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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-06-03 - Orange Coast Pilot--.. ···----·-· ... .. -------~~/ -. -.,
r
-NB Girl!J Nixon Kin!J
Tells Welfare Plight
THl,JRSDAY AFT ERNOON, JUNE 3, 1971
un
Hoffa May
Relinquish
, Long, Reig;n
WASHINGTON (AP) -Teamsters
Presklent James R. Hoffa has sent word
from his prisna cell that he will finally
relinquish his 14 year reign over the giant
labor union , informed sources said. today.
The tough, SS..year-old Jioffa. whose
atormy career a! chief of !he 2 million
member union ended in prison four years
ago, reportedly endorsed the union's
general vice president, Frank E. Filzsim.
mons, Ul succeed him.
Hoffa, serving 13 years for JUry
tampering and mail fraud in lhe
Lewisburg, Pa., federal penitentiary, had
exhausled innumerable legal avenues in a
fruilless effort to win his freedom in time
to-run for reelection next month before
finally giving in and agreeing to step
aside .
High union sources had speculated for
monlhs that the government would not
re.lease him until he agreed to step down
from !he presidencv of the union lhat
Y•ields pcl\l'erful control in the nalion 's
trucking industry.
ll was no! immediately clear whether
Hoffa agreed to resign before the
Teamsters convention opt!ning in Miami
Beach .July f>. thus making Fitzsimmons
union president immediately. or v;helher
Hoffa will hold office until the new elec·
lion:
Either v•a y, Fitzsimmons -handpi ck·
td by Hoffa .11s his sland in .11t the last
convention rive years .11go shorlly before
Hvffa v.•ent to prison -is regarded a
cinch for endorsement by the dozen other
Teamsters vice presidents.
"There's a new frank Fitzsimmons."
tr.aid one source, referring to Fitz.
simmons· obvious joy over Hoffa's
decisien.
Hoffa had kepi other Teamsters
leaders wailing for Lhe decision up to· the
union's last executive board meeting in
Hollywood. Fla .. last month. Hoffa sent
word then he wanled more time in 11 last
bid , for freedom on the basis of a
purported deposition from the chief pro-
gecution witness, Edward Grady Perun,
whose testimony sent him to prison.
Pary.in denied making t.bc alleged deposi-
tion recanting much of his testimony.
~
We athei'···--
The clouds wlll roll by early Off
Friday, followed by fair Kkies and
temperatures ranging from es de-
grees "along· lhe ,lhoc~ne to 7f
further inlarid. -.
lNSW E TODA. 'l' ' Heroin ad4ici 11Jlto WO• up to
75 bags o dot1 at CO!t o/ $750
leavts film ru final warntnQ to
11oungster1. Story. Page .5.
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oun on u a anc
• • • • • • • • • •
• I She's a Dad
I ..
Sup erv1sors 01( Irvine
• ,_
Yep. the National Father's
Day Committee has named
Mrs. John Bruce Dodd, 89,
Spokane. Wash., "Father of
the year." She is the founder,
or mother. of Father's Day,
which. girls, will be observed
June 20 for the 61 st time.
Countian Victim
In 3 Southland
Trunk Slayings
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 !ftt 0-41f r 1i.1 Sl1H
•
A mysterious multiple murder case in
which a La Habra man i!I one of three
victims -with possibly more bodies to
be found -was unfolding today in l..Ds
Angeles.
~ The principal suspec t, already jailed in
a separate rape and robbery c11se. was
scheduled for arraignment al mid·morn-
ing on thfee counts of homicide.
Detectives wen! keeping a ~hroud of
secrecy over how John P. Hendrix~ 35,
was linked to gunshot slayings of wo
security guards and a retired-rl.ilway
clerk.
Victims -aU 11lain and stuffed into car
trunks and ln ane case a pipt.up truck bed
-are-Eugene Bealer, 35. of 500 W. Olln--
da Ave .. ·1.a Habra. Le.land Webb, 3$, of
Los Angeles and Charla Hayes, 71, ef
i;,.81• Rock.
The invesl)Jatk>n w11 being handled by
homicide detectives at the LAPD's
N,wton Division, who hinted addlttonal
mW'der victims may be found.
Bealer, last seen May 2~, was found In
the. ~k of his car which was parked In
Hendrix.' driveway when police went to
the residence Wednetday after Mmebow
~ting him to the cues.
SeCunty .guard Webb, reported mtsafng
I 0 by,hls wile......,.,•••• Wllnf 14,..,.,. •p lt!(ln~,~ ~JOI> a.e•
iil#nelori wa 'i~i>\JM in i'.nlllcle.
Web!J lllld,llOon lwlce, 1""llid and
laid out in ·1a11: p· p truck ~\*f. ln-
Yestigirtors saicf. ..., I~ ,., ii'
Cone<~ about her eldtrly' nu.bt'nd
Who vaniihed May 29, lt1ye1'Jlfe filed
a miss ing pcrsom report a friend.~
later noticed the couple '• car plll-ked near
lbe L'8 Angeles raJlrCad yards.
Police said he bid also bMn 1hol lwke
and ·robbed.
Questioned today 1boul the pos.s1bllit)'
of more crtm discoveri.. a police
spokesman said he knew of none so far .
"Northern Qlllfornl• 13, Southt:rn
Cal\fornla 3," he remarked of t.M grim,
multi.fl• murder acore tf tht p11t week.
Low Cost Housing Bid
Firm Gets
Board Nod
Amid Gripes
By JACK BROBACK
01 l'i'it Ot llY ,llM Iliff
Despite the opposition of a school
disLrict. a PTA group and a homeowners
association, the Orange County Board of
Supervisor& Wednesday unanimously ap.
proved thl! Irvine Com pany's first at·
lmlpl Bl low cosl housing.
The plan calls for 280 low cost rental
units on 14 Beres just liOUth of the San
Diego Freeway, o~ mile east of Jam-
boree Boulevard and bordered on the
west by the future e:r:tens ion of Harvard
Avenue . flood control channels now
border the project On !~e east and west.
Specifically, what county supe rvisors
approved was a rone change lO allow
apartments in lht .11rea.
Jim Taylor, Irvine Company director of
general planning administration, said the
prpposal was !he first of several looking
lO~rd the goal of 20 percent of the cen·
tral Irvine . land development to be
devoted l,p auch low cost apartment!.
He sail!' the apartments would be one.
two and three-bedroom and rent for $100
to $150 a month.
Ht defended the location. attacked
vigOrously by officials of tht San Joaquin
SctK>ol District
"This location was chosen because it is
1 natural e:r:tenst)n of the tstablished
University Park ctmmunity, within walk·
lng dlstance of a llbopplng center, llandY
to the freeway end .near the Irvine
Industrial Complex," Taylor uplairied.
"Some 40 percent of the 19,000
employea ln the industrial romple:r: are In
the earning bracket for such low ~t
housing," he added.
"Thi• is a claulcel case ol poor plan-
ning and spot ion!," 'exclaimed David
King. director of annlng facillt.lu for
the San Joaquin Sc · I Distrlcl
• "1111 one and _1 qurter miles from the
nearest achoo! ....i. • University Park
elementary -and would req uire bu.sing,"
KJng conUnued. ''Sites for a new school
tuggt1t.ed by the Irvllle COmpany are oot
aa.Ulfactory."
He 11ld the acbool dlatrtct belleVea the
trvlne Company should break the low
coet houslnc tnto ~fm&ller Wllts in
eslabUihe4 areu. He -.dded lb1t ?Umping
•II the loW-ooat rent.en. who are
nonnally "'l' ttlllllep~ In one place
would be bad for tht" tchool which would
accommodate them.
RlcMrd Ke111, reprttenling tht Council
of Communities of Irvine , opposed the
projflct beeaUll ol. the he1vy load It plac·
ed on the IChoolt and lhe total lack of
public transportation ~r the lower In·
come people. He urgtdithat furthtr study
be Riven toward locatlna 11 betttr site or
1ite11 .
Keot wu joined by Wayne Ch1rk, prul·
JS.. IRVINE, Pt .. II
llo•pilnll:ed
Comedian Joe E. Lewis. whose
racy jokes centered on booze,
was reported in a diabetic
coma today in New York's
Roosevelt Hospital.
Gun Discove red
On Y uha Ra nch
Near Death Site
From Wire Senilct1
YUBA CITY -An autoinalic pbtol has
been found on the Jack L. Sullivan ranch,
site of moat of the gaves of the 23 vie·
Ums of 1 mass slaying, It was '!earned to-
day.
The pistol, a 9-mlllimeler au19matic,
and 20 shells found with i~. were sept to
lhe it.ate crlme laboratory it SacramentO
for ba llisllcs te&ll.
th court documents 1upporting the
charge agaln11t suspect Juan V. Corona,
the shertff1 office said it had found 11.X
n\n&-mlllimeter shells in his 1'11 p111el
truck.
Kuthorit.ies lnvesUgeting I.he Crilly
crime never have tnd1ca·ted dtM ., of
the victims died from buUet wotmdt'. The
bodlt1 dl1oovered along the Feather
Rive r h~d belil hacked ind 11'.bbed.
Aerial photogr1phs taken with an fn.
rr1red came-a were belng p:'OCeseed to
help offlei1ls determine whether there
are more bodlet burled in the Itta of~
crime. It wu expected to t1ke two .daiys
to _pl'OCf:IS the phofoltaph1. SJM!rlff Roy 0. Whiteaker, who says he
la convln<td rnon bodies wUI be found,
\YUBA OITY·, Pt .. I)
'
Newport Girl
Nixon's Cousin
Asks Assistance
'
By TERRY COVILLE
Of I~• Ot lly '11•1 Sii/i
A Newport Beach girl who claims she
is "sick. weak and on welfare" in the San
Francisco area says she wrote her second
cousin -President Nixon -for help .
The plight of Kathy Timberlake. 24, a
1965 graduate of Corona del Mar High
School, came to light when Bay Area
newspape rs and tel evision st a ti o n s
received carbon copies of the letter.
The Whitt House confirmed that Kathy
Timberlake is a second cousin to the
President, but said no such letter had
been received.
Kathy's parents. Dr. and Mrs. P. F.
Tim berlake. live at 1921 Irvine Boulevard
in Newport Beach. He practices medicine
in Costa Mesa.
"She's never wrllten home lo ask for
help. She wanted to be independent,"
Kathy 's mother said this morning.
According to wire service reports. the
girl's Jetter began : "I don't know if you
remember me. I'm yoor second cousin,
Kathy Timberlake. My grandmother b1
Edith Milhous Timberlake. I'm writing
you to tell you my life's existence bas
become too unbearable. I live in
California, Sonoma County, in 1 town
called Cotati. You may remember my
brot her Philip who sbol himself a few
years back.
"He along with me have had difficult
times handling our existence. I c11n 't
work O( do anything because of my emo-
tional }late. J'm going to the mental
health service in Santa Ro11a almost
every day. but It doesn't help me much. I
don 't eat right cause I don 't ever feel ltke
It so I'm always sick and weak. and the
· ftlfare>-peoplt•glve 1 very ·•malt am aunt ,•
to eat ind get my necesaltlf.'I.
"BecatQC of my stale of _ ·being
eve ryone Lakes advantage of me In-
cluding men. J was married for awhile,
but my husband r1n off with some rock
anti roll band. 1be only money I pt Is t27
11 month from eounty aid, I ain't exist on
this much but no one cares If J should
lad!.tway \ ... "
" ••. if t11rre la an)'thlnc.you c1n do,
please help me. Possibly a letttr. lo the
weU1re people would help my exlst11nee.
Maybe you can help me. It'• not too much
i. a.<k." \ •
· "We11 ·try to get ln"tduch •Ith her 11
800f'I as we Can ," Mrl. Tlmberl1ke laid
today. ·~sht dl>Mn't have .a .phone thert.''
Kathy repoi1e(Uy lives In 1 fading white
frame house behind 1 tavern named "The
Eight Bell" In Cotati. SM went to one
semeater at Orange Co11t COlle&e before
leaving the Harbor Area.
"She's cert.11inly welcome hack here!'
Jl.1rs. Timberlake said. ''I think this is aJJ
very tragic."
Dr. Timberlake told reporters, "She
was around here the first of the year. She
was sick with hepatitis. and then wen•
back lo San Francisco and I haven't
heard much about her since. I think she
created her own problems. and ahe'1
going to have to solve them.''
Timberlake is a first cousin to the
JJresidenl.
Another California cousin of the
president's was in the news last February
for being on welfare. Phillip Mllhoos, M,
of Grass Valley is a first cousin. He eel
his wife, Anna, f7, said they received
welfare and social security benefits and
had been aided by the Calironila Rural
Legal Assistance.
Wanted Man Held
With Companion
On Drug Charge
A policert\in:1 r11COgnltlOJ1 or ~ wanted
·man led t.o a brief pprsuil·in Qnta Meaa
Wednesday in which dangerour:'dnap ~d
marijuana were allegedly flun1 fro.D tp•
car window.
One suspect was arreated where .the
car finally balled in the 3lll block of S.n-
to Thomas Str'eet, while the leoond. "" found hiding in a perked lnl<k tlt.r
all~ge<fly fleeing on fOQ!.
Lynn T. Clark. 2$, ol ~ $. Tuatln :!r• ..
Orange, w11 bOOked on· f\lapldoa ot
poa.esSlon of dMifroua t1n4S and '*1-
juana, plus four trafJk: •~"ant. W su~plclon ~ sbte prllon Plfblt vlolti&km.
DaMy E. Simmona, 211, ol ISOl?t Moun!.
Jackson St., f~ntain Vallq, WI• char&··
e<f only b•' t!iti <1nJi counts. •
Officer em S.Chtel said be spolttd
Clark at 2:30 p.m .. at Santa Aria and Del
M11 avenues and aave ch~e.
A. housewife found a b•g of whlta
·po"'·der believed to be the potent
stimulant called s~. d~1rded ef the
scene, while Officer Bechtel aald brfooild
1nothtr bag containing a mtrtjUau
clgareu1.
I
•
s Ttu.sday, J11nt 3, l9n
'
,. '
'
'
DAILY PILOT 1""-19 11, L .. PIYftt
ESl ANCIA HIGH TEACHER FOURNIER llN GLASSES, RIGH T! DOUBLES IN BRASS
Kenton Ba nd Vi•its and Kid, Le1rn Ho w Musi c is Made Without Amplifiers
25 Stan Ke11ton Mu sicians
'Beat' Around Co staM es a
By TERRY COVILLE
Ot l'he Olli' l"ilOI S,.11
St.an Kenton almost came back to
Balboa Wednesday.
He stopped eight beats short -in
Co!lta Mesa.
The leader hi1nself "'as absent -still
recovering from recent surgery -but
hi s 25 musicia ns stopped off in the af-
ternoon al Estancia High School. then
played e concert at Orange Coast College
\Vednesday night.
~1usic students al Estanc1a packed the
school forum and greeted Kenton's group
\\'ilh a standing ovation afte r the band
gave a 15-minute n11nl-concert. Thi'
sc:hool's band director. Pete Fournier. sat
in oo trombj:)ne.
\Vorking in casual clothes, the band
members vtenl through the short. brassy
concert then split inlo instruction groups
to help the students.
The Est.ancia visil. coupl('d \l"ith the
evening co ncert. v.·as part of a
I\"ewport-Mesa Unified School District
project ll.'hich brought a big name band
F rom l'age 1
IRVI NE ...
dt>nl of the University Park PTA . He said
tile project did nnt conforn1 to the Irvine
f,leneral plan for the area and v.'ould
ol'ercrov.d lhe schools.
Lone speaker backing lhe company \\'BS
f~len Woodmansee. representing the
Irvine Hou!'iing Co uncil. He said he v.·as
i.urprised at the CCI opposition as he had
attended all meetings of that group and
had not heard a stand taken. He callt'd
the projecl " a natural eii:tension of
lJniver5tly Park '
Supervisor Ronald Casper~ noted that
!he super\isors 11erc in a dilemina . '"\Ve
\\Ant lr\·ine to pro\'ide low cost housing
bu! "·e arr fou!ini;! up the :1:choo! di strict.
I agrt'e that the project is isolated on the
edge of a built up area and should be 1n·
tr,i:rate-d bul ii is needed so r move a~
prov al."
OU.NII COAST
DAILY PILOT
OllMGf. CO.UT PUl l llHING COMPANY
l•~•ri N. W•H
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S. Cl St .Al t1,alW!tt
f1k•' I H 4fM4Jt
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... (aft ...... C.lffwlll.I. lllMc:rff'I~ "' "°'""' •.ti -"'!11 W N II •. 1t ....,,...,, ml/IN!'Y I Mll••ll'9ftt, u.n -"'"'·
and clever instructors for only $2.500.
At the Estancia forum there \Yas loud
applause to match the loud jazz n1u s1t._
Kids lined the walls and listened to the
slow beat break into e11r shattering tones.
·'These kids didn't know a hand can
make thal mu ch noise \~i!hout <in
amplifier,"' observed one g r a y i n &
teacher. obviously ov1•r ~O. <is he
reminisced abou1 past Kenton ~p
pearances at Balboa 's R c n de v o us
Ballroom. v.·hich burned down Aug. 7,
1966.
There was a saxophone solo played
above an undercurrent of Latin rhthvm.
The sax player sported a long beard.· the
envy of several students.
A trumpet player :stepped lorv.·ard 1n a
~v.·eal shirt. bcrmuda shorts. whi te socks
and tenn is shoe:;. \\'i\11 his che<'kS pu!lcd
out. his fingers rippled O\'er the 1run1pet
valves like they wert' operating a
ma chinr gun. His face turned red.
The kids loved it.
Kenton·s band played '·\1cArLhur
Park.·· a popular song. and gained even
louder applause. Big band ja1.1 isn 't so
far from Blood, Sweal and Tears.
\Vhen the n1usic stopped, studrnts and
band me1nbers \Ven t 10 t11ffercnt roon1s
according to lnstrurncnts they played .
John Von Ohlen. the dnunrncr. ;ind
Re:n1on Lopez. the conga player, laui.:ht
onlookers the HOie tricks of a 1iru-
fesslonal on percussion instrun1cnt s
The saxopbone players spent !heir time
an.~v.·rring questinns.
.. \\'h\• aren't there anv clannets 1n the
band?.; asked one younii:ster , apparcnl!y
de~·o1cd to the instrumcnL
"Stan hate:i; clarinets."' replied Chuck
Carter.
"IJO\I" much do ~ou play'..'"' another
(jUest1on.
.. Ofttn se1·en nigh\s av.eek. \\"r r;11 ely
rehear~e e:..cept with nev.· music:'•
.. !lo\,,. long to grow )O~r b£iar11~··
".<\bo ul a )ear."
Carter explained lhal l\l'nlon·s band
only began full1imt> again last .Jul~· aflrr
a five.year layoff v.·hile l\enton took care
of his children following 8 di \'Orte.
Trun1pel pla~er Mike Vax :i;tnr1\cd
listeners by rtvealing lhat follr hours on
a jalz !rurnpet equalled right hours on a
construction job in energy spen1.
"lt"s a tout!h instrun1enl. There's n1ore
pressure. resistance, in it than anv other
inst rument." he ~ii:plained. "So iake it
easy \1·hen you learn. You have to build
up to it . just hke physical ""·ork outs."'
Carter ended his session with a
description of his absent leader.
"Stan is very right -beautiful man.
1'.fost band leaders are a drag, but ne·s
greaL ··
North American,
Collins F ina nce
Agreement Set
A n1anagemt'nl agreement under which
North America n Rockwell Corporation
v.'ould provide additional finan ci ng for
Collins Radio Company and In turn would
gain control of the Collins board was an·
nounred \Vednesday by the chairmen of
lhe boar<b of directors of the l\l'O com-
panies.
Under lht agreement, ~·hich must yet
be approved by both boards and by the
Collins shareholders, Norlh American
\\'OUld purch&M> $35 million of a new ir;sue
-0f Collins con\·ertlblc preltTted stock and
v.·ould have warranL'I to purchase an ad·
diUonal $30 million of Collins common
stock.
A price of $18.~ per share would be
eslablished for both lype:oi of ~tock .
As part Of the plan, Nl\R "'Ould have
lhe right to elect a majorily on the
Collins board of d1reclors, Lhrough Its
stock purchases .
A North Amt'rlc8n spo kesm an sa id the
lt'!ntative agre.1nent probably will be
presented to the boards or lhe two firn1s
for U1clr approv al ~·ithin a n1ont h.
General Miss ing
A board Plane;
Co unty Scoured
Special to lhe 0 1•IL\" PILOT
t Hl 1'\0 -An air search for a retired
Air Force general and \\"orld \\'ar II
hero fighter pilol v.+iose plane is missing
in th<' rugged Santiago Peak area near
El Toro v.'as canceled today, due to
heavy cloud c:uver.
(;round patrols \\·ers hunting the
CeSlina 182 flown by 1'.faj. (;en . Richard
0 . Hunziker. S~. of Carpinteria, centering
on the Orange-Riverside county line area.
A second person aboard the cra[L "'llS
not 1dentifietl by the CAP. v.•hich sent
three separatr ground parties into the
ru _gged. hrushy area.
The plane has been mi ssing sinre
~aturday nn a flight from Caltxico to
Santa Barbara.
The missing nier was a fighter pilot
1lecorated for action O\'er Africa , Italy
and France, serving in peacetime 1o1·ith
the Strategic Air Command.
He was based at Offut AFB. Omaha,
f\eb., and also Nor1on AF"B, San
Bernardino, prior lo retirement.
f 'rom l'age 1
YU BA CITY . • •
\1 <1s force<i lo withdraw his crews after
1hev started digging at one "indentation"'
:r-nnilar to those that ha1·e turned out lo
be crude gra\'e:>.
TI1e crews found the ground still too
\\f'I.
So far , 23 transients. farm \l'Orkers ancl
tlnlters have been found h11 cked and
!'1;1bbed to dea\h in crude gr;l\·es in
(lr!·hards along the Feather Ri\rr.
.Juan V. Corona . :17 a \1rx 1can born
farin labor contract or v.1th a poor com-
1nand of English . was formall~· arraigned
1n Justic e Court \\'ednesday on io eounts
of murder -the IO bodies exhumed by
!ht' timt> he was t!rst taken lo court one
\\"et•k belort:.
··rd like tn v.et i1 o\·cr ;i11d hr dont" ll'ith
it." \Vhitca ker said as he discussed the
euntinuing searc:h for j!"raves1tcs "I
bl'lit>ve there are ~Oml' bodies out there
lh:>\ '1'ill ne\'er be f1)11od ."
The sheriff is using infrared aerial
photoi:traphy of lhe orrhards In an flffort
lo spot areas ll'·herl' lhe soil has bePn
1tisturbed. Results ::.hould be a1 ailable
Friday.
1\nolher potential gra\'esite slill i~
under v.·ater and can"! be probed until 1l
rlrirs. the shl'riff said.
At Wednesday's elosed arraignment
bero~ustice Court Judge J. J. Hankins
the proceedings \1:ere related to Corona
hv a SpHnish langua~e interpreter. Raoul
·rharra. a local florist.
Hankins asked : "Do you understand
v.·h11t you are being charged with ?"
Ybarra Teplied for Corona : ··f\o . He
<loes not under&tand. ·•
Hankins : .. All rii;thl. You hn\'e been
ch;irgcd. ~-tr. Corona, with count one. a
\'iolation or Section 187 of the pen;il co<le.
In thaL vou did murtler one Kenneth
Edw;ird \\'hileacre. ''
\"barra: ··He don't know."
Hankins: .. Well. does he understand
what he's <·harged with?"
Ybarra: .. Yes.''
Then public defl'nder Roy Van den
Heuvel told thP judge he did not have lo
read all 10 C'OUnL!i and told him Corona
v.·ould plead innocent to all 10.
Hankins set a preliminary hearing ror
June 16 at \Yhich time he sflid he: ~·ould
rit>cide. on the basis of evidence presented
by the prosecution. whether Corona
should be held for a Superior Court I.ria l.
Corona. dres.~ed in a white shirt, tie
nnd blull grttn suit. "·as returnetl to the
Yuba County jatl across-the Feather
River in t<.farysvllle where he visited ror
un hour with his wife. Gloria, and his
mother . Canditla .
I IP is heing held in ~farysvllle because
-.. l!.s j<1il f;icihtes ~re nlore secure .
•
Hanoi Nixes
POW Deal
By S. Viet s
PARIS (UPI) -Hano i cancelltd the
return of 13 sick. and' "·ounded prisoners
of war to Narth Vietnam today after they
h¥d boarded a ship Ill Da Nang for the
brief voyage to the North. Both IIanoi
Jn<l the Viet C-Ong also h\rdened their
Une toward the peace talk.s.
In almoi;L identical statements the
North Vietnam('se and Viet Cong
delegat's told the !15th session of the
talkll that a qui cir: deadline for to Lal li .S.
troop withdrawal from Vietnam and
overthrow of the Saigoo government were
inseparable and crucial conditions for
peace.
Shortly afterwards, lhe official llanoi
1nfonnation Agency, AVI, said in Paris
that llanoi v.·ould not accept the return of
the prisoners and that it 1o1·ould have a
further announce1nent later.
South Vielnan1 offered originally to
re.turn 570 prisoners of war but said lite
Red Cross after la\.lr:.ing to 1he prisoners
fo und that only· 13 wanted to go ho1nc.
UPI correspondent Stewart Kellerman
reported from abo ard the repa triation
ship Up shur th.at the shi p lefl Da Nang,
Soull:L Vielnam, loda)'. to oe.l \be-priswlecs...
ashore by .small boats in No rth Viet·
nam.
'T'he A \II announcement said North
Vietnam. taking notice -0! the 13 figure
instead or 570 it 1hought \\'ere going
homt . ''\'igorously condemned this dis-
honest maneuv.er of the United States
and the puppet regime ·in Saigon."
There v.·ere other developments to<lay
in Southeast AsiA:
-The t:niled States for lhe first time
has given South Vietnamese troop~
17$rnn1 artillery. !he most powerful
1o1·eapon yet provided the gO\'ernment
under the Vietnamizalion proiram. ac-
cording to militarv source~.
-l\i1 litary sourCes said ll1<' South Viet-
nan1ese force driven out of the Cam-
bodia n I01\n of Snuol t.fonday ran into a
Com1nuni!l an1bush that raised their
casualties in the five.day battle to' nearly
1,000 rnen killed, wounded and missing.
-South Vietn amese rangers a n d
paratroopers v.·ere driven off by intense
antiaircraft fire as they tried to nv to the
relief or f ire Base S in the ·cen tral
Highlands.
-Helicopters air-dropped supplies to.
day to elite American-trained Cambodian
troops counter-attacking North Viel-
nan1('se forces \\'ilhin rocket range of the
Can1bod1 an capital or Phnom Penh.
lr•inc i\l an Ki Ued
As Au to Flips O•er
APmard Piazza. 46. of 18~1 Racine
Dr1re. lr\'ine. v.·as killed earlv lhis mnrn-
ing 11 hen his car .,.,·ent out Of control a
few blocks fron1 his home.
The coroner's office said Piazza died a!
1 40 a .111. wh en the car ol'erturned at
1·ur!le Rock Drive and Grossn1onl
Avenue. He v.·as alone in the vehicle.
Fast Co1npany
Lobby ist cit Top Secr et Mee t
BOSJ(}N (UPI) -former presidential press secretary Pfl'rre Salinger
said a seaule businessman accidentally got into a meeting of the National
Security Counci l in 1961. received a top-srtret briefing on lht Berlin criJis and
a greeting from Pre!ident John F. K~y before be was dLscovered.
Both the names and the situation have been changed in Saling er's novel,
'·On Instructions of My Government." v.·hich the former press secretary di&-
cusse<l \\'ednesoay at the convention of the Amflrican Book Sellers' ASJOCia·
lion. But Salinger said the bas!t of the incident was true.
He said the unidentified bus inessman belong to the Air Force Nation-
al Security Ad\'isory Council. a private advisory organization, and had come
to Washington to lobby for more aerospace appropriations. He arrived late and
called lhe secretary of the ch.airman of t.he Joint Chiefs o( Staff, Gen. Curtis
E. Le~1ay .
"He asked her where the meeting v.·as and she said lhe \\lhite House ."
Salinger sa id. "Apparently she only hea rd National Security Council. The man
said rll never be able to get in t.here and she an5"'ere<I, d-On't v.·orry. ru get
your name on Ute list."
Salinger said the businessman was met by presidential aides and HCUr-
ity offi cers and he got into lhe mteling .. just as the ligh.ls went out and th ey
started to project top secret slides and information on t.he Be rlin crisis.''
The man realiied be was In tbe wrong meeting "'hen he sav.· Lf:~1ay,
the President. the head of the CIA ancl tM secretary of state. Salinger aaid.
In fact, Kennedy walked by him at the end of the briefing , patted him on the
knee and said •·Thingi are pretty tough today."
. He was di1COve«d shortly aft.er lhe Pre!lident left. OfficiJls solved the
security breach, Salinger said, by requiring the .man, a retired Air Force
colooel, to telephone Washington every JS minutes and 1'11 officials wbere he
was.
(The New York Ti~s identified the businessmt n as Elroy McCaw, a
V.'f'althy Seattle television executive \1•ho died last year).
Phon y'Kocky' Gets Loan
BELVEDERE tU PI\ -lie said his
name '>'"SS Oa\"id R. Rockefeller Ill and
he needed a $3,SOO loan from a bank here
b«ause his $3 million in asset~ weer tied
up in business deals.
Police said \\'ednesday his naine \j,"as
indeed Rockefeller. but only because he
had legally changed it fron1 D.iivid
Hubach after filing fo r bankruptcy in
Cle\'eland. Ohio. last October.
Pol1«e said .. Hockefeller"' gained entrv
inll'J prominent bay area social circle's
with the n1aglc of lhP Rockl'feller naine
anrt persuadrd a Mar in Count y socialite
to cosign the loan a~ Crocker-Citizens
Uank.
Aller the bank learned of Rockefeller"s
Blaze Damages
Knott's Facility
Fire \\'ednesday night destroyed the
.Jungle !~land office and workshop and
threatened nearby lndependencl' and
Heritage halls at Knotrs Berry farm.
Buena Park firemen said the blazt was
reported at 8:3.1 p.m. and controlled in .10
minutes. In addition to the building,
numerous v.·ooden animals which do!led
the i!;land ll''ere damaged. J'>:o live
•tnima ls v.ere injured, according to
fir(' men.
F'ire off icials today had no ei;1ima te on
the loss in n1oney and are investigalin&
the origin.
true financial status. it tried unsuc·
t·essfully to rl'X"all the loan . There has
been no, response from the hand some
young man, who listed a fancy Tiburon
add ress. and police said t.hey are looking
for him.
Rockefeller came to the San Francisco
area recently and became known in hig h
~ocial circles. referring In "Uncle
Nel50fl" and .. t.:n~le Laurence ."
He told the bank his uncle owned the
Chase ~l anhatt.in Bank in New York aad
!hat his father \l'as with Standard Oil in
Tarrytov.·n. ·N. Y.
Bul a bank official he.came suspicious
after learning that Rockere~er had taken
a job in San Francisco. l1e ~·ondered why
a Rockefe ller would need a pay check
and put a private investigator lo "·ork
\\·ho di~covered the young m a n 's
backgr-0und.
Fan1il y Pa rticipates
At Gr a dua ti on T in1e
C.1-ll!LA VISTA fAPl -This ls grad-
uation time with the En rights, all right.
The Rev. ~ferrill Enright. pastor -0f
tilt Seventh_ Day Adv entist Church. \l'i!J
be a~·arded a foctor of philosophy de-
gree Sundav a !he Californi a Graduate
School of Th{'()logy in Glendale. Calif.
fl is \l'ife receives a bachl'lor of science
from San Diego Slate College_ Son Paul
gets his pre med degree from Lom a
Linda Uni\"ersity. and so 111 Da\•id gets his
high sc:hool diploma from Sweetwater
High.
'
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Huntington n ·eaeh
Fountain Valley Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
'
VOL 6<4, NO. 132, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE 3, 1971 TEN CENTS
Court Action Threatened • Ill Sewer Dispute
By ALAN DCRKIN
01 ""' DlllJ 1'!191 51•11
The Brookhurst Slreet sewer line con-
troversy may wind up in court U the
b&ue is not freSolved to the satisfaction of
merchants and homP!!>wners in Hun-
lin£lon Beach.
If the project is delayed or restudied
the Orange County Sanitation District
m.iy lose a $5.9 million federal grant on
Ufe $7 .4 mi!Lion project.
These jX>ssibilities were raised today as
(loffa May
Relinquish
Long Reign
WASHI NGTON (AP ) -Teamsters
President James R. Hoffa has sent word
:rom his prison cell that he will finally
~alinquish his 14 year reign over the giant
:abor uni on. informed sources said today,
The tough, 53-year-old Hoffa , ~'hose
1Wrmy career as chief of the 2 million
member union ended in prison four years
1go, reportedly endorsed lhe uni_on's
general vice president, Frank E. Fitzsim-
mons , to succeed him.
Hoffa, serving 13 years for jury
:ampering and mail fraud in the
Lewisburg. Pa., federal penitentiary. had
~xhausted innumerable legal avenues in a
fruilless effort to win his freedom in time
'.o run for reelection next month before
finally giving in and agreeing to slep
1aide .
High union sources bad speculated for
mntbs that the government would not
release him until he agreed lo step down
h>m the presidency of the union that
~ields powerful control in the nation's
~ucking induslry.
Jt was not immediately clear whether
Hoffa agreed lo resign before the
Teamsters con vention opening in fi.tiami
Beach ,July 5. thus ma king Fitzsimmons
~ion president immediately. or whether
Holfa will hold office until the new elec-
tion.
Couple Arrested
In Strongarm
Robbery, Assault
Fountain Va lley polict. have arrested a
Westminster woman and a Hunt ington
Beach man in connection with the
gtr ongarm robbery and assault on a 60·
yea r-old Fountain Valley man three
weeks ago.
In custody In Orange County Jail are
Theresa Mae German . 20, of 8410 Well,,
Road. Westm inste r and John Earl
Coa\ney, 28, o[ 21462 Pacific Coast
Highway. ll untington Beach
Detective Sgt. Fred Nour~e said poHce
will seek charges of assault with a deadly
weapon, robbery and grand theft aga inst
th e pair .
Nourse alleges Lhe two were responsi-
ble for an attack May 12 oo Glen Lytle ln
bis home at 17111 Santa Isabel St.
At the lime. Lytle lold police he was
tied up with belts and ti es and gagged
with masking tape. He was usertedly
beaten and lticked while bound and rob.
bed of his wallet.
Police said lhe man's home was
ransacked aod his ca r was stolen.
Lytle was hospitaliied following the In·
eident. suffering a broken nose and frac-
tured collar bone in addition to rnulllple
cuts and bruises,
Nourse said he expects the two lo be
arraigned by Friday afternoon.
Smoking Peril
To Her Health
Cigarette smoking m3y be a
hazard to health In more than Ont.
wa y. a Westminster w ll ma n
discovered Wednesday,
Huntington Beach Ponce report
Barbara R. Giord11no, '3!1. of 7331
Siena Ave. was driving northbound
on Gothard Street norlh of Edinger
A venue when she dropped her
Jlghled cigarette.
Wh en she bent to retrieve I.be
cigarette. her ear crAihed Into a
parked vehicle , tr11ffic inve9tJgator1
said.
Miu Glordano suffered he101nd
chCllt lnjuritti In the cr11sh 11nd 11
listed In &allsf1ctory condition !&-
day al Huntington lntercommunity
HosplUI .
the late.st developments in the dispute
over Lhe sewer line.
-Dick Loesch, manager of Love's Wood 1 Pit Barbecue restaurant al Brookhurst
Slreet and Adams Avenue and the leader
of the fight by merch8Jlts against the
present route for the pipeline, predicted
thal ttie dispute would be settled in court
unless anothe r route is used.
"The city of lluntington Beach hasn't
yet granted the sanitation district a
permit for the project and could take the
'
•
.A' 1 ~·/A. ~
IJ"I TtleHlo'-
Dftd of lhe Year
'i.'ep, the National Father's
Day Committee has named
Mrs. John Bruce Dodd, 89,
Spokane, Wash., "f'ather of
the year." She is the founder,
or mother. of Father's Day,
which. girls. will be observed
June 20 for the 6lst time.
Campaign Leader
T ells Argu1nents
For Tax Boost
Parents of youngsters in the Hun·
tlngton Beach Union High School District
will not have to wait for the outmme of
the J une IS election lo find out wh at a
budget cut will dO, according to Irv
Tucker, election campaign cha irman,
Tucker claims the dislricl has been
compelled to operate on lhe current Sl.39
tax rale for the past fi ve years white
enroll ment has 50ared to t1 66 percent in-
crease [or a total student population o!
l:l,500. As a result, many cuts are already
in effect, he said toda y.
On June JS the district's boa rd of
lru~tees will seek to raise that amount to
$2.08 per $100 or assessed valuation. If
the election fa ils. the tax rate will drop to
85-cen ts per SIOO of a.o;sessed valuation.
making a f~ther $4 mill ion budget cut
necessary. ace-Ording to trustees.
Even under the curren t lax rate.
Tucker estimates tnat the tsudenl!i have
been shortcbanged in their education.
"The district -with great reluctance
-flas Failed lo replace 27 teache rs who
have left the district during the past
year . This. combined wilh increased
enroll ment, has compelled the dislrict to
reduce the number of classes a day most
studen~ take from six lo five," Tucker
pointed out.
'T'ocker. who is the: chairman of the
Citizens Committee. for Better lli&h
Sthools. said further that old, wom-out
bu5iness machines and lndU'Stria l arts
equipment has not been replaced. Some
of tbe machines, he Says, date back to
the 1930'ti.
Lack of funds also have forced the
district to neglect maintensnce work at
high school buildings and grounds.
"Not tooched since lhey were b:uilt
nearly 10 years ago, the .buildln.:s at
Westminster High School are badly in
need of a paint Job." said Tucker. "And
at the brand new Edl!OO High School. the
athletic field is a morass of mud because
l~ dltlrict has not been able ~ ftnd the
mooey to properly cultivate It for turf."
AdopLion of the $2.08 tax rale would
1tllow the dlstrlct to restore. the lost
teaching positions and ~ again offer
atudents a six to sevm period dlY. ac-
cordlhg to Tucker.
"Our counseling services could be ex·
pended and the torely ~ded equipment
purchased for the vocational clMM:a. The
athletic fiekl 1t Edison can be put In
shape. and Westmlnster High would
stand a good chance of getUng that long-
11walted paint job." he predicted.
NY OKs Youth Vote
ALBANY, N.Y. <AP ) -New York Ms
become the l l•t slate to ratify the pr~
posed U.S. coo~tiLLJUonal 1me ndment
Lh1t would allow It ye1r olds to vote in
all alec:tions. ·
matte.r to court," Loesch pointed out.
"But I feel, iI the city doesn't force the
dislricl into court, then the merchants
and homeowners wil l. I can guarantee
it."
The five-mile project is scheduled to
start in mid-September. The 9&-inc h
pipeline is designed to run from the treat-
ment plant in Huntington Beach near
Hamllton Avenue and progress north on
Brookhurst Street to Ellis Avenue where
it wiU head west to the Yountain Valley
plant at Euclid Street. ,
Two alternate routt.<1 have been ex·
amined -along Bushard Streei or the
Santa Ana River bed -but rejected by
the county Sanitation District because of
additional oosl.8.
Huntington Beach City Attorney Don
Bonfa ruled at a recent city council
meeting that the city could not withhold
permission from the district to lay the
line, but the city could i m p o s e
"reasonable con d I t Ions and re-
quirements.''
If the city and district could not agree
on these conditions, the matter could be.
taken to the Superior Court for a ruling
on uquirements. ...J
The city has not yet granted a permit
for the project. Instead, a committee was
forrued to investigate the route selection
an!"alternates.
Public Works Director Jim Wheeler
researched the district's estimates Of the
cost of the present route and alternates
and found •·nothing to argue about'' with
the district's contention that the river bed
path would cost $1 ,250,000 more and the
Bushard Street route another $250,000.
Thi! morning, Fred Harpe:r, general
manager of the Orange County Sanitatioll
District. revealed that lhr district ex·
pected to receive an 80 per~t grant
lSee SEWE,R, Page 2)
Pistol on De .ath Ranch
Gun, Shells Discovered Near Yuba Grave Sites
From Wirt Services
YUBA CltY -An automatic pistol has
heen found on the Jack L. Sullivan ranch,
site of most of the graves of the 23 vie·
lims of a mass slaying. it '"'as learned to-
day.
The pistol. a 9-millimeter automatic,
and 20 shells found with it were se11t to
U.S. 'Trlek'Clted
the state crime laboratory at Sacramento
for 6allistics tests.
In court documents supporting the
charge against suspect Juan V. Corona,
the sheriff's ofrice said it had found six
nine-milllmeter shells in his 1971 panel
truck.
Auth orities investigating the grisly
crime never have indicated that 'Bny of
the victims died from bullet wounds. The
bodies discovered along the Feather
River had been hacked and stabbed.
Aerial photographs taken with an in·
frared camera were being processed to
help officisls determine whether there
arc more bodie3 buried in the area of the
crime. It was expected lo lake two days
to process lhe photographs.
Hanoi Closes Borders
Sheriff Roy D. Whiteaker. who says he
is convinced more bodies will be found,
was fo rced to withdraw his crews after
they started digging al one "indenlation ''
similar to those that have turned out to
To 13 War Prisoners be crude graves.
The crews found the ground still too
wet.
PARIS (UPI) -HlllOi cancollod tho
return of 13 sick and wounded prisoner•
of war to North Vietnam today after they
hed boarded a ship at Os Nang for the
brief voyage to the North. Bolh Hanoi
and the Viet Cong also hardened their
line toward the peace talks.
In almost identical statements the
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong
delegates told the I 15th session of the
tAlks that a qui ck deadline for total U.S.
t.roop witbdrawal from Vie tnam and
overthrow of the Saigon government were
inseparable and crucial conditions for
peace.
Shortly afterwards. the offi cial Hanoi
Information Agency , AVI. said in Pari~
that Hanoi would not accept the ret urn of
the prisoners and that it would have a
further announcement later.
South Vietnam offered originall~· to
return 570 prisoners of war hut said the
Red Cross after talk ing to the prisoners
found that only 13 wAnted to go home.
UPI correspondent Stewart Kellerman
reported from aboard the repatriation
4, Escape Flames
Off Catalina
A Se.al Beach couple and their com·
panions from Sanla Ana escaped injury
when the ir cabin cru iser burst into
flames this morning in Avalon Harbor.
The Los Angeles County Sheriffs Of-
fice reported tha t the 40-foot boat Golden
Swan received an estimated $24.000 dam-
age in the blaze..
Richard L. Budci. 2!1, anrl his wife Den·
ise. 21 , of 205 Marina Drive, and Harol d
Berry , 40, anti his wife Eileen, 35, of
1516 Dresser SI. all escaped the names
by leaping into lhe chilly bay waters.
Firemen said they believed the fire
was caused by .a fa ulty butane atove in
the boat 's galley. The vessel is owned
by Budd.
thip·\lplhllf'lha' llt ship loll Da· 11.-1,
South Vietnam, today to ael the prisoners
ashore by small boats in North Viet-
nam.
The AVI announcement 1aid North
Vietnam, taking notice of the 13 fi(Ure
instead of 570 it thought were going
hrune. •1vigorously oondemned this dis-
honest maneuver of the United States
and the puppet regime in Saigon ."
There were other developments today
in Southeast Asia •
-The United States for the fi rst time
So far , 11 transients, farm workers and
dr ifters blvt been (aund backed 111d
slabbed to death ln crude graves In
orchards along the Feather River.
Juan V. Corona. 37, a Mexican born
farm labor contractor with a ptQ" com·
mand or English, wa! formally arraigned
in Justice Court Wednesday on to counts
nf murder -the JO bodies exhumed by
the time he was first ta ken to court one
week before.
"I'd llke lo gel it over and be done with
II." \\lhiteaker said a1 he discussed the.
conllnuing ~arch for graveslles. "I
believe there are some bodies out there
that will never be found." has .iiven South Vietnamese troop!
175m~rtlller)', the most powerful
weapon yet provided the government The sheriff is using infrared aerial
. photography of !he orchards in an effort
under the Vietnamization program. ac.-to .spot areas where the soil has been
cording to military sources. --~i sturbed. Results should be available
-Milita ry sources said the South Viet-Friday. Another potential gravesite still is
under 11.1ater and can 't be probed until It
dries , the sheriff said.
namese force dr iven out of lhe Cam-
bodian town of Snuol Monday ran into a
Communist ambush that raised their
ca sualt ies in the five-da y battle to nearly
1,000 men killed, wounded and missi ng.
-South Vietnamese rangers an rl
paratroopers were driven off by inten~e
anl iaircraf! fire 1111 the y tried to fl y tn the
relief of Fire Base ~ in the Ce ntral
Highlands.
-Hel icopters air-dropperl suppl ies l()o
day to elite American-trainer! Cambod ian
troops counter-at.tacking North Viet·
namese force.~ within rocket range of the
Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh.
Violin Breaks Mark
LONDON (AP) -A London dealer,
William Hill & Son11, today jumped the
world record aucLion price for I violin
nearly Wur times, paying '201.600 for the
Lady Blunt Sl.radiva rius at Solheby's.
The pn!vious reco rd was $51,800, set al
Sotheby's in 1968, The 250 year old Lady
Blunt was aold by Sam BloomfieJd of
California.
At Wednesday's closed arraignment
before Justice Court Judge J. J, Hankins
the proceedings were related to Corona
bv a Spanish language interpreter. Raoul
Yba rra . a local norisl.
Boys Club Backs
Override Vote
The board of directors of the Fountain
Valley Boys Club ha11 unanimously en-
dorsed the Huntington Beach Union Hl&h
School District's tax override election.
A spokesman for the board eaid the
directors fell that the "education of
Uiousands of youngslers Is at 11take and
they urge a yes vote on the override.''
The election wiU be held June 15.
Voters will decide if the district will be
allowed to increase the tax rate by 69
cents from the current rate of $1.39 lo
12.08.
Policy Plan Developing·
Co.mmunity Priorities Pro gram S°';en in Huntington
A major shif~ in Policy planning ia
being developed it1 lfuntlngton Beach to
give a clearer picture of tbe commUllity'a
futurt.
The program lnvolve11 defining tht
goals and objectives of I.he city and
asslgninl lht.m prloritlea based on the
11billty to fool the bill.
It ls being developed at Aliff and
citizen level.
Clty Administrator Doyle Miller hes
senl l'OUncllmen a draf~ of proposed
chang,tt in management m e t h o d s .
B11sically, the ' draft recmnmends that
civic goals bl! est.tbli-'hed and that the
budget process be modified to t' goal ..
oriented 11pproach.
The draft note• that pro i ri1 m,1
presenU)' under con!lderatlon exceed the
city's ability to pay, that there is • lacll:
of Information about P!O&r'"!Jl\\Otjlies
,·
and a Jack of reported informaUon on rpe.
ciflc progJams.
Miller urge! that all city hmctlont be
identified . and that all boards, com-
missions and committees ahould Identify
\heir objectives for evaluation within the
priority system.
After all actJvltles and prlOrltlea have
been 11pproved by the City Coundl. Miller recom~ends, In tfrect. that the program
be kept firm with no new \>h;jecl leap.
rrogging the other1 without proper
evaluaUon.
·:Neither-lbe eounci11 any board, com·
mls81Dn,• commlltee, nor thit city ad·
mlnbtntor shall authaflze the. lm-
Plementation Df any new -prolJ:ams or
proj~l! or a chttnge in lhe ,prlorlty of ex-
lsLing p~ojecta untll an evaJuailon h111
bfen ma Cle." Miller st.Jt•.
In thfl meanUme, a cittzeni commlUtt
ts being formed to spell out ne-w develop-
ment Policies for the city.
The council has appointed 1 citizens
steering commit~ for goal.a and ot>-
jectives. Plannlna aide Jere Murphy f:I·
plalned that this teven-metnber group
wUI govern a rliveralfied citizens cd'm·
mlttee that wlU define conimunlty <Jb.
Jectlves. 1 The lteerlng commltttc 11· in the pr~
ceas ot contactlnj' ·4J dvic or1anlzations,
ask1ng for delegetes to the lar1er aroup.
The 1tetrlng committee was act up
aft.e.r the 1t8IJ and a planning cmrtmiaalon
subcommitt~ eompleted ViOTll: o n
defining the Policy that had taken the
rommunily tn Ila prtse.n\ 1tate.
Coples of lh la preliminary report are
belng sent to dvic organtuttons and art <S.. OOALS, Pase ll
. • •
IN CHARRO COSTUME
Yuba City Suspect Coron•
School District
Predicts Budget
Sans Tax Hike
The Ocean View School District is pJ.en-
ning to spend about $697 .000 more on
education nell:t school year, but probably
without an increase in taxes.
District Superintendent Clarence Hall
said this morning preliminary budget
figures show expenditures of 110,738,000
as compared lo last year's budget 0£
$10,041 ,000.
"We can 't figure our lax rate until alJ
the assessed valuation figures are in, but
we bel ieve the general operating tax will
remain the same because of assessed
va luatlon increases," Dr. Hall said .
The current Ocean View School District
tax rate 1s $,1.0J per $100 of assessed
valuation. Bond Interest and redemption
payments raise the total tax package to
SJ.68 per SJOO of assessed valuation.
Most of the increase will be applied to
the hiring of new teachers. The district
will be opening one new schoo l during tbl
year. the Golden View campus, off Slater
.o\ venue between Edwards and Golden
We.st Stree~.
Dr.. Hall contended that tht hiring of
three new adminlslrators aerving u in-
termediaries between the superintendent
and the district's 24 pflnclpals would not
add to lhe expenditures.
"I would argue that this ls a plan to
economize the admlnlstraLlon." be said.
11'eather
The clouds wlll roll by euty on
Friday. followed by fair ikies and
temperatures rangfftg from U de-
greee along tllft aborellne to 7t:
(urther inland.
INSmE TOD,\Y
Htroitf addict who WO.f up -to
7-5 baas o doll ot coat of $7.50
ltavtt film as final warnfn11 to
11oinigs!er1. Storv. Po ot 5.
l lrtllt
Ct!I...,,, ..
~ltlt u,,
Cllttl!IN
C-k• cr-.uwr.C
O..tll fMtlt"
• , • .... ..
i: lllwt't•t • lfltw1tt ,_ '
111"'1'•1-t 11·1• Jllll-• ... 1, -" ... L....,.. 1J
Mtnl ... L-.... I ...... 1•1• ............... , ,, ...... .... ·•·t °''-C:-IY • '(' '""''' ,..,,., ' • ....,. tl•!J
Sltd! ,...,_ ... 16-17
l'tlf\•t11... ti n.Mt-.n , .. ,, -· . __., 111twt 1•1• --..
•
,
•
2 DA.IL V PILOT ,,
Jury Chief Blasts Planner Over Press Tall{i
ii
~
Ofanl' County Grand Jury Foreman
Doreen MarahaU of Newport Beach
'Vednwtay sharply censured Planning
Commission Chairman Woodro..-.· But-
terfield for announcing an appearance
before the jury to the press.
"J\tembers of the jury noted ..-.·ith
surprise a story appearing in the local
press regarding your meeting wlth the
jury scheduled, reportedly for Tuesday
morning." read a lelter from Mrs.
?o.tarshall to Butterfield. ..
··We are concerned btcAuse neither the
Grand Jury nor ill foreman had received
eny c<>mmunlcatioa tr:om you req"QtU\I
such • meeting.
"In our opinion the new11>1ptr report.a
regarding this matter have been
misleading to the public and to the county
administration which we regret," the let-
ter continued.
"If you wish to have the Grand Jury in·
vestigate a specific matter or to meet
wilh the jury Jor this purpose, we should
appreciate the courtesy of a wriUtn re-.
quest."
From Poge J
SEWER DISPUTE ...
from the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency tot th~ project
The grant application has been made
i!.nd is being processed by the federal
mgency with a decision expected by July
I. Once the grant is approved, con-
1truclion must begin in 90 days, Harper
1aid.
"If you starl increasing the cost of the
project or delaying it, the grant would be
~ut in jeopardy," Harper con1mented.
Harper also pointed out l hat
1iSC.U.Sj]9fil O,Il, th~prgje,ct ,wilh t~e Hun-
·fngton Bt11ch public works ana engil'lttr·
1ng staff began in November. 1969.
·'They asked us to look at alternates
then and have continued to do so," Har-
Guard Tryouts
Set Saturday
At Edison High
'Tryouts for the Huntington Beach
Junior Lifeguard program will be held
'aturday at Edison Union High School
rrom 9 a.m. to I p.m.
Lifeguard Capt. Doug D'Arnall s1id the
junior lifeguard program is open to boys
ages 9 through 15 who live in Huntington
Beach.
In order to qualify for the program, the
ooys must be able to sv;im at Jeal!t 100
vards while maintaining a steady stroke,
,.,.,·im under water for 10 yards and tread
water for five minutes. he said.
The purpose of the program, acrording
to D' Arnall, is to provide the parlicipants
with a sound aquatic background and ac·
~uaint them with the hazards of ocean
1wimming.
The program, which includes in·
'truction in marine safety. first aid.
'.i{esaving, surfing and miscellaneous
1each activit\e:s, will run from July 6
through Aug. 27 from 8:30 a.m. to noon
ind from 12 :30 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Saturdafs tryouts will be the last
:hance to qualify for the program before
·egistration. which will be held June 12
9nd 19 at the Department of llarbors and
Beaches. 103 Pacific Coast Highwa y.
Beach Jaycees'
T:rack Meet Set
Boys ilnd girls be\ween the ages of 8
tnd 18 are invited by the Hunt ington
Beach Jaycees to participate in 1he
funior Champ South Track and Field
\feet.
The competition .,...tll be held July Ii at
\U. San Antonio (()!lege, \\'alnt1!.
Registration forms n1ust be cornp!eted by
July I.
Clinlcs, supervlsed by Olympic team
nlembers and athletic champions . .,..·ill be
offered during the day of the meet.
Anyone interested in joining the Hun-
'1ngton Beach team should call Jaycee
Gary Virgilio at 847·9447.
OU.NII COAST
DAILY PILOT
O"AHOE COAST puaL.llHIMG CQ<llll'Al<tV
kobort H. W11J l"r"'°911t ind "111:111lfltr
J1ck R. Curl1'(
Viet l't9''""' I nd 0-11 MtMW n-·· x.,,11· t:•ltor
Tl.1~11 A. M1;1r,fli119
Mtn .. lfll _fdlt ...
Al111 Dl••i1t
W•I Or9"90 C-1Y 141 ....
J.lb1rt W. 11111
.-..-111c t<lllK
M•lltt ...... .._. Offts9
17175 l11U l1ul1,1r4
M1il111t .Y~h1n : r.o. lea 790,, t1,41
~Offk ..
i.....,.. ••di: m '°'"' ... __ CO.II ........ : Ja W•I 91Y 51.-t
tt...,t I~: UIJ N-1 lov_,.. a-0-tl; at.I H""" 51 C..M ... " .. I
per said. "Thty havr: e:11:pressed th'"e city's
concern all along."
Harper noted, however, that, at the
April 14 meeting of the joint sanitation
boards, a motion to refer the matter for
further study with the Jl.untington Beach
starr was rejected.
"I personally do n('tt believe that the
line will cause as much disruption as peo-
ple feel ," Harper said.
He said there would be strict specifica-
tions for the contractor. Work would be
dQne only fron1 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. and
tl'le:Te wOOld be "00 mo.re tt!an·• J,300'fttt
unpaved at -any given time.
.. As far as the businesses are con-
cerned, there· will be no left lurn disrup·
tion for 1nore than six days," l-farper
went 011.
Merchants have argued that con·
struction will alter traffic patterns in the
area. The Meredith Ga rd ens
Homeowners Association also has prir
tested the Brookhurst Street alignment.
Loesch said that the sanitation district
is basing its case on cost considerations.
"But I don't think money is the only
determining factor. The disrupllon, and
the loss of sales tax revenue to the city
from businesses. also has to be con-
sidered."
Loesch, a member of the touncil com-
niittee investigating the controversy, said
he would also push for the district to con-
lii der using the Southe·rn California
Edison Company easement which runs
parallel to the Santa Ana River.
Councilman Jerry Matney, head of the
committee, has asked for copies of
sanitation district meeting minutes on the
project and for copier; of the route study
reports_ The committee plans to go over
these documenls before meeting "'ilh
Harper.
Judge Declines
To Halt Coast
Apartment Work
An Orange County Superior Court judge
has refused to interfere v,rith the plar1s or
lhe Ponderosa Homes company to build
66 apartment units on a !hree-ac_re site
challenged by the Southeast Hon1eowners
Association of Hun tington Beach.
Judge Robert Ba'nyard reje1:ted the
association's demand for a preliminary
injunction which would l1all all bu!lding
activity pending trial of the organiza-
tion's cla im that it was repeatedly n1\sled
by the city on ho.,..· it could best oppose a
zoning change in the area.
Sixteen men1bers of the assoc1a!1on
claimed in their action lh!lt they nt'.'ver
received 1.one change notices allegedly
111ailed by the city la~t NO\', l!f. They
further stateU that the crty planning coin·
mission in formed the organization that ii
had nn recour~e lo 11ppeal the changr
from light industrial to mobile home zon-
ing approved by the conln1ission la.~t nee.
J. \.'1l~' council :ipprovl'd the planning
eon1mission's recomn1endatlon lasl Dec.
21. Judge Banyar(fs ruling now clears thr
way for implementation of ihe zo'ne
1:hangc.
Boa.rd Praises
2 County Aides
Orange County supervisors approved a
resolution \Vednesdsy praising t w o
members o[ tht County Coun,el's staff
who were ins!rumental in the recent
favorable decision o( the Stale Suprcn1e
C<Jurt in the Edison plant expansion case.
Otputy County Counsels J im UrhAn
and John PO\\'ell who argued the case for
lhe county Air Pollution Control Distrltt
be fore 1he Public Utlllties Cotnn1\..c:sio11
and the Supreme Court were na1ned for
.. .,...Inn ing out over high odds."
The decision ruled that the county
p(lllution control bod y had equal jurlsd1t·
tion with the PUC O\•er the expansion of
the Huntington Beach Edison plant.
Attempt to Shut
Alley. Rejected
dleback Community Hospital Jn L.a~a
Hllla Lelsure World. The letter altn noted that lht Jury's
Plannlnf and i!nvironmental Problems
Committff "haS" been reviewing the
policies and pr~W'es follbwed by the
Planning Commission and 1vill be in-
terested in receiving any in fQr1nalion you
wish lo make available to it,"
"' He Aid they had been lold that a
ho11plt•I was proper uae for the property
where the faelllty ..-.·Ill bf' built but that he
had discovered later thaL this was not so.
BuUerfield htd alse said he would
bring the ho11p1tal matter before the
Planning C-Ommis1ion Tuesday. He. did
[10\.
The only reference to the sub jr:ct .,..·as
during discussion of another matter when
c. petitioner started to read from the arli·
cle quoting Butterfield on the "poor ad-
vtce lhe commission had .received."
The use permit for the bospit.11 watt•
granted by unanimous action or fou~
commissioners present May 4, Prevlouslf.J
the commission had deadlocked 2·2 on lh•~ . 1• issue. 1,
Commissioners Arnold Forde of th..,.;
Fifth District who was absent on a trip 111··
Europe at the time was alleged to have a.
connicl of interest in the ho!pital'
question because he was fi.nanci.ally i~
terested in the Ml5sioo Communlt1 •
Hospital iu the same area. •
Butterfield in a staten1ent lo the press
'Tuesday said he had un covered in-
forn1atlon that tht> Planning Commission
had been incorrectly advised in lhe mat·
ter of the ust permit for the future. Sad·
/ ~ ..
-.;', ---••
Aec11sed
J.leidi Ann Fletcher. 21 . dau gh-
ter of San Jo.~e City Manager
Thotnlls Fletcher. is charged
\Vith 11'.'0 n1ale <.:01npanions In
t he s laying of a polit e officer
foll o\v ing the May 25 robbery
of a savings and loan in \Vash·
ington. J).l'. She faced police
lineup \Vedncsday. bnt police
\V0\1!d not say \\'hether \vit·
ncsses had identified her.
l 'ro111 Page 1
GOALS ...
ll\'a1lable tn ctltzens at thr planning
department .
"\Vhal kind of con1rnunl1y do 1i.·c \\'ant
to be7 TI1a1 'i; the kind of ciue:,lion we arr
<1sk111 g:· l'o1urphy explainer!. · '\\' h a t
Pmph:ists should therl' be on con11nerr1al ,
inrl llStrial or reslrlcnt1<il dc\elopmen\'!
\\lhfll do \\t do about public transporta·
11011? \\'hat dC){'.S lhe c.:omm unity \\:lilt \n
!hr way or public ser\•ices'"'
!\1urphy pointC'd oul !hfl l once these
goals are definrd prr>spccli\'c ancJ prcsPn1
res idents \voultl have an tdea of whal to
e.~pect and cornmercial and industrial
developers would benefit rro1n knowing
how the city will gro\\'.
The seven members of the stetting
committ.ee are Pete Horton. an acrospacf'.
execulivt>. Dick Huston, a nt>wspaper
distributor. Brian Knift', den!ist. Jim
!o>heppard of the Jfl ycer>s, Mrs. Jeanette
Turk of the League of \Vo1nen Voters.
Rob Sutflk.e of the H0~1E Council, and
f\1rs. Prin1 Keevil. a puhlitist.
Lloyd Bud"'·ig. dentist. l1as been ap-
pointed :is the alternale delegate,
\\lhen capital and operational programs
are defined. Miller secs tht>m being l\~ted
on charts with funds e:irmarked. Thrsr
\'1su;el aids .,..·ould then be 011 tli:1p1ay at
council and tv n1missio11 llll'C(111gs.
The propost-d n1anal).en1cnt chnnges
also coincide with a study of municipal
finflnt't'S that is belng made by the firn1
nf Ernst a11d Erns1 of Santa , Ma. The
firm is being paid $9.500 by the Chambtr
of Commerce to prepare a fi ve.year
fin11ncial p!11n for the city,
"'It's .a very tlmely sludy in th&t
respect;" Miller commented.
His assertions were dtnied by the
County Counsel 's office which said that
the property was being legally used as a
site for a hos pital.
J\1rs itarshall's letter noted that But·
terfield's announced appearance before
Uie Grand Jury did not ta.kt place,
The commission chairmen halted U1e
reading abruptly with, "the wording or
that article was very unfortunate."
20 Medi~ine ,,
·-:· ••
Students Enrolled in Medical Attendant Progrnni ·. -!
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
01 l~t Dlllt ~ll•f Stitt
Two months ago, Lawson Downing had
no idea how smooth a baby's bottom
could be.
Nor did Cheryl Larkin know that she
would btco1ne diizy at the sight of blood.
Lawson, 16. and Cheryl, 17, are bolh
enrolled in Fountain Valley High School's
Medical-"~~odant Program, a pilot.
course intended to licqualnt students with
modern medical practices.
"l used to give the babies baths when l
worked in the nursery." smiled Lawson,
who plans a career in medicine.
"There is really nolhing to it. You take
a washrag and wash their heads, the
ar1ns <ind legs and their bodies. You have
to be kind of careful with then1. Then you
powder their bodies and they're ready go
go. I'm always afraid of sticking them
\Vi th a diaper pin, though."
The 20 students enrolled in the program
have been practicing their skills at Hun~
lington Convalescent llospilal and at
Huntington lntercommunity l-lospital.
'fheir assignments include X -R a y ,
laborator)", recovery room. operating
roo1n. intensive care unit. dietetics and a
variety of other hospital beats.
Cheryl, who plans to enroll in a nursing
course on completion of. her graduation
rec1uirernents. said some excitement
tould also be found in the emergency
r.oom·:--
"I was ..-.·atching this guy who had been
in a car accident. They said he had a
lacerated liver. But when I saw his in·
juries I got woozy al! of a sudden," she
explained.
The program. which is being taught by
r..lrs. Marilyn Watson under the direction
of school nurse Mrs. Lee Nash, ha s
already been successful in securing
hos pital employment for s e v er a I
~tudents . ln fa ct. it is designed to pr!pare
the youngsters to go to work as medical
attendants with completion of the cur-
riculum.
•
"The tirsl half consists of theory and ~
practice in a three-bed simulated wardr;-
.,.,hlch is localed in a trailer on campus,".-;
t-.lrs. Nash ex:pl.a ined. "The second bale.
tonslsts or on the job experience in a con-...
va lescent a11d acute Qospital... !-:
Lawson, \'.'ho is one of nine junior and
senior bo1's to enroll in th e course. said
he had nO idea that he wanted to become
a doctor until he went to work in the
hospital.
"I've sren what it's really like no1v and
it has really made me interested. I would
like to specialize ln pediatrics because I
like to work with kids and I've seen some
prelty had cases."
Access to the operating roo m. a choice
assign1nent for many or the students, is
provided only through the ronsent oE the
patlent.
"The doc1ors are very good about tX-·
plaining things ro the students as they
are .,.,·orking," com mented Mrs. Nash.
Her stud enls have so far seen everything
from bone grafts to a Caesarean section.
Valley Council
Adds 8tl1 Park
Y alley P lariners Slate
Fountain \lallry city councilmen added
an eighth park to the city Tue!day night
when they approved an agreement to
purchase a 2.5 acre site near the in·
tersection of Bushard Street and Edinger
Avenue.
A mendmei;it Hearing
The park. which will cos t the city
SG0.000, is located adiacent to the Ethan
Allen School and Public \Vorks Director
\\'ayne Osborne said tl1e park grounds
1~·ill be merged v.·ith the school ground~
for joint use.
Tile Sandville Development Company,
011•ner~ of the site. agreed to include full
z;treet improvements and curb and gutter
frontage for the park in the purchase
price. Osborne said.
Fountain Valley p 1 an n in g com-
missioners have set June !I for a public
hearing on a proposed ordinance amend-
l'nenl which would require a conditional
use permit for restaurant use in com·
mcrcial zones.
A.~ the ordinance now stands.
reslauran1 u~e in C1 and C2 zones is a
n1attcf of rlght and does nol require plan-
ning commi~sion approval. according io
tlnn Contra1nan ol the t1!y Planning
Department.
If approved. the amendmenl would
enable commissioners to r c vi e w
rc staurci nt application Lo cl1eck !or 1i.'hat
Contraman described a.~ ''ad\'erse effects
on surrounding propert y,"
Superb Luxury
in Pure Wool Pile
byKarastan
'The 1nove was prompted after a recent
('ontroversy surrounding the con·
struc\lon of a 24-hour Sambo's restaurant
in a shopping complex at Brookhurst
Street a nd Edinger Avenue.
Neighbors fr om the s-uT r oun d in g
rcsidenrial are<1s objected 10 1 h e
restaurant. saying the la1e hours and
no ise created by restaurant patron!!:
would be rtisturbing and \Vou!d detract
fro1n 1he \'fllue or their hon1es.
The city ;;ipprovcd lhe project in spite
uf the objections. bul Contran1an said the
proposed ordinance "'ii !force a review of
;ill proposed restaurants to prevenl a
similar controversy fr on1 arising.
Kara1tan c•ll' this carpt:t Spectacular. So will you wh•n you
sa• and fHI th• magnificent luxury of itl thick, de•p pur• wool
pll•. It'' ama1ing price of ju1t $10.95 a 5quar• yard i1 du• to
a major br•akthrougtl in wool t•chnology. Karastan giv•s
••ch flbar a special bulking tr•atm•nt so th• yarn is "fatter,"
and more r•sili•nt. A truly r•markable value.
Jr·· \'OU Ct\N"r
COME IN -
CALL
The 17 colors er• 1peictacular too. 64&-0275
for an f':q>ert
car~l
consultant
\\'ho .,..-ill
COffit' 10
)'1lUI' h0ml"
\1 ilh JAmpl ri
\1 ilhout any
nbl1~111,ion
lo )'OU~
Your rooor il e
interior dt.ti(lrttr
tJlil/ bt hOPPll
to OISiJt VOU
•
A petlt.ion to abandon an alley in Sun~et
Beach was denied unanimously Wcd-
nt'sday by the Board of Superv!sora.
1.::;~~~~:e~~~:.~i~~~et~e ~~~:no1·
the alley located north of Pacific Coast
llip;hway and east of Park Avenue in the
eai;t<":rn end of Sun~t 8e1c.h.
f arden Grove Seeks
New Chief of Police H.J.GARRETT fURNITURE • TA••• r I 1714l '41-4111
Cl .......... ",.., ... "*-""
~llM• IJ11, OAlltl ('.Mtl ,. ..... ltl>t ... ~. "' ~ •!Wit•. ltt1'11rlf ...... •""'"' --... .,,.,.,., .. _" . --..... ., .. ·~--•l-t '!*Ill ,. . ........ ~-)..._.
Property owner' in the area oppo~cd
the abandonment as did the county Pl an·
ning Commission. Road Departnient. and
f'lrc Department .
Second Dlstrlcl supervisor l)avul L.
Boker alS-O opposed lhe n\C\·e noting th"t
it would elimin111\e RCtelis to ti 1<.·ater\j,'fty ,
Garden Grove is looking for a new
po llce chief today for the second lime ln
s ix rnonths.
Chir.f Lourence R. r..1:<1rshal has resi.l{n· 1
cd effective J une 18 lo become un-
dcrsherilf of Sant.a RArbara County.
MBrshnl, ~8. wtis named chter ln~t 7'ov.
1 l after George Titlsth fesigned lo
b«inne police chie! or se.attle.
PROFESS IONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNER
-TRY OUR REVOLVIN• CHARGE--
Open Mon., Thuri. Ii flrl. lvu. .
2215 HA RBOR !LVO .
C:O!TA MESA, CALIF.
6-1 6-0275
•
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•
DAILY PILOT ........ ~' Le• PtJfte
ESTANCIA HIGH TEACHER FOURNIER (IN GLASSES , RIGHT) DOUBLES IN BRASS
Kenton Bind Vi1its and Kids Learn Ho w Music Is Made Without Amplifiers
25 Stan l(enton Musicians
'Beat' Around Costa Mesa
By TERRY COVU..LE
01 !hi D•l!r P U•! Siert
Stan Kent on almost came back to
Balboa Wednesd av.
He stopped e18ht beats short -in
•Costa Mesa.
The leader hin1self \Vas absent -still
recovering frnn1 recent surgery -but
his 25 m11sic1ans stopped off in the af-
ternoon al Estanci a Hig h School, then
played a concert at Orange Coast College
\Vednesday night.
J\1us1c students at Estancia packed the
gchool forum and greeted Kenton's group
"'ith a st.anding ovation after the band
gave a IS-minute mini-concert. The
school's band director, Pete Fourlliet, sat
in on trombone.
Working in cnsual clothes. the band
members went lhrough I.he shorl , brassy
concerl then split into instruction groups
to help !he students.
Tflt' Est:tnci;i visit, roupled \\'ilh the
~V{'ning concert was parl of a
Ne1vport-f.1 csa Unified School Dislrict.
project which brought. a bl~ nan1c band
and cll'vcr inslruclors for only $2.500.
At. the F:sl;inci;i fnru 111 lhl're was loud
applause to match the loud jazz rnusic.
Kids linrd 1he 1\·alls And li:c;lcnr-rl to the
slow bea t hrr;ik into ear :::hallering lnne:c;.
"These kids didn 't know :i b;ind can
make th;i l much noise v.·ithout an
ii mplificr,'' ob:c;ervcd one g r By in g
t.l":acher. obviously over 30. 11s he
reminisced cibnul past Kenton ap-
pearances al Balhoa·s R c n de v o us
Ba llrbom. \1•hich burned do11o·n Aug. 7,
1966.
Thtre "·as a :c;axnphnne so lo played
aho\'f' an undercurrenl or Latin rhthym.
The sax playt•r .sported a long beard, the
env\' nF srveral s!udrnt~.
A. !rumpel pla,\rr r;!cpped Forv.·ard in a
~wrat shirt, bern1ud:i shnrt.~. \\•hite socks
:tnrl trnnis shncs. \\'1th hi~ cheeks puffed
n11t. his fingers rippled over the trumpel
,.:tlvr.~ like !hry wen' op('raling a
m:irhinc gun. Hi~ f:icc 11irned red.
The kids lovrd it.
Krntnn·s band played ··~tcArthur
r:.rk."' a popul<ir .~ong. end J!'.1tined e,·en
louder aprlause. Big band jazz isn 't so
far from Bl ood. Sweat and Tears.
\\'hen the music slopped, students and
band members \\'ent to different rooms
according to instruments they played.
John Von Ohlen, the drummer, and
Ramon Lopez, the conga player, ta ught
-Onlookers the little tricks or a pro·
fcssionaJ on percu ss 1-0n inslrumenls.
·me saxophon e players spent their tin1e
ans\\'ering <Jlltstions.
''\\1hy aren"t there any clarinets in the
band?" asked one youngster, apparently
de~·otcd to the instrument.
"Stan hales clarinets," rl!'p!ied Chuck
Carter.
"!low much do you play?" another
question.
'"OHen seven nights a week. We rarely
rehearse except with new musir."
"HoW long to grow your beard?"
"About a year."
Carter explained !hat Kenton's band
only began fulllime again last July after
a Fi ve.year layoff \Yhile Kenton took care
of his children following a dl\'Orce.
Trun1pet player Mike Vax starilerl
listeners by revealing that four hours un
a jazz rrun1pet equalled eight hours on a
construction job in energy :::pent.
'"lrs a tough instrument There's niore
pres.~ure, resistance, in ii than any olh<'r
instrun1cnt," he explained . ·•So lake il
easy when you learn. '{ou have to build
up lo it. just like physical work outs."
Carter ended his session wi!h a
<lescription or his absent leader.
•·Stan is ve ry rieht -btautiful man.
~lost bao<l leaders are a drag, but he ·s
great.'"
N.Y. Ci ty as Sta te
Ge ts Solon Sup port
ALfl:\NV, N.Y. (UPI) -l\fore than
one.,r:irc! nf thl": state a~sembly ha s spon-
:"l'Jred a bill to make New York City lhc
5lst sr:ite.
1\$semblyman Leonarrl Si1non, a Brook.
lyn lJemocrat, has been sponso rin,ll a bill
to ha ve Nev.· York Ci!y secede for the
past three legislalive sessions. Thr n1ca·
sure introduced Wednesday was cospon·
sored by all 44 New York Dernocra!s anrl
a contingent of upsla!t Republicans. The
51 sponsors are just over a third of the
150 assemblymen.
Fast Company
Lobbyist at Top Secret Meet
BOSTON IUPI) -Former presidential press secretary Pierre Salinger
said a Seattle hu sinessman accide,nl.11\Jy got into a meeling or the Nationa l
Security Council in 1961, rece.ived a top-secret briefing on the Berlin crisis and
a greeling Fron1 President John F. Kennedy before he \\"as di scovered.
Bo!h !he names and the situation have been changed in Salinger's novel,
•·on lnstruclions of My Government," which the former press secreta ry dis-
cussed Wednesda y at the convention of the American Book Sellers' Associa-
tion. But Salinger said tbe bssls of the incident was true.
He said the unidentified buslneS!man belong to the Air Force Nation·
al s~urity Advisory Council, a private advisory organitation, and had come
tn \Vashinglon to lobby for more aerospace appropriations. lfe arrived late and
called the secretary of U1e chairman or the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Cui:tis
E. Let.lay.
"He asked her where the meeting was and sfle said the White House,"
Salinger said. "Apparently she only heard Nalional Security Council. The man
s11id I'll never be able Lo gel in there and she answered, don't worry. I'll get
your name on the-li1t."
Salinger said the busine!\Sma11 wa1 met by presidential atd" end secur·
jty officers and he got into the meeting "just as the ligh~ went out and they
started to project Lop secret slides and infonnalion on the Berlin crisis."
The men realized he v.·as in the wrong meeting when he saw LeM1y,
the President, lht head of the CIA and the secretary of stale. Salinger 111.id.
In fact. Kennedy walked by him at the end of the briefing. patted him on Lhe
knee and said "Things art pretty tough today."
He was discovered shorlly 11fter the Pre!ldent left. Otrlct"ls solvtd 1~
security breach, Salinger said, by requifinf! the man. a rf:tired Air Force
colonel, to telephone Washington every 15 minutes and tell officials where he
WIS.
fThe New York Timf:s Identified tht businessman as Elroy ~tcCaw. a
wl!'althy'Seattle tl":Jevision e1ecutlv1 who died la1t year).
' ' •
Nixon Cousi11
Seeks Help
Over Welfare
A Newport Beach girl v.·ho claims she
is "'sick, weak and on v.·e l!are" in the San
Francisco area says she v.-rote her :c;ccond
cousi n -President Nixon -for help.
The pligh1 of l\athy Timberlake, 2.t a
J!l65 graduate of Corona dcl J\1 ar 1-tigh
Sthoo!, can1e 10 li~hl when B:i y Arca
new."papcrs and television st ;i I io ns
rcc:c1ved carbon copies of the leller.
The \Vhile House confirmed that Kathy
Tin1hcr\ake is a second cou sin to the
President, but said no such Jetter had
been received.
Kathy's parents, Dr. and :P.lrs. P. F.
Timberlake, live at 1921 lrvme Boulevard
in Newport Beach. He practices rnl":dicine
in Costa .l\1esa.
"She":-; never \1•ritten hon1e lo ask for
help. She \\'anted to be indeperidenl,"
Kathy's mother said this morning.
Ac:cording to wire serv 1re reports, the
girl"s letter began: ··1 don 't know H ~'OU
rcrncn1bc r me. I'm your second cousi n,
Kathy Timberlake. ~ly grandmother is
I::dith Milhous Tin1bcrlakr. J"1n v.-riting
ynu lo tell you my life 's existence has
heC'nme too unbearable. I live in
California, Sonoma County, 1n a town
called Cotati. l 'ou m::iy remernbcr my
brother Philip v.·ho shcl hln1self a fe\11
years back.
··He alon.g with me have had difficult
lin1es handling our existence. I can't
work or do anything because of my emn-
tional state. J"m g:>ing to the me ntal
health service in San1a Rosa aln1ost
every day, but it doesn"t hel11 me much. I
don'l eat right cause I don"t rver frel like
it so rm alv.•ays sick an1l \1·eak. and the
·welfare peopll": give a very small amount
to eat and get my neces.~111cs.
''Because or my st:ile or bring:
everyone lakes advai<lai;te llf 1ne 111·
elud ing men. I wa~ marrird /or ;:iwh1lr,
bu! my husband ran off w11h .~nn1e rric:k.
and roll band. The nnly n1nnry I ,get. i~ $27
a month frorn county aid. 1 can"t ex i.~t nn
lh1~ niuc.h but no one cares if I should
fade away ..• "
" ... if there is anything you can do,
please help me. Possibly a lctler to the
welfare people would heir my existance.
ifaybe you can help me, it's not too much
to ask."
"We'll try to get in touch wilh her ;is
soon as v.·c can," ~1rs. Timberlake s111d
today. "She doesn't have a phone there."
Kalhy reportedly lives in a farting while
frame house behind a tavern named ··:rhe
Eight Ball" in Colali. She went to one
semester at Orange Coasl College before
leaving the Jtarbor Area.
"She'! certainly welcome back here."
Mrs. Timberlake safd. "l think this is all
vrry tragi~.''
llr. Timberlake told reporters, j'She
was around here the first of !he year. She
wa!J sick v.·ith hepat itis, and then went
back to San Francisco and I haven 't
heard much about her. since. I think she
created her own proble111s, and she's
going to have to solve them."
Timberlake is a first cousin to the
Presiden t.
Another California cousi n nf the
president's was in the news last February
for being on welfare. Phillip Milhous , 55. •
of Grass Valley is a first cousin. He and
his wife, Anna , 47, said they reccivtrl
welfare and social security benl":fit.I and
had been aided by the Calilornia Rural
Legal Assistance.
'
Pres ident Will R 1111
In 1972, Says Kl e in
ROCKFORD. Ill. (UPI) -White Houi;e
Communications Direclor Herbert Klein
~11id Wednesday there i~ no doubt Pre111·
dent Nixon wilJ MIO (()r re~lectfon Wilh
Vice Prestdfnt Spiri> T. Agnew as his
running mate.
Thurid~Y. J~11t l , 1971 M
Tripi~ Murder Probed
Countian Among Trunk Slaying Victims
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 TM DellJ r ll .. Sltlf
A mysterious multiple murder case in
which a La Habra man is one of three
victims -with possibly more bodies to
be found -was unfolding today in Uls
Angeles.
The princi pal suspect, already jailed in
a separate rape and robbery case, was
Wanted Man Held
With Companion
On Drug Charge
A policeman's recognition of a wanted
nian Jed to a brief pursuit in Costa Mesa
\\'ednesday in which dangerous drugs and
marijuana were allegedly flung from the
cor window.
One suspect was arrested where the
car finally halted in the 200 block of San•
lo 1'homas Street, wh ile t.he second was
found hiding, in a parked truck after
allegedly fleciiig on foot.
Lyn n T. Clark, 2.'i. of 446 S. Tustin Ave.,
Orange. was booked on suspicion of
posseiSinn of dangerous dr ugs and mar~
Juana, plus four traffic \Yarrants and
suspicion of stale prison parole viola !ion.
Danny E. Simmons, 28. of 15976 r.,ount
.J ack.son St., Fountain Valley, was charg·
ed only on the drug counts.
Officer Bill Bechtel said he spolttd
Clark al 2:30 p.m., al Santa Ana and De:!
Mar avenues and gave chase.
A hou sewife found a bag of while
powder believed to be the potent
stimulant called speed, discarded at the
scl":ne, \\'hile Officer Bechtel said he found
another bag containing a marijuana
cigarette.
l'ichedull":d for arrai1nment at mid·morn-
ing on three counts of""homlclde.
Detectives were keeping a shroud (If
11ecrecy over bow John P. Hendrix, 35,
was l!nked to gunshot slaylngs of two
security guards and a retired railway
clerk.
Victims -all slain and stuffed into car
trunks and in one case a pickup truck btd
-art Eugene Bealer, 35, of 500 W. Olin-
da Avl!'., La Habra Leland Webb, 35, of
Los Angell":s and Charles Ha yes, 71, e{
Eagle Rock.
The investigation was being handled by
homicide detectives al the LAPD's
Newton Division. who hinted additional
murder victims may be found .
Bealer, last seen May~. was found in
the trunk of his car which was parked In
Hendrix' driveway when police V.'l":nt to
the rl":sidence \Vl":dnesday after somehow
connecting him lo the cases.
Steurity a;uard Webb , rf:ported m.i.ssiog
by his wife Monday after failina to come
home from a department 5tore job th•
night before was also found In a vehicle.
Webb had been shot twice, robbed acd
laid out in his pickup truck bed, in-
vestigators said.
Qincerned about her elderly husband
who vanished May Z9, Hayes' wife filed
a missi ng persons report and friends
later noticed the couptl!'·s car parked cear
the Los Angtlts railroad yards.
Police said he had also been shot twice
and robbed.
Questioned today .about the possibility
of more arim discoveries, a polie•
spokesman said hl": knew of none so far.
"Northern California 23, Southern
Ca lifornia 3," he remarked of the grim,
multiple murder score ef Ute past week.
Phony 'Rocky' Gets Loan
BELVEDERE (UPI) -He said his
nan1e was David R. Rockefeller 111 and
he needed a $.lf)()() loan from a bank here
because his $3 million in assets were lied
up m busine11s deals.
Police said \Vednesday his name \\'as
indeed Rockefeller. but only because he
had legally changed it from DavLd
Bubach afltr filing for bankruptcy in
Clevl":land, Obio , last October.
Police said "Rockefeller" gained entry
into prominent bay area social circles
wit h thl": magic of the Rockefeller name
and persuaded a t.1arin County socialite
to cosign the loan at Crocker.Citizens
Bank.
Arter lhe bank learned of Rockl":ftller's
true financial ,1tatus, it tried unsuc.
cessfully to recall the loan. There has
been no response from the handsome
young man . .,,·ho listed a fancy Tiburon
address. and poll cc ga}d they are looking ,
for him .
Rock@f11\Jtr camfl to I.he San Francisco
area recently and became known in high
social circles, ref~rring to ''Uncle
Nelson" :ind "U ncle Laurence."
He told the bank his uncle owned the
Chase Manhattan Ban~ iq New York .a~d
that his father was with 'Sland&rd Oil ll1
Tarrytown, N.Y.
But a bank official became suspicious
after \earnl!fg that Rockefeller had taken
a job in San Francisco. He wondered why
a Rockefeller would need a pay check
and put a private investigator to work
who discovered the young m a n '1
background.
Up Sa&f
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4 DAILY PILOT
\
\ •· I i,ps
Thar's Still
Gold in Hills
By THOMAS MURPHINE
01 !tit Dalt~ .. llOI lltll
HAPPY DAZE DEPT. -It is not
enough that the run of the news each day
is tilled with ordinary fear and di!may.
~-
t: ,.
(' '
•,~. j ' '~ ~ \ ,..,
! , , Ji l"-.
Ul'I Te~
Contacts Cut
Blasts Hit Area
'
Of NATO Parley
LISBON (UPI) -A se ries of bomb ex·
plosions r o c k e d telecommunication
center! in Lisbon and a nearby town tir
day, disrupting most telephone and tele~
lines between Portugal and the outside
world as the NATO foreign ministers
began a tw<Klay meeting.
There were rumors another uneKploded
bomb was found in the National
Assembly building, the Sao Benion
palace, where th~ ministers held their
formal opening session. Dr. Feytor Pinto,
spokesman for Che Portuguese lnforma·
tion Ministry, refused to confirm or deny
the reports .
east-west troop reductions.
French Foreign Minister ~1auriee
Schumann. speaking as chairman of the
Western Big Four group d'e aling with
Berlin, reported on progress of the slow·
moving Berlin talks with the Soviets. He
said his recent talks on Moscow indicated\.
some desire by the Russians for an
agreement.
\Vest German foreign minister Walter
Scheel de scribed Berlin as a "test case
for easing east-west tensions.''
:
I • l
I
I
I
You begin to suspect that readers are
gelling used to headlines aOOut mass
graves along riverbanks, triple ax
murders and bodies discovered in
automobile trunks. Then the experts
come along to soothe our jangled nerves.
Like this:
ACCU SED GENERALS The Army announced
Wednesday that Brig. Gen. John Donaldson {R) has
been charged "'ilh six Vietnamese murders a few
months after ~1y Lai. The last U.S. General
charged with war crimes is Brig. Gen. Jacob, 1:1·
Smith (L) who was courtmartialed because of his
order during Philippine insurrection of 1901 to kill
all persons over age 10 on island of Samar.
The first explosion came at a con1.
rnun ications center in downtown Lisbon
seven hours before the NATO leaders sat
down to discuss recent Sov'iet ()Vertures
toward mutuaJ troop reductions in
Europe, Russian calls for a European
security conference and the ever present
Berlin problem.
R e fu gees Die
By Thousand
From Cholera
i •shot Fro••• Copter'
f LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The
metabolic chain of a person exposed tD
carbon monoxide over a prolonged period 1' may be disrupted with damage to the
heart, brain and central nervous system,
a medical conference was told Wed·
nesday ....
Viet Slayings Described
Pinto said one bomb wrecked a vital
S\Vitching center outside the com-
munications building in downtown Lisbon
and that three olhcr bombs eKploded Jn a
telephone substation at Sacavem. 30
miles northeast of Lisbon . He sal<f it
caused no casualties and only slight
damage.
CALCUTTA (AP) -The heallb direc·
tor of \Vest Bengal State reports !hat
more -than 1.000 East Pakistani refugec:ii
have died in " cholera epidemic that
broke out near Calcutta three weeks ago.
"The situt1tion has eone completely out
o( our control.'' Dr. lliralal Saha said in
an intervie111 Wednesday. * . • Slo~·Jy. it sinks in that the expert ex·
:i pounding abo\•e is telling you that ex·
' hausl fume s can get you about three
ways.
So you drive to work holding your
breath.
If thars not enoush. you could try Ibis
cne:
LOS ANGELES (U PI ) -Repeated use
cf same commercial underarm aerosol
deodorants can lead lo clinical lung
... disease in certain persons, an Army doc·
• tor vn1rned today in a report to a medical
conference ....
*
CHU LAI, South Vietnam (UPI) -
Brig. Gen. John \\I. Donaldson, charged
in the 1968-69 ·murders of six South Viet-
namese civilians, is alleged to have fired
at the victims with a rifle while flying in
his command .helicopter, sources in the
U.S. 23rd lniantry Division (Americal )
said today,
The murder charges a g a i n st
Donaldson, now stationed at Fl Meadl,
Md., were announced Wednesday by the
Army. Pentagon officials declined to giVe
any specifics.
Sources here said Donaldson is tho
•
Jiame general \\'ho \Vas described by the
Prnlagon last January -without givinJ:
his name al lhe time -as being under
investigation in the shootings of siK South
Vietnaese civilians as he fle1v over
them in a helicopter in 1968.
They said several teams of in-
vestigators arri\•ed here between October
or 1970 and last January to comb records
of the 11th infantry brigade's operations
In Quang Ngai Province during the period
when the killings \o,'ere supposed lo have
occurred.
Donaldson, then a colonel. commanded
the brigade from October. 1968 through
March, 1%9. The slayings, reported by
helicopter pilots, v.·ere s·aid to have oc-
curred bet"·ecn November. 1968. and
January, 1969. according lo Army of·
ficials in \Vashington.
The sources said all of the brigade's
operations were in Qua ng Ngai Province,
and it was the only U.S. brigade that
operated in the province during the
period.
According to Washingkln accounts in
January of the investigation into the case
of the then-unnamed general. he was
alleged to have taken pol-shots at
civilians while supposedly scouting Quang
Nga! Province in his c o m m a n d
helicopter.
The bomb at the te!econ1munications
building in Lisbon caused extensiv e
damage but no casualties.
The blast cut all commercial and
private telephone and telex traffic. Bu t
the U.S .. 'British and other embassies,
equipped with !heir own diplomatic radio
and other telecommunications channels,
v.·ere not seriously affected,.spokesmen
said.
Speaking at !be start of the first \\'Ork-
ing session of the NATO conference.
Belgian Foreign Jilinistcr Pierre Harme!
~aid there can be no one-sided troop cuts
by the West.
He called on the allies lo agree among
U1 cmselve!'l on the 1;:eneral principles for
possible nego!iat.lons \11ith the Soviets on
He said the f:gure of 1.000 dead was ~
conservative estimate base<! on hospital
records. Ile said that \\'hilc many
refugees 'A'ent into camps in India, many
others took shelter under roadSide trees
and deaths among them went unreported.
The· disease broke out in the Nadia
district, a border area about 60 miles
oortheast of Calcutta and according to
Dr. Saha "had since spread like
wildfire.''
On :\1onday there were about 4.000
refugees in hospitals near the Nadia
refugee camps. Wednesday there were
more than 10,000 he said.
This, ()f course, is follo\\1ed by 17 v.·ell·
chosen paragraphs wherein the Army
ierk refuses to identify those '·some"
underann sprays that he thinks might be
able to do you in.
One Tricia Cake
Baker Succeeds;
Ch ef Relieved
Concorde Blows Chance Pen ci l Chewers Get
\Varni n" Over Lead "'
Dr. S;iJ13 attributed the 1ncreasin.i:
dea'th toll to lack of proper medical
fucilitics.
"Our stoc ks of saline ;ire completely
exh<iusted and none are available in
Calcurto ."
So. not knov•ing if it's your brand that
rea!ly ought lo be marked with a skull
and crossbones, you stand in front of the
bathroom mirror. hold your breath and
spray. Then you flee before !be spray set·
ti es.
To Impress U.S. V IP s .\EW YORK (AP) -People 11ho chew
pencils because they are 11ervous, .should
be ncr\•ous about chewing pencils, the
c!ly's Heal!h Department says.
Anoth er fact.or, he s;iid. was lhe
unusu;illy tngh flow of re'.ugees.
"\\lhile the government expected aboul
11~0 million refugees,'' he added. '"the
figure has nearly doubled .''
Later, you can bold your armpits down
lighl while you t.ry driving lo work :· holding your breath so tbe exhaust fumes
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The White
House chef, Henry Haller, plan! to begin
baking Tricia Nixon's giant wedding cake
Saturday witbotlt a trial run, but he wa!
pictured today as relieved that at least
one person got a one-pan version to turn out fine.
PARIS (UP I) -'Ihe Angl~French
supersonic CoTI:corde sulrered engine
trouble today during a s p e c i a 1
demonstralion fl ight wilh top U.S.
government and airline ()fficials aboard
and fai led to show off its abilily to fly at
twice the speed of sowid.
won"\ gel you.
And don"t drink out of the drinltint
foUntain at work because you've been
warned about a.II the lousy stun that's ~ floaLing around in public waler supplies
these days.
"Henry is happy now," ~irs. Richard
M. Nixon 's staf( director. Connie Stuart,
said following a report by a Washington
Post food write(\ Mary Laster, that she
\\'as able to coine up with a perrect,
delicious cake from the re<:i pe put out -
but not te!ted -by the 't\11itc House
kitchen.
Louis Ciusta, general managl!r of lhe
French Aerospa ciale Corp., co-builders of
lhe Concorde with the British Aviation
Corp., said the distinguished passengers
aboard the flight v;ould almost certainly
be disa ppointed. They had been told they
would be in troduced to lhe '"Ma ch 2
Club'* -persons who have flov;n at twice
the speed of sound .
. -. .
' , . • -• .
•
* AFTER ALL this good news, a couple
cf trunk murders seem like sort of a
remote threat !o your eKistence. So it's
no 'A'Onder folks search the nev.·s pages
for some happiness.
And so. in evenl you missed it among
the ha lchel slay1ngs and aerosol can
.,.,·arnin gs, I shall point out in this space
that Ca/1forn1a Is on the brink of repeated
history.
Four gu ys ha\'e struck gold up in !he
J.io'her Lode country in a place ca!led
r.telones along the Stanislaus River 1n
calaveras County.
Why, it's 1he old fi io Vista ~l ine. folk!!,
that "'a~ boominR 100 year~ ago after
.John Sutter struck go\d in 1848 <1nd \hey
rook $2 bill ion out of the 1t·lother Lode.
"'O't\I O,'iE or the rour lucky ones. E<l
Falls. admits th;i t lhe slrike is a good one
but he .,.,arns. "'This 1sn·1 as big as the
rumors have 11. •.. ''
Aw, come on. Ed. You know it's the
Gold Ru.!-h all over again. You 've struck
it ri C.h. California 's economic doldnims
are over. To hell 'A'ith aerospace. II'!
back to the hills wilh a pick and pan.
California 's streets will once again be
pave d with g~ld.
Don 'l downplay your strike. Ed. Arter
reading all the other news, we like your
luck.
You've given us something lo believe in
again.
Mrs. Laster conceded that she did not
follow the recipe lo the exact Jetter. She
said that was only OCcause. in trying oul
the $.serving, one-layer version of the
lemon-laced, while pound cake, she did
the baking at home and her oven bakes
slower than mo st.
Accordingly, she baked it an hour in-
stead of tht 45 minutes called for.
She also used a •·collar" 1n her pan -
\l•hich the \l.'hite }louse neglected to men-
tion origina11y -lo avoid overflow of the
batter. ~1rs. Laster's verdict: "A good
recipe."
Egypt Arms Cost
To Break Record
CAIRO fUPI) -Egypt announced to-
day a defense budget for 1971-72 of $1.56
billion, the highe:;t ln its history.
Finance Minister Abdel Aziz Hijati, an·
nouncing the figure at a news conference,
said it exceeded last year's total by $175
million.
He said the money was earmarked "to
continue supporting demands <1f the
atruggle and national security needs."
Tornadoes Raise
··rt·s an unfortunate thing that for the
first lime it was impos..c;ible to ignite the
reheating system on the Rolls-Royce
l'ngines, and Concorde couldn't go any
laster than mach 1.35." Giusta told UPT.
"I know that several of the party
aboard "ill be disappointed."
Wicks
~ ~
'I will buy her a new
d ress ••• I will buy
her a new dress ••• '
Havoc
Oklalio rna Hit H ardest W ith 100 rnpli W inds
California
Ir UlUflD f'lt•St IN1a•1o1.r.TIOH!ll
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Sen. Barry M. Goldwater (R·Arii. ),
President Nixon's personal envoy to the
air.show; U.S. Transportation Secretary
John Volpe, and representatives from
Pan American \Vor ld Airways.
Test results disclosed Wed nesday show.
ed that more than one third of a samp·
Jing or wooden pencils sold here were
coated with lead paint. Lead content in
the paint ranged as high as 30 percent.
According to Indian gov er nm t n t
r.stimates. more than 3.5 million refugees
have arrived in West Bengal Slate alone
si nce civil strife broke out in East
Pakistan March 25. ~1ore than 200,000
poured in Tuesday and \Vednesday.
•
1]
' '
I KentucJo;Y !i::; .
"'11h1 Baunoo
... ~,. •.. .,, ... .... .... . . .::!'· ...... _._~,.;..<'
saVJnger
-
l@TfiJ P K1ntuc~ Str&itht Bourlion -
..... ~~!~ ..•..
s~ngest
•
Buy a fifth of Early Times and save. It's only $5.49.
But to save more, buy the quart. It's only $6.49.
The "savingest'' though, is the half gallon. Only $11.98.
(Wh~ch proves the old adage that when you buy
the larger size you save more).
' Three sma ll victories for the consumer.
" ~ •
. -
DAJLY PILOT l)
75 B-,. Dailfl Ma y Day
Arrests
Defended
Revenue ·
Proposal
Defeated
Heroin Addict Leave s Grim
WA SHINGTON (UP J') WASHINGTON (UPI)
Film W ar:Q.ingto Young sters
'l'be Justice Dcparl1nenrs No.
2 n1an contended today that
mass arresls of May Day an-
tiv.·ar demonstrators were
legal, constitutional , and
essential to control a ''vicious
and wanton nlob attack on
Washington."
The first section o£ PresldeDt
Nixon 's revenue sharing plan
to be voted on by Congress
was defeated Wednesday and
some !louse members claim
they have uncovered a flaw in
another major $5 billion seg.
ment of the plan that will
allow them to shelve it for this
year, at least,
NEWTON, Pa. (AP)~ lie addiets I.hat the greater ma-of the Buckll' County district
died In jail 11 drug ad t. In jority of them, if not all ()( attorney's offit-e, in this small
pain. lie was hooked on h roin, them, start out with , mari-Philadelphia suburb. H o
a habit lhal reached 75 bags juana and lhen progress to agreed to do it to reach kids in
daily a1 a cost of $750 bffore harder drugs. . . . junior and senior bigh schools
his arrest "They all aay you can quit and show them what being an
:\ddict is like. Jn what one officia l deserib-
cd a ~ the final defense of the
legality of the mass arrests,
Deputy Attorney G e n e r a I
Richard G. Kleindienst also
linked leaders of the protest
with the North Vietnamese
and Viet Cong.
lie left behind a Hlmed ton-whenever you want lo. I said,-,; __________ "i
ression, warning young people it, too. But the years spea k for II
not to experiment \\'Llh mari-themselves. J.1y arms, my
juana and hard drugs. legs. It's a matter of record.
"Make no mistake, this was
a calculated atten11>t by
organized disru pters led by
people who had met repeated·
ly with Viel Cong and North
Vietnamese leaders," he said.
The film was made for Yoo can'I stop, Don't la!k
police in April 1970, four yourself into thinking yo u can,
months before he d i ed cause you can't."
ciwaiting trial for burglary. It 1-fis arms and legs were
is now being processed tor covered with needle marks.
schoo l distribu!ion, delayed They were almost as hard as
because of legal problems with stone after 13 years of jn.
his family. jection after injection. Even
"Stop before you start," he under his fingernails.
APPRAISALS
g1mtlon1s
··u v.·as no t a group or
frollicking picnickers. as some
Washington columnists have
tried to make out. This was a
deadly serious program to halt
the U,S. government. and a
force of 20.000 had been.
mobilized to do just that."'
'fhe inltial defe;it came
when the House. 204 to 182,
turned down a Nixon plan that
Wt1Uld have turned $2.S billion
in federal revenue ovtr to
stales and cities durin~ the
next two years ior manpower
training or public service jobs.
The governmental units
receiving the money v•ould
have decided ir it y.•ent for
training or for actual work.
Instead the House passed a
Democrat-backed me a s u r e
that would authorize $5 billion
dur ing the next fi ve years. to
be spent for the creation of an
estimated 150.000 pub I i c
service jobs. The President
has threatened to veto this ap-
proach.
said. '"I used every vein that was
"Everyone near ~·ou, you available, in every part or mY.11 r-------,~--, I
hurt." he. said. ··No one body." he said. Sout~ Co••t Pl•1•
esca""S it. Dennis told his slory in the Cott• M11• 540.9066
Trh . lh' 'I stud io 0£ the Lower Bucks Bri.tol •t tll1 Sin Oi•go Fwy.
Kleindienst said arrests of
7,000 demonstrators ~lay 3
without the usual field arrest
lorm used hy District of
Columbia police '"v.'cre per·
fectly legal."
THEY SMILE NOW -Pan American
s te\vardess Yolan da King share laugh
turned frotn four days in Cuba.
UPI T•lepllol•
Airlines pilo t Capt. George Ashley and
in }1iami after their ti.ijacked plane re--
.. ere s no ing you won r~Caibijl~eleile~vijifilij·'~"i'~o~d~e~leijciti~v~""ili~~~iii~ji~~ do, there's nothing you can't
do when it comes to crime.
Drugs are incentive, the driv·
ing force."
"There is no requirement in
the Constitution or in the D.C.
law for the use of field arrest
forms." be said in a speech
prepared for !he Cleveland
llotriry Club. "Such forrns had
been previously adppted as an
administrative procedure."
"'But accor.ding to the
critics." Kleindienst said, "the.
police should have turned their
backs on a rampaging mob in
order to bu sy themselves as
clerks with procedural
forms."
Job Money
For Youth
Disclosed
\VASHINGTON (UPll
President Nixon said \Ved ·
11esday the fcder,11 govern·
ment will spend $303 million in
helping 674 .000 teenagers gel
suinmer jobs this year. But
t~ National Urbnn League
warned that unen1ployment
among blarks was fr ightening
and it asked the government
to spend $6 billion .
In his statement Nixon said :
llijack Visit
'Glamorous' Havana
Meets Hard Times
Railroad
To Unload
Prin1e Land
The defeat came as the
I rouse Ways and Means Com-
mittee opened hearings on the
"general" section of Nixon 's
revenue sharing proposal. This
section would divert $5 billion
in federal revenue to stales
and cities with no spending
:st.ri ngs attached.
The 29-year-0\d son or a
\\•hite middle class suburban
school teacher was identified
only as "Dennis," lo protect
his wife and three children.
Those who fool around with
marijuana are kid d Ing
themselves. he said.
''It has been my experience
over the years wilh other drug
* * * Many States Soften I
.l\11AMI (UPI) -The very
Y.'ord J-favana seemed to
epiton1i7.e the sensuous gla·
mour of tropical night life.
Thousands of American
tourists who streamed to the
Cuban capital in the l950 's
called il ''The Paris or the
Caribbean.''
The pilot, Capt.
Ashley, 52, of Coral
George
Gables,
Laws 011 Marijuana
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -
'f he financially distressed
Penn Central railroad has an-
. Fla., said he last was in nounced it ·will sel! the sites of
lfavana ll years ago and 1t the \\'a[doir Astoria llotel and
''has changed draslically." other valuable New York City
'"It is very, very rundown. property i1~ an atten1pl lo Assoelated P ress Wrllrr sliff~ning, the penalties for'
Along the Male.con ( a raise needed mone y. Marijuana users are le~s mar11uana dealers.
boulevard skirting the bay Trustees of the Penn Central likely to wind up in jail in 1971 A few stales continue to hold
that once \\'as Havana's most 'l'ransportation Co. sai d as inrrensing numbers or the line against relaxing tough
picturesque drive ) there are Wednesday the property, own-stales legislate more lenient criminal statutes in nlarijuana
Pig~ns on the roofs. chicken ed For more than JOO years, in-la"'s. cases. All slates have balked Havana v.•as '' a no I her "~ " pens on the roofs, you eludes a 29-acre tract covering: A survey by The Associated ;it impleinenting the recom·
world," only 9'J miles from the wouldn 't recognize it. Jt looks about 10 midtown fl.1anhattan Press shoY.'S that many states mendation of a national CtJm-
U.S. 1nainland. Pre t I Y like a r uin." Blocks along lower Park are fo[[oy.·ing tlw'. re ce nt mission to legalize the drug.
senoritas flirted on almost Avenue. Value of the property federal la w lh;it reduced There is a notice;ible trend
every street corner. llum was bi•,.
1
c1,.s
0
1,i,""". ed at n1ore than $1.2 possession of n1arijuana !or to separate marijuana of.
I ·1 I d 1 c · OLD JIJOLIN personnl use from a fe lony to fcnses from the ex.isling body P ent1 u an c 1eap. asinos The lrustces said tnat \\"hile a misdemeanor. of narcotics J aw s . In
fl ourished. There was dancing the purpose of putting the real This ,,1i11 permit judges to Washington State, pol has
witil dawn. SETS M A RK estate uµ for sa le '~as to raise keep first offenders out of bt>en designated a "dangerous
Then came Fidel Caslro and needed fund s, ttiere ·wa s little prison. drug'' rather tha n a narcotic.
the revolution. Cuba was c\os-LONDON (UPI) -A 1721 hclpe lhe railroad could eJl"pect Tiie adlon by the states this Nebraska has some of the
Stradivarius sold today at auc-lo receive quic k cash , yenr continues a tr('nd of the mildest Jaws. ·A j udge there
ed to ''Yankee imperialists" Mortgages on the pro""rties i>asl four years uiward n1ilder might impose a l)('nalty as by lh ,._ , · • · lion for a record $201 ,600, ,,~ e ....... mmi n1s~ regime. are said to exceed half a la\YS for simple possession. light as a $1 fine for posses.s-
llavana became a tropical nearly four times the previous bill ion do!!ars. States that reduce penalties in ing Jess than one pound of
De.,._ llU .. ._.p ,...,.., ...... , ... ""'· ........ __,, "'-IM•~
MEDICAL ASSISTANT Ol
REC!PTIONJST
DENTAL
ASSISTANT
:Short, l11le111lv. covnn fvl!y irvalil1 you
"' "" Aui1!onl ;,. th• olfit• o l a Ph~•;don
er Ot!\li11. 4 .,.,n1ti p<Og<o., for Oe11lol A•·
•<o!ant CW" Mcd;cnl Oflic• lcc•pt;o,.ht. 7
"'°"lk p<Ogrom IOI' lrt\ed;,.,1 Auio1a·,.1. llcr)r
or cv.on1ng (lo""'· life!im• ploc:•in•at
ou;.tonc• ol flO oddit;o,...1 •all •
Southern Califomia College
of
Medie1l and Dental Assistants
(fonn1rly t..s An9tle1 Col11ge)
ffi@@ill~IDnij!J~ID I·
h., the Accreditirig Commi15io" of th• I
N•l'I. A11n."of Trd. ind T1chnic1I 5'hb . I
w..._.,.,.._,__~
1717 South Brookhurst
Anaheim
Phono 635-3450
'
' ••
"The summer of 1971 will be a
sum m<'r of expanded op.
J>Qrtun ity for the disad·
vantaged youth of our country
-due in no s1nall measure to
the large number of summer
johs Y.'hich ;ire being made
avail able In them."
wallflower. record sale price for a violin. The buildings on the pro-1971 include A r k a n s n s , marijuana.
\Vord filtered out during the William Hill and sons, violin pcrty are among Ne\v York·s Colorado, Florida, Idaho, ln-1 !i~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~i" past decade about the spartan makers and dealers of Lon-mos t fa1nous landmarks, in-diana, l\finnesota, Nebraska, I ~ ~
life in Havana, but lhc~ first don·s Bond Street, made the eluding Grand Ce n Ir a I Utah, Washington and West C' ~C
real look at the c ity came this y.·inn ing bid at Sotheby's on ·rerminal, the Pan American. Virginia.
v.·eek \\'hen 68 perso ns aboard the instrument offered for .5ale Building and !he Bilt1nore. The survey ind i cat cs , EARN 253 TO 503 -~ORE
a hijacked airliner v.·ere de-by Samuel Bloomfield lilf Commodore, Roosevelt and however, that states are lft~
tained almost four days by "the California, Barclay hotels. holding firm, or in some cases
Nixon said the Nationnl
Alli;ince of Bnsi ne~s1nen y.•ill
provide an addili onal Jrttl.000
job slots, incrrasing 1he totnl
of sub~idi1.ed p::isi!ion~ IQ
824.000 He s:1id this is 204.000
more !h an last yc<1r.
Three·fou r!h.~ ot 1he johs
will be $41.60 a n·rrk posi tron.~
in the l\"e1ghhnrhood Youth
Corps Jastin.c? nine v.·ceks. one
week feY.·er than last summer.
Cubans. The Pan Ainerican 1-o-=c--~==~~=-~---;;;,:-:;;::::r;:;;;;;;;;;;;n<'~
Iv Id A. . 11 · lu , -·'°!' !J'"'~·~?.:' .J'~·. ~ .. --· '""'!"" ~-r-r·.. -7 >~~---J>;· -w;:;., ~-t. .. "'-. ~, or 1rv.·ays Je inerre rn-•. ••.A· · ··.,. .. ·*"'.,,....,' ·Yj /" '"· -'· ;(>:·, ..... ' · ~., " ····"""' ('d lo the United Stales ~ .. -• ·~ ·= · ·' ·--.,;,.,,, :r.'< .J. -~t~
\.\"ednesday. ~
"f"ve traveled all ove r Latin "-· 1
Amecica.bol i''<>een no lhing y• 111\111...f Fl&C'll< ...-a..111= "IJOCll< :•
like 1t ... lhe ~·hole tov.·n was Um<f'llllllll m.J~~· \ • • IL ..._.. • \ ,
very dil,pidatcd .nd no hou.s• y,U TtJll= ....i()~T AIJC'•C' -.rli'>f)~~ 11
could be said not to need a . •1 L 1"'11111111111 ~ ·~ ~ •';J..J .;, .
coat of paint," said one of the ~ -j
hijacked passengers, M rs . ....~
Heidi Tortora of Na ssau. • J
r--~~~~--'=-"==='-===-=======11 ""' I
--...-.. --.. -........... ..,_ ...... ,.""'"~ ... ···-·-1 _ ...... ., C.1..VCIN [ .. 't_ .
Most banks have now reduced savings passbook rates
to a low 43 . At Pacific you still earn the same
high rates as before.
ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS
6.18°k> 6.00°k> 5,000!!.!! TWO
5.92'%> 5.75'%> 1,000!!.!! ONE
5.39'%> 5.25'%> 500!!.!! Y.th
5.13°k> 5.00°k> JI!.!! ONE DAY
• Interest compounded daily and pai d from date of
'
" ,
deposit to date of withdrawal even if it's just one day
Would you like to be
more creative?
Yo u l'an be . if you undcr!l lan<l tha t you are l hl.'
n:llert ion of God, who is the only rrealor. t
'l"his helps you exprcss 'l he in1agination, fre,.hnc:.~.
and in ~pir;1lion Go<l has given you.
No one ~houl J ft~e l his lalents slin cd .. Or his lil'e
b11rJened with' boring tasks. If you do, you c:.an
!ll~rt today to learn of the cre:it ivil y that comes
J,_rom Gotl .
Con1e in and read this week's Bible Lesson.
Ou r study room is quiet, free, and open
to everyone.
Christian Science Reading Room . (f)
COITA MES.Iii -'Fllt'T CHU11 CH 0,. CM•llT, ICll:NTllT
ltsf M••• VH•t Dll"o. Ct1l1 Mftl
NUNTINOTON IEAC N -'Fl11ST CMUltCM 0, (M111$T, SC1t:MT IST
Jle MllA Slr"I, M""tllofll~ l .. <:11
NIW~Oll:T 11 ... CM -'lll ST CMUllCH 0' CM111~T, SClf.JiTIST
lllj 1111 L-, NIWll'i<1 l .. (ft
NE Wi'OltT llACM -llCONO CMUltCM 0' CHltl$T, SCtlNfnT llOl I c1111 Mif~w•w, Cl...,• 111 Mir
"
•
The fashion look of the Thirties is back and we've got it.
ladies Gtycine watches with cofored stone crowns.
An assortment of styles, shapes and an array of colors.
Values to $55. YOUR CH.OlCE:S37.60.
C/ol .. t A<•-h ln~ltltl.
"''""rl<111 E,_.., ...
llrtli;A infl"kl~ 1111 Mltt1r C/ll f"1'n, IM.
SLAVICK'S
Jc\veler!f Since 1917
18 FASHIO N ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH-044-1380
Open Mon. •nd Fri., 10 •. rn. to 9 :30 p.m.
• '· I ii
~ .1
.; •
lj
Ask how yo u can obtain all these benefits service charge
FREE
PREPARATION OF PERSONAL STATE and
FEDERAL INCOME TAX RETURNS
6 FREE ' , ~,,1111 ,~ TRAVELER'S CHECKS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES
MANY OTHE RS .. ~ ,,t COLLECTION OF NOTES .• "
OPEN NIGHTand DAY
Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M.
Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M, ·
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
isD llllltSTOl Snt!D" • COSTA tllUA, CAUFOlllNIA • ~Ht 540-40M
•
• • • •
. -. .
DARY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE
A Timely
Coast Community College District officialS are to
be commended for demonstrating a timely sensitivity in
developing the ~istri ct's 1971-72 budget.
\Vhile the preliminary budget figures released last
week are just that -preliminary -they indicate a
welcome beginning.1
Welcome because the dropping of a 20-cent permis·
sive building tax and a $3 million trimming job done by
the college top brass 1nay result in a 22 percent reduc·
lion in property taxes paid to supfort the di strict by
Lupayers in communities fro1n Sea Beach to Ne\vport
Bea,ch.
A drop in the tax rate from 89 to 69 cents must he
praised in a year fraught \Vilh hig h unemployment,
spiralling inflation and general economic malaise.
The owner of a $32.000 home -who ma y be out
of work -"'ill be glad to know Coast Community Col ·
lege District will nick him for $16.27 less next year -
$55.09 instead of $71.36.
The proposed $21 million budget. bare bones
though it may be, nevertheless provides for continued
enrollment gro\vth.
Certainly it's v.·elcome news to property taxpayers
\Vhen a tax rut is being discussed. It happens seldom
enough.
The Fluoridation Vote
~ On June 8 Fountain Valley voters will ~o the
polls to cast ballots on a tricky fluoride issue.
The issue is tricky because of the wordi on the
ba1lot. It is not a simple "yes" or "no" on w ther the
city should fluoridate drinking water. lnstead the bal-
lot proposition would provide the city with an ordinance
requiring an etection any time fluoride is proposed.
Sensitivity
should support the new ordln1nce on June 8 . That means
a "yes" on the ballot.
Those residents wbo favor fluorides in city water
should vote "no" on the ordinance. That would allow
the council to move ahead with fluoridation. Citizen!
don't really have to wait for a second election to make
their choice. The fluoride issue can be settled June 8.
The DAILY PILOT recommends a "no" vote. Fluor·
ldation has been proved time and time again a safe
means of drastically reducing dental cavities.
WJ10 Is Paying the BilJ? .,
The Chamber of Commerce is being commended
fro m all sides for its sponsorship of a study of Hunting·
ton Beach city finances.
The Chamber is paying !or a $9,500, 90-day study
by the Santa Ana office of the national accounting firm
of Ernst & Ernst. The analysts have been charged with
the task of preparing a five-year financial plan !or the
city which it is hoped will assist the city council in bet·
ter relating major plans to the community's financial
capabilities.
But the Chamber should recognize that before any
reports or findings from the study are presented, the
roster of firms or individuals underwriting the cost of
the study. and what amounts. should be made known.
For r easons it obviously con siders important, the Cham·
ber has declined to make the list of sponsors public at
this lime.
The sponsorship information could be particularly
important m the ~yes of councilmen and citize ns shoul d
the five-year pla.'1. -~ter into the question or \\'hether
or not additional tax revenue should be sought from
businesses, and particularly the oil industry. Both have
frequenUy been eyed as new revenue sources.
•
Anti-fluoride campaigners call it a "freedom of
choice" election. But essentially the choice becomes o_ne
of deciding between fl uoridated v.1aler and non·fluoridat·
ed water.
If residents are against water fluoridation they
The value of the study-itself would be increased
\vith the r elease of information on its financial sup·
porters. H
. . ~ "';:;t:"" • ~' ~,.,.,, ~~\f'-.,J.
'iHE 5UNSET IS SiltL ·1~ERE, ~EA~ 1 EVEN .IF YOU ~'T 5[ rT AAY M0fi£.~
Met1iorial to a S111uggler
Abomination in Washington
WASH INGTON -The many millions
who make thei r pilgrunagcs to the na-
tional l!hrines In \Vashington should be
more aware of the abomination abqut. to
be visited upon the federal ci ty.
A memorial on the i:rand scale of tl1e
Johnson Library in Texas is projected to
honor Joseph the
~{agnificent on lhe
Great i\1all "'here
now on I y Gcorge
\Vashington and Ab·
raham Lincoln-not
even Thomas Jeffer-
son -reign b1 mar-
ble splendor. .
The memorial to
J~ph the Magnifi-
cent wo1Jld strike envy in Lorenzo ii
lltagnifico. tht Med.lei merchant prince of
Florence, himsel f a poet and patron oC
the ar1!1 ,
Joseph the Magnificent is no Medici,
though he is bracketed in print with this
rapacious famlly of lfilh century Italy,
but a Latvian-born forme r Canadian en-
lrf;preneur named Jose ph H. ltirshhorn.
IF ALL GOES AS NOW planned, hill
name \viii be handed down 10 the ages as
lhe only 20th century American \\'Orthy of
joining \Vashington and Lincoln on the
great greens.,..·ard bet\.,.een the li .S.
Capitol and the Lincoln t.·lernorial which
is ranked by many as the only truly
magnificent architectural vista in the na-
ticm. The seated, brooding and n1assive
Uncoln can then gaze across the reflec-
ting pool and past the shaft of the
Wash ington ~1onumcnt inlO Joe
I
, -Richard
}firshhorn's sunken sculpture garden, the
length of t·wo football fields tra nsepting
the J\tall.
Joseph the !\1agnificent wa.s ·wholly
unkno.,..·n to the average lawmaker and
public official until celebrated by Abe
FortM. Lady Bird Johnson and Lyndon
Johnson in their eagerness lo promote
the arts a few years ago. He agreed to
convey to the government his art col·
lection, of very considerable value and
merit but not to be compared with that of
lhe late Herbert Lehman given to the
Metropolitan Museum, pro.,.ided a
suitable housing were pt'Qv ided in
Washington which would memorialize his
name.
ONE NEEDS TO CAST his mind back
to 1966 "'hen Lyndon and Lady Bird were
trying to ingratiate themsel.,.es with µi e
artistic and literary community to show
that he was not a crude and tasteless
cornball from Texas unfit to 111alk in the
\l'ake of the elegant John F. Kennedy.
llirshhorn v.·ith his lvillingness to convey
his art collection under certain self-satis-
fying conditions was their artistic hostage
and prize ""'i~h the help of Abe Fortas,
The patrons produced a dazzling result
\vhich must have exceeded Hirllhhorn's
\1•ildC'st dreams. \V a shing ton is
monument-happy but Congress outdid
itsel f in Public Law 89-788 signed by
President Johnson in 1966. This act pro-
vided a national monument for the art
colleclion at publi c expense on the M;ill
of the United States Capitol rivalling
those of Washington and Lincoln and in a
.much be!ler location than the vast mar·
ble carbarn on the Potomac kno\l.•n as the
John F. Kennedy Center of the Perfonn-
ing Aris. Jefferson, meanwhile, remain!!
relegated in a modest rotunda at the
south end of the far a\1-'ay lidal basin.
OTHER JOURNALISTIC co lleagues
have dealt with the benefac t or 's
background, his coilviction in Canada for
illegal money transactions, his arrest for
wartime smuggling of U.S. currency
across the Canadian border. his iden·
tificaUon as promoter of questionable
stock schemes.
An editorialist in Washington snubs
such disc losures as "imbecilic'' in view of
the generosity of his gift, admitting that
Joseph the Magnificent may be no
perfect angel, but neither were the
J\1cdlci. Neither are the Medici lo be
1nemoria\ized on the Mall \Vith Lincoln
and Washington.
Hirshhorn's prospective bequest (he is
stilt hanging onto the art unlil everything
is buttoned do~·n about the memorial) is
certainly a desirable one and there are
plenty of places it rould be suitably hous·
rd other than the 111a!I dedica ted lo our
most famous men and highe:i;t ideal.~.
There are plenty of other ways lo han-
dle the collection and make it the nucleu~
of a great museum of American art other
than sanctifying a donor v.·ho vi'ishes''hi~
name to ring down through history v.'i lh
the greatest of America.
Noise About the Concorde
LO:\"DON -"Somet1mr. ~omrday.
public opinion ""Ill finally say ·no''" to 1hc
supersonic transport. protests the Gunr-
dian editorially ... And if lhat point conies
now ii will ht a viclory for ci.,.i!ized
v.alues." On lhe other side of the fence,
J.1P Anthony Wedgewood Benn, the
fonner Labor min1sler or technology ,
argues lhal the Anglo-French Concorde is
going lo be quieter than exislinl:l subsonic
pauenger jet.s when it enters commercial
use in 1974, .. Genuine passions for a
hi&he r qualil y of life," said Benn, ··are
aot matched by realism ."
Tb.is the argument is joined in Britain
belw-ttn those who belie\'e that the Con-
corde will be an'' environ men ta I
moru;Lrosily," and those whom the
mq:azine Flight International .says must
be ahown lhat lhe Concorde 1s a "social
animal with respect lo pollution , be it by
mnoke, noise . or induced tlin1atc
changes." This leading Industry JOurnal
added : "There is no ron.,.incing any of
the 'people who like dai~ies, • as lhe. en-
vironmentaU1ll have bttn called, that
--~--• Thursday, June 3, 1971
. The ceditoriol "'°°' ol Ui.• Dai1u · :fl!ot it1k1 to ~n/orm ond atfm.
'-t&JaUI rr~ra bu pre1tntlng this
rwwipoper'• opinfoni and com-
tM"'°'ll on WJ"ct o/ 'ntcre1C
a:nd tigni/Ecanu, bJI providing a
/ot"um /or the e,zpr11tlon of
our rt<Mkni ~niom, and bu
pr-.. wntino the diotrs11 uftw-
poMlo of lttf.,.....d obun><n
owd .,,.a-.. lopia "1 tM -Roblrt N. w~. Publlaber
Editorial
·'Research_
aviation has improved society mOT"e tha n
it has impoverished it."
It i!: not anlicipated that lhe Concorde
v.•ill ever be permitted to create sonic
booms o\'er populated land masses. The
likelihood is thal if the Concorde would be
too noisy for American 1\rporlll on
takeorf it would a l~ be banned from Bri·
lain.
CO~COROE'S BATI'LE "'ith the en-
\•ironmentalists began well before il e.ver
took to the air. Three weeks before the
maiden fiight in 1969, a group ca lling
itself "·The An ti-Concorde Project"' 111·
tacked the allegedly hannful etfects or
the plane's supersonic boom, i111 ground
noise , and the noxious inOuencei on the
atmosphere.
Although 17 bills currently before state
legislatures In America would prohibit
SST noise and air pollutkm, the Brill.sh
AlrcraU Corpor1Uon bel ieves thll IU bird
is within the. range of nol!t produced by
current subsonic jets. Thus any rtgul•·
lion which c1tche! I.ht supersonic craft
also "·ould affect existing neets. ,
One measure before tht New York
Legislature lays down that any aircraft.
producing more I.ban 108 decibels would
be considertd to generate "excessive
noise." As the Boeing 747 ls r:xactly at
tbal 108 decibel cefllng. A n t hon y
Wedeewood Benn told Edltorlal Rt;earch
Reports Jn ?Andon lhal ht wu convinced
the New York bill was "impr1cUcable -
lt. would close down Kennedy Airport."
TU: BRmS~ uAv,; been encouraaff
by !he comments in London of the Chief
()f lhc U.S. Federal A vi a l ion
l\dmlnistralion. John Schaffer_ He said
that tremendous progress v•as being
made to reduce exhaust fumes "and I
lhlnk that between now and 1974 they will
make some significant progress with
noise suppression .'' The conviction that
lhese problems could be overcome v.·as
reflected in an Apri l 22 product.ion order
v.·hen France and Britain agrttd to pro-
duce four more Concordes.
Scha ffer told the British that even IC
New York airports 'A-'Cre closed to the
Concorde, Dulles Airport in Washington,
v.·hich is owned and operated by the FAA
would permit the plane to land'.
J\1eanwhile it is likely that Russia""'
supersonic Tupolev 144 wilJ be in ~ervice
long before its Anglo-French cousin is
flyi ng commercially. As Nigel Calder
noted in the New St11lesman: "The
tov.•nsfolk of Omsk or Tomsk are not
likely. on, the face of It, to stage sit-in '
protests rn the local Aeronot offices
•bout the soruc boom,"
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
One of the qulcktst. surf'sl ways to
destroy property val ues in any city
Ill to ltl the publlc schools go to
the dog!! so chUdren can 't get even
;i fair high school education, much
leas be accrtdUed to colle.l(e.
-J. D. 5.
"'" .....,.. """" ,......, •lftl. """
_.._,,., """' " "" ........ "'' lffHf ,_ ""' '""" " •1...,., •n. ow11r r1111.
A Few of the
Facts of Life
In Economics
( .
Guest Report
The trick of creating an innationary
econon1y that continues lo keep prices
rising through an employment recession
magnified by skyrocking tax rates -
"innato-cession" lo coin a \.,.Ord -is one
most economic whizzes v.·ould have
laughed away not too long ago,
The daily headlines make it clear this
is the crisis that has been nur1ured lo full
bloom the past decade or sci. California
and New York, the nation's tv.·o largest
st.ates, most clearly illustrate the prob~
lcm, as the root causes of "inflato-
cession" are most evident in populous
centers.
THE PROBLEM , of course, i s
enormously com plicated. Various of the
Common J\tarket countries have cut
adrift from I.he doUar because the cur-
rencies of those countries are more
valuable than the doll ar. This increases
the cost of those goods imported into the
United States from the countries in·
\'olved. The irony of the matter. ()f
coursC', is that it \\'as U1c. United Stales'
;iid \\"hich put the c<>unlries on their fee.I.
ll is U.S. military installations V>'hich fuel
their economies and reduce their dtfense
requirements: It is U.S. tourisls who
pump dollars into the countries at a won-
drous rate.
Al home the people of the country . at
an ever accelerating cate, ha ... e demand·
ed or ha\·e been voted the widest, most
f'xpen~ive variety of ~·elfare programs
for thr grealest number of people ever
knov:n .
\\'ELFARE PROGRA~IS cost money ,
lax monC'y.
In California, \\'here there 1s something
approaching a tax revolt -if oot almost
an inabi lity to pay -11 percent of the
populn1ion is on welfare rolls. Thal's 2.3
million Californians -16.4 percent or all
the people in the nation who are on
welfare.
Governor Ronald Reagan is trying to
contain the state ta1 problem wtth a $&.7
blllion budget and requesb for sweeping
reform of California welfare laws. The
Democratic leadership in the legislature
doea not seem inclined to go along with
the Gavernor and has proposed tax
reform proposals of its own. Only time
.,..·ill tell ho~' the differeaces in approach
are resolved.
IN NEW YORK 1tate where Governor
Nelaon Rockefeller has to contend Nlilh
Mayor John Llnd!lay's totally bankrupt
New York Ctty, the C'ro ... ernor has had to
dismiss 8,250 state em ployes, and slash:
wel fa re costs drastlcally to stay within
the sta\e"s budget which the legislature
trimnled by •1&0 mlllion from a re·
quested $8.45 billion. New York's weHare
recipients total 1.7 million and 1.1 million
of those are in New York City.
These are but a few ol the economic
facts of Ufe that in California, for in·
~lance, .result in an unemployment rate
of over 7 percent and the aeoond largest.
sl.&te and local per capita tax burdtn )n
the country -S54D per peraon against
New York's ts76,
"lnnat<>-ttsaion." lf the Inell don't get '
you -unemployment might -and then
you ari on welfare!
C.Ufornla Ftltare Servke
Quotes
1'1Bry JOMl, S.F. -"Mankind's pro-
«res., is best made through competitive
e:nlerprlsts 11idtd by t cooom.ic11 I, dceen ·
Lra_Jiled government."
As a Compass,
Hope Is Terrible
l n na vigating through lift>, hope is an
essential ballast, but a. terrible compass.
(! (• (•
One mania l have never understood i!t
the passion for betting on horses: al least
1f people bel on turtles they \\'Ould get a
lot longer n1n for lhe1r money. • • •
'"lncornpat1bility" strikes me as absurd
grounds for di vorce,
all cou ples ar!' in-
compatible. being
made up of !WI) in-
dividuals o[ different
sexes. and the
whole point or mar-
riage consists 111
learnin,g Io fl n d
areas of compati-
bility. • • •
The way \n \\'hich 1nost of us assert our
'"individuali ty" i.~ by using our frC'edon1
to become exa ctly like ou1· neighbors.
'~ :) •i
People \vho are unea sy in th<' presence
of the fan1ou s or tatcnlC"d should keep in
mind Eleanor Roosevelt'-" wise in·
junctinn: "RemC'mber. rio one ca n make
)ou ll'l'I inferior without )our consent.,
,;= * .;.
A •·,.,.ell-informed" man Is someone
\\;ho has thought up belier arguments to
support our position than "e have. .. "' .
The diilcrC'nce between Freud and
most of hi s popu\anzeri; is that Freud
knew \\'hen a cigar "'as just a cigar. • • •
lnsurance protects you a g a i n s I
r1·l"rvth1ng except the 1 e g a l is 11 C
terniino!o~y it is co11rhed 1n.
·~ "' "
\\"e ran bl'ar ;iny s<·orn frnrn \he young,
rxcepl their current ev<1lu<1tion that to be
old •~ per ~e lo be unaltracti.,.e; and
naseent cultorc that finds no beauty 111
age will become increasingly ielf·
lacerating in time. • • •
A "pseudo-1ntellertua!"' is an In-
tellectual "·ho makes no effort to conceal
his sense of superiority from us. • • •
\\"hat.ever the disparities in language,
people laugh n1uch the same all over th e
world : and where there is universal
humor. there is hope for universal agree-
ment on matters that cannot be laughed
at. . ' .
The n1osl a dC'fcated poli!.icla n learns
from experience 1~ to be more plausible
next lin1e .
* * * The most ann()y1 ng sort of bickerint!
neighbors arc the ones who arc loud
cno11gh to be dist urbing \\'ithout being
loud enough to be 1nt.elligible, so tha l \\'e
get all of the din and none of the dirt. • • •
1 ha\'e ye\ lo n1eet a professed "self-
madc" nian who 'vas even 111ightly
ashamed of his maker. • • •
Some people are !'O tactless Lhat the
form (lf their apo\ogif's constitutes an-
other offense. . ' .
J\"s often hard to tell thr d1ffen!nce
hetween a reformer \Vith an idea in hi~
head and one .... ·ith a constriction in his
ho\vels .
Priest Had Lived a Lie
To the Ed1101·:
In regard to Laura Lee f\-lach's letter
(Mailbox , !\lay 26) rega rding Celibacy vs.
l\1arriage:
Tl is my feeling that the archbishop of
the San Francjsco area \\'as justified and
obligated lo ren1ove Father Duryea from
hiS priestly dul i~ and I commend the
archbishop for doing so_
Falher Duryea had been living a lie. by
not making knO\\'n publicly in the begin·
ning of his n1arri age th e t"·o lives he was
li.,.ing. ·The honorable thing for him rn do
"·ould h:i\'e been to tell his people and the
archbishop of his r<'nunciation of the vow
of celibacy U1at he voluntarily took when
he bcran1e a priest.
Wll EN A MAN takes n ... ow or celibacy
it is a promise of lifelong abstention from
marriage. The rules of the church on lhis
are made very clear. lie has fr eely
chosen to make this promise. He has an
ob1igallon to fulfill this promise and to
keep it. A young man studying for the
priesthood has many years 10 decide it he
wants to live a life of celibacy. Ile al.so
has an obligation to a ... oid becoming at-
·Mailbox
·~ -·
Lttttn ...... ,......,. .,, -.kltf!I,, ~nMll\'
wrll•r& ll'ltllhl noiv.1 ,...t, "'••U..• 1" * -t r i.u. Tiit ,;~~I 19 <tft~Hlf i.n1r1 It tt( ••fl't
t r e11mi,,.1t 111>11 11 '''"'"'-All 111re .. "'II" '"" clullt iltMlurt tM mtlllftt 1d~tt11, 1111 fttlftt• .... , ... wl!llM!t ... ,_,, It 111t1ki.111 ,..._ .,
._,,..,..,, ro.t/Y wUI Ml IM .WRIM1I,
•
!ached f() things that would keep him
from fulfilling the promisi:'s he made at
his ordination.
Celibacy is not a flight fro1n marriagr.
or complete love but rathel" the symbol of
total commitment to God. and to Goel"~
work in the salvation of mankind.
1 FIND AJ\1USING, reall y, the concept
of the married priest. Cnn·l rou j11~l see
Junior running into ti·" church in llie
middle or mass shou . "Look, dad, no
cavities!." Or the you111-\ priest holding a
smaU baby \11ith wel diapcrll and a run·
ning nose while trying to console someone
\\'hO need,, hls undivided Attention.
MRS. DAVID A. t'ELDE
B11 Geor9e -------~
Dc:tr George:
Arc. you the rolumnhll who te lls
peoplC' how to m:ike ashtray"' out of
tin cans by 11ilvering thf!m an<I
S?Qtling the m wilh sequins?
R.E.
Dtnr R.E:.:
~o. that must be! tllAI columnist
v.·ho keeps going through the trash
over in t~ women's deporlrncnt
for cPns .. Just dump the ashes on
the floor. Li,•c a little, I say.
CO NFIDENTIAi, TO TV
\VEl\1'HER~1AN : Oh, qui! \\Or·
..-ylng me with thO!e 'qUe!lllons -
n<>body el~e understands that ma11
t"'ither. Just keep polnLing with your
little stick and everything will be
finf'.
