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1971-05-21 - Orange Coast Pilot
e-a ·ase, DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * FRIDAY Al'TERNOON,,MAY.f r, a97 1 1 UP'I Ttlt•llol9 WOULD-BE JUMPER Dll:NIEL CLIFFORD SAVED 'Fin 1nci1I Problems' Blamed for Flirtation With D11th Father Scale s Golden Gate For Death Di~e SAN FRANCISCO IUPll -An agile father. despondent over '"finanncial pro- blems." scampered up a Golden ..-Gate Bridge cable Thursday and dangled from a perch 746 feet above the ba y for more than an hour. Daniel Clifford. 31 .. p e rformed 11cro'batics on sa fetY cables, hurled a 11afety belt into ~an Frarrcisco ·Bay and threatened to jump ~for~ t hr e e steclv.·orkers and a highway pairolman crawled out on the main support cable and talked him dow'n. Bridge of!iciali said he ''Was the th ird 1>0tential suicide talked out of le aping off the orange span ' during 'the day. More than 400 persons have jumped to· ttreir deaths from the bridge in the paSt 34 years. • The bearded, long-haired Clifford, Who mana ges an apartment complcx.~to1d newsmen he had been ha ving "financial problems.'' ' "Get my wife and child," he said as he emerged from an elevator inside the 526- foot south tower with tears in his eyes. Clilford was taken to l\.1t. Zion mOOJcal center for psychological observation, Cllfford. who was wearing jeans, intake!'! and a yellow windbreaker bi· cycled to the middle ol the bridge ht the early afternoon, parked his bike and clambCred up one of the four.foot dlame· ter suspension ca bles. , :~ • • I I ., He used handrails flanking the cable lo reach the top of.the tower. A traffic jam !Set BRIDGE, Pa1e I) U .. ITe ........ ' WORKERS TO RESCUE Busy Dey on G1t1 - • / s o ice on. I • ~ras es 1n esa Raramour Grilled, • Arrested By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 t1!t 0.llt' Plttt Slaff Test& on the body or a youni mother found dead, her crying baby Jn the bed beside her at a Balboa apartment, Thurs-. day Jed Newport Beach police to formally book her paramoar on suspicion of murder. Strangulation was listed by authoritiet iis lhe tentative cause of death of Mrs. Susan Lane C<lnstant, 21, whose mother had begged her five days tarlier to move back ta Anaheim. Questioned throughout the 1fttmoon about the case, John J . "Skip" Biegun, 21, who shared the residence at 4!.1 E. Bay Avt., was booked at 5 p.m. on the murder charge. A complaint was being sought today from lht Orange C.ounty Di.strict At- torney. Biegun, dispatcher for his fath er'• 1ecurity patrol service in Diamond Bar, was already in custody Thursday when Mrs. Constant wa1 found dead. . . . I • • DAILY 'It.OT Sltrf 1'111t1 Her 16-rnonth~ld son was crying beside the body In the Sea Level Apartments when discovered by the suspect's cider !See MURDER, P1ge 21 STOLEN CAR Ill HANDS OF TEENAGER HALTED BY GAS' PUMP IN COSTA MESA Acro11 the County, OV1r the Dips ind Into the H1rid1 of Authorlti11 Cost · of Living Takes Increase Of .3 Percent Boy Crashes in Mesa After Wild Car Chase WASHINGTON IUPI) -The cost ol llvjng rose to Americans 0.3 percent In Streaking straight down a cross<0un- April. equaling the sharpest one-month try thoroughfare, a Glendale teenager in advance this year, the Labor Department a stolen car led Jiwmen on a 15-mile, reported today. Higher prices for food and clothing were largely blamed. high speed chase early today. before he While the rise in the consumer price In· hit a dip in Costa Mesa, went airborne dei: was the biggest since a similar in-and crashed. crease In January, it was well below the Miraculously, no one was Injured in the pace cf 1970 when the nation was in the: 90 mileperhour pursuit lhrou..S: scores of grips of the worst lnf1ation since the 5" Korean War. • major intersections, ending at 17th Street Food price. increased by O.t percent and Santa An a Avenue. last month. H the advance continued at The 15-year-old suspect lied on foot but that rate for 1 full year, the annual food increase would be almost 12 percent. was captured by California Highway meaning that a typical food Item costing Patrol officers in the 300 block of Ogle $1 last month would cost $1.11 by next Street after an intensive search. sprin""=~~=~~-~~~--..;B<iy.Mthe; time the spectacular purBUit The cost of c othing Increased 0.4 per-e , a~Ulelt-O:le.rrtar,fltus a cent last month. led by 1 jump of o.a ptr-vehicle parked In 1 te.rvice station at the cent in men's and boy's apparel. end of the line were wrecked and one Women'• and girl's clothing lncreased 0.3 CHP car was out of commission percent. A telephone Pole was sheared off above The government's gauge of consumer ground level and gasoline pups -capable prlcts stood In April at 120.2 percent o( of creating a b\aiing Inferno -were bent the 1N7 average, up from 119.8 percent in and mangled but failed to ignite. Marett 'I'htlt meant It cost $12.02 to buy C;alifornla.Highway Patrol oUicera Ken th e same goods and services that $10 Dally and Walt Swlckla, first r::potted the brought in 1967. car IOtlthbound on the SMta Ana ... The April inder was 4.3 percent above Freeway, according to lnveatigators. {See COSTS, P11e Z) NoUcbJe 1 f1llure to yle.ld violation, -• • they attempted lo atop the. car -not knowing It was .stolen -and tjte the' driver. · "He pulled off. on Red Hill -then he'. put his foot Into it," said one CHP oflicer. Radioing for help, the ,pair began the chase that Involved running re,d lights at 90 miles per hour, at times ID 3S mile·per- hour zones. C.osta Mesa police and the helicopter Eagle Two joined the pwrsuit. at the city's northeasterly city limita. The youth ran 11 stop signs or traffie lights between Palisades Road ,ind Ogle Street alone, slowing to about 75 mile> -per:hour-t>efore he htt-the fateful' dip. - Hi! stolen car hurUed Into the telephone pole, service station 1tnd' park- ed car, but he still managed to hit the ground on the run , according to ,a wit-' nes.s .-- Rich Button. 18. of 304 Morning Star Lane, Newport Beach, told of!ictrs the suspect ran eastbound behind the station. Police sald CHP orflcer1 Jim Guysl and A~el Mitthof finally apprehended the youth hiding behind 368 Ogle St., and look him to Orange County Juvenile Hall. ' ' Mariner Readied. WASHINGTON (AP) :_•Tho NaUdnll Aeronautics and Space Administration 1aid Thursday it hopes to laurich the next 'Mariner rocke1 to Man before June &. The agency said · a. firm date ' must await compleUon ·Of wo~k. tesb and reviews of the 'Ma)Li Mariner failure. Weatlaier · Driizly m·omh18! · ind partIY clearing afternoons are Lhe pros- pect for the weekend along the Or- ange Coast. Temperatures are dut to dip into the upper 605. INSIDE TODAY SeltcUd 1001k.s of ~oung art- Uti, kindtrgarttn through high 1chqgl,_ '¥'' beino exhibited through May -in Souor Coaae- Plaza. Tht show i& ferUurtd in todcy'1 Weekender. • 2 UAll. V Pll.O I • P anel Ol(s Full ABM, CSA Funds WASHINGTON !UPI) -Th• House Armed Services Committee Thursday authorized $357.2 million for the Pen- tagon's controversial OA transport pro- ject and a full $1 bUUon for Prtsident Nixon's Safeguard Antiballistic Missile System. In approving a $21.8 billion military p-ocurement bill, the committee a I a o dealt serious setbacks to two army pro- jects -the Cheyenne Helicopter which It left without any money and the main bat· Ue tank, for wbich it approved anly research and development funds. Rep. Ot1s Pike, (D-N.Y.), one of the four committee members who voted against the bill, said all the CSA money was the result of contract cost overruns, which has plagued the government's con- tract with Lockheed Aircraft Corp. A committee spokesman, however, said the $357.2 million wouJd pennit Lookheed to fullfil Its abligation to build 81 'Of the giant transports. In addiUon to the Safeguard and the CSA. the committee authorized $370.3 million for the Bl bomber, a swing-wing supersonic jet the Air For~ wants as a suceessor to the B52 when the older planes are retired in 1980. The procurement bill only authorizes the expenditures. Actual funds wlll have to be appropriated later in separate legislation. The $1 billion for the ABM systems in- cluded $627 million for procurement and the rest for research and development. But the committee knocked out $13.2 million in procurement funds for the fast, maneuverable CheyeMe helicopter wh ich had been described as tbe Army's highest priority item. It also is built by Lockheed. Although no funds were set aside, the committee did not kill the Cheyenne pr<r jed. It left !he way open for the Army to aeek i modified program later. From Page I COSTS .•. April. 1970, representing the smallest over-the-year .change since the August, 1967, to August, 1968. Last year, monthly increases averaged close to 0.5 percent The increases in food and clothing prices were partially ollset by declines in home mortgage interest rates and the price of gasoline. New car prices: declined -normal for this time of the year -but med car _,Prices tncnased. The average purcbuing power af workers increaaed 1llgbtly as a result of a 2 cent increi.se in average hourly earn- ings. Gross weekly earnings of production and nonsupervisory workers averaged $124.75, up 73 cents from March, although the average work week was unchanged. After adjusbnents for price increases, purchasing power increased by 0.3 per- cent. Girl, 3, Saves Family in Fire A little Santa Ana girl got up early Thursday morning to get a glass of water. Authorities said her thirst pr<r . bably saved the lives of her mother and older si!ter. Cynthia Medina, 3, daughter oC Mrs, Ida Medina, 809 E. Santa Ana Blvd., San- ta Ana, found the house filled with smoke and the kitchen afire when she got up. She awakened her mother and sister Michelle, 4, and all escaped. The cause of the lire has nol been determined. DAILY PILOT • OIVJll~I COMT PUILIS111HG COMPANY l•lt•rt N. w .. 4 Pr•!M'lf .-l'llMlll'lw J ee\: R. Curley Vitt Pt91f""' ..... 0--el ~ Th•••• ){,.,ii .... llr.•111•1. A. M1u plr.l111• "''""r"' u1,.- Cli1r1,, H. L .. , l:iclieti P. 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UJS "'°""'''" . Frl~a.l\ MM 211971 • OAll.Y PILOT Sltll l'lltt. One Will Reign Drug Overdose M~n .Gouges OIJt Eyes • Ill BALTlf.'IORE (UPI) -Charles Jnnis Jr., 25, the son or a prominent MassachuseUs politician. took a n overdose of an animal tranquilizer and. pulled hls eyeballs from their sockets Thursday in the city hall , police said. Frenzy pain and very depressed. Lawrence Overby, turnkey at the Cen· tral District police lockup. said ht check· ed Innis' cell early Thursday because in- mates in lhe section had been making noise. ·:ne had taken his eyes out," Overby said. "His eyes ~'ere sitting on h.is cheeks and be was squeezing them v.·ilh his fingers." Mi ss Shea·s landlady \11atched police arrest the naked young man Wednesday night. She said "he \Vas holding onto the polic eman like a child afraid. It y:as pitiful:" · These eight princesses 'vill represent various shop- ping districts throughout M!wport Beach during tile chamber of commerce's Hawaii Week May 24-30. One will be ·crowned queen. From left are Karen Jackson, Westcliff; Wendy Hurst, Bayside; Patty Peters, Corona de! Mar; Judy Tingum, Easlblull; Robin Schreck, Balboa Island; Janice Cari-ton , Bal· boa Peninsula; Charlotte Brantley, Lido1 and Ingrid Davies, Fashion Island. Innis underwent three hours of surgery Thursday night to repair muscle tissue· and avoid removal of the eyes. An official at Maryland State Hospital issued a statement ·which said Innis ''had no light perception in either eye prior to surgery and the pessibllity be will ever have light perception ls extremely poor." The official refused tO say v.·hat the chances were for restoring sight. He said there was no way to determine U Jnnis wouJd be blind until bis bandages were removed at an undetermined date. Police Slid Innis was taken to Mercy Hospital. Doctors examined hlm, said he sbould .have psychiatric treatment1 but gave him no medication. , "Mercy Hospital said be w~ on some kind (If drug, he should be taken back to the station, and it would wear off " 1aid Police U. Andrew Arnold, nig:hi shift commander. Lorr Garners Support For 'Operation Alert' Laguna Beach Councilman Edward Lorr lhi! week succeeded in extracting a 3.2 city council endorsement of "Opera- tion Alert." a four.day Anaheim seminar to disseminate Information on the tactics of alleged subversive and militant organizations in the U.S. Lorr had atempted al the last council meeeting to obtain a e-0unci l resolution endorsing the program and urging citizelr! to altend when fellow councilmen complained th.at a single newspaper arti- cle was not sufficient to inform them of the nature of the ·meeting, This week, as a five-hour council 11ession drew to a close half an hour after midnight, the councilman a g a i n presented bis resolution, this time backed with copies of several ne"'·spaper stories on the "Cold War College.': Councilman Charlton Boyd said he still found the material "inadequate.'' Coun· cilman Roy Holm said after reading the stories he found ··some participants whose integrity 1 would not question and some I would question" but added he did Svetlana Stalin Has Bab y Girl In San Rafael SAN RAFAEL (AP) -Svetlana Peters, the daughter of late Russian premier Josef Stalin, gave birth early t<r day to a healthy seven pound nine ounce girl whom she and her husband named Olga. Mrs. Peters is the wife of William Wesley Peters, chief architect or the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation of Scottsdale, Ariz., and Spring Green, Wis. A family spokesman said mother and daughter are doing well. Mrs. Peters, 45, arrived 1 at f\.farin General Hospital with her husband at 11 p.m. Thursday to await the birth. The baby arrived at 2:30 a.m. Mn. Peten issued this statement from her hospital bed ; "I'm very happy to have a healthy and pretty child. This pretty girl makes another strong lln'k between this country and myself." Mrs. Peters, who has two grown children by a previous marriage in the Soviet Union, and her husband reside in Scottsdale, Ariz. They have been staying Y:ilh Peters' sister. Margedant Ha ya kawa and her husband, S. I. Hayakawa , presi· dent of San Francisco State College. Baby Olga was gi ven a midd le name too -Margedant. a family name on Peters' side. Mrs. Hayaka,va said after a period of conva lescence Mrs. Peters and her hus- band would move to Sprlng Green . Wis. Svetlana and the architect were mar- ried in Phoenix, Ariz .. in April 1970. Svetlana's marriage to Peters was her third. She was married at the age or IB to Gre gory Morosov, a fellov.• student. and her second husband was Yuri Zhdanov, a biochemi st. She defected to the United States via India, where she had gone in December 1966. lo return the ashes of Brajesh Singh, a man \\'hom Soviet officials would not permit her to marry. nol feel it was up to the councU to urge citizeM to attend such a gathering. Mayor Richard Goldberg and eow>cilman Peter Ostrander voted with Lorr for the resolution. Meanwhile charges continued to fly in a nap between the Laguna Beach Tax- payers Association and resident William Leak, sparked by the initial council discussion of "Operation AJert." Criticizing Lorr's ariginal request, Leak made reference to the need to ale.rt citizens to the existence of militant local organizations. He referred to attending a meeting of a "semi-secret" Laguna organizatlon at which it was suggested guns should be used to shoot down hippies. Later, Leak Identified the organization as the taxpayers group, staling that the meeting was closed to all except members and guests and thererore was "semi-secret." In a three-page letter to the city cou~ cil, attorney John Downer, vice president af the Taxpayers' Association, denied Leak's allegations. The meeting , he maintained, was not secret and had been noticed in the local press in a manner that "did not limit Al· tendance to guests of members." All general meetings of the association are open to both the public and press, Downer slated. He admitted some persons at the meeting had been In favor of "drastic ac· tion including the use of firearms" against hippies, but said that several persons, including the president, pointed out that law and order cannot be preserv4 ed. by violence. Reagan or Agnew Top Candidates For Nixon's Job PRINCETON, N.J. !AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan and Vice President Spiro T. Agnew would be the leading can· didates to succeed President Nixon i! he decides not to run for re-election, ac· cording to a Gallup Poll of Republicans and independent voters. Reagan. a Republican. was the choice or 31 percent of Republican voters with a preference ; Agnew was picked by 25 per- cent. Other choices by the RepublicaM were New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller. 19 percent: George Romney, secretary of housing and Urban Development, 12 per- cent. Illinois Sen. Charles H. Percy and Ne w York City l\1ayor John V. Lindsay \Vere both chosen by 11 percent and Oregon Sen. Mark 0. Ha tfield "'as chosen by 7 pert'ent. A Gallup spokesman said 7 percent of those res ponding to the poll expressed no preference. He also said the percentages add up to more than 100 since some of those responding named more than one person. Independent voters expressed pre!eren· ces simil ar to those or the Republicans by responding with these percenlages: Reagan , 25: Agnew 18; Rockefeller, 17; Lindsay and Percy 13; and Hatfield eight. Gallup officials said JI percent had no preference. Coeds Protest Dorrn Vis it R~gulation Ires Girls TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPI ) Shouting ''"·e're not a bunch of campus whores," about 250 Florida Slate Uni versity coeds marched on the Ca pilol Thursday to protest the revocation of dormitory visiting privileges. The coeds particularly were incensed by a remar k by ~1i$S Elizabeth Kovarhcvlch, a member of the state board or regents. who called state u n Iv tr s I t y dormitories "Tax payers' Whorehousts." Whlle lht: girls were marching, 1t1 iss Kovacbevlch Wai'! telling an audlcnce at St. Petersburg that she is asking Gov. Reubin Aske\\' to make a fun fn· vestig ation into university "problems." Rep. G"·en Cherry (J).f\.tiami ), the first blftck woman elected to th' Florida lt:gls\ature . told the demonstrators "the situation that brought you here is very unfortunate." She said 11he favored dorm itory visitations. But the protesttn got into a brief shouting match with another l1dy legislator. Sen. Btth J ohnson t R-Cocoa Beach), who eald she was •·unav.·Are any problem exists.•• ~t dO('s txlst, 11 scrtamed the coeds. 'm sympaUtetlc to you, Don 't .shout a -1r1e," responded Mrs . Johnson. f'rom Page I MURDER ••• brother, who bad just been released from jail. Newport Beach Police Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson said preliminary tests in- dicate the young mother had been strangled. "With force," Sgt. Thompson added. He did not explain wbelber it might have been manually or by some ether means, such as a scarf or towel. Toxicological tests to d e t e r m i n e whether any drugs were present in the victim's system are pending, but Sgt. Thompson said an autopsy failed to show any obvious narcotics. Bjegun's brother, Thomas, 24, (If Dia- mond Bar, reported1y told police after finding the body about 9 a.m. that Mrs. Constant bad threatened suicide in the past. He was visiting the apartment about nlldnight Wednesday when police were dispatched to a family disturbance call involving the younger brother and the young woman. Investigators said her body "'as later found to have bruises and apparently been slapped or struck. A record check showed Biegun had prior traffic charges with warrants cut for his arrest, but they could onJy be served during da yligh,t( hours under California Vehicle Code µdHcy. His elder brother was arrested outside the apartment on suspicion of being drunk in public end released ap- proxima tely the same time the younger Biegun was picked up on the traffic ch arges. He notified pelice upon finding the body and they turned Mrs. Constant's infant son over to the county's Albert iifiton Home in Orange for care. Biegun was held on the traffic wa rrants until initial investigation of the homicide was complete and then informed of the murder charge about 2 p.m.1 by Detec· tive Todd Wilkinson. Sergeant Thompson said today Mrs. Constant's mother was shattered by the tragic case and told of urging her daugh- ter to come home last Wefkend. "Apparently she was concerned for her ~afety," he remarked. Innis' father is general counsel to the Massachusetts' House &f Represen- t.ativ~. Innis, who complained to a neighbor ef poor eyesight Saturday, \vas arrested \Vednesday while wandering nude near the apartmeot of a girlfriend, h1andy Shea. '."a Police sa\d be was under the influence of an animal tranquilizer often passed (lff by drug dealers as THC. the synthetic form of marijuana. The tranquilizer makes those who take it impervious tt F rona Pqe I BRIDGE ••• developed below as Clifford swung around the safety cables and used them like parallel bars. , When the rescue team of steelworkers approached him, Clifford climbed over the big cable and perched in a ernall ~t of converging cables beneath it for an hour. "He was really u~l when we first got to him," said Patrolman David Peelo. "But after a while be cooled off and said he was concerned about his wife and two small children. "He said he was going to jump, but we convinced him that his death wouldn't help his family. We promised we'd hel p him contact his wife." The rescue.rs offered him a safety belt, but Clifford grabbed it and tossed it into the water 750.feet below. The second time a belt was offered -about an hour later -Clifford took 1t and was led to safety. When he reached the ground, he told newsmen he wanted to see hi! family and said he hadn't seen his wile, Anne, since Tuesday. Bridge security officer Ernest Arata said it was the fir1t time a potential bridge leaper climbed to the summit af the structure. Earlier in the day, a 58-year-old woman and a 43-year-old man were talked off the bridge by guards who described them u potential suicides. Since il3 construction in 1936, 411 persons are known to hav e jumped from the bridge into the bay. Only two survived. Irvine City , Plans Scored By Santa Ana Santa Ana city officials are continuing their attack on inclusion of 938 acres of industrial property in the proposed city of Irvine. Vice Mayor Wade Herrin has sent a let- ter to the Irvine Company demanding that company officials withdraw their names from petitions supporting in- corporation of the ne.w city. He also demands that the company in- Jtiate legal action against the County Board of Supervison if it refuses to grant the company's request to withdraw the signatures. Herrin also says the company should notify the LocaJ Agency Forma- tion Commission that the company will unconditionally consent to the annexation of the 938 acres to Santa Ana and direct the Irvine Industrial Complex to consent to the SMexation. Herrin's Jetter iJ based on a 1963 agree- ment between the company and the city which said the city could annex the acreage after .May 21, 1971 and would have the company's s\Jpport. The company did write t() the LAFC opposing the inclusion af the industrial acreage, located just south of the Sailta Ana Marine Corps Air Facility. But the LAFC approved the petitioners' map or the new clty which includes the industrial acreage. Since then, Irvine Company exectives have added their signatures to the peti- tion to the suJ)ervisors calling for an elec· ti on to Incorporate the new community. Company officials have said that the Irvine Industrial Complex will protest the incorporation before the supervisors. The complex owns 693 of the 938 acres. The Santa Ana Jetter promised legal actiM if its requests are not carried out. UP.HOl:StER¥i SP.ECIAL FEATURING THE BEST SELECTION OF QUALITY UPHOLSTERY IN THE AREA C•5t•M M""-S.ht ttr SNml- 1• .,... V•t.tt -At • s.I• hke ef $549 SHERRILL FEATURES * Quality Workmanship * I Woy Hond Tlod Sprints * Excellent Tailoring * Large Fabric Selection •* All Fabrics Scotchguarded * Large ael.ction of Hand- some Styles to choose from. If You Need A Sofa or Chair, Now Is The Time DEALERS FOR: HENREOON -OREXEC -HERITAGE NIWPOIT STOii OPIN NIDAY ,.IL t NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wtstclill Dr,, 642·2050 OPE N FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Prot.sslonal lnterlo~ O.signt rs Av1l11bl e -AID LAGUNA BEACH 34-5 North Coast Hwy. Phono: 494-6551 INTERIORS PltoM Tell P,. MMt .. o,..._ c.ntr-J4 .. 12ll • J I . I ., I' ., I . I '. ! 'I ' I ' I' ' I ... . ' ' . --- Hon.tington Beach· Fountain Valle" VOL. 64, NO. 121, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE CO)JNTY, CALIFORNIA • • . -• Today's Final N.Y. Stoeka. FRIDAY, MAY 21, '1971 TEN CENTS 14 New Beach Parl{s to __ be Dedicated • ID '71 DATE INDI CATES PARK DEVEL OPMENT BEHIND SCHEDULE In Huntington Betch, an ln1ccur1te Sign of tlie Times Huntingto11 Planners Nix Apartment Rezoning Bid All attempt to rezone 13.5 acres of land In 50Utheast Huntington Beach from apartment use to single family homes has failed. The planning commission approved the ' ione change from R2 to RI for the land -·west of Newland S!reet and south of Atlanta Avenue -but the commission was overrul~ by the city council th is ~·eek. The issue struck a note of controversy when it was first consi dered at the May 3 council meeting. Attorney Dale Hemly, representing the owners, hinted that !he rezoning might involve a conspiracy between the city planning departmenl and the Huntington Beach City ielemen- tary) School District. Hemly claimed that the school distri ct had expressed interest in buying the pro- perties for a school site and that reznn ing !he land to a more restrictive use "'ould lo"·er its value. ' The council instructed the staff to con- tact the district on its inlentions nn the property, and this week the councilmen t'Onsidered the repl y of school Superinten- dent S.A. Moffett . Moffett explained that De p u t y Superintendent Charles Palmer had con- tacted the property owners on the in- structions of the board, but had not been able to negotiate a "reasonable price.'' Moffett denied that the school board had considered the use of eminent do- main to acquire the property and denied that Pa lmer ever told the owners of one parcel to withhold their property (rom a prospective sale. as had been charged. Moffett concluded by stating that the dist rict has abandoned any plans to ac- quire a school site in the "immediate area at this time.'' Col.lOCilman Jack Green. leading the move to deny the zone change, rematned critical of the school dislricl. "I believe they let the owners believe lhey might be considering purchasing ." he commented. "I believe the owners "'ere wilhin their rights of being a little bit critical.·• The motion to deny the zone · change carried with Councilmen Al Coen and Jerry l\.iatney opposed. Both school district and city planning department spokes men have denied that the timing of the proposed zone change was a conspiracy. Peace Group Leaders' Ties . to Reds R eported fourth day to give investigators a chance Ill offer more detai ls in their charges thlll Communists held positions of power among leaders of two antiwar g·roupll. By TERRY COVILLE Of JM Deltr Plitt SI.it A lonely sign sticks up from a clump cf weeds In a barren field at the southeast corner of Heil Avenue and SP.rlngdale Strttt. " "It reads : "City park 1 l t e . Devek>prDtnt scheduled 1970." Sarcastic pa~rsby have noted lhat It ls now 1971 and behind the fence lbat sur· rounds the fje)d noth ing grows but weeds. The marker, however, is a totally in- Ar1ny Chief To Resign 6-year Post WASHI NGTON {UPI) -The Pentagon today announced the resignation of Army Secretary Stanley R. Reaor, who has served in the post for almost six years under the Johnson and N i 1 on administrations. Resor's resignation had been an- ticipated ror some time. Pentagon (If· fici als said his term of office stretched over "an unusually large period of time." The Army secretary submitted his let· ter of resignation Thursday. the day after he announced the decision to demote one general and reprima nd another on charges of covering up I.be M.y .Lal ma ssacre. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird replied today with a letter acceptlng the resij:nation "with unlimited admir1tion and appreciation for r.9'U' M~ con· trlbutfons to the depattmint uif lt' ~ 11atlon." Qi.lei Peritaaott JPOi,-an Dlll5el J. Henki n uid no successor has been lielected. "I would antldpate that Secretary Resor will be here for several more weeks, unt il his successor is (selected and ) qua lified. It probably will be until the end of June," Henkin uid. Marin e Plane Crashes, Burns In Irvine Area A Marine Corps F4 Phantom jet a~ parently carrying s e c r e t equipment crashed and burned in a field near Jrvine Boulevard and Culver Road northerly of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station 9boul 11 a.m. today. The pilot and navigator ejected success· fu lly -one parachuting into 1 nearby orange grove -and were returned un- injured lo El Toro. Secu rity guards al the scene prohibited photographs from the front section or the charred aircraft and could be seen remo ving some type of equipment from the wreckage. No immediate cause was suggested for the crash. in whid! the jet pancaked intt> an open field, bounced 200 yards and e1- ploded In a ball of fire . Exact site of the crash was about two blocks off Irvine Boulevard a mile e1st of CUiver Road. Mariner Readi ed \VASHINGTON (AP) -The National Aeronautics and Space Administration said Thursday it hopes to launch the ne1t Mariner rocket to M1rs before June 6. The 1gency said a firm date musl await completion of work, te1U and reviews of the M1y I Mariner failure. accurate sip (If tbe times. Huntlngton Be•cb parka m · not dusty, empty pro- mises. 'Mils ii 1971, the year thal a '6 million park bond Issue approved ln 1961 beains to blossom. The grasa 11 JfOwing all over lb! town. "We will dedicate 14 parks this year,'' says Tom Severns, the man wbo coordinates all park development. The '8 million bond Issue allowed Hun· tinatcn Beach to launch an ambiliow: ) ptrk development pro1ram ctlllng for u park.I by 1913, includin1 • 107-acre cen- tral p~k. Befor'e the bond money was paSsed, 14 small neighborhood par!µ hid been built, but there wasn't mucb hope of having enough money to do the olber 1' paNts. Then cltlun.!I approved the $& million park issue and Severns has was liired t.e guide lt.s use. "We expect everything to be done by July, 1m," Sevems reporta. "Our bl&· a:est problem could be mainta~s ao many parks without a solid tax base. We have one of the strongest park proar•ma in the state." UIUmately Ute city hopes to have four acres of park land for every t.bousand residenu,· and that doesn't COW!l the beaches. "When we're finished that '6 mflllort should be stretched to 19 million tllrooih !See.PARKS, Pap I) Defense Funds 01{ A·BM, CSA Money Backed by Panel WASHINGTON (UPI) -The House Armed Services Committee Thursday 1utboriied $.3$7.2 million for the Pen- tagon's conlroveni1l C5A transport pro: jed. and 1 full $1 billion for President Nixon's Safeguard Antlballistic Missile System. In approving a $21.I billion military procurement bill, the committee a I 1 o dealt-ser~ setback& to two army. pr~ jecl! -·the Cheyen.J'le Helicopter which 1t left without any money and the main bat· tle tank, kir which It approved only research and development funds. Rep. OtiJ Pike, (0.N.Y.), one of the four committee members who voted against the bill, said all the CSA money wa1 the result ot contract <mt overruns, which has plagutd tbt government's con· tract with Lockheed Aircraft Ciorp. A committee spokesman , however, said the $357 .2 million would permit Lookheed to fullfil its obligation to build 11 of the giant transpol'UI. In addition to the Safeguard and the C5A, the committee authorized $370.3 million for the 81 bomber, a swing.wing auperaonlc jet the Air Force want.a as 1 auceessor to the BS2 wh!n the old!r planes are retired in 1980. The procurement bill only authorizes Boy Crashes in Mesa !f.#k1r W~ltf-Car· C·hase ' ~ Streakinl -atraJaht down a c:rou-coun- try, llJoroushf_,e, a Glendale letneger In a st.Olen Car fed llwmen on ' a .15-mllt, liigb spffd chaie early today before he hit I ' dip lb c.osta Mesa,, went airborne and crashed. · Miracutoualy, Mone was injured in the so mjleperhour pursuit through scores of major interaections. ending at 17th Street and .Santa Ana Avenue. . The IS-year-old suspect ned on foot but was captured by Ca:llforaia Highway Patrol' t>fflcers· in the 300 block of Qale Street 1(ter an ,intensive search. By the time the spectacular pursuit ended, at 1·:40 1.m. the stolen car. plus a vehicle parked iD a aervice station at the end of the· tine were wrecked and one CHP cir w11 ~t t>f commission. A telephone Pole was shPared off above ground level and gasoline pups -capable of creating a blazing inferno -were bent and mangled but failed to ignite. California Highway Patrol officers Ken Daily and Walt Swickla flrsl spotted the car southbound on the Santa Ana Freeway, according to Investigators. Noticing a failure tn yield violation, they attempted to stop the car -not know ing It was stolen -and cite the dMver. "He pulled flff oo Red Hill -then he put his foot Into it," said one CHP officer. Radioing for help, the pair began the chase that involved running red lights at 90 mJles per hour. at Ume1 in 3S mlle-per- hour ione1. Costa Mesa police and the helicopter Eagle Two joined the pursuit at the city's northeasterly city limits. Tbe youth ran 11 rtop signs or traffic lighU between Pallsades Road and Ogle Street alone, slowing to about 75 miles- per-hour before he hit the fateful dip. His stolen car hurtled into the telephone pole, tervice station and pllrk- ed car, but he atilt mana&ed to hit the rround on the nm, .__ lo • wl~ neu. ' , Rich Bu tton, 13, ol :IOf MomfnC ltat Lant, Newport Beach, told offictra· the s~t ran eastbound bebind !hf: station. Pclice.111id CHP officen Jim<Gu)'fl and Axel Mlltho f tinally apprehendett the youth hiding behind 368 Ogle St., and took him to Orange County Juvenile Rall. Consul-general Said 'Still Alive' After Kidnaping ISTANBUL !UPI) -Premi<r Nihat Erim said today Iaraell Consul-General Ephraim Elrom, kJdnaped· from his apartment Monday, ii 1Ull alive. "We, too, are anx.ious over the fate of this hraeU diplomat," the head of a:overnment told newsmen. "Bul we received informal.ion last night he ls alive." Erlm made hla statement In Ankara. He gave no details. Police and troop searches 1crou the countrY still turned up: no trace cf the 59- year-old pollceman·turned-dlplomat, who played a major role in the capture and trial of Nail war crlminal AdoU Etc}). mann a decade ago. Elrom wa1 abducted Monday by live gunmen. His captors announced he would be e1ecuted Thursday unless the 1overn- ment freed all "reYoluUonary guerrillas" from jail. The 5 p.m. (8 1.m·. PDT) deadline set by the leflwing aelf-styled Turklah People's Liberation Army came and went -with no indlcatlon ol Elrom '1 fate. the expenditures. Actual funds will bave to be appropriated later in separate leglslaUon . The •1 billion for lhe ABM systems in- cluded '627 million for procuremut and the rest for research and developmenL But the comnUttee knocked out $13.2 million in procurement funds for the fast. maneu verable ClleyeMe heliCilpter whkh had been described as the Army's highest priority item. Jl al.so ts built by· Lockheed. · Although no funds were set aside, the committee did not kill the CheyeMe pro- ject_ It left the wa y open for the Army to seek a modified program later. Reagan or Agnew Top Ca1ididates For Nixon's Job PRINCETON, 'N.J. (AP) -Go•. rtoaald Reagin and Vice President Splro T. 'Aanew would be · the leading can· ·dldate1 to aucceed President Nixon ·ii ht declde".s not to run for re-election. ac- cordint to a Gallup Poll of ReJ>U:blicans and Independent voters. , Reagali, a Republican, was the choice of 31 percect o(Republlcan' voters with a prefertnce; Agnew was picked by 25 per. cent. Other c;ht>lces by the Rtpublican.a were New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller. l9 percent; George Romney, secretary of housing and Urban Development, 12 per· cenL Illinois: Sen. Olarles H. Percy and New York City Mayor John V. Lindaay were both chosen by 11 percent and Oregon Sen. Mark 0. Hatfield was chosen by 7 percent. A Gallup spokesman said 7 percent of those responding to the poll exprt111ed M preference. He also said the percentages add up to more than 100 since some of those ruponding named more than one person. Independent voters expressed preferen- ces similar to thoae of the Republicans by responding with these percentages: Reagan, 25 ; Agnew IB: Rockefeller, 17; Lindsay and Percy 13; and Hatfield eight. Gallup officials said 11 percent had uo preference. Streisand, Husband Gould Part Ways NEW YORK (AP) -Singer Barbr1 Streisand and her husband, 1ctor Elliot Gould, have entered into a private atparatlon agreement, lt was disclosed Thursday in state Supreme Court. Notice. of the agreement, dated Feb. 10, 1970, was filed with the clerk o1 the court. Under New York law, after two ye1rs of separation eilher the wlfe of the hus- band may file for divorce. Oruge \VASHINGTON (AP) -A researcher for lhe House Internal Security Com- mittee testified Friday that l!ieven persons he said are identifiable as members of the U.S. Communist Party are amon g 53 pe rsons listed EIS the coordinating committee of the People's Coalltion for PeaCi! and Jus1ice . The resear cher. William J. Poole, iden- tified them as Gil Green of New York, Terrance Hallinan of California. Sylvia Kushner of Chicago, Sidney Peck of Wiscon!lin. Irving Sarnoff of California, Jack Spiegel of Chicago and Jarvis Tyner of New York. ·Fair Racing Plan Studied The governpient responded by declar- ing it would nM. bargain with "hooligans '' and arre1Un1 hundreds oC 1u1pected left,. wing 1ympathiiers. Raids and arrests continued today aerosa Turkey. Sources close to Erim said marUal law Imposed on 11 of Turkey 's 67 provincea April 26 probably will be e1te~ two months beyond its May 26 upiration date. Weatlaer The seven were among some 3S to 40 persons that Poole lestificd had been Identified either by themseh•es as Com- munists or by party publications llf through testimony given by \\'llncs!es over a span of many years of hearings by congressional comm\Uees. Poole provided the panel w i t h clocumented references which he said liltO\Yed th~ tvldence of the People's Coolition which joined wiUl the Mayday Collective in sponsoring the May 3-6 en· tlw3r demon strations that were marked by elforta to tie up Washington traffic. The House probe carried over Into a Reve nue -rais ing Compromise; Bettin.g Idea Proposed A new compromise. method of taking advantage of 14 days allocated to the Orange County Fair for thoroughbred horse racing as a revenue raiser is undtr study today. The idea wa s generally greeted with optunism Thursday ..by the 32nd Di1trlct Agricultural Assoclatloc. meeting In hoard offices on the fairgrounds ln Cost.a ~fesa. . Opponents of r111cing on the fllrgrouNh and proponent:s of lucrative pari-mutu el betting allDwed by the state rTtight both be satisfied if the Idea becomes a reality. Races would be staged at Los Alafnitos Race Track, <>n a rontract basis utilizing those facilities without the staggering cotl of adding new ones to the Orange County Fairgrounds. No .formal action was taken by the Fair Board Thursday night except to vote on continuing study of the h o r 1 e racina: feasibility, referring it to the buildini and grounda committee. Director Burr Williams abstained, making il an I to 0 Yott with n1nt board members present. Fairgrounds: General Man•aer •od Secretary James E. Porterfield told the board Loa AJamilol COW'R owner Frank Vessels Jr. is receptjve to the Idea and considers it worthwhile. One method would be to stage the racu allotted to the Orange County Fair as pan of the slate'' lhotoughbred .seaaon simultaneousty with the 1972 event. The other would be to 1chedu~ them before or alter the fair and uposlllon I itself, but carrying tht Orange County Fair uue and them•. Speaker Contest If scheduled during .the·regul1r flvt-day fair, the annual even t would be extended S £ V 11 by 10 day1 ID accommodate tlle two et_Or a ey Wffka.ot.racina allowed. --- "The Ume 11 allowed, but it's just been Some 52 youns speaken In Lbe Foun- going to waste all these years," explains tain . Valley Sctjoo1 District· will mitch Gloria Seelye, lilt publicity dlree1«. toMll• next Thursd1y night Jn the Qne of the first ltepa ~ill be dl1trict'J &MUii speeth •toumey. · determination by lhe S 11 t e Attorney four Winnen from tourney• 1t each oC General's Office on whether f1 ir· the district's schools will compete In t1- 1porisored racing must be M the egency's ttmporaneous 1peaklna, orlgln1l Oratory, own f1lrirounda. dramatic and hwnorous lnlerprttltlon. Bay M'eadow1 Rlcetr1ck In the San The speech match atarta •t 7 p.m. at Franclaco Bay 1rea hoilt an annual rac· district headquarters. Student.I involved Ing card on the time allotted one county are from tht sixth through el&hth arldes. (Set MCING, P11e t• Troptuea will bt awarded to the wbmm. I .. • • ' ' I Driuly morniw and partlJ clearing afterooons ire the pros- pect for the weekend along the Or· ange Coast. Temperatures are due to dip into the upper eos. INSIDE TODAY Stlecttd works of young art· f$t$, •kin<Wrgarttn through high ichool, ore bfi'lO r:hibited tll.rough Moy Ira Soi.Uh Coo.st Plofa: The show ts /tatutt4 £11: UxJa.y'1 Weekender. . . - • ' ' l ' Z DA.llY l!lL.Ol " '""'· 11'1 21, 1971 -- W 011tata CJtofced1 Paramour Held In Balboa Death By ~RTHUR R. VINSEL Of 1'111 D•ll'f ~1191 lltlf Tes~ on the body of a youna mother found dead, ,her crying baby Jn the bed beskte her at a Balboa apartment, Thurs. day led Newport Beach police to formally book her paramour on suspicion of murder. Strangulation was listed by authorities as !be tentative cause of death of Mrs. Susan Lane Constant. 21, whose mother bad begged her five days earlier to movt back to Anaheim. Que1Uontd lhrougDout the afternoon about lhe case, J.obn J. "SkJp" Blegun, 211 who !hared the reslden« at 423 E. Prostitution Ring Trial Gets Delay A three-month delay \\'as ordered Thursday in the Orange County Superior Court trial of four alleged members or a prostitution ring that auth orities claim used a Seal Beach bar all Its head· , quarters. Judge Byron K. ~1cMillan se: Sept. 20 u the new trial date for George Lee Van Home, 29, of Long Beach, Brenda Joyce Highite, 24, of Bellflower, Leslie Ruth Stother, 25, of Redondo Beach and Barbara C.Onlee. 23 , of Cerritos. All four are charged with conspiracy to engage In prostltlUon. Van Home faces additional charges of solicltlng. Judge McMiiian granted the delay lo enable the defendants to answer to what he sald were Identical charges filed against the group in Los Angeles County. Distric t attorney's lnve.rtlgatora claim tbe three accused women "·ere members of a roster of call girls organized by Van Horne. They allegedly were .supplied on demand to various locations in Orange and Los Angeles counties. Van Home was arrested in Seal Beach. 'nie girls were arrested ln Anaheim. Signups Card~d For Huntington . Swimming Oass Registraticn for the Huntington Beach summer swim program will be held Saturday at five pools in the city. From 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., residents can enroll for swim ming lessons at the Marina High School pool, the Edl1on High School pool, the Golden West College pool, and the city pool. Classes available are beginning and ad- vanced swimming, 1'iommle and Me, adult, Tiny Tot, and life savlnf. Tht registraUon fee varies from $4.50 t.o M for the sessions which Include 10, '$- minute lessons. Beginners must be 54 inches tall for classes at Golden West and 48 Inches lall for classes at M1rina and Edison. The first session of classes begins June 21 : the second slarts July 8: third session, July 19: fourth session, Aug. %, .and fifth session , Aug. 16. All registrations will be handled on a first come, first served bas is. a asses will also be conducted at the Huntin(ton Beach High School pool, but registration for those classes will be take n at the city gym at the corner &f 17th Street and Palm Avenue. OIAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT Cu.NOi! COAST l"UllllHlttl) COM,AM't' lt\•rt N. Weil Prn ldW .. ~ '"""'l!Mf' Jec1r. a, Curle'( \Ike "91ffnt •M ~I Mt,..... n'"''' w: •• ,1r """ TI!t111•• A. llllur,l'IJ11f ~··'"' A.lt11 Dlr!r.111 w.t er.,... '-'' 1•rw Albt rt w. 11111 Anocltlo IEfllW H1llt411trM IMc• Offtte 17171 ••••h ltu1t w114 M1ln111 ,t.llr1111 P.O. l•• 7tO, f2641 OtWOlflooo UouM ••di! m ,.,.., "~ C.lt Mtft: U8 W•I •• , llf'ltl N..,.rt ••ell: UD H.-t -.Ul_ ... 1en Clt!Nrlltl as ,...._ 11 Ctfftlnt Ii: ... • Till•r• .. • 1714) 14J-4Jl1 • Cl•""4 ~ MJ..N71 c.YtlfMo 1tn, °"""9 CNtf ""*'ltfrllllt ~. Ht M'#t •""'"· lllwlrt1i.ri.. ef1t•i.1 _..... lit ~"...... ,..,.... _, " ~ ... ~t .,..., ,.,. "'** .,, ~I .,.,.,,, Bay Ave., was booked at 5 p.m. on the murder charge. A Complaint was being sought today from the Orange County DiJtrlct At· torney. Blegun, dispatcher for his father's security pitrol service 1n Diamond Bar was already in CIUtodY Thursday whe~ i1rs. Constant was found dead. Her 16-month'°ld son was crying beside the body in the Sea Level Apartments when discovered by the: iuspect's older brother, who had just ~n released from jail. Newport Beach Police Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson uld preliminary tests in· dlc1te the young mother had been strangled. "With force," Sgt. Thompson added. He did not explain whether It might have bttn manually or by some other means, such as a scarf er towel. Toxicological tests to d e I e r m i n e whelher any drugs were present in the victim 's system art pending, but Sgt. Tbompsen 1aid an autopsy failed to show any obvious n'1COtics. Biegun '1 brother, Thomas, 2-4, cif Dia· mond Bar, reportedly told police after finding the body about 9 a.m. that Mrs. Constant had threatened suicide 'in the past. He wa1 vlJiting the apartment about ~dnight Wednesday when police were dispatched to a family disturbance call involving the younger brother and the young woman. JnvestJgato11 said her body was later found to have bruises and apparenUy been slapped or struck. A reccrd check showed Biegun had prior lralflc charges with warrants out for his arrest, but they could only be served during daylight hours under California Vehicle Code po1icy. ·His elder brother was arrested outside the apartment on susplckln of being drunk in public and released ap- proximately the 1ame time the younger Blegun was picked up on the traffic charges. He notified pollct upon finding the body and they turned Airs. Constant 's infant son over to the county's Albert Sitton Harne in Orange for care. Biegun was held on the traffic warrants until initial Investigation of the homlcide was complete and then informed of the f!1urder charge about 2 p.m., by De1ec- t1ve Todd Wilk.Won. Sergeant Thompson said today ?tlrs. Constant's mother was shattered by the tragic case and told of urging her daugh· ter to come home last weekend. "Apparently she w1s concerned for her safety," he remarked. City Clerk Hurt In Boat Smashup Coordination or city and Festival of Ari.! allocations to cultural organlz.ation1 in Laguna Beach will be attempted for the first time this ye1r, councilman Roy Holm said this week. Each year both the city and the festival consider applications for financial aid from a number of cultural eroups and make separate cub allocations. This year, Holm told fellow coun- cUmeo, ht and councilman Edward Lorr wbo aervt aa the council committee o~ cultural support, are planning to meet with representatives of the festival board to coordinate the program. "Wt feel each body should know what tbt other is giving in order to divide the funds fairly," Hol m said. Bike Trail Test WORKERS TO RESCUE Busy Di y on G1te Father Scales Golden Gate For Death Dive SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -An ague father, despondent over "finanncial pro. blems," scampered up a Golden Gate Bridge cable :Thursday and dangled from a perch 746 feet above the bay for more than an hour. Daniel Clifford . 31, p e r f or m e d acrobatics on safety cables. hurled a safety belt into San Francisco Bay and threatentd to jump before I h r e e steelworkers and a highway patrolman crawled out on the main support cable and talked him down. Bridge officials said he was the third poten tial suicide Jalked out of leaping oil the crange span during the day. More than 400 persons have jumped to their deaths from the bridge in the past 34 years. The bearded, Ieng-haired Clifford, who manages an apartment complex, told newsmen he had been hiving "financial problems.'' "Get my wife and child," he said as he emerged from an elevator inside the 526- foot south tower wit.h tears in his eyes. Clifford was taken to ti.ti. Zion medical center for psychological obse rvation. Clifford, who was wearing jeans, sneakers and a yellow windbreaker b!· cycled to the middle of the bridge in the early afternoon. parked his bike and clambered up one of the four-foot diame- ter suspension cables. He used handrails flanking the cable to reach the top of the tower. A traffic jam developed below as Clifford swung around the safety cables and used them like parallel bars. When the rescue team of steelworkert approached him. Clifford climbed over the big cable and perched in a &mall nest of converging cables be.neath it for an hour. .. He was really upset when we fir1t got lo him," said Patrolman David Peelo. "But after a while he cooled off and said he was concerned about his wife and two small children. Registration for bike rides to test r outes of proposed bicycle trails in flunUn1ton Be1ch starts at 8 1.m. Saturday at Golden 'Vest Callege. Roule A (short) luves Golden West College westbound on Edinger left on Edwards, left on Gartield, right on Holly. right on Main, leli on MansJon , rJght on Lake to City Beach. Route B leaves college west- bound on Edinger. left on Edwards, I.Ct on Gartield , right on Bushard, right on Brookhurst, rl&hl on Coast Highway, right on Warner, left on Algonquin, rl&hl on Hell, left on Gnham. rlght on McFadden, right on Edwards, left on Edinger bark to college. ' DAILY PILOT ll•H ~Min Fro• Pq•J PARKS ... federal grant.s," Severns added. By July or un.s year the city erpect.s to have 108 acres of park land developed at 28 situ. Another 27t acres al 10 altes, ln· cludln( the central park, should bo ;-deve)oped er under conat.ructlon by Ju1y1 1m. The diamona In the park crown, of course. is the central park, planned around two lakes near Gt:>lden West Street and Talbert Avenue. The city alreaay owns about 180 t f the 2()7 acres at Talbert and Huntington Jakes. Park architects are already designing elaborate plans for ii,. ··0evelopmen1 of the land will cost about $2.25 million,'' Severns said. "Buying the land has cost around $2 million to $2.5 million, with haU the money coming from the federal depart · men! of Housing and Urban De velopment !HUD)." ActuaJ construction on the central Park Is due to start in 1be fall of 1972. A $J million central library is also plaMed lD the park to overlook Talbert Lake. Two other parks, designated commun- ity parks. also .feature elaborate designs. A $337,000 project which include• a community center, picnic shelter and lighted football, softball, ba1ketball and tennis facilities Is nearing completion at Murdy Park. Playground facilltits are already in- stalled on the lf.6 acre Murdy Park oU Golden West Street, north of Warner Avenue. · The second biggest park Jn the city wlll be the fO..acr, Edison Park, plaMed at Banning Avenue and l\lagnolia Street in south Huntington Beach. It's being bullt partially over an old cauntry stump dump, Southern California Edison Company land , and additional city property. It will feature a community center, a fire station, a branch library and several acres of open grass and fields. ''We should start work on Edis<>n ln the near futurt," Severns predicted. WOULD-BE JUMPER DANIEL CLIFFORD SAVED 'Fin1nci1I Problems' Blamed for Flirtation With De1th Edison and Murdy are two of ail: com- munity parks (drive-to park.I) in the master plan. Besides the central park, the other 35 parkll are all small, neighborhood (walk-to) parbi, Oil Fee Delay .Attempt Rumor l(illed in Beach Severns abo said the park at Spring. dale and Heil, the one wilh the t a rd y sign. is nearing construction and &hould be dedicated near the end of the year. It v.·ill be called Cris Carr Park for a £ortner Congre!slona1 Medal o! Honor winner from Huntington Beach. Chris Carr Park coven about 11 acres and may feature a reed pond in the mid· dle of it. A '{Umor !ha t has circulated in Hurr- tington Beac h this "'ee k that a major oil company has asked for deferment on payment of the tall'. on mineral reserve s Fro11a l'aye l RACING ... fa ir in that region, indicating the lega l precedent has been set. The private racetrack is not located on the fairgrounds property itself. as com- pared to Del 1.far Racetrack whic h is a parl of lhc San Diego Co u n t y fo~airgrounds. If it .is determined Los A I a m i to s Race track can be rented and the races ru n on a contract \\'ith the Fair Boa rd for facilities and se rvices action must be taken by year 's end. Schedules for the 1972 thoroughbred racing season thorughout the state \\'ill be set early In tht year. \1·as killed this morning. Ccuncilman Al Coen mentioned al a ci- ty council budget study session that he had he ard a rumor that a major com- pany had as ked caunt y assessor Andrew ll inshaw for de ferment of the mineral tax based on $5 million of assessed valua- tion. Finance director Ben Arguello said tha t he had alsa heard the rumor but could not believe there was any basis to it. He said that if it were true it wou ld cost the city about $72.000 in rev'en ue this year. T~is morning Hinshaw categorically denied that there y:as any thing to the story. "There is no basis for lt at all," the assesscr commented. "No representative from an oil company has approached me about it and if anyone had I would have thrn11·n him cut. J'm simply flab- bergasted.'' C. E. "Bill'' Woods. communit y reJa. lions director ror the Western Oil and Gas Associa tion. said that he had ca~ tacted all the major companies and found that no such request had been made. "We should have painted a 1 over the o on that sign," Severns joked. "But crews are \\·or king on it now." , The only problem Severns s e e 1 15 mainlenance. ..We'll have to become more automated and get more work from the crews. There are a lot of parks to keep up." Junior Guards' Tryouts Slated Tryouts for the ·Huntington Beach Junior Liteguard program will be held Saturday and June 6 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Edison High School pool. The tryouts are cpen to boys 9 to 11 v.·ho live in the City of Hunti ngton Beach. Lifeg uard Capt. Doug D'Arnall said boys interested In trying out should be able to swim at least 100 yard! with a steady stroke in under two minute s: tread water for tbret lo five minutes and i;wim underwater for at least 15 reel UP.HO~STERYi SPECIAL FEATURING THE BEST SELECTION OF (j)UALITY UPHOLSTERY IN THE AREA C•1te111 MH. Sefo tlly Sl!Hrlll- 11 G'"1 Yth•ft -Ar • Sol• Prlct tf $549 SHERRILL FEATURES * Quality Workmanship * I W•y H•nd Tilld Spri"ll * Exctlltnt Tailoring * Large Fabric Selection * All Fabrics Scotchguardetl * Largt stltctlon of Hand· 1omt Stylt1 to choose from. If You NHd A Sofa or Choir, Now Is The Time DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE NIWPOIT ITOll OPIN 'llDAT 'TIL f NEWPORT BEACH 1727 WHtcl/11 Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Profasslonal lntarlor Dt1lgntr1 Avall1blt -AID INTERIORS Pllo111 Toll ,,.. Mtlf tt ONt1tt Ct111tyo-1~0·126J LAGUNA BIACH 345 North CoHI Hwy. Phono: 494-6551 • I ~I ~I ' ' • ' ' Social SecuYity Reagan 4ccused Of Illegal Act . I SACRAli1ENTO (UPl l -A Democratic · lawmaker today accused the Reagan Administratlon of illegally withboldlng since Decembe r a $4·1-montb Social Security increase to 300,000 elderly and disabled Califomians. Assemblyman John Burton of San Francisco, one of Reagan's most severe critics. accused the governor of invoking a spurious lega l tecbn!cality to avoid making the payment. He cfiarged the action sets the (J'OUnd~·ork for. possible court suit and Cost of Living Takes Increase Of .3 Percent WASHINGTON (UPI) -The cost of Jiving rose to Americans 0.3 percent in April, equaling the sharpest one-monlh advance th is year. the Labor Department reported today. Higher prices for food 11nd clothing we're largely blamed . While the rise in the consumer price in-- dex wa s !he biggest since a sim ilar in- crease in January. it was well below the pace or 1970 "'hen the nation was in the grips of the v:orst inflation since the Korean War. Food prices Increased by 0.9 percent last month. If lhe advance cunlinued at that rate for a full year, the annual food increase would be almost 12 percent, 1neaning that a typical food item costing $1 last month would cost $1.12 by next spring. The cost or clothing increased 0.4 per. cent last month, led by a jump of 0.8 p ... cen t in men's and boy's apparel. Women's and girl's clothing increased 0.3 percent. The government's gauge of consumer prices stood In Aprfl at 120.2 perCt'n t of the 1967 average, up from 119.8 percent in A1arch. That meant it cost $12.02 to buy the same goods and serviets that $10 broughl in 1967. The April index was 4.3 percenl above April, 1970. representing the smallest over-the-ye ar change since the August, 1967, to August, 1968. La st year. monthly increases averaged close to 0.S percent. The increases in food and clothing prices v.·ere partially offse t by declines in home mortgage interest rates and the price of gasoline. New car prices declined -normal for this time of the y~ar -but used car prices increased. demanded that State Social Welfare Director Robert Carlson ou1ht to give that $4 back in the next welfare check or he ought to resign his office. Governor's office spokesmen were not immediately available for comment. Al a ne v.•s conference. Burton recalled that Con1ress in 1969 required states to pass on to elderly and disabled Social Security recipients who also received welfare a '4 Social Securlly increase. Burton last yea r steered through the Legislature a bill signed by Reagan re- quiri ng Californ ia to pass on to such reci· pients an additional t1 .50 Social Security increase. Previously, California had deducted such increases from a n:ci· pfen t's welfare check. • -Calling tbe governor Ronn ie Ripoff, Burton asserted th at late in 1970 Reagan invoked a spurious legal technicality and claimed that the state could Include the original $4 guaranteed by federal law as part of the $7.50 guaranteed by stale Jaw. He as,,erted that contrary to legislative intention, the welfare department bega n withholding the $4 from welfare checks. Burton distributed to newsmen an opinion from the Legislature 's la wyer supporting hls coatention. Burton said unless the increase is made. Gov. Reagan is surely going to see his administration hauled back into court, probably by those legal assistance lawyers, those long-haired young men with attacbe cases whom be abhors. · Svetlana Stalin Has Baby Girl In Sa11 Rafael SAN RAFAEL (AP) -Svetlana Peters, the daughter of late Ru ssia n premier Josef Stalin, gave birlh early to- day to a healthy seven pound nine ounce girl whom she and her husband named Olga. Mrs . Peters is lhe v.·ife of William \\1esley Peters, chief architect of the Frank Lloyd \\'right Foundation of Scottsdale, Ariz., and Spring Green . \Vis. A family spokesman said mother and daughter are doing well. Airs. Peters, 45. arrived al f.1arin General Hospital with her husband at 11 p.m. Thursday lo av.·ait the birth. The baby arrived at 2:30 a.m. Mrs. Peters issued this statement from her hospita l bed: "I'm very happy to have a healthy and pretty child. This pretty girl makes another strong link between this country and myself." DAILY PILOT Slt!I PM .. Children's Art The best art from Oran ge County school childrC'n is \\'in nO\\'e d dO\\'n eve n further for exhibit during th e si.'11:-\Veek run of lh e t~estival of Arts in Laguna Beach this summer. From left to right are ~1arge Skelton of Laguna Beach, Diana Anderson of Hun tington Beach, ,.1ary Jane Haden, judge, and Rose Clark of Newport Beach. Coeds P1·ote st Dorm R11le s ~ALl.AHASSEE. Flo. (UPI ) Shouting "we're not a bunch of campus whores," about 250 Florida S t a t e Univer3ity coeds marched on the Capitol Thursday to protest the revocation of dormito ry visiting privileges. The coeds particularly v.·ere incensed by a remark by t.liss "'E liiabeth Kovachevich, a member of the slate board of regents. 11>·ho called state uni v ersit y dormitories "Taxpa yers' Illeg al Aliens Nabbed Placentia police and U.S. Immigration Service officers 'fhur11da y rounded up 33 Mexica n nationals suspected of enlering this country illegally. The arrests were made as the Mexi cans reported for work to harvest strawberries, police said. \VhorC"houses.'' \Vhil e the girls v.·ere marching, Miss Kovachcvlch was telling an audience at St. Pelersburg lha l she is asking Gov. Rc>ubin Askew to make a full in- vestigation into university "problems." Rep. Gv.·cn Cherry 1D-r..1lami), the first bla ck v.·oman elected to the Florida legislaturr. told the demonstrators "the situation that brought you here is very unfortuna te." She said she;,. favored dorrrilory visitations. But the protesters got into a brief shouting match v.·ith another lady legislator. Sen. Beth Johnson (R·Cocoa Beach), who said she "''as "unaware any problem exists." ''It docs exist." screamed the coeds. ''I'm sympathetic to you. Don't shout at me," responded Mrs. Johnson. Frid~y. Ml1 21, 1,71 H DAILY PU.')T ;; -Bumble Barve KHJ Disc· Jock Held, No Bail LOS ANGEU:S (UPJ) -Popular radio disc jockey Harvey "Humble Harv~" Miller, sought u a suspect in the ghootlng death of his wlfe'M1y 7, turned himself in at the district attorney's office Thursday. Miller, 36, employed by r1dlo station KHJ, w1s· booked on suspicion of rlrst degree murder and w1s liter ordered held without bond following hia &r· raignrnenl. Police said Miller apparently dyed his brown hair red 1fter the 1hootlng and ad· ded they had lnform1tion he hid in beach communitle11 In the Loa Angeles art1 un· til his surrender. lie had been sought glnce his wife, Mary, 35, was fou nd slain in the f1mily home overlooking the Sunset Strip. Author!Ues said an unldtnUfled witness placed Miiier at the home early that morning ancl heard his car being driven away after shots were firtd. Del~ctlve Sgt. William Mercier said Miller and his wife had quarreled the ni,i::ht before the shooting and that Mrs. Miller had lefl the holl!e to 10 to some bar8 with two friends, 1 man and a y.·orhan. She came home about 6 a.m., shor!ly before the shooting, the dettcrive said. He said the couple had quarreled in the past when t.1Uler accused her of ·going out with other men. Miller w1s accompanied during hla aur- U I' I TI """"" MURDER SUSPiCT 'Humble Herve' 'Shor" render by attorney Or ant B. Cooper, who defended condemned a.51a1!in, Slrha:i Skhan. .Big Visit Set La Paz to Greet Cabinet Member The Saddleback Valley is ~laMlng a rousing welcome to Secretary of the Interior Rogers C. B. Morton. The cabinet official will land 1t La Pu Stewa rdesses to Don Hot Pants Uniforms SEA'ITLE (UPI) -The le1s on the stewardesses of "Air Wa!hingto n" won't be too long but they'll be very visible. Chairman Bob Flortnce 1ald the new cemmuter service, which will be&lrl op.. erations next week, is hiring 1tew1rdeu- es under 4-foot·IO bec1use of the low c•bin apace in Its DeHavill1nd twln otter turbojets. But he said the minl·stewardems will wear hol pints. Intermediate School ln Ml!slon Viejo at 2':"15 p.m. Monday. A special assembly has been pl&Med and special school hours arranged IO au students and their parents and friends can attend, Morton la expected to land on the upper athletic field. La Paz students will be&ln their dey at 10 1.m. and leave the campus at 3:30 p.m. on Monday. They will be. called to an assembly at 2 p.m. ~1orton is to address the students and then llkt lime to meet them. He was invited by the seventh irade social science classes to visit the school during Its recent POP week which wu dedicated to p1triotbm and ecoJocy. Although be could not attend durln1 that week ht said he could make Jt Mon- day and would be delifhted to come. The Homes are priced from 33,950 The Way of Life is Free ! I Living is wh at you wa nt to ma ke of it in a big, beautiful new home at Oceanview Park ... now offering Immediate Occupancy in the Final Unil ••• excellent ConventiQnal Financing with low. low down payment ••. and you own the land ! Quality 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath Traditional Design 2 Story Homes Surrounding the Beautiful New 2'h Acre Marina View Park ------Sales Office and Furnished Models at 19th Street & Whittier Avenue Phone (714) 546·0337 Fro,,, L 01 ~ SA/{ Ol£Qo An1e111 fW'r. - ADAMS AVE. .; > < l ci > -' .. "' 0 ;:.! s\toli l~~OMES • • J. llAILY PILOT \ \ •' I ~ps How High Up Along Coast? By THO!'tfAS MURPHINE ot .... El•ltr ,.'" &tiff HIGH IN THE SKY DEPT. -Things art heating up along the Orange Coast again these days on whether or not our seashore should ht dotted with silhouett.es Of tall buildirJ.&S. Io Laguna Beach, vottrs will be .11oin.g to the poll s Aug. 3 to detenrune, If anybody in the future will build anything in the Art Colony more than 36 fett off t.1other "Earth. The way tht whole high rise Issue boil· ed up in Laguna, where petltioner1 for an initiative forced the City Council Lo put high rise to an election, is viewed with alarm in certain quarters elsewhere. In Ne~'port Beach, for e1ample: ' SOME NEWPORT peoplt who are deeply · oiicemed with development "'·ould like to see the harbor city come up with allowances for some high rise. Yet at lhe same time , they hopt the proposed rules won't be so la1 that a petition cam - paign is triggered a la Laguna. * be . All or this must be somewhat musmg to Tully SeynlOUr, the attorney at law who resides in Corona del Mar. W orkl' s Biggest Copper Mine Seized by Chile Egypt Calls Off Envoy's Peace Trip to Washingto11 TuJJy served a long hitch as Newport city attorney following depary.ure frwi., that post of Walter W. Caramza, who escaped to Huntington Beach to become a municipal judge. Tully for a lot of years tussled with the legalities of buildings and how high is up In Newport. But he recently left Newport to be<:ome part· Ume city attorney for Laguna. Now that he presides as-chief counsel Jn Laguna, he·u get to ponder legalities of how high is up in the Art Colony. * ~--Anyway, back in Newport , a ce, ~1n nervousness \1-'as added to the high nse scene when it was disclosed yesterday that the Marriott Corporation would like to build a tall hotel and convtntion center on Irvioe land in the vicinity of Fashion Jsland and the Irvine Coast Country Club. It would be in an unlimiled height z.one. This is what caused some developers to get nel"\'OW. They feared some other citizens mighl figure Pi1arrlott"s plan would call for a real skyscraper. Actually, some sources of intelligence say the convenlion thing will really go only· 10 or 12 stories up. J STRONGLY suspect that the jiUer1 over public reaction II the building goeJ 10, 20 or 30 slorles are probably UJl.. founded. It 's likel y much the same as worrying about falling oU a tall building. If you fall from a window much over the second story. the results are pretty well .. predetermined. It doesn"t matter if it wu noor 2 or floor 22. SAhtE WAY with adverse reaction to high ·rise. Public outcry probably starts wmev.·here above the fifth floor and it doesn't really matter how much taller things get above that. * So elearly, the lall building debate con- linues lo rattle along our coastline with Ne'ol'port hoping to comt up with rules that v.·ill please both the pros and cons v.hi\e Laguna·s City Council has decided to le t Lagunans battle it out at the ballot box . The Laguna rouncil could have a\·oidcd an elerrion by simply adopting the man· date or 1he pctilitionera who were awesome in nun1ber. But lhi5 way, the pros and cons both get two months to hit the campaign tra il v.·ith charges and <:Qunter-charges. lleated ~·ords y,·ilJ lik,ly furtlier polarize the town. . H's a good bet a lot of Lagunans \1-'0n 't bt talking to each of.he r by Aug. 4. Someho~·. Lagun a ~cems to like it that •·ay. SANTIAGO (UPJ ) -The Chilean government is taking over control of El Teniente, the . world's Jarg,st copper mine: from the KeMerolt Copper Corp. in what may be another step in r.1arxist President Salvador Allende's program to nationllize U.S. ropper interests. Minister of Mining Orlando Cantuarias said Thursday the Chilean Copper Corp .. a government agency, would send six representatives to take ove~ cont~ol of the mine Saturday. Cantuar1as said the move was made because "i?Tegularlties" in four of tht min,·s eight converler ovens had cut production, and because of a $5.5 million deficit. Kennecott owns 49 percent of El Te· niente. siluated in Raucagua , about 65 miles south of Santiaf:(o. and operates the mine under the Braden Corp .• a wholly owned subsidiary. State-owned Chilean companies ov.•n the controlling 51 perce nt. Allende became the Western world·s first freely elected ~1an:ist president in November. He had promised in his cam· paign to natio9alize foreign interests in Chile and ha~en pushing his ~rogram since then. The Chilean senate liberalized and sent to the chamber of deputies r.fay 12 Allende's proposed constitutional amend· ment that would permit him to na- tionalize the holdings of the three U.S. copper companies in Chile -Kennecott, Anaconda and Cerro. Wlrks 'If mall keeps polluti11g, the fish will be dead k "ll , ,, before we ca n 1 em • By United Press In ternationa1 The Middle East situation tightened up again today, 'and authoritative diplomatic sources in Cairo said Egypt has shelved, at least temporarily, a plan to send a high ranking envoy to Washington for talks on the prospects of an agreement with Israel on reopening the Suez Canal. The trip was to have been a sequel to the recent Middle East tour of Secretary of State William P. Rogers and the visit to Cairo by his assistant, Joseph J. Sisro. following Rogers' talks with Israeli leaders, the sources said. Both sides appeared to be stiffening their positions, and Jsraeli deputy Yiga l Allon said Thursday night Egypt might ha ve done so because of "over optimism in Washington," an apparent reference lo the otimistic statements Rogers made on his return. Sisco returned to Cairo with Israel's canal proposals and had five hours of talks with Pre&ident Anwar Sadat and Foreign Minister r.1ahmoud Ried. It was agreed then that Egypt . would send a highrank.ing diplomat, either Riad or Premier Mahmoud Fawzi, to Washington with Egypt's reply. Instead, the Egyptian reply was handed over to Donald Bergus, chief of lhc Etna Lava River Wider, Faster; Ton'tl Imperiled SANT'ALFfo. Sicily (AP)-r-.11. Elna's naming river of lava. widening and ga i~ ing in speed, sizzled through the main -roa d on the eastern slopes of the moun- tain today. increasing its peril to this t0\\11 of 4,000 inhabitants. Some had abandoned their fa rmhouses as the la va gushed down the slopes and rolled toward Sant'Alfio from a ha!f mile vent smashed on the ·mountai nslde II days ago. Police and firemen stood ready in case the menace from the iava intensified. hut there were no ev'acuation orders. The town people prayed for the best v.'hilc preparin~ for the worst. The road the lava cro~sed is the Lin· guaglossa to Fornazzo \Vay uphi ll fro m Sant'A!rlo. Wintry Weather Blows In West in Cold Grip; North Also Feels Chill Wincls California ~.,..., ctrlrrtn. tvrnl.,. lnlo 1t•t· '°''"' ""''"*'-' ,., 119M 1'-t rt In llot •lier-. INlrrH. 11\t *"'''" (1!~ fo!'nlt WMlllfr t>lct11•t lodtJ. Thtrt _, 11,._ WllJ wlncb I ncl coo:~r .......... , ... , .. Sm•ll crllr w1rn1,,., we•t 'lo111ed trom Pt>l111 Co11e.,.!IO" l• Lone 8t1cll. lri '"-LOI Anet!tt trtt 1tll!trtd •rrute1 c!11,M 11r!11\11 In '"' ~flt•· llOCMI. f"-rs -· 911111 wfndl II !Im .. t'>d temper1hir1• wert cooler wllll '-1'1 ll•t'tl!Uttl CIJIC Cen!tr llltll U, U1..,P1rord wlth Tl'lllrtdlJ'I 71. T ... WN lonl9111 •Ill bl .SS. T11er1 w11 tl•nt "I lrrl!ellllfl ;n lfll lnlt ncl Vt llHI el' 1111 l~ A-!t l 811· In ...,.,, Pl-11¥1!1 rttot-15 pe•li Mr mlUlnn ptrh. 01 1!r. 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" .... s• ~°"I• ~•'! l ·~e C11" '"" °'"° $•" ll•J111Cl\te ~~•"!~ W1,...11101on W\tllllltt Hl•ll L..,. l'rl<. " ~ " u $1 JI ~ " ., '7 " ... " ~ " . " " " • .. .. " " ·" • .. " " .. .. " g .. •• " " •I " I• • " " " " ~ " " " ,. " .. " " " ., • " " • " • " " • • • • " • • " " " " " " " •• • .. " .. ., " II • •• -" " " American diplomatic mission in Cairo, less than an hour after Sadat told the·na- tional assembly about it in a 90-minute speech on foreign and domestic policies. UPI Correspoo.dent Maurice Guindi reported from Cairo tha~ the Israeli posi· lion acrording to the diplomatic sources is: -A partial Israeli withdrawal from the canal to permit its clearance and reopen- ing. No distance was given for the v.•ithdrawal. -No crossing of Egyptian lMops but Israel would accept the presence of Egyptian police and civilians on the east bank after the partial pullback. -There should be an unlimited cease- fire. -Joint Egyptian-Israeli patrols in the area evacuated by the Israelis. -After reopening the Canal Israel Would make a commitment on a further troops withdrawal to "agreed boun- daries." · In his speech Thursday Sad at reiterated the minimum Ea: y pt i a n demands which in effect wa s a rejection of the Israeli terms. Everest Assault Ended by Series Of Difficulties KATMANDU, Nepal IUPI) -Death, illness. treacherous weather and discord brought to an end today an internationa l expedition 's attempt to climb ~1ount Everest, the world's tallest mou11ta in. The climbers, who dwindled from 32 to only t\\·o at the end, abandoned their qu est 2,000 feet short of the 29,028-foot summit. In a ter.se communique, the Nepalese Foreign Ministry said only that the l\\'O Britons had "stopped climbing." It was !he first attempt to scale the . r.t lmalityan peak by the southll·estern face of the mountain, an almost vertical route. Everest \\'as conquered for the first time in 19:l.'.I by another approach by Sir F.dmund Hilary and his Sherpa guide, Tenzing Norquay. The 1971 assault claimed the lift of ~faj. Harsh V. Bahuguna, the onl y lndian member, '\vho died of exhaustion and frostbite. Mixing Ban Brings Suit \VASHINGTON (AP) -The Jus tice Depa11fnent announced Thursday it ha'S sued the slate of Georgia and a county official for refusi ng to issue a marriage license to a white Arm y lieulenant and his Negro fiancee. A Justi ce Department spokesman said the U.S. District Court in Allanta has Issued a temporary restraining order which, in effect, required Clayton County Ordinary II. w. Roberls lo issue a marriage license to Lt. John Ray Sanford and his bride to be, Betty Byrom.' The suit names the state a$ 1 defendant in addition to Roberts because the refusal was based on a state law making it il~gal to issue. a license for a white person to mar· ry a Negro. The government has filed a similar su.it in Alabama, seeking to have that state's miscegenation law d~\ared unconstitutional. The suit said that Sanford, who is stelioned at Fl. Benning, and MiS$ Byrom, whO U~es-ln .r.follntaJn View, wert rerusect a marriage license by Roberts on May 5. The Georgia law should he declared null aod void because or Jt~ conflict with the 1•1h amend· ment to the U.S. Constltutlon, the government maintained. I · 'J'alk Speedups Arms Agreement Seen This Year WASHINGTON (UPI) -White House officials Said today the breakthrough in the Soviet-American attempt to airtt on limiting nuclear weapons sbould 'roc:luce 1peeded·up arm! talks in about f o u r months -if 1r1oscow is sincere. lf all goes well, they add. it may be possible for the Strategic Arms 'Limill· tion Talloi (SALT) to reacl>-by 'Ille <lid of this year -one agreement limiting defensive· Antlballistic Missile (ABM) systems in both countries, and another agreement limiting some of each nation's 41ffensive, or attack, weapons. President Nixon, in a three-minute television broadcast Thursday, said the White House and the Kremlin had reach-• ed a major agreement on the talks whfcb could break a deadlock that bas existed during the last year. But terms of the agreement remained a diplomatic mystery since officials would not elaborate on the joint state- ment. The statement said simply: "The gover nments of the United States and the Soviet Union, after reviewing the course of their talk.! on the limitations of strategic armament, have agreed to con- centrate this year on "''orking out an agreement for the limitation of the deployment of antiballistic m i s s i 1 e systems. They have also agreed that together with tbt concluding or an agree. ment to lirrlll antlballl.slic missile systems, they w 111 agree on certain measures with respect to the limitation of offensive strategic weapons." White House officials left the im- pression that the agreement represented a significant concession by the Soviet Union. In the current phase of the SALT talks the Soviets have insisted on reaching an agreement first on limiting defense missile system.!i -such as the ABM· -white the United States had in- sisted on reaching an agreement on both defense and offensive missile 11ystems. The Soviet side, therefore, appeared tt Connally Slates Germany Vi sit In Dollar Woes \VASHJNGTON (AP) -Secretary of the Treasury John B. Connally is going to Germany next week lo meet with many of the European government and banking officials most deeply involved in the re- cent world monetary crisis. Connally, in office Jess than four months, is expected to carry Prtsident Nixon·s message to the American Bankers' Association's international ~nking conference in Munich lhat economic recovery in America will not be !lowed because of the dollar crisis. Connally told newsmen Thursday the United States' approach has been to con· tinue economic expansion y,·hiie fighting to reduce the rate of inflation. He echoed the thinking of Federal Reserve Board Chairman Arthur F. Burns, who said a day earlier fighting in- flation, not rtducing interest rates, is the top priority in improving the dollar's in· ternational position. To underscore the importance of Con- nally"s trip, President Nixon Thursday v.'ent to the 'JZeasury building to meet with Connally for an hour and a hair discussion of the secretary's week in ~funich. Connally'1 visit is seen as an effort to ass ure European financial officials v.·or· ried over the dollar glut occurrint in their countries since the first of the year. The record dollar flow v.·a s triggered by lov.·er interest rates in the United Slates in comparison to those in Europe. As a result, \\'est Germany devalued its cur- rency relative to the dollar. Several other European rountries then revalued their currencies and the purchasing po~·er of dollar.s In Europe Jost some strength. Finals at Hattd have swung around to lhe Americ-n viewpoint. But the official statement also said that during the current year both aides would concentrate on working out an agrtement limiting only the ABM systems of both countrie.s. This is what the Soviel3 have been after. Tber was an obvious ambiguity in the joint Soviet-American statement which pennitted it to be interpreted in several ways wJthout actually revealing i!J lrut &umtance. Gerard C. Smith, the top U.S. arms negotiator, \\'as expected to return Lo Vienna today to wind up the current phase of lhe talks. His departurt ha~ already been delayed several times and it was still not certain he would definitely take off. Smilh returned to Washington May 7 te confer with Nixon. The Soviet-American understanding reportedly was reached about May 10. The administration w i l h he 1 d an· nouncement of t h e understanding, however, because of the crisis which blossomed immediately thereafter over Sen. Mike Mansfield's efforts to force a cutback of 150,000 U.S. troops in Europe. That issut was resolved Wednesday and the administration moved the next day to announce the Soviet-American agree· ment. * * * Better Weapons Believed Factor In Talk Accord WASHINGTON (UP!) -T)l e Pe~ tagon believes recent improvements in U.S. nuclear weapons helped bring about the Soviet-American ~gre,ment to_ move towards some kind of arms limltat1on. On March 31 and on April 26 the first two U.S. submarines were fitted with Poseidon missile s -a new generation or weapon capable of hurling up to 10 nuclear warheads at separate targets from beneath the octan surface. Defense Department officials also feet the introduction of the Minuteman Ill - which carries a trtple nuclear warhead and is based on land -al!o played a role in the break.through. Another factor , they feel. is the recent successful test of lht: Safeguard antiballislic missile system . On Capitol Hill the arms dtvelopment drew praise. Houst Republican Lead~r Gtrald R. Ford of Michigan called 1t "one of the most .significant breakthroughs for peace in the history of "ihe modern v.'orld." Sen. J. William Fulbright. (0.Ark.), said he was "encouraged" by the development since it seems to indicate both the U.S. and Soviet governments have made concessions and the prospect• for agreement are improved. Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, (0.Maine l called the news "a good first step" and said he hoped both nations would 'how mutual restraint in developing and deploying nuclear weapons while tbe negotiations continue. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, f D·~finn.). said the next step should he an un- derstanding. right now, that no more af· fensive or defensive weapons will he deployed. Sterilization Nixed AUGUSTA, Maine !UPI ) - A bill t.o provide free steriliza tion for welfare reci- pients narro¥.·ly missed approval by the r \ J.Iaine Senate. An initial nonrecorded vote favored the proposal 13-12 but on a call for the record the vote was rejected 12· 15. The measure would have provided the Health and Welfare Department with $100,000 over the ne xt two years to pay for voluntary sterilization of mothers and lathers on welfare. \Vi th semesters nearing an end at many schools and colleges. students spe nd most of the ir waking hours preparing for fin als. The se two young men take advantage of sunny Omaha skies and "'arm weather lo study In the park. - • ,, • DARY PILOT EDIT..ORIAL PAGE End of th.e Mud Dump Huntington BeacJi's protilem mud di.Imp. a 39-acre site behind the Southern California Edison plant, should soon teise to be a point of controversy with nelihbor· ing homeowners. Since January, resident·! near the facility have com· plained that oily mud trucked to the dump from well sites is the cause o1 loul odors in the area. Pressure was exerted ~n the ~ity ~unc~ and after a sloppily conduct· ed public hearing 1n whJch the emotions were much stronger than the evidence, the council found that the dump constitutes a public nuisance. The council wilhheld court 4ction to allow the city staff and the owners, Joseph and Carl Steverson, time to ne~otiate an ainicabJe solution. L The owners have now promised to halt all dump- ine: of liquid oil fleld wastes as of June 1. Jn addition, a chain fepce with a barbed Wire overhang has been completed around the site. The action speaks highly for the owners. They have probably given the city a stronger commitment than it could have expected to receive in court, even if the cou.ncll's finding of a public nuisance were upheld-- which was far !rom a strong bet. Time to Kiss and Make Up Last summer, a majority of Huntin~ton ~each councilmen voted against renewing the city s member- ship in the Orange County Coast Association. It was a rather petty display of pique that should by now have run its course. Councilmen were upset be- cause the association had opposed the city's stand on dissolution of the Harbor District, a bitter issue that tested 'the friendships of many elected officials in the county. .., burthere seems little reuon for Huntington Beach to rema.ln aloof thiJ year from 1 group that shares so many of the city's goals on coastal preservation. The coast association, with several Huntington Beach officials among its directors, has done much that has benefited the city in the past Although the assoc· iation might be embarrassed to answer "What have You done for us lately?", it appears an attempt is being made to rejuvenate the association's program. Huntington Beach wouJd do weU to resume a l'itrong role in the coast organization. Hard Wo,r.king Women Every year throughout the year. 11 small group of Fountain Valley women never stop working. They organ· ize, they write, they publiciie, they do all sorts of things they don't hav e to dO. Lest people think them enslaved, o~ in bondage. a more •r.t description ii dedicated. We're referring to the womens division of the Fountain Valley Chamber or Commerce. Most civic events in Fountain Valley are planned, organized, staged and cleaned up by the chamber's women. Their most recent succe:ss was Fountain Val· ley·~ Cultural Arts Week during which they had lo co· ordinate nearly 50 activities put on by schools, clubs and other groups. They also are responsible for the annual Halloween barbecue and picnic, the Christmas decoration contest and a program that welcomes new residents to the community. / ·/ .. .... <!D tff' ~~·~ The future of the Harbor District remains an issue They do such a good job the city· would suffer a tremendous loss if they were ever "liberated" from their work. H HOW TO SAVE IHE S.S.1 AN~ REVIVE 1Hf RAILROADS Suprenie Court May Act on Constitutionality Hard Look At Emerging Death Penalty Unrepealed reasonable. Ont J"'li"' -··· .g, ... _P olitics To suffer death for any crime may be a ~·cruel and unusual punishment'' forbid- den by ihe Eighth Amendment to the Constitutioo, but the Supreme Court has never said so. A recent ruling by the court, upholding the procedures which most states use in imposing µie death penalty, has precipitated a flurry of ac· tivity among those advocating an end to capital punishment. An emergency strategy ronference May tS-16 at Columbia University was called by the NAACP Legal Defense F'w!d, which represents about half of the 650 persons now sentenced to die. Jack Himmel!tein of the Fund uid May g that &0me 110 persons would gather to explore avenues for further action. The court held May 3 that states did not deny defendanls thelr rights by allow~ ing juries absolute discretion ·in Imposing the death penally -or by ,Uowtng juries to decide a defendant's sentence at the same time as his guilt. NO ONE ff.AS BEEN executed in the United States since 1967. All ex!Cullons were delayed until the Supreme Court had announced its decision in several cases involving capital punishment. Now that the court has ruled, on procedural ground.s, no more such decisiom are pending. . ~ ., Edi.JW i Rese~ch • •. At the Columbia con fer e nce, participants were to examine the possibilities for legislative action .and ex· ecutive clemency, as well as furthe r judicial challenges to the death penalty. Many of the attorneys in attendance represent condemned prisoners. Their concern ls both specific -for the livts of their clients; and general -for the aboli· Uon of capital ..punishment. The Supreme Court may provide yet another reprieVe for the inhabitants of Death Row. Jt may agree soon to decide the central questk>n concemb1g capital punishment : 15 the death penalty a "cruel and unusual punishment"' and therefore unconstitutio nal? This question is posed in many of the more than 100 ap-. peals from death sentences whJch are now on the court's docket. Only four Justices have to agree to hear arguments in such a case for the court to take it. SOLICITOR GENE RAL Erwin N. Griswold has said that this line of attack on capital punishment Itself is perfectly Hugo L. Black. 1n a concurring opinion May !. said flatly that he did not believe the Corutitution outlawed the death penalty: "Jt iJ inconceivable to me that the framers intended to end capital punishment." . Reaction to the JI.fay 3 decision was mixed. In California -where 99 persons have bttn wa iting under sentence of death -Gov. Ronald Reagan affirmed, through his press :secretary, that he was still in favor of the death penalty. San Quentin's associate warden said that ex. ecution dates would 110C. be set -at least for the 15 or 20 prisoners there who have exhausted al] appeals process. All of Florida·s 71 condemned prisonel'3 ate still safe from Immediate execution. A 1967 federal courl order barred any electrocutions until a case challenging tfle ronslitutionality or the death penalty itsell was setUed. And in Ohio-where 42 men are condemned to die. -Gov. John J. Gilligan said there would be no e.x. ecutions until the Supreme Qlurt ruled on the fundame ntal Eighth Amendment issue. A technicality stands between life and death for the 28 condemned prisoners In Alabama. State law prescribes that ex- ecutions be carried out within the walls ol 1 certain prison -which ha.!1 been demolished. Frederick G. Dutton's "Changing Sources of Power: American PolitiC! in the 1970s," just publll.hed by f.ft'Graw· fill 1$7.9:>), is dedicated .. To AU the Young People Who Will Be Voting for the First Time in This Decade." A pro- vocative reronnalssance or the develo pin g political struggle for the future of American society. this book takes a hard , look at the emerging rorces and public controvers ies that will likely absorb the nalion·s attention in years to come. ?.fore important than the contention between the two major parties, or among the most prominent presidential can· didates and their principa l supporters, the author feels. arc "the hisloricaJ lines of force to which they are likely to be responding early or lafe during this decade . "ESPECIALLY JN a pelliod of divided government, !here Jl! need to recognize that what so tentatively prevail.! now will probably be under serious chi!llenge as the seventies move along . . . . If the What Can Newton Offer? older America has more votes, money, experience, and guns at present, the new eleffif!nts have still·unfathomablc energ;y. growth, Imagination, and time on their &ide." To the Editor : I note that Trash Day will come to UCl early this year with the upcoming visit of Black Pussycat, Huey P. Newton. Ostensibly, the visit will "enlighten us on 1ome of the struggles that political prisoners are facing ... through the judicial syste m. ttc., etc." 'l'his. ac· cording to one of the organizers of the "cultural" conference. Possibly, at the ume time. Huey will expound on }Jow political prisoners of hia party an: tr9 ted: very en!Jghtenlng Jn. deed. 1·m sure they would have preferred our nastY old judicial system. Of course. Huey wtll avoid diJc:Usslng anything but tiis own 'Problems. all of which he made for hlmself'; all of which are $50,000 in bail and the fault of society. TRtS SA.i\tE NASTY society and system allow losers like Newton to circulate v.'hile av:ailing retrial. What people like Newton can offer a college group escapes me. But. the sponsors and adm inlSlralion in their masochistic wisdom must be working for the economy by offering a little employ. ment to a person without any other employable sktlls. If l.hings get worse, Friday, May 21, 1971 ' . .... Mailbox \ Letteri from reader.s are welcome. Normally writers should convey their messages tn 300 word.s or le.rs. The right to conde11se letter.s to fit space or eliminatt: libel U rese rved. AU let- ters mu.st include signature and mail· tng add1ess, but namt:s mav bt: with,. held on requea' if tufficient 1't:Cl3on is apparent.., P0t:tru will not be pu~ U.htd. Huey can always jump bail and join col· league c\eave.r, who also voiced his four- letter jewels of wisdom at UCI before jumping bail for distant points. But. of course, all these lhinga after he -enligbtens. CALVIN G. SIEGLE Pnrk "•· Fluorldadon To the Editor : On the AOutheast corner of Springdale and Hell streets In Huntington Beach. enclosed by a chain link fence, slta a dreary marshland with a sign that reads: "CITY P ,ARK SITE Development Scneduled For 1970'0 This b; already May 1971 ! Whal hap- pened to lhe city's plan~? Were they forgotten. or just unfunded? We d tiien taxpayers know that development of parks l, costly. We also know that the city has many ambitious plans, Md that pri-Orllles WU) have to be given to the most Important Im· provements. And. hopefully, we would like to 1tt t.hese thlnga done within the llmllltlons ol the budgtt based oo the piesent tai rate. rluoridalion (which is not truly needed i;ince the water has some natural fluoride). Also. the Huntington Beach Citiie.n:ii !or Pure Waler posted a notice of intent to ci rculate petitions on March 25, and the petitions are now circulatin([. The city should postpone any expenditure of fund5 far fluoridation until lhe results of citizen action are determined, which is bound to be suet:essful, in view of the fa cl that more than 4,000 signatures were secured oo the first petition. Let us have a park now, not nuorlda· A fe>TTmr Special Assistant to President John F. Kennedy and Secretary of the U. S. Cabinet; former Assistant Secretary or State; former Executive Assistant lo the Governor of California, Dutton notes that the 1968. 1970. and 1972 elections are but passing episodes in an historic transition in which the U.S. is alr~ady caught up. HE SEES THE nalion m C' ·: in g abrasively and unevenly into une or 8e\'f'ral possible alternative future5 for v;hich the early '70s are only an In· belween . Yet. he feet_,, taken as ,11 whole the coming decade will probably tum out to be as determining a1 was "the Jef- Ierson revoluUan" of J800. the age of PAULINE E. MOEN Jackson. the rite of the Republican party with Lincoln, and the.Ne" Deal. ti6h! rr..11hou1e Support To the Editor: I would like to thank you on behalf of 1ht Huntington Beach Playbouse for your kind support of us. Not only were you kind enough to publish 1 publicity picture for us for the carnival, hut you placed it on the front page wllh a delightful writeup as well. It is enthusiastic support 1uch as yours that has made the playhoust such a suc- cess 11nd h~s allowed us to do biger and better things for the commwiity. "Clanging Sources of P o w e r ' ' recognizes that historic forces, largely heedless of Immediate Public figures and events. are building toward a showdown with the nal.ion·s prevailing politics and public order. Some of these forces have already made a fitful entry onto the na. lional scene. Dutton writes, whil~ some 11till lie not far below the surface of the present political system. THEY AR E NOT confined to any particular party or .J>art of the Ideological spectrum, bUt are 11lirrinf throughout Ame11ican society -not only In the social structure and econom·y, bul Again. many thanks. ANN WALKER in the deeper attitudes and psychologk:al~ impulses. Yet the wlde·spread restiveness, riots and reactions of reeent years are only symptoms of more basic Dear Gloomy Gus: lfuntlngton Beach will be all fouled up In Its developmMt plans lf that Assembly bill maket the state a dicta.tor_ Lot~ Democrat A~semblyman Slerotj sfiould keep his 003e out ol our affaJrs. pressures that are g.!ltherlng. As Dutton puls it, his concer11 is "v.·lth not just more or less of what already tl· lsts. but also what could well be dif ferent over the course of the 1evenlies. The tendtney when looking ahead b1 to slip off into the more bizarre and volatile frl"ges. quite without regard lo their proportlon1l role or probable historical effect. But the interest here is primarily in the maln.stre.sm as It ls developing in ils own -diver*4!nd often turbultnt-'way 1'':.. Why Critics and Public Disagree 'i\'hen the judges for th~ National Book Av.•ard insisted upon . dropping •·r.ove Story" from the fiction oominaUons, this contemptuous gesture oulrag· ed millions of Amer· icans, and punled just as many more. How could the run· away btsl·seller of lhe year be deemed oot even worthy of consideralion by this committee of writ- ers. It Is impos11ib\e 0 to adjudicate suet\, di11putes between the public and the .in·t telllgentsia. They geem to be lalking1 about the ~ame thing -a novel named, •·Love Story" -but they are in actuality responding to quite different stimuli. THE PUBUC IS responding lo the story on an emotional le vel, and the judges are responding to a purporte~ work of art on an intellectual and pro- fessional level . The public has a perfecl right to enjoy the book, and the com· miltee has an equal right to repudiate it. But when I say that the public ha! • perfect right to enjoy it, I do nol mean that 1 concur in its taste. It is a wretched book, however appealing on a sentimental level, but people have a right to bad taste, In book!, clothes, music, or anything else. Whal they do not ha ve a right to is the confusion of taste with st andards . 1 HA VE LEA RNED over the years, however, that it is nearly impossible to . persuade a person untrained in the am that everything is not just "• matter of taste.'' One cannot convince most people -.hat •·rhe Sound or Music " was a rotten movie, or that "Cod Ble$s America" is 1 banal song, or thal the nostalgic landscape hanging over their lireplace is a piece of junk. 'rhey are emotionally moved by all these lhing:ii, and thati ls enough fQr them. Yet in their own fields, they would not be so easily fooled. A good carpenter would know at a glance when a house is well and truly built, no rt;iatter how beguiling it might look from lite outside, and would not be deceived by il~ superficial appeal. A good lailor can tell 111 a glance which suiting has been sk.illfully run up or which is sleazy. A NOV~L. A FIL•1. a piece of musie, is a technical fabrication, before it can be anything else. It must have the 11ame pro- fessional cra ftsmanship, the game hones. ty and integrity, as a well-b uilt house or hand.sewn suit, before lt merits oor ap- proval. But the public knows nothing ol these things; it sees only the surface gli t.-- ter. This is why there is no effective com. municalion between tbe untrained au· dience and the trained observer. And why, without the right tducation. we can never hope to persuade the public that '·Love Story" is a gingerbread house wholly uninhabitable by .real people. Military Drug Problem By the most reliable e a I J m a I e 1 available, of the more than 20 million young Americans in the age group mid· teens through mid·20s, about one in 120 111 an addict or a frequent user of hard narcotics. Among the fewer than 300.000 United Stale! .servicemen 4n Vietnam. m09t of thtm in the 17· to 23-year-old age group, a congressional study has placed the ratio of hard-drug users at one in every geven to 10. Last year, according to lhl study, between 60 and 90 Gls in Vietllam died from heroin ove rdoses and the United States military establishment as a whole ·rep<:>rted 60 drug-related deaths. IF THOSE FIGURES are correct -in· deed. I( they are anything like correct - then the lime has grown very late for this country to take the preventi ve and cor· rective ~cUon that will be ·required to hearl off the deepening of .a crisis. both civlilian and military. of fr ightening magnitude. The fir1t step, now that the wraps have been taken off, is to verify the accuracy of this assessment by the House Armed Services 1subcommittee. And if it i!i ac- curate, Several steps must follow in short order: -.~DEM.I.NO. NOT l\fERELV liUggest. that the governments In thal part of the world -to whose RtTVival the Uniter! Stat.es ha,, committed t norm o us resourcet :itens of thousands of llve.'I -crack n hard on the loca l pro- f ~ ·. ' 'Gllest Editorial f with the problem at the t r o o p level. Eyen, if necf!S!ary , by isolating for treatment and rehablUtation all of those servicemen who have fallen prey to U1e narcoUc~ ''epidemic." -FINALLY. EVOLVE A companion strategy /or protecting the civilian population trom the t>bvioWI dt1ngers in- herent In returning to domestic life young men who are addicttd to hard drugs at • rate 12 to 17 time11 that of their non· stt'\lice contemporaries. Halfway eJJort will nnt sufllce. Nor 11 cost a ronslteratioo, The expense wlll simply have to be amortized as another <mt in an already hideously expen:oJivc undertaking. The utterly unacceptable altcrnatJve vould be to exPQse thi5 socie- t) to a debijllating and shameful on:lt'al who:te consequences could outlive even the national heartbrt:ak O\'er the Asian war Itself. Knn1as CUy Star .---.BIJ George ---, Dear.~Gtorge : I un<krstand th• tno has a new matayru. Is this true~ DON B. Dtartn 8'1 / Wh 's a -t Tht editorial poge o/ tht Dal111 Pilot &ll!:ekt to inform ond 1tim. ulatt readers by prtsendng thU newspaper's opinions ond com- YMntor11 on topics o/. interest and iigni/icance. bv PTOVidino a forum for thl £rpression of our rc~r1' oplni?ns..t ~11d bv presenting lht if1ver.Tt vff'1~ pointl of tttformcd. oruerw:rs and .rpokerm.tll on iopia of the day. WITI!.TllESE ll!ou#lllS in mind, I sue .. iest that the city use Lbe $60,000 of tax· payers' money achtduled for installation of nuorldaUon equtpment to develop the 1>1rk 1ile described above. This would do moni ror our city by beautlfyln1 It than -.s. o. L. As 1 bmad array or fl(Jlte epeclltc new forces emergell on the American pollllcal sctne. it ill Dutton's goal to htfp tM ob- J!d.lve observer 1'to perceive, tort out, aUttt. and .relate to what m1y atlll be a few or more years 1way:' cessing "(a 1~0 thaf. are reported'""Tu be lhe prlnclpsl source of heroin supply ; • ind tti.n follow lhrouab to Insure th11:t ~ l!Wld Is met. .; Oh~o. you don' , Ttallan joi"es are _ 1. ! <Strid you prnb-ms lo Georat. the °"&in1tor of $ideways Think· Ing.) ,... ..."" ,..,...,. ,......, ......... """ Robert N. Weed, Publisher -••Prllt ...... .. .... ........... ..... """ "' _.. • .._, ~ OtllY ...... Vlc:t.or de Keysertln1 -Develop. through consultalion at the highest leve:l1 or the administration , a coherent, pracllcablt strategy for dealln1 • QUEENIE By Ph il ~terluncll ' • DAILY l'ltOY-g· 18t C:onflrmed Case ·Pennsy Peri.I Cited . $92.5 Million Lost in 3 Months PHILADELPHIA (~) -a little in April. But there are go broke by August or Se~ The Penn Cent r a I 1llll losses on top of losses." tember unle.M work rule.s and Tramportatlon Co., w h I t b The trustet.S said earlier thlt other labor cost Issues were C... Woman PoisoneP, By Fish Mercury runs America's b I gg eat month that the railroad would resolved. WASRINGTON (AP) -A parts ptr million standard railroad, reported Thursdlly a New York health officer says considered safe. $92.5 million loss for the first tbe mercury poisoning of a The FDA ordered some tuna three months of this year Md FBI Ma Enter Prob1·ng housewile who dieted on off otore •helves last ii"' but called lU situation "perilous." y swordfish dramatizes the has since declared a I on the "It does appear that the potential danger facing otMr mar.ket to be within it.!! 0.5 d is as tr o us ... downward 0£ N d ' GM Ch ''fish faddist!.'' ppm standard. h. h rg Herdrp.an described the plunge at a rate W IC got a er s a es Dr. Roger Herdman, deputy steadily worse all through last direct.or of the New York Sta~ ~~~ c~~~ hU:" ~~e;~~~ year has been slopped.'' CITES PO ISONING ·Health Department, described reported the four trustees an. WASHINGTON (UPI) and marked the suggested Or. Roger Herdman thepU••tofan" uni"dentifi'aA « this nation directly at· ' Th FB · be' "-d t · ~-hich "t f It ____ .:.._______ 5'' .. .,. tr'ibutable to mercury polson· pointed by a federal judge' to e I is mg as= o in-l.'lldnges w 1 e were re-year old U>ng tsland woman din · •-R I h N d • · ·• to t d ing from or · ary marketable guide the company's vestigar.e ap a ers new qull'll;\J correc errors an to a Senate environment su't>. food.'' reorganization through. charges that employes of' the omissionsinthetranscript"at LJ S B co--;ttee Thura~a·y. d G al M lo R'b. ff' t t uu•u She underwent lreatment for bankruptc;y court. Sena:~ an elner of 0 rs J !CO ll reques . • • oa s The mother or three con-what was coruidered a Th.e first quarter 105.'i is $26 altercu transcr pts auto The subcommittte was pro-sumed about 10 ounces of "psychosomatic d is ease ' ' million higher than a year safely hearings in 1966 to pro-bing, in part, GM's alleged at· S S • swordfish dally for nine more than a year, he said, and , ago, but it doesn 't approacti tect top GM officials. templtl to discredit Nader ay 0 V lets months in 1964 and 1965, he contacted hi II department the \\'orst three months in the Nader alleged In a letter t.o when the consumer advocate said. and lost 4.5 of her 16~ three months ago with "Perhaps we shouldn't start the day off with & look at the stock market ••• " railroad '.!! hlst.ory -' the $197 Sen. Abraham D. Rib icoff t D-first began to make allega· pounds. She continued ber symptoms of dizziness, ,loss of million loss in the October t.o Conn.), that changes were tions that GM cars wue Still at It swordfish diet sporadically un-memory. jerky handwriting, December period last year. made in the testimony of GM unsafe , til November 1970. trembling hands and speak· The.tru1tee1report'ed1 loss -Chairman James M. Roche To back up his charges, BOSTON !AP) -Three new Now, be said , she has been ing and hearing problems. and Louis G. Bridenstine . then N d 1· d a·b· ff 'th of $15.1 miUiOn in April, $4.1 a er supp ie I ico WI incidents or harassment of diagnosed as a mercury A sample of her hair con• million leu than a year ago. an as.5istant general counsel what he said was the original American lobster fishing boats poisoning victim. talned 42 ppm of mercury. Senator Promises Tough Draft Fight The transportation firm filed for GM . transcript and what actually by Russian trawlers south of The woman purchased the compared with no more. than 3 for reorganization under the Rlbicoff said Thursday he .appeared in the v er 8 i 0 n Nantucket Island have been swordfish. all of It fresh. from ppm in an average person, be federal bankrup tcy law last "'·ould ask the FBI t.o in-printed by the committee for reported, alt.hough negotiators 8 local market, "because she said. June. vestigate Nader's complaint. the public record. told a CfJngresSional com· didn't like fish ... She wanted 8 ·-"'----------He also i;aid the Justice "Th · d I ,. d Id be The trustees said Penn Cen-e major e e ions an mlttee that violators wou nonfi!hy tasting f j 8 h, • • WASHINGTON (UPI! - Pledging w tie up the Senate "il it takes 10 weekt;, 15 weeks or 20 weeks,'' a freshman senator from Alaska loday prepared for another round in his effort to kill the military draft. tral's 1ltuation re q u Ires Department investigated a additions to the testimony of punished by the Russian fleet Herdm11.n said . ., Tb "d similar allegation by Nader in h h h commander. measures. ey sa1 a com-1967, but ''found no reason for GM witnes11e.!I w ic I ave Tuna fish fits that category, The Selective Service Law parison or figures indicated prosecution 11.t that time... discussed , came at a time 1nvoh'ed in incidents Thurs-he said, and "a person eating "'ill expire June 30 if Congress ~the heavy first quarter loss Ribicoff is chaJ.rman of the when the record was in the: day morning were \Vily Fox, 10 ounces 1 da)'. would exceed does not act, and Gravel and Was rou~ly compa~ab~e lo a 11 u b c 0 mm It tee whose custody of the subcommittee oul of Westport. Mass .. \\'hich the maximum 'allowable in- h. II' ho 1 t year ago If lwo special income transcript was purportedly staff _ and apparently "·ere Jost a quantity of lobster gear take " set by the Food and is 8 ies pe 0 preven ac· Items in 1970 were considered. d earlier this week, and the Pat Drug Administration. lion until that date, forcing the . Last year the railroad made change . made without your knowledge S On May 6 the FDA r--. GM said in a statement or that of any other Senator. an Mar ie. ~,. military service to fill their a $16.9 million profit on the l\'ader was trying to "in· They rai se, therefore , ques-Thursday night. the Coast mended that Americans if.op ranks with volunteers. sale bf one subsidiary lo timidate'' the subco mmittee tions regarding the pe rsonal Guard said, the \Vily Fox eating swordfish because the Sen. Hugh Scott, & f an.at.her ~n~ collected $9.6 staff. responsibility of c er la I n reported 12 tra"l'lers sailed agency's tests of 853 samples Pennsylvania the Se n a t e million dividends from ~he GM gai d it "reviewed the Senate eftl'p!oy~ during that through ii.! fishing are a showed 95 percent contained Stn. Mike Gravel I D • Alaska). and his small band of supporters turped back three attempts by 'Senate leaders Thursday. to set a date for voting on ·.!iome of the dozens of amendments to a bill that would extend the draft for t\\'O ,.,,.,,_ ' other ·Penn Central subsid· transcript of th! 1966 hearing period in 1966,'' Nader said. shortly before 8 p.m. mercury ex~eeding its 0.5 Republican leader, threatened iaries. \-~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~l Thursday to cut off lhe delay· "In terms of the key nelj ing tac Ii c 15 by imposing railway operating income loss ' clolure .• '''P which would figure. the first quarter , .. ult Come See the Southland's Most Exc·1t1·ng Furn1·ture Stores end debate and bring the Issue "'as only $2.J million larger to a vote. · · than last ye111r and the com· Protest Seen At Ceremony ForLBJUnit AUSTIN, Tex. fU Pll - Lyndon B. Johnson, whose Presidency "''as plagued by Vietnam \\'ar demonstrations, 1 apparently \\'ill have to face the paint-smeared faces of an~ tiwar protesU!rs again Satur· day at dedlcalion ceremonies for the LBJ Library. President Richard M. Nixon, Vice Pi-esidenl Spiro T. Agnew and House Speaker Carl A'lbert will be present. along with hundreds of other na· tional figures . Nixon will be th e main speaker at the nationally televil!ed ceremorues begin- ning at 12 :30 p.m. ED'l'. The congregetifll'l of t.op- ranking government leaders has caused anti.,.ar ,!?roups to plan massive demonstrations . Local "Mayday Tr i be '• .members, student protest groups and othe r antiv:ar t1rganizations predict 500 to 4.000 people v.•ill demonstrate. Some of the more radical groups have said they v.•ill try to disrupt the official ceremonies, but officials sa:-i no one without a s~cial guE'st badge \\'Ill be allo1\•«l near the library ground s. The library is part of an SJB.6 million cornplex Cln the t.:niversity of Texas campus that also hnuses the Lyndon 8. Johnson School of Public Af· fairs. The dedication ceremonies are slated to take place at the foot of a grassy krloll rin which the eight story building stands. An ou!dnor barbecue luncheon will follow. Citv and campu! police and &ecret service agents will cor- don off the area. , Gravel complaine d senior parable April loss was S3.S senators were 'trying to give million less than la.st year," his group "the bum's rush." the trustees .said. Tbe Alaska senator argued "We take no satisfaction the Senate. yote could be from comparin& figures that crucial in American history. are still red. He said it would decide "It does appear that the: v.•hether the United States disastroua 12 month downward would be "peace-loving'' (If plunge at a rate which got "bellicose." steadily worse all through last Gravel said the d r a I t year has stopped. legislation was "the Only bill "The lo.5s rate, .so far as the that requires people to be railroad nperstions themaelv1ts killed in the service of their are concern!<!, leveled out in country." the first quarter and eased up The Nixo n Administratio n bas advocated a plan of tying an extension of the dralt to military pay increases with the hope< Gf converting to all· volunteer military forces by 1973. So1iic Boom Threat Told ·On Treasures WASHINGTON !UPJ) The director of the National Park Service has complained sonic booms generated by milltary a i r c r a ft have destroyed prehist.oric ruins and blastf'd the face.!! off cliffs in scenic areas. G. B. Hartzog Jr. told 111 H nu s e appropriations sub- rommittee Thursday h';! con· sider('d the cnnduct of military p1lnt;; "disgrace.fu )." He ;;aid the damage they had caused in Nalinnal Parks was in· calculable. "\Vivi\ are a.non or 4.000- \•ear-nld prehistoric r u \ n s We>rth ~·· he, asked. ''\\'hat is thf! face of 11; cliff in Mesa Verde "'orth?" II is ~haltered off and oo\\' is at the bottom of the canyon." J~artzog romp!a1ned protests lo the Air Force have brought no response and lelling the story tn the public has brought no rea ction. 45 Arrested In Protest A~ Campus KENT, Ohio (UPI ) -Police arrested at least 45 persons early today as they swept a large crowd of yo\UM from the downtown area back to the Kent State University campus for the third straight nigh t. One student was seriously hurt when a motorcyclist swerved at high speed into the demonstrators. At least 25 persoM were taken inlh custody as the police began their move at Water and Main Streets after reading the Riot Act. Twenty others were arrested on ~ University Commons, including Kent Slate Student President Craig Morgan . Other scattered arrests may raise the total lo near 70 In custody, police said. Students said there have been several simil a r demonstrations 1n the 13 months !iince four Kent students were slain on campus by. National Guardsmen. but the~e were the first mass ar· rests. PAI INAL IL TINGS The crowds gathered as they had since Tuesday night tc protest city crdinances against hitchhiking and carrying open containers of alcoholic beverages. Choose One of the Many Coast & Southern Federal Offices to Serve You: 24X36 "·~t1"'"' o· 00 ON CANVAS EA. LEE'S ORIGINAL OILS ILoell f•r th Uttl1 ycll1w c•ttet•I 349 E. 17th 51., Coit• MH•-645°5360 Opon F~. Thru Mon., 11 ·5 * MAIN OF11Cl:tth 6H111, lot AngelN • 12~1)$1 * WILIHIAl 1t GRAMIRCY PU.Cl!: 3933 Wllshlf9 BIYd., L.A. •388•1295 L.A. CIVIC Cl!NTIR: 2nd & lrotctw1y • ~1102 * HUNTINGTON llACH: 11 Hunt1n§lon Ctnt•r • (714) 19T·104'1' IAHTA ANA LOAN Sl!RvtCI AGENCY: } '* 1905 N, Main St• (71 4) S4'1'.a2S1 * BANTA MONICA: 718 Wilahl'9 Blvd.• 3t3-074& .. SAN PIDllO: 10th & l'acltlc • 8314341 .. WllTCOVINA: E11U1nd Shopping Ctr.• !S1..nf)1 ~ PAN°""MA. CITY: ae11 Van Nuys Blvd .• 892·1171 '* TA."2ANA: 1ST!i 1 Vantuta Boul•vatd • S4M814 * LOHQ llACH:3rd I. 1.ocuat •431·74'1 °"' s.tw~-1 .. to 1 ... DlllY'lton~9 ....... ASSETS OVER $80Q MILLION • , u :1 ·' "' Art Linkletter Shows You a New Way to Beat Inflation ... Just Join 6%e lnsidem Club Wltt1 a $2,500 balance In you r 11Vlnga accounti-YOU are ellglbl• to become a member. Subatantlal 1avlngs are avallablewhen purchasing many llama lncludlng automoblle1, fumllur11 appliances, jewelry. Plus many free se rvices-money orde11, aafi dePosrt ISOXes; etc;- • Coast & Southern Federal Offers You These Highest Prevailing Rates: COM'°UNDED DAILY AND PArD QUARTQ.LY.• 5.00•1 •• 5,139/o P1ubook; No Minimum. 5.25 o/a.5,399/o ThrH Mon1h Certlftcate: No Min imum. 5.75"1°•5,92°/a On .. Vhl' C1rtlt1cate; $1,000 Minimu m • 6.00"l•-6,18"/o 1-Y111 Certltl .. te; '5,(1(1() Min imum. • Ett.ct!VI Annual Eunln111 • INSURANCE TO $20,000 • 1· 1· I ,1 " I I • ,. -... SPRING HAS SPRUNG -Spring showers won't put a damper on the Fountain Valley \Voman's Club installation dinner dance to· morro\v evening in the Gold Anchor restaurant, Huntington Beach. tast Bid fo r Funds Center -Holds Winning Hand Golden Key members have decided to "p-nochle .. do~'n and have one more fund·raising event to ''bridge" the gap between the working season and summer. According to Mrs. Ivan . Narragon, chairman, the card party will take place in the home of ~1rs. Ray More- house tomorrow beginning at 8 p.m. :\ $2 ticket will entitle members and guests to an evening of fun, prizes an d games, including pinochle, bridge. poker and bunko, with all proceeds going to the Child Guidance Center of Orange County. Assisting with party plans are Mrs. Cy Peterson, lilr. an d Mrs. Charles Wright and Mr. and Mrs. Sherwood Bailey. 1'he group participated in the recent citywide fes- tival with a coffee and punch booth where information on the guidance center was distributed. The group, in addition to sponsoring various fund· raising functions, operates a thrift shop at 311 Fifth St., Jtuntington Beach, under the direction of Mrs. Richard Gardner, chairman. Offered at bargain prices are dishes, clothing. jewelry, knickknacks and a few collector's items. Hours are from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday, all throughout the year. Donations are accepted by the thrift shop at any time and anyone wishing to contribute items may con· tact any Golden Key member or bring them to the shop. ~ BEA ANDERSON, Editor l'rlfty, Mil' 11, 1•11 PM ""•II New Slate Springs Things will be dliferent in Fc;>untain 'valley tomorrow night=- there won't be a smattering of husbands at h~me by themselves or baby-sitting while their wives are off to a club meeting. For Fountain Valley Women 's Club members have invited their spou~c:; to join them for their annual installation dinner dance in the Gold ..A.~chor restaurant, Huntington Beach. Carrying out the theme Swing Into Spring, the tables will sport umbrellas and flowers. A cocktail hour will begin at 6:30 p.m. and din· ner \\'l!l be seived at 7:30. Installing officer during the ceremonies to follow dinner will be ?¥Irs. Robert Sullivan, charter president of the club. Mrs. Edwin D. Booth \Vill accept the president'! gavel, and seat· ed' with her will bt the Mmes. Clarance Stewmon, first vice president; Will Romine, second vice president; Douglas Ryder, third vice presi· dent; Arthur Corriveau, recording secretary; Dave Heffner, treasurer, and James Allen, corresponding secretary. Chairmen will be the Mmes. Gerald Wessler, philanthropic; Lorin Lammers, federation extension; E. F. Sigl, program and hospital- ity, and William Carroll, social. - Members have invited Oleir husbands to Swing Into Spring with them during the annuaJ social affair, for which Mrs. Wallace Short {left) and Mrs. Edwin D. Booth are ready to depart. Mrs. Wallace Short will serve as advisor and Mrs. Robert Welch will be parliamentarian. SUCCESS IN CARDS -If the size· of the cards has any· thing to do with the outcome of their upcoming party, mem- bers of Golden Key Oeft to right) the Mmes. Jack Greeley, Ray Morehouse and Sherwood Bailey predict a huge sue- ce$S .. The fl!)al (und·raislng event of the year will take place at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the'Dome o! Mrs. Morehouse. All pro- ceeds will go to the Child Guidance Center of Orange County. • l • I +--• • < • • • ·~ • ~ ' ~ < ' l i -.<. ' ' . •' ... ·" •. ·. : ., Ann Misses Poi.nt: Problem Could Lead fo Delinquency , ···. •,' DEAR ANN LANDERS : My husband end 1 are undecided. Will you please help us come to grips '"ith the problem? We live in a middle-class housing develop- ment. We mind our own bu sines5' and have a pleasant relationship with everyone on the block. But our neighbors are nol our social friends . The family down lhe street has four children. Three times in the past six weeks.. they jlave sent one of their children over here to -i-ioorrow" a couple of cigarettes. My husband smokes. I do not. We have always given the cigarettes to the child and not thought too much about it. but after the third time we are beginning to wonder if we should t:ontinue this practice. There's a drug store l.hree blocks from here which stays open until midnight. Whal is your opinion? -FREE ANN I.ANDERS CIGARET'l'E MACIUNE DE~ FREE: ~ wor1t part of tbi1 scene 111 the example tlii parents 1-re set• ti11 for tbelr cbDdrta. It ill ufortanate when ehlldrtn aee UM:ir. pernll to enslaved by tbe tobacco habit that they must borrow • cigarette to get through the night. It h 1110 • nuisance. I'd 1ay lhree tlmu fl enough. From now ti 1ay 'jno." (Editor's Note: We believe Ann has missed the point because the children borrowin1 the cigarettes may be smoking • them themselves. The lenders possibly are contributing to juvenile de linquency.) DEAR ANN LANDERS: l am happy you reprinted your-TWel~t Rutea for Raising Children. As a grandmother who did well with her own brood and Is now wat ching her daughters and sons do even better,,may J add a 13th rule? If a mother or father lack lhe Im- agination or will not take the time to plan something interesting and instructive for t~eir children to do, they have no right t.t ob]ect to whatever the kids think up tbemselves. -KANSAS GRANNY DEAR GRANNY: Rl11bt you ire. "Aa Idle mind ii the devil's workshop. Idle hand1 are hi• tools." Let'• mike It 1 baker'• dozen. Thanks for writln1. DEAR ANN LANDERS ' 1 am a 13- year-old girl who has a problem that is bothering me a lot. I have no idea what to do about iLl hope you will give-me a solution. Lois has been· my best friend for seven years but rece nUy she ha$ developed a bad habit. She comes Into my house. 1iU with me for about 10 minutes, then off she goes to the kitchen and helps herself lo whatever she s"s. I wouldn 't dream o1 doing such a thing -even in my aunl's house. I think lt'1 colossal nervt. Thi1 afternoon, Lois fixed herself 1 triple-decker sandwich ind drank halt a quart. of milk. I kept my mouth shut because I didn't know what to say. After she left I was mad 1t myself for keeping quiet. Would 1 be a bad hostess If I told her l didn 't like ii? -CHICKEN FRIEND DEA.I\ CIUCK: I.Alt bl1 Dt muntr1 and r -ttablk '" m1gbt ie1e.1l Hf> IOtnetblag. It II extremely rade lo 10 into tbe klkben tf • friend and belp oneself to food. ne next lime Lois heads tbat way, stop kt ind explala Ou1t you plan lo sefYe cookies ind milk a little later and that the tbould wilt. DEAR ANN LANDERS ' Our daughter ia 23. She married a lazy. no·&ood rat who 0 Is already cheating on her. She 11 1lz months pregnant. Should. we encourage,, her to get a divorce? We don 't thlnk H.1 makes any sense for a young girl to nv, with a mistake forever. Please rush yo~ advice. -MOTHER WHO SAW IT 00~ JNG "\, DEAR MOTHER: Keep qultL It ii-~ ml11ake and her ... good, luy nl ft~ 11h09ld 1lto be her dttl1ioa, 1lact He wll'.'ti bave to abide by the coaaequence.. ~ Give in or lose him .•• when a N ' gives you lhis line, look out! For tips oa.' how to handle the super sex aaletman. check Ann Landers. Read her booklet.. · "Necking and Petting -What Art the Limits?" Send your request to An11 Landers In care of the DAILY PILOT, enclosing 50 cents Jn coin and a lonf.' .. stamped. selLaddresscd envelope. .; ' . . • ' • ~ . .. - DAILY PILOT Question ' Tempting ;A panel of community leaders wiU ask Is the Harbor Area Coordinated? when the Harbor A re a CooriJlating cOuncil meets al n o o n Tuesday, May 25, in the AtrJ>orter Inn. :11 will be the concluding meeting of the year featuring the election of officers. Serving on the panel will be Fred Sorsabal, city manager of Costa Mesa ; Jim Wood, piiesident of the Y o u t h E{nployment Agency ; f\.1rs. William L. Stabler, Newport Btach City Arts Committee and Mrs. Garth Bergeson, school board member. ~eservations are required. -' Members View Slide Story Mrs. Robert Barnes will OJ*!n her Newport Beach l)ome at 8 p.m. Tuesday, May 25, for a meeting of the Santa Ana- Newport Beach H a r b o r cqapter, Delta Gamma Alum- nae. Uncle Charlie and the Quiet Voice, a slide and musical presentaUon will be given by Mrs . Geo~ge Johns, storyteller, photographer and world traveler. Silver Sand• The first Tuesday at 8 p.m. Is the meeting time for Sliver Sands 286. Native Daughters of the Golden WesL I Friday, M•Y 21, t9n Welcome Home! Dinner Guest Returns A salute to a returning director of Laguna Moulton Players is planned during a premiere dinner of "The Man Who Came to Dinner." will be feted during the affair They will be joined ln the in Victor Hugo Inn on Tues-receiving line by Laguna day, May 25. -Moulton Playhouse President Gle.nn Vedder, Mayor Richard . -' - A' Bride for History ·" .r, , ·r_.