HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-05-26 - Orange Coast Pilot17
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• Dad Held Ill M~ass· ~layings •
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DAILY PILOT Clint W allaer~s Heart
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WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 26, 197 1
Pierced by Shi Pole
.
VOL ..... NO. IU, J JltTtONI. n ,A.Gii
• • o ice a1 ex are ouse
Dad of 4 Held
Nine Men Found
Hacked to· Death
From Wire krv!te•
YUBA CITY - A stocky Mexican·born
farm 1,bor contractor was arrested today
when deputies uncovered the remains or
nine mlddle~ai;ed men, hacked to dealh .
and buried In strange ritual positions
along the banks of the Feather River.
Officers said they were still digging in
the sandy soil for al least one other miss·
ing person.
Juan V. Corona, 37-year-old father of
four small daughters, was taken Into
custody at his modest stuceo home in a
neat middle-class neighborhood In Yuba
City , a farming community of 25,Wl in
the central valley of California.
Sutter County Sheriff Roy Whiteaker
declined to sa y what led officers to
Corona, and a deputy said there was "no
motive we can discover ." But the sheriff
added :
•·we are cer tain he com mitted the
murders.··
Most of the bodies were foun d
on their backs. arms upraised. The
sheriff said they were badly mutilated,
with deep cuts on th e heads and chests.
Their shi rts were pulled up over their
bloody heads.
They were found about five mil es north
of Yuba City 400 or 500 yards east of U.S.
Highway 99-E. on both sides of the river.
Se.ven were on the west bank and two
others on the opposite bank, in a prune
orchard and a peach field .
Nearby was a seltlement ol shacks
where migrant laborers live.
Corona , a quiet man, was known by his
neighbors as a strict father who wouldn't
1llow his children out of the ya rd.
"They've never bothered anybody
around here,'' said Mrs~ Olel.1 Kelley,
who lives tv.·o doors awaj.
''The only thing lhat was strange was
Coa•t
Wea tiler
' There may be a bit of driule ln
those cloudy skies on Thursday,
with coolet! temperatures (63 to
70) prev allil"!g along the Orange
Coast and inland artas.
INSIDE TODAY
An old fina ncial s~mbol ouer
Newport Ha rbor is getting a
nrw lopk. See Firi.o nce. Page 2.5.
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that\ he kept very strange bours. He
wowd cOme and go throughout the night.
especially in the summer," said the
Coronas' next-door neighbor, Mrs. Wilma
Huff.
Two of Corona's small daughters,
dressed neatly in their school clothe& and
apparently unaware of what happened
were seen wai ting for the school bus a
few hours arter their father was arrested.
The victims were all caucasiam, ap-
parently migrant farm workers in their
40s, 50s and 60s. They were all killed with
a machete or a heavy knife, the sheriff
said. ·
Some of the bodies had two pairs of
pants and two shirts, indicating the vie·
tims were transient I a b o re r 1. in-
vestigators said. The orchards are being
thinned at th~ time of year.
Yuba City is a farmJng community of
14,000. about 130 miles northeast of San
Francisco.
In a news conference after the arrest,
the sheriff said Corona has been in this
country for some time but speak.s little
English. Whiteacre said he had to u.se an
interpreter to communicate with the
Me xican American prisoner.
The sheriff had a terse "no comment,.
when asked about a double bladed axe,
pruning knife and shovel brought into the
jail before Corona was led In.
Whiteacre tentatively identified a se·
cond victim of the mass killings. He was
Pete Peterson, 63, ol nearby Marysville.
Climbers Clean
Litter ._From
Mountain Peak
EUGENE , Ore. (UPI) -You can't
escape litter -even at 17,000 feet oa
North America's highest mounta in.
Gary Gromm, coleader oft an ex·
pedition to climb Mt. McKinley by seven
University of Oregon climbers, said Tues·
day he was surprised by lhe amount of
Jitter on the mounta in, especially at
17,000 feel.
"There were ski bindings, lickela, food
wrappings and gas cans," ht said. ''It
was very discooragin1 and I wouldn 't
take tha t route i.gain. ''
Grimm said lhal the climebrs· burned
some of the Jitter on the mountain and
picked up a lot of it an the way down and
deposited it at the base.
"The climbers turned back last weekend
after rea~g the 11,000 foot level or the
20,000 foot peak. They had bttn an the
mountain for 2S days, but storms forced
them to spe nd 14 days inside snow caves.
After four days in c1ves at the 17,200 fool
level, they hnded up the aumm lt but ran
into a storm and decided to return.
•
Brightening the Beach
Graci ng the sands of a Sydney, Australia, beach is
lovely Deanne Soutar, 21, a model and leader of
her own dance troupe. Need any other reason to
take a trip to the seashore?
Y outl1 Freed in St1·angling
Death of Balboa Woman
Conflicting circumstances surrounding
the death of a young mother found in 1
Balboa Peninsula apartment with her
crying baby beside her led Tuesday to
freedom for her jailed paramour.
John J. Biegun , 21, of 423 E. Bay Ave.,
was cleared of all charges in the case.
Newport Beach police. had originally •
booked him on suspicion or niurder
Thursday after he was questioned al
length.
He was already if1 custody on minor
traffic charges when the body of Mrs.
Susan Lane Constant, 21 . was found by
Biegun's ekler brother.
Space Probe Delayed
WALLOPS ISLAND, Va. (UPI) -
Ad verse w e a th e r conditions farted
postponement Tuesday until mid-Sep.
lember of a 1pace agency experiment to
determine effect of magnetic and elec-
trlcal fields of barium on high alUtud1
ck>ud.s.
Major throat and larynx damage in·
dlcatlve of manual strangulation shown in
a preliminary postmortem examination
led to Biegun's formal booking.
Toxicological tests ·requiring additional
time, however, disclosed a high level of
barbiturate drugs in the vi ct I m ' s
bloodstream. police said.
Detective Sgt.· Ken Thompson said t1>-
day the presence and degree of drug con·
tenl effectively rultd out prosecution bas-
ed on tke evidence of her being choked.
The decision to fret BiegW'I was made
during a Tuesday conference by Orange
County District Attorney's and Sheriff.
Coroner's deputies.
Police were sent to the Sea Level
Apartments about midnight last Wed·
nesday on a family disturbance call.
Once there, they arrested Thomas
Blegun, 24 on a drunk In public charge,
returning fater for John Biegun since cer-
tain traffic warrant.. can only be served
In the daytime.
He was at headquarters when hl11
brother was released after a mandatory
sobering-up period 111d went back to find
the body.
Cli11t Walker 0 K
After Ski Pole
Pierces Heart
BISHOP !UPI' -Cowboy a ctor
Norman "Clint" Walker, 43, was in "fair
to good" condition today, recovering
from surgery after a skiing accident In
whi ch his ski pole pwictured his hearL
The accident occurred Monday at
Mammoth Mountain, 40 miles south of
here, when Walker took a spill. Ski
patrolmen took him to a doctor in nearby
Mammoth Village and because. of the
grave injury he was rushed by am-
bulance to Northern Inyo HO!pital here.
Doctors said en route he had no
recordable pulse or blood preisure and
was in extreme shock.
Surgeons located the wound In 1 ven-
tricle of the heart and it was closed •
Arter the surgery was completed, his
blood pressure came back to near
norma l.
Walk er starred In the "Cheyenne" tele-
vi11ion series for seven ye1rs 1tar~g In
l9S5. He has slece made several movies
Jn Jtaly .and also had parts in American
lllm~
,
I
Fil111 Valued
Confiscated
Wt!tminsler Police seized more thl!r
$500,000 worth of 1ex films and
photographs Tuesday in a raid on a small
Industrial building occupied by tbt
Kayous (pronounced chaos) Company.
OiJtricl Attorney Cecil Hicks called the
alle1ed pornographic seizure "the largest
In Orange County history."
The rilid follows by two weeks a
similar discovery of p or n o g r a p b i c
materials in Fountain Valley bu C
Westminster police said there is no ap-
parent connection between the two opera·
lions.
Kayous Company was operating at
15144 Golden West St., wit.bout benefit of
a city business license.
"No arreats have been made yet, but
we expect to make some within the next
two days," Westmlnater Lt. Jack
Shockley said this morning.
Police hauled 20,500 reels of film ind
300,000 still photographs Crom the
building. Shockley and lnvestla:ators rtom
the district attorney 's office spent all day
reviewing the films .
They were apparently rated double X.
"~e spent six days investigating the
business before raiding it,'' Sbockley
reported. He said he cou ldn't disclose
bow police found out about the operatlan.
Invesligators said f i I m s and
photographs were apparently sent te
Kayous for packaging and mailing to all
parts of the country. Jl was an alleged
pornographic clearing house, but notbina
was manufactured tpere, police said.
Search warrants for the raid we r e
granted by Munici pal Judge Ken neth M.
Smith. Files and business records were
taken along with the pornographic items.
No names of individuals involved with
Kayous Company were released by
police .
Shockley did say that poUce are not
sure if the Kayous owner personally
knows Joe Reitano, the man arrested in
the Fountain Valley raid.
Fountain Valley Police discovered.
38,000 book!, movies photograph1 and
other all eged pornographlc material in
Ml industria l business called Advertising
Layouts and Sales, 18283 Mt. Baldy SL
Reitano has been charged with
possession of pornographic materials for
sale. ·a misdemeanor complaint.
''We do know some of the WestmJnater
items were sent to a Reitano buslneas in
Santa Ana," Shock.iey said. "But It's juat
a business deal."
The Fountain Valley raid covered two ,.
days, May 10 and 11. Westminster Police
wrapped up their raid in one, Tuesday •. · ••
Quint Infant Slated
' To Be Taken Home
VAN NUVS (UPI\ -One of Ille twe
survivors of the quintuplet• born to a ·V*l
Nuys couple was &o be take n home todat.
Physicians 58td O'anlelle FQ, Kaplaa
spent more lhan. two months in an m..
cubator to put on weight. Her survlvln&
sister, Dawt) Michele, Is expected to be
able to-leave the hospital next week.
I
,-
~ f DAILY PILOI
Deserter ':Lived Youth • ID a DreaDt World . ~
By LUCINDA FRANKS
AND
PETER FRElBERG
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LoQf. °t'\ew Je~, Is not the kind of
town that inspires younesters to drt1m of
dolu& great things. John Picclano's
paltnts. Uke many or their ntigbbor1,
\'i~ly remember the great depression.
11.ir> tither was occasklnally out of work
t\ifJl when John wu growlna up. The
P~clanos had no high ambitions for their
onlY child. Their advice wes "stay in
line" ond lea rn enough lo :ichool so you
cari land a deeent·paying job. sun like all children , especially those
ubO sptnd a great deal o( time by
thcemselves;, John indulged in fantasies.
Oo , lo.ng walks through what were then
11\t fields of Lodi, he daydreamed of
~ming ;i famous cabinetmaker. -When
fle-'A•as reprimanded at school , he would
sink inlO one particular drum sequence
in·Y>hicb ~ became a brilli&nt Harvard
S. Viets Find
Mysterious
Red Missiles
SAIGON (UPI) -Soulh Vietnamese
ll'O!)ps S'ft'eeping a battlefield near the
dentilitarized zone {DMZ) between North
and South Vietnam today found a cache
o('heavy Communist "mystery missiles''
'\'~ allied>officers were unable to iden-
t~y.
"'1be cache or 93 rockets was round by
SoUth \'ietnamese infantrymen about
l!'J'ee miles below the D~tz follov.·ing
fishtinr ln which they killed at least w
Communist soldiers, UPI eornspondent
~11!wart Kellerman reported.
'll'he Infantrymen located in the same
~a 120 rounds of 140-millimeter rocket!.
about 1,000 bangalore torpedoes, and
m6re-than l ,000 recoilless rifle rounds,
officers said.
:.lt elle r m a n said the khak i·
cOtored m)Ultery rocket.s were six feet in
l@l)&th and without the ir v.·arheads. A
fioore or allied officers, including ty,·o
Vietnamese generals and a group of U.S.
cOfonels, v.·ere baffled by the missiles.
·they sununoned allied weapons experts
t6·the arta Crom Da Nang, 113 miles to
the south-southeast, in an effort to iden·
tify the rockets.
They v.·ere not lhe heavy 240-millimeter
•·flying trash cans'• occasionaUy en·
countertd, officer said.
"The engine seems to be about tY.'ice as
1age as the engine of a IZ2·millimeter
rocket and I guess it would have twice
the range, or about 20 miles," one oflicu
said.
The U.S. Command in Saigon. "to solve
the drug problem lhat exi.sb" among
American H:rvlcemen , announced today
ft has ordered all Vietnamese drugstores
ofr-llmits to GJ'1. 1 ·
"This step was taken becaUJe a variety
of:;Phannaceutical products are available
'vifhout pre11criptlon In V I et n a m es e
pl\8fmacles," the command said. in-
C'l,ding ''barbiturates and am·
p~famints. •I
l}andits Get Huge
• ~welry Store Haul .
·ho men bound a Santa Ana je¥o'elry
store clerk hand and foot Tuesday night
eod escaped wtth gems valued at $40,000,
Police reported.
~rs said clerk Jim Gulick or the
Star or Slam, 2015 N. Main St., was alone
tn'. the store when the pai r entered. They
bOund him wtlh his necktie and belt and
lelt hlm on the floor of a back. room. ::
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profesllOr \lo'ho alv.•ay1 had the right "'ord!
and fact! at hb Ungertips.
Ttie 1..odi Public Ubrary i' not far
fro"{ll the P)Cclano home, and John liked
to 10 there alone in the arternoons. He
usually wtnt vdlhout telling anyone, and
even li.S he grew older he felt uneasy
about disawing serious topics with rami·
ly and friends.
,..ult just wasn't done -to talk about
politics, rell&lon or anything too heavy,"
he rec1l111. l•You were 1frald you'd bore
someone."
Paul Speziale, a high school EngUsll
teacher \\'ho \\'Orb at lhe Lodi Publil'
Library after school, says John "\vas the
type of kid who was curious about
everything. One day be woold be re1ding
1 history book. the next day it mlght be
'Great Movies of tbe 1920s.' "
IRRELEVANT
John says ht was nt ver turntd on
by his classes. He eomplaiM that he
never learned anything be coum "use.''
3 Jets Crosli
In S. Africa
CAPE TOWN (UPI I -Three
South African Air Force jell
WIUally used as transport!'! for high·
ranking defense officers crashed in·
to U1e sheer fa ce of Table MoWltain
toda y. klUing the II persons
aboard.
The victims were not Jdentified,
but Defense Minister Pieter Botha
said the nat ion "lost some of its
finesl members." a p p a re n t I y
military officers.
Botha said the planes \\'ere prac-
ticing a flypast for a holiday event
in Cape Toy,n on f\.1onday.
The crash occur~d at Table
ti!ountain ~ar Cape Town . Botha
said.
Sabotage Probed
In Destruction
At Coast Bank
lndWllrlal sabotage \\'as being probed
today as a motive for destruction of
$18,@0 worth of plate glass windows
recently delivered to an 18·story bank
building in Ney,·port Center.
The vandalism \\'all reported to police
Tuesday afternoon by Michael Amman;
of Center Glass Company, l.Als Angeles,
supplier ror the new Union Bank.
Circumstance• of the 1mashlng 1pree
indicated perhaps more than malicious
mischief.
The gray-Unted :sheets. 36 in all . y,·ere
delivered to the 600 Newport Center
Drive site a week ago in six crates con-
taining ail: windows each.
Mounted on a specially built plaUorm
prior to butallatlon, the brackets made ol
heavy lumber and bolta were designed
fGr muimum protection.
lnvest11ators said .a constant watch
was kept on the 10 by 12 root window
panes valued at $500 each and heavy
equipment was kept away to prevent ac·
cldenlal breakage.
CoMtrucUon workers arrived Tue.sday
morning, ho\\'ever, to find the sbl:
vertically installed crates lipped OYer aod
their contents shattered.
OUicer Mike Ji.fcEvery said e1treme
force would be required to pull the heaYy
crates down.
I.hat the coursu seemed "lrrelevant."
Alter class John would sometimes hang
a.rowid Pap's Luncheonette near tht: high
school Dan and Chickie CUcuo, twins who
were friends with John, recall he often
expressed a v.•ish to date girls but was
shy and never had the nerve to ask them
out.
"He used to tal.k about it to us,''
Chickie says. "Jlc'd say. 'I'd like to ha''e
a glrl, \\'hat do you think 1 should do?' "
"He'd see a girl. he'd say some th ing to
her. If she \vould turn around and say
something to him. he'd be lost. He didn't
know \\'hat to say. She might say ·1u: he
might look and say, 'what do I do
next?'''
Some of the Cucuos' friends rebuffed
John, He 1i.·as lall. bulky and walked with
a peculiar shurne. Thty felt he wallll't
"hlp" enough. \\'hen he gradi.:ated from
high sehool. John oy,·ned only one suit llnd
didn't dance .
"'There voas a graduation party ht
\\'itlted to go to." Dan CUcuo s1y1. "But
most of the gu)'S didn't want him with us,
because you \\'ert Interested in girb and
you didn't want to Jooi bad. 11e came out
1111 dressed up, and this other guy said,
'where you going, John? You'remt com-
ing wl1h us. Because you maie b look
bad.' So he Y.'ent back in the house. But
It y,·as meant as a jokt. John took things
loo srrlous."
TOP HALF
Hlh cumulath1e grade~ showed
John to be in the uip half of his class,
with niostly Bs and Cs. He always ret:ei\•.
eel passing marks in "citizenship." \~hich
the school says includes "staying \1·ithi11
the rules."
J erry Tamburello, then director of stu·
dent activities and now the principal of
Lodi High School, says "he 1\·as: so
average it was rkliculous. lie was never
in any trouble."
On the surface. John changed very little
during high school. Teachers felt he wai
l'breat Was Hoax
Caller Paid $560,000
Not to Blo'w Up Plane
SYDNEY (UPl) -Qantas Interna-
tional Airlines paid $560 .000 cash toda y
t.o a man whu threatened to blow up a
Bselng 707 airliner with 12{1 persons
aboard on a flight from Sydney to Hong
Kong. The bomb threat lumed out to be a
hoax.
For seven agonizing hours the big plane
circled O\'er Sydney Airport "'hile
cre"-·men searched over and over again
without success for a bomb described as
"a small hard objeet .'' They ripped up
carpeting, went through the baggage and
dismantled li ght fittings.
The threat \\'as sent in a note to Capt.
R. J. Ritchie, general manager of Qan·
las, advising him that if he paid over the
111oney the man w9uld tell him how lo
disman tle the bomb already aboard the
plane and set to go off at a certain
altitude.
To show that he was not joking lhe
man said he had planted a similar bomb
in an airport locker. Officials found that
bomb and instruct ions for paying the
ransom. \\'hen the money was paid lht.
man te lephoned to say the report of the
bomb aboard the plane y,•as a hoax.
Ritchie said the man called himsel(
"t.fr. Brown., and that he sped orf in a
small truck \\'hen Ritchie handed him the
cash stuffed into blue suitcases. He
described him as about 23, English, with
a hooked nose , false moustache and
beard and dark glasses.
Thirty policemen searched passengers
and luggage on three Boeing 727 planes
y,·hich landed at Melbourne later in !he
day in belief the mysterious Mr.
Brown might be aboard but found no one
resembling lhat descripUon.
One passenger who ga ve his name as
E. Rowley of London said he read a
murder mystery during the sev en·hour
drama.
"The book helped pass the time,'' he
said. "l thought the bomb threat was
real. But what the hell can you do e;{cept
just sit there and hope?"
The hoaxer also telephoned the airline
to say that the bomb y,·as a barometric
type y,·hich whould explode by alr
pressure once the plane reached a certa in
undisclosed altitude, either whil climb-
ing or descending for a landing .
Passengers said the crew told them
they thought the threat \\'llS a hoax and
that they remained calm through the
ordeal \\'hich included turning off the
cabin heat to "frme" the bomb. They
· eYen served drinks during the search. ont'
1>assenger said.
"One cannot speak too highly of the
trew," a Sydney resident said. •'Tbe en·
11re airliner. including luggage, \lo'as
searched three times. They finished up,
taking the carpet oH the floor. Every sec·
lion of the plane was checked, nothing
v•ent untouched. The crew even looked
under the fuselage.''
Man, 24, Seized;
Demanded Pla11e
Trip to Denver
RED1'.10ND, Ore. ( UPIJ -A young
man was arrested Tuesday night when he
ran aboard an Air West l\\'in propjet at
an airport ramp and demanded to be
flown to Denver to see his girlfriend.
Police said Steven til. Strttt. 24. of
Palos Verde s. \\'as booked on a charge of
trespassing. They said he did not carry a
weapon but kept pointing under bis coat
as if he did.
The plane was unloaded of its ta
passengers when Street told I h e:
stewardess and First Officer Bill
Lovelace that he wanted to l;>e Oo"n t•
Denver by himself.
While he was talking \\'ith Lovelace and
the stewardess. police were called. He of-
fered no resistance when taken intt
custody.
Police said he had been loitering about
the plane and suddenly "busted through
the people" to get aboard the plane.
After Street \\'as arrested, the plane
\\'as searched as a precautionary
n1easure but nothing \\'as round. The
!light was delayed two hours.
The plane was on a Oight from
Por tland to San Francisco. Stops wett
scheduled at Redmond, Klamath Falls,
Ore .. and Sacramento.
Street's father told police that their son
had traveled north to go to graduate
school. He said his son had been depress·
ed about his girlfriend, police said.
Unslated Trip GEM TALK
Spiked Candy Gives Teen Bad Ti111e TODAY
by
OMAtlA (UPI) -It 1\'as an innocent·
looking piece of candy and f\1arilyn
Clev eland. 17, didn't give It a second
thought as she popped it into her mouth
while preparing lo lea\1e for school.
But several hours later. ti!arilyn, the
1970 fl.fis' Teen-age Nebraska, \Voke up lo
rind herself in a ho.spital room .
That \\•as the morning of May 11.
fl.tarilyn returned to school for the first
time this week after "freaking out'' on
the chocolate which she and her family
believed was laced with LSD or some
other flallucrnogen. -
Maril yn. daughter of ~r. and Mr.s.
Glen CleYeland, recalls she was changing
purses the morning she found the candy.
"I hive a sweet tooth," she said, "so I
ate It and thought no more about il." She
then began to feel strange v1hile driving
to school.
"All the cars looked like llllle colored
strings as they pa~sed by," she said.
"After th11t , my mind Just went blank un·
til I got to JK'hool.
"I then remember getting terribly
fru,lrated while lrylng to get my locker
open, and some friends came over and
belJ):ed me,'' s.he said.
"They thought 1 Y.'aS sick or drunk or
had food poisoning -they jmt didn 't
know what to think,'' she said.
The friends took her out of school and
gave her bread •nd tomato JUiee:.
"I remember seeing a grc8l big tomato
coming al me -all kind! of y,·eird things
like that. II was really acary.
"Then I \\'oke up al Clarkson
(hospital)," sh• said. r
Marilyn spent two and a half days In
the hospital and ha.s seen several ph~ si·
clans and a paychl11trlst since.
She describe.s her e1perlcnces In the
hosplt.111 as "realty 11 bum1ne:r. A lot of
times people's f!lces looked deform~.
and outside the window everslhing looked
really differelll.
•·J y,•ouldn 't \\'ant to ever go through it
again."
She ~aid she hoped her e);pcrit>nce [ l:,.,,==•'"""""~'""""'°Cl""::;l
n1ight alert others 10 lhe dang<'rs of drug
use.
"The \\'ay I feel aboui it is that il
\\'asn't worth it at all " she says. "I don't
see how peoplt' that do take drugs can
just const<lntly keep taking them. I'd i;o
crazy,"
Tustin Approves
Bond Meastu·e
Fo1· Park Land
Tustin voters Tuesday npprO\'ed a $\.2
1nillion bond issue lo provide a total or 18
acres of city parks at four locations. The
city presenlly has only 11 acrt'.s of pa·rk
space.
A 20 percent turnout or ''Olers ga\'e the
measure a 70 percent approval -more
than the twc>thirds requirtmenl for
bonds.
\\'ith 1111 eighl precincts r parting the fi-
nal \'Ole ~·as 1.403 yes and 598 no volts.
The parks will be developed y,·ith the
sale of 2}-year bonds bearing up to six
percent interest.
MYSTERY GEMS
Throughout history, many famous
I ge1ns have disappeared entirely,
'rhile others have vanished for cen·
turies, only to reappear in strange
places and in the hands·Of~unlikely
O\Vners.
Such a gen1 is the fabulous 70
carilt "The Idol's Eye." !\.lined in
1600, it passed Iro1n a Persian
l'r\nce in 1607 to a private com·
pnny, as a debt repayment. It then
vanished for over three centuries.
Suddenly. in 1906. this historic dia·
111ond emerged again \\'hen it was
sold to European interests by a
Turkish sultan.
J.'orty-one years later, in 1947,
''The Idol's Eye" "'8S sold to an
,i\1nerican \\'Oman for $375.000. a dd-
ing one n1ore chapter to the history
' of allure and n1ystery of gems.
Al though no 1nystery surrounds Sitts are 3.9 ecrts on the south"''t llt
corner or First and c Strcttll. s.s acres the beautiful stones in 01.1r store,
nel\r the northeast corner of Prosp«'t I they do have, the moment )'OU buy
1\\'t'nu~ and fr1·1nt' lloultv!lrd. 4 5 acres on them, a personal meaning and al·
1h~ northeast corner or Utt Drive and lure which will make you treas1.1re
M11rhell A,·enue. and 4.2 acres on the them throughout your lifetime.
southeast oorntr O[ Bryan and Red tllll J
Avenues. •
•
not usin1 hl.s lnteUe<::lllal potential.
But people clo~st lo John became
aware of changts in his Interests and
personality.
"fl& developed an 1-don'l·Jiv&a-dam
attitude," says Ken Barry, John's be11t
friend throughou t mort ol. high
!ichool. "He didn't really ca.re .about
classes. Toward the end, high school
became a big joke to him, a bigger joke
than when we !tarted. By the Ume he
graduated high school, be was a little
louder. a HHle 1nore aggressive than
\\hen he entered.''
.lobn's new.found aggressiveness v.·a_s
evident in his senior year feud \l'ith
Gertrude Levow, the silverhaired hi.gh
school librarian.
CUTIING UP
John ,.,,as constanUy cutUna up in the
library. Once a couple of other students
dared John to break a v.·ooden stool that
~flss Levow used . He accepted the dare
raised the stool and brought it do"'" o~
the OQOr with a crash.
"}le was so obvlOO.sly rebellious," ~tiss
Levow says. "J think he was angry at the
\\'orld. He ju.st wanted his own way. Re
"·as unhappy.''
In his last t\\'O years of high school,
John read more avidly than ever before.
I-le joined book clubs and built a bookc~
in his parents ' li ving room to hold the
\'Olumes that remain there to thls day.
He angered his parents by spending $64
he had saved on a 1929 Encyclopaedia
Britannica set.
John was curious about people \\'ho
changed the course of event... He was
fascinated with FrankJln Roosevelt and
!he New DcJI.
He also read several books about
socialism. liked what he read and became
n1ore outspoken in voicing his opinions.
"lie ahvays seemed sort of tuned in to
~ialism." Ken Barry sars. "He v•ould
talk a lot about that. It Just seemed a
good system to him. He thought it \vas a
systezn for the people.''
QUESTl0~1NG
\\'ha.t seems to have set John off from
most of his classmates at Lodi High
School was his questioning of established
views. In his senior year. he broke with
the Catholic Church after a priest told
him there were certain exceptions to
"thou shalt not kill" -and war was one
of them.
His parents say John al\li•ays expressed
strong feelings againsl \vars. believing
the "little people" never benefilled front
them .
He began reading and thinking about
conscription, 1i.·hich seemed to him an un.
fa ir restriction on individual liberty. But
\\'hen he reached his 18th birthday, he
registered for the drart as required.
John graduated from high school in
June 1962. Allhough his grad es y,·ere good
enough to gain him college admi ssion. his
p11rents "·ere unable to afford tuition.
Still unsure of \\'hat he \\'anted to do,
Jolut loafed around during the summer
and then \\'ent job hunting -only lo find
employers were not hiring "draft bait ."
"I felt this 1i.·as a trm of personal
discrimination," Johns ys. "I felt like I
was v•earing a scar et lA on my
forehead. Here T was being penalized for
defend ing the system "'hich kept the
employers in business."
READING
Wilh a lot of spare time on his hands,
John began reading about current eYents,
especially Vietnam, where the Johnson
Administration 11.•as escalating U.S. in·
volvement in I96fHi7. He read Lederer
and Burdick's ''The Ugly American" and
started to fetl America y,·as making a
mistake in intervening in Y.'hat seemed to
him to be a civil war.
"But t :still believed In the American
\\'ay and the Communi!'lt threat," John
says. ''I would have been willing to fight
for my country -perhaps just because It
was 1ny country.''
He finally resorted to a }ob at $1.30 an
hour at Popular fl.1erchandise, a mail
order firm that had constant turnover.
The work force was m~e up mostly c.f
blacks and poor whites, :t class ol meu
John had not been exposed to before.
John says the nature of the job, lht
draft, his growing doubts about the Vlet·
nam War. and the generally bJeak ouUook
of life deprtssed him dee1>ly in this
period. But like many teenagers. he felt
unable lo confid r in his parents. His
friends found II difficult to l.'{)mmuuicate
\\'ilh hiu1.
OWN WORLO
"}le jusl didn't want to be bOlbered,"
remembers Chickie Cucuo. "He lived .ia
his own little world. Like he. was satUDed
to go to V.'ork, to cume homt, to have
supper. to work on his car and thal wat
it. Thal \1·as his life. ft was a routine."
John himself says: "I felt like l had
driren down lhe wrong street and
touldn't fi nd my way out.''
John quit his job at Popular ti.1erchan·
dise after nine months following a run-in
\\'Ith the manager. He stayed home,
brooding over the fact that average higll
school graduates like himself, not
brilliant but not stu pid t ither, \\'ere find·
Jng it so difficult to get 3ood jobs.
Meany,·hlle. lhe drart was getting
closer. He took the Army physical at the
peak of Vietnam draft calls. Although hi!I
parents say John had a history or hlgh
blood pressure, he passed and was
cle.ssified lA .
John knew then that he had lo make up
his mind what to do about serving in the
military and possibly fighting in Vietnam.
By this time. he was lorn between a
belief thal he should not fight in what he
saw as a purposeless \'1ar and his inbred
fear of "steppi ng out of 11.n,."
\\'O~'T ST AV
Dan Cucuo remembers John saying
before his physic al. " 'If they draft me.
f'm not goMa stay. I tell you right now.'
"After he passed. he came home, and
for that day he \\'as real do\l'n, really
down. and said he ~·ould do \\'hatever he
could do to get out.''
\\'ithout telling anyone. John made a
final attempt to get out of the Army. He
inquired at his local draft boa rd about
applying for conscientious objector (CO)
status. He says the draft board advised
him he had lillle chance of being granted
such an exe1nptio11 because he was not a
Quaker and warned hinl it v.·ould be
"unwlse" in the long run to apply.
John Picciano's experiences illustrate
the differences bet"'een \\'Orking·class
and more affluent you th in dealing with
the draft. One o{ the greatest crllicisms
of lhe draft system is that people who
can afford to muster medical testimony,
legal advice and other expert help can
stall induction and e\'en a\·oid ii
altogether.
CAN DELAY
David Nissen. chief of the criminal
division of the U.S. >.ttorney 's office in
Los Angeles. says anyone who "spends
the time, effort and money has a fairly
good chance of at least delaying and
sometimes forestalling going" into the
Army.
Had John Pi<X'iano sought help from a
draft counselor. he \vould have learned
that Quakers are not the only ones who
can be granted CO status. He might also
have been told to get a medical
certificale attesting to his high blood
pressure.
He did none or this. He just took his
draft board's advice, and two \\'eeks later
received his •·greetings."
"When he got drafted he repo rted.''
recalls Chickie Cucuo. "He was sad, and
acted kind of strange. but he left
anyway."
(Next: Basic training and tli e bus
to Lodi.)
BB.ALLY
BIG L~AGUE~·
ii
TISSOT
Giant·size 42·mlillmeter al.Jtomatlc date·tetllna T·12's, the newest ol a
long Un i ol technlc:al biB·leaguers by Tissot.
Top: shows \he day as
'Wt:ll 11 the date, i nd fias rotat ing inside
e lapsed·t1m1 sc1!1. In
sta inless sttel, $125
lower: !hi Navigator with rotating in11de 24·hour scare. Stainless steel, $120
/). C. .J/umphriej /)euie/er.1
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COST A MESA \
CONVlNJiNl TE•MS 24 YEARS IN ~ ·~ttOH '
IANKAMltUCA•O-MASTER CHA•GE l'HONl~Q --.
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Huntington Bea~h
Fountain Valley
• •
N.Y. Steeb
VOL. 64, NO. 125, 5 SECTIONS, 72 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 1971 TEN CENTS
Final Bolsa Chica Purcha·se Accord Reached
Assemblyman Robe'Pt Burke (R-Hun.
tington Beach) today announced that the
state has completed arrangements lo buy
the final strip of Bolsa Chica Beach for
fJ.8 million.
The assemblyman said he was
"particularly pleased to have had a part
In helping bring about the ~ompletion of
this beach property purchase" but agreed
in a telephone interview that he had ob-
jected privately to the city of HuntingtOR
Beach's intervenlion In the case.
The city intervened in the con-
demnation proceedings at the request of
state attorneys last faU by claiming a
public recreational easement existed over
the property.
The case was settled in Orange County
Superior Court last month when the state
agreed to pay th~ owners of the 38 acres
of land -Southern Pacific and tbe Bolsa
Pacific Corp. -$3.8 million.
The settlement went forward when the
cily dropped its cl~im for a recreational
easement filed under the controversial
Gion and Dietz California Supreme Court
decision.
State attorney Marvin Goldsmith con·
ceded in a letter to the coo rt, however.
that uncertainties of trial and the city of
Huntington Beach claim had reduced the
settlement priCt?. A value of $5 million
had been placed on the old railroad right
of wa y by the state.appc11nted appraiser.
" Burk-e agreed that he "raised Cain"
privately wi th City Attorney Don Bonfa
over Huntington Beach's beach access
~uit.
"I felt it was going to delay the state
action on acquiring the strip," he com·
mented. ''I object to all prescriptive
rights cases. I th ink its a form cf con-
flscation. An easement pri;vents the
owners developing the property and the
holder cf the easement ca.n't develop
either ."
Burke argued that an easement claim
''freezes the status quo" adding, "Il the
claim had been left in, 'the beach would
have remained 'Tin Can Beach'. ·:
Told that city officials consider the
ea sement suit resulted in the Property
be ing bought for $1.2 million leaa than the
state appraisal. Burke responded, "I
can 't say yes or no about tha t. The
bargaining \\'15 galng on u they in·
tervened. I think there were a number of
fa ctors tha t resulted in the c<1mpromise. ''
The assemblyman felt that the old
Pacific Elec tric right of way was on
isola ted strip of which the property
owners were anxious to dispose.
Explaining his part in the purchase.
Burke said that he was no\ a par\ of the
negotiations but had "encouraged both
side.s to acl with baste."
en acie 0 .ea
Odor Fine Levied
• Huntington Brothers Must Pa y ·
A plea of no contest was entered by the
Steverson Brothers in West Orange Coun·
ty Judicial District Court Tuesda y to a
charge of odor pollution from their 3S.
acre mud dump in Huntington Beach.
Judge Kenneth Smith imposed a fine of
$250 plus a penalty assessment of $65 on
the brothers, Joseph and Carl Steverson.
The brothers also were placed on one
year's summary probation not lo repeat
the pollution that occurred Jan. 12.
The charge arose out of an inquiry con·
ducted by the county's Air Pollution Con·
trol District ( APCO) after homeowne!'I
Westminster
Police Seize
Porno Reels
Westminster Police seized more. than
S500,000 worth of sex films and
photographs Tuesday in a ra id on a small
industrial building occupied by the
Ka yous (pronounced chaos) Company.
District Attorney Cecil Hicks called the.
alleged pornographic seizure "lhe largest
in Orange County history."
The raid follows by two weeks a
similar discovery of p or nog rap hi c
materials in Fountain Valley but
Westminster police said there. is no ap-
parent connection betvreen the two opera·
Uons.
Kayous Company ~·as operating at
JSl44 Golden West St, without benefit of
a city business license..
"No arrests have been made. yet. but
we expect to ma ke some. within the ne.1.t
two da ys," Westminster Lt. Jack
Shockley said this morning.
Police hauled 20,500 reels ef film and
S00,000 still photographs from the
building. Shockley and investigators lrom
the distr ict attorney '1 office spent all day
revJeY.'ing tbe films.
They were apparently rated double X.
"We spent six days investigating tbe
busineSs before raiding it." Shockley
reported. He sakt he couldn't disclose
bow police found out about the Operation.
Investigators said f i Im s and
photographs were apparently sent to
Kayous for packaging and mailing to all
parts of the country. It was an alleged
pornographic clearing house, but nothing
was manufactured there . police said.
Search warrants for the raid w e r e
granted by Municipal Judge Kenne.th M.
Smith. Files and business records were
iakeo along with the pornographic items.
No names cf individuals involved with
Kayous Company were released by
police.
Shockley did say that police are not
1ure if the Kayous owner personally
knows Joe Reitano, the man arrested in
the Fountain Valley raid.
Fountain Valley Police discovered
38.000 books. movies pholograpns and
other alleged pornograptuc ma terial 1n
an Industrial business ca lled Ad vertis ing
La youts and Sales. 18283 Ml. Baldy St.
Rei n1no has been charged with
possession of pornographic material! for
r.ale. a misdemeanor complaint.
"We do kno w some of the Westminster
items were se nt to a Reitano business in
Sa nta Ana ," Shockley said. "But it's just
1 buslnt1111 deal." ·
the founta in Valley ra id covered two
days, May 10 and ti. Westm inster Police
wr1pped up their raid In one, Tuesd1y.
near the fa'cility at Hamilton A venue and
Magnolia Street complained of foul odors
in the area Jan. 12.
Deputy District Attorney Ralph Hanson
alleged that the APCD investigators
found that oil wastes from a refinery in
Los Angeles County were dumped at the
site ·that day.
Robert J. Findley, who repre.ae.nted lhe
Steversons, said that the no contest plea
averted a trial that would have lasted
from seven. to 10 -days.
This month lhe Stever500s gave a writ·
ten commitment to the city or Huntington
Beach that dumping of liquid oil field
3 Jets Crash
ln S. Africa
CAPE TOWN (UPI) -Three
South African Air Force je~
usually used as transports for high·
ranking defense offictrs crashed in-
to the sheer face of Table Mountain
I.Oday, killing the 11 persons
aboard.
The victims were not identified,
but Defense t.iinister Pieter Botha
said the nation "lost some of its
finest members." a p pa r e n t I y
military office.rs.
Botha said the planes were pra c-
ticing a nypast for a holiday event
in Cape Town on Monday.
The crash occurred 1l Table
Mountain near Cape Town. Botha
said.
State Committee
Hints Approval
Of Coastal Bill
SACRAMENTO -The assembly com-
mittee on planning ~nd land use &trongly
indicated Tuesday night that it will ap-
prove: a tough shoreline control bill
despite the fears of coastal communities
that il will cut local controls.
Among the groups that attended the
hearing was a delegation from the city of
Huntington Beach .
The committee did not take a vote
Tuesday night but a majority of the
members indicated they favored a bill in·
corporating points from two measures
that were before them . One ia bt!ing
sponsored by Alan Sieroty (D·LA>s
Angeles ) and the other by Assembly Pete
Wilson IR·San Diego}.
Huntington Beach, along with the
League or Cities, stands on record o~
posed to Sieroty's measu re but had en-
dorsed Wilson 's bill which died in com-
mittee last year.
Vice Ma yor Jerry ~1atney , city at-
torney Dan Bonfa. and Harbors and
Beaches Director Vince t.toorhouse flew
to Sacramento Tuesday to testify against
Sleroty's measure.
Sleroty's 'bill y,·ould crealt a reg ional
· commission that would control Bil coastal
development fi ve miles inland or to the
nearest range or mountains.
A proviakln of the bill stipulates that
until 19'15 any development 1,000 yard•
landward would be forbidden without •
pennlt from the regional commission.
wastes would be stnpped at the facility as
of June 1. They indicated that operations
to continue skimm ing the oil from the
surface and removing it in truc ks would
continue.
Other material may still be taken to
the dump but this will not be oil wastes
and would not hamper efforts to reclaim
the land, the Steversons have pointed out.
This commitment from the brothers
was negotiated with city afficials after
the council found that the dump con-
stituted a public nuisance. The council
withheld an y prosecuUoa to allow time
for the negotiations.
Huntington
'Can't Meet
Pa y Demands'
The president of the: Huntington Beach
City (elementary) School District said
Tuesday night the district cannot meet
teacher salary request& under the current
tax structure.
Steve Holden's statemenl c:ame during
Tuesday night's school beard meeting .
Trustees were scheduled to discuss !lie
1971·72 budget, but the item was con·
tinued without comment
Jt was anly when the meeling wa9
opened lo questions from the fl oor that
the: matter of the budget and tea chers'
sa lary demands was brought up .
Several members of the district'!
teachers. association attended t he
meeting, but none made presentations to
the board.
Contract negotiations bet ween board
representatives and members of the
teachers' association have not been sue·
cessful and teacher~ have instituted im·
passe proceedings against the. board.
This is the second year in a row that
negotiations have proYed fruitless and
teachers have requested arbitration.
Mrs. Dorothy McClure, president of the
225-member teachers' as.saciation, said
the negotiations have deadlocked on cur·
riculum proposals as well as salaries.
"We had hoped to have some Indication
or a chan ge in the board's stance at the
meeting," Mrs. t.1cCJure said today, "but
there was none, so we will be moving
ahead with our request for arbitration in
the dispute."
Impasse proceedings were institu ted
when board members adopted a salary
freeze two weeks ago because school
authorities said they didn't know if their
Inco me for fiscal 1971·72 would be based
on the normal local tax income or a pro-
pMed statewide property tax.
The state property tax would severely
cut the district's income, according to
school afficials.
2 J oins Seal Beach
E11.viro111ne11t Boa.rd
The Seal Beach City C:Ouncll ha s ap·
pointed two new members to the city's
Environmental Quality Control Board.
They ere Hadley W. Killough, 645
Beachcomber Drive, and Bruce Bennett,
222 4th St. Killough, a legislative analyst,
Md Bennett, a high 11chool teacher, will
taJce their seats Thursday night.
Farm Labor.
Boss Jailed
In Slayings
From Wire Services
YUBA CITY -A stocky Mexican-born
farm labor contractor was arres~ today
when deputies uncovered the remains of
12 middle·aged men, hacked to death
and buried in strange ritual positions
along the banks of the Feather River.
Officer11 11aid they were still digging In
the sand¥ soil for at least one other miss·
ing person.
Juan V. Corona, 37·year-old father a!
four small daughters, was taken Into
custody at hi1 modest atucco home in a
neat mldd1e--class neighborhood In Yuba
City, a fa rming community of 25,000 in
the central valley of California .
Sutter County Sheriff Roy Whiteaker
declined to say what led officers to
Corona, and a deputy said there was "no
motive we can discover." But the sberill
added :
We art eertain be eommltted the
murdtr11."
Most o1 the badfea were f o und on lheir backs, arms upraised. The
sheriff said they were badly mutilated,
with deep cull on the heads and cheits.
Thei r shirts were pulled up over their
bloody heads.
They were found about five miles north
of Yuba City 400 or 500 yards east of U.S.
Highway 911--E, on both sides of the river.
Seven were on the west bank and two
othera on the opposite bank, in a.. prune
orchard and a peach field.
Nearby was a settlement of shacks
where migrant laborers Uve.
DRESSED FOR OCCASION, JACKIE FEK&TE LECTURES ON INOIA
Huntington High Students Throw ThtmMlves Into Honors Program
Corona, a quiet man: was known by his
neighbors as a strict father who wouldn't
allow his children out of the yard.
"They've n.ever bothered anybody
around here," said Mrs. Oleta Kelley,
"'ho lives two doors away.
History Hunt
"The on ly thing that was strange wu
that he kept very strange hours. He
would come and go thraughout the night,
especially in the summer," said th•
Coronas' next"<ioor neighbor, Mrs, Wilma
Huff. Students R ese arcli Own Prog rams Two of Corona 's small daughters,
dressed neatly in their school clothes and
By RUDI NlEDZIELSKJ
01 Ille D1llY 1"1111 llllf
History is no longer a game of numbers
in the special cl ass roo m of Huntington
Beach High School te.acher Margaret
Frischholz.
And devices such as "Columbus sailed
the ocean blue, the year of fourteen
ninety·two'' are unneeded.
Mrs. Frischholz. chairman of the
school's social studies department, has
dev1sed -a ·'Program-thar-has student.I"
enthusiastically learning their history and
pursuing tbeir studies after gchool and an
weekends as well.
She lumps together about 90 "A" and
"B" studenb interested in social studies
and offers them a choict of topics to in·
vestlgate . They are charged with the col·
lection of the ir own research material
and are invited to draw on guest speakers
and other resourcts to make their
presentation.
The students return and present their
lnfOrmation to other classmates through
reports, panel discussions and illustrated
lectures.
That, in essence, ls the 11chool'1 IOChll
science honor11 program.
Students often use the libraries of
Golden West and Orange Coast colleges
and UC-Irvine to get at the informatlan
they need .
Thoroughness and imagination by the
participating students are the key In·
gredlents for the program's success. ac·
cording to their teacher.
During a soclology unit, for example,
students staged 1 folk song hooten,.nny,
rehearsing their techniques on weekends.
Another time, 12 guest experts were
brought In 10 speak Qn v1riow: faltha dur-
ing 1 unit on reli,gloo.
A study project on enclenl elvillzaUorts ..
Inspired one of the hono rs groups to stage apparently unaware cf what happened
the Greek Tragedy "Oedipus Rex," again were 11een waiting for the 1ehool bus a
with rehearsals on their own lime. few hours after their father was arresi,d. The viclims w_ere all caucaslan.s, ap-
The honors program is made up of a patently migrant farm workers In their
total of 90 students in the 10th through 405, 50s and 60s, They were all killed with
.12th grades. Often tbe studenl3 ~reak up a machete or a heavy knife, the sheriff
into smaller groups to study a particular said.
topic. Some of the bodies had two pairs of
Mrs. Frieschholz claims it allows tht pants and two shirts, indicating the vic-
students to accomplish more than they tlms we.re transient I a b o r e r s , in·
would-in a nocmal .h1story ec>urse:.Jnsteru}_ -vesUgators aald._The __ orchards are being
of filing dates and data in their own (See BODID, Plge f) ~
personal memory bank, the studenf.!I: are
able to strike out on their own and get
the information for themselves.
Badham Reveals
Plans to Enter
Preserve Bill
Assemblyman Robe.rt Badham (!\.
Newport Be.a ch) said .Tuesday that he
had obtained special permlss:lon of the
Assembly Rules Cammlttee to introduce
bis new bill for the creation of 1 marina
preserve. in the Salt Creek area.
The bill, AB 3091 will now go to the
Natural Resources Committee. Badhem
also said he wlU reappear before the
Rules Cammiltee next week to obtain an
urgency clause: to the Salt Creek Je:glsll·
Uon so that when It i!I passed and signld
into law by lht governor it wtU 10 Jnto ef·
feet Immediately.
or .. ge
l\'eather
There may be a bit of drizzle ill
those cloudy skies on Thursday.
with cooler ttmpualu:Ju (63 to
70) prevailing along the Orange
Coast and inland areas.
INSIDE TODAY
An old financial spbol ovtr
Newpa rt Harbor is getting a
M W look. Se.t Finance, Page 25.
1t•tl11W ,., n
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Cl'"' Cll'Mf' U (lteC~I~· U' 1 c11n111M tl-4t ''"''e' • c'"'~ • DMlll Mttkt., It
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j! DAIL 'I' PILOT H Wtdntsdly, M.,y 26, 1971
B each Schools Could Run on Less--Analyst
A management consullant claims the
J-luntlngton Beach Union High School
Di.striet could maintain ilS current f'duca·
llonal program v.ith a slgnlflcantly lo.,.:l'r
tax rate than the $2.08 It will be seeking
this June.
Robert Donaldson, 43, of 6431 Govin
Circle, told the board of trustees Tuesday
night that lhe five.campus district would
not have to• cut classes or teache rs if a
rate of $1.&:l per $100 of assessed valua·
* * * 'l'ax Ov erride
Uon wu adopted.
Hb r.ationale, he said, Is b1sed on a
thorough study of dU!trict oper1Uons
y,·blch Indicate to him that .several cost·
cutting measures could be put Into efftcL
Donaldson said h~ undertook the study
as a pri\·ate citize n and resident of the
dlstrict.
Donaldson's 10.point proposal calls for
a program budgeting system for the
district's operat1011.1 whlcb would apply
Jndustry staoda.rds to determine how
many janit.on, clerks, meeb1nics and
other personnel the district needs to get
the job done.
"I also propose a reduction in staff to
Include administrators. clerks, stcretar-
ie~ and janitors, excluding teachers,
which could save the district $1.2 mil-
lion." Donaldson said this morning.
In addition, Donald.son would favor
more extensive use of dala processing for
inventory control. making progranu such
as busing and psychological testing self-
supporting and creating a parking fee for
students and spectators to athletic
event.s.
~arina High Students
Face Fewer Fall Oass es
The district counseling staff of 37.
Donaldson claims. could be pared to 19 if
the counselors u·ere stripped of their
curriculum guidance functions.
"The curriculum ought to be packaged
so that parents can do !he counseling for
their own children," said DonaJdson, who
believes every parent should be required
to partic\pate in mandatory curriculum
y,·orkshops lo find out which courses their
sons and daughters are required to take. f\tarina High School students will be
asked to drop 2,602 subjects next fall if
the Huntington Beach Union High School
District is unsucceSsful in winning a tax
override.
That forecast v.•as offered by Principal
Glen H. Dysinger who has just completed
an analysis of the number of classes that
""ould have lo be dropped if the district's
budget is determined on an 8$ cents per
$100 or assessed valuation budget.
Revenue drops amounting to $4 million
will cause a reduction from the present
six to seven-period day to a four-period
day wilh a fifth period option at all five
campuses. according to district financial
e1perts. The Marina analysis was based
on that assumption.
Dysinger said students have requested
a total of 18,283 periods but since the
fiscal slashes are foreseen. only 15.681
can be granted. This would mean
elimination of 2,602 periods.
By department, the following courses
\\·ould be dropped: English. 381 : Social
Studi es, 34l: f\.1athematics, 136; Science,
367; Language, 196; Business, 353;
Valley Planners
To Decide Use
Of Land .Parcel
Founta in Valley p I an n in g com·
rnlnloners will study 1n 11-acrt parcel
tonight which is the subject of a $728,000
claim against the city brought by New
Republic Corp.
Commissioners will be asked during
their 7:30 p.m. session to pick between
two conflicting requests for ust of lhe
land.
Ne"'· Republic is asking pennisslon to
build 2:80 1partments on It. The $728,900
damage claim folio"''' an allesation lbat
New Republic has been denied use of its
land near Warner Avenue: and La
Alameda Street.
The city planning staff, however, is re-
questing that 10 of the 18 acres be
rezoned for commercial development in-
1tead of apartments.
The controversy over the city center
parcel dates back more lb1n a ytar,
when New Republic first obtalned
~iol'I to build 28-apartments per
acre~ on the land. New Republic wu
unable to build on its 18 acres and liter
the city changed a zoning ordinance to
make 20 unlll per ecre the maximum
allowed.
Now New Republic wants lo tum over
11.S 18 aues to anoUier developer,
Ponderoaa Homes. That firm wants te
build 24 apartments to the acre.
City officials, however, h,;ive been
1damant in their desire lo see no more
thin 20 units an acre on the land.
OIANel COAST
DAILY PILOT
OttAAGI COAST PU•L.llHIMD COMl'ANY
lot.•rl N. Wo•l ,,.ldollr .... l"WlllW'
J.,~ L clll'r•Y"
Yk:t '"'IHrot af'llll 0---1 ~
TI.•111•• K•o•ir E•llor,
'JkMt• J.. Mw,Jii1• M~ IEflllr
Al .. Dlrliitt w..e 0nt...,t c-1r utiw
Al .. 1t W, l1f•t
.-.-11 .. lfilOI' ............... °"'" i 1115 lt1cll lo1tl•••14
M1lTI•t .Y4rm1 P.O. l oa 1tO, 92641 --Utllll Ndl1 m ,_, A-
C.• -...1 Qi Witt l t r $1/'Nt .....,,.,.. ... di: nu He""°" •ou:..-1,. 111i o.;.,.i • H..._ II c;.ell'llflt hi
Jndustrial Arts, 373; Homemaking, 175;
Music, 72; Art, 208.
In addition , Dysinger said, 122 periods
of Student Work Experience would have
to be dropped.
''The courses that \\'ill be dropped are
not just electives but also many of the
more serious subjects." he added.
Projections for the 0U1er r o u r
campuses ha\·e not yet been completed
by the principals, acrording to Associate
Dist. Supt. William "Jay" Settle.
The district is asking vottrs lo approve
a 6kenl tax increase this June 15 to
eliminate the period cuts.
Passage of the tu hike would raise the
district's general purpose tax rate from
ita current $1.39 to $2.0ll per $100 of
useased valuation.
U it fails, the district will be committed
under state Jaw to draw up Its budget on
85-cents per $100 of asst1sed valuation. -New School Need
Told by Official
l1i Huntington
The Huntington Beach City Elementary
School Dlslrlct will have to acquire a .site
for another school to relieve crowding in
the south Huntington Beach area, ac-
cording to deputy superintendent Charles
Palmer.
Palmer told trwitees Tuesday night
that he would be making a formal re-
quest for acquisition or a site In the area
or Gisler Intennediate School "in the
near future ."
There Is already one elementary site
Identified near Giller and Palmer told
tru.Jtees-tbey upect to atart construclloq
as ~ a1 the at.ate releases fwids for thi
111t,t00 pt0Ject.
"We expect word from the state at any
time," be 1ald. "The site ts all &raded
and the contract has been let to Flnt
Assurance Construcllon, Inc., of Newport
Buch." ·
'Ille elementary school ta be con·
slructed will be the 1i1th In the district,
but Palmer said rapid popuiatlon growth
in the area has led to the need to Identify
another elementary school site In the
same area.
"We already are beglnnlng to have a
problem of tr1nsportatlon of student! ind
ii we don't Identify another site and build
a school , the problem is going to con·
tinue,'' he said.
The school to be constructed will be
locited lmmtd..iately north of Gisler
school.
The school site to be ldcntified will be
In the general area bounded by Buiihard
Streel, Hamilton Avenue. Newland Street
and Pacific Coast Highway, he said.
"We should also have a formal work
measurement pro g r a m for ad-
ministrators and other departments to
tell our employes that they are expected
to process so many purchase orders and
sweep so many square feet of floo r. \Ve
sbould approacli industry to belp us set
these standards," he said.
Donaldson also urged I he ad·
ministration to consider sharing various
support services ~·ith nearby elementary
school districts. These y,·ould include
purchasing, vehicle maintenance. in-
ventory control, data processing, guards
and personnel services.
Finally. his report recommends the
creation of a citizens commission to
analyze and evalu~te administrative pro-
grams and proposaJs. The board would
function much like a legislative analyst,
be said.
Members of the board of trustees
li stened to the Donaldson plan but took rio
official action.
The board is presenUy committed to a
6k ent tax override at the June 15 elec-
tion which would raise the district's cur-
rent tax rate from $1.39 per $100 or
assessed valuation to $2.03.
If it fails, the district will have lo
determine its budget on the legislative
minimum of 85 cents per $100 of assessed
valuation because current overrides ex· plre July l. ·
District fina ncial experts predict that
the tax drop would require a budget cu t
of about $4 million and major cuts in
1ervices and the educational program.
World Beauties
To S how Charms
In Lo1ig Beacli
Special to the DAILY PIWT
LONG BEACH -Lovely g i r 1 s
representing -49 nations of the world will
parade before a panel of judges tonight to
climax the 11th Annual lnternaUonal
Beauty Pageant.
The 8 p.m. review by IS judges from
the entertainment and communications
media will get under way in Long Beach
Municipal Auditorium, chaired b y
Hollywood photographer Tom Kelly.
Actress Jeanne Crain, actor Cesar
Romero and television stars ruck Jason
and Greg Morris are among other
celebrity judges.
The candidates for most beautiful girl
In the world will appear in swim su.its
and also costumes representing their
native lands.
Tickets from S3.50 to SS.50 will be
available at the door, as well as from a
variety ot mutual agencies.
Perils of Animal Drug
To Coast Youths Told
By JOHN VAL TERZA
Of .... D•ltr f'li.t II•"
Maryland is not the only area of the
country where a young drug wier can
swallow or inject Phencyclidlne then
gouge hi! eyes out of their socketa.
The South Orange Coast holds the
potent.ii.I for equally gruesome behavior,
because Phencyclidine forms the bulk of
tht psychedlic market in the area .
So says San Cle mente narcotics detec-
tive Terry ~lcAdam. "''ho w a r n s that
despite a dozen different labels. the
dangerous animal lranquilizer is among
the number~ne illicit drug Ingredients
nov.• being sold in the ::irea.
"Ifs been around for monlhs," he e1-
plained," and PCP (the drug'• shortened
name) probably has worse effects than
even LSD."
McAdam said he was not surprised
"·hen he heard of the bizarre cast In
Baltimore. Md., last Friday In which
Charles Innis Jr., the ~ye1r~ld son of 1
prominent Massachuaetts lawyer, clawed
his eyes from lhtir 50Ckets while under
tht inOuenct or lhc drug.
"It's really scary stuff." McAdam said.
"No one can rtally predict the e11ct ef-
fects, especiaUy when it ·s blended with
something el.st."
\\'here does PCP come from~
The pharmace.ulical manufacturing
firm of Parke-Davis produces a 1ma 11
quantity of the drug, usually used in
primate research as a tranquilizer.
Thus, because so UtUe. is legally ma.de,
most of the lUlclt PCP is brewed in ii·
legal laboratories .
•
And v.·hen It reaches the market, It's
peddling becomes part of lhe con-
temporary marketing and labeling syn-
drome of the drug culture.
. ~lb::ed v.·ith LSD. dealers might label It
"organic mescaline'' -selling it as the
t•natural " variety of the drug v.·hich
nature places in peyote.
"The term 'organic' is big in drug sell·
Ing these days." McAdam txplained.
"The kids Jigure if it's 'organic', then It
must be good."
The same drug generally forms 100
percent of every dose of Psilorybin (the
hallucinogenic mushroom ingredient) sold
on the South Coast.
'The recently Isolated drug THC, which
Is the chemical es!K!nce of mari juana.
also is in demand on the drug n1arket
these days.
"But all THC is Phcncyclidlne as well ,"
said the officer.
Other labels placed on the potentially
deadly drug include:
-"Super Weed", peddled as a potenl
form of marijuana. but actually parslty
flakes laced with PCP.
-"The. Peac_e Pill."
-•·HCL". which ironically eoon!orms
lo Utt ehemlcal Initial! o! hydrochloric
acld.
-··oust of Angeli"
Another Irony sttms from the latttt
label placed on Ole combln1 t Jon
depressant, anesthetic and hallucinogen.
Ot!altrs sometimes refer to "OU!t of
An1telll'' as "DOA".
Those are the oft-used Initials for
"dtad on arrival."
011111 H'fl!J to V r 11
\Vig stylist Nonie Farmer.
Sale1n 1 Ore .. says dunk in rub-
bing alcohol is only \\'ay to
l'lean a \rig. J·lov>ever. drying
can be prob!en1 because of
fun1c s. To solve it. she dunks
\v1g lhen heads outside her
~hop for nearest parking
meter.
F rom Page 1
BODI ES ...
thinned al this time of year.
'i'uba City is a farming eommunit y of
1~,000. abo ut 130 miles northeast of San
Francisco.
Jn a news confcten c:e after the arrest.
the sheriff said Coron a has been in th is
country for some time. but speiiks llnl~
English. \\'hiteacre said he. had to use an
interpreter to communicate wit h the
~lexican American pr isoner.
·rhe sheriff had a terse "no comment ''
when asked about a double bladed axe.
pruning knife and shovel brought into the
jail before Corona was Jed in.
Whiteacre tentatively identified a se-
cond victim of the mass killings. He y,·as
Pete Peterson. 63. of nearby 1'.1arysville.
Develop ers Set
For Disc uss io11
De\·eJopers of a housing proje ct in llun·
tington Beach·s Bolsa Chica area ~·flt
discuss plans y,·ith O\vners of nea rby
hon1es during a meeting Thursday night.
\\'illiam N. Shattuck, presidenl or
Signal Properties, said the sess ion will be
held at 7:311 p.m. in the Recreation
Center. corner of 17th and Orange
streets.
Signal Properties has announced ten-
tative development plans for a 428-acre
parcel in the northeastern sector of the
Bolsa Chica area. The plan calls for con-
struction of houses, apartments and
businesses.
The developer's proposal has dra~·n the
objection of the llunUngton Beach HOME
Council and numerous other homeowners.
M wrtlH·menl
GEM TALK
TODAY
by
MYSTERY GEMS
I
Throughout history, many famous
gems ha\'e disappeared entirely,
\vhile others have vanished for cen-
turies only to reappear in strange place~ and in the hands or wtlikely
ou·ners.
Such a gem is the fabulous 70
carat "The Idol's Eye." 1'1ined in
1600, It passed from a Persian
Prince in 1607 to a private com-
pany, as a debt repayment. It then
\'anished for over three centuries.
Suddenly, in 1906, this historic din-
inond emerged again ,.,,hen it was
sold to European interests by a
Turkish sultan.
FCfl y-one years later, in 1947,
"The Idol's Eye'' \\'as sold to an
An1erican \von1an for $3i5,000, add-
ing one more chapter lo the: hi story
of allure and mystery of gems.
Although no mystery surrounds
the beautliul stones in our store,
they do have, the moment you bu y
them, a personal meaning and al-
lure which "'ill make you treasure
them throughout your lifetime.
Over T.u Figure s
Committee, Jury
Will Probe· Feud
By JACK BROBACK
o• tft• Cl•llr l'IM1 ir1tt
'l'he battle royal between Orange Coun-
ty Tax Col!eclOr Roberl Citron and Data
Services Director Robert Farmer y,·as
partially resolved Tuesday by the Board
of Supervisors.
They tossed the u·hole mess to the. Data
l>rot<tssing Committee and lo the 1971
(;rand Jury. 1'he committee consists o(
5everat county department heads.
Supervisor David L. Baker who made
the n1otions said lhe Data Processing
Committee ,;hould conduct an analysis
School Kids
On Increase
This S ummer
Summer school enrollmenl for Hun·
t1ngton Beach elementary schools is up
rnore than 300 over last year, according
to a report presented to district trustees
Tuesday.
1\lrs. Connie ~\lakefield , principal of
~un1mer school for the district. told
trusU?es that 1.934 students ha v e
registered for classes v.·hich will be con-
ducted in all of the district's schools.
.. Last year . we had 1,600 sttJC!ents sign
up and J.100 showed up for claS9eS,'' she
said. ''Jn addition to having more
registered this year, 1 think we'll have a
higher percentage tum out for classes."
1\1rs. \Yakefield credited the change in
prog ramming for the increased interes
1n summer classes. In prevlous years,
1 be district has offered only remedial
l'lasses during the summer.
.. This year we 're offering an all-enrich·
n1en t program. \\'e'll be giving classes in
the kinds of things that the kids want to
learn and teachers want to teach, but
that y,•e just don't havt time for during a
regu lar sess ion day," ~lrs. \\'akefield
said.
Some or the classes being offered at
\•arious campuses include folk dancing
and puppetry and dramatic play for first
<ind second grade students; construction,
sewing and stitchery and how to run a
busi ness for third. fourth and fifth
graders. and marine biology and
photography for grades six. seven and
f':ilhl.
'L All or U6 -' teachers and 'students -
are enthused about the program th is
;-summer," she added .
Classes are sche(!uled to begin Jyne 21
anti 11·ill run lo July 16, fron1 8:30 a.m. l.O
JJ ·55 a.m. daily .
~l rs. Wakefield aaid enrollment for
sumn1cr school closed 11:arch 26, "bul if
someone wants to send their child, Y.'e
Vioo·t refuse them , But their choice of
classes and campuses v.•ill be \•e.ry
lin1iled at th is date."
:S ununer Sc hool Se t
Parents of Ocean View School District
children may send them to summer
school June 8 through July 23. Each one
of the district'.!! 24 schools wiU participate
In the program except for College View
School v.·here construction will be under
\\'ay.
and comparison of the widely differing
figures offered by Citron and Farmer.
The Grand Jury is to look into any possi·
ble wrongdoing on the part of either
department head.
The battle started three \Vetks ago
\\'hen Citron told the supervisors that ht
could get a job ·we \Vanled done for
$20,000 Jess by giving it to an outside firto
rather than to Farmer's department.
The firm was Security Pacific Optin1a-
tion Service of Los Angeles. a subsidiary
of Security Pacifi t' Bank. .
Citron also blasted Data Services as in-
efficient. 1\·asteful and Incompetent. For
good rneasure, he . threw in Qlunty
Ad1ninistrali\'e Officer Robert E •
Thomas. "I caMot understand how
Thomas can allow this cesspool of .waste
of taxpayers' money," he.charged.
Supervisors Ronald Capsers and Robert
Battin, \\'ho have previously_ attack~
Thomas. jumped onto C 1 t r o n ~
band\1'agon and with Supervisor Ralph
Clark. voted 3 to 2 to accept lhe Pacific
Security oiler "in principle." It had to be
put in proper form ~)' . the County
Cow1se l"s office before s1gn1ng.
The job "'as to change the present
paper copy secured . tax ro_H 1~ a ~1 icrofiche System similar to m1crofllnl.
f'armer htid his innings last week anil
slated that Cilron·s pre11ent method wa~
the lowest cost way to do the job. lhat it
11•ould cost 52.000 more to convert. to
microfiln1 through his department. and
$13.300 more by using Pacific Security.
Farmer charged that Citron had based
his proposal to take the job out of t_he
county on •·incomplete and ~accw:ate 111-
lormation because or hi.s. deliberate
failure to follo\v existing county policy
and coordinate hi s actions with the ap-
propriate county departments."
CJtron led off again Tuesday \\'Ith an
attack on Farmer. He came up with a
wlwle new set of figures purporting to
show that his present manual method
record kecpin,it was costing $51,575
compared to a Pacific Security prices of
$30,400. (farmer had said the cost of the
present operations \vas $11,300).
He attempted to refute Farmer's claim
1hat he had not conferred with Data
Services on Lhe job in question. (Farme.r
replied that v.·ritlen specifica tions were
never provided his department).
Citron said competitive bidding on the
job y,·as out because Security Pacific "'·as
the only company in Los Angeles or
Orange counties that has an optical scan-
ner capable of doing lhe job.
Fanner charged that Citron did not
have the contract "'ith Pacific Securify
completed until lasl Friday. "Some 540
\vords "'ere added. After rour months of
negotiations the specifications had not
been completed."
A move to approve lloing the job in
county Data Services almost came to a
vote. but Baker insisted on more ~·
vestigation.
Clark moved that the Data Services bid
be accepted.
"You are assuming that computerizing
is cheaper," Baker said. "Farmer said
manual handing is less costly. In addition
competitive bidding was bypassed.
"There is more to this than shows on
the surface,'' Baker insisted. "The
greater issue is that one department head
has \'iciously attacked another and thus
cast doubts on all departments and thls
board.
''ff Citron·s charges are true we should
fire Farmer. \\'e must ;nvestigate and
clear this muddled situation."
BE.&:LLY
BIQ-1.~B:«GUE~ ---~--
TIS~OT
Cf1nt·sizt42.mill1mtler
automatic date·telling:
T·l 2's, th• ntw•tt of I
long Un• of t«hnlc1I
bi&·leag11e1s by Tls10t.
'Top: shDWt tha day 11
Welt IS th• d•l•,•nd has rotatrna lnsid• 11l1pstd·Ume sc1l1, 11'1
stainless steel, $125 .
l ower: the N111i11IDrvrrltk
1ot1t1ng Inside 24·hour setlt.
Sta inless steal, $120
J. C. J./.ump,hri~ J eu1eferd
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONVENllNT TERMS
IA.N~MERICAR.D--MASTlR. CHA.RGI
24 '1'£ARS IN SAME lO"CATION
IHOHE 141°1401
v
I
We:dnt5daJ, M~y 2b, 1971 H OAIL Y Pu.t! 3 . .
Deserter Lived Youth • ID a Dreatn World
By LUCINDA FRANKS
AND
rETER FREIBERG
Lodi. New Jerse}, is not the kind of
town lhat Inspires youngsters lo drtam of
doing grtat things. John Pittiano's
pal'ents. like many o[ thrir neighbors,
vividly remember thr grrat depression.
His rarher was occasionally out of \vork
t'Ven ll'hen John was growing up. The
Piccianos had no hlgh ambitions lor their
only child . Their advice was "slay in
line'' and learn enough in ::c.hooJ so you
can land a decent.paying job.
. Still like all children. especially those
who spend a great deal of time by
themselves. John indulged in fantasies.
On long walks through what were then
the fitlds of Lodi, he daydreamed of
hec<iming a ramoui;'cabinetmaker. \Vheii
he v.·as reprimanded at school. he would
sink inlO one particular dream sequence
in v.·hich he became a brilliant Harvard
professor ~·ho alv.•ays had the right words
and facts at his ringerlips.
The Lodi Public Library is not far
from the Picciano home. and John liked
to go there alone in the aftetnoons. He
usually "·ent v.•ithoul telling anyone, and
even as he grew older he fell uneasy
Beach Lea sing
An11ounce1nent
Ires Officials
By JOHN \'Al.TERZA
01 llot 01th• ,1 .. 1 ''•"
State Park officials rested with ~hock,
disappoin tment and anger to Tuesday·,
announcement that the House Armed
Services Committee had rejected Presi·
dent Nixon 's offer of San Ma teo Can}!"On
and severaJ miles of prime San Ono[re
beach for public use.
Robert Meye r. Deputy Director of
Parks and Jlecreation for the State of
California, told the DAILY PILOT he and
Director William Penn Mott were "ex·
lremely disappointed to say the least''
that the nffer of the free lands had been
changed to a tease of only a parcel of
beach frontage .
\\lhars more, r-.teyer said the state of·
ficials "'ere not even informed that hear.
ings v.·ere taking place on the issue in
\\"ashington , D.C.
The committee. v.·h1ch legally rev1ev.·s
the declaration of excess relating lo
military lands, ruled that San J\iateo Can·
yon should not be opened lo public use.
It excluded the facilities at the San
Onofre Surfing Club and enlisted men·s
beach club from any possibility of falling
into public hands and offered the re-
mainder of the beachfront lrom the
~·ester" \Vhile House to San OnOfre
Bluffs Stale Beach to th!' State of Cali·
forn ia on a lease basis only.
Origin;il plan.~ a.~ outlined by President
Nixon during an announcement on a knoll
O\'erlooking the affected acreage had a
much diHerenl tone.
San Ma1eo Canyon plus the enlire six·
mile stretch of beach Fronl was to be
deeded to publi c Cntities, the President
deelared.
The announcement i m m e d i a I e I y
created a howl of protest from ranchers
and farmers v.·ith large investments on
their leaseholds in the canyon.
Stale park officials immediately began
looking to\vard the day ~·hen the canyon
\\"Ould be developed as a blend of public
can1pgrounds and farm ing areas.
t\teyer chastised the lack of support of
!he deeding of the beach and canyon
~·hich v.·as related in a recent resolution
.bY the San Diego Counci l of Gover"·
men ts.
' He also intimated dis~atisfaction with
lhe opposition to the Pre sidenrs plan
.from Rep .. John G. Schmitz or Tustin and
1lep. Robert \\'il son of San Diego.
Both leg islators reportedly npposed the
:beach giveaway before the ron1millee.
State oficials had promised to honor all
·lea~es involved in the San ,.,_1ateo Canyon
-agricullural area. he said . . --
~3
about discussing serio~s lopica; with fam1·
ly and friends.
"It just wasn't done -to talk abou t
politics. religion or lilnything loo heavy."
he recalls. "You were afraid you'd bore
someone."
Paul Speiiale, a high school English
teacher \\·ho v.·ork.s al the Lodi Public
Library after school, says John "was the
type of kid who was curlou5 about
tve.rythinf.:. One day he "·ould be reading
a history book , the next day it might be
'Greal i1ovies of the 192tls.' "
IBRt:LEVANT
John says he was never tur ntd on
by his classes. He romplains that he
never learned anything he could "use,"
that the courst'S seemed "irrelevant."
After class John would sometimes hang
around Pap's Luncheonette near the high
school. Dan and Chickie Cucuo. tv.·ins who
were friends with John. rcc:all he often
expressed a "'ish to dale girls but v.•as
shy and never had the nerve to ask lhem
out.
"He used to talk about it lo us."
Chickie says. ""He 'd say. 'I'd like to ha\·e
a girl, \\'hat do you think I should do?' ··
··He'd see a girl. he'd say something to
her. If she wuuld Wrn around and say
wmething to him , he'd be lost. He didn't
HURT IN FREAK ACCIDENT
Cowboy Actor Wi lker
Clint Walker OK
After Ski Pole
Pierces H ea.rt
BISHOP ! UPI) -Cowboy actor
Norman "Clint" \\1alker. 43, was in "fair
lo good"' condition today. recovering
from surgery after a skiing accident in
""hich his ski pole punctured his heart.
The ae<:idenl occurred f\tonday at
f\tammoth r-.-iountain. 40 miles ~ulh or
here. \\·hen \\'alker took a spill. Ski
patrolmen look him lO a doctor in nearby
Jl.tammolh Village and because of the
grave injury he was rushed by am·
bulance 10 Northern Inyo Hospital hert.
Doctors said en route he had no
rcc:ordab!e pulse or blood pressure and
was in extreme shock.
Surgeons located the wound in a ven·
tricle or the heart and it \1·as closed .
After the surgery was C(lmplE'led, his
blood pressure came back to near
normal.
\\lalker starred in the "Cheyenne'' tele·
vision series for seven yeArs starting in
1955. He has since made se.1•eral movirs
in Italy and also had pans in Amer ica n
film.•.
know whit to a.ay. She might say 'HJ; he
mlghl iook tnd say, ·what do I do
next?' "
Some of the Cucu05' friends rtbuffed
John . He was tall. bulky and walked lol'ilh
8 peculiar shuffle. They felt he wasn't
"hi p" enough. When he gradt:ated from
high school, John owned only one suit and
didn't dance.
"There was a gradual.ion party he
wanted lo go to," Dan Cucuo i;ays. ··But
mos!. of the guys didn't want him with us.
because you were interested in girls and
vou didn't wa nt to look bad. lie came out an dressed up, and this other guy said ,
·where you going, John~ You're not com-
ing v.·ith us. Because you makt is look
bad.' So he went back in the house. But
it was meant as a joke. John took things
too serious."
TOP HALF
Hih cumulative gradt's ihov.•ed
John to be in the top llalf of his cla!!,
with mostly 8s and Cs . He always rtcei\"·
ed passing marks in "citizenship," which
the school says includes ·•staying within
the. rules.''
Jerry Tamburello. then director of slu·
dent activities and now the principal or
Lodi High School. says '·he 'oras so
average it was ridiculous. He was never
in any trouble."
School Bond,
Taxes Okayed
In Santa Ana
Sanla Ana \'Oters approved a school la:t
rate increase of 54 cents and gave a two
thlrds majority lo a $l1.2.5 million school
construction proposal Tuesday.
ll was only the second time in seven
tries over the last five years that couniy
1Seat voters had approved school spending
me asures.
The final unofficial tally from all 25
preeincts gave the 54-cent tai override a
favorable vote of 11.841 to 6,998. an
almost 6.1 percent majority.
The bond issue to replace earthquake
damaged schools was approved 12,748 to
6.142. a fi1 percent margin. Two.thirds
"'as required on this issue but not the
override.
Voter turnout was more than 50 per·
cent. heavy for a school election . II wa.~
spurred by a strong effort on the part of
parent~. school officials and businessmtn.
The 5-kent tax boost will increase the
ra te from $2.99 to $3.SJ for the next five
years.
The bond issut will build nine ntw
elementary schools, two junior high
schools and purchase furniture and 111-
structional equipment.
Man, 24, Seized;
Dema11ded Plane
l'rip to Denver
RED:-010ND. Ore. (U PI ! -A young
man was arrested Tuesday night whtn he
ran aboard an Air \\'est twin propjet at
an airport ramp and demanded to be
flown to Denver to see his girlfriend.
Police said Steven J\I. Street. %-4, of
Palos Verdes. was booked on a charge of
trespassing. They said he did not carry a
weapon but kept pointing under his coat
as if he did.
The plane was unloaded" of its 18
passengers "·ben Street told t h e
stev.•ardess and First Officer Bill
Lovelace that he wantea to be flown I•
Den\'er by himself.
\\'hile he was talking with Lovelace and
the stewardess. police were called. He of·
fercd no resistance when taken into
custody.
Police said he had been loiti:?ring ahoul
the plane and 5uddenly "busted through
the people" 1o get aboard the plane .
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YOU
2300 HARBOR BLVD.
AT
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SAN DIEGO FREEWAY
IN THE HEART OF COSTA MESA 2300 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
I
J
On t.he 1ur1act. John changed \'try little
during high school. Teachers felt he y.·as
not using his Intellectual potential.
Bui people clostst to John became
av.·11re of changt's in his Interests and
personality.
"Ht devtlopcd an l·don'l·give.a-darn
attitude.'· says Ken B:irry. John 's best
fr ie nd through ou t n1os1 of high
school. '"He didn·i rtally rare abc•ut
chisscs. Toward 01e end , hig:h .~chool
becflmt' a bii;i joke to him . a bigger joke
than "'hen \\'!' slar1Pd . By the lime he
graduated high school, he 'o\"81'i a litlle
loucler , a lilt le more aggre5sive than
wht>n he entf'red."
John's new-found aggressi\•eness v.·a~
evidenr in his senior year feud v.•i!h
c:erlrude Le\'0\1', the s.ilvtrhaired high
school librarian.
CUTJ'ING UP
Jnhn was const;in!ly cutting up in the
library . Once a couple of other students
dared John to break a \\"ooden stool that
~liss Levow ui;cd . Me accepted the dare,
raisrd !ht' stool and brought it do"·n on
the floor Ydth a crash.
'·Me was so obviously rebellious." f\U ss
Levow says. ··1 th ink he was angry at the
world. Ile just v.·antcd his o"'n v.·ay. ft~
\Vas LL1happy ."
In his last lwo years or high school,
,John read more avidly than ever before.
He joined book clubs and built a bookcase
in his parents' liv ing roon1 to hold the
volumes that remain there to this day.
He angered his parents by spending $6'1
he had saved on a 1929 Encyclopaedia
Britannica sf'L
John was curious about peoplr \\'ho
changrd the course of t'\'Cnls. He v.·as
fa scinated \\'ilh Franklin Roosevelt and
the New [leal
He also read several books ahout
socialisn1. liked \1·hat he read and bf'Came
more oulspokcn in voicing his opinions.
.. He alv.·ays secn1ed sort or tuned in lO
socialism," Ken Barry says. "He would
talk a lot about t~al. It just seemed a
Jiood i;ystem to him. He thought it v.·as a
system for the people."'
QUESTTONI!'<G
\Vhat seems lo have st'l John off from
most of his classmate!I at Lodi High
School "'as his qUest1oning or established
vie"·~. In his .~cnior ye:ir, he broke \vith
!he Catholic Church alter a priest told
hitn there "'ere Cf'rtain exceptions tn
··1hou shalt not kill" -and war v.•as one
of them.
ll is parents say John always cxpres~r.d
stroni:: feelings against wars. believing
the ••Jittle people " nevrr benefillcd from
thr.m.
lie be$ian rE"arling and thinking about
conscription, "'hieh seemed to him an un·
lair restriction on individual liberty. But
whtn he reached his 18th birthday, he
registered for the draft as required.
John graduated from high school In
June 1002. Although his grades were good
rnough to gain him college admission. hi!!
parPn1s were unable to 11fford tuition,
Sri!I unsure of 11.'hat he wanted to do,
.John loafed around durlni the sum1ner
and 1hcn \\"ent job hunting -only to find
e1nploycrs were not hiring "draft bait."
"'I fell this wa~ a form or personal
rliscrin1ination," John 1111.vs. "I felt like l
11<1s "·earing a scarlet lA on my
forehead. Jlcre I v.·as being penalized for
defending the system which kept the
employers in business."
READING
\\1Hh a Jot of spare lime on his hands,
John began reading about current events,
cspecially Vietnam, ~·here lhe Johnson
Administration was escalating U.S. in·
volvemenl in 196lHi7. lie read Lederer
and Burdick's "The Ugly American·· and
started to f{'('I America was making a
mist ake in intervening in what seemed lo
hin1 lo be a civil 'ol'ar.
.. But I still believed in lhe American
\\·a.v and lhf' Communist threat," ,John
sa~s. ··1 "'ould have been willing to fight
for my country -perhaps just because it
~·as niy country."
Ile finally i:esorted lo a job at $1.30 an
hour at Popular Merchandise. a ma il
order firm that had constant turnover.
Thr \vork force was made up mostly of
hl:irks and poor "'hltes, a class of men
John had not been e:.:[Xlsed to before,
.John say!I the nature or the job. the
dr;i fl. his gro"•ing doubts about the Viet·
nanl War. and the generally bleak outlook
or life depT'('.'lsed him deeply in this
period But like many teenagers. ht' felt
unable to confide in his parents. His
friends found ii difficult lo communicate
\\ith hi1n.
OWN \'i'ORLO
··11e JUSt didn't want lo be bothered ."
remembers Chickie Cucuo. "He lived in
his o"·n little world. Like he was satisfitd
to go to \\'ork. to comt homt, to have
supper. to "'ork on his car and that was
ii. That was his life. ll was a routine."
John himself l'iA}'s: "I felt like I had
drive n down !he ~Toni; street and
couldn't find my way out."
John quit his jnb at Popular f<.1erchan·
Ex-A l'ln y Chic[ Dies
r>URHAf\1, N.C. IAr) -Kenneth C.
Royall. Sf'cret.ary of the Army under
Pre!'1dent Harry S Truman, died early
Today at \Vatts HospilAI in Durham. He
had befn at the hospi tal for several
v.·eeks. He was 76 years old.
Bush mills.
dtse after nine monlhs following 1 rw-ln
with the manager. He stayed home_
brooding over Ult ract that average high
school graduates like himself, not
brilliant but not stupid either, were find·
ing it so difficult 10 gtt :::ood jobll.
~feanwhile, the draft was getting
closer . lie took the Army physical a~ lh•
peak of Vietnam draft calls. Although hit
parents say John had a history of hi&h
blood pressure , he passed and wa1
classified IA.
John knew then lhat he had lo make up
his n1ind ~'hat to do about serving in the
tnilitary and possib ly fighting in Vietnam.
By !his lime. he was torn between a
belief that he should not fight in what he
saw as a purposele" war and hi3 inbred
fear of "stepping out of line."
\\'ON'T ST A Y
Dan Cucuo remembers John 1ayblg
before his physical, " 'Tr they draft me,
rm not gonna stay, I tell you right now.'
··After he passed, he came home, and
for that day he was re.al down, really
down. and said he would do whatever be
rould do to get out."
\Vithout tel ling anyone, John made a
final attempt to get out of the Army. He
inquired at hl~ local dra(t board about
applying for conscientious objector (CO)
status. He says the draft board advised
him he had litllt' chance of being granted
such an exemption because he was not a
Quaker and warned him it1would be
•·unwise" in the tong run to apply.
John Picciano's experiences illustrate
the differences between working.class
and more affluent youth in deallng with
the draft. One or the greatest crlticism1
of the draft system is that peoole who
can afford lo muster medical testimony.
legal advice and other expe.rt help can
stall induction and even avoid it
allogelher.
CAN DELAY
David Nissen. chief of the criminal
division of the U.S. Attorney's office in
Los Angelei;. says anyo ne who "spends
the limr. effort and money ha5 11 fairly
good chance of at least delaying and
sometimes forestalling going" into the
Army.
Had John Picciano sought help from a
draft counselor. he would have learned
that Quakers are not the only ones ~·hn
can be gr<1nted CO status. He mighl also
have been told to get a mtdical
certificate attesting to his high blood
pressure,
He did none of lhi~. He just look his
draft board's advice. and tv.•o weeks later ,
received his •·greetings."
.. \Vhen he got drafted he re.ported,"
r('calls Chickie Cucuo. "He was sad, and
acted kind of strange. but he left
anyv.·ay."
(Next: Basic trainitlQ' and the bua
tn Lodi.)
The whiskey that spans
the generations gap.
r Of 300 years, a \Vl1i.i,kcy from Bushm1lls hil!o been
\Vith u<,. Chi1rm1ng us. Bcgu1h ng us in d srnooth,
por1 .. hed and alloscrher 11gh1hc.1rtrd fi1 \h1on.
13 :;i.ener <1t1on .. l1dvc 1ef 1ncd tl. ·15 gcncr dtions h.Jvc
~1ppcd 11 1 hf'vcrdrcl . NP..i rperlcc.t ion Bu :-hrnills. full
of charar rc1 . But not heJvy·h(1ndtd ;ibo111 11. fl,1 vor·
lul. But nc\'C r over·r)O\\('r1ng Bushn11Us. It 1cil<'ct<;
Ille pa~t \v11h o l1gh1 dnd l1vcly1IJvo11ha1 is ~ll todily.
•
Co1npiHC it to your pre!lent \vh1skey. You needn't
nurchclsc a bottle. One si p at your favorite pub wil l
tell you \Vhy Bushmills hils intrigued so m.iny gen-
erc1l1011 s. It is, simply, out of sig ht.
BUSH MILLS
IMPORTED FROM THE WORLD'S OLDEST DISTILLERY.
I !ll~l:t Of I 00'.l l~ISM \'11115~•[$-t~ •aOOf-!flllllO Iii l~H.INO IHl JOS. (ill!llllll ca '/IE'.\ ~()I!(, H.f. 01910
"
•
'
.. OAIL v f'll~T---Wt4ntsd&y.. Ma.:t 26.1971
\ .
\ •' I ~ps
A Great Day
For Schools
By TllO~tAS rt1URPRINE
Ot ,,.. Dt1t1 f'llet $t•lf
.. BmERSWEET VICTORY DEPT.
U you were with this space yesterday,
)'OU m1y recal It.he question was asked
i!, indeed, Santa Ana rt!klenLs have had
it up to here \.1-'itJi substandard schools.
The 1.Nwer is yes.
Voters up in the County Seat 1treamed
to the polls ye.sterday in a 51 percent
turnout to approve a 5kent tax override
and perhaps more importantly, okayed a
"'3.25 million school bond issue to build
I 1 new a~hools and fix up the existing
Wlapidated ones.
The bonds will be 1old over 25 years
and at the rate of campus decay in Santa
Ana in recent years, it may take that
Jong for the County Seat folks to pull
their school system up into the 20th
Century. Yet it still has to be a -sweet
victory for pro-public school factions in
Santa Ana. despite the bitter overtones
of past defeats.
Ma ybe it was a last·minute fear Santa
Ana's prep football teams would be
disbanded that pulled the county sealers
back to reality. , * NEWPORT BEACH folks have a new
law on the books today that will make it
illegal for dogs to roam the ocean front
beaches. Canines are already banned
from bay be.aches but it's going to be a
new adjustment for Fido along the surf
strip. Or will it?
Talking to Don Elder, former Newport
\lice mayor the other night, you arc given
the impression he'll believe it when he
aees it. Don lives out on the Peninsula
and he ob.served, "I"ve seen a lot or loose
dogs out there on the beach from time to
time. Sometimes I've called the
dogcatcher. He even came out one day.
"He took a long look ~ta pack of dogs
romping around out there, then got back
in his truck and drove away. Never even
1ot his feet sandy."
Guess that's just a reminder to the City ..
Dads that you can v.1r1te all kinds of laws
but somebody has to teach the dogs how
to read them.
* HUNTINGTON BEACH 'S municipal
rathers have their problems these days
too. Mostly with the budget. lf cipen&el
go along as projected. it would seem that
the city would be operating in the hole by
&ome $549,000.
So councilmen grabbed their scisoors
~fonday night and decided to have a.
budget culling session. 1'he next thing
they knew the budget deficit had gone up
to ts52,000. Seems that a few utras got
tossed into the hopper before all the
deficits got counted.
If that was buda:et.cuttinf, they must
have been operating. with blunted shears.
Anyway, you can bet they'll try again.
* THE BIG FLAP in Laguna Beach last
night was supposed to be whether or not
the present school board would renew
contracts for Jts three top administrators
before three new "conservative" trustees
ta~e over the 1how July I. But as it turn·
ed out, contracts for Superintendent Bill
Ullom and assistants Bob Reeves and
Charles Hess were okayed in almost
routine fashion .
Emotions ran rampant insttad on
\\'htther or not the All-American Football
Ltague, the grid vtrsion of Little League,
should use the hi1h school football !itld.
Ah, Llauna.
* So that's Orange County t.oday, fo!U.
CoW1ty Seat to county line.
Troop Dies
Saving l{ids
From Blast
BELFAST lUPll -A Brili&b
paratrooper and an Irish policeman
threw themselves bet\\'een a terrorist's
bomb and several young children in a
police station Tuesday night just before It
exploded . The blast killed the soldier and
"'ounded t~e policeman and Zl other
~rsons.
The Army identified the soldier as Sgl.
l.lichae\ Willets. 27, of the third
parachute regiment. An A rm y
spokesman said Willets was the eighth
soldier in the British peace-keeping
forces killed this year in "Ylolence
between Northern Ireland 's Protestant
majority and Roman Catholic minority.
Police said one witness told them the
bomber w~s "just a wee fellow. He. look·
ed like a schoolboy." They said lhey had
not made any arrests and were con·
tinuing·their investigation.
The bomb. a suitcase p"acked with
about 25 pounds of gelignite. was hurled
throogb the front door of the two-story
stationhouse in the Protestant, quarter of
Springfield Road about 8:25 p.m., an
Army spokesman said today. The
building also is used by the British army
as a command post.
The expl.osion wrecked most of.., the
ground floor. blew out windows in sur·
rounding structures and damaged five
cars outsidt. The injured included one
.~o!ifier, s~y~l)-~licemen and .14 civilians,
three or them children. All but three of
them were released from hospila\ today
after treatment.
Patrick Gray, 26, was inside thf: station
,vith his daughter Collette, 4, aiid a
neighbor, ~1rs. Elizabeth CUmmings. 37.
and her son Carl, 4, when tbe gelignite
exploded.
•·J was talking to two detectives when
the door burst open and a package was
thrown in," Gray said. "'Someone
sbouted, 'bomb~' and I saw it was smok·
ing. grabbed Collette and Carl and ran.
"The soldier held the door open for us
and . as the bomb went off, I fer; on the
ch.ildren. They "'ere only slightly hurt .
'•Jf it had not been for that soldier. we
"'ou!d all have bern killed. He took the
main force of the blast."
1 sla1ul Battles
To Block Mafia
Chiefs' Landing
ISLE OF FILJCUDI , Skily (UPI) -
The residents of this tiny Italian island
defied government plam lo land 15
reputtd Mafia bosses -s.ome with close
Amtrican ties -on Filicudi to live in
isolation.
Most of the 200 Filleudlans manned the
bays and coves where boats tJsually ar·
rive and vowed lo let no one ashore until
he can prove he is not a gangster. Th.e ts
Mafiosi, guarded by more than 40 armed
police, were en route to the island in a
police launch from the mainland.
Tee bfafiosi, including Giovanni
Bonventre, 70, a naturaliz.ed U.S. citizen
who took part in the 1957 Apalachin.
N.Y., "convention," were rounded up
Tuesday from enforced residence in
JLalian villages for deportation as
"socially dangerous " persons.
The deportations are an attempt on the
part of the Italian governmemt to end
bloody gang warfare in Palermo. the
Sicilian capital. by more careful Isolation
of Mafiosi bosses. Another 17 reputed
bosses were exiled on the isle or Linosa,
near the North African coast, last week.
Filicudians refused to Jet a police sup-
ply boat land Tuesday because they
feared it signaled the arrival of the 15
men. Residents of the other six Islands
which make up the Lipari archipelago an·
nounced a general strike and Mayor
Francesco Vitale and his islands council
said th'y would resi&n U lhe men came.
Wlclu
' ••• no u nemployment
problem., but we do
h ave a surp lus of •ali ! 1
Clasli es Betive en
1 ndia, Pakistari
Forces R eported
NEW DELl-0 (UPJ) -Jndian and
Pak istani troops fought three limes in the
past two days along the Ind<>-Pakistani
frontier, with casualties on both sides,
reports reaching here from the Indian
st.ate of Assam said today.
The reJ)Qrts. some or which quoted
Assam's chief minister, Mahendra Mohan
Choudhury, said Pakistani troops seized
the two Indian border outposts in !he
Karimganj sector llf Assam on Monday
"!Her a shelling attack. The Indian Border
Security Force IBSFl troops coun·
teratlacked and recaptured the positions,
the reports said .
Local press reports alSG said Pakistani
batteries shelled an Indian outpost Tues·
day at Dalu, west of Karimganj, in·
flicting a number or casualties.
Defen.se ministry officials in New Delhi
said they could nol confinn the reports
and were investigating them.
Karimganj is situated about 150 miles.
from the East Pakistani capital of Dacea,
outside the extreme northeastern comer
o[ the province. Da\u lies some 100 miles
north of Dacca.
New Delhi Press estimates of Indian
casualties in the Dalu fighting r~nged
from one killed and six wounded to 22
dead and 11 injured.
Radio Pakistan. in a broadcast Tuesday
monitored in New Delhi, said a navaJ
patrol sank two boats laden with muni·
tlons on a river 30 miles inside East
Pakistan's western frontier. The official
radio said several Indian "infiltrators"
manning the craft were killed and
several captured.
Lava Flo'v Turns
Awa y F1·om Town
CAT ANIA, Sicily (UPI) -Molten lava
flo"·ed lo within 220 yards of the village
of Forna zzo today, then struck a lava
ridge from a previous eruption and turn-
ed aside. Scientists said it appeared the
village, for the moment at least , had
been spared.
Other fingers of Java moved down the
slopes of ~ll Etna, burned fruit and
chestnut trees and threatened a section of
a principal road up the mountain.
Mario Coco managed to take about half
of the .chestnut3 from hi3 trees before
lava set his orchard aflame today. Then
he fled the fields he had planted 30 years
ago, vowii:ig to return.
The lava flow came from a new mou\h
which opened last week h1lfw1y up the
10.902-foot volcano. Another new crater al
an alt itude of i,500 feet spewed hot sand
into the sky.
Judge Entrs Plea s
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) -A federal
judge entered innocent pleas Tuesday for
lhe Rev. Phillip Berrigan and six other
persons after they refused to answer
charges lodged against them in an alleg.
td plot to bomb heating installations in
Washington, D.C. and lo kidnap presiden-
tial adviser Henry A. Kissinger.
Intense Storms Hit East
Slwwers, Winds Wreak Ha voc; Soutli,west Sizzling Hot
Callfornla
Summar"
Al! \"lfflM \10H!'I IYlll"' "'(l~M
lhrt\ltll .... °'"1111 l.1••1 H •IV loltt•. tttllflf tff .,.,,..,, lflv11CMr1i.rf'lll 1., fltt ......
Tiit N1ti.n.1 Wf41,,,., 5trvfct lltt
T...eMtf1 IU\ltd H >'fl"f l!IU'(ldf•llltl'I'!
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Soviet's Assure Sadat··
Podgorny Pledges Aid Despite Upheaval
CAIRO (UPI) -Pruidenl Nikolai V.
Podgorny assured Egypt the soviet Union
will continue Its economic, political and
military backing in the fighl to oust
Israel from lands occupied in the 1967
war, the semiofficial Calro newspaper Al
Ahram said today. '
Podgorny arrived Tuesday seeking
assurances from Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat that there will be no change
in lhe close relations between the two na·
lion.s after Sadat's purge of pro-Moscow
government figures. They met only hours
after the Soviet president arrived and
continued their discussions toda y.
Al Ahram said the two president.s
"discussed means to strengthen coopera·
iion between the two coonlries towards
the elimination of the consequences llf the
Israeli aggression." It added that Egypt
and the Soviet Union "emphasized their the Arab people" and said aid la Cairn
commitment to work fer the liberation of would exceed S5(lO million during the nezt
all occupied Arab territory." five years. This figure did not include ei·
ln addition, Al Ahram reported. "The isling agreements, he 1ddcd.
Soviet Union emphasized Its economic, OfHclal announcements on the vlsltt
poUtical and military support to the have said the main topic or dlscuuian .~
United Arab Republic." will be the conflict wllh Israel.
Political !iOurces said Podgorny's swift l''our pro-Soviet faces were missing .
reaffirmation of continued support In. from the talks on the Egyptian side -ex·{
dicated the recent political upheaval in vice-president Ali Sabry, and !he former
Egypt "·ould not stop Moscow !rom con-ministers of interior, war, and presiden., tinuing its support.
Sovlel Am b'a s sad or Vladimh~·-··· Ual a!afirs, respect Ive I Y, S~araw'l ;
Vinogradov took the same line in an In-Gomaa. Gen. Mohammed Fawzt andt
tervie\v with the Cairo newspaper Al Sarni Sbaraf. All four were arrested In c
Gomhouriya. He said Israel 's gains in the the purge. •. (
1967 war "will vanish as ghosts fade Political sources said Gomaa . SO •. lrtedt
away in the Sinai Desert." to commit suicide in Abu Zaabal prlSOn a:
He pledged •·the Soviet Union will con· few days ago by slashing his wnst3. but (
tinue to offe r every support and aid lo his life was saved.
CHILDREN'S IMPORTED
LEATHER SANDALS
INPANTS' SIZlS 277
4 TO I -----·--·················-······--··
r.tlSSES' THONGS :.~1N:i,' 3srns ·---····--------347-~
llCO IOYS' 311
Wlo it1 6f lrew11 P•ilft!
type--p1dd1d ift1el1.
4 .. 12 ~Jl--'"-4..
.WOMEN 'S
THONGS
l"litiorted • Li++I•
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1eJ1. Wloitt •fld lite~. 111
PR.
WOMEN 'S MADE IN ITAl Y
MEN'S
AND IOYS"
BOAT SHOES
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IOYS' AND MEN'S 447
SIZES l I/• TO 13_
HUNTINGTON BEACH
10051 AOAMS •I BROOK HURST
962-9178
SIDS 31/J•6 ..... .
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WOMEN'S
ALL LEATHER
CORK SOLES
IMl'ORT!D """"~:;:,
SANDALS
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Wlriit1, l lv1 cem\tift1tio1.
FREE CANDY
FOR THE KIDDIES
MEN'S IMl'Oam>
TIRE SOLE
SANDAL
"SPECIAL PURCHASE!"
211.
HUNTINGTON .BEACH
5891 ED INGER •I SP RINGDA LE
847-9125
. STORE HOURS--WEE!i CAYS 9 T'.) Q •• SUNOA YS 10 TO 7
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DAILY PILOT EDITOR_IAL PAGE
Avoiding a
The Coast Com munity College District is attempt·
ing to finance Improvements at Golden West and Orange
Cout colleges V.'ith a technique that inevitably ,~·ill raise
questions in the minds of property taxpayers.
The district is eager to expand facilities at both
colleges. The improvements are being pictured as rec·
reational. the kind of fa cil ities that are used by me1n·
hers of the public in eight district communities as \veil
as by the students.
The largest slice of the $935,000 program at Golden
We st will go on a ne'v $603 ,000 wing to the gymnasium,
bqt the plan also calls for improving television and com·
puter cabling and for additional parking. The $700.000
program at Orange Coast inclu des $260,000 for cabling
and a $120.000 S\\•imming pool renovation.
To finance the program at Golden \Vest. the dis·
lrict has asked the Huntington Beach Ci ty Council to
initiate an assessment district through which bonds
would be sol d. Administrators u•ill ask the Costa Mesa
City Council to form a similar district to pay for the
Orange Coast improvements.
College district administrators emphasize that the
.repayment of these bonds \\'ill not be the responsibility
of the cities of Costa f.lesa and Huntington Beach and
\viii not affect municipal finances.
But they agree th at property owners in all th e eight
communi ties within the college district u•i ll feel the im·
pa'ct through a raise in the property tax rate.
Present plans call for the bonds to be redeemed
over five yea.rs through a ta.x rate increase estimated .at
from 3lf.i to 4 cents.
There \Vil! be public: hearings before both the Hu nt·
ington Beach and Costa r.1esa councils before these as-
sessment districLc; are approved and the bonds sol d. So
someone living in Fountain Valley or Newport Beach.
fo r example, could find his college tax bill hiked as a
Temperanient
Can Change
As We Age
Speaking of children who are slow
learners in school. and of the famous
men who were considered "stupid" all
during their youth (as J did in a column a
few ""'eeks ago). 1t is equally true thal
people can surprisingly change their
v.•hole tempe ramenta as they get oldtr.
Strange rates of personal development
are not only mental. but temperamental
as well. Who l'.'ould
believe thal the dour
and taciturn Calvin
Coolidge was elected
"class humGrist" at
Amherst? Or that
the sai ntly and as-
cetic J\olaha tma was
nicknamed "Gandhi
the Dandy" during
his unive_n~ity car·
eer. when he was k n ow n as the
best-dressed man aroun d Oxford?
For every one C1pa b lanca. who
rev ea led his chess genius at the age
of 4, there are a hundred others who lake
until maturity to disclose their full
pol'.·ers and real inclinations. S I •
Augustine was , among the most con·
cupisce nt of men, he alls us in his
"Confessions." Unli.J the age of 30, his
favorite prayer was. "0 Lord. give me
chastity and self·reatraint, but not just.
yet."
WlKSTON CHURCHll.L was sent to
mi\ilary school at an early age because
his father firmly believed he was too
dumb to' learn anything else. He was a
fat. unhappy boy who talked with a slut·
ter and a lisp; he entered Harrow as the
lowest boy in the lowest class. and re-
mained there. He failed the entrance ex-
Dear
Gloom'"
Gus
Politicians ()flen ~·rite books about
their administrations when thry
lea:ve of(ice. Governor Reagan \\'ill
be able lo enti!le his boo k, "llow
I took California From No. I to
No. 50 in Two Terms as Gover-
nor."
-B. A.
flllt ftll~,. l"tllleh rMlt "' YltWt, ,..i
10tctu t r11w IMM '' tll• ~'"'''''"· '""' l'Wr ''' _.,.. N 0 ... 1t1W Ou .. OallY Plllt.
ams at military college t\.\'ice before pas~
ing. It might surprise you to learn that
Einstein was so slow in learning to speak
tha t his ramily expressed concem,that he
might be retarded. He left high school at
the request of his teacher. and had trou·
ble getting into a Swiss college because
he was nol qualified for entrance in
anything but malhemati cs.
It is impossible to predict the rate of
development of any human being, and
parents might worry Jess if they realized
this. The most intelligent woman I ever
knew was actually a "retarded" child
who never rea d a book throughout until
6.he was 14.
INF ANT PRODIGIES only loo oft en
grow up Lo themselves. so tha t by the
time they reach adul!hood there is
nothing prodigious about their talents.
And. just as often, they tum out to be
emotionally immature as well -reminis·
cent of Harold Ickes' cutting remark
about Adolph Berle, one of the brightest
youngsters of the early New Deal : ··eerie
was an infant prodigy, but the only trou·
ble was that he kept on being an infant
long after he ctased being a prodigy."
C.Onversely, the "backward" child may
suddenl y break clear or his emotion al
block and turn into a brilliant and pro-
ductive member or soci ety. If Gandhi ·s
father deplored his son's foppilhness,
and Augusline 's mother lamented her
son·ir; Just, which parent among us can be
too lmpalient or intolerant of his child?
The Need for 'Depletion'
Everv Lime Lax ref orm is proposed the
Yl called oil depletion allowance comes 1n
for an inordinate amount of rather
misguided discussion as a loophole tn be
closed.
Soml' of these misconceptions \vere
corrected recently in a letttr written to
the Los Angeles Tim es by Harry Mor·
ri~n. vice president and gene r 11 I
manager of the \Vestem Oil and Gas
A~socialion. ~1orri,;on points out that one
t"harce against the allo,vanct -that it is
an unfair subsidy -fails to Lake into con·
sideralion the fact lhat the provision
keeps profits of the oil Indu stry at a level
with other industnies. and keeps con·
sumer co11ts relatively low.
A 1968 study. for example, shows lhat
oil companies made a pro(it that year of
12.9 percent on nel. assets. compared with
lhe ll.I percent average of a 11
manufacturing industries.
\\'HILE PERCENTAGE depletion 1!1
1llowed up 10 ~ percent or neL income
from lhe propl"rty. only about half of all
--....
Guest .&iltorial
the oil and gas well!! drilled in 1969. for
instance, \11ere productive; and of those .
only the "'ells producing net income are
eligible for the de.duc:tinn. A,; Morrison
said. ""'hile an occasional ""'ell may hnn~
1n an unusual return ofir invf'stment. ii 1s
only helping provide the money for the
exploratory dry holes where money il'i
lost
Tht original and continuing purpose ol
lhe depletion allowance is lo make 1t
economic.aUy feasible to undertake that
extremely costly search for new oil and
gas resources. You can't repla nt and
reharve.sl oil. You have to go somewhere
else to find ii. And lhe n11t.lon'g economy
depends greatly on the JU<:eess ol , that
search.
California Felture Se"lce
B11 George ---------,
Otar George .
I fell in love v.·1th lhis one boy
and while I wa,; going steady I m~t
this s...,·ashbuckling ~1arlne ~·ho has
bten everyv:here and done
everything. Whal do you think t
1;hould dn about lhls f\1arint'
~1 ABEt.
Defir Mabel ·
Well, If I ttll you one Uung I'm Ill
trouble from all righl·thlnktrl and
if I It-II you .1nothtr l'm 1n trouble
v>ith lhe f\larlne Corps. \\'hy don 't
you \1T1le to Ann t.:inder:i~
1 Rush )'Our prohle1ns 1n Gtnrge
instantly and ce1 a lrt1e pamphle!
nn how to procrastinatr 1n·
definit~Jy.)
Bond· Vote
result of action taken by the Huntington Beach Uld/or
Costa Mesa councils.
\Vhether this is proper will be fo r those councilmen
lo decide. The assessment district procedure avoids call ·
ing a dislrict-"1ide election to vote bonds for the
projects.
Scrapped Prematurely?
•
·'
' CON,RESSIONAL
RESOLUTION
Foe VIETNAM
WITllPRAWAL
!>ATE
• J
A unique shoreline protection plan may have been
scrapped pren1aturely last 'veek y.·ith the Seal Bea~h
City Council's decision to repeal t\vo ordinances des1~·
nating offshore \\'aters as an open-space recreation zone. 1
Th e threat of further oil drilling and possible poltu·
tion of the city's ocean had moved counciln1en enough
last February to adopt them as emergency measures
Last ~londay night some of the same n1en decided that
the emergency u·as no l that real.
The ordinances \\·ould have required oil drillers to
win zoning variances fro1n the planning commi~sio~ be·
tore any drilling is actomplished. They "'~re d1sm1ssed
as ··unenforceable and invalid."
Council members migh t have been \Viser to a'va1t a
ruling of the state Attorney General on the legality of
the plan before dumping it.
Police Arrest Reports
The administration of Huntington Beach Police
Chief Earle Robitaille may have lost some public con-
fidence lasl \\'eek by apparenUy giving special treatment
to what should have been handled as a routine case
report. Police arrest reports han dled in a standard rash·
ion. openlv and "·ithout any hint of special treatment,
are in lhe best interesl."i of both the police and the public.
'Sa.v! l•n 't thst old Win-the· War Zablocki'!'
H
Ge1teral Use Wotild Virt11ally Elinai1uate S1nog
Steam Cars Can Be Practical Today
To the Editor:
The columns of many newspapers are
filled \\'ilh gratuitous and often quite ir·
rational expressions of opinion together
with much superficial reporting of
miscellaneous current evenls. Seldom are
readers alerted to revolutionary eventl'i in
the making. So 11 1s ""'ilh the fa cts lo
""'hich I call your atLentlon though their
implications are certainly well un-
derstood by the internal combustion lords
of Detroit and ""e may expect vigorous
and perhaps unscrupulous co u n le r -
measures to emanate from that quarnr.
PLEASE CONSIDER this almost in·
<'redible s1\u<1lion: Under the auspices of
lhe California Assembly Transportation
Committee and of !he California Air
Resources Board, no less than three ex·
ternal combustion (stea1n I bus engine~
have been developed and built by in-
dependent engineering entrepreneurs and
are now being tested and debugged so a~
to be ready for installation into standard
buses by i;ite spring or early summer.
Th e se steam·powered demonstration
buses "'ill be used in regular public
IIansportation service for se \•en months
beginning Sept. 1 and their perfonnance
will then be evaluated and judged.
lF THE DESIGNERS and builders of
lhese steam bus engines have done a:
good job. if the lesting proced ures are
fair and rtasonable and if sabo lage can
be pre\'ented. there is no reason lo expect
anything but very good perfor ma nce
(rom all of these steam power plants.
After all the steam engine does not ha ve
lo be lnven1cd. perfected or adapted lo
automobiles. Steam.propelled car~. buse.~
and trucks "·ere practical and successful
a long time ;igo and v .. ith the use of better
materials. designs and manufacturing
techniques can br even more practical to-
da y.
SO!\tF: OF 'THE EA RLY steam cars.
though practical enough. \Vere somewhat
crude as "·ere their inr em::il combu~tion
contemporaries. but the bPst of them
\.\'OUld be perlec!Jy serviceable today in
spile of tlieir angular body style. The
genera l use o( modern , efficient, mass·
produced steam dr ive vehicle on our
highways and particularly on cily streets
would elimi nate virtually all the sinog
and pollution now una voidably created by
the interna l aimbustion engine.
TH.E UNWILLINGNESS of Detroit
even to attempt to provide a smog-free
engine in con(ormity to the law indicat t s
the futi lity of hope for helter things from
them . It appears lhPy don'I even
know how to make a good bumper . In ad·
dilion to the return of pure air to our
cilies. drivtrs of steam cars would enjoy
splendid performance and long trouble·
free service as a resul t of me chan ical
simplicity. Electric cars would be fine
but th e battery situation removes !hem
from t"<lnsidera llon" for the present
Steam ruled the road in my you th . I
hope to live long enough to stt 1l do it
.a.gain.
PAUL PALMER
•Blind B11pocrls11'
To IJ\e Editor ·
Permit me to express my agony ovf'r
I.he ltUer of fl1rs . Shirley Smith. "Huey
Newton and UCJ" (~J ailbox ~fay 191 It I~
distres.sinA that a concerned citizen and
taxpayer hke !\1rs. Smith 5hould seek to
dlsgu1!'le her prCJUdiced personality by
posi ng a~ oot genuinely concerned w!l.h
1.he y,•ell·bf!1ng of hrr socie ty.
To challen ge the inteRrity of Chanccltor
Aldrich by insinuAllng his be I n ~
"re.~pons1ble 1·or the recent bombings and
burruns;& at CCI ," Is to lend substance: to
, .
' l't1ailbox
Lttter.s fron1 f'enders arc welcome.
Norma/tu writers should r.onvey the1T
rnessages Tn. 300 words or less. Th e
right ·to condense letters to fit space
Of' eliminate libel is reserved. All let·
ters mtut include signature and moil·
i11f1 address, b11t 110111es may be 111i1h·
h.eld 011 f'equest 1J s11/f1c1e11t reason
is apparent. Poetr!J 1.1.•11/ not be pvb·
hshed.
\hC' vu'.!W tha! adults of the. day proJecl 11
hypocritical barrenness of virtue and a
penchant for 1nvid1ou~ness . Every tax·
paying fool or cynic kno1vs by now !hat
no bombing or fire at UCI has occurred,
or shall ever occur. to reflect the anger
and fru stration of the universily·s
clienlele who are forced to acromn1odale
unnectssarily to the blind hypocrisy and
di storted priorities displayed lo1vard thr
educa tional enterprise by the likes of
such critics.
IS NOT HUEY NE \VTON an An1eri('an.
as is Wil liam Buc kley? ~fust the univers1-
1y provide a forum for the latter. but nor
lhi former. and thus persist 1n a furthr r
distortion of the American heritage of
pluralistic tolerance? The role ol !he
university includes nol si mply prepara-
tion for making a hving, but, hopefully.
for providing an experience that will
subscribe lo the possibility of a better life
through an explication or the truth.
Had f\1rs. Smith availed herself of the
rnlightenlng experience afforded by the
J\iexican Cu\lural Week and by the Black
Cul tural Conference she would nnw he
pleading for more of such event.~. rather
lhan hinting tha! such activille.c; conspire
to make taxpayers finance their own
dtstruction
l\fY AGONY DOES not denve. fro1n
hatrt'd or bilttmess over the inju$lJces
which prejudice has meted out to me. It
spring~. rather, from n1y appreciation for
the genuine effort being made by the
likes of Chancellor Aldrich to project UCI
as a part or a society that comprises all
1ypcs and manner or human beings. It
derives. further, from my failh in the
many 1.1.•ho. hav ing been silent or in·
differenl, retain a capacity for promoting
JU5hce and for comprehending the
challenge of guiding meaningful change
within and without !he unlverslty.
I urge l\lrs. Shirley Smith to rcn1ovr
her blinders, tn look clearl y at UCI. ~nd
to l'ihare in the exhilaration of guiding QUr
future ci tizens I O~'ard the creation of a
~iCly with a greater hurntin . un·
derstanding and the 11bi!1ty to manifc~t
genulnt-citizenship.
GEORGE 0 ROBERTS
The ·Program in Comparative Culture
Amencao·Afr1ca n-Asiao·Bl11ck·Chicano
UC, Irvine
'1'10•1. Ridlc11lo1,.•
Tn the Editor:
The letler by Lyman S. Faulkner
(Mailbox. fl.la y 191 supported the US.
military i.nd st.attd lhat its de(ens1ve prn-
""'ess is .a necessity in today·~ v:orld Ir we
Rrf' lo keep ahve. I for one fctl dll·
fercn!ly The phr11sc. "national dcfen~e."
Llli 1n lt.~('lf an untruth ti J>3sscd thti!
~lage with the Invention of the bo11o· 311rt
arrow . i\;o m&ller how rt\llny nilssrleA,
BM 's or rocktts "'e set up. a nil!ion
hke Russ1.11 could destroy u~ by prer;sin~
,11 few button~
The theme for defense 1s nn longer
"Let's save ourselves tn case of an attack
by a hostile nation."
It ls now, "Ir "'t' go. let's make sure v.•e
bring them \vith us :"
THE ARl\tS RACE 1s undoubtedly the
mos! ridiculous thing on the lace of the
earth. Why should we spe nd over 60 per-
cent of our entire budget for what t:ould
tu rn out to be I.he total annihilation of the
earth? \\'1lh all the problems lacing our
nation end lhe rest of the world . we have
no right 10 spend so much on death.
What good is a monolithic military ln-
slallat1on on the edge of the DE\V line 1n
Alaska \\'hen some p;uy is being knifed on
a sub\\ RV in New York City? Or .... ·hat 1s
accomplished by a patrolling cruiser off
the coasl of Ethiopia when a kid in \Vatts
is star\·lng to death~
IN 191'11 111E U.S. possessed l.0~4 10·
ttrront111ental ballistic ni is:; i 1 ts
(JCBJ\1 's). over 700 suhn1arine-based
missiles 141 of \\'h1ch contained nucltar
warheadsl. 81fl strategic bombers. and
an undisclosed an1ounl or anti.ballistic
misl'iiles !ABM'sL Is il all worth it ? Of
course nol! The complete lire power or
every "defense " force deployed by the
U.S 1s eno1.1gh to rliminate Europe lrom
the f;ice or !he eat'lh. 100 limes. But still
WP must build 11nd mount our military Lo
evrn grealrr heights.
J\lr Faulkner said thill lhe mili!ary "ls
probably the hcst nrgan1zed. most t>f·
f1r1cn1 in rarr}•in~ out it:; rcsponsib1IHies.
rnn~t rffc<"live 1n acC'()mplishments and
hurest in the opportunities for success it
offers pCQplc" \\'as the f\1y Lai incident
an e'l:an1ple or tht n1ilita ry's "effective
.:.ccomplishmcn1s"'' And that v.·as the on-
Iv onr. so f<ir. 1n the nCl'.'1tpapers. how
ah nut 11 II thr others~
CHRIS BRODER ICK
1•rir1tittg J•ofit·e i\·c11,.4f
Tn lhr Ed11or:
'i'our article concern1ni:; 1\lr Carlton
Polk. C:Osta Mesa High School business
!f'ar.her. I ftel 1vas in the right. A rouple nr studrnt.~ from my school. I see. wrote
you <1 crank letter concern ing your
publication or the fact the teacher was
arrested for possession of marijuana and
other drugs.
I am a Cost~ 1'.lcsa High School studtnt
and I think that we are up there witb the
school drug problem. You do have a story
Lo write and freedo m. of the press.
ACTUALLY , the school dislt1cl should
find som(! way lo tell whether some or all
their teachers hike or push drugs . If you
had not publishC'rl th e story. most parents
would not have known abonl it unli l they
had 10 bail !heir ~on nr daughter out or
~ilil. I hope you publish !his letter so !hat
your readers \\'ill know that at Jeasl somt.•
one cares al>out the school drug problen1.
NAME \VITHHP.LD
Rc 111r11n.ble Batt.le•
To lhc Editor
\Vf' :ire aware 1hat man has to reat'h tn
rquitibrium with his environment in or·
der to maintain thl! earth for future gen-
erations. Rut we tend IJJ ignore the fact
lhnl cooperation l>tgins \Vlth the ind.ivid·
ual.
The gre11test contribution the youn ger
,c:cneraiion could make toward l!tim1nating
po\lu11011 JS lo purchase beer and soft
drinks ln retumable bottles. tn addition
to improvtniz lhe general appearfnCi! of
the countryside, we ~'OUld be maklng bet·
tcr use of our resources.
;\'O\'.RETURNA BLE: CANS take 5.000
vear,; to dt>eompose and return to the
earth The consumer would also be dwnR
h!mself a favo r by SllVlng money. 'or
ovf'r ~O percent or the cost or a beverage
1s in packaginit.
S1nt't teenagers and youni aduhs ire
the maJor. consumers of canned and bol·
lied beverage~. we have the power to e1-
ert consumer pressure. Through our
combined efforts, we will be taking a ma ..
JOr step in the fight for a better en·
vi ronment.
MICHELLE MEARS
Cellbar11 vs. Uarrlage
To the Editor :
The excommunication cf the Re v.
Robert Duryea. Parifica, Cal if., at the
discovery of his marriage shows the in--
consistency of beliefs within the Catholic
Church. During my eight years of educ.a·
lion in a Catholic grade school. I had
been taught to Jove God and man . 'Fathe r
Duryea has not broken this law of love by
marrying a woman, but has fulfilled it to
a grealer e)tltn!.
HIS fl.IARRIAGE HAS not affected hi5
teachings to his congregation, but ha1 er~
panded his knowledge. As a married
priest, he has greater capabili ties or
counseling marr ied couples and couples
preparing for marriage than any eelibatc
priest has.
Because of his effecliveness as a putor
and his sincere regrel.s in leaving his
position. I feel that the action take" by
the church was not for the welfare or the
parishioners, as 1t should have been.
LAURA LEE MACH
80011 to Taxpn11er•
To the Editor :
Last month . on April IJ. the Huntington
Beath Unoin High School District re-
quested postponement of the county
schools offiCi! meeting on unification ,
originally "cheduled for May 13, unlil
after the June 15 tax over-ride election.
It would have been more practical In
have postponed the election until aflt1r
the unifica tinn plans had b~n estab-
lishr.d. because unification wou ld change
Ui e "'hole school situation as fas as the
tax bllst is concemed .
1.1" UNIFICATION follows the logical'
course. which is to unify grades
Kindergarten through 12 within city lviun·
daries. the HBUHSD woWd be dissolved
and divided among Huntington ~ach.
Fountain Valley and Westminster. Octan
View School District, too. could be
eliminated. and the Ocean View schools
incorporated into Fountain Valley and
Huntington Beach school districts.
What a boon lo the overburdened 111'
payers this would be! What a saving il
would be to eli1ninate two or the vtry
costly district offices and their overp11id
staff . But, ca n those in authority be
counted on to make the logical decision?
The weary taxpayers hope so!
PAULINE E. MOEN
Secretary1 Council
On Sensible Ta.xation
(COST)
----Wed n cs day, May 26, 1971
The editorial page o/ th1 Dailv
Pilot seeks to inform and 1tim-
ulate f'eaders by pri11ntlno thll
tttwspaper11 opinions and com.
me11tarJJ on topics of hlCt1"td
and $ig11l/1ca11ce, by proufdJr1g d
forttm for il1t e:rprrsnon. of
our f'eodtrs' opinions, and tiv
prt'stnCh1g the dlverst ofew-
potn'5 o/ b1/ormed ob11n1tr•
ond spokesmen on topics o/ the
da1J.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
I
f
Wtd11tsday, M1y 26, 1971 DAJLY PILOT 5
A.cquitted Seale Pass 1st Senate Tests
' Nixon Military Plans Move Faces Riot Raps
CHATTANOOGA FIREFIGHTERS GET ARMED GUARD
Somt Fire Calls Ma r Otherwise Peaceful Night
Guardsmen Pull Out
Of Calm Chattanooga
CHATI'ANOOGA. Tenn.
(AP) -Police and National
Guard troops pulled out of
predominan tly Negrc>
neighborhood s torn by
disturbances since Friday and
turned them over to civilian
black r:atrols Tuesday.
''It looks like ·we had less
calls and the calls didn 't seem
to amount to anything," state
Safety Commissioner Claude
Armour said ln reporting the
situation was calming.
Artnour ann·ounced earlier
Tuesday that the unarmed
black civilians would patrol
F or1ner Aide
Beats Boss
/11, Election
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI) -
Lt. Gov. Wendell H. Ford. 46,
upset his ex-boss. former Gov.
Berl T. Combs. Tuesday in a
hard.fought battle for the
Democratic nomination fvr
Governor of Kentucky.
Ford, a former ad-
ministrative assistant to
Combs, had a 167,000 to 126.000
vote margin with about 65 per-
cent of the primary election
ballots counted in an unoff icial
tabulation. Combs, 59, con-
ceded defeat at 9:30 p.m.
EDT.
Supporters of To rd said he
carried five of the state's
seven Congressional districts.
losing only the two districts in
mountainous e a s t e r n Ken·
tucky.
I
\
the Negro areas. calling for
police or Guardsmen only
when assistance was needed.
Police said early today little
sniper lire and two fire bomb-
ings were reported Tuesday
night. Twenty .six persons
were arrested, most of them
tor violating a 7 p.m. curfew,
police reported.
The trouble erupted Friday
night v.·hen performer \Vilson
Pickett refused to appear at a
scheduled concert, saying he
was not paid in advance. The
disorders spread with hit and
run attacks by small groups
Saturday and Sunday nights.
Some blacks said {hey v.'ere
angered by what they con-
stdered excessive arrests and
verbal abuse. The Guard was
called in Sunday night. A
black man was fatally shot
M.onday night.
Armour would not say how
many times P9}lce an d
Guardsmen assisted the black
civilians Tuesday, but added
that regular patrols dld not
enter a housing project area
where Leon Anderson ·W8S
fatally shot after allegedly
hurling a brick at a police car.
Reagan Backs
Lockheed Loan
SACRAMENTO !UPI) -
Gov. Ronald Reagan has
declared his support for a $250
million federally underwritten
loan to the ailing Lockheed
Airline Corp. coupled with
tightening up or its manage-
ment efficiency.
Nixon Tours
In South;
Raps Nortl1
WASHI NGTON CUP!) -
Buoyed by a warm reception
from more than 150 ,000
persons in Alabama Tuesday,
President Nixon bad reason to
be enC<luraged that h l s
popularity in the south has not
seriously been eroded by a
speedup in school desegrega·
tion.
Large. enthusiastic crowds
turned out in humid, 90-degree
weather to see him in stops at
Mobile and Birmingham.
He responded to this gesture
of southern hospitality and a
gracious welcome by Gov.
George C. Wallace by praising
the south for accompyshing a
"peaceful. relative~ quiet ,
very significant revolution"
which ha s resulted in more
black children a t t e n d i n g
predominantly white schools
than in the north .
And he c rit ic ized
northerners who •·point their
fingers'' at the south on the
racial issue.
at1ttLIAI holiday
~(JDMswQ11' $cil0
kot fo.)kioit
I
,kctp<AtitA
left-,
S pecio.11~ pricJ o.i
I
1 ti~
coito11. Velv~ntfut l'li~h ... ~I Z
~-I~, ~bk,,bniwn,l1'll-pink, purpJ111
skow1~..irt!t
aron.>on>, pn,t!J,llljl ~It, 51to!dt lot. ..
~l~r!-1 kAnd w">lt6Ll~.s.l't:J .. ~ 111-
~i~nt-
J..B.oi!w-HJ P~i; l>·P!·: •• } 17.
1.>~lir«>1.11hid~J .ru* or t.iroui ....
!?on\'D4m.'~ .f-l"mc; 3Jilr.k,, wovm
Colto1t x~iH•p. rn.Q.d fl in. ItoJ~. + 15
blu..i., rt.<!, brown_ ;,.x.L
ALL·DAY CLASSES
llildei'garten thru 8th Grade
• Tladlinl tie 4 R'1 with phonics
• Door-ta-DtDr Bas Service
•Before and After School Care
•Reasonable Tahion
(Day Camp starts June 21 • , •
throughout summer.
Summt1' School starts July 6).
HAWTHORNE
CHRISTIAN
SCHOOLS
111 FoulltM Yoll•'f
168J5 lrookh•r1t StNet
t62·ll1Z
..., yo1r chll ...
lit toocl Httcb
'~ctually, I'm a
Communications Consultant
specializing in Increasing
Customers' Profits Through
Maximum Communications
Efficiency. l But to
most people, 1
' I'm just 'the 1
fella from
the phone
company'.''
You'll find him in offices, plants and stores. Analyzing phone
bills. Discussing equ ipment needs. Looking for ways to help
our business customers' busi nesses.
He's a General Telephone Communications Consultant. A
formal title for a nice, bright guy who can make day-to-day busi·
ness communications less hectic for you.
For example, do clients pass nasty little remarks about your
phones always be ing busy? Do you have to scream to page a
typ ist sitting two feet outside your office? Is it easier to reach a
customer overseas than someone in your building?
If these situations sou nd famil iar (or remind you of others),
you ca n definitefy use our Communications Consultant. And
soon, too. Before you waste more time and money. Or develop
an ulcer. ·
(And if you think your office communications are pretty good
now, we promise that he can make them even better.}
There's no charge for his service. And It's very easy to get.·
All it takes is a phone call to our business office.
We only ask one thing. When you call, please ask for "the
Communications Consultant''-not "the fella frorn the phone
.company."
Everybody's the fella from the phone company down here.
liji#t
GEnERALTELEPHDnE
•
•
r
,
..--·~, .... --· ..... . ..
:Jf DAILY PILOT H
Teacher's
OCC PROFESSOR
Louise Dowlen
Final
By J ACKJE COMBS
01 lfl• O•Ur ,., .. , Slltl
The lasl of the original
faculty of Orang~ Co ast
College retires this June, leav-
ing a 11·year Jecacy of
student·leacher Jnvolvement.
Miss Louise Dowlen, who
joined OCC in 194a as one or 32
n1embers on the sla[f, reca lls,
"I learned the junior college
system by growing up with it.
It was an entirely new co ncept
-a new system of education.
The tea chers and students
\.\'ere learning together .
·"It's too big now . I don't
e\·en kno\v e\·ervone on the
Engl ish department staff."
An instructor of philosophy
and ~nglish , ~l1ss Dow len
never aspire d lo a four-year
Meetings,
Legacy Student Involvement
colle11e position . 'The senior
colle11e professore art too
removed from their studerits,"
she hcl•eves . "Pure lectures
have their place but not in the
senS'? of 'canned'. Some pro-
fessors 91esent lectures which
haven"t been undated in 20
yea1 ~."
BE1TER RESPONSES
She also criticizes testing
procedures, feeling that teach-
ers tend to Jean on mu ltiple
choice and short.answer forms
lo r time·savlng correction,
Miss Dowlen prefers essay
questions or oral reports.
"There are other means of ge t.
ting a response othe r than reg.
imentality. When the clas!I
shares orally, then everyone
learns."
/,Jlnot.:t.h hired a~ a n
English insltuctnr, 1'1 i 1 s
Dci.v!P.n •i'rr,ed to be ti.e first
and only philosophy t"c.rr.er at
OCC for !he next :2 ye11rs.
"~.1 · rne1ncriC!I arc sweet of
1 hose fi rst philos'>,111y c:asses.
1'he slull..:r.ts and I \o\"Orked up
tue !lrcrram -tij!"o.:t'Jni to
learn together."
:\'11ny of Miss Do•,flen's first
ocr ~luotnt~ have ret1Jrned lo
tea ch on the Coast Con n•unity
Co!lcgf'~ campu~" among
them 1'u'11 \Vert, 10111 C!u lds.
Larr~· Woods •n·f Rod
Sch1yer. r.1iss Dow.~n used lo
1ell lifr classes °'' opening
.la •• .... ou flunk !Pis class if
\"O" clon't teach me
Somell'ing.''
!1.'o· only in phJlosr.p11v but in
her t rylish cour,;..s ranging
from n-mediat EAA,'!sh to
technical writinr. h11ss 1.Jcwlen
ins•steci ('In student particlpa·
1lon in reviewing the fnrmaL
"Students would write n class
r·roposal. cotnm en!ing on what
shou ld be dropf>t::.1 o r
reemphasized.''
The Tennessee nati\'e finds
si,ielling an impossible task at
times . "You can't teach spell·
ing as a subject. The moti\'a•
lion has to be there . Tbe stu·
dent has to want to conquer
his handicap."
Educated at Randolph ~1a·
con Women's College and Van-
derbilt University, Nash\'llle,
she receive<! her MA degree
from Peabody Teachers'
College.
Among her special studies
are terms at the Univer1ity of
Hawaii, the Unlvenlty of Oslo
and Balllol College, Ozford,
England where she studied the
Brllisn education r.ystem.
Miss Dowlen believes the
An1e1 ican riystem stresses ex·
lraci:rrlcular activities to a
near extrr.me and the British
are attl?mptlng to follow.
"1'he7 should aim for !Pe an·
cient GrPek concept of a
bal:tn(·rd program ."
After teaching several years
In Mississippi, she jo.inel the
Navy in 1943. "I felt I would
be leaching the children of
war veterans and wanted to
ha ve an understanding of their
exJ)'!riences.''
Following five years of ac·
live duty, she entered the
Na vy Reservt from which she
recenlly relired. Miss Dr>wltn
went on to teach veterans of
World War II, th& Korean and
Vietnam wars. "I have an
understanding of the i r
military experience and can
talk their language."
TRAVEL LEISURELY
Planning to make fu ll ust of
her military transportation
privileges, Miss Dowlen is
"hoping to travel leisurely.'' A
new camper is being packed
and maps laid out.
"I think Its ridiculous to
...,·ait until I have lo retire. I
might be loo !ee:ble lo enJ01·
niyself."
Commenting on her years at
OCC she said, "There's no erut
to a teacher's growih if he Is
in an institutit'ln Iha! perm its
it -OCC encoura11es it."
Accomplishments Taking Spotlight
. . •' ' :: ' . -. .. . ·:
' ,,. !Edlltr'1 Note: A P• • devo!td lo , '°""'"In v1u•v. 1-111n1rn1!Dn •••th, · OCN "' VI•'"· Sei l l••th t n a :• WHlmln111r .khMI Ol1lrl(! Pt ,.nl· : t;:~r~ ;";!~}'',1!th1 :~~,~~Pfn~:~~,l~
2. in Fountain Valley Civic
Center. Officers will be in-
stalled and a workshop will
be presented to aid ne\V u11it
officers and chairmen with
their duties.
publicity chairman; Willia m
Kowaleski. historian. and
Harry Fockler. auditor ...
.Superintendent Parent Coun·
cil provides guirlance lor all
Fou ntain Vallt'y p ii re n l
teacher units ::!nd acts as
liaison between the school
district and the units.
will lake place tomorr,ow
niR"ht al 7:30 following a
bake sal e. Proceeds from
the sale will be used to
finance the eighth grade
graduation party. Offit·~rs to
be installed at '.ho! mceling
. are I he l\1mes. J oseph
Dickerson, president : John
Summers and Don hfart'lne,
vice presidents: \\"illiam
Peart and KPith Darrah,
secretaries: Allen Hayes,
treasurer, and Ben Stewart,
historian. PTO life mem-
berships will be a\vard ed.
Classroom cpen house v.•ill
follow the meeting.
mu1t bol •Kt lvfd Irv Mr1. Gllbi'rl Turnbull. 5'11 Mt"'rwm Orlvt. Hvn· 11,,.1.,.. lttch llv ! P.IY'. Thuri<!•v IO• 1ullllct1lon Wedn11<!1r.J
Superinte ndent
Parent Counc il
1\.1rs. Gerald Hix
President
COMING UP : Final genersil
meeting or the yea r is
acheduled Wednesday, June
. ' . ~ ....... '·.'·::t:: .. . . .. . . . ......... , " ;\ ............. -: .... •. ·::::::: ....... , 'It:.• ••• • .............. .. 1~ .......... : •• ·.-.:.: .. :::~::;: -~ ....................... ; .. : ;•i' ..... ~ ................. : .. ::-:: ...... '• , ....................... ; .. . ~,, ......................... ': .. : : .. : ; ..
REPORTS : Officers eleclrd RI
general meeting are the
~Imes. James Ellena. pre~i ·
dent; James Ackley and
Jack Libidinsky, v ice
pre!idents; Roger Belgen,
treasurer: Walter Tate,
secretary; Gianni GenHlli,
............... :-... ":·:·::t. ::: .:::· .. ··~;·.· ....................... :· :·:::::: .: :: :: \ ............................... '·
........................... ·-:·-.':· .;· <; ~"~;:1'i·.·:.·:: ... ~: :: : . :::·~" :::.-::~:: f :':: :'.: .. :'.' ?·,.· .............................. , .... : .; : . :; .. : ' •.• ........... '. •, .... '"·' '• .. .. '
New Worlds to Explore
Cox PTO
President
COM ING UP: Unit meeting
Bookworm~ ha\'e lols of burrowing to do at Spring Viey..· School since the PTl>
has donated books and shelving and pa rents voluntarily stlif the library.
Checking out new additions to the library are /left to right) Mrs. Julio Rivera,
PTO president, Leon House, principal and Danny F'ort.
Horoscope
Aquarius: Be Realistic
THURSDAY
MAY 27
By SYDNEY OMARR
Lto lo\'t!I tO give glfli.
Natl\•es of thl' todiacal sign-
are not adl'trse lo receiving,
but actually ha,•e more fun
pre1e.11ing -that is part of
the sho"·manshlp Identified
v.·ll h L~o . The typical Lro
needs an audien ce and usua lly
h11s a hi~ onr:. But no matter
how many person~ are in-
\'olved. the 1potll~ht shines on
Leo. On ncgallve side, this
leads In arrogance. 0 n
positive side , Len I~ fun-loving,
gencrou1 and laleh ted enough
to entertain groups, large and
small . Some lamouR persons
born under Leo Include Robert
rt!ltcbvm, rtf1e West and
Dustin Hoffman.
ARID (Ma rch 2\·April 19 ):
Go .11low·and-e1sy. Many mike
commitments. Be sure you
clear action!! with fam ily. pro·
fession1I associates. You can
have fun. bu! you are not en·
t.lrely free. Tan11le of red tape
could irrll a!e.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Health conditions and lravel
mis : yot1 find that energy
!!Ur1es 1nd w11neJ11. You are not
J)(')Sitlve. Key now Is to nourl.11h
Ideas. But don't com m i t
yourself lo deftnitt course of
action.
GE!\.f!NI (r.1ay ~!·.J une 20):
Vital events occur. Be ready,
willing. · You certainly are
able •. Realize this and respond
with enlhusiasm. Key is to ex-
periment, to live lire to hilt.
CANCER (June 21 .July 22 1:
Finish wha t you sta rt. Leave
no loose ends. Conccntrat2 on
rnn1plction. Lunar cycle is
high: fan1ily member acts in
eccentric manner. Wh ~t ap-
pears setback will boomeran11
in vour favor .
LEO (July 2.1·Aug. 22): b ne
close to you is restless. You
find oul what yt'lu need to
know by being subtle. Direcl
approach will not suffice. Bt
"'illing to accept challenge.
\\'elcome new concept. Be
original.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
r.1ixing friendship and business
will be costly. Realize this ;
maintain balance. You cannot
buy your way. Bul you can
charm, \Yin. per~uade. Some
fond wishes now "'ill be fulfill·
•d.
LIB RA (S!>pL 2.'l·Ocl. 22 ):
Unorthodox approach proves
constructive. Be experimental,
daring. Learn rules so you can
break them. Following crowd
now would be error. Set your
own pace, Polley. You wllJ win.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23·No v. 21):
Some, secret.s may be re veal·
eri. Check det1ils. Avoid jum·
ping to conclusions. What you
need may be at a distance.
Keep communication I i n es
open . Sperial me ssage is com-
inc your wa y.
SAG ITTARI US I Nov 22·Dec.
2J J: Emotions fly high ; strive
to 11 ive equal rime lo logic.
Don 't be satisfied to knO\Y
n1crcly what o cc u r red ;
dlscover \o\'hy. Probe d!!ep; re-
ject superficial indications.
CAPRICO RN (De c. 22.Jan.
HI ): Some who make promises
should be pinned down . Your
own security must be C<>n·
sidered. Empty stalements do
no good. Be analytical when
dealing with Taurus, Ubra in·
dividuals.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-feb.
18 ): Avoid fooli ng yourstlf.
See situations in realistic light.
Accent on practical matters.
But you tend now lo veer
away from the pra cllcal. Tim·
ing will improve . Ultimate
gai n Is shown .
PISCES I Feb. 19-March 20):
Not wise lo depend on finan-
cial promises ol olher1. Get
house In order. Take in·
ventory. Adhe re to your own
rityle . Stick to principles.
Stand tall. ~Maintain dlt:nit)I.
~rn!Y picture Im proves.
Fulton PTO
Mr~. Robert Welch
President
COf\11NG UP : Mc1ril>ers will
attend Fountain Va 11 e v
School .District s p t e c h
1ournament tomorrow in
Fountain Valle y H i g h
School . Students from sixth
through eighth grades will
participate Members
will attend annual spring in-
strumental concert at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday, June 2. in
the multimedia room . Allan
Nicrola. inst n1mental n1usic
Instructor, will dire:t.
REPORTS · PTO volunteer.~
were honored at a µarly
hosted by hfrs Joseph
Escobedn and '1rs. John
Beebe. librarian!l . , , Unit
dt'lnated SlOO fnr eii;:hth
Rrade j!'rad11alion meTPory
books, flo~·er.; anrl outslan·
dinR" citizen ~ nlaquec. ac-
cnrding lo f\1rs. J va n
Ubaldinf. youth activities
chairman t:nit alsn
donated SISO for Arrowbf'f!r
music scholarships and $7~
for subscriptions for thr
school library ... At PTO
fashion show, r.1r<>. David
Vasq uez served as com·
n1entator. Entertail"ment
wa s provided by the Mmes.
Jamey .l;1cobsnn, 0,. a n
McNair. llenry LdnRe. Vas-
nuez. R o v Cunni righam.
Robert Welc.,. Lar ry
Schwartz, Jch ri Li n n •
Herbert ''nmne:ida. Clydl'!
Eaton anrl Ted Berr,es!n •m,
PTO vocal choru~ memberY.
Harbour Vi ew PTO
Mr11. Wllllam O!good
Presidtnt
COM ING UP : Let's Grt Ac·
quainted coffee will be
hosted by the unit at IO::IO
a.m. Tuesday. June I. in the
Harbour Lights Ap artments
recreation room . PTO ac·
tivities and nced:i will be
discussed.
REPORTS : Ofricers installed
11t general meeting are the
Mmes. Will iam Os go(') d •
pttsident : Neil Friedman
and John Tillotson. vice
presidents; David Rudin and
Robert Risvold . secretaries,
and Rodney Mori!lon.
treasurer. Layne Newgart
and \Villiam Lescher al so
will serve as vice presidents.
McDowell PTO
l'r1rs. Jim Lelvas
President
REPORTS: At general
meeting lasl night, new of-
ficers were installed by
Roland Gilmore, principal.
Installed were the Mmes.
.Jim Leivas. pre s I den t :
Ronald Hailsuka and
William Cooper. vic e
presidents : Dan Smith and
J im Johnson. secreta ries:
Dennis Olse n, t~asurer. and
Charl es L y t 1 e , historia n.
Newly ratified cha irmen
were introd uced. Ro be r t
Sanche7., a ssis tant
supcrinlendent of Fountain
Valley School Dis tr ict spoke
on New Trends in Educa-
llon .. Vluslcal prt'lgram was
presented by the ri.fcDowcll
Madrigals. Honorary life
membership was prestntcd
' How to Handle a Vandal Deftly Pictured
Poster contest winners at l\1cDowell School viev.•
their handiwork which won them honors at the PTO
general meeting. They are {left to right) Joe Gutow·
ski. seventh grade. and Chris Boli n an d Eric Yetter, .
third graders. Th ird through eighth grade students•>.
entered posters depicting the dangers of vandalism .
to r.1 rs. John Norred , middle
learning cent.er coo rdinator.
Appreciation pins wer e
awa rded to Mrs. Bill Collier.
newselle chairman. and
Mrs. Dav id Williams, learn·
ing center chairman. Plaque
fnr oul'ltanding service to
the unil was awarded to
Mrs. r.1;irvin Munyon. cor-
responding secretary
Volunteers who worked in
!!Chool or in ttY.! district of-
fi ce were honored at a Blue
Ribbon luncheon last Mon·
driy in Meadowlark Country
Club ... At meeting, Mrs.
Sanford Lavitt reported on
· the dime-a-dip d i n n e r
presented in conjunction
y,·ith open house and Mrs.
Hill Cooper reported on
plans for eighth grade
graduation. Members will
assist with a dance following
the granualion ceremonies.
Mrs. Cooper annt'lunced that
eighth graders have raised
$250 by ~ans of a car wash
and bake sale.
Park View PTO
David (i raham
President
CO'.llNG UP : Gener al
meeting tonight at 7:30 in
the multipurpose room ,
Musical program will be
presented by the beginner
and intermediate bands, the
jur:ior high and intermediate
choirs and the H a pp y
Fletcher Famil y. Primary
grade student& will perform
folk dances. ·Miss Helena
Smith. program chairman,
will be as!l lsted by Mrs.
LcGrande Fletcher , .. First
annual junior high a\o\'a rds
hanquel will be presented at
n p.n1 . \Vctlnesd ay. June 2,
in the humanities wing.
Polluck dinne r will be serv·
cd and trophies, plaques and
sc rolls will be awarded for
outstanding achievc1nent.
Robert Jalonen, program
chairman will be assisted by
Mrs . Wray Eagart and Mrs.
Earl Gabriel.
scrolls \Y1lt be awarded for
o u Lstand1ng achievemen l.
Robert Jalonen, program
chairman. will ~ assisted
by Mrs. Wray Eggart and
Mrs. Earl Gabriel .
Robinwood PFO
rt1rli. Albe.rt A_l~llo
Prcsidenl
REP ORTS: New offlcer1
elected at general meeting
arr, U1e Mmes. D a n i e I
J\leade, president; Raymond
Smith, vice president;
James Ellis, secretary. and
.Jack Gunter, tN!asurer. Unit
voted tn purchase audio-
visual aids and physical
education equipment l.o be
selected by the principal and
Attention Grabber
•••
!acully. Unit also vt'lted;~
purcha11e materials for::4
drug education program
next year. Program will be
geared t.o individual grade
levels ... At board meeting,
report on the recent camlyal
v.·as presented by William
Thomas, general chairman
and Jay Churchill, booth
chairman.
Demonslrating the fascination of Audio visual equipment donated to Vb tl'
View School by lund raising efforts of lhe STPO are Oefl) Jill Nord . lir•t grad·
er, and David Koon ce. fifth grade learn ing center assista nt
I
I
·-
;
r
.
"
Pretty
Pastels
Delic;ate shades of mjal
green. and lilac "'ill form
a pretty background fo r
Tricia Nixon's White
Hquse garden ceremony
JU!le 12.
Priscilla of Boston has
desi~ned gowns of layer-
ed silk organdy for the
bride's four attendants,
including her sister. Julie
Eisenho,ver.
Julie's go \vn \ViJI be
mint green underskirted
\rith lilac and the others
Will wear lilac under
skirted with green.
•
~.'-+z::t:! _-: •r:: • ---~---,.;---::tr.
,.
' \
•
• I
..,, rsrn ~"'---
. . . . . . .
ltjnerary lnclud;;G~ing H~;; !
I By JO OLSON research is being done there HIGH POINT cruise would be perfect , bul
ot tM o.itr •1i.1 s1111 and t.1rs. Aldrich feels that Another high point of the the Aldriches have decided to
It y,•as a quiet day on Cor· •·this potential will be realized trip 1vas being able to eat din-save the best until last. They
II.Ille by 11·111e ner with her husband every regidor. · first want to see the continents
Jean Aldrich looked around "Neither our gener<ition nor ni~·~!;s a fascinating world," of Sooth America and Africa
and remembered 1·1 ,, 1·1 had several 10 come may see it, . ·11 " to.1rs. Aldrich concluded . •·and and other places they haven't appeared in the family photo but it w1 come .
tl I can hardly wait to take off seen album, then saw it as It \\'as -tn Jndia she taste a "'ar111 · rt · · cl on another trip. Neilher of us .. Traveling makes you ap-
11. an island ol crumbling walls pudding of carrots. raisms an are sali!fil'd that \\•e've seen preciate home and extend~
1 and mushrooming vines. nuts which was perhaps one or
'
d. 1 o the world." your horizons," the Chan· Mrs. Aldrich, daughter of an her favorite new 15 ies. 11 I Aid · h II ' 'f f I the top "'!\S a tiny _piece of \\'here wou d f.lrs. ric ce or s w1 e ee s. Army officer who was sent to h choose to go for her next ··ti-1y recommendation is ir
F't. Mills. Corregidor at the pure silver, which , 5 e wa! journey~ A i\1editerranean you can do it. do it."
end of World War I , visited told whrn she suirted to -----____ -------_ '
her birthplace with her hus-remove it. 1o1,•as to be eaten ~~
band. UCI Chancellor Daniel because ii was "good fpr the @ll:" ~ ~ G. Alddch Jr .. during lhfr re-digestion." ).. "~ Do You En1'oy Being Alive? ~ .;J• : cent around-the·"·orld study Burn1a. i\lrs. Aldrich lounrl. -
~ tour. had no night life and Israel
{ 1'hey alrnos\ didn 't go to had the most expensive food .
,J Corregldor. as the hydrofoil A highlight of her trip was
..
which usually makes the 26-receiving a gift from her hu s-
mile !rip from the Philippines band that v.·ill be a lasting
"·as out of order and rhc ferry memory of the journey -ii
was in dry dock . but the Chan-gold brae<!let hand-n1ade by
cellar chartered a lin.v plane goldsmiths in Florence.
I• ii • plffll>ff tor vou lo .... ~. UP. lo ltlk W•I~
011>~1. 10 •e• lil1'1 colo•1 cloo•lv, lo II•"" !O
lo•t'd on~s & '"• sc1un<1• ot h•it19 -wi•h full
• ..,cent1•Hon? (GI~ "'"" conttn!rtlt?l
Oa yeu e<1iov • Y•l•li•V. 1n 1b1H111<1t1Ct ol •n•rqv
!~•1 m1k•1 l'<IU n1pp~ wol~ loft. ••uer lo smile,
and they flew over \Vith just Besides purchasing linens in
h · 'd jj K d f I d l'•EE Dem1n11r11lon -l1nll1, Wod., I ,.m. their pilot as t cir gu1 e. ong ong an a ew assor e c1151et • .,,, n1,1 wtct .. 1,111 w.o. •nd ~.i.
"It '4'aS a very inte resting gifts, Mrs. Aldrich found a @ .,...,nlnt cl•u•• now 11rmln9! o. <om1 i.· · I · nlthl l Y11q1 c.,.11., 40 f . U!h St . c111t @ sensation." said" Mrs. Aldrich. ve ry spec1a memenlo in M111 . ...a:zu. 1'1.\i;.
"'ho left Corregidor at the aj?e Nepa l for . he.~self -a ~ronze J~
t of 3 and remembers il onlvi;~B~u~d~d~h~a~w~1~th~1l~s ~a~rm~u~p~m;;;;lhiic~~~-~-~~-~~-~~-~~-~~-~~-~~-~~-~~-~~-~~~~ j from the pictures in her fami-' enlightenment position. ~~--
ly photo album. "Visiling the
j old gun empla~menls was
$ like visiting an old Soanish
fort of the 18th or 19th cen-
tury.··
I
,
.
·"""-'
Realizin}!" that I hf:' ~ e
\\'Capons of \\·ar \\'err used in
her lifetime ga1·r her an rcrie
feeling. she added
14 \VEf.KS
The Aldrichs' 14-wrrk trio.
snonsored bv the Danforth
Foundation. tOOk them in!o the
Philippines. Au~tralia. New
Zt.aland. thr ritedilrrranean.
Burma. Indonesia. I n rl i ~.
Nen;:il. Hong Kong and Grcal
Bri1ain.
The Chancellor slud1ed the
effects of miracle rice on the
agrirulture of nations former-
lv food-deficient. and 111 rs.
... -.....,,
:'.Club Notes
' f Flag Day
South Coast Juniors
Install New Board
Aldrich sandll'ich,ed in a little
sli"'loine bet"·erri slud1• struis.
She resisted the temnlation
to browse. c x t e n s i 1• e 1 v .
brcausP there "·ere so manv
interesting nlace~ lo vi~it \\•ith
her husband. surh as lhr fir st
touring Tea
The rlag of the United Stales
will be honored by members
of the Pat..icnce Wright
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution during •
8J)CCiaJ tea al J p.m. on Tues-
da y, June I , in Hotel Laguna.
The growth of the stars and
stripes from 13 to 50 will be
featured by a display o(
miniature replicas of 27 nags
which have flown in the nation
iince 1777.
CONNIE GREEN
To Marry
Serving as president of the
South Coast Junior \Yomen's
Club \viii be Mrs. Frank Fleck.
A Huntington Beach resident
and mother of three. Mrs.
Fleck was named Clubwoman-
of-the-ycar for 1970-71.
The execuUve board will in-
clude the ~1mes. Dan Gordon,
Donald Anderson. Robert To·
meoni and Art Hoelderlin, vice
p1esidents; Gerald Bennet,
secretary; Cliff Bri ghton ,
treasurer. and Robert Somma,
parliamentarian.
New chairmen include lht'
Summer's Here!
i\1mes. Bruce hlattem and
i\fike Brusseau. youth; Greg
Reinkcr, publicity : Robert
i\1arten, safely: Ron a Id
Zcbarth. c n n s e r v a ti on :
\Villiam Griffen, philanthropy ;
John Dav is. Christmas card~
and Norm Murphy, hospitali-
ty.
Others are !hr Mmes. Ter·
re nee 8 e n s o n . telephone;
Richard Kobayashi,
a1nenilics: Kip P a y n e,
camera; Sal Liberatore. con·
ven!ion. and Dale F r y e ,
bulletin.
r>:f)f'riniPl'i'IJ \\'hrat ~rowing
st ~non in F:nJ!:l<1nd.
~lr~. Aldrich f' n in'' e rt
Au~tra!i:i ;:ind N'C\\" 7,eahind .
!heir fir.~! ~Ions. but dirln't
ren!lv l!el "xci!cd unt il lhrv
l:i ndPd in .J:ikarta and found
all •he si1?hl~. SClHnds and
srnell~ of a Pl'\\' rt1l!Urt'.
In India she rcU a~ thou!.'h
~lie "'rre in a counfr\' livin'! in
thf' 20th rentury :ind 1st ccn·
tur.v sim11lt:inco11.~ly.
SAW POTENTIAL I
Shi' didn't find the e:i:lrrme 1 po\'erty depressing but sa""'
potential. ~1 uch agricultural 1
I VFW Unit ' In observing the flag's 194\h
birthday, the chapter invites
new and prospective members
\•:hile honoring s e n i o r
members. hfrs. U>wry Gall·
inger, regent. will present a
50-year pin to hirs. Lee Childs
for service to DAR.
September
Day Picked
Judea Camping Begins To Gather I
h1 rs. Frank lnterlandi will
sing a group of songs v.·ritten
by Mrs. ~1 arguerite Test. a
chapter member. v.·ho 1o1,·ill ac·
company the singer.
Hostesses for the tea will he
the i\1mes. Albin \Ve I h c,
Emory C. Day. Arline Baker.
Frederick Paulsen and i\liss
Elsie Luther.
l\1r. and Tlfrs. Jose ph C.
Grj!cn have announced 1he
engagement of their daughter.
Connie Jo Green to Stcvrn
\Villiam Miller. son of ~1rs.
Patsy titi\Jer of Tustin
A September 4 v.•cdding is
he1nR planned in the F i rs!
Presbyterian Church. Orange.
Both are graduates of Tustin
High School.
' Modern -day Athena
The sev~nth season of Can1p
Young Judea in the San
Bernardino i\1ountains wilt
open Thursday. ,June 27. and
continue until Thursday, July
23.
The camp. open lo boys and
girls !rom 9 lo 16 years of age.
is a summer expression of the
yearly Hadnssah Zionist Youth
Commission of the Southern
Pacific C.Oast Region.
lt-lrs. T. Duncan StC\\'3 rl lr1.[?ht i rer·e1ve~ the 1\then a medal from ~1r:-f'harles R.
J..ena han Jr., president of th e i\t'11port llarl>or Panhcllen1r The auard '1 ... giv-
en annually to a ,,·0111an who h::i ~ been i:elec-tcd on the basis of tireless efforL'I
1n contributtni: to the good of the con1n1unlty. I
According to f\.1rs. Dpvid A.
Lee. cha irman. !ht program
offers all traditional camping
activities pl tJ-'> a Jewish and
Zionist educational program.
Th! currenl camp program.
themed .Je"•ish H er o i s m
Throughout the Ages, is under
thr direction of Russell hfep.
pen.
Brochures a rt avai!ab!e
rrc.n1 the camp orfice. !i!JO N.
Vermont Avt .. Room 351. Los
f.ngeles. 9000t
Scouts Meet
Open to all citizens is the
meeting tonight at 7:30 for
Girl Scouts of Ne11-•port Beach,
their leaders. parents and
youth oriented organizations in
Corona del t.1ar High School
cafeteria.
Women Voters
ti1rs. \\layne Keith. 497-IOa4 .
y,•ill ansv.·er questions about
the Orange Coast League of
\\'omen Voters. "'hi c h
.!lponsors vEiried meetings and
events.
A public card parly is being
sponsored at I p.m. on Friday.j
May 28 by members of the
Veteran~ of Foreign \V:irs•
Auxiliary 4048. I
Those interested may join
the group in the :'\larina Com-
munily Center for dessert at
1:.10 p.m wilh gan1rs ur
pinochle. canasta and · bridge
to folio\\'.
Midi length
Grounded
Emilio Pu cci. \\'ho changed I
the look of airline hostesses
in 1966 \\'hen he created the
first airline · 'co u I our i I
wardrobe... for B r a n i f f
International hoslesses, op-I
p oses t he midi for l
:stewardesses. I
"The 1nidi is out nf place
on an airline hostess.·• Puccil
said. "I prefer the above·the-
knee look. It's young and
dynamic.··
Pucc i said the 1 on g c r
hen1Jine \\'as fine at home,
but not for an acth'e \rorkcr
on an airplane.
VHtGJNIA'S
SNIP IN"snTCH SHOPPE
333_. E•st Co•st Hwy. e Coron• clel M•r
Phon• b73-8050
VACATION'S SOON
Thi we•~• 1p11d.l y fly •w1' ."d ... c1tioft 1; ... 1 .. .11
100" tu h1••· So 91t the w•rdrob11 •••dy. Wil~ 11
"''"Y •••v lo c111 for f1b•ic1 th1r1·1 101111lhin9 1v1;1.
1bl1 for the lri" ef you• choice •1ilin9 th1 hi9h 1111,
fly iftll lo Europe. ittlint 16 H1w1ii o r I m1r1tor trip i"
!ht US A. W1 1l1c~ •u1 1tore .. ;1h yetoif•gt f1r1r inftfth
lo 9'""dmolht ro, 11 tell u1 your l••vr l pl•ft1 •ftd ..,,'ti
do ou• ulmo1I lo ht!p wt+h 9•Y ,fuft ' c1r1l•t1 clothf1
for !ht ett•l;l!I"·
e IANll:AMIRICAllD
s •• You Sooft
Vll!GINI"-
Announcing
ROUX SHAMPOO
.STYLED AND SET
W 1tli Roux: ~ 1ho1
~~tro rich creme ,1,kotnpoo.
FASHION STYLED
HAIRCUT
~ QI
G
CREME on.:
IVIAT PIAM,. .. l .. T W•~t
<>u•R• .. TllO I .. w1111 .. G
;~~~"!!.!~<I tosl'o -~!yled 1-.:t • ~ut . "-1 '
.. ~c1 , .. , °"" .,,..,_.,.. ... ,,o.. I
"l lNTEO OR
tllCACHfD H,.,!A: --1.81
NO
APPOINTMENT
NEEDED
New Prices
ROUX nic• chanq•
CoWr f.t 1 0 rn•nul'IK w1ll-o.it
pe•o~ide ond loin for week\
....1houf •vb-oft. NotU<ol col-
or1 ~ Q•oy ot ct..oll 1-.olr. &.\·
Klmet" tor bleached. lnciudes
5'Yle o.--d Ser.
ROUX: ~Fanciful!
RINSE
Colors; l~ofely! u-~
gray ~omplete-ly ~ To" 1 s;
b I to ch e d ho"! Jr.\otU.s;
bleodwd ho1r to new oiowth.
l J '"''''""11 i;olors; -rime
in -shompoo out -110
lod1ng.
ROUX ~land-Ion• ..
CREME HAIR ~T
Touch Up
""'!"""" "'°""""" ...,J Mt. Rav>t "'•ont•·'""''" er ..... Ho,.. r ,,...
........... 11 .......... ~ ""'"''°'· lu&-
''""' ~''· /'AM • To-, Wed. •r.1 ' o '''-
EVER Y DAY
SATURDAYS
SUNDAYS
OPEN
9 A.M.
10 A.M.
12 A.M.
'til
'ti!
'til
''GALS''
WE ARE LIQUIDATING
9 P.M.
6 P.M.
5 P.M_
OVER 1,000
•·SHAGGY WIG ir •• r,.~,
e DUTCH IOY WIG
I N•w Sty1etl
e DOMI DUTCH ICY WIG
• OYNEL SH,t.G GY WIG
FROM
$888
CUSTOM STYLING
$3.00 EXTRA
• lANll(ALON
SHAGGY WIG
e GY,.SY fTe•lto~I
• OOlltS
e ILIZAllTH !Show
Girt wi.1
With thl1 ch•11c1. we we1ilil llke te i11form Y•• tlle 11clflttt ~·'· wllicll ca1111 I~ fo11cy le•lr••
Sy11thetlc Skoe9y, Dul'ch l•y, •nil Gyp1y 1ece11tly. T1vlto11 Sh~9y. Gyo1y, and D11tch loy wl91
111t1 1111w 1tyle1 ••d '''"' Jtopwl•t, which s.111pln ••• dll!fltytd 111 0111 1how too111. ''"" kl11-y
drep 111 ••r •tort 011d LOOll' AT 111ch f1111fo1tic mercli1111di1n.
We 1tlll lllJJIJIY laroe 1111011111., ef Hu111e11 Holr H '1' Cfflld MIT Wlot, Cau:ailn, Ml11I falls. attd
Wl9let1. All colon ate Ct'f'ail•ltle at any tl1111. A11d et~• -h•ff fancy 1 J 111.,lttti of lyelcnhtt.
TOU MUST VISIT CUI STORE TO APPllCIATE SUCH FA NTASTIC SAYINGS
•
\
7
I
.. ----·-
Newport Beaeh
EDIT ION
Today's Fl••I
•
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL 64, NO. 125, 5 SECTIONS, 72 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, ·,.7·r TEN CENTS
en
DAILY P'ILOT t ll ff ,i.i.
ERIC ULLMAN EMERGES FROM HIS SPACE CAPSULE
Fo r Cl1ssm1tes .•t Newport Schoo l, 1 Demonstration Flight
Bea~h for Sta1·s
Bal Boy Flies R ealistic Capsule
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of tl'll D1llY l'llet 5111!
Eric Ullman may grow up to be a
1chool teacher. or a markeling analyst or
a fighter pilot like his stepfather.
Odds a~. however, he 's going to be an
astronaut.
It only figures . The &-year-old Balboa
boy has been practicing since Christmas
when his stepdad, and his grandfather. an
engineer with McDonnell Douglas, bu ilt
him a space capsule that does just aboul
everything but fly.
The pint-si zed spaceman has been all
over the universe -and then some.
"He goes wherever his imagination
takes him ." says Eric's stepfather, Capt.
Floyd A. Best, who guides Phantom jets
for the Marines. Capt. Best spent much
cf his spare time for 11 months labr>ring
flver the supertoy in the garage at the
fam ily home, 909 W. Bay St.
"The Capsule," Eric's only name for it.
it.ends more than six feet tall and is
nearly four feet in diameter.
Climb inside and one gets the feeling
NASA might learn something.
The imaginations of a fighter pilot and
an aerospace engineer can sometimes be
as vivid as a little boy's.
For inside "'The Capsule" stepfather
and grandfather have built a radar scope
that simulates a scanning screen. a mini
analog computer that multiplies and
divides. a se t of lights that blink when the
computer i6 comput ing, three different
lighting systems. including a set of panel
ligh ts an d a po"'er distribution system
controlling various other signals and
alarm s.
When Eric pulls on the hand-sewn
spacesuit his mother made, flips down his
wired space helmet, and climbs aboard
for a flight, he usually stays within the
solar system.
"I usua lly go to Mars." he says.
He had one all-night trip scheduled. but
the mission aborted.
"One time I wanted to spend all night
in it but it gels un comfO(lable,'' Eric con-
fessed. "I had to curl up and couldn 't
really lie down ."
He usuall y makes about one flighl a
d•~-Usually al night wheo l'm not at the ach," he says.
countdown doesn't lake toe long.
All he has to do is plug it in.
Couple Wed • Ill
ac
Man Freed
ln Balboa
Slaying
Contlicting circumstances surrounding
the death o( a young mother found in 11
Balboa Peninsula apartment with her
crying baby beside her led Tuesday to
freedom for her jailed paramour.
John J. Biegun, 21 , of 423 E. Bay Ave.,
\.\'as cleared of all charges in the case.
Newport. Beach police had originally
booked him on suspicion of murder
Thursday after he was questioned at
length .
He was already in custody on minor
traffic charges when the body of Mrs.
Susan Lane Constant. 21, was found by
Biegun's elder brother.
Major throat and la rynx damage in·
dicative of manual strangulation shown in
a preliminary postmortem examination
Jed to Biegun 's formal booking.
Toxicological tests requiring additional
time. however, disclosed a high level o[
barbiturate drugs in the vi c t i m ' s
blood stream, police said.
Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson said to-
day the presence and degree of drug con-
tent effectively ruled out prosecution bas-
ed on the evidence of her being choked.
The decision to free Biegun was made
during a Tuesday conference by Orange
County District AtlorJley'i and Sheriff·
Coroner'• deputies.
Police were sent to the Sea Le.vel
Apartments about midnighl last Wed·
nesda y on a family di!turbance call.
Once there, they 1rrested Thomas
Biegun, 24, on a drunk in public charge,
returning later for John Biegun since cer-
tain traffic warrants can only be served
in the daytime.
He was at headquarters when his
brother wa s released after a mandatory
sober ing-up period and went back to find
the body.
State Committee
Hints Approval
Of Coa stal Bill
SACRA~1ENTO -Tht: assembly com-
mittee on planning and land use strongly
indicated Tuesday night that it will ap-
prove a tough shoreline control bill
despite the fears of coastal communities
that it will cut local conltols.
Among the groups that .attended the
hearing was a delegation from the city of
Huntington Beach.
The committee did net take a vote
Tuesday night but a majority of lhe
members indicated they favored a bill in-
corporating points from two measures
that were before them. One is being
sponsored by Alan Sieroty fD·Los
Angeles ) and the other by Assembly Pete
Wilson IR·San Diego).
Huntington Beach, along with the
League of Cities. stands on record op-
posed to Sieroty's measure but had en-
dorsed Wilson 's bill which died in com-
mittee last year.
'Hawaii'·
Seal Beach Pair to Say Vows (l t Westcliff Plaza
A major highlight of "Hawaii Week " in
Newport Beach takes place Thursday at 7
p.m. when a Sunset Beach couple joins in
boly matrimony in an authentic Hawaiian
Two Elderly Sis te1·s
Assa ulted, Robbed ,
LOO ANGELES <UPI ) -Two elderly
recluse sisters were savagel y beaten and
rJped Tuesday and their $15,000 in life
aavings stolen from its hiding place
beneath their bed . Police said five teen·
age boys were arrested . .
The sister!!, Lucy. 74, and Manuela To(-
res , 76, were beaten with a flashlight un-
UI they told the assailants where they
had hidden their money. Their screams
alerted neighbor• who telephoned police.
ceremony at Weslcliff Plaza.
A special "tropical island'' with a
volcano, waterfalls and palm t,reeg will
be the setting for the marriage of
f\1ichele Margaret Lewi&, 21, and Leigh
Erickson, 24.
Featured as part o( the ceremony will
be the ''Hawaiian Wedding Song," sung
by George and Beverly KahioJua. After
the <:i!remony, lt1iss Roberta Lytui is
scheduled lo l!!ing "Tiny Bubbles" as I.he
bride and groqm toast each other_ with
champagne.
The couple will receive gifts ftom each
tf the plaza merchanl.o;, and a week-e nd
at the Newporter Inn before fly ing to
Hawaii aboard Weste rn Airlines for one-
week honeymoon at the Hawaiian Village.
"Hawail Week" moves into the homa
1'
strel.Ch Thursday with a 1alk by the
1tate's official representauve and 1n
island travelogue at night.
Larry Ronson . vice president of the
First Hawaiian Bank, will speak at the
Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce
Sunrise Bull Session at the Balboa Bay
Club at 7:30 a.m.
A "travel clinic'' featuring a film on
Hawaii is scheduled at 8 p.m. at the Lit·
tie Theater al Corona de! Mar High
Schoo!.
A panel discussion on travel tips will
follow. Panelists will include represen-
tatives of variou11 Newport Beach travel
agencies.
"They'll talk about how to travel from
here to Hawaii ," according to J1ck
Osborne, publicity chaJrman lor the pro-
Jnotion.
--e 0 _ea
•
·"" .,. ..... WORKERS SIFT YUIA CITY GRAVE SITE FOR CLUES
· Nee r the Feather River, A Gritty Discovery
.. -. . .. .. . . . . .
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C\lY ..
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YUBA CITY SCENE OF BIZARRE MURDER CASE
Quiet Fa rm Community in S•cr•mento V1lley'1 Sutter County
Mexican Airline Seeks
" County Customs Unit
The Mexicans aren't giving up their
fight for rights to flights in and out of
Orange County Airport.
Aeronaves de ~1exico applied to the
U.S. Cu11toms and Imm igration Bureau
for customs facilities there, the DAILY
PILOT learned today.
An Aeronave11 official confirmed he Is
negotiating with Martin Aviation to lease
space for ticket counters, baggage band!·
Ing, and customs offices, in Martin's
•
HA RBOR HIGH
HAS'CLOWNS'
Newport Harbor High School
Drama Club's presentation of "A
Thousand Clowns" opens 7:30 p.m.
today In the high school auditorium
and plays through Saturday even·
ing.
The production directed by Brad
Johnson features Alan Dumas, Tom
Granger. Ctaig Perkins. Lisa
Drake, Mike Converse and Jim
Stansburg. Tickets are ,1.50, at the
dO<J<.
., J
airport headquarters along campus
Drive.
Fernando Coppel, district a a 1 e 1
manager in charge of local operations,
said the soulh-of·the-border airline· isn't
interested in Oylng to Ontario u had
been reported by U.S. Rep . John Schmitz
(0-Tustln).
"He twisted all that up," Coppel chara·
ed. "We don't want Ontario."
Schmitz' offlct had reported that
Aero·naves had agreed to a State Depart·
menl request to ahift k>c1tion1 after local
offlclala here roae in unanimous protest
to the route agreement aigned by Prtai-
dent Nixon last y~ar.
C.Cppel 11kl· he •ii' now· awailint &!J'tport
from a U.S. Cllstom• inspection of the
Marth~ •facllltlet conducted ~ weeks • • ''ff· th1t'1 f1vor1ble, he Did'; Aeronavea
and Martln wW complete tieaotiltions for
a 1ub-leJH to be pre1tt1ted k> the Oranae
County Board of SUpervl!on for a~
proval.
It was the supervl!Ors, al6ng with the
Newport Beach City Council, w~ led the
fight ag~inst the local route and Coppel
Isn't really expecting 1 chanie of heart. "T~e Board of Supervi5or1, they doo't
W8ht UI to fly," he-laid. ,
''And the-1upervi&0r1, they·havt to a~
provt everything. You Can't drive a aail
(See.AERONAVES, P&,. II
Farm Labor.
Boss Jailed
In Slayings
From Wirt Services
YUBA CITY -A stocky Mexican-born
farm labor contractor was arre11led loday
when deputies uncovered the remain• of
12 middle-aged men, hacked to death
and buried In strange rttua1 poaitloru
along the banb o( the Feather River.
Officers said they were still digging in
the sandy soil for at least one olber mis5-
ing person.
Juan V, Corona, 37-year-old father oJ
four small daughters, was taken into
custody at his modest stucco home In 1
neat middle-claM neighborhood in ·Yuba
City, a farming community of 25,000 in
the central valley of California.
Sutter County Sheriff Roy Whiteaker
declined to say what led officers to
Corona, and a deputy said there was "no
motive we can discover." But the sheriff
added:
"We are certain he committed the
murders."
Most of the bodies were found
on their backs, arms upraised. The
sheriff said they were badly mutilated,
with deep cuts on the heads and chests.
Their shirts were pulled .up over their
bloody heads.
They were found about five miles north
of Yuba City 400 or 500 yards east at U.S.
Highway 99-E, on both aides of the river.
Seven were on the wut bank and two
athera on the opposite bank, in a prune
orchard ·and a peach field.
Nearby was a settlement of shacks
where migrant laborers live.
COrool, a quiet ma.n, wa1 known by h!s
nel&hbora u a atrict father who wouldn"t
allow his children out of the yard .
"They've never bothered anybody
around here," said Mrs. Oleta Kelley,
who lives two doors away.
"The only thing that was strange was
that he kept very strange hours. He
would come and go throughout the night •
especially in the summer," said the
C.Oronas' nat·door neighbor, Mrs. Wilma
Huff.
Two of Corona'a .small daughters,
dressed neatly in their school clothes and
apparently unaware of wbat happened
wtte aeeo waiting for the school bus a
few hours after their father was unated.
The victims were all caucasians, a~
parently migrant farm workers In their
40s, 50s and 60s. They were all killed with
a machete or a heavy knife, the sheriff
said.
Some of the bodies had two pairs of
pants and two shirts, indicating the vic-
tims were transient I a b o re r l!!, in·
vestigators said. The orchards are being
lhiMed at thill time of year.
Yuba City i! a farming community of
14,000, about 130 miles northeast of San
Francisco.
In a news conference after the arrest..
the sheriff said Corona has been tn this
country for aome time but speaks little
Engli6b. Whlteacre said he had to use an
interpreter to communicate with the
Mexican American prisoner. •
The sheriff had a terse "no comment"
when asked about a double bladed axe,
pruning knife and shovel brought into the
jail before Corona was led in.
Whiteacre tentatively identified a ae-
cond victim of the mass killings. Re wu
Pete Peterson, 6.11 of nearby Maryavllle.
Cout
l\'eather
There may be a bit of drizzle in
those cloudy skies on Thursday,
with cooler temperatures (63 to
70) prevailing along the Orange
Coast and inland areu.
INSIDE TODi\ Y
An old Jina~ial 1aumbol owr
Ntwport Harbor &.! getting a.
1111111 look. See Finan"ct, Page 25. ·
IMtlH !(, 21
Clllfe111M II
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.. -·
'! DAILY PILOT N Wtc1nttd1t, MAJ Z6, 1971
'Too Loose?'
Vnit Says Area Not Coordinated Enough
Js the Harbor Area coordinated?
Thi$ que11tion ·was explored by a pan('\
of Harbor Area Coordinating Council
Jeaders Tuesday at the Airporter Jnn,
durlng annual sesting o( officers and
year's-end review.
The ansv.·er was essentially:
coordinated, yes; tightly enough, no.