1 ' • I
)
I
(
7
J
Newport Beaeh
EDI TI O N
Today'• .Fina)
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 64, NO. 132, 3 SECTI ONS, 30 PAG ES ORANGE COU NTY, CA LIFO RNI A THURS DAY, JUNE 3, ·197 r TEN CENTS (
Coast Guard Denies Polluting Newport Harbor
By L. PETER KRIEG or ,,.. o .. tv P1'91 $t•H
Fiflh District Supervisor R o n a 1 d
Ca spers of Newport Beach Wednesday
accused the U.S. Coast Guard of being
"one of the biggest polluters in Newport
Harbor" but in the next breath said the
Coast Guard had agreed lo mend its
ways.
The charge infur iated Coast G1:1ard of·
Y 1abu Slayings
(icials. They denied It today and said
nobody has even complained before. let
alone won any agreement for them to
change th ings.
"The Coast Guard is not doing any
polluting, absolutely none," said Master
Chief J, E. Gnegy, Olficer in charge of
the Point Divide, one ,O!i two Coast Guard
cutters moore.d in.NeWport Harbor.
"The two ctoest Guard vessels do not
under any Mcurnstancts pollute, we use
Gttn Discovered
" On Death Ranch
UPI T1l ... h1!1
IN CHJIRRO COSTUME
Yub• City Suspect Coran•
J. Edgar Hoover
Blackballs Tuio
P olice Officials
WASHINGTON (U PI I -F'Bl Director
J, Ed gar Hoover biackballed two prom-
inent police authorities as guests a t a
White House conf Prence with President
N1;'4'.on today on what the federal govern-
ment can do about the recent rash of
pohce assassinat ions
The ,.,.,.o arc Qui nn Tamm. executi ve
director of lhf' lnlerna!ionaJ Assocla11on
of Chiefs nl Police 1 IACPi and for n1e r
Bsslstant PBl director who has fet1ded
wilh Hoover for yea rs, and Police Com·
missio ner Patrick \I. ~1 urphy of New
York Cilv.
ri.1 urphy said the reported White House
expl anatian that he was QO! invited be-
cause he was not 11 police chief was "sim·
ply incredible.·•
"It was with d1sappoin1 ment and dis-
ma y tha t I learned that the appearance
ell police of the greatest city in the world
-confronted by a major problvn of
vjolen ce by gun& -was nol wanted at
the Washington con!etence," he said at
police headquarters in New York .
;"We cannot allow polit ical consider•
11.ions to hinder cooperati\'e efforts lo
improve the safety of our police officers
aild the public,'' Murphy said.
Tamm was quo~ed by Scripps-Howard
ntwspapers 11s sRying the two were not
in-vi !ed by Hoover. who drew up the guest
!iSt at Nixon's reques1 , because of the.
FBI Director's personal animosity.
Hoover. said Tamm, was ''playing pol·
Jtics with policemen's liv7s."
From Wire Services
YUBA CITY -An automatic pislol has
been found on the Jack L. Sullivan ranch,
site of most of the graves of the 23 vic-
tims of a mass slaying. il was learned to-
day.
The pistol, a 9--millimeter automalic,
and 2{I shells found with it were sent to
the state crime labora!Dry at Sacramento
for ballistics lests.
[n court docu1nent~ supporting the
charge ai::ainst suspect Juan V. Corona,
the sheriff's off ice said it had found six
nine-millimeter shells in his 1971 panel
truck.
Authorities in vestigating the grisly
crime never have indicated lhaL an y ol
the vi ctim s died from bullet wourids. 'fhe
bodies discovcrl'd along 'the F'ealher
River had been hacked and stabbed.
Aerial photographs taken with an in·
rrared came,ra were being processed to
help officials: determine whether there
are more bodies buried jn the area of the
crime. It was expected 14 take two days
to process: the photographs.
Sheriff Roy D. Whiteaker. who says he
is convinced more bodies will be found,
was forced lo withdraw bis: crews after
thev started digging al one "indentation"
similar to those that have turned ou t to
be crude graves.
Th( crews found the ground still too
wet.
So far, 23 transients. farm workers and
drifter& have been found hacked and
stabbed to death in c:rude graves in
orchards: along the fe1:1ther River.
Juan V. Corona. 37. a Mexican born
farm labor contractor with a poor com-
mand of Eni:;lish, was formally arraigned
in Justice Court Wednesday on 10 counts
nl murder -the JO bodies exhumed by
the lime he was first taken lo court one
"'eek ~lore.
"I'd li ke lo get ii over and be rfone with
it." Wh iteaker said as he discu~sed the
continuing se;:irc h for grave.sites. ''I
believe lhere are some bodies ou!. there
th;:it will never be foun d."
The sheriff is using infrared aerial
photography o! the orchards in an efforl
Ill spot artas where the 50il has been
ciisturbed. Results should be available
Friday.
Another potential gravesite still is
unde r water and can't be probed until it
dries, the sheriff said.
At Wednesday's closed arraignment
before Justice Court Judge J . J. Hankins
the proceedings were related to Corona
bv a Spanish language interpreter, Raoul
Yba rra, a local norisl.
Hankins asked : "Do you understand
(See: YUBA CITY, Pagr !)
Bloodmobile Poised
The 'Harbor area C1>mmunlty blood·
mobUe will &top at Hoag Hospital from
2:30 p.l'n. to 7 p.m .. June 10.
Blood donors: are urged to phone 835-
S.181 to make appointments or ask que.'1-
lions.
Praised by Cities
dockside facilities for nature's calls," he
said.
Capt. Henry A. Pearce, chief of staff of
the · !Ith Coast Guard district in Long
eBa c;1 first responded, "I don 't know
what he's talking about.'
"Who is this man, a supervisor? Has he
talked to the harbo rmaster ?" Pearce
said.' "We're docked right next to him
and If we were doing any polluting, he
..
! ·~ l .;" .. 1
., . ··""'"'-. -·
D41LY PILOT 5!1fl P ... r.
Sallhig Alotig
One man's surfboard is an-
other man's sailboat. as this
inventive soul proves while
cruising the wate rs of New·
port Harbor. One thing about
thi s form of sa iling -you
can figure on getting wet.
Negligence Seen
In Flash Fire
On Cruise Ship
VANCOUVER, B.C. -A carele:-s
cre..,,.·men may have Ci!Used Lhc fl ash fire
tha t kil!ed himself and ~I shipn1ates on
I.he rrulse ship Me1enr. 1n\·cst1gators
dtsc loserf here Wednesdfly.
None of the more than AA passengers.
including former Ncv.'porL Beach maynr
James 8. "Jay" Stodd ard and his wife
Florence. were injured in lhc fl.lay 22
disas ter.
Arson had been mentioned as" a
possibility al one point.
"We have come to the Ct\ncl11sion th at
the direcl cause could have been
negligence on the part of one of the
crewmen,·· !he chief prober announced.
Judge K.F. Myrdal , chairman of a
Norweg ian Transportalion Commission
lnves:ligati ng panel declined to name the
man "'hose smouldering cigarctLe is
suspected as the cau.se .
Pt1yrdal said it is impossible to definite-
ly pinpoint it.
Speculation earlier had the lire starting
sit lhrcl! or lour Sf!OL~ before it raged
through forward crew quarters, bu t
Myrdal 's commissi11n has discounted the
theory. ;
would certainly taJk to us."
Capt. Pearce checked further and said
Cas pers must have misunderstood a let·
ter sent by Coast GU1rd englneers to the
County Harbor Commission last month.
"We told them the potential of 1,100
gallons of waste a day could be dumped
into the harbor if we didn 't have dockside
fa cilities," Capt. Pearce said .
"We didn 't say we were doing it."
He said the unsolicited letter had of-
fered to pay for a piping system to con-
nect the craft with sewage facilities on
shore. if Ce onshore system could handle
large amounts of salt water.
"We sald we'd either pay for it or be
happy to renegotiate our leaSI! to cover
the cost," he said.
The Coast Gua rd rents docking space
from the Harbor Department.
Caspers, a yachtsman, .said new
sanitary standards for boats wiU be com·
ing out of Washington soon.
He suggested the county install two
new pumping stations for sanitary waste
at the Harbor Department headquarters
on Bayside Drive, one for the Coast
Guard and the other for the general
public.
The supervisors ordered staff to obtain
cost figures and rentgotiate tbt least.
Planner Censured
• Jur y's Marshall Raps Butterfield
•
Orange County Grand Jury Foreman
Doreen Marshall of Newport Beach
Wednesday sharply censured Planning
-Commission Chairman Woodrow But·
terfield for announcing an appearance
before the jury to the press.
"Members of the jury noted with
surprise a story appearing In the local
press regarding your meeting wilh the
jury scheduled, reportedly for Tuesday
morning,'' read a letter from :P.1rs.
Marshall to Butterfield.
Board Okays
Irvine's Low
Cost Housing
By JACK BROBACK
Of fM IMll• PUii .,...
Otspit.e the opposition of .. a .1chool
district, a PT A grdup and a. homeowner a
a1110Cl1tion, the Orange_ County Board of
Suptrvlsors Wedneldsy unsnimously •P-
proved the Irvine Company's first al·
tempt at low cost housing.
The plan calls for 280 low cost rental
units on 14 acre.s: just south of the San
Diego Freeway. one mile east of Jam-
bor ee Boulevard and bordered on the
west by the future extension of Harvard
A venue. Flood control channels now
border the project on the east and west.
Specifica!Qr, what county supervisors
approved was a zone change to al!ow
apartments in the area .
Jim Taylor. Irvi ne Company director of
gen eral planning administration. said the
propos;:il w11.s the fi rst of several looking
toward the goa l or 2fl percent of the cen-
tral Irvi ne land , development lo be
devoted to such lo w cost apartments.
He said the apartments y,·ould be one.
two an d three-bedroom and ren t for $100
to $150 a m0nth .
He defe nded lhe location. attacked
vigorously by off icials of the San Joaquin
School District.
"This location was chosen because 1! is
a natural extension of the established
University Park ccmmunity_ y,•ithin y,•al k·
in~ distance of a shopping center. handy
lo· the freeway and near the Irvine
Industrial Complex ." Taylor explainer!,,
"Some -40 perce nt of the 19 .00l'I
employes in the industri al complex are in
the earning bracket for such low cost
housing," he added.
"This is a classical case of poor pla n-
ning and spot zoning." excla imed David
King, director of planning facilities for
the San Joaquin SchQ<ll Dislrict.
"It is one and a querier miles f)Om the
nearesl schoo l University Park
elementary -and would require busing,''
King cont inued. "Sites for a new school
suggested by the Irvine Company are nol
satislacWry.''
He said the school district believes: the
Jr\'ine Compafl y should break the low
cost hou sing into !illlaller units Jn
established areas. He added that lumping
all the low cost renters. who are
lSee IRVINE, Pa1e !)
"We are concerned because neither the
Grand Jury nor its foreman had received
any communication from you requesting
such a meeting.
"In our opinion the newspa per reports
regarding this matter have b e e n
misleading to the public and to the county
administration which we regret." the let-
ter continued.
"lf you wish lo have the Grand Jury in-
vestigate a specific matter or to meet
with the jury !or this purpose, we should
... ' --
•• • ' • ~·-i
Dn d o f lhe Year
U"I T1,llPIMl9
Yep, the National Father's
Day Committee has named
·Mrs. John Bruce Dodd. 89.
Spokane, \Vash., "Father of
the year.'' She is the fou nder,
or mother. of father's Day,
which, girls, will be observed
June 20 for the 6lst time.
Planners Face
Irvine Co rnpany
Apartrnent B id
A ravorable recommendation from one
ci!y agency in hand, the Irvine Company
goes: before the Newport Beach Planning
Commis.sion tonight with revised plans
for its Promon tory Point fparlment pr~
jecL
A public hearing on Ult! scaled.down,
~-unit complex , will take p I a c e
, sometime after It o'cloc k In City Hall.
The Parks. Beaches and R.ecr@atlon
Commission recommen ded approval of
the revised plans. which now ca ll for a 1.5
acre neighborhood park along Bayside
Drive in the center of the :JO.acre tract.
. . ' appreciate the courtesy of a written re-
quest."
The letter also noted that the Jury's
Planning and Environmental Problemi
Committee "has been reviewing th•
policies and procedures followed by the
Planning Commiss ion and will be in·
terested in receiving any information you
wish lo make available to it."
Butterfield in a statement to the prMS
Tuesday said he had uncovered ln-
{See MARSHALL, Page Z)'
Saddleback
Hospital
Rites Se t
Two county supervisors •nd a 1t.at1
health official wUJ head tht \lit et: VIP1
•t ground.breaking cere monies: Mond&1
for the Saddleback Community Hospital
Supervisors Ronald Caspers and Ralph
B. Clark wlll head the Ust Or county of·
ficial.s 1chedu!ed Lo attend the dedication
rite3 for the Laguna Hills health care:
facility which has been the subject of
controversy at the courity plaMing com·
mission level in recent weeks.
Spokesmen for the project undertaken
by the Lulheran Hospital Foundation said
the rites will begin at JI a.m .• alid will be
followOO immediately by Initial +.ii.tk by
construction crews.
Partici pants at the rites will include
Saddleba;ck Chamber of Commerce
President Tom Wing.ate . slate health
department representative Harry Field,
representa tives of the hospital's design
firm . Sadd!e back Community Hospital
Board Chai rman Frank Schaeffer , and a
color gua rd from the El Toro MCAS.
Retired admira ls Roland Smoot and R.
W. Berry also will lake part.
Hospital aides have cited more than $3
mil!ion in cash gifts a! proof of the local
support for the major health care facil i-
ty. calculated lo serve the Lei.sure World
commun ity and surrounding areas.
The hospital. faci ng a de adli ne for •
federa l grant, became embroiled in a re--
cent county Planning Commission con-
troversy.
Jn announcing the groundbreaking
ceremonies Schaeffer said the donaUons
"tell us the hospital is needed and
wanted, and on this basis we will go
ahead aod build it."
Thief Ge ts Lingerie
A cat burglar apparently got into 1
Co.sta Mesa denial technician's home,
she discovered upon checkin-g her dresser
Wednesday. The victim. 21 , said only ..
assorted items: of llngerie, plu.s .$10 in
cash was taken.
Orange
Weatlaer
I rvine Ma n Dead
In Car Accident
Four Educators Honored
A large delegation or Balboa Island
residents , maybe not as many 1! lhe 300
who turned out ror hearings: on the
original plan. Is expected at the hearing,
according to Thomas Houston, prelident
of the Balboa I11!1nd Improvement
Association.
·•But our numbers will grow 11s con-
1ideralion of the project progreues io the:
Ctty ·COuncil level," Houston predicted.
The clouds will roll by early on
Friday, followed by·fair sk.Jes ind
temperatures rangin& from 68 ~
grees along tht lhorellne to 74
further inland.
An. Irvine aerospace emptoye waa killed
early this mornJng when his car went 9'1t
of control and rolled near the int.eraecllon
of Turlle Roc.k Drive and Grossmonl
Avf'llue.
Orange Count y Coroner's Off Ic e
apokesman said Bernard Piatta, 46, of
18941 Racine Drive, lrvint. died at 1:40
a.m. Th e 11rcirlent was jus t a few blocks
from his home,
Pia zza w:is dlre<:tor of qualll y control
for Parkrr H11nn ifin. an aerospace
•1manufatturer. and was retumlng fmm 8
.,mi-annual company mtetlng iit I.ht
Ne.wporter Inn when he w~s killtod. He
had been with the company 23 years.
Wordl·of gr1lltude and pr•IR flowed in ·
All directions Wednesday as four H•rbor
Area educ•tor1 were honored for 1ervlce
to community schools. ""
Three or those honored -T'rustee
Elizabeth Lilly, Trustee James: W. Peyton
and Ass istant Superintendent Roy 0.
Ander!Ofl -are retiring. The fourth -
Superintendent William Cunningham -
hsis resJgned to take a posi tion with a
1t11:te-wlde educational orRani:uiti0n.
And erson, after 29 years a! teacher.
pr incipal. 111uperintendent and ciirector of
facilitie5 for Harbor An:a schools . was
,1n1ltd out for special recoan ition. Alter
drawin1 • 1tanding ovaUon Crom the au-
dll!nce at the Newporttr lnn, It was an-
nounced that a new achoo! in the Ha rbor
View Homes, area will be named in
Andel'IOn's honor.
Anderson beamed when district Board
President Selim S. "Bud" franklin made
the annOuncement and drew a happy kiss:
from his wife of 35 years.
Mrs. Lilly, absent becou~ of illncs.5,
was cited for six yea rs of service lo the
Newport Harbor Un ion High School
District and to the Newporl-Mc~a Unified
Sc hool District. She end the other three
hono red all received plaques.
Peyton, recognized for 11 years on
Harbor Area sthtxll bo11rci~. comme nted
wryl y that he und erstood why citizen•
voluntarily assume achoo! b o a r d
re11ponslbllties: "You re.et so good when
ll 's all over."
CunninghAm told lhe audience that in
15 year11 of service. as ii:uptrlntfndent In
various California distrlct1, he bad never
recei ved as mu ch community and '11ehool
board 8Upport a11 he had in the three and
one-half years as chief of the unified
school district.
The luncheon was sponsored by the
cl tirs nf Newport Beach and Costa Mf!sa,
by the Ntwport Harbor and Co11ta Mesa
Cham~rs or Commerce And by the
Newport Harbor-Costa Mn111 Boar~ of
RealtorS.
• •
The planning commls9ion faeea 1
number of other Items on its agenda
tonight. and likely ...... 111 not get th.rough
@ven half' of two doien 1c:h_tduled mat-
ters.
Among other things, Jl la scheduled to
consider :
-A use permit for a fdc'Oonald's Drive.
In across West Coast Highway from the
exclus lve Bayshores: area.
-A claim by representatives of Cot
Sanders that hls proposed Kentucky
F'ried Ch icken St11nd at 1007 Weit Balboa
f;\ouleva rd sboold be claulfled as A
grocery 3lore to ptrtnJt fe"t.r parking
places.
-R.eqaeits for 1 1erie1 of variances on
parking requlrcmenta for the trvlnt Com·
IS.. POINT, P11t Ii
'
INSIDE ~DA. Y
Heroin addict who wo.s up to
15 bog• a dou o:t cost of 1150
leo:ves film o:.s fin.al worn i"ng to
voung.rUr1. StoTy, Pogt 5.
~rfl'I .. L~ I Mlwln ... ,.
M"""l l jlllftllt t• fMti"•I ,,_'ft t.-1 Or1-t-1Y I
IJIY" ..... IW '' '-ti U·I)
Sr.dl•Martclls 1"-1' Tflevltl9'1 II
TllH,.,.., 1•1t W .. ftllf' I w_,.-• ...,.. 1•11 Wtnll ,.... 4'11
•
f ~AlLV PILOT N
Motorcycle
Event Set
At Fish Fry
Harbor area resident.s who have dodged
Tijuana taxi cabs will appreciate the
work of the Tijuana Police Department's
nlolorcycle "suicide SQUadron" Jn
Saturday's Fish Fry Parade.
The precision riders from south -0r the
border Wiii take part in the 10:30 a .m.
parade. then at 1:30 p.m. they Wlll
perform some of their best stunts at
Costa Atesa Park.
t.1ayor Jose Manuel Gonzalez ()f Tl·
juana wlll also be a sptcial guest al the
·Fish Fry, as Costa Me sans try to forget a
proposal to buy Baja California two years
ago.
The Costa Atesa-Newport Barbor Lions
Oub Fish Fry and Carnival starts Friday
night with fish dinnirs be ing served in
Cosl.a Mesa Park and 30 carnival r ides
end attractions open to youngsters.
Dave DeSoto. KMPC radio's "man in
Orange County," will emcee Sa!urday's
parade and the motorcycle show. DeSoto
is head of the Orange County nev.·s
bureau for KMPC.
A baby contest and the selection nf
A1iss Mermaid 'and Miss Costa Mesa will
highlight Sunday's Fish Fry activltit:>.'I.
Lions Oub mt:>mbers hope lo gross
about $90,000 during lbe 24 working hours
of the fry. They hope to servt! 14,000 fish
dinners using 4,000 pounds of Northern
Cod. plus 1,500 pounds of cole slaw. 3,000
pounds of bot dogs and hamburgers, iOO
?OtJnds cf coffee, 50,000 soft drinks. l,200
pounds of chocolates. 500 pounds of ham,
500 pounds or bacon aod 500 pounds flf
5a\Wlge.
More than 100,000 visitors enjoyed the
parade, Fisb Fty and carnival events last
Vear.
* * * Here's Schedule
For Fish Fry
In Costa Mesa
Events for the three-day Costa /\lt:>sa-
,li'ewport Jiarbor Lions Club Fish Fry are
rcheduled as follows:
FRIDAY:
5:30 p.m - fish dinners served in Costa
llesa Park.
6 p.m. -JO carnival r ides and game
IO<lths open al the park.
7:30 p.m. -Battle of the bands music
~cert in the park.
, iATUROAY:
10 a.m. -carnival opens.
10:30 a.m. -Two-hour parade starts.
~ -fish dinners served In park.
1:30 p.m. -variety acts on lhe park
;tage, interspersed through day \\'Ith
lrawings for donated giftl.
4:15 p.m. -Dorothy J& Dancers on
tage.
6:30 p.m . -Sing Out, Young Gentra-
ion on stagt.
I p.m. -drawing for a llS Yamaha
notorcycle.
SUNDAY'
Noon -carnival open.!!, fish dJnners
erved.
2:30 p.m. -annual baby contest.
3:30 p.m, -selection of /\tiss 1'1ermaid.
fi : 15 p.m -Ari~ Higbee Dancer~ -0n
t age.
8 p.m. -Grand drawing for a 1971
·'ord Pinto.
\TY OKs Youth Vote
ALBANY, N.Y. CAP ) -New York has
'tcome the 8lst state to ratify the pro-
'()Sed U.S. cOnstitutional amendment
hat would allow 18 year <lids to vote. in
Ii elections.
OU.Mel COAST
DAILY PILOT
d"llANGl COAST ,U.LISHING COM,ANY
••l.•rl N. Wee4 '••'"111 •1111 ,veu.-
J•cti It CWl'l•v \IJOf' l"P'tl ..... f .,,,. ~•I MW ... 1'.,..., J(,,.,11 .. .,..
fli,,..,, A. Mur•lil11•
Mll'lftO"I •dtlw
L '•'•' kri•t Nl'Wl*"f l•dl Clry 1!"9W ,..,,,... __
JJJJ. Newp1rt l1u!t 'l•r4
M1lll119 .Y4reu: P.O. h • lt71, t166J .,,... .......
(•'8 Melt 1 UC! W.I l1r lrr.i.t L..-11 .. rfl, ftl ,_ .... , A-(lilllf'l!ifttle~ l~fu HS1J ... di Aeo.11..,.1"'
.. Ill C.iern.ni.: -N"1tl •• C.mlnt ltNI
,
Horsi11g Around
Irvine Co1npany l 1nproves Ra1icho
The major 1rading pr6jecl Ullder way
alona the coutal bluff ne.ar Scotchman'•
Cove ls not the beglnnlng of a ~~ holi•
Ing tract, an lrvlne apokesman said Tue1-
d1y. ,....
It's an upgrading of the old Rancbo
Cerritos horse ranch and eventually will
a ccommodate 250 equine lodgers in
modern. portable stalls.
The Jrvine Company is spending
$150,000. the spokesman said, to tear
down the existing 116 horse stalls, all
handmade contr1ptions built by horse.
owners, grade oul the area and put in
ne.w stalls and exercise paddocks.
111e immediate imprQvement will pr~
vide ror a horse population of f&2, with
room for irowth to 250.
The oceanfront horse ranch, to be
~wn •11 ~· ltV.in• iquaatrltn Center, probably will renliln in Its present loca-
tion for. thrtt to five years, then be re-
located inland in the San Joaquin Hills.
It will serve as a pilot project for
a series of stables throughout the ranch
area. along a total of 140 1nile!l or bridle
trails with many loops down lo the
coastal area.
The lrvme Company, "''hith formerly
leased ou! the horse ranch property. will
operate the new equestrian center
directly. the spokesman said. of!eri'l_g
board and lodging to equine lodger:; for a
n1onlhly fee.
2.5 Cent Tax Cut Seen
In Newport Beach Budget
The adage aboul man"s inability to
squeeze \Valer from a stone n1ay apply
precisely lo the proposed 1971 -72 Newport
Beach city budget.
Acting Cily Manager Philip F. Bet·
tencourt. following a strict sel of council-
dictated guidelines, has submitted a $12.7
million spending package that wou ld al-
low a 2.5-cent tax cul.
And initial response from councilmen
has been that of delight -no doubt
mostly because Bettencourt followed the
directive, but by doing so a!so 1nay ha ve
eliminated the need for the innumerable
late-night budget review sessions. almost
traditional during the month of June.
The council has until June 30 to adopt
the budget. A public hearing will precede
its first formal review session Monday at
1:30 p.m. in City lla!I.
Where in the past the doze.11 or so
review sessions have seemed more like
S4_rgery wfU1 large chunks of cash getting
cut out. the fact Bettencourt was able to
follow the guidelines left virtually no fa t
lo trim.
\Vh ile ~layor Ed Hirth has reserved
judgment on the docun1enl. the tv.·o coun-
cilmen responsible for preparing those
guidelines couldn't be happier with the
final product. ·
"lt's lhe best looking budget I've 5een
in years," offered Councilman Donald
Mcinnis. who worked hand-in-hand wlth
Councilman Carl Kymla drawing the
policy appear early this year .
"It's a remarkable improvement over
prior years," said Kym la, "I've only had
a chance to get through about half of it,
but from what l 've bet:>n able to
determine, Mr. Be-ttenC<lurt followed the
guidelines as they were laid down.
"Budget deliberations shouldn't take
much lime this year," he said.
Mclnnl.s llid he had read the. whole
thing and said "the staff has put together
what appears to be a real excellent doc u-
ment."
"J am real pleased with the way the
staff has gone after this thing." he said.
The $12.7 million budget is $500.000
more than the approved 1970-71 budget
and $800,000 more lhan the current
budget as revised by the council in
February.
Banking <ln a 7.6 Pf>rcent increase in
assessed valuation, the property lax
Fro1n Page I
YUBA CITY ...
v. hat you are being charged wllh:'''
'barra replied fnr Corona "i\0 I-!('
dot's not understand ·•
Hankins· '"All right 'l"ou ha\'e been
rhargt'd. f\lr . Corcna. vdth count one, a
viola!Jon of Section 187 of thr penal cocli>.
in that yo11 did murder one Kenneth
Edward \l.'hiteacre ··
'l'barra: "Hr don't know.''
flankins: "Well, dors he understand
\o;hat he 's charged "'llh:'"
'l'barra : ''Yes.·'
Then pubhc defender Roy Van den
lleuve! told the judge he did nol have to
read all 10 counl.o; and told him Corona
"'ould plead innocent to all 10.
Hankins set a pr!'liminary hearing for
June lfi at \l'hich lime he .said he would
decide, on the basis or evidence presented
by lhe prosecution. whether Corona
should be held for a Superior Court trial.
Corona. dressed in a white shirt. tie
and blue green iiuit, waa returned to the
Yuba County jail across Uie F'eather
River in Marysville where he visited tor
an hour with his wife, Gloria, and his
molhu, Candida.
He is being held In Marysville because
ils jail facl!ites are more secure.
base. Bettencourt. told the councl\ his
recommended budget Vlilt al!o1V a reduc-
tion in the tax rate fr om· $1.225 to $1.20. a
reduction ordered by lhe counti! in the
guidelines.
Excepting a ny changes lhat n11ght be
ordered by the council. the only unkno\\1n
C'Ost fac!or will be c1np!oye salaries.
Negotiations 1\·ith the city's three
en1ploye associations are unc,ler wa y now.
\Vhile !he budge! must be adopted by
June 30. the council will not be able lo
establish a ne\\' tax rate unt il it receives
offic ial va luation figures trorn Counly
Assesfor Andrew J, Hinshaw, Which like-
ly "'iii come in Aug ust
Mesa Massage
Parlor Raided
A Costa J\1esa sauna and tnassage
parlor oper<1tor lat e Wednesday \\'is ar-
rrs1ed by vice officers.
1\fasseuse Christine Ruffing. 20. of Sa11-
ta Ana. V.'as ar rested at 2626 Ncn·port
Uuuleva rd. and booked on charges of
sotlctting to commit prostitution.
f\.11ss Huffing is an cmploye of lhf'
establish111enl known as Phys i ca I
T!1crapy. one of a chain operated by one
rnan in Riverside and San Bernardino
counties.
Sergeanl Jack Calnon. of the vice anrl
intelligence detail. said lhe premises had
been under surveillance many n1onths .
From Page 1
IRVINE ...
normally very transient. in one place
\1·ould be bed for the school \\'hich \\'Ould
al'commodate them.
Richard Kent, represenl ing the Council
ol Communiries of Irvine. opposed the
project bec.:ause of the heavy losd ii plac-
ed on the schools and the total lack of
public transport ation for the lov:er in-
come people. lie urged thal furthe r study
be givt'n toward locating a better silc or
.sites.
Kent \\'as joined by \Vayne Clark. presi-
drnt of the University Park PTA . ffe said
the project did not c.:onforrn to !he fr1 inc
iJeneral plan for the area and \1'ould
01 ercro\1'd the schools
Lone speaker backing the company \\'Os
Glen \l.·oodn1ansee. representing the
l l'l:ine Housing Council. lie said he 11os
surprised at the CCI Qppos1tion a~ he had
;iltt'nded a!t meeting~ of tb;it grnup and
hlld not heard a stand taken Hr cal lerl
Ille project " a natural extension of
Univcrsitv Park ..
Superv{sor Ronald Caspers noled Iha!
the supervisors \\•ere 1n a dilemma. "\Ve
\\'ant Irvine to provlde low rost housing
bu! \\'e are fouling up the school district.
I agree that the project is isolated on lhr
edge of 11 bu ilt up area 11nd should be 1n-
1rgrated but II ts needed so J mov e ap·
proval."
•
l-Jarbor School Boarcl
Call s Special Mccliug
A special dinner meP!ing of !he
Nev.·port·Mesa Unified School District
Board of Education has been called for 6
p.m. Thursday in the Esttincia fl1gh
School Faculty Lounge.
The meeting will be to d1.scuss te acher
.salary propo3als with men1bers of !he
Certificated Employes Council.
Mrs. Hanso11 Blasts Use
Of POW Issue it1 Politics
Carole Hanson, llle El Toro wife ()r a
missina Marloe P,llol. WerlneSday In a
press inlervie"' asked politicians not to
use the prlM>ne.r of war Issue for their
own polillcal gains.
Her husband Steven has been m!Mlng
since 1967 v.•hen his helicopter was shot
down o\'er f'nemy territory in Laos.
""?'hose of us who musl wall al home
for any "·o rd from our loved <lnes being
hrld in An Asll!l priSQn art hurl \'ery
rlrrply by the callous allf'mpts by Am-
b1l1ous µoll1iciAns to use the POW-~1 lA
I t-.1 1ss1ng In At tlonJ i.uue to furthtr their
own polillca.I goals.''
"\\'e ran11ot sland 1ilenUy by while our
hu1bands Rnd sons remain in POW c1n1ps
and allow them to be used by politicians
on e!lher l'lide," she said in Los Angeles.
'"If sny congressman wanlS to push fnr
11i!I" own solution to the \\'ar, thars fine.
llo"·ever, we uk them not to use the
prisoner is.sue for their ov.·n polltical
gain."
!11r5. Hanson slso said \\'ives of missing
Mlrvieemen had no deslre 1.0 endor5e any
sptcUlc solulinn 10 the w;ir. She. added
lhat Rtf Pn1pl& 10 fo rce President Nixon to
11et a withdrawal date of all troops frorn
Vietnam •·woulrl rt.move the question
frorn II.~ present humanitarian stalus Into
lhe pohtlcal arenR 11nd m1gh1 t ven
1v.·or~rn the itad phglit of thP men hPld by
lhe Communists Jn Sout hcasl Asia.··
' •
14-year Rei911 . » •
Hoff a to Quit
Teamsters Post? !
0.1.ILY f'1LOT St11! f'W
TACKLES NEW TASK
Victor C. Andrews
Lagunan N anted
R eagan Aid Plan
Cou nty Director
Victor f: .. .Andr.ews of Laguna Beactt
hets been niimed chairman of the Orange
County Citizen 's Committee for the
(;ove.rnor's "'eUare program.
llis app-0intment· \\'as an noun c e d
\\'cdnesday at a Santa Ana news con·
ference.
Andrews. 169 Emerald Bay. quoted
fi gures from the C<lunty Welfare Depart-
n1ent which said the Governor's program
could save Orange County taxpayers as
much as $600.000 duriiig the coming fiscal
year.
He placed the overall state saving at
$600 million.
Andrews emphasized that the group
was non-partisan. "Our aim is welfare.
reform. "'e are not fighting a political
campaign."
The governor's program is now before
thf' legislature an d the citizens coin·
1nittee program to support it. is
statewide .
"\Ve realize that ideas and proposals
roi-reforming welfare have been made
lur years, but all that has happened is
that the welfare load has expanded,"
J\ndre\\'S said.
"We feel that our work is unique in that
\1·c intend to extend the decision making
on v.•elfare reform to every citizen of the.
~l <1le.'' Andrews added. "\Ve \~anl each
('"ltizen to communicate his vie"'S on
\\'e\fare to his slate legislators and county
supervisors."
He said time is limited and t:>ach day
the reforms are delayed cost the state's
1axpayers $2 rnil!ion. "l\'e 11·ant welfare
to go to 1hosf' truly in need ."
I Ir quot\!tl cxan1ples nf curren1 \\'elrare
;1hu.~e. '"Under current pro\'isions, a
"'<>ntan earning Sl.245 a month tan
rl'tl'l\"C a welfare payment plus money In
buy furn1!ure ;'Ind receive Medi-Cal and
food ~tan1p bcnt'fit s.
WASHINGTON (AP ) -Teamsters
President James n. Hoffa has sent v.•ord
from his prison Ct"ll that he. wi ll finally
rtlinquish his t• year reign over lhe giant
labor union, W ormed sources said today.
The tough. 58-year-old Hoffa, whose
stormy career ~s chief of the 2 million
member uni on ended in prison four years
ago, reportedly endorsed lhe union's
general vice president . Frank E. Fitzsim-
mons. to succeed him.
Hoffa. servi ng 13 yrars for JU ry
tampering and mail fraud in lhe
Le\\·isburg, Pa .. federal penitentiary, had
exhausted innumerable legal avenues in a
fruitless effort to win his freedom in time
to run for reelection next month before
finally giving in and agreeing to step
aside.
High union .sources had speculated for
months that the government would not
release him until he agreed lo step dov.•n
from the presidency of the uniqn that
\vields powerful control in the nation's
trucking industry.
It was no! in1mediate!y cle11 r whether
Hoffa agreed lo resign before the
Teamsters convention opening in l\llan1i
Beach .July 5, thus making Fitzsimmons
union president imrnediately. or whelher
Hoffa will hold office unlil the new elec-
tion.
E ither way. Fitzsimmons -handpick-
ed by Hoffa as his stand in at the last
convention five years ago shortly before
Hoffa v.·em. to prison -is regarded a
cinch for endorsement by the dozen other
Teamsters vice presidrnls .
"There's a new Fran k Filzsimmons."
:;aid one source. referring to Filz-
!=lmmons' obvie>Us JOY over Hoffa's
decision.
, l{offa had kept ojher Teamsters
leaders waiting for the decision up lo the
union's last exeeutive board meeting in
Holl ywood, Fla .. tas! month. Hoffa sent
\1·ord then he "·anted more lin1e in a last
f 'roui 1•a9e .I
POI NT. • •
plln}'s new Design Plaza at Ne"•port
Center.
-A city-instigated change in overall
off-street parking requirements.
-A variance ~ought. by Robert S.
Jacob~ of Balboa lo build four duple:tes
on four undersize lot.~ on East Bay
Avenue betv.·een Adams and Cypress
streets.
-A ionc change from residential to
commercial on the southeast side of :!2nd
Street belween Newpnrt and Balboa
boulevard~.
-A request by the Holstein Company
and the Bluffs Home<1wners Community
Association to conslrucl a maintenance
building in the rear of the Eastbluff Shop-
ping Ce n1er.
-The !>ubrlivi~i0n or 9.14 acres in North
Blufl 1nlo 54 residential lots.
Superb Luxury
in Pure Wool Pile
byKarastan
•
bid for freedom on the basis C>f J.
purpor!ed depositioo rrom the chier pro-
secutian witness. Edw11rd (;rady Partin ..
whose testimony sent him lo prison.
P<irtin denied making the alleged deposi·
t1on recanting much of his testimony. J
The 6.1-year old F'itzsimmons, a long
time frit·nd of H11ffa from their eart.v
Detroit days in lhe union. has run the
union since Hoffa \\'CTI\ to prison in 1967.
Others in the Tean1sters· h1erarch.v
reportedly preferred F'itzsimn1ons' looser;
control. allowing them more sway 111:
their own union dislrielS. }loffa, in con.,.
trast. had lightly grip~ most power. in'
his own hands, :;ometimes bypassing.
other officials to deal directly with unioir,
members.
Hoffa reportedly hoped his stepping:
aside will increase his chances for.
parole. •
However. Ch airman George J . Reed of
the Parole board said there had been nG
communication from Hoffa since the:
board tunied him down March 31 and said·
it wouldn't reconsider until next year.
' From Puge l
MARSHALL. • •
formation 1hat the Planning Commission
had been incorrectly advised in the mat·
ler of the use permit for the future Sad-
dleback Com 1nunity llospital in Laguna
Hills Lei~ure \\'orld.
He said they had been told that a
hospital v.·as proper use for the property
where the facility will be built but that he
had discovered later lha1 lhis was not so.
His assertions were denied by the
County Counsel's office which said that
the property was being Jf!gaJly used as a
~ite for a hospital.
Mrs. Marshall's letter noted lhat Bui·
l.erfield's announced appearance before
the Grand Jury did not take p\act.
But!errield had also said he would
bring the hospital mat1er before the
PlaMing Commission Tuesday. He did
not. ·
The only reference to the subject was
during discussion of another matter when
a petitioner started lo read from the arti-
cle quoting Butterfield on the "poor ad·
vice the commission had received."
1'he commission chairman 11alted the
reading abruptly with. "lhe wording of
that article \\'as very unfortunate."
The use permit for the hospital was
granted by unanimous action cA four
commissioners present J\·lay 4. Previously
the commission had deadlocked 2-2 on the
i~sue.
Commissioners Arnold FQrde or the
Fifth District \l.•ho was absent on a trip t()
Europe at the time was allegtd to have a
conflirt of interest in lhe hospital
q uestion because he 1vas financial!y in-
lerested in the r.'lission Comn1unity
llospital in the same area.
K•r11t1n c alls this carpet Sptctacula r. So will you when you
SH and fMI the m•gnificent luxury of its thick, deep pure ¥tool
pil•. It 's amaiing price of just $10.75 a square yard is due to IF YOU CANT
COME IN -
CALL
.
' I
l
a major br1•lcthrough in wool t•chnology. l<arastan glv•s
11cn fiber• 1peclal bulking treatment so the y arn is "f•tter,"
•nd more resilient. A truly remarkabl1 value.
Th1 17 colors .tr1 tpac.lacular too.
PROFE)SIONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNER
-UY OUl UVOLYING CHARGl-
Ope11 Mon., Thurs. Ii Fri. l'fln.
646-0275
for an ~xpert
""""'' con1ulL1nt
\•·ho v.•ill
t'omt to
your hom~
v.·lrh ~fl1Tlpk1
"-'lthoul any
<>blig11tlo11
t o you!
Your Jol'Orift
iutt rior dttigntr
1ciU be hopp11
to o.tsilt uou
2115 HARBOR BLVD .
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
.... 0275
r
I
I
• I
I
Ma y Day
Arrests
Defended
' \YASlU'NGTON rUPl)
,
:
The Justice Depa11ment's No.'·
2 man contended today that
mass arrests of May Day an-
tiwar demonstrators w ere
legal, constitutional, and
essential lo control a "vicious
and wanton mob attack on
Washington."
In what one olficial descr\~
cd as the final df'fense of the
legality or !he 1nass arrests,
Deputy Attorney G en e r a I
Richard G. Kleindienst also
linked leaders or the protest
v.·ith the North Vietnamese
and Viet Cong.
"Make no mistake, this was
a calculated attempt by
organiz.ed disrupters led by
people who had met repeated-
ly with Viet Cong and North
Vietnamese leaders," he said.
··1t v.·as not a group of
, tlfll Tetul>ole •
T~ursdar. Ju111 l , lll71 DAILY Pl,LOT 5
75 B"fl• Daily Revenue -
Proposal
Defeated
.. ..,I
HeroinAddict Leaves Grim
WAS!DNGTON (UPI)
Film W arningto Youngsters
The first section of President
Niion's revenue sharing plan NEWTON, Pa. (AP) -He addicts that the greater ma-of the Buck! County district
lo be voted on by con~ died in jail a drug addict. In jorily of them, If not all or attorne¥'s.offtce, in Utis small
was defeated Wednesday and pain . He was hooked on heroin, them, start out with mari-Philadelphia subw-b. ll e
60me House members claim a habit that reached 75 bags juana and then progresl! to agreed to do It to reach kids in
they have uncavered a flaw in daily at a cost of $'150 ~fore harder drugs., •. , junior an~nior high schools
another maj<r $S billion seg-his arrest. ''They all say you caJJ quit and.show.~!Je1rl\What being an
ment of the plan tllat will He left behind a filmed con-whenever you wanl lo. I saidlr aiiddiiiOiciiliil.s ~.•,,•k•eii. iiiiiiiiiiii--iii
allow them to she lve it for this fession, warning young people it, too. But the years speak for
year, at least. not to. experiment with mari-themselves. My arms, my
The initial defeat came · d h d · legs. It's a matter or record. when I.tie House, 204 to 182, Juana an ar drugs.
turned down a Nixon plan that The film was made for You can't stop. Don't talk
would have turned $2.S billion police in April 1970, four yourllflf into thinking you can,
in federal revenue over to months before he died cause you can't."
.states and cities during the awaiting trial for burglary. It His arms and legs we re
next two years for manpower is now being processed for covered with needle marks.
training or public service jobs. schoo l distribution, delayed They were almost as hard as
The governmental un i ts because or legal problems with stone after 13 years of in..
receiving the money would his famil y, jection after injection. Even
have decided if it went for "Stop before you start," he under his fingernails.
training or for actual work. said. ''I used every vein Utat was
APPRAISALS
di•tnOndl
Instead the House passed a "Everyone near you, you available, in every part of my •·•y ·· he sa•"d s.,1h C•••• ''''' Dem"'·rat-backed measure hurt," he said. "No one """-' ' · · ~ De . I Id h. I I th c,,,1. M•1• !i40-,066 lh•I would aulhor1·,e « b•"llion escapes iL nnis o JS s ory n e 0 ~ t d" f th • -B ks lri1tol el lh• S•n Oie')O Fwy,
be spent for the creation of an do, there's nothing you can't Cabletelevisioo lo detsctives
.. fro\liclting picnickers, as some
Washington columnists have
tried lo make out. This was a
deadly se rious program to halt
the U.S. govern111ent, and a
force of 20,000 had been
mobilized lo do just thal."
Kleind ienst said -arrests of
7.000 demonstrators f11lay 3
:·without \he usUal field arresl
form used by District or
Colu111bia police "\Vere per-
fectly legal."
THEY SMILE NOW -Pan American Airli nes piJ ot Capt. George Ashley and
sten•ardess Yolanda King share laugh in Miami after their hij acked plane re-
turned fro111 four days in Cuba.
during the next five years, to "There's nothing you won'ti ~'i"~'~oioiiei~~w~e~riiu~cii~ijjjj~i~i~~
estimated 1~,000 pub I i c do when it comes to crime. J
service jobs. The President Drugs are incentive, the driv-
has threatened to veto this ap-ing force."
proach. The 29-year-o!d son ot a
The defeat came is ... the.'"\Vhite"tflid"dTeClaSs subuf6an
}louse Ways and r-.1eans Com-school teacher was identified
mittee opened hearings on the only as ''Dennis.'' to protect
"general" section of Nixon's his wife and three children.
revenue sharing proposal. This Those who fool around with
section would divert $S billion marijuana are k Id d Jn g
in federal revenue to stales themselves. he said.
" De·,... .......... ...,.,
"There is no rcquircn1enl in
the C.Onstitulion or in !he-O.C.
law for the use of rield arrest
forms," he said in a speech
prepared for the Cleveland
Rotary Club. "Such torms had
been previously adopted as an
administrative procedure."
llljack Visit
·'Glamorous' Havana
Meets Hard Times
Railroad
To Unload
Prime Land '
and cities with no spending ''It has been my experienc-e
strings attached. over the years with other drug
I * * * Mahy States Soften
... , ..... -·· •• ctt ... -' n....-. ...... ....
MEDICAL ASSISTANT Oii
RECEPTIONIST
DENTAL
ASSISTANT
!ihO<t, lftt..ni" ~ r.n, orvalify .,...
.,, .,., Auillonl ;,. the office of o Phy1;cio•
• Oenli1I. 4 111onlh p•ograrf\ lor O..nlol At-
oialonl .,.. Medical Olfictt l etep1>o .. 111. 7
111onJb P"'ll'CI,. lor Jittdicol "'uid<1nl. Doy
or •nnin9 tla .. u.. life~111• plool-9
gniolanc• Gt no oddilionol ("''·
r.1JAMI (UPI) -The very
"13ut according lo the
c:ritics," Kleindienst said. "the
police should have turned I heir
backs on a rampaging mob in word J1avana seemed to
order to busy themselves as epitomize the sensuous gla-
clerks with pro c e du r a I moor of tropical night life.
forms." Thousands of Ame rican
Job Money
For Youtl1
Disclosed
\VASH INGTON (UPI)
President Nixon said Wed-
nesday the federal govern-
ment \\'i ll spend $303 million in
helping 674.000 teenagers ~et
summer jobs this yc<'lr. But
the Nati onnl Urban League
"'amed that unt'mployment
among b!:icks '\'as frigh1ening
;ind it asked the governmen t
to spend $6 billion.
In his statem<'nl Nixon said:
"The summer of 1971 ·will be a
5ummer nf cxn,1nded op-
portunity for l he disad-
vantaged youth of our country
-due in no small measure to
the large number of su mmer
job!i which are heing made
available In them."
Nixon !iairl the Nalional
Alliance of Bu!iinessmen wil l
Provide an addilion;il JS0.000
job slots. increasing !he totnl
of' su b.,idized J)O!:'iliono;; to·
82tOOfJ. l!e said this is 204,000
morr than last year.
Three-fourths nf !hr Jobs
will be $·11 .60 a 'vrrk po~i tion~
in the Neighborhood Youth
Corps lasting nine v:erk~. one
week fewer than lnsl summer.
l.'" "
*'
r ;
! .. •
tourists who streamed lo the
Cuban capital in the 1950·s;
called it "The Paris or the
Caribbean ."
Havana was ''a no! her
world,'' only lhJ miles from the
U.S. mainland . Pre t t y
senoritas fl irted on almost
every .street corner. Rum v.'as
plentiful and cheap. Casinos
flourished. lfhere was dancing
until dawn.
Then can1c Fidel Castro and
the revolution. Cuba was clos-
ed to "'i'ankee jmperialists"
by the Communist regime.
llavana became a tropical
wallflov.·er.
\\'ord filtered out during the
past decade abou t the spartan
life in Havana, but the first
rciil look al the city came this
"'eek v.·hen 63 persons aboard
a hijacked airliner "'ere de-
tained almost four days by the
Cubans. The Pan American
\Vor!d Airways jetliner return-
ed to the United Slates
V.1ednesday.
"I've traveled all over Latin
America. but I've seen nothing
like it . , the \\•hole tnv.·n was
very dit apidaled and no house
could be said not to need a
coat of paint,'' said one of the
hijacked pa ssengers. r-.1 rs.
He.idi Torlura of Na ssau.
/ Would you like to be
more creative?
You can be, ir you undcrsland that you arc the
rcncction or God, who is the only creator.
1"his help:. you cxpres." the jm;iginalion, fre~hnc~~.
and inspini.lion God ha s given you.
No one :.hould feel his talents stiOcd. Or his life
burdened with boring tasks. l fyou do, you can
i1t:1rt loday lo le;i rn of the creat ivity that con1es
from God.
Come in and read this weck"i Bible Lc!'\.Sen.
Our study room is quiet, free, and open
to everyone.
Christian Science Reading Room
©
(CIST,llr MliA -ttl•5T c11u•c11 0,.. (HIUlT. SCllNfliT
lUt Melot Yttto Orlvt, Ct•I• M.U
HVHTIHGfOH &EACH -Fl•St (HV•Cli 0' CH•liT, l(llHTl5T
12' M•ln Str .. I, """!l~t·" 1"1<11
NfWttO•T ••&CH -l'l•iT CHUll(H o,.-ClllttST. SCllNTl5T
llU V5-~-.Ht...,..., ltt<ll
NfWi>O~T llACIO -ll!COHD CHUlt(H OP CHltl\T, S(IEHTIST no..1 Ct•ll to,11w•y, Ctr9"• tt! w r
PHJLADELPI/IA (UPl) -
The pilot, Capt. George
Ashley, 52, or Coral Gables.
Fla., said he last "'as 'in
Havana II years agn and it
"has changed drastically."
The financially distressed
Penn Central railroad has an-
nounced it will sell the sites of
the Waldorf Astoria Hotel and
other valuable New York City
property in an attempt to
raise needed money.
Laws 011 Marijuana Southern Californi• College •• "It is very, very rundov.'n.
Along the Malecon ( a
boulevard skirting the bay
thal once was llavana's most
picturesque drive) there are
pigpens on the roofs. chicken
pens on the roofs, you
wouldn't recognize it. II looks
like a ruin."
OLD VIOLI N
SE TS MARK
Trustees of the Penn Central
'l'tansportation Co. ! aid
Wednesday the properly, own-
ed for more than 100 years, in-
cludes a 29-acre lracl covering
about 10 midtown Manhattan
B!ol·ks along lo11·er Park
Avenue. Value of the property
is estimated al more than $1.2
billion.
The trustees sairl lh;:it while
lhe purpose of pulling the real
e~!ale up for sale "'as lo raise
needed fund s, there was little
J...ONOON (UPI ) -A 1721 hope the railroad could expect
Stradivariu! sold today at auc-ID receive quick cash .
lion for a record $iOl.600, J\1ortgages on the properties
are said to exceed half a nearly four times the previous billion dollars.
record sale price for a violin. The buildings on the pro-
Assoclaled Pre~s Wrilcr
Marijuana users are le!iS
likely to wind up in jail in i97l
as increasing nu1nbers or
states legislate more lenient
laws.
A survey by The Associated
Press shows that many states
are following the r e c e n t
federal law that reduced
possession of marijuana for
personal use from a felony to
a misdemeanor.
This "'ill permit judges tn
keep firsl offenders out of
prison.
The action by the stales this
year continues a trend of the
Past four years toward milder
laws For simple possession.
States that reduce penalties in
1971 include Arkansas,.
stiffening, the penalties for
marijuana dealers.
A few states continue to hold
the line against relaxing tough
criminal statutes in marijuana
cases. All slates have balked
st implementing the recom-
mendation of a national com-
mission lo legalize. the drug.
There is a noticeable trend
to separate marijuana of-
fenses lrom the existing body
of narcolic!i I a w s , In
Washington Stale, pot has
been designated a "dangerous
drug" rather than a narcotie.
Nebraska has !!Orne of the
mildest laws. A judge there
might impose a penalty as
light as a $1 fine for possess-
ing Jess than one pound of
marijuana.
Medical and Dental Assistants
(formorly Los. Angdts Collq•)
;,
ill©©IBIB®Lllfr~0 v
by th• Accrediting Commisslo• of the I
Hlt'J. AsnL. of Trd. ind T1ch11iul Schls. I ..................... ..._..
1717 ·south Brookhur$f
Anaheim <-
Phone 635-3450
•
'
' "
\Vil!iam Hill and sons. violin pcrly are among New York's
makers and dealers of Lon-most famous landmarks, in·
don's Bond Street, made the eluding Grand C ent r a I
winning bid at Sothehy's on Terminal, the Pan American
the instrument offered for sale Building and lhe Bilt1nore.
by Samuel Bloomfield 41f Co111n1odore, Roosevell and
C.Olorado, Florida, Idaho. ln-\~~~!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i~!i!i!i!i~~!i!i!i!i~~!i!i~~~~!iiii!iiii!iiii!iiii~~~ diana, '-1innesota, Nebraska, ~
Utah, Washingk>n and West ~'
California. Barclay hotel~.
Virginia.
The 'urvey ;ndica "'· EARN 25% TO 50% MORE however. Iha\ slates are
holding firm, or In some cases
r-~~~iii'i~~.;.;:..;;; .. i~ ~ et TUl?l'llil UA.CI\ Tti~ CLOCI\
TU Tti~ ~Alf31C lSJJ()!I~
The fashion look of the Thirties Is back and we've got lt.
Ladies Glycine watches w ith colored stone crowns.
An assortment of styfes. s hapes and an array of colors.
Valu .. to $55. YOUR CHOICE, $37.60.
<~•,.,. ,.(~" t~vltM'tl
AIM<'l<•~ ,.,.....,
••1111A,,,..rk1r• •M M••!•r C~•,..,., Mil.
SLAVICK'S
Je1,•rle1~ Since J917
18 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH-M~-13 80
Op•n Mon. •nd Fri., 10 •. m. to 9 :l0 p .m.
Mosf banks have now reduced savings passbook rates
to a low 43. At Pacific you still earn the same
high rates as before.
ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS
6.18°1o 6.00°lo 5,000!!B TWO
5.92°1o 5.75°1o 1,000!!B ONE
5.39°1o 5.25\ 500~ %th
5.13°1o 5.00°lo J!!B ONE DAY
Interest compounded daily and paid from date of
deposit to date of withdrawal even if it's just one day
Ask how you can obtai n all these benefits service charge
FREE
PREPARATION OF PERSONAL STATE and
FEDERAL INCOME TAX RETURNS
FREE
TRAVELER"S CHECKS
COLLECTION OF NOTES
SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES
MANY OTHERS
OPEN NIGHTand DAY
Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M.
Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
sail aflllllOI. ITUIT • COITA 11UA. CAUflORN\A • l'MONf MMOM
-.
• DAILY PROT E DITORIAL PAGE
A Timely
Coast Community College District officials .are to
be commended for demonstrating a timely sensitivity in
developing th e di strict's 1971·72 budget.
While th e prelin1inary budget figures released last
week are just that -preliminary -they indicate a
welcome beginning.
\Vel come becau:;;e the dropping of a 20.ceat permis·
sive building lax and a $3 milllon trimming job done by
the college top brass 1nay resu.lt in a 22 percent reduc-
tion in property taxes pa id to support the district by
taxpayers in communities from Seal Beach Lo l'.1e\~·port
Beach.
A drop in the tax rate frorn 89 to 69 cents must be
praised in a year fraught \\'ith high unemployment,
spiralling inflation and general economic malaise.
The owner of a $32,000 home -\\'ho may be out
of work -will be gl ad to know Coast Community Col-
lege District will nick him for $16.27 Jess next year -
$55.09 instead of $71 .36.
The proposed S2 1 million budget, bare bones
though it may be, nevertheless provides for continued
enrollment grO\\"lh.
Certainly il's \VClcome ne-ws to property taxpayers
when a tax cut is being discussed. It happens' selnom
enough.
Promontory Point Hearing
Back from the dra\\1ng board, the lrvine Co mpany
·· .. ~·unvetls it! ~i!ed plans for Promont.ory Point at a.
planning commission public hearing at B o'clock tonight
in city hall.
Com{>any ofricials have scaled down the project
by 84 units -from 620 to 536 -after their original
proposal dre\v heated protests from residents or near-
by Balboa Island and Beacon Bay.
Whether the plan, which also calls for an enlarged
Sensitivity
.,_
park to be given to the city In lieu of excise taxes, will
temper homeowner objections remains to be :!!ten. And
that should not be the determining factor.
One planning commissioner announced he voted
against the original proposal "because or all the people"
at tbe be&.ring to rrotest it. There \vere about 300 per·
sons, out of a tota city population of more than 50,000,
at the hearings.
Neither Nev.:port Beach nor any community can
afford planning by pressure group.
Planning co mmissioners, (as \\'ell as city council·
men and the dedicated citizens \\'ho sit on the countless
other boards and commit tees), must recognize their
obligation to the \\'tlfare of Newport Beach as a whole,
and to th e ordinances they are entrusted to administer.
Citizen response certainly has to be an important fact~r in such activities as city planning. But the ques·
tion of whether or not the new Promontory Poi nt pro-
posal represents good planning or inadequate planning
should be based on broader standards.
And this time, \Vhether the planning commissioner5
accept or reject the proposal, we would hope they would
also state the basis for their action.
CJ1ance to Speak Up
A public hearing on the proposed $12.7 million
Newport Beach bud get will be conducted by the city
council Monday at 7:30 p.m. in city hall.
A public hearing means just that. Each and every
citizen who bas somethiqg to say about the am!lunt
of mOney his city"""spend~. and for what, "\ill hive the
opportunity to say it.
Homeowner groups have .already been furnished
with copies of the preliminary document. Other mem·
hers ,of the general public. may see a copy at any library
or the city clerk's office.
They have no call to complain if they don 't. N
Newpo1·t Beach Police Supported, bait ••• A Few of the
Helicopters: 'Not at Night'
To th! Editor:
We were shocked lo re ad in the May 25
DAILY PILOT of f\1ayor Ed Hirth's
"ringing endorsetnenl'' of noisy police
helicopters. urging the public to "put up
wjth a little inconvenience" so that the
police ccin do the ir job. \Ve had hoped
when v.·e read 1n the Pilot on Feb. 23,
1971. that he had been Jppo1nted to the
board of directors of the National
Organization to Insure a Sound-CQntro!led
Environment (NOISE' that he would op-
~ one of the worst forms of noise
pollution that we have in Newport
Beach-the police helicopters-almost the
only form that can be controlled by local
action , by his action and the city coun·
cil's.
INSTEAD. he led the endorsement of
this nighttime intrusion into lhe peace
and quiet of our h omes
and-worse-inferred that because we
object to !his. we arc not supporting our
police. THAT JS NOT TRUE. Our police
are unmatched in the performance or
their duties and deserve praise for the
decline in local crime. \Ve support
daytime helicopter patrols as p3rlicularly
suitable for our city Yi'ilh its network ot
islands, bridges. and beaches.
\Ve also value a good night'-. slE'f'P .
Thill is something that is 1nl-reasu1gly dif·
rieull to come by in Newpnrl Bc11rh when
the helicopters patrol O\'erhe11d as they
did last week. once for an hour at I :30
a.m., !hf' next nigh! for an hour at 4:30
.a.m. How much can be "surveyed" in the
narrov.· path of th' h' Ii cop ter
searchl ight'.' \Vho cRn be apprehended bv
a vehicle that announcrs lls approach Hl
minutes bcf0re its arrival? Are the
benf'fils \\'Orth the cos!~
THE NfGHTTlf.IE pal ro!s are highly
quel'lionable. \V e had every righl l.n ex·
peel nur mayor, ;:i director o! NOISE . 10
put thol'e quc!\tcoos. In ::;uggesl rrnsnnahle
alternative.o;i !of which 1hcre arc manv1.
and certainly not lo dodgr the issue "by
falsely lal>e/Jing those of us vi'llO do object
as anli·police.
Is he tryin~ to prepare u.~ for his nr.xt
''rin ging tndorsemt'nt'' \1•hit'h v.·c now
feel sure must be in favor or increased
jet traffic at Orange County Airport
because of the enormous economic
benefits. Then he could label all of us "'ho
object lo lhat "little inconvenience" as
anti-free enterprise or Communist. That
ls the way thq_I line of "reasoning" gocs,
im'I it?
HE 010 ~OT choose to re.ply In our
prf'vious lwo lt>tters on 1his subject ex-
cept ~·ith an inappropriate lorrn !etrer
trom Chief of Police B .. la1ncs C.lavR~.
With the usual channe ls closed In u.~ I the
poll~. the city C1>unc1l1. \IC know of 1111
other "'ay of expressing our concern over
UUs serious invasion of privacy or of pm·
teirtln& the "cram-il-down-!heir·lhtoals''
-----Thursday, June 3, 1971
Th< editorial page of the Dallu
Pilot 111.kl lo inform and 1ttm-
tdak readtrs bu pre.ttnUno thi.t
Mt0.rpaptr'1 opinions and com.-
m.tnt.art/ ms ioplc1 of inttrt1t
and liqnificon~t. bv providing a
f"111m fM the t.rprt1$ion of
ottr reader•' qpi.nioni, and b11
pre1..eing the diwr1e Ww-
poi1'tl of fnform«ct ob.t'"'''' Olld ~ on lopla Of the .ia.,.·
~ N. Weed, Publllber . '
•
Mailbox
Letters from readers are welcomt .
Norn1ally writers should convey their
ntessages in 300 words or less. The
ril)ht to co11dense letters to fit space
or eliminate libel is f't.!erved. A.II let-
ters must includt signatUf't and mail·
f:11g address, but names may be with·
lteld on req uest if sufficient reason
is apparent. Pottry will not be pub-
lished.
policy of our elected officials except to
\\Tile to the DArLY PlLOT.
BOB AND FRAJICES WARNER
(
T he11'd Remove Siren•
To the Editor:
If fires occurred as often as crimes are
committed. some people v.·ould attempt
to sol\'e the problem by removing the
sirens from the fire engines.
HAL AEDISCllER
A gnhut Belir ople r s
To the Editor :
I was happ y to read on lht front page
of the DAILY PILOT that there is still
time for citizens to express their opinions
about police helicopters to the Newport.
Bcac:h C11y Council. though Councilman
Ctoul said. "It's going lo be tough to con-
\'inee me to gel rid of lhem."
fo.fany citize ns object to the noist pollu·
!ton ca11s<'d by he licopters. I am of the
1nany protesting against this di sruption or
lhe pe,1cc ;ind quiet pos.~!ble here along
the ('Oil.~! Ho1\·eVf!r. other lhan the an-
noyance caused by U1e sound of thf!
inotors. J'rn b('glnning lo qurs!ion the
T'l'lurn in di"lllar v;iluc of this kind of
police protect ion . Police men on ground
level. are simply closer to people.
HAVING GRO \\'N curious about the ac-
tual value of helicopter police patrols,
I ha\'e \\"rillen the district attorney of
Orange County for specific information of
the number of helicopter police v.tiose
testimony has been instrumental in ob-
taining convictions. Though I ~·rpte for
this inform ation v.·eeks ago, 1 have yet lG
receive the information. 1 am still
curious lo learn the facls.
We're all accustomed to the:
stereotyped chase on our TV crime
dramas. However, in real life. I wonder ir
perhaps our local police spend con-
!iiderably lrss tirne conducting .such
dran111tic chases. than in faie-fo.face con-
\'Cr!tation::i. in order lo give us protection?
I do \\'ant continually improved police
proteclion. and continually improved re-
lations between the police and the public.
t s1,1ggesl these improvement,., may be
f;ici litated by discontinuing the: police
helicopter program, loca!l.v.
GEORGIA TARWATER
'Perf~rtr11 Mcreelot .. '
"To the Editor :
Joanne Reynolds' full-page. lntemtlng
article. "Ntwport Student!: En Act Crime
and Trh1l," (DAILY PILOT. ~tay 29) wa~
published after I'd written que sllontng
the value of police helicoplen1. (Sec
foregoing \e:lter. -Edil91'l
I congratulate the Ne:v.·porl Beach
Police Deparlmronr11 program Jn com-
munity re.JatiOfl.'!! 'IRis practlctil e1ercbe
in crlminal Jaw, sugffted by Offktr
Cibbartlll, purl\led by OfUcer Blackbw-n,
11nd the Harbor Hljh School teacher, Mr.
Newldrk, ls, In my opinion, perfectly
marveklus.
J ooogratulate Ute DAlL Y Pn.nr, too,
Wlrk•
.. :::~~@~~~){: :;;
i'.~:J1~
for fully reporting this valuable program.
May there be many more such programs
in our schools.
GEORGIA TARWATER
Promo1ttory Poi11t
To the Editor:
In a recent issue of the DAILY PILOT
iL \\•as annoWlced that Ole Irvine Com-
pany was again sending to the Newport
Beach Planning Commission a pl<ln tor
multiple dwellings in thei r Promon1or.y
Point d!velopment.
Thi.~ matter v.•as apparently laid to re~t
lasl February 8 \Vhen the city rouncil
denied the appeal of the Irvine Company
after lht-project had been turned down
by the planning co1nmission. Al that time
1hc dens ity planned WRS considered.
undes irable. In !heir JJ ght against 1hi!1
blight. nearby residents asked for fl-I
1oning because between Linda Island and
Cameo Shores there is a continuous belt
of R-1 zoning and this beautiful blufl site
is no place for an apartment comple1.
TIIE IRVINE COMPANY request lhi~
lime i11 menly watered do"·n slightly
from their last request. When the city
cooncil denied their appeal in February,
one of the touncilmeo suggested that a
joint committee of Irvine. ptnple., coun-
cilmen, and nearby residents should
discuss the proper use of this land. \\'hat
happened to this'?
This land ahould be a \•iew park . but
never should it be allov.'ed to be cC1vered
by ;'.In apartment complex, I submit that
the lrvint Company is nol gfeally con·
cerned what the residents of Newport
Be.11ch th ink . but is concerned primaril.v
with lht dollars their lands can produce.
W. L. THOr,!PSl)N
Dear
Gloom y
Gus
O:>unty Plann ing Commissioner
Bulterfltld's new vendetta ag.11in st
Sadd\eb111ct Community Hospita l is
added reaaon for \be: Legi11\ature
to investigate conflic!J or inttrtR~t
In the hotpl\.11 case. Wh11f3 the
comrnluiontr's angle'?
-A. L. P.
fMt ._,.,.. "'""UI ,....,,,. ¥Mwi. lltl 1\
_.,, ...... ., tM --· ......
·-... ...,.. .. •"'-""" ..... OtllY fll'llol. ~
Facts of Life
In Economics
The trick of creating an inflationary
economy that continues lo keep pricel'!
rising through an employment recession
magn ified by skyrocking tax rates -
"inflato-cession" to coin a word -is one
molt ee-0nom ic whizz.es \\'Ould have
Jaug~ away not too long ago.
The dally headlines make it clear this
is the crisis that has been nurtured to full
bloom the past decadt or 10. California
and New York, the. nation's two largest
.sLates, most clearly illustrate: the prob·
!em, as the root causes of "inflato-
cession" are most evident in populous
centers.
THE PROBLE~f. of course. 1 s
enormously complicated. Various of the
Common Market rountries have: cut
adrift from the dollar because the cur-
rencies of those countries are more
valuable than the dollar. This increases
the. cost or those goods imported into the.
United Slates from tbe.. countries in-
volved. The irony or the matter, of
course. is thal il v.·as the United Slates'
aid which put the countries on their feel .
It is U.S. mihtary Installat ions which fuel
their economies and reduce their defense
requirements. Il i.s U.S. tourists who
pump dollars into !he countrif's al a won·
drnu.s rate.
At home the people of the country, at
an f'ver accelerating rate., have demand·
ed or have been voted lhe. widest, most
expensive variety or welfare programs
for the greatest number of people ever
kno"·n.
WELFARE PROGRA~IS cost money,
Jax money.
In Californ ia, where there. is IOm,thing
approaching a tax revolt -if not almost
an inability to pay -11 percent of the
population is on welfare rolls. That's 2.3
million Callfomlarui -1&.4 percent of a\1
the people in the nation who are on
"'elf are.
Go\•ernor Ronald Reagan Is trying to
rnntain !he state tax problem with a .a. 7
billion budget and requests for swttping
reform of California welfare laws. The
Democratic leadf:nhtp in the legislature.
does not seem 'incllncd to go along \\'ith
the Governor and ha11 proposed tax
reform proposalr of ii.!! own. Only time
\viii tell how the. dlflere.nces In appro.cb
are re.solved.
IN NEW YORK state where Governor
Nebon Rockefeller has to contend with
Mayor John Lindlay's totally bankn1pt
New York City, the Governor has had to
d!smi!l-'l 8.250 state: e:mployts, and sll!lsh
welf11re. costs drastically to .stay within
tht state's budget which the leglslature-
trimmed by S?to mOUon from a ~
quested $8.45 billion. New York't wtlfan
recipients total 1.7 ml!Uon and 1.1 mUlion
of those are in Ntw York City.
~ r.re but 1 few or the: economic
facts of life that tn California, for in-
stance. ruull in an unemploymtnt rale
of over 7 peij'tnt and the serond largf'.'il
state and local per c1plt.a ta.1 burden in
the country -$540 per per,on against
New York'' $$78.
"lnllatfl-Celf~kln." If the 111xes don 't gel
you -unemploym ent might -al'ld then
you •rt on welf11rel
Califmila Fratare Stnok•
As a Compass,
Hope Is Terrible
Jn navigating through life, hope is an
essential ballast, but a terrible compass.
One mania I have never uoderstood is
the pa5s1on for belling on horses ; at !east
if people bet on turtles they v.·ould get a
lot longer n1n For their money.
"lnCflmpatibility"' strikes me as absurd
grounds ror divorce :
all couples are 1n-
compaLible. be ing
made up of two in-
dividuals of different
sexes. and the
whole· point of mar-
r i a g e consists 111
leamini:" to f i nd
areas of compati-
bility.
The way in v.·h1ch n1ost of us assert our
';individuality"' 1.s by using our freedom
lo become exactly like our neighbors.
Penple \\ho are uneasy in thr presence
of lhe famous or talented should keep in
mind Eleano r Roosevelt's wise \n·
junction: "Remember. no one can n1ake.
you feel inferior "'ilhout ~our ronsen!" ' . ' A "\1•ell·informed" man i!ii ~omeone
who tias thoug ht ur better arguments to
support our position than we have. • • •
The difference between Freud and
most of his popularizers is that Freud
knew \\'hen a cigar v.·as just a cigar. • • •
\\'e can bcnr any scorn from the young.
except their cu rrent e1•alua!ion Iha! to be
old is per se to be unatt ractive ; and
nascent cul tore !hat finds no beauty ln
age 1vill bt:·come increasingly self·
lacerating in lime. .: * ,.
Insurance protects you a g a i n s t
everything except the 1 e g a I is I i c
terminology It is couched in. • • •
A •·psc.udo-inl.ellectual '' is an in-
tellectual who makes no effort to conceal
his sense of superiority from us. • • •
\Vhatever the disparities in language,
people laugh much the san1e all over the;
v.'orld; and \\'here there is universal
humor, there is hope for universal agree--
menl on matters that cannot be laughed
•l. • • •
The most annoylng sort or bickering
neighbors are the ones who are loud
enoug h to be di sturbing without be ing
loud enough lo be intelligible, so that we
get all of the din and none of the dirl. ' . .
I have ye\ to meet " professed ''!>elf·
made " man \\'ho ·was even slightly
ashamed of his maker. • • •
Some people are so tactless lhat the
form of thei r apologies constitutes an·
crther offense. • • •
It's often hard to tell the difference
between a reformer with an Idea in hts
head and one With a constriction in his
bowels.
Law s for Motor Bikes
Americ<1ns are buying motor bikes In
record numbers . California has more;
than a ho.Jr million re,:!istered. Many
mort are not rcglstercd, largely because
ov."Ilers do not know they must be.
The law distinguishes between the
"motorcycle"' and the smaller "motor-
driven cycle .. such as motor scooters.
But both are "motor vehicles .'' They are
governed by the vehi cle la\\S. Both must
be licensed and equipped wilh safety
devices. fiolh are subject lo many of the
same laws as other motor vehicles. These
bike~ are not toys.
OPERATORS or molar vehicles must
be licensed or they cannot drive on the
:ilreel. It is unlawful lo drive nn private
properly wiUloul permissio11. of the own-
er. Nor can they be used in most parks
or other public prope rty. Violation of
these laws can bring severe {>(!nallles.
Parenu who allow their youngsters
under 21 unlicensed lo operate these
bikes may become re!iponsible for
damages v.·hich resull from !he driver"s
negligence.
Persons who drive \\'\thout a license
ma y have t~ vehicle impounded or taken
away. Conviction of violating the law Ci'ln
Dear George :
Are you the columnist who tell.~
people how to make A!ihlr:iys out llf
tin cans by stlvcring thcrn .ind
Sl)(llling them v.•ilh sequin!;'?
n.~:.
t:><>ar H.E :
~o. that mu!I he U111l columnl~t
v.·ho keeps going through the trash
nver in the womf!n's department
I ,. '\
I La w in Ac ti on
result in further penalties.
THE LAW RESTRJCTS not just the
parents. Jl say!'! that "no person" shall
employ or hire anyone or knowingly
authorize the driving or a "mqtor
vehicle'' owned by him or under hi~ con·
trol upon the highv.·a}'S unless the person
is properly licensed.
It is also a crime to lend your license,
lo \vrongfully display it or ro du11licalc it.
Some star.es require ope r::i•ors to we;ir
he!mels or to ha\'C ii d d i I i o n :i 1
safely devi ces.
fl.1a ny smaller motorcycles ::ire 1101 ner-
mitt&I on free.ways_ A locnl orrlinance
may designale that certain portions o.r
the freeway shall be restricled to mutor-
drl \'en cycles. When the ordinance or
resolution has been approved by lhtt
Qepartment of Public Works and signs
are posted on the frl!(!wa y or the Bp.
proaches. violation becomes a crimt'.
Some motorcycles are high on muffler
noise which is also a violation of the Jaw.
for cans .. Jusl dump the a,-.ht's 011
ltte noor. Lh1e a lillle. I sa.1
CONF IOF.NTIA L TO 'l'V
\\'E:ATHER .\1AN. fJh , quit ~·/Jr•
rying me ~·ith those questions -
nobody else understands that map
ellher. Jwt kroep polnUng with your
little slick and everything will be
fine, ·•
~
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f;osia Mesa Today's F inal
ED I TION N.Y. Stoeks
1 VOL. 6~. NO. 132, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE 3, '1971 TEN CENTS
Hoffa Ma y Pistol on Death Ranch
Relinquish
Long Reign
WASHINGTO~ (AP) -Teamsters
President James R. ftoffa has sent word
from his prison a!ll thal he will f.inal.ly
relinquish his 14 year reililn over tlle giant
labor union, informed sources said today,
The tough, 5e-year-0ld Hoffa, whose
gtormy ca reer as chief of the 2 1ni\Jion
member union ended in prison lour years
ago, .reportedly endorsed the union·s
general vice president, frank E. Fitzsim·
mans. to succeed h1m. ·
Hoffa, s'erving 13 years for jury
tampering and mail fraud in the
Lewisburg. Pa .. federal penitentiary, had
ell:hausted Innumerable legal avenues in a
fruitless effort to win his freedom in time
to run for reelection next month before
finally giving in and agreeing to step
aside.
High union sources had speculated for
months that the government would not
.release him until he agreed to step down
·-from lhe presidency of the union that
\\'ields powerful control in the nation·s
trucking industry.
It was not immedi.ately clear whether
Hoffa agreed to resign before the
Teamsters convention opening ln Miami
Beach .luly 5.,th,us making F'itzsimmon!'>
un '.on president immediately, or whether
Hoffa will hold office until the new elec· uOn .
Either way, Fitzsimmons -handpick-
td by Hoffa as Jiis stand in at the last
co'lveation five years ago shorl!y before
H0f/a went lo prison -is regarded .11
cinch for endorsement by the dozen other
Teamsters vice p•·esidents.
"There's a new Frank Fitt.simmons."
said one source, referring to Fitz-
simmons' obvious joy over Hoffa's
decision.
J-1.offa had kept other Teamsters
!eaderg wailing: for lhe decision up lo the
anion ':s last executive board meeli:ig in
Hollywood, Fla., last month. Hoffa sent
·'10rd thea be ..,anted more \.ime In a last
tlld for freedom on the basis of A
purported deposition from the chief p~
1ecution witness, EdwliI'd Grady Parlin,
whose testimony sent him to pri~on.
Partin denied making the alleged deposi-
tion recanting much of his testimony .
The 63-year old Fitzsimmons, a long
lime friend of Hoffa from their early
Dct;oit da ys in the union, has run the
un ion since Hoffa went to prison in 1967.
Others in the Teamsters' hierarchy
reportedly preferred Fitzsimmons' loos~r
control. allowing them more sway 1n
their own union districts. Hoffa , in con-
lr.ast. had lightly gripped most power. in
his o~·n hands, sometimes bypa ssing
other officials lo deal directly with union
fl'l!'mbcrs . • Horta reportedly ho.,cd his stepping
•11:sid<> ~·ill increase hls chances for
~e rnle.
Hn\vever. Chairman r.eorge J. Reed or
th e Parolr. ho .,~rl ~-~ t'·cre had been no
~ (See HOFFA, Page 2J
Hanoi [ :Jcels
R eturn of Sick
POWs by Vie ts
PARIS (UP I) -Hanoi cancell~d the
return of 13 sick and wounded prisoners
of war to Nor!h Vietnam today aft.er they
had boarded a ship al Da Nang for lilt;
briet voyage lo the North . Both Han?1
and the Viel Cong also hardened their
line toward the peace talks.
!n almost identical statements the
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong
delcgales told the 115\h session of the
ta lk!\ lhat 15' qui ck deadline for total U.S.
'troop wit hdrawal from Vietnam .11nd
O\"Crlhrow o{ the SaigOfl government were
, inseparable and crucial rondltions for
peace.
ShorUy :11:fle:rwards, the olf~cial Ha~l
Information Agency, AVI, said ln Parts
that Hanoi wou.ld not accept the return of
the prisoners and that it would have a
fu rU1er announcement later.
South Vietnam offered originafly lo
return 570 prisoners of war but said the
Jl,ed Cross after talking to the prisoners
found that only 13 wanled to go home.
UPI correspondent Stewart Kelltnnan
reported from aboard .the repatriation
ship Upshur that lht ship left Da. Nang,
Soulh Vietnam, today to &el the pruoner1
ashore by small boats in North Viet.-
cam.
The. AVI announcement ssld North
Vie1.J1am, taking notice of the 13 figure
\n!ltead of 570 it thought were going
homr. "vigorously condemned this di!!·
hone!lt maneuver of the United Stal~
and 1he puppet regime ln Saigon."
There were other development! today
in Southeast Asia ·
.:..... The United Slate~ for the firRt time
ha~ Riven South Vietnamest troops
\75mm artllltrY . the most powt'rful
we11pon yet provided lht government
under the Vietn111mh.~lion program, ac·
• cording to military source.s.
')
Gun, Shells Discovered Near Yubq Grave Sites
..
• ' /.,.,;,. . ~{
tJP'I r.11,llor.
Dnd n t t h e Ye ar-···
Yep, the National Father's
Day Committee has named
1t1rs. John Bruce Dodd, 89,
Spokane, Wash ., "Father of
the yeJr." She is the founder,
or mother, of Father's Day,
which, girls, will be observed
June 20 for the 61st time.
Grand Jury
Criticizes
Butterfield
Orange County Grand Jury Foreman
Doreen MarshaU of Newport Beach
\Vednesday sharply censured Planning
Commission Chairman Woodrow But·
terfield for announcing an appearance
before the jury to the press.
"Members of the ju ry noted with
surprise a story appearing in the local
press regarding your meeting with tpe
ju,Y scheduled, reportedly for Tuesday
morning." read a leUer from Mrs,
Marshall to Butterfield.
"We are concerned bec.&use neither the
Grand Jury nor its foreman had received
any communication from you requesting
such a meeting.
"In our opinion the newspaper report~
regarding this matter have been
misleading 'to the public and to lhe county
administration which we regret," the let-
ter continued.
"U yo u wish to have the Grand Jury in-
vestigate a specific matter or to meet
with the jury for this purpose , we should
appreciate tht: courtesy of a v.·rillen re-
quest."
The Jetter also noted that the Jury's
Planning and Envlronmental Problem!
Committee "has been reviewing the
policies and procedures followl'!d by the
Planning Commission and will be in·
terested in receiving any information you
wish to make avai lable lo it "
Butterfield in a statement to the press
Tuesday said he had uncovered in-
formation that the Planning Commission
had been incorrectly advised in the mat-
ter of the use permit ror lhe future. Sad-
dleback Commu nity Hospital in Laguna
Hil!s Leisure World.
He said they had been told that a
hospital was proper use for the property
where the facility will be built but that be
had discovered later that th is v.'as not so.
His assertions y,•ere denied by the.
County Counsel's office which said that
the property was being legally used as a
site for a Hospital.
Mrs. Marshall's letter noted that But-
terfield's announced .11ppearance before
the Grand Jury did not take place .
Butterfield had al so said he would
bring the hospil.al matter before the
Planning Comroission Tuesday. He did
not.
The only reference le the subject was
during discussion of anothe r matter when
.11 petitioner started to read'from the arti-
cle quoting Butterfield on the "poor ad-
vice the romml.s:sion had received."
The com mission chairman halted lhe
readin g abruptly with, "the wording of
!Set MARSHALL. Page 2)
Praised bg Cit~s
From Wire Services
YUBA CITY -An automatic pi.rto\ has
been found on the Jack L. Sullivan ranch,
site of most of the graves of the 23 vic-
lims of a mass slaying, it was learned to-
day.
The pistol, a 9-millimeter automatic,
and 20 shells found with it were sent to
the state crime labora tory at Sacramento
for ballistics tests.
Tijuana Police
In court documents supporting lhe
charge against su.sptt:t Juan V. Corona,
the sheriff's office &aid II had found six
nine-millimeter shells in his 1971 panel
truck .
Authorities investigating the grisly
crime never have indi cated that any of
the vi ctims died from bullet wowtds. The
b;;dies discovered along !he Feather
River had been hacked and stabbed.
Cycle;:Suicide Squad'
Slates Fish Fry Shows
Ha rhor area residents wbo have dodged
Tijua na taxi cabs will appreciate the
work of the Tij uana Police Department's
motorcycle "suicide squadron" In
Saturday's Fish Fry Parade.
The precision riders from south or the
border will take part in the 10:30 Rm .
parade, then <it 1:30 p.m. they will
perform some. of their b(st stunl'!l at
Costa Me sa Park .
Mayor Jose Manuel Gonzalez of Ti·
juana w\11 a!sQ be a special guest at the
f is h Fry, as Costa Mesans try to forget .11
proposal to buy Baja California two years
ilgo,
The Cosla Mesa-Newport Harbor Lion!!
Club Fish Fry and Carnival starts Friday
night with fish dinntr:s being served in
Costa Mesa Park and JO ··carnival ridu
and attractions open to youngsters.
Dave DeSoto, KMPC radio's "man in
Orqe County,'' will tmcee Saturday'•
parade .11nd the motorcycle sho\4', DeSoto
is: head of the Orange County news
bureau for KMPC.
A baby contest and the selection of
Miss Mermaid and Miss Costa Mesa will
highlight Sunday's Fish Fry activities.
Lions Club members hope to gross
about $90,000 during the 24 working hours
of ,the fry. They hope to serve 14,000 fish
dinnt!rs using 4,000 pounds of Northe rn
Cod, plus 1,500 pounds of .£1lle slaw, 3.000
Baby Boy Killed
I n Freeway Cras h
A baby boy was fat ally injured and his
mother ho~pita\ired Jn serious condition
Wednesday when the car in which I.hey
rode rolled over on the San Diego
Freeway in Costa Mesa .
John D. Hellman, 30 months, and i'vlr~
r.1argaret ~lellman. 29, were throy,·n from
!he sedan driven by Cathy S. Hceran, 21.
also of the fan1ily home, 3316 Oklahoma
Ave .. Costa ~1esa.
The tot died of he.ad injuries at 5, 15
p.m .. ~ix hours la1er, while his mother
was listed in serious conditio n ai Costa
~1esa Memorial Hospihrl. also with head
injuries.
Miss Heeran suffered cuts and bruises
and a possible shoulder injury in the llC·
cidcnl which occurred in soul.hbound
lanes, south of Fairview Road.
Jn vestJgators for the Ca 1 if or n 1 a
Highway Patrol were unable to im-
mediately determine v:hat caused the
car to go out of control.
NY OKs Youth Vote
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) -New York has
become the 31st state to ratify the pro..
posed U.S. con!ltitutionaJ amendment
that would allow 18 year olda to vote in
all elections.
pounds of hot dogs and hamburgers, 400
pounds of coffee, s0,000 soft drinks. 1.200
pounds of chocolates. 500 pounds of h~m.
600 pounds of bacon and 50() pounds of
s<:.:.isage .
More than 100,000 visitors enjoyed the
parade, Fish Fry and carnival events last
year.
*·* -(:r H ere's Prog ran1
F or Three-da y
Mes a Fish Fry
Events for the three-day Co!tl Me5a·
Ne wport Harlor Lions Club ns~ Fry are
scb.edUled '81 follows :
rRIDAY'
!:30 p.m -fish dinners aerved in Coela
Mesa Park.
6 p.m. -30 carnival rides and game
booths open at the park .
7:30 p.m. -Batlle of the bands music
concert in the park.
SATURDAY:
JO a.m. -carniva! opens.
10:30 a.m. -Two-hour parade st arts ,
Noon -fish dinners served in park .
l :30 p.m. -variety acts on the park
stage, interspersed through day with
dra wings for donated gifts.
4 ~15 p.m. -Dorothy Jo Dancers on
stage.
6:30 p,m, -Sing Out, Young Genera-
tion C1n i;tagl'.
8 p.m -drawing for a 125 Ya maha
mo torcycle.
SUNDAY:
Noo n -ca rnival &pens, fish dinners
served.
2:30 p.m. -annual baby conlt!sl.
.1;30 p.m. -selection or tl-1iss t.1ermaid .
6'15 p.m -Arlee Higbee Dancers on
s!age.
8 p,m. -Grand drawing for a 1971
Ford Pinto.
Harbor Sai lors
T11 ke Band A iv ard
T~e Newporl Harbor Sailor Barnt and
Dr ill Team too k top honors al the recent
Garden Grove Strawberry f' e s t i v a I
P3rzde.
The Sailo r Band pl;iced second with a
r.core of 90.l. Drum Major Gene Kaylor
won first place with a score of 93.0.
The majorettes also placed fir.1t and
the SailoreUe Drill Team took second .
The Sallor BnnJ and Drill Team will
compete Saturday in the Costa Mesa Fiih
Fry Parade where they v.·111 be trying for
a second consecutive sweepstakes win,
Band Director Rich.11rd A. England ssid.
Four Educators Honored
Wcn-ds of gratitude and pralse nowed in
all directions Wednesday as four Harbor
Area educators were honored for service
to community sc.hools.
Thrct (If those hont'Jred -Trustte
Elizabeth Lill)', Tn1stec James W. Peyton
and Aasi5tinl Superintendent Roy 0.
Anderson -·are retiring. The fourth -
Superintendent Wiiiiam Cunningham -
ha:o; rc11igned to lakt. a position with •
state.wide educatlonal organlutlon.
A'nderson , afler 29 ytars as teacher.
principal, supe:rinlcndent and dirtttor of
fa c.ililies for Harbor Area school~. was
1ingled out frir special recogn ition. Aft.tr
drawing a itllndlng ovac,ion from Ute au·
dlenct 1t the Newporter lnn, It was an.
nounced that a new school in the Harbor
View Homes aru will be named In
Anderson 's honor.
Anderson be11med when dlstrlct Board
Pre:sident Selim S. "Bud" Frllnklin made
the announcement and drew 11 happy kiss
from his wlft of 3S years.
Mri. Lilly, absent because of Ulne~"I.
w1~ tHed for six years of service to Ult
Newpqrt 1'h1rbor Unio n High School
District and 10 the Nt'wporl·lt1esa Unified
School Drstrict. She and the nther three
honored I'll received plaques.
Peyton. reC<Jgnir.td for II years on
llarbor Area school boards, tomrnenlt-d
wryly that he understood "9Y clUJ.C.ns
•
voluntuily assume school b o 1 r d
responsibilties: "You feel so good when
H'!ll all over."
Cunningham told the audience that Jn
15 years of service u superintendent In
various Cali!ornl11 diRtrict11, he had never
received as much community and achoo!
bo11rd support 11:11 he had In the thra ·11nd
one-half years as c:.hltf of the-unified
achoo! district.
The luncheon was sponsored by the
cities of NewPQrl Beach and Costa Mna,
by !tit. Newport Harbor •nd C.O.La MesA
Chambtrs of Commerce and by the
Newport ~tarbor.COsta Mesa Board of
Hcaltors.
Aerial photographs taken with an ln-
frared camera were being processed to
help officials determine whether there
are more bodies buried in the area of the
crime. It was expected to take two days
to process the photographs.
Sheriff Roy D. Whiteaker , who says he
is convinced more bodies will be found ,
was forced to \Yilhdraw his crews after
lh('V started digging at one "indentation''
similar to those that have turned out to
be crude graves.
The crews found the ground still too
we!.
So far, 23 transient:s, farm workers and
drifters have been found hacked and
slabbed to death in crude graves In
orchards along the Feather River.
Juan V. Coron<1, 37, a Mex ican born
rii.rm labor 'ontractor with a poor com-
mand of English. was formally arraigned
in /ustice Court Wednesday on 10 counts
of murder -the 10 bodies exhumed by
the time he was first taken to court one
week before.
"I'd like to get it over and be done wilh
it.'' Whiteaker said as he discussed the
continuing search for gravesites. "t
believe there are some bodies oul there
that will never be found."
The sheriff is using infrared aerial
photography of the orchards in an effort
lo spot areas where the soil has been
disturbed. Results should be available
Friday.
Another potential gravesile still l~
under water and can "t be probed until it
dries, the sheriff said.
At Wednesday·:s closed arraignment
hefore Justice Court Judge J_ J. Hankins
the proceedings were related to Corona
bv a Spanish language interpret.er, Raoul
Y.b,rra,_ a local norisl , , .
Hankin• asked : •'Do you underst111d
w.hat Yf?U are being charged with?''
Ybarra replied for Corona: "No. He
does not understand."
Hankins : "All right. You bav! betri
cbarged, Mr. Corona, with count one. a
violation of Section 187 of the penal code,
tn that you did murder one Kenneth
Ed1~ard Whiteacre."
Ybarra : ''He don 'i know."
Hankins: "Well, does he understand
what he 's charged with ?"
Ybarra: "Yes.''
Then public defender R(ly Van den
~leuvel told the judge he did not have to
read all 10 counts and told him Corona
would plead innocent to all 10.
Hankins set a preliminary hearing for
June 16 al which time he said he would
decide, on the basis of eviden ce presented
by the prosecution. whether Corona
should be held for a Superior Court trial.
Corona, dressed in a while shirt, tie
and blue 1:reen suit, was returned to the
Yuba Cowtty jail across the Feather
IStt YUBA CITY. Page !l
J. Edgar Hoover
B lackballs T wo
Police Offici als
WASHINGTON (U PI) -FBI Director
J. Edgar Jloover blackballed l\l."O prom-
inent police authorities as guests at a
White House conference with President
Nixon today on .v.·hat the federal gove rn-
ment can do about the recent rash of
police assassinations.
The two are Quinn Tamm. executive
director o! the Inte rn ational Association
of Chiefs of Po!Jcc <IACP) and former
assistant FBI director who has feuded
wJt.i Hoover for years, and Police Com-
missioner Patrick. V, Murphy of New
York City.
Murphy said the reported White House
explanation that he was not invited be-
Cil.USe he was not a police chief was "si m·
ply incredible." '
"It was with disappointment and dis·
may that I learned !hat the appearanc4l
of police of the great.est city in the world
--cc>nfronled by a major problem of
violence by guns -was not wanted at
the Washington confetence," he said at
police headquarters in New York.
"We cannot allow politJcal consider·
•tJOM to hinder cooperaUve effort. to
Improve the safely of Ollr pollce officers
and the public," Murphy 11ald.
Tamm was quoted by Scripps-Howard
ntwapapers as saying the two were not
JnVlled by Hoover. who drew up the (Liest
Jii;t at Nixon's request, because Clf the
FBI Director's pe:rgonal· anlmoslty.
Hnovtr. said Tamm. w1.1s "playmg pol·
itlcs with policemen's Jives.'"'
Nixon, Hoover 11nd Attorney General
~iitchell met for nearly tlfo hours In the
Wh.itc Hou~ cabinet room with II offl-•.
clals of the IACP. lht Natlon1I Sheriffs
Association, police chiefs from Wa&hlng-
lon. D.C., Chicago. Kansas Cl.ly, Mo.,
Bo.~tc111, Lo8 Angele• city and county, tn.
stales of Te:a:as find New York, ind rink·
Ing -members of the Houst and Senate
Jud.lciary commiUees.
lll'I TtM"'8t9
IN CHARRO COSTUME
Yuba City Suspect Coron•
Casper s Cites
Coast Guard
'Pollution'
By L. PETER KRIEG
01 l~I DtUt l'llol 11111
Fifth District Supervisor R o n & I d
Caspers: of Newport peach Wednesday
accused the U.S. Coast Guard of being
"ont. of the biggest polluters in Newport
Harbor" but in the next breath uid the
C.Oast Guard had ag reed &o mend it.s
ways.
The cha rge infuriated Coast Guard of.
ficials. They denied it today and said
nobody has even complained before, Jet
alone Y,'On any agreement for them to
change th ings.
"The Coast Guard is not doing· any
polluling, absolutely none,'' said Master
Chief J. E. Gnegy, officer in charge of
the Point Divide, one or two Coast Guard
cutters moored in Newport Harbor.
"The lwo Coast Guard ves~els do not
under any cin:umstances pollute, we use
dockside facilities for nat ure's calls.'' he
aaid .
Capt. Henry A. Pearce, chief of staff of
the 11th Coast Gu ard district in Long
E.Bach first responded, "l don't know
wh<1t he's ta lking about.'
"Who is this man, a supervisor? Has he
talked to the harbormaster ?" Pear~
sa id. ''We"re docked right next to him
and if we were doing any pol!utlng, he
wnuld certainly talk to u.~."
Capt. Pearce checked fu rther and said
Caspe.rs musl have misunderstood a !et-
ler sent by Coast Guard engineers to the
County Harbor Commission las-l month.
''\Ve told them the po len tial of l.100
gallons of waste a day could be dumped
into the harbor if we didn 't have dockside
facilities," Ca pt. Pearce said.
''We didn·t say we were doing it."
He said the unsolicited leUer had of.
fered to pay for a piping :system kl con-
nect the craft with sewage facilities OD
jStt POLLUTION, Pace 2)
Thief Ge ts Lingeri e
A cat burglar apparently got into a
Costa Mesa dental technician's home,
she discovered upon checking her dresser
Wednesday. The vlcli m, :u , said only
a35orled items of lingerie, plus $10 in
cash was taken.
Oraage Ceut
Went.Iler
The clouds will roll by early on
Friday, followed by fair l!lkies and
temperature!! ranging from M de-
1rtts al011g lhe shoreline io 14
further inland.
INSIDE TODAY
Htroin addict icho was up to
15 bags a rloy ot cost of $150
leour.' film o~ Jina/. warning to -
youngsters . S!ory, Pog1. S.
~1,111, I
Ct lllcrfll• I
(~H"'tl"• v, '
Cl1ull\M U-Jt
(tflllt~ J4
c .. ""'"' '' ctflll Ntllcff t .._n • ll!lfr"' ,._ •
l "t.rtl-lt11M•I 1 .. l t ll'lt11t1i• , .. ,,
...,""-. 11
A1111 L...,.. 1J
ll\1rr1.,. Lie--t ""''" , .... Mvl""'! ll'vllfl II
IUl!ffl l N"'" 4") Or-(IOllflfy I
S1f'Vll f'Wt« 11
s-11 ll·U
1'9dl .... '111 ... , .. " T•lttltlN 11
,,..,..... lt.1•
W1•111tt 1
·-·1 Htw1 J~IJ
Wllfhll H-. ....
' l
'
Je Ol!L Y PILOT c
Ship Blaze
Link Told
To Sailo1·
VANCOLNER. 8.C -A careless
crewmen may h·ave caused lhe fla sh lire
that killed himseh and JI shipmates on
the cruise ship r-.leteo r, investigators
disclosed here \Vednesclay.
None of the more than 60 passengers,
Including former Newport Beach mayor
James B. "Jay" Stoddard iincl his v.·ife
FlormCt", were injured in the r-.fa y 22
disaster.
Arson had been mentioned as a
possibility at one point
"We ha\'e come to the conclusion !hat
the direct cause could ha \·e been
negligence on the part of one of the
crewmen," the chief probtr anno unced.
Judge K.F. Myrda l. chairman _ol. a
Norwegian Transportation Comm1sston
invesUgating panel decli ned to name the
man whose smouldering cigarette is
l!iuspected as the cawe. . .
Myrdal said it is impossible to def1n1le-
ly pinpoint it. . .
Speculation earlier had the fire starling
at three or four spots before it raged
through forward crew quarters, but
Myrdal's commission has discounted the
theory.
Mesa Massag e
Parlor Raided
A Co!;ta Mesa sauna and massage
parlor operator late Wednesday was ar·
rested by vict officers.
Masseuse. Christine Ruffing. 20, of San-
ta Ana, wu arrested at 2626 Newport
Boulevard, and booked on charges of
goJiciting to commit prostitution.
Miss Ruffing is an employe of the
establishment known as P h y s i c a I
Therapy, one of a chain operated by ~ne
man in Riverside and San Bernardino
coun ties.
Sergeant Jack Calnnn. of the vice and
Intelligence de.tail. said the premises had
been under surveillance many months.
From Page 1
MARSHALL ...
that article v.·as very unfortunate."
The use pe.rmit for lhe hospital v.•as
granted by unanimous action of_ fou r
commissioners present r.-fay -1. Previously
the commission had deadlocked 2·2 on the
Issue.
Commissioners Arnold Forde of the
Fifth District who was absent on a trip to
Europe at the time y,·as alleged to ha\'e a
Conflict or intertst in the hOlipita[
question because he was financi alry ~n
terested in the Mission Communlly
Hospital in the same area.
Garden Grove Seeks
New Chief of Police
Garden Grove i!l looking for a new
police chief today for !he second time in
1iix months.
Chief Laurence R ~,arshal has resign-
ed effective June 18 to become un·
dersheriff of Santa Barbara County
Marshal. 38, was named ch1et last ~O\'.
ll after George Tielsch resigned to
become police chief of Seattle.
Blood1nobile Poise1l
The Harbor arra community blood-
mobile v.·1ll stop at Hoag Hospital from
2:30 p.m. to 7 p.m., June 10
Blood donors are urged to phone 835-
5381 to make appointments or ask ques-
tions.
OIANGl COAST
DAILY PILOT
Oll.l.NGE co.a.st l'UI LnHING COMl'ANV
Roi.id N. w,.d
Pr11 ,,.,, •...:! l'uDI,,,,....
J•c• •. Cu•l•V
\ID Prui<l1ru •r.a Gensf•l M1,..,g.i"
Thom•• K11wil
Editor
T!.oM•I A. Mu•p~i~•
Mt ,..t lno EO•IOf
Ch.,,f,, H. loot R ic~••d '· N.11
.-.,..11i.n, M1n~int1 Edllor~
c .. t• Met• Offk• •
)JO W.11 l•Y Slr••t
M1ili~~ Addr1u: P.O. !101 1560. •1 6i•
OtMr Offk ..
•
I
Thur'611, Junt 3, llJ71
GAILY l'llOT Still 1'"'°11
TACKLES NEW TASK
Victor C. Andrews
Laguncui Namecl
R eagan Aid Plon
County Director
Victor C. Andre\j,s of Laguna Beach
has been named chairman of the Orange
County Citlzen 's Committee for the
Governor's welfare program .
His appointmenl v.·as an no u n c e d
Wednesday al a Santa Ana ne1\s con·
ference.
Andrews. 169 Emerald Bay. quoted
figures from the county Welfare Depart·
ment which said the Governor·s program
could save Orange County taxpaye rs as ,
much as SS00.000 during the coining fiscal
year.
He placed the overall stale saving at
$600 million.
Andrev•s emphasized that the group
v.·as non·par!isan. "Our aim is \1•elfa re
reform. 11•e are not fighting a political
campaign."
The governor's program 1s now before
!hr legislator(' and lhe cili1.ens com·
mi!Lee program to support it is
statewide.
'"\Ve realize \hA\ ideas and proposals
for reforrning v.elfare ha1·e been rnade
ror years. but all that has happened i!t
that the welfare load has expanded,''
Andrev.·s said.
"We feel that our .... ·ork is unique in thal
we intend to extend th£' decision making
on v.·elfare reform to el'ery citize n of the
state." Andrews added. "\Ye v.::int each
citizen to rommunicate his view~ on
11·elfare to his state legislators and county
super\'isors."
He said time is limited and e11rh <la~·
the reforms are dela yed cos! the state·~
tax payers $2 million. "\\'e 11·ant welfare.
lo go lo !hose truly in need ."
He quoted e~amples of current welfarr
abuse. ''Under current pro1 isions. A
\\'Oman earning $1.245 a month l"<ln
rc.ceive a \j,'l'lf:.irr p;i~ n1l'nt plus money to
buy furniture and receive !\1edi·Cal and
lood stamp benefits
"lt ts possible In o\j, n a 50-fool yacht
and still dra"' v.eHarr.'' he added.
And rev.·s was Orange County chalrmAn
of President f\ixorfs 1968 c11mpaign lle
11·as later ap1>0inted t:n1te<l Slt1!£'<:
tepresentatil'e lo the \Yorld"s Fair 111
Osa ka. Japan. holdtng the rAnk of am·
bassador.
He is chairman nf the ho:ir<lc: nr ~outh
('oast lommuni1y Hoc:pital and Ctiapm;:in
Collr-g" and is a citrus gro11rr .111d
rnarke1t:r ,
From Page I
YUBA CITY. • •
Hivrr 1n ~·larysville whC"rr he 'rs1terl for
<in hour v.•i1h his wife. <;loria. and h1-.
mother . Cand1dr1
He is being held 1n ~l'lar~'sviUe bccau!>c
its jail facilites are more secure.
Harbor School Board
Calls S pecial l\1cc ting
A special dinner meeting of the
i\e,1·por1.:vfesa Unil1ed School Oistrirt
Board of Education has been called for 6
p.m. Thursday in !he Estancia High
School fo'aculty Lounge.
The meeting "'ill bt to discu.c;s leachl!r
salary proposals 1\'ilh members of the
Certificated Employes Council.
Niel{ Zien er
Give sPusl1
To Industry ..
The Number One promo1er of Costa
~1esa is qu1111ng two civic r0les to devote
himself to a JO.year -tampaign toward
full industrialization of unused l:H1d now
2011ed for tha1 11u.rpose.
Chamber of Co1nmerte Executive ;\1 an·
ager Nick Ziener armouJle~ the projt>(·t
todav.
"This is going 111 Ue 1ny big lhing.''
said the n1an who recently put on a styl·
ish wig .
6imuttaneous)~·. he sald it is doub1fu l
the chamber of commerce can achieve
the desired goals alone and is urging a
joint financial effor! with the city to lure
in ne"" sophisticated i!'ldustry.
He outlines the ambitious project in
lWo memos to 1'1ayor Robert 1'1. \\'ilson.
one resigning his leadership role as pres·
ident of two nonprofit corporations.
Zienrr has bef'n on the board of direr·
torS Or cOrpora1ions 5el up to finance I.he
city hall a,,d police facility, plus the pub·
lie golf ilnd country club.
lie explains that promotion of the five
to JO.year program involves his accepting
assignments v•ith Los Angl'les Charnher
nf Co nimerce groups. relatinf! to v.·ater,
power and industrial developmen~.
Ex!£'nsivf1' work with utlli tv cornpan1es
and independent firn1s 11'hiCh assist 10.
(IUslries planning relocation will a t~o
eonsume more of his time. Zien er noted .
E·rforts toward broadening Costa
:\1esa·s tax base and work Forrr through
u!iHzation of 1.200 acres of industri11!
land are a primary chan1ber of com·
mcrce aim nO"-'.
Results won't b£" immediately forth·
<·oming but will doubtless pay oH in
years ahead. he said.
"I do 11·ant to point out that lo develop
a program of seeking and obta ining new
industries will not bring instant mir-
acles."
Z1ener wants a meeting soon between
clly councJl1Tien. municipal adm1nistra-
1ion anrl the chamber of co mmerce Exec·
utive Comn1i11ee to be,llin coordination of
thr indus1rialization effort ·
One initial slep ls compilation b.v Plan·
n111g Director \V illiam Dt1nn of all land
nn\v zoned for manufacturing. degree of
devel(lpment, value and ol.her pertinent
data .
From Poge 1
POLLUTION • • •
:'.)hore. if the onshore system could handle
large amounts of salt water.
"\\'e sairl \\'e'd either pay for it or be
h.1ppy 10 renegotiate our lease to t1ll'er
lhP cost." he said.
The Coasr Guard rents docking spAce
fron1 the !!a rbor l)epartment.
Caspers. a ~'achlsman. said nel\'
sanil<lry standards for boats v.·ill be corn·
1ng ou1 of \\'a!thington soon.
lie sugges1ed thr C'ounty install hro
new pu1np1ng s!al1ons tor sa nitary v.•as!r
at tile llarbur DepartJTient headqua rters
011 Bayside Drive. one for the Coast
liuarrt and the other £or the general
public.
The supervisors ordered staff !o obt';i.io
t·ost figures and renegotiate the teas£".
f~1·on1 Pt1ge J
HOFFA. • •
tu1n111un1cal11111 fron1 Hoffa since the
boarrl lurn£"rl h1n1 do11·11 ;\larch 31 anrl ~aid
it 11ouldn l reconsider untd n£"~1 ~rtir
The .Ju~hcf' Oep<1rlment s.1id Alt~·.
! .en Juh11 l>l1!thell had <i \ 1s1l \\'edne~rlay 1
trnn1 \\tlli:im l.Of'h puhlL~hrr 111 !hr :\Ian·
cl1ester .. "V .H , L'n1nn l.A"adrr \1ho ha~
rt l't•111'iJ h•:ins !!'11111 Ill(· 'fr:1ms1rrs
ltln·u~h l!nll:J and li;;s bt·tn al'l11e 1n rt.
1111'1:'.) lo lre1· l11rn
.John \'./. H11sl1rn. d1rr c1r)r of pubhr 1n·
lrirn1<1l1u11 l or lhe ,Ju~tire Dl'p:lrl1Tic•nt,
''onhnned that ~l itchell met \VednesdA~' 1
\11th Loeb. but said Holf;'J was d1sc uss£"d
only in passing.
"Alty. Gen r.litche!l met ""1th \\'illiam
Loeb for abool 4:, minutes yesterday to
rllscuss a variety of topics." Hushen said.
'·There was no discussion of Jame~ R.
lluffa "s parole status. !he possibility or
pardon or of !\.1r . Hoffa's present or
future position in the Teamsters Union.
"i\1r. Loeb reqursted the meeting by
letter several v.·eeks ago at a time ron·
\•enient for 1'1r. t\1 itchel1 ." Hushen said. , 1
According to Hushen . Loeb made no re· I
c1uests of !\.!itchell concerning Hoffa and
i\1itchell ga1·e nothing to Loeb in the w3y
ol promises concerning Hoffa.
Mrs. Ha11so11 Blasts Use
Of POW Issue iI1 Politics
Carole Hanson, I.he El Toro ""ifl' of a
missing ~11rine pilot. \lle.dnesday in a
pres. interview asked pollliclans not tG
use the prisoner of "'ar issue for their
own political gains.
Her hu.\band Stcvc'n-has been missing
su1ce 1,7 \1ohen his helicopter was sho~
duwn over enemy territory in t..aos
"Thosr or us who musl wait al honu!
for any word fronl our lo\·ed ones be ing
held 111 an A:jian prJ.SOn are hurl very
dee ply by the c111lous 11\tempts by am-
biliGUS po\lt1c1ans to use the POW-MIA
1 ~fiulnti In Action! Issue to furlhtr ll'ittt
oy,·n polllical goal~."
"We cannot ~111ncl ~il£'nl ly by wh1le our
husbands and .sons l'C'1naln 1nJ>OW camps
and allow 1hem to bt used by politicians
on either .sirle," she said in Los Angeles.
"If any congressman wanls to push for
his O"'" solution to the ll'ar. thal"s rlne.
Howe\'f!r. we nsk them not lo use the
prisoner lssu~ for lh('ir own political
gnin."
~irs. l lanson al~ salt! v.·ives of miSsing
srrvlcemcn had no de sire lo endorse any
~pecific solution to the wa r. She sddt>d
thet attempts to force Prrsident Nixon to
set a wllh<1ra11·al <la!c or a!l troops rrom
VletnBm ··wou ld 1·emo1·e lhe ques!lon
from its pre~nt human1t8rian status into
lhe political arena anrl nlighl even
1•:orsen the sad plight of the men held by
the conu11un1sts ui Sourhcasl Asia.''
•
•
Despite Protest
Irvine Low Cost j .. ..
Housing Okayedi
PROMOTI NG INDUSTR Y
Ch•mber Mana9•r Ziener
Saddleback
Hospital
Rites Set
Two t·ounly supervisors and a state
hc::illh official v.·il l head the !is( or VIPs
at groundbreaking ceremonits Monday
for the Saddleback Community H.ospita l.
Supervisors Ronald Caspe rs and Ra lph
B. Cl<1rk will head the list of county of-
r1ck.ls schedu led to attend the dedication
riits for the Laguna llills health care
facility which has been the subject of
controversy al the county planning com·
1nission level in recent weeks.
Spokesrnen for the project undert.aken
by the Lutheran !!Ospital Foundation said
the rites ll'ill begin at 11 a.m., and 1vill be
follower! in1mediately by initial v.·ork by
construction crews.
Participants at the rile~ v.·ill inc.Jude
Sa<ldleback Chamber of Commerce
l'residenl Ton1 \\'i11gale, stale health
dep;irtinen\ representative Harry f ield,
repre!ir.ntillives <Jf the hospital's design
firn1, Saddlebaek Community Hospital
Board Chairrnan Frank Schaeffer. and a
<"o lor guard fro1TI Lhe El Toro i\fCAS.
Hetired adtnirals Roland Smoot and R.
\V Berry also 11 ill take part.
Hos pital aides have cited more than S.1
million Jn cash gifts as proo f of the loca l
support lor the maJOr health care facili-
ly, calculated to serve the U-isure \Vorld
commuruty and surrounding areas.
The hospital, facinR a de adlu1e for a
federal i.;rant. became embroiled in a re-
cent coun?y Planning Commi ssion con·
!rover.~v.
Jn iinnouncing !he groun dbreaking
~·errmonies Sehaelft>r said the donalions
"tell us the hospital is needed and
11 anted, and on this ba sis v.·e "-'i!l go
ahead and build it."
By .JACK BROBACK
01 1M O.ilr 1'11411 Slall
Despite the oppositloo ~f a school
district , a PTA group and a homeowners
association. the Orange County Board of
Supervisors Wednesda y unanimously ap-
proved the Irvine Company's first at-
tempt at low cost housing.
The plan calls lor 280 Jo"' cost rental
units on 14 arre.s just south of the San
Diego Freeway, one mile east of Jam-
boree Boulavard and bdrdered on the
\.l'esttiy the future extension of Harvard
Avenue. Flood control channels no1v
border the project on the east and west.
Specifically, what county suPerv~sors
approved was a zone change to allo1~
apartments in the area.
Jim Taylor. Irvine Com pany director of
general planning administration. said the
proposal was the first of several looking
toward the goal or 2() percent of the cen-
tral Irvine l(lnd development lo be
devoted to such low cost apartments.
He said lhe apartments would be one.
two and three·bedr<Jom and rent for $100
to $150 a month.
lie defended the location. attacked
vi gorously by officia ls of the San Joaquin
School District.
.. This location "'as chosen because i1 is
a natural extension of the established
liniversily Park ccmn1unily, v.·ithin "·alk·
ing dist.ance of a shopping center, hand y
ro the freev.'aY and ntar the Irvine
Industrial Comple x," Taylor explained.
··Some 40 percent of the 19,000
en1ployes in the industrial complex arc in
the earning braC'kel For such lo1v cost
housing." he added.
"This is a classit:al case of poor plao.-
ning and spot zoning.'' exclaimed David
King, director of planning f11cilities fo r
the San Joaquin Schoo l District.
.. It ic: ollf' and a qu::irler nllles from the
.1·~ University Park
1uld require ·busing .''
.-,1tes for a new ~chool
Mesa Students
Slate Cleanup
The kids at Bear Strt>el I::lemcntary
School in Costa ~1esa feel lhey'\'e pul up
with pollution long enoug h.
So about a dozt>o youngsters from the
fifth and sixl.h grades are marching from
rhe school Frit.lay afternoon lo a vacant
lot at Baker and Babb slret>ts 11o·here
!hey plan to clean up the trash dutnped
there.
Student. spok£"S1Tien s.1id they hoped
their l1tlle efforl -they call i! Project :
,\1other E::irth -will spark inte rest 1n
other pt>Ople to do some1h1ng about the
problems of pollution.
Superb Luxury
in Pure Wool Pile
byKarastan
·"" suggested by the lrVuie Cornpany are no.)~
satisfactory."
He said the school dist rict brlieves tl1e.
Irvine Con1panv should break the low
(·ost h<Jusing ·into sma ller units '· 1
t>stablished areas. He adrled that lu1npu1g
au the luw l'OSI renters. 11ho arr.
normally \'try lransie11 1. n1 one plat·c
ll'ou!d b<> bad for the school 1l'hich \\OUlri
accommodate them. ,,. ,
Hi chard Kenl , reprrsenting lhe Coun1.:H-
of Co1nmun1t1es 11f Irvine, oppostd !h~
project be-cause or the he;ivy load j~ pla~;.
ed on the schools and the tolal latio: ~
publ ic transportation for the Jo ..... er ulr,
eome people . He urged that further stud}£;.
be given toward localing a better site o
sites.
Dll1lY l'llOT S!1U 1'111 ..
Soilh1g Along
One man's surfboard is an·
other n1an 's sailboat, as thi~
inventi\'e soul proves \rhile
cruising the "'alC'rs or Ne1v-
porl Harbor. One thing about
this form.. _of sailing -yo u
can figure Ori getting \l"el.
K.trastan calls t.,is carpet Spectacular. So will you w.,en you
s11e and fee l t.,e magnificent luxury of its t.,ick, deep p~re wool
pile. It 's amai:ing price of ju1t $10.95 a square yard ''.due to
a major bre•kthrough in wool tec.,nology, Karastan gi ves
each fiber• special bulking treatment 'o ,.,. yarn is "fatttr,"
and more resilient. A truly remarkable valve.
IF YO U lAN'T
CO~IE IN -
CALL
'
.•
' ' .
PROFE SSIO NAL
INTERIOR DESIGNER
The 17 colors are spectacular too.
..
-TRY OUR RIVOLVIN• CH,\~COE
Open Mon., Thwr1. ~ Fri. lvn.
641Hl2iS
for 11n CXPf'rt
cllrp<'t
~onsultent
II hO ll'llt
C'OfTif' to
ynur hnn1,.
\11 th .,11rn111"~
\111hr,111 any
obl1R_lli1011
to ~ou!
Yo11r fo.vnr itt
intt rior dt !igner
u•ill be hnppy
to assist ynu
22 1S HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
b4b.027S
' I
I
'.
"
Mciy Day
A rrests
De fe11 de d
•
'
R even ue
Proposal
De feated
WASHlNGTON (UPI)
'The first .section Of President
•
Thursday, JUM l , 1971 DAJL V PILOT &
75 Bagir. Daily
'
Heroin Addict Leaves Grim
Film W arningto Youngsters WASJUNGTON (UPI) -
'fhe Justice tk>parlment's No.
2 man contended today that
n1ass arrests of M;,iy Day an-
lion'ar denionslrators were
legal, conslilu!lonal. an d
essential to control a "vicious
and wanton mob atlat•k on
Washington."
In what one official describ-
ed as the final defense of the
legality of the mass arrests,
Deputy Attorney C e n e r a I
Richard G. Kleindienst also
linked leaders of the protest
v.·ith the North Vietnamese
and Viet Cong.
Nixon's revenue sharing plan NEWTON, Pa. (AP) -He addicts that the greater ma-ol I.he Bucks Cowity district
to be voted on by Congress died in jail a drug addict. Jn jority of lhem, If nol an of altorncy's of(ice, in this small
was defeated Wednesday and pain. He was hooked on heroin, them, slart out with mari-PhHadelphia suburb. H e
some House members claim a habit that reached 75 bags juana and then progress to agreed to do it lo reach kids in
they have uncovered a naw in daily at a cost of $750 before harder drugs. . . . junior and senior high school~
h. e t "They all say you ca•> qu,·t and show them what being an ar..:iL"ier major $5 billion seg· is arr s · addict is like.
menl of the plan that will lfe left behind a filmed <.'Qn· whenever you Y.'ant to. I saidlr ,_,_;;i;;.;;.;;,_,_,_;;;,__,
allow them lo shelve it for this ression, warning young people ii, too. But the years speak· for
year, at least. ool to experinient with mari-lhemS<'lves. l\fy arms, my w~~e th~i1if~use~e:t local~~ juana and hard arugs. legs. It's a mailer of record.
turned down a Nixon plan that The fi lm \li'as made for You can·t stop. Don't talk
would have turned $2.5 billion polict in April 1970, four yourself into thinking you can,
In federal revenue over to months before he d ied cause you can't.''
states and ciUes during the awaiting trial for burglary. It His arms and legs were · w •-· s--• f r covered y.·ith needle marks. next two years for manpower is no "'-""1ng: proce """'-' o APPRAISALS
"~1ake no mistake, this was
a calculated alle1npt by
organized disruplers led by
people who had met repeated-
ly with Viet Cong and Nor th
Vielnan'lese leaders," he said.
"lt was not a group or
frollicking picnickers, as some
Washington columnists have
tried to make out. This was a
deadly serious program to halt
the U.S. govcrnnien!, and a
force of 20.000 ha d been
mobilized to do just that."
tr;;ining or public service jobs. school distribution, delayed They were almost 3! hard as
The governmental u n its because of legal problerns with stone after 13 years of ill·
receiving lhe money would his family. jectiorr after injection. Even 9•••11101111
have decided if it went for ''Stop before you slarl," he under his fingernails.
Kleindienst said arrests of
7,000 den1onstrators i\1ay 3
without the usual field arrest
form used by Districl of
Columbia police •·were per-
fectly legal."
"There is no requirement in
the Constitution or in the nc.
law for the Use of field arrest
forms," he said in a !peech
prepared for the Cleveland
Roi.ary Club. "Such forms had
been previously adopted as an
administrative procedure.''
··eut according to I he
critics,'' Kleindienst said, "the
police should have turned their
backs on a rampaging mob in
orde~ to busy themselves a.~
clerks with pro ce du ra I
forms."
Joh Money
For Youth
Disclosed
\VASH INGTON {U PI)
President l\"ixon said \Ved -
nesday the federal govem-
' ment \li"ill spend $303 million in
helping 674 ,000 teenagers gel
r summer jobs this year. But
the National Urban League
warned lhat unemployment
among blacks was frightening
and it asked the govemmenl
to spend $6 billion ,
In his statement Nixon said ·
.. The summer or 1971 "'ill be a
summer of expanded op-
portunity for I he disad-
vant.1ged youth of our country
-due in no ~1nall measure to
the large number of summf'r
~ jobs ""hich are being made
a\·ailable lo !hem.''
Nixon said lhe Nation:il
Alliance of Businessm!'n \\'Ill
provide an addition:il 15'1,000 Job slols. increasing the totn l
of subsidi1.ed positions (l)
824 .000. l-Je said th is is 204,000
more th;io l::isl yrar
Three-fourths of the jobs
""iii be $41 60 a ""eek position~
in the fil'eighborhood Youth
Corps lasting nine "'eek.~. one
\\'eek fe"·er than la st summer.
:ir ,.,.. -· ... ···-
r • ' •, ,,
'1, (· '
•
I k "d :·1 used every vein that was '"•'• i•welrw training or for actua "·or . sa1 . 'I,-----------, Instead the House passed 11. "Everyone near you, you available, in every part of my 11
h •-•y " he s 0 •"d Soutlt Co•1f Pt111 D••r.ocrat-backed me a sure url,'' he said ... No one l.l\ltl • "· ~ Den · •-Jd h" sto · th Co1t1 M,,, 5'40-'1066 that would authorize •~ billion escapes it. nis w IS ry 1n e ~ h • h' , studio of the Lower Bucks 8ri1tal •f the Si n Di•'}o Fwy.
during the next five years, to •·T ere s not 1ng yo u won ti -~~ij~ij~jiij~j~~i~i~~~;~ d h h. , Cablelelevision to delective.s be spent for the crealion of an o, I ere's no! 1ng J'OU can t
THEY SMILE NOW -Pan American
sle \.\·ardess Yolanda King share laugh
turned from four days in Cuba.
UPI TtltPhOlt
Airlines pilot Capt. Georg e Ashley and
in ~I iami after •their h ijacked plane re--
llljaek Visit
'Glamorous' Ha vana
Meets Hard Times
Railroad
To Unload
Prime Land
'
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -
l\11AM I (UPI) -The very 'fhe pilot , Capt. George T h e financially dislressed
v.rord Havana seemed to Ashley, 52, of Coral (:ables, Penn Central railroad has an~
e-pitomize the sensuous gla-Fla., said he last was in nounced it will sell the sites of •
n1our of tropical night life. Havana 11 years ago and it the Waldorf Astoria lTotel and
Thousands of Amer i c a n .. has changed drastically." other valuable New York City
l'Sti1n<1ted 150.000 p u b I i c do when it comes to crime.
service jobs. The President Drugs are incentive, the driv-
has threatened lo veto this ap-ing force.''
proach. The 29-year-o\d son of a
The defeat came as the while middle class suburban
House \Vavs and r..1cans Com-school teacher y.•as identified
n1itlee opened hearings on the only as ''Dennis," lo protect
"general" section of Nixon's ·his wire and three children.
revenue sharing p roposal. This Those who fool around with
~e ... iion would divert $S billion marijuana are kidding
in federal revenue to states themselve.s, he said.
and cities '•\'ilh no spending "It has been my experienct!
strings a ttached. over the years·wilh other drug
* * * Many States Soften
•
Laws on Marijuana
"It is very, very rundown. property in an attempt lo Ass0cialed P ress Wrller slHfening, lh e penalties for tourists who streamed lo the h raise n-ded m O"O)'. I Along I c h1alecon ( a ~'"· " Marijuana users are less marijuana dea ers. Cuban capital in the 19SO's boulevard s kirting the bay Trustees of the Penn Central likely to wi.nd up in jail in 1971 A few stales continue to ho ld
called it .. The Paris of r/Je that once "'as J-lavana·s most Transportation Co. 6a id as increasing numbers of the line against relaxing tough
Caribbean_" picturesque drive J there arc Wednesday !he property, O\l''n-slates legislate more lenient critninal statutes in marijuana
h Pi"pens on 11.A roofs. chicken ed fo r more than 100 years, in-laws. cases. All states have balked Havana was ' ' a no I I.' r t> '""
pens on thr roofs. you eludes a 29-acre tract <:overing A survey by The Ass,ociated at implementing the recom-
y.•orld," only 91.l iniles from the wouldn't recognize it. JI looks about 10 midtown fi~nhattan Press shows that many states mendation of a national com-
U.S. mainland. P re I t Y like a ruin." Bloc ks along lo\ver Park are follo"·ing the rec en t mission to legalize the drug.
senoritas r!irted on almost Avenue. Value of the properly federal law that reduced There i.s a noticeable trend
eve ry s1reel corner. Rom \\'a.~ i.~ rstimated al more lhan $1 2 possession of marijuana for to separate marijuana of-0 LD JI JOLIN bi llion. personal use from a felony to fenses from lhe existing body plentiful and cheap. Casinos -rhe trustees ~aid thai,. wbile a misdemeanor. of narcolics I aw s. In
flourished. There was dancing lhc purpose of putting the real Thi.s will pennit judges to Washington State, pol has
until dawn. SETS 111 ARK estate up lor sale was to raise keep first offendeors out of been designated a "dangerous
Then came Fidel Castro and needed fund s. there \\'as Jillie prison. drug" rather than a narcotic.
the re\'Oiu!ion. Cuba ~·as clos-LONOON !UPI) -A 1721 hope the railroad could e:icpe<"t The action by the st.ates this Nebraska haa some of the
Stradivarius sold today at auc-to receive quick ca.s h . yea r continues a trend of the mildest Jaws. A judge lhe~
ed to "Yankee imperialists'' Mortgages on the properties past four years toward milder might impose a penalty as b th Co · 1 · lion for a record $201,000,
Y· e mmun1s regime. are said to e:icceed half a laws for :simple possession. light as a Sl fine for possess-
llavana became 11 tropical nearly four times the prevtous billion dollars. States that reduce penaltie.s In jng Jess than ooe pound of
"'a!lflo"·er. rc._cord sale prict for a violin. The buildings on the pro-1971 include Arkan s a :s, marijuana .
\Vord filtered out during the \\',.j.Jliam Hill and sons, violin per!y a re among New York'11 Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Jn--·~~!!!!!!!!!!!!~
past decade about the spartan make)ts and dealers or Lon-most famous landmarks, in-diena, Minnesota, Nebraska, ~
life in Havana, but the firsl don's,Pond Street, made the eluding Grand Cen tral Utah, Washington aid West ~"'"'
Women •••
De ye9 lllr• ..... ~' ..... , .... -. ••dtlolti _., .,.. ......... ...
MEDICAL ::~~~~6'.r1s~
DENTAL
ASSISTANT
SJiort, Orli.111i•t eo111i.e1 flllfy qoalify yO<I
.,, "" A1ti11an1 ;., "•a/Ii«• nf a Phy•;c;.,•
e>r Oe11ti1t. 4 "'onlh prog...,.. lar Oentlll Ai.-
•i•IDl>I or Mtdic°' Office ll•<epf;ani•I. 1
.,0111h progra• far M.Oie<>I Aui110 11t, O..,
11r Cl't"i"g ria1..,1. l ifeli"'t ploctM ...
aui•lo"<• ol "° adSitiotool cool.
Southern California College ,,
Mediul and Dental Assistants
(fonnerlr i.1 A11,.lu eon~t)
;,
ffi@@ill~®il~§ffi )'
• ., th• Aecndililtf Commi1sioa of the /
Ht t'I. A1U1. of Tri. incl Ttchnical Stbls.. I Wtlt••,.._I_.,,_....-.
1717 South Brookhurst
Anaheim
Phone 635-3450
real look at the city came this winn"1g bid at Solheby's on Terminal, the Pan American Vir~inia .
"'ee k "'hen 68 persons aboard the iqktrument offered for sale Building and the Bi ltmore . The ~Ur\'ey ind i ca l e s. EARN 253 TO 503 MORE a hijacked ai rliner "'ere de-by Samuel Bloomfield 0£ Com1nodore, Roose\'ell and howe ver. that stales are
tained almost four days by the California. Barclay hotels. holding firm. or In some cases
Cub11ns. 'J'he Pan Anierican l .-=;:;;:;--;;;;;;-:;;;c;7'=;;>;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;~ic-:;;;i:;;;:;;:;;cr;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;~;;;;~.,.~;;;,.,m;i;;;;;;:-I \\'orld Airways i·etliner return-fr ' · °'1\'~r··-"!;'"..fff!.•.kl!;;.J!-;;ciQ;· A:fl •"!?'fi:'~""~'
ed to the United States
Wednesday, '
-"I've traveled all O\'er Latin iJ'i.
America. but I've seen nothing ,,
like it ... the \li'hole town was
ver~· dilapidated and no house •
could be said not to need a
<.'08l of paint,'' Sfid one 11f the
• ,<t.,i,'!,.,;M~ ......... 4,.'Q..~!1'..f"l\Lt"'~ :..:i;_ ........ 1 t '.
hijacked passengers, Mrs. ~
Heidi Tortura or Nassau.
~-~·,_· j ~'12!7 ~ 1
...., GLYC:INI: ~'I ~ ' ~ ... '. ' J
" y{ ;~~
r..;t
"' ~i
' If~
Most banks have now reduced savings passbook rates
to a low 43. At Pacific you still earn the same
high rates as before.
ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS
6.18% 6.00% 5,000!!.Q TWO
5.92% 5.75% 1,000!!.Q ONE
5.39% 5.25% 500!!.Q ~th
5.13°1o 5.00°lo I !!.Q ONE DAY
Interest compounded daily and paid from date of
deposit to date of withdrawal even if it's just one day
Ask how you can obtain all these benefits service charge
FREE
Would you like to be
more creative? PREPARATION OF PERSONAL STATE and
FEDERAL INCOME TAX RETURNS
)'ou can be. if.you understand that you are lhc
.re-ncction of God, who is lhc only creator.
·rhi.; helps you exp ress the imagination,.freshne.~~.
<ind inspir:i lion God has given you.
No one s hould feel h is talents s tin ed. Or, his life
burdened w ith boring tasks. If you do, you can
start loday to learn o f the creativity that comes
from God.
Con1c in and read this week's Bible Lesson .
Our study room is quiet, free, and open
to everyone.
Christian Science Reading Room
' (/)
(OSf,t, Ml:S• -l'll•t CHVllCH 01' CIUtllT, I CllNtlST JUt Mew v..--. Ori¥ •• ~ ... MtrH
HIJ,.TIHOlON 11.A(H -l'lllSJ CNUltCH Ill' CHltl!T, SCIENTIST
JM l'll•lfl llrHf, """""'"" •tl<ll
HfW~Oltf llACM -FllttT CHUltCH 01' (HltUT. JCll!WTl'T
UIJ Vo• LMlt. Ntw"t1 1 -11
l!I W:tOlT 111.C" -ll!COND CNUll'CW Off CHIUIT, lClfNTi.T l-CNol l'llt~wty. C-t <hi Mi r
l
The fashion look of the Thirties is back end we've got tt.
ladies Glycin e watches with colored ston e crowns.
An assortment o f stytes, shapes 8nd an array o f c olors.
Val1Jea to $55. YOUR CHOICE.$37.60.
"'' .... •<~tl , .. ,,11 ...
A-1«>1 E~preu.
·••n1t•~1nl -Mtoffr C:ll• ..... "4.
SLA-VICK'S
Jt'V>·el!rJ Since 1917
18 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT 8EACH -b~4-fJ80
bp1n Mon, •nd Fr i., 10 1.m, to 9:30 p.m,
· "''""' FREE ~m,,, ,,~ TRAVE LER'S CHECKS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES
~ .,,,,• COLLECTION OF NOTES MANY OTH!:RS
'
OPEN NIGHTand DAY
Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M.
Saturd&y 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
U1i1 l flltllot. ITitllT • COITA MUA, CAUFOIUllA • 'HOH.E S4M0M
I '
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• DARY PILO'I' EDITORIAL PAGE
A Timely Sensitivity
Coast Community College District official! are to
be commended for demonstrating a timely sensitivity in
developing the dii;trict's 197 1-72 budget.
were allocated to 23 clubs, senrice organizations and
related agencies, a1ong with a dozen more unexpected
expenditures.
Besides the annual allotments to the Boys Club
and Girl s Club, scou tin g, child guidance, programs for
the blind and other!\, it bought eyeglasses for 27 needy
chll,<Jren and supported many more worthy ca uses.
While the preliminary budget fi gures released last
week a re just that -preliminary -they indicate a
"'elcome beginning.
\Velcome because the dropping of a 20-cenl permis·
sive building tax and a S3 million trimming job done by
the college top brass may _result in a 22 perce.nt ~educ·
lion in property taxes paid to support the d1str1ct by
taxpayers in communities from Seal Beach to Ne\vport
Beach.
A drop in the tax rate from 89 to 69 cents must be
praised in a year fr.au gh t \l.1ith bigh _unempl?yment,
, ipiralling inflation and general economic m alaise.
Rangi ng from $8,000 to one youth agency ~o.wn the
scale to a $10 memorial donatio n to the March o( Dime~
for the late Judge Donald Dodge, the Fish Fry proceeds
did quite a bit-more than $30,000 wor~h of good.
lf you visit Costa 1'1esa Park this weekend and
!'pend a little money for good food and fun you're reaUy
investing it in the community.
You're paying for everything from baseballs to can·
cer research.
Wasted Time and Money The owner of a $32 ,000 home -who may be out
of \\!Ork -will be glad to know Coast Community Col·
lege District '''ill nick him for $16.27 less next year -
$55.09 instead of $7 1.36.
The proposed $21 million budget, bare bones
t hough it may be. nevertheless provides for continued
enrollment growth.
Sometimes it seems better communication could
prevent a lot of wasted time and expense in the realm
of governmental operations.
Take the Costa Mesa Towers flap. Certainly it's welcome. news to property l·axpayers
\vhen a tax cut is being discussed. It happens seldom
enough.
Fish Fry }""llll-and Charity
tt1any hours v.'ere expended in design, realty nego-
tiations, governmental consultation, ~lus hearings at
which paid officials and concerned citizens expressed
views. By mid-April, organizers of the projected new
unit of a senior citizen's economy apartment house had
spent $10,000 themselves.
This was before city cou ncilmen r eached a decision
for denial, although wisely so and for a variety of rea·
so ns.
.Q,nJt.Of. tpe .~1.q~t a~bit}E~~ and successful fun pro_j·
ects":.run·d drives at a comtrtUn1ty level rolls around again
this weekend for the 26th year.
Chances are you kno\v of the Costa Mesa-Newport
lfarbor Lions Club Fish Fry. You may not know just
what it accompli shes for the coastal communities.
Comes now t he f'ederal Housing Administration
with a pronouncement that it wouldn't have financed
the project any,vay and won't build ~ny more such facili ·
ties in the near future.
During 1970-71, profits from the big celebration Now they tell us.
1Jle11aorial to a Snauggler
Abomination in Washington
WASHI NGTON -The many millions
"'ho make thei r pilgrimages to the na-
tional shrines in Washington should be
more aware of the abon1ination about to
be visited upon the federal city.
A memorial on 1he grand scale of the
Johnson Library in Texas is projected to
honor Joseph !hi'
J\fagnificent on !he
Gre at Mall where
now o n I y George
Washington and Ab-
raham Wncoln-not
t ven Thomas Jeffer-
son -reign ill mar-
ble splendor.
'Ibe memorial 10
Joseph the Magnifi-
cent would strike envy In Lorenzo ii
Magnifico, the Medici merchant prince of
Florence, himself a po<?t and patron of
the arts.
Joseph tht Magnificent is no ~1edici,
though he ls bracke!ed in print with this
rapacious family of 13th cr11111ry Ital y,
but a Latvia n-born lorn1er Canadian en-
trepreneur named Joseph H. Hirshhorn.
lF ALL GOES AS fliOW planned, his
name will be handed down to !he ages as
Ille only 20th cenlury American v.·orthy or
joining Washington and Lincoln on the
great grttnsward bet~·een the US.