__.,:...... ~ I ~~ '-4 " UPI Ttle ..... 19 .. New managing direct or Howard "Hap" Graham, who not only directs the hit com- edy but stars in the title role, The director will share bill-Goldberg and City Manager Ing with his wife Elsa Bal zat. Lawrence Rose and their Graham, founder of the First wives; Festival of Arts board Nighters, as they are greeted president William Martin, and by guests at a 6 p.m. cocktail First Nighters president, Mrs. hour. George Thompson. Bride-Of-the-year Tricia Nixon, the blonde 25-year-old daughter of President Nixon will marry Harvard law student Edward Finch Cox at 4 p.m. Saturday, June 12. The sing le ring ceremony will take place in the White House Rose Garden if weather permits. Although the eighth daughter of a president to marry in the White House, she will be the first to have an outdoor ceremony. While a student at New York's Chapin School in 1963, she met "my first and last love" Eddie Cox at a school dance. 'Smiling Voice' Sings For Executive Group The 891h dinner and final event of the season for the Ex- ecutive's Dinner Club of Orange Coast, will begin with a social hour at 6 p.m. in the Newporter Inn on Thursday. May 27. Booked as featured at~ tractions for the finale are Jack Smith, known as the "man with the smile In l;tls voice" and David FOl!ter, operatic soloist currently with the UCLA Opera Workshop. r Smith, public relations director for Glendale Federal Savings, will discuss People, Places and Things. Foster will sing selections from light opera, accompanied by Earl Brent, former muslc arr.anger at Metrcr-Goldwyn-Mayer. HIT PARAOER Jack Smith Mrs. Leota Garst w i I 1 preside with the assistance or hostes.ses, the Mmes. Syd Bartlett, Spencer H o n i g, · Donald Houseman, William Warren Morgan and Imhoff, J. W. Kem, Joe Long, Quinn. Edward Reservations are to be made by Sunday, May 23, for the 7 p.m. dinner. Among those hosting tables will be the Messrs. and ~1mes. Joseph Simmons, W 111 i a m Gieschen, Spencer Honig, Andrew 1tforlhland, Herbert Hartley, Donald Vanderbilt L.------------------------------------------1 and Colin TimmOfls; Col. and Mrs. WJlliam H. Bruggere and Col. and ·lifrs. William Roley; Miss Fern Randolph; J\.frs. Hovey Cox and Mrs. Craig Ketcham. Summer Wedding Planned A summer wedding ls being planned by Karen Cutler of Santa Ana and Charlie S. Nelson Jr, of Flag!taff. Parents of the engaged cou· ple are Mrs. George R. Bowland of Moraga and Navy Capt. (ret.) and Mrs. Charlie S. Nelson of Huntington Beach. The bride-elect is a graduate of Marina High School and is a junior at UCI. Her fiance also is a graduate of MHS and is a senior at Nortbem Arizona Unlversity. He Is affiliated with Delta Sigma Phi and Sigma Tau Gamma . The wedding is planned for August 28 in St. Peters py the Sea Church, Portuguese Bend. Bible Teacher Relates Story -caU'iOliC tayevangelist. and- former nun Miss Raquel Ja- quez will address members and guests of Zeta Chapter of Lambda Theta Chi sorority at 8 tonight in the San Clemente home of Mr.s. ·Albert Carlson. Miss Jaquez recently return- ed from an international ecumenical conference i n Salamanca, Spain. As a resu lt of her stay, she founded 40 prayer groups and Bible study classes in major Spanish cities. Entertainment will be pro- vided by Mr .. and Mrs. Bill Patton of North Hollywood. Horoscope New Films Previewed Pisces: Be Versatile Selected new films will be exhibited by Jules Engel, Academy Award-winning film· maker during a luncheon meeting of Women for California Institute of the Arts Monday, May 24. Prior to the luncheon in the Newport Harbor Art Museum, guests will view the museum's current show, New Painting in Los Angeles. Engel, who also Is a facult y member of ClA, has received numerous awards from the Venice and Edinburgh film festivals and the Golden Eagle Award from the U.S. Cklvern- rnent. He will be accompanied by Harbor Area CIA students In· eluding Bob Rogers, 1t1arsha11 Harvey, Rick Harper and Tim Volz. Chairmen of the luncheon are the litmes. Milton B. Harvey, John T. Boyd and Richard Wincler. · SATUR DAY MAY 22 By SYDNEY Ol\-1AR R Astronomers who continue to attack astrology art con· sidered 'fl be cranks by their colleagues. The public, io this day-and-age, realites t b a t astronomy and astrology are sepa rate fields of endeavor. The astronomer who has notbing better to do than to vilify astrology 111 ridiculed by both astronomers and astrologers. ARIES (li!arch 21-April 19 \: li1oney question can b e anS\\'ered. but you must do the asking. \Vait ing for others to volunteer information only creates needless delay. Be forthright, direct . Say what you mean ...2 mea n what you say. Fashion Also Ticketed Tea on Flight Menu TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Lunar cycle is on upswing. Your judgment intuition are apt to be correct. Obtain hint from Aries messag.e. Take in· itiative. Make new starts in new directioru;. Emphasize originality. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Forces tend to be scattered. Make up your mind about what is to be done-and do it Work behind t.he scenes. Be discreet. Co--Operale in project that aids charitable cause. CANCER (June 21.July 22): A friend confides problem in- volving red tape. Be sym- pathetic. But don't tie up assets on what could be helpless cause. Have fun at social gathering without being extravagant in claims. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ): Spotlight on how you relate to professional superiors. Don't take back seat; but avoid any show Qf arrogance. Express yourself in confident, forthright manner. Romantic interest is evidenl VIRGO (Aug. "3-Sept. 22): Family member may need reassurance . If necessary, da this by phone, telegram or A parade of stewardess services such as hosting grand other special communication. -rashlons-rrom airlines -around -opening and servl11g at ban-You may receive gift from one the world will be rcatured at quets. who _returns from jo:;:ey. Be th I . I th So h . I -I -h gracious. e annua spring tea o e p omore gtr s eav1ng t e LIBRA (Sept. 2l-Oct. 22): mi stakes. Others will un-- derstand. SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21): Older individual has advice to Ofter. Be an attentive listener. Affects marriage , partnership, legal settlement. Be a careful, shrewd observer. Let others have spotlight. Take it easy. SAGJITARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): Finish projects. Empha11ize appeal, advertising techniques. Spread influence. Communicate ideas. Write and publish. Build on solid base . Check basic needs. Then fill them . ., CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19 ): Good lunar aspect now stresses creativity, relations with opposite sex. Stress the new. Welcome opportunity for challenging contacts, ideas. Don't be afraid to change you r mind. AQUARJUS (Jan. 20..Feb. • 18): You may be pulled in two directions at once. Key is to take practical c o u r s e . Promise s are cheap. Go with one Who has something on claims. You will under stand. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20 ): Accent on short journeys, special dealings. With close relatives. Be ver sati le, Concentrate o n expanSion. Promote good will : attend gathering which b r i n g s creative contacts. Orange Coast Co 11 e g e stewardess program will be Investment procedures should 10 11.w:I 01.1I w~•'• luc~v lor vou '" stewardesses at l p . m . graduated Sunday, June 6, be reviewed. Take time to be montv •Ml 1ove, o<de• svdnev o ....... , S d M 23 d · I · ( h t SI !hod b:>ol<let. "St tret Hln!I lot Men 1r.d un ay. ay . ur1ng cermon es In e correc. oppy me s now women." 5,.,., blrt~a11, •Ml .It ·t•nti Family and rr icnds of those li-1ission Beachcraft offices at are especially costly. Don 't he 10 0m1rr Asl•o1ot11 Sec••'•· t~e o,1,1Lv 0 C t A' PI LOT, Ba~ 3UO. Gr10'ld C1n1r11 511• on the program ha ve been in· range oun y 1rport. afraid to ask, to correct past "°"' Ntw vo ... N.'f. 1oa11. vited to !he event in the Mesa ---'-----------1--------~--'------------ Verde Country Club, which r-- will incl ude a skit of an airline fli ght presented by sophomore coeds. New program officers will be introduc-ed , and serv ice hour awards given to the stu- dents for volunteer community WIN NEW . CARS WANTED WOMEN INTERISTED IN LEARNING TO MAKE SUMMER WARDROBE. CLASSES STARTING IMMEDIATELY! 6-1 Hour LltlOno $29,. ,., ... 50°1195 2300 Harbor Harbor Ctnttt CHARITY FAIR Ent1r 1t Hu11lin9ton C•nl•t •"Y tim• b•for• I 11 dr•win9 thi1 S1turd1y, M•y 22, f•r "..,. B;JI M•••Y Toyot1. N•w d r•win91 1v1ry Sit. for 4 W11•1 for Kirk J•Wo•l111 1.01 U1'11'!1 011nt•d di•lnond, T OWll •nd Country C1ri bb1•n stop look atventy.ISllH"11 ~ = -<tN~lteti A silenL auction, a kn itwear fa shion sh O\Vin~ and a champagne lun cheon will con1prise Lhe agenda for Newport Harb or Tri Dells' annual spring benefit. h1rs. Wllllam Snyder will open her Ne,vport Beach home at 11 :30 a.m. for the \Ved· hesday, May 26, event. Pre.viewing sale items are Oeft lo right) the f.tmes. J ames Rudy, Donald lJanks and Ken~e!h Grumbles. N~arly Ever yone List~ns to Landers Cruh• for 2, 111d D•-Lux1 01i.I S•d1n f1om T•rrv Buiek, plu1 rn•nv eon1ol11ion prit••· $1 t h•rify don1tion1 w1lcom•. Huntington Cenl1 r 1t B11 ch ind Edin9er 11 !~1 Stn Di190 F/w1y. • .._VcADILLAC 2SCO HARllOP't l!LVD. f COSTA M£SA (714) '40·1100 .. , '· .. l J 'I ' I I I I' I • f • ' . _,,_,_._ ---' Ne~~ort Bea~h ED ITION TOtl~y's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL M, NO. 1.2.1 , 4 SECTIONS, 46-PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,_CALIFORNIA FRIDA Y, MAY 21, 1971, TEN CENTS Murder Rap Faced Paramour of Balboa Woman Booked Dll.ILY PILOT U11f '"-M 011e Will Heig1i By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ot lllt ~Ul' Plitt l l•tf Tests on lhe body of a young mother found dead, her crying baby in the bed beside her at a Balboa apartment, Thurs- day led Newport Beach police to formally book her paramour on suspicion of murder. Strangulation was Ust.ed by authorities as the tentative cause of death of Mrs. Susan Lane Constant, 21, whose mother had begged her five days earlier to move back to Anaheim. Questioned throughout the afternoon about the case. John J. "Skip" Biegun, 21, who shared the residence at 413 E. Bay Ave., was booked at 5 p.m. on the murder charge. These eight princesses v.•ill represent various shoir ping districts throughout Newport Beach during the chamber of commerce's Hawaii Week May 24-30. One \Vill be crowned queen. From left are Karen Jackson, Westcliff; Wendy Hurst, Bayside; Patty Peters, Corona del 1'1ar: Judy Tingum, Eastbluff; Robin Schreck, Balboa Island; Janice Carlton. Bal- boa Peninsula; Charlotte Brantley, Lido, and Ingrid Davies, Fashion Island. A complaint was being SQUght today from the Orange County District At· torney. Biegun, dispatcher for his father's security patrol service in Diamond Bar, wa.1 already in custody Thursday when Mrs. Constant was found dead. Irvine City Plans Scored By Santa Ana House Services Committee Her 16-month-old son was crying beside the body in the Sea Level Apartments when discovered by the suspect'& older brother, who had just been released !rom jail. Newport Beach Police Detective Sgt. 01(sC5A TransportFunds Ken Thompson said preliminary tests in- dicate the young mother had been atrangled. "With force," Sgt. Thompson added. He did not explain whether it might have been manually or by some other means, such as a scarf or towel. Santa Ana cJty officials are continuing their attack on inclusion of 9.111 acres of lnduslrial property In the proposed city of Irvine. ' Vice Mayor Wade Herrin has sent a let· ter to the Irvine Company demanding that company officials withdraw their names from peUtions supporting In- corporation of the new city , He also demands lhat the company in- itiate legal action against the County Bciard of Supervisors if Jt rtfuses to grant the company's request to withdraw the signatures. Herrin also says the company should notify the Local Agency_Forma- tion Commission that the company will unconditionally consent lo the annexation of the 938 acres to Santa Ana and direct the Irvine Industrial Complex to consent to lhe annexation. Hcrrin's letter is based on a 1963 agree- ment between the company and the city which said the city could annex the acreage after May 21 , 1971 and ·would ha ve the company's support. The company did write to the LAFC apposing the inclusion cf the induslrial acreage, located just south of the Santa Ana Marine Corps Air Facility. But the LAFC approved the petilionet;s' ~map of the new city which includes the industrial acreage. Since then, lrvine Company exectives have added their signatures to the peti- tion to the supervisors calling for an elec- tion to incorporate the new community. Company officials have said that the Irvine Industrial Complex will protest the incorporation before the supervisors. The complex owns 693 of thf 938 acres. The Santa Ana letter promised legal action if its requests are not carried out. Street Dancing Set in Balboa The first public function of the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce "Hawaii Week" promotion will be a street dance in Ba tbaa Sunday from 3-6 p.m. Police officials said today they have granted permission for the chainber to block off Main Street from Balbcia: Boulevard to the pier to be used for the activHy. WASHINGTON (UP!l -The House Armed Services Committee Thursday authorized $357.2 million for the Pen- tagon's controversial CSA tTansport pro- ject and a full $1 bi.Ilion for President Nixon's Safeguard Antiballistic Missile Sys tem. In approving l $21.8 billion military procurement bill. the committee al so dealt serious &etback.s to two army pro- jects -the Cheyenne Helicopter wh ich it left without any money and the main bat- tle lank, for which it approved only research and deve lopment funds. Rep. Olli Pike, (D-N.Y.), one of the four committet members who voted Bill Adding 4 Judges Backed By Grand Jury The 1971 Orange County Grand Jury has endorsed Senate Bill 1306 whic h would add tour judges to the county Superior Court. The recommendation, signed by Foreman Doreen Marshall of Newport Beach. notes that the number of criminal and civil cases that must be heard con· tinues to increase each year. "It has been determ ined aft.er careful study that four additional judges are needed to dispose of the increasing case load and to maintain the present level of efficiency,'' the resolution states . The Grand Jury also praised the use of volunteer attor'iteys as pro tem judges since February of this year to relieve the congestion of the court calendar. A separate resolution st.ates that 174 cases have been assigned to the pro tern judges in nine weeks with an average of 19.3 di!pOSilions per week. Tr ash Pickup Normal On Men1orial Day Newport Beach residents will receive normal trash colleetions on Memorial Day. May 31, Gtneral Services Director Jacob f . Mynderse said today. All containers musl be on lhe curb by 7 a.m. that day, he reminded resident!. against the bill, said all the C5A money was the result of contract cost overruns, which has plagued the government's con- lract with Lockheed Aircraft Corp. A committee spokesman, however. 1aid the SJ.57.2 million would permit Lookheed to fullfil its obligation to build 81 of the giant transports. In addition to the Safeguard and Uic CSA, the oommit...,41Jt110rlze4 . '311U million ror the Bl bomber. a swing-win& supersonic jet the Air Force wanti as a successor to the B52 when the older planes are relirt.d in 19lll. The procurement bill only authorl1t1 the expenditures. Actual funds will have to be appropriated later in separate legislation. The $1 billion for the ABM systems In- cluded $627 million for procurement and the rest tor research and development. But lhe committee knocked ·out .$13.1 million in procurement funds for the fast, maneuverable Cheyenne helicopttt which had been described as the Army'1 highe1t priority item. It also is built by Lockheed. Although no funds were set aside, the committee did not kill the Cheyenne pro- ject. It left the way open for the Army to .1eek a modified program later. Marine Plane Crashes, Burns In Irvine Area A l\1arine Corps F 4 Phantom jet a~ parently carrying s e c r e l equipment crashed and burned in a field near Irvine Boulevard and Culver Road northerly of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station about 11 a.m. today. The pilot and navigaU>r ejected success- fully -ane parachuting into a nearby orange grove -and were returned un· Injured to El Toro. Security guards at the scene prohibited photographs from· ~ front section of the charred aircraft and could be fttf:n removing some type of equipment from the wreckage. No immediate cause was suggested for the crash, in which the jet pancaked into an open field , bounced 20Q.yards and ex- ploded in a ball of fire. Exact 11ite of the crash was about two blocks off Irvine Boulevard a mile east of Culver Road. Toxicological tests to d e t e r m i n e whether any drugs were present in the victim's system are pending, but Sgt. Thompson said an autopsy failed to show any obvious narcotics. Blegun's brother. Thomu, 24, of Dia- mond Bar, reportedly told police after findine the body 1bout 9 a.m. that Mr1. C-Md tll<t<tened 1ulclAo • Ill tbt past. · He was vi.titint the apartment about midnight Wednesday when ))OIJce-were dispatched to a raniUy disturbance uU Curious Yellow Defendants Due In Harbor Court Two persons arrested shortly after the Balboa Theater screened the Swedish movie, "I Am Curious (Yellow)" have betn ordered to appear July 16 in Harbor Judicial District Court on charges of ex· hibiting obscene material. Free on ball pending their arraignment are theater operator Eleanor Blackbum. 57, ot :ilf E. Ocean Front, Balboa . and William Alford. 45. of 1234 La "'Jrada Lane. Laguna Beach. Both were lhe victims last Dec. 23 of a !healer-raiding foray headed by Superior Court Judge J.E.T. "Ned" Rutter in which the jurist. who was then on the . Harbor municipal court bench, directed the confiscation of the disputed Swedish film. Continued delays in court action against the defendants and a group of defendants booked on identical charges when the Loewe's Theater in Stanton was raided is attributed lo the absence of a U.S. Supreme Court ruling on a petition filed by District Attorney Cecil Hicks. Hicks Is asking the high court to sup- port hi! argument that the Los Angele! federal court cannot order him to return the seized reels to the two theaters. He expect! to use the films in the expected trials of defendants in both cases. Federal aclion against the dlstrkt at- torney's office was in!tlgated by the Grove Prtss of New York, the national distrlbutors of the conliscated Swedish movie. Music will be provided by Dr. Joe Hart's Oversexlet. The sehedule of events for the re- mainder of Lhe week "'as undergoing 50me last-minute revisions and will be printed as soon as it is received.. Boy Held in -Wild Chase Teen Caught in Mesa After Speeding Auto Crashes I I/2-pound Infant Holdin g Her Own Streaking straight down 1 cross-coun- try thoroughfare. a Glendale \etnager in a atolen car Jed lawmen on a 15-mile, h\gh speed chase early today before. he hit a dip in Costa Mesa, went airborne Shirley Lee Shephard is five days old and crashed. ind the tiny infant is stHI "holding Mr Miraculously, no one was Injured in the own." Uoag Memorial Ho.spital Officials 90 mile per hour pursuit through ~ores of u.id thl3 morning, ma}Or interaectiorls, ending at 17th Street Tht seventh premature child o( 1.1r. and Santa Ana Avenue. and Mrs. James R. Shephard or Santa The 15:-year-old._juspect Oed OD foo\-but Ana "ls breathiog nne one minute, and waS Cipturea by Cllifornla Highway not so fine the next,'' 11 spokesman said. Patrol of!icen: in the 300 bk>ck cf Ogle SO.f n Sunday,--the-bftby was f.ir-st welgti--Street after.__an._iniemive search. tel Wedne$day whtn she reeorded one By tbe lime the 1pectacular pursuit pound, tight auncts. ended. al 1:40 a.m. lhe stolen car. plus a A spokesman said Shirlf'y Let c o u I d vehicle par'ktd in a mvlct 1taUon at Lhe be considered in satis:factory condition end of the line were wr.cked and ont undf'r the circumstances. CHP car w1s out or oommiulon. , A telephone pole was 5beared off above Eagle Two jalntd the pur.suit al the city'• ground teoel and gasoline pumps-eapa-northeasterly city limits. hie of creating a blazing lnferna -were The yolith ran 11 stop signs or traffic bent and mangled but failed to ignite. llgh•· between Palisades Road and Ogle California Highway Patrol officeri Ken ~ Daily and Walt Swlckla first spotted the Street alone, alowtng to about 75 miles- car southbound on the Santa Ana per·hour before he hit the fateful dip. Freeway, aceording to investigators. His stolen car hurlled into the Noticing a failure to yield violaUon, telephone pole, aerylce station and park· they attempted to J.tap the car -not -carrbut. be 5tifl-m1nagtd to hit ~the- kriowtng It Wis -,tOlcn -and cite the ground .on the run, iccardlng to a wlt- driver. nel'ls. "He pulled off on R<:<IJIJll-lllen-ht -nrur·B!ll • , o '104>1o1rilfif St pur-h1s rool lntO·ff," sii.id one CHP officer. Lane, New110rt Beach. told offlcer• the Radioing for help, the pair began the l,Ul~ct ran eastbound behind the 1Uitlon. chase that involved 'rUnnins rtd liahta 1l Pqilce said CHP officers JJ.m Guyai •nd 90 mll04 per bou,, at um .. In II mile-per-it' Mlttbof nnally •Pl>«h<ll!I«! U,, hour -. • •· •.tr .-lh h!dlq behind 311Oslo81.,_an,d loot.. Colla Me# polka llltd ... lltlla>pttr ' lb or .... CountJ.J•Wnilt IWL • Involving tbe 1 youn11:er brother and the young woman. Investigators said her body was later found to have bruises and apparenUy been slapped or struck. - A record check showed Biegun had prior traffic charges with warrants out for his arrest, but they could only be served during daylig ht hours under California Vehicle Code policy. ijis elder brother was arresled C)IJt.sidt the apartment on susplckin ol being drunk In publi.c and released •Po proximately the same time the younger Biegun was pJcked up on the traffic .:barges. ". He notified police upon finding the body IS<e MURDER, Pap ll Women Said Drugged Hartelius Must Appear Before Medical Board By TOM BARLEY Of IM Dall'( I'll•! s .. 11 Or. Ebhe Hartellus of Corona del Mar has been ordered to appear at a Slate Board of Medical Examiners hearing into charges Lhat he unlawfully administered narcotics and dangerous drugs to two Costa ttiesa women. Tht 50-year-0ld physician, who faces tri;\ June 30 in Orange County Superior Court on charges !hat include bribery and submission of false insurance claims, Is scheduled to appear Sept. 21, 22 and 23 at the Los Angeles headquarters of the Office of Administrative Procedure!. Deputy Attorney General Mark lvener today said that HarteUus who now live• at 402 Magnoli1 SL, Costa Mesa, it ac- cused of malpractice an allegations that he supplied narcotics to Mr11. Reba Vaughn, 11, and the latt Wanda Melen· dret, 24. --' It ts aUe"gtd that Mrs. Vaughft became addicted to narcotics to the point Utat 1ht Wll ru.lecl In superior Court to be I narco:iai addict and committed for treat. ment · at the California RehabrullUon Cent.tr at Norco. Mrs. Melendrez; wa11 found to hive died as the result of a dope inJec«on ud her nexl of kin blame Harteliua for her death. A $500,000 civil suit filed by the family i• awaiUng trial in Superior Court. ~trs. Vaughn testified against Hartellu!I In a recent Superior Court trial which led to his being cleared by a jury of charges or arson and fraud . It was repeatedly stated by lhe at- tractive blonde and never denied by Hartellus that she was bis milltre51 for Woman Cleared Of Harbor Area Vice Ring Rap Santa Ana Municipal Judge Paul Mast Thursday cleared 29-year-old Elaine Komara of all charges involved in what police alleged was a prostitution ring operated in the Harbor Area under the name Executive Escort Service. Judge Mast dismissed the charges against Miss Komara, 29, of Ana heim, with some scathing comments a b o u t what he termed "extremely weak ..• bad and preposterous police work in thia case." She wa1 the sixth woman cleared ln the case by Judge Mast. Meanwhile, however, Mast ordered Newport Beach oontractor Henry W. Sprague, ~I. of 64 Bearon Bay and two other women to face prostitution and con- spiracy charges in Superior Court. 'l'tle'y wtll be arraigned in the higher court June %. The women are ·Rena Sherry Andrew1, 24, of North Hollywood and Beverly Ann Poehlman, 24, of Cypre1s. All are free on bail on reduced char1es af conspiracy to commit prosUtution. Newport Beach police and Orange County sheriff'a officers combined in the Investigation of Lhe escort servk:e allegedly operated by Sprague from of. fices at 2192 Dupont St., Irvine. Investigators allege the 1ervlce •d- verLised "150 beauUful. foxy &irla for the dating pleasure of sophlsllcat!d ex· eculives." "Police o!ficert in this investlgaUan.ll4" ed words or phrase• to the deftndanls that one would use to.a.12-ye~~ld-glrl," MA!r cortufiented. ''ll they cauld have 1pokcn to them cltarly and ffanli:ly ln evoryday language iJleJ(.JnJthlJuiy td up with a pretty 1trong case." OfCktra arrested Sprague ind eight girls lut F!b. 27 ond ocouted Ille con- tractor qf operalln1 • prootltutloa _Ttnl thaL put E~ecutln f.lcol'( W{rll. fn motel• throughout the cOll!ity for cl I e n I 1 preportd to pay the 1100 1 ... ' some four years. She claims that the In· jections of narcotics Which led to her ad- diction were administered by her lover, It was also stated in the earlier trial that Hartelill! wa.s aware of the charges pending by the State Board of Medlcal Exami111ers at the time hls affices at 2.145 E. Coast Highway. Corona del Mar, were damaged by fire on Aprll 9, 1969. Hartelius was indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury last week just one month after he was cleared of the earlier arson fraud charges. He faces trial on 14 felony counta sui,. mitled by the district attorney's ..oHict and approved by the grand jury. He ha! pleaded innocent to all charges and is free on SS.000 bail. Arson Suspected At Apartment, Church Garage A stries cf arsonist.set ftres caused moderate damage in Newport. Beach Thursday, including o"e in a rectOry ga rage at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Cath- olic Chu rch . Father Francill Kelly uLingui.shed the blazing pile of clothinl!'. and other Items apparently doused with gasoline Umitina damage to $65, fireme11 said. Th~ priest said his maid heard a crack- ling noise about 10:30 p.m. and he went to investigate, finding the fire just erupting. Shortly afterward, someone also lgnit.. ed two trash caP1s at Cathy Bauer's apart. ment at 1817 W. Balboa Boulevard. one Inside the garage and one at the rear. Passerby William Middlesmith said he noUced flames and dragged the refuse can oot of the garage so it cauged no structural damage. A fire earlier caused $.100 damage to a shed at 714 W. Balboa Boulevard, but it was already scheduled for demolition to make way for expa11.ded parking facllltiell at adjacent Newport Harbor Yacht Club. Pollution Monsters Drawn by Children BOSTON (UPI) -School children throughout eastern Massachusetll have been asked to draw what they think a "water pollution monster" should look like. The reques t was made Th.ursday by metropolitan di5lrlct ct1mmissioner John W. Sears who said the best "monster" would become the symbol of future rive r and pond cleanups·in the Boston area. Orange Coa1t Weather Driuly mornh1gs and partly clearing afternoons are the pros- pect for the weekend along the Or· ange Coast. Temperatures are due to d1p into the upper 60s. INSIDE TODAY Selected work1 of youno ort- i&t1, kindergarten through high school, arf: btino t.ihiblttd through /llau in South Cooit Plaza. The show 1$ featured jn today's Wtektndtr. Mutuel ""'* ti N•llM•I Mt'n W OrMte C-ty 11 .. Mi.vt•~h 11•2* ll'l\i'le .-.mr Jt ·-· 1•1t Siad Mtrl•,. JWJ 'ttlt'lltltll • " _..., "" •••Iller 4 .. '"""'' 1<1.-, .. 11 Weri. Ill..., •• W..itltflllet u-Jt !; DAil Y PJLO I N f'rldt)', Mu 21, lt7l Pro11io1atory Poi 11t Irvine Project Hearing June 3 City officials said today the Newport Beach Planning Commission public hear· ing on the lrvine Company Pro'l_Wnlory Point apartment project will take place June 3 at I p.m. in City Hall . lt hnd Initially been called at a later date. The Parks. Beaches and Recreation Commission is scheduled to review the project f\\o'O days earlier, June I, at a 7: 3ll p.m. meeting in City. Hall. Irvine officials revised plans for the $1$ million project afte r Balboa Isl8nd residents stormed a series of public hear· ings pro(esting the plan because of densi· ty and potential traffic problenu. Con!Ultants hired by !he company and the bland resident! both maintained the project would not seriously affect traffic or parking, however. Bowing to citizen pres.sure, the com- pany did reduce tile number <>I unlls In ils plan, cutting them from 620 to 536 <>n the 30-acre tract. • The company is also offering to sell the city a l.~acre park •lte located on the slope below the bluffs in the middle <>f the project. Originally, It had offered the city a 1.15 acre park area al the eastern end of the property, which is we.st of Jamboree Road runnihg on the bay side of tl:ie Pacific Coast Highway. In addition to the open space for t.he park, company offici als have offered to provide and deVelop I number of other vista points, including a :JOO.loot wide grttn area almost directly above the park and two other view points, at either end of the development. A series of pedestrian and bicycle trails would link the open space ereu, com· pany officials said. High Rise Hotel Zone Bid 01\.'d for NeWport Center A zone change for a high rise hotel at Newport Center and plans for a Harbor Area Boys' Cl~b branch in Eastbluff Park were approved by the Newport Beach Planning Commission Thursday night. Only three persons addressed the com- Agency Showcase • Set in Newport Shopping Center A day-IOllg "Showcase Of Agencies'' or- ganh:ed by the Harbor Area Coordinat· ing Council is scheduled Saturday at Fashion Island in Newport Beach. Activities will be centered •round the Stage Court from 10 a.m. to S p.m., with 60 various comrnuJUty agencies partici .. pa ting. The variou!I acUvitles Will be rtprt· sentative of work each organization does, with some, such as the Florence Crit· tendon Home •nd the John Tracy Hear- ing Clinic showing movies in Island Houte. Coordinatlni Council President Mrt. Gwenda Walson predicts the Sh<lwcase of Agencies may become an annual event If the inltlal one is a success. Beginning at IO a.m .. the day·s sched- ule will include the 35-piece Los Allt:eles Salvation Army Band. Orange Coast Col- lege jazz ensemble and ''Half Past Late Jn Wonderland'' by the Children's Th!-- ater Guild of Newport Harbor. Sing Out Young Generation, lcthus, a musical group from SI. Andrtw '! Pres- byterian Church, and the Harbor Area Boys Club Lima Lima self-defense judo team also are schedultd to perform. missions on the hotel<onvenlion ceriter request, one of them a representative of the Irvine Company, which will lease the IO.acre site to the Marriott Corporation for a 10 to 12 story complez. Two resident. objected to the rezoning claiming lhe hotel would block portions of the view from the Broad.moor homea above Corona del Mar. "It'll block oo t our whole view,'' 1aid Robert Conrad, 't101 Llghthouse Lane. He urged the commission to table the re- quest peading a study of the view issue. Planning department officials have been meet1ng with homeowners in the arta reviewing proposed height limits in the Civic Ctl'lter below Newport Center. Laurence Wilson. acting assist•nt di· rector of community development. aald the site of the hotel was not within the scope of the study •s suggested by home- owners at a meeting Tuesday night, whereupon planners approved the re· quest. . In over1uminll'. Wllsoa's recommenda - tions on the Boys' Club project, the com- m1uion •&reed with the PBR panel that sufficient off-strett parkjng exhted in the park already aMI that tht 13 addition· al spaces proposed by the staff would not be needed. The commiaiontrt barely ~ued the midw•y point on their agenda' at 12: IS a.m. today and continued all other mat- ters for two weeks. In other actlot1, the commission ap- proved: -An alley eneroachment 1t 2108 Wert Balboa Blvd. sought by Philip J . Rapp. -A zone change from commercial to duple1 residential for four parcels of property at 207·211 Orange Street. -A request by the· Irvine Company to prezone 47 acres of unincorporated ter· ritory part of Pacific View Memorial park. 'as part of tbe company'• Spy Glass Hlll project. ...... ' • DAILY •ILCT ll•H •MN BODY OF SUSAN LANE CONSTANT, 21 , REMOVED FROM BAY AVENUE APARTMENT Coroner Says She Was Strangled; Pol ice Hold Boyfriend of Young Mother Politician's Son Pulls Eyeballs From Sockets BALTIMORE (UPI) -Charles Innis Jr., 25, the son of a prominent Massachusetts politician, took an overdose of an animal tranquilizer and pulled his eyeballs from their sockets Thursday Jn the city hall, police said. Innis underwent three hours (lf surgery Thursday night te repair muscle tissue and avoidTemoval of the eyes. An official at Maryland State Hospital issued a statement which said Innis "had no light perception in either eye prior to surgery and the possibility he will ever ha\'e light perception is e1tremely poor." Thf-official refustd lo say what the chances "'ere for restoring !light. He said there was no way to de termine if Innis would be blind until his bandages were Newport Slates Utility Hearing A public hearing on the proposed underground utility district along PacUic Coast Highway from Riverside Avenue to Dover Drive will be conducted by the Newport Beach City Council Monday at 7:30 p.m. in City Hall. Earner con.sideralion of the city's se- cond undugrou,nding district was delayed pend ing a determination of the a\'ailabili· ty of state funds lo help finance the pro- ject. Residenls of the Ba y.shores area ap- J>eared at the initial hearings to object to the plan. removed at an undetermined date. Inn is' father is general counsel to the r.1assachusetts' House of Represen· tatives. Innis. who complained to a neigbbor of poor eyesight Saturday, was arrested Wednesday while wandering nude near the apartment of a girlfriend, Mandy Shea. Police said he \Yas und er the influence of an animal tranquilizer ofte n passed off by drug dealers as THC, the synthetic form of marijuana. The tranquilizer makes those "'ho take it impervious to pain and very depressed. Lawrence Overby. turnkey at the Cen- tral Distrjct police lockup, said he check· ed Innis' cell early Thursday because in· rnales in the sect.ion had been makinc noise. "He had taken his eyes out,°' Overby said. "His eyes were silting on hill cheeks and he was squeezing them with his fingers." Miss Shea's landlady watched police arrest the naked young man Wednesday night. She sai d "'he "'as holding onto the policeman like a child afraid. It was pitiful." Police said Innis "'as taken to 11ercy 1-lospltal. Doctors examined him, said he should have psychiatric treatmen t, but gave him no medication . "fl.1ercy Hospital said he was on some kind of drug, he should be taken back to the station , and it would "·ear off.., said Police Lt . Andrew Arnold, night shifl commander. f'rom Page 1 MURDER ... , and they turned '-1rs. Constant'• infant son over to the county's Albert Sitten Home in Orange for care. Biegun was held on the traffic "'arrants until initial lnveslijalion of,J.he homicide was complete and then informed of the murder charge about 2 p.m., by Detec- tive Todd Wilkinson. · Serge<1nt Thompson said today Mrs . Constant's mother was shattered by the tragic case and told of urging her daua:h· ter lo come home last weekend. "Apparently she "'as concerned for her safe ty," he remarked. Uni Hi g l~ Plans School Faire The fine arts department <>f University High School plans a Renaissance Faire from noon to 6 p.m. Saturday at tbe school, 4771 Campus Drive, Irvine. Scenes from plays by W 111 i a m Shakespeare will be offered along with artists' e:rhibits, strolling musicians and a children's storyteller and puppet sh<lw. Ad mission i! frtt to people '!"taring costumes of the renaissance period. l\1odem-dress knaves will be nicked for 25 cents. Rununage Sa le Slated A run11riage sale "'ill take place in the Balboa Island United Methodist Chu rch tomorro\1' (Saturda y. '.f.1ay 22) from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m .. sponsored by the \Vomeo's Society of Christian Service. • 3 District ~- Boundaries Questioned By PAMELA HALLAN 01 flit OlllY l'llel 11111 Plans for dividing the Tustin Union l-ligh Sthool District into three separate ·unified school districts met with approval during the first public unification meeting Thursday. But the boundaries of the division which would create three unified school districts in the -ru.,un. lrYine and Sad· dJeback Vallt>y areas were queslioneQ by tfie 60 people present In lrYine School auditorium. Residenls of the Irvine area favored keeping the boundaries of the proposed city of Irvine as their school district boundaries but Dr. Pt!ike Hesse, 1pecia t consultant to the School D i 1 t r i c t reorganiutlon Study Committee ex- plained that thil! would not be possible. By law assessed valuation per student in each new district can vary over IS per· cent from the current Tustin diltricl figure, $13,236. That mean! it can be no higher than $15,221 and no lower than $11 ,251. If the boundarie! of the proposed eily or Irvine we~ used for one distrlct its assessed valuation per ltudent would be too high and the Tustin figure would be too low, it was reported . The plan that seemed to meet with the greatest approval ''all one labeled Plan Four which i! close to the figures In the state requirement. Unde r this plan most of the Irvine Ranch would be included in one school district, -mo!t of the Tu.stin Elementary District and part o( the .agricultural preserve or the eastern Irvine Ranch would make up a second district and the Saddleback Valley would be the third. The difference in assessed valuation in these districts would vary just 11igbtly more than the 15 percent, communitY. identity could be retained and school pro- perty and facilities could be evenly dlvJd. ed. The County Committee on School District Reorganization wll1 hold three meetings between May 27 and Oct. 7. This committee has the o f f i c I a t responsibility for selecting the plan which "'ill appear on the ballot in June of 1972. The committee can select a plan which divides the current high school dilltrlct in- to thret .separate unified districts or "'hich unifies the Tustin Elementary, Trabuco and San Joaquin Elementary districts along the boundaries of tbe Tustln high school district If the final plan Is voted dov"n in June (lf 1972 the school districts: vrlll remain aa they are noW for aoother •i:J: years. Firemen Rescue Boy in Bathroom I! the situation gets out of haad, any babysitter worth her ult knows whit to do: Call somebody who knows what to do. Terry Gatos was waiting when Newport Beach firemen arrived at the V. E. lfow .. ard home. 910 Nottingham Road about 7 p.m, Thursday, They slipped a screwdriver under the bathroom door, allowing Kevin Howard, 7, to ullSCrew a faulty knob that had trapped him instde. Fair Racing Plan Studied U!HOl:SiliERiti S!ECIAL FEATURING THE BEST SELECTION OF Cj)UALITY t Revenue-raising Compromise Betting Idea Proposed A new compromise method of taking advantage of 14 d1y1 allocated to the Orange County Fair for thoroughbred hOr!e racing as a revenue: raiser is under OlAN61 COAST DAILY PILOT ~llANGE. COA•T P'UaLllHING COMP'AN't ' le~tft N. w,., ..... i..it '"' "'*'111'111' J1t.\ •· e· .. ,r.., \'kt' Ptwffol WIC 0.-1 ~ n'"''' K',,,1r l!lller 'fl.1111111 A. M1r,lll•1 M9Mt ... l'fttw t. ,,,,, )(,1., ......,..,, l .. dl Cl!r e4!ttt "..,.,, .... Offk9 llJl N1w,1rt lo1111••r' J.f11li119 Adilr1tu P.O. It• 1111. 92,.J .,..._ C•lll M"'~ »II W.1 It'( l"- L11-... dl1 m Fw•• ""-""""11,,.10~ ... , .. ; ,,.,s l•Cll ,...,,,... ... Wit C:IM'lall•: Jlll Ntrlll 1!1 C.t1nlM ltMI DA ILY P ILOT. wllll 'Mllef'I ia ceoi•lllH .... ,,._..,,,_ i. .... ! ..... fellY u~ '-" .. , Ill .. , •• '-911111 .......... Uf\11\1 ... (JI. "-1 kM11. C.11 ~I. H\llllinetM ltlKfl. lt-1tlfl Vtll9y, kt! (...._..,/ Ctttb.W-I~ ~ktlttll, tlrte wllll - "'lllllMI "''"""'· P'flltcllMI lf'lfltti.il ,i.w II 11 ,m WtH lty $1,...,, C.tl IMU, , T_,1,•111 C7141 '41-<4111 ct_.. An.rttd .. MJ-tl71 ilUdy today. The idea w1s generally greeted with optimism Thursday by the 32nd District Agricultural AJAOCiatlon , mettlng In board offices on the fairgrounds in Co!ta Mesa. Opponents of racing on the fairgrounds and proponents of lucrative parl-mutuel betting allowed by the state might both be l!llillfied if the idea becomea 1 reality. Ra ces would be 1taged at Los AlamltOI Race Track. on a co ntract biisis utllWng those facilities without the 1taggerin1 cost of adding new ones kl the Orange County Fairgrounds. No formal acUon was taken by the Fair Board Thursday night exrtpt to vote on continuing -study of--1he -h o r 1 e racing feasibility, rd'errlng It to the building and grounds committee. Director Burr ~lllam1 abstained, making lt an I lo 0 vote with nine board members present. Fairgrounds General Manager and Secretary James E. Porterfield told the board Los AlamltOI course owner Frank Vessels Jr. is rt'Ceptlve to the idea and considers it worthwhile. One method would be to stage the races allotted to the Orange County Fair 111 part of the 1tate.'1 thoroughbred season simultaneously with the li72 evenL The other "'ould be 10 schedule them before or afltr the fa ir and exposition ii self. but carrying the Orange County Fair title and theme. lf schtduled during L"ie regular five-day fa ir, the annual evt.nt would be extended by 10 days to accommodate the two weeks or racing allowed. ,;The time Is 11lowed, but lt'1 Jmt bttn going to waste 111 Ottse years," ezplains Gloria Seelye. fair publicity director. One of the Ural sltQS wtll M dettrminatlon by the SI ate AUorMy General's Office on . whether fair· 11pansored rJcin1 must be on the agency's own fairgrounds. B•y t.feadows Racetrack In the San Francisco Bay •rea hosb an annual ric- ing card an the time allotted one county f11 ir in tlat region, Indicating the le1al precedent has been set. The private racetrack is not located o~ the fairgfounds property Itself. as com- pared to Del ~1ar Ra cetrack which is a part of the San Diego C o u n t y Fairgrounds. If it is determined Loi A I am i Io s Racetrack can be rented and the races run on a contract with the Fair Board for facilities and services aclion must be taken by year's end. Schedules for the 19'72 thoroughbred racing 1e1son tbonlah<lut tbe Jtate will be aet early in the year. Previous feasibility studies indicate cost or a modern. attractive racttrack on the local fairgrounds would be pro- -hibitive. Cost of even a much more modest track would be be&\'Y, alt.bough not en- tirely <>Ul of the question. Barber Quartet Benefit Slated A benefit Barber Shop Quartet Show \\'ill be staged June 19 by the Newport Harbor E1change Club' to raise funds for increased operation of the Harbor Area \'outh Employment office. The YES quarter1 \\-111 be open weekdays from 2 p.m, to 5 p.m .. helping youna: people find "·ork during the sum- mer m<>nlhs and additional t1penses must be met . T1cket.11 for the Saturday night show are rtservlng them w\lh chairman Dick HOdae. Mid way Rejoins Fight SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. aircraft car. rler Mldw•y hlls returned to the 1ndoc~illa war after more thin nve yeara off the llne for t1lenslve modernization, . lhe Navy said toda)'. -· -- UPHOLSTERY IN THE AREA Cwn.111 M•ift S•f• • ., S..,rill- 111 G'"9 Y•IM -At • Sale hk1 ef $549 SHERRILL FEATURES * Quality Workmanship * I Way Hand Tied Spriftt1 * Exc.llent Ttiloring * Lergt Fabric SelKtion * All Fabrics ScotchguardN * Large selection of H.ncf. aomt Styles to choose from. If You Need A Sofa or Chair, Now Is The Time DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -OR EXE~ -HERITAGE NfWPon STORI Ol'fN ,.IDAY 'TIL' NEWPORT BEACH Professional Interior De1lgnar1 Av•ll•ble -AID LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co11t Hwy. 1727 We1tcliff Dr., 642-2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS t '"•N Toll ,,.. Mott ol o,_,. C...,._,4 .. 1J•J ....... ____ I Phono: 494-655 I j l Social Secu:ritfi "' Re~gan -Accused Of Illegal Act SACRAMENTO (UPI) - A Democralic lawmaker today accused the Reagan Adml.nistrallon of illegally withholding since December a '4·•·month Social Security incr«!ase to 300,000 elderly and disabled C.lifomians. Assemblyman John Burton of San Francisco, one of Reagan's most severe c:rilics, accused the aovernor of invokinf 1 spurious , le1al ltchnicallty to a.void making the payment. He charged the aclion sets the croundwork for possible court suit .and Cost of Living Takes Increase Of .3 Percent WASHINGTON (UPI) -The cost of living rNe to Americans 0.3 percent in April. equaling lhe sharpest one-month advance thl.s year, the Labor Department reported today. Higher prices for food a~d clothing were largely blamed. While the rise in the consumer price in- dex was the biggest since a similar in- crease in January. it \\'as well below the pace of 1970 v.·hen the nation was in the grips of the ""orst inflation since the Korean War. Food prices Increased by 0.9 percent last month. If the advance continued at that rate for a full year, the annual food increase would be almost 12 percent, meaning that a typical food item costing $1 !1st monUi would coat $1.12 by next spring. The cost or clothing increased 0.4 per- cent last month , led by a jump of 0.8 per- cent ih men's and boy's apparel. Women's and glrl 's clothina: increased 0.3 percent. The government's gauge of consumer prlce1 stood in April at 120.2 percent of the 1967 average, up from 119.S percent in March. That meant it cost $12.02 to buy the same goods and services that $10 brought in 1967. The April Index was 4.3 percent above April. 1970, represe nUng the smallest over-the-year change since the August, 1967. to August, 1968. Last year. monthly increases averaged close to 0.5 percent. The increases in food and clothing prices wert partially offset by declines in home mortgage interest rates and the price of gasoline. New cir prices declined -normal for this lime of the year -but ~ car prices Increased. ' demanded that Stale Social Welfare Direclor Robert Carlson ou1ht to live that ff back in the next welfare cheek or he ought to resign his office. Governor's office spokesmen were not immediately available for comment. At a news conference. Burton recalled that Congress lo 1969 required states to pau on lo elderly and dlsabled Social Security reelpiel!ta who also received welfare a $4 Social Security Increase. Burton last year steered through the Legislature a bill signed by Reagan re- quiring CaUfornia to pass on to such rteia pients an additional fl .50 Soc.la! Security increase. Previous!)', California had deducted such increases from a recj.. plent 's weUare check. Calling the governor Ronnie Ripoff, Burton asserted that late In 1970 Reagan invoked a spurious legal technicality and claimed that the state could include the original ff guaranteed by federal Jaw a1 part of the 17.50 guaranteed by state law, He asserted that contrary to legislative intention, the "'elfare department began withholding the f4 from welfare checks. Burton distributed to nev.·smen an opinion fr om the Legislature "s lawyer supporting his contention. Burton said unless the increase is made, Gov. Reagan ls surely going to see his administration hauled back into co1.,1rt, probably by those . legal as.sistance lav.·yers, those long-haired young men with altache cases whom· be abhors. Svetlana Stalin . 4 Has Baby Girl In Sa11 Rafael SAN RAFAEL (AP) -Svetlana Peters, the daughter of late Russian pr!!mier Josef Stalin, gave birth early to- day to a healthy seven pound nine ounce girl \\-'horn she and her hlLSband named Olga. '°lrs. Peters is the wife of \Villiam l Vesley Peters, chief architect of the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation of Scottsdale, Ariz .. and Spring Green. \Vis. A family spokesman said mother and daughter are doing well . ,.1rs. Peters, 45, arri ved at ~1arin General Hospital with her husband at 11 p.m. Thursday lo av.·ait the birth. The baby arrived at 2:30 a.m. Mrs. Peters issued this statement from her hospita l bed: "I'm \'ery happy to have a healthy and prelty child. This pretty girl makes another strong link between this country and myself." -- Children's Art The best art from Orange County school children is '''innowed down even further for exhibit during the six-week run of the Festival of Arts in Laguna Beach thi.'i summer. From left to right are Marge Skelton of La8una Beach. Diana Anderson of Huntington Beach, Mary Jane Haden, Judge., and Rose Clark or Newport Beach. Coeds Protest Dorn1 Rules TALLAHASSEE. Fla. (UPI} Shouting ··we're not a bunch or campus whores." about 250 Florida S I a t e Uni,·ersity coeds marched on the Capitol Thursday to protest the revocation of dormltory visiting privileges. The c<>eds particularly were incensed hy a remark by Atiss Elizabeth Kovachevich, a member of the state board of regents. who called slate uni v er s it y dormitories "Taxpayers' Illegal Aliens Nabbed Placentia police and U.S. Immigration Service officers Thursday rounded up 33 Mexic1n nat!Ol'lals suspected of entering this coontry illegally. The arresL'I were made as the Mexicans reported for work lo harvest strawberries, police said. Whorehouses .'' While the girls were marching, Miss Kovachevlch was telling an audience at St. Petersburg that she Is asking Gov. Reubin Askew to make a full in- vestigation into university "problems." Rep. Gwen Cherry (D-1\liamil, the first black woman elected lo the Florida legi slaturr. told the demonstrators "the siluallon that brought you here is very unfortunale." She said she favored dormitory visitations. Bui the protesters got into a brief shouting match with another lady legislator, Sen. Beth John~n (R-Cocoa BeachJ, who said she was "unaware any proble01 e.sisll." •·rt doe!i exist," screamed the coeds. ''J 'm sympathetic to you. Don't 1hout at me." responded 11-frs. Johnson . -- H DAILY Pil'lT S Butnble Barve KHJ Disc Jock, Held, No Bail LOS ANGELES (UPJ) -Popular radio disc jockey Harvey "Humble H.arve" Miller, aou1ht u a upect in the 1booting death of hlJ wUe May 7, turned him.self ln at the district attorney'& office Thursday. Miller, 36, employed by radio at.ation KHJ, was booked on suspicion of first degree murder and was later ordered held without bond following his ar· raigrunent. Police 11\d Miller apparenUy dyed hil brown ha ir red after the shooting and ad· ded they had information he hid in beach communities in the Loi Ance.les aru 1.J.ft-- til hi.! surrender. HP had been souaht 1ince h1J wlte, Mary, 35, w1s found 1!1ln in the family home overlooking the SunSft Strip. Authorities said an unlde.ntlfled 1'1tneu placed Miller al the home early that morning and heard his car being driven away after shots were fired . Dete ctive Sgt. William Mercier said ~1 lller iind his wife had quarreled the nigh t before the shooting and that Mrs. Miller had left the house to go to some bar~ with two friends, a man and a woman, She came home about 6 a.m., shortly before the shoolina. tht detective said. He said the couple had quarreled in the past when Miller accused ber of gotn1 out with other men. ~1iller was accompanied durina hiJ 11Jllo U,IT•llMlftt MURDE It SUSPECT 'Humble Harv•' Shorn render by attorney Grant B. Cooper, •ho defended condemned waasin Sirhan S~han. Big Visit Set La Paz to Greet Cabinet Member The Saddleback Valley ls plannlnf a rousing welcome lD Secretary of the Interior Rogers C. 8. MorlDn. The cabinet official will land 1t La Pix Stewardesses to Don Hot Pants Uniform11 . SEArn.E (UPI) -The legs on the stewardeue.s of "Air Washlnitoa" won't be too long but they 'll be Vtry villble. Chalrm1n Bbb FlorerK-e 1ald the new commuter service, wh ich will begin o~ eratioru next week, Is hlrina: ~tewardess es under 4-foot-10 becauae of the low c1bi111p1ce Jn Jls Deff1vtlllnd ~lo otter turbojet&. But he said the mlnJ-1tewardes1e1 will ' wear hot pants. Intermediate SChool ln Mission Viejo at 2: JS p.m. Monday. A special assembly has been planned and special school hours arranged ao all 1tudenta and their parenta and friends can attend. Morton Is expected to land on the upper athletic field . ' La Paz students will begin their day 1t 10 a.m. and leave the campus at 3:30 p.m. on Monday. They will be called to an assembly at 2 p.m. 1.1orton is to address the students and thtn. lakt time to mett them. He wa1 invited by the seventh irade social science classes to visit the school durinJ its recent POP week which wu dedic1ted to patrloUsm ind ecology. Although he could not attend durinl that week he said he cou1d make it Mozt. day and would be delighted to come. The Homes are priced from 33,950 The Way of Life is Free! Livi ng is what you want to make of it in a big, beaut iful new home at Oceanview Park ... now offering Immediate Occupancy in the Final Un it ••• excellent Conventional Financing with low, low down payment •.• and you own the land! Quality 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath Traditional Design 2 Story Homes ~ .. Surround in& the Beautiful New 2~ Acre Marini View Park __ .,..,_., Sales Office and Furnished Models at 19th Streat & Whittier Avenue Phone (714) 546·0337 From L s~11 oitoo 0' '411111,, ~. S!ttola ·~~OMES ' l ' • . :( DAIL V PILOT \ \ •• I ~ps How High Up Along Coast? By THO~IAS AtURPHINE Of .. Dtllr ~ ... '"" • 'l'alk Speeduys Arms Agreement Seen This Year WASIUNGTON (UPI) -While House officials said today the breakthrough in the Soviet·American attempt to agree on limiting nuclear weapons should product 1peeded-up anns talks in about f o u r months - if Moscow i! ainctre. If all goes well, they add, it may be possible for the Strategic Arms l.lmita· tioo Talks (SALT) to reach-by the end of this year -one agreement limiting de!ensl..,e Antlballi.stic Missile (ABAf) systems in both countries, and another have· swung around to the American viewpoint. But the official statement also said tlllt during the current year both .sides would concentrate on working out an agreement limiting only the ABM system.1 of both countries. This is what the SofJets havt been after. IDGH IN THE SKY DEPT. -Things are healing up along the Orange Coast again these days On whether or not our 1easbore should be dotted with silhouettes ·of tall buildings. ~ agreement limiting some of each na&Jon'a •ffensive, or attack, weapons . Tber was an obvious ambl&uity in U.. joint Soviet-American statement which permit~td jt to be interpreted in several ways without actually revealing it\ true IU~tancc. . Gerard C. Smith, the top U.S. a.mu negotiator, wa..s expected to ttlum to Vienna today to wind up the CWTent phase of the talkls. His departure ha11 aln!ady been delayed several times and it was still not certain be would deftnit~y take off. In Laguna Beach \'Oten will be going to the polls Aug.' 3 to detennine . if anybody In the future will build anything in the Art Colony more than 36 feet off ?tfother Earth. . , .. 'f!J. .. Ultl T•~'-'t The way the· whole high rise issue bod· ed up in Laguna, where petiUOnen for an Initiative forced the City Council to put high rt~ to an election, is viewed with alarm In certain quarters elsewhert. Jn Newport Beach, for example. AERIAL VIEW OF 'EL TENIENTE' -NOW IN HANDS OF CHILEAN SOCIALIST GOVERNMENT World's L1r9est Copper ~M~i~n~e,~O'.:'.:wn:'.'.'.'.ed:.'.b~y:_:U::·:S·:_::K::•::n::n•:•:•::t:'.t'..:S:•::lud=:...::'°::'_'.:_l::rr..:eg~u::l•..:r..:it::i•::" _____ _ SOME NEWPORT people who are deeply concerned with ~..,elopment ~·ould like to see the harbor c1"1 come up with allowance! for some high rise, Yet at the same Ume, they hope the pre>posed roles won't be so lax that a petition cam- paign is triggered a la Laguna. * . All o( this must be 10mewhat bemusmg to Tully Seymour, the attorney at law ~·ho resides in Corona de! Mar. WorUl 's Biggest Copper M_ine Seized by Cliile Egypt Calls Off Envoy's Peace Trip to Washington Tully served a Ieng hitch .as Newport city attorney following departure from that post of Walter W. Caramu, who e!Caped to Huntington Beach to become a municipal judge. Tully for a lot of years tuS!lled with the legalities of buUdings and how high is up in Newport. But he recently left Newport to become part- time city attorney for Laguna. Now that he presides as chief counsel Jn Laguna , he'll gel to ponder legalities of how hlgh la up in the Art Colony. * -~-'-Anyway, back Jn Newport, a ... ~14Ul nervousness was added to lhe high rise scene when it was disclosed yesterday that the Marriott C«poration would like to build a tall hotel and con..,entton center on Irvine laiid in the vicinity of Fashion Island and the Irvine Coast Country Club. It would be In an unlimited height zone. This Is what caused some developers to gel nervous. They feared some other ci~qs might figure Marriott's plan woold call for a ' real skyscraper. Actually~ some: !Ources of intelligence say the conv~ntion ttiJng will really go 011ly 10 or 12 st.dries up. f STRONGLY 11uspecl that the jitters over public reaction if the buildin1 goes 10. 20 or 30 stories an probably Un· founded. Ifs likely much the same as worrying about falling off a tall building. If you fall from a window much over the second story, the resull3 are pretty well predetermined. It doesn't matter if it was floor 2 or floor 22. SAAIE WAY with adverse reaction to high rise. Public outcry probably 1t.arll somewhere abo\'e the fifth floor and it doesn "t really matter how much taller things get above that. * So clearly, the tall building debate con- tinues to rattJe along our coastline with Newport hoping to come up with rules that wlll pleue both the pros and cons "'hile Laguna 's City O>uncil has decided to }et Lagunans battle it out at the ballot box. The Laguna council could have avoided an election by simply adopting the man- date cf the petitiUOners who were awesome in nwnbtr. But this way, the pros and cons both get two months to hit the canlpaign trail with charges and counter-charges. Heated words will likely further polarize the town. )l's a good bet a lot of Lagunans y,·on't be talking lo each othe r by Aug. 4. Somehoi,r, Laguna seems to like it that ~ay. SANTIAGO fUPI ) -The Chilean government is taking over control or El Teniente, the world's largest copper mine~· from the Kennecott Copper Corp. in v.·hat ma y be another step in ?i1arxist Pn:sident Salvador Allende's program to nationalize U.S. wpper interests. Minister of Mining Orlando r.antuarias iaid Ttlursday the Chilean Copper Corp .• a government agency, would send six representatives to take ove~ cont~ol of the mine Saturday. Cantuar1as said the move was made because "irregularities" in four of the mine's eight converter ovens had cut production, and because cf a $5.5 million deficit. Kennecott owns 49 percent or El Tc· niente situated in Raucagua, about 65 miles kuth cf Santiago, and operateii; lhe mine under the Braden Corp., a wholly awned subsidiary. State-owned Chilean companies own the controlling SI percent. Allende became the Western world's fii-st freely elected Marxist president in November. He had promised in his cam- paign to nationalize foreign inleresl5 in Chi\e and has been pushing his program since then. The Chilean senate liberalized and sent to the chamber of deputies May 12 Allende's proposed constitutional amend- ment that would permit him to na- tionalize the holdings of the three U.S. copper companies in Chile -Kennecott, Anaconda and Cerro. Wicks 'If man keep• polluting, the fish tvill be ~ea~ . ,, before we can kill em · By United Press International The Middle East situation tightened up again today. and authori~ative diplomatic sources in Cairo said Egypt has s~lved, at least temporarily, a plan to send a hfgh ranking envoy lo \\'ashington for talks on the prospects of an agreement v.•ith Israel on recpening the Suez Canal. The tri p was to have been a sequel to lhe recent Middle East tour of Secretary of Slate \Villiam P. Rogers and the visit to Cairo by his assistant, Joseph J. Sisco, following RogerS• talks with Israeli leaders, the sources said. Both sides appeared to be stiffening their positions. and Israeli deputy Yigal Allon said Thursday night Egypt might have done so because of "over optimism in Washington," an apparent reference to the otimistic statements Rogers made on his return. Sisco ·returned to Cairo with 1sraers canal proposals and had fi..,e hours of talks with President An\v;ir Sadat and Foreign A1inister fl1ahmoud Riad. It was agreed then that Egypt . would ~end a highranking diplomat. either R1ad or Premier Mahmoud Fav:zi, to Washington with Egypt's reply. Jnstead. the Egyptian reply was handed over to Donald Bergus, chief of the Etna Lava River Wider, Faster; Tow11 Imperiled SANT'ALFIO. Sicily (AP} -~1L Etn a'a flaming river of lava, widening and ga in· ing in speed, sizzled through the main road on the eastern slopes of the moun- tain today, increasing its peril to this town cf 4,000 inhabitants. Some had abandoned their farmhouses as the lava gu shed down the slopes and rolled toward Sant'Alfio from a half mile vent smashed on the mountainslde It da vs ago. Police and firemen stood ready in case the menace from the lava intensified, but there \\'ere no evacuarion orders. The tCtWn people prayed for the best while preparin~ for the v.•orsl. The road the Ja,,.a crossed is the Lin· guaglossa to J<'ornazzo Way uphill fro n1 Sant.Alfio. Wintry Weather Blows In West in Cold Grip; Nortli Also Feels Chill Winds California k _.,,..111' d"'"''" tur"I• 1nlo tCt!· ~'"fd .. •lflklet 6' llt M ...-.OWt." !ft ""' I ller.--. "'""'° 1'11~ ~''"'" C.11!· ICWftl• wntllf:r 1!ttv•t ~Y. Th<lr1 W••• ,,.._ tut!\' wl"dl •NI cOO:fr '-"'"' 11ur11. Srn1!1 u 1n w1•!'l,_,1 Wi!~ 'l<>l1!M frM'I Polnl COllC"llon lo LOnt ll11tPI. In '"' LOI Anttl•• .... ltlt!trtd f riUI•• cl .. ttd •trt!1ltf II< "'' tllt•· ._.... 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" " <1tt l.•~f CllY " • SI~ OTHe " " 511ft ''t flt•l(O " .. ~"4!11t • .. • w~'''"''"'" " " " w'""l"9 " n American diplomatic rnissiOn in Cairo, less than an hour after Sadat told the na- tional assembly about it in a 91).minute speech on foreign and domestic policies. UPI Correspondent Maurice Guindi reported from Cairo that the Israeli posi- tion according to the diplomatic sources is : • -A partial Israeli withdrawal from the canal to permit its clearance and reopen- ing. No distance was given for the withdrawal. -No crossing cf Egyptian troops but Israel would accept the presence of Egyptian police and ci..,ilians on the east bank after the partial pullback . -There should be an unlimited cease- fire. -Joint Egyptian-Israeli patrols in the area evacuated by the Israelis. -After reopening the Canal Israel would make a commitment en a further troops withdrawal to "agreed boun- daries." Jn hi s speech Thursday Sad a t reiterated the minimum E g y p l i a n demands which in effect ~'as a rejection cf the Israeli terms. Everest Assault Ended ·by Series Of Difficulties KATMANDU, Nepal (UPI) -Death, illness, treacherous weather and discord brought to an end today ~n international expedition's allempt to climb Mount Everest. the world's tallest mou11tain. The climbers. who dwindled from 32 to only two at the end, abandoned their quest 2,000 feet short of the 29,028-foot summit. In a terse communique, the Nepalese Foreign Ministry said only that the. two Britons had "stopped climbing." It wa11 the first attempt to scale the tl1imalayan peak by lhe south~·estern face of t.he mountain , ::in almost vertical rou te. E\'erest v.·as conquered for the first time in 195:1 by anoth<'r approach by Sir Edmund Hilary and his Sherpa guide, Tenzing Norquay. The 1971 assault cla imed the life of Alaj. Harsh V. Bahuguna . the only Indian men1ber, who died of exhaustion and frostbite. Mixing Ban Brings· Suit WASfll NGTON (AP ) -The Justice Depa.rtlJl~l .Ann.ounc.td __ Thursday it has sued the state of Georgia and a county official for rtfusing to issue a marriage license to a \\'hite Army lieutenant and his Negro fiancee. A Justice Department spokesman said the U.S. District Court in Allanta has issued a temporary restra ining order which, in effect, required Clayton County Ordinary H. \V. Roberls to issue a marriage license lo Lt. John Ray Sanford and his bride to be, Betty Byrom. The suit names the state as a defendant in addition to Roberts because the refusal was based on 1 state law making it illegal to issue a license ror a white person to m1r• ry a Negro. ' The go\'ernmenl has filed a slmilar suit in Alabama, seeking to have that state·s miscegenation law d«lared unconstitutional. The suit said that Sanford. who is stationed at Ft. Benning, and ?iUss Byrom, ~'ho lives in Mountain View. were refused 8 marriage license by Roberts on ?ifa y ~. The Georgia law should be declared null and void because of Its confl ict wlth lhe 14th amend· m'nl to the U.S. Constitution, the government maint1lned. President Nh:on, in a three-minute television broadcast ~rsday, aaid the White House and the Kremlin had reach- ed a major agreement on the talU which could break a deadlock that has existed during the last year. But terms of the agreement remained 1 diplomatic mystery since cfficials would not f:laboratt on the joint 1tate- ment. The statement said simply : "The governments of the United States and the Soviet Union, alter reviewing the course of their talks on the limitations of strategic armament, have agreed to con- centrate this year on working out an agreement for the limitation or the deplcyment of anliballistic m i 1 s i I e .systems. They ha\'e also agreed that together with the concluding of an agree- ment to limit antiballistic missile systems, they w i I I agree on certain measures with respect to the limitation of offensive strategic weapons." While House officials left the im- pression that the agreement represented a significant concessicn by the Soviet Union. In the current phase cf the SALT talks the Soviets have insisted en reaching an agreement first on limiting defense missile .systems -Such as the ABAf -white the United States had in· sisted on reaching an agreement on both defense and offen.si..,e missile tiYs"ltms. The &wiet side, therefore, appeared I• Connally Slates Germany Visit In Dollar Woe's \\IASHINGTON (AP) -Secretary of the Treasury John B. Ccnnally is going to Germany next ~·eek to meet with many of.the European government and banking officials most deeply involved in the re- cent world monetary crisis. Connally, in office less than four months, is expected to carry President Nixon's message lo the American Banker 1 • Association's internaticnal banklog conference in Munich that economic reco\'ery In America will not be lfO"'ed because Of the dollar crisis. Connally told newsmen Thursday the United States' approach has been to con- tinue economic expansion "'bile fighting to reduce the rate of inOation. He echoed the thinking of Federal Reserve Board Chairman Arthur f. Burns, who said a day earlier fighting in- flation, not reducing interest rates, is the top priority in hnprovtn1 the dollar's in· ternational po~tion. To underscore the importance of Con· nally's trip, President Nixon Thursday ~'ent to the llreasury building to meet with Connally for an hoor and a half disc113sion of the secretary's week in Munich. Connally's visit is seen as an effort to assure European financial officials "·or- ried over the dollar glut occurrina in their countries since the first of the year. The record dollar flow was triggered by lo~'er interest rates in the United States in compari son to those in Europe. As a result, \\'est Germany devalued its cur· rency relative to the dollar. Several other European countries then revalued their currencies and the purchasing power of dollars in Europe Jost some strength. Fi11als at Hatad Smith returned to Washington May 7 ti confer with Nixon. The Soviet-American understanding reportedly was reached about May 10. The administration wi t h h,e Id .an· nouncement of t h e wuientanding. however, because of the crisis which blossomed immediately t.berufter over Sen. Mike Man&fie.ld's efforta to force • cutback of 150,000 U.S. troops in Europe. That issue was resolved Wednesday and the administration moved the next day to announce the Soviet-American agree· ment. * -tr * Better W eapom Believed Factor l 1i Talk Accord ' WASlllNGTON (UPI) -The P'!'° tagon believes recent improvements 11\ U.S. nuclear weapons helped bring about the Soviet-American agreement to move towards some kind of arms limitll.liOn. On March 31 and on April 26 ·the lint two U.S. submarines wert fitted with Poseidon missiles -a new generation of v.·eapon capable of burling up to 10 nuclear warheads at separate tarrets from beneath the ocean surface. Defense Department officials also feel the introduction of the Minuteman Ill - v.•hlch carries a triple nuclear warhead and is based on land -also played a role in the breakthrough. Another factcr. they feel . is the recent suettssful test of the Safeguard antiballistic missile system. On Capitol Hill the arms ~evelopment drew praise. House Republican Leade.r Gerald R. Ford of Michigan c1lled 1t "one of the most significa n t breakthroughs for peace in the history er the modern world." Sen. J. William Fulbright. (D-Ark.l. said he was "encouraged" by the development since it :seems to indicate bolh the U.S. ani:I Soviet governmenUi ha\'e made concessions and the prospectl for agreement are impro..,ed. Sen. Edmund S. Muskie. (0.Malne) called the news "a good fint step" and said he hoped both natiol)s would ahow mutual restraint in developing and deploying nuclear ~·eapons whil e the negotiations continue. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, CD·Minn.), said the next step should be an un- derstanding, right now , that no more of· fensi..,e or defensive weapons will be deployed. Sterilization Nixed AUGUSTA. ri.taine ~U PI) -A bill lo provide free sterilization for welfare reci- pients narro.,.,·ly missed approval by the Maine Senate. An initial nonrecorded vote; favored the proposal 13-12 but on a call for the record the .. ote v.·as rejected 12· IS. The measure ~·ould have provided the Health and WeUare Department with $100.000 over the next two years to pay for voluntary steriliz.ation of mothers and fathers on welfare. \Vith semesters nearing an end at many schools and colleges. sludenta spend most of their waking hours preparing for finals. These l\\-'O young men take advantage of sunny Omaha skies and "'arm weather (o study In the park. 'I 11 I QUEENIE By P)lll lnt1rlandl ' "Perhii.ps we shouldn't start the day off with & look at the stock market ••• " Senator Promises Tough Draft Fight WASHINGTON (UPI ! - Pledging to tie up the Senate "if It takes 10 weeks, 15 weeks or 20 y,·eeks." a freshman senator from Alaska today prepared for another round in hi!I effort to kill the military draft. Sen . ~tike Gravel ( D • Alaska), and his small band of supporters turned back three attempts by Senate leaders Thursday to set a date for voting on some of the dozens of amendments to a bill that woiµ~ eidend the draft for two years. Protest Seen At Ceremony 'For LBJ Unit AUS TTN, Tex. (UPI) - The Selective Service Law \\'ill expire June SO if Congress does not act, and Gravel and his allies hope to prevent BC· lion until that date, forcing the military service te fill their ranks with volunteers. Sen. Hugh Scott, e f Pennsylvanja, the S e n a t e Republican leader, threaWled Thursday to cut off the delay• Ing t a c t I c s by impos.ing cloture. 11 step which would end debate and bring the issue to a vote. GraveJ complained &e111or senators were trying to give hls group "the bum's rush." Tbe Alaska senator argued the Senate vote could be crucial in American history. He said it would decide whether the United States v.·ould be "peace-loving" er "bellicose." ~ Lyndon B. Johnson, ll.'hose Presidency was plagued by Vietnam WM demonstrations, apparently will have tD face the paint-..smeared faces of an~ tiwar protesters agaip Satur. day al dedicaUon ce remonies ·for the LBJ Library. Gravel said the d r a f t leg isla tion was "the only bill that requires people to be killed in tbe service of their country." The Nixon Administra tion has advocated a plan of tying an extension of the draft to military pay increase• w:itb the hope of. converting to all- voluntee r military fo rces by 1973. President Richard M. Nixon. Vice President Spiro T. Agnew and House Speaker Car I Albert will be present, along , with hundreds or other na· tional figures. Nixon will be the main speaker at the nationally televised ceremonies btgia- n1ng at 12:30 p.m. EDT. The congregation of lop. ranking government leaders has caused antiwar groups to plan massive d~monstrations. Local ··~1ayday Tr I be '' members, st udent p r o t e s t groups and other antiwar organizations predict !lOCI to . 4,000 pe<>ple will demonstrate. Some of the more rad ical groups have said they will try to .disrupt the offlcisl ceremonies. but officials say no one without a special guest badge u·ill be a1\01o1•ed near the library grounds. The hbrary is part of an $18.6 million complex on the Uiii\·ersity of Te".<as campus that also houses the Lyn don B. Johnson School of Public Af· fairs. The dedicatinn cere1n<1n ies are slated lo take place at the foot of a gra ssy knoll cm 1o1·hich the eight story building stands. An outdoor barbecue luncheon -: will follow . City and campus police and aecret service agents vdll cor- dqq off the area. Sonic Boom Threat T oUl On Treasures WASHINGTON ~UPIJ The director of the N'atlonal Park Service has comp!airltld sonic booms general«! by military aircraft have destroyed prehistoric ruins and blasted the faces off cliffs In scenic areas. G. B. Hartzog Jr. told a H o use approprialiOI\$ sub- committee Thursday ht con- sidered the conduct o{ military pilots "di~graceful " He said the damage they had caused in National Parks was In- calculable. "\\'hat are 3.000 or 4.000- year-<1ld prehistoric r u ins worlh~" he a.!;ked "\\'hat ill the face of a cllff in Mesa Verde '"·orth'.'"' II is ,;hattered off and now is at the bottom of the canyon." Hartzog complained protest!! to the Air Force have brought no response aod telling the story to the publlc has brought no reaction. -:·ORIGINAL OIL PAINTINGS (from E111op1 I 24X36 •1 ·000 ON C!:ANVAS I EA. SATURDAY & SUNDAY ONLY, 11 to 5 ~ PLUS: Fin• E111op••n oll pt!nfll'lg1 olf•r•cl lo !ht puhlic t i whol•11l1 ,,~<t•I All 1iitl -0/1 <•11 ... ,, LEE'S ORIGINAL OILS I Lffi ht rM llttte ,.now qtt .. •J 36' E. 17th St., Coll• Mt1....44S.ll60 Open Fri. Thru Mon., 11 ·5 DAILY PILOT II Pennsy Peril Cited Jst Confirmed Case Woman Poisoned By Fish Mercury $92.5 Milli.On Lost in 3 Months a little in April. But there: art 1Ull losses on top of lGS.su." The trustees said earlier this month that the rallrotd would ro broke by AUIU&t or Sep. ttmber unlw work ru.le.s •nd other 11bor east tsauu were resolved. ... part1 pu million standard comtdered sale. PHlLAPELPHJA (AP! - Tbe Penn Central Transportation Co., w b I c b runs America's bl1gest railroad, reported Thursday a $'.92.5 million loss for the first three months of thi! year and calied lb situation "perilous." "It does appear that the d ia:ast rous ••• downward plunge at a rate which 1ot steadily worse all throuab last year has been stopped," reported the four trustees ap- pointed by a fed eral jud1e to 1uide the company's reorganization through bankruptcy court. FBI May Enter Probing Of Nader's GM Charges CITES POISONING Dr. R09er Herdman WASR!NGTON (AP ) -A New York health officer u ya the mercury polsonin1 of a housewife who diettd on awordflsb dr1.maU1es t h e potenU1l danier faelna other · •·fiah faddlsts, '' Dr. Roger Herdman, deputy director of the New York State Hea1lh Department; described the plight of an unidentified H year old Leng Island woman to a Senate en"lronment IUb- committee Thursday. The FDA ordered 50me tuna off store shelves last year but ha! slnce decl•red all on t.hti market to be within ill O.S ppm standard. Herdman described t he Long Ialand woman as "the first case of human lllnm; ln this nation directl y 1t- trlbutable to meni:ury poison• lng from ordinary market.ab!• food." The first quarter los,, is S26 million higher than a year 1go, but it doesn't approach the worst three months in the railroad"s history -the 111» million loss Jn the October to December period last year. The trustees (eported a loss of SIS.1 million in April, $4.1 milUon less thlUI a year ago. The transportation firm filed for reorganization under the federal bankruptcy law last June. The trustees said Penn Cen· tral'.!1 sltua.lion require a measure&." 'Ibey liaid a com· pulSOll of figures indicated the hea vy first quarter Joss was roughly comparable to a year ago if two special Income items in 1970 were considered. Last year the railroad made a $16.9 million profit on the sale of (lne subsidiary to another and collected S9.6 million dividends from the other PeM Cenlral su bsld· iaries. WASHINGTON (UPI) The FBI is belng asked. to in· vestigate Ralph Nader's new charges that employes of the Sehate and General Motors altered transcripts nl auto safely hearings in 1968 to pro- tect top GM officials. Nader alleged in a letter to Sen . Abraham D. Riblcoff (D- Conn.), that changes were made in the testimony of GM Chairman J ames M. Roche and Louis G. Bridenstine, th en an assistant general counsel for GP.1. Ribicoff said Thursday he wou1d ask the FB[ W in- vesUgate Nader's complaint. He also said the JusUce Department investigated ! ,;imilar allegation by Nader in 1967, but "found no reason for prosecution at that time." Rlbicoff Is chairman of the subcommittee whose transcript was purportedly changed. GM said in a st.attment Nader was trying to "In· timidale" the subcommittee ,;La.ff. GM aaid It ''reviewed the transcript of the 1966 hes.ring and marked the 6UUt1Ul:t changes whlch it felt were re----------- quired to c;orrect errors and omissions in the transcript'' at Riblcoff's request. The subcommitlee was prO: bing, In part, GM's alleged at. lempt.s tD discredit N ! d e r v.•he n the consumer advocate first began to make allega· tlons that CM cars were unufe. To back up hls c:huges. Nader supplied Ribicoff with what he said was the original transcript and what actually appeartd ln the v e r a I o n printed by the e<>mmlttee for the public record. .. The major rieletlons and additions to the testimony of GP.t witnesses which I ha\'e discussed, came at a lime when the rerord 1o1·as in the cusl.ody of the subcommlttee ,;tafr -and apparently "''ere made without your know\tdge or that nf anv other Senator. They raise. ·therefore, ques- tions regard ing the personal rtl!ponsibility of c e r t a l n Senate emp!oyes during 'ftlat period in 1966." Nader said. U.S. Boats Say Soviets Still at It BOSTON I AP ) -Th~ new incidents of h.1rassme.nt of American lobster fishin g boat. by Russian trawlers south of Nantucket Island have he.en reported, althoug~. negotiator• told a congressional com- miltee that violators would be punished by the Russian fleet commander. Involved in incidents Thurs- day morning v.•ere Wily F'ox, out of Westport. ~1ass., which lost a quantity of lobster gear earlier this week, and the Pat San Marie. Thursday night, the Coast Guard said, the Wily Fox reported 12 trawlers sailed through its fishing a r e 1 shortly before 8 p.m. The mother of three con· sumed about 10 ounces of swordfish daily for n t n e mo!'lths in 1964 and 1965, he saidr and lost 45 ol her lM pound!. She contin ued her r;wordUsh diet ,;poradleally un- til November 1970. Now, .he said, she has been diagnosed 1s a mercury poisoning victim. 'Ibe womanJurcbased the awordfish, 1U it fresh from a local market, "because she She underwent treatmt.nt fot what was co111idered a "psychosomatic d I 1 e a ' e · • more than a year, he said, and contacted h I 1 dep.trlment three months ago w 1 t h aymptoms of dlui.neS!, loss of memory, jerky handwriting. trembling hands and speak· ing and hearlDJ problems. A sample of her hair om-- ta.lned 42 ppm of mercury, compared with no more than S ppm fD an average person, he .. Id. didn't like fish ... She wanted a,---------- nonfishy lasting f I s b , ' ' Herdman ,;aid. Tuna fish fits that category, he &aid, and "a perlOll eallng 10 ounces 1 day would exceed the maximum :iUowable in- take" set by the Food and Drug Administration. On Ma y 6 the FDA recom- . mended that Amer icans stop eating swordfish because the agency'& testa of 8.$3 samples showi@d 95 perc~t cont&ned mercury exceeding Its O.S "In terms o! the key net railway operating income lMs figure, the first quarter result was only 12.3 mill ion larger than last year and the com- parable April loss was Q.5 million less than last year," the trustees said. Come See the Southland's Most Exciting Furniture Stores "We take no saW.faeUon from comparing figures that are still red , "It does appear that the disastrous 12 month downward plunge at a rate whjch got steadily worse all through last year has stopped. "The loss rate, so far as the railroad operati~s themselve.s are concerned, 'Jeveled out ln the first quarter and eased up 45 Arrested In Protest A~ Campus KENT, OhJo (UPI) -Police arrested at least "5 pet10ns early today as they swept a large crowd of youths from the downtown area back to the Kent State Univers.i ty campus for the third straight nigh t. One stu~nt wa!! seriously hurt when a motorcyclist swerved. at high speed into the demonstrators. At least 25 persons were taken into custody as the police began th eir move at \!later and Main Street! after reading the Riot Ac.t. · Twenty othera were &rre.!!ted on the University Commons. including Kent State Student Pre!!ident Craig Morgan . Other scattered arre.s u may rai6e the WI.al to near 70 iD custody, police said . Students said there have been several similar demonstrations in the 13 months ,;ince four K e n l studen~ were slain on campus by National Guardsmen, but these were the finit masa ar- rests The crowds gathered as they had since Tut!lday night t.o protest city ordinances Ag3ln!lt hitchhiking and carrying open containel"9 ()f a I c o h o 11 c beverages. Choose One of the Many Coast & Southern Federal Offices to Serve.You: + MAIN OFFICl:lth l HUI, Lot Anoel•• 12S.13SV * W1LIHUtl et OIUMUCY PLlCl:3tS3 Wllehll'I Blvd.,L.A.•~12f5 U.. CIYlt CINT'M: 2nd & lf'Oldway • ~1102 * HlJNT1NGfON llACH: t1 Huntington Otnttr • (714) 117•1047 I IANTA ANA LOAN IEMCI AGINCY; * 190SN. Main SL . (714)&47..f257 * UfrfTA MONICA: 711 Wllahl" Blvd.• 303-0748 + IAN NDfltO : 10th A Pacific• 1314:M1 * WllTCOYINA: Eut11nd ~Ing Ctr.• :t.31•220t '* PANORAMACffY: tffl Van Nuya Blvd.• 102·1171 * TAWNA: 18751 Ventura Boulevard• MH814 * , LONCI IOCH:3rd l Locutt • 437·7"81 °"' __ ,.,,.!Jiii Dll~--t .. to lJlll ASSETS OVER saoo MIUION \ Art Linkletter Shows You a New Way to Beat Inflation ... Just Join c57h'e II lfBIS Club With a $2,500 balance In your aavlno1 tccount, you ire ellglbJe IO become 1 member. Subatant111 uvlng1 are 1v1il1bl1 wheo purchu lng many lttmt Including automobll11, fuml tura, appllances, jewelry. Plus m1ny free aervlces -money ordara, t afe deposit tioxes. •tc.. . COAST -~-I AND SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS ' ---------~----........,,...-- Coast & Southern Federal Offers You These Highest Preyailing Rates: COMPOUNDID DAILY AND PAfD QUAln'IM.Y,• '5.00"•·5.13% P-k: No Minimum. 5.25%-5.39% ThrM Monlh C.nlflcate: No Minimum. 5.75°/•-5.92"• On•Year Certlflcew: S1 ,000 Minimum. 8.001%-6,18°/o TWo-Y•r Certffle1t1; $5,000 Minimum. •EtttclM Annu1I E111t/nf• • INSURANCE TO $20,000 • ' I I I l I ! . ' .. .. T - •~:DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Master Much bas been said in recent years about how dire. ty Newport Beach needs a new master plan. Far too little has been done about it. As a result. Newport Beach has found itseU going from crisis to crisis on a year-to-year, sometimes week· to-week basis. . The recent freeway referendum was a crisis reac· tion, the emergency halt to high·rise shorel ine construe· tion is another. and in a matter of months or weeks a plan for downcoast devel op ment will burst upon us for approval. The existing "master plan" is a thin, 34-page docu· m~nt of little current use or reference. All planning commissioners and councilmen did pot even have copies of it until recent days. In recent months councilmen and planning com- missioners have talked a lot about the lack of a plan of .developmenL The council has instructed Acting City Manager Philip F. Bettencourt to put $50,000 in next , year's budget to finance a plan. This will buy veryJjtUe. In the same budget. however, $60,000 is authorized fo:r a transportation study, which is one of the essehtial eleme~ts o( a ma.Ster plan. But only one element. · Piece meal plannmg has been the norm. Currently tber.e. is a rash of such pieces -the traffic study, the Back Bay study, the Civic District study, the downcoast study. And the new senior planner has been assigned to a.land-use+study. But as of now there is little evidence of a coordin· ated approach. Admittedly there are many obstacles to producing a general plan in the next year or two. Whether or 'Pot there will be freewars or freeway substitutes and where, is central to any realistic plan. Plan Urgent , posed laws in Sacramento to control planning in the coastal zone is another hang.up. But a start has to be made irometime. and the sooner the better. There is alw;ays the hope that by the time decisions 'on these sticky problems become essential to progress on the plan, some solutions will be visible -at least in outline. The purpose of a master plan is to make It pos· sible for the citizens and the government to act know· ledgeably to preserve and enhance what's good, iµard against blight and provide for orderly, reasoned growth and change.,'A good master plan preserves the environ· ment and so preserves property values. It reduees the necessity for crisis d~cisions that too often turn out to be less than wise or less than fair. There is only one way to properly taekle the prob- lem of a Newport Beach master plan. It will take time and money. Both may be cosUy, but will be well worth the investment. First, an outside consuJtant of the highest caliber, ~ome firm aloof from toe.al political interest or pressure, must be brought in, given 1ls head -to· a point -for as long as need be, perhaps, probably, a year. Then comes tune. for serious citizen input. Every interest organization in town should be heard before pnd during a .~eries of public hearings. After this. the consultant will go back and draw a final report. The council can then schedule more hear· ings before actually adopting this considered and com· prehensive plan. The time involved could weU be two years. The total cost could be up $200,000. The result, however, wiU be a living, viable docu· ment for the ~ity's advance planning department. for developers, for homeowners t.o ha ve as a guidebook. . Regardless of the cost, or the interim inconven· iences, Newport Beach cannot_alford not to do it or not $-... ....._..~.~ How will the Upper Bay be developed and affect traffic patterns and densities? The current spate of pro-to do it now. - N HOW TO SAVE 1HE S.S.T. AND REVNE 1HE RAILROAl>S Supre1ne Court May Act on Constitutionality Death Penalty Unrepealed To suffer death for Iffy' crime may be a "'cruel and unusual punishment'" forbid- den by the Eighth Amendment lo the Constitution, but the Supreme Court has never a id ao. A recent ruling by the court, upholding the procedures which most states use In Imposing the death penalty, hu precipitated a flurry of ac- tivity among those advocating an end to capital punishment An e?mrgency strategy conference May 15-16 at Columbia University was cllled by the NAACP Legal lltleMe Fuad,;which represents about half of the ISO persons now sentenced to die. Jack Hlmmelstein of the Fund said May & that tome 110 persons wouJd gather to explore: •venues !or further acUon. · 1.be court held May 3 that states did not deny defendants their righta by allow· Ing juries absolute discretion In imposing , the. death penalty -or by allowing juries to decide a defendant's sentence at the w;ne time as bis guilt. NO ONE HAS BEEN executed in the United States since 1967. All executions were delayed until the Supreme Court had announced Its decision in several cases involv,lng capital punishment. Now that the court has ruled, on procedural grounds, no more: such decisions are peoding. I~· I . ' Edith rial Research ·} At the Columbia conf ere nce, participants were tG e1amlne the possibilities for legislative action and ex· ecutive clemency, as we.II as further judicial ch.allenges to the death penalty. Afany of t he attorneys in attendance. represent condemned prisoners. Their concern Is both specific -for the lives of their clients; and general -for the aboU· tion of capital punishment. \ The Supreme Court may provide yet another reprie\·e for the inhabitants of Death Row. It may agree aoon to decide the central question concerning capital punishment: Is the death penalty a "cruel and un usual punishment" and therefore uncoruititu lional? This question is posed in many of the more than 100 ap- pea1s from death sentences wh.ich are now on the court's docket. Only four Justices have to agree to hear argument. in such a case for the court to take it. SOLICITOR GENERAL Erwi n N. Griswold has said that this line of attack on capita1 punishment itsell is pe.rfecUy reasonable. One Justice doesn't agree. Hugo L. Black, in a concurring opinion May 3, said flatly that he did not believe the Constitution outlawed the death penalty: ''It ill inconceivable to me that the frame.rs intended to e'nd capital punishment." Reaction to the May 3 decision was mixed. In California -where 99 persons have bee.n waiting under sentence of death -Gov. Ronald Reagan affinned, through his press .secretary, that he was atHl in favor of the death penalty. Sa n Quentin's associate warden sai,d that ex- ecution dates would 11ot be aet -at least for the 15 or 20 prisoners there who have e1hausted all appeals process. All of Florida 's 78 condemned prisoners 11re still safe from immediate execution. A 1967 federal court (lrder barred any electrocuUons until a case challenging the constitutionality of the death penally it.self was setUed. And In Ohio-where 42 men are condemned to die -Gov. John J . Gilligan said there would be no ex· ecutions unti l the Supreme Court ruled on the fundamental Eighth Amendment iuue. A technicality stands between life and death for the 28 condemned prisoners in Alabama. State law prescribes that ex- ecutions be carried out within the wal\.!!1 of a certain prison -which has been demolished. What Can Newton Off er? To the Edit.or: 1 note that Trash Day will come to UCl early tlli5 year 91'ith the upcoming visit of Black Pussycat, Huey P. Ne.,.,·ton. Ostensibly. the v:isit will '·enlighten us on aome of the struggles that political prisoners are facing •.. through the judicial system , etc., etc." This, ac- cording to one of the organizers of the. .. cultural" conference. Possibly. at the same. time. Huey will txpound on how political prisoners of his party are treated; very enlightening in· deed. I'm sure they would have preferred our .nasty old judicial system. or course. Jlue.y...will a\IOkl.:diM:ussing-aeytbing but his own problema, all of which he made for himself: all or which are $50,«Kl tn baiJ....00-the fault of-soc~ety. THIS s.um NASTY society and tysltm allow losers like Ntwton to circulate while awaiting retrial. What people like Newton can oner a college group escapes me. But , the sponsors and administration in their masothlstlc wisdom must be working for the economy by offering a little employ· ment to a ptrson without any other employable. akills. lf things get worst, --~-- Friday, May 21 , 1971 Th• editorial page of the l>o:illl Pilot .seeJu to infonn 011d 1tim--,iau reader• by pre$enring thil MW$poPfr'1 opinion.a ond com- m.tnklrll on. topici of inleresi a..s llgfll/lctmce, bu providing o torum for the expre1sion. oJ evr rtodn1' opinimU, and b¥ Fflt1'lthlq tM diver.Se mw-pome, of Informed ob~nt1t1'• and ipol<umcn on t<Jpia o/ 1114 4av. RObert N. Weed, Publisher ·Mailbox ' -Lll!tr• fftnl nfftn ,,. -1c-. "'-•llY wrll.,,, •llMllll lOllftf tMlr rMlllHt• 11'1 M ..,,.. t r les•. TIM rl1lll ,. UllftllM llft'" lot Ill .. K. ..-111m11"" u..i '' ,_._ All 1enen """t 1 ... dvtlol li1nt111r. tlMI 1'11lllftt loHrftl. 11111 1111nH mlY M WllllMl4 Oii r-1 N wltlC .. llt l'M-.. UM,_., .... ,,., will Mt M MM ...... Huey can always jump bail and join col· lea gue Cleaver, who also voiced his four· letter jewels of wisdom at UCI before jumping ball ~ di>tant points. Bu~ of course, Ill theJe thinga alter be permit property owners and their dogs l«iJ take an early morning or late evening "'alk. For many people whn live alone. this stroll on the beach is one of the day'a highlights. The 9 a.m.-6 p.m. (lption, coupled wilb the voluntary action of "Concerned Dog Owners," ~'Ould sharply reduce the mess created by both visiting and locall y-o\lo·n- ed animals. Unfortunately. the minority of city residents who live on the peninsula beachfront do not seem as prepared 1s we are to compromise and give this logical approach a chance. THE ARGUMENT has betn made that an all-day law (6 a.m. • 10 p.m.) ia easier to e.nforoe than a t a.m. • I ·p.m. -enlightens. CALVIN G. SIEGLE ordinance. Why is restriction during one. range. of hours easier to enforce than one Neu·port'• Dog Ban To the Editor: -Involving any-other-time.-lntervalL.And why do all city beaches. including those In Ccrona de! Mar wbere there is much less evidence. of a mess problem, have to Like many dog owners who have livtd and paid taxes in Newport Beach fnr several years. I was very di"appolnted by the city council's approval of introduction of a motion that would prohibi t leashed dogs from all the city's beaches all day long from June 15 to Sept. 15. I was al~ made uneasy by Councilman Rogers' call for another public hearing on tbe issue for the firsl Mooday ln Sep- tember. Will an attempt then be ma.de to extend the ban throughout the winter months'! · r.10NDAY'S ACTION by the c o u n c i I waii: e~ally hard to understand in view of the effort.I of .. Con«med Oo£' Owners of Newport Beach" to help solve the dog mess problem in a voluntary way. Why not give them .1 chance? l!ln'I this the kind of constructive alternative that the h'Onorabte mttyor was so 11 c 1 ti n g throughout the hearings! ~fost dog owners probably feel lhat a Jun< l~pl 15 ban belwcen the hours or -9 a.m. and 6 p.m. would have. been a reasonable compromlst between the. ti· Lrcme alternatives or M-new .. Jaw a.nd •fl. day prohibition. ADOPTION or this ordinJnet wou1d· ' '. be reslricled all day? ~1any of us are hoping that the council will see fit next Monday to malte some prov.ision for the many responsible people in the city who value the legitimate pleasure of walking their leashed dogs on some of the city's beaches before 9 a.m. and after 6 p.m. JOHN R. FOX Dear Gloomv , Gus: Now lhat' doe:s are banned from ·the beaches In certain houra. I l\ll!SI oor poor llUlt lawn will REALLY catch It! . -Pooped Out ,.., fMMt Nftt(ft .....,... ........ , ... -• ... ,It¥' ,.... •I ... --· ltlMI' -... "'" ... ._,. ..... OellY· ..... Hard Look At Emerging Politics • . ' ' -j •J -w • ._ __ .__. ... ~--...~ .. or_,. Frederick G. Dutton's "Changing Sources of Power: American Politics in the J970s." just pubHshed by McGrav.·· Hill ($7.95). is dedicated "To All the Young People \Vho Will Be Voting for the First Time in This Decade." A pro- vocallve reainnaissance of the developing political struggle for the fut ure of Amcricar1 society. this book takes a hard look al the emerging forces and public controversies that will likely absorb the nation'1 altention in years to come. }.lore important than the contention hetween the two major parties, or among the most prominent presidential can· didates and their principal supporters, the author feels. are ''the historical lines of force lo which they are likely to be responding early or late during this decade. "ESPECIALLY IN a per.iod of divided government, there is need to recognize that what so tentatively prevails now will probably be under serious challenge as the. seventies move along ...• l{ the older America has more votes, .money, experience, and guns al present, the new elemenb have still-unfathomable energy, growth, imagination, and time on their side." A former Special Assistant lo President John F. Kennedy and Secretary of the U. S, Cabinet ; former Assistant Secretary of Sfate: former ExecullvP Assistant to the Governor of California, Dutton notes that the 1968. 1970. and 1972 elections are ·but passing episodes in an historic transition In which the U.S. is already caught up. HE SEES THE nation mo" in g abrasively and unevenly into one of J11everal possible alternative futures for which the early 70s are only an in- between. Yet, he feel", taken as a whole the coming decade will probably tum out to be as determining as was "the Jef. fer.900 revolution" of 1800, the age of Jackson, the rise of the Republican party with Lincoln. and the New Deal "Chaneing Sources of P o w e r • ' rtcagnius that historic forces, largely • heedless or i.mmediate public figures and events. are building toward a showdown with the....naUon's.. pte\!.alliriL@litjt;:~ and public order. Some or these forces have already made a fitful entry onto the na- tlnnal scene. Dutton writes. while some still lie nol far below the surface of the present political system. THEY ARE NOT confined to any partfcular parly or part of the ideologica l spectrum , but are stirring th rougtiout American society -not only in the social structure and economy, but in the dffper attitudes and psychological impulses. Yet the w id e-s pre ad restiveness, riots and reactions of retent years: are only symptoms of more basic pressures that are gathering. As Dutton pul5 it. his: concern is "with not just more or less or what already e:ii:· lsts. but also what could well be different over the course of the seventies. The t'ndency when looklng •head-is to slip off Into the more bizarre and volatile fringes. quite wilhnut regard to their proportional role or probable historical effect But the lnt,rest here Is primari!Y ... in the mainstream as it is dtvtlopiflg In Its OY.11 divtTSt and often turbulent ways." As a broad array or quite spttific new lorcts emerges on the American poUUcal liCt.oo, It ls Outton's goal to hclp the ob- Jtcr.lve observer "to perceive, sort out, affecl, ind rel~le to what may still be a few or more years away." VktGr de KeyserUn1 Why Critic-s and Public Disagree When the judges for the National Book Award insisted upon dropping "Love Story" from the fiction nominatlons, this contemptuous gesture ou trag- ed millions of Amer· icans. and puzzled just as many more. How could the run· away best-seller of the year be deemed not even v.·orthy of consideration by this committee of writ· ers. It is impossible to adjudicate such disputes between the public and fhe in· telligentsia. They seem to be talking about lhe same thing -a no vel named "Love Story" -but they are in actuality responding to quite different stimuli. THE PUBLIC lS responding lo the story on an emolional level, and the judges are responding lo a purported .,.,.-ork of art (In an intellectual and pro- fessional level. The public has a perfect right to enjoy the book. and the com· mittee has an equal righ t to repudiate il. But when I say that the public has a perfect right lo enjoy it. I do not mean that I concur in its taste. It is a wretched book, however appea1ing on a sentiment.al level, but people have a right to bad taste. in books. clothes. music, or anything else. What they do not have a right to is the confusion of laste with standards. f RA VE LEARNED over the years, howe111r. that it is nearly impossible to persuade a person untrained in the arts that everything is not just "a malter of taste." One cannot convince most people that "The Sound of Music" was a rotten movie, or that "God Bless America" is a banal song, or that the nostalgic landscape hanging over their fire.place is a piece of junk. They are emotion.ally mov~ 1iy all these thiogs , and that is enough for them. Yet in their own fields. they would not be so easily fooled . A good carpcnte~ would know at a glance when a house is well and truly built, no matter how beguiling it might look from tbe outs ide, and would not be deceived by its superficial appeal. A good tailor can tell at a glance which suiting bas bee n skillfully run up or which is sleazy . A NOVEL, A Flli\f, a piece of music, is a technical fab rication, before it can be anyth ing else. It must have the same pro- fessional craftsmanship, the same hones- ty and integrity. as a well-built house or hand-sewn suit, before it merits our ap- proval. But the public knows nothing of these things; it sees: only the surface glil· ter. This is why there iS no effective com· munication between the untrained au· dience and the tra ined observer. And why, without the right education. we can never hope to persuade the public that "Love Story" ii; a gingerbread house wholly uninhabitable by real people. -Military Drug Problem By the most reliable estJmate 1 available. of the more. than 211 million young Americans in the age group mid· teens through mid·20s. about one in 120 is an addict or a frequent user of hard narcotics. Among the fewer lhan 300,000 United Slates servicemen in Vietnam. most of them in the 17· to 23-year~ld age group, a congressional study has placed the ratio of hard-drug users at one 'in every aeven to 10. Last ~year; acrontin~-to-the study, bet.,.,·een 60 and 90 Gls in Vietnam died from heroin overdoses and the United States military establishment as a whole reported 60 drug.related deaths. lf THOSE FIGURES are correct -in- deed . if they are Anything like correct - then the lime has grown very late for this country to take the preventlve and cor· reclive action that will be required to head (If( the deepening of a crisis. both ci"Uan and military, of frightening magnitude. 111e first step, now that the wraps have been taken off. is to verify the accuracy of this aSStssment by the House Armed Services subcommittee. And II It is ac- curate. several steps must follow In short order : -DEMAND. NOT ~1F.RELY suggest. that the governments In that part of t~ world -lo who!!t 1urvivll lht Unlt.ed Stites has committed t norm o u !l resoun:es and tens or lhou$8.nds of llvt.!11 -crack do"'n hnrd on the k>csl p~ cessing "factor ies " that are reporttd to be the principal MlW'Cf: of heroin ~pply: and tht.n follow through tG lnsurt that de- mand ts mtt. -Develop. through consultJtion al. the highest levels of the administration. a cobett:nt, pr1dic1ble strategy for dealini _, i Guest. Editorial with the problem at tht troop level. Even, if necessary, by il!Olating for treatment and rehabilitation all of those servicemen wl!o have fallen prey to the narcotics "epidemic." -FINAU.Y, EVOLVE A companion strategy for proteeling the civili an population from the obvious dangers in. herent in returning lo domestic life young men who are addicted to hard drugs al a rate 12 to 17 times that of their non- service contemporaries. Halrwa y effort wi1\ nol suffice. Nor Is cost a consideration. The expense will simply have lo be amortized as another cost in an already hideously expensive undertaking. The utterly unacceptable alternative would be to expose this &Ocle- ty to a debilitating and shameful ordeal whose. conseque~s cnuld outlive even the national heartbreak over the Asian war itself. K1ns1s CUy Star B11 George --~ Dear George.: I understand the ioo has a Mw matayou, ls this lrue? DON 8. Dear Don B: What's a - Oh. oo, you don·t. Italian jokes are out ! (Send )'(lllr problMnS to George. the ortgln11tor ()( Sideways Think· Ing.) I. I. , . .. . .. -. .._' --. , Good · Grief, Party! a --' I ~i ' • • ' I I ' I ' "' ~men BEA AN DERSON, Editor • •"rNet, Mtt JI , 1t11 M , ... IS ... •,• ••• •;.'< ., '.--(_: .•. •.. ~·· • Time will be turned back f.or an evening when mem· bers and guests of the Eastbluff Philharmonic Asso- ciates Fly Back to Lhe Forties tomorrow. The Jill· off will take place in the Edward T. Maloneys' liiovie World Planes of Fame ?t1useum in Buena Park. Getting a lift from Snoopy to the fund-raisin~ cocktail-buffet are (left to right) Mrs. Paul Bergdahl and Mrs. 11-farshall Jarvie. Mrs. Jack R. Curley is chairman of the event, which will include' music. from the 40s. In High Sp irits Leading members of the Newport Beach Junior Ebell Club in a cheer for the year's accomplishments is Mrs. Larry Mitchell, \vhile Mrs. Dave Snow (left) skips into her ne\v job as president and Mrs. Larry Thayer gets into the spirit. The year was wrapped up with a School Days party in the Vincent \Voods home and new officers were installed during ceremonies in the Sadd.leback Inn, Santa An. . Thrift Shop Ex panded ,, Le9gue AAakes 'f.Aove To Accomplish Dream The dream of the National Charily League,· Newport Chapter 'is well on its way to being fulfilled. A ribbon cutting ceremony Wednesd~Y. May 26, will mark the first step in the service group's dream of having a large building to house all league activities. The league will move its thrift shop from the gray bungalo\v on 19th Street in Costa Mesa a few block west to 540 W. 19th St., where a do'A-'nstairs 5pace will be converted to a shop ~ith a boutique atmosphere. Present for the gala 2 p.m. festivities will be a host of dignitaries, in- cluding Mrs. Spen cer Tracy and her daughter Susie, Cos ta Mesa ?\-1ayor Robert Wilson, Buddy Ebsen and Mrs. Arthur Kimbrough, national president of the league . Acrordin$' to f\1rs. Rowland Lohman, director of the thrift shop. the game bargain prices \vilt be in effect at the new location as patrons have en· joyed for the past 10 years. Mrs. Jack Samuels will assume responsibility ror the sho p after June. guiding it in its effo~ts to raise funds for the John Tracy Clinic for hard of hearing preschool children. SerVing as the reception committee for the ribbon-cutting ceremony will be this year's league of.ficers. including the r.fmes. Herbert }.feany, president. and Richard Lawrence, Lohman, Guy Smith, Claude Meeks, Lisso Mims, Holmes Mills, Curtis Crooke and Richard Rawlings. The Newport Chapter of the National Charity League, a mother. daughter service group, was formed in 1957 under the leadership of Mrs. Ernest Huxford, charter president. Subsequent presidents have included the ~1mes. Franklin Arther, Paul Rogers. DeUord Fedderman, Robert Black· mar, Will iam Tritt. Chester Salisbury, Norman Bing, John Rau, Earl Olrich and Edward Corlett. •• I' f i j ~ ' . ! • ' ' t ! Through their guidance, the thrift shop has grown to serve the com. rnunity with an expanding inventory of quality merchandise at low cost, raising thousands or dollars for the work of the John Tracy Clinic which is based in Los Angeles. MOVING DAY AHEAD -Members of the Newport Chapter, Na· tional Charity League are hard at work preparing the new thrift shop location and packing merchandise at the old in anticipation o! the Wednesday, May 26, gala grand opening with Mrs. Spencer Tracy as special guest. Ready to join the crew are Oe!t. to right) the Mmes. Henry Wagner Jr., Paul Connally and Edwin F. Steen Jr. Ann Misses Point: Problem Could Lead to Delinquency DEAR ANN LANDERS ' My husband and 1 ire undecided. Will you please help UI come to grips with the problem! We live in 1 middle-class housing develoP"' ment. We mind oor own business and have a pleasan~ relationship with everyone on the block. But our neighbors arc nol our IOC.ial friends. The family down the street has lour children. Three times in the past si:t weeks they have sent one of their childrtn over here to "borrow" a couple of -clg1rettt!. My husband &mokes. I do not. We have al'A•ays given the cigarettes lo lht cbUd and not thought too much about it, but after lbe third time 'we are beginning to "11ndb' if we should oontinut this pracUce. 'Mlere ·1 a drug a tore three blocks from here which stays open until midnight. What il1'our opinion? -FREE ANN LANDERS CIGARETIE MACHINE DEAR FREE: The wont part of Ud1 seen~ i1 the e1ample the parents are 1et.- ttng: for the ir cbUdren. It ts unfortnnate wbtn chlldren let their pare.nu so enslaved by t11e tob1cct~UIHt that tbt1 muat borrow 1 elgarellt &o get through the night. lt h a1so a aulsance. I'd aay three times 11 ·enough. From DOW on say "no." (Editor's Note: We believe AM has missed the point bec1u5t the children borrowina the clgarettea may be smoldng them themselves. The lenders possibly are contribuUng to juvenile delinquency.) DEAR ANN LANDERS ' I am happy you reprinted your Twelve Rules for Raising Children. As a grandmolher who did well wllh her Own brood and ts now watching her daughters and sons do even be.tler, may I add J 13th rule?· If 1 mother or lither lack the im- agination or will not take the time to plan iomelhing interesting and instructive for lheir children to do, they have no rl&bt to object to whatever the kids think up themselves. -KANSAS GRANNY J>EAR G~1 Rlgbt )' .. .re. 0 A1 idle mlDd U the devil'• work1bop. Idle lllaDCIJ are .U &eol1." Lel'I mike tt 1 bater'• doze•. nad:1 for wrtttna. DEAR ANN LANDERS' I om a JS. year-old air) who has • problem th•t ts bolhering me a lot. I have no idea what to do about It. f hope you will a:tve me 1 solution. Lois has been my belt friend for seven years but recently .abt: has developed a bad habit. She comet Into my house, 11u with me for 1bouL 10 minutes, then off she goes to the kitchen ind helps herself to whatever she sets. t wouldh1t dream of doing such a thing -even In my aunt's house. J think lt'1 colossal nerve. Tttls afternoon, Lois fixed herself a triple-decker undwich and drank ball a quart of milk. I kept my mouth abtJt bec1u!!:,J didn't know what to say. After she left I was mad at myaelf 'or keeping quiet. Would J be a bad hostess if 1 told her J didn't like lt! -OIICKEN FRIEND DEAR anCK: Lolr has no manner• •nd 1 tblU you mlgb& leach her 1omethln1. lt h extremely rude lo 10 Into U.. klicbt11 ef 1 friend ind belii 01ei_elf to food. The next lime Lois be1d1 that way, slop lier and es:plat. tbet you pla1 to 1erve cooklet aad mllk.a.Uttle.l1ter •Dd that •be lbould w1IL DEAR ANN LANDERS ' OUr daughter ls 23. She married 1 laiy, no-good rat who Is already cheating on her. She ts stx months· pregnant. Should we encourlje her to get a divorce? We doQ't think it makes any sense for a young girl to Jive wit.ha miatake forever. Pluse rush yGtll' advice. -MOTHER WHO SAW rr COM. ING DEAR MOTHER, Keep 'l'llel. It 11 "" mistake alld her ...good, Ill)' ral lt should alM> be her dtclsiol1 slDce de wit bave to abide by Ute C01Hq1&tlct1, Give In or lose him ••• when a IU1 gives you this line, look oat! For tlp1 on holf lo bindle the super ses: ule&ma!>f clieck Ann Landen. llffd her booklet; "Necking and Pelting -What Are the Limit!?" Send )'OU< request to AM Landers In care of the OATLY PCLOT, enchlilng SO cents In coin and a .... •tamped, seU-1ddressecl envelope. 1 .. I ·----. li DAil Y PllOT ! ' Question , . • . . . . -· • < Fndl>', Mai 21. 19n A Bride for History Welcome Home! Tempting Dinner Guest Returns 'I 'A J)4nel of community Iei.dera will .,k Is the Harbor A.tea Coordinated? when the Hi.rbor A re a CoordinaUng COwiciJ meeta at n o o n T~eadp)'.,_..lfay 25, in the Afi'porter Inn. lt will be the concluding mtetJng of the year featuring Ult election of officers. ~Ing on the panel will be Fred Sorsabal, city manager or: Costa Mesa; Jim Wood, president of the Y o u t h Einployment Agency; Mrs. WPliam L. St.abler. Newport Mach City Arts Committee aria Mn. Garth Bergeson, ocf>ool board member. Reservations are required. ~ Members View Slide Story ' j.tr.. Robert Barn1s will ~ her Newport Beach home at' p.m. Tuesday, May 25, for a pieetlng of the Santa Ana- N~rt Beach Harbor °'pter, Delta Gamma Alum-..,. Vncle Olarlle and the Quiet Vojce, a allde and mualcal prpentaUon will be given by Mr•· George Johns, stQryt.eller. photographer and wcfld traveler. Silver Sends • The first Tuesday at I p.m. la the meeUng time for Sliver Salida 286, Native Daughters of jhe Golden West. ~ salute to a returning director of Laguna Moulton Players ia planned during a premiere dinner of "'The Man Who Came to Dinner." New managing d I r e c tor Howard "Hap" Graham, who not only directs the hit com- edy but stars In the title role, will be feted during the affair in Victor Hugo Inn on Ti.les- day, May 25. The director will share bill· Ing with bis wife Elsa Balzar Graham . founder of the First Nighters. as they are greeted by guests at a 8 p.m. cocktail hour. 'Smiling Voice' Sings For Executive Group 'I'tle 89th dinner and final event of the season for the Ex- ecutive's Dinner Club of Orange Coast, will begin with a social hour at 6 p.m. in the Newporter Inn on Thursday, May i?. Booked as featured at- tractions for the finale are Jack Smith, known as the "man with the smile in llis voice" and David Foster, operaUc soloist currently with the UCLA Opera Workshop . Smith, public r e I a t I o n s director for Glendale Federal Savings, will discuss People, Place& and Things. Foster will sing selections from light opera, accomparlled by Earl Brtnt, Conner music arranger at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 1'-trs. Leota Garst w I J 1 preside with the assistance of hostesses, the Mmes. Syd Bartlett, Spencer H o n i g , Donald Houseman, William Imhoff, J. W. Kem, Joe Long, . ~ ....... HIT PARADER J1ck Smith Warren Morgan and Edward Quinn . 1 .. A silent •uctloO, a knitwear fashion sh O\ving and a champagne luncheon will comprise the agenda for Newport Harbor Tri Dells' annual spring benefit. Mrs. William Snyder will open her Newport Beach home at 11 :30 a.m. for the Wed· nead•Y, Ml}' 26, evenL Previewing .sale items are Oeft to right) the lttmes. James Rudy, Donald Banks and Kenneth Grumbles. • They will be joined tn the receiving line by Laguna Moulton Playbouse President Glenn Vedder, Mayor Richard Goldberg and City Manager Lawrence Rose and their wives; Festival or Arts board president William Martin, a First Nighters president, Mr . George Thompson. Reservations are to be made by Sunday, May 23, for the 7 p.m. dinner. Among those hosting tables wil l be the Messrs. and ~1mts. Joseph Simmons, W i 11 i a m Gieschen, Spencer Honig, Bride-of-the-year Tricia Nixon, the blonde 25·year·old daughter of President Nixon will marry Harvard law student Edward Finch Cox at 4 p.m. Saturday, June 12. The single ring ceremony will take place in the White House Rose Garden U weather permits. Although the eighth dau~hter of a president to marry in the Whi te House, she will be the first to have an outdoor ceremony. While a student at New York's Chapin School in 1963, she met "my first and last love" Eddie Cox at a school dance. Andrew Morthland. Herbert Hartley, Donald Vanderbilt L------------------------------------------' and Colin Timm011s; Col. and Mrs. William H. Bruggere and Col. and Mrs. William Roley: Miss Fern Randolph ; Mrs. Hovey Cox and Mrs. Craig Ketcham. Summer Wedding Planned A summer wedding is being planned by Karen CuUer of Santa Ana and Charlie S. Nelson Jr. of Flagstaff. Parenti of the engaged cou- ple are Mrs. George R. Bowland of J.1oraga and Navy C'.apt. (ret.) and Mrs. Charlie S. Nelson of Huntington Beach. 'Ibe bride-elect is a graduate nf Marina High School and Is a Junior at UCJ. Her flance also Is a graduate of MHS and Is a senior at Northern Arizona University. He ls affiliated with Delta Sigma Phi and Sigma Tau Gamma. The wedding is planned for Augua:t 2.8 in St. Peters by the Sea Church, Portuguese Bene!. Bible Teacher Relates Story Catholic lay evangelist and former nun Miss Raquel Ja- quez will address members and guests of Zeta Chapter of Lambda-Theta Chl -10rority at I lonliht In the San Clemente home of Mni. Albert Carlson. Miss Jaquez recently return· ed from an international ecumenical conference i n Salamanca. Spain. As a result of her stay, she founded 40 prayer groups and Bible study classes Jn major Spanish cities. Entertainment will be p~ vided by Mr. and f\.trs . Bill Patton of North Hollywood. Horoscope New Films Previewed Pisces: Be Versatile Selected new film s will be exhibited by Jules Engel, Academy Award-winning film· maker during a luncheon meeting of Women fo r California Institute of the Arts Monday, May 24. Prior to the luncheon in the NetNpOrt Harbor Art Museum, guests will view the museiun 's current show, New Painting in Los Angeles. Engel, who also is a facull y member of CIA, has received numerous awards from the Venice and Edinburgh film festivals and the Golden Eagle Award from the U.S. Govern· ment. He will be accompanied by Harbor Area CIA students in· eluding Bob Rogers, 1'1arshall Harvey, Rick Harper and Tim Volz. Chairmen of the luncheon are the Mmes. Milton B. Harvey. John T. Boyd and Richard Wincler. SATURDAY MAY 22 By SYDNEY OMARR Astronomers who continue to attack astrology are con- 5idered So be cranks by their colleagues. 1be public, In this day-aod·age, realizes t b a t astronomy and astrology are separate fields of endeavor. The astronomer who bas nolbing better to do than to vilify astrology Is ridiculed by both astronomers and astrologers. ARlES (March 21-April 191; Money question can b e answered, but you must do the asking. Waiting for others to volunteer information only creates needless delay. Be forthright, direct.. Say what you mean -mean what you say. Fashion Also Ticketed Tea on Flight Menu TAURUS (April 20-May 20 ): Lunar cycle is on upswing. Your judgment intuition are apt to be correct. Obtai n hint from Aries message. Take in· itiative. Make new starts in new directions. Emphasize originality. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Forces lend to be scatiued. 1'1ake up your mind about v.ilat is to be done-and do it. Work behind the scenes. Be discreet. Co-operate in project that aids charitable cause. CANCER (June 21.July 22): A friend confides problem in- volving red tape. Be sym- pathetic. But don't tie up assets on what could be helples.s cause. Have fun at social gathering without being extravagant in cla ims. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Spotlight on how you relate to professional superiors. Don't take bac k seat; but av oid any show of arrogance .. Express your.self in con fident, forthright manner. Romantic interest is evident. VIRGO (Aug. 23-SepL 22): Family member may need reassuranct. If necessary, da this by phone, telegram or A parade of stey.·ardes.s services such as hosting gra~ other special communication. fashionl from airlines around opening and servi111 at ban· You may receive gift from one the world will be featured at quets. who :returns from journey. Be th I · t f the Sophomore girls leaving the gracious. e IMUa spr111g ea o UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ): mistakes. Others will un- derstand. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Older individual has advice to offer. Be an attentive listener. Affects marriage, partnership, legal settlement. Be a careful, shrewd observer. Let others have ,spotlight. Take it easy. SAGIT7ARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): Finish projects. Emphasize appeal, sdverti.sinc techniques. Spread influence. Communicate ideas. Write and publish. Build on solid base. Check basic need.1. Then fill them. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Good lunar aspett now stresses creativity, relations with oppo!ite !el. Stress the new. Welcome opportunity for cha!lenging contact..s, Ideas. Don't be afraid lo change your mind. AQUARJUS (Jan. 2\l-Feb. 18J: You may be pulled in two directions at once. Key is to take practical c o u r s e . Promises are cheap. Go with one who has something on claims. You will understand. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Accent on short journeys, special dealings. With close relatives. Be versatile . Concentrate o n expansion. Promote 1ood will : attend gathering which b r i n 11 creative aintact.s. Orange Coast C o 11 e g e steward~s program will be Investment procedures sbould_ Te ·fll'lf evf """'' lvd!Y ter l'llU I" stewardesses at 1 p . m . graduated Sunday, June 6, be reviewed. Take time to be ,.,.._.. •l'MI 111~e. order,,......., omt•"• S d d · · f th SI lhods booklet, "$K •tl 1111111 lor Mtn •rid un ay. May 23. ur1ng cennon1e.s n e COrTect. oppy me now w-." s-bl•IM•t• •rid • t111h Family and friends of those Mission Beachcraft offices at are esnH"ially costly. Don't he to OtMrr .-.straio.r Sl(:r11 .. 1111 O.A11. v I"--PILOT, aaa 3240, Gr1l'MI Ctfllr1I $1 .. on the program ha ve been in· Orange County Airport. afraid to ask. to correct past '"'"' New York. N.v. 10011. vited to the event in the Mesa ----------1-=c=.....:......:...:.... ___ ....:.. _ __:.=.=-=....:..-'----- Verde Country Club, which ,,..-- will include a skit of an airline flight presented by sophomore coeds. New program officers will be introduced, and service hour awards given to the stu- dents for volunteer community WOMIN INmUTID IN UARNIN<O TO MAKI SUMMER WARDROH. CHARITY FAIR stop look CLASlll ' IT.UTING IMMIDIATILYI ... HevrL_,,. $29'° Ptoooo 549· 11 ?_S noo H•w H-c .. ,., Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers E11t•r 1t Hu 11tl11glo11 C•rtfer '"Y till'le hefore 111 Jrewh19 thi1 Saturdtv, Mey 2Z, fo r 111w liU Mtirey Tovot1. New dr1wl11g1 .... ry s.1. for 4 w1ekt for Kirk Je-lert I ~O I u11mou11ted di1mo11d, Town t 11d Co1111fry C1ribbee11 Cruile for 2, 1n4 De·luire Op1I S1dt11 from Ttrrv lule .. pl.11 '"'llY con1ol1tio11 pri11t. $1 ch1rilv do111tiont welcol!'le. Hu11ti11glo11 Ce11l•r 1t le11h e11d l:dl11ger ~·the s.11 01.,. J/••v· seventy-ones at ~ ibe~ ~CADILLAC 2SOO KAR80A 8LVO./COSTA MESA (714) 640...100 • • --- Cosia"Mesa Today's Final . EDITION N.Y. Stoek.8 VOL. 64, NO. 121, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNl-' FRIDAY, MAY 21, '1971 TEN CENTS •• Fair Board ~Continu~s Study of Hor·se Racing A new compromlse method of taking adYantage of 14 days allocated to the Orange County Fair for thoroughbred horse racing as a reYenue raiser is under 1tudy today. The idea wa.r generally greeted with optimism Thuriday by !he 32nd District Agricultural Association, meeting in board offices on the fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. Opponents of racing on the fairgrounds and proponenb of lucrative parirmutuel r ' I I L I I • betting allowe<I by the 1Ltte mlght beth be sali.sfied if the idea becomes a reality. Races would be staged al Los AJamitoe Race Track, on a contract basis utll.Wng those facilities wilhout the staggering cost of adding new ones to the Orange County {a~groWlds. No formal action was taken by the Fair Board Thursday night e:r:cepl to vote on continuing study of-. thewh ors e racing feasibility, referring,tt to the building and ground! committee. Director Burr Williams abstained, I • I OAILT PILOT,...._ 'Y La Pl'l'M DANA BERG, 4, MRS. DENNIS BERG LAMENT LOSS OF TREE Sl ipup by Crtw Cr•w Turns Aah to Ash•• in Costa Mtw Tree •Trimmed~ Mesa Work Crew Vp Wrong Bark Students or civics and city street ma ps tnow there's a big difference between Governor and Congress. Here in Costa Mesa lt'1 ju.st a couple of blocks. Bu t it made a world of differtnce rhursday In the appearance of tree· shaded Governor Street, much t.o the dismay of the Dennis Berg family. They live at 829 Governor Stree t. which had a towering JS.year-old ash tree un- til 1-a.m~ Thursday. A knock on the door awakened the Bergs, who were met b)' a work crew rrom the city street department's trees and parkways division. They asked the Bergs to moYe their cars. "'We're trimming your tree,' " Mrs. Lin· Woman Given Six-month Term A Santa Ana woman who pleaded guilty in Oraage County Superior Court to wellare fraud charges has been sen· tenced to she months in Orange County J1U and ordered t.o make restitution or more than $2,000 received In the form of wellare checks and food stamps. Judge McMillan placed M(S, Stella Strong, 28, on three years probation ln the tenth 5uch se11tencin2 since the dtst.riq: 111tomey's oftlce -Wgarr tts crackdown this year on what It said was a ..