary sale ~· LO\AJES1 PRICES OF THE YEAR ALL 17 STORES straw handbags many ·styles, colors Straw bag time! We Kave toll!5 and swaggers, shoulde11 and pouches. Shown, just a ft!W from the group. In wicker orooft.crochet. White, black, otheux1lmsl'Asl0itid trims. 1l' ... .... ' ' Jl '}•f:''AA··9 99 were 9;11().10.00 J.-:i:i-• sleevel'~s s pant suit of polyester knit ., Pant suit with a ~leeveless, pocket- ed jacket and straiaht pants. It comes in washable polyester knit Navy, poppy, or oyster. TG-16. value30.00 23.99 • the luxury of mink in a n~w, longer length coat Choice quality mink. Silky pelts, superbly crafted .•. at savinssl In trend setti ng coat, fashioned be- low the knee. Choose. from natural mink shades. If you've ever wanted a mink coat. .. come to MayConow l 899.00 rnqcofursalon47 .. __ ,, __ ,,,...,,_ ..... am our c.cll'N'Mierit end It ot i.,-awwy i:i'111 .. m•y co south cout pin•, san dit90 fwy . •I liti.tol, coll• ..,.,., 5-46-9321 shop mondty thru silurd•y 10 6.m. t• 9:10 p.m., 1un,j1y noon 'til 5 p.m. I• IVIAVCO I I \, -• --. • .. , i Te~hnique Court to Decide. on D ~ath Pe !!alty_'~~~~i~::,_,~:l ~ Helps 'in , By,.,,. AssoclaMill PrtH full nlno111embcr cou rt '"' McGautha, 44, a •• u .. or armed r<il>bety llJ1d slayiJI& -r James ()ramplua -s ~tcCaulha and Crampt on. whal obser vers expecl may Louisiana; was convicted In ti( Los Angeles forocer, Ben!. ,Crampton Q( To~edo, ~o. U ... rre ry ·r•-e names ma·' aomeday be ~ nBProwly div ided deci... June 196'1 with William Romey jam.in Smetana. •-was ,mnvicted of first deg.rte I , •rv<i Y slon Blackmon joins the-court Wilkinson of the Feb. 14, lM? Wilk. . JUUriier fo.r tjl~ 1967 shooUn& be as famili1r as Ored Scotl nexr week. inson was senteoced to of ;tits wUe, Wilma and w"as WASHlffC TqN (AP) _ A to studenl$ learning', ncSmark 'No years a.g o tht .. ®'!rL life and McG•u,lba. t eceived 11e11tenced> .to die March 13, danng surgical 1 ~ h•• 1 q u'e 4'eci&lon•· .by ', °'I' 1 tlj>reme • rul..l Ulat deojh -'•tfi#s ' D '-t •O""·. ~et lhe ®ath penally. On appeal 11181. Now an ln!nate.al Toledo . . ..,. "~'"" . • coulilrt"lbelmp15sedtly .J~s :IW U t.J the .state Supreme ~.:.Sta&_"Hospital , he rectlVed allowing doctors tnonit~ !rJiHDes rifnpt.OA ~ Dennis froni wh!Ch oppf)dtnts oC • B'y T , .l. , ... ~•g· h upheld the dea\b penalty and Beve.r.al slafs, lncllialng two pressure within s k u J f CiftunCle <Mc&aul ~;jre ~on· capital punishmenl were L.fl. HI refused to grant McG· u0i4 lj)def\nue stays _cranted by the might prove lire-saving in vic ted murderers wh ose sutdmati cally excluded. a qew trial. Ohiq Supreme1Court selected cases 01 severe head capi tal puni.Wnenl appealA The Maxwell cue dicl, i;:iol· • 1 t...!_ _ • Jt -J.ttor~y Herman S. Selvirf • TOiedo attorney John ·J, inJ·ury 0 r encephal{liA, 3 "'the eourt a~ MOl'id•yl to ra.itel the ultimate queiUini?f 1 Orange ~t.y ah.iinnl.:.4ofl 0(1 BeveMY 'Aills, who . will Clllahag_; 11as 'been appealing he x1 f 1~ whether the desth penalty ,IS Los Angeles . 1Hlah SChool, argue the case before the the,,.. cqe. 1n essence, said ined1cal t.·onference was toJd ~eneactt!i came ,.,85 the "cruel 11nd unusual" punl~· Class of 1950, are reminded Supreme Coµrt, said the ap-Callahan, c ranjton'a defense .today.. . . . court postp0nei1_.for lJossibly me9L, whicb is barred U~ of a 20th reunloa celebration peal would be based oa two asked thr e e7 ~tutional ·The idea involves dr1 lhag a a year a decision on use or Const.itution , but It q~ June • '1 ·up in the oki 'grounds~ questions regarding capital ··burr hole'' in the skull and the death penally in the the constitulionality or pro-hometown. . -That capital punishment ca~: , inserting a small pressure United States. leaving intact cedures empl oyed in most The party begins at ~:JO . ls ,''cruel and u n t1 s u·a I , 1Whe~r _it ·s fair to ~ar a judicial freeze . that has capital cases. p.m. a. The Garage, a punishment" under1he Etgbtb those oppos1ngi the capltal ' • / I ~,bY Todays 'Want Ads . ' ...... • Jf J"llll need OOe •• ~to­ maUc wakhrr. lop c:oncli. ·Jen~· 1nonitoring .SYt'ilrh y,•ithin lhe halted all executions fol" the The c r a mp ton and nightspOt transformed from a Amendment, and " pun{shment rrom sitting on cavity lha ! holds the-br:un. past three yt:ars. McGautha appea ls raise the large old dU!on1otive agency -That the trial judge did the jury, Or. R. M. Peardon Donaghy The action sent bu ck to the !ame constitutional arguments at Sixth St reet and Kenmore not instruct the jury on what -Whether the jury should of ~1ediral Center Hospital, trial ('Ourt the case of William and the McGaulha case in· Avenue. ~~ a mali.sbould get life be. allo'l\'ed to ,d~e.both t~ • Start )'Ollr own t.nd with· lb~ -bus ""''''" "too new~ be u.ed. ·• '38! • Burhnglon. Vt., said the L. ~taxwell, a c 0 n vi ct e d eludes a direct challenge to A buffet(wll t bc se rved wlU> 1mpr1sonmelit or the death guilt °' innocence of a defen- technique 15 desigl)ed to detect rap;st, whQse appeal of a the death penalty. the tab sei at fl5 PV cou..ole penalty. The jury had no dant a~ his punishment. possi b!y dangerous·· pressw-e death sentt:nct' had y,•idely Here, then. are summaries and additional lnlonnation gu.idelines to judge how severe --Whether a ~ry shoukl not on lhe btain frorn .blood br bee n ex~j:ted to produce a of the two cases that· may may be ~ined bv 1n'j ting the penatt.J.es should be . be giten . ,5'ifldards o r other· fl uids before a pafient' Jandmart>~capital punishment result in a landmark decision 1ne L.A. High ~ Com-depri ving Mcdautha of ','due guidelin.es slnet ~ are a~le showA clinical signs or it. ruling. 'by the court next fall : Deools mit~ee. 913 Burnside Ave., Los p~" under the 1 t t b fo recommend and wiUthold Early detection of pressure By its handling of the Max· Councle McGsutha .AOWtli:-' ~'"'---'Amendmen4'1~Selvin said. mercy iri Caj>I '&es. can be crucial. he said. allow· well case, ~ttie court lnsured in~ doctors lo begi n pressure-tha t 'itS newest appointee. relieving techniques before it .J udge Harry A. Blackmon, is too late to save the patient. will particiP,at e -giving a Donaghy said in a report prepared for the 38th ann ual meetin g of the A me r ican Association of Neurological Surgeons that the technique has bet>n used on 40 patients at his hospital In the past five years. He said palients 'A'ilh severe head injuries and some with brain infections often suffer from increased pre ss u re within the skull. a condition that can damage brain tissue, causing permanent damag e or death. But. Donaghy said. fre- quently it is too late lo help the patient when the crisis OC· curs. He said the cases inclu<led 38 wit h severe head injuries and two children with en· cephalitil!, an infection or the envelope encl.oslnf the brain. The technique was used on the two encephali tis patienls specifically lo monitor their sku ll pressure. One (lf .them died. Although the method was used on the other patients. it was only because their con· d!Uon required surgery. be saidh "Our feeling is., however, .. the su rgeon $S id, "that the moniJoring switch was ln· ~;.., .. .,....the life of the child who survived en· cephalilS. For this reason we are prepared to 11uggest lhe. use or burr holes----for riiohitot- lng in selected cases." Radio Rela y ' Day Slated The annual American Radio Relay League field day ex· ercises are slated this year for J ll.Jle 27 and 28th, ac- cording LO Wi lliam L. \Veise. field day chairman. The Newport Am al eur Radio Society's field day . which is" an. annua l test in preparedness 'by emergency powered' statlons, will take place west of F'airvlew ·State ..'Hospital near the Estancia High School football field , beginning at II a.rn . June 27. ( The public is ln,,vited to see he ORfrati on of «n emergency exercise in ~mateur radio comm unications. Fo r fu rther information. contact Weise al f>46-5342. Me~a Youth Gets Degree ~David E! Harris, son of Mr s. Gqer S.netd, ::Uli Luington Lane, Costa Mesa, bas receiv· ~ his bach~r of electrical e~ineering df!gree , fro m Wichita State University jn KansaA. l\ ' '• ' , ... • are·1n • I··. .. .;. Unique services of Centinela Bank, Newport Beach <:. Boat-in-Banking -at our 65-fool dock n Dock-to-Dock Bank Customer Pickup and Delivery Service -24-Hour Local Yacht Race Results and Daily Fishing Reports o Drive-in TV-Teller Banking " . ' . ' ,, . • Win prizes during Grand Opening Celebration starling June 12 W in $25 U.S. Savings Bonds awarded everyday f' • -·· during the Grand Opening J~i~~~~ week, starting Friday, ~ June 121 Win Grand Prize AM PHICAT- thc an1azing 6-wheel sports vehicle at home on land or water! S.ee Amphicats ' . For a limited tin1e, you can open a Charter Account at Centinel.1 BJnk's new regional office in Ne'>vporl BcJch and get a Free Personal Checking Account for life '£dnd receive 200 personalized scenic Centinela Ba nk is a fuU -service bank with a Sa vi ngs Plan just right for you, including high yield Bank Time Deposits.• All accounts are insured to $20,009 by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Fo r your co nvenience, banking hours · are 8:30-5:00 PM Monday thro ugh Thursday, until 6 PM Fridays. O r you may ba nk-by-mail with all poslai;e paid.-· ~~~~~~~~i;,n;a~ction Friday, ) June 12 in bank°s parking lot and father's D?Y: deliver( 15 1 still guaranteed. .) ·t Large, lovely 11x14 Father's Day Portrait that says "We' lave you!" '"only 5 88 Yet ••• a /'l'lagnificent 11.1.1.C So&on Portrait , •• f /'l'IOrt .._ ...,.._ tinof thit m•4mp« ,....of you ond ~ ywr chlldre:n and TPti--fal'l'lny 'pifl~ Wttrm ond wonderfut gift for Dad on fothet'• Doy 1hot •ffP• on sayin9 ''We love yo.;" all year long I Come Jn now an.d ....... and refftNtber you coft choro• it ot Penney'•· • •Ut.l.allTOli 0t9119"1'1lr ClftlW -,,,-.w, 1no1:MJ lt\IPITtPl•TOM l liACN """.""*' t«ni.t" t1111 1ieor, m .m 1 Nl.W~llT:.. l aACN 1'11111911 llltl'd tM "-• •U·IJll ' I ' in the bay. Grand Prize Amphicat on displa y in lobby all of June. Free refr es hments too. ,• cpecks free, too!). • .. "" ,. Sav~ the $25, $35, e.ven $50 that you're r -··-----------~-------------------·---------------·--------------------------.--·---------------·-----, '. rrobably no w paying every year for 'check.ihg charges. When you open your Charter Account at Centinda Bank, you will never pay another penny for checking service charges during your Jifetin1c. • For busincsseS, Chafjer Checking Accounts opened at Centinela Bank will receive a free order of business checks and endorsement sta1np, ,with Free checking on minimum balance thereafter. ~·g · . ,• '> rA V.,1.~ .. ;. 7 °'-ir~ "tlt>lW/11.l.,•1111 MtWf'l'.!(11, .. CMP<' ...... " "--"'' ~~m·c•----·----------------- S1tfft Zip """" D~~1 --------· Dr•wing on July 10, 19i0. Winners need nol be-presenl. .... ...ioe. ~ L.~::..._:::~~==::'.~~::'.'.'.~~;._~~·~··~ ~..L_.);_C......:: ----'-----"'" ' ' ' ' ' : ' ' ,. ' ' ' • • ----------· -----. --------------------------------------------------. --. -. ··---...... ,. ......... ~ -·· --. .. ,. ' . . . - ·-Centinela Bank Newport Beach · Specialists in· Marine Banking ServiCes· 3333 ~ Coc1!I ~ (cl Nowport l\oJe.a-d) Nowport Bead\ Cdifcrrio 97J:HJ Pl-. 6.46-7121 IN GLEWOOD, 524 E. Nutwood (07'1-4060) / MERMOSA l!EACM, IJOJ Pi« Avonuc (l72-l!Ol) /PLAY A DEL REY, 8JJ1 W, Manche.tor °(!l.l-9231) l -,, . ~ -• ., • -~ .. " .. I I --'-----~--~--_L-----~--~-.. I , . \ I t. ' ' i I A NEW COURT'S IN THE CARO$ -Eight new members ha~e been welcomed to the Queen Of Hearts Guild of Children's Hospi- tal ol Orange County:-The Mmer.Ray Cobb, Charles LeBon and Robert Kellogg (left to right) are amon.g those officially named to the guild during an installation luncheon and annual meeting conducted by Mrs. ·Francis Fabian,.outgoing pres ident. '. Ckiy and Stay Camp ;, ) Scouts Gather Gear And Head For Hills With the end of school finally in sight, young misses from pixie to senior size will grab a sleeping bag, pack some hildng and climbing clothes and head for the hills. More than 300 Girl Scouts from Laguna Beach, Dana Point, Cap- istrano Valley and San Clemente will participate in the first Day and Stay Camp arranged by District VI of the Girl Scout Council of Orange County. Carn_p grounds will be at Rancho Capistrano from Monday, June 15, through Friday, June 19. Daily sessions are from 1:30 to 7 p.m. _ Sc~uts from Brownie to Senior level will take part in a varied prograrq covering outdoor cooking, swimming, nature crafts, singing and malting new friends. Juniors and Cadettes will have the added oppostunity to do badge work with a Junior overnight session scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday nights. As an added feature, a special pixie camp will cater to you ng· sters 3 years of age and older whose mothers are staff members. So far 5!l little pixies are already signed up. An adult start of 78 volunteers, 24 from La guna Beach, \vill s.u# pervise camp activiti es with th e aid of Campettes recruited from . . ' ... _, . .. • . - BARBARA DURATE, 494-9466 Mlllolll1~ .. .lllM .. Int $ ,_ IS • Guild ·.·Eight Crowns Queens . Eight new members joined the Queen's Court during an instal- lation lun~eon for· the Queen of Hearts Guild of Laguna Beach in Irvin~ Coast Country Club. Amid a setting of red, white and pink carnations, the Mmes. Otho Bahr, Ray Cobb, Ralph Ericso9, William Ferguson, Robert Ke!· logg , Charles LeBon , Thomas Ped~and John "Willlams were formal- ly welcomed to the auxiliary of Children's Hospital of Orange County. As an indication of the fund-raising year th ey will have ahead of them, a check for $12,000 was presented to Mrs. James Stawicki, coordinator of volunteer services for the hospital, by ways and means chairman Mrs . \Yilliam Gwinn . The money represents numerous benefits staged Cluring the past year including a Christmas card sale, champagne boutique rash· ion show, Halloween party, Robinson's fashion show and a theater party in the Laguna Moulton Playhouse. Another source of funds is sale of CHOCO bear pins and charms available to all guilds. F'inal item on the agenda was installation of Mrs . Horace Fritz, ,-----president of the guild, and members of her board. The ceremony was conducted by Mrs. Macauley Ropp, a pest president, who preceded. the official duty with a brief history of the guild. The need for a children's hospital became increasingly urgent with the rapid upswing in Oran ge County population. It was evident that, in order to give youngsters necessary pediatric care, a hospital had to be established to serve Orange County children, their parents and attending physicians. Children's Hospital of Orange Crunty, informally known as CHOC, admitted its first young patient on Oct. 5, 1964 and since that time it has treated mofe than 18,000 children. Cadette and Senior troops. CAMPFIRE COOKING -Girl Scouts from South camPsite are Laguna Beach scouts (left to right), Dr. AnU1ony Orlandella and ·his wife Eleanor. a registered nurse. Orange County will try their hand at outdoor cook· Melody Berryhill, Kim Townsepd and Pattjce Bos· l-----l-----wHl-cmnprire1Jrnrredical-staft-witn-vohlnteers-headed-=by-Mrs..-.Naoo.v----~.iri~uring ~~-upcoming-Da.~and,Sta,yy_,.Co..aaJJl'.l'."P-"!~...well Tbey_will be among_ino.r_e..tban JOO.,girls,..m.~~i-· --~·· -~ - Lamberg OC Capistrano Beach. Rancho Capistrano. Making a test rut! in a backyard ticipating 'in the program. • Jl:istice Pocketed When Mrs .. s·herlock Cases He.r Husband • -DEAR ANN LANDERS : Will you settle • an ll'JUmenl? Should a husband mind agree wilh you or make you loolt good . -ST. LOUIS U his wt1e 1oes lhroup his billlold! • Two yeers ago I fCKllld r8 telephone in.tmber. Out ol curiolky r called the humber and was &hbck~ 'to hear\hc voice of a 1rlend. When I t'Onfronted' ANN LANDERS DEAR LOU : I've beard some classic "so!ullons" but yours is In a class by ltscU. If addict~ were given free and easy access .to drugs, they voould surely .. GU with my astonisbitll 1tllcovery. he !"Ule1 or good baan rel1Uen1 -1 cjibftuecf they were blyjn1 a ainling i how lllf ..ndnct pd raped for the affair. -·-privaey ti ~ td9ers. :ne hlband who Gil has been beharini prttty well IJ wakbed does DOt-bthave better. He ~tnel'e"' pot ~Veta! mOQU\s. but ever11 . 'mu.ti)' ~ more cltcumspecl. now and then I cheClt ·Ills billfold \o ll'aa .. P IH 1•.U u.. ..rt ... otari•. aee if there are any neW numbers. ~ ~ Js this wrong! I reel If a man has DEAR ANN LANDE~: I ha ve 1 solu- nothlng to hide. he would not object. Uon to the pot and drug problerri - -MRS. SHERLOCK H. also heroin or ' whatever else the DEAR NRS.:_A_wtfe Whn got.1.throu~h SCW\1ba l!J want lo lnjeCl Into tbeir veins: kw lllllbud'1 bUltold"\'totatca·JOme basic Let them do it. Give them as much dope as they want. Eventually they will crt-ate an enormGUs health and welfare kW themJe:lves and the world wilt be • problem before lhty got aroud lo kill1n1 better off wtthout them . lhemsel ves. The IO!ls, in term_, of human I am· sic'k atid tired or loolting ar resouret1, Would be st.aggertn1. No coun· dirty, long-~lred slobs whu would rather . l!J cln nllow 11!! youth to bum 111 figtjl the establishment than wa!h and brains out. Wt now have approlma tely go lo work like self-respecting people. I n1l\Ji11n a!C(lholl~ in nnr crnnlr)' and They are lous lng up our world and we don't need 5 million potheads. contributing nothing but troutilc, which we have enough of already. . I am sure you won't print this letl~ because you anly publish Jcttcr5 lhat ''== DEAR ANN LANDERS: I W8! disap- pointed in YO\lr advice tci the. wire "'ho was mad at her husband because he abandoned her at parties and went orr and had a great lime. You told her,, "Stop following him around. Quit making* a pest of you,rself." Instead of teJling her what NOT to do, why didn't you • glve her some positive advlce, such as, "Force yourseu to talk lo people. even if your stomach is in knots and yoor legs feel like thej are going to collapse." My husband used to leave me stranded, too, bu t I was detennined not to be that "P;CSt" ,tou spoke or. Instead of hiding in the powder room I decided to make ii on my own. To my aurprlse I diacovered ( could have I good time 1r T made the effort. ~fosl exclflilg or all was my hu!!barrct'1 reaction. When Ile' saw me s1aodina: Jn. a ,grou p, the center or atlent_lon , laughing and talking, he came .over to 4ef in on the interesting convenaUon. What fun it Is now to show off for him ! And if a form.er shrinking violet like yolll's truly can do it, any.one can! Spread the word. -M.D. of D.C. DEAR M.D.: TIM: won! lw IM:u 11pread. Tballk1 for pro~iDC iL . "The Bride's Guide,'' Ann Landert• booklet, answers some ol the m03t. (re. quently asked quesUons about weckhngs. To receive your copy of thls cqm. prehens1ve guide; write 10 Ann Landen. In care of the DAILY PILOT newspaper, ellC.IOSlng a Jong, !lelf-addressed1 stamped envelope and 35 cents in coin. '· \ .. I. I ( . • • • • 'Dual Events Attract Mothers ·of. Seeing double are members of Orange Coast Moth- ers of Twins Club. Two activities taking place this month will be installation of nev.· officers Wednes- day, June 10 following an 8 p.m. dinner in the Four Winds restaur~t and a two-day garage sale Satur- day. and Sunday, June 13 and 14. in Fountain Va1· Your Horoscope Tomorrow -.- • -· . ' ' . ' -Harborites Say ' Wedd ·ing Vows • • · )fm!td In Our Lady ol Mount Cai:,meJ Ca th,o 11 c Qurt.11 were Tinl .Mary Taradiino and Warttn Edward Wlllluio of Newport Be1ch. • '11!< llevi John K e 11 y Peifom)ed the dooble ring ~flDODY' for the dlurtiter of • Mr. and Mra. _.Anthony D. Taranti>o of Q>St.a Meaa ind the IOI! of Mr. and Mrs. James E. Williams o( Cape May, N.J. Given In marriage by her father, the bride asked Mn. James Keech to be her matron of honor. Bridesmaids ·.,ere her CGUsin, Miss C h el y I Tarantino, Miss B on n i e Bulman and Mrr. Hugh Grin- nen. Valerie Slve WIS the flower girl. Serving u bi!Jt man was John· Goldate, while ushers · were Don Irvine, Don Hilgen- MRS. J, E. WILllAMS Home In Irvine Thero 11 a job for you In lhe Hf ~!" -• poailioo needing no other qwililica ~ your spere time and willing bands.I I , There are thousands of theae ope~~s for men and women from teenagers to' senior itipns. Now is lh• time to get Jiivolved lo yoar com-• unlty',J needs. You can help ,I )'OUD~· learn or 'ease lhe burden ol lonelioeu for lh~[elderfy. P!>SITIONS PR/>M1sEoli . Hw1!1reds ol positions •I'll awa~JI your ·tele- phone to the Newport Beach Volunteer Bul'nu at . 642-0963. Callers will be assisted from 9 a.m. to 1 p.ni. every weekday. The bureau Is Jbcatod al 32S N. Newport Blvd., Newport Beach• I · COMMUN ICATION NEEDED More than 70 volunteers are needed for the Orfl-Schulwerk program at Fairview Slate Hospi- tal. The program is a creati11e means oftC?mmuni· cation which involves gamel, chants 8DCI iaterpe~ sonal relationships. W.ard asSistants also are needed to assist with infirm and ambulatory patients. Tboee with ei:perlence teaching S'fimming are needed for a therapeutic pool progriin), July 13 lo Aug. 28. Volunteers, including ~se interested in shop work, cataloguing and tiinekeeping, should call dorf, Tom Smith and Jim -------.--- Willliins. Mrs. Enid Lathrope at 54[5-;-;914j3;;,;l.;:;;w;;;;~;;;;;;;;;ij1 Twin s '1'he bride attended Mount St. Mary'• College and ~-ii! ,gr1ctuited cum laude from the • University of Southern Callfornla. She pledged Alpha Delta Pt Her husband at· tended tht University of Miami and served with the Navy. Jey. Checking sale merchandise are (left lo righ_t) l\1rs. Frank Leahy, philanthropic chainnan; Mrs. Charles Marvin, retiring president. and Mrs. Rich- a rd \.Vard , incoming president with her twins Jim and Rich. Addilional infonnation may be obtained by call ing Mrs. Nicholas E. Bartlett, ~15. Following Utah and newlyweds Irvine. · a honeymoon to Colorado·, t h e will ,reside in President To Speak Afternoon ~emony Nuptials Link Pair Wedding vows were e1.· . Serv)nc as best man was changed by Mary -Jeannine • Michael Weatberble 1 n d Allen and AJan R J c h 1-r d se~ttpg "guests were Steven M hand d . .:.,... :re1tz, Warren D. Webb and arc urmg an .. ~noon David BerTy., · ceremony conducted by the The brlde . who w a s Rev. Fred G. Overby in Com· gradiiated fr0m Huntiocton munity United M e t h o d i s t Beach High SP.>ool, attended Church, HunlJ.nBton Beach. Orange Cout" College and Par~nta of the couple are Callfornia State College at Mr. and Mrs. W. LeRoy Allen !An& Beach. TH I DID YOU GOOF? 11 row knit· ..... twOflCt • meu? ••hi YWI' .... ~i.m ~ \fltw -W1'll r.. IWJJPY ftl h4'1p. H•W YAIN1 All M••• .... KNIT WIT South Cotst Pl•z• LOWEii MALL Acrou rrom ~" COST A MESA !'fl. ...s-an of Huntington Beach and Mrs. The bridegroom is a Adelaide L. Martband or graduate of Newport Beach Newport Beach and 1.he late Hlgh School and attended OCC ·"".'.~~~~~~~~~ Mr. Leo Marchand. .aod the University of -.. Pisces: Good Timing Essential Mrs. Fulton Shaw, president of Orana:e County Republican Womeu, Federated, will speak following a 1alld b u I f e t s~ by the Huntinaton Beach Republican Women, Federated·. The hrlde was "exorted to californla! Davis: . WHATEVER. you need, the a1biT by her rather for They wrn mare thetr home you 'll find, u )'OU read - the single ring ceremony. She , o;'";;;;N;;;~~:;,;;;";;s..c~~h.~~· ~~e~Doll)'~~Pilo~t:iaus;;;:::;;"';;";;;;;;"A;;"';;;;'J asked her sisters, Mrs. James11 Simooson and Ml.sa f'atrlcla "SUMMER ANNOUN EMENT" , I TUESDAY JUNE 9 By SYDNEY OMARR ft 11 my belier l b a t c"•radtr 11 de!lllny. You c:un, U.roap the aid or aslrqlogy, dtug:e and im·prove your cbaracter. Thus. the wise man C1a control bi1 own destiny. Mesa Club Retains Leader Mrs. PhU li p Hay was In· stalled as 11 second·tenn presi- dent of Costa Mesa Women 's Club. Serving on . her board are the Mmes. Ralph Littlefield, William Goodwin and Owighl Gross, vice presidents; Lloyd Robinson and William Sl. Clair. secretaries; CI e v c Schutt, treasurer : and Arthur Crooke, parliamen1arian. Chainnen are !he Mmes. John E. Miller, house: Wililam C. KennOOe, membership ; O. Charles Adams, r e n l a I s : James Curran, coordlnelor, and Ron Stenge, j u n I o r pruldenL Installing orfice.rs was 1'trs. Alvin Pinkley. Sirens Hear Cancer Tip-off . BE FREE.. OF FACIAt.. HA,lR F'OR EVIR •• Lrr US SHOW YOU HOW EASY IT IS TO PUS:MOVf! EXCESS HAIR w·1nc MODERK Jnfonnl'lion aboul canar E!-ECTROLYSIS, will be gained by mernbers MEDICALLY APPROVED, •• . at't'OP:S ..5eA ~lre"°'.at'8 p,tn:, -SAFE, r~, G.EHTLC,. on Wedntld1y, June JO, In the multipurpose room of the CONSUl...T Wint OUR ·- Killybrooke School, c 0 s l 8 LICY!SCD TECHNICIAN 'Mou. A iuut lpt:tktr from lhe IN OUR a e.:AUTY SALON. American cancer Society will elaborlte on the. sevtn danltr · 1lplls ind show a fi m, RQBJ NSQN 'S "lnvetitment fn Lilt .'' The m<eUoa Is op<n to 111" NEWPORT pubUc. j.._ ______ _ ' .. Pressure ma y be building. But reward could be ·substantial. Realize this and Ume actions, Be ca reful in what you say, confide. Associale may be en- vious -and careless. IF TODAY JS YOUR BIRTHOAV patience is ally. By month 's end you gain op- portunity that has appeared elu sive. You draw people to you with their problems. But now you woold be well advised to avoid entanglements. LET THE SUN SHINE IN ... The luncheon mttUni will take \place 1t 11 :30 1.m. Wednesday, June 10, In the recrtation center accordln& to Mrs. ~ Stewart, preaident. lnlroduclng tbe speaker will be Mrs. Leroy Benson, first vlct president. All interested area women are invited to attend the 1neeting. co-chairmen of amenities. TOPS Mermaids· TOPS Merging' Mermaids meet at 7:311 p.m. every 'lbuqy In Woodland School, Colla Mesi . w ·ITH OUR FROSTING SPECIAL, 19.90 BRIGHTEN UP YOUR LOOK •• , YOUR LIFE. OUR EXPERTS PUT SUNBEAMS IN YOUR HAIR AND MELLOW TiiEM WITH ROUX. AND TO ADO FROSTING TO THE FROSTING.•• THE VERY NEXT TIME YOU VISlT US, WE'LL GIVE YOU A FREE Jl"ANCf-FUL1- ' ~TO COLOR-TONE AND TREAT YOUR HAIR. IT15 A GREAT WAY TO LIGHTEN YOUR BEAUTY llUDGr;:r" • 'TOO. FROSTING SPECIAL. Al.SO INCLUDES SHAMPOO AND SET• COME IN OR CAU.. FOR AN APPOINTMENT, BEAUTY SAL.OH. ROBINSON'S ROBINSONS NE\IVPORT • FASH ION ISLAN D:· 644·2800 All l he DON Lii' ILLll ccti.brttld ~rl tnd en, o aerve as r honor ORGAN nc.....:1"'9 ,....,.,11, wm tce•llt , nm1ttd """'" attendants. Bridesmaids were i.r ot pn~•M ,,...,.,.," ~ CMC111nt wilh "-. Raym. ond Naylor and .• i..-....,.....is .., 11y1111g •nd r191trr1Hott. """ .,.. ~· "~ LESSONS ..,._,,... Hiid 111-· ....,, • .--,.~. Misees Dennise and Tuea.a · 1nc1ic.r1r1t .,.,. "' in.1.._. •nd 1v1111bi. .Wealherbie, niece.s of the D.• LM Pied91tf.-. 1;:. ~H . ...._ ....... Celtf. tJMJ bridegroom. GROUP #2 GROUP '#1 • BARK CLOTH PRINTS • RIB PIQUES 1 • ~ 1 SOLID. COLORS ~j ' . ., oonED SWISS PRINTS . ' • FLOCKED VOILES • WAFFLE PIQUE PRINTS • CLIPJE~ POPLIN eRINTS cottons, rayons, blends +l"/~S" wide 9uar. washable REG. $1.29 to $1.98 YARD I Yd. I •CANVAS PRINTS • BUTCHER WEAVE PRINTS • VOILE CREPE PRINTS • POLYF~OCK VOILES • PURE LINEN PRINTS AND SOLIDS VALUES TO $2.49 YARD · cottons, flax, rayons, polyesten, blends -"'4'.'/-45" wide . all 9~•;, wash~ble G~OUP #3 POLYESTER . DOUBLE KNITS REG. $6.98 to $6.98 VALUES 52"/54" wide gooj r1n9! of solid colors .· (Machin e Wash) I ' SOUTH COAST ll'LAJ:A-COITA MISA HUNflNGT QNTO- Yd. Yd. lrl1tol 1t S.n Dl .. o ,,....,--.uLfJU HUNTINO , ll~H ~ ,_____.. 141 ..... It ..... ........... .,,. ... ,. , o,.. M.Odoy tin Friday 10 'tll t-Swl•"t ''*"-Sud1F1 ·1W a.----...----------------~- ' I I I .L j I I I I I I I ! I I ' 1 I ' ~ I ~ I 1 ! ' • I • I Monday, June 8, 1 IJ7Q. DAILY PILOT Jij Laguna Bea ch Nuptia fs Balboan Becomes Bride . "· ' ' •.• . . ' ri. ... lttl ,...I" MRS.· SHAFER S1nte AM Home July Wedd ing Ceremo nies In the Neighborhood Congregational Church, Laguna Beach linked in marriage June Marie Dorian oC Balboa Island and Dr. John Norman Shafer of Sanla Ana. The R ev. Richard Richardson perfonned t h e nuptials for th~ daughter o( Dr. and Mrs. Theodore A. Dorian of Alhambra and the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Lenard Shafer of Greybull , Wyo. Given in marriage by her parents. the bride as ked Mrs. Sean Day and Miss Grace Paulson, her cousins. to be matron and maid or honor. Bridesmaids were Mn. Ken· neth 1-Ianson and the Misse! Trudie Fletcher, FI ore n c e Oabbagian and Chris Ziehm , . and flower girls were Angela Tosoonian and Susan Ann Chooljian. Party Produces Date • The engagement of Mrs. Beth Rae Ciciliot of Westminster and Tom Warren Titus of Costa Mesa has been announced by the bride-elect's mother, Mrs. Donald Warner oi Huntington Park. The bride -e lec t was graduated from G e o r g e Washington Hlgti Sdlool in L<>s Ange1es and is employed in the Huntmgton Beach office of McDonnell Doug 1 a s Astronautics. Ttie bridegroom..eJect was graduated from Corry Area High School in Pennsylvania, and is entertainme!lt editor for the Orange Coast Daily Pilot, Both are active in com- munity theater. 0 The couple plan a July 11 wedding in Westroin.ster Luth- eran Church, Westminster. 'O Your best summer look starts with a Helene-Curtis 'Tender Touch' wave • IMrfts hair soft, n1•111able • Prot.ds aotural oUs '15 Cut, shampoo, styling Included. Helene Curtis conditioning treatment, shampoo and set, 3,88 We apeciahl In lhrl cart of foWon wigs USE YOUR PENNIT CllAIGE CARD- NO Al'l'OlHTMENT lllCISSAIY Attending as best man was Dr,. Paul Fanning; ushers were Robert Paulson, Dr. Mark Wallln. Dr. Charles Ma1eredjlan Jr., Gary LayJ1an and Larry Krusee, and +ring bearer was Eric Tosoqnian. Tht bride is a graduate ot Alhambra High School and Pasaaena City College. She earned her BA as a p sy chol ogy major at California State College at Los Ange&es and graduated as a dental h ygi eni st at Northwestern University Den· tal School. Her husband Is a gr3duate of Greybull High School, received his BS in 1oology at the University of Wyoming and his DDS at Northwestern University Denta l School. He is affiliated with Sigma Chi . The newlyweds will reside in Santa Ana. ADPis I nsta II New Leade rs !\1rs. Robert Harlun ian has assumed duties of the presi· dent of Alpha Delta Pi Alun1- nae of Orange County. Serving with her ,.. the ESP -Especially for You Mmes. Hugo Schtrl.z. progra1n vice president; Roger II. If daisies won't tell, members of Las Margari las Woman's Clu b of ~Jission Swett, ways and means \•ice Viejo ' might get the ans\ver from extrasensory perception. ~1rs . Ronald Potts president: Arthur Ko r n• and Mrs. Sal Becerril! (left to ri ght) pluck marguerite petals until they gain treasurer; Ramon Boesch and added insight from a Friday. June 12, lecture by 1'.1rs. Beverly DeLong from Art Wahlstedt, secretaries. the Psynetics Foundation of Orange. Th e meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m . in the and Leland Coontz, historian ~ecreation Center. and Adelphean reporter. _ _:_c_:=:.:c::--=..:.:.:.c:.:.c_ ______________________ _ Huss-Grupe Names Pledges Exchanged Nuptials Performed . Air Force LL Frederick ~ A Greek Orthodox cere1nony Louis Huss claimed Debr a In St. Sophia's Calhed ral in J G h' b 'd Los Angeles was perform¢ eanne rupe as is r• e for James Theodore Kariolis during ceremonies solemnized and Kathryn Lee. by the Rev. Dr. Charles Parenls of the ilew\yweds Dierenfie1d in St. Andrew·s are Mr. and Mrs. James A. Presbyterian Church. Lee or Newport Beach and Parenls o( the bridal couple ~lrs. \Vallace Huff of F'oLrnlain are ?o.frs. Virgiriia 1'1iller Valley. Grupe of Newport Beach and Maid of honor during th e double ring ceremony was Allen L. Grupe of Anahei m ~1iss Pamela Ruggles. Al- and Air Force LL Col. (ret.) tendants were the r-.1isses and ~frs. Vincent J. ~luss of Susan and Wendy Lee. sisters "'•u"• rlWlt• MRS. KARIOTIS Greek Rites Terra Linda . of I.he bride, and Mrs. Grej:!ory \\'ere Lawrence La,1dau , Bob d Holcomb. Lori Sykes and f\1ika Duga·n and John Babera. ~i.as Candy Weamer servj: Lee Landau were floy.·er girt F'ollowing a honeymoon in .... maid o(' honor. and c1mM HOu.w PIWlt• d •-~ an ring Ut:arer. Running Springs, the couple bridesmaids were the t-.tis!t!s MRS. FREDERICK HUSS Serving as best man \vas will make Ui ei r f ir s t hon1e Teri Snyder, Melinda Carr, ·Newport Rites C:eorge Ca lamaras. Ushers in Tustin. Pamela Brubake r, Sh a r i n I--~;;;,';,;========;;;;======:-:-=-:-:-:-:..:.::;::;:; Tully and Marlene Lam- prides. Best man was Lerry Jones and ushers were Ooug Holm, Qreg Huss, Paul Robinsoo. CJ\ris Mortensen , Don Grupe .and Darryl Grupe. The new ~1rs. J1 uss attended Newport Harbor 1-ligh School, Gro•mont College a n d Orange Coast College, and he r husband attended San Diego State College . They will re s id e in Big Spring, Tex. where l h c bridegroom is stationed at Webb Air Force Base. Bridge Fan s To Participate Harbor area bridge cn- thusiasls will participate in a Swiss Team Championship at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, June 9, in the Costa Mesa Women's Clubhouse. Teams of four are needed to enter the event, sponsored by the Balboa Unit, American Co ntract Bridge League. I f . . . ' ! ' - Countywide Proj~ci ' Scouts Eye Glas s l\tlor~ Olan 40,000 girls are collecting empty glas.s containers for a giant, countya v:ide reclamation project that will cliarax on Glass Safari Day, Saturday, June 13. The Gi rl Scout Council of Orange County has embarked on a pilot project of gla.ss reclamation for a dual purpose: .antipollution measures and fund-rajsing for the council's Camp Development 1'~und. · Kerr Gloss Co1npany, Santa Ana, will re- ceive the day's mass of glass and collection si les will be located in Huntington CenLer, J-luntington .Beach ; Buena Park Center ; 1'"'ashion Square, La Habra ; Angel Stadium; Mount or Olives Lutheran Church, Mission Viejo. and the parking lot of the Kerr Com- pany. Clean, metal-free glass containers of all sizes and shapes are desired. They \vil l be ta llied at each depot and segregated &y color. 1'hc glass company ~·ill pay one-half cent (ol;' each bo ttle. lf the project is successful , siln· ilar programs may be organized nationaliy . • St. Andrew's Church Chosen for Ceremony A late afternoon wedding in SL Andrew's Presbyterian Church , Newport Beach was !he nuptia ls sett ing ror Philip J\lcDowell and Cheryl ~lcKibbin. The Rev. Dr .. Chafles Dierrniield perrormed t h e double ring ceremony for !he daughter of lhe F,'rank J\1cKib- bins of Corona del Mar and the son or the Jack McDowells or Glendale. Mrs. \Villian1 Feeny of Newport Beach s e r v e d as matron of honor. Altendants were the Misses Lynn Parker of Marilla del Rey. Susan Lauritzen of Pasadena and , Nancy Meiklejohn. of Long Beach, cousins of the bride. MRS. McOOWELL Florida Hf?m• I , I I ' ! Best iTian was Barry Eith while ushers were William Feeney, Gary Gun1 and James' ~loore. A former airline stewardess. the br11Je is a graduate or Pasadena High ~hool and the University of California. Santa Barbara. She is affiliated with Kappa Alpha Tehta. while lhe bridegroom attends fl ight school at Whiting F ield Naval Alr Station. Her bride~room is a ~raduate of Hoover High School and Lhe University of Colorado wl1ere he was an affiliate or Lambda Chi Alpha. The couple will make their first horne in Pensacola, Fla. Conce rt Date . \Vorks by Be e{ho v en, Weinland and Prokofiev will be performed at 8:30 p.m. on Tuesday, June 9. in the recital hall. Ca lifornia State College al Fullerton. . -~,....--------------- "-;;;'::CM ! I The unit also is sponsoring an Open Pai rs Championship on Friday, June 12. and Friday, June 19. John Killian and John Porcella are direc- 1ors of the sessions w h i c h begin at 7:30 p.m. BE 20 \bS· 1MIMMER 1ttlS , suMMER· • .. PllU.IRTOW Ofanfllf•lr '"""' ,,... noar. 111<4G !1UNTIN•TON au.CH H""'lfl'og!llll c.itw· ,,,. . ftow. "2·7m "" :ir.r.·noor, ....,,,u Interested persons may -call Killian at 548-7120. 1.....--Father's Day is June 21--"~'-------------. l LAST 6 DAYS! I ' ' " 7 beautiful, professional Father's Day-Portraits of you and both children 995 all for jast · '(ou'll Neeiwone llt19 ll1114 (mor. th•n Mtf tM slZI! of this newspaper pate!) pkts ad: Mndy n11et .. 1a pof'tralts for ll'"lndf•theR, uncles •nd fr1endsl And that includ" you, both your children and ~ the family petl 1f3RC>AJ:1WAY ' tfJ.JJJ1 lit. 21) ' • { I ' . ' NEWPORT BEACH -4JOl'A"CIFIC COAST HWY . 642·3 630 (2• Jllocks East o[ Balboa Bay Clubi 1840 W. 171h STREET 543.9457 SANTA ANA lfofffs !artist Owned nd Op1r1ttl Ckli11 ••• at Jocatltn Ill C1flftrRl1 af1.U FIGURE coNTnOL' SAI.ONS l.tllf .... UT ... , • l.tllUMrllC.t~ •m"" QPIOS..,.. IMlftl CltAICI me• ALSO IN 1A11ah1lm, Co•l110, Cr•111how, Oo•11•r. Glcfldol•, Lftnood, La Veqet, Lo119 looch, N••p•rt leoch. N. H•llyw•ad, 011rorlo, Pn• dfto, Sari DI .. •, $ctilto AH, 50llto lorboro, Sol•ltll, ,...._., T11rra11c .. WhWtltt. c) Cop11riyll1 1970 Gloria fl1(1 TS11all Mgt, c(). Ihc • . ' \ I I - .. I • INLV PILOT • ~ \, ) ' ~ lj/'1t~ I t: ! J.-;.v -' 70610 : l \ Here, In the newest length, Is a channinf de-nrn by Marian Swain witb a demure :V·neck and a many ploeted 1kirt. I Make it in silk1 crepe de chine, lawn, voile or 1ynthlllc ble!lds. 'IOelO Miuet •izes S.18. Siu 12 requlrel ·approximately 5 3/4 yards of 45" fabric !or tbe style witb sleeves and 5 118 yards of. '5" f1brlc for sleeveless style. Order 70160: give slieii name, address and zip. EACH pattern '2. po1tpat . Addreu SPADEA Box N. Dept. CX-15, Milford, N.J. 08848. NEW BOOKS : Spodea's Skinny Books of Saw- ing Tips -Moro fabulous hints by Dale Cav'an•Rh to 10lve your 1ewin1 problems. Volume A and B, Heh fl postpaid. Single Ring Ceremony Vows Said 1n Carmel Carmel Valley "''' selected for tbe wedding of1 NOlncy Stewart of San Franciscti and Dr. Barnett Louis Cline, Bertoley. The new h-1rs. Cline is a iraduate of HWltington Beach lllih Scliool, the un1 .... uy of Calllomla Medical Center, San Francisco, and t h e University of C a 11 f o r n i a , Berkeley. Her husband was graduated • ' ' Secretaries Take _ Note Of Next Meeting ate Now -· will be In· Now J>fflcero Jo ' be M&Jed tll1Jed Ind now orocer. In-an Mn. Mlftln Wlilll, preol· 11'llld -the 1ll!llt Cllap-clfnl: Mloo Clthtrlno Prahlor, Jer J>f llollooll ..5tcrotarleo Mn. Lourtlla llldlmond 1nd A 11 oc hlbl -I Mn. llllllel. Tllom~ vice '""II for dinner In Ille J)Nldenta: Ml•· E ~ n I co Nowpa;tar Inn 111unday, Juno Vtotal and' Mill ""'1eltno 11. c..i, H<ttllrtao,. Jnd Miu ' A ooclal bour will bell~ •I . Dolom Smith, trtuurar. l :!IO 9.m. and dJM<r wtll EIMrlalliibent wlU be pro. follow at 7. vldod by ttil madrtall choir ConducUn1 the lnlU•llon of Col'-dol Mar Hllh School ........, wtll be M11. Loyd UJ!(lor the dlreotloo cl Oon11d Flemlnt and ln1tallln1 new Haneke. olficen wUI be Mn. Jean Anyooe lnt.trt1t.ed In 1t.. Wettlteln, n e w California tend.int the .me«lnl tnl)' call Dlvlllon c o r r e • p on d I n I Mn. Jo Ann Jontt, Ml-7180, 1tcretary. ~,rt. m. • Sun-struck Coed Tbe bride, dau&hter of Mr. and Mra. Dalla& Stewart or Huntington Beacb.i w11 1lven in marriage by her father lot the single ring ceremony conducted by the Rev. James Brock. Servin& u her honor attend111t was Mrs. Paul Mubbum ol Minion Viejo. from Thomas Jefferaon High Martha Linderholm, a senior from Minneapoll!, has School, San Antonio; Columbia her hair wrapped wilh aluminum foil as part of a 'Ibo bridegroom, ""' ol Dr. Ind Mrs. Leon Cline ol San Amllo, Wed h.ia brother Gerald Cline to 1erve u best ..... Univeratty, Baylor College of tinting. sun-streaking process during_ a recent halr- Medlclne and Johns 'Hopkins o-rama at Bennett College In Millbrook, New York. School of Public Health. He The day of free, mass hairstyling to give the girls will be graduated from UCB a well-~roomed look for year-end festivities wa1; next summer. The newlywed! will make run by r. Franco of Guillaume. !nc. of New York their home in San Ju.an, _C_l_ty_. ________________ _ Puerto Rico, after September. . introductory eiffer . . . helene curtis perm plus .,exciting new cut 17.50 "nKE·sMpe118nenl-bJ Hel1119 c.tis has special condltioqers tllat Ii• Yotl lmcy;•blaf.l«.icllc Ciiis. it rim p t • ~ body far.-... hair styles. ·looo\'- Ua11t•s .• Pi1k"."3 • FQb • E'8t~otysi s Couple Recite Vows During Eastern Rites St. Andrew Ep i s co pa I Church, Stamford. CoM., w11 the aetUng selected~ for the marria1e of Cecilia Poltrack aad Jamu Robert Lynch, son of Mr, and t\1rs. Frank ~1. Lynch of Fountain Valley. CynthJa Pollrack was her sister's honor attendant and brldesnalds were Mr1. Peter Poltrack. her sister-in-law, and Mar1arrt Jones. 1 colleae claamate. John Lynch of h-ienlo Park w1s hlll brother's best man md 1111heri were J a m e s Tomcblk and Peter Poltrack. 'Ibe new Mrs. Lynch ls a sraduate d Mary A. Burnham School, Northhampton. and Drew University, Madison, N.J. She ha.s completed work for her muters degree In BOcial work at Boston Collqe. The benedl ct is an alumnus ol Milford High Sdlool ond • MRS. J. R. LYNCH New BricN the Unlverll.ty of Connecticut taking advir.1ced courses In where be was affiliated with butlness administration at Lambda. ad Alpha. He sel'\led Boston. College. u a captain in the U.S. Army The couple will make their In ~etnam, and present\ home in Cambrid&e .