Capitol and the Lincoln ~lemor1al \.\'htc h
i!I ranked by man)· as the only truly
magnificent arch11ectural \'Isla 1n 1he na.
lion. The sea trd, brooding and massive
LinCQ]n can lhen gaze acro~s the reflec-
ting pool and past lhl' shaft of the
\\'u hingto n t<.1onument into Joe
. ~-
.... . ' ' • ,, ;·~ti
Richard WI~ • ' '~ff ...
Hirshhorn's sunken sculpture garden. the
leng th or two football field s lransepling
the 1'1all.
Joseph lhe i\fagnificent was wholly
unknov.1n to the average lawmaker and
public official until celebrated by Abe
Fortas. Lady Bird J ohnson and Lyndon
Johnson in their eagerness lo promote
the arts a few ye ars ago. He agreed to
convey to the government his art col-
lection, of very considerable value and
merit but not to be compared with that of
the late Herbert Lehman given to the
J\.telropolitan Museum, provided a
suitable housing were provided in
Washington which would memorialize his
name.
~)NF, NEEDS TO CAST his mind back
ft) 1966 ~·hen Lyndon and Lady Bird "·ere
trying to ingratiate themse lves with the
artistic and literary co1nmunity to show
that he "'as not a crude and tasteless
cornball from Texas unlit lo walk in the
wake of the elegant John F. Kennedy.
Hlrshhorn wit!\ his willingness to convey
his art collection under certain self.sat is-
fying cond itions V.'as their artistic hostage
and prize v.·ith the help of Abe Fortas.
The. patrons produced a dazzling ~suit
v.•hich must have exceeded Hirshhorn 's
~·1ldest dreams. Wa s h i n gt on is
monument-happy but Congress outdid
itself in Public Law 89-788 signed by
President John!on in 1966. This act pro.
vided a nation al monument for the art
collection at publlc expense on the ~fall
of the United Slates Capitol rivalling
those of \Va shington and Lincoln and in a
much better location U1an lhe vast mar·
ble carbarn on the Potomac knov.·n as the
John F'. Kennedy Cenler of the Perform-
ing Arts. Jefferson, meanwhile, remains
relegated in a modest rotunda at the
south end of the far away tidal basin.
OTHER JOURNALISTIC c<:11leagues
have dealt \1•ith the bene fa c t or 's
background, his conviction in Canada for
illegal money transactions. his arrest for
wart im e smuggling of U.S. currency
acros1J the Canadian border, his iden·
lification as promoter of questionable
stock schemes.
An edilorialisl in Washington snubs
such disclosures as ''imbecilic" in view of
the generosity of his gift, admitting that
Joseph the Magnificent may be no
perfect angel. but neither were the
i\leclici. Neither are lhe l\fedici to be
rnemorial!zed on thl' hfa!I with Lincoln
and \\lashington.
lllrshhorn's prospective beques t (he is
still hanging onto the art until everything
LS bulloned down about the memorial) is
certainly a desirable one and there are
plenly or places it could be suitably hou!l-
l'rl other than the t<.lall ded ica ted to our
rnost famous men and highest ideals.
There. are plenty of other ways to han-
dle the colleclion and make it the nucleus
of a great museum or American arl other
than ~anctifying a dono r v.·ho wishes his
name lo ring clov.·n through history "'Ith
the greatest of America.
Noise About the Concorde
LO:\J)U~ -"Somc!lme. son1l'da \',
public opinion 11,·HI finally say •no''' lo 1hc
supersonic transport . protests the Guar-
rlian edi\oriaUy. ·'And if that poinl comes
now il ~·ill be a victory ror civilized
values.'' On the other side of lhe fence,
t<.tP Anthony \\'edgewood Benn, the
fonner Labor minister or technology,
argues lhat the Anglo-French Concorde is
soing to be quieter than existing subsonic
JlaMenger 1ets \lo'hen II. enters rommc.rc1a l
use in 1974. "Genuine passions for a
higher quality of life." said Denn, "are
not matched by realism .··
Thus lhe argument i!i Joined in Bri1a1n
between those ..-.·ho believe that lhe Con-.
corde will he an '' envir on men la I
monstrosit y."' and those v.·hom the
magarinc. Flight International says must
be shown that \he Concofde 1s a "~1al
animal "'ith rciipect lo pollulion. be II by
smoke. noise. or 111d11c('d climate
changes." This leading industry JOumal
added: "TI!e.re is no convincu1g an y o(
the 'people who like daisies.' :ls the en·
vironment.a.Uats ha ve been called, lhat
---W-
11:1ui-5day, June 3, 1971
Th< edlloriol pag• of 1/1• Dolly
PUot 1•tk1 to inform and 1t'"""
ulate rtoders bl/ pTe11ntfno tPiU
1UW1pap«r'1 opinion.I attd com.-
menla'll on topic1 of inttrtd
and flonl/icancc, bl/ providing o
fonlfll for tM t .rpr•1lion of
our f'ta!Ur•' optnioni, and b11
prtnndno th• diVl!'(lt v~w
J>Oi•ll of mf.......i ob,.nlff•
ond 'l'<'"""'"' °" IDpla of the dov. •
Robert N, Wood. PubUJbor
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Editorial
Research
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avi ation has im proved society more than
il has impoverished it.·•
It Is not aalicipated that the. Concorde
"'ill e.ver be permitted to create sonic
hooms over pi;ipulaled land masses. The
lik~lihood is that if Lhe Concorde would be
too noisy for American alrporta on
1.akeoff Jt would also ht banned from Bri·
ta in.
C01".CO RDE'S BATn.F. with the en·
\'ironmenlalisls began 1.1·ell before it ever
look to lhe air. Three weeks be fore lhe
1naiden flight in 1969, a group calling
it.stir ··The Anti-Concorde PrOject '' at-
tacked the allegedly harmful eff~ts of
the plane·s supersonic boom, its ground
noise. and the noxious in Ouences on the
atmosphere.
Although 17 bills currently before state
JegisJaturu in Amerle11: would prohibit
SST nolst and air pollution, the Brttish
Aircraft COrpor1tion believes that Ill bird
ls wlt.hln the range of noi.M produced by
current subsordc jets. Thu& any regula-
Uon whJch catches the 1Upert0nlc er.art
also would affect existing Oetll.
One meaJUre before the New York
ltglJl.alutt laya down that any 1lrcraft producins more tMn toe de<:lbel1 would
be considered to geMrate "txctulve.
noise.'' A! the Boelng 747 Is eKact ly al
that 108 decibel oeilinc. Anthon y
Wedgewood Benn told Editorial Research
Reports ln London that he wu convi nced
tht. New York bill waa "lmprtctlcable. -
ii would close down Kennidy Airport."
THE BRl11llB HA VE been tncou111pd
• f
by 111•· co1nments in London of lhe Chief
of the t;.S. Fede ral Av l ii t Ion
Admin1st.rat 1on, John Schaffer. He sairl
that tremendous progress v.·as being ,
n1ade to reduce exhaust fu1nes ''and I
think that between nov.• and 1974 they will
make some significant progress: with
noise suppression." The conviction that
t hese problems could be overcome was
reflected in an April 22 production order
when France and Britairi agreed to pro-
duce four more Concordes.
Schaffer told the British that even If
New York . airports v.·ere closed to the
Concorde, Dulles Airport in Wuhington,
which is o~:ned and operated.by the l''AA,
v.·ould permit the plane to land.
~feanwhile il is likely that Russia·ii
supersonic Tupolev 144 1vil1 be in se rvice
long before its Anglo-Fren<.'h cousin it
flyi ng commercially. As Nigel Calder
noted in !he New Statesman! "The
to>A·nsfolk of Omsk or Tomsk are not
Uk ely, on the fa ce of it, to .stage sit-in
protest.s in the loca l Aerono1 offices
about the sonic boom ."
Dear
Gloon1y
Gus
Polltlclan.i; often v.•rite books abtiut
their administration!) when thty
!rave oUlce. Oovemor Reagan '4·ill
be able to fllltlUe his book, "!low I
Took California from No. I to No.
$0 in Tvt·o Terms RS Governor."
-8. A.
'~" ,..,.,. Nfltcfl ''""" .. 1.... ...,
"'"'''u•HY ~ ~ "'• ,..,..,,...,, IM ..
'"" ... _ ...... , .... ., .... 0•111 l"llet.
•
c
A Few of the
Facts of Life
In Economics
Guest Rep'orl
The tri ck of creating an inflationary
econorny that continues to kee p prices
risi ng through an emp loyment recession
magnified by skyrocking tax rat.es -
'"1nnatCH:ession" to coin a v.·ord -1s one
most economic whizzes 11,·ould have
laughed away not too Jong ago.
The daily headlines make it clear this
is the crisis that has been nurtured 10 full
bloom the past decade or .so. California
and New York. the natkln's two largest
st.ates, mos t clearly illustrate !he prob-
lem. as the root cau~s of "inflato-
ces.s ion"' are most evident in populous
cen ters.
TllE PROBLE~I , of course, i s
enormously complicated . Various of the
Common Markel countries have cut
adrift from the dollar because the cur-
rencies of those countries are more
va luable than the dollar, This increase:i;
the cost of those goods imported into the
United States from. the countries in-
volved. The irony of the matter. or
course. ls that it \l'as the United Slates•
aid which put the countries on their feel.
11 1s U.S. military installations which fuel
th eir economies and reduce their defense
requirements. It is U.S. tourists who
pump dollars into the countries at a v.·on-
drous rate .
At home. the. people of the rountry, at
an ever acceleraling ra!e, have demand-
er! or have been voted the v.·ides\, most
rxpcnst\·e \"anety of welfare programs
for the greatest number of people ever
knO~!l
\\'ELF ARE PR OGRA1\IS cost money,
tax nioney.
In California, where !here is something
approachi ng a tax revolt -if not almost
:.in inability to pay -11 pe.rcent of the
population is on welfare rolls. That's 2.3
n11Jlion Califor nians -11.4 percent of all
the people in the nation "'ho are on
welfa re.
Governor Ronald Reagan is lrying to
conta in the. state tax problem with a $6.7
billion budget and request.a: for .sweeping
reform of California wellare laws. The
Democratic leadership in the legislature
does not aeem inclined lo go along with
Lhe Governor and has proposed lax
reform proposals of its own. Only lime
~·111 tell how the differences iri approach
are resolved .
IN NEW YORK state where Governor
Nel~n Rockefeller has to contend with
Mayo r John Lindsay's totally bankrupt
New York City , the Governor has had to
di smiss 8,250 state employes, and sla.sit
welfare cosl.!i drasticaUy to stay within
lhe state's budget which the Legialature
trimmed by $760 million from a re-
quested $8.4S billlon. New York·a wtlfa.rc
recipients total 1.7 million and 1.1 million
of those are in New Vor.k City.
Tilese are but a few of the economic
facts of life that in C.llfomla, for in·
st8nce. result in an unmiployment rate
of over 7 percent and lhe ste0nd largest
l!tAle"'"and local per capita lax burden in
the country -»40 per person against
Ne:w York's 1578.
""lnnatKeSsion." If the ltus don'L set
you -unemployment might -and thtn
you are on welfare!
California Feature Sfrvkt
Quotes
l\fary Jont1. S.F'. -"Mankincf1 p~
gres11 1s beat made through compeUUve
r.nlerprisell aidtd by economlcal, dectn--
tr111ized ii:ovemment.*'
•
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Compass,
Hope Is Terrible
As a
..
Tn navigating through life, hope is an
essential ballast. but a terrible compass. * ~ '~
One mania I ha\'e never understood is
the passion !or betting on horses; at least
if people bet on turUes they l\"Ould gel a
lot longt-r run for 1hc1r mone y. . . '
''Incompatibility"" stnkes me a~ absurd
grounds ror divorce:
all couples are 111-
rompaliblc. being
made up o[ two in-
dividuals of different
sexes. and the
whole point of mar·
r i a g e consists ]111
learnini to find
areas of CQmpa ti-
bility. • • •
The way In which n1ost or us asscrl our
"individuality" is b.V using our freedom
to become exaclly like our neighbors.
~· * ..
People who are uneasy in the presence
' of lhe famous or talented should keep in
mind Eleanor Roosevelt's v.·ise in-
junction: "Remember. no one can make
you feel inferior without }our con sent," • • •
A 1'v.·ell-1nformed"' man i11 someone
who has thought up belier arguments to
i;upport our po5ition than we ha\·e
t. ~ $
The d1 ffl'.'renee between Freud and
mo51 of tus popularizers 1s that Freud
knew v.·hen a cigar "·as JUSI a l'.'lgar . ' .
lnsuranrc protect~ you a g a 1 n ~ t
e\•erylh!nj! exce pt the leg a I is t 1 c.
tcrn11nology 11 1.~ couched 1n. ' . . ''"f' can bf.'ar any scorn from lhl' young ,
f'XCepl their current evaluation that to be
old 1s per se to be una ttractive: a~
nascent cull.ore thal finds no beauty in
age will become increasingly i;ell·
lacerating in time. • • *
A ''pseudo-intellectual" is an ln-
tellectual who makes no effort lo conceal
his sense of superiority irom us. • • •
\Vhateve r the disparities in language,
people laugh mucll the same_ all o~er the
\1-'orld: and where there LS universal
humor, there is hope for universal agree-
ment on malters that cannot be laughed
The most a defeated poli tic ian learns
from rxperience is to be more. plausible
next tin1e. .:. .. .
The mos t annoying sort of bickerinJ:
neighbors are the ones \vho are loud
enough to be. distu rbing without being
loud enoug h to be intelligible, so tha~ Wit
get all of the din and none of tlle dirt. • • •
I have ~'et to meet a professed •JseH·
made"' man '4'ho was even shghtly
ashamed of his maker. -" * •
Some people-are ~n tactles:i; that the:
form of 1he1r apologiel! constitute~ an-
other offense. • • •
Jl"s often hard to tell the chffere:nce.
bet"'el'.'n a reformer with an 1df.'a in hi~
head and one with a constriction in hi~
bowels.
Priest Had Lived a Lie
To the Editor :
In regard to Laura Lee Mach's letter
(Mailbox, 1'-1ay 2b) regarding Celibacy vs.
~farriage:
It is my feeling lhal the archbishop of
the San Francisco area was juslified and
obligated to remove F.ather Duryea Crom
his priestly duties and I co mn1end the
archbishop for doing so.
Father Duryea had been living a lie , by
nal making koov.·n publlcly in the begin-
ning of his marriage th e l"'o lives he "·a~
living. The honorable thing for him to do
would have been to tell his people and the
archbishop or hi!'. renuncia!ion of the vow
of celibacy that he volunt arily l()Ok when
he became a prie.!t.
WHEN A MAN takes a vow of celib acy
It is a promise of lifelong abstention fror_n
marriage. The rules of the church on this
are made very clear. He has freely
chosen to make this prortnse. -~s an
ob\lgaliori to fulf ill this promtSe and to
keep it. A young man studying for the
priesthood has many ye.ars to decide if he
wants to llve a lile ol celibacy. He also
has an ol:lligation to avoid beco ming .at·
DeAr Georgl':
Are you the columnis l who tells
people how Lo m11ke ash trays ool of
lln cans by slivering I.hem and
spolling them wllh ~ulns?
R.E.
Dear R.E.:
~o. thnt mu~l bf: 1hal columnist
._,ho keeps sotnc through lht tr8sh
over in the women's department
l.tttM'"I '""' ,........ -IHI~. Nem\1"" wrll .............. CffWY flltlr ..,.,_ Ill -_..,.
., IHI. T"-ri.tll 19 C9MlftU i.n .... N Ht -
., t ll"'lftl N lilltt 11 ""'"'· All ltllt<"I ...... I•· cllHl<I o19,..,,.,. ,,... '"'mn1 """"• t~t n1m•1
m t J 1M wlt•ll-.,. rHUe11 II IYllkle!tt ,.._ i.
...,..,...., l"Mlf'Y w\11 1Mt M M llll ...
!ached to ttiings that \\'OUld kctp him
rrom iulfllling the promis<?s he made at
his vrdin:ition.
Celibacy is not a flight from marriagt'
or complete lo"e but rather the :o;ymbol t1f
tot.al commilrnent to God, and lo God's
work In the salva tion of mankind.
1 FIND AJ\1USING, realty, the concetit
ol th e married priest. Can't )•Ou jusl see
Junior running into the church in !he
middle of mass shouting, "'Look. dad, no
cavities!" Or the young priest holding 111
small baby \\'ilh wet diapers and .a run-
ning no.'IC while trying to console someone
who needs his undivided 11ttenlion.
1'1RS. DAVID A. FELDE
for cans. J~t dump the ashes on
the floor. Live a little, Isa)•.
CONF I DENTIAL TO TV
\\'EA1'HF.RJ\1AN : Oh, qui\ ,~·or.
eying me with those quesllons -
nobody else understands that map
rilher. JU!I ):e:ep pointing with you r
little stic): 11,nd everything \Vlll be
fine.
I
I
I
\ I
I
_, -~· -. -<j, .,_ .... <or ..,.._ ~ • r -.~ ., f'41, • ..
Saddlehaek
EDIT I ON
VOL. 64, NO. 132, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAG ES ORANGE COUNTY, CAt l~RNIA THURSDAY, JUNE 3, 197 I
Jury Chief Blasts Planner Over
Orange County Grand Jury Foreman
Doreen f\l arshall of Newport Beach
\Vednesday sharply censured Planning
Commission Chairman Woodrow But-
terfield for ann ouncing an appearance
bt!ore the jury to the pr ess.
"Members of the jury noted with
surprise a story appearing in the local
press regarding your meeting with the
jury scheduled, reporledly for Tuesday
morning.'' read a letter from Mrs.
Marshall to Butterfield.
"We are concerned bo?cau~ neither the
Grand Jury nor il.6 foreman had received
any communication (rom you requesting
such a meeting.
"In our opi nion the newspaper reports
regarding thi!I matter have b e e n
misleading lo the public and to the county
administration which we regret," the lel·
ter continued.
"If you wish to h'lve the Grand Jury in·
vestigate a specific matter or to meel
with the jW"y for lhis purpose, we should
appreciate I.he courtesy ot a writte:: re-
quest."
The Jetter also nQted that the Jury's
Planning and Environmental Problems
Committee "has been reviewing the
policies and procedures follov.·ed by the
Planning C-Om~ssion and will be in-
terested in receiving any information you
wish to make available to it."
Butterfield. in a statement to the press
Tuesday said he had uncovered in·
formaJion Lhat the Planning Commission
had· been incorrectly advised in the mat·
ter of the use permit ror th!! future Sad·
dleback Community Hospital in Laguna
Hills Leisure \Vorld.
He said they had been told that a
hospital was proper use for the property
where the facility will be built but thal he
had discovered laler lhat this was not so.
His assertions were denied by the
County Counsel 's office which said that
the property was being legally used as a
site for a hospital.
Mrs. Marshall's letter noted that But·
tcrfield"s announced appearance before
'
the Grand Jury did not take p\ac~.
Butterf1eld had also said he v.·ould
bring the hospital matter before the
Planning Commission Tuesday. He did
not.
The only reference to the subject was
during discuss ion of another matter when
a ~titioner started to read from the. arti·
cle quoting Butterfield on the •·poor ad·
vice lhe commission had received."
The commis~ion chairman halted the
reading abruptly with, "the wording o(
thal article was very Wltortunate."
-'
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
TEN CENTS
. ' Tall{
The use permit for the. hoapltal was
granted by unanimous aclion of four
commi~sioners present ti.lay 4. Previous!)'
the commissioa had deadlocked 2-2 on th•
issue .
Commissioner5 Arnold Forde: of tha
fifth District who was absent on a trip to
Europe. at the time was al leged to have a
conflict of interest in the hospital
question because he was financially in-
terested in · the Mission Community
Hospital in the same area. -
un oun on u a anc
•
Rights Violated?
Lawsuit Looming
On Golf Access
By JOHN VAL TERZA
01 lftt Dt llY ~It.I 11111
A lawyer !or embattled San Clemente
landowner G. Carson Rasmus~n in·
timated lo city councilmen Yt'ednesday
that his client might sue the city over a
San Clemen):e
Council Eyes
Employe Pay
San Cle mente councilmen will tackle
the issue of employe ra ise requests in a
tipccial study session Monday night, they
decided \Vednesday after recei ving latest
proposals from the city's l\\"O bargaining
groups.
Whether anv increases at all would
com e from thC in!ormal study session is
In dou bt. Councilmen and city staff have
repeatedly said that runds do not exist for
any suhstanl!al raises.
Pohre and other public sarc.ty person·
nel are seeki ng lhc largest percenlage in·
creases 1n wages of the t"'O separate
bargaining en1ploye ~roup~.
In a proposal delivered by employe
represenlative Police Lt. Ray Hartm an
V.1cdnescla y the increases would range
from \~ percent for several top ad·
min~tratlve s;ilar!cs to I~ percent for
patrolmen, seasonal lifeguards and
riremen.
Besides the salary increases which
would cost in the range of $70,000. Lhe
public safety employe.~ are adamant in
their choice of :i changeover to the stale·
administered Publlc Employes Rellre·
menl System.
The plan, however, has drawn strong
disfavor rrorn some councilmen in pasL
studies on the pension issue.
The remainder of the city workers
through their association are seeking an
average 7.5 percenL cosl-o(-living raise,
plus several fringe benefits.
In lhcir request to co un c I Im' n
delivered Wednesday the miscellaneous
employes .!ieek four week.s' v~cation ~f~er
10 years of service, overtime, tuition
reimbursement. holiday pay, an 1ulo
.allowance. !hifts in employe clas!l ifica·
tion in some jobs, plus improved healtlt
11nd life insurance packages.
controversial issue of access lo hundreds
of acres near the city ~olf course.
Bernard Allen, appearing during the
oral communications segment of the
agenda, issued a harshly-worded stale·
ment fo r· Rasmus~n.
The City council assertedly violated the
\andowner·s rights lo two easements
across W city links when it cho9e
recently to label an extension of Avenida
Comelio as the major collector street to
a large planned community development
propc15ed for Rasrnusseri 's land.
Allied with the city action two w~ks
ago after the longest hearing in recent
years was a provision that golf carts only
could use the public easements across the
golf co,urse.
Those easements. Allen stressed. were
granted to Rasmussen by the city in ex·
change for a land gift which resulted in a
Little League ball diamond, firing range
and city storage ya rd.
To deny the use of the easements . Allen
told glum councilmen. violated his
client's constitutional rights.
He also charged that the cily's interest
in eliminating use of the ea sements
revolved around proprietary interest.
because the city owns the golf course and
receives profits from it.
He also blamed an "emotionally-charg·
ed climate. fear of declining property
values and the desire to maintain the
status qu o" es other reasons for denial or
the access route.
Cornelia's extension, v.·hich councilme n
authorized under assessment district pro·
ceedings. would cost up to a ha!f million
dollars to build, Allen gaid. end its
usefulness to the land in question could
be challenged.
In a large document presented to the
councilmen . Allen charged a year~ld at·
tempt to thwart development of his
rlienfs land .
The city. he said, "'has shilly·shallied
around and chosen an alternate access -
a type of subterfuge -to gain city
benefits at the expen5e of M r.
Rasmussen,·· he claimed.
While he stre~ that Rasmussen
•'does not desire to enter into a 1ufJ.," the
issue would make a good court actk>n.
Tu lend teeth lq the atatement, the.
lawyer asked councilmin lo resolve the
issue within ~ days.
The chances for a suit also were hinted
at by City Attorney F. MacKenzie Brown
who two weeks ago said the city's action
in controlltng the use of lhe owner's ease·
ment wouJd make a good court lt!sl.
Councilman Thom as O'Keefe, himself a
rlviJ attorney, agr~.
'··
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East Basin
Crov,.ded boat berths at Dana !-!arbor are P.arl of 200 slips already
opened at the county·s new rerreation fa cility. It was launched of·
ficial!y today with a boat tou~ a~d-seagoing lunch for v·1ps who had
a fir st hand look at the mulllmil ilon dollar snug harbor.
Cafe Sig11 Bid Rejected
A San Juan Capistrano area restaurant
owner lost his battle for equality with hi~
neighbors in sign height to •·en·
vironment."
John Edwards, ov.ner of Buffy·s
Restaurant, ~722 Camino Capistrano.
had appe aled to the Board of Supervisors
from a denial by Zoning Administrator
~y Reed which refused a variance to
raise his business .sign to SO feet.
Attorney William Wilcozen of Laguna
Beach, representing Edwards. argued
Buffy's 35-foot·higb sign could not be. seen
from the paralleling San Diego Freeway
because of two 48-foot.-high service sla·
linn signs nearby which were installed
after he had put up his legal sign.
, \Vilcoxen argued that it v.• as
"discrimination" to allow variances for
the other signs and deny Edwards" plea
"Il's an environmental problem," said
Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers
in moving for denial of the· higher sign.
"Three wrongs do not make a right. 1
hope laws will require lowering all signs
soon.··
Caspers said he recognized Ed"•ards'
problem inasmuch as the restaurant wa1
located In a depressed a r e a
topographically but that environment
must be the primary ('onslderation,
Despite the !'iCOpe of requests from both
ifOUp5, councilmen 11re e-z:pccted to hold
their hard-line approach this year on any
increases In wages.
Several have polnted to the general ,
recession as one reason for keeping
salaries down. View Bloeker OK
Furnace Sparks
Cle1nente Blaze
Thus far the budget study season h11.s
yielded no firm cul.s in I ' tight fiscal
document which actually shows M00.000
less in expenditures over last year.
Besides the salary q~stlon, counOlmen
ire still faced with deciding the. file of
the (lve-year-capll.11 improvements pro.
grim. requests for an increased 1ubsidy
tor the chamber of commerce and other
pro posed ezpenditures.
A large amount of funds for the pro-
l)Ostd new community clubhouse also
might come from the city coffers. That '
eq:iense alone would amount t.o about
1230.000.
Mayor Walt'r Ev1n1 Jr. 11ld the Mon-
dRy .!if!SSion might eztend to Tuesday
t ventng as well to allow time to catch up
on an the: loose en& to I.he city Uruux.1al
picture.
•.
County Backs. Dana Construction
An owner'• right to dtVt.lop his pr()o
perty won out Wednesday over hla
neighbor 's deaire ior a.view.
Richard Root of Dana Point wa$ given
permission by un1n!mous action of cou~
ty .JUpervtson to build an addition t.o bis
apartment homi between Seville Place
Alld .tfiil!tiMt of the Ruby Lantern, 47$
north of San Marino Place.
Hit neighbors vigorously protesttd on!!
wttk ago the variance M needed to en·
croach on the front and rear yard 1et4
backs to build the 1ddltion.
"Don·t be accessorLu to ecologtca l
r11.pe of Dana Point," warned neighbor
•
Don Beddoe.. S1«2 Street of the Blue
Lantern. He and olbm said their view of
th' ocetn would be blocked by Roos' con·
atrudion.
Supervbor Ronald Caspers, whose
d!Jtrict includu Dana Point. urged U1e
action Wednesday.
''Oevelopmeal of Da.na Polnl was spal·
ty and haphaiard in the pasl. There wtre
many vacant lots allowing views from
other' nearby," Casper& elpl.ained.
''Now the boom aoughl in lhe tw enties
l' here and the views are belng lOft '°
new construction. Wr. wW hive more ~
blans: Jlke thla: soon.·•
An elderly San Clemente. couple
turned 'he floor rurnace on in their
home this morrting, left f o r
doughnul.s, then returned to (ind
the llv1ng room 'blaze.
Fire Otief Merton W, Hackett
said palnter'1 tarpaulins over the
furnace caught fire as-Mr. and
Mrs. John D. Fox were out.
Damage was confined to a sec-
tion (I( the Uvlng room . The dollar
amount, the chief iii.id, was about
l300.
The home at 305 · Avenida
Maadalena is being repainted, the
C'hier -1aid.
llad Lhe ·couple not returntd
home al •bout 6:1$ 1.m. the fire
would have qWckly 1pread to the
rest .t the house, H11ckett Pid.
Down the
Mission
Trail
Twelve Students
Named to Group
MISSION VIEJO -Twelve Mission
Viejo High School students have been
selected to become members of lhe
~iety of Outstanding American High
School Sludenla.
They are Richard Lawson Gfl\enwatert,
John Robert Nimmo. Denise Ann Benton,
Penny Schaeffer. Deborah Lee Wasbln,
Debora Sue Matson. Donna Lynn Con·
nally. Bruce Merrill Ltelair, Kathy
Elizabeth McGowan , Hans Gilbert Oun·
c11n, Daniel James Neufeld and Judy Ann
Jacobson.~
Students ~elected for the honor will
have a chance to earn renewable $1 ,000
college scholarships. They are selected
for their academic achievemenl and civic
respdtlsibihty.
• s111de11t /tlemorlal
MISSION VIEJO Plans fo r
establishing 11 memorial for students who
have died while members of the student
body of ,\1 iss1on Viejo High School have
been announced by the Student Council.
Anyone wi.c;hing to do~funds for the
project may send con tributions lo the
Memorial Fund. Associated Student
Body. Mission Viejo High School, La Paz
and Chrisanta , f\ol1ssion Viejo, 92675.
• Taleul for 4th
CAPISTRANO HI GHLANDS -Beauty
rnntestants. band members and booth
sponsors are being sought by the
Capistrano Highlands H omen w n er s
Association for their Fourth or July ac·
tlv1Hcs.
Contcstanl!'i In the t>.1iss Capistrano
Hig hlands and Little Miss Capo contests
are needed as are people who can play
musical instruments for the parade.
Clubs or organizations "'ishing tn si>onsor
a food or gam e booth for the holiday ac·
livity which will be staged this year on
J ul~ 5 also are sought .
Information is ava ilable by calling Mrs.
Chuck Bennett. &'ID-3+43 or Mrs. Richard
Buss. 837-2415. Mrs? Marcella Creepnick
is in charge of thf: bea~ty contests, 8J6.
1849.
La Christianita
Parade Has New
Float Division· •
A new divl!lon will be added to the list
of wlnnen In Lhis year'allnnual Fiesta La
Chrlstianlta Parade -a trophy for the
best local, noncommercb1I OoRt.
Parade Ch"alrman Silm Schleger 11a.ld
this wetk that the "Local Float
Sweepstakes" competition wlll be limited
to entries from San Clemente, captstrano
Beach. Dana Point and San Juan
Capistrano.
1'hr. new award will boost to 130 th!!
tot.el number of trophles whlcti will be
F!iven to winner• In the annual July 17
parade -one of the state's largest.
The local sweepstakes will be among
the rive top divisions In the competition.
Entries will have to be registered by
June 30. Sch\cgcr said.
Local buslncumen and residents will·
Ing to 1porl30r 11 trophy are still being
110ughl by the members of the Chambfr
of Commerce Women's 0 I v I 1 Io n.
Six Shells
In Corona
Auto Found
From Wire Services
YUBA CITY -An automatic pistol has
be en found on the Jack L. Sullivan ranch,
fiite of most of the graves of the 1..3 vic-
tims of a mass slaying, it was learned to-
da y.
The pistol, a 9-mil!imeter automatic,
and 20 shells found with It were isent to
the state crime laboratory at Sacramento
for ballistics tests.
In court docum,nts supporting the
charge against suspect Juan V. Corona.
the sheriff's office said it had found s!J:
nine-millimeter &hells in his 1971 panel
truck.
Authorities investigating the grilly
crime never have indicated that any of
the victims died from bullet wounds. The
bodies discovered along the Fe.atht!r
Ri~·er had been hacked and stabbed.
Aerial photographs taken with an in·
frared camera "'ere being processed to
help officials determine whether theni
are more bodies buried in the area of the
crime. It was eKpected to take two day1
to procrss the photographs.
Sheriff Roy D. Whiteaker, who says he
Is convinced more boclies will be found .
\1•as forred to withelraw his crew!'! After
ttiev started digging at one "indentation''
~imilar to those that have turned out to
be crude graves.
The crews found the ground slill too
v.·et.
Sn far . 23 transien ts. farm workers ind
drifters have been found hacked and
stabbed to death in crude graves in
orrhards along the Feather River.
Juan V. Corona. 37, a Mexican born
farm labor contractor with a poor com·
mand of English, was formally arraigned
in Justire Court Wednesday on 10 counts
nf murder -the 10 bodies exhu med by
the timt-he was first taken to court one
v.·eek before.
"'I'd like to get it over and be done: with
It ." Whiteaker said as he discussed the
continuing search for gravesltes . "f
believe there are some bodies out there
th11t will never be found ."
The sheriff is using infrared .aerial
photography of the orchards in an ef fort
to spot areas where the soil has been
distu.rbed. Resulta: should be. available
Friday.
AnoLher potential gravcaite: still Is
under water and can't be probed until lt
dries, the sheriff said.
Orange •
Weather
The clouds will roll by early on
Friday, followed by fa ir sides and
te.mperatute! ranging from fllll d&-
grees aJong the shoreline to 7i
further inland.
INSIDE TODAY
Htroin addict who tDa& up to
75 bags o day at cost of 1750
ltave s fiJm °' final worntng to
1Jo1.1.11gfrrs. Stor.JI, Paoe 5.
l ltlfn I il!Urriltt Lie-I
C1!1 ... to11 1 il>W'fltt It.It
Cllr<~i"t u, J Mll:Vltl ,....., I'
Cin.mM JJ..• fltlieAtl ~ ....
Ctoftltt H Or•-C-IY I
Ctl"""'11 14 S~lvi. f'lrttr 16
ONl!I Ntlktt I ._.. '1·11
DIYoten . I S!t<ck IMr\th 1 ... 1' atUW"let ,._ ' Ttt.¥1tJM 11
lllhlrfll11111W!I 1 .. lt TIIM!t" It.It f'llllll(I 1 .. 1' '111'1.illtr I .....__ ,. -.-... "'"' ,.,.
A.ltll 1.IMtn 11 W1rN Ntwt ...
•
,
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f DAJl V PILOT lh\l~ay,, Junt ), ltJ71
Joaquin Trustee Disputes Change Procedures
l'Y PAl\1ELA HALLAN
OI IM o.lll l'iW'I t .. tt
A routine requesl for curriculum
chan&es at a school in the San Joaqui n
Elementary Schoel Districl erupt ed into a
dispute over pr ocedu re Wednesday.
Gratian B!dart. chairman of the Board
of Trustees, charged the ad1ninisLralion
\\'ilh .. bringing th ings to the board at the
f'ievenlh hour \\•hen plans are so far along
that the board has little choice but to ap-
prove them.''
North American,
Collins Finance
Agreement Set
A management agreement under which
North. American Rockwell Corporation
11>·ould provide additional financing for
Collins Radio Company and in turn would
gain contra! of the Collins board vtas an-
nounced Wednesday by the chairn1en Clf
the boards of dirtctors of the two c001-
panies.
Under the agreement. which mu st yet
De approved by both bo11rds and by the
:ollins shareholders. No rth American
would PtM"Chase $3& million of a new issue
o~nlns convertible preferred sfoct and
w uld ha ve warrants to purchase an ad-
ji · onal $30 million of Collins common
llOC .
A price of $18.50 per share would be
!'ltabli.shed for both types of stock .
As part of the plan, NAR would have
1he right to elec t a majority on the
:::Ollins board of directors. through its
1tock purchases.
A North American spokesman said the
;entative agreement probably will be
)~sented to the boards of the two firms
!or their approval within a month.
Dana Point Eyes
Outrigger Races
Members of the Dana Point Chamber
1f Commerce have begun planning for
;pectacular Hawaiian outrigger races
r;hich will be included in the Dana Da ys
:elebration later this summer.
The races, which v.·ill stretch from
...aguna Beach to Dana Harbor. v.·ere the
;ubject of a recent general membership
neeting, V.'here local residents interested
n forming an outrigger crew described
he sport and shov.'ed a movie.
The races are planned for Aug. l, with a
:eparate event for an a\1-v.'oman team
1\anned.
The Dana Days wi!l be held 11 day after
he formal dedication of the entire harbor
• "Qmplex, J uly 31.
History Society
Sets First Meet
Talks by sever.al longlime residents
ind a film will be featured at the first
ipen mttting of the nev.' Laguna Beach
I1slorical Society tonight al 7:30 o'clock.
The group Wednesday received a flnan-
·ial boost to its new organization when
he city council voted to all ocate St OOO in
.upport of planned cultural ac!h•itie!i.
The meeting. open to the public, will be
1eld al the Women 's Club, 286 St. Ann's
Jri\•e. Speakers will in clude Gene vieve
).aniel!l, Richard Jahraus. Glenn Vedder,
le.a Whittlesey and temporary chairm&n
iarry JeUrey. Refreshments v.'ill be
erved.
OIANGI COAlT
DAILY PILOT
o••HG;:! co.ur P\JIL.ISHINO ::::OM,ANY
1'.•b11t "'· w •••
,t'ftW...t •M f'-1~
J,~\: •· c~.1 • ., ~· '""-.... c;wwal ~ Tli•..,•• K11•il
.... !<Ir
n ..... , ;.. 1ro1 •• ,.~i11•
M-t~ l.l•W
CllMIH H. loo• Jlic1'1r.I '· Nill .-,. .. 1111": M-i"ll (Ol!Vi
lAtt•H S..tl Office
22 2 ,.., ••• ;. ..... ~. M•nr~, ,,.i •• .-: ,.o . •D• &•6. •161t s. Cl_.... Offk•
JOI ~01tll ~I C1111b1t .,,1, 92612 -0-(lftll M .... ' ll) w .. 1 l•'t !I....,. ,,.,_, IN<fl: Jn) N....,orl' • ..,~..,ltd ~(1'411111! kfC.)11 !1'Ji a..ctl M</llV .. d
"I'm tired of ti.\·lng this happen,'' said
Btd1rt. "I'm tired of pqttln& the cart
bdore the borae."
Bidart criticized the admlnl!traUon for
not brln&inl thinas to the board whJ\t in
the Idea stage.
Superintendent Ralph Gates explained
lh~ a prografll n1usl bt devtloped to
some extent so that ii can be ::idcqua lely
e.xplained v.'hen presented for b'eard ap-
proval.
The proaram brought for approval
Wednesday WI! a curriculunt change at ' Irvine lntt rmtdi1t.e School which wlll
\allow 1t1Mitnt1 to take two temeslers ef
science in either seventh or elahth grade
and wll l allow them to take foreign
language as an elective instead of a re-
quirement in the seventh grade_
The progrant also would flrovrde a le w
ne1v classes suc.h as o r a I cont-
munications, hoo1e tnanagernen t and en-
viron1nental sclence.
Dr. William Stocks, A .s s 1s t an l
Fast Co1npa11y
Lobbyist at Top Sec ret Meet
BOSTON IUPI ) -Fonner presidential press seerelary Pierre Salinger
said a Se;:attle businessman accidentally got inlo a meeting of the National
Security Council in 1961, received a lop-secret briefing on the Berlin crisis and
a greeting from Prt!lident John F. Kennedy before he v.·as d1scoverttl.
Both the names and lhe situation have been changed in Salinger's novel,
"On Instructions of My Government." which lhe former press secretary dis--
cussed Wednesd11y at the convent ion of the American Book Sellers' Associa-
tion . Bul Salinger said the basis of the incident wa s true.
11e said the unidentified businessman belong to the Air Force Nation-
al Security Advisory Council, a private advisory organization. and had come
to Washington to lobby for more aero11pace appropriations. He arrived late ancl
called the secretary of the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Curtis
E. LeMay.
• "Ht. a.Uf!C\. her. w.b."t." '~::.-meeting was and she saiP. the \Vhite !louse ."
Salinger said. "Apparenlly she only heard National Security Council. The man
said I'll never be able to get in there and she answered. don't wo rry. J"IJ gft
your name on lhe list." • ~
Salinger said the businessman V.'as met by presidential aides and secur·
ity officers and he got into the meeting ··jusl as the lights \vent out and they
started to project top sf<'.ret slides and informat ion on the Berlin crisis."
The man rralized he wa s in the v.-rong meeting when he sav.• Lel\-1a~·.
the President, the head of the CIA and the secretary of slate. Sal inger said.
Jn fact. Kennedy walked by him at the end of the briefing. patted him on the
knee and said "Things are pretty tough loday."
He was discovered shortly after the President left. Officials solved the
security breach, Salinger said. by requiring the man, a retired Air Force
colonel, to telephone Washin gton every If! minut.es an d tell officials where he
was.
(The New York Times identified the businessman as Elroy ,,_IcCaw, a
v.·ealthy Seattle television executive who died last year ).
Countian Among Three
Trunk Murder Victims
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Cl! "" Cl•llJ 1111'1 llll't
A mysterious multiple ·murder case in
which a La Habra man is one of three
victims -with possibly more bodies to
be found -was unfold ing today In Los
Angeles.
The principal SIU!pect . already jailed in
a sepa rate rape and robbery case, w1s
scheduled for arraignment al n1id-morn·
ing on three co unts or hon1icide .
Detectives were keep ing a shroud of
secrecy over how· John P. Hendrix, 35,
wa s linked to gunshot slayings of two
security JUards and a retired railway
clerk,
Victims -all slain and slurled into car
trunks and in one case a pickup truck bed
-are Eugene Bealer. 35, of 500 W. Olin·
da Ave .. La Habra. Lel11nd Webb, 3fl, of
Los Angeles and Charles Hayes. 71, of
Easle Rock.
The investigation v.·as being handler1 l:iy
hon1icide detecti\'eS et lhe LAPD 's
i'\ewton Division. who hinted additional
1nurder victims may be found.
Bealer, last seen May 25, ~·as found in
the trunk of his car ~·h ich ~·as parked in
llendriK' driveway v.·hen police went to
the re sidence \Vedne sday after somehov.•
connecting him to the cases.
Security guard \Vebb. reported 1n issing
by his wife Monday after failing to come
home from a department store job the
night before was 1!so found in a vehiclr.
Webb had been shot twice, robbed and
laid out Jn his pickup truck hed, in-
vestigators said.
Concerned about her elderly husband
who vanished May 29, Hayes' ·wife filed
a missing persons report and friends
later noticed the couple"s car parked near
U.S. Plane Crashes
MADRID (AP) - A U.S. Air Fore~
jet tanker plarie,..ij'ilh five men aboard
crashtd today ne1r Guadalajara, north
of Madrid. and there were no report!l of
any su rvivors, off icial!l at the Torrejon
Air Base reported. The K135 v.·a,~ re.·
turning to Torrejon. The cause of the
crash was not known .
/
the. Los Angeles railroad yards.
Police s11id he had also been shot twice
and robbed.
Questioned today about the possibility
of more grim discoveries, a police
spokesman said he. knew of none so fa r.
··Northern California 23, Southern
California 3," he remarked of the grim,
multiple murder .licore o! Lhe past week.
Parki11g Meter
'fhef t Suspects
Facing Hettring
four persons accused or cracking park-
ing meters in Southland com munities to
the tune of $100.000 before Laguna Beach
police cracked their carefully planned
operation were ordered Wednesday to
face preliminary hearing June 8 in Santa
Ana municipal court.
.Judge Paul Mast "''iii preside over the
hearing set tor (juthrie. .Jones. 3t his
"'lfl'. Realrtl'e Jones. 21 . both transient s
and Charle~ Leon Adams, 25. and \Villa
Dean Rolra1nel , 21; both of Santa Ana.
All are held without bail.
Adan1s and J\.fi~s Rotramel were: 11r·
rrsled al U1eir apartment ~tay 3 shortly
after Laguna officers l(rabbed David
Steven Perez, 19. and J\.h chacl John Di-
neen. 18. hoth of El J\.tonte. a ~senedl v In
!he acl. of bresking open meters on Clirr
IJrh·e
Dineen and Peret ha\'c agrl•cd lo
trst1fy for Lhe prosecu tion in returil for
di~mi~sal charges of conspiracy to com·
mit grand theft.
Laguna Beach pol ice later extradited
.lones from the Baker. Ore, jail cell
v.·here he v.·as awaiting court action on
narCCJtics charges filed in that com·
munity . His \vife v.'as arrested as she got
off a bus returning from Oregon and drug
charges added lo her dossier when il
allegedly v.·as found that she v.·as car-
rying benzedrine tablets and hashish in
her purse.
Missio11 Viejo W orl{sl1ops
Offered by Artist Group
A variety of V"Orkshops will be. o!fered
In July by the Mission Viejo Association
<lf Arcis!JI and Craftsmen.
Painting. clay~·orking, knolling and
v.•earlne all w111 be uught by qualified ln·
structors.
Jack Taylor will ttach 11 class In clay
on Fridays 1tartlng J uly t 't Lloda Vista
Spboolln Missk>n Viejo.
Chilci?en 6-10 will all.end from I :30 to 3
pm. and pupi11 lrom 11 yearl Qf 11.gr on
up will attend fro m 1:30 t.o ll :JO 1.m.
Thr. fet '111'ill ht S6 for !'rt auocl•tion
member~ and 110 for non members. ~tacrame <arllsllc: knOttJng ) ind wrar-
lng will be. taught by Dee Smith and Ftrn
RttJian for ptrsons nine ye:Jrs and over.
The class wlll be Tue!!days and
Thur!>.days from July a to Jul~!' 1$ from I
to 3 p.m. In ttit Linda Vi!!la multipurpose
room. The ff'( 1!1 " for members and SS
for non mrmbers.
ftll pictures and fabric painting '111'1\I be
offered 10 studrnts fivt through 'ight
vt1rs old on Tuesdays and Thursdays
from I to l p.m. from July 20 td JUiy 29
in lhe Lindti Vlst.11 multipurpose room.
The fee ~1ill be. $2 for members and S4
for non member~ and all mattrla!s will
ht supplied.
CIAs.~ts ln--0il pain lins for studtnls who
know how lo dra11,' also may be htld if
thert. ii enough interesL Prospe<:tl\'e
studenl!I may call Carolyn Zubris, ~
()979 for Information.
For inlormalion on regl!!lrstlon cnll
1)0rls Swanson. pre.siden t. 837·3143.
Su~rintendent for Instruction. told lhe
board that the chan1ts \\'ere merely
modlflcalions and wouldn 'I make a big
difference.
··sut you nttd our approval tonight se
ihat you can register children belore the
end of school," said Bidart
'·Kids will ha\'e to be registered
an)'way if we give our approva l or not ."
said 'l'rui.tee Phillp Bradfield.
Thl' board voted to approve the requcsL
Jor the curriculum changes, but on the
.suggestion of Trustee Robert lJa 1neron
asked the administration to hold <1
workshop on some of the elements In lbe
nev.· prograrn such as cominglzng of
sevenlh :ind eighth graders.
1'hr curnculurn changes arl' part of a
nl'w trt•nd to r11ake 1ntern1cdia1e school ii
n1ore cont1i;uuus t11·0-year 1-1rogran1, ac-
cording lo Pri1JL'1pi:ll John Dcl~lonaco.
To do this a child n1ay hCi\'t' the saine
hon1croon1 teacher tor two years. nion~
teC1n1 teaching will 111ke place. and niorl'
individua lized sc~duling will be done so
that i.ome seventh and eighth grad"'i
will be 1n the s11me claS!eS iC worklng at
the !ame level.
'·You should have con1e to us v.'ith
lhe~c idt·a;; first before progran1s were
dcv1duped.'' i.aid Birlart. ··Vuu prububly
wouldn't hilVt' told IJ~ about lhrsc new ap·
pro;icbe~ if we hadn"t brought all this ~·
OUI ''
CW!Mnnaco atJreed lo go into t'ach facet
(•! tht: prugraoi in thE' proposed work.sho11
before conllnu111g with p!ans for' Sep-
tenl bf.·r.
Zoning Change Advised
Laguna Council1nen Initiate Appellls Procedure
Cont roversy over an <1uto1n obi I e
storage lot 10 Laguna Canyo n has in-
.!<p1 red the Laguna Beach City Council to
initiate a change in its appeals procedure
and ma y bring about .a zoning chanie.
Pl11nning Director \\'ayne Moody ad-
vised the c:ouneil this week that exisUng
ordinanc:<:'s do not provide for appeal of
planning con1mission approval of a site
pl<in.
The on ly action th(' council could lake,
Moody said, would be to ask the com·
1nlssion to reconsider. if it felt an im·
proper action had Ileen tall.en.
~fosl communi1ies, he noted , provide
for :1ppcal to the City Cowicil in si1 e plan
disagreen1ents and he recommended an
<1ppropnate amendn1cnt to the zoning
ordinance lo pern1il this. The eouncil
voted unani1nously to instruct the plan·
nlng commission to start the amendment
procedure.
The action of 1l1t' eounc1 l. ho\vevrr, will
nol affect the case 1hat sci off the con·
troversy -installa Lion of an auto storage
lol for Phillips Buick al 113 Canyon Acres
Drive. '
Residen1 Andrew \\'ing hoid called the
:i.ttenliun of the city to thl' fac t !hat pav·
ing wa s being doue on tlle si te and a stop
v.·ork order was lssucd v:hen it developed
no perptlts had been taken out.
Subsequently. a ternporary use permit
was issued and lhe site plan approved by
the commission. but. al"Cording lo Moody,
the applitan1 s11ll ha~ 11ot complied 11ilh
requil'~menl~ of !he plan review . ap-
parently pendu1g counei l revicv.• of the
man er
Jn addition to recomn1cndin g initiation
Clemente Cou11cil Ol{ay s
Com1nu11ity Develop1nent
A 29&-unit planne·d community develop-
ment calculated to replace. the faltering
Harbor Hills Golf Course won its final ap-
proval Wednesday from San Clemente
City Counci~"· The la1vma s agreed with a privale
traffic consuHan 's recommendation on
street "'idths in the private development
and resolved an issue 1,•hich left planning
commissioners in a stalemate last week .
Unlike anothtr firm 's preceding plan
for a mo~ile home park, the planned
community applicatio n by La Qu inta
Styleline Dev~pment Co. of Newport
Beach dre\\' o opposition from sur-
rounding neig borhoods. The 'I'ov.·nhouse
li mits will be from 1,000 lo l.400 square
feel.
Plans several months ago lo replace
the links with a mobile home park quick-
ly grew into a v.·eeks-long controversy
and eventua l city denial.
A small pitch.and-putt golf course will
replact the larger links when the housing
drvclop1nent is com pleted. The exi.~ling
c:ourse clubhouse \viii beco1ne the corn·
n1t1nilv's ml:'eting and recreation h:i\l
:ilter ie111purary USC' as a sales office. said
spokesrncn lor the apphl·c111t \Vedncsd<i~'·
Pl anning com missioners 1r11nsmitted
the issue to the C'ounc1I after a 2-2
deadloc k on 1he mauer of widlh of a
~trttl lo be knov.· as Avenida la (\J enla
De\"elopmen! proposals v.·ere for nar-
rov.· roadwa ys "'hich would discou rage
on·strret parking <11-vay from special
guest areas.
A ~·ider main thoroughfare through lhe
pro1 cct. deve\.opcrs argued. v.'ould CQnfllct
with rccomn1endations fro1n the Federal
Housing Administration, and also would
destroy the plans for the project.
Alter more than hour's s(udy Wed-
nesday, c:oun cilnten agreed in a 4-1 vole.
Councilman Thomall o ·Kee le, also a
sl;iunch foe uf the rnobile home park,
cast the only dissenting vole.
Superb Luxury
in Pure Wool Pile
byKarastan -
ol an appeals procedure'. Planning D1rec·
tor l\t oody said he agreed that th•
storag e lot use. though permitted in the
zone, is not desirable in the area which is
:.1 n111jor entrance to Laguna was sug-
gested · high priority" to consider
<tnicnding or c:h:inging the zon ing.
l...cv.· Allison, who said he sold the pro·
perty. wh ich he harl ov•ned since \!146. to
Phillips. commented . ''I've al"'ays heard
fhey ~,a·nred lo mov e the businesses cut
in the <;anyon. Jrs zoned tor it. \\'h y all
the fuss""
\\'ilh regard 1o ii requircn1ent for
/;.indscaping on th e properly <idjacenl to
the flood contrul dilch. A llL~on p<llnted out
1hat 1he main canyon st>wer runs under
!hat area and ad\"ised caution in digging
Jor planting.
Councilman Edv.·ard Lorr added. "For
a long time citizens h.:ive been disturbed
by ha1'ing au!o agencies dispersed
through the community. One of the most"
logical places for an auto agency is out 111
the canyon. av.'ay from the city. People
concerned v.·ith preserving the village al·
n1osphere should eoopcrate in any effort
like this."
•·'fhe problem ," said Mayor Richard
Gol db erg. "i;; that t•vcryone wants his •
own part of tov.·n to retain the villRge ;;l-
ntOSflhere . J hope l\lr. j>,-loody wil! be able
lu come up with suitable ?.oning lo please
l'l'Cr~onf'.··
A 11·orn<1n who identified herself as a
longtirne canyon resident concluded the
rhscussion bY announcing , ·"I'm si ck of
having to come dov.·n here and fight all
the time to keep commercial enterprisc.s
out of the Canyon.''
Violin Breaks l\ lark
I.ONDO~ iAIJl -A London dealer,
\\'i lllarn Hill & Sons. today jumped the
\\Or!d record auction price for ii \'iolu1
nr<1rly four times. pay ing $201,!iOO for the:
Lad.\' Blunt S1radi1•arius at Sot heby's.
The previous record n•as $52.1100. set at
Sotheby'!l in 1968. The 250 year old Lady
BlL1nt was sold by San1 Bloomfield of
California.
Karastan calls this carpet S1»ctacular. So will VDU wh•n you
se• and fMI the magnific1nt luxury cf its th lek, d•l p pur1 wool
pil1. It's ama:ring price cf just $10.9S • squar• yard is du• to
• m•jor br1akthrcugh in wool t1c:hnology, Kar•1tan giv••
••ch flb.r • speci•I buUdng tr••tm1nt 10th• yarn is "f1tt1r ,"
and mor• r11ilient. A truly r1m1rkabl1 valu•.
IF YOU l'ANT
COME IN -
CALL
Tht 17 c:clor1 ar• spectacular too. 646-0275
fcrr e.n l!~rt .,.,,,.,
consultant
\\·ho \O.'IJI
('(lmt to
your home
\\'ilh sam ples
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llblii;(aiion ~
to YO\I!
Y;i11r /n1•oril,
inte rior dt s1g11tr
v·ilt bt liappu
lo C1$1i.St VOii
H.J.GARRETf fURNITLJRE
PROFESSIONAL
INTER IOR DESIGNER
-TRY OUR UVOLVIN!O CHAR!Ol-
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COSTA MESA. CALIF.
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•
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Lagu11a Beaeh
EDITION
Today's Final
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< I
,YOL 6'4, NO. 132, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE 3, ·1q71 TEN CENTS
Laguna Council End.orses Free Clinic 4-1
Wilh Cou ncilm an Edward Lorr voicing
strong dissenl, the Laguna Beach City
Council Wednesday night adopled by a 4-l
vole a resolution supporling the Free
Clinic and recognizing it as "an organiza-
tion of considerable worth to the com-
munity ."
Lorr prefaced his no vote with a heated
statement in vthich he asked that hi.s op-
po!!ilion be specifically recorded by the
clerk. ·
"I recognize the serious problem of the
high incidence of venereal disease in the
minority gr6up in this comrnunily," said
un
•
U~I Ttlol•Mt9
Dnd of the Year
Yep, the National Father's
Day Committee has named
J\1rs. John Bruce Dodd, 89.
Spolqne. Wash.. "Father of
I.he year." She is the founder,
or n1olher. of Father's Day.
\\'hich. girls. u·ill be observed
J une 20 for the 61st time.
Off shore 'Well'
To Be Blasted
In Movie Sce ne
Laguna Beach residents opposed to
oflshore oil dnlhng may soon witness a
dream-come-true when an oil rig oH San
Onofre is des troyed with dynamite.
However, the entire production -in·
eluding construction of the soaring tower
iOr towering eyesore) -will only be
something out of a fairy tale, for il \\.'ill
be blown up by James Bond.
The newly erected drilling platform is
pa rt of a movie set used in key scenes of
the latest Bond film. "Diamonds Are
r orever." being produced by London-bas-
ed Eon Productions.
Th e CQmpany wa!ll granted 1 31).day
permit to erect the structure just beyond
ihe slate oil drilli ng sanctuary by the
Army Corps of Engineers. During thal
period, machine gu" fire will rtSound
around the platform. helicopters will fly
over and frogmen wlll make underwater
assaults.
Butterfield Hit
the councilman, ''but I question this a~
proach. It has not been shown that the
venereal disease problem canllOt be met
by local doctors, the hospital or county
agencies. But the hippies will nol avail
themselves of these sources because the
clinic represents the establishment -and
this attitude has led us into the problems
we have here today."
1-iis Christian beliefs, Lorr continued,
would not permit him lo permit the con·
cepl of birth control counseling and abor·
tions for minors "so they can fornicate at
will."
Wheo the councilman's comments c!i!W
giggles from the council chamber au-
dience, he erupted, "l am tired of th is in·
timidation from a few individuals who sit
in this audience week after week !"
Lorr demanded that Mayor Richard
Goldberg control the audience until he
had completed his statement, but Uie
mayor did not reach for his gavel and the
gigglers subsided of their own accord.
Noting that the Free Clinic action had
been continued from the last meeting Lo
give John Payne, president of the clinic
board of directors, time to prepare ad-
ditional information requested by Lorr
and Councilman Peter Ostrander, Coun-
cilman Roy Holm said sharply, "I feel
that something unfortunate and un-
necessary has happened.
··Mr. Lorr apparently had no intention
of supporting the clinic from the outset,
yet he continued t.o request addilional in·
formation in an attempt to camouflage
this. If he had faced facts at the outset
everyone could have bee.n saved a lol of
time and trouble."
Denying this charge, Lorr insisted that
lhe endorsement of the board of directors
of the South Coast Community Hospital.
which Payne had provided, was not the
oun on · u
Culture Cutbacl{s Told
•
Colony Organizations Receive $21,000
"By BARBARA KREIBICH
or '"' oa111 ~1i.1 si.u
Redu cing the allocations of some old,
established Laguna Beach c u l I u r a I
organizations in order lo make room for
some newromers , the city council
\l/ednesday night voted to distribute
$21 ,000 in cullural support this year, up
$500 from 1970.
Hardest hit in lhe cutback was the
Lyric OperR Association or Or.ange Coun-
ty u•hich ·last year received $3,000, th is
year requested $5,000, but was awarded
only $1.000.
Also cut back were the Chamber Music
Society and the Community Concerts,
which had asked lhat their 1970 allocation
of $1,000 be matched, but will receive on-
ly $BOO this year.
The Civic Ballet, which, last year wa1
•
Nixon Cousi.J.1 From Coast
Seeking Help of President
By TERRY COVILLE
Of l~t Dl llT 'll•f Sl•ll
A Newport Beach girl wh s s
Is '"sick. weak and on wt!fare" in the San
Francisco area says she wrote her second
cousin -President Nixon -for help.
The plight of Kathy Timberlake, 24 . a
l~ graduate of Corona del f.1ar High
School. came to light when Bay Area
newspapers and television ! ta !. i on s
received carbon copies of the letter.
The White House confirmed that Ka!hV
Timberlake is a second cousin to the
President, but said no such letter had
been received.
Kathy's parents, Dr. and f.frs. P. F.
Tim berlake. live at 1921 Irvine Boulevard
in Newpor t Beach. He practices medicine
in Costa Mesa.
"She's never written home lo ask for
help . She wanted to be independent,"
Kathy's mother said this morning.
According to wire service reports, the
girl's letter began : "[ don't know if you
remember me. I'm your second cousin,
Kathy Timberlake. My grandmother is
Edith Miihous Timberlake. rm writing
you to tell you my life's existence has
become toe unbearable. I live in
California, Sonoma County, in a tow n
called Cotati. You may remember my
brother Philip who 1bol himself a few
ytars back.
''Fie along with me have had difficult
times handling our existence.. I can't
work or j:lo anything because of my emo-
tional state. I'm going to the mental
health service in Santa Rosa almost
every day, but it doesn't help me much. I
don't eat right cause I don't ever fee l llke
It so I'm always sick and weak, and the
welfare people give a very small amount
to eat and gel my necessities.
"Because of my slate of being
everyone takes advantage of me in·
eluding men. I was married for awh ile.
but my husband ran off with some rock
and roU band. The only money I get Is S27
a month from county aid. I can't exist on
this much but no one cares if I should
lade away .•. "
County Cautious
On Ranch Dea l ~ An offer by the owners of the 10 ,000
acre Starr Ranch lo sell lhe property tc>
the county for use as a public park has
brough.t a cautiou11 response from county
supervisors.
The ranch, located northeast of San
Juan Capi1trano. was almosl purchased
by the county two years ago. But lhe
Great Southwest Corporation, acting
through a subsidiary, Re c r e a t i o n
Environments, Inc. (REI ), bought the
large land holding for Sll.i million.
REI has now offered the property to
the county for SI2 milllon and cnunty
supervisors Tuesday referred the mauer
Lo thei r Regional Parka Advisory Com·
mittee for study,
The ranch is bordered on 1he west by
RET's Coto de Caz.a, 1 private outdoor
recreation club.
given S4.500, asked for "whatever is
available" and received $4,000.
The School of Art was awarded $3.000,
the same amount as last year, despite a
request for $5,000.
The Co mmunity Players allocation or
$.'i,000 plus $500 for the children's theater
Is the !'iame as last year, but it was noted
fT)06t of the amount will be rove.red by
-~ buildlng malntanance the ci.tJ ha1
1grtlid to undti-t&k't for the: playhouae.
Tht Lagun1 Bt1cb.Ari Aaaociation 1lao
will receive the same liJtocatlon as Jast
year, t-f.000.
CoWlcilman Roy Holr. who, with coun.
eilmM Edward l.<Jrr worked out the
cultural allocations, said this was the on·
ly item on which the two had differed,
with L<Jrr favoring a $3,$00 sum for the
Art Association In order to hold the total
amourU to last year's figure.
Mayor Richard Goldberg suggested the
council might decide with a vote. noting
that he would ··go to bat" for the Art
Association because the Gallery building
is in need of repa ir. "Its roof is leaking
for one thing,'' said the mayor. The coun·
cil agreed to go along on the larger
amount.
New applicants this year were the
Festi val Chorale, which asked for $500
and received $400. and the newly formed
Lllguna Beach Hisloncal Society, award·
e<l $3,000.
The Chorale, formerly deriv in g all its
support from the Ff'stlval of Arts, is ln
the process of moving to"'·ard self-sup·
port, with gradually diminishing festiva l
aid.
Mistorical Society chairman Ha rry Jcf·
frey, th<inking the council for the "~eerl
money," said the organization e~pects lo
receive substantial community support a!
it grows and eventually to be able to
operati without cily aid .
Again nothing I.hat the city's cultural
a.id program had originally been formed
to help new organizations on the road lo
self·5upport, lhe council agreed that this
policy should be re-Iterated to next year's
app!lcants.
Holm said he and Lorr had discussed
a.Mual allocation reduct ions of 25 and 20
percent, with Holm favoring the latter
figure.
However. the councilman said he w.ould
not like to stt an immediate blankel cut.-
back, since some organizations Lhat ire
an asset to the community might be un·
able to function without some support.
Jl was agreed to ·suggest a 20 percent
reduction in applicants' requests next
year .
Jury Criticizes Planner
The Opera Association cutback. Holm
explained. w11s decided on because the
organlzatWn is countywide and, though
based in I..aguna . should look to olht:r
communities for part of iti support,
Blaze Damages
Knott's Facility Orange: County Grn.nd Jury Foreman
Doreen Marshall of Newport Beach
Wednesday sharply censured Plannlng
Commission O\airman Woodrow But-
terfield for announcing an appearance
before the jury to the press.
"Members of the jury ooted wlth
1urprise a story appearing In the loc1J
eress regardlnK your meeting with the
Jury !'iCht:duled, reportedly for Tuesday
morning," read a leder from Mr1.
Marshall to Butterfield.
··we are concerned because neither 4be '
Grand Jury rt0r ita foreman hid rteeivtd
-i ny wrmr:ur.!c:it!on f!'t!m you reqi_~a
,uch a meeting.
"In our opinion the newspaper reports
re11:ardlng· thL, m&tter hive be. 1 n
misleading lo the public and lo the county
1dmlnllltration which n ttgrft," the Jet-
ter continued.
"U you wilh t.o have the Grand Jury ln-
vestigate 1 1pecltic matter or l'l mttL
with the. jury for this purpose; we should
appreciale the courteay or • wrr~ten re-
quest."
The letter 11150 ftOted thllt the Jury's
Planning and Environment.al Problrms
Committee "hu bren rev iewing the
policle1 •nd proctdurts followed by the
Planning Comm!Jsion 11nd wlll be irt-
luested ln rettlvlng any information you
wish-to m<!~vaih1hlt tn il"
Butterfltl~ in a 1t•temcnt to the press
Tuesday said he h11d uncovered I~
formation that the Plannlng C.Ommlssion.
had been Incorrectly adlolised ln tht mat·
ter of tht wie permit for the future Sad·
dleback Community Hospital in Laguna
Hills Lel$ure World.
He. said they had bef.n told .I.bat a
hospital w111 pr.oper use for the -property
where the.facility will be built but that he
had discovered liter that Wt ••• not ao.
His asmilons were dtnltd by the
County Counsel'• offi~ which aaid that
the proptrt.y was being legally used as a
site for a hospital
ll'lre. Wednesday night deatroyed the
Ji.mg'.\e Tsland office and Wor~ and
threatened n(!arby Independtnce and
Heritage halls at Knott's Berry Farm.
Buena Park firemen said the blaze w11
reported al 8:33 p.m. and controlled in 3fl
minutes. Jn addition to the building.
numerOU!'i wooden anlm&ls which dotted ., MN!. M11rM11IJ'1 letter ooted that Bul-
terfield '1 annoufl('~ appeartnee be.fora lM Miland were damaged. No live
the Crand Jury did not tfi.(e_p_i.ce. _anima ls _were injured, according lO
Butterfield had also sald be woUTd .Wemen.
bring the hospi111I matter before the F'l~e offlclal1 today had no esti~ate on
Plannin1 Commblion Tuesday. He did the IOll ln nwney and are lnvestigatln&
not. • the orl1ln.
-. ~ .. . -.
equivalent of the medical staff en-
dorsement he had requested.
Payne had explained that Dr. Robert
Roper. chief of the SCCH medical Slaff.
repeatedly maintained that the statr as a
body does not endorse or condemn any
organization, but leaves such cornment
up to individual doctors. 23 of whom were
either working at the clinic as volunteers
or had offered written support of the
undertak ing.
Ostrander's request for a financial
statement was met to his apparent
satisfaction, though he qualified his ap·
proving vole as "in concept'' and asked
assurance that !he resolutioa did not im-
ply financial support.
Two rlderly women in !he audience
spoke in favor of the Free Clinic and urg-
ed !he council lo support it.
One suggested that any OPJ)05!Uon from
doctors might be financially Jn.spired.
Another commented, "Most or thesa
young people have no money and can't go
to doctors or the h015pital . The Frtt Clinic
is a wonderful thing for this town.''
Official council recognition was sought
by the Free Clinic so it might qualify for
assistance from the Orange County
Health Oeparlment.
a anc
u,,,.......,.
IN CHARRO COSTUME
Yuba City Su1pect Corona
New Stop Signs
Even Confusing
City Councilmen
New stop signs installed at hazardous
intersections can cause problems even
for the city officials who authorize the in·
stalla tlon, it was re vealed at the Laguna
Beach City Council meeeting Wednesd ay,
Councilman Edward Lorr asked Public
Works Director Joseph Sweany if it
might not be possible to call allent1on to
new stop !'iigns wi1h a flashing light, or
sin1i!ar device. until drivers get used to
them.
··1 went through that new one al Cress
Street and Glenneyre a couple of tJmes
before I realized it wai; therP," Lorr con·
fessed.
Sweany said the cily doesn't have any
flashing stop signs and noted the Cress
Street ~ign is on a 30-day trial basis.
Jlowever. he added, "I've been caught
by it too. I was relyi ng on ii so com·
pletely I nearly got hit in the middle of
the intersection lhe other day, so I know
what you mean."
Lagunan Jailed
On Drunken.Rap
After "Accident
A Laguna Beach man was arrested on
suspicion of drunken driving Wednesday
afternoon following an accideDt which
se_!!L him to the hospital and left five
automobiles badly damaged.
Police identified the suspect as Warren
Jennings .. Whitson. SO, of 496 N. Coast
Highway. He was trea~ at Orange
County Medical Center for minor cuts:
anC biulses and then transferred to
Orange County Jail where he wa1 boo~ed
on charges of driving while untJer the iq·
nuence of alcotl>I.
Investlgam lild.the lnlshap occurred
at 1:30 p.m. when Whilftori. southbound on
Coast Highway. 1ideswlped an auto
wait1n11 to lllrn left al Nyes Plaee. Ponce
11aid WhHson's auto conUnued aouth ,
striking • flarked car P.nd. koocldng It Into
a st!cond p1r1ied euto.· Whltto1\°a vehicle
then vttrtd acroas the roadway and
Six Shells
h1 Corona
Auto Found
From Wire Senolce1
YUBA CITY -An automatic pistol has
been found on the Jack L. Sullivan ranch,
site of mosl of the graves of the 2.3 vie·
tims of a mass slaying, It was learned to-
day.
Th• pistol , a 9-millimeter 1ut.om1tic.
and 20 shells found with It were 1tr1i to
the state crime laboratory at Sacramento
for ballistics tests.
ln court documents supporUnc the
charge against suspect Juari V. Corona,
the sheriff's office sa id It had found 111
nine-mi!llmeter shells in his 1971 panel
truck.
Authorities investigating the gri!ly
crime never have indicated that &ny of
the victim s died from bullet wounds. The
bodies discovered along the Feather
River had been hacked and stabbed.
Aerial photographs taken-with an m.
!rared camera were being processed to
help officials determine whether there
are more bodies burled in the are11 of the
crime. It was expected to take two days
to process the photographs.
Sheriff Roy D. Whitea ker. who says he
is convinced more bodies will be found,
was forced to withdraw his crews after
thev started digging at one "indentation''
similar to those that have turned out to
be crude graves.
The crews found the ground still too
wet.
So far. 2.1 transients, farm workers and
drifters have been found hacked and
stabbed to death in crude graves in
orchard'.' along the Feather River.
Juan V. Corona. 37, a Mexica n born
farm labor rontractor with a poor eom·
mand of English. was formally arraigned
in .Justice Uiurt Wednesday on Ill counts
of murder -the 10 OOciies exhumed by
the time he was first taken to court one
week before.
"l'd ·like to get il over and be done with
It," Whiteaker said as he discussed. the
continuing search for grave.sites. "I
believe there are some bodiea ouL there
thiit will never be found.''
The 6heriff is ming infrared aerial
photography of the <>rchards in An effort
lo spot areas: wher.e lhe aoil bas been
disturbed. Resulls should be available
F'riday.
Another potential gravesite slill ls
under water and can 't be probed until it
dries. the sheriff said.
Orange C.u&
Weather
The clouds will n>ll by early on
Friday, followed by fair skiei ind
ttmperatures ranging from e de-
grees along the lhorellne lo 74
further inlan<r.
INSWE TODAY
Heroin. addict who Wes up to
15 "bags a. day at co1t oj 1150
l«avts /Um as final warnt11g to
~oungst.crs. Stor11. Paat S.
. came_to re_M_!_g~lolt.!._third ~rked 1utoL _
efricera 1ald.
Three of the autos had major t!a.rrtege
and lhe other two moderate, polk:e Pid.
,. .
• ' • •
. '
•
\hl!fMar, Junt ), l"l
Joaquin Trustee Disputes Change Procedures
By PAMELA HALLAN
.. M9 Dlltr ,..., II.it
A routine req\ieat for currlcu1um
changes al a school in the San Joaquin
Elementary Schoo! District erupted into a
dispult over procedure "''ednesday.
Gratlan Bider!. cha1r"man of the Board or Trustees, chargtd lhe admin istration
~·ith .. bringing !hings lo the board at \he
eleventh hour when plans lire solar along
that the board bas little choice but to ~p·
prove them."
North An1erican,
Collins Finance
Agreement Set
A management agreement under which
North American Rockwell Corporation
would provide additional financing for
Collins R.adio Company and in turn would
gain control of the Colllrui board wa1 an·
nounced Wednesday by the chainnen of
the boards of directors of the two com-
panies.
Under the agreement, which must yet
:>e. approved by both boards and by lhe
::Oil in.s shattholdcrs, North A1nerican
would purchase· $35 million of a ne w issue
of Collins converllble preferred stock and
;r,rou1d have warrants to purchue an ad-
titional ~ million of Collins common
1tock.
A price of $18.50 per share would be
!stabllshed for both types of stock.
~ part of the plan, NAR "'ould have
he right lo elect a majority on the
:Ol\ins board of directors, through its
\tock purchases.
A North American spokesman fiald the
:entative agttement probably will be
)resented to the boards of the. two firms
~r their approv al within a month.
Dana Point E yes
Outi-ig·ger Races
~1ember1 of the Dana Point Chamber
1r Commerce have begun planning for
1pectacular Hawaiian outrigger races
,.hich will be included in the Dana Days
:-elebratkln later this summer.
The races. which Ydll stretch from
...a gun a Beach to Dana Harbor , were the
:ubject of a recent general membership
nttting, where local rea'!dents intere1ted
n forming an outrigger cre.w de!cribe.d
he 1port and showed A movit.
The racl"s are planned for Aug. I, with a
eparate event for an ell-woman team
~anntd.
The Dana Days will be held a day after
he formal dedication of lhe entire harbor
'Omplex, July 31.
History Society
Sets First Meet
Talb by several longtime resident!
nd a film will be featured al lhe firll
pen meeting of the oew Laguna Beach
l1storical Society tonighl at 7 .30 o'clock.
Tiie group Wednesday received a finan-
ial boost to its new organ.itation v.·hen
hr city council voted to a\locale S3,00D in
upport of planned cultural 3ctivities.
The meeting. open to lhe public. wil! be
.cld at the Women 's Clu b. 2116 St. Ann 'a
lrivt . Speakers will include Genevie..,.e
laniel1. Richard Jahraus. Glenn Veddtr,
lea Whittlesey and temporary chairman
larry Jtlfrey. Refreshments will bt
ErVfd.
OIAM&I col'\T
DAILY PILOl
Oll~MG~ COAIT PU8l.llHll+6 COM,~y
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IOl1W
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Ck11ln M. loot ltlt~1 ri P. Hi ll ,,.,.mr.n. MllMtlnir 111i.n
............ Offk.
Jlf Fer11t Aw•"MI
M•mite •'""'""P.O. le•""'· t2•S1 S• C~ Offk• J05 ~.11~ u c.,.,1~. 11 •• 1. ,1,12 ..............
coi" M~· no w.11 ••'I ''""' M"""'°'r INt~; N1J JOI-I •oo.:e--•rd
Hllllllftl!Oll l•kll! 1111J 9H<fl ..... lt•I ..
"I'm Ured ef having lhil happtn," 'aid
Bid1rt. "I'm tired of p1.tttln1 t.nt cart
btfort the horH.''
Bldart crltlclud the adml.nl1tr1Uon lot
net brln&In1 lh1n11 to tbe boArd whlla in
tht Idea stagt.
Superintendent Ralph Gatts e:il'pl11lned
that a program mu st bt developed lo "'
some eztent so that il can be adequately
ex plained when presented for board ap-
proval. ,
The program brought lor approval
WedneMiy wu a curriculum chanat at
Irvine Jnll!rmedl1tt School whlch wlll
allow 1ludtnt1 le tlU two Mmestert t f
1clttlct Ln t ither aeventb or t lChth 1r1de
and wlll •llow them le tUt fort ltn
language as an l"lectlve instead of a re·
quiremC'nt in the i;eventh gr11de
The program also would provide a few
new clesses such as or a I {'om-
munlcations, home management and en·
vironmental science
Dr. "'illiam Stocks, A s s i s I ant
iuperintendc nl ror tn1lrucliC1a, lo\d the
beard that the chan1e1 were ml!rely
mod1Hc1llon1 and wouldn 't make a big
difference.
"But you need our 1pproval tonight s•
that you can register children before the
end of school," said Bidart.
'"Kids will have to be registered
anyway if we give our approval or not.''
said Trustee Philip Bradfield.
The bo11rd voted to approve the request
for the curriculum ch»nge!, but en the
suaaestion or 'l'ruster Robtrt Dameron
uked tbt administration to hold a
work.shop on aome or the l!ltml!nts in the
new (lrogra1n such as ton1lngliflg of
seventh and eighth 1raders.
1'he ('Urriculun1 changes arc part of a
nc\v trend to make interrned1ate ~chool a
rnore contiguous two-year prosran1. 1c-
c:ord1n~ to Princi pal John Delfo.tonaco.
To do this a child nu1y have 1he san1e.
horneroorn teachl'r fur two }ears. n1ore
team 1ench1ng wtJI take place. and rnore
individualized scheduling ~·111 be done sci
lh!t somt sevtnlb ljlod eighth i radUJii
will be 11:1 the aame cl1ue1 If wor~ at
the aame level.
"You should have come to us wi!h
these ideas first before proj!ran1s wer•
dl"veloped." said Bidarl. "You probably
v•ouldn't have tol d us about these new ap•
pro!'ches if "" hadn·t brought all this
out ''
t>el~lonaco agreed to go into each facet
of the program in the propostd workshop
before eonUnutng with plans lor SC'!>"
lrmber.
• Fast, Co1npany Zoning Change Advised
Lobby ist at Top Sec ret Mee t
BOSl'ON (UPI ) -Former presidential press secretary Pierre Salinger
.said a StetUe busines1man accidentally got into a meeting of the National
Stcurity Council in 19411. received a top-secret briefing Oil lhe Berlin crisis and
a greeting from Prl!sldent John F. Kenn edy before he was discovered.
Laguna Councilmen Ini tiate A ppeuls Procedure
Both the names and the situation have been changed in Salinger's novel,
"On lnatructions of l\ty Government," \\'hich lhe former press secretary dls·
cussed Wednesday 1t the con\·entlon of lhe Americ an Book Sellers' Associa-
Uon. But Salinger said the besis of the incident was true.
He aald the unidentified buslness1nan helong to the Air ForC'e Nation-
al Security Advisory Council, a private advisory org;i.nization. and hl'ld come
to Wai;hington to lobby for n1ore aerospace appropriations. He arrived late and
ca:Jled the secretary of Lhe chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Curtis
E. LeMay.
"He aaked her where the meeting was and she said the White House,"
Salinger said. "Apparently she only heard National Security Council. The man
said I'll never be able lO gl"t in there and she answl"red. don't worry, I'll get
your name on the list."
Salincer said the businessman \\'as met by presidential aides and secur·
ity officers and he got into the meeting "just II! the Hghts went out and they
started to project to p secret slides and information on the Berlin crisis."
The man realized he was in the ·wrong meeting "'hen he sa1.,. Le~1ay,
the President. the head of lhe CIA and the secretary of state, Salinger said,
In fact, Kennedy walked by him at the end of the briefing. palled him on the
knee and said "Things are pretty tough toda_v."
Controversy over an au to mob i 1 e
st.o rage lot in Laguna Canyon has in-
spired the Laguna Beech City Council to
initia te a change in it! appeals procedure
and may br ing about a zoning change.
Planning Director Y.'ayne P.foody ad ·
vi.~ed the cow1cil this week th11.t existing
ordin11nces do not provide for appeal of
planning commission approval of a site
plan.
The onlv action the council could take,
~1oocly s8id, "'ould be to . .ask the com·
mission to re consider, if it felt atl im·
proper action had been taken.
Mosl commUJ1ities. he noted , provide
for appeal to the City Council in ~ile plan
disagreements and he _recommended an
appropriate amendment to the zoning
ordinance to permit this. The council
voled unanimously to instruct the plan·
ning commis.<Jion lo start the amendment
procedure.
The action of the C'ouncil. how,ver, ~·ill
not affect the ca~ that set off the con-
trol'ersy -installation of an auto storage
lot for Philllps Buick at I IJ Canyon Acres
Drive.
Re sident Andre\1' \Ving had called the
at1en!1on of the c11y to th!' t;ic1 Iha\ pav-
ing \1'as being done 011 rhe site and a slop
"·ork order was issued when il developed
no permits had beer1 taken out.
Subsequently, a teniporary use permil
was issued and the site plan approved by
the commission. but. according 10 r..toody,
the applicant still has not con1p!ied with
requirf'ments of the plan re1·iew. ap.
parcntly pending council review of the
matter
Jn addition lo recommf'nding initiation
He was di!COvered shortly after the President left. Officials solved the
security breach, Salinger said, by requiring the man , a retired Air Force
colonel, to telephone Washington every 15 minutes and tell officials "''here he
Wa l . '
Cle1nente Co11ncil Okays
Elroy .l\lcCaw, a .. (The New York Times ident ified Uie businessman as
wealthy Seattle lelevialon executive who died la!t year). Com1n1111ity Develop111ent
Count ;nn Among Three A 296-unlt planned community del'elop-~ ment calcufated to "place th• falt<ri"g
I Harbor Hlll~ Golf Course won its final ap-
\ prov al Wedne9day Jron1 San Clemente
T k Murder Vl.Ctl•lflS '---.c~e°t~:~1~~~~ agreed wilh a private run lrnffio l"1l0S"ltanl"s ret"1lmmendali on on
street ~·idths in the private development
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of !ht DlllJ '"'' St•tt • A' mysterious multiple murder case in
·which a LI!. Hab(a m11n i1 one of three
victims -wilh pos~ibly more bodiez to
be found -was unfolding today in Los
Angeles.
The principal suspect. already jailed in
a separate rape and robbery case, was
scheduled for arraignment at mid-morn·
ing on three counts of homicide .
Detectiv es werr keeping a shroud (If
secrecy over how John P. Hendrix, 35,
was linked to gunshot slayin gs of two
security guards and a retired railway
clerk.
lhe Los Angeles railroad yerds.
Police said he had also been shot twi~
and robbed .
Questioned toda y about)lhe possibility
of more grim disco'lftie~. a police
spo ke sman said he knew of none so far.
'"Northern California 23. Southern
Californ ia 3," he remarked of the grim,
multiple murder 1core er the past week.
Parking Meter
Theft Suspects
F acing H earing
and resolved an issue \.l'hich left planning
commissioners in a stalemate lest wttk.
Unlike another firm 's preceding plan
for a mobile home park, the planned
C'ommunity application by La Quinta
Styleline Developmt!nt Co. or Ne"·port
Beach drl!'A' -no opposition from sur-
rounding neighborhoods. The Townhouse
!imlts v.•ill be fro1n l.000 to 1,400 square
fee!.
Plans several months ago lo replace
tlie links with a mobile home park quick ·
Ty grew into a weeks·long controversy
and eventua l city denial.
A small pitch.and-putt golr course "·ill
replace U1e larger links v.•hen lhf housing
developn1ent is compll•ted. 'rhe existing
course clubhouse ~·ill becon1e the co1n-
111unlty"s meeting and recreation hall
arter temporary use as a.sales office. said
spokesmen for the applicant \Vednesday .
Planning commissioners transmitted
!he issue to the council after a 2·2
deadlock on !lie 1nat1er of ~·idth or a
slreel 10 be kno11• as Avenida la (..'uenla .
Development proposals "·ere for nar-
row road1~·ays which "·o uld discourage
nn·!'lreel parking a\\·ay fron1 spectal
guest areas.
A y,•ider main thorou~hrare 1hrough the
project, de1·eiopers argued. would CQnfltct
"'ilh recommendations From 111e Fetieral
Housing A<lminis1ra11on . and also ¥.·ould
destroy Ifie plans (or !he projC'cl.
After more than hour's .sludy \Ved-
nesday. councilmen agreed in a 4-1 votf'.
Councilman 'T'homas O'Keefe, also a
staunch foe of the rnnbilr home park,
ct1sl the only dissenting vote.
Victims -all slain and stuffed into car
trunk! and in one ease a pickup truck bed
-are Eugene Bealer, 35, of 500 W. Olin-
da Ave .. La Habra, Leland \\'ebb, 3f!, t1f
Los Angt:les and Charle5 Haye1, 71 , of
Eagle Rock.
Tht investigation was being handled by
homicide delt"clives at the LAPD"z
l"ewton Division. who hinted additlonal
murder victims may be found.
Four pe rsons accused oI cracking park·
ing meltr! in Southland communitie!\ to
1he IU!le of SI00,000 before Laguna Beach
police crackf'd their carefull y planned
operation ~·ere ordered Wednesday to
fa ce preliminary hearing June II in Santa
Ana municipal court.
Superb luxury
in Pure Wool Pile
Bealer. last seen t.tay 25, ¥:as found in
the trunk of his car which wa11 parked 1n
Hendrix ' driveway when police "'ent 111
the residence Y.'tdnesday alter somehow
connecting him lo the cases.
Security guard Webb. reported mi!\~ing
by his 'A"ife Monday afte r fa iling to come
home from a dep artment store Job the
nigh! before ~·a~ also found in a Yehicle .
Webb had been shot t"'ict , robbed and
laid out in his pickup truck bed. In·
ve.~ligators said,
Judge Paul fo.1asl "·ill preside O\'f'T th!!
hraring set for Guthrie Jones. 34 : hi.'1
"'ife. Beatrict Jones. 21 : bolh transients
and Ch11rles Leon Adams. 25. and \Villa
Dean Rotramel. 21 : both of Santa Ana .
All art' held ~·ithout bail.
byKarastan
of an appeals procedure . Planning Direc·
tor f..loody said he agreed that th t
storage lol use, though permitted in the
1.11nC'. L'i not desirable in the area \\•hith is
<i m11jor entrance to Laguna was sug-
gested ·'high prio-rity" to con.sider
.:in1cn<ling or changing !he zoning
Lc\r Allison , '.l"hO said he so ld the pro-
perly. 11·hich he had 011·ncd since 1!146, lo
Phillips. comn1en\ed, •·r11e. always heard
they wanted Lo move !he businesses out
in \ht" canyon. l\"s zoned for it. \\lhy all
the fuss'.'"
\\'lth regard 10 a requirement for
landscaping on the property adjacent to
!he flood control dit ch. AllL~on pointed ou t
that the rnain canyon se y,·er run s under
that area and advised caution in digging
for planting:.
Councihnan t:d.,..·ard Lorr added. "For
a long lime citizens have been disturbed
by having auto· agencies dispersed
through the community. One of the most
JQgical places for an aulo agency i! out in
the canyon. away from the city. Pe<iple
concerned with preserving lhe yil lage at-
n1o.sphere should cooperate in any erforl .'
like this."
"The problem," s11id Ma.vor Richa rd
(iuldberg, "is that everyone wants his ~
Ol\'11 part of !own lo retain lhe village fl l-
rnosphere.. I hope fo.1r . Moody will be able
to co1ne up with suitable zoning lo please -
everyone.''
A woman 1\•ho identified hers,lf as a
longtime canyon resident 'concluded the
rli~cuss1on by announcing. "I'm sick of
having to co1ne down here and Jight all
the time to keep commercial enterprises ,
out of the Canyon :'
V iolin Br eaks i\fark
LO:\IDON (AP \ - A London dealer,
\\'d llam Hill & Sons. !odey jumped the
1\orld record auction price for a violin
nearly four rimes. paying $201 .600 fnr iJ1e
Lady Blunt Slradi\'ari11s at Solheby"s.
The previous record was $J2,800 . set at
Sottieby's in 1968. The 251) year old Lady
Rl11nl wa.~ sold by Sam Bloomfiel d of
California.
9-~t ,.x., 1•
0 .
Ca nc:erned about her elderly husband
who vanished ri1ay 29. ltayes· wife filed
a missing per1ons report and friends
later noticed lht couple's car parked near
Adams and Miss Rolramel were ar-
rC'!'ted ;1t their apartment ~111 y :I shorlly
after Laguna officers gr abbed David
Steven Perez, 19, end ~1ichae1 John Di·
nC"en. 18. bot.h of El Monte . assertedly in
Ille act of brf'aking open meters on Cliff
Drive.
Dineen and Perez ha\'e agreed to
tl?stily for the prosecution in return for
dismissal charges of conspiraC'y to com-
mi1 grand theft.
Karetfan cell1 this carP•t Spectacular. So will you wh•n you
'"a nd fMI th• magnificent lu xury of its thick, dMp pure wool
pile. lt'1 amazing price of ju1t $10.95 a squ•r• yard i1 due t o
•ma jor bre1kthrou9h in wool tech nology. Karasten g iv•s ••di fiber• 1pecial bulkin9 treatment 10th• y•rn it. "fatter,"
•nd more re1llient. A truly r•mark•ble value •
a . ...
IF YOU CAN "T
coriIE IN -
CALL U.S. Plane Cr ashes
l\1ADRtD (AP) - A U.S. Alr Force
je.~ tanker pla111l" "'ilh five men aboard
cr11she.d today near Guadalajara, north
of Madrid, and there were no reports of
any survivors. officials at the TorTejon
Air Base reportl!d. The Kll5 9."a9 rt.
turning to Torrejon . The cau se of the
crash vta! not known.
l . .aguna Beach police later extradited
Jones from the Baker, Ort., jail cell
"·here he was aw1!ting court action on
narcotics charges filed in that com-
munity. Hi! wife wa! 111Tested as she cot
nff a bus returning from Oregon and drug
charges added to her dossier when lt
allegedly "WJlS IOU!ld that !ht WllS Cl!.r-
n ·ing btnzedrine tablets and ha!hish in
her purse.
Mission Viejo Workshops
'
Offered by A1·tist Group
A variety of worbhof>1 will be offered
In Julf by the Mission Viejo Assoc iation
of Artisla-and Craftsmen.
Painting, clayw1:1rklng, knotting •nd
"·earing all will be taucht by qualified In-
structors.
J•ck Taylor will teach a class Jn rlay
on f'rldays attrtlng July 9 at Lindo Vlala
School in MJsslon Viejo.
Children 6-10 will attl"nd fro m 1:30 to 3
p.m. and pupils from ti yeara ot •1e on
up will attend from 1:30 lO 11 :30 a.m.
-•-_ ... ,, 1.... •~ 1., ...... , ... ,.,.,..,loilnn
··~ '"" "'" .... ·-... ----· -membl"ra and SIO for non member1.
M11creme tArtl!tk: lcnottlnl(l •nd wrar·
Ina will ht 1.:1u,1thl by Dre Smith and F'ern
R11Ran for persoru nine yl!1r111nd over.
The clae1 will be 1'utsdsy• and
Ttlursd11 ys from July 6 lo July la from I
to 3 p.m. in the Linda .Vista multipurpo8t:
room. The fet i8 $S for members and $11
for non members.
Ftlt pictw-et and fabric palnUng will be
orl effil to 1tudenlJ five through tight
~t11r1 old on Tutlday1 and Thursday!
from I \o 3 p.m. from July 20 to July 29
in the Lindi Vi1ta multlpurpose room .
The fee will be si for members and S4
for non m•tnbers and all m1ueria\s will
be aupplled.
ClA\!ts In oil oeint)na.for students ~ho
knoll"'how to dra" also ma)' -be. held H
thrre Is enouj!h lntere~I. Pro,pecllve
11udenl! n1ay caU Can>lyn Zubris, 830-
0079 for inlornllltlon.
F'or inforina;;oo nn re-Rlstrallon call
Dorl~ Swanson, prc!ldent, 837-3143,
PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNER
The J7 color• are 1,,.c.teculer too •
-TIT OUR ftlVOLVINfl CHA RGt-
O!Mft Mon ., Tltun. Ir Fri. l wH.
646--0275
for 1.n expm-t
"""'' ('(lnsullarit
¥.'ho "·ill
CQnl" to
~·our hom,.
\\·hh 11amplts
"'itlmut 11nr ~-·
ohllJrt1l1on
lo you!
Your favorit e
inttrior de,iQ'71er
u:ill be h.a.pp11
to 011is L you
:215 HARICR ELVO.
CCST A ME SA, CALIF • e .. 6.0 21~ ,
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San Cle1nenie
Capistrano
VOL. &!, NO. 132, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES
EDITION
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Today's F
I
TEN CENTS
Jury Chief Blasts Planner Over alk
Orange County Grand Jury Forem~n
Doreen Marsha ll of Newport-Beach
Wednesda y sharply censured Planning
Commission Chairman Woodrow But·
terfield for announcing an appeara~
before the jury to the press.
"Members of lhe jury noted with
gurprise a story appearing in the local
press regarding your meeting with the
J\l/Y scheduled, reportedly for Tuesday
lJlOfning," read a letter from Mrs.
Marshall to Butterfield.
un
Rights l'iolated?
"We are concerne<i because neither the
Grand Jury nor it.s foreman had received
any communication from you requesting
such a meeting.
"In our opinion the ne'"·spaper reports
regarding this matter have b e e n
misleading to the public and to the county
administration which we regret," the let·
ter rontinued.
"If you wish to have the Grand Jury in·
vestigate a specific matter or to meet
with the jury for this purpose, we should
appreciate the courtesy of d wr:tten re-
quest."
The letter also not.ed that the Jury's
Planning and Environmental Problems
Qnnmittee "bas been ~<:viewing the
policies and procedures followed by the
Planning Commission and will be m.
terested in receiving any information you
wish to make available to tt."
Butterfield in a stalement to the press
Tuesday said be bad :.:.."'!covered in·
formation thal the Planning Commission
had been inrorrectly advised in the mat·
ter of the use permit for the future Sad·
d!eback Community Hospital In Laguna
Hills Leisure World.
He ~aid they had been told that a
hospital was proper use for the property
where the facility wiU ~built but that he
had discovered later thal this was not so.
His asserUons were denied by the
CoWlty Counsel 's office which said that
the property was being legally u5ed as a
site for a hospital.
Mrs, Marshall's letter noted that But.
terfield 's announced appearance be.fore
J
oun on u
Lawsuit Looming
On Golf Access
,
By JOHN VALTERZA.
01 l~t DtUy Piiot S1111
A lawyer for embattled San Clemente
landO"'ner G. Carson Rasmussen in·
timated· to city councilmen Wed nesday
lbat his client might sue the city over a
San Clemente
Council Eyes
Employe Pay
San Clemente cou ncilmen will tackle
lht issue of Cmploye raise requests in a
special study session Monday night. they
decided Wednesday after receiving latest
proposals from the city's two bargaining
group~.
\Y het her any increases al all would
come [rom lhe informal study session is
ln doubt. Councilmen and city staff have
re peatedly s;iid thal funds do not exist for
an y substantial rais<'~
Police and other public safely person·
nel are seeking the largest percentage In·
creases in wages of the two separa!e
bargaining employe groups .
In a proposal 9.clLvered by employe
rep resentalive Police Lt. RRy Hartman
Wednesday the increases would range
from 15 percent for several top ad·
minstrat1 ve salaries to 10 percent for
patrolmen, seasonal lifeguards a nd
fire men.
•.: · Btlsidrs the salary incre ases v;h!t'h
"'ould coS! 1n the range or $70,000. lhe
public safety employes are adamant in
their choice of a changeover lo the state-
adm1nistered Public Employes Retire-
ment System .
Th~ p1an, howeve r, has drawn strong
disfavor from som~ ~uncilmen i'\past
1tudies on the pensio n issue.
The remainder of the city workers
through their association are seeking an
average 7.5 percent cost--0f-living raise.
plw several fr inge benefits.
Jn their request to councilmen
delivered Wednesday the miscellaneous
emp!oyes seek four wee ks' vacation after
10 years of service. overtime, tuition
reimbursement. holiday pay, an aulo
allowance . shifts in emp\oye classifica·
tion in some jobs, plus improved health
and life illS urance packager;.
Despite the scope of requests from btllh
groups. councilmen are expected lo hold
-.thair bard:liDe.aJ)p[OJl_Ch. tl'lj~x_e~QD__AAY
increases In wages.
Several have pointed lo the general
re cession as one reason for keeping
1alaries down.
Thus far the budget atudy seasoa has
yielded no firm cuts In a tight rise.ti
document which actually shows $400,000
Jess !ff expenditures over last year.
Besides the salary question. councilmtn
are still faced with deciding the fate of
the five-year<apltal lmprov~ents pro-
gram. requests for an lncr,.-Sed au,b!idy
for the chamber of com roe and other
proposed eit:penditurts.
A large Bmount of und~ !or the pro-
posed new torilm ly clubhouse •lso
~ight come from the city cofftrs. Th~t
expense ..alone would amount kl 'bout
1230,000.
Mayor Wa lter Evans Jr. t ald lhe Mon·
day i1eS!llon might e&nd to TueM:lay
t vcn!ng ,,., well to allow time to c1tcll up
on 111 lhe loose ends to lht city fin11nclal
~cture.
•
controversial issue of access to hundreds
1>f acres near the city golf course.
Bernard Allen, appearing during the
oral communications segment of the
agenda , issued a harshly-worded state-
ment for Rasmussen .
The city council asse.rtedly violated the
landowner's rights to two easements
across the city links when n chose
recently le label an e1'tension of Avenida
Cornelio as the major collector street to
a large planned community development
proposed for Rasmussen's land.
Allied with the city action tv.·o weeks
ago after the longest hearing in recent
years was a provision that golf carts only
could use the public easements a~ross the
golf course. ...,._;
Those easements. Allen stressed. were
granted to Ra smuss en by the city in ex-
change for a land gift which resulted in a
Little League ball diamond, fir ing range
and city storage yard.
To deny the use of the easements. Allen
told glum coo ncilmen, violated his
client's constitutional right s.
He also charged that the city's interest
in elin1inaling use of the easements
revolved around proprietary in terest,
because the city owns the golf course and
receives profits from it.
He also blamed an "emoliona1Jy.charg·
ed clima te. fear of declining property
values and the desire to maintain th e
sta tus quc)'' as other reasons for de nial of
th e access route.
Cornelia's extension. which couilcilmen
authorized under assessment dist rict pro·
ceedings. would cos! up lo a half million
dollars lo build. Allen said, and its
usefulness to the land in queslion could
be challenged.
In a large document presented to the
councilmen, Allen charged a yea rs.old at-
tempt lo thwart devel opment of his
client's land.
The city, he said, "has shilly·shallied
around and chosen an alternate access -
a type of subterfuge -to gain city
benefi ts at the: expense of Mr .
Rasmussen.'' he claimed.
While he stressed that Rasmusstn
"does not desire to enter Into a suit," the
issue wou ld make a good court action.
To tend teeth to the !latemenl, th!!
lawyer asked councilmen to resolve the
issue within 30 days.
The chances for a su it also were hinted
at by City Attorney F. MacKenzie Brown
who two weeks ago sai.d the city 's action
in controlling the use of the owner's ease-
ment would make a good court J C3t.
Councilman Thom as O'KeeJe, himself a
civil attorney, agreed.
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East Basin
Crowded boat berths at Dana Harbor are r.art of 200 slips already
opened al the county's new recrealion facility. rt wa~faunched of·
fic.ially today wilh a boat tour and seagoing lunch for VIPs who had
a first hand look at the multimillion d oll ar snug ·harbor.
Cafe Sig11 Bid Rejected
A San Juan Capistrano area restaurant
owner lost bis battle for equ ality with his
neighbors in sig n height to "en·
vironment."
John Edwards, owner of Buffy's
Restaurant. 28722 Camino Capistrano.
had appealed to the Board of Supervisors
from a denia l by Zoning Administrator
Ray Reed which refused a variance to
raise his business sign tD SO feet.
Attorney William Wl\('{lxen of Laguna
Beach, Tepresenting Edwards. argued
Buffy's 35-foot·high sign ('{IUld not be seen
from the paralleling San Diego Freeway
becaµse Of two 4S..foot..high service sta·
lion signs nearby which were installed
alter he ha.d put up his legal sign.
. --. -
Wilcoxen argued tha l It w a s
"discrimination" to allow variances for
the other signs and deny Edwards' ple1.
''It's an environmental problem ," said
Fifth Districl Supervisor Ronald Caspers
in moving for denial of lhe higher sign.
"Three wrongs do not make a right. 1
hope Jaws will require lowering all 1lgns
soon."
Casptrs said he re('{lgnJzed Edwarm•
problem Inasmuch a11 the restaurant waa
located in a depre!!ed a r ea
topographically but that environment
must be the primary con11id1ration.
View Blo~ker OK
Furnace S park,s
Ckniente Blaze ----.. ___ ·---~-
County Backs Dana Construction
An owntr'J right' to develop his prt'P
perty won out Wednesday over his
oe.Jghbor'a desire for• view.
Richard Root of Dana Point wa1 given
permWion by un1nlmous •clinn of coun-
ty 1iupervtsor1 to build an addiUon to his
apartment horn! between Seville Pl•ce
ind the Street of the Ruby Lantern , 47!1
north of S.n MarJno Place.
His neighbors vigorously protuted r-e
~·eek ago the vRri1utce he needed 10 en-
croach on th! front and rear yard stl·
b11cka to build the 1ddiUon.
"Don't ht 8cte"°'ie3 lo ecnloglcal
rape of Dana Polnt," warned r\l!ighbor
Don Beddoe, 31442 Street of the Blue
Lantern. He 1od otherl said their view of
lhe ocean would be blocked by Roos' con-
struction.
Supervi!lOr Ronald Casper1, whose
district lnclu<IN Oana Point, urged lhe
aclion Wednesday.
"Ocv~lopment or Oana Point was spot·
ty and haphazard ln lhe past. There were
man y vacant Iota ullowing view!! from
others nearby," Ca!lpera: explained .
"Now the boom sought in the twenties
fs here and the views 1tre being lost to
new construction. We wlU hsvt more pro-
bltms lilte this IOQn."
An elderly San Clemente couple
tumed the floor furnace on In their
home this mornln&. left f o r
doughnuts, then returned to find
the llving room abl1ie.
Fin Chief Merton W. Ha ckett
said painter's Larpaullns over the
furnace cau1hl flrt as Mr. and
Mrs. John 0. Fox were out.
Damage w11 confined to a uc-.
lion of the 1lvln1 room. The dollar
•mount, the chle! saJd. was about
l30().
The borne 111 ~ Avenlda
Magdalena la being repainted, the
chief nld.
Had the couple not returned
home at about 6:15 e.m. lbe fire
would "ave quickly spread to the
rest el the !>owe, Hacke« uld.
lht Grand J did not take place.
Butterfield had also said he would
Ofipital matter before the
mmission Tuesda y. HI!! djd
ly reference to the subject was
discussion of another matter when
a itioner started to read from the arti·
cle uoting Butterfield on the "pooii" ad·
vi the commission had received.''
e commission ch.airman halted the
re ding abruptly with, "the wording o(
th t .arLicle was very unfortunate.''
The use permit for the hospitaJ was
granted by unanimous action of four
commissione rs present May 4. Previously
the commission had deadlocked 2·2 on the
i!!Ue.
Commissioners Arnold Forde of the
Fiflh District who was absent on a trip lo
Europe: at !he time was alleged to have a
conflict of interest in the hospital
question because he was financially in-
terested in the Mission Community
Hospi tal in the sa me area .
a anc
Down the
Mission
Trail
Twelve Students
Named to Group
MISSION VIE.JO -Twelve ~1ission
Viejo High Schoo! students ha ve been
selected to become members ol the
Society of Outstanding Amer ican High
School Student!.
They are Richard Lawson Gillenwaters,
John Robert Nimmo, Denise Ann Benton,
Penny Schaeffer. Deborah Lee Wasbln.
Debora Sue Ma tson . Donna LyM Con·
n11Uy, Bruce Merrill LeClatr. Kathy
Eli.ubetb McGowan, Hans Gilbert Pun·
can, Daniel James Neufeld and Judy Ann
Jacobson. . . Studen'5 selecled for the honor will
have a chance to earn renewable $1.000
college scholarships. They are selected
for their academic achievement and civic
resp:insibllity.
• Student ~lemorlal
MISS IO N VIEJO Plans for
establishing a memorial for students who
have died while members of the student
body of Mission Viejo High School have
been announ ced by the. Student Council.
Anyone wishing to donate fund! for the
project may send contributions t.o the
Memorial Fund, AsSQCiated Student
Body. Misi.ion Viejo High School. La Paz
and Chrisanta, Mission Viejo, 92575.
• Talent for 4th
CAPISTRA NO HIGHLANDS -Beauty
contestants. band members and boo!h
sponsors are being sought by tho
Cap i.stra no Highla nds H ome o w n er s
Association for their Fourth of July ac·
tivities.
Contestants In the Miss Capistrano
Highlands end Little Mi~ C;ipo contests
are needed at!i art people who can play
mu!!ical instrumenl!J for the parade.
Clubs or organizations wishing to sponsor
a food or game booth for the holiday ac-
tivit y which will be staged this year on
July 5 also are sought.
Information is available by calling Mrs.
Chuck Bennett, e.'JB.3~48 or Mrs. Richard
Buss, 831·24l6. Mrs? Marcella Creepnic:k
Is In charge of the beaufy contest.II, 83(1.-
1849.
La Christianita
Parade Has New
Float Division
A.ne.w~dlvi.slan_will \)j'~JO: the list _
of winners in this year's annual F'leat.a La
Chrl!tianlla Pairade -a traphy for the
best loca l, noncommercial noat.
Parl!lde Ch•lnnan Sam Schltger aaid
this week that the "Local flo1t
Sweepstakes" compl!titlon will be llmlted
to entries from San Clemente. Capistrano
Beach, Dena Point and San Juan
C.plstrano. ·
The new l!lwari! wll\ boolt to 130 the
tolal numbtr of troph.let which will bf:
given to winners in the 1nnu1l July 17
par1de -OM: Of the slate's largest.
The loc11.I sweepst•kea will be 1mong
the five top dlvlskml In the competition.
Entries wlll hive 'to be . registered by
June 30, Schleger 11ld.
Local .businessmen And residents will·
log to spon!M)T 1 trophy are 11Ull being
anught by the members of the Ch1mbe.r
ol Commtrea Women'• -DI v I al on.
~ix Shells
In Corona
Auto Found
From Wire Services
YUBA CfTY -An .automatic pistol has
been found on the Jack L. Sullivan ranch,
site of most or the graves of the 23 vic--
tims of a mass slaying. it was learned to-
day.
The pistol. a 9--milhmeter automa tic.
and 20 shells found with it were sent to
lilt state crime laboratory at Sacramento
for ballistics tests.
In court dOCtJments xporting the
charge against suspect Ju V. Corona.
the sheriff's offiCf! said i had found six
nine-milllmeter shells in his 1971 panel
truck.
Authorities investigating the grisly
crime nevtr have indicated that any of
!he victims died froJTl-bullet wounds . The
bodies discovered -a!ong lhe feather
River had been hacked and stabbed.
Aerial photographs taken with an In·
frared camera wete being processed lo
help officials determine whether there
are' more hodies buried in the area Cf the
crime. It was expected l-0 take tv.·o dl)'s
to process !he pholographs.
She riff Roy D. Whiteaker. who says he
is convinced mor e bodies wl!I be found.
was forced to wilhdraw his cre~·s after
ihev started diggin,ll: al one "indent.ation ''
!imi1ar to those that have turned out to
be crude graves.
The crews found the ground still too
wj:t.
So far, 2.1 lransienls. far m worke r& and
rfrifters have been found hacked and
stabbed to death In crude graves in
orchards along the Feather River.
,Juan V. Corona, 37. a ~1exican bom
farm lalmr contractor with a poor com·
mand of English, Wll!I formally arraigned
in Just ice Court Wednesday nn tO counts
of murder -Ute 10 h<ldies exhumed by
the time he was firs t taken to court one
v.·eek: hefore.
''I'd like to get it over .and be done with
it." Whiteaker said as he discussed the
con tinuing sea rch ror grave.site s. "f
believe there are some bodies out there
that will never be found."
The sheriff ls using infr ared aerial
photography oC the orchards in an e(fort
to spot areas where the soil has been
disturbed. Results should be available
Friday.
Another potential ·grave.site still is
under water and can't be probed until ll
drie:s, the sheriff said.
O~aage <:out
Weather
-nie clouds-wlll roll by early on
Friday, followed by fa ir skiea and
temperatures ranging from 68 de-
gree11 along the shoreline to 74
further inland.
INSIDE TODi\ Y
Hf'!rofn addict who rUIU up to
15 bags o. da11 rit cost of 1150
leaves film 01 finol wornfng to
younua ters. Stor11. Pagt S.
l ff nit I Mlfrlltl l~ l C1Wfl,.l1 Y .,. .......... , .. ,,
C1tcc111,.. u, -t Miit~! '~""' 14 c1<1~1t11W u~ N111au1 ,._, ...
COl!llt \ U Otlllh CW•l1 t c,,., __ N f' lYhll ,..,,.,. 1•
0.lt~ Ntlktt I J-"l i1-U CH'tOr~•• I ilftll M1rll.it. 1'°11
1!t1l0tY! ,... ' TlllWbl411 II Sllltr!l lMllM ll·lt T~1t11" ll•lt
"1nlnt t 1 .. 11 W11thtr 4 ...,_te_ If WllMll'I M ... 11-U
AMI LIMtn U WtrNI fNw'I H
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f DAIL V PILOT SC
Joaquin Trustee Dispute·s Change Procedures
By PA~ELA HALLA.'IJ
Qol """ "'9Ur 'I"" llt"
It. r.utlne requeat fOr curriculum
changes al a school 1n the San Joaquin
Ell!mentary School District er.upted into a
diapute over procedure Wednesday.
Grati•n Bidart, chairman or the BG&rd
of 'l'ruatees, ch1rged the adminislration
V.'ilh "bringing things to the board at the
eleventh hour when plans are so rar along
that th• board ha s little choice but to ap·
prt1ve them."
North American,
Collins Finance
Agreement Set
A m1n1fi:ement agrttment under which
North American Rockwell Corporation
~·ould provide addilional financing for
Collins Radio Compa11y and in turn would
galn control of the Collins board t,•:as an·
nounced Wednesday by the chairmen of
the boards of directors of the lwo com·
panics.
L:nder the agreemenL which must yet
oe approved by both boards and by the
;;o!lins shareholders, North American
wrmld'purchase S.U million of a new Issue
of Colllns convertible prefttred stock and
P•ould have warrants to purehase an ad-
Jition&I $30 million of Collins common
1tock.
A price of SIB.fl() per share would be
!stabllshed for both types of stock .
As part of the plan. NAR would have
:he right to elect a majority on the
::Oll ins board of directors, throush Ill
1tock purch1se1.
A North American spokesman said the
:entative agreement probably wlll be
)resented lo the boards of !he two firms
'.<lr thtir approval within a month. 1
Dana Point Eyes
Outrigger Races
Members o( the Dana Point Chamber
1f Commerce have begun planning for
;pectacular Hawaiian <lulrigger races
,·hich wtll bf: included in lhe Dana Days
:elebralion later this summer.
The races. which will stretch from
·..aguna Beach to Dana Harbor, were the
:ubject of a recent 1eneral membership
neeting, whNe local residents interested
n formins an outrigger crew described
he tport and iho\.1-·ed a mo11ie.
The races are planned for Aug, I, \lo'llh a
ieparate event for an .all-woman team
1lanned.
The Dana Days will be held a day after
he formal dedicaUon of the entire harbor
:omplu, JWy :11.
History S~ciety
Sets First Meet
Tit& by several longtime resident.I
1nd a film Vi'ill be featured al lhe first
.pen meeting of lhe new Laguna Beach
listorical Society tonight I t 7:30 o'clock.
The group Wednesday received a finan·
·ial boost to Its new organltation when
he city council \'oted to allocate $3 ,000 ln
upport of planned cullural activit ie!>.
The meeting. open to the public, ~·ill be
1l"Jd at the Women 's Club , 288 St. Ann 's
lrivr. Speakers w!ll Include Genevieve
Janiels , Richa rd J ahraus. Glenn Ved~tr,
lea Wh ittles,y and lemporary chairman
tarry Jeffrty. Refreshments wHI be
er\'ed.
OIAHO.I COAIT
DAILY PILOT
OlllAMGll COAJ'( ,UIUIMll<f~ COMl"AH't
'ol>-rt N. W114
"'-'iMfll _,,,. PWI"""'
J •• ~ •· c .. 1..,
V\(tl """*""' .... _ ...............
'Tlt•••1 ic, •• 11
lli•"''' A. J,1,,.,lr.!11 ,,,.. ... irw .......
°'•ti .. H. t1ot ftl1~•"' P. Nill
,jl,UlllMO 111\ ..... \ng (41~
....... t.M.• Oflk•
2J? Fo111t A¥•fl111
M1i1i119 1.lclrtu: ... 0 . low &66, •1&i2 s.. c1 ...... o•fk•
lOS h•rtll El Ct111ht• ft11I, •1•12 -0-(: ... 11 ,t1oo\r m Wnt fl•f St<M
... ,.,..,..., 111c~1 ~ "'-' aou:~•rd
"""'"""" 1.-di! J117t f.o .,.,llY"d
"I'm \Ired of having thi• hap~n ," r;a1d
Bldart. "1 'm Urtd of pu tttna the cart
btfore lhe hor11."
Bldart crlllclaed lhe 1drntn11tr1Uon for
not brl111Jn1 thl.nj1 to the botrd whJla ln
the Ide• 111.tge.
Superintendent Ralph Gates e1pl1 ined
lhal a prograrn n1u1l be developed Lo
sorne extent so that it can be adequate ly
ex.pla ined When presented for board ap-
proval.
The proaram brought for approv11I
Wednesday w11 a currlcu\un1 change ;;i.t
l rYlnt Jnttrmtdlate School which wtll
•Uqw 1t\fiMll \t 11~1 t'No temestera tf
aclence In either u venlh or elahth aracie
and will allow them lo take forelan
111.nguage l!I an elective lnste11d of a re·
qulrement in the seventh grade.
The program also would prov ide .a few
new classes such as o r a I corn -
munications, home management and en-
\'ironmen!al science. ·
Dr. \\'illlam Stock!, A s s i ~t an t
Fast. Co1npany
Lobbyist at Top Secret Meet
BOSTON (UPI) -Former presidential press secretary Pierre Sallnter
said a Seattle buslne!!man accident.ally got into a mtel1ng ot the National ,
Security Council ln l9ftl, received a top-secret briefing on the Berlin crisis and
a gretting from President John F. Kennedy before he was discovered .
Botb the names end· the .sit.uatlon have been changed in Salinger's novel,
"'On Instruct.Ions of My Government ," which the forrner press secretary dis-
cusstd Wednesday at the convention of lhe Ameriran Book Sellers1 Associa·
Lion. But Salinger said the basis of th' Incident was true.
He said the unidentified businessman belong to lh e Air Force Nation-
al Security Advisory Council, a privale ad visory organization. and had co rne
to Washington to lobby for 1nore aeros pace approprlations. He arrlv@d late and
called the secrelary of the chairman or the Joint Chie fs of Staff, Gen. Curtis
E-~ • "'Re 1sked her v.·~re the meeting was and she ,;aid the Wh ite }louse."
Salln11er said. "Apparently she only hea rd National Sf':Curity Council. The man
said I'll never be able to 11el in therf': and she answertd. don·t worry. I'll gel
your name on lhe list."
Salinger said lhe businessman was met by presidential aides and secur·
ity officers and he got into lhf': meeti ng "just as th e lighL~ '\ent out and they
started to project lop secret slides and informali on on the Berlin crisis."
Tile man realized he was in the wro ng meeting "'hen he saw Le~fay,
the President, the head of the CIA and the secr,tary of state . Salinger sa id.
In fact. Kennedy walked by him at the end of the briefing. patted him on the
knee and said "Things are pretty tough today."
He wa1 discovered shortly after the President left. Officials aolved the
security breach. Salinger said . by requiring the man, a retired Air Force
colonel, to telephone \Vashington every 15 minut.f':.5 and tell officials ~·here he
V1!aS.
(The New York Times idenUlied the businessman as Elroy ?1-JcCev.', a
wealthy Se1ttle televlsJon eiec utlve who died last year).
Countian Among Three
Trunk Murder Victims
By ARTHUR R. VI NSEL
Of "'-0111\f ,Ii.I 111"
A mysterious mull lple murder cai;e in
"'hich .a La Habra man is one of three
victims -with pos1ibly more bodies to
be found -was unlold!n11 today in Loil
Angeles.
The principal su1pect. already jalled Jn
a !ep1rate rapt: and robbery rase, w11
scheduled for 1rratgnment al mid-morn·
ing 011 three counts of tlom icide.
Detective• ~·ere keeping • lhroud er
secrecy over how John P. Hendrl:., 35.
was JJnkecl to gunshot slaylngs of lwo
security guards and a rellred railway
clerk.
Vjctims -all sla in and stuffed into car
trunks end in one case a pickup truck bed
-.are Eugene Beal,r. 35, of 500 \\'.Olin-
da Ave., La Ha bra . Le land ¥.'ebb, 35, of
L-Os Angeles and Charles llayes. 71, or
Eagle Rock .
The Investigation was bf':ing handled by
homicid' deltcllvts el ihe LAPD'.o;
~ewton Division. who hinted additional
murder vic!l ms ma y bf: found.
Bealer, last se@n May 25, was found in
the trunk of Ills car """hictl wna parked In
Hendrix' driveway whtn pohce went to
the resideace \Yednesday afte r somehow
connecting him to !hr: case~.
Security gu.ard Webb, reported m1ss1ng
by his wiff': f\.ionday after fa iling to come
home from a dcpartmcnl ~!ore job !he
night before was also fou nd in a vehl cfe.
Webb had bf.'en shot twice. robbed and
laid oul Jn his pickup truc.k bed. In·
vestigator.o; said.
Concerned about her elderly h11~band
who vani-'"hed May 29. Hay@s' wife fileQ
a missing persons report and frlendS
later noUced !he couple's car parked near
U.S. Plane Crashes
MADRID (AP) -A U.S. Air Force
~t tanker p!a1e with five mtn aboard
crashed today near Guadalajara, north
of Mad rid. and lhere were no reports of
any survivors , officia ls at the Tnrrejon
Air Bast' reported. 'r}t@ KIJS was re-
turning to Torrejon. The cause of the
cra.o;h wa1 not kno\l\/Tl. •
thf': Los Angeles railroad yards.
Police aaid he had also been ahot twice
and robbed.
Questioned today about the poaslblllty
of mort 1rim dlacoverle1. a police
spokeaman said he knew of none so fir.
.. Northern Californis 23, Southern
Cahfornla 3." he remarked of the ar!m,
multiple murder acore GI tbe ))Ill week.
Parking Meter
Theft Suspects
Facing Hearing
Four per&0n1 accused ol cracking park-
ing meter1 in Southland communities to
the lune of SI00.000 before t.guna Beach
pol ice cr1ckf':d their carefully planned
operation were order~ Wednesda y to
face prtllmlnary hearing June I In Santa
Ana municipal court.
.ludge Paul ~1ast \l"i\1 preside over the
hParing set for t:uthrie Jones. 3~: his
,,·1fe. Bea trice J ones. 2t: both transient.o;
<ind Charles Leon Adams, 25. and \Villa
Dean Rotranlt\, 21; txith of Santa Ana.
1\1! are held v.·ithout bail.
Ad:ims ;ind -+.fiss Rottan;t l were ar·
rested at the ir apartmt11l t-1sy 3 ~hort!y
alter La i:;una off icers grabbed David
Sle1·e11 Perez, 19, and r..11chael John Di -
neen. 16, both of El Monte , a.ssertl•d ly in
thP Ari of breaking open meters on Cliff
Dri ve.
D in~en and Pere1. ha,•e agrtcrl lo I
testify for the prosecution Ln ret urn for
dismissal charges ol con1plra cy to tom-
mil grand the.It.
Laguna Be11ch polict letr:r extradited
,Jo~ from the Baker, Ore., jail cell
~·here he was awaiting courl ac1lon on
narcotics charges filed in that com-
munity, His wife was arrested 11 she got
nff a bus returning from Oregon and drug
charaes added to her dossier v.·hen il
allegedly "·as found thal she ~·a' car·
rying benzedrlne tablets and hashish ln
her purR.
Mission Viejo W orl{sl1ops
'
Offered-by .A-riist Group
A variety of worklhops will be offered
In July by the Minion Viejo Astoclalion
of Artl1ta and Craftamen.
P11nllnt. cl1yworkln«, knOttin& and
\l.'eartna aU will be-UUj;ht by quallfltd in·
1tructor.s.
Jack Taylor will teadl a clau ln clay
on Fridays atartint July I at Undl Vi1t1
School In ?1-U..lon Viejo.
Chi!dre:n 1-iO wl\I 1Uend from 1:30 Lo 3
-p.m. and p.iplls from 11 ye1r1 of 11e on
up •Ill attend {rom 9:30 to 11 :30 a.m.
The fet will be M f« art aseoc\ation
membe:ra ~nd $ Hl lor non member•.
Macramt f art1stlc kooltin&l and ..,,,ear·
ing wlll l)t Ltu11h1 by DH Smith and Fern
Ragan lot petJO nt'nine year1 and over.
11" clu1 ~·111 bt Tue.td1)1 and
Thursda ys fr om Ju1J 6 to July 15 from l
tu 3 p.m. In lhe Linda Vlst.a multlpurpo~e
room. The fee is $3 tor members and S8
for non members.
.Felt pictures and fabric: painlln11 will be
offered to 1tudtnt1 five. througtl tlaht
vears old on Tuesdays •nd Thursd.ays
from t to 3 p.m. from July 2() to July 29
ir. the Lind• YlJta multipurpose t(JOm.
The fee will be S2 for members and S4
for non members and all materials wnt
be supplied .
Clfl.'i!f'S in oil paintinjl; for atudent11 who t
kno"' ho~' lo dra"' also 1n11v be held If
lht>r e Is enough Interest. ·Prospective
i;tudtnt1 may cllJl Carolyn Zubris, &10-
~79 for lnform llllon.
For lnlorm•llon on reglslr1Uon c1!J
Doris Swanson. prt~ld~nt, 837-3143.
'
Superintendfnt for lnalruction , told the
boartS that lbt chanae1 were merely
modlflc11lon1 and wouldn't make a big
difference.
"But you need our approval tonight sa
!hat you cnn regl!ltr children before the
end ot srhool," .11ald Bldart.
.. K1d1i wlll have to be registered
;i nyway if we give our approval or not ,"
said Trustee Philip Bradfield.
The board voted lo approve the request
for the curriculum changes, bill on the
!>Uggcst1on of 1'ru!>lee Robert D11n1eron
a1ked the admlnlstrallon 10 hold a
work!llop on some ol ttte elementa Jn lht
new pr ogram such as co mlng!lng of
seventh and eighth graders.
The curriculun1 changes are parl of a
new lnond tu 1nake 1nter n1cdlate school a
n1ore c:ontiguuus two-year program, ac-
l:Ording lo Pnuc1pu l John De!Mona co.
'fo do this a child rnay t:;ive lhc san1 c
hon1croon1 teacher for two year~. more
teC1n1 reaching \Vil! l<ike place . and ftmre
individ ualized i;c hed uhng Will be. done so
thal son1e sl.'vcnth :ind eight h graderi
will be ill the 'ame cl11ae! (f worklnt •1
the ta.me level.
"You should have come to us ~·it tl
these ideas lirst before progran1s were
developed," said Bidart. "You probably
11o·ouldn 't have told us about these new ap• )
pm:iches if we hadn't brought 21 !1 th i!t '-
out."
LJeli\f onatu agreed to go into each facet
of t11e program in the proposed work~hop
before continuing with plans for· Sep-
len)ber,
Zoning Change Advised
Laguna .Council111 e1t I nit.iate Appeals Procedure
Controversy over an aut o m o b i I e
storage lot in Laguna Canyon has in -
spired lhe Laguna Beach City Councl\ tG
ini tiate a chAnge in its appeals procedure
and ma y br ing about a zoning cha nge.
Pla nning Direc!or \Vaync r.foody ad-
vised the council this week thn t ex isting
ordinances do not provide for ap))(>al o[
plan ning co1nn1iss ion a pproval o[ a sit e
jllan. ...
The only action the cou11cil could ta ke ,
Mood y aaid, woufd be lo a!k !he com-
ml!slon to reconsider. j f it felt an im-
prope r action had been taken.
r>.1ost comm unities, he no ted , provide
for appt>a l to the Ci1y Council in si!e plan
disagreements and he recon1mended an
appropriatf• amend n1enl lo th e zon ing
ordinance to permit this. The cowttil
voted unanimously to instruct the plan-
ning commission lo start the ameldmenl
procedure .
The action of lhc c.-ouncil. howe\'er. will
no\ affect 1he case th11t set off the con·
tr ove rsy -1nstallaLlon of an 11uto_..storage
lol for Phillips Buick a t. 113 Canyon Acres
Dnrc.
Re:i;1Uent. Andrew \V ing hil d ~lled the
attent1u11 of thl' city lo thr fact that JlB\'-
111g v:as be ing ctonf> on the site and a .!ltOp
work order \\'8s issued whc11 i! developed
no p('rmt!5 h.!d been !aken oot.
Subsequently, a len1porary use perm it
was issued and the site plan approved by
!he com mission . bul. acCQrdu1g to Moody,
lhc applicant still has not compli ed 1-1·1th
requirernent s of the plan re,·1ew. ilP·
parently pt>ud1ng counci l revie w or The
matter.
In add1t100 to rccomrne nding 1nitiatiori
Clemente Council Ol{ay s
Community Develop1ne11t
A 296-unlt planned community develop-
ment calculated to replace the !Altering
Harbor Hill s Coif Course won its linal air
proval Wednesday from San Clemente
City Councilmen.
The lawmakers agreed with a private
traffic consullant'a recommendation on
strttt widths In the private development
and resolved an Issue which left planning
commissioners in a stalemate last week .
Unlike anoUifT" flrm·a preceding plan
for • mobile home park, thf': planned
C"Ommunlty application by La Quin\.e.
Styleline Development OJ. of Newport
Beach dre"' no opposition from 1ur·
roundlng neighborhoods . The Townhouse
'llm lta will be from 1,000 to 1.400 square
Jtet.
Plan1 several months 21go to replace
the links wJth a mobile home park quick·
ly gre"' Into a week!-Jong contro\'ersy
and eventu.al city denial.
A email pitch-and-putt golf cours' will
replac~ the larger llnks ""'hen the housing
de\·elopn1enl ls com plete d. The exis ting
l'OUrse clubhouse will be come the com-
n1unity':; 1nec1 1np, an<r .µ-ec rl'fl tion hall
;1fter IPrnµur<iry use as a s:iles olfii.:e. said
spokes1ne11 for the aµpl icanl \\lediiesday.
Pl :i nning cummiss1oners trens1nitted
the issue to the counr1l :ifter a 2-2
cJradlol.'k on tbr 1na1ter of width of a
street 10 be knuY• as Aven ida l:i Cuenla.
l'>evt•lop1ncnt µroposals ~·ere for nar-
row roadways v.·~ would d1scoura.ge
on-street µark 1ng a11o'ay Iro1n llpec1a l
gueyt area6.
A v.·ider 1nain thoroughfare lhrough the
11roject. develope rs 11rsued. v;ould conflict
~·1th recommendations from the ~~edereJ
Housing Adn1inistratlori. and also woWd I
destroy the plans ror th@ project.
Aft er niore than hour"s stud,v Wed-
nesday, couneilmen agreed In a 4-1 vole.
Council men Thomas O'Kee!e, also a
sl<HHH·h foe of the mobilr hon1e p11rk,
c<ist the only dissenting vote.
Superb Luxury
in Pure Wool Pile
byKarastan
Kara1tan calls tliis carpet Spectecular. So will you wlien you
SM and feel the magnificent luxury of it1 thick, deep pure wool
p11e. lt'1 •m•rlng price of just $10.9.5 a squtr• yerd i1 due to
• mejor bre•kthrou9h In wool technology. K•ra1tan gives
••th fiber• specl•I bulking treetm•nf 10 the yarn Is "fatter,"
•nd more r••llient. A truly r1mark1bl1 valua,
Th• 17 colors ar1 s1>41ctacular too.
ul an appeals procedure. Planning Direc·
1or ~ioody said he agreed that th•
storage lot use. though permitted in the
zone. i.s not desirable in the .area which is
:1 111ajor entrance lo Laguna w11s sug-
g('sted · higl1 priority" to consider
anu~nding ur ch;i nging lhe zunu1g.
Le w Allison . wh o said he so!d the pro-
perty. wh i('h he had owned since !946, lo
Plullips, commented, ··rve all1ays heard
they wanted to 111ove th e businesses out
in the can~·on. It 's zoned lor ii. \\'hy all
1h1' fuss'"
\\'ilh rl.'gard lo a requirement for
landscilping on the property adjacent to
the flood control ditrh. Allison pointed out
lhat the main canyon sewer runs unde r
that area and advised cau tion in digging
for planting.
Councilman Edward Lorr added. •·ror
a long time citizens ha1·e been disturbed
by having aut o :Jgencies dispersed
through the community. One of the most
h1gical places for an aulo agency is out in
the canyon. av.·ay from the Cit.\'. Pt<lple
concerned with presrrving the village al·
1nosphcre shoul d cooperate 1n any crlort
like this.··
"'The problem," said fl.1ayor Richard
c;o!dberg. "ig that everyone wa nl.s his
own part of to\vn to retain the village a l-
1nos phcre. l hope i\1r .. '-.·loody will be able
to come up \l'Jlh suitable zorling to please
e1·cryone. ··
A wo1nan \vho identified hersrlf as a
longtime canyon resident concluded the
discussion by announcing. "l"m sick of
ht1 Ving to come down herl' and f\i;:ht all
the llme to keep commercial ent erprises
out of the Canyon."
Vio lin Breaks Mark
LONDON lAl't -A London dealer,
.\Vilham Hill & Sons. today 1u1npcd the
world record auction price for a viohn
11rarly lour tirncs. paying $2(Jl .600 for the
Lady Blunt S1 rad11•arius at Sotheby's.
The previou~ record 11•as $~2.800, sel <L t
Sotheby~ in 1968. ·rhe 250 year old Lady
Blunt was sold by Sam Bloomfield of
California.
•
•
··~~ •~:r ,,
. -
IF YOU CAS T
COME IN-
CALL
646-0275
for a.n t xpert
"""' contult1nt
v.•ho v.·1ll
comt to
your hpn\,.
v.1th s&.inpl•s
""hhoul 11ny
flblltallon
lo you!
Yo11 r favorit e
i11ltrlor dc11g11er
1"111 be happv
10 as.1Ut uou
H.J.GAR~EIT fURNl11JRE
PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNER
-TRY OUI REVOLVING CHAIGf-
o,lfl Mott., Thurs. I Fri. lvn.
121S HARBOR BLVD.
COST A MESA, CALIF.
646-0275
•
l
·--
.. Thu"diy, J11nt 3, 1971 DAIL y PILOT I IS
Gavels Change Hands as Organizati,ons End ('lub Year
lns1.allalion ceremonies are
being staged up and down the coast. with variety keynoting
thr events and diversity the
groups.
Leek and Well Pe~
Top awards for~ year
went to Mrs. Gary Shepard,
outgoing presidenl; Jack
Brandt, Sallmann, Bernard
Easter Society Mahoney""' Thom.,.
The reorganized C-Ouncil of Laguna W omen
the Leagues of the Easter Seal Miss Faye Bentson will
Society will elect officers from iserve a seeond tenn as pres·
four area groups. League ident of the Woman's Club of
name11, designating flowers, Laguna Beach. Rei;eiving of-
have been changed to Easler fic ial duties during a luncheon
Lily, Fleu r de Lis, Loo Lirios installaticm were the Mmes.
and Las Flores de! t..1ar. Norman Alexander, Thrift C.
Lily League Hanks , Kim Ellis. William
Randolph, J. E. Luckenbill,
St. Jude
Mrs. Edward Tagge will
serve as .president of D.imas
de C<lridad tor the coming
year. assisted by lhe Mmes.
Reuben P. HughQ, William
Cummings. J. R. Wilhelmsen,
Constantine Kunelis, Phillip
Webb. J\1ary' Kretsctunar and
James Gormley.
Du ring in s ta 11 at ion
ceremon ies, a check f o r
HB Bra nch
Mayor George J\fcCracken
of Huntington Beach will ad-
dresl mffllbers of the Hun-
t:,;~on Beach Branch of the
American AssociaUon o f
University Women on the
future (){ the ir city during an
instaJlalion lun<:heon.
Taking over leadership of
the group will be Mrs. Robert
llorner, .usisted by the Mmes.
David Carlberg, Richard
McGrath, Michael Lotocky,
David Kurth, Freel. Davenport
and Calvin ~im.
Delta Gammas
Members of the Santa Ana.
Newpo rt Harbor Cha pter of
:Free Estimates
$12,000, proceeds from the JOth RE UPHOLSTER annual Ba l Masque, wm be •
p:cscntcd to Si~er Jan~ Fran-Co1nplete -Selectlo1a of
cis of St. Jude s Hospital by Fabrlc.r ittcl1rdi11g:
Vi'ith the Sweet Smell of Sue-Lela Finklea and H arr y
cess, Mrs. Laurenti li1arsters Hansen. e Qvcillty Worlu11a • .i.1,
became president of the Additional assistants arc the STARS e RH10Hb!. l'rkn
Mm. Fred Kay. Linens and Velvets
Easter Lily League of the r.1me.s. Warren Slambaugh, Svd11•v o,,,.,. ;, on• of th• C.ZYKOSKI
Easter Seal Sociely. Assisting Louis Underwood, Ed i l h workf'1 g r••f e1frolo9eri. Hi1 , 1831 NEWPORT BLVD.
Delta Gamma Alumnae wiU Afm~. Gordon Niedringhaus,
change the crew as Mrs. Carl Ertwine, George
Richard Jimenez Lakes over as Ochsner, John Everett and
Gauthier, John Coyne, Cart
Schwartz, Robert Scholler and
Stan Haler.
president. Norman Canfield accepted or-11p;;;;;;;;;...;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ During a ceremooy con-ficlal posts.
ducted jointly wit h the Hun-Also on the board are the
tingion Beach Chapter, the Mmes. David Snow, Jean , ,r====================;!
DTERY
BIG
3 DAY SALE!
THURS.·'fll.-SAT.
WOMENS DRESS SHOES
and SANDALS
SCIENTIFIC?
• • • "' 1111 -ltlry, I (lli!Mlal ....
Kl .. llflc -· M Ill' COUNT" TAIE
STITCH CONT•ST. tl9eM'l ...c:-.rt.
1Y 11•• 1n)'ffe thtl "ito•IM t•-.:~."
'"'~ .. 1111 ;.., covld win, ""' f!l~I
,.,.,. CMld Wlft yn • 11ilf.Sf l#tUI
lltOTHElt KNITTINlt MACHINE,
fllHlulitul, frMt
The
KNIT WIT
•
officers are the ,._1 me s. Saunders George Thompson, column i1 one of the DAILY CSY·l<OS-l<EYI COSTA MESA (N .. r N1.o.r1 225 E. 17th ST. -COSTA ~ESA
S<lut~ CM1I P'la11
LOW•Jt MALL
Cnl• M ....