-ing number of welfare chiselers. *· Strong unlawfully received $1.07$ ~ ~ks from the welfare department Md food 1111mps valued at $1 ,000 in ap. pllcatlons that bore the name of ht r cousin. da Berg quoted them as saying. Moments later, the Bergs' telephone rang. "Do you know what they 're doing to your lree?'' a nei&hbor ga1ptd. The whine of power saws gnawed at the neiRhborhood's peace ~ quiet. "Trimming it," replied Mr1. Ber1. "You'd better go look again," said the neighbor. "What are you doi ng to our tree?'' she gasped, upon seeing 15 yecira of hardy --ash 'sl retching its limbs to the sky throughout the seasons, reduced to fire- wood. "Didn't you want It cut down?'' the foreman asked plaintively. Checking with city hall the crew dis- covered the lady who wanted her tree remoYed lives at 829 Congress Street. not 829 Go\lerno r Street, as the work order showed. "I asked if we lea.Ye it alone if It will grow back?'• Mrs. Bera: related somewhat acidly. "lt's finished, lady," the man said. Anybod y can make a mistake, Mrs. Berg admits. but she Is Cflncerned be- cause the city can only replace a park- way tree with a maJimum 15-gaJlon planting container size. Fifteen gallons i• hardly the size of one that grew healthy and unmolested for 15 years. "I called the Llgal Ajd Sociely and they iay we don't have a leg to ltand on.'' Mr1. Berg said. ''The;: didn't uy they'd come back anc:f take the sturnp out. but I bet they 'll come In ~ middle of the night," ahe de(]ared. Dana Berg, 4, was perhapg the most upset of all at deatrucllon of the family'& parkWay tree. "They took all the birds ' homes awa y," 1he murmured, making it an 8 to O vote with nine boird members presenl .. Fairgrounds General Manager and Secretary James E. Porterfield told the board Los-Alamitos course owner Fran~ Vessell Jr. is receptive to the idea and· considers it worthwhile. One method would be to stage the races allotted to the Onu>ge County Fm as part of the state's . thoroughbred season •simultaneously with the im event The other would be to schedule them before or after the fair and ea:position lttell, but carrylna> the Orange County Fair uu. and tbeJM. U icbectu.It!I during the rtgU}ar five.day fair, the annual event woWd be extended by IO dayJ to accommodate lhe two weeks of raci111 allowed. ' "'!be time ii 1ll0We<f. bul it's just been going to wast! all tbele ye8n.''. n:plajns Gk>rla Seelye, fair publicity dir~tor. One of the first steps will be determination by the St ate 'AttorneY General'• Office, on wtlether fair· sponaored racing must be on the agency's own fairgrounds. • Bay Meadowa Racetrack in the San Francisco Bay area hosts an aMual rac- lng card on ,the ti.me allotted one-county fair in that re&lon, indicating the legal precedent has been set. The pr!Yate racetrack ls not locatM on the fairgrounds property Jlself, 11 conr pared to Del Mar Racetrack which ii a , part of the San Diego C o u n t y FalrlJ'OUlld!. If it is determined Los A I a m i to s Racetrack can be rented and the races run on a contract with the Fair Board for facilities and services acUon must bt taken by year's end. Schedules for the 1972 thoroughbred racing season tborushout the state wiU be set early in the year. PrtviotU feasibility rtudies indicate cost of a modr.m, attracUve racetrack on the local fairgrounds would be pro- hibitive. . Cost or even a much more modest track would be heavy, although not en- tirely out of t.he question. Teen Held • Ill Wild Race 90 Mi"le-per-1wur Chase Ends in Mesa Crash Strl.aldng straight down a cross-coun- try thoroughfare, a Glt:ndale leenager in a stolen car led lawmen on a IS-mile, high apeed chase early today before he hit a dip in Costa Mesa, went airborne and crashed. MJraculously, no one was injured in the 90 mile per hour pursuit through scores of major intersections, ending at 17th Street and Santa Ana Ave nue. The 15-y~ar-old suspect fled on foot but was captured by California Highway Defense Group Okays ABM Project f qnd~ WASHING TON (UPI) -The llouM Armed Servic:et Committee Thureday aulboriz.ed f,U7.I million for the Pen· tagon11 cpntroverslaJ CSA transpc>rt P'°" ject and a full Sl billion tor Pre1ldent Nixon 's Safeguard Antiballlstic Mlsalle System. Jn approving a $21.8 billion military procurement bill, the committee a I 1 o dealt serious setbacks to two army pro- jects -the Cheyenne Helicopter which it left without any money and the main bat- tle tank, for which it approved onTy research and development fWJds. Rep. Otis Pike, (0-N.Y.), one of the four Cflmmlttee members who \/Otetl against the bill, said all the CSA money was the result of Cflntract cost overruns, which has plagued the government'& con· tract with Lockheed Aircraft Corp. A committee spokesman, bowe\ler, said the $357.2 million would permit Lookheed to rullfll its obligation to build 11 of the giant transports. Jn addition to the Safeguard and the CSA. the committee authorized $3711.3 million for the Bl bomber. a swing-wing supe.raonic jet the Air Force wants as a 11uccessor to the B52 when the older planes are retired in 1980. The procurement bill onl y authorizes the expenditures. Actual funds will h11.ve to be appropriated later in separate legislation. The $1 billion for the ABM aystems ln· eluded $627 million for procurement and the rest ror research and deYelopment. But the committee knocked out $13.2 (See FUNDS, Pa1e II Army Secretary Resor Resigns; Action Expected. WASKINGTON (UPI) -The Pentagon today announced the resignation of Army Secretary Stanley R. Resor. who has served In the post for almO!t •11 ye•rs un~er the J°'inson and N I x o n administratlons. Resor's resigna tion had been an- ticipated for some time. Pentagon of· ficials said his term of offi ce stretched e1ver "an unusually large period of time." The Army secretary aubmltttd his let- ter of resignation Thursday, the day after he announced the decision to demote one general and rtprimand another on charges of covering up the My Lai massacre. Defense Secret.ii')' Melvin R. µlrd replied today ~ilh a letter ac«ptin& tht resignation "with unlimited admlraUon and appreciation for your selneaa con· tributions to the department and to the · nation." Otief Pentagon spokesman Datliel %. Henkin safd no successor bas been aelected. "I would anticipate tha t Secretary Resqr will be here for se\ltral more week•, until his auece.ssor la (te:lectt:d and) qua!Uied. It probably will be untiJ the end of June," Henkin aald. Patrol officers in the 300 block of Ogle &tttet after an intensi\le search. By the lime the spectacular pursuit ended, at 1:40 a.m. the stolen car. plWI a vehicle parked in a service station at the eod of the line were wrecked and one CHP car was out of commission. A telephone pole was sheared off above ground leYel and gasoline pumps~apa· ble of creating a blazing inferno -were bent and mangled but failed to ignite. California Highway Patrol officers Ken Daily and Walt Swickla first spotted tbe car southbound on the Santa Ana Freeway, according to investigators. NoUcing a failurt to yield violafion, Ibey atlempted to stop the car -not knoWing it was atolen -and cite the driver. "He pulled off on Red Hill -then he put his foot Into It," aald one CHP officer. Radioing for help, the pair began the chase that involved ruMing red lights at 90 miles per hour, at times in 35 mil&-per· Women Said Drugged Hartelius Must Appear • Before Medical Board '' TOM llARLEY If IN hllr '"" •riff Or. Ebbe Hartellua of Corona del Mar llas beet1 ordered to appear at a State Board of Medical Examiners hearing into charges that he unlawfully administered nare<ltics and dangerous drugs to two .Costa Mesa women . The &i-year-old physiclan. who faces trial June 30 In Orange County Superior Court on charges that include bribery and submls.!lon of false insurance clalma, i1 scheduled to appear Sept. 21, 22 and 23 at the Los Angeles headquarters of the OfOce of Admin istrative Procedures. Deputy Attorney General Mark tvener today said that Hartelius who now lives at 402 Magnolia St .. Costa Mesa, ii ae- Marine Plane Crashes, Burns In Irvine Area A Marine Corps F4 Phantom jet ap. parently CArrying secret equipment crashed and burned in a field near Irvine Boulevard and Culver Road northerly of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station about 11 a.m. today. The pilot and navigator ejected success- fully -one parachuting into a nearby orange groYe -and were returned un• injured to El Toro. Security guards at the scene prohibited photograpM from the front section of the charred aircraft and could ~ seen removln1 some type of equipment from the wreckage. No immediate cause was suggested for the crash, tn which the jet pancaked inlo an open field. bounced 200 yards and ex- ploded In a ball of tire. Exact site of the crash was about two blocka off Irvine Boulevard a mile east of Culver Road. cused or malpractice Gn alle91Uona that hi supplied narcotics to Mn. &Iba Yaugl)n, 27, and the 111& Wohdo Mile .. drei, 24. It Is alleged that Mrs. Vaughn betame addlcted to narcotics to the paint that she w,as ruled in Superior Court 'to be a narcotics addict and Cflmmitted for treat- ment at the California Rehtbllitation Cinter at Norco. • Mrs. Melendrez was found to have died 85 the result of a dope injectiOn and her next of kin blame Hartelius for her death. A '500,000 civil suit filed by the family is awaiting trial In Superior Court. Mrs. V1'°ghn testified against HarteUu1 in a re~llt Superior Court trial which led to his being cleared by a jury of charges of arson and fraud . It was repeatedly stated by the at- tractive blonde and never denied by Hartellua that she was his mistreas for some four years. She claims that the ln· jections of narcotics which led to her ad- diction were administered by her lover. It was also •lated In the earlier trial that Hartelius was aware of the charges pending by the Slate Board of Medical Examiners al the time his offices at 2345 E. Coast Highway, Corona de! M'ar, were damaged by fire on Aprll 9, 1969. Hartellus was Indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury last week just one month afler he was cleared of the earlier arson fraud charges. He faces trial on 14 felony counts sub- mitted by the district attorney's office and approved by the grj'nd Jury. He has pleaded Innocent to all charges and is free on $5,000 ball. Mariner Readied WASHINGTON (AP) -The National Aeronautica and Space Administration said Thursday it hopea to launch the next Mariner rocket lo Mars before June·S. The agency said a firm dale must await C<lmpletion of work, tests and review1 of the May 8 Mariner failure . Poll Says Reagan, Agnew Best -Bets If Nixon Quits 'I I • . • I hour iones. Costa Mesa police and tht heJleopler Eagle Two joined the pursuit at the city 's northeasterly city limits. · The youth ran l l stop signs or traffic lights between Palisades Road and Ogle Street alone, slowing to about 75 mlles- per·hour before he hit the fateful dip. His stolen car hwi.led into the telephone pole. service statiori and park· ed car. but he stl ll managed to hit the (See CHASE, Page !) Paramour Held In Slaying Of Beach Mom By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of 1111 DlllY ,1111 lllff Tests on the body of a youns mother found dead, her crying baby in the bed be~e her at 1 Balboa. apartment, Thurs- day led Newport Buch police to formally book her param<iur on auspiclon of murder. Strangulation was listed by authorities as tbe tentative cause of death of Mrs. Susan Lane Constant, 21 , whose mother · had begged her five days earlier to move back to Anabeim. Questioned throughout the afternoon about the case, John J. "Skip" Blegun, 21. who shared the re sidence at 03 E. Bay Ave., was booked at .S p.m. on the murder charge. A complaint "'.IS being sought today from the Orange County District At.- torney. Biegun, dispatcher for bis father'& .security patrol service. in Diamond Bar, was already in custody Thursday when Mrs. Constant was found dead. Her 16-monlh..old son was crying beside the body in the Sea Level Apartme.nts when discovered by the suspect's older bfother, who had just been released from jail. Newport Beach Police Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson aaid preliminary test! in- dicate the young mother had been strangled. "Wllh force," Sgl. Thompson added. He did not explain whether It might have been manually or by some other means, such as a scarf or towel. Tox.icologlcal tests to det er m in t whether any drugs were present in the victim's system are pending, but Sgt. Thompson said an autopsy failed to show any obYious narcotics. Biegun 's brother, Thomaa, 24, of Dia- mond Bar, reportedly told police after finding the body about 9 a.m. that Mrs. Constant had threatened suicide in the past . ,,. He was visiting the apartment about ISe• MURDER, Piro t) Oraage Cout Weather Drinly mornb1p and pa;rtly ctearJrig afternoons aft the 'drO.· pect for the wee-end along the Or- ange Coast. 'temperatures are due to dip into the upper '60s. msmE TODi\Y :Pftl'.NCE'OON, N.J. (AP) -Gov. were both choae:n by 11 percent and , ~.Reagan and Vice President,Spiro Oregon Sen. Mark 0. Hatfield was chosen Stl~cltd works of 11oung art-i". 'A#Jew would be the leading can· by 7 percent. • ist.t, kindergarten through hig1t. didf,te1 to succeed President Niten if he A G1llup 1pokesmin aald 7 percent of school, are btbto tJ:hibitcd deddeJ •ot to run for re.elecUon, ac-those responding to the poll expressed no thro~h Mou in South Cocut co•g tct a Gallup Poll of Rtpublican1 prefertnce. He 1Jso uld the percentages . P~ The shew i3 featured in and !ndepel)dent voters. aOd up to more than too 1lnce aome of todo11'1 Weekelldtr. ReagA(I. I Republican, was the choict those respondin& named more. 'than one ...i111t ,, Mv11i111 ,_.. u of 31 percent ol Republican voters with a person. c.11,_,. • H.,,_, ,...... ..., I '· .-S Clltclllllt Ull I 0rMtt C-IY lt pre ere.nee; Agnew was piCUu by" per. -'Independent V"oters eiprtued pre:feren-c••uHIM n·w 11tt1111r•~" ""' cent. Other chOlcn by the Republlcal'll ce:s •lmllar to thOH of the Repubilcans.by ~=-~ ~~ ::;;; ...,,., , .. n Wf~e New York .Gov. NeJ500 .Rocke!11le.r, respondtng._wJth these _pe1cent1ge1: °"'"' NtHftl 11 lMdi Mlrfl•• D<D 1t pefceilt; George Romney, aecretai:y of Reagan. 25; Agnew II; Rockefeller, 17: =::::•-'• ,,.J ~== ,,:, 'housing and Urban DeYelopment, 12 per· Lindsay a"d Perey 13; 1nd HatUeld eight. ~::'l':W. :; :=r. . ...__ ,.,J cent. lllinol.s Sen. Charles H. Percy anct--Gt1llup-offlcl1l1 -1ald 11 percent ... had-nt--Mfll111t• • •-.w1r1_11 "..,. u ... New York City Mayor John V. Lindsay preference. Mwll• ,..,. w.-...... • ( • • Fr16Q, M11 21, 1971 Drug Overdose Man Gouges Out Eyes • ID BALTIMORE (UPI) -Charles lnni3 Jr., 25, the son of a promine n t Massachusetts politician. took an overdose of an animal tranquiliZer and pulled bls eyeballs from thelr toekels 'Iburaday 1n the city hall, pollct slid. lnnla ui.derwent three hoW'S of surgery TbU.rsday night to repair muscle. tissue and avoid removal of the eyes. An official at litaryland State Hosplta.l iuued a Woman Cwared Of Harbor Area .Vice Ring Rap Santa Ana Munlc lpa1 Judge Paul Mut Thursday cleared 29-year-old Elaine Komara of all charges involved in what pollce alleged was a prostitution ring operated in the Harbor Area under the name Executive Escort Service. Judge Mast dismissed the charges against Mi!s Komara, 29, of Anaheim, with some scathing comments a b o u t what he termed "extremely weak ... bad and preposterous police v.·ork in this case." She was the sixth woman cleared in the case by Judge Mast. Meanv.·hile, however, Mast ordered Newport Beach contractor Henry W. );prague, ~I , ot 64 Beacon Bay and two other women to face proatitulion and con- spiracy charges in Superior Court. They will be arraigned in the higher court June %. The women are Rena Sherry Andrews, 24, of North Hollywood and Bevei:ly Ann Poehlman, 24, of Cypress. All are free on ball on rtduced char1es of conspiracy lo commit prosUtution. Newport Beach police and Orange County sheriff's officers combined in the investigation of the escort service aJlegedly operated by Sprague from of- fices at 2192 Dupont St., Irvine. investigators allege the service ad· vertised "150 beautiful , fo:ry girls for the dating pleasure of sophisticated ex- ecutives.'' "Pollet officera ln this investigation UJo. ed words or phrases to the defendanl, that one would use to a 12-year-old-girl," Mast commented. "Jf they could have spoken to them clearly and frankly in everyday language they might have end· ed up with a pretty 1trong case." Officers arrested Sprague and eight girls last Feb. "11 and acaised the con- tractor of operalini a pr()ftltuUon rint that put EJ.ecutlve Eacort ;lrlJ Jn motelt throughout the county for c 11ent1 prepared to pay the SJOO fee. 'Arson Suspected At Apartment, Church Garage A series of arsonist-set fires caused moderate damace Jn Newport Beach Thursday, including 01e in a Te<:tory garage at Our Lady of P..1t. Carmel Cath- olic tirurch. Father Francis Kelly utingulshed tht bla1ing pUe of clothln~ and other Items apparently doused with gasol ine llmlting da mage to '65, firemen s1id. The pr1est s1ld his maid heard a crack· ling noise about IO:JO p.m. and he went to investigate, finding the fire just eruptinc. Shortly afterward, someone also ignll· ed two trash cans it-Cathy Bauer's apart.. ment 1t 1817 W. Belbol Boulevard, one inside the garage and one at the rear. ORANGI COAST DAILY PILOT OlANGe: COMT L'IJI LllHINCio COMl"ANY ll •ll•ri N. w,,, ,.,...: ..... t •1'11111 Pl*!ltl'lfl' J1c k l . cv,l•v Vlei l"rUMIWll end o,,,..,t MIMtW Theflltl Kt1vil Efll., lho11111 A. Mt1rphl~• MIMl!ftl EllllW C"•rl11 H. Looi Ri,~1 rJ P. Ni ll Anl1t1n: M1n19h>u E6110~ Coat• Mn• Offl1• Cl llO W11t l1v Str11 t M1ili119 Addrt11: P.O. l o• 1560. '262• OtlMtr Offk" NtwllOM llPC.1'11 I»' i>lt"ll'Ml't &llU!IPYtrd l.11""'1 IHCh; 'l'Y.' l'Pot•t AVtllllfl Mlllllfl'tlte.\ lllt~; 1111~ ltt<~ S.Ulfvtrtl ''II Cltmtftlt! J0S Ntrth 1:1 Ct mlM ltttl Frenzy statement whiclt said Innis "had no light perception in either eye prior to surgery and lhe possibility he will ever have light perception is extremely poor." The official refused to say what the chances were for restoring sight. lie said there was no way to determine lf Innis would be blind unlll his bandages were removed at an undete rmined date. lnnis' Jather is general counstl to the ti.tassachusetts' House of Represen· tatives. Innis, who complained to a neighbor ef poor eyesight Saturday, was arrested Wednesday while wandering nude near the apartment of a glrlfclend, Mandy Shea. Police said he was under the influence or an animal tranquilizer often passed off by drug dealers as THC, the synthetic form of marijuana. The tranquil izer makes those who take lt impervious to pain and very depressed. Lawrence Overby. turnkey at the Cen· tral District police lockup, :said he check· ed Innis' cell early Thursday because in· mates in the section had been making noise. "He had taken his eyes out.'' Ove rby said. ''His eyes were sitting on his cheeks and he was squeezing them with h!s fingers.·• 1'-1iss Shea's landlady ~·atched police arrest the naked youfli man Wednesday night. She said ''he was holding onto the policeman like a child afraid. It was pitiful." Police said Innis v•as taken to li.1ercy Hospital. Doctors examined him, said he should have psychiatric treatment, but gave hlm no medication. "Mercy Hospital said he was on some kind of drug, he should be taken back to the station, and it would wear o!f," said Police Lt. Andrew Arnold, night 1hift commander. Father Scales GoUlen Gate For Death Dive SAN FRANCISCO (UPJJ -An agile father, despondent over "financial pro- blems,'' scampered up a Golden Gate Bridge cable Thursday and dangled from a perch 7M fett above the bay for more than an hll>ur. Daniel Clifford, 31, p e r r or m e d acrobatics on aafety cable.11, hurled a 1afety belt into San Francisco Bay and threatened to jump before thr e e steelworkers and a highway patrolman crawled out on the main support ca ble and talked him down, Bridge officials said he was the third potential silicide talked out of leaping oH the orange span during the day. More than 400 persons have jumped to their dea~ [rom the bridge in the past 34 years. The bearded, Jong-haired Clifford, who manages an apartment complex, told newsmen he had been having "financial problems." "Get my wife and child," he said u he emerged from .m elevator Inside the 526- foot south tower with tean: In hill eye.a. Clifford was taken to Mt. Zion medical center for psychological observation. Clifford, who was wearing jeans, sneakers and a 1ellow windbreaker bi- cycled to the middle of the bridge ia the early afternoon, parked his bike and clambered up one of the four-foot dia me- ter !Uipenslon cables. Fugitive Teacher Silvers Located In Netherlands Dr. Stuart SUver!I, 34, 1 former Cal State Fullerton professor who is a fugitive from justice, bas turned up in Amsterdam. Poliet!: Capt. Fred King of Fullerton said be ha1 Information that Slivers wantJ lb make the Netberlan<js his permanent home. - "We have no lnlentlon of trying to e1- lradite Silvers." King said. The professor was fired from hi& post In the philosophy department at Cal StAte Fullerton last yea r and had been hunted on a $2,500 bench warrant issued ty,·o months ago after he had failed to sur· render lo serve a llO-day jail sentence. Silveri was found 1ullty In Aprll 1970 of disturbing the peace and unlawful as.'iembly. '!'he ch11rge s stemmed from a campus conrronlatlon with police in March of 1970. Future Farmers Sponsoring Fair Judiln• In a variety or categories Is scheduled Saturday ,.when the Casta Mt.11 Chapter Of the Future Farmer• of Amer- ica sUJ&es its 12th Annual Junior Fair. AcUvitles including llvesttck, aarlcul. tun, home fCOnomlcs and other compe· tltlon will run from I a.m. to s p,m, 1t the-Costa Mell HI.lb "Sehoof l'FA farm. Tractor skills, h•f bucking •nd m•ny m?ft eve.nu are acheduled, with 3 p.m. ..set for the 1tart of separate Judgina by F.fA members' parents. . · .._ ___ ., ..... I . --.,; .... --.. ~ .. . • Cityhood's Signatures , Under Fire Santa Ana city officiiJs ar@ ·contlnuln1 their attack on inclusion of 938 acres of industrial property in the proposed city of Irvine. Vice Mayor Wade Herrin has sen t a let· ter to the lrvine Company demandlna: that company officials withdraw their names from petitions supporting in· corporation of the new city. lie also demands that the c:ompany in· ltiat.e legal action against the County Board of Supervisors if it refuses to grant the company's request to withdraw th• signatures. Herrin also says the company should notify the Local Agency Form.a· lion Commission that the company will unconditionally consent to the annexation of the 938 actt:s to Santa Ana and direct the Irvine lndustr1al Comple1: to consent to the anne1.ation. Herrin's letter is based on a 1963 agree- ment betv.·een the ·company and the city which said the city could aMex the acreage after May 21 , 1971 and would have the company's support. STOLEN CAR IN HANDS OF TEENAGER Acro~s the County, Over the Dips HAL TED BY GAS PUMP IN COSTA MESA and Into the Hands of Authorities The company did write to the LAFC opposing the inclusion of the industrial acreage. localed just soulh of the Santa Ana Marine Corps Air Facility. But the LAFC approved the petitioners' map of the new clty which Includes the industrial acreage. From Pafie 1 CHASE ... ground on the run , according to a wit- ness. Rieb Button. 18, of 304 ~1orning Star Lane, Ne~·port Beach, told officers the suspect ran eastbound behind the station. Police said CHP officers Jim Guysi and A1:el Mitthof finally apprehended the youth hiding behind 368 Ogle St., and took him to Orange County Juvenile Hall. Charges include grand theft of an auto, evading arrest. failure to stop for traffi c signals and slop signs, excessive speed, hit and run . failure to yield to a JXllice car and dr iving without a 1ictnse. The CHP car in which officers Swickla and Daily initiated the chase was put oul of commission when it hit the same dip that sent the fleeing car airborne. ripping oul the oil pan. · t\'o shots were fired during the chase. Land Use Panel Requests Cash For Air Stt1dy The new Orange County Land Use Commission has asked for $62,600 in county funds to rmance a major land use study affecting airports. The request of the five-month·old airport group was made to the county ad· ministrative staff in a budget review session Thursdav. Newport Beac·h City Co u n c i I m a n Donald Mcinnis , chairman of lhe land use group , uld the study is needed to show ttie various land uses now exilting around airport.s . heliports and military bases as well as land uses 1round prG- 1pective situ for such fa cilities. The land use· commission was activated last December when the county League of Cities named two members to it. The state law on such commissions had been amended the previous yea r to provide that, if either the cities or the board of supervisors name members. the other must agree tn formation of the group. Previously, collnty supervisors" and the Orange County Airport Commission had refused to back a land use group. They said il was "unnecessary.'' Mcinnis said if the land use com· mission does not get the funds. ''the in- dividual members of the commission are ready lo forget the whole thlng." J Ih-pound Infant H ol.din,~ Her Own Shirley Lee Shephard Is five d1y1 old and the tiny lnfant is still "holding her own.'' Hoag Memorial Hospital o!flclals said lh.is morning. The seventh premature child of ~fr. and Mrs. James R. Shtphard. of Santa Ana "Is b!'eat?iing fine one minute, and not so fine the next,'' a spokesman said. Born Sun'day. the baby was first weigh- ed Wednesday when she recorded one pound. eight ounces. A spokesman said Shirley Lee co u 1 d be considered in sat isfactory condition unde r the circumstances. Frona PClfle l FUNDS •.. million in procurement funds for the fast, maneuverable CheyeMe helicopler whlcb had been described as the Army'! hiahest priority item. It also Is built by Lockheed. Although no funds ~·ere set at1ide , the committee did noL kill the Cheyenne p~ jecl. It le.fl the way open for lhe Army to seek a m~fied program later. Rununage Sale Slated A rummage sale will take place in the Balboa Island Uniled Methodist Church tomorrow (Saturd•y. May 22) from II a.m. to & p.m., sponsortd by the Women's Society of Christian Service. Lorr Garners Support Since then. Irvine Company exectives have added their signatures to the peti- tion to the supervisors calling for an eiec· lion to incorporate the new community. For 'Operation Alert' Company officials have said that the l rvine Indu.striaJ Comples will protest the incorporation before the supervisors. The comples OWJU 693 of the 938 acres. Laguna Beach Councilman Edward Lorr this week succeeded in extracting a 3·2 city council endorsement or •·opera- tion Alert," a four-day Anaheim seminar lo disseminate information on the tactics of alleged subversive and militant organizatlons in the U.S. Lorr had atempted at lhe la st council 1neeetlng to obtain a council resolution endorsing the program and urging citizens lo attend when fellow councilmen complained that a single newspaper arti- cle was not sufficient lo inform them of lhe nature of the meeting. This 11'eek" as a rive-hour {'OUnril session drew to a close half an hour after midnight. the councilman a g a i n presented his re solution. !his lime backed Y.'ith copies of several ney,·spaper stories on the "Cold War College." Councilman Charlton Boyd said he still found the material "inadequate." Coun· cilman Roy Jfolm said after reading the stories he found "some participants whose integrity I would not question and some I would question" but added he did not feel Jt was up to the council to urge citizens to attend such a gathering. Mayor Richard Goldberg and councilman Peter Ostrander vo ted y,•ith Lorr for the resolution . Meanwhile charges continued to fly in a rrap between the Laguna Beach Tax- payers Association and resident \Vil\iam Leak . sparked by the initial council discussion of "Opera lion Alert." Criticizing Lorr"s ortginal request, Leak made reference to the need to alert citizens to the existence of militant local organizations. He referred to attending a meeting of a "semi-secret" Laguna organization at •.vhlch it wll! suggested guns should be used to shoot down hippies. Later, Leak identified the organization as the taxpayers group, stating that the meeting 'vas closed to all except member11 and guests and therefore was ''seml·secrel . ·' In a three·page letter to the city coun- cil, attorney John Downer, vice president of the Taxpayers' Association; denied Leak's allegatlons. The meeting, he maintained. was not secret and hltt been noticed in the local press in a manner that "did not limit ::.t· tendance to guests of member1." All general meetings of the a!sociation are open to both the public and press, Downer 1tated. He admitted some . persons at the meeting had been in fav or of "drastic ac- tion including the use of firearm•'' against hippies, hut said that several persons. including the president, pointed out that law and order cannot be preserv- ed by violence. Midway Rejoins Fight SAIGON (AP) -The U.S . aircraft car. rier Midway has returned to the Indochina war after more than flv~ years off the line for extensive modernbatlon, the Navy said today. The Santa Ana letter promised legal acUon if its requeztl are not carried out. From Page 1 MURDER ••. m1dnight Wednesday when police were dispatched to a family disturbance call involving the younger brother and the young woman. Investigators said her body wa1 later found to have bruises 11nd apparently been slapped or struck. A record check showed Biegun had prior traffic charges with warranb out for his arrest, but they could only be served during daylight hours under California Vehicle Code policy. '-H1s elder brother was arrested outskf• the apartment en suspicion 41f beln1 drunk in public and re1eaHd ap- prolimately the same time the younier Biegun wa1 picked up on the traffic charges. He notified poJAct upon finding tht body and they turned Mrs. Constant'• infant son over to the county's Albert Sitton Home in Orange for care. • Blegun was held on the traffic warrants until initial investigation of the homicide Waa complete and then jnformed of the murder charge about 2 p.m., by Delee· live -Todd Wilkinson. Sergeant Thompson said today Mrs. Co111lallt's mother was shattered by the tragic case and told of urging her dauah· ter to come home lali weekend. "A~arenUy abe wa1 concerned for her aafety, ' he remarked. UPHOtSTERY SPECIAL FEATURING THE BEST SELECTION OF QUALITY UPHOLSTERY IN THE AREA C1sto111 M11do Sor11 tiy ~nll- 11 .,... 't'olfet -At • s.t• Prlu •f $549 SHERRILL F-_ATURES * Ouallty Workman1h ip * I Way Hand Tlod Sprint• '..t Excellent Tailoring * Large F1brlc Selection '* All Fabrics Scotchguarded * Large selection of Hand· some Style1 to choose from. If You Need A Sofa or Chair, Now Is The Time DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE MIWJlOIT ITOll orlH.HIDAT 'TIL. t Nl'WPdR~ BEACH 1727 Westcliff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY-Cf.ll 9 Profe11tonal Interior Designers Av1ll1bl1 -AID LAGUNA IEACH 345 North Co11t Hwy. Phono: 49.._.551 ~ INTERIORS Pl!l llO Toll f,.. MMt •f ON .. • CH1lty-14t.1Jl) \ t • • G • DAILY PILOT EDITOilIAL PAGE Teacher Views Needed Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustees have responded to the pay and program proposals presented in February by lhe Newport-Mesa Education Association. Before the next round In the annual salary 1qu,re- off, teacher association leaders have promjsed · to . seek a vote of the N·MEA Representative Council. That maY be read as a sign leaders want to know bow their·teacb· er members feel about the association's hard.line stance ln the negotiations process. Only l~st week. professional evaluators from the affiliate California Teachers Association and National Education Association headquarters rated the N·M:&A . Many of their (indings supported the staff and the or· ganization. But they further suggested lhe association membership was dropping. They said they found many teacher members were both confused and frightened by some tactics being used by the leadership in the salary go-around with the dist· ricL They urged improved internal communication -with members. · The cnrnmunity has a right to wonder if N-MEA leadership Is truly representative of the sentiments of its 750 members, much less the views of the 350 faculty who are not members. All will be affected. by the de- cisions reached between the board and the Certificated · Employes' Council. N·MEA leadership cannot truly be faulted if the majority of the teachers who are members do not speak \Ip. Now is the time for teachers to express their views on the salary and contract proposals. The Billboard Problem Subject of the semi-con&averay is outdoor adver- tising structures. community bulletins or whatever one chooses to call them. Billboard is the common name. Evolving from the Chew Mail Pouch Tobacco signs on rural barn roots th1t helped farmers meet their over· 'head, billboards are an item of Americana that now is finding more and more resistance in a more and more beauty-conscious country. A city ordinance on controls and eventual e.limina· tion in some areas i! now in the works, returned to planners Monday for review and condensation. One is already on the books, but a new law Is considered nee· essary by city planners. Under existing legislation, billboards are banned in certain areas and would be eliminated from these pro- hibition zones within eight years under the revised law now under study. · Councilmen who must make a final determination about what to do in Costa Mesa (population 75,000) about billboards (Jiopu!ation 38) are opposea in philosophies at this point. Alvin L. Pinkley has been a billboard foe for years. \Villiam L. SL Clair claims those promoting national products such as liquors or suntan lotions-curvy beach bunnies aside -are worthless at lbe community level, but defends signs advertising local goods and services. Mayor Robert M. Wilson believes not only the exist· ing 38 billboards -but all commercial signs -should come under stricter quality, size and esthetic controls. Somewhere there's a workable happy medium. '. One of the more perplexing issues in terms of what to do and how to do it is now (acing Costa Mesa city government. Business should be entiUed to a reasonable .marking of their property, but certainly the public has a right not to be offended by garish side-of-the-road displays. And it doesn't really matter if they're plu'gging a shoe store or a national airline. c HOW TO SAVE 1HE S.S.T. AND REVIVE THE KAIL~OAbS Supreme Court ltlay Aet on Constitutionality Death Penalty Unrepealed To suffer death for any crime may be a "cruel and unusual punishment" forbid· den by the ·Eighth Amendment to the Constitution, but the Supreme Court has never nld so. A recent ruling by the court, upholding the procedures which mo~t stat.es use in Imposing the death penalty, has precipitated a flurry of ac- tivity among those advocating an end lo capital punishment. An emergency l'itrategy conference May IS-16 at Columbia University was called by the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, which represents about half or the 650 persons now aentenced to die. Jack Himmelst.ein of the Fund said May 6 that 1ome 110 persons would gather to explore avenues for further action. The court held May 3 that slates did not deny defendant& their rights by allow- ing juries absolute discretion in imposing the death penalty -or by allowing juries to decide a defendant's sentence at the aame time u his guilt. NO ONE HAS 1'EEN executed in the United States since 1967. AJI uecutions were delayed until the Supreme Court had announei!d its decision in several cases involving capital punishment. Now that lht eourt has ruled, on procedural grounds, no mart such decisions are pending. ~· ·---' Editorial Research' I I At the Columbia conference, participants were to examine the possibilities for ·legislative action and ex· ecutive clemenCy, as well as further judicial challenges to the death penalty. Many of the atlorney.5 in aUendance represent condemned prisoners. Their concern is both specific -for the lives of the.it clients; and general-for the aboli· lion 06-capital *-ishmtnt. The Supreme Court may· provide ye.t another reprieve for the inhabitants of Death Row. It may agree soon to deeida the central question concerning capital punishment: Is Lhe death penalty a "cruel and unusua l pun ishment" and therefore unconsti tutional? This question is posed in many of the more than 100 ap- peals from death sentences which are now on the court's docket. Only four Justicu ha ve lo agree to hear argument.. in such a case for the court to take it. " SOLICITOR GENERAL Erwin N. Griswold has said that this line of attack on capital punishment it.self is perfectly reasonable. One Justice doesn't agree. Hugo L. BlaCk, in a concurring opinion May 3. said flatly that he did not believe the Constitution outlawed the death penalty: "It ia inconceivable to me that the framers intended to end capital punishment.'' Reaction to the May J decision was mixed. In california -where 99 persons have betn waiting ullder lentence of death -Gov. Ronald Reagan affirmed, through his press Rcretary, that he wa.s still in favor of the death penalty. San Quentin's associate warden said that r1- ecution dates would ·not be set -at lea.st for the IS or 20 prisoners there who have exhausted all appeals proces.s. All of Ji'lorida 's 78 condemned prisoners are still safe from immediate e1ecution. A 1967 federal court ' order barr~ any electroCutions until a case chaUenglng the constitutionality of the death penaJty itself was settled. And in Ohicr-where 42 men are condemned to die -Gov. John J. Gilligan said there would be no ex- ecutions until the Supreme Court ruled on the fundamental Eighth Amendment is.sue. A technicality stands between life and death for the 28 condemned prisoners Jn Alabama. State law pre.scribes that ex- ecutions be carried out within the wall• of a certain prison -which baa betn demolished. What Can Newton Offer? To the Editor: I note that Trash Day will come to UCJ early this year with the upcoming visit of Black Pus.sycat, Huey P. Newton. Ostensibly, the v:isit will "enlighten Ull on some of the struggles that political prisoners are fac ing ... through the judicial system, etc .• etc." This. ac- cording to one of the organizers of the "cultural" conference. . PosaibJ.y, •t the 1ame time, Huey will expound on how poliblcal prisoners of his party are truted; very enlightening in- deed. J'm sure they would have preferred our nuty old judicial system. Of course. Huey will a.void discUsling anything but his own problem1, all of which be made for himself; all of which are $50,000 in bail and the fault of society. TfOS SAJ\IE NASTY society and 1ystem allow losers like 1''ewton to circula~ while awaiting retrial. What people like Newton can offer a college group escapes me. Bul. the sponsors and administration In their misochistic wisdom mu.st be v.·orking for the economy by offering a little. employ· ment to 1 peraon without any other. employ•ble &kills. If things get worse, Huey can &]ways jump bail and join col· ---W- Frlday, May 21 , 1971 Tht editorial pa.ge of the Dallu Pilot reek.a to inform o.nd .ttfm-- ulaU rcadtr1 bu pre.senUno thil new.cpapcr'a op&niont end com- mtnta:111 °" topics of intere1t and iignificance, b11 provfdtno c forM.m for lht . exprcslion of our rttil"er1• opft1fon.t. and· bu pre1ntino 1Jtc cU~•• 11itw- pointa of informed ob.cerver1 end •J>Ok•....,. on lopb of Ill• <1ov. Robert N. Weed, Publisher ' """;j t . Mailbox Ltlltrt lf'flft ,..,_rt; art WllH,,.._ loMt""tllr wrllen tllovltl to11••r 11!1lr mt•••••• i... *"' _,., tr 1t11. TM tllM tt ctnde!!N .. 11 .. , tt Ill 1111« 1r 1llml111M tibll h n......U. All ktttrt "'~"' lR· cllMlt •l1111tu•1 tNI m11H119 M•r111. kl fttme• "''" "' wtllll!tl<I ell '""''' If Mlffi<Mfll ,..._ .. ''''""''· ,. .. ,,.., wm "" "' ...,,,~, league Cleaver, who also voiced his four· letter jewels of wisdom at UCI before jumPini'bail fof distant points. But, of course, all these things after be -enlighi.ns. CALVIN G. SIEGLE Education and Taxes To the Editor: On May 5 You publighed a letter written by Nor m Salee which be wrote in re&poose to aa earlier letter of mine. Mr. Salee took me to task for my views In op- position to teachers uslng the threat of strike in order to get Increased pay and other dtrnand.s which amount to less work. Even though Mr. Salee ignored the main thrust of my letter, he did invite me to lnvesUgate the plight of tt achers before, as he put It. "they won tenure." I agree with him in that since tenure could not be earned it must have been won. I WAS FORTUNATE enough to have been educated by teachers who were not protected by tenure. Not one of them stomped on our nag, was involved in dope or taught protest and all or th!!: fau lt.a of our society without also teaching the btneflcial aspect& of our society. ln faet , I was taught the three 'R's plus respect for my parent.ll, niY eldl!rl In general, my lcachers and the ta" of our land. FurLher-, I was taughL lo Jove Cod and my country u well as honor our flag and the rifhts of Others. 'J'hoy teachers bad their jobs with •dvaneemtnt hued upon competition with others in their pro- fession. TIIlS TEf\'DEO lo Insure lhat the best ones advanced and. the ba.d ones fell out ' Legislated assurance of.. a job has never guaranteed quali ty. AU one bas to do ls look at the U.S. Supreme Court for a good example. According to this way of think· ing, we could improve Justice Douglas' rulingll by giving him a $50,000 per year raise. I haven•r noticed any obViouS im· provement in our federal government sin- ce Congress voted lhemselve!I and the ex- ecutive branch such outlandish pay In- creases. ONE CANNOT blame t.eachert, pollll· cians or others on ta1p1yer1' payroll for wanting more pay for le.,1 work; however, lo hide behlnd Ult guise of our children's welfare being the prime con· 1ideralion is an Insult to one's in- telligence. The first" step In halting inflation J1 to stop raising taxes. I proudly accept Mr. Salee·s aqcusation that I have a fit of temper every time 1 pa y un just tax bill11. There are no rights other than the God· given rights with which we are born, and nobody his the right to take money (tax- i!:!!) from ant man and give lt to another. The JOO.word limit makes it Impossible lo .discuss this matter further. I am 1urt that all leachers are not bad, however we must get rid of the bad °"'" l!lnd devise an educatlona.J system that 1et.s the job done without significant tu lncreaae being: requuted. H. WHITE Dear Gloomv ' Gm: -Since residents or Country C 1 u b prlve in Mella Verde want only their own trailic, bow about mak.- ine a cul-de-sac at both ends of that drtve? -M. P. of MW Vtnle "'" .... "'*" ,......... ....... -...,....,,., """"' ., #le 1tww•••• ..., ""' ... ,.... •• ._, ..... Nrt """'· Hard Look At Emerging Politics ,..,....~_..,,.,,,,.,.,,_ .......... Frederick G. Dutton'a "Changing Sources or Power: American PoUUcs in the l970S." just published by McGraw- Hlll {$7.9S), is dedicated "To All the Young Pl!Gple WM Wlll Be Voling for the Finl Time In .This Decade." .A pro- vocative reconna1ssance or the developing political struggle ror the future of American IOoiety, this book takes a hard look at the emerg ing forces and public controversies that wlll likely absorb the nation's attention in years to come .. A1ore important than the contention between the two major parties, or among the most prominent presidential can- didates and their principal supporters, the author feels. are "the historical lines of force lo which they are likely to be responding early or late dw-ing this decade. "ESPECIALLY JN a period of divided government, there ls need to recognize that what llO tentaUvely prevails now will probabl y be under serious challenge as the seventies move along. . . • If the older Amerlca has more votes, money. erperienct, and guns at present, the new elementa: have still·unfathomable energy, erowth, imagination, and time on their side." A. former Special Assistant •to President John F. Kenntdy and Secretary of the U. S. Cabinet: former Assista nt Secretary of State; former Executive Assistant lo the Governor of California . Dutton notes that the 1968, 1970, and 1972 elections are but pas.sing episodes in an historic transition in which tbe U.S. is already caught up. HE SEES THE nation m o vi n i; 11brasively and unevenly into one of several possible alternative futures for which the early '70s are on ly an ln- between. Yet. he feels, (aken as J whole the coming decade will probably turn out to be as determining as was ""the Jef- ferson revoluUon" of 1800, the age ot Jackaon, the rile o( the Republican party with Llncoln, and the New Deal. "Changing Sources of Po w e r ' ' recognlw that blstonlc forces. largely. heedless or Immediate ·public figures and evenlll, are building toward a showdown with the nation's prevailing politics and public order. Some of these forces have already made a fitful entry onto the na· ti onal scene. Dutton writes, while some atilt lie not far below the surface of the present political 1y5tem. THEY A.RE NOT confined to 11ny particular party or part of the ideological spectrum, but are stirring throughout American society -not only in the aociel 1tructure and economy, but in tile deeper attitudes and psychological Impulses. Yet the wide-spread resUveness, riot.s ·and reactions of rectnt years are only sympt.oms of more basic presaures that are gathering. ¥ As Dutton pub it, hl11 concern la ''with not Just more or Jess of w!iat .already ex- illta:, but 1l!o what could well be dlflerent over Ille coun;e of the seventies. · The tendency when looking ahead 1s to slip off Into the more bizarre and volatile frin ges, quite without regard to thetr proportional role or probable historkal tffect. But the Interest here 11 prlmt1.rlly In the maln4trum as It ls devtloplng in Ill own divel'!e aod often tw-~enl ways." As a brollld array of quite specific new fortta tmerges on the American political ""'""· ll b Dutton'• 10•1 "' h<Jp the .... jectlve oblerver "to f)erct:ivt, IOl't oul. affect. and relate to what may still be a few or more years away .. " Victor dt Kt:) •rlln1 Why Critics and ' Public Disagree When the judges for the National Book Award insisted upon dropping . 'lLove Story'' from the fiction nominations, this contemptuous gesture outra g. ed millions of Amer- icans. and puu.led just as many more . How could the run- 9way best-seller oC the year be deemed not even worthy of consideration by this committee of writ· '"· It I.• Impossible to adjud icate Auch dispulell between the public and the in· t.elligentsla. They seem to be talk ing about lhe i;ame thing -a novel named "Love Story" -but !hey are in accuallty responding to quite dlfferenl stimuli. THE PUBLIC IS responding to lhe story on an emotional level, and the judges are responding lo a purported work ol art on an intellectual and pro- fessional level. The public has a perfect right to injoy the book, and the com- mittee has an equal right to 11!pUdiate iL But when I say thal the public has a perfect right to enjoy it, I do not mean that I concur in it.~ taste . It is a wretched book, however appeali ng on a sentimental level, but people have a right to bad laste, in books, clothes, music, or anything else. Whal they do not have a right to b the conlusion of taste: with standards. I JIAVE LEARNED over the years. however, that it is nearly impossible to persuade a person untrained in the arts !hat everything Is not just "a matter of taste." One cannot convince most people that "Tl\e Sound of Music'' was a rotten movie, ot that "God Bless America" is a banal song. or that the nostalgic land.scape hanging ovtt their fireplace is a piece of junk. Th,y ,are emoti9nally moved by all these thir:igs. and that is enougn for them. Yet in their own fields. they would not be so easily fooled. A good carpenter would knoW at a glance when a house is well and truly buill, no matter how beguiling it might look fro,m the outside, and would not be deceived by its superficial appeal. A good tailo r can tell al a glance which suitiog has betn skillfully run up or which is .sleazy. A NOVEL, A FllAf, a piect of music, is a technical fabrication , before it can be anyl hing else. it must have the same pro- fessional crafts .. anship, the same hones- ty and integrity, as a well-built house or hand-sewn suit, before it merits our ap. proval. But the publi c knows nothing of these things.; it sees only the surface glit.- ter. · This ill why there ill no effective com- murUcaUon between the untrained au· dience and the trained observer. And why, without the right education, we can never hope to persuade the public thal "Love Story" is a gingerbread house wholly uninhabitable by real people. Military Drug Problem By the most reliable e 5 t .t ma I e • available. of the more than 20 million young Americans in the age group mid- teens through mid-20s, about one in 120 is an addict or a frequent user of hard na rcotics. Among the fewer than 300,000 Unittld States servicemen in Vietnam, most of them in the 17· to ~year-old age group, a congressional study has placed the ratio or hard-drug users at one in ever11 seven to 10. La.sl year. according to the study, between 60 and 90 Gls In Vil'tnam died from heroin overdoses and the Unlle<l • States military establishment as a whole reported 60 drug-related deaths. lF mosE FIGURF.s are correct -In· deed. If they are anything like correcl - then the time has grown very late for th is country to lake the preventive and cor- rective action that will be required lo head off the deepening of a crisis. bolh civilian and military, of lrightenlng mAgnilude. The first &tcp, now that the wrll!>'I have been taken off. Ill to verify the accuracy or this assessment by the House Armed Services: aubeomm lltee. And if it Is ac- curale, st:Vl'ral steps mwt follow In short order : -DEMAND, NOT f\.tERELY sugsest, that the sovernments ln that pt1rt of Ole world -to whose survlval the Unite<J... States has committed e n o t mo u a resources, &nd tens of thousands or lives -crack down hard on thfl loc•I pro- cessing "factories" that are reported to be the principal source of herotn 1upp1.Y; and then follow throu&h to iruure. lhal de- mand Is met. -Develop, through consullat!on at the Jiiighest levels or the admlnistrali<ln. a cobertnl, pracllcablt strategy for dealln& w'ilh the problem at the t r o o ' level . Even, if necessary, by lso1ating for treatment and rehabilitation all of those &ervicemen who have fallen prey to the narcotics "epidemic." -FINALLY. ~EVOLVE A companloll 11lrategy for .Protecting the civilian population from t~ obvious dangers In- herent in rttllrning lo domestic life young men who are addicted to hard drugs at a rate 12 10. 17 times that of their non- iervic~ contemporarie.5. Halfway l!ffort will not 1ufrlte. Nor iA cost a consideratl.on, The expense will simply have lt'f be amortlied as another COllt in an alr.cadJ' tiJeously e.Jpen.'ilve undqtaklng. The utterly unacceptable alternative ~·ould be to expoM this: IOde- 'ty to a debilitating and shameful ordeal whose consequences could outUve even the nAtional hefrtbreak over lhe. Asian war ltM!lr. Kanan ctty Star .----B11 George De•r George: I understand lbe ioo has a new matayou. Is thls true~ • DON B. Otar B: '\ihat'a Oh. no, )'OU don't. ttallan' Jokts are out ! (Send the orialna Ing. l problems lo GfOl1•· r ot Sideways 1blnk· I t i i' ··- ..l QUllNIE By Phil lnte rlandl ' 11Perhap1 we 1houldn't start the day off with a look at the stock market ••• " Senator Promises Tough Draft Fight WASHINGTON (UPI) - Pledging to _tie up the Senate "if it takes 10 weeks, 15 ""'eeks <1r 20 weeks," a freshman aenator· from Alaska today prep1red for another round in hJs effort to kill the military draft. Sen. Mike Gravel f D. Al1ska), and his gmall band of aupportera turned back three attempts by Senate leaders Thursday to set a date for voling on some of the doiens f!f amendments to a bill that 'Ntluld extend the draft for tv.·o year a. Protest Seen At Ceremony ForLBJUnit AUSTIN. Tex . (UPI) - Lyndon B. Johnson . whose Presidency was. plagued by 1 vtttnam War demonstrations, apparently will have to face the paint~eared faces of an~ tiwar protes~n; again S1tur- day at dedication ceremonies for the LBJ Library, Pre~ent Richard M. Nixon, Vi~ Pre3ident Spiro T. Agnew and House Speaker Car I ' Albert will be present, along with hundreds of other na· tional figure!. Nixon will be the main speaker at the nationally ttle,·ised ceremonies begin· Ding at 12:30 p.m. EDT. The congregation of t.op- ranking government leaders has caused antiwAr groups to plan maS.'iive demonstrations. I.«al "Ma yday Tr i be'' members, student pro test groups and other antiw::ir organizations predict 500 to 4,000 people \\'ill demonstrate. Some of the more radical groups have s11id they will try to disrupt the official ceremonies, but offici11ls s11y no one: without 11 special guest badge will be allO\\'ed near the library grounds. The llbrary is part of an S18 .fl million complex on the t;nh•ersilv of Texas campus that also ·hou sf'S the LynrlCln B. Johnson School of Public Af· fairs. The dedication ceremonies are 1!ated to take place at the foot of a grassy knoll on which the eight story building stands . An outdoor barbecue luncheon 'Will fol low. City and campus policP and RO"et servi~ agent.s will ct1r· dori o{f the 1trea. The Se!ecti\'e Service L~w will expire June 30 if Congress does not act, and Gravel and hi5 81lies bope to prevent ac- tion uatil thal date. forcing the military urvice to fill their ranks with volunteers. Sen. Hugh Scott, e f P'nn.sylvania, the S en ate Republican leader, threatened 'Thursday to cut off the delay· ing t a c t i c s by imposing cloture. a step which would end debate and bring the issue to;a vote. Gravel complained senior senators were trying to give his group "the bum 's rush." The Alaska senator argued the Senate vofe could be crucial in American history. He said it "';ould decide ¥.'helher the Uilited States wouJd be "peace-loving '' er ''bellicose." Gravel !iaid the d r a f t legislation was "tbe only bill that requires people to be kllled in I.he service of their cmintry." The Nixon Administration hits advocated a plan of tying an extension of the draft to military pay increases wlt.b. lhe hope of conv;erting to all· volunteer · military forces by 1973. Sonic Boom Threat T ol.d On Tremures WASHINGTON fUPl l 1'he director of the National Park Service has ct1mplained sonic booms generated by milita ry a i r cr a fl have destroyed prehistoric ru!M and bh1st ed the faces off cliffs In scen ic areas. G. B. Hartzog Jr. told a Hou s e appropriations sub- committee Thursday he con· sidered I.he conduct of militsry pilot!! "disgraceful." He said the damage Uley had caused in Nallonal Parks was in· calcul able. "\Vhat are 3.(l()(l or 4.000- ''";ir-old prehii;toric r 1r i n s 'v.·orth ?" he asked. ·'Ylh~t is the fa('(' of a cliff In f\.1esa Verde \\'Orth ?'' It is shatl.ered off and now is at the bottom of thP canyon ." }.f;irlJ:og complained protest! to the Air Force have brought no respon!! and telling the story to the public has brought no reacti lJl'l. ORIGINAL 0 '1L PAINTINGS 24X36 •1000 ON CANVAS EA. SATURDAY & SUNDAY ONLY, 11 to 5 M111r trn1u.,.. l ltn •s .. ••ch Fi~• Eutep11ft 1<! pllflti~g' eff•••cl le ih1 pu b!;~ 1! wkel1t1I• prit•1 I All LEE'S ORIGINAL OILS fl.Mk f•r tN llttl• yell•• ••tt•t•l Jff E. 17th St., Costa Me1e-6U-S3'0 Open Fri. Thru Mon .. 11-5 -.. . ------·-~-•,, •' • I• I " • • • I • ' r ' . DAIL V ,!LOT · 11 Pennsy Peril Cited Jst Confirmed C.Ue W omanPoisoned • $92.5 Million Lost in 3 Months PHJLADELPlfiA (AP ) - The Pe.nn Centra1 Transportation Co , w h I c b runs America 's bt11e1t 1 little tn April. But there. an 1till losses on· top of loase1." 10 broke by August or Stp- tember unlw work rules and other labor co1t iuues were resol ved. By Fish Mercury The trustees said earlier this month that the railroad would ~ WASlilNGTON (AP) -A railroad, reported Thursday a New York health offic'r says 592.5 million Joss for the first the mercury poisoninf; of a three months of lhls yur and FBI M Enter Probi' ng housewife who dieted on called Its silualion "per~ou.!." ay swordfish dramatizes the ''Jt does appear that lhe potentiaJ ·dana:er facinJ other d I 1 as t r o u 1 ..• downward 0£ N d ' GM Ch "tis~ faddist!." plunge at a rate which aot a er s arges Dr. Ro1g:;an· d'puty &teadily worse all U!rough IU( , dkedor of w York Stai. year Ii.is been slopped," CITES POISONING Hea!Ut Dep t, described. reported the four lru5tees ap-WASHINGTON (UPI) and marked \he ~uggesttd Dr. Roger iierdman the plight of an unidentified 44 pointed by a federal judae to The FBI is btinl asktd to In. change& which it fell were re-____ .::...______ year old Long ,Js]and woman guide the c 0 mp any• 1 vestigate Ralph N•der's new quired to correct errors and to a..-Senate environment aub-r, 0 r~g a n i z ation through chargea that employes of the omission.s in the transcript" at committee ThW'sday. bankruptcy court. Senate and General Motors Ribicoff's request. LJ ,S, Boats The mother of three con· The first quarter 1053 is izg altered transcripts of auto The 1ubcommittee was pro-sumed about 10 ounces of mil lion higher than 1 year safety hearings in 11168 to pro-bing, In part. GM's alleged at· S S • swordfish daily for n In e a.go, jwt it doesn't approach tect top GM officials. templ!; to discredit Nader ay 0Vlets months in 1964 and HISS, he the worst three months in the Nader alleged in a letter to when the consumer advocate iaid, and lost 45 of her 165 railroad's history _ the 1197 Sen. Abraham D. Rlbicoff {0-first began to make allega. S "ll J pounds. She continued her million· loss in the October to Conn.), that changes were tlon! that GM cars were tl fit t swordfish diet sporadically un. December period last Y'&r . made In the testimony of GM unsafe. lil November 1970. Chairman James M. Roche T b k u hi charges -The tru&tees teported a loss o ac P s • BOSTON (AP) -ThN!it new Now, he s.a\d1 she has been of $15.1 million in April, $4.1 and LouisG. Bridenstine, then Nader supplied Riblcoff with Incidents of harassment of diagnosed 11.s a mercury million less than a year ago. an assistant general counael what he said was the original Am'rican lobster fishing boats poisoning victim. The transportation firm..filed for GM. transcript and wha t actually by Russian trawlers south of The woman purchase~ \he parts per million standard considered 1afe. The FDA ordered some twit off store Ehelve1 last year but has &ince declared all on the market to be within its O.S ppm standard. Herdman described th e Long Island woman as "the first case of human illness in this nation directl y at- tributable to mercury poison4 in& from ordinary marketable food." She underwe.at treatment for what was considered a "psychosomatic d i sease' ' more than a year, he said, and contacted h I s department three months ago w i t h symptoms of dizziness. loss of memory, jerky handwriting. trembling hands and SJ:iea.k· ing and hearing problems. A sample of her hair con~ talned ~z ppm of mercury, compared with no more than ! ppm in an aver11ge person. be said. for reorganization under the Ribicoff said Thursday he appeared In the v er s l 0 n Nantucket Island have been awordfish, all of lt fresh from federal l:iankruj>tcy law last would ask the FBI to in· printed by the committee for reported, aJUlough negotiators a local market, "bf:ca~ she June. vestigate Nadu'1 complaint. the public record. told a congressional com-didn't like fish ... She'wanted 8 •----------- The t~t~s said Penn Cen· He also said the Justice "The major deletion! and mittee that violato rs would be nonfishy tasting f i s h , ' ' tral's situation requ i re! Department investigated a additions to the testimony of punished by the Russian fleet Herdman said. similar allegaµon by Nader In measures." They said a com· 1967, but "found no reason for GM witnesses \\'hich I have commander. Tuna fish fits that category, pai'lson of figures Indicated prosecution at that lime." discussed, came at a time lnvoh•ed in incidents 1'hurs-he said, and "a person eating the heavy first quarter loss Ribicoff i! chairman of the \\'hen the record was in the day morning were WUy Fox, 10 ounces a day would exceed WAS roughly comparable to a 1 u b c 0 m milt e e who5e custody of the subcommittee oUt of Westport. ~lass .. which the mu:imum allowable in· year ago if twotipecial income transcript was purportedly staff _ 1ind apparently v.·ere lost ·a quantity of lobE.ler gear take" set by the Food and items in 1970 were considered. changed. made "''ilhout your kno\\'ledge earlie1· this wttk, and the Pat Drug AdministraUon. Last year the railroad made GM said in 8 statement or that of any other Senator. San ?o.1arie. On !\fay 6 the FDA recom· a 116.9 million profit on the Nader was trying to "in-They raise, therefore. ques· Thursday night , the Coast mend'd that Americ&111 stop sale of 'one subsidiary to timidate" the subcommittee tions regarding the personal Guard said, the Wily Fox ealing swordfish because the another and collecttd 59.6 ttllf. _ .. r. responsibility of certain reported 12 trav.·lers sailed agency's teats of 83.1 samples m!Uion dividends ·rrom the GM aaid tt "r,viewed the Senate employes during that through Its fishing a r e a 1howtd 95 percent contained other PeM Central sub!ii:i-transcript of the 1966 hearing period In 1961i," Nader said. shortly be!ore 8 p.m. mercury exceeding Its 0.5 la.ties. l~~;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;,.;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I" "In te rm! of the key netj ra.i]way operating Income Jou figure, the first .quarter result was only $2,3 milllon larger than last ye11 r and the com-. parable April loss "''as '3.5 million less than last year," the trustees said. Come See the Southland's Most Exciting Furniture Stores "We take no sa&faction from c'omparing figures that are still rtd. ''It does appear that the disastrous 12 month downward plunge at a rat' which aot sl,adily worse 111! through last year has stopped. "The loss rate, so far as the railroad operaUorur themselvea are concerned, leveled out tn the firat quarter and eased up 45 Arrested In Protest A~ ~ampus KENT, Ohio <UPI) -Police arrested at least 45 persons early today as they swept a large crowd of youths from the downtown area back to the Kent State University campus for the third stra igh t night. One student was seriously hurt when a motorcyclist swerved at high speed Into the demonstrators. At least 25 persons were taken Into custody as the police began their move at \Valer and Main Strttt!I after reading the RiQt Act. Twenty oU'lers were arrested on the Unive rsity Qmunons, including Kent State Student Pre~ident Craig Morgan. Other scattered arrests ma y raise the total lo nea r 70 In custody. police said. Studentii said there have be en several simtl a r demonstrations in the 13 months since fo ur K e n t students were .slain oo campua by National Guardsmen. but these were the first mass ar· resL.s. The crowds gathered as they hid since Tuetday night to protest city ordin11nces againAt hitd'lhlklnl and carrying open containers of 1l coholtc beverage1. ' Choose One of the Many Coast & Southern Federal Offices to Serve You: * MAIN ontCI: Dth &. HUI, LotMgtl•. 82$-1!61 * WILSHIM 11 QflAMi .. cv PLACl:S033 wn1l'llr9 l lYd .. L..A.. 3'&>1295 L.A. CMC CIN1'ik: 2nd&. !lnSldwly • 82&-1102 * MUN11NQTON llACH: 11 HUntl"Q'°" Clntlt • (714) 89741047 IAHTA ANA l.OAN tl1MCI AOIMCY: * 1905 N. Main St.• (714) S47.f257 * IAHTA MONICA; 711 Wlllhltt Blvd. • m.G7'9 '* IAM PIDfllO: 1oth &. P1elftc • ISt-2341 .. WIST COVlNA: Eutltnd Shepplno Ctr •• 33f·220f + ,ANOl\AMA cm: Mtl VII\ NU)ll BMI .• 892·1171 * TAAZANA: 11751 Ventv" Boulevard • J45.1814 * LONG IUCH: 3rd I Locuet • 437·7411 Opao~·l•ltl,. ·Dal~Hocn-t ... ~lpno ASSETS OVER $800lHLLION • Art Linkletter Shows You a New Way to Beat Inflation ... Just Join 07k lllSideJs Club With a $2,500 bl lance In your tavlnga account, you are ellglbla to btc:omt a member. Subst1ntial aavlnga art avallable when purchasing m1ny Items Including automobiles, fumlture, appliances, Jewelry.Plus m1ny free services -money ordere, aafe deposit boxu, etc. • Coast & Southern Federal Offers You These Highest Prevailing Rates: COMPOUNDID DltLY AND PAto QUARTllU.Y.• 5.00"'•·5.13'/o Puo.bOOk: No Minimum. 5;25'io-5.39'1'e Three Month Cenlflcate: No Minimum. 5.75°/•-5.92'1'• On.Yw Certificate; $1,000 Minimum. 6.00"'•·8.18°/o Two-YHrCertiflcat•: $5,000 Mlnlmum. •ttttetlvt AMu1t E1mlnp • INSURANCE TO ~20,000 • -- Saddlehaek . -. ' EDITION foday'a Fln11l N.Y. Stoeb- VOL 64, NO. 121, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 21, ·1911 . TEN CENTS Clemente Clubhouse to A wait Court Verdict The city of San Clehlente will wait for the U.S. Supreme Court to decide on what margin constitutes a bond election victo- ry before committing city funds for a new ~mmunlty clubhouse. The delay, sought by scores ol members of San Clemente's Arts and Crafts club. was granted quickly by coun· cilmen Wednesday. The panel agreed that because of the short life of bids already opened on the clubhouse project that mid·June would be the final time to wait ·for a Supreme Work Starts On Hospital Next Weel\: After a few unforeseen delays. San Clemente's first hospital will begin con· struction early next week -work ex. pected to last a year before the first pa· tient.s arrive. Final checks have been made and a bulldin~ permit picked up at city hall, u id buildinj department oUjcials. Prelifninary grading and soil jirepara- lion wa, completed earlier this month at the !ite on Camino de las Mares by the Chapman Management corporallon. The Lomar Corporation will do the con· 1truction worlt on lhe hospital project. initial plans cal for a 116-bed 11cute- are facility, a convalescent hospital and another board.and-care segment to a pro- ject master planned to eventually contain much more. If C<>nstruction estimate! by Chapman Group head Dr. Ralph.Graham hold. the drive by patients and physicians to South Laguna for hospital services will have en- ded next spring. Dr . Graham has promised the "least possible" delays in construction or the hospital, a private health-care facility which has y,·on endorsement from the San Clemente Chamber of Commerce and San Clemente's official physicians' socie- ty. . The San Clemente General project w11s born from a bitter battle for official sane· Uon last year as two sep~ate organiza- tions vied for critical endorsement by the now di sbanded C o u n t y Com· prehensive Health Planning Assoc iation. Chapman emerged the winner in _the competition with San Clemente Medical Center. The latter project, beset by problems and ye a r s ar delays and changes in ov.·nership shifted in another direction after losing it.s endorsement. . Final planning commission approval 1s expected next week on proposals to use the site near city hall -once set aside for hospital use -as an apartment parcel, instead . The units, garden apartments keyed to an ocean vie w, will occupy the nearly 10 acres near the civic center. Danney Jones, 4, Battling Back At last reports little Danny J ones of San Clemente had been showing some improvement in his battle .again$.t pneumonia and an ulcer -complications discovered after the perilous open·heart surgery performed nearly t.wo weeks ago. Family spokesmen Keeping a vigil at the 4-year--0\d's bedside at Los Angeles Childi-tn·s Hospital said treatment 111 :i~ parently working on the pneumonia whi~h developed in Danny·s lungs early this week. The boy. who receive d personal good wishes from President Nixon before undergoing the risky surgery, also Is drinking cream regularly to calm a stomach ulcer. 4th Quad Critical DENVER (AP) -Shawn Ellzabel,h Stoermer, the last of quadruplets botn Wednesday. w1s In very critical condition Thursday , a hospital SPo"kesman said. The three other girls were listed In fair condition by orficials at Cl\ildren's H°"'pital. The mother, Mrs. Emil Stoermer, was In good condition at Mercy Hospital where tht quadruplets were born. Court decision. If the high court rules favorably on an appeal from \Vest Virginia, then a simple majority would be all that is needed for passage of a revenue bond measure. The decision , say many observers, '"'ould be retroactive to the orlginal West Virglnja case which began last yeac. That roncept would mean that la st April's local bond measure which yielded a 54 percent yes vote for $400.000 in clubhouse bonds . would be successful without a two-thirds majority . Planning c:ommissioner Ray McCuli.n, a local contractor, bas 1ubmiUed the lowest bid for the project -an offer, he said, which would remain in effect until the end of June. Councilmen plan to resurrect the issue of awarding a contract for the building .until a meeting June 16. In another matter i:.elating to the clubhouse and several other parks and recreation items which 'ailed, at the polls in April, councilmen agreed to start the machinery to obtain federal grants under Big Visit Set La Paz to Greet Cabin.et Member The Saddleback Valley is planning '9 rousing welcome to Secretary of the Interior Rogers C. B. Morton. The cabinet official will land at La Paz Intermediate School~in Mission Viejo at 2: I~ p.m. Monday. A speci al assembly has been planned and special school hours arranged so all students and their parent! and friends can atlend. Morton is expected to land on the upper athletic field. La Paz students will begin their day at 10 a.m. and leave the campus at 3:30 p.m. on Monday. They will be called to an assembly at 2 p.m. ~1orton is to address lhe students and then take time to meet them. He was invited by the seventh grade social science classes to visit the school during its recent POP week which wa1 dedicated to patriotism and ecology. Although he could not 1ttend durina that week he said he could make it Mon· day and would.be delighted to come. Guards, Police to Lose Jobs-as Gate Openers A wearisome tradition for S a n· Clemente's police officers and lifeguards -a job which has persisted for years - will end soon when the city purchases an electric gate opening device. It took years o( selling by lhe city staff before a victory of sorts aga inst the great.gate dilemma came this week. Dru g-crazed Man Pulls Out Eyes BALTIMORE (UP!) -Charles Innis Jr., 25, the son of a prominent Massachusetts politician. took an overdose of an animal tranquilizer and pulled his eyeballs from their sockets Thursday in the city hall. police said. In nis underwent three hou rs o( surgery Thursday night lo repair muscle tissue and avoid removal of the eyes. An official at Ma ryland State Hospital Issued a statement which said Innis "had no light perception in either eye pr ior to surgery and the possi bility he will ever have light perception is extremely poor." The official refused to say what the chances were for restoring sight. He said there was no way to determine: if Innis would be blind until his bandages were removed at an undetermined date. Innis' father is general counsel to the Massachusetts' House of Represen- tatives. Innis, who complained to a neighbor of poor eyesight Saturday, was arrested ·Wednesday while wandering ·nude: near the apartment of a girlfriend, Mandy Shea. Police said he was under the influence of an animal tranquilizer often paS!td off by drug dealers as THC, the synthetic form of marijuana. The tranquilizer makes those who take It Impervious to pain and very depressed. Councilmen authorized the 1pendinl el $2.000 to buy a special gate device w:lth 20 small transmitting boxes to control th1 private acti?ss across the Santa Fe trackl near lilegua.rd beadquartera. For years. the conventional gale had to be secured with a padlock. Veteran of· ficers and lifeguards have complained for years about · b e i n g awakened during sleeping hours to unlock the gate. City Manager Ken Garr proposed 1 similar electric gate last spring, but cost estimates from one firm then showed an expense of more than $4.000. Councilmen weren't buying. Since then the price has drop~ because of lhe choice of another model, and offici als of the Santa Fe railroad in- creased thei r C<>mplaints that often the gate was left unlocked and open.·· Carr told councilmen Wednesday that the problem had become so severe. that railway officials were threatening to lift their grant of an easement across the tracks at lhe end of Avenlda Del Mar. Under the new system each police and lifeguard vehicle would carry t1 remote- control " hand transmitter which will automatlcally open and close the gate. Tradesmen serving beachfront con· cessions would enter after catching the attention of personnel at lifeguard bead· quarters nearby. "It sounds like a great relief." said Lifeguard Chief Dick Hazard Thursday. He has been one of the major keepers of the keys during the night hours. Boulder Week Slated Nati ve boulders which have been stockpiled during construction of Dana Point Harbor will be relocated to future landscape areas, the Board of Supervisors have decided . Fowler Equip- ment Incorporated of Orange wu auign· ed the task. Saia Clenaente Project a neW"program to finance the failing pro- ject•. 'Labeled President Niron's Lf:gacy or Parks program, the grant project might , provide funds for a large park in Shorecliffa for $100,000, a proposed youth ~reatlon complex for about $350,000 and the clubhouse as well. · But the hitches abound, said City f..fanager Ken Carr. T h e grants. administered by the Department or . Housing and Urban Development, are keyed to the amount of " minority citizens the projects would serve. Census figures show San Clemente to be lacking in substantial numben of persons in minorit~ groups. Carr told councilmen that despite reports of available grants, "often there aren't funds to pay for them." Councilman Thomas O'Keefe asked about conditions Imposed on the grants. Carr said the hitches were of the "average variety." ". • . most of the federal junk," be· oar OAU.Y ,ILOT lf•ff ,1191• They're Hot The annual Little League Pancake Breakfast of San Juan Capistrano will be held Su nday from 8 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in the Cafetorium 0£ San Juan School. Two little leaguers look ready as manager Pat "Grant ,gives preview to Pat Allen (center) and Hugh Grant. Trustees Find No Buyers For Aging El Toro School Old schools -despite many years of 1ervlce -are about the deadest com· mod.tty on the real estate market. And El Toro School -45 years old, fading and dilapidated -still has no bid· ders despite repeated attempts by the San Joaquin Elementary School Dlslrict to &ell it. "No bids have been received." said Rex NeriSon. Assistant Superintendent for Administrative Services Wednesday at the district board meeting. He has said It before - a few months ago. At that time the price tag was $60.000 or $10.000 more than It is now. The property includes a ramshackle 1tructure and nearly three acres of land on Olive Street in the old section of El Toro. School distr ict officials believe the &tructure. built in 1913, will have to be torn down, The school property was sold to . the First Baptist Church of El Toro three years ago. The price was $58,000. But the school district found It didn't have clear title to the property and-the churqt reneged . According Jf> S~perin· tendent Ralph Gates titles went back to the 1890s. The school board gave no indication as to what it will do with the school now. The district can either lower the price or hang on to it in hopes of inaeaslng Ill value. Help Arriving for Streets Clemente Sets Guard Try'!uts San Clemente's lifeguard department will announce tryout dat.es lat.er thl1 week for the 1971 Junior Lifeguard program which will run throughout the 1ummu months. Filly of San Clemente's worst streets ..-will receive a year's ntemion to their withe.ring lives soon under a new project 8uthoriied this week ·by city councilmen. Applying for the first time state gas tax rebates under a new. liberalized state policy, councilmen awarded a $20,000 con- tract to the Mission Slurry Seal Company to apply an oil and sand coating to the crumbling roadways . The project would Involve 1.200 tona of material on 2 million square • feet ' of ' roadway surface. City Enaineet Phil Pttu told the coun- cil Wednesday that the process would poai!>fY. Gler1d the rue of • roedway ,., at leftf' a ~r -poasibly more on eome better roadl.' · The proceai. 'however, Is a laat.-dltch measure to obtain mou service lrom roads ln "very bad shape," ht aaid. Rttenl changes in state approved a~ pllcatlon1 of gas tu reb1te1 allow for 1lurry .. auns qn nelgilborhood roa<1Way1. Several wetb 110 councilmen ·qrttd to amend the city alreet policy to allow the Ute ot ' cu .ta1 revenues on main· t.enance pro}ect.11 instead of formal con· 1truc\IOn. Malntenance iuch 1s slurry aealing amowita to litUc more then a 1'coat of pitnt oo 11treet thtit ls &hot." Peter 11id. ...,t that's the least we can do for tl!tm." be ldded . The price !or Ille job -which will '~In within a •few d1y1 -ii about 17 .000 leal iba f'eter'1 eitlmatu, I Aru· young$lers -both boys and &iris -will be· Invited to participate In the ocean safety program ~ich l\1\1111)' In- volves about 100 membtr1. ..Tryoul.s. IUeguard 'spokesmen 1aid, will be scheduled, probably two weeks arter 1chool ends, 11.t the municipal pool. ' Voungsten between 10 and 14 yean Old who qualify will p1rtldpate thrtt day1 a week through the summer ln ocean 1wimmlng and other recie1t1on proarams -all keyed to water 1afety. • quippM . While chances for the federal funds seem slim, proposals to find allemate funding for the clubhouse. revolve around the availability of city reserve funds. lf the Supreme Court decision reveals that a twG--thlrds majority still is re- quired in bond · issues, the councilmen would have to stick by some 'luggested cuts in the clubhouse design and lap city. reserves for the replace111ent costa for building the meeting place keyed to use by adult groups. Sharpest Advance Recorded WASHINGTON !UPI) -The cml ol living rose to Americans 0.3 percent in April , equaling the sharpest one-month advance this year, the Labor Department reported today . Higher prices for food Bfld clothing were Jargely blamed. Wblle the rise In the' con.s1i1mer ptlce in- dex " was the bluest slnct a similar in- creaa in January, i~ was weU below the pace of 1970 when the nation was in the lfips of the worst inflation aince tht Kortan·war. Food prices increased by 0.1 percent last month. lf the advance contlnued 1t that rate for a full year. the aMual food increaae would be almost 12 percent, meaning that a lyplcal food Item costing 11 !Mt month would CO!! II.1% by nut •prl11f. The cost of clothing Increased 0.4. per- dnt last monlh, led by a jump of O.a J>S'· cent in men's and boy's apparel. Women'• and girl'• clothing increased 0.1 percent. The government's gauge of consumer prices stood in April at 1~.z percent of the 1967 average, up from t 19.I percent ht March. That meant It cost •12.02 to buy the same goods and services that SID brought In 1967. The Apr il Index was 4.3 percent above April, 1970, representing the smallest over·th1tyear change since the August, 1967, lo August, 1!168. Last year, monthly increa.Rs averaged close to 0.5 percent ·The Increases in food and clothing prices were partially offset by declines ln · home mortgage interest rates and the price of gasoline. New car prices declined -normal for this time of the year -but used car prices increased. The average purch_asing power of workers Increased slightly as a result of a 2 cent Increase in average hourly earn· ings. Gross weekly earnings of proclucUon and nonsupervisory workers averaged $124.75, up 73 cents from March, although the av~rage work week was unchanged. After adjustments for price Increases, purchasing power increased by 0.3 per· cent. Mariner. Readied WASHINGTON CAP) -The National Aeronautics and Space Adminl1tration said Thursday It hopes to launch the neU ~fariner rocket to Mars before June a. The agency said a firm ·date must await completion of work. tests and reviewa of the May 8 Mariner failure. Weather Drizzly momh1gs and p.1rtly clearing afternoons are the pros- pect for the weekend along the Or· a'nge Coast. Temperature.a are du1 to dip Into the uppt:r 60s. INSWE TODAY Selected. works of 11oung art- ists, kindergarten through. high school. ar1 being e%hlbft1d through. May tn South Coaat P!ata. The: show is featured in today'& Weekender. ae111,.. t• C•Ult,..i. t C~I"' U" r Cllt•lfltill *'°' (-IC:• )\ Cm.-nl )\ °""' Ntrkh 11 ••1""91 ,... • ,._. tl·ll H..--u AMI LMHn ti MlillNll I ~¥... .... I 'I DAILY PILOT >C 3 District Boundaries .Questioned By l'AMELA HALLAN Of "'9 OMIY l'llet lt•tt Plans for dividing the Tustin Union High School Distrk:l into three separate unified school districts met with approval during the fLr•t public up.lficatlon meeting Thuncjay. But the boundaries or the division which would create three unified school district! in the Tustin, Irvine and Sact. dleback Valley areas v.·ere questioned by the 60 people present in Irvine School auditorium. Residents of the Jrvlne •~.a favored keeping the boundaries of the proposed city of Irvine as th eir school di.strict boundaries but Dr. Mike Hesse, apecial consultant to the School D i s t r i c t reorganlzatJon. Study Committee e1· plained that this would not be piossible. By law assessed valuation per student tn each new district can vary over 15 per- cent from the current Tustin district fi gure, $13,2.18. That means it can be no higher than $15,221 and no lower than 111.251. 1f the boundaries of the proposed city Df Irvine were used for one district its assessed valuation per st udent would be too hlgh and the Tustin figure would be too low, It was reported. Frldar, M11 21, 1971 11le plan that seemed lo meet with the greatest approval was one labeled Plan Four which ls close lo the figuru ,Jn the state requirem ent. Under this plan most of the Irvine Ranch would be included In Dne school dis trict. most of the Tustin Elementary District and part of the agricultural preserve of the eastern l rv ine Ranch would make up a second district and the Saddleback Valley would be the third. The difference in assessed valuation in these district! would vary just slightly more than the 15 percent, community identity could be retained and school pro. UPI T11WMft WOULD-BE JUMPER DANIEL CLIFFORD SAVEO 'Fin1nci•I Problems' Bl•med for Fllrt•tlon With De1th perty and facilities could be evenly di vid- ed. The County Committee on School District ReorganJzatlon will hold three meetings between May 27 and Oct. 7. This committee has the o f f i c I a I responsibility for selecting the plan which will appear on the ballot in June or 1972. Man Scales Golden Gate, Talked Down The committee can select a plan which divides lhe current hlgh school district in- to three separate unified districts or which unilles the Tustin Elementary, Trabuco and San Joaquin Elementary ·• SAN FRANCISCO (UPll - An agile dlstrk:ts along the boundaries o! the father, despondent over ''finannclal pro-- Tustin high school distr.iq. blerm," scampered up a Golden Gate tf the final pl•n Is voted down in June of 1972 the school districts will remain u Bridge cable Thursday and dangled from they are now [or another six years. a perch 74.6 feet above the bay for more than an hour. Shop Center Set In Leisure World Valencia Shopping Center, a new seven· acre community shopping complex in Leisure Worl d will be under construction within two months. the Rossmoor Corporation has announced. Located at El Toro Road and Paseo de Valencia, the center will contain a total of 64,675 square feet of store flpace . About .half the space will be occupied by a Ralphs Market and Drug Center, the balance by specialty stores and services. SeCurity Pacific National Bank will ro- .cupy a 10,000 square.fqot, twt>-level building and the.re will be parking for 356 cars. Design of the buildinas will be con· temporary Spanish, with tile roofs, ex· posed wood bearm and stucco walls. The center will open in February, 1972. Goes Back to Battle SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. aircraft car. r ier Midway has returned to the Jndochina war afler more than five years off the line for extensive modernization, the Navy said today. OIANCil COAST DAILY PILOT O"i\NG:: co..ur PUflL.1$HIHW COMPA.N'( ••"•rt N. w •• 4 Prn M11t1t 1nd p.,...~lltr J•t~ R. Cur1•v Vkt Pr•ld'"I 1M 0-1• ,,,..,..., lftt!ll•I ktt¥11 f:~!lw Tke11111 A. M11r,lii11t Mtri-.1"' a.ilff Che1lt 1 H. l•o• IUclur.I '· Nill Aull!tM Me1119lng !.tlt9rl. Daniel Clifford. 31, pe rfo r m e d acrobatics on safely cables, hurled a :safety belt into San Francl.sco Bay and threatened lo jump before t hr e e steelworkers and a highway patrolman crawled out on the main support cable and talked him down. Bridge otflclals said he was the th ird potential suicide talked out of leaping of( the orange span during the day. More than 400 persons have jumped to their deaths from the bridge in lhe past 34 years. The bearded, Jong-haired Clifford , who manages an apartment complex, told newsmen he had been having "financial problems.'' ·•Get my wife and child," he said as he emerged from an elevator inside the 526- foot south tower with tears in his eyes. Clifford was taken to 1'11. Zion medical center for psychological observation. Clifford, who was wearing jeans. sneakers and a yellow windbreaker bi- cyc led to the middle of the bridge ln the early afternoon. parked his bike and clambered up one of the four.foot diame· ter suspension cables. He used handrails nanking the cable to reach the lop of the to,ver. A traffic jam developed belo\v as Clifford swung around the safety cables and used thcn1 like parallel bars. \\'hen the rescue team of steelworkers approached him. Cliffo rd climbed over the big cable and perched in a small nest of COU\'Crging cables beneath it for an hour. "He was really upset \\'hen we first got lo him,'' said Patrolman David Peelo. ''But after a while he cooled off and sa id he was concerned about his \vife and tv.·o small children. ''He sai d he was going to jump. bul v.·e convinced him that his death wouldn't help his family. We promised 'o\'e'd help hi m contact his wife." The rescuers offered him a safety belt, IJ~I Ttl91thelt WORKERS TO RESCUE Busy Day on Gate bul Clifford grabbed It and tossed It into the v.·ater 750 feet below. The second time a bell v.'as offered -about an hour later -Clifford took it and was led to safety. \\'hen he reached the ground, he told newsmen he wanted to see his family and said he hadn't seen his wife, Anne, since Tuesday. Bridge security officer Ernest Arata said ii u·as the first time a potenUal bridge \en.per climbed to the summit of lhl' st ructure. Earlier in the day, a 58-year-old woman and a 43·year-old man .,..·ere talked oU the bridge by guards wbo described them as potential suicides . Since its construction In 1936, 418 persons are known to have jumped from the bridge into the bay. Only t"·o survived. L.,••• lffcli Offlc• 21? Fo111t AYlll~• M~ilin9 1.!dr1n: P.O. l oir 6••, ,2.52 Sa11 Cl ... •M Office Jaycee s Launching Blood JOS Nerih El CeP11l111 f1111, ,1672 Ottler Offic.s CM•• M~n· UCI Wfl/ •• ., s1r .. 1 wc ... 00•1 l1n~: Ull N1w~1 llt111!e-o••" "4\llOl!IW""' lttc~: 11111 ... Cit fl.vltvtr• Bani\: for Laguna Students The Laguna Beach Jarrees have an. nounced the eslabllshn1ent of a blood bank especially for studenta as a memorial to Dean ti.fcCord, a lifelong community resident v.•ho dil'd April 25 of leukemia at the age of 37. To launch the blood bank, Jaycee pro- ject chairman Randy Schaeffer gaid the Red Cross Bloodmobile v.•ill come to Laguna Beach June 7. The first 42 pin Ls of blood donated wlll ht given to the Long Beach Veterans Hospita l lo replace blood us~ by f\.fr . htcCord preced ing his dt...'!.th. Addlllonal blood oolltttr.d will be plac· td In a bank for use especially by junior and stnlor high schcxil studcnls. Mr. hlcCord, • former l .:iguna Bc:ich lligh School football star. attended Santa Ana College and San Diego State College before returning to make his permanent home in l...aguna Beach. Resi dents wishing to donate to the bank may sign up at Reef l iquor, Herb Nolan Real Eslalt, Spigot Liquor. \\rarren Imports in the Art Center and the Coast Inn Restaurant. In addition to the men1orial blood bank , thl! Jaycees \\'iii establ!sh thl! De an McCord Citlzen~hip Trophy at Thurston I nlcrrned late School. Each year, a atu- dcnt chosen by school officials to receive 1he tnvard u•lll have his name engraved on the perpetual trdphy and wlll receive an Individual p!Jque . Bare-bone J1Judget Study Set '1 San Clemente councilmen will begin ' thelr page.by-page stud y or next fiscal year's proposed bare-bones budget on three nights next v.·eek. , 1 'Jbe ann ual clus ter of study sessions generally is a painstaking look at possible cuta and additions to the city financial document which proposes $3.6 million. to be spent next fiscal year with no increase in ta1 ratei. But alhering to the bare-bones pro- posal made by ;Pe city staff might be toughter than usual this season. City employes, particularly public safe- ty workers, have ma~ requests for large wage and benefit increases. Demanda for capital Improvements also are e1pected to stretch the city's finances to the limit. The council will begin tackling the perenni1l problems of increasin g costs not matching dwindling revenue Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday nighls. _ The sessions will begin each evening at 7: 10 p.n1. in the council's conference room next to council chambers. They are public meetings but will not involve any official coun cil action. The panel has until the start of the fiscal year July I to adopt tbe city budget. Marine Plane Craslies, Bur1ts In Irvine Area A 1.farine Corps F4 Phantom jel ap- parently carrying s e c re t equipment crashed and burned Jn a field near Irvine Boulevard and CUi ver Road northerly of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station abou t ll a.m. today. The pilot and navigator ejected succes s-- fully -one parachuting into a nearby orange grove - and were returned un• injured tO El Toro. Security guards at the scene prohibited photographs from the front section of the charred aircraft and could be seen removing some type of equipment from the 'o\Teckage. No Immediate caus~ was sug gested (or the crash, in whit'h the jet pancaked into an open fie ld, bounced 200 yards and ex- plOOed in a ball of fire. Exact site of the crash was aboul two blocks off Ir vine Boulevard a mlle east of CUiver Road. Granger Escapes Car Crash in Apennines PIAN DEi, VOGLIO. llaly (UPI) - Actor Stewart Granger escaped injury Thursday when the sports car in which he was rldlng collided with another ear on a superhighway in the heart of the Apennlne 1.-fountains between Florence and Bologna. The driver or the car in which Granger, 63, was a passenger suf· fered minor injuries. The occupants of the other auto were taken to a ho6 p6tal for treatment , police saJd. ... , -. -· .. DAILY PILOT SltH ,htft Child1•en's Art The best art from Orange County school children is \Vin nowed down even further for exhibit d uring the si'C·\\'eek run of the Festival of Arts in Laguna Beach this summer. From left to right are A-large Skelton of Las una Beach. Diana Anderson of HuntingtOn BeaCh, 1'1ary Jane Haden. Judge, and Rose Clark of Newport Beach. Paramour Held in Deatli By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 tllt Dlllr Pll91 Sii i! Tests on the body of a you ng mother found dead, her crying baby in the bed beside her al a Balboa apartment, Thurs- day led Newport Beach police to formally book her paramour on i;uspicion of murder. Strangulation was listed by authorilie~ as the tentative cause of death of Mrs. Susan Lane Constant. 21" whose mother had begged her five days earlier lo mo\·e back to Anaheim. Questioned throughout the afternoon about the case, J ohn J. "Skip" Biegun, 21, who shared the residence at 423 E. Bay Ave ., was booked at 5 p.rn. on the murder charge. A complaint "·as being sought today from the Ora nge County District At· torney. Biegun, dispatcher for his fa ther's security patrol service in Diamond Bar. was already in custody Thursday when f\.frs. Constant was found dead. Her 16-month-<>ld son was crying beside the bod y in the Sea Level Apartments when discovered by 1he suspect's older brother, who had just been rel eased from jail. Ne wport Beach Police Delf'ctive Sgt. Ken Thompson sa id preliminary Jests in- dicate the young mother bad been strangled. •·with force," Sgt. Thompson added. He did not explain whether it might havf' been man ually or by some ether means, such as a scarf or towel. ' Youths Arrested In Laguna Beach Laguna Beach juvenile authorities Wednesday arrested two teenaged boys as sus pects in the May 9 bombing or a Temple Hills .area mail box . The youngsters, one 15 and the other 17. were booked on charges of malicious mischief and were late r turned over lo the custody of the ir parents. The May 9 incident occurred at 1$5 Terrace Way when a street-side mail box \Vas demolished. police said. The for ce of the explosion imbedded a piece of steel fragment from the metal box in a garage door across the street from the 1ddress, officers noted. Investigators speculated dynamile was use<fi in the bombing, but said the type of Upl~ive has not definitely b e e n determined. UP.HOL:STER;y; SP.ECIAL FEATURING THE BEST SELECTION OF QUALITY UPHOLSTERY IN THE AREA c ..... ·MMe $of• ~y Sltefril- 1• Gltt9 Yt4,et -At• S.le 'rke ef $549 SHERRILL FEATURES * Quality Workm•n1hip * 8 W•y Hond Tied Springs * Excellent T•iloring ·- * La rge Fabrle Selection * All F•brics Scotchgutrded * Large .selection of Htnd· 1eme Style1 to ctloo1e from. If You Need A Sofa or Chair, Now Is Th• Tim• DEALERS FOR : HENREDON -DREXE~ -HERITAGE NEW,ORT STORI 0 ,IN FllDAY 'TIL' NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wostcllff-Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Profe11lon1f lnterier Designers Av1ll1blt -AID INTERIORS PJioene Ttll ,,_ Mett ef Or .... C11111ty-140·126J LAGUNA BEACH 34.5 North Co 1st Hwy. Phono: 494-6551 I -I . ' ... Lag1111a Beaeh ED I TION VOL 6'4, NO. 12r, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES , ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFQANIA . . FRIDAY, MAY ·21, '1971' Today'• Final N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS Council Gives 'Operation Alert' Support Lagllna Beach Councilman Edward Lorr Jhis week succeeded in extractin.s a 3·2 city council endorsement or "Opera- tion Alert," a four.day Anaheim seminar to disseminate. information on the tactics of alleged subversive and militant organizalions in the U.S. Lorr had atempted at the last council meeeting to obtain a council resolution endorsing lhe program and urging citizens to attend when fellow councilmen 10 Dilapidated complained that a single newspaper aru. cle was not sufficient to Inform them of the nature of the meeting. This week, as a five-hour council session drew to a close half an hour afte r midnight. the councilman a g 1 i n presented his resolution, this time backed with copies of several newspaper stories on the ''Cold War College." Councilman Charlton Boyd said be &Lill found the material "inadequate." Coun· Woodland House· Check Reported By BARBARA KREIBICH 0 1 flll lHllY f'llal 11111 In a progress report to the city council on the Woodland Drive housing inspection program, Laguna Beach Building and Safety Director Clyde Springe said Wednesd ay that the staff is ready to begin notifying owners and · tenants of corrections. needed. During the inspections, the report states. 45 properties or bulldings were in· spected, one remains to be inspected: 16 buildings were found to be "sound" but with some having minor defects needing ~orrection : IS buildings were classified es "dclcrioraling" and needing to be rehabilitated or demolished ; and 10 buildings were found to be "dilapidated." wit h three already demollshed and removed and the rcrpainder to be vacated and demolished. The council agreed that Springe and ci· ty manager Lawrence Rose should co~fer with regard to lime limits to be estab.h~h ed for needed repair work or demolition and notifictaion of owners. \Vrlter Arnold Hano and artist Andrew Wing expressed concern 1or families re- quired to relocate as a result of lhe in· 11pection program. Noting that state and federal law re- qui res the inclusion of a housing element tn all general plans. with provision of housing al all economic levels, Hano said, "Ten Woodland families will have to be relocated and up to 15 more have to be n located. No comparable housing is available, nor has anyth ing been done to comply with lhe law in this situati.on. 1'!11 not saying people should ltve 1n hazardous structures, but .this is in- human." \Ylr'lg suggested that a "fair appeals committee" be established for persons ""hose buildings are condrimned by the Building Department and also stres~ed that the city had made no attempt to find suitable relocation for ousted families or to undertake redevelopment of the area. "It Is very difficult for these people to obtain loans," said \Ying, "and no at- tempt has been made to ~k Federal redevelopment funds. t feel the council has been terribly remiss in going into this without any thou~ht of v.·hat is to become of people who will lose thei r homes." Councilman Charlton Boyd found this •·a very valid train of thought" and coun· cilman Roy Holm said, "I'm inclined to 1gree." Councilman Peter Ostrander orfcred to &it in with Rose and Springe in an effort to find a solution to the problem. At one point in the oUterwise serious proceedings the council chamber was fill· ed with gales of laughter. Asked by coun- cilman Edward Lorr to explain what he meant by lhe classification "deteriorating,'' Springe, without reveal- ing an address, re ad off a woeful com· mentary on one of the Woodland dwell· ings: "Foundation deteriorated, causing stt· tlement. •. broken windows . . .improper ventilation for heater. . .bathroom di rectly off kilclien .. _ hol wa ter heater improperly installed in closet •.. pocch dilapidated and in need of repai r ... doors, window frames and windows in need of repair and paint. .. yard In poor co ndition ." "That doesn't sound like a place that's fit to live in," said Lorr. From the rear of the council chamber a woman's voice comment ed, "Why that sounds exactly like my house !" Drug -crazed .Man Pulls Out Eyes In Jail Cell BALTI!\-10RE (UPI) -Charles Innis Jr .• 25, the son of a prominent 1'.1assachusetts politician, took an overdose of an animal tr.inquilizer and pulled his eyeballs from their sockets Thursday in the city hall, police said. Innis underwent th ree hours of surgery Thursday night to repair muscle tissue and avoid removal of the eyes. An official at Maryland Slate Hospital Issued a statement which sai d·lnnis "had no light perception in either eye prior to surgery and the possibility he will ever have light perception is extremely poor." The officipl refused to say what the chances were for restoring sight. He said there was no way to determine if Innis would be blind until his bandages were removed at an undetermined da te. ·Innis' fa ther is general counsel to the f\.tassachusetts' House of Represen- tatives. Innis, who complained to a ne ighbor of pooi-eyesight Saturday, was arrested Wednesday while wandering nude near the apartment of a girlfriend, Mandy Shea . Pol ice said he was under the influence of an animal tranquilizer ofte n passed off by drug dealers as THC, the synthetic form of marijuana. The tranquilizer makes those who take it impervious to pain and very de'pressed. • Big Visit Set La Paz to Greet Cabinet Member The Saddleback Valley is planning a rousing welcome to SecrelarJ of the Interior Rogers C. 8. Pt1orton. The cabinet officia l will land at La ,Pai tntermedlate School in Mission Viejo at 2: 15 p.m. Monday. A special assembly has been plaMed and special school hours arranged &0 all 1tud@nts and the:lr parents and friends can attend. Morton is expected to land onlhe upper alhleUc field. \ La Paz students will begin their day al 10 a.m. and leavt the campus at 3:30 p.m. on Monday. They will be called to an assembly at 2 IJ.m. Morton is to address the students and then Lake ti me to meet them. He was invited by the seventh grad~ social science classes to visit the school during it.a recent POP week whlch was dedicated to patriotism and ecology. Althouah he could not attend durlng that week he said he could make It Mon- day and would be delighted to come. c\lman Roy Holm said after readlnJ the stories he found "so(l1e participants whose integrity I would not question and some l would question" but added he did not feel it was up to the council to urge citizens to attend su.ch a gathering. fi.1ayor Richard Goldberg and councilman Peter Ostrander voted with U>rr for the resolution. Meanwhile charges continued to fly in a flap between the Laguna Beach Tax· payers Association and resident William · Paseo Leak, sparked by the Initial council discussion of "Operation Aiert." Crillcizing Lo.rr 's original request, Leak made reference to the need to alert citizen1 to the existence of miliL!r.t local organizations. He ~ferred to atten<Jing a me:oting or a 111eml·secret" Laguna organization at which it wu sugge.sted guns should be used to-ahoot down hJppies. Liter, Leak ldenutied the organization ~ as the taX{>ayers iroup, staling that the meeting was closed to all except members and guests and therefore was "semi-secret." · ln a three-page letter to the city coun- cil, attorney John DoY(ntr, vice president of the Taxpayers' A.ssociaUon, denied Leak's allegations. The meeling, be maintained, was not secret and had betn noticed in the local press in a manner that "did DO! limit Lt- oar. Prize Winner - -Pepper Tree Takes Beautification_ Trophy By FREDE RICK SCHODiEHL at N O.llY f'lltt Iliff Laguna's quaint Pepper Tree Paseo, 440 South Coast Highway was awarded the Laguna Federal Savings Sweepstakes Prize Thursday night during the fifth an- nual Mermaids' Beaut.ilication Awards presentation at the Festival of Arta Forufll . On and to ~ccept ~ bronu p1'qYe was owner of the paseo,. Harry Howar~. 401 Glenneyre Sl. The paseo was lauded for· Its •!beautiful brick exterior and Irr numerable artist 6ludios and shops.·• 1 The Pepper Tree Paseo was recently renovated as part ot a Chamber of Com- merce program to restore and beauUfy older Art Colony buildings. All or the paint on tha used brick facade was sandblasted off and fresh paint applied to the surrounding wood. f'irst place award in lhe residential catel(ory. presented by Robert Turner, president of (he Laguna Beach Board of Realtors. went to Bennett Bradbury, 31652 Wildwood, South Laguna. Credit for the "lovely or I en ta I landscaping. . .and imaginative treat· rne.nt given the exterior of the house was gi ven to Brent Tobey, AIBD, who drew up the remodeling plans. Top commercial building award went to the Glenneyre Build ing, 470 Glenneyre St., owned by David Monahan. Credit went to architect Richard Dodd and Beach Construction for ''the kind of build ing the Beautification Committee hopes will be repeated everywhere in La~a." Dr. and Mrs. Edwin A. Stoney, 49 South Portola. South Laguna collected Ille top landscaping award for •·a feeling of spaciousness in the new lawn and the lovely old·feshione.d garden. and the quaint but simple fence ." Takeo Yosh imura was credited with the landscape architecture. In addition to the Sweepstakes Award and the first place awards, 18 parchment awards were gtVen to residential and commercial category runners-up. Also recognized with p a r c h m e n t awards were persons who "for many years have sustained interest I n beii ulificalion. including Harry Lawrence, Lillian DuSoe. Clyde Sweetser, Fred Lang, Jim , Dilley, Lloyd Milne, Greta Hay, Larry White and Bob Turner. Judfiles for the 1971 awards were Joh n Scott Trotter, music director for Charlie Brown television specials : Bill Gwinn, tele\ilsion personality and Lag u n 1 realtor; Virginia Cain, a government buildings administrator during t h e Eisenhower administration; WI n I fr e d Harm, a resident of both Laguna Beach and Kona, Hawaii ; Meredith foreman, chai rman of the Channel U Affiliates, and William Roley. investment advisor and Lagwla resident. Mr. Thompson's Last Rites Held • Services were held Thursday in: Mesa for longtime Laguna ~ach '; dent Raymond Elwood Thomp10n, died Monday in hla Sant• Ana home at the age of 60. ... The Rev. John Donaldson officiated at the rllu In B<ll·Broadway Mortuary Chaptl. lnurnmenl foUowed at PatifJc VJew Memorial Park. ., 1 A naUve of Ohio, Mr. Thompa 1 ~ ~ 1\rU<lion poinlm' hid Uved ,Jo; Orans• County for 31 yeara ind rormerfy onfd ! 1 motel In Laguna Canyoa. • OAILY !'ILOT 11111 !'ft"91 PEPPER TREE PASEO WINS BEAUTIFICATION AWARD Mrs. Pit Pe1cock Gives Plaque to Harry Howard \ ' . tendance to guests of members." All eeneral mee tings of the association ar1 open to both· the public and press1 Downer slated. He 'admitted some. pehons at the meeUng had been in favor of "drastic ac· tion including the use of firearms" against hippies, but said that several persons, including the .president, pointed out that law and order cannot be preserv· ed by violence. Sharpest Advance Recorded WASHINGTON (UPI) -The cog! o1 living r01t to Americans 0.3 percent in April, equaling the sharpest one-month advance this year, the Labor Department reported today. Higher prices for food and clothing we.re largely blamed. While the rise in the comumer. price In- dex was .the biggest since 1 simUar In- crease ln January, it" wu well below th• pace of 1970 when. the nation was in the cripa or the wont inflation sincl the Korean War . Food prices increased by O.t percerit last month. If the advanct continued 1t that rale for a full year. the annual food increase woufd be almost 12 perCent, meaning that a typical food Item coating •t Jut month would ""t 11.12 by nen ipling. . The eMt of clothing Increased 0.4 per· ~ent last montli, led by a jutnp of o.a per· cent In me.n's and boy's apparel. Women's and girl's clothing Increased O.J percent. The a:ovemment's gauge of COttfUmrr' prices atood in April at 120.2 percent cl the 1967 average, up from 119.8 percent In March. That meant It cost $12.02 to ·buy the same goods and services that $10 brought Jn 1967. 'nle April index was 4.l percent above April. 1970. representing the smallest over-the-year change since the AuaUJt, 1967, to August. 1968. . _,.. Last year, monthly increases averaged close to 0.5 percenl The increases in food and clothina pri~ were partially offset by declines in home mortgage interest rates and the price of gasoline. New car prices declined -normal for this time of the year -but used car prices increased. The average purchasing power of workers increased sllghtly as a result of a 2 cent increase in average hourly earn· lngs. Gross week1y earnings of produdlon and oonsupervisory workers averaged $124. 75, up 73 cents from March, although the average work week . was unchanged. After adjustments for prioe increases, purchasing pawer increased by 0.3 per. Ct!nl. • Mariner Readied WASHINGTON (AP) -The Nallonal Aeronautics and Space Administratio n saJd Thursday It hopes to launch the next Mariner rocket to Mars before June 8. The agency said a firm date must 1wait completion of work, tests and reviews of the May 8 Ma~iner failure. 0r .. ,. Ceast Weather Drizzly mornings .and partly clearing afternoons are the pr• pect for the weekend along the Or- ange Coast. Temperatures are due to dip Into the upper 60s. INSIDE TODAY Selected works of you.ng nrt- bJs, kinderg4rten through high !"chooi, are--being ezltibited through Mav tn South Coast Plaza. The "how l.t featured in todau'.t Weekender. MvtMI ''"' a Hlfltlltl ,.,_.. 4.J Ot4ftff Ceuftty It •11h11ranfl 11•:tt 111Ylt ...,.,... tt '-" , .. ,, Stlclf ,,..,..., l>tl ,.......... " -,..,. W•fflfr 4 ._ ....... ,,.,. W.,,, Ntwt ... .......... .... • ., DAILV PILOl ~C 3 Di strict Boundaries Que stioned • By PAMELA lto\l.LAN Ol 1M Dllll, PUii Si.II Plans for divi ding the Tustin Union High School District inlo three separate unified school districts met with approval durln1 the·firat public unification meeting Thursday. But tht boundaries or the division which would create thrre unified school district..'I In the Tustin, Irvine and Sad· d leback Valley areas y,·cre questioned by the 60 people present in lrvine School auditorium. • Residents or the Irvine area favored keeping the boundaries of the proposed city of Irvine as their S<'hool district boWldaries but Dr. Mike Hesse, special consultant to the School D i s l r i c t reora:anization Study Committee ex· · plained that this would not be possible. By law assessed valuation per student In each new district can vary over 15 per· cent from the cu rrent Tustin district figure, 513,236. That mea ns It can be no higher than $1 5,221 and no lower than $11.251. If the boundaries of the proposed city (lf lrvine were used for one district its assessed valuation per student would be too higb and the Tustin figure would be lOO Jow, it was reported. The plan that seemed to mee t with the greatest approva1 was one labeled Plan Fo ur which is close to the figures in the state requirement. Under this plan most of the Irvine Ranch would be included in one school district, most of lhe Tustin Elementary Distric t and part of the agricultural preserve of the eastern Irvine Ranch would make op a second district and UM: Saddleback Valley would be the third. Ul"ITl'-Mlt The di fference in assessed valuation in these districts would vary just slightly more than the JS percent, community identity could be retained and school pro- perty and fa cilities cou ld be evenly di vid- ed. WOULD-BE JUMPER DANIEL CLIFFORD SAVED 'Finenci1I Problems' Bl1med for Flirtetion With De1th The .County Committee on School District Reorganization will hold three meetings between May 27 and Oct. 7. This committee has the off i c i a I responsibility for selecting the plan which will appear on the: ballot in June of 1972. Man Scales Golden Gate, Talked Down The committee can select a plan which divides the current high school district in· to three separate unified district.! or which unifies the Tustin Elementary, Trabuco and San Joaquin Elementary districts along the boundaries of the Tustin high school diruict. If the final plan is voted down in June of 1972 the school districts will remain as they are now for another sil years. Shop Center Set In Leisure World Valencia Shopping Center, a new seven. acre community shopping complex in Leisure World will be under construction within '"'o months. the Rossmoor CorporaLion has announced . Located at El Toro Road and Paseo de Valencia, the center will contain a total of 64,675 square feet of store space. About half the: space will be occupied by a Ralphs Market and Drug Center, the balance by specialty sklres and services. Security Pacific National Bank will oc· cupy a 10,000 square-foot, two-level building and there will be parking for 356 cars. Design of th' buildings will be con- temporary Spanish, with tile roofs, ex- posed wood beams and stucco walls. The center will open in February, 1972. Goes Back to Battle SAIGO~ (AP) -The U.S. aircraft car- r ier f\fidway has returned to the Indochina war after more than five years of( the line for extensive modernization, the Navy said today. OIANGI COAST DAILY PILOT OLf<N(;..! COAlT PUILISHIHG .COMPANY Rolitrt N. w •• d ,, __ , ...... P\Ol>lllhef J.c\: '" c ... 1 • .., v;ce rr1J10t11r •n6 c;..,.,,, M•Nttt Tl.0111•• )(,,,;1 EdflW Tho11111 A. Mir•phi"e M•M91 .. fdflll'r Ch11111 H. loot Jtic~1rd r. N.11 AnlU•nl Mtr>tOlnt EtlKIB L .. ••• h.cli Office 21? Forti! Awe~u• Ml\il:n9 • .idr•n: r.o. l a• 66,. 92652 Sa1t Cl9tM•N O,,lce :ios No11h El C1mi"o R1•I, 92,71 OW Offk" COl!t 1.\n•• UO Wei: ltV Strttt w .... _, ll•K~: WJ "''-' 1.,.1evt•lf Hlll'lt..,11to11 llt•c~: 1111i lt•tll eair,.,w•'d SAN FRANCISCO <UPI) -An agile father, di:spondent over •·nnanncial pro- blems," scampered up a Golden Gate Bridge cable Thursday and dangled from • pereh 746 feet above the bay for more than an hour. Daniel Clirford, 31, per r o r med acrobatics on safety cables, hurled a safety belt into San Francisco Bay anch threatened t.o jump before t hr e e steelworkers ind a highway patrolman crawled out on the main support cable and talked him down. Bridge officials said he was the third potenUal suicide. talked out of leaping off the orange span during the day. More than 400 persons ha ve jumped to their deaths from the bridge in the past 34 years. The bearded, Jong-haired Clifford, who manages an apartment complex, told newsmen he had been having "financial problems." "Get my wife and child." he said as he emerged from an elhaklr Inside th e S26- foot south tower with tears in his eyes. Clifford was taken to Mt. Zion medical center for psychological observation. Clifford, who was wearing jeans, sneaken and a yellow windbreaker bi· cycled to the middle of the bridge in !he early aitemoon. parked his bike and clambered up one Of the four-foot diame- ter suspension cables. He used handrails flanking the c:ible to reach the top of the tower. A traffic jam developed belo\v as Clifford 81\'Ung around the safety cables and used thcn1 like parallel bars. \Vhen lhe rescue tean1 or s1ceh\·orke rs approac~d him. Clifford climbed over the big cable and perched in a small nest of converging cables beneath it (or an hour. "He v•as really upset \\'hen \1'e fir st got to him," said Patrolman DavJd Peclo. "But after a while he cooled o(f and said he was concerned about his wife and two small children. .. "He said he was going lo jump, but we convinced him that his death wouldn 't help his famil y. \Ve promised we 'd he lp him contact his wife." The rescuers offered him a safety belt, U~I Ttltolllr. WORKERS TO RESCUE Busy 01y on Gate but Clifford grabbed It and tossed It Into the water 750 feet below. The second time a bell ,~·as offered -about an hour later -Clifford look it and was Jed to safety. \Vhen he reached the ground, he told newsmen he \\'anted to see his family and said he hadn't seen his wife, Anne, sinre Tucsd:iy. Bridl!e security officer Ernest Arata !;aid it \\'as the firsl time a potential bridge leaper climbed to the summit of the structure. Earlier in the day, a 58-year-old woman and a 43-year-old man were tt)ked off the bridge by guards who described them u potential suicides. Since its construction in 1936, 418 persons are known to have jumped from the bridge into the bay. Only two survived. Jaycees Lam1ching . Blood Bank f'Or Laguna Students The Laguna Beach Jaycees have an- nounced the establishment or a blood bank especially for students as a memorial to Dean ft.lcCord, a lifelong community resident u·ho ditd April 25 or leukemia at the age of 37. To launch the blood bank, Jaycee pro- ject chairman Randy Schaeffer said the Red Cross Bloodmoblle v.•lll come lo Laguna Beach June 7, The first -12 pints or blood donated will be glvl!n to the Long Beach Veterans Ho.spltal to replace blood used by r-.tr. McCord preceding his death. 11igh School football star, attended Santa Ana College and San Diego Slate College before returning to make his permanent home in Laguna Beach. Residen~ wishing to donate to the bank may sign up at Reef Liquor. Herb Nolan Real Estate. Spigot Liquor, Warren Imports in the Art Center and the Coast Inn Re~taurant. In addition to the memorial blood bank, the Jaycees will establish the Dean J\fcCord Citi1.enship Trophy at Thurston Jn tern1edi:ite School. Each year, • stu- dent chosen by school ofUcials to receJve -----, . I Bare-bone ~Budget I ~·Study Set San Clemente councilmen will begin the~ page-by.page study of next fisca l year's proposed bare-bones budget on three nights next week. The annual cluster of study sessions ' generally Is a painstaking look at possible cuts and additions to the city financial document "'·hicb proposes $3 .6 million, lo be spent nexL fiscal yea r v.·ith no increase in tax rate{'-. But alhering to the bare-bones pro- posal made by the' city staff might be toughttt than usual this season. City employes. parUcularly public safe- ty workers, have made requests for large wage and benefit increases. Demands for capital Improvement,; also are expected lo stretch the city's finances to the limit. The council will begin tackling the pereMla l problems of Increasing costs not matching dwindling revenue Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday nights. The sessio ns will begin each evening at 1:10 p.m. in the council's conference room nex t to council chambers. They are public meetings but will not involve any offi cial council action. The panel has until the start of the fisc al year July 1 t.o adopt the city budget . Marine Plane Crashes, Burns Iii lrvin.e Area A Marine Corp9 F4 Phantom jet ap.. parenUy carrying secret equipment cra shed and burned in a field near Irvine Boulevard and CUiver Road northerly of El Toro Marine Cor~ Air Station about 11 a.m. today. The pilot and navigatcr ejected success- fully -one parachuting into a nearby orange grove -and "''ere returned un· il]jured to El Toro. Security guards at the scene prohibited photographs from the front section of the charred aircraft and could be seen removing some lyPe of equipment from !he wreckage. No immediate cause was suggested for the crash, In which the jet pancaked into an <>pen field, bounced 200 yards and ex- ploded in a ball of fire. Exact site of the crash was about two blocks off Irvine Boulevard a mile east of CUiver Road . G1·anger Escapes Car Crash in Apennines PIAN DEL VOGLIO, Italy (UPI) - Actor Stewart Granger escaped injury Thursday when the sJ)OrU!: car in which he was riding collided with another car on a superhighway in the heart of the Apennlne ft.fountains between Florence and Bologria. The driver of the car in which Granger, 63, was a passenger suf· fered minor injuries. The occupants of the other auto were taken to a hospita l !or treatment , police said. Claif,dre11's Art DAIL 'Y l"ILOT St1tf l"JMM The best art from Orange Coun ty school children is winnowed do\vn even further for exhibit during the six-week run of the Festival of Arts in Lagufl.a Beach this summer. From left to right are Marge Skelton of La~una Beach, Diana Anderson o! Huntington Beach, Mary Jane Haden, Judge, and Rose Clark of Newport Beach. Paramour Held in Death By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of lflt Dlll'Y" Piiot Sl•lt Tests-on the bod)' of a young mother found dead, her crying baby in lhe bed beside her at a Balboa apartment, Thurs- day led Newport Beach police to formally book her paramour on suspicion of murder. Strangulation vras listed by authorities as the tentative cause of death of Mrs. Susan Lane Constant, 21, 'Yl·hose mother had begged her five days earlier to move back to Anaheim. Questioned throughout the aftctnoon about the case, John J . "Skip'' Biegun, 21. who shared the residence al 423 E. Bay Ave .. "'as booked at 5 p.m. on the murder charge. A complaint was being soughl today from the Orange County District At· torney. Biegun, dispatcher for his father's security patrol service ID Diamond Bar, was already in custody Thursday when Mrs. Constan t was found dead. Her 16-month-illd son v.•as crying beside the body in the Sea Level Apartments when discovered by the suspect's older brother, who had just beea released from j'aH. Ne\\'porl Beach Police Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson said preliminary tests in· di cate the young mother had been strangled. "With force," Sgt. Thompson added. He did not explain 'Yl'hether it might have been manually or by some other means, such as a scarf or towel. Youths Arrested In Laguna Beach Laguna Beach juvenile authoriLies Wednesday arrested two teenaged boys as suspects in the f\fay 9 bombing of 1 Temple Hills area mail box. The youngsters, one 15 and the other 17, were booked on charges of malicious mischief and were later turned over to the custody of their parents. The May 9 incident occurred at 1355 Terrace \Vay when a street-side mail box wa s demolished, police said. The force of the explosion imbedded a piece of steel , fragmen t from the metal box in a garage door across the street from the address, officers noted. In vestigators speculated dynamite was used in the bom bing, but said the type or explosi ve has not definitely b e e n determined. UP.HOl:STER¥; SP.ECIAL FEATURING THE BEST SELECTION OF QUALITY UPHOLSTERY IN THE AREA Cutei!t Made Sol• •Y St..ml- I• .,... Ylll•lf -At • S.I• Price ef $549 SHERRILL FEATURES * Ou11ity Workmanship * t Wey Hand Tied Springs * E111cell1nt Tellorlng : * Large Fabric Selection * All Fabi-ics Scotchgu1rded * Large selection of Hand- som1 Styles to choose from. If You NHd A Sofa or Chair, Now Is Th• Time DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXE~ -HERITAGE NlW..OlT STOii OP'IN fllDAT 'TIL 9 NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wollcllff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Professional Interior Designers Av1l11ble -AID INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH 345 No rth Co•st Hwy. Phone: 494-6551 • Additional blood colll?Cted will be plac- ed in a bank for use especially by junior and senior high school students. Mr. McCord, 1 fonner Laguna beach Uie award wlll have his name engraved · ,._ on the perpetual trophy and will receive Pho11e Tell,,_ M•lt ef Or ..... C•11ty-140·12•J 1n lndlvldual plaque. ' i , I I I San Clemente Capistrano· VOL 6'4, NO. 121, 4 ~ECT IONS, 46 PAG ES ' EDITION ORANGE COUNT<, CALIFORNIA Today'• Flnjl N.Y. Stoeks FRIDAY, MAY 21, ·1971 TEN CENTS Clemente ~ Clubhouse to Await Court Verdict The city of San Clemente will wait for the U.S. Supreme Co\U't ~decide on what margin constitutes a bond election victo- ry before committing city funds for a new community cl.ubhouse. The delay, sought by scores ol membe rs or San Clemente's Arts and Crafts club, was granted quickly by coun- cilmen Wednesday. • The panel agreed that because of the lhort life of bids. already opened on the clubhouse project that mid.June would be the final time to wait for a Supreme W orlc Starts On Hospital Next Weeli After a (ew unforeseen dela ys, San Clemente's first hospital wiU begin con- 1truclion early next week -work ex· pected to last a year before the ~irst pa· lients arrive. Final checks have bcea made and a building-permit picked up at city hall, uid bwlding department officials. Preliminary grading and soil prepara· tlnn Wit completed earlier this month at lhe site on Camino de Joe Mares by the Chapman Management corporation. The t.ohtar Corporation will do the con- 1truction work on the hospital project. Initial plans cal (or a !IS.bed acute- ca re facility, a convalescent hospital and another board·and-care segment to a pro- lect master planned to eventually contain 01uch more. 1£ construction estimat es by Chapman ~roup head Dr. Ralph Graham hold . the drive by patie nts and physicians to South Laguna for hospital services will have en- ied next spring. Dr. Graham has promised the ''least )()Ssib\e" delays in construction of the ~ospital, a private health·care facility which has won endorsemenl from the Sa n :lemente Chamber o( Commerce and ~an Clemente's official physicians' socie- ly. The San Clemente General project was tKirn from a·bitter battle for oflicial sane· tlon last year as two separate organiza- tions vied for critical endorsement by i!e now disbanded C o u n t y Com· ?rehen sive Health Planning Association. Chapman emerged the winner in the eompetition with San Clemente Medical :enter. The latter project , beset by problems 1nd ye a r ~ of delays and changes in 'wnersh ip shifted in another direction 1fter losing its endorsement. FinaJ planning commission approval is txpected next week on proposals to use the site near city hall -once set aside for hospital use -as an apartment parcel, instead . The units, garden apartments keyed to an ocean viPW, will occupy the nearly 10 1cres near the civi c center. Danney Jones, 4, Battling Back ... At last reports little Danny Jones or San Clem ente had been showing some Improvement in his baltle aga.inst pneumonia and an ulcer -compllcatJons discovered after the perilous opcn·hcart 1urgery performed nearly two weeks ago. Family spokesmen keepinlo'( A vigil at the +year-0ld 's bedside at Los Angele! Children's Hr'lspita l said treatment i.!i an- parenUy working on the pneumonia which developed in Danny's lungs early this week. The boy, whn received personal !lood wishes (rom President Nixon belore undergoing the risky surgery. also is drin king cream regularly lo ci;ilni' a stomach ulcer. 