• • Buffs Get A Chance Autogtlphed copies or the new publi cation "Old Newport: 11ie Seaport Years" will be avaUable at the salad luncheon and installation of the Newport Beach Friends of the Library at noon Wedne9day, June 10, in the Balbol Island home or ~trs. Hor11ce Benjamin. The 48-pqe booklet on the ldylUC dt11 of 7i years ago on the Balboa Peninsula ls Miid on tbt reminiscences Topic Blossoms of Ramona Duarte Castle. researched and edited by Ellen Lee. Sponsored by the Newport Beach Friends of the Library, the booklet Is II· lu1trated by Thelma Paddock Hope of Corona del Mir. Author William J . Duncan will discuss hia novel "R~1S Queen Mary, Queen or Queens" durlng the luncheon. His history of the ship and the peoole who made her famous will be reviewed. Reservations for the Jun· cheon may ~ made by calling Mrs. Marlln Sheely a\..673-149J. • ' Hats Bloom . Zodiac Signs Signs of lht l.Odlac camt ~ ~Ill bloom "lain on to ~ detoratinc not( \lia J.tdo tole when !he Lido .hlo • do-ll·yoursoll paint II\<£ stain woma"'' Club 1t.1gei us an. 1 ki nua.I Hats in Bloom luncheon 1 iodiac P aqQc · I. Tuesday, June 9. in the Lido I The round will mtd1Ulom l~e Club1'o""· t aro woo<J.Uu l'tPllcu ol hand- To avoid dllappolntment1, ~rospective bride• are remlnd..S lo hove 'llletl' weddJ.Dg storlea wltb black and wblte llossy P.hoto- arallh• to tbe DAILY PILOT Womu 1 0. par!mont one week before the wedding. New olflcer• •lso will be carved ~"" .t;;;"· inotolled durina tho ll:!O o.m. / You Ollln. bl~. event and a performance of paint the II l_l(p ind "Grandm•' Orandm• ! " by Y<>llf haivt 'l I l'Ollnd 111rs. Ralph llolden and Mrs. sculplu~d Wall blDltnl. 'Kit Pictures received following tbe wed Ralph Ta!Wowsky will be lncl!Jdoa dark . .a!l):_:ail Oolon, givtm. and brush. ____ _ wW not be used. ~ , For en111emenf. announce.ments tt . tinperaUve !bat tbe irtory, olso accomp•ru by a black and white glossy picture, be sub- mitted six weeks or more before tbe weddlni date. If deadline Is not met, only a story will be used. To help fill requirementa on botb wed· ding and enn•eement stories. forms are available in a of tbe DAILY PILOT oU!ces . Further questions will be answered by Women's Section stall members at 642-4321 or 194-9466. Jeane Dixon's Prophet Sees Capitol Scene WASHINGTON (UPI ) -His "vibrations" also tell Whit dou aeeresa Jean Dixon him Nhton 's daughter and son· ln·law. Julie and ·o avid do whea she wants her own Eisenhower , will "have Iota fortune told~ of children and be very hap- Hal Gould. a man about py." · town who claims to have fie also predkled th at Jae· ''psychic vlb r11tlons." says she quellne Kennedy Onassis will calls on h.im fnr a look into l~ve wlth her husband, Greek shipping tycoo n A r I s t o l I e the future. Onwls ''for the test of hii1 Gou ld originally planned to life, regardless or the rumors be a minister liKe his hither. you tiear." U1e Rev. Les!le Gould of Trlni· "She's very happy with him, ty Baptist Church :\ t happier than she was with Levo'isda\e,, ~td .. but gave up President Kennedy." Gould the ide.h before he was or-s~d. dained. Gould also iorecast the Viet- Now he is making a name nam Y.'ar would not involve for himself on the Washing ton American troops in two years. party circuit with hla pollUcal lfe predicted Sen. Edmund and romantic predietlons. Muskie (0-Malne), would not His stock went up when he be lhe Democratic presidential successfully forecast trouble candidate in 1972. ror the Apollo 13 moon fllght. He said he began 3ensing In looking over , the · scene, his psychic power nine y~alli Gould predicted Tricia Nixon ago after an acl~s frler:i t "wUI very aoon issume a with whom he had been very responslblllty she haa not an-close, died . · tlci pated and wlll conduct it "I suddenly discovered I saw with auch crest charm. abllity more than I wu supposed and Intelligence thal she will to ,see," be said. .become one of the moat ad· The dapper seer says he Costa Mesa Store • true-to-life portraits IN COLOR ~~ ... · ... .-. mired women ln the world." "trues away from predicting , The President's 24.year-old things thal aro sad." 2 CHILDREN PHOTOGRAPHED TOGETHER .... 2.98 daughter, he added. wi!I not ~s for l!jrs .. Di:wn . Gou!d Each Additional Sx 7 or 4 Willet Sire Group ..... 1.49 said her "entire llfe will get married in the future . change in t\•:o years." Great color portraits. as only the "Pixy" photographers cap· As for First Lady Pat Nix -"She has to leam a lesson," lure them . All portraits are delivered to you al our store. You on, who shares the same birth-he said ... "She will . become have your choice of several poses. No maili na:. handling. day with Gould -March 16 mor.e spiritual, ~~aching pee>-or other charsi:es. A£e limjJ, 12 years. -the psychic !IOOthsayer has pie m new ways. . . 1 o clipped: "No comm_ent." But Gould hopes to wrtte a book TUI$., 6/9 Thru SAT., 6/13 9:30 To 5:30 ,. he addi she Is "one of the and call I! ''Crou My Palm !2300 HARBOR BLVD.,· COSTA MIS'A 1nost darling women." Wilh Silver." Presidenl Nixon, Gould said, l~~~~~iiiiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOi~:;i:;;o;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:!iliiiiiiiiiiij \\•Ill be reelected and ''by the <!D} ~:~.'',~;~l;~·l~~m;,,~~I~: Cro:1l.!Tn1n. g Glory · \1•it h youth,.. , " • Rre~ident b-eauty salons Installed Installation of officers nf lhe Orange County Speakers Forum will take place in the Santa Ana home of Mrs. H. J . Howard at 9:30 a.m. on Tuesday. June 9. Mrs. Charles f'earson of Anaheim \viii officiat.t when Mrs . J. Orland Smith of Gar· den Grove assumes presiden- tial dutie s. Vice presidents taking office are Mrs. Albert Launer of Fullerton and J\.1rs. Gunning Butler of Newport Beach. Other officers are Mrs. \Vayne Reafanyder of Garden Grove, 1eeretary, Mrs. T. H. Ock'ela of 0!'1np. treasurer, and Mrs. Leo J. Friis of Anaheim, parU1mentarian. Chairmen for the ensuing year include the M m e s . Launer, program: But 1 er, hosplt1lity; Reuben M. Day, telephone: Claude Co s b y , membership: B. R. Coupland and Ellj s Porter, publicily, ·11nd J. \Viley Harris, hlitprian. Mrs. Ernest S. Ross and ~tiss Gertrude Jcntges will serve amenities. Supper Served f\.-tembers of Delta Bell Epsilon chapter, Beta Sigma Phi, will attend the last or- rtcial business meelln1 o( lhe year fol1011.•ing a potluck din- ner in the iluntingt'on Beach borne of ~trs. Steve Vida . Conductifli the m e e t i n g , taking place at 7::J) p.m, tomorrO\\I 11.·ill be M r s . Richard FreUdenthal . presi· dent. SPECIAL-HAIR STYLES He'll love the newest fashions at marvelous savings . . . · SHAMPOO· SO HAIRCUT -Hi Style SHAMPOO-SET HAIRCUT Mon.-Tu•t.·Wtd. '2.45 '1.so $2.95 $2.00 L•t•r Wnk ·12.91 12.00 $3.95 All WHk I ' • 1 · Bufjiuris·, Goitriads, 1 variety or begonia, will bttlllsctoled by Mrs. E. 0. Shertr of Santi · Monica durtng the T:3CI p.m. Thursd ay, June 11, meetlna of the Orange County Branch, Am<ilcan ll<goMI SOClefY. ESP LuFes Auxiliarv $15 WONDER CURL PERM. OPEN IVlf•UNGS & SUNDAY $20 MAGIC CU!IL PERM $12.50 ,-, r--. ~OP~E".'N•IV!9"'E•N•IN•(!•S--.. 1 l .,_,.rt #I f•1ltroA hl•ff, N1wp•rf C1nt1r e 644·2200 M•11.1 Tiu1r1., F:rl. 10 :00 t!ll t :JO; O'llt•r D•Y• 10:00 till l ilO 1 Open to tho public, the meeting will take plaet In the Grange Jitill, Otu'tlen Grove. Sample plants will be uhlbited . ESP in Our V.'orld Tod:.y wiU be discussed when Orange county Vetortnary Auzlllary members attend 1 luncheon meeting Friday, June 111 ln the AltJ)Orlm' tnn. T h t hosplt.allly hour will be1ln at 11:30 a.m. Speaking will be the Rev. ' llertha Tuntland who for the past six years has ~nducted a number of Successful Living lectures. A resident or Tustin , she and her bus baod C. Le.Roy Tuntland travel exte.nsJvely speaking to interested groups ranging from teenagers to i;cnior cillzens. ,, CROWNING GLORY 267 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA Phont 541·99t9 CROWNING GLORY ~., ,..._.,..,......_, 'i SOUTH COAST PLAZA 1 t.. .... ...,.._.._...... ••fl Phont S46-71 U -' .................................. , Appofntmont.' wclcom r. hut not ohoays Tll''.t:CS$Orfl. . •• • ! I l i • I DICK :JUCY TUMBLEWEEDS • MUTT AND JEFF AH, ~PRrt<G ••.• MY SLIPPERS, A NEWSPAPER ANDA 6LA550FWINE! JUDGE PARKER -____ .,._ I MAP TltE BO'f MITIMG lf'llllS EXAMINING lOOli\! VOi SAY ME Q)IJLO • HA.VE LEl=T' TME IUILO· t:j IMG WITHOUT 60ING Tl-IROUGH THE J _WAITING ROOM { r I PLAIN JANE ? 11 1 I~~~~ v c~~~~wo~~.:.:.: ::~;,A;,~~:" I sentence G •S O llll LI E t l DenomirialiOft Into parts • 1 L E ~ -1 o c • L ~ • I 5 Of tht USA: 58 Jii1opy : t Abbr. J words I ' Pait~ of 61 Norse units: Var. chieftain i 14 Kind of 63 Union of• I baby-workers: sillt!r Russ . l 15 Passable 64 f o'lice t 111 Ftellng of group: f weariness 2 wotds I 17 Picture ' 66 Anatomical tn.nsmltlfil cavity by cablt fi7 State C 19 Lose powtt b8 Tt1ward bl8no 20 Abscond b9 Sports result 10 Tendency 40 Shr ill bark t 21 Extremely 70 Tarr,. tO stay 43 Unskillful l dan9Mous 71 Ausimtnts at rest person f Zl Resigns 11 Archittcti.at 44 Re jection J 2S R1straint DOW.N pilaster 4& Wastts away 1 1 2& Tra -: 12 Composltioo 47 Havin9 2 words l Did 13 Man of unusual ~ 21 Put movie c11pentry hi/.h rank formation 1 ftlm together work 18 F owe1 part 49 Immerse I JZ Klnd of 2 M.1Zola 22 Mired type 52 Inferior tret cLJdgel: Var. J Hit and 2C Vehicle 53 W. Indies ,)7 Fry quickly rebound 27 Malt republic 38 foot: C Controvetsial liq uors 55 Movrd Sulfix ·· medication: 29 Fish furtively ~ 39 Oo.,,nhU 2 words JO And other;; 5& Wake Joyf11 I l 41 Nat'I 5 RrsidLJe -l llin 51' Ertincl I AeronaLJtiC b State of Jl Bargai11 birds t Ass11 .: Abbr. mind 32 THf 58 Fish I 42 ,Close by: 7 Colorado JJ Sharpen 59 Faml'd · Dlal. patk J~ Va gue · Vikin!J ) 45 Piich I Settle down i'llpre ssion 60 "---41 Jolotd IP.f the 'S Account: time!' .. together nl!Jht Abbr. • 2 wo1d~ { SO RtqUtS I 9 Relits 011 3& Lyre's bl Course 51 lm lliilive fat aid relat ive &5 Article I .......,..,.--c"""T " l " ' . ~ i..-t-t-1--t--t ; l j i,.,:-..1,-'-.......... - • I 70 - ' . . . PERl(INS .~ ........... -- MISS PEACH FJ<ANCINE • I HCAI< ' ltlU'VC' UOINEO THE WOMEN'S. LIS MOVElt!Etttr .' STEVE ROPER 'f?Ht F!<TIEIVT WHO CAllS JIMf5FtF J.EW/S M(IYS HlfS BEEN REA/7ttV6 STEVE's NEW..s"- PAP~~- • • By Al Smith ~ 0 ' ·h •l• ••• , . '"• ''I -~~ By Frank Baginski "--3 . .. .. LI'&: ABNER SALLY BANANAS OPt ;tQ •--··'·-~ Ai..u,E~ ~~! ' 5.P..:o. .Qc- ~ .40" -"-•· '-• ~··· • • DAILY PILOT J 7 By Al Capp By Charles larsatti ·~~<~ '(ol.lqfAit,.Q dL ice ' GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL (:RACKERS DODQ DID l/00 ~OIO 'iU.T E)({)EfZT5 f'ero1q 'lf!IJ" II' 1llE \lOl<l..D'S fl?POl..A'TIOO caJTll.JUES 10 6ICOIU Ai 1fiE. ~_, ~sair RATE. - ~ :l.. ::--=--~~-.~ < M > I i ! • • ISN1T SCIENCIE M!.J<V•LOUS ? ..JUST THINK, 3o Yf.41tS f>,<,o 507o OF THE PEOPl-IE THOU<;HT TV. _WAS IMl'OSSIBLE'. ·--,,. _ C:VEI<~ llJll .. L. H~VE Olli.I/ OOE. - ~A°f1E 'FOOT' Of' t.A~D 1t> LIVE. OIJ ( By Gus Arriala By Ferd Johnson IT MUST BE C/0% BYNoW ... By Roqer BoUen ...GEE, I »::lPE t.fl SQUl-RE RXJr rs 141 A lllCE 1>€161-!BDRHOOD. By John Miles F"-'NC""", WHAi HAS ALL. THA1' GOT TOOO WIT'M TMC' WOMEN'S LIS MOVflle(r? By Mell L187 I THOLiGfrr ITWAS ~•P.- ~- DE~NIS THE MENACE J_ -+-- ' · By Saunders' and Overgard -------- • Y~H~SOME OF -rnE~E COMIC STRI llEAU'f t<IU )()U! • j ( I • llaod.1. J•llf •• 1970 I I • •' ,; JI llAILY PILOT Handiwork -Hand U,IT ........ USIN G HI S HEAD -England's Geo!! Hurst falls lo the ground after hitting the ball away from Brazil's Everaldo during World Cup soccer competition in GuadaJajara, Mexico. Brazil went on to win, 1-0, with a 60th minute goal giving it an almost certain quarterfinal berth. Germany, Peru Cinch Spots- In Soccer Qu.arter Finals MEXICO CITY (AP) -The ninth World CUp Soccer championships have readied the halfway stage wlth only Peru and West German)' definitely set !or the quarter-finals. At the other end ol the scale, WWI 16 of the scheduled 32 malches pt.yed, Bulgaria, Morocco and E1 Salvador have been eliminated althou&h each has one remaining match. And in the uno(fidal batUe between Europe and South America, the Latins are way ahead with Mexico , Brazil and Uruguay leading their· groups and Peru even with West Gmnany in the remain- ing group. British bookies made Braz.11 9.to-4 favorites Mooday to win the World Soc- . cer Cup in Muloo, with England second at 3--1. The odds against the two teami were unchanged despite Brazil's 1-0 victory over Englaod.~tUy. Italy, third favorite, came down from 7-1 to 6-1. Peru and West Germany were made S.-1 Shots. Before the weekend games Peru was at IO.I and West Germany 9-1. Rtmia and Uruguay are l~l. Mexico 14-1. Cup 011.er.vatioti · Other teanu are 33-1. Each of lhe 16 competing naticu have now played two games but only three -Brull, Peru and West Germany - have collected the maximum four points. The final eight roumk'obin games in the four separate group! will be played Wednesday and Thursday. In Sunday's games, Brazil downed England, J-0, Mexico whipped E I Salvador. 4-1 , Israel and Sweden played a 1·1 tie and West Germany upended Bulgaria, S-2. For lhe quarter.finals, Group One and Two are bracketed together, as · are Croups 'l1lrte and Four. 'lbe top leatn ln each will pJay a · teeond place in the other. • The most llri<resli!Ji.,litua~ js al the top of Group FOur wtieri 'Peru and West Gennaay have the same number ci points aOO. same goal dif. t Handcuffs It wasn'L tbe glad hand tblt California received -M. was the haodiwork of "'°Ille pll<her Rich Hlllll. And lhat WIS too much for the An&els to handle. Cleveland's young hurler WM his first major league game Sunday with a nine- atrlkeout performance and another fuuy- cheeked kid, shorlSlop Jack Heidtman, toot care of hltting herok:I. 111e Iocllana dumped the Angels M to salvage the finale ot the three-game series and drop California three games behind first-place MinoHota in the American Leq:ue West. The Ana:tls tab today off before in- auguraW. a nine-game eastern road trip Tutaday nllht in Baltlmore. Tom .Murphy, M, wib face Dave McNally, 9-3, or the or1o1eo. "Feels great, just areat,'' Hand said jubilantly after poaUng hlll first win following four failures . "l knew it l stuck ll'Ollnd king enough it would hap- pen. I guess the law of averages was on my side today." Al vin Dark, who has had Hand in and out of the starting rotation since the begtnni.oc of the sealOll, leaned back in his drellln1 room chair and remarked of his rookie. pitcher -in only hi• second year of pro ball -"He's a comer ..• yessir, a real comer. "He throws a fastball , curve and slider and he gets all three of them over tht plate. 'Iltat'1 what I like about tffl: tkl. And he's a fierce compeUtor. He batUed them ell tbe way today." 1be Angel! battled, too, wttb a pair of solo home runs by Jim Fregosi and a two.mo blast by Ken McMullen in the ninth that chased Hand and brooght on Fred.Lasher to get the final out. Hand has now surrendered 10 homers In 54 iMlngs. "Yeah," he aaid, "I've been known to give up a few-long ones~ But when you win, whal eJse malters~" . Hand embellished his victory with flawless control. tie did not walk a batter. The loser was Angel .ece Andy Messersmith who suffered his fifth loss in 10 decisioos. "We can't win unless Andy wins,'' Eng_lish Still Get Kicks ference or four goats. -,; · l They meet at Leon WedneSday to see _, who fini!bel first -very_ coosciou1 that Grand Prix Winner said an anguished Angel Manager Lefty Phllllpo. "Bui I Clj!l't criticli• him l<>day. He diOO:l have Qverpowering &tlUf bul he fo!Jihl hit heart oul" Heidtmann, a J18 bitter 1 crashed the decisiye blow, a two-run based loaded doubl• in the eighth' inDiD8 lo tup a Z.-2 tie, resulting from •· two-run homer by Cleveland's Graig r;: !n lhe third and hOmers by in the· four1h and siJth innlog•. • Hand followed HeJdemann'a hit with a sacrifice fly for his lint major league RBI and the lndiau:s added aoolher nm in d>e ninth off Eddie. Fisher oo Vada Pinlion's slncle and stiolen qase and a single by Tony Horton. cAL1,o lliMLA CL•YI~:·, ~ rltl ... r ~Al O~""'"'' d 5 1 I 0 ofJl:IM.ir, Jb • I 1 0 N1llh )II • 1 1 2 ,tfgllt.I. H • Z ,I I ,,_. r1 • 1 I O Repm, rf • 0 0 0 T Ko~ lb S t I I A.Jollfllilln, It • I 1 0 simlc 2100 S"9"1C••:tb•t10 ici;md.ttk, 1b & I 2 0 MeMlll!tn, a • I 1 I Fuller, 2b I 0 0 0 R~ld1, d' ~ 11 0 0 fmltr,lf Jl t OEpn,c lOIO MelOtt• .. nn. ·n • I 1 2 M_,.m11ti, p ' .. 0 0 H1'1dp J001G•trtt1,1> 0000 L•h~Jt o e·oosu ...... 1o,pti 1100 ' E.l'l1her, p 0 I 0 0 TOl&ll l$ '10 • fot1l1 J4 ~ 1 • CJ .... ler.d OOI 000 OJI -' Ctll/orl'li. 000 IOI 002 -• UPI f 11"11tte i-----0 -ut -0£ Robust (?)'"S_occer the loser win a Im o s t certainly meet Brazil In the quart.er-final. Brazil went to the top of. G~p Three · with .Sunday~s-lriumph-over...:.:E11:11:land. The reigning champions OOw have to beat Czechoslovakia at Guadalajara Thursday to emure a quarter-final spot. Mexican race driver Pedro Rodriguez goes into a tum during the Belgian Grand Prix ahead of New Zealand's Chris Amon. The race ended with Rod· riguez covering the 28 laps in 1 h_our, 38 minutes for an average speed or 149.610 over the 244.7711- mile course. Amon was a close secQnd wfth a speed of 149.582. One or two things have become obvious after a week of World Cup soccer action in Mexico City : I. The English haven't cleaned up their playing manners too much siJlce Manchester United'• appearaACe in Los Angeles a few years ago. Manchester was accused of dirty play by the Portugueae aide that nattened it, 3-1 . England's so-ca11ed robust football looked tn~ io me like a deliberate ---WHITE WASH ---- effort to remove the opposing team's 51.ars in Sunday's televis ion show:iJ1g of the 1-0 loss to Brazi l. Jn one replay It was clear tha t Francis Lee deliberately shoved a knee i1do a Braz.ilian a{ter making initial contact. On another occasion he kicked the goalie on a marglaal loose ball play. And _ sUU another .Jimf:_ 1'e; racked uR. a foe -on detiailble clean foOtbiff:" -- J.iost or this took pllct 111 't~ fin t half. The lads rtpresenlliag Engwid did back off considerably thf last 45 minutes as far as the vicious fouls were CUI· cemed. Hard play is &0mcthin1 lo be admired. Unsportsmanlike pl8y is quite another matt.er . 2. West Germany, Peru. Braril a n d England Jook like the four strongest teams in the competitioo. The Peru· Ctrma11y duel will be telecast Wednesday on Channel 34 (live at 9 p.m. and 01t tape at a p.m. I. Elsewbtre aroond die be1t : Palll .w1w.nu of' HunU.atoa Beach raa • H'ttlme best • of 1:0 .1 in pt.chlg ruill •t Saturday aigbt1s Compton lnYital»na.I meet II tk CellteUD. WUtiama ii • topltomore It UCLA. Goldeo West CoUep'• two mile relay team . rP a wt~wtre lut plKt:, al1& ·~t tM Compt<Ml lplkdflt. . A · cooplo of lnltmtlq l~al .error• fl the Compl09 meet 1""&l'•m. pne wa1 conlln•al JPCWn• tr llaac ~· first ••me (l111e, aaid Ute prn- '("aat}. The otliltr 'A'at klenUfylag Mel f.1'9J 11 betai& from ~ Unlver1bUy or .. -ri. Cwil• 11 te.e former Slota, Ana IJigh tier now running for Cal. A couple mo re notes from Canadian i fans wbo are' melting the lctbergs with the flames fanned by my recent column which lashed the selection of Montreal as site of the 1976 Olympic Games. Pens Keuetb l:I. Royds of Ste. Adele en Haut, Quebec: "ls this any way to edgmakate your readers?," as he encloses a copy of the Montrea1 Star's answer to my column. And, writes Moncton, New BrUNiwick • resident Stephen Mac Donald! "Eat your heart out, Gleruri," as he 8ho forwards a copJ of the Star's retaliatioa. The state Junior college tennis claam- plonlhlps will be staged at Oruie Coast College in Im. Toni Hewitt. 1'68 Olympic swimmer from Corona del,Mar, has transferred from Lake Forest fife1e in llllnoil to UCLA. Rookie baseball -tOadi 1larry Wallace Is findlq the golng jut u raqb In tbe Allnmer lea.peg as be. dhl cotd.ing <>ranee Coast College ia \be S.la Co11t Conference. · Hit tum wa1 belted 11~ Sanday. la sec action, 1U1 eatry nmshecl lul. suf'Ru~rs 1en-.ir'..OU1ht 1100 and a hoCkey stic'F'fftlrOOCe· beJon&ed to Bobby Orr brought Jl ,000 in a rete:nt Boston auction. A hockey stlcl< use<I by the 1941 Stanley CUp champs from Boeton netted $150 and a be3eb&1I Cai-1 Yastnemsid belted out of Feoway Park earned a like amount The auction or like items brought $375,000 to an educational TV network. In Mexico City:;. everything should depend on the \iroup ooe meeting between M~ aod 8-l&ium in fro nt of 107,000 ~ flll&. ln the Aztec . Stadium Thursday. -' Russia, which produced the top display of power shooting in t!)elr 4-1 defeat of Bemum Saturday, :should easily defeat El Safvador Wednesday and finish with five pointt. Thil means the second quarter-final slot will go to the wiMers of ~e Mel.I~ Belgiuin clash. . · ln the individuel :tCQring race, West Germany's ·Gerhard Muller grabbed the lead with a three-goal hat-trick against Bulgaria lo ·boo8t his tot.al to four. He is followed by Braz.11'1 Jaltalnho, who acortd the crucial goal 1plnst England, •od Teofllo CUbm., or Ptru, -.·tth three each. General .feeling here is that by Thurs- day' olllht the eiiflt quarter-finalists will be Italy, Urusu-y, Mexico, Rulsia, Bratil. Engl~, Wtst Germany and Peru.~ , 1'1is would provide for four outatandlng matches -Italy vs. Mexko, Russia vs. Uruguay, Brull vs. Peru, Eoglond vs. West Gennany a ~peat 01 the 1966 World C~ fin.al in lAOdon. . Bui everyone iJ quick to 1>0inl out that the form. book hal .often been ripped apart in World Cup !IOC'Cer play . .,_,I °"'' IU WflPtf. Wfll'h. M1i1q 110Jllr•1ll t oo~ .W.1.-1 U,,IOft I I 0 J R_,,i. I 0 1 1 llt19111m l l 1 t e"llJtnCI I O I 2 fl $.11¥IMIOr 0 0 2 0 Crtciio1lo,_.kl1 • o ) o o,..., II e,,.., IV lJrugu•~ 1 I 0 l i-tru 2 I t • 11a1r 1 1 o J Wttl G.r!'Mnr 2 o o • SW.:ltn O I I I lltlflltla I I 2 0 11•••1 1 1 I 1 Morocco I I t I Yarborough Under Fire After Triumph in 400 CAMBRIDGE JUNCTION, Mich. (AP) -Cale Yarborough felt the cauijon flags were his salvation but, according to some drivers, he took U11fair advantage of one of those flags to win the $72.000 Motor State 400 stock car race Sunday. Subsequently he may not . actually be the winner of his firat major NASCAR race aince he captuffil the Motor State 500 at the same Michigan ·Inltmational Speedway track last J une. . But it may take several days lo settle protests flied soon after the race by several drivers conct!Nlillg U'le order of finish In the first aine positions. ;'Caution alweys means bad luck for someone, bbt r was glad it gave me a chance to catch up," Yarborough said before lhe protest.I were revealed . "I knew tr there were enough caution fl1g1 ouL' I could catch up," said the stocky driver from TimmonsviUe, S.C., Who could ·oauect J14,550 with a victory. . But it is precisely his "catching up" during the caub slow ups that promp- ted 'the squabblt. At least Ove drivers. including apparent rurmer-up Pete Hamilton, fifth place Bobby Isaac, and fourth-place LeeRoy Yarbrough, Mre among the dissidents. Several claimed YarboroU£h, 19'8 leading money winner with $167 ,000, gain- ed a li p by passing Hamilton durlla: one or three cauUo11 flag periods. However, a spokesman for the group of scorers said that final 'charts credit Yarborough with an official 200 laps, or 400 miles over the two-mile Course. The squabble will be settled after. scor· ing cha.its' are sent to NASCAR's be*1- quarters in Daytona Beach, Fla., for review, according to the sanctioning body's assiJtant chief acortr Doa Matlock v.·ho was in charge of · timing"' at· the · race. The problem is a procedural 01e under which race stewards could take a lap away from Yarborough and give the victory to Hamilton. Other drivers could also move up in order of finittl . "We've bad some bad luck. We've had the monkey on our backs and I ~ess we shook him off today ," said a happy, grimy faced Yarborough, unaware of the dispute Uial was to follow . It was 1 brilliantly executed ract before 47,600 fans at MIS, located about 7S miles west of Detroit in the Irish lUlls vacation area. Winning Begets Winning!! Says Lotz CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -; Wl1111U.g, 1ayi Dick Lotz. begel! winning. '1ll was awfully Important lo me, win- ning at' Alameda ," he said. "i start.ed getUng palred w1lb tour winnen and J could see what they did, how they did it, W convinced myseU I could play as v.·ell as lhey did. "Then at Mon~to, wtll, that &fl\'e me confidence. "It ga\'t n1e I.ht wjnntng atUlude.'' The 27·ye1N>ld Lotz, a ple.aaant. lhQughttul, 'o ft · s pok en young canrornian, was a \'irtual unknown unUI he won the $1SO,OOO. Mon,111nto Open goU l.Ourl!.lment two months ago. He added the lille In the Xemper Open to lh•l crown Sunday, became only the third doubt• -on the pro golf tour thls )'tar and vaulted fnto second .place on the money winning U.. al almost 11116,000. . He came Crom one stroke off tht' pace with • one-under-par 71 for 271, 10 under par on the 7,231-yard Quill Hollow Country Club course. •nd overhauled faltering Lou Graham, the leader through the st<Ond Uld thlrd rounds. "l ·just donated It.'' said Graham, Who struggled. bottle "'Ith a 74 for a . He was tied at Lhat Ogure , two strokts off. the pace, with Tom Weiskopf, who had a sparkling 66, and Larry Hl11eon and Grier JOMS1 who Md na. Dao SlktJ, 711, Bob Lwui, 11, Stevt Reid, 73. and Uonel Hebert, 74, were tied at 281 . Rod f'unselh, 70, waS sJone at 28Z and Arnold Palmer, who bad a final 71, to~ped the ln>up 11113. "f didn't think a 71 would do It," 1ald 1..Glt, "°" ln his seventh year Ol'I lh• lour. "I'm Just 1lad nobOdy behind me lllot 1 r<ally bot round." They didn't, The grinding p«UU1'! of the chase (or $30,llilO too~ Ii• loll - ~ven Loll: a Uttlt. lie went In front to stay with a 55-foot monster putt on the 11th hole , then lhrte-pulled lhe IStb. Bui he boUn<td ' back wilt) a 12-foot birdie putt on the 14th, then boll'Yed the 16th from a trap. ,. I • n......,,_,n "'*11·1+-• 7Uf.1'1-11-• ...... ,..,,_. **n....._,. ,, ..... 11.J0.-.2'1 .. 11.J'l.1 .... au .,.,, ... n-tll "'7Wt.11-al 101f.1f..,._2'1 •t>1l-J'l.1)-:IU 1'0>-1'1-11·11-m' ., ..... ,.71_,., )l,)l.7W1--1t) ,,,....,.,._,,, ...,.,...,+-:.• 71.ff.1).71-N~' ... ,,.J1.fl-21•' 7M1·11 ·12-l'l! 71·11 ·12·71-31 " ...... 1LJS-21J .. 7J.1•10-1l5 Voodoo Only-, Way to Catch I Reds-:-P~ker PITI'SBURGH (AP) -"!bad the stuff all along1" said yoong Alan Foster of the Los Angeles Dodgers. "l jU.st haven't had my control.'' The young right:hander had everything under control for seven innings in Pittsburgh on Sunday. Unfortunately he faced the Pirates for eig ht innings and in one of lhtm -the filth -the Bucs jumped all over Foster. • That brief lapse led lo the Pirales' 3·1 yictory and provided the Dodgers with 90me dilmal statistics to Wilk about" a~ they tOok today 0¥. They now begin a nine--game home stand with three against St. Louis. I.tis Angeles mt three of the four games in Pitbburgh to cicee the road trip at 6-6, its poorest excursion of the season. · The Dodgers trail AUBnta by just one- half game -but that's only a minor difficulty. They traU red hot CinclnnaU by a whopping 9~ games . "It's difficult DOt to want to slick pins into a Cincinnati doll," said Doc111:rs first baseman Wes Parker. "It's difficult not to think lhat's the only wiy we'll get help." ,. Los Angeles Manager Walter Alston said he's been counecUng the team to "forget ClncinnaU and disregard the standings •.• Wr. can't do anything about Ole Reda UllUI wt play them ." That won't bapptn for about anottler two weeks -and even L'ien the Dodpn may not be able. to' do much about CindMall. They've played the Reds five times this seasorr, have~ ,every aame and ~Ve beon OU %/.f: I • ~ ' US Mfflal •rtnlUJI~ UfrM ... , 'Mii. M/. • t I .A• tf A • ..... " ............ . G'•rt'Wltr :I I t I ~ rt • 'I W,Jt•rttll', 111 • 'I I I StllGMI. rf • l l .,,..,, rf jJ l I I Cfl...._, 111 1 I Sil_., 211 J' I l 'I S1"9Uillln, t. J I I • I l c., • ..., d a I , , M&ntwkl ... , • , Tert!orO, t I I I lll•t•, 11 I I 1 I ,._,.,, ·Ill ' • • • v .. i., , :a • f 1 L...,_.,.,il!I I I 0 l l t ... 11 n t • • Tottll 7t J . l u.· i\nttit. • 00t .. , OCll - JllttJllll"Oll -a» OOlt - 1! -e. "!lta'I. s.ne11mt11.. o" -LaJ Illa: 1;.' lllltatiuf J, LOS -l.06 'A'""ltS 1 ·p1m- bill'p a. 2a -t11111111t11. n -i-11eti. lflMJlalllllO F .. IM"!\.,Wl I 1 :I l I 7 Vtotlol IW,J.I) t • 1 I t I WP -\IMlt. t i"" -liill. Altind#ltt -11,,4. ' ' • ~tondAY, June 8, 'J.970 0.ULV Pit.OT •" J., 'Black Is MATCHGAMEPLAY County Preps =--... ~U.!t(ES TONIGH_,..T·~hine in State Ontario's Tony Grinceri auemptli mainlaln a 36-pin advaatage when the lh1rd rOund of the 10th annual We'lll Coast Match Game Eliminations gets u~r way tonjght (9) at Kona Lanes ill Costa Mesa. Underclassmen Stand Out OI lhe--e! lnd!vlduel-llO'llle-pole...vNl)I .ill~ ' Atthough the)'. manat ed on! _l'IOO·SCOrc.· --+- mg m arid sevenlti m wo m le, Athlete ' I Bruce Black, Corona def Mar High School's ClF water polo Pl1yer-of·lh~ Year, was named Athlete o{ the Year Saturday evening at his school's an- nuaJ .1ports awards banquet. Black led the Corona de! Mar aqu:itics ror«s to CIF championships ltn swim- ming, swim relays and water polo. Football Varsity -Co-captains: Jim Nbrth 111nd Rick Petros: MVP: Rick Petros; Most Improved: Jeff Tanner and Al Saia; Most Outstanding senior: Jeff Cum- mings. Sophomore -Co-Captains: Carlo Tosti and Stan Nesheim; MVP: Carlo Tosti ; Mosl Improved ' John Miles. Frosh -Co-Captain!: Brian Clemence ond Skip Lauderbaugb ; MVP' I Skip Lauderbaugh ; Mom Improved : Gordon Stewart. ., Water Polo Varsity . -captain: Scott Newcomb! MV: Bru~ Black; Most Improved : Btt Bm!ard; Most Outstanding Senio" SaiU Newcomb. aee -Captain: Greg Loitz: MV: Don Reimers; Most Improved: Mark Otto. Cee -Captain : Dave Otto; MV : Brian Milich; Most Improved : Bruce Krump- holz. Crot1 Country Varsity -Captain: Nick Rose; fl.fV:' Richard Day an:i:I Nick Rose ; Most Imjttoved : Walt Farrar. Ba1ketball Varsity-Captain : Tim C.onroy; MVP: Don Killian; Most Improved: Mike Sevier; Most Outstanding Senior : Tim Conroy. Junior Varsity -Captain: Karl Killefer ; MVP : John Sumner; Most Improved:· Scott Cameron. Bee -Co-Captains: Jim Coty and Mark Loweree; Casey Jones; Most Improved: Tom McCorkle. Cee -Co-Captains: Urry Bald\Vin and John Grower ; MVP : Jeff 'Wharton : 1.fost Improved : Mike Mulkey. · ·· W...ulng Varsity -Co-Captains: Tim Bandel and Doug Hilliard: MV: Steve Wade: Most Improved : Jack Stalnaker ; Most Outstanding Senior: Doug Hilliard. Swimming Varsity-Captain: Bret Bernard; ~W : Garth Bergeson: Most Improved ~ Kurt Krumphob:; Most Outstanding Senior : Bruce alack. Bee -Captain: Tom Baughey; MV : Bill Stenehjem; Most Improved: Mark Otto. Cee -Captain : Greg Loib:; MV: Dav·e Otto; Most Improved : Bruce Krurnpholz. Baseball Varsity -Captain: Stao Crippen : ~fVP : Qron Snyder; Most ltQproved : Keith Samuels; Most Outstanding Senior: Don Snyder. , Junior Varsity -Clptoin' Malcolm Oe MiUe; MVP : Dan Grigsby; Mast Improved: Doug SlarT. Frosh-Soptl Co-Captains: Scott Cal)1eron and Greg Stone ; MVP : Ted Clinite; Most Improved : Brian Clemence. Track Varsity -Tri.Captains: Dave Dunlap, Mike Mutter and Jim Rudolph ; MV : Kevin Barnett; Most Improved : Nick Rose; Most Outstanding Senior : Dave Dunlap. Bee -MV: Craig Roiean; Most Improved: Doug Knapp. CEE -MV: Joe Tosti; Most im- proved' Randy Ressel. Tf:Mls Varsity -Captain: Ken Neisser: f\.1V : Ken Neisser; Most Improved: Sten Ver- mund; M06t Outstanding Senior: Steve Tabak. GoU Varsity -CaJl11.in : John Free.s; MV : John Frees; Mos( Improved : Chuck Car· roll: Most 'Outstanding Senior: J~hn Frees. Gymnastics Varsity -Captain: Ken Scofield; MV: Steve Graser ; Most Improved: Bryan \Yilliams; Most Outstanding. Senior : Brian Williams. GriDcerl hu an eigbt-gacne pin total of 1,719. h second place IJ Ralph Lom- bard ol Burbank with 1,!83J Both roiled 830 in last week's four-game block. Lamar Keck of Reseda, who has won. the EUms title and the state roll.off for the past two years, is in sixth spot with 1,637 pinJ, 82 behind Grinceri. Two Costa Mesa bowlers have moved into the top 10. Fred Dougberty jumped illto the No. 7 spot from 23rd with a four-game series of 835. Costa . Mesa's· Larry Schoenfelder is lo ninth spot after being 19th the previous week. Schoenfelder rolled aJI 815 series. Westminster's Fred Riccilli ls In 13th place, moving up 2S notches with an 828 series. The field, now at 120, will be cut to 60, following the completion or 28 games. Gauchos, OCC Drop Sunday Baseball Tiffs Cypress College summer baseball forces gave Orange Coast area teams a rough time over the wee kend al "1emorlal Park in Santa Ana. Cypress defeated Saddleback's entry playing under the banRer of Foothill Realty Gauchos, 9-5, in an afternootl game and came back. Sunday night to topple Orange Coast's Ward's Pirates, 11.Q. ~ Saddleback also dropped a late alter· noon decision to Anaheim (Cal State, Fullerton ) bv a 7-3 score while Orange Coast \vas Playing a time limit 2-2 tie with the GardeR Grove Jets {Long Beach City College) in its Friday night game. Orange Coast area high s c h o o I graduates along with returning play.ers from last year's clubs are eligible to partici pate in the 1'.1etropolitan League Games. Steve Hazan, the all-Orange Coast area pitching star for Mission Viejo High School, worked the first game against Cypress but ran into trouble In the s~tb iMing wheR they scored five times. Doug Mitten, a former Foothill High player, belted a home run for the Sad- dle back s q u a d in the secoAd inning to give the Gauchos a momentary lead. Barry Wallace at Orange Coasl has Dave Barton, prep star at Costa 1'.lesa P.igh as a pitcher with ' Dan P.1oats of Huntingto11 Beach and .Don SJiyder of Corona del Mar Hjgb School~ both catch· ing for the Pirates. , Saddleback will pJayJ its next game i-StmdQ" afternoon st" 4 lo'clock against Cypress. Thursday's iame wlth the Panthers (Chapman) has been cancelled. OraRge Coast plays its-neU encou•ler Sunday at I against Cal State (Fullerton). l"l•IT GAME S•llldllll•<ll 01 c,prw !t i e••"rtll' ••rfl1111 HGl!'M'I, II 2 1 I • Snti:i~r. cf ~ 0 0 J JacksO<l. lb • o 2 o Horo-n, u • o o o (flrlt1lflmon. l'b • I O O p...,Joon. 2b • I I P LOllll~tf'. cf ' 1 I 0 Pro~ench!. ti • l 2 I Hdwler. u • 0 0 0 K•lcevlcfl, lb • 2 I ~ Sm!lfl,r; •oOtBulllng,r; •1 10 MllMn. rt 4 1 I I Roundy, rl t I I I 8oyk . lb l 0 0 0 ,,....,..,;flll, lb • 1 1 0 Haun,p 10 0 08•rr,p JOJO $<:Ott, •1 I 0 0 0 !.cflm1tr. rf I t 0 0 HOlmn,p 1101 " Tot•ls :M S i I I To1<1b >'~ t t 6 ~r• by lnnl11t1 . " . CllOHXl 7!-S l 1 010 105 2~-· t 1 IECOND GAME An1fllflm !7J )lllld1.t!IC~ CSI w1r1no, II Follmer, lb J•rlmllkl, lb ll:Oltllf, U PellTI.,.., t MOll(t, II> McKay. cl Ponllo, rf M•pln. p Brawn, P Tot1l1 ••r fll..-1 tbr~rlli • 1 1 t J'1tkion, lb • e 1-0 • 1 I 1 (hrl1tl•nson, 11 J D O a J 2 I Longnecker, ct J 2 l a •01 0 Smilh,e JO J O •0 005dlmll•,rl 1000 •OO O SC01!.2b 3000 •0208oyle.lb JOIO Jl ll Glrdnef",tf 1000 J110 Sl'IBPPArd,p J\00 I 0 I 0 Hl.....,ford. lll .2 0 1 D 81rcr,ll 0000 lS 1 ID l Tal•I~ 2' J t I lctrt lly lnnl11t1 • DDDOMl -1 1020000 -) " . " ' . ' Major League ,Standings ! • AMERICAN LEAGUE Baltimore New" York Bostoo Detroit . ytashlngton Cleveland Minnesota Angeli Oakland Chicago Kansas City Milwaukee East Division W L 36 18 31 24 25 25 24 26 .24 28 21 29 West Dlvlsioli 3t. 14 33 20 29 25 20 33 19 33 16 36 1.,.....,., llttulh 91!!1mot"r T, MHwtl!k@CI ' C19¥tltnd ,, ""''' I Oelll*"" $. °"roll 1 Pct. .667 .564 .500 .<M .46% 420 ' . . .694 .623 . 537 .377 • 365 .31)S (hi("' '-Nl'W Vortt 3. 11 lflrllnt• 9-7..J, IC-t CllY .. , Mirw.all 10. Wtll'I"""" t. 11 lnf\11111 T.,.,,..,._ GB • '" 9 JO ti i3· 3 71> 16 16\I 11\I NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division Chicago Pitta burgh St. Louis New York Philadelphia . .Montreal W L Pct. 28 21 .571 27 28 .491 24 26 .480 25 28 .472 23 29 .442 19 al· .365 Cincinnati Atlanta Dodgen . West Division San Francisco Houston San Diego 40 15 •. 727 29 22 .569 30 24 .:;si; 25 ·30 .455 25 31 .446 2S 33 .431 S~ndlr'1 111111111 Molilr~•1 11, A!l1"l1 1 C!n<ln111 16. Ntw Yori! t Pfl1l&OtlPlll1 10, HOllS!On J Pl1t1buroh "2, ~ 1 s1. LGVIS 10. ,.,, oi..o ' Cllkloo I, kn FranclK:O 4 T .. t1"t .,_., GB 4 4\i 5 61(, 101,J 9 9\i 15 15\!i 161> Cllkt" IJoM 0.1) " Mllwt\111:" fKr111H 1 .. 1. ••M Ntw Yon {M<Alld"" l"l 1! aotfOll 111111"" ... "' J.01. 1111111 ' , O<llY •-tcl1ech11ed. T11e•t'l"I G•-W_,,.!M* .. lltlllQ Ctly, lllthl Bol!Ofl II' 0!1"'90, flltltl Mll"'*N 11 Dell'Ofl, II~ Otl!ln at Glrwllnd, 11~1 On!r i•l'Yltt lld'ledlllfd. TutM11'1"1 G'"'" Clntlft•\111 " Mol\lrul. lllf/\I A!l1ntl al PflllldtlPl\11. 11111111 Ntw YOflt 11 Hoi.rdin. lllpilt SI. LOI.Iii " Dedttf1,, llitl'it (flleltte. et s.... 01-. "lfh' .. _.._,.. Mtl!Mni, 911111 MIMllDll .. ,._ y.._ 111tM ... lthburtfl 11 S... f'tllldi<!il, """' DEAN L WIS 1966 HAUOR ILVD, • .COSTA MESA StrvJte •ncl P1rt1 fM All Imported C1rs Modem Body Shop for All Cars , 646·9303 Orange County's Lugut and Most Modern Toyota and Volvo Dealer . . I I point producing spoCa: available ln Tom J:lt)(l;y (also l+lO'h) on ewer Spl'ke Meet Saturday's state-track and fJeld finals mlws. ' at the University of C.lilomia's F.dwardll The third place quintet was com· • Stadium. 14 wel'fl occupied by jun Io c prised of ,hwlor1 Percell Keeliog pf Mom· Salllier's K.,to Lopez (9,03.11 and Cam· polindo's Tom Hale X9:l0.0) ire also juniors. By PHIL ROSS -and sophomore perronners. ingside (880, 1:52.8), Tony Kriywsiak ot .... ~ PMtt lleH, • The Underclassmen sported three fi nt Of Garden Grove (440, 48.2), Ed Mend018 El Cerrlto's 440 relay tearri1 wh.lch placed ~nd to victor~s Santa Ana. was anchort;d by 1pee<1y jwUor Sammy Burns. BERKELEY -!'ive tnd!viduals and place medals. four runnerup spots, flve of Helix 'two mile, 9rot.O), Oare Ctuim· a relay team ICOl'td points for Orange tlllrd 11taces a pair 'bf fifths ness of Awalt (mile. 4:15.0), and Ute Cuunty Saturday in the st.ate high school The winni~g underclass p~pects were ~~~:entlOoed Mosley in the high !~~Ji~:!u~~d~:~dsa~~u~~versity a trio. of juniors from Southern The ~ther place medal ·carted off ty Junior Richard Walker of Arroyo wu seventh in the nille at· 4: 19.0 while junior classmate John Robtrts of Caatlemont was ninth in the talented 440 field at 49.5. California. 8 junior went lo Santa Rosa's Joe De A throng ot 13,000 witnessed festivities Bonita's Allen .cart.er:· who doubled Dora, who ran the t40·ln 41.7~ as Scuita Ana took second In the team ~ as a baseball player this spring, defealed r:e A.lwtosith· 19 points behind victorious .a }bnnldable field for the state 100 s · . 'crown ia 9:.8. The latter outfit piled up 29 r>i~~ · Fellow junior Alfonzo Hall of Morn-* * * * * * State Meet Results lo ~e the first Northern Catifonna lngside captureil 1lie t2Q high hurdles a_ggregatlon to cart of£ the team trophy in l3.9 and was fifth in the 180 lows smce 1.963. . in a windy 19.J. Jackie. White ol-~nta Ana was ~e Brent Tubb, last year's CIF Southern outstanding, single perfo:rmer carry1~ Section Bee 13'.0 titllst at CamarillQ, lot _ 1. <ert1( 1knrt!';~.1t, v~~1 l·' 1. s. ~t·•i.r.r.'i· °.!,t11r ft!· Al°' ,:1s,, , L• the county .!I colors, taking the 220 111 was representing Reseda 's Cleveland · w1111e t~1111 A1111 t.t 11. L11111ns !PUtaburq 10.1 ,,~!!' p'J'Y l:U.1 :a. MOr11lna1I:. tna1•Wo0.i 1:1~ 21 5 I . d . the 100 f th '· l rtd<l•ll (l(~nn. ~} 10.0 1. Bomme111o ' oo.;;lnll!M'f, COl'nDIPI! J:llS. 1. O•kl•r'll lKfl . ' P ac111~ secon m . or e High in the finals Saturday and ~ ic~·~r: 'Nl:ue !!:~~· ""'' 11.s 1. IDlllll'llrll• ''11.t. ~ st:ai~ht year and ancbormg the came through with a mile win in 4:12.9. 1c1nrmoor. San Ma1ea1 11.1 J. whh• (Ham111on, ,~H~. ~'"""'~;.,!o., Cu1t;i\~~ldl!1/-e~ ~'C,~' Saints wmnmg 44{) relay combo to a The quartet of runnerup slots were. h~~'ifcG1fi 1r,::111!'.1t..1<¥,1,,, carruoi n.l !. t i. 111. Ceflc«dl .. , •· 11.0mond IY 1o 41 5 'Ill , "town t\or. Altos> 0 I , !loten ,,. IY, onc:ord) ... , ' °""' {Et c11on.orit~h · ·.. . . . . taken up by the lone sophomore of 1w11111 8 &11tr11111c1l •· ,, KnY10.i•~ ·iG•"'"" M . Friday 1n the. state trials the Sa.int the group and lhr""' J'uniors. &.~lh~·] 11~!'1.r. (LOJI .1.um) "·' 5. De 1.-ruma -1. twRn11 csr,r1, S..11 M1'"'1 r f Whi Joh Wins d J "'"" Brc L lt.:~~r11e2i 1li!1/r~~~ .. ~~r:fa-t~":.1.:16...!'"~r.r.:-i oursom~ o te. n tea• 1m· Soph flash Larry Boaeri ow Wes t 1c':1.mon\:o~rl:'~1 ~·n.,~~'it~11:.;r(k~,;1"'11:\ti~! Gard,~) '"11; s. Fu!tcl\tf u!al$Clll, s10(kto11 my Davis and Bob Harrell had equaled Bakersfield was second lo Los Altos' nal9WODdl 1:52.1 '· B••ltf" ri:m Ancieltt> ,,,_, U..'-'>. • he t econd of 41 4 · · · • 5· M.,..,..u C L•kt1'::~1:0 /:f.·1· · · Pol' v111C1 -J· r1 Ll11141v IL• $1trr~• <1rmlchle1\ t mee r · 1n WIMlng its swift Rick Brown in the 440 with a ,.:1"1 .. ,lr...Ti:. 1..1.1c1~.~~·~·cr.t~~:11\_~11f· , .. 1011 '· tt11 M.1111.r, Uc:•WODd .. lo\lt '· qualifying heat. .ta 2 Mo1111t•lil 'VlfWI ':u 1o 4.. H1r111r 1c11lrW10<1t. sol Pl•ce 1$anl• llttMor!> 1"' a; 1m1r ts..t111• D · also third · ••· I 'IQ, ' ':1.U $. Slnltrl (Mii 5, Mlllb<ttl .,l,,J_ &lr"r• , ... 1. $<:flu • (H1llk. ·SO ..... avts was lll wn:: 180 ~w McKinley Mosley oI Bakersfield was Two r.ti -Ii Jol>niOn !Wes• TOl'r111<1) ·=~' $h6t PUI -I. =-J PlllOt!Y) ue '· hurdl es, ahead of Bolsa Grande's Rick second in the lows in 19.1 and thlrd '~ .rMko:t j~rn,~ J&r't:1~ra •. 8:11111 'f~~~1 1"l1i-1.,.,"' •· 'si:~ltl.,. '1W11i..~n. i.".:: Gilson. with both runners stopping the in the high sticks in 13_9, i~Ji.Mocltl)lil t :o1 ,1 . ~·•111(1a IE•st 1a11."'111r.iT a.;c:~:1-~ si.P'.:!.!i:'111~~!:"1~!o_, · 201 _, ("'"' wat~hes in 19.L AU tiJ!les were wind-aid-Randy Fulkerson of SMta Fe, although ,,~'!,_ ~::'...,.-; (~,11~~.~~~1i:.=~·3., 1~1=~ ·~;1rJ: 1111111,l~ ,::~'°1,1 51&rrtt~·~~11:A~~~ ed. 10 the JQws, which were, won by only S-71h, was second in the high jump ~l•ktrlnt1dl '~' ·•• I UJtiv iPllltlwrtl 1•.1 J. 1Por11rv\li.\" 112~ •. ~nt1t1 t'TU11r1J 1?t~ J. P.1Jlton Turner (18.6) of Oakland s Castle. at 6-JO and then tried three w1suceessful ~ t ~~11 "i~r""' 1c11111""°"'· o.~,ltndl 1o~115f.":~1~«\~~-Los AUO! n, s..n1• .1.111 mont High. tries al 7-0Ye. 1l~12·1.M."~1J..•r~/:.ld>G,1.'~.1·~~~ o~~. :t "~~c~0~1·~1.~~· =~norrir .u~i.......ad ~ Anof:her co U o t Y .third Was ac-'l'he other second placer was junior 17~ 1w1r.:~°"'1""''°'· 11'41-1 "·' c.1.t1 11v,~•kr.= .... 1• w~'ll·TO:,':nc.~•r:l1·~~!~1 comphshed by Garden Grove's talented Mike Hill of Mayfair who climbed 14·10h ""f ~~ ''P1iiiwi9 s.rt~ A,;-· H!1~11~ .. 1!1Lf"~11'~ f"'i:".;11"• l:'i::r.'