A series of accomplishment s and areas
In which improvement Is needed -plus
methods of achiev1ng improvement -
came under discwsion by the organiia·
tion.
The Jiarbor Area Coordinating Council
Is essentially what its title says. a super-
a~ency organized to help more than 20 in·
dividual clubs and services function
more efflcienUy.
. Speakers sald Newport Beach' 111d
Costa ~esa as a v.·hole need to exercise
greater cooperation and r e d u c e
duplication of efforts in some areas.
f.1erger or the two cities, educational
system aome years ago -a so-called
shotgun marriage that worked out, as
she called it -was cited by Newport·
Mesa Unified School Dis1rict Trustee
lilarian Bergeson.
A similar example is the n1crgcr a yeur
ago of the Costa Mesa and Nev.·port
Harbor United Fund chapters into one
administered on a Harbor Arca-wide
basis.
Cosla r-.1esa Ci!y ~ianager Fred
Sorsabal suggested that failure to merge
with Newport Beach following an In-
tensive study or doing so 18 years ago
may have been an unwise decision.
Panelists agreed, ho\\'e\•er, that 1he l\\'O
cities have achieved unity in many mat·
ters with areawide impact. despite reten--
tion of individuill municipa l boundaries.
A joint City-Schools Liaison <.:om-
mittee; the Harbor Area Youth Problem
Center; mutual library pro gr a ms ;
Harbor Area Youth Employment
Service: YMCA, plus Boy; and Girls Club
of the Harbor Area, are but a few.
"\Ve h::i1•.:-heard n1any ideas here lo-
day," said oe11'ly inslallrd President
Hilda J\.tcCartney. v!'ho succeeds U1rs.
Cv.·enda \Vatson after bet• two ycors on
the job.
"If \\'e can act on half of then1 11e \1ill
accomplish rnuch," she added.
"Lel's gel lt together,'' said t:ily
?i.1anager Sorsaba!.
··Put our "''ords and ideas into action.''
echoed \'oulh Employment Service Presi-
dent Jhn \Vood.
Council officers for 1971-72 include Dr,
ti.lcCartney, president; Joan Peace, vice
president: C!Jievie\•e Bates, recording
secretary: Dorothy Dietzel. I reasurer,
and ti.lrs. \VaL'icn as immdiale past presi·
dent.
Directors installed Tuesday are Lou
Yantorn. Paul Kugler. Jean Bechtel, Ed
Mcf'arland and Dorothy Paul.
Street-end Launching
Gets Council Approval
Fron• Pagel
AERONAVES • •
at the airport without their approval," he
said.
Coppel said he isn't sure what will hap-
pen if customs approves the facilities but
Newport Beach has outlawed the we o(
1trttt ends for boat storage but at the
same time opened up 43 street-ends for
boat launching by hand.
The city council ~fonday night revoked
an ordinance allowing free storage for
boats 1t both Fernando and 15th Streets
on Balboa Peninsula .
The council is awaiting a report from
the Joint Harbor Committee before tak.
Ing action on a proposal to build ator1ge
racks at those and possibly other loca-
Uons.
Boat owners had been allowed to leave
dinghies scattered about at the two st reet
ends and several Balboa residents com-
plained about the clutter.
On the other hand, one resident called
the haphazard collection of run-down
Lagtwa's Sumner
Gets Top County
Honor for Law
Orange County Superior Court Judge
Bruce Sumner of Laguna Beach wu
honored by the Orange County Bar
Aasociation Tuesday as the 1971 recipient
of the Franklin G. West award.
The trophy , named after a retired
Superior Court juriJt who has been fre-
quently honored by the county'& judges
and lawyers, will be presented to Judge
Sumner Thuraday by former Chief
Justice Roger J. Traynor of the
California Supreme Court.
Justice Traynor .will present the \Vest
award at a county bar lunch eon meeting
acheduJed for noon at the Santa Ana Elks
Club, 212 S. Mabury.
"I am honored and delighted," Judge
Sumner said Tuesday. "And . I am
parUcWarly pleased that 1 shall be
receiving tbe award from Justice
Traynor whom I have k>ng 1dm1red."
The West 1ward, aMually given "to an
individual who has made a sign.Weant
contribution to advance and elevate
justice ind law", wept to Judge Sumntt
for his work as chairman of California's
ConstituUonaJ Revision Comm.lssion,
He has been similarly honored by both
houses of the Legislature for his
·•presiding over some 25,000 man hours ot
lhoughtfuJ deliberation by the com-
mission which has to da te reduced by
25,000 words the length <if our comple;i
and bulky Constitution."
OIAN•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
dlltAHOt: CO.UT ,UILllHINO COM'AXY "
••• .,, H. w.,4
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J•ck l. Ciirl'.y
\Ike' Pru.....C 9ftlll Gwir11 Manttr
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llit111•1 A. M~r111hh1•
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l.. Ptttr Kri•t
Nr#ptl"f a .. dl CU1 f:llllllt
.... ""' ..... Offk•
lJJ] H1w11111rt loult••"'
lioftlll11t A411ttH: P.O. ltx 1175, tJ,,J .,__
c.itt Mtt11 UI W.t lt'f" Slftet Lttv~ a .. c:tu m ,., .. , ,,......,.,.
t1iiri"l'ltl•1 1 .. c.111 111tS ... di e11111tYlrl ·S.11 tltnltnle: JDdl NOM!t e1 c;.m1no A111
rowboats used by people to get to their the supervisors deny the sub-lease.
moorings "picturesque." and urged the "It's hard lo say," Coppel offered,
council to leave them alone. hastily .. addiqg, "But President Nixon
The ordinance allowing for hand· agreed."
launching stipulates just that, prohibiting Jfe said be really didn 't know if the trailers and parking from the beach areas. airline "'-'Ould appeal lo the President.
There is no limit to the size of boats "That's up to the director general in
that may be launched. ·Mexico City," he said.
"If 125 people want to carry a 35-foot Coppel did concede thet President Nix-cruiser, that's okay, we'll all come do""·n and watch," George Dawes, harbor and on may not have been aware of the con-
Udelandl!I adminl!lrator told councilmen. trovcrsy surrounding the ' noise and
' number of flights at Orange County ~rport .when he signed the international
treaty_ Balboa Resident
Given Deadline
To Fix Sidewalk
P.A. Cassel has until July 4 to replace
a portion of the sidewalk in front of his
Balboa borne or the city will do it and bill
blm.
Cassel Was ordered to put back a six-
foot strip of sidewalk he had torn up
when demolishing one of three structures
he owns along Edge'A·ater Place, just east
of Fernando Street after los ing a recent
court battle with the city_
He refu sed, however. contending the
landscaping hi! put in contributed more to
tbe ,_..,a Lt" the cement, andtesldes, he
had ' i:f\ eight feet or walkwiy for
pedestrian•.
City Attorney Tully Seymour, who had
won the case for Newpor t in court, was
insistent that Cassel be made to replace
that wbich he had taken away.
He ind.Jcated that if the council failed to
do so. confusion over ownership or that
strip could re.suit should the property
ever be sold.
Flag By Niglat
"t\·lr. Nixon, may not know what is
going on here," Coppel said, "if he did.
maybe he \\'ou!dn 't sign .. ,
Attorney Powell
Of Ne,vport Dies
Attorney Robert Benjamin Powell Jr.,
who came lo the Harbor Area in 1918 as a
boy and was later prominent in local af-
fairs, died Tuesday .
He "'as 65 and lived al 916 \V. Ocean-
!ront, Newport Beach.
Private funeral serfices and inlermrnt
are scheduled under direction of Baltz
Corona det ~1ar r-.1ortuary.
Mr. Pov.·ell 1vas a member or the
California Bar Association and a State
Bankruptcy Associa tion Referee at the
lin1e of hi s death.
He "'as also a charter member of
Ne\1•porl Beach Elks Lodge 1767 and the
American Legion Post.
Survivors include his 11·ife, Elizabeth. a
son Robert Lav.·rence Pov.·cll, of Newport
Beach. a step-daughter. Mrs. John
Messereau Jr.. of Ann Arbor, .".lich.1 and l\\"O grandchildren.
OAl\,.'r" PU.OT '1tll PM!f
lloag ~temorial llospila.1 Administrator \Villiam R. J.ludson Jr. and ~1.rs. Charles J. Fishback, \\'ifc of the hospital board's treasurer. raise
flag that \Vill fly 24 hours a day at the hospital. Flag \Vas donated by
A-1rs. Phyllis Smith, lloag's medical librarian. in memory of her late
husband. 1'.1rs. Fishback suggested to Ne\vport Harbor hamber of
Comn1.erce that it urge area residents to fotlo\v Pres ident Nixon's lead
by flying Flag 24 hours, illuminating it after dark. Chan1bcr did and
hosp1taJ Is con1plying.
' -
,
lti tlae Swit1i
Instructor Kathy Samuels helps Lisa Jtliller. 6, perfect her swimming
forn1 at Orange Coast YrilCA. Sv,.imming classes for chUdren three
to six years of age are being scheduled at the Y~1C.J\. Call Ivy Gorman
or Bill Chunn, 642-9990, for details.
..
Irvine Officials Answer
.Queries on Coast Resort
By FREDERICK SCllOE!\.IEJIL
Two Irvine Company officials v.·ere
kept b u s y Tuesday night answering
scores ot questions from Laguna Beach
resi dents concerning Irvine's proposed
coastal resort on the three-mile strip of
\•irgin beach bet\\·een Laguna Beach and
Newport Beach.
Asked how the 3&-foot building height
limitation. if approved by Laguna Beach
voters Aug. 3. might affect the Irvine
plan, which may include "some high rise,
Richard Reese, vice president 9f planning
said : '"I lhink some vertical element is
good, and any 3f>.foot restriction v.·ould be
a limitation to n hotel developer.
"Also. such a limit would be a poor
urhan design sol ution," he added.
The high rlse Issue. along \\'ith many
other issues, Reese said, would have to be
solved by citizens of Laguna Beach. if the
city annexed the Irvine land up to CrysiaJ
Cove.
Asked if the coastal resort might be in-
corporated as an independent city, Ray.
n1ond \Vatso n, vice presi dent of land
management. said that Lagunn Beach
and Newport Beach hav<' "informal
agreement.s·• to annex the Irvine land to
both cities.
As the plan now stands. the boundary
between lhe t"·o cities v.·ould be just
southeast or Crystal Cove. Howeve r,
\Vatson said. other boundaries are being
studied based on drainage Ii n es,
lopography and utlllty IJnes.
A major part ot the Irvine plan is lo
relocate existing Pacific Coast Highwa y
inland to an elevation higher on the ridge
along the coast between Newport and
Laguna. Access to the beach, recrea-
tional facilities, park!! and vista points
would be via a._rterials from the new
highway to the coast.
Asked who would pay for the highway
relocation, \Vat.son responded that it
would have to be '"mutually funded" by
the Irvine Company, the cities of
Newport and Laguna , the county and the
state.
'T'o\·o of the large canyons on the Irv ine
land, Reese said, would probably be turn-
e4 into "recreational 1rea1" such as g~enbells. ' 1 ' '
Asked wheth~~ these canyons would be
donated to the county as open spa" and
\\'ho \vould maintain them, Reese said
that further stud y wou ld have to be con.
ducted on the mai ler. He did indicate
!hat the land11 coul<I "give people .;oine
happiness. because or their detachment
from urban areas.··
\\"atson, asked nboul the timetable of
the plan, said public hearings before the
appropriate agencie s \VOUld begin this
sun1mcr and !hat lhe first development
of the resort could begin in summer of
1972,
··But the entire project will take about
20 yea rs. It v.·ill be a slow and gradual
development." \\'atson said.
Asked if lhe lan d e-0uld remain un-
developed as il is today, Watson said that
such a possibllHy had been ruled out by
the Irvine Company.
"We 're paying $1700 a day in taxes and
gelling no return ,'' he said. ';And that is
unee-0nomica\ for us."
~Balancea'
Budget
To Council
Acting City ~"tanager Philip F. Bet·
tencourt Thursday will submit \\"hat he
has promised lo be a balnnced Newport
Beach budget that n1eets stringent city
(.'Ouncil guidelines.
Those guidelines call for a two and one-
J1all cent reduction of the municipal tax
r<.te, do"·n to $1.2{) per $100 assessed
valuation.
Bettencourl has declined to commen!
about the 1971 -72 fiscal doc'Ument.
A recomn1ended capital improven1ents
program has already been submitted to
the council -which has deferred con-
sideration of it pending receipt of recom-
mended operating costs -and it totals
$2.35 million, about the same as th is
year.
The council has already · scheduled a
public hearing for June 7 at 7:30 p.m. in
City Hall. The hearing will coincide with
initial deliberations on the staff re com·
mendations,
A key element in the city's fiscal stand-
ing, perhaps more ·than ever before, will
be employe salaries.
Negotiations with the three employc
associations actually began two months
ago but did not get down to bard
bargaining until recenlly wheir the city
compiled a list of salaries paid by con1-
parable cities throughout S o u t h e T n
California so "benchmark" salary tables
could be developed.
Bettencourt has declined to give any
details on the negotiations. either.
By law, the proposed budget. with er
without firm salary figures, must be sub-
mitted to councilmen by Thursday. The
council ha s until June 30 to adopt the
budget. Tbe municipal tax rate will be set
upon receipt of ntw valuation figures
from the county assessor, probably iii
August.
Sabotage Probed:
In Destructio1i
At Coast Bank
Industrial sabotage was being probed
today as a motive for destruction or
$18,000 worth of plate glass windo'A'S
recently delivered to an 18-story bank
building In Newport Center.
The vandalism was reported to police
Tuesday afternoon by Michael Amman,
Of Center Glass Company, L<l1 Angeles,
supplier for the new Union Bank.
Circumstances of the smashing spree
indicated perhaps: more than malicious
mischief.
The gray-tinted sheets. 36 in all. were
delivered to the 600 Newport Center
Drive site a week ago in :il:r crates con·
ta ining six windows each. ·
Mounted on a specia lly built platform
prior lo installation , the brackets made of
heavy lumber and bolls were designed
for maximum protection. ·
Investigators said a constant \Vatch
v.·as kept on the 10 by 12 foot windo\'
panes valued at $500 each and heavy
equipment 1vas kept away to prevent ac.
cidental breakage. •
Construction "'orkers arrived Tuesday
morning, however. to rind the six
vertically installed crates Upped over and
their contents shattered. .
Officer ?i.fike McEvery said extreme
force "·ould be requ ired to pull lhe heav;:
crates down.
GEM TALK
TODAY
by
BJlA~LT
BJZG1LEAQUEI
MYSTERY GEMS
Throughout history, many famous
gen1s have-disappeared entirely,
'1 hile others have vanished· for cen-
turies, only lo reappear in strange
places and in the hands of unlikely
0\1·ners .
Such a gcn1 is lhe fabulou s iO
caral "The Idol's Eye." f\'lined in
.1600, it passed fro1n a Persian
Prince in 1607 to a private cotn-
pany. as a debt repayment. It then
\•anished for over three centuries.
Suddenly. in 1906, this historic dia-
111ond e1nerged again \vhen it \Vas
sold to European interests by a
Turkish sultan.
Fort) .. one years later, in 1947,
•·The Idol's Eye'' \v&~ sold to an
:\merican "'Oman for $375,000, add·
ing one inore chapter to the history
of allure and mystery of gems.
Although no mystery surrounds
the beautiful stones in our store,
they do ha ve, the moment you buy
them. a personal meaning and al-
lure Which \viii make you treasure
them throughout your lifetime.
ii
TISSOT
G1ant·s1ze 42-millimeler .a11ton1at ic d1l1·telllng
i·l2'5. the newest ol 11 long line of tech11ical bia:·Jeaguers by Tissot.
Top: shows the day as
WtJI as the date, Ind
has rota!ln11 inside
elap5ed·l1me ~a1e. lri stainless steel, $12S
lowe r: lh1 Nav1111torwi1h rolating inside 24·ho1.1t 5cil'' Stainless $leer, $120
.,
J. C. ...JJ.umphr/ej Jewefer11
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONVENIENT TERMS
l ;.NKAMERICARD-MASTER CHAJ:GE
24 YEARS IN SAME LOCATION
f'HONE 141·1401
' ..
I
I
..
I
____ .. --·~ --·--
6 DAU..V PILOT E DITORIAL P AGE
Avoiding a
The Coa!t Community CoHege D1~trict 1s attempt·
Ing to finance improvements at Golden \Vest and Orange
Coast colleges with a technique that inevitably v.•ill raise
questions jn the minds o( property taxpayers.
The district is eager to expand facilities at both
colleges. The improvements are being pictured as rer·
reationaJ. the kind of facilities that are use d by mem·
hers of the public in eight district communities as well
as by the students.
The largest slice of the $935.000 program a[ Golden
\Vest will go on a new $603,000 wing lo the gymnasi um,
but the plan aJso calls for improving televi ~ion and com·
puter cabling and for additional parking. The $700.000
program at Orange Coast includes $260.000 for cabling
and a $120,000 S\vimming pool renovation.
To finance the ·program at Golden \Vest. the dis·
tricl has asked the Huntington Beach City Co uncil lo
initiate an assessinent district through \Vhich bond~
\uould be sold. Ad ministrators will ask the Costa J\1esa
City Counci l to form a similar district to pay for the
Orange Coa st i1nprovements.
College district adminis.trators emphasize th~t . t.he
repayment of these bonds wIII not be the respons1 bil1ty
of the cities of Costa J\1esa and Huntington Beach and
will not affect municipal finances.
But they agree that property owners in all the eight
communities v,1ithin the college district will feel the im·
pact through a raise in the property tax rate.
Present plans call for the bonds to be redeemed
over five years th rough a tax rate increase eslimated at
from 3~i to 4 cents.
There will be public hearings before both the llunt·
ington Beach and Costa Metia councils before these as·
sessmeot districts are approved and the bonds sold. So
someone living in f'ountain Valley or Ne\vport Beach.
for ex~mple, could find hi s college tax bill hiked as a
result of action taken by the 11untington Beach and1or
Costa ?i1esa councils.
Bond Vote
\Vhether this is proper will be for those councllmen
to decide. The assessment district procedure avoids call·
ing a district·\vide election to vote bonds for the
projects.
Teachers' Views Needed
Newport-~1esa Unified School Distric t trustees have
responded to the pay and program proposal8 presented
in February by the Newporl -~1esa Education Association.
Before the next round 1n the annual salary square·
off, teacher association leaders have promised to i;eek
a vole of the N-~IEA Hepresenlative Council. That n1ay
be read as a sign leaders \Vant to know ho\v their teach·
er members feel about. the association·~ hardline stance
in the negotiations prot('S!i .
Only last \veek. professional evaluators from the
affiliate California Te\chers Association and National
Education Association headquarters rated the N·MEA.
J\:Iany of their findings su pported the iilaff and the or·
ganization. But they further suggested the association
membersh ip was dropping. ·
They said they found many teacher men1bers \Vere
both confused and frigfltened by some tactics being used
by the leadership in the salary go-around wi th the dist·
rict. They urged improved internal communicatj..1n \vith
members.
The comnll:lni ty has a rig ht to \VOnder if N·J\IEA
leadership is truly representative of the sentiment~ of
its 750 members, much less the views of the 350 fa cu lty
who are not. members. All \Viii be affected by the de·
cisions reached bet,veen the board and the Certified
Employes' Council.
N'.J\iEA leadership cannot truly he fa ulted if the
majority of the teachers \Vho are members do not speak
up, No1v is the time for teachers to express their vieu•s
on the salary and contract proposals. N
COH,RESSIONAL
RESOLUTION
Foe VIETNAM
WITllDRAWAL
MTE
'&y! lllll't that old Win-the-War Zablocki?'
Temperament
Can Clian ge
As We Age
D ear
Gloo111v
Gus
Ge1aeral Use Wotild Virt ually Eli1ni11ate S11aog
~ '
Speaking nf chlidrc.n ""'ho arr slO\\!
learners in school . and or the famous
men who were considered "stupid'' all
during their youth fas I did in a column a
few "'eeks ago\, it is equally true that
people can surprisingly change their
whole temperaments as lhey get older.
Strange rates of personal development
•re not only mental. but temperamental
ai1 "'ell. \\'ho wou ld
believe that the dou r
.and taciturn Calvi n
Coo!Jdge was ele<:ted
"class humorist" at
Amher st:' Or th at
lht saintly and as·
ertlc Mahatma was
nicknamed "Gandhi
I.he Dand y" during
h1~ university car·
eer, when he was know n as the
hes t ·dressed min around Oxford?
For every one Cap abl.anca. who
revealed his chess genius al the .age
nr 4, there are: a hundred others who take
unril maturi ty to disclose their full
?O"'ers and real inclinations. St.
Augustine \11 as among the most con·
fupiscen l of men, he tells us in hi!'l
•·confessions." Until the: age of 30, his
favorite prayer was. "O Lord, give me
cha~tity and self-restraint, but not just
yet."
"'INSTON CHURCHILL was stnt to
military school at an early age: btcause
his father firmly believed he was too
dumb to learn anythi ng else. He wa5 a
fa!, unhappy boy who t.alked with a stut.
ter a"'d a Jii;p; he entered Harrow •~ th e
lowest. boy in the lowest class, and re-
mained there. He: failed the entrance e1·
\Vhy do f'\ewport city planners
only "·ant lo tak e 40 percent of
the bayfront property to preservr
the view ·~ \Vhy not 40 pr-rcen1 (If
oceanfront property for lhe v1e1v
aod 40 percent of inside pMinsula
property for parking? Nothing is
too good for our beach visitors'
-~I. R.H.
f~lt fN lur. ,.llf<I~ rttderl' llllWI. Ml
M<tH ••ll' '~•w .t lilt 111•v1pe1, it11d
rt11r H I -llt f* Ol">r'"' G11 .. 01111' Pllet.
ams al n11titary collei;e twice befo re pa~ ...
u1g. It might surprise you to learn that
Einstein wa s so slow in learning to speak
that his family expressed concern that he
might be retarded. He left high school at
lhc reques! of his teacher. and had trou·
blc grll1ng into a S""•iss college because
he "·as not qualified for entrance: in
anything but mathematics.
It is impossible to predict the rate of
development of any human being, and
parents might worry Jess if they realized
this. The most intelligent woman 1 ever
knew was actually a ''retarded" child
who never read a book throughout until
iihe was 14.
INF'A!'li'T PRODIGIES only too often
grow up to themselves. so that by the
timr they reach adulthood there is
nothing prodigious about !heir talents.
And, just as ofttn. they turn out t.o be:
emotionally Immature as well -reminis·
cenl of Harold Ickes· cutting remark
about Adolph Berle , one of the brightest
youngsters of the early New Deal : "Berle
was an infant prodigy, but the only trou·
ble: was that he kept on being an infant
long after he ceased being a prodigy."
Conversely, the "backward" ch ild may
suddenly break clear of his emotional
block and tum into a brilliant and pro-
ductive member of socitty. If Gandhi 's
father deplored his son's foppishness,
and Augustine's mother lamented her
son's lust. which parent among us can be
too im patient or in tolerant or his child?
The Need for 'Depletion'
EvP:ry time ta:s: reform is proposed the
v. called 011 drpletion allowance comes in
for an inordinate amount nf rather
mi~guided discussion a~ a loophole to be
cln~l'd
Some of these misc.-onceptions "'err
torrectecl rccenl.[y in a lr-tt~r wrillen tn
the Los Angeles Times by J1arry ~·lor·
rison. vice presidenl and g r n e r a I
manager of the \Veste rn Oil and Gas
Association. ~tornson points out that one
rharge againsl !he allo"·ance -that ti is
11n unfair suhsidv -fails to take lnln cnn· ~1derallnn the 'ract !hat the provision
keeps profits of thr oil industry at a level
with nther industmes. and keeps i::on-
~umer rost.s relatively low
A 1968 study. for e:s:ample , shows lhill
nil comp~nie.~ made a profit ihAI year of
12.9 pe.rcent on net assets, compared with
the Jl. I percen t a,verage of • l I
manufacturing industrtts.
WHll.E PERCENT AGE deple llon Is
al!nwtd Ufl tQ 50 f)f'rcenl of net income
from the property. only about half of all
Guest Ed itorial
1he 011 and gas \\'ellll drilled in 1!16!1. fnr
in,.t.ance, wf're productive : and or those.
only lhe "'ell~ producing net Income are
eligible for the deduction. As ~1lorr 1son
said, \\hile an occasional well ma y bring
1n an unusual relurn on investment. 1t 1~
only helping prov1cle the money fur lhc
e11:ploratory dry holes where money i5
lost.
The original and continuing purpo~e of
tht deplel1on a1low11nr.e i11 In m11kr 1l
economically feasible: to uodertakc that
Cl'tremely cosily 5earrh for new 011 aod
gas resources. You can't repla nt and
reharve~t oil. You h11ve to gri' :i;omf'whrre
else to find lt. And the naUon 'g economy
depends greaUy on the i;uccess of that
&earch.
Calilornia feature Srrvlee
H y George --------...,
Dear Genri:e
I fell in l<'vr \li llh rh15 onr bnv
J11 nd "'hile t wa~ going 5tl'adv I mrr
this 5.,..·aghbucklln~ ~farine "ho has
been e\·ery"hrre 3nd d n n,.
,.vf'rylhing \\1ha1 do ~·ou 1h1nk I
!ihoutd dn about th i$ fl.laru1r"
MABEi,
Dear ~tabel ·
\\'ell. if I tell you one 1h1ng I'm in
tr(luble from a!I r1ght·lh1nke.rs ind
if T ttll you another I'm ln trouble
\\Ith thr: ~tar ine Cnrps \Vhy don't
~·ou "'nte In Ann l.aoders~
'Ru5h your problems In GPnr~e
1n~l.l11tly and get 1 frl':e pamphlet
on ho"' to procra stinate. 1n·
def1n1te b'.)
Steam Cars Can Be Practical Today
To lhe Editor :
Thr columns of many newspapers are
fill ed "'ilh gratuitous and often quite: 1r·
rational expressions of opinion 1ogelher
with much superficial reporting of
miscellaneous current events. Seldom are
readers aler ted to re,·olutionary even1s 10
the making. So 1L is "'ilh the lact!I 10
v.·hich l call your attention though their
implications are cerlainly well un·
derstood by the internal c-on1busllon lord~
of Detroit and "'e niay expecl vigorou:i
and pE'rhaps unscrupulous co u n t e r •
measures to emanate from that quarter.
PLEASE CONSIDER this almost in·
credible s1tuatton : Under the auspices of
lhe California Assembly Transportation
CommiUee and of the California Air
~sources Board, no less than three ex·
lcrna l combustion (slcarnl bus engines
ha ve been developed and built by in·
dependent engin(!('ring entrepreneurs aod
Are now beini:: tes ted and debugged so as
lo be readv !or installation into standard
busei1 by iate spring or early summer.
These steam-po\vered demonstration
buses will be used in regular public
transportation service for seven months
beginning Sept I and their iw.rformance
will then be evaluated and judged.
If" THE Dt::SIGNERS and builders ol
these steam bus engtncs have: done ~
,::ood job, if the testing procedures are
fair and reasonablf' and 11 sabotage ran
be prr vented. there 1s no reason to expect
;i nythin!! bu1 very good performance
trnm all of these steam po"·cr plant'.'\'.
Af!er all the st eam engine dnes no! ha vt.
10 be invented, perfec!ed or adapted lo
autom obiles. Steam-propelled cars, buses
and lrucks "·ere praclic al and t1uccessful
<1 Ion~ time ago and with the use of better
materials. designs and manufacturing
lechn1q ues can be even more practica l to-
day.
SO~IE OF THE EARL)' steam c.tr!ii,
lhough practical enough. "·ere somewhat
crude as were 1he1r internal combustion
contempo raries. but the best of them
"·ould I)(' perfectly scrv 1ceablr today in
spite flf their ~ngular bQfly st.vie. 'fhc
general Ul!f' (If modern, cffiC!rll!, ma ss·
produced steam <lrive vehicle on our
high"'ays and particula rly on city :-;!reels
\\'Ould e!itninate virtually a!l Lhc smog
and pollution now unavoidably creat..cd-by
the internal combustion engine.
THE UNWILLINGNESS of Detroit
r ve:n to atlempt lo provide a i.mog-free
engine in coorormily to the Jaw indicate~
U1e futi lity of hope for bctler lh ings fr om
lhenl It appears they don 't r-ven
kno\v how lo make a good bumper. In ad·
dtlinn to the return of pure air lo our
c11ies, dr iver!! of steam cars would enjoy
~p1Cndld performance and long trouble·
Ire,.. serv ice as a resul t of mechan ic11l
simplicity. Electnc cMs would be fine
but the battery situal1on removes them
from cons1derat1on for the present.
Steam ruled the road in my youlh . I
hope to hvc Ion~ enough to see it do 11
again .
PAUL PAl,MER
•Blind H y poc r isy'
Tn the Editor :
Permit nle to e:xpres~ my ai:ony ovf'r
the letter of li.ira. Shirley Smith. "Huey
Newtnn and !;Cl" (Mailbox t.1:iy l!I) It 1~
dlstre~s1ng that a con<:frned c11izen and
111xp11ycr hkt ~1rs S1n1th should seek to
d1,,ii:u1se her preJudlced pt!rsonallty by
posing 11s one. ge:nuinely concerned with ..
the "''-ll·be1n,g or her ~ociely .
To challe:nge the: intrgrily of Ch.1nre:llor
A ldrlch by 1n~1nual!ng hill b e_ I n 11.
"responsible for thr. re:ccn! bon1blngs 11nd
~.
Ma ilbox
Letters from readers are wtlcome.
Norm.allu wrtters should convey their
tiiessages r11 300 words or le ss. Tltt
right to condense letters Lo fit space
or etimlnate libet is reserved. Alt let·
t'ers 'muse include signature and mail·
fng ttddrtss. but 1101nes rnoy be 1v1il1·
lield on reque.~t 1) .\11ff1ci r.nt reaso1t
i~ nrparent. Poetru 1111/l not be pub·
lished.
burnings at UC I," is I.ti lend :-;ubstance to
t~ view that adult s of thf> day proJtt.t a
hypocritical barrenness of virlue: and a
penchant fo r invidiousness. Every lax.
paying fool or cynic knows by now that
no bombing or tire al UC\ hall occurred,
or shall ever o<:cur , to rrf!ect the anger
and fruslration of the university '.ot
clientele who arc forced to accommodate
unnecess arily to lhe blind hypocrisy and
distorted prioril ie~ dii;played loward the
educational enterprise by the likes or
such critics.
fS 1'10'T HUEY NE \\'TON an American ,
as is \Vill iam Buckle y? ~1 ust lhl! univer~•·
ly provide a forum for the latter, bur noL
the former. and thus persi st tn a lurlhrr
distortion of the: Amc riean herita,::c of
pluralistic tolerance? The role nr lhc
uni versity includes not sin1ply prepara·
tion for making a living. but, hOJX'full y,
for providing an experience that \\'ill
subscribe to the possibilily of a be11cr hie
through an e:s:plicat1on of the truth.
Had ~1rs. Smith ava iled herself or lhc
enlighten ing experience afforded by thr
1'Texican Cultural \Ver.k and hy lhr Black
Cultural Confttence she wou !d 110111 hf>
pleading for n1ore of such events. ralht!r
rhan hinting that. such aclivilies cnnsp1rl':
to niake taxpayers finan ce the ir O\\'n
des truction.
1\IY AGONY DOES not derive frnm
hatred or b1UC'rnes~ over the injustice!!
v.hich prf'judice ha11 meted out to me . It
15pr1ngs. rather. trom my appreciatinn ftJr
the genuine effort being made hy the
hkes of Chance llor Aldrich lo project UCl
as a part of a society !hat co1npnses all
types and manner of human beings. 11
derives. further, from my faith in !he
many who. having been silent or In·
tfifferent, retain a capacity for pro111otin,i:
justice and for comprehending lhc
challenge of guiding me:aningful ehangt
"'ilh1n and wilhoul the un ive rsity.
I urge Mrs. Shirley Smith to remove
her blinders. lo look clearly at UC I. and
lo i;harr fi1 the exhilarat ion of glliding our
future c1lizens toward the creat ion of a
rociety with a i;:rr.ei lcr hun1an 111'1•
dersta'nding and the ability to nlanifest
genuinr citizenship
GEORGE 0 . ROBEHTS
The Program in Comparative Culture
Americxn·Africa"'·Asian·Black-Chic11nn
UC, lr\'ll'IC
'/llost R id kulotu'
To the Edltor :
The Jetler :,y L;rman S. f'11ulkncr
l~lailboK, May 1~1 supported 1he: ii S.
military and stated th11I jU; defensive pro-
"'C.!is 1s a nece.!l~ily in todity·~ world lf wt
are to keep allve. I for one rt!r:I dif·
rercntl.v. 'rhe phrasf!:. "nalinnal def.•n.~r.."
is 1n itself "n untruth . fl paMcd thal
stage "11h the 1n\·entlon nf thr: bf>w and
i:irrow. No maltcr how nl.'lny n11s5iles,
Allfl.l's nr rockl"t~ "'" !lel up, ~ nation
like Russut could dest roy U.!i by J)ff'.SS1ni;;
11 few buttons.
The themt for defcn~c ls nn 1-0njicr
''l,el'~ 5ave our~e/\·es In <:ase of a.11 attack
by a hostil e nation."
fl is no"'· "If we go. let's make: sure: wt
bri ng them with us'.''
'THI=: ARl\.1S RACE is undoubtedly the
tnosl ridiculous thing on lhe face of !he
rarth. \Vhy 15hould v•e spend over 00 per·
cent of our entire budget for "'hat could
lu rn oul to be the total ann1hilallon of the
e<1rth~ \\11th all the problenls facing our
n<1tion and lhe rest or lhe world. we have:
no right lo spend so muc h on dea th.
\Vhat i;:ood is a monolith1c military in·
stallation on the edge of the DEW line 1n
Alaska "'hen some guy is being knifed On
a subway in New )'ork City? Or what is
accomplished by a pa trolling cruiser nf!
lhc coa!'it of Ethiopia "hen a kid in \\'alts
1~ st ar \'1ng to death ?
IN 1969 IBE U.S. possessed 1 ,~54 in-
trrcont1ncnt.al ballistic miss i I es
I JCBM's). over 700 submar ine·basrd
mis.~iles (41 of "'hich conlained nuclear
warheads\. 810 :;trategic bomber!!, and
an undisclosed amount or anti-ballistic
missi les <ABM's). Is it all worth It'! Of
rour~e no!~ The co mplete fire power of
t>very "defense" force deployed hy the
Ir S. is enoui;:h lo rliminHle Europe from
lhr face of !he ea rth. JOO times. But ,.:Iii/
11!1' must build and rnounl our military tn
cvrn grratrr heights
i\1r. Faulkner said that the rnililary "ill:
rrohably the b<'sl or~an1zed, mosl er.
firicn l in r:.irrying out its re:iiponsibilitiei;:,
111nst C'ffertive in .1rcnmplishments And
t:urrsl 1n !he opportunities for succes!I ii
offer~ p('(lp1e." \Vas the My Lai incident
;in e'i r1n111tr of lhc milita ry's "effrctive
arcon1pllshn1rnts?" And that was the 1Jn·
Iv (lne, so far. in !he newspa~s. ho"'
aboul 11\1 t~ others"
CHRIS BRODERICK
1•r i11l it1g Pt1l it0«• 1\'•'•r•
Tn lhe Editor·
Your arliclr c-onccrning ~1r CA rllon
Polk . Costa ~1esa •hgh School busines.~
lt!achcr, I frel was in the right. A eouple
(If students from my school. I see. wrote
you a crank letter concerning ynur
publiCRlion Of the fact lhe leaCht r WilS
Arrl·l>lCd tor possession of marijuana anc1
other cfru~s
I am a Costa ~lesa Hl~h School sludent
an(! J lhink thal. 1~·c arc up there with Ole
srhool drug problem. You do have a story
In write and freedom of the press.
i\C'J'UALLY, the school district should
find some way to lell '"'hethcr some or all
lheir teachtrs take or push drugs. If you
h11d not publishfd thr-story. most pare nts
v•ould not have known about il \lnlil they
had 10 bail their son or daughter out o(
jail I hope you publish th is letter st'l that
your reader11 will know that at le:a!'Jl Mme.
onr carts abou( the i:rchool drug prob!em ,
NAME \V!THHF:LD
Returnable Bottle•
To the f;d11nr
l\'e arr awar,. lhat man h.as lo reach an
l"l'JUll1brium "'ith his environment In or·
dcr to maint.ain this earth for futu re gen.
cr"tions. But "-"t tend to ignore the (Act
1 hat cooperation begins with the individ·
"'' The grcate~t cnntribullon the younger
,rencration could m;ike toward ellmlnaling
rnllut10111 is In purchase beer and soft
drinks in returnable bottle.s. Jn addition
lo trnproving. the ~ener;il appearance: of
thr counrry~rdt. we would be making bcl·
ler use of our resources .
1"0NRETURr\A 81~E CANS take ~.000
yt11rs to decompose iand return to !he
e1rlh, The consumer would 11~0 be doing
hlmstll a favor by 1avlng money, for
nv('r 40 percent of lhe W!I of I beverage
ill In packa~ing.
S1nct. teenagers and young adult& art
lhe: major consumers of caMed and bot·
tled beverages, we have the power to ex·
ert <"Onsumer pressure . Through our
combined cfforL~. we will be takiog a ma·
1or step 1n the fight for a better en-
vi ronment
MICllEU.E MEARS
Celiboc 11 ""· 1tlorriage
To lht Editor·
The excommunicat10"' flf the Rt:v.
Robert Duryea, Paclf!ca, Calif., at th•
discovery of his marriage shows tht i~
consistency of beliefs within the Catholic
Church. During my eighl years of educa·
lion in a Catholic grade school, 1 had
been taught lo love God and man. Fathtr
Duryea has no! broken this law of love by
marrying a woman, but has fu lfilled ll lo
a greater extent.
lllS l\1ARRIAGE HAS not affected h11
teachings lo his congregalion, bul has ex·
pended his knowledge. As a married
priest. he has greater capabilities o(
counseling married couplts and cou ple.'!
preparing for marriage than any celibate
priest has.
Because of his ef!ectivenes!I as a pastor
11nd his sincere regrets in leavi ng hi11
positiOQ. I fttl th.a~ tht action takeJt by
the church w1!'i not for th t "'elfare of lhe
parishioners. as 1l should have been.
(,AURA i,EE MACH
Bma P eople , 1'iot Dog•
Tn thr Editor:
I am writing In reference to the articl•
in the DAILY PILOT ~1ay 15. The arUcle
on the first page was headed Beach Doc
Ban Goes to Council. In this article 1 read
that they \'.'OU!d not allow an y dogs on I.he
beach 1n the summer.
ff you don't enforce anti·li1ltr laws on
tht people I don't see why you should gn
around making Jaw!! I.hat stop the dogs
from going on the beach. l know they
don 't do hair as much damage: to the
beach as we do.
THt:Y ()UG HT TO bt banning people
from the beaches instead of dogs. At
least the dogs don't ruin lhe: \Vho]e. beach
with a bunch of GARBAGE!
I am 1ure the othe:r dog owners agrM
with me. 'The btach is a 'wondtrful place
for people and dogs and if we all work
together on ke:eptng it clean and 1111 dn
our share nf pickin~ up after ourselve!I
and nur dogs wt can all enjoy our clean
beAch'
At !cast do g !itler i!I naturally
r!?Cycled'
AN NABELLE LA 8.\SS
Aee 12
-----
\Vedncsdayl 'Afay 26. 1971
Thr. tditorinl pags of th« Dnil'll
Pilot seek.• 1.0 iijorm. and atlm.·
ulotc reodert bu presrnttng thil
newsporcr's opinion.• cu1d eo,,.:.
mr11tanJ n11 topics of lntereit
tUUi.signi/1cance, bu providing o
foritm. for tlu: expression of
our reader&' opi1uo11s. and .bu
prt.tttntln17 t1t11 d1 uer1t vftw-
pofnf4 of lntormtd nb.~ett1er.s
aud 1poktsm en on topici of th•
dpu.
Robert N. Weed. Pubwhcr
Wed11tsdl)', May 26, l«n"l DAILY PILOT 5
Acquitted Seale
Faces Riot Raps
P m11 J 11t f ena te Tests
Nixon Military Plans Move
Ul'I Ttlt•lleM
CHATTANOOGA FIREFIGHTERS GET ARMED GUARD
Some Fire C•lls Mer Otherwiu Peacef ul Night
Guardsmen Pull Out
Of Calm Chattanooga
CHA1TANOOGA. Tenn.
(AP) -Police and National
Guard troops pulled out of
p redominantly Negro
n eighborhoods torn by
disturbances since, Frida y and
turned them over to civil ian
black ·patrols Tuesday.
''ft looks like we had less
calls and the calls didn"t seem
to amount to anything,'' state
Safety Commissioner Claude
Armour said in reporting the
1ituation was calming.
Armour announced earli<'r
Tuesday that the unarmed
black civilians woul d patrol
Former A ide
Beats Boss
In Electio n
LOUISVILLE, Ky. IUPI) -
Lt. Gov. Wendell H. Ford, 46,
upset his ex-boss. fonner Go v.
. , Bert T. Combs, Tuesday in a
hard-fought battle for the
Democratic nomination for
Gpvernor of Kentucky.
Ford, a former ad·
ministrative assistan~ to
Combs, had a 167,000 to 126,000
vote margin with abol.ll-65 per-
cent or the primary eleclion
ballots counted ln an unofficial
ta bulation. Combs; 59, con-
ceded defeat at 9:30 p.m.
EDT.
Supporters of Ford said he
carried fiVe of the state's
seven Congres~ional districts.
losing only the t\\'O districts in
mountainous e a st e r n Ken-
tucky.
I
\
••
l
) .
the Negro areas. calling for
po\lce or G,µardsmen only
"''hen assistance was needed.
Police said early toda y litlle
sniper fire and t \.\'O fire bo mb-
ings were reported Tu~sday
night. Twenty six persons
\'!'ere arrested , mo.st of them
for violating a 7 p.m. curfew,
police reported.
The trouble erupted Friday
night \\'hen performer Wilson
Pickett refused to appear at a
scheduled concert, saying he
was not paid in advance. The
disorders spread wJlh hit and
. run attacks by small groups
Saturday and Sunday nights.
Some blacks said they were
angered by what they con-
sidered excessi ve arrests and
\"erbal abuse. The Guard "·as
called in Sunday night. A
black man was fatally shot
J\Jonday night.
Armour would not sar how
many times police a n d
Guardsmen assisted the black
civilians Tuesday, but added
that regular patrols did nol enter a housing project area
where Leon Anderson was
fatally shot after allegedly
burling a brick at a police car.
Reagan Backs
Lockheed Loan
SAcRAMENTO (UPI) -
G<iv. Ronald Reagan has
declared bis support for a $2;;()
million federa11y under\\Titten
loan to the ailing Lockheed
Airline Corp. coupled with
tightening up of its manage-
ment efficiency.
Nixon Tours
1 11 South;
Raps Nortl1
WASHI NGTON !UPI) -
Buoyed by a warm reception
from more than 150 ,000
persons in Alabama Tuesday,
President Nixon had reaso n lo
be encauraged that h i s
popularily in the sout h has not
1eriously been eroded by a
speedup In school desegrega·
l.ion.
Large. enthusiastic crov.'ds
turned ou t in humid, ~egree
weather lo see him in stops al
f\1obilc and Birmingham.
He responded to this gesture
of southern hospitality and a
&nicious welcome by Gov.
George C. Wallace by praising
the south for accomplishing a
"peaceful, relatively quiet.
very significant revolution "
which ha.'i resulted in more
black children at tending
predon1inantly white school s
than in the north .
And he criticized
northerners who "point their
fingers" al the south on the
racial issue.
O.tlttUAI holida~
~port'swQ.Qr $cl6
hot f ~~ki ort
·, k« p<Afff 4
l0ft..
Specio.ll~ price.J o.t
I
1 tZ ~
coito~Velv~nttl: li!mls ..• 112.
r.-1~, ~kk.,b1own,licl'~nk,, pu rple.
sltow11.uirlh
Bronson$, prinlJ,IUll on, ~~ !ot.c.
~l~rt, ko.nd ux..i,,.i,r~. ~.:M:,L J 11
l'i~t-~i!!Al' HJ PM'!; Ir Pt .. + 12.
\~~litcow~jJqJ . ru~ er bro Ill,..
!i'o.m.DQm.'• .f.lnmc; ~ltk,, WOV'Q,(I,
coftnn. kkrnp."'4<lt ii\ Iiul ~.~15
blu<!., rc.d,brown-:i.K.L.
ALL-DAY CLASSES .
Kindergar1en thru 8th Grade
• Toachlagtto. 4 R's with phonics
• Dpor·la·Door Bus S1nice
• Before aad After School Care
• R11son1ble TuiUoa
(Da.y Camp 1tarts Ju.nt 21 •••
throughout i;ummer.
Summer School 1tarU July 6).
HAWTHORNE
CHRISTIAN
SCHOOLS
ht Foii1tt1b1 Yoll.y
1 •IJS lrookhwrtt 5trMt
'62·lJIJ 1.., •••r ~•II._
l11 1ood i.. ..
'~ctually, I'm a
Communications Consultant
specializing in Increasing
Customers' Profits Through
Maximum Communications
Efficiency.
But to
most people,'
I'm just 'the
fella from
the phone
company'.''
'
You'll find him in offices, plants and stores. Analyzing phone
bills. Discussi ng equ ipment needs. look ing for ways to help
our business customers' businesses.
He's a General Te lephone Communications Consultant. A
forrrfal tit le for a nice, bright guy who can make day-to-day busi-
ness communicat ions less hectic for you.
For example, do cl ients pass nasty little remarks about you r
phones always being busy? Do you ha ve to scream to page a
typist sitting two feet outsi de your office? Is it easi er to reach a
customer overseas tha n someone in your bu ilding?
If these situations sound familiar (or remind you of others),
you can definitely use our Communications Consulta nt. And
soon, too. Before you waste more time and money. Or develop.
an ulcer.
(And if you think your office communications are pretty good
now, we promise that he can make them even better.)
There's no charge for his Service. And it's very easy to get."
All it takes is a phone call to our business office.
We only ask one th ing. When you call, please ask for "the
Commun ications Consultant"-not "th"e fella from the phone
company."
Everybody's the fella from the phone company down here.
lfii:I
GEnERALTELEPHD n E
•
•
••
•
-.. -----
.5 PILOT·AOVERTISER N
·~y ' ··Corona
•
•
Wtdntsday, Mu 2b, l 971
del Mar High Sc hool
Wednt5d1y, M11y 20, 1'#71 N OAILV PILOT JfJ
Achievers Recognized
Corona de! '.\1ar l!inh Sch-I lM utl,l•l ll•IK•ll•ll C-11 ... ..,,.,,., l•110•. Krl11lr1 Toel •!Id H, ... ,.., GOVEllHOll 'S SCHOUllAS $CHOUlllH1f't RM .... !•' kllolft.,.1,., UC ···••1••1 L ... "'tll. \lortlM• MllMl'I. Vlr(lllll• t,•,,•,,•"M"•'··-wic:1111on,' ,"' •• ~."•!l'IWf',· Ii'' "" Ille B•~><h 1nd Lomb AwltCI lo l!W W1ch""<lrtn. Slrll91tt A'h L...clno• 8 0 I I .tJ ' f , Diwl4 .. rtollon, lull $.CJ\l)(lt~hlo>' 10 8reM 11111~1~ Un Yff<v ti ldtl\fl1 N.t>#F•I, -.. ~·
h ~..i \-"l.-.1' ..,,111'!' wh11 1111 111111\HI mo1'•1Uo;11 .. ,d HIN t rill Chi'° l'tlll l ook 10 1111 01r~•• Elliot~. K1n11tlh Mtllur. UCLA. Brlth•m You"' u 111vtr1l1y, /•~' ~t1nl'Drl. U11lvtrsll'1' of '•nit Orq 1'.0lf', Nlrt 1 0_., kli..n Cl11b; lvt fP>Om'"°"' Ctllfflrfllt '-"" as recognizcu ouuiuul\llll8 .,111,v.,...n1 1" tcltJ>Ct. sitn v..-"11/nd. ou"l•nalno 11111lor b01 ot hlGn J•~! ":i~'-l-~"°•~~~n ~·;,~ A•I•"· c-n untvt'111Y 1n<1 uc lrvlM ,/;:'b<l~h·r~./."'I:~~ ~~'::'~\fl khrtdi, L•• S.C.r•. Otlloit ~n/'llW\, ~~.·~.L~:~1 ~r.~~~\:d1rbi~1r-~~~ l ('hieven1ents by students dur· l 1Clr'I' Mt~•• Aw1rd io mt o111,r1n-~~!'1:~~1.U~~:bW!~'."' a-111r11 cn1r1ct1r llkJl.o•• o.v. Cllftl Grlm1111w. G•t<1 ClnCl'I' aouort. lltVtnt1· o.cno11 .. nl• "'° CNll G11••d ... c.,..,.'I' ... ~l:i "~MDl'I. Ki::,. TlllW. M111 fl~• cruo: 01nt "nlor blly in \t/\<>ltlllt ltNtv.. <!" SIALliiAl•I$ Row, 10 111.-.d UC i<onl1 81..0.rt. Jiii (fllld, 11tln1.....,,1, M IT r .. (o ·~v--' '' ( ' ' lhe 191"11 h I m1111, 11/\leHu trwl lelCle•1/\lp, Dlclr I A'I wUll 111,.. l 's: stove Co., 0, .. ,,,. Srtn!Ord Un•v111lt'1'. Colltlll Fltu•id11, Y 1 ,..,..., l•~ 5•t••d, Oo 111111 W' 1ng II" SC 00 year, 011. C••llflcll•• of lltt membtr1hlp n ltw 01,111, J..il Cll!lcl '"° ll:tftn Htlllo. '""""'" Coli.et. ll:tn ltllif1, Joh"l HQl>kl111 1nd "" NtllHr won • l'olll t Mlfll ','"",,,,,•,-.. ,,,',,".",'.. '•""•• ~-.,, .. ~,,•,,!.'!•, ·r. A "· d t ' ,T ......... ,,.. for oultltndln<i 11•-&·~;i:•ntldrt:~1·u:~~1.:"'.:.1:~~ )~ 140HO•s AT EHTltAHC! lllobtrl Frli11-. Ouk.• Unl.,r1ur1 C•rltlOn Cllltffl Ol(lt Otv, ~llfllO•d Stllollfll<I• ...... IOI' ""' " Y"I• .. -.. v ,_ mong llr; gr I U a I 0 g t(lll1ve~nt, ICIY Cl\111, l.trrJ 111"'1 "' ( le C Sl>1 tenlo" /11 ... bffn Km""' 10 Don l(J1U1n, 11111 "'-1\0llnlllo 10 U I t lld Ufl Yl rlltJ, Uill~~~ wlnlll .. t t llO I I r 1 Ill', S!lnton. SorOC1!0fllht1 . e:~r <Jeni, '"" Pto SQ11ld, Mtrllyn 8''"1''cC\':" R1'~0'1ii ~ucl I(•:;::;., coll•O• wllll """'°'" II •nlrln(:I '"'' Cok>rtdo St••· !JlllYlflll'l'I Tint k.•1111. c1111ornl1 Stitt Scllol1r1l>IPI .... r. r d II ... Ii' ClntlY 8o1!0rl H1llon1I (ftlfl!Y seniors Selected f0r dOzen& Of I IDl'I. F/•~ c.n:.i Gr1mt.:~. 11i:~ird ~"'· 1r-e: Mir~ Alclrlc/\. !Jnlv1r1llv ot UC 51nlt ll1rblr1; !Curt Ktvm1>holt, •,•,,•~,, ,,,•,•,.,•,,•,•1•_,~!'''1,-,,,· 1,,J~ ~;P:o... 1Jn1or''i"t:1' (lub~1 •• ..;: ~·~,, 'o''_.~v,rl<!• '''!.",· ',•-,• •0•,,1 .. '•lltl1111 l1 l1nd At1 Aw11'd1 1 P1t Grt<I Lo!l1, Vlr1lnlt M11on. l\tn Pl)rt!111([1 fillc111rd O•v, USC1 Collt!t• full •(llolt[Slll lo UC1Ji1 ·~ " K-, _, C •• Holfm1n. 'Ollllltm Ct!Uornlt J•"llor ''' '"'"'' 1r ""' "n1 If'" "" awards Were h\'0 WhO \\'~re Arcfl1r, Jo/In Oln-tn1, 11 1 (fl I t <I I P r11 J I SI I Fl1Vrl~1. (ll1pm1n (<1l!tVt; G>H lo ti, ~l1romonl M1n'1 ColllH Cc-.. '°'cl>leYlmtnlJ Tl111 11:•1111, Jlet111 L14Gut, ll:uthntr. 01n Ltt .... ndr•t MtAd~r>1l, N~~,'~"v~r::::'una': f~~r: W1~, oa-,P<I Cllfll Grlm1h1w. UC ll•rl<tl1v: J•n~t 1!\CI Sr1nlorcl Unlversllv1 Vltllnlt Ell .. t>.1/1 Dtlt, lllcht•cl OtrLMl(hl •I (ltr~1 Union: Eve f flomp1a11, N1!10<11 DI<~ CMv. N~wltOrl l!~•IX>r Chlm~ff" recognized n]/1{' t i me 8 , MefllVll McGt~•tn. Do"! M1nlm1n, lloH, Ct!~~ loc~h1rt, S!t•t Co~ Ind ,",'.",','o'·,",,",'•',P'.~~r,,•,,,',',',", '• .. "',',~J,ncl M11on. Wlllllltr (clltOt; Grtt 01b0rn1, F00•,,<,l~u,•Mo ..i:u,,m,,,m,,"o'o'ollJl•,m•,','",' .. ,, LPIOUt ol ... mtrlttn Pen Worrtln; 01 COl'M••'l•Ct l t<d Cfltd Gr1m11\1\f,
Leading the senior class in
awards \\"ere Cht.'<l GriJnsha"'
and Kenneth Neisser.
Richard Day took eight
honors and another senior,
Sten Vermund, received six
awards during lhe evening. All
four are Jile members of
California Scholarship Federa-
tion and Neiner and Vennund
ha\·e mainWDed perfect A
a\·erages .during their high
1choo l careers.
Following is a <.:On1plete
listing or the students se!eeted
ftir awards :
SCHOOl SEIVICE ... w ... •os
Youln for !Jn0tri11nal1111: Lent
J1co011cn, of Sw-n.
"mtrlt1n P'!tlcl Strvlc" Anni Boul·
flor ol l'r•fltt. Ell Fur• ol No"••v.
Frlew Ktlemu al E!h11111i1 1nd 01nllo
f1oclflg11t1 ol (0111 liLICI .
5oohomoru: Mel1n!e Ml1t ll, Ntn(V
l'twll-. Lorn1 VobOl"i1 1nd Mlcha11
Wll!ltlN.
Junlon: Monie• Ou•Qtllfr, Pino Mo,
Lindi J•tobu1. Jim L111t, Mtril R1cc1
t nd GUll1t1 Svmonos.
Stnlor1: Kim B11t1, Konrtd Cl1rk Cl!\Clt i>QlOJ>1n, 81rrv Glllowev, Jtlt
Lwtltl. (1!11trlnt Mlchttl1, Ke11 Heiner, lltb«cl !.ot!n. 51tn Vtrmund
t !\CI M1<11vn wm .....
GA•'I' MlllCH .t.WA•O
Cntd Grlm1h1w, !er 0Ull!lf1<1J"51 lcl\oo! Strvlct.
SC!IOOL IWAROS
Llltrt rv: Miry l•C'>•••· tlll••rltn•ll•D. t nd Fr1nct1 Otbb1• Moort. rntala ctnttr tecllnlc\1n.
Or1m1: Jtl~non L1111btr •nd Kim
lllft, 1"' Dr1m1 Aw1ra1. Jim 11•111 I na IClm 81111, BHI fhftllllnt.
l11t1lr1r el tM Y11" Kor,,•d Cl1r~.
Orm t .. ,,u Lvnn Mllhtr, TrlOOntrtt
o! tne Y11r; ll,,.,,. J1co11<1i, M••d1e• Cl/ !ht Yt1r.
l't• Squtd• ,l1olwlr11,. -Cvnthll lllkn1111, C11t1r Mkn1tl1. Ptnnv
c;111-. Ev11rn Tutll1rm1n, Sol•tiO ltor1, Htldl Mtkllo,
Vttllly Ch•ff"ludt" -Otbbl Mllllollt nd, M1rllvn Wlll1on, M1rv J•n· nlion, $1nov Hollttln, Cl'ldt DolJ>llln
So1111!11dtr1 -Svt Kemblt , Ctrol Caldwllll. t.Aurlt M11leu, lvnn 5••"·
Mtncv Smll/\, Jiii Cusll•.
J. Y. C"'erl11dtt1 -Svsl1 HOllOr, Klnu~o Kumamoro. Jatnne Bernier, t.111 Gt rn1r!, 11:111\y Purmort, Merle ltltCI.
Ytrtl!V Clleco"ltt""'r of rt>r Yllr 1-
Dtbblt Mllholl•nct. J. v. cfletrl11du or '"' v11r 11 M1r!1 ll:lcc1. Fl1otwh1tr ct I/It veer 11 Cethv Mlc/1111>. Sona11adt r of 1111 •e•r ii N1ncv Smlln.
O,cllt1lt< Jin Frlpn<I, m..,1 ovtst•n· OlflO .. nlor •l'ld wnl!ntv l•rrv, moll lnoolrl !lcn•I <ll "Ctr.
Olrl1' L111u1: C1lllntl membftt ,,.
$!eMlt AllDOl1. l(lm 811~., Kertl' (un.
nlnoh1m, Stecv ~N1v1, Matl' Holland. ~~~ ... ~-t~(w K1~..,:~~;e11rl 1G:~~
$oc~rldtt, Glll!t n Svm-t, An~ Tuc~u, J1n.ce Tr1•tfl. Httln•r W1d1worlh •l'ld Bonn.Le Moil1r.
Olfltt r• ''" Mallnle 511111. tio.rd <Ill '""'"' HIM Plr-er, lrlt>11rtr, Tt r"' Wtll. wcrt11rr. Cllri1 t>ielL vice 1><t>l1ttrit, t t>cl O.bl>le Sh1nl'IOl'I, 11r11I· d111•.
J1u..,.11i11•1: New•m1ktr ol !he Yttr
w11 M1mmle'1 Mlnl'lolt 1"11 8r1d 511111 ICttil!td Ille 1werd. 1(1rl klllt~r h Oiihltndlt1<1 Journ1ll1! •rid Otvld OePPtr ffttho"-.1 the K1thv Ccomb1 Awt (d.
"am11n1lrln1: Gi ll Hlllgrtn, Btth
Croc~tr Homtr1',.~tr ct tomo,.,ow, Ntncv Otchntr. Crl1co Ouhltndl»G S!udtnl ln Home Economic•.
M111lc: llcbl•I LVMd, J<ihn Phlllo
SOll•I Bind Aw1rd: 1<1v Mo,,lson. Ne. tlOll•I Ord11$1r1 A11ocl1Tlan, 1n<i Merk "ldrlc/\ 1nd Melh1e Tennlllt, Ou•sten· dll'IQ Cl\orl ! MW!lbers.
lu1hi.H 111uc11ton: Soohc...,cre1 ..:. llt.e.«1 Stn<ntt, lypl11g ""d Jenll'°'
Sw1n1on, 1cCC1UnllnQ.
J11nli>r1 -Jt1nnt Hell, hDlnQ 1
O•DOrlh (.ook, >llort/\tnd; Jr!ltt• JohnlOfl 1nd Elaine 51101r. 1ccoun!lno.
$•nlor1 -Gall MllleQe. 1ec:re11rl1I: tltlll1 """' ll:teJi, clerlcfl; Nancv Kunkle, dl>lrlbutlvt ed.,c11h1n, Ind
And••• 51111, I CCOun!lnQ
0"/11ndlt1Q l)u1lnt>1 •1v<ient, "'n<irta Down f"ll S11t1.
l1r 1' AIMtlln: Fou•·Vt•r v1r1llv !•Hermen -!Ctn Htl'1tr, 1ennl1, •na l(u<I Kumanol:, 1wimml"'I i~d wattr
POIO.
LtUt t wln11111 wl!h 11\t flltht•J or•dt Point 1 v..-i11<1 lnclUO. llv1 tr\lhmen
w!!ll 1>1rletl 1!r1lohl..A tv••IQft ~•.Ol:
Simon ftouohtv, llk1>1rd 8 urru ... John L1w11, 1'\1(11111 Mt llt"'l'fr Ind Reber! '"· kol>omo•t -Greci w1n•c,, l '
l •t rlOt.
Junior -John ft laMJ led, J.I IYfflQt.
Seniors -11.tn NtlHtr t nd S!tn Vtr·
mund, bolh • c.
OUTITANDING SCHOt.AltS
8v lhPlrtmtnl, 1nt ou1111ndlM1 11vc1tnll r..:1111nluil ror f<'.flo i11!1c 1<Mtvt mtn1 1r1: 1ocl1! •tltnct. Ci1u<111 C•rv.,: sc:ltn<1, Gr111orv
!tote: m•tl'ltm11lc1, Cht<I Grlm1h1w, I nd Enollsh. ClfldV llo!!or!. Sien Vermund, Jotl•I 1clenc1, Grtl
11011, fOrt l11n l•nuv•11t1, "'ndfH $16'1, builnts\' Niner Ochs,,..r, . ho m • ..:onom (I. 1nd 511ve Tttltr, 1n<iu1trl•I
t rh . 11nk el Amtrk t PllQut wlnnt rs 1r1:
K""ntt/\ Nel.,er. 1dtnct • n d ''"lhll!T'•Tlc1; M~rk Aldrich, !Int '''" Jtntl ~1tnlori. lll>trtl 1rr1. i nd Jell (Mid. VOCl!l<l"t l 1rll.
Amtrlctll l t tllll r<"Cf'ilnlllori lo Jchn
l l1noled, llov•' S!1lt dtlr111lt •nd A1trld S1or1, Glrl1' Stile dtlflttlf.
I'. 1. Motf1! Aw1nl1 Oftltll!td by !he M1111n1 ID Ro~rl Mtcdontld 1nd 51111 Friend, !resnmen; Sut KtU •nd Ct1>
j-1, •OP11Cmort1, M1rl1 Rice• tfld ofln Mlle~, 1vnlor1. ~nd J1MI 51tnlon
tnd Kirt 1\11 d1•, 1tnlor1.
AIA Ard•lltch>r•I 0111111 Com1>tt1llon .. inner\: Steve 1 ... tt•. 11,.1 11l1c1 111([
"'''"" Ad1m1. third 1111(1. C•rH r Mtdtllllll Awlnl to !!Ip !OP lndu1rr111 tr11 11u<11nr, llt.,. s..,.tt,
Htlrt 0 1m1 1.IUl!lftl l.wtrd to 1ht
turit1nd1n11 llMllot" bo~. J!m Cott.
Htrtltr Sl'IClll•IMI C111ltr IM•tf111nll Ai10Cl1t1on r1cotnl11•I ...,.. 1tnlor1 m1lnti lnl"'1 1 Ptr11<! 1 r • 1 I 1 h, t ·"' i vt rtil : Cll'lllr Bottorf, Ken Nl•IH•. Jtnel !Inion .,,. Slfll Ytrmund.
t.A Art Ctnltr CIV"" •etotnl!IOll ol l i \lrlt Andt"Oll 1rid Aobln Wtrd. Htl1mtrlr Ari Conl11t, £ 11 t
ThDmOMtn, !I'll plttt wln"tr.
1.-01.TS U.LUSTl.ATIO Awtrd CPI Mfflt fer ln!tr1Chol11!lc wlllntt,
M•rlllP "'111n. Vtltrl ttl •I ,.ort!'n Wirt tl>t•Cll conte1t wln!lll'"I, Glt l JohnlCft 111([ K<l"ttd C!t rk.
1<11 Ctubb•r ti lht Yt1r, C.h~
C.rlm1/\1w.
G111>d Clllu" ,,.,,,,. o! tn• O&uvht••~
01 tl'lt! Amtrlt1n lll1~olutlcn, Mtrllvn
W!!l1cn. 111111 Olrf .. l~I Y11r. WM!nt• Tt r·
N . Lton MH~I AWlfd !111a1 rult IWlfdl to c11t1t1ncll"9 Junior 11udtnl in mA1h • !\Cl tclt Mt, 1l11lt Krl1 •rl<! Ptul
... lflf'Y· S.lt1m111 1l lht T11r, Junlot Acnl..,-mtnl M !to~!~t•n C11itorn11.
Clltd Grlm>ntw.
OUhti lldlna t!ulllnh In lcrpl1n
l•ntt""'' t r•: S.lnbh -Ktflntth N•l11•r 1nd Jt Mf tint"": f'•-"(.11 -Clftd• Kunr; Grmtn -l"""rl Frlntt\1
1"11 Gt .. 0'1' ltll'l!'I Lll•n -Lflllt ltbl:lt t nd 0111 Fl-··
Sl"ICIAL A'#l.ltDI
link el A1111rk1 C1t1ilk t11 w1n111•1
t••: C/\ed Grif!'l1h1w, mt lll; llltlllnl l H . t1b0"1tl0f)' M;lfl'ttl ~VMft Mullo:tf. mu•k· Evt Tllom...,..1.. trl. Ctll'lt!flnt ll!:bv, dr1m1. l11Cl!\Cl1 •Cllorl, E111llt11,
Choir Nominee
Sue Peterson or Costa Mesa.
1 fre shma n at Csillfornia
Lutheran Coll<!ge. Thousand
Oab, has been selected for
the college's so.member
Concert Choir.
l ...:"c'-::_"::::"c":":·:':':':"':':"__:_':"c":':~:·c::":":'_:•:•:•_':':'":':· __________ ccc"-"-"=-cc"c'·c''=-cccc.c::::::c":··--=":':':':'c":":":":"-":":':":':'':":'-•:•:•:•:•c~:':·--'-c"c:.="::=-=·:·:::_.:;::.="::::::_:':·::: _ _::':~:':':'-'='=':":·__;':':":":'"c':'....;':':"":::.'-:":':'~:.c"_"'_sc1101•_'_"_'''-----·
INSTAN T
COFFIE
GIRLS' Swim Suits
3.98 ,. I
-··"" ----''"'" -. -· .. ~-/." "Hershey-ets" ..
/11)'/l i&J Chocol ate Covered Peanu\s
A '!,/ FAMILY PACK ••. lw~ A I t..'f!.~J/ J.m~ 1;wont'~ v.11h dell· 59c
-...., ·~ rlOU'i !Tiii~ CllOCOIJ1e CO.I·
1n£. Rei. li9c 15 tl. 11. ..... ,.. --.. ·---·. -.. __________ .. """'_ --
"5-Day" Stay Dry
Du1I Aclioa Arrti·P1rsplr1Rl.
111.1.ag 49c •e1. t.•! 59c 5az. 811. ___ ......, .~
DISPLAY THE AMER ICAN FLAG PROUDl Y
3x5 Ft. Flag Kit
Co1w-fJ;t LOlton Joinled
b f' pol~. L~lden err J·
fl'~nt, v.aU t·ar~~I t~r
moun!ing. W/Brochu·e
ltn the Ila~.
. . -· = •• .·.·.··-_!!!! 3.79
12" x 18" Flag •.•.• 39'
Distil ltd loRdon Dry
MacKinnon's
SCOTCH '°Pr.
Canadian Reserve
St. Dennis
SCOTCH IOPI.
BltRde•
Imported From £•1lan• v, Cal .
J&BRare
16 Pl.
~'t Cal.
"·
"·
"·
Gt.
fol maK1mum PoSS1bl~
luung "hOIL l 1u1 I HI
l·eb1e ~~o~ to m-ure 1
l.irg•r ~""enlage of
hoo~td SlUAfS on a fl;,h.
Rtl-1.39
EDDIE POPE
Lures
[1ritbe4 ru r1i!Mre
P1lisb.
2201 .GIANTSIZE
Ivory
llQUID
DETIRGINT
'Super Duper' Lures
SOUTH llND All th' i!art, d1i'!l and Y .. ~a:~
n! a 11~~ 1ronll();1• I 1lttd w1!h
Iii"'<{ I :lfl•d 1·~~:" hooi
ll!f. !le
Scooper Net
A f'WiT1iTI PJ J Sh ! PENGUIN -P~, .11.e l!lil!ill ace 0 op '"' ""m"'"" "'"'"· polyttlt}lefle r.ett1ng "// Casting ouTFIT Fu s111 w11er '"'"'' "'"'" 1• • '
·11" x 2S f f, Sil(
Reynolds
WRAP
ll~n• f1il
, liem Cit .•• Sp:iflll~9..
our•bl~ p!i,lw. R•.:i11y
I ,tega.il! Ciloo:>e ham
Cold, A~ocado or litti·
ger111!.
''fi$~b1ck" ... W~L·
hies and wiggles at
th~ same lune. Oa11s
lrom 4 to 6" in each;
d11etfion. Bright col·
Ill;. Ref. l.39
99~
.. Tuni !lint" Red -7 Pc. lubular Jla\•, 4, n~t. 2 49 ~
~IFelheJd action. 4 ChroirM: plated ~p1nn·ng It&. 2.11 • -· '·
gullles. 9 ft. lenB!h. 17 88 '"'''Ree•.,,.'''''·',,.. .. 0" '"''d•d """ Sp"1nn·1ng Reel or nl{l~O line. Cd~ls l1rv• ~ ~rPam. WATl l
j ~ ... -... --.-------·::::::! l7o;;;,·~·;T:c -...... ~--··•'
Re1. 19.99 N9n2/6DllAP • P[NN -W/f1ll R1111 0111 SJst1m
~:~~.Spinning Reel .. , •• A ...... Spinning Rods '"•ALT w.,,. :;~1·1~;·d1110
\1ghl. ~moolh <!II·;, 1ng. deltf!ndable, Pi·
DAIWA .•. With &eu Ratio 3,• lo 1 1 .. I (I• " 1u~11! tr '~ •• :1. N '" d·~la"h;,~I~ r~I~ !1Jnd1~ .a~d 11 49 7 89 1,·11fr1~ l1\~ r1.:,mEd sn•nn1r.r gu1d• dnd ''' !~~ Ct11. l'l·d .
:i:e I LJ I, w1lh I ·'· u~r 1,rl1n1t 1~..i r.1 ~r.d hOM :. t.1:n~" I ~m 8 or !l It. •
lnrn · Prrm ,1~ 1"1, ~ I· .1;1· Rt1. 12.95 II SPl/9 • J kl B
I ru·.a~. J in~,,tap.i •\f P1A NO ac e ox ~.;iy~uh •• JID 19 1. •--''-------'~-----'----------~ lhO d!"~ W1d! ••• "" 11.88 *""" """ Spinning Outfit ~~ :·:~;.~::.,;~ NJlllO 11 0:' R~. hravy dult t~.I. 2~ y~. 1 e Grt•~ poly !)'·
HUCK flNN l dD1t1ty 4 lb. m:iMhlallll"lll hill' or l/l yo~., 0 95 ' 1cn~.
Spl. nn·1ng Out11•t . o! 6 lb. ~r ra!IO J IZ to I. L!ghlwe1gi\t,cor-3 88 10\1on r"'1~1anl. I 77~ Roi, cbeose Imm 6~
for fresb Walir -O~r~ ~1 /It 2 Pc shall. Rt ( 12.9! • Rt1. 4.41 I 51100 "
, '"" ·~1· 2""''"'" 0 1,_,., ..... ai -' r•••M•s Ice Chest 11,d 11,ti 1r,u1~t.'.,100\J'O,
, Picnic Plates
t Ovd! ~hape w11n ~ com·
p~rlmPnl •:. Al~o n•ce for
pool ~1de rn\Prlainin~.
A"',t ~r11M (0101 •
-· " ~
10 oz. Tumblers
! laMLl•I•~ ••• K•eD'>
4 te-1e1aRP~ l;tit er r.olo!
~ "ln1a lifwlt.lnt ~p. Si;;1~kk
crn~ Jain r~1~\..n\ A\:\. -
.......... -..
ti Jn. !i!)t·Pengum ~;{l~O· rill
'"'"""' ''"'· Mou""'"'" Sleeping Bags :. .. ;.-1
' 'Rt&. 7.49 1$88 6.88 Sold l•clu1lvely 01 S••·•n ~ · • 1
"COMMAN0£R" ••• Blue due~ rover, tomfortab!e
to!lon Hannel J1ning oolves\er hbre
lnd111"l•J ltt'',
pl~ tic lln~r.
Wrlr~1 & drain.
44 01,: I[~,
l'l~I··: -v,.th 50 {.d·
I l)rlul ~1r,h1's. fun Irr 88 ' ::~'.~:':~~:-.. -~--~ -·
Pliers •1sHUTH batting. rull :.11~ 15 79 IJllOP/. 100 1nrn
Re1. 11.91
lll!D 9.89 PENGUIN -!.~!rd ! • oi, r
ploledagain:!2 49 (orrositn.
Rec. 2.89 •
11~0lt.Rtz. 17.81 1 &~
"ll£UTENAH1 .. , .. B·ow~ ~1,plin rovPr, !a~ p:in\~otton llonne! hn1n7. 9 98 rJJ!'_.
?11~/' ~·p~'~11~g; ,~,, 'J1il/ In h ~11•. i'/1\h c~11ymG ba~ 1 6i7Q • f1I ~
,~
I Gal. Jug w11•
FAUCCT •1 T~umos
!~15~;~r: 2 89
. Beach Towels
Jai:QU~ld WO~P/I , , •
&Glurt~J !ijllrrn-. , , •
aJ:.n ~~·mt?d d·'~1~r.~
on ~h11e. w1:~ ll+nged
e11d:. larg• · 11e 2 Burner Stove
hy COLlMAN I 1·y PM1a~.1 1 ;,
211 Pt 7~r.~.
.¥425[49g
Lantern
COLEMAN
Re1. 3.5! •
J Man Nylon Tent Rez. I.!!
"H~1t1r's"l'/1th virr1I aylcn l!oor. Comple1~,
12.69
S1ng'e manrl~.
(OIT'PJc~ l1Khl
v.f1gM. I J' ~··
high, I 1• pl, luel 'apal'.ltf. ,,-,,,,.-
1eJdy 111 ·:et ur,
Ten! llltf~d~ rrJr
]lppef~1 \lo l!I00.1
with nykln $C~•en,
l a1~~. at!rarliY"!
!>h1•o; in bnll1~t
f'nlor $.Various sty It•
10 r.l:ttlse hom. JD ~
60" !.t1'. lie[.
ANCHOR HOCKING
Glassware
"Stowaways"
in Honey Gold Color.
Q~w
15or.lcelr• 711.Juice
3i1.00 5:1.00
4 :1 .00
CERAMIC
Cookie Jars
COLEMAN i200Al95
f~~L .99' 11.39
•••m Motorcycles
''Tric Up" ••• i ~ Sr~I~
rn odel:. supe1 -d~talle d
rhrom~ "nR•ne and wh•rl 3 29 :p..~·'~-O;erdil lfng\h ll
inrhr :, •
3.89
le1.J2.95114& 27 .88 2.95
IAUIR & llACK
Swim Supports
Cconom1 Styl~ ~ ••• last drying
1 otton
S11e~ SM L 99c
f/•1J1" ~!~I~ , ,
Id 1! dt'/111~ n1·
J .~. S11~ S M l.
Zories
Thonf~ lor s~m'IL~r.
Lidies'
C~ild11R's 11d M11's 19c 29c
lA DllS' Flower
IORllS
Pretty end Col·
~rlul.
PORTABLE Black & White TV
HITACHI -All trJnsi;IDr de~igried
rm dr!v1~~. c.1mping. boating. Com· 11995 pact, JS ~q. inch P•ttv1~.
Rei. 129.95 114·54
AMIFM Cassette Recorder
llALTONE -"Soun~1gn .. , .•
r11~h flt.ltll)ll tonltols, 1emote tn1i.e
w/sli)!Ld, Black, wtlrlll ltim.
ltt. «.!5 I 1131
Tape Recorder
NORllCO -Pu~h ~ut!on tlPtld!IOa.
Automd1!C record l~Yel. Rich ~.oond.
11320
3995
3995
ro1AR010 Focus.ed Flash
C.\MlaA -(leetr1c ~ye, e!ectromc
ahutter, easy lo~d1nR.
• ••. 55.95 14t0 4995
Coloroack II
CAMERA -Color
& M~rk & ... ,~,re FREE 5x7
f NlARGEMENT
Wall banger •NT•oouc10RY p11cc
LIQUIUR 10 Pl. 5 29
J11t 1dd 1rao1e j1!ct. SI~ •
lt0bl5 I AM ti 10 PM-7 DAYS A Weck
NlliW,OIT lilA(l'I
1flt !"'Int Av-.
Wtslcl!fl 1"1111
l·h1f *!
.,.
Coupcn wtlt be 1el11m!d
•ilh ltl/ roll of fl.oia·
1o~r uro, 12s. 121,
l l~) Ml'n subminK ltr
developm& and pr1nt1nr • Wall banger
COCKTAIL
INTIDDUCID!Y PRICE
!ti 2.99
HUNTINGTON llACH
A••m• & l ..... hWJI HUNT INGTON ll'ACM
''""'0f11 a ldlnttr
HOP• ' •UNOAY
f !llkl#:i l
I D'P
l'/i~ film, magi.
aitie;, allllim.
•••. 21.9!
IAXl!IS
17.88 GfFIR IDGD II
SAY·DN ONLY
Mii !llN·MIY lllM
'
Q DAILY PILOT N Wtdl!fld~Y. M•y 2f,. 1971
I
SALT AND PEPPER SHAKERS
HAND CUT GLASS
IOXEO sns OF 4 -I ONLY
Ori •. S.00 ,99 NOW
SUMMER WHITE ON WHITES
'f£RDAGE
100 COTTON CLOQUE' SUITING-
MINIC£Rf PROCESSED~
10 YDS. ONLY Orlt. l.•8 NOW
3-PC . CORNER SECTIONAL
e $P£NISH STYLE, GOLD COLOR e 1 ONLY-AS IS
ORIG . J9t.OO NOW
SHOE DEPT.
INFANTS BLACK PATENT DRESS SHOES
I
Str.1p over ln1t1p. E.1sy lo 1 88
c:l11n. . · • Orig. •.II NOW •
INFANTS CRINKLE PATENT BOOT
F.11hion 011l9n. Composition 2 88
10/e, .. ........ . Orig. 4.99 NOW •
GIRLS BLACK PATENT STRAP
"T" 1trap 1tyling. Smooth
patent vinyl .. . Ori9. 4.U
WOMENS ASSORTED HEELS
From regul1r stock. Better
qu.1llty, . Orig. 1.99
WOMENS ASSORTED HEELS
From regul•r stock. Not
111 sizes .. ... Orig. 6.11
MENS SLIP-ON OXFORDS
NQW2.88 ·
Now4.88
Now3.88
Leather upper1. Str•p
d11ign .. Orig. ll.U NOW 10.88
I WOMEN'S ACCESSORIES I
MIRRQR.GQ.LIGHTLY
Electric m.1k1-up mirror for
p1rf1ct f.1c:1. . ... .... .-.. Orig. 20.00
SUEDE HEADBANDS
For th• young 1t heart. Save
NOW
big now. . . ... Orig. 2.00
14.88
NOW • 25
WOMEN'S PANT SUIT CLEARANCE
TWO-PIECE STYllS -
FASHION COLORS
0,1,. 12.00 t• 15.00 NOW 788
GIRLS FASHION CLEARANCE
SlllRTS, rANTS , SPORTSWEAR
l,ASHION DRESSES REDUCED
GROUP I GROUP II
Otlt. l .00·4.00 Orlf. 4.00·S.00
NOW 1.88 NOW 2.88
WOMENS HANDBAG CLEARANCE
l"ATENTS, VINYLS AND SUEDES IN CASUAL
OR TAILORED STYLES -INCLUDING FRINGES
GROU, 1· GROU, II
Ori,. 4.00·•.oo Ori9. 7.00·•.oo
NOW 2,88 NOW 4,88
SYNTHETIC FASHION WIGS
TWO POPULAR STYLES IN IASY-TO·CAltl
FOii: SYNTHETIC FlllRS
"Side Port" •tyl-Orl,, 25.00 NOW 19.88
.. Mio" •hort •tyl........OrMJ. 1t.oo NOW 13.88
COSTUME JEWELRY CLEARANCE
MANY IONDS OF FA!l.HION
NECKLACES, IRACELns, PINS
GROUP I GROUP II GROUP Ill
Orl9. 1.00·2.00 Ori,. 2.00 ·Orlt· J.OO
NOW 44¢ NOW 99¢ NOW 1.44
GIRLS SKIRT CLEARANCE
FANTASTIC YALUIS IN
A.LINES, PLEATlD, AND IELTED STYLES
SIZES ]., .. SIZES 7·14
Orlt. J.00·4.00 Ori,. S.00
NOW 88¢ NOW .1.88
CLEARANCE DOOR BUSTERS!
GIRLS KNEE HIGH HOSE
Silk LOOK STYLING
STRETCH SIZES NOW 22 ¢
MENS DRESS AND SPORT SHIRTS
ASSORTED STYLES & COLORS,
PRINTS 1..SOLIOS. IRO!(EN SIZES.
Orig. J.oo.s.oo NOW 99¢
TERRY WRAP W/MATCHING SCUFF
WHITE ONLY
II ONLY
Orlt. 2.98 NOW
BOYS SPORTSHIRTS
lAllGE SELECTION OF COLORFUL PLAIDS
SHORT SLEEVES.
l"ENN·l'REST-NO·IRON. SIZES '·11
Ori.. 1.88·2. 98 NOW
66¢
.88
GIGANTIC PANT CLEARANCE
RIDE-ON TOY VEHICLES
POWERRIDE CYCLE AND DUNE 12 88 IUGGY -IATTERY OPERATED
TOUGH AND DURAILE.
0"9· U . n NOW ill
BOYS STRAP OXFORD
IROWN VINYL STYLE
COMPOSITION SOLE
NOT ALL SIZES.
Orig, J.IJI NOW 44'
HOUSEHOLD WET MOP
e RUST PROOF -SCRATCH FREE e J7 ONLY
ORI~. ttt NOW
GLOTUFT BEDSPREADS
10¢
MANY FASHION COLORS
Pill.CEO TO SELL -20 0 11ly
Orl9. '·'I NOW1.88
RIFLE SCOPE
Wtdnrsda1. May 26, 11}71 N PILOT ·AOVERTISEr. 8
I
NEWPORT BEACH .
FASHION ISLAND
STORE HOURS
MON.·FRI. 10-9:30
TUES.-WED.·THURS. 10·9
SAT. 10-6
SUN. 12·5
WOMENS DRESS CLEARANCE
POPULAR STYLIS FROM OUlt
STOCK AT GRlAT SAYINGS TO YOU
GROUP I GROUP II
Ori •. 7.00·t.00 Orlt. 11.00.1 J.oo
NOW 4.88 NOW 7,88
WOMENS ACCESORY CLEARANCE
SCA.ltVfS, IOUTIQUlS, C'ilOYlS AND
NOTIONS AT lOW CLU.IANCI fllCIS
GROUP I, GROUP II GROUP Ill
Orlt. 1.2s.1.10 0"9. J.00·2.50 Or)f. 4.00·S.00
Now50c Now99¢ NOW 2.50
HOUSEWARES CLEAN-UP
CHOOS( FROM GLASS sns
88'
STAINLISS IOWLS, SALT
AND rrrPIR SETS OR GADGETS.
Orif. 1.Jt t• 1.•t NOW
BEDDING DEPT. I
SLEEPING BAG COMFORTER
Blue/y•llow polka dot1.
D•cor1th1e & cozy .. -·. Orig. 13.00 NOW 10.88
I SPORTING GOODS I
BYRON NELSON ALUMINUM GOLF SET
I lrons-3 wood1. 81 88 J 1•t• only. Orig. 104.11 NOW •
FISHING AND HUNTING CHAIR
Fold 'n ""Y. 5 88 S only. . .. . Orig. 10.99 NOW •
MENS OR WOMENS SAUNETTE SUIT
On1 1i11 fits all. 88
17 only. . Orig. 3.tl NOW •
FISHING VEST
A110 1 llf• J•cket. 15 88
3 only. .. Orig. lS.91 NOW •
FOREMOST SP IN·CASTING ROD
Cork h•ndl._s•.
9 only. ... Orig. l.00 NOW 1.88
DUCK BILL FISHING HAT
Size1 s. M & L. 44
19 only. . . Orig. 1.19 NOW •
FOREMOST WOOD TENNIS RACQUET
V.1riou1 grip 1111s. 5 88
5 only. Orig. 7.99 NOW •
FOREMOST 600 SLALOM WATER SKI
NOW 15.88 C•t•m•r•n bottom •
3 only. OriQ. 19.91
GOLF YARDAGE METER LEATHER HAIR GRIPS
G•nuin• le.1th1r for
c11u.1I h1lrdo1. . . ..... Orig. 2.00
TREMENDOUS SELECTION OF CASUAL 1 99 88 & DRESS SLACKS, JIANS IN SOLIDS 4
99 OR !"Lt.IDS. SIZES '·11, SLIM & REGS. 3 88 NOW e SOME HUSKIES Ori •• J,,8--4.•I NOW .I Ori,. 18.00 NOW • . Orig. 5.tl NOW •
Cert mounter!.
11 only ..
MINI HITCH HOSIERY
Thigh-high hos• end light
control brief •. . Orig. 4.00 Now2.88 ~============~~==============~'-~-G_A_RD_E_N_S_HO_P~__.I I BOY'S & INFANT'S I YARDAGE DEPT • WOMENS NYLON HOSE
:;:::~I :i:~11~1 end 1h1d11 ........ -... -... NOW 3 / 1.00
WOMENS HALF SLIPS
lOO•/. nylon tricot . ......................................... NOW .77 Broken 1iie1 ..
LACE CUP BRAS
Underwired style.
Fa1hion color1 . Orig. 4.00 NOW 1.88
I MEN'S DEPT. I
100% POLYESTER ANKLE PANTS
Summer colors.
E~uy care.
MENS SUITS
13 only. Odd 1h11. Check
.. Orig. 10.00
your 1i1 e. Orig. SS.00
BETTER QUALITY SUITS
Towncr•ft plul. 116 only.
Mo1t 1i11s. . Orig. IS.00 to 90.00
S7 MENS SPORT COATS
F•ncies or 1olirl1.
Good 1i1es. . Ori1. 39.9S
SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS
Assort~ pl.1id1 •nd 1trip11.
Broken 1i1e1. . Ori9. 3.91
MENS KNIT SHIRTS REDUCED
so,.-. Polye1t1r/so-;. Cotton. Sm.111
ind medium on ly. Orig. S.00
MENS SWEATER CLEARANCE
A11orted 1le1vl111 1tyl11.
Broken 1111•. . . Orig. 7.98-9.91
Now6.88
NOW 29.88
NOW 69.00
NOW 29.88
Now2.88
Now3.88
Now4.88
I WOMEN'S DEPT. I
100'/o ACRYLIC CARDIGAN
Lim• end N1wy.
Limited qv.1ntity. Orig, 11.00 Now5.88
SHORT SLEEVED RIBBED SHIRTS
Ph1ck1t front. 1 88 Si1e 32·36 . \. Orig. 4.00 NOW •
SUMMER SKIRTS
Print• end 10Hd1.
Si1e1 7/1 -lS/1,,
CASUAL JACKETS
Ori9. S.DQ..6.00
B1ttl1 look 1tyl!ng . Sb11 smell,
mod lum, •nd l1rg1. Ori9. 7.00•t.00
ALL WEATHER COATS
Vinyls end popllns includlng the
wit look. . Orl9. 20.00.22.00
POLYESTER SHORT COATS
100% polyester rib. 81191, blue,
end yellow. . Orig, ll.00
Now3.88
Now4.88
NOW 12.88
NOW 17.88
BOYS SPORT SHIRTS
Large colorful selection of pl.1 Jd1 .1nd 1olid1. long 1 22
•nd short 1leev11. Si1e1 6-11. Orig. 1.11-1.99 NOW •
JR . BOYS DENIM VESTS
Colorful, stylish. ioo-;. cotton
d1nim, S·M-L. .. ... Orig. 4.91
BOYS DENIM VESTS
Stylish herringbone w11v•. 100-; •
cotton. Si1e1 S·M·l . .......... . Orig. 5.tl
Now2.88
Now3.88
JR. BOYS SUITS
F.1shion 1trlp11, 1m1rt doubte-bre.11ted styling. 8 88
Sl11s 4-7. Slim ind r1gul.1r . Orig. 10.11 NOW •
BOYS CASUAL PANTS
Pl11tlc teething rail. Double 1ide1. 55.88
3 only. Orig. 63.91 NOW
TODDLETIME COORDIMATCH PLAYWEAR
Colorful long or short p.1nt1, . 88
polo1hlrts. Shet 4-6T. , ..................... NOW •
COLORFUL COORDINATES
Polo shirt, boxer 1hort1. 100 -;.
cotton. Sl1e• 2-4. NOW 1,33
INFANTS MAPLE ROCKER
E.1rly Am1rl c1n styling.
3 only. Orig. 11 .49
I TOY DEPT.
EASY CURL LIGHT UP VANITY
I
or SUZY HOMEMAKER TRAVEL MIRROR 5 88
You choose. Orig. 7.11 end I .II NOW •
ASSORTED TOYS FOR GIRLS AND BOYS
£v1ry toy from A to z. 66
Spectacular 11le. .. NOW •
KENNER PLAY ANO SHOW PROJECTOR
An ecluc.1tlonal and •musing toy. S1v1r1I 8 88
t.1p11 .1v1il1bl1. Orig. 10.99 NOW •
TONKA MEDIUM SIZE CAR CARRIER
Sturdy 1t1el construction. 4 88
Tonk• tough. Orig. 6.44 NOW •
UPPER LEVEL
POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS
Textured 1olid1, f11hion colors.
90 y.1rd•.
DRESSCREPE CLEARANCE
Acetate end nylon. Av.1il.1n11 1n
in 1olld colors. 7S yd1 ... Orig. 7.•9 yd.
SHANTUNG CREPE CLEARANCE
609/. rayon 40-; • .1c1t1te, Av1il.1bf1 in solid
colors. 150 yds. only. Orig. 1.39 yd.
COTTON AND COTTON BLENDS
Full s.111, sportcloth, more.
Stock-up now.. . Orig .. 19·1.0t yd.
3.99 yud
NOW 1.44
NOW .77
NOW
NOW 3.88 M1ny 1tyl1s and color1. Now 1t a
reduced price. . Orig. 5.00
LARGE SHIELD AND WEAPON
Blick/gold Sp•nbh 1tyllng.
Appror.j}nat•l1, 7'x7' . .. Orig. 20.00
HANGING LAMP CLEARANCE
NOW 15.88
S1v1ral styles. Big saving• now. 9 88• 16 88
..... . Orig, IJ.11-21.11 NOW • • I CURTAINS AND DRAPERIES I
DRAPERY FABRICS
Trem1ndou1 11l1ction. Many f.1bric• & color• .
550 y1rd1 only. Specl1I Buy ........................ .. • 72 y1rd
DECORATIVE TASSELS
100-;. reyon t.111el1. Hundr1d1 of us••·
so o~ly, Orl9. 1.69 NOW .66
I HOUSEWARES I
STEAK PLATTERS e Serve 'em hot.
• 27 only. . Orig. 2.98 NOW 1.22
DELUXE IRONING BOARD
• Multl·posltlon.
• 3 only. Orig. 16.tt NOW 13.88
L---~:~~-::!_E_L_R_!_ ___ , TRASH CONTAINERS Lif1time guerent••·
34 only •.
BISSELL SHAMPOOER
Orig. 7.99 NOW 5.88
9.88 MOD WATCHES
Colored di1l1, m1n7 with ch•in &
Doubl• action for c•rpet. NOW
l••ther 1tr11p1. .. ....... Orig, 14.tS NOW 9.88 t only. Orlt . 12.ff
1·PC. COOKWARE SET SCUBA WATCHES
W1t1r-t11t•
5 ATM Orl9. 16.t5 NOW
LADIES' HIGH FASHION WATCHES
M1ny b1.1utl,ul
1tyl11. Orl9. 22.50 NOW
LADIES" HIGH FASHION WATCHES
Antiqued goldtn-tone
3-ply 1t1lnles1 stul. 1 4 88
10.99 1•,..••.•r_._. ----·-·.o_._'•.· .".·" __ N_o_w ___ ·_.,.
14.50 I HARDWARE DEPT. I
PENNCRAFT 71;.-· SAW
""f ____ G_l_R_L'_S_D_E_P_T_. __ __,I 1"·'•h. CAM;;~··~E;;
LITTLE SKIMP KNIT SWEATER -
15.99 10 imp. 1 % HP. Cut• 2x4 1t •s•.
13 only. Orig. 36.ff
I 9" AUTO POLISHER .
6 Imp. Yt HP. 2·1peed.
2 only. Orlf. 4t.tt
NOW
NOW
26.88
26.88
Perl.ct to 1cc1nt
1ny blou••· . ..~ .....
GIRLS HANDBAGS
P1tottt oM.wlnyl 1tylM h1
•••hlon color&. .
. _ Orl9. 2 .... NOW 1.22
NOW e88
•.
PENNCREST MOVIE PROJECTOR
Sup. I, auto thr11din9.
Ont only. OrlJ . 59.95
POLAROID COLOR PACK II
Color or l&W plctur11. luUt In fl1•h
1tt1chm1nt. 2t only.
NOW 34.88
22.88
,,,,, .. VARIABLE DRILL
Rev1r1lble. 2.6 •mp. Y4 HP.
5 only. •. · Orig, 24.tt
WALNUT SHELVING
J6xl•x12. •4630. Special luy.
24 un its only.
NOW 16.88
8.44
ELECTRIC VACUUM
Th• •••Y w•y to r1k1.
1 only, 0Jig. 99.ff NOW 77.00
60" FIBERGLASS TRELLIS
Tr.1 ln your climbin9 pl.1nt1 on '•m.
16 only. Orig. 1.44 NOW .44
7'd' STORAGE BUILDING
R1nchwood 1tyl1. lnclude1 floor.
1 only._ . Orig. 137.94
7'x9' STORAGE BUILDING
R1nchwood 1tyl1. Includes floor.
1 only. . .. . Orig. 111 .94
IO'xlO' STORAGE BUILDING
Ch1l1t style. lnclud•• floor.
1 only. .. Orig. 165.tt
ALUMINUM MAG WHEELS
NOW 73.99
NOW 94.99
NOW 115.88
Fords & Chevy1. Deluxe spok• magi. 4/80 00
32 only.. . .. Orig. 37.SO NOW •
HANDY MAGNETIC ASH TRAYS
Colorful, pr.1ctic1 I.
24 only. . .... Orig. 1.•t NOW .25
CHROME WHEEL COVERS
14" cone 1tyle, Whll• they lest.
4 11t1 only. .. .... Orig. 10.11 NOW 4.88
V.W. FLOOR MATS
White or black. E.1rly models. 2 88
11 only, Orig. 4.49 NOW •
WIDE TREAD SCAT TRACK TIRES
60 11rl11 low profile 1port cer sl11.
J60x15. 27 only, . . . Orig. 51 .00 NOW 40.88
I HOME ELECTRONICS I
STEREO CONSOLE W/f. TRACK
• Medlt1rr.1n•1n 1tyt1. 299 00 2 only. ...... . .. Orig. 499.00 NOW •
lS" COLOR STEREO THEATRE
NOW 549.00 e Spanish 1tyl1 c.1bln1t.
1 only. . Ori9. 6t9.00
AM·FM STEREO TABLE RADIO
• Wood•n c•blnet. 39 88 2 only. . O•lg. 7U5 NOW •
STER~O CONSOLE
• Orltnt•I 1tylling.
1 only'. Orig. 299.tJ NOW 199.00
ELECTRIC DRYER e White.
1 only. o,;g. IOI.OD NOW 88.00
I FURNITURE DEPT. I
PECAN CHINA CABINET
.. Orlt. l30.00
PECAN DINING TABLE
Orig. 114.00
SWIVEL ROCKER
Orl9. 169.00
3-PC. DINETTE SET
Orl1. 79.00
1·PC. DINETTE SET
Ori9. 169.95
NOW
NOW
NOW
220.00
123.00
122.00
NOW 58.00
NOW 122.00
'' I
I'
J
•
.... . . _..__.,. __ _._ .. -..
Costa Mesa
EDITION N.Y. Stocks
• . ' ' voe. 64, NO. 125, 5 SECTION S, 72 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY;-l.A};Y !&, '.197 f TEN CENTS
en
Battle Resolved?
Data Service Dispute Under Study
By JACK BROBACK
01 1'111 Ol llY " .. I 1 1111
The battle royal between Orange Coun-
ty Tax Collector Robert Citron and ·Data
Services Director Robert farmer was
partially resolved Tuesday by the Board
of Supervisors.
They tossed the whole mess to the Data
Processing Committee and to the 1971
Grand Jury. Tbe comm ittee consist! of
uveral county department heads.
Supervisor David I:.. Baker who made
the motions said the Data Pr0C1?ssing
Committee should ronducl an analysis
Fight Not Over
and comparison of the ~idely differing
figures offered by Citron and Farmer.
The Grand Jury is to look into any possi·
ble wrongdoing on the part of either
department head .
The battle started three weeks ago
when Citron told lhe supervisors that he
could get a job we wanted done for
$20.000 less by giving it to an outside firm
rather than to Farmer's department.
The firm was Security Pacific Optima·
lion Servi~ of Lo.s Angeles, a subsidiary
of Security Pacific Bank.
Citron also blasted Data Services as in·
Mexican Airline Seeks
County Customs Unit
The Mexicans aren't giving up their
fight for rights to flights in and out of
Orange County Airport.
Aeron.aves de ~fexico applied to the
U.S. Customs and Immigration Bureau
for customs facilities there, the DAILY
PILOT learned today.
An Aeronaves official confinned he is
negotiating with Martin Aviation to lease
Family Filing
Wrongful Death
Suit With Mesa
A second Costa ~esa family has filed a
wrongful death claim stemming from a
tragic collision with a fire squad car,
bringing the total in claims against tht
city to $1 million .
Attorney John Downer is representing
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hern2ndez, 2183 Na-
tional Ave .. charging negligence against
the city and Fire Department Battalion
Chief Ron Coleman.
Edward Hernandez, 19, was killed Feb.
26 along with a 14-year-old girl passenger
in the crash with Chief Coleman 's squad
car at Estancia Avenue and Swan Drive.
Chief Coleman -en route to a fatal
rire on.,iln emergency basis -and the
dead girl's older brother both suffered
major injuries in the smashup.
The mother of the. other two victims
has also filed a claim for $500,000 for loss
Clf her daughter and long-term medical
cart for the son, who suffered brain in·
Juries.
California Highway Patrol officers
handled the investigation.
space for ticket rounters, baggage. hand!·
ing. and customs offices, in Martln'11
airport headquarters alonJ Campua:
Drive.
Fernan<» Coppel, district 1 a I e 1
manager in charge or local operations,
said the south-Of-the-.border airline Isn't
interested in flying to ~io u had
been reported by U.S. Rep. John Schmitt
(~Tustin). ·
"He twisted atl lhat up," ('.oppel charg-
ed. "We don't want Ontario."
Schmitz' effice had reported that
Aeronave.s had agreed to a State Depart·
ment request lo shift locations after local
o(ficials here rose. in unanimous protest
to the route 1greement signed by Presi·
dent Nixon last year.
Coppel said he is now awaiting a report
from a U.S. Customs inspection of the
Martin facilities ccnducted three weeks
ago.
If that's favorable, he gaid, Aeronaves
and Martin will complete negotiations for
a sub-lease to be presented to the Orange
County Board of Supervisors for ap-
proval.
It was the supervisors, along with the.
Newport Beach City Council, who led the
fight against the )()Cal route and Coppel
isn't really expe<:ting a change of heart.
''The Board of Supervisors, they don 't
want us to fly," he said.
"And the supervisors.ihey have to ap-
prove everything. You can't drive a nail
at the airport without their approval ," he
said.
Coppel said he isn't sure what will hap-
pen if customs approves the facilities but
the supervisors deny the sub-lease .
··1rs hard to say," Coppel offered.
hastily adding, ''Bul President Nixon
agreed."
He said he really didn't know if the
airline would appeal to the President.
"That's up to the director general in
{See AERONAVES, P1ge. Z)
Unslaied Trip
Spiked Candy Gives.. Teen Bad Time
OMAHA (UPI ) -It was an iMocent-
looking piece of candy and Marilyn
C\e\'eland, 17, didn't give it a 11econd
thought as she popped it into her mouth
while preparing to leave for school.
But several hours later. Marilyn, the
1970 Miss Teen-age Nebraska. woke up to
find herself ln a h~pital room .
That was the morning of May 11.
J..iarilyn returned to school for the first
time this week after "freaking out" on
the chocolate which she and htr family
believed was laced with LSD or some
other hallucinogen.
Marilyn. daughter or Mr. and Mrs.
Glen Cleveland, recalls she was changing
purses the morning she found the candy.
•·(have a sweet tooth ." she said, "so I
1te it and thought no more abQut il." She
then began to feel strange while dri ving
to school.
"All the cars looked li ke litUe colored
strings as they passed by," she said.
"After that, my mind just went blank un·
til t got to school.
"1 then rtmember get ting terribly
frustrated while tryina to get my locker
open, and some friends came over and
..
helped me." she said.
"They thought 1 was sick or drunk or
had food poisoning -they ju..t didn't
know what lo think," she said.
The. fri ends took her out of school and
gave her bread and tomato juice.
''I remember seeing a great big tomato
coming at me -all kinds of weird things
like thal. It was really scary.
"Then I woke up at Clarkson
(hospital)," she. said.
Marilyn spent two and 1 hall days In
the hospital and has aeen several phyal·
cians and 11 psychiatrist since.
She describes her experience& in th!
h<lspilal llS ''really II bummer. A lot or
times people's faces looked deformed,
and outside the window everything looked
really different.
"I Wouldn't want to ever go through it
again."
She 1ald she hoped her experience
might alt:rt others to the dangers of drug
use.
"The way I feel about It ts that It
wasn't worth Jt at ill'' sht says. "I don 't
gee how people lha.l do take. drugs can
just coMtanUy iee.p takJna: lht:m. l'd a:o
craey. ".
eff icient, wasteful and ine<1mpetent. For
good measure, he threw in County
Administrative Officer Robert E •
Thomas. ''I cannot understand how
Thomas can allow this cesspool of waste
of taxpayers' money," he charged.
Supervisors Ronald Capsers .and Robert
Battin, who have previously attacked
Thomas, jumped onto C i t r o n ' a
bandwagon and with Supervisor Ralph
Clark. voted 3 to 2 to accept the PaC!ific
Security offer "in pr inciple." It had to be
put in proper form by the County
Counsel's office before signing.
The job was to change the present
paper copy secured tax roll to a
Mlcrofiche System similar to microfilm.
Farmer had his innings last week and
1Lated that Citron'a pre.sent method was
the lowest rost way to do the job. that it
would cost $2,000 more to e<1nvert to
microfilm through his department. and
$13,300 more by using Pacific Security.
Farmer charged that Citron had based
his proposal to take the }<lb oul of the
county on "incomplete and inaccurate in·
formation because of his deliberat•
failure to follow existing county policy
and coordinate his actions with the ap-
propriate ccunty departments."
Citron led off again Tuesday wiUJ an
1ttllck on Farmer. *' mroe up Will a
whole new set of figures purporting .to
shol# that his present manual method
record keeping was t<lfitlng $51,575
compared to 1 Pacific Security prices of
'30.400. (Farmer had said 'the cost of the
present ope.raUons was $11,SOOl.
He attempted lo refute Farmer's claim
that he had not ronferred with Data
Services on the job in question. (Farmer
replied that written specifications were
never provided his department ).
Citron said competitive bidding on the
Job was out because Security Pacific was
the only company in Los Angeles or
Orange counties that has an optical scan-
ner capable o! doing the job.
Farmer charged that Citron did not
have the contract with Pacific Security
completed until last Friday. "Some 540
words were added . After four months of
negotiations the specifications had not
been completed."
A move to approve doing the job in
county Data Servi~s almost came to a
vote, but Baker insisted on more in·
vestigation.
Clark moved that the Data Services bid
I Se.e FEUD, Page Z I
Paramour Freed
In Strangling
Death in Balboa
Conflicting circumstances surrounding
the death of a young mother found in a
Balboa Peninsula apartment with her
crying baby beside her led Tuesday to
freedom for her jailed paramour.
John J. Biegun , 21 , of 42.3 E. Bay Ave.,
was cleared of all charges in the case.
Newport Beach police had originally
booked him on susplclOn of murder
Thursday after he was questioned at
length.
He was already In custody on minor
traffic charges when the body of Mrs.
Susan Lane Constant, 21, was found by
Biegun's elder brother.
Major throat and larynx damage in·
dicatlve of manual strangulation shown in
a preliminary postmortem examination
Jed lo Biegun·s formal booking.
Toxicological tests requiring additional
lime. however, disclosed a high level of
barbiturate drugs in the vi ct i m 's
bloodstream. police said.
Detective. Sgt Ken Thompson said to-
day the presence and degree of drug con·
tent effectively ruled out prosecution bas-
ed on the evidence of her being choked.
The decision lo free Biegun was made
during a Tuesday conference by Orange
County District Attorney's and Sheriff.
Coroner's deputies.
Pollet were sent to the Sea Leve.I
Apartments about midnight last Wed·
nesday on a family disturbance call.
Once there, they arrested Thomas
Biegun, 24 on a drunk Jn public charge,
returning (attr for John Biegun since cer·
lain traffic warrant. can only bt served
In the. daytime.
He was at headquarters when hb
brother was released aUer a mandatory
sobtrlng·up period and went back to find
th• body.
, •
to eat
. .
' -..
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. -· .. • . '.. . . ;_:·: ... .. .... .. . . . . . . .
ri:.'~··~'\:l:\:,'.\~··,::;:::
I\'. NE VADA ;:;:
,:-:
~·-~·.-_~·-~~.'.=:·:'.·CALIFORNIA . . . . . .. . . . ..
. ::.:· ..... ·.:.. . .
YUBA CITY SCENE OF BIZARRE MURDER CASE
Quie t Ferm Commun ity in Sacramento Valley's Sutter County
'Will News Hurt J(ids?',
Asks Suspect's Spouse
By CA RL INGRAM
YUBA CITY fUPJ l -''Jg this going to
hurt my children?" Mrs. Gloria Corona
asked the reporters today in sobbing,
halting English. "Is this going to be on
television and the newspapers?"
·Then she. fled back into her one-story •.
white cream<c>lored wood and stucco
home.
Mrs. Corona and her husband, Juan , 37,
suspected of 12 savage murders, have
four daughters ranging in age from 4 to
8.
Two brown-eyed Corona girls sat on a
curb, ~alUng for a school bus and played
with olher children , obliviow to the
tragedy that struck their famil y.
One wore a red and orange plaid dress
and the other a blue dress. Both had
neaUy shined white oxford shoes.
Suddenly a man, apparently a relative,
.
Loot, TV Taken Out
Of Outer's Inn Bar
Somebody was in and out of the.
OUter's 1nn Tuesday. tak.lng more than
$800 in loot lncludlng • color televl.alon
and coins from tht bar's amUMime.nt
machines.
Gene Vlnlove discovered the burglary
at 3023 Har~r Boute.vard, Coata Mesa,
when ht arrived to open up. and fou.Dd a
bathroom 'w1ndow pried open. pollce.11id.
•
came along In a panel truck. He husUed
them into the vehicle and pulled away.
Mrs. Wilma Hulf, who Uve.s nett door,
said Mrs. Corona "seemed to be very
protective of her children" and "never
allowed them to play outside their
backyard.'•
She. said ber 4-year-old SOii, Scott, tried
to offer the girls a basket of candies and
cookies at Christmas but Mrs. Corona
refused.
Mrs. Oleta Kelley· said the Coronas
''never bothered anybody around here.'•
"F'rom the lime they moved in they've
been very, very quiet. Their children
stayed close to their yard and very
selOOm were they allowed out on the
street."
"They k~p to themselves," said Mrs.
Lee Killingsworth who lives across the
street. She saJd Corona was "de.finitely
the man of the. house.''
She said Mrs. Corona didn't talk with
neighbor!.
"She always smll ... They juat minded
their own buslnesa."
Another neighbor, who didn'l w1nt to
be Jdentlfled, said the Corons girls ire
"always the first to lhe achoo! bus in the
morning and this aggravates m y
daughter."
Mrs. Huff said lhere wu one odd thJng
about Cor()J'la.
"The oQIY thing Utat wu .1trange. was
that he kept . very strange . houri," she
said. "He would come ind go throqbout
the oight, tspeci&lly in the summer."
,
Farm Labor.
Boss Jailed
In Slayings
•
From Wlre Service•
YUBA CITY -A stocky Mexican-born
farm labor contractor was arrested today
when deputies uncovered the remains of
12 middle-aged men, hacked to deaUt
and burled in strange ritual positions
along the banks of the Feather River.
Offi~rs said they were still digging in
the sandy soil for at least one ether miss-
ing person.
Juan V. Corona, 37-year-old father of
four small daughters, was taken into
custody at his modest stucco home in 1
neat middle-cla5.' neighborhood in Yuba
City, a farming ccmmunity or 25,000 in
the central valley of California.
Sutter County Sheriff Roy Whiteaker
declined to aay what led officers to
Corona. and a deputy said there was "no
motive we can discover." But the sheriff
added :
"We are certain he CClmrnitted th•
murders.''
Most of the bod i es were found
on their backs, arms upraised. The
sheriff said they were badly mutllate.d,
with deep cuts on the heads and chests.
Their shirts were pulled up ever their
bloody he.ads.
They were found about five miles north
of Yuba City 400 or 500 yards eaat of U.S.
Htgbway 19-E, on both sides of the rfver.
Seven we.re on the \\'est bank and two
o~ on the opposite bank, in a prune
orchard and a peach field.
N1:ar~y waa a settlement of thacb
where. migrant laborers live.
Corona, a quiet man, was known by his
neighbors u a strict father who wouldn't
allow his children out of the yard.
"They've never bothered anybOOy
around here," said Mrs. Oleta Kelley,
who lives two doors away.
"The only thing that was strange was
that he. kept very strange hours. He
would ec>me and go throughout the night,
especially in the summer," said the
Coronas' next-door neighbor, Mrs. Wilma
Huff.
Two of Corona's small daughters,
dressed neatly in their school clothes and
apparently unaware of what happened
were seen waiting for the school bus a
few hours after their father was arrested.
The victims were all caucasian.s, ap-
parently migrant farm workers in their
40.s, 50s and 60.s. Th ey were all killed with
(See BODIES, Page Z)
Helicop Trails
Theft Suspects
A trio o! youths involved in a Costa
Mesa music shop theft wound up in
custody Tuesday, after their car was
trailed across town by the polic.e
helicopter Eagle One.
Keeping the. teenagers' easily-visible
white car under surveillance, the chopper
followed it from the 200 block of East
17th Street lo the Baker and Bristol
Street area.
By that point. a patrol car headed the
sedan off. made the stop and took the
suspects into custody for questioning oo
theft charges.
Orange Coast
l\'eather
There. may be a bit of drizzle ll'I
those cloudy sk ies on Thursday,
with cooler temperatures (63 lo
70) prevailing along the Orange.
Coast and inland areas.
INSIDE TODAY
An old financial s11mbol 00tr
Ntwport Harbor is getting a
fttW look, Set Finance. Page 2$.
' r
.. • ' . .
•
! DAILY PILOT C Wtdl'lridq, Ml1 26, l •71
Harbor 'Too loose?'
Unit Says Area Not Coordinated Enough
Js the Harbor Area coordinated?
This question was explored by a panel
'o( Harbor Area Coordinating Council
le•ders Tuesday at the Alrporter IM.
during annuali ·aeaUng of oJficera and
_year'wnd review. •
The aJlswer was essentially:
coordinated , yes; tightly enough, no.
A !M!rles or accomplishments and areas
in which lmprovtm.ent ls needed -pltl!
methods of 1chlevtnc lmpmvtment -
came under dlscwslon by the organlia·
tlon.
The J1arbor Area Coordinating Council
is e!!entially what its title saya, a super•
agency organl!ed to help more than 20 in-
dividual clubs and senricts function
more efficiently.
Citizen Launches · Attack
On CountY,Board.Memhers
_ An interesting sidelight to the battle
Tuesday was the-appearance of tv.·o
memben or the public who had
something to 1ay.
Richard Hill Adal'IU or Orange upset
Board Chairman Robert Battin so much
that ht threatened to have Adams remov·
eel bodily from the auperviaors hearing
room.
* * * Treasurer Hits
Cory's Propsoal
To Strip Power .
Orange County Treasurer Iv a n
Swanger has strongly attacked a move by
Assemblyman Kenneth Cory ( D.
Anaheim) which would 1trip his office or
much of its powers and transfer them to
the Tax CoUector.
Cory's bill. AB 2935, would give Tax
Colledor Robert Citron complete power
to deposit tax funds in the "legal
depository of his choice" while making
the lu collector the "incumbent" in the
event the tax collector's and lreasurtr's
offices are combined.
"You couldn't print my comments on
the bill," S"·anger said angrily. "When t
asked Mr. Citron about it, he swore he
did not know who encouraged Cory to
enler the bill ."
Citron, in turn, said he was not in favor
ol the bill.
·'I've always betn against consolidation
or Lbe office•, even though 44 of the 58
countie1 have already done that,'' Citron
added. "Bl.It in this case, I think some·
one's using me for a pigeon."
Assemblyman Cory would only aay that
the measure was ·a "spot bill" submitted
for the purpose or rexrving a bill
number for pouible use after the April 16
cutoff date for aubm1ttlng new leglsla·
tjon.
Cory denied that anyone had asked bim
to submit the bill -"d said it might· be
amended anywhere along the line.
Under the current system in Orange
Counly, taJ.es are collected by the tax
collectDr but deposited by the treasurer.
Since 1958, when Swanger waa first
elected lreasuter , the deposit of property
tu money has been on a pro-rated basil
in commercial and interest-bearing ac·
coonb.
Bandits Get Huge
Jewelry Store Haul
Two men bound a Santa An• jewelry
atore clerk hand and foot Tuesday night
and escaped with gems valued at $40,000,
polk:e reported.
Officers said clerk Jim Gulick or the
Star of Slam, %01!1 N. Main St .. was alone
In the store when the pair entered. They
bound him with his necktie and belt and
left him on the floor of a back room.
OIAN•l COAST
DAILY PILOT
OltANGE COAST ,UtllSHINO. C0M'A.HY
lob1rt N. w .,d
..... Id-•!Id l"WlltlW
J•c~ II, Curl..,
\'let ~ruld.i1t 91141 c;....11 IM""ltf'
lltom11 K11.,il
£tl!Of'
Tltol'I•• J.. M11rphl110
M•llt9"'9 EOI,....
Cftarltl H. loe1 Ricl.1ri P. Nill
At1lsrt11: MIMI~ Edl!Oll
Ctste M.-• Offko
JlO Wttl l1y St•11t
Moili119 Add,.11: P.O. lo• 1560. '92626 .............. "'"""'°" IM<ft: ~ H""'""1 ISN'fVI,., l.lo~ tctcll : 7r Forc11 Avtl'\IC
liu111111f1 ... ~ llKll> 1117~ •••<~ loullvttd kn ci..-i.; ~ Hor1'11 1:1 c..m1"° -..ii
Adam.s ttad from a DAILY PILOT
editorial: "Public confidence in the new
majorlly on the Board of Supervisors and
their appointees to varioUI boards and
commissions continues to be shaken. Jt is
as though a group had assumed the
Orange County electorate is made up of
gu11ible or apathetic bumpkins.
"Ir this continues, the Board ol
Superviaors' new coalition and their air
poinlee3 and their works are in for a rude
shock. Orange Cowity cltiuns, IO long
accustomed to open, non-partisan govern-
ment won't put up with political power
plays."
Adams went on to uy that Robert Cit·
ron did not follow proper counly proced·
ure. He then launched into a general at·
tack on 90me board members.
"There was the 'Mioma.s power play,
then the Saddleback Hospital fi1sco and
the adions or the chairman or this
board," he contin;;;"You have violated
the faith of the ec ate who put you in
office."
At this point Battin ruled Adams out ol
orde r and threatened to have him remov·
ed from the room if he continued.
Be.fore Adams 1poke, Con 1 la n c e
Benedict of Mla!lon Viejo told the board
that she had picketed Citron's of{lce Mon·
day.
"l talked to the man-on-the-slrttl
yesterday and was shocked at the shabby
remarks about this county government
and government as a wholt. It costs
nothing to be hone.st and I want to thank
SupervUors Clark and Baker for doln&
some rueartb on this subject."
From Page 1
FEUD ...
be accepted.
·'You are assuming that computeriiing
is cheaper," Baker said. "Farmer said
manuaJ handing la less costly. Jn addlUon
C0111pltlUve bfdding wBJ bypa,sed.
.. 1bere ls more to this than shows on
the aw'face," Balter insisted. "The
greater issue is that one department head
has viciously atlacked another and lhus
cut doubts on all departments and thls
board.
''If Citron's charges are true ~·e should
fire Farmer. We muat JivesUgate and
clear this muddled situation."
. Climbers C"lean
Litter Fro1n
Mou11tai1i Peak
EUGENE, Ore. (UPI) -You can't
escape litter -even at 17,000 fttt on
North America 's highest mountain.
Gary Gromm , colead'!r of an e1·
pedition to climb Mt. McKinley by seven
University or Oregon climbers, sald Tues-
day he was surprised by the amount of
litter on the mountain, especially at
17,000 feet .
"T'Mre were ski blndina:s, tickets, food
v.-rappings and gas cans," he said. "It
was very discouraging and I wouldn't
take that route again ."
Grimm said that the climebrs burned
some of the litter on the mountain and
picked up a lot of it on the w1y down and
deposited it at the ba1e.
The cl imbers turned back last v;eekend
afll'r reaching the 18.000 foot level ol the
20).100 foot peak. They hid betn on the
mountain for 25 da)'S, but storms forced
them to spend 14 days inside sno\l caves.
After four days in caves at the 17,200 foot
level, they headed up the summit but ran
into a storm and decided to return.
World Beauties
To Shaw Char11is
In Long Beach
Special to lht l>A.Il. Y PILOT
LONG BEACH -Lovely g Ir 1 !
npresenUng 49 nations of the world will
parade before a pantl of judges Wnlght to
climu the 11th Annual lnternaUonal
Beauty Pageant
The I p.m. nvitw by 15 judgts from
the tntertalnment and conmunlcations
media wtll get undtr way in Long Beach
~tunicipal Auditorium. ch11lrtd by
Hollywood photographer Tom Kelly.
Actrtss Jeanne Crain. ict.or Ce$ar
Romero and te.levlslon stars Rick Jason
and Greg Morris are amon& olher
celebrity judgea.
The candidates for most beautiful girl
in the world will appear In swim suits
and also coa:tumea representing their
native lands.
T1cket.a from $3.SiO to 16.50 will be
av11lable at t.he door, as well as from a
\'ariely of mutual agencies.
Speakers said Newport B<aeh and
Costa Mesa as a whole need to exe.rclse
greater cooperation .ind re d u c e
duplication of efforts in !ome areas.
Merger: of the two citles, educationa l
system some years ago -a so-called
shotgun marriage that worked out, as
she called it -was cited by Newport-
Mesa Ui;iified School District Trustee
Marian Berge3on.
A similar example is the merger a year
ago of th e Cosla ri.1esa and Newport
Harbor United Fund Chapters into one
adm inistered on a Harbor Area-widis
basis.
Costa fi.1esa City t-.1anager Fred
Sorsabal suggested 1hat failure to merge
v.·ith Ne"-porl Beach following an in·
tensh·e study of doing so 18 years ago
may have been an unwise decisioo.
PanelisLI agreed. however, that the t"·o
cities have achieved unity in many rna t.-
ters with areawide impact. despite reten·
lion of individual municipal boundaries.
A joint City-Schools Liaison Com·
mittee ; the Harbor Area Youth Problem
Center; mutual library prog r ams :
Harbor Area Youth Employment
Service; YMCA, p!WI Boys and Girls Club
or the Harbor Area, are but a few.
"We have heard many ideas here to-
day ," said newly installed President
Hilda McCartney, who succeeds Mrs.
Gwenda Watson after her two years on
the job.
"If we can act on half of them we will
accomplish much,'' she added.
"Let's get it together ," said City
Manager Sorsabal .
"Put our y,·ords and ideas into act ion.''
echoed Youth Employment Service Presi·
dent Jim Wood. •
Cowicil officers for 1971·72 include Dr.
McCartney, president: Joan Peace, vice
president; Genevieve Bates, recording
secretary ; Dorothy Diet.tel, treasurer,
and Mrs. Watscn as immdiate past presi·
dent.
DirectDrs installed Tuesday are Lou
Yantorn, Paul Kugler, Jean Bechtel, Ed
McFarland and Dorothy Paul.
Murder Suspect
Registered As
Labor Recruiter
WASHINGTON (APl -The man ar·
rested in CaUfomia in connection v;ith the
backing to death of 12 migrant fru it
v.·orkers Is registered with the slate as a
farm labor recruiter, the Farm Labor
Service here said today.
A Fl.S official said Juan Vallejo
Corona, 37, v.•as therefore likely to have
referred workers from the state employ-
ment service. "'hich gels federal aid to
place migrant farmworkers.
Corona was not registered as a federal
recruiter so he could not legally have
hired or transported workers from out of
state.
The FUi spokesman said the service's
California office is trying to determine if
those killed "-ere referred to Corona
through the federally su pported job
referral service thert .
The Migrant Legal Action Program
Inc., v"hich helped IS organizaUons and
398 f"rm workers petition Jor abolish·
ment of ihe Fl.S on grounds it served
purposes of growers rather than migrant
wor.kerr.· uid it might ask for a probe to
see if. federal or state Jaws were violated
in ihe referrals.
From Pqe l
BODIES ...
a machete or a heavy knife, the sheriff
said.
Some of the bodies had t"·o pairs of
pants and l"'O shirts, indicating the vic-
tims were lransient I a b o re r s . in·
vestigators said. The orchards are being
thinned at this time of year.
Yuba City is a !arming community of
14,000. about 130 miles northeast of San
Francisco.
In a news conference after the arrest.
the sheriff said Corona has bttn in this
country for some time but speaks little
English. \Vhlteacre said he had to !JSe an
interpreter to communicate with the
?tfeJ.ican American prisoner.
The sheriff had a terse "no comment"
when asked about a double bladed axe,
pruning knife and shovel br_ought into the
jail before Corona was led in.
.. WhHeacre tenlalively idenlified a se·
cond victim of the mass killing s. lie \\'as
Pete Peterson, 63, of nearby Marysville.
From Page 1
AERONAVES • •
Me1ico City," be said.
Coppe:I did concede that President Nix·!
on may not have been aware of the con·
1roveny sWTOUnding lhe noise aod I
number of flii:;hts at Orange County
Airport when he signed tbe international '
treaty. "~Ir. Nixon, may not know 'tl'hat Is
going on here,'' Cappel said, "if he did ,
maybe he wouldn't sign ."
The apparently-erroneous repQrt from
Schmit!' office on tile' aJlt:ged shift to 1
Onlitrlo Airport was being investigaltd
by the rongressman's office this morning.
"We got that from the White House, I
don't knov.·, our Washington office lj:Ot
that ror us." rt:sponded Schmitt' Orang!
County aide Willard Voit, Jr., when asked
for comment.
"The White Hou se said that's what
they 'd ( Aeronaves) agreed to," Voll said.
• •
' ... ,1 · ·' ~·
'
lta the Swi111
Instructor Kathy Samuels helps Li sa blilJer, 6. perfect her swimming
form at Orange Coast Yt!ICA. S\vimming class es for children three
lo six years of age are bein g scheduled at the Yti1 CA. Call Ivy Gorman
or Bill Chunn , 642·9990, for deta ils.
I'hreat Was Hoax
Callet Paid $560,000
Not to Blow Up P"lane
SYDNEY (UPIJ -Qantas Interna·
tional Airlines paid $560,000 cash today
to a man who threatened to blow up a
Boeing 707 airl iner with 120 person:<
aboard on a night from Sydney to Hong
Kong. The bomb threat turned out to be a
hoax.
For seven agonizing hours lhe big plane
ci rcled over Sydney Airport ~·hile
crewmen searched over and O\'er again
without success for a bomb described a.s
"a small hard object." They ripped up
carpeting. went through the baggage and
dismantled light fittings.
The lhreat was senl in a note to Capt.
R. J. Ritchie, general manager of Qan·
las, advising hlm that if he paid over the
money the man would tell him how to
dismantle the bomb already aboard the
plane and set to go off at a certain
altitude.
To show that he was not joking the
man said he had planted a similar bomb
in an airport locker. Officials found tha t
bomb and instructions for paying the
ransom. \\i}wn the money was paid the
man lelephoned to say the report of the
bomb aboard the plane was a hoax.
Ritchie said the man called himself
"Mr. Brown" and that he sped off in a
small truck "'hen Ritchie handed him the
ca.sh .stuffed inlo blue suitcases. 'He
described him as about 23, English, ·with
a hooked nose, false moustache and
beard and dark glasses.
Mlnrtls1ment
GEM TALK
TODAY
by
MYSTERY GEMS
Throughout hi,sl"ory, many famous
gems have disappeared entirely,
while others have vanished ror cen-
turies, only to reappear in strange
places and in the hands of unlikely
0\11ners.
Such a gem is the fabulous 70
carat "The ldol 's Eye."' ~f ined in
1600. it passed from a Persian
Prince in 1607 to a pri\1ate coin·
pany, as a debt repayment. It then
''anished for . over three centuries.
Suddenly, in 1906. lhis hi storic dia·
1nond emerged again \Vhen it \\-·as
sold to European interests by a
Turkish sultan.
Thir1y pohcen1cn searched passenger~
and luggage on three Boeing 727 planes
11·hich landed at fl.1elbourne later in the
tl ay in belier the my s lerious l\fr.
Bro11n 1night be aboard but found no one
resembling that description.
One passenger "'ho gave his name as
E. Rowley of London said he read a
murder mystery during the sel'en-hour
drama.
"The book helped pass the time," he
said. "I thought the bomb threat was .
real . But what the hell can you do except
JUSt sit there and hope~"
The hoaxer also telephoned the airline
lo say th<it lhl• bomb v.·as a barometric
lype which \1•hould explode by .air
press ure once the plane reached a certain
undisclosed altitude. either whil climb.
1ng or desctnding for a landing.
Passengers i;aid the crew told them
they thought the threat was a hoax and
that !hey remained calm through the
ordeal which included tuming off the
('<tbin heat to "freeze'' the bomb. The y
even se rved drinks during the search, one
passenger said .
"One cannot speak loo highly of the
crew," a Sydney resident said . "The en·
lire airliner. including luggage, wa.s
xearched three times. They finished up,
taking the carpel off the floor. Every sec·
lion of the plane was checked, nothing
11.1e"""-ntouched. The crew even looked
under the fu sel1ge."
D
TISSOT
C iant·size .42·mi11i meter
11t1tomatic da!e·ltllin& T·l2's, the newe1t ot 1 lon g Jone of ttthnic1I
b1a·le<1&ue r1 by Tissot.
Top: shows lht day as
wen as !he d•t•, •nd has ro11ting lnslel•
t lapstd·l1me sc1le, In stalnless steel, $125
lower. the Navigator with rolafina inside 2-i·hour scale.
St11nltss steel, $120
Porno Raid
Neis Huge
Smut Supply
\Vestminster Policr seize d more lhan
$500.000 v.•orth nf sex films Md
photographs Tue~day in a raid on a small
industrial building occupied by the
Kayous ~pronounced chaos) Company.
District Attorney Cecil Hicks called the
alleged pornographic seizure "the large st
in Orange County history,"
The raid follows by lY.'0 11ceklf a
sitnilar disco1·ery of porno graph 1-c
materials in Fountain Valley bu L
\\1es1n1insler pol ice said lhere i.s no ap·
parent connec11on between the lwo 11pera·
t1ons.
Kay ous Co1npany was operating at
15144 Golden \Vest St., 11.1ithout btncfit of
a city business licenst'.
"/'\o arrests have been made· ~'el. bu!
11·e expecl lo make some v<'ithin the nexl
lwo days,'' \\le stminster LI. Jack
Shockley said this 1norning. ·
Police hauled 20.500 reels of fllm and :ioo,ooo s1i!I photographs from lh~
building. Shockley and investigal()fs from
the district attorney's office spent all day
reviewing the films .
They v,•ere apparenlly rated double X.
.. ~\'e spent six days investigating thf'
business before raiding it," Shockley
reported. fie said he couldn 't disclose
how poli~e fourid oul about the operation .
Investigators said f i Im s and
photographs \1'ere apparently sent ~o
Kayous for packaging and mailing to all
parl.s of the rounlry. It was an alleged
pornographit• clearing hou~. but nothing
\\'as n1anufactured there, police said.
Search warrant11 for the raid were
granted by Atunicipal Judge Kenneth lot.
Smith. Files and business records were
taken along with the pornographic items.
No names or individual1 involved with.
Kayotis Company were released by
police .
Shockley did say that police are not
sure if the Kayous owner personally
knows Joe Reitano. the man arrested in
the Fountain Valley raid .
Fountain Valley Police dlscovered
~.000 books. movies phoWgraph!I and
other alleged pornographic material in
an industrial business ca lled Advert isin a:
Layouts and Sales. 1828.1 ~It. Baldy St.
Reitano has been charged wit h
possession of pornographic materials for
sale. a misdemeanor complaiot.
3 Jets Crash
In S. Africa
CAPE TOWN I UPI I -Tbr,.
South African Air Force jets
usually used as transports for high·
ran king defense ofhcers crashed in·
to the zheer face of Table Moun tain
today. killing the II persons
aboard.
The vicUms \\'ere not identified.
but Defense Minister Pieter Botha
said the nation "lost some of its
finest members ." appare nt l y
military officers.
Botha said the planes "·ere praC"-
licing a llypast for a holiday event
in Cape Town on Monday.
11ie crash occurred at Table
~fountain near Cape Tov,11, Botha
said.
Forty-one years later, in 1947,
1'The Idol'~ Eye'' "'as sold to an
American woman for $375,0001 add·
ing one more chapter to the history
of allure and mystery of gems.
Although no mystery surrounds
the beautiful stones in our store,
they do have, the moment you buy
them, a personal meaning and al·
lure which "'ill make you treasure
them throughout your IileUme.
J. L .J/.u1nphrieJ J eu1eler:1
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONVENIENT TERMS
IANKAMEltlCAR.0-MASTER CHARGE
2• YEARS IN SAMf: lOCAf10,..
PHONl 54t.)4DI
•
l
.,
"
'
• ·-..... --
6 DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE '
Avoiding a
The Coast Commun ity College District is attempt·
init to finance improvements at Golden \Vest and Orange
Coas t colleges \vith a technique that inevi tably will ra ise
questions in the minds of property taxpayers.
The district Is eager to expand facililie~ al both
colleges. The improvements are being pictured as rec·
reational, the kind of facilities that are used by mem·
hers of the public in eight district comn1unities as well
as by the students.
The largest slice cf the $93!>,000 program at Golden
\Vest will go on a new $603 ,000 wing to the gymnasium,
but lhe pla n also calls for improving television and com-
puter cabling and for additional parking. The $700.000
program at Orange Coast includes $260,000 for cabling
and a Sl 20,000 S\vimming pool renovation.
To finance the program at Golden \Vest. the dis·
lr1rt has asked the Huntington Beach City Council to
iniliate • an assessment district through which bonds
would be sold. Administrators will ask the Costa ?i1esa ·
City Council to form a sim ilar district to pay for the
Orange Coast improvements.
College districL administrators emphasize that the
repayment of these bonds Y.•ill not be the responsibility
of the cities or ('osta li.1esa and Huntington Beach and
will not affect municipal finances.
But they agree that property owners in all the ei~ht
communities within the college district v.•ill feel the 1m·
pact through a raise in the property tax rate.
Present plans call for the bonds to be redeemed
o ver fi ve years through a tax rate increase estimated at
from 31i2 to 4 cents.
There will be public hearings before both the 1-funl·
ington Beach and Cogta ?tfesa councils before these as·
gessment districts are approved and the bonds sold. So
Bond Vote
~omeone living in Fountain Valley or Newport BeaC'h.
for example. could find his colleae tax bill hiked 1s a
result of action taken by the Huntincton Beach and/or
Costa Mesa councils.
\Vhether this is proper will be for those councilme n
to decide. The assessment dis trict procedure avoids call·
ing a district.wide election to vote bonds fo r the
projects.
'Dream Tean1' Concept
Co ntinuing a trend to\\•ard more cillzen parti.cipa·
lion in the community. Costa ?.1esa is creating a new,
super-planning committee.
The concept grew out of the crcdentiaJs possessed
by the 12 applicants for t\1,io openings on the planning
commission . The city believes those abilities should
be put to use.
While the role of the C"1ty planning staff and the
planning commission requires vi sion to flt current proj-
ecLc; and proposals into the best application of the ex·
isling city plan, the new group JiteraJly is 15upposed to
function as a ''Dream Team."
11ayor Robert 1\1. \Vilson sees its function as to
project visionary concepts of what the city could or
should be by the early 21st Century. They will act as
.advisors to the designated planners and decision-mak·
ers. "'ho determine what Costa Mesa can and Y.'ili be.
Encouragi ng more voluntary community service
and putting more citizen time and talents to work seek·
ing directions for the lon ~-range future of the com-
munity, are two worthwhile achievements in them·
Eelves.
'
c
CONGRESSIONAL
RESOLUTION .
F0e VIETNAM
WITUl>llAWAL
MTE
'S..r' Iimi that old Win-tbe-War Zablocki?'
. '
Temperament
Ca1i Clia11ge
As We Age
Dear
Gloo111 v
G us
Ge1ieral Use Would Virtually Eli1ni1aate StnO!J
.~
Speaking of children who are slo\•
learners in sc hool, and of the famous
men who were considered "stupid" all
tluring their youth (ag I did in a Ct'>iumn a
few ""eeks ago), it is equally true lha\
people can surprisingly change their
v.•hole temperaments u: they get older.
Strange ralea cf personal development
ire not only mental, but temperamentaJ
as y,•ell. Who woold
be lieve that the dou r
~nd taciturn Calvi11
Coolidge was ell!Cted
''class humorist" at
Amherst? Or that
the sainlly and as·
relit Mahatma was
r11cknamed "Gandhi
the Dandy" dur ing
hi!'i university car-
Pflr, when he was known as the
beg t -dressed man around Oxford~
For every one C a pa bl anc a, v.·ho
revea led his chess genlus at the age
or 4, there art a hundred others who take
until maturity to discloSt their full
powers and real inclinations. St .
Augustine ~·as among the mosl con-
rupiscenl of men , he tells us in his
"Conlessions. '' Until the age of JO, his
fa vorite prayer was, "O Lord, givt me
chastity and self-restraint, but not jusL
yet."
WIJ\STON CRURCHUJ. was sent to
military school at an early age beca use
hii; father flnn ly believed be w1s too
rlumb to learn anything else. He was a
fat, unhappy boy who talked wit h a 1tut-
ter arid 11 lisp; he entered Harrow a! the
lnwest boy in the lowest class, and re-.
mained there. He railed the entran~ es·
With friends or Cost.a fl1e&.a. like
the street mamtenance crew, who
needs enemies? They have ruined
my favorite ian d only) largt: tree
in my front yard -trimmed 1t
back and made it look ridiculous.
Took It up to 20 feet \\'hen 13 feel
is the limit. I'm disgusted'
-C I,.
Tltb fMlllrt Ntlfth r41Herr' ~""''· ...i
-••Jl'JI' tM$t ..i ti!• ••-•"'· S-" ,.~, •et -VI II .,_, -.i .. rairr PUtl.
ams at mili ta ry college l\\iCe beforr. pass-
ing. It might surpr ise you lo learn that
Einstein wa s so slow in Jearnina: to speak
that his family expressed concern that he
might be retarded. He left high gchool at
lhe request of his teacher. and had trou-
ble getting into a Swiss college beca use
he was not qualified for entrance in
anything bul mathematics.
It is impossible to predict tht rat.e of
development of any human being. and
parents might worry less if they realized
this. The most intelligent woman I ever
knew was actually 1 "retarded" child
who ne ver read 1 book throughout until
ghe was 14.
INFA1''T PRODIGlES only too often
grow up lo themselves, so that by the
lime they reach adul thood there is
nothing prodigious about their latents.
And, just as often. they tum aut to be
emotionally immature as well -reminis-
cent of Harold Ickes' cutting remark
abou t Adolph Berle, one of lhe brightest
youngst,r.!I of the early New Deal : "Berle
was an infant prodigy, but the only trou-
ble was that he kept on being an infan l
long afler he ceased being a prodigy."
Conversely, the "backward" child ma y
suddenly break clea r of his e.mofionsl
block and tum into a brilliant and pro-
ductive member of gociely. If Gandhi's
father deplored his son 's foppishness,
and Augustine's mother lamented her
son's Just. which parent among us can be
too impatient or intolerant of his child?
The Need for 'Depletion'
Every IJmr I.a:'{ refor m ii\ prnprii-ed the
~o called oil dtplelion allo1vance comes 1n
for 11n inordinate amoWlt of rather
misguided discussion as a loophole. to be
closed.
Some of lhei::e miscnnceplioni:: werr
corrteted recently in 11 letler v.•ritten to
the Los An,eles Times by Harry fl1or-
rison. vice presidenl and gt n er a I
manager of !he Western Oil and Gas
Association. 1t1orrison points out tha l. one
chargt against lh t allo\\'ance -1hal ii •s
An unf:iir subsidy -fails to take into con-
:<fderalion the fa ct that the provi~ion
ke,ps profits of the oil indul'ltry at a level
11·ith other industl'lies. and keeps ~n-
5umer N'lsts relatively low.
A 1008 sludy, for example. shows that
nil ('Ompanlu made a profit that year or
12.9 percent on net asst:ts. compan!d with
lhe il.1 percenl average of I 11
manur1cluring industrie~.
~'HJtt PERCEN'TAGE deplelion i5
•Uo\\'ed up 10 50 percent of net income.
from the property. only about bttlf t1f an
Guest Editorial
••
the oil and gai; ""'eli11 drilled in 100!1, lor
instance, "·tre produclive: and nf lho~.
only the wells producing net income are
eligible for the deduclion. As l\1nrr1snn
said. while an occasional well may bring
1n an unusual rctum on invelllmenl, it 11>
only helping provide the money ror the
rxpl or11tory dry holes v.·here mon!!.y 15
lost.
The or\g1nal and ro11tinu1ng purpose nl
tht deplet ion allowance is lo 1nakt 1t
economically feasible to undertake lhl!l
extremely costly search for new nil and
aa.5 resources. You can"l rep\anl ~d
reharvesl oiL You have: to go somewhC're
el~ to find it. And the nalion's eCOMmy
depends greatly on the success ol that
search.
Californl• Fe.ature Servlct
~--------By George--------~
Dt1tr Cit1'.lrge ·
I fell In Jove '~i!h th1:i; nnt> My
11nd \\'hllP I \\'a!I. going lilt•dy I met
lhis J1washbuckHng ,.,farine who h11"
been e\•ervwhere ;ind d n n t
f'\'erjlthin£ 'wh~I dn )1011 think I
should do about this r-.tar1nt?
MABEL
Dr.1r r-.1abel
Well. if I ull yoo one Uuna J'm 111
trouble from all right-thinkers and
1f I tell ynu .11nother J'm in trouble
"'ith the Marine. Corp~ Why don't
you write 10 Ann Landers"
IRush ynur problem~ In GrnrJe
lnst3ntly and get ~ free pitmphlr.t
on bow to prQClastinatc 1n·
de.finitely.)
Steam Cars Cari Be :Practical Today
To the Editor :
The e-0lumns of many newipapers are
filled with gratwtous and often qwte ir·
rationa l expressions of opinion togethtr
with much superficial reporting of
miscellaneous currenl events. Seldom are
readers alerted to revolutionary eve nts Lfl
the making. So it is \\'ilh lhc facts In
which I call your auention though their
implications are certainly well un-
dcr!llood hv the inlerna I com bus lion lords
of Detroit· and we may expect vii;:orous
and perhaps unscrupulous c ounter·
measures to emanate from thal quarter.
PLEASE CONS IDER th ii; almost in-
<-redible situation: Under the auspices <lf
the California Assembly Transportation
Commi ttee and of the California Air
Resources Board, no less than three ex-
ternal combustion (stean1l bus engines
have been developed and buill by 1n-
dej)('nden1 engineering entrepreneurs and
are now being tested and debugged so as
Ill be ready for installation into standard
busel'i by late spring or early su mmer.
T h ,_ s e steam-po"·ered demonstration
buses will be used in regular publ ic
transportation se rvice for seven month!!
beginning Sept. l and their perfo rm ance
will then be evaluated and judged.
If" THE DESIGNERS and builders of
these steam hus engines have done a
good job. if the tcstin~ procedures are
ra1r and reasonable and if sabotage ca n
bt prtvented. there is no reason to eicpecl
a nylhin~ hul very good performance:
frnm all of these steam flO\\'er planll'i.
After -ell the sleam engine doe s not havt
to be invented, perfecled nr adapted In
automobiles. Steam·propelled cars, buses
and l.rucks were practical and succesgfuJ
a long li1Tie ago and with the use of belier
ma1er1als. designs a nd manufacturing
lechnrques can be even more practical lo.
day.
SOi\IE Ot~ THE EARLY sleam carlli.
I.hough practi cal enough, "''ere some"•h,11t
crude as were their 1n1crnal combustinn
contemporaries, hut !he best of them
\\'Ould be perleclly strvic:eable today in
spite of their angular body slylr. 'fJ1t
gPneral use of modern, rlfic1ent. masi;-
producffl stram drive "ehic:le on our
high\va ys <ind particularly on city stret-ts
\vould eliminate virtually all the smoJ::
and polluti on nov.• unavoidably created by
!he internal combu stion engine.
TRE UNY.'ILLINGNESS t1f Detro1I
even to attempt to provide 1 smog-frte
engine in conformity to tht. law indicates
the futility or hope for better things from
them. It appears the y don'I even
J.:now how lo make a good bum per. In ad·
clltlon lo the re tum of pure air lo our
citie!i. rlrivers of steam cars would enjoy
splendid performance and long lrouble-
·iret serv ice as a result of mechan ical
simplic ity. Eleclnc cars V.'Ould be fine
but the ball.try situation removes them
from ccns1deratlon for lhe presenL
Sleam ruled the road in my yooth. t
hope to Jive long enough to fee it do il
.again.
PAUL PAL.MER
·B/h1d Hypoc r isy'
To lhe Editor
Permit mt to express m.y agony over
lhc lttter of fl.trs. Shirlty Smith. "Huey
Nt\\10n and UCl" tr.iailbox 1'.1ay 19). It ls
dl!llressing that a concerned citizen And
taxpayer like f\frs . Smilh should seek to
d1!1f!U1se her prejudiced per$0nal lty by
po~1ng a~ one gmuintly eoncttntd-w1th
the wr.11-bf'ing of her t.0eiety.
To cha.IJ('nge the integrity or Chitncellor
Aldrich by 1I1Sinuattng his b e. i n i
"re~l'K'n:iiblt for the recent bombin1s ind
Letters from rtader.s art welcome.
Normally writers sliould convty their
nits.~ages 111 300 words or Less. The
11Qht to condense lttteTs to fit space
OT tliminate hbeL i!I Tes erved. All lei,·
1er11 mu.st includ e si9nat 1trt and mail-
'ing addtl!'S!I. but ttomes may be with-
h.eld on req 11e11t iJ sufficient reas:o11
is npparent. Ptntry wilt Ttot be pub·
li$hed.
burnings al UC!," is to lend ~ubstanre lo
the view that adults cf the da.v project a
hypocrit ical barrenness of virlut. and a
penchant for invidiousness. Every ta x-
paying fool or C"ynic knows by now lhal
no bombing or ri re al UC I has occurred,
or shall ever occur. lo renecl fhe anger
and frustration or lhe university's
clientele v.•ho are forced to accommoda1,_.
unnecessarily to the blind hypocrisy and
distorted priorities displayed toward tht
educational enterprise by lhe likes c!
such critics.
IS .~OT HUEY l'\E\~TON an American,
as 1s \Vill iam Buckley'! Mu st lhe un ivers1-
ly providt a forum for the latter, but not
the former, and thus persist in a further
distortion <lf the American heritage or
pluralistic tolerance? The role of lhe
university includes not simply prepara-
tion for making a li\'ing. but. hopefully,
for providing an experience that. "'111
subscribe to the possibility of a belier life
lhrou,::h an explication of the truth. ~
I-lad ~Ir". Smith availed hP.rstlf or lh~
enlightening e:rperience afforded by I.he
Mexica n Cultural Week and by the Black
Cultural Conference she would now be
pleading for more of such event.~. ralhf>r
tha n hinting that such ac1Jv11ies consp1r ..
to make taxpayers finan ct lheir n"'n
destruction.
~n' AGONY DOES not derive frnm
hatred or bitterl\fSS over lhe iniuslices
"'hich prejudice has met~ ouL tn me It
spr ings, ro:ither. from my appreciation fnr
the genuine effort being made by lht.
l1ke:o; of Chancellor Aldrich to project liC I
a:o; 1 part or a society that C()mprises all
types and manner of human beings. tt
derives, further. fron1 my faith in the
n1any who. having been silent or in-
different, retain a cai:atily for promoting
justice and fl')r <:omprehending 1he
challenge of 11;uicling meaningfu l change
withifl and "''ithout the university.
I urge Mrs. Shifley Smith lo ren1ovr.
her blinders. lo look clearly at UCI. and
10 share in the e\'hilaration of guiding llur
future cit ize ns toward I.ht. creation nf ~
society with a ~reater lluman un-
derstanding .enrt the ability to manifest
genuint citizenship .
GEORGE 0 . ROBl';rlT~
The Program in Compa ra tlvt: Culture
Amer1can-African-Asian-BJark·Ch1cann
UC, Jr\•1nc
'/llo1t Rldic11/ous'
To the Edltor:
The letter by Lyman S. Faulkner
(f\-la.ilhox. fl1ay l~J supported the lJ.S.
military and stated that It& drftns1ve pro-
wess is 1 necessity in today·~ \\Orld 1f YU:
Are to keep alivr,. I for onr. fet.1 dif-
fer,nt ly. The phrase. •·national derenSI'."
Is in itself an untruth. ft passed that
at..ge v.ith the invention of lhe bo\V ~nd
nrtow. No mRtter how many miss!!~.
ABM'!! or rockrts v,e sf!j 11p, :i 111t1on
llkt Rui;sht cnuld destroy us by prt~inR
a few bul(ons.
The thcmt lrir defense Is: nn lone l':r
''Let's save. ourstlvts in ca.i;e. of ari 1Lt.aclr;
by a hostile nation.''
II is now. "lf we go. lel's make sure \Vt
bring them with us ~"
THE ARl\tS RACE is und oubtedly the
most ridiculous thing on the face of rhe
earlh. \Vhy should we spend ever 60 per -
cent of Our 'entire budgel for whal cculd
turn oot l<l be the totaJ ann ihilation of the
e.a.rth? \Vith all the problems facing our
natiGn and the rest of the world . \\'e ha\'P.
oo right to spend so much on death.
Wh at good is a monolithic military In·
stallation on lhe edge. of the DEW line in
Alaska '-''hen some guy il'i being knifed on
11 subw;iy in New York City? Or what is
J1ccomplished by a pa trolling cruiSt"r oH
!hf" coast of Ethiopia \\'hen a kid in \V~ll.s
1s slar\ ing !() death "
IN 196!1 1l1E U.S. possessed 1,0$4 in-
lercontincnlal ballistic miss i I e JI
j!CBl\l's). over 700 submarine-base d
missiles 1'41 of "'hich wntainl'd nuclear
\\'arheads). 810 strategic bombers. and
an undisclosed amount of anti.ballistic
missi les ( ABl\1's). Is it all worlh if? Of
course 11ot' The <-Omplele fire power or
t'very "defense" force. deployed by lh+'
II S. is eno ugh In eliminate. Europe from
!he rarp nf the earth. 100 limes. B~t 1dill
~e musl build and mount our military 11'1
even greater heights.
l\1r. f"autkn!!.r said that the mililary ''is
prllhabty the best organized, mosl ef-
fic-ienl in <-arrying out ils responsibilities.
mnsl effective in iicrnmplishmtnts .11nd
Fa irest Jn the opportunities for .<ruccess ii
offers people." \V;t" lhe f\1y Lai incident
an C'(amplf' nf lhe mllita ry's "effect ive
accom plishment,;'!" And that was !ht on·
!v nne, so far . in the newspapers. hnw
abQut all the others ''
CHRIS BRODERICK
Pri111.lng Police /\'ems
Tn the Editor:
Your article ron terning l\lr. Carlton
Pnlk. Costa Mesa High School h11s111ess
!eachcr. I frcl was in the right. A couple
of students from my school, I see. wrote
you a crank letter concerning your
publiratinn of the fact lhe teacher v.·as
arresled for possrss1on or marijuana and
other dru~s ~
I am a Coiita ,.,lesa High School student
anrl I think tha t we are up there with the
~chool dru,:: prcblem. You do have a Etory
Ill 'vrite and frtedom of the pres~.
ACTUALL''· lhe school district slloold
rind &ome way lo tell whether-some or all
I heir teachers take or push drufl:s. lf you
had not published lhe story. most parents
would not have known about it unlil they
had lfl bail their gon or daughter out of
jail. I hop,_. you puhli~h this letler so 1h3t
your reader~ will know that at least some--
one carts aboul the. school drug problem .
NAr.fE \\'I THHP.LD
Ret11r11ablfl Bolflfl•
Tn lht' Ed1tnr :
\Ve 11.rc Aware th:U man has to reach an
rquilibrium with his environment in or·
tier to maintain this earth ror fut urt gen •
er.11 tions. But \\'C I.end to lrnorf! the fa ct
lhat cooperat.ion begins with I.ht indlvj(f.
ual
The greitlC~I contribution the younger
aeneriltlon could make toward ellmlnaling
polluUo" I~ In pureha~ beer •nd soil
drinks 1n returnable bottle1. In addition
In improving the general appearance of
the. ct>unlry:o;ide, we would be making bet·
!er use: or our resource~.
NON11E1\J11NA 81.E CANS la kt S,oOO
years to decompoae and return to the
earth. The C'onsumer would also be doing
hlmsell 1 favor by savin1 money, fo r
nver 40 percl!'nl of the cost or 1 bcveraae
Is In p11ck1g1ng .
Since teenage.rs and young adult.a are
the major consumers of canned and bot.·
tied beverages, we have lht power to e:r·
C'rt consumer prts5ure . Through our
c..'Ombined efforts, we will be taking a ma·
JOr :step 1n the. fight for a better e.n·
vironment.
MICHEl.1.E MEARS
Celi bur y vs. itlarrlage
'J'o the f;ditor:
The cxcommun1cat1on nr the Rev.
Robert Duryea, Paci fica, Calif .. at tht
disct1very or his marriage shows I.he U,.
cnnsistency or beliefs within lhe Catholic
Church. During my eight years of educa·
hon in a Catholic grade school, I had
been ta ught lo love God and man . Father
Duryea has nOt broken thilli law of love by
marrylng 1 worn.an, but has fulfilled it lo
a greater extenl,
HIS l\IA RRIA GE HAS not affected hi'
teachings to his congregation, but has ex-_
panded his know ledge. As 1 married
priest. he has greater capabilities nf
counseling married couples and couples
preparing for marriage lhan any celibata
priest has.
Becaust> cf hilli effectiveness as a pastor
and his sincere regrets in leaving his
posijjon, I feel that !ht action 1ake11 by
the church was not for the welfare of the
parishioners. as it should ha ve been.
I.A URA I.EE MACH
Attarkl119 ll1 e f 'lag
Tn lhe Editor:
\Vhat i' lhe government -I.< it the
governing body. the elected officials now
in power . or is it the flag?
The radical~ denounce the government,
and show I.heir contempt by lnsulLing lhe
flag. Are. they condemning the rullnit
political party? Or are. they co ndemnins
our fla g and whit il stands: for ?
The sta rs and stripes is 1 symbol of flur
country and the basic beliefs, as \vritten
in the Decla ration of lndependf!nce and
Ike Constitution. These belle~. above all,
give each individual his freedom. By at·
tacking the flag they are attacking in·
dividua l rights. If they do oot believe in
Individual rights. this leaves bul ona
al ternative. a government without in-
dividual freedoms .
JF THIS IS WHAT they wis h. then they
should U!IUlt the flag. Bu t If they wigh a
country with indi vidual rights, and honest
t1fficials lo govern this country, then they
iihoul d attack the elected representatives.
The nag to me means what is right '"
this country. l\1A ny repre11ent.atives. th t
elected officials, ha ve twisted and m1sus.
t.d these rights. b11t they are on ly elected
and can be repla ced. If there are wrong.<1,
let l.l" keep the flag. but thange lht
government peacefully.
P~'TE BARTON
---W..
Wodnesd•y, M•y 26. 1971
The ed itorial page of the Do.ilr
Pilot seek.i to ~1lfOrm and ttim.
u.lalt readtr.J by prt senth1g this
ne wspaptr's opi11io111 ond "°""'
mc11tary n1i topics of i nter"-''
011d !tig11ificonc1, bu providin g a
f orum for the-expression o/
our rll ader&' oplniont, aad by
l!!«!Stntinq the rJIV"tfJl VllW-
po nti of informed ob!tnver&
and &pokesmrn 011 topic& of thr
<14~.
Robert N. \\Iced, Pubh.shc.r
... '
I
Wt'dntsd11, May 2&, 1971 DAILY PILOT S
Acquitted Seale Pa•i lst_ ~e Te•tll
Nixon Military Plans Move Fac es Riot Raps but tb assume the greatest
risk of death as well."
CHATTANOOGA FI REFIGHTERS GET ARMED GUARD
Some Fir• Cell s Mar Otherwise P11cefu l Night
Guardsmen Pull Out
Of CalmChatta11ooga
CHA TT ANOOGA, Te n n .
(AP) -Police and National
Guard troops pulled out o(
predominan tly Negro
n eigbborh o<1 d s torn by
disturbances since Friday and
f.urnecr-ih-effi over-tOCivilian
black patrols Tuesday.
"It looks like we had les.s
calls and the calls dldn 't seem
tO amount to anything," state
Safety Commissioner Claude
Armour 11aid in reporting the
1ltuatioo was calming.
Armour announced earlier
Tuesday that the unarmed
black civilians would patrol
Former Aide
Beats Boss
In Election
LOUISVILLE. Ky. (UPI ) -
U. Gov. \\lendell H. Ford, 46,
upset his ex-boss. former Gov.
Btrt T. Combs. Tuesday in a
hard-fought battle for the
Democratic nomination for
Governor of Kentucky.
Ford, a former ad-
ministrative assistant to
Combs, tiad a 167 ,000 to 126.000
vote margin "''ilh about 65 per-
cent of the primary election
ballots counted in an unofficial
tabulation. Combs. S9, con-
ceded defeat at · 9:JO p.m.
EDT.
Supportera of Ford said he
eanied five of the st.ate·s
M"Vttl Congressional dist ricts.
bing only the: two districts in
mounta.IDOUS e a st e r n Ken-
tucky.
\
. '
•
the Negro areas. calling ior
police or Guardsmen only
v.•hen assistance v.'as needed.
Police said early today little
s~iper fire and two fire boro
ingll -\ were reported Tuesday
night. Tv.·enty six persons
were arrested, most of them
for violating a 7 p.m. curfew,
police reported.
The trouble erupted Friday
night when performer Wilson
Pickett refused to appear al a
scheduled c~rt. saying he
was oot paid in advance. The
disorders :spread with hit and
run attacks by small groups
Saturday and Sunday nights.
Some blacks said they were
angered by whsl they con-
sidered excessive arrests and
verbal abuse. The Guard was
called in Su'nday night. A
black man u·as fatally shot
llfonday night.
Armour would not say how
many times police a n d
Guardsmen assisted the black
civiliaru; Tuesday, but added
that regular patrols did not
enter a housing project area
where Leon Anderson was
fatally shot after allegedly
burling a brick at a police car.
Reagan Backs
Lockheed Loan
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
Gov. Ronald Reagan has
declared his support for a $2SO
million federally underwritten
l i n to the ailing Lockheed
Airl ine Corp. coupled with
tigbten ing up of its manage-
ment efficiency.
Nixon 1'ours
In South;
Raps Nortl1
\VASHINGTON (UPI) -
Buoyed by a warm reception
from more than 150 .000
persons in Alabama Tuesda y,
President Nixon had reason to
be encouraged that h i s
popularity in the south ha s nol
seriously been eroded by a
speedup in school desegrega-
tion.
Large, enthusiastic crov.·ds
turned out in humid, 9Q.degree
weather to see hin1 in stops at
1.1obile and Birmingham.
He responded to this gesture
nf southern hospitality and a
gracious welcome by Gov.
George C. Wallace by praising
the south for accomplishing a
"peaceful. relatively quiel.
very significant revolution"
which has resulted in more
black children attending
predominantly wh.ite schools
than in tbe north.
And he criticized
northerners \\'ho "point their
fingers" at the south on the
racial issue.
O.t11tUAI holido.~
~[JD flswt:nr $cl~
kot fo.)kioit
~ ~' k« p<Atit~
I
Specio.ll~ pric.ed o.t
I
1 tZ~
l0fl:.
coito11, Veivo.~nlli l'li11h ••• 11z
. '-t'1,~bok.,b1owtt,hii\'~nk,1 purpl~
slt .... 11.wrth
Bron.>or\$, prink.J,flll l •11, ~!roJd.i lot~
~l~rr, hAnd~l•.~.1.(,L ~lit
~i~hi-
Lloi!W' Hof. Pcat, 1>-1+. •• ~ 1?.
\$plih:owh iJ q) , l'U>I' er l>rl;i 111 "'
l?cm;Dam'• .f.I ~111 e; ~ itk,1 WO VQ4
Colhi n.loiiHop.rn4<le ii\ Itc>l<j.t/5
lolut., ,.,.i,braw• .. :i.x.L
All·DAY CLASSES
kindergarten lhru 8th Grade
• Teacbill1Ille4 R's wltll pboalcs
• Door·to-Door Bn Service
•Before and After Stbool C1r1
• Rlasoaallle Taitioa
(Day Camp start! June 21 • , •
throughout summer_
Summt'r School start.s-July ~).
Also rejected. az to 21 , was
an amendment by S e n •
Gaylord Nelson (0.Wis.), to
stop assigning draftee!! to
combat-roles in Vietnam after
Dec. 31 unless they volunteer
for the duty. -=----
HAWTHORNE
CHRISTIAN
SCHOOLS
•• Fou1hll• v.11..,
16115 l rooktt111"1t Street
962·1112
i..,. .,..,. on._
ht tMCI helidl
'~ctually, I'm a
Communications Consultant
specializing in Increasing
Customers' Profits Through
Maximum Communications
'
Efficiency.
But to
most people,!
I'm just 'the ··
fella from
the phone
company'.''
f
You'll find him in offices, plants and stores. Analyzing phone
bills .. Discussing equipment needs. l ooking for ways to he lp
our business customers' businesses.
He's a General Telephone Communications Consultant. A
formal title for a nice, bright guy who can make day-to-day busi·
ness communications less hectic for you.
For exam ple, do cl ients pass nasty little remarks about your
phones always being busy? Do you have to.scream to page a
typist sitting two feet outside your office? Is it easier to reach a
customer overseas than someone in your building?
If these situations sound fam iliar (or re mind you of others),
you can definitely use ou r Communications Consultant And
soon, too. Before you waste more time and money. Or develop
an ulcer. '
(And if you think your office communications are pretty good
now, we promise that he can make them even better.>
There's no charge for his service. And it's very easy to get:
All it takes is a phone call to our business office.
We only ask one thing. When you call, please ask for !1the
Communications Consultant"-not '1the fella from the phone
company."
Everybody's the fella from lhe phone company down here.
tdi#I
GEnERALTELEPHDnE
I
'
I
r
I
• . .. •
•
Today's .FblaJ Saddlehaek N. Y. St.eeks EDI TI ON
VOL 6'4, NO. 125, 5 SECTIONS, 72 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDN ESDAY, MAY 26, 1971' TtN CENTS
San Clemente Police 'Sufficient for Future'
San Clemente's poliet. department will
probably not increase its eJ.isting com-
plement of 47 members for the next
several years. Chief Clifford Murray told
city cOuncilmen lhis week.
The chief, discussing the proposed
police department budget up for council
1tudy Monday night, said the present
total of patrolmen-which Includes 10
new positions paid for by a federal
grant-will suffice for the foreseeable
future.
•
San Clemente's police budget Is pro-
posed at $830,044 for the next fiscal year.
ti.lore than $100,000 of that sum is ex·
peeled to be picked up by the federal
government which is helping to pay the
cost.s required by security for President
Nixon.
Also included in the budget amount is
$10,000 which will form the fund to pay an
e1tra rive percent in wages to patrolmen
wilfing to undergo cross training as an al·
tack firelighting squad.
The sum would include funds (OI"
salaries and tquipment for the cadre of
police officers who would respond as
firemen lo initially batlle a blaze until
volunteers arrive.
The chief said that the fund grants -
paid on a three-year basis with chunks
each year, have covered nearly every
training expense incWTed by his depart.
ment over the past fiscal year. The pay·
menl includes the three.'.'monlh training
cycle for the 10 new patrolmen at the San
Diego Sheriff 's Academy.
The training expenses came lrom the
state's Peace Officers Standards and
Training program, itself subsidized with
federal funds .
While the exact amount of next year'1
federal grant is still not determ.i"'ed , an
average ·figure of SI00.000 has been
budgeted..
Councilmen remarked about the in-
creasing costs of police protection in the
city, but conceded that police e1penses
are soaring nationwide as wtll.
Conver5ation at the budget atudy also
yielded the seeds of an idea already suc-
cessful ln the Midwest-discu!!lon on
allowing police personnel to take patrol
cars home for personal use. The plan has
reduced crime by a minimum of 30 per·
cenl in cities Where it has been put to
use. Murray said.
Mayor Walter Evans-Jr. pointed out
that the Availability of the squad cars not
only might deter crime, but would be ··a
hell of a fringe benefit as well.••
The chief promised a continuing in-
crease in the performance of the depa.it.
menl in the next fiscal year.
"It took us sil: mon ths to find Ute right
10 men last year, and it usually takes
about a year more for the rasu1ts to b•
felt.
"I .think in the "e1t.year will see a 1o:ixf
5bow111g and you will be pleased with
"'hat you see," be said. . -··
Ille en ac e to ea
l\'lxon's Off er
San On of re Veto
Stuns Officials
By JOllN VALTERZA
Of t11t 01Ur PIHi! S!1tf
State. Park official!'! reated with shock,
~isappointment and anger to Tuesday's
announa;ment that the House Armed
Services Committee had rejected Presi-
dent Nixon's offer of San Mateo Canyon
and several miles of prime San Onofre
beach for public use.
Robert Meyer, Deputy Director of
Park! and Recreation for the State ol
California , told the DAILY PlLOT be and
Director William PeM Mott wert "eic-
tremely disappointed to say the least"
that the offer of the free land.a had been
changed to ·a lease of only a parcel of
beach frontage.
What's mo re, Meyer said the state of-
ficials were not even informed that hear-
ings were taking place 011 the issue in
Washington, D.C. .
The committee, which legally reviews
the declaration of excess relating to
military lands. ruled that San f\.tat~ Can-
)'on should not be opened to public use.
It excluded the facilities at the San
Onofre Surfing Club and enli!led men's
beach club Jrom any possibility of falling
iflto public hands and offered the re-
mainder of the beachfront from the
Wester" \Vhite House to San Onofre
Bluffs Slate Beach lo the Stale of Cali-
fornia on a lease basis only.
Original plans as outlined by President
Nixon during an announcement on 1 knoll
overlooking the affected acreage had a
much different tone. . .
San Mateo Canyon plus the entire SIX·
mile stretch or beach front was to be
deeded to public entities , the President
declared. The announcement i m me d i a t e I y
created a howl of protest from ranchers
and farmers with la rge investments on
their leaseholds in the canyon.
State park officials immediately began
looking toward the day when the canyon
would be developed as a blend of public
campgrounds and farming area.s.
Meyer chastised the lack of support of
the deeding of the beach and canyon
which was related in a recent resolution
by the San Diego Council of Gover"·
menl5. He also intimated dissatisfaction with
the opposition to the President's plan
from Rep. John G. Schmitz of Tustin and
Rep. Rebert Wilson of San Diego.
Orufe Cout
Weather
There may be a bit of drizzle. In
those cloudy skies on Thursday,
with cooler temperatures (6.1 to
70) prevailing along the Orange
Coast and inland areas.
INSIDE TODA l'
An old f1nancio l symbol over
Ntu;part Harbor ;,, ge tting a
riew look. Sec Finnncc, Page 25.
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Both legislators repo'1edly opposed the
beach giveaway before the committee.
State olicials had promised to honor all
leases involved in the San Mateo Canyon
agricultural area, he said.
Park! Director Mott had publicly said
definitely, with only fallow I a n d
developed for campil)g.
Meyer Tuesday said many questions
still surround the issue, n o t a b l y
whether there I.I: agiy i:venue for ap.
peal, and If the' committee's decision is
final and finding .
Meyer reiterated chagrin that state
parks officials did not win the chance to
speak to the committee afttr learning
that a surveyor ror theU.S. General
Servi~ Admlnistration had termed San
Mateo Canyon as "ideal'' for private
resi dential development.
"That's an awful thing to say,
especially when we weren't available to
debate that point."'
The latest decision, he said, wiU throw
a huge kink in state plans for expansion
of the newly acquired bluffs beach-a
stretch of rugged' coastline leased from
Mari"e Corps control after nine months
of bargaining.
The ultimate decision on the com-
mittee's recommendations falls on the
Department of Defense. The committee's
choices in the matter of excessing the
Camp Pendlelon lands do not have the
force of law.
However observers of the situation
have said that the Department of Defense
rarely overturns committee recom-
mendations.
* * * Access Stresse d
1 n Hou se Action
On San Onofre
Access -the old bugaboo surrounding
any public use of the South Coast's
shoreline -plays an Important role in
the latest change in the situation of San
Onofre's beaches.
It Is the acceS!'I question which most
vetes state parks officials after learning
that a house committee had rejected the
President's idea lo give 2.5 mile• of San
Onofre btach and 3.400 acres of uplands
to the public.
Deputy State Parks Director Robert
Meyer said no hints have yet come on
whether a level aceess route to btaches
still is available from the Federal
Government .
''We had really hoped for an access to
the beach rront It the Trestles area
rather than the rough trails which are
necessary from the bluff tops," he e1-
platned.
But now that the House committee has
excluded the aecel! zone from the
beachlront eligible for lease, the question
i! very cloudy.
Meyer said he was not looking forward
to another nine-month-long negotiating
period over the extra 2.5 miles of
beachfront with Marine Corps bras.o;.
As for planning of the ent.ire stretch of
ocean front whidtmight go public, Meyer
said "it's just too llOOO to tell."
Fund1J e1lst to open the initial San
Onofre Bluffs aire• on July I. Money also
will be budgeted for precise master plan-
ning of the state leascbold.
"But unUT we can iron out the i5sue of
accus and lease agreements, we can
pl•n very lllUe, '1 tht deputy director
said.
Girl's l11jiiry
Brings Suit
The father of a 7·year-old El
Toro girl has sued the San Joaquin
School District for $500,000 in dam-
ages in an Orange Counly Superior
Court lawsuit that accused the
district of negligence leading to
her serious injuries Dec. 2 at Aliso
School.
Richard Frederick. 2.1161 La
Vaca, states in his complaint that
there were no safety cushlon5 or
guards to protect Joline !\tarie
Frederick from injury when she
fell from the crossing bar at the
school.
School officials. he claims. fa il-
ed to adequately !'!Upervise the
recreation area or the school at
22882 Loumont Drlv~i _ ~\ Toro, at
the time of the ~-
An identical clltin riled by
Frederick against the school dit-
trict wu rejected by trustees Jan.
23.
Badham Reveals
Plans to Enter
Preserve Bill
Assemblyman RoQert. Badham (R-
Newporl Beach) said Tuesday that he
had obtained special permission of the
Assembly Ruleli Committee to introduce
his new biU for the creation of a marine
preserve in the Salt Creek area.
The bill, AB 3091 will now go to the
Natural Resources Committee. Badham
also said he will reappear before the
Rules Committee next week to obtain an
urgency clause to the Salt Creek legisla-
tion so that when it is passed and signed
into law by the governor it will go into ef·
feet immediately.
Badham said his work on this en·
vironmental prOl!?ction bill began two
weeks ago when it was brought to his al·
tention that the opening of the Salt Creek
area to larger numbers of the public was
endangering the natural environment of
aeveral marine specie!'!.
In 1968 and 1969 Badham sponsored
legislation which created five marine
preserves in the Newport Beach and
Laguna Beach areas.
Man, 24, Seized;
Demanded Plane
Trip to Denver
REDMOND. Ore. (UPIJ -A young
man was arrested Tuesday night when he
ran aboard an Air West twin propjet at
an airport ramp and demanded to be
flown to Denver to see his girlfriend.
Police said Steven M. Street. 24, of
Palos Verdes, was booked on a charge of
trespassi ng. They said be did not carry a
weapon but kept pointing under bis coat
as if be did.
The plane wa5 unloaded of lt.s 18
passengers when Street told t h e
stewardess and First Ofrlcer Bill
Lovelace that he wanted to be nown to
Denver by himself.
While he was talking with Lovelaee and
the ste.wardess, pollce were called. He of·
ft-red no resistance when taken into
custody .
Police said he had been lolterln{I: about
the plane and .suddenly '"burled through
thf: people" to get &board.1he plane.
After Street was amlilid, the plane
wa1 searched u a precautionary
tne:.!l!tlft-' but nothln1 wt1s found. The
Olght WAI delayed two hours.
Tb• plaD• wa1 on a flight from
.
The famed swallows of San Juan Capistrano have arrived 500 strong
at the ~fission Community Hospital being constructed in Mission
Viejo, lending a touch of premature antiquity to the new facility.
Some thought they were the offspring of the &waUows from 14• 200-
year-old San Juan mission, attracted by the tile roo(. The bUIIders
intend to let them remain, at least through the swallow mating season.
, , -. ' dJJ·
Youth,. 19, Held
On Burgla r y Rap
A 19·year-old San Clemente youth ar·
rested during a rouline police patrol ear-
ly tOOay laces charges of burglary in the
theft of about $26 in coin from a laun-
dromat.
Police said Robert \Villiam Hoffman of
155 Barcelona, wa s arrested at the scene
of the alleged burglary shortly after mid·
night.
Patrolman Don Anderson checked the
bu siness at 808 S. El Camino Real when
he noticed a person allegedly acting
suspiciously.
Hoffman, police said, assertedly had
burglary lools and the coins in his
possession at the lime of the arrest.
Sa1i .Jtaan Rills
Raiders Seize
Ove r $500,000
In 'Dirt y Films'
Westminster Pollet-seized more than
$500,000 worth of sex films and
photographs Tuesday in a raid on a small
industrial building occupied by the
Ka yous (pronounced chaos) Company.
District AttOrney Cecil Hicks called the
alleged pornographic seizure "the largest
in Orange County history."
The raid follows by two weeks a
similar discovery of porn ogr ap hi c
materials in Fountain Valley hut
Westminster police said there is no ap·
parent connection between the two opera-
tions.
Kayous Company was operating at
15144 Golden West St., without benefit o!
a city business license.
"No arrests have been made yet, but
we expect tO make some within the next
two days," Westminster Lt. Jack
Shockley said this morning.
Police hauled 20,500 reels cf !ilm and
300,000 still pholographs from the
building. Shockley and invesligators from
the district attomey "s olfice·spent all day
reviewing the films.
They were apparently rated double X.
"We spent liix days investigating the
business before raiding it." Shockley
reported. He said he couldn't disclose
bow police found out about the cperation.
•
Farm Labor
Boss Jailed
In Ritual
From Wirt Services
YUBA CITY -A stocky Mexican-born
farm labor contractor was arrested today
when deputies uncovered the remains of
nine middle-aged men , hacked to death
and buried in strange ritual positions
aJong the banks of the Feather River.
Officers aid they were still digging in
the sandy aoil for 1t least one other ~
ing person.
Ju•n V. Corona, 37-yur"°ld father M
four amall daughters, was taken tnto
custody at his modest stucco home in a
neat middle-clal! neighborhood in Yuba
City. a ;arming community of 25,000 in
the central valley of California.
Sutttr County Sheriff &y Whiteaker
declined to 11ay what led Offlcert to
Corona, and a deputy uld there was "no
motive we can discover." But the sheriff
added:
"We are certain be committed the
murders."
Most of the bod ies were found
on their backs, arms upraised. The
sheriff said they were badly mutilated ,
with deep cuts on the heads aod chests.
Their shirts were pulled up over their
bloody heads.
They were found about five miles Mrth
Of Yuba City 400 or 500 yards east of U.S.