4th Quad Criti cal DENVER fA Pl -Shawn Elizabeth Stoermer, the last of quadruplet.'l bom Wednesday, was In very critical condition Thursday, a hospita l spokesman said. The three other girls were listed in (a ir condition by officials at Olildren's Hospital. The mother. Mr!. Emil Stoermer, was In good condition a( Mercy lfospital where tb1 quadruplets were born. ' - Court decision. If the high court rules favorably on an appeal from West Virginia, then a simple majority would be all that ls needed for passage of a revenue bond measure. The decision, say many observers, would be retroactive to the original West Virginia case which began last year. That concept would mean that last April's local bond measure wblc:h yielded a S4 percent yes vote for $400,000 in clubhouse bonds would be successful without a two-thirds majority. Plannin& COJl\ll\issioner Ray McCaslin. a local contractor, has 1ubmitte~ the lowest bid for the project -an offer, he said, which would remain In effect until the end of June. Councilmen plan to resWTect the' issue of awarding a contract for the building until a meeting June 16, In another matter relating to the clubhouse and several other parb and recreation Items which failed at the polls in April. councilmen agreed to start the machinery to obtaUi federal grants under Big Visit Set La Paz to Greet Cabinet Member The Saddleback Valley i1 planning a rousing v.·elcome to Secretary ot the Interior Rogers C. 8 . Morton. The cabl.ciet official will land at La Pai Intermediate School iD Mission Viejo at 2:15 p.m. Monday. A special assembly has been planned and special school hours arranged so all students and their parents and friends can attend. Morion is expected to land on the upper athletic field. La Pat students will begin their day ·at 10 a.m. and leave the campus al 3:30 p.m. on Monday. They will be called to an assembly at 2 p.m. Morton is to address the students and then take time to meet them . He was invited by the seventh grade social science classes to visit the school during its recent POP week which wu dedicated to patriotism and ecology. Although he could not 1tt.el'.ld during that week he &aid he could make It Mon- day and would be 4eligbted to come. Guar(l,s, Police to Lose Jobs-as Gate Openers A wearisome tradition tor S a n Clemente's police off icers and lifeguards -a job which has persisted for years - will end soon when the city purchases an electric gale opening device. It took years o( selling by the city staff be!ore a victory of sort s against the great-gate dilemma came this week , Drug-crazed Man Pulls Out Eyes BALTIMORE (UPI) -Charles Inni! Jr., 25, I.he son of a prom i n en t Massachusetts politician. took an overdose of an animal tranquili:ier and puJled his eyeballs from their socke ts Thursday in the city hall, police said. Innis underwent three hours or surgery Thursday night to repa ir muscle tissue and avoid removal of the eyes. An oflicial at Maryland State Hospital issued a statement which said Innis "had no light perception in either eye prior to surgery and the possibility he will ever have light perception ls extremely poor."' The officia l re fused to say what the chances were for restoring sight. He said there was no way to dete rmine if Innis would be blind until hi s bandages were removed at an undetermined date. Innis' father iii general counsel to lhe Massachusetts' .House of Represe n· ta lives. Innis, who complained to a neighbor of poor eyesight Saturday, was arrested Wednesday while wandering nude near the apartment of a girlfriend, Mandy Shta . Police said he was under the influence of an animal tranquilizer often passed off by drug dealers as THC, the synthetic form of marijuana. The tranquilizer makes those who take it impervious to pain and very depressed. Councilmen authorized the spending of $2,000 to buy a special gate device with 20 small transmitting boxes to control the private access across the Santa Fe tracks near lifeguard headquarters. For years, the conventional gate had to be secured with a padlock. Veteran of· fi cers and liteguards have complained for years about b e I n g awakened during sleeping hours lo wi:J ock the gate. City Manager Ken Carr proposed a similar electric gate last spring, but cost estimates from one firm then &bowed an expense of more than "4.000. Council men weren't buying. Since then the price has dropped because of the choice of another model, and officials of the Santa Fe railroad in· creased their complainU that often the gate was left Wllocked and open. Carr told councilmen Wednesday that the probltm had become so severe, that railway officials were threatening to lift their grant of an easement across the tracks at the end of Avenida Del Mar. Under the new system each police and lifeguard vehicle would carry a remott" control hand transmitter which will automatically open and close the gate. Tradesmen serving beachfront con- cessions would enter after catching the atlenUon of personnel at li(eguard head· quarters nearby. "It sounds like a great relief," said Lifeguard Chief Dick Hazard Thursday. He has been one of the major keepers of the keys during the night hours. Boulder Week Slated Native boulders which have been stockplled during construction of Dana Point Harbor will be reloca~ landscape areas, the Board o f Supervisors have decided. Fowler Equip- ment Incorporated of Orange was as.sign· ed the task. San Cle11iente Project 1 new prcgram to finance the failing pro- jects. . Labeled President Nixon's Legacy of Parks program, qie grant project might prcvide funds for a large park in Shorecliffs for $100,000, a proposed youth recreation complex for about $350,000 ind the clubhouse as well. But the b1~1 1bound, said Clty Manager Ken Carr. T h e grants. administered by the Department of Housiz>t, and Urban Development, are keyed·to the amount o( minority citizens the projecta would serve. Census figures show San Clemente to be lacking in substpntiitl numben of persons in minority grou1>3. Carr told councilmen that despite .reports of available grants, "often there aren't funds to pay for them." Councilmah Thomas O'Keefe asked about conditions Imposed on the grants. Carr said the hitches were of the •·average variety." . ". , • most of the federal junk," be ·oar ,. DAILY r l\.OT •t•ll , ..... They're Hot The anilual LitUe League Pancake Breakfast of San Juan Capistrano will be held Sunday from 8 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in the Cafetorium of San Juan School. Two JitUe leaguers. look ready as manager Pat Grant gives preview to Pat Allen (center) and Hugh Grant. Trustees Fi11d No Buyers For Aging El Toro School Old &ehoo\5 -despite many years of service -Ir!: about the deadest com· modity on the real estate market. And 'El Toro School -45 years old, fading and dilapidated -still has no bid· de~s despite repeated attempts by the San ,Joaquin Elementary School District to sell it . "No bids have been received ," said Rex Nerison, Assistant Superintendent for AdministraUve Services Wednesday at the district board meeting. He has aaid it be.fore -a few months ago. At that time the price tag wa1 $60.000 or $10,000 more than it is now. The property Includes a ramshackle structure and nearly three acres of land on Olive Street In the old section of El Toro. School district officials believe the structuret built In 1913, will 0have to be tom down . The school property was sold to the First Baptist Church of El Toro three years ago. The price was $58,000. But the school district found it dldf\'t have clear title to the property and the ch urch reneged . According to Superin- tendent Ralph Gates titles went back to the 1890s. The school board gave no indication as to what It will do with the school now. The district can either lower the price or hang on to It In hopes of increasing 11.5 value. Help Arriving for Streets Cle mente Sets Guard Tryouis San Clemente'! life guard department will announce tryout dates later this week ror the 1971 Junior llifeguard program which will run throughout the fW11J11U Filly of San Clemente'• worst streetl wlll receive a )'ear's extension to their withering lives soon under a new project authorized this week by elly councilmen. Appl ying for thl' first ti~ state gas tax ret>ates under t new, liberalized state policy, councilmen awarded a $20,000 con- tract to lhe Mission Slurry Seal Company to apj\ly an oil and sand coallna: to lht crumbllng roadwByl. The project would involve J,200 tons of materia l on l million square feet o1 roadway surface. Clty Engineer PhD Peter told lho eoun- cll Wednesday that the procen wouJd possibly utend the life or a roadway for at least a year -po!slbly more on some better roads. The procesa, 00.ver. a last-diteh mea5Ul'e to obtain more ttrvlct from roads In "very bad aba.pe.'' he uld. Rectnl..<baoges 111 .(;ii apptOVK ap-pllca~ or gao tu nfatee allow for olurry 1eallng on nel,i.~ -•Y•· Several weeks ago councllmen •&reed lo amend· th< city ·street ll'lilY lo ~U... the use of au tu revenues on· main· ' tenance projects, l111teld of formal con· struction. Maintenance such IS slurry sealiilg amoW'lts to UtUe more than r "coat of pa int on a sttttt that ls shot," Pete:r said. "But lhat's tht least we can do for them." ht added. Tho . prK:e Jor the job -which will befiln within 1 ftw.d111 .,-11llboul17,000 leu lhan ·Peter's esUmates. months. . A'fei Youngsters -both·bO)'l-and gttls -will be 1nvlted lo part.ic:ipafe. fn the ocean sa(ely program which usually In- volves about 100 member1. Tryouts. IUcguard spokesmen aald. will be scheduled, probably two weeks after school endJ, at the munieit>'ll pool. Youngsters between 10 and 14 yeal'I old who quali(y will parUcfpate tbrH diy1 • week through the summtr ln ocea.n awimmiilg a!'d oth~r r~o-tation programs -an keyed kl water 1alety. quipped. While chances for the federal fUnds seem slim. proposak to find alternate funding for the clubhouse: reVtilve around the availability of city reserve fUnds. I( the Supreme Court deci!lon rneals. that a two-third! majority still is re- quired in bond iaues, the Councilmen would have to slick by some suggested cuts in the clubhouse design and t.tp city reserves for the tt:placement COit.a for building the meeting piece keyed to - by adult groupe:. Sharpest Advance Recorded WASHINGTON (UPI) -'Ibo OOll of living rose to Americans 0.3 percent ln April, equaling the 1harpest one-montll advance this year, the Labor Department reported today. Higher prices (or foocl and clothing were lar.ely blimed. While the rise in the con.sUmer prlee {fto dex was the biggest 1ince a slmllar in- crease in January, it wu 'well below the pact: of 1970 whe.n the naUon wu ha the grips ol th< -lallalloa -tht Korean 'War. Food prices tncreased by O.t percent last month. If the advance conUnued at that ~ate for a lull year, the armual food ln<nuo would be 1lrnoel U penien~ inllnlnf that a lyplcaf food llem coot1I>( I I Jut month would cost 11.u by nest •piing. ,The cost of clothing incre.ased 0.4 pet• ce,nt lait month, led by a jump or o.a JMI'· cent In men's and boy's apparel. Women'• and' girl's clothing Increased 0.1 percent. '.J'be government's gauge of consumer pricts stood In April at 120.2 percent of the 1967 average, up from 119.8 percent tn· March. That meant it cost $12.02 to buy the same goods and services that $10 brought In 1987. The April index was 4.3 percent above April, 1970, tt:presenting the smallest over-the-year change sinct the AUIUlt:. 1987. to August, 1968. Last.year, monthly inC?URs averaged close to 0.5 percenL The. increases In food and clothin& prices were partially offset by declines in home mortgage Interest rates and the price cf gasoline. N,ew car prices declined -normal for this time of the year -but used c.ar prices increased. The average purchasing power ol workers tncreaaed slightly as a result of a 2 cent increase ln average hourly earn- ings. Gross weekly earnings of product.Ion and nonsuperviM>ry workers avtraged •124.75, up 13 cents from March, although the average work week was unchanged. After adjustmentl for price lDcruses, purchasing power increased by 0.3 per· cent. Mariner Readied WASHINGTON (AP) -The N1llonal Aeronautics and Space Administration said Thursday it hopes to launch the next Mariner rocket lo Man before June &. The agency said a firm date must await completion of work, tests and reviews of the May 8 Marine r failure. Oraage "'eather Drizzly momi11gs and partly elearing afternoons are !he pros- pect for the weekend alon1 the Or- ange Coast. Temperaturea are. due to dip into t.hl upper 60!. INSIDE TODA.\' Seltcttd works of ~oung art. lits, kindergarten through high: 1ch·ool , art btina t.T:hiblted throuoh Ma11 iii ~outh., Cocut Pla.ta. The 1ho10 i1 featured in toda11'1 Weekender. ! DAil V PllOT SC ~ . 3, Dist1·ict Boundru·ies Questio 11ed By PA~,ELA JtAl..LAN ot N 0.11~ Plltl SllH Plans for dividing the Tusti n Union lligh School Dislrict into three separate unified school distric ts met' \\'ith approval during the tint public unification meeting Thursday. But the boundaries of the division which would create three unified school dislricts in the Tuslin , Irvine and Sad· dleback \1alley areas were questioned by the 60 people present in Irvine School auditorium. Residents or lhe Irvine area f&\'Ored keeping the boundaries of the proposed city of Irvine as their xhool district boundaries but Dr. Ailke Hesse, special consultant to the School D I at r i c t reorganiz.atioo Study Committee el• plained that this wou ld not be possible. By law asse.sstd valuation per student in each new dislricl can vary over 15 per· cent from the current Tustin district figure , $13,236. That means it can be no higher than $15,221 and no lower than $11,251. If the boundaries of the proposed city of Irvine were used fo r one di strict its assessed valuation per student would be too high and the Tustin figure would be too low. it was reported. The pla n that seemed to meet with the greatest approva.I wall one labeled Plan Four which ill close to the figures in the state requirement. Under this plan most of the Irv ine Ranch would be included in one school district. most of the Tustin Elementary District and part of the agricultural preserve of the eastern Irvine Ranch would make up a .second district and the Saddleback Valley would be the third. The difference in assessed valuation in these districts would vary just 1lighUy more than the 15 percent, community identity could be retained and school pr~ perty and fa cilities could be evenly divid· ed. The County Committee on School District Reorganization will hold three meetings between l\1ay 27 and Oct. 7. This committee has the off i c i a I responsibility for selecting the plan whi ch will appear on the ballot in JWle of 1972. The committee can select a plan which divides the current high school di.strict in· to thrtt 11eparate unified districU! or which uniCies the Tustin Elementary, Trabuco and San Joaquin Elementary di.rtricts along the boundaries of the Tustin hlih school district. If the final plan ls voted down in Ju~ of 1972 the school d!Jtrlcts will remain as they art now for another six years. Shop Center Set In Leisure World Valencia Shopping Center, a new 11even- aere community shopping complex In Leisure World will be under ct>nstru ction wlthln two months. the Rossmoor Corporation has announced. Located at El Toro Road and Paseo de Valencia, the center will contain a total or 64 ,675 square reet or store space. About half the space wll l be occupied by a Ralphs Market and Drug Center, the balance by specially stores and 1ervicf:s. Security Pacific National Banlt will oc- cupy a I0,000 square-foot. two-leve l building and there will be parking for 356 cars. Design of the buildings will be con- temporary Spanish, with tile roofs, ex· posed wood beams and atucco walls. The center will open in February, 197 SAIGON IAP) -The U.S. aircraft car- rier MldY.'ay hall returned to the Indochina y,•ar after more than five years off the line for extensive modernization, the Navy said today. OI ANGI COAST DAILY PILOT QRA"IG':.: (0 .. ST PUSLISHING ;:::OMPANY 1t1liert N. 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WOULD-BE JUMPER DA,,,IEL CLIFFORD SAVED 'fln1ncl1I Probl1m1' BlafT!ed for Flirtation With 0.1th Man Scales Golden Gate, Talked Down SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -An agile father, despondent over "flnanncl~l pro- blems," scampered up a Golden Gate Bridge cable Thursday and dangled from a perch 74& reet above the b.ay for more than an hour. Daniel Clifford, !l. performed acrobatics on safety cables, hW'led a safety belt into San Francisco Bay and threatentd to jump before t h r e e steelworkers and a highway patrolman crawled out on the main support cable and talked him down. Bridge officia ls said he was lhe third potential suicide talked out of leaping off the orange span during the day. More than 400 persons have jumped to their deatha from the bridge in the past 34 years. The bearded, Jon1·halred Clifford, who manages an ,apartment complex, told newsmen he * been having "financial problems." "Get my wife and child," he said as he emerged from an ele\'ator inside the 52&- foot south tov.·er wi th tears in his eyes. Clifford v.<es taken ;o Ml. Zlon medical center for psychologlcal observation. Cli flord . v.·ho was wearing jeans, sneakers a :ellov.• windbreaker bi- yc o the middle of the bridge in lhe early artemoon , parked hi.s bike and clambered up one of the four-fool dia mt'· ter suspension cables. He used handrails fla nking the cable lo reach the top of the to,Yer. A traffic jam developed below as Clifford S\.\.'ung around lhe safety cables and used them like parallel bars. \Vhen the rescue te11m of steelworker! Approached him. Cl ifford clhnbed over the big cable and perched in a .small nest of converging cables beneath it for an hour. "l--le was really upsel \\-'hen \\'e first got to him," said Patrolman David Peelo. "But after a "'hlle he cooled off and said he was concerned about his v.'ife and two small children. "He said he was going to jump. but we convinced him that hls dcalh \vouldn't help his family. \Ye promised we'd hel p him contact his wife." The rescuers offered him a safety bell, UPI T•lt•Mlt WORKERS TO RESCUE Busy Day on Gate but Clifford grabbed It snd tossed It in to the water 750 feet below. The second time a belt \\'as offered - about an hour later -Clifford took it and v.·as led to safety. \Vhen he reached the ground . he told nev.'smen he \Yanted to see his family and said he hadn1t seen his wife, Anne. slrlce 'fuesUay. Br idge security officer Ernest Arata said it was the first tim e a potentl.11 bridge leaper climbed to lhe summit of the structure. Earlier in the day. a $&-year-old woman and a 43-year-old man were talked off the bridge by guards Y.'ho de scribed them as potential suicides. Since its construction In 1936, 418 persons are known to have jumped from the bridge into the bay. Only l\vo survived. Jaycees Launching Blood Bani{ £01· Lag1111a Students The Laguna Beach Jaycees have an- nounced the establishment of a blood bank especially for students as a memorial to Dean McCord, a lifelong community resident v.·ho died April 15 of leuk,mia at the age of 37. To launch the blbod bank. Jaycee pro- ject cihairman Randy Schaeffer sa id the Red Cross Bloodmoblle will con1e lo L.'.lguna Beach June 7. TM: first 42 pints of blood donated \v\11 be glv~n to th e Long Beach Veterans llo.$pi\al to replace blood used by Mr. McCord prccedin,:: his de..1lh. A<ldit1on1l blood collected will be pl1c- ed In 1 bank for use espcclally by junior and senior high school students. lilr. l\1C'Cord. a former Laguna Deacll liigh School football star. attended Santa Ana College and San Diego State College before returning to make his permanent home in Laguna Beach. Residents wishing to donate to the bank 1nay sign up at Reef Liquor, Herb Nolan Real Estate, Spigot Liquor, Warrtn l 1nporls in the Art Center and the Co&.1l Inn Restaurant. In addition lo Lhe n1emorial blood bank, lhe Jaycees will 'establish the 0e¥ l\lc:Cord Citizenship Trophy at Thurston Intermediate School. Each year, a SIU· dent chosen by school ofricials to rtctiv• lhe award will have hia name engraved on the perpetual trophy and will receive an Individual plaque. Bare-bone ··~·'Budget . Study Set ~ San Clemente councilmen will begin their page-by-page study of next fiscal ~ year's proposed bare-bones budget on l. three nights next v.·eek. .'f... 1'le annual cluster of study sessions r ge nerally is a painstaking look at possible cut.s and additions to the city financial document v.·hich proposes $3.6 million , to be spent next fiscal year v.'ith no increase in tax rates. · But albering tq lhe bare-bones pro-; posal made by the city sWf might be toughler than usual this season. City employes. particularly public safe- ty workers. have made requests for large \\'age and benefit increases. Demands for capital Improvements also are expected lo stretch the city's finances to the limit. The council wlll begin tackling the perennial problems of increasing costs not matchlng dwindling revenue Mond1y1 Tuesday and Wednesday nights. The sessions will begin each evening at 7:10 p.m. in th e council's conference roo m next lo council chambers. They are public mee tings but will not involve any official coancil action. The panel haa unUI the start of the fiscal year July I to adopt the city budget. Marine Plane Crashes, Burns J 11, Irvine Area A fl.farine Corps F4 Phantom jet ap. parently carrying 1 e c re t equ.ipment . crashed and burned ht-a field near Irvine Boulevard and Culver Road northerly of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station about JI a.m. today. The pilot and na vigator ejected succes.s· fully -one parachuting into a nearby orange grove -and were returned un- injured to El Toro. Security guards at the scene prohibited photographs from the front section of the charred aircraft and could be seen rel'J'IO\'ing some type of equipment fron1 the wreckage. No immectiate cause was suggested for the crash, in which the jet pancaked into iin open field. bounei!d 200 yards and ex- ploded in a ball of fire. Exact site or the crash was about ll'l'O blocks of( Irvine Boulevard a mile east (If Culver Road. Granger Escapes Car Crash in Apennines PIAN DEL VOC LIO, Italy (UPI ) - Actor· Stewa rt Granger escaped injury Thursday when the sports car in which he was riding collided with anothe r car on a superhighway in the heart of the Apc.nnine Mountains between Florence and Bologna . The drive r of the car in ""l1lch Granger. 63. was a pasM!nger suf- feTtd minor injuries. The occupants of the other auto were taken to a hospital fo r treatment. pollce said. ,, Child1•e11's Art DAILY PIL.DT 1111! PMlt The best art from Orange County school children is 'vinnowed down even further for exhibit during the six·week run of the Festival of Arts in Laguna Beach this sun1mer. From left to right are 1'1arge Skelton of Laguna Beach, Diana Anderson of Huntington Beach, l\1ary ~ne Haden, Judge, and Rose Clark -ef Newport Beach. Paramour Held in Death By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of lllt D•U1 Piiar J !I U 'Test!! on the body of a young mother found dead. her crying baby in the bed heside her at a Balboa apartment. Thurs- day led Ne\\•porl Beach police to formally book her paramour on suspicion of murder. Strangulat ion y,•as listed by authorities as the tentative cause of death of ti.1rs. Susan Lane Constant. 21. whose mother had begged her five days earlier to mo\'e back to Anahein1. Questioned throughout the afternoon about the case. John J. "Skip" Biegun , 21, \\'ho shared the residence al 423 E. Bay Ave .. \\'a.s booked at 5 p.m. on the murder charge. A complaint y,·as being sought today from the Orange Coun!y District At· lorncy. Biegun. dispatcher for his father's secur ity patrol service in Diainond Bar, was already in custody Thursday when Mrs. Con!llant was found dead. Her lfi-month-0ld son was crying beside the body in the Sea Level Apa rtments y,•hen discovered by the suspect's older 9rother. who had just been released from jail. Newport Beach Police Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson said preliminary test s in- dicale the young mother had been strangled. .. "\Vith force," Sgt. Thompson added. He did not explain ·whether it might ha ve been manual!y or by some other means, such as a sc arf or towel. Youths. Arrested In Laguna Beach Laguna Beach juvenile authorities \Vednesday arrested ty,·o teenaged boys as su spects in the ?\.1ay 9 bombing of a Temple HiUs area mail box. The youngsters, one 15 and the other li, were booked on charges of malicious mi schief and were later turned over to the custody of their parents. The May 9 incident occurred at 1355 Terrace \Vay when a street-side mail box \~·as demolished. police said. The force 0£ the explosion imbedded a piece of st.eel fragment from the metal box in a garage door across the street from the addre1S, officers noted. lnvestigators speculated dynamite was used in the bombing, but sa id the type of explosive has not definitely been determined. UPHOi;STERYt SPECIAL F£ATURING THE BEST SELECTION OF Cj)UALITY UPHOLSTERY IN THE AREA c-... MMe Sof• 11., Sl>ttrlR- I• Gt'ffll Yef.,., -At • S.t• Price fff $549 • SHERRILL FEATURES * Ouality Workmanship * I Way Hind Titd Springs * Excellent T1iloring * L1rge F1bric Sel•ctlon * All Fabrics Scotch9u1 rdtd * Large selection of Hand~ 1ome Styl•s to choose from. If You Need A Sofa or Chair, Now Is Tht Time DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXE~ -HERITAGE NlW'°lT STOii! oraN fltlDAT i1L. NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wtllcllff Dr,. 642·2050 OP E,,, fRIDAY 'TIL 9 Prof1s1lon•I fnttrior D•1i9ntr1 Avtl11bl• -AID INTERIORS Pht,.. Tell p,.. M11t 1f o,., .. C1111t'f-l~C·l J~J " LAGU"'A BEACH 345 No rth Co11t Hwy. Phone: 494-6551 t DAIL V PILOT Let TJae1•e Be Liglit The hexagonal pins b ein g inspected here '\ 111 be used to mold plastic reflex reflector lenses for the 1ear and sides of GM cars The th1ee facets of eac h pin have been ground to a flatness or 1/12 millionth of an inch and then polished \Vlth diamond dust lo a mirror f1n 1sh General Motors Guide Lamp D1v1s ion here uses 250 000 or the pins each year to pro duce more than 30 m1U1on reflector lenses Need a LalvYer~ .. Here A re Some S uggestions By SYLVIA PORTER I low long has 1\ been s1n~c you have had to use -and pay for -the ser\ ices of a lawyer If 1t hasn t been long you "-'on t be surprised to learn .that a s1nglt~ hour of a Ja"yer s lime today may cost from $20 to $50 and that many la1vyers charge $100.up for one hour of work Nor \\ 111 you be surprised to 1earn that a sticky divorce may l:OSI $3 000 to $5 000 or more n legal fees for EACH spouse that legal fees when )Ou buy or sell a house may amount to I percent or th.e pt ice or the house I hat representation 10 court may cost $250 lo $300 a day that the typica l conlingencv fee t 1n "hi ch the lawyer collects onlv 1r he wins the case for h s client) may run 20 to 40 per cent of the amount av.arded -by the court offered by the law 111 m as a \\hole -er 1f services you n11ght need are not provided uhether the firm has access to top outside specialists For 1n stance among legal services a firm might offer are drawing a will planning and serving as e:ri:ecutor of your estate representing you 1n court tf you re involved 1n a suit or an arrest prepa ring a separation agreement or divorce steer 1ng you to a competent in surance agent lax advisor reallDr dra"1ng up and rev1ew1ng contracts uf all kinds dealing with zoning matters resolving J e g a I disputes with neighbor s landlord cred1to1s etc 15) BE IJ\11\.1EOIATF.L l suspicious or any lawyer who tries to Jure you with the pro- mise of an unu sually fa! cou1 I settlement 1n s a v a negligence case or d vorce A n v n A ow H A ~di A1pen s~ A CC Bu A G1s L Auto Sc Bo <I A Bal PnC ll&no H• Bk..-., RI B1 no R •a•w I F Baurri Bav 1 Mk Bttc~"' 6"' "' " Btn $ 11 Be ~ Ha Bel• LaD 6 DD M OVER THE COUNTER MUTUAL FUNDS Symbol• Yet never has your need for legal services been as great as no1v -whether you are an in d v1dual wanting to draw up a contract or a "111 a couple wanting to adopt a baby or get a divorce (6) CONCENTRATE instead on whether a p1ospcct1ve lawyer s key concern is in preventing costly legal con frontal ons and in making all reasonable efforts lo keep you OUT of court L Let s say vou have ne1 er before had any reas.n to con suit a lawyer and you have no idea how to hnd one Mil lions of ~OU flt this desc r1pl1on so here goes wit h basic rules lo gu ide vou ~I I SHOP for a fam1 ly la1,yer BEFORE you need his services 121 FIND OUT If there IS a local La"yer Refeiral Scrv ce which "111 advise you for a fee or only $5 to $10 whether your problem actually re q u 1 re s legal assistance and 1f so which local lawyer ca n handle n The local bar association or the telephone yellow pages can direct you lo such a service now available 1n over 260 cities l 31 CHECK vour prospective lav;yers repual!on for con1 pelence good judg1nent and rehab hty with f 1ends other chents bank officer l:i vour labor union or fratcrnril club real estate agents Also ctl('ck !he /\1arttnda!e Hubbell D1rec tory v.h1ch should be 1n )Our local library and "h1ch hsl.S and rates US la w firms (4) FINO out which legal 1erv1ces and specialties are (7) l\fOST 11\IPORTANT discuss with care the Fees your famil y la\vyer may charge for various services Generally these hvc factors v.111 n fluence the charge the dif f cul1 y or \Our Job the lime IO\es!cd Jn )Our c IS(' the good the services hHVe done. you office an d )!her costs ;issoc1ated s!r1c1lv \1 th your case your ab1t ty 10 pa\ Despite these vr1n<1bles at least ask 1n ach rincr what basic hourly rate the I 1wver charges and also the baste rate for each da\ spent 1n court on your behalf At least get some estimates on costs of tackling your specific legal problems 18) AND BE SURE you and your spouse -1 ke and trust lhc lav.ver ~ou finally choose to protect you :ind your r 1 n 1~ You "lll need a la\l)Cr over th.0 years -so go brick to that { rst ru!c and choose him or her ~Fore the need and then use the other rules to help you 1.:hoose h n1 or h.er 11~lv A good lawyer v.111 more th 1n make hls fees in terms of lhe money he saves )OU and the CQstly ex.haust1ng legal snarls he 1s able to prevent your repair handled with care seventy-ones et ~1!~L~ 2tlOO HAR80A BLVD I COST~ MESA /11 •) 54<MIOO WallStreet Chatter Complete-New York Stock List ' \ DANA POINT GETS 9Hth BANK OF AMERICA BRANCH Temporary Structure OJMns Today On C011t Highway as County's 10th Dana Point Gets New Bof America Sav~ngs Firms Resist Troubles in Economy LOS ANGELES (8W) -The CalUornt.a Savings and Loan Industry during the past two yean has again proven Its adaptability and resiliency, writes economist Raymond Jalknv in caiifornia Business, western financial weekly. reduced and wlll be further reduced by year-end. In some instances the favorable real estate market has generated profits from these assets, ·:Bank of America opened ita 9sttb California branch today r 11n•Dana Point on Pacific Coast Higbway near the Strttt of ~-"Violet Lantern. -New laws concerning con· ltnlction loans, distribution of asselS, extension of lending areas, new fields of acti vity, and broader lending powers to include areas such as mobile homes will all contribute to the profit picture in 1971. . · . .l1ie tiranch, 7oth 1n Orange ,,.: :oiunty, is housed in one of tbe ·, -\;ink's newly developed pre- :· ~ftgineered modular facilities, · ·.designed to resemble a con· :. 'temporary, permanent struc· ·' tare. It is intended to provide im· mediate banking service to the area pending completion of ar- rangements for a permanent branch building. ~ 1,160 square foot oUice, built . by assembling three 12:180-foot mobUe o ff\ c • tilodule units on a spedillly IandscaPftd site, will offer a _ WU-range of checking, savings and .lending . servjccs with sir: teller stations and ample on- .. Aile parking. Manager of the office \\'ill be ; Mrs. Pat Ziegler, a seven-year bank employe who has been ' 'lending officer at the El Toro branch since 1968. She lives in Huntington Beach at 19812 Margate Lane. Souvenir Lionel BarT)'more .. · rtctdnp 'Were given out to all • •visitors while a drawing wu " ~ held for a $50 savings account. Firms Show ·~ · ~ew Type· : . Of Products • ' •· ANAHEIM -h-1ore tha n 50 J major United States manufac- turers whose products come under a newly coined sclentilic designation -optoelectronics -have just finished display· tng their sophisticated wares ~ at the Convention Center. Thelr exhibition was th• fin;t such display on the West Coast of the la test devices and developments in the field since the union of the l w o technologies -elecU;onics and optics. It is being staged under the title "Electro-Optics '71 West." In the forefron t or the ex- hibition and featured by many ethibltors was the laser beam, the unique product of light refraction that is being used today in surgery, dentistry, in- dustry and increasingly in communications and photographic worl:. The economy experienced a near record rate. of inOation during the se two year! and tight monetacy policies moved interest rates to historically high levels. These adverse conditions for the savings and loan indwtry resulted in substantia l disintermediation - a tenn used to describe the situation 1n whlch lndivldual savers direcUy place their savings tn money market instruments such u bond! fn order to receive higher yields. But despite inflation, Jligh Interest rates, and· Joss of sav· ings totaling nearly f400 million in 1969, today the in- dustry's prospects have never been brighter. Overall. California saving! and Joan associations should experience a 25 percent in· crease in earnings during 1971, with the fJnal three quarters £bowing the largest gain. This is a significant improvement over 1970, a year ol. record high interest rates and a regulation change which in· cro....i !be C06l of funds lo the industry. -1t1ost important. the as.sociations have been con- tinuoosly upgrad ing their loan yields (due to higher mortgage rates) and this will bring about an increase ln income in 1971. By Ibo end of 1971, tl1e tot.al assets of the California sav- ings and loan Industry will reach $36 billion, a 10 percent increase over 1970. Total sav- ings will Increase by $4 billion. The increase in savings will be 16 percent, for a total of $29 billion by year-end. Real eslate loans in California sav- ings and loan portfolios will total $31 billion by year~nd 1971, for a 10 percent increase. Drill Firm Tells Good 1st Quarter · ·'nlere are several favorable . factors which will bring about this substantial increase in Smith International, lnc. profitability during 1971: (NYSE, PCSE) had net in- -Savings · deposits, which come of $908,000 or 2.8 cents reached a record in!Jow of per share on revenues or $18.6 $1.65 billion during the first mlllion for the first quarter quarter or 1971, will continue ended March 31. 1971, as com· lo grow. This inflow is due to pared with net income of the extremeley attractive $821,000 or 26 cents per share rates nO"N paid on deposits and on revenues of $18.3 million in ls also the result of the shif4 the like quarter a year earlier. ting of money away from The firm is located 4667 treasury obligations, which ~1acArthur Blvd., Newport are now mattuing and which Beach. . cannot be reinvested in small This Is the first quarter amounts. Much of the money since the last quarter of 1969 from the trealfllry obligations in ·which earnings exceeded will remain with the savings those of the like quArter a and loan 3.S.50Ciations. year earlier. Donald E • --:-The demand for h0lsing Graham. president said. will generate a substantial Improvement in sales and number of new starts in 1971 earnings y,·as widely spread and subsequently new loans. among the 23 divisions and Also, the report of lower subsidiaries of the company, mortgage Interest rates will Graham said, indicating a generate an increasing volume general turnaround w i t h of refinancing and increased potential for stronger gains as loan port!olios. the year progresses. -Certain economies of Costs at the Ca I we Id scale will inc re a a: e pro-Division, which accounted for fitability as inst i t u t Ions most of the 1970 loss, have become larger due to internal been reduced drastically and growth and mergers. !he division's loss in the first -A redUction of relatively quarter was only minimal, he expensive advances from the said. Many of the pictures sho t on the moon 's surface v•ere transmitted to earth with the aid of cameras that in- corporated laser equipment ... and many of the develop~nts made possible by the luna r photography are now available lo industry and on show in the exhibition. federal home loan banks will Smith International is a continue to take place during leading world wide m<1nufac- 1971. The~ repayments \Yill turer of drilling equipmenl reduce the ovitr·all cost of designed principally for use funds for the industry and are underground in lhe develo~ possible because of {he record ment of energy and olher saving.$ inflow. This i 1 natural resources such as oil, definitely a plus factor for gas, minerals and water. earnJngs in 1971. ;:::::;;:=======;:: Jobless Rate -,,,. reduction of non<n-come producing assets will also boost earnings in 1971. For April These assets, a delinHe pro- Final Stocks In Aft Homo Editions blem during the \965-1968 ~pe~ri~od~,~h~av~e~bee~n~g~ra~d~u~al~ly~~~~~~~~~~~ Rises Again Ii California's April unemploy· mcnt rate Y.'ent up thrre· tenths of one percent over .. ~larch. but total employment was up and there y,·ere fewer unemployed, according l o Gilbert L. Sheffield, director, Department of H u m 1 n Re90UTCtS Development. .. The number of unemployed In April wu 595,000, down ':. 'fl;OOO from the March le.vel," -Aid SheffJtld, "and the t.oLal r .. n.ooo to 7,992,000." -• · .. But theae lmrpovements in :-~ fbe employment situation ln :: ~pril were less than u~ual for this time of the yea r, ' Shtf· • OtJd added, "ao the ee.:asonabl· q... ;adjw:ted unemployment rate roM from 7.1 in March to ·~ .f:• In Aprll." MAY SER·VICE SPECIALS Rog. $2.80 SMOG SYSTEM SPECIAL Ted , 1le•11 '"' .,,...;c, crenk· c 11• emit1ie11 1y1t1111. $120 YOU SA VE $ l.60 Rog. $14.50 COOLING SYSTEM SERVICE SPECIAL Fl11th I t•pl1ce ceol1nt, pr••· tur• ftd, ift1ptct 111 ho111 I btlh. $1000 YOU SAVE S4.50 SANTA ANA LINCOLN MERCURY 1301 NO. TUSTIN AYE., SANTA ANA 547-0IO "WE Al'l'HCIATE YOUR IUSINlSS" Shel!leld. said the f;gure1 re.nected the general t lack Jn the economy 1.,.ui.r with •d· -,ptiooal Joya/ls In l h e aerospace Industry. , .. ________________ ~ • Fridiy, MolY 21, 1971 I z DAILY PILOT 21 Tra-telers In New Jr. Execs Smiling Facilities Job Picture Beginning to Brighten The Traveters insurance company has opened a new Orange County regional head- quarters in City Centre, new business and financial oom- plex in Orange. The new offices will occupy one entiri; floor and part of another (lf the ultra-modern, JS-story Bank of America Tower that stands as a lllgh- r ise landmark of The City Centre. Since tbe Travelers opened their offi~ in Orange ~unty in 1964, marked growth has been exhibited in all areas. The Life and Health insurance premium volume written and rencw.•ed by The Travelers in Orange Coun!y has grown from $1,322,000 in 1964 to $1.700,000 in 1970. The number or c laims serviced by The Travelers in Orange County and Long Beach has grown from 24,000 in 1964 to 37,500 in 1970. The local branches of many na· tional firms receive t h e I r engineering and claim service from The Travelers office in Orange County. The Travelers employed 103 people in 1964 in their Orange County and Long Beach oper. ations. Today they employ 153 people . 4 on Coast Given Honor By ·Douglas Four from the Orange Coast were among IO Orange County technicians for D o u g I a s Ailcraft who recently received a company award for high performance. The award was made for t.heir part in the development of a color television aircraft flight-simulation. system for the DC 10 test and develop. ment program. Coast technicians playing a role were Ralph Cram, 9830 Garfield St. and Frank B. Len- nert, 9382 Hyannis Port Drive, both of Huntington Beach: Herbert T. Turndahl, 1628 Primrose St., Costa Mesa. and Michael D. Allen. 23872 Calle Hogan. Mis.sk>n Viejo. By JOHN CUNNIFF AP l "l"th AMW•I NEW YORK (AP) Evidence mounts that the middle management recession is easing. Help wanted ads are beginning to grow in volume, and surveys show that ex· ecutive appointments are in- creasing again alter a year of cutba cks. This means that personal pressUTes are lifting also. Dur- ing 1970, for the first lime Jn their lives, many executives jn the $15,000 and up category felt frightened, threatened, in- secure. They were UI prepared for the recession. For years they had experienced the comfort of being v"ell fed, housed and clothed. Their job was their identity. They felt settled in their comfortable suburban life style. But when profits fell their compa nies could not reciprocate their loyalty. As the recession deepened, many of these men were cut loose. They were not, as they had believed, indispensable. They were expendable. Without jobs they were sud. denly faced with the question most people avoid? Who am I? All they knew for certain was that they must keep up appearances: read the sports pages on the commuter train GENERAL JET RA DAN RADIAL TIRES WHITIWALL ·~, ... , Hl -71111 hicl. T•bn 4~99 99 ll'•T. 9.J.ll ••· SAVE flom'23.llO lat32.80 ON 4 TIRES DEPENDING ON SIZE 2 ~:a6 2. ·40 2-*4fi TUIEl.ESS eLACKWAL.L TUll!U!ll ILACJCWAU. TUllLE.SS IU.CKWAL.L 2·~0 ~= 2·~5 :::..-:. 2..'50 =~ S•ff l .50•1S, l .'5oo-H &i-1.li-14. 7.75-!$ S...-.s 8.25-14. 1 1$-1$ ,,,, -............ ._ ... c- ...... C•o-..<100. CO••• .. (OMfO•o. c ..... ,.,,,._ ..... ._ ...... ;.w,; ... f• ,,,,.,,,._,,_ .. ,... ~··-............ ---FRONT END ~ ALl&NMENT ~ l~Tl'o'I c.AMM 111 ~ t~tl";~TI~( CA .. lt~I [HJ (TO(-O!Jll Crooked wheels rob your car of maximum performance, ride, steer· ing and t ire wear. We correct caster, camber. toe-In, toe-out to your car manufacturer's specifi ca-tion~. and safety check and adjust your steering. ••• -c~ • .., .. o ... , ••. , ..... . .............. , .. •:, .... , ... -....... ·--. ..... , .... ~ .. ,.., t •. 1 .. nu.n -u;u -,, .. _.., .. ..,, P.S. INDY MAG WHEELS Set of 4 $9900 l'Olt D-C H EV-Pl Y MOUTH-DATSUN-TOYOTA ln(I. DATSUN HOl I-HOLE MAGS AVAILABLE for ¥• ton Camper1 and Pick-ups· slightly higher. · whUe dying lo ,.ad 1he help wanted ad.!, keep ~ club membership, the pr iv a t e school!, the two cars, the maid. And then the wife bad to take a substitute teaching job or the kids had to ·come out of school or the annual dues at the cl ub went unpaid. Reality was a shock. The feeling of being unwanted, after thinking you were a big deal. 'Ibe new prealdent of one company can tell you about the ordeal. When he finally sought outside help prior to winning hi.! present pasitiOn It was noted that hi.s wrists were deeply scarred. The market now appears lo be changing. A study by Wyt. mar & Co., an ei:ecutive re- cruiter, shows eXecutive ap. pointments rose 6 percent in the first quarter or 1971 over !he first quarter of 1971 over the final three months of 1970. The gains were c:specially sharp In manufacturing, finwr cial a n d administrative categories, at 25, 21 and 19 percent re~tlvely. Tb e general management category showed no gain. Marketing and international were off 5 and 9 percent, and the technical area remained depressed at minus 25 percenL obviously reflecting lbe con- tinued slow pace of aerospace and electronics. Now lhll 1he worat may 1Mi over, the quesUona arise: Will tbey be the mne? Have they learned! Do they know how tO better protect themselves! • Another recruiter. Klerna'ii Kleman & Co., surveyed 400 executives whose names had appeared in lta files for ortJ! reason or another. It found , subtle but important change$, a more realistic, less romantJs: view of themselves and their jobs. Some were bitter. ''I will never try to get a job as suc)h again. 1 have seen the IighL 1 have gone into my own bu5- 1ness. [am not bitter, just dis- appointed in American Indus· try. and must fend for my- self," lYl'Ote one. But that was more the ex· e the exception Rather than becoming cynical, most seem- ed to have come through t~e ffcession wary, suspicious, concerned. Indications are that they ue less IJUly lo ch a n ~ e jogs, because of the w- security involved, but also ie·ss inclined to give their enti re loyalty to thelr p J: e I e zlt employers -a ~of crea· live caution. • "Once a small business could steal executives from larger companies." a Kiernan man said. "Now these fellO\.\'S aren't going lo take the risk despite stock options ." ·--- The tire made . for all imported and sports cars. YW"·POltSCH• HlllMAN·M~ TuitfltU· WhlltwJ!I TIRES • 12" •t t Jot 12.J plus I.I .I. 'llOKl~l S PORSCHE & VOLKSWAGEN 3511 Ft/. II.ff The proY•n rod iol for .. J wet end dry WllCl!lt.r.W Up to1 Nlic• th• lllhafi; ' twice t9* troctiOl'I, twic. the comfort. 0 T•k• Your Pick USED TIRES 5 .. .... pt~ ··~ l~1 ol non.U1' It ... llfl. \ COMPLETE . t~ BRAKE ~ RELINE '49:~.l~N Wt do all this.: • Rtlina all 4 wheels e Rebuild all brake cyl inders e Turn and True 4 brake drums e Repack front wheel bearings e Adjust br1ke1, restore fluid • Ro•d test your earl • only 011r Sp.cleli1tt. Preci1io11 l1l1flc• l•th ft<rllt Wh••h EXPERT WHEEL BALANCE JUST ..... $250 ... COMPLETE CAR CARE IANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE Don Swedlund Since 11159 Hours : 7:30 lo 6:00 Doily PHONE : 540-5710 646-5033 Frldar M.e:t 21. 1971 $C Friday's Oosing PricerComplete. New York Stock Exchange List • GAILY >!LOT Jlf-- Finance Briefs NEW YORJ< I uPI) -One of the last masculin e st rongholders In lhe New York business world, the Cbemlst.t Club, has capitulated and opened 11.S rolls to females. But the club stipulated th1t remin1ne apphcant.s must be over 21 and be "of good character" and be Interested In lhe science, practice or ap.. pllcatJon of chemistry WASHINGTON (UPI) Western Electric Co has o!r talned an $8 6 mi lllon Navy contract to provide SflCret research 1erv1ces on elec- tronics equipment NEW YORJ< <UPI) Mapavoi Co • the first major maker of color televiskin receivers to introduce its ne w summer hoe, ralaed prices an average of about 7 percent But the increase ls flnn only In the so-called fair trade 1tates The recommended Jn. creases from $20 for 14-mch 11nd l§•lnch receivers to f10 for}" a deluxe 21·lnch comole sellinr.!: al $699 "'! '• NEW YORK !UPI) -i~ shareboldc.r hes fi led'" a cla action suit ln New Yor ' Fedtri.l Court ac cu s I "i Ecological Scierict Corp Ml1mi of derraudlng buyers lls stock~ Rectntly, t h Serorlt1es and E:rchange ConN'. mission filed a suit and a co~ sent decrte accusln •t ecological science of v1olatlo~ or the seairilies and mlsrepresentallons I n pro. motlnr the sale of Jt.s stock ti 1"8 1n~ ,1969 The new suit was flleu by Se}'mou r Rogovln, who 1ald ht bouabt stock In the company at $22 a shire and wu bound to take 1 108!1 on II because ol wrongful actions by the managerntnt ht1ded by Harold 'Koei1a. , ·--.,. ... --. ... - ' ~4 DAILY PILOT -· ~llC ... i!!fl,'Experts Believe Aluminum Boats Next for Cup Classic B~rmuda Start Moved ~R • • ! ~ ,., ' A'lwnimim I2·meters are vi~~ ~ cbi~ly for the ... . i.JrS.4~'•·CUp-Campai,gn. i; . . N WU \b<'<Oricluilbo ol·• ~•: ·pallel 'of esperb at 1 rnf;et111g: .~ of the> melropolitaii sectkin of :. ~ tht' . .societ)i: · o!. Nava I 'krchilffts ·'aod · Marin·e Engineers at the U . S . MerdJ,ant ?i.1arine Academy in New .Nork last week. The panel consisted of Olin Stephens ll, Britton Chance Jr., Charles Morgan Jr. and PhUlp L. Rhode$. 'lbe subject w a s •' l 2-Meter Yacht Technology." 1i.1oderator v.·u Henry N. Tiedeman, i member of lhe executive com· mittec. StephfJls was the designer o{ SD State; USC Crews Seek Title St. Francis Club Plans Big, Race The St. Francis Yaclit Club race committee armounced jt is currently in the process or issuing 30 invllatk>ns to yacht owners from Canada to San Diego to participate in the Ci· ty of San Francisco Perpetual Trophy Series the v.•eek of Sept. 20. The series will be the third contest for the trophy which was won initially by Theodore Stephens sailing his Alpha in 1968. The trophy was last rac- ed for in 1969 and was won by Gene Trepte's Brushfi~ from San Diego Yacht Club. The series will be sailed ~fonday, Wednesday. Friday and Saturday during the week of Sept. 20. All starts will be al 1 p.m. with the e1ception of the Wednesday race which will a:tart at 6 p.m. Courses will be confined to central San Fran- cisco Bay, and for the most part all races will be com- pletely visible from the St. FYC clubhouse. It wilt be the first major regatta sailed on San Fran- cisco Bay under the new International Ocean Ru I e . Contestant,s will be limited to ratings between 35 aild 45 feet under the IOR. This u•ill pro- duce a fleet cf boats between 46 and 60 feet overall length. IJNITED STATES NAT IO NAL BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW OHN SATURDAYS f t9 1 P.M. MON.•THUll. lt·I P.M. PaltArJ 1f·6 P.M. C7141 141·1211 . LM--4 I•: S.. c.-,.._, C•N M ... ..... ,. \'le• .. ,...<M"'*ttl' H. M. STOLT~ • Columbia. America's cap win. ner in 1953; Cons!enatlon In 1964 and Intrepid. winner in 1967 and t!nd. Rhodes designed the 1962 winner, Weatherly ; Chance altered Intrepid for the 1970 campaign, and i1orga11 was owner, designer, builder and 'skipper o f Heritage, an unsuccessful COi). tender to defend the Cup in 1970. There was agree men I among the experts that the 12- meters in the 1973 series would be of aluminum hulls. Stephens said: Lloyds of London is developing new scantling rules ;.;;; aluminum 12-meters and We are awaiting their issuance befon: starting ' ' work on the ne.w yacht." Stephens predicted approval would come early in July. "Aluminum is much lighter than wood. We e1pect to save 5.0<Xt pounds ln the we.ight of th e hull, which will aUow·.m to increase the balla~L This v.ill increase , the hull speed,·• Stephens said. Rhodes said he was ron· fklent Lloyd's would come through with specifications for aluminum. ''\Vben they do.'' he added, 1'\vooden boats will have tn sail in a cla ss by the mselves. "Aluminum is easier t~ work with than v.·ood. If you v>ant ·a change in the con· figura tion or the hull, you simply ~ • pieee cut. d. ll and replace it," Rhodes added. To a question about cost, Rhodes responded: . "A couple of years ago aluminum hulls cost about 15 to 20 percent more than wood. fiow _tll~ prices. a~ becoming equal." Aluminwn will produce a stronger and lighter hull, resulting in greater baltast· displacement r a t i o and greater sail~arrying power, Rhodes e1plained. "This might cause us lo in· vestigate the possibility of a shorter waterline, which would permit greater sail area and the smaller, lighter bull would be able to carry it," Rhodes concluded. Doctor to P·resent Water Safety Talk Porsche. • ., • -··" ~- . " Audi .. Now, For Your Convenience, Chick Iverson Has Centralized All Three Cars At One Modern Facility Because Chick Iverson is one of the largest dealers for Volkswagen, Porsche, and Audi In Southern California, he has been able to bring all three lines to one central location -his new. modern headquarters on East Coast Highway at Bayside Drive. Here, the discriminating car buyer can shop at his leisure, matching his choices to his budget. Compare the economical Volkswagen with the sport-styled Porsche. Evaluate the sensation of European highways-the Audi. Test-drive any ot these fine cars, and find the one that feels "just right." to you. Courteous salesmen and expe- rienced finance experts will make your purchase a real pleasure. While there, take a tour of the most modern and complete service facilities in California. See the very latest in service and diagnostic equipment and know that any future service re- quirements will be handled by factory-trained experts, using th·e finest in electronic and mechanical devices. Once again, Chick Iverson has put you, the customer, first! The W•st Coe1t leadar in Sel•• for Europ1•n Oelivary Now open Sundays 9 am to 6 pm. ' < " PLUS e 1 lff 1 " rM11t:M r.tlff e l'rtftHltMI ~II ,_ • Dffvllll ...... 1•111 • Gwmotl 0111 ..... . • 1''*'<111 CO.If (lrt .... e NII .. Act;e....UlitM e •1tE• TtU,.,..Mtnb l"ff '"' VK.tlltot. (I~ 1111-11..,. O.lf •II •vtr Ille W11t (Hi.I & H1w•l.I ... ~·M.. -· ~ •• 141.90.li ISLAND PORSCHE AUDI . • ~OIN : ~»t~r 1•Cll.t1a1.1i•,.&I " 'fOI THI GlllATIST GOlF IAISAUI EVIi OfflllD OYll II P•rtlcl,.tlllt Ce•Mt .. Collfenil•, Or .. ••• Nn•H, H-.11 SOUTHLAND COUlSIS INCLUDI ....... T•tlltt -·'-' C:•llV'"'! 1oa11I• 1'11111 Hllltf • 1>•1111 Dfltrt S111 JWft C:rffi. V ..... Hilh Do1trt o\lr GMllN" ......... H•ll-1 Otll1rlt H1lllMI lfl 1111eM .... I'll& MtM ..~ .. 'it"'' Oct111i• OINll L1-.1 ..... llltlHwfl l'AIK •• M9t'- 01911M•• I• (lrlM \.I Melldll '""'"' Miii• SWltlf N'Cllc• c.n ... l'arti Ltw~• W•lllt ' ··-\ttlkY I I ' Top Meter Suspect Due At Hearing ; A man identified by the prosecution at the mastermind behind an alleged meter pilfering ring that may have yielded its members as much as $100,000 in motorists' dimes was scheduled for ar· raignment toct8y in Santa Ana municipal court. District attorney's investigators reveaJ.. ed Thursday that Guthrie Edw,ard Jones, 34 , has been returned from Baker, Ore .• to face charges that he was involved in the meter milking racket that wag.crack· ed last May 3 by Laguna Beach police. Charges filed against two alleged mem· hers of the Jones organizalion werit dismissea Thursday in Santa Ana municipal court when David Steven Perez, 19, and Michael John Dineen, 18, both of El Monte, agreed, officials claim. to testify against two ro-defendanu and Jones. Judge Eugene Langhauser ordtrtd Charles Leon Adams, 25, and Willa Dean Rotramel, 21, both of Sanla Ana, to return to his courtroom June 2 for. further action. It is expected that Jones vdll join them. Perez and Dineen allegedly were in the process of emptying parking meters on Cliff Drive last ~1ay 3 when,they were ar· rested by Art Colony officers. Statementl by the pair assertedly sent police lo San· ta Ana to puJI in Adams and Miss Rotramel on identical charges of con. • l'ipiracy to commit grand theft. Jones was already in an Oregon jail cell waiting acticm on 11arcotcs charges. Laguna Beach police successfully argued that he should be returned to Orange County to face trial for his role in the parking meter conspiracy. Investigators claim that Jones co n· ceived the parking meter robbery plan in his native Oklahoma and later enlisted the services of the four codefendants. They allege that meters were robbed In at least 25 California communities rang· ing fr-0m San Diego to San Jos~ Kiwanis Pancake Break£ ast Set The fourth annual pancake breakfast sponsored by the Mi~ion Viejo Kiwanis Club will lake place Saturday. Breakfast will be served from 7 to 11 a.m. in the Safeway shopping center. Advance tickets for the event are $1 for adults and 50 cents for chUdren. Tickets at the door will be 25 cents more. Proceeds will support the group's youth and community projects. .,, DAILY l"l\.OT Sl•ll "llete Graditag for Visitors San Clemente city workmen are busy grading the site of a new North Beach parking lot that will hold 100 cars. It is to be ready in July \vith a July 4lh target date. Work will cost an estimated $7,000. The land is part of property purchased by city for about $200,000. It was initially earmarked for a youth recreation complex but bond issue failed at the polls. National Parks Hcivem- For Users of Narcotics WASHINGTON (AP) _ .... Congress has been told the national parks, once 'havens for nature lovers, are becoming·hangouts for drug users. If the problem isn'l met head on, Park Service Director George B. Hartzog Jr. told a House Appropriations sub- <X>mmitlee, "more and more people are going to ·look at the parks as a perfect refuge for the use of narcotics ... " Ha'rtzog agreed , in testimony made public today, with the statement by Rep. Wendell Wyatt (R·Ore. ), that "young people and other potential drug users find it increasing ly difficult to use drugs in the cities, so therefore they go out into the wide open spaces, into the parks, feeling they can get away with it there." Hartzog said the national parks are being visited by a new type of tourist. "We are getting a n~ visitor," he said. "We are getting the urban visitor and he is in a foreign environment when he geta to a. national park." He listed the problem parks are Lassen Volcanic, Olympic, Lake Mead, Grand Teton, Natchez Trace Parkwsy, Blue Ridge Parkway, Badlands, Yellowstone, Yosemite. Grand Canyon, Cape Cod, Great Smokies, Fire ·Island, Ozark, Point Reyes and Mount Rainier. To police them. Hartzog said an officer from the National Capital Park Police in \Vashington is being assigned to each regiona l park office to evaluate law en· forcement programs and help coordinate range rs' efforts. In addition, an officer will be sent to each problem park and a 125 man strike force in the capital will be available on 12 hours' notice to go to any trouble spot. The program also will try to educate the new urban visitor to the value of parks, he said. " ••. you know they may go out there to 1in, but they may go away converted if they have some belt.er understanding of what they are there for ." Memorial Day Services Slated At Heisler Park Traditional i\lemorial Day services in Laguna Beach v:ill be held Monday, May 31, at the Me1norial Shaft in Heisler Park. under Uie joint sponsorship of American Legion Post 222 and Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 5868. The 11 a.m. ceremony y,~IJ be preceded by a half-hour program of music by tt• Laguna Beach High School Bilnd under the direction of Fredrick· Stoufer. VF\V Post Commander \Vi\liam Irvine \\'ill be master of ceremonies and the In· vocation will be given by the Rev. John C. Judkins of the United Methodist Church of Laguna f-l ills. The Memorial Day address will be gi\'en by James A. Gilbert. past stale commander of the Legion and the Marine Air Corps Station, El Toro, will provide a squad to fire the salute and sound taps. Organizations from throughout the community are invited by VFW Com· mander Irvine and Legion Commander Lesley G. Chatham to participate In the service by placing floral offerings at the base of the shaft. Fri~y. May Zl, 1971 s Humble Harve KHJ Disc Jock Held, No Bail LOS 1J'iGELES (UPI) -Popular radio disc jockef-vHarvey "Humble Harve" Miller, sought as a IU!lpect in the shooting death of his wUe May 7, turned himself. in al the district attorney'• office Thursday. Miller, 36, employed by radiq atation KHJ, was booked on suaplclon of first degree murder and was later ordered held without bond following his ar- ra!grunent. Police said Miller apparently dyed his brown hair red after the shooting and ad· ded they had information be hid in beach communities in the Los Angeles area un." til his surrender. He had been sought since his wife, Mary, 35, was found slain in the family home overlooking the Sunset Strip. Authorities said an unidtntlfied witness placed Miller at the home early that morning and heard his car being driven away after shots were flred . Detective Sgt. William Mercier said Miller and his wife had quarreled the night before the shooting and that Mrs. Miller had left the house to go to some bars with two friends, a man and a woman . She came home about fl a.m., shortly before the shooting, the detective said. He said the couple had quarreled in Lloe past when Miller sccused her of going out with other me~ Miller was acco~panied during hi!I sur· 11,.I Tt...._.. MURDER SUSPECT 'Humble Harve' Shorn render by attorney Grant S. Cooper, who defended condemned u sassin Sirhan Sirhan. Fiesta Revelry One Clemente Banker to Be 'King' New revelry and a touch of madnm have been· iiljecfed into the 'aMua1 1dckofr dinner to San Clemente's annual Fiesta La Christlanita in early ~uly. It's the crowning of "King Victor the Distributor" who will be one of the city'1 friendly, neighborhood bankers. The idea, spawned to boost the advance sale of dinner tickets to the affair, came from kickoff publicity chaitmsn Don Conrad. The local realtor has offered a large Mexican sombrero with garish decoration to the top tiecutive of one of five banks which will sell the lickels in comlna: weeks. The manager of the bank selling the most will win the dubious honor of "Kling." And the coronation will come July 10 at the annual celebration marking the start of the fiesta ea.son at the San Clemente Elli's Lodae. - The banks participating In the new competition will be Bank of America, Crocker Citizens, Security Pacific Na• tlonal Bank. Southern California NaUonaJ Bank and United California Bank. Conrad said t~ resul ts of the unusual competition are difficult to predicl Bankers, he said. haven't eiacUy glow· ed al the Idea of bt.l.ng crowned klng. These alternatives exist, he explained: -Bank employes might buy blocka of tickets lo stick the "King" label on the boS!I of a rival bank, even their own. -Bank customers might buy scorts of tiicket.s just for the chance to see their favori te banker win 10mething·be doem'a want. -Then again, puhaps 1,000 San Cl.ementeans mlJbt just want to celebrate the fiesta. The ·Homes11are .1 priced from 33,950 ' The Way of Life is Free! Living is what you want to make of it in a big, beautiful new home at Oceanview Park ••• now offering lmmed ia'tlteccupancy in the Final Unit ••• excellent Conventional Financing wit h low, low down payment ••• and you own the land! Quality 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath Traditional Design 2 Story Homes BUCCOLA HOMES Surrounding the Beautiful New 21h Acre Marina View Park • ----"' Sales Office and Furnished Models at 19th Street & Whittier Avenue Phone (714) 546·0337 ., -.. Frorn L •• ADAMS AVE. ci ~ .. "' 0 B~rola -~~OMIS . • L .. .f DAILY PILOT ' \ •• I ~ps How High Up ~ong Coast? By THOMAS MURP!UNE ot ,,_ 0.11'1' P'lllt! S1tH JUGH IN THE SKY DEPT. -Things are healing up along the Orange r.oast again these days on whether or not our seashore should be dotted with silhouettes of ta.II buildings. In J...aguna Beach, voters will be. go in" to the polls Aug. 3 !o ~enrune .. if anybody in the future will build anythmg in the Art Colony more than 36 feet off Mother Earth. . ..... The way the whole high, rise issue boil· td up In Laguna, where petitioners for an initiative forced the City Council to P_Ut high rise to an election, is viewed with alarm in certain quarters elsewhere. Jn Newport Beach. for example. ._ U"I Tt ..... lot AER IAL VI EW OF 'EL TENIENTE' ·_ NOW IN HANDS OF CHILE:"N SOCl,ALIST GOVE)!NMENT World's L•rgest Copper Mine, Owned by U.S. Kenn ecott, Seized for lrregul•rltles SOME NEWPORT people who are deeply concerned with development v .. ould like to see the harbor city come up with allowancts for some high rise. Yet at the !affie time, they hope the proposed rules won 't be so lax that a petition cam- paign is triggered a la Laguna. * be . All of lhis must be somewhat musing to Tully Seymour. the: attorney at law who resides in Corona del Mar. World's Biggest Copper Mi11e Se ize d by Cliile Egypt Calls Off Envoy's Peace Trip to Washington Tu lly served a long hitch as Newport city auomey following departure from tl\at post of Walter W. Caranu.a, who escaped to Huntington Beach to become a municipal judge. Tully for a lot of years tussled with the legalities of buildings and how high is up in Newport. But he recently left Newport to become part- Lime city attorney for Laguna. Now that he presides as chief counsel Jn Laguna, he'll get to ponder legalities of how high ls up io the Art Colony. Anyway, back if Newport, a certain nervousness was added to the high rise scene when it was disclosed yesterday that the Marriott Corporation would like to build a tall hotel and convention center on Irvine land in the vicinity of Fashion Island and the Irvine Coast Country Club. It wouJd be in an unlimited height zone. Thi! is what caused some developers to get nervous. They feared some other citizens might figure Marriott's plan wou1d call for a real skyscraper. Actually, som~ sour~ of intelligence say the convention thing will really go only IO or 12 stories up. I .STRONGLY suspect that the jitters over public reaction if the building goes JO, 20 or 30 stories are probably un- founded. It's likely much the same as worrying about falling off a tall buildi~g. If you fall from a window much over the second story, !he results are pretty well predetermined. It doesn't matter if it was . floor 2 or floor 22. SAME WAY with adverse reaction to high rise. Public outcry probably starts some"·here above the fifth floor and it doesn't really matter how much taller things get above that. * So clearly, the tall building debate: con- tinues to ratUe along our coastline with Newport hoping to come up with rules that "'ill please both the pros and cons '"'bile Laguna's City Council has decided to let Lagunans battle it out at the ballot box. The Laguna council could have avoided an election by simply adopting the man- date of the petititioners who were awesome in number. But this \li'ay, the pros and cons bolh get two monlhs to hit the campaign trail with charges and counter.charges. Heated words will likely further polarize the town . It 's a good bet a lot of Lagunans won 't be ta lking to each other by Aug, 4. Somehow, Laguna seems to like it that "''ay. SANTIAGO (UPII -The Chilean government is taking over control of El Teniente, !he worJd's largest copper mine, from the. Kennecott Copper Corp. in what may be another step in l\1arxist President Salvador Allende's program to nationalize U.S. copper interests. l\finister of Mining Orlando Cantuarias said 'Illursday the Chilean Copper Corp., a government agency, would send six tepresentatives to take ove~ cont:ol o( the mine Saturday. Canluar1as said the move was made because "irregularities'' in four of the mine's ejght converter ovens had cut production, and because of a $5.5 million deficit. KeMerott owns 49 percent of El Te- niente, situated in Raucagua, about 65 miles south of Santia~o. and operates the mine under the Braden Corp., a wholly owned subsidiary. State-o"''Jled Chilean companies own the C(lntrolling 51 percent Allende became the Western world's first freely elected lt1arxist president in November. He had promised in his cam- paign to nationalize foreign interests in Chile and has been pushing his program since then. The Chilean senate liberalized and sent to the chamber of deputies ?\-fay 12 Allende's proposed constitutional amend· ment that would permit him to na· tionalize the holdings of the three U.S. copper companies in Chile -Kennecott, Anaconda and Cerro. Wicks 'If mnn keeps polluting, the fish tvill be dead k 'll , ,, before 1oe can t em. By United Press lnkrnational The P..1iddle East situation lightened up again today, and authoritative diplomatic sources in Cairo said Egypt has shelved, at least temporarily, a plan to send a high ranking envoy to Washiogton for talks on the prospects of an agreement with Israel on reopeni!Jg the Suez Canal. The trip was to have been a sequel to the recent Middle East tour of Secretary of Stale William P. Rogers and the visit to Cairo by his assistant, Joseph J. Sisco, following Rogers' talks with Israeli leaders, the sources said. Both sides appeared to be stiffening their positions, and Israeli deputy Yigal Allon said Thursday night Egypt mi ght have done so because of "over optimism in Washington," an apparent reference to the ot.imistic statements 'Rogers made on hi.!1 return. Sisco returned to Cairo with lsrael's canal proposals and had five hours of talks with President Anwar Sadat and Foreign Minister Mahmoud Riad. It wu agreed then that Egypt would send a highra nking diplomat. either Riad or Premier Mahmoud Fawzi, to Washington with Egypt's reply. Instead, the Egyptian reply was handed over to Donald Bergus, chief of 1he Etna Lava River Wider, F as ter; Town Imperiled SANT'ALFIO. Sicily (AP)-f\11. Etna's flaming river of Java, widening and gai~· ing in speed, sizzled th rough the main road on the eastern slopes or Ille moun- tain today. increasing its peril to qiis town of 4,000 inhabitants. Some had abandoned their fa rmhouses as the lava gushed down the slopes and rolled toward Sant'Alfio from a half mile vent smashed on the mountainside 11 days ago. Police and firemen stood ready in case the menace from the lava intensified, but there were no evacuation orders. The town people prayed for the beit while preparing for the worst. The road the lava crossed is 1he Lin- guaglossa-to Fornazzo Way uphill from Sant'AU:io. Wintry Weather Blows In West .in Cold Grip; North Also Fee ls Chill Wi ncls "l:allfornla k.4otterfd ll•IUltt, "''"I"' lnlo te••· fffl'd Nrlr*ln or t'9ht •-••• I" llW 011..--, rt11rr9d tt.t Soultltrn Cttl· fom1t •H t ..... tle:lu .. IOOtY. lhrr• ... , "'""'' tutlv •lnd1 tnll coc:~, ""'""'"''''· Smell crtll wtrft!11t1 ...,.,, l\oltltd '""71 Point COllCNfiooi hi LOlll 6NCI\. '"' tllt lo• M11te1 t ree •<•ti.,"! ll'r1•tln CIN•e-d ~·lltlly In "'' lfltr· -· Tiit.-. 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" )2 . ~ •• • .n American diplomatic mission in Cairo, less than an hour alter Sadat told the na- tional assembly about it in a ~minute speech on foreign and domestic policies. UPI Correspoodent Maurice Gui.ndi reported from Cairo that the Israeli posj.. tion according to the diplomatic source1 is : -A·parUal Israeli withdrawal from the canal to permit its clearanCe and reopen. ing. No distance was given for the withdrawal. -No crossing of Egyptian troopa but Israel would accept I.be presence of Egyptian police and civilians on the e.ast bank after the partiaJ pullback. -There should be an unlimited cease.. fire . -Joint Egyptian-Israeli patrols in the • area evacuated by lbe Israelis. -Afler reopening the Canal Israel would make a commitment on a further troops withdrawal to "agued boun- daries.'' In his speech Thursday 1 S a d a t reiterated the minimum E g y p t I a n demands which in effect was a .reject.ion of the Israeli terms. Everest Assault Ended by Series Of Difficulties KATMANDU, Nepal !UPI) -Death, illness, treacberOWJ weather and discord brought to an end today an international expedition 's attempt to climb Mount Everest, the world's tallest moUJ1tain. The climbers, who dwindled from 3l to only two al the end, abandoned their quest 2,000 feet short of the 29,028-foot summit. In a terse communique, the Nepalese Foreign h1inistry said only that the two Britons had "stopped climbing." It was the first attempt to scale the Mimalayan peak by the southwt.!te rn face or the mountain, an almost vertical route . Everest was ronq uered for the first lime in 1953 by another approach by Sir Edmund Hilary and his Sherpa guide, Tenzing Norquay. The 1971 assault claimed the. life of 1'1aj. Harsh V. Bahuguna , the only lndian member, "'ho died of exhaustion and frostbite. Mix ing Ba1i Brings Suit WAS!UNGTON !AP) -The Justice Depat"tment announced Thursday it has sued the state of Georgia and a county official for refusing to issue a marriage li~ense lo a white Army lieutenant and hi.!1 Negro fiancee . I\ Justice Departm ent spokesman said the U.S. District Court in Atlanta has issued a temporary restraining order which, in e.ffect, required Clayton County Ordinary H. \V. Roberts to Issue a marriage license to LL John Ray Sanford and his bride to be, Betty Byrom. The sui t names the slate as a derendant in addition to Roberta because the re fusal was based on a slate law making it illegal to issue a license for a white person to mar- ry a Negro . The government has filed a aimilar suit in Alabama, seeking to have that state's mlsctgenation law dttlared unconstitutional. The suit said that Sanford. who ia stationed at Ft. Benning, and Mis.s Byrom, who lives in ltfounllin View, were refustd a marriage license by Roberts on Atay 5 . The Georgia law should be declared null and void because or its confllct~wilh the 14th amend· ment to the U.S. ConsUtuUon, the government maintained. ' ' ,, . ,. ~ . 'l'alk Speedap• Arms Agreement Seen This Year WASHINGTON (U?I) -Wblle House officlala said today tl\I bruldhrollih i!' the Sovl•~Amerlwl allempl to qree °" limilillg nllcle.ar weapana abould product t peeded-up armi talb: in ·about f o u r months -lf Moecow ls 1incert. If all .... ...u. Ibey add, it may be ponible for the Strategic Arms Llmlta- tlon Taib (SALT) to rucb--l>J the end of this yur -one •ireement limiting cldemlve AnUballiltlc Mllslle (ABM) 1y:ste.ms in both countries, and anothtr agreement llmitlnc 101D1 fll each natioo'1 etfeDllve., or attack. l'Upom. Pruiderit Nixon, in a three·minute. te.Ie'vb1on broldcut Thursday, said the White: House and the Kre.mlin bad rtaQ.. ed a major •creement oo the talks wbicb could break a deodiocl: that has •xhted during the Jut y.ar. But terms el the qreement remained a dlplomatlc mystery since. officials would not e~borate on the joint state-- ment. • The ltatefuent said simply: "The governments of the United States and the Soviet Union, after reviewing the course of theJr talks on the Jimitatlona of strakgic armament, bave agreed to con- centrate this year on working out an agreement for the limitation cf the deployment of antiballi!lic m i s 1 i I e systems. 'Ibey have also agreed that 'together wi th tlle. concluding or 111 agree. ment to limit anilballiJtic missile syltems, they w i 11 a~ oA certain measures with respect to The limitation of offensive strategic weapons." White House officiab left the im. preuion that the agreement represented a significant concession by the Soviet Union. In the CWTtDt phase of the SALT talk.! the Sovlell have. Wisted on reaching •n agrttment fint on limiting defense. .mlnlle systems -such as the ABM -White tbe United States had in- sisted on re.acblng'"an agreement on both defense and offemJve mbsUe eyrtems. The Soviet side; therefore, appeared t1 Connally Slates Germany Vi sit In Dollar Woes WASHINGTON (AP) -Secretary of the Treasury John B. Connally ii 1oing to Germany next wuk to meet w1th many of the European government and banking officials most deeply involved in the re- cent world monetary crisis. Connally, in office le.SI than ·four - months, is e.xpected to carry President Nizon' 1 meeage to the American Banker 1' AlsoclaUon'1 inte.rnational banking conference in Munich that etonomlcrecoveryin America~llnotbe 1lowed because Of the dollar crisis. Connally told newsmen Thursday the United State.a' approach has been to con- tinue economic expanaion while fighting to reduce the rate: or inflation. He echoed the thinkinr of Federal Reserve Board Chairman Arthur F. Burns, who aa.ld a day earlier fighting in- flallon, not reducing int.ere.st rates, Is the top priority in improving the. dollar's in- ternational position. . To underacore the importance of Con- nally'• trip, Preslde.nt Nixon Thursday went to the 'Jk'usury building to meet with Connally for an hour and a half discussion of the secretary's week in Munich. CoMally'1 visit is ue.n u an effort to assure European financial officials wor- ried over the dollar glut occunin.R in their countriea since the. first of the year. The record dollar now was triggered by lower interest rates in the United States in comparison to those in Europe. As a result, West Germany de.valued its cur- rency relative to the dollar. Several other European countries then revalued their currencies and the purchasing po"·er of dollars in Europe. lost some strength. Finals at Band have. swung around to lhe American viewpoint. But the official statement also said I.hat during the current year both .sides would concentrate on working out an agreement limiting only the ABM systems of both ~ies. This is what the Soviets have !Jeen after. Tber was an obvious ambiguity in the joint Soviet-Amer!can statem~nt which permitted'1t to be interpret~ in _several ways without actually revealmg its true auMtance. Gerard C. Smith, the top U.S. arms negoUator, was expected to return to VieMa today to wind up the current phase of the talks. His departure has already been delayed several times and it was still not certain he would definitely take off. Smith returned lo Washington May 7 lit confer with Nixon. The Soviet-American understanding reportedly was reached about May IO. The administration w i t h h e I d an· nouncement of t h e understandil'lg, however, because of the crisis which blossomed Immediately thereafter over Sen. Mike Mansfield's efforts to force • cutback of 150,000 U.S. troops in Europe. That issue was resolved Wednesday and the administration moved the. ne1t day tn announce the Soviel·American agree-. ment. * *. * Better W eapons Believed Factor In Talk Accord WASHINGTON !UPI) -Th e Pen· tagoit -believes recent improvements 1n U.S. nuclear weapons helped bring about the Soviet-American agreement to move towards some kind of arms limitation. On March 31 and on April 26 the first two U.S. submarines were fitted wilb Poseidon missiles -a new generation cr weapon capable of hurli ng up to 10 nuclear warheads at separate targets from beneath the ocean surface. Defense Department officials also feel the introduction of the Minuteman 111 - which carries a triple nuclear warhead and i& based on land -also played a role in the breakthrough. Another factor, they feel, is the recent successful test of the Safegu ard antiballistic missile system. On Capitol Hill the arms development drew praise. House Republican Leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan called it "one of the most sig n lrica n t breakthroughs for peace in the history cf the modern world." Sen. J. William Fulbright. (D-Ark.). said he was "encouraged" by the developm ent since it seems to indicate both the U.S. and Soviet governments have made concessions and the prospect1 for agreement are improved. Sen. Edmund S. Muskie. (0.Mainel called the news "a good first step" and said he hoped both nations would show mutual restraint in developing and deploying nuclear weapons while the negotiations continue. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey. CD-Minn.), said the next step &hould be an un· derstanding, right now, !bat no more cf- fensive or defensive weapons will be deployed. Sterilizati on Nixed AUGUSTA. Maine (UPI) -A bill lo provide free sterilization for welfare reci- pients narrowly missed approval by thr Maine Senate. An initial nonrecorded vote favored the proposal J3-I2 bul on a call for the record the vote was rejected 12- 15. The measure \vould have provided the Health and \Velfare Department with SJ00,000 over the next two years to pay for voluntary sterilizalion of mothers and fathers on welfare. \Vlth semesters nearlng an end at many schools and colleges, students spend mo1t or their waking hours preparing for {inals. These t\vo youn& men take advantage o( sunny Omaha skies and \varm "''eather to study In U!e park. n t Id nt th Vt • ch al " it ly l• an d n- g. "ch et a nd In ... .. in ut ve rst "th of 10 els eel d ole y nt " it nt of .). he te ts cts el nd w nd e .), of· be to C<· ' " all 12· he ith ay nd ' QUEENIE ' . I . -"" y Phll lilt11lemdl "Perhaps we shouldn't start the day of! with & look at the atock market .• :• Senatt>r Promises Tough Draft Fight WASHl!'\GTON llJPll - Pledging to tie up the Senate '·if it takes 10 Y.'teks, 1$ 1111eeks or 20 v.·eeks." 11 freshman senator from Alaska today prtpared for anothe r roun.d in his effort to kil! the military draft. Sen i 11ke Gravel I D. Alaska \. and h1~ small band of supporters turned back three attempts by Senate leaders Thursday to ~et a dal e for voting on some of the dozens of amendment~ to a bill that would extend t.1e draft for tv:o years . Protest Seen At Ceremony ForLBJUnit AUSTIN, Tex . tUPJ) - Lyndon B. Johnson. whose Presidency 11·as plagued by Vietnam \\'ar demonstrations, apparently "ill have to fa ce the paint-sm~ared faces of an· Uwar protesters again Sa tur· day at dedie~tion ceremonies for the LBJ Library. President Richard ~1. Nixon. Viet President Spiro T. Agnew and House Speaker Carl Albert will be present. along y,•ith hundreds of other -na· tional figu res. !\ixon will be the main speaker at the nationally telev1sed ceremonies begin- ning al 12 .30 p.m EDT. The congregation of top- ranking government leaders has caused antiwar groups to The Selecli\•e Service Law y,•ill expi.re June 30 if Cona:rus does not act, and Gravel and his allies bope to prevent ac- tion until lhal datt, foreif'lg the military service tc fill tht.ir ranks ~'ilh \'O\unlttrs. Sen. Hugh Scott, e I Pennsylvania, tht: S ' n 1 t e Rt:publican leader, threatened Thursday. to cut off I.he delay- ing tactics by im~ing cloture. a step which ~·ould end debate and bring the issue to a vote. Gravel complained senior senators were trying to give his group "the bum·s rus h." The Alaska senator argued tbe Senatt vote could be crucial in American history. He said it ~·ould decide whether the United Slates would be ''!)«:ace-loving" t1r ''belllcose.'' Gravel slid the d r a f t legislation "·as "the only bill that requires people lo be killed in the service of their country." The Nixon Admini1lration has advocated a plan of tying an extensioq of the draft to military pay Increase• witb: the hope m converting to all· vo!untter military forces by 1973. Sonic Boom Threat ToW, On Treas ures plan massh·e dtmonstrations. \VASHINGTON 1 UPI) Local ";\layday Tr i be ' ' The: direc!Dr of the National members, student pro t es t Park St:rvice has complained grou ps and other anti...,•ar sonic booms gent:rated by. organizations predict 500 to military a ire r a fl havti 4,000 people wUI demonstrate. de.stroyed prehistoric ruirui Some of the more radical and blasted the fa~ off cliffs groups ha\'e said they will lry .. ln scenic areas.· to disrupt the off i c i a I G. B. Ha rtzog Jr. told a ceremonies. but nfficia\s say Ho us e appr.9i>riations sul> no one without 11 ~pecial guest comntittre Thiu·21day ht con· badgf' ...,,ill be :i llowed near the sidered the contiuct of mili~ary Jlbrary ground s. pilots .. disgractful ., He said The library is p;1rt of an the rlamage they had caused SJS.6 million complex on the in National Pf rks w~s in- Universitv of Texas campus calculahle, that also ·houses the Lyndon B. "\\'hat are 3.000 or -4.000- .fohnson School of Public Af· vear-old prehisioric r u I n r fa irs. "-·orth?" he asked. "What is The dedication ceremonies the race of a cliff in Mesa are slated to take place at the Verde worth?'' 'It is shattered foot of a grassy knoll on v;hich off and now is al the bottom the eight story build'ing stands. of the canyon.'' An ou !dnor barbecue luncheon Hartzog romptainrd prote:st11 wil l follow . lo the Air Force have brought Cnv and cam pus police and no respon.'Je anP telling the &ecrel ser"ice agen~ will cor· story to the publjr has brought don off the area. no reaction. J ' ORIGINAL OIL PAINTINGS fftOf!' i11roptl 0~6~3:VAS s1 oo~o SATURDAY & SUNDAY ONLY, 11 ta'5 Miii' lfl'•l!tt Ill" ~~ $5'° , uch Fi1t• E11rop1t1t oil p1i11ti1t91 eff1...d lo t!.1 public. •I wholt11l1 11rlc.t1I All LEE'S ORIGINAL OILS IL••k fer th1 Uttf1 pllew 1.otMt•• 361 E. 17th St., Cost1 Mtn-64S.5J60. Ope'n Fri. Thru Mon., 11-J • .. --. . . Pennsy Peril Cited 1st Confirmed Case WomanPoi.soned By Fi.sh Mercury $92.5 Million Lost in 3 Months a llttJt ln April. 'But there art 1till l05ses on,top of loasu." The trustees said earlier this month that the rallroad would co broke by August or Sep. tembtr unle.ss work rule.s and other labor coat Luues were resolved. .. WASHINGTON CAP ) - A parts pu million atandard con&idered safe. PlllLADELPHJA (AP) - Tbe Penn Ce11tr·11 Trwporlllion Co.. w·b l C b runs Anierlea'a b t 11e1 t railroad, reported 'lbur1day a m .s mllUon loss for the first three n)Onths of this year and called Jta 1ltuatlon "perJlow." ' ' "It does appear that the d l111lrous .•. downward plunge at a rate which got- .steadily worse all through last year h.as been stopped,·• reported the four trustees· ap. pointed by a federal judge to guide the company's reo r g a ni talion through bankruptcy court. FBI May Enter Probing ~Of Nader's GM Charges CITES POISONING Dr. Roge r Herdman 0 Nl!:w York hl!:allb officer says lhe mercury Poisoning of a houuwlfe who dieted on lWOl'dlish dramatizes t h. e potential danger facing other "fith faddists ." Dr. Roger Herdman. deputy dirt!ctor of the New York State Health Department, described the plight of an unldentlfied 44 year old Long Island woman The YOA ordered some tuna off• store shelves last year but has since dt:clared all on the market to be with.In its 0.5 ppm st"and•rd. Herdman described t he Long Island wnman as "the first case of buman Illness in thl1 n11Uon directly at. lributable to mercury poi.Jon• Ing from ordinary marketable food." The first quarter lo.ss lJ 126 million higher than a .year ago, but ll doesn't ajipto.aclt the worst three months ln lbe railroad's history -lhe $197 mlllion 1011 in the October to Decf:mber period last year. TI)e truatees rl!:ported a loss of SI~.1 million in April, $4.1 milllo11 Jess than a year ago. The transportation firm filed for reorganlution under the federal bankfuptcy law last June. The trustees said Penn Cen- tral 'a. aituation r e q u i r e s measures." 1bey uid a com· parlson of figures indicated the heavy first quarter loss was roughly comparable to a yt:ar ago if I wo special income items ln 1970 were con.sidered. Lasl year: the railroad made a 116.9 million profit on the asle of one subsidiary to anothe r and collected $9.6 million dividends from the other Pl!:M Central. subsid- iaries. WASHINGTON fUPll The FBI ill being 1sked 10 in- vestigate Ralph Nader'a new charges that employes of the Senate and General Motors altered transcrljits ol auto aafety hearings in 106& IO pro- tect top GM officials. Nader alleged in a letler to Sen. Abraham 0 . Ribicoff ( [).. Conn.J. that changes were made in the testimony of GM Chairman James M. Roche and Louis G. Bridenstine , then an assistant general counsel for GM. Ribicoff liald Thursday he would ask the FBI to in· vestigate Nader'•· complaint. He also said the Justice Department investigated a 1imilar allegation by Nader in 1967, but "found no reason for prosecution at that time." Ribicoff is chairman of the aub<'ommlttee whose transcript was purportedly changed. GM said in a slatement Nader was trying le "in· timidate" the subcommittee staff. GM uid it ''reviewed the transcript of the 196& hearing and marked Ure suggested changes which it felt V.'ere re. ---------- quired to correct. errors and omls!lons In lhe transcript" at Riblt"Off's request. The subcommittee was pro- bing, ln 'part, GP.fa·alleged at. temp{., to discredit N a d e r ~·ht'!n the consumer advoca te first began to make allega· lions that GM caMi were unsafe. To back up his charges. Nader. supplied Ribicoff ~·ith what he said was the original transcript and what actually appeared In tlte version printed by the committee for the public record. "The major deletions and additiOllS to the teslimony of GM witnesses which I ha,·e d~cussed, came at a time when the record v.·as in the custody of the subcommittte staff -11nd apparently were made wilhoul your kno\\'\edge or that of an y other Senalor. They raise. therefore. ques- tions regarding the personal responsibility of c e r t a i n Senate employes during that period in 1966,'' Nader said. V.S. Boats Say Soviets Still at It BOSTON t AP) -Three new Incidents of harasFJTient of American lobstrr fishing boats by Russian lraw!ers &0ulh of Nantuckel Islan d have been reported, although negoUators told a congressional com· mittel' that• violators would be pu nished by the Russi an fleet commander. ln\'nh•ed in incidents Thurs- day moming were \V ily Fox, out of V·lestport . ~lass .. v.·hlch losl a quanti ty of lobster gear l'!ar\i er lhis v.•ttk, and the Pat San f\1arie. Thursday night. the Coast Guard said, the \\'ily fox reported 12 trav.•lers sailed through its fishing 1 r e a shnrtly before 8 p.m. to 1 Senate environment aul> committee Thursday. ~ The mother of lhree con- sumed about 10 ounC!:.! of ,...,.ordfish dally for n in e monlhs in 1964 and 1965, he said, and lost 4S of her 165 pounds. She continued her swordfish diet sporadically un· til November 1970. Nnw, he said, she has been 1!iagn06ed as a mercury poisoning victim. The woman purchased the awordfi.sh, all of It fresh from a local market, "because she She underwtnt treatment for what wu considered a "psychosomatlc d i s e • a e ' ' more than a year, he said, and contacted h I 1 department three months • ago w l th symptoms of diu.inesa. loss of memory, jerky handwriting, lrt:mbling hands and speak· lng and hearing problems. A sample of her halr con· ta.ined 4.2 ppm of mercury, compared with no more than S ppm ln an averaae person, he Slid. didn 't like fi sh .•. She wanted a·•----------- nonfishy t11isting f I 1 h , ' ' Herdman said. Tuna fish fits that category, he said. and ''a person eating 10 ounces a day would exceed the maximum allowabl e · In- take" set by the Food and Drug Administration. On May 6 the FDA recom- mended that Americana stop eating swordfish because the agency's tests of M3 samples 1howed 9~ percent contained mercury exceeding Its 0.5 "In terms o! the key net railway oper11ing income loss figure , the first quarter result was only $2.3 million larger than last year and the com- parable April loss was 13.5 million less than last ye:ar," the t.rustees said. Come See the Southland's Most Exciting Furniture Stores "We take no satisfaction from cnmparin& figures that 'are ·stlll red. ''It does appear lhat the disastroua 12 month downward plunge at a rate which got ateadily worse all through !1st year has atopped. "The loss rate, ao far as the rallroad operations thim.selvt:s are concerned , leveled out in tbe (Lrat quarter and eued up • 45 Arrested In Protest A~ Campus KENT, OhJo IUPI) -Police arrtlted at least 4S ptrSOna early today as they swept a large crowd of youth! from the downtown area back to the Kent State University campus tor the third straight night. One student was seriously hurt when a motorcyclist 11werved at high spttd tnto the demonslratorr. Al least 25 persont were l!ken into custody as the police began their move at Water and Main Slrttta after reading the ruot Act . Twenty others were arrested on the University Commol\I, including Kent State Student President Craig Morgan . Other 1catttred arrMta may raise the total to near 70 in custody, police said. Slud!!nll aaid thert have bl''" several similar demonstrations in the t3 months aince four K e n t 1tudenta wert 1lain ot1 campus by National Guardsmen , but these were the Cinit mass ar· resl.!i. The crowc!J gathered as Uley bid alnce Tue5day night to protest city ordinance1 aga.inst hitchhiking and carrying open containen of alcohclle beverages. Choose One of the Many Coast & Southern Federal Offices to Serve You: + MAIN OFFJCl;lltt I HR!, loaMQ9lel •$23'1S5t * wn.aHl1'18t GltAMIRCY N.C1:3133 Wllahlt9 11¥d .. LA.·• 311-1215 LA. CMC CINTD: 2nd I Broedwly • e2&-1 102 ..-NJH11NOTON HACH: 11 Huntington c.nter • (11~ 317·1047 utn'A ANA LOAN llllYtCI AGENCY: * 1IOI N. Main 8t. • (114) 5'7_.257 '* lil!KfA MONtcA: 711 Wllahl,.Bl'Yd. •-.0741 • aAJtPURo:10thlPaetk•Uf4341 ._. WuTCOYINA: EMtland Shopplno Ctr. •SS'f..22(11 * 'plJIOlllAMA cm: 1811 Van Nuyi 81Yd. • 192·117t * TARZANA: 11751 V.ntura Boulevard• us.t114 * LOMCIHActt::lnf1Locwt•4S7•7411·,. • Clool ---· ·" 1... DlllJ llon-1 • 1' 4"' ASSflS OVER $800 MILLION Art Linkletter Shows You a New Way to Beat Inflation ... Just Join @he lnsldeJS Club With a S2,SOO balance In your uvlng1 account. you 1ra allglblt to blcome a member. Substantial eavlngs art avtJlable when purchasing many Items Includ ing eutomob\111, tumltur1, appliances, jewelry. Plue many irae aarvlcea -money orders, 11f1 dapotlt box11, etc. Coast & Southern Federal Offers You These Highest Prevailing Rates: COMl'OUNDID DM.Y AND PAID CIUAlltllll.Y,' 5.00"!e-5.130/e PUlbooki No Minimum. 5.2s•1 •• 5,39"1e ThrM Month Ctrtlflcato: No Minimum. 5.75°/o-5.920/e On•Yeor Ctrllftcata: $1111/J Minimum • 6.000/•-6.180/• Two-YeerCtrtlflcato: $5111/J Minimum. •E1ffc11ve Annull Eaml,_ • INSURANCE TO $20,000 ' I • DAILY .PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Send-off for Seniors \Vhlle other graduating seniors trek off to Disney· land and similarly glamorous places to celebrate the completion ol their high school years, Laguna Beach grads go cheerfully back to school after their com· mencement ceremonies. The all·nlght grad party at lhe high school has been an Art Colony tradition for years and neither studenil nor parents seem inclined to change it. For the parents, it spells lots of work, arrangil'lg for food , music, prizes and entertainment to keep the celebrants happy till da,vn. For the seniors it's an intimate, fun·fiUed farewell to their school and their friends, untinged by any hint of commerciali5m. For the business community, service clubs and in· terested citizens, it's .a chance to give thti k'ids a fine end-off for a very modest tab. (Donations gratefully accepted.) Beautification Needed Dana Harbor.!s investors -public and private - i re proud of the major Illaritime complex which hu cap~ured their millions. But many are worried about the community which 1urrounds the new harbor -heavy speculation and poor planning form the pattern of Dana Point's growth. Robert Dahlberg, presiden~ of the Dana A-farina Corporation developing hundredS of slips at the facility, -told members of a South Coast area Chamber of Com· merce recently that leaseholders are genuinely concern- ed that some portions.of the community are not living up esthetically to the $24-milliOn harbor which will probably give the area -finally - a place in the sun after decades of promises. the harbor complex. It b Ibo lnlersection of Del OhiJpo Road and Pacific Coast Highway -not a very pretty place. On bluffs overlooking the h•rbor, scarred hillsides and canyons loom over the project -naked .. of foliage alter extensive carving for landfill . In the same genera) area· residents of lovely view homes al.ready have fought battles against county zone changes to allow for restauranls and land once ear· marked for residential use. The Dana Point development represents millions of private and public dollars spent to muter-plan and develop an ultimate recreation facility. Everyone in Orange County has a stake in it. After years of planning, the •DU( huhor'i1 secured. Recreation largess from it will tontinue past thiJ un- tury' and generation. It will be sad indeed ii the sur· rounding property does not live up to the new facility'• promise. · 'It's About Time!' South •County residents who find themselves fee.I· Ing down in the dumps (if one la ~rmitted to utter that ugly word) would do well to consider an uplifting jaunt to Laguna Beach this summer. Having completed their annual community beauti- fication contest, the dauntless ladieS of the Chamber of Crimmerce, known as Mermaids, are turning their atten· tion to community goOd cheer. The Mermaids have hired a saJes motivation ex· pert to teach Art Colony employes how to be courteous. friendly and cbeerf~l when the summer taurist influx Ii trikes. .. . . " . . ~~ ...... One spot cited by Dahlberg is the main entrance to The idea is to send the town's visitors on their way with smiles on their faces - and bring them back more often. s HOW TO SAVE 1HE S.S.T. AND REVIVE 1H£ RAI LROA~S Supreme Court May Aet on Constitutionality Death Penalty Unrepealed To suffer death tor any crime may be-a 4'cruel and unusual punishment" forbid-- den by the Eighth Amendment to the C:Or11titution, but the Supreme Court has never said so. A recent-ruling by the court, upholdJng the procedures which most states use in imposing the death penalty, hu preeipitated a flurry of ac. tivity among those advocating an end to capital ptinishmenL An m'!ergency slrategy conference May 1>16 at Columbia University was called by the NAACP Legal Defense Fuad, which represents about half d. the fi50 persons now &entenced to die. Jack Himmelstein of the Fund said May 6 that aome 110 persons would gather to explore avenues for further action. The court held May 3 that states did not deny defendants their rights by allow· ing juries absolute discretion in imposing Ute death penalty -or by allowing juries to decide· a defendant's sentence at the ume time u his guilt. NO ONE HAS BEEN executed in the United States since 1967. All e.xecutions were delayed until the Supreme Court had announced its decision in several cases Involving capital punishment. Now that the court has rule~. on procedural iround.s, no mort such decision.s are pending. ·Editorial Research ' I \ ~4 I At the Columbia conference , participants were to eumlne the possibilitiea for legislative action and el· ecutive clemency, as well aa further judicial challenges to the death pena.1'1. Many of t h e attorneys in atte.ldance represent condemned prisoners. Their roncern ls both apecific -for the lives of their clients; and general -for the abolJ. lion of capital punishment. The Supreme Court may provide yet another reprieve for the inhabitants of Death Row. It may agree soon to decide the central question concerning capital punishment : Ia the death penalty a "cruel and unusual punishment'' ·and therefore unconstitutional'? Thia question is posed in m·any of the more than 100 a~ peals· from death senten~s which are now on the court's docket. Only four Justices have to agree to bear arguments in such a case for the court to take it. SOLICITOR . GENE RAL Erwin N. Griswoki haa .said that this line of attack on capital punishment Itself ii perfectly -reuonable. One -Just.ict doesn't 11ree. Huso L. Black, ·in 1 concurrl.ng opinion May S~ ~d flatly that he did not be1ieve the Cocisti tution ouU.wed the death penalty: "It 11 inconceivable to mt that the · framers intended to end capital puni!hment." Reaction to the May 3 decision wa.s mixed. Jn California -where 99 persons have been waiting ulKler 1entence of death -Gov. Ronald Reagan affinned, through his press aecretary, that ht wa1 1till in favor Of the death penalty. San Quentin's associate wanlen sa1d that u - ecution dates • woukl aot be 1el -at le1at for the 1S 'Or 20 prisoner• thert who have exhausted au appeals proceu. AU of Florida's 71 condemned pri10ners are still 11fe from immediate e1ecution. A 1967 federal court order barred any electrocutions until a case challengina: the constitutionality of the death penalty Itself was settled. And in Ohi~whtre 42 men are condtmned lo die -Gov. J ohn J. Gilligan said there would be no ex- ecutions until the Supreme Court ruled on the fundamental Eighth Amendment issue. A technicality stand.a between lift and death for the 28 condemned prlaoner1 in Alabama. state law prescribes that ex- ecutiona be carried out within the wall• o( a certain pruon -which ha1 bee• demolished. What Can Newton Offer? To the Editor : 1 note that Trash Day will come to UCI early this year with the upcoming visit of Black Pussycat, Hu ey P. Newton. Ostensibl y, the vdsit will "enlighten us on some of the struggles lhat political prisoners are fa cing . . . through the judicial system, etc., etc." This. ac- cording to one of lhe organizers of lhe "cultural" conference. Possibly, at the same time. Huey wlll e:a:pM.md on how political prisoners of his party are treated; very enlightening in- dttd. I'm rurt they would have preferred our nasty old judicial system. Of course, Huey will avoid discussing anything but his own problems. all of whlcil he made for himstlf; all of which are $50,000 in bail and the fault of aoc.iety. TBlS SAME NASTY society and system allow losers like Newton to circulate v.'bile awaiting retrial. Whal people lite Newton can offer a tollege group escapes me. But, the sponsors and administration in their maaoc.hialic wisdom must be working for the economy by offering a little employ· ment to a person without any other employabl~ akilla. If things gel worse, HUey can a1ways junip ball and Join col- I • ---W- F'riday, May 21. 1971 'the editorial page of tht Dail11 Pilbt 111lu to inform and 1tim- 1"cte ,.eadtrl b~ pre1tntfng thil MWIJ)CPlf"• opinfoni and com- 1M1Uaf'1 on topici of interest and lign.iflcanct, by providing a fonm for th1 erpr11.rion of OVt' rtodtr1' opinlonJ, and b11 pre-U'nting (ht diver1t uftw- pofntl of informed ob.t1rwrs 4"" IP(Jk<llMll on topic. of U.c c1ov. "RO!iil ~. Weed, Publisher • Maili>Qx - Letter• from readtr1 or• welcome. NoTTrUJlly writers 1hould conul!y thl!ir messages tn. 300 word.a or l1!s1. Th• righi to condeml! letter• to fit space or eliminate libel ia re1trwd. Alt let- ters mwt incluM signature and mail- ing addre.sa, but names mo.11 bt with-- held on request if sufficient reason is apparent. P~tr11 will Mt be pub- li$hed. league Cleaver, who al.so voictd his four· letter jewels of wisdom at UCJ before jumping bail for distant points. But. of «1urse, all these things after he ..-;. enlightens. CAL VIN G. SIEGLE Not an Ecologllt To the Editor: In covering a speech on f!nvlronmental problems 1 gave to the Laguna Beach Friends of the Library f..fay 13, your headline Identified me as r1n eeologlst. J'm not, al least in so far as that term might imply si psirticular 1cademic degree. Pat Boyle"s very ldnd article did Identify my ~Tiling 11nd teachint: background in this rtgard. I think there is 11 tendency, not only in the press. to so christen people concerned \\1tb environmental problems and 10lu- Quotes Jolm Ryan, Soatb Pandr:u -''It Is I virtual certainty that the lnltnlle 1earth young people ;i11rt on tod1y will end fin11ly Jn an enlightened diacovery oI lheir own bomes and famllle1." !\tr1. Bruce Potkr Dohrmann, S. F. - i'Hot pants remind me too much of te~ nls, arid-who wants to lu1 a tennis racket to a diMU dance!" ·• • lions. While complimentary In nature, lhil practice does not do juslict to people so tr&ined nor to the many other backgrounds required to achieve a safe and livable environment that all of us can take pride in. WESLEY MARX Medel fOf' Llfe•o.,ers To the Editor: La.st week a young lifeguard in our South Laguna neighborhood riaked his lift to save a drow~g man a1alnlt high seas and ripUdt. Would he,._ we asked, receive an award or even a citaUoo! "Regrtttably ••• no," Wt were told. "H he received so much as a thank )"OU - just tv.'O words, that would bt hll reward." There had bttn appro1imately 960 such rescues last ye11. It was all in the di)''• work. We feel atrongly 1 1peci1I lifesaver's medal ~should be in order regardless. under circumstances where (lne riska his life for another. ~t would certainly be more meritorious than 1 mert: Oscar or Emmy award for ln-- 1tanct. Our hope is that this 1111gestion may reach thole qualified to 1ct upon or consider this request MRS. D. G. CORMIE Dear Gloomy Gus: Headline In Laguna newspaper: Thousands of Fa!,. Arr<sll In Washington; Mllch<ll Siled. Now ~U us 111ln. John, just who 11 ind who I.I not 1up))03ed to work with- in the 11ystemf Some of ua yokell c•I oonru...r. . ~ .. D.AM. ""' "'""" NMdl ,.....,,. ........ ... ._._..., --........ ,,., .... .-"' _ .... •-.w ....... ,., '""' Hard Look At Emerging Politics Frederick G. Dutton'• "Changing Sourcea of Power: American Politics in the 1970s," just publiabed by McGraw- Hiil (f1.95), is dedicated "'To AU the Young People Who Will Be Voting for the First Time 1n Tb.is Decade." A pro- V()Cative reconnaisunce of the developing political struggle for the future of American society, this book take1 a hard look 1t the emerging forces and public controversiea that will likely absorb the nation'• altenUon in yeara to come. ~tore important than the contention between the two major parties, or 1mong the most prominent presidential can- didates and their principal supporters, the author fei:Ja, are "the historical lines of force to which they are likely to be responding early or late during this decade. "ESPECIALLY IN a period of divided government, there is need lo reoogniu: that what so teritatively prevails now will probably be under serious challenge as the seventies move along. . . • If the older America bas more votes, money, experience, and guns at present, the new ~ elements have still-unfathomable energy, growth, imagination, and time on their side." A former Special Assistant to President John F. Kennedy and Secretary of the U. S. Cabinet; former Assistant Secretary of St.ate; former Executive As.sistant to the C'r0vemor or California, Dutton notea that the 1968, 1970, and 1972 elections are but passing episodes in an historic transition in w]lich the U.S. is already caught up.· HE SEES THE nation moving abrasively and unevenly into one of several possible alternative future.s for which the early '705 are onJy an Jn. between. Yet. he feel.!, taken as a whole the coming decade will probably turn out to be aa determining as was "the Jef. ferson revolution" of isoo, tht age of Jacbon, the riae of the Republican party with Lincoln, aOO the New Deal. "Chaiigtr.g Sources of P o w t r ' ' recognius that historic forces. largely heedleaa of immedi1te public figures and event1, art building toward • showdown with the natJon's prevailing politics and public order. Some of these forces have alrtady made a fitful entry onto the na· tional scent, Dutton writes, while some still lie not rar below the surface of the present political system. TIIEY ARE NOT confined to any particular party or part of the Ideological spectrum, but art 1tirring throughout American society -not only In the aoclal structure and economy, but In the deeper attitudes and psychological Impulses. Yet the wldt -1pread n!SUveness. riots and reactions (lf recent year1 art only symptoms of more ba1'1ic pres.sure~ that are gathering. Al Dutton put, it. his concern is "with not just more or less of what already e:a:- 1.sts, but al.to what could well bt different over lhe courM: of the seventieJ. The tendency when looking ahead la to slip off into the more bizarrt and volatile fringes, quite without regard to their proplrtional role or probable historical effect. But the lnltmt hert' i~ primarily in lht mainstream 11s it la developing In ita own divel'R and often turbulent ways.·• Aii a broad array of qulte 1pecific new forc:ea emerges on the American pollllcal 11i::ene, it Is Dultorfs gMI to help lhe • Jecltve obltrver ~tlo .percelv" .aort .out. affect. and rel11te to what may 11Ull be a few or more ytars away." Vlclor do Kt)'1<rlinf Why Critics and Public Disagree When the judges for the National Book. Award insisted upon dropp_ing "Lo'"'• Story" from the fiction nominat.ioos, thia contemptuous gesture outrag- ed mlllion.s of Amer- icana, and punled just as many more. How could the run· away best-seller of the year be. deemtd ool even worthy of con.s.ideratlon by this oommittee of writ- ers. It is impossible to ad judicate such disputes between the public and the in- telligentsia. They seem to be talking about the .same thing - a novel named ''Love Story" -but they are in actuality responding to quite different stimuli. THE PUBLIC JS responding to the story on an emotional level , and the judges are reaponding to a purported "'·(Irk of art on an intellectual and pro- fessional level. The public has a perfect right to enjoy the book, and the com- mittee has an equal right to repudiate it. · Bul when I aay that the public has a perfect right to enjoy it, I do not mean that I concur in its taslt. It is a wretched book, however appealing on a aentimental level, but people have 1 right to bad ta.!lle, in book!, clothes. musk. or anything else. What they do not have a right to is the confusion of taste with standards. I RA VE LEARNED over the years, however. that it is nearly impoulble to persuade 1 perSM untrained in the arta that everything is not jusl "a matter of taste." One cannot convinte most people that "The Sound of Music• was a rotten movie, or that ''God Bless America" is a banal song. (lr that the nostalgic landscape hanging over thtir fireplace i1 a pieee of junk. They are emotionally noved by 1U these things, and that is enough for them. Yet in their own fields, they would not be so easily fooled. A good carpenter would know at a glance when a house ia well and truly built, no matter how beguiling ii might look from the outskle, and would not be deceived by its superficial appeal. A good tailor can tell flt a glance which suiting has been skillfully run up or whlch is sleazy. A NOVEL, A FIL!\t, a piece or music, ia a technical fabricalbn, before it can be anything else. It must have the same pro. fessional craftsmanship, the same hones-. ty and integrity, as a well-built house or hand·sewn suit, before it merits our ap- proval. But the pub!~ knowa nothing or these things ; it sees only the surfact glit- ter. This is why there 1.s no effect ive com- munication between the untrained au- dience and the trained (lMfrver. And v.•hy. without the right. education, we can never hope to persuade the public that "Love Story" is a gingerbread house wholly uninhabitable by real people. Military Drug Problem By the most reliable e 1ttm aIe 1 available, of the more than 20 million young Americans In the agt group mid- teens through mld-20!, about one In 120 ia an addict (lr a frequent user of hard narcotics. Among the fewer than 300.000 United Stale1 servicemen in Vietnam, most of them in the 17-to 23-year-old age group, a oongresslon1l study has placed the ratio of hard-<lrug users al one in every seven to 10. Last year, according to the study, betwef!n 60 ind 90 Gl1 in Vietnam died from heroin overdoses and the United States military establishment as a whole reported 60 drug-nlated deaths. IF THOSE F1GURF.s are correct -in- deed, if they are anything like rorrect - then the time has groWn very late for thi1 counft'y to take the preventive. and cor· r'eclivt action . that will be required to hf!ad off the deepening (lf a crisis. both civilian and military, of frightening magnitude. 'Jbe flr1t step, now that the wraps have been taken off, b to verify the a<XUracy of this assessment by the House Armed Services subrommllltt. And lf It L, Ac- curate, 1tYer1l sttps mt1$l follow In short order: -DEMAND, NOT MERELY suggest. that tbe covemments in that part of the v.·orld -to who8e survival tht United States ha1 committed en or mo u 1 resources and tens of thousa,nds of lives -crack down hard on the local pro- cessing "factories '' that are reported to be the principtl source (lf heroin supply: and then follow through ro.Jnsure that de- mand ts. met.-. J .4 -Develop. through CQnsu1Jatlon 1t the highest level1 of the administration. a cobertnt. pr1ctk:1ble atrateo for dtallnl -: . l GUeat Editorial • i - with the pre>blem at the t r o o p Jevtl. Even . if necessary, by isolating for treatment and rehabilitation all of lho.!ie servicemen who have fallen prey to tbe nam>tics "epidemic." -FINAU.Y, EVOLVE A companion strategy for protecting the civilian population from the obvioU.!i dangers in- herent in returning to do mestlcte.,young men who are addicted to hard Hrugl .at 1 rate U to 17 times that qr their 't.on- servlct contemporaries. Halfway effort ~·ill not suff Ce. Nor 1!1 cost a consideration. Thf! expense wll{ simply ha ve to be amortized as another cosl in an already hideou sly e:a:pensive undertaking. The uUerly unacceptable alternative v.·ould be lo expose th is socie- ty lo a debilitating and shameful ordeal whose consequences could outlive eve n the national heartbreak over tht Asian war-Itself. Kansai City Star .----B 11 Geor9e --- Otar George: l understand the roo has 1 new matayou. Js lhh true! DON B. Dear Don B: Whafs a - Oh. no, yoo don·t. Italian jOkea: 8r+ out ! ;;:; 1 :Send. your problems. to CtotR;t. the originator or Sidewal l Think· fng.f •1 ··- Frid.a1, Mq 21, 1971 OA.IL V PllOl 7 ' .. CHECKINB •UP• Banned U.S. Produ~t·s F .ound Worldwide ...__....'° .. ·~e's ·Liberal, Con servative Test · By L. ft.f. BOYD HOW DELICATE was the poetess Elizabeth 18 arr et t • Bro~'Jling! How genUet How pure ! And tender to her hus- band Robert Browning. Still, she had her earthy appetites. Her dad , 1.ir. Barrett of Wim· pole Street, said s he particularly liked cannibal sandwiches washe4 down with dark beer .•. HE ,UD FOUR wives. did Dour• Agha, a villag er in Turkey. Four wijs the limil under Mohammedan law. On a single day in 1922, one of said wivt:s1 had twins and the other three had a child each. Five, count them, on one day. The record shows Doura Agha was a proud and busy man. IN TJI£ ft.IATIER of politics. not every man ac- is Gilroy Roberts. Used to be chief sculptor for the U.S. l\.1int. His initials "GR" "!'- pear in scroll on numerous coi ns. Upon first seeing the d~Jn of those ~nitials, many . ~l.i~ns contend 1t looks like a ham.rner·and sick le, and object highly therefore. THE BARD FACTS: Did I tell you the average \.\'ood· pecker outlives the average l.ioo by about five y~ars? Or ~omen who undergo plastic slirgqy outnumber the men wbO db so by nine lo one? Or tHei-ejt one life insuran<'c age_nt ~!~ every 200 families nat1on'."1de? Or the true day is not really 24 hours, but only 23 hours, 56 minutes, 4 ·~ seconds? Come on, make notes. lually know s whether he's a lT'S TH'E FE!'lfALE chim~ conservative or a liberal, ii panJ.ee that's the more either. Here's one way to dange rous. In laboratories, at make ttiat judgment : lf heap. any rate. Chimps attack their proves of most oC the U.S. caretakers from time to •Lime. Supreme Court decisions in re_.. Cheek QJ such injuries shows cent years, he<s a liberal. If he 19 out ef 20 are inflicled by disapproves. he's a con-· .females. An irate male chimp servative. Simple as that. is comes right on, yipping and it? A political scientist says yapping. But an angry re.male so. simpers around her cage most THOSE TOKENS the gambl· Ing boys put out for $1 each in the Nevada casinos cost about 25 cents apiece. This comes tJ? beca use a customer wants to know if he can be considered a thief for taking same home as souvenirs. Hardly. The casino operators like patrons who fail to cash in such chips. For a 75-- cent profit on each. Jn ciden· tally. the fellow who stamps out just about all those tokens ~murely until her target gets within striking distance, then lunges. In othe r words. the fe male of that species . too. is sneakier than_ the male. l\.1uch sneakier. "Your Q1testions and co1n· me11ts are welcomed and wilt be used in CHECKING VP wherever possible. Ad· dress letters to L. /If. Boyd, P. 0. Bo:: 1875. Newport Beach, Co.!if., 92660. Britain Uproar ' By Jell"' B!)'lb ~ "Mlldal '11-: .... "" LONDON ~ '111at tan ef California peaches which the 1'-tunich housewife is slipping into her shopping basket? pro- bably carries a label ".Product er the U.S.A." lo llaly a worried father with a sick-child hurries home from Uie local pharmacy with a box of pills marked , "Made in the U.S.A." Both really should carry labels which read : "Banned in the United Slates." · On the s hel\le s of supermarkets and grocery stores all over the world there are row after row of al· tractively packaged canned foodstuffs which are outlawed in the United States. In chemists' shops, drugs openly are sold which doctors in the United States are not allowed to prescribe ex.cept wider the severest limitations. Recent revelation that such prohibited products openly are shipped abroad for sale to foreigners has shocked many Americans. So much s that so1ne Congressmen concerned about the ethits and the possi- ble effect on An1erica's in- ternational reputation are con- sidering legislation that would prohibit the export of haza rdous products to !lther countries. Said Hep. Benjam i n Rosenthal or New York: •'Jf a product is not considered safe for consumption by Americans how can we possibl y allow it to be shipped abroad for use by unsuspecting foreigners~" The most blatant case in re- cent months followed the ban- ning in the United States of all food products contain ing cyclamates. ~1 illions of cans {)( sofl drinks and low ca lorie diet foods containing tbe artificial sweetener - suspected aft er laboratory tests of possibly being a cause of cancer -\l'Cre S\l'ept off the shelves of American supermarkets and grocery 11tores. Most or the oull awed pro- ducts were either poured down Birds of Pr~y Slaughtered L01\'l:¥>N (AP) -A grim vestigated irlvolved titled peo-v.·elcome hawks and llwls battle is being waged between pie. beca~se they help keep down men and birds of prey on Bri-"Peopl_e ignorant of wildlife vermm. . . , go shooting. As soon as they The. pole trap. with steel la m 5 grouse moors. see a bird of prey, they com· jaws, is set on top o( a high Gamekeepers seek to pro. plain the gamekeeper cannot pole and baited lo allracl the tect the blueblooded Spoft: of be doing his job.properly. altenlion of a hawk or buzzard grouse and .P~easant shooting. "It seems nothing must ir.. which "'ill plummet toward its They are w1p1ng out predatory tcrfere \.\'ith the pleasure of prey. hawks, owls and go Id.en those whose interest In the As the raior sharp talons eagles,_ says lh~ Royal _Society countryside and w i Id Ii f e snatch the bait, the trap snaps for _the Protection of Birds. . reaches no further, and goe~ shut on the bird's leg. It can Titled landowne~s an~ their no deeper, than a round of only dangle helplessly un til ii gamekeepers _are 1gnor.1ng the shot.'' dies from pain. fear and ex· lega l protection of birds of Conder said that \\'hen he haustion or is dispatched by a prey and a~e lhr~atenln.g ~me wrote politely to landowners gamekeeper. · rarer s.pec1es with ext1nct1on, asking for help he got back a _The drive ~ga~nst pr~datory the society says. "sheaf of abusive letters." birds has co1nc1dcd ~·1th the The I a n down e_ rs and In Scotland. "'here grouse beginning of an increase in gamekeepers c 1a1 m the shooting on vast heather clad their numtJ:ers following a predalo~s plu~dcr stocks of est ates is big business. society sharp dcchne caused by game birds bein~ fattened for officials are \\'Qrried by "the pesticides during the 19!i0s. the annual shooting ~ason. indiscrimate and absolutely ii· Gamekeepers deny killing J.lan's weapons tn I he legal use o[ poisons. off birds of pre y in· vendetta Include steel traps The society does not den y discriminately. Although the and po~sons .. Bir~ that are that so me birds of prey attack blrds are legally protect~. caught JD devices like the ~le grouse and pheasant breeding estates are allowed to thin trap -outlav.'ed by Parha· grounds. their numbers if t h e y ment in 1904 ~ut . still used "You get a rogue kestrel represent a lhreat to game cove rtly -di(: in agony, which kills for the sake of kill· birds' breeding grounds, the suspended fluttering in midair ing just as you find sim ilar gamekeepers say. for sever~I hours. . , killers among olhcr predatory !iii••---------,! The society, having failed lo species." Conder said. "But GOLFERS persuade t~e game.keepers :o they are unusual and their ex- cooperate 1n stopping the 11· istence certainly· does 1101 legal slaughter, h.as declared justify the efforts to slaughter NEWPORTER INN Wltll L1w-Ha.,.lc1pi, ,_rldk• Al T~• •·total wa r on th15 senseless so many of these birds; most PAR 3 GOLF COURSE killing.:• It f?resees d!rect ~{1· of them kill only to eat." $l.OO with this lid _...k dllJ• frontat1 on with hereditary Ian· ,..;F~a~r;m~e~r~s~;;t~r:ad~l~tio~•~a~ll~y~~;;::;;:;::;;::;::;:::;::::::;::;~j do\.\·ners ~·ho lease shooting !i r ights on their grouse stocked OO RTY estates to weal!J,y synd;cat" FREE P L PA paying as much as $2,400 a gun . The society intends to press the police to prosecute anyone caught kiling birds without reason. Director Peter Conder 5aid ln an interview: ''Five of the last seven gerious ca'ses we in· Pl.AN TO AmND SUNSET POOLS' ANNUAL SPLASH • BASH I 0 •.m. to 7 p.m. thi1 Saturd11y and Sunda y Free Refreshments SUNSET POOL'S 1237 ·5. lrookhurtt, An11h1lrn -ph. 772.,.266. lhe drain or destroyed. o'ne company, b 0 we v er. returned the. banned foodstuffs to the warehouse -ind in the past 11 months bas mcettded in selling at least 300,000 cases of cyc!amate-sweetened tiMed fruit to customers in Wes~ Germany, Spain and ether countries in Europe, as we)I as in the Caribbean and the Far East. How 'could it happen! Of· ficials of the company con- , .... \ \ cerned point out lhat the sales were perfecUy legal, The United States i'ood and Drug Administration ban does not apply to exports. And none of the countries to which the suspect foodstuffs were ship.. ped, have. lbemseJves banned C)'Clamates.~ . Moi-e startling was the disc losure that at least two d'rug~ Which are sold in the Unlttd ·States· with strict warnings. aboUl possible side .. ,_. ' effects are marketed abroad with far less stricture. about the.it use. · One of the drugs, the an- tibiol.ic c.blGlqfllycetin, ctn cause seriou$ -even fatal - blood diseases. Jn AmerJca th~ drue's sale Is con~rel "t!! strictly. Doctors a~ w n~d not to prescribe it r rlvial. ailme nts . Yet abroad the drug Is ped- dled 81most as a panacea for a variety ·or allmen~s. from ' .. . . . , measles and chic~ll.D pox to gonorrhea and hepat i ti s. Nowhere on tbe label is the phy · rned the drug can be le I. So conce ned were U.S. Sta De rtment efficials a ut e wldesp tt;ad use of chloromycetin and lts possible effects oo internallonal reli!-· lions that recently it took the_ step of warning s e v e r a I foreign go\lernments llf the drug's hazards. J The sale to unsuspectinr (oreigner1 of &oodl and pr• ducts which are outlawed or illegal in the United States l:. not limited to foodstuffs and drugs. Recenlly thousands ef hi~ inflammable silk s c a r v e 1; which were imported Into lbr United Stales and.then b&Mef. as dangerous turned up ir. Canada where the fire pN!