HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-05-17 - Orange Coast Pilot,
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Looh Oiiers New ·sketch
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Oi HowardH11;ghes Today
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DAILY PILOT
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MONDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 17, '1971
YOL. ~ HO. 111, 4 S!CTIONS, Jt PAtl:S
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' Viejo Girl Reeeives Cornea
\IP'ITtltJM19
This Jass was one of the main
attractions on the first turn at
the Indianapolis· Motor Speed·
way during qualification runs
Sunday. She's enou·gh lo keep
anyone's· engine racing. But
watch out for·tbose curv~ One lamilY'• '°""'" gave 1111teful hope to.a Mi.Woo ViejO muple whose li!Ue
dlughler received a cornea and a chance
to live yrith Ddnnal 'yesigbt Saturday in
a delicate but sw\ft transplant orieration.
Just ooe cornea was needed for Becky
Jlogers, 4. so a ham radio operators
group broadcast the news throughout
North America, in an effort to locate
aome other ch.ild with failing sight.
The leCOlld oomu -donated by tbe
parents of.·• child vobo died·Saturday in
Orange c.oa.nty of a 'heart disease -was
flown to Fairbanks, Alaska, Saturday
night for immediate sw-gery.
C.Omeal tran!plants such as tl)at
performed on t\Je daughter or Mr. and
Mrs. \Vllliam Rogers, of 25842 Jamon
Lane, ~fission Viejo, are not always sue-
cesslul but !he outlook ts gOQd.
The dell~ _eye·~ must be mnov·
ed from the bOdY ot. the donor withia fwr
hours of death but can be preserved (or
~ome Ume lf no recipient is immedliteJy
available.
A team of surgeons Jed by Dr. Thomas
Anderson, head of the -Orange County,
Eye Bank al Santa Ana Com munity
Hospital completed the delicate tw~hour
~ IMlloro ll«:k)''• l1tller kn"•·
abOutlL
lie w11 eamptri1 In the mounl>ln! atrd
<'OUJd 1111 be llOlifled tbat. the thre!-mOO!h
htmt for 1 tult:able eomea donor -the
flr&t stnCe the eye bank waa organlzcd -
bad come to an end.
Since the cornea of a ~lld about the
1ame age wu required for Becky's
Rail Signalmen ·
Initiate Strike
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WASHINGTON (UP I) Railroad
signalmen went on strike today, shutting
down the naLion's rail lines, and Presi-
de11t Nixon proposed emergency leglsta.
lion to force the men back to work until
1t least July 1. ,
\Vithin five hours arter the 13,000-man
Brotherhood of Railway Signalmen went
on strike. effectively shutling down all
rail passenger and freight traffic, the
Florida White llousc announced Nil:on's
plan to Congress, calling for a new round
of negotiations.
Urging passage of a joint resoluUon to
halt the shutdown that started at 6:01
a.m. local time, Nixon ~id a conti nued
national alrike "would cause great
hardship to all Americans jnd strike a
aeriom·btow at the nation's eymomy:''
nit is essentiaJ that our railroads con.
tinue to operate." the President said.
The President reaimmended that
Congress promptly enact legislation to
extend the present contract negoUation
between the s.ignalme.11, unioo and the
Coast
Weather
Those Santa Ana winds v.'ill be
with us again , warming ·things up
along the coast. but especially in-
land. Temperature range -from
the' middle 60s to nearly 80 degrees.
INSIDE· TODA l'
What ltappc111 to good sa mari-
taJUr Theu lote boot races. But
two unfortvnate 1fCCl1tsn1en were •
mighly glad to 1ee tht" Cruta
Mesa drivtr ptd! out ond .give.
them a hand. Ste Boating, Page
28.
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MPtln """ N•llenl N"" 4-f Or111t1 C.uftlf t Sflwll P'trltr 11
S-tt '1·U llttk M1rlltl• It-It
tllevhlMI u Tl1t•l9•~ lf-Jl
Wttllltr 4 w .... eft'I NtWI tl<U
WM'lf New!o 4 ...
railroads until JUiy I.
He further asked Labor Secretary
James D. Hodgson to follow the situation
closely as it developed · and to continue
assisting both sides of the dispute. He
said Uiat if no se.U~ment had been reach·
ed by June 21, Jt &hould be reported t.o
him and Congress.
The signalmen, who maintain and in-
stall signal equipment. struck when the
railroads refll®d to. meet their demands
for wage increases almost double what
other rail unions have accepted.
Key members of Congress pledged Jn
advance to give prompt consideration to
Nixon's request. Veteran observers said
that in spite of traditional reluctance of •
labor emergency, Congress would likely • ., ' ~ .,.;•• I 1awma~er,_1. ~cLJe&ifilation duri~g a -· B•ighe--S•·e*--...·ed
approve the Nixon request -or d H h · 1952 h t I f ) · d 'ct d · th · something similar to stop the strike _ tl1ystery man H~war ug es (1n . p o o. e t JS ep1 e tn . 1s
some time today sketch by Cynthia Blythe Schemmer 1n new issue of Look 1t1agaz1ne.
House Republi~. Leider Gerald R. ~oking about _beard he .has .~orn ~ince 19~6, Hugh~s. now 65 , is quoted
Ford called for fast actioiT on emergency 1n the magazine as saying They re catchmg up with me. I started the
legislation, but 1aid the strike never style."
should have been allowed to happen. ----------------------------
Ford was Werring to legislation pro-
pcrsed some time ago ft deal with such
disputes, and in his message Nixon chld·
ed Congress for failure to act on his
"emergency public !ervice protection
act."
He said that would put an end to the
"chaotic nature of collective bargaining"
in the traftsportation industry.
\Vhite House Press SecPet11ry 'Ronald L.
Ziegler' sail "we feel this piecemeal
method is no way lo run a ra ilroad."
Some 600,000 other rail workers
honored the picket lines of the signalmen,
who com prise only about Z percent of the
rail work force.
\Vith a few excepUons. all train aervice
was idled across the naUon'Trom Boston
·to San Diego. ~
The peo~e most immediately affected
were. an .estimatetl•,ooo n.llroad ·com-
muters.
Traffic jams developed In cities that
normally depend heav11y on commuter
trains, mainly New York and Chicago.
Manufacturing p 1 a n t 11 Immediately
began Slowdowns, One Of the Jir!Jt Wal
lhe Cltrysler stamping plant a t ,
Tlnesburg, Ohio. which said It would
work half shirts today and would lay off
(See llAilll, Pac• %)
Laguna Policeman Tracl{s
Suspects by Land and Sea
A narcotics case needs evidence and
Laguna Beach police officer Tom Reeder
proved Friday night he v.·as ready tA:l go
to eictraordinary lengths to •·get the
goods" on a· suspect be and detective Sgt.
Neil Purcell had juSt arrested:
According to the officers. they saw
suspect Anthony Robert Burna, 21, meet
with a couple of young people ·at Cleo
sfreet' and walk with tbem to the Anita
i!Tttt·Beach at approx!mai.Jy 8:45 p.m.
Spotting a brown paper bag in Burns'
bond, Purcell identified himself as 1
police orrlcer and inquired as to the con·
• tents of the bag.
Bums allegedly fled toward, the ocean,
plunged in' and emptied the bag, which
police sa id appear"ed to conta1n several
plastic bags of the type used in marl·
Juana sales.
As Burns swam back to shore, where
·J
he was promptly taken Into custody by
Purcell , Reeder swam oceanward and
succeeded in retrieving one of the plastic
bags, which police say contained mari·
Juana. 1lie r e s t of the evidence, ae-
corditlg to Reeder, sank beneath the
wavea.
Bunu was booked on• suspicicin of
)ossesslon of marijuana for sale and
destrOying evidence. •
' Retdritlng to the area a couple ol hours
later, Reeder , having changed to dry
clothes, tht twtl invesUgalors set up
muvelllance in the Hacienda Motel, L289
S. C.oast Highway, where they sniffed (IUl
pl'! alleged marijuana party and arrested
;t.iiwrence Dugene 0,alph, 22, Elaine
Mnrle Jindra, 19, Edward Lee Barnett, 29
and Cblleen Mnrle Campbell, 21, all of
whom said they lived at lhe motel.
11?adu1lly failipg sight, Qie !i\!111 waa com·
pllcated.
Eye"OankCrganizers did not ltklitify
the 7-year-old child whose corneas wert
donated by her parents as a
humanitarian gesture in the hope Becky
and some· Other <:hlJd can have normal
sight.
Only her right eye was Involved, flut
both will be taped for several days and
the operation cannot be pronounced a
success for several months to come.
Tbe surgery came barely in time for
tile youngster chosen the new Orengo
County Eye Bank's 1971 Poster Girl,
because within 30 days htr visual
deterioration would have been too com-
plete for a chance to reverse It.
Her vision is expected to be clear and
almost that of a normal f.-year-old within
six weeks, according to h o ~ p i t a I
spokesmen.
The search for some other cornea rec i-
pient was pressed Saturday by the Eye
Emergency Ne twork Amateur RadiG
Group, which gives daily radio broad·
casts on needs and availa bility.
Railroad Strike
Sends Mar}£et
Into Big Tu1nbl e
NE W YORK I AP) -Sloe.¥: market
prices fell sharply today· In apparent
reaction to the nationwide rail strike and
growing speculalioo of higher interest
rates.
Al 10:30 a.n1. PD'l' the Dow Jone:ic
average of 30 industri al stocks was down
13.56 points to 922.50, and decUning issues
Jed alvances on the New York Stock Ex·
change by nearly 5 to 1.
Analysts al lr.ibuted the drop in prices
to the nationwide ra il strike, which began
today, arid to inveslor speculalion that in·
terest rates would rise. Tight money
could impede the recovery of the
economy and consequently, is considered
a market deprcss11nt. they explained.
F,inancia l observers say th e speculation
was tritgcred by· rapid increases in short
term interest rates. last week.
• Siskiyou Officials
Hit Genuine Paydirt
YREKA IAP) -lf Siskiyou County of·
ficlals ever dig 1 basement under the
courthouse, they probably won't give the
dirt away. They've found it's paydlrt.
County Supcrvisors'George Wacker and
Emesl Hayden recently dug out a sample
of the dirt and gravel under the building
to see jf It could be easily removed to
open up a new storage a~ea.
Wacker, a mlner ·ln his youth, pllnn'cd
tht Sam)>\e and fO\Jn'd "qul'le a strh16 of
gold," Jn, lt. He estimates there Is about
$1,00fWorth bcneaUf lhe bulldlng.
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·James Hoffa ..
Plea Spurned ·
By To1) Court
WASHINGTON (UPI) -By a narrow,
M vote, the Supreme Court refused to-
day to strike down state hit-and-run Jaws
that require a driver in an. accident to
stop and give bis name and address.
Tbe vote overturned a California:
Supreme Court ruling against a slate law
that is typical of those across the coun-
try. The state court held that the re-
quirement violated the Constitutional
safeguard against self-!ncriminatlon if
the infonnation was used for criminal
prosecution.
In other actions. the court:
-Refused again to hear an ~ppeal by
lrnprisoned Teamster boss J ames R. Ho£.
fa who is seeking releas'? from federal
prison at Lewisburg, Pa. The action
rebuffed his claim that federal wiretal>"
ping activity involving two Las Vegas
gambling casinos and special FM fre.
quencies in Detroit tainte.d the
government's conv iction of him on jul")'.
tampering charges.
• -In a :;..t·turnabout, refused to rule on
a Charleston. W. Va ., case. in which
residents of a ghetto area clai med con-.
slrucliOn of a federal highway was ii·
legally displacing them from lhei(
homes.
-Let stand a Jo.,.,·er court ruling from
Chicago that upheld the rig~t of
newspapers lo refuse advertisements
they deem unacceptable.
-Agreed to decide next term whether
a law forbidding imports of obscene
materials may be applied if the material
is solely for private use.
-Rejected a double effort to test the
constitutionality of Minnesota's abortion
statute.
The Cali fornia la\V which was challeng~
{See COURT, Page Z)
Alioy, Tliere,
For1n er Mate
A Newport Beach man was ar-
rested Saturday on charges of
stealing a cannon from his ex-wife.
Michael Lawrence Carden, 31, of
814 W. Ocean Front, was arrested
by · Newport Beach pcillce at hit
home Saturday after his lormer
wife. 111ary Linda Cs.rden alleged
he took the line throwing cannon
from he r home.
The firearm in question was
described as being about three feet
In Jedgth, nillunted'on metal Wheels
and 'Is used on boots for heaving"
lincf'111ng' distances.
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~ DAILY PILOT s Monday, May 111, 19i'l
Strili e Effects Told V.S. Dollar
Southern Pacif-ic' Trains S top a t 6 a.m. -Flow Posts
From Wire Sen1et1
About 11,000 commuters who ride
SOutbern Pacific trains from San Jose
and peninsula points north of there into
San Francisco had to find another way to
get to work today because of a national
strike of railroad signalmen. •
Two trains, at 5:05 a.m. and 5:41 a.m ..
left san Jose at the start of the morning
commuter runs, but pickets showed up
shortly after 6 a.m. and no crew reported
for the 6:14 a.m.
Southern Pacific operates 22 CQmmuter
trains daily, transpdrthlg an average of
11 ,500 passengers.
A Greyhound Bus spokesman said ad-
ditional b~s were added to morning
·commuter runs "where needed and
where appropriate." He said in past
Southern Pacific commuter train stop-
pages Greyhound found that "people go
to their cars instead of the bus."
A Southern Pacific spokesman said any
prolonged strike wouJd hamper move· •
ment of perishable produce now being
harve.isted in agricultural areas served Ly
the carrier.
In Detroit, auto industry spokesmen
said plants dependent on rail shipment of
parts might fa'ce quick shutdowns, with
some workers being laid off if the strlke
went on for only 24 hours. Production
From Page 1
RAILS ~ ..
could hali oompletely H the raU walkout
continued five days, they said.
Similar warnings were heard In the
steel industry, it.self threatened with a
strike later this year if no agreement is
reached on a new contrat"t. A U.S. Steel
Co. spokesman in Pittsburgh said coal
sblpment.s were stopped, and those
facillties not stocked with raw materials
could be halted in 48 hours.
In Washington, the Interstate Com-
merce Commission said it waa authoriz-
ing field offices to grant emergency
licenses to 20,(MXI bus and truck lines
under Its· jurisdiction to permit them to
carry goods and passengers hung up by
the rall strike.
All major coal mines in West Virginia
would be shut down by Wednesday, a coal
association spokesman there said : no rail
cars to ship the coal. and few could
stockpile or ship by barge:
Most immediate effects were· felt by
the unhappy CQmmuters in major
metropoHtan areas in the eastern half of
the nation, New York, Phildelphia and
Chicago.
In one outlying subway station on Ulng
Island, it took 20·mlnutes to buy a token
that would operate a turnstile, and
another 20 minutes to walk 30 feet and
down a flight of stairs to a platform. the
station took an extra load of motorist.!
trying to avoid .the crawl by car into
already jammed Manhattan streets.
In the Chicago area, a state police
dispatcher said reporti at nlldqlorolng
Indicated slow traffic on Chicago ex·
pressways -and getting slower. Extra
parking lots were opened, aqd rapidly
fllled.
Also at <llicago, a major rail hub,
Postmaster Henry W. McGee announced
an embargo on shipment of 2nd, 3rd and
4th class mail to 30 s~t.es. He at first
listed 35, then lowered the figure. McGee
said tbe embargo was invoked because
mail delivfry from Chicago to t.bos•
states normally was carried by "piggy·
back" trucks on the rallroads.
Elderly Aid Hike Near?
Sharp Gain
From Wirt Services
WASHINGTON -The now o l
American dollars overseas reached tidal
wave proportions in the first three
months of thi.5 year, with a deficit of $5.5
billion in the balance of payment!, the
Nixon Administration reported today.
That was the tiighest one-quarter
defic1t on rerord.
The official reserve transaction basis
represents all .tranaact.ions with foreign
governments aiid foreign central banks.
The deficit on the basis deteriorated by
$2.2 billion from the last three months of
1970, 'the department said.
Excluding allocations of special draw-
ing right.. or "paper gold," the new in-
ternational reserve asset, the deficit was
even worse, reaching almost $5.7 billion.
The department said the payments
deficit oo the liquidity basis was $3 billion
in the first quarter, up $2.5 billion from
the last quarter. The llqujdity basis
measures all transactions with foreign
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tbe House year following a legislative increase. So, CQuntries.
Ways and ~feans Committee today ap-adoption of the five percent raise in 1972 Secretary of the Treasury John B. Con-
proved a five percent across the board would mean that no additional automatic 11ailY gave the figures to the Senate
increase in Social Security benefits to be raise could go into effet before 1974. Finance Committee at a trade hearing .
effective June 1, um. The increase was estimated to provide and said, "Clearly; that level of deficlt·i~"
The benefit increase was inserted at an additional $2.1 billion for Social not sustainable."
the last minute in the committee's big Security recipients in tbe first full year of -The adverse report on balance of
social security welfare bill, which was it.! operation. payment& came on the heels o( an in-
then approved wit.hoot further change. There would be no immediate increase ternatlona1 monetary crisis over the
all it.! 4,2:00 worke:n: if the strike con-The House is expected to act on the in taxes above the increas'.es that already dollar, in which Germany decided to float
tinued into Tuesday. measure early next month. had been written into the bill, and which it.! currency, untying it from the dol~r.
Refiecting presidential CQDCern about The new Jncrease would come in ad-would mean a maximum additional tax and other countr'ies decided to revalue
the economic effects of the strike, Ziegler dition to a IO percent lncrease effective next }'ear of $145 on a worker earning their currencies ..
said, "past experience has shown such a this year and a 15 percent increase that $10,200 or more and on bis employer. The two main causes of the crisis were
•~---$Uike....ba!_sn_extreme.ly_detrimental-.ef-____went mto_e(ffillast year. _____ The CQmmittee_voted 13 to 12 for tbeiih_ the United Stat_e_s' adver~ balance of -
feet on the ecotiomy and welfare of The committee also retained in the bill crease. reversing tbe margin by which an payment! position and a huge 110w of
American citizens." a proyision for automatic increases in increase was defeated last Thursda~short term -capital to Europe where in·
Jn his statement, Nixon said that he~ benefits when the cost of Jiving rises Rep. Joe Waggoner, {0-La.)., who y,o(ed Jerest rates were higher·-an(f attracted
had hoped for a "voluntary negotiated three percent or more in a year against an increase last week, reversed ~ngs dollars. 1 settlement or this disp,ute: however, this However, the meas"ure provides that tJo his position and move d for The Commerce Department said as the
was not forthcoming. ' automatic incrt:aie can take place in tbe reconsideration. American economy began to expand. and
DAIL V Pt LOT ll•lt '""-"' ANGEL OUTFIELOER TONY CONIGLIARO SIGNS BASEBALL FOR YOUNG FANS
Youngsters Include Ricfiard Duesing, Bobby West and Contest Wi nner Murray Feldman {from left)
OUN.I COA"liT
DAILY PILOT PilotBaseball Winners "--
interest rates declined, the outflow ol
dollars increased.
The official reserve tr a n s a c t i o n 1
~alance is a broad .indicator of exchange
m.arket pressures on the dollar. the
department said.
Jn the first three months of the year.
the United Sta tes' merchandise tpade
surpJus increased by .$140 million,
reaching $290 million on a seasonally ad·
justed basis. nie flow of merchandise
trade bad actuaTly shown a deficit in the
last three months or 1970.
·Police ~t
Hilntington Man
In Assault Ca se
A Huntingkln Beach man was arrested
on assault charg~ Sunday night after
police alleged he fired a pistol in his
home and refusf!d officers' orders to sur·
tender. Huntington Beach police identified the
suspect as: Gordon Lamar Gaskins, Sr., of
18342 Pammy Lane.
Officer• allege "Gaski.ll! fired four shots
from his revolver. No one was injured.
According tO the police account.
Gaskin'• 22-year-old-son, Gordon Jr., told
officers that his father had been drinking
and had been m'aking threats al him. his
mother Madeleine, and his sister Sall y.
At one point the older Gaskins alleged ly
fired at the walls and at Mrs. Gaskins.
striking a beer can sitting on en
armchair, according to officers.
Police 11urrounded the Gaskin home
shortly after Ule alliged incident but
Gaskln refused to come out with his
hand11 up. according to police reports .
Two officers who had eQtered the house
from the rear by climbing over a fente
then surprised Gaskin and ·ordered him to
drop his weapon, potict said.
El.SEN.HOWER· USPl
U"IT11..-.
New 011d Extra
As post offices opened this morning. the ne\v ~lass 6tamp -with .a
likeness of President Eisenhower -sold for eight cents and the air
mail 6tamp -with the silhouette of the plane -is worth 11 cents.
(Story, Page 5).
Gusty Wind s, Sunny Skie s
Seen Through Tu es day
A Santa Ana wind condition, unsual for
th.is time of year, will continue through
Tuesday bringing sunny skies, warmer
temperatures and gusty winds to ' the
Orange Coast.
The high for today and Tuesday will be
in the 80s, the National Weather Service
predicts with lows along the coast in the
50s overnight.
Gusty winds will be localized below the
coastal canyons today and Tuesday with
occasional gusts expected up to 35 miles
an hour.
--Weatfiermen describe the ru'ih pressure
system over Nevada and Northern
S. Viet Troops
Launch A Shau
Drive at Last
SAIGON (UPI) -\Vith U.S. air power
attacking ahead of them the South Viet·
namese army today began its long-
delayed drive into the A Shau valley, On·
ly· small skirmishes were reported but
the C<>mmander of the o p e r a ti o n
predict(!d the Communists "intend to
stand and fight."
Hae Bao ( Blatk Panther) shock troops
assaulted from U.S. 10tst airborne
division helicopters ahead of the main
force of several~ thousand troops of the
1st South Vietnamese infantry division.
Their missio111 was to knock out anti·
aircraft guns before the main push.
Helicopters ferry ing the Vietnamese
troops ran into such heavy ground fire.
they had to land the !Infantrymen a mile
away from the planned landing zone. Two
formations of B52s hit Communist troop
cconcentralions just ahead of the assault
force. .
The A Shau Valley runs 35 miles from
the Hue area toward the border of Laos.
It has become a major Communist sup-
ply area since !he last allied operation in-
to the v:illey a year or so ago.
Brig. Gen. Vu Van Giai, commander of
the 33-day-old operation. said al leasl
eight CommuniSts were killed in the first
skirmishing and that the J:overnment suf·
fcred "light" losses. "I think the North
Vietnamese intend to stay and fight
here." he told UPI correspondent Ste\\'art
Kellerman.
American ground troops have not ~t
gone dnto the valley in strength but U.S.
paratroopers today reported finding a
huge Communist base camp in lhe
jungles lhree miles northeast of the
valley. The area CQUld accommodate a
total of 5.800 men, U.S. Army spokesmen
said.
California as being "a late Santa Ana.'1
Such weather systems which produef
northerly blasts of heated air are nOl
usually experienced after March, they
say.
Over the weekend . the gusts recorded
as high as 54 miles an hour fanned
numerous brush fires .
The superheated northern alr dropped
humidity in the Los Angeles basin le 12
percent on Sunday. -
Blowi ng \\'inds and low humidity turned
brush lands to tinder and firemen batUed
blazes in the Angeles Natiooal Forest, the
San Fernando Valley and Griffith Park.
None-of-the-f1rcst threatenedJlOmes.
The gusts downed power lines and kick·
ed up sand in desert regions causin1
camper and trailer warning! in Lo!
Angeles, Rive rside and San Bernardino
counties ..
Small craft warnings raised at ·a p.in.
Sunday were lowered thls morning, ac·
cording to the Orange County Harbot
Department
\Vinds tonight and Tuesday are ex·
pected to range from S to 15 knots, witi:I
local gus ts belov.· the coastal-canyons.
\Vinds did not interfere v:ith activiQ&a
at Orange County Airport Sunday or 7f!
da y. but \\'ith the Santa Ana condition
pilots were told they could expect COii•
siderable blowing aloft parlicularly avet
the inland regions,
F r om Page J
COURT ...
ed in today 's case is in forct in all ao
states.
The judgment stemmed from cbarge•
against Jonathan Todd Byers in Men·
docino County on Aag. 22, 1966. Becausa
of his failure to pass properly, he wa;
charged \Vith unsafe driving and failurl
to stop at the scene of an accident. -
Four membf>rs of the court -Justices
Hugo L. Black, \Villiam 0. Douglas,
William J. Brennan Jr. and Thurgood
Marshall -held that Byers properl1
ra ised the Constitutional claim of self-in·
criminalion.
Chief Jwtice \Varren E. Burger. joined
by three colleagues, countered thaj
"there is no Constitutional right to refuse
lo file an income tax or to flee the sce.n1
of an accident in order to· avoid the
possibility of legal involvement."
Justice John t-.1. Harlan then cast the
decisive vot e against Byers for differenl
reasons than those in the Burger opinion.
The California Suf>reme Court had held
that 1he hit·and·run law. wh ich requires I
driver to stop and identify himself after
an accident. can be enforced only H the
slate does not use the i11formation in con·
nection with any criminal proceedings.
This decision was vacated today by thl
Supreme Court and lhe state may
presumably go ahead and try Byers on
both charges.
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•
Ten-year-old ~1urray F.eldman's smile
was modest. But It didn:t conceal his ex-
treme elation a[ter being handed an
autographed baseball from the California
Angel baseball team.
That was just the beginning of the
honors that awaited Murray, \.\'inner of
the DAILY PILOT Early Bird CAntest
and special guest at the DAILY PILOT'S
"Z.for·t Day" out at the ball game Sun·
day.
Murray also will receive four fre e
tickets to a future home game. Runner·
up winners Richard Duesing, 71h, and
Bobbv \Vest. 91h .' each \.\'ill receive two
free tickets. But the real prize was yet to
come.
Before the st.art of the aiternoon game
against the ~11\waukee Brewers. all three
young winners, were taken down onto the
field to get a closer look at their favorite
~am. Murray had \.\'On the contest by
praising the comeback of Angel Tony
Conigliaro. Now ~furray wouJd get to
meet him .
Standing in the red dust before the
dugout, like the eye in a hurricane of
rushing players. ba t boys, security
guards and reporters he waited.
Suddenly the teemlng crowd parted and
the tall, self-assured rlghUielder strode
up lo Ule JO.year-old and thurst out bis
hand u.ying, "HI, ~furray, how )'a
dol.n'f"
What did .he say -this «i01. composed
young man who had lavished so much
praise on this baSebalt player? When he
finally faced his ddol. he said "Hi."
Arter the tv.'o baseball lover11 were
through talking, Conigllaro shook the
hands of both lhe runner-up and winners
and excused himself to go back for some
extra batting practice. The three boys
left the field quietly, each keeping -to
himself. •
Richard mumbled to himself, ~·r wish
my best friend was here."
Blind Boy. Dies
In Garage Fire
The blind son or a Brea police ortlcer
"'as burned to death when fire broke out
in a garage where he was playing.
rnvesligators said John R. Ziemer Jr.,
4, youngest of three sons of officer John
R. Ziemer and his wife Kay and several
other small children were playing Friday
near the garage et 233 Olive Place, Brea,
·...,·hen the fire broke out.
Fire officials said the blaze WU at-
celeratcd .by gasoline stored in the
garage. The blir'ld boy was trapped inside
the structure and unable to find his way
oul.
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"
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• • ) ,
T
'
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I
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_Huntington. Bea~h
Fountain V al.Iey
EDI T ION
,. .. -. -r-· ...
\ ._...
VOt:.· 64, NO. 117, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIF,ORNIA MONDAY, MAY '17, '1971
. •
Nation's Trilins Idled
Nixon Presses for Immediate End to Walkout
CAIL Y PILOT 1t1tr PMtot
CAPTURES BEAUTY TIT LE
Huntington B•ach's Wigg ins
Connie Wiggi1is
Crown ed as New
Miss Huntin:gton
Connie Wiggins, a 17-year-old blonde
)farina High School student, charmed her
way ahead of 19 other contest.ants Satur·
da'y night to win the Miss Huntingl.On
Beach title. ~ Miss Wiggi , 33-22-33h, Jet out a lilBSp
"•hen emcee n \Yheatly announced
her selection fr a group or five
eemifinalists. Tears or joy strea1ned
down her face as she received her trophy
and tiara.·
Other finalists included Cynthi a
l\'illprd, Carol Jean peKeyser, Bobbi• "'6rston...i Rebecca Sullard.
Tht: 20 contestants for the 7th ~fiss
Hunliniton Belch 'tine paraded be!Ore
judges Susie Bruderlin, Mary Lantz,
Florence Smale.s, Clarence Hall and
Charle! O'Donnell in noor length gowns
before switching over to one-piece
bathing suits ..
A wave of chUckJes rippled through , the
half-filled Huntington -Beach High School
auditorium when the girls turned their
backs t.o the audience, revealing the un-
mistakable signs of bikini bathing suits
on their tanned bodies.
The pageant. organized by the women's
division of the HuntlnglGn B e a c h
Chamber of Commerce, was attended by
Mayor George McCracken and Chamber
President Allen Kl ingeMmith, both of
whom bestowed congratulations on· Miss
Wiggins.
Miss Wiggins, live feet-four ·with blue-
eyes, replaces Jayme Boyd as Miss Hun-
tington Beach.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Railroad
signalmen went on strike today, shutting
down the nation's rail llnes1 and Presi-
de.t Nixon propesed emergency legisla-
tion to force the men back to work tmtil
at least July 1.
Within flve hours irter the 13,000.man
Brotherhood of Railway Signalmen went
on· strike, effectively shutting down all
rail passenger and freight traffic, the
Florida White House announced Nixon's
Stock Market
Prices Take
Sharp Tm1tble
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market
prices took a nosedive today in moderate
'trading as Investors responded to the na-
tionwide rail strike llnd rising interest
rates.
The Dow Jones average of 30 in-
dustrials at ll a.m. PDT was off 12.93 i:t
923.13. Declines outnumbered advances
on file-New York Stock Exchange hy
more than 5 to 1.
Trading volume picked up con-
siderably, late in the session fr om its
sluggish mornlng pace. Jnstitutional ac-
Fin1l Stock Report
Today, Pages 18, 19
tivity '1Jao increased, IDdlcatlng that the
aeUOH was beginning to pin moriientum.
Analysts dted worries over the rail
strike as the major market depressant.
However. fears that rising short-term in-
terest rates could trlgger a boost in the
prime or discount rala also weighed
heavily they added
Large-block trades included 190.000
shares or Household F' :ance at 52, oU ll1;
80,000 Of Niagara Mohawk Power at 16~8.
off in; 66,600 of Fannie Mae at 56, down ·
311~; and 59,000 of Fir.st Charter Financial
at 231h, off l/t.
Other Big Board prices included Cen-
tral & South We!t, off% to 44 V~; Dentsp-
ly International, off 5\.2 to 49, following
sell recommendations from s o m e
brokerage houses; Telex . off % to 18:
Ling • Temco • Vought, off Z.1/3 to 185;
Piltston. down two to 433i4 and General
Telephone, don IA to 32.
Auto l(ills Pedestrian
On Huntington Highway
A Dov.·ney youth was killed In Hun-
tington Beach early Sunday .. morning
when he ignored warning shouts from
friends and dashed acrOS! Pacific Coast
Hl~hway in the dark.
Police said Steven Fife, 17, was struck
by a car In the westbound -lane, a mile
Shell Fish Ban
On Beacl1 Lifted
west of Golden West Street at about 2:52
a.m. He wais deaid on arrival at Hun-
tington lntereommunlty Hospital.
Arthur Koelle , 16, !.<Ing Beach, driver
of the car, suffered minor injuries from
Oying glass. He was treated, but not
bospitalized.
Fife was standing on the highway me-
dian with three friends, including hi s
brother Mark, 16, when he dashed into
the street despite warning shouts from
the other boys, police said.
T1\t boys were crossing the hi ghw:iy
from the beach going to their van. No one
else wa!I hit, police said.
No one has been held and the accident
·is still under investigation, traffic officers
said.
_ plan to Congress, calling for a new round
of riegotiations.
Urging passage of a joint resolution to
halt the shutdown that started at 6:01
a.m. local time, Nixon -said a continued
national strike "would cause great
hardship to all Americans and strike a
serious blow at the nation's economy."
"lt is essential that our railroads con-
tinue to operate," the President said.
The President recommended thnt
Congress promptly enact legislation to
extend the present contract negotiation
between the algnalmea, union aind the
railtoads unUI July I. .
He further asked Labor Secretary
James D. Hodgson tb follow the situation
<:lbsely as it developed and to continue
..a!lslsting both aides of. the dispute. He
said that if no settlement had been reach-
ed by June 21, It should be reported to
him and Congress.
The signalmen. who maintain and in-
stall signal equiif'ment, struck when the
-
DAILY l'ILOT ll1f1 l'lltft
ORGAN GRINDER AND FRIEND ENTERTAIN AT FESTIVAL
Exchange (:lubbers Herb Vaughn <left), George Otott . .
Froli~ at ·Fair
Thousa1ids Attend Huntington Fete
Saturday in Huntington Beach was a
day oC cot.toe candy wrapped around the
cheerful faces of toddlers, ol painted
faces, plasticine parasols and the wailing
sounds of rock band!.
All, and more, were combined in the
city'' second annua l Community Fair
which entertained between 3,000 and
10.000 persons at Murdy Park.
The venture, designed by the Hun·
f.ington Beach Coordinaling Council to ac-
quaint residents with the various
organizations in the city, was pronounced
'"a .smashing success."
"It was a fabulous day and everyone
was well pleased by the way things
went," said Bruce Williams. who organiz-
ed the 100 attrac_tions.
Williams said the event was. so suc-
cessful that the operators of various food
booths had underestimated their supplies
and had run out by noon.
"The place was busy all day long. They
enlered from various places in the park
so it was difficult to determine exactly
how many were there," he said.
The fair suffered a minor setback early
In the day when an overabundance of arr
pliances shorted out the park·s electrical
.
systems, leaving General Hysteria, Cold
Duck and olher rock bands without a
place t.o plug in
"It seems that everybody plugged in
their coffee pot and they lost their jui~."
grinned policeman James Shandrick, who
helped out with traffic prob I ems
lhroughout the day.
Powe r was soon restored lo the coffee
pots by auxiliary current from the city's
Bookmoblle and by drawing juice from
nearby Park View School.
''An event such as this hel ps the
newcomer grasp the range of services of-
fered in the city which they may .have
been unaware oL" said Williams, "Some
people don·t reali~e Iha! ~he!:_e is a ~Yl\.tCA
or a Boys Club."
"It wasn·t a professional nent, it
"'asn·t slick, and )l ·wasn't altogether
smooth. Bui there is no question that the
Coordinating Council will go for It a third
time next year," he added.
About 75 organizations participated in
the fair by setting up displays. fun booths
and providing information lo rthe adults
in Lhe communi ty.
The k>ng quarantine on laking shell fish
1long the beach from Newport Pier in
Newport Beach to Beach Boulevard in
Huntington Beach has been lifted after 28
months by the Orange County Depart-
ment ot Health .
Hea lth officer Or. John Philp said re-
cent tests show that the bacteria counts
in the ocean water along the three mile
beach are well within the acce ptable
Prety standards.
District Survey Sent
The quaranHne was .enforced on Jan.
10. 1969 afttr the first of a series of floods
th11t "'inter. ~age line ruptures ln
Riverside County sent million ol gallons
of raw 'SeWig:t down the Santl Ana River
lo the oee11t ~. · •
Harvesting of mu!M!l! in the beach
area remains Jlnder state ban until Oct.
31. the health department warnM.
'Slu rnhcr P rotest'
Q;,KLAND (UPI) -~me l!O girls,
many in flhny nighties. protested the
past weekend over residence hall visiting
rules at all.women l\.11lls College.
The young women 11aged a "slumber
protest" in the lounges and living rooms
at uven halJJ which hou5e about 760
students. •
"
Coni1nunit y Interes t in Adult Educ£Ltion Studied
The llurltington Beach Union High
School District 11 su~eyln1 communlly
interest In adult education.
Superintendent Jack S. Roper said It>
day that que!lifnnaill!s have been sen t
out to 2,000 ho~es in Huntington Beach,
Fountain Valley, Westminster, Leisure
World, Seal Beach, Sunset Be11ch 1od
Surfside.
If there Is a favorable rtWC>nsef Roptr
said. the <llslrlct hopes to begl11 offering
~dull education courses beginning nex t
fall In the areas where support is In·
dicated.
He stressed that adult education pro.
grams can be financed by enrollmr_nt
(etll, tuiUOn Ind lllate re.lmburstment
gtn~rated by average d1Uy attendanct or
sludenl<i, The program l''ould require ,lhc
approval of the trustees.
Presently the district's adult education
has been limited to the awarding of hlgh
school diplomas to those over 18 who
complete certain courses at Golden West
.and Orange Coast Colleges.
Depending on interest shown by the
community, Roper said, lhe dbltrict Is
prepared to offer adult couri.es In
business, Industry and trades, 11cience,
mathematics, social i;cience. English,
home economics, music, art. sports,
drama ind possibly in other flelds .
Mslstant Supertntendenl Scott
Flanagan also discloJed that the dl!!trlct
could levy up to fi ve cents on the tax rate
to finJnce the adult program. lf
necessary.
••
lie said the malling of Utt surveys to
2,000 homes w1s based on a random
sampling.
Flanagan explained that in the past the
commuAily college9 have generaJJy fllled
adult educaUon needs In the ana, but the
sctiool djsLrict may be able to provide an
additional service by orfering the courses
;n the evenlnp.
"We have the evenings and u~
facllities,1' Flanagan said. ''It' 1
1JOmetlmcs dlHicult to enroll in some of
the college course1 in the evenings
because-they are so ·crowded."
Flanagan Invited those who did not
. receive questlonnalre1 to send their 1ug-
gestions to him at the district offlct1 at
1902 17th St, Huntnngton Beach, 92648.
T
railroads refused to meet their demands
for wage increases almost double wbat
other rail unions have aettpled.
Key members of Congress pledged ia
advance lo give prompt consideration to
Nixon's request. Veteran observers said
that in spite or traditional reluctance of .
lawmaker1 to eriact legl11latlon during a
labor emergency, Congress would likely
approve the Nh:on request - or
something similar to stop the at.rite -
(Sele RAILS, Pa1e l )
Teams Find
'Disaster'
Tough Going
The world of make·believe can be
entertainh1g, but not when it's• disaster.
It can be mighty tough.
About 300 policemen, Boy Seoul!,
military petsoMel and other Imaginary
crews discovered that this Saturday when
they participated in ' ' 0 p e r a t i o n
Disaster.''
They trudgea through mfles of swampS,
fallen trees and painful brambles in the
Bolsa Chica area to practice the rescue
of !hei r "victims."
The day.Jong exercise was called by the
Hunti ngton Beach Police Department to
test the emergency reaction of various
manpower groups in the city during a
1nJ,Jor ~at11lf(lphe. ,
Teama dispatched tnto tht field en.
~untered such pro~ternt _,.. ·a_4"11ed_
aircraft with an A·bomb, hr'IMID Jeo.
trapped persot11 and snakebites.
A group or scouts from HuntingtOn
Beach's Troop 4SO found out just how
rough things could get when\ I.heir
i:;nakebite "victi m" Larry Roberts, 13,
began "dying" because help fail ed to ar-
rive.
They applied a tourniquet to his leg and
g av e mouth-to-moulh resuscitatioh.
Later, they fashioned a stretcher from
fallen branches, be.Its and jackets and
packed him out through the wooded area
to· a first aid station.
Then they grabbed a quick lunch of
Army combat rations before receiving
thei r next assignment and began trooping
out again.
Although results of the operation bavt
not yet been completely evaluated, Lt.
George Renek, the exercise commander,
said he was pleased.
"Things went fairly well. It was nice lo
get the kids an dthe various disaster
teams out to test their emergewcy reac-
tion capabilities," he said.
"Miraculously," he laughed, "we had
no real disasters in the rough terrain the
men were confronted with." ,
Building Firm
•
Suing Valley
Over Aparltnents
The New Republic Corporation is
demanding $300,000 in damag'es from the
city of Fountain Valley on charges that
the city delayed an apartment project
proposed Jn the city center area.
City councilmen are expected to refer
the damage claim to City Attorney
Thomas Woodruff Tuesday night.
New Republi c, s development. firm,
claims the city has deaied it the right to
build apartments on 18 acres of citfland.
even though s precise plan was approved
in 1969 for the apartments.
In November, 1970, the city changed its
VJning ordinances to put a limit of 20
units per sere on high density (R-4) zon-
ing. Prior to that New Republic obtained
approval for apartments with 27 units to
the acre.
New Republic alleges that the $300,000
Is the profit difference betwetn 'l1
apartments per acre and 20 per acre.
The land in quesUon covers both sides
of La Alameda Street, south of Warner
Avenue.
New Republic has tried to tum Its p~
ject over to another deveJoptr. Ponder-
osa Homea.
But city ofOclals said "no dtal'' to 11
Ponderosa proposal to build 2 4
apartments on each acre. The land ls
currently zoned R-4 or 21).to-the-acre.
The planning commbllon hu withheld
any further action on the land until the
cily council Cfn rtvlciw the matter Tues-
day and Woodruff make• a decision.
The councU meelA at I p.m.. in city
hall. The damage c:lahn. not yet 1 court
suit. probably will be discussed in ti·
tcutive session .
\
'"
Today's Fl•al
N.Y. Stoeu--1
TEN CENTS
WINS CITY LAURELS
Fount•ln Valley's Holler!Nft
Karen H olkrm«u_
Chose1i Fairest
In Valley Contest
Karen Hollerman , 17, plans to be a
porlrait photographer, but for"the next
year sJ1e'll be on the o_ther end o(jl}e lens
as the new Miss Fountain Valley. ·
The Founlaip Valley High School Junior
captured the city crown Saturday n!ght in
competition with 12 other girls.
"At first everyone expects and hopes to
win, but when they actually call your
name dt's a complete eurprise, '' she says.
tifiss Hollennan picked up another
~rise Saturday. The grand prize WN a
rtiund-trip flight for two to San Francitc0
dol'lated· by PSA.
T6e .Cify;s new queen -ihe wa1 hand-
ed the crown by Linda Anderson, 1970
queen -also likes observing people and
their reactions to Jife.
"That's why t want to be a
photographer. I like people."
Runners up lo Mlss Hollerman were
Lynn Evans, 17; Betty Oliver, 17, and Jan
Markland, 17, in that order.
Linda Anders, 17, from Los Amigos
High, was named "Miss C.Ongeniallty" by
the other girls.
Pageant promotors said more than 300
residents packed the community center tor the contest.
The contest wu spoosored by the
Fountain Valley Chamber of C.Omme:rce.
Student's Art
I 1t Sacramento
A drawing by a 17-year-old Huntington
Beach High School senior has been
selected for the first statewide exhibit of
public .school art at the state capitol.
The ink, pencil and crayon drawing or a
garage interior· ls by Carol Williams, a
student of art department chalrmin
Marie Conti Eckess. It will be one of eo
art works on display throuJh May 28.
The Sacramento exhibits were selected
from a display at the .Oakland Museum
to whieh every high school teacher in the
state was invited to submit two student
works.
Miss Will iams, daughter or Ed1ar
Williams, 6721 Cory Drive, Huntington
Beach is a member of the school's art
Honors Program. She pla'ns to attend
Golden West College next Fall.
Orange
\t'eat•er
Those Santa, Ana wlnds wJll be
with us again, wermlng things up
along the coast, but especially In-
land. Temperature range -from
the middle 603 to nearly 80 degrees.
INSIDE TODAY
lVhot happent to good ·Mmart-\
tona7 TJ~11 lost. booc TOCe1. But
two unfortunatt. UCChtfmtn Wtr~
mightu glad to 1t.c tht C03ta
Mtia driver puU out and give
thtm a hal'ld. Stt Boating, Page 28. .
•t1tl1111 ,.
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•
•
Z DATlY PILOT H Mondly, May 17, 1971
OCC Prograt••
Dx_oporit Class
Expansion 'Due
A' program ro motivate high &Choo! technical ope.rat.ions, communicationa
droPouts aod potential dropouts .and ,gltflls. vocational orientation. theater arts
"turn them on to Jeaming" will be ex-workshop and American studies.
panded to serve 300' minority students at The object rs to give minorfty stt.identl a taste or coll,ege life in a setting that
Otange Coast College this summer. provides with the instruclion some words
Richard Hernandez. 35-year old direc· of encouragement, a college spokesman
t.or-of Special projects for the college. said.
started the program last year witJ:t 70 The program was launched with a com-
atudent.a.._ They were brought on campus bination cf money from the Vocational
half. a da,)\ five days a week, for eight Education Act, the college district 11.~d
ks 1 the Neighborhood Youth Corps. The latter w;~, twc>week sessions in different agency provides pay for stUdfnts who a1.
ttudy areas were offered: photography, tend classes in the morning and y,·ork at
wood working, electronics and.archite.c· campus or campus related jobs. About 50
tural drafting. 1 • are expected to attend the summer pro.
.. This year, ~tudents will be offered a granl mornings and work afternoons.
wider range cf classes Including archltec· Hernandez scouts area high schools to
h: -1 drafting, filmmaking, b o ~ e find students who might benefit from
ec~~ mies, allied healtJ:t orientation, such a program. This year's class come~
from Newport·Mesa, Giirden Grove and
Two Injured
ln,.$eparate . .
Coast Wrecks
Two\vomen are listed in good condition
today et Hoag Memori&J. Hospital af~
they were injured in two separate traffic
accidents over the weekend in Newpoit.
Bea Ch.
Santa Ana unified school districts.
Sessions are relaxed and not rigidly set
up, Hernandez said. Students in the
woodworking section, last year, made
what they wanted. Photography classes
recorded the whole eight-week program
on movie film and put it together in the
form of a documentary film .
Last yiar's efforts were encouragin g.
Of the 13 students who were eligible to
enter college that fall , 11 did enter.
Most of the others went back to high
school to finish up so they could enter
.callege, Hernandez noted.
~ The class offerings this year will be ar-
ranged differently. Some will run' two
weeks, some four and two for eight Kathleen Asbell. 20 of 1~ Ross Lane, week!. Students will be able to choose the
Huntington Be~!s -~n1ured !~~dak-colll'.Ses_which.-inte.resLthem.-most,-those-
---wllen l!'le. car sh_e was_ ~vlng was .stnJc which they consider as a potential career
from behind ~hile wa1~mg for the hght at field.
the inter~cbon of N_ewpoi:t Boo1evard Nine instructors and five instructor
and Hospital Road, police said. . aides will staff the summer program.
. Tbe·drtver of the. second car, Michael Their salaries and the costs for supplies
G. Scott, 30, of 1626 Newport Blvd., Costa are provided by a VEA federal grant. '
. Mesa. was ar:rested by Ne~rt Beach The district's cont rib u ti on is
police on s~p1clon of_ drunk driving. Hernandez' salary for time spent organiz..
, Chula Vista resident Deb 0 r a.h ing the effort, and provision of
Glackman, 19 !uffered a fractured hip secretarial services
'Saf:'lrday f!ight l'hen !he was ~~~ . o"range Coast eo1iege officials C1'.lnsldr r
while cro~mg Balboa Boulevard at the program to be part of the effort to
Street, J>?lice repo:ted. . take the college to the community 3nd to
According to officers, Miss Glack.man serve the community in areas which in
was i}1 the crosswalk when she was hit ~ the past have been neglected.
a car driven by Lynn Bryan Nelson, 18. "We're a community college, and we
12341 _Blu~ B~ll Av~ .•. Gar~en Gro;~· are taking that title literally," a ~vestigah?fl ts ~unu1ng in the • spokesman said.
c1dent, ofhcers said.
In a third accident Sunday, a bicyclist
:and a·motoreyCle rider escaped 1eriou!
. :injury in a collision at W, Ocean Front
'8Dd McFadden ~lace.
· Patro1men sald 'Todd Rovazzlnl; 11 of
· 1o5 32nd ' St.. was riding acros1 Ocean
-Front when the rear tire of hls bike was
clipped by the motorcycle ridden by Tony
:Salmon, 29, of 2614 W. 9th St., Santa A11a.
.. 5,000 Residents
.Attend Culture
Week in Valley --Mo·re than 5,000 i'esidents observed or
took part in various activities during
-Fountain Valley's Cultural Arts Week,
· -according to the chamber of commerce.
The wetk ended Sunday with a pioneer
picnic in Harper Park attended by 500
people.
"We felt it was a big success, and most
people want to continue culture week."
said Mrs. Margare t Krukenberg of the
women's division of the chamber,
coordinator of the event.
Ecology Week
Programs Set
At High School
4'You can live five weeks without food,
five days without water, but only five
minutes without air."
That's the motto students at Los
Amigos High &hool Jn Fountain Valley
used as they launched ecology week t~
day.
Each class will sponsor ecology proj·
ects throughout the week in an effort to
·clean up the local environment.
Wednesday is the focal point of ecology
week, when more than 1,000 students and
teachers are expected to walk or ride
bikes to school. ·
Teachers who drive will face a $2 fee to
park on the school lot that day. At 11
a.rn., all teachers and students who walk-
ed or rode bicycles to school w:ill march
to Mile Square Park for a picnic. On the
way they'll pick up all trash tossed in the
stret!t.
••
O.t.IL 'f l"ILOT Stiff '""'' ANGEL OUTFIELDER TONY CONIGLIARO SIGNS BA~EBALL FOR YOUNG FANS
Youngster1 lndude Rich1rd Duesing, Bobby West 1nd Contest Winner Murray Feldman (from left)
From Page 1
RAILS ••..
some time today.
House Republican Leader Gerald R.
Ford called for fast action on emergency
legislation, but laid the-ilrlke never
should have been allowed to ha~pen.
Ford wall . referring to legislation pro-
posed some time ago to deal with such
d1sputes, and Jn biS message Nixon chid~
ed Congress for failure to act an his
"emergency public service protection
act."
He said that would put an end to the
"chaotic nature of collective bargaining"
in the tra11sportation industry.
White House Press Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler said "we feel thi! piecemeal
method is no way to run a railroad.''
Some 600,000 other rail workers
hooored the picket lines or the signalmen,
who comprise only about 2 per11ent 0( the
rall work force .
With a few exceptions, all train service
was idled across .the nation from Boston
to San Diego.
The people most immediately affected
were an estimated 600,000 railroad corn·
rnuten.
Traffic jama developed in cities that
normally depend heavily on commuter
trains, mainly New York and Chicago.
Manufacturing p 1 a n ts immediately
began slowdowns. One of the first was
the Chrysler stamping plant a t
Tinesburg, Ohio, which said it would
work half shifts today and would lay off
all its 4,200 workers U the strike con-
tinued into Tuesday.
Reflecting presidential concern about
the economic effects of the strike. Ziegler
said, "past experience has shown such a
strike bas an extremely detrimental ef·
feet on t.he ec011omy and wellare of
American citizens."
Jn his statement, Nixon said that he
had hoped for a "voluntary negotiated
aettlernent of this dispute; however. this
was not forthcoming.''
* * *
Piwt Baseball Winkrs
Meet FavoriteSlugger
Ten·y~ar-old Murray Feldman's smile
was modest. But lt didn 't conceal his ex·
treme elation afte r being handed an
autographed baseball from the California
Angel baseball team .
That was just the beginning or the
honors that awaited Murray. winner of
the DAILY PILOT Early Bird Contest
and special guest at the DAILY PILOT 'S
"Z.for·l Day" out at the ball game Sun·
day.
Murray also will receive four free
tickets to a future home game. Runner·
up winners Richard Duesing, 71h, and
Bobby West, •91,1, each will receive two
free tickets. But tpe real prize was yet to
come.
Before the start of the afternoon game
against the Milwaukee Brewers, all three
Police Arre8t
Huntington Man
In Assault Case
A Huntington Beach man was arrested
on assault charges Sunday night after
police alleged he fired a pistol In his
home and refused officers' orders to sur·
render.
Huntington Beach police identified the
suspect as Gordon Lamar Gaskins, Sr., of
18342 Pamm y Lane.
Officers allege Gaskins fired four shots
from his revolver. No one was injured.
According to the police account,
Gaskin's 22·year-old son. Gordon Jr .• toki
officers that his father had been drinking
and had been making threats at him. his
mother Madeleine. and his sister Sally.
At one point the older Gaskins allegedly
fired at the walls and al Mrs. Gaskins,
striking a bt?fr can sitting on an
armchair, according to officers.
young y,·inners, v.·ere taken down onto the
field to get a closer look at their favorite
team. Murray had won the cont.est by
praising the comeback of Angel Tony
Conigliaro. Now Murray would get to
meet him.
Standing in the red dust before the
dugout, like the eye in a hurricane of
rushing players, bat boys. security
guards and reporters he waited.
Suddenly f~ teeming crowd parted and
the tall, seJl.assured righlficlder strode
up to the IO-year-old and lhurst out his
hand saying, "Hi, r.1urray , how ya
doin'?"
\Vhat did he say -this coo~, c posed
young man who had Javis so much
praise on this baseball playc When he
finally faced his ddol, he said "Hi."
After the two baseball lovers were
through talking, Conigliaro shook the
hands of both the runner·up and winners
and excused himself tD gD back for !ome
extra batting practice. The three boys
left the field quietly, each keeping to
himself.
Richard mumbled to himself, •') '"'ish
my best friend was here.''
Nuclear Plants
Under Sea Seen
PASADENA (AP) -A scientist says
nuclear generating plants may have to be
localed beneath the ocean 20 to 50 mile!:
offshore by the year 2000 to meet
Southern California 's power needs and
avert a dangerous rise in air tern·
peratures.
Lester Lees. dlrecklr of t h t
Viet Forces
Start Drive
Up Valley
SAIGON (UPI) -With U.S. air paw~
aUacking ahead of them the South Viet
namese army today began its long
delayed drive into the A Shau valley. On-
ly small skirmishe! were reported bu
the com~nder of the operatfo 1
predicted the Communists "intend 11
stand and fight." '
Hae Bao (Black Panther) shock troop:
assaulted from \i.s. 101st airbornt
division helicopters ahead of the mai1
force of several thousand troops of tht
1st South Vietnamese. infantry division
Their missiolll was to knock out ·anti
aircrart guns before lhe main pu.s]l .
Helicopters ferrying the Vietnames1
troops ran into such heavy growid fir1
they had to land the infan trymen a mil1
aw ay from the planned landing zone. Twt
formations Of B52s hit C.Ommunist troo1
cconrentrations just ahead of the assauJ· · force. ·
The A Shau Valley runs 35 miles fron
the Hue area toward the-border of Laos
It has become a major CommuniJt sup
ply area since the last allied operat ion in
to the valley a year or so ago.
Brig. Gen. Vu Van Giai, commander O'
the 33-day-old operation, said at leas
eight Communists were killed in the fir~
skinnishing and that the government suf
fered "light" losses. ;,I think the Nortf
Vietnamese intend to stay and figlr
here," he told UPI correspondent Stewarl
Kellerman. ...
American ground troops have not ye;
gone linto the valley in strength but U.S
paratroopers today repor ted finding j
huge Communist base camp Jn !ht
jungles lhre'e miles northeast af tht
\'alley. The area could accommodate 1
total of 5,800 men, U.S. Army spokesme1
said.
Lt. Gen. Nguyen Van Minh, South Viet
namese commander of Ill corps, the ll
provinces surroundi11g Saigon, and com·
mander of govf;!rnment forces in Cam
bod/a, said the February.March tnv.asior
of Laos had slowed down North Viet
namese lnfiltralion into Cambodia
Tickets on Sale
For, Huntington
Cl1arity Drawing
Tickets are now being circulated ffl
the Huntington Center'11 first CharitJ
Fa ir, a fund drive which may net loci
non-profit organizations a total of' $30,000
Merchants of the Huntington Cenle!
and other buslnessme n have donat~
prizes between $6,000 and $8.000 for tht
fair. Two of them are 1971 automobiles .
Center Manager Howard Whittakci
fiaid the prizes are now being displayed iJ
the Huntington Center Mall prior to thi
first prize drawing May 22. Other draw
lngs are slated for May 29, June 5 anl
June 12.
Representatives of the 50 participatin1
organizations have d r a w i n g ticketl
available for a recommended $1 donation
They will be able to keep the 75 percen·
money netted from the tickets.
Whittaker. who desc ribed the fa ir ai
the. greatest charity fumf drive in Hunt.
ington Beach, said the other 25 percenl
would be applied to the center's Youtl:
aM Scholarship Fund.
Winners of the grand prizes need not b4
present for the I p.m. Satllrday drawing1
to collec t their winnings but will tH
notified.
Two tots, Laurie Willhitte, 3. and
Donald Koubeck, 8, walked away with the
Little Miss and Littlt Master pi.oneer
titles at Sunday's picnic. Commuter Traffic Halted
Police surrounded the Gaskin home
shortly after the alleged incident but
Gaskin refused to come out with his
hands up. according to police reports.
Two officers who had entered the house
from the rear by climbing over a fence
then surprised Gaskin and ordered him to
drop his weapon, police said.
Environmrnlal Quality Labor a tor y
(EQL) at California Insti tute of
Technology, said Saturday present steam
plan!s, at the current rate of increasing
power consumption, "could raise tern·
peralures in the L-Os Angeles basin by 10
degrees by the end of the century.
"EQL and other groups are seriously
sludying the feasibility of nuclear power
plants. "'hich wculd noat with their
generators 100 yards below the surface,"
Lees told 1,400 CaJ.Tech alumni at the an-
nual home·coming seminar.
~::ach ticket will be valid for grant
prizes being offered at all four drawings
ac cording to Whittaker.
He said a similar charity venture i~
FresnD netted $20,000 for non·profil
(lrganizations.
DAILY PILOT
OltANliE COAST PU&LllHIHO COM,AN't
•oD•rt N. w,,,
Prnldt!lt e!ld Putllltll9'r
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Tlio,i111 k•tviC
l!d!IOI'
The111•t A. Mu rpJ1i"ti'
MIMl)in0 Edl~r
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A lbert W, l1l1t
Auoci.ta E41!fOI'
Hlllltl ...... a..• Offke
17175 lltcl. l•ul1v1rlll
M1lll11t Addnini P.O. 111 790, 92641
..-~
l1ount l11ctl: n:' ,,,,, .. , A..._
Col .. Mat: QCI Wnt l1y $1rwt
lffwport ... Cl'I: ml H1wporr huilYll"lf
$111. Cltnwl"I .JU Nllrtb ti ClmlN ltttl
~
DAllV ,.II.OT, •1111 Wllldl Is c.omblMcl lhe'
H ........ r ... ll M!lthl4 d11!r ll!Clpl S-
41't' lft 11r11t1ta ldUloN tor ~ IMC:ll. H....,.,l llldl. C::.0.11 ·~, H""'lltlotM lll<fl. ,__111t1 v11i.v. $1ft c._,,,
Coplilt,_ '"' $HlllltbUi:, ,...,. wllll -........ tdlllilol, l'tlrlclNl "111.11 ..... i.,,. ,,
•t a# W.t a.y lt'fWI, Col" Mftl, -
Tlll••lil•• 1714) '4lo4Jt1
Cl•lfW A'"'1fdlt 641°1671
As Rail W ~kout Begins
From Wire Services
About 11.000 commuters who ride
Southern Pacific trains from San Jose
and peninsula points north of there into
San Francisco had to find another way to
~et to work today because of a national
strike .of railroad signalmen.
Two trains, al 5:05 a.m. and 5:43 a.m ..
left San Jose at the start of the morning
commuter runs. but pickets showed up
6hortly after 6 a.rn . and no crew reported
for the 6:14 a.m.
Southern Pacific operates 22 commuter
trains daily, tranlij>Orting an average of
11,500 passengers.
A Greyhound Bus spokesman said ad·
ditlonal buses were added to morning
commuter runs "where needed and
where appropriate,'' He said in past
Southem Pacific commuter train stop-
pages Greyhound found that "people go
to their cars instead of the bus."
A Southern Pacific spokesman said any
prolonged strike would hamper move·
ment of perishable produce now being
harvested in agricultural areas served Ly
the carrier.
ln Detroit, auto industry spok,smen
said plants dependent on rail shipment of
parts might face qui ck shutdowns. with
some workers being laid off if the strike
went on for only 2f hours. Production
could halt completely if the rail "·alkout
continued fi\'e days, they s,ii id.
Simll11r warnings were heard in the
1fctl industry, Itself lhrcatened with a
strike later this year U no agrccmeflt is
reached on a new conl[act . A U.S. Steel
Co. 11po~esm11n in Pittsburgh sa!d coal
shipments \\'tre Mopped, and those
facllitles not stocktd with rllw materials ,
could be halted in 48 hours.
In \Vashington, the Interstate Com-
merce Commission said it was authoriz·
ing field offices to grant emergency
licenses to 20,000 bus and truck lines
under its jurisdiction to permit th'em to
carry goods an;!J>8ssengers hung up by
the rail strike.
All major coal mines in West Virginia
would be shut down by Wednesday, a·coa l
association spokesman there said; no rail
cars to ship the coal. and few could
stockpile or ship by barge.
Most immediate effects were felt by
the unhappy commuters in major
metropolitan areas in the eastern half of
the nation, New York, Phildelphia and
Chicago.
In one outlying subway station on Long
Island. it took 20 min utes to buy a token
lhal would operate a turnstile, and
another 20 minutes to walk 30 feei and
down a flight of .stairs to a platform. !he
station took an extra load of motorists
trying to avoid the crawl by car into
already jammed '-1anhatt.an streets.
In the Chicago area, a state police
dispatcher said reports al midmorning
indicated .slow traffic on Chicago ex·
pressway! -and getting slower. Extra
parking lot! were opened , and rapidly
filled.
Also at Chicago. 3 major rail hub,
Postmaster Henry W. 1'-1cGee announced
an embargo on shipment of 2nd. 3rd and
4th class mail to 30 state!. He al first
listed 35, then lowered thl! figure . M.!Gee
said the embargo was invoked because
man delivery from Chicago to those
1tat" normally was carried by "piggy•
back" truck's on the railroads.
I
·.
Grand prizes f11clude & 1971 Toyota ii
$1,000 diamond, a Carribean cruise 'je1
vacation and 11; deluxe Opel.
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. I
Hughes Sketched
·Mystery man Howard Hughes (in 1952 photo left) is depicted in this
sketch by Cynthia Blythe Schemmer in new issue of Look Magazine.
Joking about beard he has worn since 1956. Hughes, now 65. is quoted
in the magazine as saying "They're catching up with me. I started the
style."
Gusty Winds, Sunny Skies
Seen Through Tuesday
A Santa Ana wind condit:ion, unusual ror
this time ot year, will continue through
Tuesday bringing sunn y skies, warmer
Laguna Of fi c:er
Take~ Cold Dip
To Find Drugs
A narcotics case needs 'evide11ce and
Laguna Beach police officer Tom Reeder
proved Friday night he was ready to go
to ext raorcWiary lengths to "get _ the
goods" on a suspect he and detec tive Sgt.
r.'eil Purcell had just arrested.
.According to the officers, they saw
i;uspect Anthony Robert Burns. 21, meet
with a couple of young people al Cleo
Street and walk with them to the Anita
Street Beach at approximately 8:45 p.m.
Spotting a brown paper bag in Burns'
hand . Purcell identified himse lf as a
police officer and inquired as to the con-
tents of the bag.
Burns allegedl.Y fled toward the ocean.
plunged in and emptied the bag, which
police said appeared to contain several
plaslic bags of the type used in mari-
juana sales.
·As Burns swam back to shore, \\-'here
he was promptly taken into custody by
Purcell. Reed er swam oceanward and
succeeded in retrievi ng one of the plastic
bags. which police say contained mari-
juana. The r e s t of the evidence. ac-
cording to Reeder, sank beneath . the
waves.
Burns was booked oo suspicion of
possession of marijuana for sale and
des1rOt'i"'Z evidence.
temperatures and gusty winds tti the
Orange Coast.
The high for today and Tuesday wi~ be
In the 80s, the National Wealher Service
predicts with lows alqng the coast in the
50s overnight.
Gusty winds will be localized below _!he
«:oastal canyon~ today and Tuesday with
occasional gusts expected up to 35 miles
an bour.
Weathermen describe the high pressure
system over Nevada and Northern
Califo rnia as being "a late Santa Ana."
Such weatbec systems whlch product
northerly blasts of heated air are noL
usually experienced after. March, they
1ay.
Over the weekend, the gusts recorded
as high as S4 miles an hour fanned
numerous brush fires.
The superheated northern air dropped
humidity in the Los Angeles basin to 13
percent en Sunday.
Bl(!Wing-winds and low humidity tu rned
brush lands to tinder and firemen baUled
blazes in the Angeles National Forest. the
San Fernando Vall9" and Griffith Park.
None of the firest threatened bomes.
The gusts downed power lines and kick-
ed up sand in desert regions causing
camper and trailer warnings in Los
Arigeles, Riverside and San Bernardina
co\inlies.
Small craft warn ings raised at 8 p.m,
Sunday were lowered this morning, ac·
cording ta the Orange County Harbor
Department.
Winds tonight and Tuesday are ex·
pected to range from S to 15 knats. with
local gust.s below the coastal canyons.
Winds did not interfere with actiVities
at Orange County Airport Sunday er to-
day, but with the Santa Ana condition
pilols were told they could expect C011·
siderab\e blowing aloft particularly ever
the inland regions.
-
-.... 11.19'1 H DAILY "LOt 3
Anyone Want a New Ziggurat?
•
Niguel Plant G~ared for 7,500 -They Never Came
' UNIQUE INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY
Close t o freeways in fast-growing
Saddleback Valley. Bra1}d new, seve1t·
story ziggurat. One millio n square feet
floor space. Parking for 6,200 cars.
Roads, ~we.rs, water .$ervice i'n. Ask·
ing $24-· r mill ion. Tef'ms. Comider
trade. Contact North American Rock-
well Corporation.
By BARBARA KREIBICH
01 IM EN111 ,.1i.1 ll•lf
The classified ad is imaginary, but it
tells a true, sad tale of a venture that
was supposed ta change the e n t i r e
tCQnomic picture in South Orange C.Ounty
-bul didn't quite come off.
On Dec. 1, 1968, · when ground wu
broken for the giant Laguna Niguel plant
North American Rockwell planned to
build for its Autonetics Division, Alton
Allen, then Fifth District SupeMsor, ·
declared. "The south part of Orange
County will never be the same after to--
day.... •
~·t would say without hesitation that the
plant is the greatest thing that has ever
happened to the \outh CQunty .• .It means
more employment .• .it will stimulate
housing, commerce and satellite in·
dustries."
The 7 ,500 employes would generate a
community of 57 ,000, the supervisor said.
and, with es:pansion to 15,000 employes
"we are talking· about 135,000 people."
Allen was but one of many Orange
County leaders who hailed the building of
the biggest electronics plant in the world
as a milestone.
It was to become one of the biggest
white elephants in the world.
Just oow completed, after more than
two agonizing years, the huge structure
stands empty and unwanted in the gently
rolling hills of Laguna Niguel. .
Stair-stepped into the hillside, It is
fashioned in the style cf a ziggurat, a nam~ given an ancient Babylonian
temple tower.
lts statistics stagger the imagination :
more than 2 million cubic yards of earth
moved to prepare the site; roads and
flood control projects worth $2.S million
constructed; the first floor alone covering
nine acres and as Jong as three football
fields ; parking for 6,200 cars on !>8 acres
plus rooftop es:ecubive parking and
Blind Boy, Dies
In Garage Fire
The blind son of a Brea police officer
was burned to death when fire broke out
in a garage where he w.a.1 playing.
Investigators said John R. Ziemer Jr.,
.C , youngest of three sons of officer John
R. Ziemer and his wife Kay and several
other small children were playing Friday
near the garage at 233 Olive Place, Brea,
when the fire broke out.
Fire officials said the blaze was ac.
celerated by gasoline stored in the
garage. The blind boy was trapped inside
the structure and un11ble to find hi.$ way
out.
Second. Mariner Shot
Runs Into New Delay
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The launch
of the i;econd and !ast Mariner satellite
toward an orbit around Mars has be e. n
delayed at .least three more days, the
space agency reported.
helicopter pad; a main employe ~trance
designed to handle 5,000 people at a shift
change. with high speed escalators mov·
ing 1,000 people every six minutes.
But the employes never came.
By the beginni.ng of 1970. the aerospace.
squeeze had hit North American and the
Laguna Niguel facility became SW'plus
property ....
Construction. which had been delayed
by floods and strikes, was to drag on for
~ tbm II )91" wtilt-a lmJft 1'aJ
IOligbt "' .... pa ... -.. Rumen pa••4 'd i •C"ess.aatly:
-Doglles -.... it. ~ --...... ~~
-buy it. 'That ane wn tnie.. hi O&•mlwr. 1'11.
selling ail --..,.. "' -the
length .m -• Ille-· fbr officiaJs wnfil med illM • a•Mirw were
under -"' ... -"' ... pin and
U.S. Dollar F"low Shows
Large Overseas Deficit
From Wire Services
WASHINGTON The flow of
American dallars overseas reached tidal
wave proportions in the first three
months of this year, with a deficit of $5.S
billion in the balance or payments, the
Nixon Administration reported today.
That was the highest · one:.quarter
d~flcit on record.
The official reserve transaction basis
represents all transactions with foreign
governments and foreign central bank.s.
The deficit on the basis deteriorated by
$2.2 billion from the last three months of
1970, the department said.'
Excluding allocations of special draw-
ing righls. or "paper gold," the new in.
ternational reserve asset., the deficit waa
even worse. reaching almost $5.1 billion.
Tbe dtpa-...... pi)umD
deficitaadleie; ·ayltmis-asSI..._
in the lint-·"' SU llilliaa !ram
the Wt ......... -~ -measures .n ..._,..,, rill farti&B
oounlri<s.
Seadaiy tJ1. the 'DWWWJ ..... B. Cm-
nally '""" .............. -
Finm """"-ol • Ind! -.q
.m'""" ~ .... -"' -is notmsbirPt'* ..
Tbe ....... ._t --"' paymmts cum. -Ille lleds .. -m-18 nati.Jnal DWdaj crilis M9' b
~llar. ia ..ttich Gt!iiWIJ' dr.ddtd ID float
itl c:ummey, ~ il -... -· and other <Wlbies decid!d ID R'lallle
their aa1tiicits.
tseroW probably would cloR ln sprill(.
In spring the deal was called off.
New rumors bad North American !nOV·
ing in after all. This was denied a, •·-new
campaign to aell the ziggurat was
launched.
Sa far there. hasn't even been a frefb
Jood rumor of a sale.
Meanwhile the ziggurat stands thei:e. a
fantastic concrete monument to dre:llflll
ol. outer 1pace that became.earthbound..
Boy, 8, Crushed·
By Metal Gate
A pme in which a ll'OUP af Yount
\'isitor1 to O'Neill Park swung to and fro
oa a heavy metal-gate ended·in trapd7
dm'ing the weekend when an a.year-old
boy ~ of injuries after he. fell bet~n
the gate and the 1atepost.
Rodney Pearis of Torrance succumbed
from massive head lnjuriu within
lDODlf.Dts of being picked up. aheriff'1
depulies Wd. They said the bo)(1 'bud
was crushed.
Radney, the son of Mt .. and 'Mrs. For-
rut Purls, was one of a .group ·Of,boya:
«pnized by the Church of Latte'r'<lay
Saines who were on a weekend cam.Pinc
trip In the county park.
Several boya climbed on the pte bar·
rinJ: a.cceas to the flood control cblnnel .am swung the heavy fixture backwm'dl
and fcrwards. Witnesses aaid RodniyJort
his balance and fell with his hood
betw~ the gate and the iron atanchiOn.·
El Rancho has the hottest price in town!
~ .
CTN. OF 6
12.0L CANS!
Double pleuure with thi11 El Rancho value ••. you11 be pleased with t.he gavings &t. this gpecial price : •. and the •hole familY. will be -plMled witli
the tinrlY, refrelhlng treat afforded by these ShMla favorites in the easy-to-open pull top <a111: »or. ""1uo at El Jlandto !
•
·Pork Chops .. ~.~ .. 99~
Compare and see for yoursel1 that there is a difference.
Broccoli .................. 19~
Great with pork ••• and f:nshneu. makes th~ difference!
Pork Roast .. ~~!£!!.~. 89~ Blue Bon.let MirgRe ............................... 29'~
Ute it u & sptmd. in ~ for baling .•. and &ave !
Enjoy the goodneSB of Jean, midwe&tern fresh park l
Stuffed , Pott Chops ................... : .............. ,It•
R~ady to cook ••• atuffed with 1easoned dl'fflinr .•. for yout
MJJ. TN ............................................. Sr.
Enjoy Ille hearty ..,.dii • al. blodt tea! 48-ct. pkg.
J<nudsen Salads or Puddings ..... .. .. .. . . .... 23t
Your choice ••• 7-01. re.usable lun.eh--box aontainer1I '
P·rk t.a in tfftct Mott., Tittt., Wtd., M{l,'JI 11, 18, 19
No 1aU1 to dea.~r1, •
Sunsli~ fig Im ............................. ~ ....... : ... 5'4
For &flu adiool,,. with a Jlas.of milt! Bi& 24-oz. Pka'·
ARCADIA : S11nse1 anil H"' . •£'""ii· "11 •1 PASAOff\I~. .'·.: SOllTH PAS ADENA I;,'' Hur.f 'GTDN BrA CH ' tE.'IP ORT BEACH '"" New,1011 Bid 11·~
\[I Rancho CenlPr) · 1 '' ~20 Wt;! Ct.iorJ·!~ F.111 1 r~rnr:,1\ .111n tl11n '1l1)'.:Lll1 Dr • Vl .l'. 1 "'' .. 1fL"''1 11 t_, 'fl-.~ ~···~· : :.:-.'' ~.11 .J~C Cen:e1
' • .I •
• --
1
'
-
•
• •
4 DAILY "LOT
IJ'I T.i..M,.
FELLOW POLICE OFFICERS SWARM TO THE AID OF WOUNDED COMPANION
P•trolman Wai Hit by Shotgun Blast From B1rric1ded Memphi1 Home
Office1· Sl1ot in Forehead;
In Surgery ()ver 7 Hou1·s
MEMPHIS (UPil -Doctors worked in
surgery for, more than seven hours Sun-
day trying to save James C. Crossno. a
27-year~ld city policeman shot in the
forehead by a man barricaded in a houst .
"They just won't comment on what his
chances are at this point." said inspector
John Slaughter. •·1 suppose they don't
\\'Ml lo get anybody's hopes up.
Crossno and hi! partner, PaLtolman
~tichael Davison, went to 1 quiet tree-
shaded street at lhe request cf
Christopher Rochester , who said -.1
shotgun blast had been nred through a
Living room window at hi! home.
Rochester blamed Farmer, y,•ho lived
next door.
~~~~~~~~~~-
Hope Held Out
For Suffering
Pakistari People
NEW DELHI (UPI ) -Lt Gen. 'Tikka
Khan, martial law administrator for East
Pakistan. Sunday toured the Gange:1
River delta and islands thal were
devastalecl by Novembtt's cyclone .ind
assured the survivors they would receive
adequate food . Radio Pakistan said lo.
day.
"_\\'e do know lha~t his right eye
1--~and the bearing olhlS ear.The doc.
Davidson said he and Crossno y,·ere mel
at Farmer's door by a man who was 'car-
rying a shotgun anti warned them to get
away or he \\·ould shoot.
. 1'ikka told the Easl Pakistanis in the
area where as many as 300,000 may ha\·e
been killed by the cyclone and tidal wave
lhat .. the government had adequate
stocks of food grains in the proviuce a11d
no one will be allowed to die of hinger,"
the broadcast said.
tors tell us ii v.•ill be 48 ours before there
can by any determination of his over-all
t1'.lndition.'' •
The surgical work on Crossno began
shortly after noon Sunday when he was
brought lo Baptist Hospital from a
residential area in south central Memphis
"·here he was wounded by a man who
had barricaded himself in hls homE'.
threatening lo shoot anyone who came
near.
The man. identified as Sam D. Farmer.
58. y,•as hospilaliied for treatment or tear
gas inhalation and for what appeared lo
be a bullet wound on I.he index finger of
his right hand.
Davidson r.ijn behind the squad car for
proteclion and to summon assistance
while Crossno took a position behind a
large pine oak lree in Farmer·s yard.
"I was radioing for help v.·hen I heard a
shot and saw my partner fall onto the
grass grabbing at his head." sa!d
Davidson. ''I emptied my service
revolver into the front door and radioed
that my partner had been hurt bad."
Tile dozens of policemen who responded
lo the call for assistance fired more than
200 pistol and shotgun rounds y,•h!le ol-
fictrs: dragged Crossno to a 'va1tmg am·
bulance.
Cardinal Agagianian,
Top Russ Expert, Dies
VATICAN LEADER DIES
C1rdin1I Ag19iani1n
•
ROJ\1E (UPI\ -Cardinal Gre&oty
Peter Agagianian, who rose from th e
obscurity of an Armenian village lo
become the leader of the world 's Roman
Catholic mission and a candidate for lh•
papacy, died al his home Sunday nighL
He y,·as alS() consid ered one of the
f.oremost authorities on \\'orld com-
munism.
The tall , bearded cardinal who spent
ff9il of his life in Rome and spoke \\'ith 11
Roman accent. was 75. Church officials
said he had been sick lor some time a11d
Pope Paul V1 called at his bedside a fe,,
weeks ago.
A formidable linguist and a man vt'hn
Inspired friendship, Agag i,11nian was the
first non-Italian in centuries to be COD-
sidered a serious candidate' for the
papacy. He was mentioned as a possibili-
ty in the 1958 conclave which elected
John XXIIJ and again in the 1963 con#
cla\'e \1·hich elected the present Pope.
Although his prominence faded
son1e11·hat \Yilh the passing of yea rs and
impairment of his heallh . Agagianian still
was one of the most beloved ~rsonalities
in the Vatican_ Italians called him "more
Roman than the Romans."
The Ca rdinal \\'B!I born Laz1trus
Agag i11.nian Sept. 18, 1895. at Akhallzikhe
In what no1Y is Soviet Armenia, only •
few miles from the Georgia birthplace ot
Josef Stalin.
Crops in the stricken area were
deslroyed by the storm and report!!
trickling out cf the area have i9:dicated
that the distribution system for emergen-
cy food broke down when the civil war
started March 25.
India is seeking help from other coun-
lries in dealing with the problems of 2.6
million East Pakistani refugees that the
governm('nt estima tes ha11e crossed the
border into Jndia. Government officials
said they expect the total may eventually
reach five million or more.
Indian O-ime f\1inister Indira (:andhi
lold a ne\\s conference in CalC\Jtta Sun-
day after a two-da y visit to the border
.aru that little international aid has been
received.
Lava Threatens
Sicilian Towns
CATANIA . Sicily (UP I\ -Rivers tif
lava poured down on cottages and farm
houses on the slopes of Mount Etna I.Oda y
in the worst eruption of the. volcano in .(3
years.
Farmers \lo'ho built barricades to try lo
divert the Java from their doors retreated
lo neighbors' houses to y,•atch helplessly
as it burned their crchards and vineyards
and boiled through their cottages.
The stream of Java reac~ the first
houses Sunday in the outlying districts of
the town of Sant' Alfio. one of five
threatened by the renev.·ed activity and
eruption from Etn11 . and officials warned
the town may be endangered.
Trani>portation Week
Off to Shaky Start
NE \V '\'ORK (AP) -Nat i ona 1
Transportation \Veek got under way to-
dav. So did a nationwide railroad strike.
Transportation Secretary John A. Volpe
said the slogan for the May 16·22
observance would be "Transportation:
Filling the Needs of a Growing
America." Vol pe was due in New York
loday for ;1 ceremony ni a r ki n g
Transportation \Veek.
Storms Batter Midsection
West War111 , Win~y; Showers Scattered Tlirough U.S ..
Colifnr11in
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Talks Affected
Sadat Increases
Powers
By United Prf:55 l11ttro1liooal
Egypt's political upheaval t c da y
delayed efforts to find an interim ~tlddle
East solution that y,•ould permit reopen-
ing of the Suez Canal. bul Secretary of
Stale \Villiam P. Rogers sid Sunday his
:attempts to find a solution did not appear
threalened by evenlS in Egypt.
Rogers and Assist.ant Secretary of
Stal e Joseph J. Sisco scheduled con-
ferences in Ne \lo' Yo rk today with U.K.
Secretary General Thant and Gunnar \1•
Jarring, the U.N. peace negotiator \lo'hose
ov.11 efforts have been in limbo for
se\•eral weeks.
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat ap-
peared to be str~ngthening his hold on the
country and Cairo dispatche:t, today £aid
he had taken over as bl!:ad of Egypt's
polict rorct. He already is nominal head
of the armed forces. The Ciaro dispatch-
es said he had placed his politicil op·
ponents in concentration camps as his
purge continued of elements who tried to
overthrow his govern ment.
Political sources in Jerusalem said
Israel \\'OU\d delay furlher efforts to
reach agreement on reOpening the canal
untiil the situation in Cairo is stabilized.
The sources said the decision was taken
al a Sunday cabinet session .
Despite the Israeli statement. Rogers
said in v.rashington on NBC-TV·s '"Meet
lhe Press" that .. We have seen no sign
•· Ill .Egypt
tha t there will be any slowdown in tht
discuuions that are undtr W1Y and l
would hope that there will not be any ...
The Big Four ambassadors to the
United Nations ca lled a meeting Tuesday
lo review the situation. and EgypUan
sources at the United NaUons said there
would be no change ln Sadat's demand
that Israel Y.i lhdraw from the Suez Canal
-the detnand that has halted the talks.
Sisco and Rogers met both with Israeli
and Egyptian cfficials on their re«nt
Mideast tour and Sisco flew back to Cairo
y,·ith a new Israeli canal propo.sal. Today
they v.·ere briering Thant and Jarririg in
y,•hat \lo'as called an "informative only''
session. 1
Sadat carried out a major purge Thurs·
day, firing six cabinet ministers and
!hree .other top political leaders. In ad -
dition . nearl y 300 other officials either
l}-1\'e been arrested or relieved fron1
governn1ent posts.
·rhe semiolficial Cairo newspaper Al
Ahrain said today llO 'persons bave been
arreste<;I and referred to courts for trial .
IL said ''their actions indicated they v.•ere
v.·orking against the ,intere sts and secu ri·
ty of the magses."
The se mioff icial h1iddle East News
Agency IMENA) said the police force
named Sadat as its supreme head and he
acctpted the job.
Russian, U.S. Fishe1·men
Meet in High Sea Summit
GLOUCESTER. Mass. IAP I -A U.S.
delegation will meet at sea Wedne.&day
y,•jth the commander cf a Soviet fishing
fleet in hopes of ending a conflict
betv.•een Ru ssian trawlers and American
lobster fi shermen.
J;'or the past few \lo'eeks. local
lobstermen hav e complained lo the Coast
Guard thai Russian tra"·lers hav~_ ~-en_
ope rating in areas where lobster trap.'\
ha1·e been set. causing heavy dan1age lo
Ameri can gear.
John Skerry. chief cf the D1v1sioo of
Enforcement and Surveillance of Lhe Na·
Kate Webb Feels
Prince Sihanouk
Carne Lo Her Aid
SYDNEY i UPI) -t:atherine !YI.
''Kate '' Webb, held by Communist forces
in Cambodia for 23 days. said today she
believed lhe intervention of exi led Prioc_e
Noroclom Sihanouk may have been
responsible for her release.
llonal h1arine 1''isheries Service, said lhe
meeting \viii be held "mo.!ttly likely on the
Russian command ship" near the Nan-
lucket lightship. stationed 40 miles
southeast of Nantucket Island.
Skerry will head the American delega-
tion. v.·hich will al.so include represen-
tatives of lhe Coast Guard. the State
.Department and IM American fishing in-
dustry.
The Coast l;uard said·il has received
sl'ven complaints from i\·lassarhusett!I
lobstermen in the past lwo \lo'eeks thal
Russian lra\lo•lers ha ve passed over
. .\mcrican gear.
Lobster fishcrn1en use v.·ooden traps to
catch lobster on the ocean floor. The
traps are attached to floating buoys. The
general area is usually marked off with
another set of buoys lo caution other
ffs heirTicn.
Russian trawlers drag lheir nets
through the water. and if they PIUS over
an area where lobster traps are i;el, the
traps. buoys and lines get sv.·ept up in the
tra \lo'I.
Joseph C, E. Maillet, captain of the Wi-
ly Fox out of Westport, said he'1 lost
about $50.000 worth of gear from Russian
lra1vlers passing over his pots.
Maillet said at one point la.s t week the
t·re"'' of one Russian ship bade him "good
fishing" moment.!! before about a dozen
Russi an ships s!l!amed through his gear.
'Mooe that Lkimo here,
this penguin there, and
take the pipeline thro14h
here!'
Turks Abduct
ls_raef E11voy
111 Istanbul
!STANBUL .• 1'urkey rVPI) -Four
1nasked and a rm~d men kidnapcd Israe li
Consul General Ephreln1 l::lrom when he
arrived home for lunch today, po lice
sources said.
'fhe sources said the four n1en
abducted Elroin as he was preparini: to
enter his home in the center of Istanbu l
shortly after noo11 (6 a.m. EDT ).
The Israeli consulate declined to com -
1nent on the kidnaping . A spokesman
answering calls at lhe consutaie me rely
said the offices y,·erl': closed for une~
plained reasons.
f\.1ililary officials in Istanbul. which ha !!
been under martial Jaw since last monlh,
\\OUld say only !hat .. investigations con·
bnue .. in connection with k.idnapin"
The Israeli vice-cou nsel said Elrom'1
\\'ife \Vas in a slate of shock and under a
doc:lor·S care at home.
·rooay's kidnaping y,·as the third in l'I
~cries of abductions or foreigne r5 in
'furkey since the beginning of the year.
On Feb. 15. three armed Turks seizerf
U.S. Air Force Sgt. Jirnm y Finlay of F'orl
\Vo rlh. Tex .. and held him for several
days before releasing him unharmed. On
f\.1arch 4. an extremist grou p kidnaped
four more American airmen An rl
demanded a $400.000 ra nsom. The ranson1
y,•as oot paid and I.he 1nen were freed
several days later.
Political sourct'S said the earlie r kid-
napings and related polit ical instability
y,·ere largely respon sible for the resigna-
tion or the Suleiman Drm1rel gover1.
ment earlier this year.
1\'filitary leaders threalened 1t f.'OUp
unless he resigned and a 1nort" stable
government \\'as formed lo halt mas~
anti-government demonslrations by left-
ist students. 1'hr new goverl'lment im-
fXlsed martial law· and the country Jias
been relatively qu iet in recent \\'eeks.
Earthquake Recorded
BERKELEl' (AP\ -.Ir, slron11, earlh·
quake wa s recorded today by lhe
Uni versity of California seismograph sta-
lion y,•hich fixl!d its Jocalion near tht
Colombian coast.
The UC seismologists fi xed th, locatum
at about J,600 miles southeast of Berkel'Y
and at 100 to 200 miles below the earth·•
surface,
~liss Webb. 28. United Press. lnlerna·
tional bure.au manager in Phnom Penh.
w1~ captured by North Vietname se
forces April 7 y,·hile cove ring fighting
southeast of the Cambodian capital. A
body "'as found a y,•eek later that wa!I
believed to be hers. but on f\1ay I she was
released and telephoned the UPI bureau
in Phnom Penh that she was ahve.
r:l,ragi~ Wedding
In an interview en "f\leet the Press:· a
Sydney television program. she said To-
day "J now think that Sihamouk had a
great deal to do \Yith my release.''
Sihanouk w1s qustecl as chief ~late in
Cambodia in a bloodless coup t.1arch 18~
1970. He ha~ been in Peking since then
and its efforts to find the whereabouts of
~liss Webb. UPI cabled Sihanouk. asking
him for help.
f\fiss Webb arrived in Australia !\Ja y 11
to visit he r famil y.
She lost 24 pounds during tht 2J days in
captivity, during the television interview .
she sai d she \\'"S never really fri ghtened
about bc.'1ng !:.hot but \\'as afraid sht'
might not be able to acc('pt the phy~it:al
privations she endured during the long
marches.
Floor Gives Wa)', 14 GuesL8 Die
SALLEN. France (UPI) -~ugene Fa·
hien and Francoise Davenelt decided tn
hold their v.·edding party here when lhe
hall at their own village \\·as ruled unsafe
for the public.
Francoise. 19. in her white \lo'edding
go\\'n, \\-'as helping usher some of her 70
guests toward the dining tl1ble for the big
dinner when there was a loud crack .
The floor collapsed and about 30 guests
"anis~ into the jigged hole. Some were
lucky and hit the ground four feet below
fo r only minor bruises.
But about 20 boys and girls and 1 rew
adults plunged straight into • narrow un·
covered well, 21 feet deep under the noor.
The "'ater \\'as only a !cw reer hig h.
But so many people fell 1n, crushing each
other and forcing the \\'titer to rise. that
13 persons drowned on the spor. Another
died en route to a hospita l.
IL happened Saturday nigh!. 130 mile.~
Y.'est. of P,arjs in the Norm;indy country
near the English Channel.
Fabien. a 21-year-old fa rn1cr"s ~on ,
said the ma~or of Sallen, Rene Au vray,
agreed to give them the hall when the
village assembly room at_ their home
village in nearby CormOJain was closed t•
the public for safety reasons
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MONDAY
S !l •m '' 10 '2~m. l J
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1>~eld Cot~
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1"~ -1htr" l>t(lllc to.II "•d Vlrt.
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TU.IDAY
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Sun set at \\'orld ot Animals. a 240·acre drive·
through animal park ln ~1esquite, Texas. brings •
riulet tinte. most visitors never see. Tht giraUe and
l\\O £e1'1\5bo k see111 to be foUo,rtn&" a u;ail hon1e
v
aga inst the s.inltine sun -much as they might ha\ e
r1on e in their native Africa. Perhaps the car full of
.tourist:'! ts heading howe Loo
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IEA ANDERSON, Edito•
"' '"' 1•
r
Style T U!'1ed
To E·cology
• •
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" . . -' •
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' 1
Ir members of the Ladies' Guild, Sts. Simon and Jude Catholic 11
Church. Huntington Beach, seem to be spending an unusual amount of
1 time primping before their mirrors lately, it has nothing to do with
1
.
1 personal vanity.
They are putting into practice the theme of the group's annual
fashion show which will take place Saturday, fl.lay 22, in the Airporter 11
Inn, N~wp_ort Beach.
Keep America Beautiful is the theme selected for this year's
event, and guild members are planning to follow through the current I
interest in environment with fashion.
Stressing the "beautiful look" in American designs will be 'I
members who will model during the show, including the ft1mes . George I
Ralphs. Don Loeffler, Donald Pritz!. Ann Cook and ft!iss Cynthia Pinter. I
Not to be outdone by the distaff side. male styles will be model-'i(
ed by Bill P.:lcGovern. Preteen fashions "'ill be displayed by Kathy
}.1alloy. 1
__ ·r~ublic is invited to attend. Tickets at $6 per person may be
reserved by calling h-Trs.l'lli!ip ~lcCrea, 531r-7290:--Tifere Wilrtre an ,1--
a.m. social hour followed by a noon luncheon and the fashion prome·
nade.
•HITTING THE TRAI L' FOR BEAUTY -Mrs. Jack Buckie (left)
adjust a pack of new styles for Mrs. Charles Sennewald as members
of the Ladies' Guild of Sts. Simon and Jude Catholic Church pre·
pare for their annual fashion show taking place Saturday, May 22.
Theme of this year's event will be Keep America Beautiful -both
in environment and fashion.
General chairman of the benefit is 1i1rs. Francis Malloy and as·
i;isting with arrangements are the Mmes. Ron Torkildson, co-chairman;
J. E. McDonald, decorations; Jack Buckie, prizes; W. Preston Mullins,
hoi;lesses; fl-1cCrea and Louis Kaa , tickets and reservations; Wesley Eng·
lish. programs; Loeffler, advertising; Patricia Garner and Richard Mc·
Donald. publicity; Cook. models; Charles Sennewald and Prilzl. typist.
Coordinator for the show will be ftfiss Kathie Clark and fash1on!r
featured will be from Bergstrom's. \Vet Seal. Lido Fashions and the
Nu·U.
• 'Prizes' In Books ·Collected
By JODE>AN HASTINGS
Of t~• Dtil1 "ll•I Sllfl
Although it may come as a distinct
aurprise to lhe mod generation. the most
popular book on the family bookshelf in
the mld-1800s -standing in an honored
place next to the family Bible -was not
We~r's Dictionary.
Nor was it a complete. unabridged set
of encyclopedias.
Instead it was Dr. Pierce's Medical
Advisor, published in the 1860s and part
of a rare book col~lion di.splayed by
Jeffrey B. Jones of Goodwill Jndust.ries.
The fragile. yellow-paged volume with
Its faded cover seemed to contain one
cure-all for almost any ailment from
nosebleed to the common cold: a good
strong purgative~ Included were pictures
of common garden herbs or spices to be
selected for brewing of these various con·
coctions.
HOME REMEDIES
Naturally, conceded Jones, should these
home remedies fail there always was
Dr. Pierce's own Medical Discovery (un-
doubtedly a stronger potion or the same
type). If this didn't produce desired
resull.!I, Dr. Pierce concluded that the ail-
, ment probably resulted because you had
been a nasty wretch as a teenager,
anyhow.
Manners and morals of young men
\\'ere specified in the "Young Man's
P.fanual" printed in 1854. They were
round1y advised to avoid fast women,
obscene literature and t.orses.
Above all, the manual admonished. was
Bite Put on
DEAR A~NDERS: I am a ~idow
-going with a gentleman who is nol
wealthy but he is comfortable.. I have a
birthday coming up next month . He ask-
ed me what I wanted. Before 1 could rep-
ly he announced matter-of.factly, "I plan
to spend $2$." I was never so shocked in
my life. I told him I couldn't think of
anything I wanted. Now I'm not sure
ArN gift v.•ould be accept.able to me.
\Vasn't Uris crass on his part? Please
romment. -VASSAR '40
1hat a young man should be cautious in
his advances toward a young lady and if
looking for a wife, seek one with substan-
tial qualities.
A prospective bride was expected to be
frugal, because "an extravagant bride
becomes a demon of discontent in the
home." Other qualities he should seek in
a young woman would be lhat she be
grave, sober and industrious rather than
ya11t'fling and slothful.
COOL CLl!ll.ATE
Matters o[ health also were covered
with the writer advising a cool climate in
prefere.ce to a wann one 3nd healthful
foods including large quantities of fish.
potatoes ll'td vegetables well boiled for
several hours.
The topic of sex was covered in the last
three pages when the prospective
bridegroom was recommended to seek a
prospective bride with "a good now of
animal spirits."
"Perhaps he would have been wise to .
just forget it and stay single liite SI.
Paul ," quipped the youthful Goodwill
field representative who was presenting
the program for Fountain Valley Friends
of the Library.
Even the maMers and morals or the
clergy were detailed in a volume written
in 1835 particularly for young ministers.
clergyman walked away ;it leas! 100
yards to spit
Si11ce counseling was considered a part
of his duty as shepherd to his flock, the
book advised always leaving the door
open when counseling the Wif~ and
always retaining good temper and
amiable manners no matter what tht
circumstances.
OLDEST BOOK
One of the eldest books displayed wall
"Cicero's Rhetori c" written in Latin and
Greek and printed in 1569. Jones
~timated that it probably had been re-
bound duririg the 1700s.
JOnes observed that even in Bradford's
third edition of the "Illustrated History of
Los Angeles County'' printed in ap-
proximately 1883, there still was no
refereRce made to Juaquin Murriel.a, one
of California's most famous banditos.
Even the reprint or the volume is worth
about $100 on the collector's market.
Other rare books displayed includE'd ff
John Bunyon 1688 edition of "The Holy
War," a mail order catalog from Chicago
dated 1795 and a copy or "Aesop'•
Fables" printed in 1811.
Most or the books arc received among
other ordinary rontributiofll lo Goodwill.
said the personable young man. and
many valuable ed itions "'slip by" when it
is sorted by inexperienced help unawarie
of lheir potePJtial value.
·I
In "P.1anners and Habits of Young
P.-Unisters." "tippling·• was roundly con·
demned but 1nuff ()r tobacco· chewing
were approved provided the young
. The main sorting areas C'lf Goodwill
Jndustries are constantly scrutinized by
collectors of rare volumes. he concluded.
ii.ARE EDITIONS EXAMINED -Jeffrey B.
.Jones from Goodwill Industries dls(ilays rare
old books from its collection to Mrs. Clar~ncc
Stewmon, program chairman or Friends oC
the Fountain Valley Library.
Romance When Gift Horse Looked
ANN LANDERS ~
The system is rotten and this is: proof.
1 kid wllb loog bait' and a beard. lt't bis
constitutional right not to hire him.
Some or you ldds make a lot mere trou·
ble for yourselves than you need. You
walk around mad at lhe world,
accept yoa and when they don't you yel1,
accept you and whea they don't you tell,
"Dama the establishment!"
Is pregnant?
Today a woman gave birth in the park·
Ing lot of a supermarket. A couple of peo-
ple came to her rescue when :ihe was
seen leaning on her car in pain, unable to
open the door. One man 5aid to her. "I'm
going to call for an ambulance right
away or the baby will he bom here." The
woman shrieked, ''Ridiculous! J am not
pregnant. It's appendicitis or something I
ate.''
•
•
Mouth ·
pregnancy and not know H. -IF I
DIDNT SEE IT I WOULDN'T BELIEVE
IT
DEAR IF: Sueb an occurrence Is tart..
but it it ital unheard of. ne uplanaUon _,.
Is that some women do DOt experience .
the usual symptoms of prt1nancy"h the ·
ca1e of the parttn1·lot mother, she may •
we11 have bttn compietely unawart or "
ber condition ua&U Ute bb1b. •
'
DEAR ••o: Your friend 11 obviously a
practtcar rellow. He also b a e1ullou1
tYJ)I!!. Some people believe In Jtylng It on
the line. He might be crass, but be'1
honest. Don 't Jcmck fl.
job for seven weeks. The last three
places I applied seemed promising. but 1
wasn't hlred. I decided to checlt back and
find out why. All three personnel heads
!!Bid my qualification1 Wert excellent but
my appearance was agairu;t me. What It
bolled down to was long hair and a short
beard. t finally asked lhe last personnel
guy if he would hire me if J cut my hair
and shaved my beard. He replied, ''Yes."
I looked him straight in the eyt, 1aid,
"Nuts to you," and walked out.
What has my hair and beard to do with
my ability? I consider It my con·
stitutional right to wear my hair any way
I please and to have a beard if I want
one. I would like your opinion on this. If I
get the answer I want I will take it baCk
to those jerks and shove it in their stupid
race.. -BATON ROUGE
Vou 'U do a lot better. reJJa, when you
learn to 1mlle and meet the world half
way. A chip on the shoulder Is u1uaUy •
sign that there Is wood bigbtr up.
\Yilh in a few minutes that woman gave
birth lo a baby. Someone hailed a pa~ing
squad car and the woman and her baby
were taken to a nearby hospital.
"The Bride's Guide," Ann Landers'
booklet, answers some of the most fre-:
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 1t 20-
ycHr-old boy who has bttn looking for a
•
DEAR BAT: Sorry, Buddy. When you
are asking for sometblog -you do It
THEIR way. U an employet dot1a 't want
•
DEAR ANN LANDERS : This will pro-
bably sound like a dumb question and t
v.·ould not be asking it except thal
t1omething fantastic happened today. Can
a lady have a baby withoul know~g she
•
How in the world could !luch a thing
happen? Was th is lady nutty? Did ihe
suddenly develop amnesia? Please ex·
plain how a ~·oman can go through a
QUenlly asked questions about weddings •
To receive your copy or this com-
prehensive guide, write to Ann Lander!.
in care or the DAILY PII,QT enclosing •
long. Si!lf·addressed, stamped cnvtlOP' ..
and 35 ctnt.11 Jn coin. "
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Ole! It's Fiesta Time
Guvs and Dolls Section of the Riviera Club \Viii dan ce the 1.·Texican hat dance
as demonstrated by /left to right ) J\1iss Eileen Brad\\'ell. Mrs. F'rederick Garre-
loD and t.-lrs. Robert de fo~ofd. section ch airman. The fiesta group \Viii arrive at
I El 'Adobe restaurant in San Juan Capistrano fo r a 7:30 p.m. coc ktail hour fol-
lowed by dinner and dancing on Saturday, May 29. Reservations at $6.50 per ~ person are due by J\1onday, May 24.
·-Mother of Invention t:
-Labor Not Painless
By ER~tA BO~tBECK
( was with a group of
• writers the other day "'"hen the ' 1 subjtcl came up as lo how '>'·e I
I enjoyed our work.
, ,;I would rather write,·• said
:
I
a woman who wrote soap
operas, "than eat ice cubes on
an 1mp.acted wisdom tooth."
"Me too,'' said another. "I
can't think of anyt hing more
fulfilling. . .unles.s It's food . . . " poisoning ..
\\'e were being cynical. or
course. The truth is pulling
together words into some kind
of coherency takes more
discipline: than a karate chop.
You can go blind staring at a
J while 1httt ol paper.
I "Whal did you get done this
morning~·· asked a ropywriter
AT
WIT'S
END
out of it '>''ith a pair of
twee~rs which took me an
hour and a hair kl find .
"Then I alphabetized 1ny
bills, tried to make a musical
out of the phone book, picked
burrs off the do-g's rump and
pick ed up the wa ste can with
my knees without spilling the
contents."
"That sound! like a pro-
fitable morning," she said.
"Thal'!! not all." I con-
tinued . "I got a hangnail
started. made a fly trap out of
a paper clip and a piece of
Scotch tape. called Dial-a-
orayer and asked if they made
house calls and checkrd the
dictionary to see if Superc.ah-
fragilisti cexpialidoshus was in
iL"
''\'-'ere you using il?"
''No. I had five minule:i1 to
kill until lunch. What did you
do, Phyllis?" I asked a free-
lance writer.
"You re m t' rn be r tht
Christmas lrec with the Xs on
the IYPt'Wrller I s I 11 rte d
yesterday? Finished it this
moming. Then t counted a
new ream of paper to io;ee if ii
really contained 500 sheets.
and finally t figured out that
in 1981 . my birthday falls on a
Saturday night."
\\'e got aroond lo Joyce who
is a PR girl for the local piita
cha in. "I've had a great mom·
ing.'' s~ gushed. "I got a
dozen TV spots written. did a
history on the 11nchovy 11nd
'J)ersonally -('()nducted two
tours throughout our plants."
! for 11n advertising finn
"Well.'' I said. "Firlit I gnl
, ou1 a clean sheet of paper and
Ii succeeded in picking a flaw
'Mrs. Republican' Speaking
Joyce is a nice girl. but
she'll never make it big. She
isn't inventive eoough to be a
\\•riter. I
! GOP Women End Year The St itchery Nook
ClllWIL & Nl!'IDLl,.OINT
Kll1 .I. 1~,,11e1 ' ' • ' • ' •
"Mrs. Rep ublican 01
Callfomla." f.f rs. Ann Bo"·ler
"'ill be the guest .~peakrr at
lhe final meeting of the sl!aSfln
fnr !he ll untinglon Beach
Republican Women 's Club.
!\lrs. Bow ler. Republican na-
tional committeewoman from
1 1964-68. women's counly pre5i-I dent and now rrgion111
I <'halrman of the S1111e Central
Committee, will d is cu 5 s
Readiness -1972. ~ A sa lad lunrheon prepared
I
hy the losi ng \Pam in the • "•r•t•ft e 1uc1t11 e 11rft1t
rlub 's membership contest i e 1 uft1•~ • c.1vmtt1·M1 ........ • OMC ylrftl 11'ill be se rved at 11 :30 a.m.I 1)t l . 11111, Cttll MHI •U·l•U \\'ednesday, Ma~· 19. in the HILLOlllN 5QUAlll
recreat ion center. ~1 rs ·l'':=:==::::;:=:=:=:=:=:=~I Richa rd Dittmar is in charge 1r
of arrangement~.
Re s e rv at ions for the
Southern Di1·ision Republican
\\'omen 's luncheon meeting on
Wrdnrsda:y, June 2. In the
Airporter Inn 1vill be available
from Mrs. Bernard Gage,\L----------.JI
president.
! Art Works Showcased I Studt'nts froni Cnrnna di!]
!\lar High School are 11i!'pl;iy.
ing 1hrir work~ th1!' monlh 1n
the Corona del 1\far Publir
Llbr'llr~· under the spon!'nrship
o( the Newport Beach CLtr
Ari.A Comrn itlC't'.
•Ftaturcd in_ tht sh o'>'·i·asc at
t~t library '>''it! be the work 0f
f.eorge Corr.1, 111.i.:h 11~:hool arl
inslnK'lor. '>''ho ass('rnhlcd th!!
dlq p!ay for h15 s1uc1ents,
The exh1b1\ i!' open 1o fhr.
puhhr Ouri nR regu la r hbral)
hn11r~
,\1:1 nn<'rs Library i!I presrn-
1ing 11 c1 1spl11~· or art \\'nrk
prt·pared by rn11ny noted cn1·er
:ir11sls for ''Orange Count~·
l!lustratl'd." The <li11pla1· \1'ill
inclufte reprodU('tiOtlS nf the
ro1·ers in , :id<l itinn lo th ('
oril!inal \\Ol'k.
AILEEN
SPORTSWEAR
AT
1404 VIA LIDO, N'-WPORT IEACH
c;tn1 or S11rinic, th e F.mera!d it
:i. hirlhstone aut•round'rl hy
l1•1:ends. It 11 ros s11id to rOn1pose.
tht first t.loha1nn1,dan Jlta\·l'n ,
the fourth roun.lation or the
Nl'w Jerusalem, to fo!lttr pre•
'¥1t1on, llr,nii;lh'n metnory,
4'loqurnct', and evt'n mraaurt a
h1v,r'1 f,rvor. A1 the favored
1tont of V'nUI, the l:mera!d
1tand1 !or love' and 1ucce.11, ..-
SoYllor C~••' 1'1111
lr,1!11 .1 '~• S1" DI•~• ilwy,
'
Election
Planned
"School's oot" for I he
.Orange Coast Diviskln ol
California &tired Teachers
and to celtbrate the occasion
members will attend fl noon
luncheon Wednesday, Ma y 19.
in the Airporter Inn, Newport
Beach.
Paul Colburn, president . will
conduct a short business
meeting to elect officers.
Installing officer will be Mrs.
Helen Hobson. st a t e ad-
ministraUve vice president,
who will give the principal ad-
dress.
Luncheon entertainment will
be ·provided by Mrs. Milli
Magill who wi ll present her
own program of song and
piano numben .
All retired teachus in the
area are welcome (() attend
the luncheon and bring pro-
spective members from areit
schools.
Waist Watchers
TOPS Wa ist W a l ch e rs
asstmble tvery Thursday at 7
p.m. in Circle View Sctool,
.H untinaton Beach.
,.
Your Horoscope Tomorrow .
Capricorn: Caution Necess~ry
TUESDAY
MAY rs
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARJES (Ma rch 21-Aprll 19):
Whal occurs behind the scenes
may now have special mean·
lng for you. J<~am ily member
appears kl bt involved. Check
travel plans, reservations. One
who means 1,1.·ell may also be
careless.
TAU RUS I Apr il 2D·May 20 ):
Avoid self-decept ion. Get
facts : discard rumors, Some
of your desires cost more than
now can be afforded. f.1ake
financial adjustment5. Trjm
budget. Pisces individual is
due to play k'Y role.
GEl\UNI i Ma y 21-June 20):
T"'O indi"¥iduals seem to feel
they know '>''hat is best for
you. In truth, you "'ouhl be
belter advised to follow your
o"·n instincts. Accent is on
achievement, special goals
and career.
CANCER (June 21-July 22 )·
Study Arif:1 message. f inish
•
one task before beginning
aoother. Slrive for rtallstic
approach. Refuse to hang on
kl past. Future can be bright
if you make it so. Act ac-
cordingly,
LEO \July 2.1-Aug. 22):
Fathom reasons why: refuse
superficial answers. Stres5 on
how money is expended . Gel
figures ; be analytical. N ew
-approach ls a necessity. Strive
for greater inriepe nde nce of
·thought, action.
VIRGQ {Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ):
Domestic affa irs tend to
dominate. Build on solid base.
Avoid one who advocates ap-
parent easy methods. Con-
centration is necessary. Check
details. property valuas and
futurt costs.
LIBRA I Sepl. 2.l-Ocl. 22):
Stress versatility. DI s p I a y
sense of humor. Some around
YO\.! now need cheering. Do
wha t you can-the more you
give, the more you ultimately
will receive. Work associate
plays key role.
SCORPIO iOct. 23-Nov. 21 }:
Y4?tJng per50n ia willing lo be_
generous -with your money.
Pull in reins; oppose ex-
travagance. Jf you act foolish,
you will be So treated. E1-
press yourself in concise man-
periOO . ).leans you get thingt
done. Know your own abililies.
Push ahead. Strike whil e cycle
is on upswing. St res 1
personality . Don't be
w11Jnower.
ner. ------------SAGITTARIUS tNov . 22-
Dec. 21 ): Avoid stress. Have
fun without going to e.xtr4!mes.
See situation in realistic light.
Listen to sob story bu t don't
become unduly Involved .
!\1essage becomes increasingly
clea r.
CAPRICORN (Der . 22-Jan.
19 ): f.1uch that seems solid
may require review . Not wise
to takt persons. situations for
granted. You can make plans
for future, but be cautious
regarding immediate actions.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
!SJ: Protect what is of value.
Emphasis is on temptation to
spend for purpose of im-
pressing others. Key is to ex·
ercise self-control in this area.
Take one thing at a time.
PISCES (Feb. ID-March 20):
You experience a power
Petting
Zoo
Moft , +hru Su11 .. M1v 17-1)
oft. of'"• "'01f p1pul11
cl1ddr•ft I 1Hr1clioft1 h.ld i"
our ..,,11. Educ1lio•11I 11
will •I luft -clljldrtft c1 11 f,.d
b•bv •ft im1l1 fro"' 111 OYt • tl.o
worl d. Opt" dtilV lhru •••"'"9'•
o" +ht m•ll. 25~ 1dm i11io ...
l-l u"lift9lo11 c .ftt •• •' s ... o;,,.
Fr1•w1v. l11 ch 1ftd Ed ift9t•. HI,
• •
all-around comfort
and you save 41 %
1 hiddea imaer.
Mndt&rm.
fl•ttee hunray
...
2
4
~ .•.
)
(ull hip la11 averag'
ALSO A\'All.ABLE AT TH•; SAr-.IE I.OW PRJ CE:
Av,.r•ge Hip. Long Torso panty p:ird], in 1i1r•
M.L)'.L and XXL. White. 2 for f6.99
Full Hip, Long Torto pu.ty girdle in ti1el
M.L.XL ud XXL. Wb.ite. 2 for 16.99
-:-I sears I
• • ....... o .. c..:. .... r-.
I Ull(A PAllC
C&HOe& '"tlC
COM"°M
' ·-~: ..... :~
proportioned panty girdle
Here's your chance to enjoy almost custom-
like fit , •• and ltWe/ Sean proportioned. panty
girdle is not just sized ••• it's shape-adjusted
10 fit different figure types comfortably a.I I
over. Maximum control comes from firm
inner bands criu-crOISed under a panel of
satin elastic (acetate, cotton, spandex). And
you can't beat the body elaslic-it's nylon and
Lycra• spandex-with more of the same form-
ing side panels lo trim hips and !highs, and
in & V·shaped back panel ~ li ft and CUr\'C
the figure into natural linetr . In white only.
Look around ••• you will find your me here!
Use Sears Revolving Charge
MOLL1"WOO.
