HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-06-07 - Orange Coast Pilot7
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El Toro Radarman
Cries Fro1n Car Trunk
Bring Coast Bescue
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USS reate
49 Feared Dead
El Toro Fighter,.
Airliner Collide
From Wirt Services
A Hughes Air West jetliner with . 49
persons aboard collided with a Manne .
Corp& jetfighter at 12,000 feet Sunday
spiraling straight do~n i~to the rug~ed
San Gabriel Mountains like a sboot1ng
11.ar.
Only one person -the F4B Phantom's
radar interceptor officer who paracbulcd
-survived.
Jnvesligat'ors Y:ere on the scene today,
faced with the grim task of removing and
identifying bodies and also the more
pu1.zling question to be answered: what
happened?
No clues \\'Cre :ivailablc to indicate why
the tl'l'O aircraft collided. !:tie El Toro
Jo.larine Corps Air Station jet knifing into
the other's fuselage, in aln1ost perfectl y
clear weather.
Air traffic controllers spotted them on
radarscopes simult.aneously, seco nds
before the impact and neither pilot
r adioed any pre-collision warn ing.
FirsL L. Christoph(!r E. Schiess. 24 , of
Sa lem, Ore .. declined to discuss the col·
1ision with sheriff's investigators alter
being treated at Santa Teresita Hospital
in Duarte.
ti.1arine Corps Capl. Larry Karch , an El ,.
1'oro ·MCAS-based safety officer. likewise
said he could not comment on the crash
pending a mllll.ary investigation.
The 98·passenger twin engine Hughes
jetli ner was climbing toward normal
operating altitude when the ·planes
1mashed together at 12,000 feet, roughly
over Azusa .
Baggage. mail, papers and other items
flew through the bole in It! side.
"I he ard a loud explosion and thought it
was a sonic boom, but then I looked up
or .. fe
We•ther
The weat.hmnan predlcts cloudy
skies tonlgbt ·and Tuesday morn-
ing with a chRnce of hat)-' sunshine
In the afternoons. Highs today and
Tuei;day at the beaches 67 and in·
land 73. Lowa around 54.
INSWE TODA 1:'
Sailtng events in tht 0-rnngt
County Empire Se a Scout
Olympics are 1chtd11ltd fo r thi,,
weekend. Stt Boating. Pagt 16.
••• 11 .. , ,,
c1111w .. i. a
(lltdrl .... u, ,.
<11nll!M U·H
Ce1'11'' n c,..,,...,. n
0.11~ Mittie.. IJ oi .. ,,,... 11
ltii.o-1.i ,.,. •
l:ftltrttl-1 11
'lllt l'H:t tt·U
"" .. "_ 11 A~n LtJtlt,, 11
.V...llbtl• ' Ml~lff JI
N1lletooll NtWI 4·f
Or111H C111Jt!Y l J
•-•• U·W SllCk Mll'lUI D·1)
T1ltwf'I~ JI T~''"'"' J1 W1ttlltr ~
W.111'9 W1tll ti Wt,.,....• Nnn )J.Jil Wen. N ... ._,
and saw this airplane spiraling down,"
said i1ike-Zarate, 4:>, a U.S. Forest
Service fire dispaicher .
"And then it hit the mountaintop. It
reminded me of when the l{amikazes
were coming at me in the war," be ad·
ded.
Few witnesses reali zed two planes
were involved, most saying they thought
the jetliner had exploded in midair.
One was Los Angeles County Superior
Court Judge Homer Bell, of Monrovia,
who heard the lou d impact and ran
ou!slde.
"lt \\'as like a shooting star,'' said
Judge Bell.
A trio shooting photographs in !he
scenic area. John Roller. 19, his sister
Dia ne Bye.rs. 21 and her husband, Steve,
23. aJso wHnessed the jetliner's dea!h
dive .
"We must have watched them fall for
JO seconds before they disappeared
behind the ridge." said Byers, a stude nt
a! Northern Arizona University in
Flagstaff.
Roller said they fi rst heard the loud
boom.
"The n \\'e saw black smoke,'' he added.
''And suddenly there were airplanes all
(See MIDAIR, Page ! )
i:r i:r i:r
Alleghen y Lines
Prop jet Crashes;
At Least 25 Die
NEW l~AVEN, Conn. (AP) -An
Allegheny Alrllnes prop]et with 31
per50l'ls aboard hit a power line, ripped
through some 11;ummer cottages and
crashed into marshland near Tweed New
Haven Airport today.
Some report! put the death toJJ~as high
as 29.
J ames Malarky, airport manager, said
'29 perSODs were killed, and Yale New
Haven Hospital said It was Ct?ftain at
least ~ were dead.
The Convat r 580 hit the utility line as it
approached Tweed New 1-laven Airport in
hazy fog, according to Malarky. Five
beach cottages near the end of the
runway were st.ruck. then the wreckage
crashed in two big pieces.
Allegheny said 28 passengers. including
two infants, and a crew of three we re
aboard the regularly scheduled night.
which originated In Waahlngton, D.C.
Poli~ 1aid It was believed most of the
cottages We.rt v1canL
Allegheny headqu1~ in Pittsburgtt
at first said 2t persoM Wtrl! aboard, but
the paMe nger liwt later was rtvlsed
upward to include tw9 Infant~.