\len- tion laws are not as strict. DODGE COLT Now Dodge Car Prices Start at • I Monufocturer's Suggested Retail Price for Dodge Colt 2-0oor Coupe, with all standard equipment, os shown. Price incl'udes destinatton charges, but does not include state or locol toxes, title or license fees, or other Deoler-estoblished cli"orges, if ony, for Deoter-inslolled eQl.U pment or services. n.. h .. ••c-.,.ct _.... • ~ 1cio-t. ,..01 • ... speed transmission, std ..,-.. •Up to~ miles per go non• Buck.el ~r... seals • Flow-through venlilolion •front disc brakes, std. • Automotk: lronsmis.siOf1,opt. Choose from foor Golt models, Coupe lshownt. HordtoP; ... Door Sedan, Station Wagon, Of • -additional charge. 0rd8f yol.lfs today! • s1974 • 1 ti. . . \ DODGE -DART .• . " . I SWIN~E~ . " 11te ·boJP. . ) AUTOMATIC .... ,,,.,. . ) S...l'emCol. ,,,. ..... ~ ... -... ~ Rll"11M•1C tr_..,.M•I Thi$ is the Swinger that's setting new records for soles and value I See this specially equipped ha rdtop todov ! Get the automatic transmission FREE wken vou buvl It,.. ........ _n ,,1c ..... .._, -•...n c ...... Here"s o reol knocko ut blow against competition. The Dodge PriC:e f ighleis great solvtion for young_budgets! Room for five adults I .All·vinyf interior I Huge,rlfnk. /with c6nceoled spore '"el I Everything-except high mOnthly payments.. Toke o Demon·slrotiOf\ drive now! --+ > Dadge AUTHORIZED DEAf..ERS DODGE SWEPTLINE SPECIAL Come in ond meet Americo"a ecooomv pick.up chompl Swepttine Special-best truck· bargain in !own! It's o tougA holf-lon pickup that's priced way below competiJion! See it. Drive ii. 8vy ii I l i • HE'S IN YOUlt CORNEii PIGHTING HIGH PRlaSI 'o; . .-.ar.-AMll ,,,.;;¥ 00001 ... , .. AUOCIArlOff. stereo103FM ,. I the sounds of the harbor ~=1~~7 youve never hearditsogood , ------~ ; • ... I bAll V PILOT Frld.11, MQ 21. 1971 Bue1 Newton Tillu .. -1111 10 Held - Panthers to· 'Stop Hassling On Auto ' Police-Go Back to Church' _/' Repairs LOS ANGELES (UPI) -An •uto repair fraud crackdown using undercover agents i,n un- ·m-arked cars with specific malfunctions has netted JO suspects in the first six weeka of operation. BERKELEY (AP) -The cofounder of the 8 I a c k Panther party 3ays !ht mill· Ian! group is making a major change Jn its tactlcs -avoid· ing police mnfronlations, pro- moting church attendance and seeking nr.w support within !he b!ack community. Huey Newton said !he party "wu very wrong to think that lt could change the police forces in the way we tritd In do It. All we got was war and a lot or bloodshed ... ''We of the Panther party were arrogant to Aay 'dump !ht: church.' Whtn we 11tepped outside the church we cjefected from lhe C-Ommunity because the church is the one in· stitution .!he whole black com· munity Is involved in one way or anotM.r." Soledad Hearing • Charges by Reagan On CRLA Dismissed EL CENTRO I UPll -A federal commission h 1 s dismissed as totally un founded and without merit allegations by the Reagan Adm inistration lftat atlorntys for the California Rura l Legal A'!r 1lslance v.·ere "improperly in· \•olved'' with Angela Oa\•is and 11\e Soledad brothers. The decision wa.~ made in a closed st"ssion at Soledad Prison \\1edne~av but .v.•as not announced until Thursday dur. ing a public hearing here. "No evidence whatsoever ha s been produced to support any claim of misconduct by CRLA personnel or atlorne.vs regarding these matters." said Comm ission Chairman Robert B. Williamson. retired chief justice of Maine. The commission. compost>d LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE • of lhree judges. ia hold ing hearings around the st;ite Into the CRL.A at the direction of the Nixon Administration after Gov. Ronald Reagan_ ~)a st December -vetoed the {ederal grant funding the org.!l:n iu· lion. Thursday's announcement referred to charges contained in a report prepared by Stale orfice of Eco nom ic Op- portunity Director Lewis K. Uhler. He alleged that CR LA attorneys and another lawyer •·intervened" al the prison in an effort to arrange a meeting belwttn George Jackson, one of the "Soltdad Brothers." and Miss Davis. The decision also applied to charges that CRLA attorneys were involved improperly with another grou p of inmalell known a.~ lhe ''So ledad Seven," three of whom are on tri al for lhe death of a guard. 1'-11'1 l'ICTlllOUS IUJINllS NAMI STATIMl'NT tn a lecture spoMOred by 1 grou p of San Francisco Bay· area theological 1 e h o o I s Newton said : "We loe:t the favor of the black com munity anrl left lhem behind. Now there's ber.n a change in the makeup of the cent ral committee ar>d a cha nge in thinking. We're going to go to church and get Poll ce Sgt. Ken Carpenter · , said the investigation Is aimed N .,_ d at finding mechanics who e WMDJ a n .rullll charged f o r unnecessary 'P'"'"'"' or for ports nol In· Down in Shaft stalled in Lhe auto. involved in the church and the Tht unmarked cars 1re In-DESERT HOT SPRINGS black community. We want spected by police mechanic• and need the support and (AP) -The body of a before and alte r they are fa vo r of the black com-newspaper reporter misting serviced al auto repair 1honc munlty." chosen al random. ,... for nearly a year has been A split on policy in the Carpenter said Thursday found in an aba~doned well Pant her ora:anizati.on became there hid been thrte felony 1h•ft n11r this Riverside public last February when and seven mi5deme1nor i r· c l · Newton and Panther leader rests so far. «in Y community. Eldridge CleaYer, 1 fugiliYe in Th The 1heriff'1 "office said e lnvesti1alion covers on-Alae ria. clashed In 1 ttlephotte ly repair shops In the city of Thursday deputies were led to in terview. which w1s 1el1vl1-Los Angeles, all of which are the area by 1 man who edC:leaver advocated continued licensed by the police com· re!X>ftedly 11aid he killed Ter. underground attacks on the1_m_,_·ss_io_n_. __________ re_n_c_~~S_u_11_;,_,_•~·-s_2_. ---- establishment Newton em· phasizes working to free what the Panthers consider "political pri1onen:" a n d we lding blacks into a political force. Councilman Defended lease the new look of leadership {!) Via it Nebera' •Authorized" C.dlllac L .... Ing Department for outstanding excel lence In fleet leasfng or Ind ivi dual leasing. A large selectlon is now avallable to c hoou fro m. We will purc hase your present car for top prlcio. some. 110"1 l!10ll illlporl· ont produc:~ llYllllJ-OMI •I ~~~J 2IGO HAMOR I LVD. /COSTA MUA (714) 640-1100 CALLS ••• VISIT NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK DURING ALOHA WEEK MAY 24 to 30 • BAYSIDE AT JAMBOREE • SUPERIOR AT PLACENTIA • WESTCLIFF AT DOVER • MACARTHUR AT MICHELSON We'v~ l11rned our offices Into 1 bit ol paradise to celeb11ts tke fifs t Newport Beach Aloha \'(eek. Come iJ! a11d reiister for a f1 bulous, unforgettable trip to Hawaii and many other exci ting prites. ~HAWAIIAN VACATION FDR TWO PLUS A SPECIAL DRAWING FOR THOSE WHO VISIT NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK DURING THE WEEK &/A BEAUTIFUL SONY COLOR TELEVISION SET ~(so you can watch ''Hawaii F1ve·O," of course) ~A COLORFUL WORLD GLOBE "U' (To plot your course acrciss lhe Pac111c) ~EIGHT HANDSOME DECORATOR CLOCKS f ight Winners (there's good times ahead) Adults enfy m11v u:iglster, additional entrybl1nlrs f!vail1ble ail locatrons l1shtd. Orswlncr wlll ba Jietd Mty 30. You need not be preaent to w!n, Fiii out and deposit at parliclp111ng brariches ···················~ .. N•.111------------------ ·~ .. (-~---------------- t lO----------'" ... ----- l-1 .................. ... A BIT OF PARADISE,,. NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK Bayside at Jamboree •••• , ••••• 642-1 t 4 t Superior at Pl1cenli1 ••• , •• , ••• 842-9511 Westcliff at Dover ••••••••••••• 64 2-31 11 MacArlhur 11t M1Qlelson •••••••• 833-311 1 open unit!,! pm daily-6 pm on Frld171 . ' Daily Cal Gets Ultimatum r. f BERKE:L.EV (UPI) -The today. It was amendtd to halt Despite a later retraction UnJwer1lty ot Californl1 '1 !lU· publication Tuesday. and P&ily Ca.I editorials urging • dent newspaper will be The University f 11e 4 nod·vlolence. 400 p e r 1 ci n 1 IUJpended Tuesd•Y unless Its disciplinary charges Thuradat alaff accepts the firing of against the three ri red itaff . sho"ed up at the form~r park three editors who u r g e d members _ editorial pace -which is now • fMiced park· 1tudenl! lo "retake" Peop\e"s editor David Dozier, mana&lag ingJol and ~cer_fjeld -and Park, the campus publications editor James Blodgett aQd battled police with rocks and board decided Thursday. staffer Fran Ha11i·thorne. 'l'lle bottles last Salurday. The board voted 7·1, wilh cha rges could lead tb th•ir DOzier, Blodgett and ~1u;s one abstention, during a five-suspension from school. I llawihorne were fired f\-londay hour meeting to halt printing The three journali sts wf re night~ but the paper's s1aff an· of lhe..,Pally Cal if the staff charged in connectio n wit~ 3 nnunccd !hey had "rescinded continues to defy the board's Daily Cal editorial May 11 the ~ard's au1hority and con• dismissal of the three editors. which suggested students ~ar linue~ to pub lish, the news· Richard Hafner, represen-down a fence around Peo~le's pape(. The pu blication board tative of Chance llor Roger W. Park, the con tro\lersial /site was Set up this year by the Heyns on the publications whi ch triggered rioting on University Regents to exercise board, introduced a resolution May 15, 1969, on the second closer control over student suspending publication as of anniversary of the disorder. publications. TIM~EX~RE~PA~IR iiiiiiii KIRK JEWELERS 'COSTA MESA H9fhr C•et•r-S4S·f 41S HUNTINGTON BEACH H1111•l-.t.• c •• ,.,_.,2.1so1 Authorized Orani:e Cnunt.v SALES AND SERVICE 1=!!:i • THANK YOU FOR MAKING US NUMBER ONE!! ! Quali ty Carpets from 20 Major Carp et Mills at Low-Low Discount Prices OlCOIATOI rAll lCI OH I All TO '0',4 o•• SHO' AT NOMI SI MAIL.A lS,A.NOll ._ _______ IASY CfffDrr JIAMS AVAILABLE -------' ~1t1nn11nnmn1n1n1.1rn1T1 n1 1 rn11111111i111 1 111! ~ • " g " • I u z ' • I ASK ABOUT OUR " IMMEDIATE INSTALLATION I ·1 ALL INSTALLATIONS I OU AR.ANTI ID GA1DFM GtOVl ,,; l\VD, fOR 2 YIARS "'"""''"""'"' HU1Hnmm1m1 noar MOU1J1 wnoan ,.._. ,,M. MMtflT ltol1M P,M. WMUT ,.00#4 f .M. ~ • • i • s c..;,ll, • • i'V C,to;; ~ COLONIAL J ' Cll'tT 3: 7494 GarClen Grove llvd., Westminster (7141 537.7090 (7141 892 ·4495 ' • t • > • % u ~ • I • ... Congress Rebels Muscle In WASHINGTON (AP) -The current crop of congres.5man from marginal districts is showing an early tendency to buck the House establishment. On two key House votes this year, the bipartisan collection provided the muscle to cut off government funding of the supersonic transport and fail- ed by just two votes to limit the draft extension to ont year. On both occasions they disregarded the Nixon ad- ministration and H o us e leaders. If a patlem has been shaped by the mavericks' voting, it is that they are more attentive to their constituents. "In a close contest you need every vote ·you can get," Jaid one whtl asked to . b e anonym ou s. "The ad- ministration and the party leaders can't vote for you on election day." More ttian S congressmen won election last November by margins of no more than 5 percent of total votes cast. They are about evenly divid- ed between Democrat$ and Republicans, and about h~f are first tenner&. Others are legislative veterans who until recent years had little op- position in what were once considered safe di.slricts. Among tho5e veterans Is Rep. Fred 0 . Schwengel (R- Jowa) who was re-elected for a third consecutive tenn by a margin of only 75 votes over a Democratic challenger. He got 49.3 ~rcent of the total vote in a three way race. Schwengel, who says ~is district has changed in recent rears with increasing in- dustrializatio n attracting rural workers who switch party af- filiation, voted against the SST and for the one year draft ex- tension. The Iowan aaid his con- slituency is "swinging more against tbe war and toward a change in priorities r 0 r government spending.'' Among the newcomers who voted an anliestablishment line is Rep. Ri chard G. Shoup (R-l\1ont.l "·ho polled 50.4 per- cent of the total vote to unseat veteran Democrat A r no Id Olson. Shoup doesn't co nsider himself either a hawk or a dove but believes his con- stituents "want to get out of the \\'ar in a reasonable time but not to turn tail and run ." • T~is concern for voter at- tilUdes in swing districts has prompted a spi rit of in- dependence in roll calls. Thirty marginal d i ll t r i c l members supported the one year draft exleflsion and 27 opposed it. Tht amendment '~as defeated by two votes, 200 to 198. The SST was grounded by a vote of 215 to 204, \\'ilh 34 swing district members on the winning side and 23 voting the administration line. Thare·s little rubber stamp voling among SY.'ing district members. On the SST issue, for example, 16 Republicans joined 18 Democrats to cut off government spending. The early voting pattern in· dicates the marginal district members apparently are more concerned about the back home reaction to their vote than they are about their leaders in Washington Installation Scheduled A dual installation or of· fi~rs program is scheduled Friday night by Coastline Post 3536, Veterans of Foreign Wars. at the America n Legion }!all In Costa M~sa. The ceremony for both the VF'W post and Its women·s auxiliary will begin at 3 p.m., with a buffet served, ac-- cording to 1pokesman Dan \Vadsack. THE • BOLD PRICE SlASHlllG ON MOST WAllTED ITEMS THAT EVERYONE NEEDS • • • DON'T MISS OUT! UNBEATABLE VALUES ••• TYPICAL OF THE-GRf.AT BUYS YOU CAN DEPEMD .()PON FROM WHITE FRONl STORES! ONE DAY SALE • • • SATURDAY! H UR~! 11 OZ. BARBASOL SHAVING CREAM Big 11 oz. size of famous brand improved formula, regular or menthol. COMPARE Al 19< c EA. BONUS OFFER! AT HD Eml COS! 5 LI. BOX COLO WATER SOIP Iritll •• 1llls,ate frte f1rm1J1 wilHOI~. "Off" P1rU1se TEXACO 20 or 30 WT. QUALITY MOTOR OIL One of the finest motor oils made! 20 or 30 weight Ava ilable in main store. CUI REG. DISCOUllT PRICE 4 lu Ill sumE LEATHER INDIAN MOCCASINS Solt suede leather uppers. foam cushioned innersole. Beige or brown. l adies' sizes to JO. DUI REG. DISCOUNT PRICE 4.99 88 20 LBS. "Off" Detergent 14 INCH LONG '5 CRL' SBIGEANT'S SENTRY PLUS BONUS OFFER FIASHER FIASHLIGHT REA COLLARS Super cleaner with amazing low-suds· action. New, get bonus 5 lbs. Cold Water soap. OUR IEC. DISCOUNT PllCE UJ 99 CAMP BURNERS Powertul "S cell" flashlight· wilh special "!lasher'' button. Hanging loop, sure-grip rib. OUR REC. OISCOUNT PRICE 1.99 c CAMPER'S PROPANE 30 IN. FOOROCKER REFILL FUR TANK FOR HOME & CAMP l ightweight, economical propane fuel for burn- er, camp lanterns, galley stoves. OUR REC. DISCOUNT PRICE 1.21 c Melal clad locker Iha! off~s excellent slorage for sludent dorm, home or cafl1!s1le. l ockrng hasp, handle. OUR IEC. DISCOUNT PRICE 1.97 68 Gels rid e ol fleas and keeps them oil to 90 days. Odorless. Collar tor cat or dog. DUI REG. DISCOUNT PRICE 1.11 c " BOLD ''"He ••. EA. QUALITY "C" AND "D" CELL BATTERIES long burning batteries for clocks, toys, flash'· lights, radios, recorders, etc. COMPARE AT 2 FDI 350 COSTA M.ESA 3038 BRISTOL AYE. e JUST OFF NEWPORT AYE. BETWEEN SAN DIEGO FREEWAY and BAKER ST. • FridQ', M1y 21, 1971 DAILY PILDl 9 WHITE FRINGm CHENlllE ~. NO-IRON BEDSPREADS Machine wash and dry spreads ol pretty che!ille. In summery ailors you'll love! lwin or full sizes. COMPARE Al Ut 44 " BOLD S11t IJS EA. OVHINIGHT PAMPBI DISPOSABLE DIAPBIS Box of 12. The all-in-one disposable diaper and Plftls. Exira absorblnt. Ideal for summer travel, too. LIMIT i BOIES PEI CUSTOMER c " BOLD , .,,\.. I ,;MEN'S, BOYS', JR. •YS' SWEATSHIRTS He·man fabrics in machine washable colors, 111achine dry also. Men's 3-iiX, boys' 6-16, jr. boys' 2-8. 99c BOYS' ttWU£ATtf7 JR. BOYS' Bf C•IH '1 IJfn.'t CHARGE IT TODAY MIN'S C•All .tll4t DAILY NOON TO 9 PM SAT. 10 AM TO 9 PM SUNDAY 11 AM TO I Pll • JO DAILY 'ILOT J.,!,--·,.· .. ~:~~ .r.· .r .. ~:'..~~ • A. ' • . ' •. - -ti' Clru·ity Please 011 Board Pleas By JACK BROBACK "61 ,~. 0•11~ 1'1191 Jllll WHAT'S GOING on with the Bolrd of Supervisors ~se days? It's pretty hard to tell \\'ilhout a program. To illwilrate the confusion piled upon county s e a l reporters considt:r these hap. penings: The.re are two issuts discussed by the supervisors t"·o v.·ecks apart. THE rIRST Is the plea of the tax collector to be a,lowed to contract for a $29,400 micro- f 11 ming job oul3ide of the county, byp8 S!I· ing the usual bidding prtr ttdure and the county Data Services Department. The second . two weeks later. Is the plea of a trash dispo11al company serving the central part of the county to have the board agree to an optional 10- yea r extension' of a franchise v.·hicll ha.s 21.h: years to run. Statements by each supervisor on the tax col· lector's proposal and the disposal firm's request follow . Each county supervisor is quoted first on the tax collec- tor bidding bit. then on the di s posal firm ques- tion. F'or purposes of confusion the statements on the tax co/- Death Notices CAITLa LI DllnM L. C11111. Att W, of IA02 H.,.._ llet1 LIM, H11nrl1191oft lffcll. Dirt of Cltlln, "''' II, S11rvlvt11 b1 l'lutbfono, I••-; •l•lff, Doth llrOWft. 1t111.,y, I011!1M. Ftllll,, 7.JD '"'· Smllht c n1pel. 11:.,.1,11.,,.. M111, !.oturC!.11, 11 AM, SS SI"""' &. Juclt C•Tt>ollc Cllllrd'I. llUt•· Mtnt. Good "'"'11trd C1ntt11ry. Sml!n1 MDrllll r'I. Olr.c:1ot1. CHllltCHfl Jin LH Cllurd\el. lnl1nl dluthltr Df Mr. •nd Mr1. A. Irv« Churdlts, J02J k lllYl>rl!Oi>; L.,M, Coll• Mtll, Gr1.....,klt s1<vkn _,., lltlcl lod1,, FrldlY, 11 AM. Wtt•ml~lff M ...... r111 ''"'· wllfl lttY, l'rtd Moro.e ofllclst""'. ltll BroaCIWt' MorlUl 'l', Olrtcl'Orl. ILLll l!Y1 M. 1!1111. At• tt, of nu Courl St., NewPOrl llt1tll. a.re of d9etl'I. M•Y 20. su,.,IYtll bv •-C1.1u9llt1tn, Mr1. H1111 I!, ""•lktr. N"'POrl le1ch; Mrt. l!mm1 Jffn ll tk -..,1dltrltr, 1(1tllott, lcllho; i ncl ""'' tr1ndchllclren, '•lv1!1 11rvlc11 .,..,, htlcl. 11/11 Co1t1 Mn1 Mortu1rv, Olr1clo ... • JUIT!CIJ ~r!nur C. Ju1tlc1. ltll I!'. lf!n 51. Coslt M111. o.rt of dftlh. "''' 70, S~ICIS 1>tndln9 1! P1clllc Vlt w Mllf· !u1r1. ARBUCKLE A SON WESTCLIFF P.fORTUARY m E. 17th SI .. Cost.a Mesa 61M31S • BALTZ MORTUARJES CGrona de.I Mar .. fi73-t'se Costa Me1a ........ 1'6-2tU • BELL BROADWAY P.10RTUARV 110 Broadway, CGsta "1esa LI 1-3'33 • "1cCORMJCK LAGUNA BEACH rt10RTUARV 1195 Laguna Canyon Rd. 4H-9tl5 • PACIFIC \'JEW tlfE~IOfUAL PARK Cemetery rt1ortaary t'1lape:I :isol Pacific View Drive Newport Beacll. Calllornla 611-170I lector attd Ole disposal llnn by each participating super. visor are bunched with the tu coUector bidding bit first: Supuvlsor &a.aid Clipers: "-I move we accept the out- side proposal without bids. This is a aolden opportunity to get department beads on their toes." "-1bis extension of a con- tract should be subject to bid· ding, which might ,lead to a lower cost." Supervisor Robert Battin: "This is an excellent idea. lt will be get the department heads on the ball that haven't been performing well. The out.side flrm deserves the con· tract" "-I am against aranting the extension of this franchise 1~·0 years in advance. I agree bids would be better." Supervisor David Baker: -"We should get other bids. 'They might be lower. We have only a single proposal here." -''If they fail to pick up the extension option we have the right to go to bid, but•we have the right to extend without bids." ' Supervisor Ralph Clark: -"I suggest that we get al least two more bids." -"This is a question of free enterprise. This firm has done a good job and the renewal should be approved without bids." Supervisor William Phillips: -"I vote for competitive bidding." -"Good service is more im- portant lhan opening this up to bids." To confuse tht picture further, here is how the voting went on the two issues: Tax collector'1 outside con- tract without bids: For; Caspers,. Battin, C I a r k . Against; Baker, Phillips. RENE WAL of d ispo s al franchise without bids: For; Baker, Phillips, C I ark . Against, Caspers, Battin. Santa Ana Man On New Board 1ctvt11• Clltt1••• ··••" 511a. Tiit ~Iron mO"Wement does not de- pend on 1 bilanct wheel. lnstetd, an el1ctronlc-pow1fed luninl fo1k keeps precise lim1 tl'lrouah vibr1t1ons. In fact, Bu!0¥1 ru111n1m monlhlJ tteurKJ to "llhln I mlnut1.t ACCUTRON• b1 IULOVA "'' ""''"'"'I'.,,,,'" .. WO<ld I WIDE TERRY-CLOTH PRINTS 2 Days Only 84~d. 44-46" ,,·Jdc cotton terry to sew for beach er bath \1•ear. home decorating too! Stripes, geo- metrics, tloral!i, nauUcals, juvenUe prints In q uality 9-oz. "''t., 15-18-yd. lengths. Chatge It! X-25R INSTAMATIC-: OUTFIT 2 Days Only 20.87 Camera, 1 Maglcube and Kodaoolor@ film CX12G/12. All Instamatlc® fea~ turt>!I: PLVS molorizpd advance system •.. Jlihoot 10 picturt>s without rewinding. Slmll1r ft lt1u1lr1lloln TUFTED CHAISE ON 6-IN. WHEELS 18.88 DAILY 10 -10, SUNDAY 10 -7 SAT. & SUN. ONLY • Cott• Me ... -Huntington Beach Stores Only I BEACH TOWELS TEEN ' SLUMBER BAG 2 Days Only 1.87 Discount Price 6 6 6 r 36x70 Inch Jacquard weave btl.ch towels in 1t1ft, absorbent cot- ton terry. Hemmed ends. Choice of terrific patterns. Converll!le ~:!!~~~!~ag with ?"int cot~n to11, solid color t co tton back with warm Polyester fill. Mulli-purpose, OPf!n for comforter, zip close for sleeping bag. 68x80". Shop and uve ~ at K mart. X15R INSTAMATll:" OUTFIT 2 Days Only 13.88 Kodak'• most popular camera. Outfit lncludt>S 1 M'a&lcube and Kodacolor® 126/12 film. Will ahool color print film, black/white, or colored slides. ex 126-12 FILM 2 Days Only 86¢ 126 Kodak cartrida:e-load film yields 12 bM.utiful 3%x3Yi color prints. Charge it. REMINGTON PORTABLE TYPEWRITER 2 Days Only 27.00 Back to school or back to work, at home or a~·ay. A Remington portable frorn Kmart will help you atreak through all your uTiting U'ith the grC"atest of •ase. I " c....--...ai • DELUXE SAND CHAIR 31/2 H.P. ROTARY MOWER Pony Pack .Bedding Plants 28~ 2 Days Only , . 99¢ 2 Days Only l Chaise fldjusts to 'I positions, has l!I springy 4" thick vlnyl-covrrt'd mattrrsi; on strong tubular alumlnurn tremf'. \Vhlle quantltlC's hu;t? •A·600. MODiL KM200 47 00 2 Days Only • • Brla11 A: Stratton engine with et..~·spln starter and a utomatic choke. Four 7-lnch whttls. Selection lnclud" Stocki, Snap. dr111ton1 in attractivt> pony pack~. Visit our ga.rdt>n shop for all your Garden aupplies. T1ke tt to the beach or the j back ym:I. Just uy Cllarge I Jt a~ K mart. ~J Slmll•r N llholr1tlMI PAINT THINNER S8~.1. BIG BUCKET LATEX PAINT 2 Days Only 1.87 ,• 2 Days Only SPLIT LEAF VANtTY PHILODENDRON s1~ 2 Days Only 28.77 • ' ~ FUSCH IA I • ~ l PLANTS 2 Days s1~ Only I 1 Git.I. FuC'hSiAs. f•'r hang-• PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME ©~ C1•r111 for cleaning bru~hC'1l, . thlnnini:. old paints. 1-letaJ gal- l! Jon con1&lnf'T. S Qt1. of ont> coat h1!Px 1:ialnt In lhls big buckr-t. \\'hltt and colors:. F'nrmiC'a coverrd vanity with decorative hard\\'Al'f'. \Vhlle 11nd colors to mslC'h moat any dttor. Fauet>t not incl. l Gsl. Philodendrons. Jdral ing in basket or plantlna up-for lsndJcaplne front or • back yard. right In 11:ar df'n or patio. 7HI Bolsa Ave. Wea:tinlader awm • SAUTH'S MORTUARY 117 Moltt SL -!1111111• .... S..dt l ( .. II M"I .. ,., ... HUNt1NGTON CIHTll. '""" 1M l.lflfltw NllOlll"f""" l tltll ttJ·UU OM'il Miii., Tlfi""" ,,.., 'tit t COSTA MESA 2200 HARIOR ILVD . (•I W lloon) I • HUNTINGTOJl'J 19101 MAGNOLIA l•I Garliold ) i • Fri day, May 21, 1971 OAIL Y PILOT 11 LA Sees End to SA Freeway Rush Hours ~-------~ Do You Enjoy Being Alive? @ LOS A.1'\GELES -A coali- tion of planners is about to begin eliminating the punch- line of.. "'hat has beco1ne a joke over the years to non· co m mu t Jng Southland residents : the Santa Ana r~reeway during rush hour . \Vldcning projects due to begin by summer or fall of 1972 include adding another lane bet~n P aramo unt Boulevard and the San Gabriel River Freeway in t h e Lakewood-Downey area. Studies covering s e v e r a 1 years show this should get pr iority ainong 106 speciric bot tlenecks noted along the CARPET TOWN 4 DAYS ONLY! "Heavy Weight" INDOOR-OUTDOOR $'~~ .. 4 DAYS ONLY! NYLON SHAG 4 DAYS ONLY! f estiva1 501 SHAG thoroughfare burdened with 190,000 cars and trucks daily. studies are in the wor ks lo smooth trafric flow fo r Orange and Los Angeles county com- muters usin& the Santa Ana Freeway. pNjed, anticipated t• C1lSl fl mi!Uon. The IJ:llllal project is ire1t·1~ or work by the State Division or Highways' Freeway Opera· tloo Department and the Santa Ana Corridor Demonstration Pr<Vect tlon o! Governments (SCAGJ the corridor ,de monstration project began a year ago with federal fund support. No land acquisition will be required for the t"·o-mlle, $900,000 project nvolving only northbound lanes at one point but new lanes In both direc- tions elsewhere. Additional projects a n d A va riety of other measures such as metered control of traffic entering c e r t a l n <lnramps are u n d e r con- sideration as part of the total AdmlnJstered by the Southern California Associa- Long-range studies Include the possibility of building a double-deck freeway over the existing Santa Ana Freeway :''."Id developing a rapid transit system along the corridor. . iiiiiiiiiiiiii 4 DAYS ONLY! SIZE 12XIJ.l 12X9 12X9 12 X20 12X19 12XI l 12XI 1.4 12XIO 12X14.4 12Xl4.5 2X9 2X9.IO 2XI 5 2XI l 2XI l .l 2X l2.2 2Xl8.I 2X8.9 2XI J.10 2Xl7 2XI 1.6 2X15 2X9 2Xl8.l 2XI 5.6 12XI0.7 12XI l .7 12X9 12X1 4.2 12Xl3.9 12XI 1.4 12.XI B.6 15X16 12X14.8 12XI0.5 12X9 .8 12 XI 5.3 12XI l.7 12XI0.2 12XI0.7 2XI0.1 I 2Xl6 2X8.6 2XX9.l I 2X9.IO 2X I 0.7 2X12.IO 2XI I 2X I 1.6 2X9.6 2Xl5.9 2X I 1.8 2X ll .6 2XI l 2X6.5 2Xl9.6 2X8 .9 2X8 2Xl6.IO 2XI 1.6 REMNANTS and ROLL-ENDS DESCRIPTION Heevy Sculptur.-Avocado ···················-··········-·············································· .. ········• Kodel Sha9 -Green Tweed .................... ,_ .. , ............................................................. . Nylon Sha9 -Pale Gold ............................................................................................. . Hi-Lo -Royal Slue ................................................................................................... . Heavy Comm '! -Gold Tweed ..................................................................................... . Sha9 -Avocado & Lime Tweed ........................................ _ ..................... -................ . ~I:~ h I SShhaa99 ::: .Xh~ ~ t ··::::: :: ::::::: ::::: ::::::: ::: ::::::: :::: :::::: :: :::::: :: ::::::::::: ::::: :: ::::::::::::: :::·:: :: ::::: Kodel Sha9 -Lt. Green ...................................................................................... . Nylon Hi-Lo - 3 Color Tweed .................................................... , ............................ -. Comm'f Nylon -Blue Green .................................................................................... ,_ Plush Shag -Wed9ewood ........................................................................................... . Rubber Sack Avocado, Comm'I .................................. ----·-····-·--··········-......................... . Level Loop Kodel, Avocado ·······;· ...................................................... -........................ . Hi-Lo Nylon Maple .......................... -............................ ····-··· .................................... . Kodel Plush -Red ............................................................ -................................. ···-- Hi-Lo Nylon -Blue Green ............................................................. . Green Co~m 'I -He avy ............................................................... . Kode1 Sha -Antique Go ld ........ ... . .... ... ........................ ............. ..... .... ... . ... . Nylon Sha -Pink .. ...................... .. ......... .... ........... .. .... .. ...... ... ..... ... .. ·-··· Plush Kode Sha9 -Yellow ............................................. -........................... _ ..• Thick Sha9 -Avocado Tweed •....... ~ .......................................................................... . Blue Tweed Kitchen Cpt ............................................................................ ········-... . Comm'l Nylon -Rust ........................................................................................ -..... . Hi-Lo -Light Blue ........................................................................................ ··- Kodel Shag -Wh ite . .... .. ................... • ............ . ..................................... . Hi-Lo Kodel -Antique Gold ................................................ -· ...... ····-· ... -········· Plush Sha9 -l ime ............................................... -... .............. ........... ...... ... . 501 Nylon Sh ag -Mist Green -........................................................ -........................ . Kodel Velvet -White _ ..................................................................................... - ........ . Shag -Sun Gold ....................................................................................................... . Kodel Thick Pile -Gold ............................................................................................. . Kodel Loop -Mint Green ............................................... ............... .. ................. . 2 1/1" Shag Nylon -Avocado ............. ...................................... . . . ...................... . 21/1 '' Sha9 Nylon -Off-white .~ ...... ,. ............................ -...................................... __ _ Kodel Shag -Gold Tweed ..................................................... .-....................... . Long Shag -2 Tone Green ................................................................................ . Nylon Shag -Royal Blue .................................................................................... . Kode l Plush -2 Tone Blue ........ ................. . ...... ........ . ............................ . Heavy Sha9 -Light Green ........................ .. ... • ... ......... . ···-............. . Heavy Kodel Shag -Gold ................... ....... ........ ............. . ................................ . Kodel Sha9 -White ............................................................................................. . 3-Color Nylon Shag .. .... . ............................................................................ . Kodel Sha9 -Avocado Tweed _ ........................................................................... . Plush Shag -Wheat Gold ............................................. -········ ............. ·········-········ Nylon Sha9 -Canary Yellow .............................................. _ .................................... . Heavy Sh a9 -2 Tone Gold .. . ..... . ............................... -.................................. . 2 1/1 " Shag -Gold ................. ........... ..................... . ........... -.......................... . Shag Plush -Kelly Green .................... .. . . ............................................. . Kodel Shag -Janquil ... _ ...... ........................... • ................................................. . 2-Tone Kodel Shag -Gold .................................................... --.......................... . Heavy Shag -White .......................................................... _ ....... -..... ---~-...... . Hi-Lo Tweed -Gold ······-····-···· .......................... . ................................................ . Ny lon Shag -Pistachio ....................................................................................... _ Hi-Lo Nylon -Green ...... .. . . ..................................................................... . Comm'I Carpet -Autumn ................................... __ .......................................... . Hi-Lo Kodel -Sa9e ................................................................................................ .. Plush Sha9 -Bei ge . . ........................................................................................... . Hi.Lo Herculon - l i9ht Gold ............................................................... ··-· .. -··-· Kodel Shag -Yellow ............................................. ····-·-···· .. ······ .. ······-··········· ........ . Comm'! Carpet -Brown .......................................................................................... _ Short Nylon Shaq -Gold ... . .................................................................................. . Lo n9 Nylon Sha9 -l ighf Green ........ ........... ............... . .................................. . CARPET TOWN'S MANY, MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM ! PRICE 59.00 59.00 49.UO 99.00 9'.GO 82.00 75..00 6~.00 '19.00 79.00 36.00 64.00 79.00 69.00 49.00 65.00 96.00 35.00 79.00 99.00 79.00 62.00 104.00 95.00 71.00 85.00 24.00 95.00 49.00 45.00 79.00 79.00 16.00 76.00 79.00 4 DAYS ONLY SALE! SUNDAYS 11 A.M.-5 P.M AN AOOITIONAl 10% OFF I WITH THIS COtJPOH ONLY The Pric• of any Remnant or Roll- End ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMERI WEEKDAYS 9 A.M.-9 P.M. SATURDAYS 9 A.M.-6 P.M. h ii • plNIUff !of' yO\I 10 Wt~t 110, iO i.lt Wlllt Dltl .. t, ID tN lflt't CCllG"' t!6lllY, lo llll ... 10 law.i DnM • Ill• MIO.l"lll of liVoll(I -Wl!ll I'll cen<"'ltlllollf IC:I!\ ';'OU t 0f'(l<llrl!t1I 00 \'VU tn!OY • ~•l•!lly, •n 10ur.ll•AC• al '°""9" 'NII mtkt• VOii ll•PPY w;111 hit, r~u lo 1m1i., .._Ml orowl complet•l'f 1n1t1Ued 4 DAYS ONLY• KITCHEN CARPET A $1 0.99 Yalu• • s ial P pee. ~-urchasel limited to colors in st0ckl $7.~~ 4 DAYS ONLY! ''S01'' N~lONS Choic&· lovely 599 i:u~~tured Patt~ns ~~ $ p ctical Twee s ra rcial Types. · • sq. yd. Comme COLORS to Ma nY Choose from.• .TE1 y INSTALLED COMPlE • ASK ABOUT OUR OUTSTANDING DRAPERY VALUES ••• TO COMPLIMENT YOUR NEW CARPETING! BRING YOUR ROOM MEASUREMENTS • • • ' WALL· TO· WALL INSTALLATIONS AVAILABLE ••• MANY MORE SPECIALS TOO NUMEROUS TO UST WE OFFER 30-60 -90 DAYS ACCOUNTS WAREHOUSE ,,. '''"-"'-Phon·e 642-4305 I Open Evenings 'til 9 p.m. Satlwday 'tll 6 -Sunday 11 • 5 I Our Huge Buying Power For 30 Carpet T-n Stores Saves You More! ·All SALE ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE e BRING "(OUR R.OOM MEASUREMENTS e EXPERT INSTAl LATION AVAn.ABlE ·. 524 WEST 19th ST. COSTA MESA NEXT TO THE BANK OF AMERICA • I , ., . --·-- ( % DAIL V PILOT GOP Trio To Brief Agencies SANTA ANA -A task force of three Republican con· · gressmen will meet with of- ficials 0(4 Orange Count y government agencies and school districts June S to brief ·them on President Nixon's revenue sharing plan ... The session will be held in the Board of Supervisors hear- ing r oom in the County Administrative Building in Santa Ana beginning at 10 a.m. Congressmen Charles E. \,Viggins, El Monte.: Peter Biester. Pennsylvania and J ack McDonald, Michigan will be the I.ask force. The federal plan of return- ing some tax money to the coontics. cities and schools will be augmented by special fund s to law enforcement agencies, it was indicated. P edes tricu t Sues Drive r, Car Oiv11ers SANTA ANA -A Corona de! Mar man who was struck by a car and seriously injured near his home July 9 wants $3 million in damages from the motorist and the owners or the .euto. Richard Darwin Glick. 25. of 313 Heliotrope Ave., names Investors Div ersified Servict:s of Santa Ana and Robert .John Liddell .. 27. of 519 Iris Ave .. Corona del M~r, as defendants fn his Orange County Superior Court action . He identifies Liddell as the driver of a vehicle which struck him at the intersection of East Coast Highway and Tustin Avenue. Officers said Glick was the last member of a group of pedestrians crossing the highway and h11d almost reached the curb when he was hit by the auto. Chancellor • Gets Awar<l IRVINE -UC I r v i n e Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich J r. will receive the University of Arizona Alumni . Achie ve- ment Award at com- mencement ceremonies i n Tucsoo f\1 a y 29. Dr. Aldrich completed his master or science degrtt in agricultural chemistry at the University or Arizona in 1941. The award is the .second honor granted Aldrich by the University or Arizona. ln 1960. he was given that institution's 75th Anniversary Mt.'dallion of 1'-1erit. pollution is also a state of mind. We hear a lot about pollution of air and water: But what about ment al pollution? Could it affect the environment we live in? Perhaps the answer to dirty rivers and smoggy air is purer thinking ••• more spiritual thinking thBit eliminates the greed and self·will that cloud ou r thoughts. To learn more about fighting mental pollution, come hear a talk by Grace Bemis Curtis, a teacher and practitioner of Christian Science, called "Lefs Choose Heaven Here." CIYisfan Science ~cture f .... lf, Ml~ U, lt11 11 l :N '·"'· IO ot ll<tld If\ £5TA"l(IA HijiH SCHOOi. 2m Nortll PllcitnU• ............ CM11 M t .-, C1lllotnlt IH1•t»r Rfvd to W•lllOll. Wftl on WlfKl1 ltlen rt911r Of!' P1•,et'ltl1 oll<t I IJ""tt !tit •V$llO(H ol 1'1.-IT CNU'ltC" 0"-"Ctfl:llT', ICl•HT'Uf C.14 Mew, C•llfornlt - . , . -• • Frldi\Y, Ma1 21, l 9n ' JUST SAY "CHARGE IT" (Hot '"" 60'-70' OFF TERRY PRINTS • Sew beach robes, towels and morel • Have fun selecting prints! 99~ REG. 1.59·1.69 INFLATABLE VINYL MATTRESS 86~. • Comfy vinyl mattress • Inflates to 68 x 27" • Blo w-up and relax! • In Toy dept. ,. SPECIAL odor•. OIODll 7flU $30 OFF AIR CLEANER s99 • Electronic a ir filter • Traps pa rticles in air • Removes odors too • Save $30 now REG. 129.95 50 4 FT. OFF IRON RAILING . . • Ornamental iron ra ils 1 09 • In 4 and 6-ft. sections • Adj ust to slopes. • Accessories ova iloble LN. "· "REG. 1.59LN. FT. ' LARE PANT • Dacron !i polyester- Orlon(!l acrylic rayon • No ironing needed • Belt loops; 29-38 591 REG. 8.99 SPECIAL! MEPPS ' LU RES! • Plain or squirrel-tail style ho oks • Champion addition to any tackle col lection 66~. SPECIAL SAVE! WATER SO TENER SALT • Med ium coarse salt6 9 ¢ • 50-pound bags • First quality 50-LB. • limi t 10 bogs BAG REG . 994 7 MEN 'S NYLON SURF JACKET 2ss • Bright nylon taffeta • Water repellent. • Machine washable. • Sizes, S,M,L,XL. SPECIAL $22 SAVING! . QUILTED, FITTED KING BEDSPREADS! 999 RIG. 31.99· • Lustrous acetate 'taffeta • Fully qu ilted King spread • Cord welting top outline • Kick pleated corners $8 OFF PORTABLE COOLER! : ~:~~~P1::~1~n~~~ta r 1988 • Eliminates hot spots • Save $8 on cooler · RIG. 2~.95 1.63 OFF WOOD SHELVING! • Wolnut·fi nish wood shelves; 8 x 24" 5.69, 10 x 36" .. 2.86 8.49, 12 x 48" .. 3 .86 1!~ .. UG. 3.C9 TASTE· TEMPTING· WARDBURGER PLATE! 99S~ICIAL • Delic iou s. Wo rdburger on fresh bun/French Fr ie• • •lettuce, tomato and Cole Slaw included • Handy tra vel dryer • Packs easily fo r trip • Fas!, easy drying • Pick one up today! . ' SPECIAL BBQ LIGHTER FLUID -FAST! 39~~ · • Cleon-burning fluid • Fast charcoal starts • One quart can • Save 20¢ a quart now RIG . S94 32-GAL. PLASTIC TRASH CAN 311 • Plastic trash co~ • Ho lds 32 gallons • Tight fitting lid • l id locks; bu y now! SPECIAL . all season 80' OFF ALL-SEASON OIL! · • Meets a ll U.S. auto makers specs. • Keeps engine clean • 80¢ off gallon can RIG. 1.19 SHOP MON. IHRU SAT. 'Ill 9,30 SHOP SUNDAY 12 TO S PM! LA CIENEGA FULLERTON SANTA ANA PANORAMA CITY ROSEMEAD . . lo c1enego a! 18rh sl. harbor at 01oiigr1:.arpe '-'6tol ot Sl!YMfttnth toblo• al <O•<oe d TORRANCE del amo fo,hion tquore phone .542-6971 • h 836 7,., h 71 879 2500 h roserneo bl.,.d. or sari L..rno<d,-o •----'""""'"::.'=:.·'-"''-''~-_. ·---~""-' 4 · p Of'le .5•7·68 41 ho·o 89•·8211 f -" T • ---i------;i/Oi;;iT(ijj;-.;----""t--;;-;~~"~;';~;;;---t--"'~''~"~o~-~·~ho~n~o~5 7~3~.J~l~IOJ____j NORWALK HUNTIN GTON BEACH VENTURA ., CANOGA PARK . COV l~et1cil ol norwoll..: blvd. ed1nger at beach bovl~vord SOO~sou!J1 lllil's rood IO. poni•f'••• bo INA one 868-0'911 · Jjhone 7J A.892·6611 4A5-.542l 642-754 1 .... , 8 .fOOQ rronc:ci 01 '°"' b•tl'Ol'dono ""' fr••wo -hon• 966.7 411 I • ' • S,even ueens Give Heart to H • ospita : STEPPING INTO SERVICE -New members of the Queen of Hearts Guild of Laguna Beach Oe!t to right), the Mmes. Walter E. Rutledge, George Bryant and Donald G. Houseman arrive for an Installation luncheon tn the ~Ionarch Bay Beach Club. Seven area women have joined the ranks with the active guild which lends support to Children's Hospital of Orange County. Summertime Arrives And Living' s Easy When people think of the Monday Morning Clu b, they think ot friendliness and advancement of civic, philanthropic, cultural and edu· cational interests. These being the primary interest of the founding members. th& club extends a friendly handclasp to new residents while inviting them to join in monthly luncheon meetings on the second h-1onday of each month. During the final meeting this month, officers \Vere installed by ?i-1rs. \Valter Sherry, a member. Taking over official duties after a membership tea in September \\'ill be the fl.Imes. William Gieschen. president; ~1ilford Nelson , Robert Healton and C. Milton Woolford, vice presidents; Fred Anderson and Norman Alexander, secretaries, and Ruby Binkley, treasurer. \Vomen interested in joining the club are invited to contact any of the officers for information. SUMMER VACATION -Summertime Is vaca- tion time as members of the Monday Morning Club of Laguna make travel plans in advance of a busy new club year. Perusing travel brochures while packed for any occasion are (left to right) the Mmes. William Gieschen, president, Norman Alexander, secretary, and Ruby Binkley, treasurer. Installation ~ Crowns Year Against a background of spring flowers; shining sand a~d pounding surf, seven new members o( the Queen of Hearts Guild of Laguna accepted their role in the active hospital auxiliary. The ?tfmes. Gordon Atkinson, George Bryant, Wil· liam Fish, Donald G. Houseman. John Newton. Walter E. RuUedge and Louis Hunter Piper shared the spot· light with new officers during an installation luncheon in the Monarch Bay Beach Club. Guest of honor at the luncheon was Mrs. James Sta\vicki,·coordinator or volunteer services of Children's Hospital of Orange County. The afternqon began with a social hour while active and su.'itaining members became acquainted with new members. Following Juncheon, activities of the past year were outlined and officers and guests were introduced. Fund· raising projects of the past year included Premiere Ni~bt of the Home and Garden Show in Anaheim Convention Center, a Christmas card sale, champagne boutique fishion show at the home of Mrs. John Leeds Kerr, par- ticipation in the annual Robinson's Fashion Show, and a new project -a luau brunch in Don the Beachcombers restaurant. Continuing projects of the guild include sale of CHOCO bear pins and charms and an unusu4l cookbook. One of the m<1jor features of the day was installa· tion when r.rrs. Will iam Gwinn accepted duties as presi·. dent of the Queen of Hearts Guild for 1971-72. r.frs. Francis Fabian, a past president, conducted iristallation ceremonies and recited a personal poem about each ne\V officer. Childien's H!Jspital is a private, nonprofit, county· wide supported pediatric center for children of all races, creeds and economic levels up to the age of 17. Tt also is an educational and resear.ch center. the . only hospital of its kind from Los Angeles to San Diego. 6WLen BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466 ,,....,, Mar ft .. U71 I ..... 11 \ .. ·' ;) .. •, • . . •· Ann Misses Point: Problem Could Lead to Delinquency ,.·,, "fi ::~ DEAR ANN LANDERS' My husband and I art undecided,.. Will you please help us come to grips with Ule problem? We Jive in a middle--class housing develop- ment. Wt mind our own business and have a pleasant relationship with evuyone on the block. But our neighbors arc not our social friends. The family down the street has rour children. Three times in the past six weeka they have sent one of their children over here to "borrow" a couple of cigarettes. My b~od smokes. I do not. Wa have always liftn the cigarettes to the chJld and not thought too much about it, but after the third time we are beginning to wonder if we should continue this pracUce. There's a dn.Jg Atore three blocks from here which ataya open. until midiilghl. What is your 01Jlnlon? -FREE ANN LANDERS CIGARETl'E MACHINE DEAR FREE: The worst par1 of this teene 11 the example Ole parents are te&.. &lq for tbelr cbddre1. It ta ufortaaate when thildrea see &heir pare1t1 ao enslaved by lbe tobacc. Ubtt dlat Otey mast borrow a cigarette to 1et throalb. tbe night. II 11 also a 111lunce. I'd say three times Is tnoa1h. From aow oa uy "no." <Editor's Note~ We belie.ve Ann .hat. missed the-point because the children borrowing the cigarettes may be 1moking them themselves. The lenders possibly are contributing to juvenile delinquency.) DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am happy you reprinted your Twelve Rules for Raising Olildren. As a grandmother who did well with her own brood and is now watching her daughters and sons do even better, may I add a 13th rule? If a mother or father Jack the Im· .qloa.tloo o.r. w_iU. no.l take the time to plan sorpethlng Interesting and instructive for their children to 00, they have no rfgtiT to-1'" - object to whatever the klda think up Ulemselves. -KANSAS GRANNY DEAR GRANNY: JJlg bt yoa are. "A.a Idle mind Js Ole devil's workshop. Idle hands are his toolt." Let's make it a blker'a doien. Tbanka for wrltlog. DEAR ANN LANDERS : t am a 13- year-old girl who has a problem that is bothering me a lot. I have no Idea what to do about it. l hope )'OU "111 give me a solution. lAis has been my best friend for seven years but recently abe hu developed a bad habit. She comes into my nouse, sits wit6 me for about 10 minutes. then off she goes to the kitche n and helps herself to .. wbatev~r she sees. I wouldn't dream of doing such a thing -even in my aunt'• house. I think it 'a colossal nerve. , Thia afternoon, Loia fixed herself a triple-decker sandwich and drank half a quart of milk. I kept my mouth shut because I didn't know what to aay. After she left I was mad at myself for keeping quiet. Would I be a bad bolltess tf 1 told her I didn't like it? -CHICKEN FRIEND" .• DEAR CIUCK: Lois baa 1t0 maaltft'I and I tlalllk • you mtgbt ttacb btr tomedlln(. It h: utrtmely nclt &o 10 lnle tht kltcbea of a lrie:nd ud belp 111eself to food, The nut time Lola htadt that w1y, atop her and explaJ1 that yoo pla1 to 1erve cookie• and milk a llUlt later 1Dd that 1he abould wait. DEAR ANN" LANDERS: Our daughter ls 23. She married ilazy, no-gOOd rat who .:;. Is already cheating on her. She Is ~ months prtgnant. Should we encoura~ her to get a divorce? Wt don't thinkfH.; makes any se&e for ,i young girt to "" · with a mistake forev€'. Please rush yoWf,: advice. -MOTHER WHO SAW lT 00~ ING :.;"'• DEAR MOTHER: Keep qaleL II lo W: mistake and her DO-lood, luy rat. :Ji,: should aJso be ber declsiol, slDce abe wj!~ bave &o abide by tbe CODHqlelM*. .. ;:. Give in or lost him , •• when a rrir . gives you this line, look out ! For tip& Oii how to handle the super SH aalesmari.~ check Ann Landers. Read her booklet.~ "Necking and Petting -What Are Uil1 Limits?" Send your request ~ Ana l Landers 1n care of the DAILY PILOT·,. enclosing 50 cents In coin and a ion&, stamped, self·addresstd envelope, : • . . . • " • ': ~; I .. • I .. .. • ··------• OAlLY PILOT -' ' frldlf, M.u 21, 1971 A Bride for History Welcome Home! Question Tempting Dinner Guest Returns A panel or community leaders ~·ill ask Is the Harbor Area Coordinated? \\'hen the Harbor A re a Coordinating Council meets at noon Tuesday, May 25, in the Alrporter Inn . It will be the concluding meelin~ of the year featuring the election of officers. Serving on the panel will be Fred Sorsabal , city manager of Costa Mesa: Jim Wood, president or the y 0 u t h Employment Agency; h1rs. William L. Stabler. Newport Beach City Arts Committee and Mrs. Garth Bergeson, achoo I board member. Reservations are required. Me mbe rs View Slide Story Mrs. Robert Barnes will open her Newport Beach home at 8 p.m. Tuesday, May 2.5, for a meeting of the Santa Ana· Newport Beach H a r b o r Chapler, Delta Gamma Alum· nae. Uncle Charlie and the Quiet Voice. a slide and musical presentalion . will be given by Mrs. George Johns, sloryteller, photographer and world traveler. Silve r Sand s The firsl Tuesday at 8 p.m. Is the meeling time for Silver Sands 286. Native Daughters of the Golden West A salute to a returning director of Laguna ~toulton Players is planned during a premiere dinner of "The ~1an Who Came to Dinner." New managing d i r e c t or Howard "Hap'' Graham, who not only directs the hit com- edy but stars in the title role, will be feted during the affair in Victor Hugo Inn on Tues- day . May 25. The director will share bill- ing with his wife Elsa Bahar Graham , founder of the First Nighters. as lhey are greeted by guests at a 6 p.m. cocktail hour. 'Smiling Voice' Sings For Executive Group The 89th dinner and fina l event of uie season for the Ex- ecutive's Dinner Club of Orange Coast, will begin vdth a social hour at 6 p.m. in the Newporter Inn on Thursday, 1r1ay 27 . . Booked as featured at- tractions for the finale are Jack Smith, known as the "man with the smile in /:lis voice" and David Foste r. operatic soloist currently with the UCLA Opera Workshop. Smith, -public r e I a t i o n s director for Glendale Federal Savings, will discuss People, Places and Things. Foster will- sing selections from light opera, accompanied by Earl Brent, fonner music arranger at Metro-Goldwyn-11-1ayer. Mrs. Leota Garst w i I I preside with the assistance of hostesses, the Mmes. Syd .Bartlett, Spencer H o n i g, Donald Houseman, William Imhoff, J. W. Kem, Joe Long, HIT PARADER J1ck Smith Wanen Morgan and Edward Quinn. A silent auction, a knitwear fashion sh owin~ and a champagne luncheon "'ill comprise the agenda !or Neu'Port Harbor Tri Oelts' annuaf spring benefit. ?i1rs. Wilham Snyder will open her Ne\vport Beach home at 11 :30 a.m. for the \Ved· nesday, ltlay 26, event. Previe\ving sale items are (left to right) the Atmes. Jame.! Rudy, Donald Banks and Ke nneth Grumbles . • They will be joined In th< receivina line by Laiuna Moulton Playhouse President Glenn Vedder, Mayor Richard Goldberg and City Manager Lawrence Rose and their wives ; Festiva'I of Arts board president William Martin, and First Nighters president, Mra. George Thompson. Reservatlens are {o be made by Sunday, May 1', for the 7 p.m. dinner. Bride-of-the-year Tricia Nixon , the blonde 25-year-old daughter of President Nixon will marry Harvard law student Edward Finch Cox at 4 p.m. Saturday, June 12. The single ring ceremony will take place in the White House Rose Garden if weather permits. Although the eighth • ' daughter of a president to marry in the White House, she will be the first to have an outdoor ceremony. While a student at New York's Chapin School in 1963, she met "my first and last love" Eddie Cox at a school dance. Among those hosting tables will be the Messrs. and Mmes. Joseph Simmoru, W 11 1 i a m Gieschen, Spe~ Honig, Andrew Morthland, Herbert Hartley, Donald Vanderbilt L------------------------------------------' and Colin TimmOM ; Col. and Mrs. William H. Bruggere and Col. and 1r1rs. William Roley; ·Miss Fern Randolph ; Mn. Hovey Cox and Mrs. craig Ketcham. Summer Wedding Planned A summer wedding is being planned by Karen OJtler of Santa Ana and Oiarlie S. Nelson Jr. of Flagstaff. Paren ts of the engaged cou· pie are Mrs. Geocge R. Bowland of Moraga and Navy Capt. (ret.) and Mrs. Charlie S. Nelson of Huntington Beach. The bride-elect is a graduate of Marina High School and is a junior at UCI. Her fiance also is a graduate of MHS and Is a senior at Northern Arizona University. He is affiliated with Delta Sigma Phi and Sigma Tau Gamma. The wedding is planned for August 28 in St. Peters by the Sea Church, Portuguese Bend. Bible T eo cher Relates Story Catholic lay evangelist and fonner nun Miss Raquel Ja- quez will address members and guests of Zeta Chapter of Lambda Theta Chi sorority at a tonight in the San Clemente home of Mn. Albert Carlson. Miss Jaquez rec:enUy return- ed from an international ecwnenical conference I n Salamanca, Spain. As a result of her stay, she founded 40 prayer groups and Bible sludy classes In major Spanish cities. Entertainment will be pr~ vided by Mr. and ti.1n. Blll Patton of North Hollywood. Horoscop e New Films Previewed Selected new films will be exhlbited by Jules Engel, Academy Award-winning film- maker during a luncheon meeting of Wome n fo r California Institute of the Arts /\-fonday, May 24. Pisces: Be Versatile Prior to the luncheon in the Newport Harbor Art ti.fuseum, guesls will view the museum's current show, New Painting io Los Angeles. · Engel, who also is a faculty member of CIA, has received numerous awards from the Venice and Edinburgh film festivals and the Golden Eagle Award from the U.S. Govern- ment. He wlll be accompanied by Harbor Area CIA students in- cluding Bob Rogers, ti.1arshall Harvey, Rick Harper and Tim Volz. Chairmen of the luncheon are the Mmes. Milton B. Harvey, John T. Boyd and Richard Wincler. SATURDAY MAY 22 By SYDNEY Ofl.IARR Astronomers who continue to att ack astrology are con· sidered b be cranks by their colle1guea:. 1be public, Jn this day-and-age, realize• t b a t astronomy and astrology are separate field s of endeavor. The astronomer who bas nothing better to do than to vilify astrology Is ridiculed by both a1tronomer1 and astrologers. ARIES (March 21-April 191: Money question can b e answered , but you must do the asking. Waiting for others lo volunteer information only creates needless delay. Be forthrig'tit, direct . Say what you mean -mean what you say. Fashion Also Tic keted Tea on Flight Menu TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Lunar cycle is on upswing. Your judgment intuition are apt to be correct. Obtain hint from Aries message. Take in- itiative. Make new starts in new directions. Emphasize, originality. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Forces tend to be scattered. Make up you r mind about whal is to be done-and do it. Work behind the scenes. Be discreet. Co-operate in project that alds charitable cause. CANCER (June 21.July 22): A friend confides problem in- volving red tape. Be sym- pathetic. But don't tie up assets on what could be helpless cause. Have fun at social gathering without being extravagant in claims. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Spotlight on how you relate to professional superiors. Don't take bac k seat; but avoid any show of arrogance. Express yourse lf in confident. forthright manner. Romantic interest is evident. VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sepl. 22): Family member may need reassurance. If necessary, do this by phone, telegram or A parade of stewardess scr\'ices such as hosting grand other special communication. fashions from airlines around opening and serving at ban-\'ou may receive gift from one the world will be featured at .quets. v.·ho .returns from journey. Be gracious. the aMual spring tea of the Sophomore girls leaving lbe UBRA (Sept. 2.'l-Oct. 22 l: mistakes. Others will mi. derstand. SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21): Older individual has adv ice to offer. Be an attentive listener. Affects marriage, partnership, legal settle ment. Be a careful, shrewd observer. Let others have spotlight. Take it easy. SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): Finish projects. Emphasite appeal, advertising: techniques . Spread influence. Communicate ideas. Write and publi sh. Build on solid base. Check basic needs . Then fill them. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22"'1an. 19): Good lunar aspect now stresses creativity, relation! with opposite sex. Stress the new. Welcome oppo rtunity for challenging contacts, ideas. Don"t be afraid to change your mind. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2\l-Feb. 18 ): You may be pulled in two directions at once. Key Is to take practical co urse. Promises are cheap. Go with one who has something on claims. You will understand. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Accent on short journeys, special dealings. With close relatives. Be versatile . Concentrate on expansion. Promote good will : attend ga thering which b r i n g 1 creative contacts. Orange Coast C o 11 e g e stewardess program will be tnvesLment procedures should t To tlrd w t -·• IU(~., for ¥eu lot stewardeues at l p . m. graduated Sunday, June 6, be reviewed. Take lime to be monti •"" 1a.,. or.lier s • .,,.,., o ..... •r'• S d d ' ' I I h t SI !hod boot!f l, "SKrtl H1n11 for Mffl •M un ay, May 23. ur1ng cermonies n e correc . oppy me s now wome~." se"" t11rthd•1t •nd 50 ctnt~ Family and friends of those Mission Beachcraft offices at are especially costly. Don 't !')(! 10 0m1rr Attrol0111 SK•tt1, "" OAIL Y Ai PILOT, Bo~ .U«I. Grind C•nlrt l Sit· on the preigram ha ve been in· Orange County rport. afraid to ask, to correct past tlon. New Yark. N.Y. 1oc11. vited to the event in the Mesa ----------1-----'-'---===--'==cc:=..:::c'-'=-- Verde Country Club, which ,-- will include a skit of an airline fli ght presented by sophomore coeds. New program offic ers will be inlroductd, and service hour awards given to the stu· dents for volunteer community WANTED WIN NEW CARS FROM CHARITY FAIR WOMEN INTtlBTtD IN LEAlNINCO TO MAKI SUMMH WARD ROll. CLASSES STARTING IMMIDIATl(YI ... "''" ....... $2950 ....... 549·1 1'5 2!00 Herw Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers E11t1r ti H1111ti119ton C1nl1r •nv ti"'• btfor1 ltl.clr•wi119 thh S•lvtd•y, Mty 22, fo, n•w l ill Mtii.y Toyof1. N1w cl r1win91 •v•rv Si t. for 4 w11 lr1 for K1rlr J1w1l1rt 1.01 vn1T1ovr1t1d ditlT!ond, Tciwn •nd Cou11try C 1ri bb1•fl Cruit1 for 1, 111d D•-lv•• Optl S1dtn fro"" T11ry lulclr, pl111 1T111ny contcil•lio11 pri11t. $1 ch•rity Jci11•tlci111 w•lce1T11. H1111tin9lo11 C111l•r 11 l1tch t!lfl EJl1191r •I the S111 01190 F/••Y· stop look sev enty-ones al ~1!~L~ 2000 MARBOft BLVD. I COSTA ~ES,&, (71 4) 540-1100 .. A Must for Spring 708!! J1ot P3nts -cuffed and easy·to-1nake \\'hether with or without the darling bib that is decorated \Yilh a pocket! Top-stitching marches around the \\'aislband and bib. A must for all the young this coming sea- son. ~take il in denim. co tton. butcher linen, hop- sacking, knits, synthetic blends, satin, corduroy, velveteen and suede. 70841 is cut in Junior ~izes 3-15. Size 7 requires approximately l % yards of 45" fabric. This pre-cut, pre-perforated Spadea Designer Pattern produces a better fit. To order 70841 ; give size, name. address and zip. Send $1.25 postpaid. Address SPADEA. Box N. Dept. CX·15. Milford. N.J. 08848. PATIERN BOOKS BY CLASSIFICATION: Sew Speedy Col· lection -Sl postpaid. Mesan \fo Join '" Bridal Ranks KARILYN VARNEY June Plans r.1r. and ~1rs. .James ll. Varney of Costa J\1esa ha\'e announced the engagement of their daughler. Karil yn Sue Varney to Virgil A. Bushman Jr .. son of l\tr. and Mrs. Virgil A. Bushman of Joseph City. Ariz. . A June 24 wedding In the Arirona Te1nple. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is being planned. Miss Varney is an honor graduate of Costa Mesa High School, attended Dixie College, SL George, Utah, and now ls attending Mesa Community College, Mesa. Ariz. Her fian ce is a gradu<1te of Holbrook High School, Joseph City and of Lincoln Technical College, Phoenix. William Montgomerys Home 1n Costa Mesa Home in Costa Mesa are 'Vi l\iam Roy 1'.1ontgomery and his bride. the former Ruth Keaton, both of Costa 1\.1esa. Glad Tidings Assembly of God Church. Ne1\•port Beach \vas the setfini;: for their vo1v and ring exchange and of· fiC"iant was the Rev. Tom Ben- venuti. Parents of the brid<il couple are Mrs. Claude Lee Keaton of \\'estmoreland. !he late 'lr. Keaton and r.1r. and r.1rs. La"Tence E. J\1ontgomcry of Costa Mesa. Given in marriage by her brother: Otis Lee Keaton. the bride asked her sister, ~trs. \Vayne Husk of Portland , Ore. to be her matron or honor. Bridesmaids \\'ere another sister. Miss Rufina Keaton of Seattle. l\1iss Rosalinda C.oss and r..1rs. Juanita Payne. Sara Yater was the flower girl and lan Yater the ring bearer. Attending as best man was the Rev. Danny Trail and ushers \\'ere Ron Sapp, David Johnson and Bill Buttram. The bride is a graduale of Brawley High School and at- tended Jmperial Valley and Orange Coast colleges. Jtrr husband is an Estancia High School graduate and also studied at OCC. Lagunan Claims Bride In Pacific Grove Rite St. Catherine's by the Sea Epi~copal Church. Paci f i c Grove. was the selling for the nupt ials linki ng Cy nthia Anne Karp and John Parker Kin£ Jr. The Rev. Allan Wolter directed the ring and vo11· t'X· change for lhe dau ghter of :0.1r. and l\1rs. A1ark Karp of Los Altos and the son of r.1r. and f\trs. John P. King or Laguna Beach and Pasadena. ~ Attending the bride 1o;ert ~1rs. Jeffry Stevens. 1\trs. Le"1is Trusty and l\t is s Deborih Bagot. "''hile the benedict was attended by Robert Barnett, Trusty and Dr. Darryl Jones. The bride is a graduate nf the Universily of Callfl)rnia. Berkeley. ~here she pledged Alpha Omicron PL The bridef(room greduHted from 11chools In Pasadena and Oc· cl dentnl Colltl:'l' where he af· flJialed 11·ith Sigm , Alpha Epsilon. Receiving his doclor of jurisprudence degree from Boalt School of Law, Berkeley, he now is a pracllcing at- torney in Santa Ana. Following a 1-1 a \Y a i I a n honeymoon. the newl yweds "'iii reside in Laguna Beach. Lad ies' A u~ilia ry The Odd FellO\\'S !tall is the setting for the meeting or the Ladies Auxilia ry to the Vet- erans of foreign \Vars. Post 7368, Huntington Beach. the first Friday if each month. A social event takes place lhe lhird, Friday. Nuts lo Nibbles Nul!l to Nibbles TOPS Club meets in lhe Huntington Beach R<'Creation Center every Fri- d11y <It 10 a.m. c:randmothrrs I l DAILY PILOT J:; Man Finds Virtue • 1n Being Selfish Club Members ' Host Luncheon Life doesn 't have to be a vnle of tears If only you ·are willing to be selfish eaough. Thls Ls the opinion of Harry Browne. one of the most con· troversial speakers to appear before the Monday ~1orning Club of llunlington Beach. Once the typical. hard-driv- ing busi nessman, he managed a company, wrote a nationalJy. ~yndicated newspaper column, lectured -and in his spare tin1e -tried to s ave the world. Th~n he began to wonder if there might nol be more to the merry·gMoond of u I c e r s • broken marriages, stereotyped goals and other wreckage the treadmill was producing. • "I decided I had one chance in three billion of saving the wnrld but I had a 50-50 chan« of saving my O'i\'ll life and hap. plness, !O I chose to be openly, unashamedly selOsh." He conceded thal he lost lots of false friends ("who needs them") but gained new ones who realized that living is a ma~ler of exchange. Why, he questioned, is our culture so imbued w i t h altruism? Because r r om childhood we are bombarded with cliches such as don't be selfish; virtue is comprised of living for others; you must put the happiness ol otht:rs first . He cited rour troths thaL he feels are typical laws of human nature. A state ol mentaJ well-being which creates tranquillity and lack of anxiety creates a feel. ing of happiness inside and causes good things to hap(>Cn. Everyone is different \\.'ilh an infinite number of different reactions. Each person lives in a world of his own and hap- piness is relative to each in- dividual. An individual can control on- ly himself. He frequently doesn 't even have absolute HA,\lE YOU VISITED OUR NEW STORE AT: '-1embers or the Ranchn control over his own emoliOtll Proclamation. It is possible lo Huntington ~1oblle Home Park and circumstance!, but he can begin enjoying life right here · Cl b ·n h influence his decisions and and now -that is, if you Ladies u wi gal er ror a aJtematives. really ~·anl to... bt11cfJ1 luncheon at 12:30 p.m. \Vednesday !\'lay 26, in the r,.1an's time, energy and park recreation hall. knowledge is limited . He must Proceeds ~·ill go toward the face the fact that he isn't Laguna Au xi liary club's project and recreatirn going to live forever and there The Legion Hall is the fund. including n1aterlal Cot are just 24 hours in one day. meeting scene at 8 p.m. the dre sses for lndiAn children. "Learn what makes you second and fourth Thursdays I~uncheon chairmen cire the happy and do mo!'f' to Improve for members of the American ri11nes. Lillian Jl or vat h, yourself. Say •this Is what T Legion Auxiliary o( Laguna \Villiam Berry and Esther want to do.' You don't have to Beach. }lay. justify your ti.rne or finances---------------'--------- to prove to yourself that you are doing something. "\\'hy die to get freedom? Sign your own Declaration of Independence -Emancipation Kids Like to Ask Andy •. 5881 \=/arner at Springda le in Huntington Beach FOUNT ... IN V"'\.lEY-ll'fM Mit ... 11• SI. •I T•!Oert ,OUNTAIN VA\.\.&Y-14141 H1ri..r 11\11. I Edl"llt' EL TORC>-liil TfN 11 ltt<k/1114 Rll d HUNTINGTON IE:ACM-1llll IN<~ 11¥~. 11 Alllllll $ANTA ANA-1-. W. l:Glatftr 1ne l•ht91 St. WE$TMINSTl!lt"""917 Wnlmh11ltr •I Ge-Wnl COSTA MES•-UIO M•rloer 111111. 11 Wiii.iii St, CO$TA MES•-1" Ii. 111~ U. HUNTll(GTON IEACH-tUl A61m1 11 lroHh111'1f • HUNTINGTON 81 .. CM-IPCft & Edi....,-~ HUNTINGTON &EACH-WtrPltr & SprilltOflt !· Pr!Ho &to• th11 'J'Ddq, llaJ 21111 I I Next time · you f!eed casual ~hoes check Thrifty's outstanding selectlon of styles. We re not trying to compete with 5hoe chains-that Is-, except fof' the value YOlJ receive for your money! Compare the quality and the low .dis· count prices -you'll moke Thrifty heodquorters for summer footwear. ' Reg. $284 Wome Tennis Shoe~ Bikin i &olie Sox , •• 69¢ Children's & Misses' Tennis Shoes 9(;,do:lit\' ~ "'1 cottcin ~ '*itl\ tubborr ti:.. c,;ip,. 5 to 1'2, 11:.,f, Blue or Ploid. Mlpes' '" While or Block_".]21/,z to J. A!I '*itll full cWllon Tn50ln, <1~!> 11/PPOrfl, rugi;ied II.lb~ htt soln. f•,eptiotlal volun at this !'(kt! AVl:lilablc at most Thrifly Dnig end Di$CCIUl'!t Star.:;. .~ I -~~- ~11·' . .... ... .. $196 Sale of Women's Lo and Hi-Heel Vinyl Sandals • Cork Flats in Style Choice Men's, Youths', Boys' Basketball Oxfords • Hi-Heel Corle Styles • lo-Heel Crepe Sole Styles • Bas~11baT1 1hoet w111l Whit9 or Biotic cot""1 duck uppf!'l, suction gtio rubb.!r 1ales. fR<i· tur• built-In arch oeuV>icns "''*' cu1hion.d "e•I~ & cushict1 in1ale1. Mochin. wo>hablt. MGn'1 l •lt s 111 7-11, Youths' in 3 to 6 (, f!oyr" in 12-2. Available ot most Thrifly On;g ond Olsc::ount Store._ s29s See O\Jr up-to-the·minute ..election nf smart sondols in WC1¥I styling ond pow Colors. You'!! love the bare,,fpot look end Thrifty Di~nt price of these comfortoble orld foshionob!e fun sandals. Si:es 5 to l 0 in carefree styles for everyone. Sole priced now to keep you stepping lively into Summer. ''Tire Tred'',,!ole Men's Sandals Ru"ld Tlrt-Trld Sola Season's Hottest St1111 Choice of Popular Colors s199 "f'he summer season's hott't$t styftS Jn Mfn'c 50ndGfs ot o red hot .sole price. Duroble vir'tyl W'" pers in Mahogany or Ton with rugged Til'l!·Tred soles. Sizes 7 to 12. Always o sellout--'$hop .arty for yours. • •Repeal of a Sellout! • Choie6 of colors • Full Cush ion lnsol•s with .Arth Supports 94 - Your Chefr e Sutmwr'1 fovorlt• cosuol V-loolc. '" aiol, lightwtighr ver •turdy ten"ll Ploes 'Wiff't Mavy duly l;Dt. ton uppers, la"a -ring rubber..,,.,.. So comfartable on )'Ol.lf feer ""ltli full o.11hion Insoles. ond arch tlJIJ!J(>rh". 5-9. Wai.II cl.art f.:i1t n wo.tlirig moehint ! Women's Thin Strap Summer Sandals run h<lpJtenlngs lrt thiri itrcp nidal1 f<M.. lonld with hffl lifts, In sno~py eoTon tc ftt cff ycur aumm" outfitJ. Ughtwoight, <OCll lo th. foot. Slin far oll-<lt a Thrjfty low, loW p k;•. 990 Children's Buckle Vinyl San d,~; Ea.1y gai"g twin blxkltd sortdols 11'1 "-lpp/• vinyl 'fl'llli aro open lc:ol<.. A verv IPl<kll Thrifty ~urtho~ 1Mde th11 !IOI• pf'IC• posSI• ble /u.1t Iii ri,,,e for Summ,r fun. Cocl, c.c.m• fortobl• 11nd .1turdy lfl "go-with·•~iythl11g'' -!low Browrt, 6·3. ggc Cotton Ter ry Men's Slippers $ 99 Your choice of. Moccasin or Scuff Stylos r.1r leisure weoron a comfortable foolrng! Choost *rom cotton 1erry moccot1ns or 1cuffs, .10 com- fortnble fO<'" lounging or poolside. 7 to 12'h In colors to match bothrobC!', pj's or $Wlm trunk!. Buy now for Fother's Doy gifting. I • ... •· ' ·.-; •. ,. ' " " ,. ' ' .... ' • • -. ii· " .. ~·· I -. . 16 DAILY PILOT A ll Sp ecia/,s On This Page On S ale For ONE DA Y ONLY! • • ,Sears ti. ,\'.)> 1:· ·-~ ·(j Women's T ai lored Pajamas Low Priced! Cl assic tai lored t\~U piece pajamas in color- ful cotton prints. Sizts 32-40. Buy now. Lingerie Dept. SATURDAY ONLY l1m1ted quantity } 77 Men's Nylon J ackets Sears Low Price! Surfer sryle jacket in 100% nylon. Zip front with one pocket Men ·s sizes S·M-L and XL Mtn's Furnishing Dept. 397 ((';' · iL "' I ' '\ ' • / -{I ' ! ~ ,--. A' ' >'-. '. \ , \. . \ /J' ; t > .. __..,; \) Slim Girls' Pants or J amaicas Your Choice Cotton and nylon blcnJ denim, back zipper. Navy, colors. Slim sizes 7S-14S. Girls' !Vea r Dept. ,__ '"· ;__,r •• 40x81-inch Window Panels Regular $2.49 Starlet panels in 100% polyester N inon. Handwash, drip dry. la white. Hurry! lJraptry Dtpt. } 47 Little Boys' Knit Shirts We re S2.29 lo $3.49 Short sleeve sty les in assorcment of popul ar solids ancl stripes. Sizes 3 to 6x. Children's Dtpt. $lea. Blank Recorrung Tape Regular Sl.39 Fits all standard cas- sette recording units. Plays a total of I hour. Plastic housing. #3487 TV Dept. SATURDAY ONLY Limited quantity Super Value! Short sleeve styles in solid colors with con- trast trim on crew neck. Sizes 6 to12. Boys' Wear Dept. Sears Colorful Gold F.ish Low, Low Price Assorcmenc of colorful gold fish. Give your chilJ hours of enccr· tai nmenc. Buy noy,•! Garden Shop SATURDAY ONLY limited quantity ! • -----------------~~•AR~> ~----------------..&.----------------~!<t:o\11~> ~------------~.---:-• ,. • Hang~rs not included lx3-Ft. Particle Board Shelving Low Priced! Great icem for the den, workshop, and garage. Paint or .install as is. t x4-Ft. Size •.••. 48c Building Material Dept. SATURDAY ONl Y l1m1tcd quant ity - Quantitjcs .Li 111i Led Refurbish ed Executive Desks Originally sold for '199 when new Now 7 4 88 • Use'Sears R evolving Charge 60x34"" refinished hardwood desks with easy sliaing cenrcr plus 5 side drawers, including fil ing drawer for Je~ size doc uments. Several sty Jes . SAVE30 c! The Convenient Easy Method! Disposable 'frash Bags Regular 79c Heavy gauge l \1 milligram seamless plasiic. Choose from packages of 10 sizes 20 gallons, S sizes 32 gallons or 5 si zes 7 bushels. H4rdwart Dept. Camera Dept. ' SAVE 30°,,! Sears Sturdy Lawn Rake R.egu lar 99c 19.Jn. overall spread. Enameled steel, head an<l tines. resists rust. Buy now anJ save ! J-lt1rdu:are De/11. SAVE32c! Outstanding Valu e al ~rars ! Explorer Lanlern Ballc r y Regular Sl.29 6-volt heavy duty lantern baltery scaled-in steel for better leak resistance and l on~e r life. Electrical Dept. Sears IUINA PAIHC T• ..... 00., J21-4Jl0 n MONTI 01 l..atll LONG l l:ACH HI J.0121 POMONA NA f·Jl•I IOUfN COAST ,lAlA J40-l33J THOUIAND OAJIS •97·4S66 lOllANC( J 42·1S11 CANOGA PAIK i40·0ft1 GLINDALI CH 1•1004, 0 4-4611 OLTMPfC & SOTO AN l •J21J COMrTON HI •·2Sllo HI 2·1761 HOUTWOOO HO f ·Jf41 OIANOI 637-2100 ·~.llO•IUCXANDCO. COYIHA 966-otll M+OUWOOD 01 1°2121 PASAOINA 611·3211, lJl-4211 Sftep NJ9hh Monday through Satvrday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M.1 Sunder 12 Hoon to 5 P.M. .• , Santo Ana Only., clo••• 6 P.M. Tue1., Thur1., Sot • • • f'tcO WI 8~262 IANTA ANA IU 7·l"71 IAN'l'A II ININIJ f44•H I I SANTA MONtcA IX 111·•11' YAUIT PO '1·1461, fl4·2220 YllM'oNT !'L 9·1911 • • I I ( DAIL V PILOT - ' e ~!~ 3b . .,97c May , 1971 " 'fS Sean Low J'rice! ( • SAVE42%! B.edding Plants 3·3c Regular 66c • Choose from a large variety of beddingplantt e Add Spring and Summer color to your home or garden • Marigolda. Astera, Zinnias, Tomatoes. Long lasting blooma • 5-Inch Brilliant Fuchsia 2 for 79c Hardy Juniper Tam s .. ~1.ow 47c Price! 5'' Blooming Pelorgonium 47c • orS3eta. •Natural organic. enriches soil, bolds moisture • Prodocee an evergreen la~ • Reqtiire1 litiltt or no mowing """"' _________ _..__,... _ _.._ ________ _ 40c each Densely folill8cd per- mancat ihrub. smkingly beauti ful colors. Buy - now! E:iccellcnt for lanJ.sc;ip- i ng or ground-cover. Euy-c:o-arc for. 5-inch. f JS t groti.·ins, 6-12 in. hei~ht. \\/hi re, rose, or mulci-co!ored flowers. 'SAVElO% J JJ % f Regul ar99c&$1.19 79 c . o an °. vouR ctto1cE , '··' • Blue Pfitzer. Forms a fountain-like mass of bluish- green foliage with iu wide spreading branches. GroM readily in sun or shade and ia almost any soiL Italian Cypress. Symmetrical evergreen foli~ that is stately, elegant and hardy. GroM equally as well in sun or shade. ~ Prostrata. Ea'y care low growing ground cover.Just ~ perfect for the low window in your home or in the '1 garden. Philodendron. Tropical evergreen foli~. Per~ ., feet plant for partial sun or shade, pot or garden. Will grow in any soil. Sun Azalea. Plant now for a profusion of color this summer. Grows well in either sun or shade. Oleander. Fast and easy to grow. In beautiful as- sorted colors. This lush living, blooming fence will add color and beauty. Gold Dust. Perfect indoor or outdoor or ornamental pool decorating. Ideal for use in rub planters. • Thuja. A tiglrtly foliaged, perfectly symmetrical conifer becoming more globular with age. Grows ·easily almost anywhere. Gardenia. Evergreen white flowering shrub to add beauty and fragrance to your garden. Ideal for door- way groupings, pathways or accents under·windows. ""-· ~:iR' Add value to your home! .~v ..t'~ >,,.,,-~\'":~ Sun Azaleas. Plant now for color all summer long. (A" , -~ Be the enyY of your neighbors this season! These t · · flowers make a beautiful and colorful.gardea. , . ., Black Pine. A graceful green pine that is a hardy • sun lover. Bears an abundance of distinctive pine · cones. Make your home and garden look its best! Tam. Excellent for landscaping as a foundation or ~ound cover to add a finishing touch to your plant- rng areas. Easy-to<are for. Hurry ia for this outs tand- ing value at Sears! -, . •"\, "'"' '1 " •, • .... ~1 ,. I ' I I . l-- -. • "SAVE 32%1 Sulphate of Ammonia 1Jlegu lar 99c • 20-lbs ..•• use 1 for quick \ • grcen·UJ> e J< .. ormulation 21·0-0 c SAVE• .221 All-Purpose Fertilizer Regular $3.19 • 2G.lbo. covers 2000oq. ft. • Formnlatlon 11-84 A1k.4.bo1tl Seara Convenknl Credil Plana SAVE •J.421 Green.Glade Dichondra or Lawn Food Regular $3.99 •Coven op to 2000sq. fL • Has 2 inooetl• cldea •Formulation 13-3-3 57 • • i.JiWi.a.Wa,1~;.L.. ........ .,__....~ • .;.:.' • ...-. 1 SAVE •21 Superfine Dichondra and Lawn Food Regular $5.99 • Coven 4,000 to 8,000 oq. fL •Will not harm newly oeeded lawn• •Formulation 2S.5·10 97 SAVE •21 Big Four Dichondra or Lawn Food ' I, " ' I Regu lar $10.99 e Kills weeds, crabgrass · and insects 87 :. j • Covers 2,500 square feet •Formula· lion 16-84 Sears IUINA PAIK TA '"""°°' ll1o4130 a&. MONTI ot .a..Jt11 LONe HACH HI 1-0121 IOMOMA NA f·l111 SOUTH COAff P&.AIA 540..JJJJ TMOUIAND OA•S 4t7-4Jll,S2l;.11a1 TOllANCl •42•1S11 CANOGA PAAK ato ••• , OUNDALI QI 1•10CM, a W.11 O\YW a IOfO AN W211 coMnOH Ht 6.2111, NI 24711 HOUTWOOO MO MM1 • OIAHOI 117·~.tlL.. sv.u,aollllCE.ANl>CO. COVtNA. flf.Ofl1 INIUWOOO oe. wn1 PAIA.U .. 1.a11, 111-Ull Shop Sunlfay 12 Noon to S P,M., Mon. thru Sat. 9130 A.M. to f t30 P.M. • •• Sont•An• Only, cfo111 6 P.M. T•t.., Th•n.t Sat. • ..CO WI 1 ... 261 ....JANTA AHA Kl 74in IANl'AR ......... t44·IOl1 IAHTA MONICA IX W71 t VAUfT '° J •l461, tl4•2220 VllMONT PL f..1t1 l ( l I I -· - ,;.JA:Haven , .To Unruly Pro Stars II _,.. ...-Sou1l>llJld, spor1a mecca IJ 11'.qually bolnJ converlJd ll!to a hav111 "r~-onnla&s. ud navpty boy1 lltnl ~ wwld of ... spor!J. ftlt. lhe Anpll landed Alt• '"1111 Ap" J""-from tilt ClodrwU -· Jltt!or 111ey· lhouW have oirttd to take in Jqen. ,,,. A .. hat been a bad handle and .,.'l(lnc reports of club ~ion '*llllt of blm mike you -.!er U hav- 1111 lhe best biller in lhe American "-'•• •NtT• U4Ta• -....,. WHITE WA.SH = = 1M1ue (1'70) 11 warth the obvious pe-ality clllh lhat .... with him. Tiit Dodscn 1Jeaned tllt tpOllilhl, lak· ~ .JUchlo Allen -a chap -m oome ~ .. ver 1ot alool with anyone except hbUelf. ADd there 'tftrt thGle who even -led lhe IJtter. · However, Allen llal lhul far behaved ~ unlike lht Anltls VI Jobnoon. LA ma:y bt better off for having taken him. Now, the Lot Anlelt1 Ramo have pull· ed a deal which hu.llndtcl them Llnco lletul Ill tbt DaDu Cowboyl. H1'1 Jll'O- N'ly •nice~ I'll'· ~·be -to have a pn>blem. Ha bu tw1et .,,_.i hlmttU to uttJe pit; which obYloutly did nothlnl to .,,,,..,.. bio reputation. rca,t" the Rllm have him -for better ., ...... So, wily llOI complete the eyclo -bow abolo! br....,,, in Warren Wella from Ot~. 'nNlt maybe be11 take up eo mony -Ina they'll lor1t1 Johnson, Alltn """ llentatl. !Jells Is ncoverinl from a stabbin& i.u,..ing poalblt parole vtoittion. H1'1 ~-IUked lor dnlllk drivinl (twice) iliO 'attempted rape. m·'i not ei:acUy • candidate fot ~ Santa Cltus. * * * J>nn llli tidtllna: • --M1171' ... .....,,. .. I lllalt wtU ... _ ... TtlelMJ el --.,.. ........ ....W. lflC:ill pr • .. I a• • ........ -~ .. !Int pffdler M171 ttotill • a Glal, rtmemlJen fDllq •111 --tUI ll!Pt Ma11 waa ~la Ilk !Int ..... lrtps to Ille ..... -llcl!od I -ro Ill lfaftU ftalllito-.tlleke. Fohner Wwtminattr Hilb and Golden ~ O>ilt&e type BUI In1iellarl Is ~ for a startinc ~terblck job at ~ State OOlleg8 after aewcomer Join' Behrini (Fruno CC transfer) had ~'lil\pre,.ive 'Prinl !Ootball 1ame. /,·-v-la ~llltrw M-... llrt-B• .. u "Y..W .. fltDw- lq: -~ Ill Wlllp ellor !My'vo sat la ,... ... -a llel na; T-lllOe ~ la llrtlbla lllollwu .eu fir M -~a,....; Hvtr *Ive a qr • l!rftltli- . 'Ille Coul Ran,.,. have atatod lhllr -1 Yktory dance for Saturday, I p ..... at Colla Mtaa Q!untry Club. A fl.11' adlajuioll brinp Uve music i,..n 11o ~. danclna, dttr pria,. etc. ~ Ranaera wtre Pacific Socctr 1-11 championa IOI'' the llilh limo in ll!o>lall tip! Y•arJ. °""'' C0uty Hrf cM•ploo Ilea ~will _,.i. lw .. 9"$11H •: .. _y la -.__ F- .... -11111111 -Mfr• Cool& Jiu. ,.....,, _ _,..,,S..Dlep ... llol ....... tlllulaBarNrawlll ""._. -to ...... ,.,lltL • . ' . . . . -' . . frld11, Mar 21. 19n Wright Rights \· Floundering \Angels· -. \ MINNESOTA'S STEVE BRAUN FALLS BACK TO PIRST UNDIR TAG O~ ANGELS' CHICO RUIZ ON THROW FROM CATCHER JOHN STEPHENSON. Sport.s Clipped Short Golfers Sizzle • Ill Colonial FORT WORTH· -George Knudson and Homtro Blancu ohand the r1r11-round Jud ln t11t Colontal National Invitational pU tournament but much of the at- tentlon focuaed on a young amateur jua:t two shots o(f the pace. Ben Crenshaw, 19, a University of Tex· u freshman recorded the 1 e c o n d lowest amateur score 1n the · 26-year biotory of lhla tourney, f11in1 • 61 Thun- da y. Canadian Knudson and Blancas. the defending champion. matched three-- under-par 1'7s on the 7,10.yard Colcmial Coone. piayin& oo tn Ideal tc«inl day, Crenshaw, 10U obaervers 11y, has the 11me crunching tee game and deft put- ting atroke of Jack Nicklaus, whom the youn& amateur, allO a blond better, hu never mel Nieklaus iln't playin1 here. ShooUn& two-under par 68a: were Bert Greene, Fred Marti and Jack Mont&omery while Jerry Heard, Dave Stockton, Bert Y anC<y and Chuck Ceurtney were lied with Crtnshaw at 19 • • t:•nonero, No Sale MIA.MI -The V~t*iiuelan owner (If Kentucky Derby and PrealmeH winner CanontrO JI wanfl a lot 'more than the 1.5 milliOn and more a South Florida syn- dicate has (lffered for the horse, traloer Budd Lepman 1aid Thursday. "We didn't reach an agreement," 1.tp. man said after a second meeting. "Their price is much more than I beKeve my grOup intends to pay .• .lt's way (IUt of lint." Lepman rtfused to discloee the asking price for the J.year~ld but tta owner ii reportedly Htidng 14 million. e Krbllotl Rockets INDIANAPOIJS -Rookie S t e v e Krtslloff, Par1ippany. N.J., rocketed into coatention Thursday for a berth in the In- dlanapolb 500-mlle race u he tumed in tbe best lop of lht day at 171.154 miles per hour at the Indlanapolil Motor Speedway. The 24-Ytar~ld bachelor it driving • new McNamar•Ford, like the one which teammate Marlo Andrew, Naureth, Pa-... qualllied on the out.silfe of the third row Jut Saturday. '1' -· e Murta,,.11 StrlcJcen CINCINNATI -Pilllburlh Pirt!t Manger Darmy Murtaqh, !!, remained in fair eand!Uon at Chrilt H°'pitai bere ~Y whtre he wu rushed prior to Thunday't 1ame with the Cincinnati Redt complainlq of chest pains •. Murtaqh, who bas bad I hitlory of heart trouble, wu 1tiicken Jn hia: office 20 minutes before the start of the same. He complained of two sharp pains in the chest. "He was left with a dull ache in the chest area," said trainer Tony Ba.rtirone. Hospital spokesmen •lid Murtaugh would be held for observatic>n for "two or three days." e Ram Rookie Slfrns LOS ANGELES - A I l·Am er ic an defentive back Dave Elmendorf of Texas diUon to btlni an ootaltl¥lln1 dlf ... iva man in football. e Tref ... Win, 8·2 PULLMAN, Wllh.--O>nfennce cham· pion Southern California, hardly· fatigued after drubbint Oregon in the lid-lifter, battles Stanford Friday in the second day of the Pacific.a Confeunce baseball playoffs. USC overpowered Oregon &-2 and Stan- ford downed Washington State 1-4 in Thursday's opening round action. WSU is paired against Oregon in a lour-out bracket tilt. e King Advances A&M hu 1igned a contract with the Los HAMBURG, Gennany -Mrs. Billie Anatlta Rams of the National Football Jean Kin; advanced to the semifinals of Leap, the club aMOunctd today. the German Open tennis championship.1 Elmendorf. &.foot-I, 1nd 19S pounds, Th:unday with M , M victory over Heide WU a Ital baseball player at A&M in ad--Orth If West Gennany. Map Win 30 Games Blue Another Koufax Says Oakland Chief OAKLAND (AP) -Vida Blue, the bot· test pitching property in basebf.ll today, faced an embarraaaln1 situation after he signed wUh the Olkland AthleUca tour yeara ago. He had to tell A'• owner Charles 0 . Finely that his name clidn't carry any wei1ht in Mansfield, La., Blue's heme town. • "I remember that the first thing he asked for after ht tiped was a doiert baseballs. I told him to 10 buy them at the hardware 1tore and char1e them to me," Finley recalls. "But they wouldn't give him any. We had to send him a box el ba1eball1 from Oakland." Blue. who once preltrrtd throwing a football, is now th.towing ~aseballJ put American Leaaue batters with slartling regularity. YOUNG KOIJF AX 0 He's a young Sandy Koufu," uys A'1 manager Dick William,, (If hit 21-year-old left-handed pitching star. "His p:itt:ntial 11 W\llmited. His pruent loob pretty good, too." ba!lf!ball player ln the N or t h w e rt Louiaiana town or 3,000. "I did IClme work on the houH: for my m<1thtr tut year," 11ys Blue, who tu med down sev~al offers to play winter baaeball. They alto PQt Blue in a red convertible over the wlntar and drove him arwnd town bthind two high achool bands on "Vida Blue Day,'' celebratin& the no-hit- ter he threw 111-inst the Minnesota Twins Jut Sept. 21. Blue also had a one-hitter, against Kansas City, last fall after the A'a brou1ht him up from their Iowa farm club in the Americ•n Auocation, where he WU lJ.3. "Not brintlng him up earlier might have cwt us our diviaion title,'' Finley uy1. But the A '1 felt that Blue, who wa1 NShed to the majots in 1919 and hit hard, needed a full season in Class AAA baseball to work on hil control and regain confidence. D~dgers Face Chicago After 5-0 Setback ClllCAGO (AP) -Ll>teru.jg to the Olicago CUbs talk about it, thej're afraid of the Los Angeles Dodgers, a team which hu lost more than it's won. Despite the Dodgers ' 19-21 rec<ird for the first few weeks of the 1971 baseball season, the Cubs, who host tfM! Dodger• Dodger ·Slate All ...... K,I ('40 I MIY ,1 M•'I n M11 tJ MIY 21 D""9er1 ., CMUIO 111 :2.S 1.m, Dodvt,.. 1t Clllc1to 11:11 1.m. Dodoers 11 (P\I~-11:111.m, Doclver1 VI. $1n f.rancltc:o 7:U '·'"· today, have all but agreed that the Do4gers can't be counted out of things. Not with the length of the season and the things that can change. "They're going a little differently than they used 00," said Cub right fielder John Callison. 1'They're going more to power hitting and they've got some &ood young kids.'' Then Ferguson Jenkins, the Ice pitcher, jumped in and said he agreed. "They have a fine hitting ball club and they have some good young arms In the bullpen. The Dodgers will be right up there at the end of the season.'' lt didn't look that way Thursday as Steve Carlton of St. Louis five-hit the Dodgers, beat them 5'-0 and sent the Dodgers here for a day game. Claude Os- teen, 5-2, was tht scheduled pitcher fur Loa Angeles against Bill Hands, 4-4. Wes Parker had three of the Dodger hits and the others went to Willie Davis and Allen. Davis, however, e1tended to 13 bis ba tting stffak and is now at .383, se- cmd only to Ralph Garr of Atlanta in the National League bat chase. Garr is hit- li>g .403. LOS ANGILIS ST, LOVIS !itusHll, 2b Moll, rf W.PtYll, cf ft.All'11, II W.P1rll;t<', Ill J;lrYt y, 311 a111111kla, c V1i.t11tnt, 11 f!nter, tt •llrh"I 1llrllrM •OOOlrkk,lf 1011 l8 00M . .t..le11,ef 1110 1 0 10M1~v!!l,1S 0100 I 0 I 0 Sl1•u·11or1t, c l I 0 0 l OlOTont ,311 4110 • o o o C1rc1.,,11. rf 4 a 2 l 3000 HtQuf,111 412! IO O OJ1>'tt<',2b 2•00 IOOOSl1-1,u 1111 Mtllnde1, cl I I D I C1rlll)n, It I I 0 • Tt11I• ll 0 S 0 Tt11l1 71 S 1 S L<16 A11Ml111 000 000 D10 -I SI. l<111l' 100 IQO Jh(-S \Sox Series '.ppens Tonight At Anaheim \ By ROGER CARLSON ot t11t Ptllt •tlM Statt It may or may not have been a tuminC poiJt in the 19'11 American League Weat bll!tball campaign for tbe Ca!U~ Angels Thursday night, but for 1he Halos' ace tiitcher, Clyde Wright, there wam'l any ~ueiUon. .• He'J ~ a solid groove after m1mng hts first turn in the starting rotaUon 1ystem in silt fears in the majors . The ~game winner in 1970 had been ' Angel Slate All • .,..., I~ kMttC C"t) MI Y ti -""''II YI. Cl'llctto ''" 1.m. #MY Z1 -....... 11 YI, Chic•.. 7:1! 1.m. #MY fJ -A11•tll YI, Cllklff I :U •.m. 1idelined by a case bf tendonitis in hi• left shoulder, but he responded to rectnt treatment by twirling his 1econd straJ.iht shutout, whipping the Minnesota Twim, J-0, before 7,525. He struck out seven, waJked none and allowed five scratch singles to the potent Twins to up his 1971 personal mark to 4-3. "I'm quite a bit relieved. It's the first time my arm has ever hurt -it sctttd the devil out of me. It's all over now," 1aid the unassuming Wright. Wright, with an ice pack clamptd around his left wing, continued: "I'm not sure just how I injured myself, perhaps it was in • slide at Detroit or when l swung too hard at a high inside fastball. "Maybe that could hive done it." The Angels' stopper confided he wiJ worried for a time in the early going. "I told my self that maybe the ann fs going to hurt, but after three or four in- nings I just decided if it's going to hurt it's going to Wrt. "Later I knew I was going to have to ·start mixing my pitches up a bit," he said, after concentrating with fist balls for the most part. Wright, who hurled a no-hitter a&ainlt Oakland last year, was touched for a cou- ple of hits and added a wild pitch in a comparaUvely lhaky first inning. ' But he aetmed andaunted about that part of his lame. "I've had' two men on the bases evtr since I've been up here in the majors, .. he joked. Twins' chief Bill Rigney, Wright's .Conner man11ger, praised his efforts. "He's three or four timea better now than a coup~ of years ago. He'1 learned to change the speed of the baJI and he'a pitching the out.aide half of the plate, .. aaid Rigney.' Catcher John Stephenson, who 1iJlalt:d in the winning run in the eighth (stretcltin& his personal hitting streak to 12 1imet), caught Wright for the first time. "He's an easy one ti> citch,'' said Stephenson. who seems more concerntd about doing the Joh behind the plait defensively than in the battiilf dfpart- ment. The victory salvaged a split fot' manager Harlod "Lefty" Phillips' Anaels and tonight at 8 they open a three-game set wilh the Oiicago White Soi:. MINtillS~~·. "'nr -' CALl,D•:~·. "rM Toutr, er ' o a o Alom.•, •l ' 1 1 1 Ctrt w. 111 4 I O O A.Joll1111n, 11 I O o I k lll tbr-. lb 4 I 1 0 Strry, cl I I I t OllVI, rl 4 I 1 I T.Conl1ll1,.., r1 2 O I t Cltdffllt, u 4 0 2 I S1.,,,enion, c 4 O 1 I Al'/N , If ll 0 • • Mc:Mvllen, ,_ 3 • I I Ho lt, cl 110111:-r,C\' ll2 1 ll••vn, Jll ll I 1 o 5""'"· 111 J 1 1 1 Mltttrw.td, C J 0 I 0 !111111, )II 2 I 0 I k1mm.. p t 1 o 1 wr11~r. , t o o o R1111d!, pl\ 1 I 0 o c ... ~1.,, , o o o o Tollll JJ 0 $ I Toitll '' I 4 1 M 111n-11 mo oao • -• C1llforn11 ooo IOO 01:11-1 e -SIMllC.r. 0, -Ml11n••· I. l.Dll - Mlnn1tOt1 ,, Ct!11-l'~l1 7, St -ll:vlr, I -WrltM, T. COtllglltro, A. Jolll'IM~. l~Mlt lltllSO H1mm 72 114• Cor•!n IL.•71 l 2 1 1 1 t Wrl~I (W,•Jl • J I I • 1 WJI -Wrlg~I. Tl,,,. -,,1 •• Att.ldifl(t -1,'21. Lament Sweeps San Diego With News of Bambi Trade Koufat, tbe former Loa An11lts Dodgers southpaw, was '11 years old and ln his ninth aeuon with the teun before he had his first 20-victory year. Blue, starting bio lirll lull -.,,;th the A's, won Wednelday nl&ht'1 1•me •llin!lt MUwaukee to gain a t-1 reeonl. He could be the game'• nut S0-11me w!Mer. He was lo.3 with Birmin&ham, Ala., of tht Class AA SOuthern Association in 1M9 before joining the A's in July. In 12~ &11lmt American, League batters, he gave up 13 home runs and had a .121 earned run averaae in 41 innblp. TROIJILE WITH CURVE "Everyone in the ball park kneW I CO\lldn1t control my breaking ball. They'd jUJt Jean back and wait for my fast ball," 11ys Blue. ·\ 1W1 DIEGO (AP) -Suddinly, !or tjto lnJ, Umt in hil lift, Lance AJworth WU ""'"'1 btlt The moll pam0r1111 alhltte Jn '1an Dies• hmory. troubled by pulled m-'t• and Injured pndt Md a ~lrt of private investmtrttl, aaw Q"3' Gtn11011 become the top receiver ti "Ille San Diep Char"n wilh ff -. !Or 1,0lll yardl lut yaar. · Bui Al"°rlh cauiht 15 for 1111 yardl, ... the National P'<>otball Ll•ll"" !ant lt.lll wmt mainly to watch 1'JamM11 float th!ouCh tht •Ir. \1ho ftnt oupenlar 9f the old American riiolban Loque, ht caqht ,...., in 16 ~Uve &•met fOr Ill all-time pro -ud-uqiwuu loiicfidowM In I --• in all. In .. _1Ur, ht moved lhi illU l,!Oi ylrdl. ~ Cit WU &oo .much,'' a f-.n aaicf ~ ·.11or AIWtrlh -now II, a .... Alllr Jelrllni tbt a.ar..,. ""'h oUI ol tht Unl""11Y of Atktnth -was lrl4'd to lhi DiDll Collllo1• for thr .. ...,.,.. A lament 1W1pt Ian D I t I o • llvtofwben, fans etpreSRd e i t b • r ' ) dis.may, distppointmeQt or angt.r with the ctut; for sending Alworth off. There was little tbock becauat of bis welt.publicized problems over a year. '1be baby-faced speedster fro m H91chan, Ml!!., spread investments from frSid Chleken housu to dry cluning, only ta .. bankrupt He blamed the OW-gen for a long con- tract that cut his chances for a blgaer a a J a r y and, citing disag:rHmentl, aued the team for '6.1 million. L a 1 t February, the suit wu droppped. Since Marth, then wtre rurnon Alworth would be traded but last yeat he 11id of Coach Sid Gillman: "If S14 tried to tr.0-me, I think he'd catch tome ball." No public comment came from Lance about tM tr1dt, but fans a1fttd with RlymOnd Keller: "Alworth WU 1he grt:altst player wl've ever had." "My flr1t reaction.'' said W a 1 t Sweeney, the Char11r1' vtt1ran offen1ive tackle, "11 how can we "piece him!" Giiiman praited Alworth in the hi1hest temu. Denny McLain, who won 31 gamea for the Dlttolt Tlge.., In l!leS, got hi• elghlh victory en Mly 29th and his ninth on. June I. GOLDEN ARM Blue once dreamed of quarterbacJUng the Baltimore Coll!. and he earned the nickname ''Golden Arm" in high school, where he threw 35 touchdown panes hiJ 1enior year. Grambling was one of stvera1 colleges which wanted him to conUnue his foOtball career on a scholarship. "But my father died the year I left high achoo!. 'That's the biggest rtason I went lnto basebaJI." says Blue, who wu choMn on the second round of tht frtt agent draft and •i&ned with the A's ln August 1187. Also. he missed final tltl'N as I 1enlor and dl<!n't 1et a diploma unW alter going to summer school. "Mr, life just rot ail rne11t4 up that year, • he says. Now he hilps support hit11 four sister! and a brother, who are all younger, and spends hla wlnttrs in Mancfie1d. 1'1tere .. are few off-stl&OJt ~es for a After reeling off eiiht straight victorie1 thb year, he h•d walked just 21 batters In 77 innil'lts, had 81 strlkouts and an ERA of U7. Blue crtdits A's pil<hins coach Bili Postdel and mtj(lr league veteran Juan Plurro, a teammate at Iowa last year, with. 90Jvi111 h19 control problems. ';They both told me to Lake a shorter stride when I thew my curve ball." he expltiN. Blue throws his fastball, one of the belt in bueball, about 80 per cent or the time. 1'1ie occuional curves make it appear even faster. · "He got hia fett on the ground last year.'' aaya Phil Seghi, the A's farm di1"Clar. "He bad to 111 over that bump control. Some Youn& pitcher• never do . He's jtpt done it in a big way." TdUlllOlliala from opposing batters in· clude this one frem Al Kallne of Dltroit : "He thniw• U Sood II anyone in our league. Whit tmpreued me w a 1 whenever he got ln _1 jam ht could atrikc 11omeMifly ouL That'a awfuOy im· portant." U•t Tiii ...... HOUSTON'S BOB WATSON IS FORCE,D AT SECOND BASE. P1dre1' Enzo Hernande1 L••P• for Throw to First. The P1drM Won, 4-2~ ft ii I t \ d r t a "' • )J ,, • al r • ., • '• " • I • ... • • • • ' • • • • • 1 .. . -.. . . ' .. . . .. •• • '"'"· 1111 ~1. 1971 Area JC 1 CIF Spike Semis Toniglil-at Cerritos Checking : j ' Spikers In Finals Goldlft Wiit Collt(e lilree- mller Terry McKeOQ. wW lead 1 contln1ent of aeven area qualllien: into Saturday night's Southtin CallfornlJ JC track and field fln1l1 1t San D)qo's llalboa Stadium. Field event& are 1chtdultd to •tart at 1:30 with the first niMlllC event Ht. to ao at 7:IO. 'lbe IOI> lour llnil!lers In each eyent will qualify for the state championships n e :s. t we~kend at Modeato. McKeon,a1ophomere, c!Ocked a lifetime best of 14:05.t in hiJ three-mile bt1t Jaet wetk in the pttlima-but he could only get third. Mtorpark's Ken Gerry clocked • 14:00.1 and Ray Stephens of El Camino bad a time ol 11:00.9. Gerry 1tt . a naUonal JC tlu'ee-11\lle mark earlier in the season (13:52.0), but Galen Heckler •f Manatee, Fla. JC has 1i~ce wiped that out (l!:.1.0). McKeon ha5 the bf9' chance er reachlnc the state meet. while tlle other area entrants could fall by the w1y1ide. Golden We 1 t ' 1 Jact McQuown (mile) and 0.MJs Mau (+tO) along with Orange Coa1t'1 Gtorae BarneU (triple jump) Are the only olber area individual qualifiers. Golden West will also stlld IU 440 and mile relay te1ln.! into the meet while Sad· dlebaet'1 lone entry ts its 440 foursome. McQuown posted a lifetime bta:t ol 4:13.0 In last week's prelims which was the fourth belt overall mark. M11s• clockln1 er 41.3 was the sixth best 440 Ume. Ttp U.I. JATCll t,lkl MA•KS to•.-I, Mlltt (Mt. -"d McCll9 1c ... 1rl f."11), H1r1r11t IMl1111l-D•d s.1. "~ H1rrlllfl \Offsii., To·J• W lrl .. 1 (l'lltft~lr .GIH 11'41 fl11f LA , Wl'lltlt\I' l 1ktrtlltocr), f.J ··~-li Cl1tl1'1f l1"11t L.Al 21 .0: t. " r. 1•1n1 hi 21. f. 14dls i, •n:•> t,Jn, 4.~. "'' lL°"' t,.c1t! 11.Jn, Ot~"' -M••• 1G1io.n W•ll 21.1 "'° -l . CMdl1 11'~<.•/ 41.•1 J· C111tr91l (lol-Mt•k1 J C O,Jj • Wlrllt1M ll•n,.r, Tn.) 4l'.J1 4, Shltklt fCl'Ulff~) 47.,r J, Wl"*r• ll'•i.tclfro.tl 41 ; 011\ttt -Mllll IG11l4M W•ll .J •• -I. ·-·" (ar1.,1rd. N.C.l 1.411.Jnl f . IEutll flMJI, Arl.l 1 :Sol.Ii l . a..itr fU.CC ) r15J.~ L_,,,, IArritrlct n ""'"' l:Jl.71 J. Lu ll11' ll't ltnWtl l:,:t.h O!Mi1 -McO..-,. IGoldtn WH ), ltOlibl (GolMft WHll T:U.O. Miit -I. Mc:A ... 1a ,....1,d, '4.C.! 4:H.r: t. H1dl1tr !Mtne1... '"-· -=tl.41 1. ~·:1· IS.Mo\ Anel 4:0l.11 '· Gr...,., I r. acl 4:•.tni S. •11rllWllf I~. tntl : .7. Otlltt1 -M~ Wntl 4:U.01 MIJICltlt (GI ... ,. Wlfl •:16.111. l~HI -1. Md.'-Carh11'd N.C.) t :M.J1 t. Grtto•rt (Ml. s1c1 t; ... 2: t. Mi~CI~-) ,1 .... ft! •. 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Stcl 2HYn .. lilt11lt IL~ lt•chl 2U llo1 3 . ... H :f!MtrctcO 2~; •. c1n1wt ., IMtof 1) 1'-1\lo J: ¥fi r flJ Del 1J. '"tl41.,S r11, V/1111c1 C~JI, Ti•.I ••• l'l•I• 'i-1, F~S1n J-1 ... r.:1 2. •lit! 1a1k ,. 50-l! l. P ts nc1t•) #·I L Lllflt'I ( rwnt) I f. l.ittr!i {Wtll Hlllt) •P..1\11 •r; 9\11~. W•lttr !St•OIO"I .O.J1 !. llH"M(L e I U-i 1 l . NM y /f,1tr. "f: •. 1 ~' 4. ~11v1 «~fl (Httl U.J1 f . Al'Mltrltll (U. Sloll WMfl ""'"'· 0 IC~t-1 . Mt r1ft1tl fW"t Hllll) 111· t ; . IM•w.ft l'llflfhl O 171·1/ J. 1"1!r II• 1rffl•" lh-IJ -'~ G_r111 fC911lrt CM ti U I S. JI~ (IEtll LA) '"""· Jl~Mt-1. Slty~t O'ftw Mt~l« JCI 2U.Ji f, (~,,~ t ~olctntl 1"'4!:-'' H 11111 ( 1141 i .t1 4. Ollli. "" lr.,,~ .,~) 231< l S. H1Wkl Hn p l•,5 11 '26-10.. rt! . tktr Id, Mtrrltl. A0.•1 3. , ·~·· ~ I. L,l,CC/ "=t• T91 'll~· li!ltft W11 fl( l(j,,,. -·· ... J """"' ,,.., 'i 1t:lbfL.,.._, G...,_, Mllltt' O~ICk 41.f t -1 61l11r1t Tu. I · II t. M ,,,~ .... ~, TP&i. tot!~" <. -rii I~ l :U.11 NU:'"° c fl, '•""·'· """ 11'!'111111, lrtllt , 1111 1NI , : .... NORWALK -Tbirty·live ;,,. divldual performers .nd a quartet ol rtlay teams wilt carry the Orante Coast area's banner tnto the CJF track and Oeld semifinals tonijht at Cer· rltos COilege. Most field eventJ ind the lint rtlMblg: event (the 120 high hurdles) are penclled in for $:45 while the Cee high Jump ind pole Yault were c:on· teated earlier this afternoon at Gahr High. QuaWiers in tonight's semis wiil eam tht~ves be.rths in next Friday night's finals at the same location. Jn the varsity cateaory, the ere.a will be represented by a pair of baton combos along with 13 individuals. The 440 and. mile relay teams from the area are both from Corona del ~1ar whlle the Sea KingsJiave also qualified 220 ace Carlo Tosti and halfmiler Nick Rose for the semis. Rose's 1:54.6 in I as t Saturday's preliminaries at Westminster was a personal "lifetime best and the fa stest mark io the pre.Urns. ... He'll be joined .in the 880 heats by Westmlnsttr'1 Jeff Young (1:57.4) while Phil Maas (22.2) will compete with Tosti in the furlong. Newport' H'arbor 's dynamite shot put duo of .senior Mark Stevens and Terry Albritton was the talk of the prelims and their combined bests or 63-51!\ (Stevens) and 62-8 (Albritton) are unpretroented in natinal prep history. Costa Me sa 's Do u g htacLean (4:23.4) and Bob Gollnick (4:23.5) will compete in the mile along with Ma· rina's Bob Brickner (4:23.0) wbile Viking Dave Lockman (1:26.1) is entered in the two mUe. Area hurdlers io the varsity corqpeUUon are Huntington Beach's Garth Wbe (14.!w) and junior Steve Pickford (14.5) ln the high.1 and junior Matt llogsett (19.4) of Newport in lhe 180 lows. Marina will be trying to ad· vance enough firepower int• the finals to capture the se<:· lion's Bee crown. The Vikings Bet delegation Includes John Maltby ( 100 and 220). Gene T•ylor (120 hi&h and Tow hurdles). Paul Stenbo (low sUcks), Ken Martyn (1320) ar'.!. an llO relay founome. WeshTUnater's Jim Keathley (660) and Mission Vlejo's Ed Radermacher ( 1320) will bt tough to beat ln the Bees while Pat Honeywell (Newport) and Steve Lackie (Milson VleJe) ire Bee high Jump entries. Other arc: Bee represtn· tatlves are Ron Ctll l n1a (Edison) In the Ions jump and Westminster pole vaulter Walt Sinner. E!.tanci1'1 Eaaltl head the area Cee list with Bruce Glrasole (ivO, 180, Iona jump), Sieve Adams (!"' fll/rdlts), Kev in WUJ1naham (leai jump) ind a iMO relay tum. Irvine leop rival EdilOn is Hntllnt int• tbe 1tmis low hurdler Wamo Paul, bt&h jumper Joe Troxell, vaulter Ktn Gilpin and lllGt puttera Ari BJaelow and IJoyd Je1>- nlngs. ~ remainlni Cee area athletes art Jim Poettaen (Miler 0.1, !60), Jay Rocicira (Muina, 1S20), Prest• n Campbell (Marina, teO) and Neal Amsden (La11111a Be1cb, Joni jump). '71 Grid Outlook CdM to Utilize Sprint Talent By RON EVANS et' IMI Dsllt Pllel Slttf Ban the jets. That'a a familiar cry heard around Orange County In regard to the addition of more jet-propelled. aircraft at the county airport these daya. But perhaps some of these antJ.jet crusaders are 1etting their Si!flals confu!f:11. For, just down the road 1 couple of miles-at Corona del Mar Hlgh-thert:'s a lot of noise being gushed out by yet 1nother group of jets. However, these jets help to comprise the nucleus o f Corona's 1971 varsity football squad which began going , through its spring practice paces last Tue!day. Coach Dave Holland's Se• Ki ngs, a rather deceptive U last season, will be cavorting ln their !pring gear for about 2'f.r hours each weekday unUI June 3, when they'll take oft for the summer. The Sea Kings will h05t St. John Grower · art the top aecondary returnees. "There's no real team to beat In our league (Irvine) since we're 1oin1 to be tou&b along ·with FounWrt Valley, Edlsoa (defending ClF AAA UUlst) and Estancll," Ja)'I Holland. "And Magnolia will be fm. proved too.," he adds. Cotoa1 dtl Mar Sept. 24-At Newport Hart>or Sept. »-Santa ~a at New. part Oct. ._Los Al11111toa al Ntw· port Oct. 15--Santa An1 Valley 1t SA Bowl Oct. 23-Edtaon at Nevtp><b Oct. 29-P'ountain Valley 1t Huntlnrton Beach Nov. S-M1gnolla 1t La Palma Park Nov. 12-Coala Meat It New- port Nov. It-Estancia at Newport Rustlers AreaGolf ·i Courses Oran1e Coast are1 golf course3 are c ur re ntl y ._ p1rtlcipatln1 In the National Golf Day competition with f\tndl derived from the event 1oing· toward scholarships and other worthwhile project.I of the U.S.0.A. (United States Golf Alsoclallon). Golfers may plrticipalt by paying an eJtra dollar when they play a round of golf at Meadowlark and M!Jsion Viejo CoUlltry Clubs as well 1s several other art:a coorses. GoU day ir actually May 31 but players can participate anytlme through June 14. Winners are determined on. a handicap basis against acratcb scores of the winner• of matches between Jack Nicklaus and Tony Jacklin for the men 8fld S'b Ir I e y Engelhorn and Donna Caponi for the women. Every entrant gels a plastic bag tag and the winners will also receive key chains. Million Viejo ! · 1 Tony MoiJo, owner ef the Miaslon Viejo Country Club. wu the perfect heal to the 1 Harvard School 1olf group recently -that is, until the)'. .., went on the counie. > Moise then proceeded to win low net honors, closing with a J net tcore of 71: He was 'n folllowed by Pat Let in the net c:ompetltio.n. •. Hal Hoeland bad a 71 to win \ low gross honors "itb Harry ~ Macy second at 79. · In the blind bogey compet.. Ilion, Rick COwell WJ.s the ·> . winner with a 64 with Pat Clrcy next at U. Longest drive was by Biff Naylor on the .•. third bole wlth the distanc1 estimated at' 210 yards. ·John .1. McCray was 11 feet, 5 inches ._ 1w1y from a hole-in-one lo win closest to the hole competition. ·r The Sou the r n California " firunen's association w i 11 1llge a two-day tournament : • at MWlon Viejo on June 2-3. • • NEWPORT SHOTPUTTliRS MARK STEVENS (LEFT) A NO TERRY ALBRITTON EYE CIF RECORD OF 67·2'4 Co•ch Jim Hemsley Points Out the Record Put to Stevens (63·51/,) ind Albritton (62-8) John Bosco in a Sept. 18 scrimmage before opening the '71 campaign in their tradi- tional preleague tussle with Newport Harbor at Davidson Field. And what ltolland has lo of- Honored Upcoming events lnctude an ·t. executive tournament f or benent of MUJcular Dystrophy t in June. A year ago Andy Dtvine was the featured celebrity In this one. Progress Important Factor . JnSuccessof Newport Duo County Aces On All-stars fer is aomethlng else, pro-Jim Hoaan and Don Lippoldt vided, or course, that he can were accerdtd RwUer of the fill in gaps in the offtru1ive line year bonara for baseball and and defensive secondary. swimming Tuaday rll&ht at Of the returnees, leading •70 Golden West Ctlleae'1 awards rwiher John Miles and split banquet. . receiver Carlo TO.!ll are both Hotan, • twe>-Ume an. legitimate 9.t sprinters while southern Ca I i f • r n la Con· another pass-catcher -Matt ference seleeUon, batted .359 Six members oE tht Orange Cox _ has been clocked in 1 this past campaJgn. Lippoldt County Lacro!!le Club have J0.4 century and 50.IJ for 440 Jed the Rustler awlm team to Nadine Maze, usistant 111 tbe pro shop al Miulon Viejo, is playing In the Suzuki ·I Internationale al L05 Coyotea ·L this weekend as an amateur • Bucs Laud Pijl, Owens By PllIL ROSS Of tllt D1llJ" l'lltt Stttl A feat unsurpassed i n previou! U.S. high school an· nals. That'• the di s tinction Newport Harbor's earth-shat· tering shot put twosome of senior Mark Stevens and junior Terry Albritton have garnered for themselves. No other shotputting pair at any aingle school on the entire national prep realm has ever rolled up 1 higher combined total with the 12-pound roundball than have Stevens (13-5~) and Albritton (62-8 ). Furthermore, Stevens (&-3, 215) and Albritton (6--4, 220) currently stand 1·2 among California's current weight stars going into toni&ht's CIF semifinals at Norwalk '• Cer· ritbs College. The CIF meet record Is' 67· 2'4 by Long Beach Poly'a John l bbell ln 1966). Allo, the l&-year-<1ld Albrll· (who won't tum 17 until Jlnuary) has lofted the 12· 1'und steel sphert further than any previous junior in Orange County spike history. In fact, his 62-8 effort marks lhe firsl lime he has con· quercd teammate , Stevens in head-to-head competition th iS season. Last year, though, the Sailor s1 rongboys took turns in beating each other as Stevens reached the CIF finals with a 57-8 topper and Albritton managed 54-tin, before being eliminated in the prelims. N e w p o r t weight coac h Jim Hemsley supplies a number of the answers wtiy. First or all Hemsley says. "both boys have made tremendous strides in their progres5 . "Ever si nce Terry has got· ten close to Mark they 've. jui<t become enthralled w i t b be•ting each other in th e big meets.'' Albritton has been able to provide Stevens with bu ilt-in competition by imp roving on three facets regarding his form . "No. 1,'' Hemsley says, "Terry's left side has become more linear. In other words, he had a tendency to sweep his left leg out too far and, ~~ ~'(fJ ,SUNNY BROOK 19 RFth been selected to perform in yards. the Soutbem Cal circuit tbl.J1l-. thu s, caused his left side to be the seventh annual Californi a Jn addition, I et term an pionshlp two years in a row unbalanced. Lacrosse Association North· quarterback Retd Johnson Is and• fourth plact fl.ttlsh in the . . .. "Secondly, T•··y w • , s th 11 1 M 29 1 no 5Jowpoie either and he'll 1tate meet tblt past seuon. ,, .. ou a -s argame ay a -awfully jerky at the beginning attempt to pick up where de--Gre1 Henry~ Hoa1n were " of his put before. But now he's UCLA. parted Orange Coast area total solect~ but.ball capt a In 1 Pete· Pijl and Tim Owens .•. blended the two main moves Fonner Ru t g e rs all-offense leader Keith Samuels while te1mm1te Mark Crease were actorded Pirate of the ,. there together very well. American attackman John left oft was named moat inspirational. Year honors for baseball and J: "Finally,'' Hemsley adds. Valestra heads the list of Trying lo fortify the Une will Jn swim.ming Gre:g Feinberg track at Thursday nlaht'• .. "he (Albritton) has tremen· Orange County players chosen be part of the job as.signed to and Keith DontlUon were Oran1e Coast Colle. sport.11 dously long legs and he had a to show ~ir wares In the all· lettermen Ken C a r p en t e r namt!d CC>-i?aptalns and Ross awards banquet in the student problem of crowding the board (tackle) and CraJg Friuelle Mcintyre 1ccepted the m011t center . and causing a Jot of distortion star tilt. (defemive Plld) with guards improved trephy. Pljl batted .429 this past in his release." He'll be joined by team-Larry Denner and Bill Tanner Two 1olf awards were 1ea50fl, only the third. 400 hit-, Hemsley feels that the form mates Ralph Sch mi t t also figuring heavily In presented to Steve Hays for ttr in 13 years at Oranre ., .. of both or his musclemen has (defenu), Walt St ock ma n Corona'.t trench plans. beat season avtraae (76.83 ) Coast. The other two wer11 been great all week and (defense ), Frank 1 n f us I n o Holland feels that the big· and be.st round In the SoCal Milwaukee Brewer star Blll ~ realistically sees something Jn (middle), John McIntosh gest hole has been left Jn hi! ci rcuit tourney (1~). Voss (1962) and Bill Powell the vicinity of 65 feet out of (middle) and Laslo Babos defensive back!!eld, where the Members of the track, ten--(1170) . both before the season· (goal). Sea Kings kiss good.by lo all· nl11 and gymnastics teams wlll Captains awards we r a concludes. This is, of cour!e, Mclnlosh is also an ex·all· area stars i\arl Kille.fer and be honored Tuesday night presented to Dan c I ark provided that everything falls America n from the Naval Jeff Reichert. (8:30) at the Gold Anchor In (baseball) and Dare! Blood properly into place. Academy. Quarterback Johnson and We11tmin1ter. and Dave Davis (track). A revelation amidst all of --------------------------------------.c___.:...__ the activity around the Tars' .shotputting pit has been the fa ct that Sevens has been put· ting for 211.t weeb by utilizing only the palm of his right (putting) hand. "That's been the only detri- ment since Mark's fingers have been in a docto r's care dur ing this period," say a Hemsley, •·s o I can see him going over 65 feet in the semia: if his fingers heal. "Otherwise, he"ll just have to concentrate on qualifying for the finals by the method he's bee~ using as of la te ." Recently voted Tar athlete of the year for 1970-71, Stevens has been given the green light by Hemsle)r to do whatever he wants to in the CIF finals regardl~s of Ute condition of his fingers. Whatever does happen in the next two week.s or so, it'll pr~ bably be something good i! it pertains to Mark Stevens or Terry Albritton. because pr~ gr~s ls their most important product YEAR 'ROUND SWIM PROGRAM ,.,. .. r a Glttt • "' 11 "Newport Blach Aqullics" ,, _ _..,, ,....,_ ...... ~ ........... • 0.11, 1,.1~! ...... 1- • 1•1'" ~oo!t w!ltt At'f C.0111"•~ltol ••d ,.,,1c!M11.., llo .U.u 1111 .... • S1tot1 •1 .... c..-1••l•lftt • >-1• NOW-S)I._.,.,~ ,., ,., '""'""' ,., .. _.,. Cfllltft, Wll"'-Hw .. I Baseball Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE ) AMERICAN LEAGUE E11t Dlvl1Son / !:11t Dlvl1hl1 W L Pct. GB W L Pct. Pittsburgh New York St. Loui! Chicago Montreal Philadelphia 23 15 .805 Boston 24 11 .•& 2l JS .583 1 Baltimore 21 l4 .SCIO 22 16 .579 1 Detroit 111 lt .481 19 19 .500 4 New York 11 19 .457 14 lli .467 5 Waahlntton IS 22 .405 13 23 .361 9 Cl eveland 14 22 .stt West D:lvbion Weit D:lvlsien Sa n Francisco 29 I t .725 Oakland 28 14 Atlan ta 20 19 .513 ll lA Mlnne!S«lta 20 19 Dod&ers 19 21 .47~ 10 Kansas City 19 19 Houston 18 21 ,462 IOIA Ancels 20 21 Cincinnati 15 2.3 .395 13 Miiwaukee 14 21 San Diego 12 26 .316 16 Chicago 13 21 Tllurtllt 't"I '-••liltt 111111on J. Ntw Ytrll ' "'"!i'''' ••1111!• Clnc:lnn•ll J, Pith 11r1~ ' San l'•IM1Ko I, . hie••• 1 St. Loul• J. °"""' 0 PhU1<11l,tll1 1, Nilw YOrk 0 S1n Olet0 4. HtllllOl'I 2 D1lr1U S, Cltvtltt!lll L II lnftlftt• A11111i. 1. MJnn11111 t Othltl'ICI 7, Mllwlul!t I lltlllmot1 If Wt11'1lntN11, r1ln O!oly tl"'ff IC,,...111~. . T .. ,, .,_ .w .51! .500 .... .400 .Sii GB s 7 I 10 JO\! I ll 7 7\1 1011 l1 Mont,.11 4, Ati..nt1 f, 14 rn~lnt• TNl,'t 01!1'111 Ntw Ttrli ~Slottttmy,. 4•1) 11 Clt'l•lt nd CHtJMll 0.1), nlt hl ~lftt (01111" S.2) ti Ch1C1•0 IHtftdl 6-0 Clncl~ftlll IMc:Glat~llft '.]) If PM•Gfli>lltt r•u11- ftlftt , .. ,. ftltht Alltftll IJt .... 11 O.JI 1t Ntw Yo•-i•h•n •n. ft/t h! "111111\lftll Cflll1 S-3) 1t Montrtll fMtr,_. ;t.S), """' Stft Fr1ncli.t0 CPtr,., •11 t i H11111ton (011rk1f 6-11, nllhl S•" DI-(C-bl 1·'1 ti $1. Loul• Cltw•• .. ,,, ftll hl lotttn jLtnbtr1 I .. ) 1t etll!mtro tetobtlill t-)), "lt hl Mllw111kte ILICJr.-;t.)) tt Kl"'°I Cfly {l itnk· ,, ).ii. f'lllhl W11hl111!tn {Jtn11kl 1·11 t t Olt...11 CClllMI .. 7). ftlthl Mf-rrt ll lJIWlll •-4) 11 ONltlld (Ollm H l. nlt l! Cl'lltlft llrtllllJ l•JI 11 ....... (Mil' J.J), nlthl llTH ANNIVlllSARY SALEll llGOIST & llEST VITI DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARIOl ILVD., COSTA MISA 646-9303 Strvlce •nd P1rt1 f•r All fmperttd Ctr• Mocforn Body Shep for All Caro DEAN LIWIS ANNIVERSARY SPICIALS COROLLA 1971 .... •111t ll'ICIAL $1777 VOLVO 1971 DIMO $2M9 141 t9'111, ro4!t , "••tit, 1Yf•m1tl• tr11u. UllD CAI SPICIAL $3195 ,,,, ...... 164 w.. . . ., • ,. ' , • ' .• " , •• , •w -ecflr.Un' .. ~. -IUllU _,..,_,Ml tuJI IU!llt ... ta. ~601 w.....-t., itr .• Nl'ff""' .... c.111 • ., .............. Orange County's Largest and Most Modem Toyol• and VolYO Dealer OYIUUJ llUYllT l•ICIAUITI It ..... '"'"". ·~lie", ,... • ..., ..... P .. llN •If" ilftllfflM. t .... ll la)_ •• • • • • , ff DAILY PILOT Friday Mq 21, 1971 / LEGAL NO'J1CE LlltlAL NOTICE LEGAL N011CE LEGAL NOl'ICE LEGAL NOl'!CE LEGAL NOl'!Cll LEGAL Nj)TICE r-41MI fl Mn OIDIMAMC• MG. JJ.11 P.Htf MOTf(I 01' $"'11.L l~C1'10fll tUNIMMltU.J,.,1:: ... TMI tV,.ltOI :, ~ T... ct•ti;,g~~ou~" .. ~Niii, ·~:;~~:A:~~:::· A~l~·oo;N.,t.::~,~ ~=·JITT ~a:: '':JJ:.'°~:A:."::::1 1u .. 1•10.'~:U-:1/ ,.,. TK• Ti!'[:.,:",:=:!"~~_.,"'-~,:.,.,, .. ITAT• -U.Ul"OIRtlllA llM ITAT• o• (.t..LljllORlllA ,o. "" ""'"""'*' OOtt c:•rllf'I hf •r• n. lollowl .. --II ..,... klt1M11 CALl,ORNIA. CHANetNO TM .. lON ""' follOwlli• --.... ,,. "'''-ITAT• Of CAJ,.l,otlNIA flO• II lloldlf-.-.1 s-1.i ""-1riklp•I llt<llOll Oii '1t• cou~.:..OllA... TNI coi:,...-r:.::..01W1•.. ~=-1'(':.C:,. ~1"11! 1~':, !...1~';',1' •• ll!'AUTV WEST tml "•'" 119 ~N .. • ::.:y ~J.'.?: ::o:.i.o::c.;c;. " LAGUNA Hill.$ COll'"FUlllES tlSD THI co~!TU"M1°llAH•• !i~~1.!!~. ':t c.;:·~:.~=:1ci:.:= NOT1CI 01' MUlll•O ,...,'TICIN P09 HOTICI Of' HU.•IMO OP ,.ITITIOfll ai!llof CAIHotni. llflRr ""' lk!lllCllll \11i.ntl1 LI...,,.. HMlt. C1 f'nJJ Cl.CP C1Ut Ot W Liili.a. ~ HUit. c .. l)aO•I TO IHOW CAUSI 11111! l'ITITJON -Of IM Cltv Cwf1C11 lg Mid n-lnt •DPI e1a11CT1tll9 ~aVANC:• l"Olll f'lllHATI 01'" WIL4 AMO POlll llml -of ALS ICE Cll!AM PA.lilLOA GorllOll L. Ort"" 21 ~rdl air TIWI CJfY CO-II et the CIN of c-.11 t1tu. ,01 CMAHOI OP KAMI: «""'°'I°" ComplU'9 io tftt "blllC Wt 1' OP 1116'. f'flON•YY SOLO OH COtll LlnSIS Tl!JTAMINTAIV YI!. OL.O ICE ClllEAM PARLOR .,.;1 l.Huna NI-I Cl mJJ IM" don llf!rellr «Clllft 11 lollOwl Gordeft L OrMIW 2' Mtllerdl lay 111 tlM lfllttfr of tlWt "'°"llullorl for W_.., wltr.it nalvl"" .,IOt .,....,.1 DY TUCT a't HCtHWT Edi .. tit HEU:N O..Vll •ALMa ll!RO I nd hi fl k Cit IM 1911ow-TPIU WSIMN 11 IMIJnt anluc:ftd itY 111 SE!CTION 1 All ltltt PClf'fiotl f1f JM Llti!N Nt.111~ C1 rM7' ~II H-tit llO'J EUCEN( 81EN r11t fltetwt 11 r11t ClfY 111 tM MtttH _, ""' fMll• ., MIN!t'f' t)e(MM'd ::::' :!~"' ~=' "' lutt ,1111 lndl¥k:l\ll l teil-lllt clMcl'io.d rt1I ..,_,., ll Tllll tM.1tllllf" I• '"'"' ~llfd tll W.. Jill., 1 Mlllllll' Mlf'1 I COit )JrtlNTH«~ VAUINTIN~ ltlt1 Hf NIV NOTICE II HEll lY DIVIN TI!.. foliowt OOtdol'I L Or-lltrMw 11i.t .. tfllll 111(1\!0fd 111 tt1t Cl<,. tH¥lcliHI W'HI REl\S lt11 Dele 0.tr "'Iii-Cil"I' Cltrt: "' VAi..I NTINI .. HENlllY VALIN Mdftw w '•ll'ntlert Ill• r11N ll•rtll'I I -'K:.'m-°!.'~1~r:,:: M.. ••ltren. '°' Tiii•• ttl'tl!M!ll filed ....... "°"""" ~ tt wit OordDll L o-II. •1111" -nu"',..,~ Bllllo Cltv "' 1'91111111" l/tlllY ,., TINE o.c...... Nllt!Oll .... •CINI• • will ..... for l c Oii M Cltril crf Orin" c-tv,,. Mly " lt71 lClf I 111 ·~ "I" " Ill• ''""' Tiiis tlllfflttl'll tlltO with "" _..., J, ... 11'1111 ..,...,., r1 7111'1" "' """" Dlttd llwY 11 Jtll NOftCE IS H(RflY OIVI M .... , lt1;1111« _. Lt'llt • Ttllllntftllrv tt "11 l tk•r °"-IT ,llbll'1\tll 0t111111 (MU D11t7 "llot Tr1t1 11'1 1111 ClfY tit c-.11 ~ u,.,. cl<trk " °'""' COUl'llY Oii 111\tY It 1911 .. 1 Mllti.n wttll tt1t ctitrk o1 1111• CCII.Ir! ,.111111"*9 OrtftM C-1 Dilly f'llo! Vllil:GINIA ,. VALENl!NI 11111 JICUJt Htllloll'ltl" l'~nMI tt Miki! ll '"'" for Detlld M=-.J•M l:nrt11 tM.r 21 2t Ind June 4 II lt71 IJOt.71 m111 lllertot reconltd Ill 1MG11; JO PHt P11llll"*9 Or9-C..I Dllll)I "llot for 11'1 9"tlr d!lllltllll qp1Ql'll'1 Mini Mllr 11 • 1,,1 lt2+11 11TY ,.ACIFfC NATIONAL 1.ANK. I lurth« 111r11Cul1n W "111 "'time ~ Allttd L lollrt ft , .. M M. llltcordt Of lot A,,..ln (-. Mir fl 1t end Jw .... 4. II 1•n UOf.11 from 1110'+' .l*"f l lfl\t JI' to ltelllffJ----------,,,,-..... -C ........ 1911. llWt c.e.Extclllln tit 111t it1.a tit .....-1N ""' -hu """Mt LEG'' Ncmcv ty c111fo(1111 IVfffll ov1r1 ,._,., .. ,,__ .. 111. tit HfN1v w1NT"•ofl VALEN 1or 111 ... 2-un " '• '"" 111 '"' •1g: :!.~1\1;o'r#, 0~':: ~n1:1,.01,,YJ------,-==----~---I 1xc1PTJNG THEREFROM.,... w..i LEGAL NOTICE •T rs 01to1•Eo ttwt 111 --. 1 ... l---::=~:::::-~-:=-::,~:-:;":;,';;;~;-+--l'INI ale• HI Nll'J w VAllNTINE tk1 ,_,_ " O...rtmlnl No. l of .. 1a PvbllC: In Ind ,.., lttd S111-. .... -.1... Oll• -ICl'I"' 1111' Solllh ~ .,, •• OI .. 111 '''"'"' "' ,... ·~''"" 11\llltl' .... TORI t:IENRY VALENTINI! "'-cltcldtnl h1v1 (o..rt 11 1DI Civic Ctfltw Dr1"9 Wftt In ,_.,, Ml•~ M lo'''' ,~ •• ,,.. •OT<<• o• <•Tl•DOD TRAN , l•NI -r tltf0(1 llllt too.or'! 11 t :10 AM NOTIC:I TO CllOI f !llfd ._.1~ 1 Mtlllerl for 111 orHr tM Cllr el 1..,11 AIUI C..lltorn I ..,..~ ,.., ,_ S IR AL$D EXCEPTING THElllEFI OM June 17 1'71 In file cou11room 9f OtNrl IUfllRIOI COUIT OP Tll• •~"'9rlflllt ind d!rKllnt 111t (oE• Dlltd Mir 1t 1911 L llttlr1n k-n '° "'' 16 IMI 1"-~loOlll ANO LIAll!IAC:K '11>1 Wiii 11111 ICfl of th•I -11on ot JtO'flC• TO CRIOITORI fl'lenl No. l II Ille cour1J'oOl.ll• loc:lflJCI 11 STAT• 01' CAll,OINIA POii: -·~o • --,,,, •• MM , .. ,,...,MIN w IE SI JOHN -Nf!\11 1r1 lllN<•lbtcl to tM W l!lln NOlllCt Is l11rrlbY I ~fl'I !hit John A ••• ' , l •I • _ o< ••-•-·-' NI A""'' JOO > I TMI COUNTY 0, OllANOI. _..,,.. """ n1t•um9fll end ecknowlNffcl 1t1fY •• Kr1n1n. o D s Trenlf.,or .... Htl -o ,,.. °''" ,,.. -'" IU•••••• COU•t 0, TMO C vie: Cini"' DrlYI Wffl 11 11'11 Clh' " A '"" 4tctdlftf to C0!1'11¥ Ille ,,.....ty d..Crlbfcl County Clttk. '" t.1:r11 ot 11111 IOI tf S I Al>I. C 1 tit o ...,. tlllOW 11 MAA.>Olt E MA$0N DOREEN I IP tl!IUMAN t(Vltcl 1111 """' NC-.1 8oull\l1rd Cltv of C:l!ll l MIN ALSO E XCl!PTlNG 1119 $0i.lfilttly ~ ITATI OP CAL.l~INIA PO• C•llfO~I· ll'ICI' .,_ -:'u!. H ll'l'l'r•:,•y £11111 ef llAlfU.I! 11.-v-RT C••••alL' IEITHA C AM I'. IE L l 17 .. Or-Aw-• IOf'f'l(IALI JEALJ 1Ulorn,l1 lnttncll lo II I url1l11 "'Wltl fMt vi .. Id ltncl ""'"'.._ from 1111 TMa COUNTY OI' OIUNGI MM .. ,,,_ ... -· .. -··...., Olc••Mcl •-••••• ..., E CAMl'IELL J A Tfh (ntl 646-1111 #Mrv ltlll Mol'Mll tr-rt'I' lo L .. Mtllllll C1r-1llorl 1 c:tftl•r u .... If lall., SlrHI •• orentfd 11!:1t1lt d Gl!ORGI A. DUOLl!Y _, u•llH '*"1 '"" NOTICE IS Hl!Rl!llY GIVIN 11:1 1t>t tLllAll!TH T WINCICLEll MAlllJOllllE ·~ .... ""'"-" Holerr Publk C1lltornl1 Cll 1 c-lnttnotd Tr11111~ .. (l"" II""' COlllllY of o, ...... br llltf °"'"' DK••'" IMI ··•~ltd (f .. lfOl'I ot Ille "'°"' ~·"*' dKtd•~' T CC*LlfY "IAfoiCIS T c;IAHAM elld C«lll Mnl. Ceiltorflll tu,r PrlMIHI Oil t i Ill IM) Of tlOI Wll.,.,lre &oult ... rd. (II\' ~ J_,rv II lt4.J Ind ttc:Otdtc:I !!II boglr Notkt !I hie...trt tlvtlt .. cnietl!Orw ot IT IS l'VRTH~ DJfOE•'EO tll•I I 11111 ilt e.rlOlll llewl"' c11fm1 1111lul 11\t V RAY TOWNIENO Ill COlllll !tra wllll PubltWlld Or•llO. C11111 Dtli't' "' ot Ort ..... Counly B•vtrlr HIUt C1Utornl1 11\d 11111 111ci 11U. llllt f6 ol' Offlclel AloCO"h In Ille 1111 1-t 11tmtd CllCelllftl tllat 111 C-_. tlllt Ol'dlr tt ,,_ COllM '" Mlf ~ .. , '"ulr'fd Ill flit.,.,.,., .... ~'""'"'"" wrlllfll ••• -..e111" 1111 MIY 14 IS." 1'71 11,..7\ My Commf11lorl E1PlrH lnlllll:lfd Tr1n111,... !lHIOrl LM-UI• ollk l " ""' COllnl)I lec:ordlf " Wld .... ,,_,. ,..rln11 cl1lm1 ... , .... "" tlkl Pl.lbllllltcl Ill lllt D.tlly l'Jlot I ---·-with""' l'llCH .. rv WUCMrl 1~""' alllc• el'ld ...,,dlllt ll!l!tfWd Into b'/' dte:9611\I kl April t 1'7J Cor110<•ll111 ln1ltlllfi, to IHMbldr. 10 ~•Id Or C tv ci.cldtnl '" !"MUlrtd Jo !lit !Mm Wiii! ot -ti clrC'lllellorl .,.lrittd .., IM COUfl. ot tM clerk ot !ht 1k'o'I rnlltltd court 6r Ml ILldliN. H Wiier tn41 IW DONAL D F CE "uoblllMd Ortllft CN1I 01llr Pllol Jolln A. KriUin, DO I Tr•11t"1'or :~ l,.~EPT rM ln!irttl eorw_.,td 1tw lllU1Uf)I voudltrs, 111 t11t 9ff1o1 of IY Cit Or-C•IHorn11 lflCI I -" I« tt _.,,. """'-wllll tM MUMtr"f S VHLl!lll tt Mlf Ind Ille Nlltloll ha1J----LEG---AL--N-011 _______ JM--•-•-'-'-"-'-"'_J ____ ,_n_1_o_n __ ,_,_._n.i(LnH1i 1111 ••14 fllr-.1 1"""'1r I 111 trlll flWtloll el otld 11"" lltdM to Ille Cltr:k Cit tM "'°"" lf!llllld ceurt w i:r.:tCtJ~ -u prior i. t 4'11 _,.,,,._to fM 11nder1lmld tt Cndfr ~_.fer tw11lllt 111 ON1,-i J of ,.U•LIC AUCTION LEGAL NOTICE t ene111 dll.crlp!lon ot wtilcll n 11 o~ thl Orlllftl Cou"IY FIOOd Cont,61 tt ..,,sent "*" with t11t Mettl6n' DATE':r"Mlr~ ~nMllllcwl. ClllitM N111oNI B1nlc~t1•.,.,.::;;•t• - llllM C fl !lit )llrl d1r GI IOWt. 10-wlt Dillllll lllU~ 9ffkt Cll1lrkl 1W cllld rK«OICI o.ctrflbtr L -""" 16 flll Ulllltl'tl.,....., 11 lllt t ttlc• "-"'"' $.11111 Atll. C1U 1 ::-ttn It,. .... ... 111 KC6rdll'IC• WllPI C1lltornl1 CIYll Coclf ... ,_, llirntlure ...... """"" IM .... ltst 111 book ~ "" .., Ollldll " "'"" w11n11n1 • IOl"l!Mlllo luoltt 1000. HAltMOtl G scovn.Lf "" PIKll" bu1lntt1 ot "" u ••llM'll In '~ I J:"" ... _....,... .. Slc:l!Oft )0$1 -ll«M p.-r1w of Jtff IMJ\ Cited 1t !tit New,ort louln1rll. Cl• of •-dt. lhtl 1l lnclucltcl wllPll11 • 11r11 "" Sault! OlfVI It~ Lii ,.,.. .. 1 C1lll ~~-" ~.... •H 11111111"• ..n1lnlN IW ""lifltt .... d ~ l"ff ,,_ KIMtlll. Wll bl IClld 11 PllblC11•fllon to NOTICI 0" lNTl!NCIO Cosl1 Mftl CtCllorflll; Incl Ill.II w lcl "'-111 llnd Cit,,._ unllorm Wlcllll ti $00 -ftl014 wllkll I• IM tlKt of butlntll tit lllt DUlYI.: CAlll, ... ,. ••• iaaNl1 ~nl ..it!!l11 twr "*'1111 etllr tr!t -.Ulbld •t ": ...... Ml oeowtf 1.r! tr. Mll1JIY I L.lv..vm1n I l lltfl lor ,...... TRANJPllll ANO llAillAClt Incl IHlitllCk 1,.nlKllDl'I It lo bl c-fVM1 Nortfl 1f111 15o1.rt11 IM !: I ty ""'°"rlltntd lfl Ill 1'!'1111 ... t Jlffl11t!IM 'O tint P\ltlllittUori flf 1111t Mllct ~ c:;t• :..r .,:;1,1 Sllff Cit -nllorl ot b!11td °" « •"tr MIY 31 NOllct II hlf.W tl~ll'll 11111 Cllrl'tlCt J Sllmmlltd Oii Ille Jiii cltY ot Mt, lf7l lfne : lllcl I floot tlrl11> btl:: ~ t1W ut•lt ot uld dtctftllt wlllll11 ._,, =~-~SI.! SCMA• Jl,. Dtllll Mlrdl :U. Jtn C.Ulornll "'°llNcl •1 foli-t L.ot I ltn ., Cll"' HorH Auction. For 0-Sk-9dl 0 0 I Tr1rul1<or "' .,.. Mill •• 10 • "' ., -'"''' ... ' -·-··· W•lllrl't llM -ffl•I c:trltln • ...-. rnof'lllll '""' tht tt .. 1 ,wllcatkrn ., th!• .. ti ..... __ ... Crtotktt.Clttz- M ..,,,,.llOl'I Cl I '-"'"1P1' " .. D I c-.. C .... "' .. _ _.....,, ..._ Mlk• .._ Nt!IOl\ll 1"'61 11t ""Cll Mlf Ho. ..i, II II' IP ••f r "' "' Olll Mtll C~llol'I. If f'lOI Wlhtlltl lolll..,.rd. l 'll'lllld lo 1"-V>l'lll Col.Int¥ Flooll Do< ..... , l• l'11 .._. Mc. Ill: 111' llY JllNI M.. Ml" oO!I IKW'dld In 8oo11: 11 ,_ 9' tit f11rcltl ..... Dd""'"' Ort""' (NII D1llY" Piiot MIY Ct1Uort1!1, ln!elldl IO 11H C:i!'f"tlll'I Ptt1<1111/ (ltv of lfttrl'I" Hllll C•lllotl'lll C1111trol Dl-'rlct ftY Ottcl recordld In ,.EARL.., E DUOLIEV 11--' 1-ii. C1Dflnllt tM41 Executor ot Ille wltl "'::-,:~1~0 L:f f,::'"&«S '°:1~, :0 i~n n 24 u. 21. 11 "' ,, 11 i"f~~~ ~"~..,.~ ~:'.::1p T ~o~ii:r::~ ~: o.1111 L:':..!!:: t'J,:1~ "11 rw:_k: E':re~1:'G ~~~:rF~~ ~·="~": wm' !~ =-::....... " L11 ~~ ...., lllrntd lltCldlnl M1• rtcof"dH 111 look 14 ""'' 11 It ll>f ILawl ol no'I WU:sl\lrt 8oulev1td Clly • O llf C«P lllfi -•n 112.00 1"' el 1111 Wtsl 12000 l•rttt. WltllllM & ltAMtll "Ubllslwd OrlnM t.lf DIH~ PllOI A!ttnM'! 11 '-"' MIPI lllCCIHI ot Lii A""ift COunll' LEGAL N011CE of '"'""' Hllll. C111tornl1 •1'1111 Illa! uld e~ Allt<I 5 WllMirllft. IHI ot thlt _,IOI\ ot w ld IOI ' IYIM llrlll ,.... "" ,.., ot.... SL Mir 1 u 21 2f. 1111 IOP-71 IMl Wllfdltf Dtl~• Rtflle!llCI 11 mlllf IO fht lll!llllOll ll!I fl1r nllndtd Tr1111r.r .. (lHJOr) L••-ul• LEAllOUIP COl,.OlATION E••ttrlY tit Ille Weit 1ICl'I"11111 "°"" LM A_ .... C1IM .. ,. 11111• Ht lllwtln for tvr1tier 11nkllllrt. ,. MHt C•-•llClll. l111t..i1 Ill e1wbec-10 Slid l»I Wllllllrt ll'M. llorl of ••kl lot tv1111 Nortll el Ille SG,ltll Atltf'fltli't ._ •weclllrll'. LEGAL NO'nCE N.