Highway 99-E, on both sides of the river.
Seven were on the wut bank and two
others on the opposite bank, in a prune
orchard and a peach field.
Nearby was a settlement cf ahacb
where rrUgrant laborers live.
Corona, a quiet man, was known by his
neighbors a.s a strict father who wouldn't
allow his children out of the yard.
"They've never bothered anybody
around here," said Mrs. Oleta Kelley,
who lives two doors away.
"The only thing that was strange wa1
that he kept very strange hours. He
would come and go throughout the night,
especially in the summer," said the
Coronas' ne1kloor neighbor, Mrs. Wilma
Huff.
Two of Corona's small daughfera,
drel!ed neatly in their ochool clothes and
apparently unaware of what happened
were seen waiting for the school bus a
few hours after their father was arrested.
The victims were all caucasians, a~
parently migrant farm workers ln their
40s, 50s and 60s. They were all killed with
a machete or a heavy knife, the aherif!
said.
Some of the bodies bad two pairs ol
pants and two shirts, Indicating the vi<>
Uins were tranJltnt. I a bore r s , in-
vestigators said. The orchards &re being
thinned at this time of year.
Golf Course Buy Posed
An investigation into the possible
purchase of the San Juan Hills Golf
Course has been authorized by the San
Juan Capistrano City Council.
The council voted Monday to direct the
i;taff to proceed with studies lnlo the
reasibllity of purchasing the facility for
municip31 recreatlpnat use.
Councllm&n Ed Che:mak. who initiated
the 1tudy, 11Jgge<ted Jhat proflll from llM>
galf course might be u~ to o!fset tht
city's par ks and recµation program.
C.OUncilmau Jim Thorpe and. Josn Gllm·
mell tndlcaled) intemt 1n the project: but
wanted more study wf~ emphasis on
J
parks and recreation tje1 and a com-
parison with similar project. tn other
cities.
Reluctance was displayed by Coun-
cilman Bill Bathgate who thought the golf
course should remain a prlv11te operation.
~fayor Tony Forster 1ald be would be
hesitant about committing the city to
sud! a projac> wlthoul vtler •ppnival.
One or tffe. tt.afrs 'directi-tea will be
looking inl<i·1'dw ·sJcb a project WO\lld be
flnenced. Citr Onanct director Paul Law
wfif lnvesUaate 'tour Ways a ptojed of
this size cab be funded.·
•
Jn a memorandum on fU"di111 Jarge
capital pn>Jecla, LB1i &lated that lhe city
can either borrow funds, issue general
obligation bondt (which take voter a~
ptoval),, negoUate a Jeas&.purcllaM ar-
rangement or issue revenue bonds whlcb
would be paid oil by the eipecled profHI
rrom the 11olf course.
The ne•t step tht city will take in itl
study will be to acquire. a financial
consultant to advl11: the city on the bat
method •l.1cqu!slUQQ '"Id =Ing and to e1amlne the operatfun•a · to tee ii
it would be worthwbllt.
•
2 DAIL Y PIL01 SC Wtdntsd1y, May 26, lq7l
Deserter Lived Youth in a Drea1n World
By LUCINDA FRANKS
A~'D
P~'TER FREIBERG
II U•• ....... W!ftrHlllMI
Lodi, New Jersey. is not the kind of
tov.n lhat Inspires youngsters to dream of
doing great things. John Picciano's
parents, like many (Jf their neighbors,
vividly remember the great depression.
His father wa'S occasionally out of work
even v.•hen John V.'as grov.·ing up. The
Picclanos had no hig h ambitions for their
only child. Their advice .,.,,as "stay in
line" and learn enough in :.chooi so you
can land a decent-paying job.
Still like all children , especially those
\\'ho spend a great deal or time by
themselves. John indu lged in fan tasies.
On Jong v.·alks through v.·hat were then
the fields of Lodi. he daydreamed of
becomlng a famous cabinel!naker. When
he was reprimanded at school. he would
1ink into (Jne particular dream sequen~
In which he became a brilliant Harvard
Clear, Pink
Vintage Wine
For Only $75?
!AN FRANCISCO (UPI) -"Delicate,
clear. clean plnk color: big, almost
curious nOse; good body, long, relati\•ely
&oft finish -considerable vinosily aad
character.''
And 79 years old -most of it spent in
a dark, secret cellar.
The description is of two bottles at
Inglenook Cabernet Sauvignon. vintage
1392, which v.·ent (Jn the auction block
today at the richest rare v.·ine auction of
!Ls kind.
Connoisseurs, collectors. investors, inn--
keepers and wine merchants previ ewed
the 3.500 cases (Jf old, curren~ and future
vintages which Heublin Inc. offered at it!
third "premiere national auction (Jf rare
wines."
The food and spirits company predicted
auctioneer J. Michael Broadbent, head of
the wine department at Christie's of Lon·
don, would sell the 474 lot!! for more than
1250,000.
The 1892 Cabernet Sauvigon fr() m
Inglenook, one of Heublin 's California
wineries, was part (Jf a case of a dozen
bottles recently found in the private
cellar of the vineyard's founder. They
\Vere expected to bring up to $75 a botUe.
Alexander C. "Sandy'' fl.1cNally, in.
ternalional wine director for Heublin,
5.lid several dozen boltles of 19th century
y,•ines were discovered last summer in a
secret «:llar in the family residence at
lbe vineyard.
They were localed during an inventory
taken after the death last July (Jf John
Daniel Jr .. grandnephew of Inglenook's
rounder. The wines, dating back to 1887,
were la id aside by Gustave Nelbaum, the
l'lneyard 's founder, before his death in
1908.
Other wines in the case included an 1887
vintage Cabernet Sauvlgnon -believed
to be the oldest botUe of Cabernet in ex-
istence -and other Inglenook wines of
\•intage 1900 and older.
Highlights of the sale also included the
prtsident's cellar from New York'!i
Carlyle Hotel. a two-botlle case of 1846
Cbateau La(ite from lhe private cellar of
the Rothschilds, and an advance offering
al 2,000 casts of 1968, 1969 and 1970
estate·bottled Callfomia wines.
Dance Demonstration
Slated in Clemente
Saddleback College physical education
Instructor Belly Sherrer will present a
d~ demonstration to the Friends of
the Library at 7:30 p.m, Thursday in San
Clemente. The program. open to the
public will be htld in the auditorium o(
the San Diego Gas and Electric Com-
pany, 101 W. Portal.
OIAH~l COAST
DAILY PILOT
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nom•• x •• ,11 .. -
Tho111•• A. Morplilno
Mlfllllnt Ed110r'
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S.. CIMttte Offk•
JOS Nt1lh El C1miRo R11I, 91671
Olttlr Offlcn
C1111!1 "1~••· JIO Wnr 11•'1' St•,.I
t.itw;x>rl ll11t11' llll HtWf:Otl ll&11:H1rd
11\lnH"lltol'I llt1dl: 171/S lltKll llO..~vrrd
proftssor who always had the right "·ords
and facts at hls fingertips.
The Lodi PubUc library is not far
from the Picciano home, and John liked
LO go there alone in .tfie arternoont. He
usually wtnt wllhoot. · terting anyont, and
even as be grew older he felt uneasy
a6out discussing serious topics "'Ith fami-
ly and fr iends.
"It just wasn't done -to talk about
politics. religion or anything too heavy.''
he ret ails. "You v.·ere afraid you·d bore
someone.''
Paul Speziale. a high school English
teacher who works at the Lodi Public
Library after school , says John '""·as the
type of kid who was curious aboul
everything. One day he v.·ould be reading
a history book, the next day it migh! be
'Great Movies of the 1920s.' "
ffiRELEVANT
John sa)'S he \\'as never tu rned on
by his cla sses. He complains that he
never learned anything he could "use,"
thnt the courses seemed "Irrelevant."
After class John would someUm~• hang
uround Pap's Lunchepnette near the high
school. Dan and Chickie Cucuo, twins who
wert friends with John, recall be c.(te.n
expressed a wish to date girls but was
shy and nev.er had the nerve to ask them
out.
"He USC'd lo 1alk about It lo us.''
Chickie says. "He'd say, 'I'd llke to have
a girl. what do you think I should do?' "
"He'd see a girl, he'd s:iy something lo
her. tf she \\·ould tw·n around and say
something to him. he 'd be losl. He didn 't
knov.· v.·hat to say . She mi&ht say 'Hi,' he
might look and say, ·1vhat do I do ne-xt?' ,.
Some of thl' Cucuos' (nC'nds rt'buffed
John. He 1fas tail. bulky .:ind "'alked ~·ith
a peculiar shuffle . They felt he \Yasn 't
"'hip'' enou gh. \\'hen he gradt.:a!ed from
high school, John O\\ned only one suit and
didn't dance.
"There "as a gradua tion party he
DAIL't' "ILOT Stiff "Mlt
AdvaJU!ed Traini119
Skip Conner, Laguna Beach lifeguard chief. gives advance first aid
training to art colony's 32-member fire departmi;nt. It included
resuscitation. splinting and bandaging. On ground is Wi1Jian1 Sears.
Fireman Rick Grams holds respirator mouthpiece.
·Irvine Officials A11swe1·
Queries 011 Coast Re sort
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL
Of tit• O•llY "11•1 lt•ll
Tv.·o Irvine Company officials \\'ere
kept busy Tuesday night answering
scores of questions from Laguna Beach
residents et1ncerning Irvine 's proposed
coastal resort on !he three-mile strip of
virg in beach between Laguna Beach and
Newport Beach.
Asked ·how the 36-foot building height
limitation, if approved by Laguna Beach
voters Aug. 3, might affect the J.rvine
plan. "'hich may include some high rise,
Richard Reese, vice president of planning
said : ''I think some vertical element is
good. and any 36-foot restriction would be
a limitation to a hotel developer_
"Also. such a limit would be a poor
urban design solution," he added.
The high rise Issue. al ong with many
other issues, Reese said, would have to be
soh·ed by citizens of Laguna Beach. if the
city annexed the Irvine land up to Crystal
Cove.
Asked if the coastal resort might ht' in·
corporated as an independent city, Ray-
mond \Vat son, vice president (Jf land
management, said that Laguna Beach
.and Newport Beach have "informal
agreements" to annex lhe Irvine land to
both cities.
As the plan no1y slands, !he boundary
between the two cities "'OUld be just
southeast of Crys tal Covt, Ho~·ever,
Watson said. other boundaries are being
studied based on drainage l in e s ,
topography and utility Jines.
A ma jor part of Ilic lr1'ine plan is to
relocate. exi~ting Pacific Coast l1igh11·ay
inland l-0 an elevation higher on U1e ridge
along the coast bet"·een Newport and
Laguna. Ac~ss to the beach. recrea·
tional facilities. parks and vista points
""·ould be via arterial! from the ne\v
high.,.,•ay to the coast.
As ked ·who v.·ould pay for the highv.·ay
relocalion. \Vatson re sp<>nded th at 11
would ha,·e to be "mutually funded" b~·
the Irvine Company. the cities of
!\e\vporl and Laguna. t11c county and the
state.
T"·o or the large canyons on the Irvine
land. Ree se said. \.\·ould probably be turn·
cd into •·recrea tiona l areas'' such as
greenbelt.s.
Asked "'beth:?!" these canyons v.·ould be
donated to the county as open space and
'~ho "·ould maintain thc1n. Reese !laid
lhat further study would ha,·e to bt• con-
ducted on the matter. He did indicate
that the lands could "give p<:'Ople .;omc
happiness. because of their de1achmen1
fr om urban areas."
\Va tson, asked about lht' timetable of
the plan. said public }1earin~s before !he
appropriate agencies \l.'OU!d begin !hi!'
sun1mer and that the first devel opment
of the resort could begin in sumn1er of j
1972. ;
.. But lhe entire project "'ill lake about
20 years. It v.·i!J be .1 slow and gradua l
de velopment,·· \Vat.son .said. I
Asked i( Lhc land could remain un·
developed as it is today. \Vatson said th<1l
such a p<>s:;ibilily had been ruled out by I'
th e Irvine Co1npsny.
"\\'e're paying $1700 a day in tuxes and
gel ling no return," he said. "And lhBl is
une<.'Onomical (or us."
Saddlehacl{ College G1·ad I
Stru1da1·ds to Be Tou gl1er
• Graduatio n requirements at Sadclleback
College will be tougher ntxt year.
Associate in Art s degree.
Dr. Fred Bremer."superintt!ndent of U1c
distri ct and president of the college. said
it "·ould be possible under the old sys tem
for a student to leke his 18 units U1e fir s!
quarter. transfer to ano th er in·
stl!uUon and then 11.1·0 year11 later request I
n degree fron1 Saddleback.
'rrustets or the district v () 1 e d
unanimously Monday to change R policy
so that students inwl take a minimum of
60 quarter unitJ In residence or the last
18 units prior to the awarding or the
degret.
A former policy permitted ai;tudenls to
take only 18 unl t.s on lhe Saddleback
campus to be. eligible for the schoor s
He added Ulal a total of 90 quarter
units are required in California Jn order
lo receive th<' AA degree. I
•
v.•anted to go to," Dan Cucuo says. "But
rnost of lhe guys didn 't.want hhn \\'lth us.
because you were interested in glrla and
you didn't want to look bad. Jle came out
all dreued up, and-this other guy said,
'Where you going, John? You're not com-
ing with us. 8ecaUSe you n1akt> is look
bad.' So he went back in lhe house. But
It was meant as a joke. John took things
too serious."
TOP HALF
llih cumulat ive grades sho"'ed
J ohn 10 be in the top half of his class,
\1·ith mostly Bs and Cs. He al"•ays rec:eiv-
ed passing marks in "citizenshi p,'' \1•hich
the school says includes ·'staying \vlthin
the rules.''
Jerry Tamburello, then director of stu·
dent activities and no\v the principal of
Lodi High School. says "he .,.,,as so
average it \\'as ridlculow. He "'as ne\'er
in any trouble.''
On the surface, John changed ve ry little
during high school. Teachers felt he \\'as
Top Brass
Clash Sent
To Committee
Dy JACK DROBACK
01 111• Dtllt ,1191 11111
The battle royal bet\veen Orange Coun·
t\• Tax Collector Robert Citron and Data
Services Director Robert Farmer \\'SS
panially resolved Tuesday by lhe Boa rd
(Jf SuperYisors.
They tossed the \\'hole mess to the Data
Processing Commitree and lo the 19i\
c;rand Jurv. The committee consists of
several coUnty department heads.
Supervisor David L. Baker \1•ho made
the motions said thl' Data Processing
Committee should conduct an analysis
.and comparison of the widely differing
fi gures offered by Ci tron and Farmer.
The Grand Jury is to look into any possi-
ble wrongdoing on th e part (Jf either
departn1ent head.
The batt!e started three weeks a@O
\1 hen Citron told Uie supervisors that he
could get a job 1ve v.·anted done for
S20.000 less by giving it to an outside fir m
rather th an to Farmers department.
The firm v.·as Security Pacific Optima-
Uon Service of Los Angeles. a subsidiary
or Securuy Pacific Bank .
Citron also blasted Data Services a.!I in·
1•1f1cient. wasteful and incompetent. J-~or
good mearure. he thre\Y in County
Administrati\·e Officer Robert r..
Thomas. "I cannot understand ho\V
Thomas can allow this cesspool of \\'asle
of taxpuyers' mone~•." he ebarged.
Supervi!inrS Ronald Capsers and Robert
Bntlin. \\'ho have previously attacked
TI1omas. jumped (Jnto Ci t r o n · !I
hnndwagon and .,.,,Ith Suµervisor Ralph
Clark. voted 3 W 2 lo accept th e Pacific
Security offe r .. in principle.'' It had lo be
pul in proper form by the County
('ounseJ"s office before sig ning.
The job \vas to change the present
P.'.ifX'r copy secured tax roll to a
l\licro fichc Systen1 similar to microfilm.
Farmer had his innings last "'eek and
!lated that Citron's present tnethod v.·as
lhl' IO"'est cost "'ay to do the job, that it
1rould cost $2,()JI) more to' convert to
m1cro1Lln1 through his department. and
$13.300 more by using Pacif ic Security.
Farmer charged that Citron had based
his proposal lo take the job ()Ul of the
county on "incomplete and inaccurate in-
formation because of his deliberate
f:illure to follow existing county poli cy
and coordinate his actions with the air
propri ale county departments."
Ail'<tr!IH•n'*"
GEM TALK
TODAY
by
MYSTERY GEMS
Throughout history·, many famous
gems have di sappeared entirely,
\1·hi1r others ha ve vanished for cen·
turies, only to reappear in strange
places and 1n the hands of unlikely
tJl\'llers .
Such a gcn1 is the fabulous 70
carat "'!'he Idol's Eye." Mined in
1600 . it passed from a Persian
Prince in 1607 lo a private com·
pany. as a debt repayment. It then
'anished for over three centuries.
Suddenly. in 1906, this his toric dia·
1nond cn1erged again \\'hen it \vas
sold to European interests by a
Turkish sultan.
Forty-one years later, in 1947,
1'The Idol 's Eye'' \\·as sold to an
An1erica11 \vom an for $375~000, add·
ing one more chapter to the history
of allure and mystery of gems.
,i\lthough no mystery surrounds
the beautlfut stones in our store,
they do have. the moment you buy
them, a personal meaning and al~
lure which "'Ill make you treasure
then1 throughout your lifetiJ11e.
not u.sing his intelle<:tual potential.
But peopJe closest to John became
aware of changes in his inte.re1ts and
personality.
"He deYeloped an I-don't.give-a-dam
att itud e." snys Ken Barr)'. J ohn's best
friend I h r ou gh o u t 111ost of high
.!it'hoOI. "He didn·t really care about
classes. ·roward the end. high school
became a big joke to him, a bigger joke
than when we started. By the lime he
graduated high school, he was a Jillie
louder. a lll!Je more aggressive than
\S,hen he entered."
John"s new-found aggre.ssiYeness was
evident in his senior year feud \\'lth
t:ertrude Levow, the sil\•erhairfd high
.school librarian.
CUTTING UP
John \\'as constantly cutting up in the
libra ry. Once a C<lUp!e of other students
dared John to break a wooden stool that
l\.tiss Levow used. He accepted the dart,
raised lhe !!lool and brought lt down on
the floor "'Ith a crash.
•·He was so obviously rebellious,'' Mis.s
Levow says. ''I think he v.•as angry at the
\\'orld. He just "'anted his own way. He
"·as unhappy.''
In his last I wo years of high school,
John read more avidly than ever before.
lie joined book clu bs and built a bookcase
in his parents'. living room lo hold the
volumes that remain there to this day.
He angered his parents by spending $6t
he had saved on a 1929 Encyclopaedia
Britannica set.
John "'as curious about people \\'ho
changed the course of events. He was
fascinated "'ith Franklin RooseYelt and
lhe New Dfal.
He also read several boo ks about
socia lisn1. liked v.•hat he read and became
1nore out spoken in voicing his ()pinions.
.. lie al"'ays seemed sort of tuned in lo
socia lism." Ken Barry says. "He would
talk a lot about that. It just seemed a
good system to him. He thought it "'as a
system for the peop le."
QUESTIONING
\\'h at seems to have set John oft from
most of his classmates at Lodi High
School \\'as his questioning of established
vie'.rs. In his senior year, he broke with
the Catholic Church after a priest told
J1irn !here were certain excepti(Jns to
''thou shalt not kill" -and war was one
or them.
His parents say J ohn aJ\\·ays expressed
strong feeli ngs against v.·ars, believing
lhe ''little peop!e" never benefitted from
them.
lie began reading and thinking about
conscription. "'hich seemed to him an un-
fair restritlion on individual liberty. But
"·he.n he reached his 18th birthday, he
registered for the draft as required.
John graduated from high school in
June 1962. Although his grades "'ere good
enough to gain him college admission, his
parent.s v.•ere unable to afford tilltion.
Still unsure of what he v.·anted to do,
,John loafed around during the summer
and then .,.,.ent job hunting -only to find
employers were not hir ing "drafl bait.··
"I felt this was a form of personal
discrimination," John says .•. , felt like r
\vas wearing a scarlet IA on my
forehead. Here J was being penalized for
defending the system which kept the
employers in business."
READING
\Vith a lot of !pare time on his hands,
John began reading about current events,
especially Vietnam , where the Johnson
Administ ration was escalating U.S. in-
''olvement in 196&-67. He read Lederer
and Burdick's "The Ugly American" and
started to feel America was making a
mistake in inler\'ening in \\'hat seemed lo
him lo be a civil \var.
"But t still belie\•ed in the American
1\·ay and the Communist threat," John
sa)'S. "I \rould have been v.·illing to fight
for my country -perbaps just because U
"'IS my COWllry."
He finally resorted to a job al Sl.30 a11
hour at Popular Merchandise, a mail
order firm that had constant turnov er.
The "·ork. force was made up mostly of
blacks and poor whites. a tlass of men
John had not been etposed to before.
John says the nature of the job. the
draft. his gro\Ying doubls about I.he Viet.
nam War. and the generally bleak outlook
or life depressed him deeply in this
period. But like many teenagers. he re tL
unable to confide in hi,. parents. Hi!'!
friend s found it diltlcult to communicate
~·ith him.
OWN \\'ORLD
..He just didn't want to bti bolhered,''
remembers Chi ckie Cucuo. "He Jived in
his own liltle world. Like he was satisfied
to go to work . lo come home, to have
supper, to work (Jn his car and that was
it. That was his life. Jt v.•as ·a routine.''
John himself says: "l felt like l had
driven , do.,.,·n the wrong street and
couldn't find my "'ay out. 1• •
John quit his job at Popular Merchan-
dise after nine months follo.,.,,ing a r11n-in
\\'ith the manager. He stayed. home,
brooding over !he fact that a\•erage higlt
school graduates like himself, not
brilliant but not stup id either, were find·
ing it so dlflicult to get :Iood jobs.
~leanwhile. the draft was getting
closer. He took the Army physical at the
peak of Vietnam draft calls. Although his
parents say John had a history of high
blood pressure, he ,passed and v.·as
classified IA .
John knew then that he had to make up
his mind what to do abou t serving in the
military and p<>ssibly fighting in Vietnam.
By this time. he .,.,·as torn bet":een a
be.lier tha t he should not fight in v.·hat he
S8\V as a purposeless war and his inbrei..I
!ear (Jf ··stepping out of line."
\~'O~'T STAY
Dan Cucuo remembers John saying
before his physical. " ·1r they draft me,
J'm not gonna stay, I tell you right now.'
''After he passed. he came home, and
for that day he was real down, really
down, and said he would do whatever he
could do to get out.·•
\Vithout telling anyone. John made a
final attempt to get out or the Army. lie
inquired at his local draft board abou t
applying for conscientious objector (COi
status. He says the draft board advised
him he had little chance of being granted
such an exemption because he .,.,.as not a
Quaker and warned him it would be
•·unv.·ise"' in the long run to apply.
John Picciano's experiences illustrate
the differences bet"·een working-c lass
and more affluent youth in dealing v.·ith
the draft. One of the greatest criticisms
of the draft system is that peo!)le who
can afford to muster medical testimony.
legal advice and other expert help can
stall induction and even avoid it
altogelher.
CAN DELA\'
David Nissen. chief (Jf the criminal
division of the U.S. Attorney 's office in
Los Angeles, says anyone \Yho "spends
the time, effort and money ha s a fairly
good chance (Jf at least delaying and
so metimes forestalling going" into the
Army. ,
Had John Picciano sought help from 8
draft coWlselor, he \l.'ould have learned
that Quakers are not the only ones who
can be granted CO status. He might also
have been told to get a medical
certificate attesting to his high blood
pressure.
He did none of this. He just took his
draft board·s ad\•ice. and two v.·eek.s later
received his "greetings."
"When he got drafted he reported:'
recalls Chickie Cucuo. ''He was sad, arid
acted kind of strange, but he left
anyv.·ay.··
(!Veit: Basic traini11g and t/1 e bus
to Lodi. J
BE4L:LY
B:IG-L~EAGUE !
.D TISSOT
Gi3rit-si.te42-m1Uimeter 11utomat lc d1te-t111ir11
T·12's, the newest ol a
long Urie of technical big-leaguers by Tissot.~
Top: shows the d1y 11 well 1s the dltl', end
his rot1llria Inside elaps,d·llme scale. In starnlns ste1I, $125
lower. the Naviptorwith
rot11lng Inside 24·hour set '· St1inless steel, $120
J. C. .JJ.umphrie.1 J eweler.1
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONVENIENT TERMS
IANICAMf:lllCAR0-MA$TEll CHARGE
24 YEARS IN SAME LOCATION
' PHONE 541-1401
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Lag1111a _Beaeh
EDITION
Today's Flnal
N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 6'1, NO. 125, 5 SECTIONS, 72 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 1971. TEN CENTS
Realtors Seek Cof C Supp~rt for High Rise
By BARBARA KREIBICH
Of tl\1 EM.Ill" ~11•1 Sllff
Seeking the support of lhe chamber of
commerce, the \Laguna Beach Board of
Realtors Tuesday fired the first gun in a
campaign lo shoot down the building
height limit initiative.
Board president Robert Turner told
chamber directors the realtors are
J1unching a campaign to "combat misin·
formation and myth on the 36-foot height
limiL"
Exteiasion OK'd
Proponents of the initiative, he said,
•·have done a magnificenl job of raising
money and getting community sup-
port ... ·we are asking the Chamber or
Commerce to match the money ant.I time
the opposition has put in.''
Turner said he hoped many other
Laguna organizations would help the pro-
ject to develop a graphic brochure to be
mailed to every properly owner in the~
corrimunity, "explaining just what the
height limit would do to Laguna Beach."
en
District Aides
Keep Contracts
By PATRICK BOYLE
01 tll• Oallf ~Ill! 11111
Ignoring the wishes of two trustees·
elect, the Laguna Beach ~ool board
voted Tuesday to extend for another yea r
thf: contracts of district Super:intendent
~William Ullom and bis two top aides.
The action, a 4-1 split vote with
member William Thomas dissenting,
surprised many ef the estimated 200
residents attending the meeting in lhat
there was absolutely no discussion of the
Issue. When the item came up on the
agenda, board president ),#rry Taylor's
call for discussion was met with stony
sllence, so the vote was immediately
taken.
Many of the residents had been promp-
ted to at.tend v.·hen trustees · elect
Patricia Gillette and Gerald Linke. along
with Thomas, asked in a letter to the
board Monday that the contracts not be
extended.
The three were elected to the board
April 20, but Mrs. Gillette and Linke will
not take office until July I. They had re-
quested contract decisions for Dr. Ullom,
Business Superinlende:nt Charles Hess
and Instruction Superintendent Robert
Reeves be tabled un W that time.
However, the board held an executive
gession prior to Tuesda y nighfs meeting,
apparently to discuss contract extension
for the administrators. and its public vote
was against the request for delay.
Due to !he large crov.·d in attendance,
trustees were forced to hold the session
at the high school auditorium. Boa rd
pre sident Larry Taylor said it was the
biggest audience he had see n at a
trustee's meeting since he was fir st
elected in 1958. Although the audience
was quiet. most of its members seemed
to support the present school ad·
ministration.
The current board policy calls ror two-
year contra cts for the three top staff_
members, but with the proviso that the
contracts are renewed aMually so the
holders always ha~ the security of a
two-year agreement. Following the
board's action Tuesday, the three men
are under contract to the district through
tbe 1972·73 school year.
Board.member Thomas and lb e
tru stee.elect ckl.imed on Monday an ex·
tension of the contract would hamper
them in carrying out their policies when
they hetome a board majority July 1.
In Monday's letter to the school board,
the trio also asserted a contract ex-
Oruge Coast
\t'eather
tension at this time would creale a
"financial burden of over $130,000 in the
district." This apparently referred to the
amount which would be requiried if the
new board wished to fire Drs. Ullom, and
HeS! and "buy off" their two.yea r con-
tract..
Dr. Ullom said Tuesday it would in fact
cost $142,000 to take such action.
Former trustee William Wilcoxen,
whom Thomas replaced, initiated the
present policy of havin& two.year con-
tracts rather than four-year agre.ementa:,
most 5Chool dl.stricta have four-year con·
tracts.
"This change was made precisely to
avoid hampering a new board," Wilcoxen
said Tuesday, noting the policy was also
designed to prevent the board from hav-
. ing to "buy off" an admlnistrator·s con·
tract.
The Laguna Beach Taxpayers' Associa·
lion had attempted unsuccessfully Tues-
day to get a Superior Court restraining
order to prohibit the board from ex.
tending the three contracll.
However, Judge Robert Banyard refus-
ed to sign the order, citinl there was in-
sufficient cause to restrain the trustees
from taking the action. The taxpayers
group officially endorsed ~lrs. Gillette,
Thomu and Linke in the recent school
board election.
The trio had campaigned on a platform or returning the schools to more "tradi·
tional" education and Dr. Ullom is knov.·n
throughout California for the innovative
programs he has built up in the Laguna
Beach schools.
Following the board 's action Tuesday,
truslee-elect Linke. a retired Navy cap-
tain, highly critical of the schools. said he
"had no comment" on what action he
would propose July t.
Computer Keeps
Own Time Record
Trustees of the Saddleback College
District can be confident that they won't
be over charged for computer use -the
computer is keeping track of the houn.
The board voted unanimomly to ap-
prdve a contract with the Santa. Ana
College for use of their co mpute r during
the 1971·72 fiscal year.
fee for use is $50 per hour with the
computer logging the actual time used by
Saddleback College.
The district also will pay $1 ,000 for two-
and·a·half months of training for Its own
data proceasor.
'
$15,000 Bail
The realty board president said he
..,,.ould donate his own time to giving slid e
presentations to combat the high limit in·
itiative. He projected a few sample slides
showing old beachfront homes in need of
maintenance and repair to illustrate the
rundown condition of the proposed hotel
wne area in the block south of Hotel
Laguna.
Other visual aids. he said, could be
prepared by an arli st. and show the
possibility of placing high rise structures
ac
3 Jets Crash
In S. Africa
CAPE TOWN fUPIJ -Tllree
South African Air Force jell
usually used as transporls for high-
ranking defense officers crashed in·
to the sheer face of Table Mountain
today. killing the 11 persons
aboard.
The victims were not ide ntified,
but Defense Minister Pieter Botha
said the nation •·Jost some of It!
finest members," apparen tly
military officers.
Botha said the planes were prac·
!icing a flypast for a holiday event
in Ca pe Town on ~fonday.
The crash occurred at Table
Mountain near Clpe Town, Botha
sa..id.
Salesman Seized
After Incident
At Newpon Club
A South Laguna salesman failed to sell
Newport Beach police on his driving
ability Tuesday, leading to a Balboa Bay
Club incident that left all parties unhap-
py.
By the time it was over, he was jailed
and one officer was off work with in-
juries, while a second was nurs ing a bad
bite but back on the job today.
William Morri3, 2.1, was booked on
' charges or assault on a police officer,
with a security guard at the club also
listed as a vict im.
Patrolmen Don Cols and Doug \Vebster
said they noticed Morris' 1971 luxury
sports weaving erratically shortly before
noon and stopped him at 1221 W. Coast
Highway.
During the routine investii::ation the
12S-pound businessman allegedly tr ied lo
flee on foot, but was caught and police
claim he became violent
Bob Hope Presented
Degree hy Colleges
LOS ANGELES fAP) -Comedian Bob
Hope was named by th!! Cali fornia State
College Board of Trustees Tuesday for an
honorary degree. a move tha t was
criticized by antiwar students and
teachers when first proposed last
January.
Hope, who ha~ received 18 honorary
degrees, said he was pleased, adding the
earlier criticism was a "reaction to the
war."
in the canyon or back again.st the hills
"where they wouldn't obstruct anyone 's
view."
"We have got to attract quality people
to Laguna Beach fo_r our own 1urvival,''
he told the chamber directors.
Noting that the proposed CH (com-
mercial-residential) zone cove.red only
three small beachfront areas, Turner
said, "There Ls no way a Miami Beach or
Waikikj • could be built under Uris
ordinance as people have been told.''
•
fl1anpower and money would be needed
to "get the message to the community''
before the Aug. 3 election on the proposied
citywide 36-foot he.ighl limit, be con·
eluded.
Proponents of the initiate, said
Chamber president Berna.rd Syfan, ha ve
employed a number of "magnificent
myths" in their campaign.
"It takes a lot of gumption kl separate
the many magnificent myths from the
actual effect on the communlty," said
Syfan. "A general building h~lght Hmit
would lie a lot of hands and could rHU!t
in the sort of cuts you fil)d above Nye1
Place. It would make more sense to &et
the density for a development. Density is
the key to wning.
"High rise," he concluded, "is a;
tremendous battle cry, but you must look
beyond for the true effect. The hotel peo.o
pie don't get as much out of their ln-
v'estment as th'e community doe.s. The
whole town neecb them."
e 0 ea
t.aguuagrlns ly Phil lntorl•nc!I
"Twenty Ye•r• .Ago, in Th1t Price R1n9e, You Would've Gotten 1
HouM, with Ch1rm, ind• White·w1ter Vi1w. Now, You'll Gtt a
Shick, With No Ch1rm, 1nd, If You're Lucky, a M1rlne P1intin9."
Laguna Trustees Approve
Quarter System · at School
Students at Laguna Beach High School
w 11 I attend classes on a trimester or
quarter system next school year after
trustees Tuesday approved the change by
a 4·1 vote .
The only opposition to the change in
course slructure and length of grading
periods was voiced by newly elected
trustee William Thomas, wht said he
knew "little or nothing about it." Thomas
attempted to table the measure until he
could st udy the matter further, but his
molion died for lack of a second.
The proposed change from the present
semester system to lrimesters was ex-
plained to lhe board at its April 27
meeting, the same day trustee Thomas
took his post on the school body.
Under lhe plan , students will attend
course.s and be graded for three 12-wcek
periods rather than the present two 18-
week semesters. The reorganization will
ne«ssitate revising several of the high
school's courses, principal Don Haugh t
told the board Tuesday, but will not in-
volve any additional cost .
Haught said the trimester system, used
in most colleges, is relatively uncommon
among high schools. The principal said
<'hanging the present system had met
with no serious opposition from the staff
at the high school, although a few
teachers would be inconvenienced more
than at.hers by the revamping.
He said business courses, such as
shorthand and typing, and girls' physical
education are more structured to the
semesler system than are many other
courses and would require a greater
degree of reorganization.
All courses at the school will have to be
organized so they can be taugh t in one or
two qu arters. unless they are a full year
In le ngth, Haught noted.
''We will be able to provide con·
siderably richer programs under the
quarter system," Haught said.
The lrimesler aystem will necessitate
only three grading periods at lhe school,
rather than the present four. but will re-
quire three registration periods for the
students.
The new structure was adopted f.l by
the board, with trustee Thomas dissen-
ting. The vote was received with loud ap-
plause by the audience at the board
meeting.
F a1~m Labor.
Boss Jailed
In Ritual
From Wlre Services
YUBA CITY -A stocky Mexican-born
farm labor contractor was arrested today
when deputies uncovered the remains ol
12 middle-aged men, hacked to death
and buried in strange ritua l positions
along the banks of the Feather River.
Officers said they were still digging ln
the sandy soil for at least one other miss.-
Ing person.
Juan v. Corona, 37-year-old father of
four small daughters. was taken into
custody at his modest stucco home in a
nea t middle-class neighborhood in Yuba
City, a farming community of 25,000 in
the central valley of California.
Sutter County Sheriff Roy 'Whiteaker
dtcllned to say what led officers to
Corona, and a deputy .11a id there was ''no
motive we can discover." But the lherUI
added:
"We are certa in he committed the
murders."
Most of the bod i es were found
on their backs, arms upraised. The
sheriff said they were badly mutilated,
with deep cuts on the heads and chests.
Their shirts were pulled up over their
bloody he.ads.
They were found about five miles north
of Yuba City 400 or SOO yard! east of U.S.
Highway W-E, on both sides of the rlver.
Seven were on the weist bank and two
others on the opposite bank, 1n a prune
orchard and a peach field.
Nearby was a settlement of ahacks
where migrant laborers live.
Corona , a quiet man, was known by his
neighbors as a strict father who wouldn't
allow his children out of the yard.
"They've never bothered anybody
around here ," said 11rs. Oleta Kelley,
who lives two doors away.
"The onl y thing that was strange was
that he kept very strange hours. He
would come and go throughout the night,
especially 'ln the summer," said the
Coronas' next-door neighbor, Mrs. Wilma
Huff.
Two of Corona's small daughtm,
dressed neatly ih their school clothes and
appa rently unaware of what happened
were seen waiting for the school bus a
few hours after their fathe r was arrested.
The victims were all caucasians, ap-
parently migrant farm workers in their
40s, 50s and 60s. They were all killed with
a machete or a heavy knife, the sheriff
said.
Some of the bodies had two pairs of
pants and two shirt., indicating the vie.
tims were transient I a bore r 1 , in·
vestigators said . The orchards a.rt being
lhinned at this time of year.
Yuba City is a farming community cf
14,009, about 130 miles northeast of San
Francisco.
There may be a bit cf dr!ztle ln
those cloudy skies on Thursday,
with cooler lempuatures (63 to
70 ) prevailing along the Orange
Coast and inland iireas. Drug Dealer Suspect Held
Westminster Sex
Movies Seized
\)'estminster Police 1eized more than
In a news conference after the arrest.
the sheriff said Corona has been in this
country !Or some time but speaks tittle
English. Whlleacre said he had to use an
interpreter to communicate with the
Mexican American prisoner.
The sheriff bad a terse "nc comment''
when asked about a double bladed axe,
pruning knife and shovel brought Into the
jail before Corona was led In.
l.NSIDE TODAY
An old financia l symbol over
N,.wport Harbor is getting a
new lo0k. See Finance, Page 25.
INIHlf ff, It
C11flffllt1 II c.,.., c-r n
CllKll"'9 U, ' (llHlnft •1• c-k1 • (""'"" ..
DHllt """'" It 1•uw1" "'" ' l 111ff11'-tftt •tt
ll'llo111ff U.t7 """K... Ill Mallllll• ' MN I~ ltn'ICt '1·11 Mt~"-,..,..
M<ltttl ll'VNI H N1tllllll MIWI ...
Ora-C-iy It
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Or. S"'-~11 t
Sl'tcfr M9rtl:fll Not7 Ttlnhllfl n ,.,.....,.. 11·1' ••lllM' ' Wloltt ••• ,.
W-•1 NIW\ IJ.M Wwlll Ntwt ...
A man suspected of being a major
Laguna Beach narcotlai dealer was Ir·
rested Tuesday afternoon following an In-
vestigation in which 12 Los An&elu and
Orange C.Ounty narcotics agents allegedly
purcNsed drugs from the suspttt.
Ll.sted as wltnessu In the amst of
Ronald MacQuarrie, 26, a muslcl'ln, of
406 Canyon Acres Drive, were eight of·
ficers from the Lo!i An1eles Sheriff's and
Police Departments. two from the
Orange County Sheriff's Department •nd
Laguna Beach officers Sgt, Nell Purcell
and Thomas Reeder.
•
MacQuarrie was taken Into cuatody at
the Canyon Acres Ortve address shorUy
after 2 p.m. and is held in lieu of $1$,000
ball, set by Judae Richard Hamilton,
pending positive identification of auspec.
led (Ulrcotics collected police said, In 11
search of pjs residence.
Seized by the olflctrs, they claim, were
two kilos of appattnt marijuana and
-•arylng' quantitiri of 1u1pecttd cocaine,
hashish and 'peyote, ne evidence was
turned over to the Sherilrs Crime Lab
for analysis.
In a second Lagun1 Canyon drug arre11t
later on Tutsday afternoon, a West Loa
$500,000 worth of sex films Jnd
Angeles couple and a man from North photograrbs Tuesday In a raid on a small
Hollywood were booked on iruspicion of lndWia buUding oe<:Upied by the
possession of marijuana, LSD. hashish Kayou., (pronounced chaos) Company.
and a substance believed to be heroin. District Attorney Cecil Hicks called the
along with narcotics paraphe,rnalia. auiiaed pornographic seizor& "the.. tJrgest
Officer James Stinson stopped a vehicle ln Orange County history."
occupied by the trio after J~_sped out.of .. _.the raid follows by two wceb a
Woodland Drlve at a p.m. 1ndheaded up . similar discovery of, p.o r a o Cr a p b i c
the canyon. .materials In Fountain \'aOet_ bU t
Placed unde r arrest fo'Uowing a search-Wt1tminster-polite-11id:t.biti3i no •!>!
or the car were Christopher Stuart parent c:ennectlon between the two opera·
Andrews. 25. and Sherry Lynne Andrews, Uons.
20. of West Los Angt.lea and Walttr Kayous CoJ'l'.lpany w•s operating at
Edward Nysgaard, 26, of North Holly· 151" Golden Wul St., without benefit of
wood. a elty business license.
• l
•• •
Whlteacre tentatively 1dt!ntUied a se-
cond victim of the mass killings. He waa
Pete Petenon, 63, ol nearby &-tarysvllle.
pace fro~ Delayed
WAn<>PS ISi.AND. Va. (UPI) -
-Adve.ue-w..u t b•r conditions forced
postpo-•nt Tuesday until mfd.Sep-
tem ber of a space agency experiment to
detennlne effect of magnetic and elee-
trlcal fields cf blrlum on high alUtudt
clcucU •
•
• ID a DreaDt World
thal the courses see med "irrtlev.anl.'' By LUCINDA FRANKS
AND
PETER FREIBERG
U.n.1 Pr.11 e..tt,..,..,,..,
Lodi. New Jersey, is not the kind of
town that inspires youngsters kl dream of
doing great th ings. John Picciano's
parents, like man~ of their neighbors,
vividly remember the great depression.
His father was occaslonaUy out of work
even when John OA'as gro"'ing up. The
Picciall08 had oo high ambitions for their
only child. Their advice \\'as "stay in
lin e·• a:xl learn enough in ::;chooi so you
can land a decent-paying job.
professor who always had the right "orda
and {acts at his fingertips.
The Lodi Pl.iblic Library is not far
from the Picciano home, and John tiled
to go there alone in the aft.emoona. He
usuaUy Vt"tnt without telling anyone, and
even as he grew older he felt uneasy
about db!CU!slng serious topics with fami-
ly and fr iends.
After class John ~·ould sometimes hang
around P..ap'..sJ.uncheonetle near the high
school. Oaq and Chickie Cucuo. twlns who
were hltbdl wlth John, recall he often
expressed a wish to date girls but was
shy and never had the nerve to a.sk them
out.
wanted to go to," Dan Cucuo says, '·But
most of the guy1 didn't want him with us,
because you weri lnlerested in girls and
you didn't want to look bad. Jfe came out
all dresa:ed up, and this other guy said,
"where you going, John? You 're not com-
ing with us. Because you make is look
bad.' So he ·went back in the hoose. But
it ~·as meant as a joke. John look things
too serious." ''Jt jU$t ~'asn't done -to Lalk abOUt
Politics, religion or anything too hcav Y.''
he recalls. "You were afraid you'd bore
someone:'
"He used to talk about ii to us."
Chickie says. '·lfe'd say, 'I 'd like to h:ive
a ~irl. v.•hat do you lhink 1 should do·~· "
sun like all children. especia\iy those
\\'ho spend a great deal of time by
themsel\'eS. John indulged in fantasies.
On long walk.s through what were then
the fields of Lodi. he daydreamed of
becoming a famous cabinetmaker. When
he was reprimandtd at school, he would
&ink into one particular dream sequence
la which he became a brilliant Harvard
Paul Speziale. a high school English
teacher who works at the Lodi Public
Library efter school. says John "was the -
1ype or kid \\'ho '"'·as curiolJS ;1bout
everything. One day he would be reading
a hislOry book , the next day it might be
'Gr!at Movies of the 1920s.' "
IRRELEVA/'o.'T
John says he "'as never turned on
by his <'lasses. lie complains that he
nl'ver learned anything he could ··use,"
"He'd see a girl, he'd sny son1elhing to
her. If she v.•ould turn arow1d :ind say
so1nething to hin1, he'd be lost. He didn't
know what to say. She might say 'Hi,' he
niighl look and s:iy, 'what do J do
nPXI~' "
.Some of the Cucuos· lri('nds rrbulfNI
John . He \\'as ta!!. bulky and \\'alked ~·1th
a peculiar shuffle. They felt he \l"asn 't
"hip'' enough. \\'hl'n he gr:idi.:ated from
high school, John owned only one suil and
didn 't dance.
"There was a graduation party he ,,,.
Clear, Pi~
Vintage Wine
For Only $75?
SA."\/ FRANCISCO ( UPJJ -"Delica(iO
clear. clean pink color : big, aim-Ost
curious nose; good body, long, relatively
soft finish -considerable vinosity and
character.··
And 79 years old -most of it spenl i.n a dark, secret cellar.
The ~ripUon is of two bottles of
Inglenook Cabernet Sauvignon, vintage
1892, which "''ent on the auction block
today at the richest rare wine auction of
Hs kind.
Connoisseurs, collectors, investor!, inn·
keepers and wine merchants pre viewed
the 3,500 cases of old. curren! and future
vintages which Heublin Inc. offered at its
third "pre miere national auction of rare
\Vines."
The food ond spirits company predicted
auctioneer J. Michael Broadbent, head of
the wine department at Christif's of Lon-
don, \\'ould sell !he 474 lots for more tha n
$250,000.
Th e 1892 Caberntt Sau11igon ( r o m
Jnglenook, one of Heublin's California
wineries, was part of a case of a dozen
bottles recently found in the private
cellar of the vineyard 's rounder. They
were ea:pected to bring up Ul S75 a bottle.
_ Alexander C. "Sandy" 1"1cNally, in-
ternational wine director for lfeublin ,
said several dozen botlles of 19th century
wines "'ere discovered la st summer in a
ucret cellar in the family residence at
the vineyard.
Advanced Trai1ai1ag
CIA ILY "ILOt $1111 "Mio
They were located during an inventory
taken after the death last July of John
Daniel Jr .. grandnephew of Inglenook 's
founder. The wines, dating back to 1887,
were laid asic!e by Gustave Neibaum, the
vineyard's founder , before his death in
1908.
Other wines in the case Included an 1887
vintage Cabernet Sauvlgnon -believed
to be the oldest bottle of Cabernet in ex-
istence -and other Inglenook \~:ines of
vintage 1900 and older.
Highlights of the :iale also incl uded the
presidenr:i cellar from New York's
Carlyle Hotel. a two-bottle case of 1846
Chateau Lafite from the private cellar of
the Rolhschllds, and an advance offering
of 2,000 case:i of 1968, 1969 and 1970
estate--botUed California wines.
Dance, Den1onstration
Slated in Clemente
Saddleback College physical education
lnstrucWr Betty Sherrer will present a
dance demonslralion to the Friends or
the Ubrary at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in San
Clemente. The program, open to the
public will be held in the auditorium of
the San Diego Gas and Electric Com·
pany, 101 W. Portal .
OIANGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
OAANG::! COA'f PUILl5HIN0 COM,.ANY
R•l-t N. W•ttl ,,....,,.., 1<111 f'Vl.ll"""
JKlr It. Ctilty
Vk9 PmlolW ltwf c;,,,..,al Mltlfptf'
Tll•rn•r Ktt,il
E<tl!W
Tlriern•I A. Mu•p~in•
Met1tglnf EOolOr
a .,1., H. I.tot Jti~h•rd P. N•11
AHltton: Ml!lflllnl EdlJOn
L..t-.... Offk•
2J2 f.er•1t A"~"'' M1ill1tt •tltlr1111 P.0.1111 •66, 92652 s... C~l'e Offk•
JOS North El C•'"i~o ltttl, t2671
Other OttiCfl
COlll Mt-tt: u:i Wnl •• ,. s"""" N~t a1te.A! l):Q NtWpl>l"I ao.ite-.t.,,
t11111rlt1110n lltKA: 1111S lr~cn llOulfv••d
Skip Conner. Laguna Bea ch lifeguard chief. gives advance first aid
training to art colony's 32·member fire department. It included
resuscitation. splinting and bandagi ng. On ground is \\lilliam Sears.
Fireman llick Grams holds respirator mouthpiece.
.Irvii1e Officials A11swe1·
Queries on Coast Reso1·t
By FREDERICK SCHOE,IEHL
Of tlll O•Hr "' .. I Sllll
Tu·o Irvine Company olficials ""ere
kept b usy Tllt'sday night answering
scores of questions from Laguna Beach
residents concerning lrvine·s proposed
coastal resort on the three-mile strip of
virgin beach betv.·een Laguna Beach and
J"lewport Beach.
Asked how the 36-fool building heighl
limitation, if approved by Laguna Beach
voters Aug. 3. might affect the Irvine
plan, which may include so me high rise,
Richard Reese, vice president of planning
said: ';I think some vertical elen1cnt is
good, and any 36-foot restriction would be
a limitation to a hote l developer.
"Also, such a limit would be a poor
urban design sol ution," he added.
The high rise issue, along with many
other issues. Reese said, would have to be
solved by citizens of Laguna Beach, if the
city annexed the Irvine land up to Crystal Cove.
Asked if the coastal resort might be in-
corporated as an independent city, Ray-
mond Watson, \'ice pr esident of land
managemeul said thal Laguna Beach
and Ke"'POrl Beach have "informal
agreements" to annCI the Irvine land to
both cities.
inland lo an elevation higher on the ridge
aloog lhe coast behveen Ncwporl and
Laguna. Access to the beach. reerea·
lional facilities. parks and vista points
'''ould be via arterials from the new
highv.·ay to the toast.
Asked \\·ho ~·ould pay for the high11·ay
relocation, \\'atson responded !hat it
v.·ould have lo be "rnutually funded" by
the Irvine Company. lhe cities ol
Ne1\'))0rt and Laguna, U1e county and the
state .
T11·0 of the large canyon s on the Irvine
land. Reese said, would probably be turn-
ed into .. recreational areas" such as
grcenbells.
Asked whet!~~!' these canyons •would be
donated lo tlle count-y as open space and
who would maintain them. llecse said
!hat further study v.·ould have t.o be <..'On-
ductrd on tlle matler. lie did indicate
lhal the lands could "give people Jo me
happiness. because of their delachment
from urban areas."
\Vatson, asked about the timetable of
the plan. said public hearings before the
appropriate agencies \l"OUld begin this
summer and that the first de\'elopment
of the resort could begin in summer of
1972.
"But the entire project will take about
2tl years. Jt 11·ill be a slow and gradual As the plan now stands. the boundary de\"elopment." \Vatson said.
belv.·cen the• two cities 1\·ould be juSt Asked if the land could remain un-
southeasl of Crystal Cove. Hov.•cvcr, developed as it is today, \Vatson said lh<t1
Wal.son said, olh('r boundaries are being such a possibility had been ruled out by
studied . based on drainage Ii n es, lhe Irvine Company.
topography and u!ility lines. "\Ve're paying $1i00 ;i day in t;:1:.:rs and
A major parl of th£> /r\•1ne plan Is to gelling no return," he said. "And Iha! 1s j ~:;~;:~:~~~:~:;e-Grad 1
Standa1·ds to Be Tougl1er
Graduation requiremcnls at Saddleback
COiiege will be tougher next )'Car.
Truslets or the distrl('l v 0 l e d
unanimously Monday to change a policy
110 that students must take a minimum of
60 quarter units in r~sidencc or lhe Inst
18 UMil.s prior 10 the A\\'flfding o( the
degree.
A former policy permitted students lo
lake on ly 18 unit! on the Saddleback
campus to be eligible for lhe S<'hoors
Associa te in Ara degree.
Or. Fred Bremer, superintendent of lhe
district and president of the college, said
II v•()\Jld bf.' possible under the old system
for 11 :itudC'nl to take his 18 units the first
quarter. Iran.sf er to ti II othe r in·
stitution :ind then t~·o yc11rs later request a degrre from S.1ddlfbilck.
He added Iha! a total of 90 quarlfr
unit,~ arr rNJuirrd In California in ordCtr
to rccei1·e the A/\ degree. I
TO P llALf'
HJh cumula!ive grades showed
John to lie in the lop J1alf of his class,
with tnoslly Bs and Cs. He always receiv·
l'd passing ntarks in "citizenship,'' which
!he school says includes "staying within
the rules.··
Jcrrv Tan1burello, U1en direct.or of slu-d~nt 3ctivilies and now the principal of
Lodi Jfigh School, says "he \1•as so
<1Yerage it v.·as ridiculous. He was never
in any trouble."
On lhe surface, John changed very little
dll!ing high school. Teachers fell he \\'as
Top Bra.ss
Clash Sent
To Co1nmittee
By JACK BROBACK
0 1 lilt O•Ur Plitt Sl&tl
The battle royal betv.·een Orange Coun~
ly Ta.'I: Collector Robert Citron and Data
S<-rvices Director Robert Farmer \\'as
partially resolved Tuesday by lhe Board
of Supe rvisors.
They lossed the \\•hole mess to the Dala
Processing Committee and to Ille 1971
Grand Jury. The committee consists of
t;everal county department heads.
Supervisor David L. Baker \\·ho made
the motions said the Data Proet!ssing
Committee should cond uct an analysis
and comparison ot the 1\•idely differing
figures offered by Citron and Farmer.
The Grand Jury is to look in!o any possi-
ble wrongdoing on the part of eithe r
department head.
'fhe balllc start ed thre e \VCeks ago
\1 hen Citron told the supervisors that he
could get a job \l'e \VRnled done fo r
$20.000 less by giving ii to an outside firm
rather ri1.:in to Farmer's department.
The firnl was Security Pacific Optima-
lion Service of Los Angeles. a subsidiary
of Security Pacific Bank.
Citron also blasted Data Services as in·
!'fficicnL wasteful and incompetent. For
good measure, he threw in County
Administ ralil"C Officer Robert E .
'J'hoinas. "I cannot understand how
Thomas can allow this ceS!pool of waste or taxpayers' money;· he charged.
Supervisors Ronald Capsers and Robert
Battin, 1\•ho have previously attacked
'fhomas, jumped onto Cit r on' s
handwagon and with Supervisor Ralph
Clark. voted 3 to 2 to accept the Pacific
Security offer "in principle." It had to be
put in proprr form by lhe County
Counsel's offi ce before signing.
The job was to change the present
paper copy secured fax roll lo a
f'.1 icrofiche System similar to microfilm.
Farmer had his innings last v.·eek and
slated that Citron's present method \1·as
!he lowest cost \\'ay to do the job, that it
would cost $2,000 more to conv ert lo
n1icrofi!m through bis department, and
SIJ.300 n1ore by using Pacific Security.
farmer cha rged that Citron had based
his proposal to take the job out of the
county on "incomplete and inaccurate in-
formation because of his deliberate
failure to foUow existing county policy
and coordinate his actions ~·ith the aJr
propriate county departments."
GEM TALK
TODAY
by·
~YSTERY GEMS
Throughout history, many famous
gems have disappeared entirely,
'\'hile others have vanished for cen·
1uries, only to reappear in strange
pl aces and in the hands of unlikely
O\\'ners.
Such a gen1 is the fabulous 70
caral "The Id ol 's Eye.'' i tined in
JfiOO, it passed from a Persi an
r irincc in 1007 lo a private CO{ll·
pany. as a de.bl repay1nen1. It then
\'3n1shed for O\'er three centuries.
Suddenl)", in 1906. this historic di a-
J11on d emerged again when it was
sold to European interests by a
Turkish sultan.
Forty-one years later, in 1947,
HThe Idol's Eye'' \Vas sold to an
American woman for $375,000, add·
ing one more chapter to the history
of allure and mystery of gems.
Although no mystery surrounds
the beautiful stones in our store,
they do have, the moment you buy
lhc1n, a personal 1neaning and al-
lure \\'hich ~1ill 1n ake you treasure
them throughout your lifetime.
not using his lntelleclual potenUal.
But people cloaest to John became
aware or changes ln h1I lfttuesb and
personality.
''lie developed an I-don't-give.a-dam
attitude," says Ken Barry, John 's beat
frle11d throughout most of high
school. "Jfe didn·1 really care about
classes. Toward the end, high school
became a big joke lo Nm, a bigger joke
th an when we started. By the time he
graduated high school,· he was a little
loude(. a Jitlle more aggressive tha n
"'hen he entered."
John's new-foUlld aggressiveness "'as
evident In his senior year· feud 1vith
<.;ertrude Levov.", the silverhaired high
schoo l libra rian .
for my C"Ounlry -perhaps just becall.!e II
was my C<luntry."
He finally resorted W a job at $1.30 an
hour at Popular Merchandise, • mall
order firm that had constant turnover,
The work force wu made up mostly ol
blacks and poor whites, a class of men
John had not been e1posed to before.
John says the nature of the job, the
draft, hls gro"·ing doubts about the VJet·
11am War. and the generally bleak outlook
of life depressed him deeply in this
period. But like many teenagers, he felt
unable to confide in his parents. His
friends found it difficult to communicate \Yith him,
O"'N \VORLO
'"}le just didn 't \1·anl lo be bothered,"
Cl.J11'1NG UP remembers Chickie Cucuo. '"He Jived in
his own litlle world . Like he was sat isfied John \\'as e<>nstantly cutting up in !he 10 go to ~·ork. Ul come home, to have
Jibrar)'. Once. a Ol>Uple of other students supper. to work on his Cllr and that was
dared John to break a wooden stool that it. That was his life. ll was a routine." f'.liss Levow used. He accepted the dare,
raised the stool and brought it down on John himself says: ''I feJt li ke I bad
the floor with a crasli. .... driven do~·n lhe "'rong street and
"He was so obviously rebellious," Jiliss couldn't find my way out."
Levow says. "I think he w83 angry at lhe John quit his job at Popular Merchan-
world. He just wanted his own way. He dise arter nine · months following a run-in
was unhappy." ~·Uh the manage'r. He stayed home.
In his last two years of high school, brooding over the fact that average high
school graduates like himself, not John read more avidly than ever before. brilliant but not stupid Either. were find·
He joined book clubs and built a bookcq.se ing ii so difficult to get .'.;ood jobs,
in his parents' living room to hold the Mea nwhil e. the draft iYas gelling
volumes that remain there to this day. closer. He took the Army physical at the
He angered his parents by spending $tH peak of Vietnam draft <'alls. Allhough his
he ha d saved on a 1929 Enc}.(ciopaedia parents say John had a history of high
Britannica set. blood pressure, he passrd and was John 1vrui curious about people v.'ho classified IA.
changed the course of events. He was John kne\v then that he had to n1ake up
fascinated v.•ith Franklin Roosevelt and his mind \\'hat to do about serving in 1hc
the New Deal. military and possibly fighting in Vietnam.
He also read several books about By this lime. he was torn be!\Yeen a
socialism, liked "·hal he read and became belief Lhat he should not fight in v.·hat he
1nore outspoken in voicing his opinions_ sav.· as a purposeless \'1ar and his inbred
"I-le alv.·ays seemed sort or tuned in to fear or ··stepping out of line."
socialism." Ken Barry says. •·He \VOuld
talk a Jot about that. l t just seemed a WON'T STAY
good system to hiin. He thought it "'as a Dan Cucuo remembers John saying
system for the people.·· before his physical, " 'If they draft me,
I'm not gonna stay, I tell you right now.' QUESTIO~'lNG "After he passed, he came home, and
\Vhat 5(.'emS Ul have set John off from for that day he was real down , really
most of his classmates at Lodi }figh .down, and said he would do "·hatever he
School was his questioning of established could do to get oul."
\·iews. In his senior year, he broke v.•ith \VithouL telling anyone. John made a
the Catholic Church after a priest told final attempt to get out of the Army. He
hin1 !here v.'ere certain exceptions to inquired at his loca l draft board about
'"thou shal t not kill " -and ~·ar 1vas one applying for conscientious objecUlr (CO•
or thc1n . status. He says the "draft board advised
His Jlarent s say John ahvays expressed hin1 he had little chance or being granted
strong feelings against wars, believiJig such an exemption because he was not a
lhe '"little people'' never benefitted from Quaker and "'arned him it would be
them. "un~·ise·· in !he long run to apply.
lie began reading and thinking about John Picciano·s experiences illustrate
conscription, ~·hich seemed lo him an un-the differences bet"'een 1Yorking-class
fair reslriclion on individual liberty. But and more affluent youth in dealing \1-'ith ~·hen he reached his 18th birthday, he lhe draft. One of the greatest criticisms
d h d of the draft system is that peoµl e who regi stere for I e raft as required. can afford lo muster medical testimony. John graduated from hig" sc"--J 'n 11
IJUU • legal advice and olher expert help can June 1962. Although his grades \\'ere good stall induction and ei•en avoi d ii enough Lo gain him college admission , his
parents "'ere unable lo afford tuition. altogether·
Still unsure of \\·hat he wanttd lo do, CAN DELAY
John loa fed around during the summe r David J\:issen, chief or the criminal
and then went job hunting -only to find division of the U.S. Attorney 's office in
employers were not hiring "draft bait." Los Angeles . says anyone who ''spends
"I felt this "'as a form of personal the time, effort and money has a fairly
discrimination,'' John says. "I felt like I good chance of at leasl delaying and
\vas .,.,·earing a scarlet lA on my sometimes forestalling going·• into the
forehead. Here I was belng penalized for Army.
defending the system which kept the Had John Picciano sought help from a
employers in business.'' , draft colJJlselor, he would ha~·e learned
READING that Quakers are not the only ones "'hG
can be granted CO status. He might also \\.'ith a lot of spare lime on his hands, have bttn !old to get a medical
John began reading about current events, certificate attesting to his high blood
especially Vietnam. ~·here the J ohnson pressure.
Administration was escalating U.S. in-He did none or this. He just took his
\·olvement in 1966-67. He read Lederer draft board's advice, and two \lo'eeks later
and Burdick"s ''The Ugly American·' and received his "greetings."
started lo feel America was making a ··when he got drafted he report ed."'
mistake in intervening in what seemtd to recalls Chickie Cucuo. "lie was sad, and
him to be a civil war. acted kin d of strange, but he left
''Bui I still believed In the American anyway."
~·ay and the Communist threat,'' John (Next: Basic tra ining a11d tht bus
says. ''I would have been willing to fight to Lodi.)
BEAL:LT
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ii TISSOT
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Top: shows thtd1y1s
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lower: the NeYigator'INilh rot1 tin1Inside24·hour sc11·-
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IAN KAMER ICARD-MASlfR CHARGE
I
24 YE.AAS IN SAME lOCATION
PHONE 141-340 1
•
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'· '
San Clemente . Today's ,FluJ
Capistrano EDITION
VOl. 04, NO. 125, 5 SECTIONS, 72 PAGES ~ ORANGE COUNTY, CAl.IFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, ·197f TEN CENTS
San Cle~ente Police 'Sufficient for Future'
San Clemente's polict department will
probably not increase its existing com.
plement of 47 member! for lhe next
several years. Chief Clifford Murray told
cJty councilmen this week.
The chief. discussing the proposed
palice department budget up fi>r council
study Monday night, said the present
total of patrolmen-which includes 10
new positions paid for by . a federal
grant-wW suffice fw the foresetable
future.
•
San Clemente's police budget is p~
posed at l&30 ,Q44; for the nezt fiscal year.
~tore than $100,000 of that sum is ex·
peeled to' be picked up by the federal
government which Ls helping to pay the
cost$ required by security for President
Nixon.
Also included· in the bqdget amount is
SI0,000 which will form the fund tc pay an
e.s.tra five percent in wages to patrolmen
willing to undergo crO!s training a1 an at-
tack firefigbling squad.
The sum would lnclude tunds fot
salaries and equipment for the cadre of
police officers who wculd respond as
firemen to initially battle a blaze unlil
volunteers arrive.
The chief said that the fund grants -
paid on a three-year basis with chunks
each year, have covered nearly every
training expense incurred by his depart·
ment over the past fiscal y"ear. The pay·
ment include! the three-month training
cycle for the 10 new patrolmen at the San
Diego Sheriffs Academy.
The training expenses came from the
state's Peace Officers Standard! and
Training program , it.self subsidized with
federal funds.
While the eiact amount of next year's
federal gr0tnt is still not determined. an
average figure of $100,000 has been
budgeted.
Councilmen remarked about the in-
creasing costs or police protection in the
city, but conceded that police expenses
are soaring nationwide as well.
Conversation at the budget study also
yielded the seeds of an idea already suc-
cessful in the ~1ldwest-discussion on
allowing polict persoMel to take patrol
cars borne for personal use. The plan has
reduced crime by a minimum of 30 ptr-
cent in cities where it has been· put to
use, Murray said.
Mayor Walter Evans Jr. pointed out
that the availability of the squad car.s not
only might deter cl'ime, but wou.ld be "a
bell of a fringe benefit as well."
The chief promised a contlnulna il'l·
crease in the performance of the dtpart.-
ment in the next fiscal year.
"It took us six months to find the right
10 men last year, and it usually takes
about a year more for the resulta to be
felt .
"I think in the "ext year will aeie a good
showing and you will be pleased with
what you see," he aajd.
Ille en ac e 0 ea
'Vixon's Otter
San Onofre Veto
'
Stuns Officials
By JOHN VALTERZA
ot t"-DtllY ,lltl Sltff
State Park officials realed with shock,
disappointment and anger to Tuesday 's
announcement that the House Armed
Services Committee had rejected Presi-
dent Nii:on's offer of San Mateo Canyon
1nd several miles of prime San Onofre
W:ach for public use.
Robert 1w1eyer, Deputy Directllr of
Parks and Recreation for lhe State of
California, told the OAlLY PILOT he and
Director William PeM Motl were "eI-
:remely disappointed to say the least"
~at the offer of the free lands had been
:hanged to a lease of onJy a parcel of
~ach frontage .
What's more. Meyer said the state of·
licials were not even informed that hear-
ings were taking place o" the Issue in
Washington, D.C.
The committee, which legally reviews
:he declaration of excess relating to
military lands, ruled that San Mateo Can· ron should not be opened to public use.
tt excluded the facilities at the San
)nofre Surfing Club and enlisted men's
>each club from any possibility of falling
nto public hands and offered the re-
mainder of the beachfront from the
Westerft White House to San Onofre
Bluffs Stale Beach to the State of Cali-
fornia on a lease basis only.
Original plans as outlined by President
llixon during an announcement on a knoll
overlooking the affected acreage had a
much differen t tone.
San Mateo Canyon plus the entire six-
nile stretch of beach front was to be
leeded to public entities, the President
~eclared.
The announcement i m m e d i a l e I y
:reated a howl of protest from ranchers
ind farmers with large investments on
heir leaseholds in the canyon.
State park officials immediately began
ooking toward the day when the canyon
rrould be developed as a blend ()f public
:ampgrounds and farming areas.
Meyer chastised the lack of support of
Ile deed ing of the beach and ~yon
vhich was related in a recent rt.IOJution
'Jy the San Diego Council of Gover"'-
ments. '
He also intimated diSS1tisfaction with
he opposition to the President's plan
from Rep. John G. Schmit% of Tustin and
tep. Robert Wilson of San Diego.
0r .. ,. (;east
We•tlaer
Theu may hfi a bit of driztlt ln
thole cloudy skies on. Thunday,
with cooler tem.puatu.ra ca to
70 ) prevailing 'along the Orange
Coast and lnland aren.
INSIDE TODAY
An old financial symbol over
Newport Harbor i' get ting a
ncto look . See f inance, Page 25.
MvlllM f'IHlll• u Nttiool-ll Nt.,.. •-J O'~ C-ty 11 !'TA M l l'Mf ,...,.,. ..
... l'h l .. il
~. Slltftc'911ft ' i'9c* Mfftth ... 11 TtlWhi. 19 -..... ·-. M1.ttt Wnfl 11 """""" ""' ,,.,. --..
Both legislators reportedly opposed the
beach giveaway before I.ht committee.
St.ate oficials had promised to honor all
leases involved in the San Mateo Canyon
agricultural area, he said.
Parks Director Mott had publicly said
definitely, wilh only fallow I and
developed for camping.
Meyer Tu~ said many questions
still fl!"Oll!ld t¥ !uqe, • o \a b I y
whether there la any 1venUe ror ap.
peal , and Ir the committee's deci,,ion ii
fi nal and finding.
Meyer reiterated chagrlp that slate
parks Officials did not win N'.II dllnct to
speak to the committee &fter learning
that a 1u~yor for tbtU.S. General
Servicts Administration had tenned San
Mateo Canyon as "ideal'' for private
residential development.
"That's an awful thing to uy,
especially when we weren't available to
debate that point."'
The latest decision. he uid, will throw
a huge kink in state plans for expansion
of the newly acquired bluffs beach-a
stretch of rugged coastline leased from
Mari"e Corps control after nine months
of bargaining.
The ultimate decision on the com-
mittee'• recommendations falls on the
Department of Defense. The eommiUee'I
choices in the matter of exceilling the
Camp Pendleton lands do not have the
force of law.
However observers of the situation
have said that the Oepartmenl of Defense
rarely overturns committee recom-
mendations.
* * * Access Stressed
In House Action
On San Onofre
Access -the old bugaboo aurrounding
any public use of the South Coast's
shoreline -plays an important role in
the latest change in the situation of San
Onofre's beaches.
It i! the access question which most
vexes state parks officials after learninc
that a house committee had rejected the
President's idea to give 2.5 miles of Sa n
Onofre beach and 3,400 acres of uplands
to the public.
Deputy State Parks Director Robert
Meyer said oo hints have yet come on
whether a level aceflis route to beaches
still is available from the FederaJ
Government.
"We had really hoped for an access to
the beach front at the TrestlU area
rather than the rough trails which are
ntti!ssary from the blulftops," he U ·
plained.
But now that the House committee baa
excluded the access zone from the
beach(ronl eligible for lease, the question
ii Vt'ry cloudy.
Meyer said he wai; not looking forward
to another nln~month-long negotiating
period over the erlra 2.5 miles of
beachfront with Marine Corps brass.
As for planning of the: entire stretch or
ocean front which might go public, Meyer
1ald "it's just too soon to tell."
Funds ul!t to .open the Initial San
Onofre Bluffs ma on July 1. Money 1lso
will be buditled for preclx mMl<r plan-
ning of the ltate leasehold.
"BuL unt!l •e CID Iron out the Issue ol
tceeSS and lease 1greemenla1 wt can
plan very UW.," Ult dep11ly dJrtelot
uid.
Girl's In jury
Brings Suit
The father of a 7-year-old El
Toro girl has sued the San Joaquin
School District for SS00,000 in dam-
ages in an Orange County Superior
Court lawsuit that accused the
district of negllgence leading to
her serious injuries Dec. 2 at Aliso
School.
Richard Frederick, 23161 La
Vaca, states in his complaint that
there were no safety cushions or
guards to protect Joline Marie
Frederick from injury when she
fell from the crossing bar at the
school.
School officials. he claims. fail·
ed to adequately .aupervise the
recruit.ion art• of the school at
zmt 1-1 Drive; El Toro, 11
the Ume of the accident.
An identical elaim filed by
Frederick against the school dis-
trict was rejected by trustees Jan.
23.
Badham Reveals
Plans to Enter
Preserve Bill
Assemblyman Robert Badham (ft.
Newport Beach) said Tuesday that he
bad obtained special permission of the
Assembly Rules Committee lo introduce
his new bill for the crution o( a marine
preserve in the Sall Creek area.
The bill, AB 3091 will now go to the
Natural Rt!ources Committee. Badham
also said he will reappear before the
Rules Committee next week to obtain an
urgency clause to the Salt Creek legi!la·
lion so that when it is passed and signed
into law by the governor It will go into ef·
feet immediately .
Bad ham said bis· work on this en-
vironmental protection blll began two
weeks ago when it was brought to his at·
tenUon that the optning of the Salt Creek
area to larger numbers of the public was
endangering the natural environment of
sever1l marine species.
Jn 1968 and 1969 Badham sponsored
legislation which created five marine
preserves in the Newport Beach and
Laguna Beach areas.
Man, 24, Seized;
Demanded Plane
Trip to Denver
REDMOND, Ore . (UPI ) -A young
man was arrested Tuesday night when he
ran aboard an Air West twin propjet at
"an 1irport ramp ahd demanded to hfi
flown to Denver to see bis a:trlfriend.
Police 11id Steven M. Street, 24, of
Palos Verdes, was booked on a charge of
trupassing. They said he did not carry•
weapon but kept pointing under bis coat
1s if he did.
The plane w11 unloaded of JU 18
passengers when Street told t b e
1tewardess and First Officer Bill
LoyeJace that be wanted to be flown to
Denver by himself.
While be was talking with Lovelace and
the stewardess., polict were called. He of·
fered no resistance wM:n taken Into
custody.
Police said be hid been loitering about
lbe plane and 1uddenly "busted throug~
the people" to a:et aboard the plane.
After -Street wa1 arrested. the plane
wu searched as a precautionary
mealW't but nothing was found. Tbt
fl ight wa1 delayed two bour1.
Tht plane Wu on a Oiaht from
l'lte Birds
The famed swallows or San Juan Capistrano have arrived MO 1lron&:
at the Ml&sion Community Hospital being constructed in Mission
Viejo, lending a touch cf premature antiquity to the new fadUty.,
Some thought they were the offspring of the swallows from the zoo:.
year-old San Juan mission , attracted by the tile roof. The builders
intend to let them remain, at least through the swallow mating season.
':' . '"'--.... . , I -~.1. Raiders Seize
Youth,. 19, Held
On Burglary Rap
A 19-year-old San Clemente youth ar-
rested during a routine police patrol ear.
Jy today faces charges of burglary in the
theft of about $26 in coin from a Jaun·
dromat.
Police said Robert William Hoffman of
ISS Barcelona, was arrested at the scene
of the alleged burglary shortly after mid-
nighL
Patrolman Don Anderson checked the
business at 808 S. El Camino Real when
he noticed a person allegedly acting
suspiciously.
Hoffman, police said, assertedl y had
burglary tools and the coins in his
possession at the time of the arrest.
San .Juata Hills
Ove r $500,000
In 'Dirty Films'
Westminster Police seized more than
$500,000 worth of sex films and
photographs Tuesday in a raid on a small
Industrial building occtipied by the
Kayous !pronounced chaos) Company.
District Attorney Cecil Hicks called tbe
alleged pornographic seizure "the largest
in Orange Counly history."
The raid follows by two weeks a
similar discovery of p o r n o g r a p h i c
materials in fountain Valley but ,
Westminster police said lhere i1 no ap·
parent tonnection between the two opera-
tions.
Kayous Company was operating at
15144 Golden West St., without benefit ()f
a city business license.
"No arrests have been made ye t, but
we expect to make some within the neit
two days ," Westminster Lt. Jack
Shockley said this morning.
Police hauled 20,500 reels of film and
300,000 still photographs from the
building. Shockley and investigators from
the district attorney's office spent all day
reviewing the films.
They were apparently rated double X.
"We spent six days investigating the
business befor@ raiding it," Shockley
reported. He said he couldn't disclose
bow police found out about the operaUon.
Farm Labor.
Boss Jailed
In Ritual
From Wire Serv~1
YUBA CITY - A stocky Me.xican·bom
farm labor contractor was arrested today
when deputies uncovered the remains of
nine middle-aged men, hacked to death
ind buried In strange ritual positions
~long the banks of the Feather River.
Officers said they were still digging in
the sandy soil for at least one other miJs-
lna pen:on.
Juan V. Corona, 31-year~ld fath1r of
four amall daughters, was taken into
cusl.ody at hla modest stucco home Sn a
neat mlddle<las.s neighborhood In Yuba
City , a Canning community of 25,000 in
the eentral valley of CaWorni1 .
Sutter C.ounty SherUf Roy Whiteller
declined lo say what led officers to
Corona, and a deputy said there was "no
motive we caa discover," But the sheriff
add~:
"We are certain he conunJtted the
murders."
MOit of the bodies were fou11d
on their backs, arms upraised. ibe
sheriff sai d they were badly mutilated,
with deep cut1 on the heads and chests.
Their shirts were pulled up over their
bloody heads.
They were found about five mileJ north
of Yuba City 400 ()r 500 yard! east ol U.S.
Highway 99-E, on both sidea of the river.
Seven were on the we1t bank and two
others on the opposite bank, in a prune
orchard and a peach field.
Nearby was 1 settlement ol shacks
where migrant laborers live.
Corona, a quiet man, was known by his
neighbors as a strict father who wou1dn 'i
allow his children out ol the yard.
"They've never bothered anybody
around here," said Mrs. Oleta Kelley,
who lives two doors awa y.
"The only thing that was strange was
lhat he kept very strange hours. Ht
would come and go throughout the night,
es~ially in the summer," uid the
Coronas' next.door neighbor, Mrs. Wilma
Huff.
Two of Corona's small daughters,
dressed neatly in their school clothes and
apparently unaware of what happened
were aeen waiting for the school bus a
few hours after their father was arrested.
The victims were all caucaslans, ap-
parently migrant farm workers in· their
40s, 503 and &Os. They were all killed with
a machete or a heavy knlle, the sherlff
said.
Some of the bodies had two pain: of
pants and two shirta, indlcaUng the vie·
tims were transient I a b o re r s. in-
vesligatora said. The orchards are being
thinned at thll lime of year.
Golf Course Buy Posed
An investigation into the possible
purcbase of the San Juan Hills Golf
Course has been authorited by the San
Juan CApistrano City Council.
The council voted Monday to dirtct the
staff to proceed With studies into the
feasibility of purchasing the facility for
municipal recreational use,
Councilman Ed Chernak, who initiated
the atudy , suggested that profits from the
golf course might be used to offset the
city's parks and rtcreatlon program . ,
Councilman Jim Thorpe and Josh Garn·
mell indic•ted lnteret• In the project, but
wantM more •tudy with emphasis on
.. ' •
parks and recre111tlon Ues and a com-
parison with 1lmllar project. ln of.her
cities.
Reluctance was displayed by Coun-
cilman Bill Bathgate who thought the golf
course should remain a private operation.
Mayer Tony Forster said he .would be
hesitant about commitling"'the city to
such a project without voter approval.
One of the staffs dJrectlves will be
looking Into how such a project would be
financed. Clty flnence dJrector Paul Law
will investigate four way1 a project of
this size can be funded •
•
In a memorandum l)t1 f\J"ding 1arp
capital projects, Law stated that the city
-can either borrow fUnds. issue general
obligaUon bonds (which take voter •Po
proval), negotiate a ltue.pUrthase-aflo
rangement or Issue revenue bonds whi~
would be paid off by the expected p«>flfl
from the eotf course.
Tht next step the city wUI lake In ill
study will be. fo ecquire 1 tinandal
consultant to advil!e the city on the best
method of 1cqulelUon •nd financing and
to examine the oper1tlon'1 boob to tee if
it would be worthwhile.
I
I
DAIL V PILOT SC Wtdntsdi)', May 26, 1971 ~~~~~~~~~---"--''--'---
Desert e 1 • f..;ived Youth in a Drea1n World
I
By LUCINDA FRANKS
AND
P~"fER FREIBERG
professor .,.,.ho al\\'Ays had the right \1·ords
and facls at bis fingertips .
th<il the courses seemed "irrtlt\'ant."'
After class John wOuld sometimes hang
aroW1d Pap's Luncheonette near the high
school. Dan and Chickie Cucuo. twif}s who
were frltndf with John, l't!Call he t(ten
expressed a 'A'iSh to date girls but v.·as
shy and never had the nerve to ask them
out .
UllltM Pl'tll 1~1-1
Lodi, New Jersey, · not the kind of
town that inspires you gsters to dream of
doing great th ings. Joh.Ii Picciano's
parents, like many of their neighbors,
vividly remember the great depression.
His father was occasionally out of work
even v.•hen John was grO\\'ing up. The
Piccianos had no high ambitions for their
only child . Their advice \\'SS ··stay in
line'' and learn enough Jn :';Chooi so you
can land a decent-paying job.
The Lodi Public Library is not far
from the Picciano home, and John liked
to go tht:re alone in the afternoons. He
usually .... ·ent without telling :inyone, a.nd
even as he grew older he felt uneasy
about discussing serious topics ,1•!1h fnmi·
ly and friends. '"lie used to !::ilk about it to us.''
Chk·kie says. ··He"d sa.\', 'I'd like to have
~ girl, \\'hat do yo u think I should do?' ..
•·it just wasn't done -to talk about
politics. religion or anything loo heavy ,"
he recalls. "You 11·cre afraid you'd burt•
someone."' ·tle'd see a girl. he'd Eay something to
her If shC' 11·ould !urn around rind soy
something to hi1n , he'd be lost. He didn't
know what to say. She might say 'Iii,' he
might look and say, '\1•!ia1 do I <lo
nr.-.:t"." "
Still like all children. especially those
v.ho spend a great deal of time by
themselves. John indulged in fantasies .
On long v.·alks through what v.·ere then
the fields of Lodi. he daydreamed of
becoming a famous cabinetmaker. When
he was rtprimanded at school. he would
g[nk into one particular dream sequence
in which he became a brilliant Harvard
Paul Speziale. a high school Enghs.h
tenchcr who y.•orks <1t lhl' Lotli Pub lic
Librar:r il.fter school. says John "was the
type of kid "'ho was curious ;1bout
everything. One day he \l.'Ou\d br rcadu1g
a history book, the next day ll might be
'Great ttlovies or the 1920s.' "
Some ot (he fu,·uo~· fri l'nds rebulfl'd
,Juhn . lie \l'i•S tall. bulky i'.Jnd walked \\'Ith
;1 pt·culiar shuffle. They fell he wasn 't
"hip"' enough. \\'hen he gradt.:ated fron1
high school , John 011•nrd only on<' suit and
dirln 't danre.
IRRELEVA!\'T
John says he .... ·as nt1·cr turned on
by his classes. He romplains that he
never learned anything he could "use." .. There 11·as a graduation party he
Clear, Pink
Vintage Wine
For Only $75?
SAN FRAi\CISOO (UPI) -""Delicate,
clear, clean pink color ; big, almost
curious noo:e; good body, long, relatively
soft finish -considerable vinosity and
character.''
And 79 years old -most of it spent in
a dark. secret cellar.
The description is of two botUes of
Inglenook Cabernet Sauvignon, vintage
1892, V•hich went on the auction block
today at the richest rare wine auction of
its kind.
Connoisseurs, collectorJ, investors, inn-
kttpers and wine merchants previewed
the 3.500 cases of old. curren~ and future
vintages which tleublin Inc. offered at its
third "premiere national auction of rare
wines."
The food and spirits company predicted
auctioneer J . ~1ichael Broadbent , head of
the wine department at Christie's of Lon·
don, would sell the 474 lots for more than
$250.000.
The 1892 Cabernet Sauvigon from
Inglenook, one of Heublin's California
wineries, was part of a case of a .dozen
bottles recently found in the private
cellar of the vineyard's foun der. They
were expected to bring up to $75 a bottle.
OAtLY Pll.OT s11rt Pllel•
Ale:iander C. "Sandy" McNally, in-
tematlonal ~·ine director for Heublin,
said several dozen bottles of 19th ctntury
wines were discovered last summer in a
secret cellar in the family residence at
the vineyard.
Advanced Trai11i11g
They were located during an inventory
taken after the death last July of John
Daniel Jr .. grandntphew of Inglenook's
founder. The wines, dating back to 1887,
were laid aside by Gustave Nelbaum. the
vineyard's founder, belore his death in
lll08.
Other wines in the case included an 1887
vintage Cabernet Sauvignon -believed
to be the oldest bottle of Cabernet in ex·
isten~ -and othtr Inglenook wines of
vintage l!MXI and older.
Highlights of the sale also included the
president's cellar from New York 's
Carlyle Hotel, a two-bottle case or 1846
Otatea'U Laflte from the private cellar of
the Rothschilds, and an advance offering
of 2,000 cases of 1968, 1969 and 1970
estate-bottled California wines.
Dance Demonstration
Slated in Clemente
Saddleback College physical education
Instructor Betty Sherrer will present a
dance demonstration to the Friends of
the Library at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in San
Clemente. 'Jbe program, open to the
public wtll be held in the auditorium of
the San Diego Gas and Electric Com·
pany, 101 \\1• Portal.
•
OIANel COAl'l'
DAILY PILOT
CHUNGS CO.UT POlllSHIHO COMPANY
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p,..IO..,I 1ttd l'uttlshtr
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V'.a l'rlllO.,t 1N1 C..-•t MtntOff'
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lJ2 For11I A¥t "llO M•ill~, otl.tr1111 r.o. t•• •••, t 2•s1
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CO.It Mui: lXI W'11 l1V !Hel'I t<l~t •~•di• llll N1wi:on l ou!e.1rd •111111 .... r.n llltcll: 11'1/l lll~UI l""l•~•r•
Skip Conner, Laguna Beach lifeguard chief, gives advance first aid
training to art colony's 32-member fire department. Jt included
resuscitation. splinting and bandaging. On ground is \·ViUiam Sears.
Fireman Rick Grams holds respirator 111outhp1ece.
Irvine Officials Answe1·
Queries 011 Coast Res o1·t
By FREDERICK SCHOE~1EllL
01 lflo D1ltr Plkll S1111 '
Two Irvine Company officials Y.ere
kept busy Tuesday night answering
SC-Ores of questions from Laguna Beach
residents concerning Irvine's proposed
C-Oastal resort on the three-mile strip of
virgin beach bet .... ·een Laguna Beach and
Newport Beach.
Asked how the 36-foot building height
limitation, if approved by Laguna Beach
\IOters AurJ 3, mighl affect the Irvine
plan, which may include some high ris<',
Richard Reese , vice president of planning
said; "I think so me vertical clement is
good, and· any 3&-foot restriction .... ·ould be
a limitation to a hotel developer.
"Also. such a limit ll'ould be a poor
urban design solution,"' he added.
The high rise issue, along ~·ith many
other issues. Reese said, would have lo be
solved by citizens of Laguna Beach, if !he
city annexed the Irvine land up lo Crystal
Co\·e.
Asked if the coastal resort might be in·
corporated as an independent cily, Ray.
mond \\'atson. \'ice president of land
management. said that Laguna Beach
and Newport Beach have "informal
agreements'' to annex the Irvine land lo
both cilies.
As the plan now stands. Il ic boundary
between the t\1·0 cities "'ould be just
southeast of Crystal Cove. However,
\Vatson :said. other boundaries are being
studied ba sed on drainage 1 i n es ,
topography and utility lines.
A major part of the lrl'ine plan is to
relocate existing J>acific Coast Highway
inland lo an elevation higher on the ridEe
along the coast bet .... ·een Ne .... 'port and
Laguna. Access to the beach. recrea·
lional facililies, parks and vista poin~
\1·ould be via arterials from the ne\v
l1ighway lo the coast.
Asked "·ho "·ould pay for the highy,·ay
relocation, \Vatson responded thal it
11·ould ha~·e to be "mutually funded ·' by
Ille lrrine Company. the l'l\ICS uf
r\ewporl and Lciguna. the rounty and the
stair.
T11·0 of the lnrge canyons on the l rvinc
land, Reese said. \rould probably be turn·
cd into '·recrrutional 11rc<1s"' such as
greenbelts.
Asked \1•hetl~~!" these canyons ll'OUltl be
clonoted lo the county ::is vpcn space and
\YhO \\'OUld mainta in them. rlcesc said
that further study \1·ould have to be ron.
dueled on the matlcr. lie did indicate
thal !he lands could "give pcoph• ~omc
happiness. because of their detachment
froni urban areas ...
\\latson, asked about the timetable of
!he plan. said public hearln.;::s before the
appropriate agcncics \1·oulrf begin this
~ummer und that the first developrnt'nl
of the. resort could begin in su1nrner of I
1972.
"But the entire projerl will !Rke abour
20 years. IL 11·it1 be a slo11· and gradual
devel opn1ent. .. \Vatson sau.J.
Asked if the land could rc111ain Un·
developed as it is today. "'atson said th.11
~uch a possibility had been ruled out by
the Irvine Compt.ny.
""\\'c 'rc paying $1700 a day 111 t;ixrs and
gelling no return,·· he said. "And that is j
uneconomical for us."
Saddlehacl{ College I Grad
Stru1dard s to Be Tougher
Graduation requlrtmcnt.s at Saddlcback
Col\eg<' Yt'ill be lough<'r ~xt year .
Trustees of 1hc district '' o I c d
unanimously ~londay to change a policy
so that students rnust take a minimum or
60 quarter units In residen ce or the last
18 units prior to the a'1.'ardlng of the
degree.
A former pollcy permitted studen ts to
take only 18 uni~ l)n the Saddlcback
CDmpus to be eligible for lhe school's
Assocla1e in Arts degree.
Or. Fred Oremrr. superintendent of the
d1strirt :ind prl'sidcnt of the collcgt, said
ii \1·ould be possible under the old syste1n
for a studenl to take his 18 units !he first
qunr!C'r, lransfer to :in other In·
:-ti tutinn and then l\\'o yc:irs later requesl
a degreC' from Saddleback.
llr Dddcd !hat a totnl of 00 quarter
units are rl'qulrf'd l.n c.tlifornia in order
lo rrt•eive the AA dtgrtt. I
\\'anted lo go to," Dan Cucuo says. "But
1nost of the guys didn't "'ant him with u.s,
because you wore lnteres~ g~ls and you dldn 't want lo look ba He came out
all dressed up, and this guy said,
'where you going, Joluf? You not com·
Ing with us. Because you make is look
bod.' So he went back Jn the house. Dul
it \\'8S meant as a joke: John took thing s
too serious."
TOP llALF
llih c:un1ula!h·e grades showed
John to be in the !op half of his class,
wilh mosUy Bs and Cs, He always reeeil'·
cd passing marks in ''citizenship," whicll
thc school says includes ·•stayiag \l"ithln
thl· rules."
Jerry T:unhurello, then director of stu·
dent activitirs and nO\V the principal oC
Lodi ll igh School. says '·he \\'as so
il\'erage it \Va!I ridiculous. He n•as ne1·er
Jn any trouble."
On the surface. John changed \·ery little
during high school. Teachers felt he \Vas
•
Top Brass
Clash Sent
To Co1nmittee
By JACK BROBACK
01 !ht 011ry 'Bot S!t!I
·nic baltl<· royal bet111een Orange Coun·
ly 'fax Collector Robert Citron and Data
Servrces l)irector Robert Farmer \1·as
partially resolved Tuesday by lhe Board
of Supcr1·iso rs.
'fhry tossed the whole mess to the Data
Processing Cornmil!ce and to the 1971
Grand Jury. The c<>mmittee consists of
several co unty deparlment heads.
Supervisor David L. Baker who made
the motions said the Data Processing
Con1mil!ce shoutd conduct an analysis
nnd comparison of the \l'idely differing
fiJlurcs offered by Citron and Farmer.
The Grand Jury is to look into any possi·
ble \\Tongdoing on the part of either
department head .
The battle started three "'eeks ago
'1·hcn Citron told the superl'isors that he
could f;:Ct a job 11'e 11'an\ed done for
$20.000 less by giving it to an outside firm
rather ll1an to Farmer's department.
The firm "'as Security Pacific Optima·
tion Service of Los Angeles. a subsidiary
of Security Pacific Bank.
Citron also bl<1sted Data Services as in·
cffictenl. \\•asteful and incompetent. F'or
~ood measure, he threw in County
Ad1ninistralive Offit'er Robert E.
"rhomas. "I cannot understand how
Thomas can allow tbis cesspool of \\'as.le
of taxpayers' money," he charged.
Supervisors Ronald Capsers and Robert
Dathn, \\'ho have previously attacked
Thomas. 1umped onlo C i I r o n · s
h:1ndwagon and y.·ith Supervisor Ralph
Clark. vo ted 3 to 2 to accept lhe Pacific
Security orfer "in principle.'' It had lo be
put in proper form by !hl.' County
Counset"s office before signing .
The job was lo change the present
pnper copy secured 1ax roll to a
r>Iicrorichc System similar to microfilm.
Farmer had his i11t1ings last v.·eek and
staled tl1at Citron·s present method \\'ilS
the lo\\'CSl cost way to do the job. that it
11·nu!d cost $2,000 n1ore lo convert lo
n1icrofiln1 th rough his department. and
$13.300 more by using Pacific Securiiy.
Farmer charged thal Citron had based
lus proposal to take the job out of the
county on ''incomplete and inaccurate. in·
formation becau.se of his deliberate
failure lo follow existing coUI\ly Policy
and coordinate his actions with tht ap-
propriate county departments."
l
GEM TALK
TODAY
by
MYSTERY GEMS
Throughout hi s'tory, many famous
i.:ems have disappeared entirely,
\rhitc others have \'anished for cen~
turics, only to reappear in strange
places and in the hands of unlikely
O\\ ners,
Such ~ gcn1 is the fabulous 70
carat ··The Idol's Eye." 1Iined in
1600. it passed from a Persian
Prince in 1607 to a private com·
pany. as a debt repayment. It then
\·anished for over three centuries.
Suddenly, in 1906, this historic dia~
mond emerged again \\•hen it was
sole! to F.uropean interests by a
·rurkish sultan.
Fol'ty-o ne years later, in 1947,
"The Idol's Eye" 'A'as sold to an
An1erican ,,·01nan for $375,000, add·
Ing one more chapter to the history
of allure and mystery of gems.
Although no mystery surrounds
the beautiful stones in our store,
1hey do have, the inoment )'"OU buy
them. a personal n1eaning and al·
lure \vhicb '''ill make you treasure
them throughout your lifetime.
}
not using his intelltctu11I poltnfial.
But people closesl lo Jolin became
aware or changes in hil Interests and
personaUty.
"He developed an l·don"t·give-a-<tam
attitude." says Ken Barry, John's best
friend throughout most or high
school. ..He didn 't really care about
classC's. ·roward the end, high school
became 11: big joke to him, a bigger joke
than when we started. By the time he
graduated high school, he y,·as a little
louder. a liftle more aggressive than
when he entered."
John's new-found aggressiveness wa1
evident In his senior year feud lvith
Gertrude Levow, the silverhaired higb
school librarian.
CUTI'lNG UP
John was constantly cutting up in the
library. Once a couplt of other students
dared John to break a wooden stool that
Miss Levow used. He acctpted the dare,
raised the stool and brought it doY.·n on
the floor with a crash.
''He was'° obviously rebellious," t.1iss
Levow says. "l think he was angry at the
'A'orld. He just wanted his own way. He
was unhappy.''
In his last two years o( high school,
John rea d more avidly than evtr before.
He joined book clubs and built a bookcase
in his parents' living room to hold the
volumes that remain there to this dav.
I-le angered his parents by spending $64
he had saved on a 1929 Encyclopaedia
Britannica set.
John \\'as curious about people ~·ho
changed !ht cou rse of events. He "·as
fascinated \Vilh Franklin Roosevelt and
thl' J'\ew Dear.
lie also read several books about
soc ialism. liked y,·hat he read and beeame
more outspoken in \'Oicing hCi opinions.
"'lie all1•ays seemed sort of tuned in to
socialism." Ken Barry says ... He \vould
talk a lot about that. II just seemed a
good system lo him. He thought it ~·as a
system for the people."
QUESTIONING
\Vhat seems to have set John off from
1nost of his classmates at Lodi High
School was his questioning of established
l'iews. In his senior year. he broke with
the Catholic Church after a priest told
him there were certain exceptions to
"thou shall not kill"' -and war \Vas one
or them.
His parents say John ahrays expressed
strong feelings against \\'ars, believing
!he "little people" never benefitted from
them.
He began reading and thinking about
conscription. \\'hich seemed to him an un-
fair rcslrict.ion on individual liberty. But
11hen he reached his 18th birthday, he
registered for the draft as required.
John graduated from high school in
June 1962. Although his grades were good
enough to gain him college admission, his
parents 11·ere unable to afford tuition.
Slill unsure or '\'hat he wanted to do,
John loafed around during the summer
and then .... -ent job hunting -only to find
employers were oot hiring ''draft bait."
··1 felt this was a form of personal
discrimination," John says. "I felt like I
\vas ~·earing a scarlet 1A on my
forehead . ~!ere I was being penalized for
defending the system \'.'hich kept the
employers in business."
IlEADlr.i'G
\\lith a lot of spare lime on his hands,
John began reading about current events,
especially Vietnam, where the John!on
Administration was escalating U.S. in·
volvement in 196fr67. He read Lederer
and Burdick"s "The Ugly American" and
started to feel America \\'as making a
mistake in inten•ening in \\'hat seemed lo
him to be a civil v.•ar.
,;But I still believed in the American
\1·ay and lhe Communist threal,'' John
says. "I would have been willing to fight
. .
tor my eountry -l)trhaps just becaust II
\\'as my country."
He flnallY ruorttd t'o a job at $1.30 an
hour at Popular Merchandise, 1 mail
order firm that had conslanl turnover.
The y.·ofk force was made up mosUy of
blacks and poor Yt•tlltts, a class of men
John had not been exposed to before,
John says the nature of· the job, the
draft, bis growing doubts about the VJet·
nam \Var, and !he generally bleak outlook
of life depressed him deeply in this
period. But like niany teenagers, he felt
unable to confide in hl3 pattnls. His
friends fOu'ii'!\it dllficult to communicate
wiJhJiim.("""
OWN WORLD
··H" just didn "t 11.·anl to be bothered,"
remembers Chickie Cucuo. "He lived in
h.is O\\·n litUe world. Like he was satisried
to go to work. to come home, to have
supper. to work on his car and that was
it. Thal Yt'as his life. It was a routine.''
John himself :iays: '"l fel~ like I had
driven down the wrong street and
couldn't (ind my way out."
John quit his job at Popular Merchan·
dise alter nihe months following a run-in
with the manager. He stayed homt,
brooding over the fact that average high
school graduates like himseU, not
brilliant but not stupid vither, were find·
ing it so difficult lo get :Jood jobs.
Meanwhile, the draft was getting
closer. Ile took the Army physical at the
peak of Vietnam draft calls. Although his
parenls say John had a history of high
blood pressure. he passed and was
classified IA.
John knew then that he had lo make up
his mind ~·hat to do about serving in the
mililary and possibly fighting in Vietnam .
Dy this timf'. he \\'as torn bel\l'ttn a
belie! that he should not fight in "'hat he
saw as a purposeless \'.'ar and his inbred
fear of ·stepping out of lint .. ,
WON'T STAY
Dan Cucuo ·remembers John sa)•ing
before bis physical, •' 'If they draft me,
I'm not gonna stay. I tell )'OU right now.'
"After he passed , he came home, and tor that day he "'as real down. really
dov.·n. and said he would do \11hatever he
could do to gel out."
\Vithout telling anyone. John made a
final attempt to get out of the Army. He
inquired at his local draft board about
applying for conscientious objector (COi
status. He says the draft board advised
him he had little chance of being granted
such an exemption because he was not a
Quaker and warned him il would be
"un\\'ise'' in the long run lo apply.
John Picciafllfs experiences illustrate
the differen«s bety,·een working-class
and more affluent youth in dealing with
the draft. One of the greatest crilic~ms
of the draft system is that peo~le who
can afford ta muster medical testimony.
legal advice and other expert help can
stall induction and even a\"Oid it
altogether.
CAN DELAY
David Nissen. chief of the criminal
dl\'ision of the U.S. Attorney 's ofrice in
Los Angeles, says anyone who "spends
the time, effort and money has a fairl y
good chance of at least delaying and
sometimes forestalling going'' Into the
Army.
Had John Picciano sought help from a
draft C-Ounselor, he 1vould have learned
that Quakers are not the only ones who
can be granted CO status. He might also
have befn told to get a medical
certificate attesting to his high blood
pressure.
He did none of this. He just took his
draft board's advice. and two weeks later
received his "greetings."
"\Vhen he got drafted he reported ,"
recalls Chick!e Cucuo. '1le "'as sad, and
acted kind of strange, but he lefl.
anyway."
(Next: Basic trai11i11g and Iii~ bus
to Lodi.)
BmA~LY
BIG-i~~AGUEf
D T ISSOT
Ci1nl-siz1,2-mn11met1r •uton1•tic: d1t1-t1Uin1 T-12's, tht ntwt1t ol a long lin1 of t~nlcal bi1·Je.11guers byTissol.
Top: shows lh1 d1y1s
Wtll IS the dlff, Incl t11s rot1tlng intidt
er.1psed·time scale. In
st.11nle1s stet I, $125
lower. !ht N.1vi11torwllh rotatrnr Inside 24·hour sc~ · · St•inltss 111111 $120
J. C. .JJ.umpkrie~ J ewe ler.1
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONVENllNl TE.ltMS
IANICAM!RICAID-MASTEA CHA "G E
24 YlARS IN SAMt lOCATION
PHONE f41·!401
'
•
t 6 DAILY PILOT SC
Moving Up
ROBERT G CUMMINGS
113 Yorktown lone Cosia
Misa a. rtprtstrttativt of
Cll'11necttcut Ctnt raL Lift
1nsura11ce Compcu1y has
q ua/1fttd for llit 19 72
Pres1detil ' Club an organ
1:aerori. for tltt romJ)(ltiy s
leod111g l 1 J e rn.sura11ct
agentJ This mark,s ih e
fou1th. year 111 which he
has achievtd lht lionar
Cumnungs a graduate of
C11l1forn1a State Polytec hnic
College at Pomona ts a
mernber of the N at 1 on a J
Ass oci at i on of Life
Underwriters He 1s associated
with Connecticut Generals
Santa Ana branch offict
* * * Huntington Beach re!1dent
GLEN E CARTER a veleran
or four decades l)f experience
In all JOUrnallsltC med ia has
been promoted to vice presi
dent 1n Bank of Americas
pubhc relauons department
Carter will
be assigned
to the banks
Sou thern
Cahforn r a
Div1s1on and
serve as a
5en1or press
relation s
consultant
He hel d
\arious newspaper radio ad
\ert1smg and publishing po!!IS
before J01n1ng Bank of Amer
lea 1n Los Angeles tn 1945
Among hLS pubhc relations
accomplishments v.as the Jn
lt1a11on of the bank s Com
mun1ty College Awards pro-
gram which in 1971 sa w the
bank award $&5 800 to 372
student s
Carter ts a past pres ident of
the Los Angeles USO and has
received a number of c1tat1ons
fpr his efforts -On behalf of
sen.icemen He has also been
honored by the City of Hope
and Sigma Delta Chi Nallonal
Journahst1c Fraternity
He is a former president of
the Los Angeles Advertising
Club of Southern Cahforn1a
Chapter of the Amencan
Publtc Relations Assoc1a1Jon
and Southern Cahforn1a Bank
Advertisers Assoctalton
Carter and his v.1fe Mary
re side on Eastport Drive
Huntington Beach resident
CLAUDI J RUMPJI of
Hac1P1tr.la //e1ght1; hn~ been
named vice pres1de-nl 1n
cl 0'!'1" of n1stnllme11! /of1'11S
at Crocker Citizens Not1on
al Bank ~ Sourltern Co1u1
ties reg1an n• Ntionort
Beach it was <nu10101ced
by flarold C Kipp !t.111or
vice president and regiona l
ma11agtr
Rumph who had been vice
president and regional 1n
stal ment credit officer for the
bank 1n Los Angeles JOtned
Crocker in 19$3 as a consumer
loan department manager 1n
Sacrament o
Rumph \\BS gr aduated from
the Pacific Coast School of
Banking in Seatlle and has
<'Onti nucd his e d u c a I 1 o n
through American Institute of
Banking courses He v.as born
1n Salt Lake City and educated
1n Sacramento
* * * LJNDV D LE IFHErT ha~
been promoted to assistant
vice pres1drnt with Bank of
Americas Apprrusal Depart
ment at Ui~
An ge le s
Headqu11r t •
e r s a n
noun ced Ap-
praisal De-
part men t
Vlct Pre~1
dent James
L Bryant
Le1fhe It
\1 1th the bank since 19M has
been appraisa l supervisor for
bank properties 1n Southern
C<1J1 forn1a since 1968 He wU
continue 1n that capaci ty
A nHt1ve nf Longmont C.Olo
Jle rece1~ed a bachelor o(
science degrer 1n business 11d
mln1strat1on from Un1ver.s1
tv nf Denver In 1951 He also
hAs completrd numerous pr~
fe~~1nnal real est11te se m1nar"I'
He 1~ active 1n the Un1v crs1
t1 of Denver Alun1n1 Ass0<'1a
11nn &nd 1he \\estm1nster
Presb) tcr1an Church
He resides (ln Ballantine
t 11neo IA tlb hrs wife E.:lv11 11nd
two d&ughttrs COMle 18 and
carol AM IS •
~larcan Corpora11on Nt.w-
µ01 t R'n.ch hos named Dr
port Beach ha.t nomf'!d DR
\VILIAAM 8 HARWOOD
to tlz r prts1dtnc11 of It..~
Subsidwr11 i\fod11l.tnrn
/11c a llUpplltr of 11pec1nl
1:rd ttxt.s <Tlld st"rvices to
the "rl11r.ot10,t mnrktf Ht
i~ as formt:rly prrsiclcnt of
llnrtnl'll Colltrrr J\.forcnn s
or'htr n}>trr1lUJl!S cn11~1~1
('/11cf/11 nf ('{)tlf1UCflrlf) llC
ct?/eroted program.$ for oc
cdrmfc f11~!1tut1ora in ITI'
c1flc nrtas part1cutor /11
t ha t nf lnQh school drop.
ouu 01 1hc m1htarv
LYNDON
sensors and
inslrumenl a
fnr medical
industria l
and ocean
ograph1c ap-1 plicaOons
Adams
well known
0
1n finance
eng1ne~-
and education has
EA Rt ~1~LI IGA\J (I r
Hun1111gton Beach has bt.en
named \'1ce pres1deni for
&1rC"rllft sales for Wesl11tes
Ca5ltr and Equipment Co
Inc of Hawthorne
~1UJll g In
h11s a dlplo-
ma 10 busl
OVER THE COUNTER Compl ete-New York Stock List
l •ltl H.i Wt ) H!tfl L9W CloH Cftl
I
•
ONE HUGE SIGN REPLACES ANOTHER
N•wport Bal Trade Mark Becom•5 lmptri1l
Sign oi Ti1nes
La1uln1ark Gets New One
One sign Jong ramiliar to Coast residents is
about to disappear, but another, if size aJone is a
criteria, may soon quickly take its place.
Soon to disappear is the huge Newport Bal·
boa Savings sign but il will be replaced by another
de!ignating the structure off Via Lido as the Ne\v·
port Beach executive offices of the newly-named
Imperial Savings.
A new sign weighing three tons has been
moved into position at the top of the five-story
building. The I symbol alone weighs more than
hall a ton, and desigrlates both Imperial Savings
and its parent company, Imperial Corporation of
Am erica.
, Measuring S6 feet long and 11 feet high, the
sign replaces the Newport Balboa Savings sign.
OfficiJ.J s said that new signs placed at the
Newport office use more than 1,500 feet of neon
tubing, 600 square feet of plastic and more than
3.000 feet of gold myla r trim to make up the Jllas-
tic Jett er faces.
ICA acquired Newport Balboa Savings in .1969
and in 1970 operations of the association were
consolidated with another Imperial Corporation
of America subsidiary, Investors Savings, an~ the
names of both associations were changed to Im·
peria1 Savings and Loan Association o( NewpOrt·
Pas1dena.
Over 100 Imperial Savings' signs now have
been manufactured and placed at ICA's subsidiar·
ies throughout California.
Penney Reports Good
1st Quarter Record
NEW YORK IBWl -J. C.
Penney Co. Inc. net income
for lhe first quarter rose 13.7
percent etver the .same 1970
period.
For the 13 weeks ended 1.1ay
I Penney had net earnings of
$16.600.811 agairu;t $14.594.,944
la.st year. This amounts to
pri mary net income per share
of 31 cents against 27 cents in
l rJO. On a fully diluted basis
the fig ures art the sam' as
the primary earnings.
Income before income laxes
i n d unconsolid a te d
1ubsidiaries for the fi~t
quarter was 22.4 percent
higher lb4n last year, a01oun-
ting to $33,1 12,433 against
'27,037.444 in the 1970 period.
A1 previously reported the
company's sales for l he
quarter rose 9.9 percent to a
record $921,938,978 from last
year's $838.627,399.
Di SC I OS i n g quarterly
earnings at the a n n u a I
stockholders meeting here
chairman William f\.t Batten
attributed the first quarter
performance to improvement
in most areas of !he com-
. pany's operation, especially
Penney stores and catalog.
While catalog continued to
operate at a loss. the im-
provement IA<'hich began during
the third quarter of 1970 was
maintained.
Batten pointed out thal the
company also be~itled from
reduced interest rates. The
decline in the profit con·
ution by unconsolidated
idiaries was due primarily
a loss in the company's
Belgian operation.
'
Wed¥sdU. Mi:t 26, 1971 DAILY PILOT j$
Officials
Chosen
ForMMA
Uni~n Ro·lls Go Up
Count y Construction Locals Sho-iv Gain
California labor unions ad· farm emp!Qyment increased a
ded 38,800 members to their scant 0.4 percent during the
Four prominent executives rolls from July 19!1 to July same period.
associated with companies or 1970. with Orange. County Most of the year-to-year in-
divisions operating in Orange reporting a total u n ion dustry membership gain was l
County have been named to membership of 98,900. up 3,100 centered in nonmanufacturing
the Orange County regional or 3.3 perct.nt, the stnte in-v.·here local union s reported al
board or the Merchants and dustrial relations department net increase of S 7 , 4 0 0
M a nufacturers Association, reports. members. This brought total
according to E. B. Buster, The statewide total \l'ent up member ship in non·)
chairman , who is also exe-despite heavy looses in manufacturing U> a record
cufive vice president of aircraft and 0 rd Jn a n c e high of 1,516,300 in July 1970.
Townsend Company in Santa manufacturing, according w With the exception or eating
Ana . William c. Hem, &reclOr . and drinking places, hotetsf
Ney,•Jy elected lo ser\1e on In Orange County, .J10nfarm and other lodging places.I
the 1971 l\, & 11-1 Orange Coun· employment rose 3.2: percent. v.·hich lost 1,400 members!
ty regional board are William Construction Joca~in the between July 1969 and July
L. Aldrich , president. William county picked up . 3 , 2 O O 1970, alt major divisions of
L. Aldrich Public Relations members betv.•een id-1969 l'IOllmanuf<icturing had a netl
'
MAY SERVICE SPECIALS
Reg. $2.80
SMOG SYSTEM
SPECIAL 1., •. ti ........ o 111'·it1 ,, ... ~.
t 11t t mi u ion 1y1!tm. $120
YOU SAVE $1.60
Re9. $14.50
COOLING SYSTEM
SERVICE SPECIAL
Fhnh ' •t litl•<• cool111t, ,,,,.
IMtt lt 1!, i111pt ct t lf h<l J.
b1t+1. $1000
YOU SAVE $-4.SO
SANTA ANA
LINCOLN MERCURY
1301 NO. TUSTIN AYE., SANTA ANA S47·014J
"WE APPRECIATE YOUR IUSINES5" and Advertising. Santa Ana; and mid·19'10. This •was the luring, localized in transporta-gain over the year. \
Charles E. Cleminshaw, vice first increase repohqj by tion equ1pment and ordinance Organizing activities among !~====================~ president. Parker·Hannilin building trades Jocf}s since \\'hich al0!'¥ accounted . for a farm workers and federal. ci·I:
Corporation of Los Angeles figures first became available loss or ·2,$00. ty, and county employes con-
and Irvine. and also chairman for the county in 1005. l\1ore Union membership in the tributed to the addition or
of the l\1 & 1.1 Western ~erate members~f gains, state reached a new mid·year 14,300 members in agriculture
Regional Board; Donald E. or no change, were reported high ~f 2,124,500 in 1970 Hern and 13,400 in government.
Shively, manager of th ' for other segments of non said. He said. however, that Sizable gains of 9 . I 0 O
Orange County Division, manufacturing. ' . the 1.9 percent growth rate for members in public utilities.
SoutAern California Gas Com-A loss of 2.600 me rs was the year ending in July '~as 7,800 in construction, and 7,700
Nearly Every one
Listens to Landers
pany, Santa Ana. and George ~r;epo~r~ted~by~Joc~a~ls~i"_•j· ~·~nu~f~ac::-_1~h~e_'s"1m'.'.:a~ll~es~l-s~in~ce:._1~96J"'::_·_'N~o~n'.:.·__..'.i"_n~lr~a.".de:.".w~er~e'.'a'.'.'lso"'..!po~st::ed~--_.':====================::: J . Vosatka, president, Varian 1-
Data f.1achines, Irvine.
Other members or the board
are: John F. Bishop, presi-
dent. Dana Laboratories, lnc ..
Newport Beach ; Roy C. Bolt.
"'ho serves as vice chairman
of I.he f.1 & f.1 reg ional board
and as president and general
manager of Kwikset Division
of Emhart Corp or a ti on,
Anaheim ; Robert A. Daily,
resident manager, D e I co ·
Remy Division. G e n e r a I
Motors Corporation, Anaheim ;
W. J. Haney, president,
Kirkhill Rubber Company,
Brea: Howard H. Hankins,
partner, Haskins & Sells, San·
ta Ana ; Robert E. Hanson,
partner. Arthur Young & Com·
pany, Santa Ana; Harold H.
Jackson. regional vice presi-
dent. Bank of America. Santa
Ana ; A. V. Jones Jr., division
plant manager, Pacific
Telephone, Santa Ana; Walter
Knott, founder. Knoll's Berry
Farm. Buena Park : R. K.
MacDonald, general manager.
Western Division,. The
Pitonarch l\1arking Systems
Company, Garden Grove:
A. Patri{'k Nagel, part.Der.
Nagel, Regan and Davidson,
Santa Ana ; Carl E. Schroeder.
president, First National Bank
of Orange County, Orange: A.
R. Sloan, dirtttor of indu strial
relations. Collins Radio Com·
pany. Newport Beach. and
Donald A. Strauss. vice presi·
dent, employe re l ations ,
Beckman Instruments, Inc ..
Fullerton.
Paint Firm
Opens Store
Standard Brands P a i n t
Company has opened ill 37tb
paint and decorating ct:nter, at
800 \\lamer, near the in-
tersection of Golde n West and
\Varner in HuntingU>n Beach.
The new location, which is
scheduled to open in early
April has ample free parking
adjacent to lhe store and car-
ries a complete stock or paint
and decorating s u pp I i es .
Geard to the J)o...lt-Yourstlfer,
all products carry an un·
conditional money ba ck
gu11 ranlee, and are of the
finest available quality at the
lov.·est possible prices.
L
Sears SAVE $22!
·Prices Effecti1·e
V.'ednesd1)\ lfar 26th thru Sunday, !fay 30th
Powerful Push-Type
Rotary Lawn Mower
Low
Priced! 4999
3 HP engine v.•ith rr.toll 1tart·
er. 4 cutting: height adjust-
ments. 20-in. cul 191094
Rugged I H.P." Craftsman
.20-inch Rotary Lawn Mower
":"'' '
Regular $89.88, 18-in,
Power Reel Mower
SAVE -7988
SJO!
2~ HP, +cycle engine. Ad·
jus t1 from 3/8 to 21~·in. Non·
!nag handle. #79816
Regular
s9999
88
SAVE $50!
Crafts1nan
Dial-Ad just
• Low·compression he~d for instant staru
•Powerful 9.0 cu. in. engine.,.governorcontrolled
for quick power response
• Quick wheel adjusters for convenient cutting
height adjustment
Model l91J81
I
transman Mower Guarantee
It •~rltl 1•1 ftnt ftlr lldt Cnftf-.
"'"'"' ft ll• ... 11"' ,,..... .. rr.r..-.
•hoe le <ltfKi. It •tlfritl t t Wttt.111•1•,
•• trill ••~• 111 •~ta1ry ,.,.1,... ttte 9f
·····~ .1 .... -•ttl .. 1~ ... U...tt= I( .... ~ ·-•Jrdl"' .... •Ill "'...,. • ChrP.11IJtilltltt.r11 .. ll(kl:J .. .iQ:.
Dllrl•t Utt llNt N ..,__ae,bft a.-,,.,
•I •• ......... Aftff M '-.JI-~ ....
lff7, dw:flq ~ l(U ., Ille .....
"'llleaew~Hr~lllU~-
•.i.eOlla k.
Power /
Reel 1''lower
Regular $179.99
12999
• \tertical 1h•~ engine re·
dut'e1 vibration and main· lena nce
• Noit • adjust fuel i;ystem
makes starting fast & ea.'}' •Dial height of cut. "81601
.4.sk Abont Sears Convenient Credit Plans
I EVERY 'ALL THE SPAGHETTI
THURSDAY YOU CAN EAT .•• .... ~~~~~~~~~~-~\~
• Italian style meat sauce
• Permeoan cheese
• Toued salad
• Roll and butter
let's go continent•! tod•y! You'll h•ve
.+o •1k for n'IOr• ••• it'1 10 9oocl. We'll
9iY• you more, b•c•u1• wt want you
anJ yo~r f•"'ily to •njoy this treet et
lradforcl Hou'•· '
"(;!~KNOWN FOR VALUES
c
Open Delly
Mon. thru lat.
f :H a.m. t• f P·"'·
SuMay
11 a.m. te 6 p.m.
OUHT l'LAZA -BROOKHURST & ADAMS -HUNTINGTON BEACH
Kids Learn from 'A sk Andy'
' . ' Fingertip Conlrolled King 0 ' Lawn
King '0 Lawn ~ower 2HP Power Edger
Low
Priced! 13999
2 HP motor. Dual rronl taMer
v.·heels. 2·way C'lutth, In ·
clude11 metal ir115~ C'Jllt'htr.
130688
I.ow
Priced! 6999
AdJustable bl ad' gua rd. Lin·
Ina: handle. Steel construe·
11nn. \\'ide whet'ls. #206
\ \
SAVE $6! Craftsman SAVE $41.99, 18-inch
Eleclric Edger-Trimmer! Hand Mower
l\egular
$29.99
De\·elops '• !IP. l.ock11 in :i
positions. ln~tant v.·hcel •d·
ju5tment ror hf, lo tut 185781
~AVl:
$5! 3688
Cutting height •dJur111 from
"'• lo 2·tn. easily. :I ~tHl bl1de5 •81:?97 '
\Veil-Constructed
17-inch Mower
TOP
VALUE! 2999
.5 he•.l·tre•ted blade• fbr•5y
mo\l.·1na:. B•ll beatint tHI
makes JOb ea1ier. fl 79771
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Wtdntsdiy Miy 26 1971 SC DAILV PILOT fT ~
Wednesday's Closing Pric~.;::.Complete ~ew York Stock ExchangeL -1-"st-"---'--'---"-"----~
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M ,) 101" 1~ $TOCIC' U Id 9'fl l'O 22 11 1 Ill\ I IO~ IO (k>o11 lfl '" Low ( " • Nll'I un11c.. 11• ,. t t
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11 u JJ J.S\o 100 ll~•h ~ OJ 1 ._ 1"' n, • + • usPc11 o I" •• ' ' 6\o It~ -Toe lie •Ob • I USPCll of 10 2'
''
• ,,.., ,._.. 1i ., ''~'"to 11 •It•••• •l~ot ~us 'nnt u "' S4 , s• s.. NE\.Y 'ORK (UPI) -The slock market in ror r "' u 1 20 ',l' •~ •J 014 -'u~ sm• u Joi ••~• "'• """ 1 ••• w J.!r io ··" 1•, • ",~ t ,, us s " 1 "° 101 •N 'I'" 1Jlo 11•1 -\Yard gear during the morn1n1• \Vednesdav closed r nv" 11 i• ... i ._ 1 ustotie( ''° ' 111 1 \:. 73 n e. l nWI'" 111 .~ Jlo lllo t>o -•\Jn Ut tJ )I ., • '' , mixed on mo derate turnover ' •n•m • n .... i. • l•\t ~h -un u1 w1 11 11l •7ll l-1ol l~nsc:onl'O 1\,11•11' Un UIDllJ.0 J ~ n. 12 11 -• Analysts noted that despite an early surge of 1 •n~ •n~ 0 1 • ~'" u L•• , '° ,, •'~t .. ~ .. '~7 bargain hunttng generated by the reCCOt Sharp l:~~:ct°J lo~~: u"" p~1
+I ·~~:~'CO:. 1!n tl Jl, Sho s.. !,•,v,!;;.oclo ),.1) II 7•lo • t '"'/Olin 1 60 I 1
'
", "•' "• ",, _, rnarketdecllnes a general concern about r1s1ng 1n · '"' ... 11 "•' ,. ,, u11 11ld0 '° ,. 36 -T l"'l"Ct IO ,; '1~ 11,. ll '=.._USLl,..-.!O ~
1s J•\O :i.o., lo' lerest rates influenced traders ~rt"£"": 1 11 ,,~ .u 11 _1 • uSM 1111 ...
51 •' '• 11~ • One anal) st said he expected the bank prime 111w "'' 1111 1 "•,., ".,.1 ••I'>+"" usM "11"° 1'° -T-tllw P' ..0 ti llO>l -q \J 11'C6!1 IGm IO interest rate to be hiked a quarter point very soon ti;('" Ge n ' 111 •·· ,. • u 1~ PL 1" U: T~n C•n ll 17'o 11• , .o-\ V' I•~ Anoe and that the action \Vas likely to have a temporarily TY er '"'" 3• t • ,,._ 1• l _,... 1. ~~: ~':' o1 :g ~
adverse impact on the stock market However the -U V-~::!'co 6011 •
llrospecl or improved corpora.le eat n1ngs was expect uAL inc ~ J.t~ 1s•. '6 • +-"'vF '°'" 1 o UAL 1> ;o ,,. JJ o ll •, lJ • ~ \\locom wO cd lo be an ovcrr1d1n" market influence over the uA11co o • :111,,. :io 100. ... 1• v c com• "°
J ·~ n .. f>. UG Cit 171 • 11 1" 11 -. V•Comw 80 longer term UMC !..cl n '6 XI ,... ' •• VIE Pw .'1
una(O ¥.I ' lt<. J ll f-0 V1~P 1>1111 ~ The 00\Y Jones 1ndustr1al average was Off 0 28 e~ ~:"'"'~ ,,,; ~~ ~" ~~t_ + \ ~: 1:1>":.: •t
at 906 41 Advances led declLncs 700 to 630 among tl~~· ~~pl ~v •:1• ;~: g • -, ~ti"t::. " 1 ~"" •\ the 16611ssues crossing the laJJe u~E .c " 121 .~. •• 11. vv1c•n""• '' 21~ 11~ unE Jp I 10 .. ''"' •• +l.tVWllUnl n 1' • :::1'"'"'"'"'::..:"'::c:ci:::.::"'"'""'"""'".,"'"""""'"""""''"'""""::l"'"'"'\e~IC: '1~~ 1o~ ~ • ; • ~lf'o -W x y Z-UOC• 1>11» I~ ' o 'iCI o Jl 1 .. WeC!'IC• 1 l'O 1 I .... 11 .... U'I P1< CP 1 ' 1 S) .. SI Sl'1 '• Wtcll 1>11 Xi 1 10 70 UncnP•c l 1 ~ 51 • J,,~ 511+ \ W1chll IO• ll :IO\i JO"° . .. . " 16 IOlO. ,, " 1 1J>
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Co1nplete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List ?, .. ,.. "'" ~
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Finance
Briefs
• • • NEW YORK <UPI\ -Leoo>
H Keyserhng r o r m e f
presidential economtc advtso~ has accused !he Nixon a
m1n1slrallon or forfeiting
$144 billion worth of lndu str1 f:.
production by shMt.s1gh
poltcics Keyserhng told a
meeting of pension fund ad ..
m1n1slrator s at C B W L ..
Hayden Stone Inc that the
federa l government should
have been planning starling 1n
1969 !or opl!mum U S
economic growth Instead he
said the a.dm1nlstration has
followed an inconsl.stcnt
medley of anti 1n0111t1on and
anlt-depress1on progrnms
CHATTANOOGA IUPll
Dorsey Coro broke ground
Tuesday at Keyser W VA ,
tor a new $6 m1Ulon gla!!: con
ta.Iner factory Dorsey bought
out Keyser Container Co a
new firm that had planned to
build a plant at Keyser and
abnndoned Dorsey s previous
proposal to bulld a glass con
ta1ner factory at Ham: de
Grace Maryland
DALI.AS (UPI) -Drarull
International Airways Inc ..
has applied for permission to
add a stop at Orlando F 11, la
1L<1 present Dallas and M11mt
route v;hlch stops at New
Orleans Tampa St •
Petersburg and Clearwater
The opening of Disney World
near Orlando nert t a 11
moUvated Braniff s declsloo.
the company s11d
I (
' . .
fl DAILY PILOT Wtdntsd•y, MJy 26, iq71
Laguna Playhouse
'Man WlwCame to Dinner'
Stirs Theawr Nostalgia
By TO~t TITUS
01 "'-Ol llf 1"1191 SI.ii
lt'.s Old Home Week -for
the next three weeks -at the
Laguna Moulton Playhouse,
and nostalg ia is the order or
the day.
Hap Graham fs back after
• an absence of seven years,
and with him to celebrate past
glor:ies Js a cast compcsed
' almost wholly or veterans of
the old Laguna Playhouse. Fit·
tingly, the production is a
oldie as well, the durable
Wednesday
Evening
MA't' 26
1:0011111 Mm: Jerry Du11ph1.
Cl) UC News R11sontr, Smith.
B INBC Nnn Tom Sn)'der.
IJ Tiit Alltn Show DIJ11 Altftl, Mil.
Ion Berte, Jerry Collins 1J'MI c:olumnisr
Count Mtmi IU'''-0 Sl1 O'aodt Mowit: {90) ..,lie
""9idlftt'1 l.adJ"' {drama) '53 -
Chlrlton Htt!on, Suun H1y_.a1d.
John Mthrtirt, F17 Bainter.
0 Diel t"u Dyt1 SllN
Kaufman·Hart comedy, ''The
Afan \Vho Came lo Di.Mer."
Graham, who becomes !he
playhouse's new managing
director next month, has
wasted no time getting into
harness. He's per!orming the
exhausting twin tasks of direc-
ting the huge cast show and
taking on the burdensome
leading role of the loquacious
leclurer Sheridan Whiteside.
Fortunately for Graham and
everyone else concerned, he
and Whiteside are comrades
fD Tiii Fl'IMll Qtl
Ui)Tlll Allmet
e:llda Ubft
l :DS Erl) D• 11 htints Roller Gtmn.
l :lO B ([) T• .._, Willl LM (R)
Allison ac:cide11tallJ 1ets a p1rt in a
hippie lnlMt filmin1 ln Rome., then
wants to tblnit her lift sty1t and
w111<11r thro111h Europe with tht
lilm troupe.
mouviet
fJ':) DCBIJT Mt .ka "[1ral Gamer."
Errol G1rn1r is the first 1uest In tili1
10-wwk aeries from Chiumo.
Ill> P1tllrt lw Lhfq
or retent acquaintance, and
hi,q familiarity with the role
allows h i m to utilize his
directorial talents to a greater
degree. Graham has mounted,
with a handful or exceptions,
an extremely entertaining pri>-
ductlon, trimming some · ex·
cess verbiage here an~ there
to tighten the overall product.
The vastness of the Laguna
stage precludes, perhaps, the
helter-skelter zaniness of the
comedy, but the show moves
at a pleasant pace. allowing
.some fine cha racterizations to
blossom. Onty occasionally
does an unguarded moment
surface, and such failin!!'.S
work themselves out in little
time.
It Is. a.9 it should be,
Graham's show and he is,
. ' r , • -..
:\Var and Politics
On '60 Minutes'
By CYNTIDA LOWRY try for president again in 1972.
NEW YORK (AP) _ CBS The program may get a lit-tle Out ot balance with its in-i.60 Minutes" usually manages terest in nallonal politics and
to have an off beat picture war, but it is still a very
stoty in its biweekly program. bright spot in the schedule.
Tuesday night It was a report *
comedy until his drunk scene on the UtUe understood tanker Public broadcasting :!!latlons
late in lhe play. business and the owners who, which seem lo be just as in-il calculated risks work out, The round heeled actress, k h h terested in pumping out fresh ma e uge profits auling oil · Lorraine, ls done w i t h d programs Jn warm weather as aroun the world. in cold, are a particular boon
highborn style and a beautiful The pictures of the mam-lo the bored viewer these
Katharine Hepburn v o c a t moth tankers w ere im-nights. pressive, and Mike Wallace's quality by Betsy Hewett. She com mentary on the business There are a number of pro-
maintains complete control intriguing. grams, not alwayj carried as
and poise throughout, whether There was al.so an im-network broadc.lsts, l hat
on the giving or recei ving end pressive introduction of a new circulate among the educa-
of the barbed invective. race on the antiwar sctne, tional stations and deserve
Of the smaller roles, the former Navy Lt. John Kerry. more attention than they get.
standouts in large measure are He is the 27-year-old Yale man One. in particular, is Robert Cromie's "Book Beat." Robert Engman as the harried who recently made a big im· householder approaching his pression on \Vsshington with Cromie, hook critic for a
boiling point ; David Paul in a his. impassioned testimony Chicago and a Washingto n
peppy G r ouch o ~larx before the Senate Foreign newspaper, is one television
<..tiaracterization as the 1r. Relations Committee and as interviewer who really reads
repressible Hollywood comic: organizer of a demonstration his guests' books. His style is
Marthella Randall as !ht! in which disabl ed veterans of easy, literate and brings out
strange relative who comes Vietnam threw away their the best even in nervous
d l I authors. and goes almost ln a cloud of me a s n protest against the
smoke; John Briggs, also continuation of the war. Ker· On a recen t Pr og ram , r h. 1· 1 ry, who hinted at political am-Cromie was discuss i ng repea 1ng is ear 1er roe as "Defending the Environment" the grinning, Hterary·minded bitions. said frankly, the doctor ; \Valter Daly in 3 medal throwing was a device with its author, Prof. Joseph
splendid cameo as the Noel to attract coverage by the H. Sax of the University or
Coward-type actor, and Susie electronic media . ~fichigan law school. The book
0 --11 Wh'l ·d • d The program \\'OU nd up ~'ith was a report on lega l action .Au as i es1 e s nurse an by citizens groups and othe's ,,,,,,·te la,get an interview \Vilh former · in efforts to protect and Less impressive are the presidential candidate Eugene preserve areas of I and.
pe'fo-an-s of Helen Vat'f AicCarthy. He spoke of his in· • '" "'" as seashore and \vater as part of the lady of th~ house. too terest in a third politica l par-11 bl.
hesitant in both character and ty, but maintained firml y that ie pu Jc trust. A dull sub-
] F __ , La h he has not decided whether to ject? Not at all under the vo ume: 1 ru ng as t e in· gentle prodding from Cromie.
111"'-..... ,nk
fDA n.. fw Wl1/~a ... m.-,_
sect er.pert. a bit shaky for a Sax told details of one
9:00 II()) Mtdltal C11ttf (R) C•TY 1------------minor as s i g n m e n t • anti ]\f' h fascinating case after another . Lodwood l\ltltt ••a NpPl•tlrlt a g ain, an extraordinary \\'ilfred Henry, somewhat slow J.Di.t eaters It was a wlid hair hour of
doctof wtio fllhb wit/I a stiff·'**" Sheridan Whiteside. The drip-as the radio technician. good talk and altogether
: ~ CE Neticlln 14 tdl1a1111 (Andm D11u1n) for pn>m-ping malevolence i s un-Others turning in r i n e NEW YORK (UPI) -Slick refreshing.
lsi111 too ml.Id! auueu with • MW derscored by a cool and com· portrayals are Betsy Paul as new motion picture houses are!-::;;::::::::=====:::::::-., m-•...,..,,
... ~ II!) la Hara f1111/litr CM c.u..11
~: Cl) NIWI Jim H1wt:t1ornt.
1:30 (I},. • ., But Huddy.
Cil T• w Conttqutnta
Cl) CU Ntn Walter Cronklll.
0 Candid C.111111
ail flllt Men David Brinkt11.
~ · GI n. f'7i11 N11
• m .......... t.ot.,
:,,, C[l) ll6ecW fll111/Mtllctlc
• m--llil™ Ill-
NO 8 ca .... Watt. Cronkite. om•.;.."""'""""· CIJ T1 T• tlll Tfl'lll
OMMt1M,u .. !
aij MfM: (C) •40 POU&dt 1f T11t-
WI" (comtd)') '63 -Tony Curt!a. Suz1nn1 Pltsbttle.
CD I l.lvt Lucy
OJ CIJ Dr1111ft
ED I IPICr4 I !At Anrela Pttilflar·
llMllk Conollt .. Andre Witts: Moz1r1
Pltno Co11t1rt11 #24." Younc Aml'ri·
tin pl1nlst Arldft Witts Is tetn ptl·
parin1 fo1 •lld performl111 lhl Maz1r1
Cot!certo In C MfllOI with th1 Los
~1t1es Phllharmonic under the
btlon ol Zubll\ Mrllll.
fl!) Dlrlll tat LM111 W.4 ID"-"""' Cl'i) II flit Futm TM
GJ MO'lit Ctr11t
:!':u Iii)-..........
tr11tm1rrt for 1 llrf 111fftrln1 '"" m d' d 1· d th the 'd E · V ~ an 1ng e 1very, an e ma1 . rte an ucusen opening all over the country .
1anrren•. human side of the great man and Debbie Paul Kerrnode as The trend is to\vard grouping
B !iif.D i lflCllli All Ewinln1 is pcrtrayed with warmth and the You n gs t t' r s, Doug mini-theaters. United Artists
wttll th• Htrle111 Slobttrotltrs Jot h t G h • t "' 11"11' h ·1 d ones y. ra ams rans1 ... ons 1 1amson as l e su1 or an Theatre Circuit, for example. G1r•giol1 ls commt!llJ\or for this I h h d J k' Fl · ''time.~ between fllt Globllrollff• rom one lo t e ot er an ac 1e aneg1n as a curious rccenUy opened • • 1 rip I e ,,
ind th• Je.rser Clt1 lltds. Com-b;ack again are accomplished n~i.ghbor lady. 7 thea ters in Chicago's famou s
ediin HiPN1 Ruuell ind S-ye•r-old ~'ilh precision and rapier . The ?\.tan \\ho Came to f..iarina City Towers.
St1Nie Chri5ty •r• ftiturtd. swiftness. Dinner" should prove a meal I;;~-:.....;:;=::::;:=:=;:;:==:=:::;; I
O (l)Cil GI)LM .. 1 1..,_, Unfortunately, lhe most im· ticket for the La~una Moulton BALBOA
(RJ Nll7 Wi)'l lo Cool!; H•mb uritr.H portant f('male role in the Playhouse, for its sly le and
Bride Julie lnv.m btrri'7 _ 10 show is not given such careful Thirties manner are carefully 673-4048
pounds wortti-l11 ll1111b11rp r, ot1'7 attention. Julie Haas never preserved for an audience, OPEN
to '"" t.er )lusbtnd un't stml really attains believability as like a large share o( Laguna's, 6:4s
around .ne•l Wh iteside's secretary, Mag· which remem bers when . And "9 I. .....
G)Dwld ,,. ,._ h ult P'rl• gie: her performance is slow those wtn don't will find it a ll~·~-~~-~·~w~-t.~~
tiu, Did BtnJltTlirs, 8'tt1 flbodu, and uneven, and she ex· valuable theatrical historyl.1
tain's Cl'llldrt11 Ml C«don Miiis periences difficulty involving lesson.
auest. benelf in the action. Performances will be given
OJ f-,. S..td Paul Toft as the small tawn Tuesdays through Saturdays
fJ':) MIUT F1rl11 UM Wlmem f. newspaperman paints an er. for the next three weeks at the
lh1et1er llolts.. "Dump Hh:onr fectlve picture <Jf a rustic playhouse. 606 Laguna Canyon
Gllffis trt Rrp.1'1ul MtelolktY ind hero, but lacks a true nair for Road, Laguna Beach.
AH11d Lowensltin. ''i'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;i;i;;,;i;;;;;;;,;i;i;i;;iii;iiiiiiii9j m 30 1111111tn 11
a;) D Peudo di Sofi1
t :30 0 CIJ (j) W TM lmllltfttl (R)
"T~e Le1tcy." 8111 Rkllt rds bf..
comts • i><isoner In 1 Medcan
mininr camp wlltn H'1 d!KVVerff
thtt one of tlll mlntrs b11 lypllold. 111•-m LA Cru H lhrlu CrllClll
llDllA
TONIGHT
SKILES AND
HENDERSON
BOON nu w. COAST HWY.
DOCKS Nowpo't ln<h ,.,,.,.,
IG,:OD II Cl) HIWllli fw.e {R) Ptul 811"'
111Hta •• •n erm1menb uporttr
whoM wilt Is the -.!dim of 1 kid·
n1p in1 tllll Is pfQbed by McG11Tett. l!o-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~11 B (llmJr_.. lli.O.: Mco..d
(rQ .. Tll• Contrllt Conti." Mc:Cloud
lnwufit•lts • fOdto murdtr In Hew
Yor\'1 Mldison Squ111 G•rden.
0 ... ,,.,~ """ m Ntn Pllln1m/fistiman,
CE M111trap Al H1met lloJ\1.
ED w.11:.,,._. T11c11r1
m I IBCl&J Milt ht..._
This Week
Treat the Family to Dinner
In One of Orange County's
DICK VAN DYKE
~ / t?' ~ -~"" ,,(i ·; • f \ FffA IDJIT ""' . \ BOBNEl'llWIT
°COID
TURKEY"
1:111.DR brlltlmt mx--....
"**** HIGHEST RATING
ACllJIEOY 'GEM!"
"'THIE ANDROMEDA
STRAIN"
No lnl'rved Seat•
D•ily 111:)0 & 10
w""'., :I AcH . AW•f'll
"IYAN'S DAUC.HTEI'"
••• Offk• 0-1:1 H..,, • t l".M. Diiiy
SMwtlmn
Mlfl. lltr. TIHlf'1. .• I P .M.
l'rt. • Sii. ·•:»PM. Mlllllffl SI!. • Svn •• 1 l".M,
llHlnl• lull
l l:CLVll•ll
1 11aA•llllllf
PLAYING
.)M Cl bpi lnllMU The Art1els n . hfftJ PafMl1 (Flnab) F"rfty NllO!ls
·, t111 Otkltlld A's. 11e reprtstnttd in tllis p1111nt ll'Ofll
., fJ (II (I) aJ I IPICl!'l ! ,,._ptln! lon1 Betc.b. Cll. B~ron P1ltnfr ii
Tit• M•ll 11 tllt flrlni Tr1put Tht melltr of ceremonlts •nd BUI Wtlsh
und1untftl amateur )olns Ille circus. pr.wides lh• b1ck 1t111 color.
tnd after t11:eb of strtnuo111 tu!n· ClJ IHI the Clod
lni, is seen performinr with the ED looll lttl "Dtf1Mlin1 the En-
flr1n1 Apollos •ti on !ht hi1h lllJ· vironmenl, .. by Jos1ph l. Sir.
tie before 1 tent lilted wilh people. II ·JO -!Tl ri . ->48 INTERNAllONAL . _.w M•rt Iii ttin
.::J< BEAUTIES COMPETE 0 ®J ID ""'"' """
-· FOR TOP HONORS 0 00 00 !!l ~"' c...tt . : m I lflCIALI Miu ln1mationil ID Mtftt: ""';• Coldtft Claws ·: a..tJ P•.-nl (Prtllmlntry) 81fOll Stlfy" (draim) 50-tl""7 Mt rtln.
•• Palmw 11 11111tit ot' ttrtmonin tor U:XI m M.flllftrt Dow: -n. liiq Dhow-
:: thl• 111re•nt. 111a:1t five t~ totir ut.'" "'Cbi111t1n S.ud"' '""
l llth, Ctl "'[inb stocbdt.'" " "·
·-,•
• • • ...
• •
Thursday
Do\mME MOVIES
·~CD "T..p.t M111 "' Arlzont"
(wul1rn) '51 -V1111hn Monrot.
Join lllllt. :,
'
0 ""-lit ....... (drtt111) 'Sl
--01rk Q1bl1, GtM T1tmt1 •
10:00 CD "The World T11 Tl ... OWr"
(d1tm1) '64-S)'f\'!1 Sim&, ldwtrd
Jucld.
1:00 m "Tiit Priwltt Lift If HtllfJ VI II"
~danlt) ·33 -Qi1r111 l1111lllot1, Mt1lt Obtcon.
2:00 D {C) "Ctpta/11 Kofttil Hlrnblfw.
:till 0 "'""""'4 IOlllfnnl"' (dr1m1) f(" (1c1Ytn1urt) 'SI -llrtto'J "'*·
'l& -Xlhn H111Way, Mtntll Hunt. V1r1lnl1 Mayo. lJ "CnloU,"(-'53-RoO-l:OO(J)llA
! •rt MOlltf, lllJ Atttd•"· 4;)0 B (C) "'CreulriHI" (tdnnturt)
,l;Jf 8 ....,.. la I,., (lrllM) '50-'.SI -John Pt)'llt, Rtlonda fllmlna.
" V.. RIJJ«on, Jolla Cindi. ()) Slnw • lOMI Moria.
FASCIN-
ATING
Tlot>tt
"Breath-
Taking!!"
.toio!Olll G;~....,
~('"''""'
,.. . ... ~ ..
NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES
·~;:
(!pin~· 6:45 Sot ... Sun. 1.15
"DR. PMllES" (GPl
"WHA TlVEI HAPPENED TO AUNT ALICE?"
2ND ~omedy Hit
"THE TWELVE CH.AIRS" IG)
RESERVED SEAT ENGAGEMENT
TORA TORA TORA
~qfi,§!P
The eternal triangle's back •••
..• and it's never been funnier!
"$Cll.'1 P10ChKllon •.• C01llft UP I winner." -LA TIMES
H ••• °"'Of IM ll~f e.uemlllH s•en In ITllll}' ,._1111."' -VARll"TY
OPENS FRIDAY
THE GINGER MAN
~ J .•• .,..,...,.,
Murray Schi1gel's
LUY
HDW l"llJillt
S'outh ((Jost ltc Jcrtnr'
IOX OFFICE: 64~l63 OR ALL AGENCIES
I
Dr. Phibes is
~ . curiously ~ · · terrifying!
1111-
COLOR by ~ M AMERICAN INTONATIONAL·f'ic:MW1 ...
NOW PLAYING
2ND CHILLER 2ND SUSPENSE FEATURE
'•BLOOD AND LACE" "WI-IA TEVER HA PPENED
Oprns7P.M. TO AUNT ALICE?"
s1orts1110u'k 2nd weekdoysb,4SSo!.&Sun.1,lS
IJ;;!~ BIG
WEEK
E.-e. Show Start' 7
Contlnuo111 Show
~f., Sun .• Mo11.
from 2 P.M.
BARGAIN MATINEE
f l l''"°"I J•1-us1 •01 11<11011111•110 EVERY WED. 1 PM
Meet Henry &: Henrietta ...
the love couple of the seventies ...
" and !he laugh riot of the year.
Jl neC1J_ ..,.,.,.._... Leaf" ~;;',,."'
fllalter MattbaD
Elalnel1DV JIXk .
lLleStDn
\
PARK PLANTED -Sc:outs from Pack 35 in Laguna Beach do their
bit for Pepper 'free ~1ini Park where playhouse once stood. It 'viii
have trees, benches, \Valk,vays a:nd drinking fountain \\'hen complel·
ed. Fron1 left are cub scouts Scott Santmyer. ~1att Carlton, Scott
Ca1npbell and Don Rose, chamber beautification n1en1bcr.
Tree Bargain
Lagu.nans Can HelJJ Popula.te Park
Lagunans who "'ould like In help
develop the Pepper Tree l\lini-Park on
Ocean Avenue can contribute. for the
bt.rgain wholesale price of $4S, :i fine
eucalyptus citradora in a 16-inch box.
Laguna Beach Chamber of Comn1erc:c
directors learned Tuesday .
Don Rose of the Chan1ber beautifica·
lion committee said arrangements have
been made to obtain the trees, y,·orth $65
retail. and to have them planted and
m:iintained by the city Parks Depart-
ment.
Similar trees in 15-gallon containers
are available for $25, he added.
The little park, built around the pepper
tree that stood alongside the old Laguna
Playhouse, is being developed with walks,
benches and planting through public con·
tribution, Rose said.
The Cub Scouts got the lrt>e progra m
under way by planlink their OY.'n con·
!ribution recently, and other organiza-
tions wishing l.o participate are invited to
contact lhe Chamber or Comn1erce.
Apartments to G~ Back
Before Clemente Panel
Twn separate apartment proiecls plan-
ned for similar parcels in San Clemente
will return before p I an n in g coin·
missioners for action tonight ar1er
receiving postponements 1'1'0 '~eeks ago.
Both projects -one on acreagr once
.proposed a~ a site for a hospital: the
other on land once earma rked for a
mobile home park -require staif rcporls
before commissioners act.
Alfred E. fo.1ann·s request tor 11 use
permit to allow the building of i:;arden
apartn1ents at 100-150 La Esperanza y,·ill
hinge on solutions lo parking areas ;ind
drivel'l'ay \\'idths . Commissioners delayed
action lwo weeks ago to :1\low !or
changes in those t"·o phases ol the plan
ror the nearly 10 acres.
Shortly after that matter on the agen·
da. the tentative tract map for an apart·
ment complex to replace lhe foundrring
llarbor Hills Golf tourse 11·ilt recei~·e
ro1nmission attention.
'T'he LA Quinta Stylcline OevelopmPnt
Company of Newport Beach proposes !he
development on the golf course owned by
the Forster Trusl.
The question or residential use or the
links last year stirred violent controversy
-....·hen city approval wai"I sought for con·
struction of a mobile home park on lhe
land . City Councilmen turned the request
down.
The devclopmenl firm no1v i;eek11 !!Ub·
division of the 14.4 acre parcel inlo 99 lots
for residential usr.
Other items on the agenda for the •:30
p.m. n1eeting include :
-Study of the action lasl 1\·eek by city
councilmen \Vho chose Avenida Cornelio
as the eventual collector -street access
rnute lo the Rasmussen-Ayer propt'rly
being considered as the sile tor a major
c·ondo1ninium and estate-lot project.
Councilmen have ordered t'Ommissioners
lo amend the city master.plan of streets
and highways to show an expanded and
extended Cornelio as a major collector
road lo reach the acreage in question,
plus vast areas cf other inland acreage in
the ci ty.
-Further study on a riroposed
ordinance which would giv!: the cil.y con-
trol O\'er landscaping on private parking
lots. The code would use existing rules in
Garden Grove as a mode l.
D1·. Gwyime
Aho1·tio11
~Foe' Cited
Or. John Shriver G"•ynne may be fat'ed
v.·ith a countless number of new and in·
tangible adversaries when he faces ahor·
tlon charges June 2 in Orange County
Superior Court.
Santa Ana attorney Robert L. Sas!lone
described them in a unique petition filed
with. the court f\1onday as the .. many
thousands of unbom children who will be
deprived of life if the present abortion
statute is repealed."
Sassone asks in his lawsuit that the
court recognize him as the legal guardian
of "baby boy Jones, baby girl Smith and
all the children yet unborn who are
menaced by the like of Dr. Gwynne,"'
Gwynne, 29, and his mother f\lr.s.
Rubye Unruh Gl'l'}'nne, 56, face trial on
charges of attempted abortion and con-
spiracy lG commit aborti91l. The physi·
cian confirmed f\1onrlay that he is still
performing daily abortions at his Santa
Ana clinic.
Sassone, who unsurcessfully sought
election to a Fountain Valley City Council
seat last year. \Ylll be adn1itled to the
criminal action against Gwynne if lhe
court accepts him as the legal guardian
of unborn children.
"Baby boy Jones and baby girl Smith
are just fij::titious representatives of the
untold number of child1·en who v.•ill never
kn ow life H Dr. Gv.·y nne·s arguments arc
accepted ," Sassone said. "No party
represents them and my pt'lition is
designed to protect their interests.''
The petition is unique to Orange County
but its language closely follows thal of a
la\\'suit entitled the United States versus
1'1ilan Vuitch.
That court action. still undecided. also
seeks lo prevent the passage of abortion
Jaws that would mean the death of .. un·
born children v;ho will be adversely af·
fected by abolilion of the aborlion
statutes."
Session Planned
On Sensitivity
At Laguna Motel
A UCLA-sponsored ad v a n c e d
laboratory on "Applied Sens it i vi t y
Training" "'ill be held in South Laguna
June 3 through June 6 al Ben Bro'1·n·s
~1otor Hole\. •
The Uni\"ersily Extension program '1'il1
offer participants in earlier training pro-
J?rams an opportunity lo apply .their
kno'1·1edge about behavior lo practical
liie situations.
The program will bf guided by a pro-
fessional staff including Dr. Alexander C.
Ro.~n. chief psychologist al the UCLA
Neuropsychiatric Institute and Stuart
Atkins, management consultanl for
Alkins-Katcher Associates.
fee fnr the progrnm is $19S. Further
Information is available by wrilini:l:
hfanagement Programs, In stitute of
Indu strial Relations. University Ex·
tension. P.O. Box 24002 Los Angeles, nr
calling Mrs. Lisa Rosenberg at 1213) 825·
1888.
Sof thall League
Slated in Laguna
The Laguna Beach recreation depart-
ment is again organizing an adult sortbal l
league in preparation for lhe <.'Oming
summer.
The league. to be made up of five all-
men teams, will begin play as MOn as:
enough players are found. Th!: gamel'i will
be pla~•ed -v.·ith a 12 inch softball.
Persons interested in playing on on!: of
the teams may contact lhe recreation
departn1ent al 494-1124 ext. 47, The
game!'! will be played lln Tuesday ev~n·
ings at 7 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. at the high
school.
YOUR
,•3
STORES
TO
SERVE
YOU
2300 HARBOR BLVD.
AT
WILSON
JUST SOUTH OF
SAN DIEGO FREEWAY
IN THE HEART OF COSTA MES A
CENTER
WITH
FRIENDLY, COURTEOUS AND HELPFUL
SERVICE. PLENTY OF FREE PARKING IN
BOTH FRONT AND REAR MALLS. ALL
ON STREET LEVEL.
• I I
Pre-Vacation
Value Days
May 27-28-29
2301 11fARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
•
Wtdntsday, Mi°y 2b, 11171 s DAILY PILOT " • .
Revamp Ba~ked
La~una Scliool,s OK Dir(!ct Ele ctio1i
A ret10luUon calling for lhe rlirecl election nf Snddleback College trustees
and the creation of two addilional trustee arefts y,·as adopted Tuesday by tho
Lagun11 Beach School Board.
The actk>n came on the hC('1s of a si milar move by the Capistrano Uni-
fied School District Board and the rrsolulinn urgf'd the third school body in
the Sadd\eback C.Ollege District, the Tustin Union High School Board, to make
suer. a request. .
Any final action in the n1aller y,·ould have lo bt made by the rtve mem·
hers o[ lhe Saddleback College bnard y,•ho represent dirferent areas of lhe dis-
trict but are elected at larl'.:e . The L.a,i:una Beach resolution asked that the
present election rode be changed ~ voters would only cast ballots for the
candidates from their own lrustee area.
The tY.'O additional truster areas rrquestcd in the resolution v.•ould be
crralcd in last-growing Saddleback Valley, now represented by truslee Michael
Collins.
Two Expe1·ts to Lecture
At Laguna Drug Meet
A former state narcotk agent and a
Laguna Beach juvenile officer y,•ill he
featured speakers tonight at the guida~ce
and training session on <.!rug pre\•enUon
sponsored hy the ! .... 1guna Brach CorrdJ·
nalin~ Council.
The mrelini;. open lo !he publir. is one
of a series being prcsrnted at 7:30 p.m.
on \Vednesdays al the Recreation Deparl·
ment Quilding. 17S N. Coast High\vay.
Kno\911 for his intensive efforts \oy,·ard
court reform. Richard C. Grace. forn1er
state agent and now a professor of polirc
science at Los Angeles State College, :11.o;o
ser\·es a~ a con~-ullanl to police
departments on the subjeet o~ drui;
misu se.
Alex Jimenez , or the L.Aguna
Beach Police Dep;:i rtn1ent J u v e n i I e
Di\"iliion, will display e.xamples of various
drugs and drug paraphernalia and . a
replica of a marijuana plant and wil l
pc.rmil viewers to sniff the odor of burn·
ing marijuana.
future meetings in the scrirs y,·ill in-
clude a youth panel on altrrnallves lo
drug use and a presentation hy a
psychiatrist specializing in nutrit ional
therapy.
La st \Yednesday's featured speakers
were Dr. \Yilliam Routt , diretlor of the
Orange County Cotnmunily M c n ta I
Health Servicts in L<iguna Beach and
Mrs. Barbara Trear, formerly ass1stanl
director and supervisory group leader in
the Golden State foundation program for
parents and problem childrrn.
~1rs. Tre<ir ()Ullined a pro.i;:rain for
dealing with young people Y.•hose behavior
is unacceptable. offering guidelines
tov.·arrl achievement of communi~tion' tn
replace endless arguments.
However, she v.•arned. "A drug problem
in the home did not occur in a day and it
\1'nn 't get corrected overnight." First
strri she said is rt1ief or guill and fear,
return of the parent lo hi.s rightful place
as head of the household and the young
person into ffiQre responsible and produc·
1ive activities tn provide him with an im·
provl'd se lf-image.
Dr. Routt pointed out rapid changes in
society which have created problems for
adults and youlh. Drill( misuse. he said.
can re sult in, or be the result of an
en1otional disorder.
Greenbelt Picnic
Slated. J1me 12
A ·•think (:rcrn" pjcnic to benefit 1,he
Laguna Crcrnbelt will be held in the
Sycamore Hills area of Lagu na Canyon
fro1n l l a.m. lo I p.m. Saturday, June 12.
(~uc:;;ts will be givrn 11 walking tour of
1he $4 million triangle, whtch the
c:reenbell Inc. hopes to purchase and
give to !he t'ity. They will gather under
th<' :;;yrarnorc trees for a fried chicken
bnx lunch.
Tic-kets for the event, at $1.50 including
t hr lunrh. are on .'la]e al ~he Greenbelt of·
firr ahove \\'orld Sa\'ings, 216 Forest Ave.
and at business estab lishments
1l1roughout the city . All proceeds will go
lo lhe Greenbelt fund.
Dog Beach • • ·, .
• J ~
Ban Okayed
h1 Newport
,·-.
'. '· Dtspite last-ditch protesbi: from .a ...
handful of dog owner!, dogs and cats anJ ..
all other four-legged animals were·
ordered banned from Newpart Beach .. ·
beaches and oceanfront sidewalk! by ~t; ~
city council Monday night.
The ordinance, approved unaniroouslf· • .'
institutes a ban from June 15 to Sept. l.5-
that this year y,•il\ not go into effect for 30
days, until June 29.
The council ordered an automatiC
re\•iew or the Of"dinance at its rU's)'
meeting in September, tentatively set."
Sept. 13.
The ordinance <.'Overs all oceanfront .
bea!'.'hes. Dogs have long been prohibited
on bay beaches.
Guide dogs used by blind persons art.
excluded. .-·
The action came after a veiled threat·
from one West Newport resident.
"This will not be the end if you pa;
this tonight.·· said Martin Zaldo, 4904
Seashore Drive. who declined ~ ~
elaborate but who brought to mind a ~
cent referendum in Laguna Beach forcea-
by dog owners after the council lhere in·
itially passed a total ban. ·
Voters in Laguna Beach wiped oul the'
ordinance and a compromise law waS '
subsequently adopted that bans pels from,
the beaches from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m...
during the summer months.
Not necessarily germane, bul ZaldO
queried Ne"')>Ort councilmen about the
legality .. of a part-time San Clemente
resident who takes his three dogs to ~
beach. ~
"Who picks up arter his dogs," ZaldO
said, referring to President Nixon's thr~ """· . -Roy B. \Voolsey. 113 Via Venezia. LidQ.
Isle, told councilmen he felt the ban was
necessary but sugge.stcd the city look into .
the possibility of crealing a special sec-.
tion of the beach where dogs would be.
allowed. • ...
Vice Mayor Howard Roger• sugge.,~d
the PacUlc ~~Jectric right-of-way in We,t
Newport and Mayor Ed Hlrlll said this
po.ssibility could be discussed when UM;.
council reviews the issue in the fall. . ,
Councilmen also ordered prop e_r
notification of the new law be posted on
the beaches and sent to all homeowners .
in their water bills. ·
Bushmills.
The whiskey _that spans
the generations gap.
For JOO years, a. \vhi <,kry f 101n Bush1nill!. h,1s been
\vi th u!.> Ch<111n1n~ u<:. Be-guiling u-. in a .. rnoolh,
pol1 ~hecl and clllngrlhcr li gh1h1·,11tl'd f,1<ih io11.
I '.i ~cnc•r 01 ions h.:i v<' rrf 1ncd 11 . 15 gt•ncr.1tio11., h.1vc
~1ppcd 1l "J hevercl1t.I : Nr,1rpc1 IC( lion, Bu~l11n1llS. f ul\
of t.hilr.lt.ICr But not hf'.1vy-h,1ndt•d .1bout it. I l.1vor·
ful. But IU'\'Cf OVl"'f·f)O\\('ll!l),: Hu ~hrndl ... 11 rcftc1 I~
1hc p.i~t ,, 1th .1 l1ght .1nd l1v£'ly fl,1vo1 1h.111:,,.1H tudily.
. ..
Compo re il lo your prr.sen l whiskey. You needn'l ·
rurchJ.SC d bottle. One :iip tll your favorite pub will
1ell you why Busho1ills has intligued !:>O n1any gen·
crJtions. It is, simply, out of sight.
BUSH MILLS
IMPORTED FROM THE WORLD'S OLDEST DISTlllERY.
.. ·.
•
(
Wedl'ltad&), IA&y 26, 1971
I
\
:\ •' I ~ps
A Great Day
~or Schools
I I 8y THOMAS MVRPHJNE
Of tlle Cl .. ,,. l"lltf Jlt tl
.. BmERSWEET VICTORY DEPT.
IY you wert: with this space yesterday,
)'OU may r~al lthe question was asked
if, indeed, Sa nta Ana residents have had
lt Up to here with substandard schools.
ihe answer is yes.
Voters up Jn tbe County Seat streamed
to ::the polls yesterday ,Jn a 51 percent
lt~llOUt to approve a S4-ttnl lal overrlae
a~ perhaps moN: importantly, okayed a
'31.25 million school bond is1ue to bui ld
Jt:new schools and fix up the esisting
dilapidated ones.
fhe bonds will be sold over 25 )'tars a~ at the rate of campus deca)' in Santa A¥ in recent years, Jt may take that
J<>Qg for the Count)' Seal fol ks to pull
thtir school S)'st.em up into the 2<lth
Ctptury. Yet it 'still has to be a sweet
victory for pro-public-school ··ractions In
Santa Ana, despite the bitter overtones
ol pa st defeats.
Ma)'be it was a last-minute fear Santa
Ana's prep football teams would be
disbanded that pulled the county sealers
• back to reality.
* NEWPORT BEACH folks ha ve a new
Jaw on the books today that will make it
illegal for dogs to roam the ~an front
beaches. Canines are alread)' banned
from bay beaches but it's going to be a
new adjustment for Fido along the surf
a trip. Or will it?
Talking to Don Elde r, former Newport
vice mayor the other ni&ht, )'OU are given
the impression he'll believe it when he
see! it. Don lives out on the Peninsula
and he observed. "I've seen a lot of loose
dop out there on the beach from time to
lime. Sometimes I've called t h e
dogcatcher. He even ca me out one da)'.
"He took a Jong look ~t a pack of do1s
romping around out there, then got back
in his truck and dro ve away. Never even
1ot his feel sandy."
Guess that's just a reminder to the City
Dads that you can "'rite all kinds of laws
but somebody has to teach the dogs how
to read them.
* HUNT lNGTON BEACH'S municipal
fathers have their problems these da)'S
too. 1t1ostly with the budget. If expenses
go along as projected, it would seem that
the cit)' would be oper1ting in the hole~y
10me $S49.000.
So councilmen grabbed their sci&."'30rl
~tonday night and decided to h•ve a
budget cuttin& se!S ion. The next thing
they knew the bud.get dcllcit had gone up
to $552,000. Setms that a few extras got
tossed Jnt.o tbe bopper before all tht
deficit.. got counled.
lf that was budgek:utting, they must
have been operating with blunted shears.
Anyway, you can bet they'll try again.
* THE BJG FLAP in Laguna Beach lasl
night was supposed to be whether or not
the present school board would renew
contracts for its three top administrator•
before three new "cooservaUve" lt\.1$tees
lake over the show July 1. But as it turn·
ed out , contracts lor Superintendent Bill
Ullom and assistants Bob Reeve.s and
Charles Hess were okayed in almost
routine fashion .
Emotions ran rampant instead on
whether or not the All-Am erican Football
l.A:a.gue, the grid veraion of Lillie League,
should use the hi&h school football fie ld.
Ah, Laguna.
* So that's Orange County today, folks,
county Seat te county line.
Troop Di~s
~aving l{ids
From Blast
BELFAST !UPI) -A Brlli•h
paratroope r an& an Irish policeman
threw themselves between a terrorist 's
bomb and several young children In a
police station Tuesday night just before it
exploded. The blast killed the soldier and
"'ounded the policeman and 21 other
persons.
The Army identified the so ldier as Sgt.
~tichael Willet.s. 27, of the third
parachute regiment An A r m y
spokesman said Willets wa s the eighth
soldier in the British peace-keeping
forces killed this ye11r in violence
~tween •Northern Jreland's Protestant
n111jor.ity and Roman Catholic minority.
Police said one witness told them the
bomber was •·just a wee fellow. He look·
ed like a schoolboy.·' They said they had
not made any arrests and were con·
tlnuing their invesligation.
The bomb, a suitcase packed with
about Ui pounds Gf gelignite , was hurled
through the front door of the twG-story
statio nhouse in the Protestant quarter of
Springfield Road about 8:" p.m., an
Army spokesman said today. The
building also is used by the British army
as a command posl.
The explosion wr~ked most of the
ground noor. blew out windowz in sur-
rounding structures and damaged five
cars outside. The injured included one
soldier, seven pottcemen and 14 civilians.
three . of them children. At\ but three of
them were re leased from hospital today
after treatment.
Patrick Gray, 26, was inside the station
with his daughter Col/etlc, 4. and a
neighbor. Mrs. Elizabeth OJ.mmings, .17,
and her son Carl. 4. when the gelignite
exploded.
"l was talking to lwo detectives when
the door burst open and a package was
thrown in.'' Gray said. ..Someone
shouted, 'bomb~' and I saw it was smok-
ing. grabbed Collette and Carl and ran.
"The soldier held the door open for us
and, as the bomb went off, I fe\; on the
children. They were only slighlly hurt.
"ff ft had not been for tha t soldier, we
v;ould aU have been killed. He took the
main force of the blast"
1 slarul Battles
To Block Mafia
Chiefs' Landing
ISLE or FILICU DI. Sicily !UP!l
The residen!J of this tiny Italian island
defied government plans to . land 15
reputed Mafia bosses -some wit h close
American lies -on Filicudi to live in
Isolation.
M03t ol the 200 Filicudians manned the
bayi and coves where boats usually ar-
rive 1nd vowed to Jet oo one ashore until
he c1n prove he is not 1 gangster. The 15
Mafiosi, guarded by more than 40 11rmed
police, were en route to the island in a
police launch from the mainland.
T e e Mafiosi, including GiovaMi
Bonventre.. 70, a naturaliied U.S. citizen
who took part in the 1957 Apalachin,
N. Y., "convention," w e r e rounded up
Tuesday from enforced residence in
Italian village! for deportation as
"soci111ly dangerous" persons.
The deportations are an attempt on the
part of the Italian go\·ernmemt to end
bloody gang warfare in Palermo. the
Sicilian capital. b)' more careful isolation
of Mafiosi bosses. Another 17 reputed
bosses were exiled on the isle of Linosa,
near the ,North African coast, last week.
Filicudlans refused to let a police sup-
ply boat land Tuesday because they
feared it signaled the arrival of the IS
men. Residents of the other six Islands
which make up the Lipari 1rchipelago an·
nounced a general strike and Mayor
Francesco Vitale and his islands council
said they would re.sian if the men came.
Wlck•
' .•• no unemployment
problem, but we do
have a $urpl11& of sali!'
Clashes Betiveen
India, Pakistan
Forces Reported
NE W DELHI (U PI J -Indian and
Pakistani troops fought three times in the
past two da)'s along the Indo-Pakislani
frontier, with casualties on .both sides,
reports reaching here from tht Indian
.state of Assam said toda)'.
The reports, some of which quoted
Assam's chief minister, Mahendra Mohan
Choudhury, said Pakistani troops seized
the two Indian border outposts in the
Karimganj sector of Assam on Mond~
after a shelling attack. The Indian Border
Security Force (BSFJ troops ooun·
terattacked and re captured the positions,
the reports said.
Local press reports alsn said Pakistani
batteries :;helled an Indian outpost Tues·
day at Dalu, west of Karimganj, in-
flicting a number of casualties.
Defense ministry ofricials Jn Ne w Delhi
said the)' could not confirm the reports
and were investigating them.
Ka rimganj is situated about JOO milC!I
from the East Pakistani capital of Dacca,
outs ide the extreme northeastern corner
of the province . Oalu lies some JOO miles
north of Dacca.
New Delhi Pres.1 estimates of Indian
casualties in the Dalu fighting raneed
from one killed and six wounded to 22
dead and 11 injured.
Radio Pakistan, in a broadcast Tuesday
monitored in New Delhi. said a naval
patrol sanl< two boats laden with muni·
tions on a river 30 miles inside East
Pakistan's western frontier. The official
radio said several Ind ian "infiltrators"
manning the craft were killed and
several captured.
Lava Flo'v Turns
Away From Town
CATANIA. Sicily tUPJ) -Molten lava
flowed to within 220 yards ol the village
of Fornazzo today, then struck a lava
ridge from a previous eruption and turn·
ed aside. Scientists said it appeared the
village, for the moment at least. had
been spared.
Other fingers of lava moved down the
slopes of ML El.na. burned fru it and
chestnut trees and threatened a section of
a principal road up the mounta in.
Marlo Coco managed to take about half
of the cheslnuts fro m his trees before
lava set his orchard aflame today. Then
he ned the fields he had planted 30 years
ago, vowing to return .
The Java flow came from a new mouth
"•hich opened last week halfway up the
10.902-foot volcano. Another new crater at
an altitude of 9,500 feet spewed hot sand
into the sky.
Judge Entrs Pleas
HARR ISBURG, Pa. (AP) -A federal
judge entered innocent pleas Tuesday for
the Rev. Phillip Berrigan and six other
persons after they refused to answer
charges lodged against them in an alleg·
ed pl ot to bomb heating installations in
Washington. D.C. and to kidnap presiden·
tial adviser Henry A. Kissinger.
Intense Storms Hit East
Sliowers, Winds Wreak flavoc; Southwest Sizzling llot
Callfomla Te111pernturea
t l' UJrl'ITIO "111:11! tNTIANATIOJrl'AI.
r 1m1>1•1tur11 tf>d PrKl•llt tlen 1or
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• Assure Sadat
•
Podgorny Pledges Aid Despite Upheaval
CAIRO (UPI) -President Nl ko~si V.
Podgorny assured Egypt the Soviet Union
will continue its economi c. political an d
military backing in the light to oust
Israel Crom lands occupied in the 1967
war, U"le .semiofficial Gairo newspaper Al
Ahrarft said today.
Podgorny arrived Tuesday seeking
assurances from Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat that there wlll be no change
in the close relations between the two na-
tions after Sadat's purge of pro-Moscow
governme:nl figu re!'!. The)' mel onl)' hours
after the Soviet president arrived aiid
continued their discussions toda y.
Al Abram said the two presidents·
"discussed means to slrP.ngthen coopera·
lion between the two countries towards
the elimination of the consequences of !he
Israeli aggression." It added that Egypt
and the Soviet Uni on "emphasized thelr
co mmitment to work for the liberatlo~ of
all occupied Ara b territory.''
In addition, Al Ahram reported, "The
Sovie t Union emphasized lb economic,
political and mllltarY 1upport to the
United Arab Republic."
Political solJ.l'ces said Podgorny's swlft
reaffirmation of continued support in-
dicated the recent political upheaval in
Egypt would not stop Moscow from con·
tinuing its support.
Soviet A m b a s s a d ·o r Vladimir
Vinogradov took the same line in an In·
terview with the Cairo newspaper Al
Gomhouriya. He said Israel 's gains In lhe
1967 war "will vanish as ghost! (ade
away in the Sina i Desert.''
He pledged "the Soviet Union will con·
llnue tD offer every support and aid to
Lhe Arab people" and said aid to Cairo
would exceed $500 million durlna lhe nut
five ye•rs. This figure did not lncludf: ti·
Jstin.c agreementa, he added.
Official announcements on the vi1lt
have said the main topic of distua:sion
will be the eonflie.t with Israel.
four pr1>Sov ict faces were misslng
from the talks on the Egypti an side -el·
vice-president Ali Sabry. and the former
ministers of interior, .,._.ar, and preside.no
tial afaflrs, r e s p e c ti v e I y , Sharawl
Gomaa, Gen. Mohammed Fawzi and
Sarni Sharaf. All four were urested in
the purge.
Politi cal sources sald Gomaa . 50. tried
to commit suicide in Abu Zaabal prison a
few da)'s ago by sla.1hing his wrists, but
his life was saved.
0
if!.c.~JJ.ft~ --~ ~ QJ;.~ ~.Q!!:~-~,"~f~ I'!' I ~Y:,".,·-
PAISSES' THONGS
Whi+t "' 8raw111 Ptl•nl
typ-ptdd1d ; ... 011.
4 .. 1J
WOMEN 'S
THONGS
'"'••rl•d • Llttl o
Hei l • c .. ,~ t~~•'" t•f•. Wliit1 i nd Ilic\. 111
PR.
WOMEN'S MADE IN ITALY
MEN"S
AND BOYS"
BOAT SHOES
•nlllMt n1m lllQll"1 •
l~lnl CJ-. 11't n»er 1111• • •m • 5fHL
r~~~: ............... 311
IOYS' AND MEN 'S 447
SIZES 21/:r TO 13_._
HUNTINGTON BEACH
IOOSI ADAMS •I BROOKHURST
962-9178
CHILDREN'S IMPORTED
LEATHER SANDALS
INFANTS' SIUS 2"
4 TO I -······----························----·
l r 11 1 1111!1 • I
1'11& SQ111tt OflHNtts
• lllUl1 Slt l J •
11 •• I • CoillDOllllq .....
WOMEN'S
ALL LEATHER
CORK SOLES
-,-.-master charge
IMl'ORTED ""'-'"':::
SANDALS
) 1ty!11
1~0"'"· No. I 1n.d No. ), •II Wlli+•; No. l , Red,
While, II•• c•mJ.i~1tiOt1.
FREE CANDY
FOR THE KIDDIES
MEN-S JMl'O«TID
TIRE SOLE
SANDAL
"SPECIAL PURCHASE!"
HUNTINGTON .BEACH
S891 EDINGER 11 SPRINGDALE
847-9125
. STORE HOURS-· WEEK DA VS 9 TO 9--SUNDA YS 10 TO 7
T,.. '"""' lrJI..,.,, """'(~ <::w•vtd ~ !flt G .. 11 Ula ffl•outh NP
(IUWJ\fff !~ lllt n1t\oll 10Clt Y. "11»1!'1'
l tlt, f'tl!lt .,...i..tt ••~·••••tit•"· Moeri 11:1111 t.11 t "'·
1111 IJ~~'TI·
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•oe1>:1n1 .. " .. # "I ·"------------------------------------.....
•
•
\
. ' ~.~. ----,. ,___._
Wednesday, May 21>, 1971 DAIL 'f PJLOT fj 1·
Acquitted Seale Pass J st Smaat~ Tests
Nixon Military Plans Move
-·i
, I ..
\I I
J Faces Riot Raps but to assume the greatest f
rilk of death u well." :
"''' T1lepllol•
CHATTANOOGA FIREFIGHTERS GET ARMED GUARD
Some Fire Call• Mar Otherwise Peaceful Night
Guardsmen Pull Out
O fCalniChattanooga
CHA'ITANOOGA, Tenn .
(AP) -Police and National
Guard troops pulled out of
predomin antly Negro
neighborhoods torn by
disturbances since Friday and
turned them over to civilian
black patrols Tuesday.
"It looks like \Ve had less
calls and the calls didn 't seem
to amount to anything," state
Safety Commissioner Claude
Armour said in reporting the
situation was calming,
Armour announced earlier-
Tuesday that the unarmed
black civilians would patrol
F ornter Aide
B eats Boss
In Election
LOUISVILLE. Ky. (UPI) -
Lt. Gov. \Vendel! H. Ford, 46,
upset his ex-boss, former Gov.
Bert T. Combs, Tue sday in a
hard-fought battle for the
Democratic nomination ior
Governor of Kentucky.
Ford, a former ad·
rninistralive assistant to
Combs, had a 167,000 to 126.000
vote margin with about 65 per·
cent of the primary election
ballots counted in an unofficial
tabulation. Combs. 59, con-
ceded defeat at 9:30 p.ni.
EDT.
Supporters of Ford said he
carried five of the state's
seven Congressional distri cts.
losing only the two district s in
mountainous eastern Ken-
tucky.
I
\
the Negro areas.· calling for
police or Guardsrnen only
when assi~tance was needed .
Police said early today liltle
sniper fire and two fire bon1b.
ings were reported Tuesday
night. Twenty six persons
were arrested, most of them
for violating a 7 p.m. curfe\v,
police reported.