.HS-Zllll 548·2778 . Thomas Raffello, Carl Ko)). ~1arie Mi'iller and Miss Laura PILOTS g r••• feitu•••· ~Phone 642·1454 ~Jr!~ • IANKAMEJttCAlllD • • MAsrE• <HA•ot: •
bins, Ed w a rd Casselman , ~·~l~ane~U~a~. __::___::_:.___:.____:____:_:~'===:=s:======~~~~~~·~"'~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~_..~........,~-~~Jb==~~~;;'.;:::;~~=,,:,:;~~~::;,,~===~=========~ 'Varren Rey nolds and llobert-
Sachs.
The group present~ a $3.000
cheek to the Rehahililalion
Center .
Rehabilitation ----The second a n n u a l in-
stallation of !he Organization
for Reha bilitalion Through
Training (ORT), Orange Coun-
ty We.st Chapter, marked Mrs.
Harvey Singer as president.
Comp>eting the-"bo.!rd are the
Mmes. Stan Corbat. Sam
Kaplan, Don Snow, J ack Kent .
Herbert Segaloff, Da vid
Unterman, Dan M a r c h ,
Seymour Kolsin, David J ay
and Marvi n Adler.
If, . '
El Camino
The key to friendship will
open the door for t.1rs. Alfred
Mat.a, president of El Camino
Real Woman's Club. During a
Sat.ire on Fashion luncheon .
,._1rs. Mata wclcom~ boa rd
members the Mmes. Arthur
Sewell, George Campbe l I ,
Russell Walker, Robert
McMasters. John Renfro, Glen
(ierwood, G. R. Salmen and
..narry Pell.
Appointed officers arc the
A1mcs. J. Herbert Rishen-
berger, Seymour Nult, Mary
Lou Alvarado. Hugh Scallon,
Edward Kopp and Ed ward
Russell.
Theater Guil d
~1embers C!f the Children's
1'heater Guild of Newport
Harbor, appropriately dressed
in decorat ~d chapeaux. have
taken their hats off to new
president Mrs. David V. Skill~
ing. elected to a second term.
Also receiving a .. heady"
welcome are new officers. the
Mmes. Freel Ellis, John Kerr,
Ralph Tandowsky, Ralph f
Holden, James Ayne.o;, Robert
Wolfe, W i 11 i am Stainforth,
Newton Wa yne. Fr a n k I in J,
Good enough, William f
Davidson, Richard J ordan an d
Reginald Bennett.
Mrs . Jaycees
Huntington Beach Jaycees
jGined the Mrs. Jaycees as
Mrs. Lawrence Sallmann took
over cl is t a fr presidential
duties. Rounding out the board
are the Mme~. 1-1 a r o Id
Thomas. Bob \\"alker, Gary
October
Date Set
Mr. and ~trs \V illia1n E .
Rogers have announred the
rnga,1;cmen1 of thrir d::iugh1cr
'rheresa Ann Hogcrs lo
Richard l!orvath. a!/ of J·lun-
llngton Beach.
Her fiance is the son of !li1rs.
Lillian Horvflth, ;:ilso of Hun-
lington De <1ch, and the late ,._lr.
Al Horvath.
Miss Rogers is a graduate of
Fountain Valley High School
and attended Orange Coast t~
and Gcllden West colleges. The ,
benedkt-elect graduated from ,;.
Gardena High School. Gardena ~ • ·
and is serving in the Coast 1 "
N ' Guard. He is.slalioned In ew :·;-
York City.
An Oct. 8 wedding in St.
Bonaventure Catholic Church,
lfuntington Beach is planned. --------
HAND NAME IRAS .••
Th•• IS a dlff..-ence l
Col!M 111 -bo fttt.d
•lld KNOW Ht. d!ff.,..11e•
A LADY MA~LENl e GOSSARD
• 'f'ASSARmI
e 'f'INUS e JIZAllL e YOUTHCRAJT
CHAIM,IT
AND NOW .,.
LO'f'·I ·
... , < ............ " .. .,..,. ("""''
r
i
;
i '
'
OrMINlh Cerwtl<trtJ
2111. JM Sr.
j,a. .......... f"
AMER I CA'S LARG EST FAMILY C LOTHING CHAIN
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-6-41·54JI COSTA. MESA-1601 NEWPORT BlYO. AT 16111 e GARDEN G~OYE-12372 GARDEH GROVE BLVD. OPEN SUNDAY 11 -5 ' '
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New Legal Fields OVER THE COUNTER
lt•••...,ltM•• lllil ...... t ltr 't•'-1 ... i •I •,,,_.l ..... lllly I A.M. Mlft NASO
rtlrM M Ml llOC . Afl U tr -fllWjl, l!M .... Wll tr (Omm 11'-"
NASO Llttlng1 for Wednesdey June 2, 1971
Beckon Graduates
\
lly 6VLVIA PORTER
A1 the commencement 71
period begins It has suddenly
atruck me that not one ol lhe
brllllant young 1.aw graduates
1 know has gone into a lari;ie
establishment law firm or
JOUJed his father in prac11c1 ng
in th& traditional fields of cor
porate cr1m1nal liabzlity tax
family lnternatlonal other
fam1/lar forms of Jaw
Every one has turned a
friendly but firm back on his
fathers prar!Jce or on olher
establishment lures and in
ete.ad Is probing tht new areas
of consumer I a " en
v1ronmental law povert y Jaw
etc And v.h1le adm1tte<l!y
these youngsters are unusually
bright they are far from the
exceptions
They are In fac t becoming
typical of a 11gn\ficant seg
ment of young Jaw school
gradual.es leadin g US law nlo
a vast explosively important
expen&ioo Coosumu o r
pub!Jc interest law -under
which consumers b a n d
to1elher 1n cla ss action suits
to fig ht unscru pulous
businessmen -1s simply one
illustration of the broadening
Here are seve ral other new
areas
Nl!'H VOlllC (II.Pl Ctll TK
-Tllo '° aw "' ti ~I • C/;
t I Htt .a c!rl'G1
1
lhl!! specialty !!hould be In N1 Jc'l•I ~.tur , ,, c1oc N~
moW'!tlng demand 0111 .. , """ .... ~:~r.~~ c
The (leld involves such ques. r~:~,,c:t',M'. I~~~: l:~~ L~
lions as offshore ttrr1lor1a[ • 1roc~• Chine• A
h 1111~ t nd 1 ~11 Cht O boundaries and v. 1ch nations h ••noP • , s c111m LI~
have which rights to explore ': ,~p •r l:~ fl~~~::: L",
and exploit ocean resources Ii• 1 NC l ,,. l H'I Ch a "' M~ 8•> ll U'* Ch Ion rang111g from fi~ to oll ~11aw Bo~ ~ • '>II Ch• 111 u va e ~. 11 n ~ c~• 1s pl
Vt N Bn~ II , Jlh Cltrn M~ POVERTY LAW Today '"'"••~c• c , .. 1.11
h 000 I Fl<llln L! l ll ( tnUI t ere ere some 2 awye.rs ,,.utt,., c , • Mt 'tl'ork ing 1n about 8 5 O II.At Ct> s • ~ 1 C •u•ne •F'A P S" IS •'-C l ~tn ot
neighborhood law 0 fr Ice .s : Vs ·~c 1 ;~ ''°""" Cl
throilghoul lhe US primarily AVM Cp 10 •~ ~:· .. F'd Ab• 11<1 1 1\liCom C 1n big city slums Their case A u1h.. 11i. 114 com 51<
I d Admo 11> 2~ (om Gt• JflC U e Addl1n W IJ'-' Comw Pt Prosecuting slum landlords Ad• i:to• , s •c om ,.,. A It ~ • 11 , 11 l (mo! (1'1 who refuse to repair furnaces A• nd 'lo. J • cmo 1n•1
f A 1>tt Mo J'-Jtl (mp! l ee staircases ire escapes etc Ai.. • 1• 11 ~com u
Whl C V Ol ! h l!h Aco 1c 6 1 I Con ,t P c., I ae ea OTA on Ltl St SI (<>fl II<><~
building codes and which posl' A <l•n E• i • H'• Con on A co Llll!I 6 •11,Co on(o serious aC'CJdenl hazards to A roct< 1 • J co P s
b Id Ao Bt• S • 6 1 Co•m ,.,
Ul 1ng Occupants /l. d l:nul 10 ~ o ~ C aw Co
R I b l /l.vnB&<:lO!GCou Co eprc.scn1ng SU (>O\er y /I.OP cm i, 1 cu1 II••
families 1n cases 1n which !~r .. "~ ... l . :~~~" c~~11
welfare or Social Security Am eu1,. u" u O•n• ab
b AEI l ib ' IV.O•n • M eneflts are arbitrarily cut Am E•P l , n" 011• CP
If Am Fn l ,.l ,,.011 01111 fl /l. ~ n LS H"' '~ Ot • C.tn
Defending Innocent debtors :::: ~u .;I s 9.: S~~g: : nP~ll
agfl1n sl a '"de range of illegal :m M~~ ~: ~l~ ~~. g:~ ~ F<>n or unconscionable pract.ices AIT' w, d 10 10-. O•Lv• c.
Anwd.\0;e ,.. ~"" " 1-Iandhng separalioru and ... ~~u1 1 ,,\lo •• cwt< n "'11
d f h t t An••" " la\ 10 ,o~n o 1vorces or t ose oo poor o ., cs "" .._ 6 • 0, c8 .. r
legalize domestic estrange A <1 M•v 11 • J 10• n o Ario.Moil" Ill\ ~ 1 Oewe> E ment A kV G ll•IJ1>0•mC•
C A nt v n 11' 1'io 0 11& '" ome to think of it what ., aw 11 JC lO o , on
l II ki t h A •d• n"" JOO •< Inc m rea y v.a ng up o 1S I at "-'P•n s1 41, •, o ~n c u
many of our most brllhant !~ c~. ·~: :t .. •: &,oc~ • LJ
1mag1nat1ve and com Aulo !Jc.I '"-5,ao... Jon• 91 <I Al S"" 4 O<>~e 0 8 passionate young lawyer! are 1111 Pn1c 1" 1111 Dun~" o
ENVIR0"1ENTA' I.All k I ll•n• ~v 11' 11 Oup ,p '~" ._, Y.OT 1ng On y for Americans llo.•rn At 2)l.'o 1-A\ Ou on
Thl! is a held being offered at who never be fore have had :: .. ;• } s':: ~~ ~.~~·;~
the graduate level by a even two-bit help laum s1v. u EM n n llt• ' Mk 1t"lo 20\.\ E on ~~b number of maJOr un1vers1!Jes 11 .. ch"' Educ• sv
for th ere Is , g'ow1ng ten B ..... " ""' u ~ E Po• e
'
8'"3.i'.:::J5,,, .... ., • .,. ....
1
llt \ Ii• 51..., SI..., En• !. dency on the pa rt of citizens• e :A "'Ef ••-1111 L•b .a11o 411'1 E ae B' llbb Mr •~ f"!if'~c N~ct
groups atale al lo r n e y w llS B UP• w iJv. '"' E""1 m t t 8 d !o" •1~ 11>,j; f. •<. Miid generals Offi ce! and the a ree Bl c~ l"' l'4o f. • C~
fed eral government to attack ::.~,li!:i 3:~ l~ ~~P:yod
through Jeaa J channels maier Boo1 Ali H~ 6 1 En• e¥ 11. '> 1101 C•~ •·~ o Entwlll
ll lt C• 1.'t .. ll'~UY 0 1 polluters and violators of en Chatter • •d•" 1'4 • !Poco '"
v1ronmenlal lav.s 11 1n1o:1 •~ ' E " TK
E n v 1 r on me n l oriented : ~"'sc:. T;04 1~:;t ~=.,c~~o
I b I d Bl~ I• 10\,~l'tb Ctr awyers are o v1ous y 1n e lluckt> M ""' u1.1o l'•b T•k
mand for this purpose as well •c-~--,··--~ -----... ,.._"'"""'~ Bvc:k~Y• 1 l "'"" ad1 t ..--._,... __ Bunni n Ft r n9
a s to draw up en\ 1ronmental BY " s m 'l '•""" nd 1v NE\V YORK 1 UPI) -About c~ w~v 1 ~1 1114 ",... o • protection le g1slat1on al all th t l Comb N ''° 71'1 " n1rhl
levels of government e mos op 11nist1c projection c1nn M 1 1 1 1 • F'• 11011 at the moment IS that in Connon II 1 1 1 ' "" Genlf f 1rrr1d ~ 1~ D>it F 1 P M t
HEALTH ADVOCACY In
thi1 1pec1alt) lav.yers work
with community he a I t h
centers and other health
facilllies to track down and
prosecute violators of health
codes unscrupu\o\18 landlords
and others l'ho through
neg:llgence undermine the
peoples health Their targets
are all Y.ho contribute to Jn
fant mort.ah.ty .and Il l health
generally in our ghel
to! impove 1shed ural areas
Indian reservations etc
SPACE LAW Of course
thls area of !he I e g a I
landscape Is still mln1scu!e
But It deols wzth a ch.1.'iler of
£ascinallng new issues rang
mg from who owns and who
bas l'hrch rights to the
outer reaches of space no'v
be.u1g so extensively explored
It also tackles such tan
tali.ting questions a.o; \1 ho has
which legal righls and "ho
sues v. hom 1n th e event of the
celestial colt1s1on of satel!lles
OT of other exotic aerospace
hard\\ are
OCEA N LA" This ! s
another sparse\v populaled
legal spec1 alt\ bu! in 111cw oi
the fa cl that the oceans l'O\Cr
more than 70 perrent of the
earth Jt s an important one
and the lawyers who go into
IF A NEW MEDICINE
COULD TALK
'
1ty TERRY GRANT I Ph
'When l "e1 discovered
by a rl'se&.rch 1c1eotl1t l
realty cauR<I. a lot 1 r e:i1cite menL Everybody ln the !a
borat.ory v. a s overJoyrl!
when J shoY.l'CI \\hBl I co 1ld
do qalnst d.l&ea111 Of coune
they checked me out pretty c:arttully to IX' 1ure I wain t a nuke I hnd to grove my.
self over and over
'ThPn when they were
IUl"t or me I wu packaged
up nlct!ly 11nc1 lhey Intro
duced me to al I the doctoni They musl h8ve been Im
prea1«1 loo hecaut• they
uked the th11rmaci.&t to 1et
mt1 t~ thrtt paltcnlS I know
I had ~l lP.r enjoy my popu
larlty for pretty IOOn n~r
mtcticlnM \\ill bcr &nbb1n.J
the headlines.:·
YO U IJP. YOI :lt DOCTOR
CAN PIJO~°E t.:S "1wn )'OU
nHd a &-lt~•'7 \.\• wl ll 6e
livf!r promptly wU"""•l ~•·
lra c:Mrrl' A t7"3l many
ptople rl'>ly ..,., "' r ,,,. thoetr httlttt Ml"di w ... ___ ,com41
requntt f« d.41"1')' MTVk:il
and chlitp aec.out1U.
,Alk LIDO PHAaMACY
151 H.,..tfW .... N..,_, ~ ...,.., ..
,,.. Detty.,.,
•
ves tment planning s h o u 1 d ~:: r-... :,• ':~ ':,,.. ~ :~' ~" allow for interest rates ap C•~ n ., r Jtl. m "' wnl'
prox1ma t1ng present levels for
the remainder of the year •
v. E Hutton and Co says
The company c;ays the money
market is mu ch more
volatile and emo11onal then
In !he past and is affecting the
stot'k market Thu.s for the
present be Jess aggressive
as related lo making m
vestment dec1s1ons 1n the
stock markel until the dust
settles llutton advises
The recent upl'ard trend 1n
lnleles~ rates Neuwi rth
Management end Research
Corp says-has ca u se d
considerable l n \ e s tor ap
prchension since an excess ive.
price for mone \ cou d read ly
abort l1 e economic recoverv
v.hile al"o result ing in \o\'.er
pr.ice earnings rallos O\eral!
The fir m dO('c; not f':trpeC'I an
'significant rebound until the.
domestic monetary picture
brightens despite t h c
markets oversold cond111on
The rebounrl in 1 he bond
yl~lds IS a major fot<'lor a f
fectui.g the •tork m;irkcl I
lh1s timr thl' A r g u s
Research Corp be\1c\ c" 1 he
company "ii s the earn r gs
yield on the Standard anct
Poo r s industrials 1s a! an all
tune low re.lative to the h gh
quality ne\v corporate bonds
Even af1er allowan ce ii
made for a s1gn1hcant r1~e 1n
corporate prcfLls the rat o 1~
far lower th"n previous ly ex
penenced Argus says
The market is not acting
badly • according to E F'
llutlon and Co nie firm says
with 1welling dried up and the
urge to buy falling off the fa ct
that considerable p r 1 c e
erosion has not occurred
may be constructive lfut
ton also notes that many in
d1v1du al Issues have d1spl.ayed
M:!ect1ve 6trength
1st Hu ghes
Models Go
To Air Force
Oil Exploring
Progra1n Ready
LCS ANGEi ES IBW)
M~Culloch 011 Corp and JDS
011 Program~ Inc a wholl y
nv.:ned subs1d1ary or In vestors
01verslf!ed Services (lDSl
announced !hat appro:<1mate\y
two thirds of the. $30 m1!hon 011
and gas exploration )x;_ogram
re111st ered for 1971 h~ bfi!n
aubscrlbed
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Thu!·sday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List ..... "'' , _______________ .,
11111..1 Kftl'I ltw Cll~ ~ Steel!: Leaden
• Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
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TAKE THE
NEWS QUIZ
We Oare You ...
Every Seturdoy
-
•
. • •
J
•
•
Ja DA.IL Y Pl LOT TI1ursday. Jun, 3, 1971
Anaheim Center Show
Sammy Davis Jr. Top ·Entertainer
'Lenny'
Impact
B1·utal By STEVE UHLER
J'l'or !ho.st of you who didn't
know Sarnmy Davis Jr. gave a
concert here Sunday at the
Anaheirn~Convention Center.
And for those of you who did
know but just couldn't be
there (which may not be all
that much of a catastrophe,
sin~ the Con\'ention Center
isn 't big enough to house all of
Orange County), this is a
report on how it wcnl.
Kindly notice that I said
"report'' and not ··review··.
That.66 because nobody at-
tempts to review a Sammy
Davis concert anymore. All
they can do i$ attempt a
report on it.
Sammy Davis Jr. calls
hin1sell an "entertainer··. And
that's 1101 a bad thing to be
these , days. an honesl-to-
goodness "t'nlertaincr". nut
calling Sainmy Davis Jr.
merely an "entertainer" is
like saying that t:instein had a
few clever ideas ab o u t
science. Or that Beethoven
wrote pretty fair mu~ic. Sam·
my Davis Jr. transce11ds not
only the Word "en-
tertainment," but the medium
as well.
There were all kinds !here
Sunday. Young and old, the
hip and the plain-clothes, and
pleoty of brothers and sisters
TV DAILY LOG .
Thursday
Evening
JUNE 3
or informing syndkare narca!le1
pushers ol planned pcltce in~es!l
a:ation,.
0"'PD
1:00 0 Iii ""' Jerry Dunphy.
0 Cil@ CD Bhitched (R) "S•·
mantha's 81d Day In Stiern."
Seman!ha's m1rriage ls th1e1!ened
by 1 childhood hiend who Is 1
w1rlock.
aJ ABC Newt Reasoner, Smith.
0 XffBC N1W1 lom Snyde1.
IJ Tiii ARlll Sllow (R) Guests 1re
D1vid rrost. Stnator Bifth B•yh
(D·lnd.t. Micke1 Roo!lfy, Billy Dan·
iels, CtSIH!f ferrera and to·host
Ja1nn1 (Mrs.. Johnny) Caraon.
fJ Sil O'Clodr Mavle-: (90) "'Who
W•1 That ltd,r' Part 1 (comedy)
'ID--lony Curtis. De1n M•rtln. Janel
Ldrh. Jalll!S Whitmore. Barbara
Hlcllols, When lh• dlemls!iy profes·
aof's wire ca!ch1!$ him ~lssin1 1
prtt!J' 1ir1 s!udent. ht end his T'I
wrl!tt filtnd concoct 1 l1nr1slic
1llbl about lheif underc:nver wor~
!or the FBI.
01 Spy m Thi Olntstonn m Star lrtk
fD A Ti1111 lor .hllrn/Ch•rlle's P1d
EID fishel' r11nll1
al Notidero l4
ffi DJ1th ¥111.,. Days
(I!) LI HOf1 F1mlll11 con Conwclo
al Mot Jim H1wthorn1.
1:30 (]) Miits Bill Huddy.
@ lrvtll or Co1111qu1ncts
rncss """ ®J NBC Nnn m fit flyinr Nin
tD Modppodte lod19
Hi) Slltded f1h11 /MwJiu!1 rn The Dmll't Rtp0rt
(I!)TBA
CD"""
7:00 tJ CBS "'" Wi ller C1onhl1e.
0 ID NBC Ntw1 David BrlnklfT.
@ To Tell th• Truth
O Whirs My Une?
®)DI~ V1n D1!1t
m D1'1id Frost Show Guests tre
Ktress Sarah Miies, direttor /physi-
ci~n Or. Jonathan Miller, and !elk·
1ingef /act Of Burt Ives.
@Olympic Boti111 1
ED NEl Pl1yhous1 "Biography:
Ce'l>ra:t Jacques [).anlo11.8 Anthony
Hopkins stars In stOfJ' ol Trench
rrvofutionaiy leader whose bold pei·
sona1iry lilted him to promineoc1
1t 1 crvti1I period Jn th• r1ench
Revolution.
E?!J Patlem for U~nr
9:00 O ([)CBS Thursday Movie: fCI
(2hr) "The Violent Onn '' (drama )
'67-Femando l amas, Aldo Ray.
Tommy Sands, Melinda Mul. David
Carradine, Usa Caye. When an 18-
year-old girl Is a~aulted, w1ath is
1roused In the residents of 1 small
New Me~ico vill•ge.
0 Th• fuftiv1
0 (]) (!) GJ Makt Aooni fof
Gr1ndd,ddy (R) "Thi Arrangement."
Danny is otrtra~ed when an 1111·
m1riied couple who are lrieods ol
Und~ decide to live toge1he1.
(IDCMlltnp
CE El l'eudo d1 Soli1
9:3D 0 ®.l ID Adam-12 {R) "Canr
War ." lrini Lopez portrays 1 Mexi-
un·Amtfican priest who calls In
police in an attempt lo prevent 1
letn·11te gang war.
0 @@ CD Dan Au111st (R) "111-
vlh!ion to Murde1." August't inve!-
liga!ion of !he murder of 1 leen-
aged swinger is complica!td by her
rather.
€I!l Music1lt/P1mf's Doll
€Illa Cruz dt Mari ui Cnrtn
CE PeHculas
m I L .. t LUCJ m rn On.1nlf
fD Soull
ID:OO 0 @} @nD'.an M1rtin (Al Guesh
are Dennis We~ver, Bob Newhall,
Bobbi hhrtin and Ka1 Medford. lhe
Golddiggers ire !ea!ured. el Christ tht lliln1 Word
al Angeli1ot. N1rr11
a!l SI Mt fu1ra1 Jw
CD Morit G1 m1
O Channtl 5 1tews
0 B1Jtu W1rd Nen
m Nrwt Pu1nam/Fishm1n.
EEi Spet11l1tion
7!l0 I) (D f1m!IJ_ AH1ir (RJ JGdy break!! l0:30 []) Roundt.tile
1 pr1·Columb11n art work :itn! lo
Unda 81!1 and enhs11 But!}'s help 0 Movie: (91J) ~Kiss i nd M1k1
in makina: 1 cla1 copy, Up~ (comedy) 'J4-taf) Cran!, Ed·
D @) ID fllp Wilson (R) Cutsh
ar1 Bin8 Crosby. Thi Suprem~ ind
David S!t1nber1-
Q V\1~nl1 Crahtm Show (RJ Guesls
111 Karen 't1lent1ne. louis Nye,
.hlhnny T1llatson, 811 bar1 Walden
and )'Ill• e~~i Adehane Pedrnsa
0 (l) (j) ClJ ~111 Sml~ 1nd
ward [v,reU Horton.
00 M111htl Dillon
0 GJ Ttii1 11 l our Life R1!ph fd·
wards ho3ls. Pearl Bailey i$ th1
i u1p11sed guest.
(E) News Biil .hlhnl.
Jona (R) "The Girl in Bo-c11 ll:OO O (])fI!Knrs
#3.8 thyu ind Curry ~gree lo
lr1"sport $50,000 Withdrawn lrom O @) m Nen
lh1 community's ban~ jui:t before i1 @ Dt1th 't•llfJ Drri
I ailed.
0 MllUo• $ ~: (C) (21/1hr)
"'luwttd th• Un\notm" (drarna) '56
-Wllll1m Holden, Lloyd Nolin, vu.
Jlnla Leith. Roc~et pi!ol seeks to
ftdt!!m 1 past mist1k1.
m l~ ... Constqu•ce
ID"T•-tt1Thltrf
.JJlJ Cl.-a 30
O (])GJl'ttWI
0 Movie: "Ad11tnture1 ol Shll!'lod
Ko\mes" (mJ$1ery) 'J9-B1sil Relh-
bone, l'ligel Bruce. lda lupillO.
m MOYie: "'Pink(' (drama} '(9--
Je1nM C/"1hl, W!Ul.im lundi51n.
m Bnt t111 C1oCt
tE l'ttmltN: Miiiie (CJ ~.1i, JaRxo 11.:30 0 (j) Merw Griffi•
..... ..... .. 0 0.§l m hihn!IJ C.rion
m ™ o rn oo m ma c.....tt
l:DO 9 (I) UIKlfr {If) .lohnny llntrr
appe:•ra fo hire hlmaelf out 11 •
m Morit: "l.l'w ind OISOtd_..
(tomed)') '58 -Michttl RtdfrlYI,
RDberl Mo1)!!)'.
"1unmtnH \o 1 letna1er (Bill IZ:OO 0 t' Step lryoml
lllUrnJ),
m T1 Tll !!lit T"111
•• ......,.... .... 1. l 1ritw
ta& fl) t-.....&m Mnlcll
a:• a a m.,.-. <"' .,,,. M•11 H tile lfuiOt.,. IFOMidit 11 ICt!Atd
Friday
bXYfiME MOVIES
t:OO 0 (C} "T\t 0-h "n'Md"'
(6oanf1tt1t.ll)) '5S-$!1 l1u1rnc1
(J/rltf l'llrrltll!ll. .,..,. c... ..
w-" fmllMCll) '44-Bln1 CrcabJ,
Bfll1 Hutton.
GI !Cl "OMP't c..,..i" (-etltr11)
'U-'lora1nl• Ml)'O, Ot'4I RotHll1IOll
t".JOO •MotlNIM" (clr11111) '4S.-O•nt
Cla1l, Giff RNtll.
"
0 .,." Wttt """ Lwtflt!" (mu
alcat) '42--11ed A61.1!rt. Rl1I H1J -
li1Clf)MoYi1: ,.Andl11byMab1 Tllm"
(comedY) '49-Rober1 'tount, B11·
b1r1 Hale. J1ni• C.rttt,
rn oorn®J •n• m All·Nlgfrt sti .... : "'txape rrot1
Rid ROdri," "Dttlll PIJl In Dolllrs"
I nd "Thi l\1 l.Aftd."'
10:00 @ '1'oun1 Sn t .t T1u1" (wtsl·
un} '62-Jlm Mitchum, Jody Mr;.
""·
1:00 m .,;rrtfl '" n.natl"' (rrry111ry')
'4J-T1M1t Moward. Silty Cray.
2:00 0 "HJll 24 Doelii'I A11111tr" (dra.
me) '55 -H•1• H1rni!t111., £clwr11d
M11lh1rt.
J:OO Cl) "P1llic" fdrtmt) '6l--Jlnint
(;re,, CJr11 Houst on.
4:l0 IJ (C) "TM II.ct Knl1h1" fld·
nnlurt) ·~111 I •de!, P1!rid1
Mlldtna.
U)Slmt 11 10 AM Mo-11.
on bolh sides of !he frnce,
"The Friends of Distinction"
got !hings \\'armed up, and !he
crov.·d was in eager an-
Buena Park
'IGng and I'
Cast Listed
Casting has been announced
for "The King anC I," the next
production of the Buena Park
Civic Light Opera. to be
presented for tv.'o v.·eckends
lhis n1onth.
Starring in the Rodgers and
Jl.'.lmmerstein musical \Vil! pe
Ruta Lee as Anna. !he English
governess, and Ned Romero
as lhe King of Si:in1.
Supporting roles \viii be
played by Bobby Mosier,
Christina Augspurger, Betty
J<oundsley, Mark Koontz ,
1':mie llenry, Cathy Boepple,
Eugene \Vendell, Brad Dirkson
and Jay Conklin. The cast also
includes sorne 30 children
from the area.
"The King ancl I." und~r the
d irect.ion of J ohn Rlch, will be
prrformed .June 18-19, and 2~·
26 .it 8 o'clock and :i matinee
J1ine 20 ;i1 2:30 i11 the Buena
Park High School theater arts
center.
PACIFIC WALK-INS
!). .... ""··~~· ··"· """"""' '"UTTll l lG Mt.II" (t;P) • "' • ..,.....,.,.,e••• "1110 lOIO" (G) ~
Alf Co/or f',.mil> /;"Ni"'l6i N"ltNI
.... 0"9'••
1 .... -...
W•t!O'~""'I
~11111.•
0.-•~I• ("00 81 J ,.,.,..,,. I •1•1,,.,,.,_.,
·-.............. i.: ........... t __
"flll lJIOIOMIOI ITlllll'' (I~ ··••S.•....i{.:•·•·· ....
"<1l•n11•lh1 P•r•I~ Pr1jKI"
' , ..... !••• ....... 0. ..
"VAlll1 Of Tllf DOUI"
"~·. """' ....... "UI( llllllCllS"
licipation, ready and wlllmg !I)
be ·~enlertained." The
orl'hestra siarled cooking W'ith
.1n increasingly upbeat•\Ot'rsion
or .. For Once In t<.ly Lifflll." and
you knew San1my Davis would
be on that stage prelty soo n.
I began to wonder how he'd
make his a1>pt>arancc. A lloun·
ding leap? Would he just pop
out of nov.•here? ~1nybe even
descend from the .sky belting
out "I've Gotta Be JI.le"·!
He just "'alkcd on stage.
Cool as can be, nice 'n easy as
~ou please. As expected, he
11•as greeted \Vith enthusiastic
app!auS<". But I sat lherc
thinking to myseH ··Sammy
Davis Jr. isn"t supposed to
JUSI v.·aJk on stage .. .''
He announced how eool he
thought it v.·as lo be playing
for such a varied audience.
thanked them for coming, and
said in return he 'd give I.hem
"the be.st kind of show I know
J can do." And you can'! ask
for much more than the best
that Sammy Davis Jr. can do.
Then he let go. The Sammy
Davis cannon with both bar·
rels loarled. "For Once In My
Life ," "You've 1'.1ade ~le So
\o'ery Happy," ''The Rapper,"
a cheeky rendition of •·Rain-
drops Keep Fallin' On 1\Iy
llead." and. to the delight of
the plain-clothes. "What Kind
Of Fool Am J?'' and "The
Impossible Dream." He of-
fered James Taylor's "Fire
and R a in ' ' accompanying
himself ~·ith only a tamborine.
And not forgetting the old
days, he delivered ''Birth of
!he Blues" and a n un·
forgetab!e "You're Nobody
'Till Somebody Loves You ...
11e sang and danced a very
moving ··ro.1r. Bojanglcs," and
then gave "In My Own
Lifetime" and "I've Gotta Be
l\1e." JJe took a drink and an·
nounced that he kne1v he"d
already bct•n on longer than he
should be. The audience 11.!t
him know !heir disapproval
"'ith waves or "r-itore! 1'.Iore~··
''I thought you'd never say it,"
Sammy beamed. "\Velcon1e lo
the .second half of tile $how!"
lie took some requests. sang
~ome oldies. did .son1e of his
impersonations while singiniJ
"t\11 The \Vay," and just kept
right on going. For nearly two
hours. he didn't let up once.
And when il v.'a.s all over
and the cro\\'ds v.·erc leaving.
il .seen1ed as if everyone l
overheard was .s a yin g
son1elhing like "He gives !W
niuch of hirnsc/f." "lfe was
just fanlastic, wasn't he?" and
•·11e·s just the g1·eatcst. !hat's
all there i.s to it."
He dof.s, he 1vas. and he ccr-
lain!y 1s.
The DAILY PILOT-
Tops in Local Sports
C11pid 011. Wheels
I lap Graha1n as the notorious Sheridan \Vhitesi{Je is .shown in an infrequent
n1e!low mood \Vith Paul Toft and J ulie Haas jrr a scene frorn "The ~1an \Vho
Ca rne to Dinner," now on stag~ al the Laguna Moulton Playhouse.
~-..
Stars Tt11·n Out £01· Benefit
By \\'ILLIA~1 GLOVER
NEW YOHK (AP) -Yoll
can Jove it, you might hate it.,
but "Lenny" won't let you
alone. !->Jays often seek, rare]}'
achieve the bold, bizarre,
brilliant i1npacl Of the .show at
Broadway"s Atkinson Theater.
The lurid, .savage, unrepen·
tant deeds of that very con·
troversial night club comic,
the lat.e Lenny Bruce, are the
substance. But even for those
;vho never heard of him, or
have any interest in th e
strangely intense posthumi>u.!
cult that has developed, "Len·
ny" can be a most remarkab!~
human document.
Getting tuned into, and ~
cepting, the script by JultaD
• Barry and !he surrea!iS1iC
'direction by Tom O'H.orgin
takes a bit or doing. Especially
for anyone with an aversion lo
colloquial vulgarity. Bart y
develops his chronology · :.or
Bruce's anguished 15 ye)r
notoriety mostly in the "1·
1crtainer's own cascade of.~·
di»C.ipline.d llmgMag.e.
The play begins v.·ith : a
dazzling bit or 0·11organ .st~
ing in \\•hfch the playas
cn1crge from Robin Wagnei:'s
cavernous .selling as v.·eir61y
By BOB THO~IAS n1inistering help lo f i Im people v.·ho don"t unden;tand garbed pa rticipants in SOmJ!:
\1orkers in need. how hard hit the fi!tn industry primitive rite, both funny arid JIOLl.Y\VOOD (AP) !Jicome fron1 a radio show, has been. They still think. ominous. \Vhcn Hosalind Russell spied o t r th f t lo which talent contributed everyone out here has the fur u 0 c, an asy appear
Ah t<.lacGraw on a jetliner services, helped build a relire-lined S"'1m1ning pool and a lhe princ ipals-all U1e tin hbrn
recently, she s<it ciuv.•n next to ment home and hospital in the <:on1rades of the early years, f!ect flf Cadillacs or Rolls 1· JI th t · R•""•·• lhe nc1v .star and gave her 1940s. Through the years, the ina Y ~ s rtpper -v-.
pitch: Re.lie[ J.'und's support has Royces.' 1'he sales campaign v.·hom Bruce beds and weds."
k d facgel,V con1e fro111 po _vroll has not done we!! among Tiieir abiding, lormenlcd r-1:b0
"Loo , Ali, it"s your in ustry h" J h be d deductions of film workers. niovic 11Cl'.'l'Olners. Except for lions 1p or s e come a •
now. f"n1 loo old and loo tired \Vith emp!oynicnt at a /\Ii i\J.'lcGr<1w ;ind " feiv dic1erl lo narc<>tic.s loJJg be~
lo carry the responsibility minimurn. the Fu n d • 5 others, the y()ung croii'd has he does serves as the haunting
Jnllch longer. You and the rest act iv i t i es have been failed ro support the gal<1. counterpoint lo all lb a t
of the new cro1vd \'.'i ll have to threatened. "'l'hril burns nie up." sAi d follov.·s.
take over.'' "That's why we hnd lo put nliss Hussell. "Jn lhe old da1·s "All my huntor i.s based on
on this show in lhe J\lusic V.'C had to support the Fund: destruction and despair." be ~1iss llussell 1vcrs acting as d h Center." explains Rosalind !he stu io bosses c.~lled al! !he Cries at one point. .Just w y is ace saleswon1an for a cause to R"ssell. v.•ho is chairman of people under contract together never 1nade clear. but ttie '1h ich she has devoted the the \Vomen's Cnmmi!tec. "\Ve and told us v.·e ll'CJ'e obliged to theatrical power of lhe p!ay·i'.s past few months: the 50\h a n-
t b ho11e to raise $600,000. v.·hich give one per cent of our that the spectator i.s persuad· nivcr.sary ce e ra!ion or the I will pull the Belief Fund ouL of sa arics to lhe Fund. So "'e ed to accept the plea WJ-Motion Picture and Television Hclief Fund. It will be held in the hole. did, and it didn·1 hurt. questioningly.
811 three theaters of the Los "And I think v.'c're going to1iF'---------------------*.o
Angeles J\1usic Center June!:?, make it. Jus~ :n the last five J 0 YEARS AGO AUDl
5
EHNOCCEKSEWD ERE
v.•ilh a ca~t that includes Jnck or six days. the tide started to
llenny, Bob Hope, Barbra turn. and now the rescrvalions ----
Streisand, Pearl Bailey, the arc rolling in." N o W WE MAY BE READY FOR
J.'ifth J)imension, etc., etc. She admitted the campaign r-----------• The GINGER MA'N l1l11s Frank Sin al r a ' s hasn't been easy. Tickets arel Wf:D. a11d THURS. ''f:ire\1·eJI"' ;ippe:irancc. .scaled as low <is S25. but the LU y
Ali illacGra1v v.·;1s sold. She big push has been 10 sci! !hose
1 and lier hu sband. Hobert al $250.
by J. P. Donleavy
Fri. ·Sun. 8:30
Sr1t11/1 ('oast J(c cr/nrr
Ev;1ns, bought 20 tickt!s at "That':'! a Jot or 1noncy in 1 $250 apiece. She will join Miss the$e times when everyone is l
lluS5ell, .Jarnes S!c\varl and feeling the pinch." s a i d1
nyan O'Neal as emcees for salesv.'omttn ll.ussell , ''\Ve've•I
the ('X1rav:.1ganza. rriet 11 lot of opposilion from
The .June 13 event 11'ill signal ...:."."."..::..:'."...'.'.'....'.'.".".''.:'.'.'.'.'.'...:::'.'.'.'.'.~"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'~~ 50 years of ;1 unique ex-
Jlerirncnt in industry v.•elfare.
Friunded in 1921 ns a branch of
the AC'lors' Fund. the Relief
F'und bccarne an independent
;igcncy a fe11· years later, ad-"THE BEST MOVIE SINCE 'BONNIE AND CLYDE'!"
-l•rou ~"'"•I ~ ~'"Id lo'"'"'or '~"'''"'"~~~"''"" ~t11rr1"1 .... "'""'" '·-THE • . NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES •1• '"" ·(lo>•'I'<• '""""'-'"" l(,m Oorby GRISSOM GANG S<o"W•l.Oo
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT
; I
'. '--·
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with
Mi,hael Caine -Om.tr Sh.trif
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liill '~" COLOR ~ ~ !..~
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'"" ilf Vll!JO-W•ll 011 ... y" "IN SEA•CH 0 ' TH E ,
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QA.ILY PILOT lt1ll f'i.fO
HORSES ON CHOICE IRVINE COASTAL PLAIN Will HAVE IMPROVED HOUSING
Grading Under W11y; Rancho Cerritos Hamem1de HotM R1nch Becomes Equestri1n Center'
TACKLES NEW TASK
Vic tor C. Andrews
· Lngunan Ncuned
ReaKan Aid Plan
County Director
Victor C. Andrcv.'S of Laguna Be11ch
has been named chairman of the Orange
County Ci!i1.cn's Committee for !he
Governor's welfare program.
His appoin1n1rnt \l'aS ;inn ounce d
\\'edncsday al a Srinta Ana TIC\.\'5 ccin·
f~rrncr.
Andre\1·s. 1119 En1er.<1.ld R;iy, quoted
f igures rn1m the ('OUnty \Vclfare Depart·
mrnt 1rh1ch ~ai<l lhe <:nvernnr's program
rou\d sa1·r OranJ(r County lax.payers as
mtirh as $600.000 during the coming fiscal
yrar.
He placed l'l1e over:ill stnle 5aving at
:SliOO mi!hon
1\ndre11s rmph,1s11ed th;i! lhe group
11iis 11on-part1san. ''Our aim i!! welfare
rrfnrrn , 11'{' are nnl fightin g a political
t'ampalgn .·•
Thr J?,ovrrnflr'S program is now before
"'thr legislatu re and the cili1.f'ns. com·
mittee pfocram to support 1t Is
stalev;ide.
"'\Ve rraliie Lhat id eas and proposals
for re forming "''elfare have been made
fer 1·ears bu! all that has happened is
th:tl . the 1v;clfare load has expanded,"
Andrews s;1id.
'"\Ye feel that our work is uniqut in that
\\'C intend to extend the decision making
on v•elfare reforn1 lo every cilir.en of the
sl ate." Andrt>v.'! adrled. "We want each
cili1,en to communicate his views on
\elfare lo hi!'i state legislators and county " . " 1Uperv1sors.
He said lime is limi ted and each d•y
fhp re for ms are delayed cost the state 's
taxpa,vers S2 1nillio11 ... We w11nt welfAre
to go Jo those truly in need."
He quo1l'ri C'xamplC's of current. welfare
... t buse. "Under current provisions, t
'tromiin earning $1.245 a month can
tt<:cive a welfare payment plus money to
lliy furniturf' and receive Medi.Cal .and
l)ofl stamp bC'nefi!s.
• •·11 is possihle to ov.-n a SO.foot yacht
p d :e:liJJ draw welfare," he added.
!'¥,And rews was Orange C-Oun1y chairman
M President Nixon's 1968 campai@n. He
9!1:s later appointed United Slates
1tpre11entative to Ille World '~ Fair in
Qi11k a, J•pan, holding the rank of am·
t.:sador.
Jte is chairman or the boards or South
QMi st C-Ommunity 11ospital and Chapman
a,i1ege and is a citrus gro"'er and
keler.
Prcsi1lcnt Will llnn
In 1972, Says l(lein
.:>cl<F'OR D, Ill. IUPI) -\\'hit.e House
c.municalions Direc tor Her!Xirt Klein. aikf ,Wednesd11y there is no doubt Prelli· dliml Nixon will run for rf'-t.li:ctlon with ~ Presiden t Spiro T, Al new as his
nmfng m11te.
Horsing Around
Irvine Co1npany Improves Rancho
The ma jor grading projecl under way
along the coastal bluff near Scotchman's
Cove is not the beginning of a new hous-
ing tract, an Jrvine spokesman said Tues-
day.
!l's an upgradin g of the old Rancho
C-erritos horse rancb and eventually will
accommodate 250 equine lodgers in
modern, portable stalls.
The Jrvine Company is spending
$\fla ,000. the spokesman said, to tear
down the existing 116 horse stalls, an
handmade contraption.'! built by horse
owners, grade out the area and put in
new stalls and exercise paddock!.
The immediate improvement will pro-
\'ide for a horse population of 182, with
room for growth to 250.
The oceanfront horse ranch, to be
known as the Irvine Jl:questrian Center,
probably will remain in its present loca-
lion for three to five years, then be re-
located inland in the San Joaquin Hills.
It will serve as a pilot project for
a se ries of stables throughout the ra nch
area, along a total of 140 miles or bridle
trails with m11ny loops down lo the
coastal area.
The Irvine Compan y, v.·hich formerly
lC'ased out lhe hor$e ranch property, will
operate the new equestrilln center
directl y. the spokesman said, offering
board and lodging to equine lodgers for a
monthly fee.
Mrs. Hanson Blasts Use -
Of POW: Issue n1 Politics
Carole Han~on, t.he El Toro v.·ife of a
missing J\.1arine pilot, Wednesday in a
press interview asked politicians not to
use lhe prisoner of war issue for their
ov.'n poli!ical gains.
Her husb;ind StC'ven has heen missing
since 1967 v.'hen his hellcoptC'r was shot
dow n aver enemy territory in Laos.
"Those or us v.·ho must w&it at hom e
for any word from our loved ones bein g
held in an Asia n pri son are hurt very
deeply by tr.e callous attempts by am~
bilious politicians to use the POW·~IA
IJ\.11ssing In /\C"'tion) issue to fur ther their
ov.·n political goals."
•·\\"e cannot st&nd silenlly by whl\e our
husbands and sons remain in POW camps ..
and allow them lo be u~d by politicians
on either side ," she said in Los Angeles.
"If any congressman wants lD push for
his ov.·n solution to lhe war, lhars line.
J-lov•ever, we ask them not to use the.
prisoner issue for their own poli!ica l
gain."
Mrs. Hanson also said wives of rnissing
servicemen had no desire lo enrlor~e any
specific solution to lhc war. She add ed
that attempts to force President Nixon lo
set a withdrawal date t.f all lroop.~ from
Vietnam "would remove the quPslion
from its present human1~'."rian status into
the political arena and might c1·e n
worsen the sad plight of the mf>n hC'ld by
the Commu11iats in Southeast Asia.''
Laguna Taxpayers Unit
To Push for Rate Limit
Tht Laguna Beach Taxpayers A.ssocia.
tion wW spearhead South County area
11upporl for the propo.'led st11te. con-
stitutional amendment to limit property
tax to one percent of market v.11lue, it
was dec ided al a mee ting of the grou p
thi!I week.
Taxpa yer1' trea.'IUrt!r Edward Lorr iiaid
petitions fnr the initiative, proposed by
Howard Jarvis, state chairman of the
United Organizations of Taxpayer11 Inc.,
now are being printed and will be ready
Legion of Honor
Ceremonies Set
In San Clemente
' Sl.ltetn Southern California men -
.evtral of ~m Oran(e Coast community
leaders -will received the ~11ion of
Honor aw.ard in San Clemente Sunday in
elaborate rites elanned by the Order of
DeMolay.
Amon g the recipients atthe 2:30 p.m.
r ites will b~ Judge [}Qnald Dungan of
liarhot Judicial District Court, Costa
Mesa City Manager Frederick Sorsabal,
plus Glenn D. Woody of Huntlnglon
Beach, C.R. Johnson or BAiboa. Willh1m
Waggoner of Buena Park.and George L.
BenU!n and Hs-m1n V, Sweasy of Sea l
Be.1ch.
Other per110ns rttelving tht 1vn1rd for
.. out~t.Andlng com munity service will ln-
cfutle leaders in Sl\n Del10. 1.1 Mirada,
Spring Valley, N:.itional City an4 Lan·
ca.~ter.
San Clemente Mayor Walter Evan, Jr.
will ireet the guests at the San Oemente
Masonic i:emple. The lodge ia sponsoring
"
for circulation shortly.
The Lagun a Taxpayers will servf> a:ci
the committee group !or the initi l\live
campaign in the area including Laguna
Beach and the Saddleback Valley com-
munit.ies !lOUth to San Juan Capistrano.
he said. Lor r is a La11una Brach City
councilman.
It has been estimated tha:~,he effect or
the amendment would be lo reduce pr~
perty taxes about 50 percent, requ iring
the leg islature to revamp lhe state's 'tax
stru cture so that needed revenue can be
collected without adding ta the tax load
of the property owner.
To qualify the amend1nent ror 1he
ballot will require appro1ima tely 800,000
signatures on pelition1 and lh~ governor
is requi red to call an election for ra tifica-
t.ion within 120 days of tr"t date on which
the initiative qualifies.
Also at the Laguna Tax payers' mttling
thi.'1 week , president Frank Colien i;ub-
milted his resignation because of lack of
lime due to the serious illness nf hi s son.
Pi-1rs. Marie W. Ma yer was elected to
replace him In the oUice.
Pot Rap Jails
Clemente Y outl1
Reports of a suspicious auto In the
private• l)pruii Short: colony In Sa n
l1e.mente: led ta the arrest of 1 17·ye11r-
nld youlh on ma rijuana pos~ss!on
charges Mond1y night.
Police said thty •rrt5:!d the yourh
after 1 ec11rch ol his car yielded open
coritAiners of liquor and lhe small quan-
tity of the forbidden wped.
Officers were notified of the car by
security guards, !hey sai d.
The young San Clemente: boy was taken
to Juvenile hall after the 8:04 p.m. arres t.
•
Thurid•Y, Jut1t '· 19n s DAJLY '1LOT 3
Take 8wn Medi~ine
Doctors Don't Like Diets They Prescribe
DENVER (UPI) -Ooc:tort al SL.
Anthony Ho.splt.tl have been gettinr •
taste of their own medicine. They don't
like tt.
Dr. Wyley Eaton, head of the bosplt.J's
medical education department, thoulht
6laff doctors and att.tndln11 · phy•iciana
should aet a taste of the special dlets
they were ordtring for their pllients. Ha
l!itarled se.rvin11 it to them at lunch.
"It brou&ht out • lol of agreuion by
the physicians about the lousy food," Dr.
Eaton said. "But we simply remlnded
them that these were the dletl tbey
ordered for lhtir patients.
"I think we 1ot • few points •croa.
Since then , our dieticlaM have noted thal
the. d)el orders hl:ve improved.''
Dr. Eaton s•id the most com pl lints
came when I.he doctors were served up
Laguna Chamber, Lauds
'
I nnovations in Schools
The Laguna Beach Chamber of Com·
merce Wednesday honored the eC'hools of
the Art C-Olony and received a first hand
demonstration of some nf the programs
at El Morro Elcrnentary School.
At lhe breakfast meeting. Bill G1-1•irm, a
rC'altor and program chairman for the
Ch<lmber ~tasters, la uded the schools for
lheir innovations in education, s.1ying
''the key to education is the people wbo
are involved in it."
"\Ve should be very proud of ou r educa·
lion system in this cou n1ry,'' Gwinn a
former teacher. told the gathered adults
before introducing the student programs,
''particularly the system we ha ve here in
Laguna Beach ."
"\Ye can't spend en ough money on
educa tion.'' he said, noting that if he had
to pay more taxes. he would rather pay
them for education than for any other
govern mental service.
Follow ing Gwinn's remarks. El Morro
teacher Pl'!e Peterson shov.'ed slides of
the cultural enrichnlent progr ams al the
elementary school. Children w ere
depicted repa iring b!cyclts. lelrning
guitar, knitting and taklftg part In sever al
other aclivities.
Pelersnn said the programs are offered
each day for an hour after regular class
sessions and the programs are chana:ed
every six wreks.
After the slide show. the precision
tumbling learn from £1 Morro pre~nted
a demonstration of gymnastic ability.
These students were followed by a few
excerpts from the recent musica l
presented at the school , "Mi11sissippi
Melody," a tale of the life of Tom
Sawye r.
Under the direction of teacher Connie
Crane, four El ~1orro boy11 aang and
acted out parts from the play. 'I'he boys
were Charles Curtis, David Moore,
Stanley Kimball and Todd Elvins.
The play was ro!lawed by a demonstra-
tion of amttiematics ability by the
youngsters , which included mentally
working several complicated problems
posed by their teacher.
carrot juice and thin soup, a low-caJorle
dlet 'freq~ntly ordered for patients wno
have had fbdomln.al sureery.
"Th.at diet is probably the worst thin&
anybody can do to another perlOll," he
11ld. "We've noticed very ftw ot thoae
diets Ordered lately ." ,
Doctors we~ given o~ edv111t41e that
their patients ne vell .bad, Those who
didn't feel quit e filled arter a special diet
mt.al could snack: 1t a regular buUet
lunch set up in a nearby room.
"On the carrot juice and 11oop d1y,
almost everyone supplemented," he uid.
Allhough most or the doctors took the
whole idea Jn 1ood !1plrll, a few -mo.tJy
surgeons -refused to eat the special
diets. Some "1ot downri&ht hostile," Dr.
Eaton said.
"I think m°"t of them, however, looked
on it as a real educational e1periet1ot. ''
he said. ''Wt're beginning to make a lot
of these diets less reJltlctive and t.bele
luncheons brought It all to a head."
'Buy at Home'
Campaign Slated
Mort t.han two doun San Clemtnta
merchant, hava launched • "buy •
home:" campaign by electing to remain
open Frii:lay evenin1s until 9 p.m.
Jn the inaugura l me(ting of a new
chamber of commerce retail trade com·
mittef', the merchants agreed that the 9
p.m. Friday clo.sing would launch a mies
of promotional campalifl!.
The group agreed to offer "Crazy
Days'' salt.'I three days neit month. Lut
ye&r's version proved a 11uccess, tht.y
agreed.
The group will sponsor a banner hang·
ing across El Camino Real advertising
the new Frid•y hours. 'Ibe .nnounetmellt.
will be erected sometime n.rl week.
t .. c u~ Sate I
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By TH0l\.1AS f\fiJRPIDNE
01 ,... oen1 "lllit 5t•tf
•
Co1ataet• Cut
Blasts Hit Area
Of NATO Parley -
LISBON I UPI) -A series of bomb ex-
plosions r o c k e d telecommunication
centers in Lisbon and a nearby town to-
day, disrupting moa t telephone and telex
Jines between Portugal aod lhe outside
world as the NATO foreign ministers
began a lwo-day meeling.
There were rumors another unexploded
bomb was found in the Nalional
Assembly building , the Sao Benlon
palace, where the ministers held their
formal opening session. Dr. Feytor Pinto,
spokesman for the Portuguese Jnforma·
tion Ministry, refused to confirm or deny
the reports.
east-west troop reductions.
French Foreign Minister ~1aurice
Schumann. speaking as chairman of lhe
Western Big Four group dealing wit h
Berlin, reported on progress or the slow•
moving Berlin talks with lhe Soviets. lie
said his recent talks on ~1oscgw indicated
some desire by the Russians for .an
agreement. 1 West Ge rman foreign minister Walttr
Scheel described Berlin as a ··test case
for easing east-west tensions."
HAPPY DAZE OEP'I'. -It is not
enough that the run of the news each day
is filled wil h ordinary fear and dismay.
You begin to suspect that readers are
gelting used to headlines about mass
graves along riverbanks. triple ax
n111rders end bodies discove red in
automobile trunks. Then the experts
come along ta soothe our jangled nerves.
Like this:
ACCUSED GENERAL S -The An'ny announced
\.Vednesday that Brig. Gen. John Donaldson (R) has
been charged with six Vietnamese murders a fe\V
months after My Lai. The last U.S. General
charged with war crimes is Brig. Gen. J acob, H.
Smith (L) who was courtmartialed ~cause of his
order during Philippine insurrection Of 1901 to kill
all persons over age 10 on island of Samar.
The first explosion came al a com-
munications center in downtown Lisbon
seven hours before the NATO leadtrs sat
~wn to diSCIJSS recent Soviet overtures
toward mutu al troop reductions in
Europe, Russian calls for a European
security conference and the ever present
Berlin problem.
Refug ees Die
B y Thousand
From Cholera
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -T h•
'Shot Fro11a Copter' Pinto said one bomb wrecked a vital ~switching center outside the com· CALCUTI'A (AP ) -.The heal!h direc-
metabolic chain of a person exposed to
carbon monoxide over a prolonged period
may be· disrupted with damage to the
heart, brain and central nervous system,
a medical confe rence was told Wed·
nesday, · •••
Viet Slayings Described
munlcations building in downtown Lisbon tor of West Bengal Stat~ re~rts tha t
"""' 1h ... 1 th .. ,.,. n ........ ..,,,....ha ,. IMM . more than 1,000 Ea st Pakistani refugee.~ ,.,......,~-.Y..~,,,,.~~{!p......,~~~ ..... ,~ .. ~ .. 7-ctto~-demic-th-a~ ·telephone substalion at Sacavem, · 30 ~ , "· ~ "'"' miles northeast of Lisbon . He said it bi OKe ou~ near Calculla three weeks ago.
caused no casualties and only slight "The situation ha s eone completely out
damage. of o.ur ro~trul."' Dr. lfiralal Saha ~aid in
* Slowly, it sinks in that the expert ex·
pounding above is telling you that ex-
haust rumes <?an get you about three
ways. '
So .you drlve to work holding your
breath.
11 that's not enough, sou could try this
ene:
LOS AN GELES (UPI) -Repeated use
of some commercial underarm aerosol
deodorants can lead lo clinical lung
disease in certain persons. an Army doc-
tor v.•arned today in a report lo a medical
conference ....
*
CHU LAI. South Vietnam {UP I) -
Brig. Gen. John \V. Donaldson, charged
in the 1~9 murders of six South Viet-
namese civilians, is alleged to have fired
at the victims with a rifle while flying in
his command helicopter, sources in the
U.S. 23rd Infantry Div ision (America!)
said today.
The murder charges a g a inst
Donaldson, no\Y stationed at t"t. Meade,
Md., were annow1ced Wednesday by the
Army. Pentagon officials declined to give
any specifics.
Sources here said Donaldson is lhe
same general "'ho was described.by the
Pentagon last January -without giving
his name at the time -as being under
investigation in the shootings of six South
Vielllaese civilians as he flew over
them in a helicopter in 1961!.
They said seyeral teams of in-
vestigators atTived here between October
of 1970 and last January to comb records
of the l Ith infantry brigade's operations
in Qua ng Ngai Province during the period
when the killings were supposed to have
occurred.
Donaldson. then a colonel, commanded
the brigade from October. 1968 through
Ma rch, 1969. The slayings, reported by
helicopter pilols. \\·ere said to have OC·
curred between November, 1968. and
January, 1969, according to Anny of-
ficials in Washington.
The sources said all of the brigade's
operations were in Quang Ngai Province,
and ii was the only U.S. brigade that
operated in the province du.ring the
period. .
According to \\'ashingt.on ace.aunts 1n
Jan uary of the investigation into lhe case
of the then-unnamed general, he was
alleged to have taken pot-sliols at
civilians while supposedly scoutinB Quang
Ngai Province in his <: o m m a n d
helicopter.
The bomb at the telecommunications an u1terv1e \'I Wednesday.
buildzng in Lisbon caused extensive He said the figure of 1,000 dead was a
damage but no casualties. conservative estimate based on hos pital
The blast cut all commercial and records. He said tha t while many
private telephone and telex traffic. But re[ugees v.·ent into camps in India , many
the U.S .• British and other embassies others took sheller under rOildside trees
equipped v.•ith their ov.•n diplo matic radi~ and deaths among them vtent unreported.
and other telecommunications channels, The disease broke out in the Nadia
v.·ere not seriously affected, spokesmen district, a border area about 60 miles
said. northeast of Calcutta and according to
SP<:aking at the start of the first work-Dr. Saha "had since spread like
ing session of Lhe NATO conference. wildfire."
Belgian Foreign r.1 inister Pierre Harmel On Monday there were about -i.OOll
said there can be no one-sided troop cuts refugees in hospit als near the Nadia
by the West. refugee camps. Wednesday there were
rre called on the allies lo agree among more lhan 10,000 he said,
themselves on the general principles for Dr. So ha altribut~d the increasing
possible negotiations "'ith the Soviets on death toll to lack of proper medical
This, of course, is followed by 17 well-
chosen pa ragraphs wherein the Army
jerk refuses to iden tify those "some"
underarm sprays that he thinks might be
a ble lo do you in.
One Tricia Cake
Ba ker Succeeds;
Cl1ef Relieved
Concorde Blows Chance P en cil Chewers Get
facilities.
'·Our stocks of sa!inft. are completely
exhausted and none are available in
Calcutta."
So, not knowing if it's your brand that
really ought to be marked with a skull
and crossbones. you stand in front of the
bathroom mirror, hold your breath and
spray. Then you flee before the spray set-
tles.
To Impress U.S. VIPs
Warn ing Over Lead
NE\V YORK (AP) -People who chew·
pencils because they are fler \•ous. should
be ne rvous about chewing pencils the
Another faclor, he said, was the
unusually high flow of re~ugees.
"\Vhile the government expected about
l\VO mill ion refugees.'' he added, "the
figure has nearly doubled."
Later, you can hold your armpits down
tight while you try driving lo work
holding your breath so the exhaust fumes
won't get you.
And don't drink out ol the drinlting
fountain at work because you've been
warned about ell the lousy stuff that's
floating around in public· waler supplies
these days.
* AFTER ALL this good news. a couple
of trunk 1nurders see m like sort of a
remote threat to your existence. So it's
no wonder folks search the news pages
for Jiome happiness.
Md so, in event you missed it among
the halchct slayings and aerosol can
u•amings, I shall point out in thi s space
that California is on the brink of repeated
history.
Four guys have struck gol d up in !he
Y..1other Lode country in a place called
Me\ones along lhe Stanislaus River in
Calaveras County.
Whv. it's !he nld Rio Vista ?-.l ine, folks,
that ·~·as booming JOO years ago after
John Su!trr struck gold in 1848 and they
took $2 billion out of the Mother Lode .
NOW ONE of the four lucky ones , Ed
Falls. admits that the strike is a good one
but he warns, "This isn't as big as the
rumor:r. have it. ... "
Aw, come on, Ed. You know it's lhe
Gold Rush all over again. You 've struck
it rich. Californ ia's economic doldrums
are over. To hell with aerospace, It's
back to the hills with a pick and pan .
California's streets v.·iU o~ again be
paved ""ilh gold.
Oon·t downplay your strike, Ed . After
reading all lhe other news, we like your
luck.
You've given us someth ing to believe in
3galn.
\VASHTNGTON (UPI) -'The \\'hite
House chef, Henry Haller. plans to begin
baking Tricia Nixon's giant wedding cake
Saturday without a trial run, but he was
pictured today as relieved that at least
one person got a one-pan version to tum
out fine.
"llenry is happy now." Mr~. Richard
M. Nixon's slaff director, Connie Stuart,
said following a report by a Washington
Post fOOd writer. Mary Las ler, that. she
was able lo con1e up with a prrfcct,
delicious cake from the recipe put out -
but not tested -by lhe \Vhite J.Jouse kitchen.
1t1rs. Laster conceded that she did not
fo\1ow the recipe to the exact letter. She
said that wa s only be~ause , in trying out
the 25-serving, one-layer version of the
lemon-laced. ~·h1t e pound cake , she did
the baking at home and her oven bake.s
slo"'er than n1ost.
ACCQrdingly. she baked it an hour in·
stead of the 45 minutes called for.
She also used a "collar" in her pan -
which the \\'hite House neglected to men-
tion originally -to avoid OYerflow of lhe
batter. ~1rs. Laster's verdicl: "A good
recipe."
Egyp t Arms Cost
To Break Record
CA IRO fUPI) -Egypt announced to·
day a defeni;e budget for 1971 ·72 of $1.56
billion, the highest in its history.
F'ina11ce Minister Abdel Aziz liijazi, an-
nouncing the rigure at e news conference,
said it exct.eded last year's total by $173
million.
He said the monev wa.!I earmarked "to
continue supportinS demand.! of the
fitruggle and national security needs."
PARIS (U PI ) -The Anglo-l'Ten ch
supersonic Concorde suffered engine
trouble today during a s p e c i a I
demonstration flight with Lop U.S.
government and airline officials al>oard
and failed to show off its ability to fly at
tv;ice the speed of sollfld.
Louis Giusta, general manager of the
French Aerospaciale Corp .. co-bu1\ders of
the Ccincordt' \Vilh the British Avia tion
Corp .. said the dislinguished passengers
aboard Lhe flight v<ould almosl certainly
be disappointed. 'They had been told they
would be introduced to the ''i\1ach 2
Club'' -persons who have Oo\\·n at twice
the !!peed of sound.
"Jt 's an unfortunate. thing that tor the
first time it \\'as impossible to il!nite the
reheating system on the Roll s·Royce
engines, and Concorde couldn't go any
Jaster than mach J.35." Giusta told UPI.
"I know that several of the party
aboard \\'ill be disappointed."
lt'ick s
•c=::i
'l 1cill buy her " ne w
dress ••. I will buy
her a new dress ••• '
Tornadoes Raise Havoc
Olda1io1na Hit Hardest Witli 100 mpl Winds
'California
IY \.lllllfl O ..... , I NTl •NATIONAL
SUnnltr alllet•trtd w1rm-1 1'm.,.r•·
twr-• w«• 11r.Olctt'CI IOI" kvtnt"' Ct +• ""'"i. ,....,,,.,.,,
fhil WMI-HfYltl l tld ""'°'"JIM
dwll1 -•• C'-" 11ur1,.. '"' •"••·
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Pll['fl(W OfMOAA lli\.TIOHAL WCATHlltt[A'tlC(TD 1:no A.M. lS T I • 4 •71 ,.
I" 1n..--~ IMIY l llCI ,t ldl'r. Hllll
fOOIJ IO.
Cott1t l 1....,.,,l~<H tl l!tl ltOIO' 11
.. •&. ,~ ... .,., ,...._ ...... 111 .......... 11'0'1!
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Sun, /lloon, Tide•
r 111C1.t.T
'11rll flftll •........ , Jin •·"'· l.t
Plrat """ ........... 1•17 •.Jfl. el s.c«ldlt;,~ .. ,_ •.... 1.0.t.lt!, S I
ll9CClftl -.. U .14 •·"'· I.I
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......... "" ... • '., ....... • t ~ .......... ' \#·11111.m. ,,
Sum-r11
I J,llNTTICI ,It.SS li'ITl i'"!tATIO!tAL
~'''"" """"'°""''"'"""' can11nu..i 11 , ••• ctrtlr1! HrlloM ot "'' M llOll , ..
!f.o,, Sl\llfl l It/MO! Clovclt wtrt tlt/ITH ''°"' Ttx10 111(1 i'fo<t~·OMet1 10 K.t ,.. IU£•1.
Tilt mot! M\ltrt olQrm Qftllf"9d' In
OllilllofM i.11 Wt'Clnt..O.r ,t• d r-
wlMt ,,..,IU,.,,.. U l!!Ollli. ,_,.,, t i
lnl(I, ~!1., ll>li l b! DU -"Wt!I h't• tu•tcl Ill' 1'11,., fl•u.
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..... II !Wt l!l(P\tl t lM "lt.0 "'°'" ~~ "' ''" ftl lf, '
Temperatures
l y UHlfECI ,ltlSl IHTllt Nll.TICINAL
TeOT\H'llUfl l l">Ol "'"'lpl!1Hon IU>ll
for I 1~·t>o\lr <>t•ll>CI lnd.1"11 11 • ,.,M,
POT, •• PrePlr ... b1 ,,,. U,$. W11T/11r
8U•NU II Sin Fll no;ltco.
Hitt! L ... ,,,,
... lbucl\lffqu. " ~
,&,ll1nr1 .. • ·~ ... ,; ,;
Cl'tlc.t~O " " .~
Clntl/\n.111 " • Cltvtltnd " " "' O<trlvtr H ..
o.trolt " " ,.,
F-(trf WOflll " " Ht!ll\t .. " 1-+oullO"' " " ..) 10\dlal'lotl'OI" " ., I(•"'•• c11, • " .11 I Lii V1111 " ff L• ,.,,.,iu " " MleMI INth " " M ll.,..uk ... .. " M IMN))OI)) ,, " Nt'W Ot!H nt " ..
Nt'W Y0t-" " "'"'i.:.t'• " " 1"1111 h ' .. ., "' ,ortl•l\d " •• 31(r1mr"i. " .. St. Loul1 .. .. ,N !.•~ "·•~ti!~• • ..
S1n11 l 1rltl •1 .. ..
IN nit • • 5ool<•~ • ., "' Wr,hliltlOI! " • '
Sen. Barry ~t. Goldv;ater (R-/\rlz. ).
President Nixon·s personal cn\·oy to the
airshow: U.S. Transportation Secretary
John Volpe, and re presentatives from
Pan American 'Vorld Airways.
; Kantucky \!"~
l:oi1nt Bourbon
... ~.~i.~~y •. . . ... ~.. .... ' ' . . ... ..,~ .. """·<II• .• ~ "" ..
""~ save
city's Health Department says. '
Test results disclosed Wednesday show-
ed that more than one third of a .!iamp-
hng of wooden pencils sold here were
coated with lead paint . Lead content in
lhe paint ranged as high as 30 percent.
,-··-, __ ,
i 1
'
t.iu f,,,,tucky • !ht Boarlo•
Whi.ky • ~ ... ~~=·.... . :
,_ ............. _,_.~
saving er
--·-----
According to Indian gov e r n m e n t
estimates. more. than 3.5 million refugees
have arrived 1n \\1esl Benga l Stale alone
sinct. civil strife broke out in East
Pakistan ~tarch .25. ~lore than 200,000
po ured in Tuesday and \Vednesday.
Kentuc~.
Str&1.1ht Boui\oii
Whhky • ...... , . ········~·· .... -
_, • " ' ~
Buy a fifth of Early Times and save. It's only $5.49.
But to save more, buy the quart. It's only $6.49.
The "savingest" though, is th e half ga ll on, Only $11 .98.
(Which proves th e old adage th at wh en yo u buy
th e larger size you save more).
Three small victories for the consumer.·
• •
t • • •t
-· • " • ' •
•
May Day
.4rrests
Defended
WASHINGTON iUPJ J
'The Justice Department's No.
2 man contended today thal
rnass arrests of May D;iy an-
llwar dernonstralors w ere
li'gal. consl1tutional. an d
essentia!Jo control a "vicious
:ind wanton n1ob attack on
'\lashing\on."
Jn ~·hat uue official describ-
ed as the final defense of the
legality of the 1nass arrests,
Depuly Attorney C en e r a I
Richard G. t\!eindienst also
linked leaders of the protest
\1•ith the f'.'orth Victnan1cse
and Viet Cong.
"~take no rnistake, this was
a calculated auempt by
organized disruptcrs led by
people v.·ho had met repeated-
ly "'ilh Viet Cong and North
Vietnan;.ese leaders .. , he said.
"It was not a group or
fro!llcking picnickers. as so1ne
\\'ashington coluninists have
tried to make out This was a
deadly serious progr<1 n1 lo halt
the U.S. govern111cnt. and :.i
....:.__ ..force of 20,000 h;.id been
· mobilized to do just that."
'· Kleindienst said arrests or
7.000 demonstrators ~1ay 3
\1i!hou1 the usual field arrest
torn1 used by District of
Co!u1nbla police '"\\'ere pcr-
feclly legal."
.. There is no require1nent in
1he Constitution or in the D.C.
law for !he use of field <irrt~st
forms .. , he said in a speech
prepared for the Clevclnnd
Hotary Club. "Such forn1s h;1d
been 1)reviously adopted as an
administrative procedure.''
'"Bui according to I he
critics,"' Kle1ndiensl said. "'the
police should have turned their
backs on a rampaging 1nob in
order to busy themselves as
clerks 'Niih p ro c e d u r a I
fonns.''
Joh Mon ey
For Youth
Di scloise <l
\\IASH!NGTON IUPll
J•1·f'siden1 Nixon said \\lcd-
nesd<iy the tedera! govern-
ment 1vill spend S30.1 rniflion 1n
helping 674.000 teenagers get
sun1mer jobs thi.~ year. Bui
the National Urban Lcagul'
\\'arned Iha! unrmployrner1I
among blacks \Va s (rightcn1n~
:ind 11 asked the governn1ent
to .~pend S6 bill ion
In his slaleinenl Nixon said ·
'"The sun1n1er of !!171 1\•ill be a
StlllllTit'r of t'XIKlllded ()Jl·
portuni!y for I he <lis:id-
"a111.1gcd youth of our country
-due in no :-.nnrll mcnsurP to
!hr large numbrr of s111nmer
jobs "'hrch arc being made
a1•adable In them."
'
THEY SMILE NOW -Pan American
ste1vardess Yolanda King share laugh
turned from four days in Cuba.
UPI Tll•p~olt
Airlines pHot Capt. Ceorgc Ashley and
in Miami after their 11ijacked plane re-
Hijack Visit
'Gla111orous' Havana,
Meets Hard Ti111es
i',.ll!\Ml \UPI ) -The very
word Havana i;ecmcd lo
cpilomize the sensuous gla-
mou r of tropical night life .
'l'housarids of A n1 er i c a n
tourists who s!rcarned lo the
Cuban capital in 1hc. l!)50"s
called il "The Paris of t~ie
Caribbean ."
Havana y.•as · · a not !1 e r
\1•orld." only 9U rnilcs rron1 the
U.S. in:iinlflnd. P r e l l y
senoritas flirted on aln1ost
every ~tre1.:I corner. Huin w;i:o:;
plentiful and cl1cap. Casino~
flourished_ There \\'as dancing
witil da"'"·
Then came Fidel Castro and
the revolution. Cuba v.•as clos-
ed to "Yankee imper1alisl s"
by the Communist regime .
llav.i na became a tropic<JI
wallflower.
IVord tillered out during U1e
past decade aboul the spartan
life in Havana. but the first
rc:i! look at !he city caine this
"·eek when 68 perSons aboard
n hip1cked airliner were de-
tained almost four days by the
The pilot. Capt.
Ashll'y. 52, or Coral
fla., said he last
Gt'orgc
Gables,
\\'(JS in
Havana ii yea rs agn and 1t
•·has changed drastically."
"It is Vt'ry, very rundown.
Along the !•;J ;ilcco11 ( a
boulevard sklrtinR the bay
that once "·as Havana·s n1osl
pieturrsqur drive) there arc
pigpens on the roofs. chicken
pens on \he roofs. you
wouldn't recognize it. 11 looks
Jike a ruin.··
OlD VIOLIN
SETS ft1AHK
LONDON (UPIJ -A li21
Slradivanus sold today al :1ur,-
t1on for a record $201,600.
nearly four times the previous
record sale price for a violin.
\\li!liam !Jill and sons. violin
maker~ and de::ilcrs of Lon-
don·s Bond Strce1. n111dc the
\\"inning bid at Sotheby's on
the instrun1cnt of/creel for sale
by Samuel Bloon1fic\d (lf
California.
Railroad
1'o Unloa<l
Prime Land
PllJLAOELPHIA (UPI) -
The financially distressed
Penn Central railroad has an-
nounc(•d rl v. ii! sell lhc sites of
the \Val clorf Astoria llotel and
other val uable /\:cw 'Yor k Citv
property in an altcinpt t.-0
raise needed n1oncy.
Trustee$ of the Penn Central
Transport:llion Co. s a id
\\'ednesday the property, own-
ed for more than HlO years, in-
cludes a 29-acre tract covering
about 10 midtown ~1anh11Uan
Blocks along lower Park
Avenue. Value of lhe property
is cslilnaled nl 1nore than $1.2
btll itJll.
The trustees said that while
!he purpusC' or putting lhe real
estate up for s;de was to raise
needed fund s. !here was little
J1opc the railroad could expect
to recei\"e quick cash.
!\lur\gages on the properties
ar{· s.iid tn exceed haH a
billion dollars.
The buildini,:s on the pro-
perly arc an1nng Ne\v York"s
1nos! fa rnnus landrnarks. in-
C'luding (;rand Cc n Lr a I
Terminal. the l'an American
Building and the Rilhnore.
Comrnodore. lloosevelt and
Barclay hotels.
Th11~~ay, J11"' 3, 11171 DAIL V PILOT ~
75 Bagw, Daily Revenue
Proposal
Defeated
HeroinAddict Leave s Gri1n
WASHINGTON (U PI)
Film w arnn1gto y OllIIgste1·s
The first section er President
Niion·s revenue sharing plan
to be voted on by Congress
was defeated Wednesday and
some House men1bers claim
they have uncove red a flaw in
another major $5 billion seg-
ment of the plan that will
allow them to shelve it for this
year, at least.
NEWTON, Pa. (AP) -He addicls that tfl'e greater n1a-of lhe Buck!! County di s1ritt
died in jail a dn.rg addi ct. In jority of them, if not all or attorney 's ofiice, in this srn~i !I
puin . He was hooked on heroin, them, starl out with mari-Philadelphia suburb, ll e
a habit that reached 75 bags juana and th en progress to agr('{'d to do it to reach kid:s ln
daily at a cost of $750 before harder drugs ..• , Junior and sl'nior high school,
his arrest. "They all say you c.in quit and show then\ what berni.: <HI
He left behind a filn1ed C'On-\\'henever you \Vilnt to. I s.11d _addict is like.:. __ _
fession. warning young pe<ip!e it. loo. Bul the years speak for
ntll to cxper1n1ent with mari-themselves.' My arms. my
juana and hard orugs. legs. ll's a matter of record.
1'he fihn was made for You can"! stoµ. Don'L talk
police in April 1970, four you rself into thinking you can,
months hefore he d i c d cause you can·t."
awaiting trial for burglary. It His arn1s and legs v.•ere
is now being processed for covered '>''ith nM'dle marks. I
school distribution. delayed 'fhey 1vere almost as hard as
because of legal problems with stone after 13 years of in-
his family . jection afler inje(·tion. Even
''Stop before you start,'' he under his fingernails.
•• -jewels by joseph
APPRAI SALS
••late jewe l•y
The initial defeat came
when the House, 204 to 182.
turned down a Nixon plan !hat
would have turned $2.5 billion
in federal revenue over to
states and cities during the
next two years for manpower
training or public service jobs.
The governmenta l uni I s
receiving the money wfluld
have decided if it went for
training or for actual work.
Instead the House passed a
Democrat-backed me a sur e
lhat would authorize $5 billion
during the next five years, to
be spent for the creation of an
estimated 150,000 pub I i c
service jobs. The President
has threatened to veto this ap-
proach.
said. •·1 used every vein that \Vas i
"Everyone near you , you av;iilnblc, in every part or my ~--,-------~
hurt,"' he snid. •·No one bo~~·" .heto'1"didl. . I I Co1~:u~.,:0•1t :!~~~Ob6 esca,...,.5 ii. <Ainn1s us story 1n tic
r--t d" r th Lo B k I Bri1lol .,, lhe s~n Die 0 Fwy. "There·s nothing you 1von't s.u 10 o .. e wer t~e s ,l!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j~';;;;;;~ do, there's nothing you can't ~te!ev1sron to detectives "
The defeat came as the
House \\lays and Means Com·
mittee opened hearings on the
•·general " section cf Nixon 's
revenue sharing prflposal. This
section would divert $5 billion
in federal revenue to slate!'
and ci ties with no spending
slrings attached.
do when it comes lo crime.
Drugs are. ineentive , the driv-
in~ force."
The 29-year-old son o[ a
while middle class suburban
school teacher was identified
only as "Dennis," to protect
his wife and three children.
Th ose who fool around with
marijuana arc kidding
thc1nsclves, he said.
''It has been my experience
over the years "'ith other drug * tr tr
Ma11y States Softe}1
Laws 011 Marijuana
Associated Press \l'riler stiffening. the pcnaltie.~ for
~1 arijuana users are less n111rijuana dealers.
likely lo wind up in jail in 1971 A few states continue to hold
as increasing numbers of the line against rel axing tough
states legislate more lenient criminal statutes in marijuana
Jaws. cases. All slates ha~ balked
A survey by The Associaled al implementing the recom-
Press shows that many states 1nendation of a national com-
are following \ht re c en t mission to legalize the drug.
federal law that reduced There is a noticeable trend
possession of marijuana fClr lo scParate marijuana of-
person al use fr om a felo ny lo fenses from the existing body
a mi sde1ncanor. nr n::ircolics ! aw s. In
This· will pcr1nil judges to \Vashinglon State, pot has·
keep first offenders out of been dcsigna1ed a "dangerous
prison. drug'' rather than 11 narcotic.
The action by the slates this Nebraska has some or the
year continues a trend of the mildest Ja ws. A judge there
past four years toward milder n1ight impost> a penally as
laws for simple possession. light a.!" a $1 fine for po ssess-
Sta!es lhat reduce penalties in ing Jess than one pound of
1971 include A r k a n s a s, marijuana.
0. y-Ilk• t • help ,..opi.?
S.•klng • M•, •adt/"9 ~_.,.,
fhe" be • tf'lll-4
MElllCAL ASSIST ANT OR
RECEPTIONIST
DENTAL
ASSISTANT
Sho•I, i11l•n•i•• cou"•" ful!t eiuol;ft yo ..
o• on Auioh:int in th<: o!f;<e of o Phy,;c;o,.
o • D•nli1t. ' mo~I~ p•D9"'"' lot Dental A>-
1li!onl 0< Medicol Ofli<e Re<ept.ofti•I. 7
.,onlh progroln lor Mfit;,.,1 Auiot<>n1. Ony
,_,. •ffning <ioo•e•. l ;frl;.,., plo<cmanl
oui,1o~c• ot . ..., odditionol co•t.
Southern California College
of
Medical and Dental Aisistarils
(forrn1rlw-lo5 Angelts College)
;,
~~~~~~~~ /
N11'J. A11n. of Trd. and Technic1I Sthls. I w.i .... -. ,..,. ,,.., ••• ...,..,...
1717 South Brookhurst
Anaheim
Phone 635-3450
An Eligible Institution
under
the Federally Insured
Student Loau Program
1 .
Colorado, Florida, ldaha. ln-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~· diana, !\1innesota. Nebraska , .i·~ ~
Ut ah , \Vashi ngton and ¥/est C ., r j
Virginia
The survey i ndi c ate s , EARN 25% 503 MORE
how""· th't ''''" ""
0 TO 0
Cubans. The Pan American ---------
'\'orld Alr\vays jetliner relurn-f
cd to the Uni!ed Stales ~
holding firm, or in some cases -.~-~;-= .• ~ .. ~.,,~:.;::;~;;;;~~=:~· ~ ... "7t.;.,-, .-"--· ~)"'ii? : Most banks have now reduced savings pass book rates
to a low 43. At Pacific you still earn the same ' '
Nixon said the Na11on:1J
.l\l llance of Bus1ness1nf'n 111i\I
provide :in addition;il 150,QOO
joh slot~ inrrra~rng lh r total
of subs1di:.a·d po.~i11uns lo
82•1.000. fll' s:1id this is 204.000
rnfl re th:in last 1·p;.1r
Three·fnurlhs · of lhc iob.~
\I'll! IJe $41.(ill a 11·t·ck pos i!inn~
in the Ncighbnrhnqd ''otlth
!'urp~ lastin£: nine ll'eek.~. one
lrf'r k fc1rer thn n la~! ~un1m('r
\\'edncsday. I
.. J'\"e travelrd all over Latin L.
America. but I "vr seen nothing ,
like ii ... the \\'hole town v.'as ·
\'Cr\1 dilapidnled 11ncl no house i.
cou.ld be said not !o need a -~
coat of paint." said one of the
huacked passengers. ~1 rs .
Heidi Tortura or i\assau .
TUllN 13ACI\ Till: CL()CI\
T() Till: NUSTAL«31C 1'JJ()!IS
1'.· •
ANNUAL YIELD
6.18°/o
high rates as before.
ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS
6.00°/o 5,000!!!! TWO
;,
Ii ': ' f' " t .
" • I , • .i lo
Would you like to be
more creative?
You can bl'. iryotl understand that you arc the
rcnec!ion o f God, who is the only creator.
·rfli:-. help~ you express the im<lginalion, rrc!l11ncs~,
:111~ inspira lion God ·ha!' give n yuu.
No one shoultl feel his i;ilcnt's·stiflcd. Or his life
hun:Jcncd with boring t;1sks. Jfyou do, you can
~tar! lod:iy lo learn of lhc creati vi ty I hat comes
Jron1 Gotl.
Conic in ;ind rcat.l llus wcck·s Bible Lesson.
Our sludy roon1 is quiet. frrc, and open
to everyone.
Christian Science Reading Room
©
COSTA MES.\ -'lll Sf CHUllt;;H O' CHlll.1$1", ICIENTIST
lUt M•>& V•--• Or!wt, C•1l1 M"•
HUNl!NCTON l l".\Cll -'lliT CllUltCM 0' CHlllST, SClfi"IT IST
llt Mtoft '""'' 111110!1"9'-'I lttlll
NEWl'Oll.f IEACll -'IAST CHUllCll 0,. Ct1111ST, SCt!ftlTnT
l)!I V•I LMllt, How,,_rl llH~
NfW;tQll T lf.-'Ct1 -SICOHO CHU llCH 0, ClltllST, SCIENTIST
~lOO·I c .. 11 H1g11 .. 1y, (;trtll• ••I Mu
I
The fashion look of the Thirties is back end we've got it.
Ladies Glycine watches wit h colored stone crowns.
An assortment of styles. shapes and an array of colors.
Values lo$55. YOUR CHOICE, $37.60. ,.._
Cll•rtt Acc-11 lllwUM.
A""t rio;.11 liK,rt n.
ltl!llA-k•~lf '"" ~,,... ci..,.,., ""·
SLAVICK'S
Ji.>WCll•r1 Since 1!117
18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPO~T BEACH -b44·1380
Open Mon. end Fri., 10 ... m. to '9:..30 p.m. ,
< I , -;
J
I
~1 "•'JI 1 ' ' ' •
"
' ,j.
•
I
5.92°/o 5.75°/o 1,000!!!! ONE
5.39°/o 5.25°/o 500!!!! Xth
5.13°/o 5.00°/o J 9.!! ONE DAY
Interest compounded daily and paid from date of
deposit to date of withdrawal even if ifs just one day
Ask how you can obtain all lhese ben efits servLce charge
FREE
PREPARA,TION OF PERSONAL STATE and
FEDERAL INCOME TAX RETURNS
j • FREE
TRAVELER'S CHECKS
COLLECTION OF NOTES
SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES
MANY OTHERS
OPEN NIGHTand DAY • Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M.
Saturday 10:00 A,M. to 6:00 P.M.
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
U» IAISTOL ITlllUf • 'COll"t tlUA. CAUFORNIA • PHONf S40-40M
,/
I 1
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--·
•
DAILY PILOT EDITORIAi; .PA6!
9
No Longer ID , Balance
When the Saddleback Junior College DI.strict was
organiied, a fi ve·n1ember l,>oard of trustees was estab-
lished, each member representing a separate tn1stee
district.
Thousands of visitors will UM the major ncnaUon
complex nett week. Yachtsmen finally have a 1nug hubor between
Newport Beach and Oceanside.
The trustees \\lere to be elected by the voters at
large, \Vh.ich seemed emine~Uy .fair. gi ving voters in all
geographical areas a full voice 1n makeup of the board.
And the boaters alr111dy have flocked to tht mar-
ina's several hundred slips. Dozens of veutll arriv~ '
last weekendi 1till more will have a coveted berth by
next fall
Since then, however. the population has boomed
in the Saddleback ValJey areas, while coastal commun·
ities have grown much more slo\vly. This has resulted in
a voter inbalance that no\v gives the inland trustee dis.
tricts virtu al control of the board by sheer preponder-
ance of baUots.
The star bonders at the harbor are u proud of tbe
maritime facility u the developtrl' of Dana Hubor.
Yachtsmen have wasted little time in chanlln&
names of home ports on the transom to '1Dana Point."
They had waiUld years for the chance.
Good News for Students The trustee plan designed to give meaningful rep-
resentation fron1 each geographical area. As il now
stands, a coastal area candidate can be voted onto the
board or rejected by inland voters who may know little
or nothing about his qualifications.
A solution \vhich has been officiall y proposed by
both the Laguna and Capistrano boards of education
is a revision or the rules to permit election of the trus·
lees by vo ters residing in the area they will represent.
It is now up to the l'ollege board to take the necessary
legal steps, and it already has named a committee to
study the proposal.
Decision of Laguna Beach achool trustees to move
the high school onto the quarter 11y1tem should bt 1ooct
news for students in more ways than one.
Jn the first place, it will mesh the school calendar
with that of the state universities, an increasing num·
her of colleges and the junior college in its own diitrict.
This means that 1 student who wants to speed up
his college entry can do so without finding himself high
and dry between quarter and semester 1cheduJe1.
After Years of Waiting
Jt also will make it possible for students to com·
plete some state requirements, such as driver educaUon,
In a shorter period, and it should be euier for advanced
student& to do some college wort· while 1Wl in hj1.l1
school . It wasn't long ago that several dozen dignitaries
gathered on a bare patch of land upcoast or Doheny
State Beach and laid the first boulder of Dana Harbor.
Today, they boarded a boat to tour hundreds ol
boat slips filled \Vi th small craft and to survey areas still
under construction at a $28·million harbor which ha.s
changed the fa ce of the South Coast.
The thrtt specific grading pariod1, in1te1d of two,
should give more meaningful progreu evaluaUon and a
better opp<>rtunity to improve gradea.
A Cringe benefit, u noted by the Laguna superin·
tendent, will be the need for revision of present cour1e
offerin&s to fit into the new time sloll. Any such revi·
ston, says the superintendent, ii like to result in an up-
grading of 'the course.
The project has started an economic renaissance
in the once sleepy county area. •
Says Heflltor Shotald Build in Otvn Back Yard
'He Should Drop· High Rise'
Tn th e Editor :
Very much to my chagrin. t note in
I.he 111ay 26 edition of the DAILY PILOT
that Laguna Realtors Board President
Robert Turner (Emerald Bay) v.·ill seek
5upport for the nefarious high rise by
petitioning the Laguna Beach Chamber o(
Commerce. ._
Exactly Jr om v.·hom is he seeking sup-
port? The president of U1c cha mber?
His icHow Emeriild Bay resident is
11lready working behind the scenes
toward the same goal to deface our
\\'aterfront. He should do Lagunans a
great big favor and drop this undesired
underlakin,I!'. Build high rise, if he musl,
in his own backyard and please stop tell·
ing v.·hnt is best for us Lagunaticks.
'J11anks but no thanks. r wrote a somewhat similar letter to
Hcrnard Syfan. It 11as published In the
DAJLY PILOT mmiths ago. Mr. Syfan
never bothered to. or could not. answer.
l\'lr. Turner, a much more urbane person
perhaps can.
BORJS BUZAN
Coastal Zot1i11g
" To the Editor
,· Assembl\'man Sierotv's bill for
tireserv:.itiOn of our coasllinc J~ :i studied
document designed nol 011ly fi;ir pro-
tl'<:tion against haphazard development.
'C'vhich has characlenzed our use of the
11;horelinl' in the past. but. it most
thoughUully providrs for ;1 controlling
commiss ion rcprrsenting ui; through our
reprl·scntali\'es in all Ir' rl.' of govern-
1ncnt.
\\'E \\'OULO BE m('mb('r!> or the Los
Angcles·Ornnge County region al com-
n1ission consisting of one supervisor from
rach county. one councf!man fron1 IAJs
Angeles, one city councilman from Los
Angeles County other than the city
of L os An gel es . one city coun-
cilman from Oran~e Counlr. a delega1 e
In the Southern California Association of
c:overnrrcnts, and six representatives or
the public. t"''O appointed by the
governor. two by the. Senate Rules Com·
mittec, nnd two by I.he speaker of lhe
Assembly. Public members would be
persons especially \Yell qualified "lo
recommend a coasln l plnn to promote
improvement of the qualify of the coastal
environment.''
JUST AS WE LONG ago delegated our
street maintenance, our rire protection
and other services to our clty governing
bodies. instead of handling them as in·
dividuals, the time hns n11 w come to put
into ,lhe hands or a regional body the
regional resources of our coaslline. l #le cannot alone a:~ cities or ind!viduals , 1V(c4e<:t bur own balllv.•Jck fron1 the nlr
pallulion generated by 11 neighboring
powtt plant nor by ourselves keep oil
wrnpanles from drilling within our Im·
-----Thursday, Jt111e S. 1971
Tht edi torial f)O!Je of the DaJl11
Pilot ittkl to i11 form on.cl 1ttm-
ulott rcad.trs by prtsniUng this
newspapcr't opinio111 and com--
mentary on topic• of fntneit
and $fg1dfic1Jnct , b~ P"mridina 4
forum for the e%pr11non of
our re(lderi' opinfom, and bv
ptf!l11tti11g tM diOfl'IC IMio-
point.c of~ fnfoT1!J.fd o!I*'""" ond 1pok<,,,..n on topjir af IM <tiu.
Robert N. Weed, PUblllber
'·
~
Letters from rtaders art Wtlcomt.
Normally writer• should convey thtir
messages i'n 300 wcrrds or ltss. Tht
,.ight to conde11st letters to fit ipoct
or eli'mi11ate /ib et Is rtserved. All te t.-
ters m11st t1ic/ude tignaturt and mail·
i·ng address, but 11ames may bt witk-
lield on req uest if sufficient reason
is apparent. Poetru will not be pub·
lislied.
mediate coastal area, nor keep a
neighboring developmen~ from so grading
the land as to shut off all vltw o( the
ocean. But a regional commission, con-
cerned wllh the interests or the larger
area, can prevent one group from in-
terfering with the. rights of an adjacent
group.
CAREFUL STUDY of the bill will show
that our righU will be given more pro-
tection than is available now. For tx-
ample, were ther e any public hearings in
\vhich v.·e could participate held before
Salt Creek Road was given awa y, or
befQre various subdivisions closed off our
access lo the adjacent beach? 'l'his bill,
AB 1471 , provides that "no decision or
pcrmit\,applications or on the adoption of
thr coSt;tal 1.one plan shall be made
without B'prior public hearing."
Our \'Oices can be he Ard in support or
protest. If v.•e don't like the decision, it
can be appeal~ or recei\'e a judi cial
rcviev.'. AB 1471 pro jects a coastal toning
benrficial to all of us.
EVELYN GAYMAN
Applo111e, Applo11•e
To the Editor :
I \\'as one of tilt many who attended the
Laguna Beach High School's production
of "The \\'izard of Oz."
Hats off, applause , applause. bravo and
clieers to all the great performers and
everyone connected with INs e'xeitini
production!
They made my families and my even·
ing lhoroughly enjoyable.
HOWARD COi.&
Tl1e 601 1tr .. 1c Ate
To the Editor:
Builders, contractors with bulldozing
machines. hlgh-rl~s. are destroylng
views and encouraging more and more
people 'i''ith cars emiting smog into a
small town that cannot and possibly
never will solve it! dangerous traffic
problems, ,specially when the F-tstiva1
of Arts and summer IUIOll st.arta.
What will happen to OW' featlv1l when
Quotes
Robert C. Se1mu1, Jr,. Seq. el Alr
Force, In SP' 1peecli 01 MWly crtdcll at-
lttude klwlrd te.cbokta .. ladiw t.
pollutlon, arm• race -"Technology itstlf
Is only a tool, which can have both aood
and bad elfect.s depending on how It l.1 us-
ed, ''
Fred M.,.._., St.11111 Sellaetr, 11.eddlq,
opposlna: proposal to halYe •arnbitr ef
local fain ellilble for, .1S..te trpport -
"Thi! ll one of U. dlmlnlahina •rut of
govemmenl where the worttn• tarplytT
r~lv~ aomc direct benefit from h\11 tu
dollar. Far too often the trend In iovern-
ment today la to like from the. oroduclnt:
dtiRn In order to proYlde benedb for tht
DOO-PfOduetr."
artist! move away, ever in search af
n1tural beauty?
WHEN OUR BEACH cout is hlth-rben
and the cncb between destroy the
town'• ocean breezt11, v.•hat will blo'\111
away smog from addition•! smog-belch-
ing vehicles? How hot will Llfuna bt
Y.ithout those same breezes.
Cement and buiJd until no part Clf our
planet exi.!lts nor his any eirth ar
creatures left. Our materlallstlc 1e.nera·
lion mll!ll b&\'! those three car1 in the
garage. so does it matter that liter we
wlll not be here? Th1t only our childrm
will hive no green earth to ezbl thereon?
CAN OUR gentratlon11 bypau the jet
agea? The spact 1ge? Can't they un·
derstand that thi• is no lonpr their age.?
Must they thus bring ibout the next a11,
"The Gls Mask Age?"
Why not proguas within in1lt:1d of pro-
iress without?
ELINOR DA VIS
Priett Harl Lhlerl • Lie
To the Editor·
In regard to Laura Lte Mach'a letter
(Mailbox, "'f•y 2') re1ardtn1 Celibacy vs.
fltarriage~
lt is my feeling that the archbishop of
the San Flanclsco area 'vas justified and
obligated to remove Father Durye1 from
his priestly duties and I commend the
archbishop for doin1 so,
Father Duryea had been livin1 1 lie., by
not miking knov:n publicly in lhe. be.g in-
ning of his marriage the two lives he wa:i
living. Tiie honorable thing for him to do
would have~ to ~II his people and th~
archblsbop of his renunciation or the vow
of celibacy that he voluntarily took when
ht becamt a Jl'legt.
WHEN A MAN take !! a vow of cellb1ey
It Is a promise of life.long abltenUon from
marriage. The rules of the church on this
are made very clear, He has freely
cllo!en to make thi! promise. lie has an
obligation to fulfill thlt promise and to
keep it. A young man studying for the
priesthood has many years to decide tf he
wants to live a Wt or celibacy. Ht alao
has an obUgaUon to awld becoming at-
tached to things that would ktep him
from fulffillng the promises he made at
his ordination.
Celibacy is riot a fiight from marria11
or compltte love but rather the 1ymbol of
total commitment to God, and to God '•
work in the lllvaUon of mankind.
1 f1ND AMUSING, really, the concept
of tht: married priest. Can't you jlL'!l see
Junior nmn1nC Into tbt church in the
middle oi mus ahoutlnf, "Look, did, no
cavities!" Or the youn1 pr"lt boldlb& a
small baby wtlh wet dllpen: Ind a ruD-
nlna: noae while trylna to console someone
who needa hJs undivided attention.
MRS. llA V1D A. FELDE
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
County Plannln• C:Ommlssioner
Butterfield'• new vtndeU.a ag1l1u1t
Sad<ll••k Community ll0tplt1l ;,
t1dded rtalOft for the Lefblature
to lnvertt11te conructs of lnlt:rtst
1n the holpltal cue. What's &ht.
commta:.tJon1r'1 an11t?
-A. L. P.
""' ...... ""'*" ,......... .,... ...
_.-jflr """' ....... ....,,..,.. ......................................
s
A Few of the
Facts of Life
In Economics
The trick of creaUni an inflationary
eeonomy that continues to keep prices
rising through an 1mployment recession
ma,rufied by 1kyrocklng lax rates -
"ln..Dato-asslon" to coin a word -is one
mo:!t economJc whiZJes would have
Jauahed away not too Iona ago.
·The daUy headlines make .it clear this
is Ule crisis th•l has been nurtured to full
bloom the past decade or ao. California
and New York, lhl naUon's ty,·o largest
&t.ltd, mOftt clearly illustrate the prob·
lem, as the root causes of "inflato.
cession" are meat evident in populous
centers.
THE PROBLEM, or course, I s
enormousl~pllc1t.td. Varkius of the
Common M"arke.t countries have cut
adrift fr om the dollar because the cur-
rencies of those countries are more
v1Juable than the dollar. This increases
the COit of those l(lOd.s imported into the
United Statea from the countries in4
Yolv1d. The irony of the matter, of
course, is th8t it wa11 the Unittd States'
aid which put the countries on their feet.
It is U.S. millt1ry insllllations which fuel
their ecoDOtnita and reduce their defense
requirement,,, It is U.S. touriJts who
pwnp doll1r1 into the countries at a y,·on·
drous rate.
At home the people of tbe country , at
an ever acce.leralin& rate, have demand·
ed or have been vottd. tht widest, most
e1ptnsive vuiety or weltare programs
for tht. areatest number ol people ever
known.
WELFAJtE PM>GftAMI cost money,
ta1 mone y,
In California, wht:rt there is 1omethlng
approachlna a t.l'I nyolt ~ If not almost
an ln1blllty to pay -11 percent of the
population la on wllll1rt nus. That's 2.:t inilllon Californlana -11.4 perctnt of all
the people In the naUon who are on
.,'tlfare.
Governor Ronald Re.acan. b trying to
contain the ttlMI tu problem with a M. 7
billton budttt and nquuta for 1weeplng
reform of CaWornia wtllare Jaws. The
Democntlc ludtnhlp ht the legislature
does not Sffm inclined to 10 along wilh
the Governor and hi• proposed tax
refonn proposal• of ltl own. Only tlme
will tell how the dlftvtncel la 1pproach
are resolvtd.
JN NEW YOkI rtate where Governor
Nellon Rochfeller hN to contend with
Mayor John UndaJ'• totally bankrupt
New Yori< City, th< Govtmor bu hod to
dlmlss 1,2!!0 irtate ernploye1, and 11lash
wtlfart coatl drl.IUcally. to stay within
the Nte'a budpt which ~ lecltlaturir
.trlmrned by '780 million from a re-
quuttd P.4S blWon. N•w York's welfare
nclplentl total 1.7 million and 1.1 million
or those an In N•• York City.
Thell an but 1 ttt of the te0nomic
f1cta: of Ufe that in CaUtornia, for ln-
stanct, ruuit In • .-..mpqtment rale
of over 7 percat ud the MCOnd largest
mte and local per captta tu burden in
the country -f$tl ptr person against
N1w Yort:'a '571.
"tnn1to-cutlon.1! Jf the list• don 't aet
you -un1mployment ml&ht. -and lhtn
you are on welfart!
C1ll 1'1111 J'e1tare knke
•
As a Compass,
Hope Is Terrible
In navigating tbrough life, hope is an
essential ballast, but a terrible compass.
.. '1 "'
One mania I have never understood js
the passion for betting on horses : at least
if people bet on turtles they wou ld get a
Jot longer ron for lheir money.
¥ ,, ..
"Incompatibility" strikes me as absurd
grtunds for divorce;
all cooples are in·
compatible. being
made up of two in-
dividuals of different
sexes, and the
whole point or mar-
r i a g e. consists iri
learning to l ind
areas of compatt·
blllty. • • •
The '''8Y in which most of us assert our
"individuality'' is by using our freedom
lo become exaclly like our neighbors. . ' .
People \\'ho are uneasy in the presence
of the famous or talented should keep in
mind Eleanor Roosevelt'~ ll'ise in-
junclion : "Remember, no one can make
you feel inferior ll'ithou t your consent.·• . . '
A "v.·ell·infonned" n)an is someone
who has thought up better arguments to
support our position than \\'e ha l'e • • •
The difference betv.·een Freud amt
most of his popularizers i:ii that Freud
knew when a cigar 1vas JUS~ a cigar. • • •
\\'e can bear any scorn from the young,
c~cept their current evaluation that to be
o\_9 is per se. to be unattractive; and
na scent cullorc 1hnt fi nds no beauty tn
age \\/ill. becornc increasingly &elf·
lacerating in time. • • •
Insurance prolects you "a gains t
t>Verything except lhe I e g a l ii tic
terminology it 1s cot1chetl JD.
' ' ' A •'pseuclcr1nlellectual" is an in·
tellectual who makes no effort to conCf;al
his sense of superionty from us.
* ~ *
\Vhalever the disparities in language,
people laugh much the same all over the
\\'orld· and where there i:;; universal humo~. there is hope for universal agree.
menl on matters that cannot be laughed
at. • • •
The most annoying sort of bickering'
neighbors arc the ones \\'ho are loud
enough to be disturbing without being
loud enough to be intelUg1ble, so that. we
get all of the din and none ol 1he dirt. . ' .
I have yet to meet a pro ressed "self-
made" man who "'as even slightly
ashamed of his maker. _, " ,.. ')
~ome people rire so tactless that the
forn1 of their apologies cons\tlules J n·
other olfenst. • • •
It's often hard lo lell the differenct
between a reformer \\'ilh an idea in hb:·
head and one with a constriction in his
bowels.
Laws for Motor Bikes
i';mericans are bu)'ing motor bikes ih
record numbers. California has mo~
than a hall million registered. Ma ny
mort are not regi.!ltered. largely because
owners do not know they must be.
The Jaw distingu ishes bet"'·cen the
"motorcycle" and the smaller "motor·
driven cycle" such as motor scooters.
But both arc ''motor vehicles." They are
IJOYtmed by the vehicle laws. Bolh must
be Uce.n.sed and equipped with sa fely
devices. Both are subject to many of the
same laws as other motor veh icles. Thcwe
bikes are not toys.
OPERA.TORS OF motor vthiclc.s must
be licensed or they cannot drive on the
street. It ls unlawf ul to dr ive on pri vate
property without permission of the own·
er. Nor can they be used in most parks
or other public properly. Violal!cm of
these laws can brtng severe penalties.
Parents who allow their youngsters
under 21 unlictnsed to opernle. these
bikes may become rc8ponsi ble for
damages which result from the drlver·s
negligence.
Per10ns "'ho drive without a llceMe
m1 y hnve the vehicle impounded or taken
ay,•ay. C'.onviction of violating the la w can
t..... Dear Gf'Orge:
Alt. you the columnist "'ho te\13
people how to make: ashtrays out of
lln cans by silvering them and
11pottlng them with sequins~
R.E. °'" R.E.: Ill No. that musrbe !h:it ro!un1nist
who keep!! coins through the traslt
over in the .-omen·~ department
•.(
· Law in Act.ion
J
re sult. in further pena\lies.
TH.E LA \Y RESTRICTS not just the
parents. It s;:iys thnt ''no person'' shall
employ or hire anyone or knowingly
authorize the driving of a "motor
vehicle" owned by him or under his con·
trol upon the highv.·ays unless I.he person
is properly licensed.
ll is al.sn a cri1ne lo lend your license,
Lo v.Tong fully display it or to duplicate it.
Some states require operators to wear
hel mets or to have additiona l
safety devices.
;'iany smaller n1olorcycles are not per·
mitted on freeways, A local ordinance
may designate that certain portions cf
the freeway 11hall be restricted to molar·
driven cycles. \Vhen the ordinance or
resotQlion has .been approved by the
Department of Public Works and signs
are posted on tilt free\\·ay or the ap.
proaches, violation becomes a crime. ~e mnlnreycles are high on muff ler
noise v.·hich is also a vJola Uon of the Jaw.
for cans. Ju!lt dump lhe nshes on
lhe floor . Live a little, I say.
CONF IDENT IA L TO TV
\\'EA1'11F-;nMAN: Oh, quil wor-
rytn.I{ me with lhO!e questions -
nobody else understands that m1'p
('ither. Just ktep pointing with yQn r
l~llle ·alick nnd evr.rythln~ v.·ill be
fine .
--·
QUEENIE By Phll lnterlandl
"And my answer to all employee demands is, 'Of!
with their heads!' Present company excepted,
of ooune."
Hospital C11is Blasted;
Service Said in Crisis
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
president of the County-USC
Medical Center Professional
Slaff Association says the
hospital's operating rooms are
so busy that critically ill pa-
lients someti mes wait 18 hqurs
before surgery.
Dr. Donald \V. Petit made
the claim in a leUer \\led-
ncsday to the Los Angeles
County Board of Supervisors
pro!esting planned cu tb<1cks in
!be hospital 's budget.
The association is composed
of 2. !00 do('tors in pri vate
practice who donate their time
lo leaching and lre.iting pa-
tit>n!s al the ho.~piliil.
"There is no doubt in the
minds of the slalf that ill-
nesses have been rn adc much
\VOtSC bCCQUSC Qf delays of
operating rooms at t h e
hospital · and such dr.J.1·,1s mav
\Vell some d;iy reSult ifi
nC'cdless de;iths." Petit said
lie said the org~nization
feels "it must spenk For the
thousands or pa1irnts seen nn-
nually at this inslilution and to
protest, y,•ith as rnuch vi~or as
possihlc. !he hannFul effcrrs
that the fisc;il plans for ne}:I
)"ear can IHn·e on care ··
Petit cited in nn intervie\v
some f)f !he hospital's alleged
.shortcomings:
-The alcoholism 1vard is
designed for 40 p<itients and
has had as many as 65 in it.
There arc l .000 persons a
Short Term
Notes OK'd
By Senate
SACRAMENTO (A P) -The
Assembly today received from
the Senate urgency legislation
to allow the stale to .solve 1\s
Jack vr cash by selling abou1
filOO million \l.'orth of \ow-in-
ler<'sl short-tern1 notes.
The Senate passed the bill
~II after pro11nncnts said the
notes \\'OUld ;illow Cnliforn1a to
obtain needed c.1sh wllhout
in1pairing th e slate's favorable
bunrl rating.
Banks and comllinations of
banks arc expected to bid in
l'ompclition for the short te rm
notes under the supervision of
State Treasurer tv y Baker
Priest.
Senate passage Wednesday
came after bi!l author Sen.
Donald Grunsky (R-Watson-
ville), said lhe slate couldn't
Impose income tax
\vlhholdlng. quickly enough lo
prevent running oot of cash
that way.
Grunsky said an alternative,
Issuance of regl.!tered war-
rant.!. might lmpaiz the state's
high bond rating among the in·
vestment community.
Kirk West, chief deputy
.state controller, said the note.!
would probably be in the 3 to 4
percent interest tsearlng range
I r California's e~perlence
follows that Qf another fi.sc:ally
hardpressed state, New York.
T1·ial Ordered
In 2 Slayings
RIVEJl~foE (AP)
Municipal Court ha!! ordcrtd
black activist Gary Lawton,
31 held for Superior C&urt
trial on charges of tnurdering
t"'O Riverside polictmen.
La"·too, operator of . a
Riverside window cleaning
business, Is accused of the
ambush shotgun slayTnp of
patrolmen P:n,11 Teel. 25, and
1..eonard Chrli;tiansen, 30. on
i\prll 2. The two -policemen
v.•erl! kllled when t h e 'f ~n11.wered 8 f11ke burglary call
al • private residence.
, I
month in the admitting room
seeking help for alcoholism or
drug overdose.
-The therapeutic abortion
program. which p er f 0 rm s
about 4,000 abortions a year,
has no budget of its own and
has been supported by taking
nursing personnel from other
necessa'Y jobs.
-There is a three-year wait
for fal se teeth and other den.
!al devices.
Rowing Pair
In Ense1iada
For Repairs
ENSENADA, J\.fexlco (UPI)
-John Fairfax swam ashore
in t.Iexico Wednesday, his
pla[\S, ~o row lo Australia in-tcrr~ when his boat lost a
rudder.
Emilio ?\iendez. Ensenada's
director of tourism, sRid !he
Britanpia II lost a rudder orf
Point Conception, and ground·
ed on a point 35 miles soo!h of
here.
The Brilish adventurer
swam about two miles to a ce~
ment plant, "'"here he got 1
boat lo pick up Sylvia Cook,
his rowing companion.
Mendez said the couple ex-
pected to be ashore about 10
days before continuing I.heir
voyage.
F.mmet Ingraham or the
Southern California hfarine
Hadio Council said in Lo.'!
Angeles the coup le was ''hid-
den somewhere south o f
Ensenada. They're keeping
away from the pepers."
He said he understood
Fairfax·s 3a.fool orange boat
had sustained "some mino
damage, but I don 't know Jf
that n1eans $10 worth or
$1 0,000 \\"Orth."
Jn San Francisco. the Coast ·
C.uard said anolher radio
operator reporttd the boat and
!he couple \vere at "Punta
Aghino" 40 miles south of
Ensenada. They planned lo
repair the boat there. and con-
tinue on the voyage.
Ingraham said a member of
the council would fly to
Ensenada to in~pect I he
damage to the boat and repair
the malfunctioning radio.
Fairfax, SJ, who rowed the
Atlantic solo in 1963, and Miss
Cook, 31. a London art dealer,
left San Francisco April 2t on
what "'as sup~ to be 1 JG.
month, 8,000 mile royage to
Sydney.
Wife Must
Pay Alimony
To Husband
LOS ANGELES (UP!) -
Jacqueline McDonnell, 38, was
ordered Wednesday to pay her
former hushartd $1 ,602 a
month alimony.
Superior C o u r t Com-
mlssklner John R. Alexander
made the 1ward afler he was
lold by a lawyer for !he e:t-
hutband, David P. Ward, 43,
that she eamed $6,913 a month
as a singer and vocal coach,
six times the intome of her
former spouse. a. music ar·
ranger.
Ward In tum was ordered to
pay hh ex-wlfe $1 11 year
alimony. p 11 ya b I e each
Chrlstmas Day, the token
11w1rd WI.II to provide a bri~i~
for an increa.~e in alimony
payments by Ward 5hQuld hi s
income ever riMl above th.at of
his former wife.
·-. .,, .
DAILY Pl LOT z
Yorty Seeks-'Attona,ei's ~lsmlssal " ,. ,:-•
Officers Frel3:1~f Rights Chargrs; U.S. Aide Under Fire
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Two polkemen ~ a poUr;
.informant aocused vf civil
rights violations were. ac-·/ quitted Wednesday by 1
(ederal judge ayi.ng ·'Ui,e
government has C<>mP/.etely
failed to establish a case,"'
Mayor Sam Yorty, wl\o has
called the indictment of the of-
ficers Un (Ii r, immediately
called for the resigiiaUon of
U.S. Ally. Rober! L.' Meyer,
who had aMounced th e
federal grand jury 111dlctmenl!i
la!t Mal't'h 3.
"To let this cu~ 10 to lhe
jury would be a Waite of lime
and a wute ef .t taxpayers'
money," said 'Dbl Courl
Judge Clarles IL Carr who
acquitted the defim.dants.
Acquitted were Lt. Edgar
Brown and Sgt, Marshall f.'.
Gaines, and Angelo DiRien:zo.
They were indic ted on charges
of violating the civil rights of a
woman whose house was
burglarized.
The !!;rand jury said the of-case against the officers •·is
fit'Crs had previous knowledge !iynthetic from start)o finish.''
of the burglary but did-nothing-The judge made llis remarks
to prevent. it. DiRienzo was in court but outside !he
accu.'Jed of bu r g I a r i i l n g presence of lhe jury . After a_n-
Virgin ia Van Shaw 's home lo nou ncing the acquittal, Carr
lake some silverware for use had the jury of five women
by police in obtaining evidence and st"!ven men brought back
in an unrelated in vestigation to the courtroom, told them of
··I'm not condoning what"° his derision and excu sed them .
these men did ," Carr saicl_ Jn a statement, Meyer said
"But the governmenl ha:-; it would be inappropriate l!)
completely failed lo establish comment on the merits of
a case." Tbe judge said the Carr's decision, adding "the
government's obligalion to the
present case -the govern·
ment having no right of appeal
-has terminated." Meyer
had no comment on Yorty 's
demand for his resignation.
"We knew from the start
that the fcdefuJ government
had no case against these of·
flcers," Yorty said. '•The U.S.
attorney should never have
asked for the indictments."
''I also think that President
Nixon and Alty. Gen . .r.titchell
f!fle U! an explanoalion as to
why this case was prosecuted
in the first place ," Yorty told
a news conference.
Yorty emphasized h i~
remarks did not refer tn
anolher case in the March 3
indictments. In lhal case,
Gain's and three other of-
ficer! were accused of
violating the civil rights of (y,·o
Meltican nationals who were
killed during a police raid on
an apartment.
ecause
Kil"lg"6iZed quilted,
button-free mattress Padded vinyl headboard
King-sized mattress pad
2 King-sized bolster pillows
Vertical stitched
border construction
No·iron top sheet --~~~
No-iron fitted
bottom sheet
2 No-iron
pillow cases
Lovely
decorator
print
cover
Innerspring
construction
mattress and
box springs
King-Size Includes all 13 Pieces
With every King or Queen mattress you buy at Ortho you get: Mattress and
two t>bx springs with the King, mattress and box spring with the Queen. Plus
the Ortho-Pak which includes: Fieldcrest no-iron top sheet, Fieldcrest titted
bottom sheet, two King or Queen bofster pillows, two King or Queen pillow
case$, King or Queen.mattress pad and metal frame on casters. Also Ortho's
famous Double Bonus ot headboard and quilted bedspread. Total = the
absolute best vruue. Every1hing at one low, low price ••• only at Ortho!
a!,~~•~q~!!~
bollom, Inside OUL S/\1rd)l lomriertd
l\tel innerspring unit with a durable
•l•I Insulator; cott011 fell over thal and
topped whh • tlch scroll QUiited cov':lr. Complete
with venlila\ed, reinforced bor<Jer for longer, .9 8 coot.,, ... ,,.,. «>mlort. Typi"I ol lho
unen-ing_qlllllitYCGntrol Onho ,inaials upon
In 9¥9fY matttess value. Plu• lhe tamov1
°"ho-hie Md -. Doubi. eonu ••
INCWOES ALL 12 PIECES
r •; •
Twin or Full
Spending your J'FK)f"4y on an Ortho
Twin or Fun aize bed you'll always get
your money's worth, plus more! At ,..
Ortno every twin or luU pricft Includes
Ortho's f11mous, origll'lal Dooble Bonus.
And thal Double Bonus means yoo gel, at
no ~xtra Of'" hidden coat, a lleadl><Hlrd and
metal bed frame whh amoolh, euy rolllng
caslers. Thal"s ~value!
IM:fudn Po\IO!e BCM'IUe.
MATTRESS & BOX SPRING
I
Free Delivery on all Matb'esses from Ortho
Air vented
bordeis
2 Box spring
foundation -~~,
atching ~
box spring
fabric
Metal
frame
with ·
easy ron l
casters I
Many more. great King-size values
Originators of the ; Double Bonus "" -----
Queens and Twins and Fulls,.toq
. /Ho~e of the original Ortho-Pak / ·~ .
D
4433 Candlew:ood Av nue
Candltwood Shops
(across from Lake:wood Cente
Phone: 634-4134
I
You can only buy
............. Ortho Mattresses
"-.... at Ortho Stores
SANTA ANA and
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
16131 Harbor Blvd.
(corner or Edinger) Next to Zody's
Phone: 83 9-4 570
,
ANAHEIM
1811 West Lincoln Avenue
Between Euclid and Brookhurat Avenues
Just Eaat of Fed Mart
Phonei 776-2590
•
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~ D41l 'Y' PILOT
For the
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Girl. M•th•I!~ Rer\fi', I 00..n<" l OU"l:'ll , •o M t 600 Mr\ •I C. (,..,,,
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'Power Grab'
Record
• "'"'"•g• i.c~;.•• "'"'" l>ko•<l •o u"' 1w1<> ... •nu "' 01 ~. 11
Supervisor Moves
140 WLErT-AVRE$ w111,.m ~ ..
we.im.n>lot. otwl 1i...,,.,, 1\11 u , l•IJI
C.OIU~nw•"· Hvn1lnglon ll••<ll
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To Blast 2 Bills
Dissol11tio1is
Of ltfnr1·inge
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Flanrrty, o,.vi<l Jo••~" ,1•1<! H~"'"'" Marl•"· Loan and l'lyd~ D • l(•ou•• Lin<1• •nd Con•~d •11w;t 1-i•""'""• Hrt•n I(. ond D~v•n 11 SwoUl>elm. Atdylh l _ ,.nd W1\11~m (.
l1•dl<Y. G"'°'Q" rl ond !>non (~~r >lOt>Q la~"arolt, Elen• <>"II N•ChOla\
llufl(-. Carol Jin" and Leona'<! N'°I Clla•i. Ana!o1 l . u1<1 Nola PB~ayOto Kai!. Do""ld Louh ftnd 00•0•1>• £~!•1\• K•rll, A~IJ Ell1aMI" aflll "'''"n tfrnr•
Six Countv
Won1en Set
POW Dinner
LOS ANGELF:s Sni
Orange County worncn -al!
wives of airline p1lols -;11·1·
helping to prep:ir1• ;i Lo;;
Angeles dinner in honor ol
POWs arid ~11 As
1'hc <linn4"r. Fnday night ;11
the Century Plaza /lot el. ~·111
feature a !-!X'ech by Governor
He:f~:in. It 1s hcin~ organ11••ri
by l.o!'i Angl·lC'~·h;1.<;l'rl ;11rl1ne
pilots and tht>tr \\'i\'c~ 11110
ha\'C formrd the lnter·f\irlinc
Concern Co1nrnil!('f' lo ht'lj>
prisoners of 11·:1r.
Carole Han~on . the E.1 Toro
!Sy .:ACK BROBACK
Ot I"• D•+ly Pil•I Sl•ll
SA!'/TA ANA -Charging a
deliberate "grab for power"
:ind a 1>0ss1/J!e "lirst step rn a
plot to destri1y rvery depa rt-
(1\f'll! In i:uunty govern nlenl."
Supt_·rv1sor \\'ilham Phillips
\V e d n ,, s d a y vigorously at·
1 :1~·1.ed two pending bills in the
~!ale Legisla ture
T;ir,l!t'ls of Phillips· wrath
l:lre .<\ssembl}I.._ bills 1838 and
:!~3S. autlt~.ed b y
1\sse1nbJyman Kenneth Cory
~D.A naheim J. Phillips said he
was so angry abnu! tt1em-he
l'U Uld Spit. '
"This 1s another attempt to
undo good achievements just
f(ir the sake of t•hange."
charged the supervisor. "JI is
;u1 attempt to sneak around
lhis bo11rd.''
AB 18311 authorit11.'S a board
Co11nty Seeks
Court Action
On Medi-cuts
S1\1\j'TA A NA -Su pervisor
Halph Clark of Anahein1 thinks
Or:1ng;: County should try lo
~t'I i11 on the .action resulting
lrorn a S3cra1nento Superior
('ourt decision invalidating
l\1cdi-C:11 tuts by the Reagan
;1d111inistral ior:.
Cl;irk won approval Wednes-
da y uf Ii i~ n'otion lo ask Coun-
ly Co un sel Adri:1n Kuyper and
\Vell :ire .Direclor Granville
Peoples 1o check lhe county's
right to get some 1noncy from
the stair. lie said ii might
<1mounl lo ~·100,000.
T!1e courL ruhng S:lid lhe ad-
,.ininis1ratio11 \vas nor acting
:U.:g:1lly l::ist December when
< ;O\' Heagan urdered cuts in
!l.1l·d1.C;i1 1101ymenl~ saying
lhev \vere nccessarv i.o averi: a
.$140 1nitlion defiCit in tile
health progran1 .
Thr cuts included n1ajor
rrduc1 ions in health carr to 2.4
1n1llion r.1rdi-C'al rec1p1cnl~
;ind 11 10 percent frt' reduclion
for doclur~. d<"nlisl~. 11ur!ling-
l1nn1e O)lCrators :tnd 01l1rr:-;
"'h•1 providt the. !-\er vicfls.
Three C11liron1ia countir~
\vere p<1rtit'~ lo 1hf' ('OUr\ :11.:-
lion ll'lainst 1hr aclmini~tra1ion
•.:onlcnding that the cu!s have
forced adclitinn:il c.:osl f'i on
them . They arc Sacramento,
Al:1meda and S:in Mateo coun-
l1r:-;'
Superior Court .J u d g e
W11!1an1 A. Callagher agreed
\1•ith the tounties who charged
that the cul"' violated earlier
~!ale la ws that were lo h:ive
limited each county's ~!edl-C(!I
l.'OSIS.
~lor111 Channel
Hid A warded
woman 11·hnsr hu~b11nd h;1.; OHAN(;t: -A s231.5.12 <'Oll· bC('n rniss1ng 1n \'if'\na111 _ ... 111c·1·
1967 . v:ill hi· <1ne {II liil' lr;.ict to constru e\ the Bucke\'l'
honored gue~!s ;1t 1hr thnnrr Slurtn Channe l in Orange h·as
Local wo1nc11 \1·hu ht'lpl·d hl'l'n awarded by Lhe county
or ~upervisors upon request or
lhe tax collector to contract
"'ith or employe parties for
furnish ing assistance \o the
lax collector.
The Orange Co unt y
Employes Association charges
rhat the bi!J 1s loo broad in
nature and "would appear to
be • an attempt to secure
legislative blessing of an
authorization to contract our
work which is now being
performed by county
employ ees in the tax col-
lector's office."
AB 2935 allows the tax col-
lector to deposit funds in any
legal depository of his choice
and provides that in the event
Lhe offices of treasUrer and
tax collector are consolidated,
the new office shall be that or
tax collector-treasurer and the
tax collector shalJ be the in-
cumbent in the first election to
Ji!I the office.
• -eu1.nltr-'l're.iSUt'a"Y-J. <i!'l 't:.
Swanger who has held that of·
fice since 1958, said of .the lat-
ter bill, "you couldn't print
what I think of it."
The employes association
points oul that there are no
controls proposed concerning
the manner or frequency of
cleposils by the tax collector
and that the law already pro-
vides for the imm e diate
deposit of money by the tax
collector with lht': treasurer.
The employes associafilon
calls the second provision on
consolidation of the offices
•·unnecessary since the board
has statutory authority to con·
solidale the duties or the of·
fices.
"To ti·eat either oHicer a~
the incumbent on an election
ballot would provide an unfair
advantage to such candidate,"
the association adds.
Phillips' outspoken attack on
lhe bills follows action of the
pasl few weeks when county
Tax Collector Robe rt Citron
denounced the county Data
Services Department and
sought supervisors permission
to place a tomputer job v.•ith
an ou1si<le fi rm withoul com ·
Pt'litive bidding.
'fhat .at!ack \\as (0Jlo1••ed b.v
a counter attack by Dah1
Ser11ices Oireclor R o be r t
Farmf'r and ac1ion by lhe
~upervisors for a two-pronged
investigation of the situation
by a county dcpar!menl heads
t·ommitlee and the Cr11nd
Jury.
Supervi:sor David Bakr.r J1 Jso
called for a deeper in·
vestLgatio n of what "seems to
ht an attempt to destroy a
county department head and
the department."
Assemblyman Cory when
questioned would only say that
he had introduced l h ~
measures as "spo! bill.s·· lo
hold a place tn the legislative
hopper.
C'HllUfY
''Mr"<• l c• .. 11y 1101 11.,t>O, e1•a pion 1h(' d1n 11rr ni·r fl1r~ H11ar1! l)f Suj)(•rv1sors to the (; '>~ ,, Co••~ ""~''" OA1• ot dNt~. Jun• .ltl.~rph Udo1I(11. , )1;11r111.i11. l·:I
Supervisors Ronald Caspers
and Ralph Clark said they
1,1'erp not rami\iar \~ith the
propo.~ed legislation a n d
wanted a 11•eek 1o study it.
Clark also noter! 1 ha !
Supervisor Robert Ballin was
not present to vote on the
issue.
Battin had left Ille n1ee!1 11s
earlier to take carr of private
business.
l Sv•••••tl bv """· 1on~. '°"'· L~...-1~n :11111 (; E 11 g ·1 n f' er in g t:on-
r"""'· o• C.••"••'• VAii••. c~i.!o•n••I 1'orn l\1r .;, :-;h1 !1;1 !'>pe11t'l'I".
L•t en""'· S•«•m•nto, a""""'"'" M11 lll'l'S.~ srcrt>tary, ~~I Tor<J. l\lri-. trarlu1g (' n r n 11 r a t i 0 n of "'"° S.ll•n. Co"• """'"; Mfr Guv,
Who Care17
c.111,y•, Volft•. ,.,0 ''"""· Ru111 Jo.,..,. Tirnothv ('r<1ll'IO/'d. p11hhl'rll·. l't>1nona.
'!lont• Monico. c,t,..,,i,,, B•~<11<>•<1, 1no1e· Fountain V;1!l ('y ; l\·1 r.~. f),.n:_il cl Th(' proJ't;ct is between Shaf.
wood: 10 01.on<ICl>lld,•n, ~ •rtol·GrAfl<!· c~.1~ron S•"'lc•s w111 i... ht l<I ~·•11•0.ov, Ho\\·ard. c:>-(·h:i irman. l'nst:i fer and Lincoln Streets. :i
Junt-\.'PM. "~dlit VI'"" ("•o~! ..... n 1\·lesa: f..1 rs. Thoinas c:r1H1th.; No ''"'' lltWl~llP•' ;., t~. "·~ Bru<r ICut•I• n!llclo!i~'I lnlf•m•"'· I r11stanrc or onc-haH mtle. world c•r•t about yout COrft,.,U• ... , ... c ....... Mtmn•l•I Par1r., Pt tlUt en·eh airman. S;inta l\11n. :1!\{ I h . v•~w Mo,1i1ory, o,,...:1or1. t.1r.;. Poivefl \\' i r I i ;1 n1 :.. ., There were 12 bids or t c JOb nity lik• your co1n111w11ity Gaily
MAnEiOH d th 1· t d t new1ptptr Got t. H'1 d1t DAILY \I u 11 t 1 n" t 0 o an e es ima c cos was PILOT. D• ~n M•11""1, 191)115 Arr-f't•d. 9 .,. .,
OlO•, (•liloznlt ,O,.ge U ; do•t o< <W'O!", _cl:2.\0::,:""::· _________ ~=====::::'======!I M~"' XI Surwl¥1'<1 b• .,.,tnts. Mr. '""' ---,..,-------,=------"'" O..rw•n M>tlltton. ol fl•,.IOW. ~.,. •
;,..,, Fr'<l8•.? PM, Wnlcllff Cl>aoel. wit~
II•~ ll•Utl 11.urtlo oUkl•lln9 l~Hrll\1nl,
Et 1...., C•m11.,~ w1ulll1! Cho.,.I MOK·
.......... 6.io.41&1, 0.rT<IOfl.
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCLIFF f\10RTUARY
4%7 E. J7tb ~I.. Costa n.1eaa
64&-4&88 • BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del !\tar 673-!450
CO!lta Mea• 546-!424 • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
JIO Broadway, Costa ~1esa
LI 8-3433 • l\fcCORMlCK LACUNA
BEACH MORnJARY
1715 Lagana Cally• U
•H-Ml5 • PACIFIC VIEW
HEMOf!W. PARK
Cdtdery Mtrtaary
CUpel
J$11 Padftc' Vin' Orit'e
Scw,.n -c.llltnlo -• l'ZEll r .um, v
COLONIAL PVMERAL -71tt ..,._.A"-
Wl!:llC 1 f!'t -...ZS • UlnlJ'I MOllTIJARY .,_ ... -"""" .... ,,..n
.f ftiCkdt7 t_ te1r1ns..~.
,
; .
Westcliff Plaza
)]ti!' ,,..;,.,
NlW,OAT llACH
,, ... , .. 2.ot12
NQ"£ "' #'fll/I FAl/tlll
BEEF STICE·
All IEIF SUMMEJI SAUSAli(
REMEMBER DAD WITH A
DELICIOUS FOOD GIFT·PAK
flATHEilt•S D4Y, J UNI ll
S~I
20¢ OFF
.... tl .• , u..
... "·
"CHllSI OF THI Wiii ..
lelM fle•r i1 • 11•lwr•l 1•mi·1olt
FRENCH f'fpt (.ht•1• with 1 ro·
bu•t 11 ... , .. Ori9t11•ll¥ ,., ... G •1
I clan•tf c:haaot, if1 ltOW .,..G
for All \;,.,i. of (.ooki"f a1tG
,,.., •• .,,. C a!ori• t ownl•ro •P·
ptt d t!t lh• f•<I !ht! il'1 rnt .lt
f.om p••I .~;'" rni!l. s.,,,., it •I
•01;1m ltmptr.olur• ta br;fl9 out
ih lull, l1ity f lt wor. Try t l tm•
pl• •t Hlc ~ory Farlflt e f Ohit
•.• TODAY!
Town & Country
777 S. Mel• Sf.
OltANGI
714•$4)·101'
JKIJ/(J'I JIJllKI fllll/.111111
•,'---'~-------
Water Board
To Adopt
Strict \,aws
By TERRY COVILLE
ot tM C.ltr f'!IH ll•lt
ORANGE -Colorado River
water is too polluted for grow·
ing fresh produce in Orange
County. ·
And boro~-containing
detergents and li\indry soaps
n1ight soon be unwelcome
anywhere near the Santa Ana
River.
""""'" .<!: ·-··"tt·-...,.-..,. -'I'neSe 'ate s:atne undiitgt" Ui'e'
California Region&] W a t e r
Quality Control Board -San-
ta Ana Region -may turn in-
I
. . .
Count1l Eftort
.<
Boy Scouts to Reclaim T1·ash
SANTA ANA -Hundreds of Laguna; the Market Baskel in slreets. Saddlcback tolle~e
Boy Scouts will spend Satur-San Clemente ; and the shop-and Leisure World for Tustiri
Pl.ng center at Tustin and J7th and Mi11sion VieJ·o <lre.as.
day reclaiming Orange County -----------------------
from the trash thal litters its
streets and fields.
TI1e day is the firs! of many
under project SOAll (Sav e
Our American Resources)
JaunC'hed by the Boy Scouts .
Eleven such cen ters will be
located at:
The Fashion Island parkin g
lot, N(,'wport Beacb ; Sooth
C<>osL ~aza, Alph.'ll Beta market Uoiversity Park.
and Ma natd's oa 19lh
Street in C.OSta Mesa : 'Town
and Country shopping center
in Huntington Beacb; Laguna
Nigue l Town Center and the
Laguna Bo~I parking lot in
*******************
MERCURY SAVINGS
and loan association ........ ~~~
BUENA PARK Mercury Saving5 Bldg., Valley View at lincoln
HUNTINGTON BEACH Mercury Savings Bldg., Edinger at Beach
TUSTIN Mercury SavinlJs Bldg.1 lrvine Blvd. at Newport Avt.
*******************
~RANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION
··---=-
·t a simple mental technique
to improve one's life
Introductory •lecture By
" Dr. Paul levjrte, .. Physicist
Friday, June 4, 8 p.m. 1st floor · Commons Bldg,· U.C.I.
to Jaw when it meets next!'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~==~;=;;;;;;;;===~==~ "'ednesday in Orange. II
The board, charged with
maintaining high quality water
throughout the Santa Ana
River Basin. is nearly ready to
adopt strict rules on V.'hat at
least three counties (Orange,
Riversj.de and San
Bernardino) ma y· do to their
water.
The new rules may prohibit
the discharge of brine to the
g round from on-site
regenerative w a t e r· con·
di!ioners. it cou ld a lso require
all sewage treatment plants
discharging into the Santa Ana
River lo provide tertiary
lreairnenl.
Many s ewage treatment
facilities may also h<' com-
bined under the new J,1 w! like·
ly to be adopted .
Spokesmen fro1n Riverside
and San Bernardino Counties
hav~ vigorously opJ)Osed parts
of the v.·ater control plan
because it affects their in-
Jeclion of indust rial wastes in-
to the waler system. The
believe the new requirements
will be.loo tough·and costly to
meet.
Bu t represenla tivet of
Orange County and the Orange
County Water District arc still
battling for tough <.'On! ro\s to
upgrade the quality of '"ater
from the Santa Ana· River
Basin.
The Water Quality t.:ontrol
Board n1eet.~ Bl 9:JO a.m.,
\\1ednesday, in the Orange City
t..'Quncil chambers.
Scouts Host
Brellkfost
IRVIN E -Boy S<:oufs from
lhree troops ip the lr\•111e area
"ill flip flap jacks Salurd;iy,
June 12, lo earn money for
:;un1mrr Camp and 1 camping
equipment.
The young cooks are from
Troop 605 (Cu!vrrdale), Troop
606 (University Park), aod
Troop fi07 1Turtleroc)d.
Breakfast Will be served
from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the
NOW AT WESTCLIFF SHOES
-··-'
GAZELLE $19.95
OLYMPIA $18 .95
''. , . ' r ~.
\
HAILLET-$14 .95
Th e most popular Sport and
Leis ur e Shoe in th e world. Nine
super styl es in sizes from Chil .
dren 's I to Men's 14.