.eaC'i"~1=.: Sf"~~ s:;i:r~~ junk>r Tony Krzyzosiak, who earned that 1--------' ----------------------:;__='-'==-"-"-='-'=~~~ .spot in the 440 with a 48.2. Fullerton's Kent Pagel was the only coontain with any luck in the field events, placing fifth iJI the shot pul at 61-6=!4. The shot was won by a ClF Southern Section t.itlist Randy Withrow f Pasadena ) at 63-8\4. Los Altos' rush to the . top of the team heap was led by super runner Rick Br own . Brown became the first athlete in state meet armals to capture a 440.-880 double and he also anchored the winning mile relay team lo a 3:15.6 marl via a 47.0 anchor leg. The ~ti . 140-lb. ironman laid back in the middle of the field and then burned off a 54 .6 final quarler \Yith a tremendou s finishing kic k to outnod Casllemont's Nathaniel Burks (1:52.2) for the 880 crown. He was limed in 1 :50.6. Brown returned to the cinders just 15 minutes later and played the same game in the 440. , Brown's 6--0, 190-lb. teammate. Chris Adams. uncorked a pending national in- terscholastic recnrd loss in the discu.o; \\1ith a 201·3 effort on his next to last attempt. Adams' wilming series was 189· 3, foul, foul, 192-3, 192-9. 201..J. foul. El P.1odena's Dave White was fourth in 9:01.8, having struck in the middl e of the pack most o( the race. Check Out This List of Losers BERKELEY -How tough is the com· petilion in the California state high school track championships? Perhaps this list of llKln-medal winning sixth places will afford an idea of how deep the excellenct! was in the weekend state meet at the University or California. ,, 100 -Riley, FresriO Edison, 10.0. 220 -Johnson, Blair, 22.4. 440 -Mitchell. SD Lincoln, 48.7. 880 -Franek, Whittier, I :55.0. Mile-Palomino. El Cerrito, 4:17 .2. 2-mHe -Lopez, Sang~r, 9:03.6. 120 HH -WashingloA, LA Frem ont. 14.2. 180 LH -Duke, Fresno, 19.J. 440 relay -LA High, 42.2. Mile relay -LA High, 3: 18.7. llJ -Wood. Oakland, ~5~ ' l.J -Krzyzosiak , Garden Grove, 23-2. SP -Clark , Riverside, 61 ·3~4. PV -Tuck er. Ganesha, 14--6. Discus -Heilman, Merced. 17:>-4. DEAN -LEWIS ANNIYEltSAIY SALE "" $1697 +T11• I Lie • All OtMr Mll4hfs I• S..U Marte lt-Hllll.I Plck111,_ L.-d c,.1~,... VOLVO SALE "-IC.ED '69 Toyota $1695 CW-flllrclloo CM, 6-Jllltd, jt .. H, lin. 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NOW 33.M M7 .. 1S , , 14S-1J , , )l .tS , , I .ti , ... w, ,_ .... '411 ti.e WHIRWAll JUJILUS Ii" ·~ •-.. fMI. "'" toO-IS , • ., 40.tS , , 2.to J71-14 • , llJ.14 •• 40.tJ ,, 2.M l11-lJ .. tlJ.IJ •. 42.t5 •• i.2t NOW 36.44 ,.,,.. , ......... .w .. , 36 MONTHS GUAIANTlf WITH 1• MONTHS 100'4 AUOWANC·E '"'"'1$1 P1111cli1n ou .. 111111. Your F"«i!rnost• tire Pl' .. t..,uon 1u1r111tee CCl'!lll!rs all Fortniotl p•1Hf'l1er tires te•· et-pt our 1PKlel hlfll·riet10rft!ence 11re1) apfn~ 111 roed hllurd or def"'l 111 urts. YOll art protl'C1.ed for 1t11 et1!111 s lated monll'I• ol 1uer1111ee. If your tlr• fail' dur"ll'll tfle 1u1rant1e P911od, r1turn ii ta '" end we will, el °"'' ootion., reJ)air y0<11 tire, or m1kt •n 1Uow1n<:e blKd on the orl1!111I pu~h1se prlca. lncludin1 1pplkabl1 fedlnol ExclM T101 loWllrcl l¥H1 pu~he•• of 1 "''"' lirt. W• will ellow 100'!li. OJI tht a1l1lnel pu~hes• J)flcc, lncludln1 appllublt f..,_el t11.cf5e T1•. durtn11: tl'lt 100% 11Jow1nee period. Tll11e1lltr, <ote will e!IOW 5-0% CH' 25% of Ute CH'l,inel purehlM flllCt., ineludln1 epplk:tblll! Feder1t E•etMt 11, toward the ,,_!. en111 of• 111w tire. (See et.. rt below I rOlllMOST" l'llOTtCTION GUAJIANTlt: CHA•T Hl•l'I HOW YOU ll &UA•ANTll WOJtltS: f'nUN l 1Nrlnt11 Ptri.__·---·---·-··35 ..tM IOO'Mo 1t1 .. 111Ct 'tri-4 .• -------·-··1·14 •trllhs. '50% 111-1ne1ptriM.-·-··-··-·-----15·24111•11tfl1 2S,. ellaw1nt1 111riN .. _,_,~···· .. -·--·······--.2~ "'"'"'' Trtld Lill l"nlttcliln. Wt build into t111ery Fote"'°5t tif9 Mle 1r1e:Uat1 lncllc~tor•. They sl1n11 whet1 )'OW-1~-ttiould \" repleted. If yo11r Ure WtMI out ltKCtpt for ~t tilt,.. mtntl M: will mill• an •Uowanct blstd on ll'll oritlnil our· eheM 0<!c1, lltc!udln1 •PPlk:lbl• fecltfll b(.iM T••i.towen:I 1ne Plltel'llM of • nawJifl. W1 11IU allow }J durlfli! "'9 Utt~ h1!1 or~ durln1 !fie aec.ond h1lf ol !I'll at1tU tl!Otlll'll ol .., .. an lee. 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' • • AMERICA:S CUP HOPEFUL -France's entry in the 'America's Cup race, the 12-meter France, is Joaded onto a German freigh'ter to be shipped to NeWJM?P,WJ'.\.I. v.:here she will compete in a best of . - -. } Ul'ITt'"""° seven series with the Australian hope, Gretel II, to decide which will challenge for the cup. Gretel ll is ·also on her way to tlle U.S . by freighter. _ Weatherman in W eL, Windy foke on Race1·sin Tidelands . . - Preliminary Trials Start In Cup Race The weatherman said It loud and clear for Saturrlay's forecast: Overcast skies and winds to six knots. NearJ.y 100 .skippers in a! many sailing yachts believe«:! the fofecast as they ap. proached the starting line for Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Huntington Tidelands race - most of them sans foul weather gear. A! a result, there were so1ne damp crews before the Ocean Raclng Fleet reached Los Angeles Harbor where wester- Ex-Star Champion Bevar Sails to Solid Victory in· S~ling \_lace Don Bevar of Southwestern Yacht Clu~, ii former world Star c'lass Nlling thampion, sailed hit> Stliiig sl09p, Isle de Fleuer to Q decisive victory over 18 competitors Sunday in ca!ifornla Yacht Club 's Finn-Soling ~atta. games at Kiel, Gennany. Final results: SOLING -(t) Jsle de Fleuer, Don Bevar, SWYC; · (2) Norsch Okse, Car I Eichenlaub, MBYC ; (3) Gold .Digger, Roger Welsh. NHYC; (4) Gray Fox, Bruce Peachy, SDYC. ly winds gusting over 25 knots kicked up a short, square sea both lnslde and outside the breakwater. Sall changes were. the order of the day as lhe boats were over,burden- ed . Encore, a Columbia-43 sloop sailed by Fred MacDonald of NHYC, wa! the overall and Class B winner in the ocean NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) - Preliminary trial! to deCide an America's Cup defender were set to begil today between the yachts Intr~pid and Valiant on Long Island Sound about mJdway between Stamford, CoM., and Oyster Bay, N.Y. The first two days of com- petition, which will continue through Friday, will be just between Intrepid and Valiant, with Heritage not expecled to racing division. join the trials until Wed· In addition to the OR boats nesday. One of these three will de-cumpeting tin the Ahmanson fend the cup against a yacht Series, there were fleets of !rom France to Australia PacUi Handicap, M i d g e t beginning Sept. 15 off New- Ocean Racing, Rhodes and ]>Ort. PCs Luders-16s. The latter The Intrepid is skippered three lasses sailed a 14--mile "by .Bill Ficker' oC Newport cours ~ the Emmy oil Beach, CaW.; the Valiant by derric . Final resu.Jts : ... Robert W. McCullough •of Ocean Racb:ig . Riverside, Conn., aAd the OV RALL _ (1) Encore; Heritage by Charlie Morgan (2) C Jmaera, Fred Liebhardt, of St. P~tersburf~ Fla. SOY ; (3) Atorrante, Burke Intrepid made the last suc- Sawy r, NHYC. · cess_ful defense ~r the Cup, C SS A _ (1) .NewsBoy, ~g8:1n!t Australia s Dame Pat- Jack1Baillie, BYC: (2) Orient, be m 1967. Peter Davis, N~YC; (3) Hilaria, Ed Callender,·SWYC. • ' \ . - SHOP SEABS-SUNDA YS 1% Noon to 5 p.m-:- SAVE $10,! · Tachometer ·Dwell Meter . Regular $49.99 bl• &.UllO ud MID RPM • ..., ~Good-Bad Point. -· run, t....i.-torbed cln:ult: AutoiiJaUe TOltqe telectian. Wort;• on l ,12,2t or any wltafe. FunWhed witk Dunl Cell· "'""'- Fully lraJllis&orlled circu!L cu lho be. med fot outboard moton aDd. mqDeto S)'I• ..... _ -.....,. ......... mtrcu?J' battery (battery Included.) Selector Swttda for .readfDa Dwell or R.P.M. Regular $14.99 Dwell Meter SAVE$5! Auxiliary Starter Switch ' DAILY I'll.OT 2J Monday thru Slhmlay. 1:30 a.m. 10 9:JO p.m. For 'I to 12 wit 111temL Cirome plated boQ'. Trip Switch allows tube to f1aM ""' .... -Sou.I. -.tateclrcuit. • SAVE$2! • Timing Light Regular $11.!f 14~9 ~ Neon Timing Light Sean Pi1.ee! --1l&M. ........ ·-- 4 JlC· Engine Bob Andre 'ot Mission Bay Yach t Club, fotmu nalional champion was the winner i'11 the Finn Class-,1,the Olympic single-handed saulng dinghy. -The sotffig isa-new Olympic class which will be sailed for the first time ln the 1972 FINN -(1) Trout Fishing 1i'I America, Bob A n d r e , }.ffiYC: (3) Spook, Henry Spragu e !If, NHYC; (3) Serious.-Ned ilail, Hunlington, N.Y. YC: (4) Luftmeister, FrcJ )lJll~r Jr., SSSC. CLASS 8 -( 1) Encore; (2)-Chimaera; .(3)..Akul'ante .• CLASS C -(IJ Destiny II, John Hooten, BCYC ; (2) Atari, John Cazier, BYC; (3) Sanderling, Poole & Klrk, BCYC. CuLrachts ---1----Testing Set '.1 Ullman Wins Class A In BCY C Lido Regatta I • Dave Ullman ot-Balboa Yacht Club was the "Class A ~inner in Bahia Corinthian acht Club's annUal Lido-14. vitational Saturday. The regatta was held with three races Saturday an:Jy. Some 35 entries turned otlt for the event. Strong winds contributed to some gU!ly racing i~de the bay. There were no juniors in this yea r's race. As class A wi nner Ullman took the Los An gelts Ex- aminer .and the Jim Berkshire Perpetuals. Class B winner was Tom Hinshaw of Lido Isle Yacht Club v.'ho was awarded lhe W. D. &hock Perpetual. CLASS A -(i) ~Iagic, Da ve Ullman, BYC: (2) lloncy, Gared Smith, BYC; (3) Lowly Roman. Rolly Lohman. BYC. CLASS B -(!) No. 32n, Tom Hinshaw, LTYC : {2) SwurMerCul, Don Bartz, SSSC; (3) No. 2770, JlJU! Wilcox, BCYC. . BREEZY BAY -Two Li<lo-14s cross tacks in Bahia Corinthi an Yacht Cluh's~llfh annual invitational fbr the class. tron~ winds created some exciting sit· uatlons at marks. · ' " CLASS D -(1) Balclutha, John Kincaid. CBYC; (2) Windswift, Karl Tunberg. CYC; (3) Freestyle, Lippold & Cicero, NHYC. PHRF -(1) Velcaro; (2) Robin, Jack Dalablte, SSSC; !3J Aphrodile, Bill Langjahr; sssc. MORF -(I) Si Bon, D. B. Tal madge, BYC; (2 ) Blue Fin, Ed Feo, ABYC ; .13) An· d11le, Everet( Temme, SSSC. n H 0 DE .< • PC -(I) !1-l)sl.l·es:;. Bill Taylor, BYC; <11 Jn1p11lse, Paul Marx, BYC; IJ} ~li~ty, Ted Congdon, !IHYC. LUDERS-16 (I) Windsong, Bill Fundenbcrg, NHYC; (2) Pre-Empt, Leroy Southerland, NHYC. Nowon Way To America SYDNEY, Australia (AP) - Gretel 11, Australia's entry in th~ America's Cup yachti ng challenge, was taken aboard the freighter New York Siar today fo°r shlpmeJIJI to the United States. The freighter will sail from Sydney Wednesday for BostoJ1J and Gretel II is expected to be at Newport, R.J., by the erid of. July. There it is to seil against the French 12-meter yacht La France in a serles of elimina- tion races beginning Aug. 21. The winner will meet the U.S. defender, still to be riam· ed, in races off Newport starting Sept. 15. LEGION BASEBALL • • • (Continued fro,m Page %0) Svm0fl1, " • ' ' • V•rrler. u • I ' 1 HARaott AH°G•u en .....,,.,, d • • ' ' Wlllo:tnl.Gfl, c • • • • .. ' h '" Fo~. P • • ' • IACKl,,11y, SI • •• ' • TOI tis ,. • • ' k-"' 1111111111 Fl1!01r, 71> ' 1 ' • o ....... "' "' 100 -411 ' IC11betlt1. c • • ' 1 Fourl!P I" V1lllly OK: ... 30• -' • ' Nell\, d ' • • ' FOUNTAIN VALLIY UI Emll<"tr, lb • • • • S1mPIO'lo If • ' • • •• ' ' '" H11"!. • • • • • Ht•. 1b • 1 • • Mlrllnel, rf·lb ' • ' • Sll1mtll, lb • 1 • • ""''' " ' • • • C~11n::~we11, lb ' • • • l'lllfn!fltr. II • • • • Frllr, 11 • ,_ • • Olil•"'bfrrv, I' ' • • • Ctnlr-tll, rl • • 1 ' Toten, " ' • ' $~.lb • ' 1 • ktrt bW ln111fitt Goo01k1r. If ' • • • .... ... ,,. '* 000 000 -0 • ' v •• ..,.,, .. ' ' • • Hlrbor A11etll 001 000 II• -i • ' Doller)ll, (I • • ' ' l'OUHTAIN VALLIY l•I Wllkenton. c • • • • .. ' ' "' St1111eY, p ' • • • HI•, 'b • ' 1 • 81111011. • • • • • SllfmPll, 3b • • ' • Tot1!1 .. • ' • Frllt. If • ' ' • Setn !tr llllltllft Ctnlr111, rl • ' • ' Rtncl'la l"tcHlce '::: llDG 011 ,_. ' • Goodtker. rf • • • • Fo1n1t1l11 Vtllit 1 111 010 0-.S.J ~ DAlhTAKE CARE OF YPUR GRAD!! Start him out 1afely end wisely on a new- SUZUKI Sportcycle. I r W1 wlll IHI ....... lmfy ,.... -.,. ,,. .... ~ ......... JAMES LTD. 1!114 OLD HIWPOll:T ILYD., C.M.-442·0040 l Low Priced Vac Gauge-Fuel Pump Tester A Buy! -55 1111' LeU,..-....... w1 detect mlaar mslDI tnlabla, Wore Utey ..._.. major ·npoln. It ......... -yaeuum In IDchel; aidl ta -.... , .. ......,. Fila uyp1U... •• 9~9 Heavy -Duty Co_mpr~sion Tester Regular $5.99 - 4~9 Keep your cat la. U. b111t _., "'"""-Cw+--~sures up to aoo lbl ..... ..... _ !>I .......... MljlCa' fl .. a;r'l>ldtiilocllok. Regular $84.99 -eomplete. 4-in.:l En~e ISAVEt15J Enghie' · Tune~Up - Analyzer Tester ' 69!l9 399-9 ~T .............. ...... ...woce-.-•. "".,,.,., --...,_ loll .......... bol"'7 powu. .. ·--· ~ Ask About Sean Convenient Credit Plans __ .. _ .. _ ·-·-· --·----· -··-·--·----·-··---·-· _ .... _ ---· --· --"''"' _ .. t ........... . ... ,_.. ................................... !" ..... ~~ .................... ,_~ ..... .. I ==·· --·-_,. __ , --·-.. --- -----.-------..-.---.-•t-1 ,. - I -j tJ O.ULY PILOT s Mond;\Y. JuM 8, 1970 . l' pr Moaett'• Wor.ila · Here's Tax Audit Tipoff • By SYLVIA PORTER Since you turned in your 1988 lncome tax Form 1040 weeks qo, yoo may call me a tin•nd•l sadist for tell- ing )'OU DOW what other tu- payers deducted for key items in your income bracket so )'OU can compare what you clabned against the averages. But 1he la"'51 figures -bUed on 1961 taxable returns and as up-to-<iate as you can get -have just become available. Even though it's too late for you to revise or con- ·' ADJ. GR. INCOME * TAXES I 369 439 497 "' 625 792 !,09< sider a1Wir1g a dollar total. I suspect youlill be highly tempted to take out the carb<rn copy of your •69 return and oompart your figures against those below. (That's what I did.) At the Vt:rf least. this colullUI wl.lJ give yoo an ad- vance tipoff on the odds you ' II be caUed t<r an audit of your '69 return. FOR IF YOUR deduction.< are substantially above the averages in your tax bracket, the chances soar that your return will be plucked for an INTEREST I 368 439 491 "' 629 736 914 CONTRIB. I 213 21' 232 244 26' 313 434 186 714 words or the Research Institute.of America, "this is aa impetrtant test for chances or audit." So be prepared if you perceptibly exceed the s e averages, wilh data and d~uments to prove every dollar of your clalms. ON THE OTHER hand, if your deductions are way below JI,<~·'• Lhese averages, start this day to keep far more careful records of your '70 spending. You well may be overlooking wme deductions and un- necessarily paying higher lax- es than you owe. The following points stood out when I compared the new averages with previous figuns based on earlier years. -Average deductions for laxes have jumped sharply in all incomeDrackets. .. OAlt.1' Pll.O'I Si.fl ....... I l ·I 6,000 16·1 7,000 17·1 1,000 11·1 9,000 '9·1 ]0,000 110. I !S,000 Ill ·I 30,000 121 • I 21,000 121 • I 30,000 $30 . I I0,000 llO • 1100,000 fl00,000 -up 1 ,4~ l,TIB 2,486 4,231 12,404 l ,l I 1 1,309 1,138 2,975 10,llZ l,ll'J6 2;m 13,895 -Average deductions for interest also have jumped sharply -. an obvious trend in view of the upsurge in jnterest rates. PACIFIC TELEPHONE GETS NEW IMAGE SchHftr Puts Fluorffctnt Dec1I on Company Truck ADJ. GR. INC. I l·I 6,000 16·1 7,000 $7-1 1,000 11·1 9,000 '9·1 !0,000 110 ·I 11,000 l !S ·I 30,000 130 ·I 21,000 121 • I 30,000 $30 ·I I0,000 llO. 1100,000 fIOO,<MXI -up MED. EXPENSE 340 326 327 314 321 794 316 50% INSUR. PRE. 79 86 87 - 89 91 9t !16 -There has been little change for contributions. -There have been erratic movements in deductions for medical expense, but In many brackets these deductions are down. Bell Going Mod 'Olive Drab' Image ~etired 372 102 <SI 107 ... 110 628 113 00! 112 (eap,rllhl 1'11 by Field Enterprues, Ille.) · -FOR THE FIRST TIME, the Treasury is indicating the average deducted by tax· payers in various brackets for 50 percent of medical in- su rance premiums. Did you fail to take a separate itemiz- ed expense deduction for a limited amount of y o u r medical insurance premiums -regardless of how little your other medical expenses were? If you forgot this for '69 (or '68 or '67) get Form I040X right now from yoor local 'Bawl Street Journal' Declares Year of Dog NEW YORK AP) "Market Confirms 1970 as the Year of the Dog," proclaims Friday's banner headline of the "mourning edition" of "Th& Bawl Street Journal," a bUJDO?WI P,bllcatloo that has been parodyt.ng the stock market for more than 50 years. "The Bawl Street Journal", Director of Internal Revenue has a press run of 9S,000 this and file it to ask for a refund. year, says John Eckelbe rry, -Also for the first time, this year's editor-in~h\ef. the Treasury has broken d())Vn The paper is sponsored by average deductions claimed by the Bond Club ol New York, ~·ealthier taxpayers. lf you're an association of about 600 in the high income brackets, partners or officers of firms . y<>u'll be utterly fascinated by in the investment brulklng your averages •••• busineSIS. The military appearance ol Pacific Telephone's olive drab trucks and vans are in the process of being "booorably dlschar.ged," according t o Charles Juengst, supervising garage foreman for the com· pally'• Santa Ana·Riversidc Division .. The 26S vehicles in Pacific Telephone's Newport-Costa Mesa district will eventually discard the familiar green col· or and don die Bell System's "new look." The new vehicles are tw1>- tone, white and gray.green, separated by stripes of blue and ochre. "Change-over from the in· sUtutionalized green lo Bell 's new colors will not happen overnight," Juengst sald. "1'he proceu will lake aboUt five years before we convert the entire mobile fleet in the Orange Coast area." Bell System's new design serves a dual purpose, Besides presenting the public with a fresh look, the trucks are ac· lually safer with the addition of a lighter color and the fluorescent stripes and belt "The trucks light up like a Christmas tree at night." explained W i 11 i a m H. Schaefer, garage foreman. ''Those stripes are really fluorescent." The new colors are not restricted to just telephone vehicles, 'The commercial of· fices in San Clemente and Costa Mesa will be redecorated in tht new Bell System c<>lors. "Our telephone booths will also gel lhe new look," Juengst said. Pacific Telephone's symbol and conventional appearance were designed by Saul Bass and Associates of Los Angeles, Black bordon edom this )'ear's edition u tbt paper 1poofs the financial com- • munlty and 1he receDI bleat events on Wall street. F0r eumple, one of the fictional -.. lw Robert w. Haack, president of the New York Stock Exchange. musing en a psychiatrist's couch: "I wonder il tbert are 111.y more college presidencies open." The pa~'s fonnat t s similar to any other's, right down to tbe television listings, On Channel 11, for Instance, viewers can tune into "The Ei:idleu SWnmU," referring to the market.'s performance in past months. And for 1 news item lhe paper reports that because so_ many conglomerates h a v e recently been buying motion picture comparlles, Standard and Poor's is updaing its rating system f o r con· glomerate bood issues. Pilot Plant Being Built By Firestone County Shows Gain In U.S. Bond Sales First publlslied about 1919, J.LKemper With Boise Addition o( J. Loren Kemper of Garden Grove of the enginetring department o f Boise Cascade Building Co,, M o b 11 ehome Communities, Western Division, was an- . Instead of the traditional AAA, AA, A, BBB, BB, and B ratings given to bond securities, It says lrom now on conglomerate bonds will be rated G, M, R or X. For advertisements there's one by a leading Wall Slreet Brokerage firm that says, "Don't look for us in the Yellow Pages. Were in the Red." Another institutional ad for another big firm says "Our Atlantic City office recom- mends Salt Water Taffy f<>< the long pull." AKRON (UPJ) -Firestone Tire Rubber Co, is building a pilot plant in Akron to demonstrate a method dispos. ing of worn out tires without polluting the air, The tires are converted i n part to chemicals and materials that are reusable in industry, Joseph Laman, Fi res tone manager !or environmental engineering, said the process ultimately may prove feasible enough to absorb all the tires scrapped annually. He said Firestone alone intends to build 10 tire 'disposal and reclamation plants around the coontry. Orange County showed an increase in U.S. Savings Bond sales in April 1970 as com· pared to the same time last yea r, accordbig to county sav· ings bond chairman, Donald P. Kennedy. The iAcrease from $1119.710 to $887.217 for Orange County is in direCt contrast to the decrease in bond s a l e s registered in Los Angeles and San Diego counties. Ora11ge County was also one of only three counties in the area to show increase i11 sa v· ings bond sales for th e first pared lo the same time period in 1969. San Bernardino and Ventura conuties were the on· ly other areas where an h1· noimced th1s week. ------------------------------ Kemper will work as a designer of Boise Cascade mobilebome communities, now being developed in the 18 western It.ates, C a n a d a , Alaska and Hawaii, said Rlcbard J. Martens, general mu:iager of the W e s t e r .o. Division office. Beach Firm Acquired Hooker American, Jne.1 of Los Angeles announced a~ quis.itJon of the Orange Counly Ceramic Tile Co. of Hun- tington Beach for an un· disclosed amount of Hooker American common stock, Hooker will utiJi7.e the pro- duction facilities in the 38,000 square foot plant to increase procludion of Monterey clay brick. The Huntington Bench plant will enable Hooker to tri· pie tlie outpul Mesa Man Gets Manager Job LMcb Ccwp., a 11.Jblidlary.ol &A:ltalptiou 'fdeviaion, 1nc., ..... ..,..,._ llldlard E. Crowe, ol a.ta· Mt11, .a5 m-ol -c deai&n. Ile will be !Uponslble for detall<d <lrcult design for all products of. the Coot r o I 1 lliYisioa. Prl0< lo Joining Leach, he was· principal engineer for McDonnalJ Dou1ta1 A5troliilutla. Eater Wi11.1aers Ci rele f\1arcus-Mort'.;~sen ln ~ht) of lluntington Beach received a B. F. Goodr.iCh \Vin· n~rs Circle pla_que a\\•ard follo\\'ln _g ~Is election into the ~onor' society. G. \V , Hill. export director, \Vestcrn Reg1on·Jnternational B. F. Goodrich Company p~esented the pl aq~e at a recent mcelint of the society in the San Francisco llilton. ~1~rtensen is a. sale.-: r~prcs~ntalive for 0 . F. Goodrich "Consunier P~ ducts D1v1slon . The Winners C1rclc 1s con1poscd of the lop three percent of i.he B. F. Goodrich world-\\1de ~ales or~anizat1011. crease in sales were rPgistered. J anuary to April sales this year in Oi:a11ge County were $3,443,694 c o m p a r e d to $3,336,183 for the same four n1ontbs last year, Lecture On Market Scheduled \Vould you like to meet the man who pinpointed (last May 22) lhe recent tum in the market? How about hearing some of his concepts and at· liludes about the market? Haydn Stone will give you a chance June 16. Gene Inger. or E. E. lnger and Co. or Century City. will give a lec- ture at the Saddleback Inn in Santa Ana beginning at 7:30 p.m. He will speak in the Trabuco Room. . lnger plans to discuss his Performance Forecast Inger Letter as well and investment and m~y management. . Hall~rberg Gets Honor Lee R. Hallerberg, president of Master Specialties Co., Costa Mesa , has been elected to the Y o u n g Presidents' Organization. Inc .• an educa- tional organi.zalion with an in. ternational membership of 2.500 young. successful chief executives, who have become the presidents of sizeable com· panies before lhe age of 40, · YPO was founded in IHO lo help young pr esl dents become b e t t e r presidents through education and idea exchange, Royal Inns Earnings Up Jtoyal'Jnns of America . Inc .. s.in Diego, announced that net Income and earnings pe.r share ror cnlenciar 1969 were $659,291 and 48 cents compared to 1968 results ot $371,146 and 27 t..'t!:nt.s. J • Red Trade Belies Politics By RICHARD C, LONGWORTH VIENNA (UPI) -A little thing like poUtics seldom has atoppeq communist b 1 o c merchants on tbe.ir wly to a fast dollar. This it being ~en once again In the gr<nfinl trade between Rusaia amljher allies, on the one .hand,, aDd Greece on 1he other. I The colonels' !11iJDe In Greece is one of the world's most antl·Com~unl1t governments. Thie Com- munists,. for their 9art, have attacked the colontls tn their press and allowed demonstn-- tioos in front of Greek em. bassies. Despite this, recently-rtlea.s- ed trade ligures ~ that busines.s between &he Co.IJ>. mun,ists: and Greece is ~­ ing: Communist nations are participating in Greek trade fairs , In some area4-tobacco, for instance-Cornrrfmist lm· ports are helping Greece balance out falling ~ to the West. f . The pattern Is normal, not rare. West Gennan7jtw been a "Fascist wanna.," In Communist litany f{ir. years. Arid for years, that sae West Germany has been ~ leading Western trade partner of nearly every Commuist na- tion, including East qe.rmany. Other Comm~t trade, direct or indirect, Hal helped such nations as South Africa and Rhodesia survive Western boycotts. P0land risked the wrath of Western Communist by delivering coal to Spain during a strike by Spanish coal miners. There is nothing in Com- munist theology againSI. this sort or thing. v. [. Lenin, the Soviets' founding father, himsell urged tracle with everybody. More practical reason is the need. shared by every Com· rounist nation , for bard, con· vertible Western currency. Communis(...bloc lllOOeY i s wort.h.less anywhere eJee, and a sale to a Western cruntry- no matter its politics-brings in Western goods and cash. Political opposition tn Western Europe has damaged Greece's trade bala~ since 1967, and it turned to the East. Russia was the fll'S major nation-East or West-b send an ambassador to Athem after the colonels' coup. Sinct then, Greece has given the Soviets "most fa vored nation" treat· ment in U:affic, has allowed . Soviet technicians to !Rl?Vey northern Greek areas for peat, has sent tobacco to Moscow and contracted for a SIS million Soviet power station. Czech~reek trade has gone up. The Czechs import tobac- co, 'cotton, juices and fruit and send timber, machinery, coal. tractors anrl chemicals to Athens. Anti-Te g l me Greeks living in Czechoslovak exile ... are carefully controlled by the Prague government. The Hungarian press att1cks Greece regularl y , but Hungarian businessmen ap. parently do not read the newspapers. Even lhough the two nations have no form al trade agreement, HungarilUl· Greek trade is rising, after a dip in 1968, and Hungary organized a trade fair at the Athens Hilton Hotel I as t winter, Poland also has been public· \y hostile and commercially friendly. Trade between the two jumped by 40 percent last ye11r. ·Romania has boosted Its trade wilh Greece by 30 per- cent since 1967. Trade with Yugoslavia has held steady. even Maoist Albania, still technically at war w I t h Greece, has signed 11 trade agreement calt!ng for some trading with Greece. L.squared Inc. Acquiring Firn1 L-Squared Industries, Inc .. a Santa Alla corporation, an· nounces the final details of the acquisition of R. W. 1nternational. a corporation in Orange, engaged in manufac- turing CATV products. This acquisition was for a11 un· disclosed amount oI stock. Office Opened Ptfedical Data Sy.stemJ Inc. has announced the opening ot its new Long Beach Branch Data Center. The Huntington Beach based firm cutTently provides complete data proc. es.sing, faclUUes managemenl, hospital adminl.attaUon and sr.;tems development servi~ts 10 numerous hospitals In the Soutllem california area. I ,_ ,_ \ -I IS MIGHTIER THAJ H PEN And the ma" who know• jvlC hoto to tum the phrme to get thf mo# ovt of the barb ii DAILY PILOT col um,... Ut S¢ne11 HorrU. He hal bfm called the modem -datt H 1 n r 11 lfencJr:•"· If 11ou'r• rtodJI for -~" "'' of tM acid actf1cti.,e and t " 0 u fl " f • provoking pro11 to otw wou. the Medlt , •• if f/OU toemi to find iomething to th.ink about in whaS JIO"U read : •• tf vou have a '""' of humor, 11ou b t I o 11-g with 1"eader1 who ddight In t<IUng °'Mr' taMt "Sud said• ·bi OM of tM nation'• mo1t • q1Wttd columJU. j Some Sample Barbs Recently Thrown By Sydney Harris: "Ono of the hlg-p.1id lolls In Amorica .:on1i1t1 of st1nding up in front of • mic-- tophone, Mpar1tlng the good records from the Nd -ones -and pl1ying the bM-" ;. "It's sad but true that while alcobollcs are the best argument for abstinen . 10 many abstainers are equally effectiv ar· cunient fur a lilUe drhlk now 11111 • ~ I I "Moot of the ...,,nod 'lncomptliblllty' I• marri ... sprints from the f1ct th•t tt¥ rnott men, "x 11 an ad; while to 1d women, It is an emotion. And this differ· .., .. In ttlltudo can bo brtdgod Oftly 'rf ....... "The sole dJ,Uerence between 1 tdedlc. ted crusader' and a 'nosy reform.Ir' 4ICIDo sist.a in our agreement or disagreement wilh hi< objectives." Hfhe moet aploslve combln•llon Jn the workl con1i1t1 of sincerity added h lgnoreMI."' 0 Wbenever 1. am the recipient of an ti• ,, ceuively bearty h.tndsbake, I l1ISJlOCI J.lr. Muscles is tryifig to sell somethine. bide eomething, or prove aomethi.na." Cb.eok Tbe Editorial P.i•. For T•is Signat1re It'll Help You Find The Latest Q11otables Created By 'The Needler' For His Col· ama, A Regular F.eature of · the DAILY PILOT Your Homelown Da ily N1w1p1pe r ' t I ' I t I I I t l j ! • I j I I I I I - I . I I ~ ' ' ' ~ ~ I j I • j I I I l ' I f I I ' • ' l • • L • 'I Here, among some of the great newspapers of the world, is an old friencl The DAILY PILOT looks as much at home on this international news paper rock as it does at · the front door of thousands df 0 r a n g e Coast o reo homes where it 'is dropped doily. That should tell you something . It should tell you . that a "home- town newspaper" con be sophisticated and still not lose touch with what's hap- pening at city hall. Whether it's news from around the w or Id or down the b lock, th• 'iDAI LY Pl LOT packages it bes.t for you . And the si m pie fact is th o t, becouM. t.h• DAILY PILOT ernphasizes local coverage, you'll find a lot of stories in it yo u ca n't find in any other newspaper in the world. On this international news ras;k, i.t's among the great ones of the world . But at home, it's the great- j • • • est one in the world (for local news). I • I ~ "' •• \, • ' ' • ' . -. f -I ' -· • ONES I I / •' DAILY PILOT ' • • ' PRINCE PH ILLIP ENTERS SOTH YEAR UNMELLOWED 0 Uff:fl'I Husband, Unwrink~, Lean and Still Outspoken ' . " FATHER AND SON, ONCE ALIKE, NOT ALWAYS NOW Princ1 Ch•rlH, Now An Adult, Goes His Own W1y Of ten Men in Service Taxpayers Still Revolt Air FOl'C< First Lieutenld 'm~-crganizalion I~ . Over Bonds Thomas O. Beal1, son of Mr, &be. U.S. Air Force. '4 and Mrs. Robert G. Beals Of Major Webster is a fighter By THE ASSOCIATED P~ Lagun.a Beach, is participat'ing interceptor pilot with the Taxpayers In many parts in the unified Atlantic Com· 4780th Air Wing, winner of o{ Califomia held onto their mand's joint amphibious and Lhe 1969 Daedalian Main· wallets this election and re-- airborne exercise E :rot i c tenance Trophy. jected the majority or bond Dancer 111 whlch wHI continue proposals for their schooli and in operation through early Staff Sergeant J oseph D. ciLies. June in the Croatan National KJpp. son of Mrs. Josephine Tax hikes to bolster JocaJ Forest and the Camp Lejeune M. KJpp of Beachwood Park educatiOn fared somewhat bet· area of North Carolina. and Viii N I 6 7 age o. • ter but met resisLance in some Navy Lieutenant (junior grade ) Roger C. Hauge hus- band of lhe former litiss Jean C. Hoover of Huntington Beach, made his lirst solo flight. He is receiv'ing basic flight training with T r a i n i n g Squadon One at Naval Air Stalion Saul\ey F i e I d , Penascola, Fla. Air Force Captain WIUlam E. Stewart, son of Mrs. Eleanor Dochc, 801 Pinion Dri ve, llobbs, N.M., is on duty at Da Nang AB, Vietnam. Captain Stewart, a a naviga tor, is assigned to the: 2QUt Tactical Air Support Squadron, a unit of the Pacific Air Forces. headquarters for air operations in Southeast Asia, the Far East and Pacific area. He previously served at 1'.'lather AFB. The captain's wife. Carol, ts the daubrhter of f\tr. and Mrs. Art Salisbury, 2 1 4 Narcissus St., Corona del Mar. Airman William ll. \\'iRls Jr .. sOn of· fl1r. and Mrs. William II. Willis Sr. of 8322 Carnegie Ave., Westminster, is a member of the Perrin AFB. Tex .. unit that has been selected as the best aircraft mainlenance organization in tbe U.S. Air Force. Airn1an Willis is a data systems specialist with the 4780th Air Defense \Vlng, win· ner of Ule 1969 Daedalian l\1alntenance Trophy. fl.fajor Dwight M. Web&ter, son of Mrs. Frances.E. Gerard of 903 E. I 7th SL, Costa Mesa, is a member. o( lhe .Perr.in AFB, Tex .. uhit that bas betn ~lected &Ii the best aitcraft HAL Al l tsCHll HEARING AIDS CINIMI AWtl AlllfllltcttlN HO lALIS/lllf'I 3409 E. COAST HWY. CORONA DEL MAR ,., Appof11t1M11f 675-3133 l Capistrano Beach, is a member of the Perrin AFB, sections, such as Southern Tei:., unit that has been CaHforia's rural Imper ia J selected as the best aircraft County. maintenance organization in the U.S. Air Force. Sergeant Kipp is a fuel specialist with the 4780th Air Defense Wing, winner of the 1969 Daedalian Maintenance Trophy. Navy Petty Officer Class Eddie J. Viet Jr., husband or the former fl1iss Carol L. llenrie of Laguna Beach, is serving aboard the amphibious assault ship USS TripoU with the Seventh Fleet Jn the \Vestern Pacific. · Senior Master S e r g e a n t James R. t\tcF&ddcn Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. James R. McFadden, Z370 Elden Ave., Costa Mesa, ill on duty at Udorn Royal Thai A F B , Thailand. Sergea nt Pt1cFadden is a radar maintenance superintendent in the 621 st Troop Carrier Squadron. a unit of the Pacific Air Forcts, headquarters {or air opera· lio ns in Southeast Asia. the Far East and Pacific area. Before his arrival in Thailand. he was assigned at Patrick AFB, Fla. Sergeant Robert J. Phillip&, son of Mr. and Mrs. James R. Phillips or 4:'12 s. Harbor, Sa nta Ana. is a member or the Aerospace Defense Com· mand's (AOC) 25th Ai r Di vision that has won the ~neral Frederic H. Smith Jr. Trophy. Sergeant Phillips is 1 radar operator at JlotcChord. The . sergeant, received ~n A.A. dtgree lrom Orange Coast Collqe, Cost.a PttC!Sa. or 26 bond issues proposed ln Norttiern and Southern California counties, v o t e r s turned down 19. Failure often swung on the requirement for a two-thirds majority for passage. In San Franciscoi' voters didn't need a hand.cap lo re.. ject a $45 million bond issue for making the city schools invini;ible to earthquakes. The vote was 96, 716 against to 77.362. Proposals for street lighting and fire protection passed in the bay city. In neighboring Marin County . San Rafael voters accepted a sewer bond issue and threw out recom- mendations for a recreation center and a new fire staticrn. Jn San Diego County, sewage disposal bond iSsues were approved in Oceanside and EsconOdo. But elsewhere In the county, bonds and loans for· school and sanitation districts we.re generally re- jected. In Imperial County to the \\'est voters in four of five school districts said "no" to increased tax ceilings and eduealion bond issues. Only tiny Calj)atria Unified School District approved hike on the maxirnu1n tax rate. 273 to 132. • Santa Barbara County voters approved two school tax increases in the Goleta Union and Santa Maria school dislricts. Santa Maria voters approved ;in 80-cent raise in the school districl's t.ai: «ii· ing. the first h1Creese since 1959. The maxim um is $2.SS. 1795 LAGUNA CANYON ROAD -· mcCo,·micl lA~UNA BEACH MORTUARY • 4.94-9415 • Prinee LONDON (UPI) - Unwrinltled, lean and far from mellowing as lbe Ro y a I Family's most outspoken member, Prince Philip enters his 50th year June 10. The handsome blond bus. band of Queen Elizabeth no longer frets about hls receding hairline. He trots around the Buckingham Pa1aee gardens in shorts and sweater to keep fit. The face of the slender, Greek-born prince is without wrinkles. His only apparent con- cession to half a century's age is an occasional bout with arthritis-the latest in the right wrist he badly sprained in a fall from his polo pony several yean ago. But the sharp tongue that has gotten Philip into rows with the Queen over his candid remark! in public shows no sign of mellowing. · "He's far more irritable now and he certainly drops far more bricks-ap~rently more deliberately th an ever Philli ~rore," a Buckingham Palace source close to Phllip said. Last year, Phllip disclosed on U.S. television that Buck· Ingham Palace was financially in the red and suggested "we may have to move into smaller premises. J might have to give up polo." The Royal Family is firmly lodged in the palace and Philip still P,lays polo. lie f.ouched off a flurry of abdication speculation when he said there was no truth in a rumor that Queen might step down in favor of Prince Charles but added : ' I 0 r eourSe, the idea has its ad- vantages.'' Yet the candor lingers. Fading is Philip's strong ift.. fluence on his older son, Prince Charles. The 21-year-old future king of Britain still ,wears con· servative suits from his father's conservative tailor. But lately C'barles has sported bright shirts and colorful ties Philip wouldn't touch. Since Charles came of age,"' '--U n~_J.!an,,ed It--.~: Philip's closeness to him. has more relaxed gesture ol ~ waned. When Charles was a stiff nod has given way to ~· teen-ager, .Philip was his eon-reply. BAFECD slant companion at home , a Philip remains a stickler for INSURANCE mentor and boss who was daily ei:erclse. He swims in often impatient b e c a u s e the Indoor pool at Buckingham Charles did not a I w a y s Palace and there Ls exercising measure up to Philip's high apparatus in his bathroom. standards ol ~sical en. In rect!nt years be has cur~ deavor. ed his once.frequent soccer Charles has now cultivated and cricket playing to oc- his own circle or friends and casional games with b i s is no longer freqaently seen children or close friends. with his father's J).'.lls. Somebody yean ago asked Although Philip still plays hlm why be didn't include polo reguarly, his game is golf among is many sporting not as t!ggressive ~as it once pursuits. was and Charles! when he ''I'm saving that for my plays at, Windsor Park, draws okl age _ when I'm 51).plus," a bigger crowd than his Philip replied. lather. Palace sources said Philip The future king OOQ.tinues still feels hemmed in by the to develop his keen Interest restrictions of being t b e in opera, classicaJ·music and Queen's husband . .Royalty is ballet -all of which "bore supposed to avoid controversy the pants off Philip" In the but Philip is a man ol firm words or a palace source. convictions. Until recently, Ch a r I e s When he speaks out, as he copies his fathef.'s hands-Cid off the record to a recent behind-the-back walk and the gathering o( Am e r I c an stiff nod ol the head. Now journalists, his words are well- Charles usually walks with his reasoned and reflect con- hands at his sidJs and the slderable thou ght. e BUSINESS e HOME e AUTO e BOAT e 'LIFE Bob-Paley a nd ~1societe1 INSURANCE Phone 642-6500 474 E. 17th St. COSTA MESA SHOP SEARS SUNDAY 12 Noon to 5 p.m. ••• Monday thru Saturday 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. ·sears Our Lo.west, AUTO AND TIRE CENTER Prices for Tires ' Belted with Fiber Glass ALLSTATE PASSENGER TIRE GUARANTEE Cn~ Apiml:; All tire fai lures freq. nonnal ~ ~ arili or drirns ia ma~TW 06 'WOfUnamhip. ., . .,.. 11_. J...o~ Far * rve of the or:igim.l ueaJ_ 'V.'ha1 ~an 'Will 1)1,: .. - <llangr for me tire. ~ ;c charging for the 111uponWo al CDtTCnt scll ing p_rice pins fi.d. ('fll[ Excise Tu th.~ m!91I ~ Repair ~ puix.o 1'\lln :Ill: PO chaQtc. G11aran11led Apimt: 1·rm -~-For llQw ~ 1be 17'.anbcr of monrhs ,specified. Wb-1 Sr.1ni Will Do: lit no ch~ far rhc Iii'<', rcpl111..'e it cli:M"g.if\11: the cvren1 ~lliog price plus FedenJ f.ici.e Tn: ~ the followirg alk1wa:ou:: Mom.lily Gn1nm1.,. ~ 18 ro 2~ 1or;, 27 IO J9 ;!I)'_.; 40 ~% TRADE- IN PRICE What's So Good About FiberGl- Consl:Mletion Greater Safety -Twin fibcf- &Iass heirs reinforce the tread .•• c.reue an at.ldcJ burier th~ helps ~ucc pancrores, impact damage. Beller Traction -Yoo gcr more robber oo the p:ncrncn t. Y oa. get ycater rxactiqo io ail kinds of weather. 50 6.50rl3 Tuhel""" Blackwall l'lu~ $1.b!'> }'.E.T. l\nd ow.r .... L 75xl 3 Tube(.,., Wliilcwall Plus J.96 ·t'.E.1'. and Old Tire e Tl"'f';HI N"infort"t"ll -·ith !! ~lf'1•I llcJ1 ;:. virlu ull v rlim· inatin;,!: 1111 1y1•cs ..;r roud hazur& SlZE n:r BLAO..'W ALL 6."'.0:.. ll 15.::,0 1.6.'> i i:i:o.I.&. :.!L50 1.lf7 &:,",,Jo(. !4.j() :!..17 ~,60).1 :> 15.:-.0 l:Jl WHITEWALL n:.O:. l:l 111.50 20.50 ,., '"' 2'1.511 1,f)'l, JO.'>$ A.k About SeP'S Conven idnt Credit Plam :!.17] :.47 l I Tl IRF.l .E~°' \t'll ITE\t1 .\I J, ~I ZI-~ t . ..i..1~ F.E .. T. 1· ..... l.~~,Jl .,. "" • R:1)011 conl plir Jt pm'1itle I '~~--~~--'=i i i:in1001h.sr c11 rt ride 1.ir;, , .. .,, • "l ),');,,1, .. , :.51 • (;rea1 e~1 mill:'agl:' qC nny lire on the rond today • Tno:ad i:r .. 1imll + 4n.ooo milll tn:ad •·rar-out J:Ulilr• nm cc -----·· .. --~'"' --•MtTI ~ ·---· .. _ ...... ·-. _.. -y-· .. --....... -.. ._Y .. I, .. t•UIM ......... _ .. f -· (Mii ..... 7,llW J•..<U,1..__. •~flto.. ~ __ ,, -·-... '""'" --· Ml•Ull, U t .tt" -.·--., ....... _. __ ,._, ___ .. ................. taMAA1ttiM ,... I ,__.. .= ' •• __ ... lfl ~ .. -... .... -.. ,4,.,, -·"-·--~ _ ... ____ " I I ::.n;,,11 ... ~,,. :.1;.-.14 i:-.1 l..Ot. 1 .'l.i~l 5 $11 , :.n;;,1:; .. -.: :.'7 !.1 ~1:1 ID 1Jf :?.:?:;,, 1:0 .. , ol.M --~----........ M""9 _,..,, 'fMUl'fM•·-··-__ ._._.,.. • - • " s ' • • c ,, ' • ,; - • .. ·Negro flupef ~l~' ~o=n _V~·=-=· c=-=-to=-=r-:_.;..,_ --==in=--..::;<..=L=ab;;z_:. ·a=m:=.;;;.;;;..a TUSKEGEE. ,\i~ (AP) -A , voten In the thr....,.unly 3111 Negro attorney ~)'l'bbl pres.-HOUSe District gave hhn the ence u the flnt bl1ck leg~· nominlUon in • runoff elec- Jal!W' in Alabini111pce'Recon-. llon Tuesday with incumbent ,;truction dlya, cob1'1 "-&el the WiWam NeVUle Jr, 1•1 think race matter out' of ~ minds when peoi)fe see black people of Utt people." in the le&islature, they will .. 