The trouble erupted Friday
night y,•hen performer \Vilson
Pickett refused to appear al a
scheduled concert, saying he
was not paid in advance . The
disorders spread with hit and
run attacks by small gr~ps
Saturday and Sunday nights,
Some blacks said they y,.·ere
angered by what they con--
sidered excessive arrests and
verbal abuse. The Guard was
called in Sunday night. A
black nian y,•as fatally shot
.l\'londay night.
Armour would not say how
many times police and
Guardsmen assisted the black
civilians Tuesday, but added
that regular patrols did not
enter a housing project area
where Leon Anderson was
fatally shot after allegedly
burling a brick at a police car.
Reagan Backs
LockJ1eed Loan
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
Gov. Ronald Reagan has
declared his support for a $250
million federally underwritten
!nan to the ail ing Lockheed
Airline Corp. coupled with
tightening up of its n1anage-
ment efficiency,
Nixon Tours
·in Soutl1;
Raps North
\VASHI NGTON (UPI) -
Buoyed by a warm reception
from more than 15 0, 00 0
persons in Alabama Tuesday,
President Nixon had reason to
be encouraged that his
popularity in the south has not
seriously been eroded by a
speedup in school desegrega.
tion.
Large, enthusiastic crowds
turned out in humid, 90-degree
weather to see him in stops at
Mobile and Birmingham.
He responded to this gesture
of southern hospitality and a
gracious welcome by Gov.
George C. Wallace by' praising
lhe south for accomplishing a
.. peaceful. relatively quiet.
very significant revolution "
which has resulted in more
black children attending
predominanlly white schools
than in the north.
And he criticized
northerners who .. point their
fingers" at the south on the
racial issue.
nrhtUAI h.olido.y
-.......-' .. ortswQfir ~~e,
~& fc.~kiort
~-.. k«phfft~
Specio.U~ price..J o.t
l
1 t 2~.
!Gfr. coito~ Vel v<i.+een.tto± l'h~ls ... ~I 2.
~·l'I, ~ l<>ek, ,biown,ho\-pink., purpl &
show1~•irtli
llro«>on•, pnnkd,fllll 9~, ~~lot.,
~l~rt, hA11<1 w<cltoJ.le,s.M,L. ~II/-
ri~ht-100~,HJ Po.iit,1..i~.--~n.
\>~lircowhi<i•J, ru~t or brow rt.
fi'o.m. D~m.'• fj <>m 6 ~ itk,1 wo VQ,(t.
Cotil>1t ~ni/-lbp. "'4oQS' ii\ ItoJ~. I 15
lol<Lt., re.d,brow•~ ;J.J(.l..
~o. to~} P1<>:i:o., asas Bri~+.I, Go:,-hi.~ ... 5'f.5-012.i+
Ho.rbor Cci.ti+.w, Z300 "No.ltdrhor, CoshJ"l.esa ... 5~5·6'~~4
ALL-DAY CLASSES
Kindergarten lhru 8th Grade
• Teachinf the 4 R's with phonics
•Door-to-Door Bus Servlct
• Before and After School Cn
• Renonailt Tllitio1
· (Day Camp starts June 21 , ••
throughout summer.
Sumnier School start! July 6).
Also rejected, S2 to 21, wa1·:
an amendment by S en i :
Gaylord Nelson (0.Wia.), to :
stop assigning draftees to :
combat roles ln"Vietnam after :
Dec. 31 unless they volunteer ·
for the duty. , .. •
HAWTHORNE " CHRISTIAN ''
SCHOOLS . •'
111 fou11tolii Yollity '' 16835 lrooth1nt StN9t
96Z·JJl2
'"' ye1r chll ... 111 tood 11 ...
'1\.ctually, I'm a
Communications Consultant
specializing in Increasing
Customers' Profits Through
Maximum Communications
•'
' :
,.,
Efficiency.
But to
most people, 1
' I'm just 'the 1
fellafrom l
the phone
' company'.''
You'll find him in offices, plants and stores. Analyzing phone
bills. Discussing equipment needs. looking for ways to help
our business customers' busine sses.
He's a General Telephone Communications Consultant. A
formal title for a nice, bright guy who can make day-to-day busi·
nesscommun!cations less hectic for you.
For example, do clients pass nasty little remarks about your
phones always being busy? Do you have to scream to page a
typist sitting two feet outside your office? Is it easier to reach a
customer overseas than someone in your bu ilding?
If these situations sound familia r (or remind you of others),
you can definitely use our Communications Consultant. And
soon, too. Before you waste more time and money. Or develop
an ulcer.
(And if you think yourottice communications are pretty good
now, we promise that he can make them even better.)
There's no charge for his serv ice. And it's very easy to aet
All it takes isa phone call to our business office.
We only ask one thing. When you call, plea se ask for 41the
Communications Consultant''-not "the fella from the phone
company."
Everybody's the fella from the phone company down here.
tij i:t
GEnERALTELEPHDnE
' . ..
' .-
,,
.,,
..
I
~ ~· ... f "
DARY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE •
The 'Super
It has been called lhe •·super City" Idea -the
proposal to n1erge !he cities of San Juan Capistrano
and San Clemente "'Ith county areas of Dana Point and
Capistrano Beach .
But. the nun1ber of South Coast residents In favor
of the idea, seems to be quite sli1n as Lhe trial balloon
floats into its second month.
The combined councils of the t'''O cities and n1em·
hen of Cha1nbers of Commerce of the l\\'O county coin·
mun ities opened the discuss ion recenUy afler an infor1n·
al meeting unprecedented for its harmony.
Few observers \vould have bet on the friendly out·
come of the initial meeting.
Since then, city attorneys for the two c:1ties in·
volved have set meetings to discuss dozens of legal as·
peclt; of such a large merger.
The idea, local officials have said. is unique in Cali·
!ornla.
\Vhal "'ould such a blending of diverse c.:ommuni·
I.Jes achieve?
For the county areas. il "'Ould mean a shift to local
control -and end the trips to the seat of county gov·
ernment for representation at county activities affecting
the South Coast.
;
It would also end the duplication of :;omc parallel
services -fire. police, sanitati!'.ln. bl..iilding. engineer-
ing and other n1unicipaf type services provided by the
three existing government entities.
It n1i ghl be the only solution for cityhood in Capi·
strano Beach and Dana Point. where incorporation
struggles have been in vain for many years.
"The unusual cJ1aracter of Ne\vporl Beach -\vith
diverse communities retaining son1e self identity be·
neath the blanket of one city -is used as a model for
the Super City idea.
But what might be the drawbacks of such a plan?
A hefty increase in taxes to upgrade services is one
likely offshoot.
The new city \VOUld have to build from the ground
up a brand·ne\V fire department, and greatly expa11d a
police force, probably through the onl y existing depart·
Temperame11 t
Ca1i Clia11ge
As We Age
Speaking or children who art slow
-. learners in school, and o( lhe famous
rhen who wert considered "stupid" all
rturing their youth (as I did in a column a
ft:w weeks ago), it is equall y true that
prople can surprisingly change their
whole temperamenltl as Ibey get older.
: Strange rateg of personal development
::ire nol only mental, but temperament.al
Js well. Who would
t>elieve that the dour
and tacilum Calvin
£oolldge was elected
·1Ciass humorist'' at Amherst~ Or that
lhe saintly ind as-
dttic t.iahatma was
nicknamed "Gandhi
the Dandy" during
~is univPrsity car·
~r. when he was k now n as the
best -dressed man around Oxford?
For every one Capablanea. who
revealed his chess genius at the age
cit i,. there are a hundred others who take
tiltil maturity to disclose their full
powers and real inclinations. S t •
Augustine "'as among the most con·
cupiscent of men, he tells us in hig
"Confessions." Until the age or 30, his
favorite prayer was, "0 Lord. give me
chaslity and seU-re:strainl, but not just
yet."
\\'INSTON CHURCHILL wa!! sent to
military school at an early age because
his father firmly believed he was too
dumb to learn anything else. He was a
fat, unhappy boy who talked with a stut-
~r altd a lisp; he entered Harrow as the
Jbwest boy in the lowest class, and r~
maintd there. He failed the entrance ex·
Dear
Gloo111y
Gus
Politicians often write books about
lheir ;idministrations when thPy
leave offi ce. Govemor Reagan will
be able to entitle hi.~ book, ''How
f took California Fro1n No. 1 lo
No. SO 1n Two Terms as Gover·
nor."
-B A.
t~ll ft&lurt t•'"'" ''"'"' .. ,.... .,., llft1Httll1 Ille'-ltf !flt ... w~t•tr. Senf rtur ttl _.,.. 19 Oleem, Gut. Dtl!J ,.li.1.
ams at military college twice belore pass-
ing. It might surprise you to learn lhat
Einstein was so slow in learning to speak
that his family expressed eonttrn that he
might be retarded. He left high school at
the reques t of his teache r, and had trou·
ble gelling into a Swiss college because
he was not qualified for entrance i11
anything but mathemelics.
It is Impossible to predict the rate or
development or any human being, and
parents might worry less ir they realized
this. The most intelligent woman I ever
knew was actually a "retarded" child
who never read a book throughout until
she was 14.
INF Af\'T PRODIGIES only too orten
grow up to lhemgeJves, so that by lhe
Lime they reach adulthood there is
nothing prodigious about the ir talents.
And, just as often, they tum out to be
emotionally immature as well -remini~
cent or Harold Tckes' cutting remark
about Adolph Berle, one of the brightest
youngsters of the early New Deal : "Berle
was an infaQl prodigy. but the only trou·
ble wa s that he kept on being an infant
long after he ceased being a prodigy."
Conversely, the "backward" child may
suddenly break clear of hi!5 emotional
block <!-nd turn into a brilliant and pro-
ductive member or society. If Gandhi 's
father deplored his oon's foppi!5hness,
and Augustine's mother lamented her
son's lust. which parent among us can be
too Impatient or inloleranl of hLs child'.'
:The Need for 'Depletion'
Evtry Llmt la:t re(orm is proposed lhe
~called oil deplellon allowance comes 1n t>r an inordinate amoun\ of ra!her
l)'lisguided discussion as a loophole to be
~losed.
Some ol there 1niscnncep1 1on:o1 \\ert
t orrected recently in a le1ter 11·rillen lo
!lie Los Angeles Times by Harry ~tor·
r"ison. vice president and g c n e r a I
manager (If the \Vegtern Od and Gas
Association. P.lorr1son points oul thil1 one
c!harge against the allO\\"an~ -that II 1s
in unfair .subsidy -lails to ta~t 11110 ron-
!ideration tht'!. fact that the provision
keeps profils of the oil industry al a level
y.•Jth other lnduslrrles. and keeps eon·
turner cost&: rela tively low ,
A 1968 study. for example. shows lhal
~I companies made a profll that year of
2.9 percent on net as5et.s, compared with
e 13.1 perctnt average or a 11
manufacturing indu!'ltrics.
wun.E PERCENTAG E de-pletion is
allowed up t.o SO percent ol net income
from the property. only about half of all
Guest Editorial ,
!hf> oi l and Gas wells dnillcd in 196~. for
1n~tantf!, v:ere productive; and of those.
only the \1•ells producing net income are
eligible for the deduction. As Morr iso n
i;;iid. \\'hile an occasional weU may brinJ:.
1n an unusual return on investment, ii is
only helplni; provide the money for the
explorat.ory dry holes where money is
lost.
'fht oricinal and conllnwng purpose 01
the depletion allowance is to malc c it
economically feasible to undertake lhal
exlreme!y costly sea rch lor ne'v oil and
ga~ resourC'es. \'nu can 't replant anrl
reharvest oil. You have to i;io so mewhere
eli;e to find it . And the ncilion's e<:ooomy
depends gre.ally on lhc success ()( that
se..11rch.
Callloroia f·eature Strvice
---------B11 Georue ----------.
Dear George ·
1 fell in lnve "'1th lh1g Orll' bf)~·
~nd while I was going steady I mc1
this ~washbuelcllng ~1 arlne '"'ho has
been ever~"A'hcre and d n n e
everything. What do you think J
should do abouL this Ma:rlnt'
MABEi,
Deer f\tabel·
Well, if J ttll you ont lh1ng I'm in
trouble rrom all right-thinkers and
1f 1 tell you another rm In trouble
\\'Ith the Pilarine. Corpli, \\'hy don 'I
) ou write to Ann L<1.ndcrs"
t Rush your problems to Gf'nri,:r
inlilantly and gel 11 frel' p111nphlC'I
on how lo prncra!ltnele in·
def!n1tcly.)
Idea City'
' -. ' ~.:;o~ ... •, . -·-COH,RESSIONAL
RESOLUTION
FOe VIETNAM
WlTHl>RAWAL
PATE
ment, San Clemente's.
A labyrinth of overlapping special districts would
have to be unraveled through seemingly endless legal
processes.
1'hen again. with each community so committed to
its own identity, some persons wonder if community
feelings are simply too strong to insure enough unity to
function under one-city structure.
The proposal is \veil \vorth exploring. but don 't
hold your breath.
The Higl1 Rise Election
Proponents of the initiative to limit building height
1n Laguna Beach were disappointed when the City Coun·
c1I did not adopt the ordinance immediately but it prob-
ably is just as \veil to air the controversy fully, consider
all the evidence and settle it \Vith a popular vote.
The pre·election moratorium \Viii head off any in·
terim rash of permits for taller structures, as has hap·
pened in other locations where height limit legislation
was pending. .
Since questions as to the legality of the initiative
have been raised. it might also be y.•ise to seek an opin·
ion from the state attorney general.
Unfortunate Absences
Laguna's two newly elected school board members
missed an informative meeting when they failed to al·
tend the initial budget study session.
After they are installed on the board in July. 11rs.
Pal Gillette and Capt. Gerald Linke presumably will have
a good deal to say about the Cina.I operation of cutting
the budget down to size. since both have expressed
great interest in school financing.
Both have attended regular board meetings since
!heir election, though or course this is not required. It
\¥as unfortunate neither "'as on hand as the outgoing
board began cost·cutting talks.
'Say! lan•t that old Win-the-War Zablocki?'
s
General Use ll'ould Virtually Eli1ni1uite S111og
Steam Cars Can Be Practical Today
To the Editor:
1be columns of many newspapers ar~
filled with gratuitous and often quite ir·
·rational expressions of opinion together
with much superficial reporting ol
rniscellaneous current events. Seldom are
re<:1ders alerted lo revolutionary events in
the maki ng. So it is with the facts lo
which I call your attention thcugh their
implications are certainly ~·ell un·
derslood by lhe internal combustion lords
of Detroit and "'e may expect \"1gorous
and perhaps unscrupulous co u n le r •
measures to emanate from lhal quarter.
PLEASE CONSIDER this almost in·
<-redible situation: Under the auspices of
rhe California Assembly Transportation
Committee and of the California Air
Resources Board, no less than three ex·
l.ernal rombusti on (steam) bus engines
have been developed and built by 1n·
riependent c>ngineering entrepreneurs snd
are now being tes1cd and debugg ed so as
lo be ready for installation into standard
buses by late spring or early summer. ·r hes e steam-powered demonstration
buses \\'ill be used in regular public
transportation service ror seven months
beginning i;;ept. I and lheir performance
v.·ill th en be evaluated and judged.
IF THE DES lGNERS and builders of
lhese steam bus engines ha\'e done a
good job. if the testing procedures are
fair and reasonnble and it sabotage can
be preventrd. there 1s no reason to Expect
anythin~ bur very good performance
from all of thesP stea m power plants.
After all U1e steam engine does not have
to be invented. perfected or adapted to
aulnn1obiles . Steain.proPE>lled cnrs. buses
and trucks were practical and succe ssful
a tong lime a~n and with the USf' of belter
n1aterials, designs and manurac!ur1ng
techniques can be even rnore practical to-
day.
~O~I E OF THE EARLY steam cars.
though practical enough, ''·ere some\1•hal
crude as \l'ere their i11lcrn<1 I combus lion
contempor;iries, bu t the best of 1hem
would be perfeclly serv iC1!ab!e today 1n
spite of the ir angula r body style. Tht
general use nr modern, cffictenl, mass·
produced :-;tea1n drive vrhk·le on our
high11'ays and parllcular ly on ctly :streets
\\'OUld eliminate virtually all the smng
11nd pollution now una voidably cre ated by
the inlern11l combustion engine.
THE l!N\\'lLLINGNESS ol Detro11
even to a1ten1pt to provide a sinog-lrec
engine in conformity lo !he la1v indicates
the lu!ility of hope for bel1er things fr o1n
then1. IL appear.q th('y clon·1 C\"rn
know how to make a good bumper. In ad·
d1!ion to lhe return nf pure a1r to 0ur
cities. drivr.rs of ste:im cars \.\"ould enJOY
~p1endid performnnce rind long trouble·
free Sf'rvice as a rtsult of mt'chanlcRI
~lmplicily. Electric car5 '"·ould be fine
but the battery sit uation removes them
lrom coosidera!ion for the present.
Steam ruled the ro11d in my youth. I
hope lO live long enough to sec it do 1t
again.
rAt:L PAL..~tER
'Blifld B11po.,ri•11'
To lhe Ed11or ·
Permit me to expre11l1 my a~ony o,·er
the leuer o( ~!rs, Shirlev Smilh. ··Huev
Newlon and UCI " ~Jl.tailbOx May 19). It j~
dislress!ng that a ronrerned cl112en and
t11xpayer like ~lr~. Sn1ith shotild seek to
clisguist hrr prejudiced pcr~nali!y by
flOStn~ 11$ l)tle f!:Cnuintly l'onccrncd with
Lhc wCll·bC1ng ol her l':OCicty.
To chalJenge the 1ntt'gr1ry of Chancellor
Aldrich by 1nstnuallnR hf! b t 1 n g
'·respon sible (or IM re<..-ent bo111bin1:s and
,
Mailbox
Letteri from readers ore welcome.
Normally writers should convey their
tnessages in 300 1vords or less. The
1·1ght to condense lettel's to fit space
or eliminate libtl is reserved. All let·
ttrs must i11cludt signature and·mail·
ing address, but 11an1es may be with·
held on request 1} sujf1c1ent reaso11
i,f apparent. Poetry will 11ot bt pub·
lishtd.
burnings at UCI. .. is to lend substance \()
lhe view thal adults of the day project a
hypocritical barrenness of virtue and R
penchant for invidiousness. Every lax.
paying fool or cynic knows by now that
no bombing or lire al UC I has occurred ,
or shall ever occur, to reflect the anger
and fru stration or the university"s
clientele who arc forced to acC(lmmodatr
unnecessarily to the blind hypocrisy and
distorted priorities displayed toward thr
educational enterprise by the likes of
such critics.
IS NOT HUEY NEWTON an America11.
:is i~ \Villiam Buckley? fl.lust the uni,·ers1·
ty pro\'ide a forum for the latter, but not
the former, and thus ~rsist in a further
distortion of the American heritage of
pluralistic tolerance? The role of lhe
university includes not simply prepa ra-
tion for making a living, but. hopefully.
for providing an experience that \\'Ill
subscribe to lhe possibilit y of a heller lilc
through an explication or the truth.
Had i\1rs. Smith availed hers<>lf or 1hr
enlightening experienre afforded by the
i\1ex1can Cullural \Veek and by the Bl<it.:k
Cultural Conference she \Yould now be
pleading for more of such f'venl~. rather
lhan hinting that ~uch activities conspire
lo make taxpayers finance their own
destruction.
~''' AGONY DOES nol denve from
hAtrrd or bitterness over the injustices
\\"hich prejudice has meted out to me. It
springs. rather. from my appreciation for
the genuine effort being made by the
like~ of Chancellor Aldrich lo project UCI
al! a part of a society that comprises all
lypes anrl manner of hurnan beings. It
derives. further, from my faith 1n lhr
mc1ny \rho, having been silent or In-
different. retain a capacity for promoting
JUSiiCe Md ror t'Ornprehending lhC
t·hallenge or guiding n1eaningful change
1\'llhin and "'ilhout the university.
I urgl' l\trs. Shirley Smilh to remO\'C'
hc.r blinders. to look clearly at UCJ, and
10 share in the exhilaration of guiding our
future cilizens loward the creation of a
~il'\y with a greater tiuman un·
derstanding and the ability to manitest
genuine citizenship.
GEORGE O. ROBERTS
The Program in Comparative Culture
A n1e dean· Africa n-A:sian-B lack-Chicano
VC. Irvine
·~lost Ridic 11lo11s'
To the Edit.or:
The leller by Lyman S. Faulk.ntr
tf\tailbo>.. P.lay 19! .suppnrlfd !ht 11 S.
mihta ry and staled thal ils defensive pro--
11·es.s 1s :t necessity 1n tod11}'0! w()rld 1r \\·r
11re 10 keep all''<'. I for one feel l'lif·
leren!l~' The phrfls(', "na1ion3I drJense."
1s in itself an untruth. It passed that
slage with the in\"cntion of lhe bow and
<irrow. J'>lo mailer how many mlss1les,
ABr-.l's or rockets \1·e set up. a nation
like Russia could dcstmy us by pressing
a rc w buttuns,
The Iheme for defense Is no longer
''Let's sa1c. ourselves in case of an attack
by a hostile nation."
His now, "fl we go. lei's make sure \\'e
bring them \\0ilh us~"
'fllE ARl\.1S RAC!=; is undoubtedlv the
most ridiculous thing on the face cir the
earU1. Why should \1•e spend (Iver 60 per·
ctnt or our cnl1re budget for "'hat could
Lurn out lo be the total annihilation or the
earlh? \V1th al! the problems facing QUr
nation and"the rest or the world. we havt
no right to spend .so much on dealh.
\Vhat good 1s a monohthic military in·
s1allat1on on the edge or the DEW hne in
Alaska v.•hen so me guy is being kni fed on
a subway in New York City? Or what is
accomplished by a p::ilrolling cruiser orr
the coast of Ethiopia \\'hen a kid in \Valls
is star\"1ng lo death?
IN 1969 1ltE U.S. possessed l,Oii.J in·
tercontinental ballistic m is :s i I es
jJ CBP.fsl. over 700 submarine-based
m1si;iles 141 of '~hich contained nuclear
"·arheads l. 810 strategic bombers. and
an undisclosed amount or anti.ballistie
missiles IAB1\1's). Is it all '"'orth lt'.' Of
cnurse not' The complete rire power or
every ''defense" force deployed by the
U.S. is enough to eliminate Europe frorn
the face of !he earth, lOQ limes. But !-till
\l'f" must build anrl mount our 1nilitar.v to
even grenter heights.
1\lr. F'aulkner said th;:it !he mil1!arv "i.<;
probnbly !he bes t organized, most ef·
f1c1cnl in carrying out its responsibiHl1es.
1nost eHccl1ve in accomplishments and
f<1irest in lhf" opportunilies for success it
offers people." \Vas the ~1y Lai incident
<in ex:unple or lhe mi1itary·s .. effecfi\r
ac·complishmen!s?'' And that \\'as the on·
lv one. so far. in the ne"·spapers. )ln1o.·
,;bou l all !he others·•
CHR IS BRODERIC!\
1•1·i11tit19 1~olic:c ,, .. C IV~
Tn the Editor:
Your article concerning !\'Ir. Carlton
Polk. Cosla ~1esa High School business
leachcr, I lc>el was in the right. A couple.
nf sludents fro1n my school , I see. wrote
you a crank letter concerning you r
publication or !he fact !he teacher was
;irrested for possession of marijuana and
uthcr drugs.
I am a Costa ~tesa High School student
and I think tha! we are up there with the
$Choo1 drug problem. You do have a story
ln "'rite and frl't'dom or the press.
ACTUALLY, lhf' school district should
rind some "'ay lo tell 1vhether wme or all
their le11chers lake or push dru~s. 1( you
hild nol published the story. m()st parents
\\'OUld not hav<' knO\\'n about it until they
had to bail the ir son or daughter nut of
Jail I hope you publish this leUer so that
your readers will know that Rt least some·
(Ille cares about the school drug problem .
NAME WITHHELD
Ret11rnnbte Boule.•
To the Editor ·
\\1e ~re aware Iha! man has to reach an
rquilibrium \\'Ith his environment Jn or·
dt1r lo maintain this earth for futurt een -
era tions. But we tend lo ignore the fact
that cooperation begins \lo'ith the individ·
!Jal.
The grtalest ron1ribution the youn~er
fi!:CnerRt/on could make toward elinu nating
pollut10" is to purchase beer <1tld soft
rlr1nks in returnable bollles, In addition
lo ilnprovin~ lhc general appearance or
lhc country1dde, v.·e wnuld be making bet •
•er use of our resoure.:s.
NO~RETURNARL.E CANS take S,000
}'tars to dec()mpcse and relurn to the
earth Tht consumer would 111~0 be doing
h1msf'lf a favo r by sa\·ing money, r n r
nvtr 40 percent or the cost of a be\'Cragr
11; In packaging.
Su1ce lecnagers and young adults are
the ma1or consumers of canned and bot·
tied bfverages. we have the power to ex·
ert consu1ncr pressure. Through our
combined efforts, we \viii be laking a ma·
jor step in the fight for a bette r en·
v1ronmen1
.\llCHl::LL~ ri.IEARS
Celiboc!J cs. illorriuye
To lhe Editor
The exC'01nn111n1<"at1on of lh<' Rev.
Roberl Duryea . Pacillca . Calif .. at the
discovery of his marnagt show.'i the in-
consistency of beliefs v.·ithin the Catholic
Church . Dunng my eight years of educa·
lion in a Catholic i:rad1! school, I hari
been taught to love G<ld and man. Father
Duryea has not broken this law of love by
marrying a v.•oman, but has fulfil!ed it to
a greater extent.
lUS J\J,\l1RIAGE HA S no1 afrectcd hi:o;
teachings to his congl'egation. bul has ex·
panded his knowledge. As a married
priest. he has grealer capabilities of
counseling married l'Ouples and couplci;
preparing for marriage than any celibate
priest has.
Because of his cHec:tiveness as a pastor
and his sincere regrets 1n leaving hi~
post1ron. I feel that the aclion 1ake11 by
the church ,1·as nol for the \\·elfare nf lhe
parishioners. a.\! 1L shoulcl ha ve been.
LAl,.;ll1\ LEE t.1ACH
A1tucldfl9 Ilic l 'la!J
To the EdJ.tor .
\\'hat is lhe: govcrnn1rn! I~ it the
governing body. the elected orr1c1als now
in power, or is il !he nag ?
The ra di«als denounce thr gnv('rnmcnt,
and sho\V tlieir cnnlemp t by 1nsull ing lhe
llag. Are lhey condem ning the n1ling
political party? Or are they condemning
our flag and what 11 slands for?
The stars and slripcs is a symbol or our
country and 1he hasic befiefli, <ts v.•riUen
1n the Declaration of Independence and
the Con~tHulion . These beliefs. abo1•e all,
give each in dividual his frecd<>m. By at·
tacking the flag they are attacking in-
dividual right.". If lhf"y do not believe 1n
individual righ ts. this leaves but one
alternative, a government wilhoul in-
dividual freerlom.q
IF TlllS IS "'llAT the~· \\'JSh. then they
i;hould assault thr Hai;: But 1f they wish a
country \\'ilh in<liv1ch1al r1ghl~. and honest
officials lo gOYl'rn this coun1ry . !hen they
should :illack the elected re1>rcsentative~.
The nag to me rneans what is right 1n
lhis country . ~Tany representatives. IJ1P.
elcc1ed oflicials. ha ve twisted and misu~·
ed these rights. bu! 1ht'y are only elected
:lnd can be repl aced. tr there are wroni.;~.
ll't u~ keep the flRJl. but change lhe
~o\'crn1ncnl peacclully.
PETE BARTON
...... ~
IVedncsdly. May 26, 1971
The cdilorial prigt of the Dally
Pilot seeks lo i"form and slim.-
11/orc f"f!Odf'rS by pre11e11lu1g this
11e1nspoper's op1111on.s 1111d com-
11tr.u1ar!1 011 top1('.t of u1ttrtst
a i1d .~!y 11l/1canct, by prot1iding o
forun1 for the c.rpress1on of
our rrndrrs' opinions. and by
prtsenti11g Ilic dit,ersr vft111-
points oJ informed ob.~erve11
a11d spokcsn1cl1 on topics Qf tile
d<Jy
l?ol>crt N \Veed . Publ ishl"':r
wa
Th
RA , ..
var
the
JN,
me
hun
uo
son
out
son
by .
D"
the
No.
lru
J
g'
'h al
rilh
can
A!
fro
"Af
lng.
al
poli
and
mys
yea
yea
""hi
sma
l'ol'O
\\'ith
in
yea
eve
bee
fact
"'a~
ma
five
then
brid
!ere
than
A
lury
pair
it's
rate
then
dow
St'!e?
I r
1)
I
I
•
"" '
'
0 ••
CHECKING
•UP•
Alcol1olic Mixes
Booze Witl1 Mill{
By L. M. 80''0 a lmost all of those storks. ob.
\'iously. And the storks still
DO NOT CALL thcin bird left are just snowed under, I
••at.chers. Call them birder.,, imagine.
They prefer that ... IT'S A 5.'EN. llENRY JA CKSON
RARE BEER DRINKER y,•ho recently described Russia as a
realizl!.'i his pilsncr glass in· burglar tiplpeing do11•n the
variably is bigger around al corridors of the y,•orld. trying
the top than it is tall ... J UST doors. \Vhelhe-r truth or
JN, latest figures on moose poetry, don't know. but am submitting it to the Digest 1neaL It cosls t he a1·eragc anyy,•ay as a picturesque
hunter of same $436 per pound speech and patter ... THAT
now, .. TllE COP\'RIGllTED T~1E a troubled citizen is
songs entitled "I U>ve You" most apt to commit suicide is
outnumbered the copyrighted not right in the middle of what
songs entltled "I Lov~ You " the psychology specialists call
by 91).l to 300 ... WH EN Henry an emotional crisi~. But af-
Davitf'rhoreau wrote down all tcrwards. Usuallv about three
the reasons he ll'a.5 grateful, 1non ths afler11.•ards. the record
No. 4 on that lis! was "Peopl e shO\\'S.
trust me."
FAT WO,\IEN tend to think
J UST ABOUT a!I !hose they're really fat!er. thin
g e n t le me n \.'.'ho call v.·omen fend to thin k they're
them s e Iv es r e covered really thinner. Ex I en s i v e
aleoholic11 contend a drin ker studies at the Michael Reese
~ither can handle it or he ~l edical Center in Chicago are
can 't. there's no in-between. said to Indicate that. In fact,
At hand, ho1.vever, is a lelter H's not uncommon for such
from a citizen who s;iys: girls in the extreme. I 'm told.
"After 20 yea rs of hard drink-lo fail to recognize themselves
Ing , I was labeled a <."{lnfirmed in photographs.
alcoholic by my family, by the
police, by a couple of doctors. SO AT llER late husband ·s
and eventually even by gra\•eside, the v.·idow cried.
mysel [. So J quit. For two And spoke. Seldom do you
years. Completely. Then seven hear a funer al address of such
years ago, J started to drink poetry an truth. A London
whiskey again. Daily. \\lilh one journalist. ......00 witnessed the
small difference. J never lake moment. quoted the lady's
oration. I rank it with Marc t~·o drinks in succession Antony's speech ()Ver the withoul drinking ;i little milk great dead Cat'sar. Said she,
in between. In these se ven '"Tears cannot reslore him :
years r vc lost no work, not therefore , r v.•eep." even been late, actuallv never
beeo drunk." Fascina.llng, if Yo ur questions and com·
factual. ,nc11t.T a·re welcomed ond
uoi/l be tised in CHECKING CUSTOftfER SE RVICE: Q. UP wherever possible. Ad-
·•An ybody ever make a study dress letters to L. f.f . Boyd,
of how many nH•n marry girls P. O. Box 1875, Newport
for m()ney?" A. Such research Bea ch, Calif., 92660.
was undertaken by I h e'l.---========·====;J
matrimonial experts about
fh·e years ago. They claimed
then 13 out of every JOO
bridegrooms are more in·
teresled in the financial assets
than the feminine attributes.
A'I' TH E TURN of the cen-
tury. Denmark had about 4.000
p.airs of breeding storks. Now
it"s only got 65 pairs. The birth
rate of hun1an beings there
then was 3.2 per JOO. Now it's
do~·n lo 1.38 per 100. So you
see? Ovcr11.·ork killed off
ATTORNEY -ENGINEER
Seeks part time
potltiOfl with a n
OranfJ• Caunty Ca.
V1rlM b•<•fl'O\lnd !ft 1•1" Utd b111\.
"""· Ml~ d•m .. 1k •"'9 inleNtallO...
a l, 95MI, I SEli. LLI. Admll!MI i.
Si.I• l1r. Wrlle (1100111911 Ad •U4,
Oall~ PUM, P'.O, lo• JUO. C•1l1
M111. (1111, fl,H.
r ,.
l ' / BULOVA j
r ,·Golden Clipper '
1 The best classmate I \ he'll ever have
Give your Graduate a Bulova ''Golden
!
Clipper " and he'll always show up on the
' right day at the right time. Automatically. • And in style. The 17 jewel "Golden Clippe r" I: ts big ... bold ... brawny. And water
1 resistant. Made for show and go. So send
I him on his way with t he great graduation
gilt. .. Golden Clipper" by Bulova.
' I ,
I • ' ;
Open Mon., Thur1., Fri. 'Til t p.m ,
• ~·. . . ---~ ·-· ..... , . -
V.tilY r-.Lur I
For M·emorial Day, we had to do
something memorable.
,.
So we made our everyday
values even better.
special
2for1 19
Short sleeve
cotton knit polo
shirts with snap
shoulders.
Assorted
patterns, sizes
1 to 4.
.... --··· ··-·. ···-· ···-· ... ·····--·-··-
;: ·. ·::. ::~· . ._:: :: : :·:. -.
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79"
Boys' and
girls' cotton
shorts in pretty
prints and
solids for sizes
1Tto 4T.
4 for $1 22
special buy
15so
Easy-folding
lntant stroller
with chrome
plated tubular
steel frame,
padded seat,
adjustable
backrest an d
swivel wheels.
Girls' combed cotton
elastic leg briefs.
Solids and prints in
fashion colors.
Sizes 4lo14.
59"
Nylon satin bikini
briefs for lad ies.
Choose from an
assortment of
fanc ies.
Sizes S·M·L
Ladies' nylon br iefs futly~ut and
tailored for comfortable flt. Nylon
All our 3 50 shorts, now 2'or $E)
All our s4 shorts, now 2 'orq
We 've put all our misses' and junior short s on sale! Right now.
When 1ummer's just begun. You'll !ind cotton/polyeater1 , double
kni t nylons, cotton denims and more. Woven into all the
right-now styles. Choose ~ummer solids, stripes or plaids In
.-----the hottest fashion colo,.,.
special
499
Misses'
Penn·Prest•
Polyester c repe
stitch double knit
ankle pants.
Black. brown,
navy. Si zes
10 to1B.
3s9
Straight leg nylon
kn it ankle pants
with pull-on
elasticized waist.
Assorted colors.
Misses sizes.
2for $5
Washable nylon knit
jamaica shorts with easy
pull~n styling. Assorted
colors. Misses sizes.
/
I
'
tricot with elastic waist and legbands. en ne111 Sizes S·M·L XL·XXL 3for1.25
The values are here fN8rY day.
199
Boys' Penn-Prost~
sport shirt i n stripes
or solids. N•w long ·
point collar. short
sleeves. Sizes
6 to 18.
Toddler boxer
longie slac ks in
crisp, solid color
cotton . All·around
elastic waist.
Sizes 2T-4T.
2for388
Polyester filled bed pillow in
20 x 26" size. O utstanding value,
Special
99"
Great buy
handbags of
natural tone
wood. Decorated'
box shapes in
assorted styles.
CHARGE THESE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE I
,.
'
,.
' ~ .. •• ·~ •• 1• t: •' :~ • '• -~ ·' •
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi
' . ' ..
. . . .. .. . . . ,,. ... .:
'
.
Great Harv es ts Have Blessed Cl1inese I
By JORN RODERICK dustry and helped tht nation still remalns low. peasants have wor ked ,tale lurn out agricu.llural hn· were l'ffUtllted to PJtlfatt
TOKYO (IJ>) -.Why do the recover from disruptions o! The Chinese say -and owned plots ln a vast system plements, clinics to treat the prlv1tely 011.'bed pl~~ land
CommUnlSl ~l~ lmlle on tbe 196&-69 cultural revolution. Americans agree -thaf lhe ol rural communes. alllna and schools to educate lo supplement their income
the out!Sde wor:ld! O.. reuon Wjtb recovery has come con-bumper harvesls were the In the be · · g 1 h the YOUlli;. ~s an added in-aad produce from the larcet II f •• 1 ginnin e Y centlve, 1nd1vtdual peasants -1•·1e farms·, ·•
may be lhat nature has .smiled fidence. Bumper crops have resu o grea"'r use o numbered some 27,000. When ~-------.,;----~---------. on them. meant more money to buy rertillzer, mo r e irrigation. poor management and lhree!r
China,. is primarily an .!broad, mote money to im· newer seeds, and great-er successive years ol bad
agricultural country -nurty prove Chinese defenses, more mechanization. harvests brought tntm to the
600 million of its 750 million money to confront nature's Fm-centuries the Chinese brink of failure, they wtte
people tW the soil. The econ-scourges. manicured the good earth wilh dcc;entrallzed and cut up into
01ny rises or fall s v.1th hM· Japanese analysts an d the Lheir ov.rn hands or· im-70,000 smaller, more easily
vest.s. F\oo<ia, typhoons, pro-U.S. Agriculture Service agree p!en1cnts nearly as 1Jld as manageable 011es. Basic ac-
longed drought, too much rain, that 197<1 v.•as a record year, China itself. The yield they got coUJJting was taken out or the
or too litUe, plagues of locusL' though they pla ce grain pro--from their private plots of commune's hands and assign·
-e.acb or se.verally can spell ductlon at a slightly lov.•er land -many of them o\vned eel to production brlgadea
the diffett:nce bttween IUC· level -230 million tons. by absentee landlord! -was which oversee smaller pro-
cess or disaster. The agriculture people say meager. ducliOn teams .
Bul ior nine years, Premier that calorie intake by China's Today private ov.·ncrship of In an effort to achieve seU
GRAPEFRUIT Dll'•'
QUICK WEIGHT LOSS, DIET
7 to 15 POUNDS IN JUST >. WUKll .
Just $1.00
M•!I to: GR>.PEFRUIT'DIET
c/o VRJ Ent•rpri1e1, Dept. fl
70 P'atricie l•rie
Ch•cktowa9a, N.Y. 1-4227 Chou En-lai told visiting millions should improve slight· land no longer exists. except sufficiency, the brig a des
Americans last month, Chine _ _::IY~'~'-'''...::'°"~'"'.eq'l'.u'.'.e'.'.nc:'.e'.:_:_'b'.'.u'.'..l_'i'.'..l_'.m~a~r~gi~na:_l~ly~.-"S:in':ce"_:l958~,-"'h~e'_':'"":ta'.'b".l~~h'.'.'.e~d-s~m":a~l'_I _:fa~c~lo~r~i•'!•__'l~o~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
has had e1cellent harvests .
The grain output in 1970, he
earlier told a Japanese dele-
gation, broke au rtcord! at 244
million tons. Though no of·
fi scal records h av e been
published since 1960, this com-
pares with the previous
z.. "Dear Mr. Perkins: I've been wanting to get this of! :~~mi~l~96~.i&h of 215 million
.. my cbe1t ••• atop giggling .•• 'for some time ••• " The. harvest.. have &iven
Make your home beautiful.
These Penney values will help. ·;; boosl5 to light and heavy in-~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~__::::=-.::_::=;::._::::_:::::.:__::_: .. ••
'';
·~
::-..
~ ,• ,, • ·~ :· . . :: •• •• ;: •• :? . •• :: •• •• •• ~ ~ ~
. •• .• _. •• ;;. •• .. ·' ;:
• -; ;-•• . • ~ .. , . •• :. ;( .
~ ~ •
•' ~
·-..
·=
• ..
Graduation comes
just once.
These great gift values
are at
Penneys every day~
Men's 17 jewel
Seiko day-date
watch with
luminous blue
dial and
stainless ateer
c:11e. Adjuslable
bracelet.
4995
Men's day-dale
Caravelle• walch
with luminous
dots ar\d hands.
Chrome finished
case, stainless sl eel
back. 17 Jewels.
25ss
ladies' Seiko
watch with amber
or midnight
blue dial and
sta inless steel
back, 17 jewels.
Gold-tone bracelet.
5500
Ladies' silver or
yeUow--tone, 17·jewel
Caravene• walch
with stainle11
steel back and
adju1tabte lapered
linl< bracelet.
2495
ladies' 1""4K gold,
heart shaped pen·
danl wllh cultured pearl.1495
ladies' leaf motil 10K
gold ring with cut -
tured pearl.2 49S
Men's 10K gold, onyx
initial ring with one
di amond. 21 9S
Ladlei' 10K gold ring
with rubles.1995
•
Men·a onyx inl1ial
ring set in 14K floren-
t1ne gold. 34 95
l\.!'.!!.~'11
Diploma charm of
14K gold. 89~
Graduation c1p
charm of 1.CK gold
wilh one cultured
pearl. gts
Chara-It a.I tllese Penney etores: CANOGA PARK CARLSBAD DOWNEY
FASHION VAUEV·SAN DIEGO FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH
' LAKEWOOD MONTCLAIR ORANGE "THE CITY" l'!IVERSIDE
VENT\JRA Use Ponneys Tim• Payment Plan .
--
P1nncr1lt11 steel storage building.
Steel panels are chemica!ly
treated for rust resistance.
Chalet styling. Exterior base
size: 7'5" W x 5·9··0 .
Save '2 a gallon
Interior or exterior 99 Your choice, ftog .l.tt·
•
P•nncr•rt• One Coat ,Plu. Exterior Lalt.1 ii,idt I
year guarantee. Covers any~eo!or "'1 tust one .,,...
plication. Dries in 20 minutes to • 1tain resistant
finish lhat defies blistering ·and peeling. Suhmle
ior wood, masonry and slucco. ""42 excltlng cok)ra
lo choose from .•..... , _ •••• Reg. 8.99, Salei I.It
I year guarani••· When th11 Penncrart• Pal.111 lsapplied
to 1 previously painted and properly preparecf surface.
we guarantee II /or 8 yea1s. as slated below. One Ollloft
give~ l·coai coverage for up to "00 sq. IT. on non•porous
su1laces. 250 sq, ti. on porous surfaces (not Including
shakes and shingles) .
• Slam res1slant • Fade 1esi.s.t1nt .
• Non yellowing • Chalk rst~lant
11 lhe paint !ails 10 pe1lorm as guaranteed, Jet I.IS know
about 11, ""' v.111 p1owde new pall'!! or • lull relund.
Penncratt• Par fs;cellence Interior L1lex wilh 10
year guarantee. Gives one coat coverage over ant
color. So versatile, it can be used in any room •••
kitc hen, bath, bedroom. dining room, living room.
And ii dries to a durable finish that stays beautiful
even alter repeated scrubbings. Choose from 600
decorator colors ............ Reg . 8.99, S•I• l .H
10 rear gu1r1nlN . When lhis Pennc1.11ft • Paint tS 41ppl1e•
10 • p1 eviously painted and pro pe1 ly prepared surl1c1.
we guaranzee ii for 10 years •s listed below. One gal!on
gi~es 1-coai cov•r1ge !or up lo •oo sq: n. on non-po1ous
surfaces, 2&0 sq. ft. on porou' surfaces •
• W1shab!t • Stain tMiSl8hl
• Outiiible • Colort1st
11 lhe paint flilS to perlorm as guaranleecf, itt uc Moo.It
about ii, we will p1ovide new p,;ilnt or• lull refund.
Sal• pric:ea tlf•ctive through Saturday. ~ .r ~ Sale 7499 f '\, , . Sale 12999
Reg, 84 .99. Save $10. Penncralt 3 YJ HP,
20" rotary mow er wilh d1e cast aluminum deck.
Folding handle. side recoil starler. EZ 0 1/
1111. adjustable height-of-cut, controls
located on handle .
enne1f1
~\ ...
Reg. 141.99. Sawe S20. Penncraft ,.,._,.,.
31h HP, 1&" power propelled rHl ll'tOWet.
Automatic clutch, instant height-of.cut
adjustments, grass catcher inclUded.
1'he Emer1kf' aluminum -.ett
door-Features Inch.Ide rol~fOfTned,
full-size frame, ribbed design.
32" or 38" size.
8.99*
'TM Hontrcomb' •uminunl....,.
door. Sliver grey baked epaxy fintlh
fr1me is roll-formed, fulJ.slze.
32" or 38" size. 16.95*
'Tiie RoYole' gold-tone-
enodlz9d 1ereen door. Extruded
type has three 1" eittruded puth
bars, 9" built·in klckplate.
push-button latch. 36" size. •Com,~t• wftfil lelclt, cl011r •rid ltlftg" 21,99*·;
Use Penneys Time P•yment Plan •t these stores: FASHION ISLAND, NEWPORT CENTER,
HUNTING TON CENTER, Huntington BHch
•
,
Smoking:
Bummer
On Heart
By Pettr J . Stebtcroba, ~1.D.
Peoplt cornJ te me wilh
their complaln\I and gripes. 1
l\"tlcome tnenl. Otherwise,
many resorl to the common
practice of suffering the quiet
d esperation of inner
r~entment. They have few in-
timal~ they i:an talk to in
•earcfi. of sorne kind of reac·
tion.
The other . day a middJe·
aged, successful businessman
said, "Dr. Stelncrohn, I wu in
a doctor'S·offiCe yesteiday. As
l;~·~f.,?k\~ _·) __ ._~[. -
y00,l{iioW, t'm ~ ~hifn smoker.
I ·ut a Cigarette ·and before I
cOuld take a second puU I WIS
praeticalty hissed dmrn by tbe
ot.Oer patieril! in tbe waiting
rOotn.
A. woman sitting ne11. to me
pointe<I to a :!lgn on the
magazine table. JI read :
SMOl<ING ' CAN BE A
SERIOUS· HAZARD. PLEASE
DO NOT SMOKE IN THE
RECEPTION ROO~t -IT
MAY AFFEGT OTHER PA-
TIENTS.
I. pul ou't my cigarette. What
J can1t understand is why so
much fuss i! ·beirig made
about · c'lgarettes. Level with
me: Glvt· me a shorrlesson in
phy.siology; I used to take it in
school. forcetting about the
lungs, ju!d \-why do you doctors
think smoking· is such ·a
serious huard for the heart?
I told hJm T'would make my
at1swer brief a11 requested. but
he had to realize that all he
lrould be ·getting in his
"physiology lesson" \\'ere only
a few essential facts about the
hazardous effects from smok-
ing.
·ro summarize. this is what I
aaid : Consider the effects of
nicotine, for example. ll
releases eJ?lnephrine a n d
norepinephrine from nerve en-
dings and 1 the suprarenal
glands. \Vhat happens as a
result? The heart beats ab-
ljQl'.IJl.a.llY fast, tht: b l o o d
pres.sure. ri~« the heart
"'orks harder. pwnping more .
:,:ood. ~ I.here Is a .clumpin~
9f blood platelets w h i c tl
predisposes to blood clottL'lg.
You can understand how
these changes in the blood
circulation would have a bad
errecl on the coronary arteries
and upon the heart itself. And
ho\Y about the carbon
monoxide in the cigarette
smoke that interferes with I.he
proper exchange of oxygen In
the tissues? •
Carbon monoxidti in the
blood often redll~ t h e
oxygen-carrying blood capaci-
ty by as much as 10 ·percent.
In heavy sm oker s \D-
VtsUgators hav~ observed that
t,flerc ha~ been an abm:lfm.al
thlclcening of the walls of the
-pulmonary and b r o n c h i a I
arteries w it h degenerati\'e
changes. I could go on and on.
?ilf." X .. but You asked for a
ihort lesSC1n.
He said. ;,Thanks. l ap·
pi'tciate it." Then he \'Ulled a
cigarttte out of a battered
pack, lit it, leaned back and
said, "Interesting. Very in-
teresting."
MEDICALETTES
I Rep1lea t.o &1deu)
·Otar Dr. Steincrohn: lit}
husband is a diabetic and
frankly I .m worritd. He take.>
1. pill rather than insulin in
nl!edle form. He is an obedient
p1t1ent v.·ho follo~·s the rules
of diet set forth bJ his doctor.
Jn spite of this he has
frightening little seizure~ in
l'lftjcb he geLs tbe shakes, nlild
d.11.iio.esa and nausea.
M'rs. H.
CO~IME~i : Diabetic pa·
tient.s may occasionally get
ettremely low blood sugar
(bypog\yctmla) as a result of
diet, medlcation, large doses
of insulln or other ret1.!M>ns.
Ne.it time your husband has
these symptoms have him
cbeck with hi s doctor. A blood
le'st will Indicate v.·hether or
not his "'shakes" are due to
loW blood 1u1ar.
. . ... .. . . ~ ••• . .. . -.·
* DAIL V PILO" ·D
. HAVE . YOU VISITED OUR NEW STORE AT :
588l War.ner at Springdale in Huntington Beac·h
(05fA M~SA-1100 HJrlOr I t..,,, fl W•l50ll St,
COST A ME~A-JlJ E. 11111 $1.
l'l\JNrlNGTON fl~ACti-... 1 Adf"" t! lfool<~11•1t
liUN ,INGfON SEACH-lft(11 & fdl"!ltr
HUNTINC.TON ll EACH-W•'l'tt' &. Sllf"'9d•le
' •
oliday. Discounts .r.~~r·~~.~-
• ffkt, ••
'49' •• $1 00 Plastic
Housewares
•••• ,,.. ...... lt«l I lttr•
• (•tlff'f Tr•y • 71 01. Pitclt.r
• I Qt, P11t,.S,wt Pill • let
(1tlie Jr1y • .t.11• M111r, M•llJ
..... t ""'°'' ~11ful l.ouMl.old ;, • ..., 1,.
ciwolil'J' phn"i<! popular ,olo.,.
• Firnily W••H M•tlill I• Iese fl.,.•I Pri11ts
• ••·lrH Suwr ~ite
1.,_ $2.H & $3.lt
'72x104 l11ch Twi11 Flilt et" Twi• FJttff 81tt1m
• s1.n & s•.1•·,, .. ,, .... ,.n., r.....i ••" ,_ ....... n ."
• $1.•J '"If .. 2 '11'-"'"" .......................... $1.4'
fit,.,ly _,. ""''ll"o ;,. 1101• florGI prifl! ...-•o-irof! M>OW'f ,.l\;i.,
f illitd bollo"' ohttll ••lh 1t•dw1i" ~otrtlch e<lg•.• -a '1995 Polyester
llJ6x9' Shag hg .,, . . '" .... ;.,, .. $J 595 ,~!""~~~·:· .:... ' 1 ....... :""''~ .... -. " "'.,, .... .
. • ......... iwt..
$J" Enameletl
Pots aatl .has
: :=.::::· $ J 23 •{---•lh.. __ ...
Colw...i.;.,.,, ,ooi,, 1.,,..,, btftt,r,
Cho;<• of ••11· "'"' ,,,, -,,,. 2 F $5 "yle '" .... ,,e,,. 0 i ...... ,.,...,.,.1 R
, ..... s .••• 1.11
Imported
Rlcoro Rum
,, .... "_ $295
OPEN ALL DAY MEMORIAL DAY MOJtday May.31st .... .,, ..... : 3~
Reg. $444 Linen
Floral luggage
!~~~1:"~ .. 16~: s::;.1.~.~'"::;1!~:: s2 33 ..
Moldt d llo11dlt , 11....y du1y tllol' _
Jo,\.
• 11¥1" •IHI ,, .. Shtl .M$J.JJ
• 21" ••• 2.2Vt" Si1H ... '4,Jl
$18'5 South Ben
Spincast Combo
r.,. """1;,, s...i. ..,... ''-""
toced 1pi,. ,..1 ~cl _,... ,..1,.1
9 lou Ovid.."-" t od. T~ ,....f.-:•
•-bo !O<" "owl, ba11, cotl:,i. O•d
triwr heoh ..,,,,, to-fioi..
s999
Tryi..1 Pc.
Splnc•st •Ml
...... ~ .. ,_ ··-· $299 ...,11 .............. -•
•1r• Q.kk
Spi..1119 IHI
r;J, ,, .... 11.., 1 ••• 1. $f66
-·· , •• r ••• ~-i J ?9.
s11" Cole-
llHlt-
---$J396 2~ ... 1....-ttr
Concert Size Folk
St11I String Guitar
.Dlttl111i l"'llO" *'•"' 11it w.11 1 .. d;.,1 u ... r.,4 ·~-
.11 ... '•"-•" .... ., Jtw•f
tl.011 -• •,..?fl•Y 1 ....
,,;, •• , 5~ l•.
.,, . ..,_,, ..
1wllr -ott..nt•itJpecf, for <Ofllpi110,
troil1r, ,... .. , i.,,.., '"'o" po.pl!"
C.;..!, COil' li•i119. l6'" Tipp•r. lJ~
7s~. IJ-1,. i ,..., ,.i, •• 1 .. t1n.
'J.,v.1 .. 130 Quart
fill• heo•y
'l~allty C•tto"
l1ttti•1 ........ 11,.
ool., .,o_,. d ..
'l••ol p ri,.l•o( ~i .. yl
lop. cl..cl Mc•, ••"'· 1.,.,,.,1. 1h••lld~ Poly •
loo"' !ill, Ho11d tult•d.
•1 611 Roto Br.ell
20·1nch Fans .
1;.,1 ...... •· $ J J 93 blod• poriobl• ,,.
... o .... f ;,.;, h.
l ••<>l·t•1i11G•I ploffi~ 9ri!I,
Solarcaln1
Aerosol Sprwy
S2.19Vtl•tl $) 38 ,o ... ,.
Com,.r• t• Othtn lelliat ,, s.oo
@suntan Lotlen
I °""<• plo1lic $I 44 bG~I•. With _;,. ..........
•2 00 v.1 •• 1 Kl1ln1rt
ladles' Swim (aps
•J"v.1 •• 1 Eveready
9-Yolt Battorles
.0~,e,,c ·-' -I ,.,. t••• ••1
I , h ... d '"'· S•y!•
chooc•.
79' Hershty·ets
Plain or Peanuts "--1!'.0 Banana Nut
Ice Creain
-OltO•ll!O '" <h<><t-
""• <•oMd wt"'
lhi,, <o.,dy •h•U.
SAVI Tew 68(
12c Clitlc• ••.
' • (l,on•i"V C••'"''• J'h "'·
• li,.11id ,W'ith O.w-o.c;.,.,
1 ...
• Ho"d l.etlofl, ' or.
• l •'r letlo•, 6 ta.
$5.tS 'f'•IMI F•ultl1t1 ·
Travel Syrint•
"Vl••nt"
3 111t. He111i119 l"P· $J23 , .... ,., . ,.,.11 ... 1
cct••·
•••· ltc Thrifty
Super Plus
Platinum llollos
,o<\•110 67< O.ultl•
tdo•
~::r •• 79c
'lw• 11-<t d•licio~•
..,o!eri"i Uo••"·
• Slr9•"•rry, Vo·
11iOt, <k•col1tt,
M11f & M11f, Slie,.
INt ... Y, GtllH 69c
Reg. 6 for 69'
Canada Dry .
Soft Drinks
10i99c
11 o~. Co"•· Ckoi~
of f lo~ofl. Lt-Col,
Tool
8 f1poo11<M
$!ocl ~p lo• l.olifOT
pitturt to•i"I· lyp•
IOI.
$135 Pack of 150
Paper Plates
Mon's & Wonion's
Reg. 'I" Sunglasses
s; .. 1i. \., .• 1..a 1 ......
i11111a diol. l1tolh1tf•
loo\ co .. th.I fold~
fltofly. '1'e11tlfio".
.• .; :·
J 0 DAILY '1LDT
B·yea1• Deadlocle
2 New Tax Reform
P1·oposals Rushed
SACRAMENTO (UPll -
Senate Democrallc 1 e 1 de r
Geor11e Moscone today pro-
posed a new $2 bllllon tax
"t?.form'' plan as the
Legislature and Gov. Ronald
Reagan launched a fresh ef-
rort to provide property tax
relief for homeowners.
fi.fo.scone 's ~e follo"'·ed by
<1ne day Re a g a n 's an-
nouncement he ha s de<>ided to
stnd the Legisl1ture his own
tai "re.form " program -one
LA Spur1LS
Charter
2nd Tinie
l..OS A:\'GELES tUPI) -A
hei\'y turnout in Tuesday·s
municipal election dislodged
an incumbent city councilman
ani:I sen1 a proposed new city
charter down to defeat for !he
M'Cond time in se\'en months.
~'i th a turnout of slightly
mOre than 45 percent -com-
pared 11•Hh an anticipated 3S to
38 perCf'nt -rhe charter pro-
~al "'as rt jec1ed by a ~·01e
of 2211.549 to 206.330.
Councilman Edmund D .
Edelman, one ol the principal
backers or the proposal. 1aid
e;(Tly toda :v lhat the vote was
"(TY close and pledged the ef·
lnr.ts 111 charter rerorm will go
fnr\\·ard .
which would dr11Ucally lower
property taxes and tubsten-
tially raise income and sales
taxes.
In an attempt to prod the
Legislature into action after
five months ot relative In-
action. Republican assembly
Jeaders also proposed creation
of f o u r bi -partisan "task
fOl'cts" to negoUate com-
promises on taies, wellare,
i1edi-cal and school aid.
But despite the 1tepup in ac.
tivity by both tht legislative
and executive branches, one
key lawmaker said he still is
not optimlstlc lbe Legislature
vdll break an elcbt -year
deadlock and pats a proputy
tax relief blll.
"The atmoaphere is clouded
this year by a number ot othtr
issues,·· said Assemblyman
William T. Bagley tR-San
Rafael}. co · sponsor of
Reagan's program. "I don 't
expect the governor's bill to
just fly out of the Legislature.
Obviously the Democratic
Party is in control.''
~foscone -one of the
Legislature's most innuenUa l
Democral!I -planned to
outline !he details of bis pr1>-
gram today at a news con-
ference.
Basically, the San Francisco
lawma,ker proposed to finance
property lax relief ~·itb in·
creases in the personal income
and various business taxes.
The slate would take over
all local welfare financing
within four years and pay for
it through a statewide pro-
perty Lax. Local proptirty ta>;·
es for welfare would be
eliminated.
Magee Bid
Throw11 Out
By Court
SAN RAFAEL (UPI) -An
appeals court justice wasted
lillle time ln rejecting an ef.
fort by Angela Davis ' cOOefen·
dant to di:imiss the sixth jud ge
in their murder. kidnaping and
conspiracy trial.
Justice Winslow Christian of
U1e Stale Court of Appeal
turned do\\'n Tuesday a motion
by convict Ruchell Magee to
have judge Richard E .
Arneson disqualified for bias.
Christian, who was assigned
to rule on the motion r.fonday ,
made his decisio n without a
hearing. He said he ruled on
the basis of P..fagee 's
argument.s and the replies by
Judge Amason.
The motion by Magee. 32.
~·as the latest in a series of
legal maneuvers by the San
Quentin convict \•1hich have
delayed pretrial proceeding!!
for him and Miss Davis, 27.
and avowed Communist and
former UCLA instructor.
They are charged with
murder. kidnaping and con·
splracy in e<>nnection \vith a
shootout last Aug. 7 at ~1 arin
County Courthouse in \\'hich
four persons died . including a
Judie.
•.••. ,. ••.•• 7-. ...
Car Insurance Defeat Stuns Bill's Autlwr
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A
Republican senator. visibly
shaken by a committee's re·
jectlon of his plan to overhaul
automoblle insurance. &a)'l its
defeat shows the Cali fornia
legtsl1ture can't cope with
pressure from special lnterut
groups·.
Sen. John L. Harmer of
Glendale put little stock Tues-
day in a promise by Sen.
Alfred Song, chairman of the
Senate Judiciary Committee,
that bis bills were not being
SALi STA.ITS WIDNISOAY,
INDS SATUIDAY, MAY 29THI
killed by belng liken under
submission. ,
Standing ln I ha llway
outalde the-hearing room.
Harmer grimly declared, "My
bill!! are dead."
He said he won't bring them
up acain next year because
the federal government ~·ill
act before !hen to s e t
guideline!! for states to follow
in modifying I.heir au.to in-
.surance laws.
Harm er's idea was a
modified form of !he ao.called
no.fault insurance concept.
But rather than require a
motorist's insurance company
to pay for damages or injuriel
he sustained no matter who
was at fau1t, it would have us-
ed the ''comp1ratlv •
negligence" rule.
lively cottons in · fresh
colors, perky prints and
bold solids •.. special buy!
Whip-up a cool summer wardrobe with
Words fun cottons! Lo rge collection of
print5, solids in the season's new~st colors!
Scoop up yards 'n yards ot this low, special
price today! 45-inch widths! Hurry! 4 <~R
~ ·~'-•'' ,,o ,,,. ,..... JUST SAY "CHAIGI n--
.In the St<'ond council manic
dil'ltr ict. incumbent James B.
Piitter Jr., \\'ho had been sup.
poi-red b:v ~l ayor Sam Yorty in
hi8 bid for a third term. \\1as
dareated by attorney Joel
t\'achs, who piled up 62 per-
cetit of the vote in the runoff
ra'Ce.
Of major importance on 1he
baJlol "'as the $198 million
bond issue to repair or replaC1!
schools damaged or deslroved
in~the Feb. 9 earthquake. That
pr~posal pulled f.6 .5 percent of
I~ vote, but its future WllS un-
certain pending a U . S .
Supreme Court ruling on
~·hether such measures re-
quired a simple majority or
two-thi rds approval.
State WeHare Takeover
Pushed by Supervisors
ln the races for posts on !he
bofird of education and the
cdinmunlfy e-0llege board ()f
lriistees, conservative can-
dloetes captured five of the
eiQht seat.s.
S ACRA~1ENTO
California'• county
supervisors are asking the
Legislature to lake over all
costs of welfare and thus pro-
vide $450 million in relief for
the local property taxpayer!.
The Co u n t y Superv~ors
Association announced Tues·
day that takeover of welfare
by the state is its m1jor con-
.•.
L·
" "
YOU CAN'T GET
LESS THAN $50
FOR ANY OLD
.:=SEWING MACHINE . YOU'VEGOT
.-WHEN YOU TRADE IN TOWARDS
ONE TOUCH SEWING
:.
!: .-
...
" .. ~you could get$100 ormorw trod•ln allowlnce.
:· ·The better your old sewing machine, the bigger the
! .. -allowance. But right now, any make full-size sewing
: machine that's still in one piece is worth al lea11 $50 "kmerd any new model Touch & Sew• z1g·zag sewing
;·'machine by Singer. Trade up to One Touch Sewing. !· Trade in at your Singer Sewing Center today.
.~~; The trldlng's enn e1sler
wllh the Singer 1 to 31' Crwdll Pion ·-SINGER
Foraddrna of the Singer Sewing Ctnt9r neare5t
you,11e White Pages under SINGER COMPANY.
•-' T,..,_lt: ol nit llMGDI °""'AH't
COSTA M•SA-l rllMI .t. hollli. ... ., k~lfl C•t•I l'i.1•, 1•t•ll
cosrA MISA--IMt H•rM• 11v• .• "''"' ( .. ftf, •• ···"·
kUHTtJfafOlf llACM-••lftt" •I ''?""' H•"ll"'l8tl I Mtfll ( ... !tr, '"''"'
• O"AHOa-11 fl!•~-••• {. "Tiit (lty'' c ... •tr. ,.,.,,.t
•a•n•H ••ov•-tt)I c111.,..1 ... O••"'• C•""'' ''""' ,..,..11
cern during the 1971 legislative
session.
Assembly Bill 1105 is the
measure that provides for the
state Lo take ' over welfa;e
financing. It is sponS-Ored by
Assemblyman Eugene Chappie
I R·SacramenloJ, a former
county supe rvisor. ,
County Supervisors Associa·
lion Manager Jack t.ferelman
said. "The only way for major
local property l!!;xpayer relief
to take place is st ate takeover .
The skyrockellng costs of
welfa re programs must be
removed from their backs.
Easy-care ~brics at 24 %-30%
saving! Summer sewing fun!
"l..ast )'ear there was a
shocking 62-eenl statevdde
county property tax increase."
f\terelman noted. "This year
the situation look! 'A'orse. Los
Angeles County has a ten-
tati ve 75-cent i ncrea se :
Alameda County . 30 cent!I:
Marin County 65 cents, San
Diego Cou nt y, 80 ttnls: and on
and on. The local la.tpayer
jwt can"t stand this kind of
yearly increase.
"It's only logical that the
1t1te should lake over ~·e\fa re
at thi s time ,"' ~lerelman con·
tinued. "Welfare programs
are now in almost complete
federal -state mntrol. State
takeover at this point will pr1>-
vide an easie r transition to
ultimate federal takeover ."
KIDS LOVE
UNCLE LEN
Textured double knits -washable!
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Denim in stripes, solids and plaids!
Mi:it 'n match denim fabr ics of Fortrel!I poly-
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strong fabric! 45.inch widths. Save now!
2 PllMANfNTS 1
ro11 TH£
NICE Of
ANY $10 OR MORI PERMANENT!
&ring o friend! &oth pf you COl'I enjoy o
beautiful $10 or more pe1monenl for the
price of jut! one! A big holf·price saving!
lA (llNIGA i. ,. ......... 11 ......
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1.~
SANTA ANA '°'"'el " ......... "'
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Saturdays in
The DAILY PILOT
NORWALK 1ooo,....,..i .. _.,.011 W..,,
.,..._. 161.ofll
MUNTINGTON llACH
... ~ .. i.-.h ......i.-,...,,_ 11f .. OJ.6f>]I
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Coast & Southern Federal
Offices to Serve You:
...,
* MAIN OFPICI!: lllh A Hiii. lot Angt!H • et23-f 351 '* WIL.9HIAI 11t QPIAMt:RCY PLACE: 3933 Wll1hll'9
BIVd .• L.A. t 381·12Cl5
LA. CIVIC CINTl!PI: 2nd l Bro1dway • 62~ 1102
• HUNTINGTON ll!ACH: 111 Huntlng1on Ctnltr.
(714) 11137-1047
SANTA ANA LOAN ll!RVICI AGENCY:
• 1905 N. M1ln Sl • 1714) 547·D2S7
• IANTA MONICA: 718 Wllahlre 81vd. • 393·0745 * IAH "EDRO: 10th & Pacllic • 831-2341
,. WllT COVINA: E11tland Shopping Cir. • 331·2201
• "ANORAMA CITY: 8611 Vin Nuyt BIYd, • 1112·1171
• TARlANA: 117S1 Ventura Boultvard • 345-e814
• LONG llACH:3rd l Loeu1t • 437-7481
()ptll Sltllr"11-t tt1 t• t pt1 Dilly Kouri-9"" to 4,,.
ASSETS OVER $800 MIUION
Art Linkletter Shows You
a New Way to Beat Inflation
... Just J.pin
61k
lllSilleas
Club
With a $2,500 bllance In your pving1
account. you are ellglble to becom•
a member. Subst1ntla11avlngs ar•
1vallab!ewhen purchasing many llems
Including automoblles, furn iture,
1ppllance1, Jewalry. Plu1 many
fr1e11rvice1 -money ordera,
ttfe depo11! bo1111, etc.
'
I
ENJOY GREATER BUYING POWER WITH
WARDS CHARG-ALL PLAN
,ANOIAMA (ITT ""°'*' .... " ... l•t·l 111
IOSlMIAD
• .. -OM! ~ .. 4 ., ... ~ ... _,,._
.... -o-•.SlllllO
COVINA
"""'-· .. -~ .. -4 ... ~.. --966-1•11
Coast & Southern Federal
Offers You These
Highest Prevailing Rates:
COM .. OUNOED DAILY AND PAID QUARTERLY.•
5 .00°/•-5.13°/o
Pa11b00k; No Minimum.
s.25•1 •• 5,39•/o
Three Month Cenlfic11e; No Mini
5,75"/o.5,92°/o
On•Yearceniflc1te; $1 ,000 Minimum.
6.00°1••6.18°/o
T~Ye1rC1rtlflcate; $.$,000 Minimum.
• Elltctl~ Attrtu1/ Ea rrtirtgs
• 11-s r~~''(.r. TO $20 000 ···~····~ ' -.
LEGAL NOTICE
l'_.16H
Cll•Tll'ICATI! 01" SUSIMISS,
•ICTITIOUI NAMI
Tiie under1Jt ntd d011 cerlUY II• !1 <on·
e'°"'U"' • bu•IMll •I 172JI o\lm•lo L• .....
Mull'llnelon l!t•~. C•!llornl•, und•r 111,
11ct1tlou1 llrm n•mt ol llAF, EN·
filllPIUSES •nd IN! 1•111 firm 11 tom
f'OIH of tn1 IOllOWI... jN(i.otl, Wl'IOSe
.... m. In full .Incl ol•t• of ·••lclt rot• II I I
IO[low':
ll-n A, Ftrkul1, 11111 o\lm110 L-, Hunllneton 1!11cll, C1lll
0 .11111 M•Y J, 1,11,
• 1100.tl A. F1rkul1
11111 ot C.1lllo<"nl1, o, • .,.e Counry:
On MtY l, 1911 , IH/0<1 mt, 1 Not1••
,<ltltlc In Ind f'Of" Mid $1111, HrM'ltllY
•oott rl'd llobe1'1 A. F•rkul1 known to ,,,.
II) toe '"' ...,,..., '"'-" nlf••t lo •ubKrlb-•d 10 mo Wltnln ln11•um1nt 1na
1c1<.-lld•M he 1xnurtd 1111 11m1.
IOFFIC!o\I.. SE.-LI
Join I.. Joosr
NOllfY Public • Ct llfornit
Prlncloll Ofl!ct In
Or1ng1 County
My Comml1SI011 E11irt1 Mlf<l'I 7, l t'3
llubliolled 0fl"9~ (011! 011\y P11~! ~•v j, n. "· tt. ttn 1a5'-1l
LEGAL NOTICE
1'·7.12t
PlCTITICIUI I USI Mll SS
No\MI! STo\T"t!MINT
,.,., lollow!nv otrlO!"I 11 ooi,,.. butoneu .. Vll..Lo\GE 5!-IOPPl ... G CE ... 11!11, 1'1102· 1•1•1 &rDQkllut1t St•u!, tiunlinoton 8••c".
Oikt I. COlffro~t. Inc., "' C•lltorn••
c ........ 111on. ltol<I 8 roo«hurol. Hun· l•ng!on 8•1~11.
,,,;, tlu1lntu " ~in• '"""tKl.0 ti.. •
!"'oor•t•on
D It Cohe9ro'lf,
Prt•ldenl
f n,, ll•!emen1 .,., f.IH W.t'1 Tiit
\ounh (lerlt ot Q••nte Counh .,, M1y
11, 1911.
Puoll•nf!d Or1nff Cot•! D1!!y Pilot,
'-l'•Y \f, 21 I nd J UIM 1, f , lfn l:l(IG..11
LEGAL NOTICE
''"4111S CEll'fll"I CATI! OF IUllHESS
l'ICTITIOU5 No\ME
Tnt undt rslgn..:i OO<t• c11'1lt1 111 !• ton·
~ut•.n~ • bl.i1lneH •t 1'16 Vl1 LIOO, Suitt
I . NeWD<W"f llfftfl, Ct llltwnl•. "~r t~ ~t••tlo•11 llrm Mint of SOMETMING
i<•TURo\L .,,., ltl.lt Mid tlrM ls com-
_.,., OI mo lollowlnt M r.on,-•"''"'
"' lull •nll ol1<1 ol r•ldenc:t Is •• Joi·
'""'' Ch•rlt• II , Giiien. XIII I!, 8ri1roalt.
Or•nve, C•lll.
D•!f!d MIY 10. 1911
cn1rle1 R (;ltttn
Sl~lt o! Ct lllornf•, Or•"9t CounfY·
On Ml 1 10, 1971, ti.fort me, 1 ,..O!frv
'ubli<. In t ncl tor u !d 5t•tt. H rsor.•llY •W•••Pd c111rl•1 R. G!tt•n koown to .,,., .., toe tn• M<lon whOSt n.iomt 11 1ubtcrlb· on lo 'Ille wllhfn ln11r.,mtnl Ind
•<:~nowledtltd t.e t•tClfltd ltlt ••m•.
IOFFIClo\l SEo\LI
Miry Bt!h M"'IOtl
NolltY Publlt-C.1litornl1
Prfn<IO•I Office in Or•"'• Count'f Mv Comml1slo11 E•Pirt s
... prll f , 197J
l'utillV!.O Or1n9e (o.t" Oalty "•IOI.
M1v 17, 1t, U 1nd Jun1 1. 1'71 1122·11
LEG AL NOTICE
NOTICE TO CllEOITORS
SUl't!RIOll COUllT OF THll
~TATE OF CALll'OllMIA l'Ok
THI! COU ... TY 01" ORAMOI!
Ho. A·•tlll
Est11t of Rl(Ho\RO E. SCHUMACMEll
O""tasf!d .
... OTICE IS HEREl!Y GtVl!l't to tne ,..,,,.,,, of Ille tbovt ntmed dKtdenl
"'" I ll PtriOl'IS r.111"9 Cl•lm1 •••Inst 11\e ·•'d dtcedenl i re re<iulrtd to Ill• tntm,
•II" !tie MC•SS•rY YOUd>tr1, In th• olf!C t
it lht clerk ol 1r.e tbO\le enlllltd CQUl'1, or
o orest"I ltlitm wlm the "IC•U•rv 'OYChers, lo int underslt1ne<I .iol 1ne OlliCP
" t.tf Attornty II. K•lllf Olnomoor, JJC
··10! !/In St., Suite 1!1, Coot1 Me ... , C1
'161', Wl1!cn Is Int olece ol buolntu or
'!>!! u"""r•loned In .111 met1er1 Ptrt1!nln11
• me eit11t ol 11111 Oecedtnl, wl!,.ln tour
nontlls 111tr m t l!•st oulllluliot1 ol lhl1
>DH Ct.
011!'<1 M1y 10. 191!
Ell11i..th II. Stflum1C11••
e~''"''1" o1 th• win Of !ht li;IOYt n1med CllCtdMI
t . ICElTH OUISMOOll l llor.,., 11 Lew
Ull IE. 11"1 114 Sullt 111
COlll Mto.1. C•. '2117 r,1 , 111 0 J.46.77Sol
l llorney fOI" ••tcu1ri1
Put>llsllf!d Or1no1 Col•' o.u, Pllol,
AAI V 1t, )I Incl JUllt 2, f , 1t71 12Q:;J1
Deatla Notices
GA.-llo\YAM 'h"""s L. Gt ll1van. o\et .cl. oi "31 81r ~~~°"?~. H~~·;..,nr;~ ~~c::on?·~u~l.~"~: jall1v1n' d•.,ontt tS. JI M Honnell, •e•a1 Gt lltv•n. Miry We1lon; mot~r. 141 Ga!ltv•n; brolt'ltrs. Winl•m, Pllriclt,
"Ol"llt tnd Col. Robt<i G1ll1w1n1 tll!f rs, •llltrl,. C•rmlc.r,111. Mtltn Wt•t •nd "•It• M.rv OtStlts. llott ry, 1on1tn1, ','..:!n"loel•Y. l :XI PM. Sml1ns Clltotl. )11;1. 1ulem M•11. TlluriG•Y, IC o\M, 1'$ Simon • Jvcie Ctllfollc Cnureti. lnlt•mt'1!. Good ,•eohtrci Ctm"""'· Sml11'11 Morlu1ry, Joretlct1. t(ILLt..t,M
:J:l<o!hv Kllli1n. ""' ~. of lll·O Avtnida ":~"'{t s~;..,~;: :H~~.t>':~~ fo11~'~:
c/llitn; dtU•llTt r, MTS. Dory Ann $wt!!, :m.1• Meo•; brct~r. Robert GU!Mi'l,
•ttno. Prlv11t 1orvius wtrt lltlCI Tues·
hv 8! McCormldl L111un1 l11cll Jor!u8ry. .. OW.LL l<.O.rl 8Ktl.1mln Powell J r. Att "5, of •U ~ Oce1n Front. Hewpert l11c11. C1'1rt..-
-.emt1e<-OI NewPOrt lttdl 8POE ... o. 161: Am•rl<•n LNlon; C1lllo•nl1 Sttlt ~~r ... na lltltret In 81nl!ruolcv o\uocl•·
""· 01!t of 011111, MI Y 15. Surv!yecl by •,ft, Ellllbeth; 1011, R-rl lH1•refKO! ~~~e11 Jo1>~•w,::.~,r~::c"jr. "':n~•uz~i::;:
t<l(llit•n; !wo or.1n<1cr.lkfr1n. 5ot'TVICtl "d in!t...,,ent wll! M prlvl lt . Bl lh"
·o,0<"01 ~I M".to~'lfl~tl'i Dlrltdor1.
:~in1 Rodrit utl. lC'lJ Llmt Av~ .. l-'Pac~. Ollt ol de1111. M.lv 7.S. SuTVIVf!d
•v son. Morrl1 Merrit: d1,,.M1r, Ooron.v
~~:ti~ br:i:::· :..:~." tt.~'1":fc'~i,~l'':'"~ V•• Gl1dv1 Bttt l on 1 : tl~M """"'lllldrtn. Sen<<cts. Frld•Y, l PM,
···• F1mllv Colt>nlll Funtr11 tiomt TR YOH ""'t' TTVcn. 7001 E. 81lbo1 Blvd .. !••!loo o.tte ol dttlll, Mtv 25. '•TVICt• "'n<l•nq &t l't clllc View Morlu•r1. VELA
'•"utl Rodtlqueo Vtll. "'" tD. l !Ol'I ""md1lt 51., Hunlin9!on 811cll. Surylv«(
" '""• Juen, of Hunlln<1ton Bt•cll; 11• ''•ndc ll l ldrtn : n!net11n ert8! ··~....iclllldr~n Ros1ry. I PM, Frlciev,
,..,;!hs Cll1otl. 11..,ul•m M11t. S•lurdav.
.:i AM, SI, l!lon•wMlurt C11llolk Cllurcll. rl~•mt~I. Good Sr.eol'l9rd CtmNlrv. 1..,,;_ Mortu1ry, Oirttlorl.
ARBUCKLE & SON
IVESTCLIFF MORTUARY
427 E. 17th St., Costa Ate1a
"'"'™ • BALTZ MORTUARIES
Coro na del J\tar 671-9450
Costa ~tesa . 646-tuf • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway. Co1ila l\teu
LI ~3433 • l\fcCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1795 Laguna Canyon Rd.
494-9415 • PACIFIC VIEIV
MEMORIAL PARIC
~metery Atortuary
Chapel
3500 Pacific View Drl\lt:
Newport Beach, CIJl(ornl1 u .. 11oe • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
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Westminster 813-35!5 • SMITH'S MORTUARY
C7 Main St.
536-6539
RW&tlng&on B4iaclll
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HURRYINITAKEADVANTAGE
OF WARDS HOLIDAY SAVINGS
-..
DAILY PILOT J
S.lLI $TAJT$ TMUISllAY .,, INDS SAlURD.lY, MAY29.
HURRY, SOME QUllNTITIU LIMITED!
Wl .~~'"!·'i~ fine redwood furni!ure
L I I
Group includes .C metal-framed arm·
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REG. 59.95 LAWN SWING., 49.88
REG. 19.95 CHAISE.,.,.,,. 17.11
\HOP MON THRU \AT ~U 9 10
IHOr IUNDAY 11 TO S PM'
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.8~7922
NORWllLK
imperiol ot nonwolk ~-
861.()911
$5 saving on weather-resistant arm chair!
Fine quality redwood frame 8 8
hos weather-fesistont ~aler.
Soff, tufted vinyl cushions hoye
f oam filling for comfort.
REGULAR 14.99 MATCHING
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88
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FULLERTON horbor at on:irigethorpe
OM 11'-87'·'25()()
HUNTINGTON IEllCH
ediriqt:r at beach boultvord
phone 71,-892-6611
SANTAANA
bn,tol ot leYen~•nth
phone 5'7·6841
VENTURA
SOO sovth mill, rood
'85·5.C21 6'2·75 .. l
• 'Reg. 84.991 In·
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plus table ".Ill in
one p iece!
74as
t20 off 5-pc. &arliecue set!
Reg. 119.as red-9918 wood set hos 54"'
toh1e, 4 benches.
37.99, 7' UMBRELLA •••••.• 32.88
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SQ. YD.
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Spectacular sayings on beautiful 100o/o
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Trained e xperts ore on hand to
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EW1wr+•MWr 1 ......
EXPERT INSTAUATION AVAILABLE
. PllNORAMA CITY
tobios of roscoe
,,. 89.t-8211
CANOGA PARK
,.,...., .. plo••
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ROSEMEAD
ros.meod blvd. ol son bernordino
frn wo -pf.one 573.JllO
COVINA
borronco ot ton bltfnordillo
fr•ewoy-pMn• 966-7,11
..
• • • • • • • •
• • • 1
' ' • ' ' • •
• • • ' • ..
:..; , • • • i • l ..
i • ~ • ' ' ~ ' ~
' ..
'• .,
" .. .. ,, .,
.j
• ' • • ' • • • • • ' ' • • '
' l ' ' l
l
l ... !
... . . . . .
l.t DAILY PILOT
S'taper Person' Su1nnier Class Set
U CI Mathematician Wins Award IRVINE -UC Irvine will sessions are now being •c-
offer tYi"O sbt-week summer cepted by lhe Office or Sum-
mer Sessions. 1325 Crawford
sessioru lhis year. }fall. University of California,
JRVlNE -~1athemauc1an
a.marct R. Gtlbaum Tuesday
night bee.amt the first reci -
;'ient or thf: UC lrvtne Alumni
"ssociation 's ''Ex-
~raordinari1111 .Award."
l Dr. Gelbaum, Newport
~each, was ooe of 14 honored
lor achieve1nent and service ' ' a Lauds and Laurels Ban-
qllet in Airporter Inn.
Gelbaum, e charter member
of the UC I faculty . 1 s
chairman of the Academic
Senate and assoc:iate dean of
physical sciences.
T h e "extraordinaripus"
a11·ard will be made annually
to ·any member of the cam·
pu s community ~·ho through
his achievements . personality
and service makeS lr1'i11t un i·
que by his being there"
OPEN
DAILY
9-9
SATURDAY
9 'Iii 6
SUNDAY·
10 'Iii 5
llctord1ng to the a I u m n I
association.
The award d r3 i g n ate s
Gelbaum as a "super pers011''
at UCI recognizing his con·
tribution in building the math
department into "one of the
most highly regarded in the
nation ."
Another top award, the CJta.
lion of fiterit, went lo John B.
Lawson , 63. Laguna Niguel.
executive vice president of
Aerospace and D e f e n s e
Systems Operations O( the
Philco-Ford Corp.
La~·son, president or the
UCl Foundation. ~·as honored
for continuing service and ob-
tai ning support for I he
University.
Two Outstanding Seniors
~ere named, Fernando
M8.$Simlno of •'ullertan and
John Ji•lverson of Redwood
City.
~fassimino was student body
president last year and All·
American watP:r polo player.
Halverson, a blind student,
chairs the academic affairs
<."<Ommlttee of the Asssociated
Student Senate.
Massimino also recejved the
Outstanding Athlete award.
Other students honored
were ·
-Frederick Engbarlh of
F'ullerton who received the
avrard for University Service
for his actil'ities as student
counselor and ombudsman.
-Carolyn \Vatanabe of
Tustin, community serl'ice
award for her work as
<."hairman of the s l u d e n I
operated Community Projects
Office.
Other facuny m e m b e r s
honored included :
-Or. J. Edward Berk,
Laguna Hills, chairman and
professor of medicine, for
community services.
-Dr. Peter Colaclldes, pro-
fessor of classics. f o r
distinguished faculty teaching.
-Dr. Gale A. Granger,
Irvine , associate professor of
molecular biology and bio
chemistry, for distinguished
faeully research.
A UCI staff member was
cited for university service.
She is Jan J en k ins ,
coordinator of special projects
in the student affairs office.
Alumna of the Year is Dia
Dorsey of Tustin, president of
The first session will rw1 Irvine. Calif. 92664. The ap-
the UCJ Alumni AssociaU6h. from June 21 lo July 28 and plication to register should be
Other alumni honored were : the second session will be submitted with a $10 at
-Diana Janas of Newport from July 29 to Sept. 3. A slu· plication fee. Deadline for flf.
Beach, for university service. dent enrolling in both sessions ing an application lo register
_ Patrick McNulty of San will be able to complete 16 for the first session is June 8
units of course work, the and deadline for the second
Clemente, w r I 1 e r and equivalent or one quarter's session is July 6. A student afl.
magazine editor, for work. tending both sessions will need
mother to two children for pre-, -~=~~~z:~~~:!__.Pi~A~p~p~li~ca~u~-o~ns~~fo~r-~b~o~l~h~~to~a~p~p~ly~o~n~ly~o~r~\C~e-;;_;;;;;;;;~ achievement. r
Special recognition w a ~
given Mrs . Barbara Hall
Towne or Santa Ana, honor
student and president of the
senior class of the College of
Medicine.
The award honors Mrs.
Towne's academic reco rd
earned while servinJ: as fosler
mother the two children. She
returned to college for pre·
medical training at UCI and
plans a career in pediatrics.
Sl l\IMER!
1 . , , Let 01u· Cont puter
' Do the WOl'k rot' you!
Computerized llllln9,
Acc.ountin9 Dato Proc.nsfn9
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' DAILY ,IL O'f
Major J?isorders Rock Stanford,. Campus
By DUSTON HARVEY
STANFORD !UPI ) -While
Jllajor • disorders hfve been
fe w on most America n cam.
pules this year. Stanford
Vniverslty has experienced a
~ghtmare of bombings, arson
and vandalism.
• Since Jan. I. there have
been more than 20 violent
episodes al the 11,500-stu dent
;Private university, long known
;as a ''rich man 's 11chool.'' The
:Mmage has bctn estimated at
4250.CJOO.plus.
The worst occurred in a
~hree-week perlod last month
·-a destructive hospital ram-
page, a dorm rite, bombing 0£
lhe president's offlet and
Jirebombing of police head-
~uartesr.
lts shart or ctmpus turmoil ln
recent years.
But this year the university
40 miles south of 5an Fran-
cisco has been almost the only
major campus 'o\ith conti.nuous
troubles.
In January. antiwar
militants prevented Henry
Cabot Lodge from speaking.
The foilo'o\'ing month, pro-
testers briefly seized the csm-
pus computer center, a youth
was shot in the leg by an
unidentified assailant, arson
attempts occurred al an
ROTC facility and head·
quarters of a conserv ative
Organization and v a n d a J i;
broke $13.500 worth of win·
dows.
American nuerosuraeon incl a
black janitor led to a sit-In.
Arter 30 hours or negotia·
lions, the university called in
police and ordtrcd the pr<>-
test.ers out. In the ensuing
fracas, 17 per;,ons wr.re in·
jurecl, 23 arresttd and $100,000
in damage occurred at the
hospilal.
beating of a hospital e.mploye
at her home , and numerow
bomb and death thr eata.
Despite alt, classes go on as
normal. Students and pr<>-
fessors fill the tennis ocurl!I,
lounge outside c I a s s r o o m
buildings, and stroll and bl·
cycle sedately across the
sprawling campus.
But there is a dcfinile
undercurrent or concern -
described variously as ten:ilon,
insecurity, (ear or edginess.
··There is no one issue, and
'A'hen a dorm burns up. il"s a
scary thing, because there·s
no rationale."' said Felicity
Barringer. editor of !he Stan·
ford Daily.
four recent1y-e lecled student
pre1ide.nta. "The campus is M\
vulnerable. Rut il's not like
last year. You don'l fttl
there 's a movement."
N<1te McBride, one of two
studying stude n ts who
disoverecl the predawn fi re at
the dorm itory. at Junipern
House, added : ,;This is far dif·
fcrent from sett ing a truck or
motorcycle on fire. If one of
us had not seen it, a lot of us
would bt> dead . That's not va n·
da llsm ; that's murder."
Two major quest i on s
haven't been answered -why
Stanford"! <1nd wno·s responsi·
bte for the terror'.'
Bay Area for some time. "We
seem to be the prime tar1et
this week,'' he ad ded.
Lyman and campui faction:i
on both the left ind rtghl
blame outsiders for ptirt of the
violence -an d bl11me each
olher for Stanford"s problem~.
"Maybe part of the reason is
tha t Stanford is conside red a
rich man's sc hool, a very
•slabll shment and e 1 i I I s t
place," suggested Ann Kim·
bait, a member of the student
council of pres idents.
FA1UI L\' CIRCUS
Stan ford, long kno~n for its
Ji iizh tuition, academic ex-
~ellence and spr a wli n g
Spa nish-style campu.s. has had
The violefice kept building
lpto the spring.
A dispute at lhf' Stanford
Medical Center O\'er the
dismissal of a f\l exican·
ln the ensuing three weeks,
terrori st activity included the
explosion of a time bomb
n1ade of military plastic ex·
plosive in lhe aUic of Presi·
dent Richard I.yman's office,
which caused $25,000 damage:
an arson fire in a dormitory,
which caused SS0.000 lo $75,000
damage aod endangered 75
sleeping students; an abortive
efforl to firebomb the campus
police station : a sni per attack
on a ca mpus power subsla·
lion: SS.000 in vandalism 11t a
campus pharmacy; the
"You can't help feeling
scared >A·hcn a dor mitory
lounge is blown up . car lirrs
are slashed. and the
president's office is bombed,"
said Larry Diamond, one of
l.yman said St a n f o rd 's
widespread campus with its
dozens of approaches made
pre\·enlion diUicl•ll and noted
thrre '"is and has been a small
~roup advocalinit v i o I e n t
means" in the San Francisco
Diane fields. a b I a ck
member of the Student
Presidc.nls Council, blamed
the dorm fire on right.wingers
responding to the bombing of
the president"s office and
other terrorist acts credited to
the revolutionary lrrt. About 11
third of the dorm "s residenll
are bh~c-k .
"That's my Grandma . She use d to be my daddy's
mother w hen he was I it tie."
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PRICU lfFICTIVI MAY 27th, 21th, 29th THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATORDA~
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Wtdnrsday, M1y 26, 1971 DAILY PILOT JI 5 \\'rdn tsday, May 26, 1971 s
del Mar High School Achi~vers ~ Re~ogniz~d.
C d I 'f IU•' Sc'"! 1 ..... !Nt l~lllM C.-n "wal'd. r,,lor. Krllll" Tool •nd l'Mtlhfr OOVE•NOa•s lC~LAllS ICHOLAlllHl'I Rttenti• Stftol•rthl• IJC ''"'''"' lerl'l•111o Vor'llllll MI Ml'I, Vlttlfllt f1NIOY•$' A11D(!tlloru Jef\11 Pt!""'' O(Olla e ll It ... llUU 1111 811/Kll <tfOC1 l,llfl\O Awltf lit Ille W'1:11,.orlll. lh'l ll M A'" Lucl""I I IJ 111 I I , Ot•ld .. !SQ.Oii, lllll lld\Oll'11!hll l<I l rent llutMU, Vn\•1nlty 91 11W1 M(lffll, (H!I Mfll·N-1 >ii•-Lion• has recognized outataitdlna Ml'll« w1111 ,... 111..., .. 1 mo11•1t1M at.iii M1n 1ro11 c~ ""'' •• ro 1"" 111~•· Ell••· K1nno111 lll11111r, UCLA~ a,1911,,.. "'°"'n ll11lvlf•i•v, i•Mt 111111011, u111,,,~,., o1 ~t~'• 0,,, •-· Nldl 111.... tuwin E,.i l!w T~•°"· c 1111or1111 s.,,,...
............ , -'"•,••~,,',·'.'~, .. VI~~·-'. =.:':i\1r-~ll~11~":., a::ril tnar~:~ J•:: $::~1ot1twto_,•~~"(' ~r':.nd' .. n•n, CoCr~~ U .. nlv•r1lry 11>11 U lr.11.... ' ,0,lt,;t'~,'u,l .S~YMO':_~;:, ,,",.,·'·-~~~.··Q~ kl'lrKll. LM ttc.rd, OeMile !No"'*I, ~·c:.~~l I~~:. ~-0.i~~~ achievements by students dur· M Y •• w · -""r tr1l11, Mlltt Wv-· Rld'larCI Day, C"-'d c r1mt111w, or.. ,, ,-,,.,.• ~~"~ .. '.·,,',",',",.",·,.~,,M•"c'•','". nd .__ ,...d ....-1 1111 C:lo.Hi: 1111111 ..nlw Dov In tc"61•1ll( ""'W.. Cl~ s•aLa•Al•ll Ro~. , Id. Nll\llMlll/ ,,.,t•,:::1 ~II~~':"°'~ C~tfl ,i!,'~T~tt
Ing
'
"-l'7().lt Schoo( year .... n1, llhl9tk1 ~ lucHrthl•, Dkk Ctrlllltiln of lf1e rMmllt'rslll• II'! IM A'• wllll IMM I 'll Shift Co•. O!eni Stanford n ""sllY. Collftlt Fl~l1d11, Ktn TltlfY, Johns HoPklnt ,,,... it.., ~ --~Hall-I ,,...,It '~K. !",,·,,, '"-" ,_C1ut,'od •,:: lit: • Dav. C1lltornl1 kMl1.,111,. FederUlllO'I To Dl.,,I, Jl'ff Clllld •Rd l(artn titlMg. Clli aman Coll"•· C1rW!lln Collett: Diet. Dtv, ~11/lforcl I I d I t Y lallo1id;cot!f M•~":,1 Leagw; Jan"' o' A "-d (I l"TA Awtrl, fol' pu!ll&l'dl"' I'~ M1r• Aldrlch. M••lltf: •11.,., Joi MONOll AT llllTUNCll It~•! Frl1 .. ~. O~t Un~1l1¥1 IJnl-..rtllY. uC..'f-..~'1 ty~ •wtr or "" • II• l•l ,.·:~ mong 1111: gr a u a n g .,.,1 ........ ., •• l(H c1ue. 1.1rrv • .. '''"'""· Clnclf lotlorl. (l•U<ll• c....... Sil .... ior. l'llVI DltA ldmlllH 10 Do<! l(llll1n, """ 1dw1tol'lt. lo ""' 5!UMFlll •lnALl'lf I' l'l •I•' 1 11 ll' $1-111tft. S.V•O!tl1>m •11 .:• I ed I do f ~•r!clent, 1nc1 l'IP '""'"' Ml•I ~n Jtfl' Clil ld •1c11ird o.,, 11:11111ten c.i1ttt .. 1111 r-1 11 "'"aft(• The\' C11er1ae $It•• U11l~ittv1 TIOWo reij,, Cllll0tni. Stll!t ki..11 .. l'l!•t .,..,, 11 .. .,.1111 no ir~ ~•: ve c1...w k ttorl N111 ... 11 Cl'l.ld1., .-•.gen\ors Se ect Or Zen.II 0 Wll !IOll. Fil:. Cl\lld h.rlm"""'"· •lcll•rd L"' 1~· Ml•k Al'llrlcll. IJnl,..ralfv of I.IC lan!t l1rlMlr111 1(1,1rt ltl'l,ll'l\lllloli. •""'l'CIM lo Dt.,ld 8t"'-''°"· M l'lfm•-· JunlO' Dtl C 1 Atllelf \••t.,.11 t.,11111 l t "Y· L.-•I woll•1 l'• ... 1111 hll>MI Art Aw1Nll11 P1I ,.. I.Olli.. Vl,glnl1 MtlGn. l(tfl P0tll1nd l Jt lc:Pltrd O~y, USCi COllltlt Nil 1ctiolerlh o It IJ(lAI ll"ntY, Jeff Clllld, IC1111rea Cltrk, Sr.Ye Hoflmon, !lioutllt rn C• llorn o Junior u f &tf<l«•tr 111<1 Nini P1r•tr. Glrlr
awards \\'ere two who were Ar<ll••· t_or.n D111kln1 R I< 11 1 r 11 N1111r. Nine "•••J•, Je•111 stenlon, Fltil•IOtS, cn1om1n 01!~1 c.r .. Lolu. Cler...,an1 M1n'1 Collett Co•. Ad111 .. ,m,111r Tint K•auo, •~i.n l.••ou" Kutllntr, Dan LNI, A'f;Jttt Mt.-,d1m1, Sten Vtrmund, Tamml1 W1t1, Grtt ·Cti.d Grlm1h1•" U lttli:lltYI J1ntt I nd $l1nl .. d UnlYt~l'I Vlt1l11la l n11bll/I Otlt, •kh1rd 01ykMlcn11I Cl1ttkt URlf)tl! flYt 'fllompl(ln, Nlllon1I Dick C1v, Ntwparl HI'"°' Cht me.r
l·eco<>nized nine ( 1' me S , Marll\11\ McG1vreri, DooA M1lllm1n, ltOH, C1!hY Lock ... r!, $1tYt Cox Ind Sla~ton.. Unl~rtllY of Sentt CJ1r1, Ind Ml~. Wllltlltr Ctll1tt1 Grtt Otboorne, Fox. Kl~uko ICum1me!o. l int' "u1, Ltttu1 of Amt rlc1n Ptn Womt lll of Camm.,ce t "d ~/ltd Gtl,,,./\l '#o " llm MtltOA. R1cl!elle Pllltl>ltl"f, Ml•• Ktn Tl!11v, l(orfr.cl Cltr11. 1Jnlv1rtlir ot ll:tdl1ndt. T1•t1 C~rl1!1111 IJ11lv1tt1l1J; Grit ll0>1. An11t L1Monltt.,., c..., LJm1, lrvct 1(111,.d Cl1r1, C11ltor11l1 School ROii,.., Clut> ~<holt1Sll•P Leading the senior class in,1 ----'--'-----'------'------------------------------------'-~=-~='-"=-==~~==-'---'-'----'-=-'--------
av.•ards were Ched Grimshaw
and KenneLh Neisser.
Richard Day tool( eig ht
honors and another senior.
Sten Vermur\d, re ceived six
awards during the evening, All
.fou r are life members of
:California Scholarship Federa·
tion and Neisse-and VennWld
have maintained perfect A
:.averages during their high
ischool careen.
Follo\\'in& is a complele
'listing of the students selected
for awards;
SCHOOL Sfll:VICI AWAltD$
Your11 for Ulld•rtlllldlna: Ltn•
J1coo11an, of !'"IOtn,
.-.mor(tl n Fl.ill S1rvlc1: Anno !1011t·
tl1r ot l'r1nc1, Ell Fure ol Norwey,
Frl•w Ktltmu of Elhl0!>1• 1nd C1n110
RDdrlqu11 al Cot!• Rite.
Soollom0t•1: Mtl1nlt Mlnll, Ntncv
l'lwlik, l.orn• Vo"°•ll 1nd Mlt1>1t1
w11111m1,
Junlon: Monl<I Curotl!fr, Pll\CI Ho,
Lind• J1cobu1. Jim Luu. M•rl• RICCI
•fltl G1t111n ~vmond1.
c1~~1"'6ii10~/;:: :::~~· t:1~:!v.'1~~~/
l wbtt, C•lhtrlnt Mlcheolt, lt1n Neiner, Rtt>tcc~ !>Ou,., ~ltn Vtrmuna
•nd M•rll,n Willson.
co.-.RY M.-.11:cM AW.1.110
Cl!t<I Grlm1n1w, '"' ou11tMM1lit11 $cl!oo1 S•"•lc•.
SCHOOL .-.WAllOj
1.!,l~r~~~'..c'::ry ~~~:va;,,i;:::,rit~r.
Cfftltr lttll11lden.
Dram1: Jtlltr1011 Loubtl 1na Kim llltH, th• Or1m.a AWt rO\ Jim Rell!
t l'lll Klm 8ttH , !In t 1n11tl1111.
l llflktr ti It. Yttr: K°"'rld Cll'k.
Drlll Tt4m: LYM Mlll1tt, lrlOO/llllt ot tho Year; L\fldt J1<obus, .MtrcMr
of !ht V11r.
P1p s11u•d • Fl1qtwlr1en -C~nll!il Mlc,..11., C11n, Mlcl11t l1. Penny Gt•ttow. Evtl•n Tutktrm1n. S.01..,ig
$1Qfl , Htldl MllCflo.
Vtr\llV Cllttrltlatrs Ot t>bl Mlllloll•na. Marflyn Wlllton. MlrY J1n-
nilon, Si ndy Holsltln, Cin.,. OolP"'"·
c:~":!l~dt~'11,i; J,u:101~."T~~~ s~:;!~
M•M1 Smith, JIU Custtr.
J . v, Cl!Hrlfflltr1 -$11111 HodOf, Klnul<o K11m1mo10. Joannt B1rnler.
LI.a Grrl\1rl, 1(11h1 Pu•morl, Ml'll
RICCI.
V•"l!Y Chttfletd'-r of 111• v••r I• Dfbt>lt Mllkoll•11d. J. V. chttrlt1dt1 of '"• Ytl r !1 M1rlt Rl~ct. Fieo,..,irle• o! 11>1 Y•l r 11 Cllllv Mlc1'11eh. Sonolltd•r
"' th• year II N•nc:' Sml!n.
Drcl!e1ll' Jin Friend, m"'I outlla"· ding ••"lo• i nd WhltfltY Terry, m<11I
lnN1lrlllontl d•nc".
Otrl1' LtlfUt: Ct blntl membett are S!1nc:le AOOOtl, l(lm ltlu, l(erry (un·
11lnohfm, S!KY OtNt11!, Mery Holt111d, Lindi Jlcllb<ll. Ktrlt l(llltftr, Gwin
S•-rt· LOUIN 5-1""''" L I u r I 5ock,k:ltr, GllU1n Svmar>dt. Anri Tucker, J1nlct Trevett. Ht•tl!tr
v1111sw..,.111 1no e111ni1 M111lt r.
Olllct rs 1rr· Mtlanle $fltll, tie.rd c/\alrmtn: Nin• Ptrk•r. tr1a1uror. Tu,.., Witt, s.e<;rlltrv. Chrlt l)le!1. vltt ornld111r, tf\d Dtbblt Sl>•lll'Otl, ornl-
Otnt.
J..,m1H1m: Ntw1m~~er of ll•t v~.,
'"'' M1mmlt't M1nllclt t nd B•a!I S11tl1 •cntittd IN! IWll'd l(trl K!!ltler II Outll1ndl11<1 Journ1!!1I Ind Otvia O•PP•• .. c11v.a tile 1(1tny Coomb• .-. ... ,·o.
Hem1m1kln1: Coll Hlll1r•n. ltllv
Crocktr Hon>em11t1~ of l omorrO'W.
N1n<Y Oschn1•, (rlico Ot.h!1nlllno S!udtnl In Homt EcOl\llmlct .
Muoi<: Robt'! L11nd, John Ph111t Sou•• Bind .-.wu<1; K1v MorrllMI. N• t1on1t Orch1H!r1 1'nocltrlan. 1n<1 M••I< Aldrich •nd MtllJ11 Ttnnlllt, OUht•n·
dlll!I Cllo••I Mt mtltro.
1u1ln111 Iduc1111n, S.Opl!omOf•l -lllt!Kt.1 $al\Chtr. typlf'IO 1nd J 1nlltT
Sw1n1on. 1ccoun!lllQ.
Ju111o•s -J11nflt H1\I, !Ypina; ~bOr•ll CQO!I, \hortll1n!I; J•flrtv John1"" 1nd Ellinr Slla•r, 1ccountrno.
5rnlor• -Glil Ml111ao. 1tcrr!~rl1I; Otlll1 Ann~ Rie-o, ct~rk~I; N1ncv
r.unWI•. di•trltwtlve , e<luct11o", I nd .1.n<1ro1 s1111. 1ccoun•1no.
Q111111ndlna t>u1lnt n stuarn!, .-.ndtta
Downlno SI•'• 1o~1' Atftlttlcl' Fou•·w•r Y1rill'o' lellt•mt n -Ktn N1ln 1r, re11n\t. tnd l(ur l K•molKlll,. 1wlmm1na 1nd Wiii!'
~lo.
l.tJttr wlnntrt wl!ll ltlf l'llQl\rtl o"dt tioln! 1v.,.1H ltKlude flv' t•llhmon Wlll'I ptr!tcl lfft )IM·A l~t"89fl \~.al;
Simon Bout l'I••· Rlcn1rd 8u,.11u . Jolln L .... 1 •• Mltl\111 Mu•tnlltr I nd ltobtr1
Cc•. S.OD110mor1 -(;rtQ Wa111ct, J.t
overao1. Ju11lor -John l l1noltd. J.t 1vtr10t.
Serilorl -Kt n Mtl1Mr 1nd Shin Vt r-
rriund. botn • O.
OUTST.-.M01HQ SCHOL.-,llS
!Iv dop1rt ... ent. lht wl1t1na1,...
1rudtnh tKOC111l1td tor t<:hOlatllc
i cl'lltvimtnl 1rt: oocl•! ~cl1nc1, Cltudl• Ctr~er; 1Clt nc t, Cl•H-C"' ltOlt' m1tntmit1t1, Cl'ltll Grlm1h1w,
•no i;11q111n. Clnd• 10,11or1.1tn< (l•og St•n Vermund, "°'~I tc •• l ot.I foreign lontv••tl. 1'ndre1 S!lll,
11 1,;,,1 Nancy Ocn1nt:r, ho m • • ~~ ti. i nd S!tYI l tt11r. lfldu•l•llT
1rtt . • • ltn~ ti Amtrlc• Pt•••• w•nnort 1rt:
t:
•nMlll Nt lutr. 1cltnct I nd
i thima11ct; Ml l'I< Aldrich. lint; •j",\
111.i ~!onion. llbrrl! trll, an t
l'llld. vec:etlen•I 1•11 .
• 1'mtrlc•n L1tlo11 rtcot11ltlan le Jol'ln l linoltd Bor•' STiit dtltt•I• tnd Jl.Urld siort, Glrl1' STiit d•lt11!t.
• • 1 MOIA .l.'"trdl ortunltd 11¥ tn~ t•~oni to Rcllfrl M1caon1ld 1110 Suri
rltlld, lrtohmtn: Su• K11l •11<1 C1iv Ollfl $111>1\omllft • M1 r10 Rina 111<1 """ 'Miit s. 1un1cr$, 1nd J1ntt Stinton
•1'111 Kt•I Kllltter, HlllDrt.
, .1.llo .1.rc~llKlur1I onl•R Comce1itlcn
.,lnnrri· Sltvf ll!tlfrl il•tl Plttt 111<1
jht ran Adamt. !hlrd o •ct.
Cl•llf' Mtdi llle11 1'we•d lo 111~ 'OP i-.duttr!tl irll 1tudt11I, Sll •t S'"tll.
, Nolrt 01"'1 .1.1-!ll Awtrd to !ht
• ullttndlng 1unlor boQy, Jim Coll.
Ht""'r illottlN Caftlt r Mtrc~an!' }u <11Jttklll recoonl•ecl IOU' ltl'llDF\ l'll/llllnl"1 a Ptrl«I I I t f I f h I . A
1.,1,1 .. , lndY 9011or1" Ken N1!1w "
,1.,.1 5!an!OI\ ind SI"' vermuMI.
• L.I. Ar1 Ctll'ltr c.urw rKoanllklrl al lt~rll'-,t,lldtrton t nd Robin Ward. H1llm1rlt Art Clllletl. E Y t 1~omo10t1, t1r1t ollct wtnntr.
, SPO•Tli ILLUSTllATED, .-,w1td fl M1r1! fl'lr 1n1111t"°ll~''' t11Hn1,
Mtrllff .-.111n.
• YlltftM 1! 1'""1911 Wll"I t.PlfCll
l ontti! win""'" (lltl Jo.t>nton ind
f::Ollrtd Clerk,
• K11 clwbHr el '"' Yt1•, cn1d C,rirn\1!1w
• Goo~ Cllh1" "'"'"' o1 1111 Ctu~~tt" 6r tnt .-.mf'l<•n lte~olullon, M11!1'n
t<m•""· • ltMI Dlrl of 1111 Yttt, W"H ntY Ttr• ... • L..., MHkl Awt•• {ll!dt rul t 1w1•d)
In cuttllndlnt !unlOf ah1atn1 I" mft!ll ..., 1tlentt, Vtitrlt 1(11• I nd P1ul
Htlnery. lllllm•n al Ill• Y11r, .Ju11101 Acllltvtmtnl ot $0utnlfn Ct h!0<nl1,
Chlld Grlm1h1w.
o..iit111<1lnt 1!uden11 I" tcrtlon ''"l.Wlti lrt' 5•1111"1 -K"""tll Nt u er 1MI J""' ~11n1or1; Frtn.c:ll -C,ll'ld~ l(""a; (lrm111 -llOllUI FrlUtllt
1111! G•etOl'Y 11011; Le!\n -Lullt ! 11>111 •nll 01n llt"'1!f.
SPECIAL .-,w.1.1105
•ink fl •mtr1CI C1rtllk1t1 Win"'"
t re· cnfd Grn.,.111'"· m1tll; llltlltrd
• L11, lt t tr1IOO Jdtnet 1 Sutltl Mulk.,., mu1lc Evt Tl'lom•IOI\ t rt Clll'lt rlnt
Ebv, ~•tma. Luc:lndl l.o"i1trl. E"'lllh. '
Choir No111iu e~
Sue Peterton of Costa Mesa ,
1 freshman at California
Lutheren College , Thousand
Oa k5, h11s been selected for
INSTANT
COFFEE
DISPLAY THE AMERICAN FLAG PROUDLY
3x5 Ft. Flag Kit
Pliers w1sHmH
P£H5UIN -[~~it he~1 f
p!ated~gainst 2 49 rorrnsrn~.
Rt1.2.IS •
~:::.Tackle Box
11 ••· Siii Favor
£Mlc•e• f1r1it111
hlisll.
2211. GIANT Siil Ivory
LIQUID
D!TllGENT
12" x 25 Fl. Sill:
Reynolds
WRAP
Alaal11m ftD
Straw Holder
P\alic -witll SO cal-
or1ut ~. F1111 tor
r.ummer co1d drink!; lllld
:,odi' •
Beach Towels
Jacquard 111ovPn •••
r.olcrtul pattetns • , •
<il.;o a:;sorted design~ tolorfas1 cntton. Jointrd
b tt poll'. Golden ornd-
me~t. wa!I lr.Y:~fl lrir
111oun11nr. W/8rochu1e
on tilt! tlar,. liyCOllMAN £r..J Portability.
~~ wh11e. \\'1th !ringed 1 88 end •. larg~ s11e.
llei. 1.19 •
3.79
12" x 18" Flag ••••• 39'
llf. ll.ll #lll
Fielder's Glove
SPALDING -"ltlc• P•trMelll'"
Mfdlw"' SIN 9ltvt
wltti 1pUt octlo11 wtb.
F111I Jeother llnl119, Tti•"'b lotp • 5"
-------~ Fielder's Glove
"OfflCIAl All STAR"
Softball 1,s,1to•H1
12" K.!pok Ctl!-
ler. Tough r11bbtt·
hilltcov~.
-..
1.75
SPAlDI"
·Baseball Bat
!)ark l:rDWll 1i~
isl. gollb30diTI!-
3Z"·35" Len~ll\.
2.39
"OFFICIAL LITTll llAGU£"
s'""'I Baseball
Cus~ioned cart
center, ~igh JrRde
wcol yarn wil!d1ng~.
1.98
SPALDllilC
Softball Bat
Cluf 11atural
fmisll. JJ" & 2 29 ~~~ .
I.
•
ANCHOR HOCKlNG
Glassware
"Stowaways"
.•• -a«._" •••.•
CIRAMIC
Cookie Jars
:II!
Baby Siar. Baby liG.i or
B¥11 Uepllam. Attracfr1e
Colors -~~ to 10·· Hi•h·
: C.•• 3.49 ""··--
Oi\'1 Pt. f:mi(.
:1425£41!
12.69
Large, attraclive
:.trlt-~ in llr~hant
t.alor:i. Vauousstyles
lo c11oo1~ lrcm. JO x
60" s11e. lier.
•.•. 32.15fl4127 .88 2.99
IAUll I llACK
Swim Supports
Economy Styl~ 11
••• last dry1na:
1;otton.
SizesS·M L
99c
OefuxeSt~le •••
t~st drying 111·
lon. Siie S-M L
Zories
All-American Frisbee l
lOOna; IGt Sunrmrr.
l1dlt1'
C•Hdr11's ai d M11's
•r WKAM·O ••• Red, \\'hilt illd 1 29 ! Blue II lhe; ~lra1gh!, boom·
.,-anas aotl tur;e •. fun! , 19c 29c
"Punch Me" Clown
NEWl'o•r llACH
lt2t lrvlnt ""I. w.-1cHH Plllt
HVNT lNGTDN II.I.CH
lo dl lftt & ...... llllMI
HVNTINOTDN 11.-.CH
S'°""'1i. & ••l11ttr
Ass't Boats
19§**!
H01"• t •UNDAV
ft11!"1iiil
'
LADIES'
•
Flower
201111
Pr!lty and Col-
~tlul. 59c
--~.· c.n.~ ·Miker I ,,
' totl -"'The BrMI"' I, Ht11 ns ist.lt glass •••
dear1ted b>wl wit~ etrp
i: markings, sfll1dy Ktl.tind, ~ total proof ~l~~ttc h.lndle. I #DIP 2.89 I -··--.!
PORTABLE Black & White TV
MllACHl -All lraosistor designed
I~ driving, camping, lmlini. COm· 119es ~xi, 38 ~q. inch piclu1t.
Rtf. 121.95 fl IC.SC
~;:'.:.~!~~~~;,;,;_STANDARD.
mum SG11Dd. PhollOgrapll & tape 45ss .. rei:oidef tabs prOYJded. Walmrt
11ni~h. 111. 51.15 1 Sll10?5'
AM/FM Cassette Recorder
ICAlTONC -"Soumlesign" •••
Pu>h button controls, rtn'Kfte m1~.ti
tll'/Sland. Black, walnilt trim .
• .,. '4.15 # 1131 3995
Tape Recorder
tlDIElCO -Push liuttM ooeratM.
Automatic rrcofd level. Rith soaOO.
#1121 3995
PoLA101u Focused Flash 49es
CAM£1A -C:O!or
& Mack & while picture,,
lot. !I.II
27.88
FREE 5x7
ENLARGEMENT .,_.
Ccltrpoa J'iU lit retinc~
willl '"' roll af IC.Giit-
""' (120, 111, 121,' 1351 film •bot for
develo~ng and printinc.
OFFEI COOO Af
SAV-GN ONlT
MAT 21TK-MAY lOTK
lhe tol\ege's so -member •
'Qnccrt Choir. · '--~~~~~~~~..:._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
r
--
'
' .
lf DAIL V PILOT 5
STARTS THURSDAY 10:00 A.M.
COME EARLY-HUNTINGTON C'ENTER 0 NL Y
LIMITED SIZES, 9UANTITIES AND COLORS
WOMEN 'S SPORTSWEAR o,;,. 1.n •• ,_,.
T or1-blou1e1 skirt1
•n lep1nt1 •nd. 1w1at1r1 NOW 288
HAWAIIAN YARDAGE Orlt. Z.6t y4.
Screen print I 00 */. cotton 1 ~~ Ma chine wa1h1bl1 NOW
FURNITURE CLEARANCE
Big 11l1c.tion, big 1avin91, REDUCED Sof11, cha irs, table s,
night 1t1nd1 •.......•.......•..•• TO CLEAR
on,. Js.oo WOMEN 'S PANTSUITS
I 00 Y. Polye1+er, Latest
1tyl11, limited q uanti ty NOW 23.88
WOMEN 'S RAYON PANTSUITS
Ot4t-1 J.00
Solid colors
NOW 9.88
3-PC . POLYESTER PANTSUIT o,;,_ '""
25.88 Pen ts, long 1feeve top plus skirt
l imited quantity NOW
MISSES' DR!SSES Oriq. 11.00 to Jl.00
A11orfed f•bric 1 plus
Poly•1ter too! NOW 6.88 •• 10.88
WOMEN 'S COORDINATED SETS
Ponn pre1t cotton, pink or 1 44 3 99
blu e w 'wh ite check1 NOW ' to e
MATERNITY WEAR o,;9. •.oo t• 22.00
Ore1i11s, pantli end tops 4 88 11 88
l imit ed qu•ntity NOW • to •
ONE AND TWO -PC. SWIMSUITS om,. 1.00 t• 10.00
Al<o '"'"'"P" j•., 5 88 17 88 Mi11e1 & 1ub-teon NOW • to •
WOMEN 'S SPORTSWEAR on,. •.oo •• 1.00
Blouli•l·Knit t opli 3 88
Pe"ts a nd skirts NOW •
JR. AND WOMEN 'S SPORTSWEAR
Otl'll. •.Oo to ,.00
Blouse top1
Skirts and pants NOW 4.88
INFANTS' SUIT AND SHIRTS
For speciel occaliions
Dre11y-,i1e 1-4 NOW
DIAPER SETS
Br ighten up b•by1
w•rdrobe , 1i1e Q. I 8 mos , NOW
INFANTS' L/S TURTLENECK
Good for the cool evenings
or 1ummer ni9hf1 NOW
Orl9. 7.00
2.88
or1,. 4.oo
2.88
Ori9. 1.79
.88
GIRLS' FALLS AND CASCADES
Orl9. 10.00
Makes th• pretty one
look prettier NOW 7.88
GIRLS' TRICIA~AND NINA WIGS
0.1,. 1 t .00
Gre•t for efter swimm ing 17 88
or 1venin9 NOW •
SENIOR CHEMISTRY SET
Mocl ulab, 4 racks, scale,
lamp, 500 ell periment1 NOW
Ori e. 9.t,
7.88
IDEAL MINIMATIC APPLIANCES
C.t rv in9 set i nd blender
with b111 cabinet
ELECTRIC TOY HION
Sefe heat
Ju1t fo r the lit tle hou sew ife.'
NOW
Orl4. 2.99
.88
Orlq. 1.11
.44
STEREO CONSOLE • 0.1,. """
Ea rly Americ an e ncl Mocl11rn. loaded
with e•+r•1 AM FM/FMX 247 00
l on ly NOW e
SCANNER C. I . IASE
s+.+ion •ntenn •
Complete with
h•rdw1r1 ef'!d controls NOW
OP'I,. 71.t l
4988
,
GIRLS' DRESS SHOES . Ori,. 4.tt
Bl•ck patent 1l ipon1 188
Just the right touch NOW
.
BOYS' SWEATSHIRTS AND SWEATERS
Pullovers and cardigans.
Short and long
sleeves NOW
SPIROFOIL KENNER
Fd1i n.t fin9 91me. Hours of
fun and creativ ity
Orl9. J.tt to 4.tl
2 ~·5 00
Ori9. J.tt
NOW
199
MEN 'S SPORT SHIRTS
long and short sleeve
o .ford cloth button
co ll1r
l,ICIAL IUT
BOYS' AND l'RE-SCHOOL l'ANTS
Je.tns & sl1ck1i pie id &
solids. Flare1 &
rou11 d legs
O rlq. J.tl '2 ' 500 NOW ~ '
PLACE AND PRESS FLOOR TILES
Armstrong I 2"x 12"
Limited qua11tity
) p1tter11s NOW
Orit. Jtc Ml· ff.
18Cs9.
FT.
FIRST FLOOR
WOMEN'S SCARVES OP'llJ. 1.00 I• 1.00
I 00 -;. 1ilk, oblongs, sq udres,
prints •ncl solids NOW .88 •• 2.88
SUEDE HEADBANDS 00·1 "i•o
Fashion colors
Limited quantity
WOMEN'S SUNGLASSES
Wir• fashion 1pecs
Lig ht a nd dark len 1
WIG FALLS
100 % sy11thetic heir (e)(tre
NOW .44
NOW .88
lo nq ) li mited quant ity NOW 13.88
WOMEN'S FASHION JEWELRY
Orlt . 2.00 te 4.00
Ea rrinqs, coll drs, pins 1 22
Chokers, pendants and cameo1 NOW •
WOMEN'S ROBES
I 00 1. acetate quilted
8right fa1hion color1
Oriq, 1 J.00
NOW 9.88
WOMEN 'S CONVENTIONAL HOSE
011e 1ite n•vy, jet black
a11d coffee been
WOMEN'S HALF SLIPS
IOO i'. Nylon Bikini
Half 1!i p a11d pants
WOMEN'S SLIPS
He lf, full , mi ni
Limited si 1es and quantity
Ori,. 2 fer 1.00
NOW .10
Orl9. J.00
NOW .88
Orl9. 1.00 re ,,00
NOW 2.88
WOMEN'S IRAS
Padded, na tural
•nd essort•d limited sites
WOMEN 'S GIRDLES
Panty, garterl ess,
Crisi-Cro11 , mostly sm•lls
WOMEN'S SANDALS
As sorted styles
Summer comfort
WOMEN 'S HEELS
Ori ,. J.oo to 7.00
NOW 1.88
Ori9. 1.00 ~ 7.00
NOW 3.88
NOW 2.88
0 .1, .•.•• ~ 15.tt
Spdog •tyl~" ••••<l•d 6 88 10 88 Color1 & s11es NOW • to e
BOYS ' SHOES
Tuff school 1hoe1 Ori,. I.ft to '·''
Assorted 1i1e1 NOW 6.88
MEN 'S GOLF SHOES on,. 22.00
Corf•m up pers
Gre•t color1 .tnd comfort NOW 18.88
WOMEN 'S FASHION BOOTS
Lace and sli pons 5 88 6 99
Gre•+ 1tylin9 NOW • to e
CANVAS SHOES
Men 's e11d women 's
white on ly
or1,. :z.•• ,. J.,,
NOW 1.88
WOMEN 'S SANDALS on,, '·" " '-"
Summer colors incl styles 4 88 6 88
li mited sit es NOW • to •
SECOND FLOOR
GIRLS ' APPLIQUE DRESS
Great styli119
si1es 3-6X NOW
GIRLS ' APPLIQUE T-SHIRT
Mix .tnd match
Limited qudntity, sites l -6X NOW
GIRLS' APPLIQUE PANTS
Pants, shirts 6nd dresiel
Sites 3 .6X NOW
Oriq. J.11
1.88
Orl9, 1.11
.88
Ori'll. l .11
1.88
GIRLS' NYLON TRICOT GOWN
Good lor th e sum mer nights
Si1e1 41-1 4
GIRLS' BLOUSES
Perma Pre1t
l•ce lo ok, 1i1e1 l-6X
NOW
NOW
Ori9. I .ti
2.88
Ori9. l .OO
2.22
BEDSPREADS
Fitted with ruffles
Full and twin si1e1
IATH MATS
Pink a11d wh ite
22 "x34 '', li mited quantity NOW
SHEER CURTAIN PANELS
OrJ9. •.tt
4.88
Ori9. l .25
1.88
Orl q. 2.St te l.2t
As1orted color1 Penn -Prelit 2 22
•O " wide)( 54 " to 9 I " long NOW • eo.
PINCHED PLEAT SHORTIES
0 ,1,. J.4t ~ 4.ff pr.
Alisorted colo rs, Pe n11 Pr15f 3 00
•&"wide x )6" & 45" lo ng NOW • pr.
DECORATIVE WOOD POLES
& ACCESSORIES
Unf i11i,hecl and colors 99 4 88
4'' to 8' length Ii ·REDUCED , tt. e
THIRD FLOOR
STEREO CREDENZA Orl9. 4tt.OO
Provi11cial litylin9
8 track player
6 speakerli, I only NOW 299.00
STEREO CREDENZA 0 <1,. '"-"
Mediterrane an style , only one
G1rrerd changer 348 00
8 track pldyer NOW •
FOUR STRING BANJO 0.1,. o .oo
Open ba ck
Floor 1•mpl1, one on ty NOW 32.00
ELECTR IC GUITAR
s;)( 1trin91
One 011ly, floor sample NOW 48.00
CASSETTE TAPES o,;,. 1.so
10 minutes of recordin9 time 2' 1 00
Record you r own mus ic NOW ~ e
ANTl -FATIQUE MAT
Orite 16" • 23 1/i"
Great for the kitchen REDUCED .88
SEWING MACHINES
I he.tel only ) 2 only
Zig Zag •2 desi9n NOW
Ori,. 17t.tl
138.00
PORCH AND PATIO PAINT Ono."",.._
Exterior -conc rete or brick 2 88
l imited qu1 ntify NOW • gal.
AUTO CENTER
PORT AILE 8 TRACK STEREO PLAYER
Home, auto or por+•bl1
a.+teri•s included NOW
on9. 7t.91
6888
KEYSTONE MAG WHEELS
Ont piec.e alum inum
lug & hubs
I 4"x7 '' Chev~ only 4 ~99°0
• Vltdnt~day. May 2&. 11)71 S PILOT-ADVE RTISER f)! .;.:.;.:.;.:.:.:;::.:...;..:::....:.::__:c::._:.._~--=-~~~~~~:
MEN'S TOWNCRAFT PANTS 0.1,. 1.t1
Pl.id-Pen11-prest
Wash ancl we ar
DINNERWARE
10 p.t tterns to choose from
NOW 5ee
on11. :z•.•• t• t4.tl
.s.p;"~ .... 1988 79ee to 96-piece
sets NOW 'rO
LIGHTING FIXTURES o.i,. ""' •• '""
c~.,d.1; .... ";1;,. '"d 988 3688 swags, 8 styles to
choose from NOW TO
CP ll POLAROID CAMERA KITS
Otl'll. JI.ti
With case, fil m. a lbum and flash
bul bs or the CPlll wit h timer NOW 28.88
PRE-FATHERS ' DAY GIFTS
Wall plaques, figu rines
chessboards , limited 4 88 16 88 ,,.,1;1y REDUCED o to o
ME N'S WALLETS Orl9. I.SO t• 1.00
Town cr aft styling 3 88
Hipfold ancl pocket secretary NOW e
MEN'S NAINSOOK UNDERWEAR
I piece styling. cotton
S, M, L a nd XL
MEN'S DRESS SHI RTS
As,orted styles,
Ori9. J .St
NOW 1.88
Otl'll. J.tl to 7.tl
long a11d short sleeves, 2 88 5 88
v.tr ioui. fdbric s NOW • to e
MEN'S TOWNCRAFT PLUS SUITS
o rr9• to.oo
I 00 i'. wool, double breasted
a nd convenfio11a l styles NOW 59.00
MEN'S TOWNCRAFT SPORT COATS
O rlq. J0.00 re •O.Ot
Two button, conve11ti onal
,1y t;"9· 0"'"" .,d 24 88 49 00 wool blends NOW • to •
MEN'S TOWNCRAFT DRESS SLACKS
Bel t loop styli ng
I 00 /'. woo!
DAN RIVER YARDAGE
Orl9. 15.0t
NOW 9.88
Orl t . 1.7t y4.
Denim and 1tripes 1 44
Ma c.hi11t washable 45 '' wide NOW e yd,
SARELLA SOLID
Linen fini sh , white-pink, 1 44
navy and go ld REDUCED • yd.
YA RDAGE REM NANTS
1/1 to 3 ydrd
pieces 20°/o •• 60°/o OFF
BOYS' PRE-SCHOOL SUITS
Double bre•sted si 2e 5.7
Otl'll. f .tf te 1 J.tl
!:~; s:~~ NOW 7.88 to 10.88
BO YS' SUI TS
Do uble breasted 2 pa11ts
stra ight and flare le91
FISHING RODS
5'6", one piece
Cork h.t ndle
Orit. 11.11
NOW 12.88
Orl9. 2.10
NOW 2.22
HOOKS AND LEAD ERS
S11elled Aberdeen hooks
Limited q11antity
GOLF BAGS
Shaft 1a ver model
Limited qua11tity
TU RNESA CLUBS
NOW .08
Ol'it. 11.t l
NOW 11.88
11-pc.. Alum inum shalt1 78 88
I oo ly NOW o
GOLD EN PINTO MINI llKE
11/, h.p. rear shock. du .,J
brakes. Fun for t~e whole:
fern il y. NOW
, l
Ori9. 1 St.•I
13988
V/e.dnesday, May 26, ,J 'l7 l •
j'"1.::':'-:,:::~:::;-~·~-~-~~~-~/~:::i' ..... ~ The Aft NEW Supertre Tire.has W · E ''78''1 ' ,
'
I
l
, ·. · Series Tread and~Di sti,11~tii~ Style'.
,. ' ,
l < l T , -• •
Tl.lit: and Alfl'O CENTER
48 Menth Guaranteed
High Voltage Battery
'
>'EA RS BA'ITERY GUARANTEE
l'ct"C': rt·pl;icemroc wi1hin 90 Jayt of purchase if banc:ry
r rnve:, dcft"<llve. /lftt·r ~)Jay~. "'-'C: replace: the hauery, if
Jc-h.·,11v1:, ;lJ1,! chKr~e yuu only for chc-penoJ of ownt:r>h•r,
hl~ed on rh<-regular prict: lei~ 1nde-1n al 1he: ri me ol r~-
1u1n, prorac cd uvc:r number of mooch~ oi 11ua1anccc.
. ·, -
Regular $27.99 Trade·in Price 99 Fits 90% of All American-
Made 12-Volt C<1rs
FREE s~ars Baucry lns lallation
Heav,· J)uty
~hor.i. Ahsorht-1'"
Life time Guarani .. ,,
l••li .i..., '" !wl•y m.t•"•I• ot1d -~U.-hop u< wu t ""' .,,hilt .,.,~, .... P<>R:h-1 .,.. ..... ,. "
••11 ""' tttol•~d ""°" ... ""' l~t ,,( <iwF. or th<-P"'<h.,. J''°'" ..-.II M ttfu.lc<I I( dooc ....,..,,...., .. h<><t ~' .....
;-.r~d lo,. .s. ...... ~ ... 11 ;~.
.,.11 ~..., •ho<l ohoa<btf ""'~ •><h.,"'l""t.1.,,..
Liftlimt Guarantee
HEAVYSh k DUTY OC '
Absorbers
Reg ular$7.9!
Dalsun, Toyota
and
ME TOO!
ll "" Tra·t~.r,. ,.,., 111 ~-\.\'"'-
4 10,1-111 .... 11:,,i.
l 1•1;. '·' 7 L.
l!29.99 Quick·Fil
Seat Covers
2499
• Puff fabric allows
air to flow thru ma·
t e rial fo r added
comfort
• Blue,Green,Black,
Gold/Beige
ALLSTATE Pa•senger
_ -~ 'f~!! (;u~r~~!!~~-_ ...... _
4.u"r1i111t""" A1111i11~n All 1irc f.1.itutl"'i
Hum norm"I r..1J,l'h.1.l.irJ1 or dcf«I$ Ht
mJ1t'roal or workn1.1.n,hip.
For lluw Lon11 : For the li!-.,.of the orig·
inal rrc.ul.
\\ h111 ~ .... ,.,.'«'ill IJo: ln l");lh,uu;e fur
•hc ure. r~pl.-.e •!. ch.iri;•ng 1Jnly 11'.lr 1hc
l'f••f'<•Uh/OI ••• {Uff<'tlf )l'11;ng pri(C t>lu~
I l·•lt•r;il l·.:.c •~t· T:u 1ha1 rl·pn"cn1s lll"i il '
u,t·J. l\•·r;iir flA1l pllncrures '"no ch;ugc,
1:u 11r1111lrrd A111nin~1: T rt";iJ we;ir-our.
Fur 11 .... l.nn11: The m,unber of months
~pc, 1l 1cJ.
U'h11.t :oi•••l'fl Will J)o: In C'~ch;rn,1te f,Jr
tht' iir~-. u:pla.:~· it,, h~r,i...jng the rurr~•nt
~ellon,i: pric<' phi~ l-1·der•l fxc1~ T;u. h:~s
the (011.,_, ... ,ng •llUWdU\C,
~lutll h• f:1111r11nll'«•I
11' ro !I 2i !•) .)')
•!O
. .
7R-I :i _ j~_.lt ~ l~I~ 28.9ii
.a-1 i 7. 7 .'i '-J.'.IJ I·::-]:1.95
~H· I·~ ._]fi.9:; -78· I:; :ti.'J:l ---
Allo"1111"0:
't'O'f.
:!Or;,
2~'.o
2 l.7l
25.46
27.7 1
:?8.<\6
_ H.~-~r I/~
-~_:;.;,1 -:.11_;_
:i.(10 \ J .-,
~
•)\J 9-:!:.!.116 -. --:--~-:..·'-TUUU.E'' WHITEWALL 7~:~~01/t-'.78-1 ~ ~~ 26.%
-~· 7:;:\ 11/F78-14 37.9.l 28.46
-~_±:1x l 4/1;7&.14 40_9;; :10.11
~-~i_x l ,J/H 7~-14-4:1.9.'l :t?.')(1
:l:..2 1
2.UO
2.5·1:_
:!.69
:!.80
1.60
:!.:;.i
2.69
:!. 9:;
:t o:l 46.9.) ---t---+---4 1.'J.i'-1~~·~1~='-
41.'J.l
:11.46 :!.HU
:J:t71 '.l.O I
•
GUARANTEED
36Months
Low Low Priced
For a Belted Tire
fi.:'in, r :1/t.:i3-1J
'fulu·lt·~~ Bl :11:l..wall
1•111,. ~~ F.1:::r.
\ull l)IJ ·rire
;f sk .·l l1fJ11 t .i;f,ttr ...
( .' •111 ve11 ie11.L Credit. P/n,1 ~.
• Belred Construe·
rion (rayon carcas s
plus 2 rayon belts)
fo r greater scab i Ii·
ty, performa nce,
safer handling
• i=eatures the soft
j
ride of rayon cord _t• .. it ~, t :l_ff~i_.l!-1.l__ IJi '!:; ::!.on
\vith reinf<1 rct:J _'7.:i:;,11/E78-l I· :.!:.!.1J.O :!.:l7
treaJ arL:a cu re.:-_7.7 .~ll/F 7:1.11 _ _i l.1).l :.! .. 14
c..luce squirm Ki,111<::-:-i-1 1 __ :!7.'J.O :.!.flt)
• 1'.·l orc road (Qn tac t _H.:'i.ix 1 ll~ 17H-I 1. .JI"': 1(i :!.'J.~
fo r safer stop.~ and _n.:.!.ix 1.-.ft ;71:-1~ :lt~~.i 2.80
superior handling H.:i:i"l.>/l~i"H-1 .i :i:1.1J5 :tut L...;_;_.;:.;.;..--_._.;_.,___.
WIDE GU ARD
2 l•'ibcrp;Iass Bclt:i
l'l 11 , 2 Nylon Plies
J(rg11lar 'I',.· ' .. ·-)(' ')-. \' . -~·. .")
36-Month
Guarantee
6 .. iOx-l:l/C:7R-J3
Tuh1·l1·~.., lll;ir·l.wall
l'lu .. ~:! 1-'.E:r.
1\nd Clld 'fire
AMERICA'S BIGGEST
IMPORTED AUTO SHOW Prices Effcc live Wed., May 26 tbru Sun., May 30.
LOS ANGELES :SPORTS
AllENA MAY 28-JUNE I> Sears Steel Belted Radials
DISCOUNTTICKET~
Available at Sears Ticketr<in
Save 50c! Regular S2.51l
Sea.rs Price S2
2 Steel Belts With Smooth Riding Rayon Corel
SEE THE BA.IA
.. J 000" SAAB WINNER
f.quipped with Sears Rad ial
Tires and Diehard Battery
."iE \ ll ~ ,, 1.1.~T \TE
H\111\1.
l'.\:-0..,~;,f;Etl Tl Ht;
i :t \ll \~"TEt:
1-TH E \U l .f~'ETl~lt:
•
l.l '•\HA!'IT~'.E
r;,..,~""'"'' .\•ain•'' A!I
'"'' 1,.,l11n•.1 /rorn <!ch«!< 1n
lll<h'fO ,ii ur w01kn,.11•hop.
t.,r 11,. ... l.othf' l'h" lift
n!thf <1fll(•n•l ,.,.;J.
V.I••• !'i<>ero Will l>u' Il~·
'h•ni:c t.lr a new '""· ~h•tM•
1oi-: vnlr t.~ ''"' P•nl'onion ,,J rrr;i.d u<.uf
~-TK~;A 11 \\-f:,\ ROIJT
AAIJ IU.1<\IJ llAZi\lllJ 4: l , ·\It<\•\ TF:f:
f:u11ra ntrr1I As•in11:
T" •J .. c..-oot 1111d ,;," fli!-
,.,~ ltnm o·~t h:u•rJ,,
...... 11 ........... , <10,000
mol''·
Here's What Sears Experts Do:
W!u11 ~ ...... "'ill II&• At
~•nop•1un •·1.<h••'l(C" for
• .., . ., nrc '" ll'"' I"'" 1 rr· lund ' h""Jf'"lt 1nc1rhcrt1."' <Jnty hlf' !l>e l't(.of'o)fl!UI! .i(
thr m·! ....... "-''-''•VCJ. R!'-
~·<1 • n.011 poneturc-1 It 110
, h•r,«c.
• Car<..'fully repack front \\•hee l bearings
•Carefull y rebuild hyJraulic wheel
cylinders
• Re move and replace brake ~l:ioc rt -
. lease springs
• Repl~e hold-down sprinltS
•Remove and replace both front grease , ... ,
•Turn and 1ruc brake Jrun1s or reface
discs
• Fu new brake shne<, or disc r:itl~
•Flush and add hydraulic brake fl uiJ
as needed
•Inspect masrer cylioder and cmcr·
gencybrake
• Finally, we test your hrakcs out on
the road
COME IN NOW FOR YOUR FREE
BRAKE INSPECTION ••• No Obligation.!
/\flJli . ..;TJi\i:: Tbi• S..-•1<
f'.-'l<:n,11<;r Tore l ;u.,•mcc
wi II ht-h•"">tr.J •• 1ny l!C•<S
tt."!~ol or t:111alu,1e 1wre in tho<!
li.S.A. The-pfitc u1 .. J ••
rlwr b.,;i• ol aJ11,.1men1 oi
Ille r~rnm1 !K'lllnit p1iu:. in.
d~di~ •PPlioble ftdtt~I
l:•(i>e To dtt11 u• dlc" &i: ""'C" wht'..., 1d11111mtn1 "
111•dc Tl\11 ~nd '""" h<e r•••f'n•eJ •t 11roc ()( alJU•'"
mr~• -Sears
SEAJIS, JIO.EBUCK AND C.O.
IUlHA '"IK TA 1 •4'400, 5'11-4'530
(ANOGA 'AIK 34'0·0661
COM,TOH NI 6·2511, Nl 2·S761
COVINA 96'·061 t
ll MONTE GI 3·391\
GLIHDALI CH S-1004', Cl 4-4&' •
HOlll'WOOO HO 9-5941
IHGllWOOD 01 1·2S21
s..., , .... ,. ., """' .. , , ....... ttln1ht.t 1aoA.M. Nott~OP.M. ••• a •••• Att• 0.1,,c ...... ,. , ..... Th1u1,,
lOHG llACH Ht S.0121
OLYM,u: & SOTO AN l •S211
OIAHOI 637·1100
l'ASAO«HA 611·)211, :,Jl-4'21 1
POMONA HA 9•S16t
i'36
l';';" .. l:'t
T•1ht:l<w! ~/liitf'"'1U
i'lu~ Sl.'Jc!. F.E.T.
/111d Uld Tire
•Tread lifetime
plus 40,000 mile
cread wear-out
guarantee
T UBELESS
WHITEWALL
SIZE T••tl~.I• F.t:,T. P.;~.
I i.;..i:i _s:Jr, L'll ---1s:;.11. '" :?.:.!'.I
19.">-l•L !oil :?A~
:?O:",.I·~ ... :?.7•1
21:;.14. l ."o'L :?.93
19.').15 .. , 2.66
:?US.).; S5:l :?.<J:;
:?I." .. Ji S.".8 J.119 --22:-..15 !f•l.50 :i.24
,ICO we 1·4262
5AHTA AHA Kl 7'.J371
SANTA JI l'IUHOS 944-1011
SANTA MONICA IX 4 •6711
SOUTH COAST PlAt:A S4'0·3l
• I
l
2795' h.7ft,!~ ~
1'1 1h~·T)'f1•
l'lu• :?.t~ t
F.F..T. , ,
6·ply rated nylon
corJ construction
for strengrh and
Jong mileage.
,Wra 1> a roun<l
tread cnablcs ber ...
rer corne ring and
more s tability.
S I Z ~~ 1·1111 •: r.t .. 1
TUllf:.Tl'Pf;
(,:..;1~ l.i ;~;,•1.; 2.42
7.1)11,1.; :1;.•1:;_ :!~
r..~n,1fi ;?1J,1J;; :.111
i.llth flo :17.YJ -&.01
-TUBEl~S
~.IMh I ~ :!7.'J.; 2.4.)
r..:11,1.i :!'l,95 2.~
1\01'KADL-IN REQUIRED
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TOl.AH<E .!142•1S11
Ul'LAHD tlS~1927'
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t.
Wttll'ltt~ay, May 26, 1971 '
'·
avageAimsfor July RacingComehack Advers~ty
Br DEKE eOULGATE dianepol~ r.oo as a spectator. llllle bii. of the Phoenix race the day and lhai bug1 mf, but U's IO iimq bolter Swetle fa awailing a doclor'• r1I11se. Hounding. °' 1M °'11' '11" 11'" • "I just took off and came back here on before (the Questor Grand Prix at than 1t Wiii, for ln1t.nce, two weeks which is all that USAC officials will re-
f )NDIANAPOLIS -David (Swede) my own," Savage said. "These are my Ontario), and It's one of these thi()gs that ago.'' quire. f\1eanwhile, be la worklnc out t.o
Savage of Sant• Ana, auto racing p~ people and my friends and my living and come,~ back. I hope it comes back real ~moryow ~· he belJ> him~lf to recover his unload IOR\e pounds he picked up while
t.ege of Dan Gurney may be back in ac-1 Ill I , mn. m • tlon
1 8
J '1 3 In the 500-mlki my who e e. ts also the great race Savaae spent three weeks in the •'J spend a lot of time thlnk!11g. trying abtd in a hoapital. ills wel1bt eoared paal
as ear Y s u Y that I always wanted to be in and always hospital Including several days in a coqia to re.member the Phoenlx race the day 200 and ia now back to ttl, he '8id.
USAC championship race at Pocono, Pa . loved to watch . Jt'a a thing to help me gel after the throttle stuck in his Eagle-before 1 iOl hurl. Bila of that llave Doctors, he said, "have alven me all
• 'fhat'a the prospect for ~ 25-year~ld well a lit tle bit quicker ." Plymouth formula A car anq ht roared already come back. That's very tn-the physical teats and 1 seem to have
driver who suffettd a ma1or concussion Savage said he knows he is not ready to off lhe track into the turn nine wall. coura1ing. J)4lltd all of them. Now It's a matter of W a racing accident last March at climb back in a race car yet. He stiU has His condition was touch-and-go for "I do it in the evenlrig and the morning. time and setting my memory back."
Ont-lilrio Speedway and was expected to after effects. several hours after the crash. There was I took off here one aflAmoon and just lay When he d<>t.1 return to competition,
spend the rest of this year recovering. ·'It's affecting my memory a little," some talk that he might never a1aln be around. I got away from talking to people Savage said, he will be at it full time on
Savage looked the picture of health In a he said. "The accident is gone, as a ab le to race. about things that don't really matter. I the USAC champ trail at the Wheel of the
ch..iJ'Ce meeting along gasoline alter, motorcycle accident I had once when I •·Jdon 't wanttoraceyet ,"Savagesald, really had a chance to think Md con. OisoniteEag1eturbo-offythatJlmMalloy
where he is awaiting Saturday's In-got knocked down. But I can remember "because my memory Jsn't all back yet, centrate." is driving in tha lndy sno Saturday.
Guy on TV
}Vas Ex-ru~ea
"I
~pil{e Star
I fiometlmes you ha ve lo get hit in the
head by a stone to see the rocks in front
~you.
d so it is as we get a letter from
H ingt on Beach's John Sey mour . who
a.reminder that brother Jim is in-
d*d do ing well al the University of ~ingLon.
~rely he is doing that. Jim won the
Pacif ic-& title in the 440 hurdles with a
sd.t last Saturday at Washington. He
uPset the favorite from Stanford and v.•as
1Dttrvlewed on television following his
aiiquest.
l saw the whole show yet somehow it
Mver d&wned on me that this was the
6Cne young man who performed so
'
91.INN WMIT•
--___ _,
WHITE
WASH ------
capably at Huntington Beach High and
Golden West College.
Perhaps il was the longer hair he now
wears. At any rate he surely merits a
slap on the back for an oul!ltanding
performance.
We should get another look at him next
month in the NCAA championships, also
to be held at Washington.
* * * A oltty huietball matc hup Tburlday
11ight at Tustin Boys Club l5SO W. Ith)
ba5 former Ora111e Coast College players
John Valley, Tom Read, Bruce Cha~
man, Craig Falconer, Steve Jacobse n and
Ba7t Carrldo going against a bunch of
}Jarlem Clowns, Edgar Clark (er·
\iii:Merton JC) and Dave Payne (So. Cal
eg e).
I starts at 9 and admission Is a buck.
ds under 14 .1et In for 50 cents.
* * * :vou can hardly call wild turkey hunting
California a sport which favors the
nter. Of 34~ nimrods who stalked the
!lve birds this season, onl y 45 were
~s~in~~:~in~~~;·led the take
.'th 31 birds and 109 hunters seeking
m.
Kem Plateau had 76 seeker! -all ol
m turned up empty-handed after
ir efforts. Biggest bird \\'eighe d 21
unds, 11 ounces.
, Speaking of outdoor spo rts, Ernie
ror1g of Lomita bagged a record catch
~ the Salton Sea while angling for cor·
a. Ria fish Upped the scales al 32
unds, 2 01,1nces.
While the Sa!Lon Sea is CWTently pro-
Icing fine catches of corvina with many
fl!h limits being pulled out, con-
r,ationlsts are conce rened with the
iady rising water leve l.
"'They say if the current rate continues
· h will nol be able to propogate after
5.
range C:Ouaty will get a abot 1t boxing
' ' , • .I , • ' .,,1 ,.. ./ ' '• • ,,.. " > . ,, . ,. )
WILLIE MAYS HOLOS CAKE MARKING 20TH YEAR-WITH GIANTS.
Maricl1al Raps LA Fans,
Handcuffs Dodgers, 9-1
LOS ANGELES (AP) -They came to
salute Willie Mays and left talking about
Juan Marichal.
Nol praise him, mind you, but talk
about him.
The ace of the San Francisco Gia nts is
a man not at all cherished by Los
Ml¥ 11 MIY ).
Dodger Slate
An G1mn .., ICl'I (Mii
Oodg.ers "'· 5•n Fr1ncl1co 1·SS Pm Ood~ffl YS. PlllladelPll!• ' SS p,m
Angeles Doelger fans, a reud the result of
his 1965 incident with John Roseboro who
was hit over the head by a bat which was
held at the time by Marichal.
It was Willie Mays' 20th annive rsary
with the Giants Frlday nl;hl but
Marichal stole the show. He won 9-1 -
his 36th lifetime victory over the Dodgers
-and just to rub ll in, he slugged a
three-run homer to highlight a six-run
sixth inning.
The 40,042 fans al Dodger Stad!u1n
greeted Marichal the way they always do
-witn boos -and .,.,,hen that didn't
help, they hurled bott les, cushions and
smoke bombs.
lhe fans sure didn't show me much by
thro.,.,·ing all that stuff."
Outside of a Willie Davis i1ingle, which
extended his hitting streak to 17 games,
Los Angeles fans had little to cheer.
San Francisco will attempt to make it
t\YO in a ro\v tonight when Gaylord
Perry. 4·2. faces Los Angeles' Claude
Osteen. 6-2.
Bill Singer absorbed the loss for the
Dodgers, a distressing ninth setback with
only two victories.
"Looked like he had good stuff all
night," explai ned puzzled manager
\\/alter Alston. "Even when they got all
the runs he still had his stuff."
SAN 1'11.t.NCtSCO LOI ANOI LIS
eooc1 .. " S~lfr, n Mavs. cl
llo.•rlo. cf McCo,,1v, lb
F.JC11n1on, lb
OltU, c F~tnln, Jb
G1ll1gll1r, ll! Foittr, If
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•b rllf'M 11io r !IAI
s11 ow111i,•• '0 20
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l o• 4"9el.,; 000 000 OlD -I
DP -San F•anclsco 1, lOl Ang eles I. LOS -
Sin Fr1ntisco 6, lo. AnQflt• • 21! -Speier. Mc·
Covey, Cr1wtord JO -l!ooch, Ro11rlo. HR -
M1r1ch1I CI) 58 -FurntH.
IP H It t:lt I I SO
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Sports Clipped Short
A's Get Blefary;
SurgeryforTatum
DETROIT -Veteran outfielder Curt
Blefary of the New York Yankees has
been traded to the Oakland A's in ex·
change for right-handed pitcher Darrel
Oateen, who will be assigned to their
Syracuse farm club, the Yankees an·
nounced Tuesday night.
Osteen was on option by Oakland to
their Iowa farm team in the American
Association.
Meanwhile, left-hander Rob Gardner,
who was on option to Jowa after being:
traded from New York to Oakland last
month, also has been assigned to
Syr&CU3e of the International League.
In 21 games Blefary batted .194 with
one home run and two runs batted In.
e Operation Set Toda11
BOSTON -Former Angel relief
pitcher Ken Tatum of the Boston Red
Sox, who suffered a fracture.d cheekbone
when struck by a line drive in baiting
practice at Baltimore on Sunday, will
undergo surgery this momin1 in Cam-
bridge .
The operation will be performed by Dr.
Aram Roopenlan, chief of plastic surgery
at the hospital. He will be iwisted by
Red Sox team physician Or. Thorrias
Tierney .
Tatum was lim bering up in the ouUield
when hit by a line drive off the bat of
coach Dou g Camilli prior to the first
game of Sunday's doubleheader.
e Parker Gets Donor
KANSAS CITY -Wes Parker of the
Los Angeles Dodgers and Don Prox-
teJ:ter, coach at Mornin&side College,
lowa, were named to the National
Asaoclatlon of Intercollegiate Athletics
Baseball Hall of Fame Tuesday.
NAI A headquarters here announced
Parker and ProJ:texter will be honored at
the Hall of Fame banqu1t June 3 at
Scottsda le, Ariz., where the l~th annual
NAIA National 8ai1eball Tournament will
be held June 4·8. -
Parker was named to the NA IA All
America n squad In 1981 and to the all
conference squad ttam in 1960 and 1961.
He eatabli3hed nine rtcords a t
Claremont-Mudd College in California.
e Protest Flied
SANTA CLARA. Calif. -Pat Malley,
athletic dire.ctor at the University of San-
Mays Moved
By Reception
At Dodgerville
LOS ANGELES (A P) -A setUng such
as Doelger Stadium had to be unique for
an evening honoring a San Francisco. nee
New York , Glent. But the man in ques-
tion was Wl\lle fl.lays, who today began
his third decade in the uniform of a
Giant.
ta Clara, said Tuesday he has filed a pro-
test over the selection of the Unlver1lty
of Southern Callfomla aa the !Ille for the
District 8 bastball playoff fina ls.
Malley filed the proteat with Gent Duf~
fy, chairman of special events for the Na·
tional Collegiate Athletic Association.
The Santa Clara Broncos are scheduled
to play a best-of-three series with
Southern Cal Friday and Saturday in Los
Angeles, wllh the w!Mer advancing to
the CoUege World Series tn C>maha, Neb.
The Broncos and Trojans alto pl1yed
for the district champlonahip la3t year at use.
Malley said in a letter to Duffy that
NCAA guidell ne, recommend alternating
playoff situ from year to year.
Small Crowds,
Kisses Greet
Singing Champ
VIENNA (UPI) -World heavyweight
boxing champion Joe Frazier voiced con·
fidence today his European singing tou r
-until now a flop -will end up a suc-
ce ...
"I feel that my confidence increases
from performance to performance ," he
said.
Eighl·hundred fans saw his show Tue,,..
day night at the 2.000 capacity Stadthalle.
The concert "was one of tM: best of the
tour," Fraiier said .
Frazier was right. Ever since the start
of his tour with his group, the Knockouts.
the crowd!! have in most casea been just
about large enough to fit into the champ·s
dreS!ling room.
At first Tuesday night's show looked
like it also would be a fl op. For the first
two hours , the audience saw only seven
members of the Knockouts and three go-
go dancers.
"Where is Joe?" "We want the
champ," m1ny shouted. A Stadthal\e
spokesman said he could not explain
Frazier's delay in appearing .
When he arrived, Frazier said he was
not late. He always arrived at this time.
he said.
On !lage Frailer gave a 45-minute
nonstop performance. The 1udience
cheered and applauded.
A teen-age girl in hot pants rushed on
stage and kissed Joe. Two youths follow·
ed, lilted his arms and shouted "you are
the greatest!"
Frazier said "l have four more weeks
to go in Euro~ and I'm confident I will
improve from per f ormance to
performance.''
f<'razier said singing was his future.
"After all, I'm not a newcomer to show
business. I wa3 singing before I started
boxlng. I want to devote my time to
singing after ending my boxing career
because I see a chance to express
myself."
Cherubs
By ROGER CA RlliON
Ot lllf 0111~ "lltt llt lf
OAKLAND -11 adversity Is suppot:ed
to be a ra11ying factor. the California
Angels aren't getting the message.
That thought $eemed painfully clear
Tuesday night as the Halos ~oppe.d ~ 7-5
decision to the Oakland A's 1n 13 innings
before 2,868 here at the Coliseum ..
In the end it was Reggie Jacksons two.
run homer that dropped the Hale>! 91,2
games behind Oakland's A me r i ca n
League West pace.
But it was Dave Duncan's second
homer of the ni~ht on a 3·1 pitch with two
out in the ninth that kept the winners
alive. That. however, wasn't the sum total of
adversity heaped on the Angels.
Hard-luck pitcher Rudy May became
the latest casualty in the Halo camp.
He returned to Anaheim only hours
after arriving here in Oakland when it
was discovered he had a hairline fra cture
in his right wrist and a wrenched left
elbow suffered in a fall al home Monday.
Prior to returnini;i: to the Soulhland.
May told the DAILY PILOT, "It (the le ft
011 1'V Tonlghl
Channel 5 nl 8
e\bo.,.,·) feels like I've thrown abQut 200
curve baUs. But it should be OK with
some rest." Angels' manager Harold '·Lefty"
Phillips said he hopes his southpaw will
be back in the rotation system Sunday at
New York.
Phillips was also a casualty or sorts,
getting tossed out of the game in the l llh
inning on a disputed call at first base.
It was the first time the Halo akipper
had been given the thumb in his career
as the Cherub leader (330 gamesl.
"l had a good reason, too. Guessing
hurt us all night.
"But lhere .,.,.ere too many home runs,"
added Phillips.
Oakland picked up all seven tallies via
the circuit route and manager Dick
Willlams of the A's confirmed that his
team is playing like the Boston Red Sox
team of 1967. which swept to the
American League title under his hand .
''We 're following that same pattern as
when I was at BosLon . This is th e fourt h
game that v•e have come from three runs
down to win,,. said \V illiams.
And he was high on Duncan's
performance. •·tte has been p\ayini:
oul3tanding baseball, all year long," said
Williams.
Duncan's equaliter in the ninth came
off a Lloyd Allen fast ball afte r Clyde
Wright had managed a 5-4 lead through
eiRht innings.
Jack.!On 's blow was off an Eddie Fisher
knuckler. •
General manager Dick Walsh was in
attendance. raising speculation· th at a
move or trade of some sort might be in
the offing during this 13-day road trip.
If his presence iS an Indication or
things to happen. it would appear that it
v.'ili involve Oakland, since he confided
that he would not be on the second leg of
the journey.
Tonight's bill features Tom Murphy 12·
61 for the Angels against Oakland's Jim
"Catfish" Hunter (8-2).
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ttlldll'ICt -2,161. k * * *
the aecoad time lo rece11t years.
gust 14 bas been set a.aide at Anaheim
ventlon Center with such name can-tate1 as fltando Ramos aod Jerry
arry listed as poss ible performers.
"The booing is something I ju.st have to
live with," Ma richal said after earning
his seventh v.·in in nine decisions. "But
'
Time -t:•. ANtfldl l'ICI -«t,0'2.
The l...o8 Angeles Dodgers made a pret-
ty big thing about Tuesday night's en-
counter with their traditional rivals, the
Giants. slnct ~1ay 25 marked the debut of
Willie Howard Mays Jr. 20 years sgo as a
New York Gi ant. Six Americam Win
T1'e C()U11ly'1 rtng debut fell nn Its fa~
~ few years ago "·hen Dwt1ht llawkh1s
g!lt some bird from rttexlco. About two
ien people turned out to 1\-telodyland
d half of the m "·ere rrport.erfi who had
be there.
!
owever, wllh R Ramos nr Quarry (or
lb ) on the tard, the Augu1t 1pectaele
gbt be suce1111ful.
· ,, ation's Tallest
Player Dropped ..
ASHVIU.E, Tenn. (AP) -Steve
E, the tallest basketball player in
ca, bas betn dismissed from
rbllt University for academlc ........
'.'flrhe 7·fool-5 junior from Memphis did.
*i.1.:. meet the Vandtrbllt scho1astic re-
(fu1i-ementl of 12 passing hours during the
a~ing semester.
Tu mer, • regular for the last two
years, could apply for readmission in
11 w1s an All·Stale ind high school
Af.Amerlct from Memphis Bartlett, and
WM heavU.V sought by mort than 200 col·
~ ... MA!S SL IDES BACK TO THIRD BASE IN 9·1 VI CTORY OVER DODGERS.
' • '
Mays, who turned 40 eulier this
month, said he was pleased with such a
testimonial. But as befits su ch a statistic
-40 years of age and 2tl with the same
club, he observed:
"I'd just as soon there wasn't so much
attenUon paid to it. All I want to do is
help win ball game.a and forget about
years."
There was a brief ceremony at home
plate as most of !he 40,0U fans ~·ere in
th'lr seal! before the game. Big Don
Newcombe, a former Brooklyn Doelger
pitching great, who descrl~d Willie as
"an old nemesis," acclaimed Mays for
his endeavors both on and off the playing
field.
"I'd be lying it I sald 1 wasn't
nervous," Mays Lold the crowd alter Jt
gave him a 3tsnding ovation. "It's a
situation a lot of b1llplayers would like to
be in, pitying In a strange place and get·
ting this kind of reception."
There wert 20 cakes, one for each year,
which were pruented to youth organiia-
tlons as their repre3entatlves stood by.
\\'illie said he hoped the kids would enjoy
the goodies, add ing tnat his diet couldn't
afforct, such a delicacy.
No, said ~lays later, he has never set a
. goal as Juch durin1 his caretr. lte·u play,
he explained, as long u he plays well and
"has fun."
French Open Matches
PARIS (APJ Jin Kodes of
Ctechoslovakia, the derend ing champion,
and l.e:ljko Franulovlc of YugoslRvla, the
lo..i;lng finalist last yc1r, toctay won U1c!r
first-round matches In the French Open
TeMis Tournament.
Both matches had been Interrupted by
rain late Tuesday after two sets, plus
three 1ames tn the third !let.
Kodes needed only 14 minutes th is
morning to finish off W\es\aw Gasiorek,
Poland's top ranked player, 1-1. 6·1, 6-3.
Franulovic had a tou1her struggle but
finally defeated Patric It Cramer, a South
African who graduated from the
University of Miami Jn January , 5-3, &·2,
2-6, 10-3.
Marty Rles!len of Evanston, 111 .. Jolned
five American teammates Tuesday in the
second round of the champlonsh\Jll.
The contratt professional, seeded No. 7,
defeated Sergio Paln1lerl of llaly 7-6, 7~,
6-1 to keep 1llvc United Stat,s' hopes of
winning this world clay court claulc for
the first time since Tony Trabert turned
the Irick in 1955.
Arthur Ashe, seeded No. 2, advanced
Monday along wilh Stan Smith of
P~sadena : Bob Lu tz of Los Angeles. Clift
Richey of San Angelo, Tex ., and Tom
Gorman of Seattle.
'l\\'o seeded players were eliminated on
this second day of competition.
Pro Roger Taylor of Britain. seeded
No. 10 .. finally forfeited to John Cooper of
Austraha after devel<lping a back ailment
in a prolonged match halted Monday by
darkness. The two had split four sets 6-3.
6-2, 6-3, ~7. with Cooper's score listed
first.
The olher seeded casualty was Jon
Ttrlac of Romania, who feU before Bill
Bowrey, Australia's top Davis Cup
player, 6-3, &-2, M .
The leading profeaslon1ls from Lamar
llun t's Dallas. Tex., stable -Rod Laver
Ken Rosewall . John Newcombf. TonY
Roche . Roy Emerson and Fred Stolle -
chose not to compete here.
Jim Mcr..1anus or Btrkeley, lost to
Tadeusi Nowicki ol Poland 6-3, 6-0, 6·2.
Seel.:i1ag State Spike Ho1aors
J.'ive 1nembers or Golden \Vest CoUege track and
rield teain "'ill compete in Saturday's state JC meet
at Pilodesto. 1'hey are trrom left) Brian Strough, Ron
Dickson, Terry "fcKeon, \Vall Ankerman and Den·
nis Maas. A·lcKeon will run in the three-mile, 1.-laas
is a quarter-miler and anchors the mile relay unit,
of which the other three are members.
Deep Sea
Angling
U11steady
"!l's kind of beltA'een good
and indifferent."
That's the report from Art's
Landing on tl1e ocean fishing
situaUon in the Orange Coast
Area with good catches of
bass rerorted along the coast
coupled v.·ith a few bonito and
barracuda.
.. There has been a show of
yellows down the coast and y,·e
are looking fory,·ard lo them
hitting in the near fu ture,"
George NetA•combe reports
from Art's.
Edge Norn1ans
Newport Netters
Make CIF Finals
By HO\\' ARO L. HANDY
Of 1119 Dllll' ,llfl l lfll
Bob Ogle used a powerful
serve and two doubles com-
bin3tions helped pace Ne\\•port
Harbor High to a 1611.z-lllh vic-
tory over Beverly Hills Tues-
day afternoon in ClF semifinal
tennis action on the winners'
home courts.
Ogle was the master from
begirming to end as he won
four straight sets over his
outclassed foes on the Nonnan
team.
their coach a prophet.
On parling company wlth
Wilson. Sieling wished the
Tars good luck against Santa
1'-tonica and added:
"Sorry we didn't play better
today. But you put the
pressure on and your boys did
.an excellent job against us."
Uni Grid
Boss Tells
Opti111is1n
University High teally didn't
have much going (or it last
football season.
Coach Jerry Redman's Tro-
jans, in their inaugural cam-
paign, were ci>mposed of
juniors and rophomores-and
were forced to play a free
lance schedule, finishing with
a >3 record .
Ir anything it was good ex-
perience.
But 1971 is a dilferenl situa·
lion. University is now part of
the Orange League and the
Wrestling
Ace G11ns
For Honor
Wtdnnday, M1y ?6, 1911 DAIL V P!lCT U
'
Clipper s, Germa11 s Vie at OC~
Bartoah. Co.sta Mesa 's Coasl Clii> Thal was the only lo.ss suf·
pers, fresh from a second fered by the area outfit ln the Former OCC ice 11./y
place finish in the SPAAU ttA·o-day tourney. Cleaver and Los Amigos High
junior water p 0 1 0 cham-Vlclories were over Mt. San player Vince Frapton art also
pionships, face the \Vt3t Antonlo, •2: Cal State (Los members ot the iquad.
German Olympic team Thurs-Angeles), 8.0: lolani of The West Germans •re }'d
He's already received the day night at 7 in the Orange Hawaii, 6-4; Phillips 66 B, 18-by Herman Haperk.amp, Oft'
highest honors possible as 3 1 I o; and the Santa Barbara of the lop playen in EurOP,e-, • prep wrestler -so it's not so Coast Col ege poo .
surprising that he's a nominee The \Yest German team Is Aquatics Association, 11·1. Other standouts are Ptlll!I
ror the George Yardley a\vard, currently on tour in the Members of the team in· Teicher, Jinns He:-man GUdd,
which will be given June 8 at Southland. elude Ron Mi.siolek, Mike Kurt Kupper and goaltender
th N rte l to l• l The Coast Clippers, coached Kurt Olberl. 4 e ewpo r nn ne op Co Beal, Mike O'Brien, Neil and p I f d · J I .., ff"' Harbor Are.a athlete. by Terry Bowen of sta r ce o a miss on s ...... ,,"!'
h.tesa High and OCC's Jack Bill Richey. Bill McAne.ney or adults and $1 for students. Chris Horpel did just about C< JI l d l led b H. • Bob W I Proceeds or the game wn, I eve ... .th!ng possible in his r u er on, were e ea Y Costa Mesa igu, urs er ,~ seni~; year at N e w p 0 rt UC Santa Barbara, 10-5, in the of Edison and OCC's John help defray the cost of ho~
}!arbor lligh. SPAAU title game Sunday at Blauer, BUI De HUff, Bill Rice , expenses for the \Ye'.
Ht!: was undefeated, winning _U::_::CS:B:·:_ _________ T_•m_:__w_a_m_ee_k_e_•_nd __ M_ik_e __ G_e_r_m_a_n_•·------~;~· ~
everything in sight. ··r ,
The CIF 148·pound in·
dividual championship and the
selectk>n as the CIF Southern
Section grappler or the year
capped the season.
It was an individual cam·
paign lhal saw 34 of 36 van-
quished foes fall by pins.
Tourney crotA'ns at Pacifica,
Bolsa Grande, Orange Coast
invitational and•Five Counties.
likewise, were owned by
Horpel.
He pinned .all four foes in
the CIF finals -the finale
with two seconds remaining of
regulation time.
The Sa i Io r whiz con·
centratcd only in wrestling
and when it came time for Tar
o{ the Year laurels, he finish-
ed'i.n a tie for second behind
Dare! Blood. who was a foot-
ball and track standout.
Now at Stanford University,
Horpel continues to sparkle in
collegiate competition.
CIF ·Scores
Tl'nl'lt Plav«tr. ............
H...,._1 ''"· flowrly Hlll1 11\.'t S1n11 Monlt1 111~. !ttnlt !It~•• tO,i ...
Stn Mtrll\O l4\~. TYllln :J>.'. HarY1rd n it., LI Qylnl1 1\t A.A tflll'lltl
T~td\ff 14\'t, M!r1ltJlw. !lYo
~-
'
Camp and G'?lf .
1n Palm Springs ~
finest location.: :====~=~"
Now you can pork your
camp.tor or trall•r jv1t min11le1 from
downtown l'olm Sprll'lgt •••
and walk !Cl the firll t•e in minute•!
Yes, al the n•w Polm Spring• Oasl1 there'• lroil•r/
comper 1poce-available for immed!al• occupancy
-with golfing privl1eg•1 loo 1pedo~lor l l·hal•
golf cour._ right next door. l'hn your own
1porkling pool, luxuriova clubhau1•, bllllord room
and loung•. n
''The 1\'aler is 1varming up a
little but it still isn't 11·hat it
\\'as a year ago at this lime.''
Carl ~lcCullah at the Hun·
tington Beach Pier says good
catches of calico bass on the
He opened with a 6-3 win
over first singles player Mike
Margolin. Next it was 14-year·
old freshman sensation Perry
\Yright, 6-4, Ogle polished off
his performance with a pair of
&-0 victories.
Santa f.fonica was a com·
mon foe of both teams and is
the only school to defeat
Newport this season, 141fl·l31h.
Beverly Hills, on the other
hand, defeated Samohi, 15~·
12\1 .
Members of the Newport
doubles teams include Dave
Eastman and Kim 'Perino on
the firsl squad ·with Tim
O'Reilly and Doug Rosener on
the second team. Perino is a
senior, Eastman and Rosener
are juniors and O'Reilly a
sophomore.
competition figures to be , .... ~.11 ,. .. ,.,,. .........
And here'1 th• bet! porll All for Juli .$5 Oday (or
$30 a we•kl for o family Clf four. lncludint wotrr,
fllettrlcity and tewer. Jloom, too, for your e xlro
vehicle and boot if you wont lo drive A5 ecuy
mil•• and catch the Sol!on Seo't 1croppy corblno,
CALL OR WRITE TODAY FOR RESERVATIONS.
-~-
quite a bit tougher, despite ~'::,:.;. ~~,,~~~~11f •• 11 1 the fact the Trojans have a c~•ll•Y 1, w1" rorrenc1 o North Torr1nc~ 4, ANhtlm l preponderance oC seniors on .u.A
• lomi>oc: 5, "'lUH • their squad. E1 mundo s. uo11f'!I '
)6100 D•le Ptl111 Ori••· C1lh•dr1I Qty,
C1lif«ni1 922J4 or plion• (714) JZMllJ
/\n •d ivity of th• U.S. fin1nciol Gr011p
day boats with belier
a\'era ge success on
twilight specials.
than
I he
"He did a fantastic job for
us," coach Pat Wilson said
after the matches. "He had to
v.·in four for us to v.•in the
team match and he tA"ent out
and did it. You can't ask for
more than that."
"We're fairly optimislic,".,_i'~·'~"'"'~'~'~"~·~M~.,~~:':"~'==--..!:==================================: Stv1nn1 J, Ch!l'IO 1 says Redman who is guiding a
group of 45 varsity candidates
through spring driU s.
In singles play, Ogle and
Bob Isbell are seniors: Dave
Nichols is a junior; and Cody
Small il a freshman.
Htw,.tt 11'Vd 111\.'il S.vwlY Hllt1
"\Ye've worked hard and we
feel we have a good bunch of
kids. Our biggest problem will
be dcplh."
DON SWEDLUND
COAST GENERAL TIRE
Iii W. lhll, CHI• .....
14t-171Q 646·SOJ)
AYl!lY •
GENERAL TIRE SERVICE
16941hocti11,d .. H11tttlllff'M hedl
147·5110
''Our per passenger count
has been great recently and
one of our customers caught
an II-pound silver salmon
recently,'' ~lcCullah reports.
A real good catch of bass al
Catalina Island along with a
lot of blue perch. some halibut
and bonito have been reported
on Davey·s Locker boats
fi shing at Catalina recently.
Newport will tangle with old
nemesis Santa Mooi<"a Friday
in the <"hampionship finals.
hoping to successfully defend
the title won a year ago.
Site or the championship
match will be determined to-
day, Wilson revealed, with the
possibility of play at the
Balboa Bay Club if Nev.•port
v,.ins the toss.
lln1l•1
O.!t (N, cr.i. Mtr!IO!ln Ill '"l; dtf.
Wrl•~t (IJ ._.: def. 0onz1, ta1 '"01
<19'1. lrollm1n (I) 6-(1.
Sm.all INJ !Ml to Mllrool!n I&) I .. :
lml lo Wrlffll Ill O .. : loll to Donall
(8) 2-4; lost to 8roltm1n (81 ~.
Nkhol1 fl) loll to Mttoolln 19) l-4: IOI! lo Wrl11M (I) :M: lost lo Don.zit
(81 1"'1 dt'f, lrot!mtn (II),..-.
Two standout perfonners
who figure big in University 's ~~~~erba~~ To~';.:ker a~ PRE •• da • ~i:::backer-running back Bob mam-..I y I
University went with a ~ VI
~~~~~!~ T ~:e ~te !:s 0 ~l ~ llbe!I Cl) loll ,., Mt•oolln (II) Mi
Iott lo Wrll!ll 41!) 1 .. ; lo1t l~ Dol!Jll
18) J.7; Wf. llrllllmtn Cl)•·•. too complicated. But Redman .. 'Ole main catch along the
coast. according to fulbbie
Robinson out of Davey's, is
bass.
Santa Monica de£eated San-
ta Barbara in the other
semifinal match Tu es day.
181h·911J.
D°"lllt1
Ettlmtn trod PerUno fNl Ot'f. Wt!ns-
teln tnd Sltlnbt~m !Ill 6-l, •2; llkl.
Olelrlt~ Ind Groubl•tl (fll l·l •.. 4.
says Walker will sprint out a NOW Jot more in the '71 campaign.
"We hope to involve the
quarterback a lot more in our
offense next season, utilizing
the short pass quite a bit."
THRU MAY 31st Store Hours: Sa.m. -6p.m. \\!ith fishing at the island
picking up, Davey's plans to
run the Fury 11 on specia l
trips Lo San Clemente Jsland
Sunday and Monday 'A'ith
departure at midnighl.
Dan Hansen at San
Clemente Sportfishing Landing
reports good catches of bass
and some legal barracuda
'''ilh mackerel also filling the
fish sacks.
The Tar mentor, v.·hile
lavish in his praise of Ogle,
also couldn't 3ay enough about
his doubles combinations.
"I thought all four kids
playing in the doubles today
did an outstanding job.
"All Of their (Beverly Hills')
strength tA'as wrapped up in
doubles play and our kids went
out and won seven of eight
sets for a 10111-1111 advantage."
Ee11m.n •nd P~r!no fN) o;i.t. Well\1-f~I" ... d S!1ln ... Ym (fll ,.J. •·l; •Piii
with Dlt!rlch 1nd Gro11bl1tt (fl) "L l· ..
Rustl ers, OCC
Sla te A wards
A pair of spring sports
atA·ards banquets are .schedul-
ed lonighl and Thursday for
Orange Coa,,t and the Golden
West Rustlers.
Gill, a 5-9, 165-pounder,
began the season at an of·
fensive guard spot, but v.•as
moved to running back near
the end of the season.
fie finished vdth 249 yards in
27 carries for a 9.0 average.
Altt.ough Gill figures high in
University's offensi ve plans,
his best position might be at
Jinebacker.