I
•
University Park s h o PP in g WESTCLIFF PLAZA
center, 18000 Culver Drive. 1052 IRVINE e NEWPORT BEACH e 548-8684 The price of a meal ls. $1. 'I.~-,....,,..,... ______ .,. ____ ,..._,... ____ .,_ ______ ~
26th ANNUAt :'.t. __ ._____
DOM
RACITI
President
of the
LIONS
CLUB
I . . . '"''~· '(011
, and tit. t.mily to ) .,
ltlf cl"fl of f••·
·' ,-...
3 BIG DAYS
F'RIDAY • SATURDAY •. SUNDAY
JUNE 4-5-6
COSTA MESA
PARK '
PARADE SATURDAY -10 :3 0, A.M.
Th11 Ad••Tlltfmt"I !ip1>111o<•d Bv
OOM ltACITI, ,,,,;J,...1 lion• Cl~!.
Cod<> Mei• J,.,,,!,rv ,\ la A~. . '
. ,
.·
. . :
: .
' •
Tltursd~,. J11nt J, 1971 DAil 'I PILO'Y 8
CHECKING
•UP•
Natives Pi~k Out Sa~rifi~e @
PORT MORESBY, New reported flocking !oday toward righllul owners-1he vtllagerir. lal>eling crate9 of products
(fuinea !UPI) Reports the 4.000 foot mountain near 'fhe carao cult is found Jn with lhe addresses o! Melanes-
reaching Port Moresby said \Vewok. on New Guinea 's New Guinea and throughout Ian! but that avaricious Euro-
lhc nar.ive cargo cul! has north coast. lo witness the the islands of fl'telanesia. peans have intercepted the
Do You Enjoy Being AHve?
chosen a third victim for
CAN YOU CONCINTIATl1
CAN YOU lftlATHl7 cw.·,. S.rl•111I
DO YOU HA.Vt tHOUGH INflG't1
human sacrifice in hopes 11 sacrifices. 'rtie sacrifices are Members believe that spiritual ships and altered the addres-
"'i!t bring 10 them the white lo be performed near a con· agents will in SCJme future ses. •
men's carga for which they crete 5utVi!Y ma rket on top of date divert tremendous stores The administration of
have \\-'aited in vain. the n1ounlain. or the mosl sought after All Presidential
\Ve 'd like to prove to you tho/ fliere is 011 enjolf'
able, 11<1f11ral method for meeli11g ihe challengt1
of doily life , .. it works!
The third victin1 wa s beJiev. Yeliv.·an and 20 of hi s rnanuractured wealth inl-0 the
Papua-New Guinea has so farl
taken no direct action lo
Ass assii1 s Sl1ort ed to be a cull l~ader who fol!owers were jailed last year hands of the members.
received a vision that he rnusl for cargo cult activities. \Vhile In recent years s o n1 e
spill his bloed on Mount Turu in prison· he said he saw a particip3nts ha ve bu i I t
lo unlock the cargo. Another vision of his ancestors living airstrips and i rn me n s e
stun1p out the spreading @ @}
rnove ment. A spokesman said '1.'"' '1...~
today """·e have t a k e n ~ J 4 J
<.'OUntenneasures" but did notl::-~::i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:::~~
•II.El Ol!M<'l4ST ll."fl014 -5•1. •I ll •.111.ll
ll•t, .,...,,. • .., cl•n•• "''1 "••I w"k -•• •n ....... •wr W..il ... u. <l&U") YOO" Cl!NTlll.
-.1 I!. 111~ 11 .. •4'-t:lll. C&lff M ..... Gtl , ...
-.i111 ..... ,
By L. 1'11. BOYD
WO~tEN lend to get fewer
t ye infections than do 1ncn.
Medical record.<1 show Uial.
Why is clear. Tear:. ar£' an -
tiseptic. The eyes of wonicn
are capable of producing more
tears than are the eyes of
men. 1'11easurably rnore tears.
So you thought it just secrned
that way . di~ you ? No. sir, H's
a scientific fact!
i\IUST ~1&'\ITlON anolhcr of
those several peculiar dif -
ferences bet'>l'een men and
v.·omen. After the age of 30, a
man's nos!! continL1cs to grow.
shift, change shape. But a
woman's does not. Not nearly
so definitely, any .,.,·ay. This is
also said lo be true oI lhc
c.ar s.
NOTE IT STATED each n{
the four assassins of U.S.
Presidents was short and
slight. Li kewise. each of the
four v.·ou ld-bt assassinS who
tried such murder but f~ilcd.
True enough . Still, it should
not be forgotte n that this list
of short and slight men also
ought lo in clude Alexander the
Great, Byron. Cervante.~.
Cromwell. Drake, Louis I,
Lord Nelson. St. Pa u I ,
Shakespeare an d Socrate~.
Consider them. too . \Vail.
aln1os! forgo !, add Alilla the
~lun and Dick Cavett.
CUST0!'1ER SER\llCE: Q.
•·now far down does the
earth's crust go"?" A. Maybe
cult leader, Yeliwan ~ialltl'ias, on fo.lount Turu. He said the v.•arehouses to recei\'C the ex.
40 milei;. Jt's just about .,vhal and a young boy yet to be vision showed him I.he \\-'hite p e c I e d ca r go. The
named, are also to be man's cargo beneath the Encyclopedia Brit I an i ca
lhe shell is lo the egg • · · Q. sacrificed. marker and that the sacrifices reports one version of the cen-
"Ever stop lo think you never Thousands of natives v.·ere wlll release them to Uleir lral myth is that God has been
elaborate. Officials s a i dl-
earlicr this week they lnknded
to "play it cool" in dealings
with the cull whose origins are
centuries old.
Kids Like to Ask Andy
see a female tennis pl ayer or,-~~~~-,--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.,.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
goHer with good·looking legs"?
If that's not right. name ont;."
A. None come lo n1ind off.
hand. Odd. But research goes
on . _ . Q. "Is there such a
thing as male and female
bamboo?" A. Must be. As I
recall, before the polevaulters
slarlcd using glass poles,
many of them used lo insist on
femal~ bamboo.
JUST iO ''EARS AGO, there
we re no sports pages in
ne•vspapers. This comes up
because a client asks, "Who is
!he Dean of American sports
writers"?" No question about
that. It's Royal Brou11;ham oE
the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
'T'he daily sports pagP had noL
yet been dreamed up v.•hen
J\'lr. Brougham .was a tot.
"TllOU ART an elm, my
husband, 1 a vine." Such was
a line written by \Villi am
Shakespeare. And it v.·as lhe
first literary reference, I
think, to that sort o f
lady friend no•v c o m m o n I y,
referred to as the clinging·
vine.
Your questions and com·
ments are 111e/comed and
will be used i11 ClfECK-
l l\I G UP iolicrevcr possible.
Please <tddrcss your let-
ters to /,. f.t. Boyd., P. (.l.
Bq:t 1875. Newport Beach
92660.
"
ft Prices
Good thru
Wdenesday
June 'I
14-Foot Aluminum
Extension Ladder
Strong, dur•ble •luminum ladder h111 fr•e swing .
in9 safety 1hoe1 , cycola c end c11p1, •nd fix •d
safety lock. Extends to 1-4 feet to reach tho1•
hi gh up places.
$ 88
Class. In.
.. MACRAME
Tues., June 8
7:00-8:00 p.m.
learn from th• •11p•r+s
how to m•~• distinctiv•
Ma cram• acc•11orie1.
Now at RIMAS'
:Qty l1lilit
'I STR\R \ __ .,..,.,
Two doors and
only 28" wide!
:O.locJrl l a.12sL
General Electric
11 .s cu. ft_
Refrigerator-Freeur
Autom.111tic rl PfrOi'!lin" i11
1Pfrig{'1at'lr S{'t;llon
• fr<"1.('r li.-.ld.~ up
LQ 9] lbs_
Handy
adjustable
shelves!
Genent Electric ...
16.6 cu. ft. No Fre1t
. -Refrigerator-Freeze>
• Frff.u r holdS up to. 164 !be.
$30995
AlllOmlltlC Icemalu1r
(optional at e,rtra c:oet)
I
"JUST RIGHT " 1
PERMANENT PRESS
DRYING
' \.:::
,-
1 DOE 7230L
1 GE AUTOMATIC DRYER
II~• Aot""'o'io: 1'•t1•Un-t ~
~~ltM•OD woth <.nnlrlnwn. Salooc!
l k• hbr!r. tyr~ ~•llin• for,.,.
' JIPeS>WOt'o." tfr'!'on~. POT~~l•!n
"""'"~l lnr ond drum. •:nit of
• vr.lo l i~n o l !olh )l>U .,,·h•ll
<.lo!oes •ro rudy.
TWO·SPEED
WASHING!
\VWA ?OICIL
GENERAL ELEGli!C
AUTOMATIC
WASHER
Tw11 W1,b.!Sp!n 1peed1 and
l w11h cyi:l11 l re1I your
cto1he1 ju1t rlaht, from touth
10 f,..sil• f1brlc9. The Perm•-
nent Pr111 Cycl1\feetun:1 tht
r.ocldown 1pr1y r/1111 to htlp
p~ent 1pin·1•l c:r111e1. $199'5
2666 Harbor
. Blvd.,
CoSta Mesa
Pho~:
546-7080
Jumbo Underbed
Stora9e Chests
M ••• ., •• , 12 .1 1~·· T !6·)/I ''
, 6-1 ~". R,einforced con1lru••
lion, with htndl,1. lwo·color
flor•I print.
NOW
ONLT
Lady Hallmark
Cosmetic Mirror
rnini li9ht
·~
4!! .... -·
Dec:orator
Add· A-Shelf
E11y lo 1ue..,bl1-W•1I·
1h•lf •a ,,,.tai111 l1111-
i11••.cl 'W•l1111t c;ofo••d
thelf, t.o I' Itron••·
loflo 1!.'nd.,J,, l:.r•C~
•h , IC•tw1 •
3"
20·1nch Breeze
Box fqn .. All Purpose
Hack Saw
S!ron9 •nou9h lo do b;q (ul-
1;n9 iob1 .Bl•d• h•• du••blo
loe lh, <omfod .ble pl•1+ic
9rlp 1-•ndle. l i9htwei9hl,
?C.lnd1 bo~ f•n ;, pofl•bl.
1:9h1 ..... ;9~t. ••n b. mo,.•d
lo <ool ~il(.htn, work1hop,
•nv room of the hou••·
2-5,.EEO
5·Tl. GUAlANTlt:
' • ,,
'
Scott's Super
Turf Builder
Plus 'M' , lun9icid1 '"' f•di.
lj11 r " ..... ! 1(;111
h1r111lul fun9i wh ile
111pp!1menlin9 y o u r
l•wn with • bo1uler
formul •. l ,500 -·~·fl,
bt9 . 750
Scott's Standard
Lawn Spreader
l i9fitw•l9hl .,.d •••v to h•ncl!•,
with Dial-A-M1 tj(. ttllin9 1nd
f in91rl ip a n·ofl conlrol. If"
Wide._ .19's
Modi! .t )g
16.95
Exterior
Wood Stain
K•op• .It •Yl•rior wooch
b•tulilul, old ot "*"'·Choo••
!<om 66 <olon, 1ot;d or l••n•·
Gallo1t 6.50
2.35
18-lnch
Reel Mower
l ro991 t nd s1r.uon ....
;,. .. Ad juil t.ullin9
h~i9hl J ,, .. •• l ",
Sp11d i nd dutch con.
•• 7.495
Toilet Ballcock
13 95 Two 1i••1 I I 'Ii " 111d I l ".
Modtl ~oo. ft1v 10 '"-,,,11. All 11•t t11•ry fit. 3n
2666 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA ,MESA •
PHf'NE 546-1080
WEEKDAYS 9 to 9
SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 9 to 6
'
Macram•
Headquarters
W. c•rrv •II the 1uppl;.,
vou "••d to cr o•I• b•lh ,
c~o~t... •nd m•ny •lhor
unique ilt m• from populor
M1 <rom1. Ail "' oboul
them.
' ' J!'
• '
Spred Glidden Stucco Paint
E11y lo 1pplv. <ov -
'" 1lucco •11ily,
~••Pl ii lookln9
good for v••"·
P•inl no.,. •nd '""'
1 doll•t!
REW. '·''
Save On
Wallpaper
Choose r1om ••er
ICC p1tt1•n1 of
floc\1d, pr1 ·p11te.I
W•llp1ptr. Li"'" up
your w•U1l
25°/o to
SO°/o OFFi
I
t I
r :
I
• ' ..
ID DJ.11.Y PILOT
Top Orange Coast .&!£,.f!~,t Rudy Val.lee Still Looking Ahead
Bermuda shorts and almost
knee-length .socks. Hi! hair
protruded in unruly tufts from
undt1" a baseball type CllJ'.
LOS ANGELES (AP) They'll have more respect for !ludy was in hb den, a
Students Lauded
This is Rudy VaUee al near-
ly 70, v;•hich he will be July 28: Rudy Va:Jee says serving on me." gadgeteer's retreat .J!Uered
the Los Angeles Board of f'nergetic, talkative, his llle He occasionally dots his with recorder11, tap es,
7'raffic Commissioners i s "coll1para!ively u smooth and one-man show in clubs and correspondence. ,. lie wore
t.1ore than 100 Orange Coast
College students were fe\ed
recently at Honors Nighl for
leadership and servlre to the
college durin& their careers.
Five students received the
coveted onyx pen set. sym·
bolic of two years of service
to the college in more than t'lne
area. Linda Kernpf of Orange
v.'as honored for her activlties
in Shell 'n Oar. president of
the Associated Women
Studen ts, as a Senator and as
AWS publicity chairn1an.
Janie Gonzales of Costa
Me!!a was Inter-Club Council
.secretary, AWS secretary, a
member of Student Council.
the championship s pee ch
team, was a Senetro and is
l isted In Who's Wh o Among
Students in American Junior
Colleges.
William Landers of Costa
Mesa this yrar was named the
top speakrr in the nation at
the national championships.
He was na mrd Outstanding
Fresbman or 1970, was a yell
leader. a Senator and ICC
.-.prt'Jitlent. ~
James Myers of Costa l\1csa
v:as active in student govern·
ment. WCjS a member of the
OCC tenni.s learn and "''as ac-
tive in chorale and the
madrigal singers.
Thomas Clancy or Costa
J\1esa y,·as this year's student
body president. He was presi·
dt"nt of the Veterans' Club, a
member of Disabled American
Veterans. and is listed 1n
Who's \\'ho.
Thirteen students rceci\'ed
the plaque ay,•ard for t· .. 10
)Cars of leadership in a
specific field. These included
Linda Carmen, Santa Ana :
Bruce Derflinger. Huntington
Beach; Vicki llaig, Ne wport
Beach: Judith Harmon, Santa
Ana : Bob Jonah, Cosla Mesa :
Patrick Kelleher. Costa Mesa:
Dorothy MacMillan, Cost a
J\1esa : Ruth M c I n e r n e y ,
Orange; Mike Mikla us. Hun -
tington Beach; Bonnie Mur-
ray, Newport Beach: 1'!aureen
Teeter. Fountain Valley: and
Cathy Tu r n e r, Huntington
Beach.
Receiving Key 8>1'ards for
one year or le adership in a
specific field were:
COllONA DEL Jl,\AR-Laura
Lingenberg and Bill RalaeL
C 0 ST A MESA-Gabriele
Adk ins, Kathy B I a k em a n ,
Norman Fricker, Sue Jones,
Jeanne J\1ayer, Rick Norris.
Virginia Perry. F ra n k Ii n
Rain y,·ater, 'ferri Roush,
Charles A. Smith. Stephanie
Stephens. Kris \Ve1ze1. and
Bruce \V illiams.
FOUNTAlN VA LLEY -Rog·
er Braiser and Sharon Rich.
GAR DEN GROVE -Carol
Smith and Janet Yost.
HUNTINGTON BEACH-
fascinating. easy." he says. I~ includes "a theat.ers: two houri ot iOngs!P __ ;io ______________________ 'i
James Barker. NII n c Y, Jle'd accept anolher lerm. little bit of Lennis and a Jot of an~ snappy anecdot.es. 'fhe
Campbell, Ann Gibson, 11oni-\Vhat he'd really like to be on que Lacasse, Robert Pineda. is the Police Commission -he drinking or champagne," He hlgb point or his career he
NE WPO!lT BEACH-Karol ·, ' has son1e ideas on cadet says he buys 25 cases a considers ''How to Succeed in
SIM-MER!
J_.e t Om· Computer
~~~Do the work for you!
Dean, Lynn Ha in ni e r as, training. nionth. BusineSll Without R ea 11 y
?o.1elinda Harris, Fred Pfeiffer. Mayor? Ile thought of run-'fhe Vagabond Lover of flap-Trying ," on stage and .&creen.
ORANGc• ~-B d ning until he considered the per d•ys, as the singer-band· c.-vvnna ells an His sprawling pink mansion
G .,_ <:ampaign prontLSes he'd prcr leader y,·as known from ooe of Computerized lilllng,
Acc.ou11th1' Data Proc.e•tlng --~ -~,.~p~-bably have to make. U.S. his songs, says he can't retire,
SEAL BEACH-Steve Lane. ~enii tor? No. he was "a little .. There are annuities I haven't Monica Mountains in 1931 by
WE STM I NSTER-Sue high" on wine , and upset taken. We have an eJ:pensive Ann Hartling. Attriiclive, blon· of H1wport
1'.1eyer, Nancy Noling. about events in the Pentagon, home." de Eleanor Vallee. 27 years his HCD CORPORATION l ••ch
Recriving Parchmenli; for0~~~~~~~~~ii!i~-~w~h~en~h~e~m~•~n~ti~on:•=d~th:a~l~t:o_•:_~~B~u~t~is2n~·1:h~•~•~m~il~lio~n~a~ic~e~a~s~Jj~un;i~ofr,~h~a~s~bee::n~s~io:c:•~l~9:'9~h:isl~4~5:0~0~C~o:m;;:p;•~1~D~r~l•;•~l~o~p~p~o~•~it~o~A~ir;p:•~rt~l~~S~4~0~·:•~3~9;2J one year of service to the col-radio intervie wer. reputed? "Let 'em think so. fourth wife.
lege were:
AN AllEI M-Scoll Dunford
BALBOA-Gary Fine
BALBOA ISLAND-f.1arla
,.tyers, Timothy Myers, and
Sara Traphagen.
COS T A ME SA-Janice
Bellucci, Qiristine Bentley,
Carole Closson. Nancy Cod·
dling . Shelia Hann ab an ,
Andrea Kirchmeier, Debra
Nelson. Jii l Ohlhaver. Delia
Romero, J\1ichael Sad y ,
Qinstantino Salios, Michael
Srnilh, Greg Smith, J ohn
Szcz.esiak. Judson Waldron. Jo
Ann \\1ig1nore, Cat her in e
-Wrighl, C}!ld Sblrlii·Y Wright
FOL1NTA1N VALLEY-For-
est Boyer, GerRld Oiambcr-
lain, Vicki Jones, Andrea La
Blanc, Norma Odland. Vicki
Sheari n and Nancy \\'eiden-
hammer.
Jones. Andrea La Blanc.
Nornia Odland, Vici;,i Shearin
and Nancy'Weidcnhammer.
GARDEN GROVE -Ton10-
try Bernsen.
llUN1'JNGTON BEACH-Sue
Bardell. Wiiiiam Carson, Cheri
C:onne ll. Sheryl Cro ft .
Stephanie Di Orio, Cynlhia
Fink, Rodney Lyon, Vicki
Mayberry. Nancy Prickett,
Carol Skodi.
IHVlNE-Karen 1'.1ontrose
NEWPORT BEACH-Carol
Dolan, Diane Johnstone, Dan
Miller, Pat Serge and Bill
\Volfe.
0 R A N G E -C hrislopher
Black, Philip Cisneros, Jane
Ellen Co;1•an, J ohn Gray,
Sh~lagb Lawrence, n o n n a
Roarick . Kitnberlee Roelher,
and Peter Spotts.
SAN TA ANA-Vicki Frost
SO LVA N-James Solum
S 0 U 1' H LAG UN A-Carlos
Zorrilla
WE ST 1'1 1 N STER-Gail
O'Connor and Kathy Woesner.
Other awards included :
Out.slanding Wrlle r Award
for $15 -Nina Duarte, Costa
~1esa, and Lynn ll. Fex, Seal
Beach. Dance Awards of $50
each to \'lilliam Ca rs o n .
Newport Beach: Te re s ri
Nunamaker, Costa f.1csa: and
Marla Myers, Balboa Island.
Certificates and Text Books
were awarded to Oli K. Yuen ,
Costa Mesa, in Chemistry:
Charles E, Barker, Huntington
Beach, in Earth Science.
IQUA·Nn"
HAIR S,RlY
' .
' ·,~,/ ·\,_;,
'999'-inade hy Cannon18
n1ills. 'l'hick cotton terry-
t•loLh 11ilc is super absorb-
4·nt , 'vi th pucker-proof bor-
der. \\'ide choice of color s!
'C•stille' -lovely S panish-
i nspiretl jacriuard sculp·
Lured dcs~1~ r eversi ble
color contr~;~· Thick cot ..
ton terryclot~.
SALE c
Reg. $100 EA.
. •'' ~
Yeu won 't iro11 thtte!
POLYESTER
DOUBLE KNITS
ON BOLTS
'.
. ... .:-·
'Jungle'-l!!crf•c n printed
ro!tun terr:>il'lr1!.h in bold
C'Olors and dynl\mic prints.
\Vhy not purchase a few
at' this low price.
P.rices Effective
thru Saturday,
June 5th
CUSHIONED CHAIR
$
SALE
44
Reg. $8.99
4t
Duy this for your su mmer companion, wben you
really v.·aot to take it eas):! H i-strength I" aluminum
tuhing and colorful vinyl print cushions. L igh[·
"'eight, yet sturdy._, .just fol~ for movi ng.
WEBBED, ALUMINUM
FOLDING FURNITURE
_SALE $ 96
Reg. $7.97
Lip;h!welght, tubular aluminum frames a~
rustproof; fold compactly to ~tore away.
Rugged \'inyl webbing wipes rlean l\'ith a
damp cloth. Chaise adjusts, of course .
" ; I "'' ....... ,, .... ~ M£1° ~~ ...... Sale 27c 13 Of.
<AN
' CARRY-CASUAL SALE
$3!6 .,~ LUGGAGE • R~lf. ()r Supf'r h<lld
• T,r;i,\'f'~ lu1ir i;ort
UMll;, C••• "'•r '"''•"'••
MAYBELLIN P
ULTIA-LASH MASCARA
Sale 43c
• Lengthen5. th icken•
• A&10rted Mi.des
UMrT:l,--'-r
CREST and COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE
Sale
• full.Sen. rubes
• Fi1hts cavitin
UMIT1lT .... rtf'C .. f.
Reg. 14.96 .. ~-.j\
• MClchifle waJll, f1,1mbl1 dryJ.
Two new te1turized pattern•
tha l ktt'f) their i;h11pe with·
()\Jt a lirk or ironinc! E11y
to cu t .. , just sew •nd co!
La.lest colors! 5-4/56 .. wide.
STURDY PLASTIC
WADING POOL
SALE
$2 9 ~eg.'4"
5' d iameter; holds
145 gals. water. Rigid wall.
SALE $
GRANTS
IRONING
BOARD
96
.Reg. 14"
Adju1ta .. le steel lraning .. oa;d
Adjusts to 12 height& for ait·
down or atand-up ironiiig.
Open medl top, non -slip pJutic
feet. Sturdy oonatruction.
We reserve Lhe ri ht to limit u1ntitics -None sold ro dr1lers.
IN 5 HANDY SIZES
Si LE
$ 44
Reg. 14.44
Small Compact Siu,
larger Sizu '3.88
to '5.44
REG. SALi
appro•. 1 S V1 •• , , , $4.44 $3.44
approx. 161ta· ... 4.11 3.18
apprax. 18 .. S.44 4.44
appra•. 19 .. S.11 4.11
approJr. 21 .. 6.44 S.44
llere's Jigh l1\·ci1dd . .i.oft-~ide lug1age
in floral-print fabric or Sl)]id-colnr
vinyl. All purpose, a Gize for every
need. 'ft1.ke it anywhere, 11nytime.
HUNTINGTON BEACH, GRANT PLAZA,
BROOKHURST & ADAMS 962-3387 "
Hours: Daily 9:30 to 9, Sunday .. 10 · to 6
. ·
Tllur~day, June 3, 1q11 DAILY PllOT "'JJ
Outstanding Students at Newport Harbor Win Honors
Ncy,·port Harbor High School
rtcently bono~ il3 outstan-
ding students with an awards
banquet.
Among iCOte!i of awards for
achievement and o t her
rerognitions accorded >A'ere 22
honors shared by t1~10 seniors,
Shawn BI s son n' t t t and
Stephanie Yan1allhita_ ·Each
was recognized l I limes /or
sc holastic accomplishment.
Other top students lauded
\Vere Steve Kopanski 11·1th nine
tionors, Christine Kopitzkc
·with eight ·end· Nancy Palmer
v.·tth eight recognllions. All are
life members or the Callfornia
Scholarship federation.
A •completf listing or the
i;ludi!nt achleVers foHO\vS:
AWARDS
School Servlcr : C: }1 r is
KopHzke and Steve Kopanski,
fo ur year 1viMers: Shawn
Bissonnette a n d Slephanie
Yamashita, senior winneri:::
Nikki Appleman. junior. and
·Lts Jordl!ln and Nancy Bohls,
fre shmen. ,
Bauscb and Lomb. science
•ward, Lucinda Jones.
RenssfJl!ler !\l•tb -Sciencf,
Terry Johnson.
Special Foreign Language,
Dianne Shammas.
Alliance Francaise. fi rst
prize in third year competition
to Stephanie Yamashita.
Asian Studle1, i\fai!ory !\1ar-
quel.
American Field Service:
Monica de Ca rolis, Rachel
Perham and Phanil Na Lam-
pang.
i\1uslc Departmenl. vocal
:scholarshi p to Mike Rafferty,
and instrumental scholarship
to J ohn Tackman.
Lions Club, speech conte5l
winner, Stephanie Yamashita.
American U1lon, speel·h
contest winner. Rocky Beek .
Vete rans of foreign Wars.
conlesl \\·iru1er. A. (~.
Kawan1 ura.
Journalism Award of 1he
Costa-l\.1csa Newport llarbol'
Lions Club to I\laHory l\.lar-
quet. , '\.,..
Delta Kappa vmma Socie-
ty, Epsilon Omicron Chapter,
to Sue Johnson.
Diane Guerton rtlemorial,
Mallory Marquet.
Quill and Scroll: Nikk i Ap-
plernan, Mike Ulnverse. Nan-
cy Palmer, Vic ki C-lucas,
:P.1arcia Collins. Sue Johnson,
Sam Chiodo. Dtnny Cllne and
John Diemer.
Brlly Crocker homen1aking
av•ard . Lisbet \\'hite.
Senior Homemaking. depar-
tment aY:ard. Sandy Albers.
l\larlners Saving!! and Loan,
recognizing the Ne w p o rt
Jfarbor Athletic Deparlnient.
Girls' Athletic ,As soc iation.
scholarship lo Sue Kemper.
Orange County AIA, design
competition \.\'inner. Steve
Alward.
Terry ~f a r I i n i\1f'1noriel,
~cholarship to Sue Kemper ;
lenni! trophy to 1: e s 1 t y
Al\.\· a rd.
Sports~·oman of the Year,
Sue Kcnioer
Tar of the Year, r.1ark
Stevens.
PTA Scholarshlps to Nancy
Palmer and Jot:n Gailis.
P1'A Art Awards: Ann
Simm, Jim Cokas, A my
Perkins. Annette Rell, \Vendy
Peterson. Robin Smith. and
Terri \Vild.
Costa l\fesa Art Lea,itue, Jun
Cokas, Zack Ric hmond and
Richard Stillwell.
Edlth 1111.ddoc~ ~rholarsh1p
sward. Audre Gcnrirh
Zonta Girl of the 'Year.
Chris Kopilzke.
National Charity League.
Jennie Farber.
Balboa, scholarship to Diane
Glenn.
Newport Harbor Jayctes,
ChriJS Quinn.
l\1ariners School A "" a r d ,
Sha .. •:n Bissonette.
Ken Orbaclt Scholarship lO
Matt VN:er.
Facult)' As•oclation
scholarship to Chr is Kopitzke.
C<illfor nla Sa\'lngs and Lnan
League. outstandi ng sludent
award to Jeanne Cra\.\'ford.
Rani of Ameril'I , awards
Steve Kopanski. sc ience and
n1 a t he n1 a l 1 cs : Shaw·n
Bissonnette, !ibt>ral a r I s :
David Host.eller. fine arts. and
Li.'lbet \\'hUe. \'OC&t ionat· ttrts.
B&nk uf Ame r ica,
certificates. Step h anie
Yan1ashi!<i. n1a1h: Di 11 nu
Glenn. lah science: Chris
Kopitzke. English: R on
Oberndorfer. social studies;
Dean Ke'.l'!Sh. Io re i g n
language: Susan Ti 11 es en ,
dra111a ; John Tac k n1 an ,
n1usic; J im Cokas. art; Sandy
Albers, home econon1ics : Ren~
Long, business, and Howard
Denghausen, lrades and in-
dustry.
Governor's Scholars: Sha\\•O
Bissonnette. Audre Genrich.
Steve Kopanski , N an c y
Palmer, Jr.an~ Cs:awford.
Anne Sutherland.
Andy \l/illiams, Stephanie
Yflrnashlla. Chrii:: Kopi!zke,
Larry Gentosi. Elizabet h
Hesse. Lucinda Jones and
John Gailis.
CSF Sealbearcrs : Carroll
Beek, Sh aw n Bissonnette.
Jeanne Crawford. J e an n i e
Farber. John Gallis. Audre
Genrich. Diane G I en n ,
Elizabeth llesse, Cindy Jones,
Steve Kopanski , Ch r i s
Kopitzke. Ron Oberndorfer.
Nancy P;;lmer. Ch ris Quinn.
Lenofe Reday. Lori Semeniuk,
Oianne Sha1nrnas. And ·'
\\'illiarns. .Judith \\'ood\.\•ard
and Stephanie Yan1ashila.
ll'!i A(•ademlc'' television
lt>ani : Sh a v.• n Bissonnt>ttc.
Steve Kopanski and Jim Cur-
rie.
K I \.\'a n i s Bo w I \('an1
n1emtrers. Sha\\'n Bissonnette,
StC\'e Kopanski. Jim Currie.
Denny Cline. Terry Johni::on.
Stephanie Yamashita. Steve
Schones. Jim Sweet and Cindy
Jones.
SCHOLARSHIPS
Collfge G r a n t s ; Jan
F' i l zg e rn ld, \\'hitwor1h
College: Lucinda .!ones. J\toun1
Holyoke : Dan Millingto11, l'.S.
1 n t t> r nalion;il lJniversil),
~la rk Stevens, USC: A11n
Sutherland . R~ents' Scholar
at LC Santa Barbar a.
Al so. 1\farybcth \Vhitehead.
honors at entrance at Cal
State S<in .Jillie: Rick NorUi.
Lnion Oil Co. scholarship to
l 'C San Diego: Shav.·n 8i.5son-
ncllc. Trustee Scholar al USC :
Kathleen Kelly. Signal Oil
Scholarship, and Stephanie
Yamashita. Ford ?>.1otor Co.
r·und scholarship
Stute Schnl11.r1hips: L~sle,\
Alward. Occtdenlal Col\c~t':
l\tir! Ceiinder .. J<1n1es Currir.
Kat hleen Eccles. Diane Glrnn
and Elizabe-th Hesse. all al L'C
lrv1ne ; ~ichael La\\'lcr. USC:
Rich North. i;c San Diego .
Diane Payne. Orange Coast
CollPgC'. h:irn Perino. l!C San-
la Di!rbara: Linda Buschr, liC
Ha\''o\'arrl
\'rcloria Dahl~ren (I n d
Audre (f?nrich, both at Oran.Rt'
Co;•sl. :\tal\l\r_1 1\1arqu el. Cal
S1:1t" San Franci~ro : 01anr
Sah;;hury. l 'C Snnta Barbnra
and l.1nda Shotv.·clJ
Fnrty-thr('e student~ "·ere
given certificates by the
Soroptimi1t Club, youthlr----------1 1 scholarship to S tep h a n i e
Yamashita.
E1tchf."nge Club, Ke wport
Beach. Andrew \\/illi ams and
N11ncy Palmer.
llarbor Hi(!:h Exchange Club,
\V~mer \Veis.s.
E, I. Moore Awards of
l\-l11so11 ic Staf~ring Lodge . 708,
lo Steve Bennet!. Carrol Beek,
~like r.toad. \'.lean Parle!, Ter-
ry Moore, Beth Lu ymes, John
}Jarrym.!ln and Clndy Hand.
DAR C'rMCI Cltlien, Jennie
Farber.
, Girls' State, Vicki Clucas.
f'reml'o Award, Sue Boyd.
Rotary Club of Ne wport-
LET'S BE FRIENOL Y
I! ~·nu hav(' nr\\' Tlt'i~hbor.<i
or kno\V uf anyonr ll1iJVing
10 ou r are11, ph'Rsr 1l'll us
!lo that \\'r may t'Xh•nd· a
frl rndly ,,·elcomf" and hrl11
lhc1n to brt'ome AC11Ullintrd
in lht'ir new surroundings.
So. Coast Visitor
494-0579 494-9361
Harbor Visitor
~174
I See Dy Today's
Want Ads
• Having trouble .i;Jeeplng
11ights??'.'~? \\'ell then we
.~ugges1 Iha! you fl')' this
6'x7' 1\·a1rrbed. Ltkf' . •-
lh1na: you've tried belort'~!
ONLY $24,
• Surnn1t'r 15 JUSI around
1ilf' ror-! Alld 11'1
!Hnf' lor water fun'. I!!:
lll'tf''H Ju~t !II(' thing to
krt-ro Jhf. kid~ oui ol .)"'Ur
Ju,ir! ~ ! ! A 71, dln(l:h)' .. _
SlO \5 A 1n1~U prlC( !or IO
ll'UlMl pt'IH'f •00 QUlet! ~ !!
• ~!/\Kt: A JJJD JC 0 ft:
GOL.IJ:!! ! C11 11'('t !hot 1~
••. 111!'0 11 Frrnch !t>lt·
Jlh<inf", j,i0Jdlf"11f roflfe a_...
h!f' itnd n1u ch tnort:!'!!
('hf-ck rl115~ 810 for tlf•
1111.il
•
C-.iifom111 Stale Scholarship
and Loan Commission. They
are :
nu_• Parbrr. J<1n Fll:.:gerald.
:0.1elis~a r o\\'lkes, John Gailis,
A1a!t Greer, Brigid Grupe,
Janel 1-loaw.
Bema Kah n, Ste\e Kopanski,
Na111:y lAJc . Stual'I lA!wis, Joh1l
Matillavy. Hope ~1orruw. Nan·
cy Pslnier. Georg~ J~eters,
Lenore Reday, 1\.1 a r g a rel
Roger!, Bradley Schultz. Lori
Semeniuk, Ann Sulhrrland ,
Kenneth Swift, 'Venier \\'eiss,
Li~bet \\'hite. John \\'1/cox,
Andrew \\'1 lliams, J udy
\\'oodw<1rd, Lori Wunderlich.
Stephanie Yamasblta '-n d
Taras Youn!.
J e3nn!" C'r:iwford, .larnes Cur-
rlt> Kdlhy ~~rlel\. Lucuuf:a
.Jon(',.., Steve Ku 11 an,.. k l .
U 1 ch 3rd Nol'lh, An11c
Su1herlancl. Kenneth S~·ih and
Andrew \\'illu1ms.
F'ar bC'r. Chns11no• Kopitzkc
and :'-Jane\ Palmer.
Sharon Badhain. Sh 11 w n
Bissonnette. Pt>nny Blowers,
Shirley Col!o1n , J e ;i n n e
Crawford, Donna David, Anita
De i\1aio. ,_1 iche\e Eddy, Jen-
Also, Kathltt'n I. Hughes,
Robert lshell, Susan Jerram,
Steven T. Johnson, :;.san L.
Johnson. Lucinda Jones,
Nallonal Merli scholarship
ll'\ll'rs o f commrndalion:
National !'iterit Flnali1;ts:
Shllwn B1ssonnelte, J ennie
Co11101l'n1·en1cnt Speaker1:
~tcph;i111~ Yan1ashita ,
i;alul<1Wr1 ;,i11, Shown 81sson-
nette. Audre Genrich. Steve
K11pa11ski and Nancy Palmer,
valedictorian.~ -----------------
,
"""' (, II••-· c11ie1,..,. •f llu •••r• '"Sati1j'O.c1io11 <:uu1'tl 11ttt1C' (A Place You Can Trust & Get Tlte Best)
•
l UB[l[SS LAREDO [ ; 650xl 3 (878/13) Blitkw>ll. .. hth.o. \l.65f 1d. !1.Tl! It
UNIROYAL
LAREDO
i 951 t 41071/141 1 7S114(118/ I 4)
. 7 l5114lfll/14) •S.Ml1I~
$1795,7.75xl 5
(F78/) 5)
$1995 ..,,,,, '·"'" {G 71/14) (G?l/15)
7.00rl J
IC71/1 JJ
Belted or
Whitewalls
$295
Extra
·Hit Au.r1•1i •~ li!te'
8.551t14 $2295 (H7Sn4)
8.5Sxl S
(H78/I SI
DATSUN • OPEL
TOYOTA & Others
12~1~
trill
S•1'> ~ 1D1l l, ~ 6D1 l l, ~ 6011 5
io<t., ~I\: 11 \I II hi {1, hi II.
OPEN 7
DAYS
Recommended &y
ROAD TEST
MAGAZINE
·WHITEWALLS
'1 BLACKWALLS
FORD-PLY-CHEV SIZE: l.7Sx15 (FlBflS)
BRAND
NEW
fUll
4 PlY
s
F
0
R
UNIROYAL TUBELES ~
BRAND NEW FULL 4 PLY
6.SOxll s99s 1 ;F~~i114~$1095
(878/J 3) 7.75x15
(F78/15) .
r---t1RAND NEW TUBELESS-BIG CARS!!---.
8.55xl 4
iH7S/14)
8.55x l S
IH7B/1 S)
tl .OOr l S
(l73/15)
8.85x15
(J78/15)
8.8Sx14 $2695 $2495 (J7S/l•l 9.00/9.1 SxlS Daily 8:30-9
7.00xl 3
7.351t14
(G78/14)
8.2Sx14
8.251tl 5
(G78/14) 1395 1695 18 95 SUN. 9-6 8.8Sx1 s (l7Bn S)
(178/IS) ~II fo I: I ufi I I.I! ll I l.11 "I. I ( r" Ill"'''! u, .. Id! 1'1o.ITI 10\L I \) ll ! 1!11
3005 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA.
CORNER of BAKER and HARBOR -PHONE 557-8000
Serving l 'o•la /ll e•a-.l 'etcport Beach Area
.GARDEN GROVE
14040 Brookhurst-530-3200 I ANAHEIM-BUENA PARK
6962 Lincoln Blvd. -826-5550
OPEN SAT. & DAILY 8:30·9 ..• OPEN SUNDAY 9·6
• •
I FULLEllTON
1321 Euclld-870.0100
• ••• •
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UAILY PILOl T hur~d.i;y, Junt 3, lCJ/l ,,
:\M ore Dead Eagles Hunted in Remote W yor1iing Canyons LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N011CE
'"' ••
• WASlll NGTON (AP) 8.arbara •I Casper,
the Na·
where ranther! are suspected
of cairying out p r i v a t e
predator t.'u ntrol programs.
Searchers may dis('()ve.t more
dead eagles in U1e remote can·
~)'Ons of \\'yoming where ~8 of
the majesl1C birds already
have been found poisoned,
_electrocuted or shot lo death.
Wyo., a member of
tional Audubon Society.
Mrs. Dobas .told a Senate
bad sulxommitlee Thursday
fori;~d s~arcl)ers to
abandon efforts lasl weekend
lo con1b pine studded canyons
~·eather
Williarn D. lluckelshaus. ad-
m i n is tr at o r ol the
E fl v i ro11n1entRI Protection
• "There's evidence to sugge§t
there are more," said Mrs.
Agency, said Thursday 65
pounds o( deadly thall ium
I ..
LIN·IROOK
TWO
We Sold Out Last Ti me!
Here's One Last Ch a nce!
They'r.e ,perfect for campin g, boats or trailers. 7000
BTU heater puts out heat for 16 ho urs on one filling .
Cotton fi lled tan k so it can't spill e ve n with the ca p off.
Polished alum inum-can't rust-use the top as a hot
plate. Buy several a t this gi ve away price-a great
gilt. Re member-Ju ne 20 is Fath e r's Day!
SHOP & COMP A RE AT 13?.99
SMOKER KETTLE
The Finest Mad e!
We bought them at tremendous
savings & we're passing the
savings on to you!
Top·of·the-line features!
BIG 21\"
COOKING
SURFACE
I
BU1ll·IN
TEMPERATURE
INDICATOR I
YOU SAVE
110.00! -
. , •
' INCLUDES
48 PAGE
BARBECUE
COCKEOOK.
sulfate sold to ranchers wa s
believed responsible for the
death::; of bald and goldrn
eagles in Jackson Canyon near
Casper.
"It':; t•ol'u.:eivable jl.nother
be may Jack~on Canyon
discQverCd," said Sen. Gale
f\:tcGee tD·W)'o.), wtio added
2144 W . LINCOLN
Ute Y-rd1 Ell! ol llr1111kh~,.I)
Phone 774-1300
lhat Wyo ming's eagle popula·
hon m<1y' be further en·
dan"'ered by hunters kllling
for feathers.
gi1n· "I kno w one o{ Lhe
micks out We.sl is lo con
tourists to come West to buy
eagle fealhe~," he said.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
17200 5 . llROOl(HURST
UMI Y•rdt !oulh ol W•rn ... )
,.hon• 961·3311
LEGAL NOTICE
SUPERIOR COUllT OF TllE
$TATE OF CALIFORNIA 1<011:
THE COUHTY 01' ORAHOf_
No, A41Jn
~· O'~nve Counl•, CoHrornla
Bv Oo•olnv Horv•v Fi>h.,
Pvte~o1lng A.11en1
~•}.1100
Pubh•llell 0tan9<1 Co••t Oa•tv
Jvnt J, 10. 1911
HOTICE OF llEAlllNG OF l"ETITION
FOR PllOllATE OF WILL ANO FOR
LET1£Ri TEil.liMENTARY E11a1e ot HARllY MON'IGOMEllY.1 -------------
0~c•a•~O.
NOllCE I ~ HE REBY GIVEN 1noT Cyril LEGAL NO'flCE
Polol,
l l/4" 11
R. Fr111 h•• fol~~ ~erel~ A p~t1tlon !orl-----
l prob~IO ol "'ill ~nd lo• 0>•uancc ol L.,le" P ·4ltl\
Tp•l•"'•ntuv !O f'pll!lonc• .. 1 •• ence •o CEllTIFICATE f;IF BUS!J-IESi,
"""''" "mMlo tor t.,rlner 1>~rh<11lor" and FICllTIOUS NAME
thol !h• !(me and plat• of f'IP a rin11 tnp Thi unde,.;g,,•d dof• c••11t• ht " <On.
MODERN
WOOD
HANDLES!
HE AVY DUTY
CHROME·
PLATED
GRID!
CAN'T RUST
MADE OF
HEAVY GAUGE
ALUMINUM
WITH BRUSHED
SUNRAY
FINISH!
~
DRAFT
CON TROLS!
THREE
POLISHE D
Al UM IN UM
L!GSI
COVER CAN IE
POSITIONED TO
ACT AS WINDBREAK
FO R OPEN
GRILLING!
I 1ame II~• rieon ,., tor June 11, lqll, •• d U<lm; A ~uoin•" M 69/l warn•• AY•,
9 lO a ft1 ., In 111• <ou•lroom O! O~l>Atl· h un"n;!on Beath Cah!ornl• under lhl
ft1pnl No l of s•itt.<Ot!r!, at 100 (Ovoc htl,liQl>S f:rm n~mp ol CA PITAL 1N,
cenre1 Drive WCI!, ,~ Ille Clfv or Sonia VESTMENTS •nll 11101 ••l<I !lrm I• tom.
An•, Call•o•n11. . oos..i of 111~ tollnwono 1-. .. on, Who'e
O•l•<I M•v 11, 19!! n1me \n full and plate ot rc>1ot nco " •• W E. ~T JOH N lollow•
C<WMV Cle•O; Ltrov Jos.@ph ltnh•rt. 16101
PETEii C. TORJ-IAY Catl'lum1 Chtl•. Foun11lf\ V•ll•y, ••• C•lll
, .... M•••· C1ll!Otn1• '1111 l .. o. Jo••Pll Lu•h•t! I
UOO Ad1m1. S~llf Num M r ?O• Df!t<I M•v 71 . 1911
Toi: !/U l Ull-otSO $i.to of Calilor<>I•. Or •n•• Cnun!Y :
.li11orn•v for f'•lmo..o• on M1tv 71, 19/1, b•lo'• me, • Ncl1rv I Publl1hed Or~n~e Co~JI D~lly P•lot Me¥ Publl' in ind for 1110 !.1a1o. ""'•on•llv
ll. 2• t nd Jun, J. ltfl ll10 11 ••P••••d lltO~ Jo,.pn l enn•n ~nown lo
I • mt !o bo lt>c Pt''°" w!'>o,. n1mo 11
JUbSC••btd 10 !ht W•fn•n tn1lrvmt nl •nd
•cknowlPdHd t>o e•e<uled !ht ••mt. LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE 01' PROPOS ED
BANI( MEllQfll
Nol1ce I• he•eby v••tn 1n.i •colicallon
~~' ~e•n mAOt to !Me Comot•o•1"' of !ne
c~"•ncv. w~,nin111.,,,, o .c. xinc •o• hi\
t on•en1 !O • meroer ol Ne'""'" N•fiOn~I
Newoof! lleocn, C1llfo•nl•, wirn
!OFFIC:IAL 5EAll
MA.RY A.. ~C l-IROEDE R
'-lolatv l'ubUc C•l•torn1•
PrintlP~I Q!l•ct In
QranQ• Coun!V
My Comm•1''on E•Pife•
~~plembor 10. 1911
Pvbll,~•<I O••not Coa,1 Oa>lv
MJV 11 ... a Junt J, 10. II, 191!
P1IO!,
Jll1 11
11on1I ll1n•. ~"" Oieo~. Call!nrn•"· ----""d 1n10 5oulhorn (alilorno• F /rJI N•·i
11 1, ton1tmo1•1P<i 1~.1 111 oiuce• 01 LEG AL J\'OTICE •~• •1><>11e named 1Hnll:1 .,.;11 COflllnve "'
oe o~er•ltd T~•• Mlice !1 oun1l•n1d oursu•nT 'o
.lfC!•on II IC) ot Ill• """•••! OePOlll
ln•urance -"'' N•woorl Na!lon•I Bank
Nt"'"<>" ll•ach. C•ll'1>•n1•
sw•~•"' c.11"""'A
"'"' N•!•<l"•t ll•n~ $•n Ooeoo. Cal1!orn••
r vbll1ne11 0•~"9" (~••' O•il•
M•V J, 10. 1/, ?I flld Juno J, "ll
LEGAL NOTICE
10: CALWELO. ~Ml M~tA •l ~U r
Boolev•t1I, Newi>0rT lltfth, C1!ifo•n•1
91&6!1
SMITH INTE RNATION AL. \NC. •
C11Uorn•A ~oroor•llon. ,,.., MetA•lhvr
!loulovtrd, Ncwpart lhad'I, C•l!lor<>ll
n~.
Thl1 1>111l"fu J1 co"lllJ(I.., b• • te•·
par1llon. SMITH INTERNATIONAL, !NC.
II• P E Corv,
~KrUUY ,
Tlll1 1111,ment 'W•• Ultd with 1f'lt Covn·
i.. Cir•• 01 0•1n11e Covn!Y Of> M•v JI,
1•11. • v"'.iln & &1rlen
A"..-MY' II l lw
._. I DUUI OHv• SI.
L .. Aftl'llH, C•llNrft!I T·llllJ
P.l/tllllflt<I 0rl"9• Co.JI O•llY Pl/o!,
MI Y lQ, 11 I nd JUN J. 10., 191! l)!f,11
The DAILY PILOT-
Tops in Local Sports
,.
P-4\•U
CERl lFICAlE OF llUSIJ-1£Sl
FICT!llOUS HAME
LEGAL NOTICE
IUPl!lllOll coultT-c;, TMI!
STATE OF C~Lll'OllM1A 1'0 11
TJ-11 COUNTY Of' ORANGE
No. A .. tS71
NOTICI f;ll' J-11.lilltNO 01' PETIT!OJ-1
"'011 P'llOIATE 0 "' WILL AMO FOii
Ll.TTl!lll TESTAM EMT .. RY
11'10 I OMD!
JO~CPfl OE F!LL!PPI~.
/>. re~vla• mee11ng or int Bo••<I of
Svotr.i"'" ot O••ntt Countv. Call!ornl•.
81.., 1J!!lng •• Ill• Go11erni"11 ·aoard ct
D••l,IC1• ""'"'"'° bY the Boar<! cit SuM r11I'°'' wa\ /\!Id M•V 16. 1911. OI t :llO
A. M. Tn• !ollowlng named mtmber> bl'ln11
ore•enr. ~ w Ballin. Ch1trm•n: Oa•ld l B•~er, Wllll•m J. Phlil\Cl. ll•loh 8.
Cl••~. Ronald w, Ca•~" and tn• Cletk. Htodng on llotl•ntt Permit No. v.1Sff
1' tonhnued ro June 2. 1911 , He•rlfl9 ""
U'" P~rm11 No, UP·llJI lo tonllrn!ecl ID
J•me 9, !911 A 1tu<1Y on road Im·
llfOVtmtnt ,...,uortmenh In 0 fongt. PA•ll
Atre• i• •1J•horlleO Trac1 Mao No 1001 i!
aPP•OYtd. Qrdln•nce1 Noo, 3'1'9 •nd aoo
a•t odoPte<I. Amenamen! lo I h •
(an!>l'ano Valley G~nerfl Pion 1' &P"
1>•0v~ Aopeol Of! Olvl•ion of l •"<I No,
1161,. deni.O. Tht Board adlou•necl.~
WILLll,M E. Sl JOHN
c1 .. -of '"" Bc•rd of ~u~•vl"'" Pvbll•ned Hun!ln91on ll••c~ 01llY Piiot,
Ju~ l, 191\ 1~11
LEGAL NOTICE --------NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN lhtl !ht
lolltlw1nq it~"" of found or s1111!(! O•OHr!y hl•t l)etf\ ht ld bv Ill• Police ~01rtmtnl
ol tne Cilv of Co•t• Mr11 !or • ~"°" lit
t •tt\S ot nlnelv !901 d•v•· ~ g01<1 Dl~t. one nurole t lkt, ont
blut bl~e. lhret b1~t.I -COior unOl>OWl\o
ont le<>I bo•. Ont d<flOhY 1tnd monev
NOTICE 15 o:uo:1rHE:R GIVEJ-1 tn1! if
no owntr ftOP~•" Ind provtl hl1
o•mtr\hlP of Int orcPtr l• W•!h•n H vt n
(11 <l~vl lollOW•"O tne ovbliC..hO<'I ol '"'' No!1te. ·~ li!i. 1nerclo •h•I! 11~•' •n tt.1 llnar .. ;f 1nere be O<'lt. o• In the CIT• of
CO"I Mt••· In "'"''" caJe !he P'OC»"rlV ih•li ~ ..,Id 11 Public 1uc1Ton 11 I Hme
•nd dnto 1o be •nnoyn(ed.
DATED: Junt 1, 1911
R. E NE TH
CH!EF OF POLICE
rubli"""" Or•noe '°"" Junt l, 1911
LEGAL NOTICE
I
I
BEA ANDERSON, Ed itor
T~v•.oiy, JuM i. 1'71 I'••• U
Gu ild Gro ws
New Crew
A new Orange Cou nty Chapter has joined the Trojan
Guild of the University of Southern California, also
dedicated to the guHd purpose of maintaining an active
interest in the universi ty.
During a Charter Day Luncheon p osted today
by ~lrs. George Carroll in her Los Angeles ho1n c, th e
university presented a plaque to the guild comn1emo rat-
ing the founding of the new chapter.
Serving as first president of the chapter '"il l be
?i.1rs. Roger Blanchard of NC\\•port Beach, and on her
executive board will be the Mm es. Robert 0 . Basmajian
of Newport, first vice president; Paul M. J ohnson of
Irvine, second vice president, and Willia1n J-Ja \vkinson
of Newport, third vice president.
Others are the l\1mes. James I-le\l.'icker, Irvine, re-
_cord ing secretary; Richard Burch, Tus lin. corresponding
secretary and Robert Hildenbrand, Ne\vport Beac:h
treasurer.
Serving as chairmen will be Mrs. Frank Anderson.
Costa Mesa, membership, and Ed~vin Lovrett, Santa
Ana, publicity.
Tire chaptcr'.s 40 new members will be honored
during a ne\V member coffee in the l·funtington I-farbour
home of Mrs. George Demos at 10 a.m. ~•londay, June 7.
Among those attending wil l be the "l\1mes. Ronald
Linsky. Bernard-~ec~ie. Ernest Sch aez. Albert Pizzo.
.f\1 ar_l Barrett Bla ke, Richard Se1veJJ and Fran Smi th, all
of Newport Beac'1,.
l '
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l --
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NEW CHAPTER BLOSSOMS -Plans have come to fruition in
Orange County for a ne\v chapter of the Trojan Guild of the Uni·
versity of Southern California, lo be headed by Mrs. Roger Blanch-
ard. New members and ofCiccrs, includ ing (left to r ight) /firs. Ron·
aJd Linsky and l\trs. Albert P izzo, are preparing for a fruitful first
year which will begi n with a coffee Monday, June 7. in the I-lunt-
ington 1-Jarbour home of l\1rs. George Demos.
Assistan ce League Benefit
Premiere List Glows
With Filmland St2rs
'/'he counldo1l'11 has begun. All seats arc being oiled and adj usted,
the popcorn n1achine tested and the lighting perfected in the ne\v John
\Vayne ·rticatcr at Knott's Berry Farm so things \rill be premiere-perfecl by
Sat11rd.1y . .June 19.
llos ling the ~rand opening performance of John '\'ayne's nc1v film.
"'Big .Jake." and pocketing the box office receipts \viJI be the Or.ange Coun ty
chapters of National 1\ssi s tance League. ,
Si!uatcd in lhC' ne\V Gypsy Cam p al Knott's, the theater \Viii he used
for pcrfnrrnances by f\nott"s resident company, ice shO\\IS <111d country·1vcs1·
c·rn ·in u ~1cab.._ f olln\1' 1 ng the sho\\•1 ng of ··Big Jake ...
In lhc g ala rrrnrd on opening 111,rht 11·ill be the film's ~tar as 11ell a.c:
r.1chard Boone and l\taureen O'J·lara, his co-stars, California Gov. J{onalfl
J{eagan and other celebrities.
On dis play in the lobby of Lhe theater 1vill be movie memorabilia hc-
lon~111g lo John \Vayne. including his famous gu n collection. costumes he
has worn in 1n:i11y of his 185 starring roles and p hotos of each of the char-
acter~ he has portrayed.
Outside the theater \\ill be an 8·fool slaluc of the actor as he ap-
peared in his 1954 filin. ''lfondo.''
Filn1cd in Durango, !\lcxico. the hon1eto\v11 of famed !\Iexican outlaw
Pancho Villa, the ne\vest saga includes characters portrayed by two of
Wayne's sons. Patrick. 31. and .John Ethan Wayrie, 6, who makes his scree n
debut in this filtn.
T he Orange County chapters of Assistance League, w hich fornf the
organization's J~egion 11. will use the proceeds from the premiere for their
various phi.lanthropies. tnost dealing with youth and family service.
•
WESTERN WELCOME -A ne\v theater \Vill be
\Velcomed to the new Gypsy Camp area of Knoll's
Berry Farm with a festive premiere of a new J ohn
\Vayne film, "Big Jake,'' sponsored by the Orange
Coun ty chapters of National Assistance League. Re-
ceiving a friendly preopcrljng \velcome from Chief
Redfeath er are (left to r ight) the Mmes. Kenneth
Albright, Robert Unger and Roy liall.
Founded in 1935 by Mrs. llancock Banning, the league has as il;c;
1notto, "All for service and .c;ervice for all." To accomplish this goal, league
n1embers have set forth as thei r purpose "to act as a friend al any and all
times to me n, \vo men and children in need of care, guidance and assistance
-spiritualJy, materially and physically." "'1
Dieter Gets Hooked While A _ngling for Easy 'W~igh' Ou -t
/ DEAR ANN LANDERS: One reads a
greal deal these days about drug abuse
among teenagers. Why isn'l more said
about drug abu.!IC among adults? It very
nearly cost me my life.
J always had a tendency lo obeslly. My
. nvercating was mainly compu1:5ive. Last
January I became disgusted with myself
because J had golten fat as a piJt after
my last baby. I went to the local "diet
doctor·· and he gave me benzedrine pills
lo curb my 11p~tile.
Ptrhaps under ordinary conditions it
v.·otild have been all right, but that year
was a hideous lime for me. l had forced
my husband into a separation he didn't
want. Our baby was born with a defective
heart. The 2-year-old began lo act up
because she fell displaced by the new
tiiby. 1 fought with our oldest claughlo;:r
constantly. I I couldn 't control my
temper.)
'By May J had losl lhe weight I had srt
out to lose bUt J kept laking the diet pill!!
anyway. (I can't understand why my doc-
tor kept renewing the prescription.)
Finally I realized the pills were rt!ponsi-
ble for the violent outbursts and frequent
crying spells.
I kept 7promising myself. ''tomorrow
1'11 stop," but I'd wake up exhausted \\'ith
too much to do. I'd always th ink of an ex-
cuse lo take just a few 1no1·c pilli-to J;el
me through the day, When I rtalizecl T
was hooked I vowed lo finish the bottle
and not bu y inore. That didn"l work
either.
One night I tried lo kill myself. 'Thank
God I didn't succeed. That was the turn-
ing point. I go~ some counseling and for
the first lime 1 bega n to understand
myself 11nd my relalionship to others. Tn
moke a long story short , my husband and
I arc back together.
l am happier now than I hnve Ix-en at
;1ny time in the last 2'0 years. In
evaluating my troubles and how they
began, l realize the bl ame is more mine
lhan the doctor·s. But I still think
someth ing should be done about ph ysi-
cians like that. P.1aybe amphetaminr!'I
wouldn·t have wrecked most people, but
for me they were disasler.
llousc1vivcs should b(' told that \\'hen
they want lo lose weight, bcnnies an<l deic
nrc not the answer. The pounds are surt'
to come back arlcr you quit !he dope. r
nm not proud of myself for getlinR into
that syndrome, but I am proud of myscH
for Reiling out of 1l. I :ilso am th ankfu l
thal luck was on my side. I came wi!hf n
inc hes or being dca<l . If you u~c !his lel-
lcr. sign me -Bl N(;l\AM PTON
LESSON
DEAR LESSON: W'.lre It is. And DOW a
·)\'ord to everyone who Is takiJtJ: a m~
phetamlnes, far ANY ileason. Please lear
out Ibis column and paste It In your
mediciDe cabinet -as a reminder.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: A recent
writer who signed himself "Oklahoma"
stated that gasoline. painl thinner· and
acetone should never be used indoors. He
advised the use or kerosene or diesel Eucl
in.~lcad because lhry are better grease
solvents and are non explosive. This is
wrong. Both arc cxplosh•e.
\\lhilc kerosene and diesel fuel are
safer to u,c;e beca use or their higher flash
points, both \\'ill burn and explode under
!hr righl conditions. If kerosene is ap-
•plied to a hot engine u;hade-lrce
mechnnics often do this) it will glve Orr
inflammable vapors which can be ignited
.at a !o\ver temperature tha n gasoluic
vapors.
I just wanted to correct a misleading
slalemenl. FIRE CHIEF I N
l!OUSTON
DEAR CHIEF: I .am alw1ys happy tt '
correct • misleading statement -
especially II the statement could lead lo
an 11-alarm fire. (In Texa11 It could be 13
-everything ls bigger down there!)
Thank you for writing.
Al cohol is no shortcut to social success.
ff you think you have to drink to be ac-
cepted by your friends, gel the fact..
Read "Booze and You -For Teenager1
Only ,'' by Ann Landers. Send 35 cents lt\
coin and a long, self-addressed, stamped
envelope with your request in care o( the
DAILY PILOT.
.
'
,
'' ~-
~! J .f DAIL V PILOT Thur~d.iy. Junt 3 }q]l ..
, ;A Loaded Question
~Jhis . Mystery Cracked
' By ERi\I A B0.\1HECK
The other day ou1 of a clear,
:--• blue sky Bn1 c1e askt'd, ··:\re AT
WIT'S
END
• we rich .,"
' ' I µal.ij'ed un my knl'cs as 1
~ i r+trieved a dime frnn1 1h1·
~ ! 'ttveeper bag. bll'w lhl' dust
: ~ oH. and askt·tl, "~01 1>u )OU
• ·. can notice. "'h} ~ ..
. ;
"HOY.' can )'OU tell'"' hf' ask-.._
l1ow I can always tell:
~ ~ )' straightened up and
"' thought a bit. Bring rich ts a
.. You're nch vrhen you buy
~our gas a! the same ·service
station all the time so your
glasses match.
· , relative sort of thing. llere·s "You're rich when you can .. " ·.' ' ' .. t : ..
BRIDAL REGISTRY
CRYSTAL CHINA DANISH FURNITURE
• 4Jl!1t ~IAJ.LR ~ ~-1~ferfor$ • 111\P.m don1•h coffee goroen
.. .,, 26q0 E .Colllt~W!l•i Corona .lei Mor
O•ily 9:10 lo 5 lO
Su~d~v1 11 lo 5
Tel: 644-7340
&of A -Moster Lho.rgc.
FULLERTON OPEN SUNDAYS 12 to S
Hali· Sizes
•
· Around the
corner or
around the
world,
m irocl~
polyesler i1
just righl
becouse it'1
woshable,
pockob!e
and non·
"Wrinkle .
from $25
I
..
COSTA MESA (1/J Ilk. N. 18th St.l
84 HUNTINGTON CENTER
HUNTINGTON llACH
!Nert lo lorker l ro1. Fwr111!ure l
Aho: rl• 011.t.N(:;[Fol.111 MALL
l'ltllEllTON
h<tve eight people lo dinne r
and don'l have to wash forks
between the main course and
de.~sert.
j,You 'n: rich \':hen you buy
clothes for your ~ids that are
two sizes too big for the one
you buy 'en1 for and fnur ~izes
too big for the one th<1t comes
after hini.
''You 're rich wl\en you own
a boat .. , w11hout oars .
"You Clin tell ptople have
money v.·hen th ey record a
c:herk and don't have to sub-
tract it right away.
"People have mnnev when
they s1l around and joke with
the cashier while she's callin~
in their charge lo see if it's
:;.till open .
"You're rich when you write
~-:... ·,..-..._~ )"-b.~r oo naoer
w1lrlo1i( rrirt:As' ·. :-...... --~.i-"' -
"You're ri ch when Your
televtsion set has all rh c knobs
on it.
"You're rich when you can
1hrow away a pai r l)f pnn-
tyhosc just because it has a
Jaree hole in it.
''You know people are load-
ed when they don't h11ve to >
save rubber banr:ls from ihe
celery and store them on a
doorknob.
'·You're rich whrn yo11 c:in
have a home wcdd 1ni:: v.·ithout
''Ha v l" n Funeral Hom c''
s!;imned on the 'oldin•i ch<11 rs.
"You're rich when thP
l'couts have a pallf'r dri ve and
vou have a stack of New York
'rimes in your bni:emer.I.
''You're rich when your dog
Is wet and <;mell~ go()(J.
"You're nrh whC'n \·our 01vn
hair looks so JtrPat 'everyllne
thinks ifs a wi'1 "
Brucie sat ouiellv for a mo-
ment. then :;airl. "I tf;\nk my
friend Ronn y is rich ."
"How tan you tel l'!" I a~k·
ed.
"llis mom buys his birthd:iv
cake at ~ ~Akl!rv ;ind it i.~n·t
evrr1 rrttekrd f .... '1n11·"
"He's rich, all right." r :-.igh·
Pci.
Women To Invest
Conecrnl'd \vith investing
monl'y fur the i:reatest tn-
t·rc;isc of valuf'. a group or
v.·omen in Fountain V<ill<'y
have organized an investn1ent
group.
The Fortune llunters meet
monthly for a \Vall S!reel
\Vorkshop and ;in exchange of
infunnntion ('onduclcd by r-.1rs.
Charlene Vance . Sn u the r n
Orange County won1an slock-
brnker.
The assoeia1ion v.·elcomcs
\vomen u1lcrested in learning
the clos and don'ls of in-
\'estlng.
COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS
v'~0-JUNE SPECIALS! ~ "~~-d)C:TRET~~~ ~~ &0{ JJ._ Your Health Food Budget Her~! • _t~
~11,:f IHil
-~-~'
JO Tablett.-R99. Sl.49-SPECIAL
60 Tablett-Re<g. 56.49-S,fCIAL
p~ c :eEST
!~ IMAGIJ1E ALL IN ONE TAILfT.
Vltafllhl C IRoM HIJK
Co1Klftltf'11t•I •.... ,
Cltr.,. ti• fl11v11t11oldt ..
•
' "
VITAMIN E
OIL
W•l•r Oi.p•1tiblo. We •<• oflerin'i lhi1 •9•in
i~1J ,.,onth ;II lhe
dem1nd ,,.., 10 91111,
A lwO ·Ounc1 bottle
cont.tons 710C. l .U.
Vi!en"n E.
Ret. S4.49
»<Cl-' $J98
PROTO·
CHEWS
Prole:n T .bl1t1
Berry f11.,.o•. E •ch
l~bl•+ 500 m91. Protein
in .. b••• of ... 111•
di1pertib!1 L1cithr~.
150 Tebleh
Reg. Sl.19
$179
Rdl11 • • . . • • • . . . . . . . . . 50 11191.
I Httpe-rltlh1 •....... , •• , 50 "'fl.
VITAMIN E
0-ALPHA or MIXED
iooc • ., $1.98 100 l.U.
lOO l.U. "' c ... $3.59
Come i~ encl pie~ up yowr
fRlf CO,Y of
COASTLINE HEAL TH FOODS
l SU,11: I.TORI\ TO SERVI YOU
COSTA MUA
270 l•ll 17th St.
141·t5J7-le Hllltt•11 Sttu•,..
ft.~~"''"""CAlcl
M ••'•• Ch~"J•
•
TUSTIN
1094 '"'" 11 .. d.
Fiesta Plans in Focus
Speaking Out
Ecol~gy Probed
I.as £)!as Toastn1istresses decals at the setood.
v.'111 probe ecology problems·,-=:=::..::.c_------·
during the next two meetings.
Gathtring in tllcrcury Sal'·
ings building. 1-1 u n I i n gt on
Ueat'h, members will be in
session al 7·30 p.111. \Vcd-
11esdays, June 9 and 23.
Ecology Beg1ns:~t l[(Jme is
the theme of OOth di scussions
which will center around en·
virn r11nental i ssues or
rcc!i1n1alion and conserv:ition
During the first meeting a
fnrin;il p:incJ y,•11! be folluy,•ed
by a tliscussion, v.h1le at the
second session an informal
panel will precede a forum
Spc;iking v.·111 be ~!rs .. JO!'
t.onza!es 11nd r-.1rs. Calvin
Olcott . Also on the prbgrarns
will be the ,\lmes. Velma
Bolin. Doris \\'oodhall, Leland
Jeffers and ~1:iry Renner.
c:ucsls Y.'Ji l reeei\'e ecology
pins al rhc firs! 111cc.ting :uid
The DAILY PILOT-
T ops in Local Sports
Charity Fair
Win New Cars
enler now •I Huntinqlo11
Cenl•• dr•..,.in<]I held e•'h
So+u<d•y I p.m. wn!il June 11
P•itel ondude Bill M••IV
Tovole, Kor~ Jewelert 1.0 1
cor•I unm,,unted dj emond,
Town •nd Country lr•Y•I
c.,,bbe·n crui11 for two,
Te"V Buock Opel cer phn
thou14nd• ol doll•ri in
c.on•oldlion pri1e1-ljckeh
•vod~ble, help your chorilV
with \I donef,•on. H~'>ii1VJ!on
Center, Beech •nd Edin'O tr
Son Dl e90 Fiwe1 HB.
\Vith their sights set on Old l\lexico. members of the \\'omen's 1\uxiliary to the
Orange County Pharn1acculical Ass .. ociation \viii gather for a fiesta and installa·
lion \Vednesday. June 16. in lhe Santa 1\na home of l\·lrs. /\. L. Ramirez. Greet·
ing members l\'ith "Bienvcnida" are ([c ft lo right) ritrs. 'ferry rilontgomery and
1'1rs. Anthbny Williams, ne\v president.
Horoscope
Libra: Be Selective
In Making Purchases PRESENTING THE
SINGERsso FRIDAY
JUNE 4
By SYDNEY O~I ARR
AHI ES l ~1arch 21-April 19):
Jndects1on eould dominate.
Don ·t attempt to force issues.
Be rel'ept1ve. esp~1ally to
suggestions matle by Cancer
ind1v1dual. \Vork with l:imili3r
frame oi reference. Go v.·ith
ti!.le.
TAURUS I April 20-r-.lay 201 :
Pressure is applied by
dept'ndent.~. (;ive -but he
su re y11u ::t!so receiv e your fair
sh;ire. Get proper rncd 1cal at-
te11tior1 v.·here required. Pct
n1ay Jl('ed rnore affection than
usual.
GE.\ll~I {1'1ay 21·.June 20 1:
'{ou get genuine chance tn
break thrOuRh restrictl\'C red
tape. Don't ;1 I! o v.' scn-
timcn1<il1ty to block progre.~'\.
Aqu;triu~ incll\•1dual r o u I ri
~hov.• you 1hc \1ay. Ask ques·
lions.
CA.\'CEB I.lune :!I-Jul\' 2'l l·
0bln1n h1n1 fron1 u·rmini
111rss:igr Kn11Y. th,11 ha ste
tssurs arc tu bt TC\'1C11ed
Drirf l f110I yourself Face pr11c·
t1rul rn;i!tc•r.~ in maturr man-
ner. Properly should be ap·
pra1s1·d. Knov.· \'illuc:.
LEO r.July 23-;\ug 221· 'i'ou
i.:au1 thn1t:gh ~pt't'IJI ae111·1tr
1\lnkc uu1uJrrcs. Don't be
s.1t1:.f1rd !o hntn\' 111cr,,I~ th •tt
so1111."llHnJ! 11ccu1Tf'1! F111d r1ul
11 h.\. probe l)('nra\h surf:i ce
indicalJons Fa1111ly n1ember
1nakrs SJlC!'Jal rl'<1ur.sl.
\'JllGO lAug. 23-Scpt. 22 \:
Sense of \'itll1es is put to test.
Find nut v.•h;it must be kept.
disrard<'d. Gel rid o f
no11l':;Sl'lll!l1ls. l)(ln 'l dcrcive
yoursrlf Sf'e (1f'rsons, s1lua-
!lons ns rhey aclu;1lly cxisl
J.ll:!H ·\ iSt•pl. 23-0rl. 22 l·
Takt· in1t111t1vc; stri•ss in·
r!epcndcncc. o r 1 I! in a I t I ~, •
lmpro\·c appcararicC' through
11elcelil'e purtha .. cs. Outlook is
1urncd In r1·spuns1bihty. nrw
\\'ays or arhic\'111g goals. [)c!e
IS fJ\'Ol'i!b!r
SCORPIO 10ct :!J-:\nv. 21 f;
Jle!p th ns r 11ho display v.·ilf·
tngnt'-"~ Ill aid 1hr1n,.el\l'S.
Rl'fu;.e ru hr 11~t'd 11 ~ <loor
rna1 ,\1:unt:11n <o1•1f.e<.tPPn1.
I· 1n1~h 11h:1r )OU S!iirl. Some
\1JJI 11ant to distract you.
Don't alln1v it.
SAGITTA HI US (Nov. '.:!2·
Dl:'c. 21): Accent on spet'tal
desires. You gJtn mo;; I
1 hrough or1g1nal ;:ippr0<1ch. j
Oi.st'ard outn1oded conccpts , 1
ml'lhm:ls. Strive fo r emotionoil
fulf1tln1l'nt Be truthlu l 1\1lh
~ourself. You are sutcccding. I
CA PRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19 1: Accent on honors, pro-
1 lcssional endl:'avors. Key is a:>
complishment. Don't be
dissuaded by one v.·ho lacks
confid,cnce. Be self-reliant.
AQUARI US (Jan. 2().fcO.
Ill): Your ideals can be trans-
1 formed to realilics. Catch up
on correspondence. Associate 1 \l'ho attempt.s to bcl1Hle is Jc.
1 tua1Jy envious. Kn ow this and
maintain poise. Refuse !o be
irritated I
PISCES (Feb 19-i\l;irch 20 \:
\\'hat appeared Inst is
reco\'ercd. J3e gra!cful. Don·1 1
request rnore than y,1u can
handle. Applies to ·pl'rsonal
and professional arras Check
rlcta1ls . Head bel1\een the
l111r~. "\'nu v.ill know. I
IF TODAY JS YOUR
TRADE IN PLAN.
Stop trying to sew today's fashions with yesterday's
mach1ne1 Right now you can't get less than $50-and
you could get $100 or more for your old machine '.•1hen
you !rad~ 1\ in toward One Touch Sewing·. Any make
lull·size se•Ning machine that's still in one piece
is worth at least $50
loward any new model
T~..S.e.Yt• zig-zag
sewing machine by
Singer. Get 1he newest
features of One Touch
Sev1"1ng. Trade in now al
a Singer Sewing Center!
The trading'1 evPn easier wil~
the Singer 1 to36• Credi! Plan.
SINGER
Newport
Assumes
Resident
Leadership
RIHTHll.\ Y vou soon will
str.11ghten oui emotional Jn·
\'O]\'rmen!. You \1•i ll have a
brttrr understand111g of actual 1 need.~_ This v.·ill bcnrfil you in
many areas. \Vel comC""" new j
cont11cls, distractions. D0n'tl
brood You arc <ln active
For address o! the Singer Se\ving Cenfer neares1 yo:J,
see White Pages under SINGER COMPANY.
•A !11de.,,1r• cl lt!E SINGEll CO~PA,_'f
coir" MES" -11 r11101 a Sunfl.•'"•'· south Co11t P11u, 1•t1.JIJJ
COSTA MES" -1ll>O ll1rbo' Blvd .. H•rbor Ctnlor. ICI 1 l!U
HUHTIHliTOH 111.t.CH -Edln91r 11 lltl<h, Hunrln;to~ 8tlch. H1·1~0
Ottol.HO! -Jl Sh•nn•n 1111. ''Tn1 City" Cinll', J•l·lOJ
0.lttO!H QttOYI -Hll ChlP'"ln, Or1n11 C1unty Pini, JJC·OU
\1 rs c Cole of
Ncwp11rl HCiit'h 11 ill ass111ne
lcadcr~l11p 1rf !hr Oran).(c
County \\'01nen·s Ch ;i p I er,
Freedon1.~ Foundation al
Valley Fnrgr during a lunch-
eon in thr Buval Coach ln11.
Anah r1 n1. Tue~1l;1y . .lune 8.
Plans \\ill hi' announcerl
durin.i: !hr ('\Cnl for a fall
gradualP erc1hl y,·orkshop for
Orange Count.v 1eaeher!. lo be
1tlletl Pr:;.o~rr\'<ilton of the
l-'rinc1ples of Frredom.
(;ucs\ spcakrr \\'ill be Gen.
Victor 11. Krulak of San Diego.
president of Copley i\c1\'S
Sl'r\·1cc and a rl'Cenl r('('ip1ent
of a Frecdon1s Founda11on
;1w;1rd energetic individual. You ca~
Uther n".'Y.' oli1cer~ ;ire thf' charm brass off a knob: con-
~ln1es. Edgar R. Hil l. Bert dllions v.·i!J improve im-
Cof fey .I ( . (,()u Js 1.. ('u rt I~. li~".'.'.os~e~ly~,.:J~ha~r~P~Y~----...:=========:ii;==:.~=iiiii~==::==~ ~1rll l3ar1on. Ann Terrill -
Signor 1111d R11:hard lln\\'klns.
v1t·e presidents: Arthu r C.
&:hi ck .Jr .. recording
secretan:. and John A .
Prrst'Q1( trra~urrr.
ln~ta1\1ng olfirrr v.·111 be
i\lrs. ll1charrl F.;. Shellenberger
nf l,os An.i:elcs. w P s I e r n
rrg1011a! t'ha1rrnan lor !he
\\"on1cn·s Dil'ision . 4.)..
Onunncn for Lh:.-gn1duate
scmincir ;ire ~1rs. Curtis and
i\lrs. Frank E. Anderson or
'"' R TRIDE IT E
' -
S10.00
z•,, TO 6
I TO l!l f
ISH FRY''
BARGAIN DAYS
VALUES IFORMERL YI .................... UP TO $JO.OO •· DRESSES • · · · · .... · ... · ............... NOW FROM $9,99
SKIRTS JACKETS
SLACKS TOPS
BLOUSES
NOW
FROM
$1.99·$2.99
$J, 99.$4, 99.$ 5. 99
$7.00 BRUNCH COATS . ................. NOW $4.49
$3.99 MEN'S SLACKS . . . ............ ' ... FROM
MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS
And SPORT SHIRTS
M.&JnR
Cl:IDIT
CAllOS
i,
. -FROM $2.99
..
OPIN DAILY
9:)0 • '
P:RIDAY IVl'S
'TIL 1:00
14 PASHION ISLAND e Nt:W,.OllT CINTIR
Opp. lreodway • 644· .. 22J STORI!!
181_6 NeWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
T1111rsd1Ji, Junt 3, 1971 DAILY PILOT J $
,.
Gavels Change Hands as Organizations End -Club Year
Installation ceremonies are.
being staged up and down the
coast, witp va riety keynoting
the events and diversity the
groups.
La:k and Wa1t Pet.erson.
Top awards for the year
went to }t.trs. Gary Shepard,
outgoing president; J ack
Brandt. Sallmann, Bernard
Easter Society Mahooey and Thom as.
The reorganized Cou ncil of Laguna Women
the Leagues of the Easter Seal Miss Faye Bentson will
Society will elect officers frorn serve a second term as pres-
four are11 groups. League ident of the Woman's Club of
names. designating flowe rs. Laguna Beach. Receiving of-
have been changed lo Easter ficia l duties during a luncheon
Lily, Fleur de Lis, Los Lirios installation were the Mmes.
and Las Fl-Ores del Mar. Nonnan Alexander, Thrift G.
lily League Hanks. Kim Ellis, Willian1 Randolph , J. E. Luckenbill,
\\'ith the Sweet Smell of Sue-Lela Finklea and Harr y
cess, 1\lrs. Laurenti Marsters Hansen.
became president o( t h e Additional assistants are the
Easter Lily League· of the to.tmes. \Varren Stambaugh.
Easter Seal Society. Assisting Louis Underwood . Edi l h
offictrs are the r-.1 m es . Saunders, Geocge Thompson,
Thomas Ralfetto, Ca rl Kotr Marie r-.1uller and ro.1iss Laura
St. Jude HB Branch
Mrs. Edward Tagge will Mayor George Mc:Cn.cktn
the groop will be Ml'!. ROberl
llcrner, .usl..sted by the Mmes.
David Carlbttr, R i c h a r d
MCCraU:i, Michael Lotocky,
David Kurth, Frui Davenport
and Calvin Yim.
serve u president of Damas of Huntington Beach wUI ad-
de Caridad for ttie coming d_ress meinbert or the Hun.
year, assisled by the Mmes. tin~ Beach Bra.~ c..f the
Reuben P. ~lug hes, William , ~~ Association o r
Cwnmings, l R. Wilhelmsen, Uruversity ~~ 00 tht Delta Gammas
Constantine Kunelis Phillip £uture of their City during an
\Vebb Mary Kretschmar and installation luncheon. Members ol the Santa An• Jain~ Gormley. Taking over leadership of Newport Harbor Chapter ol
During i n st a 11 a t i on Free Estlmates
ceremonies. a check for
$12,000, proceeds from the 10th RE-UPHOLSTER annual Bal Masque, will be
presented to Sister Jane Fran-Complete Selertlon of
cis ol St. Jude's Ho.spitil by .Faftrir• inclt1dlng:
""· F"d Kay. Linens and Velvets
STARS
Sydn1y Om11r ;, on• of the
WOl'ld'1 gr11t 01trolo9er1. Hi•
column i1 on• of tho DAILY
PILOT'S gr11t f1•lure1.
• 9Hlfty w....-i, 1 '1 ... ,, ..... Pric•
C.ZYKOSKI 1131 NEWPORT BLVD,
(.S'l'-KO$-K£'1'1 COSTA MESA (NH~ H•-)
bins, Ed w a rd Casselman,_~M~an~e~tt~a:_. ------~========== \Varren Reynolds a nd Hobert
Phone
Sachs.
The group p~.senled a $3,000
check lo (fie Rehabilitation
Center.
Reha-b-;f;ta·fion
'T'hc second a n n tl' a I in-
staUation of the Organization
fl)r Rehabilitatioo Through
Training (ORT), Orange Coun-
ty West Chapter, marked Mrs.
Harvey Singer as president.
Completing the board are the
l\lmes. Stan Corbat, Sam
Kaplan, Don Snow, Jack Kent,
Herbert Segatoff, D a vi d
Unt.ennan, Dan M arch,
Seymour Kolsin. David J ay
and r-.1arvin Adler.
El Camino
The key to friendship will·
open the door £or Mrs. Alfred
t-.1ata, president or El Camino
Real Woman's Club. During a
Satire on Fashion luncheon,
f\frs. ri1ata welcomed board
membtrs the Mmes. Arthur
Sewell , George C ;. mp be 11 ,
Russe.J I Walker. Rob e rt
r-.1cMasters, John Renfro, Glen
Garwood. G. R. S;ilmen end
Harry Pell.
Appointed officers art the
?ilmes. .J. Herbert Rishen-
berger, Seymour Nutl. Mary
Lou Alvarado, Hugh Scallon,
Edward Kopp and Edward
Russel!.
Theater Guild ·
r-.1embe.rs of the Children's
Theater Guild ol Ne\vport
liarbor. appropriately dressed 1 in decorated chapeaux. have ·,
takt-n their hats off to new I
president Mr-5. Da vid V. Skill~ '
ing. elected to a second tenn. !:" j
Also reeeiving a "heady" ;_ .. ~ * j
welcome 11re new officers. the -' Mmes. Fred Ellis, John Kerr, 1
Ralph Tandowsky. Ra Ip h
llolden, James Aynes, Robert
Wolfe, W i 11 i am Stainforth,
Ne""·ton \Vayne. Fran k 1 in
Goodenough . William
Davidson. Richard Jordan and
Regiiiald Bennett.
Mrs . Jaycees
Huntington Beach Jaycees
joined the Mrs. Jaycees as
Mrs. Lawrence Sallmann took
over d is t 11 ff presidential
dutits. Rounding oot the board
are the Mmf<i Harold
Thomas. Bob \\lalker, Gary
October
Date Set
Mr. and r-.1rs. Williarn E.
... '-:.~ .
A ""E'RICA ··s LARGEST F AMILY C LOTHING CHAIN
•
..
REG.67.95 . .
Reduced to
30
SAVE
22.65
ENTIRE STOCK SUPERB
WORSTED and SILK SUITS
Our lqwest price ever for
these suits I Magoi6cent 90% Wqol w""""'1 with
10% silk for that look and feel of quality and rear·
round """'3tility. Expertly taUored two and three
lxrttnn single-breasted models in sizes I or regulars,
shorts and longs. Rushin and take advantage of
1 h '' e>:c:eptiooal moocy-s:!Ting opportunity!
U"f RA THIS LOW PRICE INCLUDES ~YIMG~! COMPlm ALTtRATIONSI
.~~fM .
9 :30
'TIL
9:30
SAVEOVER$7
Delta Gamma Alumnae will
change the ettw as Mrs.
Ridlard Jimt;ne; t.akes over as
preaident.
During a ceremony con-
ducted jointly with the Hull-
tingtoo Beach Chapter, the
Mmtt. Gordon Niedringhaus,
Carl Ertwine, G e o r g e
Octaler, John Everett and
Gauthier, John Coyne, Citrl
Schwartz, Robert Scholler and
Stan Hafer.
Norman Canfield accepted or-
1
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,
flcial posts.
M~. on Da~ ~'."•Je~~ SCIENTIFIC?
DTERT
, , • ... lfte .-t!lff", I Uk.WI ...
tc:IM'lllk ,...u II\"" COUNT TM•
STITCM CO NTl!ST, i1H1111t __ ,.._
ly 11,,. ....,..... Ille "Int* lrl<l."
""' •1111 ........ £9¥111 ......... lllat
-· CMI_. .... I'" I •141f.Jf (#IU)
allOTMlll KNITTING MACHIN•,
f11M1¥1MllT ,,_!
BIG
3 DAY SALE!
TH URS.0 Fll.0SA T.
WOMENS DRESS SHOES
and SANDALS
The
KNIT WIT
225 E. 17th ST. -COST A ~ESA
'-"111 CN'1 P'l•u
LOWI• M ... LL
C11i. Maa
i.t-%112 541-2771
• U.NKAM•lltCA•O. 1 1C" .-....;:ir"-ll ..Ati.Nll It \ '-
• '~
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Reduced!
Save up to 33%
ON 100%
POLYESTER
I PRINTED ~BLOUSES AND
TEXTURED
\. PANTS
blouse,
Tegularly 8.99
slacks,
TC[J ltW.rly 7.9[)
99
eac/~
Loolrat the gorgoons ootlit
for so little money! JOO% F'ortrf.P
polyester blouse with jewel
neck, long .sk:cvcs ... in fa bu loot
prints on white; sizes 32 to 38.
Coordinated 'vhile solid-tono
richly textured pull-on pants with.
Bare legs; sizes 8 to 18.
l -· I . ,
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f, ~~ f' .. ~ ..
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·,
••• r
Rogers have announced lhe
engagement or lhcir daughter
,.heresa Ann 11ogers t o
Richard Horva th . 1111 of Hun·
tiniton Beach.
l-ler fiance is lhe son of Mrs.
,, comparable sportcoals sell elsewhere for $30
---::,·~" UR ~\.Rf~O'f
2.01' or~~ pR~\C:::E\:..---
Lillian Horvath. also of Hun-
lill8lon 6each, and the late. Mr .
Af }lorvalh.
~!iss Rogers is a graduate of
Fountain Valley High School ~ ..
and attended Orange Coast
and Golden West relleges. The ;,
benedict-elect graduated from '
Gardena High School. Gardena
and is serving in the Coast
Guard. He is stationed in New
York City.
An Oct. a wedding in St.
Bonaventure CaUlolic Church,
J-luntington Beach is planned.
IRAND NAME HAS •••
There IS o ditferncet
C•-.. -M flttd -4 llNOW "'9 ti.,._,_.
f' LADY MAlLINI
e 60SSAlD e VASSAlml e VINUI e JIZAllL
e VOUTHCIAfT
CH ... IMP'1"
AND NOW .~.
LOY·I' ,
rt.s:_
2.10 I . 17,. It.
~ , i !· \;'; ~ J ; f !
: ... /. ~ . .. '
... ,
'
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• C•N M-Hll.., .. 141-
-642.·IMJO OOSTA MESA-1601 NEWPORT BLVD. AT 16th
SPORTIME" LIGHTWEIGHT
SPORTCOATS,BLAZERS
N..,. lllgh fulllon styling a tan amazing i...
prioe1 Stripes.pwds, geomotria,
textured and lioen-look blmds ... ~ aingl~
breast8d model with flap pockets, many
with belted bock, ....ie. lapeh, deep vent.
Doublo-bn:osttd oolld blazer with i....d
"lapcb, doop-. llegulan ...i longs.
22ss
COMPUTE ALTIUTIONS INCLUDED
HALL-PREST NO-IRON
FLARE DRESS SLACKS
Permanait press Dacon• polyetbr aod
Avrl!-ra)'Otl io yoqr c:bok:e of '1ripes.
palt ..... IO~ds ••• ~debhled
.,,;th Jlm.&1"...istbond, Frmcb fiy
tab, oob.matcbed nylon J:ippei. Sizes
29 to M.Abod.-oighlkg....W
in :mlid colon. li:zes 29 to 42.
Al.TOATIONS INCLUDED
com,,.....,• slach
••II •IHwhore fot $I 2
• GARDEN GROVE-12372 GARDEN GROVE BLVD.
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OPEN SUNDAY 11 · 5
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s
Moneg's Worth
OVER THE COUNTER New Legal Fields
Becko11 G1·aduates ...
a.llll A.Ill• IW
By ~"\ LVIA PORTER
N!W YOll:IC: (A"f C11 T..:
-!no 11) ....,n, lotC• I Co
I I "IKl*ll ~:, 1 Gii p1
th s specialty shoultl be ln "'' -.1 "''", ,. c1w: !'!G 111ounting demand 0.1 "' A.Un o••• C1vn1~ O As the commencement 71 11141 coun11r 111n1t ~=~v"'i ,.~ The field involves such ques-nw ""'' • 1n<1ua c .... Lab period begins It has suddenly lion:-as offshore terr1tor1a1 ., 11 0100:.1<1 c1>anc1 .-. llu.+. •NI T '"' c~1 o &truck me that not one of the bollndar1cs and which nations ,., &1nc;1> 111 ~ CM'" L"
h h h h to I lo Ilk$! l1\l.lll'4(11a .. 111 brilliant young law graduates a\e v. 1c rig ls exp ore 11 ""'" 11i.. '""' ,,.. .. ui ' and eKploil ocean resources H• 11 NC l.,,,, »V. Ch sr1c111 J know has gnne in!o a large M a1 B-• o"" '-'14 Ch uon rannina from fish to 01! ~n.,,. Bes .n ' i.a., C~r si..
tblh tllr !>!> VV•8~•llll'°'Ch•$pl es a 1s men aw 1 n1 or v. N BM 11 , 21.., c111n Mia
Jomed his fal he'" 1n practicing POVERTY LAW Today '"'u ..... c111nu1 A
I Fl<IUn l! ll 1 lll CIUnU 8 1n the trad1t1ona l fields of cor there are some 2 000 awyer! •••~•t•I• • c11 k Mt
I I '' '· { 8 5 Q A.I.I (1> .I" 1"-Cl•Utl\9 porate criminal 1ab11ty tax worl\Jag m auvll Af.\ P~ ll 11\lc 1111n 0 1 famlly 1n\ernat10nal other Tie1ghborhood Jaw-0 ff l Ce S AID Ill<. o ' 9"-Clow CP
r A TS Ir>< I,. '"" 1"" familiar forms of 1<111o throughout the US primarily AVM en 10 i~ ou n Fd Atwrrl Ind ! 2.lo IH'I' Cir
EV""' one has turned a in big city slums Their case Acu•nn1 22 ,. 2J ~ com Sh _, I d Aa..-.r '"' '"'Com Gfos friendly but firm back on his inc u e Aa11n w B" 16 ~ cornw "•
fathers practice or on other Prosecuting slum landlords ~a~ A~i'c 1~ • 1~ ~ ~~m1>1 "C~
establishment lures and in-v.ho re.fuse lo repair furnacl!.S ~ 1>e!nc1Ha 1~ ~~ ~~: 1~~~
'lead I' probing the new areas staircases fire escapes etc A t1t 11 ,. ,.,,., comre1
h h I h I Aco!ar 1'1 I C11nP10 of consumer I a w en w JC VIO ate ea th 0 r A con lh ~ '' ca" Roc~
b Id d d h h e A~•11i; 1 • ?•Con'" v1ronmenlal Jaw poYerty la\\ Ul Ing CO es an w lC pos A co Ln<t 11 -11 , ca •ni;a
etc And \l,;h1l e adm1tte.dlv .S!'ifJ01lS acc1df;it )la~ t !il\..~r 1Ji~ol"~~~s ~,,
, :-....t..,.... . .r .. 0 ~~"'b"Ulmi1'""ocl:i>pan~J A d f"pu D'lll ;otr,,lc Aw ca -1.--0<~'-l\U{J!,~l.e"CS~ .. s ""J" ·~ A Yn •a1e ID• 01,(i( "" Cll b"ght they are far from the Re preseollng sub poverty A°" c '" 1\ '"' c u Re•
I I h h AP~llm • •4(U F~d exceptions am1 ies 1n cases l!l w 1c ",. n c"" J ., .,,.. c .~ ccm
They are 1n fact becoming welfare or S6cu1I S{l('.urity :~1 8L":: 1:~ 1:1> g:~·.,1~
typical of a significant seg benefits are arb1trar1Jy cut::;: '';," '/~,l~~ g:•: 5:.,
ment of youn" Jaw school off ""' n LS in• ~.,, D• • "'" " Del d db Am Fu11 9 ... tD o •• P~g -aduates leading US law into en 1ng innocent e tors Arn G ••' '11, se \ 01 • n " •• t d I ti! I ... Me<!l<P 2ll\o 7•~ r:i •• , Fd a vast explosively important aga1ns a w1 e range o ega Am T• "" mo n<1o 0 1, 11 n
expansion OJnsumer 0 r or unconscionable practices :;:'.~":':1a li"' 1r.:, g:~~· 1~
• public interest Ja w -under Handhng separations and An~•u1 a •11.1. 'I 11o~K 11 Ao
h An~1n1niO ~lD •O~hlO which consumers band divorces for t ose too poor kl A u nll • .., 6, o~ canr
together 111 class action suits ega Ile oml!.S 1c es range-.1. 1<.MoP ,,.,,. 11t1, oewev £• I I d t t Aa Mav 11~1l 10• n!•
l h I menl #.l!W G 1!~1J1D•m cv to 1g I uns crupu ous A nov ~ l"-''•Doa ...
businessmen -1s s1mplv one OJme to thuik or 11 what ! ..... r;. H ~"' ~~ g :~' ~~
il lustration or the broadening I m really waking up to IS that A•P.n s1 1 • •, 01.n c u
I t b II t A1 C llo! """' 1•11.0ocu e Here are seYeral olher new many o c.ur mos r1 1an A11G11 Lt u .. u oon• LJ
areas 1mag1nat1ve and com :':":dsi11 ~~ :•&::.J~';
ENVIRO m 1ENTAL LAW
Thi! 1s a field ben'lg o[fertd al
the graduate level by a
number of ma1or universities
ror there lS fl growing ten
passionate voung lawyers are ea' Pn1c ™ 1'4 Dunk" o e .... Hy 111.'o 11 DuP ,p working only for Americans 111iam R1t 1>h 1A1o 011• on
ho b I h h d 1!1•1111 II f>,:i\Ollo£ ?Pa nt W never eore ave a e1u1n" J •s~E1•n sn
'
"en t •bib J 1!!1u,.,11 51,.51 Ebo n In • Wv-I ep llav1 Mk lt>\:10\ltECnr> lob a oecnm Edu< Sv
!HI n1 F ll'I. U-, E ""' E lluk H• .n h S..,, E b• Sv1
dency on the part of citizens nrw:fLtl'' I &*#k'@fili& :•n~ i,:,n ':~ ~~ ~ ~~ N~l
groups st;ile attorney
generals off1cl!.S and the
federal government to altack
through legal channels ma jor
polluters and \ tolators of en
v1ronmental lri11os
E n 111r on me n t-onenled
lawyers are ob\Jou..sly 1n de
WallStreet
Chatter
B UPIW ll•U Eeclm 8 ~ ~011 ~/\lo 4a"' E ..-.. Mod
II It h 'l'lll J"' E oct Ch
Otl<Hts 3• lJ4EmpSO
!DOU• E "' 11, Entr-tV C aoor AH 11:\0 16 ~ Eno •Y ll
l'lo•I (op ·~· 10 ElltW I II a11•n 1 I Et tco n Ir ~ Cl l 'o '1i£11~ly 011 nk• 601.lo ~l'Ao E • Tac
I! Iii 3c• 1' 11"' FPA Cn 8 wn1 Ar 11 17\'I Fl C..:o • I~ a. 20 ~ 7041. F•b (Ir ~UC~tl M ""' 181-\ Fib Tok !u<:~•ve 11 ll'h r1 •<Iv I!
8unn11 " Ft "' mand for this purpose as we\1 tz...;.;,""t".::....;;.....:.u::>;tasapg§i;qm
a! to draw up environmental
protection leg1slat1on at all
levels of governmenl
But~ Sm 11 ''"" F n• av NE\V YORK IUPI) -About C• wsv 26"' 11v. ""' o • t:1mD N 6~ 1~ f:1>11 ~! the most opt1m1st1c projection C811~ ,.,, 1 , ' 1 • "•' 11~•·
at lhe moment is tha t 111 ~:~": ~ i1~1 ~,. ~:1 ,G:-1:
HEALTH ADVOCACY \n 'eslment planning s h o u I d ~:: :-~:r ': ~ 1:111 : ;~1 :," allow for 1nlcrcst rates ap-C•1>t~ Air J ~ !'lo FstWnF
prox imat1ng present levels for tll1a spec1alt) lav.)ers work
wil.h community he a I t h
centers and oth er heallh
fac1llt1es lo track do°" n and
prosecute v1ola1ors of health
codes unscrupulous landlords
and others who through
oeghgence undermine the
peoples health Their ta rgets
are all who contribute to tn
fant mortality and !II health
generally 1n nu r ghet
tog 1mpovc ished •ural areas
Jnd1an reservations etc
SP ACE LAW Of course
this area of the ! e g a I
landscape 1s still nunl!cule
But 1t deals with a cluster of
fasc1na\ing new issues rang
mg from who owns and v.ho
has wh ch nght s to lhc
outer re;:i.r hes nf space nnw
being so extensively C;'llplortd
It also larkles such ta n
lahZJng qucsllons as '~ho has
which leg al ri i:;hts and who
sues whom 1n the event of the
celestial coll1s1on of salclhtes
or of othP-r exol1c. aeros pace
hard"o1 :irc
OCEAN L \\~ Tl IS ls
another sparsrly popul tied
legal spcriolt\ but 1n vi ew of
the fa rt rhal 1he orc;ins cover
more than 70 percent of the
earth it.s tin imporlant one
.1;1nd the lawyers who go 11 to
IF /4 NEy/ MEDICINE
COULD TALK
r.y TERRY GRANT, I l'h
When 1 v. 11.s d!11COvE"red
by a res,.Rrch scli ntlst I
really caulE'd a lot of exc1IE" ment Everybody in the 111
boratory v. "1 overJoyed when J §hov.rd v.hal T could
do against d!sc11.11e Of cou r8e they checked mE" out pretty
canJ"fulty to br ll n r I wasn l a nuke. I had to prove m>
aelf OVtt and OV( 1
'Tb•n when they v.ere
.ure ot mt:. I wts packaged
up nle4'1Y 11nd lhey \n lro-
duced m(' to 11JI lhr dixtorL
The:y must hn\r ~n im
pr6Std too bl"-cau~e they
a.skid thr f hnrmnclsl to att
me to th,.tr pa Uenla" I know
I hAd brtter t"njoy my popu
lartty for r rrl ly toon nrwe:r
mtd.J clnrs \\ 111 bf' gr11bblnr
the headlines
YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN P110NE US wtim you nted a dcllvrry \VI' will d~
Uvu p1 9mp1ly without ex
tn chant:e A ere11t ml'lln.y
pt0ple ttly nn 111 r .. r lhf'lr
health neffi3 \\r v.rlcllmt!.
requts" tor dt'lhery aervice
~ c:hara:e. a«ounta.
l'ARK LIDO PHARMA.CY
UI H•,.tal Ro•d
N..,.,, aeHtl '42 ISIO
,,.. o.l'IY'Srj
the remainder of I.he year
\V E Hutton and Co says
The i::ompany '1a\s the money
markrt 1s much mo re
volatile and emotional than
in the past nnd 1s affechng the
i;tock market Thus for the
present be less aggress1\e
as related to making in
vest rnent decisions in the
stock market until the dust
settles l-lutton advises
The recent upward trend in
interest rates N e u w l rt h
i\1anagemenl and Re~earch
OJrp says has caused
considerable 1 n v es tor ap-
prehension since an excessive
price for money could rc.ad1lv
abort the economic recO\£'ry
v. h1!e also result ing in Jo,~er
price earning." ratios ovl rnll
The firm does not expect an
signihcanl rebound until the
domesl1c mnnetarv p1clure
hnghlens despite ! he
markel s oversold cond111on
The rebound 1n (he bond
yields JS a major factor ;if
fecttng the stock marke1 al
this time the A r g u s
Research Corp believe s The
company savs lhe rarnings
\ 1eld on lhe Slandard and
Poor s 1ndustna!s is al an all
lime low rrJative to 1he htgh
quality new corporale bonds
'E\en after allowa11ce 1s
made for a s1gn1flcant nse in
corporate prQfits lhc rallo 1s
far lower than previously ex
penenced Argus sa.) s
The market 1! not acting
badl) accord ing to E F
Hutton and Co The firm sa)s
with swelling dried up and lllC'
urge to buy fa!ll!lg off I.he l:irl
that considerable p r 1 c e
e.rosion has not occurred
' may be constructive Hut
ton also notes th at many in
d1v1dual Issues have displayed
selecllve strength
STARS
1.,.i111y Om•., 1 •11• 11f I~•
worli 1 tr••I ••tu1te9tn H 1
c;olum., It ORt ef O,. DAILY
l'JLOt S 91111 l11tu1•t
1st Hu gl1 es
Model s Go
To Air Force
The fir st prodl ct1on modules
Oil Exploring
Ready Progran1
r OS ANGELE:S (BW)
McCulloch 011 Corp and IDS
01! Programs Inc a v.holly
O\vned subs1d 1ary of Investors
D111erslfl!d ScrY1ces (IDS)
announced that approximately
tw()-th1rds of the $30 m1ll1on 011
and gas exµJorcit1nn program
registered for 1971 hlls been
11ubscr1bed
Complete-New York Stock Li st
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Juno 1971 Di'JLY PILOT
Wedn esd ay's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
... , .... "" ,-----~~~~~----
1 .... 1 I l't'9ft L ... CllM Clog Stoek Leaden
Market Al1ead
In i,eavy Trade
• NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market infused
with new vigor after a recent retreat moved ahead
on a broad front today Trading Yi&S active
The 2 p m Dow Jog.es average of 30 industrials
was up 6 04 points at 919 69 Advances on the New
York Stock Exchange led declines by more than 2
to 1
Prices on the American Stnck Exchange & most
active list included Rath Packing off 1 Vs al 18
Guerdon Industries up 134. at 27% Arcuc Ent.er
pnses up l ~ at 28%: and Trans World AirUnes
loci Ito! 4110 f lnl(~ tO
f1n>U lXI T on1W Ar
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T oP Cu •• TRW Inc o
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warrants up l 1h at 221,ii UAL inc
• Big Board turnover ~as substant1ally brisker ~~c~' ~1~
than in recent sessions Brokers said many 1nst1tu ~~ f.:d 1::
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•1 '' 1l>'O 2l"i + The most active B12 Board issue \\3S Mattel un '"v e'J<i •5 70'lo tr" 10 t • un c omp l: 2~~ ll,. 71~ \\ Off } % at 38% Un Co II di 1
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Co1nplete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
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J8 OA!lV PILOT ThLlrsday, Ju~ 3, iq11
Anahe im Ce nte r Show
Sa1nm y Davis Jr. Top Entertainer
'Lenny'
ltnpact
Brutal By STEVE UHLER
For those of you Yt'ho didn't
know Sammy Da vi5 Jr. gave a
concert bere Sunday at lhe
Anaheim Convention Center.
And for those of you who did
know but just couldn't be
there (wh ich may not be all
t hat much of a catastrophe,
since the Convention Cenler
tsn'(big enough to house all of
Orange Count}'). this js a
report on how it went.
Kindly notice-that I said
"report" and not "review".
That's because nobody al·
tempts to review a Sammy
.. fu.vi• ,.,......,,.rl _,......._.,,.._ 6U
C.:<111 UO IS ilttt'flllJ~ ii
report on it.
Sammy Davi~ Jr. calls
himselt .an "entertainer". And
that's not a bad thing lo be
thl'Se days, an hof)CS !·tO·
goodness "entertalner". But
calling Sammy Davis J r.
n1erely an •·entertainer" is
like saying that Einstein had a
few clever ideas ab o u t
scieoce. Or that Beethoven
"'Tote pretty fair music. Sam-
my Davis Jr. transcends not
only t he word "en-
tertainment,'' but tbe medium
as well.
There were all kinds ther~
Sunday. Young and· old, r1he
·"'"' --...1 u...-. .. w-,..w"~' 1..,-.i ' p1t:n1y ur .nuurers cnltT ~rs
TV-DAILY lOG .
Thur sday
Evening
JUNE!
l :flO tJ Mr Nnn Jerry Dunphy.
CI) AIC Ill"" Re•S011rr, Smith,
0 KPftc Jil1W1 lom Snyder .•
O Tll• An• Show (RI Gutsls u t
D1~id frost, Sen•tor Bi1ch B1yh
fD·lnd.), Mit~er Rooner. B!lly Dan
ie!s, Gasper Frrier1 ind co-llost
Jolnne (M11 Johnny) C1rson.
0 Sli O'Clock Mootir. (90) ""Who
W11 Thlt t..d:fT' P111 t (oomecly)
'60-Jorry Cur1as, De1n M1r1in, Janel
lti(ll, ~111es Wllitmoff!. B1r1ur1
Nichols. When the d'lemistry proles·
9Dr's wile calehn him ~i"ln1 •
pretty 11irl student. h1 ind hi1 TV
writer friend c:onooct 1 l1nlistk
1libi 1boul itr.eir undercaver worlr;
for !he fBI.
&'JI Spy m 11tt Flinh\onn m Star Trtt
fD A Th111 l1H .lobn/Ch1rti1'1 P ..
EB ns111r F11n11,
a1 NotldtfD :S4
@ti Dull Yt111J o.p
Cll LI Hon f1•!1i1r co" Conwt1t
Eil Jtrwl Jim HIW!horne.
1:30 CIJ Nwi Bill HuddJ.
@ TIVtll tf C.11Mq11e ncei
(j) cas Nrws
®)NBC Nrws
m TN f!Jl"I Nwn
fD Hodf'POdre Lodrt
El!J S.i.cted flh11 / MMiit.tlt
@ti The DtMrt Rtt>Ort
(!:) TllA
G)Nns
7:00 8 Cl$ Jhws Walter Cronkite.
0 m Nit Nm D1vid Brlnkle1.
@ l1 Tt n tllt Trut-
0 Whlt'1 MJ Lint?
@l Didi Ytn o,tt
m 1LonlKJ
m []) °'''"11
fD Soul!
@El ttrrid the LMn1 Wo1d
€D Anrffittol; Ntffll
a!}SI lh f1Mn11 11
CD Mowit S1111t
o! Informing syndit.ite narcoUa
pushrr1 of pl1nned police in~estl·
21ti011t.
O NYPO o rn oo m Blwitu.tc1 (RJ ··s •.
m1ntha'1 flld Day !fr S1lem.w
S1mantti1'1 m1rri111• 11 1hielteried
br 1 childtiood triend whD Is •
warlock. J. m Dl'tid Fmt C~tsl1 1rt
1ct1w S111h Miles, di1ec101/phy}I·
cian 01. Jon•th•" Miller. and folk-
singer/actor Burl Ive$. m Otympk: Btxin11
fD NET Pl•JhOUll "Bioa:r•phy :
Geo111e Ja~ut1 D.!ntDll." Antho111
H(!9kins atars in S'IOIJ ol fiench
1wolul1on11y leader whose bold pei-.
9".lnality tilted him to prominence
1t 1 crucl1I period in the frenth
Rewllr1ion.
@:) ~1ttern IOI" l Mn1
9:00 8 l"f) CBS Thwndlf Mowi1: (C)
(2hr) ''Ille Ylolent Ones" (dnm&)
'67 -Fe1n1ndo lamas. Aldo Ray.
lommy S1rids, Melind a Mari. David
tar11dine, Liu Gaye. When an J 8·
year-old 11irl Is 1ss1ul!ed, wrath is
~rou1ed In the re!.idents of 1 small
New Mexico vill•Rt.
0 Thi Fucitivt
O ffi@ Cl)M•k• Roo11 tor
1ir1ndd1ddJ (R) "The Arrina:emenL"
Danny i1 ou1raged •hen 1n un·
m111itd couple wtio are friends of
l•nda decide lo live to11tthtr.
m Ch111t"11•
a!) El Pltldo de S01i1
t:lO D ®J mAd•m-12 (RJ "G1 n1
W1r." Trilli Lope.t. port11y1 1 Mtti·
can -Amefit.an prits\ •ho u l\s In
potlct in 1n attempt to prnenl a
teen·•&• 111n& •1r.
0 @(!) (E) Din Au11ud (R) ~1"·
~it1tion to Murdt!:' Augu1t'i imes-
tig1tion of the murder o! • teen·
1ged s•1nger is complicated by har
lather.
fil) Musit1le/Pntor'1 Dtsli
€tl l 1 Crill de M1ri111 C111cn
CiID Pelltul11
10:00 Q ®) m Dun M1rti11 (Rl Gutsts
atf Denmi Wuvtr, Bob Newh1r1,
Bobbi Mtr1in 111d K1y Medford. Tht
Goldd1g1e11 •rt 1u1urt~.
0 ChtnMI 5 P4rwl
0 Btrttr Wtrd Ne1r1
m Ntw1 Putn1m/rishm1n.
ED SpKulatio.
1:30 8 CJ) f1m1/y Alttlr (R} Jody bre1k1 IO:JO CIJ llou~dllblt
1 prt·Cotumb11n 1r1 .,or-Rnt lo
Undt Bill tnd enh1b Blll!y'i help 0 Movie; (90) "~s:s tnd M1k1
in makilli 1 tl11 toP1. Up" (crimed1) 'J4-t.!rt Gra~t Ed·
0 lfQ1 m nip Wllsorr (Fl) (iutsh
art B1n11 Crc1by, The S11premes 1nd
01..,d Sttlnber&.
0 Yirslnll liir11L1111 ShO'W (R) Guts!s
I!! Klre11 V1ltnlinf. lou11 Hy1,
Joflnny TillotJ.0!1. B1rb111 Wilden
and }'Olil 1xper1 Adtl11ne Ptdrau
0 CIJ (!) (E) All11 Smltti ind
•ard (verttt Horton.
({) M11$111I Diiion
0 ffi Thlt 11 'four Ute Ralph Cd·
wards hosts. Ptul B11le1 11 lh•
su!pristd guest.
Jeriu (II) "lhl Gi!I in Boxcar 11:00 tJ CIJ €I) Kews
# 3." Heres 1nd Curry 111et to O @] m N
lftnspor\ s~.000 •ithdrawn hom . 0 . fW1I
lhe c:ommunily'1 b1nl just bt!orr It CI) Dt11~ Y1lliry 0t)'1.
l1iled. I 0 (J) (E) Ntw1
0 MllH11 $ Mtwit: (C) (21/1hr)
"Tnud th• Un•nown" (d r1m1) '56
-Willlt m tloldtn, Lloyd Noli n, Yir·
finil Leith. Rockd ·pilot ~t~l to
redeem 1 p1it miU1k1,
m TfWtlrl • ~ .. Cd
W ft T••u 1 Ttutl
ma-"
0 MO¥it: "Adwtnlu111 el Shttloc•
Mi>lmei" tmrsluy) 'J9-B1ill R1th·
bont, P4i2el Bruce. ld t lupiflO,
m Movie: ~Pink(' (d11m1) '•9-
Je1nn1 Ci1in. William lund1t1n.
m a.1 tbt aoc.
m PrfftltN ltlf'M (t) "AJ JttlK:O ll;lO 8 LiJ Mtn Srlffi1
Ifft•~" O ®l m,...nftl c.rwii
m "' o rn l1l m ~" """
1:00 B ([l L111m (Rl Johnnr l1'1QI
11>111111 10 hirt him11tll o~t 11 1
ID MD'llt: '\ft 11141 DilOfdtt"
!comedy) '58 -Mich1tl RedtrrYt,
Robll1 Morl07.
"111nm1n" to 1 teena1er (0111 12:00 0 Ollt Step Beyond
Mull!J').
m Te Tell lllt lrllUI
l:Ot5 Gil) l.i.lftl.U Mnltal
l:ID CJ (fl @D llt ntldt (Rl "Tht Min
II lht l11alclt.~ lfolllldt II •ctulld
Fridoy
DAttlME MOVIES
1:00 8 (t) '1\t QMtll It Ct.....,.
(doalmefll.llJ) '5>-SH l1urtmt
OIMtf n1rut11. '1krt C.... ..
...... (11'111alc1r) '44-81111 Crt&br.
8t11J H11tton, m (t) •Dlwlf's ca.,.11~ (lftlltml
·&l-Vlrct1111 M1yo, o.ie Ro0trlS011.
•JtfJ "ttltllfl•" (d1'1fnt) '41-0•M
Cl.rk, Giii RlflH~.
D """ ""' ,.,.,. Llwllw"I t11111· _,.. '42-fr9d Aif•l1t , ~ii• H•1· -·
l:00 8 Mowie: .. W 81byltlUn Thtel'"'
(comtd~J '•9-Roti.rt Youns. Bt1·
b111 Hilt . Janis Clrttf,
ill OO CIJll§•..,
ID An·Nl&tit Sii..: "EIUpt ,,...
llN Rod;t "Dtllll ,.,. In Dofllrs"
Ind "TM Ill \.11111.."
It.DO Cf) "Y111n1 li11M o1 Ttus" (wast·
un) '62-Jim M1tthum, Jo47 Mc·
~N.
1:00 m °'Cirttrtl ,., Dlnrtr" 1111J1t•rt1
'•7-Trtv0t H°"1rd. Silly Cr'J',
2:00 D .. Hiii 2' Deon·1 Allsw.,... (d ft·
m•) '$5 -11111 1brn111A11, Cdward
Mulh111.
1:00 ··) "'ranit"' (d11ni1) '6.J-llnlnt
lirt,, G!yn HouJton.
4:.JO 0 tC) "Thi ll1cl 1!11lff!I" (td·
~tn!~rt) 'M-Al1n laOd; P1t1l(lt
Me1!in1,
CJ)~•mt It ID NI. Mir/it,
-Ofl both sides nr tb<> r .. nq,p •
• --•• ·~··-... .... ........... v ..
got things warmed up, and the
crowd "'·as in cager an·
--Buena P ark
'Kin er and I ' 0 .
Cast Listed
Casting has been announced
for "The King anC I," the next
production of the Buena Park
Civic Li ght Opera, to be
presented for two weekends
this n1onth.
Starring 1n 1he Rod gers and
llammerstein musical will be
ltuta ~ as Anna. the English
governess. and Ned R001ero
as the King of Siam.
Supporting roles "'ill be
played by Bobby J\1osier,
Christina Augspu rger, Betty
Roundsley, ~1 ark K o ontz,
Ernie Henry. Cathy Boepple,
Eugene Wendell. Br<1d Dirkson
and J ay Conklin. The cast also
1ncludf:'s .some 30 children
from the area.
"'The King anrl 1." und:.>r the
direction or John Rich, v.•il! be
pl'rforn1t>d June 18-19, and 24·
26 at 8 o'clock and a m8tinee
.lune 20 111 2 30 in the Buena
Park High School theater arts
center.
;ACIFIC WALK-INS
: •I ' I
,1lt. I QUJll \,IQY"'
~ ••-• "o"-a;-'"'" l>v••••• "lltnl l fli Ml l " !li'I
~ ••• ~ .. •!"'•
"110 lOIO" (GI
All Color t~"' •ly l:1t!rr/"1~ ''"~/ ' .. ~.,., ..
llNJ 11511Y-WJll!ll1 ~ ·.·. . -~ti! ~ ...
' , ....... ,, ...... ~··· "VAUit Of flU DOU1"
" '•!loo• 'fo•••
"tlll llltl(lll "
tlc1 pation, ready and willing lo
b~e ''e ntertained." The
orchestra started cooking wit.b
an increasingly upbeat version
(lf "For Once In My Life," and
you knew Sammy Davis would
be "n that stage pretty 11oon.
f began to wonder how he'd
make his appearance. A boon·
ding leap? Would he just pop
out of nowhere? Maybe even
descend from the sky belting
out "I've Gotta Be Me"?
H~ just walked on stage.
Cool as can be, nice 'n easy as
you please. As expected, he
was greeted. with enthusiastic
ano\;wst'_ Bui I. a l thi>rl\.
·······-··.. .... ... ~ .... •· '""'""J Davis Jr. isn 't supposed to
JUSl walk on stage .. :·
He announced how cool he
thought il was to be playing
for such _i!__'(aI~ ";:~ lhv,~'lliem fw coming, and
said in return he 'd give them
··the best kind of show I know
By WILLIAM GLOVER·
NEW YORK (AP) -You
(•an Jove it, you might hate it.
but "Lenny·• won't let yoll
alone. Plays oflen seek . rarely
aehieve the bolrl. biz.arre,
brilliant impact of the show ;i t
Broad"'·ay·s Atkinson Theater.
The lurid, savage. unrepcn·
!ant deeds of that very con·
trover.iial night club comic,
the late Lenny Bruce. are the
substauct". But even for those
,\·ho fl{'\'Cr heard o! him, or
ha\'{ any i~e,a in . th~
:o:trij,!lgely intcn.'"W\O~ c~~i .oll(!'.1JJ/ipea. ~n
--..... ~a most remarkable
f1uman document.
I can do.'' And you can't ask .d Wh l
ror much more th'" 1he """ C11pi on ee s
(:ett1ng tw1ed into, and ac·
l'epttng, the script by Julian
B<1rrv and the .surrealistic
<liret0lion b.v Tom O'llorgan
t<lkl'S a bit of doing. Especially
Jor anvone with an aversion lo
co lluqUial vul garity. Barr.v
develops his chronology or
Bruce's angui~hed JS year
notoriety niostly in Lh.c ·eh·
ter1a1ncr·s own cascade of Ull·
disciplined language.
that Sammy D<tvis Jr. can do.
Then he Jet go. The Sammy Jlap Graham as the notorious Sheridan \\'hiteside Is shO\\'n in an
Davis cannon "''ilh both bar· mello\v mood with Paul Toft and Julie H a;is ln a scene from "The
infrequent
/\Ian \Vho
rels loaded. '·For Once Jn My Came to Dinner," no\v on stage at the Laguna Moulton P layhouse. Life." ·'You 've f.lade ~le So _______ _.:._ _____ ::._ _____ ::._ ______ ...:_ ________ _
Very !{appy," "The Rapper,"
a cheeky rendition of ''Rain·
drops Keep Fallin' On My
Head," and, to lhe delight of
the plain-elotbes. ··what Kind
Of Fool Am l ?" and "The
Impossible Dream." He of·
fered James Taylor's "Fire
and R a in '' accompanying
himself with only a tamborine.
And not i orgetting the old
days, he delivered ''Birth of
the Blues" and an un·
forgetable "Yol.t 'rc Nobody
'Till Somebody Lovrs You."
He sang and danced a very
moving "l\1r. Bojanglcs," and
then gave "In J\1y Own
Lifetime" and "'I've Gotta Be
.J\fe.'' He took a drlnk and an·
nounced !hat he knew he· d
already been on longer than he
should be. The audience Jet
him know their disapproval
with waves of "More! More!"
"I thought you·d never say il,"
Sammy beamed. "Welcome to
the second half of Ifie show ~"
He took some requests, sang
some oldies, did .some of his
impersonations u·hile singing
"All The Wa y," and just kept
right on going. For nearly two
hours. he did n"t let up once.
And when it v.·as all over
and the cro"·d.s were leaving,
it seer:!led •s 1f everyon e I
overheard was s a )' i n g
something like "lie gives so
much of hin1self," "He was
just fantaslic. wasn't he '!" and
•·tte·s just the greatest, thars
all I here is to it.··
lie does, he was, and he cer-
tainly is. ------
The DAILY PILOT-
Tops .... 1n l ocal Sports
Stars Tu1·11 Out £01· Be11efit The play begins \\'ilh ·JI.
dazzling bit of O'llorga n stag·
n1g 1n "hich the players
c1nerge froin Hobin Wagner's
cavernous se!ling as weirdlY-
n1inistcring help to people \vhc dnn·t un<lcr.~tand garbed participants in some
11orkers in need. how hard hit th{' film indu.slry pnrn1ti1·e n1e, both runny and
By BOB TllO~IAS
llOLLYWOOO tAP)
f i I rn
I r '
·•d•·o •ho,,·. h•• been. 1·h0 y •1,·11 think omuious. \\lhen Rosalind Russell spied nconie rom a u ~ '"' ._ ~ O J r lh r' 11•y ap~ar to 11·hich talent contributed <"veryonf! out here h::is the h.Jr u u e 'n '" "~ Ah f.1 acGra"' on a jetliner tht> princtpa1s-all lhe I.Jn horh services, helped build a retire-lined sw1n11n1ng poo l and a h l
recently, she sa1 ciul'.'n next lo nient home ancl hospi tal in the fleet or C;idill:ics or Holls ~j~~11~~Uc~h~I lst~ii;;ry );~;t~
!he new star ;ind gave ber l!WOs. Through the years, the R .. 1.h 1 ,,honi "ri••·e •··d• ,·,nd wed'. pitch: Relief Fund's support h:i.~ oyce~ e sac~ eampa1gn " ~ ,,._. " ~
largely conie froni poyroll has riot done v.-e!I ;imong Their ;ibidiog. tormented rela-"Look , Ali. i\"s your industry 1 I f I "· d deductions of film v.•nrkers. n1ov1l' nc11T111ncr:; Exc!'pl for ions i1p or sic ui.:come a .
11011·. rn1 too old and too tired \\'ith emp!oynicnr at a Ali :'llacGraw and ;i ft·ii· dieted 10 narcot1rs long before
to carry the responsibility minimum, the Fu 11 d • s others. the young lTuii d has hr do~s scrvc.'i as the haunt~g
rnuchlonger.Youandtheresl activilie s ha1•e been lai led 1osupport1h~gal:1. C(iunlerpoinl lo i111 lhlt
or the new crowd "'ill have to threatened. ··That burns nic up:· said Jolloiis.
tak e over.'' "That's why we had to pul r-.1iss l\usscll. "In the old d;-i1·s "All rn~ hu1nor is based ·on
on this show in the J\lusic we had to support !he Fund: dCstruclion anrl desp~· ," ·hC J\·liss Russell \\-'as acting as h d. bo II d II h · I J t h. Center." expla1.as H.osalind 1 e stu 10 sscs <.'a e a t e cries a1 one po1n . us • y ts ace sa!eswornan for a cause to Russell. "''ho is chairman of people under contract together never made clear. but lhe \1·h1ch she has devoted the · -the \Vomen's Cominittec. "\Ve .-ind told us "'e wcr(' obliged to 1neatnt;il power of lhe play is past few months: the 50th an· r 1 h · ' hope to raise $600.000. 1vhich give one per renl o our t 1a1 t ~ !;.pff·taror is pcrsuau-niversary celebration of the I · h ,. d s ""ill pull the Relief fund out o[ sa ane:-to ! e ,-un -o "e <'d to act·ept the plea w.ri~ f.lotion Picture and Television d the hole. did, an iL didn't hurt. qucsuuningly. :... Belief Fund. It "'ill be held in
all three theaters of lhc Los "And I think \1·e·re going torr---------------------------'-
Angeles ~1usic Center June !2, make it. Jus~ ;n the last live 10 YEARS AGO AUDIENCES WERE
v•i!h a cast that incJudes Jack or six days. the tide started to1
1 SHOCKED
Benny. Uub Hope, Barbra turn. and now the n.•servationsl ------
!-\1reisand, Pearl Bailey, the are rolling in." N 0 W
f'ilth Dimension. etc., etc. She ;idmitted the campaign ____ ..;.. _____ ,.The GINGER MAN WE MAY BE READ Y FOR
Plu.s Frank Si n at r a' s hasn·t been eas.v. Tickets are WEO. 01>d 'fHUR.S. •·fiirewcll" appearance. scaled as lov.· as S25. but the L U y
Ali J\1acG r<t"'' was sold. She big push has been to sell those
by J. P. Donleavy
::ind her husband. H nber~ at $250.
J-:vans. bought 20 tickets at "'Th;i!°.!i a lot of rnonev in
$250 apiece. She will join J\1iss these times "'·he n cveryorie is l
Hus.~ell . .l ames Stewart anrl feeling !he pinch."' s a i d i
Ry:in O'Nenl as cn1cee~ for saleswoman Russell ''\\-'c've l
the extravaganza. .....1'rn~c~l~•.~lo~t~o~l._."o~p~po~'~;~,;~on".._f~r~o~rn~1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~...;~~~~~~~~ The ,June 13 event 11·ill signal
50 years of a un ique ex-
pc rin1ent in industry "'·elfare.
f'oundrd in 1921 as a branch of
!he Aclors' Fund. the Relief
Fund became an independent
agency a few years later. <td·
--~--
"THE BEST MOVIE SINCE 'BONNI E AN O CLYOE'!" ...... -THE ...... ,... ,, .... ., .... -···..., ....
-I•~" !1<M I • ••·><• f,,.,,....,
S111rrint
NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRE S ~"'I On•b<
~'~"W'''"ft
(
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT • / !
'I ;
WKDA YS 6:45-Sat & Sun-12:45
"WHEN 8 BELLS TOLL"1GP>
p lu1
"THE LAST VALLEY'~G P>
with
C1ine -Omer Sh•rif
J ..... tolltll " JM llll'llO ""·
You are looking al
lhe fa ce of a Vi llain.
Ri c ha rd Bu r to n "Villain "
I•
Ion M'Shont
Nigel Dovenport "'·0
Pl us· Soll Ke lle rman IN ''BREWSTER McCLOU0'1 R
LAST WEEKS!
Ali MacGraw \ \M
\GP -~a~0~~Neal \ ~@\\'\
1...t• .... ~ \ ..,c_...-.. i. • '1tll1.POUIC''"""~:.;_'"-------------------"'•"•' ........ In "PLAZA.S UITE"
HELD OVER
2nd BIG WEEK
AT All 3
Edward s Cinemas
)O'MI .t.T YllEJO-W•ll D••ft•\"t
"I'! 1E.t.llC" 0~ THE
CA.~r 1w,,,., ..
·.
:· -· -· · .. -· .· ·:
: :· :: .
;:
·:· :: :: ;.· .• ·: ..
:~: ... . :·
.•' ·:.
. -·
T
I
I
I
I
U.S.D.A.
GI ADE "A ..
WHOLE BODY
CHICKENS
''
J1.1nt 1971 PILOT·/
THE PROOF IS OVERWHELMING •••
SHOPPING TESTS BY YOUR
NEIGHBORS HAVE CONFIRMED
OUR TRUE DISCOUNT PRICING
Mr. & Mrs. He.mandez were in the c:heck-out line al one
of the LUCKY DISCOUNT MARKETS in Los Angeles when
we asked them II they would buy the ell:act same llems
or comparable brands at any other market of 'their own
chooaing
THEY SHOPPED i COMPARED THEIR
OWN SHOPPING LIST AT ANOTHER
MARKET OF THEIR OWN CHOOSING
They spent $47.05 at Lucky •••
The same items at the other
market cost them $53.56. And
they had to cross six items elf
their list .,. The other market ~ DOELMEA~.rGREATER SAVINGS--· . ,J~n.J r~~\hem P .
,...,..._,. -'5f1' : .. __..&;:;.~ l•••c·••·• -~•"""i ll>~1.· 1.'"~'''''''1·1i -·
CO,.,RIGHT@ 1V71 b,LUCIC'I' S-... W.-IJI llgW..__t
BlADfCUT
CHUCK ROAST
~::~.::v.~ 4 91~
(fNTfl
CUT
ROUND STEAK
LUCKY 99c TOPQUALITT
BONDED lfff lb,
RIB ROAST
~:~~~~:sac
IONDED llEF lb.
·--t'flce1 Di1counled E•cept on
Foir-Troded and Government
Controlled h9ms.
YOUNG TOM TURKEYS 3ac
tf.S.D.A. GI.I.DI "A" ................................. -••••.•.••••• ,,, lb,
!~~-~.~~-~!~.!~~,~~.!~ .... ''"'"""'lb. 43 c
~~!:~!.~.'!.~.~~'~'"'"""········ ·······"'""lb, 35 c · ~!i~~~ .. ~,~~.:~:r~::.............. ... ... .. ...... lb. 9 3 c
~~~.~ .~!~~.~.:~z'~"""'"""'"""""""'""l .. $119
LADY LEE
Qr LOW E"'r)<lay Price!·
LADY LEE FRANKS
MEATl LB.PKG. 58( OZ.AU MEAT
IANICS4Sc)
~~~f~~~~.P,~~1~~~11ait1t 73c
~!~IJ!,C_H_E_ESE ._.,. 63<
~~t~~.~~-.~ILPIL 63(
LEO'S MEATS •m 35c Nu 1111111,, ... IHI w1 •u1iwm •• l lll.P&e.
LEO'S BEEF 62< llOlll!lJ: ........... ___ .$11.Pa:.
T·BONE STEAK "'"'" $)48
'lll<•Y JO, OUAlITT IOMOID llll ---IL FULLY COOKED
FARMER JOHN HAM
GROUND BEEF BACON D.A K, HA~ $) 89
u.111111 ............................ ~LL
PORTERHOUSE :::~·,.. $) 53.
111cn TO, llU.lUTY I OllDfD llll----"'·
•IB ROAST !~~~~~ ... $)OS
\U(1y TO, QUALITY 1111010 ltff---• •
CANNED FOODS
•
; .. GOLDEN CORN 22 ~ Gll!fNGIANTCllAMSffiE C
·, 17-0UNCE CAN ••••.•••
BATH SHEETS
PET FOODS
vA' CAT LITTER ~'!':.:!~~--······-··62'
TABBY TREATS ~~t!~.0c0.ur ••••• -····--18'
~ GAINES ;!~i~:::'.~-~_'_~~--... 89c
FROZEN FOODS
~ CARROTS ~::~~:~~~~-~~-~~-~~~ ... 31'
ORANGE JUICE !'::.':W.'~~---··-·-··26'
VEG ET ABLES ~:~~:!~'.~---··-····--··-..47'
VEGETABLES ~~·:t~~1d.~.~~~-'-~~-~--A6'
PEAS AND CORN ~!~~w,':~ .. __ 47c
SIRLOIN TIPS ;:':'1.1~i~----·· .. ---·'l ss
BEEF STEAKS :~0L~i1,~:~.~··--····-73'
FISH CAKES ~~9~·:.~~-----·--··········--·~1 1'
{) • -"Ka;&;!.--.
PEAS 23 G•E EN GIANT C
17·0UNCECAN .••••••
SOLE ~"o·~~~-~~-~~~-~-~~·.'.~.1.~~--·······--···-·79c
SANDWICH ~~~·;·;:~.~-~~~---·····--·19<
BREAD DOUGH lltDGIDIOWlllli 60'
160LPIG..-··-·--
JOHN'S PIZZA '"'· ,. ................... .79'
MACARONI :,1;:.·;~G~:.~.~'..~~: ...... ___ 38'
STRAWBERRIES :~·::.~',~~~~-~ ......... 57'
CHECKMATI
FUll
SHANICHAl.I"
HOCK llMOVm 49.~
FROZEN FOODS
CUSTARD PIE ::!~i;i"~~~~---89<
FRUIT PIES !:~~~ __ 29c:
PACKAGED GOODS
BREAD llAI YUT OAT Ollltt I"~~ .t.190 POT.t.100,7<
240L l0.t.1.---•. .J
CRACKERS :~~L IOL •. ___ 47c
~ WAFERS ~:!~0: .. ~~ 27'
COOKIES Ll,lllJllOOlfhTMUJ. .48' 1)0L IA5-······-·---
.,.,. RICE MIXES ~;;", 29'
l llP. llfW 0111.lllS. ot CllKllll
COOKIES JUllSlllllllClO,J..-.U 42< l lOLPI"--·--·---~
{). -. ... K'..f&f/.
BREAKFAST 49 FOREMOST INSTANT C
. 7'h OUNCE PICG •••••••
-' RAISINS -"""""' 74' 'Q'". 6PLtlG ....•• _,_, __ _._
STUFFING MIX f~~~,:~----·-54'
ti"" FROSTING~~1::.~~~---·38'
(ILUIT U/11.011, rMD4L Mill OIOC,, VA•l.lA Ol 1 .. ontll
BAKING SODA :.-:t:'o'i'"."." .. -..... -.49:
~ BROWNIE MIX :~;:~~62"
POTATO CHIPS ::i!r.~':'. ......... -.. -.. 49<
U.S.D,L Rlllll STlllP
COUPONS
Gladly Acctpted
LUCKY
IONDED
59.~
~N GROUND BEEF • 79c . ~~!,H,1,~\~~.2~.B~~~~--59c
_,,,-.. ---....... ___ ' OSCAR MAYER BACON 69<
{). !~~~&y/. c "''U'"""'·•Lm • m •-m
DELMONTE 45 ~ NUCOA ~:~-.. ~~1-··-·· 31 c
DAIRY PRODUCTS
ll·OUNCEIOTTLE ..... SHERBET'Ollll'Oif ___ 65' I'> 'AL.(fll.,w--··-
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS
~ FUTURE !!~~:~~~~-1.~~~-~-·-·····-~1 •0
SPIC & SPAN ~~0:~~~~~~~-~~'.~-~~~99'
ct"" STARCH ~~1:::' .. ~~~----···-·55'
CASCADE :'~!~~~~-~-~~~~---· 96c
ct"" STA PUF ::~.·;~~-------·59t
IMO DRESSING ~:~~~·,~ 37'
ORANGE JUICE :~~~~~L. .. _. ___ 85<
{). -"K«;&f~
RICE-A-RONI 31 C
I I(( MIXES
11/• OUNCl BOl •••••••
AMERICAN CHEESE'"'" 69<
lllCtT PIOUSS,lllOlniUUTllUl'ffl !Ill. ...
HEBREW NATIONAL ""'a. $) 15
10111t1 nuu. n1CR111ut. ULllll cta-
~~~,B~~,~~.CUl!S, ,,_.,,. 9c
().• .... K'..f&y/. .