1 mark lhb a tumln& point realize they're just Uke any- in the -hiStory of tbt state," one else." Fred Gray commented• after Official retu rm gave Gray a ·~ (i Remem&e·r~Father Sony Tean1TV Son(5 TV·920U, with solid state circuitry, is ts easy .to-W3tch outdoOl'S as it is anr.;hefe in your home. The reason 1s clearly seen· An 8" blacll: d aaonany measured picture screen. Further· mor~. this sotld state; s.et weighs ~lY. 10 lbs. R~i~ary c'rcuitry comblne4 with Sooy Esak1 Diode and Mesa S1hc<?" tr~nsistors assure Sensitive reception (VHF and UH Fl, even 1n outlying areas. P;lu} a large speaker for W~p, str~ng .sound and a carrying handle. comes in black or white. Tnp wtth the light ton<al;lc-Sony's TV·9.20UJ . SONY. &73-vote mlf'lln over Neville. Gray lfilll could face oppo- &ition ln the November ttntr· al elecllon. 'l1!e Republican party hold:! Its' llate conven- tion July il.7·18, at which Ume it will nol'l)ln.1te candidates for some legislatlve ra~. The dlstrlct Includes George Wallace's Jlome COt,lllty-Bar· bour. GraY carried hit home county, Macon, by aboUt 3,400 votes, but lost to Neville in Batbour by mort thin I .to I. h~ -·· Gov. A I be r I Gray a 11 o c:an1td Bullock Brewer, had ncelvtd the Ne. County • gro bktic vote In the fll'lt pri- • ' · mary May 5. Brewer led Wal· "I ho .. no leellnl.-•P. • lace In the lll'll elecllon by ..-u,. Geor(e W.U-'1 aboul 11,000 voleo. home-county/' G r a y uid. • But Gray Pld be wu not "ll'a in my dlltrlcl end I'll iurprllM!d that he WU ooml"' "1'Ye ll Jlllt lJke I'll oerve lhe II.led In the lace oI the alate- otber two." wide reaction to bloc voilng Wallace wu nominated for tn the 1ovemor'I race. goven;w tn-TUMday'1 election "I dol:l't think the gov~f'a on the llrenith of • w b 11 • rm .hid onythlng lo do with "backluh," t.o c:blr&es tblt my elecUoo," be said, ••no ef· ' Regaining Pow~rs ls It Too Late for Senate? WASHINGTON (UPI) - Very, very late, perflaps too Jate to m.Uer, the .Senate has decided to retrieve t t s vanishlng f<>le In the decision to make war. A! it ia wont to do, the Senate has grumbled and griped gifaUy but hu never come to gtips with the erosion of lt.s powers .. c l rcumstance1 where "I mean just aa a matter American lives or lnteresta to protect American interests. are tbrutened and l t • 1 .lifle don't give up our rights neceaary lo make ...,. under lhe Ccoslllullqn." he move, it may just not be added. "But we go one step possible to come to Congrts1." further. We make certain that In the nuclur age, Dole in 1ny event the American said, decisions must be made people and the American in- in minutes, or houn, or a tereSts are protected," few days. Undoubtedly, lhe Sen ate " Umes • o r e would not con.sider this an .•• aorne w very I e n g t b y in the ideal situation. discussions," Dole laid. "1be Jt would be, however, an war could be over before we advance over tbe sfastnc oi feet whatsoever. We ottered voten a platform ol our own and lel jt ltand ca that." Gray said his objecllve II "to propose new laws to aotve old probltlllJ" -polnlin& •[le-cifically to "better schools, hJgher salaries for teachen and ~tter care for our aged." He said he contemplates no special problems In the legio- 1'~. but said, '°'"'II have to cross that bridge· when we come to 11." He 48ld he had "tried to reach all the people t could" with his campllcn and that be got "fairly ·sub. 1taotial white aupport lo each of the tbm counties." Tha BRIDES :; LINGERIE GIFTS ... .t ... MJrl Gr•vn ..... COtTtf'!'r.l•bl• In , • Your Ciiat8" ... .. M"'101, J""' 8, 1970 DAILY PILOT ' SPICW 5119" .............. NOW ! VIEW SLIDES WITH OUT A SCREEN I LOAD, SORT, & EDIT FASTER WITH THE HONEYWELL 630. Preview feature gives you a penonal look at e11e.ry s11de be.fore It hlta screen • No more te·focualng. Automattcal~ ly fOCW1es eyery slide.. Otber> e':ltcluslve tea~ ': ~··'• ~ITC&,.,. CA""IRAS . ' ' W!SJC:LJFF PL.AV. · . ~ But the Vietnam war in general and the Cambodian incuraion specillcally h a s fh:laliy forced ttie Senate into at least trying to reassert its authority. The so-called Cooper-Church amendment, whlcb cuts off funds for the retention of ·U.S. ~ in Cambodia after July 1, is ~ firat atep. get around to a declaraUon." the Cambodian incursion when 250 Eist ,7th Strnt 1132 fl:YINE The Republican senator con-".Ja~p~paJr~en~l~lyith~e~e~n~e~mdy~knE"~'~:·•:.,:-~,...~"'~N:-:":•·~·:-~· l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~g ceded that Congress' power before congressional leaders 642-5430 to declare war before action that the U.S. would &trike. is taken mai be "fairly near the age or ob!olesctnce." . NIWPORT llACM NIW LOW PRICE $119.95 275 EAST 17th ST .. COSTA MESA It will lie folM>wed by the so-called antiwar a~enL This proposal W()UJd choke off money for millt.ary operations in Southeut Asia by the end of the yur, leaving just enough~ bring U.S. troops home by uly 1, 1971. ·The p posals ~ negaUve and. sy Ile. ~ym ic bec8UJe, despite strong support in the Senate, it has oo chance in the House . Negati ve because il Is a retreat to the only possible recou~' left to the Ccngrea -the er of the purse. Whal s an even greater dllemm is the realiJ.aUon by a good many senators that -regardless of what the Constitution says -the power to make war can no longer be vested in Congress. • SALIS 642 -9742 • SERVICE The foundin& fathers, In writing the Constitution, could not viallalize the day when a presklent ·would just not Mve tfte •lime *° come to Congress. As Sen. Robert J. Dole (R- Kan.), pul it, " .•• if there are · cµmstances , extreme ~ ! ·, ,, I • Serving The H•rbor Are• Since 1957 Of"•M MONDAY TM•U P•IOAY t A.M.-t f'.M. SAT,: M . I Ga,ATEST HOBBY FOR / DAD!. TR PICAL FSH ' ' . : GIVE DAD AN AQUARIUM end FA i CY FISH ~· * Lowe•I Price of the Year* l ' i:..' ------· I' i I I 10 Gallon " 15 Gt!' .. ' 26 Gallon AQUARIUM AQUARIUM AQUARIUM 65~, ,950 ·1350 44 •••• QUARIUM, ·······-_ $70.50 ,!Gallon St•rter Set TROPICAL FISH SPECIAL I fOl ONLY ' ~· , .. •H-' "'" , ....... .-.• .... • s13 99 INCLUDU: . ,._, e T.W1tt e TMlc ........ ........... .... YOUR 1 ftC CHOICE 7 Meli . ..... ·-..... - WO.NDERRJL WORLD OF I'm 51 FASHION ISLAND e NEWPORr Opp. Broodwoy • Open 7 D•y• • 644-0910 I \, Jn s couting1 for .an alternaUve., Dole auggested some arrangement -similar to the one President Franklin D. Roosevelt· bad on the Manhattan Project -where tey congressional leaden: are brought into deliberatlona at I.he earliest m<1nent. "I think this relatioDship tnay be.ne<:eUUY," Dole aaid. · Karlson In Aher Losing State Race SACRAMENTO (UPI) Emil Karlson of Berkeley won the 17th District Republican Assembly nomination by two votes, the Secretary of State's office said 'lllursday after earlier reporting his opponent was the winner. Karlaon wound up wilh S,2186 ": votes, a~ding to unofficial final mi.m.' }Ii> opponent, • 'Ibom• J, Miles or <>akland, rKelved 3,263 votes. On Tuesday night, t b e Secrelary of Slste reported that wHh all J91 preclnct.s counted, Miles d e f e a t e d Karlson by three voles, 3,177 lo 3,171. If Ille latest fiiUfes hold, Karlson will face Assembly Democratic Leader Jdm J. Miller o( Berkeley In the .November general election. . BOAT BUFFS Al111•11 LeclceN¥ k fti• "'' hll-ti111• bo•tirtt Mliter .... 11:1 .. 011 1"7 .... ,.,.... .. Or•11t• Cou11ty. Hi1 1nlinl" ...... ,.,. of ltco•ffrtt end ytchfhtt 11-1 I• t dilly fi1fvre ef tti. DAILY PILOT. PER·PLEXED? ~IFT IDEAS: e Origin.al Oil1 • Snoopy W.atche1 e Cry••al e Decorative 61111 e Big "J1ck1" e Cro11 Pens • Kitchin Bou•ique e Scrip looks e Photo Albuml e Baby Al~uml e W1dclin9 Album1 e Springbok Pu des • Social ~•1•ion1ry e Hand C1rved 8oxe1 e Sb.a.ps .and Oishe1 e Gift Books e Furmi'1 e T1mpo • 25th I 50th Ann;v, e C1ramic Ash•r•ys e Mital Sculptur11 e Mobiles 'HALLMARK CAROS 1.AR•IST SILICTION IN COSTA MISA Memory Lane _HARBOR CINTIR COSTA ME5A .. .. NNNns QUIDITO PATHIR'SlllY CHAIR SALE JUST FOR DAD! . ' '· • • ' NOW! li1ES! VALUES ATANYO.NE ' OF THESE · PENNEY STORES! ) l , Prices effective thru Saturday SAVE '201 'SPANISH' STYLI rKhl'Mlr f.ios cCHnfy polyur1thane foam podding seot, bade • Rich dork fnrirwood fin. ished exposed wbOCI, EiC• ponded vinyl uphol1tery in your choice of bla'k or avocado. Hurry lnl R•9.$149NOW $]29 ·CANOGA PA•K CARLSBAD DOWNIY HUN11NG1QN IEACH v.dwoo.o N[WPORfaEACH ORANG! "THI CITl" \ SAVE '201 'MODl lN' STYll rtelrltr will light UJ' any 1"1Gr1°1 lfftl Big, roomy, comfortahl. <holr u poddad .nth poly- urethane foam, has a. ponded v!nyl ~. Tllh lo 3 poslfion~ $99 R•ll· $119 NOW SAVI '201 1MODIRN' S"11 swivel rocker hes seat and bode. padded with palyvNthane foom and Dacron• pofy• ester fiberfllT. lmportff viriyl uphOlstery In black ot ovocado, Wakwt ~ ;:;r,;;a9NOW f119 MATCHING OTI'OMAN • • • SAVE $101 UO. $60, NOW $SO FULl!ltTON MONTCIAIR V!NTUIA SHOP SUNDAY, TOO 12to5P.M.I 1 4 1 • ' I 9711 I ' • < . l · I • l . .; ,. ~I .... 1_ • A';, . -' "· II DAILY PILOT ~.-•, 1970 Miit. MWUI OUAGADOUGOU, Up- ptr Volta (AP) -llJnl· aklrtl blve beeQ banned in Ulla central African country for a l""C Ume. Trooble waa, !he pollc:e didn't know exacily bow to measure them. So last Thurtd.ly !he MIJtlslry cl Inter!« ....._. cast a new definition : A mlnlaklrf 11 1111ythlnc that leaves the Je1 uocoverM "above the top cl tba knee." Sylvania Penonal Portable TV HALLI DAY'S e Choico of lbo1ty er lrow11 Colo,.. • Tol•1c.opl119 Mo11opolt VHF er '-ti• JUST VHF A11t111110 e Ctrryf"f Hort41o e R.1111 loH Pictuto Tub. e 74 ~. 111. Vlowol>lo Picture $9996 411 E. 17th St .. Cost• Mesa Dally M; Monday and Friday J.9 BRIDE PRIDE IS THIS GREAT MAYTAG A.-606 WASHER and Matching DRYER! 1bJbr Alllllltlc W-. 2 speeds far all·fabr~ wHhlng. Automatic fal!ric softener dispenser. Power.fin Agitator for washing action thafs genlle, lhorou&h- Specfal soak CJcl• makes really dirty clotlles 1 cindl ID &et clean. ... '' ~~" NATURAL SHOULDER CLOTHING FOR DAD I. GRAD 'l'llADttlONAL 0W1111NG Wl.ITCLIP' PLAZA 11M lnfM ... ..... , .. 411 E. 17th ST. , Costa Mesa 646-1684 lbytac lloclrlalc c.11n1 DrJw, Fast dry clothe$ In a:enUe, low temperatures While electronic sensors constantly "teer moisture In clothes. Shub off wtiea clothes are dried just right One setting -no guessing for-11n!e and temi>. Per· mwnt pre" setting ,...,.,. wrinWes. ·.r.f!, : . ' b.ny·f · 6, Mon. & Fri., 9 · 9 • ~ -. ~ "<: So·;.;.~~~. ighh . Ba~.k . Who flght1 city haln Tht ~Y 1M.Gf ~{¥(!-,who. Mcf !~rt tlSI can you fl~ cogent commtnlary on M!i'~T tllat ~U.·•1~'~ of YOUR communll.J' s dally newspaper, tht ~t!)i~,!fr. i . .:: .. . ,. NEW : ~;·I ~: '. Sylvania 191.t , . t,. ·· Stereo Hi-Fi -· .·. .. makes • sad Did di _J ... '. Penn,, tatfi~ T~hts Marsha Borowsky bas ~ ~oughtful look l\D .• hor face as &be admires a upl.~··¥ of Ab~IUncoln made from 80,000 ·MJU !llld stupll,--to110illfl', The creator of this ~( art display: M \Coupel , spent one whole ~·•,.m8l<Jll"g~he bustitllrt.fl.on dis- play in a downtown belfC!il·.bank buildiDg. . "'nley shot at me three Twenty-three Orange Coast area 1tudtflls ha ve been plac- ed on the dean's list at the Calirornia state Polytechnic College. The ·students were recognized for inaintainlng at least a 3.0 grade point average during studies at the San Luis I Obispo ~hool, The students, listed below by city, include : Balboa Jslanck Barbara G. Perrine , 314 Amethyst Street. Costa Mesa : Edward M. Clifford, !929 Royal Palm Or.; Donald B. Hall, 378 East JBth st., Steven H. Sullivan, 1588 San Bernardino Rd . Huntington Beach: Barbara N. Pierce, 101'72 Cynthia Rd.; Janice E .• Porter, 20602 Lavonne Lane ; John L. Seltzer, 80 Huntington St.; Kare n L. Blackburn, 16241 Fantasia Lane; Elizabeth R. Severson, 15421 Florence Cir· cle. Linda L. Terry berry, 8461 Valencia Drive, and Jeanne C. Tardif, Huntington Street. Laguna Beach: Markus R. Gradecak, 1363 Cerritos Dr.; Richard J.·JV n\J, 1PQi qi:a ... land Drive. ' ~ • Laguna Hills: David E. Cassaro. 25111 MacKenzie Rd. Laguna Nlguel ' lR••l\Y L. Parsons, ~30411~.ir dot Courf. ' Mission Viejo: Richard D. Provc>St 2589F James Lane, Newpdrt aeleh: ~vi<!_' ~· Jiluran, 2213 Redlands Dnve; Margaret A. Vitucci, 1731 Bed- ford Lane· DOOald ~. Stioe, 114 Emera\d Av~. ,.;_ .1 · Irvine:-Frederick F. Ke1Jer, 18802 Saginaw Rd._; Ceil D. Kellogg , 171118 Spicewood Dr. San Clemente: Suzanne L. Fischer;-1725 Via Montezuma ; Anthony D. Thompson, 105 East Matqu\la R<!. IJfbnkl MMtOW-Blg IOI.Ind from • "rninf" stereo modular at• modasl price, 20 walls EIA.. Sealed air Su1f*11lon 1pe1ker 1y11em1 and dual caver Included. °'ll·lrafl,Jil... $8995 tor re UattlUty and petformanc1. Walnut g1alned vlnyL • ... Du1t CO¥W """"'· 411 E. 17th . Sr.·· Costa Mesa Dally t •. 6, Monday & Friday 9 • 9 ithone 646 • 1684 " . .. AUTHENTIC SHIP'S HATCH COVERS- · ~·· liEW SHIPMENT -t\,, J 111t anlvtJ 'front World War II HOJpifal Ship1. Many new I 111• l•ra1tin9 1i1a1. !Mini • Midi • Ma1il. PLIASE THI CAPTAIN Of YOUI SHIP ON •ATHll'S DAY, D TISSOT . JUHi JI, and t , . ~ •peciaj\/4iiht j/fOU1~~"C · · ~ . "t imporfailt'o~rft the grld'uWo'it gift-paCbgc ~at reveals a 'hand$ome, dcpcodJ~lc . , . .. "\ Tisf"l! FOJ a TiiSO'f ~S091;'f~· "J1'\"'.'!ff teiliagyourgradoate how1nuch yo n r~a)\ycare. lB™wltr~hcs are - ' acclaimed in more than 120 countrie~ for the~r rare ;o- combioation of~· •'l'lin$ and ti~Ci!rcfisi~ilf"¥<> c~ch Tissot are motC; tl\an tob;ltil'91?bf'!Watclim~tigliitij ..• assuting dependability and'Jong life. See I.hem foday. kll.K CHAJ.6E -H11llffatt-iC•.r.., ... a..ca. & 1111..., Hntl"ftM ..... lfl·IH1 I ' e MASTER CHARGE e IA NKAMERICARD "The Store That Confidence Built" Optn Mon., Thurs., Fri. Till ·9 p.m. Hetk, 1'•""'9 """" JJOO H.,._, MM. C .... M .. 141·f411 -' .t ' , .. , .. . ~· <ii' ... ,, ( t ' r •• ,. •• "I '•' i " • , • • • ~ ~ • • \ ) • I " ,. • " ' • < • • • . - ~~ . • • • ti' . • t I " " • I f • ~ • •\ .. . .. 7 n • ~ ..... ' '" ' -. ' ' " ~,1 • • ' . " ' " . ,\ I , . . ' • • •• l l ' .. • • I - .. ,. ' • ~RANW.E COAS't DAILY PILOT, MONDAY JUNE I, 197G .. • 'I ' ' , . • ~I • -, .J. ·-~-- ; -· • ---". I . " ii -·- . ., ·~ . -.----~- J ) • ' • • • • • -· , ' l I --. ' -1· . . . -- ... .f} • • 0 ' ' • • I ' ' .~ -~ . . -~·I.-~ .• ---... r" ~· ' ~~~ .. ' .. . ·~ ., • • t· -• . ---:... ----------"t<----------=-----~ ---. ---. " -·- . - ,_ - - t • -, . " ,,' - • ' . ·~ .. -. -- --:, -'-"k~}i )I -------·.~ ., l t -GRADS : J. • ·~ • , • • . 4zz of yo~r gif~ 1roblems are so·lved ..• no matter h8w long your lt#I ... x ou'll find these pages filled ivitk 3uggeA t;;,~s~ t~ please dad, the grad ,_ ! and the bride. Get bu.Sy, now is the time · to ~·elect l i thntr ·~ial gift! • • -. . ,, • • .. • - • . ,, -- • ' • • • t • . ,_ ... DAILY PILOT I ,, • I ~ ' • " f \ 1\ • • 1. ~ . ' ,,... • -• • •• ' I '/ ·' ' ' . "1:; ·BRIDES . • • ., I • I ' - • lllll~"''!!'"~~~:!~v!.~,,~A~0 ... ...,, ... ,..'l"'"""""! ... ~'."':'.~~"'! .• ~.~.~,,~,~ .. "' ................... ""''""""" .. ""'"'"'"""""""'""'l!ll''""""'"""""'""" ............ .,,,,,,...,..,....,..,..~~---~~~~~~~~------.... • ... . ~ -.. -· ·: --·. ,, ... ~· ·~ ;:, ... ·" :1< •' J: •c ·~ ·l ' -I' "' ;t' ~ .~ ' •' :- .~ •• ~ • .. , ~ ~ . I ,.. :· ~ ;,.- (i J• .i; • '" "' ' ' Monday, J11nt 8, lt70 DON'T GET STUCK ~ .. WITl£0UT A GRAQUATION GIFT ~~That pretty graduate in your life will love one of our pretty pendants. From top: With cultured pearl, ·s 13.50. Diamond lover's-knot, $45 .. Cultured pearl, $14.95. Diamond rose, S32.50. Jade and bamboo. $18.95. SIA.VICK'S Je""·elcrs Since 1917 I , ' NEWPORT BEACH -644Ul10 18 FASHION ISLAN D o,_n Mond•y anil Frhlay ., ..... t:11 T..,,.-CMr .. Ac-I WetcHnl -•&MAmerluftl, MM9f' ~ ... START BRIDAJ.' COUPLES .WITH BE:AUTIRJL • TOWELS .._,. . ' BY MARTEX .. II L,OVEL)' COLORS BATH S.llE .............. OM $2.50 HAND . SIZE .. , .. 'i . ,IOOM $1.59 WASH -CLOTH$ . "oM 6Sc AlSO SHEETS (NO-IRON) BL~lj)!:_ETS (BATES ACRILANI .PLASTIC CLOSET ACCESSORIES . . - Open ~6:00 Mon.-Sat.-Fri. 'til 9 p.m. DEPAl\TM~NT . 1816 NE\¥PORT BLVD., cDSTA .~~SA.~9-1212 Younger f.mqge for Selective Service -WASHING-TON {AP) think necessary," .saYS'Tarr~I -Caii t.!.Chester J. Cbastek, d. Roush said, ''I ti,aveo'!J•• Drift Q;reotor Curtis W: Tarr, letter "would be to "presen\ W1ahlngton Stile, 70. ._ it any tbou&ht ;" I trylng. lo .make the Selective more'y&ithlul ~I to the \ Oi.a.stek and Schwartz said, spokeaman for Novey said hi .. \ when aaked, ~at they had knew of oo p&ipl for hll Service look younger, hu ask-public eye ... l -no~Jinl'.!!~eal~loc~~lljb~'Ml~lil'!~Dl~llf!;'~''.!':ilpl~:!U.O~-------n •d agina members of his CON ' -~ SIDER YOUTH · -· departmenl to resign. Althoufrh~.-:J.e(uiesi , wP -Aft.er uking-forjhe resignF ., aimed specifically at merilbers .tlon of a specific. individual, of the Selective Service's na-the Tarr letter conclude&: "In Oona! .and Mate-beadquanen, subniitting a request for his- a higt:H"anking draft official replacement to me for coo- said Tarr's policy could be slderation, I would suggest • . .. . viewed as a': strong hint to that a yoo'ng man be con- • elderly state directors as well: sldered, one who could present But only one -H~ory M. the image· of bei111 in tune Gross of Pennsylvania , who wW1 the youth of today and at 85 Is the oldest state dir~-their problenu." tor of all -has indicated Such letters actuaJJy have he will quit, but riot uoUI gone to only abou~ JI of the the end of the year" 56 state an~ ~ jurisdie- A.lthouglt s:t i t e !directors tional direclori, bu,t word take their order~ from Tarr, generally travels fast through they owe. thefr appointmeoti Selective Service's active to ~te governors. Tarr ls grapevine. thus f~ with the diplomatic Tarr, in deference to _state problem ol easing aome of governors, has made no overt them out, ,without offending suggestibo that o v e r -a c e d the gover~rs. state directors r e mo v e ... themselves, but a1I offlciaJ ad-- ONLY BEGIN~ING milted there was a "str'QIW President Ni, on' s ap-implication" in the dire<i&or'1 pointment ·1 o(:, the •S.year~· general po Hey. ' Tarr to replace' Gen. Lewis The averase age of the ~ B, Hersh¢y; 71; a.! ·draft direc-directors is Sfi; 12 of them tor last March was only the are over 60, and two more . beginning of a campaign to will soon turn 60. lower the age of the Selective Besides Gross, fivt 'otner Service System. state direel.ors are over 70: -Tarr quickly appl ied -1he Allen J, Roush, 78, o f principle tG his nationaf head-Colorado; Ernest E. Novey, quarters, asking the res1gna-78, of ConnecUcut; Col. Morris t100 of about 10 percent of s. Schwartz n ot Tt1u· his 236 slalf members --' ' · ' -c:iviuans-over-10-ye ars ol' and military personnel who have either reached age 60 or. are eligible for their max- imum retirement benefits, Tarr recentfy began ap- plying the same standards to state headquarter's ·With a series of letters asking in- dividuals -or asking their state directors W aak: them -lo resign. Slate directors have re- quested a few exceptions, but so far Tarr has turned them all down. HALLI DAY'S NATURAL SHOULDER CLOTlilNG FOR DAO & ORAD 'rll O Dll'tl!l<A \, o;.1.0'l'll I~•; WESTCLIFF PLAZA -: .-- THE PERFECT . GIFT FOR -'-THE ONE ·YOU LOVE . , . .... ~ .. ... CULTURip l'tARLS, THE TRADITIONAL IRIDIS &IFT. CHARLES H. BARR '~ ~· ;- An o!licial said about 56 "military types " out Or !9me 340 in state beadquarters ·Were expected to'tesign by Uie end 1104 lnl" ""· Wc$1di.1~. l t•Mlrill•A.-iw. r •"' · I d' • h Nc•~I Jlw:"t ~~fl. • _ •' ••U. lll ..... C:.lir, o 1Jw5 year, inc u 1ng 1 ... w:~·~~N~ow~po~tt~lui<h~~'4~S~-0~7~92~~=~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~11 would have retired anyway, The letters to state directo · usually cite "the desires or the President" to make the draft ''more responsive and understandable to lhe youUi oC Lhe nation." "One of the rirst things Longer H1,1ir ~ce 'TACOMA , Wash. (AP) ._ Tacoma police are_ goin& J.o be, allowed to wear _con- temporary hair styles as J~ as they're not too COl1· temporary. Acting Chief Lyle Smith Issued a directive Thurlday permitting the men t o lengthen their sideburn1 a half inch -to a pqint ju1t above the earlobe and lo adapt lhelr "hair style to contemporary standards." · "This directlve ," Smith 14~ ded , "should be co nstrued u requiring an <1fflcer lo adGpt a neat and well-groomed personal hair style." f.ost Hi s Leg But NoJ, lf urt HONOKAA, Hawt1U (AP) ,.,. Victor Hauanlo 1ost his , left leg when his Peaa Corps Jeep ''lhers day lune 21st ';~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~g plu_ng~d over a 150-foot clirf. ; He·•asn'l ~urt at all. ftau anio , 34., custodian at the •P.eace Corps Waipio fa cility, told police that his artificial lndustri~liy rated utility power .tools :.: ~;~::.T:."!.'wv. "' $17•• i Fol' Top Spol'ts Covel'age Read the DAILY PIWT leg became jammed under the clutch pedal w1ien the Jeep's brakes failed and he had to wrench free or it before he could leap to safety. • WHO'S THE BE$T DRESSED MAN IN TOWN ? DAD, ·OF (OURSll < . I ~ ~ HAPPY FATHER'S DAY! • ~~ to k•p him ~Wi, hi! b11t ''R year long , loop h11 clothtt ~Int l~tlr btJt, Ju1t follow those b simple rult• f0i,,1ovin9 monty on dothe1 and he'll olwoy1 bt nun\'"' I on !ht bost-dreued li1t. ' I • $ ,,> . ' . .. . 1.t IUY WlllLY~··Atk tt111ttl_;s.. 'i_tH l•btlt. 11 1u••· I. C"°Oll A ·eOoD qLtANllt Ck11t1 tom1 ont wllo ~110..,1 lilt h111l1111 •PHI 111r11 1li111t y111r 111th•1 i nd plt11ing yow • J. C~ .. U6UU.ILY, Cl1111., f111k ,1,t1ri,, ,•n1111t d1t1ri•r•l1, ._114 tb•Y wJll lut 1111111. • 4, CLUN UNJll IYOllNa. '0!11 it 1111 of the bigg11t 101111 1f 111, Seil-' 11•111111h iu1t 11lwr•lty '•l1rl1r1!1 e nd ln•il1 ........ h1111 11111111 • 5, llAft ALL ITAINI ALONL Thi cl11-1r ~111w1 b1tt1r llow lo r11111v1 th1m. 6. CLIAN Al SOON AS POSlllLI APTll STAIMIN~. Frt •h 1l1ln1 ••• 1lw•v1 111i1r to lr••I; old 1l1in1 m1y b1 imp11• 1lbfe -. : ·~ . : MONTGOMERY CLEANERS & LAUNDRY WESTCLIFP f'LAZA I 121 IRVINE AVE. NEWPORT BEACH 646-2392 -ortN DAILY., ..... , r.M-IAT •• A.M.-6 r.M. Cut.s 21fi" i\t' 90°, 2" at 45'. Rip 1uide, over-lel J load clu tch. 3 amp. I , I . Hl1t, ter11i1• ~· ~rlll Provides SO",; more t o rqu e than •1," tlril\1. 2 am p molo~, JOOO RPM. C. 1/5 HP arbtt•I ••11-'•r F or both rough and fi nish .!ianding. Quick change clamp. 2 amp. D. High 'P9•d 1abre >aW C'u ts 111oodlipla1tic o'r rne tal. ~-stroke. Bl ades in handle, RIG . $19.95 ·sll 88 .. ,. ~ HG ... 12.11 ~ s149s s149s . Brookh11rst and Adams-Huntington leach· ' . \ I • • Oifl/tlet18 ~ for DAD·-IEI for GRAD from DAVIS-BROWN Brt1hter, •harper color .. With ta 12" dlaeonal screen for a brighter-sharper picture, · PRICED FROM $299.95 SONY B&W PORTABLE Llghtv,reighl portable '"ilh a sharp 7" diagon al picture. Plugs into cars or boats ,,.Ith optional ac· cessories:- FROM ••• $99.95 SONY FM/AM DIGIT AL CLOCK RADIO Model 8FC·S9 Rich • big Sony sound , pn1s lne latest convenience of digital, minute-by-~nute large numerals . SE·E' IT TODAY-JUST $59.95 ·for The Nautical Dads • SONY'S Land 'n Sea PORTABJ.E • • Sony's 4 banl'.I FM/AM/Manne/Weather portable is a land lubber that sealare1s wish they hacl. H features the most aclvanced solid sla te cirtuitry you'll rind around today. Crucial weather forec asts, marine reports, music and news, the 7F·82W pulls them in with a flick of the finger. This fine radio has supreme sensitivity and selectivity and impressive 1.6 watts of output power lo deliver bi~ sound. It features a lull 4" speaker; AFC switch lo ••fock 1n" FM stations, a large slide rule dial to select stations with pinpoint accuracy and a di1I light for night use. E•cfting.looking too in lu•uriously soft simulated lea ther with smart chrome accents, marine gray in color. Complete with batteries. earphone ~ild .AC cord. Come on Jn for a land'n sea oemonstrat!on. • SONY• ·--~.;...__ --~ PLUS MANY MAN Y MOR r; GIFT IOEAS FOR DAD OR GRAD -GRE,\T BRIDE'S GIFTS TOO! ~DAVIS -BROWN ' .. TELEVISION ·APPLIANCES 411 E·. 17+h St., Costa Mesa ~-- Dilly 9-6; Monday and Friday 9.9 • 646-1684 • ' ' 1 I I I --.. Candidates Fail • 1 '(To List All Cost,s 1WASHING.1'0N (AP) t C..'o n g r e&SlOnal candidates rfP:ortect less than one-fifth of tlieir campalp spendin& to U,e federal govenunent in 1'68, a task force esti mated today. I ·Jt recommended a new siricl requirement to report ajl eleotlon-Ume spending and pi"opoeed new machhll•Y 1to Jll>llce federal electlona. f I tu also said Uiere should ' . ~ oo limits on spendlng or 1 1~ div i dua 'i contributions, rtcommended tax credlls for t fi>liUcal contributions and urg-eil that broadcasters be re. ! 'fiired to sell reasonable 8F-ounts of time to candidates. , The report came from a 1 panel on congressional cam- paign finances set up by the Twentieth Century Fund, a ~ew York-based foundation. •It estimated more than $50 ' tfi.i!Han was spent in 1961 cam- paigns for Senate and House \ ~ats, but said that only $8.48 million had been reported • ' White House Looking for , f it·st Ladies !wASmNGTON (UPI) - Rranklin Delano Roosevelt's f~mous World War JI map r~m has been transformed 1 i~to an elegant sa1on and d oakroom -to handle the o\-erilow of guests at White House parties. . Clement Conger, W h i t e House curator, has furnished the room witn a Chippe~e highboy and paintings of Thomas Jefferson and Ben- . iJmin Frank l in. The fbrnishin gs were resurrected from White House sto1 age rboms and represent onlY the 1 b eginning of the redecoration Conger has in mind. 'The curator is sending out ah SOS for Chip p endale *mchairs and other fine an· tiques which he hopes owners "ill be willing to donale to the White House. · And despite the recent dona· tlon of a portrait of Dolley Madison by the Philade lphia under federal dlaclo&ure re- quirements. Because of "the weakness of le<loral and slate Jtw1, tome candidates spend more than '1 rnillJoq in their cam- pa!1ns without r.e port l n g 111\ything to the public," the task force said. It said Congress should create a · perman e nt, blpa,rtisan C9mmlaslon with broad powers lo regulate elec- tion campaigns for federal of. fice. 'Mle task force also proposed establishment of a special . committee of Congress to in- vestigate spending during the 1970 campaign.. It said that panel should ~ble 'and publish informaUoo about 1970 ~pending while the campaigns are in progress. ' Fomwr Rep. Thomas B. Curtis, a Republican from Mlisouri, headed the task foreti; Ne~ Staebler, a former House member and t h e Democratic n a t i o n a I com- mitteeman from Mis&>uri, was vice chairman. ' It sarft a law requiring full pu&\ic disclosure of a 11 campaign financing would be "the key to achieving honest, fair and competitive cam. paigns.'' The permanent elections commission the task force proposed would audit and publicize financial reports, and report disclosu~ violations to . federal enforcement agencies. Every political committee and organiz.a.Uon that spends money or otherwise attempts to influence a primary or general election campaign for federal office would be r~ quired to register with the Commission, which would have PQWer to impose penalties for late, incomplete or. inaccurate reports. The task force proposed : -A tall: credit of up to $25 for PQlitical contributions, a · step designed to encourage small donors. -A requirement that broad- casters selJ .r easona ble amounts of time lo ~ gressional candidates, and a tax deduction systerp to en-- courage sale of the time at discount rates. -A simple, universal system to promote total voter registration. Academy of Fine Arts, Conger 1;==========n\ ' ~id painting of fir st ladies • l(ere still in short supply. 'l(His "wanted" list includes portraits of the wives of th!,! following presidents: John Adams, Thomas Jef- ferson; John Quincy .Adams, William Henry H ai:rison; Millard Fillmore ; Franklin Pierce, Andrew J oh n so n : Ulysses S. Grant; James Garfield, Chester A r t h u r ; William McKinley (the While · Bouse has a small miniature), and Warren Harding. : The White House has a pain- ting o( Mrs. John Adams on HALLI DAY'S. NATURAL SHOULDER CLOTHING FOR DAD·& GRAD , ltADITK*AI. CLOTIOHG istorical AS90Ciation. Mrs. WESTCLIFF PLAZA t ' t anniversary sale • • • • . THE BIG ONE' LOWEST PRICES OF THE YEAR, All 17 STORES 3 handcrafted tables: compact storage nest Oc;casional tables with sparkling glass tops ... so many decorator possibilities! Ideal for any room .. Sturdy trio has chrome legs. res:$5o 3 7. 99 baduhop t39 hibachi barbeque set with tools and table I Your favorite hibachi now at savings. Cast aluminum 10''x17'' grill on its own metal table. Three piece outdoor tool set is included. reg. 21 .47 17, 99. hoo-.re533 • • bright vanity chair ,has wrought iron frame Old world charm for bedroom or bath. Plush padded seat ol -velwt. Q\oice ol colon, whia or black frame. So feminine, so pretty. reg.21.9516-~99 bllluhip 139 ' • Sango fine china: save on 23 patterns • ·r China that'• intricate and regal . Each piece Is lavishly trimmed .in 22 kt. 11111d ~ platinum, with tasteful simplicity and old world chann. Start or complete your ser- vice now, at savings. Prices shown ani for tan from the New York · ff er son and Mr&. Arthur. 1104 1m .. AN. -Never · I i v e d · at lfiOO -N"•°'w"port.;,;::; ... ~,:;h::..::~ ... ;;-;; .. ;:m=-11-----ll\--'----l·' :A:ennsylvania Avenue. ----~5-pc;~plau.settings,Jncluding..dinne plate, salad plate, bread and ~. cup, saucer. All open stock at 20'1. savings. 5-piece ~:Jatker ~ '2:Ja'I , June 21 . • • • ) I I ' ! ' ! l t ' ( • • • ' ! IANKAMElllCAll:D I ' Bring Dad 'up to date• with~KENT COLLECTION Oositpllld ospoclally for the fat~ who's one st•P ahead in the fashion ~rade. Taperedjor the custom made k>ok. N9w J'lllhtr neckband, lonCer point Met coll1r ••• ~ plary of ~loral Dec\9n Perma·lron in solid of 65% Dacron• polyester, 35')(, cotton needs no ironln1. 2·button cutta .,.... •.. ~lt.T.M. MASTER CHARGE ·· 2300 Harb0< Horbor Center COSTA MESA · Moreno -. - moy co iou'lh co0st ploza, 'san Cliego fwy ·at liristol, cosla mesa , 54~·932 I' ,.shoP.-niond<iY.-thlU •.•lurday 10 em to 9:30 P.m, sund ay noon 'Iii 5 fllll - • place setting 3 9 9 6 9 9 reg. 5.99-9.99 • -• may co chino 46 moreno, Spanish lace, richileu, carousel, honey 'n rice, Buckingham. MAVCO '" .. • • •• • • :• •• •• :• ·• •• • • :• • •• . Ill = • • • ll • • Ill • • • • • •• • • • • • :• •• • •• '• ' .,. '• •• 1 • ~= :. =• l. '. l! l • '. u I t ' .. :. :• :• :. • :• ~­t. •• ~ • • • !'= !. ,. :. • •• : -· ' :• !i .. = • •• •• , ~ . • :• • • • • • • • • :• :• •• • ·• • •• =• . •• • = ! 5 •• 1. ~­:. := :e • • • • .i • • • • • I ,· ~ l ~-~ :· ' I .. .-I .. • . .. ' - ·- . .. . .•. f ... t-,•. ~:· ~· .. ~: ;£: I ? ~ .. 1:. ... .•. ••• " ' ... • .t~ .,. ... ·l . (. . . ' . . . • . -. ~ ' -~ . ~ :: l r • ., •' ,. . . • . . . f I ruck eost Up .93% ' Seniority Problem =:::::f .• 1-WI tuestionsJlemain Duke Graduate Jan11~a M. Martin, soo ot Mr. and P.1rs. Gordon A. "l. ~artln, UH Est Wilton St .. COili Mt1a, 1 receive(! his degree trom¥Duke t>nivel'alty ' dur.lni 1970 commencement exel1:11e11 at me--N or t-Army's 'Goq t' OtJer looked WASHINGTON (AP ) -]'he l>tfort )'OU know w!Jal you Am\y't Gama Goal Truck, at really want." lat.est ~nl 83 percent 1nore expensive than o r I g t.1.a.l lY. BENCH J\.IARK estimated, has gotten ~al}l A beneh mafk IQ the l.IX·. atteoUon in the bilJJol! d<illor'1 yelN>f., 'hlatprj of \ 11 e overrun conlrovettle• over radieilly different vekiole was such projects as the C$A super its deJlgn by Ling· Temtc>- tr._i, VOIWlllll ""' A r my wu Stil~ Sen. William Proxmire • presented with the design, says the Ga1na Goat ls one ~wpich lt ~en used as tht of "the strangest cases ever basis for competltlve bidding, lo come before this com· LTV won. Proxmire and hi1 mlttee," that is, the WlSt'oruiin staff doubt there could have Democrat's j o i n l economic been any genuine compelilion, subcommittee. whkh 11 at Utt From lhert tht Gama Goat eye ot. Ovtl'Nn CMtrov•nii111. 1111 Lhree y1t1r1 b e h I n d Elmer B. Staats, U . S . schedule, wenl from I t 1 complroUe. ~"'"' and bead 'orifftW ~JP" size, 111\1• of the watchdog OcwtrnMent lar1er than a•jeep, to a 7.5-ton Accounting Offlce, say s U1e vehicle, rou¢lb' the weight or Gama Got\ "ii 1 prontlnunt th1 l1111!1t1.,n1ral use truck example of buyill' •omothln& in ~mi l 'l!'iltf, and jumped "Generation Gap" mnch I I SolidS ,ln bv-.Arrow• Appeals to modern men from teens to post- grads. Shapeq frQnt and back fo r a tapered look, arllht. ~•w eolort wllh contr111ln1. darker tone, black, or matching buttons and thrlld. 2~but10n Q/iff1, · Decton P.rm1·ll'Qn . Come in. Turn on. Mach II shirts by Arrow '''"' '8. • I . ' ' From Al'fOw, the colorful white •hlrt company. e IANKAMIRICARI> 2300 HARBOR BLVD . COSTA MESA THE GRADUATE DESERVES A LASTING GIFT OF MUSIC! J111t .,..j ... .d 1111 l!llflt ,,, gr•d111 tlo111 -• fl111t ••l•clio111 ef 11\liltl• bo.-•1. tht l~rt,•t l!t •II th• .U.t.. fwl11 h1,.clm•clt "'~"' ilflll• ~ 1ic bo••• wt~ fl'!t lt• di••~ 111.r• tt 111111•1 l•r•'• T~!l"I~ 9'1tl• • w•l11, \. l""'""'' Dr••m, lrY-tt .. ~fll• '"' •"" """'."' ,..,.., Pric•d from $1.91 t~ $120.00. I OUTH COAST PLAZA -COITA M!SA • in Overrun ,. from a 111 1nl!Uon proJoct to $4S9 mllllon . · Recently, In a hearing, Proxmire summed up his view 0( Gama G<>;1I &hof1<:0min,&>, (or Brl(ld~r Gen. Vlnc;ni !Ins, tll. Armf'l pr..,...ment deputy: 1•1 do eot want to bl unfair to you, but J am astonished that you were pleased ~ith the Gama Goat progress. Vou have got a program that is three years late, and you have a truck that Is three times heavier than it was supposed to be, lmd it doe11 not havt ' any bigger payload, and OQ4 that la twice as ti:penalvt 11 the original t1tlm1t1. Ji Html to me that )'OU •rt 1n euy man to pltAlt,11 · Ellll• rop/1111 he Pll'!Qlllllf rarnro4dt11 U.. project 1"4 lhat he ia very di Uculi lo please. NEVER 'l'llTEP Staats' inve1U11tor1 i i)' the Gama Gott was nevtr tleldo tested and preliminary reaulLa from wt\ft teetlna: has gone on rev41! 1trlou1 doubts as to wq,lher I.he truck cart survive its flrsl 20,000 mile,, as specified, without breaking down . Only God • • • Carolln1 school. WASHJNGTON (AP) -The aboUsb the senlorlly Ofl\tm,"1 ... ~ .... ~~--.... _, congresswoman heading 1 bt Nki. study ol the eongression1l Arnona hit propoea11 I• the 1M1nlQri~ 111tem is finding tht tllOlSon ot e o m m I t t • e problem dlfflcult to solve. chalrmtn from lh• top three Rep. Julia Butler Hansen acnior mtmben, 1n 111 Urriit (O.Wllll.), oald H • u" or TO, and a llmllalloo on members have b ten the nwnbtr of colnm1ttee and "unusually responsive" l n 1ubcomnUttH ch•lrmanlhjps making suggeslions f o r for OM man • changes in the s y s Le n\ Thi ap llml\ propolll po1es whereby committee chairman I ~ tor Mn. Hana.n. HALLI DAY'S NATURAL 81-IOUt..DER CLOTI:UNG FOR DAD 6 GHAD '11 we are going to limit al't appol.Mtd solely on length memben 11 t.o q:e, then we of service. wlll b•ve io amond Ute But amki the lncrtaJin& O>nltlluUon, becauao lhl1 is llml•· •-I -..a " ... ~1 • .1orrMlf'A1.t;Wl'tll~•: erltlolalo ti the system by a wl-on r ... •m, ,..e junior members 0JtCong.res1, llJd, 11AllD, wt heve to rtpeal WllTCl.I'' 'I.AJA tlll Mid. Uw basic quesUone the liatut.es whlQh JIYO fCIUal 1104 1m .. Aft, 1'efftlll1 : rlaht. to 1vel')'Gn• re11rdless Ntw,.rt a"'" "'"''" Dot• I.hi seniority system i~o(= 11~1:;•·;"::;";;'°;'°'::·::" ==:;::::;:O'=:=:=======i Impede pros:ress, or preven\ ; a -a '; m a s -- chiOIT Doti it tend to Isolate p.opl1 ffom issues, or actually give rank to those who hAvt ,cquired knowledge in a oom· plicated federal governm~nt! "I am f!;xtremely open-mind· ed on the subject," sbe ••id in a recent letter. Wedding Bells will ring for years to come ... Ellis and J, Ron ald Fox, ••• can 1nake a tree-but scuJptor Co unt von Svoboda . "I do not believe In service where senility Is involved. l have yet to see a chairman in the House of Represent•· lives who is not bright or 1bl1, even ~though hls viewpointt do not agree with mine." ·, .. with Q~ford Bone Chine, the bone chino for tod1y'1 way of life. Translucent, yet sur· p~1ln1ly 1tronr. H1 ndsome, yet pra ctica l. Be 1mart ••• ragl•tar you r p1tte rn choice In our Brld1I Gift R111i1try. Ask our Consultant for coordina~n&' Lenox Crystal patterns. She 'll be st•d to help you make you r selections. an assistant Army secretary, joirted this hollowed out log with bronze rods for his d is put e the investigators, eight and one~h~Ji ton work. Entitled ''Perpetuit)C' saying the Gama Goat was the. s~uJp~ure J$ca lL'<l on plaza of George Pacific .~!tensivelr teste<j in the lielq. Bu1ldmg 1n PorUand, Ore. Svoboda iaY• ii "pointi wnat is lnoomplele, they say, toward the new Ji!c ••• an emergent tree seeding Mrs. Hans'en has div ided htr ll·mcmber aimmittee or tile House Democrati c Caucus into three subcoinmittees to ei:--is testing or prQ{luction. line in the center." samples. ----'--"--'---------------plore different phases of the problem. As for the 20,000 miles, they ' -Mrs. Hansen said she ti· peels prog ress reports from each of the 1ubcommlttetfb,y mld.J..,., say their s~lfio1tlona call for that mil•••• with no more than 500 MUN prtdJct1bl1 maintenance. Thi tHtl hlYf lihown these 8"°' haYt ac- tually bee n ••"'41d, \ht)'" say, with the houn fll\U't now at 150. The original "8 million was only an estimate, the Army says. On the basis ol thi1 figure, say1 Proxmire, who constantly plup for rnorl! rigorous lllld IQCUri te 1cost projections, thtrt ha• *" a 93 percent unit cost hike, or overrun. The Army 1ays once developmcrit was eomplelQd. the individu al ln1 ck c0sl has only gooe up a percent. PHICE DEFENDED F'ox and Ellis defend the doubling of unil price saying it was treading new ground, asking LTV for its own unlque O\'erland truck with six wheels in two box-like sections con- nected by an "articulating joint" which gh111 wllh the terrain. lt'.11 supposed lo go 55 m.p.h .. swim and irurvlve parachute drops as well. 22 011 Ora11ge Coast Pass Bar Exan1ination "I have proposed to Corn• mittet members that wt idt 11 1 panal to hear vario1.11 scholars on the subject of 1enlorlly and its alternatlvt11, aM allO tbat we sit 1s 1 panel to hear DemocraUc mornbtl'I dl1cuss seniority and ill alternatives, pro and con/' she said. Twenty-two Orange Coast •re• applicants for the 1970 Sprint Bar Examination have 1ucce111f\llly quallfied for ad· ml1:1lon to praclic:e Jaw . ac· eordlnB to the Committee of B•r J!:Jarninerll of the State D11r of California. The n:imes and addresses ol successful applicants, in order of ell)', were: Costa Mei8: Lee Marlon Conover, 3119 Gib ralta r Ave.: Theodore Edward Cory, 1929 Whitlier Ave.: Dennis G. Monge, 856 Santiago Rd.: Lafe S. Parkin, 1971 Wallace St.; Corona del ~!ar : David J. Brobeck, Jr., 2310 Fir5t Avi .; Brian R-<;arl•r. tT31 Cortland Dr. >'oonll ln Va/101 1 ttorrr E. Hien , 11n LI Urando Coor!: Ronald Bl. \Yiksell,. 111 31 Betonla St. fl.farvin Vida, 17422 Avalon U.ne. El Tnro~ Elfin E. Edward.I, 213 11 !lark Slreet; Mlr•lon ViojQ: llonold H. S1b•i!t, 111a Parlso Drive; Laguna Beach: f'r11ncts B. Haller, 122 9 To11'1ple Hills Drive . Newpon. Dea~~: John A . Adler, 1904 OCea n ·Front; Frederick W. Anderson, 2591 Circle Drive ; La Verne Bugna, ~00 ~1omlng Star Lane; Nils D. Goedhart, 117 Ruby St.: William W. Pangman, 414 Vista Grande; and Phillip A. Petty, 4828 ltlver Ave. -The committee was ap. pointed as a result of com· plaints of junior H o u s e Democrats that the senJority system has produced a disprbpOrtlooale share o( eorn· mittee chairmanships fr°"1 the South. with power te obstruct National Oemoc:raUc system al.so complain that Party policies and prograflls. Opponents of the sen~rlty House Cfla irmen now avera1e Mo del .Honie 70 Y"" old at a time whon colleges, corporations 1 n d Really Vacant other American lnsUtuti""' are turning to younger mon llONOLU~U ( A p ) _ for leadenhip_ Lindwla 11omta ot HIWllll pj,!t Rep. Morris K. Udall (1)- a mOOel homo on dlaplay •nd Ar it.), has 1 u g g es l e d plaaed $4,400 worth 0 I mod ifications in the seniority furnl,hl n&s in it to attract 1ystem to "lake the total '1111'" ehlna. Elega nt lrfY aero/I motif banded In pur1 platinum. A 5· pleoa p\tct settloi is $34.95. Montclair crystal. Plat!. num trim, el~nic han d· blown IHd cry1tal by ' L•nox. A ~·Pl 1C1 pl1c1 11Uln1 l1 $18.00. PLUMMER'S 6 PAIHION Ill.ANO e NIW'Oll IUCH PHONl1 l44·11SI LTV , an aerospace COf\- traclor with no experience with trucks, was ch~•rt over Detroit afte r all lh91e years, Fox says, becaust the auto" industry has "ln1vltably pro- duced a vehicle \rhlch ·is nar- rowly aimed 1\ a ribbon of concrete." Hun lington Beach : Jeanne K. Cooke, 6131 Montecllo Dr ive ; WHllam J, f11r1u.84}n, II/Oil a!arbolrd Clrq\11 Orvll/o P. MoQlonah~1 11111 Saint Jniln I.an" 1"111d Doual" Rull<!. 11111 1111,. Clrclo; buyers. rl~ldlty out of it." 1'h1t throc·bodrootn homt .~Clo:n:lgr!::e~ss~i~sn~·~t -'g~o~ln:!g=.:to~!;;;;;;,::;:::::===:;:;;;;;:: w111 empty whe11 it wa4 Ol*\•I' Einstein Pipe Sold for $2 75 NEW YORK (AP) -A colabash p,111' 1moklll! by Albert. l!;lni•ln was &Old .Ill ttiuctlon rl\UJ'l(l ay to a New York madloal researcher for 1S75. . The salt of memo r!'biUa ol famops ~le, eotlduoltd by Jhc Chari" Homlil on Gallerll;!I al thl! W•ldorf Astoria Hotel , r1all:.ed tu,ttl. --ON THE TUBE '-' t kl '"'' 11114• te wh1f't '"F'"1.-, 1111 TY. r••d T"I WE II! """" 411hl\11ftil with ttt1 :i 1turcl•v •cllil•111 •f th• DAl1Y r1LOT • PHDNI 140-2,21 ' I od lo the publlo. Buralars had olrlpped It ol"n overnlpt. GIT THIM TO THI CHURCH ON TIMI-with , • • -SON-Y'S AM-FlVI, AM-PM. Here's a &rnart cloc;k radio tha t m&ke1 y0ur' !'