IHOUW009
lON• llA(ll
~1'MPI( I. IOTe
OIAIHJ
PAIAOrtfA
•
SALE
for 7 days'11'n1y
99
for
S.iVE41 %
on •Ttn1e. 6ip, ~ tono
puty ii.rd.le, regnlaT $6.00 eteh
'
IANTA rr ll'llJMI
IANTA lllOHltA
10!.IT)rl CO.I.If PU.U,
, ... u •• ,. ...
toll•NCI'
"&Uf1' .. .....
j •
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I
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Newport Beaeh
. EDITION
-. Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
VO~. M, NO. 117, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 17, "1971 TEN CENTS
Viet F 01·ces
Sta1·t Drive
•
Up Valley
SA1GON (UPI) -\Vilh U.S. air power
attacking 'ahead of them the South Viet·
hamese army today began its long·
delayed drive into the A Shau valley. On-
ly small skirmishes were reported but
'tne commander of the operation
predicted the Communists "intend to
1tand and fight."
Hae Bao (Black Panther) shock froc;ips
assaulled from U.S. IOJsl airborne
division helicopters ahead of the main
force of several thousand troops of the
Jst South Vietnamese infantry division.
-Their missio1 -.'as lo knock out antj.
aircraft guns before lhe main push.
Helicopters ferrying the \tietnamese
troops ran into such heavy ground fir•
they had to land the iinfantrymen a mUe
a,,.,·ay from the planned landing zone. Two
formations of B52s hit Communist b'oop
cconcentrations just aliead of the assault
force.
The. A Shau Valley runs 35 miles from
the Hue area toward the border of Laos.
It has become a major Communist su~
ply area since the last allied operation in-.
to the valley a year or so ago.
Brig. Gen. Vu Van Gia i, commander of
the 3J-day-0ld operation~ said __fil~st
tJght·eommuriists Were killed in the first
skirmishing and that the government suf-
fered "light" losses. "I think the North
Vietnamese intend lo stay and fight
here." he told UPI correspondent Stewart
l\ellerman.
American ground troops have not yet
aone into the valley · in strength but U.S.
paratroopers today reported finding a
huge Communist base camp in the
jungle.a three miles northeast · of the
valley. The area t'OUld att0mmodale •
tota'I of S.800 men, U.S. Army spokesmen
sail!.
Lt. Gen. Nguyen Van >.tum, South Viet-
namese commander of III 1:9rps. lhe It
provinces surroundiwg Saigon, and com-
mander 0£ government forces in Cam·
bodia, said the February·March invas.ion
of Laos had slowed down North Viet-
namese infiltration inlt> Cambodia
Dostal Reacts
To Statements
Over .Route Deck
Newport Beach doesn't "misunder'·
1tand ' \\'hat the Orange County AirPGrl
Commission is 1rying lo do with the pro-
p>Sed d€ck over the future Corona de!
Mar Freeway, Councilman Milan Dostal
aaid tctlav.
Dostal Wrote the California Division o{
Highways in Sacramento in r_esponse to
&tatements by Airport Commissioner E.
R. Ablolt who said:
"Perhaps v.'e could construct a deck
strong enough to protect from crashes
but not to se rve as a perman~nt runwar
• . . t think the (NewPGrt ) City ~ounc1l
misunderstands what we are trying to
~-· . . Dostal minced no words 1n his
respon:;e.
"If the ¥ck will be strong enough to
withstand a crash or overrun. it should
also be constructed to be ~trong enough
to withstand a rollover for taking oU and
landing.
"Secondly, the Ne-.'J>Ort Beach City
Council does not rnisunderstand ~h.at ~
Orange County AirROrt ComrrusslOn is
tcying to do .
"No one quarrels with increasing safe-
ty al Orange County Airport -but this
waposal transcends sarety. 'This permits
sOme future governmental agency to e~
pand the run,,.,•ay structure to permit
operations at the airport which will ut-
terly destroy the cities of Newport Beach ,
Costa Mesa. Tustin, Santa Ana. Orange
and Villa Park.''
He then pointed out, "Residents of
(Ste DOSTAL, P1ge 2t
Ahoy, There,
Forrnei Mate
A Newport BeaC'h man was ar·
mted Saturday on charges of
.stealing a. caMon from his e.1-wife.
Pilichael Lawrence Carden, 31 , of
614 w. Ocean Front, "'as arreste_d
by Newport Beach pollct at hlJJ
home . S11turday after his former
wife. f\.1ary Linda Ca rden alleged
he took the line throwing cannon
from her home.
The firearm In question w1s
desc ribed a~ being about three feet
in length. mounted on ~tal wh~ls
and is used on boats for heaving:
lines long distanct1.
Exotic Visitor
Art Gransky of Art's Landing, Newport Beach, offers bread to color-
fi.illy·plumed duck that appeared at Balboa Pav~ion a.bout a week
ago. The bird, identified by boat s~ipper and h~nt1n~ ~1de John, Hol ·
stein. as a.ipandariQ mallard is quite tame an~ 1,5 thr1V1Jlg .on a diet or
anchovies· and bread. Holsi'ein says mandanns are natives of the
Orient and are rarely seen in tbis part ot the country.
Social Security Increase
Approved by ~ouse Pa11_el
WASHJNGTON (AP) -The •louse
Ways and Means Committee today ap--
proved a five percent across the board
increase in Social Security benefits to be
effective June l, 1972,
The benefit increase \\'as inserted at
the last minute in the committee's big
social security welfare bill. which was
then approved wilhoot further change.
The House is expected lo act on the
measure early nert month.
The new increase would ceme in ad.
ditio11 to a JO percent increase effective
this year and a 15 percent increase thal
went into effect last year.
The committee also retained in the bill
a provi&ion for automatic increases in
Trustees Slate
· Special Meeting
An executive meeting of the Newport·
f\tesa Unifiei:I 'School District Board or
Echrcstionhas-been called for 8 o'clock
tonight in district offices.
The board will discuss teacher salary
negoUaUom during the c I o s e d -d o or
session. ,
The rtgul:ir public meeling or the
board Will be held al 7 p.m. Tuesday in
the Ly~um at Costa l\fesa High School,
2650-Fairview Road.
12 Hearitags
benefits when the cost or living rises
three percent or more in a year
Ho\\'ever, the measure provides that no
automatic increase can take place in the
year following a legislative increase. So,
adoption of the five percent raise in Im
,,.,-ould mean that no additional automatic
raise could go into effet before 1974.
The increase was estimated to provide
an additional $2.1 billioo for Social
Securily recipients in the first full year of
lts operation. ·
There would be no immediate increase
in laxes above the increases that already
had been written into the bill. and which
would mean a maximum additional tax
next year of $145 Dn a worker earning
$10.200 or more and on his employer.
The committee voted 13 lo 12 for the in·
rrease, reversing the mirgln by Which an
increase was defeated last Thursday.
Rep. Joe Waggoner, (D·La.). who voted
against an increase last week. reversed
his position and moved for
reconsideration.
'Slumber Protest'
OAKLAND !UPI) -Some llKI girls,
many in filmy nighties, protested the
past weekend o\'er residence hall visiting
rules at all-.women Mills College.
The young \\"omen staged a "slumber
protest" in the lounges a1ld living rooms
at seven halls which house about 750
students.
•
High Rise Targeted
Citizen Group May Ask Coast Ban
A group of citizens may ask the
Newport Beach city council to scheduJe a
referendum calling for an outright ban On
highr18e along the waterfront.
Alan Beek, a .spokesman for the' group,
said the. homeowners are not making any
reoommendatlons at this time, but do
want the CQUncll to extend the highrlse
moratorium to allow in-depth study o! the
issue.
A public hearing on a proposed 90-day
exten.5ion or the ban will take p I a c e
tonight, sometime after 7:30 p.m., and
Beek promised a large turnout of
residents to support the request.
Handbills advertising tonight's meeting
have been distributed throughout much or
Nation's Rail -.
Workers Shut
Down Tracks
WASHINGTON (UP I) -Railroad
signalmen went on strike today, shutting
down the nation's rail lines, and Presi·
del'lf"Nixon proposed emergency legisla-1 tion to force the men back to 'work until
at least July J ....
Within five hours after the 13,(1()().man
Brotherhood o! Railway Signalmen went
on strike, effectively shutting down all
rail passenger and freight traffic, the
Florida White House announced Nixon's
plan te> Congrua:, calling for a new round
of nttotiations. · ·
Urg!ni paHage of a joint ruolution to
halt the lhutdown that started at 6:01
• a.m.-local tlme, Nixon said a continued
natiorill itrlke "would cause great
hardship to all American! and strike a
aerious blow at the nation'• economy."
"Jl Is eSsentlal that our railroads con-
tinue to operate," the President said.
The President recommended that
Congress promptly enact legiSlation to
extend the pre!ent contract. 11egotiation
between the signalme11, union and lhe
rallroads unUI July J.
He · further asked Labor Secretary
J ames D. Hodgson to follow the situation
closely ., it developed and to continue
assisting bolh sides of the dispute. He
said that iI no settlement had been reach·
ed by June 21, It should be reported to
him and Congress.
Th~ signalmen, wht> maintain and in-
stall signal equipm~nt, struclt when the
railroads refused to meet their demands
for wage increl3es almost double what
.other rail unions have accepted.
Key members of Congress pledged in
advance to give prompt consideration to
Nixon'• request. Veteran observers said
that Jn spite of traditional reluctance. o(
laWmakers to enact legislation during a
labor emergency. Congress would likely
approve the Nixon request -or
something similar to stop the strike -
some lime today.
House Republlcan Le:ader Gerald R .
Ford called for fast action on emergency
legislaUon, but said the strike never
should have been allowed to happen .
Ford was referring to legislation pro-
posed some time ago to deal with .such
disputes, and in his message Nixon chid-
ed Congress for failure to-act-on-his-
"emergency public service protection
act."
He said that would put an end to the
"chaoUc nature of collective bargaining"
in the tra1tsportatlon Industry.
White House Press Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler said "we feel this piecemeal
method is no way to run a railroad.·•
(Stt: RAILS, P11e Z) '
L~ city by '-frs. Jucty Rosener of Lide>
Island, Beek said.
The moratorium extension ls being
sougtit by the Civic Dlstrict Study Com-
mittee to allow time for planniQg com-
mission and city council public hearings
on its proposals.
The study committee has not recom-
mended an outright high rise ban.
Beek insisted. however. that the group
he has talked "'Ith wants nothing mort: ::,d.TI more information at th is polnl
"We want the study committee to start
mreting at night (its proposals were
prepared in a three-month serie1 of after-
noon meetings) to allow for citizen in·
put." Beek said.
Beek said residents may force a vote of
the people on whatever standards are
finally adopted.
"We wouJd hope jt would be a referen-
dum," he said, "bul we'll force an in-
itiative (by collecting signatures) If we
have to." ._
He said unless there is a · vote rl the
people S:ny action by the council could be
overriden by a council in the t\Jture.
"We don 't v.·ant any loopholes flr
variances allowed," he said.
Basically, the recommendations of the
study committee call for addlUonal Open
space to be Jert on future construction on
watet-0riented property.
They al.so set standards for denaily,
parking and signs.
.4.verages Drop 13
Markets Take Big Plunge
Reacting to Rail Walkout
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock Jrulfket
prices took a nosedive today tn moderate
trading as investors responded to the na-
tionwide rail strike and rising interest
rates.
The Dow Jones average cf ~ in-
dustrials at JI a.m. PDT was off 12.13 ;;.t
923.13. Declines outnumbered advances
on the New York Stock Ei:change hy
more than S to 1.
Trading volume picked up con·
siderably, late in the se.s1lon frOl'I) Us
alucllitll morning-.,.... -to-
Newport Beach
Weekend Crashes
Injure 2. Women
Two women are listed in good condition
today at Hoag Memorial H03Pital after
they were Injured in two separate traffic
accidents .cver the weekend in Newport
Beach.
Kathleen Asbell, 20 of 16332 Ross Lane,
Huntington Beach was Injured Friday
wh~ the car she was drlvlnc was sti:uck
from behind while waiting for the light at
the intersection of Newport Boulevard
and Hospital Road, police said.
The driver or the second car, P.1ichael
G. Scott, 30, of 1626 Newport Blvd., Costa
i\fesa, was arrested by Nevrport Beach
poll~ Dn suspicion of drunk driving.
i!'Jula Vista resident D e b o r a h
Glackman, 19 suffered a fractured hip
Saturday night when she was struck
while crossing Balboa Boulevard at 14th
Street, police reported.
According to officers. Miss Glackman
was in the crosswalk when she was hit by
;:i car driven by Lynn Bryan NelBOn, 18, Of
12.141 Blue Bell Ave., Garden Grove.
Investigation is continuing in the ac·
cldent, officers said.
Jn a third accident Sunday, a bicyclist
ar.1-.,._motorcycle rkler escaped serious
injury in a CQ!lislon at W. Ocean Front
and McFadden Place.
Patrolme11 aald Todd Rovau:inl, 11 l'lf
105 32nd St. waa riding across Ocean
Front when the· rear Ure of his bike was
clipped by the motorcycle ridden by Tony
Salmon, 29, of 2614 W. 9lh St., Santa A11a •.
l'iuclear Plants
tlvity also Increased, Indicating that tho
1elloff was begiMing to gain momentum.
Analysts cited worries over the rad
strike as the major market depressant.
Ho\\·ever. fears that rising short·tenn in-
terest rates could trigger a boOst In the
Final Stock R•r•• Tod11y, P1ges 1 , 19
prime or discount rates also weighed
heavily they added
Large-block tradts Included 190,000
ahares of Household F" ·.ance at~. off%;
80,000 of Niagara' Mohawk Power at 16,1,
off 1-2; 66.600 cf-Fannie Mae at 58. down
31/,: and 59,00J of First Oiarter FJnanciaJ
at 231n:, off 'h.
Other Big Board prices Included Cen--
tral & South West, off '' to ~14; Dentsp.
Jy International, off 5\.2 to 49, following
sell recommendations from 1 o m ti
brokerage houses; TeleJi:, off ~ to 18;
Llng • Temco • Vought, of! 2-l/3 to 185;
Pittston, doMl two to 43%. and General
Telephone, don ~ to 32.
On the Amerlcan Stock Exchange,
General Builders was off ~ to five after
a 99,SOO..share block traded earlier at 4%,
off , J.J/3. ~r Amex-prices Jncluded
LTV warrants. off ~ to 9%; Deltona.
down 214 to 32%: Syntex, oft 3~ ~14:
Yonkers Raceway, up 2~~ to ~•. and
Cinerama , up % to s~~-
Shell Fish Ban
On Beach Lifted
The long quarantine on taking shell fish
along the beach from Newport Pler in
Newport Beach to Beach Boulevard tn
Huntington Beach has been lifted after 28
months by the Orange Gounty Depart-
ment of Health.
Health officer Dr. JDhn Philp said re-
cent tests show that the bacteria count!
in the ocean water along the three mile
beach are well within the acceptable
safety standards.
The qu~rantine \\'.as enforced on Jan.
10, 1969 after the first of a series of floods
that winter. Sewage line ruptures in
Riverside County sent million of gallons
Df raw sewage doMl the Santa Ana River to the ocean.
Harvesting of muMels in the beacti
area remains under slate ban until Oct. ~l, the health depai tment warned.
Oruge
. Under Sea Seen
Long Council Meet Seen PASADENA· CAP) -A scientist says
nuclear generating plants may l'lave to be
located beneath the ocean 20 to 50 mlles
off!hore by the year 2000 to meet
Southern California's power needs and
avert a dangerou.s rise In air tem-
peratures.
Weatller
Those Santa Ana winds will be
with us again. warming things up
along the coast, but especlally in-
land. Temperature range -from
the middle 60s to nearly 80 degrees, A: -pt~ist Newport Be.a ch f\1ayor Ed
Hirth is noL
Hirth this morning predicted the clly'
council ·will be able to handle Ill entire
agenda ~ that begins with 12 public hear-
ings· -at tonight's 7:30 o'clock meeting
in City Hall.
"rm sure we can go through the tnUre
thing.'' he said. "We'll just ask people to
keep tbeir remarks brief."
He'll be asking for cooPeration from
speaker• on such topics as:
-An ordinance to ban dogs from the
~c:he1.
-An exttnsiDn of the moratorium on
Wsterfront hlgh-rlse.
-Repeal of the tidelands use fee
ordinanct. •
-A req11esl by the Chamber ol Com·
merce to 5tring baMers across various
roadwa)'!.
-A public street lighting .system for
the private Big .Canyon ' residential
development. ,
-A request by tht Ne"'lJOrt Harbor
\'acht Club to extend Its bu I k head
bayward by 75 feet.
-Proposals to change the name or
Palisades Road to Bristol Street and
Tustin Avenue and Acacia Street to
Irvine Avenue.
-The location of the Bay 1st.and trash
canli on a pubJlc street end.
-Appointment of a COUl)(llmanic
redistricting committee.
-Adopt ion of staff project priority list.
\Vhile the most controverSlal hearinp;s
i re on cloJ-'. and the tidelands, use fee1.
and high ri$e. lu that order they art
listed ninth, 10th and lJth on the agenda
and the firs\ of them likelf will not be
heard before 8:30 . p.m. at the very
earliest. ·
Hirth aald there Is a chanct that 10me
Items on the agenda may be bekt over
unlit the council meeting May 24. but i~
dicated that certainly all the public hear-
ings scheduled would be completed.
And he felt sure the rest or the things
v.·ould, too.
"It 1111 could go pretty fast ,'' he said, I
don 't expect much trouble.
"It's the Umes when you npect long
mooUngs that evelrythlng goew smoothly,
v.•hen you e~(pecl a short meeting, you get
going around and around on aomethina
that' takea a night..
"lt"1 pretty hard to predict," he Aid.
. ,,
Wster Lee'a, direct.or <lf l ht
EnVironmtnlal Quality L 1 b oral or y
fEQL} ·at California Institute ,of
Technology. said' SatW"day present steam
plants, at the cun-ent ralfi of lnc:reaslrig
power consumption, "could raise tem·
pcraturts In the Los Angelu basin by 10
d.?grtes by the end o,f the century.
"EQL and other groups ire serioUl!lly
.studying the feasibility of nuclear power
plants, which would fla1 t with thtir
generators 100 yards below the surface,"
Ltes told 1,400 Cal-Tech 1lumnl 1t the an.
nual home-coming Hminar.
1n$lalling the plants underW1ter would
give ti-iem i re1dy supply· or coolant t1M
ke~p them far from populated are1s, he
1&ld.
' '
INSIDE TODAY
Whet happtns to good samorf.
tans? Tl1r11 lose boai rac41. Bui
two un/ortll7tate yath4men w~re
mighty (}lad to see the Coita
/.fesa driver pull out and give
them a hand. Ser Boating, Pane 28. . •
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I
t °'ILV PILOT • N -Rail Strike
Meet Paraly-zes J
Set for 'District Commuters
\ By PAMP;LA HALLAN
Of 1'1t. O•llr Plllt lt•tf
1'ie first publlc meeting on the unifica.
tion-of four school districts will ta~e
place Thursday.
A:• P,Jscusa;Oll of various unification
plans wnl be presented to resident.. of,,
thc .Ttlitin !Dgb, TwtlD Elementary, SU.
Joaquin Elementary and T r a b u c o
Elementary School Districts at 7:30 p.m.
tn the multipurpose r1>0m of Irvine SchQpl
ln East Irvine'.. 11be pub Ii c, will vote pn urufic&-
Uon ln June of 1972. One possibility i.s to
Supervisor ·
Recall Mope
Near Death
The at~pt.ed recall of three Or1nge
O:iUi\ty supervl!ors ls in 115 dying days
~ &he deadline Tuesday for collecting
the required number of signatures.
ij.ecal.I chairman Joseph A. Conrad ad-
mitted today that the group bad failed to
gatbtt the required number of signatures
to force a recall eleclion. ntree supervisa-s. Board Chairman
Robert W. Batun. Di.strict I, Supervisor
David L. Baker, District 2 and Supervisor
William J. Phillips, District 3, have been
the target! for sit months of the recall
effort since they allegedly held a secret
meeting Nov. 4 to recommend that their
1alaries be raised to almost $30,000.
Conrad said that in BatUn 's district ap--
pn;ix!mately 10,000 signatures have been
collected. Some 15,000 were needed . In
:Baker's district 6.000 were collected
against a goal of 10,000 and in Phillips'
di strict 10,000 for a required 16,000.
. Conrad said, "Although the final
' figures appear glum, we look upon our ef-
. forts as h!lving been suc~~ful. ~w;ty
voters will rwiember Battin and Ph1lhps
when they come up for reelection 1n June,
1972."
Baku wat reelected last June to a new
four year term.
Police Anest
ijµntiJmtpn Man
In Assault Case
A Huntington Beach man was arrested
on assault charges Sunday night after
• poUce alleged he fired a pistol in his
, home and refused offlcers' orders to sur·
render. .
Huntington Beach police identified the
. i;uspect as Gordon Lamar Gaskins, Sr., of
18342 Pammy Lane.
_ Officen..Uege GasDns fired four shots
from his re volver. No one was injW'ed.
According to the police account.
Ca<in's 22-year-old son, Gordon Jr., told
officers that his father had been drinking
\and had been making threats at him, his
mother Madeleine, and his sister Sally.
At one point the older Gaskins allegedly
fired at the walls and at Mrs. Gaskins,
striking· a beer can sitting on an
armchair. according to officers.
Police surTounded the Gaskin nome
shortly after the alleged 'ncident but
Gaskin refused to come out with his
hand! up. according to police reports.
Two officers who had entered the house
from the rear by climbing over a fence
then surprised Gaskin end order~ him to
drop ·his weapon, police said.
OUN•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
61tANG• COAST l"UM.llHLMO (()MltJ.N't .
a.i..,1 N. w •••
'r"loHlll 1/W PuoUtlllir
J •cli: l . C11rf1y
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MtlMS"'I l!ll!IW
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)))) N•wport l o11l1Y1rd
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Cl.-HIH ... ~ ... '41·1671
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unify along lhe:~arles oi the existing
Tustin High School District. 81ld the other
Is to split the district into three separate
unified district&.
Oie plan will ,be approved by the state
Board of Education for 1ubmt,1ion to the
voters.
If the . exlSl!ng liJih school district 1'
split the resulting districts must meet
education code conditions.
The new districts must have substan·
'tial community identity, they must
reptesent an equlf.lble division of pr<r
perty and facilities of the or I gin a I
district, and no racial or ethnic
discriminaUon or segregaUon can result.
Another requirement is that the assess.
ed valuation per 1tudent caMot vary
men than 15 per cent among districts.
The assesiSed valuation per student in the
Tustin High School District 'is currently
$13,236. The figure allowable in the new
districts would have to range from
$15,221 I<> 111,251.
OA1LV PILOT Sl•H PIMi.
From Wirt Services
About 11.000 commuters who ride
SOuthtrn Pacific trains from San JO!I
and peninsula points north of there inta
San FrancisC1J had to find another way to
get to work today because of a naUonal
strike of railroad signalmen.
Two trains, at 5:05 a.m. and 5:43 a.m.,
left San Jose at the start of the morning
commuter Tuns , but pickets showed up
shortly after 6 a.m. and no crew reported
for the 6: 14 a.m.
Southern Pacific operates 22 commuter
trains daily, transporting an average or
11,500 passengers. ·
A Greyhound Bus spokesman 1ald ad~
diti'lnal buses were added to moming
commuter runs "where needed and
where appropriate." ~e said in pa5t
Southern Pacific commuter train stop-
pages Greyhound found that "people go
to their cars instead ()f the bus."
A Southern Pacific sPokesman 1ald any
prolonged strike would ham~ move·
ment of perishable produce now being
harvested in agricultural areas served Ly
the carrier. Four plans have been developed by
consultants to the School District
Reorganization Committee. These plans
examine ways the high school Wstrict
could be divided.
ANGEL OUTFIELDER TONY CONIGLIARO SIGNS BASEBALL FOR YOUNG FANS
Younsister• Include Rich1rd Due1lnsi1 Bobby West ind Contest Winner Murray Feldman (from left)
In Detroit, Jruto industry spoke1men
said planls dependent on rail shipment of
parts might face quick shutdowns, with
some workers being laid off if the strike
went on for only 24 hours. Production
could halt completely if the rail walkout
continued five days, they said.
Two or these plans have emerged as
fe!sible.
The first, Jabeled Plan III. would give
the Tustin · area the current Tustin
elementary district boW'ldaries .plus near·
ly half of the Irvine Ranch.
The r~t of the Irvine Ranch (the
western half) would be the Irvine District
and the rest ot the territory Including El
Toro, Mission Viejo and Trabuco would
be the third district.
'rtiis plan would give tustin $12,015 per
student: ' Irvine, $15,431 and Mission
Viejo-BJ Toro-Trabuco , $15,270.
Corona del Mar ·
Student Honored
For Achievement •
A 11.year old senior at Corona de! 1-tar
High School is the Southern California
Junior Achjevement salesman of the
The second plan, labeled Plan Four, year.
contains more community identity. Under Ched Grimshaw, son of Mr. and Mrs.
this plan Tustin would retain its elemen· P. M. Coholan~ 1800 Highland Drive,
tary school distrtict boundaries plus part Newport Beach, will receive the designa·
of the Irvine Ranch arl?a to the east ti Qn at an awards banquet Thursday in ~·hich is largely yet uninhabited. the Hollywood Palladlum. 11e was
Irvine's boundaries would basically be selected from Junior Achievers in Lo~
the same as for the proposed City of Angeles, Orange, ~iversfde, Sa n
Irvine except for the agricu!Jural Bernardino and Ventura counties.
preserve section given to Tustin and the Ched is vice president of Spicy
rest would be the El Toro-Mission Viejo-Industries, a Junior Achievement com·
Trabuco district. pany that it c<lunseled by adult advisers
Under this: plan the amount per student from Peat, Marwick and '-fitcheU and
will be $11 ,251 for Tustin, $15,221 for Co .. accounting firm of Santa Ana.
Irvine and '15,221 for Mission Viejo-El Another Corona de! Mar senior, Randy
Toro-Trabuco. ' Hof(man, will receive the Junior Acbieve-
Mapi Wilt be pteiented 1t the meeting ment Etecuticil Awlrd for hi1 parUclpa-
11howing exactly how the district could be lion 1n the program in which youth
split. organiie and run their own industry.
According to the reorg&nizatlon com-Hoffman. the son ol Mr. and Mr1.
mittee, Jf, the voters turn down unufical"""" Philip G. Colvin of 20181 Bayview Drivt.
tion tJ:iree times a county co01mittee will Santa Ana, recently won a $2,000 Junior
have the task of dividing the district into Achiever scholarship. The mid-year grad
two or more unified school distrlct.s. of Corona.-Oel Mar High School servj:!d as
Vote.rs already turned down unification president or the S.000-member Junior
once. U they tum it down again in June Achiever organization in So u t be r n
of 1972 the .districts will remain the same California.
as they are now w:ith the state mandating
the third unification election alt years
afttr that.
Theft of Mink s Told
By Balboa Coves Man
A Balboa Coves man bas: reported the
theft of more than $1 ,100 worth of items,
including two mink coat!, aceordiag to
Newport Beach police.
Officers said the home of Robert
Angell, 26 Balboa Coves, was entered
over the weekend by a burglar who broke
out a side window.
In addition to the two coats, Angell told
police the thief also took his camera.
Pilot Publisher
Slates Briefing
A briefing on what's happening on the
Orange Coast from DAILY PILOT
Publisher Robert N. Weed is scheduled
Thursday by the Citizens Harbor Area
Research Team.
"You Can't Get The.re From Here," is
the intriguing tiUe chosen for the presen-
tation by Weed.
The publfc is: invited to the 7:30 a.m.
talk at the Mesa Verde Country Club.
with a 75 cent breakfast of coffee, rolls
and juice. ..
Motivation P1~ogram Set
At OCC for 300 Students
A program to motivate high school
dropouts and potential dropouts and
••turn them on to learning" will be ex·
panded to serve 300 minority students at
Orange Coast College this summer.
Richard Hernandez. JS.year old direc·
t.Or of special projects for the college,
started the program last year with · 70
students. They ~·ere brought on campus
half a day, five days a week. for eight
..,,.eeks.
Four, t..,,·o-wee:k sessions In different
Etudy areas ~'ere offered : photog raphy,
wood working, electronics and architcc-.
tural drafting.
This year, students will be offered a
v.•ider range of classes including architec-
tural drafting, filmmaklng, home
economics, allied health orlent'Btlon,
technical operations, communications
skills, vocaUonal orientation. lheater arta
v.·orks:hop and America n studies.
The object is to glv!: minority students
a tas:tt of college life in a setting that
provides with the instruction some ~·ord1
of encouragement, a college spokuman
said.
The program "''as launched with 1 com·
binatlon of money from the Vocatio~I
Education .Aet, the college district ,,~d
the Neighborhood Youth Corps. The latter
agenc~ provides p11y for studenta: who a1.
tend classes in the morning and work at
campus or campus related jobs. About 50
are expected to attend the summer Pro..
JTl'!m mornings and work afte-rnooM.
Hernandei acout.s ares high schools to
'
find students who might benefit from
such a program. This year's class came'
from Newport-Mesa. Garden Grove and
Santa Ana unified school distrlcts.
Sessions are relaxed and not rigidly set
up, Hernandez said. Students in the
v.·oodworking section, last year, made
v.·hat they wanted. Photography classe!I
recorded the whole eight-week program
on movie film and put ii together in the
form of a documentary film.
Last year's efforts \\'ere encouraging.
Of the 13 students v.'ho were eligible to
enter college 1.hal fall , 11 did enter.
~1osl or the others went back to high
school to finish up so they could enter
college, lfernandez noted .
The class offerings this year will bear·
ranged differently. Some "''ill run lv.'o
weeks. some four and two for eight
weeks. Students will be able to choose the
courses which interest them most, those
which they consider as a potential career
fi eld.
Nine instructors and five instrvctor
aides ~·ill staU the summer program.
The ir salaries. and the costs for supplies,
are provided by a VEA federal granL
The district's contribution ls
Hernandez' salary for time 6penlorganiz-
ing the effort. and provision of
secretarial .wrvlces. ·
Orange Coast College offielala consldrr
lhe program to be part ·of the effort to
take the college to the community 3nd lt'.I
serve tht community in are11 which In
the past have been neglected.
''We 're a community coUege. and we
11re taking that Utle UteraUy," a
1pokesrnan said.
'
~Pilot Baseball Winners Similar warnings were heard In the
11teel industry. it.self threatened with a
strike later this year if no agreement is
reache? on a new contract. A U.S. Steel
Co. spoke.sman in Pittsburgh Aid coal
shipment.. were stopped, and those
facilities not stocked with raw materials
could be baited in .a hOOrs.
Meet FavoriteSlugger
Ten-year-old Murray Feldman's smile
was modest. But it didn't conceal his ex-
treme elation after being handed an
autographed baseball from the California
Angel baseball team.
That was just the beginning of the
honors that awaited Murray, winner of
the DAILY PILOT Early Bird Contest
and special guest at the DAILY PILOT'S
Career Marine
Leaves Corps '
After 3 Wars
CAMP PENDLETON (AP) -The
~1arlne Corps' •·old man" -literally -
has retired after a career spanning three
wars.
Sergeant Maj. James E. Bobbitt, of
Oceanside transferred Saturday to !he
fleet Marine Force Reserve. At 65, he
was the oldest Marine on active duty, of-
ficials said.
He was 36 when be joined the ~1arine
Corps shortly afler the st.art of World
\Var II. He went through recruil training
with men young enough to be his sons.
His nickriame "Pops" was given him
' before he volunteered to serve in a com·
bat ione against the Japanese.
Because of his age, he had to petition
the commandant of the Marine Corps to
serve in combat zones three tinies -the
first in 1944, when he was assigned to
Adak in the Aleutian Islands.
Discharged after World \Var II, he
again appealed to the commandant when
war broke out in Korea . His request ~·as
granted and he served there with the 5th
Marine s.
Bobbitt also has served two tours in
Vietnam and has been sergeant major of
the lst Marine Division schools at this
J\tarine base.
His: age has thrust him Into the
limelight each Nov. 10 for more than a
decade. Thars the Marine Corps: birthday
and the oldest Marine by tradition
receives the first piece of cake.
"2-for·l Day'' out at the ball game Sun-
day.
~turray also will receive four free
tickets to a future home game. Runner-
up winners Richard Duesing, 7lh:, and
Bobby West. 91h. each will rece ive two
free iickets. But the real prize was yet to
come.
Berore the start of the afternoon game
against lhe Milwaukee Brewers, all three
young winners, were taken down onto the
field to get a closer look al their favorite
team. r.turray had won the contest by
praising the comeback of Angel Tooy
Conigliaro. Now Murra}' ~·ould get to
meet him.
Standing In the red dust before the
dugout. like the eye in a hurricane of
rushing players. bat boys, aecurity
guards and reporter!> he waited.
Suddenly the teeming crowd parted and
the tall, self·aS!UrM righlfielder strode
• up to the l(l..year-<>ld and thurst out his
hnnd saying, '·Hi, Murray, how ya
doin"!"'
\\'hat did he say -this cool. composed
young man who had lavished so much
pra ise on this baseball player? When he
finally fa ced his Odol , he said "Hi."
After the two baseball lovers were
through talking, Conigliaro shook the
hands of both the runner.up and winners
and excused himse lf to go back for some
extra batting practice. The three bovs
lefl !he field quietly, each keeping ·10
himself.
Ri cha rd mumbled to himself , "I ~·ish
my best friend was here."
From Page 1
DOSTAL. • •
f'.'"e..,,·port Beach have always misun.
derstood . _
"In fact.'' he said, "we have
'misunderstood' so often that our
misunderstandings are now pathelic.
"\Ve 'misunderstood' thal Orange
County Airport would be only used for
non-jel general aviation.
"\\'e 'misunderstood ~ that the overlay
on the runv.·ay structure two years ago
was nol going to strengthen the runways
so that heavier equipment could be used.
ln Washington, the Interstate Com-
merce Commission said It was authoriz-
ing field offices to grant emergency
licenses to 20,000 bus and truck lines
under ils jurisdiction to permit them to
carry goods and passengers hung up by
the rail strike.
All major coal rnlnes in West Virginia
woilld be shut down by Wednesday, a coal
association spokesman there said; no rail
cars to ship the coal, and few cou ld
stockpile or ship by barge. .
Most immediate effect! were felt by
the unhappy commuters in major
metropolitan areas in the eastern half of
the nation, New York, Phildelphia and
Chicago.
In one outlying subway station on Long
Island. it took 20 minutes to buy a token
that wOuld operate a turnstile, and
another 20 minutea to walk 30 feet and
dov•n a Ilighl of stairs to a plaUorm. the
1tation took an extra load of motorists
trying to avoid the crawl by car into
already jammed Manhattan streets.
From Page 1
RAILS ...
Some 600,000 other rall workers
hon ored the 'picket Jines of the signalmen,
..,,.ho comprise only about 2 percent of the
raB work force.
\Vith s few exceptions, all train service
"''as idled across the nation from Boat.on
lo San Diego.
The people most immediately affected
\\•ere an estimated 600,000 railrQad com-
muters.
Traffic jams developed in cit.lei that
normally depend heavily on commuter
trains, ma.inly New York and Chicago.
Manufacturing p 1 ants immediately
began slowdowns. One or lhe first w1s
the Chrysler .stamping plant at
Tinesburg , Ohio, which said It would
work half shifl'I today and would lay off
all its 4.200 workers ll the strlke con·
tinued Into Tuesday.
Reflecting presidential concern about
the economic effecls of the strike, Ziegler
said, "past experience has shown such a
strike has an extremely detriment.al ef·
feet on the ec0110my and welfare of
Amer.lean citlz.ens."
Our Diamonds are a Good Investment -
LADIES
21/2 ct. Solitaire
Am1ri~1n eul.
Fini (olor. VSJ Cl1rity.
LADllS
1.08 ct. Solitaire
All\trit.111 cvl,
VVSI Cl1,ity. Fl-. rlOM.
U.DIU
.60 ct. SoDtaire
Alol•tl1•11 e11t.
V\152 Cl•rlty.
$2,250.00
$850.00
$350.00
SEE DOM RACITI
FOR DIAMONDS,
REMEMBER, A
DIAMOND IS A
GOOD
INVESTMENT
ONLY IF YOU BUY
IT RIGHT I
EXPERT
WATCH
REPAIR
OONl ON
PllMISU
DOM lACm
*OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK
DIAMOND GUARANill
Whtn you buy • di1mond from us wt
will 9U1r1ntH that dl1mond to appri lM
1t 40% MORE t~1n you ptld for It or
your money back. C1n you do 11 wt1ll
el11where? COMPARE.
-1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST ./
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN _/
LOAN, BUY, SELL, TRADE COME IN AND BROWSE AROUND
1838 NEWPORT BLVD. P~ONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -Bei-n Horbor & Bteodwty
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•
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Golden Gifts
New 'Lessons'
Await Debs
Preparations for their formal bow to
society begin early for the prospective
debutantes of the Newport Beach Chap·
ter. National Charity League. Becoming
reacquainted during a tea are (above ,
left to right) the Misses Deborah Elaine
Meany, Pamela Punawai Conover, Joyce
Loui se Caldwell and Patricia Ann Tucker.
Excited about plans for the November ball
are (at righ,t, left to right) Carol Ch ap·
man Connally, Jamie Lou Styll and Jana
Granzella. At an orientation supper in
the home of Mrs. Lee Paxton Jordan Jr.
tomorrow the young Women and their
mothers will discuss ball ptocedures for
the formal event taking place in the New·
porter Inn.
'
,
Until Ball
' · DelicaQ yellow roses and the spicy fragrance of carnations ere"°
· ed ·a Mediterranean garden setting for the announcement tea to intro-
duce the 15 young women who will be presented during the 1971 New-
port Chapter, National Charily League Debutanle Ball. .
Hosting the tea was Mrs. John DaPrato Granzella.
The Debutante Ball , ·which Is the culmination o! six years of social,
cultural and philanthrop·ic endeavor in the mother-daughter Tick·
locker program, will take place Nov. 27 in the Newporter Inn.
ln recognition of their daughters' contin uing interest in com·
munity service, mothers proudly presented each one with a gold 1and
pearl medallion which will be \vorn for ·the first time the eveniritg ot
the ball.
Included in this year's debutantes and their parents are the 1tlisses
Joyce Louise Caldwell, daughter or Air. and Mrs. Jack Linden· Cald·
\veil; Carol Chapman Connally, Mr. and fiirs. Reagan Paul Connally;
Pamela Punawai Conover, Dr .. and Mrs. William Arthur Conover, and
Jana Granzella, Dr. and Mrs. Granzella.
Others are the Misses Karen Irene Hodges, Mr. and M~'s. Rulon
Kimball Hodges: Kathleen Marie Langenbeck, Dr. and Mr1. Russell
Reed Langenbeck, and Anne Aileen Lawrence, Mr. ·and Mrs. Richard
Lansing Lawrence.
Also anticipating their fornial presentation are the Misses Chloe Mc·
Jntyre,.Mr. and Mrs. William Charles Mcintyre; Deborah Elaine Meany,
Mr. and lrtrs. Herbert John Meany; Candace Penelope Moses, Mr. a11d
fi.trs. William Armstrong Moses II; Mary Loraine Steen, Mr. 'Ind Mrs. Ed~
win French Steen Jr.: Jamie Lou Styli, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall James
Styli, and Patricia Ann Tucker, Dr. and Mrs. Royal Duane Tucker.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Blanton Newcom will present their daughter~
Miss Jolie Janene LeBouef and Miss Tria Newcom during the formal
ball.
Guests \\'ere welcomed by the f\.1mes. Mean y, ~hapler president:
Bernard Newell Smith, national ball directpr: Lawrence, incoming
Chapter president. and Melvin Daniel Kilmer III. ball director.
To the accompaniment of the music played on a gold harp, post
_debu.tantes. iru:luding_.the Misses V.ictgria Carter Bryan, Laurie Jean
Gage. \Vendy Mariann Jordan. Marie Claudine Meany and Ronda
Dianne Vogel, modeled ball go,vns from Bullock's, Santa Ana.
Pouring at the tea toble were past president including the .Mmes.
Paul Milton Rogers, William Brewster -Tritt. Chester FerrelJ Salibury.
Norman Alexander Bing, Earl Stafford Olrich and Edward Leisy
Corlett.
Tomorrow evening Mrs. Lee Paxt6n Jordan Jr. will host an orien·
talion supper for the prospective debutantes and their mothers to d~
cuss ball procedures.
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
.._,,.,~, ••r 11, 1•n .. ,.,. 11
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Bite Put Romance When Gift Horse Looked • .Mouth on
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a \li'.idow
going with a gentleman who is not
wealthy bu t he is comfortable. I have a
birthday roming up next month. He ask·
ed me v.·hat 1 wanted. Before I could TI!J>"'
ly he snnounced matter-or.fa ctly, ••t plan
t<t"spend $25." I was never so shocked in
my life. I told him I couldn't think or
anylh.ing r "'anted . Now I'm not sure
ANY gift would be acceptable to me.
\Vasn·t this crass on his part~ Please
comment -VASSAR '40
DEAR '40: Your friend Is obviously a
practical .fellow. He also is a cautious
type. Some people ~lleve in laying it on
I.he line. He might be: cras11 but he's
honest. Don't kaock tt.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: T •m ' iG-
ytar-old boy who has been looking for a
ANN LANDERS
job tor seven weeks. Tiie last three
places 1 apPlied seemed promising. but t
wasn't hired. I decided to check back and
find out why. All three personnel heads
sa id nly qualifications were excellent but
my appearance was against me. What it
boiled down to was Joni hair and a short
beard. I finally asked the last personnel
guy if he would hire me if I cut my hair
an d shaved my beard. He replied, "Yes."
I looked him a.traight in the eye, aaid.
"Nuts to you," and walked out,
The system is rotten and this is proof.
\Vhat has my hair and beard to do with
my ability? J consider it my con-
stitutional right to wear my hair any way
I pl~se and to have a beard if I want
one. t would like your opinion on this."If 1
get the answer I want I will take it back
to Uiose jerks and shove it in their stupid
faces. -BATON ROUGE
DEAR BAT: Sorry, Buddy. When you
are t sldng for 1<1methlng -)'OQ do ll
THEIR way. If an employer doesn't want
1 kid witla long bair and a beard, it's bis
constlhlUomal right not to hire him.
Some of you 'kids make a lot more trou-
ble for yourselves tbaa. you need. You
walk around mad at tbe world, . .
accept you and wben they don't yoa yell,
1ccept you and whtll Ibey don't you tell,
"Damn tbe establish ment!"
You'U do a lot better. fella, when you
learn to 1mile and meet tlie world balf
way. A chip <1.n the shonldtr Is u1ually 1
i1ig11 that there is wood hl&ber up.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: This will '!M'c>-
bably sound like a dUmb question and I
would not be asking it except that
i;omething fantastic happened today. Can
a lady have 1 baby without knowing she
is pregnanl ? •
Today a woman gave birth in lhe park·
ing lot of a supermarket. A couple of peo-
ple came to her rescue when sht was
seen leaning on her car in pain, unable to
open the door . One man said to her, "I'm
going to call for an ambulance right
away or the baby will be born here." The
woman shiicked, ''Ridi culous ! I am not
pregnant. It's appendicitis or something I
ate."
Within a few minutes that woman ga ve
birth to a baby. Someone hailed a passing
squad car and the woman and her baby
were taken to 1 nearby hospital.
How in the world could such 3 thing
happeTI? Was I.his lady nutty? Did she
suddenly devekip arflnesia~ Please ex·
plain bow a woman can 10 through a
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pregnancy and not know it. -IF 1
DIDN'T SEE IT I WOULDN'T BELIEVE
IT
DEAR IF: Sucb an occurrence 11 nrt.
but H i1 110l unM1rd of. Tbe e:rplan10on
is tb1t some wome11 do ltOt uperleaCi
lbe usual symptoms of pregn1ncy. 111 llHI·
case of the parklag-lot mother, sbe m1y;
well~bave been completely unaware of
her condition until the birth.
"The Bri<IN Guide " Ann t..andera1
booklet, ansv:ers some' of the most frti.
quently asked quesUol)S about weddinga.
To receive your copy or this com-
prehensive guide. wnite to Ann Landen.
in care of the DAlLY PILOT enclosing•
long. aelf·addressed, stamped envelopt
and 3$ cent.5 in coin.
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Ole! It's Fiesta Time
Guys and Dolls Section or th e Riviera Club "'i!i dan ce the A1exican hat dance
as demon strated bi (left to right) J..tiss Eileen Brad'"•ell, r..trs. Frederick Garce·
IOn and Mrs. Robert de Ford. section ch airman. The fi esta group will arrivt at El Adobe restaurant in San Juan Capi st rano for a 7:30 p.m. cocktail hour fol ·
lo'!"ed by dinner and dan cing on Saturday, Ma y 29. Reservations at $6 .50 per
person are due by Monday, 1i-1ay 24 .
Mother of Invention
Labor Not Painless
By ERt.IA DOMBECK
l was with a group of
"'riters the olher day when the
subject came up as to how we
enjoyed our work .
"I would rather writ.t,'' said
a -\l'oman who wrote soap
optras, "lhan eat ice cubes on
an·i~pat!!~ :rJo~:::,~· ·:.1
can't think' or anything m()re
fulfilling ... unless it's food
polsonin1."
We were being cynical, of
rourst. The truth is putting
, together words Into some kind
of coherency lakes more
-discipline than a karate chop.
You ca n go blind staring at a
white sheet of paper.
"Whal did you gel done this
, morning'?" asked a copywriter
for an ad vertising firm.
"\\Tell," I said, "First t got
out a clean 5heet of paper and
1uccteded in picking a flaw
AT
WIT'S
END
out of 'it with a pair of
tweezers which took me an
hour and a half to find.
''Then t alphabetized my
bills, tried to make a musical
out or the phone book, picked
burrs off the dog's n1mp and
picked up the waste can with
my knees without spilling the
contents."
"That sounds like a pro-
fitable morning," s~ said.
'"That's not all.'' I con-
tinued. "1 got a hangnail
staMed, made a fly trap out of
a paper clip and a piece or
Scotch tape. called Dial·&·
prayer and uked if they made
'Mrs. Republican' Speaking
GOP Women End Year
by the losing team in the
club's membership contest
wlll be ser\1ed al 11 :30 a.m.
\Vednesday, May 19, in the
house calls and checked the
dictionary to see 1f Supercali-
fragilislicexpialidoshus \\'as in
it."
"Were you usi ng It'?"
"No, l had rive minutes to
ki!l unUI lunch. What did you
do, Phyllis '?'' I asked a free-
lance writer.
"You rem~mber the
Christmas tree with the Xs on
the typewriter f s t a r t e d
yesterday ? Finished it this
mOming. Then I counted a
new rearn of paper lo see if it
really conta ined 500 sheetii:,
and finally 1 figured out that
in 198!. my birthday falls on a
Sat urday night."
We got around lo Joyce who
is a PR girl for the local pizza
chain. '"I've harl a great mom·
ing." she gushed. "I got 11
dozen TV spols written. did 11
history on the anchovy and
per90nally conducted two
tours throughool our planU."
Joyce is a nice girl, but
she 'll ne ver make JI big . She
isn't inventive enough to be a
writer.
The Stitchtry Nook
(ltEWIL & Hll!Dll!P'CHNT
11111 & su,,Kft
e "•r•ttn e B11clll• e ••rntl
• Un9tr t Ctl11mlllt·Ml~1rv1
t OMC y1rn1
211 II. 111~. Cttlt Mtu '41-1114
HILLOll:EH SOUAllll!
"Mrs. R·epublican of
C11iforni1." Mrs. Ann Bowler
~·ill be the. guest speaker al
the final meet ing of the S('ason
for the I luntington Beach
Republican Womtn's Club. recreation center. rit r s .l':::;:~~~~-===o:::=:::::;:::::;:::::;::(I Ricnard Dittmar Is in charge 11
l\1rs. Bowler. Republican na-
lion11I committeewoman from
1964·68, women's counl y presi-
of ~rrangements.
Re s er v ations for the
Southern. Division Republican
Women:.t! luncheon-meeting on
\\1ednesdtlv, June !, in !he
Airporter ·Inn will be 1vaih1ble
-dent and now regional
thairman of the State C!!'n\ral
Cbmmittee. will d i sc u s s
Readiness -1972.
A salad luncheon prepared from Mrs. Bernard Gage ,l'-----------'I
president.
Art Works Showcased
Studtnts from C'nron;i dcl
1-lar High School are riispla~ ·
ing the ir works th is mon1h in
the Corona <lel f\lar Public
l.ibrary undrr the sponsor.~h\p
nf the Ney,•port B~ach City
,A rt.s Con1m lllee.
Featured in lhe showcase al
the library \\•ill br. lhe \\'Ork of
('~rge Core~. high school art
Instructor, \\'ho assembled the
display for his student s.
The crhibit is open to !hr
puhlir durin.i;: regular li brary
hnurs
~lt1 rine rs Lihrary ls prrsrn·
ling a ri isplay of iirt \\'Ork
prepal'ed by m11ny noted cnver
artists for "Orange County
llluslra U'(!." The displ ay \\'iii
include rl'prod uc1ions or the
covers in addition to the
original \\'Ork.
LADIES
AILEEN
SPORTSWEAR
AT
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1404 VIA LIDO, NEWrou HACH
,
Gem o[ Spring-, the Emerald ia
a birthalone surrounded by
leR"tnds. It was said to cOmpose
the first Moh11n1ned1n Jleavtn,
the fourth found1tion of the
Jo.'ew JeTUaalem, to foster prt•
vi1ion, 1trengthen mem ory,
f'loquence, and even measure t
IO\'er'1 fer,•or. Al lhe fa"t"ored
alo ne o! Ven ua, the Emerald
1l1nd1 !or love and aucceu.
H'11J' . .-ou r birth1!0Plt fol' :itfl
/11rl11ort a 11d good /o,11111 r. ·~I ··."
~•utlo Co11I Pl11•
1,.1\ol t i the St11 Di1 ~1> fwv.
C .. 111 Mt11
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Election
Planned
'SChoo'J"s OU .. ror the
Orange Coast Division of
California . Relired Teachers
and to celebrate I.he occasloif
members wlll attend 1 noon
Juncheon Wednesday, May 19.
In the A!rporter lnn, Newport
Beach. ~
Paul Colburn, president, will
CQnduct a short business
meeting to elect orficers.
lnstallin.R officer will be Mrs.
Helen Hobson, st a I e ad·
ministratlve vice president,
\Yho will give the principal ad·
dress.
Luncheon entertainmenl will
be provided by Mrs. Mitzi
Magill who will present her
own program of song arid
piano numbers.
All retired teachers in the
area ire welcome to attend
the luncheon and bring pro-
spective membeni from area
schools .
Waist Watchers
TOPS Waist W a,·e he rs
assemble every Thursday 11t 7
p.m. in Circle View Sctool,
Huntington Beach,
1
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Your Horoscope T.omorrow
Capri.coi:n: Ca~tio Necessary
TUESDAY
MAY 18
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 21 ·Aprll 19);
What occurs behind the scenes
may now have special mean-
ing for you . Family member
appears to be invol ved. Check
travel plans, reservations. One
who means well may also be
catl'less.
TAURUS (April 20--May 20):
Avo id self-deception. Get
facts; discard rumors. Some
of your desires cost more than
now can be afforded. ~1ake
financi1l adjustmenls. Trim
budget. Pisces individual is
due to pla y key role.
GE~llNI <May 21-June 20):
Two individuals seem to feel
they know wbat is bes t for
you. In truth , 'you would be
better advised to follow your
own instincts. Accent is on
achievement, special goals
and career.
CANCER (June 21 ·July 22):
Study Aries message. Finish
•
one task before be1innh1g
another. Strive for re1Ustlc
1pproach. Refuse to h1n1 on
to past. Future can be bright
if you make it so. Act 1c·
cordingly,
LEO (July 23·Aug, 22 ):
Fathom reasons why; refuse
superficial answers. Stress on
how ~ney is e1pended . Get
figures: be analytical. N e w
approach is a necessity. Strive
tor greater independence of
thought , action.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22):
Domestic affa irs tend In
dominate. Build on soUd base .
A void one who advocates a~
parent easy methods. Con-
centration is necessary. Check
details, property values and
future costs.
LlBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
Stress versatility. Display
sense of humor. Some around
you now need cheering. Do
what you can-the more you
giYe, the more you ultlm11 tely
will receive. Work 1ssocl1te
plays key role.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2J..Nov. 21 ):
Youns person is willing to be
generous -wlth your money.
Pull in . re ins: oppose e1·
travagance. If you act foolish,
you will be so treated. Ex·
press yourself In C<lnclse man-
period. t.1eans you 1et thlnp
done. Know your own abllllles.
Push ahead. Strike whlle cycle
is on upswln1. S t r e 1 1
p e rs on a I J t y . Don't bt
wallflower .
ner. --------~---
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 22·
Dec. 21): Avoid stress. Have
fun without going to e1tremes.
See situation in realistic light.
Lislen to sob story but don 't
become unduly involved .
Message becomes increasingly
clear.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan .
19): Much that seems solid
may require review. Not wise
lo take persons, situations for
granted. You can make plans
for future, but be cautious
regarding immediate actions.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb.
18): Protect what is of value.
Emphasis is on temptation to
spend for purpose of im-
pressing others,. Key ls to e1·
ercise self-control in this area.
Take one thing at a time.
PISCES fFeb. 19-March 20):
You experience a power
Petting
Zoo.
Me11 . th•11 Sun., M1y 17·21
011e 1>f th1 me1t popultt,
chilclren'1 tlh •c+l•n1 ht loil i11
1>ur m1U. Ecl11ct lie11t ( 11
we!I •1 fun -child1111 Ctl! fted
b•by '"im1l1 frcu11 111 •vt r th1
we1ld. Open J 1ily thru evt ni119t..
On lh• mt ll, 25' tclmi11io 11. Hu~lin9lo11 Center ti St 11 Oi19•
Frttw•'I"· l•tth t 11cl Eoil i~9tr. HI,
• •
all-around comfort
and you ·save 41 %
• . -I
•!
l
I
proportioned panty girdle
-•.-Here'• your chance to enjoy almoet eUJtoni-
like fit ..• and save! Scan proportioned panty SALE
for 7 days only
full hip tall •verage
A!SO AVAILABLE AT THE SAME LOW rruo:,
A"fel'•ge Hip,, Long Tonio puity girdle in sizes
M.L.XL ·ud XXL White. ,....... 2for-16.99
/girdle is not just sized ••• it'• shape-adjusted
to fit different figu re types comfortably all
O\'er. ~1aximum control comes from firm
inner bands criss-cr08std under a panel of
satin elastic (acetate, oollon, spandex)., And
you ca°b't beat the ~dy elaslic-it's nylon and
Lycra• spandex-with more of the same form-
ing side panels to trim hips and thighs. and
in a V-abaped back. panel to lift and curve
the figure into natural lines~ In white only.
Look uound ••• you will Md your aize here!
99 -for
Full Hip, Lotig Tono pant)' girdle in 1ize1
M.L,XL and XXL Whi"'· 2 lor 16.99
IUINA PAllt' ' COYINA
(AHIH .. PAlll: ft. MO,,,,.f
COMl'TON •lt1'111LI
lJse Sears Revolving Charge
NOUTWOOD
fHOlfWOOf
IONe ll•CN
Ol.TllllPIC & JOfO
otlNM
PAIAOJMA
1-., ..... , 11 N .. a .. I P.-..MM.tlww ht, !1JOA.M.. .. f 1H P.M., ..... ,. AHo.IJ, ......... ,...., r-..,kt.
SA. JIE 41 o/o
on •nn1e hip, nerqe tono
P•ftty &irdle, rerul•rS6.00 each
... ,,, ....... ~
... .,,. .... JH(,l
tCMnN , .... , """" •
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Costa Mesa-today's Final .. -. . EOITIO N N.Y. Stocks .
'* * vot' 64, NO. 117, 4 SECTIONS, so PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY '17, '1971 TEN CENTS
OCC Will Ope11 Doors to Minority Student·s:
A program to molivate high school
dropouts and potential dropouts and
•·turn them on to learning" \\'iii be ex-
panded to serve 300 minority students at
Orange Coast College this summer.
Richard Hernandez, J~year old direc-
tor of l'ipecial projects for the college,
started the program last year with m
atudcnts. They were brought on,campw
half a day, five days a week, for eight
weeks.
Four, tv:o-\\·ec k sessions in different
atudy areas \\'ere offered: photography,
Signalmen
Shut Down
U.S. Rails
,
\VASlllNGTON (UPI) -Railroad
signalmen went on strike today, shutlin&
down the nation 's rail lints, and Pre!}.
dent Ni:ton proposed emergency legisla-
tion to force the men back to work until
al least July I.
\Vithin fi ve hours after the 13,000-man
Brotherhood of Railway Signalmen went
on strike. effecti vely shutting down all
r ail passenger and freight traffic, the
Florida \Vh lte House announced Nixon'!
plan lo Congress. calling for a new round
of negotiations.
Urging passate of a joint re.solution to
tialt the shutdown that st.arted at. 6:01
a m. local time. Nixon said a continued
11at..ional strike •·would cause g~at
ha rd ship to all Americans and strike •
M!rious blow at the nation's economy."
"It is esse.fttial tbat our railroads ~
tinue to operate," the President Pid.
The President recommended that
Congress promptly enact legislation to
· e'Xtend the present contc.ad. negotlatkm
between the signalmt1, union and the
railroads until July I.
He further asked Labor Secretary
Ja1nes D. Hodgson to follow the silua_tion
cjosely as it developed and ~ contmue
assisting both sides of the dispute. He
said that if no sctllement had been reach·
ed by June 21, it :should be reported to
him and Congress. . ,. .
The signalmen, who malnltun and 1n-
a\al\ signal equipment. stru ck when the
railroads refused to meet their demands
for wage increases almost double what
oth<'r rail unions have accepted.
Key mem bers of Congress _pledg.ed-i• ~d\'ance to give prompt cons1derat1on ~o
Nixon's req uest. Veteran observers said
th at in spite or traditional reluctance of
lawmakers to enact legislation during a
labor emergency, Congress would li"kely
appro\·e thr Nixon request ~ or
something similar to stop the 1tr1kt: -
aome tim~ today.
!louse Republican Leader Gerald R.
f ord called for fasl action on emergency
legislation. bul sald the strike never
should have been alloy,·ed to ~ap~n.
Ford was referring to leg1slallon pro-
posed some lime ago to deal ~ith su~h
disputes. and in his message Nixon chi~
ed Congress for failure to act on his
"emergency public service protection
act."
S. Viet Troops
Lau1icli A Sliau
Drive at Last
SAIGON <UPI ) -\V ilh U.S. air po~·er
ettacking ahead of them the So:'1th Viet·
n.11mese army today began 1t1 long-
delq_Yed drive into the A Shau valley. On·
Iv small skirmi:shes were reported . but
(he commander of the o p e r a t 1 o n
predicted the Communists "intend to
eland and fight." Hae Bao (Black Panther) shock. troops
assaulted rron1 U.S. 101st a1rbo~e
division helicoptcrg ahead of the main
force of se ve ral thousa.nd troops . o! the
Isl South Vietnamese infantry d1vis10~•
Their missiOfl was to kn~k out anti·
aircraft guns before.the main P~
Helicopters ferrying the V1etnam~se:
1 roops ran intn such heavy ground f1.re
1hey hti d to· land the 4nfantrymen l mile
1iv.·ay rrom the planned landing~~· Tw°t
formations of B52s hit Communist troop
cconcentralions just ehead ol the as15ault
force. "* ') r • The A Shau ValJe y runs .w m1 es rom
the llue area toward tbe border or La.oa.
ll has become 1 major Communist su~
ply area since the last allied operation in·
to the valley a year or so ago.
' Brig . Gen. Vu Van Olai, commander of
!he 33-day-old operation .. sai~ at le,ast
eight tommunlsl1 v.·ere killed 1n lhe first
skirmishing .and thol lhe government suf·
rered ''lighl"' IOSS<'S. "I think the North
Vletn11mcse intend to st8 Y and tight
hert," he told UPI cor~pondtnl Stewart
Kellt:rman.
I
wood working, electronl:s and arthitec-
tllra1 drafting. ;
This year, :students will be offered a
wider range o1 classes includin& architec-
tural drafllng, Ulmmaklng, h o m e
economics, allied health orlentatlon,
technical operaUons, communications
skills, vocational orientation, theater arts
workshop and American studiu.
The object ill to give minority studerits
a taste of college life in a setting that
provides with the instruction some word.s
Lead Ou
'
of encouragement. a college spokesman
said.
The program was launched with a eom·
binatioo of money from the Vocatkmal
Education Act, the college district A"d
the Neighborhood Youth C.Orps. The latter
agency provides pay for stqdeDts who at.
tend classes in the morning and work at
campus or campus related jobs. About 50
are expected to attend the summer pro-
gram mornings and work arten'\(>Ons.
Hernandez scouts area high schools to
find students who might benefit from
OA1i. 1"· f>tlclf S!ttt '1wff
Barbara Mueller. 13, lead s about 100 youngsters of Christ Lutheran
Schobl in Costa Mesa to Canyon School for tod<\y's production of the
operetta "Pied Piper." In the story the piper didn't return the young·
sters because of difficulties over 'payment for a rat pact. These kids
returned.
Social Secu1·ity Increase
Approved by House Panel
WASHINGTON f AP\ -The House
Ways and Means Committefi today aJ>-
proved a five per~nt across the board
increase in Social Security benefits to be
effective June 1, 1972.
The benefit increase y,·as inserted sl
the last minute in the committee's big
social security V.'elfare bill, which was
then approved without further change.
The House is expected to act on lhe
measure early next month.
The new increase would come in ad-
ditiol'! to a JO percent increase efleclive
this year and a 15 percent increase that
went into effect last year.
The committee also retai ned in the bill
a provision for automatic increases in
benefits-When lhe cost of living rise&
thr~ percent or more in a year
However. the measure provides tha t no
automatic increase can take place in the
year following a legislative lrlcrease. So,
adoption of the five percent raise in 19i2
y,.oold mean that no additional au tomatic
raii;e.coUld go into ef!et before 1974.
Tbe increase was estimated to provide
an · additional $2.1 bill ion for Social
SeturitY recipients in the fir st ruu year or
itr.operation.
There would be no immediate increase
in taxes above the increases th at already
had been written into tht bill, and which
would mean a maxitnum additional tax
next year of $145 OT\ a worker earning
$10.200 or more and on his employer,
The committee voted 13 to 12 ror the in-
crease, reversing the margin by Which an
increase was defeated last Thursday.
Rep, Joe Waggoner, (D·La.), who voted
against an increase last week, reversed
his position and moved for
reconsiderat ion.
Trustees Slate
Specia1 -Meefiiig
An executive meeting of the Newport·
~1esa Unified School District Board of
Education bas been called for a o'clock
lonight in district offices.
The board will discuss teacher salary
negotiatioM during the c I o Ii e d . d o or
session.
The regular public meeting of the
board will be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday in
lhe Lyceum al Costa r.lesa High School,
2650 Fairview Road.
11uc:h a program. This year's class come<;:
from Newport·~1esa, Garden Grove and
Santa Ana untned school districts.
Sesslorni are relaxed and not rigidly set
up , Hernandez said. Students in tht
woodworking section, last year, made
what thex wanted. Photography clas.Jes
recorded the whole eight-week program
on movie film and put it together io the
form of a documentary film.
Last year's efforts were encouraging.
Of fhe 13 students who were eligible lo
enter college that fall, 11 did enter.
Most Of the others went back to high
school to finish up so they could ente'r
college, Hernandez noted.
The class offerlngs this year y,·ill be ar.
ranged differently. Some will run two
weeks, some four and two for eight
weeks. Students will be able to choose the
courses which interest them m05t, those
which they consider as a potential career
field ..
Nlne instructors and five instructor
aide$ will staff the summer progra1n,
Their salaries, and the costs for supplies,
__, ,.
are provided by a VEA federal .;:ant.
The district's contrl bu.tltin ts
Hernandez' salary for time spent organii.
ing the effort, and provision of
secretarial service!.
Orange Coast College officials conslOOr
the program to ~ part of the effort to
. take the college to the community and to
se rve the community in areu-wblcb in
the past have been neglected.
"We're a communJlJ" coTieie. and we
are taking that tiUe literally," a
spokesman said.
Wilderness Bacl{~d
State Agency Supports Development
Support for crea tion or a wilderness
park 011 Costa Mesa's centuries--0ld Lu-
pukngna tribaJ burial grounds, now un-
der state ownership, has come from one
Sacramento agency.
The 300-acre archeological site was or.
lgh1slly earmarked for tentative Fairview
State Hospital expa nsion, but won't be
needed due to changing patient treatment
concepts and budget cutbacks.
New methods of psychiatric care aod
educat.ion of the mentally retarded ha1"'e
Market Takes
Big Nosedive
·In . New York
l'IEW YORK (API -Stoc~ market
prt'cu toM a no1edive wd,iy in modtrat1
irad{ng as inveat.ora responded to the na·
tioowide ·rail strike and rising interest
rates. •
The Dow Jones average or 30 in·
dustrlals at Jl a.m. PDT was off 12.93 :;t
923.13. Declines outnumbered advances
on the New York Stock Exchange ~y
more than 5 to 1.
Trading volume picked up con-
siderably, late in the session from its
F:ln•I Stock Report
Todoy, P•ge• 18, 19
sluggish morning pace. Institutional ac-
tivity llso Increased, indicating that the
selloff will beginning to gain momentum.
Analysts cited worries over the rRil
atrike as the major market depressant.
However, fears that rising i;hort-term in-
terert rates could trigger a boost in the
prime or discount rates also weighed
hea vily they added
La rge.block trades included 190.ooO
1hares or Household r · :ance al 52, off '';
80,000 or Niaga ra Mohawk Power at 1611,
off 1h:; 66,600 of Fannie Mae at 56, down
31,14; and 59,000 of First Charter Financial
al 23 1h:. off 1,,.
Olher Big Board prices lnclud~ Cen-
tral & South West. off ~I to 44 Vt: Dents~
ly International, off 5'11: to 49, following
sell recommendahons -rrom-s-o-m~e
brokerage houses; Tele~. off 34 to 18 :
Ling • Te mco • Vought, oft 2·1 '3 '"' '"~:
Pillston, down two to 43:y, and General
Telephone, dow11 •.~ to 31.
On tile American Stock Ex~hange ,
Gener al Builders·was off "4 lo five after
a 99.500·share block traded earlier at 4~.
off 1-113. Other Amex prices included
l.TV warrants. off tii to 9%.; Deltona,
down 2~4 to 32~1: Syntex .• ,if 3\~ to 62'·4:
Yonker11 Raceway, up 2~4 to 40i4: and
Cinerama, up ~ to 5Vt.
reduced the number of patients requiring
lmpitaliz.ation' throoghout the state.
So city councilme11 recently approved
and ronvarded a resOlution asking the
transfe r of the land from Department or
General Services. to Department of Parks
al'ld Recreation control.
A letter to City Clerk Eileen Phinney
from Robert H. Meyer, aide to Parks
and Recreation Director William Penn
fl.1ott Jr., hints the city itself may get
lhe property.
''\\"bile our department is very ~·
cerned about the subject property, we
urge th at the city or COl!ta Mesa consider
accepting the property for park purpos.
es," Meyer wrote.
"And, for ·~he protection or the extreme-
ly importa nt archeologlcal site of Lu-
pukngna ," he continued.
"Under no circumstances should these
values be lost, and they should remain
in public control. Accordingly, I have
(See PARKS, Pq:e %) \
Personnel Director
DeDe Finally Quits Mesa
Joh-'She Got Involved' . '
By ARTHUR R. V1 SEL
Of !fie ~fir '°"'" ll•lf Her name was OeDe: and 1be came to
work for a bra nd-new city one January
morning In 19M, but stricUy for thi"ee
months.
A clerk·typist drew only $221, too ltttle
for an ' executive secretary freshly ar·
rived from the metropolis of Salt Lake
City, Utah.
Nor were the q u a rt e r s impressive
-a tin·roofed building oi, narrow
Newport Boulevard, with 1 tiny police
force taking up one whole corner.
On Friday, Cos ta Mesa Personnel
Director Dorothy Dietz.el cleaned out her
desk on the fifth floor of a modern. multi·
mil lion dollar civic center and went
home.
She finally got around to quitting.
"I just got too damed involved with the
community ••. the people ... " she u id,
recalllng how what she intended to be
three months become 89 times that
(igure.
Jobs are like that y,·hen you find the
right place.
"It wa s a family kind or arrangement.
You had to cooperate every which·way."
she says of those early days of cityhood
and governmental operation.
DeDe Dietzel said she warned City
Manager George Coffey, the first of
5everal bosses, that he shouldn't hire a
gal who only planned lo stick around
th ree months.
.. He said he'd take his chances ...
Fell ow workers -some old, many new
;_ gathered at the Costa ~1esa Golf and
Count rrtlub Friday for r-surprise
farewell luncheon. The 150 guests in-
cluded De.De's mother who new from Salt
Lake City.
~fother, ~1rs. Erie A. Anderson. will
help out at 2466 Cornell Drive during
DeOe's convalescence , from surgery
schedu1ed today. De.De's husband,
Reca.ll Effort
On Supervisors
l 1i Dying Days
DAll Y l"llOT Sit" f>llM9
RETIRES AFTER 16 YEARS
City Aide Dietzel
George, also i!I ill.
"1 can't imagine that many fellows and
g~]£__ Jc~~Ring j tJ ~YO>.I'i6:e. ~_spe:dally
those sitting right around me here in the
office." DeDe said of the luncheon.
The festive crowd included Mayor
Robert r.t Wilson and many leaders from
past regimes, besides the city staff it.sell.
"Our city i.s better for her having been
a part of it," said Mayor Wilson, one of
(See CITY AIDE, Page 1)
Orange Coast
Weather Light Ageia,c
Council Has ·Easy Night The attempted recall flf three Orange
County supervisors is Jn ILi dying day111
with the deadline Tuesday for collecting
the required number of signatures.
Recall chairman Joseph A. CoJ11ad ad·
milled today that the group had failed to
gather the required number of signatures
to force a recall el~lon.
Those Santa Ana winds will be
wit h us again, warming things up
along the coas t, but especially in·
land. Temperature range -from
the middle 60s to nearly 80 degrees,
INSWE TODAY A relatively light agenda ia: on the
calendar tonight for Costa Mesa City
Council memben, with a few zone ex-
ceplion RfrTDit he~ings.
Several bids for constructkm to be done..
or equipment to be purchased are ln-
cludtd on the 7:30 p.m. legislative session
schedule, plus routine staff rePorts and
other items.
Most or the Items undtt the consent
calendar -handled on a single motion· -
will be disposed of during the 6:~ p.m.
business session.
Appoiiitment of two positlona on the
Planning Commission 11 scheduled on the
agenda , but no action wUJ be taken since
verbal interviews aren't scheduled until
next week.
A DAIL V PTLO'I' editorial commentlnl
on lack of response to an lnvltaUon to ap-
ply for commissiop servi~. meanwhile,
has led to a· number of applications loo,
Mayor Robert M. Wilson said today.
fl.Tayor \Vilson said seven or eight
persGns have submitted resumes offering
to sub:ee<t Chairman Charles A. Beck or
Commissioner C. C. "Chic'' Clarke.
Both are now appointed to interim
terms, with Beck a veteran of 1everal
years and Clarie seeking his first 8~
pointment to • ull four.year term aft.er
nearly one yeaf on the. commlsston.
He was named to finish e<lucator Doll \
'•
Rout's term last summer when a
Newport-Pi1esa Unified School District
promotion took a ay much of Hout's
1pare time.
One zone exception permit set for hear
lngtonlght couldspark heav y
discussion, a rtquest by builder Phil
Spiller ·ror a M-unit project at 2675 Elden
Ave., In an R-2 zone.
Planning commissioners voted for
denial las t week.
A public hearing Is also set tonight on
car dealer Richard Lewis' rezane petition
changing land al 454 Bernard St., from
R2 to 0-CP de&lgnotion allo't'.ing agency
expan·s1on.
( I
Three supervisors. Board Chairman
Robert W. Battin, District 1, Supervisor
David L. Baker, District 2 and Supervisor
William J. Phllllps, 01.strk:t 3, have been
tht targets for six months of the recall
effort i1inct they allegedly held a secret
m~ling Nov. 4 to recommend that their
salaries be raised to almost $30.000.
Conrad .said that in Battln's dil1trlct ap.
proximately 10.000 signatures have been
collected. Some 15,000 were needed. In
Baker's 41itrlct 6,000 were collected \
agains t a goal of 10.000 and In Phllllpa'
disi.rict 10,<m for a requlrid 16,000.
I
\V/l(lt happe111 to aood $;Cmcr£.
tan.s? They lo$t boat; racea. But
two unfort1n1ate yaclllnMn were
mig~ty olod .fo aee !he COIUI
/.ltt4 drivtr pull okt mm give
them a ha nd. See Boatin g, Paoe
28.
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I DAILY PILOT
Son in Newport
Yo-yo Inventor·
Succumbs at 71
For "5 years, Donald Duncan Sr. based
hlc business success on a constant series ct ~ and dowM and it was perenni1lly
good for the man who gave America the
y~o.
The tndustrial baron who also grew
wealthy marketing a leg.appreciated
ltt.m.ol Americana -the parking meter
-died Saturday at 71 or a stroke.
Death camt in UCLA Medical Center,
where'Mr. Duncan had been in a coma
, for 2'1 weeks.
The multi-millicnaire who leaves a son
living in Newport Beach among other
auryivors never claimed he invented
eJther the yo-yo or tbe meter but both
made him wealib.y. along with real
estate.
He awned e'ite.nsive 1 Orange County
property.
Tbe eish~grade dropout with an acute
aense of good business opportunities
bepn parlaying the obscure Asian jungle
fighting weapon into a toy-during the
Great Depressior. years.
"He was in San ·Francisco or
10meplace ljke that and he saw a Filipino boy playing with a toy, which was the yo-
yo. He liked it so well he bought it from
the boy," aay1 Jack Duncan.
He es:plains the toy dates back ln prin·
d ple to the 16th Century, when Filipino
guerrillas uRd four-pound yo-yo on 20-
fool cords to kill or maim enemies am·
bushed Jn the Jung! ...
The elder Duncan who coined the
phrue: U It ljln~ a Duncan It Isn't a yo-
yo, also believed. the novel toy hu origins
stretching back to ancient Egypt and the
days of the Pbar:fohs.
Items remarkably aiJa11ar are d~icted
Jn hieroglyphics on the walls of old
tempif:S-
Duncan promoted the yo-yo after
purchasing his first one by hiring
Flllpinos to make them and-tour the na·
tion for demonstrations and refereeing
contests, with pri..ie.& and free instructions
offered. ,
Small boys considered yo-yo expertise a
mark of young manhood and sales of
ordinary yo-yos. plus glass diamond-stud·
ded ones, fluorescent yt>-yo.s that glow in
the dark and other varieties hit 30 million
per year. ·
One of his best customers was an In-
dianapolis aUomey who bought them by
the dozens.
"He told us he doesn't drink or smoke
and when he want.s to relax, he pulls out
a yo-yo. He spin! tbe things" before a·trlal
to calm his nerves," the yowiger Duncan
said.
By 1935, the yo-yo was establisfied as a
permanent piece of Americana -the
court.s ruled in the 1950s it was a generic
term and thus couldn't be copyrighted -
so Duncan eyed another industry.
Cars were multiplying like locusts, so
be founded the Duncan Parking Meter
Company. of Chicago, where he spent
most of his remaining years, marketing
IKl percent of all meters in the world.
Mr, Duncan later transferred his
residence to Palm Springs and entered
lhe Southland realty field, after profiting
on candy, Ice cream, model airplanes
and. for a lime, the hydraulic automobile
brake. ~
Funeral services will be Tuesday at I
p.m. in Wie[els & Som Mortuary, Palm
Springs, for the ·Rome, Ga ., native who
leaves his wife Denise, plus two other sons; Donald Jr., of Tucson, and Paul E.
Duncan, of Pari!, France.
Mi,ssion Viejo Girl, 4,
•
From Page 1
CITY AIDE ...
the original incorporation campaigners.
"She would listen to our woes, then
cheer us up and offer advice," he ex·
plained. "Som(lirnes at budget time
&he'd work till after midnight."
"DeDe is the type you kiss goodbye
with a tear in your eye."
,~· G--'-iven Corneg Transplant
The clerk-typist who came !or three
months and stayed 16 years before pro-
cessing her own retirement papers was
busy'Friday in the penthouse personnel
department.
"You would think someone retiring
would have her desk in order sooner than
4:clS p.m. on her last-day, '!..she remarked,
but a. steady stream of well-wishers kept
coming.
••
One family's sorrow gave grateful hope
to a Mission ·Viejo couple whose little
daughter received ·a cornea and a chance
to llve with normal eyesight Saturday in
a delicate but swift transplant operation.
Just one come.a was needed for Becky
Rogers, 4, so a ham radio operators
•' ~ .
· ~t;>lice I)is(X)ver.
'Nymph' if!. Mesa
Fountain Pool
She was bent over 8 shimmering pool
just like Uie girl In the White Rock aoft
drink signs when police arrived to check
a J'!POrt c.osta Mesa tity Hall was being
burglarlud.
She Identified herself as L l a d a M.
"Lady Nymph" Lawson, 20, of La
Puente, and sbe was washing blood from
broken glass cuts on her left hand in the
Civic C.enter fountain pool.
Patrolman Bob Krede.n found the younf
woman al 8:50 p.m. Friday. after
Jtudent.s at adjacent Southern California
College reported seeing an apparent
burglary.
Miu Lawson reportedly told him she
mistook the City Hall for the nearby
P o 1 i c e Department and accidentally
smashed the door wltJi her fist whil.:
trying to get in and bail a friend out of
jail.
ORANGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
0111:.ANCiE COAST PUILIU41NG COMPANY
RoD •rl N. w •• d
p..,:d ... I •r4 PLll>llshet'
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T_..,~ 17141 •42-4221
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-•
group broadcast the news throughout
North America, in an effort to locate
some other child-with falling sight.
The second cornea -donated by the
parents of a child v.·ho died Saturday in
Orange County of a heart disease -was
flown to Fairbanks, Alaska, Saturday
nig~ for tmmll)di.lte "l!lurgeQ>. ,
Clmeal transplants such as that
performed on the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. William Rogers, of 25842 Jamon
Lane, .Mission Viejo, are not always .suc·
cessfuJ but the outlook Js good.
The delicate eye tiMue must be renwv·
ed from the body ol the donor withl n fou r
hours of death but can be pfeserved {or
some time if no recipient is immediately
available.
A team of surgeons led by Dr. Thomas
Anderson, head nf the Orange County
Eye Bank al Santa Ana Community
·Hospital completed the dellcate twt>-hour
operation before Becky's father knew
about it. ~
He was cllimping in the mount.alns and
could not be 'notified that the three-month
hunt for a suitable comea donnr -the
first since the eye bank was organized -
had come to an end.
Since the cornea of a child about the
same age was required for Becky's
gradually failing sight. the hunt was com·
plicated.
Eye bank organizer~ did not identify
the 7·year-0ld child whose corneas were
donated by her parents as a
humanitarian gesture in the hope Becky
and some other child can have normal
sight. "'
Only her right eye was involved. but
both will be taped for several da ys l!nd
the operation cannot be pronounced a
success for several months to come.
The surgery came barely in time for
the youngster chosen the new Orange
County Eye Bank's 1971 Poster Girl.
because v.'ithin 30 days her visual
deterioration would have been tQO com·
plete for a chance to reverse it.
Her vision is ex~cted to be clear and
ilmost-that of a normal 4-year~ld within
six weeks, according to h o s p I t a J
spokesmen.
'Jbe search for some other cornea reel·
plent was pressed Saturday by the Eye
Emergency Network Amateur Radio
Group, which gives daily radio broad·
c~sts on needs arid availability.
EISENHOWER· VSJI.
New and Exwa
Skyscrapers and subdivisions are visi-
ble from the. windov.·s, spreading over
much of what were eri1pty rolling hills,
bean field,, and apple orchards when
DeDe Dietzel came to town.
She shuffled papers on her desk in the.'
J967«cupied Costa Mesa Civic Center,
11n elegant ctrlclur& reprmenUn& whit a
city can achieve in 17 yean, then paused
reflectively.
"Those two words -City Family -
really ?T\ean something to me," she iald.
From Pagel
PARKS •..
asked our Land Section to contact you to
discuss procedures and ways -and-
means," he concluded.
The concePt would complement the
proposed Santa Ana River to Santiago
Creek GreeJI Belt concept now under con-
sideration at the county level.
A coalition of citizens -primarily
young people -has been enlisted to pro-
mote the wilderness park concept as a
result of approaching the city with a re-
quest to establish a network of bicycle
trails.
Joining them more recently with 1.000
petition signatures urging the creation of
the Green Belt project is the Estancia
High School Ecology Committee .end the
l\tesa Verde Homeowners· Association.
Financing is one crif.ical point, but com-
mittee members studyiJ1g various ways
it could be done without tax increase sa.v
a variety of grants and subsidies could
applv here.
nie property has an estimated value of
$12 million on the real estate market
but state officials give priority to public
use of surplus land 10 offset rap id urban ·
ization and loss or open areas.
'Slumber Protest'
-
OAKLAND tUPl) -Some 180 girls,
many in filmy nighties, protested the
past Y.'eekend over residence hall visiting
rules at all.women Mills College.
The young women staged a "slumber
protest" in the lounges and living rooms
at seven halls which house about 750
studeiits.
As post offices opened th i$ morning, Lhe ne\\' first class stamp-with il
likeness of President Eisenhower -sold for eight cents and the air
mail stamp -with the silhouette or the plane -is \vorth 11 cent,,:~
(Story, Pa se 5 J.
I \
Raid .Figure
Tossed Back
In Hoosegow
One principal in a wild raid engineered
by federal narcotic agents April 2t was
back in jail today after sideswiping a car
at a C05ta Mesa nightclub early Sunday.
James V. Mamara , 251 was booked on
1uspicion of possession of dangerous
drugs and driving while intoxicated after
the i11cident ai Finnigan's Rainbow.
Officer Pat Rodgers said he witnessed
the accident at 1714 Plactntia Ave., and
went to .l.nvegtigate when Mamara got out
to discuss it v.·ith the other driver.
He said Mamara was arrested due to
his condition, with the second charge add·
~ ed when, tl:x drug tablets believed to be
barbiturates, plus LSD or THC were
found ori his 'person.
Mamara and two companions were at·
rested April 29 by teams of agents from
the Federal Bureau of ,Narcetics and
Dangerous Drugs, plus Costa Mesa detec·
tives.
They are charged with tonspiracy,
transportation of marijuana and also, in
Mamara's case, carrying a concealed
weapon, a .32 caliber automatic pi.stol.
Pilot Baseball Winners_
A third defendant was .additionally
charged with making a bomb threat that
empted Harbor Judicial District Court,
an incident to v.·hich he made reference
while undercover lawmen were present.
The evacuation occurred shortly after
the thirt:I defendant left the court com·
plex. where he had been scheduled for a
marijuana possession hearing that was
continued.
Meet FavoriteSlugger Lawmen were negotiating • potentia l
sale of $17,00Q worth ot cocaine at 2020
Wallace Ave., when an offer was alleged.
ly made for huge quantities or hashish as
well.
Ten-year~ld MlDTay Feldman's smile
was modest. But It didn't conceal his ex·
treme elation after being handed an
autographed baseball lrom the California
Angel baseball team.
That was just the beginning of the
honors that awaited Murray, winner of
the DAILY PILOT Early Bird Contest
and special guest at the DAILY--PlbOT'S
"2-for-l Day" out at the ball game Sun-
da y.
Murray also will recelve four free
lickea t.o a futu re home game. RwUler·
up winners Richard Duesing, 7*, and
Bobby West, gi,i,, each will receive two
free tickets. But the real prize was yel to
come.
. BefQt.e the start of the aftert190n game
against $e Milwaultee Brewers, all three
young winners, were taken down onto the
field to get· a doser look at tbeit favorite
team. Murray had won the contest by
praising the comeback of Angel Tony
Conigliaro. Now Murray -would get to
meet him.
Standing In lhe red dlist betore the
dugout, like the eye in a hurricane of
rushing players, bat boys, security
guards and reporters he waited.
Suddenly !he teeming crowd parted and
the tall, self-assured rightfielder strode
up to the 1a.year-0ld and thurst out his
Firemen Douse
Mesct Brush Fire
A brush fire fanned by Santa Ana winds
charred 150 acres of vacant land on Costa
Mesa's v.·est side Sunday. but no homes
were endangered and the flames v.·ere
quickly conlrolled.
The site -on land proposed as a
l\'ildemess park -is west of Estancia
High School and quite convenient to the
fire department's training facility and
branch station across the stree t.
Investigators said children playing with
matches cdu!d have sta rted !he fire in the
brushy area. mosl of it owned by the
state bu t ~cheduled for sale as surplus
property.
The firP was reported at 2:38 p.m.
hand iaying, "HJ, Murray, how ya
doin"?"
\Vhat did he sa y -this cool. compoS:fd
young man who had lavished so much
praise on this baseball player? When he
finally faced his ddol, he said "Hi.''
After the two base ball lovers .were
through talking, Conigliaro shook the
hands o1 both the runner-up and winners
and exdused himself to go back !Or some
extra batting practice. The three boys
left the field quietly, each keeping to
himself.
Richard mumbled to himself, ••1 wish
my best friend was here."
Frog Festival
Called ,Mayhem;
Boy Found Dead
ANGELS CA!o.1P (AP) -The Calaveras
County sheriff said today lhe crowd of
70,000 that jammed Angels Camp th is
weekend for the Jumping Frog Jubilee
created a scene of "absolut e mayhem."
Sheriff Russell Leach said there were
numerous fights, stabbings, automobile
and motorcycle accidents.
He said De11nis Page, 16, of Modesto,
was foond dead in his sleeping bag at the
fairground s Saturday morning of interna l
injuries. (Earlier story Page 8).
• Leach said he called more tha.i 100
deputies from surrounding counties Sat-
urday when tile situation beeame "rather
explosive" and he notified all taverns in
the area that if they remai11erl open it
would be at their own responsibility.
He said "the biggest part of them did
close for thei r own P,rotection." He said
many stores in Angels Camp also closed
of their own voli!ion.
'·The cou11ty is not laid oot to handle
this large type of unruly cro111d," he said.
''\Ve do not have adequate roads, law en-
forcement or supplies. You just can't
move."
The sheriff said lhc ~ituation was con·
taincd only because the extra la w e11·
forcement officers were brought in Sat·
urday.
Nothing but a small quantity C>f the
drug ever changed hands, but the
suspects were arrested at a Newport
Boulevard rendezvous when a federal
agent mistakenly thought he saw the
signal to move in.
(Medical Society
W oma1i Leader,
Kennedy Cla.sli
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Sen.
Edward Kennedy and the lady doctor who
heads the California Medical Society got
into a mild argument tocJ!y about
whether the country has a "health care
cct:i:is."
"We are not here lo claim that our
present health care system is ·perfect,''
Dr. Roberta Fenlon told a hearing of
Kennedy's ,Senate Health c.re S~
committee.
"It contains significant de ficiencies , ••
but thees factors do not constitute a
health care 'crisis'.
The statement caused loud laughte r
from many of the 200 persons present .....
some or whom had earlier testified they
had grave difficulties in obtaining health
care.
Kennedy told Dr. Fenlon that even
President Nixon "has recognized that
there is a crisis ... the medical profession
and the insurance industry have brought
us into the crisis." ....
Dr. Fenlon. a San Francisco internist,
replied "physicians do not believe the in·
gurance industry has failed the American
people. There is no other nation in the
world that has the health care program
the U.S. has ."'
This caused more hoots of laughter.
A procession of seven individuals
earlier told of difficulties In obtaining
health care. Stlme said medical costs had
bankrupted them, ol.hers complained they
had in effect been denied care, .and ot.hers
told of cases of malpractice by physi·
cians.
''Government health programs promise
run health care, but don't budget enough
to provide it," Dr. Fenlon said.
Our Dicunonds are a Good ln-vestn1ent~-
LADIES
2'/2 ct. Solitaire
.Amt1it•n cut.
Fint ~olor, VSI Cl~•itv.
LADIES
1.08 ct. Solitaire
Amt ri,tn c~t.
VVSI Cltrily. r;;,.. 1l1n1.
LADIES
.60 ct. Solitaire
A1T111l,1n cul,
VVS2 Clarity.
$2,250.00
$850.00
$350.00
1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM
SEE QOM RACITI
FOR DIAMONDS.
REMEMBER, A
DIAMOND IS A
GOOD
INVESTMENT
ONLY IF YOU BUY
IT RIGHT!
EXPERT
WATCH
REPAIR
DONI ON
PllMISI$
•
DOM ••cm
*OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK
•
DIAMOND GUARANTEE
When you buy a di1mond from us w.
will gutr1ntM that di1mond to appraise
at 40% MORE than you P41 id for It or
your money b.ck. Can you do as wtll
elsewhere? COMPARE.
FIND IT HERE FIRST
COSTA MESA · JEWELRY and LOAN
LOAN, BUY, SELL, TRADE COME IN AND BROWSE AROUND
1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COST A MESA -Botwnn Ho rbor & Broadw1y
1·
I
c: •
I .. ,
.,
Today's F inal Saddlebaek N.Y. St ocks EDITI O N
,
VOL 64, NO. 117, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOltNIA MONDAY, MAY 17, 19'71 TEN CENTS
Soutl1 Coast Sizzling Over Generator Pla.n·s
By PATRICK BOYLE
ot lllt Dallt f'li.t St•H
Atomic Energy Co1nmission hearings
on twin nuclear generators -that have
alrt!ady generated citizens heat here -
likely will not be held .in June.
Th1s left July and August for specula-
tion by' opponents or ihe proposed San
Onfre additions. They rear' among other
things, that an earthquake might crack
the big energy spheres, like a walnut
causing a nuclear disaster.
A television news commentator
Jast week said the hearings ""ould be in
June.
Not so said a spokesman for the AEC
•
in San Francisco. He was contacted by
the DAILY PILOT. He said no date is
firm but the hearings will probably be
this summer.
The hearings are required · y law
before any construction of e new
nuclear facilities can begin at San
Onofre. Southern California Ed son and
San Diego Gas and Electric hav applied
for a permit to expand the Sa Onofre
facility with the addilibn of tw ne\Y 1.1
nlillion kilowatt generators.
The Califtimia Public Utilif s Com·
mission has already given appro al to the
proJect following a series of sto y public
IXOll
•
Clt~nge Urged
Trustees Study Election Plan
A resolution callini; for a change in procedure for election of trustees of
the Saddleback College District \\'Ill be considered at tonight's meeting of the
Gapistrano Unified School District Board of Trustees.
The meeting will take place at 8 p.m. in Serra School in Capistrano
Beach.
The resolution. if passed. YlOuld ask the Saddleback Board to initiate
legal sleps to lead to the election of college trustees by those voters who reside
in each trustee area instead of the present method.
CurrenUy each member or the board, despite the trustee area he repre-
sents, is elected by all voters in the district
The resoluUon also urges the Laguna Beach Unified District and Ult Tus-
tin High School District to make similar requests of the college's board.
MUision Viejo Girl, 4,
Given Cornea Transplant
One family's sorrow gave graleful hope same age was required for Becky's
to a Mission Viejo couple whose little gradually failing sight, the hunt was com-
daughter received a cornea and a chance plicated.
to live with normal eyesight Saturday in Eye bank organizers did not identify
• delicate but swift transplant operation. the 7-year.:old child whose corneas were
Just one cornea was needed for Becky donated by her parents as a
Rogers, 4, so a ham radio operators humanitarian gesture in the hope Becky
group broadcast the news throughout and some other child can have normal
North America, in an effort to locate sight.
60me other child with failing sight. Only her right eye was involved , but
The second cornea -donated by the beth ?.'ill be taped for several days and
parents of a child who died Saturday in the operation cannot be Pliinounced a
Orange County of a hea(t disease -was success tor several months to come.
flown· to Fairbanks, All!karSaturday The surgery came barely in time !or
night for immediate surgery. the youngster chosen the new Orange
Corneal transplants such as that Couiity Eye Bank's 1971 Poster Girl.
performed on the daughter of Mr. and because wit.bin 30 days her visual
Mrs. William Rogers, or 2.SSU~Jamon deterioration would have been too com-
Lane, Mission Viejo, are not always suc· plete for a chance to reverse it.
cessful but the outlook is good. Her vision is expected to be clear and
The delicate eye tissue must be remov-almost that of a normal 4-year-old within
ed from the body of the donor withi11 four six weeks, according to hosp it a I
hours of death but can be. preserved for spokesmen.
some lime if no recipient is immediately The search for some other cornea reci-
a vailable. pient \\'as pressed Saturday by the Eye
A team of surgeoM led by Dr. Thomas Emergency Net"'·ork Amateur Radio
A"rrdersoir,-head of the· Orange-€oollt.y--Group,-which-gives daily radio broad-
Eye Bank at Santa Ana Community casts on needs and availability.
Bosj>ltal completed the delicate t"·o-hour
operation before Becky's father knew
about it He waS camping in the mountains and
could not be"Tiotified that the three-month
hunt for a suitable cornea donor -the
first since the eye bank was organized -
had come to an end.
Since the cornea of a child about the
Orpge Coast
Big En1e1·ald Found
NEW YORK (UPI) -A 13.14-car11t
emerald found in the foothills of the Blue
Ridge mountains was purchased for an
usdisclosed amount Sunday by Tiffany
and Co., which called it the largest and
finest cut emerald ever mined in North
America. •
hearings ln San Clemente in October of
1970.
The project calls for eoruitruction of the
twin generators On 84 acres of land down
coast from the existing ·plant Jf ap-
prOved, the generators, which would pro-
·duce five times the power of the exisllipg
facility, would not be in operation unW
1976.
During the PUC hearings, many
resldents of the south county volCi!d a
desire to move the plants inland,
doY:ncoast and underground. T h e
residents claimed thousands of people
"'ould be killed in the event one of the
reactors mal!unctioned and began emll·
Down th.e
Mission
Trail
Kinderg arten
Sig nup Sl~ted
E~ TORO -.Rt&U;traUon 10!'. W..
dergarten \«ill take place Wednesday,
May 19~ 2 to ·4 p.m.. at Aliso.~1 ln
El Toro. Registration also will take p1ace
from a a.m. to 4 p.m. today through Sat·
urday.
A child is eligible if five years old
before Dec. 2, 1971. Proof of birth date is
required, along with evidence of polio atld
measles immunization unless the child
has already had the measles. '
Further infonnation may be obtained
by calling the school at 830-4670.
• Scramblers lll e et
LAKE FOREST -The Lake Forest
Scramblers will meet Wednesday, May II
at 7:30 p.m. in the Beach and Tennis
Club for an election of officers.
The program for the motorcycle club
will be Dale Alexander and Lyle Dutoit
"'ho will show slides and give a report of
their victory in the Napa Valley Grape
Grand Prix.
The speakers l'lre billed as the world
champion Motc>-Enduro side car riders.
• Sing-out for PTO
. A musical program will be presented
for members of the Mission Viejo Parent.-
Teacher Organization on May 18.
The Sing-Out Amigos, 60 high school
and college students from S(Juthem Orange
County, will present the program at 8
p.m. in the multipurpose room.
The group. led by Mona Brown. of San
Clemente High School , is affiliated with
the national Up With People program.
Election of officers will also take place
at the meeting.
• T rus t ees 'Girte d '
EL TORO -Two gifts have been ac-
cepted by Trustees of the San Joaquin
Elementary School District.
The El Toro Woman's Club has
presented $100 to Gates School in El Toro
for the purchase of library books. .
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Minder of El
Toro have contributed 10 years' 1t1bscrip-
tion to the NationaJ Geograplllc to Aliso
School in El Toro.
Weather
Those Santa Ana winds will be
with us again, warming thin gs up
along the coast, but especially in-
land. Temperature range -from
lbe middle 00s to nearly 80 degrees.
'Labor Ca1np' Dwellers
May Be Evicted Tue sday
INSm E TODAY ..
\Vliat happen.! to good .samari-
ta ns? TlltlJ Lose boot races. But
two unJortU't1ate t1acht.sn1e.n were
migh ty glad to see the Costa
llfe sa driver puU out and givt
th tm a hand.. Set Boo til1g, Page
28. ... ,,,.. ,.
CtUMr11lt t
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Time is running out for ram\lies ~till
remaining In condemned housing in San
Juan Capistrano .
A few families still living in an old
agricultural labor camp on Well Site
Road tiave been given until Tuesday, P.1ay
18 lo find another place to live.
But their search has been fuUlc .
"All efforts have failed ," sald Donald
G. Weidner, San Juan Capistrano city ad-
ministrator. "The che11pest housing
available was out.side \he city. outside the
school d·lstrlct, and It rented for about
$140 to 1180" month."
One famil y, th.it of Rudolph<> Arr~la
ha s t I members. The home they now
share rented for $00 a month but lhi~ end
other housing ln the old camp hive bten , ____________ .. • deemed unsafe and u:lhealthy ~Y ·the
Orange Counly departments of health and
building and safety. ' ·
The families were told to vaate in
January but the city of. San Jua,i
Capistrano extentl!d the ufctioo date 90
days to give lhem Ume to find other
housing.
When they were unable to find ho~lng
by themselves, the city again granted a
30-day extension to allow time for com-
munity agencies to lend assistanct.
But that deadline is up May ta.
The property owner Mn. Lillian "
Zllenglein of Pasadena has 11tattd she
would not like to force eviction but m~
have no choice If she is prosecuted for
allowing people to remain In unsafe
1tructW'u.
Ung a high level of radio activity into the
tnvlroomenl.
However, Soulhern California Edison
senior vice president William R. Gould
saJd the San Onorre site was the O(lly
feasible location on which the plants
could be buJll by 1976. Gould predicted
the demand for . power would double by
that date and some new source of power
had to be constructed in Ume to meet the
publk: demand.
Gould said another site would require
intensive time.consuming. scientific study
prior to conslructlon and such~ a study
had .already .been completed !or. the San
Onofre kica tJon.
• al
Borror of Beotia
During lbe week-long PUC hearing,
residents opposed lo lhe new plant cited
thermal pollution as a major reason why
the plant should not . be built. San
Clemente High School science teacher
Phil Grignon said the present plant
circulates 350,000 gallons of sea water per
minute and this water is returned to lhe
sea 10 degrees warmer. He said the
warmer water would bave an adverse ef-
fect on marine life in the area. Slate of-
ficials concerned with sea' U/e have pven
the p)ant a clean bill of health after
monitoring that began with its opening.
However, Grignon said no independent
study of the discharge had been con-
a
Their express.io~ teJJs the story u St. Louis firemen carry out an
elderly fire v1ct1m at the Ambassador Hotel. Four aged persons died
and five other residents were injured.
San Oe~ente High School
Plans Larges t Graduation
San Clemente High School's largest
seriior cldss will be graduated June 17.
Approximately 400 seniors wiU den the
tradiUi>nal ca'pS and goWns for thP two-
hour ~ommencement program . It Will
begin at' 7 p.m. in Thalassa Field .
A committee of eight seniprs has been
working since February · to plan this
year's graduation.
the traditional service according to· Dale
Drager, Activities Director. The program
will not have a featured speaker but will
be more of a musical service. •
Commlltee members who have! ~en
planJling the graduation inc!Ude Mar('ia
Mite.hell, John Russell, Barbara Mudge,
Tracy Smith, Bob McNamara, Moira
Conrad, Crickelt Bewsey and Debbie
Hunt.
* * *
ducted because the planl wu on federal
property -Camp Pendleton -and only
government.personal were permitted ac-
cess.
The PUC finally approved construction
·of the plant pending a thorough study or
the seismJc factors involved in eipandinc
the nuclear facility.
San C1emente rt:11icients opposed to the
construction are expected.to 11ttk expert.I
to offer testimony at the AEC hearings.
\\•hich will probably be scheduled for the
end or the summer. Expansion foes we rti
unable to match the testimony of pro-
ponents at the PUC hearings with
qualHied physicl!ts and scit.ntiat.I.
•
OU
Emergency
Legislation
Proposed
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Raflroad
signalmen went on strike today, shutting
down the nation's rail lines, and Prest·
dent Nixon proposed emergency Jegl.sla·
tion to force the men blck to work until
al least July 1. '
Within five hours after the 13,000.man
Brotherhood of Rallway Signalmen went
on stri'ke, effectively sbuWng down au
rail· passenger and freight traffic, the
Florida White House aMOunced Nixon'•
plan to Congress, calling for a new round
ot negotiations.
Urging passage or a joint resolution to
halt' the shutdown that started at 6:01
a.m. local time, Nixon said a continued
national strike •·would cause gre:a.t
hardship to all Americans and strike a
serious blow at the nation's economy.''
"It is essential that our railroads con-
tinue to operate," the President said.
The President recommended that
Congress promptly enact legislation to
extend the present contract negotiation
between the signalme• unJon and the
railroads until July J. '
He further asked Labor Secretary
James D. Hodgson to ronow the slluatlon.
closely as it developed and to continue
assisting bolh sides of the dispute. He
said that if no settlement had been reach-
ed by June 21, it should be reporied to
him and Congress.
Nei glihors Meet
In Auto Crash
A pair of Capiatrano Beach neighbors
ran into each other In San Clemente Fri·
day-night-~th antOmolillt.a un. -
fortunately -sending one of the -.omen
to her doctor with minor injuries:.
San Clemente police said the acctdent
occurred al about 8 p.m. on Avenida
Estrella at the northbound offramp of lht
San Diego Freewiy. Accordl111 to in-
vestigators, an auto driven by Patricia E.
McCombs, 22, ot 34566 Calle Naranja, col·
lided with a car operated by Elalne C.
Elliot, 19, of 34530 Calle Naranja.
Authorities said the McCombs vebkte
had exited from the freeway and wu
crossing Avenida Estrella when struck In
the left side by the Elliot auto. Miss
Elliot suffered minor injuries and uw
her own physlcian for treatmeril
Commencement addresses 1Nill be
delivered by valedictorian Jay Olsen, son
or Mr. and Mrs. Jeff T. Olsen of San
Clemenle and salutatorian, Mari Haig,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. P. V. Haig of
Monarch Bay.
The program will feature the awarding
of diplomas and musical selections by the Pow ell New President
blVld and chorus.. . . ~
Th1s year's' baccalaureate service wiU
take place on Sunday, June 13 af8 p.m ..
Jn the gymnasium.
-A eruvia:e has been m4de .this 1ear, iri .
/
Second Mariner Sl1 ot
Runs Into New Delay
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The l:ianch
of the second and last Mariner satellite
towar4 an orbit around Mars has been
delayed at least three more days, the
Ji>ace· agency reported.
A neW flight date ha s not yet been set,
but officials said the Mariner :ind its
AU1t>Ce.ht..ur rocket cannot bt prepared
for ~uncb before ~y, h-1ty 23.
•
Of Triton Student Unit .
Pl1lk.e Powell has been elected president
of the AssocJated Student Body of San
Clemente High School.
Elections were held Thursday for stu-
dent body And pep !Klilad ort lcts.
Student body vice presldent will be
M11rk Manning. Mary Shepard was
elccled secretary and Jody Ty!On receJv.
ed the most votes to become treasurer.
Mike Young w\11 be president of the SIU·
dent senate.
Cheering the athll!:tlc teams to victory
next year will t vanity -cbetrleedtre
Danw, Bewsey, Shelley Blrteber, Janet
Gibson, Chris Lidke, Linda McPhel'IOll
and Sandy Wonnser.
Varsity songleaders elected IJ'I; J••
Boyer, Della McGarry. JIU MU!tr, Polly
Renfro, l\felanie Serences and L I 1 1
Steiner. !
Junior Vanilty cheerle1der1 will bti
Kelly Dow.ling, Leigh MacAdams, Sue
Rawls. Jenny SteCfensen, and Zora
S7.emenyei.
Debbie Wagner will bl lht tanlty
mascoL
' --I
~
'
1
' \
,
•
..... •
' Mondly, MQ 17, 1971 2 i OAl
0
LV PILOT
Son i n Newport
SC
Plans Prese1ated .
Yo-yo ~ Inventor ;Unification Mee·t
·Succumbs at ,71 Set for District
•
tor 4S years, Donald Duncan Sr. based
his business success on a constant strles
of ups and downs and It was perennlally
good for the man who gave America ths
)'0-)'0.
The industrial baron who also gre.,.
_ wealthy marketing a less-appreciated
item of Americana -the parking meter
-dled Saturday at 71 of a !troke.
Death came in UCLA Medical Center,
where Mr. Duncan had been in 1 coma
for 2\i wee.ks.
1be multi-millionaire who leaves a son
living Jn Newport Beach among other
IW'Vivora never claimed he invented
e@ler the yo-yo or the meter but ·both
made him. wealthy, along with real
mate.
He owned exttnsjve Orange County
property.
The eighth-grade dropout with an acute
tenae of good bu.siness opportunllie!
began parlaying the obscure Asian jungle
fighting weapon into a toy dlD'lng the
Great Depresslor. years.
"He was in San Francisco or
someplace like that and he saw a Filipino
boy playing with a toy, which was the yo-
yo. He liked It ao well ht bought it from
the boy ," aaya Jack Duncan.
He e1pla.lu the tny dates back in prio-
clple to the 16th Century, when Filipino
guerrillas used four-pound yo-yo on 20-
foot cord!!; to kill or maim enemies am·
bushed in the jungles.
The elder Duncan who coined the
phrase: U it isn't a Duncan it isn't•a yo-
yo, also believed the novel toy has origin!
stretching back to ancient Egypt and the
days of the Pharaohs.
Items remarkably similar are depicted
In hieroglyphics on the walls of old
temples.
Duncan promoted the yo-yo alter
purchasing hls first one by hiring
Filipinos to make them and tour the na-
tion for demonstrations and refereting
contests, with prizes and free instructions ·
offered.
Small boys considered yo-yo expertise a
mark or young manhood and sales of
ordinary yo-yos, plw glass diamOO.<J.stud-
ded ones, f!uor~nt yo.yos that glow in
the dark and other varieties hit ~ mllllon
per year.
One of bis best customers was an In-
dianapolis attorney who bought them by
the' dot.ens.
"He told us he doesn't drink or smoke
and when 1le wants to rela:1, be pulls out
a yo-yo. He spinl the things before a trial
to calm his neneJ," the younger Duncan
said.
By 1935Mhe yo-yo was established as a
penna11er.l piece of Americana -the
courts ruled in the 1950s It was a generic
tenn and thU! couldn't t>e·copyrighted -
so Duncan eyed another industry.
Cars were multiplying like locuall, 10
he founded the Duncan Parking Meter
Gu y E. Carlton
Last Rites Held
Private graveside services were held
thls afternoon at El Toro Cemetery for
Guy E. Carlton. 620P Avenlda Sevilla,
Laguna Hills, who dled Thursday at the
age of 75.
The Rev. George C. Hammond of St.
George's Episcopal Church, Laguna Hills,
officiated at the rites.
Mr. Carlton. who was a partner in
Lawhead and Carlton. Realtors, came to
California from his native Iowa 49 years
ago and had lived in Leisure World for
five yea rs.
He is survived by his widow, Clarine: a
1on, Paul F. C8rlton of Washington, D.C.:
a daughter Miss Mary Ellen Carlton of
Portland, 0 re . : and by two
grandchildren.
OIAHGl COAST
DAILY PILOT
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Company. of Chicago, where he spent
most of his remaining years, markeUna:
80 percent of all meters Jn the world.
Mr, Duncan later transferred hia
residence to Palm Springs and entered
the Southland rutty fit.Id , after profiting
on candy, ice cream, model airplanes
and, for a Ume, the hydraulic automobile
brake.
F\tneral services will be Tuesday at 1
p.m. in Wiefels &r: Sons Mortuary, Palm
Springs, for the Rome, Ga., native who
leave.a his wile Denise, plus two other
sons, Donald Jr., of Tucson, and Paul E.
Duncan, of Paris, France.
Marine Corps'
Oldest Man
Retires at 65
CAMP PENDLETON (AP) -Tho
Marine Corps' ''old man" -literally -
hu retired after a career spanning three
wars.
Strgeant Maj. Jame6 E. Bobbitt , or
Oceanside transferred Saturday to the
Flett .Marine Force Reserve. At 65, he
was the oldest Marine on active duty, of·
ficials said.
He wa! 36 when he joined the Marine
Cerp3 shortly after the start of World
War II. He went through recruit training
with men young enough to be his aons.
His nickname "Pops" was given him
before he volunteered to serve in a com·
bat zone against the Japanese.
Because of bis age, he had to petition
the commandant of the Marine Corps to
serve in combat zones three times -the
first in 1944, when he was assigned to
Adak in the Aleutian Islands.
Discharged after World War II, he
ag$ apPealed to the commandant when
war broke out in Korea. H1a request wa1
granted and he aerved there with the fith
Marines.
Bobbitt alao has served two toun in
Vietnam and has been sergeant major of
WELCOME FRIENDS -Nursery school students of the Presbyterian
Church of Laguna Beach prepare open house welcome Tuesday night.
From rear to front are Gregory Harvey, Chuckie Cook, Leslie
Schiller, Lacy Schator (face turned), Craig Nardozza and Donnie Duffer.
J{iddie Display
Pre-school Students Show Cra fts
Sp routing bean seeds, art collages.
music, puppets and tape recordings o[
their own voice! all play a part fn prepar-
ing nursery school youngsters for the big
day when they will enter "real" school.
The 160 small students at the Nursery
School of Laguna's Presbyterian ChlD'ch,
assisted by their teachers, have prepared
displays of these and other things for
their open house Tuesday from 7 p.m. to
uo.
Parents and families of Ille young sters,
along with all other interested visitors.
are invited to visit the facility at 415
Forest Avenue and hear about the pro-
gram .•
The non-denomlnaLional wee k d 11 y
nursery school has served the community
since 1960 and has a st.aff of 13 plus direc·
tor Ar!ila Smith.
San Clemente Youn gster s
" Show Off Bicycle Safety
the 1st Marine Dlviaion schoola at this 1 hundr 1 Marine bue. Severa ed San C e m e n t e department, culminated a recent bike
safety program in the local elementary
school. The boy's grand prize was taken
by sixth grader Rock Matchett and the
girl was first grade'r Charlene Lyster.
The two children will go to sea on the
"Clemente" with their fathers for the
fishing excursion.
His age has thrust hJm into the .. youngsters competed for prir.es in the
limelight each Nov. 10 for more than a ninth aMual Bicycle Safety Rodeo ~':W'-
decade. That's the Marine Corpa birthday day with two ~g competitors winning
and the oldest Marine by tradJUon an all-day ocean fishing trip. .
receives the first pJece of cake. The event, sponsored by the police
Boy, 8, Crushed
By Metal Gate
A game in which a group of young
visitorJ to O'Neill Park swung to and fro
on a heavy metal gate eoded in tragedy
dtalng the weekend when an 8-year-old
boy died of injuries alter be fell between
the gate and the gatepost
Rodney Pearia of Torrance succumbed
from massive head injurie5 within
momenta of being picked up. sheriff'a
deputles !aid. They said the boy's head
was crushed.
Rodney, the son of Mr. and Mrs. For-
rest Pearls, was one of a group of boys
organized by the Church of Latter-day
Saints ~·ho were on a weekend camping
tr~in the county park .
Several boys climbed on the gate bar-
ring access tn the flood control channel
and swung the heavy fixture backwards
and forwards. Witnesses said Rodney lost
his balance and fell with his head
between the gate and the iron stanchion.