SALAD DRESSING57 WISMIONE ITAllAN C
16-0UNCE IOTTlE •••••
If You Are in a Rush ...
aol 1111.11111 pyrOnt ti Iii ii-
., lu1. lffl lor C~t<;l•t.4 tritll
tk• tluloar. nl li&ll TU "'DJii:I
thtk" ii M alffl tHnlllll-.. WI
111 MUI ...,, It t lw • _......,_-:....
IVORY LIQUID :fa1:.~~r. ________ 82' F.•' Ir.: LOW DISCOUNT PRICES ON HOUSEWARES & BEAUTY AIDS
IVORY SOAP ::":.':.~~ ......... -.32' ALUMINUM ICE CUBE TRA '( ~ NAPKINS !:~:!.~~~-~1 19 ~0 Atl·Jl1•i11111trJJ CHEER DETERGENT n oi..u__$J4S ~-A\ witk fll~1p tli1lltr · , ' t~'t r1leues it1
0"'4 COLD CUPS =~~~-79' r cib!s ~t J $] 18 li11u111c~. BOlD DETERGENT f4DL"l·--·~l 45 OUIEYllDATlOWPRtC(
DREFT DETERGENT wouo ......... 88' DISNEY FREEZER POPS
••• the few ilems listed on this pcge r!r4tliciorss1m"!er1i111!fuh,lill l•em 37c
ccmlitule j1.1sf a imall ic mpling of the · _•10 Oe c•Hlrt1s bf1ntt _lln1rs 11d
.h d F I d. . . lre1u. ov1cn s o aw, 1Jcovnl pr1ce1 •n stor•
fo, yoo "' '""'" NOXZEMA SKIN CREAM Ni141' •tllt1t1I ,u.,1rJ11e sli1 ere•• $] 27 BANANAS ~•l•s •111114 •rtn1r blt11 i1kr1; krr,s
ski1 l1ftt7. 10 OUNCE Sllf
• .?-1 .
f ·' ;. ' f . • ' . ..
100°/o CHIQUITA
BRAND
COOIAl. l)l(llCA'S
fllllll OUAUTY
GOLDEN I oc llPf lb.
(). -,,k«J&t!-~ S(A & SKI
SUNTAN LOTION l'°
rtr J ric•ri. de?1rr, $] 02 -~ l1,1111r It•.
4 OUNCE IOTTll ·
NOXZEMA SHAVE CREAM
RlGUla.R •UM(• MfNJHOl
SUAVE
SHAMPOO & CREME RINSE
Y11r c•1ic1 11 Eu: s•111'"' C.llllitit.-
l•t sti1•111•. 1r le•• Crrse l i111 ta
ltmt tllt 1111t 1111ly •1ir s 9 C 1111 .U1 It mu111.i1.
YOUR CHOICE
BAN ROLL-ON
DEODORANT
a ,..1n1rH 1! ,rt!tcti11111i1st ,er·
; -:-s,ir1ti11 1d1r ••• wehw; Slit 11• biiil 111-icritalilf h Mrml ski1. Pnltn tll
---0011 ;•r•n111n111rL 83 C
UTRAlAlGESIH
FDS FEMININE
DEODORANT SPRAY
RE&UW • POWOE~tD • UNSCOfITll
The ··set1~d~ •e~d1r11t IUt Is 1sst1!ial
It J •tm,~·s c11"plelt 1111min1, I~ ke111
l1r 1~ d_11•tJ •~• hmitite $] 3 2 11 S~I w11•1s It''·
5 OUNCES II[
SCHICK 8'$
SUPER CHROMIUM
INJECTOR BLADES
PJ,kate 11 I Kr111-t•r11111
bh-ts Irr fJst. cl11e, t••
l•rt1.it sllJftL $] 33 OVtlOW
l'ROAfPll<f
BLANKET ST. MARYS WINTIRSONG
ELECTRIC BLANKET
TWIN ••••••• J2"
IUll/SINGLI J J"
FUil/DUAi . J 6"
1-iia~ • i" , .. ~ .•. ' .
PHOTO FRAMES
S"l7" D•<•r1ti11 1.Wn fili.
lightw•itht tke1mal
woav1bl9M1ft.r
Y•r...JIMl!llll"" •••
i111u&.t.1191i• c.W
•r b.L l nt'il celen.·
~~.~El.!LANKET. __ ....._
s...,.1.urw .... •h
cen.n ..... ld.eet
~--•hi tk-ir .. .......... wliit • ..ty..
JACQUARD
BEACH TOWEL ,_; ................ ........ ""'"'",.n.ftll
let1 yw....,. llN •x•d ...
1r11.tw.rrnthYH1111•, •ti QUI.EN •••••••• ) 9'7
... ht .... _ .. ,_ .. __ 32" •hi•• •Y ft.ct.le. CelerL KING .••••••••
llllEY .,OilCIUET"
GLASSWARE
4 DlmlllT STTllS
6 QI, 9 tr 10 OZ, IS 1/2 OZ,
4-PK. ] 01 4-PK, J 77 4-PK.156 .... , ....... ...,.... ..... ,..... ....... .... .................. ,., ......... ....., ......
4" nAllAN GIASS ASHTRAY ••••••••• J 9'
]" COMl/IRUSH/SPRA Y S!t." .,, .. ,., ...
• 77 ( 1r1• fra1n1s, wit~, ...
u!.r et Mfl"'IJ.r• P.H.
I"• 10'" PHOTO fRAME ....... "99'
LANKY BANKS
TwntJ·•ff iMMs of wM11tsy ••• wilii J 66 ••i• wtysl ci..s. ,._. nriiity .,
M•l 1M ,..,S. fitur11,asst'd olers.
PRO TOOTHBRUSHES
33c
SWINGER
WASHBASKET
A ... , .. .,. II..,-, .. , ... .,~
fiM 1tlMlity ,.....,_ .. ,
for tM nti11 f.•ilJ .••
s-.tt. ~rbtlls, i1111 thlic1
of Me4ia• or Hlird.
Mric:.,...... twe <WRfK ... lll1tl4
... ,. witll • ..... tH<lt ..... tloM
......,, .. .tt. ••· Aswrtetl 1ML
MEN"S NO.IRON
DRESS SHIRTS & TIES
, .......... , •• , •••• sWttl""'
s1.t .i....s, i.. ,.tclllts; ....,.. .. ,~ .. ,.. c.a. ....
tff~ lhn IC If! .. 17. 1"" ,.,,...., .. ,.. ...... Wi.l tlet .. ..,,_...,... ... ,......_
257
SHllTS
~n~s
~-~-------------------~-----------~-~---------------------------------------------------------------------, I • l
l ""' RINSOPOWDEREDDETERGENT •90Z,BOX d"'LUX LIQUID DETERGE.NT 320UNCEBOffiE I
II NOW WITK COLOR..sAfE BLEACH TO GET YOUR WHOLE WASH I.OW IYllA . 69c THE BIO-DEGltAOAllE DISHWASHING DETERGENT 76c I I BLEAC H.CLEAN AND COLOR &llGHT OUl M y PRJCE THAT IS LOTION.MILD AND KIND TO YOUI HANDS OUR LOW EVEIYOAY PRICE •1 I . -~------------------------------------------------~-------------------------------------------------·--------1 There Are Many Other Luci... Discount Supermarkets To Serve You In Los Angeles Orange & San Bernardino Counties We o;scoun/ Everyihing Except "J I • Quoltty, Courtesy And Service ·
•
'
.
" . .. ,·
·:
\
-1
'
•
{
' '
•
I
Big Cities Now
'Ho1ne of Poor'
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A
one-Ume leader ol New York
City 's Tammany Hall has
spoken the unspeakable. He
says big cities ha ve lost the ir
reason for existence and
should stop trying to be v.·hal
lht>y were and con centrate on
what thev have be<.'omt' -
'·'the depoSitory of the nations
""'" . All.or&y F: d w a rd N.
Costikyan, for1ner leader of
the New York Count y
Democratic Committee and
one of the t:ity"s power
brokers. offered his ideas a! H
hearing ~ _ ~rsloi:ia,I,. pl.:inning t. J>'f, ~·~fi'~-
n1ittee of Congress '--~ ·
Big cities, Costikyan )aid.
could try lo "reverse the
nat ural flow or t'Cono1n1t·
.-forces" :.ind stop the rlight of
lheir rniddle-c!ass residents
and their businesses to lhe
suburbs. but only <1! an
enormous and \\'astefu! costs.
Instead, he suggested , thcv
should rccogo1 ze reality : citie.s
like Boston. \Vilh one in five on
lvelfare. and New York. \.\'il h
one in seven on \1•elf.1re. 11·ith
OUTH CORS '
l~t ••Al 'Af,, ... 81A(" <•< 111•
0'fN NIGHTl T 6:45 P.M.
SUNDAT AT 1:45 '·""·
Barbra <!@!>
Streisand
fteor,ge Segal
a declining supply of housing,
a deteriorating sub w a y
S)'Siem, a staggering air pollu-
tion problem and an in-
efficient c i t y government,
have bccon1e the h11orne of the
poor.
As sul·h. he said. the role of
cities should be th:1t of "na-
!1onatlv financed educational,
trainirig a nd rehabilitation ..
centers for the permanen!ly
poor, many of ~·horn live out
their lives on \.\·elfare without
ever becoming effect'lve mem-
bers of society ..
"The bulk or those un
11clfarc arrc~~~~~.¥~9.i.~
··1\ rmfti• ' "1nl'eslmeiif 1 n ~'«1'3fi0f'I. ~M_!tg, HI the
children. co~~d ~ tha\-'W'(
trend of the rasl ta years
11·h1ch has so crippled the cities
might be re versed in the next
generation.··
As he saw it. cities would
slit! remain cultu ral cen~crs
;i nd pet'h$s financial cent e r.~.
But the old reason for pu!ling
plants· and offices in cities -
because that's 111 ti e re the
workers are -has vanished.
'The skilled y,·o~kcrs have mo11~
•d.
"Are our cities really tht
besl places for people lo
live?" he asked. .. Is not
dispersion of both population
{Ind business to outlying area~
desirabie? ls il necessary to
centralize commercial acti\l ity
in an era of such rapid and in-
stant communication ?"
Finally, he conlcnded .
Congress should slop giving
money to cities which use ii
inefficiently
J· fjo,..nd Grad Gift•
e "Solt Toucll" ~n<I
•"l!ul•r 11~1icnory
e ('°'' Pen\
l' elli1ig fo1· Oilers~______.,,ft'' ---
llcre are Jlunlinglon Beach High oo!'s va rsity yell Jeaclc:rs for'l971-72. ncad-
,ing fron1 left to r ight in the l r o\v are r-.Iclinda .i\r1nstrong, l.aro!e Bnrkcr and
.Julie Severns; bottom ro\I',, eri SlandJ ey, Chr1 'i }'.:rt10 and Debbie i'a 111az:1ki.
View s 011 Palos ta11 W a1· To ld
By PlllL NE\\'S0~1 .
UPI Flr•ll" N-• ""~''" .. t rC":1\l)l1. NEWS ANALYSIS. : Pakistan's Pres ident Agha \gtun~L l;OVtTr1111t'nl claints
J\·lohan1n1ad Ya hya Khan calls of ;1 return 1;r ord "r to East
the Pakistan civil y,·ar e "man J'ak1::.t:u1 .ir'(' 11tht·r reports
n1adc calamity." correct in that it \I':!~ lee! h.1· wliich tvll ur 1n o u n Ii n g
Ind ian Prime J\1inisler J\'ir~. Sheik Mujiba r H:.ihrn;.1 11 11 llri absentl·~·1s111 ;1 n1ung \1·ur kers
Indira C:andhi calls il a rebelled agairii,t 11h:H Ill' 11 ho 1tlul 111· 1h1·1r 11n pn snned "n1acabre traucdy." " declared was \\'es t Pa k 1~\;111 's lt':idt•r· ;111d of con tinuing
A follower of ~hc ik f\1uJibu1· lren!nle!lt uf l·:ast P<tk 1~1:111 .~;1l111L1gf· ;1g;111l~l hr 1 r1 gr s.
Rahn1an, whost call for East wit h its greatest s1ngk export !i1gl1w uys :ind other 1neans of
• -I' •• _., ''
2 Schools
Show Tie
For Award
Marina •ligh School and
f'(iuntain Valley llign Sct.ool
hal'e tied ror the sweepstakes
trophy in tiie lluntington
Beach High School District 's
1:1nnual Busines.'i Skills T()Uma-
ment.
DAl l y PILOT 1 BB
" This means .that the con-1 ;;iiiii;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, test's p;rpetual trophy will be l1
on display for a haU year at
each high school, according to
Dist Supt. Jack S. Roper.
lndi\lidual winners o( the
?i.1ay 20 tournament. co-
sponsored by weSt Orange
Count y Kiwanis Clubs, arc the
follo~·i ng.
Bookke e ping -Harry
llansen, Marina High, first ;
Andrea Ferreu, Marina High,
s ec ond: Cary Huniu ,
\V estminsler 11igh, third.
Beginning Shorthand -Don-
na Radar . Marina lligh first: ~
Dolores Fortune, Hunti ngton
':'.::.:.:..~ :111!!~' l ......-ml: Marilyn
Bechthold , \Vestminster High,
third.
Advanced Shorthand -Deb·
hie Frowine, Huntington Beach
High. firs!: Vanessa Comer,
Fountai n Valley High, second :
~l€phanie Garcia, Ed ison
lfigh. third.
Novice I y pi n g -Eva
Cornela. Westminster liig h,
first: Julie Short. Westminster
High. second : Lori Tucker,
\Vest1n1nster High, third .
lnterrnediate Typ-
ing -Susanna Caminiti, Edi-
son High, first : Jackie Shelley,
Fountain Valley High, second ;
Terri Costa , Marina High,
third
Adva nced Typing-De De
Juliussen, Fountain Valley
High. first: Kathy ~1cGre\\',
Fountai n Valley. .~eco n d ;
Mar t ha Con c epcion ,
West1ninsler. third.
BILL
COSBY
~~ I SP~c1·~ PRE-RELEASE
·-MAN
&.
BOY
ONE WEEK ONLY
NOW SHOWING
TUDwl
addle Pussyr,at
• Pllolo All>U•T"
e Alerm (IO<••
e Mu•iC Bo•e'
JJakislan au\~on1y led lo the and foreign cxchang<· 1·:ir11-~·1unn11111 1cat1011
(.'ivil war, cal it "Genocide." l t f t t ings. iu1 n1os o 1 1r:is l>Pi'll 'l'hniugh lht' ~l'<tJ'S i,111ce •-------iiiiooiiiiiiiiii And it is, in fact. <111 Lhrcc of I t 1 I Lhesc. 111 1 H· wf's to 111;111r:c 111· p:1r!1l u111 111' Ind ia <JrHJ l'a kistan ,,
.r
~
e Jcw•l•v. Po•I•"·
Troo>llP•• ena Ncvelllu
• "HPs" end "He<"'
<eremic gracu~Too"
l•9urin., & ang•l1
Pl111 O"r F•moti• ".t.m•rl<•n GtHlings ..
c;;r10111!'-n Clrdu
~~ sa'bina's
C.t.ROS e GIFTS e COSTUMl
JlWflltT ANO C.t.NOlf SHO~ to•' .t.1len11 A••. -Ne•! lo L»<llv'<
II Me<,inolit 1~ 11uM1"1jlOn fl••<~
Fr•e G itt Wrepp!nq -8en-Ame"card
ARMOND'S
COIFFEURi
PRE-SUMMER
-SPECIAL-
Protessiona1 Beauty Operato~
COMPLETE
TINT
SHAMPOO and SET $3.00
• In LAGUNA BEACH
no •ppointment
necess•ry
211 A BROADWAY
494-6139
t t mb ti t " , dustry, the ;1nny ;n1d pulilw 11n 1ilht·r nation li;1s :.uppltcd nt 1a nu crs 1e re u,:et.s works. ! 1 k 1 pouring across her borders :i11 1.1 •;i ·1sl11n 1n 111· an1oun ts1 \\'hen Il ic t ulh~w1·r<: nf ,\J u· 1·1111tnbutcd by lhc Unitt.-d1 from East Pakistan at 3.:i jibar H~111n11u1 ~pt•ak o 1 SI.Hf·~. Hl'tor1• th" uu tbreak ol
million and says they arc in-"genocide'' 1\ 1.s a ch;1rg!' llwv lht: • 11r"rt•n! 1·nnlJ u·t tin !\larch creasing at the rate of 60,000 il bring against 'l'ahya. 11' h 11 ~~ •. I . ~ aid w;is running <ii
day. The number of dead can speaks of a n•tu rn 10 1•11·1110111 ;,))nut S2tlfl mllhon a year. only be estimated. The rcht•l rule but seeks a nu!i1 :1r.1• :.nli1 1· 1 t 1, 1·1 f tt1• h •t I gove rnment, \.\•hich o,..,...rates ' 1 1~ :. .i u ,-b ory
r-lion lo the n·,·ult . t t ' t t · t I un<lcr lhc nan1r "Gengla 1· 1 1·~1-1 ••r;1tu1g rt• \1 ion.~ 11·11 1,
l)esh" f Br ng a l homelandi H;i h1nau:-fa i<'. h1· ~J'' • /'.1LbL1n lll;iL f'lt'll th;1\ :ud
puts 11 at hundreds n f 11f no fonC!'r11 In thf' 111!1' r '"1" ~U:-.i1<'rt 1ntcndt•d. ac·
lhousands. 11orld "incc 11 is purl'IV ,1 • 11•d1111: 10 ~111111· n gh\11 111g
ART
LESSONS
SPa~eaJ"l('s ~·ith pal('tte knife
:)tartin g J une J and June 6
6 lessons, 18 ho urs : $40.00
JULIE GREGORY
1410 So. Coa1t Highw1y
Phon1: 494-1171 Economica ll y. the war l'ak1stan1 pn•bll'nl . n.ah1u.111 1" l':1k1s1;1 n i p•il1llc1;111s, to con-I
which began in March alrcady·1 i''"t~~·~t'~"~',."..,",.',.'-"~"-.-•"•''~"-~'" .... '.'".·' .. '_;t~1·~·h.11•1 ·•· .'".".-~a\...~'~'-t~'-'~'-',.·,_·..-r~o~c~ti~tl~<m~.~·-·;;;;;;;;;;;;,.·~-~-~~---~·~·;=JI has brougl1t t~ country close]
to ruin.
7hc govcmmcnt hai; an ·
nounced lt will ask creditor
nations for a s i x ·m o 11 th
moratorium on pa yn1ents n! I
debts totalling around $4
bil!ion. Included in th e c·on-
sorlium of nat ions lo \.\•ho111
1he dcht i.~ owe1l are the
United Sta\{'s, Japan. Cnnadal
and nations of \Ve s I er n
Europe. I
Also undrr cons1dcr;it1on is
del'aluation of 1hfo rupee I
Added to this n1ust be
cnunt~d hundreds nf znillions
of doll ars \1•hich must come
fro1n somc11·hcre in t·on11ng
mon th s to feed the refugees
11(11\' li1'ing arn id hung<'r.
squalor and di sease in \\1clt
Bengal and rhc I r o n ti c r
<hst r1cts along 1hr !,300-inllc
hor dcr between India and ~as!
Pakistan.
\\'hen Presid<'nl Y;ihya c.1lls
the \\'ar "rn an 1nadc'' he i~
LOC/<L
"Artistr y i11 J\f ovinc:r" . ~ ~
Established
for the
BEST MOYE
of
YOUR LIFE
Call:
494-1025
580 Broadway
Vinyl sleeper-sofa
See Bill Cosby's fil m debut, a n action
packed Western Roadshow attraction at
popular prices, FREE Souvenir program
with each admission,
RATED 'G'
A FILM
FOR THE
WHOLE
FAMILY
27 Monarch 81y
Pl111
Co•1t Hwy at
Crown Vall1y 1'1rkw1y
4t~125l •r 4tt-l:tl7
Kids Like to Ask Andy
'
No olh1r 111wtpa;i1r t1ll1 'l'DU
mor•, ••••'( d1.,,, 1boul wll81't
9 t1in9 on in th1 Gr111+'1r O r•n91
Co11t tll111 tll1 DAILY PILOT.
for the early-american
den or living room
ANNOUNCING THE GRAND OPENING OF
The perfect piece for your
decor in richest heavy
leather-like vinyl that con--
ceals a full size tuxury bed. CENTURY
CAR WASH rcr;rn,.,-.,.
=-=--~=:;
WASH AND WAX YOUR CAR
e HIGlt PRESSURE, HEATEO SOFT
WATER e SPECIAL QETERGENT & WAX e HIGli POWER INDUSTRIAL VACUUMS e SPACIOUS, CLEAN AREAS
FOR DRYING & OETAILING e EXTRA WIDE BAY FOR CAMPERS
BOATS AND TRUCKS
c
HUNTINGTON BEACH
JUST SOUTH OF 5 POINTS CENTER lll"TWffl'I 1\.1.U .... 0 .t.O.t.NU)
186,71 BEACH .BLVD.
LOS ANGlLCS: til 2 1,.,1~hire Blvd M1r,,cl"'! Mile· 111)40 W. Pico Blvd.; 8840 S. Western Aft. AMAN£• l6n W. Unco11 umtSFIEll: l'.>10 MU. Aft.
CHULA YISlA: 476 Bro~d,.,.av (S0<m') CtAREMOMT /POMONA: 232 [.Foothill COVINA: 945 N. AntSI DOWNtY: 9435 E. f'ireslone WNDALf.: 333 fl Centnil M..
GRANAD A HILLS: 10100 Ba!bo.a Blvd. HUNTUIGlON BEACH: 19431 Beach Blvd. lA MAIU: 1720 W. Whittier Lotti 1£ACN: 2189 laktwood' Bml,
MON1ER£Y PARK · 415 S Atlaol1c Blvd. PASADENA: 85 S. Rosemead RIVERSIDE: 10,000 Mapo1!1 SANTA MA/TUST ... 1703 E. 17th St SAM IOtuaDINO: 999 S. •c• St
SOUTH BAY, 15533 s. Crenshaw Bl•d. THOUSAND OM!~ 144 Thousaoo Oaks Blwd. V!NlTJlk 3409 T....,,.,h Rd. WOODt,.1111 nu, 22223 V"'11n Bhd.
SHOl>7 oA'l'S A wrrK •W[[l(D,\YS l l_UNHL 'l. 5.ATUROl\Y 10 lliltTIL 6 · SUMDA.T 1 UNnt. ,. f1tU l"MIKlNG•FllmOU:OUTOl:IDMCt•MUIDGJ¥0'f ·COfWDllEHTIANtettJtMs
•
"' ',
. -:-.;.h ,• -J, ·-:l!>Jn
lor
·~n
work
1'..La
Child
work
' ,ex pa
"' ;pt . s,
~he (
' ;srno
-the . :1 II'()+!
:l,ctc :co lie
~tag
:Offer
:<lesi
~peci
~ch
!Frid·
:fi, I
..
..
fllll
• CS1.A 11
'l1ll
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Tllur~&J, Junt l , lq71. DAILY PILOT J 9
;:Fou11taitt Valley Theater . LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTJCE ~~-/~~~ -~~~-
~ 11•4 FICTITIOUS I US!Nl!lS NAMf ST,lriTf,..ENT Sum1n er Workshops. Slated '"'
,ol011
,.ICTITlOUS •USll>ll.15 NAME ITATIMl!HT
ktlM>·•ln1 -·~n 1, aorno 0011...n~ Tll• lo ·o,.•1'19 ""''°"" ere OD!.,.
II~ Du .. ~t>' •• JVOl ·tCAV! AEAUTV S,lriLON, llt FABRIC ,lriLLEY, l~S St nr• twbeL,
1'Qlt1;fllla, Coron1 Cfl Mtr CQ•I• Mn1 Mir!l~n L. Lt 1Wm, 2001 l•~I"" !>/l,•l~Y 5teen, 1~•1 -"•t l", ..
:: ~1'he Fountain Valley Com-
:tisunJty Theater will again of-
.fer area children e n d
·t.iienagitri a variety of drama
workshops this surnmer.
·:~Last summer sever a I
chlldren attended the drama
workshop o n .scholarshli:>s
-awardec! by the Tan1ura
Bichool PTO. This sum1ner the ' ;expantled prograrn is ~xpecled
;tn offer stagecraft and pup-
j-~lry in add1t1on 10 dra1nat1cs.
• Such questions as "How did ~he Genie appear in e puff of
:S1noke '.''1 will be answered in
~he Stagecraft workshop. Ten
:t\\"trhour sessions I.aught by
J-l('l e:-.Scarpello, Orange Coast
:co!lcg~ ins t r u ct u r 1n
:.S!agecraft and lighting. \.\'ill
:Offer an introduction lo .sel
;rlesign, lighting, sound and
>'pecial effects. Clctsses are
~chedll led 'T'ucsday a n d
!Friday , ,July 6 through August
;;, 10 a .m. to 12 p .tn. in the
Panmooot ~es p.--.tl
CIJalterMlltthau
Ellllne 1111¥
Jack CIJeston
"A new Leal"
~ ColOI' by MOVIELAll
«!>
Al10 Co1111d y -O.P
JA.CK L!MMON
IN
'.":"· 8 Academy Awards
lest Plctura ofld Actor!
·~···· . . . ~ •' . ~ .. ."'!.·-:·
_._._ ..
-ALSO-
'.i {Co MPLETE SHOW NIGHTLY
.:~ .. Pcitton" -7:00 only
' 0·Moill" -9:55 only
' ' " ..
:
''
·.
•'
' ••
' .:
'• ..
Fountain Valley Cornmunlty
Center, 10200 Slater Ave.
A dramatics workshop, in·
eluding creative drama , im·
pr_ovisat1 o n, character
develop{nent, expression, etc.
will be held Aug. 9 thr ough 30,
12 :30 to 2;30 p.m. on Mondays,
Wednesdays and Fridays, at
Tamura School, 1730 Santa
Suzanne. The 10 sessions will
be l'Gndurted by J ack Roach,
&1 at1.0r and children's drama
instructor.
T hose ••1ith an interest in
puppetry \\'Jll lear n to opt>rate
marionnettes under the in·
lltruction of Dav1d MaJvlllt,
a ctor, director and speech Md
drama inglructor. T h I 1
wo rkshop ls ten t a ti vel y
mcheduled fo r lO !essio111
begiMing June 28, with houri
and locatloo to be announced.
The first two workshops are
limited .to 20 and lhe third to
40. All are open ·to non-
members of Fountain Valley
Community Thaler on a space
.a\'ailable b a 1i11. Workshop
Chairman J o Richardson, 968--
9823. will uffe r additional in.
formation and accept reserva-
tions.
,o\YfnUt • NIWPOl'I De1U. Hun!lft gfOf\ Bfd(h _ M•rV>e 8ull00.. 141
Thl1 b<J•lr,.11 I• blln11 tonducted by 1n v~nle<. Cc•I• M~,a lfwllwldu•t. Tn l• ~ut•.,.11 !• ~In~ co<ldv<!td by I
Slo~td: M•rllvn L. L1num oartn~""IP
Thll •lolrmtnt tired wll~ '"" Cou.,fy Shlrl•Y SI••" Clerk ol Oronat Covn!V on Maren "· 1911. PuDll•n•O Or•MGI (.(MUI OGllY l'ilol. llEVERL V J. MAOOO.ll Mav 1), JO' V lnO JUfl<I J, 1911 llli-rl
OeoYh coo11tv Clerk l'vbll1nt0 Otang1 Co1.i 0•11,. Pllo!,
Mly 71 •"a J.,,. J, 10, 17, 1911 IJ»ll
LEG AL NM'ICE
f'..t1007 AMINOMINT TO r eRTl ,ICATt:
•UllN£11
~ICTIT :OUI NAMI
LEGAL NOTICE
'Mattress' Auditions
Se t • W estminster B.v J$m~1 E Rod''"' Vici Pr~llOtn• CADLETON OF CALIFORNIA
The
munity
1971-72
Westminster Com-
Theater will open ils
season wlth th e
m usical comedy "Once Upon a
?\1altress" and will hold audi-
tions for lhe show June 13, 14
and 15.
Fred \Vest. who •Nill direct
Ui1:: p r oduction, announced that
a 'large cast of up to 50
performers is required , most
. . ,, .
' 0. H. LAWREHCE'S
"WOMEN IN LOVE '
' 1 ll1111cil Al'hsJs .
ALS O PLA YING
He blew the
Oe1ert fox to Hell I
Richa11d
Bul't.an . " 'Raid an
Ran1n1e/'
II~ H1rold Plllk1ln, Jr ..
of which will have 11pe.aking STATE P0;'1(:e;~,FORN1>. ,
r oles. 1 3s.
LEGAL NOTI CE
OAIL.Y •IL.Of 11itt Pboll COUNTV OF LOS ,o\NGELE~ l T-11ns
The tryout11 will be held at Ft"l'"'t Lady f .., i <ln thl• 24111 d•Y 01 Mire~, 1911. 1>e1ore NOr1ce oF sA1.1: oF ••AL
the P hy ll!s Cyr Dance Stud1'0 ~ 0 1r•llS e mo, the uno1r1lgnld,. Noll rV Pvbllc In f'A:OPEllTT AT PRIVAT• I AI.! and tor s~ld COOJn!1 and Sl•tt. l't'r)onall• No. A6,:Ml
in the M a rina Sh o f pi n g WI apJ>NreoDEAN RICKllEIL.~nown !omf In'"" suoe"o' court of 1h, si.te r3'
Center, sp r i n g d a e a nd ii iam Kraft, ass o ciate c o nducto r of the Los Angeles P hilh arm on ic Orc h e s tra, to 1>e th• Pre•lden1 of wes1PORT HOME ca111orn1 a. tor th• co.ni~ cl oran•e.
tak 5 •· I f l UC Irv' l h I h D JLY BUILDERS. INC .. lht toroor1tlon rn.-. In me Motter 01 the E"!ato or Edinger, from 2 to 6 p .m . June e ~1me ou r om a r ecen 1ne you concer to p r e s ent l e A e~tcuteo th• within 1n11rumen1. known 10 TKEODORA HICKS HOLBROOK, D«ta>-PILOT E u ter pe 8\.\'ar d to !\1rs. C l audia Owen, right , v ice president of the m• lo be th• Plroon who execu•ao lh• l!CI. 13; at Webber School un wllhln lntlrumtnl on ~hlll 0 f Notice I• htrobY glvon lflal lh• Uh•
Hoover Street jul!lt s oulh of Orang e County P hilharmonic S ociety's youth con~erts comm ittee. L<>okin g on is wEsTPORT HOME au1LoE11s. INC. d•,.1~ne<1 w•11 '"" •• Pr1va11 •• 1,, t• '!rs J o an Bn' k 'll h . •1 0 r N l B h and at-nowle<iged to mt th1! •• 1a the ~lun~ll 1no !>fl! Ol~aer IU~l.-:1 h• Westminster Avenue f r u m Jt · c , comm1 ee c a irman. i• r s. we , o e\\'por eac , \\'BS nam-wE.STPOA:T H<lME au1LOERS, LNC."•• con1.r~t1on 01 ,11d suoorro~ court. on
7:30 to 10 p .m . J une 14, and on __ e_d_bcy_lh_e_n_e_w_s"p_a"pce_r_a_s_'_'l_V_o_m_a_n_o_f_l_h_e __ Y_e_a_r_'_'cicn:_icls:_lc9:_7c0_·7...:.l:_mcu="c. ":..:'c'.'c'cr_dcsc. ___ \tcutld i11e w11111n in11rum1n1 out1u1nt ro .,.. a ner "'• llttl -a.iy or June. lfT!. •t tlo llv·Lew1 or e reloOlutlOfO ol 1!1 Bo.rd O! lll<I o!!I r EARL J M<OO E
the second floor of Keystone 01;,:1cp:;;:s, mv h.,,., •nd clllclil ... 1• 1•371 v(1~1c:... ecuievard, van wNu~';:
Savings, Beach Boulevard a nd !OFF IC IP.L SEAL! c1111orn11 9!•01. coun1., of Le• An911e1,
We l · l A / PllUl11 Glu•~tr Sti re or Calirorn!1, $11 tne rlghl, tltlt
s m1ns er ve nue, rom v N F N Notery PuD1lc.C1lltor nl1 end lnl ete!h or 5a(d dKfflf<I •• fh• 7:~ to 10 p.m . June I~. onneg t ii Ii t Prlnd1111 ()!flee In !!me ol dea•ll I nd al! lh• rloh!, l!tl1 •nd
Those a ud;t;onlng sboold u ew m ove s '~ '"""' '"'"" '"""" '"" '"' """ .. "" "'""' MY Commlul°" E~olrts na1 acQulred bY o"""'I°"' of l•w or
come prepared to sing and Fell. 11. 191S o1nerwhe. oinor than or In addlrl<>n 1o
should wear shoes I n d STATE Of Col.LIFO~N IA lMI cl ..... o dOCta•ed, et !~e 11"11 °' SS. dHtfl, 1., ~"d 10 all Ina cerTaln rffl p<O-
clothing suitable for danclns B ' COUNTY U" L05 ANC:EL E5 1 111uv 1l1Ua1rc;1 1n the cnY or s• 1 A
d Y BOB 11IOfll AS Tustrators made mor e than the That's true w hether he l:<i a On 11111 1011> oav o1 M1rch, 1911 . tierore counrY 01 Orengo stall of ,n1~ 7' an m ovement, the director h ., . , me, 1he 11nden1oned. a Nolerv Publ•c In 11 ' 1 orn •· announced . HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Dur· aut ors . novelist or a surgeon. Hes 11'1d 1or ••Id cou ntv 1nd 11a1e, ~·1ona11v par ~ularh• OO trlbed •~ 1o11ow1. tc-wn : .. Cars Cradle" In 1963 first appw re<i J,o\ME$ E. RODGERS , known 111 Lo1 is 01 Tra~1 t•71. '' per Mato "Once Upon a Mattress" the big studio era , famous good for 20 y ears and then he m• 10 bl tht Viet Pr .. iot nt 01 recora.o In 1100~ ..i, pag~• 1 •"" J of
I brought seriOUS attention to b · f • ·'Th h eUI LOERS R ESO Oll CE 5 CC R MIKellantoY$Maoolnl~o ol!lc•of !ht wil open l a te in August in the auth<lrs came to H<lllywood by Vo nncgut. "Slaughterhouse ehg1ns a
1
k1ngb1t. de20aut ors POR,o\TION, tht corpcrerlon !het •~•cute~ ~~~01"','"w' Or•,"",,,'~w",",·,m",•.torn-
17lh Street Sch ool audlt<lrlum .i._ · W o can ast eyon years 1h1 wl1Mn 1n1trumen1, ~-n 10 "'•lob< ''"' Y "" n '' . ' a• ... int, lll'C' trainload . They endur ed F ive" in 1969 "made me 111<1 Poroon wno ••ecu!td 1h• wl!hln In-a Ana, Call!ornoa. in Westm inster. are those who make a small ••rum•nt 001 ~ha lf of SUILOERS T1rm.• of •al• ~••h In 11w1u1 mon1v at
. J-Jr1. 11.
"lll5T llUN lhirt 1.1ni:11t1r
"'t'ALD!Z IS COMIN•'' •w ••it.AID OH ltOMMIL"
wllfl ll ld\1'111 llurtorl
111«111 KW11 M1tl..-J11 .• l 1M "·"'·
~do
llt"'"'°r'I' IJACK -•I .... •~""
.. 1 ..... 1 .... 1141 "'• -o•. ~ ...
NOW THROUGH
TUESOAY
"GIMME
SHELTER"
STA RRINO.
THE
ROLLIN G STONES
•••
Join Bit z
In
"CARRY
IT ON"
Wlt:EICDAYS-7 P.M.
CONT. SUNDAY 1 P.M.
t S•Llil •l t l
tlll•A••••••
PLAY IND
their high-salaried slavery, r e.,pectable." s wltch like Normal J\o1ailer, RESOURCES "coRPOR,o\TION. • nd the un.1e<1 S!al•• on con11rma11on 011111.
d t lh · t It is a work of. unfettered ac~nowle<lo•d 10 me 1h11 •~Id sulLOEll.S Ttn "•'<•nt ot amO<Jnt blo 10 tie deP01l!td r etume o e1r Ji erary en-wh{l moved from novels to RESOURCES co11PORA.110N ·~•cv1.o with t>ld.
de a vors richer but olten e m . imagination based on Von-·jo r nalis " me within lnitrumonl 1>ur1~•nl 10 fl• 6.,.. 6la1 or olfert 10 ta in wr111nu ~"" w111 negut's own experience of liv-11 m . Law1 or , ,.,01u11on ol lh Board 01 ba 'e<•lvell al the e!o•tsold ottl(e nt an~
b it,_ d What' I lik d Olrec1or1 lime ar1 •• !he 11•~1 PYDllca!lon hfrPQ! •rod
""re · S t e to ay? Ing through the Dresden fire LEGAL NO'l1CE w11~E-ss mv hnr>d •l'ld clllclal 1111, oe•ore d"'P 0' •-•le.
Take the cll!e of Kurt Von-bom bing as a prisoner of w ar. !OFFICIAL Sl!ALl DaTed 1n11 l'll lh d•Y 0' M•v. it11. P..tlt70 P~lll" Glulklr CATHERINE HOLBRO<lK
n egut Jr., the comic fantacist Now at the height of his c 11tT 1,.1cATI! o, J UllNESI Noiarv Pub1lc·C111tornr1 O,o\~FORTH 111 J't f V l ,ICTI TIOUl ,lllM NAME Prlncloel <llllct In E'<ecultl~ cl !~1 whose far-{)Ul novels and short I erary ame, onnegu says T~• ul'ld•r•loned do ntrHt1 ,~i111v t~~t Los Ano11 .. Countv w;n or 1altt oeceatnl. he Is thinking of abandoning w• ••• cnrldu<tlno ~ soac1a11v w110111•I•-MY comm1,.1on E~plrt• l!ARI. J, McoOWELL
stories h a ve won special favor
w!t:h college-age readers. He is
partner with producer-director
Mark R.ubson In the filming <lf
t he author's first play. "Ha ppy
B irthd ay, Wanda June." It is
being made at Columbia with
Rod S teiger and Susannah
York as stars.
While here, Vonnegut will
p ay a vis it to the film ing of his
novel, "Slaughterhouse F ive.''
which Is being directed for
14'llversal by George Roy Hill
''llutch Ca ssidy and the Sun-
d ance Kid".
Would Vonnegut have work·
ed Jn H ollywood during the era
w hen noted nove\Js ts ~·ere
grinding out iscreenplays'?'
"P robably so," he rep!les.
"I'm sure I would have come
out here a nd collected mv $300
to $500 a week. Basically, I
have the mind or a har k. EVf'fl
though I'm in good financia l
shape. now. I still find m vse)f
taking a11s l gnme n t -s I
shouldn't. All thos e years or
writing anything that would
p ay have left the ir mark."
Vonnegut was indeed a late
bloomer among authors. After
U1e war he worked a s a pollce
reporter for the Chicago City
News Service, then d id a s tret-
ch as General Ele c tr i c
p ubllcist lo Schenectady, N.Y.
In 1950 h e tried to t arn a liv-
ing as a f ree-lance w riter and
began hltllng the ~ I i ck
magazines with 1clence fic lion
atm-le11.
Tho11e years brought him
scant a ttention from critic~.
b ut they had a profound in-
fluence on his 1tyle.
"I te nd to write vlsally." he
observed. "I aleo u11e a lot or
d ialogue. Charactera: talked in
allck maga1lne stories, and
y ou h ad to provide scenes so
the illustrator could mt1ke a
picture. In lho1e years the II-
Lear11
h R1!11t end RubDer 511mo bu1ln~u 101 Co. Fr~. '9, lflS Hns Vlc1arv lloul1v1rd t e TIOVf'L Parl"lfl) •' '692 ~if 8Y c ! '< ! •• $TATE 0 ' CALIFOAMIA. 1 V>n N,..,, (•l•!••n\1 "401
Last yea r he p r esented we11m1n111r, c 1111. t luJ, unde• 1n~ fir-1 ss. T•I: 1111) 111.n11
h !IUOVI llrm n&m1 o1 EH M. Solt• one! COUNTY ()F LOI ANGELES I 11.llo•n<Y !or E>ecu!rl~ "li apPY Birt day, \Vanda sor~lc1 1nd lh•t 1110 11rm It comPO•fll of On 1~11 101> day ol Mlfcft, ltl1, belo•e Publl•he<I Oront e Co•ol O•llv·P!Jot Ju,..
June," first ()ff-Broadwa y 11'1• klllowlnu oer1<1no. w1u111 nomet In lull me, Ill• undtr1l11n"", • Not1rv Putrllc In l, l . ¥,\ti\ llM-71 • and piece ot rt1ld1nte i re 11 1011ow1. lo. 1no tor 11ld Covntv t nd Sl•!t, ~roon1llv\--------------then o n . wlt: ... ~ •• ,,o HAA:OLO PILSIC.ALN, JA:'
Th h · Eowerd H. M11!ho!, ~ OtlroY Clr· ~-n lo 'Tit 10 t._ lllt Pr11I01nt ot
e t eater experience was <I•. Wt1tmlnt1tr. Calif. 9'"'l CABLE TON ()f CALIFORN IA,, 1hl tor LEGAL NOTICE
a l!itimulating thing," sa id the P1trlcl1 A. Ma11no1. l<l'n Delr•v.Clr· pgraHon 11101 •~ecurld tn1 wn~ln In-' (II, w111m ln1rt r. Calif, ""'l llrum ... 1. known lo mt to be lhe ~UIOh NOTICE QF SALE QF rangy 48-year-{lld author. 'I'd OUK! Aorll 11. lt11 ""'° •~•culed 1~1 wl!hln 1111!rumen1 on ll l:AL l'A:OPE JITT AT
like lo do more. I'd also like to E<tw•rd H . .oMUhol 1Moh1lt of CA8LETON ()F CALIFORN IA, PA:IV,lriTE SAL• Al Pl!rl,I• A. M1lll'ool •n<I •<~nowl..09...:I lo me t~1! 11ld 1 UNITS write for \he Iii c re en an STATe OF CALI FOA:N!A, CA BL ETON OF . CALIFOA:N1A ••m<ul•O No. Aot!-IU
org· \ (' e pJay l COUN TY OF ORAN(;€ lht wl!hlf! lntlrumt nl l>U"u1nl lo \ti Bv-Superior Courl o! ·~~ 51•!• of C•lllornl~ I Jna S r en • no an un Aorll 1i. \971 , a.tor• me. 1 Nc1ar1 L•w• or 1 ri 10lu!lon o1 111 Soiro or 1or the Counlv er O•~"o• Tn m~ Moll•• or
ada ptation of m y w orks. Putrllc In 1nd for 11ld !1111. Pt•1ena11v OlrKton . t"• E•te11 cl 1.0111NG 1., wH1 rE, "I d on't w"nt lo write no,,1, IPPl •••d Edward H. M•lll>ot '"" Polflcl1 WITNESS m• h•nd •nd offlcT1! 111!, o....-.• ~l•d. ' • A. Mailhot kr>OWn to mt to be'"" o•rson1 (OfFICll\L SEAL~ Ncllt• 11 ""tbV Ol••n 11111 In. u,.,_
any more. Why no!? We ll, I wholl n•mt • •re 1ub1crlt>1<1 to tne wll"ln P"lllP Glu•~•r derolgnod w•11 1el1 !I orlvett •olt, oro or . C d tn1!rument, •rid acl<nowedgld 1o me !tit! NOllrv Pubil~-C1lllornl• ~lier fli• 18!11 <lay of June, IQll, "' '"' tlSed lO WrJ!e On ape CO , thtV e•1~ut•d lhe 1amt. Prlncl11al Olllct In o!llce OI STEPHEN A. SCH NEIOEll,
where the. house was filled Wl!neu mv nond end 1eal. Lo• An9e1e1 Coun11 9101 Wll1!\lr1 llOOJl•••rd, Suir1 o10Q, . , ' lOFFICIAL ~EALI M• Comml.ilon E•1>lr11 lleverlv Hiii•, Of:'ll0, CouMv cl Loo with children. When I rtnlshed Elolu M. Ooutl•• Feb. !!, 1975 AnueJt1, ~·•ta ct c1111ornl1. ro rn1
writing I could be amon• peo-Nof1rv Publlc.Coll!ornla t ll•·OC hlono.i •nd he•! bidde,., onO 1ublte! lo ' Principal O!!lce In Publlofle<I Or•nge Cm1r Otllv Pllo!, conf.rm•llon bV !$Id Sul>l!rlot Court, all
p ie and take pa rt in their ac-Coofllv 01 Ot•n~• Jun1 l. 10. 11. 1~, 1971 111&-11 Hie """'· 1;111 ... a 1n'"'""' or 1a1<1
li,ll'le Mv Commln lcn E~Plros tle<:eft!ed a! Ille tlm1 o< Oeftlh and or! S. April 19, un •~• rllll'!t. 1111. "no lnter•tt lhftl ti!•
"But nO\V my children are t111 oc LEGAL NOTICE e11a11 or 1A1a doctA••d ha• •<QUI'"" DY Th h . I Publl1ht'd Orang1 Coool Oallv Pllo!, oo~rallon c• IA'" or clnerwl1t, <>111•• grown. e OUU: I! emptv : t Jun1 J, 10, 11, 10, l9n 136D·71 l'·•200t 1r.en o• 111 aaa111on 10 11111 ot ••Id
no longer has people making AMl!NOMEHT TO ce111 1,1CATE o, dcrei.eo. •' '"' •lme of dtat11, In and LEGAL NOTICE a USI Nlll !O ell '"' c•rltlll real 1>ro1>tr1Y 1llu111
noise. Wriling becomes a 'ICTITIOVS NA M! 1n m1 Cl!r 01 orang• co , 1v 01 or1n11e. de~nlale thing. l'·OOM The undt•llvrof'd do cerilrv 11111 !h~ ••• Slere 01 Call!otnla. 11•rllcul•fiv Otscrf~
''Be11idrs, I think m a n Is AMt:N DM•NT ro cl•Tt FICATE OI' co11ciuc11n~ ft 1>u1ln1u 11 t l• Ea11 l(tl•fla eG "' 1011""''· t~,:"i~ .'A" &OllNl!ll, FICT!TIOVS NAME A~•nue. Jl na~elm, C•tlfornle, und•r lhe PA'''' ' , I h lo\O,l!ically cnnstn1c led tn last Tllo undtrol1M.O do ctrtllY 1h1t '"""er• 1;ctu.ou, 11.-m nAme ot w~~lPORT ... : .11~t DOrlon of Loi 6 of
20 I r 11 rod ti It Cor>duc!lno I llY•ln•n I I ,,. Ent 1(~1•11• Pt ANNEO UNIT OEVEL()Pl.IENT co." Tr•~~··· ()ranee Pltk Ac••• No.~. t i
years n U P UC V Y-Av•nu e. Ar.•h•lm. Cilllotn!i, und"' 1110 Llmllt<I Partntrshop, and 11111 51)<1 ltrm i. '"~·'" l!f' • m•n rt·~r.:~~ In l>o:k ~. llc!lllf>lll firm II•'"• ot Wl!STPOQl·CEQ -comPO•e<I o! th• tollDwlnt: ~•ue '1 of l.ll•t•llo~•ou• M1"'9. r•cctrd•
New Revue
Auditioni ng
Auditions for a traveling
variety show which will play
bene!lt performances a t
prison11 and hospitals w!ll be
held Sunday night in Orea.
Director Jay Conklin a n-
nounced that the cast w ill con-
sist or from 11 to 18
A:ITOS CO, $ Llmlltd Parlne"h'"' ond Wol!PO<I '"""'' llulld•r1• IN:., ~1• "' Orarot Coun1v, C1Ulornl1, 011cr!btd r~1r 1ald llrm I• comPOtt<I of !he 10110.,_ Eft s! K1lella ,o\yfnu•. JI n 1 11 e Im , a• !<>110"" >..;. 1n1i: Cftl•lornl• &tor.,nlno •! t~1 Sau1~w..t1rlv corn.of E::~11~;:ell~""':~,.,~'~l.I01~1~ 11~r .. ! ;1~ W~~l!~e;~,u~:":'::i:~.~:.Pr,,:tl~~ee~~~l. ra<1~edrl~o:1:~ ~e~~d ~::t~fl~l!~~on"c"i l:i C~lllol'nl• Ctlrlo•"I• l'C'Od •!<I.Oil tee!, tn~~ct 'Jor111 ... n trr1w In 1
Bulldt•• RK0Ur<C11 Cor~r~Pon, 6111 C"blr!on cl Calltarno•. no Bird RooO O•rt(I 11"e •o ma NP''~"e1t.r1v torner W•U Ctn!urv Boul1vora, Loi ,.no•lrJ. Cor~I Goni r" Florid~ JllO Of '' d Lo• 6' 1~ere1 Sr>1••--11 8'0'>1 C•lilornla 90C"!i Ool•d· Ml rcn 11. 191! the Wt•le•IY line ol s1ld lot to the "°'"t 01 bto nn.n1. C1blr!on al C1ll!ornl1, 7!<1 Bird Ro.d. WE!rPORT HOME BUILDER , p,...<;CEL 1• T~"' l>Orl lon of, •• 0 •' Co•1I G•~l•1. Florldft ll!OS INC. '"'" coif!<!: More" 7•. lfll 11~ O••n ll lck!>f ll Tr•'1 9"· Oror~• Pork Acre• No J, •• WESTPORT HOME P•~tldt"1 •110· .. n 0<' a mfto •ero•Cerl In De<k ?9,
1!Ull.OER5. !NC ll Ull DEA:S RESOU RCES CORP· o~ge <l al Ml•<;rll$rtou1 Moo1, record1
llV Oran Rlc~btll, ORA rtON ol Ot~not Cc~n••, C•llrorn.a, doocrlDod
Pr n loen! Dy Jamn E, llodo•ri •~ lol'ow• DUILOE RS ltE'°UA:CES Viet PrtildOnl Seo •1nln1 al a POI'>! In flit Sou1n II,.. CORPOR,o\T IO~ c"nt,ETON OF CALI FORN IA !If \did Lo! 6 dl>!•n! lh••eon 1~00 fHI erc;•;i;::Td~·n!Rodltrl. :~ .. ~~;~r1o Pll1~1ln, Jr. !~=~~~~>' 1~':n~t l~•or~~~;,~::1r;'i~ :o~~~~
C,o\llLE:TOH OF C"LIFORN IA 5f,1.lE. OF CAL!l'O~l41,o\ ) •ct lll\t lo tht Nori~"'t>!t•ly corner of ev Ha•old Pll•keln, Jr.. ) 11, i ola 1011 !h"'1C• SOu'11oa11•rl~ In• Olr• Prtil~t"1 COUHTV QI' LOS ANt;ELES J o<I ll"t !o" PQ'n! In In• SovTh 1111• of •tAll! OF CAL!FOANIA ) On t!ilo 7<1n div cl M•rch, 1t1l. bllort IO 'd lo! dl11~nt !he•~n 300.00 !~ti Eftll•
l ~5 mt , !hi underol ontd, 1 No!i ry l'u~llt tn erlv h om ™• !.o«lhwt•t1r ly torn•~ COUNTV OF LOS ANGELES ) end tor •tld Courty 1nd Sl•lt. Pertonally !hftNll. th...,ce We1IN IY a10n1 11ld
Of! thll 1•111 dov cl Mi rth, lflT bttore 11>1>11rld OEAN AICKllEIL, ~nown to""' S°"llierly 1,ne lS0.00 tool to !ht PQln.t
performers. The show will In-me, "'' unden loned, • Not1rv f'vbll( 1n 10 w !h• Pr111Mnt m WESTPORT HOME " t1t•1nn1n1. f!ld lot 1110 Coun ty 1'1d Stitt, t>trwnollY l!IUILOl!AS, !NC,. 1he corllOrO!lon lh~I PARCEL l : Th1t oortlon cl Loi 6 of
elude musical acts. !!iklts 8nd 1pot1tl<I DEAN ll:ICl(llEIL, known IQ me ••Kull<! !he Wlr~ln lnolrumln!, ~nown lo Tri(! 9••, ()roroe PM~ ,o\cre1 No. l, 11
hi k lo bl l~t Pr11lOtnl of Wl!ST l"OQT liOME mt lo l>I lht Ptri.on wtio t•KUtld !he 111own on I m111 rttO•OIO In ~ ~. ac OUL!I. t UILDEll;S, INC .• ll)e corPOra!lon !hit W'llhln lntlrumtnl on Whlll O! P•Q• •1 o! Ml1cell1neou1 MaPI, record•
T he tryouts will be hefd p l(u!ld !flt wnhln ln1lr"m"''· ~...,wn 10 WE STPORT HOMI! &UILDl!RS, INC , of Orange CO<lnly, C1lltornl1, 11e1crlbtd
r . m1 1o bf !ht Ptr10n who t~ecute<l lhe 1nd 1clt110Wltdgt<I lo mt Illa! 1110 •• !ollowi: rOm 7:30 to 10 p .:n. 1D UJe wl!~ln 1 ... 11,.,mtnl <>n t>eh1U o r WE5TPORT HOMI! &VILDl!"1, INC I•· Bf~l~nln» ti lt'le E1s!erly termlnut cit
reCrea tion room ()f the Brea Wl!STPOflT HOME 8Ull.01E A:5, INC , •nd .-:ut~ 1~1 wlltlln !n1lrum1nt f"'rlu1nt to Tiit Solrl~•r lv ""• nl tl ld I.ct 6, 't!d 1Cltn-1t<lted to mt 1!111 oald WEST-111 llv-L1W1 ar I rt 1<1lu!lon ol 111 80.rd o1 paint llelng 02,r,J t,t! E11ltrlr from the
NWropsychl1tr lc ff{lllp!tal, 87~ POAT HOME llU!LDl!ll5, l"IC t•· OlrKtor1, SoJ hwt1ltrlv torn'' cl ltld lot; lht N:t
B ... Bl'd ~ u r t'b. -In-ecuted !hi within lmtrum ... 1 P11r1uant IO (Ol"flClAL SEAL) Norlhta~terlv along '"" 1oo ... 1hc11llflV
• • 1 111 er·LIWI Of" t r1oolullcn of !11 Bai rd o1 Phlll1 Olullctr l1n1 OI 1tld let • a111anct Of 11.to /"I
formation C11 n be obtained by Olrtctort. Noli"' l'ubllc-C1!llornl1 to I l'l>ln1 J lhenc1 Nor1nw,1t1r lv In •
Ill """ .,1.,8 WITNE:5S l'nV htt'ld •'Id offl Clt l itil, Pr.11<:lto1I Ofllct lft d'rfCI llfl<I lo !he Northwt•lul~ Corfl<l r ca ng iU.0"0000. Pl'<!LI P GLU$1(,ER LOI An.-1,1 Co1mlv or !aid Lot I; 11\l'f>(f SOulht1111rlv In .
Nol1ry ,.ull!I( • C1IU1tnl1 MY CDmmlu lon E•plr" o.rtcl line lo • PO!nt In lhl !oo,r!f> 11,.. ol
Le. Anfflti coun!r f'.ti. 'Jt. lfU 11ld le>! dl1!1m lhtrtofl JOO.IX! leer MY Comml11lon IE •Plro-• ITAT! (), (Al.IFOJI NIA I E1·•rrly !•om ll'tt 5QoVlhw11!trlv CO'ntr
Pob. 73, lf1J J SI. llltteofJ lll•n<• E1111rlv 1lon1 ltld
STol.T• ()f" CALIFOll NIA ) C<lVNTY OF LOS ,o\NGELES ) s,o, '· erlr line !l'1 9J ltt!, more or ""· ) JS On lhll 20lh Gav of Mardi, lt'1, before to tilt POlnl ~ 1Jeqlnn1n~.
COUNTY CF '1.0$ ANO~Lll ) me, tne .,nder>lgnfd, t Nolary Public In UN IT "I " On thli 141n dlY of M••eh, !971. llfforl •nd lor ••Id Countv ~rid Ma le, ~1<1o~a1tv Th•! PO•l lon of Loi I of T•tcl ,.._ me, !hi unatrtlOtl<ld, a Not•N Pvbllc In 1P1>«1red Jol.Ml!S E, RODGERS, known to Or1not P•r~ A'reJ Ne. 3. 11 11\own ""
tNI IOI" u ld C1>untv 1NI St1!t. l'l'•!ontl!v mt IO Of tn1 Vici l'rt1l.Unl 01 I m111 record td In book 7t, Piii 41 of
to A~t
1-rld JAMlil IE. ROOG•Rs, known lo 8UIL.0Ell5 RIE S OU • C IE a CUA· Ml1c1ll1nt cxn Mlp!, rtccrd1 cl Or1nt1
SCH Off • Cl m1 to 0. 1111 Vlu Prt1lde,;11 ot PORAllON. t~t cPrco11!1on !~It •~eculed County. Ct lllornl1, dtKrlbHI 11 toll-I< erl,·g asses I UILDER5 It E 5 0 U ll CE S COA· 1111 Wl1hln ln1 trumtn!, knll"'fl lo mt to be 8111~nf~1 al !hi NQ!'l~Ollltrlv C,,,nff l.o POll.AT!ON, !111 t ori>ctr·t tlon thll t•KulM !ht peroon wllo t'llecultd Tht within In· cl ltlO L.o! ir tntnct S.Oulf>tr!y Alortl
!Ill •llllln lnllrumt n!, •llOWn lo mt lo be ttrumtlll on bll11ll ot I Ull.Dl!A:S 1ne E~:!trlv lint tnorrol ro 1~0 5cv!n1r·
Summar aC't.lng cluses con-
ducted by membera: of Orange
County'• pro f 1 11 l on1l
reptrtory company were ••
nounced today by J am es
dePrletf., dlrtctor ol educa-
tional acrv lces for South Col.st
Rlperfor)'.
"AJ part of our ae rviCf: to
q,e convnut1lty, •• fetl It u
an lmportant m:ponslbllily to
one r tra.lning to 1 er Io us
studenLs of acting in our
am," DtPrl.ett noted.
ClaMtS will be open to ~lgh
8Chool and college students as
Sally Ba nana•
Really 11 •••
Bananas, Th at Is
!111 11troon ~ t x..:u11d fhl ~llhln 1.,.. Rl!IOUACl!S C<lRPOft,1riTfON, a n 11 IV t1rmlu$ ~ 1111 E1•11r11 11~1 !!'>encl
slru..,enl &ii bth"I' gf BOI LOERJ 1clnowlf'dOed to me !ft"' 111d ll UILOE A:S laulliw•~lrrlY 11ono rht S0utnt"•lt•l1
well 88 intere11ted members of A:E IOURCES COA:POA:ATION, • n d AEJ()URCE!. CORP()lt ... Tl<lN •• ~t~ICd line (/I u to lo! Jt.00 1111, molt or 1111,
lh ~/ / tCl f\0¥t'ltd9td lo mt lh~I u ld ll UILOEA5 Ill• wllMn ln1lrumenl Purw1nt to Ill DY• to I l!Oln! lflerH>n dl1!"M 17.80 ft.t fl Commun1ty, S"I Vlll S ng ll(!SOUftCl!S CO lll'O!t,lriTION t••cule<l L1w1 or t ••JOlullotl of 111 l o.rd ol frgm !IMI 1!11!trl' llrmlnU) of 1!'11 Iha wlllllft lnatrt111"tnt po.ir1u1tol to II• ev-OlrtdOrt. S&Jtht rlY lln1 ol 1110 lei: !h1tot1 atudent.s may also be invited 1..-.. ..,. • r1.ol.,tlotl or 111 lloero ~ WITNISI "IY l't1nt1 '"" ottlc!•I Mi i, Norlflwettu!v 1n • dlr.ct lint 10 Ill• Olrtcton. (()l'flClol.L SEAL) NOl'llo<w11ltrly '°'"1r cl llld Jcl1 !htnef
lo join the local company a• WITNESS my ~""' • ..., 0Hlcl1! ••••. Phlllll OIUllctl E•1tit1Y ~lono 1111 Ncmttflv 111\t ol' ••ld l'HILIP GLUt lCER Nolt ,.., Publlc.C1Hl1tnl1 •at 1(1 t~a Normt~•lfrlv (orMr '""'"" beginning ac tors fo!1owlng the Nour~ l'~Dllc . C1llt0<nl1 l'rlnctpll O!fl'f lft l n(I 1111 pain! al l>ltlnnJ1111 •
• umm.r
·-··'·n . l'rlr>e;lpt l Oftl(t Jn l.ol A,,..itl COllnTY L rC~Pf T1-1E•l::FM<lM rto1t llOl'llon
......, II.I Loi An9l lt1 Coo.rMV M1 Coryomluiof! E~Plr.. ~"" OtKrlbtd II IPllOWll
Two four·Wffk UlllOOJ Of MY Ctmml11Jon 1!Qflr11 ''"' 19, lf1S 6etrlnn1111 11 !~ Narlftt11!•rlr. tO•N~ -~••• lr · I I --~ ''*'· Jl, \t)J STAT& OF tALIFOAHIA cit 181d Loi f l l!'ltt'ICI Soum1r y 11--.w.i.. a1n ng , movcnen aiK.1 ITAT• o" CALl,OltHIA. 1 11. "'~ E111rrty 11,.. i~trtot • d1111n<e er
k ·u c. of/ .....I . ) S5 COUNTY 01' 1.01 ,lriNO&LIS I uo.n ll'tl to • 110lnt1 lfl11M• scent wor WI 11'!! ti1"\I . COUNT:¥' DP LOI ol.NOl!l.l!t I Oft !hi• 11111 ••Y "' Mlrcll, 1t71. btltr• "'" .... i·•rlv Ito • dt•ICI !Ina ,. Ill•
J une 22-July 15 and July 20-On fi,f, Hiii 41Y " M"'"' 1t 11, before ""' lt'lt UftdtriJl'nlf, • NGllrl' l'ubllc 111 NQl"lht¥1Ur rlw corfllr Of wlo lot1 lfltnq
A ~ 13 Sl d I II/ ~~ t'l'lt. flll ullffroltl!l<f, t lolof•rl' Public: In tnd ff< MWI CO!,l'l'ltr t l'ld Stitt, Mr 1on11t~ flS ~riv l '0-.0 m~ Norlhl'l'lv 11~1 of ·~lo! UJU;,~ . u tn I " /l:t1Vf •NI for 111d C:Dllnl'I •rod Sl•1•. "'r1Qn1!1y l lHttood Hol.11.()LO PIUMLN, JA.. lof !o '"" Hgrll>t11IWflY i:.mer , ... rm
11 choice of morning or af-•-•ed HAROl.O ,.1Lll(ALN. Jll __ ,, 11 ""' re "' "" ,,.,llkn1 of •"" tht POlnt of 11ttlnn1.,.,
C ~flOWn ro m~ lO be !ht PrHldenl of C,lrillLETON (), CALIFORNIA, IN (Of• T1rn11 of ... 1. ''"" 1 .. llW!ul !Nf1n of
ttmoo,n class hours lasses (AllLIETON Cl" CALIPOll.NI..., It-. Ill"• -•'Ion lhlt ••ICult<I llt• Wllfllft lf'. "'• United '"''' on contlrm11~ °' NII. Wfil meet four ""•••1 ,.... WMk, -lllon Illa! llllC:Utloll !IW Wllfltto II'-111-1, ltNWft 111 m1 to ~ Illa Hrton or P!rl Oii! trod ·l>lltnct ..,IOltl(ftl br ~ r-• rtl'Vl'f>ilnl, It-It IM to lit h -Miii wllt t•Kul• !flt wll~ln lntlroJrr!lnl on nett 11<ur1<1 II>' Mortg1?t .,,. Tr ull Dlld 't'uesda}'!l lhrough ,rlds y!'l. wflo •~ICU!HI "'' wlrtoln 1~•trvm1111 Cf! bttol lf of (A•LITON Oil (ALl,Oll NIA, Oft Ill• ~•-rrv to to'O. T•~ l'r'•tllll .,
•• ld n . be lllhlll °' (A8LEl0N ()I' CALl,OA:N IA. ""' tdt-lllltld re m• It'll! 11/d l/\'IO'l~t c:d 'O "'dt...,..iltd .. 1111 b d rwM 1.1VUSSOm , 8 mcm r •"'1 oc~nowleOgeQ to mt lfl1t \lld (AILl!TON OP CALll'()ll.N!lf, .. ac..r!t<I l ldl er oflefa lo bt tn llrrhlnt t NI will
o( SCR's regular acting com-(,o\flfLTON UF CAL1~o•H1A ••«v•td 1111 ""'111" '"""""""' •u,..,,•"' 10 11• no rec:11v1c:1 11 11\i a:or.t1'0 ou1c1 at .. ,..
Ill d t 1
•~•within ln1trum•nt ""'~u~n1 lo 111 llY· Bw·Ltw1 ti!' 1 rt .. lutlof! ot !11 '°'"'-Of •1m1 lf'tr 1111 llrl! PUbllCt !IOt\ hert'!l'I 11'111'
p:iny W COO UC one C a~!'l L1w1 or 1 1•:1Clutlon ol lh llo••d QI 0(•~10tt. 1, '• ol ···•
with de'Prie~t le:adins a !!eC(lnd 011iu1~r1. w11N ES~ m• ~•"" 1ni1 0111t111 1et1. 0111<1 M•v :1, 1•11 . . ' WI THE~',,,~ ~~nil tnd cl!ltl11 Hll. (Ol'P'ICIAL ,l! .. 1.) c.J~H[i ,,., W111TI grou~, A !lmAll t111t1on lee will ""'LIP CLUS"Ell lfhllt~ Olulku E~·(UIOf
c. C Of!~ [O CO''' C0'l ol the Ho!1t~ Publ'j -CAlllO•f;!lt N~l l•Y PL ll •C•Cll!flll'ftll o• !ht W'\11 of 141~ ffctdt"I U"ll' '~ Prlntlo•l 011 t f In f'lo11C1Pl1 Oltl1t In STtl'H£N A, SCHNl!JOl!!t cla!'ltle~-Lo~ A~OflPl Ce<.in1>' L~ An1tl•• Countv " I VI •• 111 .. ~ .. ' '"•~o
J t I d d I I My Cc,,,'l'tnlon E•plr11 Mt (omm!n lot> laah,t 8tvt11r Mlltt, Clll!lf'ftlt "211 n t.re5 (' In IV dua s may f:.•b 71, 1915 ,,11, 21. 1t1• Attornrr tor •••c•!Or
contact lhc SC!t office al "u.oc t111.oc •1u.o<:
6l6-0J6• I f'u~•ls~f'(I O••~O• Co•lt Onll v ,,',',~,', 1'1•blhlltd Or1not COO i! [)<oily "II~ Pvtr\lthl!'d Or•not C:oa1t O• 1, l'llot, ·1. Junt l. 10. 11, 14. 11'11 ..,llf J, 1e, 17, 1,, lt 71 1117•11 Ju,,. I,~. t, 1911 IM•11
-'
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--~ --
If OAILY PlLOT ThurMiay, Junt .), ~71
.J'AMILY CIRC(lS-1>11 BU Ket111e
•stop copying me, P JI"
Telethon News
New Arthritis Group Meets
"Finl, you pray a lot," ac-
tress Jane Wyman explained
about putting on the annual
Arthritis Telethon.
She was addres5ing the first
annuaJ dinner of the Orange
County Branch of the Arthritis
Folmdation in Santa Ana Tues-
day evening. Orange County
bas an estimated 12S,OOO
arthritis sutrerers---equivalent
to the population of Hun-
tingta> Beach.
As the principal organir.er
and lop star of the annual 21-
hour parade of stars in what
bas been rated the most sue·
cessfuI ~ all such fund -rajsing
eve!U, Mlss Wyman listed the
steps her group takes after of.
fering the prayer:
-February is Arthritis
Mooth, ao a date is picked 1n
that month.
-They m\15t check with
Btng Crosby and Bob Hope to
avuid TV conOicts with their
Pebble Beach and P a Im
Springs goU toumamenl!.
This year the telethon com-
mit~ held ll3 collective
breath as the moon shot dock-
ing failed 8t ftr'St, with the
prospecl ol landing Sunday In
the midst or the telethon's air
time. The:rl the docking suc-
ceeded and the telethon kept
its audience.
When the worn -out
particiP&flt& ~ trying to
sleep. tbe earthquake came.
"We lucked out," Miss
Wyman said. "We landtd in
the middle, in between these
major events. So the telethon
was again a huge success."
One beneficiary nl that suc-
cess is on the Orange Coast.
'The Southern Califo rnia
Arthritis Foundation is com-
mitted to give $100.IXXI to help
establish a rheumatology
department to deal with 30
related diseases at the UC,
Irvine Medical Cent.er when
th!: center Is ready.
Miss Wyman was asked the
question on the minds of many
who have watched her tireless
performance on the telethon.
It 14, "Do you have any form
of arthritis yourself~··
Her answer: "No, but many-
of my friends have su(fered
from various forms o f
artlritis for years. When I
wa.s asked lo ~Ip with foun-
daUon fund raising to aid
!"ttiearch, 1 decided tn find out
what it is all about. I did, and
that's why 1 have given .so
much time and energy to the
cause."
"What about Rosalind
Russell?'' a reporter asked.
"She has had arthritis ror
Gnly about a year," Gov,
Ronald Reagan'a first wife
replied. "My other friends
hava ~fercd for l!I yeara and
rnott:."
Becauae of the many forms
arthritis takes, and I l s
)nystuious comings a n d iolnp in \ndividuah1, many
J*>Ple In shnw business see
and tipe:rience the disease
and w'11l to help find the
cal.Ill! and cur1. Miss Wyman
aaJd that actors and act~sses ........__ere eager to give of their time
111d talent to help the foun-
datlcn.
T. Wise, marketing manager
of Hydro-Conduit Corp., Santa
Ana; Mrs. Kenneth Dukes.
Garden Grove, vice-cllairman
of the Western Hospital AU'l-
iliary; Albert W. Bates ,
editorial page editor, the DAI-
LY PILOT; Mrs. Donald Lutz,
chainnan of volunteers for the
Women's Auxiliary, and Dr.
Harry Gibson, UCI
orthopedist.
Miss Wyman present ed
distinguished service awards
to Mrs. Louis ;I. Cella of Santa
Ana for IO years of service;
Mrs. James T, Ferrell of Ilun-
tington Beach for several
years of service and as the
first Neighborh'ocx! M a r c h
chairman. Mrs. Fe,rr ell
organized 200 volunteers and
worked with them around the
clock for the telethon.
Mrs. Ramona Dostert of
Oranl;!'e received the volunteer
service award f or "ex-
ceptional de di cat l on .'·
Outslandiniz service aw:1rds
went to Fdwin W. Dey,
division tr1'ffic m an a st" er ,
Pacific 'f'eleohone CG .• fnr his
heln With tPJpfh()f1 f~f';\ilies,
artd to Thomas H. Moehn,
Security Pacific N a l i o n a I
Banlc executive, for service to
the founrl:itio11's Oran,:ie Coun-
ty 1'ranch.
The bank award brooeht an
exph1n;:ifion frnm M"tss Wvman
to sati .. fv the curiosltv of
manv: How anit the COUT1tl~"
mnnev anrl nler!P.ec; sent. ~nrl
nhon~rl In durinl:!' the to>Jethon
hitn~led. and bv whom?
Th'! answer Is thAt ~l>Curitv
P11cific, aii; its cnntrib11tinn to
the cause, provides emnlove<:
under cruafd to recrilve And
mnnt the mnnf'v And f'llPfl.,.es
dellvei°e<I in huii;e le.,ther
sack<:, l t takPS two tn thn'4'
mrmtho: to r<'mnlele the job
after the telethon.
Homosexual
Study Set
A panel discussion o n
"Homosexuality and the Law"
is scheduled for 8 p.m .. Friday
on lhe third floor of the com-
mom building at UC Irvine.
The opening meeting is co-
~nsored by the s o c i a I
ecology department of UC!
and the 1\merican C i v i I
Liberties Union.
Panelists include: Troy Per-
ry, pastor of the Metfupoiilan
Community Ch u r ch for
homosexuals in L<l:s Angele.s;
Martin Hoffman, M.D., author
of "The Gay World"; Richard
Whaleo, associate professor of
psyroo.biology, UCI.
And Barry Dank, assistant
professor of sociology, Cai
State l.Ong Beach; Linda
Tessier, Orange c.oonty Gay
LiberaUoo Front; and David
Young, a Laguna Beach al·
torney.
Mesan Wins
News Award ~ A grmring women's au:r-
mary of tho Orange County A Unlvendly of Missouri
branch ts BerVtng by drtv1ng $ludent from Costa Mesa is
arthriticl to their doctoris and among many honored with a
lhopplng centon. by wr1Ung total of 125.000 in prim al tile
a.tters for thoee whole hands Columbia campus' recent 1971
.,.. too crippled by arthrltls to JournalLsm Honon D • y permit this, and by porfonn· Assembly.
11111 other -1 aorvfces for w..,..,, R. FroeUd> of 1791
tbe amlcted. New Hampshire Ave. ls one of . P'rederlCt M. Ru o<hel. vice ...,.. recelvlni! scholarships ~ ~ director fl. the and other c1taUons f or
Orion 'M_...,t Co r P · • dilltingulshed reporllng and Coste )lea. and • i>•rtner or --iu , ~ .. ng. WaJter Burrou~. & r m e r P'roehllcfl won _the White ~ftr of the D A l L Y House Pr"'8 l'botographera" ~~· .. -:7~ =~edem: Special Scienct Wrl~ prt~.
CU11111rn1 ..... .ocordlng to an annomcemeat
tr tnnd1 (Of' the comln( vur. crom·tbe Columbia, Mo. cam-
ire suort!f!d1 Mrs. Al Ct11rii-pus.
-W. Fullerton. wife of !be;=':========;! tc. Art(elM Dodjle!'I vfaii ~ M,.. C•mp1 nh LOCAL
fteelftd the foundatlf.lf'l'I No .+f.ff 11.-p.,.r fell1 ye•
.. Jeadenhlp 1iward from MIMI "''""*· •v•ry 4ey, effvt wil••'• Wyman. ,.1111 ... 111 th. ~·,·L'v··,o,LO .... , • 1'twr members of the ~ C.ett tfu111 th• ~ •
'. --._.,,. -&..l;;m01m;; ___ ... =.,..
•
THE.
BIG
ONE
ann1versar
STARTS SATURDAY! SHOP 10 A.Mt-TO 9:30 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M .
quality at the lowest possible price ••. this is what you'll find in every department in all StOCCi during our anniversary sale
FASHION SAVINGS
POLYESTER DRESSES AND co.511JMES
rowo a.od travel 49 reg. 36.00-58.00 19.91-29.19
FUR COLI.ARED SUEDE COATS, S.I6 .,.
7
, ~ _
boulevard coats 103 reg. 90.00 t.h
FAMOUS MAKER DENIM.LOOK DRESSES
fortcast shop 20 reg. 66.00-80.00 .f.9.99
JR. AND PETITE POLYESTER KNIT DRESSES
yooog signarurc 94 1cg. 20.00-24-00 l.f..99
PAR 1Y DRESSES, FORMALS, PANTS
evening 5hop 97 1eg. 30.00-46.00 19.99
FAMOUS MAKER SKIMMA DRESSES
daytime dres.ses 61 reg. 12.00.14.00 7.99
DOUBLE KNIT. CREPE smO! POLYESTER
yardage 54 reg. 5.99 .f..79
ACRYLIC JACKET SWEATERS. ~6-40
boulevard tportswear 16 were 1!.00 10.99
FAMOUS MAKER JR. GO·TOGETHERS
campus lhop 43 wett 8.00-30.00 3.99·22.99
2-PIECE HOT PANTS SETS
campus ahop 43 wen 8.00.30.00 1.99
ACRYLIC TOPS. SHORlY PANTS, S.M·L
jr. knit spomwrJC 138 were 9.CXl-10.00 .f..99
FAMOUS MAK.ER SCOOTER SKlll TS, ~-J;
young signarure sportswear 117 were 10.00 6.99
TEXTIJRED ACRYUC CARDIGANS, l642
knit sportswear 76 were 15.00 11.99
POLYESTER PANTS, SHORTS. TOPS
aclivc sportswear 76 were 8.00-17.00 5.99.ID.99
FAMOUS POLYESTER P ANTSUJTS
active sporuwear 76 we~ 34.00-50.00 22.99·26.99
PRINT PANT TOPS. SPEOAL SIZES J/;.46 women·• sporuwear 85 To'cte 9.1)().11.00 l.19-6.99
FAMOUS CAUFORNlA GQ.TOGEIHERS
coordiru.tcs 101 were 15.00-21.00 4.99-12.H
JACKET AND CARDIGAN SWE.ATERS
accnsorics 19 ttg.. 13.00 8.99
GROUP OF KNIT TOPS
accessories 19 reg. 5.00 2.99
DRESSES AND PANT SUITS, I0.18
blouses 31 reg. 13.00;14.00 1.99
LEATHER GLOVES. SHORT. MID.LENGTH
gloves 3 reg. 8.00-10.00 S.99
FASHION RINGS. BRJGHTLY COLORED
fashion jewelery 22 reg-j.00-7.00 2.99
FASHION JEWELRY COl.1J;\;110N
fash ion jewelry 22 reg. 2.00-4.50 l.~9
FAMOUS MAKE LEATHER HANDBAGS
handb;igs 26 1eg. 10.00.30.00 6:99 ·1•.99
GIR!..S' TENNIS DRESSES. 4.6X
girls' dre5SCS :>6 reg. 5.00 2.5'
COUNTRY LOOK WNG GOWN, 4-14
girls' lingerie 79 reg. 7.00 •.99
PEASANT BLOUSES, SIZES 7-14
J:irls' sportsw ear 77 1cg. 4.50 3.29
LUGGAGE IN SUMMER PRINTS
girls' 1rccssories 118 reg. 6.00-8.00 4.99.S.99
BABY ARJSTOCRAT STROLLERS
infants' furniture 124 reg, 25.00
ALLEGRO'S WOVEN SUNG SANDAL
19.99
OOulevard shoes 112 reg . 17.00 11.99
TEEN SANDALS FROM ITAtY
youns; people's shoes 70 reg. 8.00 4.99
COBBLER'S -VICE VERSA," WAl.KlNG SHOES
boulevard ~ 112 reg. 15.00 11.99
GOSSARD UNDER WIRE BRA, B.C.D
found.arioru 44 reg. 6.00 '·"
NYLON BRJEF, WHITE. PASTEl.S, l ·S
daytjmt: lingerie 28 reg. 79c I for :t.99
F.ASY·CARE COVERUPS, PINK, GllEN, GOLD
loongewear 53 reg. 11.00 1.99
SHORT PEIGNOIR SETS 1N PASTELS, S.M·L
alttp lingerie IO rq. 20.00-35.00 11.99
' QUJL TED O!EST FOR UNDEABED STORAGE
OOfioru 1 reg. 3.59 I for 5.00
MEN"S HOT HAIR :!TY1.ER BY HARTMAN
toilctriet 1 ~6 reg. 16.99 S.77
JOY OP COOKING COOK BOOK boola 68 ttg. 6.9) s.n
FUR SALON VALUES
BLUE FOX CAPELETS, l ROWS DEEP
qu&li<y °'run! -f., fut ILlon 47 It.ti
NA11JUL MINK STROUD. COATS
m;nk bdt<d ond bord....! fur ..Jon 47 591.ttl
MEN'S, BOYS' WEAR VALUES
MA YBROOKI! TROPICAL SUITS
men's suiu ll re_g. 95.00 7•.oo
SHORT SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS
men's furnishings 6 reg. 5.00 3.89 or 3/10.SO
"""o;liEJlOUS NO.IRON BOXER SHORTS ~.~Jiings 127 1eg. 2/3.50 2/2.89
STll,IPED FLAR~~:,,~. 30·38 •
mens sporrswear t;. ~~ 11 .00-1300 S.99
OUR EXQUSIVE Ef, '.>..o-4lj0ES
men's ,Ui()C5 60 reg. 25.00 19.99
~facPHERGUS B.AN-WN KNIT SHLi.~
men's sport furnishings 84 1eg. $5-$7 "l'J~,99
~fACPHERGUS NO-IRON SPORT SHIRTS ~~-~
men's sport furnishings fi4 ri:-g. $5-$7 S.99 '
FAMOUS MAKER OUTDOOR JACKETS
pace shop 130 ti:-g. 35.00 28.99
BOYS" JEANs; CASUAL PANTS
boys' wear 14 reg. 4.98-6.50 2.99
BOYS' KNIT, SFORT SHIRTS
boys' furnishings 23 ri:-g. 3.50-5.50 2.29
MA ]OR ELECTRICS
GIBSON 16 CU. FT. 2-DR. REFRIGERATOR
no frost refrig. 721 ri:-g. 299.00 269.00
ZENITH STEREO CONSOLE. 40 WATIS ¥ finish. stereos 728 reg. 369.95 299.DO
RCA/ZENITH COLOR TV W/CART
18" di1g. TV 722 reg. 459.95 389.Dll
GIBSON AUTOMATIC JS.LB. WASHER
deliv,, insral major appl 714 reg-189.00 lSS.DO
HOUSEWARE VALUES
SALAD BOWL W/SILVERPLATE RIM
with $Crven. ailver 48 reg. 8.00 S.99
HOSTESS SERVING SET
dish Md spoon. Silver 48 reg_ 7.50 S.99
NORJT AKE COOK "N SER VE WARE
20-pc:. swter SC'l. china 46 1eg. 23.80 19.9S
FINE GILNA SERVICE FOR 12
20% off open S[oclt. china 46 reg. 96.90 59.95
SET OF 8 STACKABLE GLASSES
S1nokc. glassware 126 reg. 8.50 6.99
HAND CUT LEAD CRYSTAL PIECES
9 trylcs. glassware 126 reg. 14.00 7.91
HOOVER DlALA.MATIC VAClJID,.f
Deluxe upright vacuums 73 reg. 96.99 79.99
BISSELL RUG SHAMPOOER
Electric. ''acuwru 73 teg. 44.99 34.99
WEAR EVER TEFLON" COOKWARE SET
9·pc-hou.scw11es 151 re.i;. 29.95 19.99
3· PC. KITCHEN KNIFE SET
Wood holder. housewares 151 reg. 14.00 JO.DO
SUNBEAM SPRAY-STIAM·DRY IRON
36 vents. small appliances 74 reg. 18.99 13.99
BROILMASTER OVEN-BROILER
IOY.!"x1 6":rl !", small appl. 74 reg. 29.!n 24.99
5·PC. PEDESTAL DINEITE SET
W~nut fini~h. howewar~ furn. 87 ri:-g. '259 149
ADJUSTABLE BAR STOOL
Color choice. hou~arcs furn, 87 reg. 27.SO 18.99
SPORTS, TOYS, LUGGAGE
STEEL WAll SWIMMI NG POOL
s·x20". [Dy! 42 reg. 15.00 12.99
LA UR IE JANE DOLL
Choice of out fi rs. toys 41 reg. l.99 1.00
ROUAWAY TABLE TENNIS TABLE
w/pa<ldlcs, balls. sport goods SO reg. 42.99 26.89
DACRON>Z FlLLED SLEEPING BAG
3-lb. poJ ycsrl!:f". ~port goods ;;o reg. 26.99 l!.99
MEN'S GARMENT TilA VEL BAG
Nylon. luggage 36 ttg. 14.00 10.00
l.ADIES" FUTECREST TRAVEL COVER
Dress 3ize. luggage 36 reg. 16.00 . 12.00
ART NEEDLEWORK
COTTON VELVETEEN PlllOWS
Kapolc filled. art nttd.Jeworlc: 40 tt'g. 4.00 2.9t
CROCHET YOUR OWN AFGHANS
.Aist.. colon. an ottdlcwcd 40 ttg. 18.00 10..f.I
CANDY, LIQUOR, FOOD
.MOLEV VODKA QUARTS
( 11 gal 7.49). liquor 107 reg. 4.8) 3.11
KlNGS CROSS GIN QUARTS
(\.1 gal 7.49). liquor 107 reg, 4.85 3.H
J. R. PEARCE SCOTCH QUARTS
(\7 gtl 9.89). liquor I07 reg. 6.19 4.t9
VAN DER LANN HOLI.AND HAM
2-lb. tin. gourrpet I 08 ttg. 3.10 2..f.I
2·LB. BOX CATALINA MINTS
milk/dark choc. aody 78 reg. J.(X) 1.99
FURNITURE, SLEEP SHOP
BURRIS TRADITIONAL REQJNt:R
recliners 147 reg. 139.00 95.DO
4.pe BASSETT GAME SET
furniture 142 reg . ...499.00 369.00
5-PC. ~10DERN DINING ROOM
furniture 142 ri:-g. 520.00 419.00
3-PC THOMASVIllE BEDROOM
mcdiierr. furnirurc 143 reg. 540.00 409.DO
l·PC SPAN!SH DESIGN BEDROOM
By Dixie. futnirure 143 reg. 400.00 349.00
SIX S1YLE LOUNGE CHAJR·S
furn irure 141 reg. 175.00-215.00 129.DD
FOUR STYLES OF SOFAS
.,, Covered to order. furniture 141 i eg. 399.00 299.00
•• ,.,_, THCh •r~WJ'S. OF. B00_~.~11 ... _ 99.0D
01ce 0 fLn'i'sh. fl,.._ --~·"PF ·"t"J·V\T"
GOLD LEAF COCKTAIL TABLES
-~4" glas,o; top. furnirurc 144 reg. 250.00 149.00
SEALY MA.TfRESS/OOX SPRING
Twin/full. sl~p shop 145 reg. 69.95 each 47.00
11 -PC CORNER GROUPING
foam mart:resses. sleep shop 145 reg. 239.00 189.00
LAMPS AND PICTURES
SHADED SWAG LAMPS
3-way. lamps 63 reg. $25-$35 19.99-29.00
ORIGINAL FR.AJ.fED OIL PAINllNGS
2)x29" size. pictures 75 reg. 55.00 29.9'9
Don1estic Rugs
SURElY DELUXE COTTON TERRY TOWELS :
wash, hand, bath, mat. 1owcls 30 reg. 90c·$4 S9c-3.29
JACQUARD WEA VE BEA~ TOWELS
35x(i)'• size. towels 30 reg. 7.00 3.S9
SURETY COTTON PERCALE SHEETS, CASES .,
twin, full flat/fit.. shecrs 34 reg. I.60 pr.-$3 l.39-2:s1
KENWOOD 1WIN/FULL MANTILLA BLANKET
72:r90'" size. bedding 41 reg. 8.?9 S.99
GARLAND QUILTED BEDSPREADS
twin, full, king. bedding 41 reg. S30-$40 18.99·29.19
ANTIQUE SATIN WHITTI DRAPERIES
%"or 120 .. x84", drapes 11 3 reg. $27-$35 p;tir 15.19
CORDUJlOY HOLLY WOOD OR SnJDJO COVER
bohter covers. slipcoven; 11 3 reg. $15-$20 9.49-13.99
CUSTOM REUPHOLSTERY FABRIC
custom fabrics 11 ri:-g. $7-$20 yd. 20% OFF
WOOL PILE PLUSH BROADLOOM
floor coveting 32 reg. $15 sq. yd. 9.88
WOOL ORIENTAL DESIGN ARE.A RUGS
3xS'-IOx1 4._ rugs 137 reg. SS0-$350 34.88-188.88 •
BUDGET STORE VALUES
MISSES' KNIT SUl-.U.1 E.R TOPS
sportswear 800 reg. 2.19 1.99
\VOl-.UNS POL'fESTER DRESSES, 141 ~·22\/?
women's dreMCS 81 6 reg. 15.99 10.99
l-.fISSES COOL SHJITS, 12-20
misso;' dresses 810 reg. 6.99 4.9&
,I R. NO-\V'ALE CORDUROY J EANS
7-15. jr. scene 80 1 reg· 7.99 .f..99
JR. JERSEY PRINT DRESSES
jr. scene 829 reg. 11.99 9.99
DOREITE SUPFORT HOSllRY
hosiery 807 reg. 2.5') 1.99
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lingeri e 821 reg. '1.99·6.9$1 2.99-3.$9
DOREITE LONG·LINE BRA)
bras 819 reg. 4.S0-5 ·00 3.~o .3.99
NYLON SLIPS, WIDE CHOICE
dayweu 820 reg. 3.00·4.00 2.S9
SUMMER FASHION JEWELRY
accessories 826 reg. 1.00 each 2 for 1.00
WOMEN'S CLOUDSTER SANDA!..S
women'• shoes 812 ri:-g. 10.9CJ
JR. BOYS SPORTSHIRTS
childreo 808 reg. l .9CJ
TOT, JR. BOYS" SHORT SETS
children 808 reg. 2.69
GIRLS" SCOOTER SKlll TS, l· 14
girls' 824 reg. 1.99 each
BOYS SWIMWEAR, 8·18
boy1' 822 tt& 2.69
MEN"S CASUAL PANTS, 29·38
mcn't 817 ieg. 6.99-10.00
MEN"S CARDIGAN SWEATEM
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bedding 825 reg. 6.9')-10.99
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N ~i ed tt> All-California Team
SAN DIEGO <AP) -Clarenct Gaston,
Sa n Diego's leading hitter in 1$70, fired a
mild blast at P adre pilchi ng Wednesday
night after coming 'tvlthin an eyeluh of
being beaned by Philadelphia reliever Joe
Hoerner.
"Our pitchers don't prolect our hit-
ter!,'' he said after .long home runs by
Ss n Diego's Nale Colbert and Ivan Mur-
rell touched off a beanball. war and two
near braw ls. The Pad res won 6-{l behind
the five-hit pitching of right-hander Steve
Arlin, a Philadelphia castofr.
,,
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LA Rool{ie
Sees Dream
Come True
LOS ANGELES (AP\ -Bobby O'Brien
Isn 't much different than any other kid on
Vie block.
He grew up thinking he'd be a big
league baseball player and he dreamed of
lhe day he'd win his first game in the
majors.
''I've wanted to be a biR league pitcher
ever since I 'vl' been pitchini;t -and
that's since I was eight y~rs old," Bobby
. __ _.j/li c odger Slate
All G•mtl •n l<FI 1"41)
f" IF,~ 4 0o;31f, •S Ntw Vor~ JJJ"' ~ 00<!9•" 11 Now Yor~ ~ J'!fle ' Oodo••l ••. N~w Vqr~ Junt I Dodg~" At Phll•df lphl•
1·~J o.m.
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4 XI P,m,
said Wednesday night after he pitched six
innings to earn h.is first win, hurting the
l..os Angeles Dodgers to a 7·1 victory over
th e Montreal Expos at Dodger St adium.
O'Brien. <I 22·year-old leJt-hander "".ho
won 13 of t6 decisions in 1970 ~·1th
Sf)l"tkane in the Pacific Coast U>ague. was
summoned after starter Rill Singer ag-
gravated a pulled groin muscle whi le
pitching in the third inning.
All O'Brien did was pitch the final si x
Innings, giving up only two singles and 11
harmless home run by John Bateman.
"Pitchers have been throwing at us atl
1pring, especially al Nate,'' said Gaston
of • Padre team that was th ird ln the
league in home runs last year.
"It is part of b83ehall for a pitcher to
hrush back l hitter but it iMI 'I a part Of
the game to throw at someone's head.
That's what Hoerner did an<I he almost
got me.
"Our pitchers don 't knoc~ hilt.er! down,
so the hitters dig in on them. Our pit-
chers would be better off if they ttlrew at
someone onct in awhile. --,
"Any time a Houston pitcher has two
strikes on one or us and can afford r.o
waste a pitch, you can be sure the next
pitrh will be high and inside ."
The first of Wednesday n i g h t ' s
rhubarbs came in tlJe seventh innin g,
with the score s.-0, after Hoerner low-
bridged Gaston.
There were severa l exchanges of
reinarks before Philadelphia manager
Frank Lu~hesi carne tearing out of the
dugout toward Gast.on. Lu~hesi was in·
tercepted by pl ate umpire Tom Gorman,
who managed lo maintain order after
bolll benches emptied onto the neld.
r-lo blows were struck then or In Lhe
eighth tnning, wh en the Phib' Don Money
was brushed back by Arlin.
During the second incident , Gaston had
r.ished in from centerfield to join the
scene around hon1e plate. He and Luc-
ch.esi were advanci ng on each other
before manager Preston Gomez restrain-
ed Gaston and Gorman stopped Lucchesi
once again.
Murrell put Hoerner in a foul mood
-•
·~
when tie greeted the lefthander with I
seventh-inning shot that went at lea:iit 440-
feet In clearin g lhe cente rfield fence.
"I wa sn't throwing at Money in the
eighth inning -he used to be niy room·
male when we were in the minors,"
"8id •Dr. Arlin, 2-7, who scattered five
singles and stranded 10 lo snap •
persoilal three-game losing streak.
All of the bespectacled dentlst.'s !Jlrel
major league victories have Men
shutouts , starling with a 2--0 triumph at
Atlanta last Sept. 2.l
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But that was more than offset by the
Dodgers' five·run third inning and the
seventh inning when Jim U>fr.bvre and
'l'om Haller smashed back-lo-back home
runs. the first tipie all season the
Dodgers have managed to do that.
Los Angeles is idlt> lo<lay. then tacklei;
!hf' New York Mets in a lhree-Rame
series over the weekend to close out the
homestand . ~1nntreal. also idle, continues
its road trip with a weekend series in San
Diego with the Padres.
DODGERS' WILLIE DAVIS SLIDES SAFELY INTO HOME IN 7-1 WIN OVER MONTREAL DAVIS EXTENDED HITTING STREAK TO 2S GAMES.
Golden \Vest Collcgc·s J1nl Hogan has
been selected to the AU-California junior
college haseball leam announced tvd ay.
The Rustler :;ophomorr, v.'ho balled
.372 this past season. was accorded a first
teem outfield berth.
Hog<Jn recently S!J!,ncd a contract y.•ith
Hav;aii of the Pa cific Coast League and
wHl report to the Bend. Ore. club of the
Northwest Rookie League in two v.1ccks.
State champion Canada l11ndcd three
players on the rirst team 11.hile runncrua
!.os Angeles City College placed two
playe rs on the No . I uni!.
1971 All.Ca lifor nia
Firs! Tea m
Pos. Player College Rt'cord
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The off day and another one Monday
may give Singer ample time lo recover
from his latest setback. But the manager .
Walter Alston, isn't so sure.
"The doctor said he probably won't
miss a turn," Alston said after the ,::ame,
the Dodgers' sixth victory in their last
seven start.<;.
Napoles Angry
In Last Tuneup
For Title Tiff
"But I'm not so sure. The thing we LOS ANGE LES -former champion
dqn't want is fnr him to hurt his arm and J ose Napoles of Mexico City was in an
he might do that pil ch inp: "'ilh an injury. angry mood Wednesday as he and the
\\le'll just h11ve to "'ait and see. The best titleholder, Billy Backus of Syracuse,
thing tn do. i£ it looks like he might mis., N.Y .. fi nished heavy drills fo r their
more than one turn is lo put him on the welterweight title fight Friday night at
disabled list." the F'or um,
Singer. plagued all season with various The 31-year-old Naoole~. who lost the
minor ailments. has only a 3-9 record. crown to Backus last Dec. J. was upsl't
Los Angeles put the game away early, because his sparring partner failed tn
chasing t\.1ontreal sta rter Carl Mo_rto.n show·up. In recent days Napoles has sent
wi1h a five-ru n third, keyed by Richie two sparmales lo the pilS with hi5 heavy
Allen's two-run double and a run-scoring punching. · ~i n,lc b_v \\'ilhe Davis that extended his
halting streak· to 25 straight i;:ame~. one . "I'm in good s~apcd," Napolf~ !old in·
h . r Lo B k' 26-game streak which l1ma_lc!I and pre~1~te pnvale y he was ~ ~ 0 u roe s . . con fident of regaining the champ1onc;h1p
IS the longest in lhf' maiors thi~ ~tason. .,,.,. Napoles remains a 2-1 fa vorite to win
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LOS ANGELES -USC, winner of a
record six NC AA baseball championship5.
including last year, will face Sct(ln Hall
University in lhe ope ning round of the
1971 College World Seril's in Omaha June
12.
Seton Hall 's Pirates are champions of
District 2 while USC won the District 8 ti-
tle with a two out or three game series
win over Santa Clara last weekend.
e Chandler .'ilgn•
Neitl1er Rai11 Nor Ashe
BUFFALO, N.V. -Bob Chandler,
Southern California's leading pa ss-
fecei ver the last.three seasons, Is among
four draft choices under contract with the
Buffalo Bill! of the National Football
League.
Can Stop Froel1ling's Bid
e Bo11er Not Claimed
AT LANT A -Controversial Clete
Boyer. th ird base man of the Atlanta
Braves, was not cla imed on waivers Wed-
nesday and is now free. to negotiate with
any club in ba~eball, the National League
advi!l!!d the Braves.
Future Isn't Here
Angels' Forgotten Man
--LA Castoff Torborg
By ROGER CARI.SO N
or 1~ q.n, l'!lot 5111f
\\'AS HI NGTON -It 's billed as a
glamour and nioney sport and the
beckoning call to t.alenled young~ters has
a magnet ic quality.
f''ame, fortune and plaudits for some -
but frustr ation, futili!y and a tolal feeling
or hopelessness for others ts a fact of
professional baseball
The laller might describe 1 he
Attg<'I .~late
All Gomu '" 10 ,.,1'( C1tl )
_.n~•I• "' llo\IO" Anq~I> •1 llO\IDn
_.og~I• •t llM•n"
An;rh ••· New Yor~
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10 SS P "' 1n s~ • m
I SS om.
California Angels as a ~·hole cons1{iering
their currenl status. but 1f one individual
Halo were singled nut. Jeri Torbo rg
would probably get 1he honor ha nds
down.
The A n g e 1 s snapped ou1 o( the
doldrums Wednesday night with a 2·1
decision over the Was hingl.on Senator!!
before a crowd of 3,606 at Robert F'. Ken-
nedy Memorial Stadium.
<;lyde Wrighl I S·4) survived a firsl in·
ning !K'are, then received aid and com rort
lrom the. 'A'eather as rain washed out the
rinal two inn ings of play. He allowed onl y
four hilS in beating Ot:!My McLain (4-9J.
Torborg, an ex-Los Angeles Dodger.
watchCd from the sidelines again
Wednesday IS lt be~e.s more and more
apparent he doesn't figure in lhe. Ange.ls'
plans.
"I came with such high hopes but It
doesn't look like my future is here,"
Tor\>Org told the DAI LY PILOT.
The handsome Rutgers graduate is
rapidly becoming a non-entity on the
Angels.' rost;er -with only 21 plate ap-
pearances.
"!l's very hard lo maintain en-
thusiasm. The situation is so difficult.
"The main rear is the thought l'l! never
get another chance, J w<i.s out of the
lineup for fi ve ""·eeks before the three
game set against !he Yankees." said
Torborg .
His defensive play camP inlo focus last
weekend against New York, gunning
down a pair of runners lrying 1o i1!eal and
picking off another
"Seven games in two months -you
can't cut the mustard that way.
'I had a good sprin~. hitting over :JOO
Then I started !hrpe ~ames early and got
110 hits and was !'l!I! down." he says.
The 29-year-nld Ne w Jersey native
averagt'd nnly 121 at bats per yt>a r in a
seven yt'ar lour with the Dodgers.
Last year. however, despite only 1.10 at
ba!s he had 17 rbi and five game winnin g
blows
And that's not had ronsidering nnly
twice in seven yea rs has he played in
more than five games in a row.
As a comparison Sandy Alomar (with
2!5 trips lo the plate) leads the Angels
wi !h 2(1 rbi.
"It just kills the timing. The toughest
parl is lo keep in shape. You have to
work much harder in warmups."
ll is brilliant defensive ability could
pi·ove a handicap for him, however,
"M aybe they r Angels) consider it a form
of insu rance," he says when pon dering a
possible trade.
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Purse Finder
New Threat
To Canonero
Nl-:W YOfl.K !API -Back in 1%8
StaAedonr JoMny wnn his first rac e
about a month before he won the Beln1ont
Stakes. S11turda y, Purse Finder will try
for 11 ~imilar achievement at the loss of
!he Triple t:rown for Canonero II.
"He is gelling better every day,"
trainer Jimmy Conway s<11d Wednesday
o( Pur.~e Finder, who won the first race
of his R·race ct1rl'cr May 12, jusl t.hrce
dey.s before Cannnero II :id<led · the
Preakness vic tory In his win 1n the Kcn-
turky f)crby
The rat·e lhal shol Purse Finder. o~·ned
by Anthony Imbe si, into the Br.Jn1onl wa11
last Friday's Petrr Pan Purse in which
hr f'amP fro1n off the pace to smash Mrs.
Taylor Hardin's Solo f\1io. another Bel·
monl· candidate, by nine ll'ngths 11l th e
end of 1 ~.,,. mile
Blinkers have helped turn the MaribcatJ
colt into a winner, and although he n1ight
not have the racing experience of so nic of
his Belmont rivals, Conway is optimistic
about his chances in the $125.000.added
%i mile classic.
Trai ner Juan Arias and jockey Gustavo
AvUa both expressed ~ a ti s f a c I Io n
Wednesday after Canonero II worked :\ii
mile on the Belmont niain track in I :04.
Although this is generally considered a
11\ow move, ii was fas ter than Canonero
11 '.!r final work out al the same distance ·
for the Derby and !he Preakness.
Besides Purse Finder and Solo Mio,
C11noneref !l's other likely oppo nents in
his bid to become racing·~ ninth Triple
Crown winner and first si nce Ci tation ln
1948 are the Johnny Campo-trai ned pair
of Neil Hellma n's Good-Behaving and
Frank J . Caldwell's J im French, Mr . and
Mrs. Harry Lun~r·s Salem. William A.
Levitt 's Bold Reason, ~1rs. Ethyl 'fJ.
.la~bs' Epic Joumey and Tartan SU1rble 's
Hlghbinder.
PARIS IAP I -Unseeded Fr:ank
Froehling, n1aklng a comeback after 1
rive-year layoff. upse! Arthur Ashe in a
f~ve-sct thriller Wednesday in the quarter
finals of the $100,000 French Open tennis
cha mpionships. 'rhe 29-year-old F'roehling fron1 Fort
Lauderdale, FIR., st:ived orr match point
In th e . fifth sel when he trailed et ~.
before Winning &-4. 4-6, 6-3, 3-0, U . .
·Froch\ing'!il victory once a g 11 1 n
thwarted Ashe ln his hid to win this
tourney for the first time. He had been
seeded No. 2.
him to lose hi! concentration. "It'!
definitely against the rules and it is in-
excusable fo r the umpire not to do
something about it," Froehling said. He
added, however, that he didn't th\nk Ashe
wAs trying to put something over. "He
just couldn't see.'' 1'111 Tired of Being Bad Guy-Hill
'neln interrupted lhC match with
F'rochling leading 2-1 in sets. When they
came hack after a 30·minute bre.ak, Ashe
won the. fourth set , setting the stage (Gr
one of the most exciting duels ever seen
on Ule red clay center cn11rt At Roland
Ga.eras Stadiun1 TM crowd of 3,000 !ilood
a~ applauded wildly at the finish.
;l.t ont point during the ~burlh_ set Ashe
went tn lhc sidclincg lO ~·1pe. his glasses
wtlh a 1nwel And FTochling protested .
Frochling said the Tnterruptlim caused
Froehling, who gained the finals of the
U.S, ch8ft'lpM:lnsh ips In 1963, started his
comeback last July.
''Last summer I couldn't even get in
some toumamenl.3," he said. "I had to
qunlify and in some I couldn't qualify ."
He c11me bac~ to big time tournaments to
build his reputation fo r his pro jol\,at hi$
Fort Lauderdale club.
After the lo"@: match N o. 6 seed SUln
Smilh and .llie Nastase of Romania
started the ir quarU!r·final . Nii$last won
the first two sel.1 &-I, &-3 before darknes!I
suspended play until Thursday. The win-
ner will meet F'roehling in the scmHin11Js.
In another qu arter-fin al that had been
Interrupted by darkne~!I T11e~11y, 7..eljk.o
Franulo·vic of Yugoslavi a defeated Pierre
Barthes of F'rRnce f.4, 4-6, 4·6, f.2, 1-4.
ATLANTA (AP) -It was • subdued
Dave Hill burdened with a one-year prt>-
batlon and facing an uncertain playing
career, who set out today In the fir .st
round of the $125,000 Atlanta golf classic.
"I'm tired of )>e!ng the bad guy in the
black hat," qu1Jjped the volatile Hltl.
"This week l 'm wearing • wh ite hat.
Rode up ori a white charger'llnd I've got
him parked right outlide."
The 34-year"ld Hi ll was slapped wilh
the proballon for "conduct unbecoming a
professional golfer" In his second round
of the Colanlsl N11tlonal Invitation
Tournament In F'ort Worth, Te.x ., two
weeks ago.
Hill, playing poorly that day, threw a
ball out or • sand trap on the 18th hole
1nd pur~ly •lined an lncorre<:t
tc0reeard. He was disquillfied on lhc
spol 11nd later fined $500.
Hlll. the storm center of several ma jor
conlro\lerslu In recent years'." paid the
rine and followed up wtth a $1 million
damage suit against"' the Tournament
Players Div ision and the Professional
Golfers Association. The suit. the rirst of
iL~ kind aga inst lh ll two golf group!!, is
pending in fpder11I district court In
J\.fem~hls. TeM.
The suit, Amo nit other th ings. ch11fjted
the PGA and the TPD with violation of
Hill's civil rights, violation of his rig ht ()f
free speech and vlol11 Uon of the Sherman
Anti-Trust Act.
The suspension was handed down by
the Polley Board ol the Tournament
Players .Division and d0ta not prohibit
Hill frOm playing,
But, "In the nent or further Infraction
of Toumamcnt Rules and Rtgulalion!I,
durlnR the probatlon11ry period, Mr. Hill
wlll be irubject to stlspensiorr from TPO
rompelition and termination of TPD
membership.'' a prtpared stal«:ment
1!!5Ucd by TPD commi.s!lioner Joe. Dey
said .
•
'
That would prohibit Hill from p!Rylng.
It's happened before. "three or four
timr.11, I forget which," Hill said. "But
this i.s the first time I've ever been on
probRlkm. I wonder who I have to report
to."
Hill said his playing future is uncertain
-but not because of his troubles with
golr!I officialdom.
• "I'm playlng bad 11nd I'm havi ng !'.Oml
tmuble with my h11ck." he s11ld. "I'm
going to play the Uniled State., Opeh" In
Ardmore. Pa .. June 17-20 "and then, we.II.
we'll jui;t stt. I'll sit down and think
11t)out il."
I
I
" '
I
(
. . . . . ...... .. ~ •
l
'
•
, •
Je2 DAllV PILCI ~
Mesa End Returnees In Friday Prellms Semis Next '~
"'
Rated High
By Bosses
Spice State
Spikefest
County Spikers In Charity
LOS ANGELES_:_ Much like
a political convention or .a gel-
1.osether or one of those
rraternal organizations, 13 top-
flight returnees froin as far
north as Santa Rosa and as
far sou lh as San Diego will on-
ce again show !heir w;ires in
the stille prep Lreck 11nd
held chan1 pionshipr; schf'rluled
for Friday and S11turlluy ar-
ternoons at UCLA .
Face Tough Go Net Action
Kalhy Nethery and Georg•
Yardley have reached the
semifinals of the annual Ad op-
lion Guild le n n is cham·
plonships in defending U,e title
they won a year ago 1n mi1ed
douhlt's ('(lmpetilion
By llO"'Altl) I.. llA1'DY
Ot Ille Dt llY l"lleo ~!tit
\\'hen a sidehnc wag t1loved
into an 1nterv1ew wilh Jon
March111rlatti. thrCe-s1xirt s1ar
at Costa ).lesa I li~l1. lie
lacetiousl~' ask<'d· ··i\1hat kiud
or dt•udon1nt fin vou usc-"""
.Jun 11 :.1s 1111! 1111prt·s~cd by
1he qurs11un <!lilt 1gniirt•it !lie
bid to lw' noticed unlil 1! i,1as
• <tsked sr1•1•ral inure 11rnPs
lie smiled polite]~· :it his :1n-
tagon1~1, then du1·ked 1ntu a
huddle and mo ved op to the
line or scnmnlH,l!e 1fJ pu! <i
block on an Q pp o s 1 n g
lineback+'r "'llh authOnl ~
\01 ont to br easily rl is1urb-
t'd over 1n"1gn1f1c11nt 1h1n11s.
r-.tarct11orla1t1 1<> Io o k 1 n g
lor"·Eird lo tu;; senior season
a ~ a ~lu ~l<tng a1hlcti·
In f!JOlb;1ll hf' is a li,!(h1 end
()ll offense and a rnonster n10:n
nn defense
··1'rn looking f11r1,1•::1rd lo
playing defense this yeilr.
Bring a 1nonsler rnan 1~
son1ething 11e11· lo 111e <1nd I
likr TIC\\' things.
··01 eourse, if lhev Lhrow lo
n1e on offen se. I will like that
part of the game as v.·tll," he
adds ho~fully .
Such plans may bf' in the
offing for the 6-fool. l!lO-
pounder under new he.id l"OllCh
J ohn S1vcazy
Line coach Doug Bro1,1·n con-
curs in the appraisal of ~1archior lalti"s gridiron abili·
ly.
"He can catch the ball. is a
good athlete and has good
speed. I v.·ould say he·s one of
!he best in the counly al this
position. '
·•[f he isn ·r pl11gued b.v in-
juries he could be one of the
n1ost outstanding ends 10
Orange County lh is sca~n.
''He"s also a leader and hr
\vill be playing his third year
of football for us.··
'l'he 13 individual retuming
spike stets who pl11ced in last
year's state finals al Berkelt y
will be joined by four schooli1
u·hich scored relay points in
1970.
Of the baker's dozen back
for another try. only fi,1•0 are
juniors and they're both pen·
t·lled in for 4.W activity.
Eleventh aradt'r Joe DPOorii ot Santa Rosa wa s fifth in the
sl ate at 48.7 last year {Ind ht's
fresh fl'om a non-pressured
48.0 victory in the North Coast
sectinn finals.
He'll be joined in the
quarter mile derb~· by another
junior -Wesl Bakersfield ·.,
Larry Boaen -in addition lo
:inother returnt'e, !lenior Tony
Krz_vzosiak of Garden Grove.
Boaen was second a t
Herkeley h1si spring with his
48.2 in back of current
Unil'er11ity of C a I i r or n i a
lreshman star Rick Bro~·o
u•hile Southern section champ
·rony K was also credited v.·ith
a 411 .2 in his third place state
fini~h .
J a1·rett a Vital Cog
111 SC's Grid Hopes
El Segundo, Chuck Bommarito of
Crestmoor (Sl!ln Bruno) is the.
lone '70 placer "'ho 's back in
the sprints and ht'0!1 enter~ in Saxons Win both the 100 and 220 in
Friday's prellminarits.
Bommuito took ~Pcond in CI F Crow11s lhe rurlong at 21.1 and f\flh in
Bl CHA IG SllEFF
0! 1~t 0•11Y ~iltT $!t i!
S:1 11 Cleznerrte High football
coach Tom Eads is obviously
Jrnpressed with Clark Jarrell,
his ace_ running 'back.
year tor tile ·rrltons, who lhe century al J0.0 last .JunP
poste<J·a f.-4 ,.,cord -and the El Segundo High"s basebel! and his t'asy 9,11. 21.7 doubl,.
san1e is planned for Jarrett in v:ln in the recent Central ,71 . te<1m got sweet revenge .Coast finale puts him amon~
\Vednesday nij.hl in the Clf' the elite or lhls year's sprint And he doein't fav(lr the of· AAA finals al A n ah e i m crop. rense, as one might think. s d. ta 1um . The on!v r~lurning defen·
··1 really like lO so bolh The Eagles r~3-2) and ding titliSt is Clevelend's
Bv Pllll~ ROSS
01 1fte DtJIV ~lie! 11111
1..0S ANGELES -It's a
!ikt'ly possl bility tha1 Oran~e
Cdl1ntv athletes entered in ~~ri
day and Sa1ur1\ay '$ slate hi~h
school tr;:ick and field chan1·
pionships at UC'LA will hH\"1'
plen1y to hay about tlie l1na1
outcome.
But hloi1\ or them are in
tough for Friday's prelirns.
Sii:teen pre1nier co u o t y
!lpikers and a lone relay 1ea1n
\\·Ill roinpnst !he co~nty's
delegation al the UCLA ex·
lr11vu11anza.
Friday's action ~els under
""av with thf' field t'Vt'nl~ at :!
p.rTI. 1,1•hi!e tht> 44-0 relay i:-o the
initial ru1u1ing i>vf'n! al :i · Ul
Tony Krz~·1.osiak Hon~ jun1p
and 440) of Gardeu Gro1•e,
Ne1,1'port Jlarhor's lo.l a r k
Sttven~ (shot put and diseusl
and S.av;:inna·s l\1ike c;r:i~ila
(440 and 440 relay leg) are the
onl.v multiple entrit''\ \l'ho'll be
carrying count,v colors.
Tony f\ (47 7) .;ind firasha
(48 .7) are pt'nl'iled in for
Friday's quaJ"\er milt' prt'lims
in the saint' he8 <No. 31 along
"'ilh Lemoore·s Crrg Jones
•48.1). (;arclf'na' C I a 11 d ~
Bro\vn (48.ll . Rio A tnc.11 no's
Da\"e Driigh 148.6\, · f'I C':im-
po'." John CaSSt'I ( II • II) •
Branham's Rich f; on~~ If' s
1411.81. Dominguez· Ba~'
franks 143.5 l and Ron Co or
Pinole Vallt>y.
Santa Ana junior Boh lln
rell 147 .71 i~ top !'iet'dl'd in heat
I of the 440 \\"i!h San!:i Ro~a
junior Jot> DeDora (firth in
'701 a1 48 .7 :ind IV e " t.
Bakersfi,.ld junior I. a r r \'
Boaen l~rron<l 11u:;\ sf'ason in
48.21 looming a!'i hi:; ehief
Uireats. ._
In 1he lunf.t Jl'lnp. ·ro11~· i24-
1 \ will join Lo<ira's Sieve Rax·
(t'r (23-1 I'? l in rPpre~enlin,11.
the countv ae:aln."1 tht' likes .,r
Long Rf.arh Poly's Tolly
BrO\\'O 125-21. Fresno Edison's
1970 Stalf' runnerup Rand\"
"'illiams r2:H1 .. 1 and Lorn·
p<lf'0S rh11rlif'",JA1·kq'ln 12:1-5).
Stf\'en~. 01,.an11 h1lr. is A cn-
Perctll Keeling (1 ;52.6), El
Ce rrito's Dale Scoll I 1;51.9)
and Gilrov's Oscar ~torales
( 1 ·54.01 in ·heat one of tht half.
Huntington Beach high
hurdler Garth \Vise i 14 3 wind·
;11ded life0lin1r brst \ has the
slo~'t'!'I qual1tyit1)? t1111e llt7)
111 his heflt ~·hile one of tht top
t:ontenders Bakersfield's
f\.1cKinlry Mo.sit')' ( !:1.9) -is
seccicd fir.st in !hr samt race .
l.o:ira''I Jin1 Beyers <21 .91
has been placed 111 1ht' sf'cond
220 heat \\here he'!! confront
~11ch !l 1virrie!I as LA
ll11n111!-0n·~ OavLd T Ii om a s
121 ~I. F.hjah Turner 121.6f or
San llif'go :in~ El Cerrito·s
Sr1rn Burns t:.!1 ,51.
Jtent three of 1ht> IRO lu\v
hurdles find~ Anah£1in1"s Bob
J\.fcQueen (19 .1) batllinf!
Campbell ~ooho1nore ScoH
Skilltna n 118.9), Bill Cheadle
119.01 of Dos Pueblos ;ind
llawthornr's Scott Laidlaw
(windy 19.0l.
<';arden {;rove junior Mark
Schilling 14 : 13 ,2l is pitted in
lhe mite's !'it'Cond heat a,l!ainsl
Dn \'e Harper (4:12.4) of San
nie~o rtairen1onl and Av.,alt's
Da\'e Chamness !~: l ~.21, the
third and fourth p tac e
finishers in the state last
sprin~
In the \l\"O mile, Santa Ana
junior Marc Genel r9 :00.8) is
JUSI one of at lea~! 10 runners
"·ho are very capable of drop-
ping under 9·00.
Genet'!! competition Is hot
\and heavy with Upland junior
(;ordon Innes 19:00 1. Lompoc
: h Tt>rr)' Willi ams 19:01.21,
St. John IJosco Junior Toin
Kop 'S 19 .02 .4) a11d D;ilf'
Fl<'el or Clairtmo!1t tSan
l.>icgol \vning the rcs1 of thf'
1a.~test ~atifying timr~.
Va!enci 's Ron 1\1!'.IUCr" ( \:)-
21. Oran.:e County's rirs!-t'vf'r
15-foot prep ~e vAulter , will
b<' vying wi C a n1 d t' n 's
Roger !\1arti ( !5-61 an d
Mike \Yhite (15.,.2) of DUm·
lng11e;r. 1n an 'iittemp! I<>
surpe~s Paul \Vilsoo·s f\Var-
ren\ 1:i-6 1:! t 1965! mttt rPcord .
Oranse Coast College ~tar~
Robbie Cunnln.,;h am and Mikt
Caro have gaintd the same
piMacJe in men"s d01Jbles
competition.
Nethery and Yardl'y will
face Pat !o.1cCabe and Dick
l\lettter Saturday al 3 o'clock
at the ,Palis41Jes Tennis Club
in Santa Ana in a semifins1
round match 1vhile Li :i:
St hw11rt1 ;ind Bob 0U£'l'iler will
racf' Jov Emersnn ;:ind Jae-
out's (;rigry at Newport Beach
Tennis Club at 12 o'lcock in
the other semifinal.
0'EN ClAS'
M1••d aoul>I•• -NtTnMv t od
V3rdl•V "'· McC1be •nd Mf!l••r C ~
l •OOl: ~<hwtr!r or>a Ov••lt r vs.
Emor•on •nd Grlorv 0-18 ·111
Men'• aoubl•• -C"~nln•h1m •~d
'""' "'· Poac0<~ fn<I Vu<llec~ IP·l1l1 R;ner ana ll•nnf• YI. Mct1b• t n<I
J•n.,.n (P·ll. A CU.SI
Ml•fli dOllbl•• -lhcm1s '"' ~.1.
l•rocn "'· 11r v1nl end llrvant 1 '·'•~!1
l(;..,e,.11 ""' l u•11b<Jll "'· Str1lton ond
Slt1!1on t88C·JJ.
M•n" <I011ble1 -Scl'oul" •""' Ei'l1'tr¥
"'· Firmer •""' Jen••fl IP·IO lei: S1n1
and Otnlf l "'· 8vt:~t• •n<I "rm$1t•n•
11118 1;111)
W1>Mrn"• do<Jblr• -Nront rY '"'
s•1lll!• "'· Mete~ •n• o·connell INl -1D ,)(IJ; M•vu t nd S1l1s YI. E:lllO" t nd
KIMl>"I (t'.,l.
I ClAll
1.1l••a aoubln -Joni!' •nd •r·
rl!donao "" Mr,11 1na ~lh 4P-1:J01J
Kell"' 1nd S1u le "'· "ll<lttoon ond L•vllt tNB·l!l. Men'• OO<Jbln -l •ewntll •nd
On.otnMV YI. Lindbo•• tMI M<Ollwt ll
!"·TO): W•nnfl ona 5"""""' Y&. florfnll~e t nd LOPU IP·tn.
'Women'• <1011bl.. -/\I •••" ind
M'IOro "'· 8•vt n! "'" Florot•e (l"-1)1
Prit t •n<! l~omPlOn ••· l(,•m1f t n<ll
Jon" (N!l•fl.
C (lAlS
r)l••d on,1b••> Roa...,tn •na w ...
v~ ~••"" •n<! Do••• IP-J>; Moor• i n' H•"~ ., p,,,,,, •<'<i Pt••"' (P.l:.ill/.
,...on'• dOLJbl•• l t t •nd lvlO VI.
Voi.r.11n• ond W•1! IP-111. 5,,,.,.,,
•n<l 5o•t> •I !lt•dl•• """ 1-i•V (P·~I. Wom">'' do.,blf> llur<• •n~ ll~rr -
~' l•~•Oll ""~ Pom"1•11 IP 10.)~11
p ,•m 1nd Vor>c• '"-E<1mund)On ,..,.
~~~nde,; (P·IO l~I
P -Pall10<1" \fnni\ (\yfl
N8 -Newl'Clr1 B••c~ l ennll (IUb
l:IBC -8•1D<oo ll1v ClvD
SUNDit.Y l!Mf JC"EOUL E
l~inlll fl P11lu d•1 'TC !
~ ~ ,., Wcm•n"o II •1'0 h'tn' C
IO<IO t '"f , -V\1>Mrn'1 "' M"H L
WoMtn"I l!.
1l ftCO!\ -""'"'" ..... Ml• .... c. f·JO o,m -"l'•n"• Cl•tn """°"I.
J pm -f.'h!'d Oo•n. M"'" lo
In addition lo the gridiron
sport. Jon also is a forward in
basketball and a high jumµ,
11nd lo ng Jump sµeC'iali.~t in
track and f1rld c·ornpe11t1on
He hes been apprnachrd by
the l"ni\·ers1ty of K;:in .. as f'0n·
("Prning a !rack St"t;loh1rsh1p
but has no imn1ediaie pl:ins
for the future .
'"He·s the kind of kid ~-ou
hope your own son turn!l out to
hl', t1ke. ·· says £ads nf th('
'frit()n speedsler.
\l:JY~." says ,Jarrell. a cor· beaten in the finals a )ear <1e.o f RC'~eda ! slick rn1ltr Brent
lll'rhack 1111 dC'll·nst . "I really by LA:11Ylpoc, bouncf'd back Tubh. v.ho~r 4·12 .9 \\"Inning
d1dri"t expe<:t tu play defense \\'ednesday night 10 hand lhe mark of 1970 \\·ill more then
Santa Barb;1rt1 (;ount v rluli :i likely be lo11·rrf'd. f;i\"orHf' in !he .~hotp11! alnn~ ~-----------------------~ 11·11h Nt'\\"porl \e;:imn1.11te TPrrv
Albril1on. and the fnnner 1~
al~o \"yin!!, for di~cus honors in l
tr_vinJ! 10 p11<;h oul his 170-41:
stason:;il hf'"\. • ··A 101 depenct~ on \\·h:11
~ sport I have a good year in
this coming school tei-111."' he
~a.vs.
Ile 1~n ·l sure }lbn11t v.·hal ut·-
1:u11ation he \\'ould like lo
pu rsue aflcr college gradua-
tion. either
If hi.~ sun1cwllal I a 1 l' n I
abilities suddenly spew torlh
to ni<1kr hiin a 11\•ing n1onstcr
on the foo1bnll firld, ii isn't
~yond lht> re11lm or ta~
lionalizat1on to l'Onsider a prf!I
\"'are<'r.
But lh1s 1s only a drcan1 in
tlu.· mind of yuung Jon
:'11arch1orlatt1 at lht presen1
t1mt>.
H1ghl OCI\\" h1!'i concenlralinn
ts on spring fontball drills at
Costa i\.tesa lllJ!h
\\"ha1 I~ hi~ \"\Cll IJf th1• lt':ttll
;1, a 11·holt• fnr !hr tnn11n~
:-f':t~1>n alter r1 111r'e 1h:t11 1110
1q•P ks of ~pr1n,i.: drill~··
,Jarrf'll I" onl.\" one of 1hrt•f'
cxpt:rit•nef'd pla1·rr:; rrlurnin~
i the ofht·r 111 o arr l1nc111rr1
Rill i\l:1t!de11 and J oh n
llon1ero1 !or the Tr1\011:< in '71
and on his shoulder~ rest a
gre;il dP:.d of lhr San
t'lt•nlt'.ll!C 1111cns1l'c a!lat'k.
The 1:1~pounr!e 1 d Id n 't
r(·ally cf1tne. in\\> hi~ own. or-
r,,nsi1·c·l.r. until mid 11· a v
lhrouli(h last sE-ason and lhus
\\'a!'i onl.\' atrordrd A I l •
Crrstvil'\1' !.ei=igue honorable
n1cnlton
But 1971 (•ould bt' an esciling
~·ear lor Jarrett and Triton
grid fan !'.
·•\\'t'rc looking lnr <1 big
~l'ar from hun." s a~~
backfield roach ~1 a rs h a I I
Atla1r '"\Vt gel a lot o[
1n1h·a~c out 111 hirn llf'"~ J11~1
:: lough. h•ui;:h kut and he"s got
;111 t'\:t·rllrnt :it!11u1\f',··
11·11h <1 11 the gu_\S Ill' had l'nni-5-2 setback hl'fnre aJ1 In alll•n1p1ing not 1 o
ing liack la'\ season. bul I ""'aS esumalt'd crowd of J,SOO. discourage Tubb 1n anv 1\"CI\'.
l t"ry l1:1ppy ll"hcn I found oul In the con1parilon featurP. last year's third plact' i1ntsher
;ihout 11 '' North Tor(ance's Sa:a:ons eAp· 'l)Hve Cham nes~ I A v.· a I ! .
' .1:1rrell. 11ho ha~ St'Cn 1nuch tured the AAAA title with a !l~I r-.\nun\11\n Vit>v.·l .11nd lourtl•
of the world due to lhe fa~ that viclory over t:halrt>y. North ph~cer Dttve Harprr of Cl aire·
'l'orrance had previously edRc<1 mont fS an Diego I are also
his lt1!her is 11 i\.larine colonel. b k f 1\1a!er Dei, 4-3 in eight innings, ilC or niore.
h:is li1·ed in San Cle1nente for In the playoff opener. 'J'ht' third party in last
lhe 1n1 sl 11 ~ years. £1 Seguil<lo's triutnph snaP:" _vt'ar's rip-roarinR ~"·o mile
After 1no1 ing t.o the area ped a 17-game \\'inning stre;1k final. Ed . .M endonza of Helix
r 00 V. · · I 11 · ll" the d0 f0 odio• Cl"' chain-. High {n E1"°Cai·on. ran 9·01 1n. r 1 1rg1111a. . arre 1n1-.t ~ .. ~ ,.
nH.'tlialcly lrierl <i Ul for !he jllons. And ii ....... ·as only thl' '70 ~nd he ·s the lone eight-lap
Braves' second loss in !heir returnee.
·rnton Bef' learn. ht'lping 11. to last 5:> gAmes. Runnerup in the 180 \ow~
the _ Crestview loop ch:tn1-Seo!\ fo.1ct:regor and Klrk (1 9.lwl and third in the 12{)
p1nnsh1p in "69, Allison. El Segundo's two bl{' high hurdlts t 1:'1,91 1n '70.
Jarrl'lt y,1JI represent San guns all season. supplied th e Bak ersfirld'~ bespt>c-1:iclerl
Cleinenl(' High flt Boys' St.ate firework.~ in lhe fih'a.lf'.• ~lcK inlt'y :i.1o~ley is tbe only
r-.te(.:regor. a first tea,m All-1·rleran of lhe st::ite rnret in 1n Sacran1en10 in a fl'\\" v.·eeks. Clf' pick as a sophomore lasl the .<1tick e\'tnls and he "!! be
And ht· 1,1•ants to continue season, went lhe di~tance 011 lou,lfh tCJ be at this tilne around.
playing football after gradua· the mound for the Eal{les. A Field e\"cnt returnees may
'lion from high school. \efthandef. he set the Brave!l he round onl~· in Jhe high jump
.. I'd like to contJnut' playing dov.·n on just five hits, strikin g and Joni{ jurnp.
fiUt si:< 11nd walkinlt just one. Santa Ft>"s Handv FtJlkerson hul 1ny size minhL hindt r that. -& !'\1eanwhile. Allison supplied t6·10l anrl f\.1ark Vit'ra (~·1) of
Junior cnllrge is prob11bly the the s1ick\\·ork. ~LaSalle in ron<'ord 11"P.t11 2-3
lwst bl'1 ·· His fourth-innini;t tv.·u bagl{er la.~l sea ... on brhind a 7-01,
But r1i,:ht 11011·, 1he 1crsatile "!IS with(lu\ a doubt the -hig-record effort bv gr:idualed
1'n!un 1~ oulv thinking abn11t gr-;! hit of the 11arne .!P• r~ Culp nf oCen11s1c.i_r Alld
S1even~ 16:)-111 and Albrit!on j
164-41 are f:ir aht'/ld or !hP rr~t
11r the shol field with Cre~or~
Randy rrn.~~ Hil -11 ~•1 !hrir
mo!'I !'erln\1~ cnntendl'r for top
pl;:icement .
fn the (ii~r11". :-;Jp\·f'n~na <inr!
Or11nor junil)r Cndv \l nrr.~h
(164-111 arr 1hr onlr C<?_Unty
entrants. 4 j
T'nf' only olhrr rvenl f<'alur-
inJ;? more than one cn11nty N1m· 1
petilor i~ !he AA(!. where
('nron.<1 df'l ~la .. ·~ Nick Rf"l..,e I
tl ·St8l anrl Rvrn:t Park ·~
Tom t\ovaeJ('h r1 .54.9\ wd l con1~te ror fin:ll!I bf>r!h$: I
RCJse 1s s!al'ked in heat three
and \\"ill Mve 10 1.:nock orf
such standnuls a~ SaratoJ!a·~
r-.tike Tvreelt tl·52.ZJ and tht'
Otl Va-llt' 1Concordl duo of
R(lh Srr 11 :53 7l and G<'orge
Juoihard 11.54.1\ 1f he'!l 101
r11rn ()ne or the threi? finals
berth~ from hi~ hr;1t.
.. ,.,,,,~
fl{}!/} 1/219
\Vt• it• :111 111g1~1t11·r th 1:-
~1.t1· If unl' .:u~ n1alo.t.'S .1
1111.~r.1!..l'. 11c all ~u llt·r 1t ,
ruotf' or :i 1e:un etf11rt nnd r
lhlnk lh 1~ will be 11npor1<1nl
11 hen the f 001 h11 II sc;1.~nn rQlls
Hround . '
And Ada ir ft•els th:it ont' of
.l;irrt>ll ~ lug~l':-.1 attnbutrl' 1,;
ht.~ n1en!11I :ihih!1 ··rtie ht·sl !tun~ lw dut"l' 1.~ .!hink a lu1"
:-.,~·s :\dn1r, "Hr'.<> 11 natur:1I
'' 11h a lol of iosllnct. lle"!i no~
rt';.il fa.~1. hu1 he·~ \'ery qui ck
;;11d runs to the o!)\·n spot "
une thing .:_ finding ~ome !I came with the b11g~ 1011tl· they rP both bacK. ai seniors.
darlilithl and galloping for a t-d and sent F:I SegvndCJ ~head',,-r----------------=-------.-,;-~;..----.-·-----------------------~
IOUl'lld(}Wn . tor ~ood . 3-2. ,
And that might becoine a All five J.ompnc hi1s came in
hflb ll C'ome Stpte1nbf"r. the £irst three innings. J<trrctt wenl both way~ last
~-~~----------·_c___-:;;.;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;;;;:.;;;;;
Baseball Standings
1'.'ATIO."\AI. LE.AGUE
Ea~I Oi\"ISiun
II' I.
SI Louis 32 " P1IL'lburgh " " Ne~· York 29 " rhicaso 2:1 21
!\1ontreA1 " 25
Philadelph1:i 17 .11
""t'SI l)h•lsh•n
S;in Franc1s<:Q :17 16
f>odJer~ 27 :z:i
Jlouaton 21i 25
Atlanta 23 ~
Cincinnal i :!Ii :11
San Diego 111 35
WHln••'l~'I Jl ttUll•
N~w V<>•k ~-Snn F1•~t••C~ I
"111ntt l. ,..ou1t11n I
F<!!•llurfll 10. ~! I"'"' 1 C•k~llO t·•, C1n<0nn•ll I 1
~on Olt90 4. PMlllfl~•ch•~ C
09Cl••n 1, MOn••••' 1
'THt J'I 0•""'
Prt.
jj•J-. _,
.li2f'I
,!iii
""' .431
:l54
,li91l
;i 19
.SHI
.44 2
,392
J14
t:B
" 1
RI~
91'
1:1 ' l
9' l
IO
13'~
" :!O
Ho\1110!\ jFer>'ll !-II/ •f a.11111i. INt.PI •·J Ot
....... 0 ].j), "''"'
i\1\l~HICAN l.EAGUE
Halthnore
Roston
Detroit
!\'e\\' York
t"lt>veland
\\'::ishington
Oakland
t\an~a~ C'ity
~1innesoia
An1ttls
l\!Jh\'(Hlket'
< ·111c:igo
E1sl Dlvlsl(ln w I.
:.UI l!I
29 20
,., 23
22 21
21 27
19 JO
\\"e~I Divl~lnn
" 18
"' " '..!Ii 25
" 28
" " " 27
W""n•••••'• llHw!I•
'loW YM~ ' llOO!M I
r rt.
.596
.592
.540
_449
.4.'l!I
.388
•S<
.522
.510
.462
.4~5
.<00
•nt•I•• l w.,n, .. o!on l , ' '"""'''' '"'" DOl•o" 5 M1nnf"°I~ •
Cl••~l•"ll •, Mllw~vk..., ,
ll•!tl"'M~ J, C~k•ltO 1. n lnfllnt t
Onl• '""'•" ''hN~I ....
T .. , •• , 0•"""
GB
2'1
7
711
ID
7
111
II
II
12 ~j
t~ltelJO (H•""• • 11 " (111~•nn1!1 •No!on ,3 •1,
"'gt I '' ~D\111 \To<"l l 1f M Pill~b11r1ll !JllllPK:f"
•JI, '"~'"
S...tcn !Cul~ j-41 •! Nt"' Yft~ 1S1c1111,...•r~
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l"r5'1r'1 G•m••
(hlt"g ., "111n11, .,1,ht
~I I""" •I Cll>c:l"floll. "111'11 Ke'"'°"' 11 p,11,eur1111. ~1tnt Mo<>"~•I 1• $en O!-. "''"' riew Vo•-11 ON-a. "'-"'
Onl• oorn~ •tn~<lul,..1.
••lf ••'• Gl"'t l
A ... t l• .r 80ltOll, nlt M
0 .... !UIO ol \lloon1nt!O'I. fllOM
0::-< (I" •\ N•"' v...-. . .,,.,,,
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l'•U1r>0•~ •• ~lh••v•-nl11M
(l•v~lf"ll al Ml!IM .. '•· ft o11n1
UTH ANNIVERSARY-SALE-,-,-BIGGEST ' BEST YET I I ' ,.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--i
l>n"~"'""I• >1 J•n ~·•~<•'K•, "I•'"
DEAN LEWIS
1966 HARIOR ILVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303
Modern & Complete Ser.,ic• & Pe rt' D•pt. -540·9461
Modern Body Shop for All Cits
Oran~c <:oun 1y ·~ Lar_i::e'lt and t.to~t ~1odern ·ro,vn la 1uid \'olvo Denier
O'fllSl4S O!LIYllT SPICfALISTI
DEAN LEWIS
!T!OIV!Olt(AI
ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS
COROLLA 1971
srrctAL $1777
~ 511 THI ALL NIW
TOTOTA CILICA '"· cr1.