-t altcfl c111ftni11 niwt D1!tcl MIY 12, lf11 NOTIC• Oil' OlllOL.UTIOM Cl1r1111U J Skeldl DDS,. Tr1nllr Cl'" IW.,IY "II ... C1Uf "211 ' l trH of Uld l ot Pl.WV, TM! 11141 14>Zl1t W I! St JOHH OP PAITNllllSlll,. !LM-) 1111 "Ill lllf-..1 prcotrl~ • Publhhl!d O''"" Coll! Dl!l)I Pllcll llECTJON t Pvt-111 II 1M -l11o1'11 , ... , ... _ C ' O l• ,,,~ Atltl'My fw axta1ltt CW"" Cltrl! ltflf Cllrk """M dtKrlsl!Jon Cit 'Ml!dl It h tollowl MIY '1 1'71 ·-·>< flf Sldlan t'2311.4 ot Ille MllllklNI Codi! of "''"" Ml 1 "" ,......., ,.11 l e>f Ille SutM<IOr Cour1 "Ubl c l'IClllU II Nortbt t lWll 11111 Oavltl lo-wit Dln'ltl t<Wl,....,,I liflk e eQu p.. ..... Ille CJI~ el C•ll Mftl Olilrlcl Ml9 IE r M1Y I ... JI JI end J-4. 1'7l 11'J.11 T 1*' Publllllld Or111111 COllll ....,,y o ev WALTIR T KING A<Nm1<111 and C111'111 E $l'f\ Ill. llf!'ltofore 11'11111 fllrnllllrt eMI 1 •turn end loctlld Cit t111 City of C41tll Ml-. II llwlOY NOTICI TO CltEDITOll ""rll 31) Ind MIV 1 1 ... 11 lf11 101! 1\ ~ d61M bo.l•lrwu under t111 fklltl.us llrl'll tt 2UI IM$1 Vtrd• Ori"' C11Y ot ccsti LEGAL NOTICE ,,,,....,... tw tht .odltlOl'I 111erito of 1119 LEGAL NO'nCE IUPl!RIOlll COURT o" THI aOallTION MOWlllll •IA.RU.ND na"'e end tlVI• of jllJtOFESSIONAL M111 C1Ufornl1 11111 11\el Hid w it ind 'l.CP 1r111tt1crlbtd In ltdlol'l 1 f\wtof tTATI OI' CALIPOINIA A"""'"t II LI" MAINTENAN CE ENGINEEJtS If H1t le1ltblck lr11111cllo11 11 to b41 (\11'1 SECTION ' Th t Ot'dl111,_ 11\11! lalc.• l'OR TN• COUNTY 01' 01.ANGI 0.. CaMllll Orl¥t Dl'1Y DI" Cltv of Huntlnitofl 8•t.<h 1um1111ttt1 on Ille Jilt diW ot Mify \t11 Olil:DINANCI! NO n It oiled 1NI M In lull force tlllrlY (30) dl'tl SUl'l!llOI COURT o" TNI! N1, A-"SM NOTICI TO CllOITOIS M-' --~ C1llltr-l1 nul County ol O•lfltt Sltll of Ct l tornll d a t i IG Im Al !ht office of Ltllt<iu p AN OlllOINANCE o..-TM• CITY 01' CO~ frOITI encl 11t1r Ill NIUtt Ind 11rlor to STAT.Io..-CAL.l,ORHIA l'Olt Etlllt 111 PAUL ~ CL.ARK. OKlllH SUPIRIOlt COUIT Cl' TNI T....,.... f'UI Mi-1* 611 lhl t!rtr lllY llf MtY lt7I by mlltut CorPOr1!1on If 93Ctl WHil\lrt 9oule~a d TA MESA CllATINO A RI 1111 oplrt!IOll ot fltlttn 1151 111\/"I from TM• COUNTY OP OIANO• NOTICE IS Hl!RIEIV GIVEN lo tlll ITATI! Of CALll'OINIA ,0111 Alttnl'/I fir c .. l•IC>lllf"I <on'jn't 1111=• fl'ot 1~'.!_ 11'trwrllll• Ind C!I~ ot lllvff v Hll!1 C1l lornl1 OUIREMl!NT FOR J. IONI EX 1111 lllHlet lllerlOf 1h1ll bt 11111>Hslllll Cl" Nlllflliotr o.tWfl crldltort ot lllt ebov. Mmtd fectdtnl THI COUNTY 01' DI.ANGii l"llbllllllld Or111111 Ct1d Del"' Piiot terrn nt1 r '''''""1 II JllflMl'"I Otltel lhl1Uthd1t of M.lv lf7 CE,.TION ... IMIT 1'0111 AHY onc:t 111 lllt ORANGE COAST OAILV SUMMONl IMARRIAOll 1'' II '> I Ne AtUN Mltr lol. 1S 21 lf11 llU.'1 lhO'r•ln L .. _u 11 Cor11<1r11... IUSIHl!SS •ITA•LISMMl!NT IN fllLOT • MWIOo"" " ••-••< ,,, ... ,. 1 1 lll<SOM iv 1111 c: 1lrns lllllllf 1!11111 ot WILLIAM M STEWAJfT S11d ""' ""' In tllt lu!Urt wit! bt (Oft. A ,,, ' ,_, ....... ... ·~ ~ '" ,. llMI m•rrl-"' '""........-: J•lllf ffl• llld ~Ill 1r1 rMU1rtd TO lilt ....... . •-.. -· O • A .. m --I<< -WHICH ALL 0111 AN'r PORTION 0, llcw! ..,.lnttcl Incl IUblllhld In ~ Clh' of l!lell'IOI' MOllUl'll Incl ll1$iloNll'll Jama -•l<o MM --··-·--~-• >• --""'"' v• IY "°"' _,.. w ltY llV Allen S Wf nc11•t•11 SAID •UllNEll Plll•Mllll 11 (~!1 Me ... 1loHll>tr wllll tM 11111\eS Cit Hlchlott MollUnl <"-..,, __ ••· •,-,,:..-,·,' ... -,::_,,-. -NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN t6 lilt ..... lllld'llrM Ill 11•11111111 ""' dlllll Of LIAllOUtfl COll'OIATION OEYOTeo TO Tiii UL• 01 Ille membtr• "' ""' C!ly (WllCU vol!,... Tl tlM RtsPOndlnl ,,. ...... "" "' ..... ··-(rtcl!ton "' fill lbo¥9 Nl'lllCI Mc:tlltnt ---------------ftlM flrn'I ln41 ,_l\'t I ll monlu 11iriblt t:MI WllJlllrt llYll. 011,.U.'t 0 I' COMMUNICATIOH tor 1MI "1ln1l 1ll1 11m1 Tiit IM'lltlontr tlll fllld 1 llltllloll _. llllH COllr1 If to 11rtsent llltrrl, wlltl tlM 11111111 ...,._, IMl~ll'll cll lml 11111111 thl It FtlM flrrn a .... r" Nlllt. CtlH tt21t VISUAL. 01 OTHl!lll 11 MI i.. AR PA51EO AND AOOl'TED 11'111 17111 -~ C¥fl nt VO\lr lfltfr11tt You '""' nit 1 l'lt(twll'Y wouc:tllrt. to ft'l.t llf'ICl ... 1111/llCI wlll dltedll!ll 1,1 reoutrtd 10 Ilk 111 .... NOTtCI 0" ,.UILIC lllAlllNO "'""'"1 noll<f II tlttttrr t l"fll ffllf ttlt PWlllllltd Or111111 to.it 01Uy P lcl MAT.RIALS FCllalDDl:N TO •• ti ~r Im wrllltft rei.oonw wllrllll lfllr+f cirri vi Ille II tll• offk1 of Mr 111«!111' AKELEY wl111 1!lt nKeltarr \'Cllldllft. In tM eft\ct ISPOfll TNI CITY COUNCii. -.oltne<d win nOll bf •es-lbll rrom M•Y 21 .,11 l:Z:U..11 AO VE II TI I ID S 0 LO O I R081RT M. W1LU>ff dill 11111 lflll wmmono II Mrvtc1 °" 'l'OU P QUIRK '12 SOlltll l'lcwer Slrffl of !hi clt<k ot 1111 iblrlt enlltlftl ., Tiii thli lllY Oii lor •nr .tlllt•I'-lllalfftel OllTIJIUT•o TO MINOl.S UNOI• MIYW ol' ttlt CllY '' ·-· ,,,, ... , •• wrlnffl r--· Sult• I04 LOI Ant•IH C.llf0ml1 toal7 ·-··· -,. ~--1 !Mm wllh tl'ol •.. bT 01Yld Ad1rn1<111 ln 1111 -n Nl!\I or In LEGAL NOTICE ''' O O '"" -·---,.. ·-" CITY 011' POUllTAIN VAU. • ti.. r11me """ flrm A I , TWINTT.ON• Clll of CO.II MIN .., thin •ucto lll'!'lt YOllf lltll'Ult '""' bl wlllcll II "" t it<• of b\11lne•~ "' tl'tl l'IKHll,., -0..tt. lg "" 11ndtnl11ntd ,, tfOTICI! I~ HlllE8V GIVEN Illa! Oii YI.ARI ATTEIT tnltttll end 1111 <llllr1 m1r .,.1 ... e lull .. IHIOfrlltl'lld In 111 miltttJ Plflt lt11r" 'O Crod.tr.Clltrtnt N1llolltl llrtk tlO Nortit TllMdtr J-1 1m ti I OD" M.. In 1!lt c..ri~ Ill~: lllllH~~i:·~ ~:71•' h SUPEllOlll COUaT 0" THI! THE CITY COUNCIL OF THI!" C:IT'J EllEIN " PHINNEY rMnl U1111lnl,. ll'lllllltllvt or°""'' orHts tlMI 111!1t1 of 111d ftetdflll wllllk'I flMw 9r ........ 1r S1nt1 A111 C1lllornt1 wl\kl'I I• c -u (Nmblt"s, City Milt ICOOll $l11tr C11rl!1 E. ~"" ITATI o" CALll'OlllNIA l'OJf OF COSTA MESA OOEI HEREBY OR Cltv Cl••• ot 1111 CCW>Ctrnl.111 dl¥111M of "-""' -1 monllll '""' tht flnt tllblklllon of ffllt lilt 111•<• ol bullrleU ot"" UNl~r11ontd In Awt...,. Fo..ntffl Yl lltY C•lllornl1 ttlt PWll Or I TN• COUNT't Of' OIANGE DAIN" AS FOLLOWS Cito, of COllt Miu 1,,_1 dlllll c111l1111¥ dl1111 IUl'PCrt ti l'llllcl 111 mtll.,1-111111111lo111t eslltt ot $114 t:llr Courcll wlH,.. • 111/blk llfittLllll Oii MIY U~l -(NII Diii¥ 1:u.'°i'1 NOTll?a 0" ll~A:;!':4 Cll' P•TITION tvs:,c~:~ 1,,.;: ~ =! ~,,:-~ ~1t',.;~ J.A~1:2.::~A i -~':'=~ :-:r.c::"'-... ":i,~lller nlltf D.tftd Allrll 'ZI. lfn ;:.~blk-:!:" of":'.. :ri:· lrtw tM }."!;': i.t...=...,. .. A< Ardilttdurll LEGAL NOTICE 110111 "lllOIAT• O" WILi. AHO f'OR lltCl1,1 !Piii rtl;llll cllft tit tht S1111rerne CITY OF COSTA MESA ) II 'tM wl• II Miii 11111 ~ tf 111 .. HELEN DIENGHAUSEN CLARK Dltlll Mlrdl JStll 1tn "-t;.c.r.4 bM -,._I tt ~· Ille Len••• TllTAMl!NTAIY Court ot !ht U111ted Sl•ltt Ind of "" I EILEEN ,. "HINNE'I' City Cltl't" """"" i. 11111 -"Ill" '" -..... .. .. El!IC1ll!'hl flf 1111 Wl11 " Ille Crodr..,.CtllltM Netlonal ''"" ~ m l"lnwnl ll11•hc .. l1111 wl4'!11 frlnl 1t Tm~ E11111 If VICTOR ALIE RT WEISER Sullr""t Coul1 Ill tM St1N of C1Ufcr11l1 Ille Cltv ot (.,.II Mtu tNI l«ll'flc:lo """"'""' 11 "'-" Y9W Wftll• ,_.., ii lbovt -4 IHCICltftl By Jofln M. Ml""°'1 ~"'ttM 1'I 15 fM1 ill 1M CllY'I A.( IU,.IRIOR COUIT 01' TN• O.C:e1Mcl ntYI Mid 11111 etrltln llltrlfurt bookl Clerk Cit 1111 CllY COllllCH ot !tit Cltv ., 1f11 lfllf N fllN Ml"-AKILSY p QVlilllt E~tc:Ulor of !ht WIH ~~lllC!vtll Control hl'llrll lttult-STaTI! Ofl CAll .. ORNlll ,0111 NOTICE ti HEAEBY GIVEN Thi! Vic l'n"lllftfl MWllll-S •nd ollltr Prl!lll!CI C6tll Miu Mrtt>Y cerllly llltl Ille ltlovt Cltltd Mm:ll J2, lfn Ill s.tli! .......... It., hlt1'I .. ll>f Ille 1bowt 111mt'<I cltCt'dtt\I §''°"' T"• COUNTY 0, llVIRllO• lillch• GI 1w1 fllftl .... ,1n • Nllllol'I tor or Wrlllll!I 11\llerlll •lt111rH dr1w•1111 or 11'1111 lorttolM Ordlnanc• No, n 11 Wl1 11'1-WILLIAM E ST JOHN Cltrll '"" A-"t. (llfftnll .,, " Lft Afllf' Alltt!ll)t II ...... J.. J-ClllflH U1 -AllOlkllloll fH.. Hf tJnl probl t 61 •Ill tnd !or IU111AC• of Lrtte I tllolctr1ph1 mtY bt fort>klCllll lo liot IOld troduc:tll ar.d C-Jdtrtd tK!lorl try lie-Br Wm. 0 1Cr""""9. °"9llfv Tiii {!11) MA.,_ +HIS Ut1 WtsltlHt °'"" Id br G M Helslf n & $orw. rt11t111llllf HOTICI! 01' IAl• 0" TetltmfftllrY lo P•lltlontr nfertnuo IC lo PH""ftl Undlf twenty-C21l rMrl !Ion 11 I r""'l•r mtttlnt el tlld Cltv (SEAL) Arttinlt)I ,..,. bearhtc 111111 HI ~°"""" ot JllM from 111 PD 7tl!O 11 RI IEAL ,..O,•ITY wllldl 11 m-lor lurllltr P1rllc11l1rl. Ind 7lle Ch' Counc;U lufltltr llnd1 IM Councll on IM lrll d1r ot Mt~ 1f11 111C1 P11bllllltd Or-Cotti Dlllll Piiot flWl11l'lecl Orilfttt C11J1 Dell)' P!lol N.w-i It~ C1N..,_la ftU. ~· .. o 12~ Ind 1mrftlll1'11 IK!lonel Olllrkl '" 1111 Mlllltr of "" EJl•I• • PAVL H lhtl 1111 lime tnd llll(f of nttr 119 '"" dKl1rn llllt Ille flltbllsh.._, of ... Cll 1111,tlfter P•llH ""'° ...ioto•eo II • wt>o!e Allfll 30 •nd Mir 1 14 21 1'11 loot-n Aprtl 311 tfllll Mly 7 1411 ,,,.. 111"11 T11 tn4) '42 tue /! ~ lt S-10 tor pr-rlY loc:ttrd In llEN50N OetltMll 11mt h11 bHn HI tor Juna 10 ltn 11 ol bl.II""' !or tti. ••'-ot w ld ml!.,lt ls ti I r.a1111r mHll"I ot 11ld (llY C1111mcll Alllnll'Y !tr 1!1KlllW ~Gr""' Vtlll\I' ......,,uy wnlff"l1 al NOTICf IS Hlll8V GIVEN 111•1 t JO 1'" 111 lht <OYrtrocrn Cit Df1>1rt muH IMI ''""lllfd lo l111ur1 11'111 111CJ1 hftd 1111 lht 11th d1r ol IMr itn bV !ht LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE PuDllol\td Or11111 Cotll D1llll P or ~~ Euc:lld end lllUIMTW ot St11..-Th' l'r1nk D M -J!llec:vtor ot tt11 Wltl ot mtnl No I of 111d c:ourl 1 70CI Clv c m11erl1I h not "°Ill le p1r110t11 Under lol!Qwln11 roll c:1ll vote April JO 111d Ml'/ 1 14 11 1'71 1010.71 bi ,....,.,,,.. 1111 wllllln T111111t1Y1 Trttll P.ut H 81111<111 111(11\flf will Mii 11 Ctt1lef Orlwt Wtsl In the CI'/ of l 1nl• IWl"ly"°"' 111) ¥Hrt. AYES COU tJCI LMEN WlllOl'I JfJf ;a l"l• i ncl !of3i llf Ylll ltlt ID lilt hl&hUI 11"111 llnl bid-Ana C1Ufornlt C fv Counc I furl ..... flllllt INI llttll,11 •in P!nltiev SI Clllr MtmlMH •!a. bM 01M1M U1. C ... lllMll VII dt undtr !ht !trlllll eNI tondltlon• Otltd Mtv II ltn llll t !'-1~t1bl lllmmt ot 1Ptc: 11 tOl'll 111 NOES COUNCILMEN N-'1 tue AOVERTISl!MIWT '10• •IDS ~! Pll'mll 11, T•llttv• Traci 61H -Ao-,....•lil.tf!tt "''"llantd I nd wbltt'I t6 YI E ST JOHN ct1111on Pt m I reqylrtmenlt 11 !ht IT>Qll A81ENT C()YNCILMIN N-,ICTITIOUS •UllNlll Notice It ~ttrr t i...., 11111 IM lelrd ol ~ 11>1\utlon 111H bY SUMYl!lfl C1f11lruCllOl'I ((ltlf ;l'ftl•I on bv lllt Suot!rlor Court on (OYnly Cit ~ r11tonabl1 m1nntr lo regul•te lht IN WITN ESS WHEREOF I htYI JIAMI ITAT•MINT oo!M Tru1!1t1 el tlit CO.U CCIMl'llU!l!lr Co!1191 ,.-IH11 S..Compinr It emtnd IKllonll 0 1111" c Jun• 1 1t11 11 ll>e llo\lf" of t 30 1111 or CHAILll C MOlllllSON ti 1bllll'lrnent tnd OPf,111\11'1 Cit Ytndots o1 lltrMJnto 111 mv 1111\d tnd 1H 11td tlll Seil Tl'll tollowlnt <IN"POrlllon IJ Oltlrltl ti Oren" Coullh' htt11111thr CllllTl,ICAT• 01' IUllNlll ~ A\1p Jl».10 tor I dllll91 ot l-en '"" e•I t wllll!n Ille lime I !owl!CI b~ 11171' MtlllClwMlll ""'nut lhtu m1lfrl11 !Qr lht lltt!th Ul•fv Ind g!"" Cll)I flf C111t1 Mfll lhfl 11111 !Hr ol bu1M .. ,·.·.·,·.. • .. ,.. ''" ,,,bllr .. ,.,.,tel to •• "" awr.r wm r1<1IYt "'CTITICIUI NAMI! X ,.r_,iy toultd Oii lht *'"' 1 61 of l•w tt 1111 otflct of L.ul1 M NI"'" 11 l" -'""111 C'IUllrlllt MOU well1re GI Ille comrnunlly MIY t'l7t .. """' "' Uil' 10. but llCll l•lff 11'1111 2 20 ii' m Ntor'>-TM IH'Clfr1lglltcl doll ctrllfV llt 1$ ~ '"' w-... ""' ,,,.,., ... ltu Wiii ot lorneY for lllt ExKulor 11 1611 Wtll 'Tll In•) 17).SllJ SECTION 2. Actorlllnely Ill• (Hy Cou11o EILEEN " PHINNEY Boul•~•nl Cotll Mes• C•!llorftll d•r JUM 1 ltn -ltd blcl1 tor 1111 doc:llrll! I 111/llMH II 1ll E 11th ~· "' S 11r-.1>11rtl lrom Al to 1111 PO nae l •OM!wer s., I• o Ani ht "' C1UIOrt1 t """""r lw Ptllllllltr t I dOe• htrttw enact Section 1191 n of C tv Clefk I nd 111.ofllclo c.'ff~ldcor:='ir.!'fo~ wi~'f HU:. 1w1nl ot CO!llrlfcl 10 Fufnlllt encl tn1t1t1 Ccnle M111 C1Ufor"l1 under lhe I c S Cortellllonil \Jw Ptr1'111l't 1MI Ttl'llltlw1 n102 t I lht rlthl !Hie encl lnH•tll ll>f "l-14f 1'rl clol 2, Division XVII of !ht c .. 11 Cltrl! ll>f 1111 City Counc:I tlMlori Oflvt NIOl'lrouli C•lllort1ll T-Pllrtr/ltteord~ In 0Wntr 1'11ml1"-flttout I rm n1111t Of WE$TCLIF!1 Trlfcl M,50 fli.d 111'1 Cllll~Mlklll wtlll 11141 Hlcl dtctdtnl In 1M 10 1H !Mt ttrllln ,.UOlllllH Orl ll9e (NS! 01 ly p ot MKI M11nlclll1I (" ... wllkh 11 hfrtbY ot 1111 C ly ot (Oii• Mn• Thll bllllnt1I Ii c.onllllcttll bY McOllllllll ri J'":'!.: ~ WttJ (o/ltH HUii-TELEVISION SEAlllCE Ind lflll $Ii. z-°'"'" <HI pr..,.,iy lllllt led In ll'lt CllY of Sltn-Ml~ 21 1l ,, lf71 llll 11 lm•ncltd lo , .... II followl PvbU!llftl Or•-CDIU Deur l"llct ·-· ... ~ie lllC I C.llfornl1 f.Of-•tlOl'I "~-~ ...... ,,· .. -... ·., ... '' -.... lfrm II almPOlld ot ..... to!lcw "' N•llCft "Thft.t 11'11111'11 1,.. Mint ~ 1011 Co..ntv Of Or•llllt Sltll o1 Ct ltornl1 A z -Exctlllloll P.,mll 111111 bt Mar 21 ltn ll't-11 "" "'' ......,, "'"' -""' """-• r11m1 In NII Ind •l1e1 If r1tldtrlc1 "''"' -Ille .. 1~1111 l.IWI ., tht Ind ,,,..... p1rt cu ltl'/ lltltrlblct II reoul•td tor •nr l>\lllftf'I •llob!hllmtnl 8¥ H1rol'd F GtllM of 1111 flurdllll"• Attn! 111 "'' 11 II 1o1-. •I• tit c111tarnlt \GoV"t Code '5,0le n follow'I LEGAL NOTICE I" ..,...lal 111 or 1 nv PGl"llon ot 11 d Pr11ldent Adtrll"f1tr1tlon ll11lkfl11t COll.t Ctrnm11nl!v w111., 1 Cltftdl-. toO se. Lll!I .. > IM 1119 F-lllft Vtllrf Zlllllnt PARCEL 1 "'-Eut to !Ml " 1111 bllllllftt 11rernlws 11 dl\IO!ld lo 1111 11 , LEGAL NOTICE Tlllt lltl•menl Wll 111H with tht Coufl. Ctl'-11 Dltll"lcl ll1Cl Mlmt A........., CorOlll dll Mir Ci II lnllltt TIMI <.oftlftt Ordlllll'lltt JC.I'll W11t 140 """ .. lllt kul'll 2~ lft1 ot or d .... Ir Of 1nv b6ok meg.illnt h' , .... Iii Dfll'lllt Co..ntv .... M•Y 12, Cotti """' Or•Mt Cal11fY C.Hlorl'lll Ditti! MIY s ltn Incl Elltllb!ll .,., 111 flit 111 -tht w111 "''' If 1111 k>Ull!wnt -rter SUPEllOlil cov•T 01'" Tl1£ -.-or ollltr prlnltd or wrlllln ltn •nd llltll bl ~ Ind PUbll<IY ,...., W11ttr B Cltncltl'IOll DtlPlrlmtonl' ..... 1 r1 •Vt !llO!t ol "" Solllhr• I •llJlfltf "' th• STAT• OP CALl"01t111A 1'0111 m11erl1l .., lft'/ plctu r GrlW Ml OdJ. A~tl'll a MllUllftt •lol.od II Ille .... ''''" '""' In lllf Siii• of C1lllcimlt Ortnge CClllnh' ,. M lle: llllJ>Klltrl ,.., tumllllllofl Norlllwesl Qtll rltt ot Stttllll'I 2I THI COUNTY 01' OlllANGE pl'lcl09roP11 morlorl PIC!ur~ or ot,,.,. pk "-llls.t Attonorn It Lew IN•• Room or Oftllr dHllJfll!ld loc.lllon J Oii Mir S 1t1l Wort me 1 Holt,.,. ,,_ lltl~IM -tet.lltv' lft 11,,_ II' ln T-llllP 4 South l lftlll l1 W"t 11 N• A_...,, lor!1t or ~nlc1l dltmlc1I gr t ltc CIRTl,ICATI. 0" lUSlfllfSS 1411 Wllsllln •w1""trd In tr!t Mmlnl1tr1llol'I 911lldl1111 P ublic In Incl for wld Stitt llf•Mnt llr tltrl II llltM ........... ll Wiit IMI tlVll!I 1119 Renc;f!o lot Ctrotn. (.QuTlfY 61 NOTICI 01' 141!.AllNG Cl" fll.TITION I lc1I 1111rcduc 16n or any ct..... "ICTITIOUI NAME Liii AllttlH. Clllfll'llLI taMI I .cl! bid 1111111 Clllllorm I nd bt IPPll td W•lllr I CltNllnotl k-- -Nnltr lo d6 M II lurtlolt 11'1-Ori,,.. SI.le o1 Calll.....,li 11 ptr mi~ POI l"IOIATI Cl" WILL ANO FOi trloc:ln ltQU)p....,,I mKl'llMI or Tiit llnderl 11'<1!11 dolt ctrllf'r !he IS~ T.i UlSI W-UU r"90lltlvt to ffll1 hwltttklft. Ille IHd lkl-m. lo 1M1 !hi Ptnofl •lloM n1,,,. Jo IUl>o E llol'l II dlllrltl. 'l'OU mer COl'llltl IM r.ccwoed Jn Bock II p1,. J ti LI! TT I IS Tl!STAMINTAIY (NO m1 frl1ls w fl I c 11 1l111emenl'-dUC:llM I butl~U ti l'OS S.Vl l'lfl C T ntf• llOl'llS and I ll olller clocu,,,.,1111 comprl11111 Krlbtd 1o 1111 wlllllll 1<11!""""1! IM LIMIN Dltart!Mnl 11 fllt JO• ..,. rwttr Mlic~lll_,1 MIP' l~ lilt offlct ol llll •ONO) """mrr•ltd rniltr 111 W l ftY ,,,.,1111 or HUnll"9IOl'I lltldl C1llloml• I/Nier !ht P11bl!111ed Ori n" C1>11t 01l1f Pllef Illa llffllrwlll COl'llrld doaff'Monl1 (Oflln Kl< ltOllfd lie ltd llll ... Now lttm9 COUlltv JllCOfGer .. "kl Or1n1t County Ellll• of' GEITRUDE STOCl<:TON In tnv m1,_,-t et 1111• I Ullllul flrm nl"" ll>f CONCEPTS I nd Mt Y 14. 11 21 •ncl JUM • lf11 l160-1I ol Ille ConlrKI Ooc:lllllenl1 1r1 ,_ °" (OF~IA.L SEALt)XICll lttnl :• CITY COIJNClL PAllCEL 1 An ettrmtnl tor 1111 t n 11.1..SO KNOWN A.S GERTlilUOIE M t) In !..:t lorblcklfn lo bl told or lllal .,Id firm 11 <omPOIH ot 1111 lot OTICE !Ill tn41 -n IO public IMPttllon lft Ille M•rv 8tll'I Morton .•. OI' THE CITY Df •1'1111 ttte<'I to M ll:S .. a. common with STOCKTC>fol ALSO KNOWN AS GEA 6ltltrW •• dhtr Du Id to ml11ou u""I lcwln• Ptrton wl>c\t Mllll In !vii t ncl LEGAL N offlct of !ht Purct...11,,. A.Miii t lld rn1r Noll"' ,.IHl!lc<ellfort1ll ~ FOUNTAIN VAL.LEV '"""'r• I nd IOI' l!Jtllk Ill tv --· TIUOI! w STOCtcTON llNO AS GEii "" ... Of 1w,,,..,._ C11l Ytlrl er Pl•ce of ··~ Cltnee 11 II tgtlowl bl cbl•IMd bT ~t or -men •• PrlnclN I Office Ill •,. '"""' IE c.ll -I Jlrlll Cit lfnd boul'lllN Ol'I 1t>t TAU OE E WELCH OECEASEO 2! Advt I MCI II be"' lorb~n 16 b4I Jllll Ill M. M ll tkl 20l 111'1 C HI/II-llUHI Orin .. Countv •. Cltv Cl•..._ NMlll DY 1 llM ttrlll t t tt end 211 lee! NOTICE 15 HIRE8Y CilVEN Thll IOlol or clllerwl .. dlstrlllultd lo mlnor1 tlngton l•tcl'I ,.-111S7 Eld! bid slltll b4I l'lllN 6111 Oii lht M~ C61'1\m1Hlon 1!.11Plrn =~;'::W.::,. Or11111 CMJI oil tr if~~ ~o;J"'i:, l:'" i:' .::=.~ ::;'1~ ": t~ E,•=•~':; ~~ !1:: .':!~:,.•,,::~ ~Z:i. .. ffll •111 ot twenlY-n 11 D11.a J:i~ i~ '~11ta1 c1•T1:1~Cf;~~ou~" ... :~s~MllJJ .!t'";" C:,:;:'°~~"*' w1111 ''"' P~ll=u '0r~~!, C-d D11111 ,.11ot ~ !ht Soo.lllln1t Qttlf"ltt ot t1M1 Norlllwtlt Ltllfl'I 'rt-1llm•nlll'Y lo Pllltlol'ltr CNc SECTION J.. Tnl1 6rd1ftln<• 1h1 I t•t St•lt cl (II torn!t O<inH COUntv Thi llndtt• t ntcl dot• etr111¥ ht II CO!'-!•di bid Miii lie 1«omoenltll b'/' I MIY 1 14 21 n, lf1l 1571 ; , 0 " NOTICE Ol/I ttr oj uld hcllOll ,, 1NI boundl'd lklNI! rtltrfnc:f 16 Wl'lltll It rnlN tor elftc! •ncl be "h.llt IOr~r llllflY UO) ll1v1 On•May U 11'11 btlore mt ' P+ctirv dllCllnQ 1 buslMll II 1'3'11 Colltl Hltft ctrtlltd or Cllhlff'1 Cllec:k PIYlbl1 lo lhtJ----:-::::c-,-,.,-,-:-:-,,----a..i:AJAL 611 lllt Etll ltY • UM 111,11111 I• i ncl ,.., furtll..-Plr1 Clllttl ll'llll 11111 1111 llmt I nd I om Ind 11!., \II PIHllr Incl 11'11 I P•lor Publ C In •ncl IOI' llld Slllr H rson1ll¥ WIY Sunwt BMtft Cillfornlt under 1111 OwMr or :111 sleclorv 81<1 8ond I" flvor LEGAL NOTICE f~t W~tterlY crf Ill• E•llftlY "' ot ~Hf of ftettlllf Ille s1mt n11 ""'" ff't to Ill• llCP ''''°" o• I tltt11 llll lllYI ,,om ·-· td Jlld th M M lt!ok l k~ lo I'll~ lld 1111111 firm """-ol TVltC . Ind 11111 of ""' 0wftll" ·~tCU!l!CI 11¥ ffle blddlr II NOTIC• TO CRIOITO•I llld w"' h•lf ll'llll ltolll'lllll'CI on"'-W•il lot" JUl'll I& lt11 at t 311 1 rn~ Ffl fl>e II oeu"e De PUbl "'"" once n !Ill lo bf"'' penon wno" "'"'' 1 •uDscrl wld llrm Is (611\llOHd cl 1111 lollow ..., 11rlnc;!111J Incl I H ll•f-e!Ol'Y 1uretv ccm-l----------------p111T!Otll 0" S•CUllTY IMTllllST 11, 1 Int pt i l1el lo i nd 160 1 .. t E•tlt courlrOMI 11>f Otoirt,.,1111 No ) of ll 11 Ori n"' C6•11 01 IY" P lot 1 ""Wllll l>l!r of H to lllt w Ill n F"Urvmtnl I ncl l>lflOl'I ...ncitt n1nw In 11111 tncl •Ke piny al 111re!Y Ill 111 1mount not lni OIDINANCE NO n f U..., l,lftiftonft ~-d .. ~ 1¥ ot ltle WHlttl)I Lint ot u ld Wtll cour1 11 700 Cl¥1c Or~• w,11 1" !flt Cllv 1e,.,.,.1! <re~ 1t on 11rlt1ltd I nd oubl ""'II 'io",-, ltd1ec1,"'• ,•1Kutte1!hi111111• tit r•ildtncl irt ,1 '°'""""' lllln 1'lv1 111rcll\I U~I of 1111 bid Tiii AN OlllOINANCI OP THI CITY COUN ••• T"r11111111 htlf ol Senta Ant Cl Ito nit In tne c tv ol Co•ll Metl loll•!"" w th IClll\. I AL Thomo1 J j( In• *'" S11lU.1r• Of" d'tKk or b a bond lh• l bf •lvtn II I CtL 0" TNI CITY OP COITA Ml!IA To Ill 111oM PIOlll llf c tlml lltln•I !flt SI d rtll llfOlltrtr lo bt IOlll 11 1 1,1n I Oiied No.Iv II ltll ,,_ ntmt1 ol lht mtmblfl o! !ftt C Iv MARY 8ETH MOlll TON Huntlll!llOfl 8tt ch 11>u1r1nlH It.et he b Oder wltl t•«ult "'' AMfNOINO S•CTlCIN ttt2 0, THI!" Ot i..retrllfler ......... bntll Oii IM 11 commonly k,_" ••• ,,1 .... ,n w E ST JOH1'1 Covnc: I"°''"' for ll'ICI 101ln1 I lhl '""'' No. y P\111 ( Colltorn. Ol!td MIV 11 lt11 conlrld If II be ..... Oed lo lllm In ~ COSTA MISA MUNl(ll'At. CODE nwdlonl elf" "'ff\11 «CllN1"" Delort Cenl!OS A-I Sllt1lon Cillfo(nlt County Clerk PASSED ANO AOOPTEO 11111 ~7th lie~ ~· ncllll~ Of! Ct n T!>on'llt J 1C lln1 lorm h w 11'1 Ille CO<'lltHI Doc:umtnlt end lll!LATINO TO Tl'IE OltDl!"R 01' 111/lk '''"'"'" dltelllbtcl Mlow .. COl'lo SublKI to Curr•"' "'•" (O~tnfnl1 HUIWrn NURWJTZ ANO lllEMllll ot M•Y 1911 Jy1nl:.....i%~1:.. f~•l•H SI• t of Ca lol'nl• Or111119 County 111'111 ProY Ot lllt 1vrt'lr bof>d or -· l"'t IUSINllS AT CITY c 0 u" c I ... rnt!M ftndlllorll ra!rldlon1 t1ttnr1llor'IJ 4Jt.ftlMI '"'" CITY OF COSTA MESA On Mir 11 lln before me I Not•f'I' Qul ..,wl~l11 tend1y11l!tt f'IOflllC1!161\ul Ml!fTINGI Notlc;e I• lltrttw 1 Vtfl 11111 I 111/lk r 111'1!1, tltnll ot w•Y e1t1menll tl'ICI 1i N..,._, 1 ... c11 Cl11f•rllll PJUl llM¥ JIOBEAT M W LSON Publl~ I ~r~~~St COlll Olllr Pho! f ub le In 1rtd tor 11ld Si.I• PltlOlll i't' lilt 1•trd of !ht contract to f1'll blddfr A THE CITY COUNCIL OF Tl1£ CITY _,., ..... Wl'f"' fl'"••lloll"' • WCll•"' llllnq 111Cl.lll'll>rl11Cfl of rKord Ttl (114) .,, ,.,. n 1ror Mt~ 14 21 21 • ..., Juno ' lt11 !Ul-11 IP~• td Them•• J Kltllf k-n to "" L•bllr Ind M•ter!tll ·-Jn ,~. 1mount OF COSTA MESA DOES HEREllV Olt "''*'II lbaut 'O bt ,_.,, ffle fllfM ol Tnt tttllll ll'ICI CON1 llf/fll o1 111• • t AtltrntYI 1w Ptllllllttl' A EST ""' 16 1M1 lht PlrlOl'I wllml n1mo 15 lllbtcr b Cit ~ Cit Ille C1111tr1tl Ind I Perlom11nct D1'tN l\S l'Ol.LOWS ........ 11 GUl LIYERS INC l h.c> C1ih In llwlul montv ol lllt Ufllll!CI St1!t1 PUil lilllcl Ortriot (Diii D.oltr Pl o1 E LEEN " PHINNE'J eel lo !tit wit~" ln1trumtftl Ind llOl'ld In tM 1111611nt of lCO"A. ti 1111 C-ll!CTION I Tiii Cl"' C11111nc;ll ot lht Cl ~ nl busl...u ... GULLIVllS1 -Ill Amffla end terrn1 '"" Hrctnt !lKl MI Y 21 22 v ltn 123'-11 CllY Cert LEGAL NOTICE 1ctnowltdttd ht tXKYltll lflt 11m1 tr«I 1r1 te<I Vl!-ed 1Y ot (61!1 Mt.-llnoh 1N1 Clecll ti lh•I IMll ..tclrtll tit Ille dllltor I$ 1142 ot 1111 •mOYlll b!CI to ICCClmPlll1' 11M1 otflf STATE 01' CALIFORNIA I (OFFICIAL SIAll Thi Owner rtM•VH Ille prlrllttt: of r1-II 11 I" !hf btsl lnt1rnl1 ll>f lllrlOlll lltY .U.r"lltur N-1 IH<h (1Ulornll tNI 11'1t bllt llCt to 1M1 ptld II> '°"" COUl\ITY OF ORANGE I U. JEAN L JOBST lecl "9 1ny I nd i ll D els or to w• Vt eny illf blllllllft bf!ort lht Cltv Coun<ll 11 Ill "" -vi""_ .. Plrfv It NA flrrntllon"' Ille .... bl' lilt c-1 T1,n LEGAL NOTICE CITY 01' COSTA MESA , '"'''" NOf•rr Publk C1llfor11 1 lrr..Ullrlllfl ot lnforrn11Jlle. In 1nr bid 1'1111111' mte1ln11 In !ht btll ln1eru11 ol :•.JIONAL ACCt!~TAHCE COM,.ANV 01' ,.,.,,... 6Mrl!IM 1M mt lftl1tNnc:1 •• I EILEEN P PHINNEY City C trk 61 C•RTtll!C:ATI! 011 aUSlfllli:SS Pr nc; 1111 Off u In .,.. 111tMb!dd111 councllm.n Ill IPlt crcleri't' concllld of ..--~AL.ll'OlllNIAI ffll Ml•lnn• ..:ior1u""" ~ ll'ld ·-iw... .... ln1;1r111t1 K NOTICf 01' TIUSTl!I!. SAL.I !ht City of C(nll Mii• •"'1" 11.ofllc 0 "ICTITIOUS NA~E Orlntlt COll!lfv w110• •ATES busl11111 •I 111 ftlUll r counc;n mttt n11 ~:~tel llflY k NII Wll1'tlr1 llvd Sllllt Cffllll•ll to tM """"""r 111'1111 bf "o-TO l'fl 11-111 Cert of 11\t C Ir CClllncll ol' "'" C fJ' gt Tiii u""u•I•""' dcel C'1111\' 1'tl II (Ofto Mr C6111rnln lOll E.lplrt1 Purw1!11 to tlM L1bor COdl of llH! stile Ind likely to rt1vll In lrt1ler tit cltncv '~I llfYWI'/ Hltl1, C1lllor11l1 II'"' 11 b r1ltcl IJ ot ltw dt11 of cont1rm•llOll vi TS Nt 1 lJt)I Cot I Mn1 Mrttw c•flllY 111•1 1111 •Dove dudln1 t busl11tt1 ti lU4 Vtlkr#1-~•Cfl 2 ltlJ of Ct l tornlt Solllhlfn Ct1 fDft1l l llulldl'll Ill !ht ( IY •ltl'f 11111 11>1 order ol to ~ MC'llrld """' .. 111 dlb16r Ilk Tiii HlmlMlloll d lltlt 111¥ 11 r Oii TtiurlodlY June 10 \f11 11 11 00 l nCI lor..-o!ne Ord Int net NI 11 I~ WIS Orlvt Cfltt Mill C• r:1'1t U""'' the PVblllhl!CI 0rl ftlt C111I DI Ir l'llef ind Conitroc:tlon Tredfl C o u n c I I 1 Diii lllH !or 11\t Cl!\' Council ot l~r ( tv !• 1 vMd Ille ltl-int olll•r bullnu1 l-1nct <KOl'ellll d con'lt¥ll'ICI I NI A M GllJIALTAR DIEEO COMPANY ts l"'to6uctd •1'1111 COl'llldt•fll M'CllOl'I Or lot< nCTlllout tlrm n1t•1<1 cl COLOMBIA COi' M1r 14 21 211nd Ju111~ ltli 11!4-11 lultdlnti •nd CDMlrlldiOll Trl'Cll1 Council Of C01t1 MIH IMI •mt ncltd ID 1!1mlr11t~ ~--"'" Incl llMrH-wllllln l!lrft Y91P11 HCr-c:l'llrttt Ill.Ill bl 11 Ille •~HllM GI dil1Y ·-nled Trust.. u""•• Incl I-II I rttu 1r mttt M 111 ltlO (llY FEE SALES I. SERVICE i ncl 11wl llld of C>rtnte Coullt'f llW uld lelrd ot l'IMI lwo-$>lr1 c:ouncll metll111 l'IMI !lril •"""' Piii N-1111 ,.. dll•tr ltv......,. tlt MOI IO DI II Pllf"lllJl l'll IO DHd fJI Tru11 rtcordl!d June Counc I on 1111 l d O•Y ol M•Y 1'11 llnd I rm 11 comoottll 61 lilt lollowl"ll H rS\ll'lt LEGAL NOTICE Tru1tw1 1111 litlflllnld )M -r•I Ptrl ol whlcll !1 Klltdult<I ti •:le Pm ••• ''"" P•DHl1Y IO " lllbl«'M 16 "" lb ., IP Ille Clttd ltltll IN "' IM llltll"llf JO 1'10 •• llul No '°'" hi bOCI'; •m Int t•ll•r lllut<I ll'ICI A<ICOltd II • wl'lolt -· n ...... 11'1 tull t nd 11ll<:BI ol IH"fVt llln• •• ,. ot lier d .... Wllill!I for Ind lilt 1KOl\CI pert of wllkll I• ldltdulfll ··~vrllY hit"'" 11 -Ital" ti , .. , Ill 1eUer Pl" Ill ot Off cl• l ttora1 I" ~ 011 cf 1! • •O'llllll mHl!nt " ti d C ty Coun<H '" denc• 1rt 11 tollow1 •Kii c 111 .., ~ of workmin ntl!Cltd lo 11 1 lO P"' :•""""111111• Nf-1 8tadl C1tHar11l1 All bldl Ind olflf"S mu" 1M In writ 11t1 J'I t1!t Countv AKordfr of Ot'1ntt C1111n!y htld Cln lllt 11111 lltr of MIY 1•11 bl' lht Stbllll I' Sif"bouMll 31SI Yfllowl!Oftt NOTICf TO CllOITOlllS PIK\lle Ille tOlllri tl w11.-wHI be IW•r"-Accord nelY Section ml ot Chl Pllr 11 ..... .,..,.., 11o bf wblttltd lo 1M -fKtlYtd 11 1111-"'11<r 01 Lw 1 C•I !or"lt lolkrwln1 rDI tt vclf Ori"" CDlll Mei.a C• r.111' M1<l1 IUllERIOR COUlll'T OP TH• .. --•.. ,,,,, •. , ••-,, ,.. MM-Afllclt t. of l'IMI CD1lt MIMI Mllnlclo .. • Af<S CO"''C<'M<N W J ITATI 01' C&ll"OlllNIA "0111 ""' -•u ..-.. -C I rltv 1111.,UI llllY bf 111Kr1Dld M NI.,... lllOrnt¥ IOr lllt llec:ulof" I I WILL !ELL AT PUftl lC AU("1'10N "1'0 un .. '°" °" Tern1 5trt>c\I•-" 31$4 Yt llowll-Tiii COUNTY OP ORANG• Ol"IYI tint rtlH 1r1 COll!lfl'ltd In wlll oat I lltrrtw 111\f""td 11 rttd ~ rt r 11 1U lurnlNft l\lfnlsl\lftll, 1611 WHI l rotd\0<1¥ Sullt 0 A"9flt"' HIGHEST l lDDl!R FOR CASH (11111> f din P nkltv 51 Clll H1mim I Orfvt Cotl1 MMll Cl r.162' N• A..ffl7, Jpt(lfkillol"ll lllepltel b-, Ille llolrd l nCI lol-. ~I...,., MUI~ !ODii toolllll fl• (I lornle t*2 or mr, 1M1 I Itel wllll 11M1 11 llmt ol 1tle In 1""1~1 "'°"•r nf ""' NOIJ (0UN(ILME1" N-Dlltd APrl it 1'11 E.llllt of IYELY" VOS HE L \. ert 11 H' ed H rJ'"' Sl!CTIClll 1 4\1 ti lflll lllM'•t! 1 ... tllflblll INI ltw Olert ot lllt S.UPlflor C-1 11 1nr 111M Un !t<I Slftetl al 111• S.0..01~ Iron! t nitanct ABSEN"T COUNCILMEN None $~1>1 0 F $trlloutt~ FOLCiE ll 0..:•I"" Anv cllH llCillonl not ellllclPlled ll'llll Ste:.. :nGl. Or•er tf IYlll'leH ~Ill ITt ....... itY WIY ot (fllliOl'I ot I 1/fi!'f" 1M I rf! put> k ill°"' of 11111 l'ICJlkl lo lht OICI Or111Q<! Co..ntv (our!hgv1t IN W TNE55 WHEllEOF I Ill~ M1 11 T1rn 1 Se ball:S~-NOTICE IS HEllE IY GIVEN lo 1111-below fist.cl 1111 t 1141 p.11d II Int current The fetUll r lll'°''ll11t1 ol 1111 C"" urlly lnt1<t1I It 1'D Of to111ummtll!CI ti 1nd bllof"~ l'IMI mt klM ot 11!a 11 t loclll!CI In !toe 200 Bloctl ot Wnt S•nl• htrPUnto wt mY h1ncl Incl •11 ~Kl 1hl Se•l S!1l1 61 (1lltornl1 Otlnle COUnlY Crl!ClllO 1 of I~ l boYf neml!CI llectll9fll Wiii rlll /Cit !"e IP<'! Clb 1 t 1111 Incl Counc:lt OI lflf Cllv ct COii• Mnl corn oll!ct Ill NATIONAL ACCEPTAJICI For luflntr lnform1tlorl ll'ICI Did lorm1 Anl Sou 1v1 Cl (lo mer Y We•I •I'll of lht C Iv ol (01lt Mi.ii lllll 11111 dlr ol On AP< 1 2' lt11 btlort 11\t I Not•ry Ill I !I ~rlOl'I hlviftt c:lelms tlllntl the f1lll111ClllOll lft t/ltc:t Wltr! IPOl1Ctble nttncll'lt ti • 30 o'clock • m lht I like COMPANY OF CA.LIFOIN A l'-17 1t1tlr t i lllt crfl Ct el ••Id t 11Mnt' fO 5!ri!'f"I) Stnll Anl Cl lrD111l1 •It ri.llt ti Ml' 19'1 PvD c In 111d lor 11 0 S!t l• Ptt161!tl 'I N 'd ~tdtnl 1 1,1 rtoulrfd 16 I It llltm Trldtl COYnclls 11 eny to~s lllltd IMllC"fl UP Us bu1lr1111 In !tit lcHOWl"t orClfr I 1111-. lloultv1rd Sulit! 3111 "'"frlY IM Exec:ulor lie 111<1 lnl.,ttl ct11wt~td lo I nd,_ lie (I EILEEN " PM NNEY APPtl ed Stb1 d F Strboll1e• 1!111 M1rl1 wllfl Ill• ,,.tfHI,.., Y<IU<htri '"Ille olllct 1,, not currtnl or 1,. rtvhtd bv tebor Ill Plt!llll ot A11et 1nc1 ~Ji 11 Ct lllornr1 .., or l lltt J11rw t 1t11 T"' rllfll ll ff-llt"Yt!I lg rdrd '"' I ncl bv I ul"ICler 111d Deed of Try1t In Ille c 6 C Iv Ct k and Tf•f'll SerbouMk ~nown IO 1111 to bf lht of lllt cler~ ot !ht t bovf 1111 I tel col.tr! 0, 11 eemeni. ovrlnt tn. blddlllf !I"" or U) 1nvoc1llo11 ~ D11t11°Wo1Y 11 ltn •II bie!J Pfrfv lllu1lld In It 0 Countv incl SI•~ e•.ofl Clo C trk cl lht 111 IOlll wl\ol.t "''"" ire Mier bl!CI I~ to preienl llltm "'th lht !IKts"rv coni!fUtllon tlme sucll rew111on1 lhl11 br CSI Roi <• I '.<"'-St<urtd P1fly 0.11'(1 Mty l), 1t11 dtlC lbtd I t c IV Coun< "' int '"' wlttl " ln1trumelll •nd 1tk~ttcl9td II l th ndtrtl•ntd 1t lhe ell (ti ca111111trld I •• ,., of '"' bt'<rw I 1tf!d (tl AllP OVtl " I'll ~l/IH ot p t V cu '\..~ NATIONAL ACCE ,.TA.NCE /I Frink D Mu Loi l6 ol Trt(I N6.. UM a1 ""°""'"on CllV ol Cct I Mt11 ln.Y rxtcuttd 11\t Umf vouc trt o 1 U O INSON I A fl llll I !loll mH! "' <' COMPAN V O• (A' IFORNIA E, ... -o Moo ,,,_,., , ..... n ''''' 41 Pub "1ed Orin .. CCI.II 01 y Pllol Nt•v IOFl'ICIAL ~EAL< of HARWOOD SODEN ANO A K rl ti nr fl Wf trf YKI trO Ul Old bli1!nl>< ~-... .. ..,.u,,,.. "" »O NtWIH)tl Ctn er O•h•t S11tlt motion or other btntl Is $1\a I bt ft I d .... " ev L1rrv ,.II<•-LOUIS M NIVl:lf Ind " OI MIC• l l\f(IU1 M•PI recor<11 '1 Ull 124).1! Jo1eoll E OtYTt All, N••oort Bii(~ Ce llornl1 wllkfl II 11 llon to ""' i..tow lllltd .... ,.,.. 14) C\ll'lle"' (ll1!11d1r ~ A11l1!.,sl Sf< •ttrv AMlfNr ,., l11elll..-cl 0 •not Cwn1v Ct IO>"nll No!1ry Pub t.Ct l lorn t lhf P ~ct cl ti.II neH ol lllt Ulldtrl intll n APl"llllNTICES 17) Wtr an11 Vo •I« 1'11 WMI •fldW1r lwllt 0 Th• t ttl ftddrt11 i nd other CDl'l\"'6n LEGAL NOTICE Pr nc:lp1I Olllce Ill 1 1 "'•"•rs Ptrti 11119 to 11,. •llllt ol •• d Alttftll«I 11 111,Kll!CI to 11\t 1r6v tlol!I cl Ill RtP<>•h C tr Attorriry X. fl~bllll>td Ort"" COttl D•llY 1"110! AlllM>ll'l'I C1M"""• '"'1 de1 int lc11, If 1nv of lfll •tel P Ollf!•I'/ 0••~•• Coun Y aect!lenl wlltlln lour ,,_thi 1 ner 1f11 Llbor Code Stttlor\ Un.5 COMtrnlni (t) RtPOrl• Chv M1n111 ~711v 21 1'11 l 2ll 71 T-:...-:~!.im;:~ (O-JI DI Ir I" IOI =lll~v'!°.;' I~!~;~;:.. lo C:rllor~! NOTIC• O" "1'IU!Tl!I S SALi ~~ Cfi"T,::1on IE-111 11 I 7,~t"::ib~:~la: 1~711111, nollce ""t OY;::;• ,:: ·~~:.cc"i!..i or 1~ il~ld 0Ptnl111 ot b d1 If IPKlfll'd In lh~ •.. LEGAL NOTICE -v :ID 11 11 1911 1m 11 '7117 NO 1 n 71111 Pub 1Md Oflllff CO.Ill! 01llr Pll6' "°"" M•llldl contrit!Mt tmi1lo71n1 trldttl"llfl In ''"' I ll Ac!°" °" Pl"6POMll 0<dln1nct1 •!• Th' 1111<11•1 •Mil Tr\lllH d!scla !'!'II 81W On WodnftdtY Junr 1"11 "" ,, AP• I JQ Ind M1v 1 '' ,, 1•11 1ou.11 AOmlnl1!r1!or with "" •PP "'' CNbl• OC:Clllltrlon to •PPIY to '"' IU) PYbllc ht• ln11 ~ .. t. •Al i:ut LEGAL NOTICE 1 •Di ty for any lncor tdneH ol 1"' 'It HI t •vfn 0 clock 1 "' 11 $outfl f'•ont w 11 innt~td 01 1111 111P11Cab • l6lnl &P11rtr1tk uh p commlllte (UI Ntw llY1lne11 ,.• IU,.lllOtl COUlllT OI' T"I 10drnt Ind 6llltr CCl'!'lmllll tksltftll'°" It Enl ance Of 111, Old 0 "'"' Coun y LEGAL NOTICE 1111 , cl !flt •bov• tor 1 utUrlUI• of U•Pl'OYl l 11111 fl•!l'lf 11\1 CUI 0 •I COl"fll'nunlc~llor\1 ..":« ITATI Of' CALIFORNIA '0R NOTIC• INVITING 1101 iny thDW'I llet'1" Cour!houw In !hi 200 81«• on Wtll Stnt• nomtd llKtcl•nl r1!16 ot 111prlflllctt IO lwrnl'll'l\lt" Wied ,",,',"•°';~~· COl'l\mtfth '"" SUlttl116!1~ ..;'-TNI COUNTT o• Otu.N•I NOTICE s HEllll&'I' VIWE ... ~ Sild ••II' ... n ~ mlde bllt wllhoul A B ....,I 'll Formf IV Wtll SI•" lllllWOOO soo•11 ANO ADKINSON Oii ""conlrKt d""''""""' "II,. ,.. A IMfll l ot d ., -rrulltfl ot 111 F~· oln Vt !:" c"""'1~ "'"'' •tn!V t•P•tti or mpt 111 s1~:.e1 ""In 1111 cnv ot s1n11 A"' ,. .. ou1 "°'I ottk t au 1MT Contrec!or mer bl """' rf<ll lo ~t PrDmc!lv 'i! •JO t m on 1111 11111111 ot ~ t ...,..n v rettrdln• I li e POHtHIOll cit ,,.. •--·• ''''' Co<i-·•o -., -• 1 •.• .., • •-•-•k -', ,,_,_ "di rH't111r mtet 111 mlll'I'"--• • -, MOT1C:• 0" N•AalN• klloc 0 1!tlct Ill 0 •n"' Ctiunlv C'll"'b tnttl IQ lltV lilt remt nlnf pr! ... C1I ~nl1 UNITIO CALll'ORNll\ BANIC CIRTIPICATI! Cl" •USllll!S$ •w_., ,.,,.. " ~-· '"'' --· -"w (Ill' C II C> -••• OI' ,.ITITION , ..... OIATI OfL c. lorn!1 lil'lll fKf\Vt st• Ill blOI Ull le clp11 '""' "' IM N>tr IKU "" ~., u ld Truslh ..,. l\IC(tl..,. lrv• .. """" Ill f'ICTITIOUi NAME Ttl (t141 164-lnJ (Olll•KIGr 11'1111 s1,1b(:Ot1trecl6rl 111•11 1Jao OYllC ,, Cllrll CllY AHorMY ·~;lo WILL. ANO 1'"0111 LITTUI J 00 P.M. Oii""' Ulll dlY ot J~nt ltl1 ........ ,,,, ... ' ·-,,, .. ··-,. Del!CI ol Trott ,.._ bY Clrl T AulM .,. ... u..,, ......... -I <••Illy ... It '°"'"" All•lllYI !tr Atlmlnhtrtltr com11IY Wiii\ Sect16!1 1m' I" ffll ..... lo'/ I nd c ty M ....... .,., I tntmt>i. •• ' INISTlllATI.. ' ,.. -. '" 1ft1 "" dtd llu<t n1 I bYt ntll 11 :tt» Hlrt>or 81vd Pllbtllhld O<•ntt Cotti O•llY" ,.llol Mr, me"I ol 1111ortn1 CH. "-Ir ~"1 Ir lllllont Ill lllt COUii': I ~ alTA.M•NTAIY OI' AOM 1111 otf Cf GI ''kl 1"-1 Cl II• Cl "" Cl\IJ-ltnll Iller-. ti llf6~kltd 11'1 Mid nolt 111 U"""" man 1 .-.cor 1 14 21 21 1911 JOU 71 For lnlormttlon rellllYt lo ,.. ClllmlMlr °"'., Olllctn or CltPlrlmenl ... WITtl-TMIWIL ...... NN•x•o "'Oft>•"""''., ...... IUI 111 .... ••ICI Dkls ldv1nc:~1 ll l ftY uncle ll>t le Ill.I "' •~d FHINI,., "" lfM Ill B(l(llo 71l!, ... ,t 171 Coslt MtH C1lllornl1 undtr 1111 f t 11r1nllctstotp 11...-n1 .. cont..:' O recta• "'••h I I Ir""' llmt ta lll'!'lt rn1w to. .,,.,.'°! £lltll Cit JOHN H ITEJN HAUS w ti bf~ 1/"0d rtlll tor 11!1 !urn lhlnt Ottd ol' Trutl ltH Chi tel tno l-otftSH Ill Ofl!c 11 llKorGI ol Ortrltf Co..ntY llllou1 I rm nt<M of JOHN 5 RACING CE ..... •-lo< ••<•<>~ S•-<•o-l••o CIH lftlled b'f 1l'll (Ito, COYncll ll'llll l hMI e"iOto;telold ot Klftl(t N U L'fnfnl Ind IVPllllf1 ot ll'!t Truittt Ind ol 1111 truits crr•IH C1lllor11I• t "'n ID 1«11r1 I" l11o CYCLES tNI Ill.II N d """ 11 comPOlld LEGAL N0'11 ••" _,. -· ·~ -I"~ NOTICE II HEllEaY 0 1Yf:N Wl•l klPPlln 10 bf turnl.,... In KCGrdll'Kt bv lt ld Dtff of Troll llltllfdMll '" 11"'91" ol BtrfftfMI A f'O• 111 lllt loBow M PlflOll wllo!e nemt In Cll tor"l1 Ot Olwlllon of "-lntlcftlllo IPOtl< II lfle lllltll llmt '"" llllCf It ~llAllCli LOlllAIN£ STl!INHAUI 1111 wll~ t,...;llkllloll• now on t t in I~• fhf blntllclt ,., unclt'" Siie! Dttd ot 1 wlclow by rftlon of !tit b'"•lcfl of cer lull Ind Pita OI rHldrllCll II •1 IPl-1 " '1U Sl1ncl1r01 brl!'ldl ofllCtl. ~':,,h!i~ lorll 1~ IH •l•n<f OI {)Itel hlftln • ""'"""' for Prcbllt "' Wiii •w•Cll•tl"' D-fll'nln! " Ill• Founle!n Trull ~rttofort t•Kultll Al"ICI dtl Yt•td II ft obllt1llOl\I MC:utld ll'lt•tl>Y "°"'' of Jghn Ct ltc:lllo. JG7I "' nlltllll l l'I ll'ICTITIOUI •USINESS ,','.~.· •• •,re•• •• • NTll• .... .,.., ::111 ...... ":'~111 •bov• ~<t"<l lor ltlltrt lif Admfflltlrlllon Wllll IJll V•lllr kllool D tlrld Numbf OM to !hi und"" glltcl 1 "'' ltn Ot(lir1tlon wll!UI brtltll '"''' •KO>"Otcl JlnulfY 2i!h CM (t tlr KAMI! l'TATl!MINT ~ t ! ..-•111 •nM•l!CI. riltrf<ltl It """IOI 11 -llthlllOll• Lint <orne• cr1 T•lberl 1nc1 It! De!iull l lld Dernind tor Seit •net 1 lt71 1" flOCll tll6 ,. ... 116. fl 1•1d Of D1ttd AIH"ll 71 1t11 Thf 101 OWIM '"''°"' i rt "6lnt1 For...,1n lltc:•1ves l'lol Int lll•n 6a clfl!t ~ • r:,nr -r!.i"' :' metlon dul~ ·~·f« tvr!l'ltr Pl•lk.ull•t 11'1111 11111 lilt time N.,. tnd SlrHI FIUll 1 " V 1 I It y ,., ll•n Not ct of Ot!iu 1 i nd Elfol;!lon tc lltl1! Atc:ord1 will Mii II PUbl1c wet IOI'! Jllhn C1 ltt" o blliln•u 1, Ptt llollr mort !flln "11 "°"' r r•lt ol IU1"1\d~ i:,1"111 ~ftlnlllll er •• ncl llll<t ,, llff,kll "" Hntt ... been 0 ltornl• n 1'0ll Stl Tiit undrfl gntel ("Ulf!d •• a NOllce to 1111 Mllllell bidder ,.., Cll~ PIVlbl• In 51tte of C•I ""'"II Or•llft (oul'ltv THE SHOALS 1101 I Cold MwY.. "'' MthHI ClflPlllllr UIU °"'' wlllCll mtel '"' c ~l ptr OI lUCll ~,lotl fw June 10 lf'1l ,1 I JO 1 m 111 !ht flY OlllOEI OF THE ol Otflull Ind Et0<:I Oft to Sr ll to IMI &•lvt tnolllY ot 1111 United Sllh!I 11 lllt On Aprlt ~I lt71 IMltort l'llf I NoltrY l teunt &eitll ht lllt rtSllOl'lllblllh' • X Ct V 111 n 9 Cl( nt u!'"" ~tr llllbft mcl on • ~~roofn "' 0.. '"""' Ho ' ot 1110 80AIO OF TIUITEES rKordtd Ill Ill• county wne-. tllt r .. 1 lime of II. w lllOul ..,. r1n1Y II lo ll!lt Pllllllc In •1'1111 for ,••Id 5111' Pfl"IOl\I v Rlcht td 0 BUr1 lGtl'I fl1fl,,.,slll11J ••• -••• m,•,l!c Neller • Powtr lllPltr (I~:. :, ::m 11.':'...~.':l"'m. !"', ~U<IM II :tOO Clrk Ct nl1r Orlv1 Wiii !fl l'"OUNlAIN V1'LLEY P•-•lr II loc1!td l>OltfllOll or tneun'lbrl llCU ..... lnl•re•I IPPl!lrld Jllhn Cl lCUlll kftDWl'l IO"'' to ' e Ill B L l et.<11 e tnl .... uu ~~!= ~·;i:• 1~';,' CllllOrnl1 !5i~E?.!MDc:5TCIR~~E Dtl• oT::Al~T~:lOEED COM>ANY !:;:y~1~t~ ':"'T~=~ tt ::.Id ~~~1: :: :: :~~::n.::;:;.~";.'r,..f11~== ~!..ii:'~ 1 (G!;_ ',.';'~trlfllpJ 114' ~:";i;. °::"r:~~~.':"' E~~~~ ~'!~"it ~~;:r,: l"r l'llllllr 0t tncr11 '"."'-Or C t C 11 I eel flt t •Kuttd lllt $1mt R "ere Orlvt Sintl An!_..,,, .. " O TOD11, Vlbrlllnt M~lntS & I mill Sl!C:TIOM l. Thlt Orll lntnct 11'1111 llkt ... W E SI JOHN (l1rk ot th• lia<1rCI t i w d lruJIH \llu1!1 Ill '"" oun J 1 orn 1 \OFFICIAL u ;ALI Tlll1 euslntu II btlnf .......... mKlllnlcil !loll Ml t I II I r I I 1 t 1 tllec:t 1"1fbt In 11111 forct ffllrl'I' (JO) dl•I ,., c.tnl\' Clerk jllW1""" °''"" (Mii D•lf'I Pl Cl Bv TITLE tN$VIANCE oucrlbtd •• MtrY let~ Mcr1D!I p.,1ntril\ID ,,,,,!fltd heft II SJO:S from Ind'"'''" "IHIM 11111 -"•II ll•lor i\IOMN c $.ALYllll MtY 71 n. 1'11 111 .. 11 ANO TA UST COMPANY Tl"' _,Ion ol Loi • of F11v IW No! l'Y " Dll < I tor 11 B•tnl W$ftlbtrll ·--·" •• -· -·· • ,.-. -· -·· lo lhl l~plr1!1611 ot 11""" CU) a.,. Iron' ...... W"tctltt D• lilllt •l ~I Attn! Firms In IM Cltv of Cotti Me.. 1 V c 1 " llllC"i rd 0 Burl •. .,..,.,, .,. .. ,,... "'" ,.. ,_, Ill .. .:flt"""" 1111:11 Cllllll'ltlol LEGAL NOTICE '''ODEM• 0 CO<•Mo., CO..~IY 61 Ort nlt SI•'-ot C1I lorn 1 Pr nclPll O!llc• In Pob "'" D••-Cooit 0111, p!lcf l'll(lrl !hi" lht !tOUrlJ ritt of !Ill 111~1 il'tlllle Pllbllillell Ont• In tn• " ' ...... p 11 Or1ntt Coul'llY -··· • ' ' .. "'' Or•"" (NII Dilly Pl gt I ntwljllDf o• ::Ttl 1114) ........... AulllorlJN ll11111ur• •s Pit m1p ,tcard"" n ate E 1 Ap I lO Incl M•Y 1 14 71 IP!l loot 11 (ltll ""''' .... .. ... •• • .,. II • ._., tlrcul1tlo11 P~lnltel Ind Mlbtlll'ltd 11-1 .... ""11"-NOTICI Of lltll' IC ''''''' 1S134 of MIKtlltntOUI M1111s rtcOl'Ol crf "ta M~ 1C..,,...,. ~•Ion 1"' rtt ILICTRICIA"S1 J J 11 fo.1 71 1n Ille Cltr OI Cotll Mftl -111., w tn ~ll111otd Ot•not c..JI O.llY l'llot .. ,.-1 ·•-°' ,_, 0 1 ,,..... 011"9• (OYntV d1Krlbtd •• t0Uow1 ArH I t lt7 LEGAL NOTJ-Jou"""""'" W1•11'1'1111 A JI st u ... .., " 21 '' lt11 1m,, NOTICE JS HEREIY GIVEN 11111 UV ..,,.. .,,. ........ n I v "" BMIMlnt ,, • POlnT in tr!• '"'"l.,IY lint flub! !llt!I Or1rio1 COlll OlllV pt c! .... 1:.1 Ill• "'"'• of "" "'"""" of 1111 City ~ "T" PUl>llc hffrl,,.. w H be ~f1tl 1W 1111 ( 1Y Mt• ll, 71 ff. lf11 112•11 61 H d lot d lllnt ll'ltr-"'ill IHI Apr l JQ I ncl May 1 ,, ii 1t1l l*-11 Jlllll'l'l9¥1nll'I 1'1eNll(!.t11 I$$ t ll CClunc:ll WOllM lot Ind tit n1! !ht U"'f " (°"'"¢I ol l~f C 1¥ ot Coit• Me11 on Junt 1'"-lTlM Ctelt Slllktt lfl t 1I "AUED AND ADOf'Tl!O thl1 lr!h ll•Y LEGAL NOTICE 1 1t1t 11 1t1t 1111111r ot 'JG "m .. •• LEGAL NOTICE nortM v ~ "" ~•,hwtit cor,~, •,,' LEGAL NOTICE "''''' ro t1101Tc1111 ceblt si111c:• ,,..,._ ''' lO.tt 61 Mer 1111 N a IOI "''"'' 111,~• Y Pl•t w ·' "-•11 "°""""" It• 11 iN C<n o• c-TA MfSA -""''""'' II Int 11\l!ltt 11\IY l>t 111 .. \6UIM v "" Cl! Hid 1(11 ,. +tu s .... e11110• COURT 01' Tiii Fortl'l'lll'I 'S1 10.41 ... ~ Tm» hr• Cl In"" Co..nr; Chembr1' ,, lhf c IY ..... UH lhlf!Ct "°'"" lY M•lllll w1111 '"' WHI STATI 0, CAt.ll'OillNIA ,0. 11'1' llOIEJIT M WILSON IU,.l•IOR COUIT OP TH• Ht I 11 F•lr Or vf \:Qtf• Mn.o CERT "ICATI O" IUSINISS T I COUNTY OP 01.ANll Sub FOl'.,.....11'1 '-" '"1 Mlv« ~~ •:::•JP:C::~N~~· ~~l::: OllPE~T:; :11 r,:°":,:~, co!:'uctu~•cL~:~ .~~ :"' ,:.',~ §.L[ ~:F~~~ &; Cll!1~ic1~1~1~~r N!'::;Ne11 i~'.:~1:: ~t::~ ~ru~ 1k1 CARL ~~~~ ~1;,~0I tor i::~r :-:"',,,,v 1 ~.,~.·,:~,:rk,', ',".',",',.',•">A ,. TICI OI' lllARl'Jll• OP' NTITiotl EftMtP!I-7.:1 Norlll Liii 11 A.._ Hlttiw1w N-lltldl (•llfor" 1 I "1'111 111'1111ttJl1Md d0t1 <tfl!tv Ill b COii-NOTICE IS HERE8V OIVl!'.N '-1111 1 •. -... .. :"¥" l'otl ... otATI OP WILL II.ND l°' Antlltt. ltr "'1l'll11lon 11 rtt-u..,,.I 1111 1le1]J1o;j1"" 111'" 11111'11 of UlllTIEO Mid lol !lltnc:e "°"llllflY • 11111 Int CIUClfne 1 bu•fMH II t.01 Gutllrtlll Ct crtclll«I ot 111t ebo\'t PIWMCI ~ trlll .......,. COYNTY OF OllANGIE ) u , " ~otlllAJl"MIC CODICtL. iultl r011 .,._rtv llK•ted llCIO 1ttt Mllllll o1 MAC HINE IHOP 11111 1d ti 1 wttflt"IY llM ol "Id let ".JJ lttl ,,....,._ HunllM IOl'I lltldl Cit lonll1 ul\Clt!" '"' -,, '" -''"'"' c:ltlrflt .. l int/ t1M1 Hoikll'l'S 6 lllrtln ~..i to 111111 ltlill (ITV OF COS'TA Ml!SA l ~ L1nt•1 TIST.AMINTAIY Sul'lflower bt!Wftn llttr SITHI IMl comPOIH 11>f 1111 1o1'=.i,_...;:.,. ~: « Int. lo lllf llOll'll ti bttlM l"ll tlcllllou1 !rm 111me GI l'ltOFESStONAL ~ld 0eegn1 Ire rl!Wlrtd It fllt 111-4 tt "-""."' 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(llltorftlto lrlCttl' " wllOlfl • fefllrKI i. -1•11111 COlllllCH Oii !flt )'11 •Y of MtY ltn Ind z --tel whlell ,, 111161 fot """""' .... .,. Dorl! v •Irk•• "°'' I! •irk., ·-kl L .lorlnuon ""'' iddrfll INI ot""r -eeoi. D1ll!CI Mey .. 1'11 '215.J wtlldl ft "" 111(1 ,,, """""' Ill •ncl -•II sub<onh"IC""' ........ "1"' to .,,.,.,lttr ............ ..,.,. II • ""'*• ,_llC¥111 .. .,.., 11111 "" 11-.... il'!ICI ..... E11Mr •• ,,er 7900 ,., ,.,Jtw ..... 1111• of C1Utor11!1 0<•-COUl'ltv Miion If f ftW tllOWn ""'•'" Wtll•• f' '""""' "" u~tll"fll In •II malttn -••t11IM ,.,. "°' "'" 11111'1 w kl -·· Pll'ltlllfll II ....... 1., 111.Hll'll. Mid City C6ul'ICll ,.,..,,, l'IMl1"' JM -hM 11M11 Ml ltt J-C•ll Mt11 1w -rn1u lorl -'"°"" -All A•ll it un "'8rl mt 1 Notl!'I' fir Ille """"" ol "VIM oblltlllonl St•tt ot C•lltorl'lll Orlt"91 C0\11'11¥ It 1t>t eJllll If .. kl~-wl1Mt1 taut rl!n If -dl.,..... w•-'11 Ill -"""''" Mid .-i tM 111~ tit• of Mir lf11 try 111\t •K!o. 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Jof!MIOl'I k-to 11\f 10 ""' 11141 "r-Vllfltff II tl'IY vl'llllr ,,,, ''""' "' Nlf ·-l •l!CI W•llH" l'r1nc:ls l urttM ·-0.lff M1w l:L 1t11 il'l>l'Wiet d fl:lrtMlft lo!JI ffYl •lier lllt .... l"lllllln " Cl•lr Hll'nl'ntil .._ .. ....,, AM (.111,.,.nll h Cl•rk 111 CO!'lllKllOI\ with 11"9 rftwlt WfrlOll tll!TIH 1•1 1ut1ttrltltll 11 lilt wlt~ln °""' 111......, ll!lt-Ind W '"II I~ IO 1111 to bt lllt HllOll ~w "'me 11 l(ATE MAL TAR 111111.-t fot fhl _,,.. lhlrl'(!t NOES COUHCILMIN N-~~ Otftd #MY -, 1m lltl[llorlt. lmtrvmen! 111111 ld!-!HltG t11n •• UllPlld 11>rlMIHI ol 1111 Nott M<und b"t 111DKr Mel 16 tM •11111~ lt1\lrllfl'lml • ..,, ExKutrlll a OAllD 0' T•l.ISTEEI A9l1NT COUNCILMllN N-"'!· 11 It JOMfll NOTIC• 1$ FURTHllt OIVIN tlltl 11 teltltd lilt 11mt 11ld Dffd wllll lnttrtll 111tf-from Juty 1c-now!K1ttd ftf t~Kllll!CI 1111 11me ol 1111 Wiii ot !I'll COAST COMMUNITY IN W1TNEIS W111rlEOI' 1 htuf • • c.MI¥ Clfrll lllt lll'llt 1"" 11 tel ""'nllone<I IOfvl 1nY (Ol'f'ICIAL SEAL! IOlll ltl'O 11 1n ''Id Nolt ll'D¥fdtcl. (0~1'lCIAL $.EA.LI •bo>'t nel'n .. Clttedent COLLEGE OISTR CT hert11nlo ttl mw lltnd 11\11 111 xt!I 1~1 S••I .~ •• NlfA & J1m1N• .... '" "''°"1 lntt ,,,.., 1'111¥ ._... Mt•Y '"" Morfal! 01ltd MIY ,,," ,,,1 Mor• •1111 Morion MtlC•NNA ANO jlllnlNO 0, .. ,-... '-·, ,, "''"' c"' ol Colli Mu• "'I ltlh Cllt or ~Ontllt w #lillCC.ln'Wlt Incl bf l\tttf\!l br "" Citf COuntll "' IM No+•rY f'lllll!C-C• lorn . UNITl!O CALIFO!IN•A '"'"IC Nil>fll"I' •w1 c-o(a,1 tflrl'l t ·~ Ofv\119 w MCCl/flll • • • I D!ft. M•r 11'11 ~ •1 ,_ .......... '* CllY of,.,. Mtw .... ••14 fti-""'J l'f-llldHI Offl(I lfl T"'""' p,1nc11111 Olllu '" Nlot •1 Ttt• • ..., Sii'*' HOIMA.N E WATSON I LEEN,. ,.HINNllV • Nffl'i Ca ... ftMI 11tr1t. Or1not County H1fofd S lllllff" °''"" Ceunty Utllnl HJM-. Calllwlll9 "6)11 St<•41...... C lv Cl"• I nd tJ-oll t t t.:.:::i ---l!ILEfN I" PH!Nltl'J My Cltflm 111ti!! I Q!,... Aulllor!ud lllNlllrt M1 CommlulCll'I l)itirt1 Ttl (nlJ t»-l44t •Nrd of Tfl/'l'"I C .. rk of !flt (Uy C"'ncll " ,., ,...,.._ ( " c ••k All<ll • 1t71 T ,, .. , Aorlt ' ltrS A"""""' .... l1IQlll"t!r °"""' J..,.. J lt7l ' JO,'" "" c I• ,, Col • Mtll flllO"'llliol Qr-Gta11 D•tf r11et l'Wf!tlltcl Or1111t (M1! 0.llY" ,.!lot M•Y jllllltllllltll Or..,.. C111t C>tli. "!Ill PllM111Md °'""" C•1! 01!1)1 " kl! "lllllllt!tll Ortlllf Cotel 011111 Pl~ Pllbl!lhtel Orl nw C-1 D1!1\' ""°' ,.llb1l:sl\tel ~... Co.tit Clll!lr ,.llot 111~ ~ Orlllfl (eef! 01 ty ,.lit* ~ti. ,,. ,., lfll lr»-11 21 ''" 1141 n Alll"I • '""Ml-, ... i.." "" ""'" Ml'/' " " •rMI J~nt 4 lt11 l:IDl-n Mi r 1 u , JI ""un IOh-11 Mff 11, 21 n ll"ICI JI/Ill .. lf11 117'-11 MIY i1 ,., IPll ,, ... " MMtl 1t'1 n.o 71 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE • • • • ' ' " ' • "' • • • ~ ~ ,. '" " '" " • "' .,, " • "' '" ... • .. • " '" " • 101. " • •• '<· " " • ·~ ,. ~ • "' ... " •· .. " ,. ,. " "' •· CO· ... ••• .. .. • ... ' .. ih' ... lrd '"· .. '" ... " "' ... '"' • '"' ... " " "' ... 'H .. " " "'' ;on "' ... "' ... "' ·~ '"' ,. .. '" '" " ... ... " "" "' Travelers In Nelv Facilities The Travelers insurance company bas opeoe<J a new Orange County regional head- ~uarters in City Centre, new business and financial co~ plex in Orange, The new offices will occupy ene entire floor and part of another of the ullra·modern, 18-story Bank of America TO\\'er that stands as a bigh- ri.se landmark of The City Centre. Friday, May 21 , 11}71 DAILY P!LOT .21 Jr. Execs Smiling Job Picture Beginning to Brighte1i By JOHN CUNNIFF AP' I Ytlflffl A~ll~tl NE\Y YORK tAP) Evidence mounts that the middle management recession is easing~ l-lelp wanted ads are beginning to grow In volume, and surveys show that ex· ecutive appointments are in- creasing again arter a year of cutbacks . while dying to read the help wanted ads, keep lbe club 1nembershlp, the private schools, the two cars, the maid. And then the wife had to take a substitute teaching job or the kids had to come out of school Qr the aMual dues a\ the club went unpaid. Reality was a shock. The feeling of being unwanted, after thinking you were a big deal. Now that lbe worst may tit over, the quea:UON arlle: WUl they be the' umef Have they learned! Do Ibey know how Ip better protect thtm1elve1? ;. Anolber recruJter, Xltnu1J1 KJernan & Co., surveyed 400 executives who.se names ha'.d appeared in lt.s files for OJ'\P reaaon or another. I\ found subtle but important chang5, a more reallsUc, less romanllc view of themselves and their jobs. . DANA POINT GETS 988th BANK OF AMERICA BRANCH Tempor1ry Structur• Opens Tod1y On Coast Highw1y 11 County's 10th Since the Travelers opened their office in Orange County in 1964, marked growth bas been exhibited -in all areas. The Lile and Health insurance premiu1n Vo!Ume written and rene"·ed by The Travelers In Orange County has grown from Sl,322,000 in 1964 to $1.700,000 in 1970. 4 on Coast Given Honor By Douglas This means that personal pressures are lifting also. Dur- ing 1970, for the first time in their lives, many executives in the $15,000 and up category felt frightened, threatened, in- secure. They were Ill prepared for the recession. For years they bad es:perienccd the comfort of being well fed, housed and clothed. 'llleir job was their identity. 1l\fy felt settled in U1eir comfortable suburban life style. The new president of one company can tell you about the crdeal. When he finally sought outside help prior to winning his present position it was noted that his wrists were deeply scarred. Some were. bitter. "I wnt never try to get a job as IUCh again. I have seen the light. 1 have gone into my own bu.J. iness. I am not bitter, jurt di.s- appointed in American indus- try. and must fend for JllY· selr," wrote ooe. Dana Point Gets New Bof America Bank of America opened its 988th California branch today in Dana Point on PacUic Coast Highway near the Street of .Violet Lantern. The branch. 70th in Orange ' County is housed in one of the tank's' newly developed pre· engineered modular facilities, designed to resemble a con· temporary, permanent struc· ture. ll is intended to provide im· mediate banking service to the area pending completion of ar· rangcmentf" for a permanent branch building. The 2,160 square foot office, built by assembling three 12'K60-foot mobile o r r i c e module units on a specially landscaped site, will offer a full -range of checking, savings and lending services with six teller stations aad ample on· sile parking. Savings Firms Resist Troubles in Econo1ny The number or claims reduced. and will be further serviced by The Travelers in reduced by year-end. In some Orange County and Long instances the favorable real Beach has grown from 24 ,000 estale market has generated in 1964 to 37,500 in 1970. The profits from these assets. local branches of many na- LOS ANGELES (BWl -The California Savings and Loan Industry during the past two ytars has again proven its adaptability and resiliency , writes economist Raymond Jallow in California Business, western Jinancial weekly. ''Ille economy experienced a near record rate cf inflation during these two yt:ars and tight monetary policies moved interest rates to historically high levels. These adverse rond.itions for the savings and loan indu.stry resulted in s ubstantial disintermediaHon -a term used to describe the situation in which individual savers directly place their savings in money market instrumenu ISUch as bonds in order to receive higher yields. But despite inflation, high interest rates, and loss of sav- ings totaling nearly $400 million in 1969, today the in· dustry's prospects have never been brighter. -New laws concerning con· tional firms receive their struction loans, distribution of engineering and claim service assets, extension of lending from The Travelers cffice in areas, new fields of activity, Orange County. and broader lending powers to The Travelers employed 103 include areas such as mobile people in 1964 in their Orange homes will all contribute to County and Long Beach oper. the profit picture in 1971. ations. Today they employ 153 people . -Most important, the ------ associations have been coo- tinuously upgrading their lGan yields (due to higher mortgage rates) and this will bring .about an Increase in income in 1971. By the end or 1971, the total assets or the California sav· ings and loan industry will reach $36 billion, a 10 percent increa.se over la7o. Total sav- ings will increase by $4 billion. Four £rom the Orange Coast were among 10 Orange County technicians for Do u g l a s Aircraft who recently .received a company award for high performance. The award \vas made tor their part in the developmenl or a color televi3ion aircraft flight-simulation system for the DC 10 test and develo~ mcnt program. Coast techniclans playing a role were Ralph Cran1, 9830 Garfield St. and Frank B. Len- nert, 9382 Hyannis Port Drive, both of Huntington Beach: Herbert T. Tumdahl, 1628 Primrose St., Costa 1.fesa, and Michael D. Allen, 23872 Calle Hogan, Mission Viejo. But when profits fell their companies could not reciprocate their loyalty. As the recession deepened, many of these men were cut loose. They were not, as they had believed, indispensable. They were expendable. \Yithout jobs they were sud- denly faced with the question most people avoid? Who am 1? All they knew for certain \\'as that they must keep up appearances : read the sports pages on the C1>mmuter train GENERAL JET RAD AN RADIAL TIRES The market now appears to be changing. A study by Wyt.. mar & Co., an executi\e re- cruiter, shows e.xecutive ap- pointments rose 6 percent in the first quarter of 1971 Over the first quarter of 1971 over the final three months of 1970. The gains were especially sharp in manufacturing, finan- cial and administrative categories. at 25, 21 and 19 percent respectively. The general management category showed no gain. MarkPting and international ,~·ere off 5 and 9 percent. and the technical area remained depressed at minus 25 percent, obviously reflecting the con· tinued slow pace of aerospace and electronics. But that w1s more the ex- e the exception Rather tban becoming cyitical, most setrl'JI· ed to have come through Ute recession wary, suspicious, concemtd. IndlcaUOl'll are that they are less likely to eh an g e jogs, because of the . ih- securlty involved, but also le;s inclined to give their entife loYalty to their p r e s e ri t employers -a stance of crea- tive cauUon. "On~ a small business e<>ukJ steal executives from larger companies," a Kiernan man said. "Now these fellows aren't golng to take tbt fkk despite stock optiorui." ~ The tire made . for all imported and sports cars. POHCHI lo VOLKSWAGIN 3511 l"li. ti.It Manager or lhe office will be rtfrs. Pat Ziegler, a seven-year bank employe who has been lending officer at the El Toro branch since 1968. She lives in •luntington Beach at 19812. Margate Lane. Souvenir Lionel Barrymore etchings ·were given out to all vi sitors while a drawing was held for a $50 savings account. Overall, California saving! and Joan associations sllould experience a 25 percent in· crease in earnings during 1971, with the final three quarters showing the largest gain. This is a significant improvement over 1970, a year of record high interest rates and a regulation change which in- creased the cost of funds to The increase in savings will be 16 percent, fo r a total of $29 billion by year·end. Real est.ate loans in California sav- ings and loan portfolios will total $31 billion by year~nd 1971, for a 10 percent increase. Drill Firm Tells Good 1st Quarter WHITiWALL lbltlMI Hl •71s15 l11Cl. T11Ms 4~99 99 ' . The prOYen rodtGI for w.I •nd dry wean1.,. "'111 Up to : twice the Jflileov-; ' · twice the traction, twlc:• lh• co111fort. Firms Sho'v Ne'v Type Of Products ANAHEIM -More than 50 major United States manufac- turers whose products come under a newly coined scientific designation -optoelectronics -have just finished display· ing their sophisticated wares at the Convention Center . Their exhibition was the first such display on the West Coast of the latest devices and developments In the field since the union of the t w o technologies -electronics and optics. It is being staged under the title "Electro-Optics '71 \Yest.'' In the forefront of the ex· hibition and featured by many eXhibitors was the lase r beam, the unique product of light refraction that is being used today in surgery, dentistry, in-- dustry and increasingly in communications and photogtaphic worl;. Many or the pictures shot on the moon's surface were transmitted to earth with the aid of cameras that in- e<>rporated laser equipment and many or the developments made possible by the lunar photography are now available to industry and on show in the exhibition. the industry. There are several favorable l actors which will bririg aboot this substantial Jncn!!ase in profitability during 1971: -Savings deposits, which reached a record inflow of $1.65 billion during tbe first quarter of 1971, will continue to grow. This Inflow is due to t h e extremeley attractive rates ncrw pald oo deposit.s and is also the result of the shif· ting of money away from treasury obligations, which are now maturing and which cannot be reinvested in small amounts. Much of the money from the treasury obligations will remain with the savings and loan cwociatioM. -The demand for housing will generate a substantial number of new starts in 1971 and subsequently new loans. Also. the report of lower tnortgage Interest rates will generate an increasing volume of refinancing and Increased loan portfolios. -Certain ee<>nomies of scale will increase pro- fit.ability as institutions become larger due to internal growth and mergers. -A -reduction of relatively expensive advances from the federal home loan banks will continue to take place during 1971. These repayments will reduce the ovcr·all cost ot funds for the industry and are poSsible because of the record savings inflow. This i s definitely a plus fact.or for Smith lnternational. Inc. (NYSE, PCSE) had net in- come of $908,000 or 28 cents per share on revenues or $18.6 million for the first quarter ended March 31, 1971, as com· pared with net income of $821,000 or 26 cents per share on revenues of $18.3 million in the like quarter a year earlier. The firm is located 4667 ?.tacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach. This ls the first quarter since the last quarter o( 1969 in which earnings exceeded those of the like quarter a yea r earlier, Donald E . Graham, president said • Improvement in sales and earnings was widely spread among the 23 divisions and subsidiaries of the company, Graham said, indicating a general turnaround w i l h potentia1 for stronger gains as the year progresses. Costs at the Ca l weld Division, which accounted for most of the 1970 loss. have been reduced drastically and the division's loss in the first quarter was only minimal, he said. Smith International is a leading \\'orld wide manufac· lurer of drilling equipment designed principally for use underground in the develo~ ment 'of energy and other natural resourCi!s such as oil, gas, minerals and water •. earnings in 1971. ;:.============ Jobless Rate -Tbe reduction of non-1n- come p·roducing assets will also boost earnings in 1971 . Final Stocks In All Home Editions Fo r April These assets. a dermue pro-blem during the 1965-1968 ~~per~iod~,~h~a~ve~be<~~n~g~r~ad~u~~~l~y~~~~~~~~~~~ Rises Agaili 1; California's April unemploy- ment rate went up three· tenths of one percent over March, but total emp\oymen\ \vas up and there were fewer unemployed. according t 0 Gilbert L. Sheffield, director, Department of Human Resources Development. ··The number of unemployed in April was 595,<XX>, down 81 ,00l rrom the March level," said Sheffield, "and the total ll',000 to 7 ,992,000." - "But these lmrpovemenl& in !he employment situation ln Al>rll v;ere less than usual for this time o! the year," Shef· field added, "ao the seaso111bl· ly adjusted unemployment rate ro&e from 7.1 in ~larch to T.4 In April ." · Sheffield said the figures renected the general g\ack In the economy together wlth ad· dltlonol layoffs 1n the ocro.!Space industry. • \ • MAY SER·VICE SPECIALS R<'wolul1ona•r "' ... "I" '0'•o"nl "" thod· "'' "" O•onqt' C:aunly , No l L+nc<>ln "'~rcLJry d• al~r ""'" nff·" fn~l'>•W outhororrd ~er. ¥«<' ol P"«'• <ompo,'lbl, tn th"l.c cha.,1crl "' "•••CC ~lat ro"' and c.lh<'• nan 'P<"«al.,. d "'pair ~cnr," '),<><Cr b w oppaonl· mcnt ,..,.,. ,.,u fullh• • '"'"' ""d men• r Rog. $2.80 SMOG SYSTEM SPECIAL l td, clttn t nd 11r•ice cr•n•· c•1t t rnittit11 1ytl1m. $120 YOU SAVE $1 .60 Rog. $14.SO COOLING SYSTEM SERVICE SPECIAL J:h11h I ,,,,,,. ceoltnt, pret• •11r• Ht!, lruptcl ell ho1tt I btlh. 51000 YOU SAVE $-4.SO SANTA ANA LINCOLN MERCURY 1301 NO. TUSTIN AVE., SANTA ANA M7·084J "WI Al'l'HCIATI YOUR IUSINESS" , • ~ l!l. 1:1.21 l•. SAVE flumt23.io 1D*32.80 ON 4 TIRES OEPENOING ON SIZE 2 •*96 2 hr *40 2 hr *41i TUlll.!SS IU.C«WA&..L 1'\Jell.!11 IUCKWA.LL TUIEJ..ESI IU.CKW'AU.. 2-~o .~~~. g,, ••. ~.1J.l.M•l4 , •• _,, ................... c ..... ..... """'"''"-, •••••. c ...... . OO<to, .... ,_ .. _,_ ••of.(• 1 .... ,,,._., .... , .... -........... . -FRONT END ~ALIGNMENT ~ Cl'O'l11VI t#Mlt/11 ~ {lo!tll.\nftCAMltllf ~ "'"'"' Crooked wheals rob your car or maximum performance, ride, steer· Ing and tire wear. We correct caster. camber, toe-In, toe-out to your car manufacturer's specillca· tlons, and safety check an d adjust your ateerlng, 2 '50 ,_, ... ....._ .. , ''" _ .. c ...... , 0~4••>. ... '· . ......... , .............. ~ .. ,,,,.,_ ,,..,. ~,.. -'"'·· 111~ ... ...... •••I0 '°1 J1 -.,J•-'"' ......... ,"" ... . P.S. INDY MAG WHEELS $9900 Set of 4 FOltO-CH EV-~L YMOUTH-DA TSUN-TOY or A tncl. DATSUN 2.01 _ II-HOLE MAGS AVAILABLE for 3/• ton Campers and Pick-up1• slightly higher. VW·~OltSCH• HILLMAN-Mei T11Ml- W~n1w•U TIRES 12 .. •r 2 lfr S1J 1>lu1 f.e.I. Mio•IJ-5"1•11 0 Tak• Ynr Pick USID TIRH 5 .. N<h PIUI !Ill lot1 of non·1•1d lrNd i.ft. COMPLETE BRAKE RELINE •49!:.~.~:~ We do all this: e Rollno 111 4 whMll e Robulld all brake cylinders e Turn and True 4 brake drums • Repack front whHI bearings e Adju1t br1kes, restore fluid e Rotd te1f your earl only EXPERT WHEEL BALANCE JUST .. :$250 ... 011r Sptclt lith Pr1ci1io11 ltlt11ce loth Fri..111 Wll1t l1 COMPLETE CAR CARE U.NKAMHICARD MASTIR CHARGE Don Swedlund • Since 1959 Hours: 7:20 .to . 6:00 Dolly PHONE : 540-5710 646·5033 • • • DAILY PILOT s ,, • • • • " . le • ' . r.' • • • r • • • ,...-., 1, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • . • -1 • , ~ ••• .. • Let Tlie re Be Light The hexagonal p1ns being 1nspecled here w11J be used to mold plastic reflex reflector lenses for the rear and sides of Glil cars The three facets of each pin have been ground to a flatness of 1/12 m1l11onth of an inch and then polished \Vllh diamond dust to a mirror f1n1sh General Motors Guide Lamp D1v1 s Jon here uses 250 000 of the pins each vear to pro duce more than 30 m11l1on reflector lenses Need a Here A re So1ne S uggestio1is • By S\ L'\'lA PORTER I low long has 1t been since ..YOU have had to use -and ~pay for -lbe ser. ice! (lf a la" \er" IJ 1t hasn t been long you ~on t be surprised lo learn thal a single hour of a la\\')'er s time today may cost rrom $20 to $50 and that many lawyers charge $100-up for one .hour of work Nor will you be surprised to •learn that a sticky divorce ,. may cost $3 000 to $5 000 or ,more 1n legal fees ror EACH ~ lipouse that legal fees when you buy or sell a house mav amount to 1 percent oJ the • price of the house that repre!;entahon 1n court may cost $250 to $300 a da) that the typical contingency fee I 1n which the lawyer collects only 1f he wins the case for his chentJ may run 20 to 40 per cent of the amount awarded by the court Yet never bas your need for legal services been as great as • ,tiow -whether you are an in •<hv1dual "anting to draw up ~ contract or a will a couple \\anting to adopt a bflby or get a divorce Lets say you have never before had any reason to con .suit a lawyer and you have no idea ho" to find one M1\hon~ of } ou fit this descr ption so 1tere goes with basic rules 10 guide )OU I 1) SHOP for a lan11ly la"}er BEFORE you need his 5erv1ces I!\ FIND OUT tf there s 3 local La"''er Referral Service \Vh1ch will advise you for a fee of onlv $5 to $10 whether your problem actuallv re q u 1 res legal assistance and 1{ so which local 13\\)er can handle j4, The local bar assoc1at100 or the telephone yellow pages can direct )OU lo sueh a service OO\\ available n over 260 -ClllCS 13 I CHECK ~our prospectlve lawyers repuat1on for com 'hetence good Judgment and rehab1!1tv "'th friends other "t:l1ents bank officers \Our 1abor union or fra ternal club re.al estate agents Also thcck lhe ~1arl!nda1e Jlubbell D1r(c tpry which ~hould be rn your local library and which hsts and rates US law firms t (4) FI NO out wh1eh leg-:il ::erv1ce.s and "pec1111t e~ 11re offered by the law tirm as a whole -or 1f services you might need are oot provided whether the firm has access lo top outside spec1ahsls For in stance among legal services a firm might offer are drawing a 11111 planning and serving as executor of your estate rep1 esenl!ng you tn court 1f you re involved 10 a suit or an arrest preparing a separation ag reement or divorce steer 1ng you to a competent in surance agent tax advisoi realtor dr::iwing up a n d rev1ew1ng contracts or all kinds dealing \\'llh :toning 1nat1ers resolving 1 cg a I disputes with neighbors Jandlo1d creditors etc \5 1 BE li\ti\1EOJATEI \I susp1c1ous of anv lawyer who lries to lure you will lhe pro- m se of an unusually fal court settlement 1n s a y a negligence case or d1vorc e 161 CONCENTRATE nstead on 11 hether a prospective lawyers key concern Js 1n preventing cosily legal con rrontat1ons and 1n making alt reasonable efforts to keep you OUT of court I~) i\-10ST li\tPORTA NT discuss \\1th care the fees your famil y lawyer 1nay charge for various services Gencrallv the~ five faclors v.111 n fluence the charge the d f f1cultv of your JOb the tune nvested in )OUT case th e good the services have done you office and other costs associated striltlv \\ th your case ,your abthly to pay Despite these vanables at least ask 1n advance v.hat basic hourly r<1te the la 1\er charges and also the basic rate for each dav spent 1n cou rt on your behalf Al least get so rne eitimates 01 costs of lackhng your specific legal proble1ns 181 ANO BE SUllF. \OU - and 1our spouS<> -t ke and trusl !he la\\ 1er ~ ou f nail} chou~e to protect you antJ your f 111111\ \ou 11111 n~d a lav.yer over lh~ )ear~ -so go back to that f rsl rule and choose htm or ht'r before the need and lhen ust the other rules 10 help you choose tun or her \\l.se!v A good law,er 1v1ll n1orc than niake hi s lees 1n lern1s of the money he saves vou and the costly exhausting legal snar Is he 1s ~Ole to pre' en\ • your repair handled with care .. venty-ones at ~1!~~ HOO HAR80 A BLVD I COST~ MESA (714) 1~1100 \ OVER THE COUNTER • .,..., ... 1.11 ........................................ ..,,. ' A.Mo ,_ .,.. .. ,.1c .... 11t1 ...... m111 ., -'*w-..,..,... ..... «ifMlittilll. NASO L11t1n91 for Thursd•y, M-y 20, 1971 11.,., •flll 11ull h IS•tKP ~ > j hi 11~ Sv h f)np S lj11 t NC M <I Bks $11•W il<IS u '"' 11~. V• N fink Fld Un L A nov n A ~ " A v d• A~pen S>' A CC llo A Gt• LI AU g Sc 8~ (I Al B.J I i'"rrlC Bang Hy Bk•m II I 81 n• It II~~" F Bavm llav Mk B~ftllm Btt n~ F Btn ~ d Ile ~ 1-1• II~ Lal) ... M S11n•bob Soe1 I OU e• '. uP>Ol!(I Un ••~ o ~f w ~ no fd r1te1 P<lllt • ()n , •• in-Fe 'Iv" hw• o In t Ii i ··~ ~-. WallStreet Cliatter -.. NE\V YORK markel lookout The S28 5 b!l11on lnc1 ease tn gross national product n the \larch quarter surpnsetJ e1en MUTUAL FUNDS .. - Complete-New York Stock List J i ' " "' ' '~ 'l ' ' '" • .. ,, P. ,, !' • ' • •• " .. '• ~ ~ .. ~ " " ' " ~ " '• .. •• ' " " •• ' a .. '• • '" " '· • . , ' " " '· .. , ' ,, .. ' " .. " .. .. " '· .. " ,, " • ,; " .. ,, .. " .. " ' ,, ' ' . " ' ' ., " .. . , .. ... .. .. '" •• ... " '· .; .. ,, " '• ., ., ~ .. " • •• •• P l .. •• "• '" ~ .. . , •• .. t ,, •• .. .. " ' " :~ .. .. . , ,., 1,, " " " " .. " .. •• •• .; " •• •• .. .. " ., .. •• •i .. .. .. " " •• ,'I " " •• ,, ' •• '" .. " .. ,, " .. ,. . " ' ,• " " . .. ' '" . '• •• •• •; ,, ·, " ., •• " " '• " .. .. " .. .. u., . nn Thursday's Closing Prices ·Comp~ete New York Stock: Exchange list • • Wall Street Chatt.er NEW YORK (UPI) -While the market ha1 furtlttr tili climb ever the loai term, th& Mtr·t•rm outlook 11 une1rtllr1 btcauae of tht monttary sltua· tion and becauH parts Of th• rninket h a v t 1:oiuldtr1bly oversllot fmmtdl1lt 11rntn11 PntfSM!etl, Arau• Rtse1rch Corp. 1ty1. The firm rttom- mtndt th1t lnv11tet1 evaluate e1mlftJI prorptet! v e r 'I <t,.llllly ill ciloooillt llock• • 1111.o time. "Confidence la the mlssi1'11 lnirtdl•nt Ill the formuli for a lasUnr return to 110rmtl buslnet!I ind lnvtttmt:nt fl'O't1h," 1ccordln• to Wrliht Investor•' Strvlct. Neither larse lnve1ton nor borrowing buslneumen have conndenre th1t the "W1shlniton mon~ mlftl1era'' will elthtr "°" d6wil Muro t;nithl<tlon ~ or re•uee inn_. term tnteJC ratu le traditionally l~ levtll, the flnn u ya, WrJi auiaestl 1tayln1 fully I~ Vlltlnf ill flrtt 4Ulllly equitl~ •-'· ttallln1 f<ll' tlalrlflt1tion M"i futuN. fedtra1 r_t 1 I: r ·~ monetary pottey. ·~ 'hie m1rlltt'1 adv1110e h rteently btComt. rel11Uvet)'' narro~I)' baatd. despit e tht ahowfnJ of the v a r I t u 1 avtr1atis, £. r. Huttoa lllllel>ta. M I n y individual •ikka llavl bttn movtn(. both up 11111 down. mainly l• rttponte to e.,-nlnp reports. while U.. ,..,lltt u a whole ha1 been loaln1 u p w a r d IM!nmtum • • J ' ... --• Z4 DAILY PILOT Friday, MQ" 21, l'l71 Y aclating Experts Believe Bermuda Start ·, .. .M~um B.oats Next for. Cup .Classic ~ ' ' ' Alumlpum 12,-meten 3rc Columbia. America 's i;up wlfl.. Yr'Of'k on the new yach't>. simpfy c:u~ a piece oUt o( it vlrtu•UY a ctrtlinty for the ner in 1958 ; Constellation In Stephens predicted apP..oval and replace it,'l Rhodes added . im A:merica~r Cup campaign. '1964 and Intrepid, winner In would come early in July. To a question about co!l, • Rhodes responded: That ~as the conclu.siontof a 1967 and 197\l. Rhodes designed "Alumlnum is much lighter "A couple or years a,go panel of experU at a meeting · , the 1962 winner, Weatherly; than wood. We expeet to save aluminum hulls cost about 15 of the metropoJltan section of Chance allertd Intrepid for • 5,000 pounds in the weight of to 20 percent rnore than wood. the ).5ociety of Na v a'I ·~the 1970 campaign, and the hull, which will allow us to Now the prices are becoming Architects and '-tar1ne ',.Morgan was owner. designer. increase tbe ballast. This \\1ill equal." Engineers· at the U. S' J builder and skipper of Increase the hull speed," Aluminwn will produce a · ~1erchant 11-tarine Academy in Heritage. an unsuceessfuJ con-Stephens said. stronger and ligllter hull, New York last week.. tender to defend lhe CUp in Rhodes said · he was <·011· resulting in greater ballast· The panel consisted of Olin 1970. fident Lloyd 's would come displacement ratio and Stephens 11, Britton Chance There "'as agreement through with specifications for greater sail.carrying power, Jr .. Charles P.1organ Jr. and among lhe experts that the 12: aluminwn. Rhodes explained. Philip L. Rhodes. The subject meters in the 1973 series ''When they do," be added. ·'This might cause us to in· w a s • • t 2. Meter Yacht y,•ould be of aluminum bulls. "wooden boats will have to vestigate lhe possibility of a Technology." P,loderator was Stephens said: Lloyds of sail in a class by themselves. shorter waterline, which ~·ould Henry N. Tiedeman. a Londoo is developing new "Aluminum, .is easier lo permit greater sail area and member of the e.xecutive com-scanlling rules for aluminum work with than wood. Jf you the smaller, lighter hull "·ou!d mittee. 12-meters and v.·e are av.•aiting \\'ant a change in the con· be able to carry it,'1 Rhodct Stephens was the designer of their issuance before starting figuration of the hull,, you concluded. SD State, USC Crews Seek TitJe St. Francis Club Plans Bi g, Ra ce The SL Francis Yachl Club race committee announced it ls currently in the process or issuing 30 invitations to yacht owners from canada to San Diego to participate in the Ci· ty of San Francisco Perpetual Trophy Series the week of Sept. 20. The series will be the third contest for the trophy which ~ was won initially by Theodore Stephens sailing his Alpha in ;., 1968. The trophy was last rac- ed for in 1969 and was won by Gene Trepte's Brushfire from .... San Diego Yacht Club. The series will be sailed Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday during the week -- of Sept. 20. All starts will be at • • Doctor to Present Water Safety Talk Porsche • • ------ ... • Audi. I p.m. with the exception of the Wednesday race which will start at 6 p.m. Courses will be conrined to central San Fran· cisco Bay, and for the most part all races will be com- pletely visible from the St. FYC clubhouse. Now, For Your Convenience, Chick Iverson Has Centralized All Three Cars At One Modern Facility It will be tbe first major regatta sailed on San Fran- cisco Bay under the new International Ocean Ru I e. Contestant.s will be limited to ratings between 35 and 45 feet under the IOR. This will prir- duce: a fleet of boat.s between 46 and 60 fee{ overall length. IJN IT ED STATES NAT IO NAL BA NK SOUTH COAST PLAZA I RANCH NOW 0'1N SATURDAYS f t. 1 P.M. MON.·THUU. 11-1 P.M. fllDATI IM P.M. (J14J 14 .. 1211. lec.-.4 t.: S..C.-"-.C" .. MIN Aut. \lkt ~r ... -MtuW H. M. STOLTE Because Chick Iverson is one of the largest dealers for Volkswagen, Porsche, and Audi in Southern California, he has been able to bfing all lhree lines to one central location -his new, modern headquarters on East Coasi Highway at Bayside Drive. Here, the discriminating car buyer can shop at his le isu re, matching his choices to his budget. Compare the economical Volkswagen with the sport-styled Porsche. Evaluate the sensation of European highways-the Audi. Test-drive any of these fine cars, and find the one that feels "just right" to you. Courteous salesmen and expe- rienced finance experts will make your purchase a real pleasure. While tfi'ere, take a tou r of the ·most modern and complete service facilities in California. See the very latest in service and diagnostic equipment and know that any future service re- quirements will be handled by factory-trained experts, using the finest in electronic and mechanical devices. Once again, Chick Iverson has put you, the customer, first! The West Coest le1d1r in S•l•s for Europe•" Oe1ivery Now open Sundays 9 am to 6 pm. POFISCHE AUDI "" ~d .. llp . -'" . I ·-· S.11 C..111 Lt Mtlld't l~•Mt Miltt ·~~ M'CA<'I ClllM fl>1rt -· 1 ~1 ,. ' • / EEKE r A .Complete Guitle ••• Where to · go • •• What to tlo • •• MARK DANKAS MADE A WOOD AND NEWSPAPER COLLAGE Hollywood Baclestage ·How . Does l\1ale Reporter Describe Paul New1nan? By VERNON SCOTT Ul'I Ht.H~ C .. <ltfffMl ... I HOLL )'\VOOO -Paul New m an represents that most untenable of all masculine absurdities, the male sex symbol. A sex: symbol is fine if the idol is Raquel Welch. females know in· 1tinclively how to handle that disquiet- ing sobriquet of ~x symbol. But a man Is uneasy with the title. By the time fan magazines and lady 1>.t.u1.. H1ow,,.....H reporters describe him as a Greek gOd Clussical Music Progra1ns 01i TV Two programs of classical music featuoing the l.ns Angeles Philharmonic · Orchestra. conducted by ZUbin Mehta, will be presented in color on consecutive 11 ights on KCET , Channel 2.8. Tchaikovsky's ''1812 Overture" "·ill be will be presented in a 90-minute stereo ,imulcast with KPF'X, 90.7 (In the FM dial next Tuesday al 7:30 p.m. Complete with1 ,fireworks, cannon, bells. carillon and the maSsed brass of the S62nd Ca!Hor- nia Air Nallonal Guard Band, the pro~ ram was l)ne of the highlights of the 1970 Hollvwood Bowl Season. Opening the pro- gram will be Tchaikovsky 's Pian1>. Concerto No. I with soloist Gary Graff. man Following the one-hour program will be 1n informal con\•ersalion bel~·een con· ductor Zubin Metha and Los y\n11ele& Times musiic reviewer Mart in Bernheimer filmed earlier this month. The second evening performance. .. ·hich airs next "'cdnesday at 7:00 p.m , fe atures young Amerk:an pianist Andre Watt.9 who Is seen preparing for and pe'.rforrning Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 24 in C Minor with the" Philharmonic Orchestra. Wall..'! al.Ml talks of his early life. his musical Influences, and his heavy performancu achedule. The program. which won a local Em· my, ends wllh a complete performance of the work before a live audience al the ~1usic Cenltr In 1968. with slim hips. flat belly. and with crackling blue eyes, Ne~·man is a basket case. How ~·ould a male reporter describe Ne~·man~ Well, his head does look like.JI bust dug out of a Greek temple. But otherwise he's just a pretty nice guy for an a.clor. tie has less ego and pretention than most male stars. J\.1ore importantly he has a sense of humor about himselr. He·s quit drinking a case of beer a day and his build is athletic. His clothes are sloppy and comfortable. If he has sex appeal . Newman is either unaware of it or docSll"l give a damn. He would rather be with men than women. f\1ost or all he loves automobiles and speed. regrelli.ng he is too old (mid-4-0's) to race compclilively. He fell to discussi ng his acting career and counted himself forlunate ror the variety of characters he has played. Then in a rare display of candor -for an actor -he said : "J\.1y own personality is so vapid Rnd bland I have to go steal the personalities or other people to be effeclive on the screen." Newman was only half kidding. The intensity. boldness and clear-cut mannerisms of his film characterizalions are not apparent in the man himself. Newman, then, A. genuinely acting when he plays a 10le."- To portray himself might be deadly. He is a pleasant guy who laughs easily. He is somewhat unsu re of himself without a script and difficult to know . "The toughest role is playing Paul Newman, w~ich 1 have to do on this television special," he said. "111 a movie the character suggest.s the "'ay to play a role . The work part is Lhe ooly enjoyable element of movies for ml!I -the rehearsals, preparations. working on the scrip!. Standing in front of the cameras or on a stage doesn 't do it. "I haven'l done much television because "I'm protecting myself from too much exposure. Playing in a series. the same character week afler week would driv~ me crazy. How dull. "So long as I don't have lo, I won't." As for being a sex symbol, Newman doesn't understand. If blue eyes. a Greek profile and broad shoulders sell tickets. fine. But Newman is an actor, among lhe best on the. screen. He Is much happier readin~ good reviews than accounlll of his b11 blue eyes. Plaza Hosts Scl1ool Art Exhibitions ' About t.200 pieces of art, selecled from over 3,000 student entries in Orange County's 31 school diSIPicts. will be on dis- play at South Coast Plaza's "Ten Days lnc)day " through May 30. Everything from the crayon and linge r painting of the Kindergarten c!asSC's to watercolor. oil. mosaic, collage and other creations of students through the high school grades will be in the exhibition, the third of it.s kind to be held in as many years. The show will actually be exhibits- "·ithin -exhibits where many smaller shows will be part of this art ex- travaganza. One of the selected exhibits will be seen this com ing July in the Festival of Arts in Laguna Beach . It will be called the "Junior Ari· Exhibit" and no doubt will. as in pa,i;t years. be one of the biggest hits of the festival. One new exhibit this year is tilled "Legislators Exhibil~." The pieces selected for lhis display will be srnt to the Slate Capitol where they will be shown on the \11alls and lin the offices of Orange County legislators. To initiate this new part of the show, the legislators have been invited to meet the student artists at a reception lo he held in the Carousel area of the shopping center from 10 to II a.in . tomorrow. The public also is 'inv ited to atl cnd. Those repons.ible jor sel~Ong the art which will be shown in the various ex- hibils are Audrey Welch, president of the California Arl Educators Association: Dr. Charles Dorn, department head at Califorfiia State College, San Fernando Valley; Norm Schmidt, art supervisor, Pasadena City Schools : Phillip Resnack, art coon:linator, Santa P.1onica Schools; Dr. Frances Hine. art coordinator. Los Angeles County Schools, and Bernadine Boyd. ·art consultant, South WhiUier Schools. Members of the Orange County Depart- ment of Education, the Orange County Art Supervisors and Orange County Art Teachers Association helped in organiz· lng the exhibition. It will be open daily al the same hours the center js open and the public is invited to come and share the Lalent.s of the county's young people. Cast Hunt Set For New Film, 'Grandfather' Comedian-producer Alan King who ac- quired film rights to.."The Grandfather ," international best seller dealing 11o·it h organized crime in New York"s dress manufacturing indu stry, says the central character, Herman the Z<iyda, will be the subject of an intensive casling hunt. Ad- ditionally, the key roles of t,h e Grandfather's two sons. f..fort.y and Nathan. will be filled by an open casting call. •·1 refuse to 'test only Jewish actors." King Said , "This picture is too big to limit the roles to one ethnic group." As soon as the announ cement was made , King revealed his office was in- ,nundated with calls, letters and film screen lesls shot by actors al their own expense insisting they be considered for the three top role!. As millions of readers already know, Morty is the hot-tempered, volatile son. Nathan. the youngest, i;cholarly and introspective, is the one who eventually takes over the "family." King further stated at a pres11· con. ference in his midtown offices that the words, "Gonsa Mushpuka," meaning ''The Whole Family," will not be used "I'm aware as well as iinyone.." said King, "that there is a 'Gonsa Mushpuka' in this country, but if eliminating the words from the film can get the project off the ground, we'll do it that way." Miss Hiller Set For 'Wilderness' Wendy Hiller has been signed fnr "J\.1Rn in the Wilderness,'' frontier epic or the Northwest, ·rolling now in Spain. She join~ Richard Harris, John Huston and Henry Wilcoxon on the \Varncn' film, locating In various wilderne.ss area.s of the Navacerrada range, the Basque region and the Pyranees. Miss Hlller plays Harris' molhCr·ln-law in the rilm being directed by Rlch11rd Sarafian and produced by Sanford 11oward. < .. • • OAtlY l'llOT 5\1ff l'~ofM ROSE HADDON PAINTED BOATS WITH WATERCOLORS AND CRAYON RESIST 5 Ballets to Be Presented l'ounty Dance Tlienter Perforrns at Sanut Ana High The Dance Theater ol Orange County is presenting an evening of li\•e ballets, P.1ay 22 al 8 p.m., in the Sanla Ana High School auditorium , 520 W. Walnul St., Santa Ana. The Dance Theater is composed of dan- cers from niany areas of Orange County who have worked together in a pro- fessional environ1nent for about two years under the direction of Michael i~anaicff lfonncrly with the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo), his son David. and Joyce Vanderveen, former pr i ma ballerina o[ !he Royal Netherlands Ballet. Two previous concert perfonnances have been given as well as many com· 111unily Jecture-demonstrallons by !he company since its founding. The principal riancers are David Panaieff and Joyce Vanderveen. Orange County soloists are Michelle Hamilton, Nancy Tracy. Sally Grove , Cathy Decker and Ju lia J\.1athewson. Guest artists for the performance are Judith f..1ay Aaen l11ie1•1nissio11 " and Anthony Sellers of the Houston Ballet and Joan Averle and Paul Maure of L<is Angeles. William Mc Der m·o t t, conductor- arranger, will direct the 28--piece or· chcstra romposed or Orange County mu- sician~. 1nany of whom are former mem,- bers nf !he Orange County Symphony. Five ballels will be performed: La Dance et la!! J\.fusique (Chopin Concerto No. I ); Songs without Words (Men~ delssohn); Roun1anian R h a p s o d y \Enesco); Le Corsaire pas de deux, and Blue Bird pas de dcux (Tchaikovsky). '.fhe Chopin ballet h:is been made possl~ hle by a gn1nl of $2.500 from the Jrv.ine Foundation. A Korean exch<inge student, Okhce Lee, \\'ho is a11ending Hollywood Jligh School and studying with Lillian Steuber at USC will play the Chopin Piano Conccrlo. Miss Lt.>e has been in the Uni!ed Slates for lwo years and recently placed second tn a competition of the Sa n Gabritl Symphony. She soloed wilh the Seoul Korea Symphony al the age of 12. Tickets, $4 for adults, $2 for students. La ' 'N ' n· .~una s etv irector Old Ti1ner at Playhouse Rv T0'.\.1 TITUS 01 it,, Otlty l'Uet STiii The Laguna Moulton Playhouse v.•lll have a new managing director next season, but they're' using the word "new'' loosely -for lhere"s nothing new about !lap Graham in L<lj(una theater. They've been prclly much synonymous for O\'er 20 )Cars. In lact. when the jovial. mustachioed Graham takes over the ·artistic reins of the playhouse next month, it will be the fourth time he's becume its full time dirertor since he first arrived on the Laguna scene in 1949. He's getting his feet v.·et early, Jiowel'er. for he"s currently, rehearsing a large cast of old l.a· guna tavoriles for the playhouse's sea- son -closing show, ''The M an \V ho Came to Dinner," which opens a three. week run next Tues- day . Aside from dir- ecting the comedy, he's also playing the central role of Sher-"~~ '"""""'M idan Whiteside -which shouldn 't be too difficult a task since he closed oui in the same part just three weeks' ago at the Costa Afesa Civic Playhouse. THE SEASON JUS'I' ahead will start another chapter in Graham's Laguna caretr, an association whW:h began 22 yearii ago when the touring a>mpany of "State of the Union" brought him west from Chi ca110. Hflp had friends in Laguna Beach. dropped down to look them up and derided to st11y. The following summi:r. he CU'ganl1.ed " stock cnmpany of profe.'lsional &ctors at the playhou1e and stayed on as manaiing director for Lhe next two seasons. lcaVing to return lo New ''ork in "Two'g Com- pany" \l'ilh Bette ))11\'is. lie was back in Laguna in 1954 and alternated as director of the playhouse and producer.director for lhe Pageant of the f..1a sll'rs. After a five-year .strr1ch al the playh(luse. fro1n 1959 through 1964, Graham "retired "' at::ain and headed for Paris \\'here he an<.I Elsa ~·ere married. A call from the Fl's lival or Opera (now Lyric Opera Association) to direct "The Devil and Daniel Webster·• brought him back lo Laguna to sta y in 1965. "THE NEXT YEAR J started writing and narrating the pageant," he recalls, "and I've done so ever since." lfe'll con- tinue to pop back and rorlh from the playhouse to the Irv ine Bowl next door far his pageant duties. As the ne11o•esl 1nanuging director of the playhouse (Doug Rowe and John Ferzac· ca have filled that slot since his hist stint), Graham will stage m"osl of the productions and will employ an OC· caslonal guest director. His first order of business 'Ifill be to obtain a summer musical -something the playhouse can afford to do. "\Ve 've gotten t1 lillle too far a~·ay froo1 community lheater." Graham says. assessing the playhouse 's current finan- cial dilemma. "A new building make.s some poep\e overambilious. \Ve'll be: look ing In the future for selections geared for entertainment of a wide audience." With '"The Man \Vho Came To Din~r," Grt1h11m is taking a firm step in lht1t dlrccUon even before he signs on or- ficlally RS managing direclor. Joining him will he a familiar lineup of actors - "people I've worked with over n period nf 2fJ years all crowded into one ghow. It's very gr11tlfyln1t." It's Lag~a·a way of sayinf, "Welcome b:ick, Hap. • may , be reserved by calling 528-1640. Sales v;ill be made at the door U space allows. DAVID PANAIEFF \VEEKENDER INSIDE FEA.TUHES f<"rldny, May 21, 1971 The Orange County Philharmonic Society closes out it.s season with the presentation of the Philadelphia Orchestra In UCT's Crawford Hall Mondily nighl There's a story and picture on Page 26 loday. Sta n Delaplane Guide I.ti Fun Stuttgart Changes In the Ga llerks GOiden "'est Chorale OC Phl\h!lrmonlc ()ut 'N' About Guide In f1·1ovle~ Tth:vlslon IA& Live Tbtttltr Vidor Films Comics • Page !I rage ti Page ti Page ti Page ti Page ti Pogei %7 • ZS Page tt rage n Page 31 Page 30 P1ge 31 • ff DAILY PllOf -Frid~, M11 2-1. 1971 Y 01&r Guide to Futa .. . Stuttg_ilrt I ·'Wi1zard of Oz', in Laguna . ' ' R.erisioii • .Announced MAYll·ll WD!,\Jll) OP OZ -Tht IA-Beach High School's Sprmg mu11i~aJ. ''Dorothy and \be Wtwd of Oz," will be presented -inJbe...9Cbool.'a..Audltor1um...Ul P.ark .. Ave .. at-.a-p.mr tonight and Sal.. Atay 21 .. It Over SOO 1tudents a~ involved with the produdlon ot this mualcal. 'tickets, $2 ror adults, $1 for students, at the door. .. ~1AY Zl .. !! UCI CONCERT -The University Orehestra under the baton of Pete.r Odegard will present a concert, !\lay 21·22, at 8:30 p.1n. in the Fine Arts Village Theater on the UCJ Campw. Admission free. MAY Zl ·JUNE 11 I TRIP TO NORTJI POLE -Tessmann Planetarium at Santa Ana College, 15.10 W. 17th St., Santa Ana, is having a serie.s or public sho\\·s each Wed. at 7: 15 p.m. and Fri. at 7 p.ni. The film . "Shadows in Space." will be sho.,.,'n through June 11. The performances are free but reservations are request· ed. Phone 5"t7·9561. ft.IAY %% DANCE CONCERT -The Dance Theater of Orange Colll'lty is presenting a dance cont'trt. l\1ay 22, one performance only 111 8 p.m. in Santa An a High School Auditorium, 520 W. Wal· nut St.. Sant.a Ana. Tickets, $4 for adults, $2 for studenll. Phone 528-1640. MAY !% JRVINE t.IASTE R CHORALE -Maurice Allard will direct tbe Spring concert of tbe Irvine Master Chorale joined with the Orange Coasl College Chorale in R. Vaugh111 Williama' "Fantasia" on l\fay 22 at 8 p.m. in the Ch apman Colle1e Auditorium, 333 N. Gla.sseU, Orange. The f.1aster Chorale T·ravel Smmner Arrives In Scandinavia By STAN DELAPLANE OSLO, Norway-It's the beginning or the Jong. bright summer days now. Jn the next couple or months, Scandinavians will soak up enough sun to last them through the cold dark winter. At mid- . summer, the northern nights are short. Nobody goes to bed early. And you can read a newspaper on the street at 11 at night. Not pushing newspapers for your evening out. Nor\vay is very swingy. Full of liberated chiclts- Prelty likely to con1e to YOUR table and offer to buy ~U a beer. Good beer, loo.) All Scandinavia has student hotels, geared down in price for the young traveler. Thus high on the must go ' list for half a million under-30s '"ho \\'ill go to Europe this year. * Not expensive for older Hilton types either. Good rooms in good hotels for $10 to $12 single. Service charge takes care or tips in hotels and res- taurants <You add LITI'LE more. But not as much as a French \\'aiter demands by his attitude). LOT of hiking. li'los t No rwegians seem to live outdoors. See many people around with knapsacks on their backs. Only thing we found high: Cigar- ettes. Both American and local go for around 85 cents. (So quit smoking). * "We hear of people all th. time who ge te Europe on charters for pr•ctic11ly nothing .•. " Me, too. But charter clubs don't send me their schedules. For a good reason: The clubs are supf.os· ed to be formed for any reason EXCEPT trave . If they tell us. that couJd be looked upon as advertis-. ing travel. That blows it, And the Government puts a stopper on them. * You coul d look into membership in these: Mu- seums, Women's and men's clubs. Library assoc· iations. Educatioaal television stations. Clubs form· ed fo r friendship between American and a foreign country -usually something like "Name country· American Society. 0 Soccer and other sports clubs. '.tl1usic associations. * "Have you r un Into bl1ck coral i•welry? Where can I buy it?" I saw a Jot of it in the Philippines. Sold in lots of places in Hawaii. Good shopping by mail servic e \vith a free catalogue: "Hula Girl. P. 0. Box 1027. Ji onolulu. Ha\vaii 96816." Black coral and other Pacilic gilts. * ". , . • pl.11ce for Mexican food in Acapulco?" All those little places around the main plaza. This is the to\vn for ceviche -red snapper marin- ated in lime juice. deco rated '"ith chopper onion, olives and hot sauce that \vould blow a .safe. Also along the beach boulevard called La Costera, a thatched hut restaurant Los Rancheros. Great Lamb. Dinner for two -\\'ilh tequila and beer -ran $6. Enough left over to tip the \Vaiter handsomely. * "Your suggestions for Germany ... " l'm a poor advisor for I never get out of the Black Forest. I get hooked on the venison and cran- berries, the rich Black Forest desserts. the stra\\·· berries soaked in cherry brandy-I just stay. Stack arms. * You go do\vn from Frankfurt on a iparkling clean litUe train. It leaves at a reasonable 11 in the morning. Takes three hours. Have lunch on train. * Get off in F'reiburg. a \VOnderful medieval town. A river runs right ove'r Freiburg. They've channeled it. It runs TI-IROUC J.I the streets. Through yards in little rushing streams. A good tour· isl bureau here \Viii give you maps. Tells you how to rent a Volkswagen. Routes yo u. One oC the btst in the Black Forest: Parkhotel \Vehrle in Triberg, But there are \\'Onderful inns in ALL the to\\•ns. * "We pl1 n to drive in lt1ly ... " \Veil. that's good ii you i;tay ofi the high·speed, super·high\\•ay aulostradas. All the drivers are try· ing to murd@r each other. Take the parallel roads that go through the towns instead ot bypassing them. These parallel the older Roman consular road!!:. And you'll see n;igstone patches alongside where the Legions marched. THE VILLAGE WEST FINE AR TS AND CRAFTS CENTER • , • THANK YOU ..• Duo to lb• groat Interest shown -Studio & Festival spaces are fill<:<! to capacity. ,.SHOPPIH6 WIU ~I FUN! 7tJ ....... c., .. 1"4, ....... ,,.. , ... , ........ ,4.9J fl allo "'lll ainJ Carl Orff'1 "Carmina Burana:" Tickets '3 for aduJll, $1.50 for 1tudenta, at the door or in advance from CoaJt MUJlc Slor<. MAY-II AGENCIES SHOWCASE -The Newport Harbor Coordinat- ing Council wUI stage an ezhtblt for the J)Ubllc showing Ult services and phllanthropic.pn;,Jects of )ocal voJunteu agen· ties. The.re will be 60 entrants in the showcase l.o be held in the mall at Fashion Island this Sat., May 22 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Entertainment will be going on all day with bands, jazz ensembles, singing groups, a childtt.n'.s mu.sical and a judo match. No charge. ft.IAY 2Z TEEN DANCE -The Westminster Teen Club u•ill hold a dance for teens (most Sat. nights) 15 through 18 years who Jive in \\'estminster or attend Bolsa Grande, Folll'ltaln Val· ley, La Quinta or Westminster JDgh Schools. Admluion for me:mbers $1: non members. fl.50. MAY 23 GW COAU!tUNJTY CHORALE -A concert of sacred music will be presented by the 7~voice Golden West College Com· munity Chorale, futurlng Vivaldi's "Gloria," May 23 at 7 p.m. in the First Presbyterian Church of Wutminster, 7102 Weslmln3ter Ave., Ylestminster. There la no charge for ad· mission. · 1tlAY n UCI CONCERTS -The Muaic Department of UCI will pre. mt free concert.a in the Village O!ncert Hall on campus on May 23 at 1:30 p.m. and May 30 at 1:30 p.m. MAY U CM HIGO SPRING CONCERT -The C..1" Mesa High School Orchestra, Stage Band, Bel Canto and Concert Choir will preltllt a Spring concert in the Orange Cout College AudJtorJum, May 24 at 7:30 p.m. 'I'hil orchestra, rteently returned from San DJego and the Regional Fe1Uval1, recelv· ed the hl1best rating awarded in competition with orchestras from Calif., Nevada and Arizona. Tickets, $1 for adults, SO cents: for 1tudenta, at the door. MAY Z4 OC PHllJIA.MfONIC -The Orange County Philharmonic Society will present the Philadelphia Orchestra under the baton of • Daniel · Barenboim, May 24, in Crawford Hall on the UCI camplll, at 1 :30 p.m. Jacqueline du Pre, celli.st, will be aololst. For ticket information phone M8-&4JJ. MAY Z7 STRAWBERRY FESTIVAL -The Garden Grove Straw- berry Festival will be held in Garden Grove Park {Ma~ lia and Westminat.er Ave.), A1ay Tl· 31. Opening day hours 2 p.m. • 11 p.m.; Fri. -Sat. .and Mon. 10 a.m. to 11 p.m.; Sun., noon to 11 p.m. Then will ht Uvt entertainment, the world's largest 1trawberry shortcake, carnival rid.ea, a rodeo, a celebrity breakfast and a parade which is 1et for Sat., Admission to festival grounds Js tree. Phone 638-7950 for olher information. MAY Z7 ·JUNE 21 STORY BOUR -A 1tory hour for pre-school children will be held in the Mariner's Library, 2005 Dover Drive, Ne~ port Beach, each Thurlday at JO a.m. The Corona del Mar LibrarY, 420 Afarigold Ave., Corona del Mar will hold a ~!ory hour for pre-schoolers e\'ery 1econd and fourth Thurs· d.11y of the month at 10 a.m. MAY %1 SURFER .m. DANCES -The \Vestminster Surfer Jr, Teen Club will hold a dance on the aecond and fourth Friday of lhe month !or 7th and Ith graders. The 7:30 to 9:30 dance will be in the Community Center, l200 Westminster Ave. Admission SO cents. · JUNE 2-1 STAN KENTON CONCERT -Stan Kent-On and his 18-piece orchestra will be heard in concert in the Orange Coast Col· Jege Auditorl"um on June 2 at I p.m. This concert's proceeds wtll be uaed t-0 finance a Kenton mu.sic clinic for student..! ()( Newport-Mesa Unified School District earlier the same day. Tickets. '3 for adults; $2.50 for atudents, are available at Orange Coast College; Coast Music Store; Ne'l''J)Ort and C..osl.a 1tfesa High and lntermedlate Schools and the Newport Cyclery on the Balboa Peninsula. JUl<ii"E 3 OKLAHOMA CHom -The Oklahoma Choir will perform in the Forum J at Golden West COllege, 15744 Golden West St., Jluntington Beach at 11 a.m. June 3. No charge for 1dmis- 11ion. JUNE <·S CONCERT -The University Orchestra and Chorus, under the baton or ~faurice Allard, u•lll perform "B minor ~fau" by Bach in th! Fine Art& Village Theater at 8:00 p.m .• June 4 and 5. No admJssion charge. JUNE 5 EASTER SEAL CONCERT - A benefit concert for the East- ~r Seal Society of Orange County will be held in Crawford Hall on the UCJ campus at 7:30 p.m. June 5, sponsored by the Lo11 Florea det 1t1ar League of Newport Beach. Featured ·will be the 7G-piece Doctors Symphony with Dr. Arthur G. Howard conducting. Guest soloisl, guitarist Christopher Parkening , and the Orange County Choraleers t11nd Phil· ha nnonia Chorale from Fullerton will .also be heard. Tickets are $7.50. Golden West Chorale To Per£or1n at Chm·ch ltloonst,'flpe Roger Kuntz painted the Goodyear blim p in a surrealistic moon landscape for his exbLbit currently at the Challis Gallery in Laguna Beach. On exhibit with Kuntz are 24 recent \\o·ater colors by Rex Brandt. In the Galleries S.,llllrol<hll..........i• HYlllDn Jn !hi perlorlDIJICO .. ..-a111M•tpertory •. •Uho Slultprl Ballet, pt1yio( July I tl>n>ulli • • In thl Shrine }.udltcirlum, Los Angeles . "Romeo and Juliet'' (Prokoriev) will be performed Thursday and Friday eve~ ings, July I and 2. On Saturday, July 3 , ''Eugene Onegin'' (Tchaikovsky-Stolze) will be performed at bo th the matinee and eveniq.g performances. Two Los Angeles John Cranko premier6 . will be performed in a double bill at both the matinee and evening performance!' of July 4. 1bey are the new productions of "Cannen," with music by Wolfgang Fottnet and Wilfried Steinbrenner after Bizet: and, ''The Seuons," danced to the Glazounov score to depict the four seasons of the year. U11dergraduate Juried Show at UCI UCI GALLERY -The Fine Arts Village Gallery on UCI campus is open J :30 to 4:30 p.m. Thurs., Fri., Sun.; 9 a.m.· 4:30 p.m. Tues., \Ved . Closed ~fondays and Saturdays. On exhibit, undergraduate juried show, May 26-June 7. GOLDEN WEST GALLERY -15744 Golden West St .. Hllflt- ington Beacb. On exhibit in the library. during regular hours, a jurie<l 49tudent art show through June 11. NB CIVIC CENTER GALLERY -~Newport Blvd., New- port Beach. Currently on eihiblt Jn city hall during regular busines.s hours, paintings from juri!d Art Festival, through ~fay. SHERMAN FOUNDATION GALLERY -2625 E. Coast High- way, Corona de! A1ar. (Formerly Coffee Garden Gallery.) Philadelphia Orchestra Set at Crawford Hall THE LOCAL CROPS IN! And what a difference! SANTA ANA STRAWBERRIES, CALIFORNIA SWEET CORN, A1p1r19us, Honey D•w•, Cr•n1hew1, Ce nteloupe, Ra spb' · ·1, Peech•1, Cherries. We have 'em alll And look at the low prices below. Soc!. .1ese coupons e nd save. I I h ~ ~L1o:.~~ Equa savings in our Fower S op ~ W•'r• famou1 for th... Urge No. I Grade ly popula r demand •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • L•rt• 511• • At their Mt now • 1,000 cr•t• l•1t w"k • • ICEll:RO • SANTA ANA • COACHIL.LA • • • • LETTUCE = STRAWBERRIES : SWEET CORN : • 1 Q¢ eo. ._ 6 for $1. • $¢ -• • • • Limit 5 • Limit 6 • Limit 12 • • With thi1 c•upon • With thl1 coupo" 8 With thl• c•u,... • HUNTER'S BOOKS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COUPONS EXPIRE MAY 26 TROPICAL FISH SOUTH SEAS H ... T .. LK•tl•M Te ....... l'•u ttt Wl lf WllSOH COlf A iMIU. "A Complett Tropical 1l1h Stort" ' THI WIST'~ '1NIST IOOKSTORES POR no YIAR.S-SINCI 1H1 Loc1t..r At FASHION SQUARE IN SANTA ANA Phon1 1714) ~43·9343 H ,100 loob & Pop-ks JZ,000 u ...... ·-· .. Cenl• IAR•AINS G~LOUI OPEN EVENINGS 'T IL 9 P.111. Don't worry about our "Boys in Service," th•y 9•t the fin •1f foods in th•ir com• mi1stri•1, that'1 why th•y buy th•ir produce from NEWPORT PRODUCE! Con. q ratul•tionsl U.S. Marine Corps, El Toro; U.S. H•licopt•r 811•, S1nte Ana; The Elks Club, Newport; The Am•rict n L•9lon, N•wport; Gold•n West Coll•g•: Or1n9• Cotsf Colleg•: Hi Contin•ntel Colle9e. How e bout your c1llin9 1117 •·oranot County's FG$ttsi Growing Produce n11d Flower Organization'' ~ N~!~~~!"k ~~-~~~~E 261' Newport loulOYord oo th1 r .. 1-i. -67M711 •7W111 11wn1 "35 Y tar1 of Produce Know How" "Where qualttu U th1 Order of Che Hou,1 .. .. :: • • ' < .. • ... . ....... . . . . ....,-.. . .. ;... ·,.r • -r. r ..i ..... -... _ ... _ • OAJl y PILOT Zl a u T ,. N, ' A B o u r · -•11 NORM ST Al\'LEY WEEKENDER ORANGE COUNTY'S Hawaii at Inn Place 1 Newport Beach's. "Hawaii Weel," a fu.n·filled salute to the Aloha State scheduled for next week. looks like an all-out affair. But no one seems to be getting in the spirit on a bi~ger scale than Roberta Linn and Freddie Bell, guidmg lights of Corona del )1ar'1 Inn Place. Five days of activity keyed to the Hawaiian theme will get under way Wednesday, May 26, and carry on through to a festive wrap up.Sunday, May 30. During that time the Inn Place figures to be- ~ome a virtual mainland outpost of the islands. ENTERTAINMENT An ei~ht·member entertainment troupe, the Regal Tahitians, will be staging three shows nightly at 8:15, 10:15 and 12:30. Friday, Saturday and Sun· day evenings they'll share the spot!ight with Freddie md Roberta's act. . {ii. ~ Just returned to this country from a highly suc- cessful tour of the Orient, the Tahitians have also appeared at a number of top. Las yeg~s spots. To the accompaniment of authentic native instruments. the group performs the whole range of Polynesian 'song and dance routines. Notable among the latter are the exciting fire and s'vord spectacles. , Throughout the "Hawaii Week" observance, patrons will be treated to complimentary flower leis and trays of pu pus (Hawaiian hors d'oeuvres). Still another feature will be a series of drawings for door prizes. ADD SOME COLOR To provide maximum native atmosphere. cele- brants ar~ urged to don colorful attire suitable to the proceedings. Anything Hawaiian will go in the way of dress, from aloha shirts and muumuus to grass skirts. The Inn Place's fe stivities will reach a high Real Cantonese Food e•t her• or t1ke home. STAG CHDISE WINO 111 2 hi pl., Newport Beech ORiolo 3-9560 o,.. r .. lr••IMI hlff 12·12 -Fri. n4 s.t. 'tfl I e.-. MORT'S BAL-PORT LOUNGE ENTERTAINMENT FRI. AND SAT.-9 P.M . to 2 A.M. Featuring CULLY REESE GRAND OPENING PARTY TUESDAY, JUNE 15 Where H•ve You Been In The M••ntime? Dlnner1-Tue. thru Sot. 12 OZ. USDA CHOICE TOP SIRLOIN STEAK Compl•te Oinn•r ................ $3.85 SUNDAY BRUNCH-9 A.M . TO 4 P.M. 4507 W. COAST HIGHWAY NEWPORT HACH 675-4200 FOR Ollf' Of 111rs wo~w PSl.IVERY .S£,...,IC5: • ht "ewport Beach 'Co1U MHa C.11 "5·713' In Hun!l n(lon 811'1'1 8'7·1214 • • FAMILY PIZZA PARtORS PlptNG HOT PIZZAS (WITH PtZlAZ!) OELM RE O iO YOUR DOOR IN MINUTES, IN ME·N·EDS SPACE AGE MOBILE OVENS. RESTAURANT, NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE point late Sunday afternoon with a full·scale - Hawaiian luau. Feasting will include all the tradi· tional dishes Crom whole roast pig to lomi·lomi. ANOTHER SPECIAL f '-While It's not tied to the Hawaiian program. another happening at the Inn next week certainly rates front and center attention. That's the Tuesday night, May 25, appearance by the one and only Stan Kenton band. But come to think of it, Stan's enduring brand of music might furni,s h the proper stimulus to get in a partying mood for all the fun to follow. The Inn Place is located at 2121 E. Coast High· way, Newport Beach. Reservations are recommend· ed to insure attendance at any of next week.'s events. Belated Cinco de Mayo Being more than a little partial to things ?i1exi- can-the food. the country, the people, you name it -we generally endeavor to get in on the festive spirit of Cinco de Mayo. ?.-lore often than not this takes the form of dining out in a favored Mexican restaurant. -& This year. unfortunately. prior plans prevented our keepin~ the annual engagement we reserve for the fifth night of i1a y. And "'e had to settle for a belated celebration several weeks later. VICTORY Cinco de ?.1ayo cQmmemorates the victory of the Mex ican troops over the French in a battle led by General Igna c10 Zara goza at the forts of Guad;;i· Jupe and Loretto, in 1863. This battle took place in the city of Pueblo, capital of the state of the same name. \Vhich is located about 85 miles southeast or ~1exico City. TO SH ARE THE FUN Partaking of enchiladas, chi.le rellenos, huevos rancheros or other zesty Mexican dishes is an un· beatable wa y to share the fun of Cinco de Mayo rt Every ,1 Evening, 5.7, ls Famll11 Din1ter at Be•t 1\'0W APPEARING The Oyn•mic PAUL LEMOINE DUO Tue1day thru Saturd•y And For YOUR SUMMER SUNOAYS PLEASUR E Th• b:citing JAN DENEAU TRIO • LAGUNA NO COVER NO MINIMUM COCKTAILS FLEUR DELIS 1460 S. COAST BLVD, LAGUNA BEACH Fiii PAii.iN• IN llAI ... with one's Spanish·speaking friends and neighbors. Figuring better late than never, "'e took our de· layed 1971 observance to the ace Don Jose restau- rant in Huntington Beach. \%? Those \\'ho have yet to discover this popular spot need onJy tUe first visit to become out~lnd-out a.ficionados like a host .of others. The surroundings are attractive-with just the right dash of authentic !.fexican decor; iron grill- work, paintings, dark wood paneling, heavy beamed ceilirig-the service is friendly, efficient and cour- teous, and prices bring any item on the me.nu well within the reach of everybody. MENU CHOICES Don Jose features 12 special combination plates, all served with rice and beans, and pea:ged 1n the very reasonable price range of $1.05 to $1 .55. Enchiladas, at these rates, are cheese and onion, with beef 10 cents extra. Offerings include one enchilada, $1 .05; tamale, $1 .15; burrito (chile con carne) $1 .20; chile relleno, $1 .25; two tacos, $1.30; enchilada and taco, $1.40: chile verde, $1 .40; two enchiladas, $1 .~0; chile relleno and enchilada, $1.55. The •t.85 Mexican dinner offers a choice of two, and the gourmet dinner, at $2, a choice of three. betweell""enchilada, taco, tamaJe, chile verde and chile relleno. The fir.st is served with rice, beans and coffee; the .second with rice or beans and cof· fee or tea. -~ LA CARTE Due to some whim of the moment, however. our tardy Cinco de Mayo feast was chosen from the a la carte section of the menu. The decision Jed to a formidable array of dishes crowding the table. First up \vas a savory bowl of guacamole dip. served ~with fritos and cheese. Being very receptive to the way It's prepared at Don Jose, we ordered 8 ffilYflKO Indwn Dta.r C«-ikt•lla Ope ,..,. :1SDSo.Lol1lobl ... PueQw1•7Z-70M as Town & Ccro.ntry, Onnp • Mi-3303 What.ever Happened t.o Individuality in Dining? . --. i\11 Disoover the Marine Restaurant at #~a/mt Dlsllnctli!dlnln1 lu11'19. The la>!nt Is on Individual preferences. E:.lrees saute.d •nd ,.,.ed from the >kl/let at your table. Tt. menu Is definlt.ly Continenlal / Amfr1"n. ,,,. """"AllOllS: 711414-lll!O on WDl'S N~Tft INN 1107 Jernbotle ROid • News:at Beach, Cllttbml.I ·THE BERLINER Germ<llt Family R e&taurant F1mou1 For SAUERBRATEN w;th POTATO DUMPLINGS Enjoy A Wunderb•r Time At Our MAY FEST SA TUROA Y, MAY 29th Be.9innin9 •• 8:00 p.m, Music 4nJ 01ncing With Th• EDELWEISS TRIO From leY•ri1 For R•t•rv1tion1 C•ll Now Open Dilly For Dlnn1r From 5 P.M. CHILDllN'I MINU MNtUn ,ACILITllS CLOS!D MONDAY Alt• Vlt lt Dllt llltllNflt DELJC>.TE$SIN Fin• l11r''''" ,.,,4, - IM,•rttli ''''' I WJ11t1 11512 llACH I LYD. T•wn & CtVntry Ctnter HUNTINGTON lllACH Hl-5100 • ~. -- W Jl ll the large size for $1.85. A half order goe s for $1.25. Next came a saJutatory example of that taney Mexican meatball soup, aJbondisas, 40 cents per bowl. This was followed by very crisp and fresh tossed green salads, 40 cents each. ~ . ENCHILADAS Enchilada orders, served with rice or beans (you make the choice because either is bound to please), included regular cheese, 80 cents; beef, 90 cents; ranchera, $1 .05. In addition to the particularly tasty sauce that accompanies the Don Jos e enchiladas, another little touch we have alwa ys liked is the light sprinkling or chopped fresh green onions that's placed on the lop of each order as it comes out of1.be oven. Other a la carte items rounding out the dinner were a chicken taco, 85 cents; bee[ and guacamole taco, 90 cents; burrito verde (beans, meat and green chili), 90 cents; chile relleno, 95 cents; beer tamale, 90 cents. Any or these ordered individually is also served with a choice of rice or beans. • COCKTAILS TOO Beverage choices include coffee, tea, milk, Sanka or soft drink, 15 cents each. It should be noted, though, that those so inclined can order any of their favorite before, during or alter dinner cock- tails from the bar. And any night without the kidd ies tagging along makes tor a good time to step into the cock- tail lounge after dinner for a few sP.ls of lively en· tertainment. Currently it's one of the nation's pet vocalists ~f many years standing. Ella. Mae Morse, accompanied by the Hayden Causey Tr10. Don Jose is located at 9093 E. Adams (at Mag· nolia ), Huntington Beach. This great spot is open for lunch and dinner seven days a week. , Cock tail Shakeoff At little more than the drop of an ice cube. a number o( the area's well-liked bartenders will be Continued on P1ge 28 .... 111«11111 9f l'IM , ... l'r•rM ...... "' ....... IR T1llo MIW•lll~ MINMf' LUNCH e DINNER LA TE DINN ERS OPEN FOR LUNCH lntim•t• and D•1 i9htful FRENCH RESTAURANT I t :l0-1 e Tu11d•y lh11 F1id1y OINNER 5,30 • 10 P.M. Tu11d•y fhru Su11d1y CLOSED MONDAY' c.,.., ........ ,. -.,,. .. , C..r. M-140·1641 COFHE SHOP Fe1lurin9 MOKl'S FAMOUS IURGIRS & SHAKU Brt1kf1st TIKI LOUNGE Lu"'h Songs Of Cavin Oinn•r 1400 PALISADES ROAD· COSTA MESA I IH•lt le rt.. RoMwey IR•I 157-1466 , A TREAT FOR Rll LOVERS I TIIE VOLCANO HOUSE EXTENDS A SPECIAL I OFFER ON ITS FAMOUS HAWAIIAN RIBS SUNDAY and MONDAY NITES COMPLETE HAWAIIAN Rll DINNIR FOR ONLY $1.75 NOTHING ON OUR MENU IS OVER $3. 99 • STEAK & LOBSTER e CHOICI T·Bone STEAK e NIW TOii STRIP ........ . Nothing higher on the menu. N1tur1Uy .. 9ed U.S.D.A. Choice beef only. No tenderl1er1. Steak dinners 1tart at $1 .65 and include ••l•d, to•1t & pot•toe1. Baked potatoe• from 11 A.M. 'tll 9 P.M. I ''W•ll ·done" 1tealc1 cooked with tender loving care, too I SPECIAL CHILDREN'S MINU ALSO: A p•wee plet• for th• Littl• Tots -2tc OPEN DAILY 11 A.M .• 9 P.M. 226:,/ FAIRYIEW I~ WILIONI COSTA MESA · so.ou1 . . . • • • • . • ' ! l %8 DAil V PILOT -FtldaY, Maf 21, 1971 0 LJT ~~l'J . AB OtJ T 1fatteois' CONllNENTAL CUISINE • FLAMING DUCK Opoo 11 :00 A.M. -Clood Mopi(•y HUNTINGTON BEACH. CALIFORNIA 11151 BEACH BLVD_ B42 .1919 DON JOSE' J\10.W APPEARING ELLA MAE MORSE Recording Artist With Th• • HAYDEN CAUSEY TRIO Enchil1da and T1co ......•...•...... $1 .35 Chill R•ll•no ·Enchilada .......•...•. $1 .50 S.rnd will! llq, Inn, To1tadiJ•s •11d Sels• FINEST MIXICAN POOD AT RIASONAILE PllCES e COCKTAILS e 9093 E. Adams. (at Magnoli1) Hunt. Beich 962-7911 FINE FOOD • ENTERTAINMENT DANCING • COCKTA ILS BUFFET LUN CH DA ILY $1.95 CELEBRATE HA WAii WEEK MAY 2'·l0-Nltlltl, St1t9• Siio~ F"t11rh1t REGAL TAHITIANS ,t..~J Fr1ddi1 tnd Robtrl•, of cowroe SUNDAY. MAT 30 AUTHENTIC HAWAIIAN LUAU M1~0 lt111rw•lion1 Now Continued from P119• 27 in there and shaking during nex_t Monday'g, May 24, cocktail competition of the United States Bartend· er's Guild. .. . Shakeoffs for the 1971 nationaJ contest will be held at the Beverly Hilto_n Hotel_, with Ora~ge Coun- ty Guild members forming a sizable con tmgent of combatants. There's also a report making the rounds that each has an offer to be accompanied into battle by a volunteer cheering section of steady customers. COMPETING Among t hose who'll be ·missing tfom t~eir familiar South Coast duty posts for ~e miXed dr.1nk skirmish are Al Carillo, Herry Berbertck and Sm~tty Lowther. Stuft Shirt, Newport Beach; Joe Devine, Balboa Bay Club; Frank Bowman, Newt\ort.er Inn : Sam Chard, Victor Hugo's, Laguna B)"ach; ~l Repretty, La 'Btique, Huntington Beach : and _\V1 1 l· Jiam Balog, bar coordinator for Far \Vest Service s Reuben's restaurants. The Bartender's Guild, in existence since 1948, has more than 100 working members, and roughly the same number of associate members, in South· ern California. Full members are all first-class \Vork· ing bartenders who provide their professional serv· ices to the clientele of top-rated restaurants and hotel bars. SHOW THEIR TALENTS Primary purpose or the annual contest is lo enable bartenders to demonstrate their talents and creative inventiveness in concocting new and un· usual drink ide as. Winners of each year's competi· l ion represent the Guild and the U.S., among 20 other nations, with their winning recipes during the internationaJ event. This affair is staged in a different country every two years. In a sensational victory in Spain. in 1967, the Guild captured the world championship in the inter· national mixed drink competition. The bi-annual internati onal contest for 1971 will be held later this year in Tokyo. FIRST PRIZE First prize \Yinner of next week's event receives '01 JOl'll ST. llSllYATIONS HAWAII WEEK -The Inn Place in Corona del Mar celebrates Hawaii Week with eight-member Poly· th e president's trophy and $1 ,500 to be used for travel expenses to the international contest. \Vinn er of the runner-up title \Vill also go to Japan. Last ye ar's fir st pla ~e winner will join them lo comprise th e three-man U.S. team in Tokyo. The Beverly Hilton shakeolf, open lo the gen· era! public, in cludes cocktails and hors d'oeuvres during the contest, followed by dinner and dancin g SEAFOOD CONVERSATION Ev eryone is t.,,lk ing a bout our delicious steamed cl•mi a nd qie nt ( 16-20 oz.I Austrian Lobster T111 ils. SUNDAY BRUNCH Ser .. d hom 10 A.M •• 2 P.M. Enl•1l.1 inrn•nl J D1ncin9 HAPPY HOUR Mo11. • Fri. 5 to ·7 JI·"'· with Ho" d'oe11Yrn Co111 il'9 Atlr•cliont -M1~1 Re1trw1tion1 E1rly STAN KENTON -MAY 25th COUNT BASIE -JUNE 9th LIONEL HAMPTON -JUNE 22 NEWPOIT llACH •7S·Ol00 IAN(j)UET FACILITIES 2121 Ea1t Coast Hi9hway Corona dtl Mar 675·0505 ~ Serve U.S. Prhite Eastern Corn-fed Beef Exclusively, P er•onafly Selected And Aged 111 011r Omn Cooler , A Thre1 Gtmration Famil~ Tradition -Est. 1921 The Bull and Bush Your Friendly British Pub Presenh A FUN-FILLED WHktnd SATURDAY, MAT 22 AT 9:00 P.M. THE IELFAST SINGERS A •olli c~in9 1¥1n in11 of lritl! l•ll tds. Humo•o1u, t•d. lil ting ind t njoy1blt rnorne~lt with t 9r11t rn111ic1l 9roup from lilt Ould Sod GI Couniry Down. AND ON SUN DAT, MAY 23 STARTING AT 10:00 A .M. l h1 C t r1moni1I Pomp ind P19t nhy of tho PACIFIC COAST PIPE IAND ASSOCIATTION With Th•ir Stirrin9 Pipt1 •nd Oru1111 877 W. 19th ST. COSTA MESA 646·9930 TEMPLE GARDENS Q-JIN{:~Re&ta11rn11t LUNCHEON & DINNER DAILY Visit Our RICKSHA COCKTAIL l'raturlng E.'l'olic Tropica.I Drinks IU,fET LUNCH 11 :30·1:30 Monday thru Frld1y OP'IN ll:M 1.m. • 11 11.m. Sul!. lllr. tllwrt. 11:>1 •.111,. ·I •.m. ,,;. •n• S•I. 1500 ADAMS (1t H1rbor) COSTA MESA 540-1937 540-1923 J17 PACIFIC COAST HWY. HUNTINGTON IEACH Oi-EN 1 DAYS R1i1rw1lioni Acc1pto1d l'tr P'1t1IH II $ tr mert We Promise You Good cfi '.! Je"tauranl .ad AMERICAN CUISINI TROPICAL COCKTAILS CONNIE COMPELL AT THE PIANO BAR Wed. and Thur .. Nlt•1 POLYNESIAN SHOWS-FRI. & SAT. FINEST SEAFOOD AND OYSTER BAR IN THE SOUTHLAND 630 LIDO PARK DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH 675-0100 ' NOW PRESENTS EVERY SUNDAY FROM 11 A .M. TO l P.M. J. THE MEDITERRANEAN ROOM BRUNCHEON A flUIT CAllOUSEL! A IOUNTEOUS IASKET o f l lutbt rry Mu1fift1, Mift· iAlvre D•niih Rol11 tnd Flt ky C roiu1nh. 2 STEAK DINNERS FOR AP! Entirt ly Ntw Conctpl Ft1lurin9 • Mtdl•'f of "•· iorted Chil!td, S1!1cl Ftui h 'n T1'iin91. C•nl111d willl t Mound of Cotl•ljl• C1'.1 t 11, O"' Will 11 S1rw1d Ptr T1. bit. IDAHO lAINIOW TIOUT . • . • . . . • J.7S Frn ll Wtltr Trovt, eonfd. Slut-lo I 'Tur n, E1corh'd wllll Frull Eoo1. Str•mb!ld i ncl 1 G--MOUl'd of LIYon ... !M Por11oc1 EGGS llENIDICT • , ••• , •• , ••• , ••••• J,Jf Tiie Ettrn1I F1worUt, fft!t (l•11k 01~11 Wiii 81 Sen-Id wi!ft Pooclltd l'•n ll ll:1nct1 E1111s, "" .. n E1>9ll1ll Muffin wl!ll C:1ntdi1n lltcon 1M1 ~•\ICt Holltnctl ll t , C:Olttgt Frllt 11111 I G1rnl- !Vtt of Torntton Wiil Enl\lfl(t 11111 P'lllt • French Frie s • French Frie d Onion Rings • Toned Salad • Roll and Butter Brin g a fr iend ! Take ad"ent•g• cl this deli cious din- ner for 2, at • ju1t right price. 1h ID. t•ndar cho ice ste1k, cut to Bradford Hcu1e ,p•cilicetions. B• good to a friend, er meybe tha lemily7 Thi, me•I, ;, a fevorite with all , , • you 'll be a winn•r! • rll04'i1J KNOWN FOR VALUES Open O•llr Mon. thrv Si t. 9:30 1.m. te f p.m. Sunct1y 10 a.m. to '__,.m. GRANT PLAZA -BROOKHURST & ADAMS -HUNTINGTON BEACH • OMILml CNANTICLEll •• ' •• ' ••.• J.•s A OellgMtvl Ml•lur• of (:lllc~ltn lllh I ncl MUlft roomi In H .. vy C:ru rn, SuDt!y Spkld "'° FIMI .. Into • Ftu!ly GolOM Omelttlt THI .Alll'OlTll • , ••.•• , •.•••••••• 4.SO A ~· CrH lion. " 0.lk•l9 Cut .. Ftlll MIOftOn, $111tnd fo Yow Dht•lmin~Hnv T11N! lfld A«OrnPlll!leof r, I '"-llfll E99 Alvo I Mut'l'ln Ind (O\llrtd w[f!I 0W GolcMfr HOll11'11Mlt1 FllTATA MIDITllllANIA .•.•••.••• 2.tl t ·l'\llY t l •ll• Tru ll l''" G""""' $1•1ol~ wirPI 'rlfd Onion$. GtMfl (llopjMod k!lneCft, Ind I 'TOl/Cll of G1rtle:, AJ1 TouH l 'Ol'ortv Incl "~ l!'loO I l'illl1'f °""4141111 IWI t Stitt of Cr1AI' °""" ..... ROAST rllMI Ill, •• .In •••••••• I.It 1' l 1n1V, (holct CUI, Ctl'Wd lfO!'ll Out Gru! Sl1ndin1 IUll lll:Ollh. fo• tlll HHriy Mlf•ty llHf l it\19" YEAL SWEETllEADS YOL-AU·YINT J.2S Dtlle:llt Yell Swtttbr-. Ll!lftlly 5.lutwd wtrll Sl'l.ltloll, Musllr-Ind Sfm111trtd ill t 5Mrry Wine Siruct , Srrvtlll Ill t P'tn~ Stltll wltfrl f re.11 S<•tmbled lllwicll E1911 tflO Coll• P'rltl IOYAL SPANISH OMILmE , ••••••. 2.tl ' 14 ltue Ori'leltllt l6Vft'"• 0.llqftl! 14 Spky P.,1-_,.l of ,_.to. Gr1.., cnm... Mini!•-· '"°''to "'° Olttit, AH Oelll!h!luhy Bllrlclld tnd kl'vfd ftlufty Hot A GU.SS OfJ CHAMPAGNE SEIYED WITH YOU• llUNCH - ANT COCICTAIL 0, TOU• CHOICl-Sl 11700 MACARTHUR ILVD. NEWPORT BEACH ,er ll .. •rv•tlon1 C111 IS2-2710 Oppo1lte Orang• County Airport nesian group, Regal Tahitians. entertaining Wed.· Sun . in three stage shows nightly. In the 1nain ballroom. Ticket inform atio n can be ob- tained from Orange County ticket chairman, Smitty Lowther, at the Stuft Shirt. WISH 'EM LUCK If yo ur favorite barten?er .is a.contestant ~he!e's a \Vay you can increase his l1kehhood •Of w1nn1ng. Drop by his regu1-stand this weekend and let him get in a lot of practice. In tbt jintst traJition of tht true innkeeptr'.s 4rt. 3801 E AST COAST H 11;111VAY Coao:oA DLL )IAa. CALJfOMXIA PHox t : (714) 675-1Ji'4 PRlllCE ltbAles RESTAURANT SEAFOOD -STEAKS Tut .. WICf~ T~ur. 0-4 '"' F•I~ Sit .• Sun. Optfl l1 1111 ICllMlll ~\Ill SA~TA Nik t5m Ktrillr llN. m .1no (I •led II. ti (di~tlf) UOBK'N GLEi\VER IJ .. : .. : ... & 0007, E NOW OPEN 42B E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA 64S·S410 DAILY DINNER SPECIALS $3.95 BREAKFAST AND LUNCH DAILY TAtEJ1kWHAtE Nl!W~OAT HAABOft 400 M,41N', 1!1Al.80A PEHIHSUU. C714l 67l-463l ~~~ Jlla 8TAUAANT ~u1 wu r to•lf"M-•" N1Wl'O•T 11,lo(M (71') .... fllVIEftA tu:5TAUMNT Continental Cuisine Cocktails Stroing Luncheon and Dinner 6fonda11 through Saturday. Closed Sundays Wo a r1 located n•ri to the Mey Co. in South Coast PlaJ:e. lJJJ $. lrht .. !540.3140 ALLEY \lllT PRESENTS Tha Sens1tionel TONY FLORES Guitarist /Vocalist Folk, Classical, Spani1h TUE. THRU SAT. GINO LANZI Mond•y Nights FEATURING DINNERS In th• Stn Fr1nci1co M1nn•r l.ACI OF U.MI STU.KS e SlAJIOOD S TO I I NIGHTLY IUSINESSMAN'S LUNCH 11 :00 TO 5 SATURDAY-11 to S LUNCH OR BRUNCH SUNDAY-BRUNCH OPEN ll'llY DAT OM THE OCl!AN '4DJACE MT TO Nl:WPOllT l aACM P'lall: 2106 W. OCEAN FRONT NEWPORT BEACH LOCAL No eth1r n•wtp•p•r t1U1 ye• rnor1, 1w1ry d•y. •bo11t wll1t'• 90!~9 on In th• G•t•l1r Ori nt• Co•ll thtn ffl• DAI LY PILOT. Fl11e Italian C11lsl11e Cocktail• 2325 E. COAST HIGHWAY 673-B267 " .... ,,..,, .. Opett Dally -I '''"' " 2 e.111. l:LOSIED MONDAY • TV DAILY LOG Fridoy Evening MAY 21 Soturdoy Moming MAY 2Z l :llO IJ 111 Nm Jerry D11nph)'. 1:15 D C.111pu Profll• I]) AIC Ntw1 Retsoner, Sm ith, 5:30 ())1Y I Cla•to0rN 0 lHIC N......iu Tom Syndtr. 6:'5 0 MOYit Cll111110f11 S.ppltmtftl . ' ... • Friday, MaJ 21, 1 ~71 Y 011r G11ide to Movies R for 'Madding Crowd'· dies suffering Crom middle age bol'edom meet alter a friend's funeral: Go on an impulsive trip to 1..-0ndon and become in· volved in a four day drinking spree and infidelity. against time. Scientists in underground desert lab try to i so late rare disea s e transported to earth from another planet. Stars Dafid Wayne. THX 1133 (GP): Cltlr.en THX and TYX r<'disco\ er sex in a computerized "UNl4" type world where all heads are shaved. Men and ·women are sedated and nledi calcd through a depersonalized prison-city or ton1orrow. FAl\lILY -TWO NEW AND Dl fft!r.INT I ,,, .. ti•.t ACTION PltfUAU--••rT Pllst lUH 5HOWIH~ ~ -,,,. c. .. 1 w-. UTID CRJ CHILOR.IN ~ 'M°"• "~ ••• ONLY WITH PAllNTI • ! 1 r ~, I-.. ... ' w · S-~ .. ".: ........ O .:~.:~ .. .:B "'t: ..... ·: 0 Tiit Allfn 5aow 1 A 11:11dy of film history. 0 Sil O'Clock MllM: rlO) •1o11t 7:00 8 NIW Word .. NN WtJ'I Ukt ff Kot" Condutfon (comedy) 0 ®) m TtMfooltrJ Sbow Editor 's Nott: Tills movie guid1 is prepared by th1 filmt committee of Harbor Council PT A. lilrs. Nigel Bailey i.t president and Mri. Bruce Nordland is comm ittee cha irman. It is intended as a reference in determini'ng suitable f ii m s for certain age aroup.s a n d will appear weekly. Your views are solicited. Ma il them to Mo- vie Guide, care of the DAILY PILOT. I Love l\1y Wife. tR ): Elliott Gould, Brenda Vaccaro and Angel Tompkins star in the story of the break-u p of a modern Romeo's marriage. · The Great White Hope IGP): Fictionalized accowit of lire of Jack Johnson -first Black heavyweight champion of 1910. Tragedy results as prejudiced boxing establish- ment reacts to his victory and his publicized arrair \.\'ilh' a white ~·oman. AirPQrl (G): During violent1;~--..;-------~;;i;iii;i;;;o __________ _, slotJl'I. a disabled plane wilh a time bomb aboard is unnble to land because or a giant jct stuck in snow on rwiway. Against this background , lives of passengers and f I i g h I personnel unfold. '59 -Tony C11r1l1, Jd: l.tmlllOll, GI Ltt's bp Mtrll)'ll MllftfOll, Gto1p Jt1ff. Pat a.Is-.. Strllt #266·270. O'Brhn, Jot l Brown. Nelltmi1h 7:.JO tJ Dusty'1 TMllollll """'· om-•-a 111ct v.. .,. oo DiKOVlfy m nt Anbtlntt 0 llact E.qMrillce ID stir TrH ®I Undt Rita tr) I l!l<W I ICCT Auctlo11 (C) m 1'l•dlrtiirft (a.) Tht f11nd ·111sin1 1111 contln· 1:00 IJ lwrs B1tn11/hlcl Rll•• Ht11 WtS. llld JOU may ~id for lltms by 0 m WoodJ Woodptditr ctllfn1 (213) 660-2450. 0 tl) 00 Linc:dot Unk fl!) flslNr ft-'IJ' 00 Chster IM Jnter e IMtldlfl 34 0 Movie: (C) "W1rrlot hprw• 8' IMttl Vtllq DIJ'I (ldvenlUll) '60 -Kmtln M1thewl, a;) LI Kort ftmll1r cu Conslltlt m Ttltt o! Wells F1r11 m ..... Jim H.lwillofnt. 1:30 0 @1 m Th• llf(llool l :XI (fl Ntws Bill Huddy. m Cisco lid Ci) T~ ., Con11q11tnc1s ID SwmbJ Cl) CIS News W11t1r Ctonkitt. 1:45 0 Mtllin1« Rtp0rt G Cal!d!d Ctmtrt 9:00 IJ (}) S1b1ln1 a. Ille lroo,Je ®.!NBC NIWJ D1Yid Brin~le1. Goolles m Tiit f1Ji111 Nwn . 0 @'! m Dr. Doontttt C1'l) Wtdtd fl I ms 0 MDVle: "lklld Tlltt llondt" m DeMrt 1.,.r1 o m oo ltn}' L•il snow a;) TU m A..M, Moria: "fllrH Steps m Ntn Nortll" (mystery) 'SI -Lloyd 7:00. CIS Nm W1tltr Cronkilt . ..... Brld1es,. LN Padmnl. •A111bulb II Cl m NIC Ntws DIVid B1lnkley. Cimt1l'Oll Piss" (wt$1em) ·~ - @TtTtlltlllTMll aJTrMKollst 0 Wlllfs My line? ttl C.dt1 r CWtarm ®1 mct v ... °"' m PlllCWI•• LltiflG m1 LM lMc:J l :lOO@l mPlnk hnltl« * ADULTS Baby "1aker (R I: \\'hen a wife caMot produce her own child, a young hippie volun- teers to have baby for the childless couple. S ta r s Barbara Hershey. Beguiled tR): \V oun de d Union soldier seeks refu ge in Southern girls school. Head- n1islress and school teacher fall in love with him. He chooses instead a young stu- dent The two rejected women seek revenge lhrough an am· putalion . Far From The 111adding Cro~·d (R I: Film adaption of Thomas Hardy novel set· in rural 19th century England. Tempestuous B a t h s h e b a Everdene (Julie Christi<') is the object of three men·s pass ions. A r.tan Called Sledge IR): James Garner leads a band or doomed outla\.