Cloudy Weather,
Surf HQld Down
Beach Turnout
Cloud skies and heavy aurf kept many
south county beachgoers and bt:latm
home over the weekend as lifeguards
reported only mild turnoull.
Even the 300 alip! apened at Dana
Harbor Saturday failed to attract their
new tenanb with only :S boats arriving
on opening day.
"Most people just don't dig going out
()n the ocean on a cloudy day,'' a
spokesman for the Orange County llarbor
Department at Dana Point said, describ-
lng opening day as "very uneventful ."
San Clemente lifeguards said the to!al
turnout for the weekend along both city
and county beaches was sllghlly over
13,000 bathers. A lifeguard said the su rf
was heavy Saturday, keeping many pco..
ple out of the water, and was only slight-
ly improved Sunday.
Thirty other youngsters were awarded
lrophies and ribbons in the competition,
with the small trophies going to first
place winners in each grade division.
The .safety rodeo ~·as organized by
police officer Craig Steckler and the
master of ceremonies was Dick Hague, a
police reserve officer and airline pilot.
The first, second aod third place win-
ners were:
First grade -Boys: John Gorman.
Brandon Krovoza aod Joh11 Maceracken:
girls : Charlene Lyster, Kaleen Dalrymple
and Lori Cole.
Second grade -OOys ; Jonathon
llamro, Dert!k Tobiassen and John
Anderson: girls: Julie 'Abbott. Kelly
Ramsey and Roby n Ferrand.
Third grade -boys: Chris Lange, Eric
5paw and Dan Gorman; girls: Harricl
Williams and Robi n Deacon.
Fourth grade -boys: Chuck Lyster,
M.!chael Gibbs and Rober t Day ; girls:
Lezanne Epting, and Cindy Isch.
Fifth grade -boys: Larry Mear. Rex
Heller and Danyn Young : girls: Cathy
Hambro and Donna Hartman (tie for
first). Tammy Schneider and Adele Lux.
Sixth grade -Rock Matchett, Bruce
Olivar and Ken Abbott.
Dy PA~1ELA HALLAN or 111t 0.111 tt11t1 s1ttt
The first public n1ecling on the unifica-
tion of four school dlstricts will take
place Thursday.
A discuSSi.on of va rious unification
J an1es· Hoffa
Plea Spurned
By Top Coilr t
WASHINGTON tUPJ) -By a narrow,
5-4 vote, the Supreme Court refused to-
day to strike down stale hit-a nd~run laws
that requi re a driver In an accident to
stop and give his name and address.
The vote overturned a Callfornia
Supreme Court ruling against a state law
that is lypical of lhose across the coun·
try. The state court held that the re·
quirement violated the Constitutional
safeguard against sclf·incrimination if
the information was used for criminal
prosecution.
In other actions, the court :
-Refused again to hear an appeal by
imprisoned Teamster boss James R. Hof-
fa "'ho is seeking releas ! from federal
prison at Lewisburg, Pa. The action
rebuffed his claim that federal wiretap-
ping activity involving two Las Vegas
gambling casinos and' special FM fre-
(!uencies in Detroit tainted the
government's conviction of him on jury
tampering charges.
-In a 5-4 turnabout, refused tO rule on
a Charleston, W. Va .. case in which
residents of a ghetto area claimed con·
struction of a federal highway was i!·
legally displacing them from their
homes. ·
-Let stand a lower cou rt ruling from
Chicago that upheld the right of
newspapers to refuse advertisemenu
they deem unacceptable.
-Agreed to decide next term whether
21 law forbidding imports of obscene
materials may be applied if the material
Js solely for private use.
-Rejected a double effort tn test the
constilutionalily of P.iinnesota 's abortion
statute.
T~e California law which was challeng-
ed 1n today 's case is in force in all SO
states.
T~e jurlgment stemmed from charges
against Jonathan Todd Bye rs in Men-
docino County on Aug. 22. 1966. Because
of his failure t.n pass properly, he was
charged with unsafe dr iving and failu re
to stop al the scene of an accident.
Capish·ano Man
Nab bed in Raid
Orange County Sheriff's officers today
learned thflt a San Juan Capistrano man
w~s one of 36 persons arrested by San
Diego County depu ties in a gambling raid
on a La Costa Country Club.
Armando Vicente Ortega , 48, of 30042
Calle Chueca. was booked on gambling
charges in the ~'cekend raid on the
Rancho La Costa Country Club and Spa
in northern San Diego County.
Officers said Ortega was one of a group
playing cards and dice during ··run day·•
activities organized by the San Diego
County Contractors Associalion.
Officers said two members of lhe group
"''ere booked on add itional charges vohen
they attempted to prevent investigators
from bookini,: participants on th e misde-
meanor offenses.
pl ani wHI be presented to resldenta of
the Tustin High, Tustin Elementary, San
Joa quin Elementary and T r a b u c q
Elementary School Dist ricts al 7:30 p.m.
in the multipurpose room or Irvine School
in East Irvi ne.
The p u b I i c , will vote on unifica·
tion in June of 1972. One possibility ls to
unify along the boundaries of the e1isting
Tustip High School District ~nd the other
is to split the district intD three separate
unified districts.
One plan will be approved by the 11tate
Board df Education for submission to the
voters.
If the existing high school district is
split the resulting districts mwt meet
education code conditions.
The new districts must have substan-
tial community identity, they must
represent an equitable division of pre>-
perty and facilities of the origin a I
district, and no racial or ethnic
discrimination or segregation can result.
Another· requiremen t is lhal the assiss-
ed valuation per student cannot vary,
more than 15 per cent among districts.
The assessed valuation per student in the
Tustin High School District is currently
$13,236. '],'he figure allowable in the new
districts would have tn range from
$15,221 to $11,251.
Four plans ha ve betn devel oped by
consultants to the School District
Reorganization Commitlee. These plans
examine wa ys the high school district
could be divided.
Two of these plans have emerged as
fea~ible.
The fi rst, labeled Plan Ill. would give
the Tustin area the current Tustin
elementary district boundaries plus near-
ly half of the lrv:ine Ranch.
The rest of the Irvi ne Ranch (the
western half ) would be the Irvine District
and the rest of the territory Including E:I
Toro. Missio n Viejo and Trabuco would
be the third district.
This plan would give tustin $12 .015 per
student; Irvine, $15,431 and Mission
Viejo-El To!"<'Trabuco, $15,270.
The i;econd plan . labeled Plan Four,
contains more community identity. Under
this plan Tustin would retain its elemen-
tary school district boundaries plus part
of the Irvine Ranch area to the east
Wh ich is largely yet uninhabited.
trvine's boundaries would basically be
the same as for the proposed Cily of
Irvine except for the agricuJtural
preserve section given lo Tustin and the
rest would be the El Toro-Mission Viejo-
TrabuC<l district.
Under th.is plan the amount per student
will be $11.251 for Tustin, $15.221 for
Irvine and $15,221 for Mission Viejo-El
Toro-Trabuco.
Maps \~ill be presented at the meeling
showing exactly how the district could be
split.
Accord ing to the organization com-
mittee. if the voter turn down unufica-
tion three times a unty committee will
have the task 1vidin g the district Into
~o_2.li-more un ified school districts,
-Vbters already turned down unification
once. If tiM>y tum it /!'!':"'" again in June
of 1972 the district_, will remain the same
as they are now with the stale mandating
the third unifi cation election &ii yea rs
after that.
...
GiJ'l , 4, Rescuer
Die in House Fire
BERKELEY (AP ) -A 4-year-old girl
and young man who tried to save her
died ~~ a fire that destroyed a t"·o-story
home in the Berkeley hills.
Fire Chief William Steele said the vic-
ti~s in the blaze Sunday wei-e Margo
Wilhelm and Steve Schmitz, 21 , who
recenlly had taken an examlnalion to join
the Minneapolis, Minn., fire department.
_3 ~d Judge Sou~ht
In Soutl1 Co unty Yorty Returns Home
With Tunney Blast
Our Dia11ionds are a Good l nvest1nent
·A request for a third judge In the South
Orange County Judicial District has been
referred to the Leg is I at Ive Plan-
ning Committee of the Board of Super·
visors.
Board chairman Robert Battin, a mem·
ber of the committee, said the request
from the judicial district would be con·
si,dered and forwarded to the county's
legislative representatives along with 11
similar request from the Central Orange
County Judicial District.
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Mayor Sam
Yorty has returned from his stcond visit
in three weeks to New Hampshire with
harsh words about Sen. John V. TuMey
(0.Calif.).
Upon arrival here Saturday, Yort y at-
tacked TuMey and other opponents of the
supe rsonic transport, which faces a test
in tbe Senate this week after being reviv.
ed by the Howe.
Psychiatric Check Set
For Mom n( Rape Victim
A psychiatric exam inalion "'as ordered
Friday for a San Clemente woman police
accu5e of having encouraged a Camp
Pendleton Marine to rape her 14-year-old
daughter.
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defendant's daughter. Both defendants
are held in Orange County Jail.
Police rtports stat~ that the woman
took Smith 11nd her daughter to a San
Clemente motel room and encouraged the
young Marine to r11pe the girl with a view
to "calming her down." Pollet allege thal
the girl was raped by Smith on al least
two OCC"aslons in the motel:
. ·.
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flND IT HERE RRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN ~'· lftl, °''"°' C-1 JOu-.iltl'tlftl • C:-M'f, N• """'' •ID!''"' l11V\l'lllo<> .. fldltor'lll _,Ml' .,. •••••l'f!.-1• ""ti~ "''~ M r...-w.. wllllOvl llfl(lel Pf'·
"'11.tli'I .r at1rrlfllT -'If'.
Orange C<Hlnty Superior Court Judge
Byron K. P.tcfl-t \llan will evaluale reports
on the M-year-old defend11nt June 1$ and
accept her plea to three count$ of rape on
• that date.
It Is alleged that Smith took the
woman's auto and credit cards after the
!lecond offense and heade_d for Arizona.
lie was found asleep in the car in Gila,
Arlz., and returned to Camp Pendleton
11ulhorltles for erosecullon.
LOAN, BUY, SELL, TRADE
1838 NEWPORT BLVD.
COME IN AND BROWSE AROUNO
PHONE 646-7741 l«W cl111 •lllG "Id •I H.......,t .. "" fflO COit• M•~, C•l!f...,t.. lllW.tlft') w ctnltt:; .,,. _,,.. ... , "" .... 11 " J
fl'iel'liliJrJ ~ry ... ""'*"· .,~ """"""'·
l
He set May 21 for the afraignment of
Robert Dean Smi1h, 21 , who fa<:es four
countt or rape foUowlng lnvestlg1tion of
Iii• olle1ecl npealed ~suulll on hil co-
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DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -Betwffn H1rbor & Broadway
J . .
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Lag11n~a Bea~h
EDITION
YOt:. 64, NO. I I 7, 4 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
• • IXOll a1
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Louise Frazer
Dinner Slated
To Precede
'Oz' Musical
A potluck dinner sponsored by the
Laguna Beach High School PT A will
precede the opening night of the school's
ambitious spring musical production,
1'Dorolhy and the Wizard of Oz."
About 200 students.of \vhom 81 appear
In the cast, are participtaing in the
presentati,on which will be on stage in the
high school auditorium at 8 p.m. Thurs-
day. Friday and Saturday.
The potluck will get under way in the
school cafeteria at 6 p.m. Thursday. Con·
tribution will be 50 cents per person or
$1.50 maximum per family, plus a
casserole, salad or dessert dish.
Starring in the musical as Dorothy vdlt
be junior Louise Frazer, with senio r
Mark h-1ickesh as the Scarecrow, senio r
?-.1ike Contino as the Cowardly Lion and
freshman Robin Buck as the Tin Jo.1an. ·
Faculty members assisting with the
production are Gerald ?-.icCulloch, direc·
tor, Fred Stoufer, musical director and
Ray !laggard. technica l director.
Tickets are on sale now at the
auditorium box office at SI for children
and $2 for adults.
Bernice A. Wall
Services , Tuesday •
Rosary will be said tonight at 7:30 in
Mc€ormick-baguna Beach Chapel -.{or-
Bemice A. \Vall, JS.year resident of South
Laguna. who dit?d suddenly Friday at
South Coast Community Hospital. She
was 58:
Requiem mass vdll be relebrated at 9
11.m. Tuesday in St. Catherine of Siena
Catholic Church, following burial al
Ascens.ion Cemetery.
~frs. Wall , widow of the late Col .
Robert E. Wall, is survived by a son.
Robert of Los Angeles: a brolht:!r. Arthur
Benish of Santa Ana : a sisler, h-1rs. Lor· 6 ralne LeDrun of Lewiston, Idaho; tv;o
grandchildren, one niece and two
nephews.
A 11ative of Nebra ska, she came lo
California 35 years eeo and ma de her
home et 30802 S. Coast Highway in South
Laguna.
Mer111aids Start .
Sniile Ca.111paig1i
Laguna Beach Mermaids, women's
division or the Chamber of Comme rce,
will launch their summer "Smile Cam-
paign" at the Chemf>er breakfast
\Vtdnesday at 7:45 a.m. in tbe Hotel
Laguna.
Speaker Fred Herman. a sales training
expert, will give a brief preview of the
presenlaUon he plans for a pep rally for
Laguna employes June 23.
Business people and other lntt'rested
Lagunans are invited to attend the
breakfast nnd hear about Herman 's plan!!
for the summcr·long drive t9 enhance
Laguna's Image as a friendly 1pot to
' ii. t
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Gets Goods
Police Officer
In "Dope Dive'
A narcotics case needs evidence and
Laguna Beach police officer Tom Reeder
proved Friday night he was ready to go
to extraordinary lengths to "get the
goods" on a suspect he and detective Sgt.
Neil Purcell had just arrested.
According to the officers, they saw
LAGUNA DRIVER
GETS INDY SPOT
From Wlre Services
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. - Rick Muther
or Laguna Beach Sundaykcame the 25th
race driver to qualify in the starting
lineup for the 5Sth Memorial Day 500
mile race here at the Indianapolis 1-1otor
Speedv.·ay.
suspect Anthony Robert Burns, 21, meet
with a couple of young people at Cleo
Street and walk with them to the Anita
Street Beach at approximately 8:45 p.m.
Spotting a brown paper bag In Burns'
hand. Purcell identified himself as a
police officer and q>quired as lo the con-
tents of the bag.
Bums allegedly ned loY.'ard the ocean,
plunged in and emptied the bag. which
police said appeared to contain 1everal
plastic bags of the type used in mari-
juana sales.
As Burns swam back lo shore. where
he was promptly taken into custody by
Purcell , Reeder swam oceanward and
succeeded in retrieving one of the plastic
bags. which policl! say contained rnafi..
juana. The rest of the evidenct, ac-
cordi ng to Reeder, sank beneath the
v.•aves.
Burns was booked on suspicion ()f
possession or marijuana for sale and
destroying evidence.
Retul'ling to the ar._ a couple al boun
later, Reeder having changed to dry
Do\IL Y ,.ILOT 11111 l"llttt
Victory ls Bis
Bill Fish .• 16, is cheered on by' Cathy Marple, president of Laguna
Beach High School student body. Fish. tn .a field of four candidates,
won the election ·for the presidential position next year. He stressed
~eed f~r oommunicaU9 "~on& sc4oo1. board, a~ministratipn, lacully and dilderits. ' ,. • 1.. • • • ~
h-1uther ~·as one of only three dri\'ers to
squeeze into the start ing lineup Sunday
'vith a qualifying speed of 169.972 miles
per hour. He made the lineup on his se-
cond attempt to qualify. Only seven posl·
tions are now \en open. See details in ti).
day DAILY PILOT sports section, on
Page 21.
"lothes , the two inveatlgaton aet \IP -r.---.,.,,----------------------surveillance in the Hacienda Motel, 1211 · ~ · .,
'Market Records
Nosedive Toda y
In Rail Turmoil
NE\V YORK (AP ) -Stock market
prices took a nosedive today in moderate
trading as investors responded to the na·
tionv•ide rail strike and rising interest
rates.
The Dow Jones avl!rage of 30 in·
dust rialil at II a.m. PDT was off 12.93 ;.;t
923.13. Declines outnumbered advances
on the New York Stock Exchange hy
more than 5 to I.
Trading volume pic ked up con-
siderably, late in the session from ils
sluggish morning pace. Institutional ac-
Fin•I Stock Report
Today, P19es 18, 19
tivity also Increased, indicating that the
sel\off was beginning to gain momentum.
Analysts cited worries over the rail
i;lrike as the major market depressant.
However, fears that rising short·term in-
terest rates could trigger a boost in the
prime or discount rates also \velghed
heavily they added
Large-block trades included 190.000
shares of Household F: ·.anct: at 52. off ~;
80,000 of Niagara Mohawk Pov•er at JS!%,
off lh; 66,600 of Fannie Mae at S6, down
311.; and 59,000o{ First Charter Financial
at 2.11,~. off Jh.
Other Big Board prices Included cen.
tral & SoUth West. off ~ to 441/,; Dentsp-
ly International, off 51,2 to 49, following
sell recommendations from s o m e
brokerage houses : Telex , off ~. to 18;
Ling • Temco -Vought, off Z.1/3· to Ul5:
Pittston, down two to 43~4 and General
Telephone, dow1 ~ to 32.
On the American Stock Exchange .
General Builders was off ~ to five after
a 99.500-share block traded earlier at 4~.
off 1-113. Other Amex prices included
LTV warrants, off ~-to 9o/a: Deltona ,
down 21/t to 321\ii; Syntex, off 3~• to 621/t :
Vonker11 Raceway. up 2;4 to 40~4; and
Cinerama, up % to 51/,.
S. Coast Highwa y, where they sniffed out
an alleged marijuana party and atrested
LaMence Dugene Datph, 22, Elaine
Marie Jindra,19, Edward Lee Barnett, 29
and Colleen Marie Campbell. 21. all of
whom said tbey lived at the motel.
Santa Ana Winds
Expected Here
Through Tuesday
A Santa Ana wind condition, unsual fQr
thi11 time of year, will continue through
Tuesday bringing tunny skle11, warmer
temperatures and gusty winds to the
Orange Coast.
The high for today and Tuesday will be
in the 80s, the National Weather Service
predicts with lows along the coast in th•
50s overnight. ·
Gusty winds will be localized below the
coastal canyons today and Tuesday with.
occasional gusts expected up to 35 miles
i!n hour. .
Weathermen describe the high pre11sure
system over Nevada and Northern
Callfornia as being "a late Santa Ana ."
Such weather systems which produce
northerly blasts of heated air are not
usually experienced after March, they
say.
Over the weekend. the gusts recorded
as high as 54 miles an hour fanned
numl!rous brush fir-es.
The superheated north em air dropped
humidity in the L-Os Angeles basin to 12
percent on Sunday.
Blowing winds and low humidity turned
brush lands to tinder and firemen battled
blazes in the Angeles National Forest. the
San Femando Valley and Griffith Park.
None of the fires t threatened homes.
The gusts downed power lines and kick-
ed up sand in desert regions causing
camper and trailer wamings in Los
Angeles. Riverside and San Bernardino
counties.
Small craft warnings raised at I p.m.
Sunday were lowered tbis morning, ac-
cording lo ~e Orange County Harbor
Department.
Boi1ae Oceupatiota.
Cha11ge Urged
Trustees Study Election Plan
A re90lulion calling for a change In procedure'. ror election of trustees of
the Saddleback College District will be consldertd at tonight's meeting of the
Capi&trano Unified School District Board of Trustees.
The meeting will take place at 8 p.m. in Serra School ln Capistrano
Beach.
The resolution, if passed. would ask the Saddleback Board to inlliale
legal steps to lead kl the el ection of college trustcea by those voters who reside
in each trustee area instead of the present method. ,
' CurrenUy each member Qf the board, deipitl! the trustee area he repre.
aentl, ~ ~lected by all ~otera Jn,the district.
'Ill~ resolution· al» urges the Lag1JOa Beach Unified District and tbe Tus-
tin. High Schoo! District~to make similar reque1Jts of the college's board.
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3rd Drug Abuse Program
Set\VednesdayinLaguna
A program of special interest to
parents whose children already are in-
volved in drug use, or whose behavior is
a problem at home. or in the community,
will be presented Wednesday as the third
m-·a drug abuse· prevention-aeries in
Laguna Beach.
SMnsored by the Laguna Beach
Cootainatlng Council , the educational
sessions featuring experl, In the field are
presented at 7:30 p.m. each \)'ed1 1esday
in the "Recreation Department, 175 N.
COast Highway. The series is open to the
public, free of charge.
Speakers at the second Rssion in .the
William Routt, di rector of •he Orange
.County Community Mental He a Ith
Services in Laguna Beach, and fo,1rs.
Barbara Trear, formerly assistant direc·
tor ·and supervisory group leaC:er in the
Golden State Foundation program for
parents and problem children.
Speakers at the second sesson In th!!
series this week were Mrs. Faye Hauser
of the Newport Harbor J unior League,
~11ss Susan November, special skills in·
atructor at Laguna Beat'h High School
an<I David-Hagen,---counselor-iR the
Laguna Beach school system.
Mrs. Hauser described th!! Parent Ef·
fec'li vencss Program , which she said is
geared for parents of fifth gl'ade &:hool
children and has been widely endorsed in
schodls throughout the county.
It is aimed at preventing drug misuse
by stimulating parents' desire to le3m
more about themselves and their
children.
Miss November told parents how young
people heacfing for failure as a result of
drug mjsuse are gu ided back to achieve-
ment with understanding and eri·
couragement to apply theh; special
talents.
City Eyes "Encounter' Bid
•
Hagen discussed "reasons" young peo-
ple mrsuse drugs' and gave suggesliOns
for bridging the generaUon gap througlt more meaningful communication, with
parents maintailling their true roles rath·
er than attempting to be "buddies."
· A substanUal Increase in the number of
fathers was noted at the second proifDm,
klllowlng adverse comment by a speaker
the previous weik who asked. "Where
are the fathers?"
Apprbval of "encounter sessklns'' a11 a
home occupation will be soughl 3t
tonight's meeting of the Laguna Beach
Planning Commission by Dr. Ron1lld
Levy, 1260 Cortez Ave., a professor of
psychology at Cypress College.
The request romes toward the end or 11
lengthy agenda which starts out JI 7:30
p.m. with three public hearings.
First will be the second hearing on 11.
proposal that the Board of t.oning Ad·
justmenl handle all variance requests.
Commluloners Indicated at ~ study
session last "'ttk that they wouldr"refer
to handle i;ome of the request•
themselves.
Also up for second public hearings are
the new regulaUont .on condiUonat use
permits and the ordinance aetUng 1tan-
dar<ls for planned re1ldentJal
dl!velopmeots. Planning director Wayne
Moody has Indicated he may 1eek more
time to study this proposal.
Also on tonight's agenda for the com-
mission 11re:
-A continued bearing on a 'YJ.rlance
1ppllcaUon from Thoma• Unao, ltt
Wii cox Way, who ~~ks per~lsslon to Jn.
crease densHy from eight lo nine units.
-Change of district application from
R-l'to R-2 for Wendt Terrace-Wilrox Way
property by Richard Fenske.
-conditional U5e permit ttquest by
Second Mariner Shot
Runs Into New Delay
Peter and Luisa Hyun 10 construct a CAPE KENNEDY (UPI)-The lalinch
parking lot adjacent to the House of Hyun or tM second and last Marlnt!r satellfte
restaurant. toward 11n orbit around Mars has be e n
..:..rempor11ry use ~rmJt for Spin Art delayed at lea!t three more days, the
at the Shell Stt1tlon, 307 S. Coast gpace agency r!JKll'led.
Hlghw~y. A new flight date has riot yel been set,
. -Request (pr permission to combine but offlcltils said the Mariner snd Its
four loll Into one bUlldln1 site at !Ill AUa,,C..taur rocket cannol l>l-P.<epll1!d Su'""'\~ · · ' · loi lallnth belo Sllnday, Mo)l.Jl.. : :
Today's F!nal
i N;'Y. .
Stocu ~
TEN CENTS
)
OU
'Emergency
Legislation
Proposed
WASHINGTON (UPI)
signalmen went on strike today, shuttin&
down the nation's rail lines, and Pru!·
dent Nixon proposed emergency legisla·
t.ion to force the men back to work Wltil
at least July 1.
Within five ho11111 aft<r the 13,000.man
Brotherhood of Railway Signalmen went
on strike, effectively shutting down all
rail passenger and rttlght traffic, the
Florida \\1hite House announced Nixon's
plan to CongreSJ, calling for a new rourt<l
of negotiations.
Urging passage or a joint resolution to
bait the shutdo wn that started at 6:01
a.m. local time, Nixon said a ronlinued
natiOnal strike 1'woufd cause great
hardship to all Americans and strike a
serious blow at the nation's economy."
"It is essential that our railroads C<>n-
linue to operate," the President said.
The President rerommended that
Congres.s promptly enact legislation to
extend the present contract negotiation
between the slgnalme.. union and lha
railroads unUl July 1.
He further asked Labor Secretary
James O. Hodgson to follow the -situation
closely -as I( .d~'lOlo~_Md to conUnue
asslsUng both aides of the dlSP.Ute. · Ha
said thal U no settlement had bee'n reach-
ed by June 21, It should be r<pc.1"'1 lo
him ·and Congress.
The signalmen, who maintain and in-
stall signal equipment, struck when the
railroads refused to meet their demands
for wage increases almost double what
other rail unio11.11 have accepted.
American Dollar
Flow Overseas
Shows Deficit
From Wire Servlcet
WASHINGTON -The flow o {
American dollars overseas reached Udal
wave proportions in the first three
months of this year, with a deficit of fS.5
billion in the balance of payments the
Nixon Administration rl!ported today'.
That was the highest one-quarter
deficit on record.
The official reserve transactioit-basis
represen~ all tr~nsactions with foreign
governments and foreign central banks.
The deficit on the basis deteriorated by
S2.2 billion from the last three months ot
1970, the departihcint said.
Excl uding alloci.tions of speeial draw-
ing rights. or "paper gold," the new in..
terpational reserve asset, the deficit waa
even worse. reaching a1most $5.7 billion.
The department said the par.ment1
deCicit on ttlel(ijijiaity basti was $3 blllloo ~
in the first quarter, up S2.S billion from ·
the last quarter. The liquidity basis
measures all transactlon1 with foreign
countries.
Secretary of the Treasury John B. Con-
nally gave the fig:ure.s to the S1!111te
Finance Committee at a trade hearing
and said, "Clearly, that level of deficll ia
not sustainable."
Orange
"'eathcr
Those Santa Ana winds will be
with us again, warming things up
along the coast. bul especiatty in-
land. Temperatul'8 range -from
the middle 60I to nearly ao degrees.
INSWE TODAY
\Vhat happens to aood 1amori·
tans? They lose boa& racc1. But
two 1u1/ortu'tlate JIOChUm.tn wtre
mightu glad to .rtt '''' Coa ia.
life.sci driver pull out ond givt
them o hand. Set Boating. Page
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l"t!t.rlll ... ,. ' 1'111!,,:ert. .... •"rtml"m"'' t~t• W1~11ttr • ··-1•n 'l'/t!ftfft't "'"" U•l' M-tcl H " Wtrlf Ntwl W
AM Ll!Hltni "
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2 DAILY PILOT SC MOllday, Ml)' 17, 1971
Son in Newport
Yo-yo Inventor
Succumbs at 71
For '5 years, Donald Duncan Sr. based
his business success on a constant series
of upa and dewns and Jl was perennial!y
good for the man who gave America lhe
~Y"·
The industrial baron who also grew
"'ealthy markeUng a less-appreciated
Item of Americana -the parking meter
-died Saturday at 71 of a stroke.
Dee.th came In UCLA Medic.al Center,
where Mr. Duncan bad been in a coma
for 214 weeb.
The multi-millionaire who leaves a son
living 1n Newport Beach among other
survivor! never claimed he invented
either the yo.yo or the meter but both
made him wealthy, along with real
estate ..
He owned ertenslve Orange County
property. / ----
The flftl._tb>-grade dropout with an acute
sense cif · good business opporturUtles
began parlaying the obscure Asian jungle
fighting weapon Into a toy during the
Great Depressior. years.
'1He was in San Francisco or
eomep1ace like that and be saw a Flllptno
boy playing with a toy, which was the yo-
yo. He liked it so well he bought it from
the boy," says Jack Duncan.
He explaiRS the toy dates back in prin-
ciple to the 16th Century, when Filipino
gue1Tillas used four-pound yo-yo on 20-
foot cords to kill or maim enemies am-
bushed In the iU11J!l".
The elder Duncan who colned the
phrlse: If it lm't a Duncan it Isn't a yo-
yo, also believed the novel toy bu origins
stretching back to ancient Egypt and the
day1 of the Pharaohs.
Items remarkably similar are depicted
In hieroglyphics on the walls of old
temples.
J)Jocan pr041oted the yo-yo after
purchasing bis first one by hiring
FiliplnOll to make them and tour the na-
tion for demonstrations and refereeing
contesUI, With prizes and free instructions
offered.
Sm41l boys considered yo-yo experti!:e·a
mark al young manhood and sales of
ordinary yo-yos, plus glau diamond-stud-
ded ones, fluore;cent yo-yos that glow in
the dark and other varieties hit ~ million
per year.
One of his best customers was a11 In-
dianapolis attorney who bought them by
the' dozens.
"He told us he doem't drink or smoke
Company. of Chicago, where he spent
most of hiJ remaining years, marketina
80 percent of all meters in the world.
Mr. Duncan later transferred ·his
residen« to Palin Springs and entered
the Southland realty field, after profiting
on candy, ice cream, model airplanes
and, for a time, the hydraulic automobile
brake.
Funeral services will be Tuesday at l
p.m. In Wiefels & Sons Mortuary, Palm
Springs, for the Rome , Ga., native who
leaves his wife Denise, plus two other
sons, Donald Jr .• of Tucson, and Paul E.
Duncan, of Paris, France.
Marine Corps'
Oldest Man
Retires at 65
CAMP PENDLETON (AP) -The
Marine Corps' "old man" -literally -
has ieUred after a career spanning three
wars.
Sergeant Maj. James E. Bobbitt, ot
Oceanside transferred Saturday to the
Fleet Marine Force Reserve. Al 65, he
was the oldest Marine on active duty: of-
ficials said.
He was 36 when he joined the Marine
Corps shortly aft.er the start of World
War JI. He went through recruit training
with men young enough to be hia sons.
His nickname "Pops" was given him
before he volunteered to serve in a com-
WELCOME FRIENDS -Nursery school students of the Presbyteri;in
Church of Laguna Beach prepare open hou se welco me Tuesday night.,
From rear to front are Gregory l-larvey, Chuckie Cook, Leslie
Schiller, Lacy Schator (face turned), Craig Nardozza and Donnie Duffer.
Kiddie Display
sp~~:~':~~~~=e~~s Show Crafts
mlL'lic, puppets and tape recordings of Parents and fami lies of the youngsters,
their own voices all play a part in prepar-along with all other interested visitors,
Jni nursery school youngsters for the big are invited tG visit the !acility at .(JS
day when they will enter "real" school. Forest Avenue and hear about the pro-
The 160 small students at the Nursery gram.
bat mne against the Japanese. . School of Lagwia's Presbyterian Church, The non-denominational week d a y
Because of Ills age, he had to petition assisted by their teachers, have prepared nursery school has served the community
the commandant of the Marine Corps to displays of these and other things for since 1960 and has a 6taff of 13 plus direc-
sefVe-lil combat zones Uiree Umia -~their-open-house-Tuesday from-7 p;m;-to-tor Arlita Smith.
first in 1944, when he was assigned to
Adak in the Aleutian Islands.
Di9Charged after World War II, ht.
again appealed to the commandant when
war broke out in Korea. His request was
granted and he served there ~·ith the 5th
Marines.
..
San Clemente Youngsters
Show Off Bicycle Safety
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i-1
W-lans Presetated
Unifieati-0n Meet
Set for Distr.ict
By PArt1ELA JIAU.AN
01 1M Dilly 1'1111 Sti ff
The first public meeting on the un\flca..
tion of four school districts will take
place Thursday.
A discu.sslon of various unifica tion
James Hoffa
Plea Spurned
By Top Court
\YASHINGTON (UPI) -By a narrow,
5-4 votet the Supreme Court rl!fused to--
day to strike down state hit-and-run laws
thAt require a driver in an accident to
stop and give his name and address.
The vote overturned a California
Supreme Court rulin'g against a state law
that is typical of those across the coun·
try. The stale court hel d that the re·
quirement violated the Constitutional
safeguard against self-incrimination if
the information was used for criminal
prosecution.
In other actions, the court:
-Refused again to hear an appeal by
imprisoned Teamster boss James R. Hof-
fa ~·ho is seeking releas ? from federal
prison at Le.,.,·isburg, Pa. The action rebuff~d his ~laim that fede ral wire tap·
ping attivity involving two Las Vegas
gambliog casinos and special FM fre-
quencies in Detroit taiRled the
government's conviction of him on jury
tampering charges.
-In a 5-4 turnabout, refused to rult on
a Charleston , W. Va., case in which
Tesidents of a ghetto area claimed con-
s!Iuction of a federal highway was il-
legally displacing them from their
hom es.
-Let stand a 1-0wer court ruling from
Chicago that upheld the right of
newspapers to refuse advertisemenl.S
they deem unacceptable.
-Agreed to decide next term whether
a law forbidding imports of obscene
materials may be applied if the material
I! solt]y for private use.
plans will be presented to residents or
the Tustin High , Tustin Elementary, San
Joaquin Elementary and Tr ab u co
Elementary School District! at 7:30 p.m.
in the multipurpose room of Irvine School
in East Irvine.
The p u b I i c . will vote on unifica-
tion in June o! 1972. One possibility Is to
unify along the boundaries of Uie existing
Tustin High School District and the other
is to split the district into three separate
unified districts.
One plan ~'ill be approved by the st.ate ·
Board of Education for submission to the
voters.
If the existing high school district is
split the resulting dislricls must meet
education code conditions.
The new districts must have subslan·
tiaJ community identity, they must
represent an equitable division of pro-
perty and facilities of the o r I g I n a 1
district. and no racial or ethnic
discrimination or segregation can result.
Another requirement is that the assess·
ed valuation per student cannot vary.
mpre thl!!I 15 per cent among di.stricts.
The assessed valuation per student in the
Tustin High School District is currentl y
$13,236. The figure allowable in the new
districts would have to range from
$15,221 to $11,251.
Four plans have been developed by
consultants to the School District
Reorgatnzation Committee. These plaris
. examine ways the high 1ehool district
could be divided.
T\\-'O of these plans have emerged as
feasible.
The first. labeled Plan Ilf, would give
the Tustin area the current Tustlh
elementary district boundarle! plus near~·
ly half ol the Irvine Ranch.
The rest o! the Irvine Ran ch (the
"'estern half) would be the Irvine District,
and the rest of the territory including El·
Toro, Mission Viejo and Trabuco would
~ -oie thlrd di.strict:-,
This plan would give tustin $12,015 per'
student: Irvine. $15,431 and Mission
Viejo-E l Toro-Trabuco. $15.270.
The second plan. labeled Plan Four,
contains more CQmmu nily identity. Under
this plan Tustin would retain its elemen ...
tary school distrnct boundaries plus patt
of the Irvine Ranch area to the eut
which is fargely ye t uninhabited.
Irvine's boundaries would basically be
the same as for the proposed City of
----.nd-"l~..he...wanl!. to rel11, be pnll1 out
a ~yo. H~ ;pins the thinga before a trial
to calm his nerves," the younger Dunc.an
said.
BobbUt also has served two toura ln
Vietnam and has been sergeant major ol
the 1st Marine Division schools at this =Manne base.
His age has thrust him Into the
limelight each Nov. 10 for more than a
decade. That's the Marine Corps birthday
and the oldest Marine by tradition
receives the first piece of cake.
Several hundred San C 1 t m e n t e ~
youngsters cnmpet.ed for prtits In the
ninth annual Bicycle Safety Rodeo Satur-
day with two youni competitors winning
an all-day ocean fishing trip.
!;leP<l;rlrnelll, culminated a recent bike
saJety program in the local elementary
school. The boy's grand prize was taken
by sixth grader Rock Matchett and the
girl was first grader Charleoe Lyster.
The two children will go to sea on the
"Clemente" with their fathers for the
fishing excursion.
-Rejected a double effort lo test the
constitutilltlatity oL,MinneSoui~bortioft
statute.
The California law which was challeng-
ed in today'a case ls in force in all SO
states.
Irvine except for the agrlcuUural--~lf.
preserve section given l.o TusLin and the
rest would b'e the El Toro-Mission Viej().
Trabuco district.
By 1935, the-yo-yo was established as a
permanent piece of Americana. -the courta ruled in the 1950s it was a generic
t.erm and thus couldn't be copyrighted -
so Duncan eyed another industry.
cars were multiplying like Iocuslll, '°
lie fowided the Duncan Parking Meter
Guy E. Carlton
Last Rites Held
Private graveside services were held
this afternoon al El Toro Cemetery for
Guy E. Carlton. 620P Avenida Sevilla,
Laguna ~ills._ who died Thursday at the
age of 75. .
The Rev. George C. Hammond of St.
George's Episcopal Church, Laguna Hills,
officia ted at the riles.
Mr. Ca rlton. who was a partner in
Lawhead and Carlton. Realtors, came to
California from his native Iowa 49 years
ago and had lived in Leisure World for
five years.
He is surv ived by his widow, Clarine: a
BOn. Paul F. Carlton of Washington, D.C.:
a daughter Miss Mary Ellen Carlton of
Portland , 0 re . ; and by two
grandchildren.
OIANGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
Ou.NG;! CO.UT "UIUSH\NC> COMPA)fl'
1tol:tort N. Woo4
"'°'ldftlt ol'ld Put>li.hlr'
J,e\ R. Curl•1 Vkt PrnlO.,I •1111 G4Mr•I Mt1111111"
'1110111~• x.,.,11
li<lllor
Boy, 8, Crushed
By Metal Gate
A game in which a group of young
visitors to O'Neill Park swung to and fro
on a heavy metal gate ended In tragedy
during the weekend when an 8-year-old
boy died of injuries after he tell between
the gate and the gatepost.
Rodney Pearls of Torrance succumbed
from massive head Injuries within
moments of being picked up, sheriff's
deputies said. They said the boy's head
"'as crushed.
Rodney, the son of Mr. and Mrs. For·
rest Pearls, was one of a 1roup of boys
organized by the Church of Latter-day
Saints ~·ho were on a weekend camping
trip in the county park.
Several boys climbed on lhe gate bar·
r-ing access to the flood control channel
and swung the heavy fixture backwards
and forwards . Witnesses.said Rodney lost
his balance and fell with his head
between the gale and the iron stanchion.
3rd Judge So11ght
In South County
A request for a third judge in the South
Orange County Judicial District has been
referred to the L e g i s I a t I v e Plan·
ning Committee of the Board of Super-
visors . Tiio1111s A. Murplr.i~•
M•Mlfnv Ed•"'r
Ch•rl11 l-4. Looi Rid11..d '· N•ll Jr,u\11..,.., M•N9"'9 l!dlton.
1-t•llltl a..c• Offk•
21? For•1t Av•""''
.M1!li119 oddr111: P.O. Bo:. 666, 9261?
Sa c1.-11teo Ofllr.e
JOI Nellli El C1rnlit0 lt1 ol, 92672
-Board chairman Robert Battin. a mem ·
her of the committee. said the request
from the judicial district would be con-
i;idered and forwarded to the county's
legislative representatives along with a
similar request from the Central Orange
C.Owity Judicial District
Otller Offlus
The event, sponsored by tht police
Cloudy Weather,
Surf Hold Down
Beach Turnout
Cloud skies and heavy gurf kept many
south c<iunty beachgoers and boaters
home over the weekend as lifeguards
reported only mild turnouts.
Even the 300 slips opened at Dana
Harbor Saturday failed to attract tht>ir
new tenants with only 25 boats arriving
on opening day.
"Most people just don 't dig going out
on the ocean on a cloudy day." a
spokesman for the Orange County Harbor
Departmen1'11t Dana Point said. describ-
ing op@ning day &8 "very uneventful."
San Clemente lifeguards said U1c total
turnout for !he weekend along both city
and county beaches wa s slightly over
13,000 bathers. A lifeguard said the surf
~·as heavy Saturday, keeping many peo.
pie out of the water, and was only slight·
ly improved Sunday.
Yorty Returns Home
With Tunney Blast
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Mayor Sam
Yorty has returned from his second vis it
in three .~·eeks to New Hampshire with
harsh words about Sen. John V. Tunney
(IJ.Calif.l.
Upon arrival here Saturday, Yorty at-
tacked Tunney and other opponents of the
supersonic transport, whi ch faces a le5t
In lhe Senate this week after being reviv-
ed by the House.
•
C:ml• M"•' UI WK! 81'1 Strwf N.-i IHC!o: »J) H-1 Bou:.VIHf
11\lftfllllllon kadl: 11Jll a.at Boulnl'd Psychiatric ·c11eck Set
For Mom of, Rape Victim
A p~ychialric examinati on wa.,: ordered
Friday for a San Clt'mente ~·oman police
accuse of haVlng encouraged a Camp
Pendleton ~1arine to rape her 14·ytar-old
ddUg hter.
Orange County Superior Court Judge
Byron K. ~fcMHlan will evaluate report"
on the 58·year-old drfendant June 15 and
accept her plea to three counts of rape on
that date.
defendant's daughter. Both defendants
are he.Id in Orange County Jail.
Police reports state that the woman
took Smlth and her daughter to a San
Clemenle mole! room and encouraged the
young Marine to rape the girl with a view
to "calming her down." Police allege that
the girl was raped by Smilh on at least
lwo ()(:casions In the motel.
, __ _J
He set May 21 for lht arraignment of
Robert Dean Smith, 21, who facts four
counts of rape following investigation of
hit alleged reputed rultl on bis co-
It Is 1.lleged thal Smith took the
v.·oman'i; auto and credit cards a!trr ~e
i;econd offtinse and headed for Arizona.
He was rowid asleep in the car In Cila,
Ariz., and returned to Camp Pendleton
11u.L_boritie1 for ~ro.secuU011.
'i . '
Thirty olher youngsters were awarded
troph ies and ribbons in the competition,
with the small trophies going to first
place winners in each grade division .
The safety rodeo was organized by
police officer Craig Steckler and the
master of ccremonie! was Dick Hague, a
police reserve officer and airline pilot.
The first, second and third place win-
ners were:
First grade -Boys: John Gorman.
Brandon Krovoia and JohJI Maceracken ;
girls: Charlene Lyster, Kaleen Dalrymple
and Lori Cole.
Second grade -boys : Jonatlion
Hamro. Derek Tobiassen and John
Anderson; girls: Julie Abbott, Kell y
Ramsey and Robyn Ferrand.
Third grade -boys: Chris Lange, Eric
Spaw and Dan Gorman: girls: Harriet
Williams and Robin Deacon.
Fourth grade -boys : Chuck Lyster,
Mlchael Gibbs and Robert Day; girls :
Lezanne Epting, and Cindy Jsch.
Fifth grade -boys: Larry Mear. Rex
Heller and Danyn Young; girls: Cathy
Hambro and Donna Hartman (tie for
first), Tammy Schneider and Adele Lux.
Sixth grade -Rock h-Iat chett, Bruce
Oliva r and Ken Abbott.
T~e judgment stemmed from charges
against Jonatha n Todd Byers in Men-
docino County on Aug . 22, 1966. Because
of his fa ilure to pass properly, he was
charged with unsafe driving and failure
to stop at the scene of an accident.
Capistrano Man
Nabbed in Raid
Orange County Sheriffs officers today
learned that a San Juan Capistrano man
"·as one of 36 persons arrested by San
Diego County depulies in a gambling raid
on a La Costa Country Club.
Armando Vicente Ortega , 48, of 30642
calle Chueca. was booked on gambling
charges in the weekend raid on the
Rancho La Costa Country Club and Spa
in northern San Diego C.Ounty,
Officers said Ortega was one of a group
playing cards and dice during "fun day''
activities organized by the San Diego ,
County C.Ontractors Association.
Officers said two members of the group
were booked on additional charges when
they attempted to prevent investigators
from booki ng participanls on the mi!de-
meanor offenses.
Under this plan the amount per 1tudent
will be ·$11 ,251 for Tustin, $15.221 for"
Irvine and $15,221 tor Mission Viejo-El
Toro-Trabuco.
Maps w.ill be presented at the meeting
ghowing exactly how the district could be
split.
According lo the reorganiiaUon com-
mittee, if the voters turn down unufica~
lion three times a county committee will
have the task of dividing the district into
two or more unified school districts.
Voters already turned down unification
Mee. If they tum it down again In June
of 1972 the distric:ts will remain the 1am1
as they are now Mth the state mandating
the third unificati on election six years
after that. ·
Girl, 4, Rescuer
Di e in House Fire
BERKELEY (AP) -A 4-year-oJd girl
and young man who tried to i;ave her
died in a fire ~hat destroyed a two-story
hom e in the Berkeley hills.
Fire Chief William Steele said the vic-
ti~s in the blaze Sunday were Margo
Wilhelm and Steve Schmitz, 21. who
recently had taken an examination to joi n
the Minneapolis, Minn., fire department.
Our Diamonds are a Good Inves tment
..
•
U.DliS
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A,.,1rir.tn cul.
f i11• color. VSI cr.,;ty.
LADIES •
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A"'lflr.•~ t wt.
V'\ISJ Clt rlty.
$2,250.00
$850.00
$350.00
1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM
SEE DOM RACITI
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REMEMBER, A
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GOOD
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ONLY IF YOU BUY
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EXPERT
WATCH
REPAIR
DONI ON
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*OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK
•
DIAMIND GUARANTEE
Whitn you t.uy • d iamond from vs we
will 9uar•ntee that di1mond to .. pprtiM
at 40% MORE then you p1id for It or
your money back. C1n you do •• wt.II
elMwhere? COMPARE.
FIND IT HERE FIRST
COSlA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
LOAN, BUY, SELL, TRADE
1838 NEWPORT BLVD.
COME IN AND BROWSE AROUND
PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -e.1w .. n H1rbor & Broadway
• •
S a n Clemente
C..apistrano ._/
* ...,. .
NG'. 111. 4 sEcnorfs:'so PAGES
:
EDITI ON
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Today's Final
N.Y. Stoelj.s
TEN CENTS '
Soutl1 Coast Sizzling Over Generator Plans
By PATRICK BOYLE
Of tllt Dalt' P'Het Sti ff
Atomic Energy Commission hearings
on twin nuclear generators -that ha\'e
already generated citizens heat here -
likely will hot ht held in June.
This left July and August for specula·
tlon by opponents' of the proposed San
Onfre additions. They fear, among other
things , that an earthquake might cr~ck
the big energy spheres, like a walnut
a using ·a nuclear disaster. -
A television news commentator
last week said the hearings would be in
JWle.
Not so said a spokesman for the AEC
In San Francisco. He was contacted by
the DAJLY PILOT. He said no date is
firm but the hearings will probably be
this summer.
The hearings are required by law
before any construction of the new
nuclear facililies can begin at San
Onofre. Southern Califomia Edison and
San Diego Gas a.nd Electric have applied
for a permit to expand the San Onofre
facility with the addition or two new 1.1
million kilowatt generator11.
The califomla Public Utlllties Com·
mission has already given approval to the
project following a series or stormy public
hearings in San Clemente in October of
1970.
The project calls for construction of the
hvln generators an 84 acres of land down
coast from the e-xisting plant. If aJ>-
proved, the generators. wruch would pro-
duce five times the power of the existing
facility, would not be in operation until
1976.
During the PUC hearings, many
residents of the south county voiced a
desire to move the plants inland,
downcoast and underground. T h e
residents claimed thousands of people
would be killed in the event one of the
reactors malfurlctioned and began emit-
• IXOll att es
Change Urged
Trustees Study Election Plan
A rr:solution calling for a change in procedure for election of tn,istees of
the Saddleback Coll~g~_pi,trict will be considered at lO!lig_ht's meeting oJ the
Capistrano UrlTllea Sct\00 1~trict Board of Trustees.
The meeting will take place at 8 _p.m. in Serra School in Capistrano
Beach. \
Thi': resolution, if passed, ~·ould ask _the Saddleback Board to .inlllate
legal step.s to lead to the election of college trustees by thou voters who reside
in each trustee area instead of the present method.
CUrrenUy each member of the board, despite the trustee area he repre-
sents. is elected by all voters in the district.
The re80\ution al.so urges the Lag\Ula Beach Unified District and the Tu!o
!in Hlg!I Sclv!ol pi.<!r!¢ to make similar requem of Ille college'• board.
M~sion Viejo Girl, 4 ,
Given Cornea Transplant
One family's sorrow gave grateful hope
to a Mission Viejo coupli whose little
daughter received a cornea and a chance
to Jive with normal eyesight Saturday in
• delicate but swift transplant operation.
Just one cornea ~·as needed for Becky
Rogers, 4. so a ham radk> oper~tors
group broadcast the news throu ghout
North America , in an effort to locate
50me other child with failing sight.
The second cornea - dona ted by the
parents or a child y;hCJ died Saturday in
Orange County of a heart disease -was
nown to Fairbanks, Alaska, Saturday
night for Immediate surgery.
Corneal transplants such as that
performed on the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. William Rogers, of 25842 Jamon
Lane. Mi11sion Viejo, are not always suc·
c:essful but Ule outlook ill good.
.. The delicate eye tissue mu.st be rem ov·
tel from the body of the donor withi11. four
hours of death but can be preserved tor
aome time if no recipient is immediately
available.
A team of Surgeons led by Dr. Thomas
Anderson. head of the Orange County
___l:l:'!_ Bank at Santa Ana Community
-Jfo!Pilal Completed the delicate twi>hour
operation before Becky's father knew
about it.
Re was camping in the mountains and
could not be nolifJed that the three·month
hunt for a suitable cornea donor -the
first since the eye bank was organized -
had come to an end.
Since the cornea of a child about the
0rPfe Ce••t
same age was required for Becky's
gradually failing sight, the hunt was com-
plicated.
Eye bank organizers did not identify
the 7·year-old child whose corneas were
donated by her parents as a
humanitarian gesture in lhe hope Becky
and some other child can have normal
· sight.
Only her tight eye wa s involved, but
both will be taped for several days and
the operation cannot be pronounced a
success ror several months to come.
The surgery came barely In ti me for
the youngster chosen the new Orange
County Eye Bank's 1971 Poster Girl,
because within 30 days her visual
deterioration would have been too com·
plete for a chance to reverse it.
H~r vis_ion is expected to be clear and
almost that of a normal 4-year-old within
six weeks, according to h o s p i t a l
spokesmen.
The search 1or some other cornea reci·
pient wa3 pressed Saturday by the Eye
Emergency Network Amateur Radio
Group, which gives daily radio broad·
casts on needs and availability.
Bi g Emerald Found
NEW YORK (UPI) -A 13.Jkaral
emerald found in the footh ills of the Blue
Ridge mounta ins was purchased for an
usdisclosed amount Sunday by Tiffany
and Co., which called it the largest and
finest cut emerald ever mined in North
America .
Down the
Mission
Trail
Kindergarten
Signup Slated
EL TORO -Recllt.ration for kin.
deigirtan v.ill take' place Wednelday,
4 .m. at Aliao School in
El Toro.-Reglstration so·w1!1 like PIRe
from a 1.m. to f p.m. today throligh Sat..
urday.
A child is eligible if five years old
before Dec. 2, 1971. Proof of birth date is
required, along with evidence of pollo and
measles immunization unless the child
has already had the measles.
Further Information may be obtained
by calling the school al 8.10-4670.
• Scrambler• /lleet
LAKE FOREST -The Lake Forest
Scrambler1 will meet Wtdnesday, May 19
at 7:30 p.m. in the Beach aPld Tenni s
Club for an election of officers.
The program· for the motorcycle club
Ydll ht Dale Alexander and Lyle Dutoit
who will show slides and give a report of
their victory in the Napa Valley Grape.
Grand Prix .
The speakers are billed as the world
champion Moto.Enduro side car riders.
• Sh1g•o11 t for PTO
A musical program will ht presented
for members of the Mission Viejo Parent·
Teacher Organization on May 18.
'I'he Sing.out Amigos, 60 high school
and college students from s<>uthern Orange
County, will present the program at 8
p.m. in the multipurpose room .
The group, led by r-.1ona Brown of San
Clemente High School. is affiliated with
the national Up With People program.
Election of officers will also t3ke place
at the meeting.
• Tr111l eet 'Gifted '
EL TORO -Two girts have been ac·
ctpled by Trustees of the San Joaquin
Elementary School District.
The El Toro Woman's Club has
presented $100 to Gates School In El Toro
fot the purchase of library book!.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Minder of El
Toro have contributed 10 years' subscri~
lion to the National Geographic to Aliso
School in El Toro.
ll'eather
Those Santa Ana winds will be
with us again, warming things up
a!ong the coast, but especially in--
land. Temperature range -from
the mi~dle 60s to nearly 80 degrees:.
'Labor Ca1np' Dwellers
May Be Evicted Tuesday
1 INSIDE TO~A Y
lVlict happe:n.s to aood .samari·
!amt Thtll JoJe boat mets. But
twO unjortunatt llOChtsm.en wtrt
mightll glad to see the Costa
Aftsa driver pull out and give
thtm a liand. See Boating, Page
Z8.
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Time is running out for families 5till
remaining in condemned housin1 Jn San ~
Juan Capistrano.
A few families still living in an old
agricultural labor camp on Well Site
Road have been 1tven until Tuesday, May
18 to find another place to li\'e.
But their !iearch has bttn futile .
"All efforts have failed ." said Donald
G. Weidner. San Juan Capistrano clly ad-
ministrator. "The cheapest housing
available was outside the city, outside the
school district, and It rented for about
$140 to $180 a month."
One family. thal of Rudolpho Arreola
has 11 memberli. The home they now
share rented for $60 a monlh but this and
other housing In thl! old c~mp have been
deemed unsafe and unhealthy by lht
Orange COunty departments of health and
building and saf\?tY.
The families were Ulld to vacate in
January but the city of San Juan
Capistrano extended the eviction date 90
days to give them time lo rmd other
housing.
When they were unable to find housing
by themselves. lhe crty again granted a
30-day extension tc allow time for com-
munity agencies to lend assistance.
But that deadline Is up May 18.
The property owner Mrs. Liiiian
Zaengle in of Pasadena has stated sht
would not like to force evlcUon but may
have no choice ii she is prosecuted for
allowing people to rcmaln ln unsafe
structures.
1in1 ti bl&h level of radio activity into the
'nvlronme:nt.
However. Southern California Edison
senior vice president William R. Gould
uid the San Onofre site w~s the only
feasible location on which the plants
could be built by 1976. Goold predicted
the demand for power would double by
that date and some new source of power
had to be construcled in Ume to meet the
public demand.
·Gould aaid another site would require
Intensive time-consuming scientific study
prior to construction and such a study
had already been completed for the San
Onofre location.
Horror of Death
During the week.tong PUC hearing,
residents opposed to the new plant cited
therinal pollution as a major reason why
the plant should not be built. San
Clemente High School science teacher
Phil Grignon said the present plant
• circulates 350.000 gallons or sea water per
minute and this water is returned to the
sea 10 degrees warmer. He said the
warmer water would have an adverse ef·
·rect on marine life in the area. Sla~e of-
ficial s concerned with sea life haye g~ven
the plant a clean bill of health after
monitoring that began with Its opening.
However. Grignon said no Independent
study of the discharge had been can-
a
Ul'IT1 ... N
Their express.io~ teUs the story as St. Louis firemen carry out an .
elderly fire v1ct1m at the Ambassa dor Hotel. Four aged persons died
and five other residenl<i were injUred ..
' Sa11 Clemente High School
Plans Large st Graduation
San Clemente High School's largest
senior class will be graduated June 17.
Approximately 400 seniors will don the
traditional caps and gowns for the two-
hour commencement program. ll will
begin at 7 p.rn. in Thalassa F'ield.
A committee of eight seniors has been
working since February to plan this
year's graduation.
the traditional service aCC1Jrdin8" to Dale
Drager, Acti vities Director. The program
will not have a featured speaker but will
be more of a musical service.
Committee members who have been
planning the graduation include Marcia
Mitchell, John Russell . Barbara Mudge,
Tracy Smith, Bob McNamara, Moira
Conrad, Crlckell Bewsey and Debbie
Hunt .
* *
ducted because the plant wu on federal
property'-Camp Pendleton -and only
government personal were pennitted IC9
cess.
The PUC finally approved construction
of the plant pending a thorough 1tudy of
the seismic factors involved in expandin&
the nuclear facility.
San Clemente residents opposed to the
construction are expected to seek ezpertl
to offer testimony at Uie AEC hearinp.
which will probably be scheduled for the
end of the summer. Expansion foes were
unable to match the testimony ,of pro-
ponents at the PUC hearings with
qualified physicisls and acientuit.s·.
OU
Emergency
Legislation
Proposed
WASHING TON !UPI) -Railroad
, signa!rnen Wtnt-on strike today, ahutting
down the nation's rail lines, and Prtsi--
de11t .Nixon proposed emergency legisla·
Uon to force the men back to work uutil
at least Ju\y 1.
Within five hours after \he 13,QM.man
Btolherbood oLJlaUway Slpalmen went
~J>ll..Jlltm'-':llfdll"''1JlfUlbbo1l11ltllln&'i..doW11--alJ--
rail passenger and freight traifJc, the j
F1orJda White House announced Nh:on'1
plan to Congre!S, calling for 1 new round
of negotiations:
Urging passage of a joint rtsoluUon to
bait the shutdown that start ed at 8:01
1.m. local time, Nixon said a continued
national strike ''would cause great
hardship to all Americans and strike a
serious blow at the nation's economy."
"It is es.sential that our railroads con-
tinue to· operate," the President said.
The President recommended that
Congress prompUy enact legislation to
extend the present contract negotiation
betwetn the signalme11, union «Ind the
railroads unUI July l.
He further asked Labor Secretary
James D. Hodgson to follow the situation.
cklsely as it developed and to continue
assisting both sides of the dispute, He
said that if no settlement had been reach·
eel by June 21, it should be reported to
him and Congreu.
.
Neighbors Meet
In Auto Crash
A pair of Capistrano Beach neighbors
ran into each other in San Clemente Fri·
day night -with automobiles un-
fortunately ---sendin' one of the -wornrn
to her doctor with minor injuries.
San Clemente pollce said the accident
occurred at about 8 p.m. on AvenJda
Estrella at the northbound offramp of the
San ·Diego Freeway. Acoordl11g to In-
vestigators, an auto driven by Patricia E.
McCombs, 22, of 34566 Calle Naranja, col~
)ided with a car operated by Elaine C.
Elliot. 19, of 34530 Calle Nafanja.
. Authorities said the McCombs vehlcl t
had exited from the freeway and was
crossing Avenida Estrella whtn struck Jn
the left side by the Elliot auto. Miss
Elliot suffered minor injuries and aaw
her own physician for treatment.
Commencement addresses will be
dcllvered by va ledictorian Jay Olsen, 11on
of Mr. and Mr s. Jeff T. Olsen of San
Clemente and salutat orinn , Mari Haig,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. P. V. Haig of
Monarch Ba·y.
The program will feature the awarding or dlplomas and musical selections by the
band and chorus.
Powell New President
This year's baccalaureate .service will
take place on Sunday, June 13 at I p.m.
in the gymnasium.
A change h8l5 been made this year in
Second Mariner Shot
Runs Into New Delay
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI ) -The launch
ol the second and last ~lariner satellite
toward an orbit around ~fars has h e e n
delayed at least three more days, the
spact agency repor1ed.
A new fllght date has not yet be.en set.
but offlclals said the Mari ner and iLi;
Atlas-Centaµr ~ket cannot be prepa red
for lauiich b:tfore Sunday, Af!iY 23;
•
Of Triton Student Unit
i\11ke Powell has been elected president
or the Associated Student Body of San
Clemente High School.
Elections were tw;:ld Thursday fQr stu·
dent body and pep squad offices.
Student body vice president will be
Mark fl.fanni ng. fl.1 a r y 'Shepard was
elected secretary and Jody Tyson recelv·
ed the most votes to become treasurer.
Mike Young will be president of the sfu.
dent senolt.
Cheering the athlcllc team.ci to victory
nexl :.:ear wlU bt varsit,v cbc'erle.adera
Danw. Bewsey, Shelley B1rloh<r, hll'I
Gibson, Chris Lidke, Linda McPhel'IOD
and Sandy Wormser.
Varsity songleaders elected are Jan
Boyer, Della McGarry, Jill Miller, Polly
Renfro, Melanie Serences and L I 1 1
Steiner. ~
Junior VaNJily cheerleaders will be
Kelly Dowling, Leigh MacAd11ms1 SUe
Rawls, Jenny SteffeMen, •nd Zor a
Sumenyel.
Debbie Wagner will be &hi varsity
mmol
l
,•
T
--
; DAILY PILOT SC
"' 4 -· I Son in Neav port
Yo-yo Jnv~ntor
Succumbs at 71 :::::;. -
For 4S years., Donald Duncan Sr. based
his bualness success on a constant series
of ups and dawns and it was perenn ially
good !or the man 'A'ho gave America the
yo.yo.
The industrial baron who alio grew
wealthy marketing a le.ss-appreciated
Item of Americana -the parking meter
-died ,Saturday at 71 of a stroke.
Duth came in UCLA Medical Center,
Where Mr. [)mean had been iD a coma
for 2\o!t weeks.
The mu1U-millionalre who leaves a son
living in Newport Beach among other
survivors never claimed he-invented
either the yo-yo or the meter but both
made bim wealthy, aiong with real
atate. -.
He owned extensive Orange County
Property. the elJhth·grade dropout with an acute
senae · Ol good buglness opportunities
began pvlaying the obscure Asian jungle
fightlna weapon into a toy during the
Great Depression years.
"fle was in San Francisco or
eomeplace like that and he saw a Filipino
boy playing with a toy, which was the yo-
yo. He liked it so well he bought it from
the boy," says Jack Duncan.
He explalas the toy dafes back in pri~
cl pie to the 16th Century, when Filipi.Do
guerrillas used four-pound yo-yQ on 26-
foot cords to kill or ma im enemies am-
bushed in the jungles.
The elder Duncan who coined the
phrase: U ii isn't a Duncan it isn't a yo-
yo, also befleved the novel toy has orlgins:
stretching back to ancient Egypt and the
days Of the Pharaohs.
Items remarkably similar are depicted
In hieroglyphics on the walls or old
temple1.
Duncan promoted the yo-yo after
purch&sing his first one by hiring
Filipinos to make them and tour the na-
tion for demonstrations and refereeing
contests, wlth prizes and free Instructions
offered.
Small boys con1idered yo-yo expertise a
mark of yOWlg manhood and sales of
ordinary yo-yos, plus glass diamond-stud-
ded ones, nue>rescent yo-yos that glow in
the dark and other varieUes hit XI million
per year.
One of his best customers was an In-
dianapolis atlomey who bought them by
the .(lowu. •'Ii.I told 111 he doesn't drink or smokt
and when he wants to relax, he pull! out
a ~ He spins the things before a trial to -'ldl ..... " the Vft11naer Duncan •.li , I 1...-"0 .......
By 1955, the yo-yo was established u a
permanent piece of Americana -the
courts n1led in the 1950s It was a generic
term and thus couldn 't be copyrighted -
IO Duncan eyed another industry.
Cars were multiplying like locusts, so
be founded the Duncan Parking Meter
Guy E. Carlton
Last Rites Held
Private graveside services were held
this afternoon at El Toro Cemetery for
Guy E. C&rlton, 620P A~enida Sevilla,
Laguna Hills, who died Thursday al the
age of 75.
The Rtv. George C. Hammond of St.
\George's Episcopal Church, Laguna Hills,
offic iated at the rites.
Mr. Carlton, who was a partner in
Lawhead and Carlton, Realtors, came to
CaUforn\a from his native Iowa 49 years
ago and had lived in l.<'isure Worl d for
five years.
He is survived by his widow, Clarine: a
son, Paul F. Carlton of Washington. D.C.:
a daughter Miss Mary Ellen Carlton of
Portland, 0 r e . ; and by l\VO
grandchildrtn.
OIANGI COAIT
DAllY PllOT
0~~ c;oAIT"1'UILllHINO «JN,PJ.Jl'(.
l •\.•rt N. W114
Prnldtnt 11'111 f'lleol"'*°
Jtck II!. c.,,1,.,
Vlcll f'n:sld..,I 1!1111 ~•I ~
Tliom11 k11'l'il
EOllll'
Tno11111 A. Ma.,\in•
M.,1191#19 EOllOr
Cli1rl11 H. Loe• l icl11rd I'. Nill
Nallll <U M1n1111ng l!dltorl
l.9t11N kech Office
22? For•tt Av1"v1
M1il!119 1ddr111: P.O. lo• 466, '2•52
S.111 Cl-•,. Otlk•
30l N1rth El C1111ino A.111, 91672
Otkr Otrk••
Company. of Chicago, where he Bpent
most of hill remaining years, marketing
80 percent of all meters in the world.
Mr. Duncan later transferred his
residence to Palm Springs and entered
the Southland nalty field , after profiting
on candy, ice cream, model airplanes
and, for a time, the hydraulic automobile
brake. ·
Funeral services will be Tuesday at 1
p.m. in Wiefels & Sons Mortuary, Palm
Springs, for the Rome, Ga., native who
leaves his wife Denise, plus . two other
50ns, Donald Jr., of Tucson, and Paul E.
Duncan, of Paris, France.
Marine Corps'
Oldest Man
Retires at 65
CAMP PENDLETON (AP) -The
Marine Corps' "old man" -literally -
has retired after a career spanning three
wars.
Sergeant fo.faj. James E. Bobbitt, of
Oceanside transferred Saturday to the
Fleet Marine Force Reserve. At 65, he
was the oldest Marine on active duty, of·
flcials sail!..
He waB 36 when he joined the Marine
Corp! shortly after the at.art of World
War ll. He went through recruit training
with men yOW>g enough to be his IOlll.
His nickname "Pops" was given him
before he volunteered to serve tn a com·
bat zone againBt·the Japanese.
Because of his ~ge, he had to petition
the commandant of the Marine Corps to
serve in combat zone:s three times -the
first in 19«, ~hen, He was assigned to
Adak in the Aleutian Islands.
Di.!icharged after World War II, he
again appealed to the: commandant when
war broke out in Korea. His request was
granted and be served thue with the 5th
Marines.
Bobbitt also has served two tours in
Vietnam and bu been aer1eant major of
the 1st Marine Division schools at Ulla
Marine •t?ase.
·Bil age haJ. thrust him -into-the_
ttmellgbt ·each Nov. lD for more than a
decade. 'That's the Marine Corps blrthday
and the oldest Marine by tradition
receives the flrst piece of cake.
Boy, 8, Crushed
By Metal Gate
A game ln which a IJ'OUP of youn&
visitors to O'Neill Park swung to and fro
on a heavy metal gate ended in tragedy
during the weekend when an ~year-old
boy died of injuries after he fell between
the gate and the gatepost.
Rodney Pearill of Torrance succumbed
from massive head injuries Within
momenU of being picked up, sheriff's
deputies said. They Bald the boy's head
was crushed.
Rodney, the son of Mr. and Mrs . For-
rest Pearis, was one of a group of boys
organized by the Church of Latter·day
Saints v.•ho were on a weekend camping
trip In the county park.
Several boys climbed on the gate bar-
ring access to the £1ood control channel
and swung the heavy fixture backwards
and forwards. Witnesses said Rodney lost
his balance and fell with his head
between the gate and the iron stanchion.
3rd Judge Sought
In South County
A request for a third judge in the South
Orange County Judicial District has been
referred to the L q i s I a t I v e Plan-
ning Committee of the .Board o! Super-
visors.
Board chairman Robert Battin. a mem·
her of the committee. said the request
from the judicial district would be con·
sidered and forwarded to the county's
legislative representatives along wilh a
simila r request from the Central Orange
County Judicial DistricL :'
Pla1at1 'Presetated ,,
Unification Meet .
Set for District "
-WELCOME FRIENDS -Nursery school students of the Presbyterian
Church of Laguna Beach prepare open house welcome Tuesday night.
From rear to front are Gregory Harvey, Chuckie Cook. Leslie
Schiller, Lacy Schator (face turned), Craig Nardozza and Donnie Duffer. .
Kiddie Display
Pre-school Students Show CraftS
Sprouting bean seeds, art collages,
music, puppets and tape rteording! of
their own voices all play a part in prepar-
ing nursery school youngsters for the big
day when they will enjer "real " school.
The tSil small students at the Nursery
School of Laguna's Presbyterian Ch urch,
assisted by their teachers, have prepared
displays of these and other things for
their open ho~ Tues~ay from 7 p.m. to
8:30. /'
Parents and families of the youngsters,
along with all other interested visitors,
lire Invited to visit the fac ility at 415
Forest Avenue and hear about the pro-
gram.
The non·denominational w e e k d a y
nuosery school has served the community
since 1960 and has a staff or 13 plus direc-
tor Arlita Smith.
San Clemente Youngsters
Show Off Bicycle .Safety
Several hundred San C 1 e m e n t e
)'oungsters competed for prizes in the
iilntbaMUAl111cycle-Safety Rod1'l-l!aW(·
day with two young competlton w\nnlrig
an all-day oetar1 fishing trip.
The event, sponsored by the police
Cloudy Weather,
Surf Hold Down
Beach Turnout
department. culminated a recent bike
safety program in the local elementary
school. The boy'!-grana prite was taken
by Bixth grader Rock Matchett and the
gir l was first grader Charlene Lyster.
The two children will go to sea on the
"Clemente" with their fathe rs for the
fishing excursion.
Thirty other youngsters were awarded
trophies and ribbons in the competition,
with the sma ll trophies going lo first
place winners in each grade division.
The safety rodeo was organized by
police officer Craig Steckler and the
master of reremonies was Dick Hague, &
police reserve officer and airline pilot.
The first, second and Uiird place win-Cloud skit! and heavy,. surf kept many ners were :
By PAMELA HALLAN
01 1!11 01Ur ,lift 11111
The first publlc meeting on the unifica-
tion of four school districts will take
place Thursday.
A discll!Slon or various unification
Jame s Hoffa
Plea Spurned
By Top Couri .
WA SHINGTON (UJiJ) -By a narrow,
5-4 vote, t~e Supreme Court refused to-
day to strike down slate bit-and-run laws
that require at driver in an accident to
stop and give bis name and address.
The. vote .-verturned a California
Supreme Court tuling against a state law
that is typical of those across the coun-
try. The stale court held that the re·
quirement violated the Constitutional
safeguard against self·incrimination if
the information was used for criminal
prosecution.
1n other actions, the court:
-Refused again to bear an appeal by
imprisoned Teamster boss James R. Hof-
fa who is seeking rele.is " from federal
prison at Lewisburg, Pa. The action
rebuffed his claim that federal wiretap·
ping activit y involving two Las Vegas
gambling casinos and special FM fre-
quencies in Detroi t tai1ted th e
government's conviction of him on jury
tampering charges.
-In a 5-4 turnabout, refused lo rule on
a Charleston, W. Va .. case in which
residents of a ghetto area claimed con-
struction of a federal highway was il·
legally displacing them from I.heir
homes.
-Let stand a low er court ruling from
Chicago that upheld the right of
newspapers to refuse advertisements
they deem unacceptable.
-Agreed to decide next term whether
a law forbidding imports of obscene
materials may be applied it the material
ls solely for private use.·
-Rejected a double effort lo test tha
constitutionality of !\:1innesota 's abortio n
statute.
The California law which was cballerig-
ed in today's case ls in force in all 50
st ates.
T~e judgment stemmed from charge$
against Jonathan Todd Byers in Men·
docino Coun !y on Aug . 22, 1966. Because
of his failure to pass properly, he was
charged with unsafe driving and failure
to stop at the scene of an accident.
Capistrano Man
Nabbed in Raid
south county beachgoers and boaters First grade -Boys: John Gorman.
home over the. weekend as Hfeguards Brandon Krovoza and JohA Maceracken ; Orange County Sheriff's officer' today
reported only mild turnou ts. girls: Charlene Lyster, Kaleen Dalrymple learned that a San Juan Capistrano man and Lori Cole. was one of 36 persons arrested by San
Evea the 300 slips opened at Dana SeCond grade _ boys: Jonathon Diego County deputies In a gambling raid
Harbor Saturday failed to attract their Hamro, Derek Tobiassen and John on a La Costa Country Club.
new tenants with only 25 boats arriving Anderson ; gi rls: Julie Abbott, KeUy Armando Vicente Ortega, .48, of 30642
on opening day. Ramsey and Robyn Ferrand. Calle Ch~eca. v.•as booked on gambling
"Most people just don't dig going out Thtrd grade -boys: Chris Lange, Eric charges 1n the \vcekend raid on the Spaw and Dan Gorman ; girls: Harriet Rancho La Costa Country Club and Spa
on the ocean on a cloudy day," a Williams and Robin Deacon. in northern San Diego County.
.,, plans will be presented to re5ideqts cir
the Tustin High, Tustin Elementary, San
Joaquin Elementary and Tr ab u c o·
Elementary School Districts at 7:30 p.m.
in the multipurpose room of 1rvine School
in East Irvine.
The p u b I I c . will vote on unifica·
tion in June of 1972. One possibility ls to
unify along the boundaries of the exisling
Tust in High School D_islrict and the other
is·to split the district into three separ1:1te
unified districts.
One plan "'ill be approved by the atate
Board of Education for submisslqn to the
voters.
If the existing high school district is
split the resulting distrlclll must meet
education code conditions.
The new districts must have substan·
tial community identity, they must
represent an equitable division of pro-
perty and facilities of t!JE: orig In & 1
district, and no racial or ethnic
discriminat.ion or segregation can result.
Another requirement ls.that the assess-
ed valuation per studcr.t cannot vary
more than 15 per cent among districts.
The assessed valuation pe r studefll in the:
Tustin High School District is currently
$13.236. The figure allowable in the new
districts would have to range from
$15.221 to $11,251.
Four plans have been developed by
consultants to the School District
ReorganiZ;Rtion Committee. These plans
examine ways the high school district
could be divided.
Two of these plans ha ve emerged as
feasible.
The first, labeled Plan lll, would give
the Tustin area the current Tustin
elementary i:listrict boUDdaries plus near-
ly half of the lf'line Ranch.
The rest of the Irvine Ranch (the
weSlern half ) would be the Irvine District
anrl the rest of the territory including SI
Toro, Mission Viejo and Trabuco would
be the th.ird district.
This plan would itive tustin $12.015 pCr
student; Irvine, -$15,431 and Mission
Viejo-El Toro-Trabuco, Sl5.27D.
The second plan, labeled Plan Foui,
contains more community identity. Under
this plan Tustin would retain its elemen-
tary school district boundaries plus il&rt
of the Irvine Ranch area to the east
which is largely yet uninhabited.
Irvine's boundaries would basically be
the same as for the proposed City of
lrvine except for the agricultural
preserve section given to Tustin and the:
re:>t would be the El Toro-M ission Viejo-
Trabuco district. '
Under this plan lhe amount per student
will be $11 ,251 for Tustin . $15.221 for
trvine and $15,221 for Mission Viejo-El
Toro-Trabuco.
Maps v.·ill be presented al the meeting
showing exactly how the district could be:
split. ·
According to the reorganization com·
miltee, if the voters turn down unufica-
tion three times a county commiltee will
have Lhe task of dividing the district into
two or more unified school districts.
Voters already turned down un ificalion
once. If li!fy turn it down again in June
of 1972 the districts will remain the same
as they are now 'A~th the state mandating
the third unification electic.n six years
afU?r that.
Girl, 4, Rescuer
Die in House Fire
spokesman for the Orange County Harbor Fourth grade -boys: Chuck Lyster, Officers said Ortega was one of a group BERKELEY (AP) _ A 4·year-old girl
Department at Dana Point said, describ-Michael Gibbs and Robert Day; girls: playing cards and dice during "fun day" and young man who tried to save her
ing opening day 85 "very uneventful." Lezanne Epting, and Cindy Isch. activities organized by the San Diego died in a fire that destroyed a two-story
San Clemente lifeguards said the total Fifth grade -boys: Larry Mear, Rex County Contractors Association. home in the Berkeley hills.
turnout for the weekend along botb city Heller and Danyn Young ; girls: Cathy Officers said two,mcmbers of the group Fire Chief \\rilliam Steele said the vic-
and county beaches was slightly over Hamb ro and Donna Hartman (tie for \.\'ere booked on additional charges \'.'hen tims in the blaze Sunday were Margo
13,()(l(I bathers. A lifeguard said the surf first), Tammy Schneider and Adele Lu~. they attempted to preVent investigators Wilhelm and Steve Schmitz. 2I , who
was heavy ·Saturday, keeping many peo-Sixth grade -Rock Matchett, Bruce from booking participants on the misde· recently had taken an examination to join
pie out of th'e water, and was only slight· ,_o_li_va_r_•_n_d_K_e_n_Ab_bo_ll ________ m_e_a_n_or_or_re_n_se_•c_· ________ __:•_::h•::__::M-.:in:n::•::•poc::li::_s,'..'.M::in'.'.n.::_·.'.:fi~re'..d'.'.'.e~p"'.''.''l'.'.m"'cn'.'.I':_·
ly improved ·Sunday. 1
Yorty Returns Home
With Tunney .Blast
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Mayor Sam
Yorty has returned from his second visit
in three weeks to New Hampshire v.·ith
harsh words about Sen, John V. 1'Unnez
(!).Cam.).
Upon arrival here Saturday, Yorty at-
tacked Tunney and other opponents of the
supersonic transport. which faces a test
in the Senate this week after being reviv-
ed by the House.
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For Mom of. Rape Victim
A psychiatric exRminatlon was ordered
Friday for 11 San Clemente woman police
accuse of having encouraged a Camp
Pendleton ~farine to rape htr 14.year-old
daughU.r.
Orange. County Superior Court Judge
Byron K. Mc~lillan will ev&\uate reports
on thee 56·yeer-old defe:nd&nt June 15 and
accept htr plea to three counts of rape on
that date.
He set May 21 for the arraignment of
Robert Deen Smith, 21, who fAces four
counts of rape following lnvestigitlon of
his allegtd npeated ay aults on his co-
I
defendant's daughter. Bolh defendant!
are held In Orange County Jail.
Police reports state th1t the wom11n
took Smith and her daughter to • San
Clemente mote l room and encouraged lhfl
young Marine to rape the girl with a view
to "calming her dnwn." 'Police allege that
the girl W<lS rat>ed by Smith on at least
two occasions in the motel.
It ill alleged that Smith took the
woman 's auto and credit ca rds aner the
second offense and heeded for Arizona .
He WA!' found asletp in the car In Giia,
Ariz., and returned to Camp Pendleton
AuthoritJcs for pro5e(Utlon.
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dustrial averages.
A magic figure stock market
observers have been tallting
about !or week s and v.·hich
less than a year ago would
have seemed impossible to
reach. In fact. the magic 1.000
figure has 11ever been reacti'.!d
though the averages sniffed it
1n !he December 1968 high of
985.21.
But now the impossible nol
on ly aPpears to be possible in • •
'
1
I the ininds of most \Vall, ~
Spring and f.1ootgomery street
analysts, it's almost a 100
percent probability before pullback of SO points followed
1971 is over, a number of by a strong summer rally
ana.lysts -told C a 1 i r ~ r n ! a -~ \\'hich" v.•ill carry thf' Oo\v over
business. western financial 1 000 b h d r and business news pap er , Y '.~en o su1n1ner or
recently. early fall . he says.
Regardless of the merits of It's not so much that money
the DJIA as a measure of is f'asicr that's giving the
stock market activity, serious inarket its strength as it i"
investors and dabblers in the securities market continue to '"earnings in multiples."
question, pinch. poke and t~ar asserts Rich.
apart the averages in hopes or "The average in u l tip I e
discovering something about r ratio of per share earnings to
the mai:ket !he rest of the price 1 on th~ Dow v.·as W.9
players don 't kno111. during the Eisenhov.·er ad-
Thnl has led to two key ministration, 24.2 1\•hile Ken-
queslions in the minds of n1osl nedy v.•as in office. 19.1 during
investors: will the bull markcl Johnson's reign and 18 limes
of the past few months con-so far during Nixon 's term in
tioue? \Vhen might the DJIA office.
pop through \,000? "So, based on history. I feel
Interviews with \Vest Coast the Dow should be selling soon
and Wall Street research al 20 times earnings. The
diri::ctors and fin an c i a I Dow's average earnings are
analysts turns up an emphatic now about 51 and a JO percent
CQnclusion ~ An overwhelming improvement on profits would
number share lhe view the move earnings to 56, v•hich. at
OJIA will top 1,000 before the a P-E of 20. would put the
end of the year, 1nany bcliev. averages al 1,050," sayi; Rich.
ing the averages 1vill bull DJIA 1972 earnings coulcl
through lhat peak before th~ move to 60 . which -11•ith a
end of the summer. multiple of 20 -would pul the
Joshua Rich, aS!.istant <l irec. market at 1.100 to 1.200, he
tor of Research or New York adds. the kin<l of opl1n1is1n
based Reynolds & Co .. fo r ex-that sees a bull market v.•i!h
ample, s ees the in-·'a long way to go" because
dustr1al marching Ol'er 1.000 ''there's plenty of institutional
within the next six months. buying and v.·e're looking for
'"I think the market will be better corporate profits and P-
sloppy in May and may have a E's in the last half of 1971."
---
$2,500 Per Hour Spent
111 '2011nty Says Irvine
The Irvine Company spends $2.500 every hour
County. according to Lansing Eberling, vice
finance.
in Or;:inge
president,
'"Compiling statistics for the fiscal year ending April 30,
v.•e found 1hat the company paid out some $22 million 10
Orange County firms during 1970-71," sai.d Eberling. An
estimated 1200 Orange County firms do business with The
Irvine Con1pany.
"That includes expenditures for construction materials
and services. agricultural equipment and supplies, ad\'er-
tisini;: and graphics. professional and personal services, of·
rice equipment and supplies. maintenanct". insurance, trans-
portation. equipment rental. marina mainlenance and sup-
plies, food, catering and hotels." Eberling said.
* * HALLI DAY'S
HALLIDAY'$ KNIT SHIRTS ARE NOT
JUST FOR THE GOLF COURSE.
Thc~r kn11s~ a~ tailored in the jw;l right
ll<illida>·s nlann"r to fll'U\,dr you \\i1h the
1•111-ti11l ~ood lor•k~ )Oii arr ;.c1·11slornrd 10.
1l11r prrrnnlRI f<l,•)nlr by Ch,..n1i~r !..A Co~l ~
;~ 11"" 111·ail11bl~ in 111·0 g1'"ll.I 11"11 slylr~.
f"L\hr1• knl15
111 nd lLod
llallid!\y"s l\1111.'i fron1 s10.
\Vhat LS II Corbin Rock1:'1:":"
-· • -.--1 . , .... -
Co1nplete-Ne York Stock List
le... "" I "" ,lltJ Ntt IMt.J NI• UW 0.0 tat. J 1t• L'9 CllM C~t, • • M1,j M!91t Lt• < .... C~9.
I l6 S6 M -I !lltltrH 1 )0 » ll'• ll lt lll" -f • §Jtl .. all .ill t ~ It .. ltlo -1• • flo ....... -Vi vel-1 11 111. ~ • -.. 1t$CUl1! 1.0.. 194 l't>'• XI•• )(.'.• -'• M 17\~lll Ulo , yrPUlll\I~ 1 SS0-~ JI l , -lit ul!SU Pl~~ rto t l\J li1• /,,'
lt 'f' 21\\ 11;: = ~: ~~~n~I .. J ~t 'ft'• r.. .: 1 "'• 7 t, 71'• _ •; ~n lt hrtf !f .!~ :f:' t>1-"1 ~Wol t!ll I 111 1\f 119 )0 10 ''' tlo -i.. n1 Ca l.?S --l \o )11,i ... >.lO llW•f \' .i I''• 511, S1 1, ~1 J~, JZ\IJ 5V.. j '• '' lrocl , )ij 14 to O\lo "t-11 llW pt • ) ' ~lo 61"' t7 4-6 ).ll , )~\'o :µ" i1 r1 lllCI DI qL~ •,>,~, q 1.>U•ioll tflO 111 I~ t fl• tlo -....
1> Uh 11"" U>.< '-''"\" .SI• 11>• II -1~11 -H·I-
'' ''
, r>• ,, •. _·;.:_ vetCo .1 16 111'1 11\, 11•, -w
'' "'
« '1 \I"• -(,' 0.~11~ .)4 ~ .241l 74 10 .• l110W1I 2.to j JI 11 J7 -'• ' ,,,: -re, OtYl"Hlld :IOol!• 3fi lSV,. lSl'I -\1 l'ltll Pr 1..0. '3 ~ «l\1 41\( +111 1" h\o 7 1• ... D I pl. I 2Jllt 1JI' U\t -h H1Hlllu1! •.In 1'tll •• JI 0 !f\\ • '• llOO 131'1 U 1i~ll ...:.,·· ~·t ':,, . JlO tt 9' " .. 1<1mll W1! .\f '• a1\ 11• -'• ,: iit,~ •u ss1. -"" r· po: ;: :r~ .,,,. tt..~ -·1-. ~:::::~,:·11.J..-'1. llli'" 1f~t, 2f~~.--:: 19 3'\io 3'~~ 3111, m•r 1, '••'~ ... ,, _ ,. U'::l'I\:" ·11 '1 ' " tt ii .U.•1 -• IN )\lo 2' !'o -!o I Ml'llt 1 ,,w1 .,. •• -. 11 _,. 110 11 IQ.I: 11' -lo Ot,lt A\<, 4)\lt •I~ ~J~ -1"' a If • 1 2 l'o 1 l I' '<
D•U,.l' l'ILOT llt H .. ,.. ..
B11bbles lltl>tkW .50
• ••• Valley
Don1es llnder co nstru<:tion at Brookhurst Street and Slater Avenue in r~ountain
\'alley are structures "'hich \Yill be classrooms for Sullivan pre-school. sched-
uled for completion June 20 and planned to serve 200 youngs ters. ages 2-6.
·rota! project is valued at S00.000 and is part o( a chain of Sullivan pre-
school~ located throught California.
81k•O!IT It S.11 GIE l 11 Ill""°' Pu<1I Bk olC•I I lol 8tnlt o! NY 2 fl•""' y, ," B1rlM-rOl! !I ~~rd cit .1~• 811K In< 10 Btltl Mlq Baltl Mt pl I 1111nlfl<I 10 th•ft t• eta lltu1cl1~11 .llO ::;k Lltci :U
Nutritional Value Key to Sliopping
Bttrlncu 1 8e11Fa1 1 II
BKkm•n .50 Beet Ole-.JO lleecnA!r .611 ll•tcaPe! ,j()b
8tJd1n 1.60 8t!clnt11-f .60b
Btll 1-fow ,66
Btll 1n1rc"" !ltml1 Co .•O tlPfldl• 1,60 8 .... dl• f>I l
By SYLVlA PORTER
For each food dollar you
spend, do you gel more "nutri-
tional value" in the form or
protein from chicken or
tunafish or lamb chops? What
real savings can you achieve
b} switching to m e a I
substitutes suet: as baked
Item
American cheese
llan1burger
Eggs
Collage eherse
Pork & beans
Peanut bull<'r
Dry beans
Amt . Rea dy to Eat Cost ptr Strvin'
2 slices 12c
2 oz. 1\C
2 !)('
I~ l.'Up
I eup
~ tblsp.
I cup
llt~f!(p LlliO Bent!I ou.so
beans. eggs. l.'heese"? Assun1· -------------------------
Btntll 1>lCJO
lltnfut! 8t1'9Utl tn BerktV PllO
Btln Sii 1.:lll 81g Tnrtt .611
l!lltck Ok H llltl•Jonn .•I lllls1 Lauv I Blc>c~ 1-fR .. 8111! &fl! \ l'O 8!)b~[@ llr~I Botinu Co 40 J\alsC~• HI> 801'1!1 INI 8(1(11tMtn 1.'t fl.orO•A 1.70 8or11War I l~ Borm•n .100 ing !here arc bargains in these
categories, ho1v do you find
them?
You 1v11J achiel'e spectacular
cut!'l in your food market
basket if you search out the
nutritional bargains -l ho se
types and euts of n'eats and
meat substitutes \\'hich offer
you Ule greatest possible
amounts of protein and other
key nutrients for each dollar
you spend for food.
"'HAT'S f.IORE, the nutri·
lional bargain is be.corning a1
n1ajor U.S. goal not only
because it can save us money
but also because \1•e are con-
stantly being found to be suf-
fering . as a nation. from fun·
dan1ental n u I r it i o rl a I in-
adequacies.
So. first. I'll gel righl to the
heart of the matter, y,•ith this
table. prepared by the
Agricullur~pt. and t'<lm·
paring per·ser,•ing t'Osts nf
various b a rlllii i n meat
substitutes versus hamburger.
Each item on the list gives
you comparable amounts nf
prole1n.
Second. i( you decide to cat
egg di shes more frequently -
as a low-cost meat subslilule.
here are the clues to egg
bargains:
H lhe price of a do1,en extra
lttrge eggs is less than one-
ninth above the price or a
dozcrl large eggs. lhe extra
large eggs are a bargain.
~ IJ the price of a dozen large
eggs ·is less than one-eighth
abol'e that of medium eggs.
gel the large ones.
1r THE PRICE or 3 007.en
medium eggs is less than one-
seventh above that of small
eggs. the mediums are the
bdrgain.
If Lhe price of a dozen larg~
f'ggs is less than onr-fourth
above Lhat of small eggs, the
large eggs are a bargain.
Third, cheese is nol as much
,of a protein bargain as eggs -
or. even hatnburger. But com-
pared to steaks and chop5,
cheese offe rs a lot of nutrition
for relatively little money.
THEREFORfo.:. here are fi1·c
key rules on how lo gel the
most for your inoney in this
key category:
-Stick lo less-expcnsi1•e
domestic cheeses:
-Buy prot-ess cheese in
place of ·'natural'' eheeses,
especially those marked aged
and sharp:
-Cet large chunks of cheese
rather than more costly sliced
or grated cheese;
-Choose pasteurized pro-
cess cheese foods and spreads
instead of plain c h e e "e .
although the Jailer may have
more flavor.
-A void cheese f r o rn
pressurized t<tns : obviously
,vou pay plenty for this lype of
package.
Fourth. dori"t forget !hat
•
Airline Boos I
Bc-.Edlt 1.lfo bargains in milk -another sos Eo 11tt1.N • kY<"lll In( good source of protein -do ar,1111 Alrw
exist. :~/:,a~v 1·,'j;
YOU CAN, fo r example, mix f;~~':tv -~'
nonfat dry milk with fresh and t~1 ~~·,':'f
slash your milk costs. You can t,i:J..Ht111 00:,Z
get your milk at the a111,nuG 1.n . Brown Cl supermarket or dairy store awnill•P iJOso
rather than have it delivered. l~,ri .. ,i:,: .i1
Y b I . h l .lk Bvcv Erl.10 ou can uy pain, \V o e m1 suoo co
instead of more expensive but-:~:~, ~~All
termilk. You can use less ex-:~l~~~:J .•J,0
pensive evaporated milk for :~~~R Ra~r:':O
cooking. su•t 1"" LfO l11t1Nor .71• If vou heed tbese facts and 1111r1Nor a1.ss .d •1. h Surnd• .10 gu1 e ines as you s op for 11u"'~' '°
food. you will gel the most 1111"" unrv
REAL VALUE On this case z•l>OI c •. 10
nutritional) for lhe fewest c::'t~~~:'°
dollars and cents. And Ulat's z:::,-:,tL:".:s
the real meaning of a bargain. c~:~°"'i"' 'l"
an Ir"' A On P•c l JD (Gn P inl.lO c .... .iP. 1 11'> C1P C llGC19 C••bru" 1.50 C1r1l~lll 60 Ciro PL1 I o4o Cerp f.-c t.70 CV•ltrCP .t.a C1rr 111111
Set Offering
By Broadway
LOS ANGELES (8\V)-l!~t~ -~ ~''"'' t..o Broadway-Hale Stores Inc. has c1 co•P
r·J--' · . rco(orp .ff 1 eu a reg1stra11on statement ce11nnr<:11 '
"'ilh the Securities & Ex-l!::~ ~~~~ ~
change Commission covering l:~' J.,':r l.•I
S35 mil hon of 25-ycar sinki ng l~r1\~~1 Ph~
fund debentures. to be offered ~:~JL~\,1.7"
bv thc company through a CtnMPw 1.10 ' , CenrSwu 7 group o( underwriters headed Cen1 !Ml•• I
I C'"Tf !U! i'C by Blyth & Co. nc. z•\Orro C• .10
LOS AN~l·.:Ll>:S -!BW) -1---c:~::!::"ot:#
Western Airlines re po r l e d Ct11n1A1r '° I'' 11 h . A ., ,,. CFI Sii .iD• i ay ) I at !IS prl tra IC ' C1!1abrn !n< . ., N[W VOlllC (AP ) Mon<11• l {(tmoltll C1!1mpS I ?O aided by Easter and Now Ya•l SH>c\ E~'"'"O' or•ce• °'''"' NV 7
Passover sea:ron lraveJ -in-•• 1.1 "" ~~:~r·1~1q'
crea<;ed 23.-1 prrl'ent over 11>111.1 "~" L•w ci.11 c11t. f~:rt.".' ~or
April of last year. -A-~=;:~00 1~"
Based on pre l i m i n a r y A1NC111F .~ 11 " 11'• u" -11. c1>e1vt,,,1 . .o
f . AOQILD l 1~ 10D II)>. '9 6f', -2'~ Cl!~\ ! ' 1gurc~.11:;eat miles so~~ lota31ed :~~,~~.1·: ~ ~·· ~ ~ ~1 ... ~~1'~~1 .f:
421 mi ion. e.ompareu to 41 1 ~cmeM~1 71;1 !l 11 .. ", 11'• ,_,,,. c~r~11s1P:"'
million for April 1970. Easler ::'M'1~r. ·.~ ~ /l~ I:'? l~"': ~ Ch1P...., '
t I t k I ' M h I t A<l<l•<!'!I• .lOQ .MS u•, '''• t1'• l'• Cl!RIP c• UP rave oo · pace 1n 1 arc as Admit11 111 ,,i, 111, 11~. _ ._ !h R• c1 NW
vear. """"Lit 1..0 1u s1>. S6'• ~. -·~ ~:1s"'t~11\°" · !~::• 1~11 1~ ~'~ .!!: .,;,: ;:-~ nrhCn cvDI ..,1, P•OCI .JOb 146 S. u·~ il'• -,, Cllrl!CI! pral AotP•d al c~ 16 10 1•1 10 -1 (l!ram•ll .M
Bright Liglits Flasli
Over 1-Iotels, Motels
Al•Rl!<I . .t(lq 1" 1Pt-,,., ,,,, -"'~~'Z..'i!:" ·#11 AJ tnch,11!r>1• t11 •'t • •'o ·· (111n(l11t0 l.l0 Al<,LONI 11 4\ OI"-•l'o II\. -~I Cl"" GE 13' Al• G•• 1 10 I II '• 11'• II '• Clr>GE 111' Al11k• llllt'I It 11'·• l2 '' -'• c nMll.tc I •0 Albe•l<>C .71 lQl l9\I> JI'• Jll\• -\·, (IT l'i11 1 io Alt11"11111 .)ii IO ti~ ni,.. lllt -"° (ll1!'15v< j 70 Alc~n All1m I Ill ?l'tt lJ'o 1l'o -'' (lly !11v !0 AICCSl8"" ,JO I 1010 1'001 Xl'·• I '• c·1bl11v I>! 81 llL•Y• o••.10 110 61 61 ti ~ l'I•( tvl11 ptl )l ll(r-.rud 111 111 lil''l" )&lo 36 • -'• C<lv ~!" "'"' Uh!lll I 1 lD 10 111 Cl••• ea I •0 AOlslT•1 .lOtl II I) u •• "4 (I••~ 011 ~o llrn 011~IVt11 •I ID'• ID'• 10'• . Clev Clll 1.10
R'g"l'dnc>·s ol b 11 n k ,· rr a 11ouv1 011•8 1 1::•, 11"•• 13 • c1~.e1111 l I• • ' HOTEL MOT L llmEIPw I !O 361 111• ''• u·. '•Clorox .50o "vacancy" or "no vacanc)'" • E Am Eoo Ind '* 11', i1•, 11•, "c111e!!P•• •o Am Exo P! JllO l9 Jll Jll -I') Cl11Vll' pl I s;gns. ·California's hotel-motel EMPLOYMENT AG11Bfd 1~1 1 ~ 1' 11•. lj<.. '• cN11 Fini 10 A G'"'"I }O ;ti )] n n -I CNA pl Al 10 business has flashed a c;on-IN CALIFORNIA A Gn1n p!l Ill .so ll'• ll\• lJ co111 st G•• Am H~lol ., 11 1l\• ll'• l)'o (C11I 011 I 50 sistently bright employcrnnt 11 ttcm<' 1 10 111 11 ... 11 111. -', 1ont r11 .IO II 11 1ioro11 Pl l •i.. IU"' lU !IS -1 ... ""trot 011• picture in recent years. A"' Ho1P .11 uo ll' • Jl~• .»" -11• 110.1 nl•.!O AmlflY>I lit lH JIN 11 '111• ->,o (i!SC.1 pfl 1'
According to research by ;,, Thou,orid• : ~~Cf:11.~ l!! ~~ t.1 ~1., ='~! ~~:cg\1~ 51" Crocker-Citizens N a ti on_! I 11.m Mo1qr1 I" ••• 1..., ,,., -·~ co1Q P•t 1 ~o A5...091 1 H l .. )I lio ~tit (olQ P OU 50-Si!.fent)y bright employment 11 RHO" .114~ 10J 611• u•. 11"" -1•~ can1M1• 111
'
·n lhe state r·ncre•sed ,9 per-Am s111 n " '''• 1t1, "' .. -"Callin• 11•11 "I Am SlllP .60b )I XI'• 1''4 J:'1 -··~ ColortS l."'1)1
Cent lrom t9so to t970 Th t ll lllf~nclro .»" .&) lt" :lt'o ,~• -.., Ccktl11tst ''° . a Al!AmLr .l'<! 11 u•, It.! u • -'' ca11 '"" 1 represents a net gain of 21 ,000 ~11ea co .10c 110 u •, .... ,",!~ -'"'con 1n 011.11 AlltCLlld 1 •0 llO 71'> 11'• .,. -14 (Oii In pfl.tO
Cn'pl Y S 0 a . ag• ol All~Lllcl pf l 11 ""'• ., I&!• -•• CBS I -o e • r n aver AllegPw 1.:w 1111 11 1t1, ""' -ll· ces p.f 1 2,100 per year. Al~ G111 . ..o 211 J:l'J; »'• JBo -11, coiij G•• 1 ,, AllO M1l11 .cl ~ lt'~ 1' 3'I -,,. ColuPlt1 ~tr l ror \970. Crocker Bank AIHH PO ... JO lt'o IP. 11'1o -\.'> Col5o()h llO Al!ltdPG pl J I d'> d \1 il1> -1 Cmbf:n 1 o10 es11mates that paid employ· 11111,osr 1.00 "·l6 » l~:: l.J" -1'1• com1Soh1 "'
rncnt in all California hotels !::ltdc11Sv~ i~ 1~~: 111. 1•;': -,,. ccm1~1 Pi'° J9jl !Ill JI /I Al!rlolll11t 60 I 11'• n-.. 1\'• -1•, ComwE 1.Xlt>
I
and motels totaled 6.o\,OQO. AIPI>~ P Ct"' 1S t!'o !! II -'o zcmwl[d wl •111 t•C• ·~ ill(Oa I Ill ll u 6'' · I&'· -1, amE Dlf ..
Compa red to 43,000 in 1960 and CIOCIU..l·Cllltll'I fllATIOfllAl 1,Ull( :~;1:~i 160 1l m~ tl·~ ~ = ~ ~!:Eei;;'i'_~ 33.000 in 1950. Amr•"' I 10 I ll" ?HI )J'• " ., (ll'T\W 011 , .. ----------------IAmHt"' 019 JllO 11•, 1t•1 $0'~ ~1•, CamO pr!. 1 The stud.''. hascd on llm•li <>tJ 1C1 10. \JS n1f, 137\.:i -1•11 Coma111 5cl .1 Amtel ii " ,,, I'~ 1•0c Com111 J.D ~talistics from the U.S. Census A11•cood• 1 X11 1l'" n 1, n•r, -•• c°"' M111. 1
Alldl He.cl I Sl l)•o JI JI -•• Con11M111 1aa Bureau ancl county businesi; PJ '} F d Ano:o•<> 'lh 13 11'> 1111 16'.. -1 CD11r1c . .o
pattern repor!S, show s th.~t ' 11 CO· or· !~c~~l. 1l: .,.'Jf 1:'.1,1•1n:~ ~~ -,,, ~:~ ~~:: 0\·~
'mplo en' dur'.ng the 19~" A.KoO 1 :rt! lot 1s,, 1S'• 11"' + v. Con Ell!' ot s ym ...... Ape.c~ Cl> 14 Id 111, IPo n -.. CDllE a•C-.•S
196-0 in!rrval increased at t1 Platlt Sold APL co·~ so 1!•. 1>{1 uh -1"' c"" Fd• 1.10 APL 11! Cl.Olo r 191, 21)~ 11!"'-'II~:~~.:~~~ rale of l,000 pe r year. APL "' 11 !ll ' 11:i. 11 .• 11 ' -1 COtl L•••lnQ
C-ker said there are a"·1rl AP.A ~~< 1.0. n '" 111'' 171 -""CD11H•tG '" ,._.... uv Arc1r1 .01t :IQ XI''> lt\o I .... -1 .... (Ol\t Powtt· 1
• too lod · t b.sh I . , A,.dl Otn ! JI •l>t; «I 'Ill -1~ Cor1Pw pll JO • g1ng ts a I men s Ph1ICG-Ford CorPorahon of 1.•11 PS• t.OI uo 20'• in. •~ -1 cor11 Air Lit.
t. g r·n Califomr'a h h Art•111 o su 1n '"" •i. ' -"'c°"' '"" 1 '° now opera in P iladelphia a5 announced A•I.,, P.1i.ov J.>1. 1a•, 11•1u1ru. -"'~°"!too .o;11
h.v'·ng an annual pa1·-ll In th t t h be Armco s11 • 1" ?O•~ 10', l'0\1 -'--11 corn 1 • v a agreemen as en "'"" pf 1.10 1• n>..1 11t,51f"' ciCo p1A1.)0 excess of $230 milliort About reached with General Instru-"'"'' P1• n ino ,,.,, ,, " -1 Cf P pffU"
h th I · I Arm,1 Ck Ill ISO JI "'° "u -1·~ t.on111R 1 1Sll 31f of ese are_reat1vey ment Corporation for the."'r"l 11111 to • lPo "· ll -'·11:;..,:::·•
11 " ' ·th b I t • , ),,11 Col~ fl! • n tlliO "" -"l . 1~ sma opernt1on~ w1 u wo purchase or Philco-Fords ..,, .. 1~ 1..-1 l'O )l1, n•. n~ .. i. "'* u..i1 so
lh I , A•l>ld01I 119 t" l• !l'J,U1•-L.i ' oe«•t1:r• or rec C!mp oyes sem1conduct.or p I ;int at nA:rFI •• 10 li •4\o ~11. "1. -\·I CIOPf'• tit
II h b k t •• h • T · I"'"' Alrll" IO ~11 )] l Ho 32 -'1 ,,,,,,...., It owever. l e an no es n.ao s1ung. 31w3n ""••~· 1to 1: ll'• 1l 1J•~ -1,lcoo•T 1111 .11
that lhc trend hl!.5 Deen toward The sale will be crtecllve :,,~;~·1 1,10 r~ !! ! :r1 :t'· -•• 0!!!~:' .~!:
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DICK JRACY ly <;liester Gould Ll'L AINIR -
TUMBLEWEEDS By Tom K. Ryan SALLY BANANAS
1.
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Monda~, May 17, 1971 DAIL V PILOT J 7
'WE'LL TORTURE MJS .. METHOD~OUTA
~IM, AN'-pl..i.J.T!-f)P..QcJ-!.'-GIT DATES
AT LA.ftT, W !F ALL TME'S~ <=.Al.S
WAAT'S RIE.FOOZE.D US.'!
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By Al Capp
By Charles Banottl
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Mun AND JEFF
PLAIN JANE
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AC.ROSS
1 Tht first
Gospel:
Abb<.
5 -N1t lstn
of the sl\t nt
mOYlrs
'Was •
novt llst
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l1j Mahal
U Hawa iian
gar lands
l~ E111t1'1 M't
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f;1JS\ornfr1:
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21 Crtvictt
fer h.rtiv r
obSP!"VltiOl'I
ll Choose
25 Horst
2fi S\1vt
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In; b.at~
37 Solt 11! a pll)ort
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En; land
l• Addrr1s 1
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Al No: Frrnc~
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Lindbtr;.
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51 US Rtvo·
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54 Sis!tr ol
A1ron
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of big
govtrnmtnt
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of col cr
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68 Composer
of "R11l r
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8 B11anct ba•gt
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10 Rtnovate tntmbtrs
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!ht 11101<111 con trnt nt
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PERKINS
MISS PEACH
fu'I'VRE
AJRLlNE'
~ fEWAl?.VESS'ES
o~
.t\.MEl<\CI\
,,1ar
"'"
STEVE ROPER
,,
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Si<CW' aAUU sr;.rrs ~s SP/IL
PA#Ofl"O'i'IUMM---'"'-o
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PEANUTS
1-• I· ..
By Al Smith
'TIPSTER--! RUNS ~oR.'.ARD
AND TIPS 'ER DOWN
WHEN WE DIVE!
MOON MULLINS
..
'. " ..... ....
··''··
. .. '• ·~:
By Frank Baginski ANIMAL CRACKERS
s;,q, UIL.f-~
· IS ~H l<IEEK?-
-WHILE Tl-!E ECONOMY SECTION OFFE~S
EVEl<YT>JING F'l~ST CLASS DOE<;, EXCEPT
IT'S A LITTLE LESS LUXU~IOUS, T~E FOOD 15
PLAINE~, THE SEATING IS SLIGHTLY
SMALLEli!...
' 0
--------.I IUl.~T TO iJOT"ll-f;
IAI$ i;u.JIJ, ~ I'u. 8E
~'fl fEMEMSER
TO~~rr.
By John Miles
By Mell
:r .JUSI ~EALIZED
\°V'HAT'5 \Vl<ONG W/fj.j
MY LIFE--
IT'S ONE f!IG
ECONOAW
SECTION!
Bv Charles M. Schulz
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PLlfASlf Do···
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MR.MUM
By Roger Bollen ,
SHoorl
DENNIS THE MENACE
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Mof\6•1 M.1y 17 1~71 SC DAILV PILOT J ~
Monday ·s Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
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1u JU: 1 'lo -C L" ,J :?~ ,\,0 1~ ~,to oast 1st1ng
11 1~ j • ~•:\a LOS ANGELES fBW l-Frrst f U ),.~ 1~~ =i l National City Corp commor'I
1 ~ ! 'ffi! in~~~ ~~kp FN11c bee gan trading ore
ll i:r • n H ---~ -1-118 ac 1c oast Stock eit 1 :~ :"" ,~ • -"" change Thomas P Phelan ex 2 ,: 4 ff~ !a14 change president announced ~: fl , " 1," -" f"Jrst National City Bank
11 11~ 21 .1o i 1.41 +-v. htrgest In New York City and
4 I ,v. '" -~ fl u~ 1 !~ '~".: _:: lhe leading US bank ' 'I ' ,,(l '"' -' overseas Is the pr I ne t pal , It 1\1 1•-V. ,, o •1~ • ~-1111 !<t1bsidi11ry of Citic orp 'i 1~'* .fJ"' J'14 -• C1Ubank has more lhan 200 11 i:! l~ ::: ~ l branches 1n lhe New York 1~ ~~ li"' 13"=:: metropo ll tan area and f ! • ~ l overser1s banking ofhce1 m 84
' , l countries 'l' 3 ... 3"-111 1'w ,1; : j~U lg~ -" b odl edl ge i ct ., 11 , ~, j'"" ..._ , 1111 si ares are ~ j7 ' ~" j \-" Cahforn1a il J, 'I ' '-"Ii • r~ ,~ r.: + " J.H JJ1' H Jl 'I -
banking
located 1n
J PSA Carries & ' ) ' 4 J 11\ Miii 7'~-\ 'I ' , -, '" 4-•• ll'• 1'IO -" I' l~"'-"' 11 ''"'"' j•-•
)'I '"' l \t "
l i..~ :io '"+i! ,.. 11 0 11" J\lo-Jt °"" O ,,i.,,~..,. .r.·11 !·"'=~ ?li ll'.lo !'41 t'li -l'l -Tz-
High Number
SAN DIEGO IBW l -Pacific
Southwest Alrllnts {PSAl car·
r1cd 489 319 passengers during
April lhls year a 25 percent
increase over April J970, when
389 ass p11~senger~ were car
rted PSA Pre&1deflt J Fleyd
Andrews reporttd
Our p;1ssenger totals for
April were undoybtedly af
ff.l'Cttrl hy the fact Ea.~ttt fell
w1th1n th•t month ttlla yt1r '
Andrews said But 1nyt1me
we fly over 100 000 more
passengers than the same
month Ike year l\efore we are
happy he added Andrew11
!IAlti PSA has flown I 72S 99'.I
pas!t'.ngers-during the firS;t
four months of 1871
•
• •
•
•
•
20 DAILY PILOT Mond~, May 17, lm ,
"
Sears
ALLSTATE Passenger
Tire Guarantee
G_.tericf A&ajn1ll All tire failute1
from aonnal romd bazatik « defecu ia
materi.J ot M>1kmaiuhip.
Gnaranlf1ed 36 Months
Low Low Priced For a Belted Tire
f or u-Lon•: Fer the lifcoftbcodg-
iMI trnd.
Wlut SN.n WW Do: Jo cJCh.ui.gc fOI'
tbt lire,· replace it, charging onlr for the
proportioa o( ~[ 11;:1\iJJS pritt plw
hdnal &ciw: Tn tlw: r~tHs u~
med. ~nail puacrurn It: 1tO dwge..
G•anatttd A41ain1ll Tread -.vur-oui. _ ... Tor How Lona:• The number of mootbs
specified.
Wha1 Sean WiD Do: IA euhange for
dte Utt. rtpbce it. cbar~n& the auunt
KWnA: price p!UI Fcdcnl Eui~ Tu lee11
thefollo.-ingal ~
Jloatb• C-ruat.ced 18 1024
27 ro39 ..,
'
• Belted Conatntcrion (rayon car·
ass pins 2 rayon belts) for great·
er stability, performance, safer
handling
• • FeatUres the sofc ride of rayon
cord with reinforced tread area
ro reduce squirm
• More road contact for safer stops
8Dd superior handling
6.50xl3/C78-l3
Tubeless Blackwall
Plus $2 F.E. T •
And Old Tire
SIZE ......... .... 1'.&T •
_ 11JBELESSBLACKWALL
6.50xl3/C7S.13 15.95 UIO
7.35114 E78-14 19.95 2.37
7.75xl4 •18-14 21.95 2.54
8.25xl4 G7S.14 24.9S un
11JBELESS WHITEWALL
6.Sfu 13/CVS.13 18.95 2.00
1.35x 14/E7S.14 22.95 2.37
7.75xl4/f7S.l4 24.9;, 2.54
8.25x l4 G7S.l4 27.95 un
·B.55xl4 H7S.l4 30.95 2.95
8.25x l5 G7S.15 30.95 2.80
8..5.>xl5/B7S.15 33.95 3.0J
SAVE 25% NOW! •
•
33.95
36.95
29.95
8.25xl5 G7S.15 37.95
27.71 2.69
22.46 1.60
28.46 2.80
DYNA GLASS
WIDE GUARD
TUBELESS WHITEWALL
7.35xl4 E7S.l4 35.95 26.96 2.37 2 Fiberglass Belts Regolar Trade-In Priee '28.95
7.7SxJ4 t'78-14 3'Z..95 28.46 2.54
8.25xl4 G7S.14 40.95 30.71 2.69
8.55xl4 H7S.14 43.95 32.96
8.85xl4 l7S.14 46.95 35.21
8.25xl5 G78-15 41.95 31.46
8.55xIS{H78-15 44.95 33.71
STOP
At Sears for a
COMPLETE
-BRAKE
JOB
Plus 2 Nylon Plies
36-Month Guarantee
A>kAbouiSear•
Co...,.,nient Crttlli Plmu.