Mackerel fishing could bring
on a run of yeJloy,·tai l in the
near future according to the
landing managers.
Hal Sieling, veteran coach c.f
the Beverly Hills team, said
early in the day that his firsl
doubles team must win U the
Normans were to capture the
team match.
The OCC crew and sailing 1jii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iiiioiij
athletes will be honored in the
student center tonigtit at 6:30
while Golden West track and
field, gymnastics and tenni s
aces will be ff!ted Thu~day at
the Gold Anchor restaurant in
Huntington Beach (6:30).
GOLF TIPS \Vith water temperatures
v.•arming and summer months
epproaching. a!J four area Jan·
dings are anticipating a big
1;ummer or fi shing along the
Orange Coast.
The Beverly Hills first duo
failed to win a set, proving
Ba,seball Standings
A;\IER TCAN LEAGUE
Boston
Baltimore
Det roit
Cleveland
New York
\Vashington
Oakland
r.linnesota
Kansas City
Ani:t:els
l\-lilwaukec
Chicago
East Division
W L
26 15
2.1 16
23 J9
17 23
17 23
17 26
\\'est Division
JI \J
22 21
20 21
21 24
" 22 15 23
Pct.
.6J4
.5911
.548
.425
.425
.395
.674
.Jl2 ....
.<01
.421
.395
Tu1Mlf y'1 ll11utl1
W11llin9lon 6, 8011on S. 11 tnnln9,
Oe1•0!! 1, N~w Yor~ •
Mll\nUoll •. 1,1/IW•U~•~ I K~1111• Cl1Y I. Chltl lO l
o~-l~nd 1. "'"'''' s. 1) 1 .. 11111111 Ci•Yel•nd •t e~nl .... Off , t~ln To.tl11..-1 Ce!'IMll
GB
2
31:r
gy,
81>
10
,..,
8\1
9
10·~
11 1::
W11hon9t0t'I I J1~1~! l·l) e1 !101ton (Cyle 4•31.
fllWM CTev~l~rid IOYnnlng 4·ll 11 fllltlMOrf IC~lllr
J.1), 11!9/'il
Now Yor~ !Slc!!l•m¥•t •·2) at O•trol! iCl"ll"('
1.4). ,,;,~1
Mln .. t-.ot~ !l lYlevtn )-4) II Mllwlu-•t !Liie!<·
-l·l l. 11i~h! Kftn•I• CllY {t1tolund 4·!) al Ch!Cl90 !WGod ,.,J, .. 1,111
"'ftltll (MIY :lo<il •I 0.klend (HUftltr t-JI,
nl9M
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct. GB
Nev.• York 25 15 .625
SL Louis 26 17 .605 %
Pittsburgh 24 18 .571 2
Chicago 20 22 .476 6
Montreal 17 19 .472 6
Philadelphia 15 26 .366 101.t
\\'est Dlvl1ion
San Francisco 31 JJ .705
Atlanta 22 2.1 .489 9Y.z
Houston 21 22 .483 9 ~J
Dodgers 21 23 .477 JO.
Cincinnati 18 25 .419 1z1 ~
San Diego 13· 30 .302 171h
T...,1111,•1 ll11wlll
CllKlnt'tlll 7, Pf11\b<ir1h '
M<lf'!rt•I l , ,ltlff'ta 7
SI. LOiii' '• Chlt•90 1 N•w Yor~ S. PMl•Of:lohl• •. U J11nlnt~
S.n l"r•ntlSto f , Do<ltt.,• 1
t10UllOI\ J. Stn Ol"'o 1
Ttnl•hl'I GI .... •
,l!l1nl• Pltttd J.11 1t MOntrHI ISlonlm111 J.11.
nieM
Phllec!elohlt {LttK.11 '-l) 11 N'"" Yor~ IGtnll'f
3·'!. nigh! Clncln111!l (Clonl119er ~l) II Pllhbllr1h tlllH
'-4), nloM
ChltltD fl+olt1 m1n 1·4) I'! St, Loul1 !lltull
4·•1, ni1M
Houlton tfll11l,..1mt J.1 II\~ Dltft,er J·I) 1!
S•n 0 1"90 llltoberh ).4 •ne Sln10rl11I o.IJ, 1, lwl-
nltht
Sii\ f'r1fl'IKO (l'erry +l) •1 Ofttwl (Ol!ttft
+1l. nlthl
llTH ANNIVERSARY SALEll BIGGEST & BEST YETI
DEAN LEWIS
1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
Service and Parts for All Imported C1rs
Modern Body Shop for All Cars
646·9303
Or~u1gc County's Largest and Most 1\fodern Toyota and Volvo Dealer
OYIUlAI DILIYIRY IPICtALllT1
Wltll L-·Hltldlc1"
,rl<fk• "'' T~•
NEWPORTER INN
PAR 3 GOLF COURSE
Sl.00 wllfll thl1 ad .... dap
DEAN LEWIS
IT!OIYICSITl!f
ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS
COROLLA 1971
VOLVO
1971 DEMO
$2999
142 11ial•n, rtclio, h•1l•r, 1ulom 1fie
tr1111.
USID CA• SPICIAL
$1495
lt•t TOYOTA COltONA
H1rdtoo, lt&dlo. H"!'r, • $0ftd, "'I'
tond. Cl!$$ .S.Ul.
•.
Bi.g Savings on Original Eq1tip1nent Tires! Glass-Belted ,,,
W I D E GLASS-BELTED
WHITEWALL TIRES WIDE ,·
H
1 111:
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FRONT END
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Wt correct c11t1t,
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e POLYESTER
COJI D lODT
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WMITIEW"'LLI
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\,lml! • ~ c111ro,...,.,
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COAST GENERAL TIRE
115 WIST lt1Ji, COSTA MISA
PHONE 140·5710 ot 646·103J
AVERY
GENERAL TIRE SERVICE
16941 hCKh 11,4., Hu11tl1t9to• lffch
PHONE 147·5150
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e COMPACn
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'
f
ff DAILY PILOT Wtdntsday, Ml)' 26, 1971
Looking Alaead
Ciarelli Brightens
HB Grid Outlook
By PIUL R05S
Of "" -" ""' ,, • ., He's obviously not on the
FBl's len nl06t wanted list.
But if the other Sunset
League foolball ·coaches who
confront lhe lluntington Beach
Oilers could produce a similar .
list, cha'nces are Tony CiareUi
v.·ould be close to tbe top of it.
The 6-l, 185-poun~ specimen
returns for tm enior football
season (his Utird \'atsity cam-
paign) in an Oiler jersey this
fall and Oil City grid boss Ken
~1oats is licking is chops in an.
ticipation.
Moats says, "Tony ,1·as just
one catch short of the school
receiving record (30 grabs by
Butch Rollins in 1965) last
year and he should break that
reeord this season.
TONY CIARELLI "He'.s a well-disciplined kid
and a very hard worker who is
one or the leaders·by.example
we 'll have on the team." end, flanker and slotback last
"'Our current \\'eightlifting fall with bis placement at
program is the be_,t we've had the latter usually coming in
wllh Ross MacDonald ( v.·ei ght tougb blocking situations.
coach and grid a id e ) "He's a good blocker but is
motivaling the kids. And Tony probably better as a pau
is one of the ones v.·ho have receiver," says Moats, adding,
beneJitted most from ii," says ''he has all kinds of moves and
Moats. ha.c; a good change of speed.
Ciarel!i has jumped to 185 \Vilh Ciarelli and fellow
front his 178 pla}•ing v.•eight of returning receivers Brett
'70. \Vh.ile. Tom Crunk, Bi 11
Also having been beneficial Dressler, Scott Whitfield, John
to the swarthy muscular pro-Garland and Arnold Ruiz back
spective senior was h i s in the '71 fold, ~{oats clalms,
participation as a shotputter "this is the best group of
!he past two seasons on roacO receivers we've _ ever had
Paul \\'ood's track squad. here."
He hit 52·1 'h with the 12· If the Oilers (1-8 in '70) find
pound steel ball in the just-con-the right quarterback to go
eluded spike campaign ar:d with their talent-laden corps
was included among a handful of pass-snappers, there's only
of good Sunset putters rated one wa y to go for Tony Ciarelli
next in line behind Newportr;:and::::::C::o::.::::::an::d::::tlla::::l'::'::"::P·::::::;I Harbor's ptus-60-foot pair of
Mark Stevens and Terry
Albritton.
Moats notes, "we en-
courage oft-season activity ror
,aur football players here and
something like the shotput has
been good for Tony."
YEAR 'ROUND
SWIM
PROGRAM
•w..,. .... . ... ,.,.
"Newport Beach Aqu1tics"' Getting back to Ciarelli's
gridiron talents, he ~ cur-
rently working out as a
flanke r in the spring drill!,
' I,,_:_..., ""' JNw,..., ................ ,
• Doilly l••ifol"I s....-. '""'" -·· '"'"" -'-''"" _,..,1<'"''-lotMU-However, Moats poinls out
lhat his ace receiver can be
for mid able at any of the pass-
catching posts.
' l-& I-C-.-f.-,.1A9
• .1oi11 HOW-S'I,,._.... r-
f• '""""' J..f..-,_ C-• wun-M.....it 2.01 W--ty O..., _,_ .... c..nr.n ... • ......,. Ciarelli saw action at tight
•• . ~
JUST= MILES FROM SAN DIEGO
Picturesque old rancho
land hidden away from it all.
How would you llkt to own a historic and
plctur11que pleet of re1ort land down nur
San Clego ... a pltet of old Rancho land, ~ldden
baek away from It all, overlooking a rolling
green meadow, bordered by gnarled old Oak
trees, Eucalyptus, wlld lllae and aagt-aurroundtd
by outcropping, of giant rtmrock. Thl1 land
Is virtually unchanged alnee Mexican land grant
days. For many years thl1 was the MMdOW
Lake Ranch-a rich eattle spread. The mM!fow
ind the lake are still here 11 111 ~ ranch house
and the old barn. And happily ao are th• dear
blue skies and balmy warm d lmate. Wt.,. now
allJngthls property Hidden Meadows. H .. you
can own • eholc• piece of re1ort property.. Here
you can bring your family on waekend11 rllt.
relax-enjoy the eompany of other nfce middle
class people-and eacape th1 m•ddtnlna notl ..
ten1ion, and hubbub of your \r.:C--=-
work-a-dey world. "'
sc£111c Lon noM s1100
LDW DOWN PA!lllNT$
"LONQ 1UM FllWIClllQ
•
HAWSE WINS
OCC AWARD
Mesa, Laguna, MV Laud Stars
Sophorncn Jlm Haw&e is
the fit1t reelpteot of the
Wenddl I. Pick..,. bauball
award at , Orance C o a 1 t
Coll<ge.
Haw,., wbo played firsl
bale for tilt -U>IJ "'" suaon, hN rflC'tived a $250
scholarshlp to conUnue his
education at a foor-year rol-
lege. Hia name has been in-
9Crlbed on 1 permanent trophy
whlch will be kept at the col·
lege.
Tht Pickena award was
originated by Newport Beach
attorney Gene Crain and is
gh•en each yeu there is a
worthy recipient.
Award.$ banquets were held
Tuesday night for Co g t a
A1esa's baseball playera, track
performers from L a g u n a
Beach and Mlssio;i Viejo's ten·
Dis team.
Tom Sampson copped most
valuable varsity honors in
Mesa'! baseball fete at the
Newporter Inn.
At 1.1 i s s i o n Viejo, Greg
Hebets (senior), Tom
Blask.iewcz (junior), Don
Hebets (sophomore) and Bob
Niebecker (freshman) picked
up most outslanding honors.
~tesa Award Winners
Baseball
Varsity -Captain: Dan
Quisenberry; most
valuable-Tom Sampson;
most Improved: Don Jlunt;
most insplraUonal: Ted
Tompkins.
Junior var!ity-Cipta.i.D :
Chuck Glaspy ; most
valuable: Tito Mays; most im·
proved : Randy Foss; most in-
spirational: Ken Peterson.
Frosh-soph-Captaln: Mark
Kline ; most valuable : Steve
Sharp; most improved: Jim
Swain.
Laguna Award Wlnn:er1
Track
0 u ts t anding freshman:
David Kiesselbach: out.st.an-
dfrig sophomores: Kurt Shull
and Spike Atkinson ; oulstan·
ding junior : Joe Prickett;
outstanding senior: ?o.t i It e
Sweeney; most Improved
track: Ruben Gomales; most
improved field: Judd BinJey ;
high point varsity: Steve
KaWyianl; high poiot bee:
Paul Klosterman: high point
cee: Spike Alkin!OO ; Mr. Good
Vibrallom: trophy; Ro b b I e
Heddon.
Er:cellence a w a r d : Kurt
Shull.
l\filaJon Vleje Award W1Dner1
Tennis
Varsity-Most Improved:
Mark" Maurer; outsl.ending
senior: Greg Hebets: outstan-
ding junior: Tom Blasklewcz;
outstanding sophomore: Don
Hebets ; outst.andlng
freshman: Bob Niebecker.
'71 Pinto
BETTER TO LEASE FROM
MacHowaRb
AUTO & TRUCK LEASING
124 Harbor Blvd. at First, Santa Ana
Telephone 531·0607
Vacationers, take note:
our toughest fiber glass
belted tire is on sale.
-·--lapodlck plarl: In carvf• llghter attachment
or• poitliblewith '"D" cell
Ml 1 lies. Spoalcora Olporala up to
511.MUlic poweroutputol
4-percharlnel.
7995
Mlnll1zll811atktapedeck.
WllllbullMnburglaralmm.
' Foni_.-cargomasler II nylon cord trucrs.
1119 for Cllllpers, plck·ups and vans.
2295
PIUl2"'2fed.laL
671>111,111.-IJ'l'O.
Tubalype
Size fed. t1x Prite
700-15/6 ,. , • 2.67 • ••, :29.9S
95().16/S •••• :2.61 •••• 24.95
1$).16/S ••• , ~.7:.? •••• ~.ts
Tubt!HS
Sire Fed.1111: Price
ti7~15/6,.,. 2.6S •••• 2$.15
111111 prlcel w."fldllK lllraugh Salurday onlyl
Foremosl" 'El Tigre' 424 with 2 bel ..
of fiber glass on a 4 ply polyester
cord body. Dual whitewall design, too.
Olll1 whilnlll lubeled
Sl1• Fed. tu Reg. Now
F7S.14 •• •••••· 2.38, ••••·•• <40.95 •·•••••• 3S,8S
G7S.1.t, ••••••• 2.55 •·•••••• 42.95 •••• •••• ~7.811
H78-14 •••••••• 2.7.t •• , ••••• 44.95 •••• •••• 39.81
ttl78-14 •••••••• 2.91 •••••••• 46.95 •••••••• 41.81
G78-15 •·•••••• 2.64 ••••••,. t12.95 •• •••••• :17.8&
H7S-15 •••••••• 2.80 ••, •••·, 4d.95 ••••• ••• 39.8& l78-15 •••••••• :J.19 •••••••• 46.95 •••••••• 43.811
.
Plus Fed. lax and old lire
Benelli 1970 Woodsblke mflll
cycle. Powerful on or off
the road cycle with a 65ce,
4 speed foot shift engine..
~~~ Auto/home
plug-in perk coffee kiL 14.99
I I ----' . ---' \ --------------1~. lml _ -JlllD1 ---~-~' ---------~
Pick-t1p air condilloner for Fords or CheYrolets.
Complete unit Including adapter kiL 24995 Expert Installation avallable.
1688
Flex·a·lite engine fan.
This flbergtas fan cools
your engin"e et reduced
hOrlepower. ll'a lightweJghL
Y11, you c•n shop 12 to 5 Sund•ys, loo, al any of these Penney Aulo Centers: FASHION ISLAND Newport Center,
HUNTING TON CENTER, Hunlinglon Beech Use Penneys Time Peymanl Pla n
Dougherty
Rolls 867
In Elims
Jerry O'Neill o( Torrance
rolled a four-game series of
912 to take the lead in the 11th
annual West Coast l\.1alch
Game Eliminations bowling
tourney at Kona Lanes l\.1on-
day ni ght.
O'Neill cranked out games
of 213, 237, 193 and 269 for his
912 -a 228 average.
In secood place is Santa ~
Ana'! Mickey Strother (874). !
Top ar~a pcrlorn1ance came
rrom Costa ti.1es.J's Fred
Dougherty who rolled an 867
series for fourth place. El
Toro's Woody Woodruff shared
the No. IO spot l855) ·y:hile
\Vestminster's Jim Hayes v•as
l llh with &50. .
Dana Point's Clyde Lacher,
one of the top five finalists
last year: was 15th with 838.
Whittier's Glenn Allison
fired an 835 for 16th.
Overall. it was the best
scoring .first night in three
years. Last year, 889 was high
after the first night with 853
second and 811 as the 16th best
score.
?\1onday night a total of 37
cracked the 800 figure.
The 120-man field will be cut
to 60 after 28 games, then will
be reduced to 16 after 36
games. culminating on Aug. 30
\vhen the top five battle for
the championship.
L••dln1 sowi.r1
POI. •-1., CllY f'lnt1n
1. Je.rv O'Nelll, 1'or.1nce 911
1. Mickey Sr rotrier, S1nta An1 174
J. Gil Bym, An1helm Mt
~-Frtd Oougner1v, Cosre MtSI IWI
S. Garv Y1m.1ucnl, G•rdni1 "4
I, M1r1Y AndtriOn. ArMllltim Ml
1. J1cl< Klnsltv, Sanr1 Anl 117
I. Ron Dlll'll, Stinton I Si
'· J~tk MlrtlO!, S111i. A111 I U WIJO(jy Woodrutt, El Toro 85S
11. Jim H•ves. Wts!mln•ttr ISO
ll, Jolin $.h1rp, Encino 1-18
JJ. Mike Smllh, "nthtlm 13'
w111y w1gn1r. S...n!I """ IJ9 1~. Ctvoe Locher, Oeno Polf!f 138
16. Gl1rm Al!bon, Whittler 835
O!llerl -20. Nick StlDlllO (COSll
Mesa), Ul1 21. Ray Bry.an (Hun!lnu·
'°" Be1ch), Ill: ::14, Jeck Br1ncll
(Mini°" \/Jelo), IOS1 JI, J°"n ICnowles
JEI Torol. IOO; 38. Roy w•t10l'I (Custa
Mesi ), 7'L
Foreign
Kicker s
To Clash
England's \Vest 1-1 am
United, Necaxa of ~exico and ~
Germany's Rot·Wc1ss Essen
11
!.
will be in l...()s Angclei. in June
for a festival or international
soccer, with proceed s fl
earmarked for the United
States Soccer Development
Fund.
Both mate.hes are scheduled
for 3 p.m. kickoff at the Los
Angeles Coliseum. .
The Ha1nmers, as th e 1'
English pro side is kno\vn
throughout the world, feature .',
\Vorld CUp stars Bobby l\1oore , f
Geoff Hurst and J i m m y
Greaves; plus ''Pop" Robson,
signed ten weeks ago from
Newcastle United for $400,000.
~1oore was captain o f
England's \\rorld Cup cham·
pion team in 1966. follo\ving
which he was chosen as the
top player of the 16 !1alions
final and presented wi th the
Order of the British Empire
by the Queen of England.
Tn ~ 1970 World Cup
played In l\1exico, ~1oore ~gain
captained the English national
team.
Geoff Hurst is b cs t
SALE STARTS THURSDAY
ENDS SATURDAY, MAY 29
WAIDS l lVl l SIDl PA551NGll
1111 OUAIAHl ll
""'"''""""' Wo•d , .. ,.., .. , li••t1lff -.. ,
••• ~·•• l•o •••""•"'•I ••"'"'"'I••""' Ill••'•'" ;., ,..010riol ""' "'°''"'•""''• ""4 (2) 1oe4 •~'"''' .. 1~1 ... ~
II ... ,;,, f.,1, 4,, 10 -· 40'0<1<1. M ... ,.,..,,
Wo•d "'" .. ptoco ,.,. '"" tllt '''"'I "" I~•• 10-r. ., ,,.,,,.011,ood Olo. -• •• • ''"'•'•'
...... b ....... "••4 -·~··•«1 .. d •• ,. ... "'•
... ~ ...... ol ll>o 11...i ~···" '"""• '""' .... . ,.,.4 ...... ,, ( ...... , ....... ,.!>lo ,_, .. ,.1 ,,..;.., ... .,;'"'"' ••••• u •. _,_.,, w.,4 .;u,,p1_ ••• "" fo1e ,...,01041""''" beu4 -......... , .. , .... ,_ .......... ~ ........... "" ............... . ........................... """'' ......... -....... , .............. '"'°"''""'" .. 'If"• .. .... ""''"' "''"'' •o • .,,,. .,, ...... "' "'""' '"'" '"'"""""' f.11. Oot·••' """' ~!• ",. "'• .., of ... ••••4 ....... , .......
'"' ......... --·· ......... _., .. 1 ....... -• .,d""'o of d.,• of ,...~ ... to oor "'""'•-•r ..... , "'-"-
2ND TIRE
A S LOW AS 164 9
W HlN YOU SUT 1lf6.70·1 s
AT •fG. ,llCI Of 31.9 1 f'lUl
2.41 f,f.1. I ACN ANO TIADI·
IN Tiii Off 'IOUl VIHICLI
6-ply roting nylon cord.
Perfect tire f or pick-up~.
panels, campers, vons.
!ALl
,l lC I
,NO Ill(
1 •• 4,.
l 9 .9t '
l&.00' 4 --1
f7.00"+=-i
19.99° JOI
,, .
Wtdnesday, MQ" 26, 1CJ71 DAIL V PILOT •• 2.t ,.
YOUR CHOICE.•
NYLON OR •
RAYON TIRES
• !liiiM-
1180 ooo 000 l fl t
<"at 11t1u
''CHAllOl IJJ,.
Riverside® XL T
ILACKWALL
llZES
7.35·14
7.75-14
8 .2.5-14
8.5.5-14
7.7.S.15
8.15-1.5
·9 7.3S·141UllLISS
BLACKWALL Rlt•IAD
PLUS ,40 J,l .T,
IA.CH AND T•ADl-IN
• New tread M>ber carofully retreaded on
sCKA'ld tire bodiet for dependoble service
• Lifetime quality, road hazard guarantee
SALi PLUS
PRICE J.l,T.
IACH IACH
9 _95• •O• •
11.95• ... f ,
'·
12,95• •••
13.95• 51<
12.95• ~·· 12.95• 51•
"With trode-1" llrt off yow COi°. Whltewol11 52 rnort tocfi..
.. . '
I
··l
'
~ < ... :... ...... ~·~~_..... ...................................... ~~ .......... .;;;;.....,
' $3 off Wards batteries!
0 .
I
~ ... -~ I
. : IA J
·-·--..... --·-,., ... __ ,....,. ;.=..__ ... _ :....-;:-.....::-.= __ ... ___
-·-
Get dependable starts with
24-month guarantee Special!
Dependable start and 12~.~ reserve power for old·
er cars. 22F, 24, 24F,
29NF size batteries. RIG. tS.95
IXCH,
... -... --""" ... _ ......... ...
l•l llll··-·--""" ............ tzl-f'l•·-.... -
3-yr. guarantee O.E. Energy!
• 4
I
:'11
~·· .. •
"' ! 1U
"'.} .,.
I
r
"' " '"
'.
'·
·""
•ii ,.
Original equipment
quality replacement
battery. Sizes to fit 16~<~ I
most cars.
• •
•
RIG. 19.95
IXCH.
__ I
' ' ; .. -"l I •, --=-·-• • •
Buy wooden garage creeper '"
" for more working ease!
Do under,hossis work 544 ,,
in comfort! Padde d ,.
headrest, glides on
ball.bearing rolle rs. SPlCIAll
• . '
I ~ f
Save 3.55 on car-top rack
of vamished oak! Stunlyl
Carry el<Jra luggag•, 744
camping gear! Sturdy
nylon straps; 60" wid e.
A handy item to have! HG.10.99
•
f
• ... -.
HERE'S WHAT WE DO:
• Install Rlversldt111 shoes on all wheels
remembered for leading hi s
country lo the world ti tle in
1966 with a sensalional hat
trick against Germany, thus
becoming the only player ever
to score three goals in a World
Cup finale.
.... -......
• Rebuild wheel cylinders • Turn brake
drums • Arc brake shoes • Check bearings,
fluld lines, return springs • Check mas·
fer cylinder • Bleed lines, add broke fluid
• Check seals, repack wheel• Special arrangements for
vouth groups can be made by
Contacting junior ch::iirman of
the SCSFA Albert Kaiser at
sn.7855.
Advance sale tickets for
S.150 C!iln now be obtained al
the Coliseum boll: office and all
Ticketron outlets; as \\'Cl\ as
the Switzerland Restaurant.
Continental Sports. A 1 p i n e
Village and Libreria ri.1exico.
Range1·s Win
Last 2 Tiffs
'111e Coast Range rs soccer
team put the wraps on regular
sc..1son activity by slapping
Olympic of Paramount in n:ia-
jor divisk>n and reserve action
Sunday at Newport Beach's
j\lariners Park.
Coach Brian McCaughey's
major d Iv is Ion champions
zoomed to a g..4 conquest on
Chris ~fcCarthy's hat trick.
The rcse~es of coach Georg'.!
l~arrison nailed down second
place In the Pacific League
with a 4-0 bllt:z.
Others i;coring for the firi;t
team were Colin \Vest (2).
Johnny Hayl'l'es (2l. Leir Dag
\Vcmeid (I) and Alfredo
f\.laran (1).
And y Thomp!Kln l"letled two
for the subs while mates Tom
Morrison and ~f cC a u & he Y
SC()red one apicct.
$25 saving! Riverside® 3-speed
auto air conditioning unit!
Inexpensive comfort can be yours with
this Special unit! f eatures 3·speed blow·
er, 4-way l(flvers and thermoltat control
to provide directional cooling for indi·
vidua l preference!
LOW CO ST INSTALLATION AVAILAILI
$124
Rl0.149.95
STANDARD BRAKE JOB
36~.~: •Oii( Alftl'
l llf ,t,Ollllfttt
IU411iT lltillll
Don't wait "'11il your brakes fail! Get dur·
able, dependable rel ined brake shoes at
Wards. Only top, quality friction linings are
used. flt 1tandard Fords and Chevys only.
I i
•
AUTO CENTERS OPEN DAILY AT 8:30 AM •••
SUNDAYS AT 12:00 NOON!
.,
i
I
' '
" IHOP MON. THRU SAT. 'Ill 9,30
::.\ .. SHOP.IUN~A_v°i2 TO S.PMI :·.
LA CllNlGA FULLlRTON SANTA ANA PANORAMA CITY ROSEMEAD , lo c1enega ol 1Brh st, horbor ot orongethorpe bri1tol ot sevente•nth klbiot ol roscotr ro1emeod blvd. ot son bemordino \,
TORRANC E
del omo fo1hlon square
phone .542-b971
hone 836·7922 hone 714-879·2.500 • 547-6841 ans 894-82 11 Freewo -hon• .573.JllO ·i l-----'~==~c::~----t---::::7!'::::':":-::'=::'::':-'=::"-:::-:----l----"~=::=:=cc:----+---~""""':!!,""'"-"-~--+~--''-"'""''==""'""-:'-~~~-;_..i NORWALK HUNTINGTON BEACH · VENTURA CANOGA PARM: COVINA
Imperial ot norwolk blvd. ed inQer ot btoch boulevord 500 IOUth mills rood fOpanga pfo 0 barronco cit son btrnordlno
hon• 868-0911 phone 714-892--66 11 48.S.5421 642-7.541 >Mn• 88)..JOoo frffWD -hon• 966-7411
'
I '
I
1% DAil Y PILOT
ousewife
xhibits
At Fair
•
Men in
Service
U. S. Air Foret Captain
Dtiuglas C. Roach, son of Leo
D. Roach, 413 Via Montego,
S4ii Clemente, has b een
dicorated with his second
a"Ward of the Distinguished
1'1yjng Cross for a er i a I
achievement in S o ut h e a s t
ASi'J .
~ptain Roach disti nguished
hP.nself as an F-40 Phantom
flibtf!r bomber aircraft CQffi·
mander when he led a flight of
~-4J>s in an attack against a
~vily defended enemy sup-
ply network. Despite darkness, hZJe and enemy defenses, he
placed hi s ordnance directly on target destroying large
quantities of enemy supplies.
The captain was presented
Ille medal al Ubon Royal Thai
M B, Thailand, where he
~rves as chief of F-4 stan-
dardi:r.ation and evaluation for
the 8th Tactical Fighter Wing.
a part of lhe Pacific Air
Forces, headquarters for air
oPerations in Southeast Asia ,
U~ Far East and the Pacific
area . ,,,
(:brtstopbtr C. Strong:, son of
Mils. Patricia R. Frederiksen
of '· 5291 Loyola Ave .,
\Vestminster. ha s been pro-
moted to sergeant in the U.S.
Air Force.
~ergeanl Strong is a com·
m1p1iCJtloru specialist at
Etinendorf AFB, Alaska . The sergeant, whose father ,
Ray C. Strong, lives at 332
L\Jgonia, Newport Beach.
.Technical Sergeant Robert
L. 'Strtet, brother of Ronald E.
Street, 163 Delmar, Costa
Misa, has received the U.S.
Air. F o r c c C:Ommen dation
Medal at Luke Af'B. Ariz.
'Sergeant S t r e e t was
decorated fo r meritorious
achievement as di vision com·
pu~ systems programming
technician with the ~mi·
Automatic Ground Envir on·
merit Programming Agency,
JJepdquarters. 26th Air
Dtviaion Luke. He now serves with the
46t9th Support Squadron, a
utii& of the Aerospace Defense
c.ommand which protects the
U.S. against hostile aircraft
and mis.'liles.
Specialist Five Robert J.
Deut l, son of f.1r. and Mrs.
Robert .J. Deuel Sr., 19f>O
Meyer Place. Costa Mesa.
recently took part in an Anny
Air Defense Command "short
notice annual pra t't lce''
(SNAP ), al the Namfi Range
on.the island of Crete .
He Is a member or llead·
quarters Battery, 5th Battalion
of the 73rd Artillery in
Gelmany. ---Army Private First Cius
Waynt. R. Jones, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard J. Jon es, 315
Holmwood Dr., Newport
Beach. recenUy completed
eiatit weeks of training as an
infantry direct fire crewman
at Ft Jackson, S.C.
Airman Htllr)' J . Pooct, son
ef Mrs. Hope }of. Delgado,
13931 Cherry St .. Westminster,
ha1 completed baalc tra ining
at.Lackland AFB. Tex. lie has
been assigned to Chanute
AF.B, JU., for tralning In
aircraft maintenance. Airman
Pooce Is a 1971 graduate or
Pl/'lmouot Hlib SChool.
Wednesday, May 26, 1971 Wednesday, May ?6, 'Im PILOT-ADVERTIS£R J::
Employment Agencies ,Can Help
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• BAKf.RUlElD • CkATSWOR19 • COVINA • ESCONOIOO •COLETA • GRANADA HI LLS • LA CRfSCtNTA • LAOERA HEIGHTS • LANCASTE R • E.LOS ANGELES • R&SEO.t. • RIVERSlg[ •SAN I ERN AAOINO
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I
•
•
J3 PILOT-ADVERTISER Wtdnt\tJ.iy, M11 26, 19"1
Coast Area Vital Statisti~s
Dissolt1tions
01 Marriage
...
C1tlt"" J•<k 111>1""' t NI L111<11 ICIV °'""°"· J\1111 Ann I nd Jonn Wllll1m ll:ubel, 1to1lvn 1!1!1 Wollltm L Oon, llllbtrt CtlYln tnd 8tvttlY Let lo:t no. Mt,.., Hlltn Ind John Frtdtrlckl Mcl't!Sd..,, Con1t1nc1 F. Ind Wll!lt"1 J
jp, Oort $tk·Tlnt Ind Edmond 51111'19· «m Solomor!. Ctrolvft Loul1 1ne1 Ptul M. V(1ln1ln, Rtl>l<ct t nd Mtt!o
T11ler, Silly Wtv ... '"" .111111 I . HuCklbt, Clllll $uk t nd Wllll1 I.
P1i1u1, Ntntv E tnd t-jerblrl Hewt•d
r11nl1. """"' WtVftt I ncl $""'" J\lftl Sou<.tk, Jtmn L t nd Mtflrit E.
GonZt~. l•!IY Jtne flld R.1111 Ttl!olt
Ltwl1. Mt rvln AOtm tnel Ro11ll• .Inn
Et•ltY. K1n,..tll l ttov t nel Dor11 Hllt11 Cltt•'f, Annt l 111 Elltft tNI Mlo;llt t l
Earl
, ...... n1. J1nlc1 J.. Incl Ktv D.
,11 ... ""'' ,.
eewm1n. Jtmll l1to1Ttt1 t r'ld Ktfln
Slt.., ... t, 6111 t nd EIXI Mt"•
0\1 MlrJ, Shl•!tr J.. 1n<1 $t1v1n C.
8t0<.k, Mtr111t J.nn 11111 Mkllttl
Cllttltl
C1•!>0n, Lindt M. tnd lffnlf<I I .
Ptrlltr, Htrol<I T tnd .t.ut rllnl
ICtn_.,,, Je»eOI\ 1nd M1r11ret
O.n'9l1, Mor-., loulM tflll llobl•I
Jo:t.IOI\
Ou!MICll. Gtll Ind GlrY l ..
look. 0.vld ind J1nl1 Moore, Gloria M. end Fr1n~ A
Btnoll, Ph-.,1111 R.11 Ind Ron1ld lltlr
Sllt111>c>'n, Ctrol Anr. tn<I lloblrt HltOld
M1r11on, Ger1l<1ln1 V 1nd Edwtrll T.
ICult . S!lnlev Edwtrd t rtll Olant1 lynr,
Ttllv, Join V. tflll Mtrlt 0 .
T1vH>r, lllchtrd l tt Jr., 100 P1•rld1
Jon11. Oo<t!h'f PrlKlllt Ind Cllt rlH
Miiion
ICtllh, Judlll> .ti. t Nt Eow1ro V.
St n<IHI· C1rolyn V, t nd Rtx H. l(ltiti'f, Stndfl IC tNI Robllrt H
l(u'fktllllf!I, L•!i1 ......... In I nd Clo•I•
G•M H111, Rtt.l'lttl Grttt tnd R.ld'ltrd
Stott, SaNlrt 5111 tNI Ltrr¥ H\1911 lluftYffl. P1!rlc!t Ann 11><1 Gtry l'rH1""
Wtlch. Mt rtllt K1r1r1 t nd llotiert Elbtrt
M41Yln, Lt ......... M. INI J1P•!11 W.
ROii. PhVtlll F. tfld l'Mltlp I .
Krt!ocflwell, Ntllll O. tnd Jtck tt.
Clctto. Grttttfll'I tlld C1rm1n A.
lll!Yntr, Lt trY Lvnn 1M Mlllll\I
MtPo, MIChltl E. t nd WtNlt Dlt"I
LtChtnc:.t, l1rNr1 J. tncl "1111 L.
Gr111n1.. M1rnv11 ICIV t ncl Tllem11
ll:'ftll
Ht rper, J.nft Ot11 t nd Jo/In lM
RllYt lctYt , ll1f\11le tM Atlclt
MoM1. Clltrl11 Noel t nd G\tnoclt Surtn-
'" lfllTltlOCUTOllY DICtllS
IMerM Mt Y lJ
,.!C!'ll'!ll111, liallt 8. •ncl Wfltlam V,
En•]..n1nn, ltt•• F. •ncl Gt0•'9,
F1&r11, Vfl'll ••v t nd "'" C-r. Ettl11. lllllll tl'ICI J-1 Wllll<lm
"''"""'"' Httl W. t nd 1'1tl<lt C.
'·
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Edllh • ShtPtrd, lludolpl\ C. tnd P1trlc!t l .
Worll'v. D1111n1 J tnd Sllven II . Reu, llubv .ti. 1NI Wlttltm V.
T-11 C191. 81rb1r1 It. tOO Clllton F.
Grt htm, E,..1-.,11 Ell1tblltl tnd Jfll'on
Lin.on, Jt1nlt M1rlt •nd •rvc:•
.S..ldl, l+Ot"''" Vt n t r.d O.lor11 Mtrl• l::ldlt9e\ftn. Lflld1 1NI Cr•!t Ktnl Ult1tft1r. Mtrlt nne F. ft'ld llolt
Wlllltfl'l1.0l'I, Htrblrl l . 111, t lld S1A1n ••
ACHIEVERS -Bank of America vice president Robert Truex Jr. present&,.
achievement awards to (from left) Kenneth Zwick, Ellen Llchenstein, Conni•
Vega and Kenneth Neisser. '·°'.. Pewo!!. Pt!rlclt J.nn 100 ll.ot111d Mii· ••• ·-" JKl<t«I. Je J.n.,. trwl Dontld Hort>ttl Sllt l'lt. l.ertrtt J, t nd J.rlhllt E.
He-. l•rN•t J, tflll 8....-on l!:UNl'lt
MlMORIAl DAY SPlCIAlS PICK UP YOUlt Pltll aOOKLIT
AT YOUlt a.I, ITORI
I MIMOll&L DAY ITOl.I NOUll 9100 ·A.II. te 6100 P.M.)
PREFINISHED
LAUAN PANELS
I 2 in11 1111 •••I
4'x8'
Fo ur terrific colors. Spanish
walnut, saddle walnu t, two
shades to choose fro m,
p lus, mojove ook, o lighter
brown a nd antique ovocodo,
o ric h green color,
something different.
5~VE 1.11
Stem or Plate Type
FURNITURE
CASTERS
Rugged spherical casters
·Your c hoice of gleaming
bross or ontique brO$S.
PRES TONE
ANTl·FREEZE
AND COOLANT
Pre~tone Anti-boil -anti·leok -
onti-freeze w ith money bock
leak.age protection . A must for
CJ ir conditioned cars.
1 GALLON
ROSES
Many of the most
popula r varieties
_to choose from.
Reds, pinks, whites.
Sturdy plontsl
GREEN KWIK LIQUID
FERTILIZER
ONE GALLON
Covers up 10 1600 square feet.
Perfect for · lawns, ff owe rs ,
vegelobles ond shrubs.
Will grel!!!n up you r
in o matter of a fl!!!w days.
100COUNT
PAPER PLATES
Package of 100 nine-inch plastic. coated
v1hite paper plates. ldeol for many
I ' I
t lb
MALIBU GARDEN
PATIO ~LIGHTS
Completeiy shockproof a nd waterproof. Costs less thon
3 cents per night to operate. Easy to in stall. No permits
needed.
a Ll9ht Set
34.11 .
6 U1ht S•t, with
tilTl•r •• .51.11
6 LIGHT sn
••••
7'x7' UMBRELLA TENT
This medium i ize,·
outside frame.
umbrella tent is
ideal for overnight
or hiking trips where
lightweight and quick
\ p itching is of prime
\ im portance.
19''
Full, haif or quarter c.lrr e pattern.
D••roble J:)lastic with brass insert.
Will not rust or corrode.
PROPANE FUEL
CYLINDER
0.ZITE CARPET TILES FOLDING
TUIT•
ORAllal
1212
IRVINE BLVD.
Disposable propane
tonk fits all standard
propane torches and
comping appliances.
12•1NCH SQUARIS
SEE OUR SELECTION OF DO·IT·YOUISILP IOLL CAl,ITING.
Seven Fa mou s Kleon 'n !<ling feolure all ows
these tiles to be applied directly to
floor. No messy adhesives or tape to
bother with. Also easy •a pick up for
us e in another room or onolher hom e,
$hould you move.
~-!~~~~c~~~~!~T~yore
Burns safe and
clean.
llTMllllTIR
LA HAIRA
1151
WESTMINSTER AVE.
2221 w.
LA HABRA BLVD.
aU•A-PARK
•ULLIRTOll
....
VAlllYVIEWST.
24tSE~
CHAPMAN AVE.
·,~om our regular stock ond·every choir
is brand sponkin' new. They
ore full size, long-arm, with
strong and colorful webbing!
Replace those old chairs Todoyl
•
LOIMMAYAa&lll
IL TORO ..
l. 11ChST. COITA MllA
• IAKERSF'lt:LD • CHATSWORTH •COVINA • ESCONDIDO •GOLETA •GRANADA HILU •LA CAESCEHTA e LADER.A HltQHTS • LA~TIA e E.LOS ANGELES • RUIDA • RIVlRSIDI •SAN llANARDINO
• SAUCUS • llMI • SllRINGVAllEY • TAAlANA •THOUSAND OAKS• UPLAND •VANNUVI •VICTORVILLE
'
Four Coast "
• • · •. '1
Students Wm: . "' Bank Award~ • • Four students from hlo.a'
schools along the Orange eoiSt
have been awarded a total ·¢.
12 .250 as finalists ln the Ba~
or America 1971 Achievemeu't
Awards competition. • '•
The area students, ~
amount or lheir awards and
the field of compeUtion in
which they won, are:
From Huntington Beach:
Kenneth T. Zwick, I e 8 4 1
Edgewater Lane , a senior at
Marina High School. first
place in liberal arts, Sl,000
cash award.
•
From Seal Beacb : Ellen
Lichenstein, 245 Clippe r Way. ,,
a senior at Huntington Beach ~
High School. fourth place Ml
fine arts, $250. •i ,:
From Fountain Valley: c.po;
nie M. Vega, 10312 Cinco di
Mayo. a Fountain Valley Hiati
School senior, fourth plaCe-~·
vocational arts.. S2SO. 1,:···
From Newport Beach : l(i!:l)o
nerh E. Nelsser. 2416 22nd S\.~
a senior at Corona del Mat
High School. second place in
science a n d mathematici,.
$750. I " .
The students compete l;f .
a g a I n s l 32 semi·fina1i5t4
selected £rom higll schools. tq
Santa Barbara, Ventur 'a~
Orange. San Bernardino, Inyo
and Mono counties.
'
Men in ·,
u Service
U. S. Air Force Captain ciit4
Wo L. Shea, son of Mr. ~nd
Mrs. Clifton L. Shea of 2118 4
Via Puerta. Laguna Hills, 63'
been decorated with his. ~·· cond award of lhe.Dlstingui .'
ed ~lying Cross at Ubon Roy , ·
Thai AFB, Thailand. ,,. . '
Captain Shea, an aircrlf.t
c o tn m ander, distin~ishet1r
himself when he led a flight of·
F ...fD Phanton fighter bom~rs,
in a strike against a heavilY.
defended enemy s u p p i y
network. Despite darkness.
haze and enew-defenses fie
placed his ordnance direct~.'·
on target and destroyed tart ;
quantities of JUpplles destin
for use against friendly force'il;
The captain is ssslgned -·~ Ubon with a unit of the Pacific,
Air Forces. haedquarters for1
air operations in SoutheUt.t>
Asia, the Far East and Pacific
area.
Airman Tony L. Freem••1 ~
IOfl of Mr. and li-frs. M. H.,
Freeman. 2291 Elden. Coet1i·
Mesa, has graduated at Lowry
AFB. Colo., from the technical
training course tor U.S. A.itl'
Force munitions maintenance' .
specialists. ':;1 Airman Freeman. n o, w,
qualified to inspeet, assemble
and dispose of explosive muni·
lions, is being assigned ~ta.:
Kunsan AB. Republic o t;'
Korea . He will be in a unit of('
the Pacific Air Forces. bead4
quarters for air operations in'
Southeast Asia, the Far Ea1t·
and Pacific area. .
The airman, a 1969 graduate
of Costa Mesa High School, at.
tended Orange Coast College. ,
\ Army Private Stepbea P .. '
• .Jackson, son of ?.fr. and Mrs.
Philip Jackson , 2872 Re~
Lane, Costa Mella. recently;
completed a five.week Ugbt '
vebicle driver course at n.'~
Ord. Calif. ·~
During the course, be wu ·.
trained in the operation mi'.~
maintenance of m I 11 t a r Y'\
vehicles of less than four and
one-half tons rated capacU;r..
Instruction also was given fn ,·
the transportation of persoa-J"
nel. eqdipment and su;:pli'*,,
'f,' Anny private first cl .. , i
Wayne R. Jones, ion of MF.1~·
end ~trs. Ri chard J. Jones, '
315 Holmwood Dr .. Newportl t·
Beach. recently completat·~
eight week!I of training a~ u
Infantry direct fire crewman
At Fl. Jackson , S.C.
•
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DAJL-Y PJLOT VJtdntsdJ1, Mil 20, 197'1
Opening Day at Harbor Ya~ht Clubs . '
·"" COLORS HOISTED AT VOYAGERS YACHT CLUB
-
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t '' " , . ,. . ,,
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,
BYC SWEEPSTAKES PAIR
John and Silly Biker
Flag raisings, i11troduciio11 of
flag officers and staff commo·
dores. .p.1td a recog11ifion of
guesls, i'11cludi11g officers of
other yacl1t clubs are the liigh·
ligllts of a11y yacht club Ope11·
Day cere1nonies.
i\.1any yacht clubs in Southern
California are more inclined to-
ward the term "seaso1t open·
ing" ruther than "club open·
ing" since niost clubs in thi,,.
area never close the year
around.
•
' -, .. · " ' ' ' .... -
COMMoooRE STEEN AND STAFF GREET GUESTS AT BALBOA YACHT CLUB
' . ' ~ ..........
I £ ' • • I
' .
•
'
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BOY SCOUTS SALUTE COLORS AT LIDO ISLE YACHT CLUB 'S OPENING DAY CEREMONIES
r
•
' ' I . <'.'( ;i • .. .
' •
•"' • •
DRESSED YACHTS BACKDROP SSSC FLAG RAISING IN NEWPORT HARBOR
COMMODORE BISE LEADS FLAG SALUTE AT SHARK ISLAND YACHT CLUB
..... ~ .--~ ~--' . . ' " • • • •• ~ ' • ·• . ,, ., \. ••• ••
..
., "' " It
" • ' ... '· ' ..
! ~ ,.,1
Iii . ' • •
CLUB BURGEE GOES ALOFT AT BCYC OPENING RITES
,
,.
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• ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' l
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• •
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ONE HUGE SIGN REPLACES ANOTHER
Newport Btl Tr1d1 Mark 811<orM1 lmperi1I
Sign of Times
Landniark Gets Neiv One
One sign long familiar to Coast residents is
about to dih.ppear, but another, if size a1one is a
criteria, may soon quickly take its place.
Soon to disappear is.; \he huge Newport Bal·
boa Savings sign but it wilt be replaced by an other
designating the structure off Via Lido as the New-
port Beach executive offices of the newly-named
ln1perial Savings.
A new sign weighing three tons ·has been
moved into position at the top of the five-story
building. 'The I symbol alone weighs more than
half a ton, and designates both Imperial Savings
and its parent company, Imperial Corporat.ion of
America.
Measur ing 36 feet long and 11 feet high, the
sign replaces the· Newport Balboa Savings sign.
Officials said that new signs placed at the
Newport office use more than 1.500 feet of neon
tubing, 600 square feet of plastic and more than
3,000 feet of gold mylar trim to make up the plas·
tic Jetter faces.
ICA acquired Newport Balboa Savings in 1969
and in 1970 operations of the association were
consolidated with another Imperial Corporation
of America subsidiary, Investors Savings, and the
names of both associations y.•ere changed to Im-
perial Savings and Loan Association of Newport-
Pasadena.
Over 100 Imperial Savings' signs now have
been manufactured and placed at ICA's subsidiar~
ies throughout California.
Penney Reports Good
1st Quarter Record
NEW YORK IBW) -J. C.
Penney Co. Inc. net income
for the first quarter rose 13.7.
percent ever the same 1970
period.
F'or the 13 weeks ended May
1 Penney had net earnings of
Sl&,600,833 against $14,594,944
last year. This amounts lO
pri mary net income per share
ef 31 cents against 27 cenu in
1970. On a fu\ly diluted basis
the figures are the same as
the primary earnings.
Income before income taxes
and uncon s cl id at e d
subsidiaries for the first
quarter was 22.4 percent
higher than last year, amoun-
ting le $33.112.433 against
$27,057,444 in the 1970 period.
As previously reported the
company's sales for the
quarter rose 11.9 percent to a
record S921.938.978 from last
year's $833,627,399.
Disc I csi n g quarterly
earnings at the a n n u a I
stockholders meeting he r e
chairman William l\1. Batten
attributed the first quarter
performance le improvement
in most areas of the com-
pany·s operation. especially
Penney slOres and catalog.
While catalog continued le
operate at a loss. the i~
provemenl Which began during
the th.ird quarter of 1970 was
maintained.
Batten pointed out that the
company also benefitted from
reduced interest rates. The
decline in the profit con-
tribution by unconsolidated
subsidiaries was due pr imarily
to a loss in the company's
Belgian eperation.
Officials
Chosen
ForMMA
•
Union Rolls Go Up
Coiuity Construction Lo cals Show Gain
California labor unions Id· farm employment increased a
ded 38,800 members to their scant 0.4 percent during the
Four promintnt executives rolls from July 1969 to July same period.
assocl.ated with companies ot 1970, with Orange County Most of the year·tcr)'ear ln-
divlslons operating in Orange reporting a lOtal u n i o n dusiry membership gain wa s
County b,fve been named tc membership of 98,900, up 3,100 centered in nonmanufaclurlng
the Orange County regional or 3.3 percent, the state in-where local unions N!ported a
board or the Merchants and dustrial relations department net increase of 5 7 , 4 o O
Ma nufacturers Association, reports. members. This brought lOlal
according to E. B. Buster, The statewide total went up me m be rs hip in non-
chairman, who is also exe-despite heavy losses in manufacturing to a record
cutlve vice president o I aircraft and 0 rd i n 1 n c e high of 1,516.300 in July 1970.
Townsend Company in Santa manufacturing, according to With the exception of eating
Ana . William C. Hern, director. and drinking places, hotels
Ne wly elec'ted te serve en In Orange County, nonfarm and other lodging places ,
the 1971 M & M Orange Coun-employment rose 3.2 p&cenl. y.·hich lost 1.400 members
ty regional board are William Construction locals in the between July 1969 and July
L. Aldrich, president. William county picked up 3 . 2: O O 1970, all major divisions of
L. Aldrich Public Relations member.s between mid-1969 nonmeinufacturing had a net
Wt dllfsdlJ', M11 2b, 1~71 DAILY PILOT Xii
MAY SERVICE SPECIALS
llr.rl, • '" • y ~ .. I" •at '"''I rn, •~c 1, .,., ;n ,.,,"'"'l< Count;,
"'" l l •" •In Mr1c >'Y !<'<>'• ~"' a'fc. l<l(f~·~ ""'~"' ''""
••t• <>' P• ,, I CO'"'I <>•~bl< •n t~.' ,~o·q -d .. , ",.,,, ''"" •.
<>n.:l vt~"' noo 'P'''''li:.d rrpo•• ''"'', ~'''''"by ''Pf>O• I
m, nl <I'<' y• .. tu '~' r ''"'" <>"<I "'""' y
Rog. $2.IO
SMOG SYSTEM
SPECIAL
T•1I, cl1•11 •ftd ,., ... ;,. crenk-
C•I• .... lul•~ l'f'ltt111. s120
YOU SAVE $1.60
Rog. $14.50
COOL.!/IG SYSTEM
SERVICE SPECIAL
Fl11tli l-••pl•o;• cool•ftt, pr1t•
tW•I t11t, i111p•ct .u .. 01•• I
bit+ .. s1000
YOU SAVE $4.50
SANTA ANA
LINCOLN MERCURY
lJOl NO. TUSTIN AVE., SANTA ANA 547·010
''WE A"RECIATE YOUI II/SINES$ .. and Advertising, Santa Ana ; and mid-1970. This was the turing, localized in transporta-gain over the year.
Charles E. Cleminsha w, vice first increase reported by tion equipment and. oniinance Organizing activities among l'====================~ Pre sldent, Parker·Hannifin building trades locals sinct: which alone accounted for a farm workers and federal , ci·t·
Corporation of Los Angeles figures fih:t became available-loss of 2:.500. · ly. and county en1ployes con·
and Jrvlne, and also chairman for the county in 1965. More Union metnbership in the tributed to the addition of
of the M & M Western rooderate membership gains, state reached a new mid·year 14.300 members in agriculture
Regional Board ; Donald E. or no change, were reported high of 2,124,500 in 1970 Hern and 13.400 in government.
Nearly Everyone
Shively, manager of the for other segments of non· said. He said, however. that Siiab!e gains of 9 . I O O L' L d
Orange eounty Div Is ion, manufacturing. the 1.9 percent growth rate for members in public utilities. l SleDS tO 3ll ers
Southern California Gas Com-A 1065 of 2.600 members "·as the year ending in July was 7,800 in construction, and 7,700 / l ·
pany, Santa Ana, and George ..'re~po~r~ted".:'b~y~l~oca~ls~in~m~a'.'.n~u~fa'.:":_~th~e~~sm~a~l~l.,~ti_:isl".1nc:'e~t963".::':._N":o~n~·_'i"'.n..'."'.'.'"'.d:_e_'.'w':er':'e:_:a~ls~o'._lpo~sl~e~d.:___.t===================== J . Vosatka, president, Varian 1-
Data Machines, Irvine.
Other members of tbe board
are : John F. Bishop, presi·
dent. Dana Laboratories, Inc ..
Newport Beach: Roy C. Bolt.
who serve! as vice chairman or the .1\1 & Al regional board
and as president and general
manager or Kw ikset Divi.Jion
cf Emhart Corpor a ti on ,
Anaheim ; Robert A. Daily,
resident manager, D e I c e -
Remy Division. Gener 1 I
Afotors Corporation, Anahtim ;
· W. J. Haney, president,
Kirkhill Rubber Company,
Brea; Howard H. Hankins,
partner, Haskins & Sells, San-
ta Ana ; Robert E. Hanson,
partner, Arthur Young & Com-
pany, Santa Ana ; Harold H.
Jackson, regional vice presi-
dent , Bank of America, Santa
Ana ; A. V. Jones Jr .. division
plant manager, Pac If i c
Telephone. Santa Ana ; Walter
Knott, founder, Knott 's Berry
Farm. Buena Park : R. K.
MacDonald, general manager,
Western D i vision, The
Monarch lo.larking Systems
Company, Garden Grove ;
A. Patrick Nagel. partner,
Nagel, Regan and Davidson,
Santa Ana ; Carl E. Schroeder,
president. First National Bani
of Orange County, Orange; A.
R. Sloan, director of industrial
relations, .Collins Radie Com-
pany , Newport Beach, and
Donald A. Strauss. vice presi·
dent , employer e I a ti ens,
Beckman Instruments, Inc ..
Fullerten .
Paint Firm
Opens Store
Standard Brands P a i n t
Company has opened its 37lh
paint and decorating center, at
800 "'a mer, near the in-
tersection of Golden West and
Warner in Huntington Beach.
The new location, which is
8C'heduled 'to open in early
April has ample free parking
adjacent to the !tort. and car-
ries a completf. stock of paint
aod decorating s upplies .
Geard to the J)o..lt·Yourselier,
all products carry an un·
conditional money b a c k
guarantee, and are of the
finest available quality at the
lowest possible prices.
Sears SAVE $22!
.Prices Effective
Wednesd•Y. May 26th
(hru Sunday, May 30th
PowerfUI Push·Type
Rotary Lawn Mower
Low
Priced~ 4999
:a HP en1ine witb rttoil 1tart-
er. 4 eutti n1 heirbt ad just-
lnenll. 30-ia. cut #911»4
Rugged I H.P. Craftsman
20-inch Rotary Lawn Mower
Regular $89.88, 18·in.
Power Reel Mower
SAVE
$10 ' .......... 7988
2\Y HP, <f..cyc:Je eqine.. Ad·
justs f'rom 3/8 to 2Yt·in. Noll-
"!inag h1ndle. •71MJI6
Regular
s9999
SAVE $50!
Craftsn1an
Dial-Ad just
Power
Reel Mower
Re gular $179.99
12999
• Vertical shall engine re·
duce!l \'ibration and mt1n-tenance:
• l\'cii -ad Just fuel 1yslt>m
makes starting fast & easy •Dial height of cut. i81601
• Low-compression head for instant atarti
• Powerful 9.0 cu. in. eilgine ••• goYerno?'CODtrDlled
for quick power respanse
• Quic k wheel adjusters for convenient cutting
he ight adjustment
Modf'119J381
I
"ran1m1n Mew er Guaranteti
Jt '•rl•• llM flM ,_, .... ~ ,....ff!. llilb lit lin ......., """-• 11 , .... ~ ,. -lerl.tl. nrm. .......
n wtU aRt 111 __,, .....,1,. ,,_ 111
..... .. IUttr .,.,, .tt• ••tserY: It ....
ie'1 ,_ utwlift ... •Ill -HI• •
t'-11 .... udlM .. IWO.........., we •W: Dvl•• lhl ltnt .. •llJ'•-...... tiH • ....,.
•I M tUll"-.t.11« II .,.,_a.,!•• ....
*>'· ., • .,...., n-l/11 .t tlll• ~
llllM -9-l)'lllrftdlllllll_t.,,._ ... .,...,. ..
Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans
I EVERY 'ALL THE SPAGHETII
THURSDAY YOU CAN EAT •••
• Italian style meal souce
• Parmesan cheese • Tossed salad • Roll and butler
Let's go continent•! today! You'll h•v•
to ••~ for more ... lt'• 10 good. We'll
9iv e you more , beceu1e we went you
end your femily to enjoy thi1 trHt at
lredford Hou••· -~KNOWN FOR VALUES
(.
-Dally Men. thni Sat.
t :M a.M. te t p.M. ..... ..,
11 ......... _,.11'1.
GRANT PLAZA -BROOKHURST & AOAMS-HUNTINGTON BIACH
Kids Learn from 'Ask Andy'
•
Fingertip Controlled
Kini'O Lawn Mower
Low
Priced! 13999
l HP motor. Dual front ca1ttr
wheel .. ~wa-y C'IUlth, In·
eludea .metal 11111 catcher.
130e8B
Klng O' Lawn
2HP Power Edger'
Low
Priced! 6999
Adju8table bl•dt IUI rd. Lift.
tn1 ha'ndle. Steel con•tnic-
tlnn. WidewhHlL 1•
SA VE $6! Craftsman
Electric Edger-. Trimm.er!
Regular
U9.9t 23 88
Develop~ 1. JIP. Loeb Jn 3
po•ll.ions. Instant wheel td·
Juttmtnt for bi, lo cut 186781
SAVE $41.99, 18-incb
Hand Mower
SAVE
$$!
Cuuln.a he.ifh\ 1dJu1ta from
~ to 2·in. ea1I~ $ lt~I
bl1dcJ1. 1812m
Well.Constructed
l'l·lncb Mower
TOP
VALUE! 2999
5 he•\.Lre•ted blade1for•3'
tn.owlai. Ball be1rln1 "18.l
111•kes job t11i er. 179771
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26 OAILV PILOT s Wrd11tsd,y M,ty 26 1971
Moving Up I
i
ROBl:RT G CU MMI NGS
113 Yorlrtown Lant Costa
i\lrsa n rtprtst111a11vr nj
Co 'tttfltttt Ctr #rnt Lift
J11sura11cc Conipany ha&
q11nl1/11·rl for 01r 1972
Prl'~1dr111 ' C /ub a11 orunn
J n11nu for tit -'ll1npony !
lrod JrJ J J f t r1,urnnr.t
rrgr n~ Ti11s n111rk~ tlrt
fniirtl 11cor 111 wl 1ch ht
hns acl11t1 I'd tJ1e honor
Cummings a graduate or
C1thforn1a Stnte Polytrchn1c
College al Pomona 1s a
mtmbfr of lht National
/\ssor1 1111nn of life
[nderwr1ters Ht 1s associ ated
with Cnnnecl lcut General s
San!a An;i br11nch (lfflct
* * * Hunhng!nn Beach resident
GLES E CARTER a veteran
rif fnur decades of experience
In 311 JOurnahsuc media has
brrn promo! d to vice pres1
denl 10 Bank of America s
public relations department
Ca rter will
be assigned
to the bank ~
Sou thf'rn
Cahro r n 1 a
01v1s1on and
serve as a
senior press
relation s
ronsullanl
He he J d
'a nous newspaper radio Ari
\ert1s1ng and pubhsh1ng post~
before Joining Bank of Amtr
1ca 1n Los Angeles 1n l!M5
Am ong hts pubhc relations
accomphshments was the 1n
1t1allon of the bank ~ Com
mun1ty Collegt Awards pr<>-
gram "h1ch In 1971 saw the
bank 1111ard $85 800 lo 372
111udent,
Ca rter ts a past president of
the Los Angeles USO and ha.,
received a number or cita tions
for hls efforts on behAlf nr
servicemen He has al so befon
honored by the City nf Hope
and Sigma Delta Chi National
J0urnal1st1c Fratern 1l}
Hr IS a former pr~s1denl of
!hf' I.Ji~ Angeles Advrrt1s1nr;:
Club of Snuthem Cahfom1a
Cbapler 0£ lhe American
Public Relations As~oc1at1on
and Southern CalJfornia Bank
Adverllsers A!'.~tat1on
Carte r and his wife Mary
reside no EAslporl Or1vt'
Huntington Beach resident
Cl..AVDf: J R(/MPll n(
Hnr.1r11.rln Hr1gh1.~ l1as bft-,i
!lamed VIC( prf'Sldt'I t Ill
cltaraf' of 11is!allmen1 loo11s
at CrnC"k f'r C111zen.s Nnt1011
(IL Boni<' So11tl1t111 Cou
tics reyiuo 11i f';l!111port
Btacll 1! tiXJ~ 111111ouucrci
b11 Hnro/d C I\ fpp stninr
vict president n1ul rf'g10110L
tll(lll(lj'Jf'T
Rumph 'Aho had be en v1ct
president fi nd regiona l 1n
stalmtnt crfd1 t offl~r for the
bank 1n Los Angelts Joined
Crocktr 1n 195.1 as a consumer
loan de partment managtr 1n
Sacramento
Rumph wa~ gradu111ecl from
!he Pac1f1 c Coa~I School of
Banking 10 Seatllt' and ha~
cont1nuf'd b1~ e d uc a I 1 n n
through American lnsttlule or
Banking cou rses He was born
In Sall Lake City and educllted
In Sacramento
* * * ~!NOV D LEIFHEIT ha~
be('n promoted to as81stant
vice prcstdt>nl with Bank nf
America s Appraisal Dt-part
tt ment al Los
Angeles
Headqullr t
e r ~ 1 n
nounced Ap-
pr11s11l De-
par l men t
Vice Presi
dent J1mes
L Brvanl
Lelfht> 1 I
\\1th thr hank since 19a4 has
been appra1s<1l supervisor for
bank proper\Jes 1n Southern
California sf nee 19fia He "'11
cnn11nvr in that capacity
A na111e nl l.lln~n1ont Cnln
He ff'N'IVCd a bachelor or
i;c1(!rwe de~rf'f' 1n hustnts~ ad
min1straUon from Un1ver~1
I~ or Denver in 1951 He 111~
h11~ C<lmpleltd numrrnw; prr.-
f('.o;5innal reAI tstalt' ~t'm1nar:s
He is achve 1n the Un1~crsl
h of Dtn,er Alumni Associ,ci
1lnn and the W<'~lm1n~tcr
Prrsbyttrlan Church
He rcsu'le.s nn 8<1llant1ne
Lane wnh his u1fr Elva and
two daughters Connie 18 and
Carol Ann 15
/.lorron Corpnrot 011 /\ r 1n
por! Rt.och hat nomerl Dr
port Stach hos nnmt.d DR
11111 IAM 8 liAR\VOQn
to th,. prendr11c11 t'lf us
St.1bs1d11Jry ftfndu/ ror11
lnr n 111pp/if1 n( 11p,.ru1/
Uf'd lcrlJ It Id ~"rUfCf'.f In
tht tduearr"" rrrarktt 1~,
wo.J /nrmtr/11 prt.s1rl,.11t "''
Hartntll Col/r.g,. "lorc11r1 s
otht.r OJ)(Tlltlo'u: CQ/l,IJI
cJJ1t//f1 of cond11ct111Q nr
u~rartd proarn1ns for ac
akmic 1ns1ftuUon1 In $p,.
c1/1c arta.ir. parl,Clllnrl'J
that of h!gh sclrool drup-
out.s in tht mrl1tar1;
sen!;Or!I 11nd
Instrument a:
for medical
1ndustrJ3(
and ocean
ographic air
pllcatlons
"dams
v.e\I known
in finance
en~1neer1n g
11nd t ducahon has held his
pre~ent treasury department
position ror 17 of I.he 26 yea rs
he bas b~n Bl Northwestern
"' " • member
OVER THE COUNTER
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Tuesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
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Finance
Briefs
Th• electronic bartender ti.i s JUll
made tis appearance. ttl
Chicago The. Jolly Ch &l
llcstaurant cham has 1nsta.U&f_
t.hree electra-bar a y t t em ..
madf" by National Ca s t
Register Co of Daytoo Ohro
To mlx a dry marllnl thf'I
bartender or barmaid jual
punches a key
CHICAGO (UPI)
The bottle rick$ a bar ca11h
register a <.:omputer log11
unit the dispensing head 11m
a carbonu: gas t.'Ol"r'lpressor ;in
all llnke<I to&et.her T h t.
system controls the measurin•
of the liquors 110d nu1ers lh1
prJC1ng and collecllon and lhr
bar 1nv enl ory al l
.almultaneoosly and a Is n
punches oul a ctiarge ticlet or
cash receipt
LOS ANGF I ES IUPI)
Santa Fe ln tematlonal Corp
has sold Its JG-vessel offshorr
and suppl y fleet. to Offshor«
Logistics Inc of Lafayelt.f
La for 60 000 shares nt itoc~
a.nd $4 8 m1lhon 1n notes
YORK (UPll
lntttnahona l Telephone
Tele1r1ph Corp .aid lit
Brih~h rubs~lary. Standard
telepb0ne$ & Cables Ltd hu
obtaln@d a $.22 mlllloo contract
to pay a l6-c1rt'Uit 1ubmarln1
c:1hle betwctn Brat.II and t.ht
Canary Islands for W'Vice bt
1971
l
NEW
. -
. :J DAil V PILOT Wrdntsdll)', May 2b, }q71
.. Laguna Playhouse War and Politics ' 'Man Wlw Ca~to Dinner' On '60 Minutes'
Stirs Theater No&tnlgia By CYNTHIA LOWRY try for president again 1n 1972.
The program may get a lit-NEW YORK (AP) -CBS tle out of balance with lta in·
''60 Minutes" usually manages terest in naUonal pollilcs and
to have an olf beat pictjU'e_ war, but it Ls .still a very
story in It! biweekJy program. bright spot in the schedule.
By TO~t TIT\JS
OI !lit Olllly l'lltl Slttf
Kaufman-Hart comedy, "The
Man \Vho Came to Dinner."
It's Old Home Week -for
the next three \Veeks -at the
Uguna ~foullon Playhouse,
and nostalgia is the order of
Graham, who becomes the
playhouse 's n e w managing
director next month, has
wasted no time getting into
harness. He's performing the
exhausting twin tasks of direc·
ting the huge cast show and
taking on the burdensome
leading role or the loquacious
lecturer Sheridan Whiteside.
ot recent acquaintance, and
hi! familiarity with the role
allows him to utilize his
dlrectorlal talents to a greater
degree. Graham has mounted,
with a handful of exceptions,
an extremely entertaining pro-
duction, trimming some ex·
cess verbiage here and there
to tighten the overall produ ct.
Tuesday night it was a report *
comedy until his drunk scene on the little understood tanker Public broadcasting stations
late in the play. business and the owners who, which seem to be just as m.
il calculated risks work out, te t d · I t f h The round heeled actress. .1 res e in pump ng ou res ~the da y. make huge profits hauling 01 progralll.! in warm weather as
Hap Graham is back after
an absence of seven years. The vastness of the Laguna
stage precludes, perhaps. the
helter·skeller 1.aniness of the
comedy, but the show moves
al a pleasant pace, allowing
some fine characterizations to
blossom. Only occasionally
does an unguarded moment
surface, and such fa il!n,!!:s
work themselves out in little
Ulrraine, is done w it h around the world. in cold, are a particular boon
highborn style and a beautiful The pictures or the mam-to the bored viewer these
Katharine Hepburn v o c a I moth tankers w er e im-nights. : and "'ith him to celebrate past
glories is a cast composed
almost \\'holly of ve1erans o[
the old Laguna Playhouse. Fit-
tingly, the production is a
oldie as well, the durable
Fortunately for Graham and
everyone else concerned, he
and \Vhiteside are comrades
pressive, and Mike Wallace's Th quality by Betsy Hewett. She commentary 00 the business ere are a number of pro.
maintains complete coqtrol intriguing. grams, not always carried as
d · h ho h h There was a•·· an im-network broadcasts, l hat an poise I roug ut, w et er QU circulate among the educa-on the giving or receiving end pres.sive introduction of a new tional stations and deserve
of the barbed invective. fa ce on the antiwar scene, more attention than they get.
TV DAILY LOG time. .
It Is. as it should be,
Graham's show and he is,
Of the smaller roles, the former Navy Lt. John Kerry. One, in particular, is Robert
standouts in large measure are lfe i~ the 27-year-<1ld Yale man Cromie's "Book Beal"
Robert Engman as the harried \\'ho recently made a big im-Cromie, book: critic for a
householder approaching his pression on Washington with Chicago and 3 Washington
boiling point; David Paul in a his impassioned testimony newspaper, is one television
peppy G r o u ch o l\1arx before the Senate Foreign interviewer who really reads
characterization as the 1r-Relations Committee and as his guests' books. His style is
Wednesday
Evening
MAY 26
J:DO 1J Iii lltn .ltrry Dunphy.
(])Alt .... R11soner, Smith.
Cl MIC Ntn Tom Snyde r. 8 TM MM S11ow Delli Reese, Mil·
ton llflt, .ltny Collins i nd tolumni$1
Count Mtrm 1u•"-O Sb O'Cltd Movi1: (90) "TM
PmlllMf't lid'(" (drtm1) '53 -
Chlrlton Hnton, SUwn H1yw11d.
»lwl Mtlnlin, f11 B1Jnttr.
fJ lid:'"' Drlt• Sfw m Tiie fhbtol11 GI lttr TM ft! A Ti• f« JNn/Cll1ni1'1 hd
Cl)fblllr , .. ,,
Ill-"
m 1111t11t '""' °'" 10 LI Hirt f1t11ili1r con Ctntutlo m ..... Jim f11.tho1nr.
l:JO (]) Mtwl Sill Huddy.
(IJ Trwttt w Conlq11tnc11
Cl) CIS ... W11tu C1on~itt.
o~c:..r.
II.I RIC 11w1 DIYid BrlnkhJ.
m TM flJl111 N1111
ID Modttpeld1t ttd1•
IID Stlldld Fll•/M•lit.111 m-• .... ~TIA m-
r• 8 CIS l'M W.ltw Cronkite.
0 Ci -Rm Dn~ Brinkley.
@Tt Ttll Ille Ttlltlt o wur, .., U1111
9 lllM: IC> .. -40 hll!IU fll Tro11·
Mr" (comtdy) '6~ -Tonr Cttrtis.
SllnMI Plrshtt!L m 11.M LllCJ
• (I) lltlpll
fl) llmIID 1.n Anrtlll l'ttilhar·
Miiie Cl!lctrt "Andrt Witts: MOltrt
P11no Conc.rto # 24.~ Youn1 Ameri·
11n pl1nlst Attd1e Witts ii seen pre.
p1rl111 lor ind 11trformin1 lht MDZlri
Conctrtet Irr C Minor with the Los
An1t111 Phl!llarmonit undtr lh!
htlon of ZubJn Mlll\1, m a11tst ttie ur1111 wo.-c1
!El ..............
m SI "' f1tt11 Tu m Mtwlt ....
\ 7:3D BI IPIC!Q;lll YM Tn DI Kf00'1
.lerlJ Du119h7 Wl'l'tl •s rtpctftef for
this rtpctl hour th•t letturn 1
"IKI °' fiction" quiz about !lurs
ttl&I Yitwm Clll t11ui tet tll:tt tlleir
knowlldl• r1l1tin1 IQ drup.
D m lff Mell frM Slllltll (R)
"Th• Pric:t of tilt H1111i111." l•I!
(LM M•jon) 'lll>fks lo lrH I docto1
c~1iHe.e..fo"~.::::.... repressible Hollywood comic; organizer of a demonstration easy, literate and brings out
,, com~ bv Mosi H••' •n<I Georlll! s . I\1arthella Randall as the in which disabled veterans of the best even in nervous
K111tm1n, dlr..:ltd bv Hiii Gr1htm, I I ,. ho v;etnam threw away the;r m TIM frlilldl Ott! 11,.M:nttd T11.W•Y• thr01111h s11urct1vs s range re a 1ve Y.' comes authors. ~ n., Annrtr 11n111 Jun• 11 11 1he La0un• Moo1ton and 11oes alniost in a cloud of niedals in protest against the On a recent p r 0 • r am , 1:0:I on Pltv"°'1se, 606 La11u1111 Canvon llolld, " (' (' f the K • ell•dl• Ubrt L1Qu,.. Bt1ch1H11;"CAS~ons ''~7•J. smoke; John Briggs, also con 1nua ion o war. er· Cromie was di sc u s 5 in g
Sheridan Whlt,slcte ..... Hao i;,.~,..., repeating his earlier role as ry, who hinted at political am-''Defending the Environment"
1:05a:.ID .... •• r11!11n Rolle' C1mes. :r:..ir~~,f~"'.'~~~ · ·::.:··::··:·. J'i>1!~1Hft1~ ·1he grinning, literary-minded bitions, said frankly, the with its author, Prof. Joseph Lorrtlne Sh11dcn ......... Behv Heweit d l W II D I · medal throwing was a device l :lO IJ(l)T• hlM Wiiii lowt (R) s1n10 ......... -·· .. o.v1c1 p.,.,1 OC or: a er a Y Jn a H. Sax of the University of
Allison tceidtnt111, 1.U • put ln i f11v1r1v C1rnon ........ w11t1r o.1v splendid cameo as the Nool to attract coverage by the M1'ch1'gan law school. The book . . l'I I I R •L F.r11<111 St8nl1v . .. Robert Eniinm~n C d t t d S . electronic media. hip111e m<MI 1 m n1 n om•. u0en Mri s11n11~ .... · ·· l-1•1~11 V•ll owar -ypc ac or. an us1e was 8 report on legal acti'on · Mii; Pretn · · · Suil t S-on The program ound 1'th wants to th1n1e hir life stylt ind 5•••" . 11e1<v Pa.,, Scott as Whiteside's nurse and w up w by citizens groups and others win6u throu1h [ur""e wllh !ht June St•nle~ · · .Dtbbte 11au1 K'rmodt! I ·1 t t an interview with former ..,. 111ch1•11 srtnleY .. "''( v~n Otu.en avori e arge . in efforts to protect and fllm trouPt. 0oe1or llracr"v Jchn B•l~~·w:~~ Less iinpressive are the presidential candidate Eugene preserve areas of 1 a n d , m Dr•flltl H1rr1e1 s11MeY .. . M••1h1111 11:1nc1111 performances of Helen Vail as McCarlhy. He spoke of his in-seashore and water as part of
fDDEBUT Jnt.lw "Errol G1rr1u." ::~~·~ .. M~'.'.:·. DouPlt• ~\~~t.1oi~: t he lady of the house, too tere~ in a third political pathar· the public trust. A dull sub-
Wol G1rner is the first 111at fn tttla ~;:: ~~~·~.:: ... A1i:;~ ~::'.i:::;: hesitant in both character and ty, t maintained firml y t ject? Not at all under the IO week .eritt frvm ChictfQ w.,1co11 .. ·······-· w1urec1 H!n<v I Fred La th · he has not decided \•.'hether to · • no;, o;rector ....•...... Oort• s~;et<k vo ume; ng as e in-genUe prodding from Cromie. m P'ltltfn fer Uvln1 Dtiwlln ................... eP0:i1 c;~~i's sect expert, a bit shaky for a Sax told details of one
9:00 I) {j) Meditil CtRttr (R) Ciry minor as s i g n m e n t • an rt M • . J fascinating case after another.
Lcdwood 1uuts 1s , ~lppii·sl)l• again. an extraordinary \\'Hfred Henry, somewhat slow llll•l ieate1·s It was a solid half hour of
doctor who ri1hb llfith 1 sliff-nttktd Sheridan Wh iteside. The drip--as the radio technician. good talk and altogether
c.ollt1111e (Andrew Du1pn) for pfom. ping malevolence is un-Others tuming in line NEW YORK (UPI) -Slick refreshing.
isin1 t!XI much succus with 1 ntw derscored by a cool and com-portrayals are Betsy PauJ as new mot ion picture houses are•-:--:;:=======:::::
11u1ment for 1 1irl sufl1rin1 from manding delivery, and the the maid, Eric Van Deusen opening. all over the country.I
11nrrene. human side of the great man and Debbie Paul Kermode as The trend is toward grouping
0 @) ID I SFis!lll At EHnln1 is portrayed with warmth and the YOU n g Ster s. Doug mini-thealer.s. United Artists
With tlte H1rle11 Slobttrot1111 Jo• honesly. Graham's transitions Williamson as the suitor and J'heatre Circuit, for example,
Gu12iol1 is c.omment1tor tor !~Is from one to the other and Jackie Flanegin as a curious recently opened ••trip J e''
•·11me" belwffn tit• Globtlrottus back again' are accomplished neighbor lady. theaters in Chicago's famous
ind the Jerse~ CitJ Reds. Com· with precision alld rapier "The Man Who Came to Marina City Towers.
edian Ni!*J Rus.s1H ind 5·Jt•r·old swiftness. Dinner" should prove a meal •-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;0::;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;1
Stevie Christy i re tetturtd, Unfortunately, the most im~ ticket for the Laguna Moulton 11
0 (}) Cil m lM Oii I ltoftop portant female role in the Playhouse, for its style and BALBOA
(RJ .. 117 Ways let Cook H•mbur1er." show is not given such careful Thirties manner are carefully 673-4048 ::dsJ:~hi~~·h:~-:U1~1~Q;I~ allenlion . Julie Haas never preserved for an audience, oriN
10 tarn her husbind un'I stind really attains believability as like a large share of Laguna's. 6:45
rround mtat. Whiteside's secretary, Mag-which remembers when. And 7lt I. .. ..._ m Dnid frost Sllow Piuli P'ri11-gie; her perfonnance is slow those who don't will find it a:/L_ .. _1_ ... _;_~'"-'-to~oul.:_:•_:=
tiss. Dick Benjamin, Betty Rllodts, and uneven, and she ex-valuable theatrical history
C.ln's C'Jtild1111 ·~ Gordon Miiis periences difficulty involving lesson.
1uest herself in the action. Performances will be given
GJ fllony Squid Paul Toft as the small town Tuesdays through Saturdays m DCIUT flrinr u111 Wilti•m F. newspaperman pai nts an er-for the next three weeks at the
Bucllty hosts. ~Dump fl i1onr· fective picture of a rustic playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon
Guests ,,. Rep. Plul McC.lotlle7 11\11 hero, but lacks a true flair for Road, Laguna Beach.
Alltrd lowenste!11, I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
E!i)JO MIRltn
a;) El P1t16t di Sefi1
9:30 0 (i) Cl) tiD Tiit lfllllOl'UI (R)
"The Lt1acy.Q Ben Rlch1rd1 b•·
comes 1 prlsone1 in 1 Muiun
minin1 camp when It's dlKO¥trtd
that one ol tht miners h11 typhoid.
Q) V111b<lnd
€!)LI Ct111 dt M11is.1 C1~cts
G)TIA
TONIGHT
SKILES AND
HENDERSON
BOON 3333 W. COAST HWY.
10'00 0 00 ,, .. ; , ... (•> ''"' '"''' DOCKS IUl11S as 1n lflntm1nt1 u.porttr Ntwport Beach 642--4291
whQM wilt is the victim of 1 kid· l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~n n1pin1 th1t is probtd by McG11ntt. 1=
D Oj m fHr-ill.OW. McCIMll
{R) 'Tht CGl!a-fte Cornl." McCloud
hrwesti11tes t rodeo 111urdtr In Ntw
York's M1diS011 SqU11t G1rden.
0 l1xter Ward News
m Nn1 Pvtn1m/f!Jhmu1.
Q) Mutr1p M Himel llott1.
ED MasttfPieu Tlttltrt
This Week •
Treat the Family to Dinner
COUii by lldll!( ms-Arltllt
"" "**** HIGllST RATING
ACOMEDY'GEM!"
"THE ANDIOMIDA
STRAIN"
No 1-.r.ed SNtt
Dilly •I 71• • 11 M1llnH1 St!. & SMll.
WI""'' I AcH. Aw•nl• "'RYAN'S DAUGHTER,.
••• Offk • Ojltft t2 .. _ • ' l'.M. DlllJ
$Mwtl .....
MOil. ttlno TllM". • I I' .M,
l'rl. ·Sit .• 11» l'.M.
Mlllln"' St!. • Sy11. • 2 1'.M. ...... ,...... lffh
HnlWM:td lo han1 1fltr lht mtdic 10:15 O An(ll Wr1p.Up In One of Orange County's tn11 ltt1 Alt of Tale's bots.
O Anfl( Wt ... · Up 10:30 0 Cllln111I 5 "'°"
m n:. 0 [j) Q) NFl Act1011 "New Bried." 0 Cl)~ 'iEI Cotlrblllp" £6dlt't Tim RQsswidl ind Dick It Pftst 1rt f1thw (R) 'When lht Shot Is on fe1tured. th• Dlhtr foot It Doesn't fit.~ Cyn.
thl1 ICurltn tries 10 perw1llt Tam Q) 1111 Jah111 ,._
Corbitt let rvn 1111 1rticl1 on womtn's (I) C.d1n1 41 An1vati11
l!berttlon.
([)SM11 Slit
0 11101111 $MIN (t) (21/iltr) -rtlt
PrWt 11141 Ult rt.-..i" (1dw1nt ure)
'rl -fr1nk Sln1t11, CafJ llrtnt,
Sophia lortn, m Tniltl • CiftNq11111e11
llJ II TM• 1 Thltf
ma111111 JG
(B blt!NI dt llCIOI
EI!JTU
tt <ttt 0 00 III -
D ®l lll•'"'
0 Mt¥11: (C) "llinbow 1&1111d"
(mu~ctl) '44 -Dofothy Lamour.
@ Dtttti Y111tf ~1'
O ClJ lll•"'
0 Mtrlt: "'YH .... ti Mt"
(c.amtdy) '41-81rti111 Slallll)'tk.
m INTERNATIONAL * BEAUTIES COMPETE
FOR TOP HONORS
Q) I lfiC1Al l Mia lnt11111tiollll
1::00 D ,. ... lntbaU The Anitls n l111ty P11t111t (fln11s) fifty 111llon1
thl Dflkllncl A's. 1r1 repr1senttd ln this p1g11nt lrom
Lani BMch, C.1. BJ1on P1lmtr b 0 CD()) CD rnRim Pllllllploft! mister Qf urtmonles ind Biii Wiidt
tllt M111 111 tit• ~,, '""-Tho ••1• •w prOYidrs lh1 btck 11111 ODlof. 11nd1unl1d 1m1teu1 jctlftS tht drcus,
ind lfttr -u al sl1tnuau1 tr1\n. m ... l tll1 Oodi
ln1, 11 111111 perlormlnc with th1 ttl loM let! "Otfe!Mlln1 tht (n.
fiyi"I Apollot Kl on th1 hith o.,. '1ronment," by .laseplt L Su.
111 bttott • ltnt fllltd with people. ll 'JO IJ ([) N Ctlffll m INTERNATIONAL . "' * BEAUTIES COMPETE D (!lj) m "'""' '""' FOR TOP HONORS O ClJOO l!l~<*C.Vo<t
m cmI!!D Miu lnltrll•llon1l •-tJ '11 .. 111 (Pr1llml"1f')') Byron
CE) 1110¥!1: "'llt loldtn Clffn
Story" (d11m1) '50-DtMY Mulin.
P1lm11 11 m1s1t1 of t11tmo1lt1 lor 12!>0 m All-'llr!rt $Mow: "TM CIJ Difoiw.
ltllt P•tt•nt, leitust liYt frvm lone ut." .. Chl111ton S41111d" 1nd
ludl, Ct!. "lwlb stocbdt."
Thursday
°"YTillE MOVIES
..... ........... M1~ II Altzttl1"
(....tn) '51 -Y1w111n MOtlrOI, ,...,_
~ • .....,..., ...,,,.... (dllllll)
~ . '3f -JNNt H111!d11. M1rJlll Hunl • -c:.t.a. .,.. (cotntdy) 'SJ -Rob·
.. -Kii ""'"'· :1!11 8.,. Lt t,_,. (clr1m1) 16-
V.. bbto1t. Joht1 CHnill.
fJ """"' Lii Mt .. ~ (drlfl'll) 'SJ
-Oul G1b!1, Gtl'll TitlfltJ'.
IO:GO CJ) "TI!1 W...W T• Ti•• OW" (d11m1) ''4-S11¥11 Sima, [dwtrd
'"''· 1:00 m "'lite Prifltl Ult If llHry Ylll"
lelal*k) 'Jl -Ch1Jln L1u1ht0ft,
M1111 Dlltron.
2:00 fJ (() .. c..,ta11 """"• *"'bltw-
... (t!Mrrturt) 'Sl -Grttoty Ptc*,
Vi11iftl1 M1~.
J:OO (l)tU
4:MI 0 IC) "C,....i1uh" (1dwnt11111)
·~t -John f•Jlll, RllOrHl1 r1tmt11a.
(}) ~1111 .. IOAM Mcwi1.
' Fine Restaurants,
FASCIN-
ATING
•
f
11ci1.••••• 1••A•IMIWT
PLAYING
Taking!!"
.No!oli.~ ...............
NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES
0ptti Wkdoyl&;IS Sa1. & Sun. 111$
"DR. PHIBES" (GP)
"WHA TtVEl HAl'P!NID TO· AUNT ALICI l "
~alien's !l!l
JiiJ<rnt"5· "b as" CO.CR hy~· CHAR\.lSH.mt anan Un1t1d Arllllls ~-SllOW 11MU
2ND Comedy Hit
"THI TWllVi CHA IRS" (G)
RESERVED SEAT ENGAGEMENT
The eternal triangle's back •••
••• and it's never been funnier!
"SCR'1 ~llCTion.,. tomn UP 1 wlnMr." -LA TIMES
" .•• an1111 the llnel't en1tmblt$ 1H11 In m11ny month• ... -VARIETY
OPENS FRIDAY
THE GINGER MAN
llf J.P. D•11l"""f
Murray Schisgal's-
LUY
Mow l'l1yll•t
S°rJttt/1 ( (Jast lfc crtor1
IOX OFFICI: 646·1363 01 ALL AGENCIES
Dr. Plules is
"""·· . curiously ·• '· terrifying!
fvt. 5how Storh 1
Contin11011s 5how
Sett., Swn., Mo~.
From 2 P'.M.
BARGAIN MATINEE
EVERY WED. 1 PM
Meet Henry & Henriella ...
!he love couple of !he seventies ..•
and !he laugh riot of !he year.
"A new .._.,..,.ElAB Leaf" liJ-;~··
flJaltertlattltau
fJalne tla9 '
Jiik
rLleSlm
'
WtdrindaJ, May 26, 1971
lrvitae Master (;laora~
'Carmina B.urana' Excellent
By T0~1 BARLEY
Of 1M 01Ur Piltl Sltlf
We have heard no gl't!ater or
more spontaneous ovation this
season than·the one accorded
Maurice Allard' and his
magnificent Irvine Master
Chorale Saturday night and we
know of no ensemble that
more richly deserved the
tremendous tribute offered in
the Chapman College
auditorium.
A.nd yet that thunderous
ovation seemed but little
recompense for a "Carmina
Burana" that goe!I in this
critic's book as by far the best
local offering of the Car l Orff
classic that \\'e have been
privileged to attend.
from this writer In the past.
They fully captured the many
moods that Orff injected into
thil scenic cantata, splendidly
led by lhree superb soloists.
Coloratura Darrellyn ~1elilli
and baritones Jonah Kliewer
and De_nni:s Lang had the
featured roles in this glowing
•·carn1ina" and they bravely
and brilliantly soldiered their
way through so me oI the most
difficult and den\.anding arias
on the contemporary choral
scene.
Horror of Horrors
It had everything, from
splendid soloists to an ob-
viously inspired choir that
equally obviously delighted its
director and an ac·
companiment from piano and
percussion that was flawless
from beginning to end of a
choral work that p I a c e s
tremendous demands on the
abilities of any community
chorale.
For Miss Mc\illi. however, a
special word of praise for a
moving delivery of ''Sleltit
Puella," a gracious, soaring
aria that is clearly beyond the
ken of all but the most
disciplined coloratura voice. It
has no problems for the
delightful Darrellyn and s h e
gave us a reading that will be
long remembered.
Other solos came from the
ranks or thl! chorale and, a!!
with the featured solo.i.s,ts.
again the key word was ex-
cellence. Contralto Barbara
Millhnan, soprano Vin a
\Villiams and 1nezz<rsopranos
Ann f\1orris and Dorothy Nrff
draw high praise today for
flawless delivery of their solo
arias.
Ray Scott uses his Frankensleinian bearing to terrorize Sharon Threadgold
\vhile noncombatant Bill Brady takes cover in a scene fro1n the Irvine Com·
munity Theater comedy "Arsenic and Old Lace," opening Saturday in the UC
Irvine Humanities l~all at 8 o'clock. •
SEEIT
To Believe It!
NEW
ORANGE TWIN
DRIVE· INS!
ORANGE#t
ALL NEW!
ALL EXCITING!
ANZ>
ORANGE #2
ALWAYS HOME OF
GREAT MOVIES !
Sanl1 Ana Fr11w1y
Chapman Oll·Ramp
onSlat1 Coll1g1 Blvd.
(714) 547·6011
PACIFIC WALK-INS
1Dftril59 I tlll~IS
u.11111 491 ldlrll
A.If Color S'-ow
"AltllPOIT" (GI")
plus Science Fk:tlDn o-.me
"COL055U5 -THE FOllllN l'IOJECT,.
01111 .. 1n Shewing!
T-Exclll.,g Fwi!!;r..,,
"Glmm1 Sllt ll.,..' (GP)
"~ ''Wlltl'I Ntw l"UHYtll"
l .............
w .. 1.,,._1
I Jl•OOIO
""-•~...tc .... •-· "COlOSS•S· t •l ,0111• P.OJICT" ·-·-· .. .. ..... ,..,.,JIJ
THE BEST
"-••d111hlp potl1 pro.,1 "P1••
"uh" i1 0111 of th1 world'1 motl
popi.rltr comic 1trfp1. Jl.11d it
4ll1il y 111 tli1 DAILY PILOT.
Adams Not So Smart
In Latest TV Role
By VERNON SCOTI'
HOLLYWOOD (UP!)
Comedian Don Adams has
murdered
Agent 86.
blood with
~1ax .... ·ell Smart,
in ruthless cold
the excuse it was
either Smart's life or his own.
Prof~iooal lile, that is.
After fi ve ye.ars of por·
traylng the nasal, beady.eyed
witless spy in "Get Smart,"
Adams faced ad identity crisis.
Would audiences believe him
as anyone except the bumbling
cloak and dagger misfit?
"That's why I had to do
away with him,'' Adams said.
"lt was either him or me."
The showdown came with
Don's role as a big city cop in
"The Partners," a new situa-
for th at matter, •·car 54,
\I/here are You?"
"There's an hones1y to this
show," Adams said, "But "'e
find legitimate excuses for
cops lo make honest mistakes.
I don 't play a c\o\l:n like f.1ax·
\Veil Smart who worked for a
fictitious organization (Con·
trol.)
"That's why "l had to kill
the Smart image. I talked in a
normal voice. just as 1·m
doing no"'· I've abandoned all
the old Max y,·ell Smart man·
nerisms."
Adams is rriore fortun ate
tha most television series
performers. He \Viii be writing
some of the scripts.
Smart is dead. Lon~ live
Lenny Crook!
tion comed y to be aired thisl------------
fall by NBC. Because it is less
farcical than "Get Smart,"
which expired I a s t year.
Adams mu.st play his new part
more realistically.
His character is detective
Lenny Crook, the sort of Fl,..t R.,,,
h ct ho -•( ( f Jol'l11 Philip L•W c ara er w ...... OU 0 "VOH ll lCHTHOPEN & •llOWN" style 20 years ago. p1vs ... ··ny ls the kind or guy "MRS. POLLIPAX IPY" .......,, Wll!I Rowllncl Rus"li
It was, from this critic's
seat, the best thing that the
Irvine ~faster Chorale has
ever given us and this group
has drawn some high praise
They had the best piano ac-
companiment to a choral work
I••· Show Storts
7 P.M.
Co•th1110111 Sli•w
'-""' fro"' 1 P.M.
NOW THROUGH TUESDAY
'The"Rollingi_Stones
GIMME
SHELTER
ALSO PLAYIN6 '"
2nd BIG AnRACTION
JOAN BAEZ IN
"CARRYi IT 'ON"
who hates crooks," Adams e1·i·~·~"'~";' ~··;·~-;·~··~~~'"~'·~·~·~~"~'· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~11111''.I plained. "He is a dedicated --- -
man but he's human and v .. ,., .... ,_
makes many mistakes." r
Adams makes few. He
wrote the pilot script with Pete
Falk and James Caan in mind
as the two policemen.
Universal studios d e c i d e d
Adanu and comedian Godfrey
Cambridge would be fUMier.
Universal \\'as wrong.
Two comedians playing for
laughs wasn't as effective as a
comedian and a relatively
straight man. For that reason
Cambridge was replaced by
Rupert Crosse.
Cambridge, according to
Adams, hasn't spoken to him
since he was uncoupled,
following a less than hilarious
pilot film .
"The chemistry just.wasn't
right." Adams said. "But God-
fre y won't even take my calls.
l 'd like to set the matter
straight with him, to let him
know there was no personal
feelings involved."
Adams shrugged. He was
brought to Universal to WTile
and de velop three comedy
pilot sho\\'S, one in which he
would star. Universal liked
"The Partners" and convinced
Adams to play one of the two
major characters.
There is little chance that
"The Partners" will be con-
fused with ''Dragnet .''
"Adam-12 '' "The Smith
Family" Or "Ironside," nor,
Wayne Biog
HOLLYWOOD (UP!)
John Wayne announced he \\•111
cO-author an autobiography
containing his perso n a I
recollections, observations and
opinions on his career and
private life.
DUSTIN
ttOfftWj
·unu: 816 M4N"
,. .... IM:h-.iccb. ~-
'\Ou are looking at
the face ofa Villain. '
Richard Borton "Villain"
By the time he's ready m kill )'QU,it~ an act of mercy.
NAT COHEN PRESENTS AN ANGLO-EM! FILM• A KASTN~·LAOO·l("NTER PRODUCTION
RICHARD BURTON • IAN McSHANE •NIGEL DAVENPORT In "\llLLAIN" • Scrllenpley by OJCI(
CLEMENT and lAN LA FREN ... IS • &ecutive ProOucer ELLIOn l<ASTNER • Produceo by "L"N
LADD JR. and JAY KANTER· Directed by MlettAEL TUCHMER• TECHNICQl ')R". PAN"~
Oi51l1btJlod by METRQ-OQlOWYN-MAYER IRl--·---·w--j MQMU
• PREMIEREORANGECOUNTYENGAGEMENT •
2ND AT BOTH THEATRES lST BIG WEEK
HOLIDAY MATINEE MONOA Y
that v.-e have heard for many
years to further inspire U1em
in the form of the superb
backing delivered from the ir
keyboards by Rulh Langwor·
thy llall and Laurence Gordon.
They, in turn , had the su~
port of a fiv e-n1em b e r
percussion grop that had its
flWn first class part to play in
this g r i p p i n g rendition of
"Carmina Burana ."
Our review would not be
complete "'ithout our praise
for the fine contribution made
by Dr. Walter Gleckler's
Orange Coast College choir in
the master work tha t preceded
'·Carmina Burana" -Ralph
Vaughn Will iams' sti1Ting
and very beautiful "Fan.
tasia."
Oo Aprll 21, 1918, tfle Rtd laroo of G.....,,y aod th
llaclc Shffp of the R.A.F. met In the sides of Fronce.
For the lost tlmt!
).>I i • ;;m;J
~~·Llon . ,Richth~andB~
i!!!IO lllfli~llll.uo" ........
With JOHN PHILLIP LAW-DON STROUD
-----,ALSO PLAYINC>-----
"THE BIRD WITH THE CRYSTAL PLUMAGE"
With Tony Mu1•nt~Sury K•ncl•ll
Working \\'iU10ut scorts -
an achievement in itself -
they splendidly supported the
Irvine Master Chorale in work
that proved through i t s
performance to be a fitting
prelude to the Orff classic. It
\vas regrettable that their
voices were drowned on oc-
casions by Jack Andricse's
lusty orgar. accon1panimcnt
but it \\'as. overall , a rendition
comparable in stature to that
memorable "Carmina."
It was this critic's grent
pleasure Saturday night to
present the DAILY PILOT's
Euterpe a w a r d to ~tauricc
Allard as the 1971).71 man of
music on our Orange Coast.
Penny Pincher Ads
Turn Sense Into Dollars
WAU llS1EY ,-. lliS YERll'S '
0 'O. 'O O
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Hit Al All 3 Cinemas ··~ • ON~~;~:~~~l;:~~T E!11m.i_ ANDMONDAT
• r • :w AT ALL 3 EDWARDS CINEMAS •
2ND TOP HIT
Mochot-1 Coin• 011d
Britt £1o.lo11d lo,
..GET CARTER1' (R)
• 2ND GREAT HIT •
John Wayne -Kim Darby
In ~'TRUE GRIT .. (G}
STARTS WED, JUNE 23
• HAL WAWS."'""'' 1• RED BKYAT
. MDRNINB ~
GP
•\JNE SllllY'll A PlllOllENOll!
11111 lllls beea naaq lie I ill• f'll'!'lion !"" .................. ...,.,11.""
-:;..-u..._ ....... ,_ ... __ _ ,,...,,.,..,;; ...
a.-.....t-lli'la'ii. ... -= ·1--------1. ~ -6th ltlECOllD WIEIEIU """ ... , .... llllr•llllt•ll••Wl•Wt••ll•a•N '""•li_ii _____ ...... :-.
,__
,,~Bc...:D~Al=LY:....:.P=ll=OT'--~~~~~~-W~•d_"'_sd_1~1,_M_a~1 _26_,_l9~7 l '}'-,-
•
DICK TRACY ly Chester Gould
TUMBLEWEEDS
,,....-------... TH15 ONE 15 &l-ANl(1el,JT
'T'HE ONE' Va/Lt.. MAVE'
'f'OtJ MIJSTREAOFAST,AlllD MeMORI~
_ ..... ~-
....... ~··" /,
e tN:tt •·~(.ti
MCOHtlS ,,•
ly Tom K. Ryon
1''1 SNOOKIE ••. YOU SNAKE-EYE:?
!<N~•~-<\'l'S'~IDE-A\iJ.\V f!JC!!IJ'.
I CAN'T IJ'~IEVE IT!
COUUI lllS 'E ME llfAR ~1·~ •A•V •RUllPER llA'f
( SIErH)
AN', A"AS1 SOl&WHAT
UNW1i;"QY,
VANDl.EWISE
,J
ONCE:'T I 17AN11~El1
'PON ME KNEE?!
·.
MUTI AND JEFF By Al Smith
,, ........... -... . ....... , ........ -,,_,
JUDGE PARKER
JUST .l. MIWLITE, rot.KS~ 6EFORE YOU
GET OJ=F f-02 OU~ TWENTY MINUTE
ST~ I MA.VE ,\N IMPORTA.MT MES·
SAGE-FO!t A M1Y.. r:AY WMEELE2!
.t.INONE 6Y TM.l.T WAME t.
WIV NAME'S
FAY WHEELER!
WM.l.T'S THE
ME.SS.A.GE ?
OW SOARD ! /&i
PLAIN JANE
I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I
ACROSS
l .\lagmhcr11l
(, Pourld down
10 Arnvr
11 R1vrr
.. mbankmrnt
15 Arabian lath~
l& Spoktn rathe!'
than .,.1l\e11
17 Ergs, potnl\,
1oc!tl!S, rte.
18 S1d1n1J for
housrs
20 Fur ~tat!
21 Gate rrtt1pt\:
Slan;;
23 R!!!r.OVt sl11119
24 Wet ... eatht'f·
wist
2b A!htfla 11Vtr
2 fi()'dS
28 YanttJ DI
hockr~
)0 fltstefu
US to:y
31 SN1f!
32 1so1atr (!(>ti
other~
Jb lt.Y. G1an1
great
)7 l/rry ~""'
ar.'IOtH\\
)8 Rtmun~1att
for 9oo:I:.
~ Lost ~11 llOPt
42 Pkket
4~ Un11s ol A•ea
4S Steep!t\
~9 Lilt
5 IJ C ()l1lllUl I S I
sympat1!1zt:
Slang
51 Statr· Abor
52 Russian
f19hter p~llt
55 F oye1s
SS Olf1cr 1tOrltrr:
l11I01m.a!
&O Caltr
decorator
bl At 1ibrrLy
bl Possrssrd
It) Loci\ of
Stollaml
b4 lttm d
tamp1n9 gt<lf
b.5 last ---.
Sxramenls
i1dmin1stt•td
111sl ~lore
death
OC71r~
1 Make ~
911tp1ng
'~· 2 City ~ill
00fln-tf Pass
~ Btrd-\rp.,ers
t ltnnlSCOlJft
l.,l!Jft
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7 (JpJbl ~
I Et11ncl bird DI
"l ew Zealalld
Yesterday's Puzzle Solved·
D ~ ~ A
P I N K
I lo C L (O i l A SC H(
•~(D S YH l ('-
~ 2b 71
11 .:.!l('Jk 111 ,, 40 Perseus
pompous storing their
manner t a1s 111 1 lot
12 Fem111int ll Tt1eatric at
nnme perfDf m('I
llChurchofhce-1 ~2 TV VIP
l'I Move sli9htl~ 43 Poetic
22 Some , contracl1on
re9ardless of 4S family membtr
~uantity 4b Cour1try of
lS Hyfl'l('n-Et•OJl'
op1erous 47 Cut into
111Sttl small p+ece~
2b Wove(! w1tll ~8 Poker stake\
9re11t intensity 49 Harass
Z1 Oeviatts l1ot11 Sl U.S.
proper cou1st qovern~nt
28 Wearing s~s 1<1vrst1galus:
29 OtltSI lnforin.at
JG Pays llO"IOf to 53 Auow poi son
32 Poltct c~r 54 Obittts of
lealurP fa 1th
33 Suite ol rooms S& F u~quently:
3'1 Stitt Portie
VOiJ'RE TO PWOME
SOME SODV ~v TM e
MA.ME OF J'OMNNY
KANE~ IT~ ll«XNT!
PERKINS ...
TMERE3 A PMOME
llST tNSIDE TME
RESTMllWIT, MISS!
c
MISS PEACH
STEVE ROPER
BE~E 'lt\J 60 IN, I .,...".~T'i
MAKE SURE 'lOU LADIES .
... Jo,N ' l use THE "'°"D F~ -
'
~
' ,
•
Ll'L AINBt
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
----------.., ® [> ... c-... "···
1 NEED A DOUBLE
CHOCOLATE Ml'i<-, U~CLE WILLIE .GETA
Lo,i.t> OF
'THIS
REPORT
C,01~1>.
ANIMAL CRACKERS
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By John Miles
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WORDS,
By Mell
OF COURSE •..
4b Make lllOft 'l Young \tal 35 Stares ~1 57 Coon rJ Sweden
Sl)fUte 10 Can1ue 37 Bog 59 Two: Prefix
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MIKE.'·-· 'lCIU ~E EDN'T
HP.VE GOT
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ANYTHt~G IN MY
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PEANUTS
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By Charles M. Schulz
OR: 1$ IT !!AO ~TllEA!JAlfA? I lll!NI: 11'5 6000 FOlllHE ~ AHi> MP FOll1HEA/l'U5Jl~ 60:» f<ClHE llEm Ml>lllf (IWIOES.
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By Charles Barsotti
By Gus Aniola
By Ferd Johnson
By Roger BoUen
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THI STU.NGE WORLD
DENNIS THE MENACE
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Natural
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:Dress !JOI(/ cltildrc11
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" Add 50¢ Wrapping and Hand ling total •...• l
EACH AD DI TIONAL PERSON IN PORTRAIT FREE . -.. "~
offer per Family ·~linors mus t be w1Jh parents
•No age lim it. fa mi ly groups welcome
•No Appoin tment Necessary
3 DAYS ONLY
THUR. FRI. SAT. -MAY 27, 28, 29
• 1000 BAYSIDE DR.
NEWPORT BEACH
HOURS 10,JO TO 6
Time for QUIO{ CASH
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DAil Y "LOT 3 1
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE !.EGAL NOTICE Lr;GAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Lf;QAL N171'JCZ
LtOAL N01'1CI! IUl'l llOI COUl.T ., 1MI •A• n11 -T·IHU t All atft IAlt·IUt Hl!WPOIT·Ml lA Ul'll,110 I TATI OP CALU'01.lll14 "0 111 NOTl(I TO CllDITOll NOflC I TO Cll.011011 HOTICI lf <111011'011 IU•llUOll Ct \lilT 0, TMI
SCKOOL Dlll'l.ltl THI COUlfTY OP' DIAlfll I U,llUtl COUit OP flfl IUl'l lUOI COUl;f o' THI I UP'"!I (llllUllf OP 1'1tl 1tAtl ... CALIPOllUllA ll'Oll NOTf(t: INVITINO llDI (.t,fl lltUMt ll. ITATI 01' C~"~IMlj. •tit I TAT( :· CAl.11'.INIA PO• lfA I J CALllltlNIA 1'011. 11111 CGUlff'f 0 " OU.Hll
NOT ICE '' HElflY OIVEN ui.1 '~• o-.vl THI <OUN o OUNll 1'NI c UNTI 01' o l ANll TMI c UNTT t• OIANll Ne. a •Mfl IGfl•d~ EdUCtTIOll of fflt NtWPOfl•M&9t IUMMONS (MA 114011 .. ._ ·• •t Mt. ~lh Nt, A.fin\ NOTICI OP HJt,ll!NI Uri!llMI Sti.oo1 0111r1,1 ol Ort n" (oul!IY. I~'' lrlf mtrtltH of l'tlll~fltr : JULIE l1J•lt ol GEOllGE WILLIAM ltl! ... D, l!ttllt ef 1.l!X ll. ANDl 11t$0N, 1 1111, ti ()L.IVI 11.ll lollTN SM'rTH, ., ;lf lTlotl ;ea •oalTI OJI'
Ct!llor111•, will •K••vt M•ltd b'dt till lo ANIN OUllAN •Ml ll:11Plll\ll ffl: Jl$US 1~1 GEQlltGE W. llt EAO, OK•~st<I. Dl(tlt..,. 11-. -M•11 11 01.IVI a , SMYTH, WILL AN • •Ot t.ITTf lltl
11 JO"' M. 011 !l\f 3rd div o! Jt;nt, 1t1!, ~I JOE OUlitAN • N01t(.l rs Hl!litllY CIVEN lo 11\t NOTICI IS HE REIY GLVl!N ,. lht -.c., . .-. TllTAM I NTA•Y o• Ao/lilNISTaATIOlt
"'' lllllt• 01 ••Id SChOOI Dl1Ulct, l«tlld O T\A.T-llttlf"'dtrtl. JEIUS JOIE tr..i1i...1 DI tht tlKIYt ntMtd 4tc1111tflt erM!ll.,1 01 lllt t boYt "1"'11111 de-c;Mo11t NO ICI It Hlll:llY QE11V N to lllt WtTM•Tltl •Wlt.t.·AMNl )CI'
•• 1&'1 l'ltttllllt Av11111e, (tilt Meuo, u tntt t it H FMl\I tltYll'lf tltlmt ... Intl 'In. lfl1t t ll ttrltt'lt 1'111•1 ... Clflll'll ••1l11tl lflt !lilllf• " "" t MY• n fKfliltftt 111111 " JOHN H IT&INH.l\Ut C11llornl1, ti •hlcn tlmt 11'4! Did• wlU b4 Tiit Hl1llOl\fr ht l llldlll 1 "'11'°"' '°"' ltld de,ffttll t•t ,,..,.,, .. 11 ll!t 11\tm, itld fkt01111 tit r•ulrH 1• t\li tf\t/tl, I •II WNlll "'"Int (ti lt•lf\11 lht OKe '
l)IJbllUy optned •"II rc10 !Or: (.,n!ntt YOllr m•rrlit· YO>J 1'1tl' !tit 1 with lh1 lllCtH•rw-"°"'~rt. 1,, Ille ettlc1 •lth IM r*:tt11r1 YWC111r1. In !ht olll<I Md dft:Mtf!I l•t ro4vlred l• 1111 !Mm, NOtrc°i IS HlllllaY OIV.N lhtt
• TYPEWltlT EA.$ :1:11111 ~·r" "''1 II ~llt'I dll'I ol the Of !ht tltrk llf lfl• •bovt tlllllltf (6t;rl. " ot 11\f 'lttk .. lh• •bo~• tnlllltol (Ol,ltl,., With !flt "'tt .. ""' VO\iUlt rl, In'"• 1tt1,. 1"1111.HC ll LOll:lll AINI! ST!.INHlt.UI f\11
'Ill bldl t •t IQ Ill In tt(ordtt'ICt wllh 11
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1 tU~lnl '11~'"ed an W'f~. to ''1"111 1111111• Wlih Ill• 11~11"'' lo Pflltnl ltl•m, Wllh IM nKtlllfl' tf !flt Cll ti fll tM l t>IYI t nlltltll C9Y"' tr 11114 flttthl t ...,It Ion i., PtiNlt If will
i;'.0Mlllon1. 1,,,, .... ~t1Qtl\, t M S..clllc1llOl'I• .1111'1: .... !to .~. •,..:r ~~,!~~ ·~·~ ~~tt'"" to'"', ~.e.;-•11":',",':0,111~1,",' YW(ht tl, •• '"' tillfltllt f\tcl "1hi olllct .. •••M111 lt!M!'I. Wl\l'I lht l!Ktllt l'V t l'!d"' """' "'Alfmlnltlrtlltn with '"' wM(fl 1r1 now on lilt In lht ofll(t ol 1~1 .,,1 ' 11 t t!ltrntyl. Oli Y ' A N of nl1 tltorr\IY, CHAlltl.E$ c , MOll;ll;l!'Y, vovct>trt ,. tht .....,..,,1,Mtl t t ~ efilct •Ill ll•nt•l4 rmrtllCt ,. whldl h m&dt
Purdlat1fle Aten! o1 11ld $,hool Olllrl<I, 1111:;td c::111.,~1c.ui'tt i;::t~ lllltr, 1 f~t· ~.~~·~NIE! 1~11 1 .~r:111 ,'·o klltt. t; •. 1. '212 •111 (llllt;FY loulf~•rd. LvnW'OOI, or hit tn.tf\tl't : WlTTMA!-1 & ICHMl~T1 for 11.1'thtr .;_,llc\llt''' tl'ld ftlft tilt jlm•
11$1 Plt«nllf AYtnw. Co1lt M11M, "II •• 0 • " ..,. . •< t \It II .. . . lo.a • C•llltrnlt ~1. wlllth 11 IM •!&ct ., UOI W•d<Ulf Dtl# • .........,, IHI.Ii, •nf ,IK• " ""'''"' ,... •tn'I• hu b•t11 Ct tltoln!t . OFdltl Conc.t•11ll\I GlviJIOI' llf ,rt•trly, H1W110rl l•1<JI, C11flor"lt HM), "lhlll! 1, .... llfllh ot "'' lln.ltttlt "tcl !n Ill mt lltrt Ctlfl.,11~ "t' Whldl II ll!t •lict tf •II ftr JV!lt It lt7i M t •• II'\ 1 j11•
Et<h ll•ddtr muit iubmlt 1 ~10 d•to•ll 9'0Utll tu•Wt, Cllllcl Cll•!tlll•. dlllcl 1111"-1111 llltct o1 W1!nt11 tf thl undtttltnttl In ""1tln!M 1, lht ••lflt tt 141t "'1t1MU ftf tf1 u""nltllM 111 tll mlttt rJ ,_,....,... llf O...""'-1• Ii/'')'"" If ]II t~t lotm OI • Clrllll.0 or c1~hltt'1 f'Cl'1• tlt,,."tl't' lfff, <nit. tf\d Ille.II I ll ,,,llll f'1 .. !'ll lnl11f 11 lht lllllt If llid tKtd'111. within ltur 11'16j\l!'ll tlt•r !hi .. rtl lnlllt to t etf'1tt -1 •II M¢Nttlt-, _rt, II, .. (hlk Cllll:r or'h.-t we.r~',,.
clleck o• • bid llOl'ICI 11Q11tl to 1r111 Pt• cen! 11111' rtlltl II mtJ 1>t trtntN bv !tit tk .. tnJ. wl11'1J11 19tir tr10nln1 l llt r In. llrit "'blk,tlotl ti t11l1 ~tlct. wllflln i.ur """!flt tlltt ''" 11"1 Miii• !ht Cll'f' ti *'"'* ""'· Ct llftrNa. U~I ol tllt .,,, ... .,, Ill 1,.. bl-. m•<f• COllrl. Ut1l oullllet tfo.. l1 1~11 ntllct , Otltd M1v 10. ltll llof'I tf thl1 "'''''' DllMI Mi v 11, 11n • o~•nblt 10 tht or<i.r 011111 Htw-1.Mett II 1tv wli.11 ti wr. tht t t ¥ltt 1t.,. t i· 0.19d Mtv 11, lf11 WAI.Tl• G WllNLlt.NDI• Oil• Ml~ 2t, ttn W If SI JOHN Unltlt<f Stl\001 Olllrld A Pcrlormt"'' terntv '" lhli l'l•l •r, l'tll i.11...,14 '9 •• StANL,l!Y A. IMITt'I 11!"•"1!119' • UNITl!O C"Llfl'O•N1A l lt.NI( ct.n,i\, 'i' ' Bond mtv tit <l<Qt;lrtd ~t lhl dli.cre!lcn O! p ... m,UJ 1' lhll V.l ll• wrltt•ll ,__llM, II A<fmlllllUJtor ti 1t1• l!"l!Sit •I ltit Wiii of !ht l•1C1>I ... .t 1!lt Wiii J OHN C tAt. 'I' r
Ill 01 I I 111 l I I II I t llJ, "'11' 111 lti.ot Ill !!mt. of Int llltvt lllf!U;dt~ .. tnt el' lht 'll'ol t .. 4 tel I . • 1 '1r u. " • tven e • U•• 0 Otltd April 1 1111 OUl Ylit. CAI ••NT I • IAlHI S ·r·· ... ,..,.. lleetatnl " m ti tn IMt Wttl•Nlf or .. tllllt 111 •nl" !nlo wen (onlttet, tr.e P•Kffdl 01 WILl.llt.M f IT JOHN ! jl:' I It CMAl!;LI C. MOllt•Y WMlnMAH a t Ml T Nt w,.,-t 1 .. ch, Ct11fw~ .. rnr tllK~ wilt~ !o•le111d, or Inc•••., e Cit•~ . • IYJ • N • J. ICMll.•, It.I Jtll •• ,. Cttllurv 11YI, 1111 Wttt111tt Orl'lt. Tlol! (lltl •• , .. M4
bond, th• !11!1 1urn 11-fellf will bl Ill' Stro J Su!llvi n rt tf'nt' 1 1"'· Ll'll ...... , Ct tlltflll1 ttUI Ntwkrt lM,tll. C1tll,...... AffttMW' for: .. ll!llt~lf'
lodtlltd lo 1tld Sthl!O'I Dl$1rl<I 01 Or1ng1 Ott\llV ' ' ,.· ."" l II, Ctlll h UI Tth 11141 '""'1" "1>11ll1hld Cl•tPlttt c .. 11 D1lll' 111!(>1, Countv. WALIWOlltTH, tl!IOI L A Clllt.I L ,:;'.° j1lll ~~I·· ' CAlitYr.. e. INll.OON Al .. Fllfl' llr •1tc:1111t MtJ JI, JI. )t, 1'11 1nt·"
No bldOrr 11'111' wllN;lr1w 1\11 bid l~r • UU W•tl,llff Otlvi, Suitt tft ,t,!l~rlltJI ltr At•illlltri tor lM l t tl Cllor ... ll~d. ..ulltllllff 0...,... l;H tl Ot lll' Pll11,l---------------
.,.,lod or tl•tv C601 dtv• •111f int dt11 """'"" 11•<11, C•Mf. tt6U Puoll.i'llld o r.1111 CMit Dt llY P11or. •a1Mt11 .. cl Httt11i. t1111 i-•-'-'-"-'-°'•J'"•":r.-•"•'~··'•'0· "'~m''i,--'"'--" 1 ---~L~E::G~A~L~N~OT'._'.:l~C~E:_ __ _ >rl tor thr 011enln11 ll!Ueol, Ttlo (1U) '41 .... ) t Arl.rnt)'I ltt l•~UI.,
Tht Board of Ed11ct liO" ol lh1 NtWPlll'I· AlltrMJI ltr ·,."flit~•• MtY If. 1 '"" Ju11• 1, • 1111 llt\·11 l't;lllW.t!lll Cl rtn.. , .. ,, D•llW' Pl~!. LEGAL NO'l'ICE • .,.~
Me» Unifi~ Schoo! Ol•!rlcl •t•uvel tne Puollillt <I Ortnot CG.I f D It Pllo Mil' U. 1t, -t 11d JY"I '· 101 11l .. 11 frlCYOTOO'~. "o"IOM O•• •Ith! In retect t ny c• oil bldl, t nct l'IOI M• 0 1 1 1 1' 1 c-GAL NOTI CE -" • 11ectna•JIY tc~tPI the 1owt 11 bid, •NI to 1 1, It, 2• t nd Jun• I, 1'11 IU7-11 &.A LEGAL NotlCE M,t,MI tTATlM•NT w~lve 1;iy lnlorrnaHtv "" !"ltUlt tltl' In ----1----------------l-----==::;;:::::::_ ___ I NOTIC.I TO C:JllDITOl l Tht ~llMl"11 111,.on b dtlnt
'"' b!O tl(t!ved. LEGAL NOTICE Oii IUl.k Tllt.,ISPI JI •I: .,.,0,. "''' ,.,,,,0 ,. .. ,.,. tltct. u11 . 11t1 u;c .c .i .. ,. " ••R·JUf C••Tl,ICATI Oii ll,lllMIJI W&ll(t It hUtly tlVt ll ... "'• cr..i1i..1 SCl-!OOL OISlll!CT N1. P 4U,. NOTICI 70 ClfOITOlltl fllC:TITIOUI NAMI tf VldOI' :· Ci rt1n111, lQI Unlvt,.llv Or ..
ot Or1nge (Ollftly, IAlll lUI tUPllllOI COUJI 01' Ttl• .. , O O .. • oo• O O ' O -• C OOO > Ctlltorllll ''''' 0, <•<••••••• •o• • • vn HI fh Ml''' ., t t ton. .WN>r ""'' • ., •t 111i.ror, whtlt '" Oorollll' Harvro Fisher CEltTtPIC:AT.! 01' llUSINll!:IS t uc!l,,t 1 11\;t lnM' 11 21Q lllemln .. Or. 11 ..... 1 1Hrt1tt1 11 1'1 E. illh St .. • l'ICTITIOUI l"lllM NAMlf THI COUNTY OP 0•11.N•I Cttl• iriW••· c111tor11!1, tindtr 1111 l!C· e •• ,. Mt••· C:tu111Y If Ort l'l9•. $1ttt ol "~•c11ailn1t A1ttn! The yn<f1r11111td do f\llf'tll' Lotrllv lhtr H•. A·•'221 !llltu• ll•"!I """"' ol Cl!lllt.M·TllC ,.;., Ct lll6fnlt rnu • JM;Jk 1 1 1 11ou1 1
Ot'ltd :::;1\":. ltll SHILl"lll ENlEllPllSES, IMC. I nd 1!1!1!1 •I ALFllEDO i'ALLAOINO 1t11t 11t-!!tm 11 ct"-MH~ o11n1 lllllW· 11• midi fo Wllllt m o.r~:~:[111~ :5' ui:
......... ···-·· ,_,, D l lol JOIHElt EHTElltl'lllSfl. INC. ,.....,uc11,,, DK,, .. , .. ,,. ,, ·····-••••• ·--· 1111 Hri.tn, -·· "*""' 11111111 •n.l •I•'• P1 .. ,c.11t Mtt•. Ct!ll,. Tr1111 ........ i.n.. .. ,.,. " -• ly P 1 ' • ot nt ••I 11rt111,.nl11 bvsl,..11 •' 1<117 w. __ ;,T00,, 00 -, ,.,.,· ••• ,. ,::,.,"',, tt r~lft11(t 11 11 •1~w1 : bu• "'" 1oortu I• m If. 11lh st., Coi l•
Ml1 !t, ' 1111 1111 ·11 ~::nq;,''s'i:if s-cj:llfo~~'ur!,-:i'::..~ ll~ !hii 111 ... ,oor:; "tYlni ¢1~),;;~ t lti;;°ll !ht c.':l':!!.:.~: P11"h• Mii F1tml11tt Or., ~:1~~~11l;~nty 11 Or111tt. Sltle .t
l l===============l1111ous 11,.., ntmt or Otllff\111.., wn!ch ltld de<td111I ''' rr1111h M "" lilt Ill•"'• Otled Mov 11. 1111 Tht 1,0,.,ty to· bt "tniftfltd 1' LEGAL NOTICE dt.>11 not •how lht "~' "'m~ c• ntm11 ct wl!~ 1111 ""'~'"'"' YIVCht fl, '" IM Howt •4 C, P••'ch !tcllod •I lit• IE. lllll st., Cello Mtu, --------~-~~~---lth1 PftJOlll lnttrttltd 111 1tld bu1ln111, ol!lc1 ot ti. cl1tk of lh1 •bw• i n· S!•tt ol C1Uttrl\J1, Or1n11 Ctullll': Ctunlv ol Orintt. STatt el Ci llf1<nlo.
••1NTll!O PlltOOUCTS ll Y TAI. 111·L
ltlvlfllGI A111., Htwtorl l••'~· Cit.
"~ T~lll'flll Au•lln ltU"'"' J•, 151 E•sl
ltlll Strt•I, Cw tt Ml••· C,t,.. 12•'7.
l hl• 11111111tu !1 Mint conc1uctld ~1 "' lllCUvl~•I
Tlll1 1!11tm1M llltd w/lh 1111 Co;.ont,
Clttk 01 Ott~•t COll"IY
I v l av1rlv J. M•dO.O•
Ot1111,.,. Clklnf'I Clt•k April II, 1'71
Pybll!hed Ott nif (NII 01111' PUol, M11 U, lt, 16 •nO Jtilll J, 1111 111'-11
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE INVITING llDl 11>-•lt SHELFER .. JOIHl!lt EN· tilled f01>tl, •• 11 '''"'"' ll>trn. 011 Mt • 11. 1fn, tlelor• m1, I H1t1rv S1 ld ••Dllt•IV 11 d•ttrlOtd ,,, l t Mrtl I l 8 d I TEll;Pll;tS!!S, '"° thll ltlO llrm Is 'Ot'll• wllll ff'll MCtU••¥ VOl.ld\lrt, It !ht P11•Ut In tM llr llid Sltlt· l t•Mnt lll' ,1· ~II tlock 111 lr•dt. llotv,t t, eqt;lpmt"I Tr~:/!~ !i 111';:"c!c!ir•~=~~1j1 ~~jlt:t "tell "' lf\t lollowlt'll Ptrt111rs, w~ ~~N'~'f~ •~ tn; ou~':.t:'fr ~!• •ttor;tvr ll'lltt •td H-•rd c. P11rch 110Wn tt mt .~ oood wlll •I t~tt ••t•I! ttJOUno 1---,-,-,-1-0-00-0--0-0-,-,c,-0-,-,HIJ }
Olt l(ltt ol Ottn~e COl>n!Y, CaUlornla, wl!! n1me1 t ncl ~<frtlU.I l ft 11 fllllow1 : /-. p O l ~:: H ti' ~\1 S ll\lf It •t lilt Pltlfll y;l\Oll ftl l'!'lt 11 lti-lllllii-.. !'\'let 1l•Tlon bv•fn1u 1t11twn "' Vi( TAT• OP •~celve oeiled bids t;P to 11 :OO •·"'·· SHELFElit IENTE•PlllS£5. INC .• 1007 C "~fvt.I · iiUI °"' I• rn ""°" tic/I, tel 1• 1111 w~nln ln!lr11~nt end C•,.,.nt C"'vren Str•lct 11111 loct l!!d 11 lTM• COLu.'fTLl;:110~1:00111t lht;rtdtv, J\1"4! J, ltll. 11 111, Pvr<h•llllO W, 11th Sllfff, Cella Mii•, Ctlllcr11 l1, ~ ! Ofll '« ,., ' w,.n C1h ,.' !ht Pl t ct 0 •1 1clt1111wlt•tl4 llf •xtcuttd lht lll'llt. ')C..e E 11th SI . Collt Mtlt (OUllh of ' ,,,.,
JOI N EA ENTERPRISE$, INC,, .S!.11 ',"',',' •"'~ 1111 ... •11 ... Ill Ill "'" ... cO~FICllil Sl!AL) o ..... ~. Slt !t .;, Ctlll1r11l1. ' •• ... Ofi>I, OI 11Td lcl'>llol dlltrlcl lottltod ti Tllf111w-. Gtrd ... ~'"''· Ct lllomle Pt•." Ill ......... ,. ... ltld dKllll"'· MtrY l•lh Metlort Tnt b<tl~ 1 I Wiii llt ttd HOTICI OP Hl AlllN• 0 .. Ptl'ITION 13>G Ad1m1 Avt11Yt. Co111 Mt11. SHlLFl'.JI ENTlilltPRISl!I, lHC. w0011n1~.~,' -,•,'~' tllt r lht tlrtt ""bllct · Ntltrv Puflllt·Ct lllornlt r ~ 1110, ;,•,11~4~~ ''" oO ,•,~v.•,,•,:. 00 "' :llOIATI OP WH.t. ANO POii C•llle•"la, •I wlllch tlrn1 11ld bld1 will bl 8 R l>t t p (> P11 o m 1 no ct p I I Olf -' ·~ LITT II T aT1t.MI HTAlitY ! N 0 Pllbllclv <>l>tned atld •eld j(I(: IE•VIP,,,1,,1 I' c ' , Wt 0.ttcl Mlf I~ itn r ,,c Ill! let In , C. H•m•ton Co,, 111' N. NollvwOltd I OHQ)
tor £MJlnHrlnt T.t<.nnotoev. Pn11lt1. P•tt!Olllt lt.Ll'A.1!0 JOll,H 0 ••11•• ("""11 W•r· •~•b•n~. COlllllW' If I.ti Antt ltl, E111i. ., t<!l!NllY l'litt:tllEl:ICl(S, Ar(:f'IU1ctu r11 D•11tl11g '"° TKhlliCl f Iv ltverly It.. Duel• Ptil..LA.,>1"40 )It . M1 c.,,,,,,ln lttl l'.xilrt1 sr1t1 °1 Cttl .. •111•· 01e111td.
lllv•lrtlloll, Secrn:t•v f11te11l0t ol ;ht W111 ~I t, l'7J o fi r 11 ~n-11 l• ''" Trt~trr1e, t11 NOTICE IS Hl!ltl9V GIVlN !hit All bids are to ti. In ~'to•dlntt with JOIN R f'NTflltPltlllfS. INC. of 1111 •blwt 111 m111 ftclcltlll '"'11'~ Ort"tt CNtt Ot ll1 •l~I, b<.ifl11tls n1mt1 •no tddrt11u uud bV 1105111, Frmrlck• h•'I llllof htrt lll e '!'"
'"' '"'""''''"' and Condition• ond By lrt:obe•t L. Jtl"'' PLUNl(I Tt & •LUMll: 'l'T M1v lt, 16 ,,.. Jvn1 2, t, 1tn 11"·11 t rr n•tero• lor lht lh•H ~•tri 1111 ••it. '' 0 ,. 0 • 000 --• 0 0 0 l'tttldtnt ''' 0 ' 1, . 3t mt on 01 •r I • w ..... tr 1w1nc1 e SHtlllc1llons wnld> •••new on Ille 1nd ev J•n•t J. Jolntr 000t rHv•,• '"' LEGAL N""""E ~lH Mov 11 lt7l Ltlltr• T1111m1nt1rJ CNo •o ri cr I mtv bf> iocurtod In !ht oltl(t ol l~I SIC•tll/Y Oll't'I _.....,. VI-Wiiii 'o ( I r1ft<tnt1 lo whlctl II m1H f9r turlhtf
P11rch11t11g Attn! Ill st ld IOIOOI dl11tl,I. STATE OF (ALtFOll;NIA P.O. lu Mt ' 111'1 • IM"' P.t•l1Culat1, •/\Cl 11111 th• tfm1 '""' .,i,,,
E•U. bidder "1Ull lt;Dmll with hi• Did I COUNTY O!' Olll .. N0'1 Nuf\fCllf .... ltllll, Ct llllrftlt ttlfl '"'Ultl I C Tr~~+\•M ). ef R•••l111 the 1111'\1 1111 l>ttn '"for Junt
C8tl'tier'1 CllMC~. c•rtllled c.htck, or b'd• Oft Ml~ J, 1t71, ~f"'t mt. 11\t """ Ith (IUJ IU.llM or IM·Kl'I CCJITl,IC.TI'. 0 .. fl!UllNl l • ' • MA J •• J 10, 1111, ti 9:30 1.m .. In lilt ~rtr_.. ol
Clet's bori<I mt<lt Ptl'tble lo !I'll orO•• et dl•lllntd, 1 Nott rv Public In t tld tor llttllt~t t.r C•t~ut1r lltCTl'l'IOUS llAMI '°·'· •11t ti I Oto1,tmtnt Ho. l ol ••Id court. ti Ito lne Coa1I Communllv Colllt• Ol11rlct 11kl Sl1lt, PfflQl\lt!V tDPttttd llOl!lllT Pt;blllhld Or1n1• CN ll Otlly P!lll, Tiit Uftd•rJ!t n1<1 dn CH lttv lhtl' Uf •,u•M•' '\':i.ltUIJ Clylc Ctn!"' O•IYt Wtll, bl rM (llJ of
!lo.rd of Ttu1tee1 In'" 1rnou11! not ltn P, DUDA ll\CI 8EV£,iLY A. OUOA MIY It, M Ind June 1, t, 1'11 111•11 CtMluefl"' I W1lniu 11 ... Ml'Ctil ~"'*i Mt . ... $1nt1 An1, C1lll.,,n!•.
than ll11t ot r<tnl is .. ) ol 1111 sum bid ti ~nl!Wn !O "" to bt lllt Pteil<lent 1;;jj A111., NIW'"'I ltKll, Ct llfernT1. ~~•tr llll.0 ~ ... ,,...UI .. C .... I Dally .. llot. Otltd MtY 1-. ltl-
t ouar1ntte 11111 me bind er will en!"' 11110 Stc:•tltrf r1i1>1dlvlly of IHIELFI!• fN. L EGAL NOTICE 1t11 fltlhlOUl l!rm ntmt t i lltl!NT·lt.·lllSH MIV • I 11 1!'9·11 W. E, sr JOHN
!ho P•OO<l1t<I Con!racr II ll!t ••mt II TERPll1$l l, INC. llMI ROSllllt L. 1"11 11'111 11td "'"' lo ,...,polff t i lf\t C1Untv Clt1k
.... 1r<1eo 10 him, 111 !ht t Ytllt ol l1llurt le JOINl!illt t nd JANET J. JOINllit, kl\OIWn 1,0llOWI"• Pttt.on•, w"91t nt-1 l11 tull 1MI LEGAL NOt'ICE NUlitWITl. HURWITZ AlllO llMllit
tnll' ln!o •~th contracl, lht procff<I• ol 111 "''Ill l>t 11-Pretl<ltftl t nt !tCrttlrv P4 ttt lltCtl er r1111tnt• ''~ •• fotlowo; l-----------------1•»·.llllll llrttl 1~t (hi'(~ will ti.. rorJt11e<I, or In !ht Cl l t rtlPl(!l••IY ef JOINER l!:NTIE lll•1tlse1, l"ICTITIOUI 111111t•1s Nt flCY L. '''""'' 400t Mt•Ct;I, N-ittrt '''"' Ct Hll"lll ftut or t OOn<I, 1flt lull ltill'I lflttt ol will bt INC .• !hit Olt<Ultd tht wl!ftl" lntlrvn'lln!, NAMI'. I TAT•MINT Nt w-* 8tl<l'I, lftrborl Pll'...,, d i T.r1 11111 l?lotfl. fgrJflle<t lo 1110 w;l!ool dlttrlcl. kt'IOwll ro me 10 111 llle tttlllnt wflo tl lCl.I-Tht lollowlnt lttion lt delnt llu1lnt H Mtr(\11, N-'°rl et1<h. NOTJClfl\f~OA!~1DITOlll All"111rl .., Ptllll111t r
No bidder may wllhdrow hi• Old fer t ltd The wllllln lnll•umiM .,, btlltll "' •1: Otllcl MIV 17, ltll lllflllitlOl COlllitT GP THI 'u~lllll'ltd Ortn91 C01t1I Cltll'f "IJat.
Pt•lod ot lorrv-l1ve d0•1 a!ltr !ht Otlt Ill '"' cot11<>r•llorl1 IMrtln ntmtd, tl\d. IC· CAVl HEllS AND GEOHIEGAN, Ci , Htrblrl Piy11111 ITATll ... Clt.Ll,O•::· POii M1v lJ, 11 t l\CI Ju11t 1, 1111 nU-71
1or lllt openl11g merto!. ,_,,._, 00 "• '"'' ,.-'''"''''•~· ~Ml Mtt A•thtir ltultvl•d, Ntw,ort N11w;w-L. p 1y1on T•I CO~NTY 0, t 01
·--_. '" ""'' ·~ Bttc~ C111:n11!1 '2660 10 < • C ''" o o C fo\•OI • '' ''''' '' o'c'• 'O"ES. Tiit Boar<! or lr11st~1 reH•Yt• thl ll l(l/llcl lht wllnltt 1n11rum1nt pu,.11t nl ' · I I 1 rtt 1• •t nt• tullly: n LEGAL N011CE P•ivlltQt 111 rt lecllnt onY i nd 111 Didi or II> 111 b1·t•ws •• 1 rttol1>llon flf 111 ... ,d Wlllltm 11t1111r CorPO••llo.,, I On Mty 11, u 11, bf!ll•I ,,,,, /I N11111 Ot<.••••d. oo ••"' on~ lrr<ooOorl!i<o 0, 00• oO •••-Oo•O. Ctlllornl• C"'~-· 4"1 MocA.rlhvr ,~bile 111 11\d. tor i11d SI.II, ttrotnt lll' j · 0
rormallllts tn •~¥ b!d or 111 "'' tildd!nt . WITN'ess "''° ht lld tnd llflltlt l Mt !. S01.11tv1r11. NtWN!'f S11ch, Ctllft.rnlt ••"''"' N~y ~. Pln111 1...i "''"'' 111~11~~! 1111~~":. •1::1c1'-:o~'~';1 .~:1--------------f'--
"'""·· •OllM"N E. Wll.TOO• OOFFOCO•< l•A<O nj,ia. Pt l'tllft k-\il'io 16 m1 II l>t ll>f -ion1 oo••••o •z·o-<0oO-o oo•Oooo -0 •-•• OAO -••
S9C;!v. llo11d oi"Tr111ttts Gtor•• A. W1111c1t Tiii• bualntu 11 cendu'"'d 111 1 llll'lllH """"'' nt .;.,1, •rt •uDicr!btd t. ltli'Wlthl11 4f,;!~" ,",'';141111l•M 11 lUt It!~. ;H~ SUPl lltlOl coUilf o,. TH• P~blit~ed Or1nge Ccal1 Dtlll' l'llot, ltlolt rf Publlt tn and tor •lrlntr~~. Mt u.1n•tr !nllrll,,,l lll IM 1'k~twlM•H lhl'I I X• lltt ntctHt rJ VOllC!ltrt, 111 lht olllCI ., ITAT• OP C,t,P,,l,OlllMllt. •01'
lll -"-'-'-'-'-·-·-·-"-'-'-------'-'-"-·_10 1 CO•l•'.',','o',~,-,','o°'w'•'•"' T11b 1l•ftmtn1;w11 !!Itel wltl'I 11'1• Ctv,.. n~~c'1".:1.1ii~·LI 11\t C1Hk ot l~t ....... lllUllH CIO.,rt, o• TM• COUNTY OP OlAHOe
'
• (0 ,, " 0 O C -• M 00 to l'/'t llnl llltm Wllh 11\f nt(tU •f> N1. A4NH 111 --------~-------1•"''"''' ,, ,,. . • -I • lllmY on IJ . M••Y l tlh Morion '
'''
••.• -······ ••• ''' 1f11. Holtry Pt;bllc·C•lfftrnlt YOUO\tfl ,, !ht u"'"' ..... t i lf\t ortlct NOTICI o• I ALIJ 0,. ........ ··~ ... ,. DANIEL • M D,t,lllll P,, ., ._,ti .. MtW'tl' .. S111m111, tiOl .... tY AT PllYAT• l•L•
Stftlt A.,.. C1Ut1rnlt 1 1 PrtnclJtl Ottltt ·in Wll.i'llt• Btvd., •u111 4", l tvtrlv t'llll1. t11 1•· M•"•' -• '"' '''''' -M•OY
'.'
·. ''''' ..,.,,,, lt.11tr111y1 •I LI• Ort n•• County ,,.. "' "' -·oooo-0 ,,,,, <-oo Oo OOy o O•O· »U Wll oltlr• I M ., 111111 1" M• Cimmlulo,, l!:l!Plrti Ct lUor11lf t0110, Wlllth 11 11'11 •l•cf el Ltlullf I Al lCf.JI, ll•t •-o •• ..-~ ,,_,. -L.tt AR"lt' Ci M•tnlt HOii l>ti1l11tt1 -1 tht 11nc1tr•11nM in 111 rn1tttro LOUISE 8AllKER. Otc.ttstd.
MIW' If, '' ,...., Junl '· 1t11 lltlon ' A''11 '· 1'11 •Hlllnln• lo'"'"''" M ••Id dfcedt11!, NOTICl IS H ............. --o ----------------1 T·l1UI "til l111'1td Ol'tll" ·C11111 Otl!W' P lr,1, O O -· -1· Pt;lllli.11.., 0'1ntt (NII Diiiy Pile!, Mi l' It, 26 11141 J\Hlf 1• t, lt '1 lift.JI .,1111111 ltur monlh1 I ntl" lll ttrit lti~llUI· tltlr J u.,t lt , 1111 1111 und••llt~td, ----~L£~G~AL~~N~0~11~Cf;~---1~M~o~o~o:o.~o~o~. ~"'::'.'"'~~'"~"';;'~·~'~"~'-~"~"~"~' 1----;~;;:;;:-;;;;;;;;;;---;lltn el' th!• llCltldr. WILLl.,M EUGENE BARk.1!:11, 11 E•· Otlfd Mtv 11. lt11 ' ~uror ., 11\1 Wiii .. MAlltV LOUISE
•·'171• LEGAL NOTICt LIGAL NOTIC& Cl lLl J ONES, -1.4.lltlC!llt. tllO know11 11 LOUISE
C•lltTl,-ICAT• OP' 9Ut1Nlll E•""1•1• ti l~t Wiii I ARICfll, tlKNt-.1, will Mii t t t rlV•!t t 1""1MI of 1ti. ttcld..,t. ..1, to 11t1 hl11letl ll'ld lltll 11.i bidder.
T' FlCTI IOUI NAMl CllllTtPICAT• o• Ctll•Oll&TIOtl PO• llMlllltff, MfYt<' & l111m111 •ll•li<t 11 eonllrmt tlllf'I Dv ll'lt 1bov1 tn• 1 ti,,dt 'llt "tO do '"1111 flltl' '" > •o-o t •ANIACTION 00 tUIO•lll U•OIO Mfl 'IYlllllll'I l Wf .. lwilt 4..i llt!ICI lt;Pfrl1< Courl. 111 lht rl1tu, 1111•. (-U(tlnt • b\11lntu ., 10i MC,lt<ld•" .. " ........... Nllll ttllflt 11 ftlll Pt., Ht wPo'I t t t<fl, Ctllferlll•. ul\lltr 11\t ClfllTIPtClt.T I'. OP 9Ul lMISS, Pl(TITllUI MAMf ' 11 1~1trut lllf •Ul ll el th• d1,ed1nl t i 1~• llCllllOl>l llrM llt me ol THI! (:0Nf.Y lltCYITIOUS N,t,MI THI! liHO•lllUGN(O CO POllt,t,TIOH Antrlllf .., ll,~ttb tlm1 ol ll1r •••lh, •M t i! lhl tllhl, lltlt
l'LAHO ttld thlt tlld firm la umPolH Tht vlldtrtlt nll(I <rlOtl c•r!llY 111 11 (Of'>-tM• ht rt bv c•tllf\o tlltl II la •-udl"I I ..... .,.. '"° lntl•ttl tht tllt1t h11. llY o•er•llM
OI !ht tollowl110 per1on1 • .,.....,. ntmto 111 dUC:llft• 1 t~ll~•• •I &U 11. Cli lr Slrfft, k lln1n letlltd ti 110 LMl ft .,YI., Co11 ,,..'"b~''r.:t f''"',' ,c~111t~6111 1~1Le;; •I ltw 1r olh•rwl1~, t 'Qt;lrtd othor lh•., tvll t f\<f plt,ts ol rttldtnc:t trt 11 CCI&!• M•••· Ct l!li rnlt , ur'ldft tht tit· M111, Ctlltorn!t ul'ldtr 'flt lltlllllul 11,fll l l' tillt • · · or !11 1ddlllt11 to lllt l llf lht dtetdtnt •I IOllOW'1: rltlout firm non'l6 el' 0 &. 0 ntmr 11 10 IMNOVll.llVI! COMPUT lit lilt ti"'' llf htr dt1lll 111 •l'ld lo lht l C•'" Through a DAILY PILOT
-~ Ltnt, Co1l1 Mttl, OOflll<d Nt!I MIOll, fflN tf 1111 lt!lowl"9 Pf!'"'" wMM TIONS (ll GOAL·GITTlllS !I! 00AL· Ortllt•. $Ult ol Clllfor"l1, deKrll>td II
-" ~ 01vld llt. Ct "lllf. JU1 PtP•trlrH AUTOMOTI VE •1111 !ht! 11id lit"' la COt'll• tlCHNOLOGY !1)ClitYST.tiLLIMI'. ClllA· L E GAL NOTJCI: 111., •••I pr-rtv loc~tld I" lht CounlY rtl
1ty1'// 7'32 ,.eP,...,,., 1.tnt, ct111 Mflt , 11•m1 1.n luM 11111 •l•c• ti' rtti4.Mt 11 11 :~ll~5~~·H0•00,,11C~~C::.cTu1,1101~"u'cl'o tlllkl;~; North""''"' If l..t ,10,,n 1,. :~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"'"'"'"'"'~,.,~~~"'"'"'"'"'iii,! Dt ltcl MIW' 10, Jtn loflOwl l" .. ftl
O. fll , Ct"hlt fll1~h•td Ortllt 11, US SI. Clllr tl ... t, 111 IHNOVATtVI AOVE fllTISING •llf 'ICTITIOUI l _UllNIS• 151ttk "t:" al Trit t Ml. 111, Ch1nllclHr
0. N. Moen '°''' ~·· Ctlll l~tt ••Id l!tm II com-tel •I lhl !II· NAM• JTAT.MIMT Mirror, •• tlw#n .... M•P r-de<rl In
lttlt ~I Ctlllornl1, Or1nt 1 COl.lnh': Otltd Ml:T '11, 1t'i1 lifwln" corport(...,, IOf'l•t ll'lnclttl it!t ct Yh• fo!~wtllO Hi-II <rltlnt 111;11.,n s lllOIP; It. l'l l l'I 1 tlld 2 ef Ml~l.,.~t
On MIW' 10, lf11, bt!Ore mt, 1 NO!tfY ll:ldltrd Or!llf11 of lllll'ntll It II lntlewi: ii; MtN . r1,0rd1 llf 0t0"111 (PUtllY, 24th
ANNIVERSARY
~TELEDYNE PACKARD BELL
25'' COLOR TELEVISION
All SETS REMOTE
CONTROL READY.
Install Now or Later
ANNIVEl 5AJIY
P'R!CED
?C84?WL
l(MCH 0 .. TIONAt.
""TELEDYNE
PACKARD BB..L
Color
TV
.• WALNUT
CONTEMPORARY
CONSOLETTE
Annlver11ry Priced
•
Public In 111d for st ld S!tlt. ptrit•lllly Sltll f>I c•n1tir1111. Ortnttf CouMYl O LS>l•lt lt<DUSfll tES. INC,, IUJ MACH•l ·lllVIMf lltfALTY COM· ,Clliltrnlt .
tpttetrtod O•vlcl R Ct rd>lt .. Oolltlll Nttl ()fl MtT 11, 1t11, btlort "''· I Noll >Y LHtn ........ Coll~ M••• nu• ""'NV, tol f»r•r Orlw-t, Niwotrt ••t(f\ 'U8JltT lo COYt ntn!1, ctndlllfl\1,
MOC!! kt\IWf\ II ;.,, lo bl th• """" l'11t n, 1,, tn<I ,,, ._,10 5!tl•, D••Mfl•llY 1,ri1l'Nl!SS 11' f\lnd 1111' 11111 <Ill',, Mtv, THIE lll\llNI! lit.!ALTV COMPANY ~i:~r.-·~0:~. ;,",1;;~:."J· f!gn" .....
Wl\Olf lllMtt ••• IUbltfll>td te Ill• wlll'llll ·-•rid lltl(ht•d Oitlltb kl'IOWll lo"'' la tco•POllATl .S&:ALl ((t lltornl1) lMO ••r•I•• D ' I y .' 814 "' '"'" ••• l11vltM """ lht pro-
•
'",',',N .. •,·,·.· ,,':!,. 1c•-ltdfH lhtr It • IM0 !!,",',','o'"o·~"°'' ::,_•,•.~}•00•,ubsc•, .. !ltd DELtHA• lHOUSlllttl!I IMC.. ,',',"'f.' o''''ll '°' -··• .. ..,,, llod mu1! ti. In w•lli"11 a llll m1¥ 11• "' 1 "' w " .... rum~ ,... "'"" •· 11911••1 I Lllllltrd! Jr t .... 1 tlttt II ti ....... ud bW' • Otllv•rtd to int E~•cu!o• ., to tho olllLI (OFFICIAL SlALJ Iii "' ••Klollfd lht ''""· v . ' . . . eo•H•t llon CL OE E YOU"'G l lS Mt•Y 8 tlh MortOll tOFPIC!AL SlALJ l(t r"11dtnl L. I!·. l!l llfll LING, er n11 lllO'llfl', AU . •
NCll rf Publlc-Ctlll•nli M.llitY lll!TH MOlitTON STAT• 01' CALIFQfll HIA, .. ,,,,-,.T,ooo••O• Wtsl Third Strttt, Stnl1 A111, Callln•nl1. COUNTY 01' OltANGI. u . •• or m1r N llltd Jn 1111 olrkt ol 1111 C!trll: Prln,IPll OfllCt In =~ttrw-Public. C1IHornl1 On lhlt 171h dtT fl Ml¥. A.D. 11)1. Thlt lltll ,,,tf!I w•1 11/H wlln th1 ol lht Sup1rlor Co~rt 11 1111 Um1 1lttf °''"'' Ctt;nlv o.o"cl111,0tt00ct In bt'f"'t "'' Jo,tllh E. Otvb 1 Ho!•rv COllnlv CllFk t i O•t f\1• '"""" t n Mtv '"' 1lr1t Ptibllc111on tf 1~11 Holl'' 1 nd Mw-Commln lon fx11lrtt nt• oun I' PuOllc Jn 1M for 11 1• CH.,.., •ml Srt!I, '' lt11. llO!t•t 111• rnatlnt of 1n1 .. 11. Publl~:.'.tlf ~,;~~! (Nil Dilly Pl!el, ::rll ;"'1~;;-llfl l•t !ri l rtsldlnt ll'ltrlln, dUIY CoMmlHkultcl Ind "lllllthtd Ort(ltt ( .. II '0111V Piiot, Tt rmJ 11141 c-lllol\J ol 1tlf' C11h,
.,_,, I}. It, 21 tt'lll Junt J, lt1l 1113.11 Publli.lltd o'rftf'<ff Cotll Ot llV Piii! IW(l(n, et r1cn1llY •IHlttd llebUI e. Ml• 1'. ,I .lld J11111 t.,t, 1'71 IM7 11 ltwlul "'llMY of lh1 Unltlld SlllH of
----------------iM•Y 1'. 11 tnd Ju" '· t ltll 1195•1; l ulf\trdl. Jr, known 11 m1 lo bt lh• Vl(t • Am1rlc11 T111 """'' 410'\01 of' I~•
LEGAL NOTICE ---~-• , ~---1::•1:1~~:"011~~:r~::n':'!~'11 ~:1t•;u:~: LE GAL NOTICE :,~0~1~ ::!;;:',,~':: ='•(':r:~'• ';~:;'~~ 111--;;;;.,<.c;;;--;;;;;;;;;;;;c;;;;;--l ----~LE:'.~G:A~L'.'._~N:011'.'..'..:Cf;:'. CorPOr•llo" lht,.ln n1mld. 1 11 -'fll•Ul p1Jd ~•Oii conlt'm~llo" ol 1111 bw-11ld NOTICI OP' INl'.l llll''I t lt.L• t Ckn-lodttd le m1 lf\tt •u~h torHrtllO~ SUt.flllO• CDIJtl,T !;II' TH I' 5uperlcr Court, Stld 11!t •Ill b1 m1d1
llAflllll.11.A Glll:GOlV, J'l1l11llfl ul, Cllitl'IPICAtl'. Ofo l l.ll lN I SS. flf<;utt<l lht ••me. In Wllntn Whllrf-OI, 1 STAT• OP (J\.l,.011P0A POiit ti-' lht u1111t I Krtw lum1.
ll O!IL COMPAN'(', INC. ,1,., t ttl, P ICTITIOU' NAMI'. lll VI htrtun!o ION mv ht"° Ind •lfl•tcl THI COllNfV OP OlllANGll l ldl mull bt lltltcl '"d will l>t ""'ene• OtltM8~1. Ne. 11JHl. . tk• uMefllt nff <fOtl t .. 11.., '"'" (O"' mv 0111,111 otl! !I'll dtll ..... VI .. Ill lhll N•. II. II lh• ot11CI or CL•UOE I!. YOUNG, Jll
81 ~l•lut cf Ill ••<!Cull ... 11111.., on •ut11 n1 I bu1lne11 •I l:IO'l N~WPOrl l lvd .. Cl'llll<tlt ll•st t l>OYI Wtl!ltn. NOT1CI'. 01" 1t•A•,1ot• o• PITFTIOH W111 Thl•d Slt11I, St~!• All.I, c 1111,,,.n11,
AP,11 19, nn bl' 11\t Su1>1rlor COllrt, H•w-• lllt(~, C1llfornlo. ~,,.,., 1111 lie· (OPFICIAL Sf'ALI fllo11t •litOIAT• •• WILL AND ll"Oll" lt'lt f\our ol 10 o'loc~ A.M. of 1~•
Cot;nlw-ol Ort ntt, Sitt• OI (l!lfor11l1, tltlOlll firm n1m1 of Jl!NAl,IANCI'. JOSEPH i . DAVIS \.ITTllitS 0.. lt.°""IM ISTllt.TtON •1ov1 dtlt_
uPCn I l11<11m~"I •11t•rtd 111 l1vo-of PAflflllCS •~d llltt tlld 11rM 11 ,emPtltd Nt!try '~"le, Ctllfor,,11 WlTH•TMl·WILL AllNIJllO , Tiit preptrtv ht •tl,, t1i.crll>tf It'°""
I AR8AltA GllEGORY 11 l11<1gmt nl 11 lht 101!owln1 ptrion. wllo'I n1m1 In Prll\Clpt l Olfltl In •.ii!t of WILLIAM 'OllNIS, 1160 ll'\ll'llY •tltrred to 1>:
C•..,Uor llrnl 1tfl"ll fllOlll COMPAHV, lull end PllCt •I <llldtnct II'' fl!ltwo: Ort ntt Ce.inly tnew11 11 WILLIAM C, ,011N1S. Ot t l H• lGJJ Soulh Or tntll Av..,u1, Slnll Ant ,
INC. •• l~1m•nl debtor, 1h-!ng t "'' Mr•. Gi ll C. Crt1br, $0-!1 Atidtl Y 0•.. M1 Commli11tft ••111,n .0. C1!lfot"l1 12107
b•ltnc1 ol '2 ... r.10 tCIYet11 dut on 11ld Huf\llntto11 8tacl\, c tt11. June ll. 1•74 NOftCI! 1s Mll!:lll:ll Y OIVl'.N 11111 Ed~• T"• ul\ll1r•llnld r111rvt1 !ht rl1hl 11> lud~mtnt 011 lh• dill of'"' IHUll'CI (If 01110 Mtr 1S, 1911 '"'II'~"' Or•11•• cooi,111 O•llr :'!IOI, '•u1ll111 ~·· Ill .. lltrllll • H llllOI' '"' rtlH l 111¥ t nd I ll bid•. sold t•oct;llon, I htYf ltYlH t;ttOll •!I !ht (;1H C CrOtbW' Mil' 1', ,, t nd Junl J, • t11 1 "·11 probltt ti will tl'lf ltr Li1!1tt of OATliO: MIW' 19, ltll
rlt n•. rir1e •n<I lnie .. 11 111 si lo lvdtrntm Sl•I• e• C•lll~nl~. Oto1111 cou11tv: #id m 1 n 11 lr1l!on wn1>-1n ..... 111 .. ,.,.t~H. Wll!ltm £1111ne •••~tt dt~tor 111 t/l.e t rePltlY I" Ill• Counh II O., M11 a, 1111, ti.If•• mt, 1 Nt11rv LEGAL NOTJCZ rlf1tt11t t to whlCl'I t1 m1•1 lor lvrlhft l!"Xtl:t;t., ol ln1 Wiii ••
OttMt. Sltlt el Ctllfornlt. ducrlbtd II Pub!tt l" I M lot IAIG S!Ut. fltlOlll llY , •• ucu11ro, .,.., "'" !ht tlMt •Ml PllCt 1ht t ooY• ntm1111 dtl:tdtfrt.
loll-•: ''"'''d Goll C. Cro11>1 kn~11 to mt '' Thi ••nit ef Cttllerlllf, Wtllllni l ol h*°rl111 tht ........ 1111 bit" ut for J"~' Cl.AUD• f , l'CUNC lhAI pnrllo" of !ht Soulht lll 1u1rter bl th1 penon Wl\ott 11~mt It IU .. ll'ltld A•-ltlll" •••llM tn Mtl' 11 , 1111 for U, 1'71, 11 t :lO 1.m., 1., !ht cturlr.,... 1! Alttrl'llY Nr l lKUlt'
of rr .. Sou1n1111 flu••lf• •I 1-cllon 711 I• lht w11n1" 1"1lrvm1nt •1111 1ck,_.lldt• llUl'l'llh lon 11 111111111111 1 b'tnch,tlllt• In Otl't•lmt"I No. I 11 u ld teurt, 11 10CI )II WUf T"11d ltrMI
T-n'11lP 1 South, llttntt ll WH!. In !hi .. 11\f tri,ul~ tht \tm~. lhl vl,lllllv (II Oevt , D•lvt t n• loth C!w-lc CiMl.r Orlv' Wit!, Ill tht City 11 111111 a.111, Ctllftr•I• llancno Lt 1111111 CM(t , I" tnt CllY ti (O~FICIAL IEAL! O C Stll1I Ant , (ll+lornT,. llHONlt lfll) Ml-<t"l
H11nl111t10n 8e1ch, ~· per mtp rtcotlltill MAfllV 01" MOOYON llrffl, NN(ICl'1 Blf•h, ft llet ""111~, D•ttd MtW' J•, 1t11 llubllthlld Orl nt t COit" 01111' ,1161.
'
Ct tlltr11lt , l n boolt 11. IAOt I], Mllttll1nt ou1 Htttr~ Pullll(, Cillftr~!I Pulllllhtd Clrlf\H ( .. II Ol llV P iiot, W. I'., I T JOHN, Nol l' 11, l• Ind Junt 1, ltll l •11-11
M1•1, re,ords ol Or1111t Co...nly, wf\lth Prl11,1111 Ollltt '" MoY JI, 101 l1tfoll C,unir Cltrlt I• •llOW" e• Pt tct l NO. l>Oft I "''' l!!M 011"'' Counll' cr..i1 t flt (l'liflt,
In boo"' S, Pitt 1 Ill Pt,(tl Mt fl• Mv C11mml11lon E•tlt" * l rlnlwllll l1u1r1,
•t<c•<11 ol 11ld Ortntt cewnty, EX· AP'll '· 1111 L E G L N011CE 1' .. I 1111 Vlt tlllt ...,I•••"'· LEG AL N011C£
CE,.TIHG THEllEFfllOM 111 oil, tt1. Publhn.ct Or•~tt Cotll OtUr Plit t, A Ltt A•••t•, Ct llMr•lt .....
m1ner111 I ntl ot11e1 n w-d r o <t r b o 11 Mtv u •nd Junt 1, t, 11. 1'11 1Jt0..71 T•I; u1n 1n-tJJt l:lfoJJtl lAI :n.i 1ub11111~11. In, undtr t nOler !ht! mtY ----JCOTICI TO Ci!IOITOll:• A111rn111 "" Ottlllllffr IUPftlOR COU litT GP Tiil II• producK lrom I dlO!h t>tlow j(l(I 1111 LEGAL N(1J'ICE .. It...... Pulll•hM O•tt'llt c .. 11 0 1llw-'ll"'· Ila.Tl !' CAL.!fOlll NIA l"Ollt
lrom lht 1ur1tc1 Pl 11ld lt"d or •nv IVP«Ttr Ce1>rl Or 1111 Stilt el Cllll°'lllt M11 •· '1 t nd Ju11t 1, ltll n tt:11 TH• C UHTT Of OfllAMla Plrl lht rtol, 11111 wl!n no rllhl to ~•• Ne. A 11111
1111 •11•!1'' 01 ••lcl land !1 the dt•lh Ill MOTIC• o; IHTI JrjTION le• 1111 C011nlr '1 Ortnrt. LEGAL N OTICE NOTICI OP SAL• OP 11:•~t. ,II~
lGO IH I bll&w tht '"'''''ti ••I~ llnd, to DI OICA r •Al l M.lllT •11•1• ., HAlitltf l t. C•Oll, •11• Pl lllTY ,t,T •111v1T1 ••Lt 11 ttMrvtd In dttd frOf'll llll!Y J11~ NOT ICE IS "IRIEIY GIVEN thll tn ~....::,.•: H,t,A.ltlET ISAllLLl ClltOSI , T·J1lll T"' f 11ttt ot ICAlHlrt:YH ANN JOI-INS.
Croucll '"° Ol"er1, rtcordtll Jllltii •v I, 11.t litl'I <l•W' fll M•Y 1171, ll'lt l '\rd ti Mtlltt ·11 hlrtllf f l¥lll to credltori of t \\O kl'IOw!I i i IC.4.TH•'rN A. JOHNl, 11 ..
ltlt I" bllOk 1131, PIH n1. Olllcltl lrudotl el th• O&tAll Vl1w cf\MI '"' •bov• 11•mlld Cltcedtnl lh'9 111 '1:~~,llt~~ ·:~·.:rv:t\•'.o:'i.~L .,.. ...... I I I(, A. JOHNS, O•ct•lld. R~cor<lt. Ol1lt!ci ol O•tr .. cou,,tw-. Ctl!lor1111. _,...,, n1vl111 Clt !mt •ttlMI lht 1114 N•. t.47111 NOllCI! u HElltE•Y GIVEN 11\11 I~• "'tn~r will! t ll tn• tllll t;ltr tht 1.;o,11<1 t ""olullon or lnt.,,l10f'I to <IKtdtlll t rt ,,~ulrH '' !Hf lhtfl'I, wllh In 1111 S!liltr!tr Ct ur! el !ht Stilt of t;rldtt1l1ned, •• E•ku!rl• « th• Wiii llf hnf!'l"ltnlt, ntttd!ttmtllll 111d '" tMll:tlt 111 •t llmtnl It tn. CllW' 11 Hun-1111 111,,11,,1 w-tt;Clllfl 1., ,..., tlllt• of C lf\1 t O.V• n•ml<f dtcldtnt. win o U ol our!t.,•nct• 1,..ttunlt lit lOnOlnt ., 111 t1f\1ton 8tocn, 1 rnu!llClpa! '"'orlllrn. 111, Clt rk 11 1~1 t Mvt' tnrlti'4 COii•!. or t lllttnl1, lo• lht C1111"'' of Ort not. 1.iv1tt u lt to !ht ~lthttl •nd btll bl•de~
•nrwlu l ?1>1r!1l11lng. '" 11etm <f•t ln pu•-tl, 1llft 11111111111 le ~"""' !hi m wltfl lhl l'IMIUtrw-111 lf\1 Mtllt • GI lht l•1•1t .t uNn thl ltr.11• t rnl centllllft'I hu1tn1nor NOT ICE IS HEllEIY GIVEN l"1t ffl to bf lot"td evt•. 111 t nd tCrou H rllof\I h 1 Ill llitt :ll K I th Ill I LAURENCE C. OAHVER, Dj!c111..,, mtnlloltff ~!Id subled lo conllrm1llen bY Tl\~•ldtv, Ju,,. lQ, 1911, ti 10:00 e•,tock ol tht! 1.110 -.rctl ol lt nrl loc.tltod t i tht YDOJt •rl 1 I u ' 111 1 • • c Neot!cl 11 h1r1.., f lvtn thtf 1111 tifl· ltld $uPl•lo-Court, on Tnu .. 1111, J tilV I,
A.M. •' Mtln Lllt-1, C1111•1"'11Uw, 1IO wtll ....., cl lht Ad"''"ltlrtl!Yt llt;ll-lftl 111 Frtnk J , Mthu. 1 t Wlllhlft lll~d .. <ltt11tnt d wl!I 11!1 •I ,.rl~llt ltlf, lo lht 1t'1 11 lht hour or 11 :00 o'cloc.k 1.m. or
t lwlt Ctn!tr Orlv1 Wtll, Cit~ of St nlt lilt lol llt t'h lllwd. •"II WtrMt Aw-t ., In l ultf ltul. LOI Anl tltl. Ctllf, *''· hign11I t nd blll 1111Mtr, IUblt<I lo COii· tht r .. 11 ... wl!f\lft 1hl Umt i llowtd 11~ l~w.
"""• (O\lnh OI Or•not,' S!J!t of th• CllY (If Hv111!nvton 8ii°'h, Whlth I' lhl 'll(f ti butltllll el l~I ll1mtll•11 OI H id lv••rlor Court, on llf t t !hi if!ICt ol !ht til\CIOroltnMI l!•ec:ulrlx,
C1llfot11l1, I Wiil 1111 I t l'lllllle t i/Ulen to " l'llllllc mttll"' ti ..... ,~. •titJtl ..... tit>lltfl/t ntll In Ill 11'\lllt fl p1r111111nt 11 •lt~r Ill• nn d•V ... JuM, 1t 71, •I the Ill· ANNE E. 11.UTH, 6•.cut•I• of tllt l•I•!•
11!1 hlt llilll Did•••· I°' c1in 111 l•wtl.ll mtltlllt '""' ff'lllCll!tll will !ti ~tld t i lht ttlllt ol ltld 41tetdtnl, wl l!ln '""' 11,, el C. P•UL OU 801$, l)J Oov1r (If lf:lli'to"Yll Alln Jonn,, <1«t•itd, 111 <•••
money ol Ill• U"lltd Sh!H, •II"'''""'· "" W1rntr ,,. ...... HUft!IMll" •N ch, ll'\llllht ""' lfl• llrtl P11•Hc1Htn If 1~1. Ol'IYt , l vllt ,, Htw"" ... U'I. c1n1or~lt 11 lltONAl.0 H. PltEN~lil, Altor11tv •I
lltlt •nd lf\tt rtll ef 1tld !lldt mtnl 4tlll0f Ctlll11nl•, tn tht ht tty el Jllllt, UJI, t i Ill~(: ... M S ltJI ., .... •II Ill• rl1lit. !!lit IM l"tirt~I ti Liw, JU Wt ll Thlr~ S"ffl, ttnll ,t,n1,
In 1~t 11Mw1 clt.i.crll>t<t P'"''"· or 11 !ht"°"' ol 1:30 o'clock P .~. 1 1,1a.'J111•c1 9 MOTT tllt Gtc1111t1 " 1111 llMt •I dtilh •net 111 Ctllror~la t)711, •11 r!1nl, 11111. !n!t rt•t muc~ llltrtol 11 ,...y 11t Mctn t rv lo 80AlitD O~ T•U!Tll!S A• • lM rlfhl, 111141 11111 l"ttrt tl lfllt l~t ••Ult tlld nr.11 -1 11ld dtctcltnl fl tilt 11"1e of ttlltl~ ••ld tKf(.t;llOll, with t cuuta Ill· OCE'AM VIEW s c H 0 0 L . 1!~:11111,r•·~ :' '"' • el ••Id dKt•u<I "•• t c-.ilrH b~ ••••. hfr dttlh, '"" 111 •leht. liUt •lld lcit@rt1t ltrtl! t llll COlll . 01Sllt1CT lllltAMlt ; 'J Ai.I': t 'tcllft • 11011 ol lt w or Oihtrwlu, tfht r lhtn llf In lhtl llltt ttltll ll'llY f\6,,1 Ktlllrtd bW' Ot!ltl ti S.1111 An8, Ctlllo•n!t , MtJ ?, 11v J. M. P•lclc 1..., Wllllll ~-1,. ,.., 1tdt1i.n 11 t11•1 .i 11ld dtc11ud. t i •~1 -••Hon ol lt w. or ei~1,.,..i1t, tlntt r.er
1'71 A~tnotlted A1•nt ff •Y•·• •!mt el d,.11'1. In I/Id 111 •11 !hi c1•tt l11 dtllh, 111 end to 1n1 10111wl<1f dttc,11114 JAMES It., MU$1CK. 01 it ld Bo.rd I.ti Allffltt, Cl llt<'nlt .. ,. Pll loOllll 11r0Hfll' tllVlltd In '"" Count'! rttl 11to,rly:
SM•llt-Ccro1"111• Publlll!e<'l Ort 11M CotJI 0,1,., Plllll, lt.119nlfW' fir A4•~·1••11t flf Ort }\tf· 11111 l>C (t llforn11, ••Nlc~J·''' Tiit N9tth JO,. .. ol lht '"''"I.SO I~··
Counlv o< Or•nM, Ctllt.rnlt M11 ti. 1111 ltt7-71 1.0C dt1ctllltcl 11 1011ow1. IO·wll: el lht f.t tl ~t lf or lh• N1rthe111 ci111rtor 111: c. A. 11.lt.NOALL •u-lt•l!td 01111 .. Co.II Dt ill' Piiot, Ayto lf\l••dllll 11ur11w In (.. ti "'' 11111111111 IUt rltr ol ,~. °'l~tv LEGAL NOTICE Mtv I, U, It, 2'1, 1n 1 1'57·71 1C1ll!ornl1J, llKtlM II 1t11 Ho. Vtr· Soull1tt •I QUt •lt• 11 secuo., Nin•.
JllMI C. lt ltr morit AYt ., Let Ant•lt/., C•lltor"I•) Townll'llP l"IYI lfllth. II.Int• tt11 w11t,
P'1tfn1lt1'1 Atlctllf'r Ll'!GAL NOntE C111nt l Stet• 11.M -1r YI 111. C1rtltlc11t 11 IN!ktlltl.,. 1 mit ol T••<I No . .s.., ,... Wlllhl" llwt .. 111111 uu Cl lt Ht. "·1111 Ht. , tor 102t ........ ttcli'dld In ... 21 , P111 lJ ol
L•• ""••It•• c1111. tot1 BAii no su-1111101: co V•t o' titi: Ttrm1 et ••I• c11t1 1,, ltwlu• mc111" 1f Mite l!tftlOlll M••i rtcort• o1 COi.i"" 1>11blllllld Ortn .. (0111 Ot llw-f U.t. l"ICTfTIO\JS IUS~N•St STATI OI' CALlllO•NIA 1'011: !ht Unlltd Jtllfl •n conlJrmttlt n of 1•11, llf O~•l'IO• '
Hu11l1111!ori lttth EdlllOll. M1y 12, lt , 21, • N,t,Mf STATIMI MT TM• COUNTY e• OjtAHO• Ttn Petltnt 11 t ,,,Ollnl bid fl ff dttOllllCI IJ1Ctit1nf thHtl•lll'I lht Wtlt IJ! 1171 111 .. 11 Tht 19tto•IM Hrtlftt t r• fflnt • ...... •!th ~ld. f'••I
!11111r111 11~ tll~MONI \""'' 1•1AOll lilt or 6fft,. lt bt tn W•lllnt •net wltl <:.;.,fM"IJ ltllO\fllft 11 * Ne,1n Htrl>or LEGAL NOTICE OON SWAN $TAllLll, 11 '•fr Or •• In ,, lllt ll'l•rt ••• 11 ,tfHl.,,,.r: IM •«t lvt<:I t! lht 11or111I• 11flt6 ti 1nv Bto.iltYt rd, Stnt• A!'ll. C•lltor.,JI . ltrn J, Ctttt Ml 'I, C•lll.,n!t '2121. l!IAllll' AHN!TTI YAN l(AMlllN 11'141 II"" tfttr lht lll.lllllalltn l'ltrlllt I nd f ldt ,, tllt•I t rt 111vll1111 for u tof
M••v Gt ll Jt kulltf, tll W, lftft •ttlllndt11!: ll:ONALO VAN ll:IM ... H Mlltt dill el 1tlt , e•rctl el •tlll'trl'I' All tUCh llldt ll'lt;tl b•
C •• T'r.''~'T'IO•.• I UIOOll• St••ll, All. tt, C~l1 Mt1t. Ct lllornlt l Tt !tit ll:llf-dt ftl• Ot llll lflll 210 •tr el Mt l' lt71 t .,..,lllnt end w!il OI rtctlv•d tt !!It Of• 0 M1rv llttlch1m. 111'l Mt1•1. Or1111t T~· •'"'ltJ~r 11 .. • llltd 1 ... llJCll'I <_.,. Mlt.lltf°'H I,, DANIJ II " ' I' Cf l IOUI NAMI lllFll' Atrt,, Ori l\lt, Ctllltr~le. '"" •• "'"" O " O• C~twlrht •I tht Wiii llt t flf ANH 1 1 llUTH, 1!!•"1ttrl• -' 1111
Tn1 und•"ftned ••• etr!Jty "' *• (Oft• Th!I "'1tlfltU " tlllll fflWlll(IH •Y I (trnln• ,. .... , "''" •••. T .... lll•J I • .,, ''" OtCfdtlll lh!•I• ol IC,t.THlitYN AHl<t JOHNS, 6vfllnt , 1twtl11tit ti 111t1 Htt!lnt' lltrflll"'I' w'tllt" rn"1'11t Within lfrllrlV •tvt ti !llt ( l'IVL DU i Olt • ttc111td, Cfe lrt:OMAl.D H, PlllfHHffll,
A"•. •1n11 A111, Ct llMf'n!1, undt' 1111 Mi .Y Ceh J •-vtiltc ~ dtlt lhll lhll tU"1l'llOflt It Wl'\'flll fll 't'IU. Ni Oiw• DrlYt SVllt 1 ~llHfttW' ti L1w, JU W111 thltd '"tf:I,
11c:ul11111t torm nt.,.. "' Gltl'.IN91LT ioil•M ,. Ll•oY II 1ou 'fl!I to lilt • w'lllt n rtlPtnU W..--1 IMCll 'cou .. raca n.M '1"" An1, C1tl1ornl1 tntL or m•Y t>t
SYSTEM$ •1'111 lhf l Mid 11, .... 11 (Im•..... .i l.tw • wlln111 IUCll llmt, '"" ·-••lull m•Y Ml T I 1n•1 ....Mk I!" wllh "" Ct1rk Of .,.., tbtVI n.lft'll-
"'ld 11 th• ltllt•lnt ctno.,, wn"' ,.,';:i,1 ll:l lt UI ,1,111111• '""'" tlld tht <flllrt mtr Wlllr I llld•· • 1 'u11rltr Cturl, or m11 bt dtllYtrM I•
' '"'' "" ' ' '' I "'"" con111111111 ln!Uf\C!IYI ., fllhll o•tl't """""1 .. l•Mvlrill i•ld !••tutti• ..... n.111v. II '"' r1m• ntfl'll ,, I P l (t o rtl tr.<:t l •1 A11ilhtl•, Ct flltt"lt 1i~•2 ,..,.llthl4 Ot'l llM C .. 11 Otllw-Pll•t, 000, OO•oO -·OOOoooOoo '' -0, oooOoo oo< le!IOtO: Tt l: l7lt) ,n.tnt (OflCt ,,•lnt 41v Ill!\ el pr-11. I-Il l Ml ti IF I t'll! J t ! 1'1l ltt1>7I ~ m
lloo•• L. Mlltlt..,, 11J" t'ltJlll'lll Pv11111~M OftllH Ctt1t OtllY Pliel lti"''"· Cllll• CUllfdY. ChlMJ 1u~10(1, 11· W' ' loll\ • boi••• '"' ..,.~I"' " lllf 1111.