!I.ht table look bigger. Because It takes up 10111 tl'\an 5 lnohes squa re of $pace. Ye t It weik11 you up to news or weather or' • Rock or ~'Ch Just llke the big Or"li! . Th ls FM/ AM ha!! a nice big lace for easy tlmt1 telling. And 1 rlch·lookina waln ut grai n flnl1h • n comes In a little iQUire box that we'll be happy to r.ftw rap. Take II home today. And ll•t•n to A QI FM durioa th• AM or PM. Till Sony 7F~· 4W. . SONY• An Ideal Gifi-Only $29.95 ©DAVIS -BROWN 411 I. 17th St., Costa Mesa Dally 9-6; Monday ind Friday 9.9 646-1684 NOW OPEN at 54 -•r----fASHION_ ISLAND FATHIR'S DAY JUNE 21 .. ' - ' • ' , ' ... " -' . " • Anti1cnr For1111a Created WASltlNGTON (AP) -Tiie antiwar movement h a !S reached the U.S. military of- licers corps. Calling themselves I h e Concerned 0 f f i c e r s ~tove­ ment, about 25 Washingloo- based officers. mostly NllVY men, have banded together to provide a forum for what they say is arowing disillusion- rnent amoog their ranks wllh the lndochina war. A leader says the small grou p is probably lhe first antiwar organization at the officer level. "Most of the junior officers are Somewhat disi llusioned about Lhe war 1n Indochina," Lt. (j.g.) Phil Lehman, a Harvard graduate with eig~t mouths of Vle tnam dtuy behind hiln, told a reporter. Letuuan, OOIV in a supply tilllet here, said the group has broader concerns than the wur -1nllltary justice and what he called "the quality of life in the n1ilitary.'' The group reportedly has contacted other bases with f avorab l e responses Coming f r o m California, Florida and Rhode Island. The chief tool the organiza- tion USt"s to spread its views is a 1nonthly newsletter. The first issue of the newsletter. distributed i n April,1 contended that U.S. poli cies had ''turned an in· temal political ~1 ruggle intG a naUOlHiestroyi.ng b I o_ o d '•bath" i.n Vietnam. Through its newsletter, the organizntion said its purpose is to "serve nolice Lo U1e military and the nation that the ofricer corps is not parl or a silent majority, that it is not going to ]J:'t its thought be rnshioned by the Pen· tngon." Lehman said hi s com· 1nnndlng officer discussed the 111atter 1vith hin1 but there was no harassn1ent. Nobody has suggested he stop his activity -:-··not yet" -LelUTian said. The lieutenant said the nc\1.'sletter is being put out ~ ... -. in conformity With regu lations, • since n e I t he r government • facilities, materials nor lime • are used. • Lehman indicated t h e organization makes strong ef-Ill forts to avoid Inflammatory • rhetoric in getting its ideas • across. • Lehman said most or tht • members of the organ ization entered the service. as he did, • through ROTC or received • commissions rrom officer car.-• did ate schools. None are • "career motivated," he said. They range In age from 23 • to 30, several are doctors and • a number of then) have served • in Vietnam . • Asked why he joined ROTC. Lehman said he was pe rfecUy • willing lo serve. • "I fell I had tG serve my • military obligation and that • being an officer in the Navy • \\'as the best way to do th.is," • he said. The officer group is still • very loosely organized and • meets about once a week in • the apartment of a member. • l.~hman agreed that a number of enlisted men's an· • tiwar activist grou ps have • bet>n in the field for soo1e • time. But, he said, .. they don't • \\'elcome officer pal·llcipa· • lion." Anywa y. he added. ..they • are more radical than \Ve • are." • . - GiFT iUYSJ FOR YOUR FiAVORITE PERSONS DADS·· GRADS FREE DELIVERY •• r • I • DAILV PILOT 31 BEAUTIFUL BRIDES FREE INSTALLATION INCLUDED FOR THE BRIDE A rtifacts Uncovered 111 Race With Time • • • • • • • A gabardine suit in warm-weather? ' Absolutely I . But, only, Only if it 's SUPERDINE! Because this is a featherweight , , • designed by a stylist \\1ith a real thing about the fas hion of gabardine! It's polyester and \vo rsted and uses s<>me o{ the finest fibers ever spun. It'll keep you cool and un\\•ri nkled \\'hen all about you are looking for shade. Ideal for graduation - an excellent selecti on for 1''ather's Day. •• h ·~ " master charge ·~· .. ' ...... '" • l 5i5 U.ST COAST HIGHWAY, CORONA del MAI . PUL\-MAN, Wash. (UPI) - Archeologists will beg in a race against lime later this 1nonth· to uncuver artifacts of North Am erica's earliesl inhabitants before the evidence is lost beneath backwaters from the Lower Granite Dam, About 20 students and staff from \V nshington S l a I e University \\'ill work al a site in a dry reservoir about one half n1il e up the Snake Biver fro1n the prcpose<I da111 neu r Ley:iston. Idaho . The site already has produced artifacts J0,000 years old, Ur. Hichard D. Daughe rty, chairman of the anthropology department at \VSU, said the site mu y contain remains dating back 11,000 ye ars or more an d reveal a cullure ronten\porary to the one unearthed at the J\.farin es site about 75 miles downri\'er. 'rhc J\.1arrnes slte w..a..s subrnerged in J\.1arcti, 1969, when an emergency levee ron· structed by !he U.S. Army Corps of Engineers failed to keep out backwaters from the Lower ?i.1onument.al Dam. i7S·l lSO Daugh ter ty said the ==================;==:__:':::"':::'::."':::o:::ir::._. which conl ains 80 I ~ ~ j, J ~ i,>,i Today's go-anywhere, do-anything Hush Puppies.® A c:las1ic c1sual lor every man·s wardrobe. Packs lig ht lor an extra pair on trips and wears Ugh( whon you· re there. Steel shank tor extra support. Comfortably priced loo. I 3.95 known archeologica1 sites, will • fill with waler when the Ulwer • Granite Dam is completed five • years from now. • lllodllGGSD 250 su:;.~1'c.:~i!7.i.'~~~~r~,~~'.: '-~B'IJ.~~1J r· The one dating back 10,000 years • and the other containing • artifacts 400.000 years old. : I Graduate The upper 1,,., contains the EVEN SOMETHING t will surely be pleased with this outlines of semi subterranean • FOR MOM! buildings that probably housed • the ancestors or the present • Nez Perce Indian tr I be, • Daugherty said. • An archeological crew which did preliminary work at lhe • site last sum1ner unearthed • arrow and spear heads, drills, • scrapers for hides and stone • ham(Tlers from the l\\'O levels, • he sa id. "Some of the artifacts fou nd • at the lower le\'el were similar • to those found at the fl.1arn1es • site," said Daugherty, who has • worked at both sites. Artifacts found at the • ?i.tarn1es site indicated lhe in· • hahila nt.s traveled extensively • and had tradings with othe r • people, and evidence linking !he two sites logether would • be an hlstOrical archeo logical • bre akthrough, he said. • Daugherty sa id scientists • may have less tiJ!le lo explore • !he site than the five years before the flood gates of the • MODEL 10-1119 Lower Granite Dam are open-• r-__ _ 30" F,11 Gla1' Back Guard -..-11 11 , Roll-O,t I SOLID STATE UHF TUNER Bro iler Lift-Off Top ! • ltigh Gal.a. Vllf Too.er ~ • Solld State lnlF •runor ~ •Front Samul I •Front Controls • t.font1pole .An.Imm& l • 14 Square Inclw1 VJcwmg ..... - pairabl• .;ondition, ed. • • : DOU,BLE SAVINGS "CJ ..,.. !" Joi· e/Jac • • • • • • • 1970 MODEL CLOSE-OUT PRICES PLUS BIG TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE _ . .,,., tho lnllrmodlllo wrist For the per1on who finds a allghUt_ amaller watch mo re c15mfortable to -wear, the famed Tissot Seaalar 1 with water- realatant case, luminous hour m11rkera. Stalnles& 11eol, SSl.15 Matlltr llleppl11t Ctlll•r UOI MarllM" 11••· IHdl I. IEdilll., • • • i : • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Cell• Mtw thoill"ll• IMdl • • • • • • • • • • • • MS-Mii :P..fOl'lC'I ~fsoor-:wn With t11de-in on anv TV In wor~l "t. or rfJ>•irabl• tond ilion . • Here's Something For Dad And The Whole Family! lltro Cl lt OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS 2300 HARBOR (N e.t To Thrif ty'•) COSTA MESA 546-67 5 ·::..'.'.;:;·,"·;;·,;,~ ~:'.:,:M : • -----------------------------------1~~~~~~•111 11111111••·································· • I I ' I I I I I I j I I • -~-~-------. -a DAILY PllOT Mood'f, Ju,. 8, 1970 f•lldt €out Reir'rtoi]r ·'Saved' ~~lo.re ~ Vio·Je~ce,_ Ali~nation .;. 1')' TOM "m'IJS Of ..... PllltSl.tf lf'.detp dtll*Sion and acute olllOltlon .,. to "" construed Iii 11'1 lonlll, -South Coast Repel1cry bu come up with • majGr -k of art lrilh Ii. pndu<Uon of Ille COil· Voi¥..ul Brltllh. plaJ •s.v. ..... Edward Bond's dramaUud attack on decaying morality and the loss of a workable system of values was initlally binned in England bec1u1e ol a particularly slcktnlol se- quence which dtplcta the brutal murder or a 'baby by I Sant of 0 rockan," the Brlti~h equJvllellt of oor Hell'• Ill flllfl ..... (IO) MONDAY JUNE a 7:55 mi c...u.. • ---= Notici•.L ,l:toQa;)L111~·l1 {C) (10) (ll Br10tsm1i. Cttol CMll-IM 1llt Tim slnt "W111t1q _'flill"_._th11_LJt. lie Old M11 1Ml lll4JI O!'mpflb, Wilk down !ht 1],lt. ~ ... -(C) (IOI Jony ''"'"'· :: ":'::. 'ici(~~ Willi -..1: ......... h llllists .,, Sl1 ....... fl'Mll lorl!li• •lld --... ··--(C)-p If f/111111' (....., '11--Jlft11 W1yne, Diii Dallr ... ...,.. O'Mltl. • """ ...... (JD) "Tho Al· t ...... ..,,..,..., M ralla tht ,..,_... ..-ri••• lie -.inter· .,._ .. __ ... :•TlltPI ... •• fC) (SO) : .... '"'CCI (IO) •. ;19(J)MC - -<Cl (IOI •• ...,. ,..., (IO) "Jt\1tl1nd.. 13 ()) ... -iCI (30) ·ill-llO! ·-·--(IC) •· ·-..... -(C) (00) "-*. Whitt, Clori1 Cl'llll', P'1tll - •. llJr•nflY 0 ,._ ..., CCI !IQ! m To Tll "° T .. CCI (IOI fD --CCI (OOJ 11>-JOJ 1:il5 m ""• 1 ....... us1 c:..d11. ''IO ID flll Cll -. ...., CCI • flOJ (R) L11e1'1 efforts kt 111 Cnl& •~ 1ollld at ttie U.l Mr f .. _Acedltllf 111111 dOlflllll lt ftllYrt. ez.. ..., -(IOI G IDJ(J)••-- ""C#rlt'" (*91111) '52. -u.w. Olwttr, JM!ltr. ....... Mlril• Hep. •1111. Eddit Albert. 'II i!rl ..... I •latfMll It NII oft .ith I lllltfllC man. m -'"" -ce1 1001 G1111t 1IOlll o,.. Wiii• .. 1c:omtt Dllllt llllltftM, No1111111 Mtll1t 1Ml [Jty st0M 11 IUalL ·• i IH@I 1'I ......... CC)· (IO) Thi ,_ •M ,,....,,. •re llnllM wltti ftl• INt 111 [lll'OPf llDI· llPQlld 1pllllt driW!ftp, Npt •nd rlCttlttons 1111' ICICltt wlln !flt 1rMt ....... """""' tlwtM llllir 1.;. Al\lels mlnu.s the motorcycles. ''SAVIO"' A dtl,,.... b1 Ectwfird loner, dll'Kffif 1t111 oeti•fl'Cl b1 o.wto Emmet. 11111'1.1· Int ;y .. nfr1 P••k•r. C0$111.,,.. IW ···~ 6"111111!1 .... ,,..,ted by Sol.Ill! !;Nit fllHr!orw Frkf1t1 lhrwt11'511,.. da11 Ufllll Julv 11 11 Ille Third "" Tllffl.,., 1121 N-1 l lwd,, to.ti "'~· 1"MI CA11" Len .•• •• ...... •• Mlchtll Oolll!llt Pa"' ......... •• ... ••• ... JIMIC:I 0.v11 M•l"l" ..... .. ... • .. . .... • 141,... Sltrlfi "'"' ... :............ . •• 19 111 l r1d1 l"rtd ........... " .. , ••.• J1me1 81•" Ml~• •.•..•. , .... 1 ..... $'1ufr1 Frlf1!1, 1"111 ., ..................... Jfl'l"l" tt Colln • • , ............. l.Ar,.,. HerbllMlfl Barry .. • ...•.. , ...... , , 11111¥ Mill•' Lil • . ............... Ml"'I Srnllh This is, as it turns oot, one or only two scenes (out of tS) in which. the charaot.ers of "Saved" actually brt1k Crom their drib, dreary ex.- hf,ence and offer IOt'l'le lll!lght lnto their inntrmott thoulht• and feelings. The bala.oce of the play Is compriHd of col· lecLive dral]latic quicksand 11ucklng its unresisting vt,ctlm1 deeper and deeper Into a lifetime trap rrom wh.icb th.ere is no more e9Cape than from ----------- the solitary ward of a prison. know early in lhe play, 11 the resull of the zombie-like existence of her parents, ex~ cellently portrayed by AM And here lies the primary fault or the play -not the baby sl1yln& scene, bizarre as It is, but the complete lack of motlv11tlon for the behavior of the four principal characters as they settle into 1 life style akin to 1 sort of armed truce, ..-Ith com· munication totally a~t. The playgoer can only ask again and again, "Why?" Siena and Bill Brady. They 1-------''--''-- live -survive I! the better word -under the same roof, communicatini only w h e n one's frustration with tbel.llll:lll:lillllllllillllll Playwright Bopcf obviously ls a student or '"1ile Plnler school, for he pt't.sents a ludicrous situation and then proceeds to make it more so, giving his characters no more dimension than that of a catatonic. l( this Is lntende<t as a valid 1tatement on a human condlUon, Ila creator 11 in seri ous trouble . Its production at South Coast Repertory II t\eadfutly loyal to the pllywrtght's ap- parent attempt, with D1vld Emm~· direction low key and unlheatrical In Ill approach. Dramatic silence is used. as tn Emmes' production of "ThP. Jfomecoming," a11 1 weapon, underscorin& the masochi1Uc alienatlon which p e r v a d e 1 throughout the play. Michael Douglaa1. a1 a bootlicking young milklop who pickl up a glrl, 'moves Jn with her, then refuses to leave when she drops him. gives a superior perforrnanct! in a role totally lacking i n credibility. Pertoctlcally. he brlna• the au<lierce to the ver1e or undersLandlng, then lapses back \nto his mad- dening enlama. other reaches tht breakina point. Again, the unanswered question. "Why?" James Baxe1 plays the younc 11n1 lead er w h o becomea the scapegoat for hill mate1' violence with cool reserve mlxed with a trace of compassion \\'hich h e carerully 1uarda for fea r It might mark hlm as human. The other rockers are given THfY MIOOT HORM'~. DON'T THO'? ~ ALIO = AA the 1lrl who seorns him , yet chases the rockers' 11ang leader much· as 3ltt her8elf is pursued by Dougla~s. SCR newcomer Jessica Dav I 1 delivers the o u t s t and I n I performance or the night. Slashing blindly et everything and everyone in sl&hl , r.t!11 Davis creates a character who !11 the natural byproduct of a home life completl!ly devoid 1~~~~~~~~~~~11 of human feellna . Ii . This, as we att alven to Jl'r a switM.:d-o" laugh riot! WAll'DISN£Y ...... ' ~·~ ... ... • • IXCLUSIYE "FOUR STW * * * * HIGHl1T R.11111 •• -. A IRATIFYIHI ACHllVDllRT." -WlllN llalt, N,Y. Otlly Nt'll'I "ll'IC IATTU OFTHl sms.· • .Vl11ttrrt C1nbf. N.Y. nmes I See by Today's Want Ads • Then'• •· thorou&hbrtd • quarter m•re, EnallAh ju.mplrw trop winner available t<Wlay. AllO a stall, if ~ed. e U )'Ol.I need Ol"W!, •• au~ matte waAhtr, lop c:ondJ. Uon $40. ·- • Start yoor O\Vn band \\'llh .. this elt'CITIC ball aultar, "&oo new lo be \.\led." JOO! Ol'EN 6:45 7lt E. l•1kl' .. .... ,.nlnaul• ANTON ION l's :rr.111mtn :mmrnirn IPODmDf l ei Offlc:o Ope11 7 M0A*S*H Pl.US "I LOVE YOU ALICE B. TOKLAS" l a• Offt•• o""' 1 "808 & CAROL & TED & ALICli" ALIO PLA.YINI "CACTUS ~LOWBR" Also Playing TE RENCE ST AMP CAROL \yHITE "POOR COW" They thought llley W.. tough until Ill• llrlnger faced llltim With I book '"""' Pit IODIEo Doll-"' !Ill mMDA JACll( GIROUX• OUUl Oef!Ul'flt • JOMN llDllNSOlf ~DOIUMt'ti111.»MlSIDllMf .... ., M1lr tllllibt(\. R.,ula r Performtncts Me11. tlrtf11 T11111'l.: 7lJO, f 1lO PM frt.: 6, I , 10 PM .... 1rllllll llUIMY -•lltl!Oll -111 1'1'~ • s.t. llAd S1111t 12, t, 4, 6, I, tq PM "------~~-~--~~-~~-·,·~~~~~------~..;;;;;;;;m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.~1 • . , • J -. "'Old ,1 .. lhi oris:lna1 Dt-n'c:r ind ~lo Crtnd• nmr· roW.pus~ !tttnl Train i• 1till m• 1111 ht.1h'ZJ jt Knoll'• h1 Gbo11 Town, II pllla 1 011 Ill 11 0 evet)' JO wh1111.n, • HELD OVER .. An unpNcHentecl . paychedellc roll•r coaster of an experience." -Lilt "''2001' provid11 the ttrtt n with 1orn• of the med deulin9 vi1u•I hi:>· p1nin91 1 n d l1chnic1I 1chi1v1rn1nl1 in the his- tory of the !Tle lien pie· t~··•l" .... ...., ... weniwi ..... .. , ... ,.... ........ 01~ YOUN• Ali• N•1111•"'411 fer t ..... ., ......... "BEST I ACTRESS-: JANE FOIDll" ~ -ALIO-~I-•It Y••..-lllSMllD Yirl ·"'-"' Yorlt fJm C"t.1t1 PLUS THIS TOP SITUATION COMEDY Jl\AN.0 ;:.QM11$ ,<I LAii l!_'f'.-../ntf)) AU>ll ~;!I e- ~..::.;;-.:;:... COLOR "AIRPORT IS TOP FLIOHT1ALL THE WAY!" • -C~i<ogo Doil1 N1w1 "You wtll anJoy AIRPORT lmmenaol)', ond you will find yourself talkln1 1bout It enthutle1tlcalty te-your frtendt." -Gt ....... ,.,, • tan llU~llJ _..,. AIRPORT IUll'I LIJIWTIR • DUR l!.llTIR jUJI IHHI jiqUUIRl lJlllT IEDRGI llRRlll'I HlllR NAYU • VAi HFUI MAUlllR IUP'LITOI , IAHY RlllOR lUIYD MOLAR DARI WYllTIR· IARBIRI HILi A IJll~ PICTUll • TICMICOl.GI" • ,,__;,, 1t*IM !OW.\!l* Im "t.:.::::OG)) 2ND RECORD BREAK ING W!EK" RATIO "0 " IT'S FOR EVERYBODY! •• 4flirij IMJ)()~T 4fiirijT M()Vll:! ,..()U WILL lAUt3t1 . TILL ,..()U C~'t!"" "WRITTEN WITH RATTLESNAKE VENOM!" "EXPLOSIVE I THE CAST IS EXCEPTIONAL I" Mart Crowley's ••mt llVrS l~Tt1t~·· ... is not a musicol. -.-iw..o1,M.c:...i.·r..-Ao1.omo...;n.....-110ot ... tladl,-.... ,. AU."°"""'ld""'-·C0.0,0.W • A'"""'Gnol"""A.1.· 11!1-d!a=-e . AO..C:-.. llo..o. 2nd TOP FEATURE .• ............ fl'ICT1Jlet- 'IJ'll!llE 11.A\WWR I H.A~.,...,.....,,Cotl•lll("'-'' .. llOI ~ llfO,.tlll Ail'JllllJlllD.M.a\MI: M--·---·,...-,_., i • I - l • . . \ ~~-----..:.~~~;~;-~ ... ~-~·~-.:;;.:;J...f;::::-~·;~~~4::;;:'~'~";;;>:"C~[.~;:;ii~j!liilllli•ZLl&Lllll&l$ll&ll&•£~'11•: ............. a.M•OM .. IC}'.·.·Ju·M""~·,·q·lt .. , .. ~~,..~,...,.-DA•l•LY_.'11. ... 8T~o•33•0 ..,~z;o ... s._,,~CC!J!ll0 -------------··---"""'!------.. ----------· =---.. • •• I 1 A re You Letting Cash Slip Through Your Fingers See If You Have Any Of These Things A DAILY PILOT ' WANT~A D i t . Steve 2. Oultor 3. lalsy J:rib 4. lloctr!• S1w s. C1m1r1 6. W11her 7. Outbllrd tMt.r I. SterM Sot 9. Couch 10. Clorlnot 11. Rofrlgontor 12. '5ckup Truck 13, S.wlnz Mlchlno 14. Surfbllrd 15. Mlchlno Tools 16. Olthwaehor 17. P""1'Y I 11. C1bln Cruloor • ., i9. Goll C1tt 20. ''"''"""' 21, ltomp Collo<tlon 22. Dlnotlt Sot 23. '51y Pon 24. lowllnz Boll 25. Woter lkio 2 ... , ....... 27. Sultuoo 21. 'Clock Will Sell Fast! 29. llcyelo 30. Typ1wrltlr 31 , Bor Stoolo 32. lncyciopo41o 23. Vacuum CIHner 34. Trop!col Fish 35. Hot Rod lqulpm't 36. fllo C1blnot U . Goll Clubo 31. Storllng Sllvor 39, Victorian Mirro r 40. Bodroom Sot 41. Slid• Proloctor 42. L1wn Mowor 43. Poo! T1b!o 44. Tir"H 45. Pl1no 46. Fur Coat 47. Dr1p1t 41. Llnono 49. Hono 50. Alrpl1no 51. Org1n 52. lixercycle 53. Rut llooks 54. Ski Booto 55. High Choir 56. Coins 57. l lectrlc Tr•ln 51. Kiiton 59. Cl11slc Auto 60. Coffff T1blo 61. Motorcyclo 6t. Accordion 63. Skis 64. TV Sot 65. Workbonch 66. Dl1mond Witch 67. Go-Kirt 61. Ironer · 69. Comping Tr1llor 70. Antique l'urnltur1 71 . T1p1 lt-rdor 12. S.llbllt 73. Sp1rll C1r 74. """'"' ........ 75. lnbotrd Spoodblll 76. Shot1un n . S1ddlo 71. Dirt 01mo 79. Punching 1111 80. lalsy Corrl1go 11 . Drums 12. ltlllo 13. o..k 14. SCUIA. °'" These or any other extra things around the ho- ' be turned Into cash with a DAILY PILOT WANT-AD s o -.... , ..... , . .., ...... ~ -· ..... Don't Just Sit Therel DIAL DIRICT 'ill . 642··5678 DAILY. PILOT , CLAlllPllD INDU DAILY PILOT • WANT ADS • Dl.U. DIUCJ' CU.aTa , llMM a IM•D " .~ ' MOTILL TIAILll coum t~,··::::.:~.:.:.:.:.:.:.:::Ji ~~i~J:~ ......... I"" HOUSIS POil SALi I HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSIS FOR SALi :.\ o1·::::::::::::llll suilol 51 •:.w.. ........... 0-.11 1 1• Oonor1I lllGO Gonor1t lllGO 1' ""11 .......... m. ;r~· .nr.L' ... ..... .. l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I ~ll~~ r.v~.~.::::::::::::1!ilH f=:i!filL:::~:::::: oft Ji j ~ ~ "" "'............... '°" .......................... 11 ' Wli IMOll ............... 1 IAMCMU .•• ,.................. tn a " ti •••oa'': .. ..uw•··:::::::.11. CITIUI .................. '19 •-... 'ClllA•I . .J.J.' .~,,,,.,,,, ...... . lllUVl l n • ll ,,,,,.,,,,,1111 L.Altl I Li-it , ,,,.,,,..,,Ull •I !1"'"'''"'"'""" 11M l l SOIT .. ~•I •.u)"""tHI 9AT '"'''''""'''""'""1tM 01,\Hlf , i~ ~lTT , , t!t7 1LU•P ................ ;··'*-our 011 I' ' ·• 't •.. :.:.:.,. II.,_,. IA 1114 -..011MTl Na II ........ 6111 mlJ.1 ~ti ,,. ......... 1141 tulDIYtllOM I.AMO ......... ,mt IN MAI ........... 11!! ........ •1'A'•1••VKI ..... ff\• YIMMtLA .......... J; t.1. 1111 K.t.Ne .............. dM ............ _, "' t. .. WA .. TID ................ ... ... , .... , ......... ,,. " ................. 1001 IUSINESS ind "'lo "lf "'.'.~:::l"' PINANCIAL t DA . emu ...... ~= :"'I'" .m\'~~.'~~;.= 'E'AI .. WM.UY .......... 1411 ,lfJ; MIWT °'""" -. i!!I I · SUS~"-'""'""""""': IOVS MIOT WIOOTll .... ,', ... If,._.. ,.,\ ... r.t ..... 1 MOlll Y Tt \.OAN "'"'"""' . PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES CUSTOM 4 TO 7 ,IEOltOOM HOMES PllOM flil,llGO TO $500,000 t'RIMI IUILDINO LOTS" l'ROM tu.IOI TO fl7S,iloo Fer C."'itl•t• Llnll1 1111 lnf""'1tl1n Ct ll: BILL GRUNDY, ltlALTOlt IU Dovor Dr., Suli. ,, N. B. 6'2-4(20 ...... ..... ................ ~ ....... , .................. .... l.Olll• lllACM ................. ,, .. , .. WILlllY LOAN• ........... ,..,,. G I 1-ft-I ,.AKIWOOD •:..:..!.:.t•••""''"''"' .. COLUTllA\ 1.0ANt .... .,, •. 6111 ,;;'~"';';l;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;-;;;i v.Mrl 1000 )IA.Jltil CftlllTT , ............ 1 .. =AL l ttATI LOANI ...... ~·: , tut Of' C.UNTY ............ , 1:: TeAlll, TNM Dte4I • .. . I -;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;; rr.1•·i0;~ .. ::::::::::::~:: .. ,, AN:1'o'ii~~:MiiN .. T··,.... MONEY 1' "' ................. ,.,. Mii • ' • ..................... -lnd-NOTICH m A .A "0·.J1••"'"""'"'• '01 I . TA AM Ma~ ............ Is Ll."ND ,,,... Alfl , .......... .... ••I ...................... 1 ' ... .<....................... MAIER ... ,, .. '".... ............... :'"-''t. ................... -. ltblt T\llT ................. 1.. r,:1,ou NC IN11 ......... ,. ... ,. .. .. ................... 1 .. IL Ml ....................... '411 . 1\V CANTDM ,,. ...... 151 f Nl lALI .................... 11 A MILU ................ 1 ~AIO OllTUAIY , ............. '411 llACH ,. ..... , ...... 1 .~lrtllAL DlllCTOlt ....... Mtf Eutllde ! btdroom + Nm 1 = \'fa,L .:'.',';,:·:.::· ::: c1 .:~·~: Ttt.\siri".~'.'.'.:::'..::::1: Put ~ on hup Jt.2 ..; IAlll t\IMl .. T• .,.,.,.lnl N M•MOllllM ............ , •. llf1r with _,,,. "·-..... 'UM cAPtnltAll• 1nl CIMlllltY L0'1 ,. .... , ........ 11 room to '1UMU • .-n• "'~·r~~~ '"""' ~: ~==~,·=~ ~=~~;: -.:::·:.::::~: Tr"""" ~4d1n1. __ ~ , .... , • .i-...... ,D. 1,,1 CllMA. 01111 ................. emen out .... u. I f v,......,, 011"00 ~ffi:;::::::::1ns :1m:~~L IAIUlf ........... = Betl@r Hurry! i"~~~'':I 11·-1•·::::::::: :~\'i'" .'.'.~~".; :: :::::·:·:: Nichols Real E ..... DOML'!IUM .............. ,, ... Alll ,.1,.POITATION ..... IMllUI ':n.l.0:.\"t:i.¥·::·::1:U tr.lltli 11.t.NIJlolTATl<Mi·::::: .... lt.NTALS " "°'"" ......... ..., 546-9521 e IMAM • TUtoltlflll ....... HN H-Pumlohod SERVICE DIRECTORY itT. u ,.. ·-·· .......... AN Wi i i • ·••v1c1 ""'"" :l"f"~ .. ,. ............... ':1 .. i"' ill =,. MllA '.!.""" .......... J1tl A LIA I l l PAlll. 'tOiltf.. I ,. el' ................. ., • .,, .. ., °'" ... HI U ' La C ,. lDI ................ "" •••o ,1,.,.1·:::·::::: .... ::.,. -~1111!!'11 ___ .., Y CJ• . Olt COLI.Ill ••.• .. 'S.o1 ·"""""'"'111 AUTO, ,.., l•ltl, '-.... ... A ·--t • WHIT •m ............ tttf .... av11n1•t .... -1...-.-This outslancnrv 2 story cot.. " It" .............. n 11 •OAT MAIP'TINAN(1 ''.'.'.'.'.:::.... H f onial ii -rched on tM blih-• ' , ............... "" '"""' ,..,.,.,, .......... -ap-n nt ~ nMOll · ·" ......... ,.,.,tm IUllHlll SllYl(ll ....... , 1M1 r.• Ml polnt Of Santa Alli .~··Lrr:••• ............... = •111L0••1 ................... "" Under $60 000 Heights. oni,. u..ooo wm i~••ITY P.tiiit ';;:::::::::an ~l,~~~E• iirie"·.:·::.'.'.'.'.:· ... : ' buy s large bdrm•, fonnaJ rl '"'"'"'"'"""""" ... CAl,INTI 1111• .................. De1l,rned and eoftltructed by dinl U.T .................... IMI CIMllllT • lvan Weill. P'l001'to-ceillna na: room, 1arnl.ly room, 11 ,._!L"'' .................. = tM•Lo ~1111, u•ii1i':::::::: .. 11 atone fireplactt,. vaulted &. 3 balha. Submit !:'. •••1 -COlllT\t~CTOll ................. ll ~.. Ir,' Vac•"t , .. _ 24 ur llVIMI ,,._ ........... CAii CLIAHU.• . ... ...... ce 11119, turmai. dildna room, ! . -· ........ . . it:~~.~.~~.:::::::::::: ~::111~".1.~~.~.~~~~1~.= 3 large bednlOlttl .m warm LIDO llLI ........................ , DIMOl.I~· "*' ramUy room. Lulh landaci.p. u~ .. 11 ...... !'~ ................... = DIA'''" 11i:'iiCI'::::::::::""' tna. totally -...;le -Uo. ruiiWt.roM'llACti'::::::::; .. ILICTIU AL 'j "1l'lJ""'""..... .,.__ ... by ippo':o"~'"·nt.~ ; Alli VAU•V .,.,..,,.,Ml• IOVifliM Nt. I NTA ....... = ~...,..-•lnc /~\:~~···:·:·:·~·:·:·:::·:·:::! i~iti:\~·~.~~;~~;::~::: Colesworthy A•A ................... ltll 111,IMllMINI "" INlflt •"'"""""""" IAltDINt•I , ......... .. 'f CtTl' 1...:~i.:.:.·"0''"'"''hl• llNlltAL lllVICll ......... Mli e:w.AU NllWl'ITI ""''" d llADINt, DllCINt ........... .... '"' ..... -................. :u11 NM LAI A lllC" .............. 1111 •=1111 TttUMt"'"•""""""'"' ~-· ... "'" ............. 11'11 •• .... • ......... - ....... ,, ........ \lllJI .,. ............... .. iAN CLIMIWTl ".'.'.::".°:7:::·.'..1111 HIALtlf CLVll .............. ll'li IAN ,u:: CA•~ltTIA•o •••... trU tlAUl.Ull =.'..i.'""'0 ' 0 """tnit ,,,10, NO •••H ,,_ MOUllCLIAN I-............. 6nt Ir Co. · ,llEALTOll Ne\\11QM: Stach omce l02I Baylidl Drive 67'>4930 --......... INl•llOI DICOIATIM• •.•.. •m ~~":.,':'&r'coum··::::::::·W: \"'OM',,.. . .. i .......... .,.. * TAYLOR WACAffO" llNTALI Eii 11o::i Dnllllllltlil. t.. ........ 1ne -IUMMI• ltlkTALi ,,'.'::::::· I llOlf .. , '"'l'"""""""'"'1M CONQl>MIJlllUM INtULA IMI '"'""'''"'"'" ,, .. • ,L •• s' .u.~···""'•'"".,.,s \NIUIA~I ""'"'"""'""'"' . U "" .............. NYllT lTtM .. DlhdtW t711 RINTALI """""" ·· ·a;· ..... :::,'" NEWPORT HEIGHTS HIVIH Unfurnl1Md t:::~c",.";./:.f"~ .... ~~.:::::::S Vu 3 bdrm 2 ba custom llMaaA~ .................... lllt 'r!tCklMITM ................. tel• W·'k" cot'fA Ml IA ................. 11 .. MAID 111\llCI .............. 6111 hOme. al to beach&: shop.. MS~DI MA .............. ,, .. MllONIY/; lllllCIC ........... ..... pine Park trailer/boat MIO v1•DI ................ 1111 MOY~Nt ITOIAO ...... ,..... ,,., ~ , COLL I IA•k •1 ............ 1111 '"INTIN , """""'"""' ...... tlM .....,.,"""'. llll'WHIT 11.tic .............. • PlllfT 1••· 111111 :.................. IO LINDA ISLI NIWl'OaT ... HTI ............. U ll ~tlOI .. ~ , ................. 6Nf JlllWf'OllT 1M111 .......... ! "°'"'"'"'"' ........... a 8 Bdnn a batll r&mt! nn IAnHol~ ., ............... tl••we. .......... ..... .. • • ••• • "' .... ........... 'W' ..... . .. .... .... ......... • ,.m. ""· r •• "" , ..... . cL1 ' ................... • ' tl00111~1 .,. "Our 25th Ytir'' ••• ,, , ................ 1117 ··~' ............ ...... • ••••s ." ..................... --=• o s 1•1 ........... 1>11 WI LIV N. SACK SA• .................... -••• .. VI I ................... TAYLOR co "'l.JLV'' ,.,,,,,, ........ ,.= 1r.~:-(li"'ifl."'.if;;':1J·;;;;;:;:::: • ilv•"• Tt1tut• .... -...... -ll:io !'fl a Rf&w ~ := Re1ltor1 C~:~: 0'~.~~.::::::;::::ftD !r:•• ':...'•'•• .. ~~.;::;._ NEWPOYtT CEHTEJt IAV 111.AlfDI ................. NM '#NI ~> • .:.""" ................ 2llJ San J091lU.lft Hilk Ra.cf - 1 .. 4 , ................. ml I NI-"'"' llPAl•I H ,.,.,. -0 · ............ , .... I• Tlj TANltl...... .......... ~-,1 • w ~' ........... »71 TAILO IHI , , ............. #H WALK TO -• 8:r.CH H IN ............ Tl.MITI CONTICK. ,.,,,.,.,.Q iruo - " Tnt•1" I UI -... Mif Tit .. ,.,_ ............. , .. .,,tnt 8 utl""l ~ -2 -l'OUNTAIN \IALLIT ......... .Jot ti •• L ..... & ,.,.,. ........ i:!!' M IU ..oom. • ..... , llAL 1UCH .................. MH , ••• lllYICI .............. . ham~ on I butt eul-de-sae IAIOI Jf elO'l9 ,.,,.,.,. ..... :MU TILl'llllONt. ....... IN. ... I "°"l'"'c"N'+f""''····· .... Ul"NOUTl•Y ..................... lot. Luah park-like~ Oil el COU .............. WILOIN• . ,.............. Ute your G.l. Loan and co: Ts ' WAL LACI RIAL TORS --1114441M4141- (Qp1n lvonl .. 11 VALUE CONSCIOUS 7 Thtre lS • wt&lth Of f&.mily llvln& in thll ! bednn, 2 bath «imer lot home with ioom for a boat or ti-au@r. Sunn.v IUtchtn wtlh a larae yard In a "looked for" toca. tlon for fainlly llvlng, So Euy to lff If yo11 call now. -Only 131,500. 94$.nn • · !14~:131! Till: l!L/\I, ~ l '".T l\'1'1 ;RS SJ2,IOO TWO STOltV HARDWOOD FLOORS, 1 bedrooms, 2 b1 th11, CEt>AR c~s. floor~ to . oelllna STONE FmEPLACE. Even ha1 1 beeutltul 51' % VA lo.n payeble 1178 per month TOTAL. nns i• '"MiE ONE'' )'OU blYll bl'tn Joo.k. tnc for. COMt SEE! IAffTA AlllA .................... a.11 WINDOW CLIANINO ...... 'i!'"" LET'" -•"E 1N YOUI\ WltTMINITI~ ................ ,., JOBS I !MltLOYM NT ., ln.IU.I ~w:: .. c,." .. ,;e .. n·:::::::::iii,.1• ,., •A•T••·.., ............ ,... OLDw1"so~sLEL .• HOM! Rftl"" Co.t.•T•L ~· ................. ~8: ::rr1g· w-........... K "" 2CM.'l w clJH D t:lil: = :, ·::::::::::::: •S• 1 wo•i• . .......... IVIRY it MINUTIS s:'!Tll " M1••10• VI ........ -.... '"' ICMoOL•. ,.,,.UCT•Oll .... IS Walke r & Lee Walker & Lee ... N CLIMINTI ....... int .IOI •••••1tATIOf\I ........... Open 'tU 9:00 Mot 111.N JUAM CAlfl'l"•.tJIO Jru THllATllllCAL .. .......... 1 ....... ____ • "'""" ................ lfM Ml~CHANDISI POlt FRONT 0'"• '°'"' .................. ~ SALi AND TRAOI llftltot'O OCl!AN COflDIM INlllM ............... Ifft ._I ~Bl d u OVf'Llll(lt VNflUll ll. ......... lfn flUlllN ITUl l .... : ......... •nrv laruvr v . at IY..llml IUMM•ll ltllfTW ............. OP!llCI '"'r.flUll ........ 1111 5~tt91 Open 'til 9 PM RINTAL~ ,,,,Cl lffll I NT ........... 11 • h p tohod !"i1 s:,•"• "' ........... ,, MESA DIL MAR "'p1.. urn •• •" T~lANT ........... 14 • Bod 11N~11•1. ..................... • =~~.1~~~·.~os·:~:::;::::= • room ~o::. .r.1~1 ···:::::::::::::::::: I AltAOI IALI .... ., ..... ,..lltl I 11th ''ll,•T 1i•c!H ............ .,.. flUINJTUltt ltitCTIO" ........ 1112.f Newly Pilnted N IT Hlll ttTI , , ... ttll ll"PLIANCl l ................. IUI NI!' ., ........ ::.:.: .. ; .. l NTlllUll .................... 1111 • VACANT "" "" ·;" ........... ,.,. ""'"' •'•"'' 1· .,. ....... >11t Sh1rp ... SOO U"l\lllllSITY A•K ........... "21r MUllC.l'-INl'fltUM H, ...... llU ... -., IACI r· y ............ ,.,.,,.424f PIAfllOI & O••ANI ............ 11• J.46.2J1J 1/dt LUf', ,,.,.,.,, ... ,. ...... 11:,t.DtO ................. .,,.,.,ii COl=tA DIL MAI ,,. ... .,,,.llUI flLl:VISIOlf .......... ., .... ,,. IAL ............. ., ....... ~ .. Hl·f'l t11Tl••oij'""'"'"•· ii ~y IL.lNDI ••• , ....... ,.,., .4191 fAH ICOIOI , .. !!..&."" • DO llLI ~·"'"'"'"' 4111 CA ~W & ltulPMllfT .... Ml LloA 110:N . ,,,, .......... 4US MO I V IVPPLlll ........... " .... Watch the iw1 •Dd. 1un IC· tlvitle1 from this 2 ~ + bunk room, btacb home. Thi! new Jlt!Ung i1 ~~-ell 10- catl!'CI on @Xcelltnt bee.Ch. $56:000. PETE .BARRETT REALTY ! 1611 'jltllTCLIH D-. HIWl'OIT llAOH " t-12·$200 ~ . U .. TINeTON I CW ............. IPOITllfl •OODl .i. ·~'"'""'Eli . lltTAIN \IAL IY '"'"""! tflij0CULAlltotcor•• ........ • """ ... ............... M\OCILU1• •• ..... ........ Homo ol 01~1nc11on llAC" . ..!.!..l""""""" . MIC, WANTIO .. , .......... ,. ... ! •• Z & I COl.llllTT .................. MACltl .. llY, I"-............ IHI 2-S'"". functJonal 5 BR. for-~--Dilly 1-4 • SAm• •• ..,. ..,I .. ".... . ...................... Ii '" . . ........ . *l1T1 rtt1111 .. :::-.:·:.:::·::: ... 11 ~t~·:~N .. MAt¥1tiAU""""W ma! ~lnlnf, lc'f. ram. rm.. 2141 Careb,-llla1tbluff _. .. Y t1f't .................. ,, •••~• . ....... UJ)8tll.ll'l same nn. brldst f + Fam. rm. Prlct redue-SAM'f~ :=:·uiilMTi'::::::::'.:= Pl!TS ·ind LIVISTOCK area owrlooldnc ' unl(Jlle ed. All rwdecor. SPotleuly ~ ........................ :"" 11r1 ,ollfllAL .............. -pool. 1'\1111t area. f'et land. cl1tn1 very anxlollf tor n@w •• 'sl'o\'•····· ............... :11,.. CAT•, ........................... ii!i $91fl00 · •·-11 .... Con·-oteot • popu-.............. 000 ........................... • . .lal"lhy .... ....-ut1A N OUIL .......... ,... M~•lll .................... • BROKER llr ~el. Altr, ef'Jtry, Ap. MltltoN Vl•JO ........... , 4N 1.IVllTOCll: .. .. "" l•J.0700 •••2•u I:: f'l.:'~~!""'"o"""'lll: CALIPORNIA LIVING • --pro" 2200 '"· ft. 2 Ba. 11 u.•11~""° iu.ctt ..,,. ""''••••• ............. ,,.,.,,, • N•1·w-·'llTINO-e ' a~. mltr. BR..J l4e, •unny MT .................. 4"1 tw1iw111H1 POOi.i ................ .. Uv, nn. w/lrpl., o'slze, aep . .... .............. ...... Pl Tlot .................... ,,,,.tf'll l11tbf•.AL .•418 4&A din, Ol' tam. TrallJc. 'IUM .~ ............ -................................... = .,,~ ... ..-rm rm,. ............. -........ ,, WACATIOfll ........... ,.. lmmac 3BI\ 2bt.tb cwntr llftreapllfyud,Gre1 tly. RINTALS TltANSPORTATION . !ot.JJO;.,. Mull°""""'°' --tor ..,.142,390, E u.i..rntohod '°'" ...................... ---. -. . m':ll!tlO . . •jLIOATI , ,. ............... fftf ..................... !\i! ~•u••••• ............ ,.,. ,. ...... To" lay & letch Rlty, Inc. St ,, ................ 11 I It . ltt IOAT "'"""'"ii!! C:0..01No1UO•-Nn i It 'J••"""'"""'ll I I°" t •.t.n.llllt . .......... IYUU'll,I 1 $24 600 ..... , =·~· .. ::::::::::m: st:, ~=ian:.r~.~::::::.... . "'''"' . . . , • sw"""' sii01i'r.' ............ ..,.,,'ls1u,,, ", ....... ·"" NEWPORT HllOHTI Aoouft!• 11'.Loan WU!I., ·;".1.'.I'""""" . lo.tit ,,,,,., MOOIUll ............ Owner 6-raf priced be m llfY A11a ........... •OAT ll •'llCl l , ............. a Adon.bi1 I br, !I bl, J'ormaJ , IPI e.. • Y ·.1.·'"'"'"""00'"" •o•f fllMT,t,LI ............... uv nn dlb, nn like ntW low replae1ment. Entry hall ILV,P . ,............... IOAt t MAltTlll .......... ,.... ' " " _,,_, ' 2 •·••· ' • fllA •IL Moll "'""-a··· , ....... I OATI ............... = cpl1 df111• trpl Pu1d1lll1 uiu1ns l'OOm, .... u111, IJ*I> .. LIOA ......................... IOAT MOVIM ................ ttttt'-1 ~ .. ••1'000.tetm kJi.11 Uvtnc rocm elttrl din. .. ,, '111.AJllll ........... , ..... -IOAf ITOlllAll .,,, .. ,..,,. " . •oe 1 .. • I. • .. ,_, ""°nu '"= ............. ,.., ,..,,. "'""" .............. , CAYWOOD RIA~ TY 11C """"· -~"na 1re1 IALIOA llL.Afn!.~J.U'"'""'0·-&t•CIA,f ............... 6.1tltl w ~~ H .. _ ln kltn loll of wood JtV .. Tl ... TCNf llM; ........... w ,L'i'INt LallNI ...... ., .. ,.,fl , -• 1')' .. l"l'D ' ................ _ ........ M 0 ~s ...... ............... • !143-12!1! • ' pontll . Tllte '"'' the """ l lACH ....................... MIMll ............... terrltlo 19' ann~. ~ rate ·~~............... ICTCLl l ................. IY OWNlll c u ............... ILICT••C CAll ................ loin Ind have low payments IAlllDIM I ........... , .. Nlf MINI 111111 ,.,.,., .......... ftJf f Bdrm, 2 ti.1 famlJ1 tm, tttti nlonth ~1720 ·=~~~~"t,,: ::::::::::-::: .. ::a:: MOljlifl11 ···""~·;::,:!ll!· dln'111n. trp&C, 1o m&lnt•n. TA"llLL'.2fss H.1r1Jor fit-j"'l!il""'.""~-A llYIClt I: 'liAa.._ .... . . ancti yar0 bvnt • back. ,.... 11 te'lfTI ......... Mtl lV oou 1 UlllP. ....... • N -··• "•IOO N ............................ fl ILll, tltAYIL .......... ,,... · tar • .,.. ... , ~ • IRVINI Tli RRAC.I II W•"""'""'•""R TIAILlll. Ullll" ............. = aood llrml afO.mT 1 B'• ·-· ~ -~ but UI= .: a ............... (AM!llll ................. ,;,, " " ,. ,,... . ....,. .. ,utto i:. 1'.:\..l.":'r. ::;::.:-.-.·: .. ::!!!! r:~~~· ......... :·:~:::::::::lift I! •STSIDE 3 alt· "" ... .,., '" ..., ... :.n,,,. ==::zlN'"' ...... .._ ~:\'l,.\~;.t.u = ,._, ' • l1 thl1 t 'llR. ~ b&. homt. -"1'1· i'i' ............. r;'°•t•D ~'" ............ Mii Cut. olM Pan. on l&rp '°' Ccntr loc. Short CIJ1tt.net II U~-s1 A , ,_'"°~"' "z~• ia ·::::::::: .. ::i'' ~=!~a."e~, , 0tvorot ao11 dubl, b@at 1Cboo11 1 _,.. • •• :.......... ·--· .. ...... -..... l!'i&.llt!C. ntlPll .. '"' ................. ,. N ............... 'ntAappn1-d 1t: m.eoo. .8ROKER ,.._,., ... m ............ •• " •:"'" ............... p1••C1N -1771 ••• •700 u•2•u ......... , t ........... ...... ..................... ~~ -.. ~ --•lMMI l'Ol ,.,,.,,,,.,, VTO LIAllll9 •••"'"""'""1t ... • I \ . I • " OU.Jllel COUNTY'S LAROIST 2828 HARBOR BOUllYARD 546-8840 "' .... °"'"""" .... Country Hltleaw~r 1 /3 Acrt$24;1511 Local~ ln a MOl.w:ltd trN or Colt& Mtu. th1I 1parkllrw clean 3 bedroom 2 bath hom• ia vacant aOO ready to be 11\lld in. It hu • ~Iv. floor to c.lllna rock fl~plat!e. 1untty built-In Jdtcbtn; double aaraae, all sur.. "t'Ounded by a 1orest of towering trtt1. It's • mu1t see •t the u.n- bellevable price of $24,llllO. Vets • no mofiey down or low down nlA. Act l'IOY.'t Dwn It For Lass Than Rant $133.00 Mo. With pt.yment.11 like 1his you can't aHmd 10 rent. Extra &harp 4 bedroom ' bath homl tn Colts MtlA, bu)' subject to tht exlstlnl l'HA loan, annual pereentqw rate of ·a'-"· all bullt·ln kitchen, doubl@ garage block wall fence. carpetlnr thruµghout, See It and save. Open evtt. Eastsldt Bar1ain -$21,950 It need• p1\nl and elbow ~au. but with 3 b.troom1 ahd 2 blthl, hardW9Qd Ooon, dlnlna room area, and located in the de1lrable area af eutlido Cotta Meta. you can't atford not to '" II at thla price $21.s;.o, HLln')'I 1 Neatly Tucked Away tttJ1 4 bedroom 2 bl.th hom@ ls hldd•n on over 9. Ut.ird of •n acre In Co.ta Mea , with lot• oi blr frff• and 1pnwllna lot. Try ·•m• paint and It will look Ilk@ ne"'· It's 1 one of a kind fDt only S)8,000 or make otter, no down VA or mA term.1 aVA.llable, .ee th1t one! $SAVE$ Take Over 51..i % $168.00 Mo. Thi• ta the tltl&nclll bargain af the yur. With ~ down yaur monlhl7 paymenl t will be only 168.00 lncludlnr tut• and Ins. for • newly pMnted, carpeted and draped 3 timroom bomt in Colt& Meh, ~nual pftcenlqe ra. te or the ex!Jtlna FHA loafl Is ~% %. If )'OU.'rt re.nttns -11top -CALL NOW! Secluded Country Filer Upper located In the back bt.1 ar@a or Newport Stach on in •a.. F@atul'lnl 2· horse corral1, tnclOM!d lan1I overl ook i ng btaullful swlnunlne pool. The 2000 1q, rt. N1ldence oetdt paint and elbow krt•te, but what a prict own@r will finance at 7\0%. Call """'1· Income Fixer Upper $17,750 Located In Costa Ml'll this 2 bedroom home 11ts on a hi.II' R-2 lot for addltlonlil •unllS, or nnt Otjl the txlltll)I hoUH. and let It pay for llMlf. °'"1@r anxious, mllc9 &II)' ofler •. -r;,,~, ,.~·· QRAN .. COUNTY'S I.AR.UT 2629 HARBOR BOUUYARD 546-8840 o,... .... Ill loJO . .. " . . ·' ~ ' ~ .·. . . ' } • -• • • \· \ ~ . I n :· •• :~ ••• . • ., ... •• ' ., . , •• ., Monc1t1. June 8, 1970 Li HOUSES FOR SALE OU SES fOR SALE -·I 111111 -·· 1.:;.;==---..;.;.oc toeo General fOREST E. ENHR o·LSON - • Inc. Re'1ton T AINMENT . 5Y4% Loan 5 BEDROOM HOUSES FOR SALE 1105 *4 &inn, family mi, 2 baths, w/w ctPte .lhru.out Qwner leaving area. $.ll.000 ~ Me.sa Verde 1110 HOUSES"FQR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE RENTALS ~ENTALS RENTALS Houses Unfumfshtcf Hous .. Unfurni1hed 2J!t•. Fumllhed Coron• .del M ar 1250 L•ke Forest •• , , 1709 CAMEO Shores, 2 BR, 2 • Costa Mesa 3100 Duplexes Unfurn. 3975 Costa Mesa 4100 ba, den home. Uke !Mp WATERFRONT Jiorne on deJux apt, DealltlfUI £'.llrden, point 15.900 down. $ bdrm. 2 SR hse w/ gar. Bltn1 . priced below cost. Owner i den, St&-6U6 or 831)-.5216 Range & rebig. NeWly dee. 6'1S-56S8 --.. :r::;:;;::-... s; ActqJts Qrlly_. $YS. DJ-A W • Capl1trano Bea(h 1730 20th st. ca-1. 642--0530. Ba lboa Penlnsul• 1300 < BR 1o .... _ 1 MILE So. ol: marina, C:.tm v~ hOme In nice OEUJXE Duplr.x. SlOl1 blk T Rm + 3 Bath.!! + 2nd area on cul-de-sac, l yr ~an or &.v. $40,000, $600) ldtcbn, $36,500. 49G-33Tl. lease req'd S%'1G mo . 2 BR ... ttdcc, din '-laun, ml, l\C!W . 5hag • ~ ran~, 1:ncl ge.r. $165 Ad 962-7137 " ' RENTALS Apts. Furnished General 4000 "' CASA DE ORO Caaua1 Callf"ornia Uvlng In wum 'Medic-atmosphtte. Spac. color coordfnated apbi; t1esl;1lt.'CI & fum for styli • C01nfort. * Pvt. petJo • BBQ * Shag cpl$ * -' HOUSE of SlT.483 ls •~iibJe at this low mtc whPn Yi;>u bt1)1 this SHARP, SHARP 3 &d- rm & '1 Bi:.tth luKury home. brick tirt'place, nctir -rK'W crptl', rll'?S & bltn kitchen. Your total peymmts ""'Ill be Slt!. mo. incllJdin~ ta,.es. ~'by w•it! Call now; 4 BDR,\t f.1esa Verde North. sai • .ioo loan au1imable at 5% %. Landscaped 1141.io. Ov.ner'1 rock bottom price $21.SOO. MtrTlOO dr>-ea!Tles itfieil. 213 : RENTALS S4S.S7M 3116 R.oo5evell, cr.t. w/ storage * Hid Pool * Kitchen w /iM.irect llgbtfrw * Ot>luxe oven &.-ge, 1 BR. $175 Incl util. Adults. no pets. 365 W, Wll8on SL &12-1971 • ' . TAKE OVER GI LOAN --,....,='====== 1-..'.H~..,~·~··~F!uco;m~l~oh~ed~-12 Br Duplex, gar fenc<l ynl, ~ ---..-.. atove, some crpt &: drpPB the new republic • 4 Beautiful bedrooms Near nl'W 5 bedroom bom~. e 3~ Luxury baths • · ~ J)nJy 5 years )"OUng and load· • 12'xl2' Breakfast Room ed wtth charm. Jelen.I for • 16'x20' Family Room 11\rge family. ~1uge bed-e Spatkllng beat~ Pool rooms: Deluxe k1tc!K>n Y.i th • Lanai and &mb Shelter nll built-ins. A small dO\\'ll e Fruit Trees galore N rt B h 1200 - Lido l_s le 1351 General 2000 S12S mo, 548-6680 Newport ewpo eec ---,-,--""-I·.;...;-"-...:..----~:.:.: ---$1500 DOWN 2 BR. cpl!, drps, patio, DUPLEX ~ Util pd. 2 Br. Triplex, Adults. no pets $150. 1 &: 2 BDru.1 Apts for Adults. From $150 TUSTIN ·, ' •• .: .· ... ... ""· .. ~­.!' ••• I at F•irview 646·8811 (anytime) WATERFRONT \VIII move you lo on an op-&undeck, chldrn/ p et a &12-6742 aft 6 pm & wknds. D lion bas.is. \VW lease at $450 welcome 15497 Williams Street (714) 835-533.5 GARDEN GROVE 13212 Magnolia Slrect {TI41 537.$ FOUNTAIN VALLEY 17060 San Bruno Street 17141 968-25tXi OCK FOR BOAT per n10. Lovely 3 br, 2 ba. Blue Beacon, Bkr. 611$.-0l.U 3 BR. 2 bath, recently Live in ont. rent the other, 2 Completely remodeled home.I===="";::::;;:=::::==: palnted & carpeted. $235 per QUIET -Eastside Large Furn. 1 BR. payment and take O\'l'J' GI All for on!y $4l8 !iOO fl\4 annual 'ii ~te loan. No To Inspect • call &is.n n & 3 BR., A-l condition, patio Owner anxious to move lo Rentals to Share 2005 ,.,.m~•~·-·~·~·~"~'~*:...::5'~6-U:...;:~4~1 __ & sundeck. Dock your boo.I re. w home. CaU for tc---D & '3 B 2 in fron1 ."S74,500 '""' r, Ba, lam rm, crpts, Pr\vate patio. ~l'ple. l..ocUd garage. !~s! No Qualifying! Oose to everything. Now S31 ,950. ~~~~mare detail.s.1 -.iiiiiiiiiii~~iiii~~iiii•I PY'tW'J"' o 645-0303 ,. at Harbor Centrr 6% LOAN 2299 H""'°' Bl"" .. C.M. 0 MESA VERDE IMMEDIATE r $29,750 POSSESSION 'f y 4 Bdrms., on a corner Jot. Cute 3 bedroom, 2 bath col-or OU New shag cpts.; nice yard. iage nestled on quiet cul-de-. N~w paint. Close to schoole, sac street .,.,".ith OVERSIZED On this unusual MESA DEL shops & library. Now vacant lot. lo!odern built-ins, car-l>IAR 3 Bedroom eorttr & asking a modest $29,700. ~ and dr.apes ttirougbout. homt. Allty entrance for Sobmit on GI or F1-L\ terms. boat & trailer plus pawd $31.