6.50x13/C78-U
Tubelea 81 .. kwoll
Plus J2 F.E.T.
And Old Tue
SAVE '40!·
Disc or Drum? Sears Auto Air Conditioner
Here's What Sears Experts Do:
' • Carefully repack fronr wheel
~atiDgl
•Carefully rebuild bydraulicwbcel
cylioders
• Remove and replace brake shoe
release springs
• Replace bold-dowo springs
• Remove and replace both froat
-seals
• Turo and true brake drums or
reface discs
•Fit new brake sboesordisc: pads
• Flwh and add hydraulic brake
fluid as needed
• lnspeccmastercyliodcrand
emergency brake
•Finally, we test your brakes out
on lheroad
COME IN NOW FOR YOUR FREE
BRAKE INSPECTION ...
No Obligation!
Lifetime Guaranteed for as Long
as You Own Your Car
a~~D•IT Mu.mer
Ufetime G..ar•"'"
If muffler fails due to
def«t:s in mt1crilb or
workmuuhip ot blow.
out. ru.u~ or wtar-
ouc while cx-Wm.I JlV1'
cha.u owru tbc nr, it
will be rcpbced upoa
return, frtt of clwlfc.
If (fit, defi:<:ti~ muffitt
was insu.lll.'d by St-an,
we will in.1tall 1bc new
muffler with oo ciw.-
for labot.
•Large, full-length cuning
chamber for better sound·
silencing. 22-ga. outer
shell galvanized on both
sides for longer wear.
• 26-ga steel oval muffler
i oner shell ... 30% thicker
than 1 shell mufflers.
• Fits most American cars.
Exper<
I n.stnllation
A vnilnble
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• • -···-~ . .
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• Cfean Your Condepser
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Regular $219.95
l 79?s~
• Put an end to Summer dis·
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• Cooling capacity is 250 cu. ft.
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TOlllANCI 142·1Sll
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VALUT PO 3'14•1• tl4•2220
VllMOHT PL ,_1t11
I
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-\
Saddleback
Will ·Host
Oral Event
. .. Students from 27 colleges and the
cniversities of seven states are expected
o attend lbe Southern California Oral
nterpretalion Festival at Sadd:ieback
:OllegeMiy 21·22.
Special guests at the annual event will
14!: actor-director Sterling Holloway and
)r. Lillia Heston, sister 'Cf film actor
)iarlton Heston. from Northwestern
Jniversity.
Holloway will be the principal speaker
t a Saturday luncheon for student
tarlicipants at the Hotel Laguna.
Dr. Heston will direct the theater
ivaluation Session Friday at the cam pus
nd perform at the Festival Forum
li~ater io Laguna -Beach Friday. night ·
11d Saturday.
On Friday at 8 p.m. in the Forum she
ri.11 present a reading performance,
Brief Encounters," which wil~ be open
~ th e public. On Saturday, also in the
~orum, she wiJJA;iresent a lecture recitaJ
it 4 p.m.
The 150 participating students will not .
Ompele, but will be evaluated by
utst.anding authorities in the field of in-
!rpreta tion for their reading and oral
resentatio n in drama, poetry and
terature.
Dr. Doyle McKinney, Saddleback fine
rts division chainnan, said other critics
1jJI include Dr. Janet Bolton of the
lniversity of Southern California, Dr.
:lbert Bowen. of Central t.1ichigan
lnlversity, Dr. Leslie Coger of Southwest
lissouri State College. Dr. Alethea Mal-
ngly of the Uni venily of Arizona and
1r. Don Salper of San Fernando.
Ticket..s for the Friday evening reading
y Dr. Heston may be obtained without
harge from the student personnel office
t the ct11lege. Tickets will be required
ecause of limited seating.
flospital Lobby
Rebuilding Set
Visitors to South Coast Community
!ospital ·will have to "detour" when
ntering the hospital in the near future,
ue to construction in the existing lobby.
A! part of the $7 million expansion pro--
ram, which will add 105 beds to the
. ospital, the lobby will be turned into a
arden court. Signs will be posted direc-
·ng persons to the temporary emergency
xim entrance.
In addition to the new lobby, plans in-
lude a 21-bed intensive care unit, a 10-
!d coronary care unit, an increase in
perating rooms for four to six and an X·
•Y room for emergency patients.
Also to be const ructed is a 34 bed
Lroke and vascular unit.
fower Supporting
(ntertie Coll a pses
SAN FRANCISCO fAPl -A s t e e I
1wer supporting a 000,000 volt intertie
lectric power line. collapsed near
:ettleman City northviest of Bakersfield,
Pacific Gas & Electric Co. spokesman
~ported Sunday.
Eight olher 130-foot towers were
amaged Saturday night but no power in-
~rruption to cuslomers resulted. The in-
!rtie system provides exchange of power
titween neighboring utility systems.
DAILY l"tLOT lltlt l"llol•I
SOUTH LAGUNA · THESPIAN
Starling Hollowey
'~
FILM ACTOR'S SISTER
Dr. Lilli• He1ton
CENTRAL MICHIGAN U.
Dr. Elbert Brown
' \ •
,
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.,., .. ·.f: .•. ~. ,.-~-.. ·~ ..... ~ ... .,. '''"'""
Mortd1y, M.ty 17, lt 71 5 DAILV PILOT 3
Anyone Want a New Ziggurat? ..
N'iguel Plant Geared for 7 ,500 ••• They Never Came
UNIQUE INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY
Clo.!t t o treewo.11s in /cut-growing
Sa.ddle back Valley. Brand new, seve11-
1tory tiqgurat. 011e million square feet
floor space. Parking for .6,200 car.s.
Road.!, sewers. wo.ter service in. Ask·
ing $24 miUion. Terms. Co11.1ider
trade. Contact North America" Rock-
well Corporation. .
By BARBARIA> KREIBJCH
Of "" O.llr l"lltt ,,.,.
The classified ad is imaginary. but it
tells a true, sad tale of a venture that
was supposed to 'change the e n t I r e
economic picture in &outh Orange County
-but didn't quite come off.
On Dec. 2, 1968,. when ground was
broken for the giant Laguna Niguel plant
North American Rockwell planned tO
build for its Autonellcs Division; Alton
Allen, then F-ifth District SuJ>e<rvi.sor.
declared. "The south partr.of Orange
County will never be the same after to-
day ....
"I would "uy without hesitation that the
plant i1 the greatest thing that has ever
happened to the south county .• .It means
more employment . .it will stimulate
housing, commerce and satellite in-
dustries."
The 7 ,500 employes would generate a
community of 57 ,000. the supervisor uid,
and. with expansion to 15,000 employes
"we are talking about 135,000 people."
Allen was but one of many Orange
County leaders who hailed the building of
the biggest electronics plant in the world
as a milestone.
It was to become one· of the biggest
white elephants in the world.
Just now completed, after more than
two agonizing years, the huge structure
1tands empty and unwanted in the gently
rolling hills of Laguna Niguel.
Stair-stepped into the hillside, it is
fashloned in the style of a ziggurat, a
name given an ancient BabylonJan
temple tower.
It.s statistics staggei-the imagination :
more than 2 million cubic yards of earth
moved to prepare the site; roads and
Oood control projects worth $2.S million
coMtructed ; the first floor alone c:overing
nine acres and as long as thret football
fields.; parking for 6,200 cars on 58 1cre1
plus rooftop execut.ive parking and
helicopter pad; a main employe: entrance
deslgned lo handle 5,000 people at 1 1hift
change, with hlgh 1peed escalator• mov·
Ing 1,000 people every six minute!:.
But the employes never came.
By the beginning of 1970. the aerO!pace
squeeze had hit North American and the
Laguna Niguel facility became 1urplu1
property.
Construction, which had been delayed
by floods and strikes, was to dr.a.g on for
more than a year while a buyer was
aought for the giant 1tructurt.
Rumors percolated in c e 1s1 n t I y:
Howard Hughes would buy it. General
Electric would buy it. Fluor Corporation
would buy it.
'Illat one was true. In Dectmber. 1971l,
setting off audible sighs of relief the
length and breadth of the county, Fluor
officials confirmed that negotiaUona were
·,..."'~ . t .... ~ ..
OAll Y l"ILOT Slaff l'MtM
TWO YEARS IN THE MAKING, WHITE EL EPHANT OR BOON TO ORANGE COUNTY? ,.
Feshioned In The Style of an Anciant Ba byloni1n Tample For Sp1ce Age Pr~uction
.
under way ror purchase of the plant and
escrow probably would close in spring.
In spring the deal was called off.
New rumors had North American mov-
ing in arter all. This was demed as a new
campaign to sell the ziggurat was
launched.
So far there hasn't even been a fresh
good rumor of a sate.
Meanwhile the ziggurat stands there, a
fantastic concrete monumen t tD dreams
of outer space that became earthbound.
El Rancho has the hottest price in town!
I
CTN. OF 6
12·0Z. CANS!
• ,/
Double plea11ure with thi11 El Rancho value ••• you'll be pleased ''ith the savi ngs at this !pecial price , •• and the whole family will be ple.u:ed witll
the tinily refreahinr treat afforded by these Shasta favorites in the easy-to.open pull top cans! ?-.lore value at El Rancho I
Pork Chops .. ~~~.~ .. 99~
€omJ)(lre and see for you rself that there is a difference.
Perk Roast .. ~~~.c.u!. 89~
Enjoy the good.neg of lean, mid western fresh pork!
Stuffed Port Chops ................................... St·
Ready to cook • ~-!tuffed 'vi th seaaoned drea11ing ..• for you I
Knudsen Salads or Puddings .. .. .. .. . . .. . 23'
\'our choice ••• 7-oz. re-usable lu nch-box cont.alner1t
Prittt i• •If.ct M .... T ..... IV•d .. Mov 17. 18. 19
No Hlt• to dealer•.
Broccoli ................ ~ .19~1
Great "'ilb pork ... and freshne&s makes the di ff~rence '.
Blue Bonnet Marg arine : ................ · .............. 29~
U1e it u & spread, in cooking. !or baking ••• and &ave!
MJ.B. Tea Bags ............................................ 59~
Enjoy the hearty goodne .. of bl u k leA ! 48-ct pJci.
Sunshine Fig Bars . . .. .. .. .. .. . . .. .. .. .. . . .. .. .. . . .. .. .. .. . 59«
F or a fter IChool ••• with a glass of milk! Big 24-oz. pk.I.
ARCADIA : Sun<el >nil Hn.•:ini:'"' O :·:1
1.1
1, PASAO fNA : "1 S~flT4 D ~ \ ~ OfN~ · '·.· ~UNTINGTQ CH : ~l/i'11/, NEWPORT BEA UH : 1727 Newport 81~~ >nil
ill Rancho Centen J/0 1/-t r,l Lo!o1J<i'J 13,.1. • 1•1·11,. · t<1. , ,· I .'11 , 111. " 1~1 • • P.n1r (tw ,'~ Cen'er . .~· 2555 [.1sthluH Or '[Jsthluff Village Center\
• ...
-."·· ...
•
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Talks Affected
Sadat ·Increases
UPI T ..... Mflo
FELLOW POLIC E OFFICERS SWARM TO THE AID OF WOUNDED COMPANION
Patrolman Wis Hit by Shotgun 8 l11t From 81rric1ded Memphis Home ~--'~~~~~~~~~
Officer Shot i11 Fore head;
In Surgery Ove1· 7 Hours
ME~fPHlS IUPI) -Doctors worked in
surgery for more than seven hours SWl·
day trying to save James C. Crossno. a
27-yea r--Old city policeman shot in the
forehead by a ma n barriC'aded in a house .
·'They JUSI "·on"t com ment on "'hat his
HQpe Hel,d Out
For Suffering
Pakistan People
..
Powers
By United Press bltera,uonal
Ei>'Pt'a polltical upheaval t oday
de layed efforts to find an interim Middle
£15t solution that \\'Ou1d permit reopen·
ing of the Suez Canal. but Secretary of
State William P. Rogers sid Sunday his
attempts to find a solution did not appear
threatened by events in Egypt.
Rogers and Assistant Secretary of
State Joseph J, Sisco scheduled con·
ference.s in New York today with U.N.
Secretary Ge neral Thant and Gunnar V.
Jarring. the U.N. peace negotiator \\"hose
own efforts have been in limbo for
several weeks.
'Egyptian President Anll'ar Sadat h ap-
peared to be strengthening his hold on the.
country and Cairo dispatches today said
he bad taken over as head of Egypt"s
police force. He already is nominal head
of the armed 1orces. The Ciaro dispatch·
cs said he had placed his political op--
pone nl3 in c<incentration camps as his
purge continued of elements \1'ho trird to
overthrow his government .
Political SOUrces in Jerusalem said
Israel wou1d delay further efforts to
reach agreement on reopening the canal
unttl the situationljp Cairo is stabilized.
The sources said the decision was taken
at a Sunday cabinet session.
Despite the Israeli ·statement Rogers
.said in Washington on NBC-Tv·s '"Meet
the Press'' that "We have seen no &ign
Egypt • Ill
that there will be any 111lowdown in the
discussions that are under way and I
"'ould hope that there will not be any.''
The Big Four ambassadors to the
United Nations called a meeting Tuesday
to review the situation, and Egyptian
sources at the United NaUons said there
wou1d be no change in Sadat's demand
that Israel wjthdraw from the Suez. Gana!
-the demand that has halted the talks.
Sisco and Rogers met both with Israeli ~
and Egyptian officials oo their recent
Mideast tour and Sisco flew back to Gairo
with a new Israeli cana1 proposal. Today
they were briefing Thant and Jarriing in
Y:hal ~·as called an ''informative onJy''
session.
Sadat carried out a major purge Thurs-
day, firing six cabinet ministers and
three other top political leaders. In ad'-
dition. nearly 300 other officials either
have been arrested or relieved from
government posts.
The semiofficial Cairo newspaper Al
Ahram said today 110 persons have been
arre.sted and referred to courts for trial.
lt said "their actions indicated they were
'vorking against the ~nterests and securi·
ty of the masses."
The semiofficial fi.1iddle East News
Agency ( ~fENA) said the police force
named Sadat as it.s supreme head and he
accepted the job.
'Mo11e that Eskimo here,
this-penguin there, and
t ake the pipeline through
here!'
'
Turks A bduct
.Jsrael Envoy
In l sta11bii l ·
ISTAl\BUL, Tu1·kc.v 1L.:l'l1 -Foui-
1nasked and armed n1en kidnaped lsraelt
Consu l General Ephreun l::lron1 1vhen he
arrived home ror lunch today, pol.Lee
sources said.
The sources said 1he fou r n1en
abducted Elro1n as he "as preparing to
enter his home in the eenter of Istanbul
shortly after nOOfl (6 a rn . E:DTI.
chances are at this point." sa id inspector
John Slaughter. "I suppose lhey don"t
1\ant to get anybody 's hopes up.
"'\Ve do knQ\\' that he lost his right eye
and the hearing of his right ear. The doc·
tors tell us it will be 48 hours before there
can by any determination of his over.all
l'ondition.''
Crossno and his partner, Patrolman
~lichael Davison, \\"enl to a quiet tree·
shaded street at the request of
ChrislOpher Rochester. Who said •
shotgWl blast bad been nred through a
living room window al his home.
Rochester blamed Farmer , "'ho lived
next door.
Davidson said he and Crossno were met
at farmer·s door by a man who was car·
rying a shotgun and warned them to get
away or he would shoot.
NE\V DELHI (UPI) -Lt. Gen. Tikka
Khan, martial law administrator for Easl
Pakistan, Sunday toured the Ganges
River delta and islands that 11·ere
devastated by November"s cy clone and
assured the survivors they "·ould receive
adequate food. Radio Pakistan said to-
day.
Tikka told the East Pakistanis in the
area where as many as 300,000 may have
been l.illed by the cyclone and tidal w.ave
that "the government had adequ8te
stocks of food grains in the province a11d
no one will be allowed to die of bUJller,"
the broadcast said .
Russia11, U.S. Fishe1·men
The Israeli consul<1tc derl1ned to t orn·
1nent on the k.idnaping. t\ spokesman
ans11.·ering calls a1 lhe consulate niet:elY
said the offices 11.ere closed for unex·
plained reasons.
~1ilitarv officials i11 lsl:uibul. wluch has
been und.er martial la11.· since last month,
\1·ould say only that "tn\CStiga tions con-
11nue·• in connection \\"Jth k1dnaping.
The surgical work on Crossno began
shortly after noon Swiday when he was
brought lo Baptist 'Hospital from a
residential area in south central Memphis
"·here he was wounded by a man v.'ho
had barricaded himself in his home .
threatening to shoot anyone who came
near.
The man. identified as Sam D. t~anner,
58, was hospitalized for treatment of tear
gas inhalation and for what appeared lO
be a blillet wowid on the index Unger of
his right hand.
Davidson ran behind Im squad car for
protection and lo summon assislance
while Crossno took a position behind a
large pine oak tree in Fa rmer's yard.
"I was radioing for help when I heard a
shot and saw my parlner fall onto the
grass grabbing at his head,'" s.Ud
Da vidson. ··1 . emplied my service
revolver into the front door and radioed
that my partner had been hurt bad."
The dozens of policemen who responded
to the call for assistance fired more than
200 pistol and shotgWl rounds while of·
ficers dragged Crossno to a waiting am·
bul;lnce.
Crops in the stricken area were '
destroyed by the storm and reports
trickling out of the: area have iadicaled
that the distribution system for emergen-
cy food broke down when the civil war
started March 25.
India js seeking. help from olher coun-
tries in dealing with the problems of 2.6
million East Pakistani refugees that the
government estimates have crossed the
border into India. Government officials
said they expect the total may eventually
reach five million or more.
Cardinal Agagianian,
Indian Pri'me ~1iniater Indira Gandhi
told a ne"·s conference in catcutta Sun-
day after a l\\·o-day visit to the border
area that little in~rnational aid has been
received.
Top Russ Expert, Dies La:va Threatens
Sicilian Towns .
VATICAN LEADER DIES
Cardin•! Agagianian
ROME (UPI) -Cardinal Gregory
Peter Agagianian, who rose from the
obscurity of an Armenian village to
become the leader of the world's Roman
Catholic mission and a candidate for the
.papacy, died at his home Sunday night.
He was also considered one of the
foremost authorities on world com-
munism.
The tall, bearded cardinal who spent
most of his life in Rome and spoke with a
Roman accent. was 75. Church officials
said he had been sick for some time a111d
Pope Paul VI called at his bedside I few
v.·eeks ago.
A formidable linguist and a man who
Inspi red friendship, Agagianian was the
first non-Italian in centuries to be t"()n•
sidered a serious candidate for the
papacy. He 1\•as mentioned as a possibil i·
ty in the 1958 conclave which elected
John XXlll and again in the 1963 con·
clave 1vhich elected the present Pope.
Although his prominence fa de d
some"·hal 1vHh the passing of year5 and
impairment of his health. Agagianian still
was one of the 1nost beloved personalities
in the Vatican. Italia ns called him "more
Ron1ait than the Romans."
The cardinal \\'3S born Lazaru~
Agagianian Sept. 18. 189~. at Akhaltzi~he
in what now is Sov1el Armeni<t , only a
fe1v miles from the Georgia birthplace of
:Josef Stalin.
CAT ANIA. Sicily (UPI) -Rivers of
lava poured down on cottages and fann
houses on the slopes of Mount Etna today
in the worst eruption of the volcano in 43
years.
Farmers v.·ho built barricades to try to
divert the lava from their doors retreated
to neighbors' houses to watch helplessly
as it burned their orchard!! and vineyards
and boiled through their rotlages.
The stream of lava reached the first
houses Sunday in the outlying districts of
the town of Sant' Alfio. one of five
threatened by the rene"·ed activity and
eruption from Etna. and officials "''arntd
the town may be endangered .
Tra n s portati6Jl Week
Off to Sh a ky Start
NEW YORK (AP) -Nitiona l
Transportation \\'eek got under way to-
day. So did a nationwide railroad strike.
Transportation Secretary John A. Volpe
said Ure slogan for the l\faY 16·22
observance would be "Transportation:
"Filling lhe Needs of a Growing
America." Volpe Will due in New York
lodaf for a ceremony 1n a r k 1 n g
Transportation \Veek .
Storms Batter Midsection
West W ar111 , Wi ndy; Show ers Sc attered Through U.S .
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" ...
Meet in High Sea . Summit The Israeli \"ice-counsel said Elroin's
v.'ife "'as in a sta te of .shock and under a
doctor's care at home .
Today's kidnaping \las the third in a
series of abductions or foreigners in
Turkey since the beginni ng of the year. GLOUCESTER. Mass. (AP) -A U.S.
delegation will meet at sea Wednesday
11.•ith tht commander of a Soviet fishing
fleet in hopes of ending a t'Onf!ict
bet\\·een Russian trawlers and American
lobster fishermen .
For the past fe"' "'eeks. local
lobstermen have con1plained to the Coast
Guard that Russian trawlers have been
ope rating in areas where lobster tra1>3
have been set, causing heavy damage to
American gear.
John Skerry . chief of the Division of
Enforcement and Surveillance of the Na·
Kate W ebk_ Fe els
Prince Silianouk
Cam e to Her Aid
SYDNEY (U PI ) -Catherine J\.I.
"Kat.r" Webb. held by Communist forces
in Cambodia for 23 days. said today she
believed the intervention of exiled Prince
Norodom Sihanouk may have been
responsible for her release.
h1iss Webtf, 2 , United Press lnterna·
tional bure anager in 'Phoom Penh,
1\·as cap tu ed by North Vietnamese
forces April 7 \1'hile covering fighting
southeast of the Cambodian capital. A
body was found a week later thal \\"as
believed to be hers. but on May I she was
released and telephoned the UPI bureau
in Phnom Penh that she was allve.
In an lntervie\\" on "J\.1eet the Press,"'•
Sydney television program. she said To-
day "I now think that Sihamouk had •
great deal to do with my release ."
Sihanouk was qusted as chief of state in
Cambodia in a bloodless coup March 18,
1970. He llis been in Peking since tht-n
and its erforts lo find the whereabouts of
Miss Webb. UPI cabled Sihanouk, asking
him for help.
Miss Webb arrived in Australia May 11
to visit her family,
Sh,..lost 24 pounds during the 23 days in
captivity, during the television intervie.,.,•.
she said she was ne\•er really frightened
about being shot but "'as afraid she
mighhKlt-be-able--to-accept-the physk-111
privations she endured during the long
marthes.
tional Marine Fisheries Service. said the
meeting will be held "mostly likely on the
Russian command ship" near the Nan-
tucket lightship. stationed 4{I miles
southeast of Nantucket Island .
Skerry will head !he American dele ga·
tion, \\'hich will also incl ude represen-
tatives of the Coast Guard , the State
Department and the American fishing in·
dustry.
'The Coast Guard said ii has recei\'ed
se\"en complaints from ~lassachusetts
lobstermen in the past {1\"0 \\"eeks that
Russian tra"·lers hav«" passed over
American gear.
Lobster fishermen use wooden traps to
catch lobster on Jhe ocean floor. The
traps are attached to floating buoys. The
general area is usilally marked ofr with
<lnother scL of b1.1oys lo caution ol.hcr:
fishermen .
Russian 1rawlers drag their nets
throUgh the water, and if they pass over
an area where lobster traps are set, the
traps. buoys and lines get swept up in the
trawl.
Joseph C. £. h1aillet. captain of the \Vi-
ly fox out of \Vestporl. said he 's lost
about S.S0.000 "·or1h of gear from Russian
trawlers passing over his pots.
Maillet said at one point last week the
rrew of one Russian ship bade him '"good
fishing" moments before about a dozen
Russian ships steamed through his gear.
On Feb. 15. three armed Turks seized
U.S. Air Force Sgt. Ji1nn1y F'intci y of Fort
\Vorth. Tex .. and held hin1 for several
days b<'for<' r(']easing him unharmed. On
~larch 4. an extrernisl group kidnaped
four more American airmen a n d
demanded a S<I00,000 ransom . The ransom
\1·as not paid and the 1ncn "ere !reed
several days later.
Political sourcf>s s<11d the earlie r kid-
napings and related pol1l1c:i l instab1hty
"·ere largely responsible for the rrsignri·
uon of the Suleiman Dem1rel go1·er'1·
men! earlif"r this \ear ~1 ilitary leadE'rS thrt'atened 11 coup
unless he-resigned <1nd a 1nort' stable
government "'as forn1ed to hall r11<1ss ·
anti-government demonstralionsA'!v lefl·
ist -student s. The n f" w J;lo~·er111n1e11t im·
posed martial 1<111· and the rountry has
been rela111'ely quiet 1n reeent 11·eeks.
Earllu111 a kc Hcconlcd
BERKl='.LEY (/IP\ -/I. .!>\rong earth·
c1uake wa~ rf>C'ordr.d today by !he
lJniversity of C:illfonua se1<;n1ograph sla·
lion v:hich fixed its locatio n near th•
Colombian coa<:.\
The UC se1s1nolo£1~ts fixed the loctition
al about 3.600 miles sou theast of BerkelP.y
and al 100 to 200 mile~ belO\\' lhe earth"•
surface.
ri~ragi~ Weddi n g
Floor Gi ves Way, 14 Cuc.~L s Die
SALLEN. France (UPI) -Eugene Fa· <"ove.red \1·eil . 2l feet dPCJ' under !he noor.
bien and Francoise Davenelt decided to The water 11·as onl_\' a r('"' feet high.
hold their wedding party here \Vhen the But so many people fell in. cru~h1ng cac!'I
hall a! their 01vn village was ruled unsafe other and forcing lhr water tn nsr. 1hat
for the public. 13 personS dro~·ned on the i::pot. Anot her
Francoise, 19, in her "'hile \\"edding died en rout(' to a hospital.
~own , 1vas helping usher some of her 70 It happened Sa\urda.v nigh!, 130 111il<'~
J.(uests to11.•a rd the dining table for the big \\"est of Paris in 1he Normandy eount1 y
dinne r when there was a loud crack. nc<1r lhe English Channel •
The noor collapsed and about 30 guests Fabien. a 21-year-old lanner"s ~on .
vanished into the jagged hole. Some w~re said the mayor of Sallen. Rene Auvra~.
lucky and hit the ground four feel be lo"' agreed to give them the hall 11 hen the
-for ooly minor brWses. -------v~llage-assembly.. rO'lrn at-1he1r hon\&.
But about 20 boys and girls and a few village in nfttl.rby Cormolain l\'8~ clo~ed tt>
fldults plunged straight into a narro"' un· the public for safety reasons.
T!'Pt t•ttMll-d IO•ft\•\I <•Ill lo• I
•rtOUll "'''"'Iott Ir-,..11~ IOf'lt
11111'1" w1Nll ti ''""'"
t \!0''"' ''''"" Ul•ffll •till '"" 111u•· t•\•or'!ll 11\r.,.,.tll 1111 ftl!itft't
m •O•f'tl "" $/IC .. tfl ""' l1Wndt•1torm1 ~ .... 1~1 l~rOl,l,'I !~-l>OPl f ""' mlildl•
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lt•n
t<:t'll•\ t f!O Ml,~rl 111(1 ~••II Wl~!I
Wftnl"'' for 1111h 111 ro 00 ,.,11• 111
hov• A (Otl1•1 n..-m <.tflll""'fd
'~'""'" Nt"' !111l1J'ld t r"lll •""w••• u .... "'° 11>rtu1~ "'' 111t•tn1• '°""'"'"' '"'''°" el FIO•IO• tMd mt Kt'n
MONDAY
I !ltm •I
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Porfl•nd
t1nld {1!1
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l•k•tir1'10 .,.,5, it" OlttO ,,.,.,
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Sunset al World of Animals. a 240·acre drive·
through animal park fn ~1esquite, 'Texas, brings a
'luiet time most visitors never ste, The glrarre and
t\\'O eemsbok seem to be follO\\'ln: a trail home --.
against the sinkjng sun -much as 1hcy nli"hl have
done in their native Africa. Perhaps the ca~ fu ll of
tourist~ 15 heading home too
r
'
•
•
Monday, May 17, 11971 DAILY PILOT 5
Debate Raging 8· Middie~ Ousted
V'I Ttltlhellt
Fla•hll S mile
Sylvester Magee of Co·
Jumbla. Miss .. "''ill be
130 years old ~tay 29,
according to records ln
s t a I. e archives. He
proudly shO\\'S nff his
ne\v upper plate \l'hic h
contains ll\'O .gold teeth
stu dded ''ith 1.i carat
diamond~. r h e dia-
mond s and plate \Vere
a gift from a Ne1\1 Or·
leans dentist.
SST Funding
Gets Debate
By Senators
Nixon Considers
Troop Cut Id eas ANNAPOLIS, Md. IUPll -
Eight midshipmen ha ve betn
expelled from the Naval
Academy for drug use to
climax a Hk:!ay crackdown by
Naval authorities who rtmov·
ed some donnitory com·
ponents in their search for
\\rASHJNGTON IUPIJ
With Senate Democra ts trying
to force the issue , the Nix on
Administration has decided to
.~ound ou! !\1osco1v on discus~·
1ng U.S.-Sov i et troop
v.•11 hdrawal from Europe.
Secretary of State William
P. Rogers revealed !he move
Sunday u the Senate drew
closer to a vote on Democratic
Leader !\tike !\1ansfield's pro-
J>l1Sal that the United State!
cut it~ European tr " op
strength in half -fro m
300.000 t-0 150,000 -regardless
of 11'hat Moscow does.
Rogt'rs said ambassador
J ;icnb D. Beam in ~foscow had
been directrd to seek an
elabo ration on com m en ts
made Friday by Soviet Com·
munist Party Leader Leonid I.
Brezhnev . Brezhnev w a s
quotl'd as saying the two coun·
tries should begin t11lks im·
media le\y on mutual troop
v.ithdrawals.
While the Un'iled States and
the · North Atlantic Treaty
Organization long have backed
a t111·0-sided troop reduction,
the Krem li n alway s has sug.
gested the with'drawal ques·
t1on be part of a larger
discussion of European securi·
ly. Brezhnev's comments
made it appear the Soviets
nov.· "'ere "'llling to discuss
th e troop question and nothing
else. allhough Rogers ad-
mitted it sllll was "a llttle
vague."
Rogers. Interviewed Sunday
on NBC's Mett the Press, con·
linued. the administration's
assault on Man.!lfield 'a pro-
posal.
''Why shoWd the United
Slates reduct unilaterally and
thereby kiss Jood-bye to any
chartef! that we might have to
negotiate successfully to
reduce trno So\'iet presence~"
Rogers asked. A U . S .
withdrawal at th!s time. with
no corresponding reduction on
the other side of i.he Iron CUr-
tain. would present a "very
dangerous situation,'' Rogers
added.
Record Fite
Uncontrolled
In Minnesota
Postal Panel Begins
Rate Boost Hearings
WASHI NGTON (UPII
With Americans a l r e ad y
paying more (or postage
stamps, the new postal rate
commission :oday· opened
hearings to decide y,·hether the
$1.4 1 billion· temporary rate
hike should re permanent.
The U.S. Postal Service and
its !2·man bGa.rd of governors
put the higher rates into effect
at midnight Sunday because
the five-me mber Ra te
Commssion dii not act , as the
iacreases. The hearings could
last for weeks, howevtr, since
the rate controllers probably
will attempt to dispel any idea
that their function is an
automatic one.
As lhe hearing opened,
J>!>Slal offices across the coun-tiy began selling more than 5
billion new stamps. First class
jumped from six to eight cents
-the first two-cent hike in
the history of that postal class
-"'hile air mail went from 10
lo 11 cents. Post cards went
from five lo six cenl.!i; second
'"' law provides. within 100 days class mail was increased from
ELY, Minn. (AP ) -A after the increases were pro-20 to 30 percent ; and third
record-size fire lhat ha , posed. · class mail \\'as hiked 33 per·
destroyed • 13.000 acres of The law which created the cent. new postal set-up also created Newspaper and magazine
Superior National Forest con-the Rate Commission to act as publishers, heavy users of se-
tinucs ID b~-out of control. final authority on rate changes cond class mail . challenged
rorst Service offi cials set 6 proposed by the postal service the increases all the way to
pm. today as the target for -a power held until now by the Supreme Court during the Congress. And if the com-weekend. but lnsl their at.
bringing the blaze under con· mission. in its he a rin g s tempt to block the hike
trol. starting today, does not act by The increases are designed
narcotics.
New Way Found
To · Stop Hair Loss,
Grow More Hair
Three middies v.•ere expelled HOUSTON. Texas -lf .But. Ir you at~ not aJrudy
Sunday bringing to eight the vou don't suffer from male slick hlld. how .can fOtf be 1ure ' " what 11 actu\Uy cau11n1 your number ~'ho hav e Un· pattern baldneSJ., you can hair loss?,, Even il baldn~• mar.
ceremoniouslv be~n drummed no\V stop your hair loss .•• •rl'm to run In Your family,
· and grow more ha·1r thl5 ill certai'nly no ph>of of out of the ac11demy for using • the cause of YO UR hair loss.
marijuana, LSD and various For ytar11 "they Mid It ('f'l.uld Ha ir loss caused by sf'bum
t pe r 11 t · nnl be done." Bui now a firm 1 1 f ., y so amp e amines. of \abor11.tnry consultants hu cAn A so ri1n n your am1 y,
LI.. Com. James B Finkle· developrd • treatmP.nt for Mth and m111ny other Mnditionll can · ' nd that! n t n cause hair loss. No mattf'r
stein. academy information Of· [yt~t~pp\~0h8j~· 1oss • ~, bu~ 1~ "'hie~ on" Is c~uslnc your ha'.r
ficer. said searchers had really rrov.•lni;: hair~ lms. it you v.•tut unttl ~ou ai•
rcn1oved a false ceiling and a , sli ck bald And your hAJr ron~
vlindow ledge in some rooms Thk oyhd.n.n t ""•'"t ""1 Y0T"hto Are dead, you are ~yond hiP!lp. . . ta r t eu Y.'Or nr t. ey S ·1 ·11 h h · in Bancroft Hall, the main invile you to try the lrf'Atment o, 1 you su ave any air nn
midshipmen's residence. for 32 days, at their rbk. and top of your head, and would
But ht denied reports that see for yourself~ like to litop your hair IOSJ and
in\'estiga_tors .. had .ripJl('d out NAturAlly, they Y.'t"uld n 01 i;.;ow more h11.i.r ••. nnw is the
walls anCI ceilings in Bancrort nff,.r 1hi11 opportunity unlts11 time bf-fore It' too l&tf'.
Hall in a search for drugs. He thf' t~,.at mt.nt v.·orked. Hov.•· l..oeJ.Ch Labor11.tory con.suit·
le d th t "absurd .. !'v('r, 1t Is impossible to help rme e rcpor ~ v . : e\·tryont. ant11, Inc ... \\'ill supply you with
The rl r u ll •n estlga!lon · . . treatment for 32 dcya. at their
be.gan. ~lay Ii after two The great ma:ior1ty of cas· risk. If thf'y believe the trf'at· m1ds~1pmen h~d ~een .caught es of excessive hair fall and mrn t v.•ill h~lp you. Just st-nd
l'imok1ng marr1uana in the baldness are the beginninj! thf'm 1he lnformal lon liEted ht-· ba~ment. or . Bancroft Hall. and more fully developed Jo""· All lnQu!rl~8 are-answ~red
Finklestein sa1.d. The acad~my slage!i of male pattern bald· fdt · u b 1 J d announced .Friday that f 1 v e con 1 nt.La y, Y m • an
midshipnlan harl hl!€n expelled ness and cannot be helped. without obH£atlon. Adv.
wilh the other three being tX· NO OAllGAT!O"' COUl'ON -------.
pelled Sunday . To: Louch l abor11ory Co1tsul11nt.\, In<:.
Finklestein said a substance Box 66 001. J3 I I Wut Main St.
believed to be ~O. some HouMon, Tt~•~ 77006 -amphetamines and marijuana t arn 1ubmi11int 1ht lollo..,in1 information ..,jth the under·
had been uncovered during the 11and101 11111 it will ~ kept 1tricl!y confidential and that I am
rch under no oblir;11io1t whatsoever. I now haYe or hl Yt had the' sea -· fo llo ... ·ins conditions:
Do you haYe dandruir?----11 It dry?--11! oily~ •
Doea your forehead become oily or sreasy? _____ _
Dot\ your ical p lrch".' When? _____ _
How Iona; ha~ ynur hair I-fen thin nlna? ______ _
Do you 11i!I ha\'t any weak hair on top of your 'bead?_
How Iona i1 it ? h it dry".' h it oily1·---
Au1ch an y ather information you feel m1y be hel;ful.
NAM t--------~-------
t1lASlilNGTON (AP) -The
l\'h1te Hou se i:i; mnving lo
assure Senate baf'kers or a
revi1·ed supersnrnc transport
tha! it rc<1!1y \\'On't cos t
another billion dol!frs to ,l!et
the SST program going again.
The use of the billion dollar
figure by si:iokesmcn for the
prime SST contrac1or, Boeing
Co.. was viewed by Senate
Dt:mocrati<" Leader M i k e
l\.fansfield as dimming. any
prospect his chamber v.•ill go
a!nng \Vith House action last
week rind vol(_ to put mnre
funds into SST de\'clnpmenl.
New Vo ter !\'lark
A I 2:) ]\'Ii Ilion
'VASHTNGTON 1AP ) -The
Census Bureau says there will
be more than 25 million youn~
people polenlially eligible tn
vote for president for the firsl
time in the 1972 elect1on.
Officials said Sunday that July I. Y.'hen the f>OS\al service to bring in $23 million a Week
even when thr fire in the formally hikes over the mail in new revenue to help cul
wildernes., Boundary Watersli~•;y~s~le~mi,~r:al~e~s ~w~il~l ~l•~ll~b~a:c~k~to~Jb~a:c:':':":'~"":·c~ip~a:t•:d~l:2:.2:b:il~ll~onl-:~=~~~~=-~~C~ITY~~~~~~~~T~A~TE~~~~~z~I~P~~~~~ Canoe Area 1 BWCA) of north-what they were Saturday. postal service defi cit for thf'
em ~finne:~la · ia brought un-'The Rate Commission was business year beginning July
der conlrol , it may take a expected lo approve t he I.
mooth or 1nore to completely
Ba\lle Q\'er the money
estimatPs v.•as the focus nf !11 e
hours n{ Senat e deb a le
sched uled Loda y. A vote is in
pFos~ct ea r I y We<lnesdBy
evening.
A spoke sman said Sunday
the numt>er apparen!ly ii:: a
record. He said thl're Y.rre
some 12 million potential nPw
voters 1n the 1968 ell'clirin~.
Abou t 11 mi llio n nf the 2.S
mi llion 1vil t be enfranchi~t>d
!or the firs t time because of a
law passed last year v"hich
kiwered the voling age to 18 in
all federal elections.
extinguish ii.
Thick la)•ers of peat moss
ere expected to smolder long
after the fire on the surface is
exlinguished. Foreit Service
officials explained.
.\ service spokesman said
.l,000 acres of forest "'ere con-
su med Sunday in the l miUion
acre national forest.
The fire wal'i confined lo six
square miles l'I! 380 volunteers
and 245 professional Forest
Serv:ice personnel Wilrked to
slow Ult blaze.
NOW
AMTRAK
TRAINS
SPEED YOU
TO
HOUSTON
NEW ORLEANS
KANSAS CITY
CHICAGO
SAN-DIEGO
SAN FRANCISCO
OAKLAND
SEAnLE
•
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get "stacked up·· o\·cr the raihray station.
For reservations an d infnrmadon .
For Houston. Ne\V Orleans, San Francisco/Oakland and Seattle
call 080-2920
For San Diego, Kansas City and Chicagocall 6Z4-017 l
\
C..duf!oo.
Th• tTld of one "lf¥1 ct lite and the becfn-
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Wherever they mOTe1 they'll bne the
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A114J J10t only are Sylvania products
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too.
So pick Sylvanll, the ent<rtalnmont
prodact llll~'• at the head ol !t. cWs.
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Every 1r1duate wlll wi.nt a Sylmua pH.oD&l
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NOWONLY t9ts
lttte9rlt11 attd Depe11dnblllt11 Slttce 1941
COSTA MESA
411 E. Seventttntk St .
646:1684
D1ily 9.9, 511. 9-6
I
'
EL TORO
L•gun• Hill s Plau
837-3130
to.6, Thur,, f r!. 10.f
•
-.
•
DAILV-PROT EDITORIAL PAGE
That Sticlier Boo-•
I DON'T QUITE UNDERSTAND
THE "DOLLAR CRISIS"!
IT'S l<ATl.\f.R COMPLICATED
TO EXPLAIN!
There has been hardly a dull momerlt in Orange
County eovernment since the first of the year ~·hen the
1o-called neY.r majority of the Board o{ Supervisora. and
jts coterie of behind·ili'e-sce.nes advisers tpok over.
Unfortunately, there haven 't been many good mo-
ments, either. The predominant tone of county govern·
ment, is a.et by the so-called "new majority" on the
Board of Supervisors, has been one of sh.adow .govern·
ment--power politics. mane..uver and man1pulallon.
Some of the antics and activities have been good
for a grim chuckle or l\VO. however. y,·hen-throu~h
arrogance or lneplitude-maneuvers have resulted U1
stubbed toes and praUalls. ..
•
lhls particular activity by his close political a!sociate and
friend. and branded it as "\J•rong" -a very politic
thing to do, under, the circum~tances.
Public confldenee ln•lhe new majority on the Board
ol Supervisor:s, and their appointees to various boards
and commissions, continues to he shaken. It is as
though a group has assumed the Orange County elec·
lorate is made up of gullible or apathetic bumpk ins.
u· this continueS. the Board of Supervisors' ne~· co--
alition and their appointees and their ""orks are in for
a rude shock . Orange County citizens. so long accus·
tomed to open . .non·partisan government. \\'on 't put up
with politi cal power plays and shadow government.
0 0
•
The crude and seriously disturbing maneuvers in· v.ol~ed in trying to bl9('k the buildin.g of a non·p~ofit
community hospital in the Laguna Hills area subsided
-temporarUy-last week. Then v.•e \\'ere confronted
"'ith the Great Rum_P.~r Sticker Boo-Boo.
The Qu ee n Mary Fiasco TO PUi IT SIMPLY, IN
EUROPE THE DOLLAR
ISN'T WORTl-l AS MUCH
AS IT USED TO BE .'
1-lUI.\ ! YOU OUGHT TO 5EE
IT Ai Tl.\E 5UP£RMARK~T/'
The very first effort or Supervisors Robert Battin
and Rona.Id Caspers last January "'as an attack on the
county administrative 'Officer form of government and
a brazen effort to fire the CAO. Robert Thomas. instant·
ly. without any type of hearing or any solid statement
of charges. ~
In an apparent effort to revive and .bolster that
attack last week. the man \\'ho is commonly identified
u Battin'!!i political adviser and financi~I backer: Dr.
Louis Cella, arranged to have bumper st1cKers pr1.11ted
1nd distributed reading: THOMAS = TAXES. . •
\\'hen it was revealed that the Santa Ana phys1c1an,
also a major figure in county Democratic circles. \A•as be·
hind the bumper sticker caper .. h.e was quick to ~ssert
tnat it was purely a personal activity and had nothmg to
do with his man on the county board.
Battin subsequently disavowed any connection with
further wasting of tidelands oil revenues by the
city of Long Beach may come to an end-at last.
\Vilh upwards of $50 million already spent on the
Queen Mary project -some of it possibl.v illegally b&
cause it \vent for commercial developmerit -the AS•
sembl y \\lays and Means Committee is attempting a
clampdown.
Because it has no legal jurisdittion over state Land!
Commission authorization of tidelands i:evenue spend·
ing, the committee is using an 1ndirecl approach. ft has
told the commission that should lt authorize further
spending on the Queen. "conditionally or other~'ise." the
operational arm of the commission ~·ill have its budget
autom atically reduced by $500.000-nearly one-thirrl.
\Vhelher it is fair or unfair. that threat should ef·
fective!y deliver a message to all concerned. to reorder
.spending priorities on these public funds to put human
needs first.
r------:l··=
Uni 1Jersities
Should Stick
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
A Co1tspiracy Agai11st the Uitited S tates
To Their Job
~ ........
, ' ,
Hayakawa-~
The prob\ml of univmities tod ay iJ
that in their pride they havt taken on far
too many tuU. uy1 Robert Nl!btt, pro-
ft.SSOr of IOOiology at the University of
California al Riverside. in an article on
"Tht Future of the University" in Com·
menlary lfebruary 1971).
The unlvtrsity Is 'ntrwted by aovern·
ment and indu1try
with l1vi!hly funded
ru.earch projects. It
a I s o assumes the
ro le of "Super.Hu-
manit.arla it -ready,
nay, eaaer,-to mtel
directl y all of
1ociety'1 problems,"
lt a lso acta ••
"Beni&n Thtrapiat."
dealing with the
tdenlity problemt of
"ever.widening numbers of stude1ta who
have little if any interest in study.: .bu.~ wtR7im~t be, 1l all cosu. entertained.
"AS ~1A TTEftS N9W stand in the
univmity," Profe1sor ' Nis be I .s~m·
m.11.rius. "y.·e are like a rehg1ous
monastery insisting upon all tht aflluence
of a freeboollng capitalism; a n
aristocr1cy masochlstically torturing
nurselves with tht slogans of revolu-
tionary democracy: 1 community of
pacifists Insistent upon riding off. tn all
directions at once to do batUe with the
tnemy: an enclave of intellectual
autonoiny that ig yet privileged lo
remake the entire 50Cial order through
profligalt humanitarianism or calculated
ttvolution. ...
"Wa declare ourr;elves 11n intellt:etua l
elilt. fully entitled to aristocratic ttnure.
of 1tatu5. and al the 1ame lime the.
microcosm of economical. political. social
ind cultural activities that even the sur·
rounding society oft en seems too small to
contain. It is 1 lovely fantasy :·
··t SUGGEST," P;;i;-ssor Nisbet write!!.
"that the university's most feasiblt func·
lion for the future U in esstnct v.•hat ll
has been In the pas\; that of serving a~ a
stlling for the scholarly And scitntific
imagination. . . . '':hal. in a civiliztd
!Ociely. could pNSlbly be wrong. or 5eem
1tagnant or ~aic or antiquarian . aboul
" ---By George
'Dear G«irae:
Why is It your 10-Called lovelor11
husband·~·ife fightg OYer whn takf'.\
out the garbagt? Why can't you he
more sophislicat.ed. like the lady
columnists who write about sex
problems?
WONDERING ·
[)ear Wonder In;:
You're noL lhlnklng too good, kid-
do. Y.'ho'" really sophisticated; ~fy
readers. who right about garbage.
or their readtrs. who light about
RJ?
Dell Gl!Orae :
Do you ever have. a litr.le drink
v.·hM writin1 your a>lumn? "I:ell lht
trlJU!, SD.
Dur S.D.:
Jt all dep<nd>. Are you b\J yin& or
pryin1?
(5end your problems to G«irg'
11.nl ltatn how ll feel11 to !Ake
poslUve acUon by writjni to a tot.al
1tru1er who h•M't 1 clue. re11ly. l
Some pMple will cnmplam and
whine aboul anything. \Ve should
all jwt be glad that Governor
Reagan didn't claim a refund on
his losses. The average citiztn
v.·ould.
-Z, F.
'Jlllt IMIV"-l'llllCfl l'll f'"' ... 1..-.. Mt
-.uarllY lfltM II IM "1w..,a11r. ,.,.,
,.r Hf _,,, i. Ol-Y au" !11llY '1111,
tht: v1s1on of an enclave in the 50eial
order the principal purpo5t or which Is
working creatively and critically with
ideu through scholarship and tuching?
... The univer1lty i1 no mmiastery or
retreat. And \tA business is the business
of human life: inttllectual business .. , .
''Why mu~t th"' propo51I of an In·
tellectual communit y, of a scene of ideas
given structurt by leaching a n d
scholarship. be apologized for! ls it the
· ra.dicaJ functlnn that Is desirtd'? Bui
nothing ,is more radical than an Idea. Is il
the humanitarian function'? Nothing In
the long run is more humanitarian than a
humant and moral Idea. . . . The
university•s rtlation to government,
research. tht arts and other grtat func-
tions should be close. It always has been
close .in thf' university's brighter
momenu in history."'
NISBET CALLS FOR depoliticization
(J can spell it. but leave ii for you to pro-
nounce I of the university and tht
restoration of authority to president6,
deans and department c h a i rm en ,
"Participatory dtmoc.racy in univtrsily
affairs has not only gapped their foun·
dations of any roherent systtm of
authorltv. but has also creattd a selling
or instaOt. and chronic politics that makes
!erious teaching and study impossible.''
Nisbet v.•ou\d also requirt the rhasing
nut or removal from universities of three-
fourlhs of lhP.ir Affiliated research in·
stilu!es fundtd by outside source.!!. He is
not opposed to research. He insists on~~
thal it should be "in conjunction willl
teaching, and of 11 scale that doei; not
constantly threaten to dwarf the rest ol
the university."
TO ~1E TIIE f\tOST import.ant of Nis.
bet's suggestions is thal univt:rsilies
rev ise completely their present praclices
"""1th regard to leaching. The importance
of teaching is always given lip servict.
but 11ctually universities regularly reward
intellectual or i;chnlarly di Ii l i nc t t n n
through exemption from leaching. Tht .
more riistinguished tht 11cholar, lht
lighter his teaching \011d. Htnct. many
professora regard a full lt11chlng load as
iJrnominious -and gn through every kind
of 1tratagem lo avoid it~ ,
Nisbet 1uggests thal Harvard and
Colu mtii11 11.nd Berkeley and Stanford ~et
a natlon"•ide example by demanding that
e~·i::rybody ttach ::i full load. "Which 1
myself ~·ould define properly 11.s two
courses e\'ery...,l.erm in the laboratory
sciences and thret in all othtr fields.''
This requirement v.·ould be binding on
famous scienti~Lc. and r.cholars no len
than on beginning assistant profe&$0rS.
Y.'HAT CAN I SA'' In Proftssor Nisbet
hut "Go. go. go. m11n'" \\'hen t(ad')ing
and d1scour5f' and lhc lift of the mind a.re re..~tored to thtir rightful ph•ce as the
c:tntral concems of unlvtrsitie!I. "'hen
restarcb Is rtl1ted lo teaching 11nd
teaching is U\uminated by research. v.·hPn
obligations to students become as 1m·
portanl to profeMors as their out.sidt ac·
compli!hmenu 11s con1ull11nt or Nobel
Prb:t "inner11. we Mall 1111 be able again
to re1ard our unlversitiu with pride and
joy, By 5. I. Hay1k.lw1
PrtJldeol
San Fr1nc1ico 5taifi ColltJe
Acheson Condemns May Day Tactics
Vi'ASHlNGTON -Dean Acheso n has
1aid about all that needs to be said about
the mass arrests ant_ detention of many
thousands to break up tht May Day
obstructions in Washington.
The attention of the former secretary of
slate was attracted by a quotation in the
press of Lincoln 's famous remarks when
he suspended habeall
corpus i• Maryland
to suppreM the Con·
federacy :
"It has long been
a g r a v e question
v.•hether any govern-
ment. not too strong
for the libertits of
its <!it1u1i;, can bt
stronli! enough to
maintain il.s ex1ste11c@ In great emer·
gencies."
Acheson '4'fO\t to reassure t he
newspaper thal it.s fears were ill·found ed.
Lincoln 's quandar~· had often betn resnl\'·
ed in lesser en1ergenc1es than the Clv1I
'''ar . Acheson then ad ded the wisdom sn
badly needed in the \'iolent conlrO\'er!'>y
now abuilding o\·er \\lashin~on police BC·
lio n agaijlst. the May Day play-ac\ing
revolutionists .
HE WROTE: "The 11nnounced purpoi.e
of the perpetratnrs of the disorders -to
st.op tht function ing of governmenl in the
capital of the nat1nn -"'as conspiracy
against the United States in \'iolation of
its criminal slalutes . the O\'erl acts of
riol and arson committed this 11o·eek in
Richard Wilson
supfl(lrl of ii were themselves felonie5 .
"If this ~vernment had confused this
conduct \Vith the cinStitutionil right nf
citizens to a.~semble peacefully to Pf!1lion
for redres,c; of grievance~. it would have
betn unwortny, as well as incap;ible. of
survival. i\'o ooe knew this heller lhan
Pre~idenl l..1ncoln-·•
Thal i;houlrf d1~pose or. bu! probalJly
will not , the cl amor now arising over the
"Nncon pnlire st;i!e.'' 11 is raging on the
t'dltnr!al p:ii;~s nf \\'ash ington imd Ntw
YOrk and \Ydl undoubtedly be exploited
throughout the rnuntry. Allorney General
John l\-l1tchell h;;is been fa lsely accused of
nr1;1nat1ng a m;iss arrest tech nlque for
\\'hich Polirt Chief Jtrry 'i\'i li;on of
,,.ashington c:laims sole responslb11ity and
i! .... ·idcly acclaimcrl hy the vast majorit y
in thP capit<il. r-.litchell has had 1he
lcmenty, or cou rage. lo recommend this
technique as a national model for handl-
ing !he threatened "'ave of oncoming
disobedience and obstruction to foltn"· the
i\\ay Da y anl\r<.
\\'llAT IS E\1ERfiL'IG now is a Ju11·
panopherl at1.:irk on the Nixon ad-
ministra11nn a<: a pnllce stale operation
for tht suppres~1nn of all dissent and con•
5titut1ona ll)' guaranteed libertie~ of
lipeech. assembly and privacy
Add it all up · f\1ih t.ary spying on
political dissidents. "'ire-tapping 1n na.
r1ona! secu rity cases without cnurt orde r
.r Edgar Hoover as a senile tyrant.
Nixon's interferences in the ('allev case.
the e:<tra-!c,1131 11rre~t.!L to prl'\'efli p;ira.
ly~is of gn,·ernmenl oper::itinns. Vice-
Prei;1dent A~new 's frtt"'neehng cri11C1sm
of the m.:i.<:s mrdia . parlirularlv CBS.
It S('IUnds horrendous. riOE'sn't it? Taken
ime by one. ho"·evcr. there is not the
sl1ghtrst evidPnce th::it the military in the
N1...:nn ttdmin1s1r::illnn 1< spying on pr~
1ninent political f1gurei;. r:o e\'ldence that
wire.t11pp1niz ha.~ been 1~sed in national
!§ecurity caSE'~. There i! Jess v.·1re·t apping
nnw than in the JohnSM administration.
No evidence or r ither ~~Jlillty or tyr anny
on Hoover's par1. Notfiing more lhan
h n n e" t . Ftra1ghtfor1•?'rd. hard·hittlng ,
criticism of !he mass n}r:dia in terms no
rnnre ominous than thole of Thomas Jef.
fersnn . I
IT IS QL:ITE TRUE ~thal a few, or a
le"' dozen or al least ~rte or four , in-
nocent hystanclrr s wl!re swept up in
Police Chief ,\.1lson·~ragnet. But the
other 12.000 ndd had ! iltd to make the
AchP.~nn d1.c1inction t.,.·een coni;pi rary
11g::1in~1 the Unilf'd St<fes in Violation of
11s criminal fitatuta• and the con·
~t1lul1onal right or cilizens to assem ble
pe.acefully to ptlitiOJ\ for redress of
grievances. r
This is a d1sllnct1on not made either by
thoSt who spread unfounded alarms. 01\
v.•lre-lilpp1ng and on FBI invtstlgations ol
incipient or actual violations of the
criminal statutes on c0He11:e campuses,
and on conspiracies el~ewhere including
the l'l.S. Capitol huilcling to creatt publ11:
diso rder and confusion as a prelude to
anarchy ..
The gn\'ernmenf i~ sup~~Pd to 2ttrn•
all thii; lo pa~i; as an exprf's~1nn of the
exuberanct ::ind ideal1.~m of un"·a~hed
and unhingert youth wa\'1ng fla l!s of an
enemy which has killed more than 45.000
Americans?
THERE ARE TIIO SE"who say 5n, Th!
feedback to pareri ts and rtlat1ves from
the )'OUnJ: prottfittr-s. expressions from
the clergy. llympalhy 11n the campuse!I
and in Pnlightentd publ1c11tinns, send
the:ir signali; in advance.
The ,build up 1~ on for a nrv.· inten~il1ed
attack on the Nixon aclm1n1strat1on 1n a
field where its re rord ls f;11rly good. No
heada bashed in Washington as 1n
. Chicago. Fe1ver ""'irelapll than 1n pre1•1ous
administratinns. No military spying on
political llgure!I as in a prev1nu.~ ad-
ministration. Nn actual documented
repression of the rtRhts {If freedom of
speech, ai;sembly and thP prei;~. anrt no
worse criticism of the latter than in lhft
Boose.veil adm inislr1111on i But the record ckw>sn·t count . ThfJ
alarm must be spread because 1t is tr ::idi·
lional lefl·"'lnR fare, especially where
Nixon is concerned.
Nancy and Ronald Talk Things Over
\Vt £Mend& and admirers of Governor
Ronald Reagan are nutragerl by tht
vicious attacks being hurled al our idol
simply because he paid no stale income
ta xes this pa5t yt:11r .
At the very least th1~ Jimacks of k1ck1ng
a man \\'hile he's dn"'n
\Vith typical Irish pn~. the governor
"'ill say only that he CQUJdn'I help support
the state he loves
and -cherishtrbt~---
cauSe of "business
rt1•erses." Hardly
annther word es·
capes his clenched
lips. Like any "good
man who h;i s falleii
on .hard timf's, he.
manfull y refuses ro
extort sympathy bv
washing his !;ittertd
' Art tloppe
RO NALD !chin h1~h 1; \'.e\'cr'. No.
dear. I i;topped off at ::i !ilfffia.pla" di11·
ncr. [\1 ine "'a!i free. And. lo0k: I brought
you a Bo"·ser Bag. .
-·NANCY rha-pp1 ty1~Wl'-U--nt~r starv~;
dearest, as lnni:: es ,,.e h'l\'e you to pro-
\ 1rie for us tfrowning1Bul1\here has all
our m11ney gone?
RO/'\ALD 1vaguely1· 'lone)? Y.'hat
1nonev"
NANCY· You know, the ~2 million you
got for the 1'1ahbu Canyon property, your
$49,100.a-year salary. our iil.acre ranch
in Riverside county. 1the_ •• ,
RONALD 'Golly. bear. you lrnow how
rising prices gobb!~ up evP.rything you
make these days. In one pocket, out the
othPr. '
l\'Ai\CY ll;miling fondl y): '\'eJI. 1ny
f11ther "'arncd me you "·ere jusl a
drrarny idealist who'd never hold on to a
clime. And nnw I suppose you·u go uHO
lh:it ~lily old s\udy of yours and work .
RONAIJD: Yes dear. I have-to rewrite.
1ny ~p('eeh on The fRole of the 2rivate
Sector in Insuring F'\scal Responsi bility. 1
think I'll take out that llne about "taxes
should hurt." 1t's being overly quoted
latr]y,
!\'ANCY: Please . .dear. stick to your
guns. rm sure t;ixes hurt lots and lots ol
people this year : JUst as you hoped.
Hntn in public. YP.t those v.·ealthy Democrats lucky
enough to be able to pay their taxes con·
linue to ridicule the governor ' s
mis fortune. For ~hamr ~
Arthritis Affects All
Even their hnrd hearll!i wnuld mPll
could they but envision the scene these
day~ in the humble Rettgan home -t ~ft
rent co-mpaS!ionately prnv1decl. a~ ~·ou
know, by "·ell·tn-do friend~ ol tht fam ily.
THI<:RE'S RO!\' ALP. v.ho ~ bcrn \\Ork·
ing l.!llt again \n v;:i1n Jwpe of m<1kln.c,
end.~ mrrt. coming in lb<> donr In he t m· br11c~ b~· his brave 11nd bt1au!lf111 wile .
Nanc-.•. in her last yt:;ir's G1venchy. Shft
breaks nff In mid·kiss lo 11 s k
guspicinusly:
NA 'CY: Is tht1t roaJit bttf on )our
bre11th" Oh . dear. don'I ttll me )'OU ha,·t
renounced your self rt!pc<:t and gone on
"·i-.Uare?
Quotes
'itary T. Brooks . director 11.s 1\llnt.
5.F. -"Bac.k in \\'ashlngton I'm known
•• tht mMt u"usual "·oman \\'ho would
r•the;r m•ke money than £pel)d It.''
I.
I
, .
Arthr1t.is is often c1:11led 'f\'erybody's
disease." It alfccts every 11ri~ of us in
i;ome \1•ay. directly nr Ind 1 r ec t I y,
ph5·s1cal!y or econom ically.
''rt 11\0St people hlfl't' (•!11\ hRZY
ldra<:-and oft l'n incorrect 1draJ,-of 11 hal
It 's all about .
The rc\Ull i~ lhal prnpl,. 11"t\>me
cr1pplrd unnece~sarily. And 1if:I\ rr1 ppl1>d
unnrcc!tsRrily. They tlon 'l un1\rr;;;t11nrt
1hal arthrllis 111 nC\'('r hnpelr~•. Th~v
don 't ~ctk And fnl\o"' the trr~1 ment
"h1ch can pre\'en l d1sabi)11" 10 '"" fir~t
place or rt'duc:e 11 afttr II ha~ hal"rened
l'hey don I kno"' the facts.
A:'\'QTllER tl ESlJLT IS that , dt· \°Hie
the terrible hum:ln anr1 ernn11nl1r 1011 Jt
ll!kts. chMn1r arthr1'1J1; 11,rt~ hn111111'. of
tht·pl1t prior i!\' for pub hr 1u:11nn \1 .'1•1\'
of ou r 13>. dn\lat'S Rrr .'l)('nl 1•n mrrh• ..i1
<'ill'• t1nd \\elf11rP p:1\·n11>nf\ /nr ~1·1hn11~
\lr11mc. Rlready dl~blr<l F@w nf nnr 1111
t1n\];1r,_. are ~prnt nn 11r1hr111~ Cl'n!er\ 1111rt
sf'r1•ices to pre\'en.t rt isabilJI}' 111 the flrCit
pl act:.
Guest Edi toria l
ThP Uniled Statc1i JllOl'crnm l'nl .!iJ>Cnds
lr~~ than 75 ri!nls per victim per year nn
ar1hr1t1~ research and training. to which
The Arthnl11i Foundation can add less
lhAn 10 rents.
tr YOU ltAVt~ ARTlU\JTJS. v.•e hope
~·ou ~'ill t1ct by -eking proper medical
care.
\Vheiher you ha ve <1rthr1 tlg or not. ""''
hope you will dt.m11nd grtaler action in
)OUr community and In lht. nauon.
A Jireat deal c1n be don! 11bout
nrthrlt1s ~t uch i.!I being don, But much
mnrP could be done. l!'s up to ynu .
• \\'e utAI' ~nu to lr:arn the fa r.ls.
1\'ILLIAf\1 t . REY~OLDS, i\1.0.
lllrcc:tor, ~tedlc:•I & Sc:lentlfk Afft11lr1
Tbt Arft:,iil1 foundation
I • •
ROi\ALD (gloomily ): Boy, they sure
hurt me!
NANCY : Don 't bt despondrnt 1'taybe
if we cul and squet.ze and lrirri \\'e can
fiend in a dnllar or 1wo next ~·ear ~o that
you can OO!d your hr11ri up aJ!illn. And
your conservative frienrli; are still behind
~'OU. Look. hert's a telegram from the
Taxpayer~· League.
RONALD !brightening!: The\• still hke . . me ,
NA!\'CY· They certa1nl~....-do, dear . Sef'?
They're making you an honorary mem-
ber.
SO JUST KEEP in mind th;it the
~ovtrnor. nne of !ht grf'a1ei;t ~upporters
of our form or gn\'ernmrnt. .,.,·ould surely
~upporl It if he cou!cl . He doesn't want
~·our pily. Send him in~!e11d ynur cast-off
garment.s, your cltnted cannecl Roods and
maybe a nice ChristmilS h11sket.
But ahove all, in hi~ hour n[ need . QP.
deser\'cd nn1 our scorn but ra!her nur ar1·
rniralion for hi~ cnuragf'. In the months
11head lel us s'ruggle Ln rollnw tht shining
example hf' has set ror 'very cil\zcn
The deadline is next April 15.
--ma;11.1i-
Monday. May 17, 1971
The edirorial p<rpt of tht' Dnil y
Pfloi S£('ks to n1/orm onrl shrri·
ulott' r,arltrs by prPslnting thiJ
neu:spapcr'1 opn1fol'l.f and com.·
mcnUl1'y 011 topics of i111crtst
and significanct, by rrovid1na a
forum for th« ('.fpress1on of
011r renders' opi1110111, and by
prr.~,nti11g ll1e rliver.~r. viP11>-
poiirls of lttlormrrl. nb~tr\Jer8
nnri spoke.s men on top1rs CJ/ J.he
day.
l\obert N. Weed, Publuhcr
CHECKING · •UP•
Please Don't Eat
The Valley Lilie s
By L. ~t. BOYD Ilaly. St.ill. the girls In
WRESTLERS COl\IE fa:om Thailand are frequently nam-
lar&e families, ten nis players ed as the most beautiful of all.
from small famil ies, almost They are not tall. b_lue-eyed
always. . .\VAY TR E blondes, bul they do not ap-
SCIENCE BOYS tell whether pear handicapped by this
a beaver is male or fem ale is misfortune.
give said beaver a blood test CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q .
. . . ALl\10ST BUT NOT QUlTE "How' much does one of I hose
half of all the gro"'" women M-16 rifles cost th e Army
murdered are killed by their no"·?" A. About $150. lnciden·
husbands. tally, .remember the old M·I
NOT EVF.N ONE of 1hese rirle? That only cost the Army
23,000 youngsters -ever had a about $31 just 25 years ago
run-in with the la"'· Ama zi ng ! ... Q. "You said your Chief
They were brought U.P as ··Prognosticator foresaw the
nudists. they were. And the rlcfca t of Cassius Clay by Joe
propone nts or this particular Frazier. 'Vhat do:es he pred ict
way of life . who 1narle a study on the return march1" A. A
of these children. contend TKO by Frazier.
nudists never. but never get
arrested for anythin_g except
nudity. Interesting. if true.
OPEN QUESTIO N: \Vhere'd
we ~et the saying. "Take il
with a grain of salt"?
l\1EN HEREABO UTS bought
fewer suits. far fe"•er. last
year than they bought even in
the poorest year of the Great
Depression. Sport clothes are
why . The solid bus1nesi; s1ut is
takin.c: a beatin.a . lsk ts k ...
.,, Ai\1 ASKED l() spc-cH~ that
entertainer \\'ho has held the
greate~I aurl1enr-C' for !hP
longest time. Can't irk>ntify
the fe\lo'A' b\' n;:ime , but he"s
ne ither a radio nor tele\'ision
performer. that's ce rta in. He
draws a newspaper ,comic
!lrip.
ARGmtE!\'T CONTINUES
over the whereabouts of the
wor ld's most beautiful women.
lt's a tossup. some sa~·
between the tall. blue-eyed
blondes of Mexico and the tall
blue~yed blondes of Northern
WHAT a lovely flower is the
lily of the valley! So del icRle .
so pure! Eat it, however, and
it will give yo u diarrhea. , .ON
THAT l,IST of 25 things peo-
ple are most apl to worry
about. infidelity ranks No. 4.
unwanled pregnancy No. 12
and demotion on 1he job No.
16 ... If "UNCUPYRJ GHT·
ABLE" isn't the Ion g es I
F.nglish "·ord that doesn't
repeal any letter. nu r
L.ani;::ua,g~ man will blush a
de ep red .
RAPID REPLY : '('rue. New
York Cily hes west o f
Valpa raiso. Chile. But no. you
humo rist, not due west.
Y our questiru1s rrnd cn1n·
111ent.s are welcomed 011d
u;ilt bt used in Checking
Up whereve,. po s s i b t e.
Plea~_address your letters
to L. /If. Bnyd , P.O. Box
1875, Newport Bea ch,
92660.
Father's Day is June 20
ORDER THIS WEEK!
--Large, lovely 11x14
Father's Day Portrait
that says "We love you!"
only 4 88
Ves ••• a magnificent 11 xt 4 Salon Portrait •• ,
(more than half the size of lhia newspaper pag_e)
of you and both your children and thefamlty petJ
A warm and wonderful gift lor Dad on Fathe(a
Day that keeps on 18.yin g ''We love you"' all year
long! Remember you can &yge It at Penney'&.
l\nne\fl
,Ul ll!ll 10N HUNTINGTON !l.t.CH
O••"oe•11r ''""' Hv"tl"O'O" t•~•r• 1"11 """'· 111-•ld -'""' !IC!')• .~, ,,,,
-
N•W~Oll:T lli4C.H
~·-~•C" l1l•M1
]r>CI tlcor !•"-'1U
..
Monday, May 17, 1971 DAJLV PILQf T
"·
>
Summer, 1971. '
These P~nney values
m'ake it a breeze.
gee Wool/aciyllc/nylon boucle
· knit sweater In fash ion
colors, sizes S-M-L. Women's boot wi th brushed
Men's boat shoe with
heavy weave cotton
cl uck upper, cushion
lnsofe, herrii;tgbone
design molded rubber
outsole. Assorted colors.
Boy's boat shoe in sizes
2Yz to 6 ••• 4.99
Youth's boat shoe in
8izes 10to2 ... 3.99
Women's boat shoe
with heavy weave
cotton army duck
upper, cush ion insole,
herringbone design
molded rubber outsole.
Assorted colors.
4ee
Girl 's boat shoe wilh
flat slab outsole, sizes
10to2 ••• 3.99
• ' .. • ..... ' .... .... . .... .. ' °'• °'\I ...
'
.. . . " " . ... •• .. •• •• ••• ...
· leather upper, flexible.
stitch out construction.
natural plantation crepe
outsole, sizes 4to10 in
hot chocolate /sand . 11ee
Men 's boot with two-tone
brushed split leather
upper and genuine
plilntatlon crepe rubber
sole and heel. Sand /tan
. lnsizes61h1to13.
5e9
Mon's 3 stripe ox ford wllh
expanded vinyl upper, cushion
Insole, herringbone boat sole.
White with blacka~!pe.
Boy's oxford in sizes
2\lz to 6 ••• 5.911
Youth's oxford in sizes
12\lz to 2 ••• 5.911
Women's 3 atrlpe oxford
with expanded vinyl upper,
·cushion Insole, herringbone
boat sole. White with
black stripe ••. 5.tll
'
Polyester woven
twill with new 20''
flare leg. Navy,
brown, beige,
white, red or
ye llow In sizes
5}6to15/16.
enne111
The values are here fNery day.
Cotton/linen ri~bed
pullover. Natural color
in sizes 36 to.40.
.
All colton knit bonded
to acetate tricot.
Geometric prints In
·fash ion colors, sizes 5/6
· to 15/16.
•
•
CHARGE THESE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STOREI •
1
'
r
•
I
. .
'
~ 8 OAJLV PILOT
Youtli's
Jox ride
[(ills 4
Be1·l\:eley Editors
Face Melee Probe
• LOS ANGELES IAP\ -
\Vhat began as a Joyride in his
uncle's: c;:ir for \J.vc;:ir-0ld
Barnt'y JO\'('t' endt'Cf "'ilh him
and ihrce oth{'r teeniigi"rs
l'-'Cll'ad ;ind lhree more injured
.e rter lh(> t•ar rrashfd Into
:anot her auto, pohce said .
BERKELEY fAP\ A an individual member can be
appeal«! to the chancellor. re1'itw board for the l.inivt-rsi-
.! ()f11cl'r~ said Joycl'. of the
j;uburhan San Fernando Valley
('Ommu nily of T111unga. took
Jhe car \\ 11hnu1 pcrm1ss1on
l;aturday. picked up some
Jr1ends and a hi!chhiker and
Jater crossed O\'Ct the double
)ine on I.a Tuna Canyon Road
Jntn 1he -0ncnm1ng I an e,
.-,;1drs111ped one car and crash·
f-d 10111 an other.
Killed 111th Jovce ~·ere
}Ja1•id Laurit zen. ifl. of Tu·
•,lunga and the dti\'et of !he
~her car. Dennis Broberg. 19,
d his passenger Jeffery K.
arncs. 17, both of La
Cst:enta.
Dona!d Dahill. 16. of Tu·
junga. the hitchhiker v.:i!h
J1•11ce. and Dehorah Chevalier,
17.' of La Crescenta. were
IJ~trd in sa!isfactory condition
\\'Ith mu)ltple fractures
ty of California's student
newspaper is to determine
whether any t'ditors should be
punished for an editorial last
v.·ee k urging that the cyclone
fe~ce around the "Pe<1ple·s
Park'' be torn down.
The Daily C11ifornian in an
editorial later in lhe week org-
eel that any demonst rat ion
marking the 1969 riot al the
"P'!<lple's Park'' ~ peac.1!ful.
~'onethetess. v I o I e n c e
erupted during Saturday's
demonstration by some 500
persons and 41 were arrested
and eight inju red.
The I I-member publishers
board. appointed by the
universitv chancellor, was to
n1eel today. Its alternatives
for actions against members
of the editorial staff including
l'i-ring or suspension from a
job. docking of pa y or simple
censure . \
John r::mschwiller, editor-in-
chief of the Dail y Cal. said :
"Any punitive aCtion against
"We trust ttii.! is not going
to be necessary because we
feel the newspaper advocated
a peaceful dem<lnslration. We
riid not want what happened to
happen," he said .
"At first things were cool,"
he said. "The pollce -who
obviously weren't interested in
slartin,1 anything -were
being very cool. Then JOme
few among the demonstrators
started lhrowing rocks ind
that set off the chain of events
and a scenario nol much dH·
ferent than what happened
1wo year!! ago ."
At that time , students and
street people took over the
block-squ are site owned by the
univer5ily to create the park.
When the university built the
chain-link fence around il and
evicted the young people a riot
erupted, killing one perton.
The )and , now a parking lot
and soccer field, ili largely
boycotted by the student com4
munity.
I EVERY SATURDAY 1 · 2 STEAK
DINNERS FOR
• French Frie •
• French Fried On ion Ring•
• To,.ed Solod • Roll ond Butter
Bring • friend ! Teke edvenf.eqe of thi1 delic:iou1 din-
ner for 2. e t • iust riqht pric:•. 1/1 lb. tend t r choice
1feek, c:uf to Bred-ford Hou1e 1pec:ific:etion1. Be 9ood
to • fr iend. or meybe the femily7 Thi1 meel, i1 •
fevorite with ell ~ • t you'll be • winnt r.!
• rllOJli/j KNOWN FOR VALUES
•
0,.n D.lly
MM-thru let.
t ilO •·"'· t• f '·"'· lurwfay
10 a.m. t• 6 ,.m.
GRANT PLAZA -BROOKHURST I. ADAMS -HUNTINGTON BEACH
Give him everything ...
the time, the day
and the date
Accutron ®
by Bulova
the most accurate watch
in the world
Accutron by Bulov a gives
him more than the right time,
Now he can have the
precise day and date. too.
All triggered by the unique
Accutron tuning fo rk
movement that .splits a
second into 360 equal parts,
guaranteeing accu racy to
within 11 minute a month.•
Be he hu sband, father, son,
groom or graduate-give
him what he deserves.
Everyth ing. A new Date
and Day Accutron by Bu lova.
Din INI Iii "I"
JIM 10!0• 10'1 CHI 1114
11Ucftt« Hft•. Sll•·rr •l1I.
SIN.
Est1bli1hed 43 Ye1rJ I
HARBOR
SHOPPING CENTER
JJOD HAlllOll ILYD.
COSTA MISA
SA15·f411
• orfH MON., TMuas. ' ,., .. 'Tl~ • P.M,
\ , ,
UTI i llO l&Y ....
ltllftftll llHI,
Srl~•r ~II!. w .. 1 ... "' ~•Jld• •Ml fl'ltrlt n. ,,. ..
,. __.. ....
HUNTINGTON
CENTER
ll.t.CH I IDIN•ll
HUNTING-TON l lACH
at2.s1e1
•
Two Slain
In Pa.rty
Argument
LOS ANGELES !AP) -A
24-ytar-old truck driver has
been booked for investigation
of murder in the slayi ngs of
two teenager11 and criticaf
wounding of a third after a
dispute at a party, police 1ay.
Police said Ronald C •
Mallory, of Sunland. was book·
ed when he walked into a
police station early Sunda y
and surrendered lieveral hours
afte> the shooting erupted at a
suburban San Fernando Valley
party attended by .about 20
guts ts.
Authorities said witnesses
told them a dbpute broke out
between :fl.1allory, who wasn 't
invited to the party. and the
invited guests and th a t
Mallory went to his car and
returned with a .22 rirle.
The dead teenagers were
identified by police as .Joseph
J. Harmon , 17, and Wand;i
Keheley, 17. both or Sunland.
The third youth, Norman
Kellams , 22. tlf North
Hollywood, was in crit ical con·
dition at Pacoima Lutheran
Hospital with a bullet wound
in the bead, police said.
Tax Drive
Stepped Up
In State
SACRAMENTO IU PI)
Lawmakers and Gnv. Ronald
Reagan are increasing efreru
to get some form o! a tu
revisinn package threugh the
Legislature.
Assembly Democrats art
pushing a $2 billion plan by
Assembly Speaker Bob Morel-
li (D-Van Nuys l a n d
Assemblyman Joe Gon.~alves
fD-La Mirada ) chairman of
the Revenue and Taxa!ion
Committtt. The program WllS
scheduled for its second hel!r·
ing before lhe committee !ale
today.
SI.Ile Finance Di rec t fl r
verne Orr said the ad·
ministration is working on 11:
plan nearly identical to the
governor 's pro1ram of last
ye11:r whic h died in the Senate
one vote short of pass1ge.
•
Educators March
On State Capitol
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Te ache rs , criticized
PICTURE FRAME DEALERS
ART GALLERIES .,
PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHERS
Wt ~IWt .,....,. I WMOLl$ALI OUTLET tif ~fy·lftJ~t 1"1,..-r• lllf
.. ,....Uc .ic;hl,.. Ir•-It! ct11j11Mli9n wllfl ""' •tllll 11tM.
Go• Ronald Reagan and the !~:d~:tors; e ~e~l~r~nrgs th.~~ THE THINKIR FRAME SHOP
Legislature have bftn warned assemblymen will find out how
h th f th le New LM.etlo11: 621 WEST ltth STIEIT, COSTA MISA that t e wra o e vo rs it fetls to be unemployed .. if would be. turned on them if they do not vote for more !Nut !e MtDon•kl't 1<11mt111rg1r1; •<•ou from Blu• c~1~ St1m11 • lt.OtmPllon \to!•)
they do not act to improve -Jsc~hoo~l~f~u~nd~s~.-H=e~s~ai~d~IS:.OOO:!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~g schools in California . teacher s now are out of work
ln California. The· warning was voiced
repeatedly Saturday as about
1,500 teachers, parents and
labor union members marched
to the State Capitol demanding
more stale funds for schools.
The crowd was far Jess than
the 10.000 to ?5,000 march
organizers had predicted.
At a rally on the Capitol
west steps-Earl Sulloway,
chief business representative
for the State Employes Union,
asked OW' demonstrt1lors to
"throw the governor's con·
tempt back at his face. Let
him know we've got votes t1nd
v.·e're going to use them ."
Raoul Tellhet. president of
the California federation of
Carpenter ..
Arrested
In Sniping
J(i!ANHATIAN BEACH !AP)
- A 24·yet1r-<ild carpenter was
arrested -after a sniper fired
shots at passing cars herr, llit-
fing three of them and woun-
ding a woman driver with a
near fatal bullet in her back.
police say.
Pol ice said Jereme Rock, ef
Encinitas, was booked for in-
vestigation e( assault with in-
lcnt to commit murder and
taken to USC-COunty Hospital
for psychia tric observation.
The woman, identified as
Venice Agnes Snyder, 45, <lf
Sears
YOU WORK LESS ,
Keeps things cleaner without effort, elirnl·
nates bath tub rings ..
YOU SAVE MONEY
Soap and clothing last longer.
Dlsffs -
Ask Aboal Sean co .. en1en1 Credit Plans
'Complete IntaJJatfonAvallable! Just Ask!
Manhattan B"ch, drove •ix Buena Par'· 8150 La Palma Ave. Ph. siS-4400 blocks to her heme after being ~ ..
shot Saturday before col-ears So. Coast Plaza 3333 Bristol St. Pb. 540-3333
lapsi nR behind the wheel of Santa Ana 1716 So. Main St. Pb. 547-3371
her car. I ~"""·~~~~~~~~~·~~~""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""~:'.'.:'.'.:'.'.~ She was reported in gfltldl-
condition a fl e r emergency
surgery at South Bay District
Hospital. Doctors said the
bullet just misstd he r
pulmenary artery.
Susie Q's
Leap Best
ANGELS CAMP (UPll -A
leggy Jass named Susie Q is
the crown princess o f
frogdom .
Susie Q, raised on .ii diet of
flies . hamburger and bread
crumbs. leaped a whopping 17
feet !P, inches to capture the
Kentucky Derby of the frog
!let Su nday.
The leaP'"' al the annual
c~laveras County jumping
rrog jubilee fattened with S300
the wallet ()f her owner. Bill
Moniz. 1 Gwtine. Calif., dairy
engineer.
Custom draperies at
uncustomary prices.
Save up to 1/3.
Beauty Bulletin
from Penneys: ., ;.
Two beautiful ways lo
Spring-into-Summer.
Freshen up with our
Sue Cory 'Balsam Plus' Perm. 1250 including shampoo,
cut and set.
Or try a Helene Curtis
'lncradlble' conditioner
trNtmenl Only ~aa
Includes 1h1mp00
and set.
'ULlltt'!'Olol
O••~t• (tntft , ,,,, ,,..,, 111·•'''
(
NUNTINOlON ll•C:M
Nwntln11t~ (tnl"
1nl !Jet•. 1'1·"'1
r
'
" l I ' '
f i I j I
I I I ~J I Jl. '. G
Now you can hsve cuslom draperies at
tremendous savings. Up to 1/3 off on a fabric
col lection that includes: open weave casuals,
homespuns, antique satins. sheers and
many more. Don't pass uo this chance to
save on draperies made to your order. Our
·finest fabrication at regular low prices._
can collect (714) 523-6511 for
our shop-at-home service, free.
bru.t~·
Decorete now. U1e Penneys time p1yment plan,
t
Mo~J1, M.U 17, 1971 DAILY PllDT 9 ....,,.
c.W~'.fimr I Proj ects Gets Plaw1er OK
Greenbelt Pro osal Set for Board t · . In Coon~
Deatla l\'oti!'e•
1•VIUllTOCIC
llurl H, .... trolKk. lot P•1eo d• I•
Ser1111•1•, S.11 Cl-!•. 0.tt olf dloell'I, /,\f~ "· 511rvlved lly wilt, Glt dYI f ,
6•vtntocll.; ""'' 111-•I F 6t11trsl!:i<lo..
(.11 • ..i1nd, Ol'lio1 ~U9~1er. Mtrv E Johfl-
•c"' Cort i Gt Dlff, Florkl•. se .... ICtl
0.,..,,,., •I 11'.c:!l!c v1..., Morlu•••.
CAMPIJllL
OQ<J'Olt l Al•n CtmPM ll. At• 1J, vt un
Pe1111u1. S..nlt Ant O.tt ol dt11'11, Mt•
!! S11rvi•e<I bY Pt rtnh, Mr t rid M ...
cntnaler E Ct mi>Mll: 1l1Ters. P•11l1 /.I
t 1mpb•ll, S•n!I 8trntr1; Mtrllla A.
(4....,1>111, Stnl• Ant ; 1H"c•ner1, OGnt ld,
01 Se11111: ll:oOert N C1m0Dell, St n!I
~"' StrvlCt l. UllllY. Mon111v, 10 AM.
!'ltlll Ceroni dol!I Mtr Cllt Pt l, ln!erm.,.!.
Fii•l•t ••n Memorlt l Ptrk. fttlll Coront
<1•1 M•• Morh11rv, dlr1dor1. CARLTON
r.uv E. Ctrt!on. 670·P Avt11ldt ~tvll!1,
Ltuunt HUit. 0.lt o! !llltlll, Mt Y ll s .. rvlvtd b• .. ue. c1 .. 1ne M. Ct rlton;
10n, P'ul F Ct rllon, W11f11ng!on, O.C.1
r11uon1er. Ml11 MtrY Ellen C1rlto•" of
Porlli nd. Or..,..; two ,,.,,acMldr..,,,
(,r••Uklt 1tr•lc••· l PM, IOC!tY: Mon·
<1av, El To•o Ctm•lt rv. McCorm•tk Lt ·
uun1 Bei en Morlll''V· dorK•o,.
CHAM&fllil ~·t•• Cntml>er<. AQ>< n. cl 1009 Pec~n.
>iul'•lnt•on 6e•ch 01'• o• d111n, ""•~
1• ~urvlvt<I b• .,,tt. Jovct ; ion Adr<•n: uni~• • .1enn T (~1..,tiero, motnt r, Mn
1>1..trlc11 u 11: b•o•~er. Cra•~ Cnt "'be"'
, 1ter1. Sht " Hl .. ~ln1 •"" J1mo~ ~1' ~~vkft. \l)Oav. MO!WllV. 10 •M ~molfl1
f "'10t l. lnlt"""nr. W•1lm1n>!•• M1mor-
,.1 Ptr~ ~m.1n1 Mllrl\11'"· Oorec~,.
Ot F lLLIPll'I\
Jc<oP!I Dt Ph•lloo<"'· 2091 P i.(tl'llt ,
Co•!& M••• Ollr cl delln M1V I• 5~•vivoa bY tostt• a1u0Mtr. Mf1 C•••V
KoelJ Jl:ostrv tcn•Ql\1, Mon<!~•. 7 JO P,Y. ~frY•<••• Tut•dlY, ll •M. bOlh t i l!ltl"
Co,ta Me~ Morlu•rV C~11>f!I. lnt1rrnenl,
r,oo<1 Snt otletd (tmtlorY 81tlt Cot!•
M••• Mortu1ry, Ol•K.IOrl.
DILACY
G1ibefl DeLI CIV. 7011 Oilnt Lt n•. N-·
00,1 8eic~. Ot!I o! <ltltl\, Mt " U . Sur·
YtYtd ov wtfe. Jeannattt OILtct v; <1•~oMtrl, Ptm•ll, o! 1111 "°""'· t nd (,nav. of Wt l!mln•le•: ..,,.,, G1rv ind
C•olu· 11111,, M'I Je1n oonntllv, N•W-
""'' '611,n; bro1n•r. Lorlt OtL~ctv. r~••• Mt•t 5.,-y,ce1, Tu•Ml•v, 1 P,M_·
V.estclll+ cn,.,.t • .,.1111 f r C.,lbb• ot!i<•· ~1,,,. Private ;nttrmtn! 11 P1c1tk V\ew
.1.1ornOr111 Park. w.-,1<l!H Cl'lto>•I Mor1u·
~ry, ..._,.l!I. D~~':'~N
HirN C Jenn..,,, Sr Att 72, ct 41S
Gctnt m. NewP<:r! ee"cn 0.11 ol dol!lll'I.
MtY I! SurY•VPd bV w•lf , Mvr!lt f
Jot1n10n; •CM, HAtfV c J• .. Newp.cr~ !e•cn; l<e,,nt!n H John.on_. 1>111dtnt .
b·c .. 1er Fron.It. o4 51n O•tQCI:. 1ISIH.
11.,, ,_.,,,, Jo~nlobn. ~tn OIPOO, •e•~," C'l~dtll•lC:•tn ~e'"'''· 1.11on<:11v 1 P~ · ~1 .l.ndre.,.1 PrP!DYlf"f" (nv«ll. p,,,
""'P in•e•n•en• "' "''''" vic: ... M•"""''
1•1 P~·• l!lt!I! Ceron• d~I ""'r Morh1trv.
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCLIFf MORTUARY
427 E. 17th St .. Costa i\1esa
"'"'™ • BALTZ i\10RTUARIES
Corona de\ i\lar . 673-9450
C'1sta \\fcsa 646-2414
--
• BELi~ BROADWAY
i\IORTUARV
llO Broadway. Costa 1\1c8a
LI 8-3~33 • 1\!cCOR:\IJCK UGUNA
BEACH 1\IORTUARY
1795 Laguna Canyon Rd.
494-!41~ • r ACIFTC VIEW i\I F.:~IORIAL PARK
tcnieterr 1\lortuary
Cha pt I
:u;oo Paci fic \'itw Orh·e
Nc~porl Rc11ch. Caliloro\1
144-tiOI • PEEK F"ULY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
1so1 nolsa A\'c .
\\'estn1inster 193-3525 • S~llT11'5 i\IORTUAR\'
&27 i\l:tln St.
~6-6~9
llunUn;tlon Bcarb
-•
Outlined n, JACK BROBACK
Ot "'' Ot llr PUel Pill
cotnmission last Y.'l!'Ck by of·
ficia l' bf the Orange County
SANTA ANA Orange SAi\l'fA ANA _ Sonietinie Wnter District. They warned
County Supervisors will get a next nionlh. Orange County that lh e plan may simply be
proposal soon for the ex· Supervisors will ponder the "too expensive -as much as
pendJture or $7 ,458,743 in Sanla A n 8 River-Santiago $120 mllllon." 1 capital (new building) proje<:ls Creek Greenbelt Plan. a pr o· The consultants offered a
for 1971-72. The figure was µ0sat ror 8,400 acres of park breakdown of the acreage in-
pared down from $19.4 million lands stretching along the 37 volved. but no cost estimtile
in requests from c o u n l Y linear ini!cs of river and creek for developing the proposed 13
department heads. p Ii } u • l fron1 the beach at 1be rivPr square n1iles of park lands.
Included in the total is 0 S } m 111ou1h 10 the Riverside Counly This was specifically excluded
$2.884,322 in rents. leases and line. lron1 the scope or the $30.000
debt service payments which Ho..:t..: ·Pat•ly The tOnC'ept. dra\\·n Uil by study county supervisors a~i..·
cannot be reduced to any large ~ ~ lhl' f'n\•ironmenta\ planning ed Bckbo. Dean. Austin <ind
degree. • firm of Eckbo. Dean. Austin Willia1ns lo condu ct.
• ~ b a I a n c e lea ves SANTA ANA-Orange Coun-and Williams of Uls Angeles. The project would ifl\•olve
$4 ,574,421 for new building ty's chapter of the Polish Na· won a unanimous vote of con· ?,163 acres of publicly-oy,•ned
compared with $17,439,522 re-lio nal Alliance will sponsor a fidence last week from the land, 293 acres of quasi-publ:l'
quested. polka party 1'-1ay 22-al St. <'oun ty Planning Con1mission. land such as thal held by
Biggest item on the list is h h As )'et. a date has not been set util ities. 5,916 acres of private Gregory the Grell C urc d bo ooo $2,120.000 for the Harbor ror the plan's airing before property an a ut 2. at·res
Juicial District Court building Hall in Whitti er. county supervisors. of rive r and creek bed.
at Newporl Center . · The 8 p.n1. lo l a.m. soiree The propasal has met with In 11 five-page letter to l'l'\\U\·
A new welfare, health and will reature s au s a g e , general applause. It has raised ly ph~nnf'rs. George Osborne.
probation department building sauerkraut , cake and pastrie:P high ho~s a1nong <>colog~·-clue( <>nginet•r for the Orange
in southwest Santa Ana would Polka instruclOr t:ugepe minded citizens, !\ also has Counlv Flood Confrol DistriC'l.
cost an estimated $1 million. Ciejka \Yill be present , with left son1e questions. eited ·some other difficultic~
A start on Ille proposed solid coaching covered by the $1.i5 The ke~· question of co~~ wa s U1e plan rnay face.
waste dispoal site in the San admission fee. raised before the plannin~ Arsthetic lrea1mf'nt n1u~t
Juan Capistrano area may getl -------------------------
race the realities of en~teer· (s1 niilar to f 1 o o d 1 n g In bt taken against :i:uch a
ing practicahty, Osborn tau· J<1nunry·Ft'bruury 1969 i rrecway as 1t represtnls the
tinned. "It is hoped the corps of areatesl single threat to tht
He prefac·td his suggestions r11g1ncers will undertake COil· proposed greenbelt plan."
\\'ith, "It is essential 10 keep 111 ~1ruc1ion through this area .l i~~~~~~~j~~~-mind that the Santa Ana River 1 lowcvcr. if a federal project --
and Santiago C..'reek are doe~ 1101 niaterialize it will be
prim a r i I y watcrcourSl'S. 1110~1 udvisable to un dertake
usually quiet , but at times 1hl' "''Ork :is a local project
t•apablr of causing widespre;ld bcc;iusc of lhr critical nature
property damagr. hun1an SUI· t1F the deficient)'.
fering and loss or life In th1<1 "The channel coold overflow
role. the se ,,·a1ercourses n1u~t ;"Jnd produce \\'ides pre a d
Uc ela::.sified arnong lhf' ('o un· dan1agc and loss of life unless
1y·s grentesl enen1ies." l'.>t•dimentation is controlled
~losl of the chief cngin1·e r's upslrean1.''
cautions Cilneerned technica1 Osborne also notes that the
points in relation lo cert:i111 report is "silent about the
flood control devices. which. potential for scenic high'A'B}'S
he said, need study for p~ !o enhance visibility and ac·
relationship to the greenbelt \'CSS to the greenbelt cor·
plan. ridor ':r; currently inaccessible
For C.:\ample . "The portion portLOns. In addition, the nr the river fro1n 17th Strrc! poss1b1l1ty of a north-south
11n Santa 1\11111 to the 'ocean freeway running along or on
presents SJK'C1al p r o b 1 e n1 s \up of the Santa ~na River
\1'h1ch can not be so!Ved al this f1·u111 the San 1\11;,1 Frer1vay lo
tin1c. The channel 111 \hi~ art>a lhe l'Oasl is not 1nentioned.''
is insufl iricnt 10 1.:arry n1or1> lie su~·s .
1han a :\U-yC'ar frrriuf'ncy flood "/\ po~1111·r i;tantl rnusl
MONDAY AT I
AnotMt Ch•n<•!
TO LOOK INTO
YOGA
flEl OIMONSTlATION
b't K•lidGl Ir lho1otl
e Lifelcn9 8entflh e A Vitt i led~ e A Clttr Mind
YOGA CENTER
445 I. 11th St'"'
Cost11 Mn11 646-1211
Sttrl !II• bllntli!t ng ..
SS00.000 toward a total cost of
$3.38 m.illioo.
A new lire statioo ln Laguna
Niguel is proposed at 1 ~t of
SI 13,000 bul this sum would be
spent only if the ~ ~ r t.h
american Rock'A'ell bu1\d1ng 1n
that area is occu pied.
OPEN DAILY 10 to 10; SUN. 10 to 7 ••
The proposals for t:apital
spending \Vere prepared by
\V C. Ennis. space cootroi and
planning executive in the
county administrative offiee.
Larges t item requested but
left oul of the proposed capilal
projects budget that will go to
supervisors is Sl.35 mi llion for
completion of the fourth floor
of the Orange County Jail.
Also dropped from the ad-
ministrative proposal was a
$620,000 request for finishing
the municipal court \Ying on
the J.hird flooT of the county
t•ourthollSC.
Other projects postponed in-
clude a new welfare building
in I.he nonh\vest part of the
county. $630.000 ; sh e r i I (' s
training center site. $375.000:
a new ju venile hall a<idillon,
$425.000; completion or thl!' 8th
rloor in the ~\\' eourthous<'.
$500.000: 8 municipal coun e:r::·
pans.ion in Fullerton. SI.II
million : updating of the.. fire
protection system at the
medical center. S 2 g 7 . O O O :
1nedical center 1nodernization.
SI.~ million.
JLu·y Lauds
4 Officers
FULLERTO N F o u r
Fullerton police officers who
wounded a robbery suspect
after he opened fire on them
Feb. 18 have been singled oul
for praise in an Orange Coon·
ty Grand Jury resolution.
The jury commended of·
fictrs Billy A. Crook. Dennis
P. Bryerton, Carl Rees and
Donald A. Leavell for "their
courage and dedic ation in lhe
apprehension of E u g e n e
Charles Savage."
"Thanks and appreciation to
these brave men and to all
members of our po I ice
forces." was extended in the
resolution.
The officers responded to a
rad io dispatch of a robbery in
progress of a bar and spotted
Savage as he fled the scene
and opened fire upon them.
Hearing Set
l<~or Suspect
SA:"JT A ANA -A sanity
hearing has been ordered in
Orange County Superior Court
for an Anaheim 11.·oman ac·
cused or murder in the deat h
by drov,,ning of her five-year·
cld son.
Judge James F. Judge
ordered ~lary Jo Gale, 37. to
be returned lo his courtroom
June 3 for the sanity pr<r
ceedings. She i.~ held in
Orange County J ail y,•ithoul
bail.
i\1rs. Gale was arrested Feb.
22 and accused of killing
Patrick Gordon Gale by
holding the child's head under
the bathroom faucet unt il he
dro11o'ned. It was the lillle
boy's firth birthday.
UC I Grant 1'old :
IRVINE The Orange
County ~oledieal Association
and iU women·~ auxiliary
have presented $6,958.00 to the
UC 11'1ine Coltege of Medicine
on behalf of the American
1<1edical Association's Educa·
lion and Research Foundation.
1~-
LOCAL
No •lhor n•w•ptpt r te\15 YOU
mo11, ••t fY dty, 1bo~l wh1!'1
I
q oi"'J on ln illt Gt•tler O r1n9e
(";ot 11 th e n 011 OA IL'f ,llOl.
nu~" w~ •• "' r •·•·•~ •"fvt ... 1 "' o '" • , o "'"'••• .,,,_ !••"' • "'" '' I•·• 1•• "''"''" ''' "'""'M "'"'''''J ""'~'"'''~··· ......... ~ ......... .,," ........... , ........ ! ,. .• r .. ,. •"'"" ~' """ .,,..,. . ....., ........ ..,._,,,.... -, ... _......_. a1 _,. '"' •. ~··· ............................. ~ ...... ., " ... ""'' '"""'" .~ ...... "' ......... , ...... ,_,., .. ,..,.. •• ,, •• ,.., •• w '
r•r•t.1 • "' '·' •••ntr1 11 o '"' o , o, o ~"' '" •• , ...... ••''"''""' .. "'.,,,,..,IN ••' •• ' ft! ''"
... , .............. n 1 ........ , ............ , ,.1 .... ··~····-····· ...... ,,
.. '"' ........ , ,11 .............. ·~·•·"" ................ ~ .. • "'"· .... . ................ ~ .......... "' ..... '" ......... '. "" '"'. '"""" "' .... "" po•••••"'" • In OM --•••I..,,.,.,, h••~ ""'""'"' i;;:~~:l ·· .............. ""' ····~ ......... "' .......... , ... ) ~ ....... " ........ ,...,,_
VOH!ff~.loll "' ruJs 1 ro
l 11 1 Al(
--:
STANDARD
l1>~l•lltt1on A•"!•bl•
DELUXE
ln1t1llt ltOo A~t•ltbl•
FISK WAXES
O Hi-LUSTRE WAX YOUR
D UPHOLSTERY CLEANER CHOICE
0 ~:~~!EWALL CLEANER 77c
OKh
D FISK WAX KIT ,.~.
FISK FAN BELT OR RADIATOR HOSE
'!'"" IJnl1'~!1r huy!l t-1" h :at thi~ llM' Jlrwr'
YOUR $188 CHOICE
FISK . AIR FILTER ''"
SPIN-ON OIL FILTER
TUl!lllliS 'RIC( Sill IACl41!R(
C71-13 (7.001 1999 2.00
(1.11' l1.J5) 2599 2.37
F78 '' 17.151 2~99 2.64
G78 ''!I 251 2899 2.69
G71 15 !l .25! 2.10
Htl ,, 11.ss1 3999 2.9ft
H711:; 1.S5 t J.01
J11.1' 1• •s1 3~99 JOS
J71 15 115 3.12
f••I" Te~ •nd t•Mt .. !n 3499 t.rt Oii 'f'lllH t l r, , l7115 19 15) 3.21
CHARGI! ITI All pr1c"' C)l1,1J f ldt1•I Ell<•lt T1111'1CI 111d•1ro \lft
nttvourur, WI llSIRVI THl RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITllS
COSTA MESA
2200 Harbor Blvd., at Wilson
SANTA ANA
1400 Edinger, at Bristol
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J 0 DAILY PILOT
QU&ENIE By Phil lnterlandi &fJ..Bf!.tt" ~-~~/ . .';:j~:_.,~J;~.t~, :·Jl:~-1:'.!{.c}.·.:t,· U.S. Health Insurance Dangerous?
s ,,.. ', , . .) .. ~c ... f• ... •t:.
SAN FRANCISCO -CBW) 'divldllalsonavolunlarybasi.<, 'wbatleaiures make up h•gh-·"To avoid plo~lems ' ol ·grams wllh new manpowa ~~llil\f .. -:\~
:.... Todafi "pUJh" for national with financial a 11i1 ta rice Quality health care coverage unrealistic fund ing as in ~1edi· and projec:t.s by the healthipr~ ~~·t~·:~:a-:,~:i., ::• ' . ··::~~;!<
health insurance could resull geared to need. Federal and -based on professional cal, the budget for the pro-fessions. . • ;;::~;;~;.~~.~~{i~}._ii.;;~~~.t;{if~~ :~;;:;~:,"~~'i':.f:;1~1::; slale governments -in ad-judgment g.am would be updaled bi'"-"Pmbably one of !he most ~)i)itt~~;ft~it';il
s:;~~u~~ a~d !~ ,~:~ ~~~iile ~ ~:U1J~:~ i:~~ f ~~B:~~l~sa ~oul~ ~nrc~?~ ~rs~ =~iry r:~ a
8~~si~::1:w~g ~~~ ~i::~~~~ni~~~~~~~ ~~~t ~: i~·: ;~;(;?~:j'.~.'~1:~~ti'~.·2t,··:~~
bankrupt the nalion," the financing. hospiLalization, nursing home inflation. comprehensive, long range ·l\,Rliii':·:··":,. .. ~t .•• ~ ...
president of Lhe California Benefits would be provided ~~~~1;:~:bi~;~~k~s.ser;~~~!i "It provides that plans or program. Today, there are ~:::~~iJJ"'r{j~;0.(~~~1\,, ·1,:~ ~~~~C:~. Association said here ~~:Jrsh forv~ec~~:cha~ 0: :c~ care, drugs _ every area of programs under th@ proposal more than 100 federal health ;.~~~~:r;.: ... :;(;'i'WtJl:~i
Dr. Roberta F. Fenlon ceptable levels of Cilvtrage. health care. It would permit must furnish evidence of cf. programs for specialized sec· ~:~~.·,·:: ~~. , .. \:.)'.-~1~::~~;0.~~: E°~~~1iu'dutm~~ci::~.18~~ : v :·~J~ ~S: rw;u!l~ ~ ·~:~eco! ~!~h p~~\~:~~t a~d ~~~i~~P~:: :7ti~ ~rdre~i~~ :~i;i~i:s~ L~~·n· s.lndf~n af~~frs: c~:~1~d ~":'.\:~\~~~b;~t~~j_;·~;;~,'.·:·'.·~-:~~
~~~~i~~~ea~a~:aan~~~ -m~-~ec~~~':'~~~sm~il~si.:ca~t~1!so:_:o~· u~t~1·,~· n~P ·~"~,-~~~:,~~~~·:_. _P_'°_ii'_•m_s_1_h_a1_fi_1 _h_i•_.!'~~~~i~"':';"~~~!1~1 ·~' Pl!l·P~;o~iao«:che~n~:_:~:_d_i:P~~~~-~~~h~~~'Y-e~c~:~i ~i'n~d~E~so-~?~~~,1~~1:__-ed_i_c_'"'_' ~:~~~~V~~·?:~~<~~.~i~:f.~i~~~·~~~~i:f!~:;:~f~.~;~;:.~~~· ~·· ~i·s~:::
S -17 .....-
~ex-. .. ~,,,,_i..i....1t1 r.:w..i•nP .. --..1.
0 I IUppoH it SHE wanted & houae call you'd hitch
up the ol' hone and buggy in a flash! RIGHT?"
Costly Habit~
U.S. Drug Problem Mounts
' By Unlled Prus lntera1tion1I
Billions ol dollars 1 n d
countless jobs are tied up In
the drug business -legal and
illlcit -and In programs
designed to cope with the pro-
blem.
With a $20-a-day habit -
$15-a-day habits are not
unknown -the nation's half-
million addicls alone spend
almost $4 billion a yea r on il-
legal drugs.
Stolea goods -an addkt'a
primary nleans or support -
are resold at anywhere
betwttn one-fifth and one ooe-
hundredth of the original
value. Replal'e!Tlent costs
through p«SOnal spending, tax
writeo!fs and insurance pro-
bably result in a $30 billion a
year turnover for American
industry.
lt is estimated that about
half the 13 bi 11 ion am-
phetamine a n d barbituate
tablet& produced by drug com-
pan~s each yea r find their
way into illegal channels.
Millions of dollars have gone
into the setting up and opera·
tion of drug rehabilitation and
treatment centers.
Even more funds ·have
poured intO the drug edueation
ricld, principally through the
creating nf programs and cur·
ricula for teaching about
drugs in elemeTitary and
secondary schools.
meeting. She is the first
woman ever to address the
102-year-old organizaiion.
She ciltd the British Na·
tional Health Service: "The
cost has become unreasonably
hlgh -both in terms of
money inefficiently spent and
in terms of damage: done to
the quality of medical care.
The British are losing physi-
cians on a large scale by
emigration to C an 11 d a ,
Australia 11nd the U.S."
Of thf! natlonill health plans
now beinri: considered by con.
gress. Dr. Fenlon s a Id ,
''Perhaps the greatett
criticism of compulsory plans
like that of Sen. Edward Ken-
nedy and Rep. Margaret Grif-
fiths is that they would
destroy @very aspect of our
present system -good as well
as bad.
"In their'-plact, they would
create a giant. unproven
system lacking flexibility a.nd
without adequate controls.''
The Nixon Administration'!
plan, she said . focuses on the
delivery or health services
through prepaid groups called
"health maintenance organiza-
tions." The approach. she cau-
tioned, "needs to be tested and
modified, based on pilol proj-
ects -rather than im-
plerpenled firs~ on a national
level through lel\slatiorl."
Califorhia Medical Associa·
tion expect1 to have its own
national heal th p I a" in-
troduced into congress, Dr:
Fenlon told the dentists.
The C M A proposal. she
said, "would offer health
benefits to all families and in-
1971 -AUTOMOBRE
$1,000
FDRNITURt~
lllAD THiii llMP\I llULlll
Once each hour KWIZ announces a name on the air
and that person spins the Dream Wheel for a dumce
o1 Sl,000 casli and hundreds of other pmes. Send
a,_iuud, or i& attached coupon (with :roor name,
ad.i.-and zip code, indadi ng phone nambor) IO
KWIZ, Sanla An>, California. 92703.
ON( ENTRY Pn PEltSON Pl.US£
I 1 I KWIZ DREAM wHm
I I N""""-------------r ADOt!ESS __________ _ l OTY ____________ _
I ZIP· ____________ _
I PHONc__ __________ ~
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KWIZ1480
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Floor CARE Appliances
Sears
lte"tofrirK Bra•h ~
•P deep..to.ni mtt
Ask About
Sean
Convenient
Credit
Plans
Sham1,0•1~
"'llBea.!-il ~
Md quickly
-ISearsJ .... -~
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Sears Heavy.-duty
Upright Vacuum Cleaner
•Deep-cleaning re.olving brush sweeps
up hidden dirt to thoroughly clean
carpers
«WIMA .. """" ........
• Big capacity vinyl bag holds throw·
away dust bag
• 3-position h<lndle ... rug pile
adjustment
Model 3050
-SearS-Kenmore
Shampooer-
Polisher
88
• 2-speed mo<or ••• balanced
polisher head won't tip when
I ifted from floor
• Includes brushes, buf-
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Model 83.l O or 82 30
Sears Lightweight
Easy-to-Carry 1 H.P.
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Low Price! s32
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TitOUI.._ ... --..... --..,......, H ........ P.M..•n.tllr1tltit.•.iDA.M.tet1aO P&..,. S•• ... A11• Otlly,u.t .. 6 P.M. tu .. ., Tlwrt.,ht.
••
Nixon on Tightrope ·
Red China R'!.._lations Miglit Ire... Soviets _
By STEWART HENSLEY
WASIUNGTON (UPI) -
President Nixon is walking a
diplomatic tightrope in his ef-
fort to improve relations with
Communist China without in-
curring the displeasur e ef the
.Sovlet Union .
The contlnuing Ideological
and geographical dispute
between China and Russia
causes each to be suspicious of
any evidence of collaboration
by the flth(:r with the United
States.
Nixon fears that if he ap-
pears to be moving too fast in
his effort to snuggle up to
Peking. this may damage pro-
!i p e ct s J._or reaching
agreements with the Kremlin
on such major Issues as
limitation of stralegic nuclear
weapons and ,a better agree-
ment on access to Red--en-
circled West Berlin.
That was the reason for his
recent statement concerning
better relations with Peking,
"Progress is not helped In this
sensitive area by speculation
that goes beyond what the pro-
gress might achieve.''
It also was why he ordered
all government spokesmen to
avoid any statement that
might give the impression the
United States considered bet·
ter relations with China a
potential lever against Russia.
The difficulty Nixon faces in spec:ific overtures through the
this respect was pointed up in Rumanian, French and
an official Soviet radio com-mentary Jatt lari;I week. The Pakistani governmenU to try
Russian speaker said Peking to t onvince Peking of hls good
was trying to sabotage efforts faith. This Jed to a
of Russia and other Com-breaktlirough on the people-to-. t people level, but the Chinese munis countries to help the governn1ent has made It cleer Viet Cong and added : ''It ls common knowledge that the it will be a long slow proetss
policymakers of U.S. im-to real breakthrough at the of· ficial level. perialism have pinned their1 _________ 1 hopes on the Chinese leaders."
Allhou,ah he was one or the slronges~ supporters of all
anli-Peking measures in the
1950s and early 1960s, Nixon
now is convinced that the ~
year estrangement between
Washington and Peking must
end in the interest ol world
peace.
Jfe began urging erforts to
Improve relation11 s h o r t I y
berore he entered the 1968
presidential campaign. Sin~
becoming ~resident, he has
taken steps to eliminate travel
restriclions, end the embargo
on trade between the two
countries and permit the fru
flow of U.S. dollars for trade
and personal reasons.
Late last year he made
THE BEST
Ae1de11hip polls pr•n•• "P••·
"uh" i1 o"• of th• worlcl'1 1no1t
popul1r comic 1trip1. R11d it
cl1il.,.1 n th• DAILY PILOT,
1nan
n.
Or cash prize.
During UCB's Interest-Free Loan Sweepstakes.