Avt .. S1111t Ant , Ct llt. ,,..,,. 19 lt tllt 111.,, t ; .,11 lltJ·ll 1trn1,t' IH1. ,1111, •1111 WClt tllltr rtl ti 1 "'G•L NOTJC• T•1tM5 Oii SAl.1'.1 C11h. ltwtl.ll mon1w-
D1ttd Ml1 11, 1t11 . , ' •• "''" ... 1r1ntff.., 1116 <ti/rt. ' ......... It. ""' ,, lht U•(ltd "'"'· Tt11 ..,. Cllll !lf"91 litOltr L, Mllsrttd II , ... Wltlo It .. IM M'llkt ti ·~ ti• ol !ht 111:1111111 ofttrtf 11'\till I(( ...... ,..;
St•lt el C1Uforl'llt , Ort ntt C1111ntv: LEGAL NOTlCE ,.,~, Ill W t m1t11r. Yl!f ~14 ~ .. •·H• "" Wrllltn tit 1• lll!tt. t rnl !ht bt!t •"t On Mew-u . nn, lltfore mt. 1 Nttt" ~llt .. !Mt riw wi111t t ,.....,.,,/I fll\CTtf lOUS .. t.111•1 •1 mv11 1lf 1114 U!*I lflt unll•mtllon. •!
.. ~bl!( In t nd 1w ttld St1Ni, •1tltllill1 •·ntf lllf~.'P'I' .. lllH I R ll"'f· .. AMI •TATIMl •T J.ilt '' tt MI Su,lflor Ctt;rl. ''" 11!1 WI
al>Pttl'M lll:M•• I., Mllttt1d,•ll.11t-le"'' l'ICTITIOUI I USUfrs• OtlM M•y '· ltll J , ... 1tt ...... 1 .. ""'~ It "'"' i»lillllfU e1. fl'•dt UH~ !ht UtUl l MU ..... "'11'11. 11 .. ""' ,.,. ... Wl!OM ftlll'\1 It 1uiterU1· •&.M• I Tlt.ft;,.l lfT Wll,L.lAM ..... , JOt<iN, It : Olltdi M•Y n , lt11
td 10 ll!t w\111111 lllllfllfl'lt llj •nd Tftt 111111<Wlil.t 1iftM1 ll M ini klll"ttl (ltf'~ t'tOHl VII.LA TlitA!l.1-it'lt.lltl(., »II It.NM I , litUTM
1ct 110W19d.W ht t111:11tl'd IM t1mt. 11: I Y SARA J. SULl.IVAN, W. llW' It .. Ct1!1 Mtll. b K\111'1• ol 1111 l •lt .. ti
(OFF1t11t.L l l ALI Hlt.litlOllt CLO,Mll "I· ''°° ""Iii! CtPlll'I lit11tft L. IJ-11 H._t lllllltn, nu wn11. KA)HRVN ANN JOHNS. M11.rT 11111 MorlOll ll~d,.'(0tt1 ,Y.t 11, Ctlll. ••111t1t.I. ANO •&TTY, IMC l!f' A-... .• j:ttft M•tll. Cite '"I·
11---ffoltt• Pv1lfl«C1l!ler11lt J .. M. Iii~ ltclt lfllllttt Oriut. Al1tr111r1 I I I.•• T~I' IPVtlntu I• Mint ct l'l!lll,!tll b'I' en llO~LD ,.. ,. IMNlll: o .. rlnclfllt Otftu-111 ~N ..... t aHui, Ct\lf• ---•ti (lw-k Ctflftr ClrW1, Wt ll llllllwlt 1111 It.lit MT .. , l•fflrlrl•
Ori n" Cou"t't '"'' Wtl'*' 11 M Ill t.twll>CIM"' 111 111111 A111. telltffltlt Hiii 1 lwlll L. IJ61>1'1 Htmlltt" J11 t\I T~lrt SlrMI Mv COl'l'lfl'tl1tlon l•tlf'tl tf10!Y1du1I~ ,.-• CltO Mr .... t Th!1 IUtflNf\I lllH w!ll'I 1111 cw~r, Stfll• Aftl, Cl1"9rnlt ftl'll
Ao•!I t. ltH JM .Y.."'1•11 ~tlff11111 llr •1111t-. Cftrl! of Ortntl Count? on: M•r 10. lt71 T•ltltfllflt: 1no .541.Ull
•ublhh•d Or~l'IO• COii! 0111r Pilot, Pub!l~tol' Oro nH CoeJI Otl!W' •11e1, Pt;11!!$1Wid O•ltlfl CMil Dt ll¥ Piie!, Pulllltlltf Ort ntl C&.11 Dtll~ Pll1t, it'..-11 .... Ortn~ CHI\ Ottlw-•lrol, ________________________________________ _.I ,,.iv it, a. •1141 J11M t t, u 11 1101.11 ~, tt. 1•, 1' '"° J1,111t 2. 1t11 11Ja.1, M.t~ • """J111111 i. ,, 1&. n n i~n ~tr • ·~ JUM r, '· '" 1n1 l'llfol• Mil' u . • 1t!f J11"' i , ltn 1m.11
I
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82 DAJLY PILOT .
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Senuan11sfai11
Sq11adi.·011 Begins
Free Boat Class
Champ Guards Titl~
.·
Cal 40 Prodigy A1idron Faces Top .fielf!
Jon Andron of S 1 n l 1 classic chase from Lo s
Barbara Yarht Club, a 24 Angeles to Honolulu. Andron
defending champion 1n two or has arranged use or fellow
.. sailing's most Importa nt SBYC 1nember CI au d c
lo Ch:irles Phelan, squadron events, faces at least a dozen Chiperfie\d's Cal 40, Blue
educational officer. challengers for one of his Chi p, for the five-race series
Classes will be held every crnwns Saturday and Sunday for the association cro\vn this
~lood:1y al 7 p.n\. through when t.ong Beach YC bosl! \Yeekend.
Aug . 30 at Newporl Harbor !he 1971 Cal 40 Association Na-1'hree races are scheduled
Yai..:ltt Club, 720 \V. Bay SI.. lional Championsh ps. Saturday and '"'o more Sun-
Nc"'po1·1 Beoch. Interested Andron sailed his sloop day starling at 11 a.m. over
California YC ea r I y lb:'. s
week . but n1cn1bcrs have Unlit
Saturday's pre-race skipP°ers'
1neeting at LBYC to file .
READY FOR ACTION -Kaihy ,\1."en1p!e (right)
rolls up the .:;leeves or h~r huslJ;ind Hob1..·r l <on1-
mander of the Balboa Po111er Squadron . \\ hilc .Jan
Bertha loosens his tie in preparation for the ~un1-
mer session of basir boat ha\1Illing offt'rcd by BPS
at Nev~•port llarbor )1arht Club beg1nn 1ng ~1•y 31 .
\\'hen the Balboa Po11·cr
~riuiu.Jron begins lts su nuncr
session or 12 free. basic boatin.:
lccturts ~·lay 31 it "'ill cnlL~t
lf'clurt!l"S "'i\h rnore th an 100
.vears of accu1nulatiVt' 1·x·
pi'rit.'nce in pilotin g ,
~«·;1m11nship aucl :s1na.ll bua1
h:indl1ni::.
".\n1·onc \\'ho owns a ·00;1t -
or hopes lo own une -or
~1 111ply enjoys boating should
enroll in this fret·. <·0111-
prehensive l'OUr5e," ael'ord1ng
persons 1nay register on the L. ~iiller and James A. Argonaut to the Tr'anspaclfic the same flv•-mile windward.
rught or the lirst class. B'llll Carner, Newport Beach ; Yacht Ra ce overall handicap leeward twice-around cwrse
ownership IS not required tu Malcolm Coston and Owen championship in 1969 and con· outside Long Beach JiarbdT on
1·nrnll. tinued his precocious success which the Congressional Cup
HPS orficcrs y,•ho will NI lt>C· Johnson, Balboa; Mrs. l~abel the next year by capturing the series is sa iled each i\tarch.
tunng are Pehlan, Tustin: Pease will handle the lectures class championship. Andron 's was one of 13 entries
\\'1llia1n Small\1,.ood, Cost a on manners and customs Preparing Argonaut for July in the hands of Association
The class. designed by .Bill
Lapworth and 1ntroduce& j,y
Jensen ~1arine of Costa i\ji3a
in 1963, Is noted as perhapi:-tne
n1usl successful and vers.i.Ule
ocean racing hull ever ~lt.
There are more than ~ -150
n1embcrs of the class associa-
tion throughout the nallOn,
more than 55 of them beloft&i·
ing to member clubs of~lhe
Southern California Yacbj.fng
Association. Mesa; Edward Boyd. l!:rnest afloat and radio eliquette. ·f's starl in the semi-annual Secretary Jack Scott or ~~~~~~_;_~~~~~~~~~~~~~__;_~~~~~~~~-
Outer I sle
Race to End
111 Ne,vport
Nc\vport Beach will be 1hc
lcrminal point for a largt• Hert
of racing yacht s whtl'h will sci
i;ail Friday on \h(' Sl'tond an·
nual Otcur Islands race, a 230·
mile ci rcuit of the channt'l
islands starling at i\1arina dl·I
Rey.
Thr race is t:O·Sponsorcd by
Paciric ~1ariners ''achl Club
and Bal boa Yacht Club .
The race will be di"ided into
ri1·e divisions -ocean raring
yacht! w i t h International
Ocean Rule ratings (!OR).
ocean rating yachts with
Crusising Club of Americ a
(CCA) ra!ings, Pacific Han-
dicap. Raci ng Fleet. i\1idget
Ocean Racing Fleet and Ocean
.Racing Catamarans.
Only the two ocean racing
fl eets and the big catamarans
\l'ill lake the long course from
1ilarina dcl Rey a round
Anacapa, San Nicolas. San
Clemente and Catalina islands
Lo Newport.
The PHRF and i\IORF
yachts will :.ail a l~n1ilr
course CncGlTlpassing only San
Clemente and C a la 1 i n a
Jslands.
A skippers 1neet1ng for
participating yachts will b«>
held Thursday at 7 p.m. al
Pacific Mar iners Yacht Club.
Balboa Yacht Club ·will be
hQst to the racing flee! with a
1rophy presentalion scheduled
l\tonday night.
.
Lio1is Slate
Annua.l Race
Of Inboards !
High performance inboard
boats "-'ill be seen in action
Sunday Yl'hen the Belmont
Shores Lions Club -;t1ijes an-
nual circle races at Long
lieahc Marine Sladiu1n. 'The
event is sponsored by the
Southern Calilornia Spcedboal
Club, Inc.
National champions a n d
wo rld record holders are ex-
pected to con1pete in the ~\'Cnt
wh.ich features 20 heats.
One or the lop dri\'ers "'ill
be Don St. John of Van Nuvs
\l."ho has a string ol rccorfls
and trophies to pro\'C his d;i ~-
1ng and skill in the super l:ist
Superstocks.
In 1970 Sl. John~ became 1hc
national champion in th1·
Superstock Class al lhe "'hrcl
of Gii Suitor's Never Enulf.
He also holds the Long Bc:ich
1'1arine Stadium record in the
class. set in 1969.
The dari"g young raC'l'r will
again be at the wheel of Never
Enu!f, dueling against such
tipeedboa t \•eterans as Ed
Johnson of Newport Beach in
1-furry Round Hondo. and Al
Grundslrom from 0 r a n g e .
another cool-headed \ etcrnn
who drives Jiffy. and \\•as 11·1n-
ner of a recent speedboat
event at the stad lun1.
Southland drivers hold 11 ot
22 possible national and world
records 1n the 11 clas~,,~
\l.•ilhin the club. Four 1970 n11·
lional champions race \\'ith 1hfl
club and \\•ill be seen in com·
J)'lition Sunda y in I hr K
Unlimited, Su~r~t.ock, E Rae·
Jng Runabout and Crackerbox
classes.
LOCAL
EDITORIALS
The DAILY PILOT
Qu ite Often
Fights City Holl
•
'
Carpet Your
ENTIRE
HO E
LIVING ROOM, DINING ROOM,
HALLWAY AND TWO BEDROOMS
YOUR CHOICE!
• DU PONT NYLON
•COMMERCIAL TWEEDS
• HERCULON
COMPLETELY INSTALLED
OVER LUXURIOUS
FOAM PADDING
1000's OF REMNANTS
SIZE 0
SAVINGS
SMALL
SIZE
SAVINGS
LARGE 60 %
UP TO .....
LIVING ROOM. DINING
ROOM, BEDROOMS
80% UP TO ...
HALLWAYS, BATHS.
CARS, ETC.
lllNG YOUI IOOM MIASUllMINTS!
HER CULON
I 00% Her culon Olefin Pile. New Miracl e
Fiber • Sla in and Wear Re sis tonl. Beautif ul
Decorator Colors.
NOW SALE PRICED AT ••••••........... · ...... •·• .... · .•••
DUPONT NYLON TRI-COLOR SHAG
I 00% DUPONT NYLON PILE. DEEP. RICH, DURAB LE
SHAG BEAUTIFUL NEW THREE COLOR DESIGNS.
LOW
FIRST TIME OFFERED AT THIS SALE
PRICE •
COMPARABLE RETAIL •••••••••• .' ••••• $6.99
99
H . TD.
SAVI
1100
11£W KODEL TRI-COLOR SHAG DEEP PILE
I 00% KODEL POLYESTER PILE. RICH, DEEP, LUX-
URIOUSLY THICK PILf. MANY NEW HI-STYLE DECO-
RATOR THREE COLOR SHAG TO SELECT FROM. RE·
SIS! DIRT AND SOIL STAINS. . LOW
FIRST TIME OFFERED AT THIS SALE
PRICE
COMPARABLE RETAIL ................ $8.99
·so. TD.
SAVI
SlOO
11£"" LLAHEIE' llllt.m.EL TRI-COLOR SHAG
TMl TlSTll •AMI NI fllllS 99 I 00% FORTREL POLYESTER. LUSH. DEEP LONG-
WEARING AND HARD TO SOIL STAYS BEAUTIFUL
WITH A MINIMUM Of CARE. VIRY RESILIANT.
BEAUTIFUL DECORATOR THREE COLOR SHAG. LOW se. TD,
SAVI
SJ.00 FIRST Tl_ME OFFERED AT THIS SALE
COMPARABLE RJTAIL •••••• $1.99 PRICE c.i.-• ,..,,.1 ;. • ,..,,._,k .1 ,. ... , '°"""''••· 1 ....
DUPONT NYLON
100%. Continuous filament Ny
Ion Pile Certified with DuPonl
501 Blut .. N .. lob<I. .... 2!?
•L• COMPARABLE RETAIL ••••••••••.••• $4.99
KODEL POLYESTER .
100% Ko4el Polyostor Pile. 499
3 pile kel1llt pnt1n1 i11 ,,.,,
111411110. 111114 41rebility. ... "·
IH1tlf1I colon. SALE PRICED AT ;~::
COMPARABLE RETAIL ••.......•.•. $8.99
KODEL PLUSH
100% Kod•I Poly.,,., Pil•. R;ch. 599
dttp luxuriously thick pile. New st. TD.
decorator colors. l::i
"' COMPARABLE RETAIL ............. $8.99
~ ..,__1;'""7'"!';'
COMMERCIAL CARPETS .
CONUACTOISI IUllDllS!
HOMEOWNllS!
SQ. TD. SAVI 299
• Nyl ... • H•rcule" S2.00
COMPARABLE RETAIL ............. $4.99
DACRON SHAG DllP Pill
lOO'Y. Dacron Polyester Pile-499 Beautiful new deep .shog wilh o
·full deep pile. Many new dee· st TD
orotor colors to choose from. sAvl ·
NOW SAU PllCID AT u.oo
COMPARABU: RETAIL ............. $7.99
CARPET TILES·SAYE $
DO.IT·YOUlSILF
f11ls likt nlt1t-11hrtars tl~er
c1r,1t-11s, t• i1sta11 29.C ·--h-NOW : ~~,t· =.::1
" SAU PRICED • lh<••*''"" SAYE S9c U . • 111'4 fltflle Pilt
ENCRON ® POLYESTER ' 99 99
SQ. YD.
SAYl
$2.0·)
Pile of I 00% Encron Polyester. Deep, Thick, luxurious
Carpel. Optimum Performance, long Weer, Easy Care.
Resilient. Many Colors to Chooso From.
NOW SALE PRICED •••••••••••••.••••.••.•••••••••••••••••••
SQ. YO.
SAYE
6.00
NORTH HOLLYWOOD WEST LOS ANGELES ANAHEIM MONTEBELLO LONG BEACH PASADENA 11141 Wihhirt I I••. 64t M, l•tli• S1. OPEN SUNDAYS 1007 l•vrtl <•11J••
''''· -•12.2100 IQlly.voc.d l r~wu, ro '""'°"'l!ln
N ny l o\t 111 l t1111r! {nrly!llt l!lvd
CANOGA PARK
21021 Sfltr111•• W11y
J47 JJJ4
iJ"n!11•0 flffwtly IQ fq~ .... IU A~•
Nbnh IG l.lw•mon Wov !11•11 •<(It!
411-SSJS 6lS·1674
San O""IO lr'"tWQy to Wol 11·•~ '/ l1l0t l \ NQ1'"1h ol '.01>!•1 Ann
hi•no!t /J Blot-·. W,.., on ..... ~ l•-wov on luc:hd A<•O", h0r11
· hl•r I nlotormo ledtfnl
WEST COVINA
'2S26 f, W1rl!M111 Aw•,
•••·•411
•,,,. B•<l'Wlld•"O frwv '" • ''"'"
:.1 '} bll .. -~ H nn r 1!•11 I•• Wn"
HOLLYWOOD
1115 N. VerM••t A•t.
666·74SS
1 nllll 1 , Noni! ot Holl rwO<td
Blvd nn Vr1mont
11 S W. WlliHitr lll'I.
1Jl.0167
lor,_ !)f Mont~brllo
n~ Wholl~ 111\ld
VENTURA
2501 I. M.itl SI. •••·"41 I blot~\ Wr•.I til
JOOI ltftfl•wtr ~.-..
4ll.etJ4
;~in lll#{Jll r,~ to ~ltlawri
Blvd lmnoltHotthooflf!ltlolw-r
SAN FRANCISCO
MILLBRAE
l?t fl<-'•• lt•I
ltJ.JSSJ '
JMO I. C•l•r.4• l lff.
177·1f00
(olofodo Blvd 111
~ Gnlw.+el Bl'ld
TOllANCE
•2J1 Amt;. 11tt1.
$4).'6••
I bl•~'""' nl Hnw1ho•·~
8!vd <M1 A•l~~<ll
10 A.M. to 6 P.M.
COSTA MESA
1714 Newport Blvd,
64S·3020
Newp0r1 Blvd 01 17!h SI
. . .
•. ;.
: : .·
:·
•
·.
t(is
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•
PlLOT -ADVEJi I J!,._., \ ·~dnesd•y, f.,ay 26. I , , •
•
..
Flaws
Fou 'nd
In Gold
. •
By JO 01.roN
OI 1M O•llJ' ,.li.t St•fl
Once a person has admillcd to himself
that there is malnutrition in lhe golden
state of California. he must ask himself
why it exi.sts.
This wa s the urging of Or. George
Briggs, who was a speaker al a press
conference on nutrition in C a r m e 1
1ponso red by the Dairy Council of
California and the Department of food
Science and Technology or the University
of California, Davis.
Dr. Briggs, a professor of nutrition at
the J.;niver!ity of California, Berkeley,
also reported on the White House Con-
ference on Food. Nulrition and Health.
How does malnutrition exisl in the
midst of plenty? Through dental caries,
hunger, obesity and poor food habits. Dr .
Briggs said. "How many children attend
schools v.·ith no lunch program?" he ask-
ed.
OTHEJI REASONS
Other reasons for malnutri tion include
social and cultural differences. Jack of
enrichment programs in the fnod in-
dustry, a lack of motivation on the parl
of the citizens to buy and eat lhe right
foods , the presence of almost one million
alcoholics and a lack of nutrition educa-
tion and knowledge.
"\\1e in California mus! do some things
Ir "'e are to eliminate malnutrition." Dr.
Briggs stressed. He said that the White
House Conference resulted In several
h.u n d r e d excellent recommendations,
1n3ny of which are needed in California,
These include lhe lormation of a state
nutrition council , gelting nutritionists in
leadership posts in the state and getting
nutrition in school cu1Ticulums on the
local level ... Why music, art and driver
education but not nutrition?" Or. Briggs
ques tioned.
SPECIFIC PHOBLEfl.1S
So1ne specific nutrition problems, in
California include the pregnant teenager,
whon1 Dr. Briggs called vulnerable
because of her lack of medical advice,
severe f1.IOd faddism, inadequate labels on
food, poor fOOd safety and lack of con-
.sun1er education.
"The time has corne when v:e must
provide free school food for every child
al least up lo the sixth grade.'' Dr.
Briggs stressed. ··we gi ve free books,
busing and instruction. why not food ?"
Dr. Briggs. who was selected lo chair
the nutrition educalion panel at the White
House Conference, has co n d u c I e d
research on the Vitamin R complex,
human nutrition and unidentified gro"·th
factors for more than 30 yea rs.
Prior to joining the UC B staff. he was
executive secretary of the biochemistry
and pharmacology training committees
or the National InStitutes of Health, U.S.
Department of Health, Education and
\\lelfare, and held several professorsh ips.
. ~
A Bonus Birthday
'WHY MALNUTRI TION?'
Or. Georg• Briggs
Finding Feast Day Leads to Fun
For most youngsters. the birthday
etlebration is the high point o( the year.
Unlike Chrislmas, the birthday is a
personal ''just me'' event. The beautiful
nameday celebration. like the birthday. is
the child 's own day.
A nameday commemorates the feast of
the saint whose name we receive at bap-
tilim . Long a tradition in most Catholic
hbmea, the nameday celebration iis so
beloved by children that it may well be
celebrated by all.
The nameday child spends t~ day
th inking about his illustrious namesake
, .. the time is spent quietly but most
1~yously. In the evening, friends and
relatives arrive for a traditional dessert.
Before the guesls lum up, children in
the family have fun making decorations.
If you are celebrating the nameday of
Georgr or Georgette. April 23, the
youngltc rs will make St. George decora·
lions .. .fierce paper dragons. white ban-
ners ...-ith red crosses. or swords.
Traditional fare for this feast is Bombe
Georgette. Line a bombe mold with pecan
ice cream, fill the center with cherry·
flavo red vanilla ice cream:
The high point of the party is the chaf-
ing-dish hot Praline Sa uce. Children
adore the drama or table cookery ... and
this particular sauce is so simple .
Robett or Roberta can celebrate on
May 13 in honor of Robert Bellarmine,
once a cardlnal and a famous scholar.
Books are the symbol of this day and its
traditional food is Strawberries Cardinal.
The berries are heated in a chafing-
dl sh wit.h a sauce of butter. sugar. and
orange concentrate or liqueur. Keep in
mind that the alcohol cooks .aut of the Ji.
queur. leaving only a mellow orange
fla vor.
The sauce is served over vanilla irt
cream and sprinkled with sliced almonds
and pisUtchios.
If there·s a John iin your family,
· celebrate on June 24. Lambs and bon·
fires are the saint's symbols. and the
youngster! can make prelty lamb cutouls
or lamb centerpieces for the buffet table.
Snowballs on fire is the. traditional
dessert for St. John's Day ... il's easy to
make and mo!t delicious.
Freeze hall s of vanilla ice cream
covered with coconut, serve with flaming
sugar cubts lo symbolize the bonfire.
Snowballs on Fire are served with !l
delicious C'OOcolate Marshmallow Sauce
made in a t"hafing-dish.
SNOWBALLS ON FIRE
I quart vanilla ice cream
1 can (31h qunces) flaked coconul
111 cup mil~
1'4 cup bulttr or margarine
• "' \,; teaspoon salt
1 6-ounce package (I cup ) semiswee t
chocolate morsels
t teaspoon vanilla
I jar (7~ ounces) marshmallow top-
ping
Sugar cubes
Lemon extract
Scoop vanilla ice cream into balls ; roll
quickly in flaked coconut. Place in
freezer until ready to lierve .
To prepare sauce combine milk. butter
and sail in saucepan and bring just to a
boil over moderate "heat, stirring con-
stantly. Add chocolate morsels and
vanilla: stir until blended and smooth.
Gradually beat in marshm allow top-
ping. Place in fondue saucepan: keep
warm. Moisten sugar cubes with lemon
extract; place on top of ice cream balls
in serving dishes.
Ignite sugar cubes. When flame has
died away, remove sugar cubes and serve
snowballs with warm chocolate sauct.
Yield : 8 ser~ings.
BOMBE GEORGETTE
1 quart butter pecan ice cream
I quart vanilla ice cream
2 tablespoons maraschino cherry syrup
Chill a 2-quart bombe mold. Line with
butter pecan ice cream and freeze until
firm. Slightly softe n vanilla ice: cret1m
and stir in maraschino cherry syrup:
tl,lfn into cenler of mold. Freeze until
firm.
To unmold, dip bombe quickly int.o hot
water. dry and invert on a chilled servin1t
platter. Place in freezer until ready to
serve. Serve with Praline ~auce. Yield : 8
to 10 servings.
Praline Sauce
\~ cup butler or margarine
2 cups packed brown sugar
1 cup light corn syrup
2 cups pecan halves
Melt butter in blazer of chafing dish
over direct hral. Stir in light corn syrup
and brown sugar: coo k 5 minutes. Add
pecans. Serve over sliced bombe.
STRAWBERRIES CARDINAi,
l tablespoons butter or margarine
i ~ cup sugar
2 tablespoons undiluted frozen orange
juice concentrate or orang!' liqueur
1 pint strawbernies, washed, hulled and
halved
Vanilla ice cream
Toasted "fLiced almonds
Chopped pistachio nuts
Combine butter. sugar and juice in
blazer pan over direcl name. Cook over
medium heat 5 minutes, stirring con-
stantly. Add strawberries and heal.
Serve over van illa ice cream. Sprinkle
wil.h toa sted sliced almonds and pistachio
nuts. Yield : 4 to 6 servings .
BLUE.OREEN SCHE.ME COOLS WARM DAY !
SNOWBALLS FIRE INTEREST ON ST. JOHN 'S DAY
Favorite Salad a
For a refreshing and nourishinJt
springtime delight., toss together a
cool salad of g a rd e n . r re s h
vegetaiciles or sun-sweetened fru it,
using imagination as the guideline .
Wheth er you settle ror ju~t a bed
nf lettuce graced with tomatoes or
treat yourself to a dewey-fre !h de-
light chockful of many temptin.1t
vegetables, take this tip from con-
noisseurs. A hint of American blue
cheeR will put your salad in the
1tourmct class. Crumble !he chc>ese
over lhe salad ... ii makes an f'll-
ciling color contrast with tht
greens. or blend it into one of many
delectable dressings.
An easy dfessing can be made in
minutes by combining one quarter
cup each of mayonnaise and
French dressing with a dash of dry
mu~lard. Lightly stir ln one quarter
cup nf crt1mbled blue cheese. Or fry
Amerie·an bllie"Clletsi'" celery ~ed
dressing . a mellow blend of herbs.
~picei'i and cheese in a sour cream
ba~e.
BLUE CllEf':SE CELl<~RY SEl".ll
DRESSING
I 1\fakes I'll cup~ I
1 C'Up dairy llOUr cream
2 tablespoons vinegar
I tablespoon lemon juicl'
2 tablespoons sugar
I teaspoon sail
11, teaspoon mu stard
~ leaspoon celery seed
11 cup American blue chPC~t
(about 1114 ounces crumbled l
Oash nf pepper
Dash of paprika _
Another flex ible blue chee~e
dressing has an oil and v1negar
base.
OIL-VINEGAR BLUE CHEESE
DRESSJNO
lTwe caps!
11 cup light vinegar
Toss-up
11h Ct.lps sa lad oil
I teaspoon sa lt
I '"<I teaspoons su~ar
I cup Amer ican blue cheese
(aboul 5111 ounces crumbled I
Pl11ce all ingredients. except 1.1,
cup cheese. in electric blcnde~ or a
jar with a tight lid. Blend unti l
mixture is cmulsiried. aboul Yi
minute on blender. Slir in re·
maining crumbled blue che('~ so it
will still be lumpy.
V11rtatlons
Add 14 teaspoon garlic salt or i.,
teaspoon crushed garlic to basic
dressing.
Add I tea!ipoon paprika to bll~ic
drellsing to give a pinkish linge.
F'or rn1it sal ad, llllr in 'Z tables-
ponns of chopped pre!lerved ginJ.rer
"'ilh ~yn1p al the s11me time re-
1.mainlng erumhled blue cheese is
added.
' .i
,l l
~men
BEA ANDERSON. Editor
w .......... ,, ""'' u. 1m '"'" u
Home News
Fringe
Benefits
Offered
By DOROTHY WENCK
Or111 .. C•U1111 H•m• A'•I•..-
ls homemaking a career or a job? Thi~
is a quesllon we often ask homemakers
during our classes on "Work Smarter,
Not Harder."
The audience usually laughs 1 bit
because they've never really thought of
homemaking as either a career or a Job.
Then when they lhink ii over. mosl of the
v.·om en decide that homemaking IS a
career.
It's something they've chosen to do for
l!'t large portion of their lives with lhe ex-
pectation of enjoy ing ii. H's not "just a
job" -somclh in,it you might do on a
irhort term basis because you need the
money.
Homemaking differs from most careers
in several ways. however. There's no pay
and no promotiorui (unless you consider
moving from wife to wift-mother 1 pro-
motion ). You often work split shifts and
the hours are long with no time-and ... -
half for overlime.
Most careers require special trainin~
before you can begin working. With
homemaking there are no entrance re·
quirements so many women launch their
career as homemakers with little or no
trainin,it. vet there is a great deal of know-how
required : how to care for children: how·
In manage money : how lo make decision!
about buying food , clothing. hou!eho!d
appliances and furn ishings : how to l'OOk,
launder. and mend clothe~. 1!are for home
and furnishings.
The average homemaker nreds more
specialize d knowledge and skills than
man~' persons in profession al oc-
cupations. She ma y ma.ke more decisions
in a day than the average bwiinessman .
And moslly she learns on th' job, through
trial and error. through reading and talk-
ing with fri ends and occasionally by at·
tending a cla.o;s such as our.~.
Most career11. and most johs loo, offer
fringe ben~f it~ .<;uch ss paid vacations.
healrh and life insurance, sick leave and
so on.
\Vhile the homemaking career offers
none of these . it does have some fringe
benefits !hal a homemake r doesn't
11lways recognize or appreciate. These in-
clude :
•Be in.I( your own bos.~ -being ab le to
set your own schedule and work at your
own pace:
~Doing a variety of tasks. not the same
th ine hour after hour, and being able tn
switch from one task lo anothe r ir
borPdom or fal i,1tue ,1tets you down :
•Rein!!'. able tCl dress comfortably:
"HAvinJ( unr~lricted "privileges·· such
as telcphont or coffee breaks whenever
you wan! them and music or TV while
you work:
•Being able to take a nap if you need It
land if your children will let youL
Another greill big plus for lhe
homPm<1king career is that you work for
~ople you love. This can't always (or
u~ually) be said of an employer.
Homemakinit: a.~ a career reallv does
havP. a lot ,lloinJ:l .for it , yet manv Women
don 't find it fullv sati~fvin)? and seek
employment 011tside of their hon1e . even
when the family dne.<;n't really need the
mnney.
Whv? Their reasons are varied -
lhey·re lonely or bored or want expanded
onnortunitie~ In USP their talenls and
abil ities. Of1en they find work outside tM
home more rewardine: th:in hnmemaking
because bos.~es make them feel ap-
preciated.
Husbands and children lend to take
wive!! and mothers for granted. They're
11tingy with compliments and notice only
!he job!! that are not done /"How come
you didn't mend my socks ?") instead or
all the man y jobs that are done well
routinely.
A homemaking career could be much
more sayisfying to a woman if she knew
that her wnrk was apprecialed by her
fam ily. Husband!! and children need to
lr.arn to sav ''well done" oftener than just
on mother's day.
QU~TIONS WE ARI-.: ASKED :
Q. I am alway• lo!lng lhe chlldrens'
11mall 1ock1 11 they now GVer the top of
my wa!!hl ng machine tub i nd (o down the
drain. Ill 1lttrf 1nylhin1 I c1n do to pre-
vrn t lhis?
A. Launder sm:lll items i;uch as tht
~ocks in a mesh laundry bag flhe type
with a drawstring closing Is be~t). Or tie
them in!lide of an old pair of pantyhose.
Dry them ln your dryer inilide lhe baa
foo . and they 'll be easy lo find anrt sort.
Q, If you 're 1ubst1tutln1 fresJa 1lr"I•
berries In 1 re'tlpe calllng for froie1
berries, how much 1bould you ase!
A A 10.flunce package of frozc::n.
sweetened strawberries contains 1bout
111-cum-of ·b·emt.• 11ncl Juice. A pint~
fresh berries makes About two cupt o(
h11lved btrrlc.•. Sweeten th«:: 1 e anf
mc::asurt 1 Y. l'Ups.
.. : I o ' •
' ... I
. ' .
Ann's Absent
Ann Landers \\'ill not
appear in today's issue of
the Dt\..IL Y l)ILOT. Her
(•olumn \\1ill be back as
usual in lon1orro\v's edi-
tion.
June Date
Revealed
1'he engage1nent of Rebecca
Reich and Itandy Lee DtVore
has been announced by her
parents 1\ir. un9 Mrs. Egon
Jteich of Linda Isle.
Parenls of 1he benedict.elecl
are 1\trs . anrl \1rs. Harvey
James DeVore of Laguna
Heach.
BoUi Miss Reich and her
fiance attended Saddleback
Community College. H e r
fiance currently a l tends
California State College at
Long Beach. majoring in pre-
la~'.
A June 12 \valding in
Ne~·port Harbor Luthe ra n
Church is being planned.
Laguna Juniors
t
Gavel Changes Hands -
HB Auxiliary
The American Legion Aux·
lliary of lluntlngton Beach
meets the first and fourth
Tuesdays, Thursd<iys. 1\1rs.
The 26th annual installation serve as cou1dlnator and .".liss Arne Jensen , M6-m7. or f.1rs.
of lhe Laguna Beach Junior r\e\I ~loorman \\'Ill ser\'e as Bess Johnson . 968-2686, "'ill
Woman's Club will begin "''ith associate. supply information. a 6:30 p.m. social hour in ther-==:_:_ _______ :_:_'-'---------
Hotel Laguna on Thursday.
J\1ay 27.
Outgoing President htrs.
Carl Manus will preside O\'er
ceremonies assisted by in-
stalling officer 1\1rs. Robert
Calder\\'OOd, Orange District
president.
Taking office for the ne\1.1
vear will be the ~Imes. Peter
Andrews, president : James
?itcDonald. Joseph Sarlo and
•larry Bithell, vice presidenl s:
Ernie Qui g I e y, secretary;
Kenneth Erickson. treasurer.
and Le\\'is LaBonta. public
relations.
(."hairmen on the board are
the ~Imes. Roy Franson, Build
a Better Co1nmunity: Bruce
Stevens. membership; Donald
Futerer, hospitality; Don
Hodges. social; Paul Zehner,
insplrational. and Robert
Johnson, parliamentarian and
historian.
J\lrs. Edith Saunders \\'ill
IMPORTANT NOTICE
TO SEARS CUSTOMERS
These Dinnerware Patterns
Should Be Returned
Niguel Women Accept Charcoal rim. Avocado design
·•
WRANGLING'S FOR WOMEN -fo\.rgirl Revcrly
Chandler zeros in on a heifer during the l ~ancho
~fi ssion \i'iejo roundup. 'l'he veteran trailhand tend~
J1er O\l.'n section of the sy,ooo-arrc i;pread along the
"" 1'r.:i bu co ('reek Range. !\or111ally a lonely life. round-.
up tin1c provides pl enty of action as heifers arc
branded and 1nadc ready for 1narkct.
Leadership
Cowgirl Uses Different Range
~e111 leaders of the Laguna
:r\iguel \Voman's Club will take
office during an installalion
luncheon in lhe Captain's
Anchorage restaurant in Dana
/loinl at 12 :30 p.1n. on Friday,
1\lay 28.
Taking the gavel from Mrs.
Gary Davis will be Mrs. Roger
Bergersen. A Is o accepting
posts for the new year will be
the h1mes. Ronald ~1erker.
J ames Bullitt and Co 1 i n
Hcynolds. vice presidents;
John t:ibson and Fr a n k
Rnbinson. secretaries. and
Albert Keller. treasurer.
By BARBARA DUA RTE
01 ll1t D•ll• ,.lllf Slfll
If you can get along \\'!th
five brothers -11·hat's sn
tough about getting <1long \1·1th
!e.llow cowpokes.
"Nothing, if you don·1 argul'
or get bo!Sy," shouted Brvt>rly
·Chandler as she trotted ncrCJss
the corral during the recent
Rancho h-1 is s ion Viejo
roundup. armed with a n
imposing apparalu~ to
administer a health~· dose or
antibiotics and vitamins to a
bellowing heifer.
If kttping paet' "''ilh the
active J\1iss Chandler, who
admits to having been bom in
TusUn se~ral years back. is
;1ny indieation of her prowess
as a trailhand, you'd have to
rank her \Vi lh the hCS! or
·wranglers.
Love of rau<.'hing l'Qmes
naturally to lhe adept ridl'f.
roper and talker. dating back
to childhood days ~·orkin1t
around stables in the Tustin
area.
Besides ,live brothers. !>he
has lwo "~~s one of whom
Double Ring Nuptials
Ba/boon Recites Vows
works as, an account.ant on a
ranch. the clost'St an y con1cs
to ranch-typr living. All thrte
,girls hold pilot'<; licensPs.
though, \\'hich seems :1 lilllt•
1.H;,tant from h:n ing rour feet
on the ground.
B~giuning h~r car r. c r
breaking horses on lhe S!arr
llanch. ~1iss Chandler movt'd
intu the same slot on 1h1•
O'Neill Ranch four years ago.
Sin<'t' wo1ncn's lib \\•asn 't ~n
1nuch in vogue ln those day~.
sht~ liberated herself on her
011·n r<'1nark<.Jble ability and
11011· rid<'s herd on it 15.000-
acrc st'clion of tht' Trabuco
Rangr spendinJ: !'e\'en days :i
1rt'ek 11att•ring and feed1n,1?. the
<;lock . rncndin~ fence~. lend1nJ?
I(• n1l1n{! c:ittlr doing
C\:aClll' \\hat her fr 11o11·
l'o11•poke" are doin,I!. on thr1r
se<·tion or the spra11·ling 50.000.
acre rJnge.
Being a cowgirl is a lonely
life and af!er a hard day on
!he range. there's little time
left for recreation. She sees
the other hands at the 1nain
ranch every t~·o or three
1reeks and iJL lhe n1t>antime
does her own cooking and
cho res.
Since the other CO\\'boys
spc:ili Spanish. Br v r r I y
decided to take Spanish at
n1ghr srhool at ~an Clen1ente
lligll School. linfor1una,telr.
l'O\\'girl hours aren't 9 lo 5 and
she found schooling a n d
r<inching oren·t on rompatible
schedules.
The last queslion. an ob\'iou~
one. brought a quick smile and
a 11r1nkle to her eyes. ··r may marry wmeday. but
~o far T haven·! had time to
look''
Also on the board are the
h1n1es. H. P. C h as e ,
parlian1entarlan: Harry
Nurses Plan
Park Dinner
All members and others in-
terested in the California
Pracucal Nurses Association
are invited to al\end a pot luck
dinner tomorro\I' al 7:30 p.m.
in Lake Park Clubhouse, flun-
tington Beach. During a doublt' rini.: 1111ptial
ser\'il:e in \\'a\·er\ey c·hurch,
Santa Ana. Donna L) n n
LaPorte became the bride of
Donald Ed11·ard Afegn nf
Newport BL•ach
Pa geant Preview
h-1embers or Costa 1\tesa
Unit 1. District 34, are hosting
the gilthtrinlijl and tho se
\l'ishing further information
may call ri.1r11. Charles Cahlk.
The bride. daughter of .\!rs.
M. J. Vanderhoof tit Aalboa
Jsland. was g11·rn in rnarriagt:
by h('r st1·pfa!hcr. T he
bridegroom is the >i0n ol .\\rs.
t;rsle Arego of Boise
Ser\•ing us 1n;iid 111 !l(lnor
was it.tiss Hoherta l.aPnrH·.
vihlle bridt•srna1ds \\'l'ft' the
!t.tisses l>en1se n cs s {' n ~ •
Andrea Sta\7. .. Ju h11nc Sturch.'-
\ ant 1111d Joanne Clarizo.
Robyn LaPort<' "·as the llo\\l'r
girl
Alltnding as brsl 1nan "'<!'>
Pal Cross. !'sh11r~ 11l'll' .lohn
Campbell. Scott f'arker. Creg
Da vis and :\lark LaPort!'. anrl
ring beart'r \Ill:-> ~ic~ ,\lanuri. 1 The bridt' i" :1 gradual(' of ;
Coron a dl'l :\tar ll1gh School
and attended fJrar~gt' Coas1 I
College. lier hu~b;ind is a ~raduate of thl' rn1vrrs11~· ot I
l 'tah \\'here h~ aft1ha\Cd \.\'i!h l
Tau Kappa E:psilon. Phi Kap-
pa Phi and Hho \hi nnt1on:1I
pharmacy honor :.ot'Jl'ly.
Two Clubs
Gathering
hl~hng iointly this t'\'t!ning
31 7 JO in l\01nl.' Ft'derJl Sa'· . I 1ngs nf Sanl:.1 ,\n;t 11111 bt· lh<'1
l.as Qlas TOJSt1n1sircss l'lubl
and 1 h e S<1ntH Ana1
T oastn1 i~ I res~<'~. I
Las Olas 1nen1Uer!~ parl1tl·i
p.at ing in the pro.:rarn 11:111 1n· 1
elude the ~1 n1cs . Cal\ 111 01f'o1!.,
J oe Gonzale~. VC'l111a 1~0\1n
and Leland Jeffers. j
I
Social Set I
Gamma Apha i\1! Chapt{'r.\
Beta Si~ma Phi \\.'Ill havr a
box social Snturda,1•, ~lay 29.
in the home of ~lrs. John
Bo"·er. -'-
SPANISH -FRENCH
IULITZ TRAINED
PROFESSOR
Director Creates Art Democrat Club
Plans Meeting
J1lln1 Pl'llll
MRS. 0. E. AREGO
Santa An.1 Rit•s
lOVl
Pageant of the !\laster~ 11ro-
duce r Don11!d \Villiamsnn \\'I ll
d<'Sl'ribe the or~ani7.al1un of
the Frsti\'al of ArL~ pa~rnn!
fur n1cm1Jers of thl' l.al('Jna
Beach P:inhrllenie durini<: a
lun<:heon i n s t a I 1 a I i n n on
\Ycdnesday, June 2.
The meeting in the Tr\'ine
Co11s1 Country Club 11•ill begin
1o1·ilh an 11 :30 a.in. social tiour.
!\!rs. ,John II. Sharer is
th<11rrnan of !he eve n l .
assisted by the Mmes. Ed\\'ard
\\'. Heed . Geo r gt C I
Carpenter. Ross J\:liller <tnd
\\'i!liam Beatty.
/ .P •
Spe\1 1t out !01 her 111
14 Kai at gold and a 11ny
1w1nk!in9 diamond! Ring 25.00.
Pr11dari1 20.00. By Galaxy,
1-aYiion J····~ehv
c ' c
' •
r
llonored guests will be
l-0under'.'I o( rhe organi1ation
including the '111H'S. Glad~·s J\1an~on. Hobert Bncon, n .. I, Arrangemt>nts for a dinner
Sa!lcrfield, ri.fuller \\'ard. Juhn tneeting on June 24 \\'ill head
Snetsingl·r. \lir.:inia Bridge the agenda "''hen Democratic
and F. J . J\lc~lanus. \\'omen of Orange County
Taking office followin~ the meet on Friday. hfay 28. at 8
12:30 luncheon \\'ill be !he p.ni.
!\Imes. Sh a re r. pre-sidrnl ; All Dl'mOC'ratic \romen of
James A. /\.1artin and t.1ildred Orange County .:ire invfted to
Sillstrop. \' i re prrsi drnts: attend lhe-gathering in the
Sherman Todd and Emerson community room of Republic
ri.lilnor. secrrtaries. and Boyd Sa yings and Loan. Santa Ana .
Fullerton Open Sun-.,-12~5 -P.M .. ~~~~:1
Large
Join the fun
and sw :m set.
Ev•rything you
need in sun,
swim ond fun
fo1hion s is
here in those
hard-to-find
large si1ts.
Sizes
(((~,.
SIZES
38 -52
,.., let.,..n<N-Your Hom•
Al .. Sovth Arnerlc•n T•n1•
' •nlll CM GM , .. ,.;., I~~·--~ 1. ma~n1n
1 I.!;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~' 2 r.-S .. ION SQUAR[ • UNTA ANA " EDUARDO 548·3790
•
Positions Look for these identifying marks on the back ..
Brandt, historian; David Min-
ney and Peter MacAJlister,
social: Dale ~turtry. Gregg
Neibert. Robert llallahan And
Michael Suderm11n, publicity.
EYt:HING SHADOW
STONEWARE
~IOS
DOMINGO
STONCWME
""
'1'heserlinoerware patt.erns have been sold tlaoagboar
ret.rut stores sinre Fcbrual')', 107U. lt has been do-
1.~nnincd lh:;L Cl'rl:'lin pieC'f'~ may not.. meet. cmrcnf:
standards on !C'ad rc[C:1._4'. UVl'f a prolonged pc[iod of
Ube, U1is mighL resuJL in a health hazard.
If you have purchas{'d any or this dinnerware,
please return it !or cs.change or reCund.
Additional commit L l' e
chairmen include the !\Imes.
Harold Eliman and George
Kurlak. hospitality: Ro r
Maitland. arnenities: J ar k
Weber , t-Cology: Gary Davis.
club publication: \Y i 11 i a 111
Caplinger. bridge: John
Gibson, gounnet cooking, and
Ke nneth Jespe r so n .
Ame ricanisn1 .
I Sears I Sears, Roebuck and Co.
KIRK JEWELERS
COSTA MESA
Horbor C.11ret-545·f41S
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Hw11ll11gt•11 Ce11ter--lfl·5501
TIMEX REPAIR
,\uthorizerl Oran.i;:e County
SALES AND SERVICE
CALLS •.•
VISIT
NEWPORT
NATIONAL BANK
DURING
ALOHA WEEK
MAY 24 to 30
• BAYSIDE AT JAMBOREE
• SUPERIOR AT PLACENTIA
• WESTCLIFF AT DOVER
• MACARTHUR AT MICHELSON
\'/c've !urn ed our nft1 ces into 1 bit of paradise lo te[ebrale
the first Net.port Beach Aloha Ylee~ Come in and 1cgi~ter
for a !abulous, un!cr9,eUable hip to HaNa11 and ntan/ olher
er titing pri1~~. ...
{J;> HAWAIIAN VACATION FOR TWO
PLUS A S~J!AWJNG FOR.'(HOSE WHO VISIT
NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK DU~ING THE WEEK
)';i A BEAU TIFUL SONY COLOR TELEVISION SET ~(so you can walch "Ha wan F+ve·O.'' of course)
~A COLORFUL WORLD GLOBE
(To plot your course across 1he Pac1!1c)
t>e1G HT HANDSOME DECORATOR CLOCKS
Eight Winners (lhe1e s good limes ,1hcad)
Adulls only may register. add111onal entry blanks
av11llable Ill locat1or.s listed. Drawing will ba
ncld May 30. You need not be p1escnt lo win.
FJU out and deposit al pa1ticipaling branches
··········-----····;>. .Ji
N•>Toe---------------
S1•ett -----------------
C•IY ----
fl .................... .
A BIT OF PARADISE,,,
NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK
Bayside at Jamboree ••••••••.. 64 2·1141
Superior at Placentia .••••••••. 642·951 1
Westcl1lf at Dover, •..••.••••• _ 642-311 1
MacArthur at Michelson •••.•••• 833·31t1
cpen until S pm daily-6 pm on Fridays
'·.
:=: •·. . ._~,
•"~· -'·· -'"~ ... ...... -. "::
A:• '""' l .~ ~ . :~ .,
"
I
I
Pretty
Pastels
Delicate shades of mint
green and lilac \Viii form
a pretty background for
'l'ricia Nixon's \Vbite ll~vse garden ceremony
June 12.
f!iscilla of Boston has
cleslgned gO\\'DS of layer·
cd silk organdy for the
bride's four attendants.
including her sister, Julie
Eisenho\ver.
Julie's go\v n \\'ill be
mint gree n underskirted
\r ith lilac and the others
\\(if1 \Vear lilac under-
skirted \Yith green.
•
f
\Vrdn~sday, May 26, 11171 DAil Y PILOT :I.,.
Itinerary Includes-Going Home
By JO ~L.SON
Of 1M O.llr '1111 11•11
rese<arch i~ being done lht're
and flirs. Aldnth lctls that
It was a quiel day on Cor· "thi$ potrn!ial will be reatl:c.cd
regidor. httle b_v little.
Jean Aldrich looked around "Nelthl'r o.1r gent"r::ilion nor
and remembered it as it had several lo coine n1ay sec ii,
appeared in lhe family photG but it will come ."
albun1, then saw it as it was -In India she tnsted A warn1 ~~' an island of crumbling 1valls pudding of carrots . raisiru and
and mushroon1ing vines. nuts which '\'BS perhap:!I one of
Mr.;. Aldrich. daughter of an her favorite nrv.' dishes. On
"'I Army officer 11·ho ,\·as senl 10 the Lop was a tiny piC<X' ol
f''l. ~fills. Corregidor at the pure silver, which. she wa~
end of \\'orld \Var I. visited lold "•hen shr st:irtccl to
1 her birthplace 11·ith her hus· remove it. '~as IQ Ix' eaten
band, UCI Chancellor Daniel because it 1vas ''good for the
G. Aldrich Jr .. durin~ their re-digestion."
cent around-the-world study Hurina. i\lrs Aldrich lounrl
tour. had no night hfr ;uid lsrnel
TI1ey almost didn't go to had the n1ost expensive lood .
Corregidor, as the ~ydrofoil A highlight of her lr1p \l'as
~·hlch usually make~ lht' 26-receiving a gift Jro1n her hus-
mile trip from the Philippine!'i band that 11 ill be a last1np,
was out of order and the fer~y men1ory or the journey -ci
"'BS in dry dock . but the Chan-gold bracelet h:'lnd-made by
cellor chartered a tiny pl;inf'" goldsmilhs in Florence.
HIGH POINT o-ulst would be perfccl. \>YI
Anothie.r high pQinl of the ' the AldrlcheJ have de.tided to
tn11 was being <1blt lo f!at din-
ner ~·l1h her husb<1nd c~'ery
night.
"It's a f~scinating \\'Orld."
~1r!. Aldrich concluded. "and
I can hardly wait to take off
on anorher trip. NeHhe1· of u?<
are sulistlrd that ~·e·ve seen
the \vor1d."
\\1here ~·ou ld l°l'lrs Aldrich
choose to go ror her next
journey? A f\1cditcrranenn
Sl\'l' the best until last. They
firs\ want tn see the continenl~
of South America anfl Afric<i
and other places they haven't
seen.
"Travtllng makes you sip-
preciate home and extend,
your horizons." the Chart
Cf!llor's wife feels.
"'l°l'ly recommendation ls ti'
you can do it. do It."
----------~ ~ Do You Enjoy Being Alive? . ~
I• iT a ~·•••u•• IQr VOU 10 ,.a_e u~. IO 1•1l ''"'~
.,,.,,, .. "' •tt 1;10·, colO<• c"•'''· 10 11•1-" M
lo...., """ & !~• ""'"°' ot h•!nll -wit~ lull
~ouc•"'''"°"' l(•n rou cON:••"••1ef l
Oo Y"" enior • ••l•IUV' .... •!:l\IM~M• ot ... -.,.
!!oar m•-•s .,.,., ~•PPY w.1n 1,1e. ••II•' "' 1mll1.
and thev fle1v over 11·ith just Besides purch:islpg linrns in1
th.'·, p•'lo' l a~ their guide. •long Kon, and a (ow a~soctcd '11 1:1: 0 •"'•11"'"'"ft -,...,,,. WM., 1 •·"'· ~ ci ......... rt ft•d Well .. jflM WM •n• s .. .
"II ~·as a 1•ery interf'sf1ng gifts, !\!rs. Aldrich found a ® ..,,,ft! ... ct•n~• ..... '"'"'1n11 o. .,..,. .. . . I . ' ... ,~u v,,.. C1n1 ... .., I Ill~ SI. (Hll ® sensation." sa id ~frs. Aldrich. 1·ery spec1a memento In Mt•• 1'6-m•. f.Z..~:Z· ~·ho left Corregidor at the a_i!t' Nepal for herself -a brorrt.e .,;]'7
of :1 and rernembers it onlv 11~B:'~'d~d:h~a:':\·i:th:;t~s :•:cm:•:•p~;n~lh:e!.::;~;;;;:~~~;:~~~~~;;;;::;:;;;~~~~=~ from the pictures in ht'r fatni· f'nlighlt'nment position. _.,,,..,___-_-_"""":..-----------___.....~_-_-__
ly photo album. "Visiting the -------
old gun emplacen1ents \\'a" $ Hke \'isiting An old Soanish f fort of the lflth or 19th cen-
t, '""' " Realizinc that I ht' s e
~ weapons nf \\·ar l''f'rf' U~t'd in
.
~. her lifetime f:l9\'t' her an errie
feeling. ~he addf'd.
·l 14 \\'EEK:i;
t The Aldrichs' 1~-wPek trio.
"-soonsored bv tht Danforth ~ Foundation, !Ook lhem into \ht' r Philippineit. Au <:tralia. New
7.ealand. lht \fediltrranPan.
-' •. <
Burma. Indonesia. I n rt i a .
Nrnal. Hong Kong and Great
Britain .
1 '
er i1D j
IUUTY SALONS ·
U~I T1lt1MI• 1 The Ctiancellnr stu died ttie
tffects nf miracle rice on the
a~ricullurf' of nations former-
Iv for>d-dericiPnt. and 1\ir~.
::Club Notes
' ~:Flag Day
South Coast Juniors
Install New Board
Aldrich ~11nd11•iched in a litlle
shnTJpinll bct11'('f''l 5l11dv ~tons.
Sht rer:is ted the IPmol11iinn
In hrn11·se. ex I e nit i v e I v .
hecansf' thPrf' \Vert ~o manv
inlf'rt111ing olace" to vi<>il •11ilh
her h11sband. such as lh,. r.irs!
e'\TlPrirT'""'"' "'llP:ll j!:r01\•inj;'(
1\During Tea
The flag of the United Stales
"'ill be honored by members
or the Patit!nce Wrigh t
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution during a
iipee\al tea at I p.m. on Tues-
day. June I, in Hotel Laguna.
The growth o~ the stars and
stripes from 13 to SO will be
featured by a display of
n1iniature replicas or 27 nags
,\·hich have flo"'n in lhe nation
~1nce 1777.
In observing the rlag·I' 194\h
birthday, the chapter invites
new and prospective members
v•hilc honoring sen i. o r
members. Mrs. Lo"'TY Gall·
i11ger. regent, ·will present a
50-ycar pin to l\1rs. Lee Childs
for service to DAR.
~rs. Frank lnterlandi will
sing a group of songs ~·ritten
by i\1rs. J\-larguerite Test. a
chapter member. who will ac-
company the singer .
Hostesses for the tea will be
the r..tmes. Albin We l h c .
Emory C. O;iy, Arline Baker,
Frederick Paulsen and J\1iss
Elsie Luther.
Gerdlnt ,.,,...
CONN IE GRE EN
To Marry
SepteJ:Ti ber
Da y Picked
J\lr. and ti-lrs. .loseph C.
Green have announced the
engagement of their daughter,
Connie Jo Green to Steven
\V illiam tifiller. son of Mrs.
Patsy f\filler of Tustin.
A September 4 wedding is
being planned in the F i r s I
Presbyterian Church. Orange.
Both are graduates of Tustin
1-ligh School.
Serving as president ol the
South Coast Juninr \Vomen'.!i
Club will be ~1rs. Frank Fleek.
A Huntington Beach resident
and mother of three, ~1rli.
Fleck was named Club""·oman-
of-the-year for 1976-71.
The executive board will in-
<'lude the Mmes. Dan Gordon,
·Dons.Id And~rson, Robert To-
meoni and Art Hoelderlin. vice
presidents; Gerald Bennet,
secretary; Cliff Brighton,
treasurer , and Robert Somma,
parllamentarian.
New chairmen include th!
Summer's Here !
~lnies. Bruce Mattern and
~fike Brusseau. youth; Greg
Reinker, publicity: Rober1
~larten, safely: Ron a Id
Zebarlh. cons er v a I ion :
\Villiam GriUen. philanthropy;
John Da vi.,. Christmas cards
and Norm 1'1urphy, hospitali·
ty.
Others are lhe ~1mes. Ter·
rence Be n son . telephone;
Richar d Kob a yas h i,
amenities: Kip P a y n e ,
camera; Sal Liberatore. con·
vention. and Dale F r y e ,
bulletin.
st~tinn in F'nPl~nd.
1\1r~. Alrlrich t' n i o \' t ff
Au<>lr:ilia and Nt'"' Ze~l<1n1l .
lht'ir fir.;;! 1'1on~. but di.-ln"t
real!\' .rel e'<cilf!d until the1·
1:-ridrrl in .l:1kar1a anrl rounrl
all •h" ~ie:hls. )(Ollnrls and
sr""eJI.-"r a flP\\' ""1iLlr{'_
In India ~ht' fell a~ thnuah
~ht •1·r rr in a cnuntr1• li1·ino in
lhl' ·2o•h CPOIUT\' :ind li:t ('(!fl-
t11r1' simu!tant'(lu~lr
SA?.' POTENTI AL
She didn't find the exlrcme
povf!rly depressing but saw
potential. ~f uch agricultural
I
Judea Camping Begins
VFW Unit
To Gather
A public card party is being!
sponsored at I p.m. on Friday,,
f\1ay 23 by members or the l
Veteran~ of Foreign Vi'ars
Auxilia ry 4048. '
The sevt!nlh season of Camp
Young Jud~a in the San
Bernardino J\lountains "'ill
open Thursday. June 27. and
continue until Thursday, July
2.1.
The camp, open to boys and
gi rls from 9 to 16 years or age,
is a summer expression of the
yearly Hadassah Zionist Youth
Commission of the Southern
Pacific Coast Region.
'
According to 1\trs. D~vid A.
Lee. chairman. the program
offers all traditional camping
acti\'ities pl\J~ a Jf'wish and
Zionist edu.::ational program.
The current camp progr;un.
themed Jewish Hf' r o i 11 m
Throughout the Ages. is under
tilt' direction or RusSf'Jl 1\fep-
ven.
Brochures a re 11.vailablc
frnm thf' camp officf'. ~ N.
Vermont Avf'., Room 351. I.Mi
P.ngele!. 90004.
Scouts Meet
Open lo all cilizen!'i i11 the
meeting tonight at 7:30 for
Girl Scouts of Ne~'port Beach,
their leaders, parents and
youth oriented organizations in
Corona del Pt1ar High School
cafeteria.
W omen Voters
~1rs. Wayne Keith. 497-1054.
v<ill ans~·er question11 aboul
the Orange Coast League of
\\'omen Voter!'i, w h i ch
sponsors va ried meetings and
events.
Those interested may join
the group in the fl.!arlna Com-1
munity Center for des.,erl al
1:30 p.m. "'ilh games of
pinochle. canasta and bridge
to follow.
Mid i length
Grounded
Emilio Pucci, who changed
the look of airline hostesses
in 1966 1vhen he created lhe
first ;iirline ' 'c o u to u r i
·wardrobe." for B r a n i f f
International hostes~es, op-
pose~ the midi for
stewardesses.
"The midi i.~ out of place
on an airline hostess:· Pucci
!!.aid. "I prefer the above-the-
knee look. It 's young and
dynamic." I
Pucci said the lo n ger
hemline was fine at home,
but not ror an activ' "·orker
on an alrplane.
v mGINIA'S
SNI P 'N STITCH SHOPPE
1334 Eait Coast Hwy. e Coron• del Ma r
Phone 473 -8050
VACATION'S SOON
Announcing New Prices
ROUX SHAMPOO
.STYLED AND SET
W 11h .Re-:: ~ thctt
e~•ro no:.t1 creme 'lo~·
FASHION STYLED
HAIRCUT
~ QI
G
CREME OIL:
f Vflll •IAMA .. 1"11 W.a .. I
COUA11A .. fl10 1H W11oT!H(>
;~~~;!!VE <I
In.., <>n o.lyil<t ha' <ul, ....,.._ ' '
0,d ,~· One t><o<-ro ••"o" I
'l•NTEO Oil
1!1l lA(Hf0 HAllt --1.11
NO
APPOINTMENT
NEEDED .
ROUX nice cbanq•
(glor' ...., I 0 ,,....,,.,tin wlthou!
percn.1dr ond lo'~ tor wn lo.1
-wothout rub-oft No!Ufol col-
or~ of oroy or dull 1-oo,, G:.i,.
_,..... IOI" bleoched. ~1
Sryle ond Set.
ROUX: ".fancilull
RINSE
Colors. 1......,~glrly~ Ccwr•!i
9rgy (<l<'<'lplrtel~~ T <l,, • ~
b I r g c h it d t..:i.r! Matches.
hle<lchtd hg,.-10 new OfOwlh.
J l ••C•t.ng color~ -'"'~'
;,, -~ OU! -n(;
fod•no.
ROUX: "land -ton•"
CREME HAIR TINT
Touch Up
t...:!u<.tt ""°""""" o--1 ... , ~°"'" "''"""'"'"""'• ,,~ ........... '"" •. ~n. ,...,, ... ,.,..,~ norvt<I• .....
'"'"' """· M"". Tun. Wed •1 I • pm
EVERY DAY
SATURDAYS
SUNDAYS
OPEN
9 A.M. 'Iii 9 P.M.
TO A.M. 'til 6 P.M.
12 A.M. 'HI S P.M.
''GALS''
WE ARE LIQUIDATING
OVER 1,000
~s SAVE Wl\I so% to so%
e SHAGGY WIG ITt •lro111
e OUTCH IOY WIG
I ""w Styletl
e DOME OUTCH IOY WIG
e DYNEL SHAGG., WIG
FROM
$888
CUSTOM STYLING
$3.00 EXTRA
e ll ANEW.1.LON
SH.l.GG' WIG
e GYl":\Y 1r.,Jre11 I
e DOllS
e Ell?AIETH I Show
Glrl Wl9l
Witlt 11th choncor, wt wo11ld II•• 11 l11form ro• tlit ••cltf~ 11ow,, whTclt com• 111 fonc., Ttvlro•
Sv111Jt.1lc Sllaq9y, D111c• lo~. 011d Gypty rt<•11tly. T••lro11 Sltoq!J, Gv•1r. on.t 0111clt lor wltt
GI• 11-•tJIH a11ol """' p op11lor, whk lt ff:mplH oro dis!llloyff lo ••• iltow '"'"'· ,1 .... kht•y
drt, 11 otr ttort a11d LOOI! AT 111ch fa111a1t ic 1t1orclta11diles.
Wo 111111 1110,h• lor•• ~11011lllv of H11t11oft Holt H IT 011d M/T Wi91, CaK •d"' Ml11I foll-. a-4
Wi9i.11. All colort. aro avallobl• ot •11y tllllO. A11d .... •• .,..,. fo•t ., 1 l dftt,M of 1.,.1 .. hft.
YOU MUST VISIT OUa STOlE TO ArPlECIATI SUCH FANTASTIC SAYINGS
lho ,,..,~. •peoo!Plv fly •••Y 1 ft.I ••c•tie11 t:ll'I• will
1een b• h•re. Se 911 the w1r.lreb1• r1•1'y, With ••
ll'l•n., ••• ., te cert for fobtic• there"1 tom1th in" •• ,a.
ollle for tho tri, of your chei'• •oili"' tll• hi9ll ••••.
fl.,i111 I• Euro,e, i•llint 11 H1w1ii or o ..,.,tor !ti' i11
the USA, W1 tloc~ 011• 1la•e ... ;th .,.,.t.91 for i11f111h
t1 t•1ndll'leth1n, •• 1111 "' your h 1••r pf•111 on.I we'll
1'e eur 11tme1f to h1I, with 91v .f~ft l cart f•I• cloth11
for tho 1cc11ieft.
a.= -===~I
Modern -day Athena
~frs. T. Duncan Stc\vart 1rightl receives the Ath~na medal fro m l\1rs. Charles R.
J.enahan ,Jr .. presidcnl of the Ne\1•port 1-larbor Panhellenic . The a1vard is giv·
en annutllJV to a '''oman 11·ho has been selected on the basis of tireless efforU:
in con tribUtin' to the good of the cornmuniLy.
~ •• Ye11 Soo11
Vl.GINIA
• MASTll C.HAlel
~outh Coast ?taza
LOWER LEVEL -NEXT TO MAY CO.
COSTA MESA-546-7990 ,__
(
I
I
,
• . -
St DAil V PILOT s Wedn~day, May 2b, 2'1 71 ' \......_ .. , -·-• ti ..
Teacher's Legacy Student Involvement r I
• ~
OCC PROFESSOR
Louis. Oowlon
Final
Ali 10 PTA
i\tr1. Keith Kltrtier
President
COi\fINC UP: Gen t r a I
meeting tomorrow night
Studenu will present a play
adapted from tht book
By JACKIE CO~t BS
Of ""' IMllr l'llel St1H
The lasl of the original
faculty ol Orange Co ii s t
College retires this June, leav-
lng a 23-year legacy of
student-teacher in volveml'nt.
~tiss Louise Do"•len . who
joined OCC in 1948 as one of 32
members on the staff. recalls.
•·1 leamed the junior college
system by growing up y,•ilh it.
It was an entirely new concept
-a ne"' syste m of education .
The teachers anQ students
\l'f're learning together
"It's 100 big no"''· I don 't
f'\'f'n know t \ ervone on the
English departmfnt staff."
An instructor 'l! philosophy
;ind ~.nglish, ~1 1ss Dowlen
ne1·er aspired to a four-year
col le ~e rosillon. ' The senior
rollege professor!: are too
remU\"l'd from their students."
she hel•eves. "Pure lectures
heve their place but not in the
sen!:! of ·canned'. Some prn-
fessQr~ 91esenl lecture!! whlch
J.a1'en'1 been u['ldated in 20
year!>."
BETTER RESPONSF.S
She alro criticizes testing
procedures, lee!in_g that teach-
ers tend to l~an on multiple
choice and short·a r.s14·er forms
f o r t1me-sav1ng correc tion.
Miss Dowlen prefers eS!!ay
qucsuons or ora l repon!!.
'·There are other mean s of ge{.
llng a response other than reg.
1mental1ly. \\'hen the class
shares orally, then everyone
learns "
hir£;d an
'--'-----
En£hsb instructor, Mi s 1
Doivlen i.frttd lo be 11'.e first
and only philosorffly l"arher 1t
OCC for the next :2 yeArs.
"~I-1ne1ncrie~ ar~ sweet of
1nose first philos'l.>'1y clas&es.
The slu1t.:r. ts and I v.·orktd up
tne f)rccram -:.g1C1"inl to
te1rn to11 ether."
~Jany or Miss Oo~Jen 's first
OCC ~tuo~nts have returr.ed to
teach on the Coast Con n•unity
Co!legf'S campusec among
them Tu-n Wert, 1 om Ch1 ld1i,
Larry Woods iln~ R o d
&hr yer. Miss Dow1en u!::ed to
•ell hrr classes 011 opening
.la .• · .... ou flunk tht!: class if
\O•' clon't te~c h me
Somel1'Jn(I."
So~ only in philos.1p..1v but in
her ~.rvlish cour~.s ranging
from t.!medial Enit~ish t&
t'!Chnical writing, 1'1tss l...lowlen
ins!~tec.i Cln student p:i rticipa-
tion in re viewing the fnrmaL
"Students would wnte a clw
r·roposal, co1nmentir1g on what
should be dropi>e1t o r
reemphasized .''
The Tennessee nati\'e finds
S!Jelling an impossible task at
times. "You can't teach spell·
ing as ·a subjec t The moliva·
lion has to be there. The stu·
dent has to want to conqu er
his handicap."
Educated at Randolph ltia·
con Women's College and Van·
derbilt Un1versity.;.Nashville,
she received her ~fA degree
from P!abody Teachers'
College.
Among her special studies
art terms at the Ulliversity of
Hawaii, the University of Oslo
and Balllol College, Oxford,
England where she studied the
Brit1sn educalion i:ystem .
Miss Dowlen be"lleves the
Ame1 lean ~vstem stresses ex.
traci.:rrlcutaf activities t.o a
near extreme and the British
are att~mpting lo lollow.
"They should aim for Uie an·
cient GrPek concept of 1
bal:in•·rd program."
Aller teaching several years
in t\1ississippi, she joined the
f\'a\y in 1943. "I felt I would
be le.aching the children of
war 1·eterans and wanted to
ha\'e an understanding of their
experiences."
Following five yean; of ac·
live duty, she entered the
!'\a\'Y Re serve from which &he
recently retired. r,tiss Dowlen
wtnt on lo teach veterans or
World War II , the Kon:an and
Vietnam wars. "I have an
undetstanding of t h e i r
military experience and can
talk their language."
TRAVEL LEISURELY
Planning to make full use or
her military transportation
privileges. Miss Dowlen is
"hoping to travel leisurtly." A
new camper iii being packeJ
and ma ps laid out. ··r think its ridiculous lo
wait until I have to retire. I ,
might be too feeble lo enJol' , ~
n1yself.'' "
Commenting on her years at
OCC she said, "There's no end
to a teacher's growth if he is
in an institution that permits
it -OCC encourages it."
•
Meetings, Accomplishments Taking Spotlight
"Charlotte's Web." under
tm direct.ion of ~f rs .
Howard ~1udge.
Canyo n PTA
.\lrs. Sle\·e Crisafulli
President
C0\11I\G lJ P: Annual spring
dance from I to 2 p m. Tues-
day. June 8. on th e
pl1ygrollnds. All studenls
may participate and parenlS
are invite d to aucnd.
Board member s will host a
st aff luncheon Th ursday,
.June 10.
REPORTS· General mem·
bcrsh1p voled to purchase
primary pla ygrou nd clim·
bing bars . .\lothe rs and
daughters enjoyed a fashion
show pro1·1ded by \\"ard 's,
Huntington Center ... Mrs.
Robert Latimer reports a
profit of $26 wa s realized
from the sno-cone salt .
Estancia High PTA
Mrs. Ralph Boege.I
President
CO~i!NG UP· Board members
v.ill meet with incoming of •
hcers for the inst allation
luncheon at JI a.m. Thurs-
day. June 3. in the home of
,\1rs. \Valter R. Ga yncr.
Guests wlll be .~1 r 3 .
Georgianna MacL!od, Floyd
Harryman and John Prit·
chard.
Monie Vista PTA
~l rs. Fred Betb
President
COMING UP : Installation din·
ner for incoming officers
will take place al 7:30 p.m.
Thursday. June 3, in the
Volcano House. Reservation
of S5.50 per person may be
made by contacting Mrs.
Fred Betts at 642-4817.
Paularin o PTA
Nick Hanson
President
CO~llNG UP Tea for faculty
and old and new board
members at J p.m. tomor-
row ... .\1.rs: Le von Bards ley
announces tha t rifth gradr
room mothers will meet in
her home at 10 a.m lomor-
rov.· ... Board meeting al ll
p.m. Tuesday . June I. in the
teachers' lounge. . .Orien--
tation for fifth g r a d e
studenls wilt lake piece at
Davis School Wednesda y
June 2. Thumbs Up on TeWink/e's Day
Te\Vinkl e sludents. faculty and P'I".·\ \\"ill chan ge
Friday. June 10 lo .. fun-day" \r ilh a carnival and
baseball game. Food booths \vill offer popco rn.
brownies and co tton candy. and the baseball· gan1c
of Fun
'~il l pit the students against the faculty. Scoring 1
day of fun are (left to right) Mrs. Maur ice Longdale,
PTA representatives, Kathy Pervetieh and Alan
Liddle.
.I
I
' ' ·.1
.i " ' "
Hanson atlendtd' 1he st.a le
con\·ention in Anaheim.
Princ e of Peace PTI
dcnr: .James Oc\'li n, secre·
iary: Ch arles ~!organ. trtll.!·
urcr and :'Joel Hansen, cor-
respo nding secre tary.
counties. .\Vinning classes
in the papier m11che contest
"'~re ~1 iss CoMie Haynes'
fou rth grade class with Paul
Bunvon and His Blue Ox,
and ·-'llss Sallie Ve!ies fou rth
grade. class with T o m
Thumb and His Butterfly.
Fashions will be modeled by
studenls and presented by
Sears.
Htrbert l\ordqu ist
President
REPORTS: ~1 rs. Har r y
Southron. trea surer report s
a profit of S2i5 was realized
from the operetta Frog
Prince.
St . John Aux .
i\trs. Gerald \~'alton
President
Victoria . PTA
.\trs. Dougla.s Bowler
President
REPORTS: .\!rs B et l y Wilson PTA
~lrs. Robcrl Sankey
President
CO~·llNG UP· ~other·
Arts Festively Combined
REPORT!': ll ighlighling thr
unit ~cling was the science
and hobby fai r along with
the finals of the spellin~
bee. Winners wtre Bill
Wright o f George
Robertson's fifth grade class
and Robert Cole of Miss
Donna Walker 's f o u r ! h
grade c I a!! s . Runner s-up
were Dale Baker of !ilr!!.
Sam Thomes' fifth grade
class and Kelly Campbell or
Miss: Walker's c I a ss .
Certificates of achievement
in scien~ were awarded to
all particip ant s. Also on
rhsplay was PuH the ~1agic
Dragon. creattd by last
}'ear's first grade and sum·
mer school classes or \1rs.
\1ar\'el Carlson, which won
first prize awards in the
district art show and papier
mache contest at Fashion
Joseph Schulist, vice presi·
dent: Jamt> D t v 1 in ,
~ecretary ; Charles ~forg11n,
treasurer. and Noel Hansen,
Island .•. Mr. and Mrs. Nick
REPORTS St uden ts in second
gr,ade presented the flag
salute and opening prog ram
at the general merting where
offi c er s were electffi
Strving will be the i\1 mes.
Anthony Bccl:er. prcs1den1;
Joseph Schulist , \'rce prcs1-
Kratz1e. prin cipal reports
!hat Sha ron Cn.,...·en rece11·ed
R S25 bond fo r firs t placr in
the Newport-\1esa V F w
essay contest. Her , entry
also plare:I fourth in the se-
cond district 14'hich includes
all of Orange and Riverside
daughter fashion show and
tea will lake place al 3 p.m.
Saturday, June 5, in the
multip urpo se room.
REPORTS : Awards ~·er t
presented at the association
meeting lo the winners of
the s1fety and spelling btt.
Placing first through fourth
""A'ere Cherly Erickson. Linda
Cupp. i\1isty \Valker and
Peter Paul, fourth grade;
And rew Pope. Cecil Bor"ja,
Michele Crawford and Maria
Grandaos fifth grade: Terry
White. Kenneth W i Ison.
Claire Plique and Stacy
Dean, sixth grade.
Hear ye. hear ye~ A Folk·art Festival has been planned at Victoria School at
1 p.m. Thursday, June 10. featuring a \'ari£'1y of fol k dances and refreshn1enls
pro\'1ded by the PTA. Ea ch cla!'is will di splay art and the school chorus \\·ill sin g
folk ~elections. Broadcasting vie\1·s of the even t are lleft to right\ i\'an cy !1.lunn
and John f'ento n.
Your Horoscope Tomorrow Tributes
Planned
For Donors
Aquarius: Time for Realism
To honor donors for thei r
)'tar·~ harrl work . Harbor
Chapter of Hadassah 1 ~
hosting the Ei1hth Annual
Donor Luncheon on Thursda)'.
~tay 27.
Highlight of th! program
followinp: the lunrhe<>n in the
Airporter Inn will be a talk \'ii
l r an scont inental amplified
telepMoe hookup from Ntw
York by M~. Max Schenk , na·
1.lonal president of Hada ssah.
Yael Dan also will be
fe1tured in 1 pro1r1m of i~
ltrn1lional IOnC& tcCOrding ltl
Mn. Sheldon Marshall . preM
ch1irm1n.
Beach Bebe•
Every Wedne1day at 7 p.m.
mtmben ol TOPS Beach
Bahn conve11e In Hunt1r1•ton
Re1eh Hlth Schoel f n r
1>ro1rams.
THURSDAY
MA Y 27
By SYDNEY 0\1ARR
l..e<t lo\'es to ~h·,. ,11ifl~.
Native• of this r.odia ca l ~lp:n
ire not ad1·er~t. lo rtrei\'in,e:.
but 1c1ually h11ve mort fun
pre,tl'lllng -that is part uf
the sho~·mansh\p ldrn:ilierf
~·Ith Leo. The lypical Leo
fteed1 an 1udiencr and usually
h11 1 bill one. Hui no maurr
how many per!u1n1 arr in·
v6'1·ed. tbe spolllrht ~hint'~ on
Leo. On nep:allve side, this
leads to arro1ance, 0 n
positJve aide, Uo is fun-loving,
ienernus and talented enougb
le entertatn frfl ups, large and
small. Somr famous persons
born 1i111dt.r Lff loclude Robe.rl
rttllcltum , Af•e \\'est ind
Dustin Hoffman.
ARIES (f\.farch 21 ·Apri1 19)·
Go slow.and-eas.\· f\.t111nv m111kt
t'M1mitmen1~ Be su re you
clear 1ctions with fam ily. pro·
fessional 1MOC111es. You c11n
hAve run . bu1 ~·ou are nnt en·
ure l~· frrt . Ta ngle or red tape
t'Ould irrilar r.
TAUHUS 1April 20.~!a.r 20 l:
Health condilions and !ra vel
1nix : you find 1hat energy
surRCS and 1vanrc. You ar• not
posi tive. Key now is to nour ish
idea~ Bu1 don'I C' n m m i l
~·ourself lo definit!! CQUr!te of
11rt1on.
r.E~t l 1"1 '~!a.v 21 -.June 201
Vi1al el'e nts occur Be ready,
\l'llhng . You rrrt1unly are
ablt Rratize this and respond
i,1·1th rn1hus1 asm. Key is to ct·
pcr1mcnt. to h\'C hie lo hilt .
~o backing do~·n. ~ o
14•al10o14·er
CANCER 1Junt 21.July %2)·
F 1 n1~h 11.•ha l you ~tart. Lea ve
no loose ends. Cnncenlrale on
cnmpleL1on. Lu nar cycle is
high: h1mily membe r acts in
ecC<'nlric n1anner. What ap.
pears st lback will boomerang
1n ~·our r11 vor.
LEO t.luly 2:1-Au1:. 22 ): Onl'!
clo..c.e to you Is relltltss. You
fin d out 1.t'hll t vnu need to
know by being subtle. Direct
11pproach "'ill not suffice Be
\\'illing to accep l challenJ!:e .
\Velcome new concep t, Be
original.
VIRGO tAug. 23-Sept. 221:
Mixing friendship and busines~
11.•il! be costly. Realize th is:
ma intain bal1nce. Yoo cannot
buy ~·our v.·ay. But you c11n
charrn, 14'in, persuade. Some
fond "'i.shes now will be fulfill·
r<l
LIBRA !&pl. 23·0c l. 22 1:
t:northodox ap proach pro\'es
constructi\·e. Be experimental,
danns. Learn rules so you can
bre ak them Following crowd
OO\\' would be error. Set vou r
011.·n pace. policy. You 14·ill .v.·in.
SCORPIO IOcL 23-Nov 21 1:
Some secrets may be rtveal·
ed . Check dtla1ls. Avoid jum·
ping lo cooclusions. What you
need may be at a di stance.
J\ce p commun ication 11 n e ~
open Special message is com·
In~ your w11 y.
SAGITIARIUS !Nov Z2·1"'kc
21 ! : Emo1ions fly high ; strive
to give eqaal time to logic.
Don 't be sa tisfied t0 know
mertly what o c cu r re d ;
discover v.·hy. Probe deep: re·
ject su perficial indications,
Get beneath the surface.
CA PR ICORN 1 Dec. 22-Jan.
191: Some who make promises
should be pinned do\\-·n. Your
own security must be con.
s1dered. Empty statemen!s do
no good. B!! analytica l when
dealing "'ith Taurus. Libra in-
di \'iduals.
AQUARIUS 1Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Avoid fon ling yourself.
See situations in reali!tic hght.
Accent on practical matters. \
But you tend no~· In \eer
away from the practical Tim-
ing v.·111 1mpro\'e. l:lhmate
ga in is sho wn.
PISCES !Fe b 19·~1arch 20)·
Nol "'isc to depe nd on f1na n·
cial promises of othe rs. Get
hou~e In order Take in·
ventor~· Adhere to your n11.·n
styll!'. Slick lo principles.
Stand !1111 ~lainta1n dignity.
Mone y f)k turr improve~.
Plans Firmed Up
Some old·fashioned fun "'ill be cran ked up during Californi11 School's annual
!'Ocial sponsored b'' the PTA Friday. June 4. Offering Joel Vail a hand in turn·
1ng ou t a recipe or' homemade Ice cream are \Vendy Hinkley (center) and Wendy
\'ail The fe stivities 'viii take place from 8 to 8:30 p.m. in the multipurpose
room.
.
SOUR CREAM SPREADS OVER GIFTS FROM SEA :.i
;?Dill, Sour Cream Flavor Duo , ....
r:!°<Are you looking for new
. adventure in menu planning?
If you have a tendency to
sameness in the meals you
serve, it's time lo get out of
:':'1hat menu rul. elevate your
i;ights. and u~ your im·
agination. Join with other
homemakers in the know who
are a"·are of what is im-
portant nutritionally as well as
what is good eating.
They are the ones \vho
realize that fish and shellfislt
are not only great eati ng -
· they are gOQd for you as well.
It 's so easy to nourish as well
as please the family with
seafoods, because there Is an
ocean fu ll of variety available
in seafood markets or at
frozen seafood counters across
Vie country. Fishery products
rate high in valuable protein .
minerals. and vitamins. ¥:hile
being low in sodium, fat. and
calories. What more could
anyooe ask~
Fishery products are
available in many market
forms such as whole-dressed,
steaked. chunked. or filleted.
Fillets, as a rule. are the best
buy because they are boneless.
almost 100 percent edible. and
are ready to cook. Fillets
adapt readily to dozens o(
delightful gounnet or down-t.o-
earth-simple recipes.
Fillets Bavarian from the
Rice Council is a dream <1f an
entree anytime of y e a r
because it is simple and easy
for spring and summer when
most homemakers want to get
out of the kitchen. It is also
hearty and satisfying for the
winter months. Choose your
own favorite fillets -snapper,
floW"Jder. sole, or ocean perch
depending on your family's
preference, lhe occasion, and
the budget.
For more fishery recipes
vi sit one of the Federal
Information Centers recently
opened in 25 major cities
across the United Stales. For
your conve nience more than
200 titles of consumer-oriented
materials have been gathered
together and printed in a new,
15-page Consumer Product
Information Index.
The index is free for the
asking. and manv of the
materials listed, including full -
color. illustrated fish and
shellfish recipe booklets, are
available at a nominal cost .
Vi.c;it the Center near you or
write to the Consume r
Product Information Distribu-
tion Center. Washington, D.C.
20407.
FILLETS BAVARIAN
1 pounds fish fillets. fresh or
frozen
1,~ cup chopped chive~
3 cups hot cooked rice
1 tablespoon salt
~' teaspoon each of peppe r
and dill weed
margarine, melted
'1 teaspoon paprika
I tab lespoon lemon juice
I cup sour cream
2 large tomatoes. sliced and
halved
Thal'i' fillets. if frozen. Com-
bine chives, rice, t teaspoon
salt . ~. teaspoon pepper. and
1".!' teaspoon dill weed. Spoon
into a buttered, sha llow 2-
quart casserole.
Blend butter, 1 teaspoon
salt. paprika, and lemon juice:
brush over 'fillets. Arrange
fillets over rice. Bake at 350
degrees F .. for 20 minutes.
Stir remaini ng sail and dill
weed into sour cream. Spoon
over the fish fillets. Arrange
tomato half slices around edge
of casserole. Bake at S to 10
minutes longer. Serves 6.
Potatoes
Important
Archaeological diggings In
the Andes often turn up
ceremoniaJ ceramic pol!! in
the shape •of polatoes. or a
blend of potato and huiiial\
forms, indicating the im·
portance of thi~ tuber to early
or South Americans. tablespoon bullrr ~1-------------------
SALAD MOLD'S THE PEANUTTIEST
Wtdntsday, May 26, 1971 DAILY PILOT :i!7
Tri-color Grapefruit Appeals
AR elegant continental sauce and tint half of the v.·hite range alternating section! er
spoons OV'!!" fresh, coconut· grape-fruit a delicate green. In white, green and ruby
frosted Coachella Va 11 e y a large crysLal compote, ar· grapefruit in spiral fashlons.
grapefruit secHons-gl1stening ------~--
Sprinkle with coconut . OIJll
thoroughly. CMakes I ae,..,..
iag>.)
ruby, white and some tinted
pale green.
Who'd think something this
special could be so simple to
make -and good for you,
loo'
The s"·eet-tart California
desert grapefn1i t provides an
abundanre of \'itamin C,
highly touted the~~ days as
Jilood to help fight the cold and
flu bugs. lts low calorie count
makes Coachella grapefruit
easy on the figu re too.
PASTEL GRAP EFR UJT
COMPOTE
2 Coachella Valle y ruby
grapefruit
4 Coachella Valley white
grapefruit
% teaspoon green food col·
oring
5 t.11hlespoora shredded co-
• · con:.~
Peel and sectiun grapefruit
over bol'i'I, reserving juice.
Remove all membr.ne.
Sprinkle v, teaspoon green
food colo1 ing in If• cup water
Caper for
Cucumbers
You can serve this dish
shortly after it is made.
CAPER CUCUl\1BERS
1 large thic!;. cucumber
I tablespoon sugar
2 tablespoons distilled v.•hite
vinegar
,l teaspoon salt
I tablespoon drained capers
Peel cucumtl!r; cut in half
lengthwise; wi tb. a teaspoon
scoop 011I and discard seeds ;
ilice thin crosswise.
Jn a shallow bowl stir
together the sugar. vi negar
and sa!!: &dd cucumbers
and mix thoroughly.
Cove r and refrigerate. mix-
ing a few times. for 1).! hour or
as Jong as overnight. Sprinkle
with capers. Serve with a slot-
ted spoon or drain. Makes 4
servings.
HAWAIIAN
bold, mod d1si9ns on
screen print•d cotton.
exotic florals, •n inv it•tion
for fun •nd sun 9•m•'
OUR REGULAR 19< YD.
unfori:r:ed 36" wide
machine wash •
Perky Peasant Prints
fe•+ure the country c:•lic.o look.
9reat for prairi e dresse,, m•xi
skirt' with mix or match blou ses
1 oo•;. cotton
44''/45" wide
m•chine wash
Sculptured Designs On
DENIM
the new, new look for pants, for hot
pants, for knickers, for worm pents
COMPARE VALUES AT $l.98 YD.
crease resistant finish
l oo e;. cotton
44" /45" wide
machin• wesh
I
HOUSE oF··FllBRICS
S.•tli C-f rt .. -lridol •I 5•11 Diet• Fwy, He"1 rtn• -17111 1t l ri1tol
C"hll M"• -145°1116 S...hl •--54l-555t
Or91191'folr M.tl -Or•IHl•lh•r~• 111d H1rDor 111-P.ti Clflff1' -l1 P1l1n 1 1t St1P1lo11
f11ll.mi1 -5J6·Jll4 111_.wi Perk -IJl06l2l
H111tl-.I•• c..it.-Edin'!l•r •t l1•c:h llvd., H11llt'lllffM hoc.II -1•1-1011
l
,· MEMORIAL DAY SPECIALS-Thurs.-Mon., May 27-31
:~Cheese Blended
In Salad Treat
' An inrorma l little luncheon
for the gals is just the occa-
11ion to serve a special salad
entree. This unusual creamy
Cheese mold, subtly fla vored
'with peanut butter and
f;runchy "'ith a medley ol raw
'fegetab!cs is a good choice.
·: Peanut Cheese 11-iold com-
tiinell the satisrying nourish-
ment of peanuts with at-
tractive looks, so a few
iauorted finger sandwiches.
dessert and beverage will
~mplete your menu .
::'The sand wiches pictured are itasy to n1akc, yet a bit
festi;•e, too: a blend of eq ual
parts of peanut butter and
orange marmalade spread on
bread fingers, then broiled a
few seconds until bubbly.
These are recipe suggestions
prepared by the National
Peanut Council.
:..Prepare Peanut Mullins to
accompany a crisp green
ialad or savory soup. Just
fir 1~ cup chopped sailed
pea nuts into your fa><orite
recipe for mix) for plain or
corn muffins, Bake and serve !lot. . .
For a showy and luscious
dessert which Is easy to make,
stir chopped chocolate covl'red
peanuts Into sweetened whi~
ped cream. lhen spread over
the tap and sides of a baked
angel food cake. This is
delicious for • spoon-on to~
pina. too.
Another peanut p r o d u c t
you'll enjoy using 1s bland-
flavored peanut oil. In addition
to the obvious uses for salad
dressings and in baking.
peanut oil is the perfect' choice
for regular and deep frying.
It's high ·•smoke point ''
permits you to fry foods until
cooked through without burn-
ing the outside.
PEANUT CHEESE ~10LD
2 tablespoons gelatin
2 cups mi lk
I cup shredded sharp cheese
I 8-ouncc package cream
cheese
1/3 cup eeanut bultC'r
I cup dairy s<1ur cream
I tablespoon vinegar
I teaspoon !alt
I cup sliced celery
1? cup green pepper strips
12 cup sliced radishes
1~ cup minced onion
Soften gelatin in 11 cup
milk : heat remaining n1ilk un -
til almost boiling; remove
from heat and stir In sharp
cheese, cream cheese and
peanut butter. stirrin g until
melted and blended. Sti r in
softened gelatin. then sour
cream. vinegar and salt. Cool
until slightly thickened.
tt1eanwhite. arrange some of
the vegetables in a design
in greased 6-cup salad mold,
Stir remaining vegetables into
gelatin mixture ; PQUr into
mold. Chill unlil set. Shce and
wve. Makes & to I servlnaa.
!.!~!,~~:::'!~.~~ ......... 59c
One of the nice st things that could hoppen 10 o
long week-end, fine vanilla ice cream with en
extrc thick coalillQ of double-smooth milk choc.~
olcte. You 'll wont to stock up on lhese.
,~6 ~:.=0~:,!o~~!~~P~~.~.~ ........ 49c
Not o Special but our regular price -you'll
need extra breod over the week.end.
~!"!!,~:i~c:,':ee C~k.~'. ... 39c
~~.n~:!~~bo~~1~.9.1~~~ .. '.~".~ 29c
We're doing our best to help you with picnic or
backyard barbecue budget. Von de komp"s.
quality Sandwich or Weiner Buns ot o 12c 1av~
ings. Buy aeverol bags.
~:~!~~~:::~.~~-~~~ ........ $ l 39
1 ender, golden layers, luscious dork choco lote
pewn Icing, t;ghr chocola1e buttercreom filling.
~~c~/~ ~:,!~~ .~~~~··· ..... · 69 <
~:'.';;!l~k~~.~~ .. ~~~.'.~.5 .......... 3 3 c
four varieties of cookie favorites, horne-mode
style: lively Wiolosses. chewy Oatmeal. r ich
ChocoJcte. crunchy Peanut Butter. All mode with
butter or pure vegetable shortening.
Van de Kamp·s ®
BAKERI ES
.. "'Y good food --
A DMSIOHOf GfNEW. HOSTCOll".
Assorted Doughnuts 39c
(,,.. •5') pkg. of 6 •••••••.••••• -
(
!!8 DAJL Y PILOT
WITH
SALLIE
\\IALK, SHOP , PLA\'
\VEAR 1'1UU MUU .
HAVE K/\NE DRESS 'fOO
T.he Paradise Unlimited
nlood of Hawaii Is nostalgic.
flowers. happy talk. music,
and an all day long wela
kahao alt rolled up into one.
"Somelhing different." our
happy people shoppers
smile C011tentedly as they
select a can or chili. from
our bean aisles or plenty .. ,
or candleligh\ meat for din-
ner. They love an excuse to
wear the mood of Hawaii.
Don't be haole. Thls is
Hawaii \\'eek.
$500 HA\\'AllAN BL.:CKS
AIN'T HAY ..
.. All of our nui Lido
Shops people art'
celebrating Hawaii Week
with lettuce, the green stuff,
money. $ Lucky folk! are
going to win $100 bills next
Friday al 12 o'clock in our
patio. Al 11 lhe Regal Tahi·
tian1. a group of 8 Hawaiian
entertainers a pp ea r in g
every night at the Inn Place
'"ill pu1 on a sho\I'. You
don 't ha \'e to be prewni to
u·in.
HA\IJAll IS
EVERV\VHERI-.:
You 're invited lo share
the beauty of antherium,
dried u·ood roses. and cy1n·
bidium orc™d plants in the
flower shop. In the Gifl
Shop. Garden Torcbe..<> beck-
on. "We're long candles on
sticks. Put us in a la rge
pots with flou·crs a n d
leaves. S! ic k us in the
ground. Lighl us. \Ve 're a
glowing torch. IJi'e peek in
\l'indou•s from outside.''
Cofftt Shop Pineapple
omeletlftll start each day
u·ith a smile. Deli's teriyaki
chic ken and bar·b-q ribs
"'ilh exotic salad. fresh
pineapple, papaya. melon s
and bananas sing instant poi
suppers if you take off your
shoes .and spread spinach
leaves on the floor. You
could throw in a package or
frozen Go lden Shore
Ha1A·a11an shrimp u·hipped
up i n Georgia . .luscious
putfs uf shrimp filled wilh
crabmeat in a delicious
pineapple sauce. Serve
Cas'!'·ell Kona coffee and
and whip up a fev.• crisp \\'Un
tun \Vun Tun is China 's
ans\\·er to ra\'ioli. The skins
t·ome frozen You put chop-
ped meals in the n1iddll'.
brin,e up the four t•orners
and fr ,\.
\\'HAT'S HA\\'AllA~
BESIDES HA\\'AllA7''
PUNC H
. . K i k k o m a n true
Hawa11an Teriya kt Mar.
inade Sans. l I i m a Jam!!
and syrup~ C.OConut
syrup, so delicious on "·af ·
fies. pancakes and ice
('team Jams to sing of the
!!'lands .. Papaya, gua.,.a,
passion lruil , ma rmalade ..
R£>ese \'ery almost extinct
poha iam, and poi
How do you like your
CClCOOU\~' \Vhole. lo crack
open and !'31 in del iciou~
nibbles. Mendoncas fresh
fro1.rn and shredded or
fresh pure l'oconut 1nilk for
<·hi('ken luau. and bakf'd fi:;h
form. ~1argaRita, to 1nix
v.·ith carrot or p1neapplt
ju 1cf' .. Like :-no\\ .. Koko
\\'hip is powdpred and re.ad~·
10 \\'hip into milk.
Trader \'ir's Kafe-!a·ll'. a
delicious cocoa and coffee
l o gethernts s drink.
!iiU'eatened wi1h !lugar and
\•:tnilla ... Tradrr Vic and
Don lhe Be.i!cbcomber come
on strong with Island drink
n1ixes , s au c es and
nlarinades .. Caribe J s l " ,
Pina Colada, all p1ne:1pplc
JWCC and Coco Lo pt> z
t'fCam of coconut
Ha\lo·a11's Q\\•n frozen ~Uil \ a
and pas~1Qn frull or<1n):!t:>
oectar to mix \I.1th:\ rans ol
\\'Jiler .. lsl;ind lnr: pu rr
hmt JU1Ce ,\Jacac;.imi;, nut
bnfllf'. like peanu ts or nut
trunch. ground up in milk
chocolate.
Rn>lu1rd's. uh1·re thf'
rood~ of 1-fa~·aii art p1er~
where. ~nd f'\'t>r)OOd Y 1~
aikanr . , Okolr ti.la1una.
PRICES EFFECTIVE MAY 27, 28, 29 CLOSED MEMORIAL DAY
PHONE 673-6360 FOR HOME DELIVERY
IN OUR DELIVERY AR EA
FANCY, GOLDEN-RIPE, CHIQUITA BRAND
m BANANAS LB.
LARGE SIZE, DIRECT FROM HAWAII ,
LI DO MARKE T CENTE R
NEWPORT BLVD . AT THE ENTRANCE TO LIDO ISLE
PAPAYAS FOR LUAU SALADS EACH 39¢
DAISY-FRESH, PASSIONATE FLAVORED
Or~n Serenades for your pleasure by Bernice Fay EXOTIC JUICES For Tropical Punches QUART 59¢
GARDEN-FRESH
ZUCCHINI
FOi Ml'MOllAL DAY •.• HI.VI A
µAW~1)Af'/ 'PICNIC
TWO DELIGHTFULLY EASY AND DELICIOUS
HOLIDAY MENUS -A PLEA SANT CHANGE FROM
THE USUAL PICNIC FARE
Tropic.al Punch in • tooler
lvlac.•d•mi• Nut s, Coconut Chips
Smoked Albat ore
Rite Salad
B•rbetued Spar e Ribs or Bakad H•m
Waldorf Salad or Me lon Compot e
B•nana Nut Bre •d
B"ked Beeni with Pine•pple Chunks
Hamburgers Teriyak i
Green Salad with J11vanes e Dress ing
Homemade Va nill • lee Cream
with Coconut Syrup
ITALIAN SQUASH
SAVOR THE BE ST! YU BAN
COFFEE
YUBAN COFFEE
YUBAN COFFEE
Knudsen La Bon BUTTER
LB. 19¢
LB.
l LI.
J LI.
1 LI.
1.69
2.49
83¢
French's MUSTARD ~.1~P0;-.; 29~
''.•SPEN CER
Queen Stuffed OLIVES .. 01. 49¢
ASSORTED FLAVOR S, SPRI NGFIELD
WIN SODA POP " OL CAMI 10 for 89¢
$100 HAWAIIAN BUCKS SUNSHIN E
s HAPPY WINNE RS , BANQUET WA FE RS 11 oz. TRIP
WIN
FOR 2 TO HAWAII ' 33¢ DEPOS IT COUPONS IN LOBBY •
OR GI FT SHO P llB DRAWING SUN., MAY 30th
DEPOSIT COUPON IN LOBBY c'J.• CROSSE & BLACKWELL 10 •1, OZ .
DRAWING FRI., MAY 28th, 12 NOON ,..Q/].1,Hamburger or Hot Dog RELISH 4 for $1
• ~--
,,
FOR A DELIGHTFUL LUAU OR PICNIC, START WITH ONE OF THESE • , •
RI CHARD'S OWN
LIDO BRAND HAMS WHOLE HAM
BUTT OR SHANK HALFi HAMS ••. 79c .lb.
BONELESS, FUL Y COOKED BAR-M
TAVERN HAMS WHO LE 1.39 LB Y2 or 1/it TA VERN
FRESH EASTERN
LEAN SPARERIBS FOR SWEET & SOUR RIBS
ZACKY FARMS FRESH HEN TURKEYS A BARBECUED TURKEY IS GRE .... T PARTY FA RE
Swift Premium BACON FOR RUMAKI. OF couRsE !
Swift Brown n' Serve SAUSAGE a oz. PACKAGE
RICHARD'S OWN 1
PURE PORK SAUSAGE MILDLY SEASONED
FOR HAWAIIAN HAMBURGERS-ADD TE RIYAKI SAUCE. WATER CH ESTNUTS & GINGER TO PATllll
LEAN GROUND BEEF
(1w{£, /\l\l\1-t.
STUFFED PORK CHOPS ·"''""'"'"''ft';"' 1.19 ". ASTORIA SHRIMP , ...... ,.,,,, ,.,,, .. ,,. 2.98 ll.
STUFFED ROASTING CHICKEN ~::~, 69c "·
~m&ii~m
REESE MAH ARAJAH
PEACH CHUTNEY 10 oz. 49~
ROYA L HAWAIIAN
Macadamia NUTS 9 oz. 1 .79
PILL SBURY CRESCENT
DINNER ROLLS I OZ. 35¢
KRAFT WHIPPED
Banana Nut BREAD
GRANARY BREAD
WHEAT TEA ROLLS
PINEAPPLE DANISH PASTRY
~ 1'. "")--------.,--~~ ~ -J loo/ti!
l,49LB.
79~LB
FREE COTTON CANDY
c • ...,11-m
SPRECKELS SUGAR
SAT .. MAY 29
SPRECKLES SUGAR I LB. 59¢
Hl-C FRUIT DRINKS
CA MPFIRE
MARSHMALLOWS "oz.
S&W BAKED BEANS 21 oL
S&W BROWN BREAD "OL
Collier BRIQUETS 10 LI.
3 for $1
19¢
3 for $1
3 for $1
89¢
49~ PICNIC OR LUAU PERFE CT-PLASSE$ 65 ~ ::. !~N~L~; ~!~~t!~ Glasses 24 ct. 49¢
79¢LB.
59¢LB.
ALUMINUM FOIL II" :r 25' 49¢
MINUTE MAID REGULAR OR PINK
LEMONADE , oz.
KERN 'S
SLICED STRAWBERRIES "oz.
MINUTE MAID
LEMONADE u oz.
8 FOR $]
29~
4 for Sl
HOW ABOUT HAWAIIAN CRA B CURRY7 WAKEFI ELD
Snow Crab Meat , oz. 99~
Totino 's PIZZA, 3 kinds
BUITTONI
11 OL 69¢
Cheese or Meat RA VIOLAS "oz. 69¢
1.19 VEGfTABLESNA L ID OZ. 39~ 49¢ CHOOSE JAPANESE , MEXICAN SPANISH
6 for 31 ¢ BAVARIAN. DANISH OR PA RISlAN STYLE.
Ea . 15¢
$100 WINNER
CREAM CHEESE I OZ. 55¢ COLORFUL. BRIGHT AND SUMMERY
BUNCH OF
N • .,,. •.' '' '• •' •• • • '• '. '•. • • '• • • • • • • • • • •
;~ c~~:~I~~. SALAM E
. . . 1.39
DANISH CHEESE TASTING MAY 28, 29
MIXED FLOWERS
A (h•rmin g in ferm•I look , • ,
2.95 BUNCH
Add•en •..••..••••.•. :·•·•·············
•
HAWAll.-..N ENTE RTAINMENT PLUS ALL THE
ALOHA WEEK PRINCESSES in our P•tio
FRIDAY, MAY 28th, 11 A .M.
~~MARKET HOME & GIFT SHOP LIDO YACHT SHOP ANTHONY'S SHOE REPAIR F~OWER SHOP CLEANERS
OPEN DAILY 9-7. SUN. 9 -~ OPEN DAILY 9-6 OPEN DAILY, 9-b DAILY 9.5,30, SAT. •-5 OPEN DAILY 9-6 DAILY f ,JD-6, SAT. 1,30.s
•
•
DAILY PILOT ;J';)
~~Indian Influence Signals Path Back to Traditional Pudding
:::
::;_ Take the family back in :·~ history to early New En1land
::: with one of America's oldest ~: deMerts, Indian pudding. § The settlers leamed the !$ secre\1 of lhis native dish
the characteristic flavor of
enriched ooro meal. Another
1•arlatioo -chopped nuts are
sprinkled at.op before the long,
slow baking begins.
Serve the pudding ~·ann
with i~ cream for a. delicious
tribute to Amulca'1 cooking
heritage.
HONEY·NUT
INDIAN PUDDING
l\1aket I 1ervtn11
~, cup enriched com meal
4 l'Up! milk
~~ teaspoon ult
1, cup butter or mar1arine
113 cup honey
1, cup firmly packed brown
sugar
I te•1poon t'innamon
I egg. btaten
Chopped nuUneau
Hea t oven lO very slow 127$
degrees F".). Combine corn
me11I and l cup of the milk .
Htat rem111ining milk and s11lt
lo ece!din a:.
Quickly add corn nieill rTHll·
lure. stlrr\ns, quickly. Bring
to boil, 5tirring e<1nslantly.
Cover : cook O\'er lo\¥ M-nt
11bnut fl m i null'~.
Remo~·e frnn1 heat Adrl bul-
tt'r, hnney. IUjilr 11nt1 c111·
namon. Add a small amouol of
hot corn meal mixture. stir·
rlna quic kly. Pour inlo greas·
ed 111.z~I. casserole. · ~prinkle with t' h o p p ~ d
nulrneat.
Set casserole in baking pan; i::s from the Indians. ll's "'
smooth baked podding tradi
tionally made from milk, ~ molasses, spices and corn
------------------------,-------
~meal.
!_:~ In this adaptation. hone\'
::: and brown sugar replace thC
~ molasses. These flavor s, spic·
•:: ed with cinnamon. art a
::: delighlful combination with ...
i.: § ~Cabbages o"" •o• § ME MOIUAL DAY
~Double Up ......... .
'· ~! Don"t forget cabbage -11 Si can bt used in everything § from appetizers~ t hr o u g h
S aalads and entrees. § The linited State :; . ,, ~~!£~~;:~~d'~:~:~~~l\:':.i GROUND
I
LEAN
FRESH
BEEF
BONELESS
TAVERN
MOlMIL 1J OZ. ALL MIAT
WIENERS
l:XllA L!AN
IAR M
HICKORY SMOKED
39
LB.
GROUND ROUND
GtoutrlD CHUCK
HEN
TURKEYS
plact on oven raek. Pour hot
1v11ter into baking pan to
within I inch ol lop. Bake un·
oovued In preheated oven (275
degeees F.) about 3 houri.
Cool to lukewarm. Serve with
van llla Ice cream.
FRESH
DRESSED
GRADE "A"
:ti:: &ood supply now lhrough f\.1ay.
~~ USDA says there are three
:!:major varieties of cabbage:---::::=-------------------
~: smooth·leaved green cabbage, f::: crinkly·leaved Savoy cabbage,
~and red cabbage. All types are
;!;suitable for any use
'EEF PATTIES
89'1b.
59'1b.
fsA.-M-,-.-,-,-,,-,-,-,---------------~ EASTERN GRAIN
FED EASTERN
GRAIN FED
-;.:: Jn buying cabbage look for
~firm or hard heads that ire
~,heavy for their size . Oute r
~":leave!I should be a good green
;!:or red color. rrasonably Fresh.
·~and free lrom s eriou s ~;ble1nishes. .
:!: Store rabbage 1n I he PORK •:•refrigerator and use "·ithin a ~::\\·eek for the best flavor . Allow :::11: pounds of cabbage for 4 ~;servings .
::; CABBAGE J\1EAT LOAF ~= ~· I medium head cabbage
~' 11., pounds ground beef ~: 2 teaspoons sail
;-,; I \' -.,:. , l.easpoons pepper
~:: t t;, tablespoons c hop ped
::: onion
~=~ ~;~ ••• ~~~
;!:
~~ •• ·:: . :: ·.·
~1 cup flour
i., teaspoon celrry seed~
11 cup milk
2 t11blespoons chopped
parsley
2 eggs
I 8-ounce can ton1alo sauce
I table spoon sugar
1 ltaspoon Worceslersh1re
sauce
::; Cul cabbage 1n qi;;1rtcrs.
·:·removing core. Cover v.·ith
::: boiling waler and cook JO
::: minutes ; drain. t:ombine mral
.;: a n d rema ining ingredients
:•except tomato sauce, sugar. ~!and \\'orceslershire ~aure.
~ In a ~reasca 9 x 5 x 3-inch
~ loaf p11n. layer meat and
:. cabbage a11ern;itely beginning
} and ending \\'ilh m c 111 t •
:::Combine !om::itn s::iuce. sugar.
:: anrl Worcetlershire saucr an1I
:, pour over top. Bake al 375
•• <.egrees for I hour Serves 6---8. :-
. • ' ~ ~ ~. ·.· ::· :-: .-. ·:: ·: .•• ::;:
~ ~ .,.
=~· ~:; .;, ••• :-: ..... ~: •• .•. :=: ~ •• ::: "' ~:: ... •• •• ~;~
Jiffy Crochet
.. :. ;;: 7077
~: ~ tqAea'B~
" ~'. Please your fa vorite girl
::. \\'ith SllUg slippers.
Boneleu
Rolled
'ROAST
59'
BELL PEPPERS
T HIC~
MEATEO 39~LB.
STRAWBERRIES
EXTRA
FANCY
LOCAL 5~s1
AVOCADOS
RIPE 2~29~
POTATOES
U.S. No. 1 -RUSSETT
10c:r~0 49~
PEACHES
FIRST OF THE
SEASON
"SPRINGTIME" 39~ ·:· Gh·e her a \VAR.\I gift -
::;cmy slippers that co9t pennies
•!•10 make l Crochet of knilllng
:::\\"Orsled with gay rringe trim, :::sole~ of rug ya rn. P;i t1ern 7077 : 1,.. __________________ ...,,.
~:sizes S. M. L Included.
~~ F'lFTY CENTS for each pal· t! ltm -add 25 cents for each
~!pallem for Air ~1ail and
~Special Han.dling: otht'rwise
;--1.hird.clas.! delivery "·ill lake 1 FREE CAN
CARNATION SLENDER
UG. 25c 10 OZ:. CAN '
~: lhree week! or more. Send 101,11
$Alice ' Brooks lhe DAILY 'I
,. PILOT !OS Netdltcraft Dept , I
.:: Box 153, Old Chelse1 Stittion, I' I
:::New York. N.Y. 10011. Print [ ~;Name. Address, Zip. P11tern
:•Number. 11 ·::. NEW tt71 Ne t d I e er a f l WHh ihr, ,.llJI•" "(I ... 1"""U"" Jll"t"'••• r•q11I••~· l i"'il t ~·" ··c I I • In ~ Ill 1'1 I P~• (ClllPCI~ -o". ceup&~ PH t ullCl 'llt •. V1ulll 1 IJ1 r Su~ .• •• 11 a og -mor · M 30 i-fruh lons, kn its. croch cts.,il!1! •¥ '
$QUiil.i, embroidery. gtfts. 31, ----iOOD ONLT AT IA•GAINliiffi
free pattl!:ms. 50 cents.
' '
SLICED BOLOGNA S9'1b.
59' IAI M ALL MIAT
Wl£NERS 1 LI. 'II.Ci,
-----
l'EN l 9UILL ASSO RTED 3 6R $1
PORK
SPARERIBS
I DIPS -•:z_c"" .
LB. ~ Pampers 01:r.::!1~h~1:r.r• 89c
. DAYTIME, 15'1 ltt
I " NIWIOJtN, J0'1 . S1.Jt
Daytime ,.., . • 1.59
CHURCHILL
SCOTCH Fifrll ........ 16 l'l OOf
!SLANDER IMl'OltTID $419
I
"
SOP.T IMl'lllAL
MAlllAalHI I Lti. C•i.
VIRGIN ISLAND
RUM LIGHT 01 ....
SILVll rrsos
FULL
9UAltT
TEQUILA ••. ,, ..••..... P.lllTH
CIOWN IUSSl
............ 'I> GALLON $888
VODKA
HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS
PRELL SJ.1S AT OTHll STOllS
SHAMPOO '"""" SIZl-16 •L . , ..... .
SCOP.E SI.ti AT OTHllt STOllS
MOUTHWASH
SUPER SIZE ~.~'g:~... . .. .. 99¢
--l~it·}~ ~~li·I·l·FW
Sl'llN•P.llLD -6 ••· ,ai.1
LEMONADE ................. .
fO•lMOST l'llMIUM
ICE CREAM
.... 43c
•;, GAL.
IOUNO CTN ...
NAllSC0-1 L•. C•ll• 45
P.I• NIWTOHS ••••• , •.•..• •••· 4t, (
Prices Effective:
Thursday thru Sunday
May 27, 28, 29, 30 DORITOS
TORTILLA
CHIPS JtlO. ltt
IAOS
· GIANT SIZE
IVORY LIQUID
DETERGENT ~
Pr1ctt subjKt ?o stock oR hulll.
WE GLADLY ACCEPT
U.S.D.A. FOOD COUPONS
•
2Z FLUID OZ. C ~
GIANT SIZE 49 WE GIYE WE GIYE
ILUI CHIP
STAMPS
SUNSHINE HTDlOI'
COOICllS-R ... 6tc
iooo ONLY At IAl GAIN AS•n
.,.. 69 ,, 01. J., c
111 11 •• 59 .. c.n. ,.,. •
ILUI CHIP
STAMPS
COSTA MESA
PlACENTIA
19th and Placentia
710 W. Chapman
•• WITH THIS COUPON
YOID AFTH SUND AT. MAT 30th
NO MINIMU M JIURCH,.Sf-NO MAXIMUM JIUllCHASl
ONE Ol DIR ONl Y ANY AMOUNT
YOU CHOOSE ro I UY
OODON L~ A l~RG IN IASii'r
I
t
r
_ 0 DAIL 't PILOl Wtdrte~IY, May 26, 1971 Wtdnt5dat, M1.y 26, 1971 s
Lloyd Nolans Discover Joys . of Au _strian Cooking
•··au•• It can •· ma••· a••ad freshly grou nd rv>nper , lo Af'TERTHOUGHTS: Celery •,{& cup minced yellow onion cheese. 2• tablespoons but· •y JOHNA BLIJ\"N play "Russian f'Otlielte '' vl'ith lie\; "" uic ,,,. "y" 1 It ~per 10 taste)
p ' lhe menu one day at lunch. "I and a celery root tialad they taste root, popular in Euro pe as a small 1reen pepper, sliced tr, sa 'r ·r '
WESTWOOD. Calif. pointed at something and said , were fascinated with in the J/3 cup beer stock, optional w 1 n t er vegetable (braised , 2 ri pe tomatoes, peeled, Grease baking dish; Com·
··Cooking ••presses Ute art C>f 'I'll take th• ·-nd -abo••e gasthause• ·or Germany. They . · led •• chopped bine all the ingredients in .-...... .....~ Thmly sllced pick ucels casse roled, etc.), deserves to I t wint • CO"nlry. for Instance, 1 was • 1 d the 1 f l'· l (f dro cassero e, excep gravy, tha t. rew mos o ivw : (cut with serrated edge) be seen more in the U.S. The 1hi nt of gar ic ew ps ( l J 1 ) d bread V.ry Ple ... nuy surprised by ·r 1 ·ft·" hlck il ~-·ed garllc) or emon u ce an beauti u gr• l;\I c en -LLOYD NO' •N•S \\'··• ~1 celery root· cul cooked , then chilled JU. lienne .--bs) •1· II l"e quality or the Germ an d r 1 I f t h t ~ ~" ,.-~ ' 1,1 "''f'OOl1 salt crum " ix we . " was "'on er u · orge w 8 GASTllAUS SALAD into thin strips. Cover with strlps make an excellent 'hors I 1 ·t rood." the esteemed stage. and i·ou had. but ii wa s something d C k d' oeu"re coaled wi"lh a •,' "•spoon paprika Dilute gravy or w 11 e LI d C I I boiling saltc waler. oo un· ~ :1 ) "lh · I lemon motion picture actor o~· you liked," Mell said. e ery roo : Iii barely Lender (about • mustaro.navored mayonnaise freshly ground pepper, lo sauce \l'l wine or
Nolan said, report ing on his ··~Ve had'trout until ii came 1 1~ pC>Unds knob celery minutes. drain ; cool. dressing, served with hard taste juJce); season with additiC>n~I
chitf avocation these days. out our ears." Lloyd said. boiling sailed water Combine. oil, vinegar, salt, cooked ea:gs, a:amishe<I with about I cup left-Qver lamb salt and pepper, lo taste. Mix
traveling abroad. "Never have I seen such 3 tablespoons olive oil pepper and stock; mix well, fresh parsley or dlU. grevy (or white sauce gravy with ingredienl3 in
He h•d 1·usl retu rned from a l ho 1 thickened with arrowroot) casserole. Top with butlered beautiful fish." They also s tablespoons white vint0 ar pour over celery in g ass W · MELL'S LA'1B bs B k · heated 315 three week junket to Germany savored Germany's venison (or ·~ water, 1,, Je~on Chi ll I hour. Drain celery . 11 • .about 1/3 cup white wille (or crum · a e 111 pre
and Austria wilh his favorite and tbt ubiquitous bratwurst. Serve on glass plate with EGGPLANT BAKE 'k lemon squeezed) degrees F. O\'en -45 minutes
lra\Peling companion and \\'i(t . Recipes lrom the traveling l\1~~~~~ fresh parsley , op-beels. Garnish with parsley. 21,J cups coo ked, cubed lamb buttered crumbs: (made (or until eggplant is done). TRAVEL BUFF
r.1ell. "We deliberately ate in Nolans includes a lamb dish lional ' Servi' wilh roast pork or small eggplant, cul in l·inch witfl I CtlP bread crumbs, Serve alone or wit h rice and a Acto r Lloyd Nolin
beer halls, even the small _lh~at~sh~e_f~a".'vo'.'r~s ~f'.'or~a ~bu~ff::'etl__l_l .!'"!IJ•~spoo><ICl'.n'..''.''iltlt_: ___ _:sc~hni'.'·~1z~el:.:. ~Se'.'r~v''.:''..:''.:.·.:.· -----!-'~""'~'-_______ .:_I:< ..:'"::"..p~gr':•::t:ed:.._:P.::arm:::::•::•.::••:._.::cn:::·sp'."...gr~"::":...::"1::.•:.:d::. . .:.Se_r_•'-"-'-· -----'----gasthaus (small neighborhocd
restaurants}o and their food is
beaulifully prepared. I ex·
pectl'd 1 lot or f a r t y
substa~s, but, no, the sauce£
had very little grease in
them."
The silver·hairt<I No I a n
decided some timt: ago to
spend more lime living and
l ess ti me w o rk.iri g .
"Fortunately. we could afford
I!. Nol only had I earned good
money as an actor (since tl~
30's), but helter money as an
invi:st.or. Several real estate
bilVS I made v.·hen I wa~
)'oUnger paid ofr v e r y
handsomely . So we've been
!raveling quite a bit."
"Traveling has come clo:se
to· being a vocation with us,
rather than a vacation," TV's
Dr. Chegley said. (lncider.·
tally, he was persuaded lo
retu rn to television by
"Julia's" creator.producer.
!!al Kantor. The bait y,•as a
s u r e f i rt.. ir r es istible
rharact er: the crusty. growl·
ing Dr. Cheg!ty, who conceals
beneath his bear-like exterior
a sentimental heart of pure
gold I
From then on. the Nolans
became true tourists. even
recording the in d e l ib le
memories on film, which
l.loyd then delights in editing.
.. It's always thrlll ing to get
home and see \\•hat you've.11ot.
10 smooth it out, cut and edit
i1." ht said .
The actor's inability to
"spi-echen the Deutsch" added
some comic moments to
mealtime on the most recent
lour. "A Czech friend, \\'ho'd
spenl a good deal of time in
Salzburg, told us all the menus
11·ould be repeated in EngliSh .
This is completely false!
Usually. the waiters ga ve us
excellent ad v ict , but
nevertheless. v.·e still chose
some pretty stran ge dishes."
!\'Jell said she suggested they
Mincemeat
Sweetened
Good se rved \\'Jlh \·anitla ice
crtam.
S"'EE:T 1\llNCE PIE
1 ~ cup buttl'r or ma rgarine
2/3 cup sugar
I table spoon cornstarch
1 ·: teaspoo n salt
1/3 cup molasses
2 eggll
2 cup:" ready-10-usc mince:·
meat
'~ cup raisins
1 i: tup coarsely chopped
pecans
1 ta blespoons grat ed orauge
rind
Pastry for a 2-crusl (lattice
top) 9·1nch pit plate
Tn a medium bowl cream
but ler. sugar. cornstarch and
sa\\: beat in mola s s e s :
thoroughly beat in eggs. one at
11 time. Stir in mincemeat,
raisins. pecans and orange
rind.
Lint 9-inch pie plate with
half of pastry . Add mincemeat
rilling. Use remaining pa stry
10 cover \\'i\h latti ce top. Bake
In a preheated 4t)(k:legree O\'en
until filling is firm and cnisl
browned -about 40 minutes.
Walnuts
Blended
In Salad
The toasted walnuts give
lhi!> salad unique fl avor.
Pll YLL'S CHICKEN
SALAD
2 cup~ diced cooked chicken
fwhile mtal onl y)
2 3 cup coa~ly chopped
toasted \\•alnuts
1, cup finely diced etlcry
'~ cup mayonnaiK
I teaspoon lemon 1uict
t teaspoons Woret:stershire
sauce
Romaine
P.Ux toge thrr 1he c.h1cl:en .
y,·slnuts and celery. ln a cup
thoroughly mix together th~
mayonnaise. len1011 juice and
\Vorce!1ershlre . mi.: wf I h
chicken mixture.
Serve Ol1 roma.int Make:! -4
11ervln11s.
there's R
than jtist low prices .. ~
Fint--of·the-1ea1on Chinook Salmon. This delicacy i11
thipped from the cold water• of the North P ttcific
directly to Ralphs in only a matter of houra
(that'• fresh). You and your family can feast
on fre1h 1alnlon tonight and the best part
about it js that it'1 the lowest price in town.
All 510R~) CLOSED MONDAY MAY 31~1
.n hono1 ol MEMOR!Al DAY
EVERYDAY LOW PR/Ct:S EVERYDAY LOW PRODUCE PRICES
IUU'HS OWN Vine 8'eaed
BY THE
PIECE
Award Winning Bakery
H1
AM°su·1rGER 29 MedilmSize
TOMATOES .25
Finest Quality
BUNS "•·•" •
ll:cilph1 CinMimon 35
ROLLS "•·•" •
lb.•
~~~le ~resh CALIFORNIA FRYERS WHOLE
210 2111 lbs. lb.29 .09 BANANAS ll:olph1 Old fo1hion•d 39 RYE BREAD 1.lb .1 .... 1 .. 1 .
ll:11 lph1 69 APPLE PIE 1;, .•
liVlilll'D.4 1' LOW PltlC/iS
lb .99
lb .98
BEE°F STEAKS " .79
TOP0
RO.UND STEAKS lb.1.19
cuB'E"sTEAKS lb. 1.29
ROT.ISSERlE ROASTS lb 1.39
Meo! Mci1I•• 9,,f
ROUND STEAK
lon•l•ti B,,f
BRAISING STRIPS
Br•oded-Froten
VEAL STEAKS
ll:o,1mp -With Cookifl9 Goo,19•
BONELESS ROAST
lb .• 97
lb 1.19
CLOSE OUT SPECIALS
Wlillf 1HEY l AST
DECci'RATED BOTILES •• ,, 1.88
"'••flty-with CaU .. 1.u, d•••t~• -1~ "''~i·M•• pleO!ic loag I S·o•
GLASS TUMBLERS
w.~."w....i
SALAD BOWLS ...
....... 1.77
.39 "'' .99
, , ,,,11, lh• '·"'"!.:'I'''" ,t ""lo'""
Frozen Food
f,.,h P•<•Ct•<td•"
PEAS
'-••II P•cl Ct•od• A Ch•pP•d
BROCCOLI
lt•llo1t"•
EGG ROLLS
lt•lt•o f•.,•p! Clo'"' C1>o .. do•I
SOUPS
K.lt••
CLAM CHOWDER
1 .. o19.r.«1 ••~•·..,·••·
BREAD
MoM•
HONEY BUN S
'"'' ty. COOL WHIP
)O •• t •'•·
10, •• "''
.33
.19
•~, el 1 l ,59
! •.•• ··~
•... "''
.53
. 59
.21
. 29
.57
E~t:ll YDA Y LOW PRICES
lb .89 Eouern·Groin Fed Porto:
PORK CHOPS
lb .• 43 Whol• er Holf
SLAB BACON
Reody to Brown·Li"k'
JONES SAUSAGE ..... 78 pkg. •
ll:c:i l~1 -With Cookinljl Gc:iuge
FRESH HEN TURKEYS lb .49
Fc:inM r John
SLICED BACON I lb. pkg .• 55
fonl'letJohn
LINK SAUSAGE
Armour-Bon•I•••
NUGGET HAMS
f•••h Ch.inook
SALMON STEAKS
., " ,: •. 28
lb 1.49
lb. 1.29
COOK OUT SPECIALS
'••"' . PICNIC CHESTS
r> .... c ... -S.01,
REFILLS
· Ralphs CBlll'lllll Ice Cream
lOOt .• 88
.69
' ·····' .69
Pantry Fillers
01 ..... (~ """"''"') RELISHES
1.1..,. C•<tck••
BROWNIE MIX
p,11,1. • .,. l•rtt
CAKE MIXES
llillob • ..,.
FROSTING MIXES
1tll h110fl lntt•M
POTAtQES
lt•oltG,.p•
JELLY
11' ... , j ... 29
11•, . ., .. ~ ••
.49
.35
I• 3·••· ,~ .• 39
..... ;.. .25
DELICATESSEN DEPARTMENT
RALPHSSALADS "·" "P .35
Rolph1 Sliced-41ft•4Yt
COOKED HAM •·oi. pkg .• 55
RALPHS SLICED
LUNCHEON MEATS .38 IS Vori•li•1) A/I Meo1 lolo9no.
All •••f lologl'lo, Cott• Solomi,
Oliv• loof, Pickl• I. Pimento L-f
6--ei . pltg.
1.1 •. ,i., .• 58 ll:olph1 Alt M•ol
FRANKS
'"'b .93 Ro lpht Wi1con1in lenghorn
CHEESE
13·01.ttick 1.49 Gollo
SALAME
DAIRY DEPARTMENT
F0RP,lro0R1'Ni<s '";' ''"'' i;.,.,_ .25
SOUR CREAM ""' .49
llllphsPotatoe
Chips ' 12 .... b., .49
Health & Beauty Aids
HA1R'"SP'RAY"· Jv,. .. H.td·l •·H•:"7 .. 1,, • ., 1.88
•~1 of 36 .59
•.• , t•~· .87
11 ........ 87 ,.._ ....
SKIN CREAM •·•I '"" .85
• LISTERINE ,.H ....... 1.05
C111p Green 2 '" .29 CUCUMBERS
Mild, Sweet, Brown 2 f., .19 ONIONS
Swe•I Gold•n 3 '" .29 CORN ON THE COB
f r•1h lt•d 2 '" .19 RADISHES
Gre•n 2 '" .19 ONIONS
f i,,..t O\io1i~ -,\111. Flovor~
r. .• 39 BULK CANDY
LIQUOR DEPARTMENT
for J ufl• Wedding •
Chot•oit P•tilt Chompog"~
lt•go,1Jc:ir -Pink
COLD DUCK
N•w ot Ro lph1-Gold•n p,,,,,.11f'l'l -
C11b•1t1•f So11vignon: Pi not No ir;
,,.h 1.89
Chordonnoy-From The Sonorno Voll er 2 49 WINES ,,,,h •
GiN'~r VODKA o,.. 3.89 BOURB06N°1···.,;·h• o,.. 4.69
Early California Pitted '
Ripe Olives ... '", .33
(f11;tro La rg•& Gia11tl
Household Need s
~.l..,olo .. l•Q"Od -1 ... 1.~., 1 ~< 011 l eb.I
DETERGENT n ., ....,,, .65 Tod•
DETERGENT .. ., ,,, 1.20 S•o P.,f
RINSE ., ,., .,.,,. .59
C11K•d• 0 .. 11 ........ -'"''~a .. I;, Ott \olt•I e~T~~~~~J .... , "·· .... 56
DETERGENT
klM O\o• ....,iqwo
TOILET TISSUE
....... ~ .. n
·~, .... 30 1u ...... '"""tt•• ,,., ,,, .41 EFFERDENT ,., .. ,. .56 PAPER TOWELS
H•tlo ""'-d•n Swp•., 1.,ulf'f 1..,,1.
w. ... 1 .....
BROWN SUGAR ..... 38
COFFEE '" ... 2.22 SANITARY NAPKINS ,.., .,,. .83 FACIAL TISSUE ••• .. r 111 .25
No everyday supermarket prices are lower prices than fl!#!>
f1011r1 food Ponfry f11/e,1
1, •• ,,,,,G •"'t"••••• .19 SPI NACH ') .. "'' ... , ... .35 .t.PPl l PIE '. ,. .. , .. .79 POUND CAK E ! ., ••• ....... .19 MEAT PlfS ...... ....... .23 GRAP( JUIC( ... ...
(.>.o "" .47 TATI" TOTS 1 .....
~Vt>
Price Pledge
........ 1 ...... ~
BABY FOOD G""""' l•••" ~~!~! .. ~D
COFFff w_, •·••••• SAUCf w ....
COFrfE "" COFFI E
We Pledg• .. no everydly
1uperm1rkt l pric11 •r• low9r ptical
thin Allpht: on iMntlctl br•ndl
Of idenlicel product qlllf!iy.
...... , ..• 09
.......... 13
... 1 .. 1.09
, ...... 84
'" ... 1.67
Ponfry Fille11 H•olth i leovty A,d, ~ ..... 1 .... ... i..""'1.34 '"M'"'' \•••··· .. ••· ,J 8 COPPfATONl OINNfR S . '"' , .. ........ °''" c .....
, __ "'
·~ ... -1.34 SANDWICHES 'l·•• "' .49 COPPfRTONE .... ,. (,. ....... ,_,.,., • ....... 1.61 DRINKS +1 ....... .10 SPRAY l•-11••• .29 (loo,,..J 71 BAKE D I EANS ' •... '"' VANISHING FORMULA •s. .. ..._ • ORt~iNG '" h ..... 39 ·~· • ............ 72 JIXODENT , ........ , .... c .... .... '"' .37 , .....
».ou .. ~,, 1.16 TUNA MOUTHWA SH
More than just low prices . .
Hou11hold N.,,J, Ho111ehold N1 edJ "'" '···· .... ~, ........ DETERGENT J1 00 \,oMjo ,83 P.4.Pf R PLATES ,..,.•10. .98 "" c ........ , ........ ' .. OfTfRGfNT .. " •'• .83 COLO CUPS .77 -....... ... ...... , ........ •It .; IN
IAR SOAP .. ...... .07 LJGHTflt ·-~ .45 DlT11tGINT .39 (0-.1 •e., ,~, CLEANSER , .... ·-.26 . .. , ... <•-· •·•·"" TRASH IA.GS "• .... .69 CL fANElt
io ., -· .66 ""'""'' .99 •···· FL.ASH CUBES "' ol I DETERGENT ··-... .75
RALPHS STORE IS LOCATED AT 9901 ADAMS BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH, Store Hrs: 9-10 Do ily 9 am-9 pm Sun.
. ..
• .
r
,
Cooks Tell Their
DEAR NAN : U. one of your parts of Mex.lco. especially
colum.n.1 you me1t1oaed "Luy Sonora. wheat nour tort illas
Day Stew." I llave uother are popular. There ia a gen·
version given to me by a uine masa flour °" the
friend and Ii'• gre1t. The market and while you won't
blalc rec::lpe 11 the 11me as find it at aH or d l n a r v
youn e1«pt tbat I uae a lll'lt groctries, you are bound to ait
heavy r011W.r with lkl lnsle1d over the Southwest or where
of the foll top, and a large can there is a M e x I c a n
LETS ASK
THE COOIG
( by
Nan Wllty
of wbole tomatoe1 ID1te1d
tomato 1auct.
INan 's Nott: Tht 1tew I
gave called fot 2 J)OU[ld1 r1w
beef cubes arranged single
]aver -do not brown the
meal first -chunkl'I of car·
rots. potatoes, onions and
celery to sui l, an 8-0unc:e can
of tomato sauce plu5 1 can of
water and I teaspoon sugar.
<Pour over tht meat , etc:.
Sal! and pepper lo taste. 1,ast.
scattr.r 2 teaspoons quick-cook
tapioca on top . Se al with foll,
place in a 325 oven for tw1> to
lhrce hours . Then yoor whole
l'linner is ready. Beck to our
contributor.I
I sr.t my fl \•f'n 111 WO. ltt the
11ew rook all day. Elgbl bnur1
I~ br~t but HI houri dotrn't
make a y,·hol e lot of dif-
ference. On day1 you mui.~ be
gone all day this 11 a bapdy
dish. 1 have trted muy tn-
novatlons fnr a flavor chan1e.
Substltutt 1uccblnl 1qu11b
and crooked rteck !qUlsb for
the other vegetables, add
y,•holt fresh mushrooms. U1e a
pack1gtd dry anion soup mi~
11od ! cup1 of water ln1lt11d of
the tomatoe1.
neighborhood or at topnotch
gourmet shops everywhere.
YOO can foUow package
directions but 11. recipe I pick·
td up in San Antonio is tasliE'r.
F'or "tortillas de mai1" use 2
cups o! this Mas;i Harina, lh
teaspoons ~alt, I tablespQOn
melted shortening and 7"1.
fully cooked
fUlL SHANK
HAlf
Fresh Hen Turkeys
0" llHtll 110.\llA 49 ..
Secret of
t'Ups boiling water stirred ln
wiUJ a spoon or ml1er al
mtdlum speed to make a sUff
dough. " Tbtn tht rt 11 •·tortilla de
barina " made with :t cups
while flour, 1 le11poon salt. 1
tablespoon 1borlenfng and 1,
cup water. Knead tlU springy.
Butterball Turkeys . . 59· ...
HJO R!l iAll\1 ~ ~!
You can add 1 teaspoon blk·
tac powder '° U11t If you llke
but tbe tortillas •<M't 1tretcb,
will be 1m1Jler. Divide either
dou1h Into 1% balls. Shaping ts
t11it!t with a hln,.;td tortU1n
press but es:perts 1055 the
balh: back and forth betwttn
the palm1. A popular way Is to
W!dl'ltsday, M.ty 26. 11)71 DAILY PILOT If!
Being
shape the balls wltb llahUy oU-
td band1, prtu U.tm belWffn
wet muslin. wared paper or
plastic wrap 11 thin 111
posslblt, using a dlnntr plate
if you likt..
Cook on a \'try 1t1hlly
~rt11ed grlddlt, just mtdlum
bot, until golden brown In
auuc PACK. fRESH
3 llS. OR MO!tf
Lazy
1pols, luming only Qnrt. A rt·
cent USDA rttipt' f'AllS for
corn noo.r t which I could nat
find at n ela hborhood
irf)(eries) or t'Xtra rlne corn
meal -nol rt11ulu r -u~s an
f nllrtly different techniq11e
but ha s no shor1enlng lor bak-
ing powder I ~o I doubt It
y,·ould please you.
A 1tood way to frt1bt.,.
tortil las ror rt heath1.1 11 I• mn
your d•mpe.ned band1 over
lhtm before warmlna le
una re 11std 1kHltl or In an overt
or you c:an a:ivP. thtm a brlrf
sttamlnjt bul you rt1k geldD.J
lhem 50JlJ::Y·
WIU N
CLOSED
Memorial Day
Mo., May 3111
SIOP l.llLf 111 llYI
111111111111111111
MIMORlAL DAY
VARIETY SLIM PRICES
~J'd' $277 \~U.S. FLAG
~ : .. ,._J; :~.i>'t?~"'
• J/~.
Colorful Playballs
! ' ' . s.~-.. .
·1···.,· ~,._ .[r.' ~-·'.',
... ,1,., ........ . ..... ··~ ...................... :ti's
1.,tf,.10 Cool w>.;,. ....,..., '"' ................... ,,,..
.... llc
Ust wbolt China pe11 with
lht ba1lc rec:lpt. Whole fresh
creen be1n1 art al10 food . My
very laiie1t way Is to use ,
frozen stew ve3ttlbles ln1te1d
of fresh ooe1. Vou can be
gone the whole time , dash Jn
the bou1e, like stew fmm
oven, ral1e the he1l lo bike
refrigerator bl1cultJ that ha ve
been dipped In melted butler
and car•••)' aeeds ind your
famlly •Ill be aurt you've
slaved lo the kilc:htn all day.
EDNA VA N OEVENTER, . . SLICED BACON I LINK SAUSAGE
fAllMER: JOHN
l·LB. PKG ••••
GROUND BEEF
55c CHUCK STEAK
29c FAMILY STEAK
U.5.D..&. CHO!Cf
BLAOE CUT
POMONA
I had suggested the foil top-
ping for the pan because ~me
lids aren't very cl~ fHUng.
\Vith very little more trouble
you could !'.e[Ve Cheesy garlic
bread !dices. These are really
wmething ~ A lot mort buttery
than using the v.·hnle~oaf
technique.
Cul 8 th ick slices .!i0Urd0t1gti
or f rench bread. slowly melt 1
1!ick butter ! 1 ~ pound) in a
shallow pan. Mix 21:1 cup
Parmesan or simll ar chee!!r., 2
tablespoons sesame seed~. 2
tablesponns grated American
ch~ese !pnwdered type! and 1
tablespoon poppy seed . Set
;iside In melted butter mix I
tablespoon garlic juice. Dip
bread slices on just one side.
Do not .~aturate. Plare on
shallow cookie pan . sprinkle
evenly with cheese mixturP. on
buttered side. Toast under the
broiler but watch close!~·. It
doesn·t lake tong . Serve wr;ip.
ped in a napkin in a bread
ba~ket.
OEAR NAN: When I w11~ 11
kid In ~outh Texas we had a
~texican maid who grl\lcd
1ortlllas for our family u1in1[
nour. 1bortenlng, b • k In I
powder, salt and water. Tbty
were fant11dc with butter fnr
breakfast or "'·rapped around
• hot dog (or lunch or flllr-d
with browned hamburger,
mashed be•nR and cheese fflr
supper. They make an excellent
~ubslltule fnr breAd. I ca n buy
them at store~ but they are
nutrageously erpenst\'I! and
orten state . Can ynu help? ~IRS. BILL WI LS 0 N •
OVERLAND PARK . KANSAS
Your cook probably used
real •·mas11 .. made from l)e
treated corn although in some
Simplicity
'Appearant
,
for a f1:r.vorfll'I treat , serve
deli cious fresh D'Anjou. Bose
or Cornice pears baked in a
tas1y red wine sauce. ~ .
Cort 4 rirm pears. be1ng
careful not ln picrc,. them
through to the b<lllom. Peel
lops half way do"''"· leaving
the rest or tht skin inlacl.
Put the pears In a deep bak·
lng dish.
Fill tht cenlrr of eech ptar
with sugar and grated nu1mtg.
Add i whole tlovts. 1 amall
itic.k of cinnamon, 2 cups red
wlne. and trdlb w1ti:r to h1lf
cover lht ptlfl.
Add YI e11p qar, coalinl
the tops of lhe pears 1enerous·
ly. Bike in 1 mocltraltly hot
; • ., m d"'"'· !or 311 to <!I 10111 mlnu
0
tes or unt il the pe~rs 3rt
tender. Otl lci(KI! .served hot or 34081
f'old .
--
' '
OTATO
CHIPS :~
PORK&
fARMfR JOHN
SKINLESS. a.oz. PKG ••••
LOWlll TM61 DISCtlUlrlT PRICE PLUS ILIJl CHIP STtMPS\
MOTHER'S
PRIDE
BEVERAGES
(<>0r, Pe1.,.,i.;"a
Anod..I ,).,.,.,,. ~
Adams Ave., at Brookhurst, Huntington Beach
Doheny Park Drive, Capistrano Beath
U.S.O.A. CHOICE
AONELESS
The Un-Polluter . .''. '' . 75'
Dog Food " "' ' . 29' " ... Funny Fa<e Drinks . -. 5' '" ~ . .
5922 Edinger Ave., at Springdale, Huntington Beach
Laguna Hills Plaza, El Toro
•
... ...._.,. .... !.ol. ,, •• --(-·"""' .... -°""'-•' "-"' '*•··-°'-''"" ,_,,
o.s.1, DESSERT39c
1;;, w .. 11 DISH ~
Wir~ fa<~ Jl '~"""" 0..11 ....,
lilAft lllNC ACCESSO•Y r1ECES 011 SALE TllROUGllDUT TlllS PRO,RIM! ~---· :1·.· 1 ....... ".," 11 11 ll''tl•"" . ,. . I• II ,.,~,.,. ...... 11tt
( Jttlof ~ .......... Jll 1r t"''b" . l " 1Ct1o>l tool1 ..... ltt
J )\\"$olOI PltlOI "' lM f 'l•l•1•11> lowl ,. ~ .. ...i .......... Jll
1,.. hol/1111 ....... I.ti • '" t"'" hl .. •• '°'"'"" ........ •• ~ ..... " ..... ,.. I ti 1 .. , •• •• loll" tu• ..... 1• ~~ •• .., ... ! . l •1 • c ...... "' ,,,,., , . ic .. 11o .... .,, "'
PITTED OLIVES ~AN fE~i'lANOO
NJ:Oll/M 300 CAN,,.
PAPER PLATES ,.:~~·.:~'"· 68c
WILSHIRE PICKLES -~~~~;;~i~ 69c
HEINZ B·B-0 SAUCE ,~~·;~~ 38c
INSTANT NESTEA ,~;.~'-79'
21082 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach
17950 Magnolia, Fountain Valley
(
I
I
I
-I • .,
OAI\. Y PJLOT
Scarf It
9356
lOY,-221-S
. Fee.ling fresh, free and going
Places -that's you in this
lithe skimmer with a contrast
bCarl secured' by a neat lab.
Printed Pattern 9356: NE\\'
llalf Sizes 10-n, 12\~, 14 '.2,
161':. 18'"2, 2Q lh. 22\2. Size 14 1~
(bust 37) takes 3 yds. 39-in., 11
yd. 39-in. contrast.
SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS for
each paUern -add 25 cents
for each pattern for Air Mail
and Special Handling :
other"'ise thi rd-class delivery
v.·ill take three weeks or more.
Send to ~1arian Martin, the
DAILY PILOT. 442 Pattern
Dept .. 232 West 18th St .. Ney.·
York. N.Y. 10011 Print NAAIE.
ADOREs.s with ZIP, SIZE and
STYLE NUMBER.
Sw ing into Spring~ New,
New Pattern Catalog has
sepa rates, jumpsuits. slim·
ming shapes, free pattern
coupon. 50 cer,ts.
INSTANT SEWING BOOK
.sew today, wear tomorrow . $1.
INST ANT F ASHJON BOOK
-Hundreds of fashion facts .
SJ.
Veal Meal
Adds Zest,
Trims Fat
Veal is for real in this zesty
dish offered by \Ve i g ht
\\latchers. lVho suggest a
caulifloWer-orange salad lo
complement it.
VEAL PROVENCAL
8 ounces sliced veal
Salt, pepper
2 ounces sliced tomatoes
crarlic powder
Oregano
Pound ve;il until I hi n .
Season with sat! and pepper ,
then broil until veal is slighlly
cooked. Remo\"? from broiler.
Place tomato slices orf meat
and season with ~alt and pep·
per, garlic pmvder and
oregano. Remember to arld 2
ounces of a No. 4 vegetable lo
make lhis compli;i\e \lleight
\\latcher meal. Return to
broiler to co mplete cooking
the \'eal. f\1akes one serving.
CA ULlFLO\\IER·
ORANGE SALAD
1 medium cauliflower
2 oranges
I tablespoon onion flakes
Pimiento dressing
Cut ca ulirlower in1o
quarters: shred finely , Peel
and section oranges '"'Ork
abo\'e shredded caulifloll·er to
catch juicel.
Cut each orange section in
hair. Add oranRes and onion
rlakes tn caulino\\·er: toss
lightly. Servr "'ilh pimiento
dressing . f\lakes four servings .
Engineers
Take Note
Y.'ASHINGTOi\ (UPI) -
The U.S. Department 11 r
Agri cult ure i~ inte re s1ed in
'·engineered !oods"' for school
lunches. These were described
as foods that improve nutri·
tiona l value. reduce cost. are
convenient and i1nprove ac·
ceptabillty or stability. "Forti·
fying or enriching \l"ldely used
foods would be considered the
preferable type of enginee.r·
ing." said Food and Nutrition
Service Administrator Ed\\'ard
J. Hekman.
Easy Peel
Drop ora ngu and grapefruit
inlo boil.in& water for a fe\\'
minutes before remo11i P1g the
tkln. ~ ~Uni i.!I ea.!ller. ;
" '. .· .. .. ~ ...
.
SWEET LUSCIOUS.
STRAWBERRIES
• •
BASKETS
FOR
TU1At OISCOUHf S
[V"lRY OAT
00
SOME ALPHA Ir! A STOllFS QISCOUNI
CllMG[ N IC(
1.o9' 791
D~~~. RlGHT"0GU0ARD1
•
4-0l:D9'71 c
AU. l>H.W&
Cover Girl Supersheer
LIQUID MAKE·UP ~ 1 '°
COVER ClllL • AU. ~KADCS LIQUID MAICE·UP 1...W 140
Ml DIUM OR HA~D ~DR.WEST ~TOOTHBRUSH
l Vr.RYnAY LOW l'RICC
9·1NCH DL.AMLi[R
PLAY BALLS ind
SPORT BALLS
_6SC 251
J4C 661
FRESH • JUICY• SPRINGTIME
PEACHES
ll]lJ1 !)1',f Jll hl'
lvlRr UAr
@ ii'ucoa """'"'"' .3Gt 301
~ !!O;OUNCE PACUOE • CRJC<EH 8 l ( ~ S"AKE II BAKE _sst
@ liA'Rs'ii'r.iil.'£ows 3l'f 251
@ it~it'C~~;ek'""49t 41 1
@ $p.c;'Fo':d sil~ii7~ 51 1
• l!>-07.. J>KG. ntAMY l'UDGi: OR VANll.1.A @ 1'11..L'iBURY
• 14.QZ l'KC STIIAW8tRRY 3ac
r-FROSTINGS 43(
@ ::.MUCl [R'S • 12-0'l JARS • 11tm'l'.RSCOTCH • l'!Nt:Al'PL.£ • ClfOC, fUDGC •CARAMEL
ICE CREAll
= --1 TOPPlllG 39C 301
sn\AWWIRY OR SW/~ CHoC. J?! 32': -------------------
2·0UliC. TU!~
COPPERTOllE
SUNTAll OIL
OR LOTION 1)1' 791
..
GARDEN FRESH • RED
RADISHES or
GREEN 1 ONIONS
c
bunch
BELL PEPPERS
··~
IS·OU!tC£ CA.N
SOM£ AU'ti l(TA
STOltf:S Ol3COtJffT '"""'r n1u
Jfc 271
~t 161
]..lt 91
~ lk
.ief 171
l·l.E' CAN • REGULA! OR t:U:CTRA-PE:Rt MAXWELL
HOUSE
COFFEE 86c 791
:1 LB. CAN • REGU LAR
OR l:U:CTRA·PERK :_,Jit 2.lt
~ OUNC[ !AR ~MAXWELL HOUSE ~ lllSTANT COFFEE 1.21' 1 os
10.o utict JAR 1)19 ut
@5j:il'E'Eil41L'($"''69C· 59c
@cilEE°si'PilFFS ~ 291
@pof.'c'/llil"""""""15C 291
'
. .
RED RIPE . •·WHOLE
WATERMELON ..
c , ..
CAJfTAlOU'E
FLAVO~FUL
•
C: •Ii: ' 1-, ... ~ ..
t~ GRA!fJl..ATl:O C&H SUGAR
'L!.•UGF.!ORDA!r.!AOW!I l·l.B. •POWDERED
SOM£ ALHl.l l£T.t
SIOl£S IJSCOU~f
t lll"t tl!IC(
Vt 67' "" ... Jk lie
@ iiiWA1ii'N'liu NcH zsc 21' l~A!I 9C ~
r:::.D:::\ BJR!>SEY£ • 'l-O'Z. CA.J"'lf • rROU:ll 31 ' ~AWAKE 4lt
~ IO-O'Z. TUB • FRO'Ztli ~ REODl·WIP 63t 451
fi.l'r"f l?lliri'' lCEM ILK ''°VAL 391
DA TT!Mf! • 3J.CduMT' PAMPERS
OVWIN1GKT • IS.OOUNf NEWBORN • 30-COUNT
@wllo'Li"co'Rrl'"
1,&9' J4f
~ ii;.
25C 20'
@ !5-04. CANS • l l:EFARONfOR
Sl'A.GHrnl & MijATllAUS 35' -Chef BOJ•lr·Dlt 38t
~ IS-OIJNct CAN J 6C ~Ranch Style Beans~
:SWANSON'S • S.OUHCE CAH (,.. ~80NEDTURnrO' 45' ~·BOIED CHICKEN 49C ·
i:ur.Rir'E WAX PAPER ;nf 28'
• •
' .. . . .. . . ' . . . . .. ~· .
--~'~,
'ud. tJ«t=°98' STOCKS dozen
6-INCH PCT , 9"4i. 6't
· A.Ui.s 2'1 POMPoNs98' I ,..,. I LEMON UAF AND FlDR:AL PAPER ..... 7~• WITH PURCHASE OF AU. CUT FLOWERS.
. '
-
. a:'\lll" 21-Fl&GS .. . -.
lOfAl DISCOUNTS
lVlRY DAf
g.m_•~•R[G.OR HOT IOll$ OIP
e.oz. PACDGt' ltHFT VELVEETA ::.ut. P.ACUG'E
At.El •PACUG£CE' 12 TACOSHEUS
8-0UNCl! PACQG'I: AUX rutAlES
itlW'f~BlllCl
$3'
4111
l.U
49'
{ 36~
• &1 1
I 1·1.J.PACK.A.Gt' •ALL MtAT
RLPllR BETAW~NEI$ ""VAWC 68'
~ CS.OZ. JARS • STIIA WBl:RRY' 011 ¢RAPE 921 ~ TOP FLAVOR PRESERVES J,15
(§> STRAWB[RRY • 12-0? JAR .llW SMUCKER'S PRESUitS '8E w ·
aJ.OIJHCI: !AR ~ nr
t:D::;\ S'Ml.AWBtr>RY ·not. JAl'I M~ ~ KERN'S PRESERVES '!II: 1111
• 48-0UNCI: JAR "f.Ji ' II~,,....., ' ~ TIJIRAGON OR WIHl:• 12-0t. !OT'?LtS 4fM lffl1IZ VINESIRS 3aE llV'
Cf0£R • :J'l-OUNCC lJOTTtt' 1!9 ~ WHITE • 32·0Z. BOTTLE: ,: llc
1'.0Ul<CE BOTTL< 31; H£lltZ CHIU SAUCE jl{ ,
SPftf:CKELS • JS.at. PAC'UGC IRllWllULAT!O SUGAI
fllCF.tl • IS.OZ. CAN DIAMOND A BEETS
:.iHOtSTJllNQ llE:ETS • 16-0'Z. CAN
1J! 2r
1a;
"'
Your Afpho Beta fTiend!J NtiOhborhood Butcher CtheMM In thl REDAPRONI
PROUDLY OfTIRS .
EUTCHE!'S PninE MEATS
MEATS YOU'LL BE PROUD TO SERVE • Qva/1ty&Satof_Gw,,_ • D1sc0Uftt Priced
BUTT
PORTION
59~
CALIFORN IA
. <;ROWN
ALL.ALPHA BETA
STORES WILL BE
'CLOsliJ .
M~o~hJ;·'.
MO-y
MAY' 31,,
R<riUtAR "1'0R
WIU. BE IN Efti:J '=~
10AM.to7.P.M. •T
••rr IUICBEfl
11111
REC/'£
H18ACl/r
SURGns
~-0?. PrG. • WH1TI: • ON!OI~ • .GAAU¢
DID LONDON ROUNDS 1lf 46i I.US. ROLL • REGIJlAR QR HOT IUTCBEr! HIDE
FRESH FROZEN
" I' ALPHA BETA IUttata:S tl!DC BEEF AT OlscOUNTPltlC£S!: ~(
GROUNDBEEF 59!. {ij_'
T·BONE 148 \
J
MORRISON'S• 6·0Z. PKG • CORM.rt?S
• PAN.nts 1"' llHITS · J.1< u·
QAl'T • t R~£ PACUGt
CllEESE.N CRACKERS
t<A PACk.<0£ • "" 41' tll1flVll llARUINE .,.
Vt-GALLO It CONTAJNtRS • Fflurf' litmCH • ciu.P&
• l.EMOl\ADE • ORANGE 25' HIPPY DAY DRINKS lll: '
JIMMY DEAN 77' PURE PORK
SAUSAGE
DUBUQUE'S :i'::48 IOWAMAID C
BACON
t ·LS. PACKAGES
DUBUQUE'S ROTIL BUFFET
or f/I__,_,
BACON 55'
KIDS LOVE 'EM 9 e
"FOOT·LOllG" HOT DOOi 6,u•
FRESH
FILI.IT OF OCIAN 'IRCH 93 :.
GROUND
CHUCK
PAnlES
89~
QUICK MEAL ITEMS
TOP DOG 10\.;·0Z. PAC:KAG[ . CORN DOBS
lllTCKll'S II/DI
WHOU. BBQ CHICKEN
111ea1rs 11111
COOKED
MEAT LOAF
59~
&a:.
79:.
STEAK lb.
BONELESS
FAMILY STEAKS
BONELESS
CLOD STEAKS
11? ~l:\
123 ~/
. "-
BONELESS RIB STEAKS 1.1911.
CHUCK STEAKS BlAD£ CUT 65f ..
THESE MEAT PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY, MAY 27-JUNE 2 .
/. COSTA MlSA-141 i. t7th St.
HUNTINC.YON ll!ACH-t041 Adom
HUNTING-TON IUCH-11611 N. M•I• St.
fOUNTAIN VALLIT-llfl w__.
LA5UNA HILLS-21541 C•ll• tN"Ta L11ll9
llVINf-11041 C•'"'· U11l':"et'llty P•rt
SOUTH LAGUNA-)0122 S. C...t Nlway
'
OAJLV PILOT ~
Berries
Turn On
Pudding
A fresh lemon flavored pud·
ding mold is a perlect foil for
stra.,.,·berries.
It aceenls .bolh-thLill!cious
flavor and rettripe color of the
fruit The pudding is light and
airy, too. for the cooked mi.r.·
ture is stirred into beaten egg
whites just before pouring
into the molds.
Serve it with spoonfuls ol
s~etened berries.
Lemon Com Starch !\tolds
I cup sugar
~2 cup com starch
1,, teaspoon salt
3 cups water· _1 I teaspoon grated lemon rind
1,, cup lemon juice
1 drop yellow food coloring,
optional ·
2 egg whites
?o.1ix togelher sugar. com
starch and salt in double
boiler top. Gradually stir in
\l'ater.
Cook over boiling water,
stirring constantly, JO to 15
minutes until mixture thickens
enough to mound slightly when
dropped from spoon.
C-Over and continue cooking,
s I i r ring occasionally, 30
minutes.
Remove from water. Cool 5
minutes. Stir in lemon rind
and juice and food coloring. if
desired . Beat egg whit.es until
soft peaks form when beater
is raised.
Gradually stir lemon mix~
lure into egg whites. Pour into
molds and chill thoroughly.
Unmold and sen·e with
strawberries. fl1akes I (5-
ounce ) servings.
Leftover
Vegetables
Spread Out
Any of this spread leftover
may be used as a topping for
crackers.
GARDEN CLUB
SANDWJCHF.S
5 radishes
2 ribs celery
I medium carrot, pared
1 small cucumber, pared
I small green pepper,
seeded
I small onion, peeled
l/3 cup pa rsl ey ~prigs
I package (8 ounces) cream
cheese, .softened
113 cup real n1ayonna ise
J small clove garlic, peeled
and minced
\2 teaspoon lemon juice
11.t teaspoon salt
White pepper to taste
Thinly sliced white bread
Put all vegetables through
fine blade of food grinder.
Drain in a fine-mesh strainer,
pressing with a spoon.
Blend cheese. mayonnaise.
garlic, lemon juice, salt and
pepper ; thoroughly stir in
ve.R"etable mixture.
Chill, tightly covered, S
hours or overnight. Makes
about 2 cupll. Use as filling
with bread for sandwiches:
cut off crusts and slice each
sandwich into 2 triangles.
Cupcakes
Go Spicy
They're at tht!ir fluffy-best
served warm or reheated.
SPICY CUPCAKU
1 1.~ cups silted flour ·
J,J teaspoon baking powder
~% teaspoon baking soda
If• teaspoon salt
1,J teaspoon nutmeg 1,z teaspoon ginger
~l teaspoon allspice.
1,~ cup ( 1h: of a •,~·pound
stick) butter or margarine
1/t cup sugar
I egg
•.z cup light molasses
'h cup very hot tap water
Sift to6ether flour, baking
powder, baking soda. salt and
spices.. Cream butler and
sugar; beat in egg.
Stir together molasses and
water. Into creamed mixture
gently beat floor mixture
altemately with mo I 1 s 1 es
mixture.
Tum Into paper bak ing CURI
set in medium-size muffin-pan
cups. fil ling 213 run.
Bake in a preheated 350-
degree oven until 1 cake tester
inserted in centtr comes ou\
clean -about 12 miriutes.
Makes about 24.
Fin•I Stocks
In AU Homo
Editions
I
,\ .-
'
•
' . . . .
~ DAILY PILOT Wtdntsd1y, Mu 26, 1971
..
---~~-----··-··-----~---·--rn~··~----
By TOM HOGE
AMtdtl .. ,.,_. Wrtltf'
But there was one bnghl
note.
•,
l* cups dr/ white wine unttl scallops are tender. •
If.I cup wale" SP'ain and return liquid te
l cup skim nllk skiflet and reduce to about %
Creative Cook
Thinks Slim
It wal!l the kind cf luncheon
epicures drool over, and it was
accompanied by two wines.
But from the cpenlng ccurse
of crtamed scallops le t h e
dessert of strawberries
l!lwimming In Port, it totaled
cnly 830 calories.
The meal was served at a
New York restaurant and the
menu was conceived b y
Dagmar Godowsky, star of the
silent fllm.s and a lover of flne
food and drink who has been
fighting a running battle to
keep her weight dow n.
with her family at lbe
outbreak of World War J. She
was 14 years old and already
stagestruck. Eventually ahe
made it to Hollywood and
playtd roles Oppo.!ite Rudolph
ValenUno and other aid lime
idols.
Today, I.he green-eye d
enchantress of the lnot is
leading a more sedentary llfe,
but she still laves the haute
cuisine and bas a penchanl fer
the wines of Callfcrnla.
"The cnly thing all the
doctors seemed to agree en lJ
that I can have a glass of wine
with my meals."
And soon she made another
discovery that led to the
collecting cf diet recipes.
''1 found I could still have
wonderful food even with
these hcrrid diets." l!lhe said.
"There are many ways to
make perfectly divine dishes
with unaaturated oils, and my
friends In California made
wonderful recipes for me ao I
can eat all my favorite.
things."
Judging from 15amples t
have seen, the re<:ipes are
really something. Here 's cne
for scallops ln white wine, and
according to M a d a m e
Godowsky, it Is only 2&0
calories P,et serving.
COQUILLES ST. JACQUES
1 pound scallops (washed
and cut into small pieces)
6 medium mushrooms sliced
2 teaspoons unsaturated
margarine
1 tablespoon !lour cup. Add milk. Melt 1
1 t e as p o an unsaturated tablespoon margailne In small
margarine pan and mix in flour to make
White pepper, &alt ' a paste. ,.
1 teaspoon grattd Parmesan ·Add a little llquld to thin
cheese 11nd blend Into the sau~.
Wash scallops an d cut stirring until thick. Pepper
crosswise into flat slices about and salt to taste.
i, inch thick . Place Add sc allops and
mushrooms in a Jar11e skillet mushrooms and mlx. Spoon
with 2 teaspoons margarine into scallop shell.s or individual
and lemon juice. Cover and cven·proof ramekins. Sprinkle
cook t minutes. with grated cheese and run
Almonds
Provide
Topping
An almond topping helps to
make thls dish intertsting.
ASPARAG US
CASSEROLE
1f.i: cup blanched \11hole
almonds
1 teaspoon fi&iad oil
2 table5p00n! bu tt.er
2 tablespoons flour
l 1h: cupo milk
i..t cup grated cheddar
cheese
Salt and pepper to tute
2 pounds fresh asparagus.
cooked and drained
4 hard-cooked eggs. sliced
Jn a shallow baking pan coat
almonds with oil. Roast in a
preheated JOO.degree o v e n
about lS minutes.
Wben cool enough to handle
but 1till warm, split almonds
into halves. f\.1ake a w h i t e
sauce with the butter, flour
and milk : stir in chttse and
ult and pepper.
Alterna te layers of
asparagus. egg and cheese
sauce in a baking dish: t o p
with almonds. Bake at 400
devus for 20 minutes. Makes
4 or S 1ervt.ngs.
Shapely
9033
SIZES a.is
'"'1ffMi ... 1ff,_.,-f~
Gel onto summer's most ex-
citing wave length-sew this
shapely shirUng in day, tunic
or Jong version to wear alone
or over pants or skirt.
Printtd Pattern 9033 : NEW
Misses' Sizes 8. 10. 12. 14. 16.
18. Size 12 (bust 34) day length
25-1 yards 39-inch.
SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS for
uch pattern -add 25 cents
for taeh p9.ltem for Air f!Iail
and Special H and Ii n g :
otherwise third-class delivery
will take three weeks or more.
Send to Mirian Martin. the
DAILY PILOT. 442 Pattern
Dept., 232 West 18th St., New
York. N.Y. 10011 Print NAfl1E,
ADD~ wilh ZlP, SIZE and
STYLE NUMBER.
Swing lnlo Spring! Ne\v,
New Pattern Ca!.alog · has
separates, jwnpsuil!. slim·
ming shape.!!, free pattern
coupon. 50 cenb.
INSTANT SEWING BOOK
aew today, wtar tomorrow. SI .
INSTANT FASHIONBOOK
-Hundreds of fashion facts.
$1.
Soap Slivers
For Sweaters
Put &livers of toilet soap into
a 5Crew top jar and add boil·
ing water.
The ''jelly" that results is
fine for laundering sweaters
and lingerie, 1u1gts:ts Nat.ional
Family Opinion Inc.
Dagmar came to America
MEDIUM SIZE, EASTERN PORKERS
As Madame Godowsky grew
older, however, her wal1Uine
began lo vanish and she
embarked on her struggle with
calories.
FROM OUR MAYFRESH
FAMILY OFPROUD BIRDS
LEAN PORK
SPARERIB·s .
MAYFRESH
:HEN
TURKEYS
Juice of one lemon
3 tablespoons c b fl p p'e d
parsley
Pinch of Tarragon
2 ta blespoons minced onion
Add scallops, pa rs I e y, under broiler uni!! bubbly.
tarragon, onion, wine and Serves four and is good with a,
water. Simmer 3 or 4 minutes cold, dry white wine.
"""-.. / ~-~._ I
"""""' ~'
USDA GRADED CHOICE OR
MAYFAIR BLUE RIBBON
WELL TRIMMED
LEAN BEEF
SHORT
RIBS
.,
USDA CIADED CHOICE OR
MAYFAIR BLUE RIBBON
BONELESS
CHUCK
ROASTS :
CENTER CUT
'
c c c
!9!~'!~~"~~~~~·~·-E-·· __ 29<
!!~~~~~~E.~!-~~~.~~~~-~°.~-···---65<
!!},~~~,~~AN~~~~~_!~C°..~---·--·$1 O?.
CANADIAN BACON s 129 Wll!>ON,C~NTElt CUT P!ECES ·····-·········· .. ---····-······-··----··-··-···· l8.
?2'-~"~'qJ,~-~ff~~~~~~~-E-~·---lB. 98<
,----SEAFOOD SPECIALS----
HALI BUT $
STEAKS'rv~· lb.
MAYFRESH
SODA POP
All VARIETIES, 12.oz. CANS ..................... ..
KING TIDE $
DETERGENT
GETS CLOTHES WHITER ................................ .
HAMBURGER or
HOT DOG BUNS
MAYFRESH. PKG. OF 8 ........................................... -..... .
MAYFRESH
GELATIN
lb.
. FRYER PARTS
" CALIFORNIA OROWN ,._.(
FROM FOSTER FARMS ~f'
li~i WHOLE LEGS ... V!Jr1!W
~
lb.
,---10R HOLIDAY FIXIN 's--
GAYTIME MARSHMALLOWS 1 1b .. 23 '
RELISH Es COOl>f A '"C<WEll 10'; Ot 4' \1
HO! DOC., 1-!AM!U-OE~. SWEET ....... ~
FRENCH 'S MUSTARD 12-0z. •. 29 '
BAR-B-Q SAUCE ~",:i~s 14 az ........ 33 '
CHARCOAL BRIQUETS 59<
MAYFAIR, 10-lb. SAG ....................................... ..
~,·~!~. ~~~-~· c~~~~~ --·-7 8'
PAPER PLATES . 59'
QUICIC·SE,V. JO Ct .............................................. -... ·-
lb,;
BONEIESS, READY TO EAT
HAMS
HOFIWIAN TAVERN, or WILSON
TEN DIR MADE, WHOLE or HALF
.2 9
BEEF SHORTRI BS 6"'
f-K;USM cur·····~·········· ............................. lb. '7-
CLOD ROASTS s 11~
llONfl[SS. SHCUlOE' .................... -.... -... -."--Jb
ARDEii DAIRY SPECIALS
---;-·POPSICLES \~· .. 25'
~~~!~,l.~t~REAM ·········· 69c
ARDEN SOUR CREAl't1 551
Pl'-11 C.-.JHON ...... " ...... -·-·· .. ·-·······" .. , ............. .
MORE HOLIDAY FAVORITES
COLORTEX NAPKINS '"" ................ 10
HUNT'S PORK & BEANS "o.,. "" 4;•1
S•Mf!ON•NOO J ' RIPE OLIVES ~"·"''" ............... '"'°'" 4;
SUNSHINE FIG BARS i~i~: ...... 59c BLACK PEPPER ~c;;'ll~~:~ 49 '
!~H~!tt0~1~!~2g~ L --·-_ .39'
~.,~~}~~,~.~~~~~"" '6 0l 3 ~$1 IRIS FRUIT PUNCH BASE _ .......... o' 6,
IRIS KIDNEY BEANS ........... ioo""6i'
'
MAYFAIR FARM FRESH FRUITS & VEGETABLES
•
CALIF.
GROWN
HUSKS
ON
SWEET ·co RN
~
EAi
RED RIPE
WATERMELON
SWEET, JUICY, .............................................................. lb.
FANCY GREEN BEANS '.~.~.~.ER . lb 29<
CUCUMBERS ~~~~N ... , .. 2 FOR 29'
FANCY SQUASH ;~~,~~".. La.19<
HASS AVOCADOS 4 FOR$1
,
'
(
:.~· "
SUNNY AND INTRIGUING CANNELLONI
USDA INSPECTED
FRESH FROZEN
FROM NEW ZEALAND
WELL TRIMMED
NEW ZEALAND
LEG OF
LAMB
~
lb.
LEAN, BONELESS
STEW BEEF
USDA GRADED CHOICE or
MAYFAIR BLUE RIBDON
FAMILY STEA K s12~. 8Q+.lflE55 ... ., .................. M •
TENDERLOINS '
1(1oNP'OlllC --· ... -... -... _ .. __ , ..... _ ..
FROZEN FOOD SPECIALS
TASTY FRIES
BIRDSEYE
S-OZ. PKG .
FROZEN t0~A.
MAYFRESH LEMONADE . 10 1 ~"~'1
BANQUET FRIED CHICKEN ............ '" 1"
M.C.P . JUICE DRINKS . •oz. 10' • DED ,fllCH. SOtE 6"' GORTON S BREA .. ooon ." oz. . •
BONUS BLUE CHIP. STAMPS : .
COTTON WORK GLOVES. . .... + 50 STAMPS
TAMPAX ,,, + 100 STAMPS .
COLGATE SHAVE CREAM " oz + 50 STAMPS
HAPPY LEGS PANTYHOSE .... + 100 STAMPS
CENTER CUT, BONELESS
CHUCK
STEAKS
BO.NELESS ROUND STEAK ........... .... . ........... "·'I .29
•LEA'I BEEF RIB STEAKS .. . .....•..................... •'l.29
BONELESS SIRLOIN TIP STEAKS ............. ... .1b 'l.59
LEAN BEEF CUBE STEAKS ............................. ,b_'l.59
LEAN BEEF RIB ROAST .... . . . . . .. .................. . .... lb.' 1. 19
TOP or BOTTOM ROUND ROASTS '°""'" ...... ib.'1.39
CENTER CUT BEEF SHANKS ............................................... " 59'
MAYFAIR DELICATESSEN
FRANKS ' RATH All MEAT
12-0Z.PKG.
c
CANNED HAMS
HOFFMAN $ 3 98 BETTERMAID
5-lb. CAN
CANNED HAMS Wilson, Certified S-Jb;$439
RATH LUNCH MEATS :::;-;.:1·:~:,'!\~~~'.~~; ................... 69
PILLSBURY BISCUITS ;~;g;::::: ~~z . .... . 6i 49'
~h~!~R!~oz . . lt ~,\~~J£~~,~S .... s I"
************************************ • • : 24 HOUR ST~RES :
! WILL Remain OPEN !
! MONDAY,MAY315T !
... ***************************••······
CLUB COCKTAILS
PER~:c~~~~ ~~~ICS, • I j.
OR lfACH, lX.. DRY MARTINI. ,_.
SCREWDRIVERS. GIMLETS
DAIQUIRI. WHISKEY SOUit EA.
Wtdn1sdat, May 26, 1':171 OAILV PILOT 4 0.,
Herb Sauce Adds Magic Touch
Sunny and singing 3 s
Southern Italy itSelf \s lhis up-
dated version of famous can.
uelloni.
You still have a three part
sy mphony of pasta, filling and
sauce, yet by using perfectly
seasoned canned tomato herb
sauce you .eljmlnate one whole
lcnsthy step of preparation.
f\.tade this way, the cook gets
to si ng too.
The spi nach g i v e s in·
teresling te>r:ture and color
contrast as \veil as flavor lo
the cannelloni -makes ~c1n
look hnndsome, too. Use a
lighl hand \l'ilh th e dough, to
assure its tender freshness.
As for the filling, double up
on the cheese and you add
deplh.
AH you do is add \1•ine and
wat('r to a tomato herb sauce,
which takes no lime al all.
Keep the Ita lian feeling c.f
this special dish by serving it
with just warm crusty bread,
a big green fA[ad, followed by'
fresh fruit for dessert
FACIAL TISSUE
OCOTTIES. CALYPSO. ASSTD. 200-CT. PACK
WITH lHIS COUPON
LIMIT I COUPON Pf fl;
.AOUl I CUS TOME It
MAY 17-JUNE 2
FROZEN PIZZA 't•~'·
iONI INSTANT, SAUSAGE. PEPPERONI. CHEESE
•
T0'fJ\TO Hl:<.:RD
SAUCED CANNELLO!'\I
l ( IO.OUncc) pa ckage frozen
hear until thllwed, then cover
and continue healing S
minutes. Drain well, pressing
out all water. Combine with · •
eggs; pour lnlo center of flour
mi xetl with sail in mL'<lng
bowl .
chopped spinach
3 eggs, sligh tly beaten
J cups silted flour
l teaspoon sal~
Double Cheese Filling
1 (IS.ounce ) can tomato
Blend, then knead about 5
minutes until dough Is well
mixed and forms a smooth
ball. Roll out dough, hair at a
lime, lo 1116 Inch thickness on ..
lloured board.
herb sauce
1.2 cup water
113 c4p red \vine (or water) '4 pound thln s lices
l\.1ozzarclla cheese
1-leaL spinach over very low
Cut dough into Jxs:ifich rec-
tangles; cook 4 or 5 al a time
in boiling water 5 minutes.
Drain well, pat dry ; cover un-
UI all are cooked. Spoon some
of Double Cheese Filling do\.\'n
cen,tcr or each cannelloni; roll
up.
Ptace seam side down,
slightly apart in bottom of
buttered 3·quart baking dish.
Combine tomato herb sauce,
water and wine; pour over all.
Cover.
Bake at 400 'degrees 15
minutes. Uncover, arra nged
Mozza rella slices s I I g h t I y
overlapping down center or
casserole ; continue bakins 1Q.
minutes or until bubbly.
ri.takes 8 to 10 servings, '2
cannelloni each.
Double Cheese Filling
ri-lix together I pound ricotta
cheese, 113 cup gr a t e d
parmesan cheese , I egg, 1
tablespoon s\vee t basil, 1
tablespoon finely minced onion
and -1 teaspoon salt. -lttakes
about 2 cups.
Peaches
Diced,
Sliced
fi'rcsh as spring, lry these
fruit salads using prun es an d
canned cling peaches.
Both prunes and canned
peaches are being spotlighted
by lhc United States Depart-
ment of Agr ic ulture 's
Consumer and ~1 ark et i n g
Service as the Plenliful·Foods-
tc>-Feature .