IMMIOIATI OILIYllT
~
VOLVO
1971 DEMO
$2998
t 41 1•d•~. rtd ie, h11•i•r, eulernt lit
11 t ftl.
~
UllD CAl SPICIAL I
$1195
lt6' llNAULT llO
ll~dle, llt-'''" • 1offd Nl!P !'l'l(fl(ICI
Baseball Shoes
Little Leaiue Shoes
.. 9.95 to 21.95
5.45 & 8.95
Gloves • • ~95 to §2.95
Caps -Bats
Balls -Sox
Undershirts
Sanitary Hose
Masks -
Chest Protectors
Gym Shorts -Track Shorts
bym Shirts -Swim Trunks
Speedo Swim Shorts & Suits
Champion Handball Gloves
Paddleball Rackets
Paddle Tennis Paddles
Ping Poni Sets -Paddles -Nets
Frisbees -Sli~ Shots -
Slea~ing Bay~ -Fins -Ma~~s
Snorkles
Open 9 to 6 Closed Sundoys
Tennis Rackets
Wilson -bancrolt
· ~av1s -Dunlop
wdson T20h0
-~ Steel Racket 32.95
Strung Nylon
Tennis Shoes
Shorts -Sox
•
Dresses -Shirts -Hats -.!I-JI
Racket Stringing
Pennsylvania Xtra Duty Tennis Balls Doz. 7.50
Raleigh & Astra Bikes
10 Spead Bikes 69.95 -84.95
99.95 & 125.00
3 Speed Bikes' 54.95 & up
Tires -Tubes -Accessories
Basketballs -Volley Balls
Tetherballs -Soccer Balls
Playground Balls -Handballs
538 Center-646-1919-Costa Mesa
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WHAT'S IN-
OUTDOORS?
By nA1 NJE,\1JEC
Cold waltr moved in around
!:he Coronado Islands and the
yellov.·ta il fisbing all but
!hutoff completely over the
past weekend.
Tbe gan1e yellows prtfer
"''aler above lhe OJ degree
mark and had. up until la st
Friday enjoyed a 63 degree
reading . As the cold fronts
pushed across lhe Southland.
they broughl with then1 cool
temperatures. If the skies stay
<·lear and lhe air v.·arms up,
then the outlook for this com-
ing weekend is good,
'The weather did not seem to
affect the lYl'O off-shore island s
close to the harbor area. Both
San Clemente and Catalina
islands produced sorne nice
catches of ytl!O\\'latl. bass,
barracuda and wh ite sea bass.
The conditions al the islands
are excellent -In fact Joc:i1
skippers are very optimistic
about a good run of yellows,
whitt sea bass and log bar-
racuda this season.
The game Fish are hitting
best on live squid, but anglers
art also rilling their sacks
with mixed catches using
ancbovies. jigs and feathers.
'The calico bass bite at the
islands is in full swing and bull
bass lo seven pounds are com-
mon among catche:; made by
all boats.
The yellowtail are in the
"'aler, but the mossbacks are
up lo their aid tricks or
playing hard to hook even
lbough lhty are pushing bail
on the surf;icc JUSL flUt of
casting range.
The First ycllov..•s of th e
Season were,akco from under
kelp patties off the v.·est end of
·the island on ,\1onday and
From all indications they
should ~ around for quite
some tin1e .
Weekd ays are producing
betttr fishing coodit1ons, as
the wttkend CfOYl'dS are
churnlng up the bay prttty
bad and trolling and still
fishing in boats is very dif-
J1cult.
/tlnrlit1 Bite t•ood
<..:huck \Vallers of Newport
Beach rt'ports that niarl in
fi shing is very good at Rancho
Buena \11~\a. Two partil's fron1
llif' harbor area recently
v1i.1ted the resort located soulh
of La Pai. Baja Cal ifornia_
r.1 os1 every boat ot1t is bring-
ing back s p 1 k e b i 11 s. but
\\'alters reports that many
sportfishern1en are tagging
and releasing lheir catches in-
stead of hanging them up for
pictures
The srnallcr game fish -
ye!Jo wtail , groupa and dolphin
-<ire numerous and good cat-
ches ef these fighting warm
"'ater fish arc common. The
roos!erf1sh ha ve nioved in and
live bait anglers are scoring
en big fish.
f'is/1it1g Folr
Reports froni all the tackle
stores along l-f\\.'Y. 395, from
Bishop lo Reno, indicated that
!ors of holiday v11cationers left
th e rl'Sorl areas early. Fishing
was rc1>orted as being only
f ;:11r at n1nsl of the more
popular lakes and streams.
Ga1nmo11
In Line
For Honor
brange Coast Collt ae ·s
Chns Gammon had quite a
year in 1970.
And because of It he's a can-
didate for lhe Yardley Award.
given tach year to the top
athlete ln the Harbor area.
Gan1mon. occ·s top alhletc
for the 1969-70 school year, not
onlv excelled in !!lwimrning for
cocich Jack F'ullerton"s Pira!e
squttd. but wa~ a top flight
""ater polo star as well.
Nicknamed l\1r. ,.,lactune,
the Former Costa Mesa Higl\
product churned his way to
victory in the state J C 100
butterrJy championship in '70
and also finished second 111
lhe 200 lly _
Hi s 100 fly clocking ,,f 5:! 4
was JUSt sevtn tenths ef a se-
cond off the national JC
record . He was timed in I .57 .9
in the 200.
Gamn1011 not 'only earned
All-America statu! in the twe
fly event.~. but also was ac·
corded tt:e same bonor in the
400 medley and 400 and 800
lret relays.
Also in the '70 season, Garn·
mon was first in both the 100
and 200 ,fly events in the South
Coast Conference meet and
..,.·on the Southern Cal 100 fly
and was second in tht 200.
"We built the swim team
around bim for two years."
says OCC coach Jack
Fullerton. He is a great com-
petitor. "He and Butch P ope
are mentioner.: in the same
breath as far as top but-
terfliers lhat I have coached_"
Gammon. a 5-11, 165 -
pcwnder. was developed by
Don Utter as a freshman at
Costa JIJ!tsa High.
Cycles Return
To Fairgrounds
\Vind slav.·ed fishing al
Topaz. Br idgeport, Crowley
t1nd the June Lake Loap,
although a fl'w an g I er s
man<1ged to pick up some
n1edium ~ized ra1nbo1v trou t
on Fi!ihbacks fished fr om
shore. \V orms. TNT a n d
saln1on eggs also accounted
for ca!c he s· of planted bo ws. Art"s Land ing, Davey 's Big Bear Lake was almost a Rain washed aY1·ay last
Lockl'r. San C 11" me n ! e duplica te cf the high country Friday's r~lar card bul a
Sportfishing and Seal Bearh 10 tht norlh. C<1inp grounds full field of 22 separate races
Sportflshing are al! n.inn1ng i\ere full. but anglers could are slated fol-this Friday
regular schedules. and landing not get out on th e lake and night in the s peed w a y
"perators report good catches shore fi~hcrnien only nianaged motorcycle racing competition
of surface fish for all anglers. 111 Sinn~ :i fei~ s niall troul. at the Orange County
1'he loads are light now, hut as !);is.~ :Jt'lllln at Big Uear Lake Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa.
soon as summer vacation was zero. !laci ng begins al 8 p.m.
starts. reservations will be l.ake Elsinore produced all;;------------.
necessary ror Lrips ta the few nice 1im1ls or bass averag-
outer islands. ing about 212 pounds apiece.
lb · d Wllll Lo--M•"'l••~t
GOLF TIPS
A acore. !he magic Yl"Or 'The rish are rigtrt in the trees .. , •• 11 •• ,.,, n.
that e:tcites all sail Yl'alf"r at the lov.·er end cf the lake NEWPORTER INN
fishern1en. are the topic or and arc hitting good on PAR 3 GOLF COURSE
much conversation dot\'n <1! Bu~hwackers. with ye 11 ow Sl.OO wlffri ttrils-4 w..t 4.p
the landings. .:""~i~ng:_:t~h'~""~'~l~c~o~lo~c~. ----~:::iiiiiii::iii::iii::iii::iii::iii::iii::iii::~j Old timers f~el that it"s 11-------
go ing 1o be a good year and I
even tht skrplica\ fish and 1 ~amt people are encourager! 1 by the excellent food and 1
water conditions found off the
Ct'.last currently.
It's my guess that 14'e should
bave the hr~t Albacore ...,·eigh-
ed into the angling club no
later lhan July I Lct "s hope
that the First longhn is weigh-
ed 1n soont r.
A t19lers S(•ore
Skiff fishermen and short:
anglers are F1nd1ng it hard to
btat the r1sh1ng currently
being enjoyed In the bay ;ind
1ust outside the Nev.·port je!ty I
Bass. halibut and croacker1
are the ma in targets bul ,
other varieties are also being I
caught. Tro!lers, !llill fist1er-
men using livt bait and shore I
11nglers using cut clam ~ and
musr-.els are all d<lin.Q: ~·r-11.
Boal.<; tying up to I.he buoys
irt the channels on !he in-corn-
·1ng and,out-ioing tides are f1n-1
ding the lar.ger fisb, "''h1le
shore fishermen are picking
up far better mixed catchts «if
bay fish.
UCI Lists
Summer Rec [
Activities 1 An extensive summer spnrt:ri:1
i~trucllon1I program is being ,
conducted at UC lrvil"tt during:
tht summtr months under
direction of the physical
educatk>n c!epan.menl for Qoys l
and gir\11 age 3-15.
The program "'ill inc lude ,
fi ve two-wee k stssions 11•1!h i
each snsion mttling daily, I
Monday throuRh Friday. from1
SI \o 12 al the UCI alhelticl
faci lities.
Daily instruction will be con-1
dvcterl in SYl'imming, gym-1
""-n11stlcs, folk dance, ttnni!l,
lr11ck Jnd fltld. softball,
volleyball and basket~alL . I
Each child is provided" with
ln!!urance. locker and tow~l
service end sports equipment
at "" txtra cllarge-othef lhan1
the nominal 25 cent11 per
session.
Oates of the program are:
Junf': 21 .Jul)' 2: July t-1 6:
July 19-:\0 . August 2-13 ; .and
Auqu"t 16-27.
For further inf,,nnRtion ,
contact the. rtertation •ports
• SAVINGS
!N
EVERY DEPARTMENT
DIAGNOSTIC. CENTE R
GOODYEAR TIRE CENTER
SER VICE DEPARTMENT
PARTS DEPARTMENT
BODY SHOP
RENT AL LEASING
ON EVERY NEW & US~D CAR-TRUCK
FANTASTIC
DISCOUNTS
50 GALLONS
FREE GAS
FREE
4 WEEKEND CAM,ER TRll'S PLUS
SSO CASH SPENDING MONEY
GOODYEAR BLIM, RIDE$
SO VALUABLE PRIZES IN ALL
COMI IN AND HGISTIR
NOTiflN• TO IUY ' . "O OIUG.\TION
Theodore Robins
FORD
. .
SO YEAl:S OF SE~VfCf; lO ·
OJ.ANGE COUNTY UNDll: SAM£
OWNEJ.SHI ,
2060 HARBOR BLVD.
-Coat• Mes• '42-0010
offlCf: 1t 833·!>346. ''"-------------------"
' '
\
Yikes~ Lions
·'
Victorious
LONG BEACH -!\1arlna 's
Vikings and the Westminster
Lions both got o:i en the right
foot with opening game vi<.:-
torie! \>~dnesday nliihl in the
Long Beach City Collt~e sum-
mtr basketball league .
Coach J im Stephen!' Vikings
rode an II for 15 fiel d goal
performance by guard Bruer
i\1lller ~who had 31 polot ::1
total ) and were suppc>rled by
Ron Swanson, who chipped in
with 13 !I<; they dumped
Lake\lo•ood, 72-48
The Lions of l'ooch Don
Leavey stopped Long Beach
Jordan, 58~~-
Wo11"''""" n.11
" ' '
I! ••
10 I• . " 1...•ntaH
Mel1..,,ht!mtr s .... ,,, .. rtt
. '
Tolal1
lG ! 11 ' . ' 11 11 JI
S<.,.. '-' Cluartt,.
Le Jordan 12 • I 17 -•~
Wn1mtn11e. t " 11 1• -st
,, " ,,
SPtl•• , ' ' 80lld•~ ' ' ,
Mlll1t " • " Ht "o~ ' • ,
$ ........... ' , " JI ot.11•> ' • • "dam 1 ' • ,
Cl••o-• ' • ,
lh•l~y ' • ,
To•a l1 " " " S<Or• ~. OYlrltn
Morini " " " H -1?
L1••w-" , " >-•
Area
Adv
ces
J hur!i:llY, June .3, l q? 1 DAIL 't Pll.OT R
Edison Honors Spripg Athletes
Edis<¥!, Hlgb honored itJ> """" _ Mv~~~1:.,,1
0,.-,i, <.ci-Ari l lo•low • f t~ -NN'; JO. h11.1l!1 c•Pl1ln1
0 1n MC'"'"on . ... 1prin1 MX'll1.J1 parUclpanLs with ''"'' eu11 eot11rd1 "'''' lm••o.,..d: an ' aw~ banquet Tul':Sday ~.~,,',',. 111co1 c .. <-•• •"'" tnorlt•
Va tolly -MVP : Pl\11 IO.N• <•llll RI night In the ichool caftttria_ Ju111c< v.irtuv -MYP. 5••11 ,.,., ~ .. , ..,..., 1 ..... 11wM> stave H11i. • •-•II Pr•a'>Ofl: t•P'"'"' Kirn ~tt....,toll i•lr•unlfl9
Vl rtil'I' -HI ..... ! •tillnt •v••···· Tt..C-.... '". Vl'l llY -cu n1ln· Ml\• •••URI
llOfl llutr; ,,_, ruM p.rr..i In Mon. v'"'"' -MVP! "°"' 'comnt11 ~"" "'"'f' loll w u,.t•t: nleft octr•r; foll In 11•!1 MV,: .JIOll .""' t.IPll ln. Dou& l•ln. Mi~t _A,...Utl> mn• imPf0¥MI'. W11rt1f•; ,...,., ln10l•1Uon1!. • ...
c.w-u. D••• l'owtll; ftl"' POlnl "''"; IOI'! l!lul(Oll. Ju'llt<r ~anll'I' _Mui': Jt ct 111,,.,., c.i u,,..,. 8•• -MVI': O•n G••P11m: c••l•lnl The Ntw rt l-i1rbor 'l'1rs c1,1o1n: 0111< 11rM1 1&1• -MVP: John ,.,..,.., c1p!al11: Mv•• s,..,,.,,,.u~1. ftest!·~~pll -MVP: Ed M•<¥I CMI· O"" C>lt"" c .. -MVI'• Al McCOWlll c•.ialnl
apparently re nol sati5fied by ,ii~"~";• ~·"~'~'~"~·~~·~------~'~"~-~·~'~'~w~"~"~'~'~'§"~'~'~"~"~''~'~'~'"iii;;'";"io;i";";";';'";;'~·----"'j merely r !!ling on th t i r ll
,laurols 1 LEARN TO , SWIM
Coach Pat Wit:wn'!!I Sailor AT YOUR
''""" players '"""'d the i< ORANGE COAST YMCA second .stra~t CIF AA.AA
team ecowo '"' we<"k by 642•9990
1hu1np1ng ptrennial ntmtsisj~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .... ;..~;;;,.,,,;;.,,;;.,,;;;.,,.;..~~~~~"""~~~~~~~
:-iaola Monica in the-cham-
pionship decider at UCLA.
And now the Ta:-s are back
at' it again. this tim e on a
n1ore indi+:iduat basis.
\Vednesd ay N e w po r t ad-
vanced ilS top si ngles
performer and IJe!!lt doubltJ
t<indem into Saturday's CIF
individual ntl Finals at the
Kolboa Bay Club Racquet Club
01 NeY1·porl Beach as the 'far
players scored impre!!ive vic-
tories in the indiv idual
preliminaries Ill Santa Ana
High.
Tar singles ace Bob Ogle
had lilt!e troublt in subduing
Coro)la del ~1ar's normally
fla.,hv Dick Miller.
Ogie made shorter work or
ti.1i1\tr than \YI! txpected by
posting a Ml, 6-2 triumph.
His Sailor d<lubles team-
mates Kim Perino and Dive
East man disposed of Foothill'•
Dennis Zurn-George Bjornson
combo by identical 6-3 scores.
Estancia sophomore Steve
Mallott ad\'an.ctd into the
singles finab by thrashing
Katella's Steve Miiler by 6-3
and 6-2 counts.
•
Head ing north? Then head
to r PSA and Long Bea ch
Airport. It's not all lh_al -,.:
far. It's easy to get ..,.,,,,,,
inlo and out of. Plenty of
oarking. And the crowds
~7 t-iaven 't found it yet. Your
travel agent knows the way •. Also earning finals btrths
wert A1arina'a Scott McDowell
and Morio • Parker w h "
dumped Lcing Beach Wilson's
Ktvln O'Neill and Steve Ter-
rtll in doubles, 6-3, 6-3,
.,_. ......... .,.. ...
WHITEWALL
l'IUCE • H
12 66 1566 1.78
1466 1766· , ...
1666 1966 2.0f
.7!.-14 1766 •20•• 2.,
7.7S-15 2.16
1866 •21•• ~" 2.37
1966 •22••
FISK SAFTl ·WIDE TRACK
WIDE OVAL
.iA YON C@f'Dr'f19l"RGLASS BEL TED
MllED WHITI LETTERS
• TIEllWEIT
IWITYll(
TOP CARRO
66C 3" ·-
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D .... 1, lt1M 2544 uo
110M 0 .:1!>1 2744 ,..,
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Gfll.\J II 11>1 '·" 1"10.IC lt t'>I 32441 '·"" "'°'" ltlt1 1.11
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TUllSMISSIOll
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•
CHROME RMRSE WHUL ·-, ... r3•• ..... •qi... j.
... i , .. ,.1'o<L.
,..._La1 Jr<uh .• I.II Se! •f 4
SLOTTED DISC
CHROME WHER
1988
L«1.U.o LvJiltv"u • ., _-.. , ol 4-:.,. "4.tt
TAM WIY-All 777
,_,
Cll[OI T
CARO
OR VOOA
BANI(
AMEAICAlllC
SPIAY PAl"T r~·
•
SANTA AMA COSTA MESA WESTMINSTER
Edinger Strfff at 8rl1tol
1400 Ed inger
Harbor S.ulevtrd tt Wiison
2200 H•rbor llvd.
Beaeh Baulevard •t McF•dden
15440 Beach Ill vet.
,. .
•
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DIET SNllTH,QUARR'Y .
"°""'NG 15 LIKE TOURING
'IOI.JR MOON COMPL.e..,EH?
r--W';'J'.1"''.-"""''
&UT, 'S.tl'tt '10U WOULotf T
)(NOW OUR PLAC.E, WE'Vf
EXPANOED SO iWJOt OUR
CllLF COURSE COJER5
27Ml~S!
ly Cliftttr Gould
ly Tom K, Ryan TUMBLEWEEDS
WANT MET SHOW
YA HOW I S1AWKS
1'UFFtOf515WEET5 ?
r W-f-ll-, -Fl_RS_l-_OF_f;,-'flJN-,\ · 1Mell, WHEN I 6rTS IN l\ANGE1 I RARES ~ACK, • 61\P! HOW VMll!
YOO CAN ALMOST
HEAR WE IJEASiS 51GH11N'1Hf HERP II SUMMINGS ALL M' LATIN'
STAITTS SNEEKIN' UP SlRfN''J!i.L AN' f'ERPARES
Ctl 1Hf UNRESPECTIN' 1' SPEOP M' GLEEMIN' SNICKORING!
CRErot!RES!... 111.APE 1'HOIM!
MUTI AND JEFF
ASPITC'HER
,SOMEHOW I
GOTTA IMPROVE
MY CONTROL!
By ai Smitlt
1· .. -~,.,, '":~~:.:::=.. .,till. ~~l'fli+--.
JUDGE PARKER By Harold Le Dou Jii'""Ellll'*!lll""'""'""""'""'""""'==9 v:,;;O<J::--:S:cu:;;,;:c, v';;"·~ow""c"""c;;-';;Tc;u,;ET;ocY;;OO;;;-;l;;N..., ME"NWHILE • • I PONT toJOW:
THIS CA.Ni TlroU&LE? ™E OLD LAO'f I MEARt> MJIA 15 THE
LETTE!i:
YEAf.L.EXACTLY ~ VOU C.OOLD'VE
BEEN A. COUNTE!i:l=EITER: "I
COULt>N'f TELl. n4E Ol.C' U.17Y'5
S!GNA.TU!i:E-!=!?OM YOUR COPY
!JO" MY U F=E DEPENDED ON
GET ME IM ISN'r AROUND ANYMOl?E LEA.VE EArn.Y .. A.
Ll kE VOi!
\VANTED IT,
JOHNNY ?
TROUBLE~ TO 5 .. V SHE DtPN'f WR"ITE LITTLE -'FTER
IT, F=AY ! .~
I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by . A. POWER I
ACRO~\
I 1a·.
b Perlu~1·r'
•1~c ~<~1tv
II th1r1rr~il
Acco11n1.111t
14 HJb11uol r 1 JS .'lnrl11
lb Ku1d of 11!1•
11 TV ptrl011l't'r
19 US l1!1rno11~1
I 70 ~l1~h Va•
21 llldd ~rty
, 22 Consum~d
124 Bakery orod11CI
2b Most 111111~11~!
21 s~~
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30 --s11orl~
JZ Buddhist wtio
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ltqt dtg1tt>
li1tormal
14 Onct <ll'Ollld
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CO C~ss rxi11 ~
Cl Scaundrrl
.C2 Aclot PJ11! ·-·
43 Shott btilst!.
of SPttd
4) Ptrta ui~ Ytsteniily's Puzz le Solvrd :
~~ r.loilu!Jr tloov R A P • A 1 1 P • 11 ,
48(ioOlllOOI' •~I ~II
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Abbr .
!,a AflPO•nt111tntS
ti~ By no -·-···
DO<'IN
l L~1·n
'S1c1!,.111 •l~(, ••
3 {,r,11y· Slan<,i
4 laol!t\~
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2~d ..
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7 "'atlt ~ti:l1rct
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ll( (~$[$ !OY!
10 s~l• ~· ,
f11eplatt
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l l Oreqoo
l l}lorl~1
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2 words
12 Htlptr~
13 Exhal1St~d
lB Wr011glul ill:1
23 Busllt
25 Branch o!
lta1nii1y
1b (~cess 01
r 11.t<lC t\
27 F •t al an9tr
28 Son.of
Aphr ad1t1
2q Footwr~1
J10l1shrr
JO DO"~ i
b J 71
JS Ch111~· t
Qt!.tt111
3!, Procttd
18 Ertra
39 Pr ivil"1'
of vo\11111
41 Dashed
htadl!J19
42 Pa1111l nd1"t
44 Plac' of
conllnt n1e11t
S!ang
45 Eq11>~ colot
~b Small shoal
4! Talk Idly
48 TOU1Jlt-look fng
you!hs: SlaOQ
50 Card oamt
SI Ribbon· S11lf1x
\3 Optn ~pact
54 Neighbo' of
°'1ta110: Abbr.
rl11'.ltt SS T1nka1ds
31 B~lrn 58 ~lir19
33 Lar9t clot 59 Htad~ar 1!t1n
,..,,,-rr ic.rri,:--i'="r.""''-r,rrar-,,, 12 11
•
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..
-
"rnE LEITE!?~ l=IVE!
CA
PERKINS
MISS PEACH
MARCIA
MAc;o~1 s
. 'f.~I.!. Y' ScllOOl-
fJf£A0TY
A\>Vl'E ..____.....
•
.,._<;;1c;~ UP NoUI + • •
STEVE ROPER
I
"
U'l: AINa
•
.j
SALLY BANANAS
~---' . "
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
By John Mila
By_ Mei
Bv Saunders and Overaard
JK) RIBIJONON THE t>O<Y/-l('MjB/
OlR SECRET ·oo NOT DfSTURB•
516/IJAL ! ···SO I GiESS IT'S
<W>Y FOW ME to
WALK KJ6Hr twl
~ I
ly Charles M. Schutz ...---...... --....
1HeM M.$0 PfW.A.~
SEEN ¥<lit fMTMU.!
' .. . ..... --~-
ly Al CGpp
• I
Ll'I. -f;IT.60F -+FT.+a'
I! , II 1'
fi
DULLNESS
AND
COGLIKE
Cf.\.OT1CN TO
DUTY -AND
Non11116
MON!.
TIMlDIT"/,
HUMIU_!Y,
SOJIU1-,;
IJO-l-VlRIUT'i
AND
ONE
THING
MORE.-
ASllCAl:T
TOUCffOFnll!
-• .$1111NGIA." .. ' ,
ly Charles lanotti
By Gus Airiola
,. tlOSE' °" 'Ille WJ!.C IS ~
By Rogtr Bollen
1. !Xlll'r T1·HllK
COMMUIJAI-UVllJ&
IS AU. "T}l.tr ITS
~OP1"o llE .
--MR.MUM
•
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~·· • <0:-.J
DENNIS THE MENACE
,.
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LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ,. '--~~~~~~~~~-i 1'·1US ·~· FICTITIOUS IUSIHISI I l'ICTITIOUS I USINf\S
HAMI! STATEMENT NAMI! STATIMINT
Tht fgllowl"9 !i*UOfl I> clgmf 0..0!/nfU Tht tollewlnt ~OO!I 11 llO/nt llu1lnHI
'" .. H.&llBOR H! JC!. 1XI £. lltll ~t ' Ce1t1 BULLOCK'S u. HABR A, lj(ll Wr1!
M1.. 1.,,,...,1.1, I • H-•· C•lll<>tQll 'IQ6JI
Fuad S. H-••dl, l071 M-lfl A•r.. FEDERATED 0 EPA RT MEN 1
Cou1 Miii STORES. INC.,• Otl1.,1•1 t<>•POtfl~.
l~h butlt\eH ,. bf-•n11 <O<>duCI~ br 1n 1n W••! Scvtnln Sl•HI, C•ntlnn111,
lndlvld<IU. Otoio 4S:M
Fu.wl 5. H11w1!<1! -rn11 11\r;lntn I• bf;,.. <-..Cl'"" '-• I
Publlll>t<l Orl r>W CIMl~I 0fllr P1101. f CD<l'C>"ih~n M•~ \J, 19, ]1 1n11 Junt J, 1111 11•1 1!. Wt'1en P . Fl!191"1,
' ' •
LEGAL ~OTICE
F-1115
FIC1rn ous IUS!Nl!SS
NAMr STATEMENT
loHowlnt Per"°" b dolr19 busln•••
rubl;ll,,.~ O••n9r Co.>•I Daol• P•IO!.
M•• :10, 11 And J11n1 ], IQ, 1911 1)1! 11
LEGAL NOTICE
BAR ll•4
NOJIC.E ro CREDITOR~
SUPEAIOR-COU IT OF THE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA f'Oll TNE COUNTY-OF ORANGE
NO. A·H J1S
E•l•!• ol llOBEllT A R T HUR
'
• •LO(.ltWOOO, e!Ot> ~nown •• ROBE Ill A
LOCKWOOO Oec•••t<I-
• NOTICE IS HEREBY GtllEN !o lh•
•r •f<lltora ot lht •bc•e flam~ dt<r!IPn! ' 1na1 o!I ftll!'!Cn> havong clal"" 11ga•n.i 1ne
_ oald dtctd•nt ~le •eouir"'1 lo Iii• lti.m. it'. '·with t"" f'K•••••• Y'l'IJ<h•"· ·~ tllt othce r---0( !ht Cltrk of,.._, ""°"t t nH lle<I court, or
• lo ort5tnl lhfffl.. wltll lhe ntc•"M'
·¥V11e11er1, lo •nr uo<lf'ri•lmt<! •I rnt o!rl<I" ~ d ner atlJ>rneys· ROberl,.,n, Ho.,1tr &-
' 01rl1nd, 111ornt~•. 4:ul (ompu• Drivt,
''<NtWPO•I 8••cn, Call!orni• 9"/Ml, "'hlcn io
!ht pl1c• ol °"'",." or th.• undtr1l9nfd in l :111 motterl Dr•l•inlng 1(1 11>1! e\!ol• o! •~Id
· ~r<1ent, wl"'I" IOU• mon1n1 aft tr lilt • · f}r:.r P<Jt>fic<l!lon ot ll>is 110llC•-
• Dated MIY 1~. 1911
Jar>el Lr"ne L«Kwood '14 •' AOrnlnl1tr1tri• of !ht tslat•
i,o: 01 The •bcv• named ON•d•~I
~ 10BERf50N, NOWSEll j GARLANO
-; ~.l.40 C1mnu• Ori•• ~ ... N1wpert B••ch, C1lllorfti1
Tol•fthO•o: HUI !<0·5~00
Att~ney1 lor lldmlni11r1trl•
•
Put>li\ht(! O••nve Coo.i 0 •• 1. P•IOI. ,,..,v 11 and Junt J.,10. !I. 1911 lXC·I!
LEGAL NOTICE
I lllCI Pftlklffil
ffU·OC
Publl•h~ Oro•~ t1wul Dilly Po\ot. M~r !J, lO. 21 •lld J~J'l<! ). 191\ 1141·11
LEGAL NOTICE
Lf'~GAL NOTIC~
NEWl'ORT-ME\A UNlFl£0
SCHOOL OISfRICT
NOll<I t1Nlli119 6id1
lllOllCE" IS >lEREBV GlllElll !1141 tr•t
Bo~rd 01 1'<1uca1le1n ol lh• Nt .. nor! Mt••
Unoht<I Scllool o,.1ric1 of Or"n~• Countr.
( .. lltornoa, will rf(flVI! ••"It<! bl<ls up lo 11.(Ml A.M on lhf 11111 ddV ftf Ju,.f, l~ll;
61 '''"' o~rkr of •di<I SchOOl D•1!rlcr, loc~•e<I II 700ll (htt Ori••· N•wr.orl
BfACll, (ali!ornla, ~r wlllCh llmf •~•d D•d>
wdl be 1>ubli~lv open«l ""a •edd tor
DELIV ERY OF FOOD CA.RlS
All 111~• ore lo b• In •ccord4nce witll
Condllion>. 1ns1rucllon" ""a SQedlicl!llons ,.,,,c;, A•e now on file In I~ olllce ol lllf
Purcn•~lnq A9•nl or '"'" Scll<:l<ll Dl~•r•c•, llS7 Ploctfl!i• Avenut. Cost• Me5d,
C~lll<>•fll1 Eacn l>odder mu.r •11brn1! I brd deoo•\I ;n me form of 1 cetlil•t<I ft• ca,M•r'1
CllK~ or • bod bond ~1141 lo loYf ""'cent u -..1 ot tll• drnount of lh• bid. m11dr
oaYabl• ro rne 1>rde• 1>1 lne N•woor1-Mes1
Unlllea School 0151"<'-A P~rrorrna"""
Bond miv bf! reDu,red &1 •ne d·sc•••lon ol
thl! Oi•!ricr, In 1/le .-venl of l•llurt 10 I
'nler inlo •uch con•rocr. lhf Proc~d• o•
thft ell•<~ woll be rotlelled. "' ;n c•!.f o! 1 I bcr.O, !tit full •um lh1reol woll be
•orl•lled 10 sal<I School oistdcl o! Oran~• 1
Cn<rn!Y
No b•<ld"' m~• wi!hd••w t•!s bid tor t ,..,,ad ol lo•l•-fiv" ~411 d.••• •lier !ht I
d"I'" •t1 rot th~ ~ni~9 111.-r..ol .
Tht Bo~ro er Ea~c~toon "' l/lf NewPOr!
M~•e Unll,•d khPOI Oiorrkr •e•e•vt• 1ne
tilltil lo re1ec! anr nr •II bod>. •nd nol
n~cu•~f<IV •<•Pl>I the low~•t bid, and 10
W&••f' dn• Jntorm•(•IY or 1"•9Ull "IY In
6hV bid tfCtovMI,
Dilltd M•y 11 1'11
NE't'IPORT-N.ESA UNll"IED
F·1m SCllOOL 01$TRICT FICTITIOUS !llJSINESS or Or&nOt Coonlr. NllME ST•TEMENT Cahlornl&
lht Tallowing l>ft"'n 1$ dc>ng bu"nt>I 8.: Oorol/ly H•rvtv f ISh-r
OY-NA DRILL CO, •661 MaCAflhor ~d·l 100 •> I PV"ch~\lnQ A9•n!
!loultv•rd, Newoon Bracn, Calltor~ia Publl~hod CJ.an~ (0,,1 D•1I• P1k>I,
" ~l6«l Ma• 11 ~nC! Jone "· 1~11 1161·1! ~MI TH INT£RNATION.l.l, INC , ~ _ _
Bool&v ord, Ne .. oo•I Btacn. Cahtornl• i,£Gl\L NCYfJCE ~"'
callfoin·~ con>o•atlon, ~6'11 M•<Arlhur I ----
~ lr>T• n~ .... , .. !1 <Ondo(led b• • ...... , SIU
"'"'110~. FICTITIOUS IUJSINESS SMITH INlERNll,TIONAL. IN(, I Nll,ME STATEMENT
P £ CORY Tnf f0How,r19 Pf,,011 t• <IO>ng "'"'"'°'
Secrtta•• I " lni1 •l••etntM "'"' loltd W•l~ l~t Coun· PERKINS SCHOOL OF MUSIC. !&O~ I
l r (lf rk of Drln<tf COUlllY 011 Mj Y ll, O•~ll<lt A"", (0$1• Mf'•~. (1111
191! N"'"'" Pt·~·~· Butcl\t•. Xl•n SW V<Mtllon I. B•r!on I C.vor<\> St , Sanl• Ana, C•hl
Arto•n...,., II L1w 1th• bu~•nr•• " tit1119 conduc!t<I bv • ., ~k 5'1"!~ Oii•• Slrtel fn<l>V>dun!
Loi Ant 1I••· C•lllor11i1 I S>!lned Norm• Ptt~1111 flUllllrr
,l ·1'11' 111•1 1tat1•me111 hied wiln If>• covnlr Pubh•llf'(I Or~""" Coo11 Oa•I• !,'•107i, ell"~ 01 o"~oe coun!v on ADnl 1, 1911. M•~ :10 ll 1Nt J11110 J. 10, 1911 1 •1~ I El(llERLY J MAOOOX, ,
LEGAL NOTICE 1>unu11>en o.,,,,a. coa" D•nv P·•~!.
I
;:i...,u1v Countv Cit<'• •
------,,.7127-----~n(I Jone l~O. !I, 1911 ~
"';:~r~o5u,s .. :~?,_~NNE.;s LEGAL NOTICE
Tn~ follOw•"<I llf'r!On •• Po•nG bu11nt~• 1---------•5; CERTIFICATE OF BUSINESS,
Ol!ILCO . ..,,,,,, M•cA•lhur QD\lltv••U. FICTI TIOUS NAME
Nt,..oort Bt•<~. C•lllorni~ 9M60 7~• un<1•r1l<1~ ""'°' crr!1!v h• 11 con ~MH>l IN7ERN/ll10NAt, INC, ~ du!11"1' • bv1in~ .. Al 1~\I "H" Plo<enl ••
(~li!O""" <oro<>fnl>on, •661 Ma<Af!hu•
Oovltvo•d, N<'w!>Ol't Btacn. (alllornla
""' too< t>U!•~fl• ls cono<1clfd b• a <ot-
'"'"""on SMH~ 1NrERNAT!ONAL, INC.
~,qn~d -P. E Cory ..
S.,.;r•lor •
lno• U•••mtnl w•s 1nt<1 ,,.11n 1n~ Covo
"' (ltr~ or D•.,>Ge Counir on M•• 11, 1911
Yo•••I•" t. 8•r1on ,t,norn1y• •I L•w
A••, Cll'!l~ M~s~, Cal•!_, und~r tn• •1c
"!100~ llfm n•me ot WATERMAKeR
SPECl.l.LISTS •no lh~t <~•d llrm 11 com-
oo•O!<I o! lhf followln9 1>~non, whi>•f
flamt in t1111 ~nd 1>lac• or '""dfntt 11 ~'
1011.,...~
l A Dollh•f, Jr, 11791 wooc110wn
A•~. Tu1hn, c~11i
Daled M~v ?S. 19!1
T A Dcbl>le, Jr
S••ll or C~lllornlA. Dr~"lr" Counrv·
'°' !.outn 011•• S!• .. t
,
4 l.ff A.nt•IH, C1!ik"""
T-llt1f
On M•v 71. 197!, n~!UJt mt. d Nrl••v
Public In ~nd I~~ "l•<I ~la\~. Ol'tcondlly
""""~"" l .& O<>bl>•t, Jr kn<>*" !o ,, .. ,
•o ~ I~• ""''en wno.-nam• ,, '''ll•cr ~
t<1 lo lnf wltn:n •n\l•um•nl 1nC ... <~n<>Nlfd<lf'<f ~-••tClll•a th• •amf. 10FFl{!Al 51:AL!
Pub!••"~ Ot•n~ (O~~· D••I• P•lol -.~ M&v ;>ii, 37 •nd Ju"• l. lQ, 1911 IT.IQ 11
I LEGAi. l\OTICE
" ~ -----~
l.IA~Y ~El~ f.'0010'1
Nn!•n' Pul>li(, (ftl•l~•fl••
Pfonr.oal Othce lo•
o•~nQ~ cou"'•
It • c""'"''"'cn [,.,,.,. "'""! I, Ill>
r ,,t>h•~fd O"n<IO' Co.>>I DiUY Ptl~'
M•• 11 •nd .lur>e ~· in 11. 111! 1 )1'1 11
LEGAL NOTICE
Buy a
'
to
Border
Bargai
Every cla ssified want ad in the DAILY
PILOT appears in every edition every
day . That means your ad will be ~een
in papers del ivered to homes and sold
from newsr acks from border to border
all along the Orange Coast ... all the
way from
Seal Beach
to
San Clemente
You
Get
It
All • • •
Dnntingt.on Beach
Fountai11 Valley
Costa Mesa f'
Beach Ne\Vf>Ort
Laguna Beach
Saddleback
San Clemente ~
· €apistra110
(Plus the daily
newsrack edition)
For One Price
With A -
Classified Ad
Phone 642-S678
•
WANT
TO
CLEAN
UP
ON
YOUR
CLEAN
OUT?
'
FOR
FAST!
FAST!
ACTION!
CAll
DAILY
PILOT
CLASS-
IFIED
DEPT.
D
I
A
L
D
I
R
E c
T
--
6
4
2 -
5
6
7
8
1 nurmar. Junt ), J. 'IJ J. IJAJL l t'ILU I ;l5
T la e Biggest Single iUarketplaee on The Or ange Coast·• PhotaP. 642-5678
• ,,,.,.,. ................................... ..
~-__ '"---~lie) [ _ ......
General
YE-OLE ijRM. HOU.SE
6 BR'S. HOBBY RM.
THAT 'S RIGHT~ 6 hUf:e bc><l-rrn·s. 1\h11nmoth living area
'1 ~th co~.y c<'ilini;:-ln frplc.
"Cc:i111~·r l't'lllr" kirchen
willi Loads & loads of stor-
agl'. Bl'ilha111 burn1 orange
~·;;rp('ting, Sep. 111s1r. sui!('
1111h 19' e!Ost'!s. A lilt!('
pain! rould make thi11 a
1<howpl1H.:l'. Hurry, Call t71.I)
!);J:,!.j,).>G_ -FOR[\l [ OLSO\
'" R~AL T0 R S
19131 B1·ookhurst Ave.
Hunti11gton ll<'nch
I ALL PURPOS'~E~--
RECREATION ROOM
1';ASTSIDF; COSTA ME:SA \o-
r-ation -ar·t1ve hunily addl-
1im1. You'll f'njoy tilt> 17'x? .. r
high beant f't'iling 1'4 a111. Rm.
11 11h indirect lighting .. built
JJI Sl'\\'lllJ::' <'enh•r and many
otht!r extras. Add 10 1hi~ a
1hrcr Bdr111. 1~. B111l1 hoin!'.'
11· 'f1replt1\"t' 1u11I dctllChf'{.[
Dbl. garag<' 1y/allcy acress.
('l•nl •'tdly located kilthrn·
servic;• porch. Call this eve-
ning for appt, to set' ..
COLLEGE PARK
-AREA-
$26,950
l.lll'Cly 1·orn<'r lot homr. with
.1 b<·4l rooms + 2 hath~ +
hUgl' ruinpus rn1. All this +
<in u . .;~un111hll' 6'!.. loan of
$1S,6.'JJ. P11yuhlf" $174, mo.
1nclurl1'S 1,._...,rs cir. H11rry
on this Dtli' ..
General
Macnab-Irvine
Hl'11.lly C:u1n11a11y
Prestige Sayfront
W /Pier & Slip
Spectacular vif'w. Off~~ by
originaJ O"''ner -this-;, BR,
8 bath honu•. L1L~unous
wood p11ncll in1,: throughout.
Bi!llard rou111. e lc\·ator. :>to1·-
agc ~a\Dri! -all o.n lhr lip
or an i.~la1KI. t"or-app't. !o
~e cnll A1ny Custun &12-8'23.:i
Macnab·lmne
642-8235 67S-3210
OWNER
MUST SELL NOW!
i\lakl! an offer on this 11cat
3 bch•111. &. den CAJ.1F.0 .
:-i! !ORES home on a 1;01T1er
lol 11'i1h 11 VIE\V & access
to :i private bea(•hcs .. Don't
<lel;iy • this ··••on'\ lasl at a
IOI\• $67,:iOO.
~
Coldwell.Banker
~
83:1-0700 644-2430
HOME WITH POOL
:: B~rt11.", 2 Baths, hrd\\'d
floors, FA hl erpls, drps.
l_..'lrgr k1tcl1, l;u~e sep. fa1n-
ily 1·111. Northeast Costa
i\lC'Sa. $29,500.
J .. ar~e 2 !<lory ho111r, shake
PIUI, firr-pl, crp1s. drape.~ &
1nany, n1u11y xt ras. $•12.:JOO.
Roy McCardl• Realtor
1810 Nl·"'•port Blvd., C.1"1,
5-41-7729
$28,000
2 STORY HPME
4 BDRM. + FAMILY
ROOM
Cal1fornlu r;o1h·h stylf' homt>,
h1•avy shake r oof, lii.ri,:~
nJ(l1TI 1lu\lughout, <'ntry h11ll,
Newport natural 11·ood kitchen <.•ab-
•t 1n('l<1, b\li11-1 n r ant:e +oven
+ d1shw1t~hf·r, natural hrll·k
Fairv iew rireplac1•. huge f:unily room,
646-881 J Ol"'l'll til 91':'11. :..t0-11:!0
TARBELL 2955 Harbor (anytime) 1----------
WATERFRONT
BOAT DOCK
40' Boal dork bt•low sp11r-
iuus. landscaped 1c1T;1{X'.
UJ\·eJy .1 lxfrm. hon11• ..... /
f•fl·mal din. nn. &· fan1. 1•1n .
'.! frpll·~. & V.'f"t brir. )34'SI
huy .. $91!,7:,0. ..--Coldwell.Banker
~
83:1-0700 6~2430
FIXER • UPPER
..a-$ MAKES SENSE
\\'hen in1·es!ed in the righl
neighborhood. lletw about
f\\'fl srparatr 'l tw>droom
IMJmr.~ on 1 101 y,·1th g(l()d
1·as1.sKlc ICH'al 1011., S h n r I
11alk 10 shopping. Try
S:L"i,500. Now, Th~l makes
11cn.'<f'! Call 67:i-4930.
-$23,950-
4 BDRM . + DEN
General
ONE OF
A KIND
Baycre.~t li\'111g qua1·tl'rs in
College Park area . ·rnis has
got-to-be the vr~ bl'st 4 2100
sci. fl. of cus1om l'ralt 1~·ork
by owner.. Call now lor a
n'll 1.rcar.
$39,950
Newport
••
Fairview
646·8811
(•nytim•)
PRIDE
is Ill<' word ro dl•scnbf. ll1i:r;
n£>ighlx!rhocll'l and this grcnl
:I Hftlroo111 l101nr_ Quie1 c-ul-
dc·sa•· s1rf't>I shake rool,,
f<imily rm, 'p11110 kitch.
BC'aulltull~· dt'LVratetl &
ready to nHJY(' 1uto .. 6',: Loan
c.11n be ss.'lumed .. ~~uu pnt·1·
$..ll,500. Call :fKJ..ll j ! (ope/\
f'\1"$. f
51/1°1.
ASSUMABLE LOAN
C\1.slon1 4 Rlt., 11,~ l)a. hvrne
in \\'estclifl .. l.Hrge f;i mily
room, cov1•r('d p.1!io. 1't'nect.
pool, l-a.LSl'd sundeck. 1 .. ar~c
Joi, on a quiet str,~et.. SSJ.000.
133-0700 644-2430
WATERFRONT
CONDOMINIUM
Seart:'e hu\ easy 10 own, A
Walcrfl'onl :! Bedroon1, 2
hath t•nnt!o1n1n111n1 1\•i1h ar-
('('.~s to a ~lip !11r your .. •t'l1(·h1.
Qt1al1r,v c:tqx\1 ;.uni tlrapes
Mud 1nt1<:h nlf!l'l' () n I y
$·1J,:i00, w11h ll'rn1:r; likt• rl'nl.
Do I! now llll(I lit' lhcrc !or
1hl." g u m mt-r Juu. Call
6'13-~D~lO.
\'to · THE REAL
~ESTATERS
' , l ''I ----------NEWPORT
HEIGHTS
\Va /king distance. ro all
~ehool.~. SeparB1c children.~
play yard wHh ciimlung
!n•e. liood siie room and
bi~ hrigh! kitcllt'n $33,900.
cau 646-7 11 1..
\o ·THEREAL
\"-ESTATERS -•I '• , ,,11 1 •:
$23,950
4 BDRM. + POOL
Pnrk l1ki• set!ln~. Beautiful
hilm... Entry haH, d1n1n::;
1'001Tl, populn r Cl'ntra! pl1tn,
lari;:e kitchrn v.ilh ~11l1-1n
hreakfa.~1 bar, huilt-1n 1·angr
+ oven -t d1~hwashrr. 4
king i;i1rrl li<'<h'n1:in1~. u11t·11
)~
*REDUCED $1,000 *
HURRY ON THIS!
5 BEDROOMS
VACANT
Harbar View Homes
a.~aur1ful rl":':.lclcncl' wi!t. wr!
bar, lo\'~·ly carpeting:. scH-
i.:!caning ovens .. Q1,1lck (!OS·
scss1on. Owner anxious~
NO W OfllL Y s.:;8,500
!NCLUl)INC TI~E W\ND
CORBIN-
MARTIN
REALTORS 644-7662
UNIVERSITY PARK
\Ve!! l()(~a!Prl hotnC'
1•lo.~r to lnol nf'l<l lo!
j·nn11nun1t·y pool and
i:rcf'nhelr
J BOOrooms. 21.1. baths
including spacious upi;tairs
,\1.1sler bC'droom £uite
Fan1ily room end
la~c kit(·hen
l'.39.950
Rl'::ALTORS
SINCE l!H~
673·4400
NOW VACANT
!111mcd. possl-ss1on. Sharp,
shaq1 4 Bf{ 2 Ba hon1r in
pri1lll' lrn.:1111011. Cou('rcd pa-
11n. S!Oll(' B-B-Q, mOOen1
kilt·li .. t~rey !1r<'11! ,it:_ ?ose
10 ~hupptng. F!IA/VA:ternil\
or assun11> 6\2'.f> Joan -SZOQ.
1110 1n1·1. 1'l..'Ct•s .. Call :J.1;J..&.l21
1opc11 cvc~ ~
2 YEARS NEW
B1•;iu1. 4 BR 2 Ba w/all dlx
..:1ra~. Ga1tlrn kitch, brick
f11I, l;1u11dry rni & low mllint
yd 1"lll7l\1I w/nv-sizrd patio
,t; ~pnnklrr1< Xlnt C.~1. IQC ..
J\11 •In VI\. lo Un 1'-'llA. ca.lJ
~lli·.··~ ~Ol)f'n t'l'CS.)
7%• HIRITIGI
~ tUl UIA11
2 ON A LOT
2 • 2 RC'droom house~ in one
or our b<•st sou!h-.of-lhr-tugh.
\''ay loca110~. F."cellent 1n·
L'O[ll(', and can be-st""en al-
1110.~r <iuy11n1r .S4i950. CaU
£73-SJj() for aPro1nt.rnen1,
STEPS TO BEACH
2-Sty. A-frarrw .. ~ BR. ,+
lan11Jy rn1 . Cornrr Joi,
Only S32,9()0 ~ !l't m<
CAYWOOD REALTY
6.10.i \\', Cn.1.~1 Hwy., N.B.
548-1290
2MO ~ci fl of living arr<1 , :?
r· ... s~i1·e f1N•pltt1·r.~. all hi!.
u1~.:: lri.: UH. lf11111ly & bon-
us rrn .. 6'.~ f\ssumahlr \Qdll •
$2"2i rnn. puys i1IL Xlnr ari•a
_ All tcrn1 .... $~2.n:il. (;all
~J lj-/\12•1 ((1p1•n l'\'Cti f
B<>aur1flll homt-sPI 1n pie·
1un·~11ur S<'tt!l1~. The addl'd
f<'aturi· 1s th:it 1hls hon1r
r\l<'tl h;i<; II S\Vl/Jl pool. Kuig
!<11.NI f'()()ITIS lhmughout,
h11il1-it1 ran~t' -+-oven +
d1shw;1sher. Ow u1•r trans-
fet'l'f'(!, 0 1..en Iii 9 Pl\1.
~~1n..11~0.
til !1 P'I. ~).H).17~'fl.. l ----------
\outh ~ (. oast
--
* * • • • *
GLORIOUS TREES
Shcl!er lhi:oi well built comfy
hon1r. l..arge living roon1;
Palos Verde rock 1i1't'pla(...~,'
3 bed1'00n111, !.-,.. halhs,
n4'l'ds nt•w sh.-11t: and a HrtlP
pa1n1. L<1w prier ror lhi~
de11iralde Ne1vpnrl Beach
home in \\'estcllfr area.
Arnold & Freud
388 E, 17\h S,1., C.1\-1_
646-7T.-» d!lys I 616·5.:iJll evf'tl * EASTS!DE *
*CONTEMPORARY*
J rue 2 RA + family room,
hu!H-in kitchen, orfice and
garage. Mnlntcnancl' • rree
yard_ Lovely fM lio. $34,150.
6'(3-3663 S.18--0115 Eves.
associated
BROKER S-REAL fORS
2025 W Balboo ~7J-1 66)
TARBELL 29S~ Harbor
-HEREJ TI Sfl--
4 Hui:;r S.'llrOL•ms • 2 luxur-
iou11 Bllth'I $21.000 Pl'i<'r 4
VA and f1 1A. Trrms f;irpets
.. U1'i1·k fh't'l'!l!ICf' • Oo\1hle
C.ril'll[!l' F"cnc1'<1 Yard.
(..'ALL
TARBELL 29SS Harbor * Fixer Upper-*
NOl\'po">l'I Bl'<ICh [)uplr:-: .. ' ••
'J, f!l'rrl~ !f'rll]f'r loving 1'fll't'
1i hlill'k lo ocean. Pr1cCd s 16,:iOQ ..
673·366.1 5'f8·:J942 F.Vf'l!,
associated
BROKERS-REALTORS
2ClS W Bolba o 67J-J66l
Walker & Lee ASSUME LOW
INTEREST FHA LOAN
2790 \1al'l'IOI' Bl vd. at Ad11ms · 3 HR, z Ba llome .. New cop-
.. ' ~)l."i.9 ml Op<'11 'til 9 J';\1 per plunib., gurb. d1spsl,
New, Vi•w Homes 111•w c rptg thruout. All llf'W·
()f)vt>r Shnrel! '-i.1st hit. l!Avr ly pa.in1ed. Ownf'r \\'ill srll king .~izc, rhoi~ honlt'sites low d01vn or Wes cont Va.
w /v;ews N.B .• f('(' or lea~-cant. $26,500,
·hold. l new home11 and JEAN SMITH, RLTR.
cons,!.. rendy rnr Ott. in 400 E. 17rh SI., c:i1 &1&325.'.i
June."Vi..-it 103.1 !\1:ninrrs D. P&NDING
for p~vlew. 4-:i BR homt'~ FORECLOSURE
"-·/pool.~. Prlc~d fo r quick 11a1r. No\v
IV·AN \\/'ELI.Ii & SONS vacnnJ • 11icr rl '!iide11li11J
10.1~ J\1ariners. Dover Shorr" al'ea, 2 stry 4 BR + lrg
6·M-l:~'i0 Open Oailj bonuJt rm, all bltins. Crpt!'.,
Boats • Trailen dl1>8 & mol't!. lO 'iO dn moveli you in, Call Ray Gault,
3 bdr, f.11mi!y room: d ining .. ·HERITAGE REAL·ESTATE
roon1. Rualic 1tyle, New 540-1-151.
ahlll: carpels.· In move-In 1-.-,-.=o.-;--.---~~
condition, Co~r Jot with A LITTLE for • I.OT
11!'8\e lor boat er lr3iler. $14,95(1 buy11 a bu1lding sill:'
2 DELUXE +PLEXeS $34 .500. Newly lis1M. Come with approved hou:;e plan
Mid ~. Cali S.l&-2313. en Ea1t 22hd S1. • ready to
Sp:1c. 3 BR & 2 Ba in cbolce Jro. , .Loll'! more -fron1
N.B, an•a.' (}\\•rwr w;inl.'!' 1$13,500.
quick M lt'. Prlerd IK'lo1v Pete Barren Realty
1nkt. NEW 80',~ loon. 7%.'/o 642-5200
lturry, thr11c won't IAsf. 1 -~R"e"PO""'s"s"'e"'s"s1"o"N"'s---I -~E"M=E"'R"A~L~D~B~A~Y~-
$71;5CJO. EACH s'PArkllnilf'le,D-hornn , .,me fantutlc whlre waler vit'' PERRON REALTY CO. lll'wly Jtlh1tert "carpeted. 2 rrom ni.111 1mm1u:. 4 bdrm.
llt2-1771 ANYTIME 3,4 &. 5 bdnn11. Some t.'ith "-family rm, hOmt . Com-
-----NJ::AR F.I Toro Rd., atlrac.
3 Bft, dc11 , frplc, i 131\. erpt,
ln1IM:J>1i, blk wall ('U\.,,lr•~llf' ~I., ll'alk !0 f'lt:in, !!('hl. '~
11h 10 Crrt'w11y & 2 ~hQp rcn-
!r~r, ~26.500 Appt only I
1137-00 llJ
pools. 1'11A -VI\ ('(Inv. trrm11, munily pools, tf'nnl..i els.,
from $20,000 1o $·10,000. priv, be11t'h; priv. patrok>tl
COLLINS & WA'l"TS INC. lltl"H'l.11 fo r your t1ccur ity,
8843 Ad11.m11 Av". 962-552.1 Shewn by app't. only. $93.~
• , , a 0 11.lly Pilot Cla11~!1ie<l
lid 612 ..... i6T8
D•L•ncy R•al E•t•te
2828 E, Cotu1t Hwy., CdM
6«-7270
~o~,",-.. -,-r~1r.o·r ,.-.,-.-,-,-.,-,-,
The
DAILi
Pl OT
0 ANGE
COAST'S
-1eading
/ Marketplace
' ------r -
\
-'
•
'
•
•
' '
•
DAIL 't PILOT
•
Everyone Hos
Something Thal
Someone Else Wants
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
The Biggest.Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
You Can Stll It,
Find It, Trade It
W ith a Wont Ad
•
Jl!ij _,,,,,.. I~ I ........... l~I -...... I~ I -·-I~ I -..... I~ ! ........ -I~ I -·-I~ '--·-·~,:._·~r·_ ~
G.neral Ge neral Costa Mesa
******
Huntington Buch Irvine
SIX BEDROOM LOVELY 2 1ty Broadmoor
1'm'tle Rock \~m• w/ig•
GI oo do111n. Giant ~ittd view lo!. ~ BR, 3 BA, ram
hoinc. 3 Baths, ts· x 2.:i" lan1-rm. 1 pa!!os, 3 car gar. 1
ily rn1, Jrg kitth wilh bltiu blk 10 park poo~ & 1ennis
Lido Isle Acreage for sale ISO
TRADE Penin. Point -t br, 2 LAND .. OPPOR'i"UN°lf'f'
ba, Cape Cod, adJ be.st 10 beautiful l~11el .acres. ~O
ocean beach. For Lido Isle miles to LA f1ry 39j. J91l
homr. Principa.l! on I y. \\'ill see comPletio n ol Lake
673-2332. !'em!;. Ff"a.s ib!luy ! t u d y
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
'liHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
* TAYLOR CO. *
LINDA ISLE
Anyonr qualilif's sub~r! to
Jo'HA Loan with 6\4 annual
percent8,l.:e ratf'. Total pay·
111en1 $148 potr n10111 h. Sharp
3 bedroom hon1e glistening
with HARD\\'000 FLOORS.
2 luxurious baths, modern
bu ilt-in kitchen. Ready to oc-
cupy immediate-ly. GI buy-
e-rs v.•elcome. CA IJ.!
R/0, dish"''shr, Ji11111g rm N' ' •·-I ~. cr1. r. ~Cnuu s v,.·ner, 11-'Jth firepl, uµgra<.led v.•/w 8:.J-2057.
c;rpls-&. drps. Lrg ma~ler ..::::..::::::.:._ _____ _
i.-U11e v.<Hh walk i11 closets, Laguna Beach
Mesa del Mar a1'aliablc. ~Iobile . ho m"
park -housing. Priced for
~ Br, 2 bs, many custom fmmediale sa le S5a.OOO.
features. Sll.500. As::ume Hop• G•rrie Realtv
92 Linda Isle Drive Yo•1 \l'ill really love this lower priced el egant
home on exclusive Linda Isle ! 4 Bedrooms,
study (or. 5t h BR), fatnily rm & formal din-
i11~ area. Plumbed ror pool. Pier & slip. Lux-
urious decor ..... , . $145,000.
R'.ll'ing room, scp pri11a!e
~ifling rm, 10" x 42· 11ar io,
shingle rool, profess. Jdscpd.
DbJ gar. $·11,000. \Valk 10
beach.
s~~ 1'1-lA. Prin. o n I Y, &i:;...1-IOO 64~3320 54..,.,., * POOL • VIE\\' * Beaut. 5 BR .. 4 ba . hon1e \V/forma1 ·din, rm.
& !Rf!lilY rm. 3, Frplcs. Outs ide sta1r,vay.
Bu1Jt-1n gun cabinet & bookshelves. $145,000 Walker & Lee. -t Spac. bdrm!., 2~~ ba's. Lge.
!111., 'tan1ily & din. rms ..
C'hC'ery kitch. 11'/loads or
slot•age; .C!Jmplrlely ln<lscprt .
\\'(igr. trees. Enclosed yard
\\'llh 15 x 30 htd. &. lilt. pool.
Nice deck & pa!io areas. in
good neighborhood, close to
schools, $49,500.
71/2 Ac Parce ls $2995
O\\'NERS i\lesa. de\ i\lar, 4 One good 111ve~tmen1 Is brt·
br, lam, bltn~. d~h11·!hr, ier tha.n a \ili!llmi! of 0wnrk. patio xtra!. Lo <to11·n. .
complete info,-mation on 1111 homes &
lots, please call: "Our 26th Y••r"
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
illJge Rea l Estate '!79o ffarbor 3lv1! at Ada1ns 1,
;,4:)-0.IGJ ()pen °"l1J 9 P;\l
UNUSUAL house I< lo!. E-Z t62A47J C ::::) 546-110l
maint 4 br, h·s shrllng J:l&ss
Sl \. !!W 54• 5882 ;llorongo Basin has con1r
' · > · alivr: Industry, Colle~,. &
Mi1ston Vieje Prop!(', moving ln 1Klw. l.im-
BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road
POPULAR Tri-1..elltl; 3 br/J ited number of parcels. Bkr;
ba, \rg pnld den W/1'"et bar. 838-3060 or 545--Q.187 ext fi 17.
De.!peratt> ov.'net \\"ant~ of· Business Property 154 ._1833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.8 . 642·4620 NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 • tam rn1 , lvg 1•m, dbl gar. :.l
ba. C9n venienl, qui'! loc
near all schls. 2 min. to S.D
()!" Nwpt fWy. A ~ICal\ in Jlth~
4 ery e:.r: lo 1n a i n l ai rl ,
Outdoor outlets & lights.
Chrislmas lights lo I t -i n ,
various trees, Sprinkllng
ll}'S, Im! It. -bk. New waler
hrr, dahwshr, dispOSa.I. 2,098
sq. ft. · 100 stf If gar.
S.1·1.:iOO. By Oll'ner . .546-3660.
TIRED OF
RENT RECEIPTS? General .~!!!!!!!!!!'!"""'""'""""""""~::"'"""':""""'""'""""""~G•neral
:,·,l;;;;G·-··;;;;;'"
1=== I G·~·~~H COTTAGE
A" HARD TO FIND *
2-S{y, 5 hdrn1s., 2~<. ba'!.
Lge. kilch, 1v/brkrsr. area.
formal din, rm. Lge. li11.
rm. w/frplc. On cul de 111e
street in good neighOOrllood.
$39,:00.
fers! ~ J\tarv i n · ___ _._
Bro1111 Tarbell Rlty. DOG KENNEL
THINKING
OF
" SELLING?
.\IAR!->ET YOUR !10;\J~;
\\'JTI I
iJ'."1,QUE HO:\IE:\
Unique markl'ttd o 11 r r
t $600.000. In local RPal E:s-
.1a1e in !he lasr 30 days.
UNHlUI' tiClMU
Ae11 E.&1111. 175-6000
l•d [. (D•\I H·"Y·
<:ofOl'll 0.t M11, C1l1I.
SPANISH
SPLIT -LEVEL
pealed in one of the most
!)Opular & LM'sl neighbor-
/ hoods in Huntington Beach.
I IJus! a~k any or lhc rcsl-
iJcnts.J This hnmt Jeatures
I tKlr., family room , formal
t11n1ni;; roon1. 21 ~ baths. Sir-
uaterl on 11r1·y l a~e lot wi!h
rxtra pr11111ry. Priec>d to
-r>JI quickly at S-Kl,;,o(). Pholl('
d&-2313 for additional lnfor-
malMln.
10 · THE REAL
~ESTATERS
• 't ·.' ' ',·
*MESA VERDE *
1\·rly 1mmac. home. Bel:lul.
:rounds. Cov. p;1tio. J nn.
f:tni rm <! B;1ths .t3:i.'1Xl
Georg• Williamson
HEALTOl1
fi.r1--1.·:o6·I 1·:1"r<;
1eneral
. .
fORE\l J: Ol.SO~ , ..
A'!AI. T ()PJ
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Would You lelleve
LESS THAN
$75.00
A Mo11th
"Ql\'e!;l11r's sp<•cinl. Tl\kc
O\·rr :>i,. annual •,;, rRIP
l"l!A lo..1n. Nral nnd
olcnn :i Ocdroorn hon1e, -enn ht' }"0\11'11 for less
: than S75 a month. narr
• find nesllC'd on hu~e
; '\\•ell k('pl lot. f or lhc
• parUculpr hon1P buyer.
: qr the di~c('rnlnl{ i~YeS· :-.tor. Dorl"l ta il to lnvH·
1. Ugtt te this unusual op-
, :l)"irlunily. \Von't last !1 ;p hurry_cn11
:: • '45·0303 ... .. ... •• or • •• jj..
" ~
BACHELOR
"BEACW'
BARGAIN
~:It u.nd,y beacMI and
• · the roar ot the surf
:. tum you of\ thl.$ fa It.
:: Summer-tun cottal:e.
• Sp1;clt>Us llvtng rvom,
. tm&.hl shiny kltchf>n.
" tara:e bed.roomt. IN·
'CLUDES llvtnc room • l'\Jrnltutt-and ttfrl~l'I·
• &or. (hl.•nf'r llquldllting
• .. tnr fA1t aale. Don't ptlU
up that briAk·mnn1lng
' run on the .-net. llurry
; -\\-nn't lut. Dial J 645-4JOI
:I
I> ·~ " ;.
IOlll.\I I. Ol\O\
• I • • •
• 2299 Harbor, Cm-ta Mf'll
4 BDRM., 2 BATH
$12,295 COlY FOR COUPLE Built On Your Land
Qu:iu1! rasc <."()\'crt'd ~a l"()!· -13.JJ sq. It. l111ing area
1ai;t'. Perfect for rouille or -AH lath & plwuer
bachelor. Huge msrr. suil~. -J{ardwood cahint•!i1
Loa.Us ol clerset spacl'. FOR--Breakfast ba r
1\IAL Dll'l<ING RJ\.1. All tiled -Pullman ha!h.s
kitchen & bath. Lush earpe(. -Spacious \1·arctr(llh·s
1ng. L<iv1sh tlecorall\"t."".rtlls. JUST $9.15 SQ, FT. ~ rovl'N'd patios. All dichon-Planning-DPsign.f in anCing-
rlra law11:1. Bnek planters. "1400 Homrs &. Apartment!
Nl'v.' painl. N('w rool. R-2 built since ':'"1i"'
·zo ned. ll"alk lo beach. Jr 's CALL 5JJ.Q380
a doll house. \\'on "t last • l0666 "'estmins!er Ave,
Bellf'r hurry. Ca I J j 714) Garrlen Grov,.. CLOSED SUN
KHp In Tun-
Move In June!
Cambrldgr homCB charmer.
Th,. ~parkling pool i! wail·
ing and thrre's room to
park }'0',11 boa! \\'hat a lun
room 10 live in·: on a larte
pie shaped lot at the end of
a quiet cul-de.sac slttl't. J
I a r g e bedrooms. lamily
roon1, elrcl garage door
opener. SJS,500. Call 646-nn
1-0 THE REAL
I'.". ESTATERS ' .
PENDING
FORECLOSURE
Just reduced $4,00o. See this
3 BR house plu~ 800 sq. r1.
ioto-..~. plus 1000 sq ti -5
)'r old bui-lding on 1\-1-1 lot.
AU for S31,500. Cali Ray
Gault 5-11J...l l5l HERITAGE:
REAL ESTATE.
Come st'e this sharp 3 bed·
room plus lan1ily room
hon1e. }~ormaJ diniJ1g area.
used brick tireylaee, Like
new w/\11 carpets & drapes,
bltin RIO. COOi. covered pa-
tio. Jus1 reduced to .$21,500.
Cali 847-lZll.
SEYMOUR REAL TY
1n.i1 Bearh Blvd., Htgn Bc:h
Open 'til 9 P~t
BELIEVE IT
OR NOT
Thi.-; .f Dedrm home can be
yours for only $750. total
cos!~ to GT'S. Convenient 10
• OCEAN FRONT DUPLEX Outstanding Loc•tion parks & ShOp!. \Vas ju~
* LARGE * FA:\IILY HOME
Jn oceanfront neighborhood.
J-las j bdrm!., 3 lla!hs. Huge
Jiv. rm. 111/lrpl. Jo'onnal din-
ing area. Lg!". 11•ei1 . equip-
ped kitch. Centrally located
rec. room. Over 3,000 sq.
It. on one level; st•rrounded
by nice garden & patio
areas. A very functional,
v.·eU planned home. Asking
$87,j()(j_
$47.000 4 hr. 2 ba, !gc kl!chen/d ln "g-painled & crptd. Only S2ti,9JO
STANCO FORTIN CO. li12-.'.000 arl'a, rrplc, brick patio. COLLINS & WATTS
Balboa Island lrl'es, cor;:;er OU!IC' w/side 962-5523 Eves. 962-6889
• IUILDllS. INC. --------yai·d for bo or lrailcr. 1 eTIBURON CONDO e
002-:-i.JS;-,.
f'ORlST [ OL \ON
N £,A L'T-011 s
]91.':J Brookhurs1 Aw.
lluntington Beach
AmNTION
BUILDERS
1----------11us large H-2 lot oilers !he
OWNERS, LOSS
YOUR GAIN
l"hl:lni't' ro bulld 2 or J units
in Costa i\1esa, ju:<il srrp~
f1~1n1 J9th :\L sho11pinJ.:
area:1. O"''Jler is 11cry fie x-
iblc on 1rrms, SCI Just call
10 srp 11·ha1 ""c ran ll"ork
nut. Prier reducl'd 10 Sl l.900.
Srllrr must sal'rilicc S4.000
Of ('Xlr.i.s 111 his lo11ely 1'1-1·n
s1ory. ~'nur Bdrm. ThN'<'
hath IKlme \\.i th sunken li11-
ing Rm., Din. Rm .. Ell'rl
B/I Kil., Bkfs1. Rm. nnd
hu-gf" r an1. Rn1. Bl'a(ll i!ully ~ COATS '
dritped and 1·a 1'p <'l e d &. '
1hroughou1. Thrt'(' ~·ar gar· · WALLACE
agc-p1,1frssionally landscap-REAL !ORS
f'd ASSUi\IE EXISTING -546--41-41-
r·J I.A. loan or n>linlUl<'e to (Open Eveningt)
your choice. Priced for a 1----------quiek sale at only S39.950.
Doll House
$21,000
IF'.:..-'IJust on th" n1ar!Q!1 . This is
the (;Utl'~t huine \l'e '\•c sct'n
in awhilr • 1..arge dot1blr
garage • ovrrs1:t"d lot • nrw
pr1 in1 -1·t-ry clean. Try this
Onl'. '.i·IB-SG-10
BY OWNER,. nilnulc~ niajor shop'g -• J,iltlr l~lafkl . Secluded & 1 2 vtory J BR, lam rm, frmJ . d 11 1 ce nter, reeways, schools, d' b "· cusrorn 1:i:e a e ee. home. 2 50 arre p 11. r k. S3l,500. in. ll"e! ;u·, s .... g C..'Jll1!i
Bit, 2 BA , 2 story. family 5-Ui-J086. th11111ut, f'lcr kit, air.cond,
nn. & Jeck overlooking I----------cov'd patio, 2 car gar. App.
gaJ'drn \\'/large pat io NEW Spanish Duplex, 3BR, l!lOO sq. fl. VA/F HA terms.
bclo11", Beam c e i Ii n gs , 2 BA, 2 BR, 2 BA. Corner lot 8·17-S507/961!--4377/9GS..J17$.
hrilwd pani;ling, "'OOI crpt, Privall'. Cpls, di·p~. Fenced
walnut cabine ls. O the r l blk 10 .~!ore.~. Principals ~ j '
quality materials incl J\.1e.x only. S49,950 . .j.Ul-2181 he-
0
, •l.•{:j j I,;;
tile, 1CIT!:l7.ZO, m a r b I e , fore 9: 30 Ai\l or 11f1er 9 PSI. a • • .,.
I 1Ul11 ~ta1n ess s1eel. t.fany ap-1$-11 Wintergreen PL, Apt •
p!ianees oftt'red at ap-B, C.1\ol. App"r only. STEP UP
praisal. 673-7060. '\ .'"'----$22,SOO TO A GRACIOUS Attr •cfiv• ~ b I I • ·' I
* 499--:!MO *
PRIVACY
Nor1h Lagi.u1a ocean v ie 1v
ho111c 11·i1h private rlr111e,
Lacks up to vacant Irvine
Ranch land. Sp11nlsh s.rchl-
iecture . tll~ rool, adobe
bricks, 11-rought iron, lleam·
e<l ceilln;:. 3 Bedrooms, 21,,
B:tlhs, lanHly room, dining
roon1. hu ill-1n kilchC'n v.·ith
d1sh1\"ash.:r. S&l,!}j()_ Call •
.. r, 1a -.-l""O nvert.,.. am sicp-do111n Ji\'ing nn wuh IV<1t1•r!ron1 h<llllf" \\ith dock. N >' lo I' k ..A-0 rrn. 1~ rf'1't m ar huge J1repl. 4 hctlrn1. 2 .I
'.! BH., fl:Ull .fill., l ba., may homr. FllA or VA ok or a!-IJa tlHI . ""ith Jrg roman tuh, o~an
b · con11er1f'd 10 dup!('_-..:. 1203 n ',. GI I 1 ·~ su 1e ,1,.. • n. ""'" 1no on a cul-de-sac street. Cov-REAL ESTAJE J\"n. 11ayfrou1. Only $111,000. PIT!. Call \V:'\lC, ~1.1g.9:J.~I. 1' Bill G rundy, Rltr. f'rffi patkl. Great area near ""G S Dover Shores the beach . Only $30.500. ll;,v lenneyre t. 8~3 Do11er Dr., NB 642-4620 COLLINS & WATTS ~9-1-9413 5-19·0316
:.! BH. h!C, I br apt + guest e ONLY ONE e 962·~3 Eves. &4 2-0-127 BY 01rner Lo\"ely ~ BR, 2
rin & bath, u5 Pearl. OF A KIND VU HOJ\1E BA, fan1 rni, I r ll I r.:,
$fi!l.500. Q1vner 675-1209 5ooo sq ft Do11er Shores 4 HUGE BDRMS. panoramic view. Up ·rf'rnple
College Park Contemp. Old \\lorld desi gn ON 1 HUGE LOT Hill Dr. !o 3008 Dorn Court ~ Bft + maid"s. 4 1~ ba lh 0 (cul -dr . sac). Open house wnrr n1oving to Tennessee OPEN HOUSE Spaeiou.~ g-ourml't kitchen Sa!. & Sun June 5 k 6. ).6 anti say~ '"Sell Nov.•". Full 3 BH. Pool and large cover-10' antiq_ doors -f'ountR in pn1. Phonr 545-8983 or price $2G.SJ<l. 49+-2723 rd pa!iu. New i;hag •eupet atrium. 4-car gar., 'fem1s, 5-13--0-l.iH ll!J:).8:}33 ...::_c_.c~· ------
thruout. Bit-ins. CorMr lot ,f~l'-'~·'i00_,,_•~•--51_8_·1_2'_9__ $39,500
rr. \Valk 10 schools and shop-• E'CLUSJVE AGE.'-s • I ~ el yard & pa1io nrea. Excel·
with room for boat or ean1p· East Bluff ~. •. Custom yiew h1.Jn1e v.•i1h il'V·
ping. 10?0 down. Con\"en.--·~ • Jen! local ion. \\"alk to hcach NEWPORT t1onal finnr~mg '33.950. SALES • LE,\SES ,.,,..,..,..,... .... ..;..,..,..,I ,t· shopping. HEIGHTS ?H9-0j30. 2:H6 Greenbriar, BY OWNER PLACE REALTY 49-1·970.t
nll Princeton. {tut f Par lf1c Sand~ J br. 2 ba, Z969 So. Coas-1 II\\)'., L.B.
\\"alk1n1r distanrr lo 11.ll 2629 llarll()r, C .. \I. C rono del Ma• ¥.' rrpt~. dri)ll;, gar 1,·1hoft1 B" ~ 4 BR I :i;chool.~. Srparalp ch1.ldrcns -CLEANER.UPPER O • v,vn<'r: . am rm,
I d h I b door. Cor llt'r lot. \\"ell Ind-lg~ patio, ~hag cpl. Good P [ly yar w11 e 1n1 •ni.: 11 · · , O\\'NER leaving, must sell. I ·• ,. • 500 '"'
trrc (jood :<14' room and :re~ a r~~rgain l l~r lyou. !!arbor Vie1v Hill! horn". 2 na ly ~'!;11i:vs'iJ.:.10,E~;~ra~ terms. $31, . 49+-0,,,,.,.
l11g hra:-hl ki1chrn SlJ.900 'eris a 1 1" pain · c f'llll-Yrs. !JC\\'. adult occupied. 4 ,., Lido Isle Call fi\li-ilil 1111.! up; nlrt' 3 HR., 2 B.i ., 2-114 Vista Del Oro 11·knrl ... _,.'1,6.f~,'i().
llllns., frplo · . .<f~<'. <1lrnrr RR 2 1!!B.i. Vil" w.By app't. r-;e B h "'' ll''l ' til•1-6.'i9j Aft:: P:\1, ' 11·porr eac '"". "" I Irvine
Newport Beach ;;.;;,;:.:::,;,;:.::..;_,.,...,__-IEstablis hcd commercial ken·
3 BR. & DEN "'1 '" '·' '"'" '"d"'"
Near Cliff Dr. Custom home
only 6 yrs, old. 2 FUil baths,
kit. bltns., patio. Dbl. gar,
on .a.Hey, A good buy a t
$34,500.
4 BR. BAYCREST
large, modern 3 Bedroom
home plu-' smaller 2 Bed·
rooin guf"Sl or employee'
house afict several utility
build in gs. Existing set -ur
could be modified for vet-
erinary clinic or incorpor-
ate a pet store. $130,000 .. For
fUrther informalion, please
01\'ner going East, must sell call R.E. Knox 1'>'i!h
nice BaYcrest area -t BR .. Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc.
/amily rm .. dilling rm., 2 :>-11·20ZI E11es/\\"knds 538-943.'i
baths, tile entry, larger dbl.
garage. Priced I o 1v at Cemetery
S.39.900. Lots/Crypts 156
CA LL (!') ,.,.l-tl-4 CondominiUms·····----
A~,.,,,. ,., .. 1. uo
r.EALTY COUNTRY Club ViU!:!s, byl
Ntar Newpotl Po1t Offir• ov.·ner, Beaut Spanish 3 BR.
$15,100 V.A. 2~~ ba, frplc, p11t rat. Adj 10
Anyone qualifies ~\lbject to pool area. '\'alk lit l\!esa
flfA Loan v.i!h 61~ annual Verde Cnlry Club. DUI
percentage rate. Total paY-garage. 7!;1/5-10--0162.
n1ent S148 per month. Sharp COSTA :\IESA Tov.•nhouse -
3 bedroom home glistening Carefree li11ing; 3 Br, 2 na,
·with J-IARD \VOOD FLOORS. bltns, lrg dill gar. $22,500.
2 lu.xuriou~ baths, modern By O....·ner. Aft 6 wkdays, or
buUt-in kitchen. Ready for Sat. & Sun, 5"!0-2:1~.
immediate occupancy. GI l\10:-/TJCELLO tov.·nhouse -
buver~ ..,,·elcome. CALL! 170 Lexington Ln. C.:\I. 4 br ,
W. I k & L good cond. Shown Sun or by a er ee ., ... ",_'"'
2790 ltarbor Blvd. at Adams Income Property 166 ·
s.t5-046.l ()pen 'ti! 9 P~1 • CO~F:SA
BALBOA COVES 12-2 Br G11.rden House! all
WATERFRONT w/11.u . ira.rages & p11.tios. On •valuable 172x20-I. t blk Bank
Transferred • i\fust &tll~ of America, 2 nii. ocean.
Prime Joe. J BR. 2 ba. single Income $1 ,S.15/mo. $169.500.
t lory. Newly f.iel'Or. Fenced Good tenns. Ga il Pa~('
yd. 30 It, boat alip. $7'5,500 01'•ner :Wj Bernard St, C:\I
Bill Grundy, Rwltor 646-4430
l<ll Dowoc DI'., N.D. 642"'201--1-N_V_ES_T_M_E_N_T_S_
CORO:'\ADO home, 3 BR.
J•amily rm, Plush shilg \VITI ! ,.MAJOR"
carpel throughout. Lots or TENANTS-LEA5:"EBAG:S
other " extr11.s. Im n\ e d OFFICE
possession, $32,500. 837-9j()() CO:"lfi\fERCJAL
or 830--2808 & APT BLD'GS
BAYCHEST Beauty b y W. R. DUBOIS, INC.
ov.·ner. -4 br. 21.~ ha. pool, fR .E. Brokers~ SJ.1.!).11."1
fam nn, D.R., Ire _sim ple 7 Un its • $42,500
lot. Open Sun 1-J pm Otean wi, or hiway 11-'/in-
5-ls--02111. come over S700 1110 A good
EXCLUSIVE 3 Br, 3 Ba buy for someone. '
homf'. Linda Isle. Priv. PLACE REALTY '194·9i0.\
dock . $147,500. 61~3 296S So. Coasr H1\y., J,.B,
lot w rno1n rnr hoot f,, 1rlr. ,1~n~n""i~a-'--'-~1-9~---Fountain V•lley
Driv., 1.~\0 \\':11son, C.:\1 . ,r, · • fl -+-r . "-P' on -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; lf'I llS ~t•O\\ 1! ·I)' lot, :.; of 1\\1.·y. $4i,OOO •
HARBOR HIGHLANDS
4 br, 3 ba, ~;, FHA
$39,950 0\vner 64&-2«ll
:;;,;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I .1 BR .•. ~1~ h11.: 45 X &~ S!l3,:i00 Newport Heights
QUIT READ IN' ~BR., J ba.: 60 X 90 .. Si!l,500 y ·-0-U.;..,P_R_O_V...o;ID:...E---
4--plex, Costa "1"sa , Sell or
trl:lde up, $24.000 equit)
Principal! only. 67;-r.~JS alt
'
B/B
TRIPLE X
~-2 BR., )(00!.I n'nlui Arra
Long-l1mr \('nant.~. 011 rn•r
lu·n1 !t1"1 t1ni,: 9G~:i.1.
Cost• Mesa
4 BEDROOMS
+ DEN
"FOR RENT ADS" 4 BR., 4 ba.: 90 X AA $1 35,000 THE FAMILY
Enjoy the sttur1ty or your Udo Realty Inc.
Lots for Sale . 170
(lWn IMlmf'. A !Oii' dOY.'n pay-3.177 Via Wdo 2:! Yr:,\RS Qt'
H~~AL ESTATE SERV!Ct;
IN TIU:.: HARBOn AP.EA
SPANKING NEW
JY''1tly !n dr;1l• Ask . $37.:ll(). --.--.--E-A_S_T_S_l_D_E __
MORGAN REAL TY sharp 3 Bdr111, 1~0. Ba. h11·d
673-6647 675-6459 llrs. fa ht, lrg Jot, boat ac·
CUL·DE·SAC
P.oom [or boa.I fH' lra1l,r. Im·
11111culatf'. tih1M sell quick.
Prirr l"l'dUccd. lrnm('clinlr
posscs~ion. Subn1i1 F11A or
VA ICl"ms.
\\'e'H provide everythln2 else Orange • OK for 2 t nrlcxe~
ln this .( BR homP. Big lot, or 6 units.
playroom, boat & trailer * ALSO • sortf" 1 J a errs in
LIDO Isle Joi _ 57'x88', yard. Near Cl llf Drive, re· C.M. · & COJl.l.,1ERCIAL .
mrn1 nnd thli< lfiOO ~Q. ft. 3 673-7300
Hdrn1, 2 b:;lh lo11·nhousc can
br yours, $29.riOO. largest avail on the island. du~ to $43,500. QUINTARD, !Sil Harbor. Ci\1 Srl1't"I your 1:arpctin1:, dl"ilJX'~
.& colors for· your bt·and w
hon11·. now unrl constnic-
Steps From 1·1•ss. $27.500. Oll'lll'r may
ht'!ll hll'111t'('. Don't \\"Sit •
Park & -Swim Club • c.11 >4&-0814 •
11on; 3 BB., fnrrnul (.lining is lh1~ n1odpl !l('flt 4 bdr. \.
rn1 ., Jamily rn1., in selrcl ~tory ll<1rbor View hon1e.
HAFFDAL REALTY
812-•l IO.'i Eves: S41-2446
Via Lorc:a. S52,500. By University Realty 642-2991
Co~·~"'2><~r~2~1~"~4~4"':...::"':::::.8 ___ 1 ~'00..:.:.l_E~._Cs..:.:.l.=f~l•~·y~·--'-'·-'""-"-'-AVA LON, Cn talina • 40>:160
LrDO ~~idence • 4 bdrm. 2 Newport Shores n .3 lot, Prlrrd below <IP·
Unil-'. Pl:lrk C"ntrr l rv1nc ha. by owner. Call 673-5554 1----------pr11.isal -for dl'st·ription:
(ired hill
area, S45.000. 1\ rozy ram1Jy roon1 oil a 6 75-3000 J'l'ally uniqu,, ~u~try ki1-
BILL l''ULLER, REALTO~
REPOSSESSION, by 01vncr.
Spread your wing5 in this
spacious 4 BR + den, pool
horn~. 1':at.1n kitrhen, l~.
fan1il y rn1 \\!/frplc, shag
("arpctini: thruou!. lmmac
c"'Or.1. S.'\le or lradc for
sn1nller homt'. Call 546-3226.
· or ,..,.D '"'~ Pal Chaney 5."l..ll PR.'<£0
3 BR. 1'' DA, bl r,···. lg• Call Ao". lim• Rll ~20 •·~ 3 BR do· _.., blin• dp• ."' "" ... • ... .,,., , '" ,.u · • · • OrlRndo Santa B11 t"bn.ra, Cal. fan1ily rm 11-'/bar. Lge patio .,_,__,__..,,.. __ 3 BR/2 ba, on 1!~ lo\1, \Viii cpl , $27,000. Avail imm~d. 9310:;.
1.•hen. A l11rn1al d1n1ng room & newly lan dsca pr d. e 2-SfORY I01''nhouse, UOO LEASE \\·/option or take By OY.'ner. 642-340.f prin-loc==~~-----1 As~umable loo.Ji 5 %. ';O . ~11 tr . ~ br, 2~ ba, lge tam TRADE. Gn·TIB:>. c}i>les. CllOICE golf cour~e lol, Ni. JBll.ll ~ 111:.U'll
llEAl:l'l I \I'.
& giant 11\'ln~ J'nOlll with 11
brick f1rep!are. C:irJ>('tL!]1at
rould ne11rr lul\"t' 1~·.d\!p·
pe'd on. Cuslnm ('ln(Telt /,.,
:<prinklcrs rnlnt & rear. All
!his & you Oll"n ttwo land too
for just $4j,j00_ Call be.lore
it"s goll('. 5'16·2313
962-j()ll rm. Jiv nn, formal din, Z 1.8-,-.-0-"-.,"-,-., -4-,,-,,-3-,,-, -h,-.-1-atn San Clemente gucl C.C., Laguna Niguel,
Huntln...ton B••ch lrplc~. custom I n d s c pd. rm. lrge li\•'r rm 111/fplc, ·----------I JOl ' x 1S6', 01·rrlooks J ~t
,E\l 1 1 1 ~ ~7S '0~~1 -For Sale By Owner I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
If" r.oo1I loc nr UCI. schls, !t 61 ~ faiN"ay &: grrrn. $36.000. ~hop'i::. $10, 7;i(). O iv n e r $."9 •• ;-.o. ;).R56.). SliORECLifF"S -0 c ~a n 492-0661 ./
Come aad Go
$28,000
Low Down
\0 THE REAL
'.".. ESTATERS
Nu ~1nrd w(lril. t.ovrly 2 BR. 1-'C=:h=i=lcl:::,::1=p"o"rad==ois"e"'
'.!. Rn nr. fifty, t'ircP!, Cam.
11) 11n + living arta. Built· Lo11Ply Cambridgr pool hon1e
ln3, Fine crp.• & ltraprs. at !hr end or a quit'\ .!f!rt•ct.
Oouhle gara,i:::r . Piny a1'(>11. roon1 lor boat,
Lachenmyer
Re.1 ltot
.'I hirg" bdr. ClolJI' to good
~chools & shopping. St'!' 1 r~
or 11tKJne 646--TI71 for lnror-
n1alJon, Olferrd at "8,500. •
3 BR, 2 DA. lam rm, new
shag crpt. paint_ Near St.
John"s, $.10,Soo . .;.19-208;;
3 BR/3 ba, bonus rm, rrpl<:.
2100 gq. rt. Northea!t CM ,
CLEANUP lo SAVE
Just redu~ S2.000. 2~ Da,
3 BR, b~ yd, all modern,
Quiet area. Jl. price S11.950
545-04~ 893.8533
5%~'1 t..oan, $.31.00>. By ••. ov.•ner. 5-16-5386.
RETUlED? Ret1r1ng? Quiet.
seclude<t 2 br, 1¥, be. adull ,.,..,~~~~~'!"!!!I!""
t1lndon1iniurn. By . owner DRASTICALL y
5·l2-!!586. REDUCED
0 1\'NEn-J br, 2 bn, rrplc on
011er 10,000 sq rt cul-de-.-sac.
Pro! lndsepd It dee. ntA
j%_%. S32,900. 546-5891.
Execurive "transfer, mut l lf!ll .
Me1-edilh Gard tt n s Gal·
leria beauty, 2700 sq fl. 4
• BR + tamlly. C:omer Joi.
1860 N' I "I d CM 3 BR, l \,i: BA, rumpUs Ir; By ov.'Tlf!r, 962.7.174 .wpor ,., v ., .• . lly ·-Ollice open 7 day wk. lam nn. -....... do\\'n. GLENMAR EAST '0 ' THS REAL
"" f.STATr.R::; 1 Ca.II &16-3928 I Ews. 6·t6 ... i6-19 Owner. GM-3l!l6. 3 BR, 2 Bti. vacant Colonial ""~""""'""'~~""""''-'""iDf,OV~jiE'jiRFjS~HfcOf,R~Eiis= FHA Appraisa..I $2J,500. l Br, 11fY\t>, forcd air. 111~. bl. RI
Le •• Opt• 2 ba, shaa crp1s, nice drps. 0 11 a-10ft View l'lnmt. 1.ltS Santi«go Dr. dbl . gar. 6(2....24!M. . UITY•'NOn't lasl. S20.~.
Ealtsl'de 5 Bdrm. °"'1 h"Y. '"'" 5 BR.• bo. Rex L. Hecftu 147·2l2J l HR on estnre sitt Oce11 n Shiny •I••·, .... ,,., .. f"" Im· Adaptabl" lloor plan for . I $24 "'" 0 YANKEE ... ""' ""' ...., "' couple or lit. family. Ntv.·ly vie\\' oi. •"'"'· v.-nu. ' ~,~-:.itf' oteu:·," d~my deoor•tt'd. By a.pp'!. $9l,OOO 1010 Linden Pl, C~1. 642-112:? ! COME HOME
iiunriy = homf' ~·itht~~'. Bill Grundy, "Re1ltor .\IESA Vf'rdt by 0111~r 3 BR. 1 In thl., loveJy 4 bcdrm POOT.
d--m 1 01 1 83.'I DO\'W!r Dr N.8. M2·4620 13~1 rm. 2 ~·.patio, {)pt_n 110.\IE. Only SSOOO ro1nJ
•.1 ..... 1 • OnJ 'orag"· ------d111ly $29 !t50 :.i>-Wi5 hu&t mn.1;1rr brdroom and BEACH KEYS ' CMl.t 1n GI'S. VACANT Ii
easy boat and can1per at:· Go witti 1t111 2 Bdrn1, 2 n11 . ME~A lkl 111&.r S BR, l BA . only $30,;x:JO,
ccn. Now a11f1ilnhlr on 11 Coron11 drl L\lnr pool hon1c. J\!snv •xlras. EJ Owner. COLLINS & WATTS
leue . option be.al.-. 145.950. Sc:t"lurlf'd yard & lovely llU\· 1 :ilfl-lTOl 1 962-5.313" F:vra, 642-01~7
CAii 67)..8.jjO, tt1 . Yoo o~'n land $·13,:iOO. MES.A VER bl! HOME 1,t,RO ACRE-WOW!
Home Shpw Re•lters 3 Br lge klt. nice lncd ynl Bc•utlruJ clran 3 RR 2 Bath ·o THr REAL
'"" !:STATER~.> X'i.tii J::. Co.~t ll"'Y" CdL\I DAJLY Pl~ t ctlon! Jl)•lc kltchcn. llAS tfl LOAN,
"Armthll lr Hou~hun!ln~" lly owntr $21,000. $C5-i;OS4
1
ncnr Doui;:ln~. Jf uljr rn och
-"=======:: L__ ''5·7125 Ctt!! 642-MiTI I Sa~! Rex L. Hodo•• 847-2525
\
8.13--1337 '"\VEED Jr &. rear" .. clean vi~v.', "'lk dis. to beach. -4 1 •""'==~-,,---~I
out the. tr!asures I: triuh • br, 2 ba, new v.•/w cpl. Lo\\· I CHOICE golf cou rM> lot,
tum into <:a-'h thru a Dally dn pyrnl or trade equity tor Niguel C.C., La¥JJna N\.1n1tl,
Pilot Oasslfled sd. Ml-5678 lot, up or dn. 492--4187. 10l"x186 '. Overlooks 1 $I llOUSE Hunting'? Watch the
OPEN HOUSE column.
$@\l~1A.-l££2f~;
The Puzzle with the Built-In Chucll•
0 ltearrorio• lellers of th• _,,.-,~---.... ~--... lou r st1o rrib!ed wordi h•·
low lo form four :.imp!• word1
1
KOOrIN
1
8 Pi1Nr NUMBlito I' \fl TltS IN SOUAlt(S rr1·rrrr1
~ ~~~'t6'"0'l I I I • I I I I
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 1fi1 "LASSIFICATION •oo
•
fairway ,\ green. $J6.00J.
-492--0661.
• 14 + J\CN!, view lot e
Corona de\ ?-1ar
•m-2010•
L6T on !\re!a VeOOe J:Oll
coune, view!!! La~! or 2
lots. Owner aft ;), 64 4-8595
i\1ESA VERDF: J•AJR\VAY
LOT. By owner. 5."ll-3601 or
e\"ell f>42.....t364
Mountain, Desert,
Resort 174
CABIN en 2'1,ii 11cre~ 11nd
furnished, all for only J~99j
-S750 dov.'n arid low
month.Ir payments. Bo b
Roberts R•aJ E ! I 1 t r .
:.,j7""'1169.
Out of Stare Prop. 171
S. IV. Washington, In creit
recrr:11 ticn ana, approx 3-1
llcttl -new ChAlt>t hon\#' on
St11!e H"'Y 501. M9.~
ltnf'tN. H. I... i\lris ing~r. 970~·
Splri! Lftke H"''>', Touilc.
Wash !!RMfl.
Sa\'e YoUt UU' • :t's not
fllr! Ju11 reach ror Y'Oltr
phone It call 0.11.y r .101 c...1n...i ..,_,..,. a....,
Yottt ad ~ I~!
'
•
,
•
·-• -"• ...
• t
Tinwsd;17, June '· 1971
1;;;;;;m;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~lfil;;;;;;;.µ_--_· ____J ~ I -•w-; I~ I ,,_,w_ I~ '""""'"IMR•" ~ L ---1~' '""'""""twRoot I~'-----'~[ ~~~ .. ..,.i.. ]~
R•nd'l•s, Farms, 1 ~~~~;;;;;;~~~1~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;1
Grov" 180 Money Wanted 250 HoUH5 Unfurn. 305 HouMS Unfurn. :. 305 Apts. Furn. 360 Apt1. Furn. 360 apt. Unfum. J&.S Apts., Aph., '
1 .. ·-.-C-R_E_S_"_""'_"_"_"<_o_,.,.-'ng:.;;.e VENTURE capital needed General I rvlne "' Costa Mei• I N""'o_w_po_ri_H'"o'"lu"'h_t_s ___ Cost• M.sa Furn. or Unfum. 370 Fum. or U~m.
Grove in 1\Jvers1de at Van Jo'r 2 mot.Jon P ; C' 111 r~ ~ -----------;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I•---;-;;;;;;;;;-::---l·-----------1-An Burtn & Cleveland Good $750,000 or 1 motion picturt FREEll • _ * SUO UP ,... DUPLEX aµt-Lee 1 br turn. FAIRWAY 1S.:;:;n~t:•~A:;:•:• _____ ....;S~•~n~I~•:...:..;;;;'------+!
ait.e ,far trailer pk or wb-for S500,000. Distribution Landlords-Own1r1 i :::-2 ha. summ~r •· $31~~· GIANT 1 &: 2 BEDROOM! w/w crptg, drp.15, disposal, 1·
division. On main hwy to set. Call l\fr. Rice at \Ve W11J rel er tenants to you '• iUmnier '''''''' ' · Oorgeoua park·like U:ttlng Ule. Newly decor ·a t e d .
1'1arch field. Write Chas. 213/787-4321 or r.lr. Hill man FREE of charge ... !l.tany 4 BR, 21h ba!lu~ · ·•··· s350. Closed
1
itlf8ie! for max: Adult s, no pets. Working VILLA APJS.
Martin, !10 No. Main St, &l 2.13/340-8822 eves or desirable tl!!nants on 0 u r 3 BR. family room, Turtle lmum security. Quiet street. v.·ornan prelerTed. $127.50
Rivtnldr. 92501 wknds. Principals only \\'ailing list. Rock. Avalt July .lst •• $350 Adults, .no pets. 20 2 O mo. 308 Catalina D r .
My Olddy ..,., "'LW Md..,,..
Jty Mommy uft,.
J BR. 2 balhs ......... $325. Fulluton Avt (Harbor to 548-71611.
R•el Est at• M;7~s~SIQ;9e1,
260
ALA Rentals e 64:'r3XO 3 Bn .. 2 ha!h.s; flff'1lished Bay, then So. until 2 b!ks I ·CLE='=A~N~l~o-,~2~8~,-. ~.~.~,~-.-00 Exchang• 182 * * * &Yllil. Aug. ls! ........ $400 So. of Newport Blvd. 642-pets. Lg !tit. t.135-SlSO. 2421
2 & 3 BR's
Private paUo. pool • lndlv.
laundry lac.
Near Orange Co, Airport &
UCL Adu1ta only.
"'Theta -.tly.,. M II
3 BR. 2 BA. oew hrat -air
refrigeration (4 ton), heated
pool, furnished 1 blk Palm
Springi!. Shopping CPnter.
$35,000 Jor Laguna, Cd:\1,
NeY.'J)Ort area. 0 w n e r
675--0677.
Real Estate W•nt9d 184
CONDOMINIUM
-EXPERTS-
1vE S PECIALlZF: JN
S-E·J....L-1-N-G CONDO'S.
Buyers wailing no w. Our
salesmen are bonded. Ul·
most protection tor you
v.tien $folling your honle or
in«ime property,
Larwin Rtally, Inc.
21562 Rrookhurst, Jlnti::n Bcb
546-5411 anytime * CASH BUYER *
Don't Ji5t your home,
seU it to us.
Save time, save money.
immed. firm oUrT Broker e CAPITAL
INVESTMENTS e
8·12·7577 & 510-5.136
PRIVATE Parry
buy ocean front
Newport Beach.
cash. 544-lT:rll
Jill1nc.ial
Busln•ss
Opportunity
\~·ants ' to
home in
\Viii pay
I~
200
NEE!) CASH $140-SHARP~ 2 Br Duplex , (i eel h'"ll 8600 E. 16th St. NB. 64!>-1801
11000 OR MOR" gar. Kids ok. U LI' bl B 'lul 0 r I ·-.••Va 'f ••ut1 BACH. ap!, l person only.
Avco Thrift for a Real VAL D ISE!lE Gard A
$150-COOL n•. 2 Br 11 / "'~'I. • en pt~. $100 a mo Utt!. paid. 221 Esta!e loan. Upon approval ,,_.., · Adults no r11>fs F1owef! ~~~ s NB use I.he money however you child, !let ok . REALTY everywh-ere .... SU:Cam &1-'"="'c:.."~'~·.::,.:~·----~
20122: Sanla Ana. Ave.
l\lgr, !\1rs. Joachim, Apl 3-A
546-{;215
like.. Also ask abour our Blue Beacon * 6.45.011 1 Univ. Park Center, lrvine Waterfall, <15' pool Ree. Rm, Apt. Unfurn. 365
unsecu~d personal loan.~. 3 BDR.'d., FllJTlily nn., park Cali Anyl.ime 833-0820 Sauna, Sgls 1-2 Bdnn. Furn-General * Spanish Elegance
AVCO TI·IRIF"T like yard. Costa t168. Rids !!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!!I Unturn. from $135. SEE IT: ;;;;;:i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
620 NeY."POrt Center Drive OK, brk., $200 a month. NO L B h 2000 Parsons, 642-8670 Q I t Ad It L' I 833-3410 FEE. 5"0-1720. •gun• oac VEN DOME u • u tY ng Shag cpl e drps e blln~
$40,000 1st TD on C-2 parcel. Corona del Mat * VIE\V HOi\11': * GARDEN LIVING Beaulilul Pool e AU Uhl Pd
Sold al $li0.<XX>. Strong buyer De.luxe 2 Br. 2 ha. North end Quiet. attrac-., pleasanl. Util L\li\1ACULATE API'S! l BR. $150-2 BR. $!7[)
is «ins!ructing bldg, fell{'(', 2 BR, l Ba + 1 Br apt. 1 blk loc., xlnt ocean vie\v. All paid, HeaTf"d pool ADULT and Adults only-no pe!s
lndscpg, etc. Pays $1200 heh . $32:"!/mo )T's Jse. No hlln kitch. Frplc. Open 1 Br. $145 ~ 2° Br $170 FAMILY Section 2-ll Avocado St. 6~&-0979
qrtly, incl. 97c. Discount chi Id I p et s. Retting. Beam cell's. $Ji~ mo. Adul1s Sn1atl Pf'l ok 1 ~~~~~~~~~"!1 10'7o Bkr. 493-lll.3. 962~. D11SS!ON REALTY 7~0 \V · lSth St C i\l Clos• to shopplng1 Park ---~•:._:-494:c::--0~7~3~1 ~*~--I.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! . ..,..,·..,··..,·~·~·..., I * Spacious 3 BR's, 2 ba * $130 UP *
I~
Houses Furnlsh.d 300
General
RENTAL FINDERS
Fr•• To L1ndlords
64S.011 l
41\ W, 1 tl'll, CM .. MIMI
* * * ~100-NEAR TO\VN! Ideal n1a-
1ure a9ult. Vacant.
SUi\1i\1ER P.ENTALS!
l\1any avai'.I. Reserve no\Y,
Blue B•acon * 645-0111
e FIXER -UPPER huge 1
br, child & pet OK. SUS
•LOVELY 2 hr, I.Joe Joe, sm
pet, UtJ pd_ Sl7J.
Ala Rentals e 6.45-3900
Costa Mtsa * Swim pool, put/green GIANT l & 2 BEDROOM!
MeH V°'d' BA YCLIFF MOTEL VERY CLEAN & VACANT * Frpl, Indiv/lndty fac'ls Gorgeous, pa.rk·like setting.
is this 3 bedroom home only CLEAN, 3 br. 2 b a, * LO\V \\'EEKLY R,,\TES * ~845 Anaheim Ave. ·Closed garages for ma.."IC-
2 years old, near South cul-<le-sac, Is l & last, sr;i0 Kitchen, 1V's, n1aid service. COSTA MESA 642-2824 1mum aecuri!;y, Quiet 1trttt.
Coast Plaza. Lease required lease. 4~9ll. AviL July J1e11ted Pool. Adults, no pets. 20 20
I I '~" B 1•--p I I Fullerton Ave (Harbor to a! $240 ""r month. Call ~·~·--~-~----1----~·~~~·-~~:'.'.:'.~ ____ I • 11UG M nsu a r :-Bay, then So. until 2 blks
agen1. f>.16-·1141. Newport Beach *Studio Apt. $11 O BRAND new Deluxe 3 Br, 2 So. of Newpart Blvd.) * * 2 BR. Gar. Patio. Crpts, BEAUT -" ho 3 * Beef Bn. ap!s. 1600 block E. 642-8690 ·,' m~. "~, u~.. 1 room $130 -drps, sloYe, rcfrig. QtJie1 BR 2 BA l p 1 Balbo1t Blvd: close lo ocean Park-like Surrounding tropical setting for adults ·· ·2 • r c .. PC!. io. MAPLE sr NEAR l!ITI! or bay. 1 yr lease. Incl
only, 1 blk to shops. Sl69. Pool. 2 Car gar. All bltns! 64i0349 D/W, drps, frpl & crpt. QUIET • DELUXE nu carp, drapes. L.se $29~1~~=,...c,,:;.:::..;.:..____ 1-2 & S BR APTS
•&16-44:111. • n10. (I) 523-4710 or 84&-5991 *WINTER RATES* 544-4.ISl da%, 673--0253 eves Al.so Furn. Bachelor
2 Br, 1n cour1. slovc, gar, eves/wlmds. * * ALL SlTh1r.1ER! * * for appl . Prv patios * Hid Pool11
patio,2 chi\drenok. Nope\s. CLIFFHAVEN home, cpt, Quie.t . Atlrac Studios &: l DELUXE .l hr, 2 ba, yrly Nr shop'g * Adull'li only
P.efs rcq'd. 61J-Victoria. bltn, r/o, lg yd for baby. BR s, Silo up, AdHs, no lease.·All appliances. \Vkdy! M • • A
Unit 6. $225. 213 889-2020, eves. pets. 2135 Elden, i\1i;tr Apt 6. Bf! 6 pm & \\•knds, S..18-49.19. QrflnlqU8 pts.
• Bf' I ·1 C d I M lm Santa Ana Ave., CM .:i ... 1on1e, :? b11. fan11 y rn1, Santa An'a Heights SPECIAL -Lo Ra!es [rom orona e ar lire!. dbl garage, lge h1cd-in _ $25 wk. Kit avail, maid Mgr. Apt 1.13 646-5542
yard. Sharp, $22.>. Call IDEAL Home • 5 bdrms. 3 scrv, TV & ph. Sea Lark
~6-8226. ha. New shag, Spanbh en-Morel, 2301 Npt Blvd., CM.
l BDR:'ll _ ~er!y. No ex-try, Nr schls .Ir; shp'i:;. &16-7445
ce.ptions, Couple pre[errf'd. ~"'~3-_23~'-"~~-----ll-•.:.C:L~R~G"'-l-b-,-c-,-,-,,-,-lly_l_oc-.
l"o pets. $80. 196J Parsons Condominiums Pool, carport, adult!, no
SL 5-lS-2898. Unfurn. 320 pets. Sil'> mo. 560 W.
1 BR. housf" Y.'i1h yard. Ftove Hamilton. 646-4160 or
& rel . Uul paid ,125. Huntington B•ach 54~7ro.
545-2·186 .•
~ ,a~~
ON TEN ACRES
I & 2 BR. Furn, &: Unfum.
Fireplaces I priv. patios.
Pools Tennl11 Contnt'J Bklst.
900 Sea Lane, Cdt.1 644-2611
(J\IacArtbur nr Coast Hwy)
*BRAND NEW*
LA COSTA AP'l'S. l &: 2 BR.
Bltns, l!Wimming po0I & gar.
age. AU ut!l pd. USO to fl70
mo. Adults, no pel.!1.
354 Avocado, 0.t 642-9708
HARBOR GREENS
...., ....
lltJfl rt.Ir ,,..,__.
... '165::. -·----·--..._..,.. .......... ----· 1 ....... ....,.1 ..... . ...._. . ...,_,.,.. .....
"""""OWUU&Y~i C91B:
I> ~HM,,,...Sd*"l!l(Jttf"" TIM CR..illf
• • --,.-~,~t-a:· ~~::."'@
(TU) U7.0-
Mollooo'QAlltJ0....~\b)'Tllta.-'oC--Jllr...-..t8'1.l.""9cW •
.Apts.,
Furn. or Unfurn.
Apts.,
370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370
Newport Beech N•wport Beach
FROM $135*
Olympic sire pool-Bill iard1-Saun11-T enni1
pro shop-Color TV lounqe-Health Clubs-
Indoor q ol f drivinq ra ng-Party Room-Full
time Activiti1s Director.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS: Sing!", 1 & 2
Bedrooms, furnished or unfurnished.
DISTRIBUTORS
NEEDED FRt:;E RENTAL BOOK
NE\V multl-inil!ion dollar DROP IN AND RRO\VSf:
advertised snack pack pro-Walker & Lee, Reaitor5
3 Jir, frplc • $185
.}l&-6--IS9 aller 5:l0
Dana Point
2 BR, 1 1 ~ ba, crpls/drps, All VERY Ni('t-1 & 2 BR
apphalX'es. carport, pool, Trailen;, $100 & up, Child
rec fac1l. $160 mo. 962-1189 ok. 133 E. 16th St., C:\I.
eve~. 642-]26,j.
FOR lease 2 Bit Condo. $220. t BR, pool. ldcal Io r
)'K'r mo. 1st & lasl + $100 bachelors, $125 & $13;). 2
clep. (714)5~315. BR. $!;:(!. Adults. Spac. 1993
GARDEN & 511JDIO AP'I'S
Bnch.1,.2, S BR's. from UIO.
REASONABL E RENT•: Singles from $135.
1 Bedrooms from $145. 2 Bedrooms from
$200. Low move in charges. No lease req'd.
* SPACIOUS * 2700 Peterson Way, C.M.
2 Bdnns., l~ baths Front 546-0370 Models Open Daily 10 am to 8 pm
ducts. NEED N O\V ! 2790 Hrirbor Blvd. at Adams 2 BR., 111 ba, Crpts, Drps,
Nr !l.1arina,
Adu lts. Reliabl' men or v.'Omcn in Fountain Valley Bltns, F11J!c,
your area to :!itrviec $215 mo.
fa st!TlQving coin operated SUi\1i\1ER rental avail JtJne 71 ~/870-1146.
produc1s in c om Pan Y 18. 4 hr. $300 mo. Children & ·roR lease. 2 B'R, Jge J1v nn,
secured locations, com· pets??? 962-3S3J f.rpl , stove, ttfr, cpts, rlrps, mercial or factory, PART I ~=c..:.:..c.=c.::=-----OR FULL Tl~lE. 6 to 12 Newport Beech gar, fenred yani. No pets.
hours J)f'r y,·eek. N'o !>rllini::. Available July. $\R.l. 494-6922
CASll REQUtB.ED: $600 1o BEAUT Westcliff 3 BR, J une Fountain Valley
$299J. ~'rile for morr in-1~1~9~to~.~S.:p~l.~1~.~IV~•~l~~~j§~~]jR.~::~~ formation: I:VSTAJ\'T FOOD gankner, $450. S48-8642. L, 3 BR. den, rrpls,
SUPPLY P.O. Box 31a5. Houses Unfurn. JOS drps, bltns. Many xtras,
Torrancr, California. 0050J.. Avail no11•. $293. M7-Ta62.
Tnc!ude phone nun1ber. General Huntington Beach
TO BUY OR
SELL A BUSINESS
HOLLAND BUS. SALES
"The Broker with Empathy"
1 TI6 Orange Ave., c.ri,t
64J.4l70; 540·0608 anytime
\Ve need sales people.
ARE yoo interesle-d In people
and creative art? Xlnt OP"
portunity !or man & wile.
$10,0CKI investment required,
fully secured. P ho n e
77S-5116D before S: 30 p.m.,
772-SSJl aC!er 6 p.m.
NEEDED'
WORKING PARTNER OR
?VT INVESTOR. Substant·
ial return on money invest·
~. secure-cl w/coUatera.!.
For more info Y.Tite P.O.
Box lST.9, San!a Ana.
CATERING 1ruck f... cstab·
lished roUI(' 111 Lni:llna area.
Fully licensed k insuttd.
$4j()(I cash. 71'1: 6%-8646.
BEAUTY :;;. a 1 n n. 11·ell
establi1'.hed, OY.'nl'r retiring.
638-7710 or ;)48-3212.
Monty to Loan 240
1st TD Loan
1'1~• INTEREST
2nd TD loan
e BUDGET CUTJE :Z br,
fncd yrd. Kids OJ<. $lli,
e FA.\llLY NEEDED 2 br,
('OC gar. Kids &. pe1s. $1JO.
Ala Renta ls e 645-3900
* * * $180-SPACJOUS~ 4 BR home,
kids & pet fine.
$17;>.LAGUNA! l Br. Cozy
cottage, frplc, nr beach.
Blue Beacon * 645-0111
e STEPS to BEACH yrly. i
Dr. crp1s/drps, sngls OK.
$1iO.
e BEACH LIVJi\'G YEAR
ROUND 2 br, sng\s OK. $175
Ala Rentals • 645-3900
* * * $1:!.'i-NEAT! & Ci('an 2 Br,
bltns, child ok.
.$17.'>-PAINT & Save! :i Br. :!
Ba, lrplc, tamily or sngl.~
Blue Beacon * 645-0111
e \VALK to SHOPPING 2
br, crpls/dfllS, enc gar. $150
e SPA.Rh.LING 2 hr, xlnl loc,
lncd yrd. Kids $140,
Ala Rentals • MS-3900
* * * $170-NEAR Ocean! 2 Br, yd
for kids &. pr t.
EXTRA tllCEt "Glen t.!a.r". nr
B rookhurst/Adams.
Ncwpor1 & bea ch. <I BR, 2
ba. Fnm rn1. Shag, bltn~ .
Frple, elr. Ava.ii now, $250
mo. ~948.
NE\V-ncver livl'd in, l BR, 2
ha, Shal!:", Drp~. D-11111sher,
fncd. s2:;o. 968 -233 4.
53&--0.\7!1.
2 Bn, pool, ll!il paid.
Close to bcarh $225
• 842-:W76
3 BR townhse-NC'1vly rice.
b11ns, T"C'frig & pool. $100 on
lse. 9Gs-8979 or 839-1361.
2 BDRl\1 home, 1 ba, new
crpl~/drps, gardener \Valk
10 beach. $170. :'":i3G-7003.
3 BR, lrpJ c. beau!. rrp!s,
drp~. nr ocean, ~ch Is,
cahana 1•luh. $200. 673·1ST.t
J BR, 2 ha, bltns, crpts, $210
per nin.
Call &12-2701!
Irvin•
:! BR .. 2 Baths ........ $32J
3 BR. & lamily rm. home,
line!. gardener I .... $.145
3 BR. 2 Ba. Choice grecn-
b('1t Joc;ition .......... $32:"!
4 BR., '..!'h Ba. a: lam. r m.
Turt:e Rock, nrly new.$350
2 BR. 2 Baths .... ., ... $275
ap!. 2 Blk!, to Big 'corona REAr. Value: Cijits, drps, SOUTH BAY CLUB OAKWOOD GARDEN
Bch. & shopping. Adults. No dshY.•hr, pool, 2 B r , A
pets. lmmnc. L.se. $250 Mo. S.130. ~1Alure adulls only. No Apartment.! pa rtmcnts
Wesley N. Taylor Co. pets. Qlliet. 2295 Pac!Le (just fo~ single people) slng~~cl0~a':~1i;J :d~tbil
0 1urch. 548-!!633. 2 BR, l~i BA, crpts, firps.1-.:c,::c:=c_:_:::.:=::_ __ _
bltins, \\'~llr/ciryr, Call $25 per week & up * 644-4910 * Ave. 5-18-6878 or 642-4·129 Irvine &: lGlh. ltith bhvn Irvine le: Dover
* COROLIDO APTS * * REGENCY* 714 ' 645·0550 714' 642-8170
be fore 1. 8·12-1629. J3ACHELOR & 1 BR.
Townhouse Unfurn. 335 TV & maid serv. avail,
Newport Beach 2 BR, 2 ba, sunken liv rm, 2 Rr. studios & street levels, 2 Br, 1 Ba, crptg/drps, 1eU •Rent subject to location
--'--------1 1 b I $lRO/ 1255 $1.85 & up. Dsh1vhr. frpl, dbl clean gas oven, encl gar, pa.1'!''""'"'~""--'""""'~""'!"' _ _,_.., ____ •I
450 Victoria, C.nf.
* Adults Pr•feirred * rp c: 11 cnn.v. ~o carport. LA RGE Pool, tios. S.18·3605. J77 \V. Wilson . rA 1 Unfu•n,
2 BR. 2 BA. 2-carport S2'l5 Baker St., Ci\t. 5'10-2a70. 673-3378 * BEAUTlFUL l & 2 BR.l.:..P~·_:.:..,.:..,'.:.., ___ 3~65-Apts,,
3 BR. 2~~ BA. 2-car gar. S275 NICE 1 br dplx. Quiet. Sep li~=.:.__-~----cl Furn. or Unfurn. 370
REAL TOR. 548-6966 by garagC'S. 1 adult aver JO, FOR lea:!e deluxe new all Contemporary Gal'den Apts. Mesa Vtrd• elcc 2 Br, l Ba. Patios, tr PI cs p:iol. osta Mesa DD~u~p~le~x~e~s~U~n~lu::r•~·:_,.;'.35~0~1;~oo'fi;pc~l~'·~"-i;ll-~l~02l=,,;;;;;;;;u,;: I Unobstructed view of bay & $150-$165. Call 541>-~163 2 BR. New Cf1l\'g, r1.rpi;, ----------1 -AITRAC furn . To1vnhouse, ocean. Adl!s only. S390 per CLEAN clellixe 2 BR "!Udio locked gar .. }!arbor/Baker T\\'O 1 SR apts, unf, $125.
General E/sidr 2 Br. ]1~ Ba, pool. I 67~ """" s Shop'g. AdUs. No pets. Adults, M pet,;. 82() Center ----------I mo on eai;c. .>-<i""~ Cpts, drps, pool. Cle.~n Stolfi/ 64 5-3515 2 BEDR00:'11 apt. close 10 No pets. i 17:i. 646-66lO. 2 BR deluxe. \llalk lo beach, rrsponsible adults. 1 child mo. · · ~t., C.M. M2-5848·
store. Senior c1lJzcns only, GARDEN Apt • 2 Br. $J611. Adul!s. 546-4431 v.·kends, ok. 646--04!)6. DLX 2 &: 3 Br, 2 Ba, encl CLEAI'l, freshly painted l bt.
53G-34JS. Bltns, garage. Adlllt s. lfiO....G &1.1-147[ y,•kdays. DELUXE new 2 BR apt, gar, $145 & up. Rental Ofc: Crpts, drp5, bllns. t;l.J0..;140.
Corona dtl Mar E , 2\s! fit. 548-2127. SHA/Ul .1-bdrn1, carp .. drps, crpts, drps. Sofl water, 3095 Mace Ave., 546-1034 No pels. 540-9722
----------11 BR. $135. \Vater paid. 2039 priv. patlO. Ground floO r. range, gar, $190. 548-lW!J. Newport B•ach Huntington Beech
CORONA Highlands-2 Br, \Vallace, Costa Me 1a. Scenic Propertir5 67~:'1726 * LRG 2 Br Mesa Verde PARK NEWPORT
~2 Ba,Vstv~~f,MCpt~, d~s.1..C-&~l&-<~>t~0~.~-----'1---I Costa Mesa upstrs , Joc ked gar. APARTMENTS
cean u, · ; orning _a-SLEEPING room $45. onth $14~$150. No pets. 557-3400 8,,1,, •• -, 1 ~ 2 B-"room,,
nyon Rd, S27a. 646-2290, Stone Villa Tra · --..... "'"' 67~1·15 333 \\'est Bay. Costa lllNG BROS. Announces $170-2 Br, 2 Ba Stlldio apt. and Townhouses. Spa. pools,
Costa Mesa A!'I!.~. Now Avnil;1h!e Cpts, drps, patio, gar. Adj tennis. From srra. Across • * $9:t-.fl25. Nie<' 1 hr. 1.12 MEDITERRANEAN to shp'g. 285 Ogle. 548-8301 from Fashion Is.land at Jam·
R·-E-,-10-0-c-.L-,-,--B-R-.-w-/-w-,1 \V~ _IVilson Ave, C. i\l . VILLAGE East Bluff boree .& San Joaquin Hills
bltns, bric gas lrpl, beams,t .c"~"4-'-"~'°~·-.-~----2100 Harbor Blvd. Roads, (TI4) 6+1-l!JOO.
natio. l adlt·no pets. $134. S13J. Bealll1[ul I br expando C 1 M '' C'ls a esa NEWPORT BEACH SEACLlFF 1.-lanor Ap!.'li. 2 Yearly. 642-8,j2(J mobile home.132 \V. \V ilson 17111 557 8020 · iiijiijii;i;iiii;iiiiiiiiiiii l-~~~!:._I~~~----==,:;.~·c.,.:==·;::"""~-Br. AlM 1 Br. aYail July 1. A1·e. C . .\1. 64$-4530. VNrURN 2 Bn, 1 18 5 • Villa Granada Apts, Crpts, drp~. bltns. pool, priv
SUBLET for 1ummer, beaut Four bedrooms with bsJcon-0,1· •tud'o ,_ l" "-Dramatic 2-sty. liv. rm. ho G 10, 1 ......... 11 oa, furn <le!ux lge 1 BR R:arden ic~ a ve &: ':relow. raclou1 f•i••i ok 54• ~,, 1•2-w/f'"'il .. nvrrlookt'"g "" · o-~v·' "'::i
'"t P•l G•" s •• •9•..<! '' ., Ji\'in"' & q"lot ~,, ....... ,,ndine Pl · \ A k ~------" ,. · ·• " ~ . .,....,, ·"-'· t · I I d · b _..v acent1a , ve. s about -rop1ca n scpd swimming for Iamily with ahlldJ'fon. o•• d'--v·J.
Ap1t1menl1 for Rent
•--------· '.\'ICE 2 BEDR00~1 I · J 5 E 10 .... """v " poo & patio, 4 . ...,th St., Near Corona de.I !\tar High l=~-=''=~-~~~-
Apts. F urn. 360 Duplex. C~rprt!'r?. &12-4603 School Fire Jae ~· t bar&. SUBLEASE-Exec. 3 Br Park
-"----------$ !35 5-19-0113.1 i,;;;.,:;:_~=~=-~=-1 · ' P e, e Ney,•l'W"t t To \\' n ho NEAR NE'\V $275 - 3 BR, built.in kitchen appliances. , .... ~ . . use
General Da na Point If 0 w n s 1 a i r ~ .,,,. 1 b It n g 8J5 AMIGOS WAY 644.2991 Magnl l1c1cnt bay view, $fiOO
----------1 " I h I 1 C 1 · ll B k • Co JWr n10. Unfurn. No pets. No .. SINGLE. 1V, """'I. ""!S ok. u;s iwas er, rp c, 2-cer 0 awe an er °' ' children unrler 15 5"'6-4"'01 Rent Beautitul .t'urnimre ,,.....~ ,,... "Hr .. on c:uJ-de-~"c nr *phi. f.f i A I 541-52:?1 · ' Dan11. l\lanna Inn, 3-illl ., ..., ...... anag ng gl!!n :. before s. aJ!l-0684 y.•knds.
for as little as CoasJ liwy, 3·17 Woodland Pt, i\pt. l"o. A. e NEW ELUXE e
ONE MONTH l,,.==..--'-'-------1 c
6
.,o
30
11 ,".'.','.ect 213/G93--2;H2 a fl D LOVELY BAYFRONT
complete with
your lOOo/o
Purchast Option
lnd. ilem selection.
24 Hour De ly.
CUSTOM
Huntington Beach " 3 BR. 2 BA Apt for lease. Incl 2 Br. From $365, -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 11-=-2:-:c8~R-. ~FR~0~,-,-'1-,-,--1 spac. master &Wte, d!n rm Furn/Unf.
• COl\TPLETELY REDEC. & dbl ga~ge,, auto door NEWPORT TOWERS
CLEAN & COZY FA:\111,Y opener ava.il, Pool &: Rec, * 642-n:l2 * La Quinta Hermosa UNITS. CONV. LOCATION.
Sranish Country Estate Liv-VILLA J\1ESA APTS
.,. ...
• $263 •
865 Amigos \Vay, NB
r.fdnaged by
WILLIAM WALTERS CO.
BLU1'~F"S dlx Townhouse -2
Br, 211~ Ba, bl1ns, lrplc,
patio, encl gar. Quiei , Mr.
Jones 644-l133; alt a pm.
ing &: Spacious Arts. Ter-719 W. Wil.c;on 646-1251
raced pool; &Unken gas BBQ 4 NE\V large 2 br aptJ. wood
Furniture Rental Unbelievable Living: • Only panel ing, <'P!Sfdrps. Plenty 644-0940'.
ON BEACH!
NEW 2 BR. API'S
From t;230
FurnHure Availabt.
<:arpets.drapes-dishwasher
heated pool-saunas-ttnnis
ree room-ocean views
patios-ample parkin11:
Security iU3J'ds,
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
7l1 OCEAN AVE .. H.B.
(TI4) 53£.1487
Ole open 10 am-6 pm Dafly
WILLIAM WALTERS l'O.
Parklike Beach Llvin&
1or Adults
Casa Del Sol
1 & 2 BR-furn/unt. Pvt pa.
!lo, frplc: in 2 BR, elevaton,
dshw~s. crpL~. drps. Pata
attepted. From $145 •
21661 Brookhurst St HB. * (714) 962..al)SJ ••
Tennw based on equity.
642-2171 54S-0611
Serving Hat'bor area 21 yrs.
Sattler Mortg•ge Co.
517 W. 19th, C.M. 5-la·348I 1 Br unf $150-furn $175 or clooets &. cupboard !lpn.ee. Huntington Beach N' PT Is Le w l r fr n t
$90-POOL! 1 BR + den, ma. ~~bi;;_ :-..JZ: l Br unf $175 furn $210 No pets. $160. 309 r.tonte Seascape Apts wfpier-noat, 3 br, 2 ha,
rure adults. ALL UTIL INCLUDED I =V=;~'',o'~· ~C~·~··~"='-~l~96:1=. ---1 LOVELY J 2 BR l lrplc, sundeek, $375 yrly lse
,...ll 11 b ,-p !' I i 1 I.
---'l \ !'11 ll11r
ft 2 & 3 BDRMS. $150 UP.
Patio, pool. Child r en.
MORA KAI APTS, 18881
Mora Kai Ln. % blk E. ol
Beach .at Garfia·kl. '714:
. 96U9!W.
3.16 E. 17th Street * 8.1•"• Island SPAC 2 BT apts from l l'O. new • ·l ' 675-7672. Blue Beacon 64S-Oll1 YU s ·-• 13o I ' blk -m C I d '~-=='-~---~ pec1iu nus; a s Iver· Htd pool , Play ;yd, CrpU!, uv ocean. rp ll, rp1, 1: KIDS WELCOME
3 BUR!\-L +family rm., full "SlNC"' "'"""" SUNNY mod. J r oom, pl•J-·' candle •nutJ•r ;, d patio, dshwhr, sundeck, trpl 2 BR, 2 BA, crpts, drps,
C h F t '
"' .....,..,, ....... ... rps, bltn,~. patio, NeY.·ly blli Co I 11o ts $1&5 as as • dining nn .. built-Ins., brk. ]st \\'eslem Bank Bid&" w/dinelle, dlsp, Nr. beach. )'Ollrs u )'OU bring thl1 ad de{'Qrated. Kids ok. 205 15th St. 347.3957 I mo~·· Nr.up ~oag pe" ~ s p .
$390 a month. NO FEE. \ln!ven;Hy Park Aecom. 3. Sllmmer season when you vis.it our model!!. 1998 Maple. No. 1 &l&-2287 ./ CHEZ ORO APTS 64l-4l87.
Move in today, Attractive 2
&: 3 br aplll. ;139-U89. All
xtras, pool, ~s OK, 17~31
Keel.son Ln. apt B or D
842-7170 or 968-7510. 1st & 2nd Trust D•eds Newport, 546-1720. Days llJ..0101 Nights $000. or $175 mo. Yr lse, 4 b!Q S. of San Diego Frwy NEW 2 Br, lea,. 642-064l aft 8234 Atlanta. 1·2·3 Bdnns.l,C""';:::;:'--,..,--,_,.-~
FREE APPRAISAI.S • · w HITE ELEPHANTS:' ut il incl. 120 Pearl. 6n2004. on Beach, 1 blk W. on llolt 6 pm. wkdays. Will show Pool. Private g ara ge, PARK NeWIKJrt lge 1 hr. dlx
Cotta Mesa.,lnvestment overrunning )'11Ur house:~ 4 BR. 2 ha, Jncd ;yard. Pool 2 BR. apt. Winter rental. to 16211 Parkside I..ant •. J\femorial Day weekend. No Wshr/drycr. 536-0336, health spa, $710/mo. 4 Mo Newport ~.ach
5'41-7711 anytim• "CUh" .. sell D'll!m thru privileges. Avail immed. Charming. $195 per mo. cn4) 811-5«1 cblldren. 00 .. ,,. 5.1&-2727 or longl!!r. Wlll consider l·;;i~~i:i;~~iii:~;;;.~~~~l~~~Uo~l~~~~~,,.~-·::::::::::1.:!'~·~~1~~~~f7~:::::;:;;;;;1~~~~~:::~::__::__~1r~':"iiill'ii!~"'li::"'i'lf.': o--aR:--;;;;;;;;y-p;;;;;;;;;--&l.~fu~rn~~·31'-'!'::''~39~1~.~-----------~ Y lllnl ..,....... se. • (2131 792-2573. NEW 2 BR. be ,.,_ 3 BR. !l't'shly painted &: . VISTA DEL MESA -I $135 -i\10DERN. lge . 1-Br. am ce.....,,gs, clean, btl'hs, .~u. d""', Santa An. Balboa Pen1ns~ • near beach. Cpts, drApes, wood pane ling. All rec -·.. ..,. ----------Ap.1rtmant5 • features. $165. Adults, no frplc & air cone! .. Nr schl! 3 healed .........i '1 1 & 2 BR. Fum & Uni. Dish-• Rates hy W!!!ek~n Ocean <lis p., etc. 210 Chicago •hop'g • p••ks Kid• OK -~" Lovely Bachelors, 1-BR . 847-5169 pets. Call now 646--0073. pets p~ 8.~1548 ' "v Large OubhotJse etc. BBQ .,a!her -Stove and Re.trig -
I · Pool til o l,c"'=='------~ 387 W. Bay St. · · · · Child Care Center Shag crpl'g-Lrg .Ree center. Mad .!et'Vlce. , U . 1-BR.. swimming pool. 2 ;-;=,;;:~=-=',.'.'.:'...--• 67~40·• Blks to beach. Adults. No LARGE 2 BR, r!!!I & range, NEWLY decocated 2 BR. 2 Great new l, 2 & J Bdrms RENT Slart.s $1~
crpt. 35 +. No .... 18. t..mp BA studio. Ocean view, South Coast Villas Tustin & M•sa Drive CLEAN bachelor apts. Steps pets. S135 per mu. ,,.... bli' I · I I t'-lo beach. $!00 & up. 315 E. Trndewinds Realty 847-11511 Llghler, 360 Victoria, $125. ins, re ng, pr va e pa "-'· llOl MacArthur Blvd. * 54S-U.S5 * Gas-water pd, 54~2407. Tl"lldewtnds Realty 817-8511 54&-8323 •-nto Ano Balboa Blvd, 673-9945 REDECOft -Lrg I Br. $140 ~
Corona del Mar Xtra closet•. Pool. Patio. 1 BR, r /o. oven A. diap., NEWLY dl!!corated 2 br Westcllff ;:;;;:;;~::;-::-;:;:;;;1::;:::;;::l ~'~d';lt~•·c,.oo~f>'~~~· !;<536-<~7~17'.:,,_ cptl'I, 132 E. Bay SI. No. B. = Adulta. $l3S mo.I---------VILLA MARSEILLES
NICE . apl -priv balcony BAOIELOR apt l mile rrom c .ri,1. $la!. 494-2792 eves &: • QUIET, SPACIOUS -New 2 IRANO NEW
w/harbor A: ocea.n, view. be ' wknds 2 BR. townhouse nr. ocean. 13r. 2 Ba 11\l'den apt. '">lush
lncl Util $175/mo 2500 sch, m s & Wi'lter paid. SEVER.AL 2 Br._ 2 Ba. apt11 Crpts, drps, washer/dryer. gold crptJ, dl"plt, bl' pvt SPACIOUS
Sea.view. . $91'.lfmo. 213: 59Z-29'T7. $150 to n65 prr mo. P rop. Stovt, reft11. 962-2872. patio, chandelier In I ster 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts.
VERY privat' l Bdnn, N•wport Beach mgmt D1v or So Cat Rlcy 2 BR, crptJ, drpg. No "ls'. bath. Lot.II of on-sill!! park'g Adult living
everyt.hlng $195. 545-842.4. Child OK. Laundry room. + cov'd 1ar. All 1gl story. Furn. & Unfum.
Unlvel"llty Realty 67"..-6510 * 2 Br. upr;trs wfsunrlk. 1 BDR.M~.-,~,u-,-,-un~f-unus-.-ht-d-I Front yard. $1.lO. 968-0064. Walk to O:>co .. A: W'.stcllff Dl1h'WUhet . oolor qiordJnat.
C t Mtu hanging rrpl. Nr bc:h. $250 Mature adults onlyt $135. SHARP 2 BR. wtprlvacy. Plata. Adults. $185. 642--0239 ed appllancn • plu&h ahq: -;;;"':w'C.r.im'Jii<F.°7.~J.!Y'~"''.::·~N~o~f>'~b~.~55~7;_...,~'....,,=l,~'50~E~.~2U~l:Cll4&-<0l~~~··c..,~-I Cpts, drps, 13r. Child OK Apts., carpet • choice or 2 color NEW LRG DELUXE APT~ 2 BR furn. apls. Pool. Nu LARGE % BR. upstairs. $155, 540-J862 Owner. Furn. or Unfurn. 370 .cbemn • 2 bath! • ilall
Bach-furn . •· • •• $139.50 c:hildrl!!n or pets. 240:';"" J&th Crp11: drp1, rangt, carport, 1L•guna ieach ihowen: • mirrored ward-
1 BR-furn . , , •• , $149.SO St, NB. 646-4664 .No pct11; $130. 673-TI78. Costa Mtl• ~!'1n"""kltc~·~.~~-l~11'1
2 BR tu•n $179 50 WI -R e NEAR BEACH I 'BR., 1% ... ,..., uoc:8.IWI ~ • ·· · · • N1r:.. RENTALS e LRG 2 BR, eptll. drps, bltJ'4, B Pool A.tt It Le l17Sil---------bar , buae private fcnc.d UNFURN AVAIL.ABLE &nt NOW for Sept.! pat., gar .. No pell, $135, J\11 s"c .Jfw u sl."'-0'!:_· AMAZlNG Adlllt L t v In It ,,.no • 'plush LandlClplna •
ADUl.TS ONLY, NO Pf:TS ABBEY R"'ALTY ,.,., ~0u. 5· ~·0 1867 · oawt 1· '" '''"'· "' .,.,........,,, • '"n-· Bl!!llul l .l 2 BR flJm or unt brlcll; BAJ"o.B.Q·a , l&r;e bMt.
1760 Pomona 642-2015 TRAJLER for ,,.1 •JOO nto LRG 2 B •· d bl Lido lslt A I ' , .. , "' , . r, cp .... , rps, tn&. pti1. Self c !an. ovena, ed pocM, & lanai.
HOLlbAY PLAZA-partially f"11m. 2912 \V, CO&..llt J-2 chlld"'n ok. Nr schls &-2 BR, 2 BA, bay vl!!!w, f~~h D/W fin 2 Brl dlsplt, shag 3101 So. Brllfol St ..