To be eligible, all you have to do is fill out an
eiitryb1ank at any one of our 235 offices. It's that
simple-no purchase required. If you apply for a
personal loan for any amount up to $10,000 and it's
approved, you may win that loan interest-free. Or,
if you really don't need a loan right now, you may
win a cash prize equivalent to the interest on an
average UCB Personal Loan with a two-year matur-
ity. And, since there'll be one winner for every 50
personal loans approved for 3 months, your chances
of winning are good.
Of course, you're probably saying to yourself,
"Row can I apply for a loan now? With money so
tight, I'd do better to wait for the economy to pick
up." Well, we 'd like to point out that,.strange as it
probably seems, just the opposite is true. Interest
rates are now lower than they've been.in years.
While prices continue to rise. Which means that, if
you borrow now, you'll actually save money in the
long run.
----So if-you!ve-been waiting-t<>-apply f-0r-11, loan,
you'd be wise not to wait any longer. Come in and
4 talk to us today. No matter what you're in the mar-
ket for-a new car, a boat, you name it-you'll find
we've got a loan to suit your needs. Everything from
a vacation loan that lets you wait 3 months to start
repaying to a property improvement loan that finan·
ces 100% of your expense and lets you take up to
10 years to repay.
In fact, now that you know all the facts, there
really is no time like the present to borrow, is there?
Because even if you don't win our sweepstakes, you
don't lose.
UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK
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lnfants'-Toddlers'.
Wear
YOUR CHOICE!
• SAVE30o/ol-3 for$1.39WaterproofPants ... Pkg.of 3 9 7c •Cotton Terry Training Panties ... Pkg. of3
•Easy Care Cotton Sleeveless Vests ••• Pkg. o£3 ~
• SA VE 42% $1.69 Toddlers' Sleepers ••• each
•
Inrants'-Chlldren's Dept..
PRICES EFFECTIVE
NOW THRU MAY IBTH
Some Quantities Limited!
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SAVE 141! 16 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator-}'reezcr
Regular '~99.95 $ 2 5 8 • Co mpletely f'rostleas. Freezer hold .~ • l~lbs rrozcn food; door 1helves
•Reversible doors ... 3 f\Jll 11helves
• Th inwell insul ation. !f6l650
Major Appli ance Dept.
Monday, May 17, 1971 DAILY PILOT J J
Extra Soft, Extr.:a Shrink Resistant \
Men's T-Sl1irts and Briefs
Blend or7~% cotton for soft. 6 ~s
ness and 25% polyester for 'IJ'
Stre ngth. Shrinkage COD· f 07 '
trolled. Men's sizes.
J.ten's Furnishings Dept.
SAVE $2 1 NOW!
Regular '179.95, 8,000 BTU ·
AIR CONDITIONER SALE
Cools up to 2 rooms. Uses $'
110-120 V. house current.
Plugs Into any regular out· I
leL Compact, only 19*-
inches wide. li1odel 7112.
~lajor Appliance Dept
Great Value at this Low Price!
Sears Washer 'n Electric Dryer
• 24-in. wide ... lint filter B f
•Powerful 6-vane agitator Of £ f Or
loosens 11tubborn dirt
•Safety lid •witch: #18100 $
•Z.Trmp electric dryer 19 8 l!uilt-ln linll<reen · ' •
traps dulling threads,
lint; l.todel 60210
Afajor Appliance Dept.
-1 Sears J ..... .... , . .,.. . ... w... 0 """' • .... "" ......... ,, ... CANOGA PAllt n ll!IONT' INGUWOO• 01.llNOI POJllONA JINTA MOIOl(A
""'"·""'""'"~"'""tO. CO.....,.OM •UNtAl.f lONO l(ACN PAIADINA IANTA AHA aounc c'oAtJ PlAta
llfOl/llN• 04P
lOllAJf(f
'l'IUrf
l~e, l':"iul•y 12 """ t. I , ... , .. ._ thr• Sit. t 1llO A.M. te f1llO r .M. ... l•1tt1 A1• Oely, d"11 6 P,M. ,, .. ., l~vn,, l•t. .. .._
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J! DAILY PILOT
I•• Bl1re attd ma Review
Policewoman Shirley Groves awaits her turn as
Costa ~1esa Police Chief Roge r Neth, J.1ayor Robert
\Vilson and City Manager Fred Sorsabal (from left)
inspect ranks. Costa Mesa Police Department holds
Captain Skippers 340
Vessels Every Year
SAN .FRANCISCO fUP ll -
Captain Archibald Sinl~nslad
skippers about 340 ships a
year.
Simenstad. 60, is head of the
San Francisco Bar Pilots
Association "·hose 2.5 members
are carrying on a sea-going
tradition here that dates back
to IB-i9.
Simcnstad. \\'ho commanded
an attack transport during
\Vorld War JI, said a pilot
•·takes over the duties of the
captain'• when he g~s a~ar~.
"Only he is doing 11 1n
restricted waters.''
"The Captain is s t i 11
responsible for his ship," said
the veteran of sea service
a;ince 1926.
"Hov•evcr. in case of a
grounding the pilot would be
responsible.''
SimensfaC. who has been a.
pilol here for 11 years since
serving as a skipper with
American President Lines,
!iays the men in the Associa-
tion each pilot about 340 ships
a year.
The association"s boats are
~lalioned 12 miles outside the
Golden Gate. rtlieving eich
other every \Vednesday.
There are nine crewmen on
t'ach boat , the Golden Gate
;ind the California. and the
pilot taking a ship out stay!i
aboard until he catches
another ship in.
'"But v.·e hnve e rule among
fJurselves lhat you don't have
to stay oot there 1nore than 12
hours.'' Sin1enst.ad said. Then
the shutlle boat Dr<ike v.·ould
get the pilol.
Simcnstad said he and his
men are saddened by the
passing of another sea-going
tradition, the San Francisco
light.ship. The Coast Guard
replaced the lightship with a
large navigational bouy late
last month.
The lightship was anchored
near the Golden Gate and
California and "we had built
up a mutual understanding
v.·ith the Coa st Guardsmen,"
Simenstad said.
··we do feel a kind of lonely
without tbem. especially dur-
ing bad wealher. But in an
emergeny we can take refuge
on the buoy."
The association is so ex-
clusive that a decade may
pass before death or relire·
ment creates a vacancy.
It was formed in 1849 by the
state's First Legislature and
the law decrees that all in-
coming and outgoing foreifin
vesSilSlile a bar pi ol
aboard. The fees depend on
tonnage and range up to
several hundred d o 11 a r s .
Simenstad and his men guide
the ships through a 49--foot
deep corridor that stretches
between a silty, crescent·
shaped bar "'hich protrudes
from the mainland.,
VeJeran navigators say the
1 l·mile-long channel is one of
the world's most treacherous.
It is beseiged by swells, tides
and currents.
Only tv.•ice has the pilot ship
strayed from its position and
. both moves were caused by
storms.
1'he only major accident oc·
cutTed when fierce waves
whipped a pilot schooner to
sea in 1867. Three pilots and
four sailors were washed
overboard and never-found .
ree •••
TRAVELERS
CHECKS
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Travelers Checks you want
•.. up to $5,000 worth ----/_;-,itWPOR:r ~·
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Kids Like to Ask An<lv J
I
-. ;
Ulbricht · Career Still Not Over?
~
By PHii. NEWSO~I
U'I PtrtlP H"""'' AAtlrll
of agreement between 1t1osco w
and the _lYest G!i:man F~ral
:enerating affection or o( car· him, party chairman, the man
ing, harsh and intolerant 'vitl1 taking over is his owa
bis aids, ni.ling througti. ff'.llf designate, Erich Bonechr. Probably no 'A'Orld leader Republic centered on Bonn, and ru'thless purge. From Honecker lltUe t!iange
ever has had his poliUeal aeeing in it a thrtat to the ex· A.s Ulbricht moves over to a in attitude toward the West
obituary written more often istence of his own regime. post created e~ally for can be eipected.
than Walter Ulbricht. li~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ii;;~ But last August, he was Not even today, despite his
own announcement of his forced to sit silently by as
•
run scale dtess revie\v once each year .. Even pla~
clothesmen don uniforms for U!e annual formal in-
spection.
Kids Like to Ask Andy
retirement from the key post . BoM· and Moscow signed n
or first secretary of East .noo;aggresslon pact t h a I
Germany's CommW1isl Party, seemed ·lo herald a new eru
would it be wise to write a .lor .Europe.
finish to the career of this
most durable of all European Jt ls noteworthy that lhP
C.Ommuni.st leaders. new era bas not yet emerged
Ju.st as Kremlin watchers
carefully check ·each groups
photograph-and each published
list or Soviet leaders for poss).
ble clues to the men really in
charge of the Soviet Union, so
too for year-1 hu each crisis,
each Kremlin snub been
chronicled to anticipate the
purge that seemed inevitable.
Not oWy rud Ulbri c ht
IW"Vive the twists and turns of
Kremlin policy through Stalin,
Malenkov and Khru.Vichev to
the present, but he ac-
complished it without ev"° los-
ing sight or his main-,goal
which was the eslabllshment
and preservation of Com-
munist East Germany.
He bitterly oppoSediany hint
and that the chief stumbling
block remains as it has been
since the divis ion ol
~rmany-Ulbrlcht's demand Wr full recognition to Easl
Germany.
Within the C.Ommunist bloc,
Ulbricbt's will bas prevailed.
Within East Germany, he
survived the workers' revolt of
1953. He replied to the flight to
to the West of some three mil-
lion or East Germany's 17 mil-
lion popuJati00i with the Berlin
Wall and went from there to
make East Germany the m05t
prosperous of the Communist
bloc nations outside the Soyiel
Union.
As an
seemed
individual he
Incapable
has
ol
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e 17' square e.l>d aluminum
c::anoe with built-in flota·
tion. Carrying capacity. m lbs. $.1Xl. Youn tor
only S2UO.
• \Vho needs money ? ? T
$$$$ available on all types
ol ReaJ Estate -paid lor
or.not.
• Nttd an economy car?
All1.tin 1961. 4 c)1. new
tire!.· Runs great? $125.
e Are you in the boat mood'!'
There is someone looking
lor a buyer rigtit now for
this Lido 14 No, 914 with
a blue and white Sflt!,
'The best ·Wciyto·appreciate
a new Mercedes-Benz
is~to test.tdrive an old~Mercedes;Benz~
At Mercedes-Benz, we're not afraidoE1 _what one of our old c~ill say about
our new c::ars.
So be£ore you buy a new Merced~
Benz, we invite you to test drive an old
Mercedes.Benz.
Finding a car to test is really nb prob-\
lem. A neighbor or a friend may own one.]
(Your dealer probably has several on/
hand.) But 've urge you to be selective.
Pic k one with a substantial accumulation1 or miles.
Helpful hint: J£ you spot aMercedes-1
Benz with one of the badges shown be-J
Jow on lhe radiator. you've found an ex.-
ceptionally promising candidate to test. •
' We award them to a Mercedes-Benz.I
after 100,000, 200,000 and 500,000 kilome-J
tc::rs. (The European equivalent of 62,500.
125,000 and 312,000 miles:)
The one sure sign of a1e in•
Mer,tdts-Ben~. Ra.dia ror b4dges
oworded at the J()()JX)O, 200,000 &
5()(}JXXJ kilometer miluronts. TJit sirn
of An owntr's "a1e." a 1old lopd pin. ,I
.....
'Mo(or's cmtl!lu.sion cbout c wtcr11n of-
/
110/J()OmOu: "Apart from some loss of
ed.tt •I tht rop tnd thll one ft't quiet.
tfulblt 11114 fr•• of rattlu i:t:nd the oil
pruswt ntt4ltwas .alwa1s hard on rhe slop."
We even designed a special suspen-
t' sion system for the exhaust system. Rub-
lber "doughnuts" hold it under tension. A 1
rubber bwnner is stationed at every point.
1 of contact.
l9ngevity. So they arC sliced in hair and
analyzed by in£rared spcclography ..
A revolutionary old car ...
Today an old Mercedes-Benz bristles'
with features that still seem revolutionary An intriguing contest compared to the '71 cars of other makers.!
Acceterateontoahighway;'I The reason is simple. Our engineer-
' Notice how new and tight the engine~ ring decisions are made by enginec::rs. Not
rdrivetrain and suspension feel. cost accountants. When they find a way to
' Recently in the Road & Track series I make an improvement, they make it.! f "AfterTbe New Wears Off," the Cnginee~-1 Without waiting until it can be made as
/ ing editor summed up 35,000 miles in his ,cheaply as what it replaces.
, Mercedes-Benz by saying simply, '.'The Take an old Mercedes-Benz through
car is more impressive than when new." · 'some curves. Unless it's a prc-1930 model,
To keep our ."new" from wearing· you"ll discover the nimble reflexes that
cff, we engineer the run-.c::ome from fully indepen-1
ning sear to last as long, dent suspension. An in-1
as the body. A lengthy' 1novalion yet to be discov-1
but intriguin1 contest.1 cred by domestic sedans.I
indeed. • • Look at the mode ..
To Jllake sure it will. nameplate. If you spot aa
'vital mechanisms must . "E," the car has some·
passthousandsoftests. _ thing no Am erican car
We consume more ~b~er"doughnuts"suspettd . · has an einspritz.system 'h II f ·ta1/p1pts1111d111utflerswrderlens1on, • .. It an 40,000 81 ons O rubbt rbun1ptrsUolatethe111from (German for fuel lnJCC-
lfuelamonthtC!tinievery 1hebod1. Theuhaw1 s1sttmma1 J tion). Developed £or Mer-1
engine before ins ta Ila.' never ra.ule. · ,} cedcs·Benz grand p rix.
ii. \tion.Someforu long as five hours. ·cars, it provides a substantial increase in
After nine successive applications at power 11iirl1110 sacrifice in eco110111y. A "su~pe_ns.ion.syltem'~fo.,r ___ -1135-.mph.Jn a "destruction.'! t.est,~dis ' Apply-the brakes. Mercedes-Benz~
the exhaust system ,brakes tum fiery ~·Th~ must endure j lieves the brakes should be 1he_mos1 pow-
1 Take your test car down a potholed this torture fifty dilferellt tlmcs-and suf. e.rful par1 of any c:i.r. So we introduced
rood and listen foraudibleprotest.sofagc. ,fernodamagt". disc: brakes in 1961 . Put them on all four I
• A journalist from Motor recently put , Even seemingly unimportant ilems wbecls in 1968. No domestic sedan today,
:i.n eight-year-old Mercedes-Benz roadster, ,like dashboard knobs must prove their offers four disc brakes.even as an option.
to 1he 1e~1. "\Vha1 impressed.me most."1
he concluded, "was the solidity of the
body-not a squeak or rattle to be heard."(
\Vc"rc llattered. But not surprised.~
cause \Ve l'ic::\v c\•ery part of a Mercedes-
Benz ::is a potential rattle.
I nstcad of bolting body and frame
logcthcr. \Ve fu se it wilh 8,000 or
ITIOrC\\"C]ds.
\.\'indow glass rides-.in a
channel that's buttressed in
three di reel ions.
The radiator is supported 1 by rubber and f ramcd in foam.
It ~ tnl'1al ne\'cr touches therestl
of 1hccar.
One of our rt1wcors. Tht 250,
• fivt·passe1111r sedan wllh
ptrformartc1 f1a1uru
,ou'll 11/// appreciat1 _
wh111 ti'•'"' oltl car.
stirtilig'rtom theina"id~
WhmyorinislryourtesnltJOe, wali)
r around thecarandlookat the finish.·
' To keep the outside looking new; We·
start protecting it from the inside. ·. · . ~
·,._.. Bodies are submerged in;;)...-·
~rust.proofer. They emerge P
24 pounds heavier.
But that's not
enough for Merc:edes-l
Benz. The inside of,
body panels that .
were welded air-!
I ight \vere painted J
before welding.
Outside, a Mercedes-.
Benz is protected by four!
coats of paint and Primer .
The front gets anextracoai\,.
or chip-resistant enamel. . •
We even insulate Evtnbod)' pi:t:ntls tho.~
the side trim from wt1dt4 a_irt~1ht an
.L bod · b . corrode1nside.Sobefor•\ u1e )'Wit astnp wewtld.wespra.)'tMm
lof rubber. And sheath with tine oxide. And~
the clips that attach it \litlil ar&aS b1 hand./ ·-
with plastic grommets, .so that metal can
never bite through paint and start natJ'
The ''average''
Mercedes·Beru:: $8,000
There's nothing "average"· about a
li ne of automobiles with an average sell·
iog price of SB,000.
Building automobiles you can appre-
ciate when they're "old" car~. }z115 made
our new cars more expensive than most.
There are ten "Mercedes-Benz models
pric::ed from ss.44s to $8,663•-\vithout o~
tions. And six limited editions, largely
handcrafted, from $13,032 to $30,352•.
The coupon will bring a ful 1-color bro-
chure of the new Mercedes-Benz models.
In the meantime, be sure and test
drh·e an "old" Mercedes-Benz. And, just
for comparison, an old anything else,
-AH.er aH.,..you live·most-of-your 1tfe
\Vi th an old car. So you.should knO\¥\Yhat
your next car\vill be like after the "new"
wears off.
•W,.,11 Coan p:1ft rlf ~II)', io.«.fu•il-e of lran,_.~tiO!I, "'~''""
..... 1i. {~111, Oilier OpUon<. MAIO aod l<><al '"'-'· ,, ""T· Cop)~t 1971, Mucak1-llefll fli 1'1orUIA-tlc:a. l no:. r-------------------------1
JIM SLEMO~S IMPORTS, INC. l
lZO W, Wono.r A-w•J111•
Sa11t• Alla, CallfMlll• 92701
Pltau: send me your full.color brochure of the
Mercedes-Bent motor cars.
Address ____________ _
CilY--------'~"----,,
I" Zip Telfpbone •
~------------------------~J
Jim SI em ons Im ports; In C:: 120 w. Warner A venue. Santa An•, Califor"ia 92707 Phone: 714-546-4114
', . . . . .
'
MALE SECTION ·-South Coast Community Hospital Auxiliary
members ne!t to right) Edgar C. Bootay and William Eberhard!
perform vital services for the hospital. Two of a select group of
siK-male volunteers, the men work in the pharmacy aild maintain
a Wok cart and library-which/rovide reading matter for patients.
Additional time i.s given to fun raising.
Approve Improvement
Judges Cast Votes
In Line of Beauty
Laguna Beach is renowned as one of the most beautiful spots in
the world. But five years ago, a group of women designed a program
to make the Art Colony even more .attractive.
The Women 's Divis ion of the Chamber of Commerce initiated
an aWard program in 1967 design ed to give recognition to owners of
residential and commercial structures who had made an effort to im·
prove and beautify their property.
This week, judging on the 1971 contest will' be complefed, cap-
ped by an awards presentation on Thursday, ?.fay 20, at 8 p.m. in the
Festival of Arts Forum.
The public may purchase ti ckets at the chamber offic e.or at the
door at a cost of $1.50 which includes presentation of awards, a slide
show by Robert Turner ol winning structures, improvements and
beauty spots, mariachi music and refreshments.
Serving on the judges• panel and in the presentation will be
Willia.'Tl Gwinn, actor and television personality, who will be master of
ceremonies.
____ · __ Al_~atlicipati!'l(_ are. Joh~ ~ott Trptter, ~ fo.rmer music. direc·
tor for Bing Crosby ana musical dlfector of t11ei::narJ1e--si'own pictures:-----
lifiss Virginia Cain, former admistrative assistant of building services
in Los Angeles; art coUector Mrs. Winnifred Harm of H,awaii and La·
guna; Mrs. Meredith Graves Foreman, interior design consultant, and
Col. (ret) William Roley, investment advisor. I
.,
/ . ., . , ' ' ., ,
•
BAR&ARA DUARTE, 494-9466
,Mfllll•r. MaJ 11, nn f ,,.,, u
In Lin e of Duty
Men -Ass .ist
Auxiliary
For those \Vho think auxiliaries are women's work,
at least one auxiliary ha s a surprise for you.
Since the Auxiliary of South Coast Community Hos·
pital \vas first organized. men have played an active role
Jn such areas as the library and pharmacy.
Though the 111en are greatly outnumbered by a
hard-,vorlQ_!lg'. corps of wo1nen volunteers who donate
thousands of hours each year to hospital duties, the se-
lective crew of six 1nen \Vork just as hard and hope to
increase their nun1bcr.
Among those holding full auxiliary standing·are Don·
aid 1' Beddoe, chair1nan, a television cha racter actor:
.John 11. Sharer. a former investment broker; Eugene
Shidler, properly manager: ('olin \V. Timmons. former
president of a construction co1npany: Jlenry T: Brian,
retired executive; \Villiam Eberhardt. real estate broker,
and Edgar C. Bootay, formerly associated \vi th a phar·
n1aceutical house.
The men fill vital posts in the library 'vith-custody
of a book cart for patients and in the pharn1acy.
l\1en volunteers al so are indispensable in fund ·rais·
ing projects such as assis tance with the Festival of Arts
soft drink booth. the rractured Follies and the annual _.,Jiii
Valentine Ball.
' -
The fifth annual beautification awards .,rogram is being direct·
ed by Mn . .Robert Peacock of the Mermaids With the assistance of tbe
Mmes. Charles Gauthey, Floyd Lee. F. G. Peterson and Roley.
OUTDOOR CONFERENCE -Mrs. ?1-feredith Graves Fore-
man Oeft). confers with William Gwinn and flfiss Virgina
Cain in front of the recently completed bowling club in
lfeisler l)ark Six judges will view commercial and
residential improvements this week, casting votes for
their favorites. A specia l a'vard \Viii hon or a beauty spot.
Bite Put on Romance When Gift Horse Looked
DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 am a 'lildow
going ll'ith a gentleman who is nol
y:ealthy but he is comfortl)ble. I have a·
birthday coming up neKt monlh. He ask·
ed me what I wanted. Befort I could rep-
ly he announced matter-of-factly, "I plan
to speod $25." I was never so sbotked in
my life. I told him I couldn't th ink of
anything I wanted. Now I'm not sure
A NY gilt would be acceptable I<> me.
Wasn't this crass on his part? Please
commenl -VASSAR '49
DEAR 'ft: Your h'lt:lld II tbvioa§ly 1
pr1ctJcal fdlew. He •Ito 11 a caullous
type. Some people believe I• layln& ii oa
lht Hae. He mlgbt 114 cr111, bat ltc's
""est. Don't knock It.
DE~R ANN LANDERS: I am 1 20-
year-old boy who has been looking for a
•
ANN LANDERS ~
job for tf:Vtn weeks. The 1ast three
places 1 applied seemed promising, but J
wasn't hired. I decided to check back and
find out why. All three personnel heada
aaid my qualifications were ei:cellent but
my .appearance was against me. What It
boiled down to was Jong hair and a sMrt
beard. 1 finally ask~ the last personnel
• guy if he would hire me if l c,ut my hair
and shaved my beard. He repht(I, "Yes."
T looked him straight 111 the eye, aaid.
"Nuts to you," and walked out.
•
The system i1 rotten and this i1 proof.
What has my hair and beard to do with
my ability? I consider it my con-
slituUonal right to wear my hair any wy
I please and to have a beard if l waAt
one. I would like your opinion on this. If I
get the anawer I want l will take it back
to those jerk!· and shove it in their stupid
races. -BATON ROUGE
DEAi\ BAT: Sorry, BIHldy. When you
are uklq for aomethlDI -you do It
THEIR way. If an employer doesn't want
•
1 Ii.id with long hair and a bea rd, It's bl'
con1tltu,Uon1I right not lo hire him.
Somt ol you Irids makt a lot mort trnu·
bit for your~lve1 than you nttd. You
wal.k 1ro11'nd mad at lht world,
accept you and when lhey don't you yell,
accept you and when they don't you ~II.
"Damn tbe ·estab1lsbment !" .
'You'll do a lnl Miter, fella, when you
learn to smile and meet the world half
way. A chip on lbt 1bnulder Is usually 1
1ign that there Is wood higher up.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: This will pr<r
bably sound like 1 dumb question and I
would not be asking ii except that
something fantastic happened today. Can
a lady have a baby without knowing she
is pregnant'?
Today a woman gave bi rth 1n the park·
Ing Jot of a supermarket. A couple of ~
pie came lo her rescue when she was
seen leaning on her car in pain. un1:1ble to
open the door . One man said lo her, "I'm
i;oing to call for an ambulance right
away or the baby will be born here." The
woman shrieked, "RidicUlous! I am not
pregnant. It's appendicitis or semething I
ate."
\'i,ilhin a few minutes that woman gave
birth to a baby. Somt()nt hailed a passin g
squad car and the woman and her baby
were taken to a nearby hosplla l
flow in the world could such, a thing
happen? Was this lady nutty? Did she
. :;iuddenly develop amnesia? fleasc X·
plain how a woman can go through a
•
•
Mouth
pregnancy and not know It . -TP' l :
DIDN'T SEE IT I WOULDN 'T BELIEVE :
i.:r
DEAR IF : Such an occurrence i1 rart, :
but It Is not unhe ard al. The explanation ·
is thiit some women do JWt experlenct :
lht usual symptoms of pregnancy. In the :
case of the parkJn'g.Jot mother. &he may :
well have been completely unaware or :
her condlUon until tbt birth. •
"The Bride's Guide," Ann Landera·
booklet. answers some of the most fre-
auently asked qucslioru aboul weddings.
To rcceivt your copy of this com-
prehensi ve guide, write to Ann Landt!f1,
in care of the DAll.Y PILOT enclosing a .
long. self·addressed, stamped envelope:
and 35 <'tnts in coin.
\
_.._ ....
,
•
·.
Ole! It's Fiesta Time
Gu rs and Dolls Section of the Riviera Club \\il l dance the r-.lcxiC'an hat ~a ne e
as de1nonstra1ed by (left lo rig ht ) J\liss Eileen Brad\1 ·ell. J\lr:-. Frederick c;arce-
lon and JVlr-". l:ohert de F'o rd. secliO n ch airman. 'rhc fiesta g,roup \l'ill arrive al
El i\dohe restaurant in San Juan Ca pistrano for a 7:30 p.tn . ~orktail hour fol-
IO\ICd by dinne r an d dancing on Saturday, J\1ay 29. Reservations al 56.50 per
person are d ue by J\londay, J\Iay 24.
Mother of Invention
Labor No.t Painless
By EH~IA BO~I B ECK
I was with a group of
\\'riters the other day \\hen ~ht
subjC'ct came up "2 to how v. e
enjoyC'd ou r v.·ork.
•·1 woul d rather write," said
a \\'Oman who wrote soap
oprras, •·t han eat ie!! cub<'s on
an in1p:1cted "'1sdom too th."
"!\lr 100," said another. "I
can'l !hink of anything 1nore
fu!f1!1ini::. . .unlC'ss it's food
poisoning.''
\\"e \\'('rC' being rynical. or
COU TS(' ThC' tru!h is pulling
together \\"ords into some kint.I
of CilhC'rency lakes 1nore
d i~ciplinc than a karat{! chop.
Y nu can go blind staring at a
"·h1te i;.heet of paper.
· \\'hat did you get doflC' !h1'>
n1nrn1n;!~" askrd a ro py"'·ritC'r
for an :irh ert1s1ng firm .
\',rll.'" I said. "first 1 got
ou1 il l'lr:1n ..,her\ of paper and
succef'1lC'tl in p1rking a flaw
AT
WIT'S
END
out of it -·n·1th a pair or
l\\'Cczers \vhich took me an
hour and a half to find.
"Then I alphabetized 1ny
bill s, tried to n1ake a musical
out of the phone book. picked
'burrs orr the dog's run1p an1t
pirkC'd up lhe waste can "'ilh
n1y knees without spilling the
contC'nts."
"That sounds like a pro.
fl tabl c rnorning,'' s~ said.
''That's not all.'' I con-
li nucd. "I got a hanJ!na1 I
i;.tarted. made a fly trap out of
a paper rlip and a p1ec1> of
Srolch tape, called Dial-a-.
prayer and asked if they made
'Mr s. Repub lican' Speaki ng
GOP Women End Year
"\Jr~ H C' p ub\\(' ;i 11 (If ll\' 1l1c losing learn in !hr.
h0U!IC c.111'> and chrl·kcd the
dictionary to see 11 Supercall-
fra gilisticPXf'ialidoshus '''as in
it."'
"\\'C're you using it?"
''No, t had five minutes lo
ki ll until lunch. Yt'hat did you
do, Phyllis?" I asked a free-
JanC(! \\'Tile r.
"'You rc111c1nbe r the
Christ1 nas trrc with !he Xs on
the tvp::11·riter I s I a rt r d
yesterday? FinishC'd it this
n1orning. Then r counted a
pew rcan1 of pap<'r lo SCC' if it
rc11!Jv contained 500 sheets.
and ·finally 1 figurrd out that
in 1981. 1ny birthday falls on a
S<1turday night."
\\'e got around to .lo\ce \\·ho
is a PH ~irl for the local pizza
chain. ''l'\'e had a great mom-
infil,'' sh!! ~ushC'd . "I got a
rlo1en TV spols "'riHen. did a
history nn the anrhovy and
pcrson:1Hy e•inductcd I w o
tours throu~houl our ph1nts.''
Jo.vce ill a nice girl, but
..,he'll llC'\'Cr make it big . She
isn'1 invC'ntive enough to be a
\\'rttC'r.
The Stitchery ~ook
(ll EWEL a NEEOL.,01'-IT
l<oh I. Swpp!lt •
• P••~~on • Bwtlllo • Bt rn•I e U"9" e (01w1nll••·Mlnorv1
• OMC y.,111
HI I!'. 171h, (01!1 M••I 60 ·1114
i.llLLGllE'-1 SQU.t.ll!
-
' ••
Elect ion Your Horoscope Tomorrow
~!~1~~;~0; lh • Ca·pric ~autiqn Necessary
Ocange Coast Division h TUE SDA y one task -before beginning Young P"son is willing to be
California Retired Teachers MAY I B another. Strive for realistic generous -with your money . and to celeb rate the occasion members will attend 8 noon approach. Refuse to hang on Pull in reins: oppose ex-
period. MPans you get lhln gt
done. Know you r own abllllies.
Push ahead. Strike while cyc l1
lun cheon Wednesday, May 19, Hy SYDNEY 0.\1 ARR to past. Future tan be bright travogancc. JI you act foolish, is on ups wing. Slre s t
Don't be In the Aiiporter Inn, Newport ARI ES t ~larch 21_APril 19): if you make it so. Act ac-yoU \\'ill be so lreated. Ex-pe r so n a l ity.
Beach. cordingly. press yourself in concise man-y.•ellflower.
Paul Colburn, presi dent, will What occurs behind the scenes t EO (July 23-Aug. 22 ): ner. ------------
conduct a short business may now have special mean· Fathom reasons 1vhy; refuse SAGITIAR IUS tNov. 22-
meeling to elect officers. ing for you. Family member superficial answers. Stress on Dec. 21): Avoid stress. Have
Installing officer will be Mrs. appears to be involved. Check how money is expended. Get fun without going to extreffies.
He len Hobson, s t a I e ad-travel plans, reservations. One figures: ~e analylical. New Sec situation in realistic light.
ministrali ve vice president. "'ho means \Vell n1nv also be approach is a ncl·essity Strive Listen to sob story but don 't
who will give the pri ncipal ad-careless. · for greater independence of become unduly i n v o J v e d .
dress. TA URUS I April 20-!\lay 20 1: thou,ght, action. ti'fcssage becomes increasingly
Luncheon entertainment v.•ill Avoid sclf-decepl11)n. G et VIRGO 1Aui.: 23-Sep\. 22): clear
be provided by Mrs. fi!itzi facts : discard rumors. Some Domestic :offairs IC'nd to CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
h1agill who will prese nt he r of your desires cost more than dominate. Build on solid baSC'. 19): hluch that seems solid
own program of song and now can be affordC'd. !\·lake ;\\'oid one "·ho ad\·ocatl'S ap. may require revie'"·· J\'ot wise
piano nu r:nbers. . financial adjustn1enls. Trim parent easy niethods. Con-to take persons. situations for
All re tired teachers in the budget. Piscrs individual is centration is ncC'essat'y. Check granted. You C'an make plans
area are v.·elcome t~ attend due to play key role. details. property values and for future, but be cautious
the lunC'heon and bnng pro. GE!\11NJ !?ilay 21-June 20): future costs. regarding immediate actions.
spe clive members from area Two ind ividuals seC'm to fl'e] LIBRA (Sept. 2.1-0ct. 22): AQUARIUS (Jan. 2Q-F'eb.
schools. they know what is best for SlrC'SS vC'rsatility. Di sp l ::iy 18): Protect "'hat is of value.
Wai st Watchers
TOPS Wa ist W a t ch e r s
assemble every Thursday al 7
p.m. in Circle View Sctool,
Huntington Beach.
you. In truth. you \\'ould he scnsc of humor. Some around Emphasis is on temptation to
better advised to follow your you no\V need cheering . Do . spend for purpose of im-
own instincts. Acrcnt is on \rhat you ca n-the more vou pressing others. Key ls to ex-
achlevenlent, sp.ecia! goals give, the more ynu ultlmaicty erC'ise self-C'ontrot in this·area.
and career. -\Vill rccciVC'. Work associate Take one thing at a time.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22): pla.vs key role. PISCES (Feb. 19-l\tarch 20):
Study Aries message. Finish SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You experience a power
PettinCJ
Zoo
Mon. thru Su11 .. Mey 17-21
One of th1 "'oi l "o"ul1r
chil.ir111'• 1ltr1ction1 h1IG ill
our ..,.11. Educ t li on1 / 11
"'Ill 11 fun -ch;ldr1n c1n f,,d
btby t ni..,111 fro.., 1!1 O•l f lh1
world. O pen d1 ily thru 1Y1ni1191.
On !ht ..,,11, 15t 1d..,h1ion,
H u~ti n9fon C111!1r 11 Sen Di199
Fr11..,1y, 811 ch end Edin111 r. HI,
• • •
all-around comfort
and you save 41 %
2
1 hidden inner-
band1 firm.
Batten tummy
V -band1 lift and
ape derriere
3 aide puela
trim thiglu
4 nott-binding
ler;b&nd1
' ' ., .
;.
}
·'
.
1. --·
('alif:1r111a.'' ~Ir~. :\nn ll•l\\'lr.r ciuh's n1C'n1hC'rship contest
l\'1l l hr the ~ue~t ~pcHkrr ;it 11ill be ser\'C'tl at 11·30 a rn
the final n1f't'\11~g of !he ~t'll.!.Otl \\'cdncs.da~·. ti lay 19. in the I
for 1hl' llunllll~IO!l Reath 1·e1:rc:l11nn l'C'ntrr. r-1 rs.:::===========~!
RC'puhl1r;n1 \\'u1n£'n':-. flub. ll 1ehard Dil1n1ar is in thar.i;e "'\tr~:-Ro1\ 1l't-:-ltt<f1Uh1trnrrn:r: cir-:rrrangrments.---I
ti11n:it l·on11n11 le£'11on1an fron1 Hr i;. er\' 11 ! ions for the
l!lfi~-63 11(11nt'n s enunlv pre~1-Suuthrrn ni\·ision Republican
<1rn1 :1111! nn11 r C' I! ·1 on a 1 \\'otlll'n·s luncheon meeting on
ch:i1r1nnn of thr State f"rntral \\erinr-:diiv. ,June 2. in the
f"on1n1111vf', \llll di~ r us.., A1rportrr Inn will b<' 11vailahlc
~~)
1ewPls by 1oseph
R1 .. 1d1nr:~ -p1;2 frnn1 ~lrs. Bernard GagC'.]~----------~.l
A ~al:id h1n1·h£'nn prf'1•are<l prcs1drnl.
Art W orks Showcased
~t11drnt\ frn111 ('()f<\11;1 ct .. J
~1 ;lr ll1i::h Sehion! :1rf· •h pl.1\·
in ~ th•'I!' 11orlo." t!n~ nin11th 111
thr \ornnn <l~·I '.\1ur !'uhl1f'
Libr:ir; u1 1d1•r llu· '-Jlfll1,n1 .. l111~
of 1hr \:t•W[)llrt B";uh C111
1\rls C01nn1it1rr ·
TllP rxhih1t
pt1hl1r d11nng
h1111r~
i~ op t'n tn lht'
rr~u l:ir l1brar)
\1.1r111Pr~ L1br:1ry h prr . .,C'n
ting 11 d1sph1~' 11f ;11'1 \\Ork1
jlfl'flilfCd h~ lll~ll\' llO[l1d (()I !11'
;ffll ~ls f1•r ''flrar1gt' Co11nt \'
l!ilhlrait'1t." Tht' di . .,pl:n 11111
inl'ltUIC' rt•prod11t·t ion... of 1 ht1
Fr:iturc1t in !ht' ,110111 :1'1' ,,,
lhr !1brar~ 11 i11 lw •he 11nrlo. of
f,e(lr,:!r Cun\ hiuh ~111·~·1 art
ln~lrurlor. 11h•1 a .... •1·111h!ttl !ht•
rii •pl:i\ fo r tu ... ~:udfnl ..
f·u11'1' In :11lfl1t1on lu th r Gcrn uf S11r1 ng, the Emerald is
nr1µ.111M! \\Ork. i 11. lo1Tth-alo11e s1.11 round~<! by
=;r,:g;~~;;l l'·io:c11J~. It 1,aioo s;uJ to ,·(1norose =----=---= th" fi rRt M11h11111n1rrl11n l h~aven, pg _
AILEEN
SPORTSWEAR
3'04 VIA LIDO, NF.W~ORT BEACH
'
thr f,.u rth foundation of the
l';t>w J\"ru~ale1n, lo Jost.er prt-
' t~ion , strl'ngthcn n1en10I')'.
f'h•tJUt l\CI', and e\'C'n mrasure a
]ol't't'a f1•t\'ur. As lht' f1vorrd
11ti.ne of \'rnua, the Emerald
elands for lo ve and aucct&s.
lfftrr JIOliT bir/ltfl•H!I) fnr .lift
/at~lurz orzd goorl forl!i.nt ·~ ...
Sowl ~ Co ~1• P!•t •
l ru!nl ,1 I~• S4n Oio~o Fwy,
·'1 ·r ~\ r· -
.. -
~--, --
' ' ' ,
full hip tall average
Ats:bAVAILABLEAT THl::SA~I ELOW PRICE:
Average Hip. Long Tor!O panly girdle in :.iicc
P.t,L.XL and XXL. While. 2 for 16 .99
Full Hip, Long Toreo panty girdle in sizes
M.L.XL end XXL. Whi~. 2!o r 16.99
-1sears l
"'''·'~u.-~c•~..,<o.
l \llNA ,A.RIC
<•Mota '&tit
COM,,OH
COV1 '-i.t.
I\ flolONU
GllNt l l f
proportioned panty girdle
'
Fl ere "s your chance lo enjoy almost cu!Storn-
\ike fit ... an d save! Scars p roportioncJ 11anty
girdle is not jusl si1.cJ ... it's shape-adj usted
to fit difTcrcn t figur e types comfortnLly all
over. ~1 axi n1um cont ro l comes from-firrn
inne r bands criss.crossed under a panel of
satin elastic (acrlale, cott on, spandex). And
) ou can't hl'nl the hotly rlastic-it"s nylPn an d
Lycra• sp::indl'\.-with murc of 1hc san1c for.m-
ing 5idc panels to l rim hips and thighs, and
in a ¥-shaped back panel to lift and cur,·e
the figure into natural line!i. In white only.
Look around .•• you "'ill fuid your size he re!
c.~e Sears J{evold ng Charg e
HOUTWOO•
ING.uwocilit
IONO l ll Ctol
Ol'f'oll!PIC & IOTO
OR.t.NGf
''l•OlNA
Pl(O
'OMON.t.
JAN'l.t. AH"
•
SALE
for 7 <la ys onJ y
99
fo r
SA JIE 41 o/o
on a\'erage fi ip, e\·en gC tono
panty girdle. regular S6.00 e•eft
J.t.NTA II .,.IMGI
llMT.t. MONICA
JO\ITM CO•IT "1.AZA
TltOUllNO OAQ
TOll&N(I
ViUIY .,,. . .,.,
'
•
/
Say "T~rees, please!"
and .save on
PECHGLQ by
VAL'°" l c.r):· F_-'\.IR,
Onc:e o yeor you hove your chanc:e to stock
up on peffect little Pethglos. This famous
royon·a nd-nylon fabric feels fresh and cool
as o fluff of fine powder next to the skin.
Marvelously soft and absorbent. Brief, sizes
J,.], reg. $1 .75 each
NOW 3 FOR S4.50
Size 8, reg. 52.00 eoc:h
NOW 3 FOR $5,75
in Down Pink and Star Wh i•e
Bikini. Re9. Sl.!oO
NOW ) FOR $'.00
Veta's
111111Utt APPAlll ............ , .....
......... Cll.
/
PAMELA HIGGINS
To Marry __
September
Rites Set
During a chan1pagne brunch
in their Corona dcl ~1~r hotn~.
ti.Ir. and Mrs. Forrest E. Hig·
gins a n11ounced t h e
cng<1gen1cnt of their daughter,
Pa1nela J ean lliggi115 to
Christopher \Villiam Cooper
A Sept. 4 wedding 1n SI.
Andrew 's P re s by I r r i a n
Church, Nc\\·port Beach is
being planned.
:\·liss Higgins is a graduate
of Corona del i\lar High School
and attended Orange Coast
College.
lier fiance , son of i\lr. and
~·lrs. George Paul Cooper, also
of Corona dcl i\1ar, is a
.eraduate or Cdi\1HS and at -
tended OCC. Ile OO\\' is serving
in the Air Force.
Wives Club
Tallies Votes
l\1rs. Normiln Potter will be
installrd as pre8ident of -the
Acronutronic Y.1lves Club dur·
ing luncheon cert monies
\\1ednesday, ~1ay 19.
l\1en1bers "'lit gather in the
Grand llote\, Anaheim.
DAILY PILOT J5_
Newlywed Sheffields
Home. in Costa Mesa
New Office rs In stalled VFW Au xiliary
Coastline Auxiliary t o
H . Ch 11 Veleraru; of f'oreign Wars.
Orlzo ns a enge p°'"· 3536 ga!liers the l1nl Fridays at 8 p.m. Co5ta
_ M,,..'sfanc,ticaD l.c~WI A I a m1 t o s' corre51'C>ndlng+ is the meeting scene. ) ,
seerelary, and Robert Adlt:!r, r-~~~=--'"===-=~=; Peek F'amily W e d d i n g
Chapel, Westminster was the
setting for the double ring
ceremony linking P at r i r i a
Grant of Costa ti.1esa and Allen
W. Sheffleld.
Parents of the bridnl couple
are l\1r. and Mrs. F'. H. Grant
of Aurora. Colo. and Mr. and
Pt,rs. Wayne Sheffield of
Anaheim.
Bridal attendants were Pt1rs.
Fred llov.·ells. matron of
honor : f\1rs. l\1only Sheffield
an·d l\liss Terry Hetrick.
bridesmaids. and Pt1 on i q u e
Devincenzi. f\ov.•er girl.
Serving his brother as be.Iii
man 11as Sheffield,
v.·hile ushers v.·ert \VHliam ll.
1-lilton nnd Richard S. Grant,
the bride's brother. Timmy
~Til ler 11as lhe ring bearer.
The bride <1t:ende d schools
in Redondo Beach and her
husband is a j?raduale of Hun·
lington Beach H.igh S<'hool.
The:1 11·ill reside in Costa
~fesa.
Mesa Setting
• ,._
MRS. SHEFFIELD
R1cit11 Vow1
New Horizons~ Challen1e for
Today will keynote the year
v.·hen Pt1rs. Anthony L .
Williams o! Fountain Valley is
insta1\ed as president of the
Wo1nen's Auxiliary, Orange
County Pharmaceutical
Tustin, treasurer . ~1rs. Peter Who Cares?
Perak will be the Installing of·
ficer.
Hostesses for the luncheon
will be Mrs. Varna and ti.1rs.
No oth•r n•w,p•p•r h1 th•
wotld e•t•1 •bo11t yo11r •011111111•
11ity Ilk• 'f'Ollr comm11nitv ~flt¥
ri•w,p•p•r do1,, 11'1 tho OA.11..Y
PILOT. ' Association. Dr. Wil helm de Nljs from Charlts lleincy.
Services for tile Blind, Santa ----·-
Ana will be the speaker when
Mrs. Anton Lopizich opens her
Mesa Verde home ror lhel
installation taking p I a c e
following an 11:30 a.m. social
hour and noon I u n ch eo n1I
\Vednesday, May 19.
Serving on the nev.'.
ecutive board will be
Mmes. Russell Yamaga. and
Ronald Waters or Costa Mesa,
vice presidents; Ter r y
l\1ontgomcry. Hunt 1 n gt on
Beach. recording secretary ;
ruchard Tar lton, Los
WOMEN INTERESTED IN LEARNING
TO MAKE SUMMER WARDROBE.
Ci.ASSES STARTING IMMEDIAT'ELY I
6-l Hour l1uon1 s29"
l'hone 54,· 1195
" ~··
Harborites Say Vows den river's "nubby dan"
WOVEN FANCIES & SOLIDS
MRS. LL TEGEL
Hawa ii Home
Costa Mesa's ~'i rst United
t.1ethodisl Church was the set·
ting for the vov.• end ring ex-
change of Charla K a y
Spannan and Larry Lee
Tegel.
The llcv. Hichard J. Dunlap
performed lhe ceremony for
the daughter of ~J r. and Mrs.
Charles K. Sparman of Cosla
J\1esa and the son or Mr. and
J\1 rs. Henry J . Teg el ol
Newport Beach.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride asked her
sister, t.1rs. Peter B. Drew to
~ he r matron of honor.
Bridesmaids were the t.1isses
Theresa Keller, Sandra Teza
1 and Janice Herndon and J\1rs.
f{o bert Tegel. the•
bridegroom's sister-in-law . I
perm •nent press beauties for
dr•ss •nd 1portsweer.
REG. 98< YARD
16" WIDE
MACHINE WASH
FORTREI. ,OLYESTIER/COTTON
SCREEN
PRINTED
Mechin1 wesheble, bold designs, hot colors for sheer
dres•1 , b1ou111. ...,.
COM,ARE VALUES AT $1 .lt
POI. YESTER/COTTON
44"/45" WIDTHS
• 01h-ers to be-installed arc
the Mn1cs. llarnld Schaefgen. ---·--------
Attending e~ best man was
Carl Scvlin, v.·hile ushers were
Tegel. David Sanderson. lhe
bridegroom's cousin . Roger
Jones and Drew.
vice presidenl; David
Erickson. secretary: C. \\'.
Young . lreasurer. and Ralph
WoJahn , membership.
Danc e Club
Deck Shuffled
Cards will be dea1l along The newlyweds will make
v.•ith a buHet luncheon when their home in Hawaii. SAVE 40¢ to 99¢ YARD
fortrel po lyester/evril rayon
• CAMPUS SPORTS PRINTS !\1esa Rebekah l.odge 402 The bride is a graduate <>r
meets at noon Thursday, May Newporl Hartxir High School
20, in the International Order a n d the C a I i Io r n i a
Square' Riggers Sq u a re of Odd Fellows Temple, Costa Professional School of Medical
Dance Club "swin~s ou~" l\1esa, and Dental Personnel. Her hUs.
every \Vcdnesday at 8 p.m. in Tickets are SI · j}('T person band, al so a NHHS graduate.
lhe F i r s 1 l\1ethodist Church, and the public is invited to al· i.o; stationed in Hawaii with the
I 00 "I• cotton
• TERRY CLOTH PRINTS
'======================,:,,,==================,!__~C-O:::st,a Mesa. _______ •c_n_d_. __________ N_a~'Y:._R_es_e_cv_e_. ____ _ q 01. I 00 •1. cotton
• WHITE BULLSEYE PIQUE
:"*V*V*V*V""W*W.::V*Vl·ilU'*W*V *V*V*V*V*W •
-fC · .~:-~:~_~;,--· ~')J[aMk@ says: 7' .V-1
I
•
REDfJCE the g11ar4nteet/ wtty! anti .. ;
•
REDUCE
THE GUARANTEED WAY
IF YOU HAVE ADDED UNWANTED pOON!lS AND INCHES MR!
IS ONE SURE WAY TO GET BACK TO A SUM PEllfECTLY SliAPEO
FIGURE ••• START NOW AT GLORIAMAASHAtl'S WHEl!ETRAINED
FIGURE EXPEl!TS QUiCKLY SHAPE YOUR FlGURE TO ITS NATURAL
LOVELINESS AND KEEP rr THEl!EI
" )
I I'
~ .t! l
·1 .
' ' ~lmlll Cal •l'jO)" .. , MW 11if1• , 0 0
1'low ha1 •""llY to IPQrO' o~d. • n•W" ~ to. • • • l"°"~' to Glo••o Monholl 1"\i• loft 36}i r,,.1 .. , lo 31 lb•.
l'ot Ch!!dd TIOI only Jo,, 17 lroclin 111
"'' flrit 10 .. ;,111, b~t •~ '"'"°"' flu sli111 loll 63 poi.rndr cmd .55 lnchcl. '
' '
tr.11dll f;o11 hod 11ift11 vp 110!'9 o• ~
a-tflng bcrcl( inl• • ~ito llff S, ltu t,
it did hoppotll cit GlOklA MAUttAll'S.
~· Jo.t 23¥. iil!CMli _. 21 "°""'''
STILL ONLY' * ,,.~ 2 FREE $1!0 * wro: FACIALS .. ~~ .
•
' .
l 00 "/. rayon
• FLOCKED LYNETTE PRINTS
I 00 "/. acetate
•ACETATE SURRAH PRINTS
REG. $1.3' TO $1.98 YARD
16"/45" WIDTHS
GUAR. WASHAILl
new cross stitch, haevy qu•lity ~nits th ef will
naver 1aq or baq.
MACHIN£ WASH e NEVER IRON
EXCILLENT COLOR SELECTIONS
COM,ARE VALUES AT $5.91 yd.
5b"J.S8'' width1
going to the prom?
polye1ter /avrll rayon monarch
• FLOCKED DOTTED SWISS
kodel polyester/ovril rayon
• PERMA-PRESS ST AR GLOW
.98 yd.
$11' yd.
100°10 cotton
• WHISPER LACE $15' yd.
arnel trlocetate /fortrel polyester
• RIPPLE CREPE
1198 yd.
polye1ter & cotton
fl &MBROIDERED S.WISS
$298 ,,,
)6" to '45 '' width~
II HOUSE OF FllBRICS
S•Yttl C111e1t Pl11• -lri1tol •I S.11 011119• F"'¥• H111_. Plflo -171~ ~I l•,.!ot c .. ,. M•I• -541·1116 Se11t• A110 -S4l·SSS1
Or•111ef•lr Moll -Or~9•tho•p• •1td M••bo• l wa11e Pe•'''Ct111tr -L• P1I'"• •• Sl•nton
f11Herl1• -126·2JJ4 . • l111J1• P1rti -121·6l 2J
. , H~11tlrttt•11 C111Mr -EJ•ftt •' •• l ite!. l lvJ., H1111tl119f11111 l 11c.lt -1'7•101]
·1
. . .
..
-··
•
J 6 DAIL V PILOT
~
Moose Group
\Vomen ol the ~lcr '-"'
assemble the Hrst ~nd 1h1rd
Thursday of eacb m onth lor
meetings in Moose Home.
Costa Mesa. The programs
begin 1t 8 p.m.
TAKE
ANOTHER
GUESS
ytu m•V llkt 11 "'f~Y IUIUt l t t
\'IU 11t tit I~ tut "COUNT THI
STITCHES CONliST." Gttml"' 11
Ill "'pllW ti Ill I•""'· Yov cOllkl
WI" I 114'.M f •Jl.l) l"thu knlltln9 lfll4~1n• "' .,,.,, elf1ri1. c1m1 I~
,._,, fir tMllllr 9'1111.
The
KNIT WIT
Slut~ c ... 1 .. 1.,.
LOWl!lll MALL
C.1t1,M1u
a.u.2112
.. '
• • ..
Small World Guild It's Up, Up and Away 1 ____ u:_G""'~"·"·~=-OT1_a___ LEG~~,~~ICE ~N::1~t~~;~;~~~~
CllTl .. ICATI 0, I UllMIU Cl•Tll'IC,.TI OF aUSINllS "'"' -11 Mid D• trll ,ellce 0.•••"""" / w ' "ICTlTIOUI MAMI l'ICTITIOU5 NAMI ef 11\t CllY of Cotlt MIU fer 1 "'*' ..
Table s Work Pluns F L . ,.,,. 11nMnlt* doH C"111Y ht 11 Ulfto Tiit u...,,,,1,nt0 "°"' ,.,,1,., lhf It c-... , .... "' 11!"''' CllO) GIYt:
O·r' a·wyer'5 rves· ~ ..-WtlMlt ~ti.It ~lot. d\lefl"' I Ml-II~ Joi. Jl.MMrl T•I D~ blliea, '-l rffll tlllitt. twe ~ CMll ~11,· C11ltor11l1, unoMr tllt lie-l lvd., Ho. o . "'~P0'1 e,..,,., C1lNOf11I•, ""'!!' &lk11, -Hid b\ti:•, -y.ii..
tH*1• ti"" M-ti IOl 'S HANDYMAN uNllr tn. f\clllloul !Ir"' name of AP· blli;a. -DIKlr. Dlkt, -rMI blkt . tft
l"AINTINO SllllVICI tNI tt'ltl u ld tlrll'I U.11£ tnd 11111 uld firm I• comPOMCI Ill f)!k11 · color unkn1~. -MJtltnl, t
ln ch1r1e of entertainment :~1" -:VM ':C, ::=-': ,.: ~'::i 1~=1:: ,:1=. ~Z°!: ~=.~" flln =.,,~'"· --~'-"'"r-.•or ""' fun and sames a w a i t
member~ and guests -Of the
SmrlJ Wo rld Guil d of
Children's Hospital of Orange
County. Irvine
Bridge and other card
g:imcs \\•ill he pl;iycd n t R p.m .
Thursday, ~1ay 20, in the T ur·
lie Rock ElcmentarY' School.
Tickets at $1.2S each and In-
formation mav be obtained by
calling Jl.1rs. \\'. G. Pric e.
New guild officers \Vere in·
stalled during a salad Jun·
rheon in the Village Park
R ecreation Center.
A buHel of a ssorted salads
and breads made by members
were served amidst tables
d ecorated in a spring theme of
y ello"'' and white daisies and
greenery.
~trs, Richard W a g n e r •
outgoing president, introduced
ne w a ssociate members and
~1rs. JOlieph L . Stawic ki,
coordinator of guilcls for tbe
ho.~pilal. installed the new of·
ficers.
Serving d uring 1111e coming
y<'ar • will be the Jl.1mes.
U?onard Bartling, president;
J ames Sabin and William
Bartlett. vice p r esidents:
James Wertz and G 111 r y
Dalzell , secrelaries, a n d
Henry Dalby. treasurer.
Applications for associate
membership may be obtained
from Jl.1rs. Bartlett.
Jacquard
Effective
Lawyers' Wives of Orange
County will be Up, Up and
Away to their ins tallation
luncheon taking place Thurs·
day. May 20, in the Sad·
dleback Inn. Santa Ana.
Following an 11 a .m . social
hour and noon luncheon the
People. singing g roup from
UCI. will present a prog ram
of contemporary music.
Treasures
Earn Funds
are Mrs. James O'Brien, I• •• tollclwl ~ Ci r"'•" Jeh111o011, !27 •t•• Slrfft, NOT1C£ IS FUllTHEll GIVEN "''' H
cha irman, Mrs. Robtrt Hol· c;:"J.:.·, ~~~r.:;,~;~ Colltllltfl'l•I ~!7:'~.11.,·~~~·1;,~u10rnl•. :.,.,.::'i':r 111 ·~.=-;!11~,~ ,:i;:;z11n~:
\and, CO-Ch.airman 11!d a com• 1)1t .. A11rll )II, lrl1 C1r-11 Jlllhnson !II dtYI lollowln1 lht 11Ub!lc11lon flf lhlt • 11.l!Mri E Grtlll ll1tt Ill Ct lllarnll, Ori,,,. Coun1Y: N11tlct, !ht 11111 lf\utla.11'1111 Y"I In t~I
m1tlee Comprised Ot lhe MmeS. $1111 of C1lllOfnJ1, Or1nt1 tluftty; ' On MIY U, lt)I, bolo<• me, I Nol$ry !lndt r. II !hut bl on1, or In !ht Cl!~ of
Robert Pike Grover Frater °" •••II JO, 1t11, "'-'' ""'' 1 ,..,,,., Public: 111 ,,.. tor u ld s11t1, 11trr.ot1111v co111 M111, in which c•M •he 11•eci•ri¥ ' ,
1
Public ln 1NI fOI" 11kl Sltll o "'""'llY .,..,,.c1 C1rmtn Jollnllll'I ~-n 111 m1 to J/111! H i.olcl 11 1>11bllc 1uct111n ti 1 !lmt
and James Batue. 11111t1rld lloblrl E. Gr1111 kl\Cl'llln i. "'' 1>1 "'' H•1o0n ~,.. n~me 11 subtc•llltcl •rid <1111 ro ti. 1nri.w'l(fd,
M Robert 0 > C ft e J l Ill bl 1111 .lflOn wf>llH lllmt II 11/bKrlb• Ill lhf' wllhl!l !nJ!rUfl"t<ll I ncl lcilnowledt· Dllld: MIY 11, ltll
rs. 0 n •.ii '" 1114o within . 1nitrum1nl •rid H ll'lt •~ecuttcl tht um1. lit, E. NfTH
Sacramlnto, president Of 1cknowltc11td h• ••«IMwil the wmt. tOFFICtAL SEAL! c11111 o• Pollet
Lawyers' Wives of California, lOFFIC~.!£~~101,..11 ~!!:rw8~~111~~~":111flfn11 1o1:~11:~.~~10r•nP• C1$11it D•l Y ,:~~'i
will seat the inCGming board Noltl'Y Pu•ll~111tornlt Pr1nc1.,.1 0111c1 In • N I Prlnc:1•1I Ofllu 111 OrtnDI CounlY
Jnclud1ng the Mmes. oe o''"'' eountv My eomm1u1cw1 E•Pl•t•
Conway nresldent· John MY CIWflmll1l1111 11"1''' April t, 1•1J • I" ' Ju"' )I 191' "'llblllhed Or•ntt Co••' OtilW P''°"·(--------,-~------
Anderson , Ralph Dixon and l'ubll•hlll 0 ;1,..1 CM•I O.llY ,.,1e1, MtY 11. ,,, ll •NI Ju~ 1. 1•11 1111.11 P·t4'tt
William Murr a y. vice M1Y ~. 10. 11. 24. nn 1ox-11 LEGAL NOTICE ,111~~~~~"1~:T:u~iN•ss
p residents; William B yrnes ,. '* TllE uNOElll SIGNED <fo h•'•"" (ffllf1
t
• r. E G li>I! t!ff'd lwf' April !1, "11 '""• ct i...i to
and Frater, secre anes; ucne L AL NOTICE o1 •1CTtT1ous 1ustNESS c1n 11u.1 ... u unM• lh• 11c1111.,.,, 11,.., ,..,.,,
M IJ parrarnentarian· NAME ITATfMfNT ol TOlllllOCENTfll II tn1 """"'"'''' u r• a XWe , I • " H\4 Tht lollo.,lng Pt•Mllll 1r1 001"11 bu1f"'u ner Ill llloc:klldcl Sltttt 1fWl Et Tore 1116td,
LEG.\!: NOTICE
Furman R oberts, treasurer; "ICTITIOUI IUSINl'SI '" fl Toro. C•llfor"I• ...... rc n bu•!-• w••
k Jame' B.t'h'lor. d'
·-tor-at· NAME STAT•Mt:NT ElDAlllHEN COMPA"'Y. 11 H••bllr loi-mt rlv comi>0secl "' lh• lollowln•
A wee end treasure hunt '""' Tr.. follow\"' "'"°"' 1,1 001"' hi•""· Ne-..porl l t1ch. c.111ornlt t?WO. Hr""''· wnoH n•m,, 111 FULL •NI • .-ce
"th I f · f I large; James S lack. state bi/1111111 1i: H'""" kll1el1•. Jr · 11 Ht•bllr 1111no, o1 rt1IMnc1 '" 11 follows. ro-wl!:
WI ots o surprises or ear Y d St I THE Gll.EENEllY HIJI ••cd<hu'1t N•w-1 ll•1ch. Ctlllo•nl• tl660. Ernr•I w. H•~"' inc .. 1311 w El
h
.
11
b f d . representative, an an ey 11,'"· Hul!l'l ntfllfl '•ffdl. Ct lHotnl• e 111 1. kh111.-, 11 H"bllr 111anc1. s"unc11 11vc1 .. Hew1,...,.,., ,111,.,,.1, s oppers wt e oun J n a Gould. past president. """· Nt"'""'" Bt•ch, c11i10tnl1 tl'60. 901o;o. Thieves' Market snnnsored by Wllllt "' ltttheld 111rr. 1tIJ1 O.rdlt Sctitef., Dunlie, 11 H•rb<Y J1me1 l . ll1rrt1r, Suite 1u•. u11111,. l'y 8 rookl'lufll 5trH!, HuntlntJlllll 1111(11, hltncl, Newi>Orl lftc~. Ctllfor 11l1 ti~ I•~• To.,er, Del Amo l"lntnclt l Ctftltr,
You migbt not recognize the Interfaith Servicemen's c1111or1111. Thi• builntu h uncrucied D v Torr1nc1. c111ror1111 toJOl.
f
MirlNI I.ti 111rr, tNn l rcd<nut1I Cao1rlM•lh1•· ' D.lted Aorll l•. nll
some of the den im ef ects Center in San Clernente on CM Auxiliary .s1 .. 1t, Hun1111t11e11 1111CP1. Ct111otnl•. Htn•Y kh•tle•. J•. Err11" w. H1hn. lne .•
around currently. Frida.v and Saturday, May 21 T1111 11u11neu 11 ceflcluttPCI tiY • ttn1r11 Partnf'• • c1111or,,11 cor-111en ptrt11er.,,lp (hutbl114 i n<f wilt ). M&C,.<LANE, SCHAl,l'lt 4"10 HAUN llv: Err>lll W .... h,., Inc:.
Levi. the San Francisco firm and 22. The third Thurs day or the WHll•'" 1..-rnclcl S!lrr OM Wllllllr11._ l ulldlnf, Sull• niN J•mu L. l•rrttl,
founded in 1850 when Levi The sale will lake place in m onth members of t he M•'"'' Lfo!;~ iit'o!~~~111' CIHl••nlf '"
0
•111c1 b~~1,:::;vi~"~~~d1,.. tittltll)Ut ,...,.,.
Strauss cut up some the former city hall at 408 N. American L egion Auxiliary. Put111N1.c:r O(""" Cot•t Dtllv l'liet, PubHsl!Pd 0,,n'!!~~11 D•fl v Poioi ... TOAllDCENTElll", •• "' th• c11t1 "'
goldminer trousers out of tent F:I C;:imino from 9 a .m . to 8 Costa Mesa Unit 455 gather in
1
M_"_'_'·_'_"_'_'_'_"'_'_'_"'_"_'_'_" __ '_'_'._'_'i·"-"-"-·-':":'o'o':"'-:--':'o"':;:;'·o'~'~",---'-' .. _'.1 I ~1;0'~u1~~~·.~~~1~~N·t;11 •ncl 111~•1•r·
canvas. reports th8l for spring p.m. both days. the American Legion H all. at I LEGAL NOTICE ST•TE OF CAL1Fo111N1•.
f th I d
. I k P · h " t d t L EGAL NOTICE cl)Untv "' Le• An~•'-•· ...
or. e gas new entm oo s ersons w1s 1ng o ona e ~P;·~m;·===========,J---...:.,;;;;:;i;:-o;-;;;;'----------·! on A~•ll it. 1•11 b<'fnr• ,,.,, """•m· include : jacquard weaves , items for the sale, in;: ,.11, Ne.,. •n• p.inu de.,;entd, • Not1rv Public in •NI 1er 1.1.t
mullicolored stripes w i th particular furniture and l'ICTI TIOUI •Ul tNISI (l!llTIFICAT£ 01' COlll'Oll•TIO N StAI•. P•"oni llv IP~trfcl J •mfl I. .•• ,. STARS NAMI STATIMENT OOtNO I USINESS UNOfA rf tl. ~"""'"In me tn bt !no Pt rlOn .....,.,
d t n j m • ) 0 0 k backgrounds. \ISeab[e appliances, may CaJl The fello.,IM l"e•Hn b .SOlnt llu1!nu.1 FICTITIOUS NAME n~m• i. iull1~r/Md 1
& 1n1 wlthln In.
ant'
·que and early Amer•"can the le t . k Svdn1v o,,.,.,, i1 en• of th1 I I' THE UNOEllSIGNED COl!POllATION lllU"''"' •nd ICllr>a ... ltclttd lhtl ... II(· cen r or P!C up. CAlllVAN 11.ENTALS. UM t11I 11th deel h•rebv (tf'!lf~ ttill 11 11 ccnclucllnl . K u!rd '"' ''""· •
p atterns on natural off·'>''hite Proceeds will be U5ed for woild01 1ro1t •1holo91r1, Hii s trtet, ''"'' .a.n•, c ,111orn11. ""'""' ••I•• bu1lntss •' 1013 North ( WITNESS mv h•ncl •ncl 11111c111 11:<11.
denim, and a new ma!Lress operation of the servicemen's colu'"n 11 on• of th1 DAILY 11.EC·lllENTS, INC.. , Ct llfllrn11 H1rbo• 1eu1ev1rd, s1n1e Ant, c.11t11rnl1, OFFICIAL 5EALI !~~i!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!._~~:i"!..~~~--------~~~~-----------.!:;'~l ~LO;f:S;,;~·~·~·~·=·~·~·~'~'~'~"~·====!I C&r90t•llon, 761Wi lt1ml1h, 1111 G1rcl1n1. unde. t~t llclltlou1 fl•m name o1 EM· Gayle D. Mortin ticking slripe:. center. ctHforn11. PIRE CAMPER SALES 111<1 1~11 111e Nottno Publlc-Ct Htornl1 Thl1 bu1lntu 11 bllnt condutlld !IV 1 nome Ill Hid torpor1!1on trHI Ill prlnclpel Prl'l()pt ! Ollie• In Corportllon. PllCI ol bu1ln1n It 11 tollll""l: Liii An11l11 Ceunly Wll llt "' Tt Ylor AllHll.15 A1111clflt1 Carp0r1tlon, 1013 My CnmmlHlcn E•Plrtl
tlll-OC N .... 1n H1•bo<' 8®11Yt •d, .S1n11 Ant. NllY. ''· 191•
. . -
l'ubl1$1\ed Ol'l not CMll Dtllr Piiot, C1!11«nl1. STATE OF CALIFOlll NtA. MtY :1. 10, 11, 24. 1'11 let:IJ.11 Dt ted: Mtrdl l, ltll. COUNTY OF L05 ANGE.LEI, 11, AntellB ••-l•lfl CorPOl'l llM °" Apr!I JI, 1'11 blt11•t '"'· ... Ult•
llY John Cllttcro Vidffn. .,.rslgnlcl. • NnlltY Puellt In 1NI !00'
LEGAL NOTICE President 111cl Slltt, Pfl'loOt\lllY ''""-'"" Erntsl l ------~~cc--'-----l 5TATE OF CALIFORNIA l W. Ht~n -"""'" !11 m1 ID be !ht l'rtsl· COUNTY OF LOS 11NGELE5 ) u Ofnt. ol l~f coreortlion lhfl nttll~d tril
1'4'14 Oii tlllJ Jrd dt¥ of Maren, Ao 1911, wll!>ln lnllrumen1, k.-11 TO"" 111 I• IM
,ICTITIOUI aUllNISI Delore mt, t Noi.•v Pllbllc in And t11r Of:Hll"I wno ••tcull<f I~• wllllln ln1trU• NAMl ITATlMl'/llT lf\<f CDUn!V 111<1 5!alp, ~fllOlllflV AP. mtnl Oii -tll llf IM Cllti>Or.tlen IMrtl"
lellewlfl• N rloOll ll dlll,. M IMn Hired Jnh" CllUorcl Vldien know" 10 "'' naml"ll, •no •t~l'IONIPd•ed lo mt lht l 1lltlt
I t: lo M !ht Preslcl•nl "' lne cor..,,atlon tllal c:e,.•orllill!l t~ecu!td thf' wllhln lnt"tr
M000 ANO &$SOCl.t.Tf$, 115111 IJIKUled lllt "'llflln l111trurritM Oii ben1lf men! •ur1uon! Ill IU ~Y·llWI or I r-111'
ln>lnt lau1ev1r~, Tul!ln, C1lllornl1 111 Int tOtPOrlllon tl'te•eln nimtd, •fl<! ''"" nl lh bou d of <flr1C111,.. ·~· ltcknowltcl1M Ill mt '~·· llKll ccr-· WITNESS my ~·'Id """ ol!lcl11 Mii. 8eYl•n• Int .. • C1lllot11l1 Cetwlllon, 1!1on tllKUltcl th1 stmt , (OFF ICIAL .SEAL)
1Ull1 Irvine a ll!(!., Tu1!1n, Ctlllornlt (OF,.ICl&L SEALI Lnll M. 51oc:k'11 11610 DoMkl C. IClmM• Nct•r¥ PubHc<1lllornl1
Jonclol. J'l(., 1 C•Hlf>tnl1 CO•Porlllen. Nott•Y Pu"lc<:illlorlllt Prlncl111I OUlce In
11.11'1 tr¥1ne l !Yd .. Tutlln, Ctllfcr11l1 Prhw;lptl Of/Ice In Lm An"!eJ Coul'IV tt'80 l111 A•><tel•• Cauntv Mv Comml11lon fkplre1
Thll llvtlfttll 11 cenduciltl ,, I ~ MV '°"'"'TH!O" E•pl... M•r. 11, lt)J •1rl11otrshl P. Feb. t, 1916 Publl1hocl Or1ng1 Coell De!IY Plltr.
llt¥1t n, Inc. OONAL!J C. ICIMlt:•, &tty. Mer II, J6, JI I nd Ju,,,. I, 1'11 111,.71
It LtoMrd M. Hoed lJt SDUI~ S11rint ~oc L11 A11t1l10. c1u1. toou LEGAL NOTICE
The Glendale
Federal Savings
''Try us•• account. Pulll!1hld Or11111 Co11I OtllV l'llol. '"4.0C 1-----c-,c~c-·----
"' ____ • ., ~.,., .. ....,...--, M.IY l. 10. 17, ,._ 1'11 10J1 ·11 l'ublishtd O•tnW; Co11! 01i!y Pllel, •AA JUI
i 1----::-:::-:::-:::::===---r":':'~':· _':':· c'~':• c':':· ~':':"~~~-·~·~·~·~11 NOT ICI' ti' TlllUITll 'S IALI
l
• ------.-
I
r-'
Isn't it time for a fresh look at whe re you
are ... and where you really want to be?
Try us. If you can't visit one of ou r 27 neigh-
borhood offices, just phone. We simply transfe r
your savings into a "Try Us" account. .. and you
try us. With $10 or $10,000. How much and
how long are up to you.
The "Try Us" account, our new Umpteenth
Way To Save, is comfortable. You try us on your
own term s. So you bask, wi th o quarter of o
million others, in the warm security of over a
'
.!.·)
•
~ ,..t' Of· ~ ~
billion in assets. It's a nice feel ing. Then when
you want your investment back, we give it back
with interest.
Just remember. Once people know us, they
usually stay. So come try us. Then you t;on relax
and enjoy the other good things in life.
Trust Glendale Federal Savings ...
you can't lose.
Newport Beach 500 Newport Ce nter Drive • 644-0300
Costa Mesa 2300 Harbor Boulevard • 642-471 1 '
.#
' LEGA NOT G T.I . "''· ••
71 L ICE LE AL·NOTICE On Junf 10. 1'11, •I !1 :00 A.M •• OOV(lt
1----------------1--;;::;;:C:-7.C:,-C:-:CO:-CO-CCOCO--IEQU!TlfS. l"'C .. A corP1>•t1l1111. 11 <flllY l'Al•H NOTIC1 0 1" M<SH&l'S SALi •""".J11t...i Trulli• ~ft oM ~r1u1to1 Ho
Tri Coutotv Pl1itiC1. I~. l't1l..till. ,., Dttd" fl lru~I !l•fir'Otttmllor t . !Kt.
CE•Tt,tt&TE tlP COltPOllt&TtOM Heretd II Dtwi.on. ktltlltln O. o.-"· •••<u1.0 bY DANlfl E. MAN NING, ol\ll 001N6 IUllNl'I S UNOl'll Ol!l•nd•nl. Ne !~).ltj. recorded Oectmber 11, lt•t, 11 lrulr. N&.
'ICTITIOUI NAMI' IY ¥lrtue of an t•«ullon lnuPCI on ll)l!S 111 bonl< tH! Pllt 111 of Olllcl•I
THE UNOE lltSIGNEO COll .. OlllATION '"''uary l, 1911 bv lllt ~upor;o< (DUtl, llltcord1 In IN .,.Hice 11 Int C.Un!t
don lltttDr uril!'I' thll 11 I• cnnduUlllW I s1,. lltrrlil•dono, c.,.,.,,., 01 ''" '""'' Af<O•ll•• of 01tnQt Cnu~I•. Cellfllrnl1,
tlullMH ol «IOO WHI (hl l>ml " Avtnut . W E Ot-t. Ct lllornlt. ullclir tM fltll llDUI dlllO, St1ttolC1llfornl•. uPllll 1 lucl•m•nl HllLL ~TLl AT l'UILIC AUCTION 'T!J
llrm n1mt DI s.MUGGLElt'S tNN t lld llltl tnltttcl In l1vor el Tri·CDUni, P!i•lo<.. 1 GHES llOOEll FOii CA~H IMYt blt
ll\1 "'"" llf w lcl tor-t llllfl end 111 prl,.. Inc:. •• ll>Clgmont c•tdltn• •nd t t tlns! 1 11"'1 ol 1111 111 lowful mon•Y Of tti. ci1111 Pl&C• 01 t>ut lneu 11 ,1 ,11,._., Ht•okl 11. 01w111<1, oc11ni.tn o. o.w....,, United l11tu ) " th1 s....111 11•111'11) r11-
APo<l1ttfl Molt• el Ct lllornli, Inc:., L¥lt II. Ot WlOll 11 lud1m•11I deDtot1, :•net lo lht CwnlY CDUrll111111, 7(11 1.u1 Wlltlllrt l 1¥cl., •tw•rlv HHll, Ct . ,,._l"g • 111t btlt nct cl 111.Jol.lO le· C loc:~ W••I S1nt• An1 l lvd., .S11111 .a.n•. '1!1211 111111• clut en 1tld iudimt n1 on int dt l• ol •lllotnlt . t ll rlthl. llllt Incl lntt rt sl coro·
0.fed: A ... 11 I}, 1t11 !M l.....,lrKI QI 11ld tl«~llM, I ~ ...... VfYed Ill 1114 1111"' i'lttcl by II uMtr ttlol AUOC1•ttd MDIII fi1 lewlPCI Ull()ll t ll lllt r!Ohl. lltlt 1114 \~teru! DM<f or Ttuil In lllt 1•1111rlv 1llu1ttcl lft
C1lllo•11lt . Jn<. nl 11ld lu<1qm1nl deblo" !n 1111 GrOH•IY IM cir~ 111 N-1 hid!, ln 11111 C-f'I
ly N1th111 Wlnltrl \,, l~t CDUntv ol Otentt , Stt•t ol Ind Sitt• dtlCrlbld 11: SKrtl...., C1lll11•nl1. dul."l'lbed H k:>llews; I.GI I tnd lht SourhttllfflV IS ltl'l ...
STATE OF CALl'O•NIA ) Le! lt, Tr1cl n11, •• Sh""'" bv map Loi • Ill •1oc:k ~. cl C•"•I S•cll•~·
COUNTY oir LO! A"IOIELIES l ti. rt<o<dM In lloo~ 41 P1gf 1\ NtW1>11'1 l••<h. II ·-" "" • m••
On lhll 15th cl,!Y ol Aorll, A.O. 1tll. Mlocollt""""' m•c• ••<o,dtd '" 0,.n,~ lhoreol rtc11r.,.., In look 4, 111,1 ti,
1111or1 me, 1 litlllof'f' l'utlllc In •1111 tor Cwntv. C1111orn11, M11cell1"eou1 MIDI. rtco•dJ 11! Ot111,.
11Td SI•"· bfflllnlll1 1~p11r~ NATHAN l'Olll Cllll Orlvt. Nt w1>11r! flilch, Ctl· Cwnlv, Ct lltctnlt MtY tlK> llo tc"°""n
WINTERS known lo "'' lo ti. ll!f lfornli ~s: •011 C~~nn•I Pl1tr, Ntwpof! ll11t~.
$tt:ret1rt of lilt c11rpar1ll1111 lhll t •Kll!PCI NOTIC,E IS HEAEllY GtVEN !~ Call!crni-. (11 I tl•N I 1dclrt11 er <I"'•
!ht wltMn '""'""'e111 "" beh1lf 11! tht 1,1 11 itn , •t 0~ mon dn1P"lllo" !J •hown 1Hvt ~o ccr1<1rlll011 111.,,,. ,, ... , , "' ," ·, ' 11 l~·OO 0 cl«~ AM_ 81 wtrronlY It 11v•" t i to 111 con>1111inn1 t •bO• 11elcl1I Ol1lrlcl Ccurt, M1 W111 or tcrrettnf'Ul. ::~~"~.:' ::= !Ml 1111U1 corNr1llon 11th Slrtt!, Cltv of (OJI• M111, CGUlllY ol .Sold 1111 will M "'Ide. but wllllluf
WITNESS my hllld Incl tttl. Ort "''' !lttt 111 C1lllornl1, I wlH !tll •I c.ov1n1111 or wo,,•ntv, ••Prl lt or lmpl/f'd , Jolln M. 1111111,1 aubll< 1uc!Ten lo t~e ~lonnt 'tlldd••· for rtttrd!nQ !Ult "1>11Utlllo" or
Noltrv l'ubllt Jn C~ll> Ill l1wlul ...,OlllV el lh• U"lltd Sl1ltl. tumbrl n<;tS. lo 'aa¥ !ht r•m~lnlni p~:::
Ind 10, 51111 Slttl ~I !hf rlgM, lltlr Ind lntore1t ol 11ld clPt l •um cl t~• f'lll1r IKurtcl llY i tld
•l'NOfl, lllAIKO,I', IHAPtltl) &NO 1udgment clebt11r1 In !~1 •bovl dtl<:rltll<l Oetd of lruit. wltn lnterl1I 11 In 111• QUITTNl'lll, All,. P•OMriv. or H muc:h lflt r...,f •1 m1y ."'° nnto pr~¥1dHI, •dwt ntfl, 11 i ny, unlltr lh•
lllll Wlllll'llrt l fV•, SV!tt lHt ntc1111rr 10 11!1ttv t1lcl t•e(l/llon, W•m 1trm1 et Mid O•td Ill T•ull 1111 Ult 111
Lii Anttll l. Ct. .. K C•lltcl ln1trt 1t •NI cottt. lfl<f t•P!'llHI cl Ill• T•u1t~ 1..d ot 'l~I
,l.tlorMVI l't~~~~. ti C111tt Mui, Ct lUornlt. ""'II !•ulli Cfl•lld br otlcl DeM ol Trutl.
IM1·0C 0. 0. WlllCIASON, Mir1hll The bonellcltry undt t 111cl Otltl If
PublllhPCI Ort ntt Coesl Dtll~ Pllt>f, MullklPll COllrt, O•ingt CDUnl1 Trust. bY rtl1C11 el 1 b,.1ch or cllftutl lft M1¥ J. 10, 11, )I, !ti! 1Ct!0.1! Mt rbor JudlCl•I Olltritt mr ot>lltf!lanl l"'jUrtd lhUeD¥, l!t rflell1r1 I~ 11.. N. Gl!Gdf, O.tut¥ •~t<~ltd •nll cltltvutd lo Ille uncluslt "."'!•
LEGAL NOTICE Mlc11111 11. outotn • wr111011 0tc11r111cw1 e1 0et1u11 '"" 06-
1
-------;:cc=------·I m Ntri~ Ste•tut AYt .• Suitt • '"'"" fer S1t1. i ncl M l""' n1Hci •I l'•nm U•l•lltl. Cl llNt•I• brtlC~ •~cl cl t lt<llon '" tlUH II>•
<1'11.Tl,.lOTI ti' •UUNISS l'lt ln!ltl'I Al .. r•tY undt rlltnt!I 111 ttll Jtlcl 11"-rtf ..
l'ICTITIOUI NAME Pu"ll~td Orl nRt Cotll Ot l'-··1ri1 ,"1""' Jt lcl obllGetlCl"lt, I nd lt!trtl l!tr on " ' . 11>ru1rr J, ltll, fhl unll.-rtlt ntd c•u1e!I
Tiit Uftlle•1!tntd de tt •l!ly theY ••I M11 J, 10, 11, 1'11 1023'11 11lcl notice el •ritcll 111c1 e1 t lectlon tt e:i.
tel'lllUdlnt • llu1ln111 1t 101' Pltttnl11, rttordPCI In bftek ts.JI, Htl m, II stld
Cotl• Mn1. c11Hor111t, und,r '"" !I<-LEGAL NOTICE Ofll•!•I 111cord1 t!tlou1 llr"' n1m• el VOLKSTUNf 1rld Otlt: M•v !O. l•n lftt l U l<f fir"' 11 comPO•t'd Ill 11\r f&ji.,w. DOVER fQUITtf$, INC .• In• ... rSOfll. WIMlll fllmt l In full •NI I All lltf I .. l'IK~I ol •t sld-enc:t .,.. 11 lclklw!: NCITICI' 01' TllUSTl:l:'S IAl.E ~I 11 <f orut!N, Ch1rlt• 1"11111t1llo, Ht Ccnirul. Cott• T.S. Nt. Ul·11 8v· T.O. Servke C11mP1,.Y, ,6,f'linl Mfft . Ct ll!ornll. On Ml¥ 11. 1t11, 11 1!:00 A.M .. T D Wi id& II. H1v1.
Jim•• "· :1oi..r1. 10, Mtln, NIWi>O•I SfltVICt COMPANY, A C0ti>0roll11<1. •• Publl1~~~r~o;:1c1';'' M !lot IHt~. Ctlllornl1 dulv 1pPOlnted T•u11ee unlltr """ I P<I" t r N"'I ProH 1ur1u1nl to Dttd 111 Trull dll.cl Ul"'b ntd wlln 0 1llv I /let, NIWHrf OoltdC~•"r~,!JF~~~llo Otc•mber ], 1'6'. twecutfcl tlv!CARL II. IH<~. Ctlllorn11 Mt v 11. 14. ,1. ltll
J t,.,tl I', !iobtrJ CllE,l.ltY & J EAN CLEtRY. huftitncl t nd 1!'8·1l
.Sltll Ill C11llo1nl1, Ortntl count1: wll•, incl •l!Cllrcltd Decembtr s. lMO, fl ----,-----------
On M•Y ll. nn, btlll" "''· 1 Nottrv 1"11'· Na. '116 In btOk •u6 """' 31' er LEGAL NOTICE Publlc: In •"d fo< iold Siii~. P-l'•lllnt!IY OUltltl Rtcordt In !ht etflce cl thl 11111t1rld C/>1r111 l'tflOlllo ind Jt,.,t\ "· Cnun!v llltc.,dtr o! Or1n91 CDU"•v.1----------------
SoMfl ti:nown tn "'" lo 11-P lh• """"'' Cf lif11r11l1, WILL SELL AT PU8llC AU(· l'·l!IJJ """°" n1mn t rt IUDKrlbld le tnt wl!f\lll TION TO MIGHEST lllDOER FOA CASH (EllTl~ICATIE 0' COltl'tllltATIDN
)flllrumtnl I ncl t dll!llWltOted IP>t¥ I X• (111¥t blt t i llmt ot 1111 In !1wlul mcnrv 001"10 IUSI Nlll UNDlll. ICV!td ll'lt u mi . el I ... Unlltll Sll!tl l 11 !he South (Iron!) "ICTITIOUI NAMI
(OFFICIAL SEAL\ enl••llCt lo !hi CDUnlV CDUrlhOUlt, 100 TllE UNOf llSIGNl!O COltP'OlltAT IO"' MtrY lletfl M&l'ion •lock Wnl S1ntt An• Blvd., S•nl1 .f.n1, clcu hffllflY ct rtlfy t~•t ti 11 t_,.utnnt 1
Nolt rr l'Ubllc. Ct lltornli C1lllllfn!1 tTI rlt ht. ll!lo 1nd ln1u11r cor,. "«If r•<lnt encl b•ftdlng buJ!MH •' llllt
•rhw::.let l Olfk9 111 vt vld lo t nd now lleld bv 11 !Ind" ••l<f Beach lllut.v1rcl. But nt Ptr-. Ci lllor"I•.
Ort lltt C&u"IY 0.tll of Tr11sl 111 t~ .. prcoertv iltu1ted I" Ynd•r !hf llclifi(Mjl firm n1m1 Ill !!ENT
M¥-(Otnlf!lnlon txplrn u ld CounlY..trul SL!lt..dtJerl~ TREE Al.NCH t nd lh1t !ht nt m• II 11ld
Aprlf t, 1'15 Alt fl'l•t '''' ''""""Y loc:••~ in tnt torpor1•111n -1nd 111-prl11tlPll ~!let er
l'ubll-Or111u Cotll o111v "no<, Stilt 11! C1lltornlt , (DUnlv of Oran9o. bUl1"••~ !I•• fellow•·
MIV !I. l~. 31 10\d Junt I, Ull 1110.11 (11¥ or Co1t1 Mr11. cl~\tffbod 11 l<VR Entf'fPflH•: tnc:. to2' letch
--------"--------IOl-S: Loi 10 of TfACI •601 .•• P•• l oul•v•rcl, 8utn1 P1r);. C•llf0fnl1. LEGAL NOTICE mt p rttorclPCI I" looli. llOl. plffl JI I Od O•led S1ptrmbfor JO, lt 1(t JI o! Ml1Ct ll1neoo1 MID•, lfl , ... llfll(t l(VR ENTE~PAISES, IN(.
Ill ll>t tttordtt OI ••;cl <&unfy ICf'nntlh E R•1hnl'<lt r
NOT ICE ti' TlllUITl'l'I l&LI' MtY 1110 bt •!'OW~ ••• )Otl MadllCl'I STATE 01' CALIFOll:Nt.t. )
On Tfl.urfcll Y. !ht lll!ll d•Y ol J<Jn!, H11 . Awt nu" C11•lt M!H. Ct ll!orn11. Ill 1 COU NTY OF LOS ANGELES J H
II Int hour Ill 11 :00 A..M. •I Int Mtln 1trHI 1clclr111 or comMll!I d6itntllo-n 11 On '"I• 30th <f•v Of •••II, A.O. ltll,
fnlrl Mtt ol l~t O••fllt C 11 u n I Y 1hown t tlOY•, no wirrt nly f• glve11 01 lo btletf "'"· • Net1rv Publk In 11111 ~
Ceurtt..111, 1flll Civic Ctn .. , Orlvt . W11t, Ut c""•lttlfllll o1 corit<lt1eul. ltlcl C(MjnlV •114 $1111, WMl!tll• ""'
I,. ti. C!tv Ill So11t1 Ant , C1lllOf11!1, St lcl 11lf will M ..,ldt, bul .,lllloul fft rl'll ICPnM!h I!. 1111!1...,.tltr --n l!I
UNIT£0 5TATES HOLOING COMPA"IY. (11"11"1111 111' w1rrt nlv, ••1tu1 or l"'tl\td, mt IO Ill 1111 Prttldtnl Ill ti. COftoe•llloft
11 Tru1!H. wm lf!I 11 PUll!lt •uCll.,.,. te rn1rdl"9 lilt., llOllUlfOfl, 11, 0.,. 11111 uecul@d tM wllf\111 ln1!rurntnl Ofll
1111 hlt l!n• blddtr, tot t111'. 111 11..tul cu"'br"''"' 111 Pl ¥ !he r1m1lnlllt .,1,,. lltlitll of IM coroo,.!len lfll•tlll 111,,.ttl,
monev o! Int U1111PC1 St1t11, 111 t•vtblt t i tl11I oum of lht note 11t11red ,., 111c1 '"" 1C);110Wlltlord lo me !ht! llKll c¥•
1111 lime nr 1110, •II 1~11 Clrll lll •Ill ., ... Otttl el TrUI!, with lnltrlll II In ltlll 1>11r1t11111 ••Kulld !Ill l lmt .
.... rty llluolr In "" Cl!Y of Co1!0 M111, l!Ole erovldPCI, t d¥t nc:t1, 11 t nY , uMtr 1111' W!TNl!SS "'V 111"'11 •nd Hll
Or1nq1 CDUntv Hlfll<!r·Judlcl•I Dl11rlct, 1trm1 ol 18111 DIM 111 Tru1r. tees, t~••P•I (0FFIC14L S£AL\
Countv ol Or1ngf. Ct ltlorfllt , cr.1<rlt11d 1114 •xllfns•1 (II lflf' Truitet and of 1~1 Btw••IY J. ICulclluk l<lllowi: lrulll cre<d tlY 11,d D•td of T•~•' ' Nolorv Publlt C1llf11•nl1
Lot ll ol Tr1ct Ne .UOI, In lh' Cltv ol T~t l>fn1fltl•rv undor ••id O"'t'i 01 Prlnct1111 Olllc• In
C'l•t• M111, Countv cf Or1n1•. 51••• 11! Tru11. !Iv """'n of "b•t•cl> 0 , dtfau•t In le• Anttl,_ CwnlY C1111<1r"11, &I 11•• mt~ rtcordtd In loek '"' 11Dll1etton1 1rcurK1 , h ,.,, ~ v Mv Com,,.lulcn E·•1lr1t
160, Pttll JI I nd JI Ill ml1e1lltntnut ~1rtlolcr1 •~•cult<! •ncl delivered ,0 '"~ A.pd • 1A, 1'11 M•~1. !n lho. offlcr ol l~t COllnlY u11clrrslt11Pd f wrl!t•~ Otcll•llion of llt Ell ANO M.t.Nl'Ll.I. ' Atcordtr ol 11ld CDU"tv. O.llull •ncl 0 1m1nd !or Slit, i ncl .,,111111 tOO O•ltwtv E111 l ull<flq
l!XCf PT 111 ~I, 11• tncl 111/1.u l'IOiltt at bfOltll tnd el elttllllfl le U UH CffltYf'/ CllY h¥cl•oc:trDll" 1ub111nc11 1¥1"1 H!ew 1 lllt 11ncltlr1ltnld to 1111 llld Prol>triV to LOI •nt1!11. Cl llltl'ltlt HH1
Wtflltt! cltPlll ol jOI) IHI lrom ll'lt 11tl11Y 11Jcl ob!lg1llMJ, Ind lht•llffPr, 1111 &1torn111
1u•l1ct llltttOl. but wllllnul !hi rltM Ill J•nutf'/ lt, 1'11, 1111 uncltr1lt ntd (IUll<l "OlD.OC •nlry Of\ I~• 1url1tt l~trl'(ll. -• r11ttY· 11ld not!cr ot brrtch incl el t lt<:llo!l 111 k Pullll1111'd Or •nH Cot s! O.\tv Pllel. "" !~ 1111 cltPCI from Occ~"·lol l oi n tKllrdtd !n boa~ ISH Ptff 116. .i M ICI Ml¥ !I, )t, 11 •nd Ju111 1, 1111 11.._'1
(O#Nlt nv, t (orpor1tlon. rt corotd Ottltltl lllK11t<f1.
J•"u''' n. 116>. 0111: •P•il ,1. 1111 LEGAL NOTICE
Tiit 111t will 119 "'tdr wllhlllll covt.,.nl 11¥ T. O. SEll:VtCE COMPANY [-------------,,, ... trrtnh '"trcll"I !lilt , i>O•HHlon. Ot ti ltlcl l•Ul .. t p 41ft j
tnc:u,,.brtncts II 1111111 !ht cbll1l!t0n W•l!IO A M1u1. IKutPd Dv. 1nct 1111rsu•"' 11, 11'11 l>llWH ot Vlct·P•lllcltnl C£11tTtPIC&TI: 0, IUllNt:SI 1•! I .. ' " .... .. ' OH FICTITIOUS 'llllM NAJllll' • con ,,, " • (ft ." trYll II llled 0••1111 c .. 11 DtllV Pllfll, , ... una,,.1,-.... -· ...... ,,,,,-
PUU!td bv COSMO I . INSEll!lt& 1..0 N4t v J, 10, !I, 1'11 ·~ •• J EAN f INSEll.ltA, llulotltfltll i M wit• ••1----;-;;;;cc;--c,-o=cc--'':"C':·l:l1 !ht!ht 11 Cllflduehnt t •ttlll kllln11t t\ !~~' .. n11111. •I Tru1!ot1, "' U"ltT£0 LEGAL NOTICE In lllCll'wfllUl l 11 IJIJ o" •n. Mtfl. l uf'n• STATES HOLQINO CDMPAN 'I. 1 1 Ptr~ "'-Int Ce.<ltr. •u•nt l'1r-
Ct tl!or11l1 (Ofi!OO't tion, 11 l•v•lt•· "'" tllt _ C11;forn11, ~'IClt• ll'lt hct111ou1 '''"' n1.,.; 11111er11 11'111 l«lfl'lty ti FltANIC J, NtlTICI ti' l'•Ol'OSlD Ill TOY W(llU.O •ntf m1 t 1tlt tlr"' ••
LfYI NI I ~ MAlt GAltfT J LlVINS, •&NII: Ml'ltOl'll (""""°!od et l~t ll!lllwi111 H r14111., Wfll\f ~ulbl"'ll t "'ll wff.t 11 IOlnt itnffltl. 11 NOlk t b lllrtbt 11v111 tl>t l i oelittll.,. "11/N 11 Ill tun .,... .i1e1 11 r11Mt1.w;.1 !1
•111111c11,.,. dt ltd Jvnt tt. tttl, t llcl 1'111 111 .... mtdt II mt COl'l\tl!ellu " ... •1 '°1
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• • "' Ot II I Gtr~ 0•1"• Ctlll1t11l1
1'111. IO>t. ill IOOI: IJ1,, "'''' ''· et ef. tOMtftr In • "''"*'' 111 Nl.,POrl Nt 11()1'111 Otted ••H H. ltll ' flCll l rltOl'dl In tl'le 11111<,J ol tht C"'"'Y ltnlr, NewMrt llMtll, Ctlll!)t~lt, wftll tlt.rr 0 1rvt-Htll
lttc:oroe< ff Ori"" Ceulll'/. C1lllOl'nl1. l rill Inti &tlul""ft (1ll/ofal1 First Nt· ST.a.TE 01' e.t.Li,OlllNtA.
Nollet ol 011/tu\I 1Nt flKlloll I& S•ll llon11 ••n~. Si n Oi.Mi, t t lllernlt, COU NlY 0' t..0$ ANGii.it, ... ,~. •ncrl'*f ,... ••-•IY Ynlllf ,~. It II '°"''"'"'".., ·~·' •JI ottlcn Of Ofl ...... It :ti. 1'11. l!olfort 1'1'11 •• ···-•Md of lru11 w11 rtt:ordfd.,, 'tbf'111rv 1, t~t bn .... •· '" lt'1, I I ln•lrUl'Mnl NO ttJJ, I~ leek tSJt, 1 vt ftl tl"lll !l*nk1 "'Ill Clllltinut to ,.vbf"' In ln<f fllr 11ld Stitt, •trMllt l,.,
Pitt '°"' t1A ofllCltl r-•1 of it1• Ctu"' bt llH•lltd. •-•rtCI l:lltrr Trvt••rll ~-111 "'' Iii I\'. TM' llOllCr ll tubh1~1d l>U••uint te bt thr »tr""" -..t'IOH n•m• II 1~nrlbttl
0.!fll: MIV u. 1tll St<llon II IC) Ill '"' F1c11•1! Dtloul to 1111 wlm111 ln11t11'"•~•. •'Ill •t--1•••
UNITED STA Tll H 0 l 0' N 0 1111u .. nc1 AC!. tel IO.,.,. mu"' •x..i:ulf'M ,~. ltmt.
COM ••NY, NfNPOrl "'lllo~tl B•n~ W·l~Ht "'V ~ln<f ln<f 1111,
Ttv1ttt Ntw.orl llttch Cfl1lo•~l1 !OFFIC IAL SE•Lt
I • F. It. ltlW'd. SOu!~ttl! (tlolO~~To ~·:,•.v,yJ p Ob~lt~~
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.--------------,;--------------------------------------------;------------,------1 •ue1<1~1d OrtllQI 1(.M1! Otl!Y 1111&!. l'Ublls hH Ortntt C111Jl 0.llf l i!ot, •ubllfl't'd O•t "lt CM•I Ot !tV Pll!il MIV It. , •. l!. \ti! 111 .. 11 M&v J. 10, 11. !' .~ J11nt l. 1'11 lClS" MIY 11, }I, l! •"4 Jvn, 1. tt11 11, .. n.
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. . . , ....
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
MUTJ AND JEFF
1 SEE '1bUR
i'IAVY l'E!OS
YoU <3000,
'SAILOR!
JUDGE PARKER
-~M6 .\SKEP
™E IAAIO
TO AMSWER A
PMOWE C..t.U.
FOR HIM,
JOMMNV IS 1
VISl&LY SHAXEN
&Y TME
i MES6A.GE~ ;
If w.r..s LONG OtSTJ.NCE FROfril.
SOMEONE N.\.IAEP ~ ... v! ~·s
AR'RIVI MG .f.T TI-IE ~
&US PEP0T AT SIX IN TI-IE
Mo«NING "NP WA.MTS ~
TO MEET MER!
• ••
By Chester Gould
By Tom K. Ryan
.f.,
B Al Smith
SUBMARINE,
CHUM1
OH ·WHAT
DO YoUDO
ON THE su e ?
IT'S A P'tAcnol JOICE FlOM.
.. MAN RaEMP OF M.INE ! we·s
ALWA.VS 6ETTIM6 HtS WIFE ro· WJ(E TMOSE CV:Z.Y
CAU.S TO t.\E !
By Harold Le Doux
~~-LOOK. M.A.RIE •• TMESE Rl&S .UE
'4.UA.OST DONE~ WI LL 'fell WATCJ.I
Tl-I Ell.. fi'.lR A COtl PlE OF
MINUTES WM1LE I CA.LL
IA'I Fe!ENO MCI(?
Ll'L ABNER
•
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
.MOON MULLINS
.1. . " ,,
PLAIN JANE By Frank Baginski ANIMAL CRACKERS
ACRO~~
l Tht flfSl
Gospel:
Abb<.
5 -Nlt lS!l'l
of lht sil!nl
mov 1!S
9 Was 1
novelist
l ' Sitt ct \ht!
Ta! Mahal
15 Haw1111n
g11 l1nds
10 Eag le's ritstr
17 Post office
eus\()llltrs:
2 words
111 Tiny
ZO \n ~ny
respect·
2 words
21 C1evicrs
lcr hxtlve
obS!!'Yl!IOM
?l Choose
25 Horse 2• Slave
28JlmorM
3z "tt o! hold·
iriQ bltli
51 U) Rt~o
lutlooary
war gentral
5• S+ster of
Aaron
56 C(lt'oll aiy
of big
gl>\''rnmtnt
sotnd 1ng
2 words
b2 Fa int \Jate
of col cr
bl Ext1tt
fee lings" or
u 1de
b4 Pl~nflf!d
bb lMgt
n~tvral
stream
&7 Battlianal's
w1\d ct'{
bB Cl)mposer
of "Rule
8r1\ann1 a"
il'i I.II'( ard
Bllddy
70 Period before
Easttf
71 ''--
tharit t "'
2 word\
37 Solt f!f a plow.'
38 Rlvrr of
England
DOWtl
39 Add1ess •
1 lawyer
•l No: Freneh
•2 Containers
45 ChArlt!S "'·
Lit\llb trg:
Z words
48 Per iod nl
wort stoppage
50 E90
1 •
I " .
I':
I " ,, "
1 Mothe1s:
Informal
Z Variegated
thalttdony
3 Test
• 1,1.ost l119h
5 AutQCJ•IPh
lttter
s19ntd Abbr.
6 Ot p.11t
gradually
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11
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7 Automobdr
atCfSS!:r If~
8 Balance
sheet itr111
~ Laundrv
~opl1antes
10 Renovate
11 Used in
the mouth
12 Pitct of floor
t11Yerl11g
13 Congrr>
18 Kind of SO't
-22-Favoutt
5 17 71
40 Consider
•3 Ca19o<arry1ng
bar;t
44 k t hoc:kty
playtH>
10 Most sk1tltd
members
17 Of a certain
t ontintnt
'9 Est imated
ti"'t of
3rrlval Abbi
5Z Eji!Ct tCT~rtully
__53 Wai!_ on table
SS P~11 of 24 Goll hazard
l7 LDad tomplt!t1y dr•a11c;en1rnt
29 Soddrn sp;isrri Infor mal
of i:i.a +n S4i One whCl
30 01\f that acts for
i\ adored 57 P"ntrsi
31 Sand durit In Grttk
B•1t. ro1ytho\09y
3z Rrvis1M~ 58 Plant with I
Abbr. lleshy strm
)} Sta9t )q Prlvic boor s
direction bO Brstowrd
34 911,11 bl ln lilt ntar
JS Rece nt Prt fii tutll'r
3b ~akes lr~ther b5 D~ep black
• . ' " " " ll
ii•
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' " ·.' ~'? ,.,
19 lO. " \~ " " " ,, -'
PERKINS
MISS PEACH
fuTURE
A.JRL!N£_
~'ffVJAl?.PESfES
o~
A ME21Cll
l'f'lf.fr
s~Y. Uil.E-~Ell
IS~H~K?-
-WHILE THE ECONOMY SECTION OFFE~S
EVElt'ITHING-~IRST CLASS DOE <;, EXCEPT
n'S A LITTLE LESS LUXUll~S, THE FOOD IS
P!.A INEr<:, THE SEATING IS SLIGHTLY
SMAL LE ll .. ,
1==="="' === ;!__~~=-~.!-~~~
STEVE ROPER
Ar TJ1£6l~L1t
SNOW • 5ARKU
S7;4TrS #JS SPiil
P.AA'Oi-"'ONIVM'---~
iN'l.OD£S.'
.,.
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WE'LL TORTURE ~IS "METHOD" OcJTA
HIM, AN'-pA.1'lT.'·OP.Q::ll.!'."-G!T DATES
AT LA'IT. WIF AL.L THESE ML.5
WHArs RllFOOZllD us.'!
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L
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DAILY PILOr 17
By Al Capp
By Charles Barsotti
,._,,
By Gus Arriola
By Ferd Johnson
r .
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Pl f.ASE Do·"
,A~YPL.AC& ...
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cW?: i;nlll, so ru.. BE
Sllf¥1V~
10~11VE IT .
By John Miies
By Mell
l JUST llEALIZED
W"ATS WRONG WITH
MV LIFE--
IT'S ONE !>IG
ECONOMY
SECTION !
I
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1, 1. ; l •
<aJtE.A JJm.e IJ.1!,
txJOO-fio.l?tll \lleel(
'fOOK f').Ja. ~
ro:J~P«J!
-THI tT IANGI WOllO
~
MR.MUM
By Roger BoU.n
r SWX>T"!
DENNIS THE MENACE
..
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' I PEANUTS By C~nrl•s M. Schub
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s:JMEllME<' n'5 CM~ A LrTT!l
1HiN5 'll!AT 61'/ES VS HOl'f-
A ~MILE FROM A FRIE>W OR A ~6. OR 1HE 5161\T OF A 81R!I ~ING Hl6H AY:rlE ll!E T~EfS. .
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------. . ---... " ·. • I • ' ' • ' • •
?
II OAILY PILOT s
' D·.J Averages. New U.S.
fixperts Predict
Reaching 1,000
-~eonomy
Fragile Who Listens
L0S ANGELES -{8\\'l -,..
1.000 on the Do\Y Jones In-
dustrial averages.
A magic figur!' stock n1arke1
observers h1:1 ve been tatk!ng
about for weeks and ~'hith
less than a year ago would
have st!e111ed impossible lo
reach. In fact. lhc 1nag1c 1.000
r1gure has ne\·er been reached
though the a1·erages sniffed 1l
in the Dece1nber l96ll high of
98.i 21.
But no~· the 1n1poss1ble not
only appears to be possible in
I
FllWICE
Btibbles lfp • ttl Valley
the 1nlnds of mQ.<;t \~'all.
Spring and ~lootgon1ery slreet
analysis. it 's almost a 100
percent probability beforr
1971 1s ov~r. a number of
analysls told Calirorni a
business. y,•eslern financial
and business. new s paper
recently,
Do1nes under construction at Brookhurst Street and Slater .'\venue in fi'ountain
Valley are structures \\•hich \Vill be classrooms for Sullivan pre-school , sched-
uled for completion June 20 and planned to serve 200 youngsters, ages 2-6.
Total project is valued at $300.000 and is part of a chain of Sullivan pre·
liChools located throught California. . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-..,.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Regardless of 1he n1erits of
!he DJJA as a n1easu re of
stock market activity, serious
in\'estors and dabblers in thr
J>ecurities market continue to
qucs1ion, pinch. poke and t~ar
apart the averages in hopes or
discovering son1eU11ng about
the market the rest of 1hr
players doo '! know. •
pullbal•k or 50 points followed
by a strong 'summer r.ally
\\'hich "'ill carry the Dow over
I .000 by the end of summer or
early fall." he says.
It's not so much that money
is easier that's giving the
markcl its strength as it is
"farnings i n multiples."
asserts Rich.
What°'s Food. "'Ba1·gain?°'
Nutritional Value Key to Shopping
By S\'LVIA PORTER
For each food dollar you
spend, do you gel more •·nulri-
tional value" in the form of
protein from chicken or
lunafish or lamb chops~ What
real savings can you achieve
by switching lo m e a t
substitutes such as baked
Item
American cheese
Hamburger
Eggs
Cottage cheese
Pork & beans
Peanut butter
Dry beans
Amt. Ready to Eal
2 slices
2 oz .
2
•, cup
L cup
4 lblsp.
l cup
Cost per Serving
12c
))C
!IC
1c ,,
6c
3c Thal has led Lo two key
ques1ions in the minds o( most
in1•estors· y,•itl the bull market
1Jf the past few months con·
linue" \\'hen might the DJ IA
pc.p through t .ooo·~
"The avefage multip le
(ratio of per share earnings to
price) on the Dow was 20.9
during the Eisenho\11er ad-
1ninistration. 24.2 while Ken-
nedy was in office-, 19.l during
Johnson·s reign and 18 times
so far durtng Nixoo's term in
office.
beans, eggs. c~se'! Assum------------------------
lntervie'A'S ~·ith \\'esl Coast
and \\'all Street research
directors and f i n a n c i a I
analysts turns up an en1phalic
conclusion : An overwhelming
number share the view the
DJ IA will top 1,000 before the
end of the year, many believ-
ing the averages will bull
!hrough that peak before lhe
end of the summer.
.Joshua Rich, assistant direc-
tor of Research of New York
based Reynold s & Co .. for ex-
Rmple. s ee s thl' Ill·
dust rial mJ!rChi11£. Ol'.e.r..._1.000
within the next six 111onths.
"I think the market will be
sloppy In ~1ay and may have a
"So. based on history. 1 feel
the Dow should be selling soon
at 20 ti1nes earnings. The
l)oy,•"s average earnings are
now aboot 51 and a JO percent
impro\'ement on profit.s would
move earnings lo 56, which. at
a P-E of 20. would puL the
averages at 1,050," says Rich.
OJIA 1972 earni1Jgs cou ld
move to 60, \Yhicb -with a
mulliple of 20 -would put the
rnarket at 1,100 to 1,200, he
adds. the kind of optimism
that sees a bull markel y,•ith
"a long "'ay to go" because
''.Lhere's plenty of insli~uliooal
buying and we're looking for
better corporate profits and p.
E's in 1he last half of 1911.··
,
$2,500 Per Hour Spent
In County Says Irvine
The Irvine Company spends $2.500 every hour 111 Orange
County. according to Lansing Eberling. vice president,
finance.
"'Compiling statistics for the fiscal year ending April 30,
\l'C found that the company paid out some $22 million to
Orange C~nly firms during 1970.71." said Eberling. An
estimated 1200 Orange County firms do business with The
Irvine Company .
ing there are bargains in these
categories. ho\v do you find
them ~
You "'ill achie\·e spectacular
culs in your food market
basket if you search out the
nutritiona l bargains -I ho s e
types and cuts of meals and
meat substitutes which offer
you the greatest possible
amounts of protein and other
key nutrients for each dollar
you spend for food.
WHAT'S MORE. the nutri-
tional bargain is becoming a
major U.S. goal not only
because it can save us money
but also because "'e are con·
slantly being found to be suf.
ferin~ as a na liqp. from fun.
damental n u I r i I i o n a I in-
adequacies.
So. first. I'll get right to the
heart of the mailer. y,•ith this
table. prepared by the
Agriculture Depl. and l.'Om·
paring per-serving cosl3 of
various b a r g a i n meal
substitutes versus hamburger.
Each itefl'I on !he list give!i'.
you comparable amounts of
protein.
Second. if yOu decide to eat
egg dishes more frequently -
as a low-cost meat substitute.
here are the clues to egg
bargains :
If the price of a dozen extra
large .eggs is less than one.
ninth above the price of a
dozen large eggs, the extra
large eggs are a bargain
If the price of a dozen large
eggs is less than one·eighth
abo\'e lhal of medium eggs.
get the large ones.
"That includes expenditures for construction materials
and services, agricultural equipment and supplies. adver·
lising and graphics, professional and personal services. of-
fice equlp1nenl and supplies, maintenance. insurance. trans·
po.rtation. equipn:ienl rental. marina maintenance and sup-
phes .. food. caler1ng and hotel~," Eberling said.
IF' THE PRICt; of a dozen
medium eggs is less lhan one-
seventh above that of small ---'-I eggs. the mediums are thr """-.. ••-•••II'•--•-.. •--•... bargain.
·1r the price of a c1olen large
eggs is less than one.fourth
above that of small eggs, the
large eggs a~a bargain.
Third. che e is nol as much
of a protein rgain as eggs -
or eVelJ hamburger. Bu t com.
pared Lo steaks and chops.
cheese offers a lot of nutrition
for relatively little money.
THEREF'ORE, here are rive
key rules on how to get the
mOsl for your money in this
key category : -Sti~k to lcss-expensivr
domestic cheeses:
.._Buy process cheese in
place of "natural" cheeses.
es~ially those marked ag~d
and sharp:
-Get large chunks of cheese
rather than more coslly sliced
or grated cheese :
-Choose pasteurized pro-
cess cheese foods and spread!!
inslead of plain c h e e s e ,
although the latter ma y have
more flavor.
-Avoid cheese fro 1n
pressurized cans; obviouslv
you pay plenty for this type Or
package.
Fourth. don't forget tha1
Airline Boos I
LOS A~GELES -!BW J
\Ve-stern Airlines r e po r t e d
!f.1ay llJ that its April traffic
-aided by Easter and
PasSO\'er season travel -in -
creased 23.4 percent over
April of last year.
Based on preliminary
figu res. seat miles so ld totaled
421 milHon, compared to 341
million for April 1970. Easler
travel took place in March last
year.
bargains in milk -another
good source of protein -do
exist.