PEANUT STlJFFED PRUNE
SALAD
12 cooked prunes. pilled
113 cup cottage cheese or J
3-oz. package c r e a n1
cheese
¥.! leaspoon grated orange
rind
3 tablespoorus chopped salted
peanuts
Das h salt
1.layonnaise or ltgh t cream
12 canned cling peach halves
Lettuce
Combine cottage cheese or
crean1 cheese with orange
rind, peanuts. salt, and enoligh
mayonnaise or Jigttt cream to
n1oisten.
Stufr mixture into prunes.
Center I stuffed prune in each
peach half. For each serving,
arrange 2 peach halves on a
bed of lettuce. l\fakes 6 serv -
ings.
MOLDED PEACH SALAD
I cup boiling water
1 3 ounce package orange-
pinespple gelatin
I cup cold waler
11,3 cups drained, diced cling
peaches
1 cup dairy sour cream
1;, teaspoon grou nd nutmeg
i,~ cup sifted powdered
sugar
Add boiling water to gelatin.
Stir well to dissolve con1-
plctcly. Then add cold \Viller.
Pour into 8 Individual molds or
1.quart mold. Chill until slight ·
Jy thickened ; fold in diced
peaches .
Chill until firm. Combine
sour cream, nutmeg and
sugar. Top each serving of
molded salad With lhis mix-
ture, Makes 6 servings.
CALIFORNIA FRUIT-SALAD
BOWL
J quarl broken salad greens
2/3 cup coarsely cut cooked
prunes
I large orange, peeled and
thinly sliced
~fa cup toast.cd s a I le d
almonds
2 tablespoons sliced gi-een
onions
About ¥.-cup French dress-
ing
Place crisp greens in chilled
salad bowl. Arrange prunes,
orange slices, almonds, and
onions in a decorative pattern
over the top.
At the table, just before
serving, tosJ salad gently with
just enough dressing to coat,
all ingredients. Atakes 6 serv-
ings.
Safety Tip
Some safety rules to follow
in use and storage of aerosol
cans: never leave In the sun,
especially in a closed car:
never leave on a warm
surface, such as a stove;
never Incinerate or puncture
a can.
Treat the 5pray can wlttt
the respect you would any
exploslve device .
\
•
1
' ,
• I ' •
I
j § DAILY PILOT Wfdntsday, Mi)' 26, 1971 PI LOT -AOVERTTSER 8
PLY
OUR FLAG
PROUDLY
MEMORIAL DAY
Discount l' ALVES
AT TOTAL DISCOUNT THRIFTIMART
BLUI CHIP STAMPS ON ALL PRODUCI AND MIAT DlllT. PURCHASIS
STORES OPEN MON., MAY 31-10 A.M. to 7 P.M.
.,.EAT DEPARTMENT
·•Tender-Lee''6rade ' . .\'
~IEAT DEPARTMENT ~ MEAT DE PART~IE~T
SELF·BASTING HEN ''Tender·Lee'' IRll ALL FLAVORS 12·0Z.
UR KEYS FINE QUALITY -FULLY COOKED CANNED
HAMS
•::r.K45c
LB.
POP
~····· a:'L (CASE OF 24 ••••• •1.92)
HAM SLICU $1. It lb. WllOU HAMS 57< lb.
PATIO CHlf $149
WILSON'S "TINDIA MADln •r KOR.MIL'S Cl.Ml '11 ' 2 PULLTCOOKIDBONILISS ,3i: '1 S HALF HAMS ................. ; . .. .. .
UJ O_.L-Cl••u " $JU T·BONI STEAKS............. "·
USO• "t ... <o"t •••'-h tl Q $)•,•.
US.D -'"1:>01 ....... 1,,. 98 ,
7·80NI ROAST .. • . . . . .. . . .. "·
uio .... -ci..i..·i...,1... s1••
CHARCOAL BRIQUETS ..... ?~ !':';
WIZARO 45c CHARCOAL LIGHTER ...... -~~'.7.
TOP SIRLOIN................ 11 ClOD ROAST ................ '" WILSON'S CRISPJllTE or
u.~D.&."C:•ol<•" $JSI
PORTERHOUSE .... .• .•. ••. • "· USO • 'C""lt•"lo•olo" SJ0f
BOTTOM ROUND ROAST ... '"
USO• "C'•••"l o••'•" $JU FAMILY STEAKS ............. i..
US O.L "t""lo "t•.,oh4 98 ' RIB ROAST .................. "·
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED NEW ZEALAND
FRESH FROZIN SPRING
MORREll'S YORKSHIRE e 1 SLICED BACON ... ::0::·.4v.~.
OUIUQUf ROYAl I UfffT, HOrtMEL 'S lt£D l••tl,
f~ESH LEAN
GROUND BEEF
DJSCO L~T SEAFOOD
FILLET OF SEABAss.:·::::..S1.19
CHINOOK SALMON ;;~.~~;:::.98c
SALMON STEAKS.'~~ ~;::··sl.3 9
MONTEREY ROCKFISH •• :;;: 79c
OCEAN PERCH .• .' ...... :.;~::89c
EG 0' LAMB HOfFMAN'S IITTfitMAJO, SIG ........ N'S VAC PAIC 5 9 ( SLICED BACON ............. .':•.:~·; oo.
fCONO PAI( 5 9 (
3-l!S.OR lb
'°'OR£ •
WELL TRIMMED
SHANK REMOVED
4·6 LBS. 73~B. RATH 11.AClt HAWK 98 c: WH0Lt o•HALF ~l,t.1 45 <
BONELESS DAINTEI lb . SLAB BACON .. .. .. .. lb,
'A•lrilER JOHN, LV,R, HOffMAN'S-PUR£ POl lC I 29 < LINK SAUSAGE •••••••••••••••••••••••••• , •• 0.'~ ea.
. DE LJ CATESSE~ D El'A RTillE~'f ,--w-.,To--1
Ol'VIRGINIA 12·0Z. PKG. ol 10 39 IHOTDOGi TENDER JUICY Ci BUNS 1 FRANKS !:;~33cl L------"' JANE ANDIRSON SALADS ""'"'" 79' POTATO or MACAIONI SAlAD (1S •i.) 36 CHEDDAR CHEESE •••••...•• , •••• .'.'~.
' COll SlAW SAlAD {141/2 01 I C ""11"°""'1"''1111 $4 19 • ~ I~ ' • HEALTHSAlAD(13 V101.) IA.HAM ...... , ...................... •
J••·· IVIRYDAY LOW DISCOUNT PRICES ON FROZIN POOD
~--.~-·, ... ;t,~ .. i.., 40< .. 01!0"~ ... 31c ""U•••C 1•·-·l·C·"~'l 70 33c ..... , .. d ..... , ....... drlotlfdl•$17• "O'PIAS.rCORN HONEY IUNS ....... , VEGETABLES ...... ,'. GOURMET SHRIMP "
COtO!'IT 35C ,.,,.,, "'"",..""r•tl •Ttool 3 9c c•.,l••boo•Ol'."<!"•lo,.. 29 t::M:.\C••••"••t•Hdo.r 79
ONION RINGS .... ~~·. Morton's Dinner• ~;1 Chicken alo Ki nt ~:: c ~fish Sticks!~~·. c •11 v.,,..... ~
1 .... 1.1 ..... ~ •• 11.,•<h,..•0.."'69c ...,. '"~''""""''"""' 26c •••u•tn "•L$139 t::!if:\e.. .... •,1,,. .. 0.,,..~ 89< CHERRY Pll ?'.:~.':'~.. ~Vegetables '.:0 ~Halibut Fiiiets ~fish f illtt .~s.~ •.
t.'llt\"'' 1.11•1..... IO ""'"•'-••1 •uv1111 45 .. ,, ,,,d .......... ~.1 •. 1.00 $ r.1if:\ c;,...... •·· 4 9, ~fruit Drlnks a.. c DOUBLE BUDDllS ~~1• c ROUNDSHRIMP .!4.~'; 129 ~fish Stick Puffs
''"' 58' SPRAY STARCH .......... '.:.'.'.
WA'T1R SOFTINlR ........ .':.•. 79c
ie!
6Pack I I
12·0Z. TINS
Burgermeister
DRAFT BEER
C'ALVERT'ExraA :.".'. $4.99 ,, .... Ill $3 39 VODKA ........... .'.':'. t
\Oo<DO"' l"OC.' $ SCOTCH ........... '.':'. 3,99 LONl>Oh' tfl!IGl "1' $3 48 ORY GIN .......... .'.':~ e
0111•vr .. T ' 59c O"UCIHT G 88' THRILL LIQUID ........... :1• :'. DRIFT , , ................... :::'.
ICl"llllW"•SllO\ 69C '•-•'II 88' CASCADE ................. '.'.".'. IVORY •................... ~·;:'.
l"RODl'CE DEl'AllT~IE~T
___... : U.S. NO. I NEW CROP WHITE ROSE
-_,1 ~~·-0TATOES ; / c
LB.
lAtGf COMP,t,Cf I 5 c u 5 NO , atOWN J lb boi 2 5 c ARTICHOKES-• • • . . . . • • • • • • • • • • • • tA. ONIONS •••••• , •• , •••••• , • , •. , •••
1e111sP -.. ,u,..,c~,. I Qc su ........... ft-tr,1.11,1.N ,,. T1uow I 9c CUCUMBERS ••••••••••• I........ IA. SQUASH lL ·····•···••···· ···•······ GOOOKll SA~OS llDl!P( 33c
ROMAINE LlnUCI ............. 15~ .. STRAWBIRRllS ........ '!::·.'::':'. ••·
SUNSHINE STA.TE-FROZEN
RANGE JUICE
6·0Z. 15c
PITTED OLIVES
•Pft "'" 27c
IAltl,t,llA ANN -32 suets 39•
Sliced Bread ........... ':~~·; -~-, '""'MA10 -"' '"'vo., ~ · •
Oll MONTE ~~ !,~~~!.~ .. Dill Chips .... ~'~:: s1: ~ SHERBET
Chunk Light Tuna ........ 37 ~@ .<:-1 HALF GAL. 49 c
N'00'B"' c Oreo ""· 49• ,,~,~ ROUND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
~ SHOESTllNG Por:rofs -(•·OZ 2 !~) '"'· 3 7c I ~ ~ French1es .............. ·-=---H~·;;:;·s~&;~'k"iP';ck .... ::•; 59c ...i:::~-~!!l!l?~C~R:.O::E~A~l~ .. ~ll~P~l~E~S-.,, GAYllM~JillNIATUltl ,.; ""
Marshmallows •••••• ~0!"1.0•· I 9c _c..'!!'"}4 r iC' 2 Otf•n fX'llA 1.ARGf P1TTf0 39c 5 c Green Ripe Olives .... .'.'2'! 14.oz:.
~ Ofl .MO"/TE 2 C ~ Catsup .............. ~~~·~ 4
WITH PUMP . French's Mustard ..... '!:·; 32c
HflNZ IND! ... -HOT DOG o• Hamburger Relish .... '!:': 32c
~ JAMf Al~OfRSOM ~ Mayonnaise ....... 0::~55c
IARllCUf .SAUC (
Chris' & Pitt's .......... .'::•; 35c
~ il;'lian Dressing .'~:·,$9c
/ ;!i!:\ ICITS ~ American Flag ...... $288
1-:!i!:\ Q""' 2 5 c ~ Pork & Beans .... .'.'~.
~ klffNfX -,t,SSORTfDorOfSIGNflt 32c ~Paper Towels .... ~';!':
~ o"""' 6Sc ~ Bathroom Tissue ::~
CHlffOM Facial Tissue ........... ~":':'; 27c
O~CHIO.S Paper Napkins ........ !':':'; 32c
DISCOl':\"f llEAJ,Tll &DEALT\' AIDS
M!DIUM O• H•._D ( c~~l )4 ' 9, 9 Pro Toothbrush ... ::... ~ c
·~·) OOUllf OUTY ( c"•llGt 2 ' 89' Pro Toothbrush ... :~.. ~
"" I . ('~~·) $188 Dr st an . . . . . . ....... ~' ~· ..
"" (<~~·) 79c Anacin ..................... "; ..
l~llY $1If '. ( c~~.:il) 72 C Crest Toothpaste .... :·:-..
llGHTW!lOHT & WA~M $3'' Thermal Blankets .......
JERSEY.MAID -FRESH
SOUR CREAM
PINT 49c (1/2 PINT '25c)
EVERFRESH -FROZEN CRINKLE CUTS oa
·:_,,,;;:o~~!?-1, FRENCH FRIES
fRIED 10 tHl(KEH 9·0Z. C
,~_$, 39 PKG.
PAPER PLATES
:oa.cT. 69C
~XWELL HOUSE
l·l~. 79c
2701 HARBOR BLVD., C.OST A MESA • 13922 BROOKHURST, GARDEN GROVE e 1308 W. EDINGER, SANTA ANA
585!1 W A~NEr., i :""~J TINGTO~I B ACH e 23811 EL TORO. EL TORO •
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§ PILOT-ADVERTISER $ WedMsday, May 26, 1971 Wtdntsday, May 26, 1971 DAILY PILOT 47
ED SUCED i¥1ll ,!' .. ~~~;
S USDA CHOICE OR 3 9LB. ONNMIMOllALDAY STATER BROS. CERTIFIED BEEF fllOM 10 t..M. TO 7 ,,M.
FARME. R JOHN c ioullD'i'iiil'ito"°AiT ... LI. 69c
llONIUH 111 .. HOU<.. • C
PORTION usou•otaot•J""''°"an .. o•Hf 95c RUMP ••All .................. -...... LI. GROUND Rl4Htiiii'°:~C::::.:'. __ , ... L1. 95c
, U$0ACMOtCl~STATPllOl.QITlfNIOlllF • 1 •3 BEEF T-BONESIEAKl ....... -........ LI.
' "p'0o·""'R1"'1"'R"H··ou""0 '1c1m1•''°1'1":.., LI. • 1 ••
ITALIAN
DRY
SA LAME
FRESH • LEAN • DELICIOUS -GROUND HOURLY u•oACHOICIOUTATIUIOS.CnT"""'"' • 179 i
IN OUR OWN STOllES TOP SIRLOIN llEAK ....... LI. .
13 OZ. CHUB 11.39
MOltttl.L AU l ffJ ::~~·s ... LL 69<
BUTT PORTION 5ftc
;,HOLE HAM °7L1. 59. fXTIAUANANDfLAVOltfUl 95c C GROUND ROUND ................. LI.
JIMMY DIAN-IEG. Ot MOT 7 5c
LB PORK SAUIAGI ....... I-LI.ROLi.
• MOlllLLTOIUHIU t.U . ''°· Ol lL>TlffCK 4ftc
M•00t•n•N-AUIH• EASTERN GRAIN-FED TENDER SHOULDER 6 9
I ~~f3~.ti::.59' PORK STEAKS .................. ~. c FRYING
CHICKEN BRAUN SCH-( LL MIA T. IULK VARIETY c ~~ 59
WEIGER .. _1.0129 BAR-M WIENERS ................ LI.
. 1 ALEX CHILI ....... '90z.89'aoz.51 ' KRAFT MIRACLE WHIP _____ o, 63'
MAZOLA MARGARINE ........... "· 42'
GRAPEFRUIT ~it,';l,., -· ·-·-· 2 cas. 89'
TOMATO PASTE ~'o't,~~~"-.. 2 •o• 33'
OLIVES 08''1' PlACEO 59' 43' STUFFED .. ., ... _, ....... !i-OZ. J.oz.
YU BAN COFFEE '" "" ---·-"· 90" HUNTS PORK & BEANS --· 31oz. 27'
POTATO SALAD """"'" _,. "· 89' BISCUITS """"' "0 3 29' 01'1 SUTTEllMlllt .......... • a-oz.
48::'.'::lvo -----' 1!!.
SUPERIORTAMALES _2.o< 49'
BEEF STEW 01;,., •OOOE -2'·0L 69'
LUNCH CUPS ~li!i'~,~~· _____ 4 "' 63'
TOMATO JUICE ~\}.,, .......... "oz 39'
DEL MONTE CATSUP ----"oz 24'
' TOMATO SAUCE ~\}"" _ 3 ao< 33'
MARGARINE .... ,. "" 37' MIRACLE WHll"PED _ ..... --
LUX BAR SOAP '""'"' ............. 14'
CHEESE STATEO "OS '2 Ol 71 0 311< .AM(RIC.t.N 16 0Z 93~ •·--.. ·~·· 8-0Z. ::J"
ROLL TISSUE :li\lr~6:, ,_ ... _ "" OF2 31'
• KLEENEX FACIALS ·-·-·-· '2HOUNT 29'
KLEENEX NAPKINS ···-···· ... ~COUNT 29'
-
USDA GRADE A WHOLE BODY
rf-'t:· 2gc (;,.~~)~ ,:.~\ -... ,10,, ,i. ...
\6), LB.
IPAlllBH
OlllONI
U.S. NO. 1
·" CUT·UP FRYERS lb ... 33'
3 LIL25'
IUCED BACON .................. -.. "· 7 .
"sSDT .. CHE~A•KST .. sT•••jf~tttiv~1V1r:iF , 1 15
CLUB OR CUBE -·-·--LI. "
IONILHSllOUNDSTIAK·LI .••. $1 .0S 95 C ROUND STEAK Bi~~.~ ........ .
1-ST.THIUS-THlll ••• Ll.99< 6-TH " 79' I RIB ROAST1.1HRIB ............ LI.
PORKCSAUSAGE __ LJ.3 9 c
PLANTERS COCKTAIL PEANUTS 1J<>r.6f DIYTREND DETERGENT ·t «no• 41 ' RY KRISP
PLANTERS SPANISH PEANUTS ''"' 35' UNI-FLUSH POWDER _,._, lr " "'" s •. """'"' ..... w .. ,,,, .. .., CRISCOIHORTlNINQ .,.,, 96' Kim KARE CAT LITTER '25 '119 OllGINAl ~ 9c '" w,., .,,.. ... ~ '""" 0••• M••
PRICES EFFEC. THURS. lhru WED., MAY 27.JUNE2
T 100 r .. t Cetlh1t Affll1e, Or_,.
., tu. ' l·OUNCl 61611111~ A"""· HWttl"tfCHI lffclll CHBCHILI c.c. WITH IEAllS -"9<1r Jr. K·IR SPOT LIFTER --'"""''Ir UOJ w ... --·-· ........ WOOLITE RUG CWNIR --22<>L1 1.21 DAISY FRESH SPRAY STARCH ,,~,. 39' SEASOlllD • 12· Z •• 45c 1111 co., ... •-· ..,...._ o,.,.
WO LITE WDER I LIQUID ...... Ir OLD ENGLISH LEMON OIL -·"o" 49' PfZZA. a.oz .......... 43< "" "'""Tutt• • ._. .......... ..
I
1122 Wethllllftt ll•d., W•tw1l1Mtet
J4JO WMt u-.11 A'""' ... ....._.. \.
Z6l 0 llllllf9' 4MN, S.N AH '
12l0 Mchd• ... .,.. .. , S.... .t. ..
I
25•4 w .. .,..,...,, "-'"•
2110 Ne_.,.rt lfwl., C.... lihM 1171 .... , ttt.t, c .... ,.._
14171 h4 Hiil AtJM-. haffli
14212 .. , .......... Wltfn'-
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48 DAIL V .'ILDT
MO.ST SAPIWAY STORIS
CLOSED on
Memorial Day
MONDAY MAY 31, 1971
Most Beach & Recreational
Area Stores OPEN
.
IJIL.OT -ADVERTISER N Wednesd•y, M•Y 26, tflJ
BROWN DERBY MRS. WRIGHT'S PULAR I .UN POTATO CUGMONT MEDIUM SIZE BEER BREAD IGAREM CHIPS ODA PO .. ....
·=·= :·:· ...• ::::
=~~; AA' EGG
Super Soll-~ 111lite Or l'lllOll Reaular Or Kinas-Your Choice Party Pride-Re&ullf or for Dips Diet or Rei.-Assorted Flavors •• Cream O' the Ciop-"farm-F1esh"
!iii Llrp Slzt 391 6t2•1L ....
DRY GIN
D. !'lied f Vi•k• suno••s "'""" s2••
IS 1 rom (SAVI ''•) Crain-SQ.Ploof FIFTH
Whiskey "~~:'" 1;;;; s411
s. ~ 11111 Mellow ..,.,,. FltHI
MacNair's Scotch ~;,::t " .. 1521
Old Calhoun Bourbon i:: ""' 1421
Blended Whiskey ~:., '~J:· 1351
. __ ...,,.. ___ .,_
FULLY COOKED
HAMS
F11111r Jou
er lier Bm•s
>VU IMANll
PORnON
.• ... 59'
Portion•· lb.
~!~~,~~"'~a~. $359
.... .-r.11, c...... Cll
Canned Ham .. "'~·-" "'"'"·"·1429 .J • Ovbuqut •0111 lol11t Ill
Canned Hams'!"~':/!:'8 ;':; 1&n
Center Cut Ham Slices "· 1121
BONELESS
[Gou1Mli1HAMS
'WllMO T11j10M1j1 S) 29 • ,,,.,,.I•~" r.,,,,
• 1111111 Nl1ktry SM1k1•
('""""Ion Cl 1111) lb, .... , .. ,. "·
.. ... ~ =:·'lllli .. ••••• :-:.
DAIRY -DELI. BUYS!
CHEESE SALE!
Safeway'• Own 95 • Millt Cheddar I• l't... c
• Monterey Jack Wii1kh .
• Longhorn Cheddar lit,
Potato Salad 'l::ri:i:
Coldbrook Margarille
Shady Lane Butter ~~!
C. R II "" .,;,,,., mnamon o s ,..;,., .....
... 381 ...
, ... 201 ... ,.,., 811 i i• . ..... 271 . ..
FRUIT DRINKS A Lucerne-Assorted Jll f lavors-Low In Price!
HALF GALLOll 25c
SAFEWAY SUPER SAVERS
8 Cold Cups ~,~~"' ·~;~· 69'
A Aurora Tissue ft;!; ~:: 271
8 Kotex Napkins ::~'S,: .l'fi 11'1
a Hawaiian Puach .:,"',:"' •:;:.L 39'
I Lipton Tea Bacs ~:: :.'fi 591
a Skillet Dinners .=:. '~;~L 791
I. Campbell's Soup ':::~' '!;•; 531
8 Scouring Pad, ~;~ :,'\; 49'
fi Del Monte Corn.~!7.,~. '!;:.L 231
8 Royal Bargers := •;;;~ 7g.
l11or H1111
Pra11i1• Q111ity
USDA Gr••• I
T11•1r lnd M11tr
20·0un" M1t W1Jcht
each
Fryer Parts
• Wlltlt l11s • Dr11tSticks
• lh~hs !F~11 l ro1111 11. 19e) lb.
Banquet Fried Chicken 2;~; 11n
Pork Chops p.v,,i~.\."'1~,. '"' '• 691
Pork Spareribs ~·;~::::.sr.~. ,. 591
FRESH HEN
TURKEYS
USDl G11dtd 'l' 49 S1ltw1r Pr.,,lum QHI, C
ID to " i.s. lrg, Wt.
"' B I R t R1iloj l TJ1j Ck11t 89C
USDA Choice Beef. flmrlul one ess oas ao!Jurcy-lopslol'l>IR045t lb.
0 B R I Roud lon1 lk11lj1t • one oas USDA ChOlte Beef. ~wiu Slu k ,:.~:« •• ll<)
L b Ch 1114• tr l ·I••• C1tt am Ops Genuine American Sprint limb
USDA Choice-fully Aud & Tnmmed
L f L b lt111l111 Sprll11 L111• eg 0 am USOA Choice limb-Short Shank
&11ll L01n Limb ChOll> lb. II.Ill
!
. .
lb. 69'
I~. 99c
lb. 98'
2 ... tZ-01 •
ca~
c ::::. , .........
::;:: b . LMJ• 411 •••• 14•11. ..... =·=·'!.'----' ....
~~ii. . .... ... 1 .. 01. ell •
fl
I L I • D • k Pla11,,1 .. Gr1111lr111t a anl 'In Richand Zestfulflavor-Tru1y
A Retres!in1 Fruit Drink! 'l·ll·29' ... ~CHARCOAL '· . flPar Fabric Softener 1_11. 69' Slit
"'1 ~ · Ozark Briqueb
• '·.: • _1 ,,~ 10-lb. bag
· ~ HAMBURGER
. -~"7-G BUNS
... ....Z<i ... , ....... o4 33' .8. Stock Up Plenty °"
, . This Grert V1fut ...............
8 2-Layer Cake
I 30-Slice Bread
fudgt
Pec1n
Mrs.
Wri1llt's
..,, 11os
.. .. L 371 "''
PAPER PLATES
Brocade-Stock.Up
For Outin15 & Cook-Outs
.. tDO·CDU•T. Jlll PACKAGE
U.S.D.A. Choica
Grad1d 8111
Gr11t Fer Out•
4t tr l1rb1c11 l11f
BLADE CUTS
lb.
Sirloin Tip 1:1:~::·
UIDA C .. lco l11t~h $139
E1c11/tnt Sl11k It l1r·l ·Q111i J~.
R d St k '"" ''"'" 991 OUR ea s Cols·Boo<-1• I~
T ·Bone Steaks 'u"~.'~::1 ... 1P1
Top Sirloin Steak ·~:" "· 11"
GROUND
BEEF
USOl IHpKtod 59 ForWholeso111t111U. C
In l 3-lb, P1ckogo I ..
(3.fl, Chw• ... $1 .11) ,
Pkg. of 8 Skylark Hot Dog
BUNS and
l·lb. Pkg. Sterling Sklnleu
FRANKS
~,01" 89c
fQ\l _ -
(
-~·1~f . , / I\ _ l iahl Fasler,
'/. I .. "°;", BlKo longer! c
Ugllttr Fluid
Ozark ~ 36 Brand ••~ C
, RIGHT GUARD
~ : Deodorant-Gives Self· •·•i.
HOLIDAY FAVORITES J Ass11red Protection Fiant .,,.,
Plfspitltion Odor 01
OLIVES a 1----Jlich Nutty Tat~
r Plenty for The Holidijt 10'
Vitalis Liquid r~,=r .. "•;,
Weraet's Dentu-Creme
Head & Shoulders =:,:::
·~:L 721
u SJlT •L .~ 4Y:a ..... c.. ••••
Foil Wrap K"rtchen Ctilft Brf!ld ·~~ 25'
Jer •en's utr. OrJ skin ronn1111 fOf ~-~". 951 !t Your Sli11. lnch1des 12c Off -~
AllMll~tlYJ Duty
Wonder Foam Cups •••. 491 Mennen's Skin Bracer S•I L $112 ....
•I H ,..,, Spoons or Forks ••• 59' . ... ti IH
Razz.Ma-T azz '""'"""' l •1L 34-..... • •• Pork & Beans Hi&hwty "·•L 271 SHORTENING
W/Sluet ... VElllT IAHO """"' Stuffed Olives Tasty Green il•OL 88' , .. An PUfj)Of.I U5e-l•ghl
•NI WMleiomt! ComtN1e•
Heinz Relish 1:'.I::.~.~:" 11 .. L 321 , ..
• Fre1ch's Mustard
Bar-8-Que Sauce
Fancy Quality
Golden, Firm
and Ripe.
DISCOUNT lb
PRICED! •
'"~ """" """ ,~ .. l .. L 14' ... l::.L 38-
. 3-lb.
ca•
'Juicy -t~. Sweet ~
Valencia Ba'
DISCOUNT PRICED!
Larr• Sitt C1mp1 ,1
Serve Hot or Cold W1lh
Sauce Of Your C~oice Artichokes
Sweet Corn
Large Avocados
F1n1r Q111lllr Gollin
Pass the Salt & Buller-Here's
Com to Feist On
C1lifo tnl1
Serve lh Shell
or Sliced
Watermelons
Cantaloupes
Winesap Apples
.... piPSlli
• ft""" ~\\W Q.1.0.L _.,_
courotts
'"' ... """' 101 Vint"Ripened I~ .,,. .• ,,,_..... 191 llltlll A i, Mode ,._
•
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6 .. n49c
... 25«
, ll71
11,t , .... ,,,,
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Albertsons
Grade A
5to141b.
., average
BEEF STEAKS
USDA Choice or
Albertsons Supreme
• Sirloin Tip
• Boneless Rib Steak
• Top Round
• Cube Steak
lb.$) 29
. I
,,
~ ·· .. , ~0';·; Regular
Small Size
Eitra
Meaty
Great For
Bar-8-Que
~b.
SPARE
RIBS
100 CT.
-...._PKG.
; .<
Freshly
Ground
t~i A s· ,,: ny 1ze
;A Pkg " ' .
GROUND
BEEF
Wtdntsday, May 2b, 1971 DAJLV Pih_Q.T . 43
~~~~~~~~~~
Grade A
j Plump
Juicy Birds
JONIS
SAUSAGES
... 79c.
KINGSFORD CHARCOAL
BRIQUETS ,,,___
CUCUMBER CHIPS ~·,-:;•,:: •........ 39' FABRIC SOFTENER :::~:,.. $]29 LEMONADE '""'"'"'"·"'"' 10 $JOO i11.11u ................ for
PITTED OLIVES ~::~:.:i:.""'' .. 29' GIANT DREFT """ . . .. 78' FROZEN DINNERS ::;:;::~:'.''.'''.'~36'
ORE-ID A POTATOES :::·:.::,•:,4$1°0 FIG NEWTONS :::'.~:... . ....... 46' GIANT CHEER •••"····· .78'
W1f1 11 ANTHONY NOODLES ;;•;::::: .. 33' GIANT TIDE """ ........ . . 78' S11u11 JENOS PIZZA ROLLS ~::::;·,·~. 59'
Sweet Vine
Ripe
TOMATOES '"' .... '"''"" . ,. 1 gc
CUCUMBERS ~::~.: ............. 1 oc
ONIONS :::.~·~.:,,.. ... 2 , .. 29c
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PEACHES
Cillifornia Springtime
New Crop
3rb~100
MIRACLE WHIP ... rt.,.. . .. sac
w•ile. Dk. Ch1cal1lt ;ud YER CAKE MIXES '""""''"''''"" 4 $] LA Ytl1aw.19a1.1i1t.............. for
BAR-B-QUE SAUCE i1':.·~:':'. . . . 3 ,,. $J
ICE CREAM ;~b.e::1~:;, ............................................... ~CAL 72c
COLD DUCK
CHATEAU RENE
Buy Plenty
fnr The
Weekend
4
FIFTHS
for
·PANTYHOSE
Sizes to
fit All
L11s
ENKASHEER
PAIR
for
I s
'
CAKE Of THE WEEK
Germ" CAKE Choe.
1;,., $J19 2 layer
51D So. lr11k•1rst, A11•1l11 251• & 111'111, l11 ¥1111 3041 C.11t llCB11. C1r1a 111 lir'
13157 lhdhitl Ave. T•1!11 12233 C11tr1tl1 t;., l1ke-..ttd 11150 l Frem., )lirw1la:
224l F111•iU llH~ la t111;1 100 St. C111t llwy •• L11•R1 811c• C1r•!1 I V1•wt1, C,1t11 Plft
lltltM!t! ..... 1911 ·-111$, H11t111111 l11c• 1351 Wtst11!11ttr 11,~ .• Wut11i11tu 1511 D111111111r,., IH•t l'Nt
BURGI[ DRAFT "" 6 99' DEODORANT .......... ,~... 78' ""·'"'"'""'''" "'""'''""'"-''"'' "'"''"'•'"'·'""-"" ···-' ••• .. .... , ~ u ....... '·-.. II 2tDD W. llSttlllS .,.~ ,, ..... ,. 1151 St. [lw11•s. Nlftli11t11 lt1ca 2511 ....... llfmi.1 WHISKEY :~:.'.".:'.~ ........ w. f II"· ••. $33' SHAMPOO ~:i:i~ 1it1 ...................... t1. s11s 11711 W. llhll1, A11•1111 112DI Finl .. , • ., WblUler 115 L F11rtllll, l't ... .
.1rtt "' 151 No. K.r•tr Itri~ La 1t1•r1 441 (111 S!r11t, A•1•1IM 7U t Alllfttl lrifl.Alb .... VODKA :::ti''.~'.~~ ........................... 1298 BEACH TOWELS ~~~::~;1~7 .. · ..... u. 5270 11a42 M•1•1U1, F•w•t111 v111rr 11a33 L~1• .,,,,·, .. ,,,,,H•IPn 4141 Wt1••fl,lll,....
===============llltllftstm.1,1..,,a,ii"'ii" •• 00 .. -.UI>~--
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Let your planning ••• be
it for the mountains, the
beach, the patio or the
deck •• , begin at El
Rancho ._... for a memor-
able :?tfemorial Day!
We Will Close
Mon., May 31
Memorial Day
Open Sunday, May 30
El Rancho's own
FULL
SHANK
HALF
Lean ••• because they're cut from the best part of the ham ••• delicious because it's El Rancho's!
Whole Ham ............................. 59~ Butt Portion ............................ 59~ -Big enough for a hungry hordP 1 There's so much good eating in our ham !
'
Sparkle Fresh Produce!
. .,.... . 11~1 lJ···jr/J"' . . . ~ .. . ) ,,,,__ :(I 1ff '1 : ... ~ . • ••••••••
~· £ach tender golden kernel bursting v"ith S\veet goodness ! Compare the
quality ••• and see that there really is a difference at El Rancho!
Cucumbers ........................ 2 101 29' Romaine ............................ 2 101 29'
Long and green and cool and crisp ! Garden fresh ••• crisp ]eaves, so fresh :
• Delicatessen Specials . .
Rath' s Canned Ham .... ~:L~ .• ~A~ .••.• $2 89
Perfect picnic size ..• pullman shaped for e''en slices .•. and \ve'll do the §!icing at your request!
Kosher Style Pickles ........... 39' Shrimp Cocktail .................... 33¢
Crisp and zesty : ..• 1-lomade ... 22 oz. jar! Serve in re-usable 4 or cocktail glass ! Lassco.
Salami Chu bs, .................. $1.39 Sliced Jack or Swiss ............ 49¢
Gallo Dry ... mail one overseas! ••• 13 oz. size. Natural cheese from Cache Valley! 8 oz.
W•I ' B•t ' B REAL BACON 1 79e 1 so n s 1 s o aeon .............. : ..... .
!lade of only real bacon: •• , crisp bits that go so '"ell on sala-ds ! Enjoy the Natural flavor of \Vilson's !
Cook-out Values
Kingsford's , •• for uniform heat! 20 lb. b11 •••••••••••• $1.57
Wizard fire Starter ....... QUAR I •••••• 49'
Starts coals surely, easily . , . burns off comple~ly !
Reynolds Broiler foil ................. 39'
So many uses around the grill! Strong!' 20 foot roll.
Solo Hot Cups .......... 39¢ C-& B Relishes ..... 5 for $1
\Vi th holder and 20 cups! Your choice .. , 4 kinds •• , l OY2 oz.
Paper Plates ............ 59¢ Mixed Bean Salad ... 43¢
Bond,vare .. 9 inch •• pkg. of 100. S&. \V, ready to serve .• , 15 oz. can.
Place Mats .......... 3 1or
51 Cucumber Pickles ... 49¢
Scott's, colorful, practical! 24 pk. S&.\V •.• crisp slices in 22 oz. jar!
tcnlcsl
Chicken Breasts ... ~~~1 .... 69~
.Plump ••• so much more meaty, 'cause they're from California grown king sized birds ••• and so tende r t
Legs & Thighs ..... !~.H1 ..... 59~
Rich juicy dark mea~, so deliciously tender, moist, flavorful, king-sized California fryers make di!ferenceJ
So mu ch meaty goodness here! Quality makes the difference in taste !
Ground Round ......................... 89~
Lean and fresh ••• bulk or precision patties!
' fresh Spare Ribs .................... 59~
J.I edium size, to offer more good eating.
Jimmy Dean's Sausage ......... 79~
F or a really betU!r breakfast! 1 lb. roll .
Boneless Ham .................... $1.59 lb.
Cure 81 or Bar-M ••• \vhole or half!
Cooked Shrimp ...... : ........... $2.89 11. King Crab Meat ................. $2.79 ,b.
Ready to use .rour favorite 'vay ! Alaskan ••• for a salad or a. cocktail?
New Yolk Strip ..................... $2~~
Aaah-h ! Satisfaction t U.S.D.A. Choice beef ••• nii.t urally aged for flavor and tenderness ! ••• Incom.
New · York Steak .................. $29~
\\'hat could be more re,varding than hearty, tender New York steaks ? ••• and you know the value is in
Super Holiday Savings!
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lranks ....... 55!
I t's a great time for serving hot dogs .•. and they'll be doubly
delightful ,~·ith the all meat goodness of Farmer Joh n's Franks!
Hot Dog Buns ...... ~~ :s.~. ~u.N~ .... ~ 3 i $1
Langendorf's ••• package of eight ••• delivered fresh da ily to add to your ~ook-out pleasure!
Potato Chips ....... ~~~R.A. ~c.u~~~:s ......... 4 9c
Big 12 ounce bag ••• crisp and crunchy! 'Vl1y settle for lesser quality v.·hen El Rancho offers this value !
Cola or Root Beer .... l~~~~.A~~s ..... 6 ~ 59'
The occasion becomes co1nplete v.·hcn you have plenty of soft drinks. iced do"·n, so tingly, refreshing?
Darigold Butter .................. 81 ~ Hawaiian Punch ............ 3 for $1
rrtade from fresh cream ••• "AA" quality! Choose their favorite kinds! ••• 46 oz. cans.
' Sliced Pineapple ............ 4 for $1 Mother's Cookies ................ 43¢
Do le's , .. No. 1 ~;~ cans .•• to go '''ith hnn1 ! Save lOc on Oatmeal, Sugar or bfacaroons.
\\ Hunt's Cats up ..................... 29¢ Macaroni ............................. 23¢
Belongs on a cook-out: ... 20 oz. bottle. Globe Al Salad Shells, Elbo"'s '. 1 lb. pkg.
Ice Cream ............................ 79' Pizza Rolls ...... : ................ ~ ... 59¢
Royal Host •• catering quality •• half-gallon ! Frozen hors d'oeuvres from Jeno's ! 6 oz.
Cool· Whip ........... 35' ,:. Los Olivos Olives ................ 49"
}~1·ozen from Birds Eye ! Q11art S9 t Stuffed green manzanil\a! •• , 7 ~ oz. jar.
Y uban Coffee ................. 83~
'fhe one you choose !or a heal'.tY bre''' ! Tvlo lb. can 1.65, Three lb. can 2.,19
Sup er Liquor Valu es
El Rancho Beer .......... ~~~~~.~~~········· 79e
Enjoy the bubbly goodness ••• and en joy El Rancho's special price !
l~ick a pair of six packs at this price, to double your pleasure!
Boutique Napkins .... 25¢ Pitted Ripe Ollves ... 39¢
Package-of 50 .. so-10ft;1"l't-stronir1-stw,-extra-1a1"11t! slZ<. No. 300 c11n.
Pritts in. tfftot Th 11r. tht'OuoJi S11n..
ltfa:v 27, !l8, 19, 30. No 8ales to dealrr.i;.
, Crown Russe Vodka ..... H.ALF:6A.~ ..... s91
Open dn ilvo·to 9., ;Sundau1·in~7
ARCADIA : sun"' and Huntington or r/i'i't· PASAD ENA : r/i\'t; SOUTH PASADENA : /W;t: HUNTINGTON BEACH : , /'li'i[;, . NEWPORI BEACH'."i?i~~ew ii~ii(''.'.~.
1EI Ranclio Cenler J ''"" 310 Weit Colorado Blvd ..... Fremon! and Hunlrnglon Or ,.,,,. • Warner and Algonquin !Boardw alk Center ) ''·" ' 1555"!.isibluff IJt. i&a11iimu•Wia~i~i~I'
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J 8 PI LOT.ADVERTISER WrdneSdil1, MaJ 26, 1971 DAILY PILOT lJf•
• NO ONE OFF ER MORE! ..
THE REJtL ESTATERS No. 1
No. 1
No. 1
In Servlc.-~for1 1nt1.-1ter tM 1111. 60 trll,_, 111 .. ,..,1. I , S efflelf te follow thr11-
ln Mvertlsln o...,t•t• cev•rat• 9f the ....,..
lt9r Arn "'' d•t• '
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CHOICE HARBOR VIEW HOME
This desi~·ablC' Palermo 1nodel with many up..
graded extras is the ans\vcr lo luxurious Jivini::;
at a mode1·ate price. Spacious family room \vlth
fireplace and \Vet bar adjoin carpeted dream
kitcht'fl, Dramatic t>ntry. Large, :;ecluded mas· -
ter bedroom suite µ!us 3 additional bedrooms, Luxurious custom carpeting throughout -many
othrr tastefully sclec tf'd extras -you 011·n the
land. Call today to see. 646-7171.
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PANORAMIC VIEW
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The bay, Lido & ocean from this 3 bedroom, din·
lng roon1, large 26x26 living roo1n Ne11•po1·t
l-lt'ighls home>. 011·n th<' land for S5•1,950! It's 0 11
a large lot 11·ith room for a pool plus. Nc1v car-
pets, drapes & paint, The owner is an.'l'ious! Call
646-7171.
HONEYMOON COTIAGE
SOUTH-OF· THE·HIGHWA Y
IIO\v about thi!! in Coronl'I d!'I i\1ar? A sharp 2
bedroom, 2 bath home only a short \1·alk to thr
bead1. A surprising" ,·alue at only S-13.900. For a n
appointnlent lo see call 6i3·8550 today.
NEAR THE BEACH
Danrlv 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Ne'v long Ji?ff'"n shag:
c&rpe.1"-, par! block ''all fcncrd. Out.'!lnnding
value in Huntin~ton Beach. $18,950. 842·~
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FANTASTIC FIVE BEDROOM
Outslandini:: family hon1c Jn f;TC'B l rn>ighboa•hO<Xf.
J.fuge f111mily roon1, :;;unny kltrhcn, ro1111al dinini::
room, r,.;11·111 larer living r oom "·Ith i;tone lire-
placc. S.·l0,500. 646· il il.
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DUTCH HAVEN MARINA 4 BDR
Just placed on market, this 4 bdr-2 bath home i.,
ready to occupy, Neat, trin1 throughout, freshly
painted, fully carpeted, con.er Patio, block \Valls.
1 bdr paneled & shelved, ideal for den or study.
BC'llcr hurry 10 Sf'f' this~ Phonf' 842-2535 or
;,<16.2313 for information. Full 1ir1cc $30,900.
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WALK TO THE BEACH
to school, to 1he library from this immaculatr .'\
bcdroo1n 2 bath home \l'ith beautiful earp<>tini::
fllld vinyl floors fllU~ quali1y custom drapes.
Don't \\'ail. call no\v to see this charmer priced
~32,900. call 842-2535.
PLAY IN THE BAY
and S\Vim in your O\\'n Tahitian Pool! A 3
bdr home only 3 blocks from the bay. Ne\v
paint & carpets. Only $39,500. Call for the
facts 546-2313.
FAMILY FUN
ln this spacious ·5 bdr Republic home. Roo m
for boat. camper as \\'ell as a pool. ~1esa
Verde area. $44,500. Call for details 546-
2313. r-
BEAUTIFUL CLIFF DRIVE
Quality custom construction. Stressed for
2nd story with plans available! Better than
ne\v condition. Trul.v 1ninimum care yard.
Ne\vport Heights 3 large bedrooms, 2 full
baths. huge family room. All at just $47,600.
l~ct us shO\\' you this very special home to-
day. Call 646-7171.
BACK BAY BEAUTY
Architect designed and custom built con·
temporary home 3 bedroon1s. 3 baths, large
atrium and 2 fireplaces. Co1nplete built in
electric kitchen. Ample room for pool, ten·
nis courts, etc. Price only $53,000. Cati
646-7171.
BOATS· BOATS· BOATS
At your door step. plus a gorgeous view or
all the bay. All <this for $49,500 in a To\vers
Apt. Living for Jess than 360/mo. Phone
673-8550 for appointment.
THE BEST KIND OF YARD . . .
l s the one soffieone else maintains. The
best kind of pool is ... the same kind. 1£
this is yo ur philosophy \Ve have your home
ready for you. 3 bedrooms. 21f..i baths in
the bluffs with a park for a back yard. Lib-
eration for man. woman & c)1ild for only
$44,500. For details call 673-8550.
4 BEDROOMS + GUEST HOUSE
So clean, so neat, on a private .street just a
felv steps to 'Yes tcliff shopping -The 15x
27 guest house could also be a teen-agers
haven -Covered patio -lots of concrete-
o \V n er leaving C'ountry and wants quick
sale -only -$34,950 -can be seen any·
ti1ne -615·8550.
PLAY GOLF
and "live" a c r o s s the street from the
?ileado\vlark Golf Course in Huntington
Beach. 3 4 bdr home that sparkles! Cathe·
dral ceilings, profe.~sionally landscaped1 and
1 year ne\'1! $38,000. Call for details. 842·
2535.
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SUBURBIA PARK SPANISH
Located in one of the n)Osl Jltlpular & best n~·i;'.:h·
borhoods in Huntinbton Bt•ach. (Ju~t a.~k any or
the rcsidcnls.) This hon1c !<'ii.lures <I 1xl1-, ran1Hy
,·oom formal dining room, :.!-1,1 bath~. S11uatC'd {•n
'cry lnri::e Joi \\·ith rxln:i privac·y. Pl'icrd to ~rtl
quickly 111 S40,500. Phonr 5~6-:l:n:1 "r 8-l:l-2j;j.:i
(or additional inforn1atiun.
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2 ·0NALOT
Exceptionally sharr -nnly 5 )'('Ill".., olcl -"n
Jarg<! 60.xl:.J.l Jot -Built-ins. shakr l"Hllf. Scpa-
ratl' garages. Ju~! a .'.lCJ • tu all sho1i11ini;:. 10' ,,
Do\vn. $34,900. 646-7171
ON BALBOA ISLAND
Ren1odeled and expanded 3 Bed roo1n -3
bath -10 s teps to sandy beach. Ash panel-
ed -ne\v kitchen and baths and storage
space galore -2 car garage. $82,500 -
Call 67J.8550.
TENDER LOVE & CARE
flave made this 3 bdr. 2 bath home the verv
cleanest you can find. If you enjoy a ,1·eil
kept la\vn, a back yard full of flov.rcrs.
sparkling cle~n floo rs & rheerful \1'all pa·
per then this is the home for you. {)ou't
hesitate to caJJ 646-7171.
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
Freshly painted t"•o story on rul-dc-:-i:H'.
Ne\v drapes. Lovely brick firep!Jcc. 3·rar
garage. Just reduced lo $40,950. Call 646-
7171.
MESA VERDE BEAUTY
Charming 2 story home in Cos(a ~ll'sa's 1nost
desirable com1n unity. 4 bedrooni~. den, din·
ing room, 21/2 baQ1s. 2100 sq. ft. shake roof,
shag carpets, lots of extras. If yo u ~ee this
one you'll buy it. $39,950. Call 546-2313.
RARE 51;4•/o ASSUMABLE LOAN
If you're looking for .a very special hon1c in
Costa ~tcsa \Vi th 3 bdr. 2 baths, fan1ily
room, very clean &. neat throughout, fresh-
ly painted, shag cpl. large lot. ni cel y land-
scaped, room 'for additional con~tru clion ~'-=
pool -1-boat/tra'iler/ca1nper, and a 5 1~' n
assu1nable VA Joa n -you just found it!
Price $31 ,500. Phone 546-2313 fur addition-
al information.
UNBEATABLE AT $24,950
Super collage beautifully decorated. Ready·
to-move in! Corner lot 3 bdr home \vith
paneled double garage. Con\'cnient to
schools & shopping. Call now 646·7171 .
SALESMEN NEEDED .
EARN MORE! LEARN MORE!
Lei us show you how
• You can tarn up to 80',0
e Profit Sharing Plan
• Ptrsonallzed Training Pro~ram
e l\lort Sales Help-Ne1v Truinin:; l'ro.>::rain
1n Progress
Call Randy McCardlt 5~6-2316 for
Interview
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LUXURY & VERSATILITY
Look at this ~II(' & you'll U..' ('OITI[')('l\('cl IN llil'•'e
11ith us th11l il's about lht> ioharp1'S\ & n1oel l a.~tr•
fuly dt.'<"·•r11h•d home around. 4 bdr, 1-n blllh,
ro1·mH.i dinln,i.: l"OOlll, family roon1, & fJreJ)il. The
4th bdr \\'ilh a lRrj!f' r"\'Crl'ation roon1 {pool tablr
.~izr 1 ls S('paratf"d fru1n thr n111in living quar1rr11
!..· ha~ it ~ 111111 lmrh. Proff'!iiiinnally landscfl.t>!'d &
<lf'c·ol'atC'd. Nl'11·110rt BC'ach frr land in rlc:.;ant
nt•1v 1ll"r>a. Call !'i·l6-Z313 •
CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX
:! -:.! R•·drovm huu~f'S in onr of our best sou1h-
.,r-llu·-h1gln\·ny h•cnllons. Exrrltr nt incon1•', :ind
<'11n . u._, st.'<'ll Rlmost anyti111C'. S'i~.951J. Call
tl7;J.8550. '.
RIGHT ON THE BAY
J~cau ti!ully redecorated, 3 large hedroom!(,
3 11:.i baths, livi ng roon1, formal di ning rooni,
breakfast roo1n ~'.: a large sunnv kitchen on
the bay, plus a proper stud y \1 ith fireplace
·& 1vet bar. All this coupled \1ith off street
guest parking, Space ror a s11·imming poo l
and a large private patio. 1nake tlus the
n1ost exciting-offering of tile year for only
$164,000. Call 673-8550 for details.
VIEW HOME
IN HARBOR VIEW HOMES
1Jran1atic e11lr an1·c. spacious family room
\vilh fireplace ao d \vet bar. Secluded master
bedroo111 suite plus 3 additional bedrooms.
•rastefutlv rlf.'t·nratcd & loaded \l'ith extras.
l 'ou 0111i !hr l:i nd. Call today to sec.
646-7 171. $55,000.
NEWPORT HEIGHTS VIEW
~p;u·ious ho111c, l"ic11• of Ne1vporl, bay &
11c·cu11. L:.1rgc !i1·i11~ roo1n wit h built-in
shelves l°l "lora~e. fo rrn;il dining & brcak-
!a st area: huge up~tairs fan1ily roo1n & bar
-Al~L \Vilh \rlF:\V. Onc-of·a-kind custom
hon1c. $72,500. Sho\\ n by appointment 646-
7171.
FOR THE FUN-LOVING
NEIVPOHT SHORES ON TflE CANAL
l.o vcly t., large .. \ for1ner model hon1c . 4
BH, den for office), 3 baths plus a neat bo·
nus roon1 for ping pong and pool. Ouly
$49,500 673·8550.
CLIFF DR. BEAUTY
1~ct1er than nc11• condition -quality con-
~t1·uction -strc3sed for 2nd story lvith plans
available. \'cry mini1nu1n care yard! 3 large
bdr, 2 full balhs. huge family room. Offer-
ed at jnst $47,600. J.,ct us shO\\' yo11 this
vrcy special horne today. Call 646-7171 .
NEWLYWEDS· TAKE NOTICE!
1'his tute 3 bd.J·. green shag carpet.. 20 x 40
patio. fenced yard. corner lot \vi lh room
for boal or trailer. Only $25,500 -hurry •
0\1·ncr anxious. Call 646-7171 .
LOTS! LOTS! LOTS!
NOW'S THE TIME TO BUILD!
50 x 125 lot· n1. alley. just $12,500 !Mag·
nolia).
84 x 104 lot -Rt · ~ood area· $24,950 {Gra·
nada.
90 x 125-HI -l:ppcr B;iv $21 ,500 ·(22nd).
06 x 300 -P.4 · 6 nn1ls s:zu,000 (Canyon).
1\lcsa \1crdc. Ill $21 ,950 ·<Suva\.
107 x 101 .5 -Cl -Bak rr St. -$29,950 (1,·ill
exchange).
' In Sil• In the H•r•or .-,.._,, .. , ,..ltfv.,_
Thi• 11 wh•r• "T Action 11."
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TWO-STORY NEAR BEACH
Beautiful, 3 Bcdroorns -21~ Bath -very sharp
homf' lh!'Oughuut, Fralures formal dining area.
large family room '\'ilh brick firepla~. upgraded
l·arl)f'ting, large Jot. ~xrellent location near all
school~ .. ,hopping and beach, Pri~ $36,750. Call
546-2313.
MESA VERDE -$28,500
11 .. 11· rnany homl'i> do )'OU sur1µou thrre: &'fl hl
!1!1•:.n \lrrde undrr S28.500! \Vr count 3 am\ the
nic{·~l or thC' 3 by far is this little sharpie. 3 Bed·
roum.; 2 baths f1n•m11l dinin~. pool sizl'd yard and
10';, Do"'n. For details -673-8550.
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FAMILY LIVING
Cunvrnicnt cast~lde location. Pool &: patio l or
1'nlertainJng. Srpar11lr master bt-droom &: bath.
\Vondrrful r11mily rnom & kitch1•n. \Vet ~,.
n1·ail11ble. Rt:iat •Jr cnm11t•r stora~r area. A mµs t
l ('{' at $.17,950. Call &IG-7171. •
MOVE UP TO WESTCLIFF
l'\u1v ii" thr timr. 1'r11.n15{rrrl'd owner Is offe1·in~
this quality homl', loaded with extra featureg at
a p1•ice thlll 'viii en11blc you to provide your fam ..
ily "·Ith the IK'St in eccomn1oda1lons, locatjon.
t'tJll\'cnicncc and satis(nction. 4 bedroom:i, 2\i
bath~. dinln:: room, recrrl'l.tion room, study. Let'•
'o s1•c it~ $63,900. Call 546-2:113.
MESA VERDE GOLF COURSE
A lu1) g_olf counr> locetion v.·lth a breathtakinc vir1\·, 5 bedroon»' or 4 bedroo1ns &: den, 3 bathl'o
fornial dining ~nd breakfast room. It is elso the n1o~l inc.xpensiv(' 110U course home in f.lcsa
Verde by Car at $48,500. Call 646-7171.
THB REAL ESTATERS
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NEWPORT BEACH
1700 Newport Blvd.
646-7171
•
COSTA MESA
2790 Harbor Blvd .
546-2313
-
HUNTINGTON BEACH
17931 Beach Blvd.
842-2535
CORONA DEL MAR
332 Marguerite
673 -8550
INVESTMENTS
2784 1-jarbor Blvd ., Suite 20 I
Costa Mesa · 546.2316
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DAll't' PllOl PILOT·ADV£RTlilR 19
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Everyone H ea ; •
Somethin lh et/
Someone Else Wonts
DAI.LY PILOT CLASSlF.IED· ADS
1The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
You Con Soll ft,
Fin d ft, T rode It
With o Wont Ad
_ ..... I~ !. -•w•7 I~ I Hcx.sfflorSale I~ ]~ [ ~lorSale I~ ~r -;;;,·"~ .... ~J~~l~-~·"~s.J·~l~~l
Oentr•I 91ntral Gtntr.11 G1n1r1I General Corona dtl Mar Coron• dtl ~Ir
* * * * * TAYLOR CO. * dJnda ~9j£
PRESTIGE WATERF;.ONT HOMES
l'OOL l'LUS!
Unique front courtyard 1ur-
round1 big, heated & Utrd
An1hony pool. Rear yd & pa.
1lo offers sale play area for
lhe children. 4 BR, lamdy
r m., 2 Ba. sep. laundry rm,
bltins & \\.=lier sollencr in·
i:!uded for only S36,500. No
down Vt!ls or Low down
FllA
* REDUCED $1,000 *
HURRY ON THISI
5 BEDROOMS
VACANT
$27,750
Swim Pool
Shade tree.11 + patio + deck·
Ing + pool au ad d up 10
family enjoyment. 3 Bed-
room & den, huge family
room. Handsome natw-al
brick fireplace, dream kLI•
chen with xlra ealing area,
built-in ra.nge + oven +
dishwasher. No dO\\'n terms,
hkr. 540-1720.
OPEN DAILY
LINDA ISLE -$145,000
New listing! Ca ll to see this gracious
home with 4 bdrfl}s. study, family rm
formal DR. Room for pool. Pier & slip,
92 Linda Isle Driv•
Beaut. 5 BR., 4 be. home \Y/!ormal ~in. rm.
& family rm. 3 Frplcs. Outside stairway.
Built-in gun cabinet & bookshel ves. $145.000
H1rbor V itw Homes
Beautiful residence with 11.·el
bar, lo\•ely carpeting, setr-
cleaning ovens. Quick pos-
6ession. Owner anxious!
''Our 26th Ye1r''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realton
TARBELL 2955 Har.bor
For Complete 1nformatlon on all homes &
lots, please call : 2111 San Jo.1quin Hills Road Bill GRUNDY, REAL TOR NOW ONLY SSll.500
INCLUDING THE LAND Newport Center ~910 833 Dover Dr.; Suitt 3, N.B. 642-4620 COATS PROFESSIONAL a.ntral General &
WALLACE
REALTOR!
CORBIN-
MARJIN COUNTRY SIZE
• -KITCHEN-I
General ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;···;·~·~· Gen•ra1
COLLEGE PARK l=N-EE;;;;;D;;;:;S;;;;;P;;;A;;;;;C;;;:;E 7;;;;; I ;;;;;C_O_U_N-TR_Y_S_IZ=E
-AREA-The rat:is 1ie€'n1 ro 1€'1! us "'"
have-1h1· anS\\'Cr 1n 1h1s -KITCHEN-
Open Evenings
• 962-4454 •
DECOR
acid cou ntry sized lot. Beaut
1.BR, 2 story l'llS1om home I
wi ih 1111 Xl ra~ inr.I 3c ~ar. I
Owner transl"d to I-"rancr, $26,950 be11u1 ifu1 TRI-LEVI-~!. home and muntry-~izeli lot. Beau-VIEW THE · h I ulul 4 BR, 2 ~1ory rus1orn wit orn1~t d1n 1ngroon1and · BLUE PACIFIC sC!por11 ie large klrchl'n ell!· home wirh all !he xtras Ill·
REAL TORS . 644-7661
B/B
22 YEARS or
REAL ESTATE SERVICE
Large 4 Bedioom plus for-
mal d1n1ni; rn1, Pai:esetler
hon1e, tca!urt•s a unit1uely
dilfrrcn1. drl1ghlfu1 dcco1·.
aling thcn1c. This 1s :.i "n1ust
~ct"' fol' 1hc 1hscrin1ina1u1g
buyer. L<trge loL S•l-l.950. 642-5200
mu1r leave 1mmrd. Pril'cd 1 l.li\·rl y cnr"".r Jot hon1r. with
far quick sal!' a l an unbe-.1 hedroomll + 2 bathll +
lievabll' S44 ,5'XI. Call J.t~24 huge rumpus rnl, All !his +·
{open f'VCll) an asllumable 6', loan of
lng area. Lnlertai n royally cludlnr 3 t11r ~ar. Owner froni this 3 bd rm. & den
In the bl£ ,,inkc-o fiuni!y translc-rre<l 10 Franct' ·must home in Cameo Shores.
room completr "'Jlh \\'ET leave thii;, mo. Pric«:I for an Cornl'r lot insures privacy.
BAR and xtra hall beth. For immedialt' sale a1 an unhc-It also has access to 3 pri-
lhc do • ir _ yourself nian, lievabl!' S-1-t·,j()(). Call 54j.8424 'v111e beeches. One ol our
IN TiiE HARBOR AREA Corona del Mar
BAYFRONT 1 ::::2::::::0~N:;..:;A:;::;.~LO~Tc--l ~O~u71s~t~an=d~in=g:--:-lo:c:::at;;,:;-
Prict' just reduced SJ.COO. 4 br, 2 ba, lge ki tchen/d1n'i;
Colta M11a
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UNMATCHED
Ideal !or Doctors, Investors. !
!'le:. 2 Bed.rm!!. 2 b a I h s.
tweds \\'Ork inside It out.
' qooD LOOKING FlXER
llPPER and \\'HAT A LQ.
CALE!~!
Arnold & Freud
'-~-JSR E. 17th SL, C.~1.
'4fi·715.i daytt &16-5.)38 r Vl' * MESA-VERDET
l..Ovt'ly immac. homr. Bc;1ut.
:grounds. Cov. 1111tin .. 1 BR.
· & fam. rm. 2 Baths. s:>S.!1Xl.
Geor9t Williamson
REALTOR
9ener•I
I ORl.\I [ 01.\0\
" "i A/l(!Nj
QPEN 7 DAYS A \VEEK
Would You ltlltve
LESS THAN
$75.00
A Month
Investor's special. Takt'
'ovf'r 51,i annual '1ii ral1•
FHA Joan. Neal and
clelln :\ bedroom homr.
Can be yours for Jrs~
than $75 11 month. Rfl.rP
fi nd n,..~t lf'd on hu!'C
well krpt lo!. t'or t hf'
parlicul11r home buyer
or the discerning invrs-
tor. Don't r11 1J to in\'eS•
tiga l4" this unusual op-
portunlly. \Von't last
10 hurry _ call
MS-0303
BACHELOR
"BEACH"
BARGAIN
If aandy brachrs and
the roar ot the surf
turn you on. thlg is it.
Summer-fun cot11110:e.
Spacious living roorn,
bright shiny kitchrn,
large bedroom s. IN·
CLUDES li\'ing roon1
furniture t1nd rrfrigera·
tor. O\\•nrr liquidating
for fast salr. J)on't pass
u11 that brit>k·morning
run OTl thr s11 nd. Hurry
-won't lasL DiRI
64S-030l
I Ol!l \I r OL\O~
'-'rA 1 I('!('~
$18,650. Payablt' Sl7l mo.
includrs taxes etc. llurry
on this one. here's 11 big 3 (.\R GAR· (open evrs. I hcst. Cali to see. $67,j()O.
Luxurious sandy beach -1.,...,..,..,,..,,,.,..,.. .. ..,,l2 · 'l Bedroom houses in one area, lrplc, brick .pa!JO,
S\\'imming al your pleMure. LA BONNE VIE of our best south-of-lhe·high· trl'<!i, corner house w/side I
ACJ:: too: !l's all rtRdy to ~ Dran1allc view of harbor t'n-\l'aY locations. Ex~Uent in-yard tor boat or trailer. 2 Two Bd rm. T\\'O Bath, pa. '-· I tranre. 3 Bdrms. plu~ fam-con1e and can ~ seen a -mlnu1es to major •hop ' Newport ~e. TOTAL l\10'lTHLY .........-----~ lio. pool and recreation · ~·-9~ c II • Hy rm. New price S9~,500. most any!ime. ~J, .AO. a center. iref:!"'ays, school~.
•I
Fairview
Ml>-8811
(1nyrime)
PA'fl\1ENTS ol 1246 at a ColdvveD Banker
•·01a1 prlceof :nlyC~&~~~'! t, ..... _..,,....,.._..,...,..,,I ~ room. O~LY f.!l,500. Can S I · 1 I X!nt Terms. 673-j.=J() or appoln men· 50 acre park. $31,500. you ask for more? Bay & Beach Rlty. 546-3086.
WALK TO THE 133-07oo 644-2430
2407 E. C~L H11o·y .. CdM -.~R~od7u_c_e~d~$~1~,ooo=~*~
C•ll f " Ooc •·r.., M. M. LA BOR,.,,0 .. £_.
1 . WALLACE BEACH PLC'turc Brochure ..-FHA. VA, Convent., or )Oil
Of C11rren1 Lis!lngs 325-MARf G-OLD--name it! 3 BR.+ lam. rn1 . REALTORS This large fa mily home is all
-546-4141-cu.~!om. ~ RR., 3 Ba., Jam. NEED MORE ROOM? 67' 3000 Tnn·1!1c family home. Spac. 2 Ba. $28,700. •· ' C•ll·. P•l Wood STEAL IT -BEACH
ONLY $16,950
Jusi !isled! Clran 11s a run.
:-.1odl'rn charm. Huge roon1s.
AH elec. l)u1!1 -1n kill·hen.
Dining area. Shd1 n~ l!;las~
!o palio. Hugf' g1·nund~. 2-
car garage \\'l1h ho;it door.
\\'alk ro school~ ,t. shops.
Joj;! to heach. E-f. 1erms.
Bet1er hurry. Call t714 J
962-llii
I ORlS.l E 01.SO N .......
Rf/fl ro11s
Hll31 Brookhurst Ave.
lluntinl{lOn 81»1r h
3 Bdrms.. l:i.• ba. Lge.
$30,500 FHA/VA 220 E.17tn '"'"· """'"' '"' c"'· & drapes. 11,, Blks. to ocean,
(O rm. plus drn \\'ilh 11r! ba r. Jr you have been lceling
pin Evenings) rt11> red hlf> roof & slump· ('ramped. here's you r
~·nne \\'ill! say •. \lexico. r•hance 10 s!l"l'!Ch out. 4 BR.,
NO DOWN -VA
Our "POT OF <._;OLD " hc>nle
1n EASTSIDE CO~TA
!\IESA. ·rop valu<' for a n11n-
irnun1 ~~.H.A. inves!mrrl! •
NO DO\\'N G.J. \Valk so/tly
on """'· lush avocado car-
Jl{'l\ng ; t"njoy d1n1ng among
a 1\0rld or "'alnu! cabinet.'i,
Rrla:o: undrr rtw CO\'erecl pa-
110 surround,..d hy you r o"n
11N.'larJnf' orehard. ThreP
Bdrm11.. J1" Baths. ONLY
SX>.9:io.
$.il . .'JOO. 212 balhs, formal r!inlng
--
room, df>n. hrkf61. nook, big
yard. $41,000.
Coldwell.Banker --
~ Coldwell,Banker
833-0700 . 644-2430 I ~
2 STORY 833-0700 644-1430
STEAL
This lan1asllc IJ11'J:ain of only $23,000
Evenings Ca!l S-18-3265 ·-----Owner Nevada • bound J une
L"Jth. Large 3 bOOroom
home 111assivt' fireplaces.
fam11Y rn1., all bltins, Jrg DOVER SHORES
boat & tr<1iler yard. !rl'e
shadcd covered patio & quiet
cul-rle-sac. Also, assume
Waterfront
5.l4 ~~ loan -S\75 mo includ-CHA RJ\11NG l BR, 2 B,\
C's laxes. Call 5·1j.3424 (open h0n1e. OC'n. \\'et har, sceam
ev\'s. f room. 60xl00 lot. P1l'r & slip
\outh " ( oas t
for ID fl . boat Xlnt \'ll'W.
$117,950. Xlnt f111e. avail.
0\lo'rl('f. Trade arceplable.
~S-1936 or 6+1-46&1.
S26,%(1 include~ 4 huge bed· I
roo1ns, 15 x 20 J.,rtuly room, 3 Bd & D + p I -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jl!!!!!!!\!~!!!:=~
formal dining !"0(.Jl, J batht, r . en 00 -a· -Park Ilk!' yard. beautiful LOOKS NEW t'<H "p!"IS & dr.1Pt thruout grounds ,t, p1cn1c area.
PLUS ovrr 2000 !Iii. fl . No $ MAKES SENSE 2'' Id • BR I ·1 Sharp hon1e. entry hall, : yr o ·• & an1i y, n11stalte or m1spr\rr. ACT kl . k I bl hu1h1n range & oven & spar 1ng pa110 11. a l 1-
011·nrr anxinus.
MORGAN REAL TY
673-6642 675-6459
-4-STAR * * * * 4 Nca1 2 bdrm. homes on 3
\'aluahle R-2 lo1 s i90 ft.).
I-,'inrst residcnual a r e a.
$11.z.:ai
University Realty
3001 ~. Ci;t, lhry. 673-6Z.l0
DRASTICALLY r rduce d.
lla1·bor Vie"' Hills hon1e. 2
Yrs. ne1v. adull occupied. 4
BR. 2 '~ Ba. Vie\v. By app't.
644--6.J.% Aft. 3 P~1
t-;O\\'. Trade yours When invested in the right ,. 1 , d h · d 1~hwasher, xtra eating ins. u I lTp1 s ,.,. rps, ugr
E W I k & L neighborhood. How abou1 I HOME WITH POOL 2~ . ~7th . 646·~0555 a er ee an·11. w spacious kJ!chen, tWO srpar<Hl' 2 bedroom JLO sq fl. pa 110. Askini.: ~.vc11111,~ Cal! fl41-i003 !1rrnJar1'. patio, Bkr., O""n only $30.950. Ali 1ern1s in1'I
HARBOR View Hills-Lusk
home. 4 Br, 21: ba. J car
gar., ocran \'ii?\\', $69,500.
P.,·1 ply. 9A;'-;!·5P~1. S»-7119,
5 P2\1·9 p:--1, &14·1080
-l ~fl SHORECLlfF" DR.
•· ,,~ hon1es on ! lo! Yi'ith good 3 Bedrm.~. 2 Bath~. hrd\\'rl BEST Realtors 111 !) p.m .. .>I0-1720. {'as!sid(' location? S h 0 r 1 FHA/VA, ownC'r le:i\·i ng
tloors, FA h1. crpt.~. rl rps. - -7682 I-:din,er TARBELL 29SS Harbor area. Call M0-1151 tOpen \\'alk to shopping. Try
* OPE~ DAILY 1 TO 5 *
Vil'11·-3 Br-3 Ba . $115,000.
Pf"\l' Barrett R e a I t y
6'12<'.1200
CostaM~,,-.~~~~-
Large kilch, huge .scp. fam-FOR THE MONEY 1714\ 812-•14:0 or 5.j(').jJ.JC I $31 500 Sl5,j()(), Now. that makes eves. I ~ r~2g :•·lheas! Cosla VETElt.\NS TOO~! u~" yrilll' 1 $23-,950 1 sense! Call 673-4930. r;;~ni~.-~J?~--·~~H~EiRnlTiAGGE~ 1 esa. · · r!1g1b1l11y. FHA for nil I 4 Bd + F ·1 I" '""" ~ .... ,,
h Al
'
rm. am1 y rm •• COl£SY-K>RTifY&CO.I -"' ·--------..-14 BEDROOM 2 BATH 01
"N.
50 1111~ume ow ui-1 Tiit.'\ IS IT' Thorou hl in1-+Pool l -~~~RE~A~L~T~O;Rs~~~11..;~~~~~~:;;;~1 N"'"PORT HTS. 1rn'Sl loan. Churming :I BH ~ ~ Y ~ I ~i Rd l'IMloo•n-•n • ~TY
2 I h k ho . Id 2 rnat·. in & out " BB.!'• A~~un1r ·,.:i,•, Llia n I C\f P·' Uin:e ~tory 10mc. s a r n1r quir t C'u -l'-sac . · ·· · Nr>&<PORT IRVINE TERRACE IIC'1gh1s a1'f:'a o ... .uml'r
roof. firepl, crpt~. 1!ra!J('~ & n1a!'sivf' rlff'prs and all '1hr Ba.I fai:~i ly ~~1 11~1:~ to\~l'rtl i:.-'au1
1
11u1
1 faniily 1hom,e, en. c n 3 BR. 2 Baths. Beaut. par-St, 4 bdrms, 2 l>a lh~. l"ice
many, m11ny x1r11~ s12 .. ·XX1. mod. ronvf'nirncl's, A m11~t "~~OM' ldpa 10 ~~; rr 1°~-llv ial h hu~e ami Y ~~· HEIGHTS quet floor!!, bc;im <'eil's., 11 u1et slrret. Lan::<' R-2 Jo1
Roy McCardle R•altor In Sl'e a1 $30.:,00 Ca I I a c uu 0111~-1 car:-<'" · xi·a bar s. d ning room. r · c·" I wlallcy tor rutuic rental •i~ o"'' 1 · I la~tC'lully dr1'Qra!ed. Pr1dr Lu1urious kuchen n"rk like \Valking distance lo all owner anxious, tlU or 1810 Newpor1 Bl\'d., C.i\I, ., ..... ~ .... open ('\'l'S. •,,.... · II' 9-unit. 01\"nC'r an1do11s, make of ownrr~hlµ. y11M. ;..w.Ji"10. schools. Separale childrens app I . · ~. JO. 5~8-7729 Larwin Rea lty, Inc. TARBELL 2955 Harbor play yard "'ith climbing 673-3663 673-8086 Eves ofler. Asking $29.000.
2\.)ti2 Bn.,•khurs1. 11.ntgn Bch --REPOSSESSIONS-lree. Good siZe room and CALL 0 646·l414
I 546--5411 anytime big bright kilcht'n $33,900. ~d'd _ _ Sp.1rkl1~g clean homes, some """" Call 646-7171. _a.. .._, WATERFRONT ne"·!y IJa inted & carpeted_ 2 REA LTY
$28,000
2 Story Home ---------===-DOVER SHORES :l,1 k ;, bdrms. Some 1v1th Nt1r Ntwport Post orr 1ce
4 BDRM. + FAM. RM.
On qu iet tree l1n1•d st/'l'l'L
Short walk lo a l11"aul1fut
park. En1ry hall, <l1n1n~
room. dream k1trhrn 1\ 11!1
built-in range + n\•1·11
d ishwashrr. htrgf" l111n1ly
room. bkr. oprn t1 I !J 1u11.
54().\720.
TARBELL 2955 Harbor
$22,500
.Ju~t lislf'l'I, 1rrr1hc :\ RR
honlf' 11•1th nvrrs11,r1f lc:ir rn1
for bo31 or 1rlr. 01vncr' has
bough! 11 11nlhrr• hon11• and
n111~i M·ll. ;-.:,, nn VI\ I<> dn
fl-IA ll'l'Hl~. Payn11 ~ ~187
prr n10. inrl laxes & ins.
Call .~11;.:-..~8{1 lnpen f'\'r~ 1
-N-ew-,-Vitw Hom•• na:t HERITAGE
11.t.t uun Dover Shorl's cust hll. llavl' ~
klni: si1r. ··h<'l!r•r IH1ml's1!r sl ~========= w 1 viM\'~ :-.:.B., frf' (If Jcasr-1• ·--Mhl. l nf'11· hon1t·~ und * 644 DARRELL *
eon.~t .. rf'arly for OI'(', in Cn~la \]{'~;. l11111l<H' :t l~R.
,Junr. V1ffif 10.1.~ i\lrir1nrrs D. &· lam. rn1·. ·rastrf~lly de,.-
lor pl'('vie111-:t·:i BH hom es nr~trotl. c11rp. S.. dr11pr.~.
"'/pools. [rplr-.. F' /\. hral; il('llUI.
Ivan \\'ells & ~n.~ tnd!tc·PJ,? HrN's a bargain
1033 i\tariners. Do1·rr ~hoITs fnr SZil .. --00.
546-l:itO Oprn Daily MORGAN REAL TY
DAILY PlWf fo r action' 673--6642 67S.64S9
General 1General
GOxlOO ln1 . l'irr & 11hp !nr 40 pool!. t"H A-VA ronv. terms, -LEISURE-LIVING --COOL OFF_I __
rt boat. Charn11ni;: :': BR. :! fron1 S20,000 to S·I0.000. this summer in this lnvely
B h d b '
• ,,. • • ., I I Beautiful 1 SIO'"'-' 2 Bit 2 Bil \ nnu'. \'n, wrt ar, o ins .-.a Ls nc. "J ~O 11. s\1·imming pool, o~·n-
1 °'S'3 Ad A 962 "'23 $23 950 Condo,, near bay. Lr• l1v. ~1 r11m roonl. X nl \'le\\·. "'~ alllll \P. .,,,, ! er tr:ins. & ha! purchased a
'
I · 1 rn1 11.•uh lirepl, din. area. 117.9:"..0. X nt flnc a11a1. 4 Bedrm 3 B th nt11· home in anolhcr ana,
0 ·r I 1 bl 1 Q blnn.~. Kd crpts, !lrps. dbl ., "'•k• '" off•r O" lhl• l wnrr L'1l( I' f!{'t'f'P a {', 4 Bdr + Den " " " " " ~)\,~_19.16 nr f;!\-l!iSI. Only 18 11\0li, old. This home gar, hid. pool. purling grern. BR. 2 ba, r-.lrsa DC'! i\111.r
IS !IOI\' vacnnl and the_ 01..-ner Brau!!lul hon1c. l'lllry hall, Price reduced to $28,000. VACANT and-READY. hon1c. J ust rrduced $2,000 1!1 anx1ou.~ 10 sell.~ beauti-large roon1~ throughoul , f tt5! rscrow. 133 9~
Bll)l'!'<':'l'I, ~·u~1onu1.rrl · 1·rry flil ~pllt lrvrJ hon"' t-o m-buil1-in range + ovrn + lachenmyer Realtor ~el·~~~Y Real E state .~J>t'l'l1tl honi•· .. ~ 111~" l"M•d-plrlely up graded· !orm11.I di11h11o•as~er. lin~plar.c, Oprn CALL646-3928 Evr~: 646-J6.19 611-i270
roorns, d1n1n;.: r•~)nl and .•r·p-r1111ing, i;e r rarn. nXlll\ wi!h Iii 9 pn1. 5-10-1720. --------------
ar11.rr dt·n. l.01f'ly prwJI. 111 ,·plal'f' . nan1" ~·our tirnis TAR BE LL 29SS Herbor Balboa Island YEA!t old 3 hr Spanish style.
$.~9 .. 'iOO, bt11 hurT_v. Ynr1-01v Real·..,rs -----· ~ Crpl~. clrp~. fl a r I i al I y
Pett Barrett Re alty . ~ti-SGlO. Shorecliffs $4500 On. BY OWNER lndsrprl. ,\ssume GI.
642-5200 STEPS~T=o~B=E~A~C=H~-On VA Joan. ·1 BR. 2 ba. Lgt' Li!!Jp Island. Ct1stom1zed. all 5'1.·i-·_l2_07 ______ _
__ own your ow n lot. Sho1·t nJ"". 2 BR 2 BA 7 ,10,.., ov-13 BR on <'51atp ~ize OC'C'!ln J UST REDUCED Z-Sty. A-fran1e. 3 BR. + \\'alk to 2 heacht's. ~· '"'" 'J
lo $3l.~-:-.1,11ll'rn ~ Btl brach family rm, Corner lo!. Home Show Realtors crlook1ni:; gardf'n W1 la ri::c v0J~iv L lodt. ~1l9c.~i 021""~11";
hornr. nrwl.'• <lr-r•J·'. Only 132.!""' • 1rrms pano belo.,1·. All appliances I 0 111 en . · · · 64 -'v "u '>Vil "Armchair J!ouschunt1ni;:" 01., lk'r "ill t•on,i.r. 1rrn1~-CAYWOOD REAL TY lJ.li E. Coa~t !lwy .• Cdi\I 1nclurlin~ laundry faciluics. ;\II-:SA \'erd.; by owner nJR,
JEAN SMITH, RL TR li.l>ii \\', Coast Jli\·y., N.B. 67S.JllS ~lany spc1·ial fea1ures! fan1 rn1, 2 BA, pa1io. Open
~ E:. lith :'t, C.\I 646-l!?ii I 548-1290 673-7060. daily S:!11.951J 5'15--2075
I
JJOtSE Huntini:-? Watch the House Huntln.it:? \Vatch tl1e I The "\'rllow Pa Res"
For bes! result~! 642·5678 Sell idl e items now! OPlN 110USE calumn. OPEN HOUSE ctllum n. l'ia5s1f1ed .•. 642--5678
General General General Gener el G ener al·
ol.
Scenic Properties 67:>-5i2
COLLEGE PARK AREA
Sharp, 3 lge. BR. home ,
Family r m .. 2 lrplcs .. shar1
cpts. $31 ,950. 251S Vassar1
PL
546-5780
r~on sale by o"'ner: 4 lxlr
home nr schools & shp
$28,000. Agswnable I-'i!
Joan at 5~~ %. 1185 Dor~l
Lane, Cf\1. Phone 54>-2421
3 BR, 2 BA, in College Pai+
area. Anlhony pool. lo\'C'1
yard \\'/brick patio. ~1..i.'
usumable G.I. l oa n
$30.000. 642-2382 ..
COST A r.1esa, heated JlC'
3-4 BR, adjacent to pai
\Valk to 1cbools. By Q11·n1
$35,000. 545-835E
REPOSESSIONS
Gov"t & others. Anyonl' c1
buy, low do11o•n. SZ2~1 1
$10m. \\-'\U s R!ty. ~5
!\lESA Del ~1nr 5 BR, 3 B
M11ny extras. By Q\1·1•,
54S--1701
East Bluff
• EXCLUSIVE AGENTS l
SALES • LEASES
2414 Vista Del Oro
Ne111port Beach 641-11?.:,
Fountain Valley
Owner Transferred
SAYS, "SELL!" $2500 Di'\
4 Bedrms! l baths! 6% loan'
Small $erond!
HAFFDAL REALTY
842-4405
Eves: 5-11-Ul6
SACR IFICE! Must go 1'11~
\\'knd. Park side hon1e. 4 hr.
den, cov!'rrrl patio, 3 car
gar. Across froi n go 11
rourse, pool size lo1 -+
\';\l'an1. $Jj,JOO, { 71 •I I
962-~>692
NO Yard "·ork. Luscious 3
Br. 101.,·nhouse. Prolc.ssion·
ally dl'cor. inside k ou1. 2
Landscap~ patlos. very p\·\
w/pl!'11sant view k pool.
S27.j(X), J ohn ln•;in & Assoc.
636-4470
Gentr1I
l!(fil ! :i §4 ;; 01 NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY
Newport Beach Office -646-7711
2043 Westcliff Or. •t Irvine Open Evenings
SIX IEDROOMS & A VIEW
SEE CATALINA ISLAND
Ovrrlook all of l hl' f\Trsa Vrrdr Country Club arra. f\le$lni fi·
Cl'nl formal dining. l\\'n brirk flrcphu.'('11. f\\"O 11111 10~-purr
luxury "'ilh rninln1um n111 in tt•nancc. CALL N(l\\ !r BU )' A
WJN/'.'t;n.
$19.500
2 "' 3 hi'droom'<. 11i ngl~ !tlory or 2 111011•-lakl' your Jllrk.
Nf'\\'ly dl'C'O'!'Blrd And ho ll! hll \'1' IHHll~. Tr1•1nr11fln11 ~ ]ll'l;lll'Y
ll\'ln~ 01 n1i11in111111 ''°"I Tiu~ i~ nol 111~1 .., <h'i'lltn t•idl\,_
URGENT' They \1·on'1 h1st--cal1 no11 and 11111kr yo11r dt~A nl
a ,.,i;,~.0-VETERAN!.-NO QUALIFICATIONS
That'll ('1)rrtrt-y1)U nt'l'd no! be a Vetrran to 1ak1• •1\'1•r R s•: Mnnu1tl P"rn•ntagt' l'&te VA Loan. No crt'dlt .-.r rrn11loy-
m••nl c1u11 ll tlt•t.llon~ to pul ynur fllmily in 1hi8: 8:!<11clol18:
f.Oxl :lO rt. Int. C1ranf'8:1 hnn1r 1n m,.51 dr,;lr11htr 11rrn I ll"d-
r11on1~. 3 bathroomi;, r\crrr1(' !!air fnr n16:0:1mun1 11r1 \'Bcy.
4 R ~NT
Quirt 1·1iT.flr;uc-iirrM"-.'fW"rnr1mii, r1'1u'!W'iiiirll~r.1'·:rli·1'<'1
yard, rhlldf't'n/Pf'I~ nk. $210 8 month. Al."n llU£" mR n~l•1n tor
onl)' ~.00 a month.
~;?: ,..ae••
Costa Mesa Office
2790 Harbor Blvd.
Days 545·9491
Ni9hts '545·0465
OWNER TRANSFERRED
f\lu~I ~I'll quick this <I l'.>t'dr·oon1 bl'JHl!y 11'!1h hu~r family
ronm. rrcsh!y pa!ntrd. C111ifornia Hanr.h Stylr "l!h lf•1s ot
In•<•!!. \VI' \\'ill ,'°luar11nt!'" thr i;all' nf your honl" on ft \radr -
!n. t.I ;1 11d FH1\ lrrrns includf'd at the 1irice u( $32,:200. CA1J..
PAY TAXES?? RENTING??
XO\\~ 1hr runt' lo i111·1...:,1 111 tt hurnl' 1() snvr 011 1ax1•• rll':.tl
\!'llr. i\ppmx. s:m fll"'r nlo. ~·l'•ni.:~ nn this 3 bt'droom be11u1y.
t ;!'.~ nn 111,,nPy nerdl'd 1\llh tnllll pnymrnl of approx, Sllll
p•·r n111111h 1ntludr~ rill. lln111r hri' all Iha! yo1111t'C'd and morr.
~'L"LL l'l:Jc;f; is S:l'l.950. '\'vu can't afford tn rrnt any lon~l'r.
CALL.
GORGEOUS DOLL HOUSE
11.1 full 11l'l<i" or $21,950. :l hll11;r• bl'droom~ \1l!h 2 bnth~. Im·
n1aculatl' !hruout. Carpl'ts and ~Jlstcnlnf,\ hard"·ood floors
11hh ml'll!'hln.i: dr11 1ll'~ Submit dn\\'n l:>l'Ymrnt on $16,100 r:r
l.rt$l n 111 $1 1·, i~'r n1nnth. 1nclud1nc 1a:1c~ fir NO 00\VX lo
(:! hu1 •·ri. or f l!A Trnn~. C111l-
-·SL~EPER· -
:l i)f"dr1t0m homr \l'ilh 2 bn1hs. fOl't""ri l'lir rurnl\Ct', flrrplAf'f',
rll'clnc b11ilC-111s fnr ;..fnrn in !hi~ ~f~fi' .~i:tvrr Jdtchrn. C11.r-
J"lf'll a nd dr111"''· renliy fo r roor 11'111\'C' in 1\!I t hl~ for $72.()()(l
11 1th rurrrnl Fili\ 1. .. 11n 11lth tnlnl 1~'lyn1r11 ts of Sl70 1rrr
n1onth. l>on't J)U!>S"lhis-CALL
Huntin9ton Beath Office -842·4455
7682 Edinger Open Evenings 540-.5140
7612 £dlng1r opJ*lte Huntington C1nt1r
$24,500 POOL PAD
Add to your dll.Ylime sun and ~vcning fun \rilh this JiQUeaky
cl1>an 4 "wroom bar~itin. Shar. ct1r}X'l!, cu~tom drapes and
A.LL TER?.IS availabtr.
HEAR THAT SURF!!
You rft11 \\'l\lk lo 1he bt'11ch rrnn1 thl, I vrar vnuni:: :1 lx>droom
hunf:a\01v .,.,.l lh th!t'k !lhOJ.! ('lll'fll'IS, d'rc<Jrrit or niirror~. All
terms ur take over lo"· gu\·crnn1en1 loan. S21.500. Trade
yours!
I
OWNIR DESPERA'lt
lla1 hts ~oo!ll packed alld 1hipped to l:_ngland, sitting 011
crnlr And \\'Ailing for yOur off<'r . llui::t 2'200 1q ft , 4 bPd·
room, .1 bftth IJ('au ly. clean ris a pin "'ilh r-arprt~ & drapes
lhrunul. All Terms at a barr;atn s.'.ll.500. Tr~dc-yours!
2 STORY STEAL
This ranl&stic baq,;ain of only $26,950 Include.. 4 hu~r lx>d·
ronrns. ij,:ic20 fllmlly roo1n. formal dinln£ 1~u'lrn , 3 hath~. car·
\)f'l.s, dl'lllll'~ 1hrun11 t rLt:S ovrr 2000 sq. ft. N(, 111!stake or
n11 sprint. ACT N()\V . Trade yours.
WALKER & LEE IS AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONE
Fountain Valley Offit:e
Brookhurst 1cre11 from Llnbrook H1rtlwar1
968·3371 Optn 'tll 9:00 P.M.
NON-VETS $100 DOWN
T'hl!I !lmall rlJA elosln.': cn~t, i:::et11 you thl1 4 bt>droom, 1%
balh DOLL f.I OUSE \\'\th beautiful shag carJ)(!l!i and match·
11111 draprs. HURC' cornl'r Jot and double garage all for $24,000.
\Vhy rent'? Bui ld equity for your future. Call today.
4 BEDROOMS $170 PER MONTH
J~'IY~ all s,ubjrct lo 6'; annual JJ('l'Cf'nlage ratr VA loan 11ny• on~ can assum .... Fr11tHl't'S 1nr lude carJX'lS, dr11f)('~. kitrhen
built-in~. and farm brick lirepl11ct. Quick possession: t'ULL
PRICE $2:'>,000.
GOV'T HIALE
3 quttn-sizt'd bedrooms vn nearly % acre lot with acce!!11 Md
slab ror boat or t railer, Anyone c11n takt ove.r subject In
Gov't hlfl n \\'llh a httlc dAb nf cash and pe,yn1ents of S155
per monlh rnrs all. GO i\IAN CO~?
DUPL~X $17,500
Sll\fl I'll" add !II ~·t'lur rl'tlrl'ment asta1c, Uve In one--rrnt
lhTtrfhC'r'".111id tiefir !li<' 1rrGJt"JN('0~1E TA£S "1\li fnoom,..,
!rO\\'lh nnd tax sht'ltC'r. Call today for complete details.
O'i~ do"'" handlf's.
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;0 PllOT·AOVERTISER
Huntington Beach
2-STORY GIANT
4 +FR+
FORMAL DIN.
$28,500
And only 2'i yrs, old. lr1ti-
ntate In modern deco1·. Lush
carpe1ing. STEP-ON living
nn. Oiandel1ered fornial
dining rn1. i\fasst\'e lan1ily
rn1. Firepl:l<:('. :!!,,. Baths.
Garden kit-chen lhat spark-
les. !'.1ln, to the beach. Lush
grounds. You"ll be 50rry
you didn't look • J-lurry &
call (7]<!) 96'i-::i.~i
JORIS!' E Ol.SO~
'" Nl',.t..TO#S
l!Hll Brookhurst A\'e,
Huntington ~ach
INFLUENTIAL
VA no down. 3 BR &. sep
den. 2 BA. lrg kitcl1 w/ gas
b!rin R/0, plenty or cup.
boards, fam rni. forn1al Jiv
rm with fiberglass, all up-
graded crpl!i & drps. Exist·
Ing :)l<i',0 VA loan. Priced
Huntington Beach
BREATHE EASY
Elecl ronically afr-clellned
be1:1t1!y, Sot Vista's.. finest
.11ingle SIOl'Y • bt!dnn, 2
bAth. ldl'.lli tor atthniatics
or allergies. All custo1n floor
&.· \\"!ndo\V COVl!rinp, mini
rare yards Wilh sprinklers,
F'ir~t timf' oftered and orl)'
$37,j(l(), All ternts a\•ftil.
Lerwin Realty, Inc.
546-5411 anytime
BEST Buy in Huntington
llarbour. $49,700. Jolm
Irvine & Assoc. li36-14i0
SUPER Shu rp 4-ple_-;, 11 .B.
$10,900 dow n. John Irwin &
Assoc. 636-4470
Irvine
DRAMATIC
Living roon1 \\'/rm1ny \1·1n-
dO\.\'s, plus formal thn. rm ..
lge, family rn1., '1 bdm1s.,
2 lrplcs. & nice patios, makf'
this spacious 2500 sq. ft.
1ownhouSt> a perfect tamily
home for you & ,YOOni.
1$31,9j(),
{ired hill
REALTY
Unlv, Park Cen!rr, Irvine
Cali Anyl in1e 833-0820
$31.500. I ~~==~=~
l' 1llage Real Estate
'62-4471 ( :::: ) 546-llOJ
MOVE UP TO
LUXURY
S30,9j()_ Spacious 3 BR, 2 BA
homt-\\·ith custom drps and
(·rpls thruou!. Firepl, cov'd
patio, dish11•asher & many
mort' xtras. \Von't last long,
so call no"'·:
l' 1llage Real Estate
Macnab-Irvine
Realty Com1mny
MOTHER IS HERE
A 11arm, rriendly lan11ly
home on a lovely corner \ol,
Floor 10 ceiling brick
hearth, farn1 style kitchen
\l'ilh Jots ot brick. Fun flo·.i.•-
f'l-ed patio_ Hurry on this
one. $27,liO.
Macnab-Irvine
642-8235 67S-3210
'62-4471(::::)546-1103 1 ~~~ .... ~ .........
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii...,iiiiiiiiiiii;l2-STORY condo home.
RETIRED Ground lo roof glazing. 1
See this lovely 1 B.R. doll palios + atrium, 4 br, 2~~
nouse. sit in the shade of ba, lge fan1 nn. Ii\·':; rm,
11pt'a\.\'ling 1rees and relax forn1al din'g rm. $40,750,
for a few moments, only I 78_"-_JZ_3_7~-...,----
Sl5.~. Real Estale by l\1c-Lagun• Beach Vay 893-8.ill or 5'1X)4j8, I---------HANDYMAN
SPECIAL
GI NO ON. PYl\1T.
l~~~~'.".".~~~~~'. i Charn1ing rustic slyJe home.
I· $19 500 Derailed exterior of \\'ood ' • I k d b . k . p an , use r1c . w1nclo1v 3e~~.~~~h~a~~~'. d~~:!:; .shu11ers, .,..·ea1hered ccdc1r
lot. Adult occu pied. Low dn, shake rooflines w I gabled
847-8j()7/968-4377/96&-IJ78 peaks. Located on pool siZP
lot tTiiAT'S BA DLY J'i
*' J\'EED or \\'EEDJNG & tf~~~~~::f~f.~!~1~'!;1 LANDSCAPING\, . ·l~ • -•II" Long liv. rnl. w/11·oorl p~n-
\ l lllll • t>li11g, SOLID \\'ALL Of'
CUSTOM HOME
ON big country Sile !OI. de-
tached garagr and room to
roam. 3 Bclrm/2 ba., all lhe
delails ar Real Esrair by
l\lcVay 5-l)-().l;.8, 893-8;)33.
BRICK, U N I Q U E l.OG-
BURNING FlREPL.ACE
FRO:\! FLOOR TO CEIL-
ING. \\'ell designed 3 BD-
R.\I. & fA:\l. H:'ll. FLOOR
P LAN, SERVICED BY
BATHS. \V I \V carpenng
Thl'UOtlr,
:\iodcrn kilctwn 11•/l:l'l'amic
1tle, ALL BUILT-IN RANG!::
.~ 0 V E ;>.:, D!Sll\\'SllR.,
GA/l8. DISP. ETC .• opens
AI R.LINE PIUJr TRANS-10 ~pacious FA:-01. R~1.
fERRED. Be 11 u 1 i f u I \\'ITH FIREPLACE. This
new 3,000 sq. It., rri level, 4 bc!!er bu ilf home l\'EEDS
bdrms, 3 baths, dining rn1. J..ANDSCAPING & YARD
giuxlen kitchen, 18' x :«!' + \\'ORI\'. & A FE\V ;o.11NOR
honus m1. 3 rar g:,rage, REPAIRS. Orfi'red "AS
large pool su:rd fenced R\ "OP. IS" on V.A. TF. .1." r •
yll rd, lu.~ti :;hag carprt, $34,500 FULL PRICE
custom <lrapf'~. A s~ume NO DOWN PYMT, large VA loan. $39,9j().
0\\'TICr. 897-;)ljT 1(1 eli!?,. \•eteran, payable
---OWN.=E~Rc---$229.;J.'l per nio. for 360 nlOs ..
SY 11•il h an annual pcrt•'n1ai:-e
Pal"ific Sands 3 lir. 2 ha. rair of 7'f ·~. CaJI now !or crpt~. drps. gar 1v/hoat apii:.
door. Corfler tot. \\"ell lr,d-MISSION REAL TY
scpd, cov'd rat.J. c"·'"1·'· 98~ &l. Co11 ~1 ll"Y--La'!Una
Bargain ~ll~. Eves ! Phone (714) 494-0731
11·knds ~6-~:+.'J(). $ 16.9j() -Spec mi:-2-bed-:-2
4 Bdrm, 2 ba, lam rm, frpl, garden ba, 32' liv, beam
spacious kit w/pantry & C"ll, viPw, clnse in.
bltns, lrg J!:Rnien patio. lo S!M.:ioo F.!egan1, 4 be1t, 31~
main! yd, cul rle sac. 2 hlks ha , spa<"ious beam Cf'U !iv,
to schl & shpg. $2'.l,7j(), din rm. pool ». pa!io.
962-37·18 $14~.m. Ocean Front, 4 be<\,
LOVELY 3 br, fam rrn, 2 ba, :11 ~ lla. <!en.
lmmac. Lo down p,vn1n1 or Pf'::: AllPn Rf'Rltor. 4!H-7j78
a~~ume s~. ~:. loan. ~7:l 3 BR, 3 B1\, cx·n & cnyn. vu,
Silver Strand Dr, llB. bllin~. cptg. S\!l,:ioo. Tf'rn1.~.
SU>-0973 Owner. OR 1st or l~c/op-
, • y Id lion, $Jj() mo. 494-2339. 4 BR. rs~. , N. o ·i ~~~-~-~~~~
Lease/option $300 p<'r mo. IT 'S Bea.en house timt!. Big·
G.I. Loan. Sell S37,000. gest fie\ection evt?r! See the
Days: 6424i67 S 4 6-0 2 41 DAILY PILOT O a.ss.Wed
I -' ' •
Wtdnt5day, May 26, 1971 DAllY PlLOT 5.S --------
;;;;;;-"i:.',';;;;,_:::";;;;':.;;,;~~l~I ;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;· =l~~~I~[ ;;;;_;;;;,,.;;;;,..,.~l~~ie [ ............. I~ I ''"'OW""'M ... I~
240 HouH1 Unfurn. 305 Hou.MS Unfurn. 305 Apt1. Furn. MO Laguna Be•ch S1nt1 An• Lois for Sale 170 Money to L«Min -NORTH LAGUNA TAI{£ ovt'r Cl 6'JC, $23.~
I/price. 3 Br. I"• bl.I. corner
101. t"rple, blU\I & new
<"&rpel . John Irwin-& Assoc •
636-4~70
ru l..O'r zorn..'11 for 7 to 10 1 t TD L Gtn•r•I
"""" OOxJO>'. Ne oou"ITy S oan 1--------
Univer1lty Park Costa M•••
View hon1". barks up to va-
cant Irvine Ranch land.
$p.'l.n!sh architt•clurt' • Hied
rool. adobt' brick!, ""'rou1:ht
iron, beamed Cf'iling. 3 J:k>d.
rooms, :z·~ baths, f:unliy
1'00n1, dlnin.1: rooru, built-in
kitchen "''Ith d18hwa~her.
ReClt1l:t'd, S&l.950. CaU •
..AO tan
REAL ESTATE
1190 GlenneYIT St.
19-1-9173 5-19--0316
Lido Isle
Prim• Lido Nord
5 BR. 6 ba. \\'/ele\'a!or, 52
lt.. lor. Pil!r & float. $275,000.
Tip of Lido Isle
Beaut. 4 BR., 5 Ba. home 2
lrplcs. 56 ft. 1vater lronlngc.
Roorn ror lafl:c boat J>iips.
Price $500,000.
Bill Grundy, Rltr.
833 Do\' t r Dr., NB &12-462{)
SHARP 3 Br, bltns, lrplc-,
l'rpU/drps. Aasume low 6~
er. $183 a mo. John Irwin &
Assoc. 636-4·170
San Clem•nte
DRF..A~I OCEAN VIEW
at Shore(•llfls, 11•alking dis to
s!Of'('S & your own pvt
bf'ach. 4 br. 2 ba, bllins,
11•/11• carpel (brand ne\\'),
Cr1llt'. & drps. 2 c11.r gar,
beau yd, Loc at 2725 Via
V1stos& (v11ran!I. Lo1v dn
pyn11. Call o\.\·ner bf'fo~ 9
A\1 or a f!('r 4 P:'-1, 492--11117
Re~L [51111. I.el G1n1n1l
~__,
Acreage for sale ISO
club, C.M. Realtor, (213) 6• ~ INTEREST $17$-3 Br, fam hOmc, gar.
37~1418 collecJ ...,~, • llui;e yllr<l Jor family.
• • NEWPORT "-' '°'· ,~~ 2nd y D Loan $120-t'uir 1 Br. cotlagt". El Mr, blk to ocean. $21,000. ,.... . d
O\l:ner. 673-8088 Tenn. hued an equity, '"'"'" n1r.(' )'itr . gnra1:".
642-2171 S4S-06ll BLUE BEACON
Mobile Hom•/ 8ervina Harbor arta 2:1 yn, * 645-0111 *--
Trailer Parks 172 S1ttl•r Mort9a9e Co, e PRlVACT ASSURED! 2
BEAUTIFUL 2~ acre 336 E, 17th Stlfft Bdrm, fl>nced yard, gar,
nlOblle home sltea. Trees &liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;I ~hild & Pt-I , $150.
vie1,1·. $59.iO. 2 hMI L.A. Cash Fast I Tt>r111~. Call owner. :HJ/ • e NE:All BE:ACtH Comror-
~ BR. 2 ba, summtr •. $3L.
J RR., 11umn1~r , ....... SJi5 .
-I BR. 21,:1 bath.~ ..•... $~.
-I Dlt. wlU1 taml}1 100111
Turtle Rock •••••••• S37:i.
l BR. 2 ba.1tig ••••..•.• $.12.l.
J BR. 2 bfllhs: turnithed
avn\L Aug. Isl ........ $·100
i)red hill
REAL"fY 67~193.1 1st &. 2nd Trust Deeds ;~~~" l Br, cpt, df'p~. child.
Mountair,, Desert, FREE APPRAISALS ALA Rentals • '4S.l900 Uni\'. Park Ceriter, IMne
Resort 174 Costa Mt•• Investment --------Call Anytime 833-0820
310
Costa Mesa
• 3 ADJACENT h1llsidf' lake 548-7711 anytime L.ARGF: 3 bedrooni, just I ".""'""'"~""!!!!!"'""'""'""'"'
vii'\\' lots, t.gke Elsinore. p11.intrd. carpets " drapf'!'I, Houses Furn. or
$2500. 536-2449. WHO Needs ~1oney'!' S renced yard, family room. Unfurn.
,0---~=~~,--"""'°"I available on all types o! children and peti; OK, 2t;->
Out of State P rop. 178 Real Estate-paid tor or not, 11.111. \\'a!kt'r & t.ee , Newport Beach
33 ac.t'f's in EnlLat, \\'ash. 9 co 9 ;"m, d11Uy. TRUSI' Real ton;, ll 4 2 -4 4 S;; or 1-,19-ll-'"-'--BaJ--p,-"-'-"--°"-1-1-,-,.
Orchard I.: pasturt land. 2 DEED CENTER. In<", Alu'. .">\(}...)l10 t.'Ollage, .11m. L.w only. 2 br, houst~. \waul r ivrr \'icw. 1323 N. Broad1,1·11y, S.1\.l':i'"""H~e~d-roo-,,-, _ _,,-,b-,,~,,-. ...,.,,,-,-,I •I" ~o-1 54., S""l no gar. · ~-.10;, . ~II or !radf' f1)r housr or .,..,..,., kilchr.n. Some carpels k ~~~~~-----Condominiums dupll'x. i\lust i;ell. ;)4:.-72.11 Mortgages, drapt•s. Gara!!:" 11ntt rr'IClos-Unfurn.
Ranches, Farms, Trust Deeds 260 "" )lll'd. Rent 111 $J9j J*r
Groves 180 n10, or Option. Call Broker, NO ONE can !Gil our prire~-5-t~IG.>
320
*SUNNY*
*ACRES*
* Motel-Apts. *
!:iludio &: l 8 ((Jroorua
LOW RATES
$?> Week-$100 l>1'o. ~ ~
Daily Rates Avail.
• Color 'IV, Air-Cond
• Pool, Pool Table
• Sounds .~
Zl7t> Newport Blvd.
SIS.9755
NEW OWNER.-undtt
NE\Y ,\1ANAGEM£N'r
* $130 UP * GIANT 1 le 2 BEDROOM!
Gorgeous, p<U'k-llke setting.
Clos~ i:arages tor max·
\n\um security. Quiet street
Adults, no pets, 2020
Fullerton Ave IHarbot to
Bay, then So. until 2 blks
So. of Ne•·poct Blvd, 64:2-
8600
Unbeliev•bly Beautiful
VAL D' ISERE Garden Apb.
Adult! -no pets. Flowers
evel')'\.1-·here_ Stream &
\Vaterfall, 45' pool Rec. Rm.
Vacant lot 3'.!x&I .... $3-1,500
ANS\\I E'R. TO TIIE $ CRISIS
Real Es!atc? And the hot·
lest real eslf1tP is recn:'a-
lional~ 5, 10, 20 ac. L'Onv. to
Silvcro.1·ood lake, S797.00 pe r
;ic. Lo dn. Price is 1,1·ny
under market. Bkr. &l·l-4670
GOV'T land . S5 ac. \\'rite
La11d Package, 118:> Ar·
rowhrad Avf', S a n
&mardino, Ca
20_A_C_RE_S_p_rod_"_"_"_g_Oran __ g_,·I CASH in 24 hrs. for you r .
Grove in Riverside 11.t Van Tr-.ist Dc-:xis. TRUST DEED l .BDR.,I., Family rm .• park
Bu ren & Cleveland Good CENTER, In<". 1323 N. like yard. t:Mta Meu. Kids
••POOL Tr~1E ** Sauna, Sgls 1-2 Bdrm, Fun\-
4 BR, :\1onticel!o, nr OCC Unfurn. [tom $135. SEE IT: 2 BR. 1 ba, 3l)x88 .... $17,500
4 BR. 3 ba. l'iOx!Kl , •.. rn.500 sl1r for trailer pk nr sub-Broadway, S.A. 543-113:11 ~~E br~.i)._~: • month. NO
S240 mo, incl cluh hl'f', pool 2000 Parson.~. 642--8670
& maint. 838-&.1Jj/:'>K'i-4760 1.,-N~E=W"°"'L~R~G~. ~D~E~L~U~XE~.~ .. -A~PT~Sc l
Laguna Hills Bach-furn • , , , . , $139 • .50
NE\Y fllx. sngl 1ty 3 BR, 2 1 BR·furn ..• • ·. $149.50
BA. crpts, drps, bltns, pool. 2 BR-furn .. , ... $179.50
Lido Realty, Inc.
3Ji7 Via Lido, ~.S.
673-7300
--
division. On nitun hwy 10 anylin1e. · · ·
l\larch firld. \\'rite Chas. 3 BlJru.t. + lamily r.n., full
LIDO !sir lot -57'x88',
largest avatl on the island.
Via Lorca, $52.500. By
owner 2131419-2998
Martin, sm No. f.!ain St, I ,~ dining rm., built-ins., brk.
Rivl'rside. 92501 . HoulnfotRlnt -~ $391'1 a month. NO FEE,
R eal Estate Ne~-port, S4G-l720. Children OK. 2 C enc gar. UNt'UR :'ol AVAll..ABLE
e 3 ACRES Doylf', Cahf. 40
1ni nortb o! Reno. $1600.
:.36-2~-19
~ & trash pkup inc $265. ADULTS ONLY, NO PETS
Bkr. 837-5506. 1760 Pomona 642-2015
~~--~~--~~!
Duplexes Unfu'". 350 * SUS CASITAS M esa del M.-.-,----
4 Br, 2 ba. ni11ny custon1
feature~. $31 .500. Assume
S!i FHA. Prin. o n I y ,
:>16-."ml
M esa Verde
Cemetery
Lots/Crypts
CRYPT, Pacific View,
(Selling now S91.l. 1 * EH·l-19Sj *
156
S62).
---3 BR. 2 BA. fl{'W heat -air
NE\\' Spanish Duplex, 3 BH., Z AD.I , lors. Pal'ilic V1e1,1• rcfrli;c1•11tion j4 ronl. hPfl!rd '4JJ W.l,tt..C .. t• Mno IRVINE TERRACE 2. BA, 2 BR, 2 BA. Corner :ill'rnorial, N.R. SJO(I. pool, furnished I blk P&ln1 l ~"""=:=o~~--~-* jJ(}.38(i.I * --hO -C t I: lot. Private. Cpts, <lrpi;, ~pr1ni:s ::. pp1ng en er. $110-1 Br. ~lob1lr homt. Dcl\j:htf'ul J Bc\rm, 2 Balh,
Fenced yard. 1 blk to J BURIAL site.. Pacific Vit'\v Sli,000. for l...nguna, CdM, Sn1al1 yrd, Compl furn, llur-Available Ju~ 1~1 $3()(1/
General
3 BR 2'~ BA. 2 car gar.
Clran! Sl70. 684 Dw·rell St,
C~f. &12-6'fk1
Corona dtl Mar
CORON A llighla11ds-2 Br,
l1: Ba, £Iv/ref, Cpl~. drps.
Ocean Vu, 4~9 l\1oming Ca·
n,\On Rd. $zr1, 646-2290,
67H14~' stores. Principals on I y. r.tcmorial Park. Private Nt'11·p<1rl art>a. 0 w n er rv. nion!h'.' Year's lr:t"f'.
s,i9,9:;o, 5-16-2787 before 9·30 pry. <19-~3921 eves. 67:i.oo77. . Hope G•rrie Realty Costa Mesa
,\:'>I or after 9 P:-OI Condominiums Real Estate Wanted 184 Sll>-P.f'<lcror I Br. 1v1 pool. 6-15-~
·I BR + F'11mily. ] B,\ for sale 160 Jn111n1 or sngt~ oka,v. l=-~-,,.-------1 RF.l\10DEL. BR, Vl'/11',
Custon1 dP cor rhruo111. '! -----------1 BLUE BEACON Costa Mesa bl1n.~. br11: gas Irpl, beaf11~.
frplc, din rm. nil t'lt'c i.:11. ARTISTS & PHOTO * CASH BUYER * * 645-0111 * 3 BR, 2 BA, ne1,1• tTpl & patio. 1 11dlt·M pets. SI J.I.
r:lectronic a1r tilter. $4~.lflO FANS ..,.,-,.Dbl ••r & 1,,, yd, N• Ytarly. 642-8:>20 e FINE UX::,\TION -2 Br .-" .°":..c'""='·~"'1J-6627=,:--~----I f\lc1.zanine styte n1as!rr bed-Don't hst your home, "'alk 10 shops. Pf'l ok, S\Jj. E~tancia l-li. S23). O'K). or PVT palio, encl ~:1rage, 2 br.
Newport Beach rni· wll h dressing: rnl I.: dbl sell il to u.~. \\'ill ]sf' \>o/op!\on to buy. crpts & drps_ $160,
1·!ose1s, and 11• bath up-. Save li'.11"· MVe monry, • \'OUR O\\'N DOl\tAlN! Sn11 down. Call aft 4 pm 67:t.36!'1() :.1air~. Studio cl1•n \\'llh dbl 1mml'd. fum oflf'r. Broker .. . &12-~76 I~---~ .----DOYER SHORES closets, lull bath & xira 11 CASJI BUYEP. * Co-ey t Br. f.xcclleru nr1~h· i -----~----Newport B•ach
rn1 for storagr dO\.\'nslairs, 8.12_7-77 & ,,10.~3·-w; horhood. $90. llOUSF: 1 yr lrasr, 111!' fan1
J ,} ;:, • ALA Rental1 e 645-3900 r111 \.\1/frpl1-. :\ Rr. 2 Ba.
<lnrk rm, tlr xtra slrcpin,e: 5 BDRl\I. ~ or j ba, Do\'l'r 01J!'d. 1t1·ps, blor k frnct>d ~r1ace. Sl>('cial owner !inane. Sho_n"~. area. ro._tus.1 ht' w<'ll Corona d•I Mar rear yard. Nea1. ls!, last + in~. Try Sl500. dn, no point~. n11t1nta11lf'd. Pr1i:ic,plt's only. BEACll rental hy l\Pf'k <»' tlep. $260. fi46-7j94 For Sale By Owner llO ~eronds, no qualify1n~. c 11 6~5-3TIO u h
Dover S!lOres vir"" 4 bed· nnd only $23.500. a -o_ ~-I'll· __ rno. 2 br hSC!, S17'.')/.wk. 2 BR hou~ on quir~Vf'~
room J bath hon1p + frim· Larwin Realty, Int . G?ldrn r ori St., Cd:'ll f'lf'An, rrpts & drJ>!ii. Yard
VIEW HOME
2 RR urr <lplx t1r OCt'an
Slll5 yrly, cpl, drp, t'f'I. rng
A\•aU ./u11(' l5. \Viii 1-ede<-.
311'~ 361h SL C?lll 218-1921
Hy room with sunken 11 "1 l:.0°2 Brookhurs!, Jlntgn Heh Ii •'l 6.1&-3876. mainlninrd, no garnge. $100.
har. 1 lirepl<iees, formal 546-5411 anytim• flllilne~I Fountain Valley . F.vr~ Ir wkend11 646--06..~~
dining r ootn, ~rp11r.1 !1' SOMETHINGOLD-=-~F:R l'f'n!RI 11v11.il .lnnf" 2 AR. hou~e f, ital". F ~nl I••••••••••
Lreakfa!t roon1. Valrnr1nf' JS. 4 br ... .,,... mo. ChUdrrn & unit, \\'alrr Ir IR\\n m;11nt. Apts. Furn. 360
t>uilt. 2 vears old. 3200 sq. SOMETHING NEW Busr'nes• +m 1 ti"" '""""' \V ll pets ??7 962-3:'1."..1 urn. ,.., mo. £"~" a ace Gen•r•I I!. 3 car garage. $.'::! .iOO. , ~ and 3 BC'droom condo's, in 1 Opportunity 200 sc., fi7:i-:::~ ~Hll-J~~ H• 'ich Arca, all ready ror Huntington Beach -----=-----•---'-------10PEN llouSf' 2 Rr, \\'/\\', :.,.,u ro nlhVf' 1n, Chea11C'r -1· 3 BR. & DEN
l'\e:ir Oifl Dr. Cuslom hv111r
only 6 y1·~. old. l Bdrn1s. &
dt>n. 2 full t-.ath.s. kiL bltni;,
pat.Jo. Obi. g:1r. on alley. A
J!llfld buy at S.1-1.500
CALL 0 6••-241 4 ~"" Nc1r Nc•porl P••I Offit c
CORONADO horne, 3-BR,
Family rm, Plush shag
carpet throughout. Lots of
other extras. I m m I' d
pos~ssion. l 32,JOO. 837-9:xl0
or 830-2.1\0l! ------HARBOR VIE\V H0:\1E, ;;
Br. 3 ha. 3-i·ar gar.,
Spacious lam Tm, \\'r1 bar.
1 frplc's, Formal d1n 'g rm.
Redu ced 10 $49,9(,(), &M-21:.!7
X'iRA lge, QCf'an viPw, 4 Bn.
~ b11. bar, lrplc. 3000 !<II II +
sm bonus, s.12.:..00. 2~1 La
JoUa, 673-1672, ;,~8-5~71
BLUYFS CONDO: :: Br/:I
ba, corner lnl . $12,;(X) hy
01,1·rer: &l•l-l~i
\\'ESiCLIFF-Sunny 3 br, 2
b11, cu~tom pn1io, lge )ard.
:\Ju~! .~ell $41,900. 642-:1119
HA R.HOR lllGHLANDS-
4 br, 3 b11, 5\~ f'llA
.19.!00 Owntr 646--206J ---Santa Ana
11lan 1•en1ing <ind mnrr run NEW 1 RF.DROOl\1. onr prr50n p.1f10, garag" Attach. 1 Srn11ll
ltlO. PrlCC'd fl'Onl $17,!J.';!), $87.:iQ, 2 bt'llroom $\Jj, 2 child. l88 \V, Bay, CJ\!.
·rakC' ovrr low 111lerest ex1~•. INCOME twtlroom Sl alJ. CIOSJ> In _64_2_-8_:_,,. ______ _
in~ !'tlA loan~ or try Fll A lx'ach. arlult.~. M pets. ~f'ESA VERDF. horn .. "1.'i!h l
221 program wilh $100 di•. PllOne after 5 pm .. :'i36-1783 BR, lrg ff'nced yr!, n('11r
plus costs. ' POTENTIAL Laguna Beach sl"ht:lol."I. S230 Pt"r mo. Call
Larwin Realty, Inc. Agt>n1 516--1111
2Jj62 Brookhurst, lfn!,gn Brh \\' llN'd 1 di~tnbt.lcor 101. OC..EAN vic1,1·. wRlk lo ~~ch, 2 Ar. f'lrr frpl-.-,-,-,,~,n-,.~,-,
11 r 2 BR. bf>amt'rl ffihni:. 1· . h ·1·1 546-54 anytime our corllpany tJ'Onl thts arl:a . _ pa 10. 1,1i; 1 1 ry rm, nr . · l1rPpl11~·t'. $27;, year ·ho· Siii'/ 1 •
Duplexes/Units
sale
Income P roperty
162
166
FOR Sale· by Owner. 10 unt1
1..i111r1 on 1 ac nr larnl, Z011{'d
for 3 1nON' un1 1s, Closr in.
l I ~rs old. Cpr~. r!rp.~. !I
spacious 2 Br hscs t.: 2 \.\'/ ?.
Br. 2 Ba's. All \\'/ f'ncl prlv
pa!1os &-all. gar. $155.000.
53.1.000 dn. Inc. $16.~hno.
alv:uyi; ren!!'d. ldf'al tor
~;.nr!ira1kin. 673-.'Jfi!IO
e COSTA '.\1F.SA
12-2 Br Garden !lousr'\ all
11/all ga rages & µalto.•. On
vulunblr li211.201 . 1 blk B.1rtk
of An1rr11·11, '] till. ()('•'IHI.
Income Sl.9 1~/n\O. $169}~.
Goo.! tcrnis. Cail P1111:e
Qwn;•r a.1:1 Bernnrd SI, C;\I
fi.IG-11.'lO ~o~,~""-,-,,-,,,~"~r--~c~.-.. ~,,
l\lrsa. 4-plrx. Lgi: rooms,
101 60x12:1 S~A.:.OO or GI ap.
prl\1sal. ~2-4219 ----2 -•I PLJ-'X, C.111., :; br, 2 ba,
II you lll'f' coinplacen!, al-leas." <194-JS.14, 871-9777 s f' ~· " n10 o n~o ~r
\\'<IY!I lil't'd and s.1•1s[ied $17<i lse. 616-6961 or 6411-1 2 1~
wuh your pn·~en r earnings N•wport Beach 3 Br. 2 ha. Large yl\l'd0 Pets
~t· 1ton'1 \.\ant you ~ HUT z RR Hou.'>f', lurnii;herl, good & ch1ld1'e.n~ 01{~ Sts:J.
11 you lll't' al;'l{T('SSlVt>, f'!'ICr-view of QCf'Rn t,, J~laod.~. _.. .i-.18-1.162 *
gt"lic and t'1u:i'r to do 1.lf'lll'r c.111 213: ~·lfi-:;.100 or 114: COMPLF:T~: Privnry-$140.
YOU 1nighr l)f' our 11('111 thl'>· :,.i.'l-421::... LJ:p 2 Br h.il' In ('(!Uri. Patio,
1r1butor. \\'(· hll\'r B II•'\\' Houses unfurn-. --305 ga_r. 612-3-195 or 5."'17--8&'!.~
1~lcn. 1n the fie!~ o/ Vf'nchn~, 2 Br. t9S7 A Chnrlr, Cl\1.
'1"•,•
09
d,,..
00
s l'L'f!Ulre a dr.posil $14?':1/mQ, No dog.~. Call General 0 . .•. • &IS-7017. 642-2259. \\'rlfp for prrsonal int('rvir\v __________ 1,~~-~~~~---
1i!al1ni; your nanic • addrt'Sli RENT OR LEASE Huntington Beach
• trle1ih<.lll(> 11un1her tu:
Jn!cr·Nat101111I D1:<rribut1'lr,
;o So_ 9th Ea.~1. Ckpl 9S~1
Salt 1M1k(' City, Utah 11-!lllJ ----DISTRIBUTORS
NEl~Dr·:n
e :\ 110,\IF:S JN e \\',\LK TO BEACH ! l Br.
COS'rA l\1ESA e Rlt·1ns. ral'Jlt'I~. drapc.<1,
$2'1."; per nio. 3 BR, nrll' Child. Sl l.J,
r rp1, 2 Ba .... ALSO i:~2j.
ill:' ho1nr, :O.lc~a Vcr(lf' "'/ e SPACIOUS 2 B1frm~ C1·pt$;,
/ormal din rm ..• Al.SO • drape~. ff'riced yartl. k1J~ &
NE\V mul11-milhon dollar 11(1· SZOO. 3 AR ho rnc. J>l'I~. fl:iO
Vl'l'l iM'd snack pack 1>rn-546-9521 or ALA R•ntals • 645-3900 duel ~. NEED NO\V! __ ----
Reli1thlr n1en or 1,1-omrn in 540-6631 3 BR. Cotkl. 11,11 H11. pools,
Juur i\n'a to ~crvice fast-Nicliol' R•al Estate clubhou~. pahn, 2 ll r ,
m11v;ng. co!o oi;cra!ed pm-SlJ:l-NeRt 2 Br, Pncl gar, nice w/slorasr;e 536-4n6 11fl :-i
duel~ 111 1...:in11iony ~i·rured yrd for ktdH X: pc1~. Irvine lnc.•1111on~. t'<lnUn<'rc11tt or t;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;
facto':>'· PArtT OR f"ULI. $150 Ne1vly decor :l Br w/g11.r, ~'"~ Tl:'-1~~. 6 to 12 hours J>f'r 1 & ! k 3 BR., Z Balh~ ........ ..,...,
Ren! Beautiful Furniture
ror a., little a.,
ONE MONTH
complete with
your 100%
Purchas• Option
Jnd, itcn1 selcclion.
24 Hour De ly.
CUSTOM
Furniture R•nta l
j !7 W. 19lh, C.l\I. 5'18·3·181
Anaheim 774-2800
La.Habra 69-1-3708
CHATEAU LAPOINTE
LOVELY 2 BR apls. J-~urn &
Unfurn. Shag crp!'J:, hid
pool. Carport~. Adults, no
peri;. Fron1 $140.
1941 Poniona Ave, CM.
Balboa P enin1ul•
2 BR. furn. ~ Up!'!tai1· .. apt,
1a1ndet"k. Yrly l11f'. $200/Jno.
1120 \\', Ralboa Blvd. No. 7.
675-1070 PVf'.~
• R111e~ hy \\/erk-On Ocean
Lovrly Bachelors, T - B R ,
l\lald serVl{'P. Pool. Ulll.
• 675-87·10 •
CLEAN bachck:lr apts. Steps
to beach. $100 I.: up. 315 E.
Balboa Blvd, 673-9915
Corona del Mar
(21 BACHELOR 11plg, nr big
Corona $1 IO .~ $134 I n10
Yrly. l J\clll, oo ~t~ .
LrJ. nicely furn Bachelor .\:.
I Br. Furnished 1nodeil
OJ)t'n daily. New rtntal r.ite.s
2llD Ne1,1·pon Blvd, CM ; :
BA YCLIFF MOTEt· * LO\V \V F.EKLY RATES *
Kitchen, 1V's, maid service.
lleated Pool.
f,16.3265
*Studio Apt. $110 * 1 Bedroom $1 30
~1APLE ST., NE::l\R 19TII.
64S-0349 ~*~w=l~N'TE_R_ R_A-TE~S~.~
• * ALL SUl\li\olER ! * •
Quie1 • Attrac Studios le 1
BR's, SllO up. Adlt~. r)d
pets. 213."1 Elden. ~1i;r Apt~'.
HOLIDAY PLAZA
DELUXE Spaciou!i I BR
rurn apl Sl.~a. J\e111{'(! pool.
Amplt> parking. Adults -no
pe!s. 196,j Pomona. C;<.I. -
1 Br. furn apt, all uti\ pd..
Pool. Garuge. Adu\1.s, hO
pets. $l:i>. ~tgr No. 9, 383 W.
\Vilson. C.~1 . •
F'URN BACHELOR OR 1 BJS..
Nice.Ly decorated $ll~S140j'
Pool. Adults. 612-2181 ·
QUIET 11 ttrac studi~ Sll!>.
1 Br. $12:.i. Adil!!, no pell!.
21;..'J Elrlt>n. !\1~r Apt 6, C~t.
2 BR. 2 ha, sunken liv rn1,
frplc. hn ll'On,v, $\.'«l imo 1250
Raker St.. C:O,.f, 5'1()..2570.
NICE I br dplx. Quiet. 5"p
by·gara,i::es. I adult over Jil.
no pers. 548-1021
/AVA IL now -i .t: 1 BR fui-n.
Pool, l't'e rm, gd loc11Jwin.
No children or peti;. ~4
2 BR-$155 POOL
Adulti;, no pets, 642·95ZI
Dan• Point
SINGLE, TV, ponl, pc1s ok.
$30 & up wkl y. Dana MarlM
Inn. J.lll.l Coast 11"1'·
Huntin9ton Beach
[a Quinta Hennosa
Spanish Country Estate Ll\h>
ing & Spacious Apt!. Tet--
raced pool; sunlten giu BBQ
Unbelievable Living • Onlt
l Sr unf $150-fum $175
2 Br unf $175 furn $210
ALL UTIL INCLUDED .
Special Bonus; a Bilvct·
plated candle snufre:t Ii;
yours II you bring this ..a
"'hen you visit OlD' modelJ.
4 blks S. of San Diego F"'1'
on Be11ch, J blk W. on Holl
to 162JJ Parklide Lane.
1714) 8·!7~
3 Rr 4 f'am1ly Roo1n.
rovf'red patio. Take ovrr
51,~ -;:;. Gl Payment~ Sl:i3
pe.r mo. Elf's\ S. A. location,
John 11"1.in & A M 1: o c ,
636-4470
7.ixG. 10·,~ dn, w r~ "''·
$11!1.fll:()., prinr, only, l t 1
49&-18111,
.,...t'l'k. r.;,, ~el11ng, CASI! ttE-ot BL,,,UE•B· EACON .1 BR. & tamily rm. ho111r,
QUIHED: S600 to S29!K1. fine!. 1{8l'dl'1W'r' .... $3'1:.i
\\"rilr /or n'llJre informallon: * 645-0111 * 3 BR. 2 Ba. Choice: grf'cn.
642-8520 Laguna Beach
LRG I Br 2 blkg lui.: ('~
Industrial Property 168
HAVE
1NST A1'T FOOD SUPPL\" e \VALK TO BEACH! -.sp;iC':' belt locijtion .......... $325
P.O. Box :l\~1:1, Torran~. iou_. 1 Bdrm. ~tove, ·rr.lr!g. 4 BR .. :l~~ Ba. & ram. rm,
Cnl\fornia 9051):.i. lnclud1• f\lds .i:. pels. S10j, Turi~c Rock, nrly 11ew.$:t"iO
Furn. S15.'i. Yf'11rly. I adll. QU I ET ga r de n a pt
no peli>. 64~8520 downtown. l BR. de:coratnt
Eve section now! 1-;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;:::;;:;;;:;;:::;;:;;_;.;;;;;:0;:;;;:;;;:;;::::;:;;::;;::;:::;::;;::;..!.;:;;;:;;;:;;::::;:;;;:;;::::;:;;:::::; I NE\V Orti~ Ru1lrling 1~ \\'/$100 K equity,
phonP numl'lf'r. ~ BR. 2 baths ........ $27j 1--------------e 2 Bl..KS TO BEACll! I BR, TO BUY OR ~1vll'('f. Kids ok. SlT.i. 'll n li"l 1I'11 i I.
lur ni,..hed. ocean view, 1 blk. e 2'br, Bills paid, $200/mo, 10 beach, new <"J>!S, drps,
yrlf. Adults, no Pe I'· paint. Mature Altltll. ''ear
61.-i-351 1 leaSt?. $200 mo. 4!H-4029 day,
2 BR. or t11g COl'Ollfl. 4~1-3839 eve & ""'kC'nds
$185/mo Yearly, Adluts. no I cN~ew_po_rt~B~.~.~, ... h"'-=--1
pets. 642-852) S@~dillA.-"£trS"
The l'unle with the Built-In Chuckle
I RODDEY 'I I 1·1·1 I
1-~,;-;,~, ..;l....;,.-l-i Ii A hillbnly woman sa;d that
_ • her husband's idea of saving
money wos not to work hard ... ,-T-U_Y_P_E_0_..,1•'10\'gh'°need 0 -·5·-"
' I' I I I' I o ~:::;~ ... ~,.~ • _ • _ _ . you d...,.lop trom siep No. -3 b•low·
~ PRINT NUMBERED r ~ lEnEllS
'"" UNSCIAMBlf '°'I V ANSWER
r r r r r r r r 1
I I I I I I I I I
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800
$27K Net lncon1e
WANT
f'REE Ir CLEAR
lndUMlrial Bld 'g
or Lnt 11 aci
\\1.P •. OuBo~: 5-Jj...7166
Lots for Sale 170
MARINE
COMMERCIAL
M1trillt' Srrvlcr St1t11on
7j F'l'f'1 on
.-.:M\•pon Blvd., ~ilh
Bulkhead & $Iii>:'
Sl9:;,000
REAi .. TORS
~INC£ 19·14
673-4400
e i l + .\ere, vif'.,..• 101 •
Comn11. df'l J\fRr
•673-2010• 1 -M~.-,-.-·verd9F•irway
/01. Onr. S:U-T30T, &t2--4J6.t
SELL A BUSINESS ALA Rentols e 645-3900
HOLLAND BUS._ SALE ~ $250-3 Br. Lrg 111m-rm, poo(
'"f hf' Broker with t;mpathy dbl gar fncri tor kids/pets
1116 Orani::e Ave., C.M. ' --. . SlNCE l9-l6"
&t;;.41
1
70: 540. ·~ anytime 11~n.u111 J•I. Prlv. hnrh. w/ l k
---,-1 ll'u li ur Costa Mesa BAOl.ELOR apt, all t!ltt,
!lw1m pool. e.ncl ,i;:ar, 1 blk
'
I Ol<I 11'11 \'.'t'.51t'r n I an Bldg SPEC!•• • -R"t•o fro1n \ r nef'd sales J)t'OP e ,,,, .• & n•fri". Tor ok. '"·· -LQ '" · ... 11,.1vrr,.i1y P11rk $2.) wk. RH .11v11lt, m Aid
NEEDED: BLUE BEACON Days 833.0101 Nights serv, 1V & ph. Sta Lark
\VORl\,NG PARTNER OR -* 645-0111 *--1'1otcl. 2301 l"'pt DIVU., CM.
PVT L'lVESTOR Subslant• e SPREADING R00:'-1! 3 Laguna Hills 646-7445
\a\ return on mo"'-'y inve.11!· 13rlrm, 2 Bath. Birr,.. 2 t;.11.r 1 s•· h , b l h . e 1'lJRN. L'lCL U 111-
/ I _, Ch'ld k 1170 •. r, new omt'·.; r, II, 111r o-u ... , ........ lo & -h 1~. secured w ~I ater ..... gur. r rel) o . . cond, crpts, d 5 h w 5 h r _ u ... '""" .,,.enc r " r
tor more 1nlo write P .O. , l..nti~i.•p nialnl'd. Adj 10 club Ap\!11. $:\3 weekly &: up. ;\lo.
aox 1819. s11 nt11. Ana. • ll~~R THIS _2 BP.. fncd pool. $28:1 mo. 1-fr. Jo'reenian rate~. Terms Avail. 998 El
COli'l Ofl{'raterl Lau~lromat i1.;.a t~ncl gar. K1d.11 I pet1. 1!31)...GZJ9 Camino. 5-16-0-ISI_. -:----
on Beach Blvd. Pnced to ALA. R 1 l • 64S-3N\A N•w_po_r7t -.B"e-.-,'"h___ $25 per we;k &. up
produre lncoml' !or __ -~ -~ BACHELOR & l DR.
1111".Jlfled flt'nlOrt In •lun-$1~.0.AI Beach. 2 Br. sep, du-1----------TV' k nl11.id 11crv. avail.
llnglon Bch ~A. Call plex. Stove, rhllCI & per ok. BEAUT;, mod. lo\\•nnou8C. 3 l =~'~'°'--V="='°"-'~·-c .... _,_1. __ 9G2-8996 BR., 2 , BA, trplc., pal\Q. , ,.. l
I '"" l B 2 B f' ! Pool. 2 Cur r;11r. All bltn11, LA.IE I BR. b a r o n y' LAUNDRY, fluff 'N 1-·old, ""It"'~' · r, ~~. qi r:, dt.sh1vo.i;hcr. Sl30. l\lgr. 7·15 ·'bl -1-d ·•nl 121· nu c;1rp, dl'!I~~. Liie $295 B J Si SIG--8 15.000. t.onr left<.e. Termj,, " li!!ll•. ·~ :i · .:i. an1t·1 . . ..,., :
BLUE BEACON mo, 111 :)23--4710 or 846-5001
S"•'Ie. -up!•. 0111 f'.,I.. olr! fi.1~17 w • I e~/wknd~. I ~'°"''-"~~~~~-~ cu1"1IQ1nl'rs, old mnch1ne:s £ * 645-011 ~·!!...--1--,TiucC.,.;;>--DUPLEX :J BR, I RA. compl_
11·e'N' old, too. ~18--56-IO FREE!l TIME FOR rcdt'C, Crprs, drps_ retrlsr,
BEACH S111nd-t'ood ro go. Landlords-Owners QUICK CASH ~N'.lvf'. E-!ll•lr nr Caihollc
Serr, plu~ rtntalll. Fa~• 6 \\e 1,1•\U i·Ptt.r 1rnan1~ In you THROUGH A C'hurch. Oltlrr rpl. no peu.
mon!h OJ>i'ru11on. s;:..,213:;o FREF: ot cht1~r .~Ta11y $150. Ai:t. &1z.ro_'6_. __
BARBl'..R !lhop for ~nt d«..,lrtthlt' tenant.i on our DAILY PILOT 1 !. :J BR Utll pd,
c.~1'. lorlllion, Ali !!l!Ulp-waltlnst list WANT AD * No p('t~ .•
mt-nl . Call Asel 1;4>4110. ALA Rl'nt•l$ e G.r.:i-3900 2t.'i0 Nr"·pon Bh1!, C.:\f~
oce11n . $110. 211) Cedar.
~~11 ::1
* LRG 2 Br. lurn 8PL 9$
\1/. B11lbn11 Blvd. Sl65/mo.
'Yearly. No men. Ph befo!'f'
9 am, 8.'t8-0038
e WINTER RENTAL.~ e
Rf'nt NO\V for Sept.!
ABBEY REALTY 6~2-3850
e OCEANfRON'T LGE !
BR, 2 BA . 2'114 \V. OCEAN·
1-'RONT, 61.'HlOliO.
* :J Br. u1»1tn w/sundk.
hangin,;t rrpl. Nr bch. $250
yr lse. No peri;. S57-lWOO
2 BR furn. apl.5. Pool. Ng
rhild~n or pets. 2405~1 .l6lh
St, NB. &16-lfo6.4
1 br. den, 2 011, fieluxc
duplPx 11r liPach. RrfA l'f'tfd.
Arlull~. S210/0'IO. GU-30.'il
Ntwporf Heights
CLF..AN l or 2 Br. Adit1, no
~l~ 1..c kit. $13l-$150. 2421
F:. 16th St. NB. ~1110t I
I
I
I
I
I
l
' I
,
1
;
I
••
•
'
'
. ' .
'
~,,!~ .....-~· ~ .. -~. l!tl I _,_ ...... .,. I~ I --lit] I ~.-..... 1 ~ I:-·-lit]
, ,. 1 ................ 11 ........... lll!i ................................... 11
365 Apt. Lnr\,,,,. 365 Apt. Unfvm. 365 Apt•.. Apt•.. . Aptt., .
"'--.,....-----1 ·Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Uitfum. Co,ta Mesa Costa Mesa 370
N1wport Beach N•wPo:rt leach Newport S..ch
FAIRWAY :1 BR. ffiO!tl nsa
C0~1PL.ETEl. Y RE 0 E C, VEN DOME . ~. },
IMMACULATE APl'S! VILLA 'APTS. CLEAN & COZY FAMILY ADULT a.nd UNITS. CONY. LOCATION.
, FAMILY Sectlwi ·VILI.A t.tESA APTS
2 & 3 BR• 719 \V, \VIIAon tH6-1251 , . .._,,.-.,.._ , Close to shopping, Park • "
• Spllclou. 3 BR'" 2 ba PtfraJ, "''"'· PoOI • lodiv. HARBOR GREENS J'.!?:ifi~r'-' ,* Swim pool, put/green laundry tac. GARDEN Ii STUDIO APTS !•,_._~ Frpl, lndlv/ll'ldry fae'la ~~r Or:r:e C~. Airport k Brch. l, 2. 3 I R'1, from $UO. '~. 1145 Anaheim Ave. I. A ll l!I 0" y. 2100 Peterson Way, C.M . .... COSTA MESA 6'12-28.24 ~122 Santa Ana Ave.
; ':J) ~tgr, ?.frs. Joachim, Apt l·A 1..:54IHl.17"-'-=o:.-~=-..... ---I
• ·~ Ibo. Peninsula 5"6-GllS * $17G-* • ~! --...... -1~,~30~U~P-•,---·13 Br, 11.J Ba, patio, bltns,
crpts, drps, Allk about our , • ., J BDR:\J, trpl balcony. lta ,.~IANT 1 & 2k~~DR~~f! discount plan. 880 Center 1~ E Bay '$~ Le ......,rgeou$, par · e se mg. S C\l 642 8340
.. yearly, .Inquire ~to.apt. a~ ~losed g~es ~or max· , __ .. _. __ ·~-----~-·I
fi73-l!i2I or 548--7711. 1mum .secur11y. Qiuet strttl. NE\V 2 BR, beam ~lltngs,
.. Coron• del Mar
Adult!. to pets. 2 0 2 0 wood paneling. AH rec
Fullerton Ave· <Harbor to feature1. $165. Adults,
Bay, then So. tintil '.! bllU pe.ls. CaJI now 6'16.-007J.
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiil So. of Ne"''P(lrt Blvd.) 387 \V. Bay St.
1 l.!:::=~~~;! I' 6~2-8690 1 's_P_A_c--'2-.,,er-',-,-.,.;;.,1ro'-m-1-140~.1
~ D. ~~ ~ ParkQ·UL11E~T• _s~.rErLoUXEunding 1u c1 pool. Play yd. Crpts, w nI' I k • , , ~ v drpe,, bltns, patio. Newl,y
.. ON TEN ACRES p~~P2 ,ri~;:i:.£;~1• 1~00~~d; ~;d•I ok. 642~4 e 0 y 00 expeDS1ve.
REAL Value: Crptll, tlrps, ,1 '· &: 2 BR. Furn. & Unturn. Nr shop'g * Adull~ only dihwhr, pool, 2 B·r .
Fireplaces / prlv. patios. M • • A I I N Pools Tennis Contnt'l Bkfsl. art1n1qUI' pts. $130. !ilsture adu l!S on y. o pet1. Qu iel. 2295 Pacil:c ,• Sea Lane, CdM &14-2611 1777 Santa Ana Av!!., CM Av£'. 5.18-6878 or 642-44:19 ~.-!acArthur nr Cout 1-lw:y) r.tgr. Apt 113 646-5512
*REGENCY*
", l;PACIOUS ' BR., 1\\ ba .. * BRAND NEW * 'Br, 1 B" crplg/dn>• ... u
':frt. apt 2 Blks. to Big LA COSTA API'S, 1 & 2 BR. clean gu oven, encl gar, pa. • d tios. 548·3605. 377 \V. \Vil.son. Corona & shopp'g. A ults. Bltns s11.'imming pool Ii: gar-
·-1' • o pets. SZ::.0 ~ionth. ai::e.'An util pd. $150 to $170 * BEAUTlFUL 1 &: 2 BR.
\Vesley N. Taylor Co, mo. Adults, 00 pets. Contempor11ry Garden Apts.
• 644-4910 * ~ Avocado, C)1. 642-9708 Patioi;, fr p I cs, pool.
: · ~l+cc:Co>iR!coliL:l1cocoiiA~P>'Tf!sf'.**I ""'""'""'~""'""'""'~ 11S<>-SJ6'. ca11 ,...,"'
• Br. studios & itreet levels, UNFUR~ 2 BR, . $18 5, l BR Suitable l or 2 ladies.
, • , ,$185 &: up. Dsht\'hr. frpl, dbl Dramallc 2-sty. hv. .rm. 156 22nd St., C.~I.
t'T' 'carport. LA RGE Pool. \\•/frpl., Ove rl oo k1n gl~==~~"~~~""~'--__,,-I
, 673-3378 lropica1 lndscpd li\\imming CLEAN 2 BR lo\l·er, Crpb., • ;.> ~ 1 1 11 pool & patio, 145 E. 18th St., drps, bltns, no pets. $140,
• •1 .,..,R c~ de uxe nev.· a 64?-4603 968-l47"
: .;., cilt'<' 2 Br, 1 Ba .,,..~-~~~~-~~--1----------1
'unobstructed view of bay & LARGE 2 bdrm, l~-1 ba, un-EHt Bluff
.Hut lhe 1ruth ti( the m1tt.r k yoa t'mJI. ftllt
• fun1ished •ingle 11pmrtme11i IOI.'• low ..
1 135, an unrurnl1hed Gne-bedJ'OOISI /or
!14:; ""an v nfurrU1hed two.bed,_ fu r
1200.* And no fa&q' DW"ro-io o»U, •nd
· no leaM requi~!
And 1!1at'a only the •tart! You•re 110C on11
.ll'o:n ling a Jo•el1 ,•par1men1. You're .1 ..
renting • m UUoa. •dolJan wonh -of recre•
alion.J. facilil~ ••• llke •wlmm.i.D.g' pooJ•,
• Re• .. 'UJ Jot J-lioa.
Oakwood Ganl~o
Aparllllent&
h e..,11 Jinn,; lor
•in~fei m.1tried ~.Jr.)_
Nr"'f>Ol1 ftr.11efi
Oo 1111•" 1 .. ,_
i 1lt!6"12-31;'Q
liellth .-haLI (ool one, •• bot um), ...U
eourl•• hlllfara -. etc. And •IW lbere'a
nioi:e. Like a ruldcnt tennla pro wbo w-orka
<Qll.l of • runy .. 1oc:kcd pro llhop ••• and •
f uli·lime activlli" dll-ector, plua hundrecht
cif frie11dly adu1t11.
So ti. next time 7oa're chUinl b.ek ••
1our ordh1a,ry •partment, •top In •n4 ~
c:beck.our low pricea. Wc'reopen~d.J
Letweeta 10and8,
South Ray Club Apartmenl8
( jlllill fllf .ingl~ pectplt)
A~im
111..a--.,. iot llfookh-1 :i II T.Z..SOO
;. "nccan. Adlls only, $390 per !um. $150 IJKI; l a r g e 1·: o on lease. 6~992: bachelor, unturn, $100 mo. ---------·· Apt. Unfum.
' • BR deluxe. \Valk to beach. 984 El Camino, C.~I. Newport Beach 370 365 Apt. Unfum. • 365 Apts.,
Furn. or Unfum.
: , i'A.dullll. 546-4431 wkcnds, 557~012. See mgr. Apt 1. NEWPORT BEACH l ·G;;;;;or;;de;;;;;n;;;;;G;;r;;ov;;;e;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1-::c0""°":-:'=-,o:~"°-
: . ' 833-1471 wkda:y1 ' 2 BR. Crpts, drps, closed VIII G d A t I' PARK NEWPORT ' 22 1 rine e P s. $160 TO $170 ZING dull L. . sta Mesa {!arage, adul!s ·only, 14 .APARTMENTS AMA A 1 v I n g -;;:;;;;;;;;--;;;-;;:;:-;::;;;;:l,~R~"~lg~<~~~D~r.~.,.....~~~1~9,._.--1 t our bedrooms with balcon. 2 SR •• 2 BATH Bachelor, 1 <r 2 Bedrooms, Beaut.' 1 & 2 BR furn or unf
;.,.. PACJOUS 1 Br. apts. Crpts, LGE l br apt \\'/garage. ie! a bove' ~low. Graclous * * NEW * * and Townhouses. Spa, pools, AplJJ. Sell clean. oveDs, ~~: •• ~s. dsb\\·r. all bltns, 1 $135. &12-2ti2J. 712 Shalima.r, livin& le quiet llU'l'OUnding Gas It \Valer P aid tennil. From $175. Acrn11s D/\V fin 2 Br) d isplg, shag
\, ' ,jllild ok. $150 per mo, All Apt c for family with ehildN'n. Air-cond. DishwuheT,1 from FMh1on Island at Jam· cpts, drps, jacuzzi &: sauna
j ·. Vtll incl'd. 615-0984. 307 Near Corona del Mar Hi&b Pool. J acuni Pool · batM. Huge pool.
; +vocado CM Apt 9 LGE 2 Br, 2 Ba studio. new School. Flreplac.e, wet bar & Recreation facilities ~ &: San Joaquin l~ills Morr1'mac Woodt ' ' sha~. bllns. Children ok. bull! · kl •· p11 Roads. (7141 &.14-1900.
1 • 155---$1£5. 2 Br units, {rpl, $165/mo. &15-1496 alt 5 -In !Coo:n ap a.nces. PalioS, &r-Be·Que! 425 ~1 · \V C !\I
<'rpts, drps, beam ceilings, • 835 A1'tIGOS WAY 644-2991 Limited Children · EASTBL.UFf ' emmac ay, ·" . ,~', jiatio. Adults only-no pets. yard, $250 per mo. 5-l.r77~1 Coldwell, Banker & Co. EL CENTRll:O Apts 1.Bdrnt: unL, \ipsta.in ivilh 1 Br uni $125. 1 Br. turn $140.
I' ' Jlef' 2354 Sant A A 3 BOR.\l, 2 bath, nr shoppln,1;' ?itana&lng Age nt 541·5.2!1 2 bl ks N G G frwy !rplc., carpeted & draped.' No pe1s. 820 Center. St., ~··. ~ a na vc. center & $Chools. LTg fe~ e NEW DELUXE e =I B~~ bltru. le ~irit. Sl85. _c_._M_._&1_>-_5848 ______ 11
f.·., lTI'lFUL z BR JIS Ba DLX2Br,l ~JBa,cpts,.drps, 3BR.2 BAApt forleue.Incl 9931 Central Aw. · . .-...Ji-d II ' ' <"--stove, dshwhr, gar. Oi.ildren spac. muter iWte, din rm Garden Grove (TI4J SJ0.2l50 675-6050 0 Huntinl!on Be•_<h,. f\." Q UJUW .!l U 5, no pell . .,.,., k $150 •oo 7958 '
'°:."!'Mgr, 9.o, 755 w. 18th St. 0 · · ....._ Ii: dbl prage, au to door[~.._.._.._..,..,..,~..,'!"''""""' -M''' r a,a ~. CM LRG 2 BR nev.·ly paintM, opener avaU, Pool &: Rec. Huntington Beach
t· 1 ~EA·T. clean crpt'd I Br ~~~e·S:~~~1e;L1~;· Sll5 area. • ~· • LARGE 3 BR. 2 BA. SEACLJF'F Manor A~t,.;. 2 ON BEACH!
I Silo B k ba .-.. Br. AllO 1 Br. avalf J ul:y 1. • . ·~gar. . ac Y 865 Ami'°' Wa .. ,t,'8 Secluded, porch, quiet. Dead , .. ;._; ·ma. 280 Dtl Mar, GE 2 BR Duplex. Ne\\'IY decor.. ro end lit. Children, pet con-Crpts, drps, bllru;, fOOI, pri"'
,. .. , . l.9568 pvt patio in yard. $160. 71M Manqed by sidered. $17S. 2 BR also. ,_Lio, atudio· typ{, 1\1:· Bl. :f .. 4 NEW Apts, 2 BR.1 BA. No American, 968-4339 a.ft 6. WILLIAM WALTERS CO. $150. 7731 Ellis. 1 blk to 5 Jnlant ok. 548-2682. 1525
'. •., jet!:. 309 l\1onte Vista. $175. Apt, Unfurn. 265 Apt, Unfurn. 365 Points. Qy;ner 673-3293 or' Placentia A~r A.sic 1.boul
.. ·ar MB-3963 s41..0032 ~"""=~d=''~""'-;--:"~r·"""====-: :: up. Costa Mesa Cost• Mes• =-LOVELY BAYFRONT .... I CLEAN ' Br. ""· d!'P•. Seascape A..oc •· • r:•• 2 Br. From $365. :-. :',..ltm, adults. no p e ts. LOVELY new 1·2-3 BR. l U f
• ! ~·· 125/mo. 5'1()...8100. blk from ocean. Cn>•. <kP•, Fur!l/ n • • · NEWPORT TOWERS : UXE l BR. 900 sq, ft., patio, dsh\\·tir, sun<leck, trpl. * 642.22.oo *
, b!tns, crptA:, drp!, retrig, ~5 15th SI. 84l.J9'j7 :..li "c:11.r, bale, like 3 BR. Freshly painted & Santa An-.: .• !162-<~. .. -. Ran' n Brothers cl""· blw. crp~. drpo, 3 H•"<d poo1' ;.. ,! *' LRG l .Br Ales.a Verde ':I fn>lc & air oond. Nr schls Large Clubhouse etc. BBQ
; .~. ;o p a trs, Jocked ga r . A••ow11en shopng lr parks, Kids OK, Child Care Center
: ~ :'S145--S15Q. No Jlf'l,. 557-8-100 1_n_o~p,~·-·~·-Ph~·~llJO.-l.54_·_s~·--· IGreat new 1, 2 & l Bdrms
1''BR w/ gar new pa int, !ncd ADV AN CE ./ CllEZ ORO APTS $145/UP ~ • >'d w/ pat. w1r pd. 636--4120 8234 Atlanta. J.2.3 Bdmui. SOUTH COAST ~"'t ~76 Ph1centia Ave-D $130 OPENING Pool. Private ga ra·l'e. VILLAS
\Vshr/dryer. 5 3 6 -O 3 3 6 , 1101 MacArthur Blvd,.
' '': 536-2727 • 54&-8823 ...
Apartment• Now Available NE\VLY decorated 2 BR. 2 ILA~R-a=E_,,~bd_,mi-. ~.~.-,-.,~""-·
" (:-' "
. . ..
" r ··.
1
I ,,
.. • .. ,
,· ~ ,. • " ;. ' .
(~ ·: -
. 'l;J """' .,Reed Cli1111ficetion1
" ! For Expert t-. •
' "
AHistance ' '•
' 6500·6900 . In thee ' .,
DAILY PILOT
AT
MEDITERRANEAN
VILLAGE
IN
COSTA MESA
II t crei of bt t utiful •w•rd wi11 11in9 l•P1duo•p1 * Ma,, of pri~•I• 1lr•am1, poP1cl1 '"' wt t1;f1ll1 * Million doll•, r1cr••fion ct nl1r
ft 011i9111r coorcl i111t1cl inl11i11r1 * Firapl1ca1, w1th1r1, ht tm1cl cejlr"''' w11ocl
P•"elifl,, import•cl ,1111cl111h w1llc11y1rin •t
Ptlio1 and h1lconi11
Billi•rcl, cercl a nd me1 1i119 r11om1 , * Milt• of thi cltcl w•lkw1ya * Swirnmi,.9 pool1, outcloor wbi11pool, ni9ht li9ht.
eel ch•mpi11n1hip 1i1t ltnni1 court1, h1•lth 1p11
with 9ymfla1 ium1 with 1tpar1t1 f1,ilitie1 for
mtfl f ll" WO.,,fll,
14.hour t•curity tyll•m
UNFURNISHEO
BEDROOM
1 BEORM. & OEN
2 BEOR<?OMS
2 BR. TOWNHOUSES
FROM
FROM
FROM
FROM
Hours: 10 to 5 Daily
Mediterranean
Village
2400 Harbor Boulevard
Costa Mfla
(714) 557-8020
""' lrott..n c.,,.,..,.11 h • .. i.ldlwy .,
M•llOJr• .. t11d1n1rJet, lllC.
BA studio. Oceah vie\\', carpel£, drapea.. stove It
bluns, relrig. private patio. refrig, fenced yard, child
'Trade\\'inds Re11lty 847-8511 Of\, rcas. 531-73TI
2 BR 'vith crpls & drps, near
beach. Upslain1 \\'/patio &
gnragc. Ready for ttnt
6/15. 96S-3132
DELUXE 1 br $140. Also 2 br
uniL 2 blks to Htg Cntr. All
elec bltns. 894-4954 alt 'I
S1U\RP 2 BR. w/prh·acy.
Cpts, drps, gar. Child OK.
Sl55. ;,,JG--3862 0('.·ncr
2 Br, cll•rin & atlrnct Crpls,
drps, bltns, air . cond, nr,
acbools • .&hop·g & park. Kids
ok. No pets. 836-1548
Laguna B•ach
* LOVELY GARDEN APT.
QUIET l BR, ocean view,
1 block 10 beach • 1cl~·n.
Year lea!t", winttr t81C'll
year-round, ?.iature adulls,
"4,!W-4029 d11y, 494.3839 '~"
& \\'krnd. $160 mo,
l,~ hlk beach. 1 Ir 2 BR. Pool.
Adults. Leaae. 2175 S. Coast
1-lvi.')'. 494--0209.
NEW lux l BR, 11; BA,
ocean w , pool, S2l0. Adi!!,
t10 pets. 4s.t-958l all S
2 BR. New crpt'g, drps, Jock·
ed gar, Harbor 18 a ke r
Shop'g. Adllt. No pets.
$115/mo, &45-3515
DL.X 2 & 3 Br, 2 Ba, t'ncl
gar, $145 &. ~p. Rental Ole:
30% ~fact. Ave .. 5'16-1034
Newport Beach
2 Br, 2 Ba, frpJc, d1h.,·hr,
patkl, S250tmo. Yr lellM'.
2(M 33rd St. 6.J2-~20 or
548-1347
2 BR, l BA. erpts, d~.
bltina, Coop!~. no pets. $1G:i
mo. !':r. Hoag Jlo1 p .
&12-4387
BLUFFS dlx
Br, 21,. Ba,
patio. l'nrl
6T.;..;m3.
Tuwnhou1~
bllm. f'rpl,
gar. Q'illtt.
* TOW NHOUSES *
2 BR, 2 B11, 2·catp1;1r1 .. $225
3 BR. 2 Ba. 3·CafPOrl · · $27$
l'tEALTOR 5-IS.0066
Westcliff . ''-..
QUIET, SPACIOUS -New 2
Br, 2 Ba garden apt. Plush
gold crpts, drpa, bltns, pvt
p11tio, chnndelier in master
bath. Lots or on-silf park'g
+ cov'd ~ar. All sgl s1ory .
\\'alk to O>co's & \\'eslclltf
Plaza. Adu\ts. $185. 642-0239
Aptt.,
Furn. or Unfurn. 370
Cost• Mesa
NEW NEW NEW
VILLA CORDOVA
QUIET·SAFE
COOL • FR.ESH!
tNcar Back Bay)'
40 Unit Adult
Apartment Complex'
1 & 2 BEOROOMS
Entertaining will be a ~lcas
ure, Dt'corating this lovely,
spadou11 apt will be a joy,
• Special cablnet space
• Lock garages w/ lg stor
• Bm ~ • Lndry • Patios
• O\V/displ •Huge gas stxc
• Special 1C11.1ndprooflna:
• Deep 2 color shag
carpets, drapes
GAs & \\'ATE R PAID
Mo. to Mo. From $140.
2323 Elden Ave, C~T
St-e Afgr. Tml \\'oodhead
64~32
* .. *· • El Puerto MoH Aptt • '* • •
1 89droom Apl'$.
ftJO It np \net, ut111tli:!s, Also
f\irr Pool lr ~creation
artll. Quiet E?!virotJment.
Off street pa.rklnir. No Chi.1-
d!'f'n, no pels.
AllO Garages F'or Rent
lro!l-1961 ~fa.pie Ave.
Cos1a 1'.1eaa •
NE\V 2 BR. APl'S
From $230
Furniture Availabi.
Carpets.drapel-<lisbwuhtt
heated pool.saunu-tennla
rec room«:ean vtew1
patios-ample parldna:
Security gUards.
HUNTINGTON J
PACIFIC
'111 OCEAN A VE., ll.B .
IU4) 536-1487
· Ofc open 10 am:S pm Daily
WlLLIAM WALTERS CO.
P arklike Beach Livin&
for Adults
Casa ·Del Sal
·1 &: ·2 Bft..fl.rn/ullf. Pvt pa,
tio, frplc in 2 BR, elev•tors,
dsh1vshrs, crpts, drps, Pets
accepted. From $145.
21661 Brookhurst St, HB. * (71.&J 962..(i65J *
KIDS WELCOJ\IE
2 Br, $159. 3 Br $189 All
xtras .. Pool, pets OK. Avail
N'o w. 842-7170, 968-7510.
lT•l3~ apt' 0 , Keelson Ln,
lt.B.
"If 2 &: 3 BDR.i"S. $150 UP.
. P a tio, poo l. C h il dre n ,
MORA KAI AP'J'S, 18881
fl.1ora Kai Ln. 1,~ blk E. of
Beach at GarfJeld. TI4:
962-899-1.
Newport Beach
VISTA OEL MESA
Apartments
l &. 2 BR. Furn Ir: Unf. Disb-
~'asher -Stove and Rebig -
Shag crpl'g-1.J'g Rec center.
RENT Starts $155
Tustin & Mes• Drive * S45-4a55 *
2 BR • FURNISHEO
1-Bath. $275 Mo., )'t'arl:y
3 BR. • UNFURN.
2 Baths. $32S i to., yearly
BURR WHITE
Realtor 675-4630
2001 Ne1vpon Blvd., N.B.
S•nta An1
VILLA MARSEILLES
BRANO NEW
SPACIOU'S
1 & 2 Bdrm. Apb.
Adult Llvlnf I Furn. & Unfurn .
Dishwasher . color coordlna t.
ed. appliances • pllJlb shag
carpet , choice ot 2 color
1Cheme1 • 2 baths • stall
showers • mirrored ward-
robo "°"" . lndu..t llabl·
Ing In kitchen , ~akfasl
bar • huge prtvatt ftnctd
po!lo • plush la.n~capfng •
brick &r-B·Q's . iarp heat.
ed pools Ir lanai.
3101 So. Bri stol St •
(~J l-11. N. of So. O>lst Plaza)
Senta Ana
PHONE: 557-1200
Wtdntsd1r, May 26. }q71 PILOT·AOvtRTISER 2J
NOW!
NEW!
PILOT
PENNY
PINCHER
CL:(S.SIFIED ~DS
WITH A
NEW-LOW-RATE
3 LINES
2 TIMES
$2.00
ANY ITEM
$ OR
LESS
e EACH ITEM MUST BE PRICED e
• Ne Item 0.... $50 • Ne Commorclel Plrmo e
• "" c.,, c""-• "" AWi,..;.11 ... •
CAU
6·42-5678
ASK FOR YOUR
DAILY PILOT AD-VISOR .
AND YOU MAY. CHARGE IT!
• •·'v -.., -· ·--... ' . . . -. . j•
•
~3 PILDT·ADVERTISER Wed-y, Ml)' 26, 1971 WrdntSday, May 26, 1971 DAILY PILDT ==·= ..... ::,~~~l~-~ ..... ~l~~~l~-~-~I~~ ~I ""~ ... ~-~Jal~ 1 ~1 ~ ... ~ .... ~ .. ~1~~'~1.-~--~1~=1 ~1-~ ... ~-~l~~I ~ .. ~_~, .... ~~~~!=!='v;-•;~~1,.,;
Rooms 400 G•r•gts for Rent l,:;::-~...,......,.....--1 WILL rent lo\•ely furn. sleep-
SJO Found (,_ Ho) 83>-:ISJ.1 I
551 School1 & Chllol Core Polnll .. & Help Wonted, lo\ & I' 710 NCR ~I.I
ing room w/prtv entr. It
prlv bt. to eldt'rly employed
gentleman only $51:1/mo.
!l-!>1023
$65 to relined lady in n1y
lovely quiet home-in C. M.
N<> llmoking, ttferenct.&.
-719'
.STORAGE GARAGE * NE WPORT BEACH
-$2D.SD -* ED RIDDLE •* 646-8811
------,-.,.. lnetructlon1 -575 Popo..a.~1-Y Imo •~-o! h>tm~ PAIR mtn'• pruc:ripUon 5 DAY ~<e•k. 2 yn. or owr, r, ... .,, ... APT' !louse P.1ani Couple for our "''-• -..,_...
glasses, vie. Amigos \Vay, ~sw"t"M.,..,.Ll'~S.!O""N"s"•_,Qu,....,al"u"ltd~ 1 expe~ .. rell., very ttllable. PROF. p&intlD&". Exter l Xlf40 unll11. P..tntlng 4 1' the key to UU. "'."P1111•
N.B. Call 644-1!01 inltructor. Belin ln!U, Adv. ~. vtc. Adama 4r 1tory, low u $2Z w/a:d cltanJn:. + Apt aalary. ~le •Pot In a ':i.WinJf co.
Baile boating roune of-F---' ~ •• ,, ·•· ·~-Chl•a 2 wk 1t11ion, mu.. -6 Pf? Buahard. paint. Avr nn $18. Airleu (213) m-8589 ore exper. eq more
fi:red to the pul:lllc ~ ....... "l........ . ... ........-.. A••~ no ~u Jolin ••• -11 :<:::::::::~::------I II'"" .. pay. c.u £lleo Rap .. & Edinger, ll.B, ~ ,..... ·.... ON"VO• Contr•ctor tpray T\I' accou•. ce ...... 4 Pointe r ...... 11
F R E E
ct chara'e by the Balboa t0tl• $15. Roy, 8'17-1358. Accountant ~
Offic• R•n!•I 440 Powfr Squadron. St.U u Lost 555 I\l'Y W•Y. q\W.ity home No WUtinu: Sho.rp caJ»ible peNOn to train High exper. Bosen chair etc:.
r v.·eu IL!I poll"er bo11.lln( I jrel ttf)l.ir. Wall s, ceillna, noon up to mgm1 resporulb!lltle1, l\.1un relccatc. Lo\v c*l * PRE~IGE OFFICE taught New cla!ses itart 1'11SslNG Eflalish m.te bull ,._...._,.....,..~ etc, No job too amall. ""w:ALLPAPER * De willinito re-locate. Ben-housing, r~e med !txc.
Next to ·al :Estate tlrrn. at 7 p.nt., A1-y 31. Every dog. White w/brown •poll. 5'17--0036, 24. hr ans. serv. l!J• J n )'OU call "M,!.;," ru e-litll' xln't. $850. Call D~ve frlrige11. Fee. Call 'fdarlc
FURN. Ulil pd, Ideal for Redecoratttl -crpta & drps. 11.londa.y night tor u Vic. San Juan. Laree d "'~-"""... V'IV"l Drake. Tixnnas,
Xlnt for h1wrance, tax DC· l"eYlard. 493--4023 eves or / 'I\ di....,,. * Rtmodellnf:' LESCO p•tNTING p I student, $:>5 per ni<l. Com· ,.. Y•eeks. Al NeY.-port Har-Bebytlf1h'll ! GerMck Ir. Son, Llc. "" ertanM __ C. •
munhy ba. Female only, COUB i:i~ant or a8rc1 hdi1ectC.Ml860 bor Yacht Club, T7Q W. ~ collect, COSTA .. ME•• ~n.-a>ll * 549-2170 ~11d Ir. Apt.11, Spr•yin; 3C• Secrtt•ry Stcrt t11ry $5DO-JS51
643-&520 '• ev.'Jl()lt v ·• ' • Bay, Ne"'·port Bf!aeh. LOST-Kee1hond (grey -I I cou11, ceillllf11, Int I Ext. TOp co. Golden oppor, Jr yoo Type SG-65, Sii 80·100.,Dict.
LIVE on Balboa Island this LACHENMYER Bring notebook le pencil husky-type doe) vic..A,d11.m1 PRE.SCHOOL E!,ltctr ca Uc'd/ln,, 64>2399. "'ant an Interesting chal-Pel'5()nntol expe.r_ pref~,
sumnier $100 a mo. \\'omen REAL TOR first nl&ht, Rttl1ler at It Mqnolla, H.B. Playfully Spec:l&l Summer~ il(::D .Ele:ctrlclan, ma.Int. Plaster, P<1tch, Rtp.1lr lenglna job &: ha\'e good but oot neeess. Busl~col-
only, i\lake ReseNations 1860 NEWPORT Bl.VD. that ti.mt. Contact P.lrs bit neighbor's child, m111t 11th le Monrovia. % day + .~. Also, ruld.. indu1lrlal. sltii1a:. $500. Co.U Kitty Long. lege counll!. Good afftar-
now. 1Z7 Agate. 67S-31iU Can 646-!9281'Eve1 6734577 JsabC'I Pease 673-1855. locale, 968-$164 full day aeWons, Planntd 6G-UT4. Pl.ASJ'ER-Patch-Rm AdM. ancr. f'ree. Ca 11 ~ 1,0~N;E;:-'_-',C:,~:!.:,~,':.n:'..1'.:1::,::m~•-n-·,· I ·nnEi'i!i'iuxii'.<i0&,;mop;~;;F;-."SUTJmii'Ei's< t.FUU..Y LICENSED * * $50 REWARD * proen.m, hot lunehts. Ares 0 ffnl Accous. ceilinp, •tu c co Cler k Typirt Ll<>y~. ~-, 17~· a.a·• .J R 8 U hn 6:30 AM-6 PM. •r ng tttin. Free e • l Im at•,. p bl R I t'
master bdm1, rtlrig, beaut. ;l~ntiM j' . A/C, ~.; Re-Ad".',""l_ •'•ti~~ maSr>",,1,'!a.1111 fCll'frocameNl color coaH. thmiss~na JJi wk-COMPARE! &&2-4050 PilOFESSIONAL Al A 11\T, 8.l.i-1591, &IS-4588 aft 5. Gb~'n',· ,:':"ma' •,''mo' • .. kUYb• ~:i"li· ~lti~cg op· ..... ~~°:,', for a t. home vie: P .C.H. It Beach m"•'·. "'w ·•-. •. I paint/ • '"' ....... ... m e1vpon 1g 111:win1 er &3&-523T ..._ . . n . ..,,,. 1u ,,.. , Blvd .. 536-8518 ......._ ... ,.....,. Love, l\Jarrlage, Busineu N "--· 67' ""5 · tl'tt \\'On<, Pru n 1 n I · * PATCH PLASTERING ""'""· Cal.I Killy Lon". 1racth•e triehdly per.on.
drps, 325 to 9C1J sq. ft. Suile Readings pven 7 days a 7""~·;;·~-~·~·-~·~·.!::-~~-IBAlliiAiiYYssmiTI'ilNNGGomyey°1ho~mm.:r-. tpraying, disease It \.l'etd All types. r ree e11timate1 .,....,., . .., r.teet tn\-.Jing execs It other 1,~; ~:. ~~1~· ~~·:a~ -'~·~P-h~·-"--'·-=-~~~~ wttk, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. ~.= .. ~'·~a'!" :Ot~·. vie. Bushard 6. Hamilton, ~~trol. ,,., Spmkljober Gnpair . ..,,,..,,,,,.c~at~l-540<825 ___ • ___ 1 Receptionist inter~ing people. Wlll1ratn =, 1023 altor 9 ·-til 11 DESK !!pace available $50 312 N. El Camlno Real. _. • H.B. o.,-, t\'e., hr., or v.·k. ......an ~.. s. @Orgt, Pl b. ..... S 1or car rental agency, 'Call u•..-..,,. "'·'• ~-m•nl• brov.'!1 spotted, vi c Jloleaa ~ 646-5893 um 1ng ••!Cf. harp attrac1. person. pm. mo. Will provide furniture ~ ....., _.,_ "-~1' ......., -~=,...====:--I Lots of public contact. A Janet Car)'. •
at $5 mo. Arm\'tring 1enrlee 492-9136, 492-0076 Vt''-"'"· Reward . ..._._.,, BABYSlTl'ING my home, AL'S GARDENING LE\V TakU &; Son 's Plum-little typing ivilt land this. Record KH~r
l'URN. slping rm, quiet, a\'ailable-. 17875 Beach 81\ld. \VE guarani~ our shampoo LOST in Irvine Terr-~Iale Irr fncd yd, hot meals, day fnr gardenini'. le •ma 11 bingo Repa.tr Rep t p e-ttui.. Call L•:-, , Ang. Tr•inet M6;20 clean priv. home. l\tale on. H Ungt 8' "'" •-t / U hit bod 1--' In -" all R mod I -.,., ""'"" ...,., un on ae!l. ~ will slop ha.Ir Jou&; in mosl ca "' co &r. •· e y, t; nite. IW2.S299 .,..i1cap g se ...... ces, c e e Frff Estimate• Aro >'OU retired! Or ttt~" -out ly_ $17.50 wk. Eves/wknds tail t s · ~• ~~ 0 ·-·ln N -~ "'" o°'O ~ 646-2™2 DESK space av~ble $50 cues \\'ill grow hair back. raccoon • P 18.mese. WJU.. babysit by the v.'fek. ~ . ....,.,. i e~....,... ,,.,........,., Receptionist of service"!' lnlerei1ted in •
mo. \Vill provide' furniture Completely goarantffid. 615-33'M Lovi So c ta. CdM, Costa Mega. Dover l-:-LE=w~T=a~k~,-,-~,-,So~n~'~1~P=1-um~b-Lo\'e.lyofcneedsattracl. per. Iasclnatlnir jC>b w/excellent ROO~I for rent in my beaut. at $5 mo. Answermg service Costs only $2.15, You be the LOST, bro\.l'n & white small M: 64~~.i ' o.s Shores, Weslclill. Ing Repair. Replpe, Remo-son tu meet It. greet. Nini I potential? Rapid adv~-
home. College student prtt'd available, 305 N<>. El judge! Sir \Va!ter's, 2052 dog w/ ttd flea collar. A1111. =,...,-,...,,---,--,-----IAL'S Landacapinr. Tree del. 1·-, ,,1, •'"·8"" mont for right ,. .... n. Will C II D 838-0038 Car t S rvlct '" ru '"" fingers & a v.·inning smUe. ,'\ a ave, cam in<> Re al , San Ne••port Bh·d. C.i\r. to Sta.sher. 1964-A Meyer Pl, P9 • removal. Yard ~modeling, 1-~C'O"°L'E°'P~L'U"'M"'B'IN""G;--Call Cindy King, train to 11-ork w/ legal l!Oc-
SLPG rm tm· steady work'g Clemente. 492-44~ SINGLE? WIDOWED? C.P.f. Reward. 1-f IR AC LE AN Car p et Trash hauling, lot cleanup. 2_1 hr. Service urnPnt~. Call Jane( r.suy,
older man, 00 cookg. By rno DeLuxe OUice 5Z> sq ft. *Dlvorc.d Over 21* REWARD I I Service. Fut dry shampoo, Repair sprinkleri. G1l-llfi6. * &\5.-ll6l #r G irl Friday Salts T r11inee $l46o +
only. $40. 1543 Orange, CM. Carpet-Drapes-Pane\ Wall.I Oldest & largest For a self Grey & whlte, 11m rat tree soil ttlardant & cok.lr EXPER. Japanese-American l.Dcal l'O. wania person for Di?gree prcl'd, SOn\e .P1ea
LAGUt-;A !urn. rocnn for rent Ne\.l'J)Ort & Bay Cen1er explaruitory measage 21 hrs "Hitla". &12-3#1 brlaf\tness included on gardener, complete garden-PLU~tBlNG REPAIR this variety spot. Lite skills e:icper. Large nationaJ'1:CO·
with k itchen p1·iv, etc. 2052 Newport Blvd, C~I a day, 541-9991 LOST-Eye glasses in case. every job. All v.<ork guarn. ing service Ir. cleanup. l\~ jo~2~~~z;n11 needed, $36S. Call Cindy w/1rrong training pro~.
v.·k/mo. 491-4WS (Also % otf avail) MG-1252 -AN~Y~O~N~'E~in-1-,,.,-,,-.,~ln-,~lar--I Bifocal ¥-'/black rims. Vic Reu. Call f<>r tree est. 893-0150 King. Good chance to ero\v. Eft.e.
ROO'.\I for rent $40 mo. DESK space availaLJe $50 ing f'>1pense of Los A~ll's Laguna Beach, rrl., 5/22 &f.~9"9 1 7u=w=N:-ca-,..-.,....gard-7,-n-,-.,-,.,.k, SS HOUR f:ull ~ln.rk Thomas.