$() FULL PRICE. parking. A big $24,234 loan is WE SELL A HOME assumable by anyone. call ·EVERY 31 MINUTES ""'" Walker & Lee ~al1on; 768'l Edinger SU-4455 5~!).5140 $23,950 FHA· VA Newport •t F1lrview 646-8811 (1nytlmt) "'lllcsa"'\"i~c'.Rcaftr 546-5990 NO DOWN PAYMENT $23,500 Full Prico Room for boat, trailer, camp. er. Neat 3 Bech1ns & dining area, beautiful back yani, patio. Vet, • don't dclay. Others _ hurry, too! 546-~180 (netlCin!IN llwtlt) LLEGE REALTY 1500 AdllB It turblr,CM. .. , ~6461H4 REALTY RIV!~ilOl NEAR N£•POR1 POST OHICE MUST SELL WILL TRADE Benutiful • Roon1y llaycresl custon1 built 4 Bdrm ho1ne on a large lovrly Jot on se- cluded street. Xlnt Joan pro.. vision. 54&-0773 BAYCREST EKcellent location for quiet living: <ustOm 4 Br & 3 BA home. Spac. master &Inn, lrg c.'Orner lot. $79,500, Own. er. &12-7136 * BLUFFS 3 Br, 2 Ba, 1 level. Vil.'1v. &his, pools, tennis. Now $29 ,9flO. 644-4265. BLUFFS, Singles or coupl l.'s. Split Jcv., 2 br on Grc>enbcll, nr pools, tennis clb. $25.500. &14-2422. REDUCED: \Vcs!cliff-Dover Village Condo. 2 Br. 2~ Ba. Pool. Sacrillcc $211.SOO. l5x30 heated pool -4 large SparkJing 3 Bedrm home • bedrooms, 3 bath!, 2 Ii~ freshly painted Inside & out. places. Plus new carpeting • nice PLUS $•28,000 Mym, •JH7'6. 4 Bedrm.-Fam. Rm. ./By OWJl('r. 2 bdrm, 2 baths lamity rm. Prime Ea.stsidc The colorful kitchen opens to location. Call 54s.M24 lhc pool area for the ulti· Beautiful home, En!'"" hil!I, & den; 1 yr. old. $39,500. . ~ 644-4269. spacious living room, huge m8tc in entertaining. Walk to schools and shop- ping. family room with fircplst'i!, 2 BR TO\l/NHOUSE. Must full dining room, buitl-ins. Jiiell. AH oUen; considered. ex!ra eating are!l in kilchen,O ·="="'='=· ='~'-=="=·==== pool sized yard, prime loca-• 1=~~~==~~=~1 A fun home for M large .fam· ily. ONLY $59,500. $22,500 TO INSPECT • 673-8550 \-O' THE REAL '('\.. ESTATERS I r , J , , , , '/ COSTA MESA'S $0 Do\\'fl payment Vets, $500 Down to Vets who us~ !heir VA's ---$950 for all other buyers. Nice 2 Bath home in Costa Mesa. 1-IAUX:REST lion. 54Q.1T.!O. TARBELL 2955 Ho,bor * MESA VERDE * BeauUJul pool and an hnmac. 2 story home. 4 Bedrm 2 baths, family roon1. You will like If at ...... S~4.900. Wells-McCardle, Rltrs. 1810 Newport Blvd., C.J\l. 548-7129 Eves. &W-06S4 2 Blocks to school. With the A F UN PLACE TO LIVE?! greatest increase in proper-3 ~room. 2 bath, floor to ty ever this borne \\1U be a ceiling fireplace. Modem lmoney maker. built-ins including dishwash-C t M 1100 Nichols Real Estate ;;'.;.,,.,c1~:;,"";,,. ~=~ I ;;;0;;';;;•:;;;;"':;;•=;:;:;;;;;: 546-9521 STU RDY! C ean as a \\'histle. Owner will Si?ll FrlA 1:::=======:1 or VA -submil on $24,900 I• Price. DOLL HOUSE IN NEWPORT BEACH Charming little home in grcnl location on beautiful tree. liru>d Signal Rd. ldMI for WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee rouple or small family. Pro-Realton fusion ol plants, shrubs & 2m Harbor Blvd. at Adams flov.-ers. F1exiblc lcnns, 545-9491 ~n 'til 9 ~{ phcro o $30,500. · -546-5810 Crueinrma tlllltrtl 2 HOMES LLEGE REALTY 4 Bedrm + 2 Bedrm 15(1)AdllnsatHarbor,CM . on one lot wilh garages. =~===~=~=!A real buy with good fin- CORONA DEL MAR ancing. O.ll for appoint.. ,.. to show. A5lA.lfll3blc 6 ,,, loan on dar- ling custom home, on fee land. AU in sparkling con- di1ion & owner will can-y r.lnd trust de<'d.. Great financ- ing in today's market. $63,500. Macnab-Irvine Lachenmyer Realtor 1860 Ne"-port Blvd., C.r.1. CALL 646-39'28 Eves, 611 2-2237 4 BR. bcau!y: den, din. rm., STOP SHOPPING and move into this sparkling 1-lesa Verde home. Spacious 3 BMmt & family, custom carpets, shuuers, drapes and vinyl floors. 15 x 17 Scrrened lanai, all this on a quiet tree lined cul.(le-."13c for Po. !:iO. E.tlsting 5% '7o lonn can be assumed. Call 5-1!J.ll51 ASSUME 5% ':t loan, on large \\"ell cared for 3 broroon1, full price $23.500. Assume Sl4,~ loan,. $118 mo pnys all . Also available \Vith new lo\v down FHA loan. Call &W-1151 1-leritnge Realtof'S. Realty Company 3 baths, pool. Eastside C.r.1. I ~~~~~"!""'""'""'" ..... 642-823~ 675-3210 " l';=i::::::i::::::::::\l=i:::::::l2 :FOURPLEXES; fi,. up & ESTATE SALE. Cozy cot-l• build equity! !age, Fixer upper -lo be LIDO WATERFRONT ,. wl.: In "as is" condition. APTS.-310 LIDO NORD U .UNITS: 2 Br. ca. Pool. Back Bay area -good sized NOW REDUCED TO Costa lofesa. lot. 3 Large Bedroom.o;, 2 Newport Heights 1210 By Ov,1flC'r-Assume 6% ':0 VA R·2, 2 BR. Remodelerl 5panish Channer. $26,500. &15-14•16: if no an!I, 642-0010 ask for Paul Herrick ASSUMB 6~0 VA loan. 2 Br. \V I hUest house. Ne\v sha~ crptg. freshly pain!cd. $28,000. By O\vner. 6-16--0317 Dover Shores 1227 "' BY OWNER 4 BR, 3 BA, formal din'g nn, lrg family nn. $~.500. 1317 f.1arinl'rs Dr. 646-0418 Open liOUSI> Sun, 1·5. MINT CONDITION 5 Br, 4 Ba. H & F pool, pan. clini:. c!ec. kit. Owner, $85,000, 1600 Santiago Dr. University Park 1237 NEED AN OFFICE-? And ms1r. BR. riOl\'OS!llirs? J-I011r· nbout 2 BR. upstnlrs for the tl'ens? \re h.-1vc l!, "ilh activity to 11ult lots, 1cen!I & J{randmoms. too! V11ulted brnm cell., fir . to Cl'il. f11il., din. rm. & fain . nn .. V.'CI bar. s:U,500 \\lith a&"lrmable low inl loon. e Red Hill Realty Univ. Park Center. Irvin e Call anytime ~M *UNIQUE·SCENICift Uniivall.'d View of Buy & Mini::. 1v/p1ivacy. Spaciou!I, nt'nrly nr1v "Old \\Torld" Contemporary w/ court & atrium. 5, Br's expandable, 50CKI sq It. 41.~ ba. hl-ccil· ings. 4 car gar. Sl78.IXXI fum. Will lake small hOusc or vacant land area. Ch..'Jlcr ~nl9. app1, this '"eekend 673.()".iOS, OLDER woman to share drpa, bit-in$. Year . lease. ENJOY Pri I be h lovely 2 hr C.M. apt 642-7312 art 6 "n1, va e ac es, w/samc 0 t A 1 -'=~==·~·~==-. tennis eris. 008.ting at prox .~ wn ransp. Allp--- •--,u·1u1 Lido I I 3 B · _.. mo. expenses. Newport Beech ....,... s e. ri privil. Call 962-5721 3200 den, 2 Ba. huge llv rm, • cxten. panlg, bltns. $57,500 WANTED l to 2 people, JS ** NEW 3 BR, lamily. din- By owner. 675-3982 to 25, male or female, to ing, 2 bath home. Com- .share ocean view 4 BR munity pool &: clubhouse. Huntington Beach 1400 house widen. $85 nio. S350 per mo. 1807 Port """°"-.;:;.;;.o;::.o.-C-' ·-4.M-7655. Charles (Harbor VI e "' $22 000 FULL PRICE Homes) 213: 670--4601. • . . SPACIOUS Home. priv. rm., I'""=~~~,,..;-'=-for this rure as I'll'w cottage bath. Share with cong., ac-5 BR, 3 BA, ~i acre, Coun- only 5 minutes to the Blue tlve, ~I. R.N. ~2726 try-styli.• hS(' ln mid. of N.B. Pacific. r.todem electric WORKING . Lovely hillside view. Nr. kitchen with custom carpets . Gni 10 share un-schls, Gd Resid. area. and drapes, Buy subject to furnished apt. Q\•pr •21. $400/mo. on Lease. Call aft existing 514 'i;, government ~964T after 6• 6 Plot, 642T3446 Joan at only $127 per month WANTED: Roommates l.ro=i~l<N~. ~1=1o=u~s=E~,-,~B~R~. -2-l; OR new GI or FHA 1enns. (male) 3Br, 2 BA apt. 1 BA, !rple, patio, pool, 2 Wa Iker & Lee blk lrm heh $88 mo. 543-0173 car gar, all bltn!, c.rpts, Stable young .... -oman lo drps. Lse $275 mo. 8TI-88ll Realtors share condominium or 642-2497 eves or wknds. ·7682 Ecllnget SlOO mo. Mll-7877 FOR Lease: New Eastbluff 842-4455 5'10-5140 \VORKING Wt1man share Condominium. 3 BR, 21; 2 BEDROOM house v.'i th same. S25 per BA. $3:io. Nr. school, mkt, week . 64~61 pool, tennis els. Owm r only $18,500., This Is v.'Cll 10-i-========== .,....,.,, cated next to Brookhlll"'!t & N rt B cft 2200 Adams. Has excellent stores ewpo 111 within 1 block including Sav. W/\TERF"RONT. Fum. or on & Grants. Price includes unf. Very nice 3 BR. 2 carpets, drapes, washer & Ba., 2 pa!ios. Yr. lease $400 dryer. I-las swimming pool, mo. Boat dock available. 1ennis court for your use. Graham Realty 646-2414 $2500 do\\'n. BAYFRONT, Furn. 3 BR's I' 1llage Real Estate Dix 2 Br, Ba Twnhse, w/ pool, firpl, crpts, drps, lrg patio, $250. Agt 646-0732 NO. BLUFFS: Vie11', 4 br, fam. area, 2'h ba. Schls, pools, tennis. $395. 6#--0275 WE Have 3-4 Br. beach homes 1rom S:z50-.$350 mo. Caywood Realty 548-1290 RE~fARKABLY UNBELIEVABLY EXTRAORDINARILY BEAUTIFUL Val D'isert Garden Apts Putting green, waterfall & !!!ream. fiow~n ev!!:rywhere, 45' poi!, rec. room, billiards, BBQ's, Sauna. furn.-unfurn. 1 &:-2 Br. also Singles from $135. See ii! ~ Parsons Rd., &12-8670. Bel\\'een liat- bor & NeY.'J)Orl. 2 Blk N. 19th RENT FURNITURE 3 Rooms from $19.95 ?ifon!h to month Rentals \V!de Selection 1003 PURCHASE OPTION 2·1 hr. Delivery Custom Furniture Rental 517 \V. Lqth, CM. !>18-3481 1568 'v Lincoln. Anbm 774-2800 DDMP·lJ.LIBT Apartment Rentals Listing Service NOW ACCEPTING LISTINGS Phone 642-41i56- ADtn.TS 2035 FULLERTON, CM Newport Beach 4200 MESA MOTEC * LOW WEEKLY RATES -. Kitchen, TV's maid 1ervlef, lieated Pool.' -6'6-9681 2 BR. & B3chelor. 'FUrn ~. Crpts, drps, patio, p:iol, bltrui. $137.50 to $18S. Ask ubout our discount. SeacliU r-.fnno r Apts, 1525 Placentia. NB. 5-IS-2682. , Westcliff Rivier• l BR, Furn. Bit-ins, crpts, drps. I-ltd Pool Nr. shopping area. Adulls. 1800 \VESTCLIFF DR. * 642-3618 * \Vh.LY Rentals, 1-2 Br, from SlOO. Near Beach " Bay. Ca.II (1) ~7 e \VINTER RENTAl.S e e AVAILABLE NOW! e Abbl'y Really 642-3850 1 BR. Furn, Garage. Util pd. CJosu to stores A 1narkt>ts. Call 67"'a-2930 """"""'"""""""'""""""' \$150 yrly-Oean lg 1 BR dup, up, 1 down. Best location. Avail Jun 15/Sept IS $1500 962-4471 ( :::.) 546.SlOJ pe_r mo Or yrly ltase $&50 per mo. 642-4002 alt 5pm. DOWNTOWN Costa M'esa 4100 _N_e_w~po-~_S_h_o_r_••~~3~22~0 1 _;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:1 panel'g, cpts, u!l pd, no pets. OR 3-5533, KI 7-ll55. Price reduced. CUst bit 5 BR, Balboa 2300 tam, 2~ ba, lg kit w/bltns, 3 ---------- car gar/Alley. Prof. Jndscpd. PENINSULA Baylront. S BR Sell GI or FlfA. O\\·ner transf. i: maids qtrs. Pier. Call 847-8507 Eves: 968-1178 l\lrs. Staples (Zll) 795-7575 -or (213) 79!l-1642 eves. I BR. & deo or 2 BR house. 2 Ba. Bltna. PJo mo. TI4: 828-1163. University Park 3237 ---. .:..::.=_..;= 4 BR, 2~~ Ba, prime greenbelt location, quality Furnished Apts. VILLA POMONA from $140. ADULTS O?o.'L'\ NO PETS ALL 1-fODERN AP.1ENITIES 1760 Pomona, Cosla 1'1T0.1a 'V. of N\\'PI. bctw 17th & 18th Balboa 4300 --·----·I PENN. Pt. -1 BR util-Pvt. Patio-steps to bay & Bch. $180 on Yr. Lle. 67;°>-2591. Huntington Beech 4400 LU j lj@/ '.!t'I Lo~uno 'Beech 2705 crpt! & drps, Spanish Ille $35 WEEK & UP roof & entry fir'g, t1nly l STUDIO & l BEDROOMS ""SOLTEROS APTS. 1, View for Rent-3 Br. 21Ai BA. BY Owner: 1'. ran e is can 2 palios, close to markt>t & 1'~oontain, 4 b.-, 2 ba. 6* ';'~ beach. Sunshine clean. ~f's loan. l35,500. 847-1136. req 'd. $525 mo. June 15th- Fountain Valley Sept, 15!h or lease partly/ 1410 furn. 49-1-6409, 4993097 A ROMAN BATH ATTR .. view home, OCl'an-lron! 2 BR & den 2 BR, Ii> just one of the features ol wshr/dryr, dshwshr. gar. 1his beautifu1 Four Seasons $275 mo, Jse avail. 9/12. Hoine, other features in· 497-1819 elude •I Bl'drms, sunken tlv·i-======-o==== ing room \\'ilh fireplace, for. La guna Niguel n1nl dinini; room, fa1nily rm 2707 wi1h \\'Cl bar, upgraded car-('QlieLETELy_Brand...New pcli> lhruoul, ii patios. Ex· swimming pool , 2 Bcdrm, ttllent location -all this and lndscpd w/palios, access lo an assumable 6S~· VA Joan. priv beach. Lea!\e. Agent Payable $253 per mo includ-495-4&1~ or 496-5791. yr old. $370 rental lnclds TV & Kitcht'IX'ttes incl. Bachelor & 1 BR's, Pool. use of Village-Park ree. Inc. Linens & maid scr avail Adulls, no pets. From $140 =A=v=•~il='="~"='='=;=· =~==Ti='== I Chlltln!ns & P<'l Sl?ction up. 17301 Keelson Ln, H.B. 2376 NEWPORT BLVD. O blk \V. of Beach, C1I 548-9755 Slater.) 842-7848. Irvine 3238 TURTLE Rock. next to UC!. 4 BR. 3 Ba.. [am. rm .. cplg. DW. stove, 2 sty, 3 car gar. S355 lnclud. pools, rennis. Avail. 8/15. L~e. 833-2929. Be ck Bay ~- 3240 LRG. 1 br, crpts. drps, bltns, $145 mt1. Complete privacy. Call 557-8888. 1 BR. Ne\\•Jy dee. $140 per SUS CASITAS mo. incl util. Adults only, Furn. l BR Apts. Adults no pets. only, no pets, 2110 Ncv.')XD'I 'I'ra.de1\•lnds Realty IW7.$lJ Blvd, Ci\l . G-!7·9286 2 BR. Adul!s only. Util pd. ./ ACAPULCO APTS. A1 -81.'RUl.-Quiet. Pool. Beam clng trac. Pool. Util pd. Gal'l.lcn 176TG Cameron. 842-6121 Living. Adults, no pets. 1 I ~====="=='==d BR. $155. 2 BR. $175. 1800 Laquna Beech 4705 Wallace Aw ::-a r:--I ii~iii!!P.~iliiiii;iii I 1 • ' sR·,. Pool. Pauo. i zziSINGLE ADULTS! From ·Sl 30 -$1 ~•5 ltlo. Furn/Unf. 18·16 Placenlta, Corono del Mo r 3250 646-&\64. $35 WK. VILLAGE INN 29lO -F~O-R;;.;:.Le;:...""':.:;·;..:;'.::::"~R-.-"'..:.:'~.~, 1 1'-=s=n~. ~c~1-,.-,-_-A_l_h_··-,-. -F-,-,.-,.· 1 Prestige Living, Maid ser. ' .• 'I blk I •-h b. $110. Lease. Refs. Cpl. in-pool, stcp!I beach. 494-9436 ('S P.I.T.I. T 0 ta I price $43.950. f'or appt to sec this Summer Rentals bcuuty, call: I' 1llage Re al Esta te BA YSlDE Dr., Lido, Linda Is le & Peninsu l a \ValcrfronL<; + oCf-water 962-4471 ( r.:~.) 546~81 D.J Lido hon1l'S NEAR BEAC'H--Bill Grundy Realtor 642-4620 ASSUi\fE 6%. VA 2 Br, Sips 6. A\'ail June - Spacious 4 bedroom + fam. special rate. Also July/Aug, ily room y,·ith fireplace, 2 \vks Sept. By wk. ~. 3 large baths. incl. carpel· 5444262 aft 4 p.m. ing, drapes, built-ins. Call NEWPORT Isl \Vaterfront for rll'!:'lils 962-2421 4 BR, furn. Pier & float'. DICK BERG REALTY Avail 6/21·8/l $600. "'BY OWNER-,~"~"="='°==---­ Unique Four Seasons' \VATERFRONT Beaut. lrg M edit. HOME-$49,000 Duplex, N1vpt ls!. Boal 'TiOO sti . fl. 4 BR's, 3 car dock. 6 7 3.-7 8 61 , 805: gar., cul·d!'·SllC privacy. 9688 687-8384. ~~~~-~----L.a mo ra Circle', F.V. TI4: SUl\li\1ER Rental apt, sleeps 968-2687. 4, On Bayfront nr. Lido ASSU!\'lE lo!Y 6'7o F.Jl.A. Shop'g. 61.l 36th St. 673-4296 v "w, . . o =ac . 1g patio & fncd, yard. Extra fant ok. 2538 Newport B!vd, pa·k· 1400 21· p C:\1. LARGE l BR. 2 blocks :to , Lng. mo. a oppy be CdM. 673-2492. $135/n10 dlx mob lm1, CJ11p l ,1•70ch, no40',1 7997h end, <"' ~- Lido Isle 3351 furn, hid pool. Adults. no " · ""-or :7't"VJOD pct<i. 4 Season'!'; i\Iob. Est. LRG. 2 Br w/frplc, 2 blks 23.i9 Npt. S.18-6332 lo bch, No. end. $235. Call • 3 BR, SO. Palio. Crpts, I ~=;~~Fu;:.::.m~ia~h~od:;:l'-=B=P.7'>-,~.-494-7997 or 4~588. drps, bltns. Lease (adults Studios. F'rom $U5. ·Zl35 RENTALS ::~· 673-4063 or 1213) Elden Al-'e, Apt 6. c r-1. Apts. Unfurnished Adults only, no pct!!' -General 5000 Huntington Beach 3400 FOR Lease: 3 Br Twnhse Pool facil, 2 car ;ar, \\'alk to bch. $200 mo. cau 8374362 NEWLY Painted 3 bdrm house 1\'ith pool. SlSO per mo. 833-0079 alter 5 pm. $140 MO. furn. 1-Rr. \\'/util. Adul!s only. \Vilson & F'uirvie11' art'11, 5.\S·O.'i22. $1::17.00 Util pc!. Baeheloc, riool. singles ok. Activl', Brk. !"l.3~-6980. o/ 2 BR, 2 BA, lrg cl()!;f'l~. pool. 11.dulls, no pets. Ull l pd . Ca\1 ~. .... Frie. l • La11dlorQ UI W, lf!ll, C.11• M ... ~ 645-0111 -~"<t1W!Ul • '!llJilll. --.._____; ~!f llOflCll bnlhs, hrdwd floors, carpets $175,~Xlnt Terms --. • & hea\'y shake roof. FHA $25,700 Ii Bl'auliful units. 6 Car ga· 6, U.NITS; Eastsidc Cosln or VA terms ave.ii. C1ll 4 BR Span. 1\\·nhs, ..:ust. RENTAL!t 4 Br. 2 Ba. S195 n10. Avail June 15th. l BR. NEW. beaut. furn. loto. to mo. Arllts only. 2220 Eld<'n. G.16-927& e\·e. Costa M esa 5100 ---'-" r""C'l! & utility ,oom. \vllh 1•1esa For th is "eai:y care" 2 Rr. -515-&121 South Coast Real viC\V unit. \Ve also hnve a 80 h. fronting on l'l\Cellcnl 2 HOUSES·-1 R 3 Estnte. 4 BR. \Vith terrific lease/ General 3000 swbnn1ing bcacli, Units a rc 1, . • on. argc ..... • IOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiO•I Westminster 1612 --------'-"-' nN·ly rumlshcd. lot. ,t mile to beech No On Vefs Lo On FHA optioo. I ~::~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~ii RENTALS 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-4620 -e Bill Haven, Rltr. I• Bill Grundy Realtor G UNITS; Van Nuys. E:i:-3 Bcdrm .• l'.l Ba, dble. gar., 211l E . Coast, Cdl\I 673-321 1 OELIGHTFULL y ALL TYPES '"""""'"""""'""',~"'""""'"I change for Orange County hug<' feoced yard. Quiet ATTRACT .. Hom<' + ncv• COZY f!.10 FEE TO TENANT BAYFRONT APTS. Fortin Co. Real!ors 6112-5000 B~°itOfs:-REA;TOR apt. So. of H"''Y· Good Loe. Friendly, 4 Bt"droom home. 962-2421 VISTA DEL LIDO TRIPLEX 546-5580 Good Income. Good Finan-The spacious rooms rncom. DICK BERG REALTY Pier & Slip a viilable T1\'n 2 bdnn. + spaciou!! 3 cing. By Chvner, 673-6904. pa.~s n1any fealutrs (or grac. $175-5 Room, gar fncd yrd. S32.500 AND UP bdrm. 2 b.'.lth. unit wilh bu ilt-VA No Down i~ui; lh'ing-. It 's big-~ thf! R/0, v,•/w drps. 'Chldrn & <lrp~. A-I $S900 dn. 962-7U.6 Houses Unfurnished -(? 894.5102 * o/ i S!ory S BR, <lini ng rn1, \v/\v, drps, 2 !rplcs. Lease. 968-2119. Laguna Bea ch 3705 =---'= PANORA~llC \1iew, 2 Br. 2 Ba, bltns, l'iepr din rm. quiet dead-end st, N. end. Or Furn. 49+-f!-163. 2 Br !un1. npt 1v/ likf' nc~w rurn. Conv. Joe. Sl5Cl. 523 Bernard St. &16-3.'>19 l BR. 1-~rple. &>arn cri!ings. Palio. Adult only. $149 mo. 6112-8320 * l & 2 Br. Furn. Apts. POOL. 177 21nd St. NASSAU PAUIS. 612-36--15 2 BR Unfurn apt. Bit-ins, 1v/1v trp!s. Infant ok. No pcrs. l.~l & last $165 mo incl u!il , Apply llJ Albert Pl., C.r-..f. mgr up.<;!alrs apt or call {21 3' 693-:J839 NE\V-Spac. 3 BR all modern w/ lrp\c. Lrg encl patio. 1 2 car gar. Like having your n\vn homC". Adults, Call for details. 546-4016. • {Sell or I~ascl in kl!ehens and private pa-FllA Low Down Corona del M a r 1250 Tight pl11ct's and that s lp1-pet ok. Active. Bk r . George Williamson lios. Garages nnd off strt•et 3 bcdroon1s. large fenttd portan! to th(' gl'0\1-'ing lani· 534-6980. General 400\IGeneral 4000Genera l 4000 REA L TOR p11rking. Located nenr two yard. For sale by ()l\'ner CHINA COVE ily, \Vt>ll landscaPNI. pntlo,t,~U~>-~L~~-~1...,,8-,~H~,---ya-n!~ 1-----·--------·-------;;;.;;c..:;..:;.c;:.;:.:. ____ ...;::.::;:_ shopping, Cf'nfrrs. Al>A'nys CINERAMIC VIEW nicf' cpts & tlrps, all this for ' · .... · .. ~ • 673-4350 645-1564 Eves. tt'.-nl!•d • Pi'i(:ed ~o sell ut S21,500 PJ1one <'Vcnings and Ovrrlooklng Harbor Jelly & $30 7.-J() • gnr. children ok. No de)XISll. -\\'C'ekends -67U168. ' · · Active, Bkr. 534-6,980. REDUCED TO SELL Sll .(XXJ. Blue Pncilic, a pll'nsanl & Near lfartior High and lith M. M. La Borde, Rltr. EAST side kx:ation 3 brm. excluslvf! <'?n1munlty_ 3 BR, Slrttt ~-Thrtt hdrm, G4G-IJ.'i,1;, .. ~'t':<: 531>55i0 l'i baths. Xlnl. cond. 2-ca.r large !iv.nu. Lots of ~lau. PAUL•Wffil'E CARNAHAN &SALTY Co. $12.).. 2 BR triplex, R/O, relrij::, \v/v>', drps. Pet ok. Aclivr, Bkr. 53·l-69SIJ. f'A•o baths, tam. nn. built-~aragr, 80' Wide lot. $22,500 Sundcck, 3 garages, $67,500 tn kitchen. EnclOSl'd 20'x'.!I' TRADE YOUR HOUSE :\lln. 10•;0 do\\•n. 2j3 Rose 0 $185-Ulll pd. Lf'Je 3 Br, S.1G.5-1-IO honie. Frpl. R/O, crpls. -~.~-~-""-~-""-""'~-~-"",..,..I Blue Beacon, Bkr. &15-{1111 Santa Ana Hgts. 1630 $150-2 Br .. 11 ~ Bil studio st:twned-in p:i.Uo. A hl'11uty FOR THIS! Ln .. C.lol. 646-2896 et only $32.700. Assum<' 1-1 1.\ 1~ Acre Country Estale •I BDRJ\I, J\lesa Vt>rde North, lo:in. . 3 Br, 2 Ba, 18:<36' Pool, hors. S~.QOO loan. assumable at M . M. LaBorde, Rltr, tsorunils OKin,n:>ar.Coun.. 5-\~. Landscaped patio, li4&-0l55 E\'es. 673-6116 ll'Y style living in the city, vi<'v.', ownf'r'i; full price Near ne1v siark. Assume $28,500. 545-7700 Selective Buyers 6~~(, loan. Owner /Agent "Fol"f"\·cr \'ll"\\'." f'X('lu.sl w 54&.9477 or 642-5000. Oo\•er Shorei;. <I Bcdrm., :!I'll========= ha., powO<-r ft'IOm. lge. fam. 1i O\VNER. Ne\\·ly decorated 3 BR, A~un1able F II A $'12,,j(). fi.ltH;763 aft 5 pni. ./ By o\\·ner. 3 BR, 2 ha, corner lot, ·lo lntf'l't>SI GI loon 6'il-, $26.l:iO. 54~79a.2 Mesa Del M e r 1105 -- Uy rm w1n,.,i..,,, inocr 5 BR & FAMILY courtyard ""'ith a llUl:!' pool. Large family home in No. Ready lo move right lri! Cmta i\lesa with all hll-lns SIQJ,400. Roy J. \Vant, J<UO i!l('luding water conditlonc?r, ~flQ' Dr, &f6.~ Open Quick Poss. Assume l':.llst. FOR Sale by t1wner, .. 1,1 y. <.tng FllA Joan. Only $3,000 " YOUR LOVED ONES dov.·n. Joe, clnse to schools, 4 BR •'Trll.lf1c-sa.fe" 1lvini::: In lh\J PERRON . 642-1771 or 3 & den, 1~ BA, crplli, drps, bltns, Irplc, fam din 5 BR. 3 00. E-Z care' homol::z==:::::::: rtn, CO\' patio, dichondr:i &. yo,t'd, In Pf'O(totOO rul de •-kl g11.c. Qruy $39,$0 on lttx-ml LUSK HARBOR VIEW 13wn, 1prn er frnt/f'l'ar , terms. \YllJ '~lntnller Only Stio.000 filr thl!: :1 BR. 3 ~CZroooclean;-·,;-~u--i. home In e:cdla•· ba.. homr in COf"On3 t!el ~1ar. ""~,.'------­ H•I Pinchin & Assoc. Great \tiew 0( the harbor BY O\\•l'M"r, 3 BR. 2 ba. REATORS Ir ocean. 2 Fp .. ('OOl'tyml, r am rm, cov par. dclw: ~ E. Coast Jlwy. 675-4392 3 car g:ll'B. ROX\oK~Eftbuy! w/everythlng, S20.COO loon B!J:cumablr Ill ~1,', , S.tl.900 MARVELOUS VIEW 2001 'Bayside Dr. Bellut. shake roof 1-sly, 3 Br. 4 ba. wat!'rfront hoint', ::dnl S\\im- mlng ~acb. Nl'1\·ly redf't't'r. SJ 75,000 SHO\VN BY /\PP'f. B ill Grundy, Realtor 833 Dover Dr .. N.B. 8--12-4f>20 10')3 S..1ker. c.~l. -"---= npt. putil.l, gar, pct t1k. HORSES? Bl"'"'"'''"· Bkr 64:..-0111 1~ ACRE, partly ft>nccd, wm-• plcle '''i1h old house. $25.000 Cos ta Mese ------3100 nnd Ov.·ncr muy hl'lp !in-2 Br. Gar, patio, crpts, drps, ~llCf', stove, ref.rig. Ban1boo FULLER REAL TY Vlllag<' has pri,·acy & quiet 546-0814 for mRlure adult!! only. ==========-I D1\•nt\\•n, CJ\f. $160. ;,4-i--0452, Laguna Beach 170.5 ft-IS-7134. BY OWNER - Harbor View -Lusk. 1'1ontccito plan 4 BIG STEAL I 3 Bdrn1, 2 ba. fam. rnl, BR, 21 ~ SA, family rn1, 4 bti den 3 ba LG 11 crpts, drps, bltin:s. Avail a rt fully drpd & crpld, Jndsrpd. mi ··w1be;,,;" fpl c~ v; 15th .. S265. incl gardener, nc.-dwood deck & brick Bit~. kitch., tilt carpel~·. &tZ.27:Kl AdultJii, pnllo: \Vilh Octan Vic1v, Identical llC'arby honie l!I 2 Br, HS<". bean~ ceiling$., $j8,80Q, l\ppl. onlY. 714: orrr.rcif ut S·IO.COO • ··11eal" fl'plc, priv. pali!J, rtdulls ~1.1.14-or 714:613-8219 this rnie--'M-W.000! only, no i>ets. 336 E. 20th St. e 316 NARCISSUS • l\f'ISSION REALTY 491.()731 _Sl48 per n'IO. G42-&i20 (Call for App't.) e $31,sOo • 2 Stbry, Mesa Del Ma r l.O\'Cly 3 Br. "°""' bf'ln2 rt'-1 \\13.llc to N:ach. Charmimi; SlOO. ~. 546-9-1!}2 dee. Xlnt IOl'nllon. lm~1cdl-, hOm(', 1:1.ndscapl'd ror prl· r or rut l'f'SUlts .. Call ''The ate ..,...,....,..~\.On!" $1l,9:f'I. \'<Icy l~f~1ACULATE? Hot Linc" Dally Pilo! S©R~N\.-~t-~s~ The Puzz le wifh .. fhe Buiff.fn Chuckle O Reorrorig" kirters of 1he lout scrambled word$ be-,---.... low lo term lovr slmpf• words I NEKLER I I I I' I ~----- .._s_._o ..... M_O.J..E-L..-11 _ ;j _ I' I I' I . 1 ..., L~O ~C~C~l-~1 ~ _ I I I I' . · l.IUTURO I . I I I I' I' . • .The: o f f i c i o I Hollywood drink.; M arriage .. the -. •·ll 0 Coml'l lc!o !hf! d1uc~I" quo1td by l•ll•niJ Jn tile mlu,l'lg words YOl.I d1vf!lop lrom llt11 No. J below, e PRINT Nt.Jl.,.\&El!ED tETlfRS I t :s • • IN THESE SQUARES €) UNSCl1AM8lf UTTERS f0 R ANS~'f fl HE DAILY PILOT WANT ADS! 133-0700 &44-2430 Pflld to loon. OCii Junlpcro, Dial 642.-6618 A cluap It. !149-0:A)t , MORGAN REALTY I PL.ACE REALTY 4M-9704 C1:1.uitied r 673,.6&12 67:"''" "'' So, Cooat Hwy. 6'2'1678 SCRAM-LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIACATION 9000 ----~-:-~~-~---~--~.....;_.....;_.....;_.:..:.:.;:.:...;...:..:.:..:.._ ' I ! • In ... ... • * ... SI. - M .. DO - '"°· • ,;. ol, .. ill la. -... "" >m "'· • ' .... Ttil " ... no vl oh. ' >0!. 140 .B. •• ~ dy. 511 pd. ' Ing "OS - IN "" 436 -to JOO 3 :s ,,. :11 100 "'· No rno <rt apt '"' tio. our for -- ... ' .• • . .:. ___ ;;;.;;;:;.;;;::;;:;:::,:;;;;:-= -+ ---,,.,,-:.:-::·.;:·~i:::;oe;~;i:-::·:::-:::;;:::;;;;:;:;::&:'::1'1'1':~1111""!• ......... -------------.. --------~=---=--~-------... • ~· ................ _ -~-· •. ..:... ____ .__ ...... ~ .. -! __ ........ ,._- --0lllNTALI ..,.., Unlumlohtd ~!NTALS Aplr, Unflimlohtd Cott• Mes• 5100 Costa Mesa .1100 AVAlLABl.E JULY lST • NO\V feu lnc, new 'DR, t ltory 2 BR (J klngslze) a J UR, utlla, Qltl .. dripe1, J'\ii BA. Jiirepla~. Fre1hl)' bll·lnl, trpW:. Open Df.lly Ptinled , -New 091.1., _di~ _31WU }IA&QIJl:!!JTE NEWPOllT 8'tch Dtl- Ottlc.. ~., healed, w/ 9l'lv b&. l!OIJ W. Caul Hwy. • Wh~n You Want it done right ••. 1 M f I> f: '., r. ( _A wooo·, Lwh ltndacaplna w/36' Bll-ln1, dialiwuhlr. Prival• Don FnnWln RHJtor fD..2222 P I n e trtet, sparkling patio pllll COOL POOL. & J?iU.1ACULATE t BR, 2\6 waterfalll, -. u b b 11 n I reert:atloa • l&'1!dry rooms, ba dun!••, bit-, util ,,.., streams 6 Hrt'nt POO<I• I'" •· I ' -•• make Aierrlmf.c WGOC!s the ..., rno. ..,.. & ast plut cpl.I, df'PI, $21~. ITWWJ Commtrelal Call one of the experts . listed below II: Pl,UME t:q.UIJ'llON1! ~ace to live. T~ 1 It 2 lll!curlty deposit. 549--067• D • .. tu tu ' .. ··-tE •""tLL .. " .. 3 BR, '"' Bl DUPLEX. •••• • ., rn or un rn. ,. . c.1' r. r -1 d bit ncl apt.t., ffl\W'I' air.cond,. ..... , 1, fPI, na, e aar, • furni1hed llflltli, zoned com. merd&l, J&d.211 I It, I 0 0, Owntr: STS-2259. "4-N1I loWUNA ln Newport Beaal W/hlP pctlni.t llJl,OCI), KlllOAAllD llZ 14! ~= 1ielf-<leanln1 oven1, bffni Ntw 2 Br. 1'-' Ba. w/aar. Call. 673--~. celUiip, dlthwathe", prtv. JUO, Adulta. )'1Mld. prlv. WlllMY• W•"" WhMWYt Ollt l'ICIAI. CLAlll,ICA TION l'Oa NATUllAL IOltN IWA,,llU s,N•l llm &:ut.11 w / 1 tor a r •' )'trd. Crpll, dfp1, wtr pd. H··-"l"I~ ... ~ •-e l 1v•tqr1, lOI dtl 261J &anta Alli Avr. ,,No. ""' •-.n .,. - t,,.,...~utlc pool, 1wlm L.) 85f...41:xJ llllVICI DllllCTOllY SERVICE DIRICTORY° SlllVICI DllllCTOltY ----l:'~fy ·~~.:.u·:1.!1J "v;;;..rcr."""'A"'-;oM~"i~l~A-A=P=Ts~. act.lvltlts. A.dulta pleue. 2 BR, Prlv p!ltlo. Hid pool, From Sl40. Juat East or 2 car encl'd pr, Children 2600 ll&rbor Blvd.. near welcome, no petJ plell!el Nabtt'I CldlJlu at 4:.15 $165 mo. 't1t w. Wllfon. Mtrtltnlc Wt>;· ~5-6300 Ml-1261. IL ' CORDOVA Dt:LUXE l Br. Bit• 1tovo, NEW _,.DULT Am AVAIL 4 d1hwhr. PoQI . Eo c l Large 1 &c 2 BR Uni ts 11rqe, all util JI d . Color coordinated kitchtn1 J 13 ~ -S 15 0 . Ch i I d :r r 11 ttaturtn.' dinOlal 6 dtlllXI w1loomo. 241 W. WU.On. dilllw&llttr. Dlolltntr ~rap-Apt 5 CM. Ml-140.I '1'Y A c:~. J..GE 1 BR. J'rple, btam Complate rec ctnlfr w/ pool c:elUn1:11, prlv pal\o. UUI pd table, luge twimming pool $149. 1fT f;. 2Jllt SI. NH520 le outdoor bbq. Priv garage lncluded. Rent• from 11'6. lOI! Cllul<, C.M. (l blk W, of ltarbor blvd ' Hamiltor\), Call .. S.2118. * • . * * !I '""'" Moa1 Apia. • • * * 1·2 lt<lrffm Apia. iuo up lnol. \1Ulltie1 Alm furn. fl)Ol & Rocreation area. Quiet Environment, Ott •~I pllJ'klllf, No pclJ. 19S$:19tl t.\IPle Avt. Cotta M~lll FAIRWAY VILU APTS. - N•wPort lttch l'1 IA YPRONT 2 BR., 2 BA J.,uxury Apt•. Priv, ltrra.ot, elevato:n, aub. terranear\ pk'c. All eltc Pool, IOft water, dock•. SliJ \Y. Cftll.lit HWl/, Newport. 0<2-ml * OPl!NDAILY f.5 * 777 AMIGOI' WAY 2 Bil. 2 ba. unll.ll, unfurn. Out1ld1 livi111 •rtl.8 a n d doublt &Jr1W11, $250 10 JJOO, BOYD RIALTY * t1a.sno * 2 an, 2 Be, wonderful view . N1w. Overtooklnc B 1 ck B.ay , l'rplc, dlhwa•hr. 1)65 mo. 74~ Oomin10 Dr .. N.8. ~!JI 14~Ulll or et>-~ Prlvata paUo, JOOl .. Jail\', 2 81\, , &\. Wcnilerlul vtew. laundry 1.e.c. New. Ov1rlcoldnc B n ck Near Orange Co. Airport &: Bay. J'rplc, d1hwuhr. $$5 UCL Adult.I onl)', mo. Tif!I Domingo Dr., N,8. Call 64~126Q or ~5 21122 Santa Ana A~. OCEANFRONT 2 Br t.ower Mir. Mn. Bruce 5'5-3i9of $~ yrly, bllll,i, will redec. BAY MEADOW ,API'S. ~'ti: S.a1horc. Patio, 111.r. New exclllnJ 1 BR, J140. Avail 8/14. 213: 21g...102t ~ BR, tl~. Diam ctlllrJis. I SPACIOUS 11pt, avallable Wood pan'Jt, 1ha1 erptg, for lease, with 1oraeou1 prlv. patio, 10me w/ irploJ. vlaw 'of bay. For ap- Pool, 1And vollt)' ball crt. polntment call 61'3-&41• RC bldJ, pool labltl. put, E -· • ttns J"ff"· Adults, no pell. DEI.UX ~ 3 l;Jr, 2 Bath, W w. ,. ... Open J1ou.e crpts. dr:p11, blln,. 111 blk • bay I bch. Adult&. S2CO 12-T pm 4all)'. 148-00TJ, mo. 54~7098 OftUXf i 11l0ry 2 br apt. ANNUAL. 1'1' Blk. io ocean. in trl•pJex. 2 niarble l 1 d pullman ba'1, 2 Irr: 3 BR. Ba. F'p · lihwr, l1ndsca~ patio•. now 1.:::';!lt\tl;,, 11!8o6'1;:,o;6'T;;;;;53!)08;;:,i=';11;;:= paint c:rpt ' drpi, loads Nowport Htlnht.1 jffi of bltn1. CIO$e to •hoP•· ,. 409 Ford JW, (2 Blks t:;. or Toyota l Volvo Dir, oU $165--2 BR. Crpt1, drpti, ltarborl. Adults only, no bltns. Po ('I I. Adultt:, J'IO pell, pell. * 64:J.-2514 • MARTINIQUE t 11aat Bluff Jut '4rll>LI"" lurroundl'!fl• D~LUXE i;2-~'i'BR AP'l'S. PllllTIOI LOCATION ALI() FtlRN: •ACJl!:LOR For leue, deluxe 1188 141. ft. Prv pt,lb e Hld Pools 4 Bit. '"" BA apt. Frple-, Nr ahop'g • Adult.I onlf drape1, crpt1, wet bar, pri 1m lani. Ana Ave., CM baleoniea, dbl gar off ~llehen Mil' Ap~ U3 e f'&-550 dshwhr: dbl oven, Peel. Conv HARIOR GlElNS to ·~~vs~~t ::.''11o" CARDEN 6 STUDIO APTI &35 Amigos Way, NB Bach. 1, 2, 3 BR's. trorn 1110. Mrr. ,..t door 865 AmJ:ol. mi Pttol'ID• w.,, c.M. • ·R1w oiCD xre 546-{lml 3 Bl\. 2 BA Apt tor leall'. --* I>f:LUXE * Incl. spac.. ma.liter suitt, din Lra l Br. apt. unf\lrn. New rm 6 dbl 11ra1e, auto doer crpti:, J'ICW drps thruoul. opener avail. Pool & R11c. Fur.,lturt R11torl"1 ,.,.11 .. . ON BEACH! • 2 RR Ill BA rROM m e 2 BR 2 BA FROM $260 S L'--I 11--I llu"'° JULll • 14> .UIT ""LU" ~.-.... ....... ~ n: '!!"'~"'::: rilo.066 mmz buUd..... lollyalHlftt 6HO f1Ja-f98 W. 19th St. Bethel ,---------" llollnlahlnt '675 ,,, .. , .... , .. ' "'° 1'°"'*1 .,.. •. 54a..1111 Agt. I - BABYSI'fl'Ejt .. M~hJrc teert ---------·-------- e 3 BR 2 BA rROM l360 Cupe\1-draPN-dllhwuhar heated pe.oJ. ... u""'teMll rec room-ocean vi1w1 peti0£..ampl.e parklflg. ~ :::"lf'"1 -''"011i..r .. i To "•ce v.Ur"TrMlr'1 1'or111ll1t M '"ONI '42·5671 lnduttrlil Rent1I 6otO qual. 6: tn.111. av111 for iun\. 6\.11\Nl'l'VRI:: ~trlpplna A * PAINT11'10 INT I !."X'f, __ ., mer monthl 'Ill 0011119 Jtllnl&nltla. i:eaaonabl• Averi. r •b' $260. l 1\¥ NEW Warphouit *'· 250I · lt&ttl •. wW llvl.rl, fl'~ r1ti•.. Call 14 i-t 5 1 5 $~. Incl all 1natorl.\l A or 5000 sq ft. h' Catta Me• CJJl& For liChool q:r child, 1.':;•;;"l';:':;lm:;•;;· =====:;; preJ>1r11.tio11, ttl. per rm + Securtl>' auard•· F'VJ\N, a11o Avail, HUNTIN•TON PACIAC 7ll OC£AN 4 Vi., 11.B. (n41 ll!I0-1417 ore. open 10 am-t pm DaJl)' I•) 2 Bldroom unltl • xlnt C.lof, loeaOon, W I A50} c<iuity • want homa in Joc:&I uee or 1 Jeck Hunmcnd, Btkr, 6'0-1151 TRADE tQIUliat t r o m QJ,000 to fe0,000 In motel • Rancho S4nta ,. aCfMP roR houJt • or ''' °""" m-2*: -WAU< J blks to beach. Eict\Anct S OJX, unltl, Jiiw- Abnost ll(!W lr; 3 Br apt, thtirtlt, eq. 11.0,0llD, inc. MIO. dbl 11r, trplc, wfw Cl'Jltl, !or T.D.'1, home, income drp1, dwhr,·2 ba. $225 mo. or _ ? Ch.ldm ok. No pat1. MS--1TU The Huntsman IU11. -.1211 NEAR Hunt1111ton Hatbolll' I DLlC, unlt1, clo.e to }loJ.. Trt.plexe.11. Qulot 1re11. Lra: l)'Wood Park. All renttd. 1 Dr. dlahwathu-. Sl&O. Pr!t •••COO It •· ... .-,. A "'"'' equ )': wr 1111\IM, ok. 121;\) =~ ZS or f1'1~) l•M or \noome. 846-lia9 OWN~ ~ l 81111 c:luplex:·Walk lo ocean COfd.MERCIAL prop., tne Adult• only, no 11c1.s. Stov1, 6 clear, nellt to ltan, C. rerrt11:., utll furn. suo. · u o;; _.. _,,... r-"" 1\63 VI~; _,,vvv .,. .,. ..... ....-I · hoult, unltll or lanct. CO?r.fPl,,, R.cdec. lmmac 111: OWNER ITM208 3 Br, tncld aar. AdultJ, 1°3-1"• Twl..,o.,;.n°'-"'"-w;_;;Cnt.;;;;l..,"--w~/ no pet1. *' Ell&land it. moortnr. fully fll\llpptd, 53&-UO!i auto pUct:, radio I phone, $1~2 Br. Newly painted, good ~. Trade 1.or lot, crpla, drpe, bltna. Oar. Xlnt condo. dupleic or ! 494.;457 loc, K1d1 ok. '30--15'1. Original oil palnUn; on vtl- DELUX 2 BR, 2 bath, P\lt vet by \VM. CANNON. Vai- ptl, 1ha1 ep\1, encl 111. ued at Sl.200. wtU.. Tl\ADE •ll •tory, nTO. 53&-Mlll tor car or '!!'!' .,,...,, 14' T" IJdpJack llUbol.t, fl. l!M-44n or 642-QiO ~ Calli. teacher, &; ea d · g, I · patnt. Local refa. C"'1 J•ck bcJ'llu•. Incl trtr. All Kln't •wlm'&, 1art1 • craft.t, Otrdtnlftl MIO ~or tol-1900. · cond. W&nt a11tomatlc ea. AcreAoa 6200 ,..~,.,,~'----~--M'oAROENJNO * EXTElqOR..~TERJOR * maro, M1&1tq or almllar, --f.oVINO care )'OW' chlldrfn IDr Prott,.lonal Oudinlnl Wiii not be underbid! ~usiom C.U ft5.0lU, 6 Ao. ltvtl, ITWS. I min, my home. 11.8, My hr~ay-• small 1111 d 1 capIn 1 work. FUlly JU&r. ·}'in!:lit Renowntd I.Ake Tahot ft.tit. to anr Vlctor Vall')' Jet ·wk. 96Ml46 lle1'V1ctl call &4&.3'29, St!'Y· paints. P'tte e1t. L color .. -·t l •--· 11 ..... _ airport. Many other pureel1, ="""....;.,;...;,~-------·•11·11& •-al ,..,.p • :_ •--· ....,-, ""·-"'' all site1 Jow do.! BJcr QW..O CARE m)' home in& Newpo11, CdM, Colla ..... i.i.w ' ......., ... ~. """"• dl~rct. N~ llOme lncoine &73-UG6 ' · ' &ear iehDol IJ'lta, Coat~ Mtll, Dover Short•, Wt1t-1,.;;l1o,ind,,,C,, ~'"''°""· .;&46-lll,:_"1'"-~-:te T~~:i ~~. TIU-1000 i) Ac's l\ivmid~ Co. Nr, Meaa. Sf&-:!02J _oTU_tt~. """====~-1,~0RJY Sit= ',t:"!o"""l ;;::::=="'"=,:::::.:..::;:;::=J new trwy $40 down MO INFANTS To 3 yrs, wkly + LANDICAPl'NO~ -•••• 11'", Acal. <tit'·• Streamline motor home · • su·wic .. u 'hom1. I1nced Nti1 t.a 11u .. ~···11-... ... ... fully NII-cont, •"Df'd v·J. mo. 0\\'Mr. (7141 548-nCM. .... '""'')"~'.::-. ••• u•1 ew wna ,.c 11<1 ft, $13. per mi. tdln. I rm1. '! ,.., '"'~ \It..,., .... .--.. dt1l1N. Do •II or pan )'Ollr· &46-0371 4 637...gua pwr; .f\llly auto, alp•· I. Far R11ort , __ rty 62111 CHILD Cart, """ beacti Mir. RototUllna. Uc, eon· ----'-'--''----real e1tate O'l' unaller unit. ~=.;..;.c•c;::;-~:::;C!,,_.;_;= •w U No W1t1ling S4"'-l 1 8 home, days only. traclor, yn local tt•P· \!•LLP•P&" .,._ . .....,.w It · e LAKE AJUWWllEAO e * 673-~ t !136-12n, "' "' ~ r, t.fini llkf "Go-Otvll", new, f8SOO mOVot you into =="·"·:i·"·'='"":i::::::::= N'~EW,;,;:::;1;.. .. -w-,-,,-,..-.. -ld~mtr-. n )'O\I call "Maci' nevt>r l.Llld, Ii HP, J229 vaJ. bl;autiful .f UR. 3 84 ·Ifft M•l"t•n1nljllt .,JJJ Complt1t11 l1wn Cll'f. C111n 5*144.t SliMW ue • trade for an)'th\ni . pre. tr1-level bome 1v/ a 11 up by job or month. Free 2 Coll•rt 11ud1nt1 wtUJiiirit fer land cycli, c:amera modern conveniences, inot 1· 1 r I 1 11 a\•erap 3 BR ext. '-$14:5., Kl.Illar. eTMm ' $5000 worth of n<'1v furn .COMPLi:TE REf,INISHING e1 111111. CUI. or n o ca including labor & i;ieriall, W & drapes. Alto dishwas her Palnt·v•rnl1h ' hul\1. K!l?-2411 or ~· Call Stove, 5'1~0 ant rte 0!11111 Yacht or disposal bltn v a c u u nt' • 19T~83 • ,GAR.D'"iNINO-Ml"ICU'OUI "l""T. Baflronl homt to $250,000. AM-Fr.t' lntfl'ooCOm in et.' I====":;:;:=== RotQ!illln&: -New L1wn1. 1 ~ r-""' Exch. F/C Calif. Acreaxe or I rm. Call 540-lMT or s.is-G7oJ Brick, MaMM'lry, Monthly lawn 1ervloo. Corn· Bl.VE ClilP &TAMP$. tNI. ~'!1..PfOVtdll03. lot1, Owner tn4J f'\·es. etc 6$60 .POfl delillt!red, tree e•t. crew col. •tudtnlJ. Int.ext ~·-~~------1==°"======="-t 5'18-1742 t houses. Exp, Dock•. !7M1U Trade~ Cq S BR condo Out of State Prop. 6201 BIJlLD, Ro:modll, 'repair ffEW, Lawn&, ro-teedlna . t WILL. paint a J bdrm C.M. toR Uxeo Mobile-----. --Brick, block, concrete, Compl1tt1 lawn care. Clean houte for SXID, Int.I trim, homt or ltr&tr In C.A1. or /·.Blautiful · earpenlr)', no job too imall. up by job or month. 1'l'H •t\lcco. labor I matulal. Newport arta, will add ctlh In SHu!L1;.:REJD ISL~:ii Lie. Conll' ~5 t1Urn1te1, ~ror Into call a.ne. ~T-TM3 or st&<toa2, if neoded. 562'25 ~" uan 1• llT·Ull or lfS-09~ IN-·< " 1-c:.1. PAI"TtNG, ;.:...;;;;:;;;:;,.::.::.;:=. ___ , Wash., in me N!art of lht ·-IT~ , .. I.Ill It .,,. -In 0r&JWt boaliol J"'•di>e of u~ C1~lnotm1kln1 61811 •ALLIN lllOTHllU tMMED. llERVICE .. Local What do rou Wit It trade t Pacific Cout. . w o o d c <t, Call UI for oompl11t yard nf. iR&E 011. s.a&.1827 Coanf:y'i luplt nld ftd; Natural cove lor dock site. P'umlture I-AnUquei Mf'\lice at lo...,·e~I n.1111 '" ·-o~A~Y~--'-..,-i-,-, -,-Ex-I. Nice beach. Close to shon1, Refinl•hlns I: R.e11torins. MG.1T89 Free e5t. LOC rtl•i l~'d llW polt-ll"t rMlill a ltnl. Moderate. cltm1te, clean 3.\r, * &f5-0ll1. • GARDENER • 17 Yf'I exp. •"Int.' Call ~huCk '14~ ~ * * * * '* clear ...,·aters. This island ln thlt 1rea ... dtllrel work PAINTING • Ext.·lnt. 11 )Tl. VILLA MAltlllLLIS .,!lf!Jl!llfl!!liilll!l!llllfiil•ll~···l!i!iJ'l'9•il i1 delinilely unique. For lull C1'1M"ftrlnt 6190 in Lasun.. Conaclentlous & exptJ, lni. 1.lc. )~fl' t ill. Santa A,na Ntli I!! ltlAL IT•TI h1fonmllon wrlto: P. O. o'Oli•blo. I\>~. Al, 04--0UI Ao<"Ouat. Colllnai. "4M!20. BRAND NIW REAL llTATI ~ Bole 411, l'tllovuo, Wuh. CAlt,INTRY AL'S ""'14-plna. Tre • YOU Supply Tho Paint. ! l~ACIOUI ~~~~-----_!!!o_ro_I _____ Ul)OI or caU ( .. I ~91 MJMOJ\ l\IPAD\.I, Jrfo Jolii removal Yard ijrnodeling. Br. Uv RM I Kitchen 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. I I -eves. Toti lmtJl. Cablrllt In -... Trash ha\JUn•, !Of cle.anup. Adult Llvinn R.e"t11l1 W•nt.-1 lftO UI ne11 Rtnt1I -" Patnttd, $60. Call M'J-8631. furn. I Unfu~n. R W 6240 'Ill I o th tr CIDlnlti. Ropair sptnkltl. 6'1'S-ll6G PAINTING Int ' c~l . A":I Dtahwa•Mr.colorcoord!nat-;-;;-~~d-.-down--IOWll-HILLORIN IQUAltl · E .... !ntH ~-11:',u.:=-~~aQ~ JAPANESE Gardon in1 work. Rcuon11blr.. rr1.e ed •ppllanct• ,. pluth shag Hunt. Bch. 2 adlta, no petJ. 2 •lore• avan. for lmmed. ./ WANT TO BUY Afldtnon ~Nice. Ne~~ Cltanup e1tlma1r1. SlS-1900. CA.l'Jlll _ ot!olce of 2 color gar pref. Und 11' 0. It ... ln Onet of cit)''• buelt1l HOM& -, .. , m&lnt. RETlflED Palnter1 1J )'Ml schemt11 • 2 bath• • stall 536-1214198J.«IU by l/U, ahopplnc eent1n • .App, sno rrom Private P1.r1y QUALlTYWOOtlcraft. iml EXPERT Jap1neM!-p.rden-tXptr. Neat A hnn11:11. Non ho I ~ -~ ~ 11 '' In $50,000 "rice _,. .... 'cuh), 11n'I oon.tr. l cal'l)C!ntry, I""· Frec cit. Comol•ll> d"nkor. CtU ...... l 11 wen • m rr•c>i ..... W1Uu· 5-0 bnn, 3 batht, Ba)' rront. ...... · • " ·--.r ... 11 u.i_... robe doort • indirect H:;ht. or Dover Sbore•, witt\ doelc. %:(; E. 17th St., Coils Mua Approx. 2!iOIJ aq. fl. So. cf refl oon1uUatlon It quot!· yard •rvice. ~. + PA·PIRHAN01N0 ing tn kitchen • breakWt For mo. er Au1., Lit \It'll. C!all Mr. lram (llS) Ol.14700 O.rtlild • w. leach Blvd. Call Kin 6'b-(l(H4, ~ jJM'S Gardentna t lawn ti PAJNTTNO. * 961-MZ bar • bl.I.It prlvalt fenced ol Sept. 844.-00'll. INEXPENSIVE )tlO 1q ft pvt · 714 r 673-52'14. A-l CARPENTRY maintenance. ft••· ' com· ---· patio • plulh l\nutcaplnc • e LANOLORDI .-office e. bath. ptu'k'g, heart Hn Req'd-Dlr ect Sal t Sma..11 Job Speelall1t mcrelal * MO.UST brick Bar-a.Q'a. Iara• Mat-FREE JU;NTAt.. IE'RYlCE ol CdM, $65, o.,,. n er f'feeded by August in_ Ba.y-call Gonion 14_1-8'1"3 CLEAN PUP SPEClAUiT 6170 td poo11 ·1c &an11. 8 ke "9 j-673-3'Mft. cre,t, \VeiilciiU, DoverSfior. G~Repalr, aild, cib. r.towln"". "'•l••,--=--.rtolil.l-cu-~-.-1 -P-ll~·--• .-.P-ll-Y 3101 50 • Br l.1.1 51. ro r -,. ... M V I II I .... . .......... "' ., • ..,., "''"""'''"" •i'RiltE fl10 121 W ltth es or -; t BR, fam rm,· orm ea. pane ni: mar lte . Reuonable ~ (ij; UI. N. of So. CotJ!f JJlua) API' &: Roommate wanted St., oc,'" Avait June' 1st. dln'r ...,, hon;e,. ~K. Aeythin&I Dick, 61'$-4459. JOHNION'I ~ofw"WF;NING RelllOnable • Phont Gordon Sant• Al'I July lit-Newport O't C.M. 5@..1711 good cash po61tion. Pri~l· REPAIM * ALTl:l\ATIONS Yard care, Clitn-upa. Pru~ t &•T-81•~ t PHONI: 5174100 Young ,,.;iman. "7·!"4. l '-ro or Ofo m -It pahll only, Bo. MUM.I, Daily * CABINETS. Aey 1!&11 job Ing, plant!..-. ~ -•-"!~'!!!!l"!!!!'~!l'!lll'•" I It ft It nl 5995 1• • RV -'Pilot. ~ yn r.xper . Ml-61'l3 Pl11ttrl"I' Pitch, . • • )USINESS tnd --·----Gtntrll StrvlcH-'612 r-_. -CAN'T BE. B£l·T-· oorna r I tn c M. * Owno' ~ Ito-Ir ·- Sir1il1 SWry Saulh 51.>a Atmo&pllCIN 2 Bedroom l 01th1 Carpe~ I;. 'Drape& Air Conditioned Prlv11.lc Po.tio1 llcalt'd Pool Plenty of J:.iw11 Carport &, :):toroi:e 8Lli:EPING J\Oom, re1t rm. Offl1t ltent1f 6070 _!l~ANCIAL Ctment, Concrete '600 CLEAR Vu Malntenanct. \Ve * PATC{ PLASTERING tacll. Older adult. MO mo. lusin••• dO ev.nythlnr1 Free e1t, 2"' AU 1yp1,. Frte •1Umat11 Call 64S..8464. SUPER-DELUXE QUAUl'Y Opporlunlt1'11 6300 CONCRETE work all 1ype1.-hl' llClrv. 846-26811 ~I\ ~25 Sawina, breakln,, haullna, rtOOM Ftlr malt, lllt. prlv'1, 1-J-3 room, up to S,000 tq. ft. -""-lp!o-•\ni· LI• 8'rvtce • GENERAL Clean.up Ii haul-6190 1ludcnl prtrd. 170 mo, lit office 1ulta1. Jmmed. oceu-AAA -... · '" l11i Hone1t prlc11. M,_.m &: Jut. .. 1811 an I pm. ..pa.ncy, CMft(e Ont,. AJrport CANDY SUPPLY Qualll1. 8'J.IOIO or MMS9J -------- BACH·lurn rm, comm. H Jrvtne Commtro, Complex, kOUTI -CONCril;'I'!:, ,4.ll tykpel 1· Fre~ -CALL n·~,~~H~Al'l=P~Y~M~Al'l~ BOB'S TREE SURGERY "umbln1 A kit. Jdeal L;)r atudint. acU. Alrpcrter Hot1l & ~st. CNO .!El.UNG INVO,LV!:D) ••t. .. wln1, bre• n1. haul· Genera! Home Repair 11 bBc:k ott1rln.r the prne S."'5 mo. MW:i20 aurant, blnkl, Ian Diego Plan one , , ••..• , $325.00 Jn;-I sklploadlnr. Service ,;;===*.:';~;:;"';:U;,;;•== )l~lne Qua.lit¥ ~e Servl<..'O, nl & N'pt, Fwy1. . Plan two ••••.•• , '91'5.00 I qullll)'. 6-1M&68 Bob. ..., 540-3198 rt1AN o y, umi•pvt balh, Pl ••--11""00 CO"'CR~T• ~ 67-UNCROWDED PARKING an """""' · · ·••• . * r1 "' s:. w.,,.,., H•ull"I _ Water heatera • d1.tpo11er1 Cen. rtpalt'I 643·2™ or 64)-0506 $~ mo In advance. 1111 LOWJCWI' RATES Jnquire about all, Excellent LIQ9nlled. Patlol I dnrwya, ·----.:.;.:.: Cre1tmont, C.?t1. i»Mll.9 Ownor/fttll'. 2172 DuPont nr., inoome Jor a ftw houn etc. Philllp1 Ce m • n t. MOVINCi, 1¥'11C titan-up ' J\OOM to worklfll Jfrl or Rm, I, NIWPOrt Beach. week!y work, CD~• &-54H380 lite haullns. l\euonable. woman OR share homr . 833-32'13 Courtet)' to Brokers Event~). Refilling and D~E'°c~o°'n~A~TI~VE=~ca~N"CR=cr=E Free e.Umat••· ~1802. PLUMBING REPAIR No Job loo tmtU --•-53_1--"-"-*--· 1 • p ti Off -oott"'""""""'y-trom-roln -.mNEs:WALKs:PAT!O Alroc: Enforp ' PRIVATE Room 6 Bath. rel 91 ICI operattd dlepenltt'l In New-CALL DON 64WM4 Cleaa!.na' l hJuUna. Gartfl!I, prlv. entrance. PaUo. ~ L·,·oN THE BAY'; port Beaych and ·~rrounding MORE eo-'•-porw· '"' l\fc. :W~1991. S@..2.Ul R1mod1lln9 ... bltna, tep, din rm. 99i El area. Camlno Or. ~51 e VMP.I J~ e JIJDOtN VIL.LAGE NEW'" Dix l i 2 sr. •Shi: 8M Aintgos Way, NB CAf\DEN APTS • &t2-3U!I • I d-• bib!• immM --~·. ¥-• • 2500 loulh II.Ila CfP • """"' • · ~nta Ana * ~•1525 tiecp. rrom 1150. MG-1DT3. Corona dtl M•r J210 '""' !WS.2321 I :-iiiimiiiiii'.