YOU CAN. ror example. mix .
nonfat dry milk \\'ilh fresh and
slash your milk costs. You can
gel your milk at t he
supermarket or dairy store
rather than have it delivered.
You can buy plain, whole milk
instead of more expensive but-
termilk. You can use less ex-
pe~sive evaporated i;nilk for
coolting.
If you heed these facts and
guidelines as you shop for
food. you will gel the most
REAL VALUE (in 1his case
nutritional ) for !he fewest
dOITifs ~and cenls. And that's
the real meaning of a bargain.
Blue Goose
Purchased
By PacLight
SAN f"RA :'lCISCO -i B\V \-
Pacific Lighting Corp., Los
Angeles. announced plans to
purchase lhe AssOciated Pruit
Orcha rds and Groves, packing
and marketing ope fations af-
filiated under the name of Blue
Goose Growers Inc. for a~
proximately $22.6 million.
Pacific Lighting 's board of
directors. authorized the ac·
quisition of lhe group of 28 en-
tities for $22.56 million . in-
cluding more than $3.6 millioo
in cash and the balance in
notes and assumption Qf debt.
* * HALLI DAY'S Briglit Liglits Flasli
Over Jlotels, Motels
Complelton of · I h e ac-
qu isition is scheduled June I.
according to Paul A .. \!iller,
Pacific Lighting president.
Included in the purchase art
10.026 acres of land in
California. Arizona, f'\orida
;ind ~1aryland : six farm
n1anage1nent companies and
t11el\·p pa c king house!i'.
operating in the same states:
t.wo regional ma r k et i n g
organizations. and a head·
quarters building and com·
pu!er center in f'ullerton.
Calif.
HOTEL ·MOTEL
EMPLO)'.MENT
IN CALIFORNIA
NEW YORK f AP )
Economic activity by the •Ni'I·
on administration suggests the
Image these days of a custom
car maker pulling I he
finishing touches on a creation
To Landers?
he has assembled laboriously ..
The-creation in this case is a
new economy, reworked out of
1 the remnant! or the old boom
of the 1960s, rebuilt here and ,
!here, and scoured or its ugly 1
protrusions by a painful reces-
sion.
The old economy was v.·eary
with inflation and waste and
inefficiency . The new
economy, in its assember's
view. is less inflated, less
dependent upon the military,
more productive, basically
stronger.
It was a long time emerg-
ing. and' for maiiy months the
critics of the administration
insisted that it would never
get built at all . But statistical-
ly it can bt shown to exist,
finally.
FLAW NOTED
But it is flawed, too . Pockets
~ recession remain.
Unemployme nt is relatively
high . Inflation, though reduc·
ed, does exist.
And so the designers are
busy at work polishing up
their creation.
In recent days. for exampie,
lhey have promised aid to the
aerospace indust..Y, w h e r e
unemployment is high: they
have promised pr efe rence for
depressed geographical areas;
they have promised to help the
farmer: they ha ve begun a
fight to give business a ta1
writeoff: and they hold out the
possibJlity of a tax cut for all .
The new economy certainly
is not a photograhic projection
of the vision of two years ago.
While generally hewing to the
light money. reduced spendi ng
regimen, the administration
has made actomodations to
reality also. I
Chief of these involves the 1
Pre~ident's. ov.·n inte~retation l
of his role 10 economic affai rs.
It was his firm belief two
years ago that the chief ex-
ecutive shou ldn'I intervene
directly in the market place.
VIEW BASIC
This view seemed basic lo
his philosophy. The market
should set its o"''n prices in
keeping with the Jaws of sup-
ply and demand. The Presi·
dent might Influence suppl
and demand through his
policies. but he must ne ver I
slep into the market and set I
pr ices directly.
Such a view presu1nes that I
the economy is governed byj
physical laws -!hat every ac-
tion has a rl'aelion. for ex.
1 ample. But the economy is
•
SINCE
SHE'S
ONE
OF
THE
TEN
MOST
hardly a perfect machine. Tlj
has loo many human parts. 11
doesn'l always act logically. INFLUENTIAL
Big business or big unions.
for example. ca n dictate
prices. and they ha\'e done sn.
Steel prices i:?o up while l
business falls off: st~lworker
\\'ages rise l~ough unemplo.v-
ment. o\·er the long term.
doesn'I.
\'I EW ACCEPTEll
WOMEN
And so the builder!! of lhl", IN
Nixon economy appear lo have
j?rudging!v accepted the view
tha1 their machine cannot
function h.v itself but needs sn
assist now and then fr om the
ch;er eng;nee<. J) m"'' be ad-AMERICA ju~ted from tin1e to time.
This i.q ho\\• the President
exnlains the change: • •
--·
•
Regarclness o! b 1 i n k i n g
•·vacancy" or "no vacancy"'
signs. Califomia"s hotel-motel
business has flashed a con-
sistently bright emplO'yemnt
pi cture 111 recc111 years
According to-rcset1r€h by
Crocker-Citizens Nat io n a I
sistently bright emplo~·ment
in the state-increased 49 per-
cent from 1950 lo 1970. Thal
represents a net gain of 21 ,000
cn1ployes. or an a1•eragr of
2.100 per year.
it Blue Goose's s trong
management-group-will be re
tained. according lo Miller .
Off icers include Do n A.
Collins. currently g e n er a I
manager. "·hn "'ill become
president. and Paul F .
Eadington. Da\'1d L. Palmer
and John E. Bums. 'vice
president!.
''Because !here are times
_1\'hcn...economic. fuedom..musl -----
b(' prott'C!ed from ii.\ own e-x-1
cesses. I \\'ill continue to use
the po\\•tr nf my office In Just
HALL) DA Y'S KNIT SHIRT~ ARE NOT
JUST FOR THE GOLF COURSE.
TJ1r<<" k111t~ Ar r \1ulvrrd in rhr ju~t t!~hl
llall1dd3 '~ lll&!\tHT tn l'l'Hlld!' )Q!I \\tlh !he
!R•U:ll t:11od look~ ~<•U Il l'<' Ro ·,·u•lnrn<'d In.
f1111· f'l''l'rnn111I /rno1'1!r h) Cll<'n11~r I.a (' .. ,1e
\1. 11••11 11111)l11l1lr 111·l11n 'i!l'f'<ll 11r11 'l,1lr~.
111 h•·t k111r~ 111 ~11h tlr <11·1r1nt:•
lllld lt.1Jd
ll;ilhd11_1 ·, l\n1 1-frnni SIO.
\\'h111 1~ ~ l"<•r1J1n r.oi krt ·• ··
Vor 1970. Crocker Bank
esllmates that paid employ-
ment in all California hotels
and motels totaled 6t000.
1 compared to 43.000 in 1960 and
33.000 in 1950.
ll
U!I 1111 )til
•1$1••t• ••
C•OCltU·ClllllMLHAflOfPIAl IMlt
The i,\l1dy. based n n ------------
. ~lat1st1cs fron1 lhe U.S. Census
I Burf!a u and county busines~
pattern reports. shov.•s that
employrnent during the 1950-
1%0 interval increased al a
rale of 1,000 per yenr .
Crocker said there are about
~.100 lodging estabishment~
001v operl'lting in California
having an annual payroll 1n
excess of $230 milhoo. Aboul
half of these are relati\Pely
:sn1al1 operations y,•ilh btJ1 two
or three enlployes.
Pl1ilco-Ford
Plant Sold
Philco-Ford Corporal ton of
Phila~lphia has announced
thal agreement has been
reached with t~eneral lnslru-
mtnt Corporation for lhe
purchase or Philto-Ford '~
:iemiconductor p I a n l at
K11ohsiung, T1uwan
The sale "·ill be effective
June !. according to Philip
Cald'ACll. Phik•o-Ford presi·
dcnl The purchase price y,·a~
nol d1stlu~t'll.
"The-Blue Goose-organiza·
lions currently ha1•e varied
<11vners. \Ve b r Ii c v e con·
solidation of O\l'nershi p y,•ill
enable their m;inagement to
operate n1ore efficiently and
econornically.'' i\1i!ler said .
Land in\'Olved in t he
purchase inrlude-" 3.139 acres
of orange, lemon. tangerine.
mandarin nnd g r a p e f r u it
~roves: 2.023 acres of apple,
peach. plum and limited cher-
ry orchards, and 4.864 acre! of
open land . some in prime
<1e 1·elo~nl areas.
Blue (:oos(' ha s ap-
proximately 400 employes.
persuade business and labor 101
act respnnsiblv in makinJil
further progress against in·
fl?fion ."
The President. In other
I\' n rd~ . has for,.sak!!n a
philosoohical oositio In
reroPnilion of lhe need lo he
practical. And in doing sn, he
mav be arlmi!l ine-!hat his nel\'
economy j., only as .~trnn~ -
nr as weak -as the Pre11l·
dent.
BA NK ADS
SUCCESS
• • •
About
Everyone
Does
That's ~Ila
You Can 'Listen' to Ann Landers
•
~!EN'S 1"RAOITIO~AL CLOTl!li\C;
1701 I IJIYtN( AVE.
NEWPOJIT IEACH
W(STCllf~ PLAZA
1'1-f l4$.01'1
However. lhe bank notes
that the trend has been loward
larger· un its .• About 200 or
these eslablishments h a 1· e
nlore than 50 employes E'<'IC'h.
""early JOO employ from 20 to
50 per.sons each.
Finol Stocks
In All Home
Edition•
Pacific Lighting Corp. is a
na!urar i;a~ utility-oriented
company ¥i'h1ch began it! ac·
qu estlnn program in mid· 1969.
Acquisition of the Blue Goos
Organizations will mark the
sixth made since that time.
/\lore than 12 percent of the
compRny·.~ income applicable
In rom1non S'lock v.·R~ from
non·u!l!lt~· companies-in 1970. Do ily in The I DAILY PILOT )
I
"The sale of our T111w11n
plNlt 1"" part of an orderly
phaSt''OUJ of the i\lirroclec·
tron1~·~ l1ivl~1on. \\'hlch ha ~
follo\\<'d th!' dcri!lion madr 111
Fcbruar\' to wllhdn1w trom
the s~ni1rnnductor bus1ne.ss, '' <..:~ltf'A·ell said
~liller said the tompany ln-
lcnrls In enn11nur I!~ scltttile
an<I ron1rollM acqui~ition pr~
11ran1 \I. hlfc r~gnitlnR thRI
It~ bil.'\IC bu sincs! ·~ the
dlti;lrlbution of natural gas
SA,V f'RAXCISCO fUPT \
-Bank of America said its
campaign to catch bank rob-
bery suspect~ by means ol
nev.·spaper ads has been suc·
cessful. The bank pubtlshed1
ads last December containing
photos of five suspects and of-I
fering rewards or •t.000 for
1 fhc ir capture. "four of the l
five now have been ap-
prehended ," D.S. Langsdorf.1 sen ior vice president 11nd con·
!roller ~aid. In prt\'IOUl'I 11d~.1 lhf! bank published the pho!n~1 of six robbery su:1pccts Anrl
flvr or these 11lso have bte.n
C:11UJjh1 . J
'"-~~~~~~------· -
'
•
w
h.
1
'
3 LINES
• 2 TIMES
2 DOLLARS
!Any Item Priced $50 Or Less)
Pin~l1 Yo111·scli A Pile Of Pe11nies
(01· Eve11 Dollars)
. I
~ __ L Dial Direct for Details Pen-n-y-Pfffgle r-s-1------~--642-5678
Pile Up P.rofits· No rth County, 540·1220, Toll Free
•
DAILY PILOT PENNY PINCHER WANT ADS
• •
•
•
I •
I
I
-
• •
l
'
'
.. . . . . .. '
•
.20 DAILY PILOT
Sears
ALLSTATE PJUI•enger
Tire Guarantee
G--...teed Aa•in,.u All tlre f.,ilu:ra
from normal nwt haxuds or dcf«U ia
rmi:crial or workm»Uhip.
For How Lou•: For 1he life ol the-oti&·
inal und.
Wluit Sun. Will Do: 111 Cl'Chaow: for
the Utt. ~bee i1, tharsins only for me
propan.ion of current M!lling price pl111
Fedt-n.I &cl~ Tu rlw rcpr~na und
at.ed. JlcpW-nail pllDCIW"CI t.l no <lw-~
Guua.nter.d A1"ain11 : Tre~ ..,,·car.out.
t'or How Lone: The np.mber of monlhs
specified.
Wh•t Se.rm Will Do: In etthanse for
• ti~ replace' ir, charging me Cllfn!:Ol
.elling prier plus FcdmU Pelle Tu lnJ
the following al lowmx'.e.
MontMG.....--1
Ill w24
2710l9
40
•
•
•
•
Monday, J.1ay 17, 1971
I
. . .. ~ . ~ ..... •"' .....
r
Guaranteed 36 Months
Low Low Priced Fora· Belted T"ll"e
• Belted CoDsuuction (rayoo car·
cass plus 2 rayon bel11) for great-
er stability, petlormanre, safer
band ling . . . ..
~Features tbe soh ride of rayon
cord witb reinfotced need area
ta reduce squirm
• More tOld ex>nlaet for llferll.OpS
. .00 oupelik hmdling
6.50xl3fC78.U
'fubel ... BbckwaD
Plus $2 F.E.T.
And Old Tire
SIZE .......... -· F.&T.
TUBELESS BLACKWALL
6.50xl3/C7S.13 15.95 ·-7.35xJ4 E7S.14 19.95 %.37
7.75xl4 F7S.14 21.95 . ;!.54
8.25x14 G78-14 24.95 1.69
TUBELESS WHITEWALL
6.50xl3tt 78-13 18.95 %.OI
7.35x }.ifTo".78-14 22.95 2:31 •
7.75xl• F7S.14 24.95 :tS4
8.2Sxl4 G7S.14 27.95 2 -
8.S5xl4 H78-)4 30.95 !!.95
8.25xl5/G7S.15 30.95 2JlO
8.55x15/H7S.15 33.95 3.01
•
·SAVE 25% NOW!l
33.95
36.95
29.9"
37.95
25.46
27.71
22.46
28.46
DYNA GLASS
WIDE GUARD
TUBELESS WHITEWALL 2 Fiberglass Belts
Pins 2 Nylon Plies
Regular Trade-In Priee '28.9S
7.35xl4 E7S.l4 35.95
7.75x l4 F7S.14 37.95
8.25x 14 G7S.14 411.95
8.55xl4 H78-14 43.95
8.85xl4 J7S.14 46.95
8.25xl5 G7S.15 41.95
8.55xl5/H7S.15 44.95
STOP
At Sears for a
.Q9MPL¥."l'E
BRAKE
JOB
26.%
28.46
30.71
32.96
35.21
31.46
33.71
•
36-Month Guarantee
AskAbtndSean c.,...,.,..;e,., CredU Plalu.
6.50x 13/C78-IJ
TubelessB!aek....il
Pim $2 F.E.T.
And Old Tin
SAVE '40 !
Disc or Drum? Sears Au.to Air Conditioner
Here's What Sears Experts Do:
• Carefully repack front wheel
bearings
• Carefully rtbuild hydraulic wheel
cylinden
• Remove and replace brake shoe
release spri n~
• Replace hold-down springs
•Remove and replace both front
grc.st seals
•Turn and true brake drums o r
reface discs
• Fit new brake shoes or disc pads
•Flush and add hydraulic brake
flu.i d as needed
• Inspect mas te r cyliodcr :uid
emergency brake
•Finally, we test your br.kcs out
on the road
COME IN NOW FOR YOUR FREE
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n ... ,., .. Du1y Mu.IDer
uretimc G~•r•ntee
Jr muffler faih .luc ro
deice-ti in maccn•h «
"'otl:mtn!hip or hlow-
out. tlJ!l-OUI or •eat· ~1 while ori.11inal pur·
~hiHer owns the.-ur, ir
9.·11\ br f'l'J!l.ad upon
fl'lutO. fn.'C of Cb¥.11Co If t~ dcfectivt. muffitt
it.u inHaJleJ by Scars.
-will 111$1&1l 1hc """ ro.ufflcr with oo cbaqiic
fur labor.
• Large, full-length tuning
chamber for better sound·
s il e ri c"ing. 22-ga. outer
shell galv.uiized on both
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Phillips BlOws Off Steam: Calls
Monq,y, Mir 17, 1971 DAILY PILOT %)
Johnson Defiant
By.ROGER. CARUON
I O! fllt o.fty .. lit Stiff
On paper the CaUfornia Angels are a
~finite American League .west/ cham·
pjonship threat.
But manager Harold "Lefty" Phillips'
l-h1los aren't e1a.ctly burning up the
American League -let alone their own
division.
They're six games off Oakland's pace
as '-11nnesota's defending AL \\'est tlllists
move in tonight (I) for the first of• four.
game set.
The Angels dropped 1 &-2 decision IG
Milwaukee Sunday before 3,951 at
Anaheim Stadium, dipping again under
the .SOO mart (la.19).
Rudy. "4_ay (3-2) is'...,.I lo lliirl for
California against the Twins' Bert
B,lyleven, the 2G-yW'<Old phfnoin wbo
was tolling for Santiago lff&h School two
yean ago.
There have been severa l rea·sons put
forth r"ecenUy on just what has been
wrong with the Callfornil attack, but
PbJllips, In an unusual outburst, laid ll on
the line Sunday afternoon.
Alex Johnso\' the American League
batting champ last year with a .329
mark, was out of the starting lineup for
the second day and chances are he won't
be back barring some sort or turn a.round
by the fonner Philly, Cardinal and
Redleg.
-.!ll.A.lo< J".,,.,_.nJ!oes oot ~ his icUons I'll not play him ,.anymore,"
•teamed PTIUll(lO, who waa 62 $unday.
But, tbert ~as nothing kl ijMi tlr even
A,,.e1 si.te
All O-t .. litM"C en•>
MIY 11 -Anteli "'· M~ M•Y II -"""-w .. to\IM4tol• _,. If -A-16 •t. M~•
J:U · '''""
J:U '·"'· J:1S ......
remolely tesembllhg a party type et·
mospbere as Phillip.!· let kM>se on . the
Angels ' problem chUd.
"We can win jwst as many ·withoul him
if we 're going to get only 30 to 40 per ctnL
of "'hat he's capabie of doin8;.
"I put up with tbis thing all lut
year .•. but l thought as a )ea&ut leader
CbaUing) he'd show some pride W. time
around," stean\ed Philllp.s.
"And I think it's bolhering Wine of the
others on the team. This has been a
g\dsing game since be joined the club -
but I'm not alone.
.. ln one word he's defiant. He won't be
back In lht starting lineup until l see fit.
"It's his wbole all,round play -hls
fielding, baserunning and general at-
titude," was Phillipt; matter-of.fact
response, Johnson's current batting
average is .239.
The Angels' birthday boy wasn't in
much of a mood following f\1ilwaukee 's
li-hit attack sparked by Tommy llarper's
four safeties.
DAIL'( .. ILOT ""°"' " •1t:t1•N 11 .. hl.,.
Tile Angels Utd ll brle!ly In"~ second
Ct·2) on doublts by Ken J.tcMuUen and
Syd O'Brien.
But a two-run homer by Ellie
Rodrigue£ and a solo job by T~ Kubiak
finlsbed off the Cherubs.
Catcher John Ste;pbenson and Mc)fullen
continued theJr heroics in the batUng
department (two bits apiece) fer the
Angel! -but that was about the extent
of anything pleulng Phillips. ·
Lloyd Allen, starting in Clyde Wright'•
spot j tendonitis), was ahelled for slx hll&
in 3-1/J innings and reliefer Ardtie
Reynolds wasn't much better, allowing
aix more safeties and four runs.
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Ex-Olynipic Games Steir
Roberson Named
UCI Spike Coach
By HOWARD L. HAN DY
Of Hit Dally PllM Si.II
Irvin "Bo" Roberson, a silver medal ist
in the 1960 Olympic Games as a long
jumper and for six years a flanker back
in the American . Football Cooferenct,
"'"as named today as head track and field
coach at UC Irvine by Athletic Director
Dr. Raymond Thornton·.
Roberson. at age 36, has a varied and
colorfu l career in athletics and a quiet
nature to bring to the coachin' ranks at
UCL
A graduate of Cornell Unlver11ity, he
played basketball and football in high
school and college along with jumping,
running the sprints and the hurdles.
"\Ve are very pleased and honored to
have a man of ?\-tr. Robe r son'11
background as our first track and flekl
coach at UCJ," 'IM!'nton told the DAILY
PIWf.
BO ROBERSON
UC Irvine Track Coach
MILWAUKEE'S TOMMY HARPER IS CAUGHT CN RUNDOWN BY SANDY ALOMAR. HARPER WAS 4-FOR-4 SUNDAY IN 6-l WIN OVER ANGELS.
"We are very pleased to havt a world
class athlete such as Bt> on our staff. He
has had considerable experience in ad-
ministration as well as recreation and
will be able to assist us in more than one
area.
Stanley Cup
Deciding Gru11e
Set Tuesday .
Dodgers Rally~ 9-6
Haller Gets Enjoyment
"fOl\l'fREAL -"Those Pifaho,•lich
boys," Chicago coach Billy Reay sighed,
shaking his head in disbelief.
Out' of Beating Giants
For lhe second Sunday in a row , that'!
all Black Hawks goalie Tony Esposito
seemed to see. And. as they had a week
earlier, it was those Mahovlich boys -
Frank and his kid brother, Pele -who
carried f\1ontreal to a thrilling victory in
the nationally televised National Hockey
League championships.
The Canadieas' come-from-behind 4-3
triumph sent the Stanley Cup series back
to Chicago for the seventh and deciding
game Tuesday night.
Frank se<>red a playoff-record 14th goal
and missed a chance to up that count on
a fi rst-period penalty shot. His 'l7 playoff
points also tied the single-season mark.
Peter scored h\•ice, including the u·in·
ner with Montreal playing a man short In
the third period.
.• JtlcKa11 Likes It All
SAti " FRANCISCO (AP) -Many
baseball players· who return lo haunt
their former teammates deny a ,Nenge ful
motive, but not Los Angeles Dodge;s
catcher Tom Haller.
Figuring Jn four rallies and driving in
three runs, Haller powered the Dodgers
to a 9-tl victory over the San Francisco
Giants Sunday and didn't minimize his
Dodger Slate
A~ 0 •111tt N k"I 16*)
Dad~ ,, sr. LGiri• Cod,.., •T St. Loul'
Dod9tr'5 •I 51. LOUii
l :S1 p ''" s·ss P m.
10;2S •.m.
joy over clobbering his one-lime buddies.
"It's always great to beat the Giants,"
said Haller. y,•bo balled .400 against Sa n
Franc:isco lasl season. "I think I have
a psychological edge against the Giants
; 11 was almost like a Fourth of July because I know their pitchers and what lhey can throw." ~aerial display but tnstead or fireworks it . :was a football blasting through the lower Both teams•took today otf before open-
:atmosphere at the hands of Trojan ing three-game series· Tuesday to the
• .,uarte.rbacks. They made fiO lries and hit east. the Giants in Chicago and the
'l Dodgers in St. Louis.
·on 36 of them. Hailer's second-inning grounder scored
"I liked it all," USC coach John ~1cKey Rk:hit. Allen. with lhe first run, and his
: summed up Saturday's intrasquad scrim-sixth-inning double drove in Willie Davis ~mage at the Los Angeles Coliseum. lo put the Dodgers ahead 3-2.
season-high 33,981 watched the game and
the three-game series auracted 98,336.
"It's not the end of the world. J'lJ take
two out of three in any series and five of
six any week," Fox added.
Dodger manager Walt Alston was not
discouraged. "We were in the first game
and could have won the .second,"' Alston
said, referring to Juan Marichal's I.() vk!·
lory Saturday when the Giants collected
only two hits.
Alston said be didn't feel any extra
pressure to win the finale, though losing
it would have dropped the Dodgers 11
games off the pace.
"l never gave it a thought," Alston
said. ''It's too early to be gelling excited
about peManl races. Heck, we have JS
games to go with the Giants."
Reliever Jim Brewer, 2-0, was the win-
ner afler holding the Gjants scoreless for
two innings. Reliever Don McMahon, 2-2.
was the victim of the three-run eighth
and suffered the loss.
Speir, who committed two of the
Giants' four errors, summed up the long
day npproprialely "l lelt like I \li·as
playing for Barnum and Bailey."
LO$ A/rilGl:LIES IA/Iii l"•AHCllCO
Rookie Gree11
Plays .It Cool,
Wins Tourney
HOUSTON (AP) -Rookie llubcrt
Green said he fel l no particular pressure
. \\'hen he went to the first extra hole in a
sudden-death pla.vorr with vetc1·;in Don
January for lhe $25,000 first prize in the
Houston Champions Jn,1itatio11al Golf
Tournament.
"Well, hell,'' shrugged the laconic.
unflappable young rnan, ''J"m walking
down No. I fa irway and I sure can't
flnish worse than second. Everyone else
has finished.''
"When we are ready to launch a foot-
ball program, he could help there as
well." Thornton adds:-
"While he is getting a late start In
reeruiling, some of our other coaches
have talked to area athleles and t am
b'\lfe we will have 1 representative
team."
Roberson i1 very pleased with the
facilities at UCI. One or the m08t
modem, up-t!Mlale tartan surface tracks
is at his command and many experts rate
it ahead of the UCLA track, one of the
finest on any campus in the country.
At the present lime, Roberson is com-
pleting work on his master's degree at
Whitworth College in Spokane, Wash. He
will return to Spokane Tuesday to finish
this work and will be on hand in Irvine .
M_ay 25 or 26.
Roberson wa~ the Pan American
Games long jump champion in 1959 with
a leap or 26-2. His second place Olympic
Games finish to Ralph Boslon in Rome
was ~-inch off the winners' mark.
Roberson leaped 26·7"' to 26-7~4 for
Boston, both marks over the Olympie
record at that Ume .
Jn addition to jumping, Roberson was a
t .4 sprinter and had a best nlark of 22.1
for lhe 220-yard low hurdles on 1 traightaway __ ·_
As a high school star in Philadel phia,
he was named as the outstanding prep
athlete ill the city on two successive
years -1952·53.
After graduatiifn from Cornell, he spent
t9:5Ml al the U.S. ~1i\itary Academy in
West Point working with track and field
athletes and competing while serving as
a lieutenant In lhe army.
ln 1962 he sjgned a pro football contract
with the San Diego Chargers, the first
Ivy Leaguer to enter the play-for-p.ay
ranks. He signed as a free agent and
played one year in the Border City. He
also played for Oakland . Buffalo and the
Plliaml Dolphins. And he scouted for the;
Raiders for a year.
He spent a year attending law school at
Stanford upon completion of his pro grid
career in 1967 but decided coaching and
v.•orking with youth was more rewarding.
Whitworth College in Spokane beckooed
and he answered the call as an assistant
football coach and this past year hal'I
been spent as a community liaison officer
for a junior high school in Spokane.
He nall ed down the top prize on that
first extra hole Sunday, lashing a nine
iron shot 13 fee t from the flag and run·
ning in the putt from his unorthodox
stance deeply crouched, fett "'idely
spread, and elbows oul.
The birdie y,•on it over !he -41-year-old
January, a IS-year tour veteran and
form er PGA champion. January missed
the green and chipped to about three feet
before the 24-year-old rookie settled it.
Green, who failed to make it when he
first tried the PGA players school, joined
the tour only la te last year. The viclory
pushed his ea rn ings for the year to
Liquori Overcomes Ryun 's
U11beatableFinishingl{icl{
$59,300, $44,100 In the last four weeks . PHILADELPHIA (AP) -f\1arty LI·
Green, a oalive of Birmingham , Ala ., quori beat Jim Ryun in their super milt
and a Florida Stale graduate, and th id d Janua ry finished 1he regu lation 72 holes Sunday by challenging e y,•or recor
with scores of 280, just rour under par on holder in his specialty -an unbeatable
the rugged, 7,166-yard, par·7 1 Champions nnishing kick.
Golf Club course. 'The one thing Liquori feared in prepar-
that he had outdueled lhe fastest m11er In
the world.
Ryun didn 't think Liquor i was lucky.
"Marty ran a bril\ianl race and I just.
followed him. J didn't undereslimak his
strength," Ryun said. "He knew I always
• •
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-Wil~-----· a-\ ....... ri l-J l -l
1..ct,,.,, rl JI I t Spc~. '' J l 'I I
marking the end or 20 days of _spring Bobt>y Boads' three-run homer in the
..-----~lrillilng:111e-Reds downed-the Whites-5$---silttr]aVe 1J\e Giants-a-s:s1ead;-but-wes
Green ~ad a steady par 71 o~ !he fi~al . f lh race was that Ryun would round while Janual')' <:losea 9u1ckly with ing or e . h . he f a -68. -------out kick him-in the-ttret.c -m l eawr
wa!I strong in the last 200 yards and with
100-yards-ltft I saw-him a~bit bea~.---
Tben I got a bit heavy myseU and he held i-21. . J. Parker's two-run homer and Hailer's
Jn the Southern Cal display senior im-single highlighted a three-run eighth.
·my Jones completed sev.en Of nine for 208 Haller scored on a throwing error by
vard!I and two touchdowns. His partner rookie shomtop Chris Speier Wbo was
On the Red team, junior Mike Rae, struck trying for a double play.
for 11 of 19 and ITI yards and 1 Davis' double and Hailer's single pro-
touchdown. 1 du~ the eventual winning run in a
; Across town the UCLA Bl u cs three-run ninth .
: $11eamrollered the Golds 34-8. James "There were too many free runs -it
! t.1cAJister and Marv Kendricks led the looked like nobody wanted to win;" said
' running attack for the varsity_. t.tcAlister manager Charlie Fox of the Giants. com.
·made 23 trips for 170 yards and a menUng on th·e eight errors, 13 wlllks and
i touchdown and Kendricks s I a m m e d 11 pitchers in the 3'1'1:-0our donnybrook.
: through 14 times fOr 5-4 yards and three The Joss anapped a five-game win
: louchdown.s. streak for the Giants, who lead 1he Na-. Pepper Rodgers. the new Bruin coach, Uonal League · West by nine games. A
• said he plans to work both Mike Flores.
M!k•rllel'I, p l 0 t t M1y1, d I 0 I I
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Mo••· rf I O O I ll!.O.r!$Pr1, P t t I I Rtbet1tr, p I t o o
lG!•f' 31 f 12 1 Tt1•1t. 37 • I •
Loi A"fltln 010 101 OU -f
$111 Fr~nCIKO 000 101 001 -I I: -Lt l.O¥rt 1, H•ll ... , 801"<11, 01111, l"l!r
2. Wlllt, Mc(a~y, OP -!In l"rUICIKO 1. LOii -
Lo. Anll!"' 11. S..11 Fr1ncltco t. 111 -H.iltr, W.
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-fU'lfllM, "'-YS 2, Wlllt. 5 -l"llt!'llM.
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n .ft1 •
L•••llno Kor .... , .. ma~•v w1~~1~11• ~un<l•v in event of the Martin Luther King Games.
lh• U2!,000 HOl,IS!on CFYITJl'lon1 1nvor111orwo1 901t th' ·r """rnu r-1: He thought Ryun was stronger and •t-i
"'"""" Grttn, ll!.OOO ..... n.n-no the race was cloee, nobody could beet Ole Don J,rKiflry, Jl._XIO ll·IJ.U...,.._114 r· ( 20!) '· ao11 Murl>hv, 11.• 6t.1ua.11-111 former Kansas star in the 1na yarlllto
L" Trtv!l'IG, s1.1S0 1•n-u.•1-211 well. Ryun was close in the !lretcb. He 0.n Siiia, MAil 111-15-11...._:117
Lou Gr•hlm, w1i ,,_.,_.,.,,_,., was a step behind Liquori with 200 yards o.w1n w •• .,.,. tJ.10 10_.,_.,.1~11J L. .1 I I h Ben Cr1ns~<1 11m111ur) 1~9.7.J.11-"J to go. Surprise ! 1quov never e 1m
l'lomera a1anc•~. \;.l•J 10" 13 n-11J gain an inch and won by a step In 3:54.6, Ch•rln, COOdr, IJ.l;IO n .ffl.6115-71•
JOl'H> Mllltt, s:o,Bo 1J .. 1.11.n-11• lhe fastest mile ever recorded in the
ao11 •C\buro, 12.u1 n 1'"'' 10-iu easlern Un1"ted Slates. O.i. Oovol•U, 11.!.ll 11-11-10 11-11;
Joh" schitt. 12.1J1 11-6•·l•·i9-11s "We were bolh dead tired al the end."
Gwrt• A•cMr. 11,111 11-'9·1l·1J...:111 I h " J••rv M<Gtt, "·'" ,,., .. ,11-.,_,.. Liquori said a ter is greatest victory. i:l r.""::;:v; :i::: ~::~,:.·;!::: "But 1 was lucky to hang on. I expected
G1t1111 G11btr1, 11.•:11 10-11.11.1 ..... m to have him flying by," he observed. Jt
:!;' lr!.:,'v;1,~11lu ~::!!:;f.~~:~ seemed as U Uquori was 1Ull 1urpriaed
1 primarily a passer, and Clay Gallagher, s
·runner and passer. at the quarterback1
.slot this fall .
"Evenlually, I'll settle on ol'le, ••be said.
e Pnc.8 Pla11offl Stnrt
SAN f'ltANClSCO -The playoffs for
Laguna's Muth~r Qualifies for 500
· the Pacific-3 Conference baseball title
start Thursday at Washington State's dia-
1 mond in Pullman, Wash.
' Southern California, 17--0, and Stanford
: 11~. Southern division leaders, will con-
• tt:nd with Washington State. 7-4, and
: Oregon, 7·9, of the Nortbem dlvllion, for
1he right to represent the Pacific .. NCAA
District 8 playoffs, Thomas J . Hamilton.
~~rerence d!rtttor, said Stlnday.
Oregon will meet USC in the double
·:elimination tournament's first game
•tarting al noon. Stanford will JilRy WSU
at 3 p.m. Thursday's winners will play
each other 'Friday. The lltle game will be
·p\aytd Saturday afternoon.
lNDlANAPOLlS (AP) -Three gleam.
Ing memorials to the late Bruce
!\.tcLa.ren, British auto racing genius, will
start one, two and four in the 55lh SOO.
mile race f\1ay 29 at the Indianapclis
?i.1otor Speedway.
The new titan. 18 McLlrtnt domln11ted
the first wetkend of 10-mlle lime trials to
ht! completed next Saturday and Sunday.
t..aguna Beach's Rick Mulhtr qualified
In the No. ti position in a H~wk.Qf.
fcnhauser. Muther averaged 169.972
m.p.h.
Tht \\•altr·lhin chance that the single
turbine engine tnlry might qualify l'l'as
virtually en<led when t11uther quallfic<i.
Only Muther has had experience driving
the Allison 250 turbine owned by Jack
Adams of f\lemphls.
Peter Revson of New York won the
pole position and about fl5,000 in cash
and accessory prizes, with a record four-
l•p 1verag:e of 171.li96 m.p.h.
Mark Donohue, who had done over 180
In practice with .a twin to the
Offt.nhauser.powered Rev son car, had to
seltle for second -the Inside of the
three-car front row -at 177,l)J7.
Bruce ti.1cLlren's London factoi)"'staff
hu carried on with bullt·ln efficiency
since he was kllletl a few da ys after last
year's Indianapolis ract, testing a new
•
<:ar for the Canadian-American Challenge
Cup se ries.
He had left Indianapolis disappointed
6y the breakdown of his car, driven also
by Revson , less than halfway through the
500" Bobby Unser, 1968 lpdy winner,
prevented a sweep by th"t ~lark IC13 in
this year's time trials, by putting one or
Dnn Gurney's Eagle-Offenh'Ulsers on 100
out.side or the front row at 175.816.
The first 26 qualifiers averl'lged 171 .•51
m.p.h., compared With the. previous
rtcerd of 167.076 for tht same ~tage in
last year'!! trials.
New Ztalauder Denis llultne, lean1·
..
mate of Revson on the McLaren factory
team, was fourth.fastest at' 174 .910 and
will sta rt in the second row just bthlnd
Revson. Donohue's h-1trk 11 is owned by
road racer Roger Penske of Phlladelphit,
who helped develop it.
The ~cond row wil l be row\de~ out by
1970 Indy winner Al Unaer In one of
Parnt:lll Jones' Coll Fordt 1nd thret-Ume
wlru1er A. J . Foyt Jr. in one of his owp
Coyote-Fords. Foyt held the qualifying
record briefly 1t 174.317 before It , was
broken sutteHively by Donohue and
Rev son.
up."
Ryun, loo was clocked In 3:S•.6,
finishing ,well ahead of Byron Dyct._ who
<:ame in third in 3: 59.6. Reggie McAfee of
Brevard (N.C.) Junior College wa:f
fourth (4:00.0) and Keith Colburn of
Sports lntemalionaJ fifth (4:02.1).
Llquori ran fifth and Ryun sevenfll
through most of the first two laps. The
half W&!l completed in 2:03.2. The pa(.'t,
howet'er, was too slow and Liquori knew
it. So, he decided to go out and make the
race himself. He took over the lead just
as the field started the third lap.
Ryun sensed that Liquori was going le>
try and run him intQ the ground and took
up the <:hallenge.
The world's two greatest milers ran the
final half with never more th an a stride
sepa rating them. The crowd of some
23,000 at Franklin Field was on Its feet tli'I
they rounded the rinal turn or the gun lap
and Into the stretch. Here was what Li·
quori feared. IIt had to outrun the guy
who also held the world half·mlle record.
Ryun reached back for hls ramou.s
flnlshlng kick which had made him the
No. 1 miler In 3:51.1, world record holder,
before his shocking reUrement In Jun-, -
t96t. lie couJdn't gain •n Inch. At the end
l.lquoli ttlll had lhe.t precious step a~
his meet cherished v\ctofy .
Llquort ran the flm quarter In SI
seconds, eompltted tht second leg in 62.2
and the third in 56.7. He finished In ~.I
under \remendous pre"ure from ~
"'host aplits were 61.4. 11.9, $7.0, .and $4.3 .
••
..
·: .
-fJ OA!l V PILOT Mond,q, M.tJ 17, t•?l
' · Regional Playoff Tilt
UCI, Puget Sound Nines
. .
ToSettleDisputeFriday
By HOWARD l.. HA NDY
Of .... Dilly ,llM ll1tf
From out or lhe Paclrlc Norlh wt!st,
whtrt rain plays a leading role in the
dtsUnles of spring baseball action. will
tome the Puget Sound Loggers Friday to
do battle with coach Gary Adams ' UC
lrvint Anteaters.
·~e of the meeting between two
teams thal know each other well even
Utough they have never met on the dia·
mond , will be the San Fernando Valley
Stale Colleg field Friday at 11.
Both are entered· In the 1971 NCAA
~ern Regional basebaU playoffs. A
year ago, Puget Sound was bumped oul
of a spot In the playoffs by I.he UCI nine
in its first year of play.
Pugel Sound boasted a 17·10 record and
UCI a U.10 mark.. The selection com·
mittee was forced to rever5e a decision
I that had placect Puget Sound in t.he
playoffs and give that place to UCI after
ffantic cro53 country telephone con-
versations.
All that is In lhe past , however. and the
dispute will be settled on the basebsll
diamond Friday.
Going into a pair of doubleheaders over
• the weekend. the Loggers had posted a
17-6 record this season.
The most reWarding accompl ishment
came during the spring recess when the
19ue.r1 won the first annua1 Don Kirsh . . • ' .
frep Nines
:· ~wait Opening .
r1ayoff Games
:r our Orange Coast area teanu have
'6:ade the CIF baseball playoffs, and In
eijch Insta nce, the area clubs are on the
r~ad Tuesday in opening round com·
ptlllion. All games are al 3.
:Jn /\.AAA circles Marina High's Sunset
Memorial Tournament at the University
of Oregon.
Puget Sound won out over such teams
as the Unlversity of Washington . Oregon
State. Oregon, Portland University,
Portland State, Seattle University 111d St.
Mary's College.
Leading the Loggers lhls season 11
southpaw hurler Craig Cukey. Caskey
was named most valuabl@ player In the
Kirsh tourney after posting a 2-1 win over
the University of Portland In the cham·
pionship game with • lhrtt-hitter.
His only Jo53 In an g..1 aeason came at
the hands of Oregon State, a team he had
defeated earlier. When he Jost, he was
coming back after only two days rest.
1-lfs earned run average of 2.06 speaks
for itself. He has 71 strike.o~ in 70 1/3
innings and has outstanding control.
"You have to hit him to beat him,"
athletic director Doug McArLhur says.
McArthur has be.en around the Puget
Sound scene for several years and has
watched the Loggers participate in three
successive regional tournamenl5 unlil
they were bumped a year ago.
Two years ago the Loggers won the
tournament and one of the more pro-
minent a lum ni of the school is
Cleveland's Rich Hand. The Loggers also
won the regional basketball title this
year.
Other pitchers on lhe staff include
Dave Beba {2-1, 3.24 ERA ), a Tight
hander who played basketball,'stands 6-4
and weighs ~10, He Is a fast ball pitcher.
Also Don Bechtel, a sophomore rlghl han·
der (f.I, 1.80 ERA).
Lt a ding the te am In tutting is Greg
McCollum. a sophomore first baseman
with a .373 mark. He was drafted by the
Boston Red Sox out of high school and
tumed down an offer of $15,000 to sign.
'McCollum also leads the team in
homers (5) and doubles (I). He his 1
pair of triples and 19 rbL
CUrt McNeley, 11 freahman , has moved
last year's starling ahorUtop to third
base. He is hitting at a .388 average and
•Jg one of lhe fastest men on the team.
Chuck Last, a sophomore a.nd the man
moved to third, is hilling .300 and has l'
rbi.
:Geague runnerup Vikings visit Chaffey Jim Berg. a second baseman, is only
~le Matl!r Del ... 1 No. 2 entry from the one of two senio~s on Lhe young Pugel
Al'l"elus League is at Norlh Torrance. Sound team. He 1s a three-year. atarte.r
• !:' • -~-fur t.bt...LJggea and JJ currently bdlln& at :Fountain Valley's second place "Baroni a .2Sl mark.
lq the Irvine League are at Upland while Jim Azevedo, a sophomore wilh four
Slln aemente's No. 3 entry (tied for se-yean of military duty behind him, Ls the
cOnd in the Crestview League) trek lo leading outfit.Ider. He plays left field and
1'n1sa Grande In AAA action. has ~ rbi this season although t'is aver·
"(" age 1s at the .250 mark. : Easiest route to North Torrance As a team the Loggers are hitting .267
1-ligh is to go north on San Diego compared to .310 for UCJ.
Freeway, takt Artesia Blvd. turnoff. Go McArthur, In 111mmln1 up his opin\on
West on Artesia lcl'l on Prairie. Proceed of this year's LA>gger team. says: . ' . "It's as good as the team we had two
aouth to !Mith, turn lefl and go 1h mile. ago lhat won the regionals: It is
; Awaiting Mater Dei \3 Jim O'Brien's ~:~sger and perhaps not quite u good
~xons. led by pitcher ,Phil Manahan, a defensively but it hat more speed. The
r1,ghthander with a 7.3 overall mark. b!ggest .. need is an out!tandlng No. %
:Fountain Valley's battle with Upland pituccherl ·d •1 h t bout th• · . . oesn ave o worry 1
'{ill be at ~pland Mt1Jl.Or1al Park in No. 2 man. The Anteaters will face No. l
Upland . The best route is lo take the -Cr•g Caskey on Friday.
Riverside Freeway to 71 (prior to
GLENN WHITE
Sports Editor
Belmont Stakes
No Walkover
For Canonero
BALTIMORE (AP ) -Cano nero 11,
\•irlually unwanted as a yearling and
unknown as the Kentucky Derby winner,
now has the oppOsition unhinged as he
shoots for the firsl Triple Crown in 23
yea rs.
''I don't intend to hook Canonero again
lf I can help it," Reggie Cornell, the
trainer or Eastern Fleet, said after the
Cinderella horse <>f 1971 scored a spec-
tacular triumph Saturday in the
Preakness.
It ·Was Eastern Fleet who stayed with
Caoonero'ILl.hroughout the I 3/16 mile
claMic. Butlii'the end, Venei.uelan
jockey Gustavo Avila and his mount were
pulling away.
The victory margin was l lh lenglh.1 and
the time of 1: 54 broke the Pimllco track
record, set in the 1955 Preakness by
Nashua, by three-fifths of a second .
"My horse didn't stop," said Eddie
Maple, the jockey aboard Eastern Flflet.
"The other one just ran raster."
"If the race had been longer." jubilant
trainer Juan Arias said, •·11e would hive
won by a bigger margin,"
The Belmont Stakes in New York, last
of the Triple Crown series on June S, is at
11h miles. Arias asid the di stance would
not bother Canonero II, and the owners
and trainers of other horses seem to
agree.
So far, on ly J'm French, Lhe third-pJace
fin isher irom the ll·horse Preakness
field, seemed likely to compete in the
Belmont Five of the field were in lhe
Derby, too. with Jim French the runner·
up that time.
Sound Off was fourth in the Preakness,
followed by Bold Reason, Executioner,
Royal J .D.. Vegas Vic, Impetuosity,
Spouting Homa and Limit to Reason.
Despite ~ recent startling wccesses,
however, the Belmont doesn't figure lo be
a walkover. Among the Be Im o n l
possibilities who mi ssed the first two Tri·
pie Crown races are Good Be.having, Run
the Gauntlet and On Your Toes.
Citation. in 1948. was the last Triple
Crown winner. And , since 1958, the Bel-
mont has been the stumbling block for
Tim Tam, carry Back, Northern Dancer,
Kauai King and Majestic Prince.
Corona). Go north on 71 (Euclid Ave.) to
1'oothill Blvd. Upland Park. is 11" milts
u sl of Euclid on Foothill Blvd.
\Maf"lina·s clash with Chaffey will be at
Ontario's J ohn Galvin Park. Easiut
directions -" Co north on Riverside
f)-eeway . North on 71 (Euclid Ave.) to
<t!Ji St .. tast on 4th ~ mile to park.
CINA E'ini•hes Second
Polo Crown. to Pl1illips
fian Clemente's test '!'.'ith Bolsa Grande
v.flll be on the Matadors' diamond,
l~ated at 9401 Westminster Blvd . in
Qarden Grove.
'.Coach Al Hall 01 the. Matadora says
ht'll throw either Bob Poitras or Jack
Kasuda (both righlhanders ) at San
Qemente.
Phillips 66's A Uam defeated the CINA
A squad. 7·6. to capture the SPAAU
water polo championship at Golden West
College Sunday afternoon.
In the third place game. Phillips· B
team handed the CINA B squad a 5.<f set.-
back .
The tournament was a warmup session
for the Pan-America n tria~ May ~30 at
Belmont Plaza In Long Beach.
Baseball Sta_ndings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
w L Prt. GB
Bos1Dn 20 II . 64S
Baltimore 19 13 .SM "' Detroll " 17 .485 ' New York IS 16 .48< s
Washington 15 19 .... ,.,
Cleveland 12 20 .37S 8'1
\\'est Di"l •ion
Oakland 2S 14 .641
~finnesota 18 17 .514 ' An geli 18 19 .m • Kansas City " 19 .488 6
)1 ilw11ukee " 18 .438 7\\
Chicago 13 20 .394 ' ,,,...,,,, lttt011tl
lloltlf'l'IOft ol &io\Ofl, t1ln
C1t,,.l1nd I! Ntw Yori!.. 2, r1I"
~Irv!! J, w.,,.1,..ton •
MlnMtOlt I>. (;~lt•.o 1 Ot~lo#\d .. 4. ICt~I•• Ch• J.10
MllW•i*tt •• .l"'tt1 7
TMt Y'I Ot mt1
MIMttott (lllvi. ..... t•O •• All"t1 (Moy J•Jl,
"""' (ltw•l•nll !OuN\1"' 2·11 •t w11fll"'t.,. /lo~· ,... .. , .... ,. 1t!1111
ltltl"*'t l°""'°" }o)) •I Ntw VOrll (]!Oltlt·
lt'IYr• ).\). nl1ft l O.Ottll CC1'11'tt t.11 11 latlll" (P@!P" 4.1!,
"'•"1 OftlJ tO"'f-1 K~YIN,
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Easi Olvl1k>n
W L -Pel. GB
New York 21 11 .656
Pittsburgh 20 14 .SM 2
St. Louis 20 15 .571 2\.4.i
Chicago 18 17 .514 414
Montreal 13 ll .500 5
Philadelphia 10 22 .313 11
\\'est Olvlslon
San Franc-isco 27 10
Dodgers 111 19
Atlanta 17 18
Houston 16 19
Cincinnati 13 21
San Diego 10 21
'""''''' IHlllO Monlr'l'll t, Cl"cl""'tl t
1'111'1&.;rt h I, Ntw Yer' t
PhlttOtl~lo '· Alllftll I
l~l)lllttn n . SI. Louil '
Dottt" t . ''" Frtntltn 4
.730
.48& 9
.486 9
.457 10
.382 1 2~~
.294 ll\\
C~l(9to •. Si n oi.. I. 10 lftftl"''· ht ........
'NI ttmt WlotNltcl ' lft nfntf, d111l'lfl!
Ttc11•'1 011,,.1
/AonltN I !Mori ... l I) •• 1'1111&.,•tft 1w11~ ••
1·41, ~i.111 N•·,. Yerlr. CS.•v•r ).fl 01 •ot1n1t lit-0·21,
fl•tftt
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rltt 11.41. 1tlllll
S•1t Olf'lo l •obfo•IJ l.J! ti "4eutlllft fWll-
l•J), "''"1 QftlY t lmt, ldoMilltd
DEAN LEWIS
1966 HARIOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303
Service and P1rt1 for All Imported C1r1
Modtrn Body Shop for All Cira
Orange County's Largest and Most 1'1odern Toyota and Volvo Dealer
OYIUIAS DILIVllY S'ICIALISYS
\
The Phillips A team was composed of
UCLA players end . also included four
former Olympians. The CINA team1
were composed of pla yers from Corona,
Irvine end Newport
Golden West Colleii;e. under the name
of Phillips GW. defeated Cal PolY
(Pomona) in its first game. S.4, then feU
to Phillips A, L2-0, and Cl.NA B, 6-4.
DEAN LEWIS
!T!OJV(O!T!A!
MAY SPECIALS
COROLLA 1971
o .....
SPl.CIAL $1777
VOLVO
1971 DEMO
$2999
111 1t1'11t, ••llllio, h1tl1r. •ufo1rt1tlc
It•"'·
USllJ CAI SPlCIAL
$3195
'''' Vel•o 1'4 W11
... i. ..... , .... ·~"'"'.""· -''"""" l'1ttltty •Ir C...Cll-. (YWI Jd!
. . ' ' . •
Newport .. Duo Sparkles
In GIF Spike reliiiis
By PHIL ROSS
Of .... IMlltr' ,llM .,.,.
All the lalk being bandied about con-
cerning a possible 1·2 shol put finish by
Newport Harbor Hjgh Jn next monlh 'a
state track and field finals at UCLA could
tum out to be a pleasant reality.
The Tars took a giant step toward that
goal Saturday at Westminster, where
S.ilor weight aces Terry AlbriUon and
Mark Stevens qualified in the top two
preliminary berths for Friday night's CIF
semifm.all at Norwalk's Ctrritos·College.
But there was a slight change in the
placement of the Newport dynamic duo
as junior AJbritton bested his senior mate
for the fist time this season by letting ny
a &2.-top effort with the 12·pound steel
sphere.
Stevena quallfied for the semis with a
&1·11 put, ISY. inches shorter than his
Ufetlme best of U.51n.
Corona del Mar's Nick Rose improved
on his fastest ever 880 mark by a tenth of
a second and dropped his seasonal best
by half a second in an easy 1:54.6 vic-
lory in his heat. Westminster's Jeff
Young waa runnerup in another 880 heal
at I :59.0.
Newport junior Matt Hogsett clocked 1
career topper in the 180 low hurdles of
19.4 in capturing his heat while Hun-
tington Beach's Garth Wise (14.3 with
wind) and Steve Pickford (14.8) were vie·
torious in separate 120 high hurdle races.
Only other area winner in the varsity
division was Costa Mesa 's twc>time
lrvine League mile champion Doug
MacLean who toured four laps in 4:24.2.
MacLean's Mesa. mate 'Bob Gollnick
(4:15.2) was second behind Lowell's Ran.
dy Gray (4:24.9) In their mile heat with
Marina's Bob Brickner (4:24.9) qualifying
behind Mark Schilling~4:22.%) or Garden
Grove in still another ile race.
Corona junior Carlo sti anchored the
Sea Kings to a 43.fi ~place 440 relay
clocking behind Kate*la 3.5) and then
returned to cop the 220 spot (In
22.4) in • he.at behind G den Grove 's
Tony Krzyioslak (21.8).
Phil Maas of Fountain Valley tipped to
22.6 furlong mark in finishing behind
Loara's Jim Beyers (22.2).
The mile relay found Corona ruMing
3:27.5 foi' a di stance second qualifying
spot in back of Santa Ana (3:21.9).
.Marina exhibited some: or lhe noise it
may make in the CIF finals two weeks
hence by earning lop quali fyi ng spots in
five Bee evenls.
Viking hurdler Gene Taylor acled as if
he were shol out of i cannon.
Taylor swept to a legal 15.0 clocking in
the 120 highs , came back to whip a wind·
aided 12.8 in the 120 lows and then closed
out his Saturday labors by ruMing the
third leg on Marina's winn ing 1:33.1 880
baton effort.
At the same time, sprinter John Maltby
was monopolizing semis berths in both
the 100 and 220 with 10.2 and 22.8 marks
and No. 2 Viking.hurdler Paul Slenbo was
qualifying second in his lows heat at 13.4.
Westminster sophomore Jim Keathley
churned to the day's fastest Bee 660 time
with a 1:23.4. He passed lhe quarter mile
mark in 52.0.
A Bee 1320 heat was won by Mission
Viejo'• Ed Radermacher, who tipped
3 ~12.9 ahe•d o( Marina aoph Ken Martyn
(3'14.5).
Estancia 110ph Bruce Girasole was tops..
in the Cee 100 (10.0), 180 (windy 17.4) and
long jump 120-9'4) while Santa Ana
equaled the CJF Ce:e 440 relay record
with a 43.7 mark.
Girasole's 180 clocking is just two-
tenths short of a ClF standard.
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Orange Coast Net Team
Captures State JC Title
W.ith_ three ol its top four players back also indicated lo Gerard that ht will be
next season, it's quite po51ible that back in 'i2.
Orange Coast College could· make it two Caro. a sophomore. has been offered
state JC tennis championships in a row in scholarships to Cal { Berke I e y) and
1972. Arizona, but is yel undecided.
Coach Ma urie Gerard '• Pirates ran Cunningham, a fonne r Newport Harbor
away with the &late crown Friday and ~igh star. defeated Rosetti in th~ singles
Saturday at Foothill College in Los Altos<' f1~al~. S.-7. f>:l, 6-1. .He earlier had
annexing 13 points. Runnerup San Diego el_1m1nated D~ght Frer~c.hs of San Diego
had six and third place San Diego Mesa City Coll~ge 1n the sem1f11~als, 6-4 '. U, g.
fin ished with thrtl!. 3. Rose~t1 advanced lo the finals with a fi..
Robbie Cunningham. the stale si ngles
thampion. Atilio Rosetti and Ste ve
Emery are all freshmen and probably
will retu rn to OCC next season -
although Cunningham has been offered a
scholat'l'lhip to the University of Arizona.
Rosetti . who teamed with Mike Caro to
capture the doubles title, will spend the
summer in Europe pl1 ying teMis and
then return to Orange Coast. Emery has
4, &-! victory over Caro.
In the doubles championship. RosetU
and Caro lost set No. I to San Diego'1
'Frerichs and Bi!\ Schmerzel. 7-9, but
bounced back to take lhe next two set.s,
11·9, 7·~.
The San Diego pair had advanced to
the finals with a 9-7. 7-5, triumph over
Cunningham and Emery. Rosetti and
Caro knocked off a San Diego Mesa d®
in the semis. 9-7, l.fi, 7·5.
Diagnostic Center
' for car check-ups. ..... f1 .penoeys Scientific Testing Center ~J can help to point out weak spots
c~0~ in certain vital areas of your car .
~ In less than .one hour we put you~ car thr?ugh a series of sci~ntifiC
~ tests (212 of them). Steering, engine, brakes, transmission,
:;" electrical •nd cooling systems. You watch the results come out on an
electronic typewriter.
The written report shows the results of the tests. It Indicates what tested
parts of your car are weak and what parts are strong. A tra in ed diagnostician
will go over the report with you. If you v1ish . he'll give you an
estimate of any necessary repairs costing big money. There's no obligation
to have any of the work done. You declde what to fix and where to fix It.
Tho 00$1? Only g 88
Not bad for a check-1Jp-thesedayl. ·
'
Penneys Scientific Testing Center
Pen'lf.'1•
Charge it at any of these Penney Auto Centers: BUENA PARK tOrano11hotot at v1111y V+ewJ CARLSBAD
tt.ILLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE ''THE CITY'
Ol1gno1tlc Jan11 open Monday lhrough Saturd1y.
•
'·
...
l(ey Releaguing Changes Fullerto11,
I l C A S h ls Cubs Mix nvo ve oast rea ~ oo _; T d
Releaguing ret.'O~mendations a~ currently There has bttn talk lhal perhaps Hunling-ues ay
being studied and according to CIF Southern ton Beach (Sunset) and Edi.son (lrvinel
Section comrniSsioner Ken F'agans, unless would also switch places. but that proposi·
\>'lolent objections are put forth there will be lion \vasn't offered.
some changes in the makeup of Orange 0 . County leagues involving Orange Coast area • •
schools.
Here's the three 1najor changes teffcctivc
1n September or 1972):
E5tancia lligb's "·eigbUifling corps "'OD an
ti,Eht-leam tourney at Kennedy High recently.
The Eagles' 30-man group put do"'" Loara,
f\ennedy, ~1agnolia. \\'eslern, Orange, Sav·
anna and BellRo"·er "'Ith a balanced effort
No one from EstRncia wa5 an indh•ldual
leader in any category. ------ROGER
CARL~ON .. ___ _ • • •
San Clenlente's Ben Cum1nings has been
~ppointed a member Qf the U.S. national
AAU long distance swim committee.
Cummings has long been an advocate of
the 1.00(}.yard freestyle in prep competition,
L That Santa Ana (Sun set League) switch
pt aces with Fountain Valley ~I rvine).
Anions his annual swim proposals to the
Cir are a perpetual varsity svdm trophy, an
All·CIF swim team and a stale championship
on the varsity le\'el.
·• Thal Estancia (Irvine) move lo the
Garden Grove league, making thal loop an
eight·team setup.
• • •
Nev.'port Harbor's tennis standout Bob
Og le is btlng: wooed by tbe University of
Houston. 3. That Costa ?i.lesa (lr\'ine) move to the
Orange League, to make that also an eight·
team loop "'ith the 1971 addition of Uni·
\·ersity.
Ogle, a senior, has ne\•er lost a Sunset
League niatch in four years on the Sailor
varsit y. '"Enrollmen t is the basir problem. The re-
leaguing committee has put out these feelers
and \\'e"re a1vaiting reaction throughout the
southern section on several proposed
' • •
Congratulations are In order Jor the Hunt-
ington Reach Uniried ,School District and
~la rina High, upon the co nclusion or the reg·
ular baseball season. changes." says Fagans. .
F'ron1 this angle all of the proposals in-
volvin g Orange County learns appear to make
sense.
The Irvine loop is lhe sixth largest in the
CIF' on the basis of average enrollment de-
!pite Cosla Mesa and Estancia housing less
lhan 2,000 students each.
Once again they have managed to get
through the cantpaign \\'ilhoul a single
smashed face from a ricocheting roul ball in
the unfenced "dugouts" al the Vi king
diantond. • •
Corona del l\lar Hlgb's Kurt Krumpbolz ball
sig ned a Pac-8 letter of intent to enroll :at
UCLA in the fall.
And with the projected e nrollment of Foun·
tain Valley approaching the 4.500 mark it's
hard lo rationalize why the switch between
the Barons and Santa Ana's troubled Sainl.s
shouldn't take place -unless Los Alamitos
or Edison "·ould like to volunteer for Su nset
duty.
Krumpholz was the ClF water polo player
of the year.
His freestyle times of%%.(. 41.5. 1:44.7 and
3:48.& are school records at Corona del l\1ar.
Pijl Tops
Jaycees
111 Hitting
Orange Coasl Collegc·s Pete
·Pij\ is the 1971 battiog ~ha_m
pion for the three area Junior
college baseball teams .. ac-
cording to statistics compiled
by the DAl LY PILOT.
Pijl. a sophomore. balled
.429 in the Pirates' 29 game~
·finishing 4l points ahead of
Golden \Vesl freshman Pat
Curran (.3fl8).
Golden West's Jim Hogan
was the third leading hitter
(.359) "'hile Saddleback"s Bob
Blackl idgc ·was No. 4 \\'ith a
,33.l average.
Other .300 hitters playing on
11 regular basis in clude d
Orange Coast's Jim Hawse
( .3151 and Danny Clark 1.300)
and Golden \V est's ~1ark
Cressc ( .322) and f\1ikc Adams
( .302 l.
Or••lt CHJI Cll·Ul
• .. ' ' •bi •••.
Pele l'<il " "' " " " .•1•
Jim HIWJe " "' " " " .lli
O•n c.11r~ " '" " • " ~
Boo l••v• " "' • " " "' Sieve Klnq " ~ " " • '" , ' tov• " " ' " .1n
O:>n Snva•• " " " " .Jn
Jot!~ .... ,,,, " " • " ,116
Bob Wil~tnwul " " ' ' ' ·'" ~111 Pa·,..t!! " .. ' " ' '" fh 'I HTn••lv " " ' " • ' " s Scllo.,!1~• " " ' ' ' .!16
M Quo<tn~trv H " ' • • ,,, ...,b B1•lt¥ • • ' ' • .111
Oon McNe1tv " " • • ' .101
(llOI<~ Pt•rl " " ' • ··~ O"" Simon• " " ' ' .081
Ct~,.. " • • • ro1111 20 1011 lJI nt 10. ·'" C01IOtR WIJI !JJ.UI • .. ' ral l •f .
'-en Murillo • ' ' ' • .661
PH Cur< In " "' " ., " • ••
Jim Hog1~ " '" " " " .lit
S•t•t Ntt1on " " ' • • .3ll
M~•-(•.,le " " " " " ·3'?'
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C.r1lv Ktll'' " .. ' " " ,115
l!.ud Bvt!lnG " " • " .?!?
"ob l"fml!!<I'\ " ~ " " .1M
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JiM C1moMll " " • " • .26J
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New Lacrosse Loop
Over conies Sprinklers
By PHIL ROSS
Of l~t Ot ilJ l'lle! t rtlf
Originally begun as a n In-
dian pastime and laler en1.
braced by the more . af(!uenl,
taCT'O!!e is slowly edging its
"·ay into the everyday leisure
life of the common man.
This holds especially true
here in Southern California,
"·here the fir s t-ever in·
rercollegiate lacrosse league
in these parts has been form·
ed.
A retired Air f'orce colonel
and Corona del l\1ar resident,
.John l\1itchel! was responsible
for the founding of the
California Lacrosse Associa·
lion 12 years ago and it's
l\l itchell "'ho's also involved in
the pulling together of lhr new
collegian group.
The S o u th e r n Calirornia
Intercollegiate La c ro ss e
Conference consists of the
University of A r i z on a ,
Northern Arizona Universily,
Claremont Men's College. UC
Santa Barbara. UCLA and Qc.
cidenlal College. the team
11•hich Mitchell also happens lo
coach.
r.·1itchell notes that a
sprinkler system shov.·ed no
prejudice recently "" h c n
lacrosse's newest co 11 e g e
squad <Mitchell's Occl<lental
crew) took the field against
the brash oldster of the West
SAVE~1700
Coast collegiate lacrosse set
(Claremont).
l\1itchell relieves the thrill·
ing opening moments of the
contest. "The game started
precisely al 2 and that's
precisely when the · sprinkler
system decided to go on, thus
delaying the game for half an
hour ."
Actually, the sJx.tean1 C<JI·
lege conference has merely
been added to supplement the
already-flourishing. five-club
California Lacrosse Associa·
lion \\•hich includes club teams
representing Temple City . San
Marino, Los Angeles. Clare·
mont and Orange County.
Highlight o( e v er y
lacrosse season in the Golden
State is the North·South all-
star clash pilling top players
from au parts of California
against each other.
This year's seventh annual
all-star lilt is scheduled for
UCLA ·s Spauld ing Field l\1ay
2!l i 2 p.m. l with various
trophies lo be donated and
a\rarded by many different in·
di\tiduals, including l\1itchell.
Although lacrosse s I i 1 I
hasn't been accepted for its
tull worth by Soulhlanders. the
bufrs of the sport still ha\te
their day at least once a year.
In fact, l\1ayor Sam Yorty
will officially proclaim May 29
as L.acrosSC" Da y in Los
Angeles.
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Fullerton J C and L o :s
Angeles City College are
scheduled to meet in th e SC·
cond round ol the state junior
CQllege baseball playoffs Tues·
day after both posted opening
round victories over t hr.
weekend.
A site \vas to be selected to-
day.
Fullerlon, the South Coast
champion, defeated ?\tission
c·ircuit titl e-hol der
South\vestcrn by a 5.3 count
Friday al Chula Vista. And
l.ACC's Cubs scored a run in
the last of the ninth inning on
;i squeeze bunt to trim Pierce,
S.7. Saturday al USC's Bovard
Field.
In the other So Ca l sc"l.!final
tilt Tuesday: \\lestcrn State
champion Ventura e I a s he s
\\'ith College of the Desert in
Palm Desert. 8-0lh teams
drew byes Friday.
In th e Northern California
quarterfinals last "'eekend.
Allan Hancock, 1he Central
Conference champion, polished
of( Valley \\'inner Sacramento.
9-1. and Canada (Camino
Norte) whipped College of the
Red\voods (Golden Valleyl. 10-
2.
TutUl~'I ll'lfrlflt l
(ti• llrlclltll
C•"Wd• (Cimino Norlt) ti Allen
li1ncoc• {C1n!r1IJ, 2 o m .
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1 .. u .... •••c••!I l.01 Angtlft t C (~'h"" C1l1lorn11!
v1. Fuller!of> 45.0il!h COlllf 11 ,u, lo
bll nlmlld.
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DAIL V PILOT f:I •
M1cKeon Top Area Qualifier ·.
Rustler Tltrec-iniler Clocks 14.:05 .9 • JC Prelirns Ut
SAN DIEGO -,()olden \Ve~t
College's Terr)V'McKe<1n \\'ill
lead an area J C qualifying
t'Qfllinge11t of seven i n t o
Saturday's Southern California
tfa Ck and field finals al
Balboa Stadiun1.
Golden West's H us I l c r !
qualified five 111 I a s l
Saturday's prehms in San
Diego \\'hile Orange Coast and
Saddlcback had one each.
McKeon had a lifetitne best
of 14:05.9 in the lhrce·mile 1n
placing third i11 his heat
behind Ken Gerry or ~1oor1lark
(14 :00.8) and Ray Ste\'ens of
£1 Camino !14 :00.91. The na·
hona[ record is 13 .51.0.
Another lifetime best 111as
produced by Rustler freshman
Jack l\1cQUO\\'n, \\'ho clocked
4:13.0 in one heat of the mile
in finishing fourth.
Dennis l\1aas was the only
other individual qualifier for
the Rustlers. placing second in
his 440 heat in 48.3.
~,.,.
And Saddleback'~ on I y
finn l1st "'ill be ils 4~0 relay
tea1n of Keit h Del..o renr.o,
Hick Gcddtis. \Valier Miller
and i\1ike Jackson. They clock -
<'d 41.9 in finishing third in
their heat.
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mile relay te.l'n1s b o l h
quallfied The quarter inile
foursonte of Dave Keys. Bill
Kan1p. fl'la as and Oa\·e
Johnson t"locked 41.6 in run·
ning third in one heat and the
rnile relay quartet of \\':11\
Ankennan. Brian Strough,
Ron Dickson and l\;laas had a
season high of 3: 16.9 in
!inishing second 111 its heat.
Orange C oa s t's lone
KIRK JEWELERS
COSTA MESA
J.torbor C.11t•,_545.9415 TIMEX REPAIR
qualifier was triple ju1n1>er
George Barnett \\ho ' had a
best or 44.7 to place 12th. J
HUNTINGTON BEACH
H11111tl•tto11 C111ter-192·550l
Authorized O,-an:;:e Counly
SALES ANO SERVICE
BRAND NEW4-PLY
NYLON CORDTIRES*
AS
LOW
AS
FOR
size 7.00·13 blackw111 p111s f.LT. ol ~l .99 pe1ttre1nd 11Jdt·in.
•7.00·1l1 nrl ~ 60-1:. •v•1l1blf In 2-ply Of>lt
BFG'S LO NG MILER
f1d1r1I Trade-In
Slz• Ta1pe• hre Pric1 for Pair
.00. IJ St.99 '30
7.35·14 2.01 32 .1s:-r.c--2.1'4 --<1•-
8.25-14 2.32 38
5.60-15 1.60 32
7.75·15 2.16 36 32.40
8.25-15 2.37 40 36.00
Wnl1ew•lls S.1.50 m nr' P'"' '"'
Hurry -Anni¥erser1Sale1nd1 M1y 31, l'J7l
w• "0"0c:,·.~; rl._'.'.'._S~o?.,.'.:,.:\1-M=A~S-=1-=E-=R""c"H"'A"R"'G"'E"'• MAJOR ··~·~"'' .1 CAllDS ~/·<.:_.::o
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Brutf !loYll " Brit " Ho1mei " •• ' ' ' • • • OT'>e•• " ts• 101 221 ~ Toltlt
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BR·AKE RELIN E
• l!.Xl'Elfl 11'1'0111(1>! ... NSllll • Lube Job
Guarant:ee
• OUALITY 11£P\.ACEMSNT """'s • l "ECl•L LOW l'lll(f;t • Oil Chang•
LINING & 1.AIOll
• S•fety Check
COSTA MESA: ORANGE: WESTMINSTER:
JONES TIRE SERVICE JONES TIRE SERVICE L. I. LITTLE 1116 0 TIRE -2049 Harbor Blvd. 1100 Tustin Ave . 7352 Westminster Ave.
(•f •• .,, (Acro11 from ntw Post Offic•)
89).5572 646-4421 540.4343 532-3383
;
$366
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Mt111da1. M1.y 17, 1971 OAll V PILOT
·Enzyme Ca cer Cure Eyed ~
SEAil'LE. Wash. {UPI ) -. cha I~ of the , u · 'rsily They are explol1ng lhe glu1am1nase lo other types of •APECC IN6U~A.NCE A University of Wa~hington
n-.edicat research team has
discovered tha t the enzyme
gluta mlnase shows an ability
to destroy one high ly malig-
nant' type or cancer pro·
pagated by mice.
medi cal school's de.pa enl general theory lhat cancer fan cancer.
of experimental a n I~ a I be attacked by determinlng At the same lime, the team medicine, glutamlnase is 'pro-is anempting to determine
duced by "using a grim· what cancer cells n.eed for vre "'hat harmful side-effects. if
negative rod'. type of bacteria: and then deJ)riving the cells of .,, any. ntighl result r r o m
He Indicated he preferred \o. that subst ance. .. glutaminase treatnlenJ
defer further explanation ~ !" one 3().day test. the three ~l any chemical reactions
this phase of the rtsearch. \ sc1entls~s fou~d that three of ~ill not operate properly ex·
• FIRE ,
•AUTO
•BOAT
•HOME
• BUSINESS The cJ ut anl inase deprives
the cancer known as Ehrlich
Tumor of the amino acid.
g I u l am i n e , which the
carcinoma cells require to
stay alive.
Joining Dolowy on tilt team . every five mice treated "'1th cepl in the presence of minute
were Dra. Joseph Roberts, glutaminese were freed of an1ounts of substances known
professo r of research and \ lun1ors while Bil the mice not as catalysts. Enzymes are thr
head of th.e departmtnt's \treated. 1P.·ith the enzyme died catalysts made by Jiving cell&
Research Division. and John •r Ehrlich Tumors. and \\'hich enable the cells to
Holcenberg. an Bssistant pro-\Now they have expanded carry ou t the chen1 ical proc-
Bob Paley & Associates
474 E. 17TH STREET. COSTA MESA
642-6500 546-3205 According tn Or. Wilham C.
'Dolowy. pro f essor and ft ssor of pharmacology. t ir research in the use of ess nect>ssary 10 exis t.
Netv Scfaool's Crest
Mi chael Brajdic. 16. Tuslin. sho"·s University High
School Principal Vic Sherreitt the school crest
made v.·ith cr ushed rock. fl.like presented the mosaic
creation value at $100 to the school on behalf of the
freshman class. University High opened early this
year on a site off Culver Road near UC Irvine .
Mice Offer Lesso11
011 Overpopulatio11 I
\\'ASH INGTON ·!UPI ! Calhoun. :..1. a goateed
Three years ago. Dr. J ohn na tive of Elkton. Tenn .. set up
Calhoo n put four pair of while his e x p e r i me n t near
mice in a 9x9 foot enclosurt Pooles\'ille. ~fd .. northeast of
and ga\'e !hem the beSt of here in the rolling Maryland
e v e r y t h i n Iii -comfort-farmland.
abl quarters. nou rishing food. As baby mice b e g a n
plenl y of Water , freedom from arriving al the start of the
dist ase and natural enemies. experi ment. the colony began
But the good li fe is kill ing form ing social rules. Adull
!hem. ' mi ce . for example. decide d
They are dying t r o in 1hat JO of them could live
everpopulatlon. comfortable in each of the 16
.'\oting what happened when · · 8 pa r I me nls'' Calhoun
!he original eight m ic e provided.
multiplied to more lhan 2.200 in just O\'er two ye ars, But then the pop ulation
Calhoun lhink5 there is a life-skyrocke ted.
or-death lesson there fo r ··\Ve allowed a tremendous
mankind. nu1nber of the young lo
Calhoun is a re 5 c a r c h surv ive. man~ more than t~ey
psycho\og151 for the i\"ationaf~ad -a-capact~1o ·eo~ Wt';h.
lnsutute of \lental Health. so1new~at hke "'·h111t •. s
He admtls he is nol the type of happening on the. demographic
scienl ist who "·ai ls for everv 1hun1an popul ation! sc ene
last available piece 0·r today.'' said Calhoun.
evidtnce before dra11. ing a \Vhen the adult social onlcr
conclusion. rejected masses of young
··Ra ts and mice. of course.
are nol· perfect n1ode\s or
hu1nans. But the disaster the v
represent is so compelling th~!
the world cannot wait fQr
proof of every step in the
eq uation. We must deal with
our crucial problem now."
~alhoun says.
According 10 lhe scientist.
"'hen tht population in the 9x9
enclosure reached a peak of
2.200 mice. the very precise
social order crealed by the
mice fell apart.
:'\ow. those !hat are lefl
don"t even sq ueak anymore.
They have lost interest in sex.
The last pregnancy in the
colony was two months ago -
roughly the equivalent or six
human years and the
offspring v;as born dead.
The youngest moul'ie in tht
enclosure is no"· about 40
~·ears old in hum an te rms.
generally past the age or
ha\•ing young, and !ht last
mouse in the experiment
should die so melimr in June
of 1972. Calhoun said.
Those that are now left. he
adds. are !IO affec ted by lhe
1ot al rejection that resulted
from the overcrowd ing and
l11cl; of privacy that they
v.·ander about v i r t u a 11 y
un:i "are of v.·hat's going on
around them. frozen as if in
-rnlancy altlfoUgh their age--
m;iy equal 40 human years.
'"They l~ke care of their
bod tl)' needs.'' Calhoun said,
.. but I here is no societ y left .··
ANIMALogic
mice. the outcasts became
ex tremely inactive and violent
among thtmselves.
··These an imals just ri p
each other open and thr
animal bi tten has tosl his
capacit ~· to fl ee.'' Calhoun
said. '"This was the first
\1'arning sign that somethi ng
had gone wrong ."
Soon, he said , social order
began to topple. S e x u a I
activity and aggression 1\·err
diminished. A n1ouse mighl
begin a sexual acl or st;i rt
aggressive behav ior but the
lack of privacy and crowding
precluded completion of the
act. Calhoun said .
.. Only the s implest
behaviors, such as eating and
drinking. v.·ere eve r carried to
completion:· Calhoun said.
'"The mice reall y never
learned to mate or fight .
Never f i gh t i ng . never
competing (or mates , ne ver
protecting young. they ne\"er
kne "' !llress. P.1ost malured
into passive b 1 n b s of
protoplasm, physically healthy
but socia lly sterile.
Calhoun said he h a d
""ilnesses three ;icts o I
copulation in his dyi ng colony
last ft''eek. "'so son1ethlng
mig ht ha ppen."' despite 1he
long time since there \li'l\S a
pregnancy.
.. The three mice \<1st 11"eek "
probably-won"t get pregnant
anyhO\\'.'' he said, .. and If the y
did. there is no wa y the
nffspring could be reared if
they v.·ere lxirn. They n1 ighl be
eaten -•that has happenetl -
or l r a mp I e d immedia\el)
because of the overcrowding.
Calhoun d e I a i I e d his
experiment in an article in th1~
Smithsonian. the m o n l h 1 y
niagazine put out by !he
Smithsonian Institution. and in
a folio"' up intervir1v with
li PI. And he \\'Ondered aloud:
.. Are there lemmings in our
n1etropolitan tundras -silent
shado"'s of the se\,·es lhe y
,.._--It!· might have been, read y lo .. .; follow in unquestioning niasses .,
""·~ , : an y fli cker ing fign1enl nr a
' ....... · · 11lassy i'Cr~n ~ Are they ready
to bnng ci\·iJiz;it ion Io
suicide"'"'
·wt vt AL•. &!fir/ co .... P1. 7~1\! ~OLF TIPS
Wllll L ... •MIMlCl,I
'r•,lfi:• At 1'111 M.ATCHfQ.•
•
NEWPORTER INN
PAR 3 GOLF COURSE
11.00 ·"' ftik ......... '•"
\
Automotive week!
\ You can't afford to
drive by values like these .
J l MONl llSCUAlllANTl I
1111 >t ~MONl f1S lM'o Al ~Ot'/ANCI
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1Q95
Foremo11·
A•ll•nt 4 ply
nylon cord tire .
Blecllwell tubele11
$1ze F•d. 111 Pric e
650·13 l iO 1005
.775-1 4 21 • 13 95
824-1 4 2 32 1::.q5
855-14 2 so 17 Q'j
775·1 5 2 16 1:1 q5
815·15 2.3i 15 ':IS
845-1 5 2 .<4 8 1i 9S
Wh t•w•lls S3 mo re
For campers, pick-ups and vans:
Foremost • Cargomaster JI nylon
cord truck tire sale.
Sale 20 95 plus 2 •2
ted. tax
670·15/6 .
IUDI type. Reg. 22.95
Tube type Size Fed. taii: Reg . Silt
700-15/6 ............... 2.87 ...... ,,., ... ,. 29.95 ······ ......... 21.95
650-1 6/6 ............... 2.61 ............... 2•.95 ............... 21 .tS
750-16/8 ..... . .. 3.72 ............... 33.9 5 ............... 30.15
Tubeless
Site Fed. tax Reg . , Sal•
670· 151 6 ............... 2.68 .............. 2S.95 ............... 23.95
Sale21995
Reg . 239 .95 . Hawaiian auto air conditioner.
High power cool ing for larg er cars. Our most
powerful un it with a slim, luminous desi gn . 4
front and 2 side louvers provi de cool air to
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Elpert Installation 1v1\11bl1 IHOCK AMeRlf:PI
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,.
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. . . . • • J
•
M~r. M'7 17, 1971 DAILY PILOT flJ
·San Cle11a.e1ate Theate1· •
'Marriage' Still Goe s Round
Actor in Idaho Troupe ..
Randy of Garden
I
By TOM T1UlS
Of ~ Defir l"li.f Ii.If
"The ~arriage Go Round "
b lbe 'tYPe or cute, precious
little.. play for which the term
'sophisticated comedy" was
coined. A n d sophisticated
comedies. by their very struc-
''THI IAA•JttAGi GG,JtOU;;:--
A CamtdY bV l.slle SltY*"l. (ll•K·
ltd tftd dni•l'lllll bv A11rfl011y l•lndl,
1119t ..,.11•9•' LHia.. Ttule•, ll9flll119
tty Erk Sult!er, Prutnt..:I by •lie 5111
Cltmtlllt Cammurtlty l"ut1r T,_11•1·
d•V IPl'11Uth $.lturd1Y. MIV tt, •I '"' C•brl!lo P!•l'N!Uu, 1M Av1n~1 Cl ·
b<Ulo. Sin Cl-It. ltts..•v•licm1
jf){M6j,
1'lded by som~gbUng el-
fects.
Omar'1 ln San Clemente and"~
Grove, who has ai>Qeartd in 1 the Or.tan Toad tnd Captain ,
number of Orange County Jack'• in the Orqe Coaat
community the a~~ r P!'Q-a~.
· ducllon.s, has slgnedW'Trfi'tB\11~~~~~~~~~~~
Carroose.I Players o( COCur d'
Alene , Idaho, Robert E. Moe
ol San Clemente. general
manager of the troupe, an-
ture, come with a very high TH& c.t.st
depr.cl·a11·on factor. "1111 ~1"111• lt•!i>~ Tom!I"'°" Content Ltiw.il ..... • (llorl1 H-lo" . The current slaging of the K•!•ln sv" 1C111" J1t~1•n
Leslie Steverui offering al the _•_•_•_•_•_·~-'-' ____ '_'_" _""_"_"_'"_"
San CI em e JI t e Community
Theater is a case ln point. It is
brigh t. literate, well directed
and features some attractive
performances -but bouncing
around the community theater
circuit for the past several
years has taken a good deal o(
the zing out of it.
There is very little latitude
for interpretation in a play of
this genre. particularly when
it is compressed into a
miniscule staging area such as
the Cabrillo Playhouse. Direc-
tor Anthony Brandt has done a
commendable job, however,
with the scenic transitions,
TV DAILY LOG
Monday
Evening
MAY 17
5:00 fJ lie ,.,.. .Hrry Dunphy.
(I) AIC Nftl Re1son1r, Smilh.
CJ KHIC Htwsuvlce Tom Snyder.
1J TM Alt11t sliow
D "CARTER 'S ARMY "
*STEPHEN BOYD · COLOR !
0 Sir O'Clodl: Mo.k: (C) (tO)
"'Certtr's Artr(' (dr1m1) '69 -
St911hen Boyd, Robert Hooks. C1pture
al 1 slr1te1ic brid11 le1di111 Into
enemy lerritOf)' durin1 World Wu II
it 1ivt11 lo • comp.iny of blat•
soldiers mmm1nd1d by 1 prejudiced,
white, Southll'n otlicer.
0 Didi Y11 Dyke m Tiit n1nt1t11• m star Trtt
EIJ I l•ICllt I KC£T Auction (C)
(6hr) Second nl1ht ol 1nnu11 lund·
t1llin1 Auctl<in. To bid, ~ltwers dial
(213) 660-2450. Collect calls 1cce11I·
1d from 714 i nd 805 1r11 codes.
fil) Fbhtr f111tlly
@II Nttldert 34 m 0.1111 v1nrr Dl)'I
ml la Mera ftlfllM11 con Consuelo
QI NIWI Jim H1wth0Jnt.
1:30 (1) """ Bill Hud dy.
(j) TNtll Ir ConseqUlllW
(I) CIS """ Willer Cronkite.
0 c.-ld Cil!llfl
IJj trite News Dtvld Brink.lay. m Tltt Flyffll N111
fl!) SelKtff fll1111/Mllllcllt m TI11 hlltt Report
m:IT1A
m•-
1:0011 CIS N"" Willer Ctonkit1.
CJ ID Nit NIWI D1vld Brinkley,
John Chancellor, r11n• McGH.
Ci) ft Tiii tht Trvth
QWhlt'1 My Untf
Q)l Didi Ytn D,\t
m I Lewi Liiey
ID (I) Dtttntt
.ml thrill: the LMn1 Word
£D Allplltos NllfOI
EI'i) $1 N1 fatr11 T1
a> M0¥11 GtMI
1:30 II ()) Ktrt's luCJ (R) HlllJ brlbu
Luc~ Into ooslna 11 his "tJP«tlna:"
wile to btp Gertit, 1 lormll' 1h1
friend Wlio stops In town, tram
sh1na:h1iin1 him Into m1fl'h l•·
ONYPO
O (!)a>lt W11 A v_, GM
Y•r Turbulent 1964-4 y11r of ten·
sions, ch1n11. and contrasb-b II·
vl1w1d in kaleiclGscoplc dtltil with
Mtl Tonne ts host.n1rr1tor. Gutsl:s
1r1 Gowtr Ch1mplon and Don Scflol.
l1nder.
m SARAH MILES & THE * FOUR TOPS guest
w/David m u..ld Frltt Sltflr Guts!s 1r1
Doc 5werinsen, S1r1h Mires, Tht
FMir Tops, tutllor Bernard Levin.
m Dr•111et
f!i) P1ttn !or Uwln1
GI!) MlptAlto V11da: SMw
t :DO 8 MIJblfl'J •.F .D. 01) Cousin
Alice buyr. 1 harp ind sl1ns up for
lessons from 1 Eu1011e111 prol1ssor
who is thrilled lo h•'lt at le1sl 0111
puoll.
0 @} m Wffld ,,.11tltft ltlO'lll:
(C) (Zin) "Do You Ttb T\11 Strtll·
ttr?" (R) (dnm•) '7~1111 Barry.
Di•M Biker, .Josepll Cotltll, Lloyd
Brid1es. A min sthemes 10 lnhult
1 million doll1r1 by 1wilehln1 lden-
Jllies wiJ.!1 !.!!._!cqyainl•~ who hll
1 termin al l11ness.
0 TIMI Fupiw1
Q CI) (I) l!ll AIC Mtllday M...te:
(C) (fir) "TM CitJ" Cdr1m1) '7G-
Anthony Quinn, E.. G. M1rsh1ll, Rob-
ert Reed, Skye Aubrey, Ptl Hin111.
Tht ureer of the m1yor of 1 south·
western city Is j1ap.11diztd by urb1n
criws 1nd 1n 1suuin.
(!)At lu111
(i} Ftlony Squtd
Eil)JO Minutes
O)Sonrisn
GD 0 Ptc* dt Sofl•
9:30 fJ (j) Dori1 Day {R) Larry Slorth
1ppears 11 1n 1i·boxe1, i nd Doris
1rles lo help him 1et another c.hanu
as an en\ert1iner whtn his n11hl·
club 1ct tlosts lmmedl1tely 11\u
0111nl111-
D Candid CIMtr• m QlllSt tOf Mvtn1u11
fS Mltllu1t/Pador'1 Dnll
£m LI Cna dt M1ri11 Cntces
10:00 O @ tarol l umett (II) D)'an Ctn·
t1011 1nd P1ul lynd1 (IJUL
O 011nn1I 5 """ Kevin Sandtn,
Bamty Morris.
0 81rttr Wtrd Hnl m Nf'fl'S Putnam /Fishman.
Brandt's contribution, ln
fact, is the mo.st impressive of
the production . His llving
room set with lighted patio is
attractive and well dressed,
and he hns taken deft strokes
with his director's pencil to
updat.e the show a good decade
(a reference to Eleanor
Roosevelt, for i n's ta n c e ,
becomes Phyllis Diller ).
The overall acting level,
however, is not quite as sharp
and polished as might be ex·
peeled on a second weekend.
There are, on alt counts, a
number of timing lapses which
the show can ill alford
The plot, for those still un-
(amiliar with· the pla y, µi built
around a single running gag
-a forthish couple, both col-
lege instru ctors. whose blis.s--
ful life is shattered by a gor·
geous Swedish house guest
who announces she wan ls to
start her own maste r race,
using the services of the man
of the house. ' Gloria Newton, who ha s
played the role of the wife
before (and still looks about 10
years too young for it), is the
standout of the cast, showing
BURNED UP -Paul Doremus orders arsonists (from left, Denise McCanles,
from the Orange Christy nwyer and Chris Sork) out of h is house in a scene
Coast Co Uege drama "The Firebugs," opening "''ednesday.
measurable improvement over
her previous performance.
Tiris time around. she I a y s
more emphasis on the play's
delicious dialogue ( a n d
virtually all the wife 's lines
are very funn yl. bringing to
her role the stinging wit of an
Eve Arden .
The basic prol>lem in the
show's development is the per-
formance of Ralph Tomlinson
as the pleasure-pressured hus-
band. Tomlinson is never
really wrapped up enough in
h I s character, his reactions
are artificial and about a beat
Tryouts Set
For 'Ginger'
In Valley
The Fountain Valley Com·
munily Theater ·-Which up lo
now has concentrated solely on
c~ildren's plays -will hold
auditions for its first ad ult
production. Ron a I d Alex-
or two behind the pace of I.he ander's "Time
others. Intensity, in particular, Ginger,'' ~ight.
Out for
is lacking here. Five adult roles are open ~r
Karen Jacobsen as the the &medy. with the re-
blo nde dish of Swedish pastry maining parts available to
is ideal,. both physjca,lly ~nd boys-and girls 12 and over, ac-
dramaUcally. Her \.\'ell-chosen cordi ng to Jay Conklin, who
acce.nt rarely falters: and she will direct the show.
i;_a~r1es t~e proper ~1r of se~· --Readings will be nc\d al 7
ua l super1or1ty that lS .so basic o'clock tonight at the Fountain
to her character. A first rate Valley Community Center,
performance. 10200 Slater Ave., Fountain
Rounding out ~he small casl Valley. Jf additional Lryouts
Is Ren Hutchings as the are needed , they will be held
languga~e professor ready to Thursday evening.
catch Mtu Newton on the re-"Time Out for Ginger" will
bound -or in mid-Right. be presented for four days,
Hutchings i~ quite c?n\'jncing June 24 through 27, Further
as the roguish old friend. and infonnation may be obtained
his mannerisms are caretully by calling 847·9821 .
chosen.
OCC Play 'Firebugs'
lnflanimatory Show
"\\le·re nol out to please ha1·e done. and \.\'hen ~ ..
people." i:::~".!dermann is played by
That's how director \llilliam Paul Doremus. who last al>"
Purkiss sums up the Orange peared in the OCC production
Coast College produclion nf of "Man of La Ma ncha ."
"The Firebugs," opening Wed-His wife , Rabelte, is played
n es d a y in the OCC by Ka thy Ladd, and lhe maid
Auditorium . by Corienne Pierog . Leader of
"For students. this may be the chorus is Tom F'arrell of
the most compelling play we Hu ntington Beach.
have ever done," Purkiss said. The play was written by
"It deals with issues basic to Max Fri5ch. who watched
tocla0y's problems." W o r Id War Tl from
The pla y tells the story ol Switzerland. He displays a
two arsonists who lerrorize a pessimistic view of man's
to,...·n. lhen enter lhe home of a challCes of saving himself and
wealt hy businessman a n d the world. He calls his play "a
threaten to burn his house . learning experience without a
Tiie arsonists r e pres e n t-lesson:"
destruction for destruction's ·---------
sake.
The businessman . C'r0ttlieb
Biedermann, attempts to
befriend the arsonists, feed ing
them and housing them in an
atte1npt to dissuade them .
The play tells its story in
tableau scenes, a pseudc>-cla.s-
sic chorus and monlogues
directed al the audience. At
"The Marriage Go Rouncf'
is, at first glimpse, .1n in·
genou.Sly structured comedy,
the dialogue of wh ic h corr,.
pensates for a rather un-
dernourished plot. It is r.o~,
however, a strong e:10ugh
work to withstand annual in-
spection at one commun i!y
theat.er or another and s~ould
be moth balled for a few years
once it leaves the S a n
Clemente stage.
the end. Biedermann turns to
Nige1·ia Dance the audience and asks, ·'What would you have done, for
Sergio
Mendes
&
Brasil '66
Show Cal·cl ed God's sake. if you h•d h«n in • •-. my place? What would
A class in the ethnic dance·li~======~=~~
Three more performances
are scheduled for this week.
Thursday through Saturdav, at
the Cabrillo Playhouse, 202
Avenida Cab r i I Io , San
Clemente.
of Nigeria's Yoruba tribesrmn
will be give n by a master
dancer from that African
coonlry Th u r sd a y at
California State C o l I ' g e •
Fullerton .
Tunji Vidal will demonstrate
a number of dance paltt!rns
and teach the use of Yoruba
instrumen ts including t h e
"talking drum'' from 3 to 4:30
p.m. in the Arena Theate r.
NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES
2iido
Nll'WOfl tt •CM •• •• •~• ""''•-I• lo~ol•oo II'• hlo ·· 0 1, J•IJJI
Fri. 1hru Mon.
MtY 28 lhru JI
2 Shows E..:h Nit•
B;OO p.m, &: Midnitt
illoom1111 11101111.
AmtliCI ·• 6ru t1M
VK.1111111 l uy.
For Reservations c1U :
ZEnllh 9·9924
" Kings Casile
Lake Tahoe/Nevada
!702)831·1111
J :30 D (I) G11llllft0k1 (R) A &lick-le1kina
lr1ve!in1 u lesm1n (Don Ch1s11in)
11 1e1eued from ir1tt wslomtrs by
I ftrm widow (S1ndr1 Smith), who
liter 11!uHS lo believe Festus'
1111rnlna: l111l ttie min 11 1boul to
twlndle her on ''Tht Miricle Man"
tplaodt.
0 @) m FJtM 1 Bird's [ye View
m M1nt1111 Al ~111111 llosll. I
Q1) I S•tCIA\ I KCU Audioft (C)
im:I Hit dll Molllfftte {cont'd.) \'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~
"New:r Put It In Writh11." Mlltl1 10:30 0 Movit: (lhr 45•) "W.U l&l1ncl"
•ritt1 her resl1n1tlon, then dl1n1u (dr1m1) '42-Bri•n Don!evy, llobut
her mind, but tht 1ethr Is 1n ra11t1. Prttton. Heroic 1cilon1 of U.S. M1•
1J Ylr&lnl1 Cr1h1111 Shtw Ron [II· rint Corps In flmaus b1ttlt1.
ran. M11 Shevtlson i nd The Pacific· ID Biii Johns Hnrt
1ir1s 1uelt. €m Ctdln• dt Anpstl•
(!)Movlt: (C) ''Th• Ytllow Cit ll·OOIJ ([)Qi)Ntw1
M111," Red Skelton, Glo1i1 D1H1ven. •
0 CIJ tl) llf1 Mft1 1 0.11 Monty
Hall llosts.
o 9mH••
@ Death Y1l11y D1JS
u --S---:.-12'<1-.,,,.,f---6 .[I) !lll"""---
Havntln("(drtrna) '63--J~lle Ha"b, 0 Movte: "Htrllw" (blo1raphy) '65
Cl1lrt Bloom. Tile of • tartlully --Ciro! Lynley, Efrem Zimb11lll Jr. HllC1ed arou p who 11 lntrodutfd to
1r11htenlna: m1nitest1tlons of the m FRANK SINATRA IN
aupern11ur11. * "ANCHORS AWEIGH!n
m Trvth ff' Con111:q1tncu m Mo.11: (C} "AlitMD l"'IP"
ID It Tikll I Titlfi' ~{musical) '45--frtnk Sln1t11, Kath·
ryn G11yS&n, Geno Ktlly,
II,;) an1111 XI
@E)Do-Rt·MI
7:S5 m C4tedlo11 dt S.,U11dot
l:OOO @l mL111h·I• (II)
H1w11 1uuts.
0 (])a> Htwlf'Wtd 111111
Col die
GJ .. tt ~· 0.0:
11:301J (I) M"' Griff'ln
CJ ®I m John"' Cantn Ori1in1te1
In Burb1nk, C11il,
o mrn m•"""" m Roller C1111t
fli)Wwtd ,._,. m T1 Tell tlll Trllth
fD ! IJICllll KC£T
(cont'd ) A11ctlo11 (C) 11:15 0 Ont St.ti 1.,.11d
mM11 ef YIMtl
ei '""'!'
1:06 Gii) TIA
Tuesday
DAYTIME MOVIES
1:00 D "Anti!. IM. .. (111)111") '49 -
Robert LOWlr,, Artnt G_,,,M, "kif·
ltt l•prtll"' (dr1m•) '34-M•tltnt
Dltlritlt. Sim ;.111.
ID (C) ..... ,. h I '""'"''~"
(tomtdy) '49-1.ol'tllt Vount Ytn
Johl'tlOll, Rut/ Vt11ff.
,:30 0 (C) "Ctll M1 Mad1111" Conch1
skin (mm1d1) '!J-..(1119' Mtnntn,
Dan1ld D'ConflOt
1:00 11 Mtwlt: "Thi Fe1r111t Alllur
(drtma) '58 -Hedy l 1m1rr, Jant
Pawell, Geor1e Nadtf,
CIJ DOCll@J N,..
O ·~ Dtuble Ufl'" {dr•m•) '47-
RoAtkl CtilmaA. Shtlley WlnWtl,
10-00 (}) lt) "Apftt !tr K.ll.M." (IUS•
lll!ISt) '~trk Rkhmond, Wlfl·
Mii Corti. -
1:00 m "n&M '" ,,...... .. (dr1m1)
• '•3-RouDnd RuNtll, rM Mac-
M11m y.
2::00 D ...,. Kiit" ld11m1) ·~Kirk
Dou1l11, Robert Wllktr Jr.
J:OO (I) "'llllltr htlt!I SW (dr1m1)
'57-Donald O'Connor, Ann l lrttl,
4:io B (C) "St111 " nu"''" Itek'"
(w1sttm) '64-B111y S11l!lv111, M•l1·
ly11 M1nrtll.
IM SOUTH
ACADEMY AWARD SHOW
Winner 8 Academy
of Awards
INCLUDING
BEST PICJURE--BEST ACTOR
GEORGE c. scon
-PAFl'ON-
ALSO -IUT SCIEINPLAY
M-A:S·H
le• Offk4i o,_"' ':45 ,.111.
"PATTON .. 7:11 f'.111.
"MASH" 10111 lit·"'·
"" COA~l PlAZA P.lJIKM
Visit th• future 2nd Big
where Ion Feature
is the ultimate "THE
ILLUSTRATED crime MAN "
"THX 1138" Rod S1eiger
Weekdays 6,45
IG'l Sot. & Sun. 12,30
•
..
FASCIN-
ATING
llOUnced today ,
The Carrousel Players 111re a
company that performs sum-
mer repertory musicals in the
Idaho lake dt-y.
Cobb recently finished suc-
cessful engagements al
FIRST RUN I
GF.ORGE c. aeon. ACADIUt 'f' AWARD I
OMll'ft:t: ••• 111:8T ACT'Oft IN 'PATTON'
Joanne
~c.1~1
.~.!~!~~:1
TECkl<tGOlO!>' C» l!!J
AL 0 G
SOPHIA LOllN
"SUNFLOWER"
. ";\
DUSON ·
. HOlfltti\N
.IJTill:
\Bl6MAN.
'PlnMlion•'kt•M:doi'
~-
NOW-ENDS TUESDAY
ACADIMY lWAlllD WINNll
-llST fOlll•N llllLM I
' "'._.. "<"-"'l&. ,6'-'-4.u f,..'ON -...-cc_ .. _
. INmflGATION
OF A CITIZEN
above
and "THtNGS OF LIFI"
Pkhlra 1-.4 l•PI
Call 673-6260
For Show Tlmtl
ALSO P~YINll -"ADAM AT ' A.M."
wlffl Mliliiil D•••l-1.ee P•rcett
•
"Breath-
Taking!I"
, Noillllt O""'-...... -
•
r
'
. . .. • . ' . ' •••
•
OAIL'f flllOT Mond.1y. t.~11 17, 1971
LEGAL NOTICE
•~P••HM couaToP TM•
lTAt• 01' CALll'OlllNIA 1'0111
TM• COUNTY 01' NANI• ...... ...,,. Fadeout Time for Last of Movie Moguls? ~:
NeTtca ... lAL• OP 11t•AL "•O"·
•r.Y iloT Pltl\'AT• IALl l 'I' AO.
• IUl1"11;AT01l WITH THI WILL AM• ••••o I IAf•lf iA' l[Vl[L YN VO 1 H I l L ,_OL.GEtl. o.c..,..,
NOTICE IS HElll.lllY UIVEN tntl
JOt1H lo"!:tNDL. •• Mm!nl11F1...-wltto ""'
WIN •-Id ti "" .. llh o1 •V!L"N VOSHELL fDLOEll,· OK"'""· wm Ml)
wf w r-...tt M l-, "' tllt lllt1>e11 1"<1 bur 11>1....-, ,,,...... "'' '-'m• 11'111 cnf11..,, ,,_J,,.fttt ....... , ...... , .,,. ~lllKI lo
<'.Oll#lrm1!Jon Dy lllt Su1trlot c°""· '" ~ 17, 1'71, t i 1111 "°"'' ti nlM •'(locio
(t;GO) A.M,, • ~lfllll' wlrtiln ti-. l""•
•1•M llV l•w. 11 ""' 9'!k•1 .i
HA,RWOOO. IOOEN I .O.DlllNION, •'·
,.,...,,. for .11kl •llmlnl1trl101" ... rtoo I~•
... 111 a _ _.M, 11 t.50 N"'-1 Cf'11ter
D•lw, "1111 CM, tt-~ ee.do.
c.111on1i., 11• ""' ,1..,1, '""'· """""t. ,,,., •llfllt of lh1 dtctt11d. t r.cl 1•! Int r11111,
11111, lnltrtsl. lflti ''''" 1f11t ·~· •• ,, .. er EVt!LYf,I VOSHELL l'OLGi'.Jt. <1.C .. •·
•ood, n11 1«1uln1C1 '" -••lien ot I-ti<
•IN•Wl•, otllH lht ft, .,. In .a1111on If,
fftM tlll llld dKHMd, •I tlot tlm• .,( h.,
<lt.,h. In ,,,., tC1 •U lt'at c1n 1M •~•I """°" ..ttv 1ll11tlt In lhoo Clf't ti ,. _ _,
lltfd\. c .. ,.l'I el Or•RM, Jttle °' Ctllfor"l1, common!• ,_,. •• 12'9
T"MI" ... ,.....,.,,, ""''' 1>ttfltvllfl~ 11t1v !•· Ml ... fol'-9;1
Thi NOf"lllllUtrly ll IHI ot fl>t
"°'"'""""1.,.1\1 ~It !lfl .. I n '
10u1i..u1..-1v h2 '"' ti Loi 1a -lllftd ''"" llo1 ,..,,., It,.. ol Tll•I•" ..... ,_ of N...-port Mt 19'0tt It .... m t o
19<61"01d •fn llOC* ~ Pttt IJ 01 Mlt<llll _.,,t M11>1 •0<0td1 ti 1110
~nfY.
s..1111<1 1<1 c-11,ont , •t'111U-I,
••.,....1!10P11. <•••nlnl• ..... -m1, rl•~h
al111 rl11U1 el WI¥. ol racor;, ft '""'
TN l1ff'Pl1 •"" ~UlcM1 01 1111 t tf :
C.11l'o In ltwf11I """"¥ oJI !ho Unl-IH Siii"
ol "mt,ltl . Ton H t c...i (10-.\ GI "1• .,,,....,., bid 19 1ccornp1ny ,,,. Olttr 1nli
lhO llllt nct i. IN p1ld ""tOflll•"'•'-cl
Wl.L.IUNGTON , U.J. l~Pij
Darryl Francis ~e
boy "'Onder lrvrn \Vahoo , Ntb ..
who btcan1e a Hollrwooel
lejend. goes into corporatt
~tilt w:ith~ hls son and
niranged wife Tuesday In an
effort to hang on as the Ja~1 of
u~ niogulJI Qf moviedom.
1'he fight -biller. absorb·
Ing . .and con1pllcaled -\\'ill
play a one~ay stand In Bn ap-
proflriate place, the Playhouse
Theater here. Tite scttle is the
1nnua1 shareholders mtttlng
of 20th Century-Fox Filn1
Corp., of "'hich Zanuck still is
boord chairnian after having
been depo&e:d M chief ex-
et·uUvt offictr lasl month.
The legendary !Um maker
-known ltirougbout the i~
dustry by his lnHials, DFZ -
i~ 68 and wlll be required to
retire by company rules al 70,
But he deeply is involvftl on
tht slde ot tht present
manaaement in 1 proty battlP
with a group of insurgent \.llall
Street 8tockholdtrs.
The dlsslde.nls, organizt'd 11s
Ule "Stockholders ProltXtl\f'
Committee," seek support of
enQugh of Fox's 8.5 million
shares to take over the board
of directors and pul in lht>ir
own munagernent. The struii:·
gle for proxies has become 50
\nlenst> that each side has lie·
cu.sed the other of electronll'
eAvesi:iropping and u s t d
debugging devices to l'OOnter
ii.
7.a11uck 's 110n. Richard D.
7.anur.k. 36, was ousted as rox
president Dec. 29 In the fat~r
Jon tilt that reportedly grt'\\'
out of jealousy about who Vl'3S
hem'. The trouble~ a! Fox
stem front 11.'i 11ad financial
Movie Review
of OFZ five yeare ago and ha:;: _.,-,r°•l. ~ btt!'I !Us Meady companion.
<:onditlon in
c10\\'nturn in
fortunes.
the cu r ren t
motion picture
One a.llpeet of tht family
reud was the closing by
Hichard of the Pariil office,
where on spent much ol' his
lime. and refusal lo rene"' the
option of actresa ~t\it\'e
Gllles. a freck led Parisian
beauty who became 1 protea:'
Sh! Is 44 ytan youJ11:er~han
he and ha• made one sta:rrin~
pk.1u~. '"Hello -Goodbyt,"
\\'h\ch ran 11.bout LUt long.
DFZ waJ &epclrale<I. from IU!i
wife Virgini1 in 1956. He hilt!
mB!Tied htt in !he eArl \'
l'!i!enl·movir days "'hen shC
was the leading lady of Bush•·r
Keaton . lhe deadpan COn\-
edian. II~ wenl to France.
made friends with several
rrench acLresses according lo
his bk>grapher, ~lei Gusso"',
and lwiC'e saved Fox fron1
bankruptcy with brilliant filn1
51.ICCessel.
Heccntly he has , b e e n
plagued by a series of
multimillion-dollar Oops after
having turned out the most
sucets~ful f i I m in history .
;,The Sound of MusiC'," which
.. It" II>\' tht Court. '" "" t¥91>1 GI O.f..ilt ...,. .,. •ldder!1I, "" l!.11•1• ..,, .. m 1ln ''"...,_It H U.Uldtltd d•..,.ffl. lfocr-~~ 11"1 "' til dJYidtd M~lll~ bt!Wefh bv1'9!" .nO M lltn •~<•Pl lhe1 TM u !le•
wlll .. ¥ flll" &!Ill ClotllmtnllfV 1llmDI
•nd "" ..,la' et 11111 r .. ,~••nc11 1n. bv.., WIO •ff mo Ce>tl 01 rt<o1tdln1 th<>
•e•. TutJ. I"""''""'• tnd ttnl1, II •AY·
Sex, Schools Scored in 'Pretty Maids'
•••to bt -11t0 ta clos• t1 t.IC'-. Tht By GEORGE LEIDAL
or_,.,. II II l>e 101<1 "'I• Is .. "'""""' wllf'rt nlY or ·-•••n111k>rl ti le lhe t"'· 01 tM 011ty ,.011 111"
d lllon or 1W!l1bltl1¥ ar !ht 10PI •• rt tnv "Prrtly Mai···-AIJ 1°n a now" lmlll'"OYetntnll 1!11r90n tor cornl•~tlioo ar U3
ocWPllkM •NI wllhaut tum••• c1t1r1nc1. {'Urrently playing in Orange 1••mltt won w Oll'>t" reio.!r .. .,.. !t bt .. ,,.., .... iw Mti.r <.:ounty theaters Ls jusl tht
All •'01 11\d, °"'" rn1111 bt In wrnlntr fllm anti·sex ,ducatk>n ad -•n• wlll 119 '«tlYM ti IM offlttt ol 1-iAlllWOO O.~SODl!H .I. AOIONSOH. ••• vocates have been waiting for.
,,.,,.., ''" wld 111m1n111t11or ,.11~ 1111 This latest t'aBhy olf•ri n" will 1nne•M, t1 UO N,..._, Cfnle• ,.
Drive. S~ll• Ul, "--h K"-rrom Roger Vadlm could IJe C.1llti:itnl1, 11 I PIJ TllTM 1ntf 1111 l irsl -· ---
OUOl\CtliM ol 11'111 """Ice ,,,. btlor1 ""' LEGAL NOTICE ......... "' 1114 l t lt . For 1\ortlllr lnlGl"m1ll011 11'111 bkl lo""1sl------
•P'°'V •I "'11 Glfi u at ll1e IHOl'MVI ''" '"' t -mn 1C1mln!ltrl1or with ttlt will,,.,.....,_ NOTIC• el' Silol.I O" P•llllONAL ""o n.. rl•n• It •••••vet! lo rtlKI In• •nO 11• ... L ""O"l•T'I' AT ,.uv.1.t• IALI
t ll ill""-Nt. "'""°'" DAlEO: MIY lJ. lt11
JO!-iN MEIHDL.
.t.om1,.;11rt1or wll!o ll'lt Wiit
.... ~ ... ~"' ol "'' E1111e et
~VEL.,11 voit-rELt FDLGf.~.
D«used .a
""llWOOD, )u o1•N & AOIC.INJeN •r• -HI 0. "',_, Al""HJI at Ltw 1111 ..__, C...tw omt . 11111ot w
,. .. Offi<t ... 1111
H-"'1 IMCll, calllarfti. "'6J
,. .......... (7141 "4-111S
ilottwftt11 IN" Atftllt>lttrtW
.. ut>lllMd Or.tiff (Olll DI!~ 'lktl,
,_ 11. u. 24. t•n 11D-11
p.-i1m
C•llTll'l(lloT! DI' b USINlll.
l'ICllTIOU\ loll,M•
TM wlldtr~l!CI c!o <orllt t l~e-1 1ro
condl.IUl"9"t bullnnt ti ll-J' W. MtFrta·
<1en A•t., ~•nll Ant. Cllolo:lr"I•. •<Id,.. l~t
t.ctttlout ttrm l\lmt ol TJl;QY \ ELl!C·
1 llA . ll.$. lilOOTflil, Olill.lr-1 I. \EWl!ll
!Ll!ANING IEllVlCE 1r.<1 !~ti ••l<I Url"f\
" c.ornPo19d ti ""' follow'~' !li'rtGf'•·
... _ nt m•I 1.. 11111 '"° tl~<H ,. ••-olden<• '" 1• tollowo: l r1Yll P•vlf ,, 11CI! (!1• ~· ti~
llt KJI c 1111 P11rlc11 s P•ul*'• n cm
1:11¥ $1., NtwPorl llftell, C•hl t l10C,
Dtlllcl MIY 11. "71
l•1Yll P t wloy
\
Pttrlct1 I. P1~1-¥
11ot1 o1 c.111 .. ni., °''"'' c°"""' "" N•• u, un .... , .. , ..... • No••"" Pu&llf. 1" 1...0 IOI' 1110 Sii!•, Ht-•11¥ IOOlftrld Trt ¥11 P lwl"' 11\d '•l•ltll \
r'•11ll., k,_n to mt to ff "'' 1>tr00111
..,,_ "'"''" 11t .utlltdbtd to "'• wlllli"
lnllrvn"nl t nd 1t>.nowltdtter '""~ ••• •t"'" mo lllfll. IOl'FICl"'l SE .. LI
J05£PM N. MOON
ND!ff¥ PcDo« L•l100t'' •
Prlrt<lo11 Ottlct 1"
Ortnt9 Counlv
tAY C..,,.,m1u1.,,, I••"''
Mt• ti. 1911 ,.ullllthtd Or1ntt C1>1'1 Dt••~ ,,lol,
All ' 11, J•, JI t nll J-1. 1911 l!ID-11
LEGAL_ NOTICE ---
""""' C•lllTll'ICAT• 0 1' I UllNlll, l'ICTITIOUI NAMI
T~• 11,..,t<,lenrd lloe• f 1rtif't ~• 11 Cil<"I"
...Cll"9 • Du•IMn ., lltl l.e••" II .