\'S hotly pursued bJ the law in this \\'estern drama. J\l*A"S"ll fR): Irreverent comedy about lhe J.1ob1le Army Surgical Rospit.al during the Korean \Var .. Spoof on nurse-doctor relationships and the "Last SuppCr." Pretty J\1aids All l.n A Row f RI: Rock Hudson portrays principal having affairs I\ th his prelly students \.\'hile English teacher A n g i e Dickinson seduces shy boy. Plot concerns the strangula- tion of three of the girls. "'omen In Love (RI : Screen adapllon of D. H. Lawrence no\'CI. Set in the England of 1917, Birkin rejects the love of an aristocratic intellectual, choosing instead an earthy school mistress. He also bea>mes involved in a sensua l relationship ·with his best friend, Gerald. Jenny (GPJ: t..1arlo Thomas portrays Jenny, a pregnant girl from New England \.\'hb goes to New York. She mar- ries a young man. for con- venience, who wishes to avoid lhe draft. Little Big 111an (GP): Dustin Hoffman stars as a '121-year- old gunfighter in this "better \vhite·<han·Red" story of the American West, culmina!lng in Custer's last stand. Love Story (GP): A 11 MacG raw and Ryan O'Neal star in romantic, bittersweet fable or today's college youth and the gencralion gap. Told in their language. A New Leaf (GP): Walter f\.1att!1au porlrays a luxury hungry bachelor who is down to his last quarter million. Elaine f\.l ay plays the rich love interest in this sla pstick com- edy. -Doctor Doolittle IGJ: Ex· cursion fQr all ages into the fantasy world of Dr. Ooolittie l who prefers to communicate with four -footed &JI i ma I s rather than the human kind. Rex Harrison portrays the fame.d doctor. On A Cle:ir Day (GI: ~1ovic version of the l.erne r-Lane musical of reincarnation star- ring Barbra Streisand and Yves Montand. Rio Lobo IG): llumorous western starring John Wayne. Takes place at close of Civil War. %001: A Space Odyssey (G ): Gary I..ock'o\o·ood stars in film depicting the history of earth's formation, the development of EVE SHOW STAlTS 1 r .M. BROADWAY'S MOST HONORED PLAY IS NOW A MOTION PICTURE 20th Century·Fox Presents The Great White Hope CONTINUOUS SHOW SUNDAY FROM 2 P.M. L!nda Jaclcson B•tt Actress mw"'"" o moo "' ""'"""'"' fB awtst ttlt lhl111 Wo1d 0 Movlr. "Btlll St.Irr" (wutern) fE An1'1i1" Jllfrros aJ Movl1: "Riot In J1mnfle Ptbon" all SI lft Futrt• T1 ili) Alribl II Norte m Mlwi• ,,... tO;(IO e rn .1os1. a. 111c PuslJclb 7:90 II n. tnttrn1 fR) O ®l m H.R. Pvfnstut Gel Carter (RI: f\1ichael Caine is small time London thug in story of revooge in British underworld. Hu sbands (GPJ: Three bud· ~IATURE TEENS AJ'll'D ADULTS Andromeda Strain ( G ) : Suspenseful story of race Patton: Salute To A Rebel (GP): Film portrait of the \Vorld \Var II genera l kno\.\'n as "Old Blood and Guts'' sho"'ing him capable of in- tense profanity and also as a brilliant war strat e gist . George C. Scott portrays Pat- ton. Kar l f.ialden is General Omar Bradley. man and the current ability to PlWol.WION" o/GP) travel in spa:. [~'~ .. ="="~'~"'~'"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The letter immediately,~ after the title indicates the rating given the picture by the ~fotion Picture Code. Tht Coe«! A'/ld Ratina pro- gran1 niay be found 01' one of the motion picture pages. III Mtvlr. (C) '1111 Lat s.-r (I) RMI Emit Rtftt.111 (wultfn) '59-Rod Hud111n. 0 00 Hit Whul1 0 (lg) m Hi< Cll1P111Ttl (R) ili) Lucfta Ubre 1J Yirfllia ltltltfll SMw 10:30 II 00 Haritm Globetrott111 0 (I) EB Tiit l1td)' l•dt (R') 0 @) f!l Hert ComtS i.1 Grwmp (})Movie: (C) "fie llt1111 ti Ult 0 Movit: '"l.itllt Miss M11ktf" Ct .. Is kill" (dr1m1) '61-.lick (dram•) '34--Shirlef Temple. lord, Susan Stf1sb1r1. O 00 $kJ' HM1 O Miiiion $ Mowlr. (C) (2•1) .. 40 11:00 B (!)Archie's F1111hOU1 &1111111 ~· Pm" (wutetn) '67 0 (fQ1 ID M•jo{ LH1u1 luttlth -Audit Murph1. Miclllel Sums. Atl1nt1 B11vu It N.Y. Meis. m Truth If CllnMftUlllW @ Ml'l'it: "link lltllliCI•," Don (() Jltrry M•• Kellry, Ed••td G, Rob!1110n. @E) Cfne111t 30 O (!)Motor Mouse al £..drlllH Mnietlu 0 Movie: (C) '1i11nfi1ht It lltd 7:55 CiE) C41utioa "' Se111ndo• Slodl'" (wuttrn) '65 -Rlcl'ltrd 1:00 0 (I) a') N1nnr l lttt P'rolwor H11rl~n. G. R. Slu1rt, m Tt Ttl ttlt Trirtll (E) Morit: "M11nificent Dell" (blOI· fI1 I IJICIA I ACCT Allclin (CJ raphJ) '46 -Ginpr Rosen, (cont'd.) CiE) Tinll Mnlet111 II!) Ulin11oot 11:30 0 (I) Tiit Httdr IOJI IE SytN r hriq11t G) Mano 1 M1111 llanc:hert 1:05 m l.JitM Ullrt Al 1:3011 ADdJ cnt1i111 <R) ternoon = '~ lltN ti llM C.• (R) 12:00 6 5*by ~ Whlft Art Ytu? a rn m n. hitndi• r1a11r o rn m Alwricl• JudlllM GI JOHNNY CASH SOLOS ill:;:,"'.;..,, ,_,, *with the EMMY-WINNER ED Hfsh School Problemt m Oftill fl'Oll Show Johnny Clstl G) Tutr• ftna.tico 1uull. a\) Dr1111t dt LI Stmn• (D Or11ntt • 11:15 0 Moftt: "Tiie Glut T1111b" (mys. tJD Pttttrn fOf LMn1 tery) •55 -John lrtl1nd. t :OO fJ CJ) CBS frld•J Movi1: (C) (211r) 12·JD B (})Thi Monk• "Tht Good Onts" (mu1ic1I) '67-' @ M®lll Homt Show RoddJ Md>owlll, Debbie W1tson. 0 Movit: "Tiie 8111tf11l [lephtnl"' 0 TIM f11i!Uv1 . (jvvtnile) '62-Mollr Mtck. 0 t1J &J1'1111 Cnl (R) 1:00 £) 01stlnllr lo Nuttier aJ Felony S.1111111 0 C1J 00 &) Colonltl Natfontl In· @El 30 Mlnllln vitationtl Golf Tot1m1mtnt Tiie third 83 LI Cflldt Bien Cfltd• round of 1111111\lm. Fort Wor1h, Tu11, all D hadt M Solla (fj TV g Looks ti Lnmlnc 1:30 D (ll (I) m n. Odd Ceuplt (R) m Wllktecl Ntw1 u Candid C.IM!I ED LI Prohibldt m Qlltlt flf Adwnt1r1 l ·lO u 1\e Jtt.ns Ci) Maiult/Pule(s Oat ' 00 llrltJllltiontl Hour Ill LI Cru: 4e Muta Coltn QJ Movl1: .. Plundlrtn ltf P1/nted Cl) Sp1nlslrl fllbrrt film fltb" (wesltrn) '59-.John Carroll, 10:08 O GI m I IRC!g!Y111ict It 2;00 6 Dusty's Treehoise Dt•~ An ABC' Hews special on the rn l'llbllc Slf'l'kl fllll por1end1n1 ddth ol Vtnlce, Italy. 0 197l hcffic Dpt Clumpl1n- • F11Tlf n1rr1t11 tht doc11menl· lhipt Livt Imm Seatllt Wa1hforton 1ry tbolll th1 re1111ns !or th• rapid 0 Ont frtirftt St.Ind ' ' destruction of th• 1reat city, end 00 TiaddOMI why It lllo111d bl smd: 0 Novie: (C) "Artftt" (dr1m1) '53 O lrttWI Slnd1rs/Mo1111., -Ci& Young, Polly Ber1an. Le.._, JOSEPH COTTEN ~(Jf.i.-hibE' li;R: · .::-~·•• p ''"'~' "'"'"'"'I ·" tluGH GRIFFITH-TERRY-THOMAS vik"GrNrA N?'"~ NOW PLAYING 2NO CHILLER 2ND SUSPENSE fEA l URE ••ULOOlt i\ 'It l •. \(·f ;•• "WHA'l'F.VER 1-IAPPENED Open1 7 P.M. ·ro Al !N·r ALI CE?" Srorh11!Du~k Wte~dlly1 6.4SSo1.&Sun. l1lS Ryan's Daughter ( G P ) : RQbert Mitchu1n and Sarah Miles star in a love story set in scenic Ireland of 1916. Restless and beautiful wife of middle-aged school teachC'r has affair with English major. Tragedy for all results. \\'hen Olnosaur1 Ruled The ''2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY" ••• Earth (G): Tate of Dinosaur "Kr1.1.v•s HrRoE \'' era when Rock P~ple try to w1111 c11n1 1111WOOc1 appease the god causing Speci.1 Kkh Mir. -s.r. 1 P.M, esrthquakes by sacrificing the ---[ blond virgins of the village. ~&1111!1' eGAS"I' MICl!Wil'f ~rrw IT, Red Sky At A1omlng (GP): ~1 Called to World War Two ~\M;i Navy duty, father deposits ' ' • wife and son in remote TONITI AT 6:00 1111d IO:lO Arizona town. Son comes to r.11nEU ... DfflfEllEOf ~r~~ver~ith sc:ree~f~ ta~~ ·-- mother drinks to case self· THE FORllN PROJECT pity. ! VN NERSAl ~CTURE • IECHNICOlOll' MOVIE RATINOS ffiR PAREl'ITS AND \'DUNG PEOPI.£ T"-llb1..:f1,.. of,,,_,.,~," lo WOI"' ,,.,_,•-/lie ""''•lllhr, oJ -·· ,_ ,., ¥•-.., .,. '""' di<,. .... All lG(S "OllllTED Gt "'"I AU!h~U ""' -------------------- ® llQ OMf UllOll 11 ADllllTTIQ (AOt l•~•I 1•11v •lry "'111111n '""I Ifill lllNAVl~ON" Q ANO AT 1:05 ONLY , ROSS l!UN!!lf ..,,.,, ... AIR PD RT A llllM'.RSl.l PICll.111[ l!ll ..,, AQUA PET TROfllCAl l"ISH, lllRDS, ROOEttTl -SPECIALS - e l i91r e,,b • , , •. , 5/Sl .00 • ' Alga• E1t1r •••••• 5/Sl.00 R11 bor1 , , ••• , • , 5/Sl .OD e Neon .•..••..• , 5/51.00 e M•rbled An9l1 , ,. l /Sl.00 5901 Wor11er, H~11tl11gto11 l eac.lt U (])Ci) Cl) Lovt. Am1nun Style 0 Roller OtrbJ 0 B1xter Wtr" NIWI ®J Know Tour 81blt ..,, Ill ~ -!Zl ... ,.._.,. UN I GT C m NIWI Putn1m/flshm1n. m Movit: (C) "Tht 0.p Sil" (dra· lll·U1I ,,., .. .,0 ., -H T N ON IEA H ...................... -..... (Onltr Sprl1ttclllt ""' W•tn1r O)M1ntnp ta . ma) '58-Alan Ladd, D11nne Foster. _"" ___ _,..,.,,.,,_ 146·l11Z ·m 11ttc11L1 A Allttion <CJ m sports World 1--======================~~==========~~""""""""""""""""""""'I (cont'd.) CiE) Ytritdtdes Musletln !O:JO 0 Movie: (?hi) "0.S.S." (dr1 m1) &) Kot Wheels '46 -A11n Ltdd. Grr1ldln1 Fill· 2:30 II Tiit C111t LOl'ldoll Sllow 1er1ld. rn LlllWl!dl (() 8111 Jolln1 Ntw1 0 Tflt lany Kint Show Uil Cld111 de All1111lit1 @ For11m loxin.1 11:00 fJ (J) ail Mewl (!} Sltllnltr Sltowme: "Tht Three 0 ~ m lllNS Stoo11et Meet Hert111es." @ Dutil Y11itJ DIJI @)Sports Chtllen&t 0 rn m ,.... m Dolltn a. Senst 0 Morrit: "Edit ti tlM City" (drt· &) SQ Hnb 1111) '57 -SidlltJ' Pollitt, )olln l:OO I) IRsidu/Ollbid•r "Venlct: A C1umtes, View From With[tL" Part I. GI FRANK SINATRA IN ill '"'"'"" * .. From Here to Eternity'' o Mowir. "HOfl'OI' of Dnaril" (llor· m Mowlr. "fre111 Ht11 to f:ltfnlty" to1) '58 -Peter C11sllln1. (dr1m•) '54 -Frink Sin1tr1, Surt O Movie; (C) "frtd of t1le Cir" l1nctsl1r, Dlbor1h l(err. (wftsttm) 'Sot -R1lbert Mitchum. 11 :15 iE1 CIMmt l4 ~ MOVl!; "8l1ck ':'stlt" (sci·fl ) -i1:30 II MM Gilltit S3-5o~s .. K1rloff, R1ch1rd G~!en~ 0 @) m .lthnnr C.IMll (!) M0¥11 , SlffPln1 Cll lo Tnestt 0 (]) (j) &) Dick Cffttl (mystery) 49 -Je1n l(ent (]) Mowit: (C) .. ltod:·A·IJt ltby'' EI!) I 5,J(tll I l(CET AIXtioR (C) ( ed)') '58-Jlff)' Liwis. Mtrllyft (10hr) Tht third 1nn11al fund·nlser Mcom 11 fo1 EducfUMtl ltlevislon. Bidders m":~1: (C) "Rud to fll't Alt1111" m1y .cell (213) 660-2450 to bid on ('fl'lllt1n) '66 -Kin Ct1rt, iny items. .. m Musie11t/oav., a. cona0i 1?:00 a.;! SHI! "M11cotm X Mtm0rl1L '-I) Rnistl Mullctlt 12:15 0 MO'lit: (C) "Thi Sty Abon, th1 in Thi Bii Plet1111 Mud ltlnr" (dotum1nl11J) '62 -CiE) Tutro dll Slbldt Wllll1m Peacock n1r11111. (D Motor Moust 1:00 11 Nowit: "TtrpNt Alltr" (d11m1) J:lO 1J Owr Alntrietn M11sfttl Herltap 'Sl-Mtrt Slmin1, Doral hr Milone. (J) VOlct of Alricultlttt (}) D 0 QJ News U Jlr• T11o11111 outdtDn m AA-NI Pt ntr.-nt 11& Sll'wt." 00 Ml¥M: -Wttritn fht,• J1cl "ht TIIW' •1'14 "DMI U,... • P1l1nca. Jolw Rll!r. Tl•." fB atild1111's c...,.i How 1:05 II§ MtM: "11111ndlr 111 t11t Hiii" '-I) TIA (drtml) 'St -Cl•ud•tl• Colbtrt, m , ... Alhtftllt• Robflt Dou&!• .. Ann l lyth. m Ka1dJ "" FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKENDER PHONE 642-4321 FASCIN- ATING - IZCLltllYI lllOA•llllllt PLAYING "Breath- Taking!!" • f'olotalt. O'""'-t4o'P"f'1 lol(llJI l:Y! SHOW STAATS 7 P.llt.. CONTINUOUS SHOW SAT. AND SUN. FROM 2 P.M, Win A Bicycle & Other Prir.ts Sat. Afternoon NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES TONIGHT 8:30 P.M. Plus RATED "R" '?O!hCtnlury (Qlpi:tsm'1 . ~·,.- \. 1\, fit1 I I~ "PATTON" shown 5:15 & 10:30 "MASH" will not be shown tonight -·- 2llh C1Rhr1·f11 Prt1tft t1 .,,,_ I.EX HIRN.SOM • Uve T"laeat.er Williams Drama On Village Stage Vido·r Films Shown I Director Honored at LA County Museum T"·o other films Chamberlin \vou.ld have liked to include in the re,rOBpectlve were "Peg O'My lleart" and "Bardleys the Magnificent," made in The eternal triangle's back~ •• ••• and it's never been funnier! "SC•'1 production , , • <OnleS uti f ,.IMlr ~ -LA TIMIS ..... -"',,,. lonHI -itmblti , .... Ill m111y ri.nthl.N -VAllll!TY OPENS FRIDAY THE GINGER MAN lly J. ,, 00111...-, Murray Schlsg•l's LUY JllJW Pllylr!I FOR AQY.ERJ~ING in !ht WEEKENDER OUT 'N' ABOUT SECTION Phone ~NORM STANLEY 642-432 1 "Camlao Real" A Tennessee Willlams drama on stage in the Fine Arts VJllage The.ate on the UCl campus, presented by School of Fine Aria, at 8:30 p.m. Wed.· Sat., J.tay 26 • 29. ReservaUons -833 • 6&17. "Tbe Firebugs" A German drama on stage ln 0r8Jlge Coast College audi· torlum , 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa, Wed.-Sat., through May 22, at 8:30 p.m. Admission free. Director King Vidor is being describes "Show People'' as honored with the first museum "one of the most successful retrospective ol hl:s films at motion pictures a b o u t the Los Angeles Count y Hollywoodevermade.'' Museum where a program of Chamberlin further stated, twenty complel.e features as "Vidor's most creative period well a& sequences from six was during his tenure at other Vidor motion pictures ~1Gl\t He had more freedom v.·ill be shown through June 12 and more support under the at 8:30 p.m. Friday and Satur· aegis of Irving Thalberg than day in the Leo S. Bing Theater at any other time during hi~ of the Museum. in Eiposition career. That's why 15 of the 20 1923 and 1926. Both prints IOX OP:FICI: '"'·llil 01: ALL AGINCllS were unobtainable and thel"'!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~============ original neg a tive s hadl: deteriorated before the studio instituted its program of ' transferring nitrate to safety l!':jp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; fllm. Chamberlin indicated it \1•ould be or great benefit to film history if anyone knowing I the whereabouts of a print for } ''The lttarriage Ge Round" The marital comedy Is: on stage at the San Clemente Community Th e a t e r , 202 Avenida CabriUo. San Cle- mente, Thurs. • Sat. at 8:30 p.m. through May 22. Reser· vaUons -492-0465. "Antnlc ud Old Lact.'' Comedy on stage in Human- ities Hall on the UCI campus. staged by the Irvine Commun- ity Theater, 8:30 p.m. Sat. • SUn .• J..1ay 29 • June 6; J une 14 • 16 and 18 . %0. Reserva- tions -8l'Hl793. "The Ginger l\1an" Bri tish comedy on stage at South Coast Repertory, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, Thurs.-Sun. at 8:30, through June 19. Reservations -646- 1363. Park. full length features we're According to Phi 1 i p presenting are from MGM ." Chamberlin, the t.fuseum Film Besides "Show People," the Curator, the series begins v.•llh J.1Gl\t films are ''The Champ," the screening of "Show Peo-"Wild Oranges," ''Th e pie," a film made for lt1GM in Citadel," "The Crowd," ''Not 1928 starring Marion Davies So Dumb,'' "Comrade X." · and William Haines with • ' Happiness,'' "North'tl•est "Min Who Came to Oio.oer" Renee Adoree. Ch a r I es Passage .'' "Hallelujah," A comedy of the "Thirties'' Chaplin. John Gilbert, Douglas "BiUy the Kid," ''The Patsy," on stage at the Laguna Moul-Fairbanks, \Villiam S. Hart, ''H. ~t Pulham, Esq.," "La Rod LaRocque, Mae Murray Boheme" and ''The Big ton Playhouse. 606 Laguna and King Vidor. Cham6erlin Parade." Ca11yon Road, Laguna Beach, ___ __:. __________ _ .at 8:30 p.m., Tues .• Sat., May 2.5 ·June 12, Reservations - 491-0743. ei ther of these films ~:ould r~ contact him at the museum. Vidor was nominated on six '. different occasions for an 1 Academy Award, and has been honored throughout the \1·orlrt by Film Festivals. Ten years ago, the British Film Instilule paid trib1Jte to Vidor \l'llh a retrospective a.s well. naw ihipmant of levi cord1 btnl•m•ric•rtf e fft•1ftt chtr9t 'r.Jhian i1lt nd, ntwp111f c•nltr 644·5070 Ulldtr l1 mull bl! wl!~ iN•enl "ltMOH KING 01" THI WITCH!$" (Ill Pluo "T~t \'1mpl" Ltv1r1" (II) All C1111>r Pr1mlllr1 Er.o•otment "tlr. "~"-" (Gl'I plus • 2nd Cftlll•" "&INll A ... lKt" (0") --·-· -·-.. , ... 11 AUC-"*Pw.W..£..,_,,,,, u.-.,,_._w,•~ ..... .,Intl .. ID5 All I• A IOW" Ill ..... M.c ..... c--.n CAlfll" 111 -·-·-.... JllJ NJ""" f'-'••"" o ...... ,. µ...,,;_,1 _1, ........ W; ... _ "'1'M Wllll •lffn" 1•1 '"" "Tltf llHMcktr1" 10•1 "lrtC.!"llll*lt T-H ,, ..... ""' (01'1 .i11a • ~ .Crlllltr "Tltt H-nit ' Ofi . • ....... 101') ' A Raber! Wi1t film "THE BABY MAKER" in Colar -Sl•r1in9 lorbara Htl'llte'i' ''TH( AHDltOM!'D4 STRAIN" No l•11tr•td Seots Dilly ti 7;)0 & 10 M11ln''' $11, & Sun. 11·2:)0 .. s Willner l AcP . .1. .. 1rd1 "aYAN'S DAUGHTER" ltJ: Offl<t Offft IJ N"'" • t l'.M. OtH~ Sl'Mlwllft>CS Mtfl., tllrv Thi!,,.. ·I l'.M. '"··Sil,· J:)t l'.M. MtllHU SU,· Sllll, • 2 l',M. lttH""NI $till • PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT • Now At Both Theatres • .HAL WALUB .. aaucno' RED SKY AT MDANING f rom !ht llf"l lllft1n1Mil1tllt r! I""" HC1 U t ... •Ollt'6CMI RICHARD THOMAS •CATHERINE BURNS DESI ARHZ, JR. l'•"*"tG U l'Mt •l)Jl.11 RICHARD CRENNA, CUIRE BLOOM JOHN COUCOS ·HARRY GUARDINO ST!OTIUR ll!TII ·ltMfl~M PER!Off IN•OO'Wll.Mnl't~- UI LOVE NK-· wtFE" .... ·---·~ ~ l 'JaJS 50Vfll 2NOTOl'HfT Michoel Caine o.od So" Eklond)., HGET CAtUW' (41) ., : > C' i m,HMlllilMr ' iI111WI.tW1m1 1 ..J«flllf)~OUIC&·•DB_.1591 ·BmiCMi~, .HALu••• \ RED SllW AT: .. MDRN•1a·: V"1'1£tSlt PICTUtE 1tC to lltCOt09• Best Actor-George C. Scott BEST PICTURE PATl'ON Visit the future where love Is the uttimate aWtie. nlXll38 ~.-ner 8o01 11'-*5 11« 11l& floDef1 DINaU Ind OOneld ~ lec:~Ted•~ =--=E[Si~ Oonold Sut+.~ ALL SEATS CHiLDREN'S MATiNEES 4 7Sc BOX OFFICE OP~NS 11 ,45 A.M.-SHOW RUNS FROM 12 NOON TILL 3,30 IN MISSION VIEJO FULL LfN!;TM FIATUll EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO ~"~ (llfG(l ..... ~ Al V, J-Al fVf<HC11t 8)0 6990 ~USICAL ,ANTASY IN ,AIRYLAND COLOll "HANSEL AND GRETEL" ' LU:lll.E R\lL ',,......., llCiR\ fQ\[l\ ,:~£.-71 "laurs,,llne ... Ol}lS" ,\,~\141' -a. ...... .,,. •<' •H .. ~ • TUMBL!WEEDS JUDGE PARKER ACROSS 1 GwlMflt S Th l119s Iha! h1vt btt(l Vtdfltd 10 Not hvd 14 llfoi llm pr inc:t 15 All 1roini l" Splnd1t 11 Ft mlnint "'"' lB Forwvd 19 large ft l!ne mammal 20 Cardinal numb t r 22 Ship's 111indow 24 Minute spot 25 Kind of alcohol 27 Publishing house t mp1oyets 29 Proc lalmtd 32 Gold: Sp. ll Pub product )4 Punish in 1 ctJlaln way 3' Tli11s 40 Trt t1 42 Vacil1att 44 kind or light 45 Flavorful 47 WOl'n ou\ 49 Australian bird 50 Ctrtal 9f1SS .,.Y2 DlSll'liltd • 1 •• 5" Frtrd from guilt 5& Stagt dr1m1s: Slang sci Firrarm: Slang "o Mrrtd b2 Otdt.Kl I pol'· HOil of a l!lll t.5 T OllCh 117 Cours es b9 So lar disk 70 Counttnancr 71 Rrmovr l1strn1ngs 7Z Gray wolf 73 Pu!p and paptr sourer 7.t Mrni~I workrrs 75 Attra ctrd DOWN 1 Lowland btlwtt11 two hllfs z Boy's n1~e ) Cerla in sound rr.1.11flt1s 4 Move rrom place to place 5 Y11kon and Al1ska, e.g.: Z 111ords Ii Port of Finland 7 Success ful s!roke I I '.~ " Yt sltrday's Puzzlr Solvrd: ' 5 1:lf71 8 P11vatr 41 Grrrk portico ins tn1t \01 43 Turns 9 Enttrta!nmenl inside out form: Informal 4b Length unit -10 GalJJla.J~ 48 Vrnrlian ll Chrml cal maglstra tr compound 51 Deslret¥: 12 Surface 2 words or a room 53 lewdly 13 Garms Pfoducts humoroos 21 Milrstonr 54 Skill 23 Drss"l item 55 Relating-to 26 GMdrn part of dorm(!Usr tM ear 28 Performs 5ti Draw forth Zct Giddy 57 Loaltr JO Nilled lilffary 61 Treaty ~n name group: Abbr . Jl Mr. Niven fi] FuttKr JS O~nqrr 04 Sufliclrnt: 37 O~ watch· Artha!t lnq a 911M ~ Golrrr's 38 Subdue 1ccrss0f'1 39 Wall membtr 118 Gu1'19a -. ,10 11, 12 " ' '" • • ' " ' ll " .• 21 .. " " , 2 ~ u " " c:, " ,, .. .. • " •• •1 .. \,, -,, " .. b" •• '' ,, " " ,. " " "" 1 i ;~ •• " .. .. ff ,. I •• n "' 1" " • By Chester Gould -Ll'L ABNER ,. I CAN'T, MY BRAKES GAVE OUT/ I CAN'T S1'>P! PERKINS By Tom K. Ryan ... ·. J/i. . ' .......... :·.~~ By Al Smith WELL, FOR G05H 'SAKES, TURN OFF TtiE METER! By Harold Le Don NQMRS..P.l.RKER: MARJE A.trrlP I .l.RE 60I NG 10 SE2VE 'Jl.115 EVENING! MISS PE~CH •I• '. MARCIA? l 'D LIKE TO ~CME OW FOi: A ~IL.E •• l STEVE ROPER SHA)(lt.IG WITH FR IGHT, CAPT. BILLY llACES TO REACH HIS OFFICE AHEAD OF THE POI.ICE CHIEF.I PEANUTS I • • ' " • , " • 'WE'LL. G IT Dii\TES· 'NIF ALL TM E.SE. UPPIN GALS·- SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS :I. !WE. CAL.I.ED 1\llS MEfTIOO TO l!lRll™ UQ01\-IAT I PM fW l)P Wi1H 1HE Dt511f51'fCf SllO\I!) 10 Me 1ij 1111> PASf.f. By John Miles IF YOUJre" uUSl' GOING TO WALK AllOU"'D , LOOKING l'\:l\IFPU5, OKAY. \ • ... By Mel -SUT IF YOU Pl.AN TO MEDDLE, FO~GET fl"- /) . I J , f·JJ I "'"""· Bv Saunden and Overaard NA-fHl··IF I WAS A ~NVllCH·IHJI~ .+«N. /I> THINK MY PllAYIRS" HA{) BEEN ANSW£REO/ y-..-:;c,?' ... ... fO' REASONS AH CAIN'T FIGG ER OOT!r fHf SflAHGf WOILD MR.MUM .... - DAIL y PILOT SJ By Al Copp By Charles a.IOlll ~I 1 I By Gus Arriola !l A SCIMITAR/ •• Ii .\' By Ferd Johnson By Roger lol1n LU DE~NIS THE MENACE . " 'IT OON'r lOOK UHl5illW<.481E 10 Ml I' • ,_ • ' -- -• • ,. . " ' 3!'. DAILY PIL-ol f'Plday, Ma)' 21, 1971 ' . . ' ,._. \ \ .. , . ' .. ' ' ' ,. . . . ..... ...... ' We Are· Over Stocked By Some $200,000 And 'The':. . I Inventory Must a. Balanced. P r I c • Slashing Is Ttit , , 4 Order Of The Dey At ATLAS CHRY$LER/P.LYMOIJT)tl ' Check Ther Outstanding Values 0 ff. r. d And Com, rn I' Tod1y. Spec:i1I Savings On All New And Used. Cars.: L I '64 PLYMOUTH FURY 4 OOOR VI, eutof'llelic, 11dio, h11!1 r, pow1r 1111•· j t~x~ ~oe ~ ond itioni l'llJ . $595 '68 Y.W. ··~ 1p11d lran1mi11ion, r•dio, h11+1r. (YQA- 179 ) SEl. NO. 4141 -Jll-091662 '64 OLDS 98 4 dr, H.T. VI. eu+o· m•lic, power deeri~g -br•k11 -v111t win. liow1, AM.FM, crui11 control. M u1f 111. (PAE941) $795 '69 OPEL KADml Fully l1clo•y 1quip- p1d. !ZLK703 ) '67 PLYMOUTH YIP VI, 1ulo;,.11ic, power 1+11rin9 · br1k11 ·win- dow1 · 1t1h, •ir con- dilio11in9 vi11yl roof, IVIJ401 t • ~295 '68,TOYDTA C()ION.t.\ Aulo"'1tic, • t cl i o , h11t1r. whit• will +;,..,, 71 X.OM9 7,9). . • ! • NEW 1.971 DUS·TER A"tla• Servlcie ~et;, . part•e•t , Wei~, ee•et11 ••4 Heaen~ all Chr)·s le r Cot-• peratlea Velllt!le•· Re.ii•lriag :;.,.rvlee aad Warraaty Work, R egardle••' Ot Wllere t ar-Wa•' Parellased . ·we· Hea•r Ma•ter C0llarl(e, Baak .. A•erleard. Carte• Blali:elle. A••rl .. ~•• Ex~re•• .(ad Dlaer• Clall •••• USED CAR '67 OLDSMOBILE '68 CHRYSLER ! -· JOO J1DOOR H.T. ;68 CHRYSLER NEY(POIT' CUTLASS SUPIEMf '2. dr. iporl coupt, Vt, 1utom1tic, r1dio, h1<1I· 1•, pow11 ll11rin9 & br1k11, wh i•t wtll1, Vt. 1iJ0"'1tic, r1dio, VI, 1ulo1111t\c, radio, ii:i1'495';. h1 1ler, powt r 1l11•i119 lle1+11, powtr 1l11r- & ; br .. ~11. 1i1, , v••YI in9, .i ir condilionin9, to ~099s . ~~'895" " " . SER. NO. VL~tl l f121920 '69 PLYMOUTH FUJIY Ill H.T. COUPI VI , ._utcm<1lic, r1dic, h1<1it r, pcw1r 1l1•r· in9, vinyl lop, ·t ir ccn· ditioni ~. !Xll:V694l ' ' · l '67 CHEVROLET l!L All SIDAN Vt , •ulo,.,1lic, r1d io, h11!1r,·p ow I r 1+11r· int & brl.11, t it COft• dltionin9. !UKW452 ) $1095 '69 FORD FAllLANI SOD l dr. H.T., VI, 1ulo- m1lic, -radio, h11l1•, power .+e1rin9, whit1 wall•. vinyl lop, 1ir co11dit io11in1J. !XYG- '"s2195 '68 PLYMOUTH IAllACUDA 0 cyl. 1uton•,.tic. pow• •• 1l11ri111J. •ir co~d .. vinyl fop, r1djo, ht•i· er, wh it1w1ll tire1. "$1'295 '69 Chevrolet CAMAIO SUPEI Sl"T. vi, 1uloF111fic. r•dio, h11!11, power 1+11ro inq, b1"k1t 111h, eo'il· 1011, vinyl fcp. IXSk· "$21 95 ' l ........ ' ' , , '· ' ' l • ' . ' ·~); "~ \,. • • > 1971 P1NTO ~at ,1{l pp1d-buf fully lo1decf wl!h 2000 CC ENGINE. AUTO., r1dio, Cf;,, lir1k11 •• ti"t<1d 91111, .•iftYI roof, cl11u111 dtlcor 9roup, whit1 1ide will tir•~· 0.1110. No. I IR IOXI067611, FACTORY LIST PRICE $2612 •: SPECIAL $2 .. 165 ~~11 'SALE PRICE' > > > > PRKf • 1971 THUNDERBIRD • • l971 MUSTANG 2 DOOR HARDTOP • Nol01trippeil lwt tu"r. tooded wi1h 35 I V-1 ENG. CRUlSt:.0-MATIC TtANS,.pow- 1r 11e1ri119/bfoke1, .f.M/fM 1t1r10, de<:or group, con1of<t. 11n1ed glo11, chrome wit-11, with .peciol 1ore1. Demo No. (IF01H02"°97J. P'ACTOIT LIST PllCf $4401.25 . ... SPECIAL SALE .PRICE 1971 GALAXIE 5004DR.HT Nol stripped but futfy looded with fAC· ORY AIR, .COO cu, in, V·8, cruise·o· c. P/s1eeririg/broke1, AM/FM Sier- . yl roof, tinted glo•t, whi1ewolb, wheel covers. Demo No. ' 565117565). fACTOIY LIST PllCI ·":SPECIAL $3768~~1 ... SALE PRICE PRICf " ' . ,,. ' . . • ' t • ' -. Friday, May 21.i iq71 DAILY PILOT 311 1971 . MAVERICK Not s1ripped but fully looded with FACTOJlY AIR, crui.e.-o-mo1ic ••o ns, power ateering, radio, accent group, tinted gloss, whitewalls, Demo No. (1K97l1074 l l). fA(TORJ Lrsr ,.ICE $32.fl.1'1. SPECIAL SALE ·PRICE 1971 LTD BROUGHAM 2 DOOR HUDTO, '$2 65 32 FUU PRKf Not stripped bu! fully loasJed with -1~9 CU. IN. V-8, FACTORY AIR, crui1e.:o-maric power.-s••rirg/,brol<.e~dows, 11.ereo lop• with rodlo; tinled' Qla11; dla s.te,ringt,Whee~ ~itewolls wittl db:. cove". ; SS!lsiil.'(' ':·: FA~R4f LW\;:(8$.5!:1·1•.rJu ;' . ',. ·. r~ ;f,..,. ·~ '1'• "· .,;. ';i~I . PRK~. ' 1971 TRUCK NEW &CAMPER . llfAND NEW 1971 ECONOLINE . :_-........---. ...- '6' .6. V.W. BUG . -,. '$688. IHle, M~ffr (IKf.IJt) '68 F-250 3/4 TON PICKUP & ELDORADO CAMPER: complete camper package· equipt. with ;tov&, 1mk, icebox, ~c. No , 105~67 Ser. No. F2.5ARK20l69. JIM.b Hit ..... 11 .. ,,..,, .W $Ill.Ji I• .... kf91 -· pyMt. Mlcl. -..,._ '11 lkn1t ..,. •II fl.UC• ch"" " .,,,.. .. ctlllil fw J6 -·""""'" ,...,, prk1 I'"'"'·" IKl.1ll P..c1 clle..,.s,,.JI,, '71 lk .... ., If,.. prehl' .. ,,_, c11h. hlf cei.lt pric1 i1 $1741.41 h1d.Mlutea.71 lk•111. AM19AlPntdTAll llTl 12% IMMIDIA Tl DELIYHf · ·~:: ELDORADO CAMPER VAN ' $2688~~. OIDH YOURS TODAY , :.~ 69J~;.o!~~~.e '" $ J Z88 I .. ' ' -, I . MUSTANG 2+2 $ Y·I, rffie, Met.r. (MIX924) .8 88 • . :·: ·.· .. . '··~ .... .. . . .. :: .. : . :--. ; ... r •• o. ' • CALL ,OR OUlt PICTURE lltOCHURE Of CURltlNT LISTINGS °'FICI O,IN SAT. A SUN. GREAT VIEW LOCATION Transferrinf executive say 'jsell" thJs ele- pnt contemporary home with walls of glass. 4 BR .. formal dining, ram. rm., custom pool. .Beautifully<Jandacaped ·& a forever view. Im· . 'mediate poaswlon. $74,900. Belle Parlch. ' NEID MORE ROOM 7 Il you have been feeline cramped, heN•s, your chance to •tretch•out. 4 BR., 2i/i' ba\l!•, formal dining room, dell, brk!sl. nook. B.ig yard. '41,900. M. C. Buie. ' WATERFRONT-0,EN HOUSE OPEN SUN. 1 TO 6: 2301 BA YS!DE Dll., Corona de! A1ar. 5 Bedrooms, 3 bp.ths, sandy beach; pier, sLip: parking for 8 cars. Only 5 Min. to the open sea. •178,500. George Grupe. . . . 923 GOLDENR,9 .D--, HARIOR VIEW HILLS O,IN SUN. I • S Beautiful water view -large lot w/many trees. Charming, airy home w/3 bedrooms, 2 baths; beamed ceilings, new shag carpel· Ing. Ideal set-up for adding rooms and/or pool. $49,500. Eileen Hudson . • 4507 ROXIURY..CAMEO SHORES OPEN SUN. 1 • 5, Sophisticated "Country" decor -tile floors custom shutters, European wall .. pers. Fain: 11~ rm. & living rm . both wfbrici•fireplacts. :nmlng rm., 4 bedrooms Ir: 3 baths. Spaciotis garden. S85·,ooo. Carol Tatum. . UDO ISLl-0,EN SUN. 12. 5 'jl04 VIA ZURICH CIRCLE. Exciting 7 bed· room Mediterranean style pool home on 3 lots. 51h Baths. Formal dining;Jourmet kit· chon. ~.~00 Sq. Ft. 11<'\ng. A re buy. $180,· 000. Mary Lou Marlon. CLEAN-CLEAN-CLEAN You must l!iee th is 2 yr. old beauty! It has 3 ltrge bedroo ms, formal dining, family room with wet bar & soaring wood beamed ceil- in(s. Everything's done! Mint condition & reduced to $42,SOO. BUI Comstock. VALUE-CHARM-LOCATION G~rg., custom 4 BR. & den contemporary In ;prime Baycrest Joe. Custom bit., all new shag -w/w cpu., 2 frple&., 40 fool heated pool - a great family home. Professionally landscap- ed. $79,950. EZ Terms. Art Gordon. " NEED MORE' ROOM ? Here's your chance to move up aild stretch out at reasoMble prices: ' 5 BR. 2 Ba ., dining room, family room, 2 fireplaces . . . . . . . . . . . . . $58,000 4 BR., 2'1.1 Ba., dining rOom, · den, patio .................... '41,900 M. ·c. Buie. S'~CIOUS UDO Imagine 5 generous bedrooms with privacy for quiet living. See to believe: oversized lot • Iara• ahaded patio & priced -$106,000. ,Harry Frederick. : CORONA DEL MAR INCOME Just what you asked for! Live in one unit & enjoy income from the <1ther. \Valk to shops, :church & be1Ch. Good terms -asking $45,· 000. '• LUSK HARIOR Yll!W HILLS 3 Bdrms., 2 ba. Beautifully decorated. View home; professionally lndscpd. Fee land. Only I year old! S66,500. 3 Bdl"ftlS., 21h: ba. view home. Beamed ceil's., formal dining plus family room. Profess. lndscpd. Fee land. $69.950. Harriett Davies. EXCLUSIVE DOYER SHORES Private beaches plus la rge lf & F pool, make this 4 BR., 3 Ba. home most invi tin.1t:. Great View, la rge library den, gorgeous ' living room. $86,800. Al Fink. l IR. FAM. RM. TOWNHOUSE Univer11lty Park -owner's motivated . Great 1reenbelt location; pool, tennis, golf. Xlnt. t1mlly home; low maintenance. Near U.C.t. Move in for low price o{ $32,950. "Chuck '' Lewis. HARIOR VIEW HILLS A tittle "Jewel", nestled on a hilltop with a tiit of an ocean view. 3 BR's., family room . Fully carpeted & I a n d s ca p ed. $59,950. Cathryn Tennille. A HOME WITH DRAMATIC FLAIR If you entertain much , this h ome with a 1pectacular view & pool is £or you. 4 Bdrms., 4 baths plus room for expansion. R~cently redecorated & newly carpeted. $169,500. !Uthryn Iaulslon. WALK TO THE BEACH This large family home is all custom. 4 BR., S Ba .• fam. rm. plus den with wet bar. The red tile roof & slumpstone wall say-Mexico. $59,500. LaVera Burns. VIEW THE ILUE 'ACIAC From this 3 Bdrm. & den home in Cameo Shores. corner lot insures privacy. 1t also has accea to 3 private beaches. One or our besL Call lo 1ee. $67,500. Bud Austin. IAYSHORES Prt••te Bay are a w/2 swimming beache s. children's play yard & adjacont lo boot docks. Spacious home w/overalzed Jlv. rm .. din. rm., 2 Ire. bdrm1. $59,SOO. Mary Harvey. 133>0700 6#2430 Coldwell, Banker LUXURY/ »ERSATIUTY HURRY ON THIS! 5 BEDROOMS ~ ' VACANT H.1 rbor View Homes Beautiful re1ldenct> wfth v.·et bar, lovely carpelln1, self· cll!aning ovens. Qu ick pot• session. Owner anxiou1! NO\V ONL \' $58,500 INCLUDING THE LAND CORBIN- MARTIN REAL:rOllS • 644-7'62 Bost for the Money V!TERANS TOOJ ! UM your eligibility. ffiA for all others. Al80 assume low in. tereat loan. Channing 3 BR home, quiet cW.de-sac, 2 ,naulve fittpl's •nd all the mod. oonvenlence1. A must to see at SJ0.500. Ca 11 545-8424 (open eves.) THE NICEST PEOPLE Uve In Newport Hdghll. Neat 2 btdroom & cfnver- • tlble den · or 3 'bedroom home. Walk.Ing dis~ to • all tcbools. ~ for boat or. )1ra.1Jer. ~ $1'1.!l(m. Call '!"7171. • • O THl: f<l .l\L "-J.!>T I\ Tr :r~s CORO~A · DIL MA; ttt,i• WITH A VIEW ·. Secluded 2 bed~m p o'd:I home-in lhet,POputar CDrona l llghlands. New · upiradl'd 11hlg lhroURhoUI. VnbclitV· able $44.750. - Walker & Lee 2043 W@McUff Drive 646-7711 Open 'til 9 PM DOVER SHORE S VH >w>me. 11.U Sanliago Dr. Be11 .b~. spac. S BR. 4 bB. Ada~~e floor plan lor couple or l&:e. family. Newly decoralt'd. By app't. $91,!0l Bill Grundy, Realtor • • *'***** * TAYLOR CO. * BAYCREST -$79,SOO New offering! Beautiful famUy home on quiet street in prestige area. 5 Bedrooms & fam. rm. w/4 baths, 40 ft pool with "no mainte- nance" patio. Immediate possession. 1636 ANITA LANE OPEN Sun. 1~:30 THE BLUFFS -TAKE YOUR CHOICE TWO LOVELY CONDOMINIUMS 3 Bedrooms & family rm "E" plan with many extras and on green belt. .......... '51,500. 3 Bedroom & DR popular "Linda" model w/ beam ceilings. $43,500 -Call us for appt. CORONA DEL MAR -$41 ,SOO Lovely "Broad.moor" home at t-Op of Harbor Vit1w hills. Spacious 4 & FR w/formal DR. 2612 LIGHTHOUSE OPEN Sat-Sun. 1-5 :30 LINDA ISLE -$250,000 A. truly beautiful 5 BR & family rm home -with formal DR. Abundant marble, rich wool cl.rpetlng. &:: expensive drapes. Air·COfldition· ing, pier/slip & 3-car garage. LINDA ISLE -$145,000 New lisli ng! Call to see this gracious fine home with 4 bdrms, study. family rm and formal DR. Room for pool. Pier & slip. DOVER SHORES BEAUTY See this impressive NEW 2-story modern to- day! 4 Bdrm, study, garden nn & fonnal DR. 410 MORNING STAR OPEN Sun. 1-5 :30 TRI-LEVEL WITH GALLERIA 4 BR on comer site. Prestige area in Hunt· ington Beach. Owner anxious ........ '45,500 20251 CRAIMER OPEN Sat. 1~:30 CORONA DEL MAR -$17,500 A trufy fine custom built home in popuJar area of Little Corona Beach. Ocean vu, spac- ious 3 bdrm & DR. Large master suite. 216 POPPY OPEN SUn. l-S :30 BAY ISLAND -$llO,OOO Charming 5 BR home w/pier & slip. Pictur .. esque island w/private park & tennis court. MIDITERRANEAN SPLENDOR Dover Shores waterfrt home, All new front, encl. patio & entry way. Dock your boat at your doorstep. Take a dip ih the pool. Enjoy supreme comfort in this 5 BRs + maid's room, formal DR, bit-in wet bar ..... $175,000 CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX -$54,500 Delightful 4 BR front unit w/fireplac e. Rear 2 bedroom & 2 baths. Easy maintenance. 515-5151'. POINSETI'IA OPEN Sat. 1·5 :30 CHOICE LOTS -PRIME LOCATIONS 90 ' Fron t, Level , Fee $ 27.500 80' View iite, Level, Lease $ 29,500 94' View site on Galai:y, Lease $ 38,500 57' Waterfront, pier/slip, lease $ 49,500 BEAUTIFUL .LINDA .ISLE 56' Waterfront, Lease 45' Waterfront, Lease 45' Waterfront, Lease, Plans incl. 108' Waterfront, Lease • CORONA DEL MAR · VU of China Cove, Bay & Ocean BROKERS & SALESMEN $ 69,500 s 73,000 $ 75,000 $125,000 $ 65,000 \Ve have an opening in our Residential Divl· sion for an experie1,1ced man <1r woman pos· sessing enthusiasm and integrity. If you are interested in a beautiful office in the finest location, working with congenial associates, we are interested in meeting you. ''Our 26th Ye.1r" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Reolton 2111 S.1n Joaquin Hiiis Ro.1d NEWPORT CENTER 644-4110 * * * * * * .... ~ IYAN WELLS · -OFFERS :.... General MACNAB -IRVINE , . .. " • FINER HOMES Your opp:n1unity tO lilVe a . "'"· view home -in HAl\IOR lSLAND SOUTH BAY,RONT Dover S)Klru. C\Mtom built THE; CHOICE, location in Newport Harbor. to )'Oiir el.rticula.r needs. Enjoy this beautiful home thla summer. 2 We have tt1e Iarwest seJt.e.. yra. new. S!Jp for 65' yacht. Huae LR, DR tlon or Kin&'. size. choice area & kitchen, rhaster suite w /FR. all over- hOmelitea with outs1Andin1 Jookine bay. 4 BR's 5 baths, plus maid's suite views ln Newport Buch, or billiard: room <1ver garage. Custom built ~ ~ can no,w be •C· by present owner For app't call Tom Turn-qwrtd 1n Fte &1 well u t 642-82!5 · • c. ... hold. At ... ·-·1 ,~SrlOE BAYFRONT'W/PllR • SLIP time we have l new Mmtt . w.; under con1truction which Spectacular. view. OUerld by <1rigil}.al owner wllI be ,.111y tor ..,.,.,.,.,,. -this 5 BR, 8 bath borne, LuxUr!ouo wood in June in case yuu 1'ilh a.> panelling throughout. Billiard room, elevator, movl! IOOl\; Come 10-lD3l storage galor~ -all on UJe tip of an island. Aiarinera Dr. for a prevtew For app'.t. to llte call Amy Gaston 542-8235. or our exciting new .c & 5 RARE OPPORTUNITY bedroom ~mes coroplete Best Vl.EW location in prestigious DOVER with aparkhng pools. SHORES. Luxurious 4 BR. 3Y~ath elaborat~ Ivan Wells & Sons ly appointed home. Lg. FR, formal .DR. An· • Lhony pool w/Jacuzz1. $207,850 fee sunple or CUSTOM BUILDERS ~75, 400 ii you prefer leasehold. Call Bert llllCE 1922 tiron for app't. 675-3210. !033 r.iuin.n Drl" ~1!5511 I' WPOJIT ISU.ND Pier & fioat~for 30' power boat. Decorator's "' horde (}n Corner lot. Perfect for couple or bachefor'fi fun-house. 2 BR, 2 bath. Most un- usual Ii.lichen. Asking $96,000 -shown by MR. & MRS. app't. only. Please call Mrs. Fay, 644-8235. Brina the kids? Move in oond. CHARMING & SPACIOUS 3 Bte: bedrooms 2~ baths, 2 BR, Den home cu11tom buil.t for well-known clotets plott. Big livinK decorator. 9' celling -mansured roof -ex· din• family rooms,~ trplcs. tensive use of brick. Offered at a price for Open • 111.ppy Home. Only fast sale -$82,500. C211 (or app't. 141.!00. TURTLE ROCK HILLS I Aerospace executive mu st sell. Beautiful 3 HOPE i;ERRIE BR, FR plus convertible den, formal DR & REAL TY gorgeou~ LR. Tremendow VIEW, located on &-45-4400 6'5-33'ZO quiet cul-de-sac. Offers invited. '79,000. Call ~; 675-3210. C¥.> Dover Dr .. NB 1-~=-=--=--I HOMES FROM $4~,950 TO $47,950 $26,400 . THERE'S A KIND OF HUSH C Btlr. +'Femily'tttom Jn this peaceful immaculate 4 BR home at the $500 DOWN end of a tree-lined country road. Pool, jacuzzi Prime location . Priced below and easy care yard make you foreet your reptacerMnt eo&t by tran• cares. A home for all the family. $47,950. ·f.~md own:er. ~* family Open Sunday 1-5. 369 Vista .Bays, Upper Bay, kitchen, WJ.th bUt-111 range, Newport Beach. own. diahwuher: flttplace, DUPLEX GOLD MINE entry hall, dlninc room. Best value in area Ocean view -to~ ln- Bkr., open 'tll 9 pm. 540-1731 M ot I t k d " 000 TARBELL 2955 H rbo come. ay ·0 as over wee en ..... , . 1..:.:;:;.;;.;:~;:.;:;,;,::i•~:::..r Call Lois Miller 675-3210. SAY "HELLO" .TO MEREDITH GARDENS DECORATOR'S HOME GOOD BUY' A beauUful 3 BR home. Lg. FR w/FP open· A&SUme sub;tct to W ~ a&-ing to lg. covered patio. Close to schools, nual. percentage r\te and stiofping & freeways. Formal DR. Please only $175 per month OR ..,cal 675-3210. $43 950. "'" FHA or VA .. T.,,... INVESTOR'$ ,Git(llBERll I Wall• of wa.ln~ panelltn1, C~l-lot. 2 '&.ks. to new •1~anary Development" cuatom drapes le carpetl, l'll:ilfiO · " · t 3000 N nJWP'LACE and ~hen w,...... mo. me. now. ur1ve pas ew .. o! gooctie• oNLY tJ4,9CX1!-.port Blvd. a 11 BUY". Call Lois Miller 675-3210. Walker & lee YACHTSMAN'S covE 'i682 Edinger 1n41 842-4465 or 540-SljO !ASTILUlllF POOL HOME On a lluce irre,Ufar cul-d~ u.c lot in Eutbluff. An out- 11tanding 5 Bedroom home with a comp~ Dolatl'd and safety ftnctd pool , Only $52,000. Phone 6'13-8550. ' We are privileged to offer Southern Cal.if- <1rnia'1 most exciting new Bay!ront Develop- ment. Close to the Harbor Entrance, Yachts.. man's Cove offers the best location for sailors .in Newport Beach. . Lots SO'xlOO' minimum w /slip privileges to a 45' pierhead line. From '121,000. Construction staritng on 4 custom homes from $226,350. Low down payments & excellent long term financing provide for tax shelter for the <1w°'" ers of these exciting homes. OPEN §ATURDAY & SUNDAY Bayside Dr. between Marine Ave. & Corona del Mar. MACNAI 0 IRYINl . 642-8235 67S.:3210 DAILY PILOT ..., " FALLlfiOOK Ownen w\11 trade tor oom· parable Newport propeJ'U'. Authentic Adobe Spect,teular view • 2 Md- l'OOll'M. 2 baths, Jarge living reorn with Spanilh fireplace, tine ldtdw:n. ttorage room att double car port, attrac- tive plantina • aevtr&l iuod •voelda trtt1, $69.500. A Bull! In Park ~rlooking alld abov~ a tow!))' Fainva)' .. mainlfi· ctnt 2 bedroom. 2 bath (muter 1ul1e1, plus gUUt apartment and bath.. Custom bOme with many txtru. un- UIUal dolet .pace, larp view living roooi. with fire. plaC'f', approximately 2300 sq, ft. liveable. Lurini car· den. PriCPd to .ell ~.500. BERG. MecKAY REAL'JUR.S (715) 758--0152 Hlghway 16, Bonsall, Calif, •NO DOWN• Govn'mt appr. at 125,500. 4 lrg BR 2 Ba home, comp! ttdec, crpts, drapes, lathe/ plast. oonst. Nr 1Chls. • 5 BEDROOMS • Vacant & ready for new own· er. Im.mac cond., crpts, drpa, bltlns. Walk to 1chls/ 1hoppinr. Only $27,500. Xlnt . terms. I •OWNER ANXIOUS • Price reductd $1500. for fut &ale an thi1 beaut Republic home. 4 huge BR, 3 Ba, fonnl dr, Ira tarn nn. Ma~ cw:tm features. Vacant. Nr. So. Cit. Plaza. Only $40,500. NELSON REAL ESTATE 546-5.386 (Open ewa.) TREES -TREES TREES II Lru"ge CORNER LOT sur- rounded on two 1ld4!1 by beautifUI Myoporum Trees. Spacious Three Bdrm. Twa Bath borne with ~ yards and three patio.!. Completely carpeted • n d draped. Located in beautiful Harbor Estatel, cloae to k'hoola and ahoppinc. ONLY $29.500-NO DOWN TO V"E'f· ERANS. Evenings Call M5-4483 COUNTRY POOL HOME Th.is gnoat 4 bedrm ranch style home is surrounded by scenic rolling hills. The inviting pool in the com- pletely concr.te decked back yard will provide many hap.. py hours of tun for the kids. HURRY, bl!caUBe It's a bar. gain at only 131,500, co: Ts WALLACE II EAL TORS --l5'4441 ..... 4141- (0pe:n Evenings) 833 0twtt Dr., N.B~ 642-4620 1 ,0~_-0-r1~1--------------.... General 4 BO.+ FAMILY RM. Spa.clout bomt . Larae rooms throughout. Huie fa mily rm., natural brick fireplace, -4 twin Wed bed- room•, ""' quality built. 901 Dovor·Drl.. IOIO lleyslM Ori.. HARBOR VIEW HILLS Im, '""" hall. "ParadlJe" Nowpert BHCh _ LUSK HOME _ Fas! ttsult1 ~ just a phone call away · 642-5678 GORGEOUS DOLL EASTSIDE O'EN HOUSE In lanchcaplng, Brit. ,Open -.------------------Near new 4 BR 2 Ba gn.-+~~~~i. t4°";:: H1tbor 4fiJ ~ioos liv. r;n· w/firep!: fam-Gener•I HOUSE ;;;;i;iii;;;;;;;;i;;;o;i;I;;;;;~ at fun price o! S21,9iiCI. l huge OPEN 7 l>A YS A WEEK Would You lelleve CESS THAN $75.00 A Month JnvP$lor's 1peclal. Take avrr 5 ~ annual ,...o rate FHA loan. NtAt and clean 3 bedroom home. can be yours for Jess than $15 a month. Rare rind nesUOO on hui::e well kept lo1. For the parllcular home buyer or the discerning-fn\'N.· tor. Don't rail to Inves- tigate this unusual OJ)o portunl~y. Won't last 110 hurr)'. ~o.11 645·0301 BACHELOR "BEACH" BARGAIN If sandy bt>aehe1 and 1he roar of the 1Urt turn you on. lhia 11 IL Summer-tun cottage, Spacious llvin.r room, briiht shlf\Y kitchen, large bedrooms. IN-CLVOES living room f\Jrnilure and ~gen.· tor. Own~r llquidatlnR' for rut &ale. Don't JMUI• up lhat br'ISk·mornlnt n.in on the 1snd. Hurry -won't Jut. 1)1"1 645-0JOJ HlRIS I [ OL\O\ '" bedrooms with 2 baths, Im· maculale thru~ut. Carpe11 and &llwtenlng: Hdw. noors wlth matching drapes, Sub- mit down pllymf'n! on 116,100 G.T. Lo1tn at 1135.00 per mo., including la..,es or NO DOWN \() G.I. buyers or fl-IA term1! Call • Walker & Lee 2190 Harbor Blvd. at Adams ~ Open 't11 9 Pf\I J999 nJSTIN AVE. SAT. 1-5 3 bdr. !arTIHy room, dlnln1 room. Rustic 1tyle. New shag carpet11. In move.Jn condilion, Comer lot wllh J!'llff' ror boat or trailf'r. S34 .500. Newly listed. Come a~ &ee. Call 546-llll. \0 THf. Rf.l\L "-!:STA rJ :RS entrll Ge I ily rm, dining area. mlr-* l ·INCOMl!S * ner• rored closet doors, 3 car Bttt Joe. 5 yrs. new! Frple., pr. Some vitw! patio. Ho""' + 2 "'""'' In SUISIDIZED rear. X'lnt rental summer & PAYMENTS winter, 14 Blk. to bay II ocean. $65.DOJ. Bachelor 1pt hi-hind garage Call; 673-3663 ~ Eves. can help pay for ttliz charm- associated AAOKEAS-RE/11 TOR'j 1025 W llalbo.., 1>71.J66J 'OOL 'LUS ! Unique front courtyard sur- rounds big, heat!d &. fllrd Anthony pool. Rear yd & pa- tio often aafe play area far the children. 4 BR. family rm., 2 Ba, .ep. laundry rm, Lochenmyer Re.ii tor 1860 Newpot Blvd .. C.f\t Call &t6-3923/Eve1. 613-7S15 $23,950 3 B·-' 2 B h Country siie Kitch. wuroom • at and country ailed lot Beaut DES,ERATE! Out of town owner mu.1 Rll this 2 story prestiie homf' in pf"flslig, area. -4 BR, 2 8.1, vacant & wa.itlng, Priced to sell 11 $l2,COJ. COLLINS & WATTS ing, well arooml'!d hOme on a larp, manicul"l!d, coml!r lol J'ruit trees and flowen galore. 2 huge bdma w/ walk·in clClst'ts. ~ dln nn, encl. bk. porch, ma~ a spacloug home tor a small family Eas's'de too II: only $21,900 bltlns A: w·ater softener In-J BDRM. + DEN ctu~· 1or only $36,S()()_ No No down lenns, available. dawn Vets or Low c!own Entry hall, 1packlus living FHA. room, natural wood kl!chcn cabinets, tine quality built- .ins, xtra eatln& a.t"l!a, d ish· waaher, Xtra batN;, pi~ Eastside " .BR. 2 •klr)' custom lxlme C M w1lh all xtn.s Incl le pr. Now110rl •I osta esa Owner tnn•f'd to France, COATS ,,...._ '""'· ., .. ,.,,., Jfardwood r Io ors, fittpl, crpt~. drps; cov'd patio, dbl car gar. Lrg back yd. f\l11ny beau! lnlit trtts & shrub•. l 28.;iOQ, Terms FllA or VA, Roy McC.1rdle Reeltor mo Newport Blvd., C.A-t. 541-772' $311,250 JR. ESTATE -POOL 4 bdrm -+ den. home. ttntral floor ptan. ditam kilc.Mn, x1ra . ttdng ma. buUtln ranie'lt O\.'fn II dl&hwaahtr. Natural wood kltcbtn cabi- nell. that are elqant in dt· si,n and plactment. Ovtr- •lltd aar•rt, pool It aun deckq: 6: patio. BKr., open 'HI 9 t>m1 ~1120. TARBELL 2955 Horbor 3 BR. $21,900. 3 BR·$31.0llO 2 BR·S2A.900. R·2 Jot 150' x 175' U>.000. tlome. '" bus l lL\000. mmt ltave lmmed, Priced tor quick We 11 an unM.. llevtble S44,SOO. Cali 545-1424 <open eves) f1irvftw & TARBELL 2955 H.1rbor 646-1111 . WALLACE 1.,....,..., ............... 1 REAL TORS 5 BR -MESA VERDE (inytfme) --S<.54161-44141"""'-Se. thlt aharp contemp, •S'x209' w ith 3 Bed l..,.,..,..,.!!!!li¥1!1l!!i.!l!'!!!"'I (0,..n Evenl"11) home en lf'I. cor. Jot. Rm for 962.ss23 Eve, 962.Ql9 * R-2 LOT* room and plan• for j 4 IEDROOMS c:::z:=z:::z:;;:;:zz=z. boat or trlr. Own.r anxiou•. ,,,.... units. $11,500. + GUEST HOUSE PURCHASE OR su•mu $4i~1~. •PPr. at YOU'LL LOOK Pote Barrett Re•lty OPEN SAT. A SUN. LEASE/Ol'TION PERRON REALTY CO. FORWARD TO 642°S2i!O 456 SHADY' DRIVE SUMMER! 1 BLOCK FROM 1Tnf A Almoat new 3 BR home, Ira 642-Im ANYTU.fE ~ you live 1n lhil ipac-RiiPOISISSIONS IRVINE WTI rm 1' 111nken Uv. rm iolls 2 BR, l" BA Condo. ~ clean bornes, aome So ~•&n, llO ntat, on • Pli· with flrepl, f\tll crptl II drp1. $Z 1,500 with lqe pool, recnatlon Mwb° painted 6 carpeled 2 va~ atrHt j\Wt a~ ... s1•'11 Florida kltch le patio, A&k:· 3 Bedroom l\S bathJ:, built· nn, laundry nn, Carpets, 3,4 " 5 bdhna. Some with to WHtdltt ahOppl.rlr -The ln,w 128.95(1 or~ leue/optlon ina. forced alt heat, good drapes, bit-Ins, fittplace, Po0l1. '11A-VA cotiv, terw:, Ud1 Pttt houte could allo at S250 per mo: C.rl 540-USl area of Costa Mtaa.. Huny. private patk>. encloetd "'...,.... from Ul,000 to $40,000, be • tun-t.atn haven -{open tve1) 54!f.8640. agr. Priced to sell a t 121,900 CoW111 A Watts lnc. Covered paOa -Jots of con-t with ••I um ab I e loan. U4J Adams Aw, 9'2-6.m mite -only -$34,950 -. n;p BTAGll ,.....,. • MOST HOUSE l'OR THE m=. ¥ = M "''" ...................... MONEYINNEWPORTBCH BALBOA ISLAND ,.., ,. h. °""'""' s BR =WATIRFRONT:zel-,=,.;"29~H=•"'°~':.,· ;.C-'c.tc... -·I Ou~tandlnr 3 bdrm, 2 B" llram•<tr11Wm1,2Ba,iom' DOVER SHORES STEPS TO BEACH home and nr. new 2 bdrm., + Nlrmal 41A. $11.IOO, OWn· l-,-,.=r.-==='=-='"' I «)jlOO lot P\er A •Up ror tO ~. A·framt. -.a BR.. + 2 bl.. Apt. Attrl, rum. tr movl1l3. * MEIA V!lltOI * tt. boa.t. 'O\armlnr 3 BR. 2 family nn. Col'Mr lot, $86,Pl(lO JIAN SMITH ltL Tiit. Lovely lmmac. home. Beaut. BA home dtn wet bar Only 132,900 • term* Ruth Seeley Reeltor 400 E. tT1h St.. C.M. 646-.1255 rroundi. eov. patio. 3 en. 11t1!am ~m. Xlnt vitw'. CAYWOOD REALTY !306 Park Allf!. 673.-l7fl6 * OPEN SUN. 1..f ·* & fam . rm. 2 Bnth•. S35.~. Sll1,!'.kl0. Xlnt ttnc avftll. 6Xl6 W: Coasl Hwy., N.B. • • w H 1 TE ELEPHANTS" !l1' SAL.BOA COV~ ... N.B. Gtorge Willl.1m1on Owntt. Trade Bcctptable, 541-1290 ,R £,lfl TOR \ .,,illlli!i!i50ii!!!Ni!!W!!!i!'!!O!!R!!TlllliC!iEi!INT~E!!R!!D!!i!R.i!!, !!N!!!.B!!.!!!!11'!!! I 2299 ""';"· c .... M;,• Vlnco Rtalty 64~0033 2029 Harbor. C.:\1, llOUSE Huntlni;:T \Vatch the OPEN l.fOUSE column. n\'ttn1nnlnc ~rur hou1ef ~ •'1. Boat snp · REALTQR ~S-1936 or~. We1tcllff l Bedroom "C11sh" .. sell Uirm thru 'F'OR.TTN ro. 6~2-5{0) 673-4350 &45-156-t Evrs. The ''Yf'llow p.... of S~4.t«>. Owner &12-2049 Dally Pllot ti11ssltlf'd We'll help )'OU sell! M2.-!i678 C&lJ 642-5671 &. Save! cluslfitd .. , M2c_56?8 Sell the old 1rutt ~ - DAllV PILOT Friday, M;u 21, 1971 Eve ryone Hes Some thing That Som eone Else Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED · ADS You Can Sell JI, Find It, T re de It With a Want Ad { 'The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results · .. Open Houses THIS WEEKEND 1.., thh i..11dy tllrectorr whii .,.. tWs wHl.U • Y•• t• 1io11 .. •hllJ1th1t. All tlle IKofl ... ll1fetl -..iow .,. MKrlMtl I• 9recttft deMll ~ M.-rtJN-t M.-wa.. I• totloy'-s DAILY PILOT WANT ADS. P-.... IMowlllf •PH h•-for Nie or t. ,.., -•rtM I• li.t 1.ch h1f•r-tl•• I• tt.i. col••• .-ca. Frit1..,. HOUSES FOR SALE (2 Bedrooms) 125 Abalone Ave., Balboa Island 673·7060 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 400 Heliotrope, Corona de! Mar 645-0543 $39,950 (Sun 1-6) 312 Orchid, Corona deJ Pt1ar 675·5930 13 Bedrooms) 613 Begonia, Coron a del Mar (Sun 1·5) 675-2576 (Sun 1-5) 1040 Linden Pl ace, Costa ~1esa 642·1122 $24,950 (Open Daily) 493 Magnolia, Costa fl.1esa 548-8537 $26,500 (Sllllday) 600 Poinsettia. Corona de! Pt1ar 673·65!0 (Sun 1·5) 2024 Beryl Ln. (Harbor Hglds) NB 642·5200 (Sun 1-5) 923 Goldenrod. Co rona del fl.tar 833-0700: 644-2430 tSun 1-5) 320 Prospect, Ne"'port Beach 646·7171 (Sun 1·5) 51 I Santa Ana Ave., Newport Beach 646-7171 tSun 1·5) 801 Kings Road, NeY.rpo rt Beach 642·8235 (Sat & Sun) 216 Poppy, Corona del Mar 6444910 S87,500 (Sun 1·5:30) (3 Bedrooms & Family or Den) 130 Shorecliff Dr., Corona del Mar 642-5200 (Daily 2·5) 1845 Pitcairn fli1esa Verde) C~l 539-7753 (Sat & Sun 11-5) *213 Wake Forest Rd. (CoUege Park) CM 545·6835 [Open Daily) 3086 Gihralter. Costa Mesa 545·2075 829,950 (Sal & Sun 10·5) 2499 Anniversary \Off Tustin) NB 646-3255 (Sal & Sun 1-5) 987 2 Silver Strand Dr .. HB 846-0973 $33.500 !Sun 1-4) 604 Allvie\\', N. Laguna Beach 642·5200 1Sat & Sun 1·5) 140 1 Santanella (Irvine Terr.) CdM 675-6060 !Sun 1·5) *1130 Pembroke Ln. (Wescllirr) NB 675-2101 <Su n 1·5) 4102 Brisbane, University Park 644·2430 $32,950 (Su n 1·5) 2252 Avalon (College Pk.) CM 646-8811 (Sun 1:30 -5:30) 308 Bucknell (College Pk.) CM 646-8811 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 1717 Terrapin, Newport Beach 646-7171 (Sun 1·5) 9700 Raven, Huntington Beach 646·7171 (Sun 1-5) tt330 1 Bounty Ci rcle, 1-luntington 1-larb. 646-7171 (Sun 12·5) 2420 Cliff Dr., Neu1port Beach 646-7171 (4 Bedrooms.) !Sun 1·5) *369 Vi sta Baya (Upper Bay) NB 675-3210 $4 7.950 *1895 Swan Circle. Cos ta ~1esa 646·7171 <Sun 1·5) (4 Bedrooms & Family or Den i 10052 Sp irit Circle, l"luntington Beach 968-1616 S35.500 !Sun after 10) **58 Linda Isle, Nev.iporl Beach 642·5200 . !Sal & Sun 2·5) 2905 So. Pacific, Santa Ana 546-4141 (Sun 1-5) *3007 Java Road , Costa Atesa 545-8424 (Sun 1-5) 1701 Oahu Pl. fi\1esa Verde) Cl.1 557·4654 S37.000 ISal & Sun 1·5) 420 K 151h (a t Kings PL) NB 675·6060 (Sun 1·5) 501 E. Safl Juan . San Clen1cnte 492·0726 $46.500 (Daily) 4507 Roxbury (Cameo Shores) Cdl\1 644-2430 : 833-0700 ISun 1·5) 2612 Li~hthou se IBroadmoorJ NB 644-4910 $61.500 !Sal & Sun 1·5:30) 410 Morning Star (Dover Shores) NB 644-4910 SI05.000 !Sun 1-5:30) 2025 1 Cra in1er IA1eredith Gardens) HB 644-4910 S45.500 (Sat 1·5:30) 1984 Kornat (Off golf course) CM 646-7171 (S un 2·61 **505 trlorn ing Slar (Dover Shores) NB 642·8235 1Sal & Sun) 2057 Com modore (Baycrest) NB 642·8235 S74.500 (Sunday) (5 Bedrooms) *1033 J\.tariners Dr. (Dover Shores) NB 646-1550 <Open Daily) **2301 Bayside Dr., Nc,vport Beach 833·0100 : 644-2 430 !Sun 1·8) (5 Bedrooms & Family or Den) 1f708 St. James Rd. (Cliffhaven) NB 642-5200 [S un 1·5) **210 Evening Star (Dover Shores) NB 642·8235 (Sunday) 2615 Bamboo. Eastbluf! 673·8550 ISat & Sun 1·5) 1636 Anita Lane. (Baycrest) NB 644-4910 879.500 (Sun 1·5:30) (7 Bec:irooms) *904 Via Zurich Circle {Lido Isle) NB 644-2430; 833-0700 (Sun 12·5) DUPLEXES FOR SALE (3 hdroom1 & 2 Bed rooms) 322 Iris. Corona del ~1ar 673-8550 !Sa l & Sun 1·5) (4 Bedrooms & '2 Bedrooms) 515·515\h Poinsettia. Corona del J\.1ar 644-4910 $54.500 (Sat 1·5:30) BA YFRONT LOTS FOR SALE **Bayside Dr. bet. Marine Ave. & CM 642-8235 <Sal & Sun) * ,.., • * Wef«fr•t1tr • .,, * '"I oM W•tnfrellf General COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE n J') //) fl. ~ '~~ x ,,,.'! ~!~ /-' ele V.:>arrefl l<:.ea(f'! room. lush lawns. lhntbi. { fll'IWel"!. truit and shade pt•e6en .1 trt>es. Nestled amongst all ~~ is~:~Y ~~~°'1~:~ LOVELY SHORECUFF homl' wltb HARD\\1000 OPEN DAil..Y l TO 5 _:Avoid temptation . FLOORS, larye dining Rm. Do not come to see this charminR. immacu· Bil Kit. and breakfast a1-e11. late home. U,NLESS you are ready to buy. Covered patio, O:>uble gar-Open for the first thne -130 Shorec liff Or., age and a :setting o1 relax-Corona del Mar. anon you'll never forget . Prl"" to""" in.soo -"th EX9UISITE HOME · liberal t<'rms. LA RGE PIER AND Sl.IP -4 or 5 bedroon1s- WOULD YOU hand loomed draperies - in1med iate occu- pancy -BUY or LEASE, see 58 Linda Isle, open Sat & Sun 2 to 5. HARBOR HIGHLANDS IltlltlACULATE -3 Bedroom.!% bath home \vith fireplace & covered patio. Carpeted. landscaped, xlnl. condition. $34.500. 2024 Beryl Ln., N.B. Open Sun 1 to 5. OUT OF THE ORDINARY BELIEVE OUTSTANDING VIEW -708 St James Rd.- A ~ RR & ram rn1 homr ln unusual redwood construction \Vith deck in Mesa Vt'rde for und er the treetops. 5 Bedrooms -3 baths. Open SJlJ.000. Thert" is no otht'r Sun 1 to 5 -Offering price $75,000 . ... ;,h "'°"""'"' or dolfar• COUNTRY ESTATE + + + IX'\\' lll\ag crpts nt'W ""· ".'w """ '"" an,,,_ ON PRIME BA YFRONT ed cutie hidt'-a·Way rm in lhe garage for lun a nd COMPLETE. PR.IVA CY -room for tennis games or meditation. Cail court or sw1mm1ng pool -plus large yacht quick and let us sbo1v .)'OU. or even several smaller yachts! Build to suit AU terms. yo ur needs. Co ntact Marcia Bents. $29,900 BACHELOR PAD Newport UNIQUE fun and livable 2 Bedrooms' plus at · large den in beach area. $28,500. r.;,.;,w TERRIFIC RECREATION LAND 646·8811 (anytime) MESA VERDE A lop golt course location 1 .. ·itJ1 a brea!htalting vie\1'. 5 bedroom~ or 4 bedrooms « den, l bath!, formal din1n11: and breakfast room. It i.~ also 1he n1ost lnexpensi\·r goll eour~e home in l\1esa \lerde by tar at $4S.~. Ca.II ~7171. ~o·THEREAL ~ESTATERS "'. '• ·' '.· BU'ITERFIELD AREA -Spectacular view of Vail Lake -Your O\Vn mountain top. Gentle terrain, highway frontage. Ac rea ge from 20 to 240 acres. $650 to $850 per acre. Contact Bill Bents or Rick Ri ckard. Office Open Saturdays &. Sundays PETE BARRETI REAL TY 1&05 Westcliff Dr., N.8. 642-5200 3 BEDROOMS Beautiful. top quality. semi cu stom home w I big airy rooms, manicured grounds, massive stone fireplace & deep pile shag carpets. Don 't miss the hardwood kitchen cabinets w/a handy service porch arrangement. Ask· ing $43.950 . General - Genera• BAY & BEACH REAL TY, Inc. 22 Years of S.rvlc• In The Harbor Are1 4 SPECIAL OPEN HOUSESll SATURDAY & SUNDAY 1.5 PM 700 ACACIA AVE.· DUPLEX So. of 1-lwy .• Cdh-1. 2 Bdr n1s. 'v/frplc. in ea. un it. Priv ., patios. 2 Car garage. Top cond. Easy u•alk to shop'g. $55,000. LUXURY LIVING 3 Bdrms. 2 baths. Step·down living rm .. family rm., rormal dining rm. Fantastic mstr. suite. $74 ,95-0. Localed 1927 SANTIAGO, Baycrest, N.B. EXCLUSIVE HARBOR VIEW HILLS (You own the land!). Spacious 3 bdrn1s., 3 baths; hu ge "poolsized" family rm. Dream kitchen. "Conversation Pit" in living rm., \VJ brick frplc. Localed 1963 PORT BRISTOL, CdM . Only steps to the pool & clubhouse. $52,900. STONE'S THROW TO BEACH 224 HELIOTROPE, CdM. "Hideaway col· tage by the sea". The one you dreamed about last night. OnJy $62.000 . a location worthy of consideration . Gen.ral Gener•I . ::: · . PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES ; 26 Linde Isle Dr ive , Decorator furnished . 5 Br. 5 bath home : ing Harbor Island. Jacuzzi &i: sauna. Re;,iuy ·: for immed. occupancy. \V /dock $200,000 :; 92 Linda Isle Drive :: Beaul 5 BR .. 4 ba. home w/formal din. rm. :: & family rm. 3 Frplcs. Outside stairway. :: Built-in gun cabinet & bookshelves. $145,000 :: 12 Linda Isle Drive :; Elegant new 5 BR. 41/1 ba. home w/formal :· din. rm .. fam. rm., '''et bar. Impressive en· :: try court u•/16 fl. n1ahog. doors. $179,500. :: : . 5 Linda Isle Dr ive ., .Just completed 4 BR., 51;2 ba. home w/{am. :: rm. & study. Magnificent 39 ft. waterfront :: Jiv. r1n. lV /frpl. & wet bar. $164,406. :· Waterfront Lots I •: .. No. 44: 108 F't. on water . . . . .. $125,000 :; No. 76: 3 Car garage. Reduced to ... $77,000 :: For complete information oft 111 homes & :: lots, ple1u c1ll : ;. " BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 133 Dover Dr., Su ite 3, N.8 . '42-4620 ;. -I II fB 11.l\' ,\ llE\1'11 111:.U:t'\' l.'\I'. 675·3000 Gen•r•I ====~11o_w_N_E_R~T-RA-N~SF_E_R_R_ Must 1ell quick 1his 4 bed· • room beauty wi lh huge tam· ";;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 Uy room. t•N!shly pa inted. Collea-P1rk .. .. .. 3BR. 28A. !'11any e.~tr~ Heatf'd pool. 213 \Va* i-·oresl Rd. Open H<>!!s,; General Gener•I Calif. Ranch S!yle .. vit'h lot'! of tr('("J;. \Ve 'ol.'111 guaranlr.r lhr $a.le or your homt' on a $:12,500. O"•n('r. ::.45-683.i ,• Coron• del Mer .- Separates JETIY BAYFRONT Classic Italian Villa \vith pier & slip for large yacht. 7 Bedrooms, 5 baths. Nothing compar· able West of Ca pri. $225,000. LINDA ISLE LOT Choice bavfront lot \Vith a mile of \Valer in front. $75.000 includes plans. 16 LUXURY UNITS So1ne \Vith vieu's; close lo schools & shops. Excellent rental record. $375,000. HARBOR COMPANY REALTORS "SINCE 1944'' 673-4400 ll'ade-1n. C.f. and 1-'.IJ,A. lrrtn1 included at llw piice Walker & Lee 279(} Harbor Blvd. at Adams 545·9-191 Open 'ti! 9 PM or S3'l.200. CALL -~-PRIME AREA VIEW LOT- One of a kind. Among singlt> ·1a1nlly distirw·ti1•t. homt!I. Unparalh:l('d virw. $49.~ submll oflcrs. 1110 Galaxy. Nt>Y.'POl1 Bc11rh. 2 Del igh1fu lly lurnishl"d houS:. ~ on °"" kit, separated b)' priV8ll" ya rd. South o( fue. highway. Li\•e in one and collect rent !ro1n the other. Just ~ce~ 10 shopping a.nd !hi· beach. ~l.7"-". Phont 673-&:'IOO. 1-oTHEREAL \"\.. ESTATERS ', " ' . LAST CHANCE &r 101 So. or tll(" h"'Y· 1Yi Block.~ from Ck't'n.n Blvd. w/ <'harn1in5; 2 hr hnmf'. A look lo lhf: futurr property. $60.000. 312 Orchid, Open ~&CO.I su:o~~~1.REAL TY -~''='"'~~U -ttM 3629 E. Coasl Hwy., C<L.\l ht CHANCE • VIEW-675-5930 l BR .. h1n1. rn1. &. din. 1m . 1 --~B~E~A~UT=IF=U"L--I 11·ltt1 aunrwi & harbor lighfs vlr"'· Priv. \1•allcd streel LARGE DUPLEX itidt> yanl & virw sidr palio. ONLY ONE IN TOWN. Each Dont ml!~ 11 -only S"''l't,750. unit a 4 Bedroon1 2',~ balb Open hou."'" Sal. &. Sun. 1·5: 1viJh approximaJely 2.000 •q "'"""'"""""''""'""'""'""'~""'~""'""'""'""'""''"" i Zll Arbutus. 1-:11sthlun. N.B. rt. Only 2 years old. Enjoy G-enerol-General H Sh R I ome ow ea tors 1op incomf', excellcn1 loca· ;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;=;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;j "A1·nlChalr l!ouS('hunlirn::'' !ion, and luxury livi,nz. DOYER· SHORES VIEW r,;i; E. c .... ttwy .. CdM 179.500 Wllhonly JO% "°""· 675-7225 CALL 673-g;j.'j() Custom built home \\'ilh spectacular view. Can be purchased as Leasehold or you can $21,900 FULL PRICE nO\V buy the land . for thls bf'f'At 3 bedroom ,oTHEREAL \"-ESTATERS Bright as Spring 4 BR. 3 BA. family rm, bceury. Lot! of carpr-t~ wilh 4 BEDROOMS formal dining & breakfast rm. Decorator nialchuig drapr,., ~fodcrn GOLF ANYONE? Super clean Pacesetter, single i;tory w/large S kl ' t d I $112 bu ilt-in5 are in lhis country KAMAUI papers. par 1ng cour yar poo · " 11yle kilchen; also a dish· 600 POINSETTIA master bedroom, huge patio area & place to ooo Pol · 1 "-Hen>'! a charming, large · washer. Move-in condltion. y11cs1an R mospucl't", car. ramily home !French P.e. add on! New list:ng on this popular floor plan Al this price, YOU CAN 'T ner 3 Bdrm. 2 baths. Ha- gency Style I along i\tesa in !ine Mesa Verde locati on. 0 ff ere d at BA YCREST AJo'FORD TO RENT. Call wa ii 11·ttk 11pecial $41,500, \'t'rde'! 15th fairv.·ay. a BR. $43,950. 4 BR. 3 BA. fan1 rm. 3 cor ga ra~e. $87 .500 Ill! anrl we'll qualify YOU. Open Sun. l-~. Vi!ii our otf: 1an11ry, dining & brcakfa!(r 5 BEDROOMS " 3 BR, 3 B.i\, fa in r1n, formal din rn1. $62,500. Wal~er & Lee ice . ~ign uri for free trips rrns, w/"·ci bar a11d a lo Hawaii. sparkling 40 ft f>C JI. Simply "Hidden 2 Story" in the heart of Mesa Verde ROY J . WARD CO., Realtors ALOHA! i;:r<'ar for casual entertain· that has been enJarged to include 5 bed-1033 Mariners Drive, N.B. 646..lSSO Z790 Harbor Blvd. a1 Adams University Realty ing. Prict juat reduced. Call rooms, 3 baths, family room. formal dining Dover Shores Office 5-15-0WiS Open 'tU 9 P~1 3001 r.:. c~c. H11·y. 673-6310 516·3AAO lOIK'n ('ve11. l & lovely Jiving room. Everything u•as done ...,.., ... ,,...,....,...,...,...,~""'"'l"'""'""'""'""'~ * * * • • • HARBOn View Hills • '. well . Location close to pa~ school. Listed GeM(eJ~- 1 General UNMATCHED Broadmoor. Unlqut', Prizf! · I ~ft!" ~ .. ·~.~I at $49.500. -------:;;;:;; 1---------ldf'nl lor Ooctor1, lnve11tol'll, winnlni.: homt w/~mashihg · ~ -.. , " . • etc. :.? &drm!I, 2 b 3 I h 1. entrance, innt'r courtyard, "-"-~a.£"'(-;..(" ""'"ctr.~ 2 DELUXE 4-PLEXES '"""' wock ;,.,., • m•L Expowd ..... m. c'" t ., ----lJ~ J. VC1-0~,J\..v l.l GOOD LOOKING l-"lXER. frplC', floor to «itlng win-* 644 DARRELL * -Spac. 3 BR & 2 Ba in choiC(" UPPER and WJ1AT A W· dov.·s. Betlut Ind i0 cpd Costa l'\>Jesa. l1nmac. 3 BR. N.B. a1~a. 01~rnt·r 1vii.nt-'l greenbelr adjarent. \\lalking &. ram. rm . Ta!rtelully eke· 1150 Mesi Verde Or. • Cost• Mes• quick ialr.. Priced bl•low BALBOA ISLAND CALE!~! distance io schools . .f BR, orated, carp. & drape11, e Phone S46-5990 mk1. NE\V 8Qf,f., lnan. 7147~ ON OPAL. Nr. So. h3y. Nice Arnold & Freud r am rn1, 21) ba, $74,500. l.rp\(· .. F.A. hr111; 00Au1 . ....,... ..-. ..-.. ..-.. .-. ..-.. .-.. _ _ __ ---.,. Jiul'ry, lhciie 11·on'! last. olde r homr with nr. new, 388 F.. 171h St., C.~t. 644--055.l for RPP1·,....,.~,-I lndf;Cl)i:t:. Here·~ 8 bargain ---~-~~~ $72,SOO. EACH qualily 2 BR. apl, /or 11-'Ay 6\fi.n.~ days /fH6·l"i'JI t'Vf' * OP EN sUN. 1-5 * lo. '29."'1. PILOT CLASSIFIED PERRON REALTY CO. '"" tho1> '"'''"""""t "'" G.I. APPRAISAL 1401 Sentenel11 * 990 POST * ORANGE COAST'S BEST 642.t71J ANYTIME • 0'""' w/corry "'" U'l>St S2'l.OOO I""°" T"'""· J BR. ' ba. L.en:c fHA loan c11n be 1u1-deed. Ready for ru1 . closing f'l!· r·amily rm . Here '!! your 11un1ed; 4 BR. &. 18Xl8 pan. SALESMAN DAILY PILO'r for actkln~ crow, bas l Bn, 2 Baths, chance lo l1vt' ln thlJI' li nt: ell'd family rm w/S11'edhJh •• Call &U-5678 &i Save! ON PEARL. Duplex cm tulJ l'J[1ra. large kil ctJt.n & thr' district st rhP low of $46,:,00, frp lc. Biln!. Carp Ir. drap-j:;;:;;:;;:;;:=:====================== 101. Smallrr apt. will bf" biggel!I backylll'd in 1ov.·n. Rich Irwin Realtor. es: t:t'mented area for boa.! I avail. al s-Jmmer for otw Will a1so !)CU FHA. * 675-6060 * l<I !railer. Offrred tor $26,950 $©\l..~}A-Q,£?/JS" bu}·er.. Lal"g1' one rrnlt'd for \Valker & Lee fnc Realtors 1 -,c~A"'M-c'EO SHOR a--MORGAN REALTY • 11u1111ner. A.-.klng $48,:.00. 892.443.·,. ==~-Bt~aut.iful Ocean Vk>w 673-6642 675-64~ TJ,., Pun/., with th" Bu1'/f.'n C'uc'I-o' SAPPHIRB. N•. No."'" * WATERFRONTS * ;,,. u .... d! •BR.• l•m. rm. I, n I{ llO' 4 BR. home w/lrp\. In mtsr. Approach lo Lido l~e. 1\'/4 ba. & pool. 4639 Gorha,rn HOME WITH POOL 3 Bcdrmll, 2 Bs !h!!, hrdwd floor11, FA hr. crpt~. drpa. Large kitch, hU~t' arp, lam. ily rm. Nor1he11~1 Costa Mt>sa. $29.500. Roy McCerdle Re1ltor 1810 Net>.'J>Ol't Diva .. C.M. 5411-7729 CdM MODERN Blgg;est, newe111. close tn bea.ch :l BR. In "Old Cor. onn. ·· Sund~ck. lam, rm. I.· 1in, lor expan5lon. Ser i1 S.'tl. or Sun. 1·5: 228 C<lldcn- rod, }'u.'11 ~IJOVf' Oct11n Blvd. Hom1 Show Realtors "l+.rnu·hal.r lll'JU!lf'.hunllni:'' lil'i E. C<1:U11 flwy., Cd~f 675-7225 o·-i...... "' ... lour .:rarnblod words b..-r. ~~«f ~c·j~ ~"} I JARKA I I I I 11 i f;t I• ,~ UI R IE LI , 1 ..,:fl~";..' od,:!or~'~'Haw':::;:, M ... e-rr..)n7" _ • • • • . • Second OC1or: ..,Ho got over being. ilck. He's iort of o ri--:l-A':'"':Cccl,...,..,Y-M-..,,-;_ ~i... "'• diudle ::,:,, _ I' I I' I I ... i.v '"t"" ~ .......... -'· -• • • yo11 d.v•lop from 'i.p No. 3 below. • r:t~:.~~~~~.fS r 12 r 1· r I' I' 1· 1 ., ~~~\·t"'' '°'I . I I I I • I I I SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFIED 700 "WEED II A reap'', .dean out tht trea~1rt~ &: truh - turn Into c111b thru a Dally P1lol Cl.au~ ad. ~ ""'....::;;::;:.;::;cccc:.;..:..;;..:.'-.~--~--~---~~-~--·~~-~~----~ ' ' BR pJu11 2 BR. ap1 Jdeal Vaca.nl Cl·H $199.500 Dr. $95.000. By app't. fDr 0year ·round Jlvlni. 120 1'~1 in 1'ht" Co\les, 4 ~:?. Bill Grundy, Realtor l baths $120,000 83.l Dover Dr., NB &12-4620 LI1TLt: !SLAi'llD, 011 Aba· Lido Realty Inc. 613 BEGONIA .k>nt'. Vf'ry nice &. nt"tll 1s 11 l3T1 Via Lido 673·7300 DpEon houllf! 1.;, sun iOUlh or pin 2 BR., 2 Bii.. yrar 'round 8•lboe l1land h'.1.'Y. Perice! l10me0 k !or In· home plus very nice 2 BR. Vt'1>tmen1. R-2. Trul! \lalue apt , J u.~1 reduc~ $7,:.:xi! BY OWNER throughou!. By o wn er. Llllle lslnnd. All elt>e. 2 BR. 6Ta-l'i76. ON GARNET. Nie• duplex, jw11 reduced $10,000 ror im- mcd. sa.lr.. Thi.s will not laat • ca.JI us~ CLIFFHAVEN :00 l\rNGS Rd. 1''tet> 2 Bdnn., den liouse: 0111ner Aald "11ell, sell, JOell", .. drlv(' hy, Cftll to ttt! Ali otttrs will bt con,11idr.red. Solisbury R._..,11, 2 bath.•. 2 ~tory 'ol.'i!h fanilly rm & deck overlooklna gu r· HARBOR View llill11-Lu.sk d'" • I·~ "•t' 1 home. " Br. 2~ ha, 3 car '" ,.e ,.,., 10 Uni: er-,/1Cath. Beam It. Cathedral ga r.; ocean v}tw. $69,500. "'celhna•. lnipor1ed gl~& 1''in. Pvl pty, 9A;\f.5f't\1, l15-7U9, ,..... j Pt\1·9 P1\f , &l.J.I~ dowa , ~1exlcan tllf' & ler. razo floorit & 11'00l carpt'f lng. 130 SHORECLl~·r DR. Stalnle11i1 mnrhlf' & "'alnu! • Ol'EN DAILY 1 TO 5 • in baths & kitchen. Al l ap. Vieu.'-3 Rr· l S.. $115.000. plia~ Jncludln< laundry Pelf' Bamll A. e a 11 y s.i2-m. . tacllllie8. ~111.ny other cu1. tom feature5! ?11ust Sep to BROAD;\IOQR VlE\V home. ApprecltHtf Cl:ll tor app't 4 an, 71i 00. rommunlty 6'73·7060. pool. Z70T l11l11nd View Or. $if.900, 614·26'21 &;ib;'• Penlnsule lll ,\I.ARIN~ /\VE. 673°6900 ot:l.VXE duptrx, y t' 11 r I y BALBOA l.$LAND lea11f', Al! Rppllal\C(',. \\'1';c.ly.s OPF:N-lloo!ie 1~·"e,"M""s",-~..,400= 1: llcli()lruJI('. Coiy 2 br. trr !• R·2 lo!. ,\{l!Sf sell. $39,95(1. :• Ownr.r 6-1~ • Tht fastest draw In the West 11.ft 6 It 11:knd,, !3&-i949. • -..... -. ~ " -. Frld,f, M'Y 21, 1971 ~I _;: ... I~ r -.. -~I -·-I• r -·-I~ I -·-D•l _I -"=--~~I~ f °l~l;;;T;;;o;;;ro;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; H>rntlnt..n looch ~IMtlt;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_;;~~j~-iiiiiiiiiliiiii .. iiiiiiMoiiiiiir.iiiii::.,; Nowjiort loNh J IDupl-•._-/IJll-. •Its--• ;;;;Oppwlulllly;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii:IOO; Houon Unfvm. - I Mor I 2 BR, ·~ .... ,,.,... drpo, '.1tefric, tkt\"!, OctfJI view. 'fm, 6f8-2290, 6'7Hll45 llDUCED $J,000 Now -m.~ .• OPIE N 11-S S.turday & Sund1y • IM.I '1TCAlllN Ntar \\'. l\1eia Vttde li Ad· ~ !n a $43,000 ar~11! Walker & Lee ' ' . """"" ..... 1153 COOL 'Ol'FI La b F ere1taly Owner 5 br, 3 ba. iiool.. ~ el• tr'b. $45.500. 13'7..e9U EHt Bluff WE CAN PROMISE YOU A · ROSE GARDEN ' r..,,..,-,_...,,......,,.....-,,.-1-...,...-...---..... ...,.. Nie H2 luolnooo 0-rol ' Outlt•lllllolt Location I AR, 2% hi. P •• 1.1 ~~=~,_..,........,,.,.,.,.. -~~~:;;;=~==II ~~~~~"§f.iB;:I IT'S A M ESS YOU CAN HAVE • • < br, 2 ba .... kftchen/dln'1 Auwnoble S\;'" "'nold" OIAR-'llNG Dopt.., E/olde. ;; • Si.po lo -~ .1 Br, c"'"" Up AM $•,.. .. ~ -'<! 0( ,.... -"' ...... lrplt, brick ...... W\!~lndt. "11®. 518-4!55 QI, $30,500. X!Dt .-!. W•ll TO IUY OR <PVdrpo, ""1d nio. Sii.JOO Tuni. """k"lllilil 'Quallty -., """"""""• w/llldo KAllSOR mOllLANDS attd tor. Ay ••nu, SI LL A IUSINE$$ • Euy ~:~ 2 Br II l .~.2 Ba, trpfl, cirpl, bll· thr\IOut from the tu.ab •hlr yard for boat or tralltr. 2 4 br, s ba.. S"-n1A '4$-1841 HOLLAND IUS. SALE~ tncd )'d, cpll kldli pda. b:.o tn g 1: O. Qultt.cul.deou.c, carpt•1'. ·• d:nfef to the top m1nutu to, major "ahap'I' $31,t50 Owner •• Ul l1111me P-.1ttw Ill ''Tbt Broker wttb EIQatb)" ALA Rent.alt e 663900 pool .ir.t y&rd. Br!nr """' « tho line ..,pu,,,,., A a eentor, -...... ~· N-jlOll HoJthla · 1111 Onnro Aw., CM. ., ~-~-I~. -te run tor the A-f 50 aCN garlr. $31,....,.: FOJ\S&le-lrJOwntr.10onlt ...... -. Ull---..i--f.14G-neat 2 Br ..... ,.._.... pr1int, lot• ot • ....... cnue .._ 5'6-3056 3 ll 1· DEN ••. ~ .... uv, .... -.. a<Q'~ Id/ and flnd a jewel here.. 'lbia ho~ bu evuythinl • eaurt oo 1 ac ot land. Zoned \Va need Alta people Bltm:, cb.i pet okay. $ll,SOO. Submit, 847·1221 "-11 in lmmac. cond. Owner 4 Br, 2 b&. many cwtom Sor 3 irior. unitl. OOH: lD. $2(tSO hu hffn trantf. il wantl ttatitree. $31,MIO. ~ Neu Oltt Dr'. Cullom borne· ll >Tl <>W. Cpu, drpl. I NllDID:_,, $175-3 Br. Dbl oraae. h\llt ---- 1 action! See thia S BR. 2 8&. 5l4. ntA. Prtn. only, only e yn. ed. .S Bdrma .I: tptclous 2 ar hats I: 2 w/ 3 WORKING IPAR'l'Ntll OR .)'Jl'd ,_ k1d1 A ~11. . 3 BR + llA + ,,..., 14""' tn•<tll• &>ta of ~ 2 lull ~. lei .,.,. Br. 2 Ba"•. All w/ one! prtv PVT JNVESTOlt sUbatant· ILUE BEACON +DIN llM + ~• .. ~ooo" .... . -1 ~ · ....... I< &IL 1u. llr.5,000. ,_, -•-.., -· •-~. _.. ,,. •111 * Dt:li&httuJ l·!IY'. adult home. , 11, X 36, POOL lrvlne. '"''>v _,, you Me1a Vtnlti Dbl, rar. on allt.y. A cood $35,000 dn. Inc. $le60/mo.• ~ ..... ,..Q ~·~i.,..~"'-0--.,---~-..,...=,= The "IM"n'& loortt • Angeli la. own_ the land! \ ' LGE-br 2 .._ 1am buy al J.14.500. always rtr1ted. ldtal tor ed, •ecurtd w/ tt e Kida Ir pets welomo. '2 Br, Plan": Sumptious instr. PluslL. p&l&ce Wit.b &U the ired h·11 lovtly 4rPs .iii' low~ CALL G> ,41•1 414 ayndlcaUon. 1'73-3890 FOi' more tn1it wr1te P.O. fnc4 )'IJ'd. •net rar, fm. :~f!':!:U:!.,~e! =~ !~~ta~ d:,~,1:;: . I crpt thnlou~ sf:te entry. ,, .. ~. E-SlDE downtown Cotta Boa 1119. Santa Ana. ••• Xll'lt cond. 2 patloe:, btaut rllJCv Mtn. NfV'fr vacant. ' COlN ()puattd Laundromat e Eulllde kM:ly, cpb, drlll, COUntleu quality featurts. bltln beds, nicely ldacpd. land&caped ~-C&l'fl yard. llALTl' unit.I, l fUm. + O'o\>Wr'a on &a.ch Blvd. Can put fncd ydJ Cblld Ir pet. UG. Cholc. oorner klc .. 51~ps 10 SUbmlt. 147·1Zh Univ. Park Center, Jrvi~ lotany lg!! trees. Qult.t cul-Nt•r "'"P•f'I •••I Otrlc• p&rkJ.ike areL \Valle to together a protita.ble v~ ALA Rentall! • M5-39Clt this summer In thla: lovely •dull pool atta, Priv. patio APPROX 1/J ACRE Call AnyUme 83.1-0920 de-iac ilreet, Price reduced lmmrtdlate Seatine everythina, Beams. trplca ture for pel'ION want.in& ad-e Brisbt 1; Airy-2 Br, cpll 40 It. ~~ ~·:on-In rw~ b~. ''~ ~l~H~ 3 BR·+ 2 IA + POOL ~~~'"""!'"'""'!'""'""'I . Chl'?ler trans1emd. SSi,000. Yat )WI' boat, tra.Utr A pool thruout. Inc 0 me $690. dlUonal income in Hun-dJ'\'8. kids .c: pttg. im . ~ ~~ in '!:~a arwa~ you 1 ay. ~ us v Y JUST $21;750 BEAUT new Broa.dmoor 1701 Oahu Pl. 501'""654 table. Best Nf'Wport HaifhLI 164,SOO. 10% down. Bert Uncton Beach. Call 962-8998 ••• -so make an oUer on this 3 wltn -11\cludes beaut 20' X 20' covd home in Turtle Rock rr NE\V s,&nl.lb Dupl,tx. 3 BR. )Oc., • Bdrms., 3 bl.ti. plus' Mott Rltr. 646-7™; evu *LIQUOR LICINSE* • SpacioUI A nioe 2 Br, 2 Ba, BR. 2 bi.. ?aieU. Dtl ?I.far f . "-encl'd patio w/pvt linpl i-rk "'/pools ' tellllia 2 BA. 2 BR, 2 BA. Corotr playroom. t )'Cl.ti new, Tr')' 551~. CourttJ>' to Brkrr. Oral!Ke County on sale, a•n· cpts, di'Jll, kldl/ptts $lt!i. · •Jl>me. Just reduced $2,000 '--~ Ir B·B·Q. W/w C'rpll, drpl ~· View. 4 br, S b&, Jot, Private. Cptt, drpt. $43.500. ' Plex, Calta Meu., 2 hr, 2 era!. (Old illllle -food or ALA Rentals e "5:-!SOO ;.'t!;!:y R•el litf1 te u-' t. ~!!1~1-d~~ot~=~ =-~ nn. By o wner. !~~ ~i~la :~I;~ 3001U:l~•k~~H~1D ~ ::,1 ::.1:r: ~~ ~i!w~~:c~=: 1:!G~. ~~:~ •,· 644-7270 •1 ly painted oubide, No dn TURT.LE Rock 2-tity, 4 br, 3 $49.950. 546-7"8 bt(ore 9:30 COUJlTYARD INTRY lnoome $7400. Principles LAUNDRY, Fluff 'N Fold, fenced yard, family l'Ollf!\, ,. $500 DOWN 2414 Vista Oti Oro GI, Lo dn FHA, 147-U'Jl ba7 $00m~ x::2<15f lew. Altl or after 9 PM Vtty lovtl,y 3 BIL A-2 BL only. 875-2>18 aft 6 pm SS,000, Lon: leue. Tenn.t. c:blldren and pets OK, '10 ' Newport Beach 644-113.l ISLAND PARADISE s.a' . ner e EARLY A.'\!ER.ICAN e Fam. nn., dininc area pl1,11 2 • 4 Pl.EX, C.M., 3 br, 2 ba. SUlte. couple. Old tat., ol.d p/m. Walker I-L_••· TO ALL 4 IR + llG f•m. Rm. La1un• ... ch Immac 3 BR. 2 ba le: Wn rumous rm. over raraae. '7.lxG. 10% dn, 2>% ret. tllltomen, old machlne1 A Realtors. (n4) M2--+W or 1 • L.A. Widow qnl!s 10 buy $J6 000 -=,,,,,,,,,,-,,,,,,'°"'°"'::::"...,-I rm. Stained panelll~ Ii: Ntt.r <lift Dr. $111,0CD .• princ. only, (1) we're old, too. 548-S&IO 540-5lf0 ' A;nyone can ptll'Chue this • * EXCELLENT ~IEW ~ v;allpaper. 2 l1e used brick WA(K&R RIAL TY 491S-1MO, BEACH stl.lld -Food to ao. FOR RENT .. ..abarp 3 BR home, subject to direct front owner small l Truly a. Wwplace. I6'x24' Of ocean ._ city, Mint corn'I., trplc'a. Onr, $ 31, 9 o o. 67J.IM """"'m :Hi1tina: GI Jo4n. (hyner wUI level Eaat'BJutl Home. Mrs. !am. rm., hi bea.m eeUlnr. J Bd.rma., 2 bath.OJ, Let. Jiv. ~2803 PRIME 4-plex. All 3 br, 2 Bter, plua rtntals, F.ut 15 Immaculate Wp'4 BedrOOGl " help finance. Ca,U owner at Ja.rnes 67f>..OO'ra Palos Verde 11tone :flnpl. .c: fam, rms. w/frplc. \Vell XTRA lae, ocean view,' BR, ba, lnc $700 mo. No down to month operation. Gl'5-l&OO home in Mna Vft'de ••• ,. ~ 540-7823 Fount•in V•llev Cool wa~rfall in llv, rm. planned kltch bu loads of Newpert le•ch 4 ba, bar, Jrplc, 3000 sq ft+, GI, '62,300. NrOCC. 557.filSI. Meney to ,LNn 241 nk:a kic&tion, c10M to'ick. 'f,;,;======-;;-plus finpl. F~h pond~..,. •tona'• ~"'"'"'·bar. B<au-DO YOU HAYE 5 IOO bonuo, IM,500. >U Lo HSE w/lnoomo pottntlal, 14 $300 per.,.._, r ... R ~~R~E~EClAL _W_H_ER_E_E_LS __ E_C_A_N = ~~.atr~r~ l~ :;!Y pa~s::!: ~~ ~ m~m~rs in ~ur ~'! ~: n:,..1612. WrS311 :as.~:.~~ iJL 1st TD Loan 4 N!:m.R-:•::·:. $31,950. 29% dn 0\VC bal fur you find a sharp• BR home tum,,. M7·12'll tic Hills Loe. $46.500. I.r so, we can sell )'OU t!lit IMuttrJ.I 11_,,... 161 C'L'i'. INT!:R!:s'l' kitchen. Si>me carpell and J ~ )'rs at $190 mo. l BR in F.V. that la sharp I. --* LARGE • gnat t bedroom home on .S Br • Family :Room, ,..._,,,. 2 d JD L draPtf. Garqe and Mo :·"$ii).% BR 1150 .... t ...... cl• ... tully ..... "drpd FA>ULY HOME the .. NEIVF.H.A."-"'1" """""' patio. Tollo "'" HAYE n oan ·-,...... Root at · Ntts 10';0 rel urn on S9'JOO thruout. 6"1~ VA loan pay. In octanfront naia:hborhOOd. I.or just $100.00 u doWn pay-51.4,,. Cl Paymenll $133 NEW ~'--B"'"'in• $195.00 per mo. er optieo. · 'C&se requi.ttd. 2 1tucco 3 able at only $210 per mo. All llaa 5 Bdnn1. l baths. Huae ment. ThiJ home is ready per mo. Stats. A. location. v•u.;e-"IMl-._ Tmn~ bued on equity, CalJ Broker 50-9491 ~ pr' a, Ex. cond. Eutllide this for only $33,500,. and 1Il41 ~ach Blvd., Htr. Bch. liv • .rm. wlrrPt Forma.l din· to occu.py. Cupetl, dra~, John Irwin Ir A 1 ioc, W/$100 K equity, '42-2171 545-0611 $100-SEP. 1 Br. Stove .I: a.. ' 'JoC nr 17th. Lytle Rlty 51.1 by-the·way, .,,,-e'D aJ.o in-Open 'til t P.~l Ing: area. ~. "''ell equip. 2 lu.xunou1 baths. Full pnce '36-4470 'S27K Ntt Income Servin& Hubor a.tea 21 yn. frii. Tot, Pet or anata. • ·W. 19th cl~~the=~pool=~·~•:thla~prltt=~· 1 ~~if:i:-iffiFci~ ped kilch Centrally locatlld is $23.900. Ca11 U! oow • TAKE owr GI 6%. $23,500 WANT Sattler Morfl• .. C.. . -· >D-""' 5<~2512 I' I Ill 4 BR. + HUGE "'· roo,;,. Owr l.000 oq. ••'ll ihow ynu tho hoU5e FREE a CLEAR 336 E. 171b Stnol $1SO-Near Jkad>.2 Br, licl : .. BY OY.'ntr: 3 br/2 blll. '''''i •• , It. on one level; IWTOWKied wand explalnl k ... ,_....L ~~n:i~· ~!. ... ""::! lnduttrlal Bld'r patio. dlfJdftn welc, ; ·iorm din. tam ""· kit 962-4471 ( =1 MMIH FAM. RM. 2 BATH %..:'.'"A~".!~ I er ee """l Jobtt Irwin .-'-· or Lot u &<) Cash Fast '· BLUE BEACON t· ~tw. w/w new •has. ~•J 836-44?0 W.R. DuBois: MS-n68 * '4J.0111 * •• Ptint-fon:ed "' •••t. ONLY $2500 DN' woU plaM<d home. Aaldq n.&Jto,. 1.L,..ot-,..,,.-,-s= • ..,1-e--""1=10 lat & 2nd Trust DHd1 NEWPORT w .... a ... ! :. "'•ted pool. lmmao cond. • BEACH -$22,900 $17,500. 1790 Harbor Blvd. at Adorns SHARP 3 Br, bltna, lr>lc. ' -· 8--' 1 3 1.-.L..I • crpb/drp•. A&!Um• low 61< C . Lot I FREE APPRAISAL'! BR. Bltnso 2 CU I"· IZIO I r nA It VA $28,250. 543-8211) 4 ... rm. U1"Jlll• \.:d ~ .1 -"'"-· =· = ... ::-:'=°"-o;n="til='·'-"-1 GI. $113 a mo. Jobn Irwin "' ho1c• uys Coit• Mt•• lnveatrnent Mo. on yearly lt&M :1 WALK lo V.'e•tcllf( 11hop'1 Ir Planneddewlop'mt! 2Poo!I! F.1ntutte tenn.s too! Low ~ ~ DOYER SHORES Auoc. 638-4470 *Apple Valley R-1 J2,99;i J41.n11 •nytlme Caywood Rl!alty 541-1290 1 all 1ch11. Fenced, pool-•i.ztd Oubhses! Nr JOll "-pk! down Is all you need, Mod· _.... =:;.~=' m S•n Clemente * Col'lta i\feu. 4-unltll' p ,950 3 BDRM., Family rm •• Pld. 1 ~. tttea Ir plenty of 6%% intl Crpt'd., drp'd., em thru-out, flocktd dKor .....,_ ...... ~ VIEW H'OME -=-------·I* Capistrano Bah R-1. WHO Nffda Money? $ like yard. eo.ta M9a. !Ml, : , ~ct: tor boat I: trlr. J br, fcnctd. walls. Rich wood pa~lng. * $2800 * Whitehoule-Oc:ean View view $10,0CO ava.llable on all types ol OK, brt., RIO a nxmdL H) '. :db'l'I nn, !rpl.c, $26,500, For HAllFDAL REAL TY OPEN BEAM CEIUNGS.1 --=---~-=--l from every room. 2-itory 4 * Newport Bch R-1. Real E1tate-paid tor or not. FEE. S4G-11:1G. fut po 11 ea a i o n , call e 842-4t05 e Huge BR'1. Entertainina SwMpfllCJ View Fer Sile ly Owner bdnn home. Minute• from view $1C,950 9 to 9 pm., dally. TRUsr 3 BVRM. + tanill1 nn. llD <M'fler/bkr now StS-8537 family nn. Built-Ins. Dish-ot tht city Ir coastline; sev-Dover Shores vie\\'. 4 bed-Municipal Golf Co urie. 'EltRON RIAL TY CO. DEED CENTER. Inc. Bier. dlntns nn., built-tns.,'bft. · * RHuced $1,000 * BY OWNEll \\'Uher. Mas.~ive covered pa,. eral I•-view dttks. Built--m. ~ bath home + tam· "' I , t d M b I 642-1'171 ANYTIME 1S2.1 N. Broadway. S.A. _,,. a month. NO -Ho. Towerine tttft. \Veil -·~ '"" ,,ew y-..ecora t . a r e MJ-3381 -·-FHA. VA, Convent., or )'OU Four Seuont home, }.fedi~ kept area. Close 10 beach. In kitchen with btta.Jdut ily room \\'Ith ltlnken wet tile entry, compllmt.nted by Jt2 LOI' zontd 1ot 7 10 10 I ~C'-:::C'-------l . .!:N;::•_:""!:llOl=.rto_,_:5I0-:=:1~7M.~---1 ' Ila.me it! 3 BR. + fam . nn. wrranean l story, " hr, 2 nook: le: patio 1arden·. fonnal bar. J. fi~place1, form&! !···• ·•·· ~ta -•tt-um·•-,.~, N• -·•-Mort1•-• •-1•·-PtfllMulo 2 Ba $28 700 b11, fWlkell' liv rm, w/nw:• Just li A:led ·\Von'! last. Call di · F ' pl l d. . at ...,. .._ -r ' Jan ~, CUA.1'.V • • ""'" "I •-' 2 ,. --• • 1714) '61-5.>SS. nltlC room. ire a~. llUllR' r o o in, aepar e l&1H1tyl9d yard w/open pl club, C.M. Realtor, (ll3) Trust DHd1 - Ca.Il: Pat \Voocf ~2300 sive ancu1&r lrp1c, Jonn. Bedrooms. 2 baths. $37,!tji), brtaktut room. Valentine BBQ It. r•nuint tile pat\o. 374-1'11 collect :·::...,,,-:::----:--.... "-:'.'.:'.'." IOCEANFRONT-jwit built S 1 Wrlic Properties 675-6726 din. rm, 1arden kit, fam nn Ca1I • built,, 2 years old. 3200 1q. Owni!r tr&natUftd. Below -,,..,-,-,...,.-=-,.....,=:--NO ONE can top our pricu-lt)'-fanWtie bay • oc.n CO ••-m• lk ~· / t bar pt·~'--· Ir ~oasoo • ~ + Acre, view lot • CASH in 2.f. hrs, for your vie-3 Br 2 Ba t·-rm, NDO•n.i..nJv.,1, l , .-n. w we , ~ ...... "' _JO fl. 3 cv aan1e • ......, . cost al W,500. 49'J..0726 ,,, ___ ..... .. .... bl ,_,,_ IW1 · 1 ..1 ...... Assume 5%~ FHA. '4 "'"!<~~ 11.WUn11.-... Mar Tnat Dffdl. TRUST DEED paH-· _,_.;AA .. di bwbr , , ... ,...,., mmin&" poo • ... ,... ' '.l'I .111'7 #I .....,. "" • SHORECLJ1TS * e 6Tl-2!109 CENTER. I 1323 N ..... ·~ pvt patio, Country Cl•b $42,000. "'2 C&nory, FV. v _,c-a GEM ..,.,,..--.,,..-,,.-,..-..,--""· · blw, """· apu. Adulb, 'Villa, nr KOH co u r 1 e. 962.5119. REAL ESTATE ,.._ Dream ot.ean view, ~ml. lo Mesa Verff F•irway Bro&d\\'&y, S.A. 543..azsI aml pet. s:o>/mo. Ill. 133 ~ F t U "" I ~~=.c,..~.,_.,.......,, ...... -; mkt, %, mi. to beach. 4 hr, lot. ~ "'11...,., ., • ., • ...,. anytime ~ .n03.:A,N. or •PP . ca ~ NO Ya.rd v.'Ork. Luscious 3 19Ul Brookburlt Ave. UiO Glenneyre St. Soarldinl: Weltd.ltt belnt. I J ba. blfins, ntW ept ttlru· ..,. .... -» ....... ~ . 11-,,"-~'°"--=~=---·I Br. to,vnhou.le. Proftu.ion-Huntinrton.Bt•ch c9'-947J 549-G316 !drms. le: .tamny rm. w/ out, 1.&ay man's yd. Com@ 1 Meltlle Heme/ CeNM •I Mlir ! :BR, 1~ ha, fa.m. Assume ally decor. j[Wde Ir oUt. 2 --,=i..°"'A"Y'""..,G"OLF==--:===-::-.,-;;c-==-htd. '-filt. pool. Low maint. ,., &t 2125 V1a VbtoN. Tr Aller Parke 172 I 11.e) S'l ~ IBA ~"""· 113,.,.,. J..and&caped p&lio&, ,.,.,. pYt EMERALD IA Y Jnd9<Ptl. Owntr wute ~ Opon "°"" S.I 6 Sun 10 ---NICE -3 Br, 2 llo. l hilt SUt mo. total $24,900. 1993 w/pleau.nt vtew It. PQ91. and "live .. aeroa ~ 1treet Frtthly ttmodtltd, 5 bdrm. TION • JI.lit $47,7~. am to 4 pm, or call 492-4l8T. BEAtrrIP'UL 2% •ere 1 ~· ;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;·;;;1 from bch. $350 on yr'1 leue. Meyer Pl, Appt .~ $27.SOO. John Irwin 1; Al90C. horn thr loleadowl.t.rk Golf borne., E\'crythlna new. Din· SEMPLI mobile homt 1ite1. Trffs A No chldrn or pell. ReW. ews. 6J6..4470 Coor.e. A t bdr borne that ilti' rm., fa~111y rm., inMr Rt•I Eit•te •JJ-llOl S•n JUM Capl1tr•ne vi•w. ~. 2 bra L.A. HoUMI furnished 300 962-6653 • 3 BR home by ownt.r. JnSALE '=~.-r"'"l,-,-.. -.~Lo-w-d"°own-.-:3 1pa.rkle1! Cathedral ceil· patio: plt!as1ng decor. Ltvel 2515 E. Coast Ii\\')'., Cd?<.I BY TN'SFD owner li,i yr old Tenn& can owntt. 213/ 3 BR, 1% B&, 2 p&tiol, Nr Wvwt shapt Eaat-1kf11 Joe N ings, professionally land-lot "9 jlJO 5 ~-3 ba. f / &Tf..1911 0.ner•I ba)' le: octan, $350, i.e... >7-: · Pl 500• hr, fam nn, 2 b&. ea.r · • .,u .. · e ONE e 1JUS111, a.m rm, v.· w S ~ ,._ • 5 m \\'eitallfl ua. m. · ocean. 962-4982 scaped and 1 year ne\V! Turner Associ1te1 cpti, drpa, wtr sinr. \\'shr, Out .t t•te Pr.p. 171 $100-LAGUNA Bea.ch Pad-2 °1..-....0" .... pm. 5tS-M48 by appt. $38,000. Ca.JI Ior dat&II1. 1103 N. Coast Jl w,r., Laguna • OF A KIND VU HOME d r yr, re f.r Id . Lr g: b1k& to bch, incl all util. :I BR W/Rumpu.1, Avail Jww_ COW.EGE PARK l BR, 2 Ba. Huntington Be•dt 842-2al,;. .;;.,.j 177 Anytime 5000 iQ ft Dover Shott11 landlctped, Inc d yrd 51i9 •crts wttn rlwr front· 18th, Summer or rearl¥· M tru ~--· 1$ -----Conte.mp. Spanlah desfln I tio I •·-c dj hl h '4>-:t086 , any ex . .., .. ,..,.r, ...,.. .MAJESTIC SPAN H EMERALD BAY 4 BR+ maid's, 4~i ha "'pa i nn or ...,..... •P, a acent to I way $150-Ealltside-2 Br, yrd tor P;rtnctton Dr. $29,~. Low & MONARCH BAY -.... ~ .......... •rmet kl'·•·n Ownb:td 2 car 1ar. 1 mi to 101 in SoutMm Ortaon near tot &: pet. Avail Now! Coste M.i• down. SG-3260. Open Sat' • .,._. .. -.... ·~-·.. "''"" ma.rina. I: beach. Nr school. c.alUomla bcirder. Prtnte BLUE BEACON , Siih. ~ , CUSTOM ·BUILT O\VNER I BUILDER'S own Antique doors • FourrtaJn Askin( l31,900. 493-3292. land tffdy for development, 4 BR, 2 BA. Ganie, ft?K9d ' EAST 'SIDE PRESTIGE AREA custom deaien view hom~ atrium. 4-car pr., Terms. W tml n.,-SM.003 f1exlble ttrmt. For 1--'*"-_'4_5-0_11_1_*,,_-·I yd. Newly painted. Cpb, . CLOSE TO 'I1lE OCEAN with pool. Take your pick $171,000 ** 5'1-7249 __ e_•~,..".,.......,.,.,....,,..,.--turthei inform&tkm, p1-aae drpa, retri&'. electric ranp , JIR, 2 BA, C\·d patio. From double arched entey at Jess than cost ot repro.l•;;i;;;i;'lilliiiii"'!~~-ii i•s 2,L •• No pehl $235 w te pd . carpeting, drapes, built In, io adobr ttd tiled roor. 3 Picture your family in this duction, $89,500. 497-15.17, I' PRIVATE ROAD •-~-m~ ~:beau· Ecall Jt_! &KnoxA with I &curitY dtp ;: ~ ;,,.;, dilh'A'aaher. $29,950. 5% ~o hua:e Sn. CU!>tom draperies. 11'1'. iracio~ fl.lrl nn w/nr 49!'1-297-4. ,........ C11>"9'f"J inc., nc. RENTAL FINDERS CM Dail lOAM 1PM Joan. 646-Mll. Built-in boolube.1\•ei and end 10 ceiling fittpl. 3 BR, 2Ba-1 --=o'=~===--IImmac. 3 BR, den, din. rm. ty, also hM bit. ins Ir at· 5(I-l621, evn/wknds 5,31.9435 FrH Te Lindlordi 1.,,~· =-,o'..c;;;~·"'°';::.· --1 E Parle_ &st Buy. tables. Lnvable "Brick" de. \\·/Roman tub, atp din nn, RITA MYERS 3 bath home on lge, fenced tachtd praa:e, Call us now. I AVAIL Junt, J BR, 2 ba, Ip: ~u~ 10 $l!l,950. New e-;,i cor ki tchfon, 10' brtalOut beaut Jri encl pa,tlo. 3-c has chanaed loc&tions! Jot. Ll(ht airy roome:, man\· Walker Ii Let, Inc. Realton ll•nchei, P1rm1, 645-011 tncd ya.rd, Bltns, w/w ,maintenance Ind 1 c P, g, bar. Lavi.ah SlTJOkN glus gu., boat gate t\_ profess. Formely \\'ith Vic Stuart Real cured lawns A beaut. ru· 192..+tl5 Grevel 1IO crpt, drps. Otlldr.n, 119tl =·· In rleeor ~ver rich "'Orrn\\'OOd ldscpd. Llke Ml\', 1tt to •P· Estate, NO\V a Realtor al dtn1; dbl. pr&fe Ir shop. =-~~~'.".":'.""'.:'.'."'":::::'='I ~~~~~=-;-=-v;:;I OK. Nr all IChools. $2'3 mo. ... .utom tenor, 3 Br, 2 Ba, Sandc.utle Rea.I Estate, Auoc. pool .C: ,.,.,t•1---n. 20 ACRES producin& Oran&e e DOLUIOUSE • 1 Br. Xlnt 2.873 hflautl 1'6-71Si .tam nn. O\\·ner S4G-0002. panelling, Spanish loebum-preciate. r-..... I~ Ing firepl&~e. Only l% yrs. COLLINS & WATTS li86 s. Cout Hwy, Lal(Una Beat buy in a.rea. $64,!500. 11..i lit9ta. Grove in Rlttnlde 1.t Van E-1ide loc. $90. , !fl'A Ale1a, hta.ted pool, old. Cur.om built. Centrll.I 962-~2l Eve 962-6&89 Beach. (94-8025, Ste her for C&ll $4~ tor app't. '-------~ Burt:n le: Cleveland Good Al.A Rentals • MS.3900 3 BDR, 2 &, ept/drpl, rar, 3-4 BR, adjacent to p!U'k, beach arc... E-Z terms. )'OEM"'E"'u '"Lo""'eAt'y"'"Lo'r' -1.~B~l~ll~G~··~nd~y~·~R~u~l~le;'••I ~~~~~~~-~= 1He for trailer pk or 11.1b-WALK to Beach. Pri,\''. nlct' nr. 1Chool1, rwc. tac. ()p911 , ntk to schools. By Owner AIRLINE PILOT TRANS· dtvl1k>n. On main h'N)' to p t k Util pd llOS. .. _., • ~lust set to belit\'e, BE FERRED Be utilul n e \V 1.farch field. Write Chu. e 0 · • nuuae SUn, 2459 MantUlet, ,$3.5,000. 545-8356 >~RSr•. C&ll (7141 ~m~. • a ' IAYSHORIS Acre• .. fer 1•1• 150 ALA Rt'ntals e &G-3900 New. Riviera.. $295. Ca.11 '• "°"......_ 3.COO aq. ft., 1ri le\·el, 4 bd-t a;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Martin, 870 No. ~1aln St, EASf i.:ide. 3 bdnn, 2 ba, 2 rms, J baths, <lirline rm, Decora.tor'• dream w/priv. 1, Rivenlde. 92501 SUi\UtlER & yrty. rentals; {213) ~701 wk. da. :patios, del. rar on alley. Finest ' lugelt view lot b~ach. 3 BR. 2 BA. entry I Acre1 Lquna. Beach. U•-·=~~,..,-------finer home.a in beach area. LARGE 2 er, frt•h l> I sanlen kitchen, 18'x + 30' .... E Id B • • I • I I ,,Slll(b for boat i;: ca.mper pk& bonui nn, 3 car aarqe, Blll\l.,G mendro Rltay hall, form dn1 nn. Lota of . improved mounta.lnous prop.. "e• ~• • • BUI Grundy Rltr. &U-4620 painted:, fnd:c yard, iar., <$24.,500. by owner. 548-5972. tarre pool Ned Je~ ru y, r. pa.nelllnr 4i; shutters, S~ erty ln atta ol ~nslve Exch•nge 112 BalbH lil•nct lawn maint, incl. ~ Tl\t-Level 4 br, 2 ba, paflf_ll· yard, lush shag carpe:t, 833 Dover Dr .. N'pt Beach ~t k 2 patios, %i16 Villa hiU sklt homes with ~Ill w=ANT=-, °'.i-,.,-, ,,,.,.b-r,"J"bl,_.u-n-:-I, IN •·• 1 Wa.ll~·~c~~· D. $160 per ed lam rm, 1hq: crpt, bltn 19131 BrookhUrst Av_et custom dnpei. Asiume '42-4420 ~-642-1883 view. $1'900/ac. 1ubmit your dbI wde moble home. Adult W TER rtn1.11.1 3 hr, trpc,1.,.mo07• -=··~~-~.....,~~~- ,bar, 11~ kil, drpd, ~!c. Gt liuntin&ton Beach larp VA loan. $39,950. * Male1tlc Vlew * IALIOA COVES tenns. Far further inf°::. pk. Have poodle. lfave nu pvt P!'tio, $300 ~mo. (213) ••2 BR. Gar. Patio, Opts, resale. O\\'Df:r. ~n l·N_E.._A_R-TH" E IEACH Owner. 987-3331. llome \\'lth spacious qualit-WATIR,ROHT tion, pleue call R.E. x Clim bit. 3 br, 2 ba, F.A., c 792-2573 drp1, •tove, rtfrl(. Quiet iiALECREST. Sacrifice by e TIBURON CONDO e le11. Contemp. -hSeditt. rtyle Tra.n&lem!t'I . Muat All! "ith 6 d, blt-lN, paved rtar yd, "* SU?.t?.fER ·RENTAL * tropical settinc for adultll p:>wner. 3 bdnn, 2 ha. 1213 Dandy 3 bedroom, 2 ba1h. 2 BR. ta.m .rm. fml din, up-in min t cond. S~.500. Prime Joe. J BR. 3 bL linale Eckheff & A1aec., ·~~;,,, 1,. dbJe 1a.r. FHA appr. ls .S Br, 2 Ba, lum, Pvt. Patio, only. 1 blk: to 1hopa. $19. ' ~--u St C'f 125'~ Gt N' I •·· PL'CE Rl"LTY 5'1-2621, ~vu/wk.Nh 5J8.:N.>ol •~1 IUW\ \\'Ill Hll 1-~ no peu 21l/~ ·-••• '"" ..-... ~ • ,a ' ·-· ew ong: green ,,._ C'.81'· ird 1ha1 crpls thrU. All elec "" "' •tory. Newly dtocr, F•nced .,......,_. -,.:MJ. · u•--.. ....,.......w, !11"":· 5-G-7978. "*ll!. naW block 9.'all fenced. 2969 So r-. t H LB ........ ....._ "" .,.% ~ Assume $14,000 1.t $111 per Hunt I""'-Beech ATI'RACTIVE. d••n 3 BR. 2 ~ ,,.. ,...... kit. a/cond. Likt nu. Beaut · ....... a wy.. ' • )'ti, vv i1, ..... t p, ,,..,_ * lO A ovr1Jc Lk ~I1.tthev.•1 B onl 00•·-• CUSTOM bul1t, E-side, 2 Br. Outstandin;! ,·11lue in JIL1(-1· cqv pat, 2 e fill' w/elec * 4M-t7t,4 * 1111 GrVl'Mly, RHftw * " A • • --A""'• moN ·b~!_f· l°!,.,!l~A a.~ Ply. LGE Id 6 •·-· 2 BA home, Cul~ va,. • BA t bit t l in"'on Beach Sl8·930 .... Dr N B. ••ll J-.,.. n-.. ......... ""' O ,...,., •u su:n\\vuu ., o er nn '"'"ft:' cant S23d JnO, ......... 'It .... ,, , crp s, m. rp c, ,.. · ' · ""N'. VA I FJIA tenna. CO>IPLETELY ~vale ~. -Dover .. . -Vlll•y ~1 ... -I pd ~ -I"• •• dbl B 842-2.l.15 vr ,., ' _.. "" • ~""' b ks to oetan. AU util , area. 2459 NoJ'H Avt. cu~c.· rarav. Y , 147..SS.071'61·1171/968-43TI. ~red pa.Uo, 5 BR, 1'4 *WATE•-o~ •lOAnrL&kePttTis ..... i"E -.500 Ch a ttel s:m 536-7400 S36-fnJ owt)er. S4S-28S3. BA, Valley view, lndlcpd. l\n\ n 1 " *m A on mm Lt t.abtlla illJUJ' _. mo. ~r 3 BDIL\t, 2 Bath, tam rm,w/ ~ BR & f. UJ Older duplex 2 BR. each mortra.ie for dwn. pay. on N•wport la•ch !rplc, qu.Jet ilrfft nr ICbla I: ~ ~~,:~~:~:~ w;1;9 i':t. l.,.:=~=;::_·1_·~..,-~-ll~l-:...,_•_Y_,m_;..,_n.,.tl P!ERl~:~T ;Jr~~r~ = =·ri'·.;..~~~ '!~ ~'':;_~~h'1;1!:' :i=-:·, ~-"6-7511 ~BR on ~t•tt 1ize ocesn O.OSETOBEACH -. VACANT• . LGE. charming, 1tcluded, WALICIR II.ALTY GOV'T land_ S3 1.c. Write suaranted pvt. pty. Call 213: '46-Mf.IO or U4: 3 BR. $175. Crpted/lrc tnc4 <Vie1\' lot. $2.f.,9,j(J, OY.-ncr. l-11.ory SoUthport home. 3 br. tree-shaded , 3 BR. 2 BA, 67S.Sl00 Land Packqe, Ul.3 Ar-m 869-7413 eve. 5'.5-4:115. yd. On Victoria, C.M. (2U) 3MO Llnden Pl, C\1. 642-112'2 4th br or den, 2 ba, fam rm. 2 Bed.rms, elect bltin R/0, panld llv rm, frpl, lrf'l===ADO=-o--..,-= rowh e ad Ave, S• n '"'=~=---,....--....,-WE-'"F, l B" ~.1~ rno,•.,.,'46-06=..,'-'-· -.,-~~-~1 Custom ftatutts incl bltN. iundtck ocn vu fncd • ..a 1 CORON home, .S BR, J BR. 2 BA, new heat. air .,,._...._.. n..,.,...,., '" °'E$A Del Mar 5 BR, 3 BA. 1heh•ti, bar, pane 1 led dbl r I.rare, f&nced in, blk \V~'a Cov~. VHJ~" yr Family nn, Pl\llh: ahq: =n.-'"',....."'-'"°~·~C-•-..,--= "fr1J'trallon (4 ton), heattd June 19th to Stpt lst. Adlt.s ~BR. houme. Ava.ii, May 18th )tany extras. Ey. Chl'TM!r. 1 a r a Kt, p·a t I o, el c. ldscpd. lse. Adlts, Rttr. f!M-9981 carpet tbrou.(hoUL Lota at lutlMll 'reperty 154 pool. f\lmlahed 1 bllc" Palm only. S4'8-8642 Prlv. yl.ld. $18.)/mo. 54&-J?Ot Cul~e-aac. r-.1ust 1et 10 •P-ll!!!lm!l•lll;llll!•••n!llllllllmlli:·=':O::=.if.i::.:::.:..:=-1 othtr extra~. Im m e d Sprlnp Shoppln& Center. S•n Clement• !:,~~~ &e.ano. aft I • e OCEAN VI EW e preciatP: C'.ood tenns. Ask-•'''·---·-Leguna Hiiis powa11on, $32,$00. &!7-9;;00 DANA Point, 50':11120' com· $35,000. tor Laruna, C4M. ~;nmac. 3 BR., by 0\\'1"r ~'nf'r$33:,.li16 Open Sl.ut.. t•t-4471 (::::: J 14, 111 iiiii, 3 BA. l llorl', Jge Iot •• 1,TO"•"rWNH"t.»-=~=u°"SE=--,.,,r,.....-,,11-mt'tda1 lot l bk>ck from Newport area. 0 w n er 2.!!J. ~~cb~~:.al:l~~ ~::.A:~!~.~ I ..,.,900, &42-9816 ___:.:_ 0 H 5 l-4 fully lndscpd, lge patios. , car. rte v· P.clftc Caut Hlahway. '75-0;77. Jae, 144 w. 1.l a r 1 poi a. Khaols. $250 per mo. ~ BDR~f. 3 bi. 2100 ~q fl. t-:r BY OWNER pen wie vn. Nisumnhl~ CJ Joan. Immac. in&: P,.ark L l do· No $23.IXXI • .Terms. For f'Ut"thl!'r '•"•"vr,.-p"'1y"'°'bu"°'-;S;-:;d'1:;::wt::,-.:1n-knd So c 1 Pl r.r •. 1 PncUlc &ulds 3 br, ~ b&. I:o~ely 3 hr k fain rm, 2 ba $36,900. G4G-3ll4 leuehold, 3 BR, :i ba.. 3 Information. 11i1e11.1e call R.E. come units in L.A . .\Jttloua ;:wc='·::o;::;:=:---.. .. 1~Ar<=•:::t;:.' ,;5:;;16-<~!~<17. -.,.---1 '32.j()(l~s54~ a l ' 0 o•n. crpts drp~ car 'l\•/boat 1n ShoretteAt We&t. Lee J>A• 1araae1, xlr'a11 -pool, Knu with 10 trade up. 6~ HeuMI Unfurn. 305 NE\V 3 BR. 2 BA. 2 car aar. "'""·· ,.. • ....,;,r· lot. 1,-,11 1-... tlo prof lndlC'Pd Ii! decora.t· Li~o Isle $31.500. OY.·n11r 6"-2250 Eckhoff & Ai·-Inc I E W IM A.-1 6S3 W. Wilson, CM, No -ti 11.WllA Ve de b l BR ~." •ru o ~-' , I ._., • ltH 1tete Anted v.n•r• ~-,.. ~--, r Y owner ' 15CJ>d, cov'd Pl\~.l e .. cr•.i. ed. n '-"W'Qt·li&C. mn•ac. P rime Lide Nord HARBOR. VJE\V JIOME, 5 $41-2121. evu/Wknds 533-!Ml.5 .,....., &4U7&1 ~"11.ily "9.~8~~1~· Open Barga.In $Z3 900 'Eves " Low do\\>n P)'n'lrl or a•itume s BR. ti ba. w/e.Je\•ator. g Br, S ha, 3-cJr 1a.r., .., • .,._ .. ..,,.....,..,. * l'lt'U BUYU * flREll 1 URGE room1, ntwly dtcor. \l'kndf ~~. • ~~'i;t!::· :·~. ~l:i It. lot. Pier&: float. S2m,ooo. Spac'°';l11 lam nn, w.et bu, CtJMtery WWII Lendlitrll...OWntri • S sltepln& nna $$ • MO, ~w;L..:1'hE,.o,,,.ri~~rL-Pl•lt<Oto.' $22,700 Dft 1•• ... -....... ..__ T i• el Lid• l1le ~!2~~ F~a9001 d.l64n ~ ~ L.t1/C""1 156 Don't lilt -·· home We v.'ill rtrer ten&nta to you 2!J&·E, Maanolla. 5t8-C9l6 pr. ~95 or L~7-A8&8 }"ULL PRICE 4 ~... ~ ua, '"'Y-u• Y->• Beaut. i BR., S 8a. bom:e. 2 ne\I~ lo ....,., .,.......,., all ttJt;' u.s; ' }'JlEE ot c'hule. , .Magy 2 BR lOwnbouse -Crp!J:. l,>'0:-'-"-"'-""'"""'"'"''--1 3 Ort 2 Ba l«alfd nr f'rplc, $29.900. 1 9 7 -I 41 9 ' lrplca. 5G fl. •'aler trontaet. 3 BR.. 2 ba home on l'ii Iott 2 .ADJ, \ob. Pa,:e Vit\\' ' Save time, ••ve money, dealrable te.nants on o u-t drpt;, ~. $160 mo. AvaD I BR, e-&kle C..AI. ~ to schooii 4 1noP,ina-. llul'T)'. l:m2 Nottln.ibam Ln. Roam for l•l"f• bolat allpm .• cm Udo ltla.nd. &Indeck, Me~,~ • · immed. finn offer. nroker wa.iuna: !lat. June J. Call 5*).Q34 park. IChooll 1 ahapp~ \\'alkcr Ir: Let, lnc. Realton BF.ST ~ ln JfunUn.rton Price µ>0,000 . room • » build, $62,000. ~~-'°"'-=----1 * CA.SH BUYER * ALA Rentals • 645-3900 3 Ba-FR. Ntar OCC. Cpts. ~atn", $77,liOO. 646-))S'J 39'.2-«l:i lta?bour. $49,700. John Bill G ruMv, Rltr. 1.,,."""~=n,,'°==~,_--,,-:-c..-.,,.1 .. 1vrri1 JU.73_JT" ~ $195-Frult Trff•. 21: den on dr)la, t'OY paUo, el~ 'BI·RO Q•M Pelnt 4 OR, ~11r gar., Form1I din-Irvine. A.uot. '36-44'70 133 Do\ltt Dr., NiJ M2o4$2Q e WESTCLJFF, Sunny 3 Br, f« IA'9 160 \VAN"l'm to I~ or option 1,4 ac. Kids A ptta.olc:. lfJOO mq. ft. $115. ~7i:ie .., lnJJ, ulillty &-fam ily nn Hunting"'" HarMut OIARMING hOme on choke 2 bl.. C\ll101'D P1tk), lra: yard. IUPlllt. SHARP W buy: WHtelUI, 81.Yctt•l -, 2 BR. 1987·4 Charle, CM. SAVE s,m., a naJ tam.JI)' "'/f'tl>lc. 21'9 bl, 2.aoo ft, 90' 11tttet to 1tnet lota. 3 br,1 :P.lust 1tll, $f4.900. Otltn in-''Villa Padlk" 2 BR.. l'tt Ba, or lJdo; l BR. tormll dln'r '11~ l BR Cottagt, New. SlG/mo. No dor1. C..U ~e w/oettn view, dbl dr iprinklers. Owntr, 142.-.2167 --.... ..,,...'<-,..,.._....,_, 2 ba ' an e8ptClalty 11' vUed. 154~2049 f\alJ mlrrottd ltvtna rm \\'all, rm, lee kltcbtn, den ar port Hl)itl. Priv, )-.rd. 6'6-1017, fU..2239 til~ enlt)'. 4 br "-fam rm, 2 J BR Cond 14 Ba. ponl~ "8\llAT!:Rl'RONT .. , 1 BR, kl paUo w/gp.'lce tar additional EASTBLUfT Lusk hOme, ~ •baa crpb. Bat buy in area lam.Uy rm. approx 2500 11q Adlt1, 2 BR. Me w/ rar, pa,Uo t ' )'rs <Md. klw t.ues. JO~ <In, clubhouse, • patia, • 1 1 r : ~:OCfJ~.,~:·...:i~ doc · nn' I pool. Owner 6'fl.767l br. a ba, t.am rm, 5:01q n.. al $23.klO a.nd terms too, ft, for rent $400) Principal~ I LU~,.~EACON 1m1tl c~Ud. $141. Yaarly. pool alie Joi, .pa~ for trlr "'/storqe 536-4776 a.ft 5 The futect dnw tn" the~ FOR salt or Ant 3 bdrm 2 trplc'e. $60.«JO. Open Son See Jt fut, tbiJ •'On'I lul!! only. 213/~1-im * 9'U'11111 * 64Ul20 ... boa-.: $3S.&oo. 493-3473. SUPER Sharp 4-plt~, 11.B. . • a 0&111 Pl.lot o ... lflf!d convtrtible dtn, Jr pt .: 1-6. 2230 Ant.Ila St. &U-1102 Lerwlft lttalty, Inc. «'ANTED to Ltut: 3 Bdrm SHARP 3 Bn, 2 BA, bllns, 4 BR. 2 BA, den, partJall ~-Fut ...;i 1C4J )!tee $10,900 ~John 1i'W1J1 I: For thlt fftrri unct.r s:JO, blt-in!, SIW.500 ~ $4!!0 mo. 0&11.y PUot \Vant .Ada hlvt J.M..J411 anytime bow• w/pool, No chlldran. OW, crplJ, drps $2:3.'i mo. dfll'd, Cpti. Fenced Jard, Cit llli ln the DAILY PU . .or A1110C. 63&-WTf'I try ftl~ ~ney Plnche:f )'f>o,r le11_,. ~ barg1.ln1 p)ore. 21!i62 Brookhunt, Hunt. Bch. e •7l-TI55. Call Ray Ga.ult 540-USl S2TS mo. Sf&..2464 .. • ·'. - I Buy a · Bo·rder to Border Bargai Every dassifio~ want a~ in the DAILY PILOT appears in every edition every day. That means your ad win be seen in papers de livered to homes and sold fr9m newsracks from border to border all along tho Orange Coast ... all tho way from Seal Beach to San Clemente You Get It All ••• Huntington Beach Fountain Valley Costa Mesa Newport Beach Laguna Beach Saddlehaek San Cle1nente Capistrano (Plus the daily newsrack edition) For One Price With A \ Classified Ad . Phone 642 -5678 • fritl.ly, May 21, 1'171 I~·~.:. ........ !'\" l ;;;;;;;;;;;~~ . • . !--'--'· . Hou'" Unfurn. 305 Apto. Fum. JIG Ajtla. ~um. c-.-,-,-.-M-,-,-,------General Coit• Me .. AVAIL June lit, Clean, at-Rent Beautltut FUmUurt * SUNNY * trac 2 BR duplex in quir t, IOI' aa UtUe 1t * ACRES * el"'""· E"'ld" CrJIU, d'P•, ONE M0'.11 JH *'Motol·Apto. * Range , Gar, Pr e f :JI SlUd.io 61Bedrooma older/retired cpl. 519-3532 LO'" n 'TES eves./wknds complete with •• .,.... Your llrJ. $25 \Veek-$100 Mo. 2 BR house on 11ule1 st, Ve"" Da.Jlv Raios A•a•'I ·~ Purchase Option ~ · clean. crpts & drpt, Yard • Color TV, Alr-Olnd nu1iintal11cd, no garage. $160. lod. Hem selet'tion. e POOi, Pool Table E\•es & wkend1 64~ 24 Hour Dely. e Sounda 3 BR rouse for tamUy that CUSTOM 2376 NeWJ>Ort Bh'<L enjoys yardwork, $230. Furniture Rental 548-97a5 ,,_ c:;.,, ..._ .. ~ ON TEN AatES 1 A 2 BR. Furn, A lJnlurn. Fireplaces I priv, patios, PooJa Tennla Contnt'l Bktst. 900 Sea Lant, CdM GU.l611 (&tacArtbur nr Coast HW)') * Spanish Eletance Sets The l\tood F or Quiet Adult Living Shaa e,11J • drpg • bltns BeaulifUI Poo.I e All Utll. Pd. 1 BR, $1~ • 2 BR, $170 Adutt.s only-no pets. 241 Avocado SL 6f6-0979 * 545-7978 * 517 \V, 19th, C.?ol, s.18-348.1 NEW O\VNER.-under * COROLIOO APTS * 'H;-u-n°"ti;-n-g°"ton-"'B"'•_•_ch,_--IA.nabeim 174-2800 NEW MANAGEJ.IENT 2Br, studiol Iii strHt levela, FAIRWAY LaHabra 6.M-3'108 * $ll'.I UP* $18S IL \W. Dsbwbr, irpl..dbl CONDO. New dee. 2 Br + CHATEAU LAPOINTE GIANT 1 &: .2 BEDROOM! carport. LARGE Pool. VILLA APJS. d l " n. d L0\1ELY 2 ·BR apts, Furn I Gorvous. park-llke setting. 673-3378 en, 1 ,.,... cpts, rps , Closed for 1-~~-------bltns, v.·shr/dryer, 2 car Unfurn .. Shag crpt'r, hld ~ max-FOR lease deluxe new all • gar. Quiet. Lease S210. Call pool, Carports, Adults. no lmum &eC'QJ'lty, Quiet •treet. e:Jec 2 Br, 1 Ba , 2 & 3 BR'1 collect 213/ 479-2122. pe~. Fron1 $140. Adultf, no pets, 2020 Unobstructed view (Jf bay & Private pa.Uo .pool· lndiv. · 1941 Pamona Ave CM Fullerton Ave (Harbor to ocean. Adlts onJu. ttM -r laundry ta.e.' PACIFIC Sands 3 Br, 2 Ba. =-~-~-~.;.:._· _.;.· -i Bay, then So. unW 2 bllcs J _.... ,.... N ~ Co Al < compl fenced, avail June B•lboa Island &, of _Newport Blvd. &U-:m-o'='"=''"'"",.c..c•n-6992~'-'-'~~' 1 ear v•ange · rport « ·, • NOW YOU CAii lfFOID NEWPORT BEACH ;, Enjoy $750,000 health club Ir spa; 7 pools, 7 tennis courts. Bachelor, 1 or 2 Br's. Also i. •tory townhouses w/ 2 or 3 BR's. Elee. kitch· ens, private balcony or patJo. From $175. Subterranean parking, elev, maid servlc~ .. FuU·lme food marke t-, dry cleaner, beauty salon within complex. 7 beaut. model ap14 •.. V am to 6 pm daily, other Umes by app\; : Jamboree & San Joaquin Hills Rds. N. o! . Fashion Island. 714: SQ.1900 !or leasing Info. PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS Apt. Unlum. 3'5 Apt. Unlum. ,,............,,.,... ___ _ Costa Mesa Huntington Beach 15th. Wtr paid. Children ok. 8690 BACHEWR apt f(Jr rdined ucr. Adults onl)I. S725/ll\(J. Call (2131 284-5™ ;;-;;;;-:::-~7-::~:'.'.::'.'.':I.:::.:::.....,~=~~~-r enlleman, \Valk to beach & 20122 Sanla Ana Ave. NE\V 2 br, l ba. 642-0643 aft fl!--1c.,.,. Apts • 7 BR apt. \Vlnte.r rtntal. l & 2 BR UW pd. Ma:r. hlra. JIJi.chlrn, Apt 3-A i pm \Vkdu,. ww ihoiv ~ -r-' BRAND new ne\•er lived in 3 Charming, $200 ptt m(J. * No peta. '* stores, S9a ,mo,; incl utll. ~5 J OOVELY new 1-2-3 mt,; i BR, 2 BA, w/w ~hag, cusl. (2l3) 797-2573 2450 Ne.,,_,rt Blvd, C.l\f. 673-Q)7l \l.hl'kndl of 5/ZJ le 5129• No blk from ocean Crp•· •~· .... · Park-Like Surrounding c dren, no pets, · "'• .... ....,, dd""s250s, d~~~~.bltns,lfene-8alba11 Peninsula 1 BR. S135. Crpt/drps. SHARP I.Bdrm, <'&l'JI., drP6. QUIET. DELUXE Df'LUXE 1 BR patio, dshwhr, ·1tu1deck, trpl, e · · ..,,.,.......,.,.,, aft S\1·im pool Ck>le in 143 E priv, patio, Crnd fir. • • 900 1q, ft., 20a 15th St, 847~7 2 BR •· / OCEA.'l FRONT . . · . "--,,·. ~pertlo1 6"" .. ......, 1-2 Ir 3 BR API'S bHn" C""ts, drp•. rtlrig, , l .,.., w W crpts, drps, 18th St Cl\i 642--4603 .30..-...:: "" .... ,., ,,,....,,..., .... .,, 3 tiR Fl'e1hlu ln'-d • Decorator furn., v.'/Y.' <'Jllt. l Alao Furn. Bachelor a:ar, bale, like ne \Y, ,. • ''Y pa «: « nu 6tovc. gar., Lake P ark. Bdrm den. No children or 1 BR, turn. gas & v.•aler pd, 2 BR deluxe, Walk to beach. Ptv patios * Htd PooJi1 962-4180. t:!ean, bltns, crpts, drpl; Avail 6/l, Sl95. 962-7137 N hlld 1 Adults. 546-4431 \\'kends, "'="'°'....,-,-=..,...~~ f ...... I le · cond Nr ch.I! ,..,,..,...,-~~~~--·! pets. ?-.tarried adults. $250. 0 c · ren, no pe 1 • S33-l4n kd Nr ahop'i' *Adults only CONDO 3 br, 21ii ba, fncd • .,c ai.r • 1 ~~~~. ·~~' gb~t;~~s,1~~ month, yrs lease. Owner, $1.J)/mo. 5'13-5991, 646-7058 Cosio ~~ •• ay!I Martinique Apts. yard, encl gar, pool. Clean. ~':P,.1 •. &:i:~l~d!I. ~: ,,.. 547-1641 CARDEN Apt -. 2 Br. $165. .._ S22J mo. 546-1813 or coll. 842-2276 2 BR, furn or partly furn. Lg Bltns, gara~e. Adults. 1~ lm Santa Ana Ave., CM 213/547--0900 or 213/549--0780 ./ OIEZ ORO APTS \VALK to bch. 4 BR, 2 BA. upstairs apt. sundeck. Yrly E. 21st St. 54&-2127 RI NG BROS. Announces ?ilgr, Apt ll3 &16.5.j.42 l Br, 4-plvt, llhaa; crpts, 8234. Atlanta. 1-2-3 Bdnn5) Full crpts, bltns, clean. $260 lse. $a'.l0. mo. 1120 ,V, D•n• Point Apts. No1v Ava.Uable * $130 UP * panelinr, new deoorat~. Pool. Private i: a r a&' e. mo. Lease. 968-1598 Balboa Blvd, No. 7, '7t>-1070 MEDITERRANEAN GIANT 1 & 2 BE'DROO'-f! $]J.} nio. 67;;...7196 aft 5 pm Wahr/dryer. 5 3 6-033i, Irvine eves VILLAGE Gorrrowi, park-like Rlllnc. 530-m7 ' • · NE)VER 1 BR view, 11·ith Cl06ed garages tor max· 2 BR w/ pr new pa.lnt, fncd N H • H "*'. Rates by Week on Ocean deck, from $i4'5., 2468l-9l UOo Harbor 81\'d. !mum securlty, Quiet itrftl. yd \\'/ pat. \Vtr pd. 631Hl20 r unt1n9ton • r Lovely Bachclon, 1-BR Cordova Dr., Open. O\\TI. Costa Afesa Adult.II, r.o peta. 2020 2176PlacentiaAw-D SI.30 Triplex· quiet area. Lr:I J. 3 BR., 2 Baths ........ S325 3 BR. & tamlly nn, home, nncl. garck>nerl .... $3-15 3 BR. 2 Ba. Oioice ~n. belt location ........•. $325 4 BR .. 21,i Ba. & tam. rm. Ala.id servite, Pool. Util. 49242'L. <7l-4) 557-3020 Fullerton Ave (Harbor lo 3 BR, 2 ba., ramil" a.pt. Br · 1140• 3 BR -$240. J:'•tl • 675-8740 • SI NGLE, TV, pool, pets ok. 2 BR. FROM $15.i Bay, then Su, until 2 blkl Crpt1, drps, bltrui, J Pool, I ~""-=-m~•~>_l4&<ll __ n_.~--· CLEAN bachelor apts. Steps S30 A: up wkl)I. Dana Marina CO:'llPLETELY REDE C, So, (J r NeY.'POf'I Blvd.) $175. 557-4057 2 BR \I.1th crptll I drps, DNI' 10 beach. $100 & up._ :h5 E. Inn, 34111 C<>ail Jhvy. CLEAN It COZY FAMILY ...... :>.UOO ...... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;; CLE"""~A~N~2-0'BR,.C.lo~,-,.,-,-. ~c~.,,-1$-, beach. Upstairs w/""lo A Turr.e Rock, nrly new.$350 2 BR. 2 Baths . • .. • • .. $115 c-f.ln~'-l 11•lltl. - - -'Tll'uilor "SINCE UM6" lst \\'es!ern Bank Bldg Jlni\'ersl!y Park Days 833-0101 Nights c':::'1. ~:· !:!945 Huntington Be•ci;-UN~ifJ'°~~i;oN. * IRAND NEW * ~i4~w, no pets. $140, :;[:;~~~dy for sw:at 719 W. Wilson 646-1251 ===-..,-.,..-~~~= 2 BR. clean I atlracl, ~ll!; t21 BACH EWR apts, nr big La Quinta Hennosa ATTRACTIVE mr duplex, itm~!!'~=i!,~ ~ :::, Gti~~E~rZ:!. -A~u~;: 1%_~ dtp11, bltn1, air cond, nr. Corona Silo & $134 I mo r.,.1, -i.. drps, beam ceil-1• 1170 E. 0 ,_1 St.~.,,.,.., achool1, 1hop'1 It park. JPd1 Y I 1 Adi! ~r age. All uw pd, $ 50 to .ua ~ u • k N •-1-"'I • r y. ' no peta. S I.sh C ,,.., Esta LI lnp, patio. Adlta only, no (J , o pe..... .............. 642~20 pan oun .. ,, lt v-pets Roi• 1•= 50 •~ 116' 50 mo. Adult11, no pets. 2 BR. Crpts, drps, closed 2 BR t-·.-•ou,. --oc,.n. ~~~=-~~~-• Inr & Spacious Apls, Ter-· · "-· "' · · 354 Avocado, C~I. 6-12..970& gange d Its nl ...,.,, ""'"' '" • 2 br, Bills paid, $~/mo, raced J>C)O.I : sunken ga.s BBQ ~ ...... ~nta Ana Ave . Rutge~ C:.. ~19Y· u l Crpts, drp11, wuher/dryer. yrl1. Adults, no Pe 1 • · Unbelieva ble Living • Only • --~--'~-----I SPACIOUS -Nl'V l & 2 Stove, refrlg. 962-2872. • ~'-1>-~35~'-'-~b~. ~Co~-1 1 s, uni $150-lurn $175 HARBOR GREENS Br. Lw< Apt" Pool, D/W, _E_••_t_B_i_u11_____ 2 BEDROOM, "'"' 1hop'c. 2s1 J1~0 ;~arly:iAdluts7':; 2 Br unf "$17$ furn $210 CARDEN&; STUDIO APTS ~~!xi~·la~~u~r~e~ rmooit NEWPORT BEACH i:!:r;~:i=-~~. $~ pets. &12-8520 ALL UTIL L'JCLUDED &ch.1, 2, 3 BR'1. from $110. ep .l frwya, Adull.I, m L Special Bonus;. a silver-2700 Peter90n Way, C.l\I. pets. 642-4470 VIII• Graneda Apts. aguna BeKh I t_, dJ ff 1 546--0370 Four bedroom.1 with balcon. i ---------pa <;:U can e snu er s 1 ~~-'-'~--~-~-BEAUTIFUL 2 Br, 1~ Ba 'h blkbeach.)12BR.Pool. Unbelievably Beeutiful yours if you brlni: this ad LR G c I e a n 2 Br , Studio, new crpta It pa.int. le, above 4 'eklw. Grack>ut .A:dulti . Lea1e, 21'"1 s. e&ut Coste Mesa TURTLE Rock, 4 bdrm, fam nn, 2 bll, atrium, $375 mo. Leai;c. 833-14ll eves. & v.·eekends VAL O' !SERE Garden Apts. 1vhen }'(JU visit our models. reJrig/range, $1::Kl or $140 D hl -~ 1160 Ii~ & quiet tMttonndina: H\\"' 4•u......., I ' ti! Lam I• ht A t rps. tns, c ... ""' '· for I 11·· with .......... _ J • :nrv41r.J. Adults -no pets. Flowers 4 blka S. ot San Dlea:o Frwy nc u · P ig er P s, mo. No pet.s--1 child ok. 998 am v ..,. .......... n. I ·1-~B~R~. -.-,-w~,,-~d,-,,.,.--1,.~1 Laguna Beech everywhere. Stream ' on Beach, l blk \V, on HoJt 360 Victoria. Adlt1 l5 • no ll Camino. ~1 Near Corona del Mar Hl&b ---------·I Waterlall, 45' pool Rrc. Rm, to 16211 Park.side Lane. pet&. 548-2401 School. Fireplace wet bar I duplex So, L&euna. Atature *' VJE\V HO:'lfE. * Sauna, Sgls l·l Bdrm, Furn. CTI4) 117.Sf.tl * $l70 * SPACIOUS 1 Br. apts. Crpts, built-in Jd1chtn aiiP&nco. adults only. $175, 499-25!'0 Deluxe 3 BR. 2 ha. NoMh end Uni fro $135 SEE IT drpa, d1hwr, all bltns, I 13Zi AMIGOS WAY 644-2991 Mes• Verde loc., xlnt ocean vie\.\·. Ail urn. m · : 3 Br, 1% Ba. patio, bJtTii, child ok SlliO per mo All Col ' u n .-~ Co ----------1 2000 PaI110r1S, 642-8670 1-BR., '"''immll'll' pool. 2 crpb,. drps, Ask about our · '. ~ ' owe • oa.ii_..-"-• ~~.Ji~i~~~~ ~'.·Open beam NEW LRG DELUA'"E APTS Blka lo beach. Adults. No dilcount plan, 88() Center utll ·meld. 64~t..i' 307 Man.gina Agent 541.mn 2~~a~e;;:7~'!·r~i:'~~- .lll!SSION REALTY Bach-furn $139 50 pets. $135 P"r 11\(). St.. C.\t. 642-8340 Avocado, CJ.f, Ap • NEW DELUXE .-Sho • Adi N • • •. •. • Tradewlndl Realty &17..s511 SPACIOUS 2 BR, blt/'111, 3 BR, 2 BA A t tor I Incl nJt!o. &l:>-~15 o petl. * 4!M--07JI * 1 BR.furn •.•••. $149.501==~--~----1 3 BR, 2 Ba, unfurn, <'pt'd, frplc, patio. t blk trom P ease. "2-,1g-,-;;B-;:1Uc-.-..,=,-,,,-,,-,-u..,tld"°tt~k.· I 2 BR-fum ...... $179.SO n.JRN rm w/ kltch &: bath, drp1, Open Sat"-sun, 10 am Harbor Center Sboppln1. apac. maater auJte, dla rm DLX 2 I; 3 Br, 2 Ba end ocn vu, stdVe, refr, drp~. Um'URN AVAILABLE l blk to pier, Idea.I tor •ti.I· to S pm, i 169/per mo. 1010 ?tla!Ure adu1ti. $11>0 . A dbl 1arap, auto door rar. $145 le up. RenW Ok: w/w, S250 inc util. Adlls, m ADUI.TS ONLY, NO PETS dent, '85/mo. YrJy, 6(2..8SJ) El Camino ··o., or call 6t6-8308 after 5, optnet &Vall. Pool Ir Rec. 309:J Mace Ave., 546-1034 pets. 263 G r a n d v i ew. 1760 Pomon• 642·2015 La1una Beech '558-0744. •·,~B~R-.-1~%-b-,-.-c~,-..,-.-o.,,.~-.·I area. • i~ • Newperf Beach ~'94-="~'~'~~-~--t *SUS CASITAS Q UI ET g~rden apt SPAC 2 Br apts ftom S140. Frplc, PaUo, Sundk, Dbl 86SAmlp Way, NB HOUSE for lease -near pier B Htd prol. Play >'d. Crpt1, garqe, $180. s 4 8-0 3 7 1, EASTBLUFf' Lrr nlcelv !urn Bachelor Ii: downtown. I R, decorator d bl . N l ••• •735 Afanagtd by $315 I mo. Rcf'11 m1uired. • J 1 1 hed 1 1 blk ~. tns, patio, ew Y J'U-0 IVIL""M WAL 0 1-Bdrm, unt, upsl&in: with 308-2 o 11 ood o s 1 Br. Furnished mode;:: urn s •ocean v ew, d·--1-". Kt'd• ok. -~-=-,-~~~~-~ TERS C • fr I ' rl II' r., . to be ch ta d .... u.a cu .. •Deluxe ) z..3 BR. p c., carpeted a drll*L Laguna. 494-5167, 494-&iOO. open dally. New rental rates a · new cp ' rps, 1998'1\laple No. l 642-634.C • e TOWNHOUSE bl • frl 11•• 2110 N<wport Blvd c~t paint. J\l ature adlts. Year All bltn&. Crpts, drps. Gar. tN. re r. 001. BA YCLIFF MOTEL 49-hU.19 ~& wkend1 ' maUc Z.sly, llv. rm. w/rrpl.. 5'5-2321. frplc, patio, enc p.r. Quiet. _ • • Laguna Niguel ~~=~=~=·=~• lea1e. $200 mo. 49'-4029 day UNFURN 2 BR, $185, Dra· Nr. S. Con.it Plaza. Deluxe 2 Br, 21ni Ba, bltru, > .. '''"'OisO 0 NE\V 4 Br, 2 Ba, din area Ov••looklng •-!•al •-"--pd 1 -~~==~~-~-675-5033 * W\V \VEEKLY RATES * * WVELY GARDEN APTS .... .. ... ., ... .u"""' * BEAUTIFUL 1 le 2 BR. :-'-""'-=-----· 1 W 9 ''' •II &a..a , fam nn, frpl, cpls, drps, ... lt,.hen, TV's, maid service. QUIET 2 BR, 2 BA and l 5wurunlng pool A: patio, lti Contemporary Carden Aptll, Garden Grove spr inklcl'!I, fenced yard. Jm-n .. E 18th St &12 •••• mac. $3IO. 49>4244 Heated Pool. BR, ocean view, I block to · • ....,.,,,,, Patios, frplc1 , pool. LOVELY BAY,.RONT 3 BR, 2 BA, crpts, drp~. pa.v· ed .storage space for trailer or boa!, 3 yrs old. Xlnl cone!. S280. 4954244 646-3265 beach &: tov.·n. Year lease, BEAUTIFUL 2 BR, l~J Ba $150-$165. CaJI 546--5163 $160 TO $170 2 Br. From $365, • v.intcr r ate11 year-round. Studio, adults, no petll. See NE\V 1 Br, frplc, beams, 2 BR •• 2 BATH Furn/Unf. *Studio Apt, $ 110 M•lu"' adult" 4"'-'029 d•Y. M.,-, ~D, 755 W. 18th St. patio, w/w, blm.. 1 adult. * * NEW * * NEWPORT TOWERS * 1 Bedroom $1301"'494-=3839..,,.',,,"',....,•:-w-ok_•_nd-:--:--l ,c"''"'.,.· ,.-~---,.,--i Yearl)I. $1.36. Av! ?tfay 1. Ga. &: Water Paid * 642-:tm * J\!APLE ST NEAR l9TH NE\V decor, S, Lq., ba.ch. SMAIL studio, n"ar cottage. 642-85XI Air..rond, Dl.shwuhera N __ •_w'-Po-rt_B_o_a_ch____ '4i0l4t $140 inc util. Rdwd, deck, Npt HI.! area. Sep. yard. No l -B-E-:sr--E-<-;d-,-28-R-l-\-~-Ba-. I Pool, Jacuul. Pool SEACLIFF Manor Apts. 2 BEAUT. nKld, to11>'nhouse. 3 ER., 2~ B1\, 1rplc .. palio. Pool, 2 Car gar. All bltns, carp, drafl('s. L6e $28.i ~lo. (I) 523-4710 or 846-5991 eves/\\·knds. -====~==-:-·I ocen w , quiet. Single w/ pet.II. SllO mo. \\later pd. Recreation facilities Br, cpt.s, drps, bltru, PoOl, * WINTER RATES * refs only, 499-2174 Emp. "-oman. &1;)..j69'! mt-ins, Inc, pr, patio. Patios, Bar.Be-Ques priv patio, itudio type, 1% · '* * ALL SU~1 ~1ER ! * *2 ---R--~L~E~X~--,~ ! Adul ts, no pets $ 1~0 . Ll Ba. Infant ok. SM-2642 1525 . Quiet • Attrac Studios &: 1 Newport Beech B DU P • n e 11· y 548-9632 alt 4. mittd Chlklren Placentia. Ask about our decor., Pvt patio In )lard, LGE 2 Br, 2 Ba studio, n"w El CENTRICO Apts discount BR's, SllO up. AdJts, no WATER FR N T duplex, $160. 216:1 Am er i c an, shar, bltn.~. Children ok. 2 blocks N. G.G. trwy -*,.-,T=o=w"N"'H""OU=S"E~,--·I' pets. 2135 Elden, i'.tgr Apt 6. Spacious 2 BR upper 968-4339 aft 6. Sl65/mo. M:>-l496 aft 5 oil Brookhur&t. * WATERFRONT 3 BR. 4 Ba. home, ne\.\•]y l'C'dcc., on sa!l- dy beach. Sl.000 Mo. Bill Grundy Rl1r. 642-4620 HOLIDAY PLAZA \lo'/iovely dttu!ng rm. Huge 9931 Central Ave, 3 BR. 2 Ba. 3-Carport •• $270 DELUXE Spaciou1 1 BR liv'g rm w/frplc, Beaut Dl.X upper 3 Br, 2 Ba, "" 1 BR, crpll1, drp11, refrlg, Garden Grove 1n4) 530-2350 REALTOR ~ elec kltchen.Tas tefully shg crpt, drps, bltns, $la!! 1tove, patio. $115/mo, No ""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"" furn apt $135. Heated pool. N OCC SS7 .. 51 kid '"7 ~· decora!ed. 1 BR lower mo. r · 1 · s or peta, .,., -.6.l<IV Ample parking. Adul!s, -no =~~~-~~~~·I --~=~--=-="'° ISELLING y 'Lis pets. 1965 Pon1ona, Cl\t v.·/frplc, lovely patio, boat $170 -2 Br., 2 Ba Studio, yud, $2511 per mo. MS--7761 our boat'!'' t" Ra 1illp, Walk to Richard's Mkt crpts, drps, patio, ear. 285 3 BDRM, 2 bath, nr shopping with u1, .Hll It fast, Dally PARK NEWPORT -Lie l br · w/vlew. $210/mo. 4 mo or ~ lona:er. 644-1566 3 BR Newport Hei~htJ lease S260 a mo. Phone 1213) 293-959-i evei;/\1•knds. 2 BR n1obile home, $250 mo lease. Adults, no pets. 121:!) 2~3-1323. SPECIAL -.Lo ~fa !ro~ ocean, yrly. 774-9-~ Ogle. 543--8301. center le 11chool11. Lrr fenced PUo• Oa11ltied. 642-5671 Sell klle items now! $25 v.·k. Kit avai ' m ai WESTCLin~ Orlve • 2 Br. Apt u fu 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt.· Unfurn. US Apt. Unfurn. iiS ~ 'M""', ·, rv,,.,•N•h,.Bs.I d. LaCMrk Newly decor. BJtn ap-1 _;...,· __ n_,_._. _____ .;.... ________ ~,....--00--,..---------------. I OC, p v .••. II Pool ..... ,,, N t .. h N rt .. ch N t .. h N rt...... .•· 64G-7445 P ance1. . -ewpor ac ewpo • ewpor ac ewpo University P •rll: -I BR. 21n baths ...... $350 t BR. with family room Turtle Rock .......... $315 3 BR. 2 bath.! .......... $32,; 3 BR. 2 baths; fllmlshed a.van. Aug. lit •.••.... S400 (ired hill e FURN INCL U ti I . e WJNTER RENTALS e DELUXE .bachelor & : br Rent NOW lor Sept.! • Apt1. $35 weekly & up. Mo. ABBEY REALTY 642-3850 rates. Terms Avail. 998 El 2 BR fum. apts. Pool. No Camino, Sffi-045I. child ren or pets. 2405~ 16th $25 per week & up St, NB. 646--4664 BACHELOR & l BR Newport Heights TV & maid serv. avail. CLEAN 1 or 2 Br. Adlta;, no 450 Victoria, C.f<.I. peta. Le kit. $lJ5..Sl50. 2421 e DRIVE BY e E. 16th St. NB. 64&-001 141 f"lo\l.•er St. l Br. furn or San Clemente unfurn. Best location In C.l\t - &16-09'20, &i5-5970. FURN. l BR, br!Q:ht. clean REALTY 1 BR w/stv It .ref, adult Oil-near 1hopplng. Ideal, aenlor Univ. Park Center Irvine ly, SlOO/mo. Also 1 Br fum, rt1ldents. 492--9817 "'!!•Cal"!"! •A~n"yt"lm.,•.,.833.· ..... '°.,.., I no pet.& SllO/mo. 974-B W. Apt. Unfurn. 3'S 'c d . i 17th St. ~954. I!__ I on omtn ums .1 1 BDRM. turn apt. 1140 -nera · Unfurn. 320 ,,. I';;;-;;::;;;::;--;;::;-;; mo. No pets. 820 Center 1• ""''· "'"ta Mo... YENDOME 642--5848. L119un1 Hills NE\V dl x. snsi:l 1ty 3 BR, 2 LCE 1 BR, balc ony, IMMACULATE APTSI BA, Crpts, drps, bltru, pool. dlshwallher. Sl30. Mgr. 745 ADULT and Chlldren OK. 2 C enc gar. FAJ.nLY Sectkm grd &: trash pkup lnc $265. B James SL 64G-2278; Bkr. S37-5506. 642--3117 1 Clot• t. lhoppfnt, Perk Townhouse Unfurn. 3lS 2 BR-$155 POOL * Spacloua 3 BR'1, 2 ba 3 BDRM townhouH, cpts, drps, blt·lns, poolJ, A\'ail 6/l M&-3no Adu1 ta no pell &12-9320 * Swim pool, puVarttn , VAIL• • l· & 2 BR~--* Ftpl, Indlv/lndry tac'ls .A """· ·~•.. 1145 AMhoim Aw. 2 ba, PoolN ••1~,,nn, ~-~~.,!'~COSTA MF.SA 6U-2824 l'IW(m 0 C rw~• at,._._ O'fU"'911ft $ 2 2 5 FURN BACHELOR OR l BR. Bafboe Penln1ul• Nlcely d«orated S115-t141J. 1---.....,,.....,..... __ _ 350 Pool. Adults. 642-2181 BRAND ne•i DELUXE 3 Br, Duplexes Unfurn. 2 ---------QUIET lltlfl c .stud ios $115. Ba 1ptJ. lliOO block E. Cost• Me•• Br ~~ Adi 1 Balboa 81\'d; clOMI to ocean 1 .. ,_._. ll, no pe a. ...... 1 ,__ •--• 21$5'£klen, Mv Apt G, CM . or ~· )'T .,......,. uig % BR, 1 BA, compl. redec. D/W, drpt, b'P t.: crpt. Crpts, drpi, n:trlg, llfl'IVC. 2 BR, 2 b&, sunken llv nn. 644-4161 dayJ. 613-(l2SS eYU &-tilde nr Catholic church. !rple, balcony, n ao/mo 1255 ror •PPt Older cpl, no pell. $150. O:lker St., Cl\f. ~70. ' Ag!. &124196 BACHELOR • $ll5 Incl utll , Corona del ,,. .. , RE~10DEL. 1 BR, w/w, Neal, quiot. Parkin&'. 261 I BR l&rqe a.pt, No pet1 or bltns, bric gas trpl, he.ams, M('sa.,Dr. 646,7342 ~ cblldrtn. Nr lbopplna A. p11tk>. i a.dlt·no pet,,. i i.34. i'W that Item under $50, bu11hM:1L Ad\llt • n 11 • Yl'1rly. 642.-8520 try the Penny Pincher 675-072S ~ square ~ bnents • ANNOUNCES THE AVAILABILITY OF TWO AND THREE BEDROOM UNITS FOR ADULTS DESIRING TO LIVE AMIDST BEAUTY BY THE SEA IN THE .PRESTIGIOUS WESTCUFF ~ AREA OF NEWPORT BEACH ........ FROM $230 For lnfOl'llllltlon lel9phone Mr. Robert M. Buckl•J, Manager at (714) 845-0252 or wrlle to Th• Office 01 Tile Manager, Mariner Squar. Apartments, 1244 lrvln• A••nue, Newport Beach, Calllornla 12884 • " .. ~: • ' ' • ' . ..... f rldq, M.111 21, 1971 M DAILY PICOT I ~ .__[ .... _ ....... ~___,·" l~\1,..,. ........... 1~[ ll!l !~.......__ .... ~. lltl[ ~ _ ... _ .... ~'~ I I Apts .. Apt. Unfurn. 365 Newport &.ach tr.rESTCLlFF Drl\•e • :l BR. :Ne ... oly deoot. Blt n ap. piiances. Pool. e 642"'2'!4 I Apts.., Furn. or Unfurn. Apts.. 370 Furn. or Unfum. Apts., 370 Furn. or Unfurn. Co&ta Mes• BAY MEADOW APTS. 370 Roomt 400 Gara~• for .Rent 4l5 Furn. or Unfurn. 170 PRIVATE room, ttp. en- tn.n<:e w/priv. patio & Newport Beach cooking facil, Girt pref. 2 BR -FURNISHED CdM .......,. l·Balh. S'J75 ~10., ytar1y FURN. llpin& rm, quiet, •WANT 1arq:e to rent nl!at Brookhutlt/Victoria * 673-0270 * Office Rent11 S•nta Ana Bcazn celll.tiiS, paneling, prlv 3 BR, -UNFURN. clean priv. home. Male on-BEAUTIFUL S room office 2 Bafh~. 1325 Mo., yearly ly. $17.50 wk. EVl!:t/wkndJ 1uite w/ kitchenette. Ideal FROM $135* pati0s, recreaUon facilities. f..ARGE 2 br, crpts/drps, All adults, no pets. bltM, lncd ,Yd. $130. Citll • Bachelor apt fron1 $110 * Olympic 1i1• pool-Billi•rds-Saunas-T •nnis pro shop-Color TV 1oun9e-Healt h Clubs- Indoor 9olf drivi ng rao9.-P•r+y Room-Full tim• Activiti•1 Dir•c:+or. BURR WHITE 6-16-2042 for archHect, l n 1 u ran c e 531-7317. * 2 BB. from Sl6J * Realtor 675•4630 LIVE on Balboa Jaland lhl1 agcnl. ttaltor, ttc. On summer $100 a mo. Women Monrovia St. In N . B . 2901 Newpon Blvrl._ N.B. only. Make Reservaliona Sl50/S300 Pl!f mo . Ms--0710 Westcllff * I Br, dC'n, \\'Ct bar, 2 Ba Sant• An• no'.I.'. 127 Agate. 615-3613 387 \V. Bay St (btwn Harbor QUIET. SPACIOUS -Nl'w 2 & Nei~tport Blvd, ~~ nil. N. Br, 2 Ba &:ardcn apt. Plush of 19th SO. ~o.ld crpl!!, drp.\, bltns, pvl CAL• .. 646_0073 BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS: Single" I & 2 Bedrooms, fur nished or unfurnished. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;:;;;;:;:;;;;,;;;::;;:: I SSLUPGeG°<cm~fiOoc;a,~t<aa.di;y:C,..~,i<k''ii I DESK 1pace available S50 VILLA MARSEILLES older man, m cookg. By mo mo. Will provide furniture CM at $5 mo. Amwerln& service patio, cha.ndt>llrr !n malUl'r __ ,..:::=c..:,,.:;__,-__ , l>alh. Loi• ol on-slte park'g Huntington S.ach :+ cov'd 11:ar. All sgl s1ory ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;::;;:;;;;;;;::;;::J R EASONABLE RENT': Singles from 1135. 1 Bedrooms from $145. 2 Bedrooms from $200. Low move in charges. No lease req 'd. BRAND NEW only, $40. 1543 Orang!!, • available. l'lm Beach Blvd. SPACIOUS NICE room for working man Huntington Beach, &U--021 l & 2 Bdrm. Apts. w/cookilli" privilegt. Eut \\'a\k to COco's '1 \Vc51cllfl Plau. Adults. $185. 642.--0239 QUIIT, PRESTIGE APT-: ' 2 BR. crptd, drps, bltins. Walk 10 Weslclifl Plau.. Adhs. No Pf'\S. SID : monthly. 646-8372 or • 646-1550 Apt1., ; Fum. or Unfurn. 370 Cott• Mes• W -Atwjjiiiijji]AE!ii!w YlllA CORDOVA QUIET·SA!-,B iNeAr Hack Bay~ .CO Unit Adult 'Apartment Complex I & 2 BEDROOMS Enterra!ning v"i!! be a pJl!llS· ure. Dttoralllli" 1hill lovely, spacioull apt will be a joy, e Special cabill('t spa~ • Lock garages w/ lg &tor e Bm Ct'il e Lndry e P111im • DW/tlillp! • Huge 11:11s lltxe • Special 80Undproofing e Deep 2 color 1hag carpets, drapr1 GAS & \\'ATER PAID Mo. to Mo. From $140. :1323 Elden Ave, C?.f See Mgr. Tl"d Woodhead • 646-0032 • • * * El Puerto Mesa Apt1 * * * * ON BEACH! Adult Living C.M. 642--03:16 NEW Wa1ertront Offi«a $275 Furn. & Unfurn. * NICE Br, kit. privi.l oP-lo S4M Month. Above Tut Models Open Daily 10 am to 8 pm Disbwuhet: colof coordinat. tional . Pvt adult home. Nr. ]slander. l41 Bay1ide Dr, ?<l'EW 2 BR. APTS SOUTH BAY CLUB OAKWOOD GARDEN ed appli1Me1 • plush shag all &Costa Mesa. 54&-4711. ~: .. &4~~ Bill Grandy, From S230 A""'"lm•nu Ca.rpl!l. choice of :l color R00~1 for rent S40 mo., __________ 1 FU I A "-b•-Apartment. •-· , r n lure vaua ..-fresort living for 11Cheme1 • 2 baths • stall Crntleman only. l!J5 Monte DESK space available $50 Carpets-drapea-dishwallher fjust1~~!n!ln;l~6~Ple ) s1 ni;.:le &. married adults) showel'll • mlrrorl!d ward· Vista, Costa Mesa mo. Will provide turnlture heatl!d pooJ.saunas-tennia 16th bt~·n lrvinr & Do~·er robe donrs . lndlrect light-~G'u_t_st'"°H'om-.----:40i1<5 I at $5 mo. Answerini H1'V1ce r'@c room-ocean views 71.C: "45-0550 714: 6"2-8170 lng ill kilehen -bN!akfalll available. 305 No. !:I patios-ample ~~i •Rent subJN:t to localion bar. huge private fenced *PRIVATE ROOM Ca mino Re 11.l , San Seci¢ty gua,.,..... patio • plush landJ1capln1 -f&r elderly lady. Bright Cleml!nte. 492-4420 HUNTINGTON brick Bar-B.Q's . J&r&I! heat-("httry garden surroundings. 1-"'o.°"'Luxc--, 'or"r"°;.,.~,,.=-,.,....,,,.., -I ed pools & lanai. Nutritious meal 1. ~all c o p I w II PACIFIC 3101 So. Bristol St. ;,48-4753. a~~~;ta':sBa~neCente~ s 7U OCEAN AVE, HB. Read Daily Pilot Classified m M;, N. of So. Coaat Plua) THE Gall•~"' Guut Hom• '"" N•wport "''"CM {714\~536-1487 Santa An• has a pvt rm avl for am· (Also 11~ off avail) 646-1252 Ofc open 10 am-6 pm Dally PHONE: 557-8200 bulatory 1uest, ~2562, DELUXE PROF. SUITES WILLIA?!-! WALTERS CO. l o::==~=====::;::-;=======:'.':: ~~""""""'""""""""" 642-9862 17ti12 Beach Blvd.. ll.B. Apts., Apt1., Apts., Summer Rentals .C20 Pll!ntlful pkng, A/C, jan., 11' 2 &. 3 BDfiMS. Sl!ll UP. Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 --------,.-mwiic. new caJ"Pl!l11 / pa !nt/ Pario. pool. Ch i ldr en ·1-----------:---:--:--------c---------ON the Water -.l Br&: fam drps. 325 to 900 1q. Jt. Suite ~~r~A Ka~~n. ~~~k i~~! _c_o_•_••_M_•_•_• _____ c_o_s_t_•_M_.,_• _____ c_o_s_r_•_M_•_••-----~k "in~~~~i. S~u;~-/ !°:'.1-;;:'"'· ;o;P-;-h·-,84='·::'52-l===-;;;;I Bt'ach at Garfield. 714: 673-7571 DESK space available $50 9'2--8994. BAYFRONT rottage avail mo. Will provide fumltutt at $5 mo. Answering RTVlce KIDS W~LC0~1t: 6/15. J unl! $75/wk: July, available. 222 Forest Ave, '"'· ""· '"' 118 ' '" Amaz1"ng Adult l1"v1"ng '"" .. , .. 11501 •• 0 ' La"""""''"'·' .... "" xtras. Pool. pets OK. Avail $500/mo. &i6-7823. Juf'll' 1. M2-7170. 968-7j10 PROl''ESSlONAL. Sida. 4.lc:: 17431, apt o. Ke-el~n Ln. N1wport Be•ch aq It. Air-cond, crpls, drps, 11 8 UNLIKE ANY OTHER APARTMENTS 2 BR.'"''' 6 •, Blk. 10 t:,:•;,k;n~,;""~~E ':_.~: Laguna Beach ocean. Avail June ht by RETr RLTY. &12-435.1 week. SI.IO. 892-4936 1 & 2 BR Apts. $185-$210. I NEW oUice, crnd Ur. Air- Ocean view. 100 Cliff Drive Featured in Rint•ls to Share 430 cond., only $60. 1602--A New- Apts. Ph. 494-5!ll3. pcn1 Blvd, CM &12·28Zl, ev~s PROFESSIONAL BUILDER'S MAGAZINE as HA VE you ..-;,• ;i, r 64J.SJ06. BUSIE~ marke~olaee In town. The DAIL\. PILOT C!Mslrled sl!ction. S ave money, tlme & eUort by a.rm~ha!r. haven't, but I'm willing. ~N~E"w=P~O~R"T~B"E~A~C"H~' ''SHANGRI LA 11 Bach 34 v.ill share 2 BR apt Liveable luxury with all the conveniences: <>n 50-50 baiils w/female or $108 to nss mutual interest. Call Rick * 675-1601 * (tve) 5.i7-3056 ~l3"60"""S,-FT=--°"o"u";.,.-,-o"c-,-,,o=..,. s="A=CH"E"Ul=R,.---,lo,...--:,,,-,,.::.,:--;3 I ReUC1nable. Costa Mesa. bdrm; comp!. furn w/ rotor Mt, Pope 645-2820 TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A 1"""""""'~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I DA IL y PILOT QUIET 1 BR, prl. patio. l Bedroom Apt1. $130 l up Incl. utilltie• Also furl" Pool Ii: Rl!cteation arta. Qulet Environment. Off street parkin&. No Oiil- dttn, no pel.s. Abo Gan.ge1 For R.l!nt lil!'f£.1961 Maple Ave. Costa 1'1eu Clubhouse-Social Life -Indoor & Outdoor Sports-Walk to stores, banks , movie ond college. 1 & 2 BEDROOM Apartments with Terraces FROM $140 lo $295 MODELS OPEN DAILY TV. frpl. On sand. Call John ~,=N=o=rv=r=o=u~A~L~o=r=•·"1CE~s 1-"ullerfon 5 5 8-l 0 0 0 ot Ntw Irvine Indus!. oomplex. 675-8387 Top Joe. 833-3443 anytime WJU. share apartment with (l XLNT OFl''JCE Spa.ct? now girl. 1 child OK. ~lee avail. LIDO BLDG. ms Via Christian. &15--0574 Lido. N.B. 67l-4!lll Working girl to sh.are S.\1ALL officl! slorage mom. apartment wi1h same, 10x20 + loiler iho~·er. e CdM. 546.3904 e Ea11 CM 54()...1943 NOW"S THE Business R•nt1I Beam erg, bllinll, TA:/w, nr WANT AD E. l71h St. ghopplng. 314 Ocie St. CM. HOUSE lltmtin<? Wtl<:h tho 642-5678 Sl!rvlct? DI.rectory. Check Jt for thr 1erv1ce )Oil IX'l!d. Apt1., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Huntington Be•ch Are you ready fora w '°· 8Ufnmer win be Nr9 aoon, why not ltve at the beach, and enJoy 1our putting green, gym, volley hlll court, lwo awltnmlng poots, uuna blths. bll-- llardroomandclubhoU9e. For • rel•xlng retreat, JOI: Nve your choice of one or two bedrooms, fur .. nl1hed and unluml&Md, each with Ifs own prlv.te patio, flreplace In two bedroom, erevatore, d l11t- w11h•r1, carp•!• and drapes, and all ulllUn Me peld exc•pl lfghlll. F-...dc-.rt ffOlh jull. ,, ... Apts., Furn. or Unfurn. Merrimac Woods 425 Merrimac Way, Costa Mesa (Between Harbor and Fairview) .................. Apts., Apts., Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Sant• Ana Sant• Ana TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 Apt1., Furn. or Unfurn. Sant• An• 370 SHOWROOM, mfg. &. oltice space. Parking. Close-in J...aauna. $8a-S395 M o . 494--4653. USED Car Ult-Lights office • complete S400 mo. :ll36 Harbor. CM DOWNTOWN Balboa a1ore building, ll'x80·. $140 mo. 673-6880 lndu&trial Rent•I 450 7500 SQ. FT. -all power, heat. Jlght1, partitions & floors fin is hed . 153,;) Monrovi a, N.B. Call 64.>-0770 EAST 17th ST., C.M. Shop I. ottlce. 22o P<>wf'r $1 10 Month 675-6700 Broker R1ntals Wanted 460 Qt· bachelor 50 yn; clean, quiet furn. w/ priv. bath t. en- ."! in home or apl~ nr.- 1 • _hion Isle. Approx. S100 .. _ 1110. No pe!s . Dbl or king- !win bed. Maid Sr r v? 644-62'".J() days. OLD UN FURN APTIHSE 1 or 2 Bedrm., Expect 10 r.ompletely r f' p a l n I I. redecorate. 3 Blks <>r nearer bf"ach, Newport or Olrona . yr1y., $1Q +. Bob Jacob- son, 833-8770. GARAGE wanted, prefer two car suitabll! for building 14 It. librr glau boat will !Pave no mess. Call 646-46S.'i after 4 & v.