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-ii'i $150 • IJ\G 2 BR. Studio ; BR duple". rar, bllins. I' Apt. (Tri plex). Fa.mil)' 1iie new!)' -renovatod, Adults ~ ... ; kltch. "'' bl\111, tr11t1, drp1, T hi'" '· t ~ b frplc., encl J&r. l or 2 pref, C u 0•· l1Q pe: Ii. •rt• children ok. (Nr sel\11) No 61r.-l!6T ~ll. 2230 s. Cent11r St., QUtET d1o1ple,,:. Adults, n~ ON TE)>J ACR.Ell S.A. Nr Wamer. 546-99119 pet•; 2 Br., enc. oov. 1111tlo, 1 Ii t .aa P'urn • Unlurn •: • • ·= 1705 mo. CM. 54~3'1N Al do Yacht Anchorage: area, \ e estabbah route. • ..... L"' " Ground floor 156 aq U IHandlet name brt.nd ctnd)' Jen money, ArtlJtic 119ttlng. HAULING i Clean Up Ripelr 6MO I WEEKI,Y Raie• 'til end Air oond, Cptl Orp11 and anaekt). ror pertonal Lie., call Max at 644-0687. Trtt1 RemOYe:d -Tree Ell. I -"'·=-=-----",.;;; of Ju~. Tahiti IM Motel. E-Z parkln1, uiu paid interview in Newport Beach CEMDJT WORK. no job too ~="e'='-Mt-7'1~1'2;;,..ce"==-Ji 0 USE/Dock Carpentr)'. •30 Vlctoria, Cf.1. $1~ pe!" month IU"el, Mnd name, addtt11 Small,. rtAIOl\able. Fl'« HAULfN'G $10 A LOAD Fix I cha.nae I yard 1r- 5'" TI1 LIDO PARK DRIVE and phoM number to X•Um. H. 8tu1llclc Ms...881:5 C11an up. TTt:e serv. Oen. ranp. Add too, can do. --------8TORAOE Can111 • 2 1lnal1, 115 4s .. £. 10th CM. 1-dcuble $2rl, E. 21.11 . 542-~. Newport Beach rJS.1080 ?-fULTI·STATE DISTIUBtrr. PruninK Me-25211, MWOill 14,,8092 DELUXE 1•3 ar s nn. iulll ING, INC, 1881 Broadway, Contractors 6610 YARD I Oar. CI e 1 nu p. nr. Oranr• Count)' Alrpot't Anaheim, Calif. 9280' (714! ---------,Rtmovt tree•, Ivy, lra1h. • lrvlne Ind \I I tr I a' 1-"-~..c-~:,· ==~~-~ •TIIE REMOOELER.S• Orade, backhoe. 962-8145 -S.wln1 -·~ .... ___ ,, gar. Bl!n1. 1150. n4 I Stulc f'lrepllt1fl I prlv. pallGI I &12-7472 ( l'ool•. T•nnl1 _ &nml'I Blcf•t. SPARKLING clean 2 BJ\, lklO Sea L&nt, c.dM 64C,,tlll ~ bath, be1ut!lul !O(!&tinn, !MacArthur nr. Co111i1 ff I Compl•x. Carpet, dr1p11. * I' AMOUS IRA.ND Free t1t.9 • 100% Flntnclna: LITE Haulln1 6 1ar•1e t OCEAN VlE\V, Lr 1: mu•lo, 1ir-cond!Uonln1 i: NAME * Kltchen1 • 11r1111• • oarport~ clean--up. Mon thru Sat. Bachelor. 1 & 2 UR 11.p11. Income Property 6000 ianllcrlal aervlce. CANDY &. SNACK ROUTE Complete Remodellng. Quall· J'ne 11t1matt MS--5031 •• w /lmmedlal(l l)b•1CPW11. 557-9118. t DELUXE l A ~ BR 61rd1!.n Ap t1. BU-ln1, priv. pa\111. heated ponl, frplc. Adtdla. Sl45 mo. ~lM Furn or unfurn. Crpt1, firp1, I----·----...,• AVAILABLE NOW IPA.RT OR FULL TlMEJ ty Contraoton. 6'2--S660 J-;;::;i;i;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;== -,. lift., ath. all alee, bl tn1, patios, wa I k In J A I BOB PJl!TITI'. Realtor VERY HIGH INCOME Addlt!on1 * Rcn1ocle.llng HouHal11n1n1 67U fl'l)lc . crpts, df'DB, bltnt, dl.11t1.nce to town. 100 curr H•nt on • ISMI01 • We need • dl1trlbutor in lhit Fret! H. Oerwlck, Lie. KNITTING !\1AClllN1':S By Toyota. ExclllflJ & n1w, computerl11d tor unllmlltr1 drllJJn1 . lt,roc ln1truc:t\on11. School ol Creative 8ewlnll'. 2630 Avon St, Newport Belt. t su.MI, * l\eal n~ f Br. apl. All eli· 1ra1 Adult• only. lnQ at 211 llllmllton St. CM. $Pl.IT Level, 2 'BR. L'f'PIS. (irpt, bltn1, J \1 Ra, IVI )>llA, iU5 Mtindou Dr. ~tl U\G, S Br. crpLI, drp1. l kid• ok, 11.60 + dep. 2il.f CcllcizO"v1:-fl-tO--Om - NR "'w 2 ifr, l'" 0.. crpta, drp•. stove, d•hv.'l\r, llU'· 186 W. Wll1an. 64~79511 2 Bf\, Aptt. Yufn ' unr~ Dl'J>•, crptf, kitl5 ok. ~ Maple. No. J. fl48.l808, I J.RO 2 A I Bit, 2 BaU\I Frplc, bllns, crpbl. drtat encl. pr. pello. Ma...1034 * 2 BR~~. drp1. pr + prkg. IJfio. Adulll, no . pet1. 1111~00. ' BR. feno;<i Pai!O. fl'!llc. Crpts. drpA. 11SO mo. Call 131- 8ruDro. filrm .. t~• b• bullt\nas, prl patio nsa mo. Avail. i/11 M&-l'fiJ 1111 Mn, • f ill '"· •v~il Juoc 1s. 11, dfpl. bllna, pr. 5'J'-n4 dt 5 1111, · LC E B&chT .. p kl!. crpl•, drp1, no p1t•. 2.115 ~ttndo1a ,Dr.~21, ~·="'=·='='"'="="='co·~'='·===..!.;D::,•;;·::· t.a:=•o::· .:;",:'h:;.;;';;94-;1;=;:";:::: lnv11ton ! Modern Offices area ror our aand>" (Nest1e1, 61'M!HI * 54s-2110 \YANT A sunny • bri1ht Santa Ana 5620Santa Ana 5620 For &ale, approximately V. $75 aln&le. 11~ 2 nn eulto. ~;st.ei;ic:)~~=~::~M;~ -C .... Cl 1 1.1.•• hOmer Call the DUTCH CREATJYF. rABJllONS By Donna Dee " Utt.,. .A,....i .... 1. Spanish S1yle Luxury J A I Bedroo111t ,.,,,.,, ..... ,,., v,.,.,""'•A.11 ,.,.,, u~h•• 0,..,,., 5i.a1 ,.,,..,~··" ,....,11.., F...-clfln1 ,,...,;., ~'·•~ ......... '•"'FY .• 0..- l'riHH l>ftl •nd Bel~ Al, CM1ll110W ~,.;., fnr o.r,. l'rl••'• Sf, HHIH l'.Hl-<'..i.,. 1'1 An11,.,._ • Now Ronlln1 '""' Nm" o/ 5otlfA C...c ,., .. JOoO W. /llocArlhur Bl•d. I ...... r .. , •I lrbfol s ... 1. '"" . 540-11491 acre prime R-3 property. All' cond. Stet y NTVlce. volvt'd. We Jl.ll'hllh all ac-lrpt aan ng --MAINTlNANCE P.fAN for Silijaled on hi1h bluff, <Mir• parklftl, eontr&lly !Dc!Jltd. counts. You must have 2 to -----your w\ndow1, noon A Fnr the f1ne1t In cu1tom made f11hlon1. ~1M4 port Beach, .ttc. Adjacent 1., 230 E. 17th Street (days or eves). IZtl JN ALL KIND~ OF • Dro11maklns· Alterations t)elllfled IO ~\t )'OU, Call Jo •~ looking Udo llla.nd, New· So. Calif lit Nat, Bk. Bld&'. 1 hrl. per week ipare time D.".. Q. ~ 11arp1t cle1ntn1. SPECIAL- Hoag Memorial HOApit:>.l, Colla t.1ffl 142.ldS Sll50 TO $l!l50 F'LOORS, No mw, ~lMO !llln'OUndtd by Medi c al • • p CARPET •fl. 3. ------ BuHdlnp ud. lovely high-DESK s ACE CASH ftiQU!RED ST1•u c E·N BAY .... oto Janitori.t Tiit, Ctr•mlc "'4 ~ •• , ,~~nt comp!••· 222 F • r..-more lnl.,,,,,.Uon writ• -L ~ ID ,..., ,.... ... -orast "venue "01-~~a DMllON RI •10N •aLI It •TIS c1-11. window•, noortr Elloe!ll•nl tina noini e.vall-0 '"'""''"' ~ ""' ~ tlt:·.r-RA• • commc 'I. PATHS, KITCHENS. EN· a ble. $190,000. Write or cell Legun o Beech #2.1", P.O. Box 58, Pomona, .Alto carpet tnilallatlon 646-lfOl TRIES. PATIOS AND S&v· 1 ~-·"'-.I)~~. _ CH-H66 Calif. 91769 • lndude phone ~1971 lngs and quality work T TowNquaN Dev. Corp, t W. TOP uallt ffl --In -rwmber. -I -~LA~ND='-t0~RD=-~SP=EC!=A~t~ JOE!I GL.IAN llRV. gaUJ11.ntffdo You tupply Ulo, Slate St., Redland1, Cl. 92513 CdP.lq '¥ o tc:s:»&C,' Coffe Suppl)' Route :iOO tq, fl. $20. l'1amontl We do !:Vtl')'thliig • Rel. A I will \fUl!tll ftll' labor. 'iou _, _ __.._ ::r~ • avaU 1 per 1q, Ex~ptionaJ Jncome Cerpet Cleanen. JIT 21Jit Comm. Free Ell, 549-3126 H.ve l/S, Call for det1U1, luslnlll ltre,.rty 6050 11· Alto ~ntal or Medical No sellini (not vendlngl 2 St, Colla Meaa, 64$-1.itT • APT' CLEANING * no job too •mall . llcpalra, suite. Xlivalor ' Janitor to 4 hrs V.'k. Servicl! ---Fa t & thOrou"'i. 64i.llM rt-lf'OUt, ~ yr11. exp, ----~ _... "''y .... _ •J'Vit11. 21M E. Coatl Hwy, es1abl!1hcd 1ccount1. Caah RB;MARC Servlcei. !J room• w11'11am1 Clo1".:1'n• •--. 493--42U 1ftor 1 P~1 . FOil Sale by owner, T""Jnlt CdM f1M1Sl $21.SO, Fully 11.111rantoed, " " ;:iv,y rnatle rn MEDICAL Of1N. ' nee, liHS lo SSaDO. Write Credit 1!ard1 OK. 1141-6681 ..,.. 1'-Verno, Th• file Aian • TAL CENTER.. Good DESK SPACE for lnlf!Nlew IJ\v• ph. no. iftAM:wJat Cl"""t cie~nln&". !!,onlnl .. 6711 Cusl. work. lnlttll 6 rtpAlra. return, aood wrlte·oll . 17875 Beach Blvd . 'otSTaddrv. "cci'. QU1 1uc:' K~P. c:'.arKart na.t"ion.wlrl• Nojobtoo1n1tll.Ph1.1111r Con1id1r home or ? in • rvl ~-1 .. ,.055 IRONING In my homt . $! pa tio, Lcnklnr 1howe.r Hunt'ingto n BeacL Robtnhood or., Stockton Ca. II! ce ... ,.., e1 . ~ Jlr. Dret•makina Ir. al!•ra· -potr. lrade, lk!t 5811 Hclil Avt., ri Jj20'!' -lion•. ~~76'1. ~"' ~~c:~e1. oiif:{ eaiiill 642432.l, Ext 1f6 CotN LAUNDR~ l'encln1 "'°I ;;;;~:;;:;;;;,===;:. -· ~111~ ,,,.. DESK SPACE Frl1ld1lro -------L•nds<•e'•J 61tO Tre• 1trvlc• 305 No, ii Camino Rtal J'rom ~ to $S1,DOO REDWOOO 6 chain link LICENSED landte1P1 con-. '"° - lualntta R_!ftl."-"•:..I __ ;; / NICE m•ll Shop, C<!M. ,'.I. yn. ltaMt. )fr. Hardacre m.!Nlori!IH601 BUSILST m..rk'atpllot In town. '!'ho DA!~Y Pn.ar Cla11lfled tttttlon. I• v e- nlont)', Um• A etJort by 1hoppl111 fl'&m )'OUI' IUTilChllt. $.' Cl.•onlt e Buana Park e Fullerton e fence1, llctnN(I contnctor, Co 1 . TREE•. lledp1, trim . N f, ,,, tractor. mp •It 1erv1ce. WJ..MXI r.ypr111 e Wntmtnlttr e frM e11. t11Jt 1 er v I c., . 968-l92S or 646-4241 1tump1, ttll\OYtd. bliultd. SO uunlinalon Ben.ch t Carden ~ yn exp. ruuy tns. 6-12-4030 lttt \.outltfl In CiM. f.rovo e Or& ... e Santa CIJ'°"'ifQ""'M,-,M"'Ab=t,_1-,nn-an~t, Mtvlni .. S!ertlf 6MO DON 'S TREE !tl\VlCE AD ltl1 kl l«iO tq,. rt. Dehm Off. Ana • Cpcta Mesa t Ana. a ~ter.tlon1 Rini'• c>I ---l)'l)et. Lise & Int. 1'l'ff a:.. lot Sp.cu. AvaU Imm.cl, helrn e Newpot1. ~ LOCAJ.. I; Jont dist movtna, llm1to1. 6'J..5514. Phof't Owner, Nl-9160 Cl.ALL CJl.AJUJl: $7133 Did )'OU ever th ink of awal>' Rcu. •toraa;t. 1'"rte Ett. TIRED of ihaiold i\Ji'i'J1~~! LOVELY 2 Rm. Olllcl, 2ua / e-0-1 N t..\UNORY • I -that White lltl>htnt-tn 1-040I O.K. Van A Stor1ac · ha?\1 !:. Coli ! llW)', Cd M time oflertd. Mo.I deluxe lht attic for 1om11hll\I you IT'I Blach hOUliC time , Bir-to replact, Ju1t watch ffie Rtialtorr &a~l . Jn USA. Ntw e q u l p., can uMT Tl')' !hi Trad•n 1c.1t pl1cdon everl 811 tbc! 111rn1tur11 • mlactll•1*1U• Ot"ftCJ: $Jile rcii"lt111.1\ii 11!1bJ11hed t r 11 tl t . 0)' Plfldlla oo!umn ln.thl Dal-OAJLY PILOT ClauiU~ C!HulMI In tho ClaNlt\cd 11. ft,, a1r oond. Xlnl C>wn•r. 1e... llalc~r ti If Piiot Want Ad•. 'ectklft now! Se"ctlon. TH! mJN ?J&VER 8il'l'I 11n locAtlon. ;.mplt l)fir)dnr. Fairvltlw, CM. lhrn call DAILY PILOT WANT ADit Blilr. li4~ e~lt fm..1.Clt "4-llO'f - --· -----· ~---------- ' \ , .. I. '' I I ' r .I ' ' I• :1 :;;::~;;;;;~~::;;;-~~~·· ~~~~~~~-~·--~~-" , • "1011 .... 1, "'u~ '· .-..... _ .uilOutiC~llTs i\klTISill'iclMiiNTs • JOa's·., EMPLOY Mr NT Joas & EMPLOYMENT Joas & •MPLOYMINT Joas a EMPLOYMENT Joas a EMPLO, YMENT JoBs & EMPLOYMENT I JOBS & EMPLOYMENT _. llOTICll ....t NOTICIS 1 . • t=::.::=.:.:;:;::;,.... __ ..:;L::..;:.:;::.:.:;::;:.::.__:__IJobo Mon, Wom. 7100 Jobs-Mon, Wom. 7.100 Jobo Mon, Wom. 7100 Jobo Mon, W~ 7100 Jo.._,,, W.om. 7100 Joa..-Mtn. Wom. 7100 Jobs-Mon, Wom. 7100 ~-~·iiiii"~'~·~•5•.!!!!!!!!~,.~nt~~·iiii;"~1ei.i1u~~·~·•~:.n~tc:11~m~,..~d~•iiii~'4~1o i;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;:_:;;; '· • P~ weight reducing program to establish ~-1aUstica for rapid permanent weight loss, ;<;Ofulucted by qualified physical culturista. (Must be a minimum ol 20 p o u n d s over- 'WD.igbt. have • transportation and not cur- ~.uy under d~tor's care. All inquiries co m- !J>lelely confidenUal. t:~·;;UK '<FOR MISS POWELL-537-5412 BUSINESS ond ' -~ j'FINANCIAL Found lfrM Adi) 6400 . ButlMll f<>-rtunlll•• .. 1 · " . PLUS INCOME lri~w are looklnc to add lo )~~sent income, look no ttrrther! A rou~ ol good profit producing U.I.I. wnd- il'I&: machines can be estab- ljaheQ for you in the vicinity qf your realdentt. .. N~,. iielltng 01" sol.lcitlng! A •i:viCeable car is ne<.'l!ssal'Y. ~·Wit have evenings or v.'eek- ends trtt lo aC{'(Jmpliah re· s;_oc.ltin( of machines, A :sinct't'e person \l•llh 1l.\ lit. tle·a.s $500 lo $2,500 to invesl i;, ljlis business can grow to a n.ooo per month income liit\ut.1ion, . Y9ur "'ply should disclose refrerenct>s and phone num- l:ier. Write to Ussery Indus. tries, Inc. 1195 Empire Cen- ttal, Dallas, Texas 75247. Ato: Dept. • l278C. Affiliate * '·READ THIS * G{Vr me ~~ hour of your timf" & I will prove you can earn a, much as $350 monthly on a Serurcd inactive invest· taOnt or $2.800. 75% Financ. big avail. to those wilh good ctedil. SO solid )'our 01vn b&nker will approvt'. You ck> no work of any kind & may withdraw at any time. Nflhlrally if you invest more, yOur earning will double or triple. Call 10 AM-5 PM daily • 83.>2541 • lo ar- range for pe~ interview. It can't CORt you a dime to hear our story. but lose you an opportunity of a lifetime if you don't ••• , THE YARN SHOP . FOR SALE CATCllERS GlovR~Jeft handed-fouOO 2 wks ago. Vic. Blue Blrd Bea ch (l<guna) • .._ • Call to Identify writing on glo.,,e. CHiliUAHUAT or Pomera- nian ! white &: tan Jemale w/flea Co 11 a r, Vic. Brookhunt It Vicloria., H.B. ~ .fil\tAI.J.. White poodle rec. trimmed -wearing bow. Vic. 17th & Tustin, C.M. ~ . LI'ITLE Black puppy fmix- ed) \1'hile spot on nose 6-8 wk! old. Vic. Del Mar & Orange, C.l\I_. 64&-8656. KEYS Found on beach vie. Island & Balboa. Inquire at front counter, Daily Pilot, 22ll Balboa, N.B. BASEBALL Glove & at Te\Vinkle Park. .... 73:0: Lost radio C.M. 6401 Y.'hite kitten, blue eyes, fe. male. vie 1875 Anaheim Ave. C"t Reward! 548-0442 9'1.ALL Black dog, (8 mosl vie. S. A. lights. yuy friendly -546-1965 Personals 6405 FREE! BASIC BOA TING · COURSE Otfctt'd to lhe Public by Uic Balboa Power Squadron starting 'I P.M .• J\fonday, June 15. al Newport Harlm Yacht Club, 720 W. Bay Ave., Newport, No advance registration. Enroll at class. Bring ootebook. Oass meets every ,.tonday night for l.1 w('('k!. Any Questions: 011.I 673-1855. "Safe Boating is no Accid('nl" * Alone? • M E. Coaat Hwy, CdM Yrs. 11·1 your fault. r,or tt· 111£St sell dU(' lo illnc.ss. Ex. corcll'd llll'ssagc t.hal will cillent location & clienlclC'. change your life caU .• A 1.ond "'nlank-You'' to 1 ~7..fi667 m~ client friend!. PlcaSf' 2it 11.r. Recording cont.act Bob Hoffman (2IJJ 434-9585 (day & ev1.>J , * Newporter Sauna * J."or Men & Women 1''ANTASTIC businl'i;s oppor· Professional Female Stair tdnity. 140 seat resla.urant. Newporter l nn Hotel established Newport Beach ll07 Jamboree P..d. N.B. 6 Ytl· Well known. For im-644-0960 mediate sale flue to loss nf ma.n~er. $10,000. dn. "URGENT Kathy Rae 1·all Coblact l\1 r. Pike. 494-6373 your home in lndianapoli.s. or~ 64-7432. Dooney. and Ron George GOING Restaurant !or sale. SWINGERS Orange County Steady clientele on JJ'alboa Guide. Free info write P.O. Island. Owner, 67'.J-3375 Box 2111 AnahC'im 92804 =='=='=====-IA LCOHOLICS Anonymous lnYestment Opportunities . 6310 e HORSE LOVERS e Invest . now in beautiful t..'Olnm'l stable lo ht 1;111\t In Santa Ana Ill~. US(' 1)('rinit allo"·s 24 box slalls, bull pen, riding arena & spccla· 1or patio, 67l-2259 NEED $2500 Jn1n1cdiah•ly! S5000 return ln 90 tlnys on highly prof1t11bll' Jl f' a l Estatf' lnvest.mC'n1. &>curf'l.l! 1 714/686-6043 day or f'\'!'. -· Morley to Lotn 6320 ONE 01 our ac.cts just t'Om· m18!'1ioned us $25,000 tn IX' placed in Sl!ID-$:JOOO lnans on Orange Co. real r stalf'. Call . us 1oday! Broken; ~i.z:ing in private moncy. Quklt Cash Far Your TD TR\,15r DEED CENT1':R qJ Ns.r;;;ra..Y· SA l1st TD loan I 8% INTEREST 2nd TD loan 1'cmul based on f'QUl!y. 64~2171 545-0611 St-rvlng Harbor 11rca 21 yiii. Sattler Mortgage Co. 336 E . 171h Slrr'l'I MQtlEY avail. f or lrt- 'Vt'lltmcnts. PhofK' ~I ,. • I GrCen"al lfi4) 53.>4228 llurr. m•n Jnveslment Bldg. 1746 1\V, ·Uocoln, Suile 5, A.oahoim ·Mdney WontOd 6350 ,--·..:;."'-'"---'CC.. PRlVATt ?.arty wanll lo I ~ J.'.iOO .. aecond IN!t( -· 515-1711 A ;i;;il°"'M"'E°"NT'O;S.- • .,.;i; NOT1C£S -~ . "°""" CF-Iulo) 6400 Phone 542-7217 or write 10 r .o. Box 1233 Costa Mesa. Auto Transportation 6445 Sh1H't r1<le 10 Sunset&· Vuw. L.A. Lv. NB·CM 4:15.4 :30 pin t.ton.fri, R.C'lurn 1(}.10:30 1im. ~S.9314 DY.ighl. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Job Wanted, Men 7000 COr~LEGE: StudPnl :iecks 1•1nployn11~11!. \Vill work 12 1n 7 pm '\'C'ekday~ & all day \\'L>ekcnds. 673-9139 Job Wanted, Women 7020 -------SECRETARY. lav.• oU\i.'f' rx· pt>rienct', 1natl1N", <\C'Pf'n· ftahlf', full. IC'mp. or parl, rrf~. 551-ll209 C.o\1. 8 OOKKEEPrNG-Gr·-,~.1-o~f. lier. Exp'd. want perm. po.o.1tion 646-2134 aflrr 5 Po\1 A IDES • for convalescence, rldC'rly care or family r;ano, llomcn1akcrs. 511-6681 DENTAL HYGIEN(ST Al'llil May l1·26. 54()..1481 Job Wanted, Men & Women 7030 YOUNG CPLE., fl XPf't , tlr.o.1rt' 10 mana::e undrr !"1 uni1 s. Corona dcl ?o.1ar al'T'a lj73--0216 Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 At.'CO\ln! UIJ:.c!M'iti1I RUTH RYAN AGENCY )'l't' poid by £mployt>r Re<cept-Cen'I Ofr . . 10 SMC ret-p.ild by Appticanr Pa)'l'Tlll Clk: ............ $400 S<'en'tary ............ to i."IOO O crk T)·pisl .......•.• "'S.\'lO Girt rrKtay ......... , lo ~ ·GOLD -,...th ,..,,., . '-lany OJt.cr l)DtitJon.• tennli COW'tll Cd.M. 1'193 Nr \.\'rint'I, ('.l\t ; IT.J.1071 11931 &>&ch, HB • 1 abilities anlimiteo agenc.y Full Charge BkkHper Books thru T.8., E.0.P, Good 1ypl111 &. pli'asunt phone Jl('r. eol)ll.lty, Cupablc of hnndl· in& an types of people & sif. uallons, Secretary Cha.rmJng 008.1 needs girl w I 90 S.H., accurate typing. 1tfarkf'ting background help. Ju~ L09ol Soc'y Sharp girl w/good sec'y bkgrd. U:ga! cxper. )W!lpful but will train, Secreta ry Ass!. lo extX:. Sl:c'y ~ 1uee men. Coi;igeniaJ group in Laguna area. Junior Sec'y ~'JK'r., not req. if yuu havr- good S.H. & fypin{;. Xln'I opportunity, A. Payable Clerk Process A/P IYPf! 50. knnw 10 key adder. Coru;l1\1ction expcr helpful. Loan Processing Soine loan processing e1rt.-per. req. Xln't co. benefits. Public Relations You wiU meet ro. cliC'nll:; "'hile n111.king clell\'crie!I in posh co. car. Type 50. /ltus! be very 111CU groomed &. per. :;onablt·. Bookkeeper Knowledge thru T /B. Con- stn.11:Uon C'XP. helpful. Beau. tiful ofcs., xln't bc?nefits. TRISH HOPKINS 488 E. 17th, Sul1l' 224 C.l\.t. 642-1470 Accounting Clerk POLY OPTICS, manufactur. ers of fascinaling. d~'Ora. liVI' lights. "Poly-Oplieals .. has an opening for an exper. ienccd accounting cll'rk in AcC(lun\s n eccivahlc. APPLICANTS should have t>XJ>l•ricnce ln pcs!lng, pre- paring accounts receivable, triaJ balances & <.'Ollct:tions. t.1usl tyfl<' it:'l + \.\'pm. TifE PERSON sclcclt'<i 1vlll work with thrt'e olk!>~ in a small, congenial accounting department, APPL't POLY OPTICS, INC. 1815 E. CARNIEGE AVE. SANTA ANA Accnt. Clerk Payable • noeeivabJe exp, bC'ach arf'a, call Loraine, \VC'slcliH Personnel Agency, :!().l3 \VestcliU Dr., N.8. 645-mO ADVE:RTISING AGENCY * SECRETARY* Ne"·port Beach. Experienced Excell. typini:: & shorthand, some billing, under 30. Pres. sure pace. Xlnt. bt'nclib. Call 1714) 642-3910 ATT'RACTTVE Girls for p/timC' work. Must be 18 or over. Fox So. Coast Plaza Thratre, S410 So. Brislol, C.t.1 . Bankers EXPERIENCEO Tnp salary & bf'll('fi1s For n1rn & won1cn intcrt's1l•d 1n joinin~ a las! growing regional bank. Centinela Bank 3333 West Coast Hwy. Newport Beach 17141 646-7121 BABYSITTER -2 girls. L1vC' 1n. F.xpei·1ant nr I child o"·· Sal. Nr11i·r1 lsl/673--0472 iift !'i. • BABYSITT'ER, i\ly homf' Tor 2 preschoolers, own trans, Rrf. art :1:30 &IG--0951. BARTENDER · TIIE: BLUF. BEE."i' 613-9004. S.10 a shift. * BEAUTICIAN * Youn,::. attrncttve lady With some hairpil'cr rxpcr. No t'hl'n1rlc r"Qu1mt. Sillttry $.·/or mmn11:-;..•;io11, Call Ski r~1G-:'.{\l)ll *BEAu·~n~c~r~AN~ .. -,-nr hus~. pQpular pri<.'t'rl C.M. salon. Pai<l l'llf'. No rlu~nrrh· n'q'1I. N1•\v i;:n1d 11·r l1'0n11'. Call thi• ;\111nai,:rr. :~lf>-7 1~6. BO YS CARR(ERS WANTED Dtlntt Po I n 1, Capl~trttno fit-n('h At.:<'ti 10.1•1 CONTACT JOHN HEIM il92--41:1() temporary personnel proud to be an • american glad you're a. . girl?? rtgi1ter with' llOOkKEEPER SECRETARY Newpt. Bcb. Gd. eea"eltrtal .XIJls and knowl. ot double. entry. Pressure pace, Wlder 30. Xlnt benefits. Send res. ume Box M-597 Daily Pilot. BOYS 10· 14 Con1er """"' Opm tor Lla1IDa -!o. Loc-o~ CAR WASH Girl Prldoy $4li -1 ;;;;.-:::;;;=:;;;;;;;,;::;;;~j AJilwer ~nrs. stncnl ott. m 6 ice. No lhorthand,. lite typ. • ""!· G-....u bus._, · t:l:I xec nr. Garden arove. A 1 S.pei1or -642-nlf gency •or 1&57 Ht.tbor, Cotta NHa -Career Girls GIRL 11/o'lle-t , Juli -'!!!ft time. C a II Mon-Fri. Whietle S Io p. &IS-U16. 'fr GROUNDSMAN • Sa.dd1e. back-College is accepting application.s for the position of GI'OUf1dlman II. St.arting sal ary $460-$18J..S507, depending on quallllcatiins. Call Mrs. Radncr 1714) 837•97001.499-2211/it!0-4950 . GUARDS ••• lmn\ediate u It pt ~ poi;i.. tions avail, San J uan Capis. trano area. Uniforms & equfp tuf'nl1hed. Fringe ben.. ef.ita. Car & telephone req'd. Apply at: 13912 Ponderosa Suite F. S.A. Secretary f'lna~ dept. for 2 Cen'I llCCY bkgrd. men. Secretary for leading archUect. <;on. str. bkgrd ifOO!f. m~1 Exec . Typewriter. Secretary Good typing & SH. Strung contsr, bkgrd. Preitlige <.'O. Jr. Secretary New position. typing & SH, Able lo "'ork under pres. '""'· Cl~rk Typist Sales ' TRAINEE A way for a btgb scliool ~aduare-­ lo enter the newspaper buslness DAILY PILOT Thls highly successful local newspaper has an opening for a trainee in the circulation sales area. Selected applicant wUl receive a liberal starting salary, regul arly scheduled raises, bonus opportunities, and many fringe benefits such as paid vacations, paid group insurance and a credit union. He will also be provided a company car with personal use privileges. · ·l\pplicants must be 18, have a clean driving record, have a high school diploma and should be reasonably clear of military servi ce draft. Hours are generally 11 A.M. to 9 P.M., with some Saturday overtime. Full &: P/Time PosiHon1. Growth Company. 3 l«.a· american .(_:_ .. ..,~"~""."'eo.""··~ .. -=:=o~=~~,.,=·---HELP YOUR HUSBAND You can earn up to $12.511 in an bow' taking -Ol'deFS !mm your friends . neighbors and relatives for Studio Girl'• beautiful Good Housekeeping' a p p r o v e d WIGS. WIGLE:I'S, FALLS am cosmetic1! Good typist. Will train for MTST &: MTSC. Work with • out supervimon. Top co, If you are qualified and are interested in learning more about where this training leads, come to 305 N. El Camino Real, San Clemente. and ask for Mr. Seeley in the Cir- culation· Department. 1 Part-time. Hrs fl exible. gel r A«:t'g otli,,., Seod """"' Box M 439, Dally Pilot · Girl Friday Gen'! Ins. bkgtd. T)'Jllng heavy phones, Public con'. J-:::::==::::=:=::::::=7:=:::=:=::::::=:::::::1 tact. Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 Jobf..-Men, Wom. 7100 invest your time & talent wisely & COOK • NIGHTS Some broiler exp. MC. * APPLY * REUIEN'S • AIRPORT '4647 MAC ARTHUR NEWPORT BEACH COOK*** FULL OR PT. TIME No Phone c:ans Apply In Pmion * SURF &: SIRLOIN * 5930 Pacific Coast Hwy. Newport Beach ••COOK •• Exper. Apply: F lyill&' Butler, 3101 Newport Blvd., N.B. COOK (M/Fl Apply in Top profits. No territory restrictions. Also sell where you work. Full time or spare hours. Side line OK. Phone toll free ~-4005, or write STUDIO GrRL HOL L Y WOO D. Dept. NC-27, 11461 Hart SI., No. Hollywood, Ca. 91605, lor fuU infonnation and free twnplea by mail. No orie will call on you. All replies confidential. Phone today. .Here la our present list of job opportunities: --------Accounts Payable PHONE ORDER DESK, 2 yra ~exp, 'J'yplng, 10 key with experien<.~. Coo d "adding, Cons11·. bkgn:i. good. typis,I, g,.encral oUiee. 270 Briggs Ave., C.M. A .\.sst: Bookkeeper PBX 'Ans"·ering ser.:icc exp. OC!s. ~v., l'Ouchcrs, fjg. }funtington Beach a re a, ~re lyp111g. Plea.su.n t \.\'Ork· Steady work. 536-88fil. tng conds, Order Desk 6 mo. to l Yr exp. llca\I)' phones, typing :":() ace, PR. Assistant - PR firnt needs pnlished, at· tractive Wrlter-Coordinaor, 2f>.i!D. Must have PR or prcr fcssional w r i I I n g ex· periencc. Resumes to Box Cost Clerk 569, Tustin, Cal. 92680 2 lo 5 yrs acclg C'l(J> lo liry1.,-,_=~==~-=­ calculator e."<p • l\!f~ 1 * * POLJCEl\tEN-Fi v c exp. · ... ;ypc nc1v positions. $141. lo start. · Exp'd. applicants may be ~10 W. CoaSt Hwy. StarliflJ! above entry level Gen'I office help Newport Beach depending on qualifications. SALES IMPORT AUTO \Veil esfab import dealer fea . turini; !he hottest import Jines. Good opportunil,y with good co. benefits for quail. lied, exjX'ricnced, impnrt salesperson. 646-9309 for ap. pointment. Ask for Dick. SALESLADY for Jewelcy Store. Some expc!r. req'd PH : 548-34-02 SECY.-SALES be your own boss! -_pe~ri.~. 1703 &lperior, Coata Mesa. {will tra.inl 646-3'3' Salary adjusunents present. Girl diapatche.r ly under council considera· Secretary, typing & S.H. lion. Xlnt iringe benefits. (split feej "lEDICAL Sec'y, E>t P<' r Applicants must be bet. Zt. NEED l:lharp. pcrsonablt! _.'5£!..Y. to join our fast grow. ing eo. Diver.ie. duties incl telephone contact w/cus~ mers. reeord keeping, SH, typing. ,.lust be accurate and exp'd. •• american girl you will find exciting. tempor•ry to fit your & needs. positions schedule WE NEED TYPISTS KEYPUNCH OPRS. STENOS CLERK TYPISTS REPRO TYPISTS SECRET ARIES GAL FRIDAY GEN'L OFFICE PBX OPERA TORS ASST. BKKPRS. ACCTG. CLERKS LITE FACTORY (Blue collar) 'MCR 482 1Proof oper1torl american girl - needs YOU Call for Appt .. or information. 833-3232 REGISTER NOW! COOK/Howiekeeper , exper. tor widow, live-in. $250. can 6'.lJ-1879. Secretary prelerTed, 40 hr work wk 32 yrs o[ age. experienced (No S.H .• dictaphone) 546-0237. ' applicants lo 35 yrs, 5' 9''. ExJ)C'r. Teller MOTEL MAID-FuU lime. 6' 5'', 1"1.S. diploma or GED ST ART at $525/mo. Xlnt opply. for advancement. All fringe ben's. incl. profit sharing, Apply in person al· * DENTAL ASSISTANT * Front desk only. Good hn, sal open. Dental e>eper. nee. Beach area. Call bet 811m & 9pm . 84~3540. Proo! Machine Opr, trainee Apply 2376 Newport Blvd, equiv .• b'IXld vision & physi. lnsutanct' Girl, trainee C.M. 548-9755 cal , condition. \V ritten test California H t will be \l'aived for cxp'd, 05 esses ln1·ectlon Molding Typ. ts SO • persons. Apply hy June 15th, Boo~~per c&w~~l (lite) ~ 08Wp0rt . LAG UN;\ BEACH POLICE (I~ B1r~~::;t·eo~Mplc>t) DENTAL RECEPTIONIST Mature, reliable with ex· per icnce only. 548-8844 Cler k typilll DEPT. SO:i :rore$l Ave. Sal .. girl personnel ""' 401.112r. SECRETARY·Typi1t Keypunch RE."STAURANT. !\'ale or tor Newport Bench AdvcrUs. Exper. l nside Collector agency fl!n1alc. full or par1 lime. ing Agency, Congenial sur. DENT AL A.sat -chalrslde. Exp'd. Epxa.nded duties. J.lB ofc. 968-5782 any1imc. Credit Intcrvic\\'Cl' 833 Dover Drive $1.75 hr. +, j.Jj-1686 bet roundings. lop local.ion (In (will train) NewpOrt Beach l-5pm. Jrvinc Finalicial To11i·ers • DISHWASHER !Doysl PIT Food Boy.s i;u..~70 Retail Mgr. Fashion Island), Exccllenl Brake Alignment ?.1an Experienced • great potent. salary k company benefits. !state lie. & own tools) This is a partial• hsljng of ial. call Ann. \Vrstclifl Per. This position involves heavy Factory trainees . o.ur job opporlunities al lhis sonncol Agency, 2(l.L1 \\'est· typing. You must be a top ?.igt trainees lime. For furthC'r inlorma-cliff Drive, N.B. &15.Z770 notch typist 10 qualify, Die. Station Opr Tra.intt ,. 1 "'( taphone experience helpful, IOfl, P l'ase c.., or come in. RN. ll-7:30. xln'I benefits. b••1 -1 -•·•-. p<-oc (bondable, graveyd .1.At\J. u "" ........ ".._.., nu 10Aloi1) F/C B Apply in person, Palmcrest for appointment ,.liss Law- * APPLY * REUBEN E. LEE 151 E . COAST H\VY. NEWPORT BEACH AssWant to branch mgr. " kkpr ·'' ·•· · ·•• 10 $650 Convalescent Hospital. 13075 IC'r, 644-5284, Cbondable, military over )· ~~ ',.._~Y .......... • S550 Black Bird St, Garden S'~E~CR=ET=AR=Yo------( DRAPER Y ~1ANUFAC TURING -Female. Im- mediate opening !or f!Xper & trainees. Beach Drapery Service !m W. 17th, C.M. 640-3909 """'l><U .::rot:<.:Y •• ·•• • • ·• ·· • S500 GrovC', INDEPENDENT Bkkpr .................. S500 ---,.-..~~~--,.-The Laguna Beach School PERSONNEL AR/ Bkkpr .•.........• S~51l * Sale.s Rep * District is accepting ap- AGENCY A/P 'Clerk ............ $<IOO Pick your 0\Yn area dose to plications tor Secretary to 1116 Orange Ave, Suite c homt'. Fast advancement. the A ssis tant Superin- C.M. &12-0026; 545-0979 Many of our job opporlunl!il'S ~al fun job w/good poten.. lt'ndent, Business. Thia will 1· Also Fee & Free Jobsl' are fee pa id by the employ. llal &: lu1u1·e for you. Sta11 bc a 12 mo11t)l position. DRIVER-Older man, time, to drive truck. • 962.-0538 ;.; parl er. :;ome are fCf.• ri:!ln1 burs. $600. Call Sally Hart. Persons applying must be lfOUSEKEEPER, I i v e ·in. eel, some a.rC' applicant paid, SilQ.6055. U.S. cffiZeils. con I act N.B. 2 achool-age children, you may chooSl'. COASTAL AGENCY Pe~J Office, Leguna. Spanish ok. 673-1322 art 6 l i'::~~:"'!~'!"'"'!'""'"'""''I 2790 Harbor Blvd. Ci\! Beach School District, 550 *DRIVERS* No Experience Necessary! HSKPRS Emplyr pays fee NURSES NC"Cded f0r private -------~--Bluemon!, 494-8546 b y Georgt' Allen Byland Agency duty • every type, RN's _ ~ALES MANAGER.<; FOR 6115170, lo&B E. lGjh, S.A. 547-0395 LVN'll -Prac, • A i t1 (' s. C0i\.fl\1UNITY ANTENNA -=s~E~c='Y=~R~E=c~P=T~ H 0 US EKEEPER-Babysitl· All shifts. Call any hour. TELEVISION SYSTEl'-lS • MQ!t have e1ean Qilllondl drivtn& record. Apply YELLOW CAB CO. 186 E. 16th Sl I. · Leo ..... .,Ji, Nu--R · 1 For CPA firm in Newport fir, 1ve1n, mature, perm, -.u,. "'"s eglS ry Immediate. 962-5486 642-995.i Two tough jobs ror top men. Beach. Typing & shorthand k skills required. Salary open. HOUSEWORK -Woman **NURSES AIDES ** "-o r ing in 1hc fast·gro"•ing * MS-0844 * wanted 6 hr.1 wk. $2 hr Expttrienced. 7-3 P l\1 arcu or con1n1u11ications for lo start, Baysbores area. * 549-3061 . n1a.Jor NYSE company. 011C' * Secy/Recept * e DRUG SALES LADY e 54.S-7092 -7 -;.-;;;;;,_-;--;--[ 11•ill be naiional s 11 le s Eslb'ld co. Weal location -°""' ..... EXPER, FULL TL'1'E HOMEWORKERS WANTED * OFFICE * 1nanager. the 011lt'r "·ill beach area. Some SH & e 499-2ni e * POSITIONS * ha.ndlt' a local system. SuC'· t;en·1 ofc exp. will land this !Envelope AddresseNi). ccssful cruldidates \\•ill be glamour job. $400. Call ~r- Engineers Rush stamped. se 11 ·ad-LOCAL AREA aggressive, able lo create ry White, 540-6055. EARN '-fONEY \\'ilh &hoes dressed envelope. *Secy .......... $575 and execute promotional COASTAJ. AGENCY • that sell themselves. Call LANGDON WORLD T c II 54• ~~. TRADE 0 1127 ° ontro er No f~· and pubhc rclaUons pro-2790 Harbor Blvd., C.M.' .,..._.,., RS, P. · Bo>t · *Keypunch .. St. $416 ~rams, skillful In \.\"Orking Engineer A21. Redondo Beach. CaliL 029 exp. Nn f('C' "'1lh customer 1" and 'Secy' I Headquarters Mgr. Test Engrg.17M. 90278 *Accts Pay. ,,., $433 cr.1 ployces. CATV ex· Nl'l'rl 4 Seeys for permanent EE re<J. Supervillt' de~ign & * LADIES * 18-60, show 1 yr f.'XP. N•i fet> pericncr no1 nl'C'essary, bul · assignments in locaJ area. development of sophi1tlcat. SARAH COVENTRY Spring *Accts Pay , .. , , $425 consumrr markchng CX· St~drt $450·$6! 1 50 1 .. F'ec & fee ed test equlpmenl for ell'C· & all season j e "' e I r Y . Consl.r. exp. No fC'r µrricncc anrt/or adl'C'rlising pai oppor un ties. tro-mechanical sub-a.ssem. AbMlutel)' no invest'mt. \Ve *L p $45C sates l'1'1JC'ricn<.-c are re- l 5.ll =•i 96,_5988 oan roe .... blies & 001npulers. Min. 10 tra n. -<IQ.> or Life exp, 1'"Cl' nrl', quiT('ll. Top salary, ex· yn exp. Beach area. Co. LEGAL SECRETARY -*A t p $450 crllen1 fringe be n c f i I s. cc ' •Y .. · Loe ,. · h. hi d · bl pays fee. lee jobs also. Sub. TRAINEE, Part time. No On the beach Fl'e nri:. ·a 1011 is ig Y es1ra e mil resume to ANGUS GOR. shorthand. dictation equip'. *S $5 5 Orange County beach oom- OON • n bl 3. ecy ......... , 2 "'' .. ,.1, mt. lrs uexl e, nve r • a .. 1.. • Purchasin!; l'Xp. Nn lt'f' J . R. Plerce with ooUege pn?fd • •!arbor *G I F 'd $4l Associates ~ncy, 11'11.'. area law olc. Reply to Box a ti ay ·'' • 0 Writr; Aoctg dept, J'"I:' 1885 Newport, CP.f 64Ui'7al M-.'i99 Daily Pilot, N.B. *Payroll Trne ... $325 I l''RY COOK • Sat & Sun. Oiiiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio No exp. HS bkkpg. J-'Cf' Day Shift T ,.., J .,.,cc jobs al5n Ask for Wayne _ •l'" _ J . R. Plf'f'Cl" !1111. R II. NAliL ~ 1'·cs Cahlcvision "'" 60209 Lo& Angeles, CA 901XiO RANCHO SAN JOAQUIN' . ..l: ~--. l\s!'()('.1atrs Agt>ncy. Tnc. GOLF COURSE --1885 NWJ!Ort, CM &t2.f720 -.-,,.-,-";<~~=.- lB021 CUiver Road * Sales Eligr. 13M N•·-" Beoch. IJZ 11r 1110•11:! • '"--' AlfMI eeePART TIME-Car I11rnlslll'fl. Jn1crnat1onal •• .,_ • 4S110 c..,_ Dr. • II~ ._. (Irvine: Branch! ""-1-0-.·c~"",,,.., Large company In Anaheim org. ncftt.s man for Ornn,gl' ~er. S33=Ulll /'ltofw J4fr.lll• has part-time opporrunity Co .• san 01cgo" an.-a. fkS. FUU. or-PART TIME. Earn for 9 men. Clean. plr.asanl pref. 2 to J yn; sales exp. ,_ •->""'ER ,.1AJDS, Part time _ Sat _ work. Hrs. 6:J0.9:JO eves. ,.fusl have cJectroni(' con. up lo..,. per ou . ·u~ No-·-'· -c. Fo• pc-"-ol b'-·" Co r BRUSH 54• •745 Sun. only. Sealark Motl'I. ,.,.,~ '"' '""'' l)('(:tor "b''"'· . pny~ C<'· Gai F;ay $600 2301 Npt Blvd, Ot. 646-7445 intcrvi~~1~ci3\h!~~iit & Tue11. ~:n!°t~s A%~Ur.;s~~I~~: E>tcl t i n g, expandlnr co. MA I NTEN A NCE Man, Pocke• $325 M-o. J. n. Pier<~ 8 Udl be lilul f mature semi retired. ex.per. u ng au new o cs, 6AJ\1-2Pl\t Sun. off, P lease Work days. Good t'O. henls. As!IOCiulcs Ag<"ncy. Inc, Some typln&", etc . wonderful 1 Lo Ra R .,.1,, ... pi-r--·,I, . 1~.-. Ne11·port. c,1 64'2-6720 · job To be fl C ii eppy ne nger est., "-" '' •· ,-,,, variety • P n • 8 JASON BEST Miss Eliza.belh, 557-6122. Ab. 17502 B<'ach Blvd .. li .B. S11lcs. I II Abbo p I Ane MAN lo assi.st l\ltn· .. local 'En1ployrn1·n1 Agerl<'y SLlf.f L:\'~I l·l!Yl • $20!)) Nn ga 1 ersonoc •>e> n. ... Z'm1 So. '-1eln. Sttnta Anti. s.'llr'~ ex". rK.'t'tlNI. \Vortd·~ cy, 230 W. \Varner, Suite 211, appliance store. J\1ust bt' ,. · ~,.1r ... 'l<ltn k•ndu"• hon1(' cxC'l'('l5f'r sell~ Sanla Ana. nl'lll appearing. Call 9 k \t -,--( ~ to 10 AM only: 496-2383 * PLASTIC-$ * 01) l!ite, Up to $50 profil on GENERAL rvr ~It'. o\hll'Y Lou Good. Th.. Lapna Beach School *Manager Trainee* !J&il.2.116 543-8329 D\Jtrlcl 11 aceepling ap. Look~ tor a good job, but In jection Molding ptlc1tiom for lnstructlona..I have no training'!' Lgc firm * Forema n * Superior Agency 642·7141 1857 Barbot. Costa Mesa * Secre tary * Boss needs you yesterday. •te is Young & sharp. Sincere J?al iv/good skills, step up. Cn. pays servicl' charge & wi!I start you a t $550. Call Gloria Kay, 540-fi055. Other free & fee jobs avail. COASTAL AGENCY 2790 Harbor Blvd., ·c .l\1. Secy $575 'h FM Pd. for t..'Olltrollt>r o( ro, Good skills, young co. ~al po.. lential. (also fee jobs). Call Loraine. \VestcliU Pel'50nne:I Agency. 20-13 \Vcstclill Dr .• Nc11·port Beach. 645-2770 *·SECRETARY* Matun>, well groomed, ac- curarc typist. Sllonhand or speed writing and know. ledge of medical ·terminoJ. ogy, \VOO~llNSTER C0i\!to.ll.1NITY -HOSPITAL - C:itll i;11;.7so1 or apply Jlersnnf1C'I Dt'[)I. 17772 SC'ach Blvd., lluntl"J.1on Brac h. Bookkeeper1 SS00.$650 T~-o f'XCl'-ll••tll C'o\. llt'f'fl f'lt,.. t abl1· ~·.c. i;:1rl11, Our 11\lfllllOn arr let" & fn.'f•, 2172 Dupon~ sune 12 Newport Beach- aides: classroom &: clerical ~mgr. J: asst. mgr, \\'ill "'Orlt possible In various train at their t'XPC!n!it'. Start &111igne.mnts, AV1!n.ge lYP" $400. Call Salll' Han. a.a~ lQK abllib' desln,l)le. Ap-COASTAL AGENCY plkantl must bl' U • S · 2700 itarbor Blvd, Ci\t '* • SALES l\t At\-Rrtail. i\1agnavox & component ex· l\llnimum t1\+o )'t':lrit cxprrl. ~hence, for Coilla ~fcsa encc in ln)('Clloo moldin.it. kK·atton. l-'ll"f::I'! tanung.s. Must be famili11r 11·i11\ mold. draw a~alf\."t ['()mm. Pl'lorr Ing nylon, s~me. pofycfll'. Mr Koch. 5"1ij..2&.'!0 * SECRETARY * ~tanager In 1.1ttrke11ng D!'prf. needs shlu'p, depcnd1tbl!!. at.. 1'11\CtiVr secret.Ary. TYJ)(' 50, )'H SO, min. 3 )'ti rxp, Xln1 fringe ~n·s.. C1tll for 11ppl. AVERY PROOUCTS. Con. ~ Div 54!)..40J), 2Q) &>. Su!illn, Sanl& At\ft <Near H:l1'br'lr & \Var11Crl. • S'vPrr1or Ai:l'1N·.1•· r. I.' 714 1 1857 llarbor, f• ... 1n l\lr'~ll. TifE SUN NEV·F.lt S1':r'S nn 011 !fled'~ l\('!H)ll [lflllio•r . ror ttn Ad lo !'Wll nn1u111I !hr clock, du1I &l 2-."i67R. ( Nr. Orange County Airport I • d tlttM. Conlad aualtiro Pt:rsonnel Office, 5 50 MARINE Dock help, Yoong, ... ,.,,.,, • exp, In sa.lling and laun. Blum<inl, ·tr•rou.,<1. chlng. Y.lrHt!' Boor P-72 Dally Is )'O\J ad in 1hc cll'sslfled Pllol SECTION! Someone I s v.·alchiflt for 11. D I a I 11~ E QUICKER YOU CALL. 642-5678 lodayl ntE QUIQ{ER tou SELL boMles clc, S!ih~ry 1,1pen, SALES: i\latutt lady Glll Appl y 8:3{1 lo 4 p.m. Shop MIC!!. f''I: r only, J:>em1 . &lary· & &nt'f\11 *' ~~ O\Asl Pla~ficl * t:lol'l Country Sa far I, 850 \V. U!th SI., C.i\f. _;•;;,,..,;::;;"";;;:::;;;:;;:===.,.., PILOT WANT AD!I &IJ..$71 TUE SUN NEVER SETS on DATLY Pllm \VANT ADS! ~-----~. --~---~ - •. ,- 13 3 _ ...... -· ' . , . " ••• ...... ,..~ . -4 ••• " . . . Jobt-Mon, Wom. 7100 'JOBS & EMPLOYMJNT JOU A IMPLOYMENT Jobt-Mon, Wom. 7100 MERCHANDl$1 POii SAL& ANl;I . TRADI MERCHANDISE l"OR SALE AND TRADI M!dtHANDlle POR TRANSl'ORTA'l'IO'~Mt'~""j"!' ~JO~nt~I·~· ~l~~O~~!!::P.~~~D~A~ll~Y ~l'll~ft~·t··~· ;_~_;.~; SALE AND TRADI FREE TO YOU · ~ ;:;:-•--· lloat1 & Y1Cht1 Mobile HomOI 9200 J oopt '510 Furnitv'9 IOOO •-lloncM 1100 Ml1collonoou1 8600 1 ---~----.;;.:;=..;;.-"'"-"---_ .... &•""vtlv1 S.cr1t1ry $500 mo IO ltarl 6 day ~k. little 1ypi04 I shorthand lOl5 of rcspoiW. bUltiH with major Onmee cdwtty firm U MC'y to V.P. Z.D. Product& 3190 Pullman, CM il4t>l432 Sf;cru:t'ARY, Accoo nOna dept, LaJuna Hill.s. Call 837-1tl20 ext 46 for nppt. SERVICE CENTER Employment Agency Free & 1'~ee llosilions * Gal Friday • , • . • . . • $470 }font ofe/diverslflcd job/ 11etda S.H. 1. t)'plnv. * Secretacy ...... , . . . S500 Con1tr. or eng. brgrtl./ good typi11t. • Prod. Control . • . . . . $450 l! you like flgurl's le typo aCCUl'llltb', this Job is for you. * Repo Tpyill ..... , .. $500 Learn new lieldlllop vo- cation. * Seey/Mkllif ·•••• •• • S4TO Fun job/ucret11.ry I lop bcn(t/requlre& gootl SH & typing. 500 Newport Cenler Dr, NB Suite all By .Appl. &1'1~9Bl Service 1ta1ion sale11men (4). 2 elderly retired inen for night1. Bllse pay p I u 1 comm. lntervl c"'ing hrs. 9am-5p(tl Richfield Service, 490 E. 1Tth SI., C.M. SEAMSTRESS And special machine operator , ex- perienced, full and pa r t time. Apply 525 1'"ore1t, Lacuna Bch or call 497-1131 STYLIST -Exclus ive Ne-"J)Otl Bench beauty salon has one position opt>n tor an experienred stylist. Soni following deslrffi. Please call Ml'I. Glll, 11 . m., &l&-1677; pm, 67:.-SO.lO. *STUDENTS* Summer work for college 11u. <lenls, Sale• & iparkctlng sales positions. s:m P,Cr n10 lai; per agree men!). Call Mon. & Tue1., 9-5 pm. Hunt. Beh. branch. 536-752 1. TYPEWRITER li1ECHANJC Add lnir machine exp, in- alde/oul1ide work. 646-1873 * Typi1t/Rocept * Great opiy for 1parkling, afTf. bitiou.<; glrf. Good Typist for advertising agcnC'y, Plush ofc. in beach area. Great boss. llulT)'. $4:ZS. Call Ger. ry Whilr, M0-005.'i. COASTAL AGENCY 2790 Harbor B.!vd ., C.t.f. Typi1t $330.$375 May consider girl right out of school if good !ypist. Opty to a<Jvance. Superior A&:ency 642-71'1J .1857 lfarbclr, Cotta A;lesa * Underwriter * Good typlna: &: hii;h goals for success will land you this pmillion. Service charge pa.ld. $500, Call Gloria Kay, 540-&)55, Other free l Ice jobs. COASTAL AGENCY 1190 Harbor Blvd, CM VANDA Beauty Counselor cosmetics now interviewing for part-time earnings op- por. No exper nee. 546-5710 WAITRESSEStt* EXPERIENCED No Phone Calls Apply In Pcl"iOn SURF I: SIRLO IN 5930 Pacific Coasl Hwy. Newport Beach Waitre'5 * I lostcss Exp'd , O\!f'r li BLUE DOLPHIN 4455 Via Lido, ff.D. \VAITRESSES & HOSTESSES lor Mexican reslaur:inl. l\IUsl be over 21. fi42·827•1 W A 1 TR ES S-Eicpcrienccd only, The Cottage C':!ffce Shop, 562 W. 19th St .. C.r.1. WATTRESS-El M11tador P.fexlcan Relitauran! 1768 Ne"'POfl Blvd ., C.1\t. WE NEED YOU CALIF. CASTING CO. Lookin& for e\•ory day people like you! For T.V. Commer- ciala l: film work. Recei\'e tree ICl'IM!n test, no eicp nee . Not a 1enaol, m f~. $50 to $125 PER DAY ' If accepted. Ji'o? appt phono CU41 ~282 \~'QMEN, Ute delivery v.·ork. l\IU.t have OWQ CJt. Apply: 32S N. 8roadwa,y, Room 410, Santa Ana. ::i \VOM};N ~·a.rued iot part. time Y>'Orir:, cat nee'(fed, • 547-3f28, Mf.1814 • --· Schoola.-ln1tructlon 7600 Diacovtr 1 G re1t N•w Career With Th• AIRtlNES • --'-·-----.....,.. CUTE. J1talthy terrier mix· 24' Cabin Crulaer. l"rtahly BAY HARBOR '59 .Wllly'1 ala, wq, ·.283 ,.__ ed pupplts, Net d rood r:lnted Wide •out! Re~ Mobllt HOfT'lt S1le1 ChfVY, 4 whet! drive, wJ.,. 17 PC . KINO SIZE KENMOR!! Auto, Wuhe" * AUCTION * homet. MAie and lom.Jo .. lltlilrct In nltt ,__ All NIW 7' MODI LS rcn hubl, new tb-or, 'b\f llDROOM Xln't """'· $40. Hotpot"' U W ll 141·3340, 1191-111 61~ alt IFM NOW ON DISPLAY rim1. 11M411, Chrit Larxe 9 dra~r drtJeer, mlzl. auto. ~·uher, xl/1'1 eond, )'Oil w J ft' or b\11 ror, 2 bedl• 1ta.ndl, liana S-15. Wlll deliver. 841-Sll!i atve Winn1 a b')' 2 Small triAy lt'lxed bmd 141 rIBERGLUS runabout. i:t' WldH as low a1 s.W95 '50 J EEP Was. Conventtooil atze headboard, frame, quilt. or s.twen. Auctlona Ft1dtl T:)O p.m. pupple1 brown, ahorl ha.Ired r.totor, tra.Utr, tit<:. bait 12' Wides to M' \"lldes drive, xlnt body, er,g' "If td ruattrtu, tlwelf, blank-__ W indy11 Auction l•rn male and female, tank. 1$5Q, ~ Park Spacet ~vtllable gd 1hape. netdJ dulch.'Sl7S: eU, tic. Antlqutt tt 10 )07S~ N~ CM 6*80M ~1203 6/1 lA' Aluminum boat .. 2S hp 1425 Baker St .. C:O.ta Mesa 96i-Ma. '· Choice ol Spa.nllh -:i;a: Behind TonY'•' aide. Mat1, lDORABLE Whitt~ blaclc motu and traller, atru ~block Ea.st ot Ha.rboi: Blvd. '63 Wqo"""r-CB radio, ~ or Modern j;tyl• f'OR ConnolasellJ'S-.deooratcr I;,,--;....,.""'-'""""":..,.~ and wh.11e ldtlf111. To aOOtf $300. 1SM911. Costa Mesa fn41 M0-9470 tJret, ntW tl'.\ltnc, ne:\f ALL fOR $249 Hems, velvet uphO!. love Silver in Llrnlah proofaheit, home1. Ma.le and temalt. 20' CRIS Runabout. ri~ l!Mti 1968 DOUBl.E WIDE paint. 9a--4911. No down pm~. only S9 mo. 1eat1 .I: chr1, mirrors, fancy M pc. Wiiiiam R.odpn: SU-893-2111 6/8 model, Xlnt cond . Set Up In Famil)-Park. Petl -===0:-::===== WELK'S WARIHOUSE desks. leather uphol. card ~;:;4 Never lllOd. ~price "2'' pupplu zte9d loving Desperate., m..tf25 OK. Near w.~t. 4 S.A. ~arneer• 9520 600 W. •th ~t., Santa Ana tbl A • match's arm chrs. hornet Cqckft' mix. Call Area. 2 Br, 2 Ba. c' -.-"P_l_R··-1-:·"'·"'· ''.: Dally 9-9 Sat M Sun 11-6 i .:.";;'""'~l:OO~. ~-----SL[M GYM World's euic1t _.. '"·"'"' ..... '"~"1504 So• $ llL·-t -10 $8 250 """ • ' -ANTtQUE v t' h' 00 k nlflthod of home exerclae. d:Y'"'"""' ... ;J.JY-619. ~~!·----~ 545"824i A.~1.S. * 6 PACK ··~: .. _ A natural tor YQ.U!lg' people DIVORCE Foree• aad1llce. ene ian 1-c Deal.en want~. Olli Dora, ., who WIU'lt tUtCltemcnt plu'! Dusett S{Hln. T pc bdrm. lovese!'I, creen •ilk damask f*..1630 . COCKAPOO~ White. fem. 1o F R E E ! Bl I t'. $795 Ticke;t agent? Air freight? klni: Enalander bed, S. pc, down c u1h loni $150. lood homt. lo cult Jookl _!'ft.;.;.;1.:.'