C•!I Mfll. (ftll0'1"1' 11-fl>I !le·
lll!Ou• llrm n1m1 .i Clllt!.,TIVI!
l'ACICAGING 1..0 !~II ui!d !!r"' i1 ,.,...
"'NI of lht followl... P•r-. .,.,,..
n1rr>1 In 11111 •nd •11<1 .,i 1 •IMn!t 11 1•
l;Jlowt: '
•1ct11nl l'1cMckll1n. 1 1 it. 0••"9•
Dr., Lot A.,.1111. C1lll .
01•1d Mo., 14. 1911
111<"-•d •tcto1011 ...
~u p1 of C11Uorn;,,. Ot ••lt• c ...,nl"\';
On MllV U, "11. b••or• "''• I N"''''
l'11bPlt 1,. 11\d ror •~ ~ 11111. r•n011•ll•
"'""" lillth1rd ""'""~ilPln .,.....,." 1o ,.,. lo ~1 rt-. Pt'rl"" wri ... 1 "'"'' It Sllbo<tl'otd lo ttlt "'ilhlPI !r<lrVmtnl 11\d
Kl-llicll "' M f~f(U!t'd ftot ~11'>1.
(01'1'1(1.l.L l lE.ALI
JOIEPH f. 0"'Vl$
Nol1rv f'ubllc, C1lttttnl1
Ptl..CIH I Olllc1 In
Ortn•• '""""' M• Con'l,,,IUIOfl l•l>"ft
JI•~· 2!, 1'1' Putl ,.,..., O•on91 (N \1 O••l~ •llO'P.
Mor \1, J~, ]1 A"" Jt1n• /, !t 71 l\k /I
subtitled "Evt.rything You theater~ in new York Vl'here
Always Susprrtt>d \\'a.~ Going unsh.even old" men seeking a
On in Our School~. Hu t \\'err place to sleep gf't lhrir jollie!I
whllf' p;1<>s1nJ! hro\\'n·bilggril
Afntid ~1ighl Hf' Trui' ·· 11111c hottlc~ about the blal"(ln~.
Billf'"d as W<!ck comedy ihr \\'Uh the .s oun d I rack,
filrn is not wilhout (omt ho;11ever . the vie11o·er i ~
delightful momen1s, howevrr transported lo thr r1'al m of
sn1u11~· the enlire produt·t ma)' black C'omrdy -"here lhe
be viewe<l. macabrc is supposf'd to bf>
Thr selling is a beach com· fun ny .
munity high .l'C"hool in 11o·hl~h The !IO<'ial pr1111t atten1pted
Ro1:k Hudson I~ a~slstan! pnn-is th11t small to11'n societ\"
cipal. football l'OaC'h. and place., grt>ater rn1phasis 0;1
guidanre 1-oun~t>lor. His brand !he up<"urninR foolball gamr
cf t•ounseling p,r o ''id e .~ than it doe~ on !hf' !!Olving o(
guidan<"r in lh1· art of three 1nurdt'rl!'. in as nuin~
lo\'ernak1ng, in1phC'l1y and r:-:-days prece~d1ng Uw gamr.
pliC'illy de!ailrd nn the :>rrt>1•n TtK.> hoopla surrounding !ht
Anyont' \\·ho w 11 t ch r ti football gurne <111d the co1n-
lludson beC'On1r N.,); u a I I y muru1y·s undying affection for
trustr11tcd 111 films of the their 11o·JnninJt coach. mask the
"Pillo.,.,. Talk" ilk. -A•ill be solution to lhe .'!Uspecled sex
surprised ht finally 1nakes ii. slaying.s.
and m11kes ii. and make! It in Telly Savalas turns in the
this one. The objrcls of hi." outsland1ng performance ef
liberated libido nrt all th!' !he film os the hardnosed Jn·
prelly rnaids ;1host· chann" vtstiga tor.
are sensually po r Ir ct y e d A subthcn1e of the fll1n in·
lhrough frequent I ov i 11 g vul\·es lludsoo's 111hlctlc and
caresses or the <':fiTIUft1T ·t:vP l'lexuat protegr7 Porn.·t John
un <tpprupn<i1f' -to !hi~ fdn1 Oavld Ca rs o n successfully
an~·11o·11~· Vl'lrlinn-. of 1hc launches \.\'hal niay become an
nubile anato111y. oulstandrnx filn1 <'art er
If run without soundtrack, thf' [llllying the role of the adole'.'·
feminine ~ccnrry in 1hi~ filrn c:cnl who sufftrs frorn easy
would carrv the film's intent arnd frequent. but e1n-~ually as ~·ell a1 mo11t of the barras~1ng stin1ulalion o I
ailent stag lilrns. II !lurely t'rectile tis~. .
weuld bt a hit in these B<lwery Tile solution ef hia d1fficully
is prescribed by 11udson and
involve! evening sessions wilh
his teci.chcr, Angie Dickinson .
Thi' en.~uing change of 1he
personal ity is. nl'edles to say,
not the most challenging of aC'·
tinp; assignments. but Carson
pla~·-~ the character \\'ell.
Unfortunately, 11 u d s o n ,
11o·hite capable or solving the
youth's St>irual inadequacies,
has difficulties handling his
s('xua! proc:ilivities. Ah.
there's the rub'. And. if !here
l'an be considered a moral
point to !he film . it i~ he"':
'l'he privac~· his guidance of-
fice provides. offers a con-
venient trysting place for
coaC'h Tiger"s involvements
\Vilh the pr,tty maids.
When the entanglements
lhreaten the cozy fa1nity situ a-
tion Hudson maintains wlth his
wife and c hi Id , the
nllemalives fo r preservation
or image and 1narriage nar-
ro)v.
S1nt:e the rt>solution of
I lud!i0ll:11 difficult~r.e_th
rneat or the filrn. it v;ould be
unfair lo anyone perverted
f'nough lo want to see-11, lo
1poil their fun .
For !hose who couldn 't <'are
le.,s aOOut sptnding money to
view tbe Beach Blanket Bingo
set orgy It up. tht kno11o·ledg<'
would be Irrelevant.
~ ...... ~ ~~~~~~ IS A FILM OF RARE
Rtmkr'1 Digest
''Rtti Slay ,,, Monri~t " ;, ,, Jl11n• ,,;,,, ""'•'"'of 1c"en n>"'4Nli·
<i1•. II '4·ill J11rtly br o•t 0/1~
Most ;,.porl"•lfil•• o/ 19 71 .
F..111r11ortiiNdr't J,.P•<ll ''
Wi•fr1ti BIM·/r11 , 1 . .A. l ltr11ft:J.
Eut1ri#f'r
' · 't~k HAL WALU& 1,t,.'.;{·~·' p.;:;OCJtCTICI" ·~~~,RED SKY AT ·~~;.:t~~ MURNINB
;;.:"(' ..
• JlfDflATUllATfHftl,_..,OI•
Ml•TllE-lfTlm•i 1m1m~!MIM _
TllE FOllBIJI P•J9C1"'
AT BOTH
THEATRES
,.
.. ....
.. . 11·aS rnade ror sa million and
g"""'9 IJOO miU»iJ.
Zanuck. a small man "'\'ilh
prodigiou~ f' n e r g )' and
creativity. has such an engag-
ing perronality that he dined
v.·Hh Frttnklin D. Roosevel\ ln
lhe \Vhit(' Hoose \.\'h.ile CITII·
paigning for FDR's opponent.
\\'endell L. \\'illkic. He i~
<'rcdHed wiU1 saving Foz'!I
<'orporate llfe with "The
Longesl Day" In the 1960"1
aft.er taking 01•er company
lead ership from Spyros P.
Skouras.
now. \\'am~r Bros .. senior ex· "Slrlk ing I" -'!.•r•I~•• 0.11,,,t. e<:"h"e v~1dent has JJI"' ...... ~ ..
"'-ll 1 • 1 ' cou.••••Hc:~"''""J ~ 3.000 share! o vote !or Uie in· ... s .__ ,
surgents but he and hu:' , .,.._ JACK NICHOLSON
mother together are said abte ~~ . nw DI&
to control abour 200.000 shar... , Plt:t:E•
DFZ O\\"rul 170,000 shares,
cootrols 100,000 0"'11ed by 1
""
111 fPtl cp
other members of his family .
and is said probably able to
influenct a total nf 500,000. The
dissidents were reported to
have started with about one!
n1illion shares under control
and haye been <.'Onccntraling!
on smaller stockholders with!
about LS million shares.
The dissident& ha\'t been
angered by the drop in Fox)
111 IJllV£B
UJfGFOB
MYFATHEB"
~ Thal feat earilcd him the ti-
tle ··the Fox of Holl)'\\'ood , ''
and in recent years he hKs
h<'en the lost of !h~ great
1nov1t tycoons afler a fabulous
e:ireer !hat SO\\! him enter
movies at age 7 \1•earlrlg a wig
and playing an Indian maiden .
He supervised ruid produced
more hi! pictures than any of
his mogul rivals.
stock from $41 a share in 1969
to around $14 currently. The!~~~~~~~~~~~~ company registered a loss of
$2.'i million in 1969 and $77
million last year.
-
Virginia Zanuck . rtportffl
infuriated \Vhen her son
ruchar<l \\•as. fired from the
Fox presidency, said she
v.·ould vole her 100,000 Fox
shares against DFZ and for the
challenging group. Richard ,
• 'I'\\' en t i e th Cen41ry-Fox.
\vhich DFZ helped create after
ytars with Warne r Bros .. is
Hol lywood 's biggest and most
glamorous studio. When recent
flops ran cost budgets up to
S17 million. the banks and
financiers forced Zanuck to
cut his full-time studio staff
from 3,000 to I~. •
l(ID S LOVE
UNCLE LE N
Saturdays on
The DAILY PILOT
I
HELD OVER IXCLUSIYI OaAN•I COUNTY IN•A•IMINT
EDWARDS Tit£ ULTIMATE EJPOllUICE
...... .. -U:.1•"6&.-1••> .. ________ ........... .
Plu1 • Wolt Oilney'1
'DAD, CAN I BORROW THE CAR'"
FOR l'llJYOll! . ._,., .. ,,_ ... ,,,,....,,,,.-r_ ..,._, ........... . .. -CM amir ... -.--..... n ..... llf--~·------
~ Kll.mS NISllll
Ali Mac&raw f (}JE
[GP,·~·~~Neal \~1\)~ _.__ -
Visit the future
where love
is the ultimate crime.
lHX--1138-
Wl<l\I< 8rOI PlfMnlS THX 1 \31
Aoolf!OlN•~-OonllCl~t
lf(hh!(O~ .. IKMoK~
:;::;-.: E:3 ~
ACADEMY AWA RD WINNERS
Plui · Borbra Streisand In
"ON A CLEAR DAY '00 CM SH fOCfVP:•
'"' ,,,.,. '""' (. Scttt llST ,KTUll
llST SClllUlAT
Ellio" Gould
Oonold Snlht rlond ...
"A IAIE DIUGHT. THE LEVEL Of SUCCESS,.,l llf.
VffllTIOlt IS MAIVllOUSl T HIGH.
'.I ... lNt' 1clll•••• t•• ••"' -• ;.,,..M~I• 1•H4•r
11 tliot .... , .,o•lt c1111Hlit1111•1 ploll'
WALTER MATTHAU&'ELAiN"'i1MAY'
.. A iiico"Ciaf"
[~ Color by MOVIELAB
EXCLUSIVELY! Richard Thomas-Catherine lurns-Desi Arnett, Jr.
• • 1111 MM9011 SHOPf'IJIO Clll'Tlllt • •
EOWAl'ID•
HARBOR.:.'l:.2
HUIOll llnl. llot WlUOfl It,
OITA MIU. "'·Ol7J
2N O TOP HIT
M11.ha1t Coint o"d
Bt~I fklond In
RED BKYAT
MDRNIND
• I.I .. Ylrt9"l l'lf!TUt l
Tf t::><1••COlOlll f
2nd Top Attraction!
ERIC IRADEN-
SUSAN CLARK
"COLOSSUS. THI
FORBIN PROJICT0
(R11tlld GP)
ROCK liUDSON
ANG IE DICKINSON
1'F.LLYSAVAl.AS
DUSTIN HOff~'·
"llTilf 816 ~"
~·TechrlC06ot' ~-
DUSTIN HOFFMAN 1 CHIEF DAN GEOllG(
. . • . . . -. • . --. .
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stereo 103FM
the sounds of the harbor
~::::::d~~7 youve never heard it so good
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' PILOT· 27
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l f several thousand hearty young turtles toddle across
the beaches of Jupiter Island, Fla;, this fall and swim
h appily out into the ocean, Frank Lund can take a great
deal of the credit.
•
for hatching, a0<l lhen keep an<l fee<l the turtlets in a
protttted pool for stveral 1nonths until they are hig
enough to fend for t.llf'mseJves, So far 000 big sea turtles
ha,•e been tagi:?;e<I. And this year there '''ere 30,000
eggs in the rookt'ry-,vith luck three c1u11rter.~ of then1
,,·ill have halched and survived at the end of the season.
llazards facin( turtle~ include raccoon~, ,,·hich eat
egg.~, extren1e heat of the sand and erosion.
Lund, a !?O.yc:ir-0Tcl student at the University of
Floridl!, has spent his last t\VO sun1n1cr vacations living
on the beach, tag~ing loggerhead and green turtles and
raising their youu,l!. out of fear for their pos~ihle ex·
tinction. }e5.\C arid )like 'rhite and :Bruce 'Vjll iani.~
ha\'e been helping jn this re.~earch cxpcri1ncnt, \vhose
aim is to clctcrminc the nt>slin~ hnhi!s of sen lurtlcs,
their populations, h azards they face when nesting, and
percentages \\'hich hatch and reh1 rn.
The boys dig up turtle eggs, take them to a •rookery"
':rhc four students hope lo collect Rll their finrlin ~~
:inrl puhlish Lhl'1n later .. -\II thi.~ llecRust\ thirteen rear~
a.11;0, n fi.~hcnnun frienrl happeneO lo give young I;rank
Lund a turtle as a J>et-,,·hich led lo hi.~ present .keen
interest in turtlt's and concern for their survi\'AI.
! ... ~-tw~\ \ ·, ~ l
. , ..
~· ... J~ ~.:. .,. "" • -"'t":;i ...
TJris lf'etk'1 PICTURJ:." SHOW b1 AP pholograph~rJim 1'011rrii~r.
Freshly dug loggerhead eggs ready to be
laken to the rookery •
Fr'ank Lund, left, and Jesse White on the morning expedition by Jeep to look tor marked
nests and to dig for turtle eggs on Jupiter beach. The night team found and marked ne1t1.
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Handfuls of baby turtles, In larger-than-life size pictures: newly hatched log~
gerhead, Jell, and • rare, three-month-old lrunkhead. ,..
-·-l..IO Three weeks elter halchlng, a glislenlng and heaving ma11 ol. loggerhead
turtlets swim In their protecled, salt waler poof.
Frank Lund holdt a rare, albino loggerhead. Behind, In the apeclilly
6ullt pool are other youn g loggerheads. •
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·' 1NVAOER TO RESCUE -Phil Caricoff of Costa
1 Mesa t em·-porarily abandoned the l I 2·mile Border.
' -Dash offshore pov.•erboat race Saturday to rush ·to
.:'Log Race
FCup Kept
,By SIYC
' Shark Jsland Yacht ~luh's
• perpetual trophy for predicted
_, log ractng \.\"ill remain in its
· home case for anol~r year.
, ' The trophy was won
"recenlly by SIYC skipper Gene
De Yeung v.·ho won the trophy
, race v.•ith an error of only .864
percent. ·
The event dates back to
1961. and with the exceptio~ t:if
· 1955 and 1967 it has been won
~y SIYC skippers.
Other yacht clubs
•· represented in the ~·la y 9 race
··"·ere Del Rey Yacht Club.
J;:xpan sion
Of 'Radio
Watch Set
-----Califotnia .Yacht Club,__and_
\\rest Wind Yacht Club. The
·race is sponsored by the
,. ?:Fllerican P o w e r Boat
·'Association and the Southern
,.f California Cruiser Association.
·· ·The Mariha del Rey Yacht
··Club team won lhe SIYC~ ~--"·American ~I a r in e , Lid
-P erpretual trophy for the club
Radio station K~tPC Will el·
pand its Cb. a n n e 1 w a I Ch·
v.·ealher sei'ViCefoOOaters thls
year ta include the area from
Huntington Be a ch ;:ind
NeOA·port \outry le San Diego
and the Mexican border. In
the past the service OA'a~ ~nly
available in the Santa ~forilc.a
to Long Bea.ch and cross·chan-
nel to Catalina Island are~s ..
The radiD station begins · its
service ~lay 29. utilizing,
priva1e · skippfrs [roll') th~
Unite d States Power
Squadrons in both District 13
and District 28. The feature
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n·bose team of three boats had
the be~t course.
Final results : ( 11 Margene,
Gene de \"oung. Sl\'c.:o.8fi4 ;
t2l Dulcinea, Fred Bice. SIYC,
J 437: fJ) JiictE'J. Jack Prs.<;JS,
-on.Ye. 2.047: (41 Husky 1.
Georp.e Friedl . SIYC. 2.18.1 ;
)SJ J:;'I Sid II, Sid Senter,
-•. DRY C, 2.480.
NOlfJCE CLASS -.fl I Lady
Gay , Ernest Beck. SIYC,
;..l.386: !21 Beaver, Ted ~1cCon·
ville. SrYc., 4 836.
H a rbour Club
Sets Rcualla "' ; ' The •lunlington l-tarbour
· Ya~l Club v.·ill stage it.s an·
nual Mid ~1'ay Regs1111 \Ved-
nesday lvtlh competition limi-
~ed Ill S:ihots and Lid('lo-1~~.
The regatt11 i~ i11vita!ional .
·•Races v.·ill be sailed only on
courses inside the hay.
•'
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. airs on KMPV (710) each
Saru rday and Sunday and holi-
day through October, giving
information 011 'A'ind. sea and
citannel . ronditions.
Dick \\'hlltaker (If Shcrn1;1n
Oaks. a member of the San
Fernando Valley Powe r
Squadron. heads up lhe Chan·
nelwatch under the
supervision -t:if KM PV nCws
djreclnr _Hugh Br u n d age .
\\lhillaker "'ill be assisted by
Pasadena Power SqLiadron
members Charles Adair and
Fred Edmunds.
The Channelv.·atch fleet v.•ili
also inclu de members of the
BalbOa, Rio Hondo. Long
Beach. Lynw!)Od. Sa n l a
Monica· Bay, H unting lo n
Beach. Rcdond1t Beach and
Santa Ana_poWer ~quad.rons.
·ship-to--~hore· rit~ios' a re
utilized 'to enable ·skipp~rs on
the ·scene to rfport . lhe
n1arina, harbor and sea con-
ditions flS" !hey exist al the
time of each hourly broadcast.
Lat~ <;Tt1•iS'teni1ig
Dick and Rosanne Valdes Sunday christened their
new Columbia·57 sloop a rull \veek-after it had '''nn
Class A and the 1t1ex1co Secretary of Navy Trophy
in th e N_ewporl to E"!icnada race •. The f:nscnada
•race was the maiden· outing..for F..scudciro.-lhe eifhlh
57 lo be produced by Columbia Yacbts or \l'hirh
VaJd es is presldent. Escudero ls also thfl nev•e~l ad·
dltl .. to Ille Newport Har bor Yacht Club fleet.
~.
the aid of an injured competitbr whose boat had di!li-
inlegrated in choppy seas. Carlcoff .Jost 10 minutes
in the rescue and still finished iQ tb:ird place.
'Mesan Saves 2,
Winds Up Third
,P hil Cariooff of Costa Mesa
hlew his chances of winning
the 112-mile off shore
pov.•erbo11 l Border Dash· from
Lllng Beactt 10· Mission Bay
Saturday when he temporarily
:abandoned lhe· race to go to th~ aid · of tv.·o comj>etitors '
\l'hose boat had disintegrated. ·
Caricoff slopped his· own
boat and dove onto the chilly
v.·aters of f.()l)g Beach Harbor
·to save And y Andrews of San
GabriE.>l ~ho wa's injured·when -
his boat bounced of{ ii choppy
sea soon after th e start. The
other occupant of the boat was
F'red Cline, also of San
Gabriel.
Race offi~ia1s said Caricoff
was 11 moog-the-1eaden:'in-i-he
race when he spotted the ac-
cident and rushed to lhe
rescue. He la ter continued in
the race.arid fin ished third in
the race.
A long Beach Harbor Patrol
boat also came to the
assistance of Cline a n d
Andrews. Cline surfered 11
severely cut chi n and had two
teeth knoc ked out. Andrews
suffered a badly cut hand and
left leg. Both wen~ rushed to a
Long Bea'ch hospital Io r
emergency treatment.
·Overall winner of the race
was Bill Gilbert, a Beverly
Hills realtor. who droVe his 20-
foot Spectra Marine Special al
59.7 mph over _...the 112-mile
course. Second place went tu
Toad. Aga in, driven by Bill
Vogel of Arcadia at 57.2 mph.
Caticoff's time for third
place was 1 hour5. 4 minutes
and-t2-secondrft1r jlln-average
!peed of 54.1 mph. It was
calculated that, Caricof flost
about 10 minul.l;s in stopping
to aid Andrew.s.
56 Yachts Turn Out
'"
For Oly1npic Regatta
Fifty-six boats in five of lb$
six Olympic classes turned tlUt
for Ne\\•port Harbor Yacht
Club's firit Olympic Cl asses
R~atla Saturday and Sunday.
The regatta was sailed In
light airs both days. Olympic
rourses were laid out west or
the Newport Pier.
Conspiciious by I h e i t
absence was the Finn Class
which had a conOicting regat·
ta iri Mission Bay over the
"'eekend.
Light Winds
Mar Laguna
H ighe.<;~·l~rnouts were in the 'C' Race
Soling Class with 22 and the
Star with 17. The Tempest, Light winds b ampere d
J;itest to gain Olympic 5latus. Voyagers Yacht CI u b ' s
had ejgp~ entries, the Dragons Laguna "C" race Sunday.
se\'en and the .f lying Dutch-leaving many of the slartll'rs
man, 2. stranded until late in the even·
San J)ie.go skippers, led by irig.
The winds were moderate at l)on Beva r or Sou thwestern !he start but dwindled In near
Yach~ Cl ub dominated the Sol· flat calms after the Oeet turn·
inf.: Cl.-.s~ hy ·tak ing .the first ed !he mark ofr Laguna for
(\\'O of three places. Second home ..
·\\·a~ Lo\te.ll ·Norlh of Sen -Diego The Laguna "C'' race is a
Yacht Club 11~ third was feature of VYC "s Ma5sey
·Roger Welsh, Newpo rt Harbor Series for PHRF and MORF
Yat·ht Club. yachts.
Both Bevar and North . aie WinnPr in the-PH RF division
former \vorlcl champion Star \vas Jeff Barbe.r's Laughing
sailor!i and .North won a gold , l.ion from Dana Point Yacht
-m~Al In theClif.~1fi 1968. -Clilti.
In the Star Class itself. Don The ~10RF winner. racing
Trask and · Tom Blackaller, for the VYC Midget Perpetual.
both of St. Francis Yacht Club "·as Tv.·ist II, skippered by
were standouts. finishing one· Andy Morthland of NHYC.
two. TninJ was Chick ·Rollins Final results:
of San Diego Yacht Club. PHRF -11) Laughing Linn,
Competition in the Tempc~t Jeff Barber, DPYC; ( 2 )
class was closely fnught \\'ilh Scnrpio, Doug Nash, VYC : C1)
first plate winding up in a lie Num i~u m II. Ray Booth,
betv.·cen Doug SteNe of South BYC; (~) ZumAran, 8 i 11
Coast Corinthian Yacht Club Rohrs. VYC.
and Jack Morris of SL f'YC. MORF -11 I Twist II, Andy
Santa Barbara Yacht Club Morthland. NHYC: 12) Siar
ek ippers led by ''{ fl. Painter Shine, Bil l von KleinSmid .
swept the l:>ragCM1 Class. Run-NHYC: 1:1) Sequoi1, J im
ne.r-op was Volney Craig, arwl Moore. SS.SC.
third was David Wig1ey. ------------!
There were only lwo entries
ln th• Flying DutchmRn Cla«. The DA ILY PILOT-
The winner was Manfred Klatt
of p Q mo n .;:1 Valley Niilini.; The One That Cares
Associalion.
LOltD & IARON -ANTHONY ltAMCHAND
HONG KONG ~~1l~R~
FINAL 3 DAYS LAGUNA BEACH
MAY 17-18-19 ...... ,, .• ..-a..,,.._
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IJ,tf ••• ••• 11.M ". ••• •• • ••
C•ll a t Ylth Mr. W. LAL. • e.11'1. -• '·"'•
LA GUNA HOTl l ftl iltlJ!I\ C11•t 1o11,11w1,, L•f~"• at1c~
!IU I "'·"11
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WANT
TD
. CLEAN
UP
ON
YOUR
CLEAN
OUT?
FDR
FAST!
, FAST!
ACTION!
CALL
DAILY
PILOT
CLASS·
IFIED
DEPT.
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ltAll .. Y Pil .. OT WANT ADS
The Biggest Single Marketplace on The Oran9e Coast• Phon" 642·567•
IL ___ .. _ .. _lliell -~ .. --General
ofi~.Ja !J~/e
PRESrlGE WATERFRONT HOMES
5 Linda Isle Drive
Just completed 4 BR .. 51h ba. home v.•/fam .
rm. & study . Magnificent 39 ft. waterfront
liv. rm. v.•/frpl. & wet bar. $167 ,406
For Complete lnform11 tlon on 111 homes &
lots, ple1se c1ll:
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
833 Dover Dr., Suit• 3, N.B. 642-4620
2 Bdrm. Townhouse
3Yz Baths Detached
Maids Quarters
Llve thr easy v.·11y of life.
Nn upkeep wnrriell. Club-
houlle and pool, 2 luxurious
bdrm~. 3\1, lavish bltth.s.
Built in kitchen \\•ith dining
area. Lu11h carpe.t and drap-
e~. Detached guesr facilitif's
1•.-ith ba1h. Atrium type 2fr
pa tin. Only 1 yr. old. Very
1ma.ll down and 1akoit over
e>:1s1ing Joan. You can't af-
ford 10 ren1: Beach! Hurry.
~714) 962-5585 I'
! G.neral
} BEDRM. EASTSIDE
Charmin~ oirler hon1f', need-
ing a litl\e fix'ln. Cnme see
11.nd submit your nffcr. Open
Sun. 1-5. 32;, FIOll'l'r St.,
C.M,
3 + RUM PUS RM .
St-e thls VU!W horn ' .,../tlrdwd
fi rs, blrins. shingle roof,
block w&JI frllC'd. Ideal !or
t~ lrg. family. No dn. VAi
lo dn. to olhf'rs. VA appr, at
$24 ,bOO
5 BDRM .
_ ....
General
ASSUME
VA LOAN
Hf're 's buU! -in !ina/lC'lng,
wirh NO NEED TO QUAL-
lf'Y~ Existing 6% loan can
be lakeo over v.·ith tot11\
payments le11s than rrn1,
Ill a modes t rlown p11ymenr.
It's a lovely 3 bl>dmom
home v.•i th A shake roof 1n
a prime area. Only $29,400.
will make it yours.
COtT!>
· WALLACE
REALTORS
-546-4141--
(0pin Evenings)
UNIVERSITY PARK
A 211.rdf'ncr"s drram
Beauri fully l11.nd11C11.ped
4 BE'droom hnme
'•"Block to club & pool
Compact ramily room
open!! nnro lovely yard
$39,950 • 10% Do\l·n
REALTORS
SINCE l!}«
673-4400
3 Bedroom • 2 Bath
Eastside
Costa Mesa
Hardwood (I o or 5, hl"f'pl,
crpl11, drps. cov"d patio, dbl
car gar. Lrg back yd. :'-111.ny
heaut lru1t lrtts & !ihrub!.
$28,500. Tern1s rHA or VA,
Roy McCardle Realtor
1810 Newport Rlvd., C.f\t.
54S.7729
ECOLOGY CLE~
Gt'ffn is 1he nci.s:;hhorhood.
Bright is the homr. Rparkl-
ini,: i11 tht' pool. This en·
111.rgrd Thrre &'!rm. home
ha~ thrm 1111 phis A price
"rhAtit ri.s::hl-Only $36.~. Lo-
c11tM nr11r \\IESTCL!fl'
SHOPP ING CENTER. Mllr·
in,..rJi; PArk and School. Call
Today~
Macnab-Irvine
f OHL\ l [ Ol.SO\
MESA VERDE
Open Sat/Sun I · 5
2784 Albatross , C.M. I.., _____ ...,. Rralty Company
SPARKLING SPANISH
'" PCAL ro~s
19131 Brookhunt Ave.
Huntington Beach
OWNERS LOSS -
YOUR GAIN
SeJIPr must sacrince $4.000
or extI'll.11 in hi~ lovely two
11tory, Four Bdrm. 1'hree
bath homf' Witb l'UnkPn !iv·
• i;: Rm., Din . Rm .. Elect.
B/I Kit., Bktst. Rm. and
111.;gl' ram. Rm. &autitu11y
~_!_.~--~ r_p e __ t' d
thmuR:houL Three car gar-
112r-pro!P!'~innally lnncli;c11.p.
NI ASSUM f: EXIST!r\G
}'.II.A. loa~ or N"rinaoc:f' to /
}our 1.--hoire. Priced for a
Sfor this 11h.11rp rontemp.
home on lrli?;. cor. Jot. Rnom
lor boa1or1rtr. Owner 11nx·
ioull. Submit olrs. VA 11ppr.
" $42, 150.
DELUXE 4 • PLEXES
Spac. 3 BR & 2 Ba in choicl'
N.B. 1re11. O"'nf'r ""1nl11
quick salP. Priced bPlow
mlcl . NEU1 !!03 1011n. 7~ ?(,
Hurry, thl'se won't las1.
$72 ,500.
.,. -OERqON
. J .. .,-.. -<ryo ~. ~
q1ul'k salP al only S.19.!J"J(I. I 642-1771 Anytime
Evrninli?;ll C11ll 644-7003
Vl.EW
The Blue Pacific
f rom lh is 3 hrlrn1 . & rirn
Mmf' in EXCLUSIVE CA·
MEO RH ORES. A home ynu
Tf'i!.lly can Alford. COl·nrr Int
ln.o;ure~ privacy, l'll!IO acrf'~!I
In l private bP.fi:l'.'hf'!I. Onr f'lf
our hes! buy~. Call to F!l'f':.
$6"7 ,500.
32Ui JDAHO PLACE, COSTA
MESA • Dforp. pllJsh l'h11g
crpt11, m11s~iv, dbl f1rrpl.
horh bn11.1 (., trlr ~tnrllJ!:P,
IHld rre~h!y p11.inted. !->ri11rk•
/infi!: J BR horn!' w1/h Ir,:.
f11 mily rm, l glr11m1ng b~ths
k cool. c!r11n, htd &. fltrd.
==~= COLLEGE PARK
-BEAUTIES-
(\\. Z:lfi6 Colgale -4 BR +
famlly rm.. ~h11g earptg,
v.'11.terfall in .. ,.~r yard.
$30,500
Cl.l 3311 \\tes1hrook. ~ Bn w/
pool, lar1:r cn rrtf'r lot.
$32 ,500
(J.) 2"1S Tulane -4 BR cus-
romiztd homt. 2200 sq, ft.
of luxury Jivinr. See the
very ht-st.
Newport
••
F1ri rview
6•6·ea11 I
Harbor View Homes
Srautiful rrsiclrncP with ll'e!
h11 t, lo\'ely ciirpP.ting. sell·
clPAnlng Q\'Pn!I , Qui ck pos-
Sf'!~ion. Q\l·ner 11nxiou!!
S.'J!l.:iol
!Nn.untN(; Tl!E l..ANU
CORBIN~
-~-CORONA
DEL MAR
BAYCREST
Autht>ntic olrl Spanish charm.
Dhl. droor Spani~ tilrd f'n-
1.rv. Sunken LR . ~plendid
rdrmal OR. richly flMl'led
f"R, Spanish style hrickM
t'nur1yRrrl. Only 4 yrs. old.
$7•1 .~.
Macnab-Irvine
V;u.:11nt & ready for yl)Ur im-
mf'dii:ite in~Pf'Clion. Lt>tsa
charm. 3 bedrooms-dininii:
room.hardwood flOOfs-buil!
in~-cozy fireplace and all on
R-2 lot. $34.500 /\'.Ped ,,.,I
1>11.y morP'.' CA.Li. 6!.r-49..ll I 642-8235 675-3210
$43,SOO
WATERFRONT
""""s""uR""F""s""o""u~N""D""
SEND YOU 7
·n iPn l'Qrilr · ffl "Nr"'f"'"l"f
~hnre.~ and l'Ce 1h1~ cutr 3
hf>flrnnm All nprn hf.am
mnrlrrn hon11• Accrss to 2
pnnls a1111 lrnni.~ 1'l'lurts, !no
All for SZ!.l.:}00. Call &16-7171.
Tu·o i;1nry, lour bedroom. l"'fl
bathrooms, nP"A' Kodl'l c11 r· 1
prl1np;, beamed ctihngs.
\\'ON'T LAST • CALL •
Walker & Lee 1
2(HJ \rrsicliff Drive
616-nll 0pPn ·ril 9 PM
DOLL HOUSE
&11ulifull y <IOO">ralf'rl 3 h<lr ..
I
SO, SO HOMEY!
Best Buy/$22 ,900
11 1 b11lh, shag cp!, brick GI -nil <1n~ fo"HA tprm~~ ;\
vinyl kil1·hr11, pl!.l'IP1Pf1 J!'.a· I BR! Loi~ of p::inrll inQ:~ Lrg
rai;:r. MovP-in ('ondiliQn . yd 1\"ith fn11! trrr1<'
l'all nllw 64fi..71 7l. HAF.FOAL REAL TY
8•12·140\ J.\·r~. ,-,11-2 146
-SPANISH-DECOR
LnvPl y, in1mac. 3 BR, 2 BA,
N V. H lll'llr new horn('. 011·npr dPS-ew, 1ew omes
Dovrr Shores i·us1om hit : f'l'rlllr. Ju.~r rPduced, Only
H k. . .__. h s~ .. il'Wl. cirP111 l'lC. .iivf' 1nR:_s11.f', l'•~·tce omf'-JEAN SMITH RLTR
s11e~ "''''1ev.·s N.8 .. ff'f' nr ' • •• ]P.i.~hnlrl. 3 llf'W homes un-'400 F.. 1 71~ .. (1 .. \1 . 646·32J.J
drr rnn~1.. 1>f'ndy for on:u-'* MESA VERDE *
f'Rnc~· in Junf'. Vi~i1 10.t1 i.fi\·rl y 1mmar. hnmP. 8f'11ut.
:\l11riner1> D. fnr PT'f'Vif'W • 2"1Y1Und~. Cll\'. Jlllll(). J BR..
4-5 BR hnmr~ \V pnnl~. & f11m . rm . '.! 811th~ Sl"i,900.
ROY J . WARD RL TR. Georg• W il lia m son
103.1 \larinl'rs. Dnv('t !->hnrr~
1
REALTOR
616·1~1~1:l -Oprn f);:i1l.v 6i.1~1.t-...O ~t'>-!.".J>.t Evr~.
BIG CORONA BEACH
Anti the prito! arr an r;isy
We'U help you sell! 642-5678
G1n1ral
stroll frnm the 11rv.·r~1. p;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;,
niN>sl wRrm k spac .. 1 BR.
AvR1I in hi-nut. olrl Cnrfln11..
· Home Show Realtors
"Arml'hair Hflu~Phuntini;:"
3.;35 F:. Cn11$t !hi·)'-· CrlM
675-7225 --V-A-CA NT~.-n-d~-
SPARKLING
fORl.\l [ OLSON ..,
R £Al r O P S
OPEN 7 DAYS A 'VEEK
Would Yau lelieve
--JY""L t'UIO. o.! ""C~842' 10pen-eves1 1-MARTIN f·i1mily plnnTIKI homr "ith
s~atf' m11stf'r ~room_
w\m:;. 2 BR & lil.m. rm .. l'P-
mPnt pAliO!I; I.· bnat door
in i;:ar111::r. $30.500.
LESS THAN
$75.00
6
4
2 -5
6
7
8
~C-... REALTORS
~~ wow
644-7662
BARGAIN HUNTERS
Jllfl1 ff'IPl'll'f'rl, f:S~tside C.'.\I.
C.nvrrnmf'nl ref)().~.~l'~sinn -
$21.·l."'iO .. 1 BR. CovPl"'f'fl p;i-
lin. C11rprt.11;. Brnm cPilinl!'.ll.
Ohl. i:::11r. Lr12: lot on cul-<lf'-
"11r. $199 Jl('r mo piiy.o;
e\·rrythini;: v.·ith lo"'' dn pay·
mi. tn 11nynne.
C11ll ~1 10-ll:l\ 10fll'll PVE"~.)
-3P ANORAMJC-
OCEAN VIEWS
C.1-ent Hirlf'A"'i'I) A->~r11mf' Alpine llome
;,()' livin2 l'Ml'n
l 'nhe lleva.hlf' $..14 .500
\\'ON 'T LASf . CAI.I. N0\\1
Walker & Lee
;!l'M~ Wf'~tclif! Drive
filfi.771t ()p('n ·1il !I P\t
CAREFREE LIVING
Sp11r.:K1U! l etory CnnM. Ells!·
~irl" C.i\I , 2 BR, l't A,\,
FiN'pl11r~. i\ll hl!-1n-", \VI'\'
cp1.1, rlrr~. Pr1v111ro p11110.
H~t f)On1 . r"'M'f"At1nn rmm.
~ondry ll'lt>tllt1r~. O\\'NER
~ll'ST SELl1! ;ttg.067~
CalJ Ml-:i678 .i Saw!
$750
l!'t11.I mo,·,.in for this quf'tn-
~iird 4 hP<lrnom. 2 b11th •5-
ti11r \\'ilh fi1""'1111.ce, modern
bu ilt·in kil<"hfn. c11.rpl'l!I,
11nrl lnr_,. of i;:nnrlir.o;. $24.000,
NO L1PS, NO F:XTRA,o;;, '·
Pete Barrett Realty
642·5200
:.O"P1\·(y rlf'ror. It c11rperf'rl, 3
BR , 1"'4 h;r.. B!tn'. 2 c11.r
gara2r. S'l1.~.
CAYWOOD REAL TY
fi..106 \\'. Cn11"1 H1\·y., N.8.
548-1290
Walker & Lee '""" i~~~!!N);!,, u~
7682 J<:dinj:ler I h·1>f!llly Dr. Ea.d sidr C.M.
1'714\ 1':4~·44~ nr 5'10.5140 Lachenmy~r Re~ltor 1
Y E o J frl!i-3.'1~ I f_VC'l'. :i \;,.:'\.i8,.1 oung xecuttv• s
Prim• Bch . Aroa Hqm• MESA VERDE
3 BR. 2 811. hu2t fam ily rm.
Din. rm. 2 f'\rrpl 's. Lrli?;. en·
("I. J>lllin. Lrg kitch • tr.II
~lf'Ct blr in.11;, 3 CAr fl:Rr 111lf1
1n;;r,ny, ml'lny :i.rra!I. lllCI.
•lttl. aar rloor fl()('flf'r. cn r· °'' Im 11· 'bo.111 i:::11tr. Sfor
1h1~ outl'lt11nd1ng homr pric-
t"<! RI s.ll.5nJ.
l Rrrlroom~. hrii;:ht chr rrful
horn,., ilU'Re ·country kueh·
f'l"I. $28.950.
"lllua\mc~taCty
546-5990
COL LINS & .VATTS ! * BAVFRONT *
962-:'i.}2:1. E\•n.. 9&2.m.'J Balboa Covt.o; 3 Bdrm.. +
$21,500 h1m ily rm. 1..g,., 1\YJrk~hoP.
1 Bf'droom J\1 bll.th<, hu1l1 211 BA'1. ~r. p;ihro, beach,
ins. foff'Pd 11!r hr111 . gD!'rl pif'r k ~l ip. Sti.nno.
l'lrP11 nf Cn~,11 ~lr.~11 . llurr~
:..ii;.ftli4(1, howO'Ql) lowson j ft.
JICOl(Oll
I
1ltc la!IP~I draw 1n the \l'P!-!
, , A 011 ll:v Pllot Chl~!ili'°rl
__ ,.,, __ H_.r_bo_r._c_._"~-_A.:.d.:.._6:."=--.:.".:.'::.'-----
A Manth
h1\·r~t nr'5 ~Jlf'C'lill Tak•
n\·rr 5 1, 11nnui1I '• ratr
fHA ]OIUl. ~PR! 11 nd
rlrnn :i hrflrflQnl hnnlr.
CAn '"" Y"UI"\ fnr ]PsJ 1hRn s,;.-, 11 n1nnlh. Rllrf'
rinrl 11r~ttrrl nn hlll:!!
\l'<'ll krp\ ln1. f or the
pa1·1irul ;ir h"111" huyrr
nr th" rl i•wrrnini:: invf's·
t.ir. Oon't fa il 1n \n\'PS-t1c:Rt,. 1h15 IUlll~Ulll or·
rnrt11n1 !y. '\inn't las l so hu;ry ei.11
645·0l0l
BACHELOR
"BEACH"
BARGAIN
If 511nd,v ht>arhr~ And
lhP rn11r nf 1h• surf
lu1·n you nn, thi' is it .
Sunlnlrr·fun cotl11i;:r.
SpArinu~ 111 in~ ronm,
hrichl l'h1ny kill'h,.n,
111.ri;:r l~n.nn1s. IN ·
CLUOF.S lh1nc room
furnitur .. 11 nd tf'fr1ccni -
tor. Chi nt'r hqulri11t1ni,:
!or fut ..ala. l'lnn"I \l'ISS
ur th11t t>ritk-mnrninJ:
run on 111,. $/Ind. ~llrr)' -wnn'l 111,r. n1:11
64 S·Dlrl
•
..
.1
I
'
'
..
• Mo~, MIJ 17, 1971 OAJLY l'lLOT If: -
Everyone Has
Someth in q That
Someone ~lse Wants
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ' You Can Sell It,
Find It, Trade It
'Vith· a Went Ad·
') .. J
The e·iggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast-Dia.I ~42·5678 for.Fast Results -?" '! I
'I
~lorSll•
*
•
* * * * TAYLOR CO.
THE BLUFFS -$51 ,500
* FREE
500 CASH!
COLLEGE PARK
AREA
Sharp 3 la: Br. home 2 Ba.
& lam rm. .11h1tg carpet.
$3.l.CXKI. ~5780; ~197,
2313 Vft:i>sar Pl.
Huntington &each
J us t listed! ''E" plan condominiun1 on green
belt. 3 BR. fam rm & 2 patios. Many extras
include brick fireplace \\'/mantle, upgraded
\Ve're not joshin .. ,plus you
get one beaulittd 4 bedroom
home ~·uh priva1e master
suitf', sh.al[ cll.rPf't and all
freshly pa fntPd. f'HA or VA
lmancinlil:. Sounds too good.
huh ... Just ll!t us prove it.
We are htore 10 do buainesa.
* R1duc1d $1,000 *
FHA, VA, Convl!nl., nr you
namf: tt: 3 BR. + lam. rm.
2 Ba. $21!,700
Call : Pat WOO<l ~.f.,....2300
' cptng & drapes. Immaculate! &fonic Prop!':rtit~ 67~5726
·"Our 26th Y••r" 546-9521 VAC ANT 3 BR. 2 BA, all
bltlns, crpts lhruout. Cov'd
patiQ, Assumr f'HA, no
qualifying. S.lMO dn. 115.900
lull priC'f'. .lnhn Irwin &
A~snc. 6.1!H~70
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 San Joaquin Hills Road Nichols Real Estate
Newport Center 644·4910 •I J K_tl!CHC115 J••••••••I Generol ------=-= LOVELY 3 br homr. fAm rm
p11.t10, gar. crpt 1/tf rps,
ownpr will ,,.u !or FHA ap..
pra isaJ. :HS-3097 rvrs O~n
Sun \.:,.
Jtlore Renl
Estate 01&
Precedh1g PR!le
HARBOR VIEW
"MAJESTIC MANSION" 1...--....... -...............
• QUIET REST • 4·BDRS. 2·STORY
-$28,500
That's right and only :2'ii
yrars old. For thr folks who
like the ul t1ma tr in modern
ritocor. Lush carpeting, 1trp
do\\'n li\'Jng room . Chandel·
ien?d form11.I dining room.
Massive family room, 4 g1.
ant bedr& 2~1 baths. Flrr·
p!arp, garden k1tchPn rha1
i;paddf!s. Lush grounds.
Min. 10 beach. Shop around
then look at th is for $28,500
• l t"s inron1parabi,.
Call t71.fJ 962-~j
fORl\T E Ol\O\
" llEAl TORS
Gnr~is Deannr Homr ne11r
th!!': ocean on beauti fully \\'i!'ll
kept corrirr lot, ~hake roof,
adu!1 lived-in, onr owMr
homl!'. 3 BR, 2 Ba.,
$25 ,500
BRING voun
CHECK BOOK
RETI RED~ Re!iring'! Qui!,
r.ecluri'd 2 Br, 11.li BA . Atfult
condom inium. By Ownrr
64.2-97186
HALECREST. Sacr1rice by
Newport ownl!'r, J bd rm. 'l ba . 1213
I t Parnell Sl, C.M. $25.500. GI
1 Loan. 51~797R.
Fairview 1 e DROPPED prier: to S1600
~6-1111 bf>low fa ir mark'! \'alu' to
( ti · ) SZfl.!IOO. F"it•placl!', 3 br. •~y mt I 5.i7-77h7 after 4
I-"'~"!'~'!"'~"!'~~!""' iMESA Verdr by owner: J OPEN HOUSE ""'m, rmJy rm, I ""· ,.100.
1 TO 5 DAILY a~'" _d aily, '"·"'· M.~207.1.
30&5 ).UJ\ON,COSTA Mi'.:SA -?.1ESA VERDE Highlands. 3 BR. 2 BA, family room on N~ hsuna • Popular BtMd-Now vacant. lmmed. J'.IOS· cu!-cl~&ac. $32.500. !i.\7-&"i29.
moor split \r\·el. 4 BR . v.ith 191:11 Brookhurst Avr. srssion, Lrg 4 BR homf!. D P ,
H . D. h fly, "'"· 11nrl All lhf! mod· ana otnt • DELIGHTFUL s br: l&.m !amlly room and la.rgl' din -unnng!on a<:AC -------=---, ·" iiiOiiOiiOiiiiiOiiOiiiiiiiiiil l!'rn convtonicncPs. Cov'ri . pa· A LOT BUY IT'S A MESS rm, 1tudy, 1pacious patios It: ing room. Some \i e11·. '.\'.en is I ~ k ~-· J WALK !JO and lan!Astic B-B-Q, Dan" Potnl Joi, OK fur 1unutt . .._,,u1~ 11 to at ot, som' v.·ork and a ne-...' back p 1,· ~ , . 1 1 Cle•n Up And Sevt By _ .. 0, •• 61' -rofc&~. SC1,,.., 1...uw n l!'r· rlupltx or home , S.ciooo. "" ' .,...,.,,.
yard bul this mr11.n9 ~avini:~ TO CHURCHES est 1011.n avail, • SJ2.9jl), BUTLER REA L ESTATE $1l ,.500 Mis• dtl Mar
for 1he boy,r. Priced to ~II 54~24 (0 1 430 11 3 BR. 2 Ba , crp11, drpa, blt· i----------
at $&tocxi. AND SHOPS ~ ~~n f!VM ~: i{;m~~ee 1 1n R ~ 0 . Qµi,t c~l-de-sac. Out1t•ndin9 Lecatlon
Call U·N££K 67";)-6000 Bright 3 BR, 2 Ba, hard"·oori <192-J(Jlol or 4!1Z-561B ~ l tll> Yl t<I. Bnng 10mr 4 br, 2 ba., !ge kilchen/din"&:
floor home -&l1rv, ii or 1fi(ii8 ihJ.\I E Bl ff pa1nt, lots nf r lbow grra.se arra, trplc. brick pllUO,
not you ca.n a.ssum,. a 41,i'lc ---· ----ast u arw:I t1nd a jt'Wf'I h,r,. ~es. corner hnu51!' w/&lde UN~~~~~.~~t:S ~o,'"1a~:i.'$"2"7'.o"'O·ON1ce add· • • ·-:-* • • Must Sell Sl8.;)00. SullmH. ~47-1221 . y&NI !or boat or tTaller. l ,,0 E. co•it ti...,. SEYMOUR REAL TY m1nute1 to major 1hop'r
CMonao.1M1 r,c111r. Ve•ry ln-ter-est•ing 17141 Btach Blvd., Htgn Bc:h cent,r. trtt1111.y11. schools,
OPl!'n "til 9 PM 511 acre park. S31.500.
B/B Newport ~:gso~:U ~:u:~ln~:~:) Bit 5 bl'rl!'l'IOm Or 4 l.nd_rl:n. AIRLINE PILOT TRANS. ~~-
Ea u·d 1 l p II ul 2 ba ths. lormaJ din1n11: • 4 BEDRMS -S29,950 •
22 \'EARS or 1t s 1 e O('a *'· re Y c · roo m, view of Ra.ck Bay. fERRED. Br-au1itut , n « w FHA, VA l conv termi.
REAL ESTATE SERVTCE Fairview dr-sac. 4 _81'_riroom home. 2-o~·ntr ha1 movl!:d and tr; 3.000 Mt· fl .• tn lt vf'I.. 4 Compl r~l!:COl"lll!'d rtrw
IN n!E HARBOR AREA bath~. built·1n1. All could hf: dPspPr11.!e to !11!'!1. GREAT bdrm11;, J _baths, dini~g rm: crpt Ir lg fenced' y11.rd.
Summer'& Comin' I 646-8811 be11utilul. Vacant. \\'ellt')' OP PORTIJN JTY. New !<Ip ' garrlf'n krtr.h,n, 18 xro Owner, Bob Law, Stj7-200J
It takt'.'s a real .i;w1mmPr ( I' ) owner. lmin 11vail1blr. 152.!!50. bonu1 rm, 3 r11r 111.ragr, d11.ys; 544-8580 l'vea.
1ny 1mt Arnold & Fre'1d Brok'r 5-15-9451 l11rj:";e pool 1lztt1 ftncrd l,-~~-,-----~ for fhi5 PXfra lgi>. pool. I • 1 yard , lush ~hir; carpl!'I. 4 Br, 2 ba, many ~ustom
Nkrly lndsqid. 3 BR. homr I :iiAA E. 171h SI., C.M. e EXCLUSIVE AGENTS e j cus!nm rlr11.~&. A. 1 ~ u-m , fratur~11. S3l.!m. Auume
in choice loc .. \\"estc\iff. -GORGEOUS DOLL Rf..:A'L'J'OR!\ li16-7T.~ d11y5 1 SALES ·LEASES lirge VA lo11.n. $3!1.950. ~~ J;,
1
JJA, Prln. on I y,
Out of arr11. owner very HOUSE REPOSSESSIONS I f O"'ntr R97-:ttj7 '"-""~
anxious! S~8 .!"JOO. ! 11.t lull pri ce o{ $21,9;iO. 3 htil!"e s kl. I "· N rt •-h pa r 1ng c ean numt~. somr £-~ Huntington Harbour 1wpo P9K 67§ .. ]000 berlroomg 'ol.'1th 2 balhs, im· newly paintl'rl & c11.rprted. l DO YOU H•VE ,
macu!a1e lhru~U!. Carpel s. J,4 &. 5 bdrm~. Some wi1h * WATERFRONT - 3 BR. 3 "" <ill
Hj llA\' ~ lm .u:il 1
llE.lU'V l~<'.j
I EST 1 Y~~ ____£~1 00~
11 nrl ~lli;trnihg Hrtw. floors pools. J.0HA.VA ronv. ttrmi, ,_ BA, wtt bar. 4-0' tfock mf!mbrr1 in your lam fly ~'!
wi lh match1ng drapP~. Sub· lrom S20.000 to S40.000. I SS..l.000. OWntr ~6-1~54 II ..,, Wf' CM 1rll you th11
mil do\\·npa_v1ni>_nton $!6,JOO Collin~ & Wa tts Jnr. 2~14 V1s111 Ori Oro Irvine ii:rt at 4 hedroom homl!: on
~-1. l.nan at Sl ~.oo prr n1~ .. 81143 Arlams AvP. 9fi2·il2J 11\·ewport Btich 644-lllJ t~ "NE\V F'.H.A. Program"
1n,.lu1hn2 laxes or NO e OCEANFRONT DUPLE>: F t I V II TURT. LE ROCK !or just SI00.00 as down pay.
0011;..• 111 G.I. buyers or S47000 oun • n • •Y
1
ITll!:nt. Th11 honll!: i1 reAdY Keep In Tune -F'HA 1erm i;'! C.'l.11 . ronTIN co. · 642.:ioirJ Al! the 'x1ras 11 re herT in to occupy. Carper1• drapes,
M I J I w I k & L CHATEAU BLANC th11 3 bdrm., 2 bath homt . l Juxur ioua baths. Full prier OVe n Une • a e.r ee Colf•ge-Perk L_g,, family rm. v.·/v11u l1eri 1ll S23.900. Ca ll u~ nnw • Olmbrid~e hnml's ch11.rmrr. CO LEGE PARK I 7 & .l Br Deluxe Townhou&eA. ceil.. heautifully draprd & w~·u 8tinw you th!!: hou.91!:
The .'!'f>i'rkHni:i: pnol i.'!' llftll· 279B Hi1 rhor Bl vd. 11! Ariam1 L • C11.rPf'15 & dra?f:5 rncl. lndM!pd. k you own thl!' 11.od explain thr progrun.
ing 11nr1 1h{>f'e·~ f'O'lm ''"' &l:l--Olfij oPf'n 'tJJ 9 P:-.1 J Bl'<lroom & Pool. Ou n,.r. • Blin ki1cMn •Pvt patJO! I lanrl! "'2·.;oo· Ownrr has Walker & Lee
fl <trk your ho111. Wh11L a fun I Easlside $148.00 Spani~h Decor. Big Jo1! t'1n-e 420 sq ft rumpus room e bel"n transft rrtd.
rnnm fo Jivp in: on a larcr I Per Month i1 nr1ng arranlleri locally. Encl 2 car garA ges •Swim-li d h·11 Ftr.t.l tori
Pl' shaper! lol at the end of PAYS ALL 10'"~ rlnwn. 7.2 irtll!'l'f'SI OJn-ming pooJg k le.Mis courl!. re I
11. quiet cul--de-s11c 1tree1. 3 \'entiona l. $."i.1900. No tra/. 27!'10 Harbor Blvd , •t Adams
1 .. r&!e bMroom~. family 'Th is J Oedroom horne In he. ;}49.imn /or 11pp·1, $24,350 to S21,SOO 54.>9491 Open 'til 9 PM
room. ,Jer i garA~,. door c,o~t11 h ~dleSll. has 112 ~~uhl' Corona del M•r RE Ai:. TY NEEDS TE·ENAGERS
nprn .. r. \\1!'11 pr1crd 11! PIAC e ~;iragl!', ,,,.!hs.1 -----=~---968-7177 or 961-4004 Univ. P11rk Center, Irvi ne Community pool, clubhnUM"
SJS.500 C111! &t6-7171. hreplRCP, hoa! 1Jr trai!Pr 11"· * 519 IRIS * So. Bay Realty Call Anyt:lmt 8.Jl.-0820 pu tting rrcrn with this Im· C'P~~. All for S7it ,500. A ~ond buy • rlupll~s . J.J BR. mar. adult occupitd J BR.,
546-8640. \\''11.U lhl!' hltn~. plus I I· Huntington 8•1ch UN IVERSITY P•rk, 4 bdrm family rm . ht>ml!'. Lge.
l~I •
3BR&DEN
Whitehouse-Ocean View
trorn l!:vrry room. :2-1tory f
bdrm borne. Minutes from
Municipal Golf CnUr1e .
N'"·ly-deccirated. t.1 a r b I e
til' rntry. complim,ntrd by
plush 1hag cprg. Tahl-
tian--stylM yard wloP'n·pit
BBQ &: crnuine tilt p11tio.
Ow~r ltVL!llemd. Bt:low
cost 1t $42,500. 492-0726
2 BDRM 12.l, 7JO
Excl!'lle-nt location, near
cenll!'r nf town, clou t&
everythinr;.
BUTLER REAL ESTATE
.f.30 De La. E1tre.ll.a
~Clemente
f92.3034 or '92-.5610
S•nt• Ana
-f BDRM. 2 ba, J yr + old
$2fi,OOO. By ownt.r. 1410 N.
La Bonita St. 537-3278.
Dupl•x•a/Unlfl
tale . 1'2
ATTRACTIVE
$34,flOO Home +
below · c:oat, By
dupltx.
ttntal.
owner. ~
Income Property "' -4 PIPX, Costa Mesa, 2 br, 2
ba, for~ air htat, taxi •q
ft, ~tio. trpl; car. S59.500.
lneoml!: .S7400. Princit>k!:1
oniy. ·~75-2018 aft.'6 pm
PRIME 4-pl,x, All 3 br, 2
ha, Inc S7QJ mo. No down to
GI , $62,500. tjr OCC. 557.6.151
loduotrlol Pl'<lporty 1'8
HAVE
NEW Offil:e' BuUdinr
W/SlOO K equity.
$27K Nrt Income
WANT
FREE 11: CLEAR
lnd.uitria.l Bid'&
or Loi <1 •Cl
W.R. DuBoia: 5(5..7166
Lota for Solo 171
FORECLOSURE
2% aae bone ranch rtpoa·
aeued from former 4ero-
1pace employre now •vall-
able at· developers COii. _
SAVE $3000
on these faDuloUs, oak 1tud·
ded, ranch size 1pre1da.
Located in the boominf
South Cout area near .$an
Juan Qplalr&no-Ht 1·b
above the amoa. private
road and k>cked ratr guar.
antre the natural beanty ol
this ionner, Spanb:b Grant
surrounded by beauWul
Cleveland NaHonal For.it.
All utillt!e1 av.11.ble,
PRICED FROM $9,al
LOW DOWN.EASY TERMS
Circwrutanceo: force the im-
mediate dlsposl::lon of t.heH
few choice parcel• whole
fonner ownen LOSS l• your
GAIN !! Call or write for
complete dl!:ta.ill and eokir
on-1ite photos. Buy ditec:t
from thl devei.~per:
RANOiO CAPLSTRANO
2172 DuPont Drlve, Rm I
Newport Beach, Cal. 926&1
833.3223
ONE PLllS ACRE. West
Huntinrton BeaFh, backs up
to private 1irport. Could bt
R-3 or °!1 '! Poulble !l!'COnd
contiguous acre avai11ble.
Subordination.
L1rwln R•alty, Inc.
11562 Bmokhurst, H.B.
544-5411 •ny·t lm•.
CHOICE lot. 100 x 13j R-2
paved allry. 348 E .
' Roche1tl!:r St. CM close to
11•11 r:11a1., ~ 17th SI. 1hoppln1 area
;;;°';"";';I;;;;;;.;;~;; I ~"'~·c.°"'=6'-7~:1--""'-,-~~-= Rl LOT zoned !or 7 to 10
unit., 60x30.)'. Nr country
club, C.M. Jtt;aJIOr, (213J Acr••I• fer ••'• 150
LIQUIDATION -M.40. 80· ac
parcl!:la 1t Lucernl! Valli!'y &:
Heltndalr. Priced to clear
al '391 f)'r ac. Divide or
hold. Broker. 644-4670
GOVT LANO $5/ac. ·Write
Land Pa ckag,, UBS Ar-
rowhead AVI!', Sin
Bernardino. Ca.
Condomlnlum1
for ''''
VACANT
160
374-141& rollect
e %. + Acre, view lot e
, Corona d'I Mar
•673-2010•
D•n• Point duplex Iota:
S7.97;> 10 SU.950
13W090 (Bkrl
Mese ·v.rde Fairway
lot. Onr. S.11·1307. Ml-4364
Out of St•t• Prop. 171
33 a.crra In Entiat, Wuh.
Orchard A: paatutt land. 2
hou1r1, Maul · rivf!r view.
Sell or tradl!' for houSI!: or
d11plex. Mw:t . aell. 545-7231
or 645-2689
R.t•I E1t1te W•.nt.ct· 114
8u1lne11·
OllPOrlunlty
..,.,..
INFORMATION '
CAND.Y * PANTY
HOSE ~.
SNACK PACK
VENDING
NOW SILLINO
PART e ,ULL TIMI .
~ajor Dial. Co. will o-
PrHI vlt w1 1nd 1lve help-
ful hint.I on a •uctt&ffbt
approach to .the Vendinr
Buslneu. Excellent pottn·
tiaJ Income,• refillinr natri•
brand product$ and CGl·
lectinr money from coin
operated dJJJpensrrli, Days
or Evenings. Many plam
oprn from Sl l~.00 Cuh
Required. Wtite to: Multi·
State Dist., Inc., 1681• 'W.
Broadway, Anaheim, ·C&
92802 (7141 778.5060
Working Cap~
Loan Required
$100,000
10'!. INT. PAYAl~I
SEMI ·ANNUALLY
Recorded collatert.l 1ecur-
ity position. Prefrr Active,
Mature Executive, Exp. UI
Administration, Flnancf!,
Manufact'urlnr A: Market·
ti:s. BuslnPu intt&:rity a
must. Mod@st s&lary to ad·
minister fP!ance1 &: adviae
on procedurH fol' &:rOWth
of small. privat1:ly oWJled
co. Lever1a:e pot,ntlal.
Principles Only!
Write clu1lfied ad •46,
Daily Pilot. P.O. Box l~
Co.!t& Me1a, Calif. 9262fi
WANTED! I
f.tan tu re1tock ud make
colltction1 from comtnoer·
cial and lndUJ!tnal. &naclr
and ront,ction aceounts in
your area. Part time now.
run time latf!r. 5·hn. week-
ly eUort ttquired, day1 er
r ves. No arllin1. Excdlen
wet:kly income pot,ntial.
Sll50 toUI cash ~uittd to
sWt. For details. write to:
Prnducta "Dlv. •2, P .O. Box
5104, Anaheim, Calif. ilSOt.
Indude phone numbtt.
ENCO
hu 1 Serviee StAtion with a
rood klcation ava.ilahle in
Huntinrton Beach,
PAID TRAINING
PROF. COUNSELING
STRONG
ADVERTISEME.NTS It.
PROMOTIONAL SUPPORT
FINANCING ASSISTANCE
CaJJ A. Oom1, Dys AJ6.Ei6S1
Eves ,._ '''ttkrnds", 962-8069
TO BUY OR
SllLL A BUSINESS .
HOLLANP BUS. SALIS'
"The Broker with Empatey"
in& Orange Ave., C.M.
Si.>-4170; 540·0608 anytime
We need salra peopifl
NEEDED:
WORKING PARTNER. OR
PVT JNVESI'OR. Suba:tant.
11.1 return on money lnve1I·
ed, 1ecured w/oollateral.
FO!' more Jnlo '4-Tite P.O.
Bax 1819, Santa. Ana.
BEAUTY Salon, l 1tations.
Ni!:wly deooratrd-low rent.
S500. -...·ill handle 5ll-16U
Meney to· Lun 240 • bd rm . Xln1 ronri. In 11oocl twnhsr. 2.400 IQ It, 2•, bdrrtl.!I. k huge encloSl!'d ia·
1'f'nl11 l 11tr11.. 01/erffi for -V.ACANT -hlith~. nver~1zefl f11m rm, 2 t10 m11kra th is 1 &:l"a l bomr 1
$24,950 S~!l.:;o(I, C11ll In srr . S!19!1. MnvPS you in. Gov_n:m t ~1or.v lv1t rm, brick trpl. for a fam ily W!/h trenagerS. I st TD Loan MORGAN REALTY ""7 cu.slom lnd1<:11 PI!', ~xc f!I $:19 500 SUPER SHARP
2 BR, 2 Ba with charming
m~uaniM mstr. bedrm,
bltin bunk beda In 3rd down-
alalrs bedrm. Cll!'an. Bl!'au-
HfuJ crpt1 k drp~ throour.
Try $1500 down on "Special
Fln1ncln&:··· * CASH BUYER *
2629 Harbor. C.M. &ppra tM"rl 1~:1. 00. Pricl!' rr. Good 1 , $4-0 740 · · Don't list your homf, tJ%% mTERESI''
4 BO. + FAMILY RM. ·-$24 950 673-6642 47.S..6459 tfucl!'d 10 ~.!199. 4 RR 2 ~8JJ:~JJJl:R~1~· pm: · Delancy R•al Eitatet "V11la Paci hc" 2 BR. 1n: BA, sell it to uz.
Sp11ctous h o in'. La r It P ,· HARBOR-Vlpw H\llg . Lu~k ·BA; 4-yn; nrw-, C'Ompi _./ BEAUT B d 2828-E. Co~l[1fWf."";CdM I~ rni~l'l!'de!iv1;:-n:n-wall Slve . tffife, l&Ve money, 2md--'l'·o loan
rooms !hroughout. Hu1t' home. 4 Br. 21., ba. l car tl•c hltin RIO, rlwrhwshr, new roa moor 6.f.t.rno 1 a: crp.1. st y 1n area imml!:d. firm otter. Broker I
famlly rm .. 1111.iur11I brrrk I 4 BO.+ FAMILY RM. ga r., ocean view. $6,11 . .)(IO. l!'atl ni arc.3 in kilch. form! home In Turtle Rock nr R $ 0 I Al S2S.950 and terma too. Home B11Yer Tmna hued on eqully.
hrPfllacl:?. 4 twin glzt'd bed·· FULL DINING ROOM Pv1 plv 9AM·5P:O.\, l\~711!1, liv rm ""/lircpl, upgradl'rl ! park w/pool1 & lrnnia 4 B 39,90 See lt fut, th.ia \lo"On 't la1I!! g4:z...1a11 &: 540-5336 642-2171 . .54J.M11
room!. tine qull lity built-Spa.clo111 home. Lar~r rooms s P:'-11:9· P"-1. ~4-1080. ( crptli, F"A ht, lrg patio. dbl r?~rts. View. t br. :t ba, BAYCREST AREA. Ow"'r
1
L1rwln R•alty, Inc, WANTED 1 Le 3 Bd Srrving Harbor an 21 ins, l!'nlry h11.ll. '"Pii rarli~t" lhrou;::hon1. HUl!"I' family DELUXE 2 BR & DEN gar, .sririnkltra & ld.~cp1ng, ~;._~~rm. By Cl .. , ne r · ri;ning eut, mu1t .sc~I -4 brl· 5~5411 1nytlm• bous' wt~. :: cllildr: S.ttlft' ~fQ•;. C:::-
in )llnil,11r11 p1 n~. Ark. Ope n rrn. nat11r111 1->rirk hrrpl ace. PLUS l!ep 1 hr renl11.J, 6()' frnc d cuJ.r!f'-Sl'C lo1. W.t.lk · tms, f11.m1ly rm , d~n1ng rm, I nJ62 Broo khurst. Hunt. Sch. e 67:>-TI65. ~ E. lTth Sll'Mt
I'll '
P\f ""17"" <I '"'In J11zrri hl'dmnrn,, fine to M'hls, 1mmM occup. L1,.un1 l•1ch 2 baths. 2 lrplc1, tll' rntry, -==========-~==:=:;;:;;;:;;;:;;::;;;:=:~=::::=:;:=::;;;;;;;:;;;;:=;;-I · · .)'...,.. '"· ..... . coroer lot , pvl paljO. i;:d • db • • OJ 'd • TARBELL 29SS Harbor qu::ih l)' uu l!t-Lns. enfry hall. s ·11 ~1 B~ ,, -VIEW LOTS !Ugt l rar . ....,, 'WI'· "P d" .. . 1 _ _, IPrm~. . 1 '":: er11, "' SJ!!-. FIXER~IJP PER i!rll 1~" .1n aron!;e11.pin~. 21J/:Vl3-0529. I ... "'II ~ ,, I bkr .. Opf'l'l 11[ 9 pm. 5'10-1120 Io• Two nearly li!'Vt:l lot•, ocean CA.LL ~ •••·2414 uuplr~. t•lnll, tn _hl'::i ch, "· 1 TARBELL29SS Harbor CoJte M•1a t62"4471lr.:~.J54'6 1 • i hills \·iew, Improved 91.;;, ~ "'v'11SuT~!A"DIE·l6L .. iOOL.IDO OWNER TRANSFERR-UNUSUAL hnu.~e" 101 . E-Z $21 ,900 FULL PRICE I 11trte11 wi!h underground dlJllllC.
lo. IM, <t"•ll l b<droom ulillllu . $4.500 Each. C.U • I EAL TY Braut. l·Brirm. wl\'tr\\, pool, M1111t 11ell quirk th\~ <t \,pr\. m11in1. 4 br, lrit '1id1n1 glas~ he11.ur~. Lots nf carpt'tK wilh fllr•r fllt•port r11t Offl,Lr
plrr k ~l ip. $1:l.OOO. rrom be11u!y 1''ilh hu_ge f11m• fam rm, lv2 rm, rlhl ia.r. 2 AO e ON.E e
C11ll· n73 .. 1663 !i4~·i<M2 r:vc~ \ly room . FrP.~hly paln1t rt, ba. Convenlen1. Qtllet Joe m111r.hlng dr11prs. MOOern 0 Ja.. H
· (lllif. Ranrh Sty!, \\1th 10111 near i ll ichls . 2 min to S. bui11-1ns ire ln lti ia country "4 1~ Of A KIND VU HOME
associated n/ trl'f's. \\'I!: \\'Il l J!:!lil.ra.nier o . or Nv.·pr fwy. Ai1tras !n s/}'lt kilchen: •ho a dish· REAL ESTATE 5000 1q ft D<lvrr Shores
the lil.lP or .vnur horn!!' on 8 art n \•f'ry PI to mai ~l.'!.in. wa~hrr. Move.in conrtlrlon. Conremp. Sp&11l1h dtsian
tl'Arlc·ln. G.1. and F.H.A. Outrioor oulll!'I~ Ir l1a:ht1. At !hl~ PMl'f', YOU CAN'T 1190 Glen~yre St. 4 BR_ + ma.id'•· 41-1'. ba BRO KERS-a EAL TORS
202S W lalboci 67l·l66) 1erms inrludrd al lhf' price Chri~lmaJi lia:hlll b) I -i n, AJ"f'ORD Tl') RENT. Call 1 '4!M-!M73 S.9-0316 Spa~1ou1 (OW'mrt kitch~n
1----------1 w lk & L \'11.rious trre~. Spn nkhns,: !I~ I nd \\'t""I\ qua.Illy YOU. r Oceanfront Apt AnltqUe doors • Founta.Jn
N W's THE a er ee Ji\/~ frnl & bk, Ntw Wll!Pr w lk & L e . 1lr1um. 4-car :;:&r., Term1. 0 h1r: d~hwshr, rl1Spn!111. 2.l'l!lll + a er e I Drama tic 1url & .thorl!'Jine 1169,500 ** 548-7249 1 219'1 ll11rt>t1r Bl vl'\. 111 At111.m1 liQ 11 -460 ~q f! 1n 11:1r.1 views fro m 1111 elf'.1t11n1 3 hd· SPECTACULAR VIE.W
I .'>'1~-!1491 OPl!'n 'ti! 9 Pl\f s:l.'"t,fi.iO. By o"·nPr. ;"1-16-3660 27~_H.lrl_JOr BIWI .. ~t 'Arlllms 1 rm. uni!. Ltr1t!. li\'1n1 rm. 2 Bl!:dnttfl and-i to.lAN'S 'd&n TIME FOR of S.12.200. CALL COSTA M"' ;,,1_.--;;:;r I ;>l'J-046,:J 0Ptn ti\ 9 P;\J J wlfrplr. .. 2 h11.'• .. •fl3C. dttk. C ~ 1 h · ' · · ' '"'' ,,.,., ' G s · ln us tt'lm ap....,,n ment.1 t N• ' '.\TARIN~:ns SCHOOL . HA R· 3--1 RR, 11rij11cent 10 p11.rk. S23,7SO . 2 11.raa.e J~c'•· wimm g out. Tetrllctd, eli>v&ft"d, cor.
C SH ROR HIGHLANDS. rm m11c. \\'11.lk In &chonl,. By Ow"'r 4 Bl'lf. 211 h.ol, fpl.. rh:r ki t., (!Ol'll • S87.:iO<I. nrr lot ror tha t "Kini ol Qu ICK A l BR. d,,n, 1~ ba Min#. $3.i,000. :'>(5-8.156 ctpl.J, drp1, Own. an."<IOlll. Turner A•Joclet•• the HUI'~ feeling!! $39,900 on
Owl'"lt"r &pe nt ln111-11~11s:h O"'KER"S lovely 4 BR, fam. Prier nnf1 r mkt . 847.gj()7, llOS N, Coa~t Hwy., IA(Ur'll fHA or Ct hir m1,
THRO,llGH A moO'zin.11 thi!'. kHch \\'/.11U Ml!:t11 rlrl MAr, Low down. !J6&..117S,.96S-4377. 494-Jtn AnyJim• Lerwtn Reilty, Inc • ... 1.1,., .1 .. 1 ·~o. ow. All '""'· 54>-5802 EMERALD BAY LOT $46-5411 •nytlm1 S.8-'ld .tr sink, i11tll'hf'd l.•t'lrn 2 BR's rrpl1 drp•, slnvt:. 2L~ Bmokhurst Hunt. Bch.
OT 1111 l'Oml' up 11•1 a \'r ry . ' • ' · D.AILY PIL comlort11.bl t hnmr 001 no ttfriJ, ftnctd yllJ'd. ZllO I f Lnl'll &-lu;e.11 view lot CORONADO home, 3 BR.
lonatr 1Jn!I!' rnouih for hi!. Orange Avr , c:-.t. M>-l6j? 1 _ •l•ttl 1.127 Emt'r.id Bay Fam!ly nn. Plu sh shat
W·ANl AD 2r11\\i.J'IR t.11 1n ll.v. Musi ht ~tESA Di!"l Ma r ~ BR. 3 BA. MUST SELL. MPd1tl!:rralll"1n Biii Grundy, Rltr, c1rpet throughout. Loll of
·gnftl klnr S34.9.'!0. Olll . """" rxtn1, -S, (ki.·ne r. r 2;000 5q n, 2 Wkl 'O-Wlltt .............. ~ .... , B<arli o.H1er ~tnu.. Lfl}_m~e d
:O.lr H;i rrla, !iOUTI-1 COAST 546-171'!1 front, ol\ly $49.100. C.U John 6.l.> ~r vr .. 1~ posJ1easlon, SJf.m S37-9SOO
64?..CI'' 78 R.F:ALT\', M5-8424 Turn thO!;e White Eleph&nta H. Irwin i: AslOC. a t 642-4620" ,.•-'.,""".,.,."°"....,C7"'_.,..,--.,,.,..
\Tn DAlLY PILOT tor tJcbon? into caa:h thnl a 0."7 Pilot 536-4-t7n Si!'U the olrl stull A rood ••anl a.d lt • 1ood
r !l n.12-.\~f.t & S3vf'' Dfmf'-11-lil"lf! a~l1 The f&JJteat dr1w In the '+'ta1 Buy th• ri•\I' JTul! lnvestmrnt --
I KIDEN I 1--rrl ',.,l';..;;I 1""'!-1 s
I VAHER 11 I I. I I' . wi~-:'\r:r.: ~ .... ape,,::
.RA04r1· r·11cauaoa--. ;;,,-
1• I I Ii 0 c....• ....... ~"11 .. ..... ..., loll .. ~ .... ~I ..... _.
you dtwloft ''°"' .. p No. i b.low. fj PRtNT"NUMBtREO I' lETTERS r1~1·11 l'l'l'r1
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900
•
"· ·····-·· ' ... .. -~ "
30 DAIL V PILOT
I
[ .
lit·&. 2nd Trust Dnd1
FREE APPfUISALS
Costa Mesa lnve1tm1nt
S..7711 anytime
WHO Netd1 Monty? S
avi.111.ble on all typeg of
R.nl E1tate-paid for or not.
t to 9 pm, riAlly. TRUST
D!.E.D CENTER, Inc. Bkr.
1323 N. Broadv.·a.y. S.A.
M.l-Sl'l
I · HouMs for Rtnt I~
RENTAL FINDERS
Fr11 To l1ndlord1
645.0111
e VACATION YR ROUITT>~
On tht: beach. K1d1/pe,tJ.
"" Al.A Renta11 e 64.>J!m
S$Util pd. l'\1c1 Bach. Y.'/
pool. Full cool(g. E·sidt.
Blue Beacon * 645-0111
e RARE INDEED! Spac. 1
Br. child. aml pet ok. s11;,.
Al.A 'R.entala • 64~3900
$11:>-Atttac. 1 Br. Compl
furn w/patio. Jdl!'a.l cpl.
Blue Beacon* 645-0111
coz Y' 2 Br cott&£1!', nr
bNch, bl!'am ~illni. frplc,
p:riv patio. S280. 675-4943.
Huntington Be.1ch
.f. BR. tam rm, 3 ba. tri·ll!'~.
':'Ir bl!'ach. July Ia:t.Jan 15th,
1.125. 961-l~-
L1gun1 Beach
. '
Monda;, M1y 17, 1971
]~ ~! iiiiiii
• i I~ I -I«-
\
... I I I' •
Ap1rtmtnta forRtnt
' .. . . . . . .. ' . ~ . . . . . . . . •••
•
Ap1rlmtrili torRtnt [9 ]
L-----'
3'5 Aph ..
Furn. or Unfurn. 37D
NE\\' 2 BR. APTS
From S230
P'urnHure Av•il•ble
Cupe1.1-dtape1-diahwadltr
btatM pool-uunu-ltMll
tte room-ocean views
patios-ample parkin1
Security auan:l1.
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
Parklike Beach Llvln1
Jot Adulrs
Ca1a Del Sol
1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts.
Adult Living
Furn. & Unfurn.
-:.=-==-== ---
Rooms 4DD
42D
•
' I
•
•:j •w .~
Mond.ly, M~ 17, 1971 DAILY PILOT :J L .
[ '---_ ... _... __,]~ [ fttnlib: I
460 lost 555 C1m1nt, Concrete Painting •
Paperhanging
![fi][ • J[fi] I ._,_, _ l[fi]l.__I _"""°'_-·__.l[jJJ,~· .: -· 1 ~;;;;.;;;;;1.;;;;;;;;;;~r ..
Help Wanted, M & F 710Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanled;M & F 710 Help Wanted, M l F 71~ .. ,.
-~~~--~~1 -~~---~~-~~ OLDii:R 'rorkll)i m•n '1'111
share beautiful 3 BR homr,
aarage, all 1xtru i n
Ney,•porl Be:al'h "·llh 1amr.
Private aarden, color TV,
aardrnr1.. $11;",. mo. cau
;;.18-8272.
MATURE woman uraenUy ,$.'iO Rt.:\\Yt-RD fGr im.U * SAVE TIA.1E ' :.tONEYJ
desire& 1 Br apt er t tudlo black k& ,,·hlte hairy leinale Have iL pUm~ -anywhere, 1,-,-A-N....;~.-.-.,-1,--,.,--.. -..,,-1-00 compl. & nictly .turn.' lor doi. Haa ta&•· 673-i992 or anytime, Calvert's Concrete r e1 1aura'nt1. of!IC(1 Junt.. Little Isl. Wt!lh to re-S.W.-9;u,;. N() q uestf o'n1 Pumping * S48-8426 ~sldencts. Floor service'.
locRle & huy h11me w/rrotal. ask~. QUALITY eenient work, let Xlnt rels. 836-M:ll
\Vrilt" rit. St't7 .. 70'! F:sca.lona, LOST·F'emalf' be!lgl, P"PP" Gt"Or;e do it. Llc'd, Bond«!. I ;;===,-.,====-7.". C ., l CA •~10 Ph J PAINTING, p.rofessiona.J. All ap1 o II, """' · • \\~lll'lll• red collar. vie. &1~1G95.
RESPON . .)'OU11i aal "'lshe1
to 1hal'r l'hal'mlng 811lbo11.
Isl. hon1e \!.'/ s a n1 e .
673.-2.183
l '"" ,7-~·, -==="""==--~c-cc-IY o r k & u a r n . Co 1 or """1"'>111
"'" Begonia, Cdl\f, Reward. CEMENT \VORK.nojobtoo llpeclall1t . 962-8143,
3 Br 2 Ba unfurn. Harbor 675-8531 ,;mall, ttasonablf'. rref' S47-144l.
his;h 1u:h. area. yrly. lease LOST: t'tmalt>, lieeshond & F:sl!m. II. Stuflick. ;,48-86\j. 6i.>-16i6 sht'phe1'd . No tags. Vir:
Gtragea for Rent OS Misc. Rtntala 465 Hal'bor View homes, NB.
PATIOS., walk~. drive·, ln-
111tall new Ja,vns, 1a\\', break,
ren1ovr. 548--8668 !or esl. U>CKED DBL. GARAGE-• BARN a' is, Sl>lmo. ~4
suitable lor sn1all boll!, 1'lt1\'POl'I Blvd .• Costa f\1eu..
camper or penonal pro-:i-18-0811
perty. 177 E. 22nd SI, C:O.t. I ~~~~~~~~~ S-12-364j
GARAGE 19.lriHI, s1orage on-Announcements If ij!C)
i)'. Oran&:e Avr & Flower S1· 1 .:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;~ C.:'11. 133 mo. 54g...:;m.
Lara:e :ZS' x 11' a:araie
1
Announcements 500
Storage only. $25 mo.
;\r. Nwpl & Fairview 64;}.2196 Idral Beauty Shop &16-3621
, Open 6 day1 a wttk Office Rental 440 Evenlng!ll hy Appointment
Profrs1;lon11.I Bldg-l.e11~,,. ------
700 iq 11. -S.12,:i mo. r-------,1~
3J!l sq. ft. -$160 1no. l Pe11on1l1 *"-
air 1X1nd. crpls. drp.s. pll'llly . ~
of park1ng. Xlnt !oc111ion. 1 •••••••••• 3j() E. 11th St. C.i\I.: PETE
BAHRETT ft EAL Ty. Personals 530
642-1""-LADIES YOGAI
&l4-6693
DISAPPEARED J''ri 1nol'n,
Lido Js:le, lge 9 yr o1d M!al·
pci1n1 Slamest. aJ tered male.
673-21111. Re"•a rd.
LOST, bro1\'n & ,.,.hltr 1n1aU
dog \\'/ ~ flea collar. An'I.
to Slasher. 1!164-A J\.11"yrr Pl,
C.ll.I. R'"'ard.
LOST -Lgl' orange & bh1.ck
1urtle \·ic. Brookhu1111 &.
Hercult!ll, HB. Pl'L 96s.-6:l\;.
YORKSHIRE Terrif'r 4 lbs,
m'1e. flea collar H. Bt'ach.
"Popi" 962-&117 ne .... ·ard!
LOST J/II/71. flu lfy blal'I;:
puppy iv/white front pa¥.'S,
e e CONCRETE. Floors,
patios, drivt!I, s1rie .... ·alk1,
slabs. ~11s. Don 6~2-8514
Contractor
MY \\'ay, quality horM
repair. \\'alls, ceillni. floors
elr. No job loo small.
~7--00.16. 2-i hr ans. serv.
Lic'd Contr. RemoMlin£
Addition!, Plans, Layout
Karl E. Kendall 54g...1537
Additions • Remodeling
Gen\·ick &: Son, Lie.
67J.-{;O.lt * 549-2170
El•ctrical
vie . S.A. HtiRht11. ~:r644!1 1---..... -..,..,,...--.,..,. LIC'D Electricran. main!.
LOST JI.f in. brown poodlr. serv. 'Also, resid. industrial.
fem11lt-, 4 mo~ old. Vit'. 44th 6·12-4474.
No \Vuung
* WALLPAPER *
\Vhen )'OU c&l.J "lilac"
548·1444 646-lTil
r.1AN, wifr & aon "·ould hke
rltaln!enance "·orlt. O!fJcr.,
re1taur11.n11. re1id11nt1, ett'.
Exp. Refs. ~7-619-1
*PAPERHANGER*
!-iuperior Cr1Jts.m11.n. Reu.
Ralt!ll. C. Rebko. 64&-2«9.
PROFESSIONAL paintln.g •
lnter/exter. J~onest \\'Ork.
Lir. & ins. ~S-2759, &l.>-5.150.
l NT & Ext er, P&intinJ,
Lic'ri, in1. Jo'~ est. 30 yl's
e>.'J>er. Chuck, \N5-0809
PAINTIN G. Qualify \\'Ork.
Reasonable prl c e l.
Rts/Co1nn1/Indus. 892-3206
* * * 1i' * Attention Realtors
SOUTH COAST REAL ESTATE
*
ls pleased to announce the openlng of the ir
second office at 1500 Adams Blvd., Costa rvlc~a. This office is located on th! ground
noor adjacent to .t he main entry of the multi·
story professional building.
\\le are presently seeking 3 experienced and
professional men or ~·omen (brokers or as-
soci ates) to complement this exceptional lo-
cation. Should you be contemplating a change
please contact Al Black at 545-8424.
CLERK 'fypJjtp tor Purc:hls-fRY cook, full * part Hme.
Ina & proc.h1c11on control Apply 1n ptl'llOn. HouM ot
dutl••· Ap11ly, 1741 Placen· Ple1, 3110 Newpor~ Blvd,
tia, cr.1. 1:J0.3:30Pro.1. Nf!\\'pott Beach
COMMERCIAL
TELLER
E:cperlenc:td
UNITED CALIFORNIA
-BANK-
~l ,\vPnlda Del "'1ar
San Clemente
.i!IZ·.illl
GENERAL orr1cE WOJtK
Jntere~hli po'!11<1n ~'Ith ,
Laguna hroktrta11 lirm.
Tflletypc f':orpf'1'. dealrahle
hut not n~u1ry. Mu~t be
accuratt t)'pi1t & &ocxt at
gr!\eral olllre \.\'tlrk. PMn•
!II is~ Burt 494-9781 for ln·
t('r,dew.
GIRL FltlDAY
Equ11.1 Opportunlly l!:mplnyr.r \\'ork & l~arn y,•/briUlant
==--
COMMERCIAL
TELLER/
PROOF OPERATOR
man in 1utere1 tln1 field .
l::)q)l"r. in ele<'tronics co.
"'ill hrlp. Sta.rt $450.
CAii Sally Hart, ~
COA~AL AGENC'l BONUS PLAN TO 84 % >;,,..,.;,"""' 2700 ""'"" Bl at Adams
UNITED CALIFORN IA
* * * * * * -BANK-GIRL FPUDAY. OC. Alrpotl
6 r.1on&rCh Bay Pla.za 11reL illust be txptr bkkpr, 'YPe 50 ¥.'Pm. undtr~and ofc Help Wented, M & F 71 0
~dm S•lts
WANT A PRESTIGE
JOB & A NEW
1971 CADILLAC?
Help W•nled M & F 710 South L.a1uns procedW?s. SH or 1tenorettt! _.._ • 496-1273 499-I361
Bank
' ESCROW
CLERK
exper •prttf'd. P/time now ~qua.I Opportunity EmplO)'er Resume. \•/rte <J assified ad
. no. 118 " Daily Pilot P. 0 . C 0 ill P lt N 1 0 ~ ~ I 1 l I' Box lj6(), Costa iltf1a, Ca.
housekeeplna;, L1\1t-11\, Good 9262fi
DESK space available $50 I Benf'!its 11tart lht lst dav
St., N.B. 673-757-1 attrr 6 I =C"-~------
Fumiture
FOR clean & neat p.aint lni.
interior & exterior, Call
Dick. oog...,1()65 ~""'""~-..,.---,-,,,---1 PAINTING/paper1na. 18 yn e No Dtlfl't!er. or exptr.
in Harbor a.ea, Lie &. nectssary.
Huntington Beach
~1m6~, s mall salary. !ll3--0489'1'H~A~l~R~D~R~E=ss=E~R~-,-,-,~,~,-~·
""°"'""-,=::-=-:::=:::I f/time. Attract. bu&y shop. CUTTER, exper . or ar11~1i1: Xln't "·orking conds. Above
\1 /st!wing exper, !or 1m.all avit earn!n1s. Ask for Betty
. 11ports11·1'11r mfgr. Apply 1;,s9 B;;irton GiGi's Hair Style&
at S5 ino. An.~ivenng servi~ l\"ed at 10 am. Bring a lnitruction J ~ Speclal kitchen cab. doors bonded. Ref's furn. 6-i2-23:)6 ldea!!y 11 e would l1k .. to .l\nd ,\1onrovia, NB. S46-5000 '
someone 1\'ho h11.~ pr .. v1ous. . ,
. ..
mo. \VIII provid«: furni1t.1 re FRl'~l:.: DE:\!ONSTRA'r1QN ~ Furnitur11 Strippin&:
ayallablt'. 11875 Bea~h Bh2'd1 · Jriend. :-.lrn Jo"e Yoa;;;i. \\'ed stripped S3 ea. Avg chairs
Huntington Beach. 642--43 morn & Thurs nite classes S.J ea. Gluini. 642-3"4j.
DESK ~pate a\•aUable $.)() starting no\\', i\'atural Beau~
mo. \Viii provide fumit~ ry & Vilalily, Yoga Cenlrr, Schools & Gardening
PAL'l'TING/pa,perlna;. U yn
In Harbor ana. Lie &r.
bondtd. Ref'1 furn. 6'12-23$.
P RESTIGIOU~ POSITION
NO\V AVAILABLE lN OUR
EXPANDING S AL ES
DEPT. TO l:'ITPRE.SS UPON
OUR CLJENTELE THE 1,\1.
AGE k QUALITY OUR
CO:O.,PANY H AS BUILT
FOR ITSELF WE'LL GIVE
'\"OU llif. CHANCE TO
DRIVE & 0\\'N A NE\V 1911
CADILLAC.
\v \l'Ol'ktd as an Escrow DE~TAL .Ass 1• front desk HSKPRS Emplyr pays fee. -
. .. _ . secy, Exprr only, People Gtorie Allen Byland· Asen-~ • Cle rk or Escrow =C~lary, ndrnlt d prewntive prac· ho11tver. 11· .. "'lll train an 111_,,:, H.B. 962_2436 cy I~B E. 16th. !.A.
1.l S:i mo. Ans,~erln~ &el'VlCI" ~-1;, E. l7lh St C.1\1. ~l Instructions 575 _P_R_O_F_E_SS_IO_N_'A-L-,-,-A~l~,-~""T.
available. 30a No. E I Enjoy Liie• Discover •" Grt;t kew trtr "ork, prun ing. Camino R,111, S a n · • . d' & O'd
PAINTING : Honest,
guar11.n1eed 11·ork. Lic'd.
Local ref'g. Call 67>--.l7~ alt
5. Cl.m.ntt. 4924120 * FULLY LICENSED • Car••r W ith Tht s prayin&, ise:ase l\"t
rontrol. Sprnkler repair. Pl p h R I DELUXE PROF. SUITES P..eno\1·ne:d Hindu Spiritualist Clean up jobs. Gtorgr. ast er• •fc , •p• r
Advit'e on all maHen. AIRLINES 1761?. Beach Bh'd.. H.B. Lo\'f', :\larriage. BU5iness _.,._c..c.~5897"3~====,--Plentilul pkng, A/C, ja.n., AL'S GARDENING . Readings given 7 days a music, l'lf!\V c1rptts I pain!/ A nalural f0t· youn;i ~pie for aardenl...,. & Im a 11
PLASTER~Patch-Rm Adds.
Accous. cellinp, st u "'<: o
re.fin. f'rtt e1.l lm 11te1 , ~ f S .l ""eek, 10 a.m. to JO p.m. ..,.
drps, 32j 1o ,.,.,., iq. t. UI e 317 N. El Camino fttal, I ""ho want excitement plus? J11ndsr.aping stivicts. call
B. Ph. 8'17·2521 I San Clemente Ticktt Agent '.' Air Freight'.' 54()...5198. Serving Newport,
DESK space available s;,o 492·9136, 492-0076 Station a g,, n t ~ Re&trva-Cd:0.1, °'5ta ~Jeu., Ilo'ie.r
mo. \Vill provide tumitu~ SINGLE? W I DOWED? lions'.' Ramp or n-11,·el Shores, Wtstcliff.
83.i-lY.ll, 54!>-4:'>88 alt ;,. 1 • Top Comp@nsat1on1 * PATCH PLASTERING e Slllft Immediately
All rypt11. Fn-e estlmattl ' • Plush Offices
1t $5 mo. Ans"·ering service agtnt'.' We'll lrllin you for * ~ANDSCAPING *
·1 ht m F t A , *Divorced Over 21* d · P lumbinn ava'. a e. orei:: v • tht'Se An mort. ay or nite. Nrw 111111111, tree l't'moval, •
Laguna Bl!'ach. 494-9466 Oldest &. largest. For a seU j \\le include placement as· spiinklers, rlrains, arhors. 'L_E_W_T-.-,-.,-&-So,_o-.,,...P-l"~m--
NE\V office, grnd llr. Ai r-explanatory messaae 24 hrs 1lstancc. patios. lent'f!s. Lic'd con tr. bing Repair Rt p I p e
cond., only $60. 16:>2-A New-8 day. 541-9991 1 Use ll.lastr.r Chargf'. 13 yrs nemodel Free Estimates
pol'! Blvd, Cll.t 642-2821 , ev~1 REDUCE sale & la!I with ~L 21 y1~. Apprnved for toe. e:xp. 536·12'1J. &16-S340
i41-.J106. Go!ksr. Tablets & E-Vap Ve!Pran!I. Eligiblr inshtulinn ONE 510p Japanese garden. LEW Taka5 k Son's Plumb-
NEWPORT BEACH ••,.,.a1 e r pillz '' under the fNle1·11l!y insured ing &: minor la.ndscapina;. Ina Rrpair. Rr.pir>e. Rem1>
SlOll to sis;; CRA\VFORD'S Rx Phar-1Htdent· J011n program. 1''ree ,,,;1. !13S--39l1. J-larbor dt-1. f'l'te es!. 646-8.140 * 677>-1601 * niacy. \'ie1\', k Tur!le Rock 1 -~C~O~L~E~P~L~U~M~B~l~N~G~
13tr0 S FT • Office or stot"'I!. ALASKA.Retired middlt-·ll-Airline School a Pacific AL'S Landscaping. Tr" e I 21 hr. 5i:-1"Vlt'f!
Re&M>nablr. CO.l!ta fflesa. f'd_ male intrt"'l!stetl _"'tamptr 610 E. 17th, Sant• An• removal. Yard remodeling, * 6·1J-1161 *
r.lr. Pope SL">-2820 trip ro Ala~ka. Will sh_arr 543-6596 Trash haullng, lot cleanup .. ----.,.,-.,.,::--,,----
"11Pf'nsts & help drivt. BRIDGE 11'~.'IOns, Sl.2.i J)f'r 1 Rt-pa ir ~prinklers. 67l-1166. j . S8 HO~
, 11\"DTV_IDUAL Ot'F'ICES 6-1&-42U Pf'r~on .. \1orn &-f've lltssions • , . Pl11mh1na;/electr1c1l l'f'pa lr
!'1tw ilv1ne Indu&t. compltx. PR 0 GNAJNT• Ad 1. ! be .. i\l l!lth & '6h EXPt.R. Japanest·Alntr1can 1&.12-Z1li &l>-l.f0.1 t T I s.~' ~ .143 anyti1ne r. ' . o P 'o n . g1nn1ng i 111y . • t . rd let garden. op oc. ...--.. I a bo r 11 on. v a $f' c Io my The Shepherd of lhf' Hiil,; -~a enrr. iromp& e cleanu __ P_L_U-.,-,-.-lN-'G--R-E_P_A_l_R_
() ~T OFrTCE Spat't_ f'M?W counSl'ling ~ infonnation. Church, Laguna Nigurl. Call ~~tol~rv ce p. No job ,00 small
avail. LIDO BLDG, m.J ¥1a 6424436 aft 6: John Ell inn, 492..(,(122 e 642-3123 e
Ca.II ~Ii \"OU \VILL RECEIVE
C0:'11PLETE FREE TRAI N-
ING HEADED BY DA VE
LOOKINGLAND. FINANC -
IAL ANALYST, R. E,
BROKER 1'0 START YOU
ON THE ROAD TO FIN-
ANCIAL INDEPENDENCE.
CALL NOW
547-6771
Ask for M r. Elkins
---~
A AMES
Lido. N.B. 673-t:;Ql ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. PIANO LESSONS LA\\'N carr & gartl .. n "''ork.
Business Ranta I w Phont s,12_7217 or 1.1·rite Ligh! haul ing. Exp· d . Roofing Wt •re st•ffing
Your liomr. Certilif'd 1earh. Rt-::i.!lOnblt. Call ~3-9735 ----------new hranch office
STORE or otrice !or Jell~"-I P .O. Box 1223 Co!llta Me1111 . -f'l"I. Ml1sit' Sy11trms. i\lr, J AP ANESP. G a rd " n In J:: Lr:E Rooling Co. Rooh111 ol 1 In be1ch .area.
1320 sq 11 . H1rhor Blvd t • Ha!hrock. &14-0114. Service. Neal "'ork. Cltanup ~~~r'!~:~::~~r~g~~~~~~~~ I lnter'lliews wlll b!
trontagr. Air cond, crptd. 1
[ ][g) MUs1c r.t11j-lnd. Univ Si·hl yd. maint. 968-2.103 & color. Llc/bonderi sin'"• at our An•ht im office. Call 6-12-8060 day~; LI lo1t and FIM'ld 1 •t T h "'=.,,--cc~-,-=c:--,,-,,; ' ' A 0 "u.,u.:. '•c Yn i CLEAN Up S""ciali~I. haul-'47. ~2-7222 Pl•••• call nna.
u ,-., · U'C"g.-your nie. ing orid joh.~. nt-w 1,nce & g...25911 e~·t~. I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;; ,, ..... ,, • ·-"° ,.. --------
SHO\VROO i\l. 1111;. & ofr1Cf' 67:.-1504 rtp11.ir . Rt.a~. :tls-695.l T. Guy Roolini:-. Of!al Dirtct.
space.. ParkinR. Close-in I Found (fr" adi) SSO l ~P~IA~N~.~0~1~,-,,.-,.-,0-,.-.. -,-"-"' r -~~~-~~~-~ I do my o\\·n ¥.Ol'k. &-fj..2'/80,
h' .,, J im'!!: Lll.wn Cutting and 5-18 9:;go Laguna. SS:>-$3;,.'l :0.1 o · yo""g, f 'un summrr cl11ss. I ,. -
'
'OUND p ·o oo gr••o & Edging. C11ll or "'"'
1
4lM-4d s:·. IR t I 450 I pu1·ple : nt~k~eb~wn body, Reasonable rer. 494--5700 t.:~1im11.1P. Phone 6~2-16!13 Sawin9/Alter•tlon1
n UI r1a en A Y"'ll0"' t )-.f'11 , Please call i Cut.\ Edg' f,.a.\\'n EUROPEAN D!'e8smakina.
iAST 17th ST., C.M. irll'nlify .'i.li-t06j I ~•ndftepWs ]Gif=l r.t11 in!cnance, Llc'd, Insured E.\"fl('rUy Cu!lllom Fitted,
Shop & offic11 2'1.() Po11·er round 1n Cdi\1 Fritndly red· . . ~ ~18--4808 alt 4. . Arcur. Rra11. 673-1~19
SlIO :-.1on!h fi7::t-6700 B1'0krr di1h brown puppy \\'/flea e JAPANESE GARDENLRe Altt r•t lons -'42-5145
INDUSTRIAL Unit or olfif'c rollll'. Dr. Stockton 613-1050 Babysitting t-laintt-nant'f!. clea,,up Neat, accura1e, 20 )'tiara t icp,
or studio! S.lO. \\I. 161h SI, 1 d11rk blRck doxie. no collar HB rv Ci'.! area * '424142 Tila
N.8. &16-1724 or :>12-76!11. j found Vit'. C.arlield and COSTA MESA JOHNSON'S GARDENING
Rentals Wanted 460 i\la.gnolia 968-5840 PRE-SCHOOL Y:irrl f'an-, ('!Pan-ups. plan-
t"OUNO mal' ·cat. Jl'l"Y &r. SJ)f!claJ Sunimrr Progr11n1 fin;:, ~prinklrrs. 962-2035.
l or 4 BR hou~e hy Junt 1 \\ hite sttipts 1 on a hair 181h & i\lonro\·ia, ~s day + EXP ER. ila\\-·aii11n Gardentr
ljth. I ~r ll'l!ll'". $275 J)('r 11•/collar. 54~133 full day sessions. Planned Complete Gardenln~
mo . Pretl'r Ens11;:n Jr Ui .Ir program, hor lunchr!ll. Agrs Service_ K11ma.lani, 646--4676 area. Call colltct, 213: PARAKEET vie, &.ach Yorktown, H.B. 962-7898 :?-fi, hr~ 6:J.O A:0.1-6 PM. ~2-239\. $18 "k-CO~IPARE? 6~2-W~
fA:\IILY OF 6 + p@l desire:~ 2 Afgh;:in.\ louncl in Vic. Ci\.1 . or 838.j2Ji.
6~2-~l 4-5 Bdrm. 21r3 bath houM; 1 ------~-~-VACATION "tolher -"·ill
in NewPol'I Ha1·bor Hirh ilT.ALE Husky in G1trden lakt care of your children in
Sehl Districl. 548-21:;5 Grove 534-433.1'1 your hom11 ""hile )'OU v11ca·
Japane!f! Ganle:~r
Exp'd. Yam \\'ork
Cll'an-up, Pl11nting 646-0619
COMPLETE lawn &
i&rdtning servit'e.
J im 548--040.. -----· ·----·--
* * * * *
tion. Reli11ble, f'X c t-l 1 e n 1 •~=~~~~~~-rrfJ. O"'ll Cll.l'. 548-11989_ LA\\'N Ala.int. 1-laullng, new
CERA ~llC lllt n1¥. k
ttmorirl. F'ree r~t. ~all
jobr. "'rlrom11 536-2426,
Tree Service
TREES, J-leda;rs, Top, Trim,
cut, remo\'td, haulad. Ins.
6-12-4030 Big John
GENERAL tree 11t rv., yard
rll'anup. All around h11n-
rly.man. Rell.JI. 646-5848
Upholatery
776-8120
Sec'y frff
A~~·1 m;r .• Supervi&e
2-3 (iri s. Fritndly
ptrsona.lity. tactful,
xln't iJ'OQminc. S. Ii.
Loan DCkirntl. $Zi00 •
New Acct& fre•
A people person. 1011
of customer contact.
PrP.uy, poi~ le: chic.
S t. loan exptr, $--17.i +
Taller fret
Charmin&: iaraonahcy "
attitude. I Yr. exptr ar
ttllrr. ca.shier etc. lor
3 le loan. S450
AA:'>1ES BUREAU o r
E<'>1PLOYl"-1ENT ACENCY
600 No, Euclid, Anah,im
;,<J!l-4937 ar!er 6 P :0.1 la\\·ns. cit-an-up, prunini. Vl"\'L \V Id ' ' b Free e•I. Call 546-737!1 J• e ln'!""-UIS, urn.&, ASSEi\IBLERS CHILD can: ff''I 2 • tear~. Cu~tom dyt ina !all * a · -::i yrs. General Services rolori) S.~Z237 1mobile1 Immediate Openinas ~ducalional indoor. crr11 h\'e R.\8-39~2 Good P•y! Call Now:
ou!door play. r.ttJa Vrrdr. Hu~b•nd Bu!lly'.' CAii :-.loo&e 9Ai'<l·:!Pr.1, Sal 9A:'l1~Pi\ol
546--0469. ~1~W after 6-Repair On1n1e CoaJit
I TEENAGF,R dt1"~1rr~ hah)·~il· 1 Bulld-Serv Most Thill&:!! I[ 1 • 11 Employment .\:;ency
ting in Colltge P11.rk "r"11. * LABOR UNLl'.\ofITED * Elf1lloymen1 f 1869 Newport Blvri, C~l
Trader's Paradise
individual 11 ho Ms had some 5"7~l9J \
prr-,·ious txposure 10 tlv-~E~TAL t:.x_~· Sec'y .ore. * --r HOUSEKEEP!:R.
.dCM"'Un1enra tion connl!<'!cd 'IS•; Dlve!"51lied du t 1 es . M LAUNDRESS
11ith t,he proce~ln& of FH1\ :;ttre. '~ pt~~aiit~ *i Call Mfi.1764
and \A loans. judgn1en1 req'l'I. To 45. Top HOUSEKEE EFt-4 daya a
_ . . salary, ~IB-3(00 wk. Exptr. Pref'd. Pirie
Thli. 1s an 1ntt1•t1l1nr: posi-EC Lido Conv<scent Center. tton of!Prin~ line slartlng e DENTAL R EP· 6U--&M4
Mlary, xln't Jll"w beneflt,11 TIONIST wan I e d -S e n d ..
plan and 1 plt allanr con-rr.sume lo 011sslfied Ad No. INTELLIGENT, lov1~ lady
rem"" ¥.'Orkin en"lron· 161, Daily Pilol, P.O. Box 10 help wfl bab1e1 & '"'rary i . l!IGO. Costa r.tl!J.I 92626 hou1;•1l'l>rk. WIZ-2631. mtnt.
Please C1ll
!Cor Appolntmtnl
171 41 146-3321
SECURITY
PACIFIC
BANK
DAY QISHWASHER
Apply In Person
Ancient Mariner
Restaurant
2607 W . Co••I Hwy
Newport Beach
INS-Bt1. Salary to $600 plu~
bPnefits. Unique position
"''/lremt>l!do1111 future lor 1
"'"l>tl'ienC1'd fire &: ca!! 1irl.
~1t1st have mln. or J yrs. ,
gtneral a.a:rncy fire b ca11 •
t xprrienee. Call 112-1141.
JAN ITOR~. exper, o n I y
p/timt>, night 1\'flrk ln C.M.
& beach c1t1es. GJ0-16011401
l<raemer, Ana~e!m
LEGAL SEC'Y w/solT\a iii. * DRIVERS * "'""~"" !BM "'" & _bkkI!_'!_!;_ rxper, Ne. w po r I I Equal opportunity employr r No Experience °'n1er Ofr, &44-6400
Necessary! Legol Sec'y
BEACH park1~ lot ~,t;r-a1· '1u!il have clean Calif. driv. P /Umt. Sl ht. No SH. l:i hn
1 .. ~~nl , ~e.un11. •re 11 · 1nr: l'l!cord. Nnt under 25. a wk. Pltau.nt attract. C.1'1. r1tini~ dunng •r •~on_: YELLOW CAB CO officr1. Call M.iss l\oit linda, ~~rP":.::~.·1:~~~~a~~ ~::~.~~ l~ E. 16th St ., C.ilt.. :J.)7-6122. Abi&ail Abbot Per·
perwn. Start j/26171. St-nd EARN FOR A Sli:\1:\1ER sontlf'I ~1ency. 230 W. \\''1'·
tt&ume-llrll lelter. AJ 1 VA CATION, A CAR, CA.\lP ner. Sulit 211. S.A.
rtplies an51\t'red. \\1111 ln-OR COLLEGE FOR YOUR L I VE-I n valet-caretaktr,
ltrvlf'w l..Ai\lna a1'l"a. \Yn1~ CHJLORF:N. Be a n AVON Unusual opp or t un i I y
c11i~~iht'd ari No. 64, Da lly Rtrrf'~ent111lve k rarn e:octril ¥./t1tabH~hed lirtn. Salary
PUol, P .O. Bo.\ 1~. Co~1a n1on~y. \\'!n prizt~. i\lt-el nprn. Apply Anne Hau!er,
i'•IPSI, Ca lif. 9262fi. J)(oplt-. 1-llive /un. 11'& ea.~y 8:.10-.1:30, to.Ion lhru Tr\.
Bookkeeper to $550 rn itet 11ta.r!rd. Ju!! call: 714/644--0ti20. e qua I o p-
1'\ti\' ·po5it lon. \Vol'k "'/con-;~it;.~141, S.W-7011 portunlty en1ployer
rrnller. s1a1:tle a;rowini co. LOAN OFFICeR
Plea5an1 "'Orkin&: cond!I. Top ELECTRONIC A ~ltd. &iu financial in1ti-l)f"~lh1. Ct11l Ml11!1 Lauri. TECHNICIAN tuUon ls Rtkin& top mort·
557-6122. Abi.11all Abbot P"r· I.A'ading Di·ana:' ~· tlrm. i •!:t Joan oflicer. Jl.1Ullt h.ave
90nntl Aienry, :130 W. \\'11r· E .ceptiona! oppOrlunlty for appraising exper Jn L.A. It
S Ir 'It "A e.~ptr., ver5atlle ttchn1cian. ner, u e , .,. . 01'ange Co. 11.nu. Pleue
CAR ho . A \\'ork in 5mall rroup d 1rtct-11t-nd ttsume to re--Kel p,; or 1.1·aitrtl~"'1· t-ly w/phya1ci•t on new pro-• ...,,,.,
tro etiv e w/brrbblio1 Director P 0 &ox •it.11.•e duel 1!11t. Starting rate to · · · .._..,,, -rsona1itv. p/t1m'" Tht Lt1!11 Aoi'"lt11 ca nntU.~ ''~ J $69(1 Jl"'r mo. "'/Xln't irowth · ' · ,,.,.,..,. 7.oo Rrs1 , fCnl.&I H1cy 111
f\!rArthur•. potential. i'.IAN I'll' ooupltl'L early 1m
ne11spaptr dtllvery ln lt-
CARPENTER It. Cablnt try !RVJNE PERSQ'INEL vine area. X1nt route open
traint'es 11f'f'1'itri i m m"' d SERYJCE5•AGENCY $290 mo. Approx 16 hn/wk. 962-4633 Or11n1t Co11! Employmrnt ·1111 E. J7!h jat lt\•uie) C.:0.1.1 0i-5ii0iiiiiiiiii-iiiiiii ACtl'llcy, 1116!1 Nf"11port Al\'d, 642•1470 Costa ,\fjl,~11.. Call &4:>-3111
-=~ .... -·-=
CHECK HERE
WITH THE
JOB KINGS!!
FEMALE
Gtntr1I Office
1 r pe ~. SM 80
All around 1lrl
SIOO a mo.
E!'S~C~lt':!O"!'W'."/l.~S~S~T~/ """""'I
RIAL iSTATli
LOAN PROCESSOR
UNITED C/l.LIFOltNIA
-BANK-
2112 W. Coa1r H\\"Y
Ne11'pt'll't Brach, Calif.
646-2·131
Equal Oppor tmploy1r
ESCROW OFFICER
M1na9tment S•lts
TRAIN TO BE AN
INVESTMENT
COUNSELOR
Sl0,000 • $10,000
THE .\IO~f SUCCE.SFUL
& UNIQUE COMPANY lN
THE INVESThlENT F IJ:l,.D
NEEDS TALENT Ii: CA-
Rl!:l!:R t.llNDEO ll.IEN &
WO:\t'EN TO JOIN Ourt £X.