DELUXE SptlcklU3 l BR Hwy, 645-<WJlO. shopg. Sl!il. 962-30:;.<i. J)Rint, new crpll .l drpg, cpt1, dl"P.!I, jacuz:d & sauna (~ Mj, N. of So..Caut Plaa)
furn apt $135. Heated pool. 1 BR-newly tum. Park DELUXE 1-2-J BR. &love & rt.tr!g. Avail lm· baths. I-luge pool. Senti Ant
Ampll!! parking. Ad111!1 -no Newport No lea10 req'd. Nr. South Ct»1i1t Plat.a mtd. SZTS mo. l.a W!IOn Real Merrimac Woods PHONE: 557..1200
pet~. 1965 Pomonl\, CM. 548-5035 Alt 5 pm. * 54.'i-2.'\21 * Eslate 675-4562. ~~ f.tctrlmac Wo y, C.~-f.
"
•t
I
I
I.
•• DAil Y P\L01'
I
TURN. util pd. ldf'a.J for
Gudent. S5S per mo. Com-
munity b&. Female only. .. ,_..,.
Auto tranlp0rtat1on 515
DRIVE my Sulek Skylark
w/only 4000 rnl. 1 o
Pill!buri. Gu & oil pd.
6n-5252.
JIQ [ ................ J ~, ........ ,, .. -1 ~1.___ -__,J[j]J I J[Il] I J[Il] ;;;I _.__,_~l;;;llll
Help Wanted, M & F 71o Help W•nttd, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710
-M-ALE~--,..,~,~w-/~w-h_t _m~,,.~.•lc·-EM~E-NT~-W-O-R~K-.-,.,~~-b~too-l•P-A_Tl_0~~,,.,~,-;~~1-.. -,.~-.-d~dlm;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;i;;:.i;::0;.;;;;;1 ·~~~~~~=:-::::~· HOUSEWORK·3 hMt dAys~ ----.
V.'hl ~.I paw., wht tip a.mau, reurJnable. 1-~re e distinction to your home Apphcants ESCROW ASST. r.ton, \Ved, F'n. Own tran-S1l1a.
Lost SS5 Cement, Coner•'.• Patios
on I a 11, Jon & a. i r, Estim. H. Siu.dick. Mi-8615. v.·ith a cu.stpm pa!!o des1an-TEMPORARY Ex~rienced portanon, The Blutls, NB
"N1chola~''. yic H .B . PATIOS ·alk! d . ~ 1 . ed expeci.tlty for your ASSIGNMENTS UNITED CALIFORNIA 644-0902
Heatlbroken. 536-7736-stall ne0
w 'tawns'. 1a~~~'b;,.;, horn!". Quality. Experie~ -BANK-Journeym•n Plumber
...... ~e~ "1M • -. Wom<n PLEASE. please, plea1e remow. 548-S6M1ore&t. Sall.slacllon. Eawn & ' *SECRETARIES •••t E '-· H N k · · 7 • ., ......... , ' ....,... ""' Construction. 5'18-0769. '" · ....... st W'J. nttded -ew ~-or . ;)4~ °""' onb-. Mab-Rewrvatiotla ENJOYING LIFE? ttturn femaJe jet black, C t "* BOOKKEEPERS Corona dri Mar
LIVE on Balboa Island this Personels 530
COMPANY
TRAINING
PROGRAM
NOW OPEN mw. 127 Agate. &TS-3613 Enourh Enerv? Sl eep~ part beq;le. Vic: Pomona, _•_n_t_,_•_•_•_• ______ Plaster, Patch, Repair *TYPIST 673-9'l40
ROOM, private entranct, Jtit· 1'~onty! Puce or Mind? CM. Family pet. Reward. MY Way, qua.l ity home S P.ING * GENERAL Of'C: Equa.I 0pPortun!ty Employer 54&-7223 • repair. Walls, ailina, floors "* PATO-t PLA TE• chen prfvil~s. S00 & Y-Is A METIIOD For ... All , F ••timat<• LOST Jn1h Setter, 16 mos. ete. No job too a;malJ . ypes. ree' SERVICE C E NTER month, iwma.n 54s-.so33. Physieal & Mental Well &· Call 54(}-.61125 EXEC. SEC. $600.
J . W . ROBIN SON'S
e NE°'A''POl'tT BEACH • e NO EXPERIENCE NEC
ESSARY. , • Sl.t. ~ Md, Pttftt ina. FR.EE DEMONSTR.A· Le at h er colla.r-pngnan! 547-0036, 24 hr aru. serv. Emp loym e nt Agency
empJ man. Nr 17th&.:. !Nine, TION, Sat. at lOAi\l Classes ~·/non--ped~tte pups. Vic Additionl'i * Remodeling Plumbing ~ Newport Center Dr, NB
Fee Pd, yoong co., exrellenl
skills, call Lora!nt', Wtst-
rhff Personnel Agenl')·, 2CM3
\\'es1cl1ff Dr., N.B. &l.l·?Tro
Ha~ 11nmed111te
·11ng !or
C.M. 6f&..8716. lila.rbng ncrw. Yop Ct,rtt-r, ~;l~ 11tb C.l\f. Please! 67~71ck : Son, t:11~2170 LE\V Takas & Son'a; Plumb. Suitf' ~ -644-4981
Room & Boar d 405 +t5 E. 17th St, Cost& Mesa. ing Repair. Repipe, Remo-BABYSITTER to ~•t•h m• 3 ML.
.
.,, TAILOR
OUR COi\1PANJ£S ruc-
CESS IS DUE TO TI-lE C.H~:AT SUCC'~~s o r 1'--ii:: Mli-8281. LOST, brown & white iimall LIC'D Constr. Remodelin,1: d J F 646-8340 .,. ... "
Goin& on sumn1er vacat·
ion? 2 mature college.
studects will ma.in!aln pn>-
perty & occupy house for
1rtt room while o~·ntr'!ii
away. REF'S AVAIL. C.tll
~13 aft 5pm. AAk for
Andy 01' S:otl.
do w/ red fl Uar A e · ree esl. bov1, "oeg 14, 11 & 1 Y" * FULLY LICENSED * g ea co ' ns. Add itions, Plans, Layout. " -.. to Stash~r 1964-A Meyer Pl K I E K _, II &1"38tl PLIJMB. ING REPAffi from 9 am to 3:30 pm. my Renowned Hindu Spiritualisl · ' ar · e,..,.a · ~ · all C.M. Re-ward. E I No JOb loo sm home, ;) days/wk June -14 Advi~ on all marten:. YORKSHIRE TE'rrier. Vic: '--'•-c_i_.r_c_•______ • 642-3128 • thru Sep!. 15. $175/mo. Lovt, Marriage, Busine111 r -&12 1276 ~adin&s given 7 days a Ea.atblull area. Reward. LIC'D Electrician, main!, Roofing -·
week, 10 .a.m. to 10 p.m. 645-.1611 or 774-7443 ~trv. Also, resid. inc!ustn.al. LEE Rnobng Co. Roofjng. o! BCAo~•Y•d',':1'£1n,,.!:',' •. 2 ophil0d0tt1n ..
312 N. El Camino ~al. LOST rreen parrot with 642-4474. all R " • ~-" San Clemente yeJ}Qy.o • htad. Name t.orre.1 "G~.-,-d~.-.~,.-n-9------types. ecove-r, rl'Wil~s. Capistrano. 493-3219 afl .5 !her-mo roof coatings, wh1tt pm
E XPER. SECRETARY
Typing 50 ~·.p.m. SH 8.5
w.p.n1.
UNITED CALIFORNIA
-BANK-
201 Avenlda ~l ?.far
San Clemente
(714) 492-5123
Exptr1enef!d
• Full time, xln't co. !'Jene.
lit!.
Apply i11 pt"r:son 1Q.5 r m.
• 2 Fuh10n Isl., N.B.
Equal opportunity employer
Equal Opportunity Employer I !!!!!!.,.!!!!!!!!.,,!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!
PEOPLE \\'J-lO \VORK FOR
us.
Y 0 U R OPPORTUNIT'l'
.TO BE A,._fONG TH.ESE
PEOPLE JS 0 N LY A
Pl!DNE CALL A\\IAY.
\\IE'LL PREPARE YOU
1'0 E:'\TP.R A RE\VARD-
ING SE.'CURE PROFES·
:=:IONAL FIELD THAT
\\'tLL ENARLE YOU TO
ACl-ilF::VF.: FINANCl:\L lN·
OEPENOF.NCE &_ T 1-£ E
HEIGi-iT OF PRESTIGE.
Summer Rent1ls 420
LAGUNA BEACH-2 BR
house, lilp& 6, nr beach.
June &-Sept 6 JJ:il mo.
JU.spontible Iamily only.
BethJl;e Realty 494-28;i>
151'.M South Coast Hwy
Rentals to Share '30
BACHELOR to share 3
bdrm: c.ompl. furn w/ color
TV. trpl. On sand. Call John
Fullerton 558-1000 or
<7>-8.187
MAN 2S-C5, share apt with
same. Al Broz 1145-3117 afL
9:30 PM, days JE7-6879.
Sl-fARE my "'atertront home
~/dock. /\fan, 36-60 years.
$ISO/mo. 67.5-ll.11
492-9136. 492-0016 Call 646-6749 .aft S PM. ·,. · ·· St color. Lie/bonded li inctl~=· =7.e~~===-
SINGLE? WIDO\VEO? LOST !lfin. brown poodlt, PROFESSIONAL MAI_l\T, '-47, 642-7222 BEELINE FASHIONS EXPERIENCED upoolstery KITCHEN Helper. 18 +. Ap.
ply In perr.on, -Hi-Time, 495
*D ivorced Over 11* femi!.le, 4 mos old. Vic, 4-4lh tree . work.. Pru n 1 n g-' T G Roof De J o· Hi rarn. potentt.al. free stam~fre~ses-Top scale pay St., N.B. 673-7574 after 6 spraying, disease "-11.·eed · uy ing, a !rf'Ct. ....-ardrobe samplrs No coll E. 17th SL CM. See Harold.
Oldest & lar;:tst. For a seU I .~~~~~~~~~~I control. Spnikler repair, I do my own work. &l;')-2780,· · · & good benefits. Apply in , ___ 1 24"-rng·nn ordlvry_Carnecssary P'"""tt Joh•n•"n & e>.:p-.,.. trry m~&age ,.,s aean . up jobs. George, .,...,.. ::i"". 51&-7570/636-4053 ,.,., · ,-
a day_ 541-9991 1 · l/l• J 646-5893 Sewing/Alteraiions ~~i~tensen, 8!18 W. 16th St.
KITCH E N H ELP
549.3001
PREGNANT? Ad 0 pt i 0 n, ln1tructlon AL'S GARDENING .,.-,,------,--,.-Betty Bruce LABORATORY t~Mk:ia n,
abort!on.va1ectomy !or gardening " 11m a ll . DressmakJng. Alterations sec·y LEGAL EXPER. cleane.r nrf!ded clln1cally QL!alified. Stat('
counselini &. in1ormatlon. landscaping r;ervices, call Special On Hems Orange Counties leading co. mornings for a n 1 ma I rec1stry ~u1red . Jmmedi -
642-4436 Schools & 54~5198. Semnc Newport, Call Jo * 646-6446 Tnrn •kUI•. hospjtal, N.8. &14-5460 from aie employment Apply
ALCOHOLICS Anonymou!.
Phone 542.-7217 or write
P.O. Box 1213 Cos111 r.fe~.
GOLF • Irvine Coo.st C. C.
membt-rshlp for sale-term!.
642'-251.1 /eves 548-9722.
Singl•s Danca Clns
Ele;:ar:t atmosphere,.
S:J.l.mt
JOANIE :
~,. QA!\! ro 6P!lt. Soultt -~Community instructions 575 CdM, O:lsta l'lfesa, Dover CUSTOi\1-made olothes al Executive ~~;;;:;-;---;:;;:::::::::~:::::;, llcSho~~"~'~· ~W~·~·~tc~l~ltt~.=~--1 ready.made prices, altera· Pel'SOnnel Agency EXPERIE~CED Saltslady He.spiral, So guna.
SU!\t·:\lER tutoring small "* LA\VN SERVICE * tions too. c. J . 673-·32&1. <llO \\'. C.oast Hwy. /l.'B for jewelry 1tort. 499·1311, Ext 356
groups.' 1 hr, 4 days/Y•k, $16 Ff1?nt yard $1-0. pe-r. ffi91llh, EUROPEAN Drel!smaking.l'S~w~·<e~H~~~!!!!..;&l;>-~2~n;', I ·~~~·~>I~S~-~3"l~3~•~~~ LAB Technician for pt'd1111r1c per child. Exp. credentialed bdck yard al so. Weeding, Expertly CU.'l!om fitted, AG·I ~ EXPER;ENCED Installment group, part llme. 64£K>5-ti
teache-r. 496-5059 yard cleanup. 962-8612. cur. Reas. 673-1849. BOOKKEEPER -pt lime, Loan clerk: also part time r.1rs. \Varren.
AL'S Landscaping. Tree Alter ations _ 64 2-5845 Hunt Bch business needs 1 ~to=l~l'~'·~53&-=='~"~'~·~-~-LF.GAL SECRETARY
I I~ removal. Yard remodeling, lull charge bkkpr for ap... EXPERIENCl':D part t.lme Exper. Call Pamela Neat, accuratt, 20 years exp. '""· 20 ""· -r "'k ·~13--84.:.8 ~and~ Trash hauling, Jot cleiuiup. Tile 5-16-9316 ,,~ 11edical receptionist. ·
-. Repair 11prinklers. 67J...1166. Ph: eve.OJ 5.'l6---0066 r.tAfDS -r.tOT EL
• Stllr't lmmf'd1a,,.l)'
• Company Car Plan e Plush Ol/1cf's
FEMALE to ihatt a p I
w / same. as of 611.5/71. Pie~ contact ?<tom & Dad· BREAKFAST COOK 2 Fu!! time, Sl.6l hr. LA\\'N Jil1tlnt. Haullng. new CERA.\IJC til e ne~ & EXPER. Cleaning \Voman
Babysitting 111.wns, clean-.Wp, prunlng, remodel. Free est. Small Expcr, Must be ovpr 21. Ap· for comm'! bldg. 4-5 hrs !-"aye, :')4~5--lil
AS ADDED J~CEXTTVE
.\· TO HELP M.<\INTAlN'
OUR QUALITY J ,\·I A GE
\VF:'LL GIVE YOU 'J'HE
OIA..'lfCE TO O\VN A NE:\V
1971 CADILLAC &_ \VE 'U.
PAY FOR IT. DAVE LOOK·
INGLAND, 1NVESTifENT
ANALYST, R. E. BROKER
\VI LL BE YOUR l/\'TRO-
DUCTION TO OUR C0:\-1-
PANY TRAINING PR.0-
GRA!'>l.
6~7154 .after 5: 30. dy! ' Free est. Call 546-7379 jobs \\"elL-umc. 536-2-426. ply in pcrr.on, Surf & Sirloin n11e!y. 673-8219. 1\IAJNTENANCE l\-fan for
Garages for Re nt 435 FREE Facial. Discover j>eauty by l\-lary Kay, Call
DOUBLE Garage private, W. Vfi ita, 830-73.'18 !or appt.
COSTA MESA ,;-~~-------I 5930 \V. Coas1 Hwy, NB. · 1 F=l~B~E~R=o=LA~SS~-m-o=id=,---.~A-,,. i;mall nursing home. Call
R S JAPANESE Garden in g Upholstery '" n• on7· f f:' E· CHOOL Service. Neat work. CIC!anup BOYS 10-14 plications" now being taken. 17141 4,,.......,., ;i or appt to in-
Npt. 2'1D Cedar; SpeciaJ Summer Program yd mainL ~2303 Vl NYL \\lelrlins;-Cuts, burns, to deliver papers in lhe San Clipper !llarine Corp, 1731 S. tervieY..'.
18th & i\lonrovia, % day + 1~~·~-~~~~~--tears. Cu!itom dyeing ~all Clemente, San J uan Capis-Ritchey, San~a Ana. ~!ANJCURJST-Exp'd, Par 1 CALL NOW
* 548-1132 *
GARAGE for rent .SZ5. per I lost Md found j lril
n1onth. Vic 19th & Santa L;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~L::iJ;;;;~
lull d.y .''.;o•·. Plann-'"' •JAPANESE GARDENER• I ) "'"2231 ( bil ) I ~ ' p I K. 11 y '"' = co ors .,.,,,... mo t ll'ar'lo and Capistrano Beach FRONT desk recep!ionisl. 1 me· ·" P Y program, hot lunches. Ages Maintenance. cleanup 838-3~2' area Or!horiontlc olc. Xlnl oply. Templeton's, 445 E. 17th St.,
2-6 h·• 6·.3o AM-6 P>'. HB FV Cio.1 area * 842-8442 ~~~~~~~~~~~[ · C'1 ' ., DAILY PILOT Call 644-1·108 for appL 1' •
547-6771
Ask for Mr. Nerdin --$18' ~·k·CDMPARE! 642.-40.50 JOHNSON'S GARDENING I l[Il] I~~ ~l:lO GAL FRIDAY illATURE y..·oman to cook or 838-5237. Yard care, clean-upi;, plan-il . ' -. d f '" f ·1 ·
Ana. Costa Mesa 642-4289. 1
_oo_;,_•_R_•_•_ta_1 ___ 440_ Found (frff ads) 5SO E111>loyment CAR h '" At Typt•l t" '''"' d-t. S"""· inner or -e am1 y J WILL babysit by the week. ting, sprinklers. 962-2035. L ______ _, fr a e ~~v ~r 1~~1/u:~~shlin~ ~600. N~·big r~rle b:~ nati-=-rh1y~/wk. Hrs 3.7 pm. Sales
DELUX.E PROF. SUITES
17612 Beach Blvd.. H.B.
Plentiful pkng, , A/C, j11-n.,
musk. new carpets I pain!/
drps, 325 to 9'.lO sq. ft. Suite
8. Ph. 847·2'521
DESK sp11ce available $50
mo, Will pf'9\'ide furniture
at .SS mo. AnS\vertnz servlce
avaU11blf!. 17875 Beac.h Blvd.
Hunt1ngton Beach. 642-4321
DESK space available $50
mo. Will protlide furniture
at SS mo. Answering service
available. 305 No. EI
Camino Real, San
Clemente. 492-442'0 •
PROFESSIONAL Bldg. 45c
&q ft. Air-cond, crpts, drps,
id parking. Xil'lt loc. 350 E .
17th St. C.M. PE.'I'E BAR-
RE'IT RLTY. 642-4353
DeLuxe Oliice 525 &q ft.
Carpet.Drapes-Panel Walls
Newport & Bay Center
20.52 Ne~-port Blvd, C!\1
(Also ~~. m; avail) 640.1252
DESK sp11ce 11vailable $50
mo. Will provide furniture
at $5 mo. An!Wering service
aV'lClable. 222 Forest A'.'e,
Laguna Beac.h. 494-94Ei6
3700 NE\\'PORT BLVD. NS
*ON THE BAY*
6T::.-2.f&4 or 541-5032'
e NE\VPORT Beach Deluxe
View olfic.es. Air-corn!. Priv.
Ba. 240J W. Coast Hwy_
lNDMDUAL OFFICES
New Irvine Indust. CfJmplex.
Top ioc. SJJ.-3443 anytime
( XL'JT OFFICE Space now
avail. LIDO BLDG, 3355 Via
Lido, N.B. 673-4501
1670 SANTA ANA AVE. C~
Loving care. So. Costa Exp. Japanese Gardener l••••••••••I f*rsonalily. p/time. The ally known ro. involvN! IJl 1 _2_13_1_59_>-_5_2_75~·----~-I CALICO kitten, no l .D. Z..1esa. &t5--457-I Complete '\'ard Service. M h • Cl A yellow blazf! down nose. fu J ob Wanted, Male 700 Zoo Res!. (Coast H"'Y .111 high<'r pnced 1>.'arerfront ec GnlC: GSS BABYSITTIN G my home. e f'st.imale 557·9264 MacArhturl h d bl Vic. Larkspur, CdM. omes r~1res a persona e Full time, work guaranteed, ,7 • .,~co •• 1 7 P'! Jrg fncd yd, hot meals, d•y EXPER.. Hawaiian Gardener C RPE F N SH Ji t O" I d • ,. t ;>-""""" ilJ " • C I P OSITION \\'anted, p/time A NTERS I I VE' Y .Y ung a Y ,o .ass s tcp pay, call Roy at Dean & nite. 642--.52'99. omp ete Gardening 1 J SMALL kitten. gray & \Vb Sc · K al . 646-4 676 hkkpr or salesman's rel!C'f lmn1ed1ate Open1ngs aSL mav1ng sa es crew, Lewi..~ &16-9.103 1969 Har.
striped, vie Hlllcre&"t & Sd.a BABYSIITER -Qualified ivice. am 11.nl, 1n re!ail store. Rel's, e_.'(per. Good Pay! Call No1v! !'.lust type 60 \V.p .m. Pre!. bor s 'lvd .. Cosia Mesa.
Joa"""n, La"''na. -4!H-4l:W t'>;p. college girl lo live lll. Japanese Garrlener &14--.'Xl28. 9A~1-9Pt.t , Sal. 9A...\1-6Pill sorne SM. Bchvn age 2l·30. I ~=,--:~cc--:--:;:c.c=
...... 6~ 673-{;667. Exp'd. Yard \Vork Orange Coast Ansv,·er phones, plot ga.Jes, l\IEN, women & childrt>n
alt 6. Clean-up, Plan11ng 646--0619 Job Wan ted, F=ema le 701 Employn1eiit Agency m!:'ft v r r Y interesting \\'anted for extras & bit
BLUE Cabinetmaking .,, 213-461 3359 & grey It-male _____ ....; ____ Gene ral Service s 1~9Kf1vportBlvd,C.\f pt>f'lp!e. Call 17J4l 846-1~1. pa. · -·
Greyhound w/whit@ mark· CABINETS & room ad-1 ----------PRAC. Nurses, Companions, &l;)..Jlll &15-3112 6-15-3113 Ask for r.ir Taylor. MGR. Trainee, intervl\' al
ina:s lound on Harbor Blvd. ditions, remodeling. Husband Busy'.' Cali t-.-!oose Hskprs. Live in <lr out. ~~-~ Kenrucky 1'-ried Chicken, ~I-2998. 548--412!!, 646-S2l9 5'15--082{) after G.P.epa 1r r.·Jonih!y rair5. Em~lr pay5 1-.=.-:c=A~S~H~l~E~R~.=N~.-,=11 0 n a 1 G:~~. ~~~~~·e~~.A~~~'. 292:1 E . Coast 111vy, CdM
"-"MALL wl'utt "'"""--''e /Mal-Bu ild·Serv !'ltost Things '' II• Ill • F•mtly C•e" NEW CAR SALESMAN ,,.. .-.....,.... Carpet Service e. <a 1 "'" ... Lumbrr, Huntington Beac.h. type. 50 wpm, understand
test c*s dog. Vic. Tustin 1,.,..,..,-.,--,-----Hauling Agency, l!lO:J N. Broad1>.•ay, Call 962-1'161, llJ.4 P:\f. ore proceduN's: Sil or Or11nge County specially
Ir Mesa Dr, Costa !11eM. "'!!RAC L E AN C 1L7'C:O:.:-~---..,..--S A 5-17-6681 d -• Som •-·-•t1onal
PERSONNEL
COUNSELLOR
TRA INEE
Dynamic r __ xpandlng eorp.
opening ntw olc. \n lrvinl'!
con1plf'X. If )'OU like publiC'
contact, are ('11.rt-er minded
& "·ould like to earn SI0,000.
312.000 firs! }'T on a dr111•
C"Ornm, basis ..... e 11•itl train,
C111! >I.rs. \V1tson, 5.J.l-9261
tor appt. ·
DE\r"N!S & DENNIS
Personnel Agency
201!2 llf ichelr.on Dr.
Jrvine, CaliL
" arpe YARD garage cleanups. · · · CLER K TYPl~T srenorelte exJlf'r pre f'd . e-.._.er, • e ......
64b-69'22. Service'. Fast dry shampoo, Rem~ve trtts: dirt, Jvy, \VAN~ED: dday \Vdork .... _ex-An in1elligen1 capable typist Plume now. Salary com· vP.hi c\e expenence desin-d. SF:RVtCF.: Sin salesmen. Full
FOUND male cat, ftty & ~e soil tt~.ant k co1'or skiploader, • back hoe. Per 1 P. n ce an nave · _ _, b mens u r a 1 to w/abilities. Roy Carver Rolle-Royce, & part time, l\--lu~t be neat Ii, h. · t bn"""-tness 1n"l"d•d o · f $18 d 1~ ne • .,,,ro Y our manu-B "\V J I n t In n• I w ite slripes on gh a t r E>" • '''"" " 962-8745 re erences, ... a.v. facruring "ginrering stall Resume. \~·rite Classil1ed ad ·'"· ., n er 11 have loc&t ref's. Apply tn
w/collac. 549-0133 every JOb. All work ruarn .lo;===~-,,--.---,-542-417~1 '' 1 1 p 0 Trucks. lllr. Davidsn: """ \V C 1 H""' "°-,..,--==-=--_,,---,.-I Reas. Call for free est. CLEANUP &. Hauling, lree ~~=~~~~~~~1 10 ~nerale data processing no. l • Dai Y P1 ot, . . person """ . oas "J•
Found in CdM Friendly red· ~~~9 trim top, remO\"c, garages At DE S F'O R C 0 N· input~. type mem~. & main· Bo."(·~. Cos!a lltesa, Ca. 5-!6-4.J-44. !\'B.
dish brown puppy w/tlea l:l<'aned, il'y &, t, n cc VALESCEKCE. e Ider I Y rain files !'>!tis! br: ablr to 92626. NURSES Aides for small SERVfCE Sta. Attend, 1'.lu.'ll
collar. Dr. S!()('kton 673-JOSO Dia.m~nd Carpet C~aning rl'moval. Jack :>46-4743 care or ra mily <'are · operate a flt'xowr11er &· type GIRL Fririay _ Se C''y. lile nursing home. Ex Per · be good salesman. Salary +
FOUND male Collie &. Repa~\Z; ~:ila.tions MOVING, Garage clean ·up _l_lo_m_e_m_•_k_,_"0 ,•_54_7-668 __ l __ I 5..'l to 60 11,.p.m. 2 Yi>a rs bookkeeping. phone sales pref'<!. \\·\II c 0 n ~ id ' r Comm. Apply in person,
Shepherd dog. Vic: \Vilson Free Est. 645-.1317 k li!e hauling. Reasonable INFANT CARE your home clerical exper is aJso reqqir-w<1rk, on Balboa Pen1n. !raining r i2h! party. j 7l !! 31~ Harbor Blvri, C."i'o!.
& Rut.. ~! "''"20 F I I ,.-1602 teoder & txactlng. Ne'v -·• Apply tn ,_, ..... 0. f-1.~ •ppro• ••~ mo. <19-i-S07j for appt. to Ul· rs, .... ,,· ""°'-:r"I · CARPET h . .. ree es 1ma f!S . .,..~ . ""' ,. .. "'"' '"" ·~ " '""" SERVICE Slatton SaltJ.man s ampocung, uryl"';-;-;~.-=--~--btirn lo ~ mo. 67.5-2i6\. PERIPHER.t\L BUSINESS 673--9~1 terY te"'· FOlTh'D vie: Frmltaf Ave., foam. Regid, c.omm 'I, win-TRASH & G11ra2e-clean-up, ~~=--:~.-~~=I \\'anted lor Newport Shrll ,
CdM : Kty w/initi.aJ "ilf'', do~·• • "oo-. F-'''· 7 days, $10 a lond. Free f.'st. Help Wanted, M & F 710 EQUJPi\1Ei\'T. JNC. HA IR DRESSER~ Booth OPENING for nigh! cooks. 2800 \\1e~t Coa~1 H11:ro. N.B. "'" .u ... • .. ~ J7U2 Armstron r,.,..,. Inquire w/chel af!t'r lOam, on leather C'hain. 673-7162. 962--0672 Anytime. 54S-~31. ~ ~pace to rent. '"""-"' Loca· Dill mans Re.~taur::inl. SERVICE st a. Saltsmil.n,
FOUND · · 1 H I . ACCT ""'" ii·/O••ng· Co. (Irvine _..,dustrial Complex\ lion and parking. Hair \Vest 1,. 1 prescr1pfron g 11s.se1 DRIFOAM CARPET CLEAN ousec ean1ng '" ~ • " 1l'' A' g??IT.i r~p<>r. P irne, n~ar 11pprar
Do . R d N adv agenoy. \\'ork in r•din Santa Ana, c.._.1f. ~ ~ fi7.'1,....4JS6. OPERATORS -sportswear A 1 2 __ N 1 Bl C'! on n111e l)a, ewport Rtasonable Rates. 171 , ""8.,. !f 1 Good ,.f!PY .1"" e-wpor . ·' "-h c-•1 &!" 1TI3 Unl1m1t('r! e.\rnin"s 67.'.'.-{.66.l ., ___ ='='~~=~·~-'N=~-HA RD\VARE ,S,·'·•m•n H .\Y. r.· g expPr. on y, pay. =ac · "' ;,-· Tomlin Svc * 557·9669 }/OVSE OF CLEAN "' ,-,,_,~ Ste;idy. 642-3472 N.B STYLIST ror ~1g ch111n Exp FND: Schnauz<'r. Comm'! & Resld. C\P.an111g CLERK TYPIST \Vnghl Co., 126 Roche5!er, ---only. Bl'Kllly i<Upply e-.;p Carpenter Adm Sates 60+ rv. p>0g, loc~. Fee Pd., Cos1a. )lcSfl PITL\IF: trainees. HS or C'Ol· 1 557-30.it Free est. • &t2-6824 * he p!ul. Full !Jm '" Arply X .. MILJTARY \\'r s1cl1ff PC"rf.Onnr\ Agency, HF.LP wanted 1n prt shop. lcge. No exper. nece!\s. The Empre.~s \V1.;. 12682 Chap. Lost
I YR old tern GermM Mort
haired Pointer Rtwa.rd .
Call alt S P~t/646-315.J.
GOLDEN Rrtriever, vie. or
Ca!tita Capi~trano, 2' yrs. no
hr . boy's pet. 4!'.13-4340.
CARPENTRY Bay &· Beach Ja,gitorial
MINOR REPAIRS. No J ob Crpts, windows, floor1 eie.
Re!\. & Comml 64~1401 Too Small Cahinf!t in ga.;. _ .
ages & o I her cabinet$. lllr.sa Cleaning s;rv1ce
545.8175 U no llJl~"·er leave Carpets, Window~. F !Mr etr.
msg. at 646-2312. ll. 0. Res1d. & Con1mr'1. 54S-41 l I
Anderson. HOUSECLEA."\'JNG and Win·
ANY sz job. Resid., cJnm·1. rln"' i\·a~hin1< tc ~m. Call
j _, A P. F 61.l.!1322 or 67?,..jji')J.
2"'3 1r , 1·11 o NB Zoo Re!\taurant, Coast H11y $20,000 + .,.., ·es c 1 r.. · · Xlnl opportunity to learn man, G.G ··-017 r 1 1 • ..J.. at )1acArthur 1 ~=~~==~==-I .,..;r. 10 <1 .'lO et JVVSI !he pe.I busine ss. Student 1 ----~~--~-T E L A P P 'T SEC'Y
prr!'d. lll Broad\va), C.i'\l. PR 0 FE S SIONAL ph(lne oo~· T LET Y 0 UP. Cosmetic Dept. Mgr. solicitor -Dana Point, San PIU'I 111nr, .J-8 Pm. Our oft, HOUSEKEEPING De P t. d C · iC1!, Cd'.11 Prrmanent. J\'ef"d. TP •. Al'.\!;\G & ABILJIT GO E xec.. P osition n"orls e.\""rJenced CU~TO· e.rncnte, ap1s trano area.
To \\·1-E \\"'EN "OU I ,,. \Vork in your own home. ed. a n art1C'ula1 r, C'heerlu! · ;-., • ·n ' ' DIA:\' 11IY1 :\lAJD. Apply C ,-" \PPL\' tT T0\1.ARD~ Be.t deal in arl!'a. Phone rxrraVl!'rt, 833·36.'>6. Home . "·' ; · ExrlOni: oppor!urtity In 11 nrk Pe!'>.Onnrl. .$tiu!h Coa!'t Com-A~ EXCIT[,'i(i RE\VAR D· in la!lt pacrd hi-<1 uaJHy !.-1 ~h-niunily llLJ~!lllal. 31 ~72 Coasr 835.1465 behveen 9:00 a .m. 6i'>-10:-::~.
l:'•:G PP.OFE~SJON AL CA-ion t:.IOl'f'. E."penrncrri Only II\\)', Sou th l~i.~1.1nfl. 11 nd noon. TF:J.EP!iOSE rPrept10n1.~1
From 300 1q/!t. 35c sq JI. TIRED of that olc! turnlture'!'
,,,.us .. pts. :.ta.s. reeesi.1,--~-------
962-1961. Ironing r.F:ER THAT CAN LE/1.D ;.;err! Applv Du11rs )nc-iude. I ~=7====~---RECEPTION IST. Youni la~-2.l-J:J. P/t1m" e1'Ps. 17AA
TO FINANCIAL INDEPEN-~0111.., huyi~&. s!ock l'OOlr"!, HOt.:SEKEEPER for ~um· veri; nttd your ptr.;onal1ty Ne\1·pnr1 Bl, Co~t:. :\fesa. 67S-2464 or 541-5012 It's really not that hard * NEWPORT BEAot * to ttplac:e. Ju!t wa.tc.h the
300 to 100 Ml· ft. fW'nituA A. miscf!ilaneo'.JS
DeeDtt, 67l-5862 columnt t.a the a~ ''B=u-a•i=n.-.-.-.R~.-.~1 •• 1--,44!,.,,1 Secoo~
SHOWROOM, mle. &: ollice. * space . Parking. Oo~-in
Laguna. $85-$395 M o . -· * *
Cement, Conc re te Jroning &: AJrerations
, At ilty Home e ~ CONCRETE .. F'loors, 5<1S..7Ml
patios, dnve!!, i.1drwalks,1=-~-------
sla bs. Reas. Don 642-8514 Painting &
*
Paperhanging
*1--.,,.-,..----No W11.!ling
*WALLPAPER *
S85 SML store or oltict, near
Mlulon, San Juan Capo.
Now avail. 4~1153.
lndulfrlal Rental 450
EAST 17th ST .. C.M.
Shop It otnce. m ~·tr
6SIJ Sq. ft. 675-6700 Broker
Renti11s Wi1nted 460
QLl)..TIME 1...q\Jna resident
de.perate tor l or 2' BR
hou.e or a.partment, turn. or
Jdtche:n turn. NOW! Ph coll
Trader's Paradise
lines
times
dollars
~n you call "Mac."
54g.]44-1 64G-171l
PROF. painting. 'Exler l
story, low .11.1 $22.5 ~·/gd
p.!lint. Avg rm SlS. Airless
11;prayirfg 11C'cous. ceilin1r5, 2
coa\1 $15. Roy, 847-1358.
PLASTER·Palch-Rm Adds.
Acrous. ~ihngs, a t u c c o
refin. Fr~e e!ll im ate !.
835-3931, ~>-47& aft 5.
PROFE SS ION AL Pain·
Ung-lnter/exler. Ho nes I
<f'"ays n4: 637-3661. La!~ model ~lf'r, CM•
t-~~--~~-~--f\·t-rtib~. like new conditkm, YOUNG m&JTied couple need 24.000 miles:, atill under
l or 2 bedroom unfurnished warranty, trade for fl.Ider
hOuse I'll' apartment Sl.JO.OO car or '!' 64>1395
pez-monrh °" n . Call Pat 1 ~-~-~----643-6468 or Jim 54$-4669. l!ave Kimball spine1 piano.
WANTED to Jfue: 2 or 3 br Dux man'1 chair & ottoman.
houi.e. Call 0.'1d Dudley, pr of Lancer 77 rpkn. \\'ill
DOS n.._._ "'~" 7~7 Aft 6 eXChange for am cu or ? ~-.,_ ..... ; ' fi75..4595.
KELP! Mu&t lnO'o't by June Tor trade: '71 V\V Super
30tb. Nf!f'd 5 BR home for Bug, 1600, trade tor rehulld.
1-3 )'n, N.Q. 6'fl..l026, aMto 1500 1.nd equ1ry. T()m 1,3,-or-'•o-;BR:;;-.~,,-,&;;:-7hom<~,-.-:s.n,,.-v Mike !149.J.j58, or a.ff l •
·Qesnentr srea. S mo lellM:, pm: 5"'8-l6lO.
up to $300 prr mo. 544-J.56B. lM-f NEWPORT I.JI pow~
TIME FOR
Chryslf'T, xlnt mnd. F"or
Van, Station \Vqon or tell
CM!.ainl!d ca.m prr,
5.16-"'2
"'ork. Lie. &. ins. 54S-2759,
\VESTCLIIT LOT F 0 R ~-
EQUITY IN NEWPORT 1-~A-.-.-.-,=11=c-S~pe-c=;-.71i~.-t-
BEACH HO.\fE. r-1ea1 work. 1147-41211
CALL 646-"'5 LESCO PAINTING
___ ..c.cc:..:=----IR.e&id A Apt•, Sprayjni 11.t ·
2 lots. Palm Springs, frlee COiis, ttlllng!I. Int / Ext.
" clear. \Van! unlta. TD'1, Lk'd/lns. 645-.2399.
v,an (C"Ont&lned). Submit PA INT ING : Hon to 1 t·,
NMcy J. Mc:icn Really, guaranteed ~'Orlr. Llc'd
673-3I01. LocAl rers. Call 675-574-0 alt
WILL Trad" cornu R4 Joi 5,
at S!Uton Sea, N. ShOre. l;P~A~!N~';TlN=c=.-P ... =r,7.1=,;70-,.i.-. 'A7.ll
Paved, ~·attr elt c.·lor selr 1111 0 r k I u a r n , Coln r
cont. motiu,., hOme or ? apec l al l st . !162-6143,
Call {Z131 661--0108, f'VH, ~7-144 1.
C l-l EVY CAPRICE '68; YOU Supply T h 1: PJt int.
Trade for equity in house Rooms painled $10 ea, Call
In Nf!'\.1--porl Qr Corti hfep 540-7046
0£;.ICE & PRESTJGE. 01-<play, plannini; promn. mrr.;:, day '\'l'l'k, cle1tning. & charm. ·afc 1n modt>m T YPIST/RECEPT.-
d I I \1ash1rig. iron1nJ;:", !\Orn e center. WtU train \fl Je,.t lion~. f'Vf' oping_ s a f' s l'OOk1ng. Refs. 6 i 5-8 8 i 9 , , Sha rp girl for busy offil't!
• Xn f'l"1llegc or ex1~r. nee-Jlf'O!lle. 1.lany co. b<'nrfl!s 1n. Nr"·porl Bearh. t~rminology. $423 mo. Call Good ,£1"1'JOrl unity Call bP~
('SSl!ry, elud ing profit sharin~. lielrn Hayes, ~O·fiOS:i 1,1 n 9 A,\! & 12 P\1.
I. MA~IN & CO. H~KPRS E mpl~'T pa)s lee CO,\STAL AGENCY DUREL ADVERTISISG
1'0 BENEFIT FROl.1 OUR No. 2 Fashion Square. G~orgt Allen Bylanoi Agen· 27!lO Harbor Bl at Adams 2172 Di1pont Drive
co;..IP,\NTES TRAINING San!a Ana c:y l06-B E. l6th, S.A. I E N"~"Potl Bi>ar h 8.JJ-167(1 PROGP~:-.1 HEADED BY "":':~'.!'!'!""!""'""~~ ~1--0:t9.i. * Rea state
DAVE LOOKJNGLAND, J;./-CiJLLEGE Girl _ 1.folhers HOUSEKEEPER Safes * TYPl~T. Loca.J (lfc of na· • "sr R •t 1 II · 1 ., liorially kno11•n 11 rm . VESfi\fENT ANAL• , . helfH"r, l11•P-in N.B. home "a ure: co ege gir or. I · • E BROK"F.:R YOU'LL HAVE Sumnirr _ 2 childf'l'n, room Call 536-0.:!93 Unusua opportunity tn Ou1stand 1ng CQ. benefits.
0 F 1 ---~=====~ sm•ll, ver~· successful, Start 1mmed, .Job security. TO APPLY Y URSEL · & hoant + sm. 1 a I a r y * + HOUSEKEEPER ' Srart $4('(}.
\\'ORK HARD. \VANT TO ~2-900!i. & L,\UNDRESS well t}'tablished office . Ca.II Jt'An B-w•. ''" ~"
BE SUCCES!<FUL & HA VF .=~~-~~--One of the hottest loca· "'·ll!"" """'"" ' ~· · . • ~ • COOi\, Pre-school v.-Call 64&-TI&t COAST,\L ,\GENCY THE ! N c ENT TV E TO t ions in Or ange Countv. ' · perif'nre prr ff'n'f'd. HOUSEKE EPER, tivP-ln. fi ' 2i90 Harl'lor Bl at AdAm.'l i'llAKE BIG l\-10NEY FOR •S:..~.l7l3 g.;; pm• ila)·.~. EnMlish !I; peak in g . We have a c:1ptiva m•r· YOURSELF & FOR US. ""' ket. Our men mike e x· 2 f'A:\-llLIES, ~amr Are.1 .
'\'OUR CO:'.rPENSATION
f.IA Y BE $20,000+ \'OUR
FIRST YEAR IN CO:\-iil-115·
SIONS &_ SERVICE FEES.
DENTAL Asst, front ~ec·y & 6<M~15 after 5 pm. need sitter. Ages 2 k .4 need
prieventivf' nun;f'. r.1ature c • P 1 i On• I I Y good J1l dAyS, 11.ges 3 & ;, nted 1 ~·oma.n. enjoy peQple. Exper • money. D raws avail to day. Our homes only. $1 hr,
pr!'f'd but 1nlelllgence anrl qualified man. DICK Call &14-X>46.
enlhusivrn may make dlf. !i.:, BERG 962·2421 I Eves. 1 --.W;;c,,----,-~--I a itr ess, p /t im•. frre n.-.:r. H.B. 962-24~6. 847-6076. E ""-:: • -ll'.Pf>r. Not Unrltr :!I NO
DENTAL RECEPT-~ SALES help "'an!rd. ;\-fust PHONE CALL..'. ,\pp·l.v in 1 ~k only, !Jtonral exper. · ha\•e ei1p. Apply in J>l!'rllf!n ~rson, S\J r[ &_ .'iirlnin, 5:130
ne-ress. :".omr SAts. &il11ry Jackie'! Fashion Cf'n1er, n \V. Coa~1 llwy, !\.fl,
• SI.art lmn1ed1att'l)'
• Cnmr11ny Car Pl11n e L1brral Fringe Bene.tits e Plush Otfi<.'t's opPn, !ringf' benefits. H.B. -Hunllngton Center, H B.
area. liAi\1~P1'11. 846-35-16. fD'VINE PERSONNE L S N "'A IT RE S S-lfos1t'~~ for I'\ SALE MA fi\m tly res1a·t1r11n t. A~" \~
DENTAL A.u1. E:xper . SERVICESW>AGENCY Tirt, cUI 1°111"5. Schmidt. thru 25. Apply helli·rfln 2 &
rh1tirside. X-ray. pouring \\le-stclJff Pen.:lnnrl ~f!ncy, ~pm, r-.tr. St .. ak R"~lauranl
CALL NOW
547 -6771 models. 642.-7998. '2043 \Vt!tc'llH Dr N.B. 2'167 F'air'.'inw R<I. r .\I. · Ins. Read e r $SOO 64 >2TIO
Ask for Mr. Buxfon *DRIVERS*
No Experience Ai\IBITIOUS couple interest·
td 1n 1ncrf'."a.0Jing income-. Necessary!
Pa.r\ 1in1t. No door-te>door, i\fust have clf'an Ca.JU. drfv.
For inter-.if'W c11ll, 6T.'l-5747. ing rtt:om . Not undtt 2S.
ANS\VERING st'rvlct' -Ol'f!r YELLOW CAB CO.
30. Pn>!t'r exprritnct. but 1B6 E. 16th St., C.M.
~1·111 train, 54l\-tm. EARN FOR A ru!lli\fER
ASST BOOKlIBE'PER VACATION, A CAR, CAMP
Exper. Rt'r(d. Apply, 1631 OR COLLEGE FOR YOUR
Plact'nli11, Cl'>l. CHILDREN. Be. An AVON
E:>.()l'r . .111110 & PttSOnal Jinti. WA1TRES-S
Jiappy ol!ire. e SALESLADIES -F'ull Ovf'r 21. for M"n·in~ Z..lr,;\.
A I Cl k "lO lime. 1S-4S. Ch 11 rl rf' n · s ('". n food. El .•l•••dn•. 1768 cc ng e r . to rT • ,,._ 1tore. So. C~sr Pla1.11 , CM. f"t~·porr Bhd._ C ~I. ...... nie grn I aC:C'l!\I: f:."(f)('r or Apply 650'"D" SI, Tus11n,
!\Choolini. Be11u1. lle'V olr'"i. \VAITRES~ f':>:per, (\\'PT 21
Sec'y to $600 SAR.Alf Coventry net-rl! 0. or •\nply Flylnz But I ,. r
pt time help. f"o in-673-()97i 1
Top llkil!s, at:nlity 10 ~'Ork vestm,nt. Wlll tr11in, min
r1u1('k-!y &-acc:uratt'I)'. Bright agt 21}. S40-06l4. \\A'A~TED· Oa_y 1i :ciil!'f'ss
cheerful arurilde. s..._ ftir "\Ir ~! 1 J ! ,. r
G irl F rid a y $433.33 Sec 'y/F /C Bkkpr Dlllman"i ~f'~\ll11r11.n1. '
Frnl oft· .........,ming. '""in< & ,c;cn ...., · WIG Styli•! ··•/ I ... -"''' ID~. -~·n I (r01111h oppor. . .. !I\ p~ "Xfl'"t
hie f1211rt' 11ptilude. ATtrac. in pleaAAnl o!c. Sii re<fd. Anpl y in person, 211.1 E l"ith
five officc.i. \V1ttf'r or t;1vU 11~rv. b11ck· Si, c .:i1. 9UICK C·ASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
A"fL * M2-46IO * 1'P~A-I =N~TlN-G_/_p&-,...-,.,-.,.-.--18
~--~--'--="I Yn in Harbor ana. Ltc I.· Bt-"udM Boxer-pups. Will bondf'd. Jtefi fum. 642-2356, A/ P Bkkpr to $S50
d
'
Pho 2 Yr st"On11r. Some EDP +
ReprtM:nt11tive & tArn extrA
monty, \\'Jn prizes. ~t~el
people. llsve fun. It's e11sy
10 gel 1!artl"d. Just call;
!,46.5.,141 , ~™1
•1..118 E. 17th <11t Trvuie) C.)f.
642-1470
gJl')Und hPlpf11I. u·O)IAN to Y."l)Tk 11\ tJnnut
NEWPORT 11hop r->n ptinne i·,,n, ·,.1~.1 ,~ tr• e or: to t'<lJIL pow. FOR clean k neat p1.1n!in1. n too11, lapidary tqpt or lntfflor "-extuior. Reu. etttng 1i}'!'tC'm kno"·Jedae.
Whit :'! ratei Call Dic.k 96IH065 N E WPORT
Per sonnel Age ncy
133 Dover Or., N.B.
642-3870
\\'1nche.ll'.'. Oon~il ~hop, 2(•.\"i
Hutwir Blvrl. C \I
WANT AD
Tl'.de Pell nru!A ?t 4 BR, 2
bt. Cape Cad homf, •dJ ~
""1 ~&11 ~t'h w/boat
~. PtlR Lldo I~e ho~.
PrindpalJ °"'Y· 613-23J2 342-4212 ttr 963-23.ll • ' · P erson nel Agency SELLING Your bot!it? •·Ust'' *~ PAlNTlNG/paperln1. lS )'TJ. 133 Dover Or., N.B. with 111 .. 1dl tt ta11. Daily * * * * * In l-latbor a1e1L. Lie & 642~3170 · Pilot Oaul!il!d. 6f2,.Sg71 '-~~~~~~~ 1 .,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,.~~bon~~M~.~R.r".:!.'~ru~rn~.~M~~~:21l6:!;!:. 1 "'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'''-~~~~~~~
"\VEED Tl " ~ap" .. clean
oui the treasures • tnJ:h •
tum into e11h thru • 0..Il)'
Pilot ClauWed ad. Ml-M71
:\1n'r Open1r11; r"t
H1'ffi DRES.'J."P.:<;
HOU!\£ Huntlncr Watcb ttMr I 67~112 nr 67.>.J7fl1
OPEN HOUSE mlumn. St.II the old stuff
•
.
'
-I
.. '
\ Ti11Hsd•Y. Ju11t ), 1971 DAIL Y PJLOf
l[§J 1 __ I _ .... _1·ro·__,J[l1.__I -_ ..... __ .... __,. J~1 '--I ;;;;y_,,,,_;;;;-1
··;;;;;
1""_,.:Jil:;I ~'"";;-·;;·"" ~llil:i :l;.·-----..:l~§JI
Ml•C•ll•n•ou• 3 line•, 2 Tim••, $2.00 I ~ \
_W_•_•_•oc1 ____ __.120 Gener.al tOO Mobile Homet tJSMobile Home• 9l5 Trucks 9'2
ll§J I ( J[§J I --
Antlque1 IOO 'urnlture 110 Mlsc•ll•neous 111 1--------SCRAM-LETS QUICK ult: couch hlrquou1,.
:!-pc. see1\onal $9j, a1111
chair s2:i, 2 twin beds $-l!i '
S30, 11tereo $30, .it \\'a.II Ric·
lllrts $10, kitchen stool SS,
rard table S6, bed lamps &
klll'hen utemlls. 197 4 1
Kin~wood L a ne. H.B.
962-3856.
*AUCTION*
FRIDAY 7:00 P .M .
-Jo'REE tu good OOmt w/t'hlld· -------\\'ANTi.:o by pvt pty t'ortl ren-2 yr old Shl.'pht>rdlC.Oll ie 13' AU.EN Spttd boal plus ·~ Ford ~11 ton P:U/' v-a
dub wai. or Cha!tau '69 or ,...ii", malt. 714/J.i!4-?2it aH f,(I hp Srotl n1Hbo&rd motor INSTANT HOUSING Jlathead. Nf'Vt' !ntfM<.11'. Ex·
ANSWERS lairr. \VIII pay up 10 $3000 l!lnd trailt'.r, $3;:.cJ. tra motor $300 or best ~:30. 531 1~1 IS Mod I ~ I bl fl ·~ F ~ cAsh. ~299 or 67~~l00. ;:;;~iii;m;;-~;>;":-;:7~1=~=='~-~·'.;:'~---• I on i.nlp •Y reasona e o fr. ,,. o, .. JUN!' 4th
S"J'ORAGE SALE FOR
ORANGE COUNTY VAN &
).11NlATURE 0 o b er 01 a11 'lti ' ~1'1'.:ELCRAFI r ,. bl 1 Econo!ine. needs new motor
Mu1ical lnstrum•nt11%2 mix:, l yr old ftmalr . Xlnt Chry~. Cro't'tn eng'. J usl in· MOVE IN TODAY I S..100 Olf best reuonable oUer ~i mono -Charif -~lag i(' -
Jtn~ -MINK COAT STORAGE GIBSON el tc guitu , hollow v.·atctidog. No ch I l d r,. n. s1alll.'d MW SS radio Sl.800 llJ5..5572.
54b---1300. ~s-n39o alt 6 Pr-.1. . . --featuring --FORD Pu v ' SOme girls' idea of thrift ii(
raking ~ bus lo s. :\!INK St&led boxta, Dish paclu, body, prrrect cond \l'/casr
Va.CUllm cleaner. Latl\f¥.'i, S325: Ku9tom 1 O 0
Bdrm & dining r1n i:." rs. 11rnpl1fier 11•/co..,tr!. $3:.0.
Bunk bed. Chewts, Divan~. 64·l--41\4.
~ *VIKING * EDGEWOOD I>IO · · -
DAL\1ATION terTier,lema1e 80ats,Pow•r 906 *4<.EYWE!ST *KINGSTON Fl 11 !h ead r •cent l y COAT h<tli•. 3 N'ew Jtudlo rouchPs v.•/ 1 mo. ~payed. 11hot~. N,-.e,1~1---'---------overhauled. Needs paint •
l_enced ~ard. 67:>-48l2 al! 8 Jo~LAT hoHotn d1·1tg boat, 1 yr * fiOI SE CASCADE body work $350. or bet! of----A-NDREA'S malchinR hanging l11nipi,
l79 e11.. ~·uu size bo.~ sprln,q.~
ANTIQUES & 1111111rt s5 ~Pts, ~1,.r1!1ttd ,t-Otnett~. Ottlr-e desk.~ &, C~O=K=n-:=·LcLcO~~Accc=a0R=o-1Q0,~·.
<·hairs. Cunlert'r>CI" 1.1blr . Xlnt rond. ('o.o;f $500 """'·
Colonrtl TV, Stt'i'ro. N••w •vill sell lur $250 or best ol·
/-',\1. olr!. frPsh engl.lle, 4J5 cu in S ingles -E xpandos !er. 83&-5672.
Ju1t R•e•lved 1n good ('Ond, S30tsr t. 2-:1 FLUF~'Y Jongtuured--;,;; 1~27 ChP\')'~. custom !or A uto leeiing
k111eru;, 7 . "'ks, weani·d & rar1nt, u1jectrcl ( u t I er , CAPITAL SALES
NEW SHIPMENT d!'aw.,.,. hutch & 1'f'rvers. Wi
AUSTRA i.JAN, FNGJ.ISll ra. u~·r. lll!l,j llllI'bor Blv<l
& Jo'R ENCll PIECES C:.1. ~~~:i1 '
drapt'S, Crpls. Rt>fr1g 's. ftr. 545-36!~t
\Va5hi>rs, Dl')rrs & n1uch Piano1/0rcgc•-nc,--ca~2'6
more!
hox truil!P&fl li+l-!13~7. __ ~~~d!~ll~!y bylnj~~:rsnei~o~~~ HUNTINGTON SHORECLIFfS
'f\\'O rerl chick!, 1 l'OOster J: Ua!lrra!t r11t·lng steering, Beach B!vd . I ~li\\'ay 39 btwn J hen. Really tute: * 558--084(1 * C11s1t!e rac1n1' ff'ar box, .4.tlanta & Indianapolis. t mi.
==o:---~--~--~I he11\)' duty o v fr 1• id e. N p U" C II )
2380 Ncw110rl AL, C.l\I. i\'!::\V tourh & chair. 1\•i11uhk,
&l.'1<4870 " WINDY'S AUCTIOM WOULD YOU beau1. blue & green, SJij,
Daily J(]..;) * .Sun, noon-~ 8l't'11.kfas1 !bit, 2-!gp Jvs fur BELIEVE NEED good honie for grt>y & ~1ainlC"ss !>\C'el hiu'\:J~·arc, · ac lC oast wy.
ANTIQUE brass flouble lM'd dining, nl'W upholil'd <"ha irs CO\tE BRO\\'SF. AROUND 1-"'REE ORGAN LESSONS
as long as you like! No reg-
i~1rntion. No obligaI!on. Ju~!
Con1f'. )1ond11y1 7::\0 pn1
11·hite mlllf' cal. I:! mo. Jlcally :\lfKln lank, <'US!om 1\·ood ( 714) 536-8816
:.1nal1! 55~S40. drck, gold 1nrd11.l nake
T\l'O calicus, [ beige .(· I 11·/romprtn1on rwangr trim. "'/rails .. P1'Qf. r 0 j I ~ h, d . $65, :\laple I win pdrm .'>Pl, 20151,-;. Newpon Blvd.
,\'.Jnt ennd. Pd. SJ:l.'.i-St>I! rlrsi· I: cl_1~s 1. hox .~prgs & &hind ·rony·s Bldg ,\fat'l~
SlSi 4'.l7·1(!.IW.. ina\I, $1 ;)(). or ~tll srp. Costa /\f~1 ., r.16-81)81.j
.a.i\!IQI:i:'°l!lth Century l 646-1167 or fA8-5i 30. __ I OPEN DAI LY 9 lo 4
trltpho!lf', w/ba!rPt'\. bn\ PVT part) 11·11n{s lo ~r ll
Perlect Al)praisPd si15, sell I roinplt>tr hou~e or bfo11u1i.ru1 JOHN'S BIKES
~100. 1f!7-10i!4 near nf'W l\le-<11! !urn, in. --NT!QUE~G·----dud!'5 I(' lilk naug so/r1 t· -SPECIAL -
1\ ~ llnu <:rank lu\·e~ellt nl.'Vf'I' u~er! Sl30
pho n ograph .Re c ord Bu nkb(o0ds Ele11:an.1 Span111h
slurage. cost SSO: sell S-IG. kingsz bd~ sel & more.
497-lOM. 213: 92~3622.
Appllance1 102 =~~~~--1 CUSTOM Coek!ail table part
LADY Kr nm 0 rt aulo Tei'J'azu lop, 4'x6'. Cost S7::.0.
\l'aEher. letP n1odtl, cop-~&_.1_1_1_1·_,;_·~'-7-3-_296_. _3_'. ____ 1
pertonf'. S7:i. Speed Que~n Garage Sale 812
.-cl" /\1un-ay S1ingray TYJ!t'
Boy's or Girl 's • $~l
-NEW-
! SPEED * S~i -Stil
5 SPEED * t,i!l.9j • Si2
10 SPEED * $72.50 . $129
COAST MUSIC
£.12-28:)1
* PIANOS-(JR.~G-Ac,-.s~.-
Conn-2:) peclal s;.9:;
A!lt>n's sa1·<' SSl
Kn\1ai r1·~.. i;111'r Sl:.!JO
F'riendly tl'lrphone lnror
FIJoJLll'S PIANO CO.
1833 Nf'wport 8!\'d.
Costa .\lesa 714/64!>-3250
11gcr , f\ll hox tra ined By liPll!. S9000/offer,
Beautilul. 6i3-~9ii . &16-601.\ 9-12. ·-------\\·E: neert 11. OO~f'<-f'ive 8 "k 2.Y1NTERNATIONAL. 160
olil klttrns. 1t!so gt>nlll' f\lrt<'. CnJih('I'. Tan d t n1
moth,.1· c<1llco rnt. 962·3910. lrrdlrr, radio, R D.l·"., <ll'Jllh
GORG~:OUS \oni:::haire.t kil· ~nuncler. tiaJI tank, head,
t"ns. grr.v & "'llllf'. \\.'taii('d lt•ss !h1tt1 _50 h~~-$10.000 in.
,t patty-trnd. 847-;,s.io afi s. ,.Ps!ed. S7500 ltrm. 543-.1103 _
ruG-purtbred, 8 mo old, all 19· Hoi11on Doi")'. 33 !IP
shots. Frt• to goo<I homt Johnson lull l'anvai; co,·er,
Call. &12-l~;:i alt 3:30. · 10" x lG~' glass v[Pwir1g 001.
Cycles, Bikes,
Scooters
THINI
HONDA ...
"FRIEDLANDER~
lnll llAdl OftllfY. •>
537·6S24 e 8!\3.7.,i,6
BABY grand, n1ecJiun1 . TI11.., 11)111 . lJreJtr for <living.
niagnifa·l'nl instruml'nl l.IITLE <'rean1 <:0lortd malr drt'dging or fishuig, $l~5. YA:'l-1AHA ~c Trail, 2800
bui!t by Adanl SchR f f <log. Lc:iv('s li!flt bor~. f rrt 67:\.-{)5.'l:\. 1ni' ... Yan1aha 80C'e T!'ail,
P!l.'c dt)·r1· Sl'J, Rolh xlnt
t'Ot\d. gu11r & delivered.
M0-.8612. S4i-~ll:I.
lh' d I . lo good hunir. =>is-ro2~. I-~~==---~--3,000 mi's. /\lust sl'll/n1ake \\ RV~' rar.•e C'K'i 1.-; "' --~--------* ":i' O\\·~·N wl nC'1<.' tw''" '''·
TIC T k d "' "" offer. '68 Honda ~jQ CR, lo Ol' er Thrill Shop :\lov· 3 spd . Stin~ra.vs,. 5 spd trorator'i; dream. :.to\'ing KIITIES -Free. 3 1na.ll's .f.: Best navigarional equip. nli's. lop conr1. S :;.4 j.
-USED -
ing-Day-Baa·Salt, fri & REPAIRS ~wa.'', -~arriliee $1200. Ph l fem!lle. Likp nrw conrJ. v alue
Sal. Bri n~ rour o \\' n --5'18-2384. &1"1·22:11 S35.000: will 5el! for Sl7.500. -6-1-'1---12-2-3'-------
fRIGIDA/111;; ~[O\'t. Cu~rom i;upermarkcl·lli1.e hags & fill 2.1~0 NEWPOR'r BLVD, C'.\1 HAM:.-m'CN"'oo:--.~s"'" .. ~,-,-w-.-y. ·-3-00l3 BULTACO i\t11t11dor 196\t,
Imperial. i11fln11.!e l1ea1, dual fo1· 5 0 r . EVF:RYTHINC I Weekdays Open 6-10 pm Ysniaha. Neiv I:. u~ed fRF.E kitlens, rtal cute. bi · 150cc. S1rtf'I or Dir!. 1700
o\'ens, sioragt undernc11.th. !:Of'S! 120 J>:. 19th si .. C.l\I. Sat. & Sun. p. 6 pia.no.s of most mskes. Best i\fothcr is a rallco, 2~' CRISCRAl'T cah r111i~. niilP~. J ust tuned. A Ste;J R1
Mobile Home• 935
CON TEMPO
LAGUNA HILLS
23301 RIDGE ROlITF: DR .
ICornl'r of /\1oulton Pkwy\
Prei;11~c adult comn1un1ty,
fldjar11n\ 10 Leisure
\\'ur!tl. BeautiluJ su1·round·
i ng~. &ll luxury 11ppolnl·
rnenrs. ·rherapeutic pool.
Saul\as, E.xrrc1se gym, 4
bill1;i rd labll's, much, much
niorr!
Ste br11ut. furn n1odeJs In
pa.rk-like srtling.
GRAND 0Plii1NG ('os! .SfiOO. ;'.1akt of!er. GRAF\'0 OPENli\''' ~·,. ""' &I". -4 ... "" 613-1863 lull.v e.:1uipJM.'d "''I frailt>I'. S·l;i() rash. Orig. L'Ost $965. " " ,, '''" buy.-; in So. C11.lit. a t Schmidt :.4.>.-2.186 oir 673-1i3i . :"h(.p Junt 10th -j~O \\'. J9U1 \\'i!J Takr Tradr.Jns _ l\lusic Co., 1907 N. Main, t'Rl::E to good homr~ n1a1url' $3900. Pvt. Ply . .!·1~2.~ ___ ,,._,..._531J~--------fOR salr, 20'x4J', 2~
\\'HlRLPU6~o wa~h"tt l ~ C.:'11. __ -----I Santa Ana. Schnauzer \l'ith p 11. per~• '70 BERTRAi\1 2;,, fly i\11Nl-Bil<E, Taco ,.,, i l h ocC'an front p r op P r t.y
$40. J\.tnmorl' gas dryer s:ll'J. MOVING SALE ZENIT,B eolor 21" \\'Rlrllll JIA:\1:\!0"'N"'D~-0-1-.,-.-,,-. -,-IOO~e'l :l4t.)..!886 all ;,, bridge, fiSh('rn11111 'i; delight. Briggs & Stral!on 3 HP \\'/Vil.'W. priv11.te b<>ach. 5
Bolh :i.:ln! cond, guar & Sat & Sun _ Dish1o1;isher; eonsole, ,;!nt, s1:.o. Sn11!h r..l-lll. :.Jllrir prPsf'I, \lalnur BEAGLE-Trrrirr, 15 n1o·~ l\l ust Sf.'l!~ * fi7:~7198 * n1otor. banana seal, "ood n1i lo Dana Point :\111.rina.
delivered. ~6-8672. 847-81L'i. rerord;; _ 33 1/3, old i:Jassic Corona au10 Plr1· porl. ii•/bark grill. SI IOO. E\'t: free to good home. Call 26' CHRIS '511. TS. SS, Df'. eond1tiot1 $iJ J 1n1 C\Jrley A1tul1 park. San Cll.'mente,
7-i albums: lOxtO lent £"om. l}'pe\\'J'ilf'r. !ike n"w. S\00 . «."3-.ll22. fi~:,...211:... Slip Al'ail. S.12.lO. 224 Mlh _64cc'--c"c"c·~-~-~---lc7~1c4-clc92c-c3304c4c. ~-~-.,.--
• LEASE •
'69 Cad El Dorado •. $169 mo
'70 Ford 500 Galuie:
4-dr .............. $79 , ,o
'69 Chevy Caprice
2-dr .••...•.•••..•• $79 mo
'69 1''ord LTD 2-dr •. $79 mo
Ali Cars with Air
SOUTH COAST
CAR LEASING
300 \\'. Coast llwy, N.B.
6.\j.2182 Eve1: 673-826'.!l
Autos Wanted 961
WE PAY TOP CASH
for used can &: trucks, just
cell us for tree estimates.
GROTH CHEVROLET
Ask for Sa.lea Manager
182ll Beach Blvd.
Huntington Beach
8.il.7.6087 KI 9-ml
\\'E PAY TOP DOLLAR
J<'OR TOP USED CARS
It your car b: extra d un,
5Ce us f\n;t.
BAUER BUICK
234 E. 17th SL
Costa tttesa Sf8.'TT65
DIPORTS WANTED FOR f>Rlr -2 relr ig .
\\'hilP-oldt>r, S·IO. A1·ocarl11,
nev.·er i~.;. Firn1 . Call Jnr
app 'r. 67.1-KXIL
e REBI.1' w~hrs·c:i ~ liryrs
.S.'iO Gua1·-0rlv. :-.1,.tr Chg.
,\fa y\11 g 1·(!p11.1rm an .
il4:53l-R6:':i.
ple!e; hook!' galore; ini5c Ampex F-11~ ru-ol. l>lr reo '"°-.,.~-----St., N.B. 673·1B1 '69 YA:-.1AHA J2j. 1700 orig. NE\V J\.lobile .Home 20x52, 2 ~ 2
1
!apt' r!cck i" rf'i•I, sound on HAl.DiVIN piano, 11croson1c . . .... 1 d , 0 Bl' , b 112 ,00 o. items at l<>.l.l Arao-,n Cir. 1 1 k J~ \VAN TED: t1·a1ll'r for 3,000 n11·s. ,.,, n! eon . S ";, . '· - a. ..1 · =l up & On1.n&e Countl~ " s"••o<I t'f" ,,,.1,11 s 1 'a 1•011 einporar~·. 1 t new. ~ /Jtg Bch, ('Orner \\'ard & ·"" , .• .., · PttsandSuppliti lb. boar, B11nan1a n1ln i b1kr, 3'~ HP, lndsrpti in Cos!a :'ltesa·11 TOP S BUYER
y,-,iktown. I ·"hf't'\iOCk"I 1'l"r"r1 u111p, f'"M sn50. 96.l\...4fl.l7._____ • 646-46~ * S7:i. &1;>...4720, &12-9867. GREENLEAF P ARK. 1750 BrLL MAXEY TOYOTA
tun,..r, Cnrr:uil ~ t Pr t n S · M h · 821 ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;~;;~1 \\'hillier Ave. GARAGE Salt! Jo'ui-n. china,
rl ishes. kn1ck-knarks. 1111·
li11ue ll'amt~ & 11 1000 othrr
goodil'S. 1~12 Bel'\'1 L:it1t
!Harbor Hi,i:lll1111d~I. Npt
Reh. Sil! &: Sun .!line 3 &: 6
9am-Jp1n.
ch11.n,,,.r, llrll 2 12 .. ewing ac 1n•s JS' FIBERCl.S ~k1 or li~hini:, '69 VW, 24:\1, pe rlert cond. 188$1 Beach Blvd. ' II & I ~1!1·1698 * 64~'.!510 H Be "h M7 ~Jll'1\ktrs in t r.lout rabuwts 1970 ."IEC'\111 Lydia, hart!ly Pets, G•neral &SO 70 hp :'Iler<" 1rh·, likf' nt•w f\ extras · s erv c ~l "~~-~~-~--=,I . &ch. t • -8555 ~100. ~·1 1h'<1 t'.\\.~1 i;ttrri:o u.~ ... 11. fu!ly 11u10, gd tnr ;:;;:;;--;::;::--;;:;--;-:;::;::;--:;:;:1~1~1!2>J:".':_·.''~3~'>-~7"."'c:'.:.'~-~~ rf'rnrds. Dr. &..'Ott 544-5262 Trailers, Travel 94.5 Autos, Imported 970
an!t>nna. tl'le~1·opinp; ma~1 . k.ri 11~. Orig. S·lOb. now S'!~JCI. FOR Sale · Pet Rabblt IO.'ilh Boats, Rent/Chart'r 908 ~~~9:~343. _ -------COLD~POT rrfri11:. \\'orks
prrfectl~·. Cro~!l·lop ft'l"ez,r.
s~o . 642 -:=i oss . 2677
Orange-Ft.
GARAGE SALE! KENl\IORr: 11asho:r, $35, ex·
C'ellen1 : AL~o "'llShl'r /,,. Sto1·t> f<'frigP rator avocado
Dryer set. ~>"10.1095 gree~ $'2Qo 111-. \\'lille refr1g-
AVOCADO iv.11 she r. l4 eu fl erator $65. S!cf'per sofa, gold
rf'frig, A rt·~z stoi•e, I ~1.~. ancl mi~rll more, J717
CHEAP. &r ... 0201. I \\. B11lhna, NcB7·----
l\.E:\':'ltor:~: ll'llShl'r !..· rlryrr,
(~ rond, $22:1. ('all 11ttrr
:.t :..111.s:-:.ii "'
{,'.D . il \lli> • nlfU IPI'. S:'ilJ. 1 .'c"'c-6~2',_1'c·-;~-;--~= Hutch. S5. ---..-.. I 'ill TR!Ur..1PH D11ytnna !'Jl)J
Craftsn1a11 10" !hi s111v Sporting Goodi llO 5-11-7294 Ca l 25 + Catlina 27 c·r, 1700 n11\rs A1nt cond.
\\'/a!l a c«"s. $100. 546-f>.ISll. COCKAroos $10 i..:uaranitt thP ltJ""rst ratt>s 111 cl0950:::._'c°'".:.:'c"o':._ __ ~--
LEAVJNG .-;1:111• .~alt>. t lll'I P 0 0 L TABLE-K 1 n g ADORABLJ:: KITTEi\S So. C11hr ''Catllna rn11s-I BRIDGESTON E '611-lOOr1'.
twin beds. ril111os1 ne"" or Kn1ght-f11ll sizr, ~latt top &12--4S18 * • Evr s: :i34·38ll5 1ng c!ub'". lu<1l1un NC'11·port :Xlni mechan1 ra! 1'.'0nd, $175.
rhoirt of l\.illJ? ~itr 1l\in~. "''"·all rack. b1tlls & 6 Cats 852 Harbor. 7141958-•l!HO !or in fo. 64ti-OtJ:J7
i\l UST Se!J! Co!rrn11n Ten!
Traller. Jldtp, dinf'tte, slp11
fi. Special mill. X!nt rond.
Vl'ry reas. 962-6:154
16' Aristo. Lo-Luwr.
r-:1•w l~lnd . Loal\ed w/rxtras.
S\ps 6. 279 Alber! Pl. C:\1
&16-j2j2. S;J(); 3 <'1l~t111I <:'lllt11·s. 3 high "Q's" $5:.oo or l'x'st of/tr. • 36' LUXt;RV 'i"ACHT-1! l!l6~ l!odaku Are 100 dirt
hack s2:1 f'a:: c.•on1hinatton 67~'.Zm. SIA:\IESE Ki1trns. traintd. * Ci•uisf' or fish hike. xln't l'Oll<I. S200. C}
R/I\' TV-reron1 player & l)IVTNG gf'at', regulators. J-~i;,, ~Jur ~int mother SlO. * Day ,1C'ek 6·!6·9000 r-:•·•inian <19-l-86!1S. Jfi' FIR F: B 1\ LL. !rll-con.
radio, hra\y r·nnS(ilr, nr11· i·al\·e. ~iknno~ fla~h. eic .. -.\f.-1~8 r1·t 1111:s. B S II 909 ---' 11unerl, gRs rrfr1g. sips ~.
Sl .?.00. tll'11ut1 fu1 jlll't't' o( ~l'w t. u.~l.'d. 67:,...""'l~>. :ZBl~tNT Sui ~ kit· oats, a I l!lti'l 11:\1\\' mo In r r ~ r Ir .\..'l:qoo, (rlG-979·11679 Congrcs~. "" ~ ~ ' me.r ..,./!e rring, 11.indsh1eld dUs! J((''' furn. Si:,: HCA \·l\'uir I.iv· TV R-d-. -H .F-. tens -Havr h11d 1~1 sh1Jls. LIDO 14 xln '1 N)nrl trailf'r ~~"" . 6 •. 1,,.,.,·. · · ' St<I ' I . ' a 10, I I, I . " . ' . rr1\l••r """" ni1. I,·""·.() ' 0 OR. 16' 1111:: ·ro ... , ~1r n•<1p 1(11111·. St•reo $2~ r.:ir 1. .1·1-.11-IR $1rng, !)<lid CO\'rr, S90'l :l-16.1 · 68 I\ ,\IF 1 1', slC'PflS
AUSTIN HEALEY
1956 AUSTIN llell.ity-Olds
tngine & trans. Runs good.
Ntw paint & t1re11. Needs in-
terior. Call aft 1, •199-1873 or
~ee nt 319 E. 17th St, Santa
f\na anyt\m,., $600/best Of·
lf'r or u·ade. ---________ ,
'66 1\U!->"TI~ Hral"Y
i\l:1rk Ill. Good i:ond.
3000
IA &
ou1, ov(!rtlri\'t. fi75--6i98.
BMW
\\'HIRLPOl)l. \\asl1er ~ t>li>r.
drytr. dC'hl'"· Used 3 nio.
S2ij. 67;H302.
1\EIGHBORl!OOD g 11 r n g ,.
~<1lr'. IP11 1•\.: lln1_g 11·11,·11 !(>\2
Sn1ukC':v. Fn·S11n , !llill-!1:1:11\,
%S..9()i9 Rrd \l'hf'I hdhrrls.
11n1/pre-amp, 1"ablti;, ln1p~. SIOO; n111rh1E" 1np r-ock tail 836 Dogs BS4 El\esinl'r<'. tllc~:1 Vrrclr, 'J'ACO i\l 1n1-bi kP.3 6 Rik<' rack, awning. Ltkr
1:1b!e, S2J. ~l8-l6::5. 21 :i CITIZEN RadtQ.~: z (irnernl L.:\I. horsrro"tr, Rr!ggs & Stral· _,_.,_,_._1_1195. 11-11·5136. ,\utomot.ive Excellence
f\1agooha. C.\I. :\JL11-A. r. xtnl. 12 or 110 QUALITY hni' bred, hand· SABOT, ,,.E".\''1.1' PAl.'"T'"D. hlll. S6Ct. ll38-llS7. l!l1~· !VEAL, fully ~elf c_'(ln. G :\fOVING SALE -Evef)!h111i,: -~~ -" -"" \lOVl.Nf:, i\lu:-.1 sell: Jl i<>h 111!1, ba.'>f' & mub!IP an1P11 n11 . ra l~t'!l, prnn11~1nJ1;, S}l(ll\' nr 2-.,1 .• ol •.• 11,·. 112,·, '&1 Y,\;"\1AMA 110: New en!(. 1n1nrd. Cle11n \Vilh many ex-GE elrc dryer,, 'vhile, Llkf' f{Of'S, J une 4, 5 & 6, !) Jn!~. " , , ·'" . C powrrrd trlP"t'HP". $ 4 :1. hrii!gr Cn1nplrle $ 30 O. oh e d i t n c P P r n i:.pert~. ,•l'I"'." JICf'i.is Clf"an up, W,-., 11·:1.~. $1695. 968-0317 ne\\', $9:1 2fi0 Even11111: illl\.~11\ 11.<!, "'~I I • ~ ·~• ·.;.---6-·i-ll!JIO . J:O. C 1 TV : 1 king.~z htd S-10, llt'aft1ng 1bl :>-16-4;.iSR. ,...,, 1t>rn111n p1nsc 1cr pups. * 9ti2-0!'i57 • -_G ___ 1--.1 1 ~---•-1, ), . • c, • T. {) llr . '.~. rnn II', S20, Lar1r walnut f'nli 1ablc5 ---l\1 fl rl in c rr ~ t l\enncls e :1.2' P.C. rP ci ng .-;loop. Xlnl VIKIN Travc Trat er, f'X ·
C.m.'.' &
I
pirturr~. furn, "ash/dryr. !%!1 :-.JOTOROLA 2 3 ·' • "' nm!<I ronrt. :.tust s,q,crllict' $2950. • 5 HP ;\l lN'I BIKE. ,.r_llent t:orn:I . Reasonable. ROY CARVER Inc 67' mi & l"Offep ir1blr szo I'll. All-Cvnsolr Color TV: 1't15! ..... ..........,. -. ,,.,,,-,77, GOOD ('ONDITION ~.-$1118, l'\'l'n1ng<. I -' •
Equl'pmenl 808 _1111~_r. ''':...:.:..: ·------· h • ' ~-IUJUi> (' PSI, n1a1u!{' lop . i;pent S96 on ne11 1ulK'~. Cos! K·!l-50. Callin.11: all yard * Call !H&-8.1·16 • T ., u ~,. 947 292:> Harbor Blvd. 1--.;.-'--------PORTABl~E .i;ew1n11: 11111.f'h, mirTor $fi0 AnhquP lanip ne\\' s;,20, 1'cll $J7J. 6-46-69i2 11._,cngri~. ·rraln nov.· !or SABOT, 1111ofl, Jl:()Cll\ cond, __ ra1 ers, t1 1ty Ct')sta ?-1csa 546-4444
Bf.LL & Jlowtll .~upt'r 8 picnic 1ab1r & he nchPs, thl. car.'l'd $lO A.n!ifjur cu! or 49i-!OIH. 111oo.,-Jo11:·SQtiarl. Star! .Tullt' l'o1nplP!P "/$;:iii l 17:-i. 1 1070 YA,\11\J\,\ 2'.)() ,\IX. S5~. DATSUN
n1ovie projec!or. S-1:5. Call classie k bondrd r..tin. li· gla~s tli~h S·IO. ,\l any odds & CLOSING OUT--7th. i ;'.lO, :\lartincrf':!;t Ken· * :ll:i-221:1 * * !l3:l--01:16 .'----~:\-1ALJ. u1 t11ry I rft i.J t r , alter ·\:30 548-j47~. quors in cRbtntts. ,\\uch ,,.., -I cJo;;rd-J n. Xlri1 ronrf, Good -----------1 f'nrls . .,..6-5i01t nFls :ttl>--09S!J e 26' t:XC,\IJFIUR -bl'Lrr 'iO llDNDA 90 CL, like nr1.-. buy 111 Sl40. 64&--·'"'-71-. ~~ '66 DATSUN 1600 Furniture 810 n1ore. i05 Popp~', C.d. r.1. Brand npw l\'urlitze.r p111.nos I"· 1 II 1 Lo mile~ S29~ ANNJVER.5ARY Bou!iqul'. F GREAT D11nrs -AKC , I ..... ·rJ! a~s hu on .v. Brand
1
w · · · · d c0,,.,,11·t>I•. "•-. -ody -'AT ' Su Ju 5 & 6 9(M &: org11ns. ·an111.sl!e deals. "' 2 0•7 5136 4x6" PICK Up be trailer, ;:in .,. "' ., '.\!AKE " hi1I f(l r : gold . . . n ne . \\'illel i;nlid ,.hf'rry !'l'I: Bt>ll * 541-0f,,\!l * lrn1ale ffi\\'n pup~. Champ nc". $1100or offrr. on&-577. ,... ·-·-----A-l cond. Sl.20. go. rSR\'438 1 S99J.
r· a r PP 1 in :::. Fr" n 1, h l.aColoni11, Jo"ounlafn Vflllry. & Ho"·pJJ ran1er11. rir(1jeclo1· .stock. Show q u a! I t y . 21' Jslanrlrr. sip~ •I. h<'ad, sJi/, ·1;ir6!l HODAK A. Chnmhrr. • MIRACLE MAZDA
I Pool tablP, lrerzer, wa~hPr, & TV J'IO"·er p11ri.:; matlOI{ ,\10VlNG, mus1 .~ell nPw 962-4633. f!Va i!, sz59;;. nn1v koobby, ;.;Ira~. ~pares. !'!4&-5392
le!tphu11r. guhl· "11' llAllan !V, sm. t(Jl)I~. n1any hl>f'holrl s I 1 C'Olor TV ! A t S ' Pa t 949 roflt>l' tahlr. 6 .vf'lloiv Dun· heds!eail; K(l()(l1r~ g11.lorr! • Y van a . remo r COCK-A-PO() l'I u n n i r ~, ('all fi7~-!ifi.l2 \2:1() IJI' trade. ll94-3!165. u o erv1ce, r s i tem ~ .~· Knil'k·Knac.ki;, Conie 10 \f;uil.'.l n Thrilt r.!'ln1rol & an!enna incl. ,290. " r ran Ph.1 ft• rh11ir1<. gold o 6• Bro\\·11s & h!11 ck~ S2;) e11ch. AURCIRA 21' rgls ~lt:io.'Jp slils "LlL"' /ndiRn minl h1kr Hr>n1e nt Ille Rota1y Jo.:ngine •l-1111le! ! 1971 VI\' Super Bu.11:. PATIO SALF · Furnih1rr, ShQp, 1810 l'nrk A\'e. C.:.t. ;,i,.,..;:il ;i 2 · I I 00 I 00 leather bar. 111:{"1!'1hon. sew· ' •· 21 •. TV '•. 1 __ 12., 1Jll l V1oerCircJe, Foun1ain ( xtrai; Nwp1 s!ip SI~ of-mode 4 I ·
\ng maC'hinr . gol l elub~. i:l;. ! ea 8 c 8 P" · Ptc. 2'l20 _T_l_m_i·_,._,_._ri_,'1 Sal .., VI). ~9--604·1. l~r 114: 494-297\ Call :1 19-2~3:1
\'ia l)dn Nnf1!. ;.; F3. Ligh1hou11e Ln, Cd:.I. Sa!. :.1,\PLF; Hi-Fi i"Rdto arl41 (;oorl ,,1nd111nn ----------10-t r<'rorrt plnyl"r irr fN'nl'h * li1~,_1 763 * ALLERGY cau~es hair of CAL 28-Load•d RAcer l!lii-~ YA .. \IAHA DT-1 ('RUSl/E:J"1 \ Pll'PI l 1\'1 11 ~ 0:1fl AKC t\Jghan hounrl. . . , _ Run.s ,l:(l)(ld. best o//rr. l\.Xlm rh11.l f~. s2:, r 11 , Rf.AL b11r,1?11in JI:. on~ 1 e i:.. Pro1·u1ci11l rab1nl"t S 20 . 1~·· TI.CA 1'V Blnrk & ,_.hllr. B!onrt fenia!C'. 6 4 G-2 Ri :1 SR3.l0. '.'IB 1;l1p 111 1111. 4!H·04:i1 • 968_9:'J()6 •
A~sorled 7. f.: X' Mfa~. )"niir Evl'ry hnu~rlinld 1·111~1!"''.I'· \l11ple ~r11l1• lu•11rh $10. "·01·k.~ l1nr. ii7:H111 .1 Ji70 anytimr. K!Tt..: -vrry c!f'an hull, 1;6 :'\OR.TON 7:iO--C-,.-,1-,1~-,
10,,1 °1tl <old """ G 111cl 1''71'fs a ft ~r 01 ·.~Q. "' 2 ,,.,.I Boll~, So•c• I C 11 d 1 1•hnk,, 11.~ 1.... S'!.'• f'arh. · ' -'\J\I " ' " '" ' •·" -• DACll . ..::.T1uNn rupp1r~. min urinsua Y rl~Jt:r ' n""' n:ri.s' rnrnp!C'lf'ly rrbu11I . $850 or
Af>11ul ~1 pi· i;:ra11\qh Br ~e!, Rallooa !~Ir. R,.dl arlcls Dr. 1'.H. inff 2.1rd f>Ac-KA-R n-R r 1TI:;;:;;;; 7 \\'k~. Pur<' hrl"fl, nn v./1\......,tl! lrai!Pr 5-18-2~JJ7. I lirht l)U~r. ll7:t-2i•l!l
rn11:inc 1600 re. DuB I portPd 2150 ffarbor. Co!!1a. J\lesa
hPads. Undrr 1000 mi's. -~~~64~S-~57000===~-
$4:it:l. Tom: .'1<19-3:i:i8 or all i DOT DATSUN
pnr ,'>-\R,-07"~'°:_..,~~~~ OPEN DAILY
VW ENGINE 40 HP AND
;i:l(l.69,lft: :;24.7957 11ft 6 SUNDAYS
Auto~ for s~le
18335 lkai.h Blvd.
Huntlr!i1on Bes.ch
M.2· 7781 or Y l)..()M2 rnml l~. l'~·F, Jll~.J Harbor 1 LIDO T.•lr · F1·i. Furn. ~ill· ~'.;,1~1 ~~~n S11.nia An a and I A.\1/F~\l, "iilnul r11h1ntl riarrrs. :O.l & F $2(1. 9@....T.l9ll 3:1· LION i:la ... , slror>-:\.d .71 _ :i HP -NO.VA_C_O_n_R_A_
Rh·d, C.\1 :~1'\.<\\~7 JHIJ!~. ~11ai< l;u11p~ nuhn~. ___ _ • ---Still. f; • .l-101 7 nr1 fi pm. all::.. ~~.,ir.. & i:f'ar Sl6,JOO ,\11,-.;r B!l\E. l~ikr np"·
LI Kf:r;p" 2 llo.\ -sPr11111:~ t._. 2 ' ni is•'-. ilrni~. $ i;, l('I $lOO 21'.m I * AUCTION * \11\(;:\AVOX-TV. ,..-h ;rn ~Ti\:'\DAlt]) J'riuJll's Al-iC 1 ~,,,....~Avi•ii, Hkl' __ ! ~1 :10 ·1!13-'.l.~r..a. I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii n1at!re~~r~ !.:; (r<ll)lf'!; l~.1 ~~ I l''1 nl' r 111u1·e !'01H;OfP, 2 1 ... ~;ll fi \)O ·\fair: l lrm11lr,n1rcChor.l\ITF: .XL:"'!' CONU. 2 Mobil.Hom•• 935 Gen•ral 950
l§J '65 DATSUN PICKUP
~t hra~s :1nd1rnns l 10 ROl "i\IJ 11" £1ln1r l ~h\1>, $7:1 j (., ,\npli.in~·c .l11$minr. Cd:\1 lill-i!lO.l. -;-mn nld. 64&-&lll7. <\All.~. Thi.fl l 1
2-h l 'V> ,. ,,..,.,.._I 4 11pd, dlr. Family work hor'!le
('nll Gill 6i:i-12'.l 4 turq f.:3mP r r•, "'' P11; ..\uf'tinr\! rrida). '1':()t) Jl m , --Vf.R\·-~PEC!AL ~11;..o-m1~,\·~ 6'i1·~7l~~., --.-TANT U I '6;, F'Ofl:D H~nch \\'2n, xl,nt }"ire engine red, 1 owner, re·
:1 Pc Spani~ll di11;;~~e1~ part TV. s2:i; mi_.f' h~hlll W indy's A uc tion Barn ill Cl:a1np .. ~1n>1l Corker Span1e!~ COP.0~,\00 J:J + 1r.1ilrr. INS HO S NG rond. 62 Chtvy 327 Bis.. h~ fireman. Sacrifice. '~-"' ro11r1 111nn. 129. 2 ,..,..._ ;,.JS-!l4o<l_. ____ ~~=·I s I I · 'I 11 1·•ynr Hrhl1 'I! Int rond """ ,.. 207.i\, ~e11'I'°"'· C,\I &16-fl6.i!G r rte co You .Jordan'il" Pr! !'ih1ir 64·1-4000 u Iv "qu1r. 1• u~! -~ c • . • __ •• · (PIV:i43l \Vil] Ill~ tr11.de or Spanish i;n!.1 ,t,: chair, g<T)(I F'.NTIR~: c:+1nle11I~ or l!l!l\1 I I ,.,,,, Sarr1flce 61.i-H•l7 aft 6 Behind Ton.v·.~ Blrlg /\1a!'l SIL~IE Trn'1<'r puppy, Af\C, 1\:.0 hst o!r. 1~·..:!,~---1 WHY WAIT? --__:___ fin. pvt. ply. CaU 540-3100 ronrl1!1on, $fi9. 2-$' .<;f11111l.~h C!1rsRpr11kP 1~11, 11.B. Furn, ll' 2TI $lOO I k 9 O FORD F'-100 P .U. S6ij. Ply or494-1.'i06 artlOA.i\l. .o'1fas. s:i!l f'A Lf~-F. lSi!.3 "Prli&t11'r.~ & niisr. 962-2176. K!TCl\f.:N lahlP, 4 chair!', 1nes, mes, · br11u11ru! ni;;rkln~s. Boats, S ip1/Doc s 1 The all new Village House 4...1r Be!v !I, 597.i. 227J
Hr1rhor rl l\·rl C\I. ~1/.-!J.C,i. SJG:-.;5-, -S!oi·e rti)n1~ t. 1• in· <•h!'l()nlf'. S2:i. B!n~'k & 11·hl!c * 962•8·177 • BOAT slip avail, July 1s t, !or by 1 evitt ~1obile Systems Republic Ave. C~l alt S pm.
doii'!. llolll1". 1ru,.k.~. For r/11. 21 ·• TV, S~JI); \\' r i n.(: r r FREF: k111Pn~. ~ilve;-\\hlll'. 2 .\IAIRmy!r/·N'e\l·founl\ls.nrl 60 .. 70". Wide ,.lip. \\'Ith .~loping .diake roof c11.n -
rail 962.Jll~i nr :'.IS..fi:illf. wa.ohrr, nrr1r n('11•. S6:1: 6 11·k~. l'Mrl Per ~ i 11 n , pupri1r5. $ZO ea'ch, 6 \\'reks fi 73.£606 be ynuf'9 oow! MoOels on Antlques/Cletslcs 953 IX:C. l.OJbl,.~. f'nrne r rehinPI.
6 anliqu(' rlin chr.~. cu11
lamp•, J1nli1p1rs m ! Ii r .
;,. '16-6 9(}.I .
J-4'-'J' ::;p11ni~h C'r1'dell7.8 s~
3 sludrnt dt.~k~. $19 Pa. 2-J
rlr11"'er 1·h1,.;ts, Sl!l P!l. lJJo'l'.
lAAj llarOor BJ\'d, C'.\l.
548-9457.
GIRL'S "'lllle provenc1a l
dres~r. fra111ed mirror A:
nire t l81lrl .SfiO. rolor TV $60.
fi /3-1017 aft. 6::l\I PM
'.\1UST i;cll: ~11r~ gold
couch & k11'1'1>en1 .
• ';).ffi-4306 *
nor al
\•,\Cl i:\lN 1'le11neJ", 1110\'\e I
rirojrrln1-. piano Ii r n 1• h, 1
pA intittg~. :.tii<c. 6~U'i9J:;.
GAR . ~11lr , T h u r s.
JOA'.\.1-SP.\I, lifi Cos!n :.lcSI!..
St. Cos ta i\lrsa. &1:>-21'i:i.
l:ArtAGE-S:il;Jutl(' 41hK,:
S!h. Cub f'11('k 27~. fi.~72 Yale
Cirell', H.!l. S.~ ll!l-1-1271.
Misceileneeus 111
CHJLDs blcycle 11•ilh traini ng
whPe.l1< ~.00 Firl" englnt•
pedal rllr $:1.00.
~1 1 -72!H
DELI.JN C'U1ilon1 club cM ir, 1 ·ro~R--1innirdi1tle 1<,. I".
Cost Slll9 -4 monih.~ new, Np"·porl Bfneh Tennis I<
S:il. 644-2730. Swimmlnc CJ u b n1Pm·
PVT pa r1y, R' blk naug11hyd• I cc"'-"'o'c1o"o'c"'-'..-0_12,_o. ___ ~
J10f11, nr1·t r u Ii" <l SlOCA ·:19 BUICK. nr,ds 50111p work
213/!IX>-'.1622. si1. Xlnl rfoghouse Sl5. 2.iG.i foRr.ttcA ·.,·-,-1,-.-,-,-;-.. -,-,-i Oran1<e Avf', C.:\1.
l'hall'!I ,15. Good condition. Jo'ISlfER
~11.i. $2.S.OO,
nleklng ('hHir, SJO: r/!Ylp ieflf 962-f>.tj.~ Rfr fi :•:>.Q prn . O(d_ ~tls....45~2. d isplay al,
lablr, SI; 3 \\a,V lan11>. SZ; DAR! ING ff'ninlr klllcn! Jt~G. Sr. BrrnHi·d A!\C, fc ni. SLIP SPACE AVAIL BAY HARBOR
Roiiani1t i\tini·hike, $ j Q · 1 fRE.E to 1eoocl twin('. , !! wk old. $200 or i\!ake ofr :z;i·-30• SAILBOATS MOBILE HOMES 5-18-2~28. ' * 54!J-:16JfJ 11: 64.)-41"6, ;,1.)...4i6.1... * ti7J..66!Wi * 1425 Baker St .• Costa l"il~sa
i!J.10 FORD P.U. V-8 l!athead
recently overhRu!cd. Nel'ds
paint • body wu rk. $3;'(1 or
best oHcr. 8~72.
CABl~ETS, kitchen & ba.U1. CALICO <'HI , lvves pe-oril<'! I i)OIJER-;-\TA1'1; Pl!rs:-7 wk.s; 8oat1, Sp•.d & Ski 911 J\Jlit S. ot S.D. Fwy al Harbor :341 Cad coi ch. A rlassic In·
custl'lll\ huill. 1 e I e I' 1 Shots, i;payrd. 8 mos. ood . Bo1h n1alt: 1 N'd-I hlrck. 11·1/540-s-170 r rrrtibly well prC'scrved.
ila rdv.U)(I. lLIWf'SI prli•r.~. 54~110l:l nf1 2 pm. ,4.'l. Ph: 548-~792 J4 " OUTBRD. '·'·' llP >, t•11·. '10811 F-11 Jl2" 837--01 -9 Many modcl11 on display R1 1 • • omr -Hoyal • o,N. ;i ·
shop. lO l'olor~. il·larhle A-,..REE killf'll~ ra !ovinl!.'. home QUALrrY Afi::-han Hounds -F:Jrr s!nr1rr. Trlr', \\.'a!(•r Ernhassy. 20.-.:~.-0. 2 br, 2 bR, Dune Buggi•s 956
formica 1ors. 1654 13nbcoc'k only! As!lll1r tf'd c <J lo rs , Rf'awnable I black, 2 blk-11klis. two ropP, 2 11nc hors, Ir$: rins, dhl awnin2s, comp.
s1 . Cos\fl /\1es11. 6~2-9115 nr &12~1~9. ma~kert ('!'f'.11m11. 962-76j i, 1nisc equip. All for S·IOO. Aft i;k1rt1ng, lrnel'rt yd , porch
&12-2741 ~·1.ur~·r 1111rr poori!t, blk BE::AUTlrUL T-eup & liny ~: 5.li~716. "/1..-.KI iron i·rtilings, !ors ol lenui.J~ 6 mo. All ~hots. Joy ~1-popp;,,, Ti""y Joy J'll\_7 JOHNSON 1/0, tri hull. e7"tn1s. Dohcny Pa r k HOUSEHOLD furn., r11mpln11: "'""'" V'lt Sp 28 U p I Arter 6 PM 5.16-9637. ~.11111'·0-.-,~r. R!l3-!1719 J.,~ hp. Like new \\'/!Ill trlr agl:', · • · · ar.ro~s CflUIJl., "'ll~hrr k ri"'·rr. OIJ I. " '. • ,_ I Doi> " SI I B h) ., 00 F. PUPS· • W'·-., ~lflny PXlr8'. A ~Ira] at •vn I' y A e c bo11rrl n1nlor!I, Kayak & TO qualified h•lrllf', GP rmll<_ P DL • • . ..,,, ~ S29QO. 6-14-7~95, Children OK. 496-4R'20.
~m11.ll t.allbo111. 11.ra::h1 l\J. ::;hl'phrrd. Lovablt, lenced r..talt; 2-Ftm, ti nit !WL ~la ke 0 f f er . )d. 7J.lg..{l!j\~ * ll4.6-4:nl + 1:.· CLASP AR, 50 ltP Merr BA YSIOE! Village mobile
644-1836. Plcc. ron!rol.~. wind.<hielrl hnn1P, Adul • prk, North
Ht;AUTIFUL p IP tr" i 8 11 ACK regi:>itered Bes. II: 1 t , Ira !er $69!) 64Z..9105 or sidf', 2 br. cslm hlt liv'.11: rm
2 ~1.JLL '"nJ!:lh bridf'!I Jl:(J\\"llS long.hairrd kiHen!l. 10 Wkll fr1n11]P, 6 moll old. SJ:"i. Call :.J~R R~k for cascy. 11'/lrrilc, 2 b11, dbl/carport.
CUsrOM Alun1, borly '6:1 V\V
chass111. tow har. x ! r •
whl~/t lres. $R'o(). :>"19--0498.
Truck1 962
• IH. ..
RECREAn o N CENTER
ROY CARVER, Inc. siJ.e 9, 1-Prillci lla nl Boll.ton flh1 . &14-429!1. 6'14-4169. J.1' BOSTON \vhRier'"';·/•IO hp I laundry rm. tllove ln cond!
label. B!u1•. $25 each, t\11-LONGllAl!l.~D Tortul~" Horses 156 613-7363. H11ue Y•eddin.11: dM"li!I _ ivo~ .lohnmn, rlel' ~lnrl, 2 illll --------1 2925 Harbor Blvd.
•J shf!ll femlllP rat, 7 t0f'11 on ,_ !nnk!l. Sl080. &1~!260. '69 KJRK\l,'000 20x•l5, 2 BR. Costa ~1esa 5464444
sa.llll. lli7A' 13. $~. Exercyclt ea. 1001 . 642-21133, 642-MOO. 1 i0!"'.5E for lcll!ll''. 6 yr old t-,;, ba.. r 8. t i 0 -c 11 r p n r 1 I ~"""""""''-,,,,...,...::::0'.-"'.~
$25. 54~7393. PLEASE give 2 abandonC'tl m11.re, tXCf'll,.n! lor childM'n Beaut. beach pa.rk. s769a. '66 ford pick-up, 1s.dio,
'67 DATSUN PICKUP
'SR DATSUN 4 dr. a.uto,
R&l{, low milPS, xlnt ('()nd .
$1300. 638-9110 or 540-2111
eves.
'&9 DATSUN PICKUP * EXTRA SHARP -If
\l,'ho!e5ale r 673-2271
'67 Oa!sun !!port<i car, 90ft
top & hat'CI top. Good cond.
$1200. 4!l!l-J029
FERRARI
FERRARI
AUTHORIZED
SALE.S I SERVICE
NEWPORT
IMPORTS Ge lger co u n I t r klttrnt1 A hom,., both ma.le & nr adu\1!1, SIO ITlQ 54-0-1871, ii ll•l UNITED MOBJLE JfO,'dES. ~~~r,$~too 4~pd ix::n~j,:;~
531-729-1 MEMBERSHIP bo')(·!r11.intrl. 64&-1739. Transport11lon 61f>..l1'10, 633-2961. !146-8163 1-11 ba.ck velvr t eha lr1 , BALBOA BAY CLUB ,------===~===~~ llOO W. c.oa.t1 Hwy.
casters, S6:i. velvet couch LIDO \~ ~95. , 11. b I • 11 , Phon~ M4 1312 LOVABLE Free k I t l' n 1 • [ hit• and 1 1~ JP J 1~1 •t:W.CR~ST 2 -b .t~~i ·ss CHEVY LONG VAN F tc ___ cN~•wilo.:;;"7:"'~"~"'---I
$47.50. Like new. 54&-3997 ~'rirldail'I!: !'!!. .SIOO. par\() • female. J c11.llco. Mlr!N ~ tCt. C S I I R 1920 .it ra. ~ coo rr, r. ' n V8, l\.1uncie 4 •J'ld. pane.led, FIAT ..:...:..:.:;....-,~~-~-~ 11 11: 11.B. 5JS,411~ • emptirs, • • •n cond. Take ov"r pymnt8. GOLD rug 10x19' \\.'ilh plld, too. 67:>-30,"\6, IV S5500 ~ wide ova.I.!!, venl "'-indOIO.-'S,
s;;o. Air cond\tiollt'r, ,A.m11 n11 . IRVINE COAST COUNTRY SERRA Thrift Shop. 11 ~ St'UGCLE::S haa dont> 1f ~J8Sl : now . S\1~ or Trade 497-1084.
$111. Bab" bugy$5, 6'16-8210 CLUB Mt;MBF:RSllTP f\1aln SI, H.B. Is h11v ln,e; •, 11.,11;11in! l lemalc11, 1 m11tr, 6 G•neral 900 "f,6 f'ORD " T. Cs.mprr l ' '1\ Dodge TrRde~mM 100,
J 67 • ...3()7!i JlriCf' 111111!. Silt J unr 61h. wk~. Par l r.ockf'r. 642-2.,l:i. Srecinl. Au10. Good cond. '63 BUDGER 17x45, 2 BR, 1
2 r.:NO t.11hlrll S~ <'A!""1. rolfit * w • * Special hn., 9 am to:; pn1. 14' t'A(JOHV glll118 ovi!r w/Oeluxf' Pullrnen ro'lmPt"r hn. F'1tn1Uy park. UN ITl-:D ·rake over psymcna wl!h B
le.blP $10. Good conl\iHol'I. 9'x9' TENT utcr! Of)Ct' S30.00 533-9((17, ADOltABfJfi; klltrn5, l!Vbrkn, wool, 'ki/rl11hin11: b o a. t ~ •xtend1:1l l<lp it; s ide can· MORILE HOMES, 64~:1140. of A. 5-10-3="-'=~~--
:""o '~1 :1• I Camp stO\·p ~.00. WEBCOR blk J.· 1~hl & co.hco rnan1s. 1\/lr1tll,r, S24:l or offer. vu. 6'1';,....i15(;. 6..1.'\.'"""I. l!Ml CHEVY P.U, En& '"'' ~ HlFl/Sltn!O ~tl ~JQ
'69 FIAT 124 SERIES..
~ sl)('L+rl. Low ~fi!eaS'. Sharv!
(7.SX199! $2195.
MIRACLE MAZDA
A ,_ I I "ll-7-.' · .,, "14-07~0. "'' ~·1 'I"! s~ LIKE nrw-voc11.c ... vf ve .... £,.. to retl, ~ynrro 1 rack ' "' on...,_.· e Dat!un Ciunpt'r Shell~• \!ixJI AUOOER ExJ)llnrlo. ' -.i.
f10f8. l JO\•e.s,al, Sp11ni'h oak NE\V 19"' 01,\').tPlC TV I:()~· ret-crdtr. SttJ: J p~e. blllf' 3 t7 l \\'K o[d long halrf'd kit· 16' B 0 AT w I trlr. 75hp Jo'hrgls, alurn window,, Sum· }-:11sy \\'.&lk C l\f. stort.~. 2l7l f>R <"llle ~I. ~I ._ llomf (If 11\e Rotary Enifn.
111blt1. 613-69~. or $250. Apt Ai7.l' Coldsflb't Slln1sonlte luggage, $20 . ti>llli, 2 w/1 lor' on ea. loot. nh., Png, Xln! cond. $495. mer sale $115 It. up. ~·hurrhrs. $.1!i00 furn./$3000 1!110 Ranchr ro ~·Only 5.000 2\W Jl1rhor, Costa Mrs.a
COMPLETE 81!0 $JO relrlg. S~. ~731 . 64.l-2'1&l. 642-28~3, 642-8•!00. All Const Gu<1rd App . 5.'m-7310. ~unf 6.1:...1512. [ •nL l.lke ~w. 1,,nt, ol ex· 64,5..5700
963-3.115 REl"RIG , Slove., Doubl« nr CATA~!ERAN 101>¥·. hsr nrr . t.ABnAOOR mixed malr 96S-&.'-21!. '69 WhHI Cs.mi>er. hardly FRONT!F:R-8~.1.i l f3R, I h11, lrll•. S:lOOO . .il.!1-l·li'.?OJ ____ YtATS NEW &: Uftd &II
r o ~SULTS you C'1ll !);: ;:~~~36 1, 7-pc. kitctien 11tt & '56 Che\)' dtllVff')". 1,15 puppy, 2 mnii:. 7VJ' Dinghy $10 u11ed , sips 6. Vrry gd priCt'. !um . Nr lfo.'ljt llnspl!al. !!loll '\'\il;."0s Pick-u p trurk all mo1IP\s, parU and ffl"'<lice.
pend on, c.JI the Soper-1 · "":"' ·. I lll!r, make ofr. 548-9755 .•19'J-367j, 4~95 Call alrrr 6, 67:..1;,.1.i1. 2239 R(!pub!h'. C:vi . 612-2802 UNITf.L )o!ORll .E HO:.t E:S,I r.11r1~ hrPnl\ nl!IO.' n ... :i..iv to \ owrsCM Ol!livtry. ~a l•am 1 11. O.ll7 Plkll TAKE: 0\·F.R 10 acM'1, NO 1 V.'ATEn ~6x7~NP~ I l)AP..LING kl1!tnt1 ~. 'l't"I';(. 1 DIAL direr! &tZ-.5678, Charge T\\'0 40' OCJ"D Ctir~·~. XJ;;f 6~~3l40. 6.\1~7!161 . I drh·r. &!6 ... 16.~1 or S-l~-9l11· C. MOB AUTRE'' MOTORS
Ci11..Sl'lnM &4z..afiT!I ~ plae11 00\\·N'. $19 mo. Ne11.r I~ npe~. S...rrlr1ct S24. J . 2 J1111>r' L11.~\1n11 t-:1,e;i1Pl your f.d, lhl!n •11 ha(k and conrl, Loe11.l , On11 At S20,;il0. DAil-:-'i;-Plt1rf · tr~tionl fi1rnUnu:~ 11 ;;:;-,~ into quirk I 18(i(] Lon~ P.esch Blvd.
'yoor •d • ''"'' "' I"'· "'·"'"· I • ·,11 .. :m • .. .... ·lll!l·Jll1', ·~·-""9". t I ll•ler " ... '"""' n"f\ .,,I r" 11'1714-1.,. C•ll M2·""" • $"" I '"''· '"" "'-"" ' "3-!91~111
-
I
_ \
..
.. ~ ~ . . .. ... ' .~
•
3t OAILV PILOT I
[ I§] I 1§11 .__ _ ........ _ .... --'l§l I ........ _ II i:1 I I._ _'_"'_"_'M_"_'_' _J§J cl _•_"'_"_'_M_"'_' _ _;JI ~ J 1;A!_,u_-;..._;;_Ne.;...• ____ 9ao_A_u_1_os..;...No_w ____ ,_ao_A_u1o< __ ._N_•_w ___ ._m_
Autos, I mport9d 970 Autoaw lmportitd . '10 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autoo, UHd 990 Auto., Used
FIAT ·MGB TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I ·66 f\tGB Roadstl'r, good con· AnniversafY Sole
1971 TOYOTA $17n
'6.7_ VW '69 Jo'ORD Bronco, 4-Whl -drlv•, apart package. VA, B. J.
SPORTCAR
CENTER
l:IBBD
dlllon, 23,000 ml.. $],000 or
best ol!er. Call Ma. t t ,
536-rn-1.
• * '&4 MGB, $B75, CLEAN .
673-2358 ASK..fOR CARY.
OPEL
'71 OPEL
RALLYE WAGON
.i.Deo.it Lewi&
.• TOYOTA
Custom painL rlr:h , bul!ket seal!, limited
$1295 1970 SKYLARK &lip. Xlllt oond. $2700 .
This car has: passed the VW JN PERfECT CONDITION ,6::7::3-07:.:::'3=-------I
16-point safety and perform-e 492-7770 e RAY Dalke'& '32 F'ord Coupe,
ant.! rest. It is fully checked 1--------'----best rod by Calif. Hot Rod-
and thoroughly recondi!Jon-CADILLAC de.rs. Show or drive. $(,700
er!. We guarantee 100% that ----------or tradl!. 675--4265.
we'll repair or replace all Largest SelectiOn '67 FORD LTD 2 Dr, vinyl
B.UIC~
'68 124 SPORT COUPE 1900 Series, very low m1le-
Radio, J[eater. Hacing age. Sho1111'00nt fresh, 8~3-
1~ J1arb9r. C i\.I. 646-9300
1969 TOYOTA 4 dr, stick
shift. 27,000 mi. A-1 fi.tlNT
shape. 6"3-22"JO.
major mechanical parts• for OF LUXURIOUS lop, lmmac. All access. 1
JO days or 1000 miles, w~ich-CADILLACS owner, $1685. Eve 494-7081
Gre.'n. tXPLOOG1 CPf.. TRIUMPH ever comes first. fORD Country Seda.n 1966.
•Englrwo e Transmission • I O C I · Alr, .......,, oond. Pri. p--~.
F •-• .,_ •u n range oun y •"""' ..... J '1595 FULL $1895 PRICI: THE TRIUMPH ront ~le n.car ...... le As-$1100. Art, 673-9330 semblies e Brake System 1963 thru 1970'a
2133 H1rbor Bl vd.
C.M. -540-449 1
Harbor American
646·0261
1969 HARBOR. COSTA MESA
VB STAG
NOW ON DISPLAY
• EloctneoJ sy"•m. ~QbC;&. JEEPS
l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~-~~~~~1 I 1960 OPEL: Very good cond,
• Comp!eie S1ock of $30l,.. •
Come in for a test drive!
FRITZ WARREN'S
SPORT CAR CENTER
710 E. 1st St., S.A. 547--0764
Open daily ~9; closed Sunday
'63 TRIUi\.1PH TR4 Ro3dster.
'Vire \•>heels, overdrive, new
brakes. Good condition ~795.
5<1~530. !\light trade for
older Van.
A~ l.cJ) '61 InternaUon&J Scout. 4 whl
C , ~D~ dr. Runs good, $850.
~ ~ 2600 HARBOR BL., 538-7765, 497-2097.
12 .. 0fl 1 --·~AJ~•=''="='-~"~7=9~·--111 .. ,.,J PORSCHE 0 =· MESA LINCOLN ~ o.S 540.9100 o,.n Sond.., •e ftp EL DORADO 1968 '67 4 DR CONTINE!'TAL .. AJ, loaded w/lllras, siee.:e!c;a':e.~ XLNT COND, BSr OFR. Tlllnk See
"FRIEDLANDER"
13750 BEACH ILYD.
!Hwy. 391
g93.7566 • 537-6824
B. J.
"'SPORTCAR
CENTER
~BBIJ
'68 850 SPYDER
4 speed. radio. healer.
IXEZ782)
$119500 :.~~~
283J H1rbor Blvd.
C.M. -540-4491 ····-B. J.
SPORT CAR
CENTER
~BBB
'69 124· SPY DER
Llke nr"'· 5 s))('ed, radio,
hen t er . cnmfJPtilinn ex-
hausts, radial ti!'cs. \ZKf·
357)
$219500 :.~~~
213J Ho1r bor Blvd.
C.M. -540-4491
JENSEN
JENSEN
AUTHORIZED
SALES •. SERVICE
"'"NEWPifRl " · ~ : lrt!PORTS
31\JO \V. Coast Hwy.
Ne1vport Beach
LOTUS
LOTUS
AlITllORJZED
SALE~ & SERVICE
'65 PORSCHE C
\Vhi!e with red interior. Ex·
ceUent condition. (TZP 808)
Full price $2495 or take
!fade. Call 494-7744.
PORSCHE Hl70 911E/5 2.2
couplr, tangeril)e/blk int.,
Bl11upunkt AM/FM ,
outstanding cond. S 6 9 9 5 .
64*-0555.
1964 Porschr, SC. green,
Newly rebuilt engine anrl
transmission. Any offer
S2li00 or berter, 49-1-1380.
'70 Porsche 911T Targa,
Blood Orange, Jo ad e d
w/xlras. $6,700 "' or best of-
ter. 4!l4-79&3.
'67 PORSCHE 912, 4 speed,
A!\1/F~l . chrome "'heels,
xlnt condition, 4 9 2 • 7 3 1 7,
(eves).
'6-1 Porsche coupe. clE'an Ex-
cel. mech. rond. $2!125. or
he~! offer. 494-1380.
'69 Porschr !)12, Ar.1/FM,
Xlnt cond. Owner 1 n
Etlrope. must sell. 545-4767.
1967 PORSCHE 912
5-spd. xlnt cond. 536-8652
J958 911 Por~che Targa 5 sd.
Hel£e w/ blk in!. Al\1/FM.
J\ Elliott. evP 67;).-2347.
RENAULT
EXCELLEt-;T trans car. '62
Renault. Good gas mileage.
$150. 548-2349
TOYOTA
TOYOTA NEW '71
NO DOWN
PAYMENT
"\J• Xlnt cond Pri. ptr. $4200 644-6484, 644-2942
54~3031 Exl. "" 67 Art. 67>9330. MERCURY
• '64 TR4. good condition,
$800 or best offer. * 673-3365 *
1970 GT 6+ hlue. goorl con-
dition, low miltage. Best of.
fer. Aft 5, 494-1380.
VOLKSWAGEN
~·~~~~~~~~
'67 VW Bus
Custom paint, new tires, very
clean.
$1895
1970 HARBOR BLVD,
COSTA MESA CHEVELLE
'61 VW SQUAREBACK· 00 ~lALIBU. landau top,
Air condi tioning, Clean & auto trans, air, PIS. $1995.
ready~ (VRY2•19) $1293, • 83J..-0108 *
MIRACLE MAZDA CHEVROLET
Home ol the Rotary Engine '67 CHEVROLET
2150 Harbor, Costa Mesa BEL AIR SEDAN
-~=~64~S.~S7~DO==~-IV8. automatic, radio. hea1er. '67 VW ·SEDAN power s1ecring & brakes, air conditioning, fUK\':452;
Excellen(oondition in & oul. S 1095
dlr, Special wheels and tir-ATLAS
es. Jias had loving care. CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTII
(U1 BS\\') Take trade or 2929 H bo Bl fl
small down. \Vill fin. pvt. ar r ".. · pty. 340,3100 or 494_7j(l6, Call Cosla Mesa 546-1934
'" 10 A.M. '69 CHEYELL SS
'66 VOLKS BUG
4 speed, 22,000 miles • Per-
fect! SLW600, $995.
MIRACLE MAZDA
This car has pas5ed the V'V
16-point sa·fety and perform·
ance 1est. It is fully checked
and thoroughly reoondiUon·
ed. "1e guarantee 1007o that ..,,._.·u repair or replace &JI
major mechanical parts• fdr
30 days or 1000 miles, which-
f'\'er comes firs!. •
•Engine • Transmission •
Fron! Axle • Rear Axle As-
semblies • Brake System e Electrical System. Home ol rhe Rotary Engine
2130 Jiarbor, Costa Mesa
Compef:Jllon orangt', 396 V8.
5..i package, 4 speed, radio,
healer. (420 AUG ) Barwick
Imports, 998 So. Coasl Hwy.,
Laguna Beach. 546-4031 or
494-9771.
645-5700 1960 CHEV white lmpa.Ja, 2-
1--=~=~==--·1 dr, Good l"Ond, Lo n1i. Aulo '66 VW BUG trans, Pis, new p \\' r
4 speed, radio, heater. fTYC-1,.c~:,..:.~"=c.,.. ___ _
Ol7J, Barwick In1poris 998 r.1usr sell '68 Impala 6--pass
So. Coast Hwy,, Lairuna wagon, Full po11,.rr. Fae air,
Beach. 5'16-4051 or 49-1-9771. Lots of .-.:tras. Very clean,
549-3031 Ex!. 66 or 61 1969V\'1 blue with whill! Jn. Bes! cash offer. 673-5494
1970 HARBOR BLVD. lerior, sharp! lo miles: ~~~-· ------
COSTA r.1ESA Privat~ party <lne owner. '64 C~v. Impala SS convert.,
646-4032 pi s. V-8. auto trans, H.d. '66 VW Bus. reblt eng. Nev• hock 37 soo ·· $;).j(} clut ch. Best oUer. Call '68 Bug, Xlnt cond, 4&8 tape : s. · mi 5· ·
deck, criro mats. !\loving, 5-10-0024. :H&--0510. lcc'cc'-"'-"-------must sell! 6'1~38 1968 Chev. Nomad S!a!ion
"64 V\V Pk-up truck. Near '66 V\\o"-Less than 20,000 mi. . W~. P/b, !'Is. R/H, 26.,000
-new 1700cc Png & lirts. $650. Immac:. Good tlrt's 1 miles. Orig (lwncr. New
l'{A;!l_t \5~Pv:'-1~, ~'16-8;;;;;;;-'-"ii·;;;;t-;;;;;I ~o~w~""~'·;s~1~050~. ~67~>-:-;3~7~88<_._ rires. $1600. 8'17-5024. j '&I V\V. Minor front end ··7 C"-V8
'63 iltercury, full pwr, air,
new tires, brakes, etc.
clean, origin11l throughout.
Must see In ;i.ppreciate.
S350.\ Call days 548-5477
r.ton-P.ri
;1oc;r;?Eftc t}flone GT, 351,
Y?,,.,.Air, X1ra,. List $4tJOO,
S.icrilice $2500.' 7 -15 4 9
leave n1essage.
MUSTANG
'68 Mustang Fsrbck 36,000
1ni, V8, auro, ps, pb, r/h &
tape deck. Sport deck. tily
strwhl, metallic blue,
54S.IJ.17.
'66 V-8, 3 pd. 1 own.
$850/~et : '6.1 Dart 6 cyl.
auto $450/besl.
• 642-5.%6 •
'66 Mustang. orig. owner. lo
1ni"s, good rubber. $943.
499-2333.
e '66 MUSTANG-Clran &
sharp. $925. or best oiler.
644-4·123.
'66 Mustang 6 cyJ, R / 1-1,
au1o, new tires, lmmac,
Orig. owner $825. 646---1171.
'65 Conv!. ~1ustang. auto
tntns & top. Good rond. $;,sQ.
Call 645-1260.
'66 MUSTANG GT 4 spd 289.
Lots of ex!ras. Good cond.
Mu~l sell. 675-2427, eves,
OLDSMOBILE
SACRl1-'ICE '66 Olds Cutlass
2 dr Holicfay hardtop, Lo1v
milt>agt. lull . equipment,
flt'\V rubber. \Vholesale
Bluebook $975. BeKI olf,.r
over lakes. No dealers.
642-1813. k f '60 V.W. Rebuilt engine . .l 1n:vy wa~on, , auto. $69.01 MONTH* damage. Nrw eng. Ma e o -Good condition, 833--2-,97 •II P/S, P/8, RIH, Good run-ler. 962--1782. '67 DELTA '88' 36 mos. O.f, pay pri~. 6 pm. ning cond, S3il0 or trade '!
$2484.36 or cash p r j c e '57 V\V Camper hus. needs 1_, K Gh. 179_ 9&t \\'.17th St ., C.l\!.
12003.5.) Incl. Tax &: Llc new passl!nger door. $500 or """' armann ia J or.,,~-"'· 6 1 1 full power. Air Conditioning.
A.P.R. '14.54%. Serial No. off Pr. 645-3496 best offer. tr?-nlscaynt cy au om, dlr. TRFOS7. Must sell. \\1ill
"347 • ••7 VIV • Call 675-1731 r/h. Ruos good. Good rrans-tal\"e trade or finance, Call
l.ro . " '67 VW PANEL VAN. Ex-portal.Jon. $.300. 494·6SOS 494-7714. *On approved credit $250/or Besr Offer .~~====~~~~ Biii Maxey Tayata •&15-251M * af1 6pm * tras. $1 300. 18-l·ll Ny£'s Pl, 1963 Chevrolet, ~es11 t~an ~ '64 STARFIRE, P/S, P/B.
d Laauna Beach a.ft 5 pn1 mi . on rng, ac 8 r, st Rill. A"'O, Air, Slut !n ,..,..,. I· 18881 BEACH BL. g47.8555 '67 V\V BUS, n1int con . ~=--'"=--=' ,,::_:...:c..:::::.._ sh if!. \Vant 10 trade lor Jge ''"
B XI"'' sis~ '66 vw Camper mo•o""y•I•. 492-7664 ___ , or nios!Jy. Rotten conrl. S22J HUNTINGTON EACH ' ' . 6{5,.5028 ''" ~" -. 1akts. 64.1--4720, 642-9867.
0 _D ___ -----··----Special custom paint. Ne.,.,, CHEVY Wagon 1968, lo mi's, -'70 T VOTA 4 OOR '65 VW $750 '63 OLDS 88. Orig owner. ' ·-'''-·~···-·~ Air conditioning. Clean. L.QW * 545_0775 * $l 995 96S--5S72 eves. AIC, PIS, PIB, lo1Y miles.
n1 ileage. 4666BBS1 $1895, :'\.1n! cornl. $:125. 9a"'2-{)0.4.J. MIRACLE MAZDA ·~~;~rB~:,;:.built eng, trans This car has passed the \'\V CHRYSLER 1962 Olds F-R5 Sta \Vag. Ask-
l6-po1nr f.Bfety and perform-----------1ng S1JO. Gd lit!Je transp.
• 644 -j{j\2 * ance tes1. It is fully checked 1969 Chrysler 300. 17.000 mi ca.r. 646-i631
}{rime of the Rotary F.ngi ne .65 \l\IJ, $650. and thoroughly rerondition-Loaded. SJC(J(). hrm. 1------------
21:,0 Harbor , Costa l\lesa D.3y :.39--1 115 td \\'e guarantee 100'% !hat 644-6197 PLYMOUTH
645-5700 E\'f'S 67;;..563~ ..,,.e 'll repair or replace all COMET
31~,',,'.';,,,~tooB',' .,',<,wy, j '69 COROLLA 2 DOOR '.i9 \/\\'Van, S:150. maJOr mecha nical parts• for -----------11968 ROADRUNNLR llU, 4 " ,~, ,, I 697 V11"tnn11 SI . C.:lt. 30 day~ or 1000 miles, .,.,.h1ch-'61 co:-.IET-Good cond. NP\\' speed, ~oorl cond. $1650.
-----• 646---0907 • evtr comes first. br<ikl!s I.: tr11 ns. R 11 n s * 540-01112 • MF_RC"D ES BEN Z ' ""' "'· E".'"'."' •"<>Orl•· -~-.:;; ... , "" .6. 'QBC'·· 'AAii. · "~:n~1nr e Transm ission e ""l'lrrt. $23;, or hrst olr. --------C~--uon tbn1ou1. < .... AN l<!J) ).lust ·' " "'· """' n11 io. on •·-PONTIA
MG
'69 MGC-GT COUPE
Auion1at1c, 13.000 or1g11v1l
ml!es. Perft"!t l! fl8:i AE:>:J
fl595.
MIRACLE MAZDA
Home of the Rotary Engine
2150 !la.rbor. COKta Mes.a
64S.S7DO
MG
AUTHORIZED
SALES Ir: SF:RVJCE
i . NEWPCfRt .
IMPORTS
3.100 W. Cout Hwy.
Newport Beact
'69 MGC ROADSTER
H a r d I a p + eonVl!:rllble.
Sh8J'l)! Low mileage. f611·
AIYJ'\. ~.
MIRACU MAZDA
J-lome of the Rmary En,tne
21!iO >I.arbor, Olm Me.a
64M7DO
~THINK ... ~.
"fRIEDUNDER"
117M llACi. ll!llf'I'. itl
893--7566 • !i.17-6824
l
1-"rnnt AXie • Rr11r Axle As-546--0714 ~1crif1<•r. SI0'.19 full prrt.'t!. rr>hlt motor. amlfm rarl1n_
Takr smatl doY:n or older S79.1. 6i5.-l:"l;,il nfl 1 pm !en1hlies • Brake Systeml--C-O_N_T_l_N_E_N_T_A_L_'I----------
• ElC'ctrical Srstrm. '70 GTO tr.irl r. \\"1!1 fin pvL ply. Cal! '70 V\V rlP Juxl! <'l'lm[W'r. lac-
~tl0-3100 or 494·i:J06 aft 10 tory morlrl \\'/pQp1op. Fine ~ "68 LINCOLN Continr ntaJ . Ram Air, 4-speed, Firestone
A.:11. cond. 4!'!-1-3133. Jmmaculale. Must 1P11. wide ovals. sharp-all black!
1970 Corona. 4 fir sedan, 191·o'~v~"~,--ft~ ~ $3100 or m11kc offer . Sacrifice'. $500 & !ilk{' over Am-~·n1 auio trans, Vrry Xlnl ronrl. .S l•l!f.i ~ 0 67:r.3500 11rt 5 pm . payments~ &IB-~ alter 5
1·lean. 83d--7flJ6 aft s pm. 673-2271 ; M&-4120 Whl~r ~ ~s '66 Lincoln gold Cnn!in<'ntal & w<'Ckend:o;.
Auto&, Imported 9-7-0 Autos, lmport.d 970 . ·I\~"' 1"'1~.·'.·~v~o"Y1!.,R.~VpA. rlRull p11'f. '6J Gr11nrl Prbc, Fu]\ po1ver, ~ JI v~., .r-""' Air. Rallye whcPl~. Xlnr
sha~. Musi i;<'ll, Take best
1003 G U d C * oHer. !">36--3791 111\ 7pm.
Q uarantee se ars 5'1l·303l Exl. 66 °' 67 '67 Tom"'" l<M'"" New 1970 HARBOR BLVD, '64 J\10NZA 2 door, R&H. brakr~. tires, rehlt (arb.
• lNG1NE. e TRANSMISSIO N e FRONT AXLE e REAR
AXLE ASSE.MBLIES e BRAKE SYSTEM e ELECTRICAL
SYSTEM. )0 DAYS OR 1.000 MIL ES.
Tiii• co, tun pos.Md th YW 16-pc>lilt 1offty nd ~""·
011t1 ffft, It h fulty c!Mc•..t ond th•fo .... ly rMO,dilt1o"41.
W• quoronteo 100.Y. thot we'll refHl'lr or Nploco \.11 11'1•
jor m-.:=hcntlcat portl • for J O 4oy1 or I 000 mlln , wttlft.
•••r comes flnt.
'69 VW SEDAN $1400
R&H,
NO MONlY oowN
IOACI •55"· .....
Mo. '""''·
!Y NW2 41 I
for J6 mo"th,, c.,h pr;,.
i"cludi119 t•ll" & lie , Sl47J,
D1f•rr•d p1ym111t pri ce
$2003.04. A.PJt 21.25 '1..
'67 VW SEDAN $900
NO MONlY DOWN
!OAC l '36'° TOTAL MO. PYMT.
for 36 mo11thi. Ceth ptl c1
inctudint ft• J tic. S•tt.
Oef1ir1d P•Y"'•"* ptlc1 1i
$1117.60. A.P.rl.. 11 .25 '1.
'70 SQUAREBACK I '68 CAMPER
Air cond., II. J H, 4 Spcl., We1f1lit , Pop • Top.
lu99•!• ll.1c~. IJ440FVl Equ ipp1d. !Wllt46JI
OPEN SUNDAY
BILL YATES
JllS2 YelS. 11....-, S-J1• c.,l•fnlH
IJ7-4t00/4fJ.-4S 11 /4tt02161
I
I
___ co_sr_A_M_E_S_A ___ 1 11u!o. Clean, runs good S32:1. $950 or make offrr. 968-2942
968--1103. art 5 pm.
VOLVO '63 Con111.ir Spyt1er • good
oond!Uon, 4 spd. Must 'ell!
Eves. 642..W2
1958 Pontiac Chierton, au!o,
good cond. S125 or best of-
fer. Call 962-2761 or 635-8681
lHIHI DODGE 19&1 Lt-il1ans Pontiac. 64.000 'VOL.YO'!----------oril{. mlles. autom., p/s, ] owner. 495-5625 1948 DODGE. GOOD COND. ----------1 "FRIEDLANDER" 1221 • ,,.,..,,1 • -~~r~,;:,:,~~~-'s~'!~ ";.?;
1S1MI •IA(ll OfWY, ., oller. a.18--0918 893-7566 e 537-&24 'f,6 DODGE Corone.t, 9 pass. ~,.-~---...-.,~-\ S W ~c1>0. '68 PONTIAC Sta, Wag. 9 ·A • ta. rn . .,..,., ... nn1versary Sale 646-4732 or &IB-0042 pau, air cond, S21J75, Pv1
1971 VOLVO $2991 FIREBIRD PIY. M>M!IO.
RAMBLER
..J)wlewiA W VOLVO
'69 r1REB1to. 1ow mi1;;J ----------
ow""'· 1'11 powoc Coll •fl 4 '69 REBEL HARDTOP pm 549-0D811: 968-6829.
IMS Harl>or, C.M. 646·930> FORD 2 Door. Automatic 11.ir cond ..
1959 VOLVO. XJnt cond . See pov.·tr 11teer1ng, ·vinyl rop.
to appreciale $375 646-46291 ----------Low mll~age. B;u-w~k ln1.
1.fter 3 pm. · 1964 Count!)'. Squire IUl l pow-por1s, 998 So, Coasr HY.)' .•
er, rac Air, $700 or bst Laguna &a.ch, ;46 .. I051 or
Autos, Used 990 olr. 545-5122. 49-1-9771.
'71 LTD; 429. hurgun!ly '62 RMIBLER S111 . \\'q . UXl e FLEET SALE e w/black_vl~yl top. $4.000. t·actory Air. PIS - P/B.
'&I Cad Cpe de Ville Sl07~ Phone 61 5-45<!4 Towing hllch. &12-8587.
'66 01•-~,,, 88 ,-•,, '63 FORD Galll.'ly XL 500. ...,. """ ni '63 Rambltr Amrric11n Sta.
full power, lo mi't~. $ll7j hardtop, original owner. Xln! \Vagon, good transport.atlon
'64 Lincoln Con!'I $87j cond. 833-1085 all 5. car , S250 64~901.
'68 ~ontiae Sal3ri Sllltlon '64 XL Gahtxi,. 39o cu 1n, 4 1964 LE Mans Pontiac, &1,oOO
\Varron. Air SlBn spd, <'hrome .,.,·h!s, ·1 1 / ] orig. mi es, au om., p s,
SOUTH COAST s-100. 8·17-0080 owner, 49'3-5625
CAR LEASING 1!)66·-'-,-_0_R_O_F_"_'"-,-,-,,.-,-.,-,.1--=-=T~B=1R=D---1
300 \\', Coast llwy N.B. PO\\'l'r, air. xlnt col\d. Make •
&4:..2 182 Evts: 0673-8269 nffrr. 968-56z;,.
"67 2+ 2 V8, P.S., fact air, SACRIFICE Jo mi~
Xln! rond. $1700. A38-3,144 or ~uirP 'A'Altl'ln
642--0433. 64~58 -!!It ~PM
FOR SALE
T·RIRD '6.i $700
Ml-7294
CALL US NOW!!
<"rt"' M1• will try t• .,,.. .. , t_e 11•• '" ,.,
INST ANT CREDIT
YOU MUD AND STILi SAVI YOU MONEY ,
1.lf you ore new in Colifomia J. If you ore new on your tob
2. If you OW.,money 0t1 your '· If Y?U hov e lillle or no
cor \ cred11
Ln Ml TIT TO AllAMtl TMI CllDIT A•D TflMS YOU •EID SO
TUT YOU MAT \ Dri•• Moine Todi:iy in the Cl•" of ~choic;ell
·:::
0 1971 COLTS ·;~,':
MORI JA1'ANrSl CAR tOR YOUR AMlRlt41't OOll.O.RI
Pr1••• $.fa..,., la lulf '""' Su<lg.. , •.
'
. ~~~N°'71 DODGE POLARA
Au10. tn1n1. heo!tr, doth & ,;"" inlerior.
"""9 ....,lllOfl <Yll.,,., wi111hhttld wu1i'o-
trs, ~odd•d do•h & '""'Ii, "'"'h mo r •.
Dl4!Cl01118U
BRAND NEW
1971 DODGE VAN
FULLY FACTORY EQUIPPED
B 100 $2689
OllDER YOUIS TODAY
'70fORD GALAXIE 500
HARDTOP
V-B. oulo. trons. loclory air <orod.
rod'° & h.a!er. 406AKf
s1970
WHY PAY MORE?
~~uR MONEY BACK
GUARANTEE
ON ALL USED CARS ADVERTISl!:D
70 IMPALA
lo!011c1 Foct. Worro11
'70FORD
MAVERICK
factory oir, radio & heater. tTC /i
0~91T!3B870. $1198
'69 CHEVROLET
VS. ou!o., powel' st~ring, radio & healer, fully
f0tl. rquip. YIK701
$988
'68DODGE
DAIT
Vfl, power stttririg. power brakes, radio, htol·
tr{X081 IS)
'69TOYOTA
(010111.l 2 DI. MT
4 Jf'Hd, rodio, Mott!". but~et 1eo1s. YZX159
$1198
'66CHEV
STA.TIO• WAtON
41111:1. 1n1n1. powtr 11•tring. rodic:, hto!t•. whi-
1twall tirt1. R0tt9SO,
H•rdtop, VI, •~lo., ,,I. M w~h
11101•. !76~BOAI
'70 PLYMOUTH
ROADRU NNi R
Thi1 red btcu1 y ~o s aulc .. rad io & h!~!tr.
powt r s1terino. WSW, londou to~. fat1ory air.
130AfY $198
Aulo. Irons., rodio, he;iTer, wliiiewoll l•res, b..rc~
tl Stoll. S~DOQ8 .
'69 BARRACUDA
VS. auto. tram. power steering, r!J!lio, htater,
whitewoll tire1, Ser. No. BH23I9B 122359
$1298
'69 BUICK
Grwntl S,ort 400
Auto. trO!!\., powtr slfffing. power braktl,
radio & heoler. No. 198• 19
STATION WAGON
\'·3 ~~10. lnsl1. ri:idio & lito!tr. Yf8384.
OUR COU~TEOUS PROFESSIONAL SALESMEN AND
CREDIT COUNSELORS ARE All BONDED BY A l -
STATE INS.AND STATE LICENSED. YOU'LL LOVE
I !NESS WITH THEMI
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