Gentleman only. 155 ~Jonte mo. \Vill proylde furniture Pho"' ·~ 'll6 CARPET shampooing, dry Llght hnuling. Exp' d. Plumbing/electrical rl!~!r Secretary Sec'y Legal $500 + ( phone line to SE portions of "'""""' 64' -· 64'1'"' ->. Vista, Costa l\1esa at $5 m<>. Ansv.·enng i.ervlce foam. Resld, comm'!, v.in· Reasonble. Call 543-97li ""'''aa ,,.. """' Large co. needs super sharp Expe1-. in Cali( Real c..sulte"
available. 222 F<>re11 Ave, Orange Co?' 494-5696 LOsr-BJaclc mall! short hair dows I: floors. Free e:st. I '=""E""sE"'cc:::-:-;d-:--:~.-::-: Remodel & Repair -rson for th~ ton spot. & corporation lall" ?' l'Sne NICE room for v.·orking man Laguna Beach. 494-9-l&i Tired of Bars & Dances?' cal wearini blue collar, vie. 96J.-OG72 JAPAN a r en Ing ,..... ,. C II
\1·/cooking privilege. East PROFESSIONAL Bldg. 45c *EVE'S DATE BOOK Irvine Terrace. 673-5918 Diamond Carpet Cleantna: ~~~n~e~~ Cleanup "AR""'E~,.-,~,..-,~dy-,lo_r_t~h<-:Su,.-m. ~~edy Ki~~~ies. $-133. Call ~~y ~s~r~~~ r':~v~~y 1~c_.>_i_. -"-""'--"-~---·I · drp Panicular GALS & GUYS LOST d rk all t Ava •"• room •o mer Season?' Handyman C 1 · S R I '21! sq ft. Atr-rond, crpll, s, a c:: co ca . u .., ,.., "'AN Up •-o·atl I ha·" I ar .son. •' ummer ent• • ~ Cali EVE 2-8 m 774 77~S _,_ Pl · 11 v•-.........,. ~ s . w· 3J>'Cia 1st. All types repairs .. 1:10 gd parking. Xlnt loc. 3!0 E. P • • Fem~. ast1c co ar. "' Repair!.,.. I: installatiom 1 odd job 1 • Gon'I Offo·co Sec'y Exec. ~ ··• ng s, new ence • & fix ups. Call Bill, Befatt SOI Edgey,·atcr-Bal; Bayfrnt 17th St C.P.I. PETE 6AR.-GOLF' . Irvine Coast C. C. Mnd SI., N.B. eves 64~9889 Free: Est. &15-1317 npair. Reas. 5-18-6955 9am/aft SPl\t, 96S-6837 Varied dutita in fun ofc. R.!p.. Top level position as t.C'Y
y,·/pvt bch. 3 Br/2 ha, ~RE'IT=~-RL_T_Y_._M_>-135:1.,,..~-membel'llhip for sale-terms. LOST small black poodil! ORlFOAt.t CARPET CLEAN 1--.Ex;-.,p-. •Ja~ .. = ... ~,.:c-~G~anl=o~n<~r,-id raises, A gent, $300. Call to 1hree execs, in ~na
garage. DESK space •''ail in e>1· 6.t2-2Sll/e\"es 5-18-9722. 'A'/Wht marking1. Stitt le1. in )'Ollr home or office Complelf' Yard Se.rvice Roofing Lisa Allen, bu11iness, An exceptional OP.. ~Ir. Robinson -Da\i!I Realty ecutive oHice bldg, northml PREGNANT? Adoption, Please call 646-7354 Tomlin Svc: * 557-9'49 Free t>stimate 5-Ml-5332 ·LE=E_.R-oo~fl-.ng-Co-.~--·r;·n~g-ol p<>rlunily. Fee. Call Nancy
Phone 642-7000 part of Htg Bch, Beach .l f b<>rt I on, vase c tom YI "=~K~SH=iRE="'°'T,-7. --,v~·,.. all type1. ReCO\~r. npairs, S.creta ry Car!50n, ·~· Edin<>er nr Htg Cent-. · YOR · err1er, 1c: C1rptnfer e JAPANESE GARDENERe S 'y -
303 Sapphire-Bal Isl 2 Br/l 847::soc,1 "' coun.V:llng It. information. EutbluH ll'ta. Re'A"a.rd.1, _ _,.,..,====,...-P.Taintenance, cleanup ther-mo roof coatinJtS, \\"hill! Ability, personality art-the •c , ,. -
&12-4436 64S-16ll or n4-T443 CARPENTRY HB FV CM a-a * 64• ,.,2 A: color. Lie/bonded i;lnce requirements. To Sfi-OoJ. Call Th i• e:-<ec. needs you now. ba cottage, avail J une, $1.JO 70 SANTA ANA AVE C: •• ~ 'l7 "·"7m "·-AU•n. Great location. b11uran.L &; 16 • -•1 Singles 011nce Cl11s ?-.fINOR REPAIRS No Job · .,..,..... ....--y.•k. July $165 v.·k, Sept l-15, From 300 liq/II. 35c sq fl. LOST Mine' brown poodle, · JO~INSON'S GARDENrNG =r-=G,--~.,..--~11-~",..-_71 ~0~,_-llankfng background hl!l.ptul ,
$165 wk. l\lr Robin.son, 67;;...2464 of. ~l-50l2 Elegant 11tmo~phere, female, 4 mos old. Vie. «lh Too Small. Cabinet ln gar-Yard care, clean-ups, plan· · uy • ...,., ng, l.l'Ca .,..,ct, X.ln't future for gal 1~ing
Du vis Rily &l2-i000 534-mt St., N.B. 673-7?>74 alter 6 ages l: other cablneta. ting sprinklers. 962-2035. I do my 0\\'11 ¥-'Ork. 645-2180, Mgmt Treinee ror career advanr'f'nil>nt.
3700 NE\VPORT BLVD, NE. 545-!175 If no answer leave ;;;;i;;'""°1t:::::;;:-:c-;.:::;::::: 548-9:>90 Jr. Exec. type. Co, training, ··--.· BEAUTlFUI. l bdrm turn *ON THE BAY * Socl•I Clubs 53S GOLDEN Retriever, Vic, of mag. at 6'6-2J72. ll O. EXPER. Hawal!an Gardenl!r ,5,--~.-~1,..,..,1 :-'7..:---tuture oppor, $j,'.;Q. Call Dan Cali Ba1'bara Lei!, ..
'°o· ndo. nw/lrg patio &d·"pl. 675-24EH or 5-11-50.ll •Clias~;apisttr<a~~~~!"· no Anderson. Com P le le Garde: n Ing :~e~w~o~ng-:-:-.-'~•-'.o.t•~·~·-·~-Sharp, Sec'y . t'OO
at€'s ex. Mature a .... ts. e NEWPORT Beach Deluxe BALLROOAf dance lesons c, ...... J 5 pe • ~. Service. Kanialani, 646-4676 e Dreasmaking. Al!erations •'nst growing co. looki.tlj'1 ~or
.. ....,., ~· • -•·· . "-[~~~~~~~~~~ ANY u job. Resld., Comm'I, G--·' •·· la! 0 A Dlslro'ct amb,·1,·o"' >'nd•'" to -•nd View olfices. Air-cond. Prlv. ,..,,, U411S 1nstrucuun. Japanese ill-uener ......,c n ems . · Y, f"I"
E. Costa J\.iesa-3 hr. 2 ba. Ba. 2100 W. Cout H~'Y. Buginess men appta avail. , . lll•I Ind..,., Apts. 11<".>'r" "1· Exp'd. Ywl Work Call Jo * ....... Salll Rep outoh<lr "'w bo'°h ol!lc01.
J uly &: Aug, $300 mo. INDIVIDUAL OFflCES Everyonl! welcome. Elegant ln1tructio1t 1 ~ooi.. __ 1961~-· ------C"lear>-Up, Planting 646-0619 EUROPEAN Dre11>mllking. Sharp per80t1 \.\'/drive & de-Plush. Nice bos1, Fee. Can ·
54S..27l2 New Irvine lndust. complex. atmosphen. SM-2Z21. '--------' C<1ttrlnt FREE e1t. Compl or partial Expertly Cu.stom Fitted, &il'I! for tuture w/nat'l AAA Ann Ru'Sell. •1~ ..
Va c11tion Rtnt 11ls 425 Top l<>c. 833-3441 anytiml'!\ •UN·,-,·Q-U_E_ca~t-,-rod-·m-•~ab_f_ot lawn maint. & cleanup. Accur. Rea1. 673-lMtl co. Good sales bckgrnd. Cashier ~ ~ S~ I & L •r Garden" 612.0075 -.~1,,--.,,;1---.,,.=~=-$12,000 + car + expouses. Here's your chance to l'.iork () XLNT OFFICE Space now I l 1 -• ,..,. I o;oOO I that June "'eddlng or ban-· " · in,. 3 ft ferat on1 --2-5145 your way up. DivenlUW
ENJOY camping out without avail. LIDO BLDG, 3355 Via \i as -. fnstructlon1 57S quet. Exceptional variety Gwr•I S.rvictt Neat, accurate, 20 years l'!lCP. Call D:in Sharp. duties 1 Girl nle, 89:i:,"'
roughing it-Nev: condo, sips Lido, N.B. 673-1501 :;;;;;;;;;;;;~;:; -----G---N--1 and quaJity. Your pleasure, ho To'lo g00rt~ F'ef'. C•il Ruth,.,,..
Ii. J\lammoth Lakes, c.. ••J DIKover • reat •W l\Tonsieur! 49~ 1-·1x up your me lorl:O:'.:"'.'.'.':':O:--c-----Terr itory ""'Y • Business Rtnt1I -CarH r With The spring, No i>b too 11mall. S•lta Rtp Claims Sec'y ---:-$4U Ideal v11.oa.tion area.. \Vkly -=--,,.,..------F.uncl (frH ads) 550 C.rMnt, Coner•~• Ca-ntry, painting, \val! CERAi\tlC tile ne" & Large active co. needs ~ or monthly rental. 5-1~1610 SHOWROOM, mfg. &: oHlce .,.,';,..,...r, d-all olc. ~, nmode:I. Free l'!S1, Sm.all Super sharp person v.•/good · --,------..,..-,.,. AIRLINES QU"--·-~I ~ .,. '" job I •ooow I ~k-nd '·r~area for thi& 1uper bu.sy~pl. Rentals to Share 430 space. Parking. Close-in ,:.,.,.h S A kl bl ,_,,,. • Cl'!Wnt w1J1 .. , et 54G-53l9 1 we com!!. """'".....,.,11. sa l!9"" ... ... l!i""'-' • ,.. __ _. •kill• , 1<>mc <cl<·
Laguna, $85-$395 Mo • .r::TI ... · · \'ery va e Georgl! do IL Lic'd, Bonded . .,,"~l.==>nc=· ::;;-;::;;;-;;::::::-$8400 + c::ar. Call Dan uuuu a: 4~. lnllllfUY· blonde cat, 3 legs, MS...lfi9j. JJusband Busy?' Call P.toose TrM Servlce ground cinch it! Pant.Milla
BACTIELOR t<> !hare 3 ""~=~,..-~..,.~--w/;feweled pink collar. Anx-A natural for young people ====07.==--.,-,...,.,-545-0831 after 6-Repalr Sharp, OK, many other frincer.i:& ~~~f.°~~1~8f~J:1 C.:(i ';;,!~~ offi~~ococ;:~1;:l!t-~1~. ::.o;;~:; lovable new ~ii;e~~!e:~i~~e:.!.e~~~ ~alJENTm'. ll."~sotu11~>.ckbi:° •. e! ~:. _*_BLABO~o7U=d·="=;.,'u~~=~·~~:.rr~Th===-.,..• 1:~E~;,e:!~'·h~~~:™i::: Arel S•lts Rtp the tint I<> c::nJJ Elgl'!n 'Roa:·
Fullerton 5 5 S -10 0 0 or 1.,--,--,>136,...-,H,a=rbo:-r7, .,c,>_t_,.,,, I==~~~--~~~ Station a-g e: n I ! Rnet'Va· .c..u .iw-ov.w HANDYMAN I ;64~"4030"'°=~B_l~g=J~oh_n=,,--,,--,,, A local AAA co. needa sharp Cl!::k $6500 JliM -~ o.07 I d I I R I ... ,,. FOUNO.Half grown black I PATIOS "·· .. ..: ,_ GENERAL lree aerv., yard person for 0 .C, area. $000 -• 6•..-ovo n u1tr a tnta -.1trlpet! niale tiger cat lions! Ra mp or trave • wa .... , .... w~. "'" \\'eld!ng _Carpentry 673-1922 hall-+ comni. Call Dave Drakl!. :'i11!nu planning. Alust 1j:l<>-
1\1ATURF: male to share,.,...._,,,,_._,-""'---\\'/fluffy tail wearing flea agent?' \Ve'll train you for 1Wl new lawns, saw, break, cleanup. AH around cate, low i\fass feedlni':,'2a0
rent. Charactl'1' refs ;f.j EAST 17th ST •• C.M. coUar. Eastluf( a re a' these. an more. day or nlte. nmove. MM668 for est. Heullng dyman. Reu. 61&-S848 Jll!O~ll'! or more. Cott .Mus· Shop & office. 2'.2()'Power · 1 • 1 ~-,-===~=-U-'-1 1 REGENCY qu irerl. Age 2;).3:l. I 4) 644-0139 aft 6 pm. \Ve inc ude placement as· • • CONCRETE. Floors, YARD, garagf', cleanups, t"ov I ery ing, Free med, Exe. lr1P&'·
633-4280, ext 222; 675-84.43 630 Sq, If, 675-6700 Broker sistance. patlo1, drives, !ldl!walks, Rl!move trtts, dirt, Ivy, PERSONNEL ell. Fe!!. Call Mark ThoD18s.
R I I W 1-.1 .a.1... BL~{ It grey str!}>I! cal some -1 b •-Do "'" °'14 C SHARE m.v watert'.ront home •n • s •n <n1 -..iv &ia 1. ru:u. n .,........., sklploader, back h<>*· VJNYL \\'eldln~-Cu!JI, burns, ustomtr n~ brown ll>OI•. Collar and 21 ,, 96' 074· AGENCY _,. ·' y,•/dock. fl'lan, 30-60 years. F.11. yrs. Approvni for Chllcl Care ......, a tears. Custom dyeing (all Strvica .. QUIET bachelor 50 yrs bell. On OCC campus Hg_rpe Veterans. Eligible inllitution colors) 649-2237 (mobile) GI r ,_, $150/mo. 6T;>-133I y.•ants clean, quiet furn. Econ. buili:nng. 834-5715 TRASH & Garage c::lean-up, ant o a company ~s
\VORh.1NG glrl to ~hare :? hr room w/ priv. bath &: l'!n-IFO=UND=~---,, .. ~,-.~h~S,.-B=ro-·-··n I """', 11"1 federally lnaurtd CHILD Care, my fw>me. 1 dayslm. $10543-503& load, Free est. ~838-3~~94~2~~~~~~~~
1
1150 E. 17th St. outgoing p!!non w/lile":Ork · h 1• 11'\JU .,. 1tu ent oan nmaram. W k d •. 2 Any! • J background Some -·"" apt v.·/smae 11.s of 6/l;i/il. trance m ome or a.p : nr.-.,.ve· ee aya:. ...,.e to 6.1===-· "'---,--. .,..,.~·· mall'! puppy, Vic Continental T"-I fro -~thin. 675-7154 alt 5:30 Fashion Is.le, Approx. $100 P.facAr thur Ii: Flower, S.A. AtOVING, Garar. clean--up l!i lj Suitt 120 S<1nta Ana ,.,,y promoe m ... ,
\\'TLL !hare apartment with mo. No pets. Dbl or king· A":.;71f5 C.~L Approx 4·6· Airline Schools Peclfic M~l!T Jlt lit!! hauling. R.l!llsonable. £nt>loin•lt t •·ec. ca.ii Ruth Gordon,
girl. 1 child OK. Prefer hi.in bed. ~laid Se r v ?' 1 ,,"===-,--,~,--,.--I 610 E. 17th, S11nta An.t Fla" that item under $50, Free l'!sllmates. &IS-1602. -------·· SSS-lSl l Electrlc1I •
Christian, &aH:J14. 644-6250 days. LOVABLE abort haired grey 543-659' try the P~nny Pincher Housecleaning Englnffr $14.000 =H~O~U~S~E~t~o"i~ .. -.. -. ~.~B=R~.-,7,-n·,I altered n1a1e cat. w/Dea I ~========= Job W•nttd, fll'emala 702 Very largl'! dll'!set pl&J\t &
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
LR, DR _ Pal<>! Verdes, collar. Had for over mo. * * HOUSE Of' CLEAN "ii;~~;;;;;;;j trans. Must ttloca!I!. ~-
Hunt. Bch, Laguna., Corona vie. C.;\f. 6~184 * * * * Comm'! 6. Resid. Cle811ini ~ tact job w/xln 't tringe, F.tt.
de! ~far -near good schls. 2 Puppies. Vic Paularioo and Free est. * 642-6824 * TYPING &: Sec't lll!rvlce. Adm S11lts Call Mark Thoma.J, ; J.Bl\I Selective. ii ave E S • ~SO P.fD & fam ily. \\'rile PO Boll \'ic <>f Del Afar in C?lf Bay A Beach Janitorlnl xec. ec y . Stenorette &: Dictaphone 4369, \Vichi!& Falls, Tex 54()..1781 O'pts, windows, floors etc. ,_ rlbo 15 WOULD YOU \\'ell koown co. needs£.
T d , Pa d • .... n&e rs. yrs exp.
76310. •"'OUND: Doberman male ra er s .. a 1se Res. &; Comm'!. 6-1~1401 540-0202 or 546-1892. LIKE A Gel ln on the fl'OUnd .
GARAGE v.·anted, prefer ty,·o vie. Nl!v."""rt He I g ht s I 1 Meu. Cleaning Service HAWAIIAN Bu.,y otc. Future }I06s!bU-..., WANTED; day 1\'0rk, ex-Ill B "'"" F Call car, 5Uitable for building 14 f>tB-&)2.a Carpets, Window1, Floor etc. VACATION THIS es. I! .. · ee. I• perien c ed and have A R II ff, fiberglass boat.. Will FOUND bUc &. 11·ht Sm 1em Ines Resld. It Commc'I, 548-4Ul references, Sl8 • day. SUMMER? nn usse ~ .A leave no mes1. Call fi46.4665 HOUSECLEANING Gtn'I Ofc ~30
after 4 & wkends hound. Vic: 111agnolla & "'ill d any•~•-· I l7S<~i..o=1~8=1-~~,--~~~ + Potenlo'al Lots of public contact' ... re. Sla!er. Contact 9l)S..4jl46 • "' <> 'Jt= ·~sec ean-A IDE S FOR CON-
\VAl"TED unfurn N w pl I 'F"O~U~N~D~S.~ng-.,-l<_n_o~al-,-P-"_P_Pl_', ti mes ing. Exp. & ~as. 516--082! VALESCENCE, e Ide r I y t•rnlngs $50,000 Local ofe w/great ~aU
Shores house 'A"/cpla & DEDICATED CLEANING care or famlly ca re . to $100 000 needs you, Variety, ec.
drps. Yearly lease or '9-12 mo, Mission Viejo. \\le do everything. Fnc Hon1e111aker1, 547-6681 , Call Ellen Rogers, J..
longer. After g & y;knds I "83"7"-4=260'°"_.,-..,,._,,-~ dol la~ e11Umate. Call 673-4012 , ,_,,.......,,-.,.-'°'.....,"""= OUR APPROACH IS A Gtn'I Ofc ~~ 64~5661 BLACK female Poodle \'ic. I ia Help Wanted, M & F 710 LITTI..E DlfoTERENT BUT Enjoy pleasanl 1urroundtri2a. ~~~~~~~~~~I Del i\far & Newport Blvd. Ironing WE \VANT TO SHOW YOU 11-1eet the publk. Fun. jobijor
;. 548-1337 or 540-5922 '------------------.-1'1 Ironlna; & Alterationa THE ADVANTAGES OF sharp person. lfere 1 Y.9ur
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1 tt J I~-~~=~~~-~· I Late model Chrysler, con-Have: 14,000 aq, ft. blde on At Aiy Home A Better Temporary JOINING OUR CO AFTER chance to il'!t aboard. ifef..
Found Jn CdM Friendly red· vertible, like new condiUon, 1%. Acres nr Redlands twy. 54S.7641 Position CQ,,!PLETJNG o·UR CO. Call Ann R.us&ell. ' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ dish brown puppy w/nea LOC i---,,..,;wffi,,.-:---l I T a1175 c::ollar. Dr. Stockton 673-1000 24.000 miles, ltlll under Trade for AL propeny. * J.RONING * TRAINING p R 0 GR A M ega ra1net .~
warranty, trade tor older SCJ.IWORER $2 hr in my home URGENTLY NEEDED YOU & YOUR \VJFE WILL Are you aggrc111ve &: ~dlJing Personals 530
ALCOHOLICS Anonymous.
Phone s.u-m7 or v.Tite
P.O. Boll 1223 CDst& ~re1a.
SEl.LING Your boat? "List''
v.'ith ... Sl!IJ it fast. Daily
Pilo• crassified. 642-5678
):'CUNG brov.n & v.·hlte car or'! 645-1395 673-26&1 642--0Sla e SECRE.1'ARIES HAVETHEOPPOR.TOGO to learn'! Local co. ~s ~~al~~;~,e:.:.:.af;,.~ .Have Kimball .•Pinet piano. Have oceanl.ront duplex. • TYPISTS ON AN ALL E.'{PENSE accurate typist. Futuz:e !Qn.
""ti• .._... Duxman'1 chairol:ottoman, Want 2.nd T.D.'1, equtty in Masonry • PBX OPRS PAID VACATION TO HA· limited. Gnat benfilil&, ~·
FOUND male cat, grey & pr of Lancer n spkn. \VUI oouae or. ?'! ~fASONERY WORK All types e KEYPUNCH OPRS \VAii, Call Ann R111~ll. 1
l11hite stripes long II.air eXcharige for sm car or? rucu IRWIN Fne fft. TI'i<>roughly l!Xpd, e ACCTNG CLERKS Mgmt Tr a inee $,$oo
\v/coltar. a19--0133 6T>459a. Rultor/Exc.hangor 675-roGO 6-U..1948 \Vork when & \Vliue e Cadillac Car Plan 1 A chance to achieve ~r
Si\TALL 2-3 mo old whltl! kit· 7$350=.~000,.,...-.. -,~y~ln-ov-.,-,,..-he INCOAtE PROP. San Cle-P~l ntlng &. )'OU ~·ant! e Plush Offices goal If )'OU have tiMnce
ten. Vic. O.C.C. 646--9855 counter stock. Trade Io r mente. Del l\tar Avt>. ~ • Full Fringe Benellu bkgrnd_ Sh&rp penM~ A
ad P11perhanging Interim • s··-Immediately real <>PportUnlty tor d-ranch. land, apartments, Store1, 3 apt1. \\'Ul tr e ..... , /,.,.,..A
Or ??' •-TD 'I Penonnel r--·fce • Full/Pan Timi'! vancement w •"""' ~,to ..,.. · .•prop. or · PAINTING : Hone1t, ~T right one. Fee, Ca.11 M'ir,y * 546-59$4 * Call 4'1-3262. ruaranteed v.'Ork. Llc'd. UESIDES BENEFJTING Uoy". tt.
\Vant Van or Van Can1per. PIO< up !rode It. Cadillac Local ref's. Call 67N740 aJl 771 W. 20th, C.M. FROr-.t OUR MAI"lY INCEN-Mgr Trainee
Econoline or Chev w/11uto "·/air &. c::lean. Trad!! !or $, 642-7523, 546-2592 TIVE-'. YOUR EARNJNG Fresh out of tcrvlcet , ot
trans. Trade 'li6 Cro\.l'.11 Umou1inl! or v.·hat have PAINTING,. professional All (\V, on 19th St. t<> Placentia, POTENTIAI~ l\f A y BE n1uch work uperT ~
Imp. Chl')'sler. F.P. It tacl you. A•k for Bill. work g u a r n. Co Io r r!rht on Placentia to 20th $50.000 • tlOO 000 you R to go? lnlernatlonal .
air.536-ll31. * 645-0011 * 1pec::lali1t. 962~143, St., riihton20th). FIRST YEAli THROUGH net(lssharpambitioua n
Have two adJoininr c .2 l<>ta 5(6 _ 01..Yl\IPIC aau Rae:· f>'T-1441. I'"'":'""'""'~""'!:!'~""'" CO~ti\11SSIONS &; SERVICE to nin branch offices,
<Kl S. BrOadway, L.A. 'i'rade Ina; Sailboat, alau hull 16%' X-Painter, now sc h oo I Accounting Clerk FEES. ' advancement, Exe. eo.&.
$20,fXKI l!qlllty for boat, di•· long, tun 18111 w/trlr. Sfil, teacher. Exter J Inter., a<> Addlni: Mach. Exper. r>.'o eflla, Rellrt! w/ea.se. I
moodl, or what havf! you or value, For Pick-up. wagon, cous. «llinr~. airiest f!qlltp. l)'plni. Local. Call Loraine, \VTnt TltE HELP & SUP· Jal"l{'t Gary.
eCJ?l _val. frn.QWl c::ar, '!' 13J.152G Work guarn. Reu. 646-451.9 \Ve11clltt Personnel Aa:ency, PORT OF FINANCIAL lN· Medic1I Recept.
TRAOE25' PiverTrimuan :=.:....:-===-----l;;y;;o'-u,._,s;;;,p;:p;;:ly~T.-;;h::,<p>.:a<-tn:;-1. :»43 W1!1tdlfl Dr., N.B. VESTMENT ANALYST, R. Do you enjoy people! rk
for Ore-gon land WANT VAN <WITH \VALK· Rooms pajnted $10 ea. Call 64;).2770 E. BROKER, PROf·E.S-tor a rroup ol docl'Dr1. *e
or AROUND ENGlNE) TRD: ~7()46 .ASSEf\1BLERS, Exper. for SIONAL SALESMAN, DAV· appolntm!!nll, type to"Jni
whatl!Wt'. '67 CORTL'IA SEDAN. camper factory. Apply, 86!1 ID 8 , LOOKJNGLAND etc. lnll!ttltlna I: fUn ~-
-* 842.3191. * 536-1131 * Pv"r.~1tn~~~~·Llc ~ w. 18th s1., C.M. ~g~u.TO~~!~~~:. ~i!~iL~ry. i;
TrMle t 4-plex ill Costa Have -40' tllp In Santa Bar-bonded. Refs furn. &12-2356. A'M'ENDA.vr w I up. for DEPENDENCE le PRES-Tec h. Superv isor 1~
l ltu.. for .Jl0.000 equity In bara to exchange for SJ' or FOR clean .1. neat patntln&, Chevron Statlon A llerti 'nGE. ?!hat have mJn ol·!i )Tt ,
ainalf!, f&mlly home or 1 r, larrtr tllp ln Newport a~ intrrior &: exterior. Re1._ Rent-a-Car In L • r u n a . In c.1\nlc::aJ lab & be 11 llTIA!l 2nd 01<&¥. Gd am.. prox 1 mo In summer. ram. Can Dick, !16M065. Coll l•goha'~tudent OVflr 18. N<> CALL NOW ed. Work t.ton tbnl Fri.~ &fS.1496 a.ft s. 213 Ml-0161, <>111 4 . Perm. full time ===--,....,-.,-! PAINTING1.,per1nr. a yn oumm« • port lim• dwing 547·6771 •·knda. Bo~ to 'fl ClltV. fmpala, 283 t:f\f• WES'IaJFF LOT TOR In Harbor &ft. Lie A 1ehl. Sal.ary • comm now. Fet. Call M&.ry
auto-power.R&Jf.fair n1b-EQUM"Y IN' NEWPORT bonded. Rl!r1 turn, 6'2-23.56 w/raJtct. 4!N-!B3 F~ & FM Jebt i
ber-for P/tJ truck or utU-BEACH llOC'AIELL, 1-<A>;c::ou;;:,;;,r.;lo;-S<;po;;:;cT.1o:i1l.;;,>1 -l '.A"TT;;,R,;.AiCi;;T-'-. iwiirl;:;T'°R"E°'S'°'S 1,.".,•.,k,.·r...,r .,M!!r!!.!!D!!t!!r!!lc!!k""'I .Jr=:~ i
It)' trlt ln ad Cond. pink for "·'"·e·_,,~ Neat work. 841-4128 Ell"por. N<>t und~ 2.1 NO "9J .,_.., ... "'-• pink. &IS-2142 a1l 6, wkdyll. """' _,,, • ....._ ''Y llo p J • r -The IUll!I\ draw In the We-st PJION'E CALLS. Awly In ~,.. e vt II''" <1 2323 N. Bro,Q, 8t&,.
M. ·~~ PUot O..wtd l;.~'fr'W:. ~-~In, 59.30 classlfttd , . , ~ * * * * * *
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DAI L V PILOT Wtdne~ilf, May 26, 1971 Wednesda7, N•J Jb, 1971 PILOT-•PVUTISER %4 1
[,___ .. ,...,_...,,,~l[Il] I ][j] [~'-·--·~][Il] [ J[Il] I [mplo)lmenl J[Il]i l~r-_-~J[Il]I ~! ;;'"-""';;"""'~;;;;;J:;:[Il]~l ~[;;;:;:---;;;;;;;;;;1~;11~.___[~-~~-l~~I
_, Ml F 710 p ltu 110 Ml1cellentoU• 111 Hel p Wanted, M & F 710 . Help W•nted, M & F 710 Htlp W•nttd, M & F 710 Help Wanted,. MI F 710 ~anted, M & F 72! H•lp W•nted, M & F 710 Help W•nt-. urn re
---ood O"WN=ER=-,.-crt"'1:-le<--:M~ed~lto-r· WORN once In "''tddlnl! Sise A M.ECJIANlCALecn i I u c er, SAL.ES hdp \\'-.Oled, Musl \YOMEN ram 8 money + ranean tumlturt. CUitOm S' 16 Ptlllt "Loli D t b' '
ptRESIOENT MGR EXPER. SECRETARY GRANT BOYS Graduate, !or dtsign, <lrl:tf. PRECIS.ON have ticp. Apply In penon a new wardrobe showing Vtctra aora ' lovrstat. rormal. Yellow/Whitt with
. Newport Beach 1'w".,'".!',. :io w.p.m. Sil 8j tini:. uwlus1r1t:tl plastics, pro. SHEET METAL Jackif:'1 Fash.Ion Center, 7~ ~e~.'! !~·~~3s Car nee. Melody ch&lrs, 7' black dalJ;y design on lon.1 aleew.
" • due11 ,(. tooling, vacuum llunt1111ton Center, H.B. li-iiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii / naugah)'de tola & 2 mat-F10?r len;th w I E mp Ire Exclualvc ~·at('rtront apt UNITED CALIFORNIA formed & 111olded foam pro-ASSEMBLERS SARA.II Coventr)' needs fl. or <h>"i ch , 1 r , _ .. ,,,., .. ,, \~&JJI. Size 7 dyed-io-match
,,miplex ~1 \'f'N1ttile yr! I -BANK-*SALES CLERK* Ii 1 " "'"" " ·'f Incl"" duets. Sn1a t'Qmpar1y n pt Ume help. No In-[§) chalrg (.'O!fH &_ ~mmode shots and Ion& .. P 11\j· :~;l~~~~!~e~~.~~ 1~,hf~~l~ I 21)1 ~vl'ndlda 0t11 J\lar }'uU & Pt time Orange Cn!y. Will al.51\ do Wll! perform auembly work vestment, Will train. mill I "'".....,. I""" tables: quality 6-pc king ed. Pd over $40, Will aell for
R . I :san l'ffien,. eslimat1ng & r o o l Ing . ol h>ghl" Jklllf'd nature <ln age 20. 540-0614. _ . V bdrm lf!I w/arnlOir, .>-pc $20. 147-7187, Sunday Wu •.na1 nttnancr, cc1u11'C'1 nun 17141 ,92.,.123 ~ub-('on1ra~1iru: & fo!!Qwup . ~ Ida J · "' Apply in perso11 eKper\menlal &; prototype! SECRETARY. Pul Yo u r queen dbl bdrm 1et, dlnette, 1''r Y • ternoon. ;~~T~1~~~n!11~:.1~~·1~~n~\~1~~ 1 f:qual Oppoi1unily Bniploycr A.'l>k ror Mr. \V\lt'Ox :~~1;:gec1;~tial~lu~l~t.:~l~ shret nielal componeni. & charm & ability to use Antlqull 800 lamps, plaque~. 19" TY: HOJ\1E sold, must ae 11
it)' 10 dC"al cffec1ively w 11 "'.X'PE"IENCED .0 .. 1 .. ,1,2 .... hf.-(\\'('l'n 2.:; pm only have rninlmum $ yr11 exptr. clo1e rolerance assembly wlA1,AA rod· Good be1ne1Gita '-
1
'fonka to~!I, bo
1
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1
20 turnlshln&a-Ethan Allen . 2
allilblf' JIOpU al\On ° (' 11" for ,·ewf'lry !\!Orl'. 'nr-1 • ho Sta I $500 SI CM bl Whl ~· 1 · 1 1 r " ,,.. ' "" ''° .. 611. ~tructure, H;gh school ed· rap a vanet:men · rea SCRAM-LETS Slinara,y blkt . mac tema. 1able11, Suivel, Bassett mir·
renantll. Fully furn. ripr + • ••o ~'"', The Grant Boys 1.=..:=-.;;;;;;;;;;;; uc11.tlon required plus S 11· r · •; 266 Joann • wn tor t28" x 4j"J: r • .,.,... ~~~ 1 Call J ean Brown, 540-6055 lfarbor & J-"a.irv!ew, l blk ~·asher, roaaler-ov!n. bric Mlary &: i;(lrpor;it{' llt'nl'llt.~. ----,----=--1750 NE\\"PORT BLVD., I _'"A'P'P'Lxeer!N""'p'E· RSON _ COASTAL AGENCY ANSWERS north or Wil.,n, b••ck, •po•I• -•Ip, ...,in·
644-3258 V>'kdays hcr11cen 8 I n1ostly housf' 11nd . ofh Ci' .I :\3.1.1 HARBOR BLVD, 2790 Harbor Bl at Adams PVT party want.!l to 11!11 tins .l print.I, women11
rr you qulllify, plra.<U> l'all DO:l.1ESTIC, o( all kin~ls. COSTA ;<.IESA ~ newport. l L .. -.. -
A~T P~I l'lran111R Somr t1r1v1ni;!: er· f:qu.c11 °PIX'rtunll_v rniploy('r personn11 COSTA ~1ESA, CALI.I-', SECY. Top exec w/AAA co. Ovtrcto-Naval_ Brood_ t'Omplete house of beautltul clothes &. much more. 112 -· ...!. !'>_• --· ----1 rnnds. Ph. (2131 ~231 or ---HOSTESS needs sharp &a.I lo run hls Deputy-DEODORANT near new Me<lit furn. in-Georaeto~·n Ln, c.r..r.
f'\'4"•· Tt>l frorn hon1f'. · --S500 J ., " A'lC.. $2S day, "''0rk 3 hN til4I ~57 Apply Jn l'erS<>n _agency ATLANTIC ofc. Xln't beneflt1. Sta.rt A hillbill., woman aaMI 1hat eludes I' bl'-nau1 tofa &. •1usr SELL! 18'' Zenith.
Dtliv. In atta. Call g 10 12 , EARN ro~ A &.1J~f~lE~:,. WOODY'S WHARF 1'11 Dover Drivr · hf'r hu1band'1 Idea of saViJ1i' Jove.w:at, !M!Wr used Sl50. New color TV, 1' Jl art
A1'.1 \l.'kdays. 536-5£04 VACATION. A CAR , CM.ti 2318 \V. Nr11opor1 Bl\'d ~cwport Beach CaJI Sally Hart MG-6055 money was not 10 work hard Bunk ht&, FJegant Span!Jh came r o 'k i 1 , pr lb I
' --OR COLLEGE 1-"0R YOUR Nrwpor1 Bl'&l'h &IZ.3870 COASTAL AGENCY enou1h 10 nttd a DEOOOR-kinpz bdrm set &: more. typewriter, misc. hsehld ef .
BABYSti'TER-.-livP-ln, for CH ILDREN. Be an AVON HOUSEKEEPER I or 2 days I RESEARCH 2190 Harbor-Bl at Adams ANT. , 213: 92.'rJ621 feels. C&ll: 646-6362 morn:
'rho o I -a Gt' ch i ldrrn, R I I' & I k $560 SECRETARY/Girl Fri. lot 1"12 l..11guna. 494-7280, ~7-1169 r presenwa· LVf' _earn eMx ra, \\"kly, Thurl'i & f'VPry o1hrr' Sec'y / Bk pr to ANDREA'S BEDROOM H I white ·provin-,,..
molll'y. in prizes. • ee Sun. Apply in f)l'rson 1032 1 Export Coordinator $57.;. young c...:i. in f ountain ANTIQUES clal, dbl dre;ser, 5 dr1wer 1 <""pc-,~b7I•-,-,,.~.~. -,~,~.~,.-,~e-BARTf;ND~d11y~. 3i4D proplr. Jlavf' tun. l!"s l'asy s.intiago, N.B. R A~t thru Legel Sec'y $600 Valley. Call 540-4043 Just Recilvid cheit, 1 dwr nite stand, +mat. train case, xln! ccnd, 1~~"11 P<'~il1:·."eki:>a~!2:; ~1t:i ~t1 ,1~:_~~1 Just ca!!: rl1nni>r al ii pin. $:.kl. JK'I' RN/LVN SSSD Systems Division SERV. Sta. Salesman I.: NEW SHIPMENT ll&5: ctY•ta.l lamps, $3,j for all S25. Brand nu 6_ ao!a, ~-.,., -<lay. ___ __.. Asst. Bkkpor $515 mechanic. Sal. op" n. AUSTRALIAN, ENGLISH both; coUee fabl e, Iarse quilted, xtra c u• h 1 o n•,
•l!lli-_:•4
·--------ESCROW-ASST/ --llSKPRS En1plyr pay' fee. Recept. to f47S A Division of Unilorm, furn. Apply 7012 & f'R.ENC1I PIECES Pecan Medi!. SlZ>. 847-61111 barsain ll:io. 962-0212 eves.
BEAUTICIAJ'I fu!~ 1 i ni r REAL ESTATE George Allen Byland Agen· Legal Sec'y p.t . $325 Susquelulllna Corporation Edinger, H.B. 2380 N Bl CM anytime. NEW freezer & di1hwuher, 1:U~rantl'<' + oor' · I wk. ! LOAN PROCESSOR ry \()6.B 1':. l6Ui, S.A. Rocepl/typlst $3% SERVICE Sia. Attend. e11· ~~~70 '• . . BASSET whit' F r ! n c h tables Ii lamps, movie n~1d VllCAllOn6 ·1 2-2060:1 !"1 17-0393 ' L ' I I ., I -Ee u·1 Ibo rl
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S T · 1 $450 r-QU8 op1Xtr uni Y emp oyer per. Apply =v . oaat Hwl'., Dallu 1~5 * Sun, noon-S ProvibcW d<luble bed camera ou 1 , o u a l
fi.IZ-!&22 C~1. --UNITED CALIFORNIA llOUSEKF.f~PF:R·L1r hskpg, tat. ypii . _ . Newport Beach. J • w/head & foot board. moror, new mattress &
BOAT C11rpl'n1rr or Cablnl't ' --BANK -irQrHng. Mon, \\-'('d & Fri. 3 ~~ongF Beach) t S78t Rl'aJ t:slate Sali's SERYICE Station nee _d a ~~~::i~~s.ch~; cl~:;i,; 1-·rame, box springs & mat· hue, misc. 548-7456. ~lakPr, r xpt>r. Pl'rn1. job. I 2712 \\' Coast u~y !Ir.~ a rlay. Mra. Carring1on op ore man ° 1 NSTANT MONEY I "."P d man for days. union ,_ "-e, h, 0 d -, 0 I-, e d tress inc. Like n!w . .$85. CAMPER shell, l·ll. over t'ringr bcllf'h1~. Lakr Ar· . . . .,,. ~·""' (Fiberglass) .... IV ... 64' -· b Fl a fl tru k rtl'A'ht11rl M11r!n11, t 714 l ! Nrwport Beach, Calir. u .>--.lU'1U ---~~~-Join The Professionall' Oil 393 E. 171h St., CM. lilhoiraph, "A Clearing," .,....-..., ca , Is any . . c . l.~7_2501 I . &16-24.31 i!OUSEK J-;EPERS, full tin1e-.,...,_..,..,_..,..,..,.,.I Salf'i1 Trainf'es-men &~ WO· SHA.\iPOO Girl _ 18 to :n. SJS5. 548-1369 KING-SZ bed, Ortho hole! Has be_en on truck only
---B-USBOY l-.qual Oppor. rmp!oyrr par1 rin1r . Exp et I en <' e <l NURSERY delivery _ llppty mf'n nct'drd 10 join highly ft1ust be llc'd. Call ror appt. cP~IAN-0~.-,-0-,-,.-,~1-e-,-,-,-e-d" I atylt $100, kingJi bkcse ~~.·7~ike1 new5 $~j\ c;a-u
Apply In Prn;on
WOODY'S WHARF
2318 \\', ;-.l('"''JlOrt Bh·d.
N'e\\·por! Beach
c OChl AIL \VA1TRES.5E.S
tor excilin_c:-rK''V nightclub.
Al<iO COOK -Xlnt hours,
Deli r.11:p if IXISSible. male or
ff'nli\ll', St-c J\1r Bakf'r
anytime after 11 an1. The
Vl'lvct Gypsy, 1550 SuperlQr,
C.~T. --------co r I-· E 1-; shop 11,•aitreAA · All
shifts avail. Apply in pcr.<en
111 ~lesa Lanes, 1703
Superior St, C.r..1.
-~--COM PETE~T Jfi.schl i;:rHti
ror clerical work. Steady·
mu.,t ht' 11mhi1iou~ & 11o•illini.;
10 lea rn. 11 .B. arra. Call
Llaa", 962-33.51.
COMPANION tor elderly
l11dy. Take !or tirive, !He
IJ!'f'ferrffi . Park Lido Con· bl 9 & 12, s~ ~o hdbrd ·~=-. Sofa. 16' curved 3 J_.., "" a ter · er on in per!()n, Uoyd'ti Nul'M'ry, auet:csslui le1Ull of real e1-wn m, ,........,, small Baby Grand, col--1 ESCROW ASST. I vii.le~r~l c:n~ 642-8044_ 2038 Newport Blvd., C.M. rate profl'1iaionals. Bonu11, letlor'11 ite1n, must remove, pc atctional, oyitcr wht, LADY'S di amond rin1, 24 I Expt:rienretl • * HOUSEKEEPER paid mt'dlcal ccvcrage, pd. SHOP FOREMAN Brose RHy, 673-30l2 barga1n llOO. 644-:Nll diamonds, 6 rubie1, worth
UNITED CALIFORNIA & .LAUNDRESS NURSES AIDES vaeatioo!, tralnfng program Must hsve. ex.per, w~tlbtr-ANTIQUE lland r r 1 n k 'J'IA'lN beds, used 4 month1. $000, ukina: lliO. 67J.:i180
I C JJ 646-7764 L' 7A'l 31' 1 h 11 1 I n.atiOn tooh"" &: V•n v-1 maur.... $6.'i. N.B. -BANK----II ---r~XJK'r, ' .. 1 "l . tor inr:q:x·rftnct'd, draws gass am1 ' .... phonograp h.Re co rd uo ~ l-----~-~-~1
;u.n 1-:. Coasl H11o·y. *HOUSEKEEPERS* Huntington Beach 11,·ailable ir you qualify . Htg. molds, Small local non~e-itorage, cost $80; aell $40. &13-1084 afttr 5:JO or ~·eek· S450 51!1 ol ,·6 E~yclopedbooi~~
21 492 3"7. Convelescent Hosp. Reh. Ole. -n. Call Je....-u fen1e plant. To S180. 497_1084. days. It ch I l re n s ~ Corona di'! j\·Jar \\"On1en or O\'l'r. . • .l I v .. ~ • •J /book Ex nd U1
673-92.JO 18811 Florida Ave. Groi>!IO 'f16-2'l31 Anaheim, J"'"NE PERSONNEL PRIVATE party juJt in-NU Queen-s:i: bed •'-t ; w 11 c!~· 137:· co ' ,,
H B ••7 3515 * SEYMOUR * r-v1 drester. table, headbrd, box or 0 er V"T'r" Equal Opportunily Em ployer • · · · '" • · herlted depre1si>n gl1s1, old
* Exec Sec'y lo $550
f':.,clling fun JOb in So Coasi
ar£'a rNfll top ski lls. * Bkkp</F /C to $600
1 Xln'r c·o f.: benefits. Divr.r~l·
li!'c1 Po~ltit.111.
* Sec'y to S600
Ability lo work vndrr pr1·~·
sure.1rn10y c1 11:·1ano11.
SF:RVICF: CE:>ITER
r:'.\1PLOY:l.1ENT /\C8NCV
:'l(l() Newpon Cen1er Dr, NR
SU11!' ~1 644 -4981
IRVINE PERSONNEL
SERVICES ""AGENC Y
Realty & lnveatment SERYK:ES•AGENCY pop bottles. Other <.'OI· spring I: matt. All Sears ?<.!OVING, must stll Ken·
NURSES A IDES 1----------!1 "A" • "" be!!I. 540--3631 more elect. dryer. Lre i<>ld 488 E. 17th lat Irvine) C.M. lectable1 ........... lv4.
ExpC"r. Only. ___ ~,,.~·~-~306161_1 1 --:;i;"'D~~l-s;;;;;;;,;;--1 642 1470 PC '°'"~l~ •• c-c-:-=1,-COUCH 1' traditional 3 brocade sectional " mite. * Real Estate . RTUGESE •uay tab ea, cuahklrui, good ccnd. Tired 546-1974 or 998-1429 OPERATORS -11Xtrt!w('ar ML Airy bedrm, l pcs, h T ·
J\-1!g exper. only. Good pay. SaJ.s * STATTYflST/R~CEPTION·f walnut. 112 Georgetown, sl ip cover $50. M1...s&iel NEWPORT Beac enru1
St('ady. 642-34r.! N.B. Unusuil opportunity in !ST _ CPA 0Ir1ce. Yng & Cl\.1. Gar•t• Sale 112 ~:~.~:~::r::iip~~ ~~~
Qv'ER30 & "''illing l'o learn! small, v1ry succ111~ul, ~~~n~~!~· ~~ngex~~i11~ ANTIQUES by Wanda Hull· MOVING SALE 64l-J58&
H you ha\'e 11 background or well es tablished office. ....q'd. Sala-.~ ... S" "'"! man &181 Bo11a, ft1id"'a)' t .1=R=V17N=E~-CC~A~ST~cc=~u~NT=R7Yol SUl~Cf'SS &. an interest in in· I ... •J ,.-" ~ City &92-3622. Spec. in dep Sat & Sun • Dlshwa!her ;
vestnient sales, phone ao1.P. c;>ne ~f thl hottest oce· SPRAY PA lNTER _ Excel glas.,, record!!_ 33 V3, old classic CLUB MEMBERSHIP
J\i-usr & co., Inc, m~mber hons 1n Orange .county. opportllnity w/amall co. ANTIQUE: 191h C ~ n 1 u r y 78 album~: lOxlO tent rom -* 67f>..307a *
Clerk Typist to $450 Pacific Coa81 Srock J::x. We have e captive m1r-Req uire W<lrkinr painter 10 telephone, wtbattery boll. plete; book! galore; miJc Ml1cell11n1oue
Good !yping k ability to work chMge, 2100 No. Main. S.A. ket. Our men meke ex· run paint dept. Neat ap-Perfecl. Appraised si1s, aell items at 19512 An.gin Cir, w .. nted 120 w/llgurc~. Eicpcr, shipping ~ 4 7 -5 9 4 I. Ex per no\ c • p t i o n a 11 'f good pearing. Salary battd on 1100. 491-1084. Htg Bch. corner Ward It -;'-'------~
or order dl'sk hclpru1. nece1sal')', 'A·ill l!'a in. money. Orew1 •veil to experiencf'. 7776 S. S\Jsan, SNOOKER table w/acces. & Yo1ktown, \ri~~~: rua:~al~ e :~!~e~
Recept. to $475 OUT BOARD )"fechanic ex-qu•lified men. DICK S.A. custom cover, S750. 544-1644 NEIGHBORJ:IOOD 1 a r a i e sizes, In good con d .
E xec. Secritary \'<•ry 111ir3<·1 l'<'rMJn 1 1' .".: pt'r. Perm. Job. Frinar BERG 962-2421 / Eves. TECH. \VRITER. Converl eves & Wkends. sale.. furn_11 ure, pictures, .(M.93.i2 .(94-i182.
Mlkpg <I or J hrs, 5 da~·~ \\k. :::::======= CUM. Call aft 6 644-7993
COOK
!::.-.:pt>r. f /1lme
APPLY IN PLRSON
THE RIGGER
NO. 16 FASHION ISLAN D
NEWPORT BEACll
COUNSELLOR
Trainee. Prf'lltb::e lirm. If yon
havf' lhe ab1H1y & dei1irf' tfl
work w/proplr k havr had
11alrs or pubhc tonract we
'A'Lll train yo u. Tn1J.v a pro·
fr~sifln11 I ,t· lurrati\·~ po.~1-
tlon. rnr appt. Call Mrs.
Romo.
1·:elt i::roomrd. Lu,. 1\'P•n~ bf'nrfi1s. 1..ake Arrowhe11d 847.6()76. ""'Ur eltttron!c11 knowledge I ~-""------= bout1q\H! ilems, Jots <liq~~~~·-----~= 1 To V.P. Corp, Legal cxp€'r · JY A II s •~ M I 11 t t 122 S1c'y to $560 Marlna, j7J41 331-2501. ro an ent1\'; into the ad· PP ance _, mi~IJSMOus. Thun. le us ca n1 rumen I rr1f d. Xln!' co.
,._13f1, Bs.ui::;hoian Sr-c'y ror ii 11o·orklni:: PN'si· p-.(FfT-Tl°M-E:WOMEN-vertisini lie d. Up & comifii KENMORE iuto washer S65. Fri., 10-3, 16j81 Marie MOVING-GUITARS: l b&s.s
F.:xei:utivr flrn1. llvy ~1rno. ~1a!ure 10 11 llnl _ 2 pm RN'S p/limf' 3Pl\1-llPM 1hlll. agency. Stan $12,000. Wh irlpool elec dryer ~. Lane, ltB. l 50. 1 12 itrins $40. 1 sml
Prrsonnel A~rll\.'Y rl~!l l 1'''?ublli'. I ~1;u•Donald's. 11\f' lars:es! l'ar· 2 Days wttkly, Call Helen Hayes, ~ Both xlnt cond, ~ & GARAGE SALE: Man Y 1lx atrin1 $15. Heathkit
410 \\', Coast ""-"· NB Girl Friday t o $SOO ry-OUI rrsiauran1 chain, or. Huntington Beach COASTAL AGENCY delivered ~71, 847-3115 item1, Frigidaire washer. ampl. $50. 2 mike aWld• $j. ~urir H 6t·i-27\ti Typr 7n. Ptr~~1uu phonf' pi•r. 1 1,.r~ an xlnt opportunicy for Convalescent Hosp. 2790 Harbor Bl •1 Ad"ms 16 8 Copperlone S-e-,-,-s crptg, lormica tables, lawn ea 508_2913 • .,. ... ,.._ ... ___ _,~I sona.llty. Chf'f'rful It f1e111bl". ueat. alert 1vomen to work 11111 Florida Ave. TE,\1PORARY cook until 1S""cemaster' frost free lurn. ~ SandcuUe Dr, · L ·G nd 13 5-0-
••7 3515 J I' I h c I I ,... Cd~f. Kl~1BA L ra . Executive Secretary at J\.111eDonald'1 o! Co!!1a H .B. .. • u11e • onva esce:n relrigerator. Xlnt c o nd . C 11. 1 1'1h .. _ ___.. 1>!K F 17th fa1 Irvine' C.~f. , ... .,..,,., ... ..,..,~~.,..~I ho t e per best Call J\.-lr 116 e in """ .,.,, at.-...viuJOn. S600. ·· i\1rsa Mon lhru Fri 11 am -m 11 · · S1 50. 833-2948 alt 3PM M1chin1ry 673-2485
"··" ,. 642-1470 2 pm. Thi• -•manen• ,_,,1r r 1·,0 Sele1man $650. W'lch, Country D11y School, 1 o~==~~---~--1 1-"':-",=--==~=-ii Sil 8ll, vuuu typ1.sl. ouni;: .-~ 847 """' e REBLT wsl\rs-gi1 dryrs . .,_,...---..,-.,-.,...-,.,, BUFFET TENOR SAX Con1p11 ny, Call IA1'8ltlf', I =~-====~=~== round em pJoymen! in i·li•l\fl, Call ~1r1. Schn\h:t1, w,strliff -~UJ.> Si'iO Gu&r-Delv. M,,tr Chg. i.oGAN metal lathe. 10" Good condition SJOO \\'c~tcliff Pf'r.s<>nnrl Agenry, I plf'asant ~urround ing!, w1lh Personnrl /\Jrnr.y, 2043 TIRE REPAIRMAN. Local Ma y 1 •it r ep a J rm 1 n . win 2.f" ,nter Cabillf't
:.!Q.13 \Ve~tcliU Dr,. N.R. J, W. ROBINSON'S un1 form1 lurnished. WPi;!cli ff Dr .. N.B. 64:';-2770 mf'mbcr of nat'I chain. Good 714:531-8637. :nou~ied. .:.Xtru~· Cambro•l"';,,.;4-8359,;c:."'-o0~'~'~21~"'~'-'-'~"-'-''°-!
fi-15-27iO. frr Pit id. Also feP Apply al 11olld reliable l'O. Great Mtg. Mr. Hammond, 1147.3531 Office. Furniture/
124
;,. e NEV.'PORT BEACH e MacDonald's beorlits &_ f 11 , ! ad-KENMORE gaJ dryer S50. Equip. .Job'--==~~~--of Costa Meaa Siles vanceml'nt. Exper. Sla.rl Whirlpool elec dryer $3a. SHOP itema, ahelvini. Jight1, •----"-------.
EXPERIENCEn Iii n n e r 11;-i~ .n1n1r<l111t,.
1
_1111 Harbol' Blvrt. 1750. Both good ccrvl, guar & hoist, pallelts, misctlJ ste-el. Ot"F JCE Furn. de•kt. chair~ ..
•·ook. ~ ni1f'~ ~·rrk. <.:0nlai'I opening fot UNUSUAL Call Sally Herl. ~5 delivered. ~72, 147-8115 548.4320 lighta, lables, miscell. ;
.Jerry betwe('n 9 & ~ pn1. PART tJme dental asJ't, ex-OPPORTUNITY COASTAL AGENCY * MAYTAG electric dryer, Miic•llineout 111 :)48...(326 :
l\!r. Mikf''jo; 209 Palm ~t.. SHOE IX''r, m11 1ure, ovf'r 24. Ni!al sso.ooo + n90 Harbor Bl Ill Adams 2~1 yrs old. Off!CE Dt•k 34 x 60 Good:
Balboa 6i;~J774 & int c r ~st e d , Good Call 8"4-{)877 ,
Regency -----~--bcnclils/salary, young den· * TYPISTS *'===~-~~~-* AUCTION* 287roo<1,1•1~,nlow1"'La·--".c'-,.,""'. or; P.r.onn.I Ag.ncy 1-:x rt:R . 1,1!.n ds<'apr SALESMAN NEN l"-llLITARY \\'O!'llEN JRONRITEmangle$25. Ken-"' ,,.. d 11~1. Call 6<1!'>-1060 art 6 or Register ror FRIDAY 7 00 p M 1 18.,,, E . lilh SI ., S.A. Su fl" rl n tr n r n t !" & ..... ,,,,.,, a l•mpo••-,.. b more elec se"·ing machine : , , Pi•nos/Orni1nl 126! ..., e~limaloM 11an!e-d immOO. ..~.... "" AGGRES.'itVE DIVERSI-• ., w/cablntt $25. 14&-415.J 1.1..ay 26th • Sultr 121:1 j,'JS.1811 tod '""' •°'"""""""'"""'"""""""'"', _:'IJ;J_nr ~_,_..,_,,, ____ ~ ~:'l;Pf'r f 11nir r1 £D CO. NOW EXPAND-ay COPPERTON refrlg, 3 yn BANKRUPTCIES & REPOS HAMMOND, St • In. W a Y ,i Xlrl"t Co, Bl'll£>h 1~ PASTE UP GIRL ING INTO THE INVEST-Intel"V""·s: 9-12 l'URN raO~f Yamaha. New &; usedi CUSTODIAL main!. man. E: X PF. R m n Io r r Yr If' L· " B d ". · gen E 1 0 E lo old, like new. 12 cu ft. Top ~1in. gge-21 11/2 yr~ ">iP in .-;elesman in 8('1ivr fl.f,::rney. r nr ,~. · " Vi'r ~ing ii. • .\IE:-o;T 1-"IELD N Jo: EDS qua ppor. mp yer lrcezer. $150. 642-o4086 MODEL HOMES pllnOI ()f moat ma.kea. Bes1 ;
C Appl,\· 1n pcr!i011 l0.:1 p.11\. t·.v. I' timr ba~~. MEN & WO>~N TO ,.lLL bf&ie & female TOP NA,IE FURNITURE i...,,,, in So. Calif. at Schmi.dl knowlOOge: ol mr1hods, ma-16!1(] Ne"porr Bh·d, _\1 . At'e DUREL ADVERTJSl'llG · •·•r~ W I G ' I I SEARS dell.lxe J7 cu fl ~ C 1907 N M I . -b · • '.? t'11•hion Isl.. :-.1.B. )IANAGE~I ENT & SALES ts ern 1r nc. Be••t bd<m & din'g <m •• ,., Mu1ic o., . &lll, \erialz & cqu1pml'nt U!ed in ,__,.., · "172 ~. 1 -• B •=! M •• h Bl d lroatles1 treeier 11,•/LOCK. -. "'--•-· ~==~~~-~~~ Equal nnpoMunll" employf'r • vupon "-''• «· · l'OSITIONS l'l'IEDIATE ....,., ac.n.d ur v . LI"· ... , .. Coll~•,,·~ Ceda< & •. ,;-.. _w e"·st•,• =~='":..:~=~'---~--main!. "'Ot'k. Salary SJOO n1(). }-",\SHION Styli.'>! -IWel\nf' -·· ~ ' · · ...., '"' .,.,..... •o "''""' "" 1-
7 I Sl.1-1670 L''· Newpon Beach C"·st ol d<•W•<•. o ,· .. ,... • 300 Pio...,. Ii: n-.,.n.. I Call 83 -4084 OT .11pp1. Fashiun~. \\'ill !rain. No in· ;;;:;;m ~ KENMOR" h ~~"" '"' • " ..... ..... ......
vcstmenl. Gen c. f"lo 540-03"'"~~--' ~ ... u er, ...,.,, ell· Coffee tables, Burtell Com-NEW-USED. Goln1 out for I I If YOU LACK THF. --TWO GT R-LS cellent; Al~o 11,•aJhcr " modes. Dezks, Bunk' beds, buslneu. Rentals $10 a tTKl. DAY D SHWASHER J\r11\i-trrr1 . 494-0737, LABORERS PHILLIP•S . DryerM't.540-1095 aid . v.
Apply In Person
Ancient Mariner
Restaurant
2607 W. Coast Hwy .
Newport Beach
I •fl6-20i2. 494-1003. ~~lll7 'l'ltAINING 6' !::."\\PER. & I girl ~'riday and 1 relrphone Mattresses. Colored TV'1, Steinway, B Win 4 .n.aWaJ •
I ------PETROLEUM AHE \Vil.LI NG TO \\"ORK girl. Good pay. Contact Mr. DELUXE Lady Kenmore Stereos, Oinette9, Retr11·s, Chickering, Yamaha, etc,
r·/\c.TORY \VORKERS \\'ork \l'hrn t.· Wh('t'I': COMPANY llARD ,I, L£ARN \\'F~'RE James between 10 &: 3. 1489 11,•agh,r. Avocado 11;;. Apt. Washers, Dryers and much FIELD'S PIANO ro. !mn1rdi11.le Opt>n1ng~ · I '" ... ,_ G ~·uu l'.an!' PRF:PAR~:o TO E~lPLOY E Warn.,, s.A. •tze •love, 't\1, <M<>-....., more! Costa Mell Arden Grove '(;(IOtl Piiv' Call Now! f t
, ·~ 9 --OJ no1v hirJn~ or J)('rm11nrn YOU. TRAIN \'OU & GlVE • 540-6676 12 cu It G. E. retrigeralor WINDY'S AUCTION (714) 645--3250 (714) 638-2770 !IA;<.f-!ll :\l, Sat A'.\! ~:-.1 Interim posi!il'.ln in tht'\r eompan)I-YOU Tllf: INCENTIVE TO . w/lop trtezer $50. Call WOULD YOU
Orangr Coasl ope:a!etl scrvil'<' station in MAKE BIG ill ON EY FOR UPHOI.SfERER or. Tni;i· 638-6106 or 644--0151
f:niploymrn! Agent') Personnel Service ll~ntington Brach. XI n t )'OU RSELF & FOR us mer eKper .. Perm, .ioQ. Fr-,-:---COME BRO\VSE AROUND BELIEVE ·,
ll!fl!! Nrwpor1 Blvrl. ('"1 slarting snlary + 1111 eum. • ln1t benefits. Lake Ar· --W.1her, Auto, 20T;i'h Newpor! Blvd. 1'"'R.EE ORGAN_ LESSONS
&1:1-Jl!l 61.J.3!12 6!:i·31 !l 1 ... 11 ._ rowhead Marina, (71 4 ) ~'"'''-Id Sl5 "7·1'"' •s lo•gu~•l1ke • No -g 778 W, 20th, C.M . pany ringt .,.·ne I~ "' -!I ll • La1l1lla1· Car Plan ·'"' · '' · ··· "'' """ Behind Tony'a Bldg t.1a1'1s " JV • ... •
&r.?-7j23, a46·2.ill2 :>.ln1 opport\Jnlly !or ad· • l.1bf"ral F'r1nge Beneflls 337-2;;()1 ----~--AuCfion 104 Costa Mesa * 64~8686 l~lralion. No obliialion. J ust DE.LI G•·rt .... ~-ork In l••ltan fl BERG LASS -ol'••• A' V-1 TAM I N m•n,f•Cl•-r Com• Monday, 1·30 pm •v · "1 " .,. 1· 1\\', 011 19th St , 10 Placr rlfia, vance111en1. • Fl'f'I' Tl'ain1ng P rogran1 ·~ OPEN DAILY 9 to 4 · · Of'li, Cos\a l\1cSA. Appl,v in plication~ now bt-lng lakrn. .ri~hl nn Plai"t'nli;1. 10 20111 PIPase conratt c;11ry Ca rson. needs expt'r 11bIe.Ier 1, Ctmerat &. COAST MUSIC
prrf.(ln, h<'!wn 2 & ·I Pl\.!, 319 Clipper !\1arine Corp, 1731 S. Sl , right Q.rl 20th). PlllLl.IP'S P1:."Tlt0LEU1\l YOUR. C'Ol\1PENSAT ION i;xiera It g r 1 n u .lato r a , Equipment IOI AUTO "''aler w ftener Sl50; 642-~1
E. ·111h St. C.:'11. Ritchf'y, Sant11 An11. C:O'.\IPANY, Brookhur·;t ,t,, 1'., I 'Y BE •~.000 1." CO'!--"°-=-'"'c'=l:t6==~-c~--,.c 1 "=---------elec l111o·nmo~·er &: e:dgeri -A-1-.1-.E-N-O-R~G~AN.:::S::..._ci_•_·_ -------" .,.,.. ,, " PENTAX 35mm S!XltmaUc Sla; Seara washer It gas ex u11vely Dt:NTAl. A'st, frunl ~rc"y &.· FRONT OFC" ~lF:DICAl, , l.,\DY for hoU!rwor\.:. l Adam~. Htg Brh, An 1-;qual 1\llS!'IONS t. SERVICE *WAITRES&lor dining room d-·· 17.,, 9'2-""32. Also CONN £: WURLITZER 'I 1:1.4/5(1 suprr T1kumar + 'J'' "" present!\'(' nur.~r. ' llhH'f' \\'ork \\/lrading rlnctor In rnorninRS per vk. Apply 41:1 Opponunity En1ployl'r. FEES YOUR rtRST YEA R :i to 11 PM shift. SHERATON ll>mm tele-lenlar: Vivi tar Gould Music C.O, aince. 19ll 11ob~11n, e-njoy_ JlC'O~lr. F:xf)('r l rl)mn1un1ty. No hack . nfr Bayside Or . .N.B. 'fll ROUGU YOUH ASSOC!-BEACH INN. ZUU Pacific polarizina: l!Creen + tripod NEW Kenmore . wai~er s7;;. 2045 N. Main SA, S474i!l
pre! d but 1n1rlhgencf' _& R r I as e d lliurrour\d1~s. ! IFGA°ISEC'Y~·IYmiP SH PLASTICS fa rtory 1r11\nee, ATION" '''ITH PROFES-Coast Hwy llunt. Bch. Apply Ii c arrying case, 1240, ~e:u~~~h~~S~~k« new'ia-EA::.:U~T:.::.lFU.:::.:L::::.= ... =,~,~nc...:l=in=i~>h-1
rnthus1asn1 m11y mnkr 1111· Grt"al hr•, StAr! $400. ' · • 1 IB:\I i, llili:h school grad. ~1ilitary SION AL.<:; LIKE !'!UART In per~n only. 644-2793 Ca 1 :r~. H.B. !162-Z-1.16 __ I Call Sally Harl, ~~1:) ~~~~t ~~pt'r .. ;.; ee:~~-o r l I obl\ga!lon complel('d, ;)'10" f"OX X-ST'OCK BROKF.R. \VAITERS. Now lntervi,w-,,--c::o-="'°""'=--,--= WEDDING GOWN, iiu JD, ~ntole.U~le;; m~,
DENTAL a.s..~·1. i:ha1rs1tle or r, COAST,\!. RAGENC) Cent,r Off'. S44-6400 ur ovr1', ml'Chanical ability FINANCIAL CONSULTANT ing. Experienced only. Ap.-16 MM BOLEX Camera & $la. Utility trailer $50. Call yrJ. )Tl. ·
lmt oftlCf'. Lido. \\'rill'. _,90 ~arhor ! <i1 Adant~ ----------hPl plul, S2.45 hr, ~lore ii ex-& DAVF. LOOKINGLAND pl" ,·. po•-· •t Tow·en t"quip, Unu1ed. Inc l. 16mm 64~>-~-~--~·~l~t~5.:---=~1~963-i'A;'9j1'~.;;-;;;;-:-c:;;Jt;;;;;;<;I ------Ll\7£ V.'1n> Broke1·~ in· tts-·12· 3 " ...... Bell I:. HoMll Projeclor. ":: . . S.1ALL piano · Gulbransen, Clusifit'd 11cl No. 1:1-4. Dall>'! GENERAL CLERK lt'r('~l<'ti 111 lormuii: ll.B. 1irr .. · .l "'· CO~f:-OIUNlTY LEADER, R. R,511urant, li'lS S. Coast '4"24!} CHEST ~/4 dra"e.r1 $~0. 1 just tuned, Rood mnd. Pric·
Pilot, r~.o. Boic 1560, Co.~1a 0f}f'n1n1: in our Jl.R, n!r. Ir 11~<,()(' Srnd T.rurr. Rd No. PRESSMAN E. BROKER. INVESTMENT Hwy, Laruna Beach after 1 ~~==~-~~~~ ·atr0Uer1 $.~ &: S2, ~1-cbair ~· M at S3.'i0. 67:J.-37g
f'.le511. Calif. 92626 you ran atrur, lyflf' 51)+. 102·1 Daily Pdol, I'. U. Ho:1. ANALYST, YOU MAY BF: 5 pm. ELECTRICdryf'.r,f'rlgidaire, playpen $5 &: tv.1n bed SJ.(~-~C.C'=--'-~--=oi
--.. · • I I ll11mAd11 Star 500 r~per. CR ·~~==o-c=--=---= runs on 110 volt, $M. 543-:1635 """1000 Sporting Oooda 130 DEfl.'TAL A!s't. BxpcriE"r\t•f' 11 oru~ prr min art' n <'r-1.-'60, Co~ta 1\1r:;a, Ca!1 r. ABLE TO A !EVE FlN-1 1 I ~ ,
chairsidt>. Sillary IJ p P n. •':tle<I in working fnr It b.-nll'o'· 92626. rf'q'd . Plate ml!. king, lllflSk· AN'CIA L S t: CUR ITV & V. AITRES..;; Over 21 . llPP y unyHme. 'P~IA7N~'=0-1~17>l~.~z";,-_-,-,.-,-,.-.;~,-,l·N~E-\-Y-HAR.;;.._T_J_"_b_U_'<_•_k_ls-.I · -•'I d & ~-in11: \'Ir, G"' 111tt'r 2 pm. SWISS l·F;-~".------,~l'°' l.aJj'.un11 Hill~ 11.r('a. ~1!30 111)'.: ini.. co. " ..... n ('{'11 s l\IGR . Tra111r1·. 1ntrrv11o· Al PRE5'1'1 "'· CH.ALf:T, 414 N, N!wport urn1ture I D m11chine S50, lay-11.~ay bed binding•, ladle•. l 75. With
DEN TAL R-;-;:-;p-1 to---n ili ti~~·-t~, C11.!I PN~nnrJ, 1\rnt11rky Ft'+f'il Chirken, Blvd, NB. -·-------SlO, Bookca.,e S5. 5.17·9964 Nordic11. boots used 11euon
v.·alnted. F:x 11 er I,. nr e Ii •·. ·' · . 2!129 I·:. Con~I llW\", Cd'l :R.VJNE PERSONNEL C,ALL NOW 1 ---'-------~-I OF. CO R ATOR ' S nf'W ADULT girl scout un iform. only $20. 541-29SS
Pl'flt lttd. ~8:_70~ .ll.n1~11-~l/-l~~{'r <.roup I-MAI D &-MAINT-. -SERYICES•AGENCY 547-6771 ~~~J:~11:!1r~dg~•;u1rt': draperlet, Josi lease; :ill pair New. Slu 14. $10. Eve~ call LEFT h11nd Wilson St11lf's 2
DENTA1::--r,.rtorlo11t1r 11~~1 c;.'"Nr.:.~tAl~I off!r~ 1-~1n1t•i /\p1 +-. G7~1-87·W oi11n. &47-9696, 546-2820 assor!f'd sizes & cclon. 673-1629 woods, lOirons,, bq . '50. ~lO I ht' PXprr In tah l.·1 \OO\lo '"'i:r a,.,. un !t ----· -------CAA I!:, 11th (ar Jrvioc • i,,'..M. 646-1111 SOUTH .Amt'rican emera.lds. 646-03CM. 5 · . 11,;yahlr I. J'Ccl'lvabl<' & :'11 AN A r. r: R -1111.inre lor 642_1470 Ask far Mr. Ogden Wanted Liv .. ln -CUSTO~,~,~ .. c .. 1~11;.-bo~r~w=r ~,.~,"~". I 1~--"-~---~--·I ch!llrslrte&lr;:l~durr~. ?\on P"yroll. l\1u:1.! hf' ablt lo /11rlif'~ hr11l!h llPB. full or Babyaittt'r. ~7-8498. ..._. • ..., "'.holeule ~o r ina: maken. Store Restaurant
11mok1tr. !Ilk<· full ~·h:u-sr of 1 girl of. pa.rt lin1r. (;C'ln(! npportunhy -PRESSERS & OVERLOCK Stiles WELDER. hellarc. Exp'd. It 6 l"hair atool11. Newr US· Fult'1t qu&l1ty. '13--5089 8i1; , 132
DF)/T.Al. As~l11tan1 -(l9.rl 111, •• 897-109:1 !or sf'll·i<larhng i;?al Lt'isuN' * PROFESSION AL * Ught mot•I. '"'I. AIR CONDITIONER, 4 ipd,
E · Oper11ton Wanted e 644"671 2100 BTU $100 So ta '"---------1 Hltlt. xptrif'_nre n('N'lli~ary. GENERAL OlticP. l \Voma.n I l..11d y SPll, 21'121 r11~~ de Ex-ptr. only 646-0308 * SALES CAREER * • 64~5432 • • : ny pe: ICT.D lea di1petl!f'r for
Call bl't. g & J. ~93-241~ "rl' rwrd11 A.!1~11111\nl. Sil t· V11l,.nrl;i, l..11j;(una. Hi 11 ~. P RoFfsSIONAI.. pl'lOne S1_:inina: aal11ry plu~ comm. WIG Stylist w/salea •xper. g· llert'Uk>n 'of a , but· recordt'r, $45. 830-0871 ~;taurant. New. M&-3714
DJSTRIBUTOR$-11o 7n t~ ;~plng "°S!ll'nt1aJ, hp l 11 ~~-~p!y ~n 10 ~ fiOilc!tor • DlUll Polnl, Siln f lr11 y ~ 1 r Parnlng, of Apply in per30n. 26J E. Jllh !on-1ut1t'd, nevtr used $lj(l, BOX SPR rN GS & MAT· arr,r 6PM.
ne"'' produc1 Xlrit nlnl· 11 /bkkpna. l'!'rn1. p/l!mf'. ~!/\TURI:: Sn Ir~ I 11 ti i , 1 Clemente, Capiatra.no area. $12,or:>D • plu~ poalb1r 1 yr St, C.M. ~~~~I love1eat S I 0 0 . TRESS*S32~,,&:7~~-''rv=-. ~R-.-4-le-. -H~i~F~i-, ---1
mlaOOn. 114~17it I 2.J hl'!l 11ok 61;..:1.'!.l.1 1111ntrd . No ~ l'ICp<-r ll('('f'~~. Work ln your own home. 1r1ln1ni:c program by ~nlury \\' -'70==;;--0::::7'::-:':C. I c.===~---·-"--c--cl St.,... au
* DRIVERS * CIRL-rR10A y-t,,. a ti in Apply 1 llf'. Show.(l!f, l~un-al Pho old llfrl ~na.l co. Buai~ss or omrn Bt:AUTI.FUL Spanish oak WALKE R for a convaleSC"enl
1
11"""rlisinr "~rncy , Iota :r 1~n~ton (en,,. r . im :;,~.i~e be~~tt~;:·oo L;:. 11111~ backltl'Ound hclplul. \\'~1rR; ARE1 ~ii ~.~P:ns tables. aYOCado velvet sofa pracile&ll~~~';!MS40. 2-1~ .. -C-O_U)_R_TV_, -.-,-.~--e,-,·.I No Experience l'Uhllr ('flnt1tcl & ll'!rphol1f'!I. Edlngl'r, 11 B. "" phone and noon . Nn trav,l/1'1imL opportun. P ase:s 0 14 ......,. 1 & lovt: 1iea1, cu11.tom tutted. ~ .....
I !'tllrl !IOfl. rAll.• plf'll~ hl~ llrt; opening now. Beauty All™'"' new! 673-6926 I=~~==~~~-~-! !RCA). Perteet "''orking Necessary. -.----· LO S tllf n'la1ed field-('xctllenl op. CH ARTER flofem~ral\lp, cond. Too Jae tor livini r m. Pdmt have clean ClJH. i1rlv. ()tll Jr~Tn "r rn11o n,E~1IO-OO~ ~IA TU RE ~~m11n \\I ·antNll to ' Rec1ptio"i1t 7R93~NSoA p A, I MA portunity for career I"J lnded III btick velwl c h a Ir s ' Newport 8e:11ch TeMis Club. Sl 2S. Call 5*-0HM.
COA., .\ , AG ·:-:er prrpArr innrr or lltJ:I' for I a.ding l<'ftll a;roup. 'l)·p.1 , a1n er ve . 'A'Omen who need rood c111ttrz. S65. vtlvet couch $350. 673-6900
Ina; record. Not undt'r X... I 27'-lO Harbor 8111.1 Atlam• l11 mil)'.;, tiay~ 11k '.1!rl~527a In 00 diclnphone. S>mf' \VhJttll'r (1131 12.'l.6j78 paying jpbs lnttrv\ewlng :s~<~l.~50~.;L:lk~e~no~w~,~;c~o-.199~~7-I T'Ai<E'0v'Eii:OOi;m;;:-N<il ~tOVTNC, must sell M'll YELLEO~ c:B C~O. HAl1tDRt5SF:RS-\r11n1f'(l"7° J\.1 EDICAl~Se•·'y &~rrrpt. J:rgn'I o~:·rxper. Equal Oppty. tmployer M&y 26 rhMi 29 !or new -STEEL SECRETARIAL. TAKE OVER XI aetts. NO S)>lvan!• eolor TV, remote 186 · t th '1 • ' ' I lt11ar! Hun•rr Rraur) Salon•, Rrllpnn111hl,. ~1rl rnr bu!ly MISS EXEC AGENCY SALESLADY. E11per. 01r-Orange Counl) bcatlon.,. DESK l40 ~~ ~7mo. Near Iae =
65
I: antenna Incl $290.
f:XPER. Meanf'r n ,. ,..d rd 67~:?32 or 6'?~3701 ' lmnt flfr . /\If" 25-411 titust 410 w, Cµ•t f.lwy .. NB lllln!I • dni.pt'ri('s. Udott·1 &t1-.119:i * 646-6150 *
murn1ng:\ for an Im a I . iiAIHUH1':!':~r:n-n (',. rl,. ,11 i111vr "ICJ"lf'r 11 /1111 1nt<rl. In~ lilS.l'll!t llon1f' rurnbhlng~. !:: Co•~!''i-vo~.,-.-N~-,.-m-,.-,..,~-.-~1~0-, =P"VT~p"'oy-.-8. blk n•urahydc FOR •aJt Ne11o·port Stach 21" TV't, 170 -SlS
hoapl111I. N. B. M44460 f/t!nir. Altr1ti•l hu~y ~hop llr11 !IA~l-6P~1 da.11,v. \\i'rl. 9-. I Pl1t:t11:_<'::.:'_1.___ -eldl'rly lady, ra11 time. 8ed $lOO 2ll Tenni' Oub Ml'mbershlp, Good cond!tlon
from 9Ai\l~ti~--Xln'! 11o·11rklni: mn(!~ Alxi\·r I, ~1 9-1. S<ll11ry flrx1blr k 1 R F:C E.PTIONIST-f\'PfST. SALES lady !or 1r1 gaH"I')' Jive-In. Room, bo11rd k ;n~.;;ver u · ': 1400· 49+.l9:1T * 67s.176..'\ rr·s A bn'e1.e, .acll your / 11\'i r11tntnJ:l'-Aitk fllr l3t"tty 11ltow1111e1••"'ill Ill' m11df fcir l New \'lff!r.e ~ tu1·nb hlfl1t•. 1n N. R. Age T.~40, 111r11.r1. aal1t·y. Call Mr Interview, NICE roJl .. top desk. $250; SONY~ TSEC a:tereo tap!!:
lltm1 ~Ith e.all!, UM Dally B11rton, GtC1 s ll11r S!.)lr5, 11 skl\lcd IX'r<on. Rt'ls l't'q'd. H~ S;~. C11.ll ~11'$. \\111tt 4t dre4~ 'n111rlly. St•rl 12 :>4S.7i·ll, dl)'l. Ma-6774. New Hatch Cover Table' Wurlitzer spinet piano, $250.1 center. Ntow cond, S)!IO. Call
PDot Ousified. 60-667I 846-5(0) f'hnnl!, (i4r,..J!l62 SJJ..8680 hr. lor 2-' hr \\•k. 644--61 44 r 1'('.!o. 5-15·1~1.t, 20402 Acacia, CM Lt g...c,'m j_'6-766J or 147-45.lt ---------
•
. . -·· .... -' ···-_ ....... ···---· ..•. '. " . -. ""' ' .
•
25 PILOT ·ADVlJITISElt Wtdnesdlr, Mar 2~. 1971 Wtdnt~&)', M11 26, 1171 DAILY PILOT 57 ~
iM;
][§] [ frw to Yow lri I Tral'llpOrtallolt J[i] '~"""'-"'_ .. __,]~ I --...
TV, R•dlo, HIFI, ,,., .. 13'
f"REJ:; kltteM-Silver/whht'.
Part Ptn!an. 9&Z-63M I.ft 6
pro, S/2T
DARLING. long haired black
Gentr•I 900 C•mper•, S.lt/ Rent 920 Tralltrs, Travel MS Auto1, Imported
l§)l ~I ;;-;;"'""'~J§]~ll~ _ ..... _ .. _""'.:;;I ~~I
970 A11to•, UMCI 990 ,~
w 970 Aut°" lmporled 970 Autos, Imported -------
1972 ~nlth1 are here! Leia
lhan dill'OUnt price1 on ·11
color, S.W, 1tereo., Hurry
lOt full Hltetlon. ABC Color
'JV, 9021 AUa11ta, JtB. ,...,,,,
F R E E "63 PICK-UP re rampcr, half 16' SJil\ata. Stove, own. Ice
ton Chevy wl8' cab over. hox, 25 gal \Oo'llf'r t11trtk.
SlOOD. 548-1281 aft 5 pm. Sleepii 6. Electric brakea,
~USTIN HEALEY VOUlSWAGEN e FLEET SALE e
--------· l'&I Cad Cpe de Villt i10'15 :a '66 Olds Drlta 88 :Mdt.n
MERCEDES IENZ
~MOTOROLA 2 J ' '
Console Color TV; Just
spent S96 on new tubes. Cosl
new ~W. Stll $-175. 640-6972
or 497-1084.
DANISH modern a t c re 0
AM/FM wllh Ga rrarri
turntable &. matching
speaker. Sacrifice, $100.
~5-4235 rvea, 671-5719 days.
MOTOROLA XD) llOlid a~te
~It~. Stunnini: cabinet &:
tone. Cost SllOO: ~1ov1na:,
\\'Ill 1ell for $J50. ~5--0704.
PANASONIC I -track car
sit~ w/Panasonic
speak.en & ll tapes, $125,
Call ~7667 or M7-t539
SILVERTONE ater@O, cost
$-KIO. l200 or nt&re11 offer.
:145-3459
tlttr l IOI.id black klllen1. Baile boa.Una: course of·
S46-7D S/21 fertd to tht public trff
5 wk. old !em whr. LabradOr of charge by the Ba!bo&
-Husky mix call alt s PM. Power Squadron. Sail a1
493-3894 5127 \\'<'I! as powf'r boating
PUPPIES black Llbrador taugl:IJ.. New clas1cs 11tart
Rttrie 6 k at T p.m., May 31. Every ver nux. w !. Monday nitht tor IJ S37-9413 .>21 wee~'-At Newport H&r·
Cycle•, Bikes,
Scooter•
Very Clean and In txctllt.nl
92S condlllon, 9 x 12 canv&! zip-
prr room $700. 96Z-T689
THtNI "68 19~· AWO. Self<"Ont'd,
dbl a..xle, l·rp'ld. Xlnt cond.
HONDA 1=$2850,..c·~· --~5800=·=-~= -Trolloro, Utlllty 947
"FRIEDLANDfR" FREE· lovable, housebroken bor 'f•ctlt Club, 72() W.
kittens desperately netd Bay, Nl\wporl Bca<'h. I•• ""°' '"'"· ••
good homts. 96&-3019 S-2'1 Brina: nott'book &: pen-537-6824 • 893-7566
BOX TRAILER $50
6~2·8&26, M!i-6044
Auto Service, P1rt• 949
FREE kittens 6 wk!. a.II cil tlrtt nta;ht. Regiatrr T HE BIKE SHACK '61 GMC, v~ 401 Cl comp.
kirtds, Lonr hair . at that time. Cont1cl NEW BICYCLES tnglne. Xlnl C'Ood. New
962-7161 5121 Mrs. Isabel Pe a 1 e PAR1'S e ACCESSORIES bfad1 & starter. Art 3 pm
Nd good home for lovable 673-1855. Expert Re-pa irs. All MakC11 ~7-7063.
ora.ngf' & whl k It ten. CABIN Cruiser 24Li', 110und Open U.8Pr.1-Sat-Su" 10-5 hvw=~E"N=G~l7N=E,-,40o=-°'HP
548-0813; 836-4493 51!7 hull, need1 v."Ork. New 1093 C BAKER, CM * :.30-6940 *
FREE kittens, orange or Chevy eng. "''/\·--drive $800. Ntar Fairview 546-413D calico. 673-5741, 306 Fernan-(2131 3n-Om ---~~~~---1NE\V enzines, Ford V..f, lor
do' Bal~. Pon,·-·•a. S/Zl , bo WANTED boat or b11&. $595. Compltote . ..,..... •Qui 16 Runa ut, ~ hp JohrllOn
LONELY little-hound nee-ds motor. Good lor skiing or Honda 305 Running or not or 1_548_4_·'-"'---~--~
Jove. Frit:ndly & inteJJ. 2'J)6 fishing. ~147~. SacrlII~! wUJ buy parts. Ask for Bob FIVE 72-spoke witt wheels,
Rutgers Or. No. B CM 5,.17 Ml-1123 5.17-9305. v.ide rims.
FREE kittens 81.k ahorl WANTED, bay boar, U lo 20 DIRT bikt, HONDA JO!I, • 962·8!1Sl t>vf"s *
h
'
_, o k lt Lyman South ~--or Good roncl. Custom piP:_t's &:
frM 10 You
a'""' 1 w 5 16662 Ketllfr 1i~llar. 642.-5990 ...-... Ital Knobby tires. o';..'ntr I II~ I Lal"lf!, H.B. 847-952-4 5128 · ll •~ A·· .. ~-)ll moving. m1111 i;e ...,.,..,. u• ....
.. 2 female kittens 1long1.nd 1 WANTED Sabot 11' complete:. 968.-J2'l8 '--------'
_ • short hair. Hsbrk . Good cond. I;·-----~~; 1546-0082 5128 e 530-1758 e 6.~c TRIUMPH: 19601---------
M _ Triumph TR6 mag., bike General 950
Jo'REE kittens cute and nut· Boatt/ arlM cstm & C'hromed. Molly·----------
PRETI'JEST of the litter ly. 2 male 1 female box Equip. 904 paint job, isoo or bst olr. ELECTRIC car, l dr, xlnl cute black & "''hite kitten trained, 6 wt.-. 842-:SOl3 5/28 64' 7 9 wtaned & housebroken'. ~ PAIR 413 Chrysler'a, J: 9lll .-11 cond. S500. or best offer.
Need1 good home w/lots of FREE -2 adorable kittens-8 gears. Jo houri Sh10, $1475. '69 V\Y, 24..\l, perfect cond.1_64~2-884..;c.c.5_=-~-~=
love&: affection. 54S-l630 alt wks old. Alao mo thf'r cat. -~~·~~OC,.3'-9~12~*~~-I All extras &:-s er v l ce Antiqut•/Cla1sics 953
j, ">/28 S3(}.S968 5128 -:-re-rds. D•. '-'ti .,. '~2 ,
'61 HEALEY 3000, Looks,
n1flS &OO!f. R~nt en&lne
work. I want ntW<'r car.
Will ae:U th.ii tor $800.
5'6·20.lo
}·on sale -'61 Austin Healey
3000. Ex.eel. cond. New tires
& batter)" win wheels, top,
k tonnrau. $1100. 968·12'l8
Call after 3 pm
e 1956 CLASSIC Austin
Healey Street Le M a n' .
Aluminum body, t n g i n r
blown. SUitable lor VS. V.'ill
haggle ll $500. 673-3210.
BMW .Aotom•Q ' ....
ROY CARVER, Inc.
2925 Harbor Blvd,
COit" 1-lesa 546-4444
DATSUN
DOT DATSUN
OPEN DAILY
AND
SUNDAYS
11835 Beach Blvd.
Hu.ntiQrton Beach
m mi or ~G-0642
'65 DATSUN PICKUP
M1 powtr. lo ml'1, $1215 CuMom Paint, aood . tran1-'61 ford Squire 9-pau
port., (NUG348l Thi1 <;&J" tta.tlon \\'&:n w/air it01S
ha.r puled the VW l6-poinl '68 Pontiac S.tari Station
safety and pertorrna~ Wagnn Air $1875
ttat. It is tully checked and SOUTH COAST
thoroughly reconditioned. CAR LEASING
We guarantee 100% that 300 W "·· H N 8 '11 I ' l all • ...-gt wy · · we . repa r o.r l'fl1> ace 54-· 2182 EvH· '673-8'169 ma.)Or mechanical part:1• for '1" •
30 day. or 1000 miles, ·a; AUTO. 6 cyl, low mile1,
whiche~r comes lint. Qean. C&J.i 9 to 5, S46-0Z3l
•Engine e Transmission e att 5, SS7·8476.
'64 vw
~.68c:--~,,~.,-e<-..,d<-,~,~,.,-,S~E~.-1~,k~,· I Front Axle e Rut Axle Aa· '61 2+2 VS, P.S., Fact air.
1embUe1 • Brake System Xlnt cond. f}.700. 831-3344 or fll'W, low mileage, i-1,950. • El 1 al S·-• Air & leatMr, new Michelin tttr c ;r-tm. 642-413.1. o .... 493-34'9. $895 1 -=~c......,.A~M=Xo---1
MG ~ 1969 ..,'°'· 1ow mil ... 1 ft d owner, air, PIS, perfec.t SA~!01~i~CE "~, s0" ~1;:~-..~':.;
e .. ~-1969 RIVIJ'RA-LHdedl NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 \Y. Coast Hwy.
N tWpOrt Beacl:
taft\ THINI -,,~,,
1'FRIEDLANDER"
"\~,.. Gold. parchment inlr11or,
S.19-3031 Ext, ti6 or 67
1970 l-IARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
pe.rclunent vinyl roof, crul1t
control, thermo..air, atn.to
11~ats, mag whls, wht s:ldfl
-,~6~7 ~VW-~S=ED~A~N~-1 w.i1 •• p...-wnd .... '"' ... , M f/FM Vibrasonic radio.
Xlnt cond. See to apprecl-
Excetlenl l-Onditlon in & out ate. »195. Call a.tt g pm or
dlr. Speeial whetl1 and tir-wlmd1, 833-1004.
e RADIO direction finder-'"" • "'""" .... -.-..~u FO V-8 1 the d NEED 1d homes, fncd yds 6 Yr old spaytd cat fret! to Heathkit. Like ne\\' S5(1. or 495-4.343. 1940 RO P.li. fa a
!or 2 beaut Lab & Wim. m'n< a:ood home. 64~2J 5123 ti1~ 69 KAW SA'n 'd . recently overhauled. Needs 4 spd. dlr. Family .,.,·ork horse
U7H llaCH llfWY. tfl
893-7566 • 537-6824
e1. Has had lovlnG'. catt. 1965 BUlCK Le-Sabre, 4 dr
(111 BSW) Tak~ tfa:de or h.t. Beaut. cond. Pri owner,
1ma.ll down. Will Ima.nee Divorced, Murt sell lmmed.
pvt. ply. 540-3100 or 494. 7:;os, at wholeule 6Tl-3298 •,.1
. '-~-~------;,~ 1 • A ,.,_, t'.f S1 e .... •md-n•int -body .,.,'Ork $450. r"' · __. 1 O -pu -, S mo'•, g-ldo•• ~. ADORABLE 0 !ly k'tte ~ p 906 & ._...,f ..-·1re eng1ne,=, Wfll'r,, ... ,.~ " ._..,. · u 1 M . Bo.ts, ower <'r. Stree1 · dirt equiw=. o• best olfrr. 836-5672 or, M&F, love kld1. 537-2836 5/28 Stro . S47 5 • tired fireman. Sacrifice.
;i!I-7336, 542-7096 5/27 LOVELY silver Persian to 23' INTERNATIONAL. lliO ~~. r;ru"tetroit st: Oun• Buggies 956 (P1V543) Will take trade or Mtrc. Cruiser. Tandem tinanC'f' pvt. pry. r:aU TO good home with ftin«'d adult bomr. 5J6..-0.176 5/28 H.B. CU!ITOM dune buga:y, rebh 540-3100 or 494.750& aft 10
yard. English bu 11 dog, CUTE " Hy k. trailer. radio, R.D.F., deplh Bl\.1\V Motorcycle R-,:,0 1969 eng, F.xtra1. IU95 or \Tade A.•t ,
I t b .. u ittem. sounder, bait lank. head. ::::".:;_~==~===-f'ma e, purr rtd, 4 yn old. ~15 5118 3800 mi. -.1th I erring , for self-contained lS' trailtr. ,67 DATSUN PICKUP Cerl. of pedigree. Call lt'u than 50 hrs. SlO.OOO in-windshield dust c ~ v er 644-4TI9 4 FluUy 6 wk old kittens to ,,, 57•-!Inn .. 8-31"' • ~=~=~-~---1
beforr 5 p.m. 5J6.IL24 5t 28 l ~~~~~~~~_!!~ll nv~"i2~f·F~~m;; ... l'~~iiCZi~:0.1 673-2250. . '~RENAU LT o,-s" gr y, good homes. 557-7620 5/2S ....
BEAUTIFUL Ille kiften11. t 1968 23' i'1>rmul11 OYJC 710, 1970 KA\YASAKJ JOO Green Dual~. 5...,-parta $100. RWUi l1k.e new, (UVf 8.11), 4 Black & while & caliro kit-.... ho B · k d' ~· blk & wh. mall', 6 wt.. old. l.;JU urs. a1t tan · ra 10, Streak, 1akt' ovtr p•vmtnbi. * 646-4644 * Barwick Imports, 998 So. n.a lens. 644-0740 ::it28 d th ~ Call 644-0688, 2921 Carob St.. outrigger. suntop. e P $340. 962-6309 al!er 4 p.m. Spot1•, Race, Rodi 959 Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach.
N B 5/28 Kl'ITENS blk & r "y finder. "''· many extras. "-'" .,.,. , 4"' 9771 . . '70 TRIUMPH Daytona 500 -"""""";:i or ""* .
BEAUT!f"UL Cream colored 531-5256 5/27 $6500. 213/867-4669 cc. 1700 miles. Xlnt cond. RUPT Racing go.kart, trame
bob lalled kilfl'n. 8 "''eek~ 2 Adorable kitlens. part 29' Calilomian '69 V-8. SO $950. 494--1224 only, mag \O.'hls, xln! cond,
old. Fret 10 gel home Persian. 644-4299 aft 6. 5127 hr~. rad. ·rransom door •. BRIDGEST'ONE ·6R-l00N'. $200. £73-3302 art 5pn1.
M&-5361 5/27 3 Section davenport. After 6, awim step, refrig. ss750. Xln t mechanical cond. $175. Truc~1 962
FREE 10 e:xcrptions..I home. 673-5202 5127 Ntwmarka, (714) 645-7700 646-0037 1--"'--------
Half Aby kittens & Siamese BIG ga.s rel.·•'Orks. 949 e '£8 20' BERTRAM Mop... '69 HONDA CB-350. Beautiful. ...
Jema.Je & othf'rs, 536-0476 Dop'OOd CM 5127 pie. 160 hp ?<.fercruiser $.l500. Lo ·~~ I ~~~~~~~~~~
1
.,,,0
,. mi. Stort'd. -· 5128 , _c_.i_, _,.,._.~~=~~~~ 642-:ma
'71 DATSUN WAGON
4 speed. radio, heater. t'ull
price $1999, (059CAX). Bar-
wick Imports, 998 So. Coan
Hwy., Laguni. Beach.
s.i6-40Sl or 494-9771.
1968 Datsun 4-dr. auto, R&H,
'j7 MG t.ta.gne tte--Not run in
yr &: eng stuck. SIOO. or best
olr. 548-1495.
1961 1'¥1G, Good mechanical
condition, $-150. * 642-1a40
PRICE to sell-'67
t.1JDGET. Good cood.
548-8414 Karl
MGB
MG
Call
'69 J'.tGB-GT, red. 11,DOO mi,
AM/FM, luga:age r ack,
r.Uchelin-S, like new ,
545-7529
PORSCHE
'65 PORSCHE C
CaJI aft 10 A.M. '60 BUICK Conv. Baby blue.
'69 VW BUG
Black beauty with pin 1trip-
lull powr. Nice top. Good
Png. $325. 123 31st St. N .B.
CADILLAC
inf, 4 speed. radio, heater.1----------1
Low mileaa;e, (330 BQK>. Larg•st S.ledlon
Barv.'ick Import!, 998 ~-OF LUXURIOUS
Coa>t Hwy., Lattm• S.a<h, CADILLACS 546-4051 or 494.sn1.
'65 VW BUG
3000 mile11 on new 1600cc en·
ginr-. 1-lolley 2 bbl. Por&ehe
dl1t. &. coU. mag wheels,
custom paint exhaust and
AIANY , 1\1ANY, EXTRAS.
$1250. ~-5380
In Orenge County
1'63 lhnt 1970'•
ibeij; ~CAOIUAC """"""° ....... 2600 itARBOR BL..
COSfA MESA '69 vw Bua $2300. W /re bit 540•9100 Open SundQ
eng w/.fHIJ ml or 6 mo war-1:.::..:;:::,~~--''=-""--'-I
ranty. Air cond &. other CAMARO
xtras. 644-769' aft 4pml-------,..,.-,.-·I
wkdya, anytime Sat & Sun. 'ti9 CAMARO. Loaded w/o.· B~E=.A~U~T;l=r=u=L-..,b~lk_,•-w-,.hl~k~i1· ~ e '71 BERTRA~f 25. fl y '70 Yamaha 1-LX. $550,
ten 6 1\·ks. unusual marklngJi ~iiijPjjotjj•jj..,iiijjjS.jjupjj,..jj .• ·~l~'L,;:.~ I ,::b~ri~d'-g•~·~'~''~"'=-nn-'=an=''-• =d=<-li&:=h~t. running t'Dnd & very fast. nttd8 lov l ne home . . r. Muslse.11!*673-7298* ""9682 * 673-743£ * 292.') Harbor Blvd . .....,... ~121 26' CHRIS '58. TS, SS, OF. c •• M "'6-4444
Xlnt RF.cREATION CENTER lo mi. Xlnt rond, $1350.
R 0 Y CARVER, lnc.1 .==.c•"-u"=o:'=E'="'=-o'~==-
FERRARI
White wllh red interior. Ex·
cellent rondition. (TZP 80!)
}'ul\ price $.2495 or take
trade, Call 494·TI"4.
1961 SQUAREBACK. Gd tra1. Ne~ Mlchtlin ttrt:1. ' ti~•. batt & clutch. E~ ~Mt. i2195 t Ir m . .,.;
nttd& love & valve job. 1_:;:.:.~c.·==~~=~-I '68 JO:> Honda Scrambler for os..... <'s& .,.. NO ~ horn•• ~, wato• Pol•, Gone•al •"'" Slip avail. $32JO. 224 20th ood "" """"' •v • • -.....,7 ule. :r.ttth'I ~ co , 1969 DODGE Custom 100 'i Sn.::iniel P"PPI•• '"'' • St., N.8. 673-o"' ---' I I k & t .,~ ,... 1ot=-1.S ut tan Sta . .,.,.,.... T Pick Up. Metal & glass lovablt, in~ yd .,. "'lJ·. FOR Sale • Pet Rabbit with \IIAO.l"I': u .. d trailer for XI 64' , ... al 'P'! I . .. -... ...,......,., '~''" • ......,....., l " . rover, £ cy 11\ck 1h11t, Like 8J6.-4.t93 S/27 Hutch. S5. fl. South Coll!! or Lym•o "'" ""• '69 BSA 750cc Nf'w only l500 ml. $1700. ..,.,J-7"" Jnboa~. ~ 210!/673-4969 2 TO qua! home R.oclesi11n 1---------= •u .,,.,... $000 lirm. Xln't cond. 67> J.42
Ridgeback mix puppies. Catt 152 Boat1, Rent/Chart'r 908 549'-4348 evf's alt 4P:\1 . l o.~6,~Ero~-.,.~lint---~,.,~V~i~,-"-,-,,,.-
~~9.l. y d 5 4 s-os ~;~ SIA.i'1ESE kittens, 2~S mo E'ST'ABLISHED yacht HO NDA 305 Street lomiles,goodpa..i.nt&:.tirn,
FERRARI
AUTHORIZED
SALES & SERVICE
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
PORSOiE 1970 9141 6,
~llcw, lmmac. cond
thruout. Private Party .
644-6589 .
'64 PORSCHE. Just painttd
Signal Red. Tmmaculate!
Dl--Ol:A> day1 646-8654 eve.
'66 Poriche 911-Red wlblk
f!50 . 879-9000: ,.; CHEVROLET
e '69 VW-Aulo trans, 1ood1---------
cond. Stereo, heater. $1400. '69 CHEVY
Call 675-404l CAPRICE
'64 B11.1, Reblt 1500 enaine, J DOOR HARDTOP
7-pais, $89:1. Full power, loaded, Tape
... 548-0190 ... "-''""'""
Int , $3.300/be1t ofr, mu1t &eU. e "70 VW •
playt:r. Sharp . .x:r. ~
old 1 Sealpt. m 1. l i-. l charter agency needs iha.rp Scrambler. Look~ & n1ns Must aell SI.JOO or ofter.
ADORABLE lrte pupp ies lo blurpnt malt, :z Russian 00 good. S325. 545-4207 545-0041 a fl<'r 5:30. H ~ ho M U 8' 1 boalJI, power &. ~llil, to 1 ·• 3100 W. C.OUt wy. 615-5138 1ft 4 or wlmd1. Sharp cond * Xlnl lires-
·70 911 T, 5--spd , 20,000 mi, $1560 * * 673--'l271
$2888
DAVE ROSS "'"""' nit. os Y ag t . blue, ft m Is, exceptional Emit Minnty 548-4191 '68 YA~fAHA T.JIJ Enduro $325 '68 CHEVY LONG VAN F11c Newport Beach .11:~ Broadway . C.M. home-no 1mall children. 968-9506 VS, ?o.1uncie 4 sprt, pa_neled,1 ----~"c~---PONTIAC 642-4818 til 6 pm only [1127 644-0US. :B::H::,l;,:•~·..;S:;•:;ll:..,_ ___ 90::;;9, I ><m-s;;;;:;;;;;;--;rui{'i/c'HI y:idf" oval~. vent \\'lndows. FIAT
IVHT lon.E:"-hair mother est SIAMESE'-~ki~.,-.. -.,-,--,.-.,-,-,, COLUMBIA 2%', •ig&ed for 1971 Sportsier XLH 21CH $1i85 or Tradr 497-1084.
nrana:e, fmmac. Ot1perate, '64 VW Bus, atereo, m1ny
must sell. 67S--20D5 extr11s. Low milea. $1000. .:::::::..::;:T:;O;Y~o"T""A;---1 646-0l>J ,.., Hubt" Bl•d. at F•I• Dr. tank. 5'" F:xL &. c'Obra seat.1,.:.c,:c...c.~,cc.--~~= with 1 blul' rye 11nrl 1 gr. chocolate-pt. a:rntle, beaut, race, Genoa. spinnaker. e1c, 2;}00 nii. $2100. :'>4S-2074 '63·~~ Ton Chev, 4 spd, ]()..16.5
l')-t 2 cult k i It I' n 5 box train., purebrd Sl:l ea. Head. running & cab Jile1.1 ~='7."===c-;:;c-:;c-=·I tires &. whls. Saddlf' tanlt8.
64S--305& 5127 j,J&-2127. battrry charger, much 1970 KA\\IASAKl J\lach Ill. llD iprings $750. Jl.531 1st
LOVABLE rtd and wht. SIAMESE kittens-6 .,.,•k1 old. more. Sl:JOO. 968--9:;;).'; Xln! corn!. $800. SI. S. Laguna. :i57-26&1 all 6:30 ~~~t pt~lli;d m~:lchl d~·. :~:l~~ned. SJ.;} to S:.l. Call 1:,:ii~rW;~ci~~ltt ~~~:.1 .--19-7-0 -H~O~N~D-A-350=~s~L~Lo~1 ·54 P/U. nu paint, l\rts, gen, I ~-------~~ I ,_ v . l'k 1575 Call gd V-A eng, mual sell lhi1 ;,JS-7181 '!i/21 tie Trailer. $650. 91)8...1228 after mi, 1 t new. · wk. Trd ok. 645-4983,
YORKSHIRE / Poodle mix. Dogi 6 pm 54.8--5821 Newporl Hgll. 675--0144
cute, 1mall. had shot~. 4 32' COLUMBIA SABRE . e , 1970 YAMAlfA ?50 '4S International P.U., a:ood
mo's old 9391 Nantucket, GERMAN Shepherd puppif's. Sleeps 4. ENDURO. Clean. Lo milts. oond, SJOO or btst o!r, Call
Hun1. Be11ch. evenings. 5/28 11 "'ks, Sitt fl"om champion $4950 * 714/846-3445 C&ll all 5, 838-4911. bef 2 pm : j57-638J uk !or line, $75. Stud St!rv:ict avail. I ===-~~~~,.--=~. TO good homr. 6 wk, old HOBIE Cat wltrailer. Good "'iO Rond1 175 K-4. 1100 mi's, John. 847-n01 kd 1~~~~~~...,-...,-"" JI u pp y , p I . rock e r . con<!. Want lo 1tll. $950. N_ew rond, S500. \Vet ays "60 1 ton. ll x 10 stake btd.
962-0401 5/'l7 SPRINGER Spaniel pup!, 673-37!8 5j7-2472 afl 4pm. Good cond. New nibber.
AKC, champion 1tock. for ., •sk· Mobile Homes '935 1986 Pomona, C.M. 548-4»4 CUTE gtty & while
beautiful markings.
old. 646-5361
kit~n.
g wk1
5/27
show. huntini or p t t . • BALBOA . extra1,
831-3344 ing $3200 * &n-2S36 * GERJ\1AN Shepherd rrg i1te red ~how line Boat1,Slip•/Dock1 910 F'REE 10 &:d home mature
Schnauzer dog w/paperll.
5'1~1"-86 aft 5. j/'1:7
f"REE kiltens 2 beauliful
orange tabbleg &. .1 unique
dark calico. 962-:1285 5/27
7-Cuddly puppies free. Shep/
Co!!it-mother, lather? ? ?
Ph. 557-6168 aft 4 pm 5/28
Kittens-Fn!t to good homes
673-5684 Cutest cats in town!
pups. $25. Black &. silver.
Eves. 846-4352
SLIP, near Lido fol" a 20'
boat.
5/28
WIRE F'tlx Ttrrif'1~, AKC
paptr1. 1 Female & 2
males. 842-4522
* SILKY PUPS AKC *
Champ background. * 646-7335 *
DOBERJ\1AN PUPS, 7 wk!;
Both male: 1 red-l hleck.
$45. Ph : 548-37!}2
ADORABLE PART POO-
DLE PUPPIES SlD.
642-4818 tlays. 534-3885 eves.
BEAUTIF1JL T-cup &. tiny
toy poodle puppies. Tiny toy
stud service. 893-9TI9
2 Beautiful Tabby kittens, I
long hair male, 1 lemalt. 9
\\'kg old. 548-4537 All 6 5/'J7
TWO d11.rling klltem -1
orangro tiger, 1 all blk -10
wks old. 646--5134. 5128 TOY Fox Tttr'ier Puppies.
8 WK old gtty kittens -Putt bred, unpapeffi:l. $50.
weanf!d &: bO:ii: tralntd. Crop~ talls 548-9702 642-1633. 5128 ' SAMOYED pups. AKC , 1how
quality. $125.
Transport11lon
INSTANT HOUSING
'611 Dodge Camper Van, V-8,
auto, pc15i rear end. loaded
w/-xtras. ~. ~j-S707
• Complete S!ock of
/IBBD n1u s..
"FRIEDLANDER"
1J7JO IU.CH ILYD.
(Hwy. lfJ
893-7586 • 537-6824
'68 FIAT SPYDER
Excenent running cond ition.
Owned by little old nurse
from ~lmre: World. dir.
(WQC 281) Tili small down
or old<'r ca; in trade. Will
finance pvt. Ptr. 540-3100 or
494-7506, Call aft 10.00 A.M.
JAGUAR
'68 XKE 242
TOYOTA NEW '71
NO DOWN
PAYMENT
$69.01 MONTH•
36 m<>11. °'f. pay prtce.
$24&1.36 or ct.1h p r t c •
$2003.!6 incl. Tax ls Lie
A.P.R. "14..st~. SerlaJ No.
ll-1347.
*On approved crfldit
BIU Maxey Toyota
18881 BEAOI BL. 847-3555
HUNTINGTON BEACH
'69 COROLLA 2 DOOR
4 spd. dlr. Excellent concli-
tion thruout. fXAN789) Must
sacrifice _ S1009 run price.
Take 1mall down or olrl<'r
Automatic, fact. alr, dlr. trade. \Viii !in anci-pvt. Jl1Y.
Loaded , • owner. Take older Call 540-3100 or 49-l·TSllb alt
tr&de or gma.11 down. Will 10 A.M.
finance pvt. pty. ca i 1 l-"A-n'-n-i'-v-e---ft-ry-"'S,..a""le-
540-3100 aft JO am. • ..-
.6;, JAGUAR 3.S Jieda.n-Auto. 1971 TOYOTA $1777
orig, idnl mech. saxio. Ca ll fl""" l••"'• fir;>-'1171 Ulf\ t.UIMI
JENSEN
AUTiiORIZED
SALES :. SERVICE
1966 Harbor. C.~f. !H6-9303
TRIUMPH
'68 VW sedan, sunroof, Cost1. Men. 546·8017
AMIFM ~;;i~,g;·n• '68 Chev. Custom
,69 VW B~S MANY FUNC-2 Dr, Auto, J_tadlo, Heater,
TIONAL X'TRAS $2 35 0 . Powft' Steenng, Pow•r
642-3848 Brake1, Factory Alt Cond.,
-_;;~"=~~=,..---I v;-,. Top WOJ722. -'65 vw $£50 ... ,. •
D•y 530.lll; $1788
Eves 675-5639 DAVE ROSS
"69 VW Bus, 7 pau. AM/fM
radio. W /Camper kit. $2150. PONTIAC
962-6093 Xlnt cond. 2480 Harbor mvd. at Fair Dr.
1969 VW Squattback, air, c:mta Mesa 546-8017
radio, tuneup new tires. SALE OR TRADE
..
Must .sell. 495-5352 1961 Chtv_ 4 dr Impala 283
'62 VW bus. rebuilt ena:, eng., Auto_ Power. R&.H -
trans. SS50 or olfer. Fair rub._ New bait. $200. ~-
• 644·5612 • or trade for P/U truck, pink
'65 VW $750 tor pink. 645-7142 aft 6 PM, * 545-0775 * WEEK DAYS ONLY.
e '57 V\V e '62 C~vy Impala Stat\on
S2'50/or BeJil Offer wgn, Reblt engine .l brake1, •64~258.f * alt 6pm * iood n1n'1 cond & lookll
'66 VW·Leas than J),000 mi. good! $~;. 548-~13 aft 5:30
Jn1n1ac. Good tires. 1 &t wkndo. Gary .
o"'fltr. SlOj(). ti73-3788 '62 Chevy llaUon wagon, Re-
;-70 vw Bua:. 4--&pd. Very blt brake$ &. engine. Ckiod 1 cleM. Girl"I c11.r. SlS50. running cond. BEST OFF-• + Call 962-M64 * ER. 548-5613 After 5: 30 .I:
'62 BUG. $550 -''"'='"'=""'=,· -~~-=I * 333.2258 * too;i Che:vrolet, 1"5s t~an 300 , ~~~~~-.....,.....,,.-,~. -1 m1. on eng. lac air. aid
'66 VW, xln't cond . Rae d"'i i' ihift. Want to trade for lie ,
new tires, $800. a motorcycle. 492-7£,64 ~
91)2,...:2503 '62 Chtvy, V-3, auto. i2Xl or ,
VOLVO iratt. 1" •"• "'· Call , ,,.._
$3295 '57 °""' :kl•, hnltp, ""10• in.IE TRIUMPll Be1t olter
• '· 1069 Volvo 164 Sed. R., 11., * SJ&-6009 * -FREE ki!!tns • very nulry,
lo\•able, trained. jJli.188\
5/28 96S-9212 art 4pm Cimpers, S•le/ Rent 920 VB STAG Automatic, FactotY A ir 062 Chevy Nova wa:n. R&H,
AFGHAN PUPPIES -it25 &
NEWPORT
IMPORTS for uled can• trucka, Jutt NOW ON DISPLAY Cond. Sharp. YWR.343 Pis air new t1re1. 111 $465
----------l'O"'°=""°"":;;-o=-:-:c::;:=-1 call u1 for free ••Umatea. Come ln for • 1ti:st drivtl DEAN LEWIS tak;• 11.' 675-5948 fREE kitttn11, all colors, Jong
h1ir, 6 \\'ks. 847-7867 Hunt.
Re11ch. S/28
1!"6 12>t53 2 BR,'" •wniop, GROTH CHEVROLET FRITZ WARREN'S IMPORTS storRgt ihtd. Ni~ C.M. 3100 W. Ccasl Hwy. SPORT CAR CENTER 646-9303 '64 ChlovS.UNkovoR. 41,~"!1-
BED sprinit wfle21.
6'16-2377
up. AKC Champion line. HYDRAULIC Camper
Terms • l-6lfr9875 Remover/at.and heavy duty
l\11XED Irish Setttr/Poodle all mt' 111 I conatn.iction,
puppie~ SlO. Call after 3;30, handles up to 1.2 fl. campers
96:i-3433. e,slly operated A!1d ir1 very
Adult Park. $499;-t or, offer Newport Beach 1946 Harbor rtvd., 6 cy. c . uns ............
iES638fil American Mobll<' Ask ror Salea Man11a:er I 'K""'A~R""'M"".A-;..,N=N~G=H=l"'Ac I 710 E. Isl s1 .. ~.A. 547-0764 ---~Co~•t!a_'.M~•:!•~·---J,l350fiii~>"ran•"'ii;:&;ki0;5'9i$i·375'15.i'o:I" Home Sn.Jes, M>-8211 18211 Brach Blvd. Open.daily g..g; clostd Sunday CHEVY Van '62-asklng $550. ,
MOBILE Home 10 x 50~ Huntincton Stach '63 Triumph TR... (@j tM• Call 6'1!>-8822 home: or . , , l-;--oc-c-'°"'c--c--:--::c'~'._,.28 DOX1ES. AKC males, $50 . .t. 1afe lo uae. Ot11tlr11-'llY CO$f
3 Femalf' kittf'ns, 1 nutty up. Have 1hob. Ri~ aae for S30D -wlll 1acriflce for SlflO.
gTty 2 short hair 2 months picking! 962-4744. F"or more ln lonnatlon call:
~02l Ji2S POODLE PUPS: I Wka, 3-MA-Dlll
G. Shep, mix male I yr. nd1
fncd . yd. 541-0313;
&36-4493 51'28
BE.Atrrlt'Ul.. fluffy &:ttY .l
wht killens females. I wks.
67~ Bal T~ll'. 5128
FREE to good homt 4 kit-
1f'ns. 2 1rey 1 Tabby l I
butt Mlortd. 548-5.353 31'28
KTTI"ENS gray and fluffy. 8
\\'kl. h.11br1t. MS-1601 5/21
FEMALE Tiger 1tripe kittens,
iray/R9J-2S67. 5/21
KIITENS de1perak'ly nttd
cood home -M0-5t9!J. S/~
Male: 2-Fem, =c..=M=P=o=Ro-~,h~e"ll~ • ...,.,_7.11-. -o~v~,c, * M6-4XKI * cab. fl11 •"Y S.fl. truck.
BASSET Hound p1.1ppits
Real beautit~. Chlmplon
1im:i. S15 & up. 494-5662
SCHNAUZER PUPS. !\!alt
al stud. Cf'Olm.
!~
Has betn on truck only
~. Like ntW. S215. Call
528--47~ 111lter 5. Fullerton.
1963 %. Ton DODGE w/11'
Camp Kine. •II l'Xtl'lls.
Sl~p• 8, Jo mUt1, xlnt cond.
i;ioo. 968-6219
lri1h Sttttr Pups nvo 40• OCFB Chtla'11. Xlnt
Ch&mp alrt'd * !167.7540 cond. LocaJ. One at S211.'°°.
Hor••• •r1. Avco Bkr, 714/774--7XIS -1 ..c.=,=__;_=~'--= '70 1600 D111$Un truc.k with
<'amper. s~. MMy n.tnl.
4~241 aft 4.
Pllrtly !urn. Mela! awning. 841-6087 KI 9-mJ • 1~10 Ghia-10,000 ml, •uto. r.-m. M&-5933 'YOl.VO' st6--{1198 work.
Cement stepg. Storagr shed WE PAY TOP DOLLAR Mint cond. $!995, Pvt ply. '61 TR-3. ~bit en< A trana. • 101~,.,~~M~A~LIB==u~.-cla-ntl=au-top,,-·,t C1ya: 64~; Evta: $3000. Adult Park. 642-0731 FOR TOP USED CARS 6~7489 CTR.-4 eng). Extru. Mu1t auto tnlnt, air. PIS.
SHASTA W5 w/oi" cab•n• U -'" " .,,,... cJ•an, 1 --.iJl"uii'i'i~~lwil I.!"~"!:,· ~169'~·~· 613--0640~~==-I "FRIEOlANOER" l==;-*,.,!3>.fl=:-:1°'-*=,-;;:nt "
liv'g rm, R<nt $45 mo, Adult "'"' !inl. LAMIORGHINI VOLJlSWAGEN '"" """ 1..., • ., CHEVY C..pt1ce 1968 Full park, C.M., $1195. 64G-3931. BAUER BUICK nJ..7566 e 537.mf powu, AM FM 1t•M> 44000 67~0 evf's. 234 E. 17th St. * LAMBORGHINI * ------,.-:= 1--'-"---'---,$a~,,..._I m~, IA.ndau tw. 673·mll
HUNTINGTON • '69 Ki••· c,,,1a ""' 541-7705 ~ GT 2+2. Rod-Blk Int. ,,., Volk'"'"" ""a" '6,ooo Annlvel'IClry .. CHRYSLER ANTED ~ miles, New tires S1700 or lf71 VOL VO $2991 11o00d 20x45. 2 BR, 11; ba . IMPORTS W Pun::hucd New, June '68. best offer. &16-t032
645-Jl40 * 6.3~2961 Onrop"''s 8~~eR• 8.000 ml. Jmma"-S8500.,!'!'t .68 o ... JO·t -nd ••• ,,_ ~ Ln•*• NE: Yor11tT lo"68.I Ex~ h36 NICE, romplttely furn. u&c. pty, llrrt&: Hrbr ~ ... 1 •A<&• ",,_,, •......, ...... UllMI ..,..venmC*f, m .xtra ... ~ BR wlbath, Cabana in 8lLL MAXEY TOYOTA 592-1062, deck. rocoll 64~:n1138· M<Wlnc. OLVO cond, auto, s. A.\f I FM
parlc w/pool. Rc11.dy to 13881 Stach Bl•d. I '-'--'-'-,,~==,.---· I mu5t se ! ,,..._, atereo, Pl/Pdb. rac air, tint
mow In. $1995. 642-78.18 fl Beach.. Ph. U7-8555 LOTUS 1969 V\V: RAd io, wlw. Ork 1i..u. vln)'t r 00 t, "-'hl
24x57 MOBILE, Clean ocean Auto1, Imported 970 arn, w;,h~';''~'·~l6~,~000~~m~I .. I i1~946~H~ar~tm~,~C~.~M~.;"'646;:'.:·:S303.&\ coven, P/&eAI, Plwnd'NI. '· air, m111y >:Ira~. LOTUS 644--290!: M&-m4, 8-4: 30 pm; 1
• ""'36-4011 • AUTHOR1zEo 'irVw-E"• cthll, ... w '71 Volvo Spl Cpe. 546--0012 '"'· v
NEWPORT• '11 '"''°m ALPINE SALES k SERVICE h.ak., • cMch, TIO,,.,,._ "'UICK CASH
LGE outdoor ca1• for culnea
pigs or r111btll1•. 644-0530 5/28
3 kiHtns 2 t11r.r I blk 6 "'kl.
MUST SELL NO\V!
Reglsttttd running-
Qual'tt'r Hor1e. U .2
Chestnut mare, Hid train-
ing. CoNlstent jumper. ssoo. 673--4546
3x30 • cabon11. . :z R1t lnr. R&H . $650. 615-MllS 1100 E. Model "I"
LIKE To trade? Our 64~140 • 6.tl-2961 "67 Sunbeam Alplnt. Nf"w TIRED or thal old rutnll\lrl:T 3 weeka old. F'ully.equlpptd. THROUGH A
Tr1dtt's Paradise column ll Motor Hom~ 940 clutch A tlr'!s. AM-f'M It'• rta11y mf that bani Prl pty. l'antutJc deal. SS500 DAILY PIL:OT
M6-4ll( s123 1 -~H~O~RS~ES=~eo=•~RO=E~0~-1 tor )'OU! 5 Une•, 5 Dt.1' for
• KITTENS. Wi mo** BACK BA't $5. Ca.L tod'f .•. ~73.
M2-01'1S ew,.. ~/28 :MO-lm * * ~745 •
-SlOO). MA-4087 niirh''· I to ttplact. Ju:.n watch the car·nc\rf. owner 1Jttds quick
1969 21' Dodg~ P11CC'·Arrow HOUSE Huntt111'! Wat~ fW1'l\fUte A: mlacellaneo"JS 11alr! i.1475. MS-1936 or WANT AD
Motor lfomt~ Dys; 642...,1373, &!rv lce Dlrtctory. Chock 11 31~ W. Cout Hwy. oolumn1 1n tM ClualUtd &J4 .. IQ4. 642·5671
Evts: ~l~I for.the &C'rvlet you NflWJ)('tt Beath -Section.
l
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A DAILY PILOT WtdntS(Wy, May 26, lt71 Wedntsday, May 26, l m PILOT-ADVERTISER 2G
M .. ,,... ]§]I ·~ .. ,,.... 1§1 I -...... l§J I M .. ,,... I§] I '""'""" 1§1 1 ..... ~... 1§1 [ .,........ 1§11 '""'""" I~ 1,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~I
mi Autos, Used 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, UMCI
CO_N_TI-NE-N-tA_L __ _..;..C_,0.._R~VA""'IRo:--DODGE
~.,..."'."-c-----
990 Autos, U-
DODGE
990 Autos, Usod
FORD
990 Autos, Used
FORD
990 Autos, Usod
MERCURY
990 Autot, Usitd 990 Autos, Used
MUSTANG
1970 _MARK 111
I\ 50,000 n1i, 5 )T "'arrancy
Elegant blue, v•bl te Broug-
1
ham top, blue Ie:ather Jnl<·r-
ior. Every delu.,;e exlTa,
'63 Con -air ~onza 4-spd. nu
IJl.lnf, good eng &: tires,
rad'°, bkts. Xlnt cond. $295.
673--!IOCM or 6i3-6HO
'68 DART '70 CHARGER
LOADED WITil EXTRAS 2 DOOR J-1.T. MUST SELL!!
V-3, auto trans,, 1Actory air, e 675-3369 e
radio & heater, vinyt root I =~~-~--,---'--~~
mo FORD Galax. 500 4 dr
hrdtp, pvt pty, &OOd tam.
car. AU xtru. $2195.
831-2287
'69 FORD Bronco, 4-whl
drive, sport package, V8.
r&h, bucket seats, limited
&lip. Xlnt COlld. '2 7 0 0.
'73-0783
1968 l\tERCURY Colony Park '6.) J.'astback, rebuilt ell(,
S.pus &tation "·gn. l.tladed slick new 1ires & ni.ags, Jar-
\\'/delµxe int & all pwr op-dean headers, Ansen lrac-
tlons. Fae air. Grecian J:Old lion bars, tape deck. $1100
"'/b\k vinyl top. H.D. 644--0154
Incl 'stereio radio & tapr CORVETTE (XD\V644) '71 Dodge Tradesman 100.
l , d
1
eck. Michelin stttl·bel!,•d
1 t res. For sale by O\llld.
• &12-8U9 '
$189 5 Take over payments with B
of A. 54()...8241
DAVE ROSS FALCON PONTIAC
'65 FORD Wag. 9 pa!ll. Low
mi's, new tires, $900. Call
JEEPS
613-5198 '69 TOYOTA Land Cru\11>er.
sU&pens.ion, stereo h l -f 11,,~~--~~~=='I radio, Jugg rack. Orig 68 J\1ustang Fstbck 36,000
owner $Zl50 646-$115 eves n1l, VS, auto, ps, pb, r/h &
· · · t11pe declt. Sport deck, Ult
'65 l\IERCURY ?.1ontclair, 4 11tn\•hl metallic blue $1650
'66 BRONCO Like new. \Varn. hubs. roll '61 Fali:on, clean. Good ba 8 me ch. c 0 n d . Gr ea 1 Lo ml, lots of extras. 837·3370 rs, ,000 miles. $2,650.
A" 5 ~,.21 &12-1586 alt 5 pm. '
i •--c~O~R~V-A-IR __ , dr bzwy, full po"'er. air, M!)...tJ.i7 '
Al\1/f,\1 radio $650. Orig.lc,00.=--,--~~~~~,11 o"'TK'r. 96&-l::iS!t aft 7 pm or 65 Mustang fastback...O cyl, 3 • • • transportation $275. 673-8117 " pm """'" · wk-"ri llpei!d •
! '64 Corvair ''Mont•" aft s. I ··"'ss'"""""c-____ 7,_-c,Squ~-,-----'68 JEEP CJ-5. V6, ronvt
---===---·I '-"'Ui .. r u,.,, air, ·P"T top, wam bubs, radkl. Good ,........ $693 •** 6T>I045 '70 Montego ?.fX, Ex. cond. , : I\e111• brake,, good t~. FORD strg/pwt brks. CLEAN. nd $2'l<•l mo. · ,,....," "' · · · "'"3971• 'LO\v miles, new tires. Lan· 66 GT, 4 Spd 289, Gd cond.
dau lop. Air rond. 673-6691 Lots or xtras. 675--2427 l Runs good $3.:iO, a.Ml-li:.'S
BUSINESS IS GOOD
AT THEODORE ROBINS
FORD ! THE REASON
IS SIMPLE • , •
• THEODORE
ROBINS SR.
TIME
~
Tim• Magazln•
Qu•llty O.•ler
AwQrd for 1971
LINCOLN
WE SELL FOR LESS
THEODORE
ROBINS JR.
THIS WEEKEND
-ONLY-
BRAND NEW
1971 MUSTANGS
HARDTOPS---FA5TBACKS---CONVERTIBLES
CAMPER SALE -
EVERY NEW 1970 $ 7 5 CAMPER IN STOCK .
SLASHED TO
OVER FACTORY INVOICE
ENJOf CAREFR!E SUMMER DlllYINGI 40 . OVER
IN STOCK $75 FACTORY OUR $100,000 DIAGNOSTIC CENTER
Gives your car over 130 vital
tests for reliability, performance
and saf•ty, in just 30 minutes.
Full written report is included
TO CHOOSE INVOICE
FROM plu1 t4x I lic1n11
IJG SELfCTION-NO ADDfD DEALER CHARGES
W• A~ TM Or...-Co111ty Sllow Cose DHlw For
E Dorodo Co1t1per1
$995
FULL
PRICE
NO GIMMICKS..,..NO ADD ONS
-NO ORDERS-
RENT A CAMPER
llese"• Todoy for As111r•d Darn
DEMONSTRATOR
SALE!
STATION WAGONS-LTD'•
GALAXIES · TORI NOS -MUSTANGS
RANCHERO
All AT
5150
Under ,factory Invoice
NEW'JI RANCHERO
NEW RANCHERO
Emission control sy1fem, E7 x 14 t ires, AM
r.tdio.1 119111 ) 11441
W·Stkr. $3)96.12 011r l'rle• 52742.94
SAVE $653.88
NEW'JI FORD
NEW. l TD 4 DR. BROUG.
H.T. 429 VI, vinyl roof, crui10.,
WSW, vis. 9rp., P.S., di• .1fr. whl.,
P0 1h., P·dr. lock1, 1ir, •ulo temp,
control. AM-FM, P.W. eic. { 121-
SAVE
$1100
701 !. ;1'45 5 W-Stlfr. S!l041 011r p,1c1 $4941
NEW LTD SQUIRE SAVE
~ pin. w•go", 42' VI, Crui10., $110100 \1,'SW, vit. 9rp., P.S. di•. rick, 1ir .
con d., AM-FM, H.D, 1u1p., dfx.
whl. COVlrl. [ 14234) :a112.
W-1f!lr. S5715 011r Prlc• S4614 ~N=E=w~L=T=D-47 DR. HDTP. SAVE
Vinyl RF, A/T, pwr. 1t1•r, br1~11, $97200
I 11nd window1, eir. e lec. delro1t,
AM .FM, Vis. 9rp. W/W, Tint,
91111, whl. c•r1. (100017) :6!10
W-5fllr. S5267 011r l'rlc• S42tS
NEW GALAXIE 500 SAVE
2 Dr. Hd. Tp. 400 V-1, Vinyl rf., $92300
A/T, Pwr. Sir. i nd br1k11, t ir, r•·
dio, whl. cvn . ti11I. 91111, ,lie. de·
fo991r. (00015) .;"6!11
W-srt.r. S4922 011r Prlc ir Slt9t
NEW'JI BRONCO
NEW BRONCO
WAGON
VS, sport pkg., conv. group., H.D. radia·
tor, .tux. fuel lank. (700 12 1 107641
W0 5tlfr. S4522.44 011r l'rk .. $8151.21
SAVE $671.23
NEW'JI TORINO
NEW G.T. SAVE
351 4V, AM .FM, P.S., P.I ., tint. $78872
9l11t, crui10., A"''"* whl1., I 134-
4121 ! 3771
w .sttir. S4514.2S 011r l'rk• Sl7t5.SJ
N•w 2 Dr. Hdtp. Brough. SAVE
351 VI, A·T., bit. tir1~ • .,.;,. ·grp., $68152
P-S, P-di1c1, •i•, red., whl c .. rs ..
•fc . f 124156) #116
W-Sfkr. S442J.2S O•t Prk• SJ741 .7J
NEW 4 DR. SEDAN SAVE
VI, cruho., P.S., Wllit1 wall 1, AM $50100
r1dio, fint1d glau. 1173 585) (760)
W-Srt.r. Sl4l1 01r Ptice S29JO
NEW 4 DR. SEDAN SAVE
VI, crui10., P.S., P.I ., oir cond .. $62700 WSW, AM r•dio, tint. glau, whl.
cov•rt. 1175541) lll5l
W·Stllr. S4152 Our l'rlc• SJ49S
NEW •11 FIOO PICKUP
NEW F-100 STYLESIDE
Custom. VS, ranger pkg., amp & oil
gauges, tool box, cruisomatic, opt. vacuum
booster, AM-FM Ster•o, power steering,
G78 x 15 tires. 10651 I
W-Stlr. S4150.20 O•r !'Tic• Sllt6.l1
SAVE $953.89
·~~~· '71 MAVERICKS
OVER
FACTORY
INVOICE
2 DOOlS-4 DOOR~ I I CYLS.
Gll:AllERS-AUTO'S-STICKS
NO GI MICKS e HO AD OHS
NO ORDERS
·::~· '71 PINTO
$1919
(000000)
NEW'71f250 PICKUP
NEW F-250
STYLESIDE
Pickup. 360 VS, tu tone green & white,
gauges, body side mouldin 91, H.D. r.tdia.
tor,8 plytir•s. (07J4111<141
W·Sttr. Sl668. tt 0 11r l'rlc• S2tll .OO
SAVE S687.99
·.~: NEW CAR TRADE·INS r----.-u-.-,-A-lll_G_S_A_L_E __ _, ALL OFFERS CONSIDERED r--,0-11---1-TD---GA_LA_x-11--T .. o-11-No---w-•G""o-N 5-A-11....,:
15 fo choo\1 from. 'b5 th1u '70 model1. Coup11, h11dlop1, TRADES ACC ..., ... .._,,_ .. U"'-'Jl,.....L.,_,.....,.......,,._..4,_....,..
convertibl • •nd 2+i f1tlb•ck" Som1with 4 1p11d1, 1110 EPTED ............... ~W-loi-11.W.. ...... ,; .. ,.;., '"' ... , •. ,;, "''''" PAID FOR OR NOT! 1969 FORD LTD
EXAMPLE: 1966 MUSTANG HARDTOP 2 dr. H.T. VI, 11ulomtfie, R&H, power ll11dng & br1\11, feel,
......--------- -------.-t ir, .,.;•yl roof. !XSR8971 Vt, "''"";" ,.d;o, hu"" 9ood ma,., ISVF7l41 , -rRWsPOliiATI~~
OUR PRICE $996 ---------------OUR PRICE $2196
'69 CHEV. MALIBU
1 d1. H.T. R&H. 1uto., •<1. P.S.,
VS, vinyl roof. Good m>l e1.
W1rr. 1v1il. !YWl5l5)
$2296
'68 V.W. FASTBACK
R&H, good mil11 .
$996
'66 CHEV. NOVA
1 Cr. H.T. !I c-yl., 1Yto., R&H ,
qood mil11. lltZX477i
$996
'66 DODGE DART
'170 H.T. R1dio, hitter, 1lend·
erd, good mil11. !THU48S )
$896
'69 COUGAR
Aulo., R&H, pow1r tl1erP119 , •ir
cond., good mil11. IXUIU9b).
$2196
'66 CAD DE VILLE
SALES DEPT. I AM 'to t PM MON.,ll
I AM Te 6 PM SAT HOURS 10 AM Te 6 PM IUN
'65
'63
f~~o~ R~~.Lp~~~: c5!., good $896 '66 FALCON SEO. '69 FAIRLANE 500
mil11. !NOG87!11
CHEVY 'Ii TON PICKUP
with c1mp1r 1h•ll. Vi, lid. thift. l l25721}
PARTS-SERVICE
HOURS
$896
$)896
$596
$496
R&H, •ufo., 1ir, P.S. low mil1t,
ISAX9ll)
$996
'64 CHEV. WAGON
111 Air. VI, 11ulo., R&H. P.S.,
Air,9ood mil11. (JI Nl15J
$696
--~ '70 PONTIAC G.T.O.
VI, tulo., P.S., 1ir cond. Good
mil119•. R1d io, h1attr. (J21 ·
AGGI
$2596
2 dr, H.T. VI , •uto,, lt&H, P.S ..
fe el. t ir, lo milt1, W•rr. 1v1il.
I ZVEOOS)
$1996
'70 MAVERICK
'1 door. I ewne<. ltedio, h11t1r,
•conomy pl111. IYRE7161
$1596
'69 V.W. SQBACK
Fully •qu Jpp1d, go od
(YWSIJJI
$1496
7 AM Te t PM MON
' 7 AM To 6 ~ 'IUWll I !'ARTS DEl'T. ONLY
I AM re 1 PM SAT\IRDATS • •
eves.
OLDSMQlllLE
'66 Oldsmobile 98
4 Dr., lfardtop, V8, full pow-
er. Factory air cond,, Vinyl
roof, RXS470.
$1088
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
2480 Harbor Blvd. at F'alr Or.
Costa l\lesa 546-801 1
'67 DELTA '88'
Full power. Air Conditioning.
dlr. TRF087, r.tust sell. \\'ill
lake trade or finance. Call
494-7744.
'66 OLDS Cutlass, vinyl 1op,
low mile~. 1 011•ner. J\Ii;it
cond. SUOO &14-4175 I
'10 Vista Cruiser-Yello"'·
Air, 1P s/Pb, radio. lo mi.
S3900. 494-9i81 or 495--0473
·~ Olds very gd mech 4 bar·
rf'I carb, $85 or bst orr.
642-5083, 2677 Orange, -C~I
PLYMOUTH
'6:) FURY JI[ family wagon.
Good cond. Unemployed.
i\ll1St Sell~ $7j(J, 54-l-803·1
PONTIAC
'65 PONTIAC GTO
Automatic, radio and heater,
vinyl top, a ir conditioning,
YVX143
$2488
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
2180 Harbor Blvd. at Fair Dr.
546·8017
'67 TEMPEST
6 cyl.. auto., fully equ ip·
pcd. tUUNlO·O
$988
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC •
2-180 ~lnrhor Blvd. at Fair Dr.
Costa Mesa 5-16--8017
'69 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX
\18, Auto, Radio, llca1cr,
Po11•cr Steering. Pow c r
Brakes, Vinyl 'fop, Less
than 21,000 mi., Remainlnx
Factory \\11:1rranty. Serial
#·1905.
$2488
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
We've Re ally Don•
It This Time!
THESE CARS
HAYE TO GO
LARGE DRASTIC
REDUCTIONS
1964 FORD
R•d io. H••le•, Full Pow1r,
Au lomo!ic. (FM H~71 I
$558*
1971 DUNEBUGGY
NEW
$1152*
1964 CHEVROLET
2 Doo" R • d i o, He•l1r,
Au!om •lic. I 440AKS l
$369*
1961 CHEVROLET
2 Door Autom•lie, I IZT.
254)
$268*
1965 T-BIRD
F~ll Powe r, Air, R•dio end
H11fer. !OS!
$677*
1966 Pl YMOUTH
81 rr ecud• 2 Door. Re dio,
H••l•r, Air. IRYMlll)
$679*
1967 RAMBLER
4 Door. V.8 . Full Pow1r,
R•dio, He1ter. (0Sl
$617*
1965 MUSTANG
Convrt. Automet<c, Redio,
H•11ter. Air. !XE F!l77 !
$680.47*
1961 AMERICAN
Club Coupe, Aulom11tic.
R1dio, Hi.tier. !XUNJ411
$788*
2·180 Habor Blvd. a1 Fair Dr. 1964 CADILLAC Std. CeVille. Full Power, ------~'•-l&_ ... _17_11 R.dio, He11ie1. ! IEUOS BI
'67 BONNEVILLE $727*
STATION \V1\GO~
V-8. Auto. trans .. faclory air
r0nd .. power s!ccrinJo!'ldisc
brnk£'s, radio, hearer. (TOD·
•IO:i)
$1888
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
2180 Harbor Blvd. a! Fair Dr.
:t-16-8017
1967 OLDSMOBILE
Automatic, R1d io, H11l••·
t4 Door/. 171BBIMI
$872*
1964 FORD
S!1+ion W1gon, Full Powfr,
R1dio, Healer. !OSJS7ll
$854*
1966 RAMBLER
'70 GTO Am1ric•n Wegon. Full
Rum Air, 4-spccd, Fireslonc Power, He8t1r. !SJRl,11 '
wide ovals, .~harp-all bl11C'k! $850*
~icrifice! $2b'9:'1/bcst ofrt'r.
&16-•1665 alter 5 .to WN:>kcntls 1967 FORD
Pontiac GTO Con-C lub Coup1. Autom1+ic,
\'Prliblf', nln1ost lll"W lop, It d' H I A" ITBX
389 enginco, 4 spd. trans. 9;5;0· ••er, "· :
$.12.i &16-2977 $679*
'69 GTO Judge, 4 speed. very
i;::ood cnndi!inn. $2200 or best 1964 PLYMOUTH
oUcr. 5-18--0918 =~-,-~~c---11 Club Coup•. Autom11tic,
1958 Pon!iRC Chlef!on, auto. R1dio, H1•i1r. ! EDL741 I
good rond. S12:i or bel!l of. $520*
'"· Call 002-2761 •< 635-.%81
RAMBLER • $50.00 PREP
'62 RA~1BLER S!a. \\'ag. $300
Faclof1: Air. PIS • P/B.
To"ing hitch. 64z..&l82.
T·BIRD
• 196.1 T-Blrd Landau, Re-
cr"nl valve job & brake. joh.
Rebll trans. new tires. s-i;;o.
Call 5-4M791.
FOR SALE
T-BIRD '65 SiOO
531. 729-1
'Gj T-Bird, NeWs sm11ll
Rn10Un! o( \\'Ork. * 6i?r-22$9 *
1961 Rcl1 T-Bird con\'! Fttll
P"'r, air, Vo1n1r rirt'!, Y.ire
\\'his. $700 673-$203 c\·e~
CHARGE
SAVE
SAVE
Marcus
Motcrs
2100 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
SALE GOOD!!!!!
Moy 24tfl to Moy ll•t
I
I
I
I
...... -.. . . • ·-. ..... . • . . . . . . .-....
_ .. _\ "67 PILOT ·AD\IEfltTISER Wtdnesda1, M&1 2&, l97l _______ !m ______ '!'i!' ___________ "!" ______________ Wtdnesd,Y, May 26, 1971 DAILY PILOT !;9
--·--·---------- --------------------·-
5 DAYS
ONLY
DAYS
ONLY GUARANTY CHEVROLET 5 . ' ... ~~~~~~~ .....
THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY •
259 BRAND NEW
1971
CHEVROLETS
CARS & TRUCKS
IN STOCK. READY, FOR
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
Down payments so low they seem
il!lpossible. Only made possible thru
Guaranty's tremendous v o I u m e •
Monthly payments virtually what
you care to make.
TRADE-INS
DURING THIS SALE CREDIT-IMMEDIATE--DILIVERY
YOUR PRESENT CAR IN TRADE, PAID FOR OR ,,. On credit approved. Low rate savln9s passed
on to you NOT. Must be appraised hi9h enou9h to make
you act at ance.
NEW 1971
IMPALA SPT. SEDAN
Tfn!td OllH, door gu~r<:h, ~JJ.«ICI
lurbO, ciowrr s1rerln;, w11!11 W3111.
Wl'IHI (OVt rl, radio, llf9 S•rlll ICU+ •••
LIST ........................ $4212.25
DISC. ............. . ... $597.63
SALE $3784" PRICE ... --.. ----
NEW 1971
MONTE CARLO
Tinted 11l•Ss. 1lr, t"emO!t rur vl1w mlrro. 2711-"0 turbo, paw.,. 11eerln<).
wri1t1 w1ll1, radio. ""' Serlel 1L1•
»>.
LIST ............... -....... $4449.10
DISC. .............. .. $380.99
SALE $4068" PRICE ........... .
NEW 1971
CAPRICE COUPE
Tin ted gllso, "°"''' wlndOW$, floor
Miii. door gu1rds, rNr window d ...
lro.ltr, •"· remol1 mirror, vln•IY mirro" 300-«ICI fllrbO, lilt whftl, POW·
1r 1•eer!ng-, w!ll1e w~ti,, lt1tdllle de-l•v, rldlo, 111.,.ktf, bumprr guard•.
l7S9 Srrl11I !C12'1"5.
LIST ......... _ ........... $5309.75
DISC ........................ $713.99
SALE $4595" PRICE ...
NEW 1971 CHEY.
•;, TON TRUCK
T!n!ed Ol!H, reor wlndaw 111111"'1
glan, baly 'ide mld11. air, tron1
. 1t1blll11r. ~eavy rt•r 111rlng, ''"'
lul su1pen11o<i, HO tu•DO, PO~• 11ffflng, •;td!o, tool & •10w~ge be•·
. hill foam SNI, geugn. J212 ~ .... 1
lZ62'lU.
LIST ........................ $4420.45
Dl&C. ......... $71 2.41
SALE '3707" PnlCI! .. ...
NEW 1971 CAMARO
Tlntllll 1111n, door guerds. ¥l11vl •OOI.
1lr, con10lr, P0"""' brJkH, 1•J.Jl0
turbO, 1111 whttl, ll(;wtr stee•ln~,
Wft!I• w11t1, cloc~. "dlo, 1~t1kor,
r•Hy wl!ttls, rally •!>Ori, rnt1rlor ac-
ctnl, Jl20 Serit l IL5CV262.
LIST _, ..... -.. $4613.70
DISC. _ .................. $559.17 ::.~EE ......... '412451
NEW 1971 CAMARO
Tlnled QIOH, door 11uard1, ~Ir, rt>n· 1olt. power brekes, 2<.!.JJO !u•bo,
DQwer 11Hrl"!I, wnl!I w1111, CIOCll.
ridlt>, illlilk.,, rally WllHll 3916
Serl1J 1LI1012tl
LIST ........................ $4341.20
DISC ........................ 5419.21
SALE $3859" PRICE .......... ..
NEW 1971
CHEY&LLE MALIBU
Tl~!ed 9l1n, sffllO buclltll. door 11u1rd1, air, cc~.cre, pawer dl1c Crall·
'"!, 270.350 1u•bo, power 11ttrlf1!1,
""''" w1111, clocll, radio. bumoer
oull'lll, ,.11y W11r111. Jiii Serl11 !L I·
t':~i' , .. _ ................... $4496.15
DISC.~--··-··· ........... $470.95
:'SALE '4025" ·PRICE ............ .
NEW 1'71
EL CAMINO
~lnted 9tau, door ou1rd1, 1k, pwr.
<llK. brallts, turbO, POwtr tlH rlng,
...,...lft w1ll1, w'llftf covtr1. radio,
,bumPlr guarG1, 3'U SHii i 1ll3'M7
LIST ...................... _ $4301.40
bl SC. _ .......... _,,_ .... $551.41
SALE s3744" ltlllCI ........
NEW 1971
IMPALA CUST. COUPE
Tlt1!ecl g!e1s, elr. 211-350 1urbo, 11Hf'-
inf, wt11t-111i. r1dlo. 3214 Serlel
1(101617
LIST ........................ $4669.15
DISC. $571.71
SALE $409044 PRICE ... .., ......
NEW 1971
MONTE CARLO
De!""e De•h, tln!..:I g!fn, PQwer win·
klws, ¥lny1 roof, 1/r, rrmate rt•• view
mlffar, l7G.ll0, turbO, POwer 1reerl"51.
wl!lle wi lls rad.o. 111e11ker, rally
Wllttlt. 4326 Serial 1L1311°'.
LIST ....................... 5479 3.90
PRICE ............. ...... $452.93
SALE $434d" Pit.ICE ......... ..
NEW 1971
CAPRICE SEDAN
Delu•11 belh, tlnll'CI glau, v•nyt rool,
'"· r~le mirrnr, TurPO, paw1r
11Hrlng, wl>/te walls, he11dtlte llellv
•v•tlfn'I, rMlio. b\imprr ouerdt, 3695
~1rl11 1C!26U6
LIST ........... _ .......... $5112.55
DISC. ---·-"· $611.67
SALE $4493" PRICE ....
NEW 1971 NOYA
FOUR DR. SEDAN
T;n!td 111115, door gy.,ro1, l lr, POW·
rr dl•c brekn, 24-"° rurbo, power l!Hrln;, Wllllf w1111. ,.i,HI CD¥!fl,
clod!;, r11dl0. C11$lcm l~te•lor, e1tlfflor oecor, 4101 Serl1I IW20 .. 10 .
LIST ........................ $3134.60
DISC ........ -............... 5285,03
SALE s354957 PRIC E .......... ..
NEW 1971 NOVA
Tinted ol•ss, whl!1 wills, Wftttl ca¥·
ers, redlO, cu>!O<'rl lnlrrlOr, 1td. !ran•
ll<! Serl1I JW131115&.
LIST ........................ 52146.15
DI SC ............... -$111.21
SALE $2729" PRICE ........... .
NEW 1971
CHEYELLE MALIBU
O.lu•e Dells, !111ltd !ll•u. POtl ••le.
MS.4S(, ' sPCI., •l>O•t $!ftr1ng wntt!, he~vv duly ba1Tery. 1Dtclal l111tr""
ment1!1"'1, radio, cowl lfldvchon "'3Qd,
55 e<iu lpment. 3050 Strl1I 1Ll0490,
LIST _, ..................... $447J.40
DISC. ......... $469.58
SALE $4003" PRICE •..
NEW 1971
EL CAMINO
Tlnlwd g!eu, 1lr, pawer dl1c br1kn,
2d·3IO •urbc, l>Qwer 1te1d~g. whl!t
w~ll1, wl'lflll CbVefl, tlG•O, l.ll2 Str•
111 tll2S1U.
LIST ........................ 54327.15
DISC ••.. -.................. $563.40
SALE $376445 PRICE ......... ..
NEW 1971
MONTE CARLO
Tint .. 1!11s, floor m1t1, door ou1rd1,
•I•. ~anltv mirror, '711-lJO. turbo, pawer 1!etrlng, wl'l!!I well$, c1111cm
Wl'IMl CO"t!f'I, rldlo, 1P111ktr, 1111m111r
gutf'lll. SS9• Strl•I lll2"16.
LIST _ ................. -... $4590.10
DISC ....................... l4ll.21
SALE '4151" PRICE _ ........ ..
NEW 1971
IMPALA CUST. COUPE
Oel11•1 tlell5. ll"ted gllu, door g11<1rdJ
vlnyl root, air, ma, turbO, dWll
.,.~awl, pe..-1!'1' •tireru;g, WllUI ... alls.
....,.ttl covt r1, cloc-. r..:llo, 1i>eall1r,
twm~r 11!Jllrd1. lSID Strlel lC12722.I,
LIST ....... -............. _ $5049.55
DISC. -········· $657.22
SALE '4392" PRICE .. -·-·-.
NEW 1971
MONTE CARLO
Dehrce Delh. !lntl'd 91111, 1lr, 11/rbO.
POWtr s!Hrl"ll, wn!11 wills, radio.
'3~9 Ser!al ll129lt6
LIST .................... $4409.95
DISC ..................... $401 .46
SALE '400849 PRICE ........... .
NEW 1971
CAPRICE SEDAN
T!n!ed 01115, 11r, turbo. """""' 1tft•·
!rill, wnu1 w1lll, radio. lil'S Serlll
1C l:J029J
LIST _ .................. ___ $4930.75
DISC:. _ ..................... $636.20
SALE s4294ss PRICE ....... _ . .,
NEW 1971 CAMARO
Tinted gl1.i, green vlnYl raol, 11r,
consoJr, pa .. er b•a•n. 2'5-HO turbO,
pawer llHring, wllfl1 .,...11,, clock.
r1dl0, •PHktr, •!VII trim, lnttrlOf
ac(tn!. JOIJ kr\oll 1L500:MI.
LIST ....... -............... $4414.DO
DISC ......... -.............. $507.00
SALE '390700 PRICE ......
NEW 1971 NOVA
Tln!rd ol11s, wtil!1 wal11, wheel cov.
rr1. rid lo, ,1d, 1r1n1, J62' 51rl1I
1Wl6'$01t
LIST ........... -... -... $2725.00
DISC. _ .................. $90.tl
SALE '2634" PRICE .......... ..
NEW 1971
CHEYELLF. MALIBU
Tinted gl""' s!ralo buckt! '"h' 1Tr,
console, !>011 11~te. J6~•1• '1PCI, paw-
'' S1ttrlng, heevv duly btlttr~. <IOl:k
1>.M FM radio, 111e1~er, 55 f'lllllP. ml'nl, lSJO ~trltl ILl23lolt,
LIST _ ......... -...... -... $5049.30
DISC ..................... S585.65
SALE '4463" PRICE ......... .
NEW 1971
EL CAMINO
Tln!rd g11111, door 11u1rd1, atr, power
di1c brake ~45-l.IO 11/rDO, "'°wer 111er·
In;, Wh]!I W~lll, WhHI CO\llfl, '1410.
36f! Strllll IL121t:JO,
LIST ........................ $4314.15
DISC. _,........... . . $560.61
SALE $375354 PRICE .......... .
NEW 1971
MONTE CARLO
Tinted 91111, door 11u1rd1, 1lr, f~rbO.
powtr 1teerlng, rt.olo, 1•k9!', "
fCIU1pmtnt . .C1lJ Strlll 1LUH60.
LIST __ .. _,,,.,, ____ $4114.SO
DISC. ---.. -.............. 1471.05
SALi '4413" PRICE .......... ..
NEW 1971
IMPALA SPT. COUPE
Tlt1tecl gleH, door OUlrdS, l lf, ~
rurbo, du.I oltl11$I. p0...., 1!Nrl111,
Wftl!t Wiiis, clOCJ<, r1dlo, b.i"'"r
ou1rd1. i25' krl1I IClia>IO •
LIST ... --............... $4135.00
DISC. -·-.. -............... $611 .71
SALE $422321 PRICE .......... ..
NEW 1,7\
IMPALA SPT. SIDAN
Dellll(I 111111, tinted 91111, -· wln-doW$, door ouard1, Vl{ll'I '1>01, alr,
remo!e control mirror, l00-400, turbo.
dual exl!eul!, IHI w'llM I. p0W!1' 1l1tr·
ln9, wt!l1t w1!l5, w!IHI CO~fl. ctock.
AM/FM r1dla, IPNktr, buoipe<
11u11•d1. :uu ~ff 1a1 1c11m1.
LIST _ ...................... $5317.75
DISC. -.-................... $712.91
SALE '460477 PRICF. .
NEW 1971
CAPRICE SEDAN
Tlntrd 1111111, pawer wlndoM, \llnyl
roof, air !urbe, 1111wer 11t1rlnv, bellld
llrei, wtlH I COYffl, rtdlll, <IOU Serial
1Cl:it•7
LIST -··--··-........... $5190.60 DISC. ___ ................... $651.ff
SALE $4531 " PRICE ........... .
NEW 1971. CAMARO
Delu•• bell!, tinted 111111, 1lr, con-sole, turbO, pawtr 1rerrlng, dock.
r1cll0, r1!1y 1port, lnlerlOr iu:etnt, $S
equlpmtnl. JOU Strlll IUOll1t.
LIST ........................ $4'17.15 DISC. _,_ ................... f549.4'
SALE '4067" PRICE .......... ..
NEW 1,71 NOVA
COUPI. delu•• 119111, l!nltd 01a11, 11r,
pa-..r dl~c breke1, turbO, PQwtr stetrln;, Wllll1 w&lll, r1cllo, sPKlll
!n!to"lar o roup. 11<terlor dKOr, r11ty
Wtift(I. ~14 Ser, lWl!fOH
LIST ........................ $)720,50
DISC. --................ $:ZU.71
SALE '3431" PRICE ........... .
NEW 1971
CHEYELLE MALIBU
O.lu.ic1 1111111, 111111'111 01a1•, t1 r110 bvc:·
~el 1Hh, door Ulilrdt, ¥1nyl roof, 11r, paw1r dill( b'lkH, 24.S.UO turbo, pow-
!1' llttrl"V, Whl!I ..... 111, rtdio, bllm·
per gu•rd1, r1lly wltHl1. 31!2 Strl•I
1LU1tm
LIST ... -................... $4412.95 DISC. ___ ................. $461.20
SALE s4014" PRICE
NEW 1,71
EL CAMINO
Tl11ttd g\111, POwer d11c brtllts, tur·
bo, l>QWto' 1!Hrlnt , whllt w11t1. "'""I
cov1ri, rllllo. 365& Strl1I 1L!J06J•
LIST ........................ 53771.30
DISC. ---····-· .......... $451.'4
SALE $3324" PRICE ........... .
N!W 1971
MONTE CARLO
TIMM gl111, cloor OVlr1'1, l lr, >00-000,
turtio, Ult Wh"'· pei~r 1t .. rln9, IPlfltl w!ltel COYlfl, Whl!t w~lll,
r..:110, •P91ker, !wrfll)lf' 11uerd1 . .CS.S S...111 IL14'17,
LIST ............. ·---··· $4671.40 DISC. -..................... $426.61
SALi '4244" PRICI ........... .
NEW 1971
IMPALA SPT. COUPE
Detince belt!, !ln!ld 91111, -... OUll"lll.
1lr, 110-l50 turbo, PO.,..,. 1tff<lnt·
bl.U wall1, rldlo. JtN S..rlel ICll+
~·· LIST ---.. -·-··---.. ·-$4471.75 DISC. -·----............... $571.52
~:.~El ............ '4093"
NEW 1971
IMPALA sn. SIDAN
Tln!td 11111, 2»Qi f\lrbo, POW9•
1tttrlnt, wn1t1 w1U1, -1'1 C0¥9rl,
r1cllo. ~Jl-1 S.tltl 1Ct:l7t21.
LllT ___ .......... _ ..• $4300.05
DISC. _ ..................... $601.26
SALE '3698" PRIC:E ........... .
NEW 1971
CAPRICE SEDAN
Tinted gl111, llllD-r me11, door gu1nls,
ylnl'I roof, '"'Window dtftoe!er, 1lr.
r1mol1 mlrr1r, venlt'!' mirror. JI».
«ICI lv•bo, PO-11-lfll, bell..:! tlr11.
1t11dlll• dtl•r. r1dlo, ll""_.,, bf.Imp.
.,. gu.rd1. 4136 Serl•I 1CU5'21
LIST ... -............ -..... $525t.30
DISC. ----·-............... $672.31
SALE '4586" PRICE .... -......
NEW 1971 CAMARO
Tlntod t llt f, 1lr, 1po1/.,. tqlllpme"t,
p01I 11t1a, .100-m 4 1,cl., 1por1 Jlfff'·
Int whtel, 1pect11 1n1rrumen11ti.n •
llVll trim, lntll'lor l(~t. SS fCIUI~ melll, J111 Str"' IUW,,,
LIST ... -·-··-·-....... $4137.35
DISC:. -----·--·-·--... $Mt.65
SALi $3687'° PRICE ........... .
NEW 1'71 NOYA
COUPE
Tinted 91111, p11w1r brtkn, t urbO,
pow..-1lft•lng, Wfl(le w1ll1, Wflll!
covtr1, rldfo, cua1am 1Xllrlor. •15'
Strl1I 1W2UI"
LllT ___ ................... S3274.70
DISC. ___ .... _ ....... $170.17
SAL! '3104" PRICE ........... .
NEW 1971
CHEYELLE MALllU
Tll!f«t Oll H, ITrltO buC-tl ... II,
door gu1rd1, 1lr, J110wer dlic brekts,
t..S.Ull 11/rbo, POwer 1INrlngt w11r11
w1ll1, wl!NI c0¥1r1, rl'dlo, bllnlptr
g~rdi. J111 S.r1fl ILlll'tJI,
LIST ----.. ---·-·-·-· $4353.90 DISC. _.......... .. ...... $441-25
SALi '391265
PRICI .......... ..
NEW 1971
EL CAMINO
o.1vic1 btltt, tln!tll 11f11, door gu1ra1.
'/'· powt r dlK, tJO.JJO, turbo, pawer $ ffri"ll, white ... 1111, IU!I Wlltel CO¥·
an , radio, 11Um1111r ouar,1, 3'1J Serl1I IL\lll42.
LIST -·-·····-···--... $4191 .15 DllC. -.-............. tS76.34
SALE '311411
PRICE .. -.......
NEW 1971 CHEY.
'I< TON PICKUP
Tl11I, 111111. rtt r Wl'ldw, tlldln; 111111,
bell moldlftO, 1lr, (miff'. mirror. lr1.
I. rlllt ll!OC:kl, It!, 11tblt., I Ull. 1prg, po .... r lalr , .. , lllll, 2H IV<W, II.
1tHr, cnr. hub CPI!. cmp,, wrrno, •1.11t
blry, r1cl., tool .. •-· O•utef, 1111. clltl. lpt. tril. #310 S1rl1I 1ZIU2'N
LIST ........................ f5'al,26
DISC. __ ................... t9S7.14
SALi $468041 p q.ICE .......... .
•
ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST SELECTION
1971 VEGAS
Of'IN THIS
SUNDAY AND
MIMOll.IAL
DAY
I A.Ill. TIL 10 l'.M.
NEW 1971
IMPALA 4 DR. SEDAN
D1111111 bet11, Unttd 01111, t11rbo,
peiwer llH•Jno, wtltl• Wllll, ....t'l«I
cover1, rlCllll. JlJO Strltl IC10U2t.
LIST ...... -...... -.. -... $40to.IO
DISC ......................... 5451.67
SALE '36214) PRICE .......... ..
NEW 1971
CAPRICE COUPE
Door Olilnl1, t lr, remoll mirror, ioo.. "°°· 1urb9, du11 1.ll111111, 1111, POWe<
11eer1nv. wtin1 w1111, r1dla, ill7
Strltl ICHKJt.
LIST -...................... $5031.90
DISC: .................. _ $657.45
::.~·E ........ '4381 's
NEW 1971 CHEV.
'lz TON TRUCK
Tln!ld 01111, llllD<' b!Mrd, 11 1 I" y
frOlll 1Pf'lnt1, ltHvy 111r 1prl~
tlllllo. g1119n, llU Slri•I IZIJlOI.
LIST _ ...................... $3235.35
DISC. _ ...................... $469.09
SALE $276626 PRIC:E .......... ..
NEW 1971 CAMARO
Tlnr..r 1111111, 1tr, con5011, pOWff
brakn, 14J.l511 lurllll, P11wer 1rH r·
Int, ""'111 w1111. wl'lftt c1¥H1, rfdlo.
r1lly IPOrf J:MJ Serilt IUOfCl2,
LIST ----····· .. ·---$4469.75 DISC. _ .. ___ ,, ......... 1514.SI
::.~E. ..... .5395524
NEW 1971 NOYA
COUPE
Tlnlld OllH, doar 11u1rd1, -· dl1c br1keo, turbo, 1>aw1r 1trerl11g,
whltl Wl llt, r1dio. U ll Strltf lwt.J.
""
LIST -...................... $3203.10
DISC. --................... $155.21
SALE s30471t PRICI ........... .
NEW 1971
CHEYELLE MALIBU
Ti"!ed OllH, door 111u1rd1, 11r, l>QW·
tr dlK br1k11, J4-J50 l11rlll, POWtr
l leetl"!I, wl\111 ..,.111, r•dlo, bllmlll!r
gu1rd1, r11ty wll•l1. J12' S1rlll ILi J:l !ll,
LIST -·---·---.......... $4235.to DISC. ------............. $416.61
SALE '3819" PRICI .. _ .....
NEW 1971
EL CAMINO
Dtlinct be1t1, tln!ld 01111, oeor gutl'(l1,
t lr, pDWtr dl1c llrlkH, turbo, POwer
1tMrl"!I, wl!!tt w1 ll1, rldlc, Dumper
ou1n:11, rtrly wrie111-312• S1rr11 Ill·
32111.
LIST -............. -.... $433S.20
DISC ......................... $564.to
SALi '3770'° PRICE ........... .
NEW 1 '71 CHEV.
'I• TON PICKUP
Tlntld 01111, 11111 mo1c11no, door
011erd1, 1lr c1m111r mlrn1r, lrl •nd rHr 111ock 1blotb.tr1, fr! 111blllztr,
l'lvy r. 1111111, pwr. IOll; r. 11111, 2H
CV. In VI, turbo, lilt ..ml,, p, lllli'.,
cmpr, wlrl119 , rtd .• gaug11, 1PI. cmrw
e111t. apt, m . •»n s.... 1uo564f.
LIST _ ..... -........... $5399.10
DISC: ......... _ .............. $913.11 ~:.~ ..... '4485"
.,CAI 0, fHf YUi"
MOTOR TREND MAGAZINE
MADf IN U.S.A.
IY AMER ICANS -FOii. A/,•~·•,. .. N ROADS
BUY AMERICAN
NEW 1971
MONTE CARLO
Tll'ltld t l1u , lll"l lo buc:klt llNIS, !too<
tU1rd1, "l"yl "'°'• 1lr, ClloMOle, 2~ lJe, hirb11, POW9f 1lfftln0, whHI
!rim, wnUe ... e111, /.No/FM r..:ilo. C112
S1rl1l ILl.cuJ.l.
LIST ----·····-········· $4153.60
DISC. -················-·· $465.47
SALE '438813 PRICE ...........•
NEW 1971
CAPRICE COUPE
Tinted gll11, door gutrdt, 1lr, lOO-CIO. tu<W, du11 ••lt•int, PO...., lltff·
In;, wlllll -111, rldlo, »11 k rill
1(124127,
LIST -·--·-.. --$5031 .55 DISC: ......................... $655.91
SALi '4375" Pit.ICE .......... ..
NEW 1971 CHEY.
1/2 TON TRUCK
Floor bolrd1, l!llvy tr1r 1prJno, 0111-
oes. u. s ... i.1 1u10 1•.
LIST ·--······-............ $3139.51 DISC. _ ...................... S44t.!1
SALE $2~89" PRICE ........... .
NEW 1971 CAMARO
LIST ~·-······----··-·-$3973.7! DISC. -·-·-.............. $410.19
SALE $3568" PRICE ........... .
NEW 1971 NOYA
I Dr. Sed111, Tlnftd gllH, dOOr g~rd1,
powtrtlldl, wtiltt well1, po ..... r ilNI'·
Ing, WhNI (0Vt'1, r1dlo. «IJJ Serie!
1W20UOt
LIST _ ................... $3039.00
DISC. ____ ............... 1126.65
SALE '2912" PRICI! ........... .
NEW 1971
CHEVELLE MALIBU
Tl11!.cl 91111, 1rr1to bllcller 1t1t1, d1>ar
9u1rd1 power dlJc brtlleo, 2.U.JJO, turbo, power 1"erlng, ~111 wtll>.
Wfleet CO'ltrs. radio, b\imper gu1n:t1.
PS.. Strltl JL1lli't2.
LIST _ .. -·-·-·· .. ··-.. -$3946.30 DISC. -.. -............... $3$6.11
SALi '3590" PRICE ···--.. ·-·
NEW 1971
EL CAMINO
Dttu~• 111111, lln!ld 911111, dDl'lr gu1nl1,
1lr, pawtr clloc tirak11, 2111-UO t~rbc,
power 1!Hrl "11. wn1t1 well1, radio, bumP1r gu1n11, r11ty whtel1. 3loM
S.rlll 1Lll5120.
LIST ... _ .. _ ............... $4410.55
OllC. ---........ ,..,.. $580.30
SALi '383025 Pit.ICE .......... ..
N ~i< 19
'I< TON PICKUP
Tint. 01111, r. Wfldw 1lld.ol•., bod! 11c11 mldo., 1tr, cmPf', mlr., trt.
r. 1hk1, Ir!, 1t1bl., ""Y lrt. tprlno,
1u1r. 1p111., 1$0 lvrflo, 11-•!ter, dlr.
l'IUO ctpe, t JOaltS•I llrn. llJJI. 119f;,
cmpr, wlr., r1cl., tool • 110w bOJt, rrt tl'lr, bolmpr., OllJ'l'S, cuar, COl'l'll, •
CGll'I. 1pl 1mpr •IZ60f07', LIST ... ____ ......... $5161 .65
DllC. --.. -............ $16(1.31
SALi '4301 21
P ICE ............ •
NEW 1971
MONTE CARLO
Tln!ed 9l11ss, air, ritmOle te.tr YIN
m!rror, 1'1-150 Turbo, pOWff 11eertna.
wlllle Wiiii, rldlo, 4lU l.erlll 1Ll4'714
LIST ••. -............. __ $4449.11
DISC ......................... 5310."
SALE $406811 PRICE .......... ..
NEW 1971
CAPRICE COUPE
Tinted gllu, floor man, door guardt.
¥lnJ1 root,'"' wl-... d~""'"· 1lr. rtmoll mirror, v1n11v l'lllr•or, XIO-a
turbo, pO'Nt:f l!eerinO, wt!lllo w1llt.
l!Ndllte dtlllY, fl Olo, HltO~•r, bufnl>-
er 11u1rd1. llJI 5er11! \Cll't~~J
LIST •.. -................. _ $5243.40
DISC. _ ...................... $700.57
SAL! '4544" PRICE .......... ..
NEW 1971 CHEY.
'Ii TON TRUCK
Floor boarcl, Iron! 1!abllller, *""'
front 1Pf1nv, heavr re1r IPl'inv, 11u-
'"· l1tl Slfl•I 1Zi25012.
LIST ~·-----------------$3165..41
DISC:. --···-.......... -... S454.7t
SAL! '271061
PRICE .......... _
NEW 1971 CAMARO
Tlntld glan, floor .,..19, .,_ ou•f'lk.
11r, v1111!y mlrrPr, console, -bra~n. 14-JJO lurbo, power 1!.erlnt,
wh l!t wet11, whHI cov1r1. rfdleo.
l!'fll trim. J110 Sarl1I IUOll'Ol.
LIST -·-·--$4370.U DISC. _ .. _ .............. SA93.8J
SALi '387702 PRICE ........... .
NEW 1971 NOYA
FOUR DR. SEDAN
tl11!rd 11111, dOOr ou&rds, •I•, ,. mo11 ea<1lro! rtar mlrror1 p0-..rdli.c bra~"' PQw!f' tlHrlng, wneet ct>vtn.
radio, 10...:11! lntH IOr, txlerlor d-,
111rb0hydr1rm11c. :)2l1 Strlel IWllo 7'11.
LIST _ ........... _, ..... $370l.U
DISC. _ ...... -.. -··· $214.11
SALE $342424 PRICI! ........... .
NEW 1971
CHEVELLE MALIBU
Tinted 111111, door OU1•d1, air, ~
dlllC, 2d·l10, l>QWlr l lNrll'IG, whJ1-
Wlllll, wl!HI cov1r1, r.il!O, J115 Seri.I
\LI~
LIST ...... -... ---·--·· $4115.35 DISC ...... -................. $406.05
SAL! '3779'° PRICE .......... ..
NEW 1971
EL CAMINO
Ollux1 111111, lll'lll!d OllH, llr, %711-.UO,
turbo, paw•r 11...,.!n;, wllllt w1lll,
clecll, radio, r•lly wllMlt. •7l Strltl
ILUllH,
LIST ~----·---··-·---... $4354.H DISC. _, ............... -... $561.75
SAL• '3785's Pf?IC:! .....
NEW 1971 CHEV.
'I< TON PICKUP
Tl~lld gltH, llOOI' bolrrd, frt 1lablf.
l11r. llHVV Ir! 1prlr19, .... ...,. rttr wino, •uwlllary -11111. J.fO turtio,
pwr tlllllrlng, tool and •low•O• ~
tun 1o1m M1t, pauon s.w1a1 1260l1n,
LIST .. -----·---$4159.65
DISC. ·--··---·-··•"·· .. ~ Nit.fl
SALi '350041 PR ICE -........ .
SERVICE . PARTS · USED CAR CLEARANCE WllT'I
LAR•IST lllYICI
DIPT,
Open Sit. I AM· Noon
MON. 7 A.M. to 9 P.M.
MS. thru FRI. 7 A.M. TO S P.M.
OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF USED CARS
PRICED TO SELL
DURING THIS BIG
AT THE 17TH STRE.E T
lUR'N Of r ~ANfli ANA
Ff.lE£:WAY
5 DAY MEMORIAL DAY SALE
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.. OAlLY PILOT Wedntsday, ~,ay ?' I Wtdnesday, May 26, 1971 PILOT.AOVERTIS!R ft
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DICK WILSON SAYS: OPEN ENTIRE MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND •.•••
FRIDAY ~ SATURDAY -SUND.AY -MONDA_Y -UNTIL 10 P.M.
BRA ND OR
NEW & 9'1 CAB O VE R
Complete camper package equipt "''ith stove, sink, icebox, etc. No. 105467, Set. No. F25ARK261039 Self contained unit with side door entra nce, steinless 1teel
t ink, renge, oven, hood, 9es/ elec. refr.ig., hot & cold water,
shower, aquemati c toilet, walnut panelin9 th ruo ut. plenty of
electric outlets, complete hom e away from home. #90554• $
$250~~~~ $116 58
PAYMENT MO.
1250 is the toWll dn, p)'fllt. ond $116,58 is total mo, p~mt. incl. lol(, '71 lo<tnH & .. ~("""'"Oft
cpfll'.uedit 1vr 36 "'°'· 0.ftrT.d p)'flll. ptt.t $446.U in<I. o!I fllllll'l<t "'*vei. lox ... 7110;111111,or if you
pre/• lo ,..,. cost!; tole> 'g~ price i$ $3761 . .0 incl soles !GK. '71 li<ema. AHl«JAI. Pt:RCEHTAGE RATt ,,.
FULL PRICE
tn us•o f· k 6 '
FASTBACK V-8,
factory air,
power steering,
radio , heat er,
whitewalls.
(955CEK)
FULL PRICE
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'64 DODGE 440 ~IOTOP YI, A11to, Power
Steering, Rodio, heoler,
(OYC-391)
T DAY
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BRAND NEW 1971
' j J ~i\i 0 l
EASY TERMS AVAILABLE
GOOD SELECTION
' I s ,)
HARDTOP. With
V-8, factory air,
automatic,
power steering ,
radio, hea ter.
(690-6BW)
FULL PRICE
I' • ... --~ "" H t It"' ... .. " ~
..... . ,} J_ -
' SPECIAL
SALE
PRICE .
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WAS ·$2695
( ! •. a~·::: .... -~.;· .. -......... ~ ............... ~ . l&::: ,..,.__:: ~ ~?: SHOWCASE DEALERS SPECIAL
· ·. • THIS WEEKEND ONLY
BRAND
NEW
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CAB OVER
CAMPER
Vocolion equipt, wi1h
icebox, s!of,, 1ink.
Outen siied bftl, tun 1,
~eor 11uoran1e e .. #
113897.
BRAND NEW SAYE
LANDAU
WITH BROUGHAM •
INTERIOR
full1 equfptd with factory oil", tn1ist0m0tic
tron1 .. pow« 1!ttring/broli11/Window1' 6-WO)'
:ieol1AM(FM11""" with pow« onttMO, white·
woll1&muthrnor1.(Strial l l.194H106332) ....,,.:
11.'J . ~
Immediate Delivery FROM FACTORY LIST
'68f P~P. ~.lP. .•.•. ••t•. tn1111., htt•" •Ir
PfS, P/WYl•yl re•f, LI·
t Htt 243 ACf
'66 FORD Gal . 500 2 door Hardtop. V-1. fo,lo·
ry oir, 011to, power 1t1ering.
l•~C·391)
'6 7 ~~~~~ J~.!_on,. r
(V92543) -1:s -,_ ..
'65 MUSTA NG2+2
Y ... rMt., 1Mtt1r. (NGX924). '68 ~~~~~!.~ .. ~;,., tORtOlt. (WIJ701 ).
'68
Cougar
XR7 Hdfp,
V-1, focf. •ir, •111•,
~ p.•tr., J• •rll1., 111r10
t1 1 wit h r•d lo.(Wlt774)
'69
WAGON ' Y·I, outo, rodio, heoler,
(29t.-DDX) '65 FORD Squ ire
10 PASSENGER WGN. VI, tac-
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" '69Mustang Grandtl '~
V-1, ••t1, retllo, hMtt r, { •
wtllt1w1ll1 wit• wire-~..,.
whttl '·'''"· CJ47-CDMI '67 !~~.~!.'?..~~ ... a
& •••r ether tl•l•x• 4+' ~
1xtre1. 111161. ~
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T-BIRD LANDAU '70 ''"""'"'·"''"";" ~i; cr1h••-t1e, J•••r V
s11t1 & whulows, Ottit r
41i1x1 xtre1, (lltAtC) ·
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