----lU Station aeenl! Reserva-Span, bdrm, twin bod•,1:;;4""":=';,jQ<:::, =====;::. DJSH\VASHER, Under ll~ a atuUed t oy . RALEJOH Super Course; -· .... ... - t..lontrRamportravela,gent• Green Flock hdbrda,I· counter ,$40, walnut 6~T. 619 Slmpl•x dtralll•or, 'ull Prlc• We'll train you tor ~ i-Hl·riatr, pr, ntte 1b11, deak, S.Wing MtchlnM 1120 ::t': headboard 1111· 2 LoYable Kitteru need home. Basic 80ltilll Reyno.Ida 5.11 tubinf '8Q. Standard modf.t tndudlt '- lllld rnore, day or nite. We !uni. vtl\'d bench, pla.ld SINGER Auto zfz.zar, 6 mos. 1 blk A 1 tlj:er ttripe. fTS..S026 over flature, J ~It.owl, include placement assist.-lleeper. tew wka old. old. No attaeh needed tor 1''RENCi A loc11l, New lult. MS-<llll 619 Course tee box:. butane heater A ' ,.,,,.,, Pvt Pty MT--5066 lady l1111ai:'f. Man d. rin1 Ml · Blk 9275 lit• •-t v-•.., In •-·-........... . . , z!i·J&I', button ho Its • clothing jewelry m u c b GENTLE Sm. fem. Terrieri n1 et , _,. .., ..., ... , .. Est. 21 yrs, APPJ'O\ted for Veterans. Eligl~ lns:Ututlon unde r the federally iJuured llludcnt loan program, Airline Schools P11cific • 610 E. 17th, S•nta Ana 54U596 PIANO Le1ii0ns: Reuonable.. Pop I Clastiic: Home-Studio, Call J. Feldman, 6T:l-7S33. -The1trical 7900 ACTING Do you ~·ant to be a full time \\·orking profcssionaJ? Do you have the M!lf discipline lo JJubjecl yoursclt lo a rig. id British •raining course .I: lhl' arli1tie hu,mility 10 ac. sept minor rnle!f until the !raining period a romplcte "!' I! so TH E LONDON LA· GUNA ACTORS WORK. SHOP might bu able to he lp you. No previous experience nece9sary, no agl' barrier. ~fen1bcr& of this exclusive group will only bt-accepted upon a salisfact.ory personal interview with UK! director Call 19-1-'1404 for appt_ ' MERCHANDISE FOR SALE AND TRADE -Furniture 8000 20 PC. "MADRID" 3 ROOM GROUP FRO!\! MODEL HOMd; Jnclw:les: Quilted sofa & 1:hair, 2 end tables & cofJee !able, 2 lamps, dresser. mir. ror, headboard, quilted box springs & mattress. 5 pc dinirq: room; table A:: 4 hi- bnck chairs. COMPARE AT $749.!ki $399 No down Pmli. Only $16 mo WELK'S WAREHOUSE 600 \V, 4th SI., Santa Ana T\\'JN Bed-ii compl-$30. Queen bed compl $35. drc1St'r $25. DW btd-eomp S25. Pr. nite stands $&. Lamps $5. Sofa & chair $100. Roll a-way Ocd $2U. Range $10. Dinette set $15. h1uch more also cheap! !'>'14--0452, 543-713-l. MUELLER Of Grand Raplda co ntemporary master bedr oo m i;et, ~olid mahogany( Kin&: headboard, 12 dr11wcr dresser, lg mir- ror, 2 nlte t11blei;, $1XIO new, Ask $350. 641--0329. SPANISH Bedroom, ( 3 months old, l sel complete ~ilh new king-size bed with 10 yr ~·arranty, 5J&.GS46 or 842-1128 HOUSEFUL ol new model hon1e lurniturr. Reg. $683, now $197, &9f-+117 or 637-6200. LOVELY Floral sofa, never u~ed. $125. !\latch. Jove seat $7j, Pvt ply. ~7. DINE'ITE Tblc., 6 chairs, like ne''" Other itemi>. 9701 Verde ;\·far, Hunt. Beach T\\'IN Beds compl wtmaholl dbl hdhrd, new cond. $7:>. Call 5-fS-6835 . ~lATCHING Mapfe sora-bed, ch1:11r, '.l lilbl£'s, Xlnl co11d. $125. 5-10-3·136 an 5. s PIECE bedroom S('1, $75 rugs. picture,, etc. GT;i-5127 or 6.f2-416l TV. Single bed, seve ral chi's, <.11lf~ tbl, dressers, rni,i;c, Sun. only. LI S-8750. CUSTOi\1 Wood bar w/burnt orange leatlwr hand rail Ir :l bar stool!, $1.10. SJG-1337 PLANNING to move? You'll find an amazing number of homes !n today 's Classified Ads. "Check them MW. SPANfSH 9' custom ro1d detlcna etc. Guar. S39 cash more 67Wf4l Mb: bei&e -black., IOft& Ottered to IN! Public by the BONANZA • 4 h.p. Has Ku1tom Motors velvet sora. Spanlth cocktf.il or 11nall paymenta. SZ-6616 · · ' ltjdl Nf--08l3 6/f. BaJbot. Fewer Squadron 4 .. -.,, 1,~,., ·-• 1,~1,, 11'15 Ba.ker, C.M. 5tl).591S table, glua top "" x 36"1,;;,;o======""~ l'.11AYTAG Cu dtytr. Ex-_ __, 7 M M .i "'"v ,.,. .... ,. .. x 60", heavy lfO)d leaf base. Mutlcal cellerit Cond. SSO. A1em-P/San'!0)'8d, ereet blk ears stiarnne p, " 01 ay, Llke new. Sl!iO. Evenings '67 Suntil1I Delux• ·1 · Chair in ,.rreen ...elvet. Inti-.• mfnls 1125 bera.hip C.d~t ltnnll club, w/frinae on lap, male 5 nw, June JS, at Newport Harbor aJter 5, ~~UO VW (imper Above itema eo1t ~. oneJ-.:.;;;;.:.:;''."~:<;.;;.:... _ _;;= $511. 6T3-U92. MMSCfi YAa~tNt;~ mN !"..o Bay l.1ahogaey interior . .A.JI tM mon1h old. Leavhig country. W1lnut Splrwt $250 n" Admiral Color T.V, ~ith TINY Femala kitten, oranie ~:·., •ti .. -~ ..,.1 'c1ance Moto_Icyclet 9300 ioodlu. Mutt seelto a1'~ • SacrUice-make ofter "-'"""""lafte•6PM .&< hlte needs*"""' '"'•"' • on.~•IJUill UI. ~ iate, (UQff6921 ·· '• V"lV'JUJ new anteru)I. and picture • ..,.,..,... home. Brinc notebook. au. meett CUSTOM '67 500 Triumph _•_3&-4'1_..c09_. ------GIBSON Classic folk guitar, tube. $200. C~ 67:J..3Slli f>49-lll4& 619· eVJ!T)' Monday nilht fDr 13 $950. Must lff to apprec. $2StS REMODELING Sa~e: coucti, Xlnt cond, Sacrifice price. after6pm. s Puppiea part poodle 1c. weekl. ;.rry Que•Uon1: Call eancarl842-8772a.tt4. ffarbOUf V W 2 reciiner1, chair, coffee 6"-{18'1'1, 64'"'2853 NEWPORT Bch Tennl1 Club wire-haired telTier. Small. 673-lSM, "~fe Boltin& ii 1968 Honda Scrambl•.r 175, ~ Ii D~ table, end table•, waa:on member, ID hard els .& 4 AlaO, ldttent. 646-tln 6/$ no Accldtnt' 4000 mi, good eond. $350. 181U BEACH Bl.., ~ wheel fight flxtu~· & 12 Pianot a Organs 8130 grsas ell, P¥t dlna tacll 5 lovl1¥ btaut. kittens need 24' lalander W/aux. many 83)..5}7f bet 8 I: 4. HUNTlNGTON BtACH " > yrda, Antique aatln dtapel'Y --• I: Pro ahop, MO-OYt aft 6. homd Ill bft -1 ho'· R·" ~ ·-M ntaterial (It. ,roen). After PIANOS & ORGANS ' w ..... en Ii .. xtru. ""' IU ....... Ult 1$65 250 cc Du c 0 ti '65 CheV)' hvy. dty, convl 4 PM &. weekeDdi call: NEW A:: \JSED Graduation tormal1. V•t." id .Call aft 4, 600-8405 Hll. Nv.;pt allp av1ll. 11•1 Scrambler. Asklni $300. van camper, atee1>1 5 +, 64~ • Yamaha Planoi Organt never uaed. P'1'1lncisc11.1t, CUTE Blk A whl. male pup-m.mtl( ex. Mm or 213 / 64:>-0668 aft 6 pm. custom cuthion1, 6 cxl, ·: • Thom 0 dishc:;, additional Items. p", Sm!. mix brffd 10 w'··, 3.15-9974 Jt/H •olo 111~ S H~ u raan1 " .... · '66 Honda 90 dirt bike ' · ' ""'' · -.;-·. · Office Furniture tOlO • Kimball Pianos 536-2260 842-7292 6/1 SAILBOAT: All fibel'llUI S2:25. tina:t(!n Bead!, s:i&.2381 -e Kohler & Campbell AIR Conditioning wlill $100 THE Bad IUYI have deaerted 13' w/nylon N.11 I" ffj,.way • M6--0ST1 * 8' Full cab-o\ler camper, USED atffl dukJ .Sl!.!IO • COAST MUSIC each. T kittens, 4 call. Bf! a soocJ trlr. Licensed, ready to IO· .69 Ho~,·~ CL tact, dlacon.tlnued n\DdW · :O-ti': r-i~ :;·so ~liup NEWPORT & HARBOR 962--0538 iuy, adopt me. 646-8226 6/15 S!Z. Ml-OOee wkdays aft 1SOO mlle:.'Ma-; otter! Complete, $693. 869 Wet!. A wu 1 nr Cotta Mesa • 64,Z,2851 YARD vacuum, .good coNI 1 Cute blk A wh ite female 6, all wktnd. 6~3 after .fPM 18th St., Colla J..1e11.. i ':~:~:~:=~kl Open lG-6 Fri 10-9 Sun 12..S $50 "Z" trlmmer-Rlower kitt'n 6 wkl. To &'90d home. lJOO 14. Xlnt cond. Tnller 'M HONDA. CB 160. Cl aJI '69 DODGE Van, Cwitom u...· 1800 Newport Blvd. HAMMOND M·S $100. 67>1657 644-0410 6/8 Ir boat eovtr. No.1837, fl!ady ready to i'O. $220 .. P.,.!,_; t.er. Elee. reh'ig., new tln:aJ Costa Meu • 642--&50 ORGAN ~ASSJNETI'E, Mattrei;, pad 1 /JI black female cat, no to sail. SllOO. ~lU after $39. •70 rea:. 646-9072. ~....... Tape deck. Bob 6"f3...Xl911. ' . ·---·-With PercuNoion, Warranty, 1 a;:. 841~~71,,.87tti tldr1, uking la.ii nice personality needs $PM.'· LIDO I•' HARLEY Davidson 1961 74 '65 ~noline camp uni~ Office Equipment IOl I LellOlll Ir Delivecy tnclud. loocJ home. 6ff..OUO 6/8 Chop__.. ,...,,.., xlnt 1 cond Butane refrll · b PeJ·ct co~lllon. ,._ •-11. ....,.. offtt,........... . • ed tfuntin•ton Harbour, ttefriK, •"' .... """"' .... Many xtru llJlO UPHOL. Swivel & 1tralght Thit Wttk Only $581 lamps, chairs, wheelbarrow; PETS inti LIV.STOCK er, mu.t tell. Sett oner 673-lOU , . chain, deakl, benchea, filea. GOULD MUSIC plant.I, mlCI. !146-llllll tak9, 642-9405 Mr. Todd, '69 Yamaha 115 Enduro. «MIO Cimpor Rtntils '. tables,. cablnc!J, wood box-COMPANY P•h, Gtneril llOO SABOT Schock ra,ctf, 1918 mile1. 'Many M-X extras. · _ ell. 642-3408 2045 No. M1ln Mite. W1nt.od."'-_-·..;N=10 top condltk>n, co mp 1 e te $500/bnt. ~ . Rent me -Camper Van •• ·~ -S I A "7 0681 -BANTAMS. Beauty ehix, Mao w/traller $300. 1175-5285 'IT Honda 305 leram,bler, ·~TIC, Weekly or monthlJ 1 C1ft, Reat1ur1nt t~C in 1 na ""' • WANTED FIOral print IOfa, haU arown 6: adult1. Lovely ev~ Dry dock .i.o avaU. Xlnt. Cond. 1400 or · beat 1t 541-14\4 * (~ii Ca1e = ~:1:reof ha1viS~1~ !e:!~:~ r~!~, e~::.~ rpe~ 2612 s.E. Mep.Or. 10' S.Ubolt, ne:w aaila, offer. MB-3438. B I 9521 (2) lfambW'&:er Grllla on Pial108 and Organa. Bathroom cell'g healer, Old Ctt•-------'·88=20 trailer, xlnt cond $300 '65 Yamaha 250 ~u.!!!..._ ~9' .•-•----1 (1) Collon candy machln• You better come on down! domed tn.ank, Sausage 1tuf.. * 6(2...MllQ aft llpm * Need• work. $7.oo RED Metaltlake, 1tr. lega,f. Ted 642-Tf55 Jim 53'-2401 WARD'S BALD\VIN STUDIO ting machine, dbl door re-2 KITTENS: Part Slameae ./WANTED: 12' lo 15' Uaed ==-*.:.,.::54;:t;-c;3::1.::46c.*::.... __ , J..\c. Apr, 70. 65 VW tr.a.n~ -------1819 Newpoi1, C.?-.I. 642-8484 fri g. 646-8226 $5, Bia.ck with l!tlue eyes CATAMARAN. Write Daily CHEV. '69 V-8, 1tlck ~ ton, engine reblt USOcc. HD oil Household Goods 8020 0 1)en Every Nile WANTED: 9 drawer tlreiaer $2. Call 540-3787. Pilot M-33 & ft. bed, alr, cuat. Lo ml. pump, 88 ~arb, fuel & a~, 42 sq. yds., used Ivory __ &,_s_u.,.,_ay'-'IJ-l_•_moo_n__ & 5 dra-·er chest, Kood SABOT--Comple:te, ready to =X='"=1=· =;""°;::.,· :54ii .. =28!5"===:o I filters, Scali { in bla~1 carpeting, SGS; Nau.a:ahyde cone!. CaJI 846-ll46 D,!l• ______ lfl=~S 11.tl. Almost new, m\llt sell. -· uphOl'd seall, carpet, belt&. swivel cha.lr $25; barrel HAMMOND, Steinway, Yam-==-------613-31124 MottrHOOt1r1 9350 HD clutch, new brakes, <l~ Cha'· ·~. All ~•-L oo·•, ah&. New •-used pianos of \VANT ~ood used sewinr POOOt.f; Pup1 2 white, 7 --c.o.-'----'=:1 elthautt •. ikldp1e.te1 bw1).-, ., ..,.., ....... ,., • machine $25. or Iott, wla im·" ml•"•·-AKC $1000 Buya my l/S lhan, '68 LAMBR.ETTE me tor llb ··•·~ ~. mo.I makes. Beat buy1 In ·• au ............. pen, ro ar, rc1,._,..,,. ~ So Calil. at Schmidt Music &1H711 art 6:30 Pl\t ordered. \100 W. Ba Ibo a 26' aux. tloop; Npt Slip. 1cooter $150. Call after 6 chassis. Mapl!ghl, · ~a, in Bl\'d., Newport B1a"ch 1 ..:F..:0:..•..:d::•~=::.•.:54.;:..,,..:.::=;_··--or Wttktnda MS-29'7 pttdo F r 1 I022 Co. 1907 N, Main, Santa Ana ~ coS:. Clnopy Bed 613-484!. 12' Flberatua Kite Sa ilboat =as' maii, r::; Call 540-4725 PUPPIES: '4 German Shep. wtaall l trlr. $695. (1) Auto krvlct J'l'OXl4X8 Polltfactlon tt1u ; JUNE s, 9• lO. Movinc lhil PIANO Upright xln't cond wkencl, rnuat sell aotu, . ' • ' chairs. maple tables &: buf· ~tu.,re for tale. Ctill eft, washer Ir dryer, ,c.;,~=·--~--­TV.,.tereo oomb, H 1-F J BABY Grand, waln!J11 comp. compone:ntJ, btd 6: dree.slna JtOOJld. Sac. $650. 67>1245 table A mall)' odd• Ii eild.1. ~·~• ~M~~='~'~· ~--~-921l Belli& St., Newporl BALD\\'IN A~c piano, Stach Eaatblutt l~~ yr old. like ~W'. MOVING, Mutt Hll, Ken· •833--0590• n1ore pa dryer-gd. cood $35., Se11.r1 rotary mower T.:.•::;l;:•.:.•:.:i•::i•:.:•:_ ___ l;.:2::;;05 $35., elect edger IT.50, PHILCO CONSOLE co-cart w/gd bod)'-motor needr. work $50., water ikls Black I \Yhite $45. $3.50, pull dJI llrht fixture• 1 =='"""'='"='=•'="'=''=p'-m"=. = $5, mlJCell 642-3391 I I 16 cu f t Amana ruo; 1 Hi-Fi & Stereo 8210 hide-a-1>e4, like new $65; FOR Sale: Craig car stereo, 1 Zenith 21" console $60; new & never u1ed. SllO. 1 hutch $4!1; Misc lamps 642-1067. 4 housthold ltem1. IOmc· 1M..:.;:AG=N=AV~O~X~AM=1=r~M-"-,-,.. anllque1. 2281 Elden Ave, Id ~i•·i/S '"53tl5 console, 3 mo o , new $300, ,.,, ~ un . .....,... · sell $150. 4!»-14()-1. I 1.1 0 V IN G·BARGAINS. ;;,~='""'==== .furn., tape re cord ., Miscellaneous t600 Al\.1-F1.f conaole c ombo I:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;-;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::: phonorraph, · i lnka, f 1 r . GRADUATION GIFTS furnance, pipe, plywood ele. 160 E. 22nd SI. C!l.t. Beautiful rlngs, necklaee1, 646-3750. earring1 for the Graduate. Custom Catting. Calling 1Upplles, waxee. engagement le. weddini ring1 our 1pecta.J. ty, All jewelry making equipment. Rough1 4 cut stones. Everythinr for the PATIO & 'Gar. Salt: June 5th 'Lil. Tool•. fiah \ng lackle, ailver, china, clothe& si: 10.12·14. Corner 13th " Balboa Blvd. lOAM-7PM. HOLIDAY Spa i misc. 1401 rock hound. Olive: Apt. I"', Huntington Open Tues thru $at. 9.11 :""=:;";:h","536-='=20:2=:600..===::;;;::ISunday 10-4 clOllOd M.oo. -~-J'IVE M GEMS It. Appllencet 81119 LAPIDARY SUPPLY :.::::::.::.::.::.:::...... __ ..;:.;..:: Rear of College Center USED Appllance1 I: TV'1, 7750 P.arlxir Dlvd., ll·A all guaranteed. Dunl11.p's, Costa h1esa * ~549-2039 1815 Newpo rt , C.M.1..,..,..,.,...,...,..,;;;;;;;;;. 548-7188. I, • ~faytq deluxe washer S90 Maytq set, i8S dcyer S200 Others from $25 up 531-8637 OlEST Typ& freezer, 3 )'ti old, Xlnt conct. $ 7 5 * • 54~23M aft 3: 30 KENMORE 600 elec. dryer: while: 4 monlhs old, $125. 5&7-9311 LADIES diamond d I n n er ring, set wi!h }J,4 karat center diamond, 2 diamonds • ~J karat on each side. Brillian t cut Sacrifice! ReP- Jy to Bo:< P360. Dally Pilot. e CLOSE-out at cost or Je11 on rlCIY l!cms front of Laguna Btcch Jntcrtor.i, 1020 S. Coast IJ"'Y· & used Hem• in rear. CARPET left from Couun'l. conlrnclf. $1.98, $2;88, ahq: $3.99 ~ yd. D1·W1 Carptl 17206 Beach Wvd, H.B. Rtl-5114 BOY'S Maple bedroon1 1111, mu'! see $50.' Portable 11cr. 00 $10, 545'5616, 673-5147, Carpel l4xl7 GRtn Wilwn, new. ~. Call MS--0&.~. I Nr.wport Beach Family ciub ~ftmbeMlllip. $200. Dicy• ;.:49-2288, a\lt!s 557...s96$ NEW Gil! t.h:rehand. SiOOii rclail v~lu .• \Viii ootwlan. lrade nr ae.11. 644-2-420. herd * Collie, male &: fc-28&-2747. & Pirt•:. ___ ...:..9400 $1.500. HWlt. Sch. 892--46386• • male g wkl SS. &f5.21l)4, 19' Sloop, trailer, nu m&.1l Whoj;il• to Public RED Cherey '63 Dune ~ .., 1700 e MFGR ~fOVING 642-4674. lc.61"ril5g:: all500l I or Best Olfer. COMP.LETE ENGINES IY"'ISll encmt, 5S bp, n e w1 Air compressors. spray Gtrm1n S~tpherdPups ...-'" pm SHORT BLOCKS front ind, ne:w bra~. ~Mry, Etc. booth&, •pray guns. palnla, AKC 9 Im 962-14' Sea Kina aallboat. Mov· Motor Man 64~04 Realbr qufck. $1600 or ~ ,_, bl 1 1 • w · 7382 ing, Mutt aell Make offer oUer. 67S-.nts. . .. , me..... ca fll' s, urnace, ~J VW i · Good C d · tbl1, n ckt, Pck'g mater, B I PuPfi, AKC 6T3-4068, S1Mll65. n9iM, on ·DUNE BuRY rail wH:b ~·all plaqut-s, p I c t u r e esi, id temperament. FU_pper ln Good cond • 64~ • trailer, rt1blt en(int, Sia · framcJJ, .statuary, ash trays, Santa Ana, ~0-4996. eaU No. :168 Erscon cam A Holley carb • . ·, etc. 642-8289, 549-2868 AT Lail! AKC En1U1h Bull • 67)-88)6 * !!_•lier, Tr1vel ~ 1.: headers, S750. 557-9J1B. ~ . .=:========'I PUPI. Champ. blood line. =========I DUNE Bum Bocfit'S m ' 541-0897. 8.A. Power Crvf1er1 9020 ALPINE B .. cket Seatl S7. ' Weeltl FR-EE TO YOU BEAUT Year old white Penian fem. cal, w/orailge & grey rrinrklng11 on face. Al.to 1 \' yr. old calico fem, BEDLJNGTON • 19 mOi., 25, Owens '5', rood cond. Only, Ca.II (2:13) 4"Jl.S.'i5r5, · • JJpayed, lhola, all equip., New motor 11111 yr, SS e VW Ch1.11l1 Shorll!nlnge : ' - no pape:J'S.,S.10. tiU-2* redlo, tun canvas, head, VACA1TON Free pick up Ir delivery ' 9-Adorable blk Ir golden La· ball lank, 1Jpt c. $3195. TRAVEL CENTER e 642--0443e cat. Brilliant co Io r 1 . brador PIJPI, read)' to go, 6f6..0130. lxcef, • Oolden '•Icon !==="""'====:== Good •-. S10 ••. 540-55119 Olymplo -Alpine Imported Auto• 96CIO ' 546-7202 6/1 2 Beautiful fluf!y femalta, 8 wka. old kitten• 1 gray with white, l cray striped • St. B<rnant Pu Po I• •' lloot Molntononco fOJJ Apocho • WhHI C1mpor VI It 0 . All , champion 1ired, $175. --~ -Woridl J.arse1t mOlt com-I Uf ' 642-<586. 438-M••noll&, c .M. PAINT • VARNISH, -RV voafcla th<>pptnc N "'-rvl ' · REnNISH, Our Specialty. center ew .w C MIN. Schnauur pups AKC. Playful Ir. lavil\I com-Reuonable rate1. Quality 13$2 Gard111 Grov1 mvd, GG Deparmtent panlon1. $75. 644--0714 ~'Orie done at your illp. 534•6616 · .: ' lii:er. 548--0813 11/11 KJ'ITENS Fat A I be rt . (p/Angoral liliM Mullet &: Tlgl'r Paws. 6 \vks. weaned Ir trained. 642-2637 6111 SILKY TERRIER AK c N~~ ~~1~,ffi, Clo"" Sat. Opeo Sunday Complete Forelg'!: .. = PUPS Xln'l Quality, Male Apacl\e falcon lent trailer, Car Rtpalrl · , , : ilt fem. Sl50 Ir up. 644-4806. M1rine Equip. tOJJ tip• 4, Ir&: tlp-<111 awnlnj', COCKAPOO, this one lo\le1 · 1 Ilk bl OLD Engllah Sheep Dor like new, $450. 962-8036 For any lnlormation ca11 or attenton, ca e, approx. female 1 yr PET not for PAIR of 283 Chria ena:lne1. TRAVEL TRAlllR stop by. Open 'Ul 9 P, , l yr old. Has 1hot1, 645.0391 b d' ' 111:. o~o ,..,..,., 21,.i ID l Reduction, ad cond. Th '1d 6/9 ree lr.g, ;i, o.>it""'l7-· Cell 646-IMO eves. Sleepa 5. Good condition. S325. u ay. • , F~-R=E=E-K=l-tt-,.,-, -,--w-ki-., MALE Yilrlt&~lre Teti'ier _,;;;;;,;;::;;;::::;== Call 531-7294 aft 5. Jonghaircd 108 Park Ave Puppy, Champion aired Boatt Wanted · 9050 l.J. .Balboa Jsl~rul 618 , • 64HM25 • OVERSTUFFED C h a Ir. Horiet 8830 comfortable, needs clean. --~----- ina:. 6'&:-5226. 6/8 REGISTERED Tenn. walk· FREE Wood • Mndel Glass Co., 1644 Superior, C.M. 646-3231 8/8 Kl'M'ENS -4 male and lemale black ori:, buff, all colors, '46-4328 II/& POODt.E/Mallcse, 8 female. "MuUina" ehlldrtn. 875-4764 mo, ''""' 818 2 Yr. old German Shepherd ma.l e. "'llh papers. To a:ood home 545-2:'"136 6/11 SWEET, Playful or a n 1 e spayed IC' male cal l ~ old. ing horse, 5 yr old chestnut gelding, ahow & trail. day: :i.10-4606, eve: 735-Ql23. 4 Yr Old Sorrel Mare Incl, aaddle, etc. S300 or best olr. 846-004.5. 'TRANSPORTATION Bo1t1 a y 1cht1 -SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Had shota. 5'1!-0iU 6/8 Kernel -M0081!!1 -Colic - 2 S'payed""ftm. ca\a -l blk. Aurthor -ON lbe ROCKS . . pert Siamese A: 1 calico. The oflicial Hollywood 836-44!1.1 1118 drink; Marriq• ON the 5 Baby klllena, I u r r y , ROCKS, houtcbroken. 6'12-4959 art 14' Alumlnun1 boat and 4Pi\f. 6/8 !railer, plu1 5 a:al, 11.a tank. AJ<"FECTJONAi'E Male klt· Trailer l'f!Ctntly painled, new wiring & lights. Sac. ten, liKer 11trlpcd, hacbrkn. $200 llrm. 494-0060 before 138-7650 6/9 5: IHJ.-3708 ovcnlna:1. 4 ROLLICKING Kittent -_T_RA_D_E_l·-,.-Y-Q\lr~-la-... -... all houubmkon &: ready for 35, Ohlson 1811,1 yawl. $1p1 moui;lng. 968-4972 6111 II fut 5, hd, aa ey, ly ad. KITTENS • Fluffy black, 114/915-11181 day1, white ' gray 961-1244 n4./t8S-41!2. S OLA.Cf\ me.le kllteru:, 6 17' Trtm&ran, Piwr de1fan, wku old. ~. 8/9 ·dlcl'On .,u,, a I um i n u m FREE Wood door 26" x 'J!I". mut,' •lainle•• steel ri1'1. &75-M21 fll Be1t offer 1Ake1 lJI 6T~. K)'l'l'>.'Ns 9 w•• qJd. 11j.l i1>-!G97. Auttln st. C.M. 64>4179 119 =t lCIENllD OCEAN OPERATOR 2 !0~11.....i.elllal• kitten~. FOR JllRE 531-2238 11/8 e IT3-3941 e CUTE, FluUy k I 1 le n 1 . ~ S.ll 17", flbe .... ln.1i 613-8963 611 """ ' "" lnbrd, 'xlnl cood. Small n.UFFY J.ltlle be (11 ll cabin, lrs oockplt. Btst of- JIC!rllan kitten. 6'12-0239. I/II fer. 673-9311 l Pupp)' Cock-1t-poo mix It 18' Rul\&bout w/new 3~SllP cute kltt~ru;. &f&-3623 11/9 motor. . D\11 MW6111 (;° REsffiJr!f _ M2.-.SS29 or M2.-33.116. 12' Spitfire Travel Traler, GOOD. Used Kite. Ca.ah! il(>ll t, $4B8 645.1960 Sporti'c1r C•nt1r 2833 Harbor, Coit& Me:sa ; · Weekend• OR. 5-5164, I,.======== Weekday1 (213) '700-7964. 540-4491 " Mobllo HomH 9200 * Newport Horbor * A few remalnlna: mobile home space1 in une of Calif. '1 !alt. e1t rrowtnc nllOrt anu, MOllLI HOMES are on dlaplay, these home• are fully equipped at prlcc1 YoU won't want to pus up! EXAMPL.E: :..:T•.:.:u<::::kl:..._ __ _,,ts""oo AUSTIN AMERIC:A • GM~ ... ~.CKS AUSTIN AMERICA ·:-. Immediate Delivery Sale•, Service, Parta Immediate Dellvtr," AU NOCS.11 Sou•-Orattae CounlY• ont, Authorhcd GMC Dealer UNIVERSITY OLDSMOllLE 2850 Harbor mvd . Collta ?i.1esa 54fi.9640 * lntorn1tlonol * TRUCKS .'1rlt1pn1 l Jli11pu 1l s 3100 W, Coul HW)I., N.B. .... -540-llll ; Authorized MG DMltr' ~ New 20x44 w/awntna1, 1kirt, etc. $9111'.> complclc Incl, tu &:. Ile. Many ready for IM· MEDIATE OCCUPANCY! GRllNllAP PARK Bia d~ot nn all mnd•ts. Al! adu!LP.Jiva~ club Pic:kup11 1 , Scoull, 'J'l'aveUalla. "ALPINE , ... 17~ "~tttl A &av. . .----.4> T--.J.11 "" "" er ve., • · , eo.1a M•.. Kusrom Moton '67 ALPINE · ' ~: · Ph, 714/642-1350 845 Baktr, C.M, 540-5915 Road~ler, hard It 110lt top'lf. ': - T•ke .llorbo• Blvd, to ,64 FORD PU tWVNOJlJ $Am•l•al at only · ·: 191.h St., the n we1t to Whittler ,\ve, Lana: btd, V8, heavy duty I J JOMICRA, J~C. 1usper11lon. Good condition • • ~_;;::;:::;=::;;.,OIJ;;.::::....--1 thruour. Take f.orelp car or SPcrta Cir Center ORANGE C NTY 1maU down <G545n) Call 28.:U Harbor, Cnsta l'1csa ' Exclu8.lve Dealer For dlr Phil aft 1D am M0-3100 540-4491 ' LA PAZ "'•94-1"'9. Cu1tom IJllll CNchH SElij lT TODAY! + ManYOU\er Set Upe Gu•r1ntMCI S1Nce1 In Tustin ramUy A Adult Park. Buy your coach from us and aavt on factory dl- t'CCt price., Over 100 mo- dels to chooae from. UNITED MOBILE HOME !ALES 237 So. Tu1tln, Oranre 6.\1.2001 es.1-m4 536-144& -. IHAkdRA-lX - • • e BY1HESEA e . Set.up Mob Ila Hom••· OWtl .YOUR OWN. DOU houlta anlJable. C.shl or flnanctnc arranaed. CaJ NO\V, A1k for JAY, '1U26-2770 Llater • New '70 Datsun AUSTIN HIALIY . ll!OO ouc, Pickup wl!lt camp. ,66 Allltfn er. Sale price sm dlr. '· • ,. 617911 Will ""'~ pri. HHl•y 3000 ... :!_"~· Cail MG-40$2 or RoadAter. 4 seater, Brltfait · racin& a:reen. E.lec1tic oWt_• .. '70 Chevy Cuatom IS T. drive wire whce1-excCllGi' ' ·• Truck, Air eond, auto, pfb1 ~1141i11>n )n I: out. kw ,.Un · .. p/1, deluxe uphol. lncl &nail down. (TQC191), WI ' .• -.. · headliner. sscoo. 612-15.38 nnance private peM)'. CaJJ -- sun. thru r d. btfnre 2PM. dlr Phil ah lD AM ~ ·": CHEV '68, VI. std, !S--T. or •~1029. ..., 8' bed, air eu~tom Dt Id, 1967 Austi n ifealty 3000 Mar~ •• Xlnt $2";\'IO. ~2835 Ill, gooct cond. Beat Qr, '11 Ford P .U. v.a. fer-"inll!I •11. f.ll-3231. Nt"' paint $41).15. Good cood. Pl.ANNING to MOYef You'll 675-16!J1 find 111 amutn1 number of lfHE QUICKER YOU CALL, homt>1 In todt,y'1 Cla.ssUlcd THE QUICKER YOU SEU. Adll, Chieick them now. • • • • l DAJLV PILOT .• .• •riAJWIORfATloA • ...... ,... ...... 9600 IMW I ., , : T&M MOTORS (~S ...... 1) J ·bl c.araen-Grove Blvd. • ._.,. Blk. E. of Beach ffivd. • 53f..n:84 892-5551 ' *BMW* : · lpgest BMW Selection . • Sales • Parts • Service • Sor. the sUITOUDding area. , 09rerseu delivery spechtl.. iatl.-Sales open SundlQ'. ~ · ' C. Bob Autr•y ·18l!!O'Long Beach Blvd., L.B. (213) 591-mt. ' CORTINA . * f:ORTINA * . Lorgest 19711 Cortina s.Jeo. lion. e Sales • Parts e ' Service 1r;:rr the surround-: h:C' area.. Qveraeu dcl.ivery : • qeclalists, Salel open ~ • c)a.y ... ; .· •· C. Bob Autroy , Ul60 Long Beach Blvd., L.B. 213 -591.ml :ss Cortina GT, xln't cond. :Ssr;o for immediate sell. ~. DATSUN i '67 DATSUN SSS ' A u t o m a t i c transm1ss1on, ~ whl~ wall tires, 17,997 act. uaJ miles, 1 owner. (VWJ. I 107) .· $995 Harbour .. V.W. 1B1l1 BEACH BL., 842-«35 HUNTINGTON BEA.CH -1 .. !Jl- ''Leader in The Ceat'b Cities" Zl~MERMAN 2145 HARBOR BLVD. ---540-6410 '69 Datsun 1600 Roadster. Xlnt cond. Must sacrifice. AM-Ft-.f, chrm rims. $1950. Prt owner. Aft 3, 548-5751 '69 Datsun 4-dr, stick, Xlnt cood, Pvt owner $1525 days; 61:>-6460 eves; 6tl-0227 FERRARI FERRARI I Ntwparl ·lmportl Ltd. Qr. .. ~ . . • . Monday, Junt e:, 1970 , • .J_ TRANSPORTATION t RMSPORt AtiON TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION SPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION -TRANSPORTATION lmportocr'Car1 -.Im~~ Nie lmi-tod Cort -Autoo Wont.cl '190 ...... Lu11nt1 'l~::;::..:::;::... ___ '900:.;::: !!_MCI Coro ""' Usod Con FIAT MGB 11UUMPH WE PAY TOP FORD AUTHOltlZED $100 FORD '15i~:g;:;:;n;0;,±~-CASH: LEASING 8Yst'EI< 'DELIYl!RS A CAR •••••••••• • ~a iitfOii ·cr.aiir.:i' 'G''l'R~lO.CI!) • • -·• IMtoot • ...... l'Oll '57 FORD M<lan, 1 door, , ·~ ......,_ cell<nt oonjlltlon. l!ett oUer . """'--· _ · • a •r-,.,_. e -..w1 . _....,._, uto--.11-'~ '-!:..!~-" :="i"-J==:-- BUYING A FIATt 66 MGI Roodmir.· · . Call attor;~'19611 -; ' tor uiod can I< truclcl Just leui., al all tno con aJd e We citt; Cootn1cti • d1 .... :11SO· or tietf'lllfU. fl 4ti~· ~~ ~ '68 ';rriumpb CT 6, blllf'i ~ call ... fnr tree estimate, ::::.;,.. ~ . • We CU P'inlnce Aft)oona :~· . ·t1· :.1 FORD c:J.., f bl1.1e with "J4clc Jee.the? m. -.whl.s. 18,000; ml. Vtry -Id ROTH CHEVROLET O\'ft 30o.1e. 'Uri ~ e . Can ~ ~ ~-_ '6! Ford Ll1> &opw O:luntr)' e terior, CsYD43) Will ~ .... f.DllJ. M6-3828 aft-8. , •; r:1 -. ,... ,~ · .. <l:lmpeti= ntll _ l lue Ch~ Auto .h i" . Squlft>8tnwacc>n1 ~· Pif<f t •f ....n "°"" or -··\\'Iii ,_ d A#lor·~ -•New cordoolibibll>-2W. IWl>cir Blvd.. C.fll,. AJl.lf"M ""'°· ~ \ u...,,.,. •rlvate -· ·e.n -VOLKSWAGEN l82U -·fl\w. 9-l'tlll ......... -.,.. w.9ro0 · *' ·~ -·-~-;::;· ;::c·::...:..· .,....,--",.,,.:<ll -'--2\240 S. Maill I d.lrPhilaftUtam~or ·~,Bea~ your pretlllltat ""U "-CoUntry. Sed&D ataUon be •• • ~-1029. . • LARGE w~ m ."'1331 •All .-.. mu. ·-IUICI .. , . =n .. ~1>. , • ..,. l3lO SANTA ANA '54~7076 . IMPORTS WANTW able · ·· .. . • MORRIS SELECTION ' ·• °"""' -r«i QimPfjli .Detllli Coll. ·• ruv1en. Air, A114tnt. ·c FQRb FADi.LANE. ·• • .. auto sport ltd , . "' vw ''roP 1 BUYER .,.,_ -•• ,....,_,_ a · ... < ** !185"' ** 9625 Ga>~en Grove Blvd. '61 M rrl Mlnor 'Excell nt CAMPEt . . BmL iwa;y TOYOTA IAulns "'""'"' ~w:rili~·~ao~ISOl~-~-~!._l'~--~-1 iii'·'Gil·-~·--f,"~·~;;;rm;;; O I , • e _ , . _. ,:;.·.:: ~ Beacb ~~ 'ntlldor9 '~..1335\WM~ I: Bat.. 537·'m1 893-7568 ~ ~ ~. °'~: ·ffarb ·o'ur W· II. BeocJ\. Ph. Ml-l:lP ltOBINS IORD mr Sport WaiQ~· !fl. air, ~~'itr°:'1!~~.m;:: ••••• ••••• t -=======·=,I , , . . ·• .1"' ;·m ·PAY TOP DOLLAR :itl&O -·Bl"'-· · lib new! 8JIOO millli, ~ air. MW olr ~ if6S POIUI Ceuttt,f Ntli"• <ttitiM _... ·fo11, VI, •ukfrl•flc fraM· fl'li11io11, f•ctory •Ir c.e'""· tio11l11t, power 1t•erl11t, t•• tlior h••t1r. INCC 224, '68 FIAT SPIDER OREL ... AtrmOR!ZE'l '. -'FOR TOP USE!> CARS O>o1a Meaa • sa.4me '4>-9ll!;. 6",-0637 .. -. ··~7 !:ountry Sqvlro • •' SALES A SERVICJ<· H·JOW" -II extr. dwt, '63 B~ ~la! Wag •. 39<1 air • ** . 646-3677 Hard top & soft top, Radio, beater, 4 speed. C\VXL654J $1599 B.J. Sports Car Cenq r !833 Harbor, Colita Mela 540-4491 '67 FIAT 850 OJupe. <C speed, radio, heat. er. Sharp! See to apl)ntci- ate. (VOL114) $795 Harbour V.W. 19711 BEACH BL .. 8424435 HUNTINGTON BEACH • '69 ·Fial 840 Coupe Xlnt cond, $1495 * 557~11 * 1967 Fiat noo 4 Dr. ao MPG. good concj. Best offer over $600. 494-336.5 '68 FIAT 124 Sedan. 4 speed, 4 whet!! disc brakes, (ZLll045) $1095 B.J. Sports ·car C•nter 2833 Harbor, C'.osta ?1-lcsa 540-4491 *FIAT* Largest Fiat Selection • SaJes • Parts • Service !or the surrounding area. Ovetsc8.ll delivery gpeclaJ. ists, Sales open SUnday. See C. Bob Autrey 1860 Long Beach Blvd., LB 213 • 591-8721 JAGUAR JAGUAR HEADQUARmS The only authorized JAGUAR dealer io the entire Harbor .,., .. Complet..: SALES SERVICE PARTS BAUER BUICK • ''8 Opel Kad<tt deluxe Sta ~g"ro':,L.;,= -'I' ~IE BUia< _ . -~ ~E " ~~~ ~~·s, . · ... F ....... soo':'f'11i'· Wag, 102 eng. Still tn war-234 E. 17th SL ' '69 c.dllJac Coiipe:-n9 , --· ~ :, · • . . Good. cond. $f00. ranly. ExcePL dean. '68 vw BUG ' '&..ta..... 543-TniS lull·~. air, vinyl..... CADJLl:AC . 5.1&-172! 664--0156. 2 Door Sedan, 4 speed; -n,.: . \AIR-· P'A y _ 8!'1-'fm ~· New white-· ' '62 Ford Wag. Good running PORSCHE _ dlo beater,cexcelleot 'cond. ~ · .. · "'\II. tilt noeri.,.""1. WI' 19'9 CADILLAC PARTS cond. N-paint. $2'15. Call in :. OOL .:rake ....n down, . -TOP DOLLAR . .... ""'· ',.: . FOR QpICK SALE:' .... -::;-;:;;"""'""""'"',...,--will finance priv&te party.· -For clean, used cars SOUTH tOAIT ' . _ & -.64 Cdltom 500 ~ '62 PORSCHE ExceUen~!f ~!!_' AM-FM radio. Rtblt enc. ~~~t :;·~·=·· Private party. 645-1982 '62 Porsche-AM-FM. New tire& & paint. Engine being rebuilt. Should be finilhed June 9. Must &ill! MS:-1982 <>r see at 2089 Harbor, c~. (ZKM588l .. <;an dlr Pb11 alt JOH!!.S!>!'.1 ~·SON C,t.ll LE~ING w-~-Good oond. $4SO ' lD am 540-3100 or 49f.~. LINCOLN MER.ctJRy l'.Xl W. C'.!i Hwy, NB;-M-2112 Radk> * aft 5 pm M5-87'J'O * WANTED l626 Harbor. Blw ., c.>L • • Co :Wbffta ... ' .. . . .. UM\! . ,. 9900 'I'tansmJWon I U pay top dollar .!Dr ;:.our. A'1i' L"'!.•lnt· 9110 All' Cundl.-r 6 VOLKSWAGEN todof. c.li · · • •g II• •.•. • • I H Ung U •t and 'ask h Ralph. st9-3031 f or L••H or S.ll D {OU HAYI And~ 00: nem1 MERCURY Monterey 1967 . Ex~6....,9 .VW6T3-09ll!I.•~ ' mo Cadlllae· eonv. <00 . • $1"". _ . 533.llO Alter s P.M. ~!:,, "'!..'°l:~i!ire"/~ _, mi'a, black wi red leather, ~ HOW About a ~88-·CadWac tires:. Private PartY. make ·Rad.ia, titat.eJ', 4 speed,.whl~ I 1970 C¢ll~ Conv., ~.oOO Sedan ae Ville'!'. loaded, otter. 548-l214t · • wall.tire!!. Likenew.to.wn. mllht•"r· ... ~ ~_w/gold WE HA.YI A CAI orlginalowner,~.OODmUes, (-•-) FOR YOU ho ndltlo 1968 O>lony Pa,rk Wagon s.. '65 PORSCHE, Showroom· er ~· · ---· · s wroom co n, new , . • $1695 . I 1$69 Cadillac. 4 dr OeVille, e we can ~ anyont tires ~ tunelip ' $3900-pt• air, etc. ~ $1395 . '61 . FO.RD Cou11try •"•" .•t•tiM ••· t oll. Vt, •uto111 1ti1 .tr1- 'llii11lo11, f•ctory •ir coMlf. tia11i119, pow•r ••••''"'' r•· •lio, h••tor, w!tlt1.-•ll firot. !UHi 1901 $269$" '' =Fm ~o ~ ~ c. H ' b v w leather inter •• Oul;ltand· • we· carry contracti ' ' tirm. &ii29:4a.: . ~ : --* 644-4966 * ~642--1037;;;;,, ...... • .... ,...",··, ar . 0Ur • ; I ~; F!rebird w/air, oood. : ~la!,.~~ l'tl c;~!)ILLAC c,.~ 1961 Mercury. powor, ::ood '64 FORD XL , ;::, 18111 BEACH BL 8f2M35 $1D5 -deVi(le. 33,000 wl9inal condition, $225. H~rchop. 2 dr. cp•. Vt, •1o1· SUBARU HUm'INGTON iiuCH -.,, 1969 :~~g Benz 4 dr. C•=T auro s•w miles, In imm•c. cond. ,,...,,;··:..· "';"613--.7246=:--'.=-. . ·•ic tr•11•.-ftctory •Ir, . iJ ·· "' "' 646-4202. osk"L-Ton "" _.. C11 2 tops a'~ -" pew•r 1t1•ri119, power wi1t0 i * '70 SUJA~ '63. vw Camper, new eng. • Diesel, ~.15 ~mo, 5.30-6360 ·~ 'I· """' ....... • u,' """" cl9w1, r.clia, h11tOI', whif•4' 11' Here Now • . Ex. cond. $UOO. 19 71 TRANS WORLD .10292 Garden Grove Blvd. '89 <;AD CoJtvert..~ather int, xtru. ~ $7500. 6#-155.1 ... -.11,, who•I cow•rt. IPOI Immediate Delivery Watlact!, Apt. A, C-,M·. AUTO ·LEASING ••• •· ••••• I AMIFM radio, full pwr, ~ .. ;::. =&=w=ke=""~· ==='=II oto1 . ' I • "' MfH ·Capabil"7 543-1993. CAI Bayshore Rlihtleld, Cor. BUSIEST .;....1 t fact air. tilt tel• ,,,., pwr MUSTANG $1195 ' I • 35 MD.es Per Gallorr ~69 VW, xlu't cond. radio; Mer of Coast Hwy & Dover) m ace n door locks etc. 6f4-5859 l e Beautiful Styling' w I w. Must sell tmmed, Newport Be:~c;h", Calif. town._ .The D~Y PILOr 1970 Cadiliil1C•O>!IJ)e de Yllle. • ,i T'81 Drive ~-At $1515/b<ll olr. 67>-1510, 642-ll069 Oa!ailied · ""tion. Save Fully .q.;...,i:. !fu ""'" '6"6 MUSTANG '64 FORD ~~~~!!!!!!!'""!!!!!!!'""'"I tnOneY, time Ii: e.ffort by cash offer only! 714/675-2030 · Kustom Moton '&t 1VW Bug, pearl -Wliite, THE SUN NEVER SETS 00 'Ii 1 fro C:OOVertible )\vQW682l Cultom 4 door.• cyl .. tile• ill 845 B&ker, c.M.., .~ -e~~~~~;-ttres .. DAILY~~WANTADS! ~~' m your ~~d ~~ti~_ 1;f15~ Priced to seU·fhls week i~1:i 5h1;•/•r. ,. • .,; p.t11•~ SUNBEAM . '65 . VW BUG Now Cor~ -New Coro · · 9100 .543-!951alt6.,. H b. $"5 · V W $679 . l:/i · · · · .r Gr .. t ...,,;p;,,,.tion buY.'. .'67 CADILLAC CONY ar our • ~ '67 SUN.EAM Priced 10 ""· <VllB682> 1 """''· 132Xl. ....,... mi.t"i1EACH Bl.:. 842-11351 Arrow Sedan. 4 ~ tranL, $695 LOdK 'EM OVER 0 i , ·~~,..:~~ aholo wrooml'ml HUNTINGTON BEACH '69 PL YMOUTK -· .. · . ·--t-. <·u~~->. Harbour V.W. ·= .... ;-::::" ... · F .. , 111 ''""· r• ....... ,, ,.11.U ·-"~ nu...., TOP CAR l ALL • ......,., ~"'"'" -'6S Fstbk, R/H, p.s., 4-sp, m•tic tr•111., f•cta" alt"' B J · · · • 63 nu brakes, ohrume Miro , h < • • ' SEDAN De Ville perfect I pow•r steerl119, r•.,iO, ••t.: • .., 19lllHUNTJNBEKatGTOBNL.B. EAWMlSCll WITH ROY CARVER'S • cond: -lirm $1000. 6'1S-51Z7 rlmlo-• Xll:lt con d, $995. ,,, whit. w.111, tiRtod_ ti•••• ,.,. "' ~-5.16-·;c·~ms=-~~~--ll IXMG 1601 . . 1 Sports C•r c=:e•r 4 • or __...ui.>. . ~ 2833 Hl'bor Blvd., C.>L • '62 VW, REBLT ENG, '65 Mustang VS 2119, auto, $1949 •· 540-44'1 GOOD CONO. 18J(), BES!' CAtcllARO Riff*~~';" .:rs·. • Sports Cer Cent•r 2833 Harbor. C<>sta Mesa 540 091 : !TIOfYIOITIAI Mork,llW- HI Lux Plckvpl _ L•nd CrulMrl w.,.... DEAN LEWIS 19Gr. Harbor, c.M:. 646:93tll OFFER. 491-8635. '67 VW BUG Extra.sharp, \\'hite waU.dres, radio, heater. 4 speed. (ULJ. 2811) $1299 Harbour V .w .. · l87l1 BEACH BL., 842-4435 HUNTINGTON BEACH '69 VW. Blue w/wh. Int., radial-tire1 &. extras, tl.750. 67">-5229. '64 VW Bug, Excel' cond. inside I: ~ut. $795. Call 549-41ll. '65 VW, xln't cond ln. & out. Many xtru. $900 or best offer. 646-1493. · BIIL MA'.XEY ... vw. _aunroo1. oean, ...... r::,.,,,.,,,,,.,.,;,· ...,.,. ,..., clutch $875. Must Sell! !r!Olv!orrlAI .:;,:;.,., Gh io. gd ~. 1969 PONTIAC GTO 2 DOOr ~ Beautlful verdon> green. Only· 12,000 o · miles on this exceptional car equipped th the popular 4 apeed tl'l,rwni&s)on, power _st~ l;lmVer dlac bralm._radto. htater. !784.AF'X) Tbe Performance· enthual&sta 1pedal at only 1 • • $2995 1961 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2 Door hardtop. Original gold with black vinyl top. Equipped '\'Ith VS engil'ie, factory air con· dlt!oning power steering & brakes, tad10. heater, Only 40,000 miles on this one <>Wner car. (YCN· 842) Vacation ready at <>nly $1977 1967 FORD FAIRLANE 2 Door hardtop. SparkJlng iv<>ry finish ""ilh con· tra8ting black vinyl toi;i and black interior •. EQulj>ped \\'Ith factory all' conditionin,, pov.·er steering &. bi;a,l:t~s,__radlo, heater. ~ 1d.;:al car for the young family (TTM478) At <>nly ' '65 C"'vy II . O,i.DSMOBILE 2'lloor-~. l'b':,{650 full , • -.-.: -' price or 4ll1le fafelP; CJlr In '67 CHEV, , f111p•I• ·~.rdtip. 'ff, •• ~· in~ttc tr~i., f~Ctiry .;,: po~~; 1t1t'rl!lj, r1d~o, hot • ar, ti~tM 9)111. ·flVW 402t, $1769 ~ trade. (NO&M6) Clill 5fMQ52 '6l 0~ V-8 4 dr Holiday or 494-9113 aft lD AM. metallic blue w/vinyf top, ii4Cbev)'·Ss-eonvt. Impala_ w/w pg/pb auto. r/h $850 Good rubber, k>w miJCI, .~642-;;.:l;l75::·c..,.-~-~-11 reo:>nd . motor. s 650, lil67 88 sedan, low mileage, ---,-.-----ill 86-1691., eves 546-5348 clean. good l'Wl11in& order, ·'6t ·FORD '59 Et c&mJno $100. ot best .!1!0:;:-;;:·;.:-:;:..7;;:491::.:,,....,.-~~ 11 ·· ... '. ••-,59. Bul-k. •ff u· 'it. Cutl.ua, all ex-xln't 6al1iil• '500 4 iioor fiff4, n-.. " .,..., top., Vt, •ulo1111ffc! · tr.-Mf is. 955 . W. isth, 0 t f conii •. Wbale price:. Call pow•r lte•ri111, r~dlo, M;f, 'Monrovja, CM. 962-28'U'aft 5. •'• whit.~•lf1:· fUo6'206J MUSf·SAC1UFICE '65Chevy '65 442, < spd, xln't ...... ·$·1497 I Impala ·ss oonv., am/fm Must see to apprtc. JiJJo, rad!<>. Best ofr. &fb..1~. 56-1240. • · • '69 Caprtce, run power, air, loaded! $3400. * 548--5491 * 1966 IMP ALA 396 super Sport, Maroon with black interio_.r.· ~~ e '62 CHEV. VAN e Good ¢0nd. thruoul $550 962-3923 After & PM '63 White Nova 11 rrtn wgn, like new, lo tni'a, $585. '61 Dynamic 88 wlair . .Has had tender loving care. $. 494-!H66 or 837~1753 ;~ PLYMOUTH Jff9 . ROAD RUNNER • dr., iLT, Extru !Jl<j'fdinj radio ' Ii: heater, 4 $ec~ 4 Brt. carb. SHARP! Private party. 546-2932. '67 FORD Cvllorn 2 door ied•11. "j •i.rtomttic lr•ni., • f1cto •ir,-pOwor ile~ri119, r1dlo h••lor. 1~v_w ·41s1. $1389 '+7 FORD ange Coum;y'a cn11 author-·==------'St-190 sedafl. 1 owner, very tud dealer. ood -· 18111 BEACH.BLVD. MU!t , .. , _ l<i50. PEACE. Hunt, lkach. •147-&55J can 675-5605 eves. I mt N. of eout "'"·on 84* '63 . VW Bug $600 $1777 1969 GRANO PRIX ~ . CJtRYSLER '68 Road Runner, xlnt cone!. L<> miles, aut, xtias. Sac! Best <>ffer 96S..fiOl2 G•l•xi• !iOO 2 door htr top. Vt, •ulom1tic tr•11 pow•• •*••rin9, · r•diit, h•• 1r:fTFl 4-lll . ' SALES-SERVJCE-P ARTS g C011u., tM'IV ~. 3100 W. c.o&at Hwy. shocks $850. 67J..Sl08 Newport Beach '60 i\lERCEDES Benz 'J!lO 642-.9f05 ~176' SL 2 t Authoriud Ferrari Dealer ' ops. amlfm, xlnt cond. $1950, 494-1390 , ENGLISH FORD ALL NEW ENGLISH FORDS NOW JN STOCK DRASTICAIJ...Y REDUCED TO CLEAR LARGE! SELEC'TJON TO OtOOSE FROM Theodor• ROBINS FORD MG ...........,.. (.I& THINK ~ .. ~~" ."FRIEDLANDER" lint Sl!ACM CMWY, ,,, Or Bst OUer. Great '68 Toyota Corona 2 Dr. Grad. gift. 84Z..71.M. Hrdtp. R/H, Auto trans. 1---"'1°'964""vw=---S1350 or oHer. Days 64S-0991 or eves, 673-6&19. $600. •""4088 * '69 Corona. hrdtp, auto trans, lrg air, anl/fm, vln. tp. S1400. Pvt ply. ~2055. TRIUMPH '68 TR 250 Real sharp. AM/FM radio. (Ser. # 40221) $2395 B.J. '68 Light blue bug. r/h black interior, crtginal owner. • $1495. 962--1622 169 vw •I< $16&:) * &42-&m '66.BUG Sunroof, xlnl cond. Priced !Dr "quicl< ..U pooo. 96W!00. ' ''61 VW 'IMMACULATE!. $595 - 2 Door hardtop. Every conceivable extra <>n 1hl." Cllstom ordered SJ model with the CW1tom_ral\y &rftn. exterior and black vinyl top with black ~!l!ne leather intericr. Originally sold for over '6300. (ZVD870) Now <>nlY $4295 1966 FORD MUSTANG _ Radio, heater, automatic, power' steetlnii, ·fac· tOry air conditioning, light'yl!Uow with Off-white interior. Approximately 40,000 1 <>Wner' miles. (RBJ331) ..; $1777 ... . ' 1968 VOLKSWAGEN' ·• ·---'---~-'63 Ct\ry&ler. Ml9 Coovt. Good ®nd $300. * 557--6859, * 1963 9 Pa~. s~tiqri \vagon. Good ;I.ires & running cond. $350 962-7497 COMET ./ 1964 Comet, 'good cobdltion. $52S ** air com.; CORYAIR. --'-.~:.:...- '49 PLYMOunt · Good lh't!s, bait, 11.uns. Best Oller. !NS--9583 PONTIAC '69 Grand Prix t 'ac •. 11.:r, landau top, radio, heater, factory ~aqty -""'~i'"1'450) 1970 Demonstr B.J. I SALE : 28l3 Harbor, Costa l\Iesa All 1t7'' Diitftautra ... ·-1 ...... , ............. 3)$;) Harbor Blvd. u---' cOSta--YCii --&12-0010 NEW-USED-SHV. ............... c.n, Ft<d 645-1669' Sports Ctr Center 2833 HiFtiOr. eostaMea '67-VW, 90 ·HP apeciaf~ 540-4491 , . radlal tires, many xtraa.' -Radio, heat.er, automatlc...mnsmlsSi~ 1 m1'Mr, light beige with contrastfni~lirOWn inler!Or. • (WIE924) L<>wer your ruel blll at just Sports CJ r Center 1 I -==~-~c:.;.'=-~c,.-11 ~· ft • ..,.... • • '63 <ln'vair. Monza, Wpeed. 1968 LE MAN __ ~!_!~. u..'...:..0 ntlln. ,..._ 1'71 •· ' ..r.Jh,..reblillt·engtne;·new-~ar. ~POwer -~•: ·air"~;;;.. ,. ... , hH thT rr.c end ........, -..-.... ..... li<I "--· • mll• ct.Ck-up-·.""· r · .~ )~ ... ~~:-~, :: 7~:_~>• ,.~~:~ =--~ ''".~~i~ '62 Triumph Bonneville 650 ,55 VW, Clean CC. Extra chrome, M,ech Hui n • ..i ,._ FIAT • MG $!300. 546--8372 ·-·--·----Sales, Scrvic.J, Parta Immediate Delivery, All Modelt good. f.1ust sell this wlmCI. _, or .......... 01.1.,. 646-8187 Sat only !-:=Good==· ,;'""";;;:;54&'0!!:=' ='='==- '67 Spitfire tcl!K Ill VOLYO --- ! '68 850 Spider 4 speed. radio, heater. (X'IJ{. ! .669) specia1 pr!~ for a specl&l l---.:..;----'- $1499 car, !\VXS834l Best StOck ot VOLVOS~·~ J1rtuport Jl111port :; B.J. '100 w 0out H N 5996 "' °"""' Counly. ._ • . "'" ·"' BJ D"'""N LEWIS. .._....rts C•r Cen ter 642-9400 tl40-1'1G4 • • . . 511' 2833 Harbor, C'..osla ~lrsa Authortted MG Deall!r Spo rt1 Car Center 1968 Harbor. C.M. MIMl3DS S«M49l '!iO MGA Coupe Rdstr, Ex. 28.33 Harbor, Costa Mesa '64 FIAT UOOD. 45,000 ml. mt'Ch, concl, Nu tires. '-lufil '""""'"'~540-44~~91'_ __ .1 ~Alll::;;;l'-'-:;;::;,•"'.'C;:.l;;:o;:.11;;1;:.c1:"'"1M"=li':S 30rofgal.Exc.11.hapc.i\lo\'· Scll.After7~·eekdays,any. '67 Trium h GT6 l~ OMvrolet ?'1~~:" · bg! Quick Sale! $38,;. timr \\1?Cke:nd, 536-4938 -R P . GOod unrestored cond • 6"-G1 __ eal racy pctn, (WRC'lOSJ Call~ aft 6 pm. ~ . '17 , J'ial ISO Coupe. New h<!GB $2195 · • ....., rtblt·-Vefy clean. ---·I B.J, Aulol Wonled · -'7111 $1577 . 1967 JEEP WAGONEER 327 VS. •4 whe('J drlv~1 locking hubs, atf Original aqua exterior. -Exceptional -car~ SPOrtaman's de- light-family practicality. (1'NR636) $2877 """ ""' ., ow ... .. .,. ""''" """ ••• '"' c.t. c .... O,._, LIM1111o 1tn --...11 .. •ro.. -... -· '• ..,,,.. air. 673'10!9. '68 MGB Roadster Spo rts Car Contor i '6f 150 Spid~ Radio, h1.•ater, t speed Crans. 2833 Harbor. Co~la Mesa 4 ....i """-. ndlo, lteatcl. (.XKVZ14l ;;;;-=~54::0.;.:44:;:9:.:_I_· -~ t Eittra t:Urp. USD105J $l996 · "M Triumph exl. cond. wn : $17" · B.J, wheels, roll-bar. Make· of· •~••." ~~--1-~ '''" &12-83.15, •r>--0051. .,. Sport• Car Center WE PAl ~--;: ~-RO Y CARVER FOR YOllR '.l!il ii ROLL S -ROYCE . COl\INEl,L CHEYl~ •. ~ C•r c.nter '833 l larbot', Col!ta Mee& IT'S \\'ONDERFUL the 54CM491 . mnny buy5 In applle'.ncn : _ llarbot, 0.ta Mta -• ~·011 fi nd in the Oaultied ~ • _;_ _ __;S40!!!~4!ff~l~•:.__ DtaJ,6fU578 fQr RESULTS Adl. Cheek thtin nowr . - \ ---· Ooota-MC>ml • I ~ 2925 HARBOR BOULEVARD, COSTA MES '65 Corva.ir convt New ptjnt: '6(1.:GTO 4 speed, .trlp\o\T, ' lfl trans, tirea. battery, 4 Jpd. Wbt I blk. AM J FM, mags, All Mod1l1 To ;; $425. 613--1495. good tires. 540-1554 Choose· From ~' '60 COtvair .wt.rebuilt '62 · '63 Tempest, :klr, VB, auto, engine._ auto trans. ... S250. R/H, new tires. 962--0634 ~ • $450 * * 673-7291 MMt c.,. Pullr jffl .... ,,,. ; l DODGE '61 Dodp Dart, R/H, auto trans, p.s., & cyl:ee.t ouer. !C-1111 '68 F irebird Convert Low. mileage $1995 or best ob:er . ~fore 1l <>r aft 6. 5'8-2l.81 '64 Hdtp Tempest Le Mans, bucket seats, console, 6 eyl. Xlnt COIXI. ~7469 e T·llrdt e TorfMI e MUlt•ftt• .......... e FoN LTD't -_..:C;_O:..UGA_R __ '65 Ponttao 1.e · Mon~ VS. DUNTO --. .., Extru. 1'150. ""' ply ' '69 COUGAR. pwr .stetr, dla ~ * 83.1--0182 . * . brikes, )>Olyglus ttrea, xlnt -J =rra -· 113-1103 ."'.'.'"'·-RA~M:.:.BLE;.:.;.::.:.R;,...·_·-_·ll .•• fORD ,1: '6.l Rambler Amer, ait new FALCON .. .,..t .,.. DI""" all l· • • -SPM, S3&-037I 2240 S. ~ '61 Falcon ' Or. Wagon, MW ............... lliO. 3ci8 E. T·BllD s l8lh St, CM. ANYA A_~ NO matt~ wb.at it Is. )'OU '56 T;BlRO, xlnt com. New oah sell It with ••DAILY pa;nt & Interior, AJk1na ' 546-7076", PILOT WANT AO! 64!1-<i6111 $1800, ~ .c ~· • 17