·kends No Matter What It Is • SELL IT WITH 'A DAILY PILOT WANT AD! DIAL DIRECT 642-5678 Ask for Commander A.ttlng. Manager COLL.EGE GIRL WANTS ROOM &: board in exchange J:===============-=-=,I (714) 962-6653 211161 Brookhu,.t Slreet HunUngton Beach. Cilllt. -~o -:.... ..• Apts., Apts., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. Newport Beach Newport Beach Brand Spanking New In Beautiful BACK BAY 1 and 2 Bedrooms Furnished ind Unfurnished Adult Living * Dish\\1a~her . * Stove an d Refrigerator * Shag Carpeting (4 oxciting colors) * Sound Proofed * Billiard Tables *Pool * Large J?ccreati on Center RENT STARTS $155 370 • Vista Del Mesa Apartments tt• Tustin & Mes• Drive @ 545.4955 . ' So don't IC' ave your youngsters hi'hind \\"hen yo11 C"(unc o\'cr lo inspect OrRngc County's ~littcrin,!!. nc'v aparlnli'lll <.'ORllllUnlty-M>UTH COA<:T \ 1Ll-\S. For u·hilc) nu"rc a1lu1irin~ the sumptuous private Cluhhnu'>C 1111d luxuriantly landscaped wounds. we have a fc,v goodies that'll delight their little hearts too. Like our $500,000 Cbil<l Care Center and playland. 5001H COAST ,·1L1 ..... s is -v.·hcre both adults and children have the best 0£ evcrythi.ilg. DKWetor rt1led 1, 2 & J -b•droom •p..rlmenl·homes • C1nlra/ gas rtl1ig1ral.O eir-conditionirtg • 81lel'IC.d Power Kitch11u • Color-h•rmoni1ed eppliences, including dishwaJhar • Privtl• l•rrac911 • W•//r-in w1tdrobe1 • '000-sq. fl. Clubhaus• with '"'•rl1inin9 & dining f.cilities, seunat, billierrl•, t.•rd1ooms • Cab.n1J, barb.cue, b1dminton, 1hufl/1bo1td • 3 h1el1d pools ind J«uni • Chifd Ca,. C~l•r & play/and. All this family luxury living from $145 a month S.. lhe •lt11nlly lvrni1hecl ~ ar-rt~1 i nd l"lt.rw11on cent1r-OP1ft dally 10 1.m. to 7 p.fl'I, for lite housekeeping or babysitting. Needed by J une in OCC dls1rict. 5-46-{1281 3 <>r 4 BR hou1e by J unt' 15th. 1 yr lta.se, Prefer Newport lits area. Call col.- lei'!. 213: 54:i-2391 1-~AJ\f lLY OF 6 + pe! deilres 4-5 Bdrm, 2~ bath house in Newp<>rl Harbor High Sehl Di.strict. 543-2155 3 BR. 2 BA unlurn. lfarbor High Sehl a re a. Yl!arly Lea.!le. Ph. 67~1676 Announcements 500 NEW item tor fund n.i~lng, terri(jc responR 11 a fllnd ralu.r. Excellent buyer ap- peal, hlfh profit m11.1Jln. Call artier 6 p.m .• 962-8'JM J[j] 530 PREGNANT? Adop tion, abort I on, vast c I<> my counseling le. Information. 642-44lli Need remodeling? See want ad I ' I l ' SERVICE DIRECTORY : FOR EXPERT HELP i11 the DAILY PILOT ALCOllOLICS Anonymou1. Phonl! 542.-721 T or write P .O. Box 122.1 Cn'la Me~11-..:.c.:.....:.:c.c.::::...::..:.......:.c::;.cc_•\~~~--~-~~~~~-~~~-"• • ... Frldoy, Mii 21, 1'71 DAILY mor l[Il]I L-_.....,_, __ l[Il] ~I -'""'-····;;;:l~[Il] I . ,,,..,.. l[Il] Ptrton•I• SIO Loot SSS C•rpol Swvlce H•ull~ TrM Service Help W•nted, M & , 710 H•lp W•nt.tl, M & ~ 710 Help W1nted, M & F 710 Help W•nlM, M & ~ 711 * FULLY LICENSED * Rt!no"''TI~ Hindu Splrilualist Advlee on al\ mallen. Lo\'t', MarriaR"e, Business Rt'adll'lls .riven 7 irlAYI a w~k. 10 11..m. 10 111 p.m. 312 N. El Camino Rell, San Citmentt' 492-9136, 492.0076 SINGLE? WIDOWED? *Dlvortted Over 21* Olde1t & largest. For ll l!l'Jf explanatory ml'ssage 24 hrs a day. 541-9991 A:NY'O'NE intctts!ed In shar· Ing t'Xpttnse ol Los Angeles phone lint' lo l'E porlk>fll ol Orange Co'! 494-51Xlfi Tired ol Bars It Dll.n«-S'! *EVE'S DATE BOOK Partieular GAL.S & GUYS Call EVE 2-8pm, 7T4·17.t5 S ingles Dence Class EIPgan! a tmosphere. !1.14-2221 GOLF' • lrvf~ Coa11r C. C. membt'nh!p fer sale-terms. 642-ZJll{t'Vf'~ 548·9722. l o1t and found GEru.f. Shep. pups, malt MIR Ac L. EA N carp• t ''NO Job Too Smatr~. Llt,t TREES, l'ltdft•, ToP, Trim, BUYER ESCFtOW ASST/ JA N I TOR I AL. Pllfmt "Par1ntr" J. femalt Sen>ICt' .. fut dry ahampoo, MuUni. ranp • yard cul, rer:novtd, hau1ed. In.a. Jr. to 1n1ermtdlaW, xtn't REAL ESTATE malurt: malt or ctlOpli!. 5 ReceptJonlst "~1l)'a." 5 l • mos. Sun. fret' aoil retardant 4 color clta.n-up, windows wubed. 64.2-Cll.10 Bia: John tltttronie mfsr firm. Min l LOAN PROCESSOR nltts per wk. H.B. atta. fnr lt•dln& l~al KJ'OU'I). 1'YP- v1c. Alabama It Chlcaao. brlJ,."hfnt'SI lncludr.d on tic. ~3-0172 btwn S.10 &m Gt::NER.AL trft ltTY yard yr txper in ~ft'b'onk:i. c'i'1&-7.:""'1:;;;;·°'""--,--,.,-,-I tn1 f!O up, dlcttl)hone. Some 118. 53&-9810 eVt'ty job. All wortc !JI~· or •fl a pm, cle•nup. All around' baD-Call S.t for Appl. UNITED CALI ll'ORNIA jANM'OR.o;i, rxptr, on I; a:en'J orr '•per. LOST: \\lhlte 10., poodl~ in Rea~. Call Jor lrffl t•t. YARD, prqe, cl1":anup1, dyman. Reaa. 64/H343 ~1Al'Y B.111.1Pman p/limf' nl&:ht worlc ln c M MISS EXEC AGENCV ' 64"~9 •-dirt 1 -BANK -· · · ..... 1hft Dtan Bl'Ol. Paclfir.,1 __ ~_~________ i ..... movt' tret's, • vy, Upholstery Executive 7111 W. Cout Hwv A btach d tlea. ~16011401 410 W. Col.at Hwy., 1~.n .sinds, HB. Ans. lo''JOC"lro.'' CARPET &hampoolna, dry tkiploader, back ho e .. 1_;..., __ ..;. _____ ,1 Penk»'lntl Apncy Newport Stach, c.fit Kra,mf'r. Anaheim 1146-3939 Rl!'11.'tird, Call \\'. 0 , Mont. fOAm. Rt~ld, comm'I, •·In. _,._,,.._7_'-'-------IVINYL Wtldlnit-CUt1, burn~. •10 W. Co.st Hwy, NB M$.l4JI LEGAL SEC'Y w/aome SH , ··=·····••I eomety, !:1364511. or 5411-1144 . dowi 4 noon. Im es!. TRASH &, Garage clear.-up, lean. C\Jatom d)¥1na (all Suite ll 645-2716 Equal Oppor. ~mplo)'l!'r 1!f'nottllr, IBM l'Xec. & ENTAL AGENT LOST Sat. Sl!'al Point 962--0672 7d~a.$JO altJad.FrH eBt. colonl 64~2237 CrnoblleJ CARPENTERS-1-,-SC-R'-O-w-T"n'".t-.,-,-.Ql-'-M-=--!oc-a·' bkkpfll txpco:r. Ntw p ort R Sl.a ml'!r, Jge altettd m1tlf'. Dla.mol'ld C•riiet Cleantna Anytime. 548-5031 838-3942 E I d Ct'nt" Ole. 644-6400 •• xper •nee hon, M1,1•l h« xlnt typ\11, 1 ..:~o;;,..:.;;::_;:.:.:.=.::;:.,.__ Pmml~nl W.-~1 L.tl8 Anl'I., Vic Tust'in ~ &y, Costa Avg 1h:e mom.., J\fOVlNG, G"oge cl!•"'--"" LIC. Fum. Uph, ft.•od • o• •NGo COAST p I Llk B h . . _,, tio ... '"",.. ...,. "" Prm po~ltion. For ,.. • to r•at • balt'd d11v,lopml'nt f I r m Me~a. Rf'\l'I\ , 642-5107 Rtpalrlri'E • u11t .... a n1 .._ llto h•"''.""· n-uc•·bl•. cane work. Anlhony • Uph. f'MPLOYMEN'I' AGENCY · • .,. n... ·-• IM'\11,w rail Bay EACrow, Fr•sh Air? nef!da f u 11 time ~nl&I ""' ~ lanwuvu: v.>.l"'V""" Dot1n't Ev•rybody? Atent. No ~ales promotian U).<r-F"•mol• •·•g!o P"PP" J<'ree Est. 64>1317 l ~F~"~';'~'f,"~m~•~"~'i· ~64~"'~'~'°:'~·-i~"~"'~·~ic~•~· ~N~.·~·~64~2-~58~2~7~~ !869 N•wpo't Bl•d S ·-···• ... ·- "''earing rt'd collar, vie. DRIFOAM CARPET CLEAN HouseclHnlng Costa Mt.111• 64.>-3111 Thfl .qutpm!nl you will wll Jnvolv~. Salary S:500 p.lut "' ,.. 0 CASHIER-Counter g Ir 1 s. • "' removt1 amoke, ·~.toxic commiuion, Excellt:nl tu. R<goni11, c "'t. Re"'''''· In"""' horn• or office ii ill EXPER SECRET'RY 6~11 Tomlin Svc * "7-9669 H USE OF Cl.Jo:AN l .... Pfnlnl: t •· k n. -• T plnr SO wpm SH 15 " C " Ca 1!'1eria wor , v.YS OouY, Y · · • 1aae1, ozonr.,1, v•"""•, di1. lure a11Uttd, Call 567-8'.m. omm'I 4r Resld. Clf'1ntn1 ,... LOST, bro11o•n k 11.•hlle small f'rff est * Mt·6fll4 * all wktnd~ ll hol iday1 oJt w.p.m, qreeablt orion, du11 ll po1. ';::;:;:; flog w/ red flp11. t'Ollar. Am. Carpenter C11I S33-86ti6 all l pm UNITED CALIFORNIA lf'n, Joi" •hr ECOLOGY • lo Sla!hr-r, 1964-A Mryer P l,1-...:.-CA,..,.R""'P"E"N"'T"R=Y,--Bay Ir. Beach JIJ\ltorlal Job Wanted. Male 700 COCKTAIL WAITRES.S&~ -BANK-tram, CAii 646-3239 for de· R be E L C.r.t . Rf'~n1 . Crpts, windows, floora ~tc. lor exr.itlnt l'lf'W nia:htclub. 101 Ave"tda [).a Mar talia. eu n 0 ee LOST Fem Golde n MINOR REPAIRS. No Job Res.&:: Comm'I. 646-1401 SCRAM-LETS AlllO rooK. Xlnl houri. San Clrmente MACHINISI' with all around Rrlr1evrr. goldi8h b r 11.• n To0 Small Cabinet In Ill· Will do an)' type hou&edt'ar.. . 0!11 f'xp It pos1iblf', malt-or 17141 49l-!!Jl3 experle~. hair, fif'a. rollar, rrwud, q:!s .I: o t be r cab.lneta, 11\J'. Exp. Ir. ~a1. ~ ANSWERS !rr"alr. See Mr Baker f:quaJ Opportunity Employer • M>S452 .493-434() 56.8l7S ii DO aNWU itaw DEDICATED CLE•"ING II ,, 11 --===~------1 m!g. at 6'6-2372. H. O. Al~ any me a e.r a;m, ''"" EXP'D full time «>1meticl1n MGR. Tr•fntt, lntervw at REWARD~ l..llst 151h, whi!r We do everytJUns. Free \'rlY!I Gypsy, 1550 Superior, Kenh.lcky F'r1M Ch\eUn, Siunoy"il Husky wfaprirot,10AnNi'd~'~"°-.;"·i;l;;;;J.j'"-;;;;;;;;;;;·J ;'!"~!m~!'I~•~· ~C!al~!!6'1~3-4072~~--Detarh -Rajah-Ru!~ -c.~t. T1ke full ch•rit" ro•metic 2929 E. Coast H""'Y· CdM rars. Vic 20th, SAnlA Ar\8.,I ANY n jQb. Rel.Id., Comm'l, lronlhg Calmly -CURED HA~t -'-"-------~. --df'pt In dru1 1lott. ,Submit Fi 'H •r COCKTAIL Jr food wa1tr'ftt. nom• & '''' ""m•-, 10 •-u•10 & MAINT. c.r-.t. 548--.i731 aft 6P~t Indus .. Ap11. Rea1. Frte eat. rst actor: · ow·a "er. · .. ,... au.-. ~ 952.1961, Ironing 11 Alte.ntiorui lin?" 2 yrs exp. ONLY nerdy •P· 36.'i, CdM !or inlervlrw fl.loteJ, Apl +, 67~740 At Mv Home Second actor: "Hf' am over ply, Local reaident, oun1, Now Hiring LIAO NITE SEAFOOD COOK * Apply .. 1.51 I . Co•1t Hwy Newport Beech ~ " •.lngll' .c, atlt'acl.ivr. 494.7100 EXPF'..RJENCED drlv,way Mgmt TrelnM" I ~ C•ment, Coner•~• ~5-7641 bring ilck. Hfl'1 M>l't of a Lf'arn whU, yo" '"" • •• .. Jn1trUctlon I -----'-'--""'-----I CURED H •M .. corrE~ ~ 1-'!! 1alrsman. Sharp! Nf'at nnly. ~ !~;;;;;;;;;;;;;I " · "• 1'"'¥ Wll u>0U ·" Salary It comm. 54>9849, t11.bH1h & lire lonr Cll't'H ~-------CONCRETE Work, no job P111ntlng & COLLEGE 1tutirn1 wffllmily •hlt111 lllVllll. Apply in ptnon 10-3 PM w/o,._. nl thr larl@:st! finanr- Found (fre• 11ds) 550 too imall. Pilki• • pool Peper h11nglng nef'd~ joh, c1n work 40 hr •1 Ml!'la I.Anes, 1703 ..::c:..:..:::._ ______ ia\ lnAltution11 in the coun- ----- S•l•s Ex•c. s h I & df'cks • brick • 11tln1. ' ' SI C'I EXP ER L d c 001 ----------!y,•k (flex. hr1 ) Good ,1JPf'r1or · ·"· • in a c.apr try.G!'1!atjobtorVletN1m PEKINGESE or Pomera-instructions 575 642--047R l''nr rst. PROF'. painting. Exttr J backgrnd In work exp. I c:.:.:c..:.::.:..:.:..::c_______ s 1,1 Pr r in I end r " I• Ii. y.,.18. 16ooo. nlan, cnal black, \'H". Vir--;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;. CLSTOM CONCRETE 1lory, low M $225 W/fd 673-0&t7 •stimaior.111 y,·1nlflf Imm!<!. c Bt H 540-6055 LET US PAY FOR YOUR NEW CADILLAC ., loria Slrf'l'I le Dumond, • AIRLINE PATIO-DRIVES-ETC. paint. Ave rm $18. Airle.s~ COOK Phonr 542-4428 M~A~A~~·F.:NCY Laguna. 497-21"194 alt 6 SCHOOLS Free est. 531-7968, 675-5516 spraying accous. ceili_nis, 2 .Job Wented, Femel• 702 Exper. f /fime EXP'D dn!11m1kf'r f n r 1190 Harbor Bl at Adam1 -"'~·~"'..!c"~'~·~Ro~y~,~ .. '.'..'.:~~1~358"'.:_._J~;;;::~~;:;:;:--;;:::;:;:::::::::: LONG haired blk dachshund PACIFIC QUALITY cement wnrk, lf't No Wuti.ng EXCELLENT Bookkeeping cll.o:tom aOOp. 675-1381 dayi; ~tANAGER-traiMe for ~~~~r:~~~l~ic :~da~~":. Day & Night 0.assea ~~;j~ it. Llc'd, Booded. *WALLPAPER '1Ji haekground . AR .r. AP. APPLY IN PERSON F6:,:'8~.~~v:~pPT wanfl'd for lad ie.• Dtallh tpa, full nr .., •••o 543-6596 un.-_., "M .. Payrol:, typ1n1. Grn. oftl~. THE RIGGER part timf'. Good <lpportunity -~ ~-E. 17,h Sr. S•n'-,, __ CEMENT WORK, no job toG "',...n you ...... ac M • 1 u re pr", r n t 1 y mollltrlea11 home . Ch 11 d ror 1tlf-1tartln11 111. Lei1ure Cd•t r · -•r _.. ".l.U "' .j'U"" -11 bl r ""'"'' .... ,m · ' • r·r .... k 1 • ·•· s-. ~,,, ••·-'' Found m " rie .. ,,. y '""'-I•!!!!""""!!!!!!!!.!!!!!!!!!"""""! am .. , N!a"OnA e. re e employ,d, Pr!ll!'r CM, NB ~a~ 1 e '""' .. "l!P ng. ....., , ..-~.,., ..... ~ dtsh bro"''" puppy "''/flr11. PIANO LESSONS Enim. H. Stullick, ~5. LESCO PAINTING area. 54~2453 alt g NO. 16 FASHION ISLAN D Call 968-3143 alt,r 6:30 pm V1lrnrh1. Lii1una H 111 1 , roll.:i.r, Dr. Stoc kton 673-lD.lO Your home. Certifil!d teach· PATIOS, walkll, drive·, in-Rt'lid & AptJ:, Spraying t1C· LADY wanli housecll!:anlna. ! NE\VPORT BEACH FIBERGLASS molders. Ap-8.JG..&380. AppJy btwn lO A 2 FOUND male cat, grey & ~I 1 5 1 Mr 1tall new 11.,.,•nt, 1a111, bttak, rou.o:. aUinp, Int / Ex!. Ex Ow , """"""""""""""""""'"' plicatlo"' now bein1 rak!n, MATURE reaklr"t manager, white &tripe~ Ion i ha Ir ~~i~~s. ~4;.;,ms, rrmove. ~for eRI. L\c'd/ln~. 645-2399. CaJpe~7 36:1~ traMpor!allon. ('OUPLE Exp'd for luxury O ipprr J\farine Corp, 1731 S. for prl!'1t!gl!' 30 unit adlt. w/rollar. 549--0U3 • e CONCRETE Fl -;c;;u.;,.,,;;c-:--u;:-:-:-:c;-1 .::::'.,'.1.=~-:::::_:•1~"~'~6'..!:Pm::::_. _ apt C"O.?iplrx. M11n t fl r Rilcllty, Santa Ana. apl C.M. R..ply 1t1tin1 eJCp, ''ro""u~N=D='-_ ~w~h~;~,.~,,-------1~,_.--, PIANO lesson.!! for beg. & patios drlvr11• ;iMw:'f:: PA 1NT 1 NG : H 011 •. •.t . AIDF:..~ Fnr convalfo1Ctnee, maintenancf', wile kl clean .FOO:.:::~D:::.ol:.:::Cock::::~,~.~u=-w-,-,.,.,-,-.1 q.-, lam.II)'· 1tatu1. present yng 1tUdf'nl~. Your home or slabs 'R.1'11.J. ~n 642-A5l 4 guarant~d wcrk. Lie d. elderly care or family care. apt.. SJ:io In a tart + bt'aul. rx,.r. P/timf'. C 0 u Id 1ltu11lnn elc. W r it r : OUR COMPANY IS ONE' THAT IS BUILT ON nu:. MENDOUS PRESTIGE. WE BELIEVE IN TREATING OUR PEOPLE Wl'nf THE SA~tE RESPECT 'M-IAT THEY HAVE DEVELOPED i;·vR OUR C O~tPANY, \VHEN YOU JOIN OUR OOMPAN\', \VE WILL PUT • YOU JN nfE SEAT Of' A NEW CADILLAC A N 0 \\'E'LL PAY FOR IT. :~ ~;;s C.M. parking mine. 61a-7:i04 . · ~al re!•· Cati &75-S740 aft Homtmakera, ~7·66111, apt. 962~1 drvrlop lnrn f/timf'. Oay Clauified ad No. 149. Tht Child Cere .:::c..c:::.u'°'s°"T'-O~D~l~A~N~--ahil1. Ra""oo San Joaquin Dally Pilot P. o. Bo• 1j6(), LONG hair male cal • Salt & X-Paintrr, now 1 ch" o I H•lp W1rnted, M & f' 710 Ex ... rienced G<llt Courllf', 18021 Culver C031A Mru, Calif, 91626 pepper rolor, vie Huntington I I~ CHILO Carr, my homr. teac~r. Extt'r/ln!er., ar-l ;;;;;i;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;; rr-Rd, lrvint. Nr11.r \J .C.I. Allk MEDICAL Stc'y ' ~cepl . Bay Homes. H.B. 962-,1691 5trVlcn and R1.,.lrs Week days. Agf' 2 to 6. COU8. ceilings, airlrs~ equip.It d 5 I ORANGE C'OAS'T lor \\'aynf'. Al3--0lll Retpon11ible airl tnr bu1• li~:~;;;::i~:--;~J.~I :·;;;;;;;~·:;~ MaeArthur & Flower, S.A. Work guarn. R..a~. 646-4519. A m. a ea EMPLOYMENT AGENCY ~ FOUND Dog In vlc. 54~3187 l86!1 Newport Blvd, ffiF.NCH Tl!'achl!'r wanll!d by tronr ofc. Aa! 2.'i-40. Mu1t Ne wport Ri\t!era. To Iden-PAPERHANGING by pro-JR. EXECUTIVE Ctwt1& M~All &45.llll lady tntereated in 1,,arnin( h11v, r xJ>f'r. "''/all ml'd. lnll, llfy. 644-2024 S11by1itting Contrector feuionals, all work (Id. TRAINING conv,niatlon, Plra1e call Hrs 91\M-&PM dally. Wed. 9- FOUND t"'o dogs. 1 Samoyed COSTA MESA I ~.:iJ~:t., no ;oi. IOO am•ll. PROGRAM COMMERCIAL 646--0721 J, Sat 9-l Sa.lary O@xlbll!' "- kt puppy Germ. shep. mix.. PRE SCHOOL MY W11y, qua ity home W TELLER/ GENERAL CLERK allowancrs will br made lor 646-77TI . . -ttpalr. \Valls, ceil1111, floon PAINTING, profe11io1111!. All Mtn . Mllltery • om•n PROOF OPERATOR a .11klllr.d -rson. R.f"IA ~q'd. SP'eial SummPr Progr•m !! '"""-nin, in nur H.B. nfr. 11 ,.... ! . r te. No )oh 1no sma . y,·o rk guar n . Colnr """ Pho 646-l96l FOUND Dachshund. 1vc. 18th & Monrovia, h day •,_,._,_--00_"1~,-"-'-'-'-"-'-·-""'~-·-I spe cl al i it, 962 ..gl4J, TOMBE'TTIIEEXPAND-F.xperif'l'ICf!d you CAn acrur, l)'?fl ~+ M . • Brookhurst & Ellis. den~ !ult dAy ge.uton~. Plannf'd ,. JNG NEEDSOfOURCOM· UNITED CALIFORNIA "''orrl~ l>f'" min z, arP ln!f'r· MOTHER'S hl!:IPf'r, pt-timr. tify. 962-7640 program hot luncht'~ Ages Add itions * lkmodellni I ~><~7~-~"~'~"'-------1 PANY, WE HAVE JUST f'R1f'd In worltina lnr a araw. have car 4 be wllllng to do DOXIE Brookhurit It. Ellis, 2·6 hr11' 6:30 AM-6, PM. Gerwick ' Son, Lie. FOR clean A: rlt'at painting, srARTED A NEW JR. EX--BANK\-1nr; inR. co. w/xln'I ('C'lnda' housework, Good u.IU')', F.V. 962-7640 St8' "''k·CO?-fPARE! 642-4050 6'fl...6CH1 * 54~2:170 interior It rxterior, Call EC. TRAINING PROGRAf.1. fi Monarch Bay Plaia nt:nrf1t,, Call, PerlOllnel, Jii"m'•""'-·'---...... -.. BLUE Siamf'se 11o 1th rolor. or RJB.5237 D I Dick, 968-4065 THE MEN \\'E A'RE LOOK-South IA.aunt !42·7151. Vic Turli! Rock 811--3250 BABY~ITTl~G m" homf', r veweys PAINTING/papenni. 18 yr1 ING FOR N r. F. D NOT 496-l 273 49!\·llITT. Unir;1rd lnsuranr" Group ' i 1·-~ Ll • Equal Opportunity Employ<r v1c. Bugharrl Ii. Hami!ron, HAWLEY'S Orlv,way Seal-n ~cuuur aiea. c • HAVE ANY PRIOR MGM'7 GEN'L M'CHINISTS GIP.L'S pur5f' l<nmd vie Park ,.._.. r--CM NB bonded. Rel'a turn. 642-235fi ~R OUR PROJEC " Lido. 548-2405 H.B. Day, eve., hr., or y,·k. .....,.ting. r ''"' rst, . EXP~~ . ~ • For 1rablf' comm '! firm 41 FND. SlAm•5f' CA!, Elden No. D. C.M. !168-3626 &. S.A. atta only. 548""'4-474 PAINTING/pa.perinr. 18 yrs TIONS ARE GREAT, SO COMMERCIAL yl'.ll in bu1\net;.11. CHRISTIE in Harbor are&. lJc II HERE'S YOUR CHANCE TELLER ELECTRIC CORP.0 2120 bonded. Rel'a furn. 6U-235e. iO JOIN A \\'INNING Experiencl'd P\acentl1, C.M. *PAPERHANGER* TEAM RIGHT F'ROM ntE k SuPf'rior Crafl1man. Reas. BEGINNING, UNITED CALIFORNIA Gk~~r1.!:':.:1:;r w1bnflted Ratea. C. Rebko. 646-2449. -BANK-for •m oltic,, 54{)...541 ~ CHILD c~ agt's 2-S yn. Educational indoor, creative Electrlc1rl , _______ _ newport . personnel agancy All Dovtt Drlvt Newpon B«cb '42·3870 • P lush oltiC1'1 * Prnfeaaional trai11ln1 program '* Immediate, limited openings * Liberal hinp benetitl YOUR COMPENSATION MA y BE s20.oon ro $100.000 PER YEA'R, AS AN AS- SOCIATE Of" FINANCIAL INVESTMENT ANALYST, COMMUNITY LE A 0 E ll PROFESSIONAL SALES· f.tAN. DAVID 8. LOOKING· LAND. FAMOUS CAUFOR· NIA R.E. BROKER. e PLEASF. CAlL e S47-6nl A~K fOR MR. OLSON SALES Woman t'Xpt"r. Ca.rffr mindf!d kl work Into aP!fi. Ant m11:r ol tine l1dlf'1 doth· !nit chain. Ple.a11e apply In FOUND :\fonf'y Vic. CM1t H\\·y. NB Describe. 548-51121 YG IRISH 'Sl'rrf'r ,\fa\f'. Vic Mesa de\ 1'1ar. 5-1~1938 outdoor play, Mrsa Vrrde. LIC'D Electrician, main!. 546-0469. .11f'rv. AIM>, re1id. lndu1triaJ. \\'ILL baby.!lil hy the y,·e.ek .1.:"='=-".:.:.:7='·------- 1.oving cal'f'. 645--0574 Furniture e Plu11h Otfic..!I ..,. PROIT..SSIONAL .,.._lnting -41111 Aven lda Dt'I ).far GIRL ntlDA Y, OC. Air ....... ,.._ • Llbf'r•I frlni, 81netita s. Cl ....,. ' l•9o1I Sec'y $600 peMIOn, Backilll'f't'f, •25 lost 555 LOST arey fema.le cat, long haired : vie. SPCA HIUI· tington Beach. 536-2351 \\'ILL babysit you r prf'-. school child in my home. Furniture Strlpplrls Exp'd. S20/1'i''· 968-3132 Special kitchen cab. doon -~--~-----1 15tripped 1.1 ea. Avg chai.n S.i 1!:11. Gluing. 642-3445. inter/exter. Honett work. • Drive 1971 CadiUac .n eml!:nte area. Muat be f'Xpl!'r bkkpr, Lie.' ins. 548·2759, 645·5.l50. • Start Immediately .492·5123 type 50 wpm, und,.nand ofc INT & Exter. P&intinr. Equal Oppnrlunity Employu pmcedul't'11. SH or 1trnon111 L. 'd I ~-t •• TALENT IS THE SOURCE f'X'Pf!r pr,f'il. P/liml' now. IC ' ns .... ,..,.... •• · ""'yra DELIVERY.Part time, a,m. Fle1ume. Writ Cla,aiflf'd ad R•c•ptionlst $450 Futiion tsl11.nd, N.8, Asst. Bkkpl" $525 SALESMAN. Sl!:rvict Sta. Escrow Sec'y $500 par! time, Neat in 11.p. Con1t1" S•c'y $500 Pf!lrln<'r. Apply 2~9tl TIME1 FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A exper. Chuck, 645-0llOO Qf" ST'RENGTII OF ANY t& 7 rl k no. l" D•ll• Pl!ol, P. 0 . P 'NT.NG Q al. PROnTA.RLE COMPANY. per, ayi "' ..., ., Bo1nk Telltr $400 Nl!'wpor! Blvd., CJ~. -~~~---~~-! SA.RAJ-I Olventry nttd1 O. or YORKSHIRE Terrier, Vic: Eastbluff erea. Re11o·ard. 64:,..1611 or 714-7443 LOST .:\Tin. bto\\'n poodlt. fpmale, 4 mos olrl. Vic. «th S1., N.B. 67.1-7574 11fl""t' 6 GOLDEN Retnl!'Vf!r. 'ic. of Cas11a Capistrano. 2 yrs, no he, bo)'6 pl'I, 49.'\-4340. IRISH S.tter ltmalt, 1~ yn , lo!t nr pier. Has puppil!'s a! home . RrwM'd. 6~195 * * * ' DAILY PILOT WANT AD * * * A . u 1ty work. * 646-816:.! * Box 1560, Coit& Mesa, Ct. R b ' I ~ T F. \\' A R T f'OX JS •==~_:_.:....:_:;~---PROF"ESSIONAL MAT r.. T . ea iio"" r pre"•· DENTL"'"~ "•' 9262fi NOTETELLER Re1 /Comm/lndu1. 892-3206 ACHIEVING FINANCIAL A .c.>otc • .,,..c Y Ofc, tree work, pr u n l n It:, INDEPENDENCJo: TN AS· Mgr. Dlv,.rsilied d u t Ir. a. GIRL to 2lve rldin1 lf'IM>nl, ExPflrll!:l'ICP.'d pl lim• hl!'lp. No ln- Vl!'Jlment. Will train, m 111 lllR'f! 20. 540--0614. spraying, di1e1se A: Med Photogr11phy SOCIATION WJT lf IN· Sl!:c'y 1kill1, bkkpn1, f'xp., Ena:llahA Wf'~tf'rn. No UNITED CALIFORNIA control. Spmkle.r rttpair.W __ E_D_:;D_l_N;...,.G;...,_.-,---1 VESTMENT AN A 1• y !ii T, mature. Good p!rsonality Ir. pOOnr call•. 20286 Laguna -BANK-SECURITY Cl,an up job&. Georre. P 1 c ure .111 : judgment rf'q'd, TO 45. Top 1 _c=n~y~n~R="=·~· ="'~'~"=""::...:Bc=h-~ 64&-5893 ~:~~,~~':!. ~~·~rry ~TYE. ~~O~ER~· ~~J~u:: ,n_l•_'Y"-· ---'--------I HAIRDRESSERS WanlPd: 27~.:Po~oa~a~:>' GUARD AL'S GARDENING LOOKJNGLAND. DENTAL 11•'1, chainldt' or Hf'ail Hunll'r 8f'1uty Salon1, 646-2~31 Avf'tAR:r $100 Wffk to start. for gardening 6: 1ma 11 Pl111t•r. P•tch, Repair frnt nrtiCf', Lido. Writ.-, .:."='-'...::"='="='~'='~;.cJ=10~1'-~-Jo':qu111 Opporlunity Employt'r f'ull or part time. Paid va- l&nd5caplng ll!:nrlce•, call PLA5TF.R-P11tch-Rni Add~-PL EASE CAL l Cla~11fif'd 1td No. 134, Dally HAIRDRESSER n r. e de d c11tion, hoapitaJ 6 life ln· 54()..5198. Serving N•wport, Accous. ceilings. 1 tucco 547·6771 Pilot, P.O. Bo.o: 1560, Cmlla f/tim,. Attract. busy ahop . NOW acuptlng: appllca.tio"' lltlta.nc'f', Opportunity !O ad- CdM, ())st& Mesa, Dover rTlln. Frre • 1 1 I m a t e 1 . Mf'1'1. C11Jif. 9262fi Xln 'I ~·orklna cond•. Abov11 for Cook Tralntts. Day.111. v1.nce to drt,.ctlv!, Conta.et Shores, Weatcllft. .,,,,1.,1 .... ~ •~DD ,11 ••. ••I ••rnin,11. Ask for fkl!y Applv In PerM>n, Colony •-· ... ,..,.. ;J ..,,,.......,.. .. DENTAL A111 . Exper. only ~ ~·Jnty Agent e LANDSCAPING •· 1'r PATCH PLASTERING Ask for Mr. Tate for 2 diy. 1 '4'k, Plrall' 81r100, G!Gi'1 Hair Style1, Kitchen, llll Harbor Blvd, White Front Store ROTOTJWNG, 2Y.c: SQ Fl, All type!!. Free t'11timates phone. 64>1111 Tul!'1 AM on-_M_S-_"'100-"--------;C""'M~·"'°.._,--,,,--...,----)ON Bristol SPRINKLERS. SEED ... C1tll S41Mi825 ASSISTANT wllnfl'd lor K,n ly. HOSTESS-WAITRESS. OLDER couple tn mange Costa Mes• SOD l.A'WNS. LIC'D CONTR Plumblnn Tfmplrton'r'r Hair 11dtylf1t1 .0 -~E-N_T_A-1,-,-,-,-... -Ex-.. -,-1-,oc-e Exp'd, ov,.r n. LOVE'S •mall Holf'I In Balboa, Call Mon. May 24th, 9 AM to noon 333.2554 • !\fu11 h~ c " n • e COi· \VOCD PIT BARBEQUE, 67.1-1440 af! 5 pm. chair11id.-. S.!llry n p,. n. '»'Ei<.>"'.';:;;'.:P;w~;;;;;:;i: 1 .•;•:•Y~·~~~~!'!!"!".iml ONE 11top JapfUlt'st garden. LEW TakAa & Son'a Plum· mftolORillL 642~;7 Laguna Hill1 1rP.fl. R:l0-1130 Brookhur1l ' Adams, Apply OPENINGS in pharm1ceuri. ing &: miMr Jand&C11pln1. b1ng Reiwilr Rep i pr ASSEMRLERS, ExJ>f'r. for DENTAL Pf'dodont!c aABt.IC9-'...::12:.:•m:::._ ______ l'a.l 1ranulatina;, A com. SECRETARY Trader's Paradise lines frE'e f'llt. 839-1q\7. Harbor Rrmodel Free Estimate• campl!'r fa ctory. Apply, 869 Mull be f!Xpl!'r. in lab .It. HSKPRS F.mplyr pay1 ftt. pounding. Exper prPf'd. Wor1c in bf'autlf\.11 olc In Qr. Viey,•, It Turtl11 Rock 64&.&340 \.\' · 18th SL , C.M. chairtide procrdures. Non Geor1e All!n Byland Aa:er.. ,;c""::;"~';';;· =="7,_=--I 1111ge, Oppnr, klr rrowfl\. AL'S Lllnd~caping. Tr e ~ LEW Takai1 & Son's Plumb-A'TTENDANT w/ 'xp. lor 11mok,r. 644--0611 cy 10&-B E. 16th, S.A. PA.RT TIME Machine {)pf!ra-Hr.111 IOAM·1P~f. SH not man. times dollars removal. Yard remodcl ln1t. ing Rrpalr. Rf'pipe, Rem~ Chrvron Station It. Hl'rtz OENTAI A ·1 r 1 d k 547.-0395 tor1.. w1·1 train. Sit!, Ii. Sun., da1ory. Tra11h hauli ng, lot Cl!anup. de!. rrer ea!. 646-8.140 ~l~~;~c:l~d~~t o~:r· 1~.n ~~ 11te'y, Ex~; ~nl;.n Pf'O~f * ~ ~~~~~~~ER All ~h if!-. CAii Sal. for Appl, Repa ir 1prlnkl,r~. 67l-l1rr&. COLE PLUMBING lonr; ha ir. P'!rni. full lime orlrn11'd prPvrntfva prac· C•!! 64•7764 INCA PLASTICS INC, Mary Bau(hmao EXPER. JApane.e-AmerlCAn 24 hr. Srrvice aummf'r' part lime during I ..'.':'':'~· ~H~.B~.~96:=:!2-~2:•"1:::_. ---I :7==;;;i-;;=.;;;~c-"C,.,:-;-:...,-Apf)Jy 3297l CAile Prrfreto F.xeC'\Jt!ve R"llJ'deMr, compl!lc 1arde,._ * 645-1161 * l<'hl. Salary & comm w/ DENTAi~ ASSTS'TANT HOUSEKEEPER w a nlf;d, ---'-S.~n_J~"'"=c=C=a~pl='=lt='"=''--Prraonl'lf!I All!ncY ing .. erv:ice II cleanup. •• HOUR rii,r.JI. 494-!IOOl Exp'd, Ortho. auittant, !uH own tran,.portallon, $2. pt'r PART 1iml!: dental au'!. ex· 410 W, Cout Hwy. NB • 1968 \\V Bug. auto 111ek, new engine, good cond. Trade for llltf' mndel El CR· mino: Rancho, or c11mpl!'1 ol equal VAIUf'. 8~2-847~ Babv forces tr•~ or !'! s:io.Ooo equity In 5 mobile ' OOme acres fnr Im. hn41 or 7'! Oyn11n1lc 11.rt'll . Rush· er. 632-0790 nr 5.57 • .ct-l.ilJ. 21,ii acrf'! y,•/bf>11ut \'irw on GAn'ltn, lh,. .11trer! !o !hi!' Country Cl11h. Rrrll11nd~. Callt. \\'Ill ltaile for New. por! propcriy. 673·5990. Late model Chryalrr. con· \'l!rt!ble. like 11ew ~ndlllnn. 24.000 mile1, •!!JI undrr 11.·11n-11nty. trade for o!d!r car or ~ 54;,.1 39:; Have l<imbalJ spinet piano, Dux man'5 rhll lr k ottoman, pr of IA.noer Tl' spkrs. \I/JI @XChangt for tm car or ? 61.>4595 Su Oemenle on !he bl!ach- 9 units or S units A: 4 unlt1 al!"Plra ted. S3ll.OOO equltY. Tnrde for loll or T 496·3701 s:&.ooo rqi_v In ov~r the counter strick. Tradt f o r ra.nch, land, aparrment1, or ?? • S46·~ * -· "150 ~ r M 1 'bl hr. 346-166& or 846-058.1 1 ., N 1 :)u:t'! H 64>m8 .,......... Plumbln1/electrin.I repair ATTRACT, WAITRESS I me. I ure, r'f'IPQ:nA I e ~r. ma ure. ovrr -· r.a LAWN care &.1ardf'n work. Ml-275..l 542-1403 Exprr. Not under 21 NO aid .. 18 10 25. Salary HOUSF.WORK 3 h1Ir day1 At. l nl!rr.al rd , Good SECRETARY 28 11.c hf';1rul "'OOded land LiRhl hauling. Ex p ' d , PLUMBING REPAIR PliON E CALLS, Appiy In $500/mo ph1.11. !»44-8031 Mon, W'd. F'rl. Own tnn1p. bf'ne.fh1/ula.ry, youn1t den-T(I Salet ~1 1[r. Prefer eon.tr. ~;~~~~:nt~nk~;:~~~k "R=';'="'~"='=";"_c='='~' ="=~='-7·="'-Nn joh 100 im.U Pl!"rl!On. Surl Irr Rh'\oln, ~ DENTAL As~i•tant -plll'I The 8lull5. N.B. 54-4-0!IO'J ti11. Call 64>1060 all 6 or ::c~~~r!~~ 1etdlng firm Al~ 101~ nn Hjy,·ay 101 . f'nr JAPA.NE'SE Ga rd,. n I ng e 642-.1128 e \\'. Coa•t Hwy, N.B. timf'. Experlf'nce neaa1ary. wr.rkendi' NB n 7-,, 673.5990 fir.rv1t'I'. Nr111 y,'flrk. Cleanup Call bf'L 9 " :,, 89.1-2415 PART·f'ULL TIME Call Sat. !or Appt. Pl'Ofl. 1 r · · · yd. mainl . 968-2303 Remod•I & R•p•lr APT Housf' Man. Couple for DR"PERY Mat')' Baurhman R 30140 unlla. Ptl11lina: Ir "' Marr!~ womrn, 1tuden11 . F.x«:utlve Lllkr G~ ·1 loi/rlr. CLEAN Up Spedali.llt, haul-ARE )'OU rf'ady for the Sum-cll!'an ing. +Apt aalary. SEAMSTRESS SI.Ira, office, atock. Work P!l'J!Onn!!:I Att'OC)' X'lnt hu1ld 111r, )'f'ar.md/ Ing odd jobs, nrw fel'ICf: 6 mrr Sl!:allO"! Handym11n !21Jl ""-" •~""-Ex ... rl•ncM nt:ar hOmf!. Apply DAHN· N C .I Cl h S ~ rr-410 W. Cotst Hwy, NB \'11r. r N'!I ne. u an repair. Rru. ~8-69;6 •p1P;iali1t. All t)'.~s rrpair!! BABYSITTER NEEDED $2.JO.S,l hr. KF.N, 124 F.. J7lh, C.hl, Suilf' H 64.\.J'flS 11orlti ~tmbc~ lnct. For 0C C 0 Mp LET E lawn I. .It. fix ups. C1ll 8111, Befnre ORANGE COAST PART·TIME caahll!'r, Mu1t inc:. TD A ~r · f.44..0lSI prdenlf\JI: servlct. 9am/1lft 5PM, 9fi8..6&37 ~~u~T-l::~e. l 6 ~;~k;~~7 EMPLOYMENT AGENCY M P:xper. Apply In ptraon, SEC'Y/GIRL Friday tor '60 Mrrc ,.tontrl't'y, 4 dr J im 548--04!1'.. Roofing Ram-2pn1. 11169 Ntwport Bl vd 1S4.!i Adam• Avf', C.M. )'()uni co. In FounWn -__ ..:.,,_-,-.,.--,.,,--l~i-;i[ii.;;,,==-c=-,,.-1 '"'~~ V11lley, can 540-4041 HT. Bl11 rni;:. 11.ufl:), ~~-REE e.11. Comp!°' P<rtlal Cl'Mi:tl. M"M ..,.,.3\11 ID\Jlh.ft': p[DU'°'n.in P!IARMACEUT!CAL M tr. -~~==-==.,..,.--! LEE Rooting Co. Rootl1'.Jt nf * BABYSlTI'ER -lull tlm,. .r\.Vll"IL l\,,)\Jl"fl"'ltL SHEET MITAL t1l'f'~. Runii 1:!1.11 ~ed~ work. l11w" m11in1. & d~nup. all l)'pt"I. R~vf'r, rt;~ira, Mnn/f'rl. for 17 mo old boy, * DRIVERS * SERYICES•Arci..lt"'V htlper.1 minimum waat. Tn1d(' for IO 11J)e(ld, bike or t~.M. G11.rdf'nlni;:. &42.0075 !her-mo roof coatingi, white Cnron11 <lf'l Mi.r. 673-1207 ,....,,...""'-I 6M'rl9.11. EXperl1ncecl '""''"· .,,_,.,,. No Exp•rl•nce p hi T h on•NG>' COAST J im's Lawn Culllnl( and '· rolor. Lie/bonded glnce BABYSITTER, aflrrnoona, ~ INS, SEC'Y $600 1yc ltrlc ec: EMPl,OYMEN-r AGtNCY HA\'1!: Wurli1ur Org1n mod f.:dging. Call for •·~r '47. 542-7222 hrs, l-5 day• Jll'r week. Neee11C1ry! M11rvf!lous nppnr. tor alrl w/ Sup•rvi1or 4,'l,00, JMded w•kl r11s + ttmt f:11lmatr. Phnn, 642·169l T. Guy Roohng, De.al Oirtet. aom, wlmd~. 963-4!Wi Muat have clean Cal if. drlv. a11:e ncy f!XPl'r. (No LtleJ Co. Oppty lo htlp dl!v,.!op • pro-CoRt11.l:9t11~e'Nptlrt B~1.3u1 c11b1n,1 . $nl0 valu. \\'anl e JAPANESE GARDENE'Re t dn my own work. 64>7180, BEA.CH parklna lot Mrt·al-lng record. Nnt under 25. hen!f1t1, chrM'IUI ofl", 1r·a1n In a nurtlna home lor 2nrt mor1~1111:r tir lluto. Im· M•inten11onefl. cleanup Mg.:.w.,go tendan!, LaJUNt a re"', YELLOW CAB CO, 488 E. 17th t11ot lrvine1 C.M, lhtt relardNJ, l yra 1'.J(Pf'r SERVICE ENGINEER pnrt. c11r. riJG.167.t HS FV O f a1"1!a * 84:z..M.42 S•wlng/Alteration• Flllml!: durln1 1 •a Rn n; 186 E. 16th St .• C.M. '4'2·1470 wnrkinJI'. w/fht' mentally re· 1-:~r:,lt r.ppolo~un~I" ;:m~ Ha\'@ 14.tXIO 11q, ft. bldg on JOHNSON'S GARDENING -------,..---SuPf'rvlll' 1u!omalf:d aat• In 1 -------~--1....... t.ardf:d. Gl1ndale are a. ~ " • ~ -~ Al! !' ! I d OOMESTICS of all kind1, X1 , I ..., ..... •dvancflmtnt 11 11 t 11 Iii Actt~ nr Redlllnd• ,..,.,, Ytrd ''"'· .,.,,.,_. "''"' ...,, .. gsm"""ng • tr& Kint ol 1,a110n. Jd,11o_J for ref re n I u ary A u1n&f! ""n· -, • .. ~ ,.. o;:....,.I r On H ' ..., ,,_ mo1tly house and nffict 1 21 217 • .,,... avallahlt! Tl )'OU ln! youn,i, T'•de t-LOCAL •-•>· II••. •prlnkl"'"· 91)2..-~~. ...,.... .. a em• pf'r~n .• ti.rt ~l~/71. ,..,nd ,r I.I, ( l l """""· "' •¥..-· ... ~ c 11 J .,. .,,. 1 1 r 1 clraning, Somr drlvinr; er-J W ROBINSON'S rn11rrled. inlPlllaPnl and ... •~'WORER a o '* ~ o reaumf'.fral 1nu. A • • PROFEs--•AL •-·· ""'-n EXPER. HAqtla.n Game~ I II I rtnrl~. Ph. f713) 83>8231 or NEWPORT BEACH • .,,.u.. PUUJ,.. Kn'lllv• and dealrt. a carttr 67J-2m4 Comf\l,te Garde11ln1 EUROPEAN Drf'wnaklng. N'~l~I!• ~~Wi!l't'd, WIW ,,.. (1141 9Q..U)7 • Mlldlor • D&na Point, Sa.n poeilk>n, '4'f! ~ve an open. ----------1 EltJll!rtly CU11tom fined, lf'i-vil'Y,' .... gun11 &!'Ta. nle I ~:.:.:,:;...:=;.;;:.=.-==-Clemente, Capl1tra.no U'la. Ora Co So Ha\•e OCt'anlrnnt duplex, &rvtCt'. Kamal&nl, 646-4676 Accur. Rta.s. 61s.1&1g Clas~illfll'I ad No. 64, Daily EARN FOR A SUMMER Hu lmmedlatt Work 111 your own home. Ina in nee unt)'. me \\'ant 2nd T.D.'1, ,,quiry In JapancBe Ganlen_tr Alter•tfon•-'42·51U Pilot, P.O. Box 13«1, Colta VACATION. A CAR, CAMP openlnc kw Be~t dial ht area. Pbone ~~~c=! ~.::;.I~~ houae or· !'! Exp'd. Yan1 Worl< Mf'u, Cal!f. 92525. OR. COLI.EGE FOR. YOUR US.l4«.5 betwHn l:OO a.m. .,_ RICH IRWIN Clf'1n-up, rl•nl1n1 646-0611 Neat, accurata, ~years tXP. Beauty operator: OflLOREN, Be 111 AVON 'LUNCH 1.nd noon. :~,M~~~~fly, Scr1ptomi.LW Re11.J1or r.xctuingnr 67a.6060 G•ntr•I Services Tile botllh •pact for rttrl. Hair Rtpr!sentativa "'-flam extra 6 mOMy. win pnm. M"! WAITllESSIS ftEAL tsTATE SALESMAN SERVICE Station Anond. What do )'OU have to tnde7 Hu1band Busy~ Call Moon CERAr-.flC tile llf!'A A Wtst 73-4!!16 Jl'<lPI!. Ha'vl lun. lt't easy WANTF.0. SMALL ACTIV£ full or p/11mt. Ovar 11. T .. l5t It her1t -tn On.nit M}.OD'.) altl!'r ~Reptlr n!model. Fff!f C":~r. Small e BLUE DOLPHIN e to 11'.f'I 1111o_r1ed . Juat call: APPiy tn -"ton lO-I p.m. SUC'CE.c;grtJL ore niAT Nrat, 1d ••Pl 1r ., County'1 latl'11t rtAd trad. BuiJd-Sf>rv Moat Thlna• jOba wtloome. ~2426. Hoeteu. l!:Xpe-r. p/tl.me. Ap. ~l. 54()...70.tl ,._ MAKES MONEY. DICK ptrlON.ble, 1d rtfA. m • in& JIOtJ.&41-56'7l '* LABOR UNLIMrrm ... '!ba 1.u!Ht draw tn tM West ply, 3356 Vta Udo, NB. na; 7 ut.1t drl• In tht Eq:IJ 2 ~~1~11~:~)..e, I :=8;,;t!IG::;;:.:,• .;;•;:,,:";:"~::---Harb&r, C.M ~ * * * * 'I(' * HANDYMAN , , • a D•lly Pilot tluailied SeU k!le lttmf now! Call Wert .•. a D&.Oy P I 1 e t SeU kf11 !tuna now! Turn unuMd lllem. lillD 4U'fa ': 'il••llli•••••••••••••llil':"'~.i::•':'.:"!.:." ;,:C.~""~n~rry~g~~-:;1~922~ Ad. 64J...5678 _64l-56 __ ,._N..;;o_w_r ----· "n""•-•.._•!11 ... ..i_..._•_•_. 64_2-ll671 ___ , .., ... ,.. ... ,... .. ..,..,..1 Ca11~~~~~7l~N:!!o~w'.;.1___ wh, call g.u.s71 • , • • .. • DAILY PILOT fdo11. Mil 2!,. 1971 ,I.__ _ .... _1""'"~lli1J I f t ~I -1~1 · J~1 ~r ~ ... ~ •• ~.tl~~rij~ ... ~,d!w~~~-~~~-1., ~-~ 111 ·!""/'~--" , ...::: " IOT!l;NS T -2 ... """ --~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:1 ..J. I I -' I =· Ho1p ¥/ ....... , M & P 711 A!'!"'-Ill Fumltvre 110 Gorogo S•I• 112 Mloctll._, Ill Mi.cell.._ m&l<il. mEE: -· to I ... ..,..... • ! -'-'-------11 ·PVT=--.. ·--w· .. -~-.. -.. -. SAT, • SUN. U-5,· -JOHN'S llKES -Wonted • ao 1 Otlllyl ~..:..!.:.~~ n\ok. ~c nt9; -ci.ic•• ,' ·,.<!;,~\. s&RVJCI St. Saleaman • REBLT v1rt.brf..au dryr1I •v ........ 1 -_, .. b1jntd, ID'pdll,homt, no 1 .. ,,.,;r":J:. UtlmcMiie JMabanlct. 2 )'l'I Pl Cuar-Drtlv. Mltr Oc. t'On)pletc house ol btautltul Lugpnia fNt'>A'J)Ort Shpre1), W~ED: 9xU Perslan trained, ud 1 yr. -ll'llfll ebUdtu pl·eaat. ·•-a In N lla Maylat're:pa lrm ao . near new Medi! turn, I~ N'pt.·Bfach. Nt'wport. ·-NEW-Qfll:l\t&l fUI, aho'•maller motbtrcatw/ahortAJlr 63M1Jj&ftlpm, 5i,n lilp,JFS. ~1 "9! -mAppiv~ ;:_.•pC,· '11t:S31.a.n. di.idtt I' bAk na""•aofa &: Smith-Coron"' .1 1ypewriter lD 8........,, ll.1e:hs $71.!6-$85 aiies,, in cqod co n". ~ hair. 541 -1015 ll -It ~1 ff't•'W' • J~ •, ' .., .. ...,... -·-~ ...t • ...._ ' ... CM 5/22 J ttln :"".. .c:u .,.. -Crtl. Cemeru & kweteat, newr uled SI~. m. 4 Ladder back cha\!'1, Ladies S &: 10 1pd $65--~ ~&i:>Z. ~. ttns. "acme p Is 1 a m ••• , . , "~ _ '· ~ SERVICE Sta. Sa1Hman,, t'I'· Equipment 10t Bu.nk btdt ·~nt S[)ll.nlAh rush-ty~ 'seats. $30. 40" Mena,& Ladlea; J..QJd ~a.WANTED: OLD DOLLS A TINY Adorable black "-w•a at:( A tr-a l11-e:d. ~--..~ •• ~'t · ..... r-.J __ , ,. klnsa mh,,, mel It more. Round tablt w/full lkirtcd sUnuiys OUNA HEADS.. W. Milltt, white ,b&by &Uttn1. Must .... -5121 ~I· , •. 1 •, : per. "'"""" ,...ary, unuorms. ,,. BO al ha S6 A f _..._.., Chl!v'ron . Adams I ltt MM 1:.EX Camera & 213: 925.-3&22 , ng m rovu . n Lque -USED--. ~4 haw homu by Saturday. G™ Sht~Jld. 'mo'1, . . ~ M'lnolla. H.B. ~uip, Unuatd. Incl. 16mm ==~------1 drop•front delk 135. An tique &•-·-I I I -Wffl\fd6b•t1a•brot•n __ , _},_ r--w.:,.-it Mini.•~· ~ I==""~-;--'--=-,· I Btll ' Ho\\•tll Projector. DEt'OR... · lttm1; A·n 11 Que carved oak table, Mnall . $25. 10 Spetd $4;>.$80 mu. ~ n1trument1.u 548--l630 rtu .$ PM . 5m u.._.t,_ ~ WI')' ·~-~ ., f..iWk' .W ·,&:; · ·. SE\V 'M~ optrator. Steady MC-Qt9 'Yhlte «: rold lamps, .$2.'i. Small antique s h 8 k er l SJw.d $28-$40 -, a · -Iowa elildrtn A • .,.. all :!' I0-4lll · \\'Oni b' qual.1lrl. I====~-~~~-Yamaha 11tudlci piano. $500. rocker, stripped, no seal .Sllng Raya S.l843S KIMBAr.LCn.ndPl&no .$850. 2 KriTENs -Torto i ae ahtJtl M&.2l50 5121 "1A''. '"' ~ ' 67S.79l2 ELECJ'JUCdrytt,Frl,gidaire, Llkenew.Tred.11eW,mach .. $10, White 3 drawee chesl -£PAIRS-Cellini liO bau~ ic«ll'diOn female, Delp ma.le.~ GOLD£N '\nmi da~ .,_. ' .' . ' '•' i SE\VERS, if )'OU have ex. runaonUOvolt.$35.548-.2635 $45. ~ $7. Pr. yellow bedside noo~poolTOse~73-~""Hawktt ':Ml" haired. H1brkn Ir lov-puppy .w/a ·Uttlli mb-ed...yp -~-~,,=~'~ ..nyilmc, c"·•t• 17 ,, ~ y•llow 2840 NEWPORT BLVD. ar • °" ...... -••--1----~ttttd '-..A1-, u .... ~· -~. mo.:hiu "'·~ .. ·'-•,. petienct In \\'et 1uit1 -~--------WALNUT&mart>leoocktail '"' · · .-.. · -_...._.... ...~,. _.,.,,., ~ _.,.. -•nufaehl-'""', un11 1a _,,r ltble & match!•• , n d bedside lamps $7 ea. Tur· COSTA MESA GIBSON IA; Gold'hardwarr, male. 53()..1679. 5124 f94....383I $/lO dd.l¢nn. J'.ltl(~, M "'1j ;hanct io·"'inett...,, ~ .. ,~rnitur.. .\ 110 .table" .. SlO ea. Tv,-; table q~iM. mustard &. white OPEN ~ID WKOAYS. humbuckina' ;Plck .. UPf> MALE cock S'' 'In(! GERMAN lh h d aft'SPM : : .,, . 1 .,~-,.i -. k•n<> s read 11' L SAT. & SUN. • £ bt-...1-tin;.o.. •.. 138-00f'f -a-poo .,._ • ' * P .e.r . . •--' u:±: ..1..-..1 walfe•. "'Ofklnt: .eondltlona. Thuraday, Frid1y lampt1, S1 ea. 968-1341 9002 .~... P · ge. an--""">e ,.., blk-needt l')(ICl home fncd pup/mill:, I mo·a, fem&J,e , ~~ '1~· ~ in a friendly-atmOlphtte. Se &. S Carrolltown H B. · hqued avocado gm. chest 645-4nO BAS&.\t:AN amp, w/apt>abr . .)'Ud. 1 lemaM wht kitttn. Hibrkn. iood · Wlcbildrtn. .,mi~• ~-tu I!)l)t.·"' -O>me 1o tM SUrftr Haute, f, un. ' . . wflouvert'd doors, while -\Viii take Tnidr-11\5-box, $ll:t.. Mlist alt SU-'655 · S/22 "-•~ ......,. 512'1. mo. J115. 213: Q..Url : SALE -WAREHOUSE FIVE rooma-i\fediterTanean form ica t,... 110, 8 Candle · ......--13259 ML BUdy Crde F V , • F I t · J d v.. * 573---3558 aft 5 pm 1r 1W ;u::.:: ' · · Full FURNITURE urn ure 1 nc u '' wrought iron wall sconce ~IRIU[ % SIAMESE JemUe kitten. 6 RABBITS,.adult·CaliL-.mix ~~~ • ..,.~':" :z-.~~. SHAMPOO Glrt wanted 3 All muit be aold refriiera.tor, freezer I:. S20. "'hite lamp f-1. Draning Offl F ttu' / wkl. Box ttalntd. A1ao a,. doe,· dlincWa •doe, dutch ........ ~ • "F." ._ days a ' "'k. Call 137...fl"U, At T'Mse Lew P rices ~tag111~ Color TV itereo tbi. $7. 48'' Row-id lacy rush SPECIMENS E ce I urn ,.. 124 hilied Bl!oM Point Sl.amtM dot, and dutch 1-lct eu.a:z;3 ;wmtt. 2'.t ... •a>-1174 • • 1""137~-tm=~·~""~'c'P"'pt_~,_= f K'~ Bdrm lt't $139. Sofa comb. ~7-3241 rug $5. Nev.; &ntlon 'tl'ii, FOR SALE qu p. house cat. 1-yr. 9li8Q7 Wlt btf noon. ' 51211 81.SSET I:f!'U1'4 · ~ ; SH.01POO Girl -11 t.o 25.. f19. Cbain .$39. D~ ta. DUNCAN Phyfe dining 1ned. bro"''" $9. 3 New life Movingpl in_Junr . ...!._~\led;! BRUNING .copy. machlhe, I WK Oki ldtteftl, .tit.% FREE to llluU.ifild }lome ~al .1 beautiea,. ,~ tifust be lic'd. Call Jor •PPL ble & 6 <:ha.in $49. Bdrm ael Table, R•I• 1.2. ''tst5, CGA a p pr v • d, sam es, ~ a~ .......... tee ... just serviced, S165 or Wit ""--, ... " Pon•·,., bl•.. waWr -...1a1 m..1¥ pupplft, aired. • 115 a. ...... -1fesi-btwn 9 It 'U •-67S%o7o · .. ,., * .,.A """.., Surfboafds, k...... · .. __ nl•. play sptel.mer. 5 a r e o»an• ,.. ..... ..,._........ "' ·~---=~ .. ~·----! com.pl w""'--'-. mat· " --.-~ '"'" ........ . • oUer. Will take typeWl'tl:et •Y••. Bo:1-t ra l ne'() fncd yard. 541 -011 3 'STAT TYPIST/RECEPTION-tress" fr._~l".s89~·Qu\lted llke new! rtUscell. All fairly choice thumbna.lls. S.1ur-11 part payment. 6-t6-$lf · '54s-o&.l7 1 5124 1.16-4493 5122 HUl\'TING ..,..,..;.."~ ~ ?ST _ CPA oU.ice. Yni 1: ta Ger ... S.le 112 priffi! & in A-1 cond. Come day, ~l.ay 22, or phone for "''Or'IMl:l. -~ ·1'•-pa.J!ll!Sl peilonable. CPA n:per. A so It iove1tat Sl49. Fine ,,...,,....,_,,_.....,---""--see! appointment 280 Bowling BLACK metal chrome trl&J!.. NEED -1d homt1 fo.r ADORABLE ht Jl'IPPiu lo AKC aift .fr dfm. IQ..."1C ; XI qui!~ sofa & loveseat w/ GARAGE Sale; Pack Rat . Grttn, Cosia Meu. enc) \wod top 5' :1 30'' desk $Ui adonbl• put Siamea« hlk rood· home. parf ·~· ll3 il.ASKAN Mi ...... •-·, nt 1tat typins ability tables le lamPs S249. Guar. antique collector c 1, 1 n BA~Y buggy & ('(.Ju1.p, walnut ~S-2502. 673-3029 Bro«d .... -..v. C.M. ·54J;.4111 til ._. 11.., • .... req'd. $1.lar)' open. ll>-0801 1meed ttlrigtraton color house lot lst sale. Old pat-0U1ce desk w/.cha1r, maple Klttftli. ~. ~ ,..., 1 ·pm. only 51,)1 ....._, :* ~ .. '·*' Tele. Appt. S.C'y TV's, 1tereos at u'1betiev-tern &lass Crystal Pewter dl'f!!!!er &. mirror , maple Plenoa/Orfant 126 "'H _ .. to invntment broker. P/ abt. low prices. Chi,na., C~t glas.11,' Bo1Uei1: ~ffee " end tables, decor. Time to Recerptt?? 1-----"-----B.EAtmFULL.Y marked ldl· TO aood home w/pleaf.T td AKC Poodle .,u-i(i:I~ lifld. time, perm. SPECIAL PRICES · ln1ulaton, Boc?kl, Anti11ue ;~n \amp &ndtable lamp~, Collage, Boat, *Super Organ Sale* krui. 2 Marne, 1 wka. ;fl~ 1'%n ~~~!ii lJad;:ntio~~~-~ wt,lte 4 PM .. PM ON HOUSE FULLS record · Cabfnet, R if I es, 1 oop , u r!,t cons ' Camper'! Trade-im, most 'from ntire-4~E:> 5124 961-6565 5/J:> !OY ~. --r""" ·-1 Out Office CdM. PJeue ,cJo FROM APARTMENTS, Sh o l &: u n •. P ~c I u res , "''/plan, •1~ radio arm saw CARPET n, 1uper dean, 1 oJ • lri{ld SCHN.4.Uii$ PUPS. Mahi ESTATES, MODEL HOMES, Decorator ltemi & more. \.\'/acces. inc, li~P vacuum, inc. le.tttt rnodela. H-lOO's, WHG haired Pendan kitten& BEAUTJnJL kj t te JW 1 't atwl. Gftlllili. ·' not apply unle15 )'OU are in BANKRUJ?'IOF.S Some treasures aome trash c:h1lds snow skill! & clothes, BARGAINS! ! ! E.182, T-200'a, C..J, RT--3. A-about 1 weeks. Varlou. ~J. e-11co, l bUr: I: ..mt mal•. 6 . ....._, extrovtrt WM Jlkes to arzue WllL SEPARATE May 21.il le 22nd. 10am-5pm: dishes loys & misc hshld All Slros-All Colors lOO's, M-3'1, C-2. Cv. Many or1. ~2 S/22 wb. 2921 Carob .St., N.B. ... strange'l'l into )'OlU' way of No pJ?.sale & 00 exceptions Items. Sal & Sun. 418 w/ Lt•I•'• spkn. Al'°,_......., M4--0688 S/%1 ...,.., •.: ' · thinklna. 833-365G, Hom r Cash -B of A • F'inanct: 3906 t.llatral Dr, on Humboli Car nation, Cdr-.1. WINDY'S AUCTION IJ,J""J 'IWEED kitteftS -ha If fw.>-1089 Repossession Center ' 2075~ Ne'tl'J)Ort Blvd, CM 'C:Onn_ Have a da.y at the Siame1t. Alao pur•bred WHITE · labrador pi p. · 11·0ftk.. 'W..t:::0 , TELEPH.ONE S I . . 619 E . 4TH ST. !Hsland in H un tin it on GARAGE Sale -Sat & Sun beal'h & shop with U.S. Low· Siame.e. ~1910 5/24 Female call after I P~f nr;; .,.~ ••. 't'~~BA'f o ic1tors arbour. 10 am to 3 pm . Jla'tlaiian • 646-8686 * 493 319 • • Juan ..., " .... ,. . SANTA ANA I ~~~"'""""'""""'"'!"'"I f'51 price., Terms. \V i 11 HELP!! ·N~-' .....'...A .. _., --. .:i a 11 w ... ~-**".~'" Morrufll' A: afln hours. Call guitar, $25. Tenor banjo, 1: . ~ ....... llUfI"' Capiltrano 5122 ....,... ... ,, -r--·._ :rtteu La.nu:. 646-J993 9:)0 e .m .-4:)0 p.m . SAT ONLY 1t ll04 Dolphin $25. Exercise bike, S25. \VORN once in -.'eddl.ng! Siu ~No' °"'oR"G5!1~; 1!;!,H0A105~!-for kitten& and )'I neutered I~~~~~---~~ l uiiili'F..-'' ;:*f';•.,.;;;;-· i"';, .. •f• t,t'liinll; ... ;_-011 Sun: 10 •.m .·S p.m . TerT llrvine TerT.) Qlt.1: a. Lamps, walnut rm divider, l6 Petile "Lori Deb'' ' tu~ .,,..., • call. 5.17-2836 W AOOR.ABLE ftte. PllJIPia. to .,.. T~~~~~lori;;t, ·=~ ~ AtOVING! New D' Lu x e Pl' 'i\•alnut bdrm art w/bed hum idifier-cooler. $5. PLU!\ fdonni ''•· yenowt,Whlte .. 1 "llilh ~ ..!,: Cout H•')', CdM, FREE pup. • M o·t he r sood bonle. Part !kalle. ll3 ntM ~ ... ~~;" • /bl ·•1 I Misc. 17'7 N•w H•mpshi-, a sy es1gn on ona: ..,ttve. "7Y"O"""· Broad"WQ" C.M &a.-4&11 til Hl-Tek, ml So. A.i)n• St.. Lullabye' yr. crib (Maple) w In lrunu r, ge chest of ·~ Fl 1 th / E i !--~~------German lhephenl, father T ' • s.A. ,._ ~~"" and -bum ti:ft drawers, h""e mirror, tall,_c_.M~. ~"-"'-"'~'-·~~~--oor tng w m P re • 300 Pianos ilr Organs Y1' .--;. ,.,_ 6 pm only 5124 LlvettM:k .-.r,._, ma .... .,11, Ptrs ...,., -, . \\'1.is1. Size 7 d}'!'d-to-ma.tch NEW·USED. Going out tor .nv-v•..., ..,.- Tlr• Silesm•n $651. Solid Maple butdl/baae corner cabiMt &. bedside MOVING SALE .shoes and long slip includ· bustne•. Rftltall $10 a mo. ADORABLE «anft: i1: "''ht 3 FREE kitttns-2 female, BAH'fAM ~ ... 111..by ... Call ~Ira. Schmidt. \\'estclLN $150. Twin bookepe head· table.· Xlnl rond, ma.kt Sat It Sun • Dishwasher: ed. Pd over $40, Will 1t:ll tor Slein\\'ay, Baldwin· 6 Kawai kitten to rc¥X! h 0 m •. black, .\.9ne ~· l maft, dUcQ· ·St.Jlt, ie.W ..... Pe'l'9onnel Agtncy, a:H3 board SIO Twin 80" mat. reuonable oiler. Also other rerords -ll 1/3 old l'ia!llk $20_. 8"17-7187, Sunday thru Chiclterinc, Yam.aha., etc. ~>18TI'.(18Ilrn~"!-;&;;t1ii0;;'.'s;;;;;;22;l="""'"'=~""'-=""'-"°~-·-St8'..,.'~~009~ P,.50. 26ll 9a..'~.iit-Dr. \\'~cliff Dr .. N.B. 645.2'nO ~-",,·, box7 dn·~~r"•!". ~I--'~ Items. 1673-1801! 78 album1: 10:c10 tent com· F riday afternoon. FlELD'S PIANO CX>. KITJ'ENS part Manx . Sol'l).e •··""" "" _, ,., UUQ-11 NEIGHBORHD gar. sale Sat pl cte: books galore: misc ,,..__ 1 hort ,.,,. 1 .. _ CUTE cuddly tittt:n tound .,. ~ ·----. - w A J T E R S , Now in. 5 d d ·" 17 ... ,_, ~ 2 ........ ta Mesa Garden Grow w s ..... w...... a'·...... '-y w/b· iut' I ..... ...-·-"'"'.:'.·.·1 ~ t e r v iewinr. Exprrienoed rawer· e..... · .,.._...,.,. Ar Sun 9Ai'f-5P~I. Women5 i1erns at 1 ..... 1 Arag1n Cir, CLEANING out earage u.lel 1n4) ~3250 cn41 6J8..-27'l9 613-1963 S/22 .,.,IUUf,..... ~ ...... -.,,, ... ooly. Apply In -rson-at LEAVING 11late -l bdnn 1o.lr clubs, camping equip., Htg Bdi, corner Ward &: Cou~h, chain, 1 ~a JI WO. ULD YOU 1.. .. ..-Jd • Y• • fr e• t • you . ~ {S I .... sets $95 ea: baby furniture; dune buggy body, \\'igS, Yorktown. apphance1 • TV • pipe • -BEA1.n'IFUL ..,,,.,_iftd t. ~11 · · 5/2) -1 51 I To'tl·ers Restaurant, l553 S. g• •-""" .. 1 .,_. clothe• ''' _12 Sub rb' 'c'===~~~~~--1 ,,m-,, ,11 ., .•• , 01 . ·.SELlrve· ten, I wkA old. 67~D>2 alt ~""'" -..:.a born 0 1,. '· . Coasl Hwy, Laruna Beach .,,.. ........ ; '* ve vet cu .. lfl • · ''J" · u ia AR.AGE Sale-We ha" e "" ___,. nu ~ 5 1/22 & n.z..,i:. ~ .......... e • .-art, Oefteril· _ . : _ .1 M after 5 pm. $85 ea; stem> $200; Hide-a-Ln, H.B. INr.l.l' Adam5 & everything you need! Three ntiscellaneou1r· lltms. Some FREE ORGAN LESSONS DacluLhUJld ii:. 8-tMt black · : · ·"" • • · .- bed $75: 2 lamps 6 " hi, J20 Brookhun;I) 968-3037 r 11. mi I i es p~rticipating. haven'I tie-en sr en for six a. long as You like! No tti· 1D wk Old blk ani! wht .JdtleJW female . .M5-CJ5.1. .:mo s.1 cABIN 1 Crui9fr· ;.u:: -4i.tt \\.ANTED ·Middle •a•d man ea; gu lop w/grate & fi t· MOVING to Europe. Must Sat:.sun l0-5. 2412 S. \V. years. 642-6468 Sa turday· or istrallon. No obllaation. Just 3 ma~ 1 fema1* w•..-d and Oak, Santa Ana 5124; hull, "it e·, e ·~· ... N.W fM 1te1dy pt-time Wdg Co r..1 nd 'l 30 trained 644-5358. ~/21 custodian Mf-9S!l6. 541-213> tlttgs. · SJS; misc:. items. sell everythinj. Furn , Arure, Sant11 Ana Hgts, Sunday me. o ay1 : pm PUP. blk w/wht itar·on CM.,.,.. *fll· ""--ye .... 846-3165 clothe11, reoo1·i.1~. bric: a brat', GIGANTIC :-..Home salr _ COAST MUSIC 81.,ACK Labrador Retriev•r (213) ln.-• ., • Wanted. liv•ln kit he t "· d I h C B I D 642·28o'l pupp\t~. S wlcJ o 1 d . cOOI, cuk Ir lively temah:, e D'l"G"'··=• e . BABY furniture; cri b , c n u ~ns1 ... , s eK , Antiques, furn, mi~c. J7l'"i l , run ng raft. lt-1ach. 36'' &37-!Wll S/2l 101.'ti kid&. 546-3'798 aft 5 >'I l;·'l'M Babysitter. 557-3491. pjaypen, bi,.hchair &: infant elec. ~pphance1>. color TV Santa r-.ta.ria Flri v J y arn1, 18" 11.lum sc11.le $2.'l. HA.\LVIOND st e I nwa y, pm S/24 All GIU.-•.•·• • $100.00 \\'EENLY poutbl.e • teat $40. Also hi-back chair l!IC. Sal & Sun 3J4Hi E. Bay 847-1962. ' Burval iliding patio door Yamaha. ·'New il used 1 FAT &reY baby kitten, "8--Utl ** U'I~ 11.dd~ssins mail Jor Jlrm11. w / ortDman • gold. Danish Bal Pen. * GARAGE BLOCK SAL~ * $2.'l. 2 Twln maple bkcase pi,anoa of mcist makes, Bes1 male, box tra ined . HIMALYAN St a lp o ill t , ' ~·-i Ottails send stamped self atylt: SM. 23" IQ. Dani3h GARAGE Sal~; Sar It Sun 2Q homes -Shado\\·fax ~I ., hdbrds $20 ~a. \\'~ugh! iron buya in So. Calit at.Schmidt 643-1653 5/22 ap&de, a.lao Bluepoint •Pt.M '~1/Mp:. ~ addrtsRd r.nvtk>pe to aryle C'Ol'lll!J' ·tbl StO , 162U Eagle Ln. H .B. Antiq Lake Fores1. Sun .• May 23 pat«> bt>l'ICh S2a. Blk ~ Musk Co., 1907 N. Main, t FREE ldttenm, Calko, k>rw Ir ~tl)er .altered ca ta . -..... Wit-· ... DreUbach. Drawer BD. ~ll76. butte!, .nrH ntW dbl elec • * * * Garage Sale _ Sat '-' decker elec. tnmmer SlJ. Santa Ana. hair. I WHkl old. Hou.a 113.)...?975 er 836-4493. 51)) h Anlhony, Ntw Mexico. nm FR Provincial cun•ed lee· °:~·· 1nfa.nt ~~! •.~ 1 t . Sun U 10 5. 10421 \\'ax\\~ng $2-110. 833-1511 eves/wknds. WAA'TED TO BUY: u~ broken, 548-3750 snt MIXEDpl lrioh ,sett':!~'• .~J~J=='w~~~ \\'IG Stylist W/lllH exper. tiOnaI, Beige damask, $100. ~..., ~~. ou..,.r items. Circle, f'ountain Valley. electric · organ, Pr-efer ~ SO. LAGUNA. playful cute pup es -m .... s, dlaa. I.f1ie nt• · l "SfO Apply in penon, 263 E . 17th I ' Provincial IOI&., beige .,._.....,.,,, * AUCTION * par1y. ,icittem to rood ~s. I ~~~· ~ Ea 1 t-;:;.; ~a; tf!t.ml• Sl, C.M. da.muk. ni. 2 John Alden PATIO !II.le Sunday. Prac-Machinery 116 Fine 1'lmlture '* 646-76.)4 * · ka old. 199-3494 ~22 · 8EljMAR lif3t band ndi9 •'1: X-ray Tra.inee p r 0 1 ram . maple ~nd tablta $ 2 O. tic~lly givir:ir a~·ay old. I urn. \VANT-ED from priv, party It Applim 5/2'J BliCK female Lab. 5 yrs FREE -Kitt@rui • 2 adarahle -~. model ll!OD, . .W. Studr:nta btlna: interviewt!d ~alt S pm or wknda knick-knacks, kitchen item.•, 16" 1wing or more f'ngine Auctions Friday, 7:00 p.m. ALJ..EN ORGANS o::chssiwb -oli. Wondftful Jt'tlch dog. ~ fllitt)' llY ii: ~ S,critlc:e! m.;o&t. . •. far )-yr trainln( COtJl'M, 2 DIR table. ·48" md T 2 women's cl.othing, Y olr"ll.!! lathe, must be reuonably W indy's Auc:t ion 81rn Abo CONN_ Ir ~ 5'd:2730 5122 ~ .,,.i • UDJO idiftetiat& lindcr )Tl collece requil'ed. eon. leaves, no-mar kip, cost cosu, 138 41th St. N.8. priced &equip'd. No dealers 2075~~ NeY.'POn , C.'1 ~ ~d l\1U11~.C.O. aince UU 2 ADORABLE kitteM -1 HCORSE te~. 20~!.1 Hnthl.lt; 'l.Jlla. •-"" -~ 111ct Penonnel Office, South sm tor $123. J Mr, and GARAGE Sale ~1ay 22 "-please. Call 64.>-l.2115 or 364 ,B~•~h~lod~T~o~o~y~"~B~ld~g~. ;M~a~t~'Lcl;~""';;;;~N~·~·~·~··~n;SA;f;,_5'_7_--068lli;i mal~ 1 female I Mal old. y pr• 11 Santa ...,,, '15-4631 .. Coast Conun. Hosp., ll.172 A-irs, uph chain; COlll $425 2lrtl. Bicyclf', lawn furn. 16th Pl, Apl B. cat. Bf\\'n -Sporting Goodt l30 'MS-aiJO I 5/22 Hta 5)21 •-n~ All '"· elec, applianceR, odds & Tus.lin & Orange St~. UNION MEMBERS 2 Pio·~" 7 •·k old ~--t BJltilS PROP!:t..LER Coast Hwy, S. Larupa. w• •:>.. .... e ne1v. ..REE 2 ,, 11 nw ~·~~ - Antiques ANDREA'S ANTIOUES I~ IOO Just Rec:elvN NEW SHIPMENT AUSTRALIAN. &~GLISH Ir FRENCH PIECES 2380 Newport 81., C.i\I. ·6-15-4870 Daily 1~ * Sun, noon·S AA'TIQUE Trunk. medium r:-•. r'ft'lanzular llha.ped, of:'tMJy CW'vtd top, SJ,S. .. ~ AA'TIQUES by Wand• Huft. man 3181 Bol!I&. i\fkl"''l.Y City 892-3622. Spe<:. in dep 111.s!'i. S.1\000KER tablr 'tl'/acce1. Ir custom cover, S750. ~1644 f'ves It \Vkend$. Appliances KENP.10RE \\'a•~r. new belts. hoses. etc. $65 . 6Tl-4231, 403 Columbua Circ, Cd~1 K~Jl.10RE 1uto 'A'&l her $65, Whirlpool eltc dryer $50. Both xlnl cond, cuar • d~l\'e~ 546-MT.Z, 841-8J]j KENMORE gu dryer $50. \\'hirlpool eltt: d?'Y"r $35. Both l()Od oond, f\IU It. delivered., 546-8677, u1-s11;, CARRIER room air co~ ditloner. coat over $300. aac.Ttfic;t $100. Ult'd only 4 montM.1~3 KEN~tOllE "'~.I~. P · cellent: AIM! 'A'l.!Lher A Dryer RI. S40-109:i \\~NGHOUSE dl&hwuh- t r, coppertont. il.30 or best Offf'r. OOS-837'0, ~1AG IC ~r ns rani' -Ua· td 1 >T. Coil! Sl!.O: win ltll for $95. :;.&g...a146 COt.OSPOT rrfri1~ator, 11 cu ft. $40. Kenn'IOt't wuher SlO. MS-883l GE Eltttric 110\o'• C ye,an old. £xcellt:nl condition. ~7-4062 ~7070 ends. JOO.I Roya\ Palm Dr. Miscellaneous 818 JOIN UNION BUYING SER· * SKI SALE * ~ -m ... • ea • mothef Jone .ha~. R,ai,ed -r 22" *'* m lln rear) Cosia i\1e5a. Apt C. VICE , MEMBER SAVINGS Fishtr vP .JlJ'a· w/marker bouiebroken, lDv• clilldr-.n. -~·".~"~-54• •901 5/-F • Ml-IS1J e · . ~PC Birdseye mapl• bdrm 646-4.US •vt:• 5/22 w•u• ,.,..,...'QI .-..., Ml: twin btdi, dresser, No. 15 Beacon B11-y NB !Fri Hf FI ster~o components, ON N!\TIONAL BRANDS bindings, $80. Hart Spoilel'!! · V""r'l'TTJ.?S . INti, ,P.tiftar .. iili. dtelll tabl* I. rocktr. For Sal Sun) R.erria S20; !!Ome &SSf'mbled. OclglnaJ OF' APPLIANCE.5, FURNI· 180'1, $40. lCulinger mvi'1 AOOJtABti 'White cocll:-a· ~·~f"'• .. , ~ . ~ apt Fri betwn 3-Se.m or Sat wo~el1!! clotheJ n 11 m ~ oil paintings, misc. frames. TURE, BEDDING & STER· boots, ~ie· 11, US. :All fOOd poo 4 moi. Female. 642-1214 "2-,.Ql'ftl «Vff S>b'PJ"-0:< .~: nftd ..,:,,,; betwn 7-8am, 673-0lJ.f bra.nd &-Ht: ping~pona: tbl: Llldy'11 i:ons,_ golf bag ca~t. EO. PHONE: 962.()101 cond. 644-1128. or 673-8987 5/24 S/2:1 ~J1 thtn ·111 hrs • •.21.t anligueR + mlsc. J\fany f\hsc, llems. io.5, 310 JtA~1t.10ND chord organ TV, Radio, Hi Fi, (3) FREI: tefriprator, BLACK cat .. ft!-male, Jona C,O.M. •~ •. ~lo• ~~w!:.e~ d~~';;. ~....,GO~.~LDC,,.~d,~,.=,~.,-n-.-.,~,io-I~!~: &St,Sa.~i!f.An~t~e:~ SZ25.; Zenith 19 .. port TV. Stereo 136 ~~¥ing. llJ.~.St, N.B. ;:.;~ •• ~ellow ~~ t:=."full~ ;~ ~ :C::.· ~ T~nze,.;~~: =1::s~· ~la:!i~Y & tro~~he~l ;;;2"1,~226, ~"-·-~~-=~ ~-~ ;;~th~~~ s~ ~a~~ SCOTT nl w.11tt P~ amp It 968-3856 . ~/24 TREE VW body a: pan euly ~. ,te.Jte. ~; N ,_B am •• 15 'I-'•"· 0 ,, 1_,, ..... DIN INGt11:. om• .table S70, 2 II' ~ S W d I ..,. amp, FISHER AM /FM MUST find hofne' tor thrft 196Q'• !5.51-9112 1Dl7 ~Oen h!boa Ba}'.CU.1-, Ml--2lil 0· • C.M. "'"' °"' • • '"" .J.; . .u · & gol P atcu, rteei\-er, G&ITl.J'd. SL-65. houaetwo)(en 'I wk old Cir. loft Tultin') N.B. 5-'8X>'« willlnle. . 'c~u==C-,.=..,--~-,~I TerT Cd~f aqua print aha1n $10 ea, 7 $50.: .303 Enfield rifle, m. bl 190 'd kit! ~-s-'~ STOM buUt bu w/ refrli ' light · l' ha h d f' 1 i e r $15, 496•3046 turn ta e Ar cartn ge A ens. _..._,, _ '.,. URGCNT! Ff'M ·• weet . old ~· ' ERNATIONAL. · "6 chair 1tools. Never us-ASSORTED tum. carpeting. dishy,•nsl>er, S20. assorted ""''""'==-:-.,,.-,,.,-..,..~1 dust cover. 2 JBL spesker ~liITE Sibttian Husky, kittens. UUI W a t aon , Mtre; Oulillr. T'•11d9' ed. dl'!'uer~ Al!!O Mt 1 ~·' ~ 23" CURTIS f\1athias b&w t /lS !XX) J -, mr nea tra\'C'l"Sf' rods. t>'l'Hl'Jj.j roniole TV." good cond. $.t'i. sya ems w , c y c e male, l ~' yn. o Id. 01 5121 tr&iltT, radio, llD.T .. dttti • 6#.667! •tulf from junk 10 fi rH"loT~l'C~K=roc=~x=E=R~Th~-.,~, ~Sho~ 2 -· """k c r 0 s I -over •Y st e m I, 531-3551 ~24 NEED~ ~-~ I ..... 1 llOUnd.tr, bait. tank. ,_,." BEAUTIFUL Spanish oak china. Sat Ii Sun 10.5, 2913 ri P '""' """' et seats from 'fi6 Headphones It. utension ........ '"'!'""...,. Pa_..... IeU !hall 50 hri\•l lO,OOO to: ; tabJ do Baker St, C\t 546-6Qj2, ~1oving Salr. Things must El Camino, good cond .. S20. rord&. 516-71S2. ASSORTED kitttN 1•7 toed, Lab mix P\IJll, .6w:d. yuil. ,. ....... 4r i!; :ev:.a cus:'m"'~~J. l\fANY miac items . from an-be );Old belott y,·e move. 11 eal'h. ~j, "i-!ll-,~z.-.-11-,,.-.,.--,,.-,.-,~,...-11 .ame p/SlameM. Weaned 548--0SU, 836-4493 5/22 wited. $1500 !km: - Price. Starts ~Ion. 120 E.1 .-.~,~G-LD~-,..-,.-,,-,-"-,.-,,.-18·.l t"·o d'--·nt pn·-, on ·n and trained, M8-461S 5/2C 1 !\lo. Did G, 5tiet 1troale 'O (.brl;c;:litca R ' All near rtt!W! ~ ~e a~~=~~ .. -fu,,m,.;•,"W.· 19th St, Costa ~1esa aiust see to llPP~-~ mliC ~or. MW, ate~. H• ....... PER.SCl'lALITY.·"''"' JO""'° lhota: hlbrk. rrJ-22!! Jen-'IT, s1 1·, &•• ~. BDRM ~t-AYOC grn, triple '"' "''3 .. _.. if co•l Joel .... , l and Center so. c. 'I. CAr-.IPER shell , 1·11. CH'('r tables & oe<:as. chair, Beil tor full M!icction. ABC Color La .. ..,htpM~ mb<•-, bJL ~ tr 51~ · drsr, & mirror, dbl bed, nite " ~ Lu •u•• • tra.llet No •nrl-N rab f'its any 8" I k ofr. 546-9610, Aft 5:30 PM , TV, 9021 AU•nl&, H.B. mal• 57• ~s 5124 FREE lo~ home 6 ..,k • •• • 1tand, painting A limps. HI DE· A-BED S · h · -· ru r · ......,, ' •"""' cllrome• -a l'lll -1--=--"· . • panis H11~ bf'cn on truck only 8Jl day \l.'knds. ~Jll9 old malt and fema.lt kttt · · ~ N'~" ""st otr. 833-2396. 1~ead, nu f\f1x Mas1er. OrH'f' LikP ne\\', S2i:'i. Call SHEPHERD puppy C'Ai mOI. • eN fl*. f'9oM iT5-7.5lS · REFRIG. Rocker. Uphol1. bike, ran, clothe!'i, drp1>, f'l c. :'126-lljS after 5. f'ullerton BLK naug. reclinef"l! $8j, SPANISH Stereo credenza all ahotJi;. LoYiible to rd .547.-.~76 anytime 5121 r UL Ly . • • u•i:;· •• 14).,,, chr. 2 divarui. Oval rug. Mesa & Santa Ana Ave, C~I AD,llRA . Wl'stlngh!!e hvy dry gas cabinet, perl. cond. Paid home. 548-M68 5/24, 4 MO. cld P\111', vuy lova~t, liti.fllau. .,.at.r • '· -, Comp. bed. lG44 Madeira, ;;-;=-,,=cc--,.,--.,-""~I ' L arr cond S200; dry1>r/prefer exchange elec. $4:il. Sell fpr S225 or bst olr. KITCHEN ra•-ii .... ~, '"I lively, ~s 136-4<13chil...,,51~. ·& ..,, 40 h, :Evlrwude, •'-, CM "''~ .. ~.... MESA Verdt -Country Clu. b dbl lx'd S20: boy's bike $£·, dryeJ'.. &33--llJJ f've1/wknds. 5U-621C. ·-.~ .. '" uu ........ , en•m·' 22 -~ t 3069 Ct! I Rd ..... oveo •--, •nrino •-vu..-.. s. •tart. ~IJ ~. \ tl'l:r, M •, oota, ., .. _ , .... •"•'ll•d 0 yon ·Fostoria. bicyl'le exerciser S6: chair ONJ::: An1ique Bruns'tl·lck six MOVING, mutt aell new '"'"" uvu ,, .. -.. "' Inc-"~ ·~· """' dep glass, Avon b t Ii. S!i; hooks l0c·25c: vaporizr!r broken. ~ 5/24 · _____,....~. Goral, Scotehguarded l l30. 5"4>6774. S2. 536-8017. IO' Snooker !able. with 1%" Sylvania -oolor TV, rtmole 4 Kl 7 1 1 l{lii<) 196! l'''Oulic'-..........,· Matchinr kweseat $80. sl;:ite !op & all aCCf'11tOrle1. control Ir anttnna incl. S2!Kl. ttens, •'kl o d. Solid Patl -.-.. _., 535-l95.5 atOVJNG! Everythi11g J\1us1 CARfET Leyer has quality 1%-5.~·lfl. 5"8-516:i .,.,•hilt &, rrey. 548-0802 5/24 . _ fibuslui W/ .. Evinrude Go! From 12 noon Sa l, f\fay shag5 & ·Hi-Lo at disrount '"'o;o-=,---,--~,----,f-~==;;--::::--::"""-1 -:;:;;=='0."==c-c""'~~ I outbd. Eltt 'atm., 86tb '~ : BEAUT. Spanish oak !ables, 2Znd. ]029 P~sidio Dr, CM prict!l from S2.5CI a yd. Free NCR 1090 ca.sh regi1ter, goorl 21" TV'1, $2> -$25 ADORABLE ldttena need ad .,. Wals1r0m.· tn.ner. h · • Avocado velvet 50fa & s.i;-,-3459, Est. :.tr. Ed (7141 871-9958 eond. $L2:>. Rtm oltict: Goo1 condition home•. 540-3199 5/24 Peta. Gerteri;I ~ tru. IC-Nii a.ft."I , stand. Typ\\'tr. Good cond. * 67.>.-1763 loveseat, custm tufted. All FURJl.lln.l~E. p 1 ~tu _r es , LADY'S diamond ring. 2~ S-6 ~248 s·.>-28.'\8 C'ln"E l:;ittena Ii , calico) 'II 0 . ES X: cfilaln aui8lr.. -,., -w. 67' -~... t 1 · or 1 SONY TC-J.ZJ casHtte ta-~. ~ •i51 5..u FOR Sale · Ptt Rabbit wi!h Fiyi-~•,., oi••i• ~" • .... "" ......,.,_ """uque 1 em~. misc. 1 cm!l. diamonds, 6 rubies 1.,.orth ,.... r•""' .,.,...... ,,,... ... -~ ... Fri., Sat. ony, 10.S. lGjgl S600, •sking "~. •673.5780 KTNGSIZE bed Sil. radial deck. ' mos old. Re-tail fl.30, Hutch. ». 225 int~t.r ~-9' TUXEDO M>fa, xlnt rond ......,., PQ\\'er Ml\', Burke golf sacrifict, S71!1. 65-2110 ADORABLE kitten ·AD dlf-5l1·729it ·~-.. SIOO. ~ished brau trplc P.tlll'it Lll.nt. HB N.B. l b \\II I b lft"t!!ll colon. 962-Tl02 Snt 152 ha!Jn.. n :1tst dap ...... ICl'!'en 'tl'/acee11• 1 H , GOOD " I d <' u .11, ' !IOn go f Ilg, T.N.T. amp. &-.11peaker box Cett Bht 9fffl' -=-.:.. 11$..'JOd n.enn1orl' rec ryer, BICYCLES, uSl'<I. Good Taperflrx l\'alerskl. 546-4478 :11th 2•1s .. J .B. L.'s. 541-9337 C · DARLING ,Jr i I l• n 1 . • .. -,..,.'lt' ., 84l-2:173. drapery materi11I, knick· rond. 3 sp. $30, 10 sp. S40 _ 3J3.-0402 5122 SIAMESE kitteN, .u)pt, 29' Californian , ...... V.f, , 1, STEEL SECRETARIAL knacks, je'tl•f"lry, dlshfo.11, etr. $60 Slin"""'>" & m,, c, BRAt'\D lie\\' Charmglow gas or ~5630 _ .. _, • .._ -~ .... bllr k.... ,,=-,... L-Jo I !-,,==,,..-~--== l F•mal• blk • -bl ldtt•n ~ate-Pt. ,entle, *"'• •u11.• ~-. ~ ,_. DESK $40 fir! It Sat, 2:J6 Rosr Ln, C:\I 642-1-112 -~1-..., ,,. ur °:' cos · AD~1IRAL Slel'l!'O Hi/Fi, • .. box · • 64 4-199" portable, 6 speaken, $100. 540-1080 • 5171 tn.m.,· purebrd $1.l •· •WU'lt. fltJI.. rtbif,: ' 1t 646-61511" * GARAGE Salt ··BarJt:ain.~" NE\VPORT Bf'.11l'h Tr!nnis "li:EE'l:itt.;n;:->;<;;"";;;:;i;;;j'I ~536-~!212'7~.'-----~;o, Nt--.rk1. tn4) ~'"'*: SO°"'F'°A;-;•""io~w~,.=,7170n:--=l~'""-,71y· I fri..SUn, 21-22-23, 2 o 1 2 I Club i\lembenhip. $-100. plu~ SIGNS; Store fronts le 'tlin-* 83J..8296 • ~E7,.,!ittena, }Ona halrtd 5121 . n....., UI JS'.Q~ J.,_, brin. d j' colon. Reaa&nable, pvt par-B&yvlew. Santa Ana. Hgls. transrr r fee call 11.ft. 5 pni, ~o~i;. bollt!i, trucks. i;·or e&t. 21" Color 1V, trrn-VFH $125 .....-.,... --. · ty. 892-4194 54~ 642-15116 a I !162-3887 or ~18 19" Portable TV· 125. COCKEJt..POO Puppy, 1'1ale. AKC Beqtt -pupa Own bqDt In ltl3, mm all,: I ';::.'.:~~-~--~ I LE'fiTI1iiiEiR'b~;;;li-1h;:->N;;;,:;::;.:;;, ;;:J & '" ~ ~~ 5/21 I' 0 •-' i J I ~ makt! olJtrl, h-e ft'l t :. 1 2 COUCHES ea. 100" long, 1 GARAGE Sale • .ew. mach., Nu surplus ., t e (' 1 r 0 n i c """ • ever ... ar • ~S--6529 • "\\'ff...,.. .....,....,,,.. ~t~6oli\\· ... , ma e, '~ <-6919, businw": ..... Ooki, 1 floral. $125 each. outboard mtr, cloth's ll 9, n1aleria.l, st>!! (' h' 11 p . iahlc, good condition, S00-1~~~~~~~~~~'. ICOCK·A·POO pups -fl'l!f: to i'I" Xlnt condilion. ~7880 couch, toy1, butler, vacuum, Sat/Sun only, 10·2. 1:'.llS -l!J&482t 49fi-l9n. 1; cood home. 968-1149 5121 CJUMPAGN toY P,!)Odl~ WAN : Used traDtr ftir It COMPLETE household turn-misc. 258-A F lower St, Ci\1 lAlitan, section No. G, C:\1. C II ARTER Membership, I I[' 1 RABBIT, J duck, 1 Guinea w/pa~'rs .;vana\l• ~ 1tud ft •• louth Cotst • ~" ' ilhlnrs A antiques, ~fANY llem!l: 32 yds drapery 2 DINETI'E .se:ts, Gold Nl'"'f!Orl Btach Tennis Club. ,,... 1' You . pip. 5!f0..n95 • S/Jl nrvtce w/u.ine: SC~ ln,boud, 6~0~ f * 540-5191 * material $15. 9142 Alol\ll Dr. couch. F.xerevcle, Carfct• $3.)(), 67J...6900 ADORABLE I wk old mixed lr·l1h letter '"Pl 31'.0IRIS qo.,t. r.c. I.oicd-~ VELVET klVntat, $7:>; ·7' Huntlngron Bch 91)8...JLIJ:> table & end 1"b1,.. 67!)...6148. FAMILY VACATION 6 \VK blk'maie puppy. Poo-Boxer pupa. M&--Th5& 5/21 Chainp lirtd '* ·557.TM(t . e<J, Pf,500. D1¥9: llS/ I AfOVTNG tverylhing must JRVINF. CO ST CO "' th 1\11 Cab. \V k """ BEAIJTIFUL. T A· tiny ac.a75T: Ewt~ 'IU/Ml.57K. I eooch, $65; reclinen. $33. -• A UNTRY ' mmn 1· • in ·•Joi· dle A-terrier. MoUwr dtad. 6' Myoporum plan!• -cup Like nu. 542-81TI 10. 2Z3 Santa lube.I Ave, O .UB ~IEMBERSHIP Resrrvr Now 531-3374. 646-4042 S/22 545-3%19 5121 toy poodle pupp!e1, fley toy e .' .. JO' .BER MO,. Co.~ta ~fes11.. * 67" ••15 * 1 ... --• --1 11'1• J«t'"'-M--• PVT pty, I' blk n1ua:ahyde .r.JAJ COMBINATION SAFE TORTOISE ahtll kittens A WHITE fluffy" k ltt1ii1 Suu ..,,~,e&.~•• · ' '"' I .t0Ja, ntver used SlOO. 213: C JI U RC H RU ~1 rtf I\ GE STENO type mactnne A, 24 x 31 x 27" $100 lo\ling mother to rood home. 139-1167 aft •6. 5121 YOUR. ~t'chdor Ki1'PIE -c,'.1J f1\..2982 • ' !Z>-3622 SALE. ll:l Acate, 811.lboa lr!S301\1. Si.l. e 54>m9 &l"-"OOl S/~ 1,,_,,_-"~~-_,....c,,01 (Aus. f'Mip.). PrOfertiw 21' 1'llh1na ht l:: GNJ, Jaland, Sat Ma)' 22nd, 9 to 5. * 6-12-6197 * I ~===,-...,-,---...,--1,or.==,.,,.--~~~ 'ii Manx altt!'l!d male idlt child'• ...i•-rnate, 673-"'-. Wt.11.nt. • motor. PU ar Nit I' PARCJ<A1ENT bf!.. sot CARPETING, help nylon, BLACKt \Vhltt tux'-do klt· eat "''-2167 5/21 ~ -· ....., w.. .. e • GARAGE SALE APT. re.frig. " SlO\'f, 7 pc, . """'T"' oo~• ;KC -····· ~. el 6r.. ~·4 . . 'A'/ plutk coven. Good BARGAINS G., ~R.E' •. 13 L ... ...... 100 *J, yd~. Good corx:I. ~n• rix weeks, potty train-KITIENS. 1 "·ht, 2 atr1 ..... A, ., ..... ~ r ~ ~ • i'('iilfv>""-Wii~iiiOif:I c:oMitlon S23. 673--07M nuu · ~ ... 11cu1::n '"t . ......,ch It beds, Clr!an. $50. !WG-0281 ed. ~ 5/22 wks. .... .....,., ~,..! up. Hawtahots. JUpe: ..... .r;;;·· NAyY \\l(J,1.TJI04T, I CongttSI, CM F'rl-Sat~n f\laple dt.sk. 543-{).1$ _._, ..,.i picldn&! ·'52-u44 G&r tG..Jti1 • PRIVATE pa-y ttft'-n· HI ha.de \.'t!lv-et e h a i r 1 , ;;n~;;;;;:-<"'iii:':=--;;;;-m:j;;'""i<i:;;;,iii:;:.,;=-C.,.-2 DJCTAPHONES. not \\'Ork· 3 Young &Uinta ptas, black. GREY ,_ •·~ idt'·n, I ' I ..,· 0 • 7 • 1 1• •"' YOUnamelt.\Ve'velQl il!BENNETTbreAlh1ng "'' ~ ...,.. , .... ,. POOD".,' £:: _, .. tors kw' rent or W., Alla ni1ters, S&;i() wh>el iCOttdl .....,. 10th s H n... ... lnr. $«!. .,..>-4J6l 5/;u wks 193-46'.!ft Sin .-.;.!:t:'M-1>..._¥• -.. ~' =''===~·~--=-( ""IAJ t, lg. ouh ~ ... in m11chi~. TV-1P. S287. Call M8--98J2 ~fOSTLY '·· • DN)ltt.J'JVf'IU, Jonc ,ba.tr, S U'i.PQWQ Ct.t, t.t(• iShp,. ltovet. ~ S-47.00. Llkl' new, 54~ only, Sam to dark. 5.16--3136 •645--0963 • · {'()C....,r J!Ups • l AOORABU: lritte.na blk & yn ~d. Clll St)..5]Jl -~· Xtru. N;;: MW 1 DELUXE Latty Ktnmm'I! W bide vtl\•tl c: ha i rs , GARAGE S.I~: Bar stools, KER~fAN Oii~ntal rua:. AP-TAKE OVER 21 acres. NO Black ii: butt. S33-2'Z&i S/22 wh1. 968-645.t ~22 e Irish ~Iler pupa e mfitiu. ~TtlO · .... 'UMr. A\!Ofado f'Th., Aft. cute.rt. $66: \'t'1vet couch car 1npper, 1•.11 ktl. tools. pro.-<. !l'T" x lol''.I", Good 00\\'N -$29. mo. Near l;:e 6 ~10 old br. rabbit ariCI cage. BUC: fl ...... 6 mo eld cal • .....~ .... ton: U' la~r. 8-0047 1621 s. Gre~iUe SA 5/22 54,_...,~:-:'"',,,. • .,~ • .,,,,: 51...; U'l'~H .... "'"" boat, motor A: tralltt ...U l1ze 11ow, $40. ft6..7Dl '47.50. Likt new. 5f9...3997 Sat. Jl611 Tlllf'r Cir. 1-l.8. eond. s.:ioo. 5-18-&ll2 • _ -1 ,,.......,.._ u * . ~95 * wMJI ~ iu)mlt 6tfft' :.fPACf automatie let: l PC. BtdroomM:I. Bedltead GARAGE Sal~: 10 am..S pm. GE 12 lb "'aiht-r SOO B' Mlfa M i1c1lfeneou1 FREE killtlll IO aood home FREE ldttiN; 1up wltc-SAJ:NT Betpl.rd I tba £!!J llltV .; 5'l-71DO . ~~'!~mlly iwm bu. ,",',!'-. ',!!,."°,,·,."". st oI dn~n, We haw everylhlng. Che11p. $-$0 largr lamp S3(l, 3 dra\\'fr W anted 120 67l-5684 5/22 Uon. 494--2-432 5i22 old. p)O, .,. ""*' ~OllTIOAJU>-slUMd. """'-v•_... '" • 1~ ~ntu Sl. CM. 6f6..106R dl'sk $20. 6'12-ll!H. 13UY inodtl ra\lroad ltaina: LOVABl..E ~lttlt blk 9 ""k SOF'A I eNfr ~ to .YJ)U. * ~ 1t ~~. • b.1ttr.-.. •tr t.AJlOE nbipntor e OAK DRESSER, LARGE 2306 Htafhrr Lant, NB The laste11 draw In tht \V,st \\'httl do you J{avef Braq. f>up. S.7·7450; 542-1096 5/22 M&-5139 S/Z2 POODLE PUPS: a Wb. J. Wf'I' ~ tfl t215. J.40, ttl( dd'ol!lrc. Call BEVELf.O P.tl'R.ROR J.Ki, Sal & Sun ltH. Lats ol • , a Dally P11o! Classified ~ or IMC I , Valle)', f"REE kitl!.na need Id TR.EE ml dirt. Uh and Malt; 1-FQt, • DAftS: jam b ac1:11aJ '"'~mo. Ma...&SU f'UrnilUr'I' " ~hU', Ad. 642-5678 • Al\llh<llm. 92804. home~. ~7629 $124 . 3.rd. HI 53Mlltl 5/22 ... M-4300 .. C&D*'-*'1. s.,.., • • I· " I I I, ' II ., I I, " I ' i • • I I' I· ~! • I· I. ' ,_ .. I 1 •• - ). ., !\ l; ' ' t-t .. L . • l !: ' I,,. i· " i • r r ' . ' . ·~ ' ' ' l I ' • • ! . I i r ". • • .. 1 • " i r8 [ ~rn •• _, ., __ .. 11 ......... ,, ----• ?' . ~ -..~~ L I ?. ... -_., .--l , , "6 IMto, Sllpt/l*b flt Cycltc, a H1•1, . Trolltrt', Tt•!'fl, .., Autos Went.cl Ml Autos, Imported ,~ e "Tl ~''>{ 'ri; .80ATIUJ,ava11,#ulylat,Jor " St ii .. n '25 16' TRAVEL Tralkf. Elec. lxidp, • .i. longhl "'"'~· wk!. .Up. _ hral<a; ..,,. • oV.n. Ex. • WE PAY TOP FIAT CASH B!LL BARRY Must .U!•-11$-Wll91....... . 6'7UC16 ' . , , • ,.,.._ eoti:1. Slttpe. I A bis Seta of "' <;HI<!•, • TS,-~; or. am >Pld: AVA" H-.... ~· ....................... s.. "i'Hf' •• ,11. ""'°' ,,. ... •. ~: ~.· .. .: -·........ .. ·-""""' SIXl.Oth """ !t.t N.B. S'fS.:~T ' · .., ~ _r'"-• ~ cabiana.'$750 with• luto..otiO!LCh•rl'.r ·IOll "'fllBUllBI" out....__ ' for Ultd cars • trucks, J\111 CaJl U;ii for mti t Btima lff, · -,,.. iJ ---_..... TERRY 1967-JT, fully sell W4NTED nice .so· or luifr· ·1 ~ ] • 53T-6124 • 1!13-'1561 mnt. 8 .sMper w I bol.t ;1cr 'it .dQ',. 1''11 ,pay _ m t!Wrythjna:. Clean I: weU Aak for' Salts lofanqer u:x> +tax. Ca.U.wk<lp. 213 THE BIKE 'SHACK' cared for, ,'$1600 f irm. ll2ll Be b Bl d GROTH CHEVROLET l32--4Ul, ,*Xt 4Q.'I" troni · NEW BICYCLES 96J-8714 , Hwitfn&tac B,. vch M :SO, aft ,1 I: .wknilil eall •mpera, S.ale/ Rent 92G PJ.ftTS e .4.CCESSOR.IE.! AilJMINUlf' Tt&rdrrip, euy on a 211134-2193 ' . ' ' Expe" Repair., All Mtkft to pull1 11ew tins. butane. IMT.fi087 Ia 9-3.131 OJll!n Aaf'.M-Sat..SW. 10..5 ktbox, 1971 lkenae, $250 WE PAY TOP DOLI.AR. !l s·T A.I L'J'!H'J: D yacht chuttt aoacr Hedi wrp ~bol.U.· powtr ·1: .,_n, tO 100'. -. ., .. ..,, 513.i1'll ·~;s.ll . tOI · CDNT!ST !7 DEMO ··.REDUCED $4000' Need quick ...i. 1111 make :room for ttw mnntftct.nt ~DNTEST • MK 11 . urivi.-' in Jun. Holl&m Yach111Ntwport TJ</iff.01'9 . CHEV _64.. 1 tori, duals, ·chl.1i. mount 11'; toild, hG1dlc tank, ,30 1aJ Watu tank, . boot, 4 burner slaw oven, aux gu tank, 4 speed 1tick', loll ofstorqe'and ex· tru. Ntw ti.rt• Ud bl'Jkts, ci.._,,,, one owner. Priv~te plrty $3500. g,. ., 2740 Sari ,:Jpan t..ne,_C'.Cllta Mesa. 'Jf ALA°SKAN c&mper \lnlt, ttlf ··cont.,· "!'fiaJ. 6 elec. rttrla;. Jtange & owfn, Uv Ir UOv dee. Sink w/wattr 1091 ·C BAKER, CM 84W991 FOR '!OP USED CARS Nf'1r ·Fa.trvitw !WMl3(I TENT trailer, slps .u. bltns., It )'Olli' ear ta extra dea.n. '69 su1taco J60cc, Orr1trt or !:7.'pada, xrta wheel, xlnt ace, Us ftnL motocrou n 1ijy, 34mm , $3M. 6Th-52l3 BAUER BUICK ·Miku.n.1 carb. Rcynolds 15•, Alum. Gem lip1 .6. 234,E.17tbSL chain Tabloc, Aronll, Frl!sh fllrnlct, tlec brake•. Many Costa Mru. 5"-7765 ena:. super fut. S 550 . utiu. $795. m-.zs • IMPORTS WANI'EO li>4iOS7 Or&nae Counlln ,69 D!lYt~ dqlper, apriJ-cio Aute Service, P a rts M9 'J'op I BUYER <I(' forks. Mack ... 1-Corvair Q-63. 3 1Jlffd stick BILL ?alAXEY TOYOTA ru.slom tank I: .paint, 3,000 trans/axie $3$ complete. 18881 Beach B.lvd. mlle1. M'r.I. Take tNU w/dutch $50. 54s--O!Kl6 IL Beach. Pb. 847-8555 pymtL .,,,,._ VW ENGINE 41_H.P. Auto1, lmporttd 970 1Y1lem, awnings Ir Iota of WANTE" DZMQ Sp~tt 22' lutf.,11~ •tDt•I"· 6'4" top Lwn for II .. .en tht: feet · $ll~. Watts __ , h I 11 "'* HOnda 305 'Jtunninc or not or, r;;;..;"-----, • 53<).6941) • ------STOCK REDUCTION SALE! Col.,,.u. " MK ,JJ .,_ .,-..~!~~ .. wy tra\le' ,v.w., .1 1 ~ .. u... u ~~ "''ill buy pan1 . .Uk ftw Bob 1· I r:; eo.t $350. new., now $1TS =="°",_...,...,,__.,...,-= 5ST-9:K>S. '..' • ._...,... ...., Chry:sl~ 6.6. ootboard, k>nt: CAMPER shell, l·ft. over l;;;;;-;m..,,-;;;;;--.l;;;;"7i'.:OllL-------' shaft $125. 1133-3772. , . cab. Fits ~ A.ft. truck. 1967 HONDA 450 .. t500. Also:l ·--------Hu been on tiuck only race car. 54&--34lf '11 6:3011 Austin Americas '70s NEW '71 s COL .. 22--Running Ht~!. he1d once: Like new. S275. Call pm MM lhl"u lfti.un or Antique1/Cl111Jc1 953 Ir. 1alle)', Slp1 4. lialbot ·526-4156 alt r 5. Fullerl:ln wknd•. ·211» Pftltid9nt Pl;cl;,;_.:,....;.....,.;;.;'--- .Up. 1295(). Good '""""· · ' . CM ., llHOFORDP.U. V-IOath"d $1595 Days 512-7124; ·~a '51 Ford ~ bus, mn-recen•1u overhauled Needs "rt-•. FO". SALE OR CIMATJ'I ~ s treet ~ ' (Including might, P"P·• 675--fOtl. ~ ~~ paint -body work $45(1. TRADE. S48-561l afttr 4. motorcycle. Nrnr rldde.n. best otfe S36-561l undenstaJ, radio&. hlr.) JI i:tacer. Lollded, llS uk for Jim. Fae. ruar. SM al e.y flfinl or r. alto avail. w/auto tran.a- rad. Di~ 9% 0 \8. . ' Blk 1-• -Bl··.. . --i 'Raythton gpdmtr. Spllll rlr. T\fO f/J' ~·Chris a, Xlnt e, "'u .... e .. ...,.. vu, D B 1 956 •"" ,.,r11. $9000. Nwpt pier 9in.il· cond, ~.~at $20,:;DO. C.M,. S375. ~ une "II •• Ser. #UH393 4~1 , . . Avto Bia. ittJ;nf..1211 l-5 HP Mini· bike, exc. con-RENAULT Dune B u gr Y , ;$600 Less Th•n VW I 24• MUST SILL: '70 lfiOO . (>atsun tn.rk ·with dlllon. $7l. l mini bik• 1%i duals, loll of •.xtra parts, 2 $500 Less Than Toyotel SI .......... •'·" ~ ..... ~: r.~~Mln,.e:ctru: HP, ~ condition, just extra cars inc. s 175 . $450 L•11 Than Datsun ! .... .,..., ,.......,. 4 .painted .,I: tuned, St 5, ~JT75 or 646-1.257 -•- eqUlppe<t. AllO, Sabot 'buD. l aft • 644-6099 alt 8. ' CUSTOM dune bug:y, re.bit Similar S4vlng:, On ., x1n.·1 co ..... 6".0135. ' • Ex--s"= -·-·~ Cycler· Blkn '69 vw; 24Pil, perfect cond. eng-, u-. u....i or u...... MG -SPRIT E - '67 Catamaran .sea Spray, Scoofers :' 925 All C".Xtra• A: service forM?Jf-contained 11' trailer. MG MIDGET Fibtrz;l.t· ~ J"ull l sail, · ncordi. Dr. Scott ~ &M-4719 For courteous Information · w/tn.UP,:;·~Uft. •lQ $650 '70 Honda 350 Scrambler· Lo ~ f95..43l1. caJJ 115 col.lt!t'I! ~11'-11,.,tt t . rn.I. .$55.0.· o ·ay1 Sports, RH., Rods 959 • Nev.·port lmport.s ,, ,,,,.,.·~~~·---,,,. ru/684-1"';. •nytlm• Mollll•Home.• t:IS * "~··n •71 -I .: ... -64)...~ll 2&l CHEVY enfine, ' com-~ 11.UbOa ~--nf6nthl)'"ba!ill . ' ' INSTANT HOUSIN,. pletely .ttblt " race, ~ l;al\ .. ~ .. ,nytlnlt. N~ I,,. cu..... 124 ·S.lrloml a .060, Cf"'"' am, .,11... 240Z Cpe. clubs, .Pltaff. -Sptcla.I, -~-mi~s. Retail liften, ....... ·-. 642-7637 aA50 u. St crifi $150 ~ Automa.lic. rn a a: whttls. CAL 2·24;. Sips ·(, ~·" <r -:,,u · ~tt. or ·· WHY WAn? aft 5. white with blue Interior. ra- .. u-... Mo~. :W/battery."' ·="'":;,· i'-J!F."':;,·':;='!!-;67E,~":n'iioi-:::-.:: ...,,_ 1-''---------1 ~.1 -::: •· ,,..,,. all new Vlllaa:e House dio &. heater. Only 3,400 mil-" . . "**· )18-4179 '611 Hoqla Scrambler for by J Witt Mobile Syitema,T_r_uc_,k,,.•~...,,.,.,=,_..-'6-2• I ti. (Ser. #04011 OOLUMaLl li, ii9 r Load-·1al•. MHh.1 good mnd, with alo il1J' &hake 1 •· aft . ed .. ·~·, Day-If 21.tl -~~~t~:;~.geaL $350,, • ~ ~ now! M=b C: : Bill BuRY •Newport Imports 5.16-mS7;.:!v~: 714.l)M-5724 display a t. . . Sal• P rlctd This CAUT.· Catamaran, xlnt 19'ro HONDA "70" trail blkf, BAY HARBOR PONTIAC-GMC-FtAT Wukend Only · conci. M'a'i t' a U·trailer ~~ne;;117~~·:~ MOBILE HOMES NEW '71 GMC Authorized PONT!Ab-GMC-IUT NEW '71 FIAT tiO SEDAN 2198233 SALE $1679 $299 DN . $49.59 MO. $29'3 Is the 1otal down pay. men!. $49.59 is the total monthly payment including tax, license and tinan~ c:hargn on approved credit for 36 monlhl, Tile ea.sh prl~ including tax i lie- ente is $1792.95. Deferred price ii $2(64.2' includina: tax, license ll finan~ charge. Annual percentage nit JJ.$% .. Over 135 'New & Ult!d Carg 1'o Choose From OPEN 'TJL 10 PM 2000 E. 1'1 St., Santa Ana (lst St. at S.A. Fwy.) 558-1000 I A/T • 1.argKt Selection of New &. Used Fiats • Southland'& Most ~fod. em ~'!rvlce Facilitie!. e Complere Stock of Fial Parts • OVl!l'Sl!as Deliwry . Specialists Buy Or Lease Al C. BOB AUTREY 1860 Long Beach Blvd., Long Beach Phan• 12131 591-1721 Closed Sunday TiilH S.. "FRIEDLANDER" 1 )750 I I.ACM ILYD. (Hwy. 39) 893-T"66 e 537-6824 '68 FIAT SPYDER lncl'd,.lfft "•rter. 54!l--079 SM. M2-&Wl-1425 Baker St., Colla Mesa 1h T , P ickup & I Ft. Ferrari-MG DraJer • CORON •~ 15 F 11 Jwt S. rd S.D. Fwy at Hatbot C <n-tl Ml-9405 « 540-176C Excellent running condition. . ~. ... u y YbtARA 80 m ,. . n·~" .. 70 I amper -·•~ 1~-G t · ..,.....,,. Open Sun. Owned by little old nurse · ~~ w uu-. . rea VESPA 'MaJ'OR BIKE '40 Fully_,.,,,.......,. Z'"'"'"~. Tlnt-$11SO/off ~ ....... .,.._ .&..a...... ALFA ROMEO from Leisure \\1orld. dir . .... ltape. ~. Both Run Good! ~15S7 ed Pus. Heavy duty FilR (WQC 2Bl) Take sman down KlT!: No. 27%. comdet.e .,.13 • .HO~_IU l&l Xlnt cond. aprtnp, brake booster. 3.7 or older car in trade. \Yill .._ii.; JfD). Phone ..ffftndl, S1f5 or 'lttst otter. Extras. rear axle, 3 speed automatic ALFA Romeo 2 litre rd~tr finance pvt. ply. 540-3100 or n4: f13....Z71 ·, 646-0031 , 1 ttana 1: pU•h button rad lo. "61 low miles rood rond many extras. 546-4431 49'1-'l'j06. Ca.It aft 10.00 A.fl!. .,,. P.C. raclnt ~" Xl•t •n HONDA r,., low ""'"· Pfomblng ..........,.t. Fiw AUSTI.._ HEALEY nATS NEW & """· all cond, Muat ucrillce $2950. S1%iO or m~. ! ff• r . 1a:Uon bu~ tank complt:tt ft' modi!!!, parts and .service, 646-2577 ' '' '; 642..9Ql;(I, U.l.-31'90 tves. insulatkm Totqllt! wfndowt, [----------Overse~S Deli~ry. ' :; ~• -•y :.. P~. -t )l•eo• ·-........ · NEW MOiSiJe Hri 20x52, 2 Twdve YOl.t Ugtrtin& IYI· '6'. HEALEY 3'XX>. Looks, C BOB AUTREY •1-RS ~ ,,,..-. ...., (:;s "'11""' • ~ •..J1A.-.: BR 2 ..__ r1~ """ <>-t • tem. Fourtttn gallon plastic J'W1I aood. Recent engine · •• v•v cond. Compt .w/trlr. $850. $900 • Xlrft mnd. • ua ................ -up• _,_ f lfh. d 1 1860 Long Beach Bl~i:t ..... ,,_ ., ... • ·" •nM lnd"pd In eo.. ta Mesa'• water tai .... , ..,.<J p:>Un n• work. I want newer car. '"~ ""! ~1 ~ ...._ tftl ...... 'H"• • • ... -~ , __ ..... _ ~1-t ' ___ .::~=..:=-~=··=---1 . . GREENLEAF .PARK. 1750 1walcu ....,. ...,..., two ...-t Will ae.11. tbh for $800. 1 • lJ'· METC.4.LJ' 'with tralltf .. ~ RU'f!_ ql'!J,.,bike, ~pBnn• WlU'i:tJer Ave. burnl!r, •ton.ge, hand tall· 546-2050 HILLMAN -aails. s-: ... ~ ... apprtcl:'le. Ir '.stm_~ ~· · $15. 548-1698 ,. ,M5-2il0 ored drape.tits, Slttps six w-l,-67_A_U_ST_JN-H-,-.-,,-y-Sp_r_il_•, --------- $400. '1 -1 641-)7&\1 -· • · optional lara:e table quttn • WOULD likt to buy a Sabot I ' fibeq.la11 105 p: Jitan.-:Dofbd. 1970: .19&6 llx53 J L.J.:I Ip awnlnp, slz.e bl!d a.rn.ngement. Par· miginal owner. 49.000 mile1 Hillman Husky In good ·. ~. ~a"<!i!121o~~S150 , Put. -&>nd., '650 mi, 1trfft ~~~~~.~1C:r ~~ tilloned drawers. Many oth-S!IOO or bes! offer, 962-7269 ~hape. Call 64~1082 .-.-..... ,.. lepI .. il60~~" , ' ("~) .~~--M_...,,_ ft' features. • '60 Austin Healy 3000 JAGUAR • • • c:..-xiu ''"'"'""""'' uvuo: SALE $3987 Clean! Drafted! 1550 or , ... , EXc,j.LJBU~ -..,.. '70 Oua StilJ•l> Ji..., S&li~· MS-1241 "'" Offor! 54S-"64 '"' .firers!~ hull on,y. ~rywt Ex. oond: ~~·,S7m ECONOMY SpeclaJ Shasta . '68 XKE 242 new, .~uoo or oHe~. 646-2577 • e MS-~-.· r , ......... -·""U• horn• ,_ --~ .,.,, DN. $tl.3I mo. 'lili XlOO BJ-8, Michelini, f'M, t <>A.JU muu m .,... ... ~ Leaving for Europe, be.st of. SLOOP J)': Wood hull. MU1~ ''9,H'OD~.dlrt ,~lke. HJ.rb' ~rr,...;ient ·cabana, cltan. $499 tJ the tot.al down pay-fer . ~2078 1tll. Wilt not saiU. M~ , prrlormance.~nglne • l'IUIOY Call Chip at 646-3931 after mftlt. $98.31 it; tlWi total --------- ._1 Udo. ~ : --.utru:. $325. -~ . 5: 30 ~O monthly payment including '6.1 Austin Healey !\lark II 3000. New tires A.· paint. ODES 1J tlnop,: full tt111~ BOY'S Sdiwinn 5 apl!l!d Good ~M: &xU tn.lltr niot tax, lktnat and finanC1! Xlnt nd Sl.200 M3-093l mtr., J sell aaill, flnl eona. Cond, Gtneratoi' litK S50 part Sp1;ce &: ~tllltie• charges on approved ere-co · . · $BOS. 548-1067. ~ Adma No. 7 .Balboa ren. uncler $60. mo. Ste to •P-dit fM 48 months. The cash BMW . COLUMBIA 16, 1.& In-fr Honda. 305 Scrambler prtciate 12450. 54&-lfi67 price indudin&: tu: &:: lie---------- tettst. Wdl · equi~ On txcellent .. Condition $350 iifAUTJFUL l0x50 Expando, VIH Is $427.C.35. ~~ Automotive Exttllence Moorinc. HM310 · .• Call alter SPM Sti-9751: . Lall:.e'M)()d, 2 BR. 5 • Adult price ia ~7.811 includinr & SABOT:. camp. --' cond, ·~NORTON' Commando Par1<. On bus linf:. 548-1312 tuts, llC'V\M I. ftnance " ' •"""" · . ' hats An:iual pert't!ntaat ,$150. (Genot. Boe.t Yd) Lido. . • mi, Bunett dlrtctl, MUST 11ell by July. 2 BR. 2 ~le ti_ 40~· Ph TI4/11:1-3Dl .Jl.095. ~ NeptuJ'lt, NB. BA. Ma.ny extru. Adulll. Over n5 N~ " Used Can uoo 14 No. 167' 1825. 'fl HODA!<A.,,,..... 100 »!· 96<-2!158, , ... tU-112> To °"""' Fn>m ROY CARVER, Inc. ITI-3232 ot 2370 d1y1, panslon ctunb.' Str. equlpt. Motor Hom•a 940 OPEN 'TIL JO PM 2925 Harbor Blvd. IW4-00SI; Mi-aJT ews, : $200 or t?Ue. ~T~. , 2IX'IO E. 1st St.. Santa Ana Co11ta Mesa 546·4444 ~AT 12'. '"" . •an; h" Boy'.• 10 1pd. Blkt VACATION Ost St. at S.A. Fwy.I -..'OOd, tne •Hp. $225, btit • 646.()839 + ' 5511-1000 olfor.•V•ry ..... ........ HOMES ·~-~ ll, , ... 11•• _,1..._ 350 HONDA SL 19TD • £.>• • u-•wv ~....... WJTII E."'\'Tft.AS., For SaJe or Rent ped, maey· elltras. t '42-j829.· Explorer Motor Homes I: • 961-9651 * mini h o me 1. Complete Ill . DATSl!N DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAYS l9i0 Honda 350 e,n rt n e. homes on wheeb that take RECREATION CENTER .... ti, Sll,1/Dffk1 tlt Compl.f!te. lo ~·,._ $225. you anywhere you want to 11835 Beach Blvd. Call 646-4711\ • . . a••uy1" ·0''1'R'1'cT'°'"a'•rt.SAVE ROY CARVER, Inc. Httn-Baacll SLIP. 1'1111' Lido for • 20' '70 )!'AM·AHA 125 f 2925 Harbor Blvd. 142-Tm. or~ bo•t. 't'l5 ·~i'~ Now Exp!°"' IBI> to 26, Colt& M"' 5~ "" '65 DATSUN PICKUP * 87l-M50 * fH6..3344 FROM $7"S . '56 Oiev ~ T. c:uatm cab. 5•· T\\10 4-way tit boat 1llp1-$!6 ,,,,..,.,-.,-""=-=,...,= + tax A license bed Xlnt COl'Jd, lo mi's, $550 0 l UUI ,er month. J ''10 Yamaha Wt. ·$W-, Xlnt ur best ofr. MG-9542 aft 6:30 'Tl-QSO runnini cord,• ~'tuL pm. RENT Oft Sho~ MOORTh'G l "=-~*~"~·~;._1«..:.;..' -··~·~~ 11,,-"!0:::Cl ~hj~._~.-.~10,..-•t&k~,-,.bed-,-. I In Nrwport Beach. Up to ff'. MINI · bikf:/ 'rtconditiontd, _________ , Good cond. New rubbfor. Good , .. CCU.. '9Ull'I .. , MW 'part.i. $50. ... good ward: ·ad ... Pld 19116 Pomona. C.M. 548-4204 IW';,•;;';;U;;~:;;;;""';;,::;:Mll:;:!,;'4H6!1=:;;:;::===='!'=,__=====-!.=lnvn:=;;;;""'="=':=:====;l '5S Ford pickup w/camper. Xlll1 cond. $500 or beat offu, .,. ~ ' . . 43'-4535. 1963 '°' TON P ick-up Xlnl. 4 1pd. dlr. Family work horse Fire engine ttd, l owner, rt!• tittd fireman. Sacrifice. CPJV5(3) WIU take trade or finance pvt. pty. ".all M0-3100 or "94·7506 a.ft 10 A.M. '67 DATSUN PICKUP Cond. $1150. Runs like new. (UVT 881), * * 536-4~1 • * Barwick Imports, 998 So. l·,~.,~r=on1_::.;:;.,,,"'T='.'-;C1a:i:::t"'om:',%;;--;:bod:7, I ; Cout Hwy., t.quna Beach. auto, R.&H, Overload•, low _,._....., __ ! _orc_<M_-9_77_1_. __ 1.,::m;;"'·~"""'=·;::'::-:..:;,;.;_-...1 '71 DATSUN WAGON Auto L••slng 964 Au!omatic. fact. air, dlr. Loaded .• owner. Take older trade or 5maJl do\lo'n, Will finance pvt. pty. Ca 11 540-3100 alt 10 am. '1i(I J aguar XK-150 Drophead Coupe, chrome wirewhel!ls. 61.000 mi'.s, 1n F ine cond. °"-ner leaving country, Ca.II eve.~: 714/847-5349 JENSEN J EN SEN AUTIIORIZED SALES :. SERVICE J1rluport 31111µort s 3100 W. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach KARMANN GHIA '65 KARMANN GHIA IRRB 175) $999 Harbour V .W. .. lrTl t BEACH BL. 842-4435 HUNTINGTON BEAOI LAMBORGHINI * LAMBO RGH INI * 400 GT 2 + 2. Red-Blk int. Purchased New. June '68. 8,000 ml. rmmac. $8500. Pvt Ply, Hn1g Hrbr (213J 592-1062. 4 speed, radK>, hl!e1er. Full LOTUS pt1ee $1999. ((1S9CAXl. B11r. ---------1 ->'LEASE • 24 mo's w/purchu« option '67 Ford Squire wgn $69 mo. '89 Cl<I D Dorado $119 mo. '68 Pontiac Exec wan 179 rno. '70 Frd G~ 500, S80 mo. '67 cad n Dorado, rus mo. AND OTHERS All can w/ AJR SOUTH COAST CAR LEAS ING 300 W. Crt Hwy. NB 645-21112 TIME FOR Cj)UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT "WANT AD wick Imports, 998 So. Coan LOTUS Hwy., L •gun• Beach. AUTHORIZED M&-4051 or 494-9711 . SALES &: SERVICE FERRARI FERRARI AtmtORIZED SALES 1: SERVICE ~~rtuµort jl111port ~ • 3100 W. CO.st Hwy, Nt'Np9t't Beach IT'S A brttle .. 11tll )'O\D' fttmJ MUI. ew, use Daill' Pilot 011.ultied. 642--$78 J1rluport 31111porls llOO \V. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach MERCEDES BENZ 1%7 MERCEDES 600 Limou•lnt. 6 door wHh divi8- ion. ROY CARVER, Inc. 292.5 Harbor'Blvd. Cc'lsta ~leM 54G-M4-i DAILY PILOT ALL NEW DODGE COLT No other import offers o!I lhtie feotur•s os standord equipment: AdjU&tobie sleering column, fl ow thru ventilation. front d isc brake1, 100 h.p. e11glne, reclining bucket 1tols, hidden on lenno plus up to 30 mpg. ORDER YOUR$ TODAY! '67 MUSTANG 4 llttlD COUH f.UTIACK Wiltri ""'°I ..,..hMlt, ¥..,. ftlf:•, low ,.k•d llo•tolft, (Tf0660) v.1, 1Nlo111e!k treft1lllfHion, .,. .... liNI, Ndio, h<IOl•r. !W05021 '61 CAPllU h"'"" CM.,,.el..t w1111 v.a. •vlo111allc, ~ , ... ,,.,,, e1.r condltleft1ng, .. 1..y1 io,, bu,ket 1•011. (VHN.532) '61 CHAIGEI v.1, eule. troft1., ,... • .....,.. Ing, ¥1ftyl lop. Tell d•lwo th!1 lodoy. (l.5115H). '1h:ed to Mii " '70 DODGE COll:ONIT .C Door, V-1, power 11e<!rin9, lull., lodory equipped, Incl. •ir cond, lk, Wl(.C lCO $1888 LARGE SELECTION TRUCKS & CAMPERS NEW & USED BRAND NEW 1971 PACE ARROW ' MOTOR HOME ' '67 vw IQUAll I ACK ~AOON lo< .. , h•t.r, whitto wo!k. (Vll094) '61 COUGAR l odlo a hHllt, •Ir COftd and vlftyl loll Thi1 ofte ;. r<IOI 1po"'1 (VNl162J, only '70 fOID CUSTOM 500 v.1, auto., pow., ''"''ft•f btek•t, lodory oi• tond., redio, f1<101••, whlt•wo!l1, lk . .5$0-401 '66 FORD COUNTIY IOUlll •odie eood MMl1r, oulo-lk, pow•• 111 ... lftg, V.t IV/JOI. A fl"'•ft~I b\t'f, pl1l1ly Mii COftloifted with , ""''°· tront., p/1l<1••lng, p/b<0k<11, 1podo1u wa1drob1, tl11plftg acco111111otlelloftt kit 6. A bMvtilully oppol11t1tl tlkh•~ wlrh J bu•n•• 901 1le¥1, .,.,, hood .,.,ft, fott•tl l!ft ll heal, d1!u1• llolh•OOM Ofttl MOft'f oltiw lu•url•1. OIOEI l'IOW fOI YOUI YAC/¥ TION • OPEN DAILY 'TIL 1 D PM INCWDING SUNDAY I '66 IUICK I KTU.•K ,_ ri--HDrdlap0 V .. , .vt., troft1., Al• eo..d. Vlnyl .... fTl'NOOI) ' •• blfY lhli ...,.. '61 UMAllO- .. dio, HMt.• The '-rfMI C.. Yt>A5U , • , only '70 fORD MAYlllCK W• lfl¥1t• yov 19 Nit <lilt .... 11111 ta•. II h foci . •qpt. with lh• COft¥•ni1nc• lhel "'Gkat drl•lng o pl•1v•1. 71JACH MOTORHOMI SAUS& SIRYICI Wf1'N ...... ,_...,.. 1+ I CllUlfo• ............... ~ ........ ,..,.,. .,., .... .. W1 NP91f •" ,,..i. ... -4 lo!.i.11 Ge .. ,,1..,, Alt Candhl-t1, A- lnlt. si. ... 1,....,. • ~Int . All cars subitct to prior ule. Prices good '"' Moodov. M.•'f '"· 1971. • • , • J ••• CALL US NOWll , .. ....., ..... •111 "1 ........... ,1 .. ,.. ... INST ANT CREDIT I YOU lllD AID STIW SAVI YOU MONIT tw you oro -in CoHfor""' 3. ~you oro now"' your iob 2. tf you owe money on ywr 4. If you have little or no ; c;or credit UT •• n't TO &llAlll m ClllfT AO TllMI YOU IRD IO TIATYOUMAY ' Ort.t MINT-., ill ... •fl,_ dlobft s2497 FULL PRICE IMMIDIATI DILIYllT BRAND NEW 1971 DODGE VAN FULLY FACTORY EQUIPPED B 100 s2&.89 OIDfl TOUll TODAT FULL PRICE $65 DOWN $65 MO., 36 MOS. ~~u• M O NEY BACK G_UARANTEE On All Used Cara Listed Below 1970 FORD '70 ROADSTER P'arit~• •n9in1 1id1 curl•in1, ri1u. 111h, lll•l1l fl•\• 111inl, ('9'9 !100 ) $996 '69 CHRYSLER CUSTOM Or. H.T. v.1, •ula. h•111., paw•t tjt•rlnt. •!• c:ond., ••dio, h1•'•'· wh ittw•ll l ir11. t inl td gl•n. a1 •. wh11 ! COY•n, l•nd•u. !Z>.Cl~I) 1798 STATION WA•ON Au!o. lt1111 .. paw1r 1ltt•in9, t•d:1, h••'••· .. ~;,,,,.,11 ii111. (~0H•l'9 l 5488 MAYIRICK F•c:lary Air. r•dio. ~••ler, •1t . sf '2'9'a '70 CHEVROLET 1"4P'ALA H1 rl!l!op. VB , •ul am1lit , P',S .. mo•1, ( 76<180A I $1888 '67 CAMARO H1rdtop, VI, •ulo,. 'buc~el ttth, 'ontol1. ••lille, h1•+1r, whi11 wi ll lirt " (VfXl 71 l $788 '69 Dod9e Char9er v.1, •u+a. "'"'·· f1cta,.,. •ir to~a;. tia11i~9. oowt• 1ltt•in9 , r•lilio, ht•i· t r. !ZIZ<19l l $1555 '69 BUICK •RAND S,ORT 400 Aule, tr•n1 .. pa,.,•r 1lt•rin9, Pll'"'•• br1k11. r1dia & ~••l•r. Ne. 1 •14 1 '9 1666 '69 FORD STATION WA60N " VI, •ulam•tlc, rtl!l ia, h•1itr. p•wt r 1111rl 119, muc:h mert. !Y FIJl4) $1233 OUR COURTEOUS PROFESSIO~AL-SALESMEN-AND ·CREDIT COUN SELORS ARE All BONDED BY Al· STATE INS. AND STATE LICENSED . YOU 'LL LOVE DOIN~JlfiliESS .WITH THE/.11 < .. .. '. ' , ~ .-~ .r r. .....,. ...... ,. . . ... ,,.~ -· ..... . . ~ . . . . . / 1§11 I~ I 1§1 I 1§1 Autmfors.le ........... Auc.tilr .. AutMfrDl-Me I ~ II Autos, Imported 970 Au ... , lmpor!M '10 A .... , Imported '70 MERCEDES IENZ PORSCHI SPRITI TOYOTA 'ST Porsche Speeds te r, '60 Sf1UTE w ( '6' q., SAVE! Champ yftl., bUr inter., new tral\I l. lnalr. Jte.upholartey sop, tac 1re1b chromed en&, • rus. $400. fi4 S·!ll!; 1t71 TOYOTA ·~ b'l.n1, new brk1, dulch 1 ,_,"4,,c,_-==~-~~--I $1777 &: elecb'l.cr;. CinturalOI ton. '6T SPRl?E Mark III, hard DEMO e 8812 LOW MILES neau, many xtru, mu1t 1et, top, 8T,000 rni. il Nnftina. llfl' OUR DEALS SJ.200. n41m-OBS4 S450. 496-93.51 ..:..."----'--'------0n Other ·n 0emo1" Larrl '65 PORSCHE C TQ'Y;OT•A Sll>Ck Of N•w '71 Tuyoto" '68 Mercede1 250 SE. like new1 tow mileqe. $4,950. whlta-with red interior. Ex· Air il lealher, new Michelin c!l.lenr condition. CTZP 808) tires. 493-3429. 1'ull price $2495 ct take TOYOTA 11•w '71 ..t)eAA Lew NO DOWN W TOYOTA MG trade. C&ll 4!M·TT+t. •,----,.,,,.-...,.-~IBLACK '64 SC, ~nl MG engine &: tr&1111, Mar•, FM. PAYMENT \ AtrrHORIZED Muil aee. MJ....434.1 dy•, !ALES It SERVICE 646-91ll alt 6, Mk IM t~1·tup 111 · 1! I: I~,,, : i ·. i..m.. PORSCHE, '62 S, rebuilt en,W, new tins, &hock• & seat.I. Elec IWI root, extra•. 2J3.4J>.<540 .,_ W ~--H 1969-512. Chrome whl1. Am· ~ ' ~l ,,,,. ··-Orl $69.01 MONTH' 311 mos. Def. pay prlct. $UM.36 or cub p r te e iml.55, ll>ci, Tu • Lie A.P.R. lf.5'9'. SeriaJ, No. 134347. •on approved credit Newport Beach' Fm radio. .._.... I · r-----"-_.._.. ___ I owner, 833-MM, Mf-0537 1111 Maxey Toyota 18881 BEACH ~ 847-&Wl HUNTIN'GTON llEACH eves . 196l PORSCHE, rtblt en.a. 4 1pd. dlr. Excelll!nt ctindl- tion thnlout. (XAN789) Must 8.lJ-:WOO r.xt 456 ti a y 1 , 1 ,__ ~ lull ~ 64l-623T: fiM-0089 eve1. u.c:r r ... 11', ii...... ,. ....... Take 1ma.Jl down or older ,,, .. ••Ac• UMY. •• '64 PORSCHE. Ju11 painted 893-7566 e 5.1T-6324 trade. WW tlnanc.. pvt. ply. ~-'-"=--,,..,;,~~~-I Signal Red. Immaculate! C&ll M0-31{)(1 or 494·T5Uti att '66 MGB, l'.l,000 ml'1, Rem. ~150 day1 646-8654 eve. 0 M ht'dtp. "Old lady achool '66 PORSCHE 911 1-'IC....:A:::·':,.::_· ~~~~~- teacher", Sll95. 6?3-1901 Red wl blk tntt-r, 1961 TOYOTA CORONA '63 MGB. Good cond., Call 6TS..5738 4 OR. SEO, hardtop. ~ire wheell, $795. '68 F'm'lche 912 Super cle11.n BtauUf"~:::: ~,':' with 2 • 673-3095 * Air, OHer. s4T-6091 d'f1'. "'··~ •a.u 1m MG.A cpe, wJ'65 MGB 673--1901 evr.i. tone intttior. Auto tra.M., • -1NINI "MG" .. "fRIEDWIDBI" '69 COROLLA 2 DOOR 1962 Pcnche-Xlnt Cond. S1950 Pvt. Party ... S-1~1503 ** 1966 Harbor. C.M. 646-9303 '70 Toyota Corona Alr """""'°"' Economy ~ Comfort, for hot month$ to come, mue, 9'JOO Mile1. · $1895 _1~l l:l~~ll 1 1 , . I ' . . . : l ' 3100 W, Cout Hwy, Newport Beach '65 Toyota Land Cruiser P.U .. , 4 whl drive. S1600. \\'/cam~r Sl!IOO. S4!t--05()1 TRIUMPH '71 SPITFIRES NOW ON DISPLAY Come 1n fOf' a test drive l FRITZ WARREN'S SPORT CAR CENTER 710 E. lat St., .9.A. MT-076' (lpon daU, 9·9: clooed SUnda.Y I '1'-"' .... 1§1 A\lfM,lmpomd 970 VOLKSWAGEN '67 vw W/white aldtwall1, 4 Spd, Radk>, custom paint, CUSG· &40). Th1s W' hu passed the VW 16--polnt &afety and performance 11!151. It is fully cbec:ked and tnotolll'hlY rt· conditioned. We guarantee. 100~ that we'U repair or te· place all ma.Jar mechanical p&rts' l or 30 d1.,u1 or 1000 miles, wtlichever comes tint. 'Endnt • Tn.nm1is1ion • Front Axle • Rear Axle As- .em.blles • Brake System • Electrical System. $1295 ~,~, ~~' _>49-3031 Ext .. 66 or 61 1970 HARBOR BLVD, COSTA MESA '66 VW lu9 Show Cll' Burel. Exh&UI(, Wood SIPl'f• lit& Wheel, Chrome Wheels $995 i)r \11~111 11 I 11 "11' ' I • ' l · •·l-''"""~===~=~-1 Ra.dio Heater, etc., Price tr&Ill enr., new nres 162 PORSCHE 1600 S Reduc'rd. VTLDI S97S. John-'MW 1959, many extru, 3100 w Cout H rad. S6;.() 549--0957 $1900 833-lZiS &. Son, l6l8 Harbor Blvd., hard top, '!~ll{lt'U IOft top. New~ Be.adlwy. PEUGEOT '6T PORSCHE 9U TarJA. C.O.ta Me1a, 540-5630. · Good· con<hliod With 1~1\11: ---..::.C."-''-'---motor. Good commut1n.a: 1---------·1 Ori.J. Owner, kl m!'i. $4150. 1970 Toyot• Corolla car. 830-9721 Th .... ,.... 1200 c-. 1 . ..:::,:,,::;_=----e ....-'61 TR·3. reblt enc. k trans. '58 Ponebt, excellent cond. SPORTY ECONOMY over-driVf', clu iic. S90'.l. or Black beauty with pin ltrip· balaneed '._M_u_~ __ .. _"_'"_._"_·_'_'_'_'_0 • Bri&:ht rtd finlrh with black beit ofr 67l-0640 Ina:, 4 speed, radio, heater. 6~170 bucbt seats, 4 apeed trant., ~::.:,,:::_.:;;~,:;_---·I Low mileaae. f330 BQKI. lo, H .68 TR-4A, $200 Wldtt IQw '69 YW BUG I . AutM for £tit A.,.., lmPortod 970 VOLKSWAGEN '66 VW IUS 4 Spd Radio, custom Paint, 11asBxs1. This car h&.s pa.Sl- ed th!! VW 16-poinl 111fety and ptt,ormance ~11. It is flilly check@d and thoroUJh· ly r@OOnd!tlonM. We SU&l'· antee 100% 1h11t we'll re- pair or ttpla~ all major ni.echa.nical pa rta• for 30 days or 1000 mlle1, which· ever comes first.. •Engine • Tran1n1!11ion • Front Axle • Re11.r Axle Al· 11!!mbl!es • B~ake System • Dttl.McaJ System, $1695 M9·3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COST A r.1 ESA '71 VW Super IUCJ 1700 Miles Mag Wheels. Rad ial Tires, Or1.na:e. Black lnlerior, $2195 f)r111•1•1r: --. ll11 1~:ut ' c• 3100 \\'. Coa~I Hwy, Nr-1vpon &a.ch '64 vw iJKN 755) .$799 Harbour V.W. machl.ne RENAULT R&d ...... "'·· ,.,.,.,.,, Siu• Book -S1.12S • whl~h Buwiok lmpom, 998 '·· tor quick Ille. OlAKS. S14T5 will fix. 64J...lTl7 Coll.It Hwy., Laguna Bel.di, ·59 Renault Rr18. Sdn \l!gn Johnaon A: Son, 3626 Har· --------'--S4fi.4051 or 494.9n1. 18nt BEACH BL. 842443.S -~-Bl d "-to M .68 Triumph Spitfire , convt .:;:.:..:::.:...:.:...:::c_;::c..o_ __ I HUNTINGTON BEACH You've out.crown your Xlnt cond. MOO ml, 2fl mp& ~ v ·• ......... e~. • •68 vw. Good Cond. two-1eater aporta C'lr and $1195 * 642-~ =-=~""'='"'·~-~---hardtop, wirei. )Ont rond. l lo='\ 197 VW -Yellow w/aunroof, .. th h t MURI He! -49h'i801 wv hate the ou; t o 1. au· TOY OT A Land Crulier 69, ..;.;;::.:.:.:;:;.;::.:._=.:_ ___ I -Fm radio, Porsche rim•, eat<r •"""-Now, to' you, ROLLS ROYCE Warn hub•. Tow bu Mth VOLKSWAGEN 1---=Call=...::6'6-:."4:.:0:.:5__ • .i.. St•ec·g whl. 11., ~ ·• there's a four·seater 1porta .. ...,.... car that cell 30 mile• per ---------Brake • Rite Strombery '69 VW Sqbk·Auto, 1unrmf. T.Q.P. Call 545-3073. .•• aaJton. The new Peuieot 19'1 ROLLS ROYCE Coupler. Low mileage: e '68 VW-SUNROOF • 11,300 mi. Like new, Be5tl··"10'""v"w,,-s"u"g'",-;:;bl"u•"".-::.,::c,,..,:::1 ..• J()C. The perlecty balanced Silver Shadow, 4 Dr 1ed1.n, S2400. Prlva!e Party . Ste at S1200 ... 67~ oUer. 549-1004 tape, wood ·whl, da1h &. ·• ' machine. aold It 1erviced by u1. t"ac· 2'140 San J uan Lane, CM. '69 vw. New radlaJ tirei, HO 1962 V\V reblt 1600 •ng. knobs. 14,000 mi. Xlnt oond. tory Warranty. (XEV059) 1968 T~yota c.orone."""""5pd , shocki. AM /FM, Sl300 or Ma;1. Call 96S-!i066 or Pvt pt,y.~S1795. 646--2635 N8'Y Peugeot 304 FRITZ WARREN'S SPORT CAR CENTER 710 E. lit SL. S.A. 547.0764 Open daily 9-9; closed Sun. PORSCHE PORSCHE'S WE HAVE 'EM '70 fill Past~! blue with black in· terlor. AM/1'M, chrome wheel1, 20.000 miles. (~. BBN) $5895 '61 91 T Adriatic blue. S 1pe.ed, A:\1t FM . Excellent buy, i\VPZS64J $42'5 '61 912 COUPE Tancerlne finish. Immacu· late : 5 speed, AM/FM. !\\10 0 7481 $4395 '61 912 COUPE Adriatic blut!. 5 speed. Al\t/r r.1. ILXN368 l $4395 '61 912 COUPE \Vhlte flnl1h. S speed, AM/ Flot ( XKY8~5) $4395 '67 912 COUPE Buriundy black interJot. 5 1petd, AMIF?tf. IZGS· 3851 $3195 '66 912 COUPE Sih·f'r ""ith black Interior. ~ speed. AMt r r.-1 . cruz. 909• S36tl '66 912 COUPE Black finish. S 1peed, A.\11 FM. ITKW68il $3695 '66 '12. COUPE Yello"· finish. S speed. (\"LU546 1 $369$ '69 MERCEDES BENZ 210 SI. COUl'I lmmaculalt!! Automallc. po1.1·~r stettrin&. low mile· &it· (7038AU1 Sl9'5 '56 T-BIRO An orltinal equl pmtnt. In· cludina: Cont1nenal Kit. port hol! top. 1 owntr. frxv333l $13'5 Ow.t1eu Delivery AvaU· see or call RltL DON BURNS PRESnGE Porsche, Audi 13631 Harbor Bl~·d., C.G. (Juat S. ot G.C. Fl"'-')'.) a..osm SUNDAY 636-2333 $16,950 FM, mag wtll1, new eni Ii best offer. 57;,...2110 ~962-;:::1:;"':;:''.,.--,----,-l ~b::_h:::•-n::,;4-::_l_;P:::m::,·~-,-,-,,..--1 ROY CARVER, Inc. tire1. R.eblt 1mog. FUl'I to 1---1,.-'-,-V\l'-,-8-.,---'68 vw udan, sunroof, vw '62, Good pa.int. titt&. 2925 Harbor Blvd. 1 _d_ri_,._._l'-950_. _ .... _250.1 ___ ~1 .smo AM/FM radio, S1.1T5 uphol & erpt. Ju1t rec'd Co. a.ta Meaa ~ •'63 VOLKSWAGEN Call 55T-8865 after 8 1 _1.__~S<::~c:i:::... ___ 1 ~.,jl muRt He $600. ··: Campti'. fully e q u I p p e d 1968 V'W-Xlnt corxl, low CAMPER '66 poptop, 451'.m QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT "-'/fU hea ter. ldnt con-~~ 11""' m· Must tt1 a---i&ce ·59 ~ BUS MANY fUNC· · •-I •~., ... ...., 1. • 1. .ee ., ... ~~ . dition. oo:sl of t-r ..... ..-vuu. Call 673--2271 $1995 ti.rm. 494.&893. TIO AL X'TRAS $ 2 3 5 0 . 642-JM!! TmED of that~ furniture? '6l VW bu&. rebuilt el'IJ, '59 VW. reblt eng. Synehro 1 ~~~..,...-,-----• lt'• ft&lly .not lhat hard ~$850 or offer. 11'1.nL Xlnt mecb cond. 1375. '65 VVt'. New ti~1. brake• & to npl.aoe. Juat watch the _,,....;.,..i _ _.•, .l..•=-644-::::0561'.'.2'---·· 1 ..... :_:o,:,""':::::--~-~-muttlt r, i1~2~~· turnlture It m1soe11ant«1I '69&illlttbe.ck Vollrawqt11, '67 VW.Good concl, new ti.rel, 1 --~.,'-,=~=---1 column. in the Cau!fled r ood condition, for sale bell R&H, Jo ml. S.~. '65 VW $750 WANT AD . 642·5678 Section. offer. 117St404l. 54>1112S ---•~54_;._o_77_5_+_=~• .;. 980 Autot1 New 9IO Autot1 ,_w 980 Autoa, New 980 Autos, New 980 ••• Autos, New PRE VACATION SPECIAL 1971 COLONY PARK STATION WAGON 'aw•r 1ill1 wl11dew1, Colt ny '••k lt1• tl•11 W•9a11, 42,·4V VI. Twi11 ca- fart l•vnt• t••h. Ne11 11h1utl ,..,;,. 1io• tY•*•"'· Car"t rint Ltmpt. W1W H-71ir ll l•H•ll Tir••· Tilt •'•••i"t .. h.el, Auto ... 1lit •JI••' c:enlrel, 6· "''Y 'Wfl tt•I driw1r 1i!l1, Atc:linint p111•119 1r ···'· c .nter '•ting , •• , 11•h , Tinltll gl•11 • cofl'lpl•tt , lut • t•t• ,,.,;,, . "'/•.ir ll1fl., Ce•p•tell la1ll flear. lltlien w•9a11 P•dl!IN/ Lec~1bl• ,;J, tlar•t• comp1rffnent, P'ewer d11or lac~t, Auta ... •lic ,,,.,,..,,, lu•• central. AM r•lll• w/1ltrtt *•P• ty1,. lftlt ••tl wind1hl•11!1 wl,1tt, 01.X 11•1 I FflT. 1h•ul ll1r li•lh , App•tto 1111• pr•l•clio n 9teu,, A•Mot• CTL ltft ht ftd mirror. t Sl!i6 I I DISCOUNT ' 51077 PION WINDOW ITICICll rtlCI 1 Mlle South of S.n Dl~o FrHw1y Lincoln Continental e . Mark III e Mercu\-y • Cougar 2626 HARBOR ILVD., COSTA MESA 540·5630 642·098l • • • -' .-: ·,· ·. .•. ... .. l • Fnd11, M11 21, 1971 DAILY PILOT ~-_ ... _ ... __,!§]. I ~........ !§JI A~........ I§] I '"'"'"'"' I§] I ........... ~ ;;;;;;;~•1.:;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;:~:i-.· Alllo1, lmPortoa 970 Autos, lmPorted · 970 Autos, Imported ' 970 ~·· lmPorlod 970 Auk>s, Imported 970 Autos, Now 9IOAutos, Now 910 Autos, Now 9IOAutoa, Now :i j; VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGl!N VOLVO <~: '64 VW e VW's • '67 VW Camper '63 YW BUS FANTASTIC BAUER BUJCl7 iN COSTA MESA i.!~. Fully F.quippfd, C U I t 0 ffi ~ ••. • Custom Paint, ~ '''n" • • • •-~ HUGE SElECTION Paint, IURW76.1J Thia '" (6JO S<OJ SA NG I ·:· .• I pcn·t., !NUG3481 This car has puud lh! VW l6-Point YI S. ·:•:, ............. vwl~polnl 5899 ''SPECIALIZING safety and performance '64 ro '70'1 ufety and pertonnance test. test. It is fully ch&ked and It ls fully cllecked and DEMO SALE . thoroughly reconditioned. HUGE SAVINGS thoroughly recondllioned. I 144 Autorliatic I. Air We guarantee 1003 rhal PRICED FR0~1 We guarantee JOOt;a that • l'2 Automatic ;~,=!,;;~,;",::, ~: • '64 SEDAN • ;~::,:,;.:,.,"~~ ~: '1W.Jig~1~~ si;:,•:is : i~ ~="' . . 30 da)'! or 1000 miles, Radio, htaler. CHXY16J) :lOda)"Jotllmmilts,whlch-'&] YW SEDAN Overstas Delivery IN. UALITY'' whichever comes tirst. $69S ever conics tlrat. ytl OUR DEALS ' 'Engine e Tn.n""l"ion • .,_ •Engine • Transmission • >'ront Axle • R'"' Axlo M· '69 SEDAN Front Axl• •Re" Axl• M· E"ellent rondltion to • o"J. A•xl "'~ On 0"< W.• . semblies e Brake System semblies • Brake System dlr, Special wbl'els and tir. Stock of 71 Vol:vos, • Electrical Sys1cm. R.tdlo, heater, ma.as. • Elt<:ttlcal System. es. Has l\ad loving care. fi L • $895 J870 ASLJ $1995 till BSWI Toko trade °' eoa eUJIA • 51295 • ~ ~~ty .. ,fo'.;,:~!.~~;~ . VOLVO Lowest Prices c.i1 .,, 10 A.M. Q~ OJ Highest Trades c~ o~ 1968 s~~ ~'l::~~t••k 1"" """";3~;S 646""' ' ~ ,s J' New .,, 1S BELOW \VHOLESALE . 1969 Volvo 164 ~. R., H .• ,a ' Car o, .J'P One OWJl('r trade, _30,000 m1, Automatic, Faclory A Ir ~L A1J1 Oe11l•r ,,,,. 4 spd 1nns. radlO, heater, Cond Sharp YWRMl 'I' Bill Jones' m. XEV667. Sll7S. Johnson DEAN .LEWIS .II j s. rt c l ~S-3031 Ext. 9> (Ir 67 .l Son, 2626 Harbor Blvd., L\IPORTS 5'19-JOl l Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. u. . po scar en 1970 HARBOR BLVD. "°"' M .... 5'0.5630. 646-9J{J3 COSTA MESA COSTA MESA VOLVO al< Had•>< tl•d., 2833 Harbor 11.1 Adams, C.osta Mesa ,70 V\V 8 ..... n .. d;•, mat•. Costa !'o1esa '69 V\~ w/sport. options, ,71 VOLVO l80DE Cp FUlly ------·II "'"' '"" "' 541).4491 tach, aLnK.'OOp, llatr exhausl . ' (j; lHINI Holley 2 bbl, headt>rs, fbrgls --'-'----I lips, perfect cond. Sacrifice equtp. w/auto Ir an.'· 'YOL fenders, polyglas t i r .-s, '&I Bu!<i Camper, '68 1000 this \ffekend at $1~ (Ir PUrchased 5/5/n. 400 ml 1, VO' mag11, xlnt cond, S1650. engine, Big tires, Must stll, best oltrr. Call 838-3829 S4600 firm. 548-1936 • &12-5443. STJll 54&-5619 b!lvn 6-7PM or can be set'n '62 P-1800 Sprt Cpc, Xlnt ''FRIEDLANDER" • '64 VW-Lo n1i. New paint 1959 VW, xll'l! runn~ Ctlnd. at service station, corner cond, l6,{0) mi's, R/H, & brakes, Xlnt cond, $750. Good body, $350. Redhill & ~titchell In overdrive, $1295. &16-2107 675-6414 * S49-2730 * Tustin. bl'f 6pm. 1»'N llACtt INWY, •> 893-7566 • 5.17-682.4 Autos, New 910 Autos, New -,--.,~~--~ 910 Autos, N•w 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 JOHN CONNILL "No Gimmic11, No Gi¥11w1y1, Jytf 21 Yr1. Hon11t S1Uin q WE'RE LOADED WITH THE ALL NEW 1971 CHEVROLET WAGONS! • The rear window goes up and disappears into the roof. The tail gate goes down and disappears into the floor. ALL MODELS • EQUIPMENT AND COLORS AVAILABLE! OVER 50 VEGAS TO ~CHOOSE FROM .BRAND NEW 1971 Named Car of the Year I 971 MOTOI TllND Best H1ndlin9 Car in Amer ie1 Re91rdless of Price IOAD • TIACI Finest Out Of ComP"rison Tesh of the Sir Small Cars CAI• DllYll CHOICI Of $2197 )r~;;J • 10 CO LOIS . :VEGA 2 DOOR SEDAN . . HUGE DISCOUNTS • , WE'RE LOADED WITH BRAND NEW 1971 VANS! CAMPER VANS-SPORT VANS TRUCKS-TRUCKS-TRUCKS LOTS OF 4 WHEEL DRIVES Pickups Carryalla Blazers. Immediate Delivery i9J1DCH1iVv1/2TON 1~;l{~~:1 $2569 f CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA HUGE ·INVENTORY REDUCTION SALE! ON OVER 100 NEW CARS IN STOCK! '71 BUICK SKYURK 4 DOOR HARDTOP va , automatic, pow•r 1te•rin9, redio, k••+•r, WSW, a ir cond., t int. wlndshi•ld, cllK. whe•I COV• ers, cit.-. sf••rinq whe•I, custont c:erp•tinq, all G.M. safwty f••· tur•s 11re standard. l433691ZI· 08008 1 DELIVERY TODAY OPEL 1900 SPORT CPE. ,,7,-46722) 2 DOOR SPORT COUPI 4 speed, r1clinin9 buclt•t s•ets. All Federelly R•quir•d Sef•fy Equ ipm•nt. White wa ll tir•s, tintad windshi•ld, power d isc brakes, 90 horsepower engin• with hydraulic lift•rs. DELIVERY TODAY! IN UICK COSTA MESA B V ICK·OPEL 0 JAG VA R 234 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa 548-7765 :-: • . ' •, ;. ·: . . ·: . . . : : ' : ,' . ' .. . . -. . . . . : ... . . . . .. . . . ; : . • .. " . • . . ~ . . ... ,U DAILY PILOT Autos, lmportff Friday, May 21, 1971 970 Autos, lmportOd 970 [ ,, Autos tor 5al• , '"'"IMS... 1§1 II'-_._ .... _ .. _ .. _,!~ 1§1 I ......... ~ l§J I I §J I '"".. .... I §1 I ..... "".. I §J I .,, .. ·~ .... lllmll..,,. __ 990 Autoo, UM<I 990 Auto1, Used ~A;u;to;s,;;U;sed;;;;~;990;;; Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used • 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 A used Volkswagen makes a first-rate second car. '68 VW ·SEDAN ! OUA564) Full Pric• St-00 NO MONEY DOWN for 36 !l'onlhi. C•1h pric• (CACI includ ing I•• & lie. SfS0.00. $]588 Totol Oeftrrtd P.•vrnent Pr i ct Mo. Pm111. $1281 .61. A.P.R. 21.25~. '68 DUNE BUGGY '69 VW SEDAN fWIB J R & H !YNW241) . $999 tJ399 ~----------~-~--~ '68 CAMPER '65 VW BUS Wa1fati1, Pop . Top. Fully 9 PASSENGER Equipped. IWIR46ll #111072 '70 SOUAREBACK I '69 CAMPER Air cond., R &: H, 4 Spd .. Weifali• Pop . Top. Lu99a91 R•ck, (J440FVI Equjpp1d. #079169 BILL YATES . 31852 Volle Rood, San Joo11 Coplstrc1110 137-4800 /4tl-45' 1 /499-2261 Autos, New Fully .~,.:;.;.:,m::...,-.. -.. -,-s"t-, -w-.. -,n-, I ___ B_U_l_C_K___ CADILLAC new tire11, air cond, P/$, P!B, ~fint cond. Ju$t rec'd Co. car -must sell, Ile\\' sold for $4600, try $2600. 963--0341 '51 Ford school bu s, con· verted. FOR SALE OR 'fR.ADE. 548.5613 alter 4, ask !or Jim. CADILLAC CHEVROLET CHEVROLET DODGE • w· 1N $1000 CASH • E~g:,n,::~.'.~h~;";.:%,. '65FORDWag.9pan.l.ow • -. • hant top, blue leather inter-~~St~ew tires, $900. Call ior. Every deluxe extra, 1 ..:.:.:...='-----~-1 incl srereo r:idio & tape '6j GALAXIE 500 XL, air, bk! I I deck, i\1ichelin steel-belt>!d seats stereo verb radio, OR ONE OF 19 OTHER PRIZES! ~';:ni" .ale by owner.,·1"':-'c_·_c·~'-~ni'-.-'-67-~-::-11-,-... -,-km-1 • • e 1968 LINCOLN CON-'vagon. Orig owner, Good T J NENTAL. Immaculate I ..:oo::::nd:::·..:140.:"°::· C.· .:84::7..:-1=088=---I II • SABLE CAPE I l:~·~~~:oo. never any •·6~i~0!~G:iti~!E • 11 • TRIP TO HAWAII ffOR TWOJ II 1_'_"'_;n_e~~ro_:64.::b~:_•::m::;';:_:,*~--l ·65 eo:::~7:.•a:. ~T Fl • WURLITZER ORGAN • 1--c_o_RV_A_IR __ s;~·'•" '""·CLE::,," M!J '62 VAN, queen size bed & '66 BRONCO ti • 16 TRIPS TO VEGAS I ~;;;Noed•motor $"5~f~;·~o;:;;;~~."837.mo II IN THE "13 TO WIN CONTEST" I '~~:Rfu~'a..::.;: ___ G_.M_.c_. __ 1 II • I ,',~-:C-"-"~---~~ I '67 GMC van, 6 cyl, extra '63 Monza Coupe, red & length, new paint, recent II THE ONL y NEW CAR DEALER IN • J~~·~:.:~:.~:~: .. ~ overhaul.;~~j.~1768 E ORANGE COUNTY WITH A BALLOT BOX I 1-=~:"':;:,.:::,:w ~!i.:..:='j,:o"c..:.::_: .. ~;,.:.:__~~I ':0.';i~'i"oo~whoel ,,;,., ll.1 I CORYETIE • 64<-154• * lli!I WINNERS ANNOUNCED LIVE ON KCOP T.V. CHANNEL 13 SUNDAY NIGHT 11 P.M. --------1'66 Jeep Wagon. 6 <yf. 4/w -. REGISTER EACH WEEK FOR A NEW DRAWING • ·:~;~hil~lntco;:;~~· N:,~: ;;:;,'.h1'1';.;,a~t~7~,:,,H. new minor mech. work & tires, l-,63=::::,=-E=EP=-c-'J."s.=-=v"•.=-,.-n-vt-I II I $6jl). takes + small t.o.p. top, warn hubs, radio. Good 1,;;6'~4--094-:;;:~':;;;-o.::::<::--:::::;l~'°~"'~·~s~ro~~~·~610~~~3~9n~.--I '63 Corvalr Spyder • good JAVELIN • • oondltion, 4 spd, M'-'t sell! E""· 64'-= 1968 JAVELIN SST· • I DODGE V8, Auto, P/S, Vin)1 Top: ---------1 {X'VJ 7321 • 'f.6 Dart ~495 $1695 Now tires, dean, good ROY CARVER, Inc. running. Call 968-6726 • I J,1~963~00;,:;;0G~E~DO:ar"'t ::;G:::T,:-Lo,:::m-,t"'. J 2'J2:i Harbor Bl\'d. Good buy at $385. Costa lt1es.i. 546-4444 II 67S-8733 For best results! 642-5678 • 1~-~==:..,--9~7=0 1 Autos, Imported 970 • • • I • I • I • • • • • I • I : I . . ---• • • •• I.Alli AVI. • ADAMS AYl. ; • • • • 2480 HARBOR BLVD. At FAIR DR. ! I • COST A MESA ·•-~;:r~~·~ • :; 546-8017 1 ... :~1~:·-·· ~ • . SALES DEPT HOURS .... ' out a .... • e1>0 A.M, TO ltiN ~.M. IUN.-11 A.M: 'l'O t ,.,M. $ .; •••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~· 1 Y2 Mll11 South of S•n Diego FrHway ' • I ' A Sports Car You Can Afford While You're Still Young Enough to Enjoy It Tiit fiat 1150 Spider is th• lowe5t priced ttu1 spons (0( on !he marker. has di.-: btuket in front ond ;.. dtptndtrll W!optf!Sion oll l'fl!Mld. Ami, for many people, il'1 lht ti.JI-looking sporlt CCII' ~ The rtd !Wit on its engine is oN the Wfl'f up ot 6,500 rpm, It dtr $10,000. o 150 SPYDER 1971 RE•ISTllt NEW F1ctory W1 rra11ly. R.clio, Heeler, low Mileege. $1995 #0t9217 aasa RlG1sn11D NIW IXECUTIYI 124 SPORT COUPE f•ctory W1n111ty, ltldlo, Heeter, low Mll11'1t $2795 # 12t••• LOWBT PllCES, HIGHEST TRADIS Alf •w C.OMf' ........ ~tf,. 1«¥fce detertMfft -,, .... ,, -• .,.rt tt9ff ,, """" "-"'" ......... Co111pl•te Mdyo 'I CdtoM ,.1 .. lflol' t .. I BILL JONES B. J. Sportscar Center 2833 Harbor Bird. at Adams, Costa Mtu, 540·4491 I .. ·. Friday, May 21, 1971 DAILY PILOT ,f3 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used PLYMOUTH Autos, UMd 990 Autot, UMd 990 Autot, UMd 990 Autos, UMd 9'0 Autos, UMd 990 LINCOLN OLDSMOBILE 1970 PLYMOUTH PLYMOUTH --,P,.,.LY""'M...,..O,....,U""T'"""H-1 "JoMTIAC PONTIAC RAltilLER BARRACUDA RAND PRIX "~1 L:w~~tr':°~~wCl;.~!t '67 DELTA •98' Conv. ~· beater. power Bc"!~~~A ~~ H~~~ 'ri& nd~ ~ owner, Air r:~~r, PO\\-er\VUldOq, S 99 5 213-6 3 2-.C 16 2, =rl<~ K=::.iueN::! v.·/bal. of 5 yr. 50,000 mi. co• Can .;!i: ~2-l05l * Vinyl Top. 1ZLll019) 1970 GTO '61 Ramblu Convt. A"'°· FOR SALE 2 Dr. H.T., Turbo hydroJnt good enr, new tim &: bat-T·BIRD '8S $700 U4-540-0534. Full PD"1er, Air Conditioning. •·a-. ••• HI -rt '"'· 4 1 ---===~'=""---1 $2895 ··-TRF087 ill wholesale srm. •9602 Dean •• "'°" .-PONTIAC ,... LINCOLN Continental • ~. ·Must Mil. w Lewlo s.,..taJ """"· .,..;1n1ction .,,.,,.1,, ROY CARVER, Inc. tic, Factory Air, Power tecy, air cond, $245. 536-ti697 531..729-1 Steering, Vinyl Top, Execu· 1 -==7.,64~Ra::m::obl,;,::,::;2'<1:=::::..:::.: l ~.:-.;;;56,.-o;T-"B"'IRD=.-,R;;-;;:!:';;D~,I Dr. Sedan ?.fark V . take trade or finance. Call $995 Absolutely near new. Pri. 2925 Harbof Blvd .. Medlanlcally ln good con·i ='"=·-71="'~·~~~-~-pt,y. murt 1ac. this weekend. '66 hrdtp cpe, Xlnt «>nd, Costa Mesa S46-4444 tlve car with low rn.ileqe • Very Clean $325 ORIGINAL XLNT. and fa et or y wainnty. * 968-5370 • * 54$-.5937 aft .c pm {1177~) l ~~"",.,:;;~c.:...,,,,_~=ll""°~""CT'°"'""'~--~I dlti&n. S250. 644-0620, ext 250 1968 OLDS CUtlai1 442 • Best otter over $2100 . Ori& owner, Auto trans. MERCURY Fully <quipped. A"''· •I•, t!J••M Lno.:1 119Z-3816 ~B, Vl bruonle. '70 GTO $3195 '62 RAMBLER Sta. Wag. UDO '65 T-Blrd, 'Needa •mall ROY CARVER, Inc. "'"'"' •i.. PIS • PIB. """"'"'•'',!"'.!. * Ps/Pb, vinyl roof, lo ml. WA U.UIO PLYMOIJl'H :uno. SateUite Ram Air, f..11peed, Ftttstone --,1.,-97,,o,..M=E"R'"C~.-. --1 Sac at below whlll book TOYOTA deluxe wagon. Fully equip-1958 Pontiac Chlefton. auto, wkle ovals, lih.arp-all black~ MONTERliY $1495. Pvt pty. SfG..0144 art ped, factory air. 3400 miles. good cond. Sl.25 or belt of· Sacrifice! $26951best oftl!r. 2925 Harbor Wvd. CMta Mesa 546-4444 Towtnr hltch. &t2-8582. ,,,,..._ "WEED It • reap" •. clean '65 T-Binl Landau out the tnuure1 & trash • Full pwr, fa ct airl $750. Call turn into cuh thru a Dally 548-8132 tir 673--9950 5:30 1966 Harbor, C.M. 6*-9303 Like new. $3495. 842-8750 fer. Call 982-2161 or 635--8681 646-4665 niter 5 & V.ftkends. 4 Dr, Hardto11. 10,000 original , w ·u •-' ••• -miles Factory Air Condi· For bea1 resultl!I! 6Q-5618 DAll.Y PILOT tor action. I .CCb<::lo::".:...:.,...~"·---~.: e neip you Mil! UM•;n•o We'll help you aell! 642-5678 Fast re1u1ts are juat a pbooe call away • 642-5678 Pilot Classlfled ad. 1;42-5618 Call 64J..5m, Now! ~~-(~--m--~--m--~--~ Autos, New 9IO Autos, New 980 Auto•, New 9IO CDDJ $3195 lOY CARVER, Inc. ~ Harbor Rlvd. Cost.a Mesa 5404#! '65 MERCURY Montclair, 4 , dr b~'Y. full power, air, ' 'AM/FM r&d!o. $650. Orii. tiwner. 968-7589 aft 1 pm or Wknd• '62 Mercury Meteor, 2 door. Good cond. $100. Call ··~ MUSTANG '69 FORD MUSTANG GRANDE Air cond. wire ~·keels, vinyl · ToP· Radio, Heater, Po~r Stetting, auto trans, remain- der of factory warranty, (XQK347} $2495 '1>.,({/A.,,-; o,j-8 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD, COSTA MESA '65 Musi. Conv. 289 .C &pd w/alr eond, ate~ $700 It irJara. 830-6709 '60 MUSTANG 6 cyl, new 3 1pd trans. New paint. $625. or best orfer 646-1912 '67 ).f1111tanr: Convt.-V8, P/s, disc brakes. Xlnt. Emergen- cy sale b)f wlmd. ~78'8 'ii Mu1tang faa:tback..O cyl, 3 speed. $695 *** '66 Mustana:, AM I FM, 4-spd, etc., $395. 3519 E. COut Hwy, g....:; w1ekday1. '66 MUST ANG, V8, auto, r/h, low miles, S 8 7 S, 548-7633 MUST sell 1966 Mustang, very good cone!. Phone 642-9172 after 6 ~M. '66 Alfl'O. 6 eyl, klw miles. Oean. Call 9 to 5, 546--0331 .aJt 5, 557-8476. OLDSMOBILE . '67 OLDS 4 DOOR Automatic, poYo'<?r a!eerinl". ~air rond., radio, heater, CGXV 104) $899 Harbour V.W. 1)111 BEACH BL. 84244.15 HUNTINGTON BEACH '66 OLDS. F-85 CPl Automa tic, power &leering, fully equipped. (406 AFZ) , Barwick Imports. 998 So. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach. !1.16-411.il or 494-9771. t96r F-35, Very good cond. .New valves, wtr pump. llfernattir. paint &: tires ~ 833--Zl44 :Olds 442, 2-Dr hdt, 4-sp., :~ tires, xlnl cond. ~1uzt '..ell!! Oller 642-0359 1$. ClJ11.ASS Olds, 4 speed, Nn.1 like new, many ex1ras. A:ak1ng $495, flrm. 968-2664. 145 DYNAMIC 88, New paint, .Good rubber & runs good. :b>-3336 Vista Cru lser-Ycllow. ', Ps/Pb, radio, lo mi. . 494-9781 or ~73 PONTIAC . :~: BILL BARRY ,•. : PONTIAC--GMC-FIAT : : NEW '71 :· VENTURA II '.:~ Factorr, equipped • : ' W22&;t05 i::: 'SAi.£ $2288 ~ ON. $63.IO MO: "" ls the total down Pl¥· ;io.nt. 163.SO It the toW :JoOnthly payment, tncludinC ··~. license and ftnanee :ti11arge1 on approved credit ~ 36 months. The cash ,t:ice Including tax I Jleen1e ,lit"$2447.40, deferred price ii -.. ~.80 Including tax, Jjc.. ~ & !'.nance chat'ie. An. itJ. percenta1e rate 9.31%. OVER 135 NE\V &: USED CARS ' to Cboose From , ; OPEN 'TIL 10 Pl\t 2IOoo E. 1st St., Santa Ana Cht St. at S.A, Fr'Ny,J • ....1000 "MAKE Room For Dad- ~·· •• clea n out tht Onie .. )IOW' truh Is CA.SB i:ri_itl .. D&1b' Pilot CasiUief ·1rf. --- BIG DEALERS HAVE BIG STOCKS BETTER SELECTION GREATER BARGAINS 30 DAY 100% DEALER WARRANTY PARTS & LABOR 2 Js'i!r? ~~!!~Au~· 4 Dr. Hardtop Sedan. Law miln, 4 Dr. Sedan. 6 cyl., Economy car V8 ~ VI I R. I R P/S A t .. ~ .. to " Rl~t A t PIS R, P/S, Air Cond., Factory War-Jn Showroom Cond.ltlon, •Automa-""'Y"" ny oo • • • u o., ..__ m. •" one. u o., • ranty Remaining, C053ASV). Out· ft, PS, auto., air cond.. Nice. C377· tie Trans., Rlldio. Has factory war· Air Cond. Te1TUlc car, Factory air, R, needs a careful buyer. 1tandlng Value. BMW) rant)', C350ASQ. CWOW) (BUY) Warranty. (146AGKl CXWE222J $2799 $3099 . $2399 $3599 $2499 "NO EXCLUSI NS" 1969 MAl,IBU 1970 MALIBU COUPE 1970 CAMARO 1969 CAPRICE 1969 IMPALA 1969 NOVA 2 Dr. Hardtop Cpe. Vi, PIS, auto., 2 Dr. Hardtop. 10,000 miles, V8, R, 2 Dr. Hardtop, V8, PIS, Auto., Air, 4 Dr. Hardtop. Eltt. windows, 4 Or. Sedan. VB, Auto., PIS, Radio, 4 Dr. Sedan. (Economy cat) 6 cyl., vinyl roof, &orgl!Ous car. (Y0.1· PI S. auto .. remainine warranty. freah condition, (317AZV), t~ vinyl root, air, R, auto., PIS, PI S, .Air Cond. Sure this week's Special Radio,. PIS, Auto. Remaining Fae· 066 ). Cheap. (STK974J mainlne warranty) warranty. CYUUE9) Buy. tY0~2) ..., tory "Want)'. __ ..,..$-18_9_9 __ ... ""'!'!1!~$~2799~r1~::$~30~9:9::"'"1"':'::-:$~2:'9~9i::::'f--"':':$2~1:9:9:i:--t-i~$r'to~9n9 1968 MALIBU 4 D•. s.don. vs.'"'""''"' own· 1968 CAMARO 1967 MALIBU COUPE 1966 NOVA 'De. H!,.!p Z28 .............. . 4p;°'s · Jt~to1p s.ddan .. VB, c"VTPdlo, er, auto., PIS, a.fr ~nd NWVRttd a 2 Dr. RT. R, auto., PI S, g cyl. 2 Dr. HT. VB, PIS, a uto., vinyl Su~r vSt''p';s""'· Ct onsoR.leLoobue~!! 1orgeou11. !l"f'Bh showroom condl· , auw., a r con ., ruce. • good car at a good pi-ice ! (· • economu, R--• ,•--("""'"") sea ... , , , au o,. .... .., lion. Not one of these around. 435) 809) .. .., ~ , .... ti' "~ roof, terrific car. (\VPB844) for just that one! (RUJ091) careful us.e. (Y\VY756) $1899 $1599 $1899 $1599 __________ ..., __________ .... __ ..._ ______ ti-llllP. ... 1965 FORD LTD 1971 CAMAJlO 19~7 MUSTANCi CPE. 4 Door Hardtop. Top condition. VB. auto~ R. A/C, PIS. PI B. new Radio, heater, P.S., air cond., Air, P.S., auto., radio. 45,000 miles. ear condltlon. (752BS'i'). This baa beaut,i fully well kept Qlr thruout. (REX562) to be a buy. ln'C510) $1199 $3399 $1599 Conllnental 2 Door Hard Top. Tre- mendow color, vinyl roof, ahow room frtsh, air, elec. everything, PIS, P/B, radio, sharp. IP2380) $2499 $1499 $2599 196B NOVA 4 door sttl. V-8, Auto., P.S., radio. CVSR566) $1399 Jov•l~.926~ ~~.~~s~ER~ 41 o, Auto .. VS-12,000 mile1 -. Buy! Buy! Bu,y! (44988Jl $1999 STATION WAGONS WE HAVI 'EM STATION WAGONS 1970 Chev. Malibu , 1970 Chevrolet 1970 Chevrolet 1969 Chevrolet 1968 Chev. Impala 30 DAY 1970 CHEVY 1968 Plymouth Townsman 100'/• DEALER 1Cl119twood, 6 p•u•nt•' w•9· S•telllt• 9 p11t Cot1eo11n• W19on, R1dlo, Auto., PI S, -Sh1rp. l 160ACfi.I Kings Wood 6 P111 Wagon -R1dio, PI S, PI B, Auto., Air Cond. -Nie•. IP2l971 :1::•;, s::;~0111,,w;_::;,· /');: 6 p11t . W11Jon -II, P!S, :1:~1·_w;!~:·.,.~11~:~·t '::~ WARRANTY ;:~:ir;1~k~" t:.~~0 P.;,~:· ~u1'_; V Auto., Air C•nd.,' N•w Ger· .1 I Townsman Sport Wa,on. II, Auto., PI S} Air l'fSAJ 11 1 Sp,cl1 Pricad At Auto., 150 Cu. In., I , 1 1,21611 tWXEJ .. ll PARTS & LABOR ''' conollton. Hurry! 714· P2J96. D11d Sh1rp. 9aoui ,gold co or. llSFI $3099 $3699 $3799 $2899 $1899 "No Exclusion•" $3699 $1899 ________ .. ______ .,.. ..... ____ ... ________ .,.. ______ ... ______ _,~ ~1111!1"' .... ~"!'mll!"!'!!!'- 1970 Uatsu~ Wagon 1970 Ford Wagon 1968 Ford Fairlane 1967 Ford Wagon l~~b~!~j!~r 1966 Buick Skylark suburbon w.~.~7~.~~!~ .. ~!.D.M/ ' P w A t P/S 6 'au. W19on, Auto .• 'I S, 6 P1u. W•gon, Auto., PI S, FM St•r•o, Aulo., PI S, Ell'r'o' 12,000 ml, Auto Tr1n1., R1- dio. o •• a· .Sh•rp. l12SA.Stl 10 P1s1., R, PI S. Auto., Air c•nd. -l•111tif11t l lu• Cir. 111 .. AGC I Cout1try S•d1n, Auto., PI S, Air, Rad io, Sp•ci1I Pricacl. 111795AI 9 P111. -Radio, Auto., Pl S, S•r. 1315. Sp•clal Prlc•d At 1'1• •ton, 11 o., ' Alr, R., Rick (292CQTI. R1dlo. Air Cond., -l ow, Windowt 12,000 Ml • R, ,Air Cond. l11t buy to-Sp•ti•I. low Mll•t. low, l ow pric1. lntarior Trim -Tr1m•nciou1 SPECIAL TRUCKS '64 FORD F-600 J IOn dual rt1• Mieeltr11ek. 2 111Md ... , 1•11, V .. , I IPftd, 1'111 U'Xl'lll' 1tumlnum v1n body wlTl'l l'lydr1ullc. lift fllt. ».000 miles. In lop ~Ilion toalfl rn1d11nlul incl 1-r1nc1, Guar1nlt..:I condition. !S3221l TRU~KS ·TRUCKS '69 CHEV. o/4 TON I '65 FORD y, TON Pie.up. 6 c.yl,. d ick. H.D. 1u1p. p· • y 8 t d' I 11161•01 •C 11p. -' I U o., fl 10, I ron9. $2499 """" $1199 '69 CHEV. V2 TON 1t•p1id1 pickup. R1d io, P.S.. '64 FORD 3A TON 1'11711 v.1, -4 1p1•d, H.O. c.1mp1r •q11 ip. $2799 '68 CHEV. V-1 \'i TON Picku p. Radio, P.S., •uto., 1ir, n1w color. IP2 l 61 I $2299 '67 CHEV. o/1 TON Pickup. V-1 , 1tick, r•di•. IVt .. 7101 $1899 '66 FORD 'I• TON PltkMp. 6 cyl., 4 •P••d, H.O. ·~ulp. R1df,, c111tom c1b. IUJl797J $1699 $1399 '57 INTERNATIONAL 1/1 ton pickup. U11111u•I conditi on. {Jl75561 $699 '67 CHEV. ~ TON Piclo:up, VI, R1d io, 1tick, H.D. C1mp•r Equip. jU 582501 $2099 d1y. !WEEJJ21 !J7tADHI Car, 1919AVl l $1899 $3399 $3999 SPECIAL VANS '6B CHEVROLET ................. $3399 " ton. l llck th111, V ... redlo. H•1 new llM 0111 umll"'I' <""ver11o!o. P1u cir ConYoinlerlt•. Sleep& 1n klnt 1!11 bid, l lOYI, "' llOX. Nk•. IUlOOA) '69 CHEVROLET ................. $3799 \'t iw.. v.1, eutomitlc, redlo, low "'1191. 8r•nd MW Sw 0111 dth1•• c1mper CCNw•r· ''°"· $!1!lon WlllOfl conwn\flltf. llMp -.. , -wort:; -plMlllrl . Economlcll YllC• !!on. IPJ37J) '69 CHEVROLET ......... : ....... $3699 ~ '°"· Y·t. 1uto .. redlO. Yin 1111 MINI -Sw Dl•I c1mper conwrtlon. Vaurlon. l•mlly (Ir Incl ~ ur. YOU'~ llkt 11. (16Mt1El VANS -VANS '61 CHl!YROlfT 1/1 TON V•n. 6 cvl., 11ick, r•dlo. f P2Jtll ''' CHIYROLn "90" YAN 6 cyl ,. tlick, 9r11t for work or pity. f PJ .. 061. '6t DODCil SPORT $1599 $1999 $2499 Ven. J 1,11t1r, 1111•., rad io. IYPSJ76! EL CAMINOS •• RANCHEROS '69 EL CAMINO '67 EL CAMINO VI di h I 1 p S • l VI , r•dlo, h•1l1r, 11110., vinyl roof, •1r• o, ~1t"b· "i~l .. I ' " M"'111Y1 n•w p•lnt. Gor9ao111 ctr. IOI 1'401 l r••, "'"' '111n , ••u 1 u cir. 111 $l 599 •••· f,/6-409El . $2599 '69 EL CAM'""l"'N"o -- v.1, ••dio. pow1r 1t1•rin9, auto,. •ir. Nico blu• c••· IPJ1641 '6' EL CAMINO $2699 v.1, auto., P.S., ~r,aro, bl1ck ¥inyl --,,,;6i'"R"A'"'NCHE"R""Oc-- roof. Hu99•r Or•n91, lior91ou1. t6SllODJ V-1, auto., P.S .. r1llllio, 1lr, N•1tv• 11ic• 9rto11 car. C227~0CI $1999 BARGAIN HUNTING '67 MALIBU '65 BUICK WILDCAT R1dio, P.S., Auto. ll•t-2 doo• h•rdtop. ll1dio, air, P.S. I P.I. Nie•. IOXl1161 · 51199 5999 '66 IMPALA COUPE '64 BUICK HARDTOP Auto., R4odio. P.S,, Nie•. !TXS .. J .. l iRBi:;~I R1dlo, 1uto., eir, P.S. '63 CORVAIR 2 door coupt, .. tp•1d, IUOJ79 1) $499 '66 BUICK LA SABRE r1dlo ... door 11d1n. Aul., P.S., r1di•, •Ir, Sh•rp. ISIR 776l 51299 '65 RAMBLER WAGON '65 CHEVRDLl!T A11to., rtdio. fNFV479) .. cl•or ttd•ri. R1d io, P.S., o uto,. 1lt, Good cond. fJOY261 I s799 2828 HARBOR BLVD. • COSTA MESA J ,, " --·- l • I • __ ...___ ---... - ' • NOT JUST A \V PRICE LEADERS BUT ON A LARGE · VARIETY OF • CARS-& TRU~KS. CHECK FOR YOURSELF, KNOW THE FACTSH • TIME l:J THIS WEE ·KEN D PRE· VACATION . THIODORI IOllNS IR. . , .......... .. QYllllty ... ... ....... ,., lt71 ' THIODORI IOBINI JR. INJOY CARlflll SUMMER DllYINGI OUR $1 00,000 DIAGNOSTIC CENTER -ON LY- BRAND NEW . 1971 TORINOS HARDT~ASTIACKs-4 DOORS . T~~H~~~ $75FA~~~RY CA E .. SHO W NEWEST MODELS . -CASA UNDA -SUNDIAL PRESTO VAN -CON1EMPO -BALBOA EL DORADO. Factory Representatlvn Wll Be Present To Answer Your Camper Cjluntions. · Gives your car owr_J30 vit1I tests for reliability, perform1fice •nd safety, in lust 30 minutes. Full written report is Included .for only $995 PULL NICI • OVER 30 MODE LS -ON' DISPL AY FROM ,1~~!~~1~!. NO GIMMICKS-NO ADD-ONS-NO ORDERS ~~MUSTANG : NEW MACH I . SAVE 429 VS, A/T, Sports inter., conven- ience grp., pwr. 1teer., brakes, win-$ QO dow&, air cond., tilt whl .. SpL deck. 901 elcc. detrost3 AM-FM, console, tint · glass. ( 10005l!) •653 W-stkr. $5559 Our Price $4651 NEW 2 DR. SPTS. ROOF SAVE 351 v-s. tu bkt., bit tires, A-T. P-$. I steer., P-discs. radio, dee. &rJ>., T-5765 ( glass, whl cvrs. etc. (131869) #375 w .. tkr. $3911 .25 Our Price $3334.74 1 N~s.2 •. ,~.~.e!. ;di~~~~~!: SA VE sole, P-windaws, spt whL cvrs., T· bit u,.,,, ~t '''"" A·T. AM-FM, coo-$7501·s glass etc. (102430) •at w-. $4714.75 Our Price $4034.59 NEW MACH I SAVE · 351-4V, auto. trans .. rad.. ~· &tr., I: $ OQ disc brla., spts. Inter., wide ovals 1-701 more. ( 100060) #665 w .. 11tr. $4449.00 Oar Price $3741.00 -~i~ RANCHERO NEW RANCHERO SAVE Ern!ulon control .,..i.m. B'IXI< llia, $68388 AM radio. (119131). W-stkr $Uf6.11 Our Price $2712.M NEW RANCHERO 500 . SAVE 351 VS, crulsomaUc, Tis. ll'OUP. P.S.. · pow" db< h1'alc"' nMIJo, tiat atuo, $88863 RD. IUSP, (J..l56t8). W-$4114.06 Our Price $3395.43 . ~:~ FORD NEW LTD 4 Dr. Brough. SAVE H.T. 429 VS, vinyl root, crulso., WSW, v ... grp, P.S., dlx., •tr. whL, p,.,,.., $1100 P..dr. Jocks, alr, auto temp. control, AM-FM, P.W. etc. (128708 ). •4M W·Stkr. $6041 Oor Price ~'41 NEW LTD S(jlUIRE SAVE 6 pan. wagon. 429 V8, Cruiso., WSW, v ... ""'" P.S, d1x. ,..,k. air oond., '$110100 AM·FM, H.D. susp., dlx. whl coven. (14234). #862 w .. lkr. $5785 Our l'rlce $4614 · NEW LTD 4 DR. HDTP. SAYE Vinyl RF, A/T, pwr. steer, brakes, and · windows. ak, •le<. d•fro•~ AM-FM, $91200 Vis. grp. W/W, Tint. &:lass, whl cvn. · (100017). #660 w .. lkr. $5267 Ow Price $42'5 NEW GALAXIE 500 SAVE 2 Or. Hd. Tp. 400 V-8, Vinyl rt, A/T, """· Sir. and brak"' '''· ndlo, whL ~92300 cvn:.. tint. 1lasa. elec. defogger. ~ (00015). •661 w .. lkr. $4922 Ovr Price $3999 N.~~ BRONCO NEW BRONCO WAGON SAVE VB, Spt. Pkg .. conv. grp., H.D. Radia-$ 23 tar, •!PL fuel tank. Stk. #0764 671 (70012) W·llkr. $4522.44 Our Price $3851.21 .. NEW BRONCO WAGOM SAVE VS, bucket sts., traction Jock R-axle, Lid. ollp-l=t ulo. Spt pkg., aux. $70676 fuel tank, radio, free runnin& hubs. ~ Stk. #T200(8014) w .. tkr. $46'0.22 Ow Price $3973.46 · MUSTANG SALE ~~~ T·BIRD ~~ .! !~~!.~N~:.~. SAVE . Seat, auto., air, stereo tape, tilt whl., S 2 00 P-discs., vin)'l top, p-antenna. etc. •652 (100015) ~ W-Stkr. t7m. Our Prk• $6114 · N~! .!~~.~w~~D!,.~! SAVE ham int., W/W, radio, 429-VS. #181. S -Vi>"' (106435) W·Stkr. 16351.51 Our Price $5157 NEW 2 DR. HDTP. BR.. SAVE Full pwr., vinyl roof, air, A/T, tilt whl., pwr. wind., 1tttr. and brakes, s1 ,, 100 ri.dio, 429-VB. # 399 ( UJ.587) v W-Stkr. SW1a.75 Our Price $5212.75 NEW 2 DOOR LANDAU SAVE 429-VS, Full pt.W., Art, AM-FJ.L BrotJ&bam int T-glass, tilt whL, '1 51100 Auto. Temp., Air. #651 (100014) W·Stkr. $7371 Our Price $5167 ~~ FI 00 PICKUP NEW F-100 STYLESIDE SA VE P.U. 24().6 cyL en&., 3-spd., radio, tint. glas~. H.D. Rear Sp., 1aua:es, ci1:. $ A l)OJ lighter. Stk. #T63 (2638). ~ tJ"'" W-Stkr. $3;31.t7 Our Price $26tS.OI , NEW F-lOO 'CUSTOM SAVE Styleslde. VS e:ng., Ranger pkg, !lllt. amp A oil gauges. tool box. crulso-$953<>9 matic, opt. vacuum booster, AM-FM U 1tereo, P.S., G78xl!S tires, etc. (~l). W-stkr $4150.20 oir Price $3H6.31 BRAND NEW 1971 VERICKS OVER FACTORY INVOICE 2-DOQRS • 4-DOORS . 6 CYL's • Y·8's GRABBERS AUTOMATICS • STICKS '() GIU!llCK .'i ' " "' • 11.1\".'i \ 0 OROF.11."i NEW 1971 FORD F-250 SAVE camper speci.\l. ,Sport custom cab. CnllJe.o.matlo tnmmwloo, powoc $9 6531 steering, power. di11e brakes, "360" VB, radio. extra gas tank. #16, motor #2158. 1.t•ll MUJ,11-Sela $3167.71 NEW F-250 RANGER XLT SAVE camper Spec. 390 VS, crulso, air.1$102189 AM·FM 1teniO. P.S., P-dlsc1, extra gu tank, etc.-aµs (03067) · w .. ru. $5H7.H Ow Price $457'.ot "· 10 to choose from. ~65 thru ?O models. Coupes, hardtops, convertible •nd 2 + 2 F1stbaick1. Some wtth 4 speeds, also air condition ing and automatic models with power stffring. ALL OFFERS CONSIDERED TRADES ACCEPTED PAID FOR OR NOT! Many to choose frol'd '65 thru 70 Models, Sport Roofs, Form1l1, 2 door •nd 4 door l-t1rdtops ind Sed•ns. Full power, 1ir condi· tionln.-. Werr1ntles •vailable. .EXAMPLE: 1966 MUST ANG HARDTOP VI, •ulom•tic, r•dio, h••l•r, 9ood mil 11. ( SVF724J. OUR PRICE $996 70 MUSTANG H.T. vs, auto., P.S., R & H. fact. air, warranty avail. Low miles. (621AVPJ '69 JAVELIN SST V8, Rilr.H, 4 i;;pccd, good miles: W1UTanty available. 1322730). FX .t..{.i'L ~: 1971 cou r TRY SEDAN '65 '!,~~ ~'.!~iE.!o!nd. $896 10 p•n. w•'Jrin. VI, •ulo., WSW, P.S., P·di1c1 ,, •ir cof'd., RIH, tint. t l•u, whl. co"'''• pwr , l•il t•I• window, 'JOOd miltt. l176·tQCI, Eood mileL (NOG876J 0 , ~ •. f CE S3996 '63 CHEVY 1;, TOH PICKUP $896 with campl'r sheU. VS, Sed'69. FAAuL 10 C .• OR~HF, UTUlA &t'd. shift. ll.25728) .,. '70 FORD SEDAN VS, auto., R&H, P.S .. P-dlsc brakes, good miles. 1104825) ----------------1 powt'!r steering. '61 Y.W. FASTIACK 4 speod, R&H. good mllei. (V\\'S427J '69 COUGAR Auto., Rilr.H. J)OV.'er Stf'(!J'. ing, air rond., good miles. (XUR196J '69 PONTIAC LE MANS $2196 --~adir:~i!'~a~~:~~~~~" '66 CHEVY IMPALA WAGON R&:H, auto., pawcr steering, air, good miles. (VTP857 J. $1896 (l\MP29<) '64 CHEY. WAGON $1196 -:se1 Alr. V8;-auto., R&l-T, \ P.S., air, eood miles. '70 MA ¥ERICK 2 door. 1 owner. Radio, heater, economy plus. (YRE716J Spl'clal dlx. Radio, heater, auto .. air, good miles. CUUJi205) ·-SALES DEPT. HOURS I '69 FORD LTD 2 dr. H.T. V8, auto., R&ll, P.S., P.B., fact. air, vinyl roof. (XSR891) I AM TO f .PM MOH·Fll I AM TO 6 PM SAT 10 AM TO 6 PM SUN I '64 FALCON Z DR. 6 cylinder, radio and heater. (0SV613) CIIN155J '70 PONTIAC G.T.O. Hardt.op. Au tomatic, P.S .. P.B. C32lAGGI '61 TORINO vs. auto., Rl.H, r.s., air, good mile~. (\VJC874J ••• ""'" ..... "' n ,...,.., ,.,., 141111.n " '"'' ••11t.. PARTS-SERVICE HOURS 7 AM To 9 PM MON 7 AM To 6 PM TUE·FRI 81/z acres of the most modern Ford sales and service'facilities on the West Coast I PARTS DEPT. ONLY 8 AM to 1 PM SATURDAYS •• •.