PANDING SALES FOPlCE.
YOU'LL 8E TRAINED lN
! \\"Ptkr nd1 on I Y. Call ~~~CH~A~N~'D~Y;M~A!N~::':~t~=~::~::~::~·~·~;.~3111 615-3112 '4~31U . ;"'~"-:;;-~· 'l!"""'"'-"'--===:c'>~t1a!llf"="'cil'fifilli'YliU=l. =;;~;:;;=::=;::;:=;:=r~ K •vpunch Opr · r ss;; mo. Child cal'f' in )ny J ob Wanted, Male 700 ASS!m'ANT want,d for Ken Exper. From Sj(lfJ mo.
lines
~.-~-,-,.-, ~ -
f"inanclal inslilution is &cf'k·
fn e, an E!!Cro....· Ofllcf'r to
\l'Otk-in_ 0 .C._uea.._ !11usl
hll\'e f1-lA &: VA exper. Sal·
•ry commen1urate wl •XpPJ',
Call P e raonn el , 12131
67G-Ol.:,O.
At?~ PH>tSE!\ or-susr;-·1-----1
NESS TIIROUCH 0 U R
COM PANI ES TRAINING larat f'l r an home C i\I _H_•_u_l~ln~g,_______ TPmpltl'lon'11 Ha ir 11tylb.!!.
646-5:J.17 YARD, 11:a rai;:,, cltanup!!. 1 need• joh: i\Tusr hf' l lc .. n,ed cos· l'v"' h.-tn • pt'Ofl'~~l(lnal Bul'lders Remov"' tret!i, lfir t. Ivy. mr10Jogisl. fi.IZ-68.i1 bar1tndrr lnr ovf r 20 )TA. ~kiplO<Ldt-r, b11ck h o e, N h . . d -• ll"' 11v1ni;: r1111<t-a Ku:<"'
1mes
dollars
Exper . Ina. G irl
ll.!USI k110W firt in~.
polirits all r:,pes.
f1'0n1 S-11))
PROGRA:\1 CUlDED S Y
PROF'ESSJONALS L I K E
1"' ... iiiiOiiiiiii ... iiiiiiiiiiiii l DONALD ;GQTTES:\1AN,
EXPER. SECRETARY B.S .. ill.~ .• PhD &-..DAVE
19" V\\' 8u1. aulo 11\ck,
new ena:inr, rood cond.
Trarie for lite mo<lel El Ca-
mino; Rancho, nr c11mper
ot equal \'alue. 8~2·817~
NO Job Too Sm1U! Brick, ="-:c-'-!=74_; ____ ,-__ llZ, family, of ntct&111ty, f'\'e
block. concrl!te, carpentry, TRASH /,, Ganis .. cJr11n-up. bf'rorne han1ly 111 many
Trd S28,51Xl Chattel mort1. add 11 rm, houi;e lev•lln.:. 1 da)s. SlO a 1011tl. Frre t st. th1ncs. r1n hot 11 rriid ol
•-• h gr.r. door repairs, F'ne est. Anv01ne. j4g...5031 ¥.urk. \\'h11t can I do lor
ASSE.\IBLER Tralnt'IS nl'rri-
.ed immtd. /or i()t)(! pay
job•. Orange Coa~I Employ-
mtn1 Agtncy, 1116!1 Newpi'lrt
Blvd, Coila :O.lesa. C11ll
64~llll
F /C Book keeper
P 't1mr. Frtin1 $.l hr.
TJulJ l..h. linan. glnlls.
Typing 30 "'.p.m. SH 8.l LQOl\INGl.i\NO f lNANC·
11·.p.n1. J,\l. l/\VESTfl1EN'T AN·
UNITED CALIFORNIA ALYST, R. E. BROKER. for riwn. pt.)'. on "" , se \\.()Ody, 962-69.fj . " 7 ~~
or bch prop. prfd. Pay11 1 -:--"-~-~----:0.10VING, Cara1e-e\ean-up 1 ~'=·'~"-' ~'~>-~·~~--,---~
$3jQ mo. &. 1972 SOOO mo. C1rptt Strvic• k lile haullnc. Rtasonable. J'RO F:uro-Trun11d .rourmet
-BANK-..
201 Avenida Del 1\l111r
811.n Cltmt111e
t71<1) 492-5123
e ~1111rt Trt1med1attly
Fully auar. P''t, pty, TO· CARPET ihunpooin~. dry FN'I! estlmate11. 64~1&02. chf'I "'"eks dome&t ic employ
974l:\ eve. foam, Re~td, c.-omm ·t. "·In. Houseclt1nin9 r"!s. 6l3-;;42!1
APT. m•n;;igtr wanltd , Factory Train•••
~·rom Sl.6~ hr
e Company Car Plan
• Full Fringe Benefits
man&i:P 16 1111!11 I n i\lagnillt'"'n! l\rab111n ~worrl.
Circa l Mll, Valued (.Q, $300.
\Vill trade !or j('"rlry, an.
tlque,., 1t111s or iubm1t,
&73-080:2
Tn1d, large $30,(K)() 101. rrte flow~ It Jlnorll. Jo"ret r 11. Job Wanted, Fem•la 702
k clt'11r, in We1tcl ill on S. 962-W2 Bay & Bl'ach J11nltorl11I
\Ves1mi11s1rr for fr e t
Equ~I OpportunHy Employtr
MALE C1\LL NO\V TO STAftT
"!'OUR Ni:\V EXCITING CA.
REER \VITI! EARNING
POTF:NT1At..<:\ OF' ~.000·
$100.000 PER YEAR IN
san1ln.go Dr, for l'!qUlt" in 1 ,,,,.---,.~--,-=-~ Crpt1, wtnrlow1, floor< etf'. LADY wants hoU.•l'!cl.-11nlng. ,, Dlamonri CarJ)f'I Clllanina R 'l "'°l'h "' n.. ,_ Nt:\\"'1rl Dr111ch home-. . e.s. l.t Con1m . .,.,_ . ...,f ~xper v .. ·n lflill&por!at1<1n.
apt. Call hf'!wn 2pm .\. 4pm
only. 842-133.'
EXP TV Service Man fo r
out•ltl11 11ervlc.. Goori R .. !'11
r1"q11lrt-d. The Oavis-Bro'4·n
Cn. !>.tS-34~7 ,, "'6-""'o Avg !1117.1'! room S8 Call 8~7-3637 llfltr II pm. BAB''.Sl'M'F.R My home .2 .,.. .,~ R1p11 it1nr I. inst•ll•!ions Mesa Cleanlna; Strvlf'11 bo:>y11, R:3(1 'Iii 5:30 Call aft )
Lumber Y a rd
~n1e 1"Xptr.
t'mm $2 hr SprtdbORit. Cen1u1·y w. Gray l.it1e modtl Chry1ler, con-
marint 1nhr11 rni:. "II •'"''"t ,·r1·1ihlt. lik"' nt-11• cn9'11r\on,
trlr, l'O\'tr, 1n~·I ~k1 111p11p, 'l l.000 niilP~. slill under
Val. $1 :100. Trd ror lair 11arrl\n!}, lradt-/or oldt.r
1ruck equ11l "alu. 6i~0fi6.tl ~·11r nr ? 'ti4j.l3\l;1
HAVE 2 slllt') blit.s:~2600---:Q. \\.11nr rf'ntal un1~·port
If, C.:\t • <'ho!f'"' f'Ol'ntr. or Cn~•a :O.lr.sa. T1·.Wr: clellf, s.i8.ooo rq. For hous~~ du· ~oiod proper1y, Arcadia &
plf'i. Tut Vo" Cll. Rtal• t.:, Pasarirna. &qulty 62M
tor5. 673-94!1'.l. Aa:1. :,.ig.2211 Exl l30.
Nt\V .ai:x24 Glen I. boAL La~na Nlll"JCI Golf Count
)'O\l fil\l$h, ll&\'I! new un· lol~ f.tC'luded canyon vu ol
dt rntalh hr•~i. l\aJ·rt"'·are. 6 fain\'llYl,,"q & Clbhst.
Tr11ae for pick-up. car or ~ Trri for mmm. TD'•· mlfl)ls
7'6 \V. ~111 St., 6-12-46Jn. In llbr area. Ch\·ner 64.>-111Jl
H,\VE· rREE /.· ctr.Ar.-r.-IARKET B u IL DING
I.EASED ('()\1\1ERCIAl. l..11nri, 60xt'i. 'T'nule valllt!
~A N DI \I A~. 5'-.\,1)111 $15.tnl lor 111"1'"'"" In So.
\VAf\T: u orsF., ouP1.t:'\'. ca111. 408 rranklort . llB. OR • .,'.'~ ·~l'Vr.l't"S. ·~J.--TBl'I~ [!JI or Dow'Tr.m-M'JO
r r,e Lst. 6·1f>.1317 C1u·pe1s. \\'lndows, Floor~ f'tc. AIDE. comp11nkln, hskpr, P~I. 9fi8...'\,l1 R.
DRlrOAl\l·C•rfl"! rlran I Rc3id. k Commc'I. ;,1S-41ll cJes.ninx of ar)!11 or homr~. BAKEn. This i& a fine oppor. I
DEDICATED CLE \"INC. l -3 days, [!Vt 0 u l, Rrf., in your horn" or oflit:'I'. •' -~ ' ror th" man "'/somt e)ll"'"f· \" I ti f mntur'I', call alt 4, !!f>S-6j(i:l Tomlin S\'l' • :1..i7-966ll "e co "'·"r) 111111. re' fitlf' pt0ple to 11'01'k lnr Sl .'AJ
T rain•t ti
rrnm Sl hr
C . I t1tim11.t1:. Call 67~72 Nu~·Companlon-Cook hr. •rpenter 11 · Ch k O _ nr~pon ibltl', Erficlcnt • vr-1 n or out 1111 Riii ll•f'Pe1'. 5-I0-60:J5 tc tr pr
l;E~X~'~P~E~R-. ~,..,,.-,"~'it'-,"'""s~"~ll~o-o-,~,-. I C0,\1~11SSIONS le SERVICE
tf'll(/, Hrly wa11t + C\'lmm. fEES.
9!Ml E. Co11J1t J-lwy, NB
F.Xr 611" boys: Ne .... ·port
Bearh Trnn1& Ciuh.
CALL NOW
Cllll Rfne: &14-oo50 547-6771
CARPENTftY I HOUSEKEEPER • &16-1822 • CO ASTAL AGENCY At leut 2 yr~
:O.ttNOR Rl::PAIRS No Job $2.;,o ht. &42-3718 AIDES For convaJr11cence, 2'700 llarhor BJ al Ad11m• expt"r. 0\\n kf'h1~ FACTORY Trainff.t. netdtd
Too Small Cabinet In p .r Painting & elritrly care or f11mlly cart , From SJ.~ hr 1mmtd, for &;OOd pay joba.
Ask for Mr. Ber gm•ft
aie• &i ~I her cabinets: Paperhanging Homtmakerj;, 5'17-6681, BOOKKEEP'E~I ~/C T1're ltetreader Ortrnct Co11&I EmplO)'m•nt MAOUNISTS tralntts nffd-
545-1115 '1 no •'""'"r ltave LADY v.'iitte• claYMt--ork, f0011 ' $XIO-Si00 Per -'' o. I Aa;ency, l8i9--N~wpon BJ\ld,-ed immad. tor rood MY
mic. at 646-Z37l. H. O. BARNETT palntlni ; 1.fl!"c1al and ~llablr. 1\e~nnce.a. 3 :O.tu~t Mo e.11per. wt COila. ;\1.,~a. Call 145-Jllt jobl, Onnae Coast l:mplay. Anc!~l'I. "o«tt, ito~---.avtt, lebor, ~·~ s.n~ AC.COUNTING (LiRK -· 1::uck Ut-.i-l!!!~'!'l:'!".''!!'""~""~~I mtnt Afency, 1869 NeWJ19!1 . , m11ttrial. 1in1le Sl~. hi.'fl I S37!>-S4~ Prr Mo. from Sl .20 hr F'IBERGLA~ molde.rs. Ap.. Blvri. CM• Mea. Call
ANY u Joh. Rr1dd .. Comm I, ~!Ol')', SISS. yoo trim anri Help Wanted, M & F 710 1 Perrnlnl'nt Pftgltton. !o.llssion pllcatJong now being lakcn. 1>6-3lll. :...""~1~1Apt1. Rt11.s. P"ree e11. ~•\'P, lietnsrd S4fi-.093.t or I ADVERTISING A n T 1 s T Vll'jo art•. tNO f"!:"El P r od. M1chlnlst1 dipper ~larine Corp, 1731 S.i"""""'""'""'""""'""""""'I =• iJl1 . 963-:1236 Prorluc!lon :'>lana1tr for hot Kno11 blur111·int l'f'llrt1n1 R!lthe)'. Santi Ana. MAIDS
C•ment, Coner•'• PROr. ~lritlnr. t~xt"" 1 Nr .... ·por• Rf-act! act n e y PRO • TEMP f'rom S.l.la hr. Fllime malr. hl'lp ¥.'anted. Apply, V11rabol'l(I r.tofM" ~!or)' 1n1.,. "'" S22j w/rrt :-.111~1 h1111't a;oori boartl l l6ll W lro adway PltlmP frm•l", C!lr1"tr11. lintel, 3U1 Harbar. C~I
t1.:STO!\t CONCflf'.'fE ~Alnt' A\l"C rm $1~. fl ll'lt~~ 1 ~kill•, Knnw print!na:. f>ro-h • • ... fO j APEX Co~a.lon~ Corp. Al3-1 116, l\1GR. TralnH , lntl'rvw al
· PAT.JO.ORJ\."ES.[1'€-:-,... · ipri1yln;; At'i.'OU~. rtil!n.r,,, 24 11"nl"f111rr1n111 srlfrdullnr. Xh1t Ana •nn_ -11.rOI -Employment Agtncy ";kdY•--~fl'M'f'-6, exetpt Kentueky 1"rtltf Ollek1t1;·
* * * *
1''1?1 8111· ~i1. 7!lffi, •1:;.a~16 rn111~ SI~. Roy. S4f-l3.;8. I o rip n r t ti " 11 y. DURLL 1173 Htrbor 81vd. 1hura. A~k for i\tr. Rtddtnc. 29:29 r .. C:0.1t Hwy, Cd.'I * A cood want ad is • aoott AnVF:RTISING. 21Tl Du· 1The "Yt!k'lw P11ze:f ' of 1 Costa M as• 541-342'!'"'~' r~suJ!j, Art Just a phone HOUSE Hu n11nc? \Vatch the 1n\·11~fn1,.nt Buy the Mw ,.-tufl f'l'1nl Dr , N B. 1~3-11i7n t'la~•if•l'd f>lZ~~il C:tll 111:iy • 61,-:167& OPEN 1\0USE column.
-· ----. 1 . * 1 ·-----· --
~--• ~,._ • -~ r --.-. --.. . ------------~ "•"'I
1.
'' '
,_
-
•
Help Wonted, M • F 710 ....... Help Wontiif;-M 1.-F7lO Help Wontod;M • F 710 Help Wonted, M • F 710
'J:B~
J.
EXECUTIVE
Per•onnel Agency
PROFESSIONAL
TECHNICAL
SECRETARIAL
& GENERAL OFFICE
POSITIONS AVAIL.
Appointments Only
PBX Opu., anr.~·er1nc /~ .
:e~ce~r· N:t_r d. "·0· · • ''FREE''
PERSONNEL Girl -job re·
~uires initial intervle"•lng or
pl"03pttti\'f: emptoyes, llght
l)'plng, ket'ping employc
records &: Mme phone v.ork.
Ou.!&Q!ng personality & at·
tract1'Ve aPQeal'ftnce nee.
$380.-$420. nlO. depl"nding on
experience. Apply in perM>n
at Coast Catamaran, 33012
Calle Perfeclo, SJC.
PRECISION
·SHEET M"AL
ASSEMBLERS
SALES TRAINING COURSE
No charge or obligation to a t t e n d _these
classes other than your tlme a nd desire to
improve. tv1en & \Vomen
Our multi-million doUar International Corp.
is exr,anding its facilities in Californ ia & off.
·-ers a most unlimit ed op portunities for money
and advancement Jn:
SALES
SALES MANAGEMENT
EXECUTIVE POSITION S
714 ·644-6120
Collect Calls Acce pted
410 W. Co••t Hwy., NB
Suitt H 645-2716 Second Shilt Openin~
SID HOLLANDER & ASSOCIATES
359 San Mtguel Drive
•
J
Newport Center -Newport Beach
:\IECllASIC A Will perform a!Uembly v.·ork I ~!!!!!!!!i!!ii!!it!i.!!i!i!t!~~~~-i!!t!~-i!~~ljii~~~
lit't'nse. Pr'f'I. agency man. of hiahly Mtilled nature on Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted~ & F 710
\\'/class
Extremely gd pay for right experimental & prototypt"
Antique •
ANTIQUt-: llra1Qlrf'
11o•/origlnal bevelf'd m1r1w
doors Approx. 18$0. Exctl.
cond. 67.l-67o:>
Appliances 102
COLOSPOT Rclni;5, hen·
n1ore stoves, dl~hwashcrs,
reduct'rl up to $100. Slighl
fl'\•ig:h! tlamage & tloor
n1oclf'li. i'"'ully i;u11rantred,
Scar11 lloebuck & C.o. :I05!1
Adam~. H.B. Phone
962-7781. ---------• REBL T wshrs-gas rlryrg
SJO Guar·Dclv. J\.fslr Chg,
l\laylai: rep1irman.
7l~;j.:U-8637.
KENl\IORE "'ashcl', $3ti, ex·
cet1ent: Also "'asher &
Dryer sel . .'HO-J09j
\\'EDGE\VOOD Gas Range
Olrler. bul very clean, s2;,
496-4123 (Capo Beach\
'
JOHN'S BIKES
-N£\V ·-
-Columbla.Premiuir1°$l~
So1ne used bl~5 in 110ek
2340 Newport Blvd.
Costa Mesa
Open 6-10 Wkday1
Sat. & Sun. 9·6
64l-t720
~\\llJJ . .take 'fradt·lns.-
ESTATE SALE
E·Amer. 1'restk-dining tblr..
\\Ir, iron tbl & c:hrs. New
lg:e cl'Lail'S, d:'ps. !l"preads.
Antiques .. \1nt '66 Impala
Wgn., under blue bk. Olhcr
Items by appi. Sun 12·:"l.
1918 Seadrift. llvine Te.rr.
61-1-0106.
-.
f'i-..10 You Ill! I~
~ ll11Jf Si1mese kitten.~. ;;, wk:!" Boe t s Power
136 old. Bia.ck &: tortoiM! Shf'I). '
3.1N!l78 .i/lil----------t l ~~=.,-.------·ID\RLI:\'' kl ,\JUST sell, 2;)' 0\\f'nS £Jc. ll.OVJ!'jG. 011al M?ll new ; . ' (.; tteru;, Par 1 prtt!Wi' ct'\lllif'I'. Jlood l'Ond
Sylv11nia color TV "mole Pt'rsla~;.1~5 old. Z Slk, 1 Barg11 in pr Ire-. E~i5
'control & antenna 1~cl. ;200. grey. _.w.,,, :J/17 6~2-8062.
1 1~>1~>-~;i~s;,~· ~~~~~:~I BLACK PaJ'l Lab, xl11'11',7tA~Y,,:.:D~A~,~.-. -,76l~7'~'~C-u.~to-,-1 1 Wll.tc·h. <loi; to good hO~lf'. bll, ~!ps i. S.S., 117 HP, ~~2730 J/17 Chryi; V-8. Bst qrr over [ I[' i\fJ\LE kil1eM-2 \\'h1tr, :.! hlk. SZjOO. Pirr .11\•a1l. 673-028.l
_ fl'ff lo You . 6 v.ks old . ~136--0136 3/17 if"CHJUS Const. T.C~-~~~;;;;;~~~13 Da.rhng k11le11s, 1 \l'kS, Z ed. $2l500. Days; 113/ ~ male, I lrrn, sandbox train. 6.16-()7.i7; 1-:Yr~: 7J4/6l6-5724. K ITI"f~N$ 1 Wk.!1 old. 2 shor1 ed. ;)IS.32-17 5/J71·,-~-. -.-------· hair rnlilt!, l orange, l gl'f'y , _ 59 29 rv. 1nscre'v OwelUi,
& \\'hi1e. I lluffy black, 1 ? \VK old klllen · n~ot~r Take ovrr_ pu.yn1ents.
male 1 It u & ,.. Siamese, rather skunk. No * :>%-2~J:l * • u Y grey ""1111e ocl &r II.,... ·1111.~~=~~C..C'----~~1 t em A I c. \\'eeflC(I & bo.'I: or. :>--"" :> '67 32' T\\'inscrew Chris
trained. 1 yr old mothrr cat FREE k!ll1!n.o: • long & 11hor1 Cor1n\hian, low do"·n, Xlnl
Sho11 hair. grey &. orange: haired & box tr a In Pd ccind, $12)00. '.>IS-2~3'
C-~I. j"6-8()JJ j/]6 641-~ 5/17 e '68 Oll' BERTRA~I !11op-
f'REE black k. 11o•h! spot!M t.1ALE n1annalade cal. All pir. 160 hp l\lf'rt.tuiler.
RCA Colo!' TV $75, Apt. size Puppy , Poort I e m 1 x , lihots & ulcered 1 yr old rrec $3j()(l, Call 6i>-2982
stove, excellent $35. U" hOuscbrok<'n: j mo old. lo good hon1e, 962-9878 :l/18 16' An'Ogla~ l~ t.ler<:
girl'$ bike $15 Bathlub j l0.09'2.j. 20311 Cyprr~s cn11Sf'r, l\lother i;ays 11 or
enclosure door $7 Stove ;30 Ninta i\na llgts. !i/18 llbl mf'. S2200. &16-3880 aft 5 pm.
t.loving Sale: r.1ake Olfers! ;, F'.antasllc ni~Jy !rained kil· [ Pets and SU9P1ies L lj ' BOSTON \VllAl..ER 'fypt
\VASllE" f t td · Jake's t.Ierchandi.se 117 E. _ . r"', man. All others need nol ap-sheet metal componen!Ji "It-SALES
ply. Ric-h lit'ld. 19lh & <'lose tolerance assembly Business & indus. mkt.
Nev•port Blvd, C.i\t. 1tructure1. High school ed· Orange !> San Diego Coun.
~IEDICAL RECEPTIONIST ucatlon required plus S ties, Jfi·volume non lechni·
"-r g atre cuslom ISth. Cl\l I ens w / ll park Ii n It boa1 $300 or trade.
.SEC. d~wc. Like tie\\'. $85. personalities, l all bi&c:k, • * 646-12:>7 '* • *
ExCt'llt>nl 'iikills, young co, 1 ,==~•o-'54~0-4'-'-"13=~·~~-ROXi'~Of{D 18" engine lathe. otheni black w/"ht feet. Cats 852 25·· NAVY \YHALEBOAT,
Intriguing oppor. in the oc years experience. cal product. Cnr &: expenses
of a local doctor w/an elite -APPLY JN PERSON -.furnished. Salary $00XI.
practice. Lite typing. Start 3333 HARBOR BLVD. CaJI Sally Harl, 5-1()..6(};)5
$400. COSTA 1'11ESA, CALIF. COASTAL AGENCY
Call Helen l!ayes, 5-10-li!m :!790 Harbor Bl at Ad11ms
COASTAL AGENCY ATLANTIC mo Harhor Bl 11t Adant1 SALESMAN
• • 'MEN • • Good pote,hol, <0ll M'"
lf you'\1e Mid va c uu m Schmidt. "'estclit( Person·
cleaners, pols A: pant, &. RESEARCH nl.'J Agency, 2(M3 \Vestc:lif( want to ean1 big money. Dr N R s-i· 2770
Call Elec:lro\ll.ll, 496-2383 '• · · · ~
• l · SALESi\fAN. Service S1a. :>fOTHER'S helper, P -time, • • part-time. N~t in ap-
haw ('ar &: be "'llling to do Systems D1v1sion pearance. Apply 2 5 90 hou~v.'Ork. Good t.alary,
962--8349 A Division of Newport Bl\'d., C.l\f.
i\IOTIIER"S Helper, Ltve-\n, Susquehanna Corporation SALES girl, parl lime,
Ba b ytillin1:: & lite bakery. Afternoons, Sat &
housekeeping. Room &: Equa1 opportunity employer Sun. all day. 962-4096, after
txiarrl + $!Z'i mo. 494-1203 I ~II!!' I -':...:::"='-'-34:.:7:.:'------
newport .
-personn~
agency
I ~ SALES Jl,fgr. for C.I\!. Xlnt
PRODUCTION t r a i Rees oppty for hi earnings. Fuller
needed immed. for good pay Brush, 546--5745. ·
jobt. Orange Coast Employ· I ~-~--------ment Agency, Ne w p or I SARAH Coventry needt fl. or
Blvd, Costa Mesa. Call pt time help. No in-
645-3111 vestment. \Viii train, min
age 20. 540--0614.
beach area. ca1I Loraine, DOUBLE door rc.lrigt>rator, Atlas hori.wntal mi 11. 499-2889 So. Laguna. 5/17 $IOO/offcr. &12•3629 d • Y 1 ,
Westelifl Pen;onnel Agency, late n1odcl Coldspot, $75; Dunlap 6" lathr. J ig-sa1v, 2 yrs. old afghan female. SJAl\IESE k11tens, l!t?alpt. &42-3J96 evt's.
2().13 \Veslcliff Dr., N.B. clean sto~·e. $3.1. 646-7820. Ampeic 1160 stereo tape. Sell American Kennel club Vr chocola!e·P!, gentle, beaut,, i~C..:..:.c.:_,:....c::__ ___ =,1 &t:..;:.>-_.:27~·7~0'----,.,,---ti ~C~.-m-.-,.-,~&~-'-----1 or trade 49:>4(}76 1 bl nd bf> if 1 · F'r ry box triun., purebrd $IS ca. Boats, Rent/Chart'r 90I -ENGLISH tiH-top tea table, o-va c a . aut ll · ee 5.l&-2127.
SECRETARY Equipment 808 lo a lovu1g ho 1n r ·loc--------,= 6.l' :-Choonei· (Kclpie) no"'
P/timc 1-.i R.E. & thorobrcd --'-'----~---1 r.iahogany $3j · 2 upholstc!'rd 673-5741 5118 Dogs 854 booking bal'l'foot cruises 10 ELECTRIC dryer, f'rlgidalre, c·halrs $3.'i & $:i0. Gas log ,
horse investments, N.B, off-runs on 110 volt. $3.). 5-18·2635 wHh gl'a1e k lilting~ $1j, 2 Couches, 'l swing 6Cts, dbl \VANTED: Honie \Vith TLC. Calal1na .. Dcpa11 r~~; evP ,
iC'l'. Xln"t accur. typist, SH Coffee table $10. &12--5207 bx spring, coffee tahlr, 4 loveahle blat•k and \\'hlle t'Clurn ~un . l"vc .• S:iO Pt'L"
desirable. Persona bit',-at-..nytime. BICYCLES, used. Good artist display f'ascl, 2 <'ribs. ~k-a-poo poodlc!I.. Very ~rson. Calif. C r v l 'e s
tract.ContactStephenSmith Furniture 110 maUres~es, 2 chairs & rea50nablc. ~14:> alt 5, __ 0•~>-<_·_l9~l ______ _ · cond, 3 sp. S:lO, JO sp. S-10 • 1 •
for inrerview appl, 673-0431. CHERRY dining room :set. 6 S60 Stingrays & mi 5 c. book!!. 5-16-0697 ~/Ii pm. EST A BL f s 11 r: D yach!
SERVICE St. Sa l esman chairs, buffet w/cut glass, 642-1172 J\.IIXED small Gernain POODLES k i\10RE chartl'r agency needs sharp
J/tlme-litc mechanics. 2 yn; pads&: 2 extcnsons, Bargain + + NATURAL autumn Shepherd n1alf', 9 mo. POODLES!! boats, power b sa.11. to JOO'.
mlrf. ex~r. Neat in apfl('ar. at $200. 2 !1tx foot couch beds haze mink coat, ~ lenglh. ~usebroken. Xlnt dispolil· \Ve havf' lots of lhein: ! Erni!" ?>Tinney 54S-4191
Apply 2590 Ne..,,•port Blvd, \11/naugahydc cushions , Orig. pt'icc $1700. boughl ~llon f~f' lo g~ horn" 6WHJl .\2 3.U E. 17th S1., Cl\132' Twinscrew Chris, fully
C;\I. both for ~.,(). Early An1er. locally. 9 mo's old. ~Just 4~265 Daria Point 5/18 . t'f[Ul!l'd. f'ishln.t: or Cruili·
· 1 I • "·· $1" ••ll S500 • ·10 ·~1 SPRINGER Spaniel pups . vi l _ .. ""'•" ..,1,, SE\VERS. 1[ yw have ex· pnn c;ouc 1 "" c .... ir .1. ""' • casu. a a-J;oo l~ mo old G. Shep; has been AKC. champion :stock. Fo~ Ing. ·" 11 COuu • .....,......, .>"• · -· l · t Birch coffee tahle & 2 end NSU penen._.., 1n "'e !i u I • Prince dune buggy $T.j trained for bhnd, till shot~ ~ho1v, hunlin1:: or p el. Boats, Sail m
manufachn'lng, this is your cabinets $30 ca. 6~5-443'7 or lradl.', antique radio $25, 227 !\Jonte Vista 548-7932 art 833-:\:YI~ 1----------
C'han<'e to increase your DANISH dining table & bail tank & pump$~. 3:30 5/17 · rarl. Dingh)" ~i~ 0 . R .
"'ages, \\"ork1ng rondi11ons, chairs, 12' Bdrm cabinet * 6•1&-1257 * S:O.I mini . poodtr, 1 \l'ks. SZO. CAI. 18 Racer. Loaded. SIS
in a fri endly atmosphere. \\'/14 d1-a~·ers, met a I GhORGEO~S 8 ~cniaJ€' 7 wk old pt Beagle puppie?~ Raylheo11 spdmtr. Spin rig.
Comp to the Surfer Housr, ki1chen cabinc!.o;, headbCJlll'd, FAMILY VACATION unl1ng reed 10 •"""'borne $10. 6-12-4818 d)5, ~38&.i $0000. Nv.•pt pier avail.
182j9 r.1t. Bald)' Circle, F.V. cha.ir.r;, etc. J •16-2 5 1 7, Mammoth t-.tt. Cabin \\'k, $93. "'/I g e Y 8 1' d · Sh o l s · eves. 4.~jl ,
5-l&-3665 Reserve Now 531-3374. \ &42-442·1 j/19 ' ----------------. ----AI.~SKAN 1\lalan1ute Pups, li' Hollday Y11.11t Vrry ~hip·! SHEET r.-letal trainees Im· BEAUTJJ-'UI. Spanish oak 1 TAKE OVER 20 acres, NO 2 IUters-exCt>pt1onally cute Al\C, $100. py, very niatmg. Aft cabin.
med. for good pay jobs. tables, avocado velvet sofa DOWN $29 mo. Near lgc ki!lens: M>n1e part Sia.mc5e, * 64:l--Ol21 + Slet'ps 8. Slip 11v;iil. 675-8792
Orange Coa.!l Employm€'n\ & lovr. seal, custom tufted. lake, 96i-£1(H7 WP.a n_ed &: tra in_.._~ AKC Beagle pups Champ. (rvl.'s & "·eekends)
Agency, 1869 Newport Blvd, All near new! 673-6926 IRVINE COAST COUNTRY 5'18-16l;i .:1/11 line, 6 \\'ks, 2 male, 'l rcm,1 -'--'::...:,:..c.===---1 Costa r-.1esa. Call 645-3111. 24 MUST SELL
833 Dove:r Drive
Newpo rt Beach
&12·3810
PRO FES SIONAL pb:>ne Sec'y Jr. $416
solicitor • Dana Point, San Rare oppor. to be part ol Or-
Clemente, Capistrano area. ange Counties most fascin-1,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,!!!!!!!!
#.t:SO Work in )"our own home. atlng prestige co. Fun & ex-Stockbroker
BEAUTIJ-~UL yr old 1-lcritag{' CLUB MEMBERSHIP FREt: hol'se 1nanu1'f' ror 6~4-~1()35
ilinlni:: rootll SCI .... 4 * 67a-3075 * f~rtiliil'r, :M311 <:ypres~. CHA.\1PAGNt~ toy poodl(' Sips . •I, hci:irl, •!nk, fully
cane back 1·halr~. s ma 11 Sl::T Stan T hompson golf :San!a Ana lle1ght11 54(}.092J \\'/papers avallable for stud equipped. Also. Sabot bull. F/C Bkkpr
Legal Sec'y
Bkkpr-Hosp.
Fire Rating Clrk
Sec'y.Sale•
Keypuncher
Sec'y IE &crow
Stock Room
Recept/Sec'y
Recept/Typis t
Siles Reps
'"' Be.t deal in area. Phon!! citing, Advancemerrt oppor. WOMAN
$600 m.1465 between 9:00 a.m. Cali J\.111111Roseanne,537~22. STOCKBROKER
$6S<I and noon. Abigail Abbol Personnel
$550 Agency. 230 \V, Warner, Unusually attractive unmar-
$ Receptionist r1ed woman, age ~5. who S2S I al """'-&lite Zl l, S.A. ha..~ had suca>ssful sales ex· $500 tor eadlng l€'g group. '" ..-t --S~E=C~R~E~T-A_R_Y~-. · 60 dicta.N...ne Some perience, annual carnln-~ $500 mg up, t'"" · N_.,......rt Bch CPA 0firm seek· $4Jl gen'I ore: exper. • .. .,.... o,.·er $10.000 some yei:irir in
"lS MISS EXEC AGENCY ing per&0n lor 1 girl office. the past 5 years. NYSE
-410 \\I c H NB 1'11ltst ~ good lypisl \\'/~x-member firn1, ht-lclcphone $400 · oast W)'., perie........ in office ''°'~ 6Wi-3939 '"'""' recr'plionist during requ11"t'(I
$650 dures, shorthand desirable. 6 months' training period 111 Prefer a detail-minded, con-Laguna. Send resume to
scienlious \\'Orker who can p 0 oo· , , . . Box lVtJ, ...,.guna
table f'Xpands lo JOeat 12. irons $50 2-double mirrol'ed 5/17 i;crvice ""/S<tmc. ~H::.-JW.S A!l xlo'I concl. 6t-1-073.'i.
Asking $475. 675-671X> sliding doors $60. ~15-4885 FLUFFY kit!eni;, 7 "ks grey AKC !RISH SE'M'EJt-6 mo, PVT pty \\'ants to leo~ a 2;)'
SOFAS. chaLr~. <'a r pet , Miscellaneous & "'hi fcml , blk &: \\'hi1c all ~no15 & lie. Slj(). Jnquirt' sai!boa1 on 11 monthly basi~.
draperies, pictures, misc:. Wanted 820 male. Nred loving ho~e~. lll 40-1 3rri St, Laguna Bch Call 8-12-:>126 anytime, Nol
Good q11ality. Priva1c party. 847-8960 J/17 brl 2pm or art 9pni club~. pica~.
..fiTu-1891 BU\' modrl railroad trains; LOVABLE black ft111a.le pup. LAB puppies, AKC, '1 "'ks. CAL 2-24; Slps_.4, head &
STEEL SECRETARIAL \Vhat <lo you Have:" Bragg, py. Needs ~ood honl(' Wilh field & becnh s 10 ck . ::::t1Hry. i\Jotor, w/battery,
DE'S!\ $10 63.>-636:i or 644 S. VaUey, fenced yd, :1 42-7096 : Rubal}n Krnnrls. 968-291!1 S~900. ** OOS-417!1 * 61&-6Jj() + Anaheim, 9180-t 83&-4493 '.j/\11 BE1\UTIFUI. T-rup & 14n>· 14' Super Sattelite
Garage Sale 812 \VAf\IED; 9xl2 Pers 1 an FR E f:: . 1 o q u ~I 1l1 t d toy pood!r puppiei;, Tiny toy S~:.O * 67J..l38.1
NE\V f1bergla...~11
riool :c;lides, 1
lrotn, $2.1 each.
l!v.1mm1ng
10 choose
967-4981
Oriental ru~. ali.o smaller hom~s.-\\atrr Spaniel mi:..M 51ud i;crvicr. 89Z-9719 16' PCC S!oo buil '.:>8, Ai .1 sizr~. in good ('on d. puppies. Fencl.'d yard . p, l pi; 49~·!m2, ·19.t-Zi3.~. .\.18--0813 ur :il36--i l!l:l ;,117 e BEAUTIFUL Lhasa 6, ruA1om -~nter , $13,500.
, Ap.so puppir~. All HaJT,ilton. A\'CO Bkr, 61:>-8990 NOTE TELLER
Experie need
UNITED CALIFORNIA
-BANK-
RECEPTIONIST -good ap-
pearance & ability to meet
the public ne('. Light typing
&: clerical "'Ork required.
$~$400. mo, depending on
t>xp. Apply in Person a t
Co.ut Catamaran, 3 3 0 1 2
Callt' Perfec:to. SJC.
adapt to a wide variety or Bei:ich. Musical Instruments 822 P ... ~AYt' UoodL 7 ,"·k old2 kb",•,en!.1 Al<C. "h 0 1 s . Reasonable 26' Excallbur-bare flbergl11~
must ·~ecc g "10n_1f' ti.19-.">8;'.:7 aft 7 pm. h"ll o••l . 8 ,-• ,. $llOO Ave, f'ULJ.. set of drum~. Good tiger, !\'fothf'r S111mesl"! Bos " Y r ~K• ''"'"w
special projects. Must be I--,;'-,--,--,-.--,--1\10VING · ••vcryth1ni::
responsible, \VCll groom«!, Tele. Appt. Sec'y go. 223 Santa Jsabtl
articulate. attraelivc. Xlnt to investment brokl':r. Pl Costa Mesa.
\\'Orking conditions, coni;:en. time, perm. I M '~a~c~h~i~n~.~,~y-----8~16 cond, $140. trainrd. ~;)...6j!J;i .•. l/l7 At'GHAN PUPPIES • $12:> or offrr. 64&-2J77 '
7712 W. CDll!t H>Ay
Newpon Beach
6-16-2431
Equal Oppor111nily Employer Receptionist
Do lite typing & various NO\V ace<!pUng a pplicallons other dutiet including er-
for Cook Tralneei;. Days. · r
l ,,.._ rands, o $400.
App Y in Person, ... ulO'lY Accounting Clerk
Kitchen, 3211 Har bor Bl vd, 10 Key by touch & lire bk-
t ,;;C~~~' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..,i;;; I , 11 kpng. Some exper. 1n res-
taurant food che<'ks. 37a
hr "''k, $2.7J an hr.
PACKAGER Tralnee1 need·
ed !mmed. for good pay
jobs. Orange Coast Employ.
men! Agency, 1869 Newport
81\·d, Costa Mesa. Call
64>3111
I PART TI:-.fE exp 'd
maturr .;ale&l ady !or
maternity thop. No. 28
l'a!hion Island. No phone
calls please.
PART Hmc trainees, male,
HS or Coll. No exp nee. The
Zoo Restaurant, Coat! Hwy
& ~lacArthur.
RUTH RYAN AGENCY
17'93 Newport, Cl\1 646-4854
17931 Beach, HB 8~7-961 7
Recept. Gen'I Ofc.
Legal. $450. 1\teel & greet
elients in thi& top dra\\'ef
r>i.B. Jaw firm. Call 1\fiss
Connie, ~17-6122. Abigail Ab.
bot Personnel Agency, 2.10
\V. \Va.mer, Suite 211, S.A.
RECEPTIONIST
Pe111011able gal w/gcf1"gen'I
ofc :o:kills. Mostly customer
relations. S1a11 SJ,j(),
C11 IJ ~ly llal't. ~
COASTAL AGENCY
1i'90 Harbor Bl at Adams
lal atmosphere. \\'rite Clas-4 PM·8 PM
siried 1\d #119 DaHy Pilot, Our Otricc Cdl\I. Please rlo
P.O. Box 1500, 'c.l\t. 92626 not apply unl('Ss )"OU al'e ;in
SECRETARY to Sa Jes extrovert \\'ho like,.-to argue
J\1anagcr, good pay & op-t.lrangers into your w11y of
portunitic5. Call 77&-1180 thinking, 833-3656, 1-1 om c
SECRETARY 675·I089,
N!!w offices e Airport Loe. TRAVEL AGENT
Good opportunity for all"r t ~me? exper in licke!jrig or
secretary, to \\'Ork in fast rei;er,:a.tion.& will g€'1 you
paced N.B. adv e r l is i n g this spo!, fine benclils.
agency. All skill,; including !'tsu1 $3.)0,
SH req'd. 833-1670. Call Helen Hayes, 540-GGSS
DUREL ADVERTISING CO ASTAL AGENCY
2172 Dupont Dr/Suite 4 2790 Harbor Bl al Adams
Newport Beach, CaJil. TYPIST. Grc>1vlng Escrow
SERVICE CENTER co. f'"un plaCP to "·ork. ra~e
ad\'ancrments. Learn while
Employment Agency you earn. Start S400.
C11tl Sally Hart, 54!Hi0j;j * Sec'y to $550 COASTAL AGENCY
Good Sll • technical back· 2790 Harbor Bl at Adams
gmd helptuL * WAITRESS-EXP'D * Sec'y to $600 Not under 21. NO PHONE
Some R.E. or constr c,'l:per. CALLS. Apply in person,
helpful, Surf & Sirloin. 5930 W. Coa~t * General Ofc to $525 Hwy., N.B.
Gd typist/outgoing manner/
PARTY counselo r s &
/lousev.·h·e!I needf'd. $50 !or 3
e\'es "''f!ekly + bonu!I. Ph:
~5-44~::i. &-10 am or 4-7 pm
& \\"kndt
PART·Tl i\IE clerk 1ypisl/
bookkeeper. Sm informal I
girl ofli~. Sl.75/hr. Call for
a ppt &15-1021.
eool head. \VATTRESS. Clean, neat & * Medical Asst to $500 attractive. Over 11. Apply
RN 'S p/lime 7A;\l-3P~I & ~ b k I t-:gg & Ale. 6i3-0077, i\fr. r 1111 & Ar nfc: e:<Jlt'r. car-Zimmer. 3PM-11P~I ghifl. i.. V N diology helpful, I ~~"""""""""~'""'""==
I/time & p/tin1e. * Recept. to S400 \VANTED: i\!an \Vilh pickup
Huntington Beach Accur. typist/lrnt ore. !ruck ror early morning
Convalesf.'E'nt Hosp. pa.rt·limf' \\ork. &16-6862
+ &11-1368 • 'J • , up. AKC. Cha1T1pion line. COLU~tBIA 28. 1969 .... Load· I. f ref' puppies, G. Shep Tcrnl.'1. 714/626-987.l rt $9800 o . 213/ Lyle Classical Gu itar \VF..l.DF~ll !:::x('ellenl condi1ion
\Vired for hii;h/10111 urnp i.~j. t).11-0022
$..10 * ~i·IH-~398 I C---------"'~
GIBSON L-5; Gold harcl\\are,
M iscellaneous 818 hun1bucking pi(•k • ups, IT3iii hlonde rinlsh, 838-0047
mon1n1ic oul of mind and so " · : · 11 Y s. art' \\!'. Plra.~e f' ::i 11 A;\·IERICAN Eski1T10. 6 nio. 636-07.)7: Eve.'I: 714/64&-5724
6T.>-4687 5/17 1\111lc. Papc!'s. $100 . .HO-~• 32' P.C. racing sloop. Xlnt
!x-hvrcn .1 & 6. ·. I " ·t ·r· 179~ FEISTY little ;::rr.y killf'ii i_oni._;,"us sac1 1 ice .......
nosr. Nf'rds J?ood POODLE PUPS; 8 \Yks, 3·i~'"'-~'='~'1~~~~-~~ I W/"'hlle
hlomf.'.
&l&-5:i61
8 wks 0 t d l\talc; 2·Fem, FLIPPER: Salls & h11.11l in
5118 * S!6-4WO • xlnt rond. Less than 2 yn e BEAGLE PUPS old. $32j, 673-868.l
D l N E TT E S ET S I -~u,'--",,'-,,~00="-",~,,::.,'-,~.,.-,-,,-,-
B RAND NE\V Like~\\'!!$!;,[) RARE-lx-i:iut. beii;€' killcns -
COUCHES • 545-775.l e l bobtailed. S v.·ks old. !.wk"*• AKC RHODES 19 ~loop, full cov.,
$69.50& UP ---'C..:."--"'-'-'---INeed~ good home . $.1J •* 9&1,--0430 mtr .• 2sctssxils,:dnt cond. WASHERS $25 Office Furniture/ 64&-5361 .J/\SSCOTTISH Terrier AKC Sl:J:J:>. :>18-1067.
B &-J FURN ITURE Equip. 824 PUPPIES 'i D a Im 11. ti an . P~Pl':'1. males, 8 11·ks. $100. + LIDO I~ l"'o. 914. blue A:
Shorthaired. All var1elic.~ ol 962-l.l2.l brfore .( pni. \\·h1tc. \Vant lo sl"ll 0011.•:
R38 E. i'-irst S1., S.A. \\'ANTED: Used off i cf' ,;pots. &l&-!~7 :l/l&Horses 856 6~16--0S~:._R~i~----~-I OPF:N !1·9 7 DAYS ft11•niture. Desks. chain;. .--.
el(', Davis Brov.·n C 0 , ·I f'Ule kittens 10 1\k~. 11ra11f'rl :-,1t.;ST ~ELL l\O\\'~ LfOO l 1-X:ln! ronrf. Tral\Pr.
* Aue ON * 0•011:"" and trained 833-0 ·IO'l l'O\·er. C::ill ~l-1!16o days: Tl .... ,..... """ H1·;:islf'1·ed runn1n::: P\'f'. ~·117 or 67;}-8-16:"1 P\'PS. Fine Furniture BLACK metal chron1e trim, I ~"""°'===-:;--c-:-=-I Q11;\rler Hon;". lZi.2 -~L~roo='""'~~-~~,1 "ood top;)'" 30" desk Sl2j, t'REE: pupp1c11 R 11ks. Toy C/l("~lnut mart. Had train. ,.. 1·1 No. 2663
& Appliance 673-.1029 colli{' and coc k r r mix. Ing. Co11~is!rnt jun1pcr, 1v/rrailf'1', Slll!». l.ess trlr
Auctions Friday, 7:00 p.m. j46.0921 j/17 $700. 673-4.~G $91.l. Eves: 64l-2601
Windy's Auc:t ion Barn Pianos/Organ• S2& LAB·Gt'r1n;in ShrphPt'(I, 6 llORSf::S BOARDED Boats, Slips/Docks 910
2015~2 Newport. CM 646-8686 e 300 Pianos & Organs weeks, 3 blark malr~. t'rt--e $3.> 1110 + + BACK BA 'l ,..
Behind Tony'..: Bldg. ?lfat'I. NE\V-USED. Going out tor to good homes 675·0110 5/17 ~1877 + * 5-16-574:1 ::sLJPS ro1· sailboa1s, 2·1' 10 :H' ~-==~-'---'-.:__:-'--'-~1--~-~=-'.,,===I narro1v btam. 8 f',;t AQUARIUMS business, Rentals $10 a mo. 1\lATURE m11.le toy poodle,** 10 )'\'.BAY GELDING, facillties Free pr kni
Custorn made beautiful all Steinway, Baldwin & Kawai r.hamp. sire<t, to good home. gf'n11r. Ph. 54S-9977 or Phone 67.1.8711 'Ill 10 PM ..
Chickering, Yamaha, etc. 71olfi-~·1S nr 772·9723 ~/UI j lS-S-Hiti ,i::las.~ 1anks, nothing like 11 f'~I ELD'S P IANO CO. PRIVATF: !ildc tic. 4j' ma.'I'·
on Lhe m11rkc1. Buy dh'CcL Costa 1\-teM G~rden Grove IRRESISTIBLE. 6 beaut. imuin. $100 nlo.
rrom n1anufaot11re1·. AlM), ,714) 645-3250 1714) 638-2?"40 kittens, box-rralncd, ~1tl-84t~ Boati i nd ~ 67;}-&llit r)"Y "'li )'0"' •upplic' •l b"' :i117 M••'" Equ•·p--t u ' ~ WOULD ye)u___ . ~.. ....... 21i' SLIP, $6;i/n10. Priva1c
i;avuigs. !161.-1~1 BELIEVE FLUFFY l"al a'O nio1hrr rat ba!h. No. ? Balboa. C:O..·e~.
UNION MEMBERS 2 ho.,.1raincd k i 1 I en~. G I 900 N.B. Call fi75--133! JOIN UNIO~ BUYING SER· FREE ORGAN LESSONS f;42·1897 !'1 118 enera ~long as you like! No re~-' lc::""-:::o""._-..,,.-:::-::::,-Boats, Spe9d & Ski 911
The laslest dra\"V in the \\1est lil811 Florida Ave Ask for Tom 1-----t :-:A Diily Pilot Cla"~ H.B: 8l7=lal5 500 ~~C~rtL~-4~ NB•-1 ,,~vo""'R"K"tN=G""n~N.,=""=,=,~,-,-,.~,=.,,=,
Ad. 642-5678 \\'e'll help you ~II! 642-5673 "·oman to 11it afternoon~. 1-3
HelpW•nted,M& F 710 HelpWanted,MIF-710 Help Wanted, M&F 710 hrs, 3 day& a "'k & 8 hrs 2
~CEN~i,~~~;~ ~A~~~ ~~atio~.~ o_b_lig;i;n._J_us.!_ ~~~·~ul f.-°:1 mU~n;~ppi~~l: SCR-AM-L-£TS lJ ti: .. LJlP Evinnwte.
OF APPLIANCES, l'~URNI· o lt". o ays · pm 548--081.1 or R:.16-·H!I~ ;i/17 Beau!. ski. $jj() Inc, trlr
T URE. Bl::DDING & STl::R· COAST MUSIC SPECIAL little kil1tns to ANSWERS 817.0.ii8 or 84S-jil2 ED. PlfONE: 961-0101 6-12-28.ll . ·
Im iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilii=. days " "'k Cl::l'l pn1-12:00 -w pm I \\'ould pre I er t<;0n1ro1'>t'
~pcc1al homes. 51s--0813 or
S;\CHIFICE! \\'a.sher, :.,'OOCI lf~\1\11\tOND. S l ei n \Ya y, 836--1-193 :l/17 PR'a~·h -Inked -Ra\·rn I
conrt S'lO; g1111 rclng. good Yamaha. New & ll.~ed 2 Yr. old AKC charcoal min 1\1on11r -CAN OPENER Transportation ][i] Rest1ur1nt !rum tdi\'1 or Un1vcrsl1y Mnd $10; 2 1IL'f'SS('rs t:, pianos ol niost makes, Best P0ixl!t', llf!u1et't'd n1a tr . jl.lt>alJl u~1t to be opent'dl i· iiiiiiw
ANNOUNCING ANOTHER
Exciting
Accepting Applic1tion• For • • •
Coco ~ e WAITRESSES e COOKS e HOSTESSES e BUSBOYS
• DISHWASHERS
Pfankhow e
e LUNCH WAITRESSES e COCKTAIL WAITRESSES e BUSBOYS
e DINNER WAITERS e BARTENDERS e DISHWASHERS
APPLY IN PERSON
9 A .M. 'Iii 4 P.M.
12342 BROOKHURST ST., GARDEN GROVE
Owned by Far \Vest Services. Inc. Opera t.or~ of Snack Shop~
Coco's, Reuben's. Reu ben E. Lee. The \Vhaler, Isadore's •. :
Park aR'a., 811-15&1
\\'RITER
l·lousr org11n, e di to 1· i a I.
,;tr;iight nC\\S, some r!irn!
conta<'t • , , Professionals
only! Send rt'sun1c to ~lar.
tin Advertising, Inc, 18141
Irvine Blvd., Tustin, Calif.
976!0.
YOUNG man no1v \rorkin.i;
a11 aAAL chtf -\\Undtrlu!
opportunlt.v leir 1111" ril!'.ht
man \\Tile to Cha~ \'eai;cr
3295 ]'l;e\\'porl Bl. Newpor!
926~7
-...... ll§l
rat•h; n1art1't's~. bo:o: ~pl'lnf:~ buys in So. Calif. at Schmidt 6~:.-2!)59 ~i/17 \\"i lh a blesi;1ng. No111 niostll
I. fl'::ime S.i. Crib & maltrtss l\lusic Co., 1907 N. Ulain, f'Rl:E kill€'n.~ _ 2 ::itlnrablr, folks u~c a Ci\:"11 OPE/\"ER. Campers , Sale/ Rent 920 s· "lS.-"'1684 Sa l ta Ana.
J, .; • l --'--'---------1 nutty females. 673-66;)3 !it lli \\"ANTED. Diesel fishing '.ll f'nrd ~hool bus ron·
GO ING oul or hus1nc.~.~ Salr; ALLEN ORGANS e.'<chtsfve\y 2 yr olrl Terrier, good \\ ith boat IY/J1yini:; bndgc--good vf'l"tf>d. }''QR SALE OR
i\flly JI 11! n\d.'IC :sold. An· At~ CONN & \VURLTTZER kirls !'1:")7-7315 5/l8 (.'Qn(!. ::::;,CO) lo 40,CXXI. \\'ill TRADE. J.18-:1613 after 4,
1lquei;, VcneUon, f'°l'ench, Gould Musi(' Co, 1;inf.'E' 1911 Io=~~------lradc VRC'a nt land j n ask for Jim.
C l ll "'· 1:, N. !\fain SA. ~17--0681 LOVABLE k111ens lo good b · r H tin,.,.ton ""70°""~o-c~--~~1 ut &. prt.,sed g 115.'I, un.· home 5'11}-5199 !"1/18 us1nc:~s a.rea o un ., TRADE '67 Drlnxt f rl 1nels&papcrn•t11,M11.~icbox· STEIN\YAY Gnind, ebony.lo=~~-~==~~c' B<'ach or (qual value. C . r. f's. Pl'Ovincitt\ Shop, J ~76 So. t"REE pigrons 548-9832. Ask \\lrill"; Box 6•18 Kula, Utaui. or!lna, xln l cond -plu,; ~ Pe·!, f)arty. $7375. E. con· 101. Choi"-·l 5118 rr .. 961.3 for la!r niQCfel v1n camper. C~t Bl, l..i:ig Bc:h. rlition. 962-2213 " il\iau · -' Col! 6T.)o..'ii.l8
Lt-:AVING ,.t11 te. 4 r>r lil \n:; Sporting Goods 8lO I Tortoise shell kitten Rnd 17' 11q Pndecl aluminum c11noe Al U~llNU:\I ·h 11 11,
i·uh, 16' ~tcrl shl'l\'in,. 6. -"--"-------lovins 1nother. 6:>,14967 r1t l8 \1t1 blt ·111 floatlon, Cat·ryuii:; .. : .. ' 111~ r1'7~.~~r s l' •
• '·u1 L l l ' -· l" !300 '""· . ....,. ""' s an t " 11h,11"11).!r {'llb., ronnal di•ttP"~. , sel a um1num go I COCf\ER-Dos1f'. 4 n1 o ~. 1·11rll1c1 Y· '1.l v~ n1•11•• CtllRllna F!n V!r ni••~!cr hr. Col'Oll('t CIH10P)' club& "'/bas;. par!ly h~bkrn, ~.\!l.~ ;,/17 your11 101• S20tJ. Likr 11~11 . -.-,' ·....:___
clfN•I, !Ul'l'.l. &· ::1\'0Cl1<to. 2 Si.\ * :l.\7-1 3711 . , ~--~!ll-8.~&9 T\\ 0 40 OCF'U Cht·i.~'ir;, Xlnl I Rabbi!, I 1h.1rk, 2 Gu!or oi . . cond, Local. Ot1r 111 SW,:;oo cnn1plrtr 111111.~. &1r1·1f1cf'! TV, Ra dio, HiFi, pi;:.~. ;~IS-11!1j ;i/18 111 Rllrl11_bi.111!, \.\oorl '~ Avro Bk r. 71 4/'iil-i:lOR
612·11ti1 , ~::~ .. 170!.i I St1rao 836 BE'UT " l < 7 i::la.•M'rl. fully rquipl. W hp .7.,--';,;;';;"".;;-::c.:.:_,~'=-
NCR J[lOO~h°iTiti.'ll~ ----------'~ !llol.,ri~ I'll, iro • -.JohnMin rtf"r, Rn.It lank. HD '6!1 FORn SUP"r Van·El"c t.IOTOROLA '2::" C!'llor 111th l'llliro kiltf'n"i .i4&-ml ·1111 1rlr s.i7\ ?'-"<> • .. 1}46 rl'f1·ig, llf';id, o\·cn, sto\·~. cond. $12:). Rrn1 office " '~
stand. T)p\\·tr. Good cond. :<t11nd, nc1v $.j()(I, ~II $17i ZOYSIA grai;s you dii. • Boats/Marine fl ip top, .a1~ rond. :m-32ti.
Antiques 800 ${), &1~2-18 or 675-28.18 Xln1 cond. Also ~folorol"-833-1006 ;i /17 E I 904 Cycles Bikes
itterro, Ai\1-fl\1 radio, <'her· f'REF: kittens ~ v.ttks Rll qu p. Scoof•rs-' -925
ANDREA'S CARPl:.'T !..ft~r has qua.liry ry r::ibinf't $15. 64S-4137 rolors MS-2712 !l/17 RA\'. Jl'fl mod 623, VHF' f'~tl---------·I
ANTIQUES I ~~f:. ~~i~~·: ~~n'.:~ l --~21~.~. 0TV=·,-. ~,,.~_-=si;~-~-G. Shep pupt 4 \\'N!kll 10 irood radio pho~ "'/:ttals ll:Jr 61, THINK
Just Received Est. l\lr. Ed ,71~) 871,.!l!SS Good condillon homes only &l.'>-098.'\ 5/17 rh11n . Like_ new, $300 HONDA
NEW SHIPMENT * 67It-176.1 ===~---~-=-~ &14-6218 or 61.r2838
E 'GLISll NC:l::O A RUBRER SfAl\TP? 1 -~R-C~.-~~.~ .. -CO'-"'L-O~RC:::,C~o-,-.-l•-YOUNG pet m1~. 61.)-0137 Bo p 906 AUSTRAtl/\N, N I Call S36-3J&I ,,.. ,...., 5 17 ats , ower SU
& t"RENCH Plt:C£S l"enr nev.·. \V/pol. S2j(). ~~~------~• "fR :l3SO Newpo1·1 Bl., c .,\I. I.ow pric1•11, fas! ~n·icf'! • * :~1~-7:}1H • • DARLIN G k11!cns, to ROOCi ~KlrJACK 20, . brand 1~11. IEDLANDER"
frl:i·IS70 NF:\\' f1tx>1l(la:.,. s11.1mmlno;: 21 .. Cotni· TV 0.~,.~,-~1~1:-'1-llon1t 642--0121 :.111 ll"!J. 1h~n 10 hr~ 1)n 210 t1'• •••at ,...-,
Daily 11}.~ • Sun, 11mn·:I ~~. ~~~··;~d; ~~-l;~;Xllll' 19" Porli:i blt TV $.10 ''''l.F. 0\1lrh r 11 b bit . ~~i~iulln~~i;;·r~~Tr:.o ;~~ h.":7·GS24 • 1''.,l;,;~
ANTIQUES b I' -• II ff • 54µ~1.) e 71 16-7W8 ;1/17 ----_
i y \ lhllla ll • 1--M-IN_K_ST OLE $6S-t:-.11·,1:.. <'00~1 £:Urinf rq111p. '&! \1\'. 11.\l f1t1fri•1 rnn.i'
man ~JS! Jkils.1, lt1ld1\ay CO:O.lB. 21 ' eolor TV &tc'rl'O/ I 2 fluffy l!'.rl'y kitlcn.'I ~ 1'·k~ 111cn1,.ctc...Soo. oookmaaier-. All •xtr11 '" ~ :ii,. r v 1 ,.,.
Cily 892-3622. Sptr. In dcp I • 6·ll!.lIJJ~-•--11m.rm. \\'l!lnut c~b. S~Jo. olrl ~S-1501 !If~ Rrilbrul R.1y Cluh, !>-1~2211 rcr01'!'!:r.. Or. &o!t !tll-j21;} gln~s. Sell ld lP Htm' now! 27'2 HiJ:h Dr. 1:14-93~1 j rRt;f; k1ltf'1?$ j.18-41~ ~/17 $6."iOO or \\~It lt11-~t. n1' ~!l . ._l,1~.':, '-"-----'---"-'--~-'-~--'--~~~
t
I •
L-~~~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~........!:._..,:::_~~~------~-----------------.il
•
I
~ondJy. May 17, 1971 DAil Y PILOT 3,S
lliJ I Autos for S.I• 1 1 ~1 1 .• ,. .. ,,, .... 1§1 I 1§1 1 ~ ~_ ...... _ .... ~llBl I l§J I -......
Cycles, Bikes,
Scooter•
Auto Service, Part1 949 Auto1, lmportelil 970 Auto1, Imported 970 Auto1, lmportaa 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, UHd 990
CADILLAC
HONDA 250 Scrambler. Xlnt
cond. Mtut see to apprec.
$275-0ffer. 67>59-18
'67 YAMAHA 100 ce trail.
$175, or best offer.
• ~8-5802 •
'65 Suzuki 80, excellent
cond. 3EiOO actuaJ mUes, 1135.
67;>.Wll
'70 SUZUKI 90, like nu,
under warranty, T'JO miles.
$.125. 673-2191.
Dune Buggies 956
'70 Myers Tow'd, VW power,
Licensed, Cood cond, $975.
540-5900 dys, 50-9251 eves.
Spor ts, Race, Rods 959
'33 CHEVY PICKUP
AUSTIN HEALEY MERCEDES BENZ TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN
~ ERIBA PUCK
'nie Camper tor little cars.
Hitch weight -11 lbs. In-
credible. 21 ft Jong, height.
Come In for a teat drivel 6'4", 2 burner stove. Sleeps ==='="'=~I FRITZ WARREN S 2 Adults + 1 child with
VOLVO
$3l9S ' .,.
1969 Voh·o l&I Sed. R., 11.,
Automatic, f'aczory A Ir
Cond. Sharp. Y\\'ltl<IJ
DEAN LEWIS
IMPORTS
&16·9303
·n Mercedes Benz 280 SE ' comfort. Can dlne Six. In·
3.5L couple. War
0
ranty. SPORT CAR CENTER dl'penden1 lighting ,.~1en1.1 ----------
s11 ,900. Bob Burr 714 no E. ls! St., S.A. 547--0164 &U contained water. Anl· ~ THINk
1946 Har~r r lvtt.,
Costa Mesa
&12-3400 or 540-m?O Open daily 9.9; doted Sunday pie Storage Including hang. -. 'VOLVO' ROY CARVER, Inc. '68 MercedM 250 SE, like CANARY.Yellow 62 Triumph up closet. Panoran1ic win.
111 2925 Harbor Blvd. w, low 1nilcage. $4.950. T.R-4. IU!c. l'f'bll. Gd. uphill. dows. Built.in leveling, 4
CMta ~1esa 546-4444 Air&: leather new Michelin Ures, paint. Super Clean! addl11onaJ Adults can sleep '1fRIEDLAHO[R'' DATSUN tires, 493-3429. $695. 54S-28S5 or 548-6591 in opllQnal add·a·roomtent.
_________ 1 ·55 190 SL hardtop. 9D'i'o '&I Tlt-4 Green w/black In!: Has everything the big one's
DOT DATSUN restored. Tape deck. $1500 Good cond. $800. 6~ have and can ~ tO\\'ed by
firm. 671-1066 aft 6 pm . ask for An.gelo the small car, See it today
IVJO •IACll tMWY, >ti
89J..15GG • 537-6824
Largest Selection
OF LUXURIOUS
CADILLACS
ln Orange County
1963 thru 1970'1
ibeij; ~CADILLAC
AUlttQflllU) DtAUR.
2600 1IARBOR BL.,
COSTA MESA
540·9100 Open SUnday
'69 EL DORADO
1 OWNER
,CAMARO
196' CAMARO CPE.:
SUPER VALUE .
1'1ashy Competitkln oran~
finish with Black Landall
roof & bucket seata. V8,
Auto Trans, Radkl, Htr.
Power Sit>ering, Factorf,
Air, elc. YEH0,10, $24'lli,
Johnson &. Son, ~26 llatbo!'
Blvd., Costa. Mesa, MO-~·
CHEVELLE '
'64 El Camino 32'7, 4 apd;
New ~!!:A f.maga. ~
cond. 61iMi:& a.ft 5.
CHEVROLET
Less Than 15,000 Milas '70 MONTE CARLO ;
Still In Warranty 350 turbo hydromatlc, lactory air, power ~lpped, Lan.. OPEN DAILY 1-"=-=-7,C=':.:;_,=-·li "ATI>T<"i"<«"ir;;;;;;;;;-I at
AND MG ~ T~. ~i;'.',:c ~~~ BAUER BUICK SUNDAYS John 231 E. 17th St. 18835 Beach Blvd.
Fire111ist color. Full lealll('r •
Autos, Used 990 interior, A~t/F~I stereo, PS, ~7~· ~OvA ''307 va·• '.
-·-,.-.,.-.,.----PB, P\V, P. seals air cond., Automatic trans., po•~c
'68 Volvo 121 S, aulom., l-1000
n11. Very goorl cond. Asking
$1400. 49i..3t!l3
. . Huntington Beach Cadillac engtne, hydro. ~lust 842-778l or Y.0-0642
MG
A1JI'H0RlZED
SALES & ,IQIVJCE
VOLKSWAGEN Cost& 111fsa 5-18-7765 "51 F" ~ hoot h tilt Wheel. landau' fnn, auto. o,,,. SC' us, con· ¥" steering, factory air, Ian.( vertcd. FOR SALE OR matic trunk & door locks.
2100 Harbor Blvd.
TRAoi;· ;-,.ig"" • (•!Hl51 Priced to sell. dau top, etc, : ·10 llW Bug, hluP., 11erM 0 ~. -..... i 3 after .. , ask '70 IMPALA CUSTO"
,_...,., wood •'hl. d"'h & '7 YW SEDAN lo' Jim. ---···• --"·-· COUPE '")
•, ~nobs. lf,000 nii. Xlnt cone!. BUICK '~ ,,,,,._ F ct · 1 -" t . 2100 llarbor Blv·'. &tS..W66 a ory air, arouau, JXIWet;
R I·•· IUVT881l ~vi P1Y· $1195, 646-2635 (!1()6 APJJ " equipment turbo hydromaJ
be 81't'fl. "'4.-. ~ '67 DATSUN PICKUP
·~~onda 250-Good conct. Trucks -----=---962
J1rtuµort
Jl1nµorts :~ f:u ";;{~. Barwick btwn 4-7 pm. $1799 '69 CADILLAC tic etc. ' ~
Impacts, 998 So. Coai.1 Hwy., '62 Karmann Ghia VW. black ER I BA PUCK COUPE DE VILLE M.ic Howard Leaslnt '.
CaU 536·4178
'68 Bultaco 100 Fast dirt
ready. Many xtras. Xln 't.
$300. 642-&388
'""
* HODAKA 1969 *
5 apd trans
• 646-1257
SAClfS 125-fas!. dependable.
Xlnt cond. Sac. $395.. Call
673-1061
Imrnac:ulate Norton ~ ce. ** $795 •• .........,.
'66 DODGE CREW CAB
6 Passenger. 81~ IL bed. Ideal
for camper. V8, automatic,
power steering, air cond ..
radio, heater. Priced right!
(U3608JJ
2100 Harbor Blvd.
'66 FORD % TON
Laguna B<'ach, 546--1051 or 3100 W. Co~t Hwy. w I \\/hire convertible top, 1-·ull po1,1•er. factory air, door {Corner 1st & Harbor) ,
494·9771. Newport &act rebtHl1 l'ngi.ne. Xlnt mech. lock1, eh'! 83~ 531-0601 Santa An! -=c~-=--~----1----'------I conditlon. $,l25 or bes! oJ(er. The Can1pcr for lilllr oars. $4395 .
'70 Dal!un 240 Z four 11peed, Eves 494-1380 18111 BEACH BL. S.12·-i435 Jli!rh \\'<'ight • 77 lbs. In-Mac Howard Loasinn '69 CCHAEPVRRICOELET
low ml. red/blk inter ior • THIN" -" bl 2l I I I t • • * '69 V\V, xln! cond, low mi, HUNTINGTON BEAClf Cn.·ul <'. t ong, ieig it -(Corner lJ;t & }!arbor)
$4.JOO. 963-84TS '''!G'' stick shilt. $1400. 536-7192 1968 VW Squareback 6'·1". 2 burner i;tovC". SJttps 839-960() Santa Ana HardlQP Coupe: •. Factory air;
FERRARI aft 3 pni. SALE PRJCED 2 Adul1s + J chllcl with ,62 CAD CONVERT "350", turbo hydromatic; co1nror1. Can dine Six. In· • • power equip!,, landau top., FERRARI '69 VW, auto !iti{:k, sun roof, BEL.O\V \\IHOLESALE dc('l('ndcnt hi;h11ns.: sys1cm. $2395 ''FRIEDLANDER"· Aro.I/FM, beaut. con d, • One· owner trade. 30.000 mi. <--11 . I AuntORIZED Sl.450 644-6027. 4 spd trans. radio. h('a\er, ~· 5containei l\Ya!C'r. Am-Air ronrl. PowPr steering. Mac Howard Leaslng:j
SALES .It SERVICE ,,,,. a1•cH tlfWT. *'' '68 '"V -• x~v·~ J h Pie rorage inc udins:-hang. tCTR·I01~ As clean as the (Corner 1.st le Harbor) ' 89.J.7566 • 537-6824 '" , .. ...,an. 11unroof, etc.•'"' ""''· SUT:i. 0 nson up closet. Panoramic \\'JO· day it came off the show· 839--<-"·o'· •-' 1~~=~-~.,..---d,-I A.1\1/Ft.1 radio, $1,175 & Son, 3;,'26 Harbor Blvd., d n ·1 I 1· 4 ........, """ 16 ,.,,. '63 MGB Cood con o11·s. u1 1-111 l"ve mg, room floor. $799, t.lust see
hanliop, ;,.ire v.·heels, .$825. '10.;;;;;o;;-=54:::S-0308:=-c==7"7o-I ""°'='~'~'~''~"-·-'-'~-5630~~· .,..--add11ionaJ Adults can s\et>p lo ;;ppreeiate. Bruv.·ick Irn-'62 Chevy rtation wagon, Re•
Mobile Homes 935 * 61 .. """~ * SUPER Cletin '68 V\V New 1968 V\V Bug. aultl stick. new in 01111onal add·a·roon1lcnl. po"• 991! So C 1 HY. bll brakes & efl!:'ine. ~ A l . 6 _, IU"'61" ~~ d' I I • "'• . oas ·y., I _.. BEST OFF u omatic, ... ,.,., ..>'!' 11----c===----I n la I rei1, chrome wh11, enguw, good cond. TradP Has e\'erything the bi,t: one's Laguna Beach, 5-16-40jl or runn ng co'"'· •
J}rtuport
311nµort s
INSTANT HOUSING Full Price Sl.29!1. Barwick MGB $1250. 962-8918 for late model El Camino: have anrl ran be to11·ed by 4!).1.9771. ER. 548-5613 After 5:30 & •
lmports 998 So Coast Hwy 3100 W, Coast Hwy. '69 Sq b k y lks Rancho, or can1pcr of equal lhl" small car. &-e lt todliy =""""~,.....~-~~~ _w_"~k~"=""·~-----t Laguna . "·ach.· ~"" "~ ~f e 1'.fGB '64-Like new in & uare. ac 0 wagen, val"•· 842-8<14 '69 Cadillac Coupe de Ville :c oc ~' Newport Beach . good cond1Uon, for iale best .. at 24 000 . • 1968 CHEVY VAN ; R/Hi, 494-9771. 1 ----~~~---1 out. Wire wheels, R&H. olf·r. fi7"""l "'°-;,;,,-~c--7.ec--BAUER BUICK . mi's, Pvt owner. Full 6 1 . WHY WAIT?
Tha all new Village House
by I evitt Mobile Sy1tem1
with 1loping shake roof can
be YoUn now! Models on
display at. ..
FIAT $950. Call &15-4765 .. .....,.,. · '63 V\\', New reblt eng, pol\'Cr & air + .Ai\1/FM new p yg, ID windowS. '60 CHEVY CARRYALL 1963 V\V, 6 passenger pick. trans, etc. J rn mac u I a I e 2W E. 17th St. stl"reo, vinyl roof, leather ~~~ $1695. 4 9 7-10 8 4 • PORSCHE up. ExceUentcondllion. $700 cond, Pricrd for quick sale. Cosla 1'.tcsa 543.7765 lnter., tilt whff!I, power =~""=~~-~-·I ao,,,.fl "lj~~iiii~iii:r;--1~m.3878!i~~-;;u;,...,,c:::,,,=-days: S-18-ll33, eve 1: door locks, Perfect cond. 1968 IMPALA Sprt Cpe 1 3 Spd, 3 Seats. New Paint,
Nice. {G\VE899)
$995
rQj '65 PORSCHE c • '68 vw. Good Cond. •13-4532· 64"-2182 ""'"· 37.000 mu,.. ·~ !1050 c~-l~V\~17' c=h,-a~x-1,,-1-co_n_d-. ~n-11-.._ 1970 Coupe DeVillc Lo mi'1, cond. Extraa! Xlnt! $1650~
BAY HARBOR
MOBILE HOMES
1425 Baker St., Co.!ita Meu.
Just S. of S.D. Fwy at Harbor
714/540.9410
'68 124 SPORT CPE. White with red interior. Ex-Call 646-5405 New brks, new muff. New Full JXlY.'Cr, f1u·1ory air, Jan· all elect, air, AM/FM. ~P"h".°"644-=54=22".""'°-.,,-~7'-I
cellent condition. {TZP 808) '60 VW Bua •• 62 rebuilt eng· mast. cyln. !\lust SC'C'! duu top, A~1/F~I. 28.000 $1(100. & assume paymts. 1969 ?i1ALIBU Chevelle, 2 dr,
Like }'ull price $249j cir take Pxcel. mnd. runs &:ood. 1650 Clean! s55o or Beat oiler. milt's look~ & dr1vr.s like Call Ginny 54j...S.127 Days landau top, auto trans, aJ.q ~~
2100 Harbor Blvd. 64""468
Radio, heater, mags!
new! (WXJ.388) trade. Call 4!l4-1144. or olll'T 673-4643 -'-'-'-'-°'-'~·""~~5'<)..36,.7'0-98---11c"'· Sec at 5-10-2286 eves. pwr i;teerlng. vinyl seals~
BLACK '64 SC, Recent '64 V\V Bu£. Sunroof. J5!Xl VOLVO MafCoc Howard Leasing 1968 Cad Sedan deVille. All ,'-'~·'°"~·~833-0 __ 1_08_. ____ ,
LANCER '69 20' x 53' 2
bdnn, 2 oa'. bit-ins, ~/d,
wtr softener, two 7 x 5
storage 1heds, country club
$1695
LOWEST PRICES M FM rll('r 1st & Harbor) li>a1her. po1vf'r. New tires. 1964 Chevy '' Fa cl or 'N engine & trans, ags, . eng. Ex. cond. Nu paint. ---:--:-=---8m ~-c
-HIGHEST TRADES
l\1ust see. 642-4343 dys, $72.1 or Bei;t offer 548-3697 VOLVO .. ~ . ...,.~, 5J\.{)6{17 Snnla An11 Xlnt cond. Pvt ply. $3200. amper" Van, R/H, aulol
646-9115 aft 6, Ask for-i-.;;10;,,V\;;¥;-;A>d==,-,---DEMO SALE '70 Rivi£'ra, ICM1ded! A1t 1 ,,•,,.<>--;oc24;-75-c=~""',--,,~ :;;7~int~2 new $1100.
atmoaphett. Adults mobile RECREATION CENTER '69 12 4 SPYDER Lance venturer camper. e 144 Automatic &: Air power. Air. !-itC'reo. Am-Fm. '63 Sed. deVille-White w/blk -0-7.-~="·="""~~~~-I
' Lo mi. Like nev.'. Under Rrrl beauty! $ 4, 4 O O. leRlher Int. All extru. 1'.1inr • '57 CHEVY-Good, reliable
1"' .. °''•c..·'°'64.c>--0183"-'-"°•c..11cc"~'~· ~~ 1 ROY CARVER, Inc. 1969-912. Qirome v.·h\s, Am· warranty. $3250. 673-7008 • 1~2 Automatic &44-0ftO. cond . $750. s.MJ-6994 eves & transportation $125. c.au
d Fm radio. $4800. Orig .. 1.;;.,,.;;u-'o.::;0:'7':0-'':':':::C-,, e 144 4 Speed
S speed, radio, heater, roa owner. 83J....l5.3j, &14--0637 · VW Sqbk·Auto, i1unroof. e 1&1 Aulomatic BUICK '62 lnvicta Sta. Wa,i::.
1
_,_·k_rnl.c'c_,-;--;c;-;-::=--6-1~2437
lamPs. <ZKE357i eves. 11,300 ml. Like ll(!W, Best We Speeia.lize Jn 9 pass. air. lo n11'1, clean. CAMARO • . .,~v-AN=-v~-8~, -.-,to-. -St-,-"°-·' $1995 offer. 549-1004 .,,.,. '68 Porsche 912, M1-F:'>l, , O\·crseas Dt:livery """ or niake offer, Call panelled. louvered wlndoWL
NEW Mobile Home 20x52, 2 2925 Harbor Blvd.
BR, 2 ba. $12.SOO. Set up '-Costa Mesa 546-4444 lndscpd In Costa Mesa'1
Bill Jones' 1.Jags, Must r;ell . 64 V:V Bus, _xln't oond. 1500 832-S'm-I. "·s"'9°'c'"A_M_A_R_O_. -lt-k'_""_·_p_wr_S 1 -=M~I"='' '°=""=·,;l'c2tl95'-"'.-'64Ul<l.,=..=:..... 1 B I S rt C l * 54>-3.JOO * <ng>ne. $!01>. fleatt LemiA CADILLAC & B. •1' • FM. vinyl lop, "64 CHEVY Stn w.,.; new
GREENLEAF PARK. 1150 MUST aell '67 GMC %
Whittier Ave. T.P.U. ~ng, V...{i, 305-E,
MB-1698 * 645-2510 complete except alternator.
Vel')" gd cond, 26,000 mi'1. BEAtrr '71 Co Iden w,. s I 54!)..8(195, Costa Mesa
Aquarius, 1hag crpts, Full --~-----~ drps, 2 full baths, 2 BR &. '59 Chev pick-up, rebuilt
den, Mirrored waU in Jiv. engine. Utilco body \\'/lad-
rm. 536-6802 der rack. 2583 Santa Ana
• • po scar en 1---;.68ii8!9it12fPOPOiRiCSCDHttE0-1,,,.,,;;;-;;;"~&-04~:"30C,.,,..,,_ • hyd, lrani;, new &!eel radial eng, ttres, brakes. paint.
r.1AKE OFFER '64 VW Conv. Low mileage. VOLVO ·~ Cadillac 4 dr DeV1lle $3000 tires. BpOilers. One owner, 64a-4983, 675--0144
2833 Harbor at Adams 536-8302 Ex. cond. r.1ust Sell! Make • '65 ford Ltrt 4 dr $700. -"~"~"="="'=1"">,..21_9~1-___ The "Yellow Pages" of Costa Mesa offer. !162-1182 196C JlitI'bor, C.1.1. 646-9303 642 3024 ... cl w 540-4491 '62 PORSCHE 1600 S Autos No -. · Call M2--5oi8 Now! ass cd .,. &f2-5678
---------1 $1900 83.1-3258 , w 980 Autos, New 980 'A"u-=t"'os-,-;N;-;-ow---.....,9"'8'°'0 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980
~BlilD SPRITE -------·----'------'-;;,.;.;.;.,;;.,-. ...........;..;~:.:,.;.;.;,;:.._..;;:: Ave, Costa Mesa FURN. 8x34 trailer, nice .:..:====---~~ park. Space &:. utilities '62 Ford Ranchero. 20.000
under $60. mo. Ste 10 ap-mi on reblt eng .. $450. 175&1
preclate $2450. 548-1667 Santa Catalina, F!n Vly
ThlU SH 'fi.1 Sprite, new top, 4 new
tires, 35.000 miles, good
10x5.5 2 BR, partly furn 2 Auto Leasing 9'4 "FRIEDLANDER" cood. !125. Ml-9954 ev" & weekends iheds, lge patio, corner lot. -Jo' LEASE
Adlt park. &16-4079 IJ 7SO llACH ILYD. TOYOTA 24 mo's w/purchase option
Mo-;;;;to;;;';;H;;;;om;;;;o;;1;;;;;;;;;;;;9;;;40; I '67 Ford Squire wgn $69 mo .
• '69 Cad fl Dorado fJ.79 mo .
IHwy. Jtl
89l-T':i66 • 537.£824
FIATS NEW & Uled, all
models, parts and service:.
TOYOTA NEW '71
NO DOWN VACATION
HOMES
For Sale or Rent
Explorer ~Jotor Homes &:.
mini homes . Complrte
homPs on wheels that Ulke
you anywhere you wRnl to
RO in style & comfort.
BUY DIRECT & SAVE
New Explorer 18 1.i 10 26'
FROM $7995
+ tax & licrnse
E)l'.PLORER SALES CENTER
830 So. Harbor Blvd
Sarita An.1 7141839-8040
Trailers, Travel 945
16' Travel Trailer. Elec.
brakes, butane slave &:
oven. Ex. cone!. SlC'eps 6 &
has k>t1 ol room 11 nd storage
1pace. See lo Appreciate!
S800 with 14 x 14 enclosed
-~abana'."""" i150 .,. i t h o
962-7~
Trailart, Utility 947
4'x1'x24" B 0 X TRAlLER
UKE NEW! $l50 837-3370,
830-2621
.-------Eilfifpfci
'fM Pontiac Exec wgn S79 mo.
·10 F'n::I Galaxy 500, Sal mo.
'67 Cad fl Dorado, $115 mo .
Overseas Delivery,
C. BOB AUTREY l\10TORS
lSf.O Long Beach Blvd.
213-591-8721
PAYMENT-
$69.01 MONTH*
AND OTHERS
All cars w/AIR
SOUTH COAST
CAR LEASING
HILLMAN 36 moa. Def. pay prlce.
---.... ~----1 $2484.36 or cash prlce
300 W. Cst Hwy, NB 645-2182 '58 Hillm;i n Station Wagon. UXl.3.55 Incl. Tax & Lie
'61 Hillman Convertible. A.P.R, '14.54~. Serial No.
Both n~d eni;in<' v.·ork $75. 134341. LEASE a new '71 Pinto S50
mo. (36 mo.) open end.
RENT a new '71 Pinto Sol
day and .4c mile. Put a
little kick Jn your life.
THEODORE
ROBINS FORD
2l60 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 642-0010
Autos Wanted 968
WE PAY TOP
CASH
used ctll'I & true , ust
caU Us for free estimates.
GROTH CHEVROLET
548.-2318 "'On approved credit
JAGUAR Bill Maxey Toyota
18881 BEACH BL. 847·8555 l-,-71-J-AG_U_A_R -Y1_2_ 1HUNTINGTON BEACH
TOYOTA
DEMO SALE
$1777
1971 TOYOTA
Demo #9206. Low miles,
ance pvt. ply. Call 5'!0·3100 full fa ctory equipped.
#l£7.CJ627. 8 OTIIER DEi\10S ON SALE
Aulomauc. air cond., wsw,
TG. Pwr. St. dlr. 111u.st 1ell.
Under factory warranty.
Take older trade. Will fln.
'68 XKE 242 ----fleM-LeAViA Au!omatic, fact. air, dlr. TOYOTA
Waded .. own('r. Take older
trade or small rlown. \Viii 1966 Jfarbor C.M. &16-9303
finance pvt. ply, Ca 111~==='°" =._,==~ 540.3100 aft 10 am. 1968 TOYOTA CORONA As~s: ~~~:~er JAG XKE Cpe 50'.X> mi. avhd. 4 DR. SEO.
H'"tinglon Beach eng. cu!. int. FM must M"ll . MUST SELL
$1500 or best oHer 548.-6930 Beautiful rf'd finish v.·ith 2
S47.6087 KI 9-3331 --~===co----1 tone in11"nor. Auto trans ..
WE PAY TOP OOlLAR JENSEN Radio, Hearer, etc., Price
FOR TOP USED CARS ---------t Reduced. VTL200 $975. Jolin· u your car la extra clean, JENSEN k Son 2626 Harbor Blvd.,
... "' first. AUTIIORtZED Coilta Mesa, 540·5630. The Camper for liltle car1.
Hitch w('ight • 77 lb1. Jn. BAUER BUia< SALES ,'ti SERVJCE 1970 Toyota Corolla
credible. 21 tl long. height· 2M E. 17th St. 1200 Cpe.
6'4". 2 burnl"r 1rove. Sleeps Costa Mesa 548-1'165 SPORTY ECONOMY
2 Adult1 + 1 child with u.IPORTS WANTED Bright red finish w\th black
comfort . Can · dine Six. In-Orange Countln bucket IJNt.8, 4 .speed trans.,
de.pendent Jlghting .yslem. ,. TOP $ BUYER 3100 W Coa H Radio, }!eater. etc .• Prl<-"d
SeU contained w11!er. Am· BD.J..-MAXEY TOYOTA · II wy, for quick sale. 621.AKS. $1475 pl~ S!orag~ including hang· 18881 Beach Blvd. ,.,-,-:,-,N,-,ewport'7=c:""',-.,'=h.,..,,,..,..1 .Johnson k Son, 2626 Har.
up closet. Panor11mlr win-H Beach. Ph. 8474555 KARMANN GHIA bor Blvd., Costa Mesa,
dows. Buill·in levf'llng:, 4 "lutos, Imported 970 '5-1Qo.j6JO, additional Adulti1 can 1!<.'C.'p WOW! '69 Karmann --B~EST~-B-AR~G~AIN=s~-1
in optional add·a-room!ent. ALFA ROt.fEO Ghia-Supe_r dean. On I y COME SEE OUR
Has everything lhe biit one'• S1850. 6J>.5612 alt 6 pm SELECrlON OF
have and c.?an bP towed by ALF.A._Ro_m_eo __ 2_1,.ltJ-e--ro-,-tr LOTUS TOYOTAS
the small car. See It loday 1961 low mllu iood cond ---.,.-,"°'_,.,. ___ Jim $lemons Imports
., BAUER BUICK "'"" ........ """'"' LOTUS 140 w. Warner AUSTIN AtmlORIZED Santo Ana
234 £. 11th St. ------SALES &. SERVICE Open Ev••· & Sun.
Costa Mesa 548-T76S GOOD lransport~ S4Ml25 -----r• ~ economy car. Au1 tin 1961, 4 1968 Toyota Cornna...okpd,
AIR-research tur~tuuiier cyl, new tlteB. Rull$ great. FM, mag whl11, new e.n11: &:
Judson auptr ~ti 1 r r-e-r, $1~. ~1£91 e.ve.s 01 wknd& tlJ'H, Reblt 1mog. Fun to
L"'" "''''"' uch15. Sell " AUSTIN HEALEY '""'· !950. 64&-250J trade (()4076. 3100 W. Cout Jfwy, Call today -Sell !OnJOrm,•!
l,VW;;::B;,,U,;:S;_c,c.,.:.,"-;l::or:-;;'61,,.--o::r '61 He.a.ley 3000. Good con-.,....,...._N_•_,,w~'°-'~'-"'~"..cb_,_ Fast tt1Ult1 wilh a Olli y
later. 8t!11 otlt . ditlon;-nrbt fu~t ff-l'tll 11'8.!I ttsul~ itre 'u5t·• phone J>Uot-Claultl9d-Ad • ...DLU
•• 968-1210 • • "Hard" top, $8.iO. Sf!-.42l7 call llWAY -&tl-$~ direct 642-5678 -NOW! ---------·---
PRE VACATION SPECIAL
1971 COLONY
Crots co1111try rU. p.koqe
Power 1id1 window1, Colony P••k Sit·
lion W1gon, 429.4Y YI. Twin com•
fort lounge 1e1h, Non 1irh1 11ll emil·
1io., 1y1+1m, Cornering l1mp1. WSW
H·71•15 l elt•d Tir11, Tilt 1!1ering
wh••I. A11lom1lic. 1p1•d co,,lrot, 6·
w1y PWR 111+ dri~•• 1id1, R1clinin1,j
p111enger 1e1!, Center f1 c.ing •e •r •••h, Tinl1d gl111 • c.ompl•le, Lug·
9•g• c1rrier • w/1ir defl., C1rp1+1cl
lo•d floor. Ste tion w1gon P•dded/
l ock•ble 1id1 110,•9e compe1fm1nt,
Power doo: loc•1, .A ulom•lic t1mp1r1•
lu1 e conhal. AM r•dia ..,/il1r10 l•pe
1y1., lnt1rv1I ..,;~d1hi1ld wiptri. OU(
111! I FRT. 1hould1r b,!11, Appear·
•nce pr11tection 9roup, R1m11i1 GTL
lift h•nd ml11ar.
PARK STATION WAGON
The Ultimate in Stations 1
'515611'
DISCOUNT
$1077
FltOM WINDOW $T1Ckllt Pit/Cl
~JOHNSON & SON .
1 Mila South of San Diego Freeway
Lincoln Continental e Mark IJI e Mercury e Cougar
2626 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 540·5630 642-0981
..
. '
U DAILY PILOT
AulOI !of Sale l§J I Auto1 for Salt l§J I 1§1 I._· ... _ .. _ ... __.1§1 1 ~1 ---·-;;:l~§l I .• , ......... l§J .._I .,._ .... _ .. ___,l§l
990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, UMd ...... 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, I.I.sod 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 AutOI, UMd 990 Autos, UHd 990
CONTINENTAL -CHEVROLET CHEVROLET ------PONTIAC PONTIAC CONTINENTAL COUGAR FORD MUSTANG
-:SA~L;-;E:-zOR::-;T::::R-::AO~'E
1961 ~v. 4 dr. J111~a 283
~Jll., .Auto • Power -RAJI -
Fair rubb _ New batt. $200.
or trade f,or P/U truck, pink
for Pink, st~21-12 att 6 PM,
01 Sat&. Sun.
CONTINENTAL MKlll 1970 MARK Ill 1967 Cougar L ~w e!ill!._
valves. tune-up, R/H , air,
factory tape, extras. Exct>I
l'Ond. $1 ·195, 545-6974
1970-FORD L TO
4 OR. SEO. '67 MUSTANO--;--'" POHTIAc:-GTO "1'6NTl·A!Hl'i'&.-d«n:
'65 Belair, P/S, P/8, fac
air, New tires, 1 O\\'llel',
Very clean. $750. 847-2.'i2J
'62 CREVrJl\tP.ALA
ls1 $150 eash takes it. * Call 64~ lit
CONTINENTAL
TO SETTLE ESTATE
'63 Continental Executive se-
dan. Air c_•ond, full power.
612-8119.
if.000 CfNE OWNER MTLES 50,lix> mi, S yr "'a1-ranty
Striking pastel blue finish Elepnt blue, "'bite Broug.
\Vith polar white leather in· ham um. blUe lealher 1ntt>r-
terlor & landau roof. Lux-1or. 1-::Very d<'tu.xc exira,
ury equ ipped throughout. incl liletw l'adio & tape
.Full power, air cond., power deck, ?.Uchclin 5leel-bt'ltl'd
door locks, till stttring tires. For sale by 011,ncr.
\Vhecl, radio, with stereo 64.2-11119
REFLECTS
FORD
EXCEi I .ENT CARE
BeautifUI one owner trade ln,
Dark Jvy Metallic finish
STATION WAGONS with matching:· landau root
'68 Ford. Air a uto., PS, PB-Ivy gold Interior. AulO.
$199a. trans .. RadiO, heater, po1v-
'ti9 Cowllry Squl1·e. Power, er 11teering, power brakes.
alr, l'lltk, 10 pass., elc. -l"ac101-y air. etc. Seto and
$319j, drive to 11pprecia1c. 37acQS
Po\\·er steerlJll A brakn, P RICED AT WHOLESALE pv•r. st~r. &. br akes.
auto 1rans, air cond. Low Beau!lfQI. Lime' .lroJt metallic Automalic.
mileage, excellent cond. Unlsh witttba.thlonizing Lan-$575, .Call: 675-2723
$1395 dau & interior. Auto trans., RAMBLER :
radio, heal., pow._ slet""r., I ·----------1 Harbor American
• ~4~0161
19 6\l ... ARBOR COSTA Mf~A
pow. brakes, air cond., etc.
Excellent condition l.hrough·
out.~ & drive today, XTG·
913. S2175. Johnson & Son,
62 RAi\1BLER S;ta. Wag. $300
~·actory Air. P/S -P/B,
Towing hllch. 64!-8582.
'62 4-dr In1pala, Xlnl concl,
Clean, !\lust u-e. $495 or
best offer. 540-59.l.1
"66 Continental, all
Xlnt. <-'Oncl. One
SllOO. 49!1-J9.\5
rxtra~.
0\\'11er.
H1pc system elc. J\lalnta!ned ''·~ro~cco-.,c,.cl.c2coc,-.'ro,c,1cly-,-.,,-.,-,-t.
like ncv•. Balancl' of factory BalanCf! of 11ew \Van·nn!y
"'a1Tanty available. &-e & fransferabJe. $.)095, 6~5-jJ91
'Gl Mustang V-3
llard!op. 3 .!!pd. t.11NT
5'19-3666
S715. 2626 Harbor Blvd., Costa T-BIRD
Mcu. 540-5630 I ~~~!!'~ii!~~~! I
Autoa, New 980 Autos, New 980
drive today. 964AGO. J ohn-
llQtl & Son, 2626 Harbor
Blvd., Costa l't1esa. 5-10-5630
ANNUAL
SPRING SALE
1971 CADILLACS ARRIVING DAILY
BUY OR LEASE YOURS TODAY
Complete selection of models, colors, & exteriors
1971 Sedan de Ville
FACTORY
EXECUT IVE CAR
wi1h leu lhan
only
$7222 CADILLAC 6700 LOCAL MILES Full Pri ce
FULLY EQUIPPED WITH £V£RY D£LUX£ CADILLAC EXTRA
FACTOltY Atll. C:OND!T10NING, FUll POWEii. INCLUOING DUAL COMFORT SPLIT FRONT SEAT. TIL l & TELES.COP I( STEERING WllEEL, 00011. l..OCKS, CRUISE CONTROL, TRU .. K OPENEI(, LIGHT SENTINAL AUTO DIMMER, REAR Wl/<IOOW DEFOGGER, LIGHT MONITOR SYSTEM, RIGHT & LEFT Rt MOTE CONTROL MJllROlt, STEREO AM-FM MULT IPLEX WITH STEREO TAPE.
llEAUTIFUl Ft1n:M1sr F!NtSl'l WITH FULL LEATHER INTERIOl'l, tSER :Wtl) ----------------------------------• Sed. De Villes • • El Dorados • • Cpe. De Villes • ----------1970 CP£. 0£ VILLE
l'ACTOllY A11t CONDITIONING
Vin"' NdcSed too, !1111 lutt..r "'"
'1.1tlor, •II -•r •1•11 11\cl. Ill! & ltlt KQPic l!Htl~g, ct_. 10(11.i, ... ' ... "''"· ••c. \/ • r • ·-inl!t a1>1 • m to c-.. ·~· 11111~!.
Spring Special
1967 SEDAN OeVILLE 1967 CPE. DE VILLE
F.,CTOlllY 111111 CONO!TtONIN4 Gor..-..,,DllW llOld Onl11>
"'' ~ lu~IH'ious oolcl lrllTCfl•., ·-tt1ry '"'"'le•. J:vll -•· 111 & 1.ltKfPlc 1IH<lrlg, l'efH -lflOl1 •II ....,._ c.tillao: t.drn.
FACT~Y .. Ill CONOITIONING LE THAN lS.000 MILES ""'' -·· ••• ·-·-• lult.t ln!1tlcl•. T Mt & i.IH.C~ ::::,:;-,.~1i\lm1. m..i .. , IUWlCMI • Spring Special Spring Special
1966 S£0AN OeVILL[ 1966 CPE. DE VILLE
FACTORY "-111 COMOIT!ONINV F•CTOlllY Alll COtt~TIONING fUl..L LEATHER I TEJt!OR FUlL LE .. TlfER INTERIOR
Vlf!VI Nclclecl -h.tt -r .... ti..,., AM·FM rtdlt. r1dl1I t!r"'
& _., """'r delll•• tlllrn. SM .. -Kltll . 1$1,.YIDSI
Vlnvl NCtded !<op,. 1111 & lelnc:DC>lc s'"•lft9, 111 .-•lblt llO-irtr••• AM-FM del\O"" , ... lo, & rnudl mar1. (!.JYmlil .
$2333
1968 CPE. D£ VILL£
$2111
1971 El Dorado 1968 SEO. OE VILLE
1'A.Cl0JtY All' CONOITION!NG
\,flftvl lie-loo. 1>lu11! c!ol~ & le•thf• Inter., 11111 -• & 1 !loll ol ot ... r Clelll•I •!ti!, 199SAC"'l-
FAClOJtY lllJt CONOITIONI N~ VinYI ol<lded TOI>. lvll PO-r, !IT & l•lnc~ Jtffl"1"9, claor llCU.
IM/l'M 1t..-«1 muuii=:"· .~.._
$3222
• Convertibl es •
1969 CONV£RTIBLE
FA.ClOltY .. 1111 CONDI TIONING 8011111/ul s.i.n1sh 5llve• ll~l•h w/ bll(k '"' & 11111 ft<I leUl\f'r Inter Full -r. till I. ltleOC:OO>C 1tH<l1111, door lock\ crulH con-t rol, •lllo d l.....,tr, !tunk _.,..,, du•I control comtort Iron! ... n.
etc .• t1t. "--lll•IY l<Ml~I & ""'' 11•1 ,,,. ""v It ltf! ""' •hOwroom "-· (YCLC.I
$4555
1968 CONVERTIBLE
TREMENDOUS
SAVINGS
1971 CPE. DE VILLES
Sd. DeVilles, Brough'ms
5Ell:VICED a. lllEADY FOlll
IMMED IATE DELIVERY
1969 El DORADO
F .. CTOll:Y A.!Jt CONDITIONING. BEAUTIFUL 8lt1AlllWOOO WI!~ e>11Cldfod toe & full teat~• In
ttrlor. m.o11 evff'Y DOHlble -· & Clelu•• te•!u~ Clcllll1>e m•tt'l-
Ed•eme!y low mil-I. new rl• dial "'"· (ZUllSS)
1969 [L DORADO
-
IU1fly _._ !Wiit I.
$3222
1969 CPE. DE VILLE
FACTOlllY AIJt CONOITION!WG
Fvll -•· ~1""1 J90· AM-f-M. IMI & lelncDOlc -i..o. cloor :.:i1~: ~-· \~Ou:O:~ -
$4666
• Fleetwoods • -----------1968 BROUGHA.M
FA<TOlllY ... CONO!l IONtNG 8<•otnt1k0Rg llfo>QUI: t>Olcl w\111 r~1~~.::. iu~r= ~r.
clDor lockL crvl" con!tol, "" & f~lfKD91c; •lftflr>O, •!tfH & -w~w 11rn. v,,.. -mu-. IVGY.itl
Spring Special
1969 BROUGHAM
F .. C10111Y .. !Ill CONOITION!NG E•qultltt cllallc;t oolcl ...+Ill l>lttk _.,, I® & bffvtllvl !~Ml1fi & lo~tMr IMt rlor. All r:,-r ,,_.. 1urf1, ll>CI. cl()Of loc , '1t<t•>. cruli.e tontro1, tilt & !elttcopic: stoerlnr,· etc. Atnolultlv ,,.,.,.,_
•OOm 'Ill\ lnoiO. & OU! & .......,.,
Yt'V ·-ml!u. (Y)(V5ll) Spring Special -----------
JUST A FEW EXAMPLES; CHOOSE FROM ORANGE COUNTY'S
1---11----LARGEST SELK-HON-OF QUALITY CADILLACS
SELECT TRADE-INS
----------------------------------
e Buick '70 GS455'C'-pe::--. --;e,,-JA"G~'"6'6"X;;;KE"C"P"°L---.=-vw=-"'7"07Su"o"m=o1""e~us-
L"""'1ov1 5-" MO!o Ermine JIJ'T '16.QOCI l.'llf5 LE5S TMi\N 11AOD MIL£$ wllll• w}tllOCk vinvl top & vtnv1 1!111utllul 8 "1111\ Wl\Hr "'btlOCk l!le•ut!lul 1-lont llnlll'o wl"" Oelu•r Inter. 1"1(1. 111 t-"lie'<•.. 1<11n.,. ll•avounl:l .,M·FM roc1'c!.. in1..,1or. • t.Pfed lr.,..,,.,lulon, ••· l ilt Wflftl, Cl\•--rt wl!ff!l. ~ 1Dftd, cllrDme wlro WM•I•. ••· d•o. tic•!•• & lruty lm....cul•lt Loul to '"I. CIUllFS/ 0111 1;re1. Min! <-. iltl!Y14.ll lntl<lt & out. 14HA'f'9).
• Continental '67 Sedan
Fo\CTOJt'f' 411P CONDITIONING f-ull -r Ollll•"• I. vln•I PM!· OCd TOO. !ult !ff I Mr ln!11IDf, 1 llt
11ttr!no. ICIC.ll low m llt.o...., oem
lhll'• r11U~ a lr\lt '"""' Pul!I SM todltYI fVEll991l
• CAO. '65 4-dr. Hardlop
f.O.(TO"Y .,,It COHOITIONING
Full l>QWOt. (!ol~ I. M:&TM<" lnT..-1-or, "-M·l'M radio, et<. lH,,.,UJl/J,
$995
• Olds. '69 luxury Sed.
FACTOlt'f' Al lll CONOITIONIN(. Full _, t'111111mtnl Incl. 1111 't•••lno wt.eel, 11c•ol"I' !ltreo 141DI, MO$! Ill cleh"f OO!!on•. Mvs1 b. \.e<ln & drl...., t• "'9'K~ 110. !Y JOCWl.
• VW '69 SQUAREBACK e Buick '66 Wildcat Cpe. e Buick '69 Electra "225" JllSI !Urfled '10.000 m+lo• & l~I n~t ..... • tDHG.. ''°'"· l\ffT.,.. c..,.tom -Jn w11.,11 fl(>Wff. L11•urlo1K •·dr. l\lrdlt11 wr•111 .. ~-"""' w1w l!rts. $n le -· FACTORY i\1111 CONOIH·OHING I'd" trim, Ftd. 41lr c-.. lull fYC¥.12tl. Vinyl too, I ulo, lr1n1. lllacl., hlr, pew.,., v!nvl tt11. Alt OPllon!. 1 -----------~·~··"·"'"··~·~ll'!:..!_T_!:U~~lc• ___ .OCYDOIJ!_Noer new ltlr~t.
•
All Sales Prices Effective Until Monday, May 17th, 1971
NABERS
CADILLAC
•
Authori zed Cadillac Dealer Servicing lhe Orange (oonly Harbor Are•
2600 HARBOR BL VD., IN COSTA MESA
CALL 540-9100 OPEN EVES. & SUNDAY
I
CORVAIR
'6:> Corviur l\1om:a rebuilt
engine, good cond. $37:-i.
968-841:;
CORVETIE
'58 CORVETTE
Hardtop . .f gpc1_ RW w/ Blk
Stripes, 327 V8, OYr1·haUll'd
by i\larcu5 ).loto~. (JUZ;1701
$1045
?/t4.wa,~
2100 Harbor Blvd. 6Jj·0 166
'f,6 Corvc11e co11v. Rral
cl<"an. Good 4')nd. Li1\V n1iL
SCXXJ. 4~. 4!lil-6175
'63 Corvair Spyder • good
condition, -4 spd. htust sell!
E'·e~. &12-68.12
COUGAR
'69 King!WOOCI 3 :.eat. Pqi-.·ec, $Jlj(l, Johnson & Son, 2626
air, auto., elc. -$279:>. !!arbor Blvd., Costa Mesa.
'68 Country Sedan 10 pass. 540-5630
Factory air, power' rack, '69 TORINO Squire \Vllgtln,
22,000 ml., etc. -S2°295. Perfect cond, Hi,000 mi'5,
Mac Howard Le•sing R/H, PI S, P/B & disc
<Corner 1st & Harbor) brks, Air eoncl, S2450,
839-9600 531-0607 Santa Ana 5-15-3666.
'66 Brpnco, 4 \\'hl dr, hdlp, 1967 FORD Country Squire
overdrive, locking bubs, Iii\'· air eond. PS PB. Good
1ng-a1vay spare, 35,000 ml, polygla5s tires. Only 52.0CIO
brand new street titt1 & miles. \V e 11 maln).ained,
u·hls, plus 5 xtra oft the Rd. clean. $1000 557-3111
tires & whls. S2'150. Also I c=~~-------1968 Ford wagon, \Va.iTanty avail matrhing 4' x 7' x 2~" Michelin tireli, ne1v brakes,
box trl r. Sllo.3370: Art 5 pm 830-2621 auto trarus, 390 eng. Sl,600.
540.008>
'69 FORD SUPER VAN E-300 123" \thcd . base. VS, '57 Ford Wag. $100 5~8-439S eves. au1on1c.lic lrnn.~.. radio,
healer ('!C'.
• $2495
Mac Howard Leasing
(Corner 1st & Barbor)
839.9600 531-0607 Santa Ana
JEEPS
"68 JEEP CJ-5. VS, convl
lop, wnrn hub~. radio. Good
cond. S20j{l. 675-3971.
'ti7 1''0RD Ga.laxle gl'cen.
'67 Cougar, 1\hi!e, l lovin~ I 2 dr, blk vinyl top &
O\\'!Jer. Auto Iran~. PIS, upholstl!l'y. Cati before 11 or
1964 SCOUT conv.
drive, $850.
!).19-1582
4 whee l
R&A. ~rp Sl-19;). 61..l-1U5 after 8. 642~165 MUSTANG
'65 ~1ui~ faslhack-6 cyl, 3 ,,,...,
$695 •••
'65 convertible-Lo mi . Ex-,
ceplionally clun. ' 9 5 O.
673-2065
'66 Mustang, Ai\t I 1'"~1 .
4-spd, ~le., $895. S519 E.
C0&sl Jhi.'Y. 9-S "'eekdays.
'65 l\1usl. Conv. 289 4 5pd
w/air cond, 1\t.1<eo $700 &:
mags. 830-6709
'65 MUSTANG 6 cyl, new 3
spd trans. New paint. $62.'.i.
or best offer 646-1912
OLDSMOBILE . .
'67 DELTA '88'
Full power. Air Conditioning.
dlr. TRF087. Must sell. Will
tai<e trade" or llnance. call
494.-TI4.f.
* * 1967 OLDS 442.
convt. Auto . $1395.
Call &15-45.'ll
·PONTIAC
Blue
• '70 COUGAR·18.000 mi, '63 Ford station \l'agon-Auto, 1 ·--------,..--
ne1v tires. Pvt ply, :\tu.st P/s, Runs good. $375. 1969 Mustang Fastbk: '69 GTO Judge."_. speed, very
sell. hlake offer. 67j..1\36 96&-2927 $1895. "** 830-22-13 good condition. $ZDJ·or best
~1e·11 help you sell! &12-5678 For best results~ 642-5618 DAILY PILOT for action! oUer. 548-0013
'65 PONTIAC. GTO I I
Automatic,.radioani:l heater ERIBA PUCK.
vlnyJ lop, ·~ <0nditiomng:
YVXI43
$2488
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
2-180 Harbor mvd. al Fair-or.
Costa :l\fesa 540-8017
1969 PONTIAC
GRANO PRIX
1o1UST SELL
Attractive lime frost finish
with Black interior. Eguip.
ped. with Auto Trans. Ra.
dlo, Heater, Po"·cr S!ee1··
ing, Power Brakes, Power
\Vindows, A beautiful Car th~hout. Sho11•s goo d
care. YER897. $2915 . .h>hn·
fiDn & Son. 2626 Harbor
Blvd •• Costa i\1csa, 540-5630.
'61i Ponlic.c Ler.1ans-R&M,
Pis, Beaulitul cond, $895.
673.-4132
'68 Pontiac Firebird 400, air,
\\'arranty, Xln't. ~Just sell.
6-12-9982.
The Camper for li1Ue can.
Hitch Wt!ight -11 lbs. ln-
C'1-edlble, 11 f1 long, height ·
6';l". 2 bw-ncr .11tove. Sleeps
2 Adulti; + 1 child with
con1f'Or1. Can dine Six. In·
dependent lighting system.
Self contained \l'ater. Am·
pte Storage including hang-
up closet. J:'anoraruic wln-
do11·$. Built-in leveling. 4
additional Adult.a can sleep
in optional add-a-roomtent.
Has evcrythi_ng lhc big one'!i
hutle arid can be towed by
the srnall car. See Ir today
" BAUER BUICK
23~ E. 171h S\.
Cos!u i\lesa 54&-7763
'56 T-Bird. 51,000 mi. l
01vner. All ~:..:tras. Xlnt
eond. $1800. 644-MlS
'63 T-Bird, Hu all power,
Fae air, $·195. 4521 Fairfield
Dr, Corona de! ~tar.
Jlousc Jlun!lng! Waldl the
OPEN HOUSE column.
Autos, New 980 I Autos, New 980 Autos, N•w 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New
FULL
PRICE
1968 FORD TORINO
2 DR. FASTBACK H.T •. . -~-heoler wh11ewol\s, V-& power 51eenng, ruu10. • Tod~y'$ best bargain. 330A.00
4 SPEED .
$1195 FULL
PRICE
1966 FORD T-BIRD
2 DR. H.T.
1 oil' tondi1ioning. full
V-8, outo .. trons., oc~ewa\l tires, vinyl rool. power. rGd10, heater. 1
t\eon os 11 pin.
FULL
PRICE
1969 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL 4 DOOR SEDAN
toctorY air condi~· tun Y-8, auto •. tronS--whitewoll tires. vtnyl roof.
power. rodio, heater, · a's No. 1 Lulurt tin1ed gloss, wheel coven. Ament
car.JTP490
1969 PONTIAC _ _,__1_9.6_7 ~D~~~-E ~ --~~ 2 DOOR"°"' ·•· •·otor ""';.;;;ill 1"" LeMani "-n. ~ • V-8. oulo.. wons., r111rio. ""' . 'Runs Vf/l'f w1l1. wer stetring, rodio, heo1tr, whttl covers. CleGO 01 ° pin. V-&. oulo. Irons .. ~ I Y low mileogt ~ UDT•73 whitewo\I tires. vifrfl roo · lf'f
Runs like ntw. XWl609
I
FULL
PRICE
FULL
PRICE
1966 LINCOLN
4DOOR SEDAN
trans factory oif tondi1ianing. lull
V-8. out~:~-~ter whit1won tires, for the
power, 1wl01 • • "'''' . •·•--'I beat this one. prKS YClll r uii•
1968 PONlJAC GTO
2 DOOR H.T.
V-8, CMJlo. trons., 4 ~eed, radio, heo1er Low
mileage, Runs like new. XOM344
1966 MERCURY
MONTCLAIR 4 Dr. Sedan
v-t,.oito. lfans....~~'°'~'>;'·~--·
heater, whilewoll ti~es, w_he1I co;::s
t leon os o pin. test fiivt 1his one I y.
VXR'112
s595
,
~ FULL ,;: .
PRICI '
l