Tht plane w11 Flight 485, which
originated h't W11ahinglon, D.C .• .11nd had
(S.. ALLEGHENY, Pa1e I)
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TAPS AT ARLINGTON
Audie'• Widow, Pamala
Murphy Buried
I n Arling·ton
Ce m etery Today
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WASHINGTON (AP) -Audie Murphy,
the baby faced warrior who became
America 'g most decorated soldier in
World War II , was buried today with full
military honors at Arlington National
Cemetery.
Among the mourners, ~ about 40
members of his old 3rd Infantry Division
with whom Murphy fought at Casablanca,
Sicily, the beach at Anzlo and across
France into Germany.
"One thing about him,'' recalled
former Pvt . Alex Saba.Uni of Rutherford,
N.J., "tf he eyer took you out on patrol,
you always came back. He had the right
!nstinc~.''
, Murphy was buried under the shade of
a black oak tree nettr tbt amphilht.alle of
the Tomb of the Unknown SOidier.
Murphy, 48, died May 3t when the
small plane in which he wss riding
crashed agalmt a wooded mountainside
niar l(oanoke, Va.
His wife, Pamela, and their two IOJIS,
Tel'ry, ts. and James, 16, "°tre among
the sevtraJ hundred mourntts and
onlookers that included Gen . William C.
Westmoreland, Army chJef of staff, and
George Bush, 1mbas.sadot at Jarie to the
United Natio'rt111.
Besides w1nnlng t~e Congreeional
Medal .cf Honor, Murphy, who was 1 se-
cond lieutenant when dlacharged 1t the
end of lht war, received th•
DitUnguiShtd Service Cross, Le"fion of
Merit and Sliver Star wllh Oak Leaf
cluster. Jn all, he received 14 American
medals, Uvee French aw1rds and one
B<lglan medal.
Murphy's casket was bornt on e horn
drawn eaWon to his !lnid resting site. A
(lie< MURPHY, Po~e II
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2 Suspects
Arrested
In Kidnap
By PATRICK BOYLE
Of lfll a.irr ,.,,.., Stell
A San Juan Caplsttano service staLion
aUendant was credited today with
slerting police lo the kidnaping of a Long
Beach man afler the attendant heard
cries for help coming trom lhe trunk of a
car.
The attendant, whose name has nOt
been released by authorities, was on du ty
at 3 a.m. al lhe Enco Service Sl.ation,
located at the Junipero Serra exit of the
San Die.go Freeway. An auto occupied by
two men entered lhe stalion for gas and,
after hearing the screams coming from
the trunk, the attendant took down the
license number of tbe auto and called the
county sheriff.
Deputies ra n a check or the car and
alerted Long Beach police that it was
from their jurisdiction. The auto wa.'!
trace d to a Long Beach automobile repa ir
shop, whose owner had been reported
mi.ssing by his wife al I a.m.
The vehicle was stopped al 3:40 a.m.
by San Diego sheriff's deputies south of
~I Mar who, upon opening the trunk ,
discovered a gun and several blood
stains. The two occupants of the auto,
Monroe Jones, 23, and Edward J . Cole.
20, both of Los Angeles, were arrested on
1uspiclon of autG theft and kldnaplng.
The missing body shop owner, Daniel
Barnett, 66, was found about two hours
later by the California Highway Patrol
walking along Intersta!.e: 5 south of
Oce~l}S.ide. He was bruised and bleeding,
officers said, as a result of two severe
beatings.
San Diego sheriff's deputies said
Bamett is in Tri-Cities Hospital in
~anside and is listed in fair condition.
Authorltie1 said Barnett's wife reported
hearing a scuffl e coming from the shop
behind the couple's home st about 1 a.m.
When she went lo investigate, she found
only her husband's broken glasses and
blOC><t5tairu on tbe floor.
A spokesman for the San Diego Sher·
lff's Department said Barnett; after the
Jnlllal beaUni at hJs shop, was agai11
be•ten with fists 11nd a wrench, before
being thrown from the stolen car. He roll-
ed down an embankment Into a pool of
water. the spo«esman ·111d, and finally
made his way back to tbt: freeway.
Hit·run Victim, 2,
In Cr itical Condition
A '2-year-okl Santa Ana boy 11truc1c
down by a hft and run drlvtt remains in
crttic11 condJUon today at Santa Ana
CopunWlily Hotpllal.
Sinta Ana police aald they have no
clues to the driver of the car which
atruck down llltle Andrew llays of 1817·A
S. Ctdar St. and left the tot crumpled ln
the at.tee\ late Frklay. The boy was found
unconscloua ln frout Qf 1600 s. Cedar by
Gertrude E. Rowland of Sant.a Ana, a
passln& motorlal.
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Survives
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DAILY PILOT
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MONDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 7, 1971
I Peek-a'Boo
?i.·targaret White, a showgirl at
the Tropicana's Folies Bergcre,.
models a peek-a-boo bathing
suil by Estevez. The LondOn
beauty does the suit ju_stice
with her 39'26-37.
S. Viets Battle
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Reds Along DMZ;
V.S. Tank Lost
SAIGON ( UPJ> -SOu1h Vlell\f~oe ;n-
rantmnen. _and ~rn_arlnts batUed North
Vl~tnamese ·~1. alod«,'the detrillilaiu-
ed zone today tor the thtrd corlsecuUvfl
day, The CommunLsts also shClltd lwo
U.S. !)O!ltions, knocking oot a tank and
in flicting light .casualties.
'l'oday'I li&htlng by oompany·siu<I
units ·over • wide atta foUMd a
weekend or action in whlch the South
Vietnamese ••Id that wtth' U.S. air sup-
port they killed 308 Communist! at a loss
of six dead and ~2 wounded . They atso
reported a Communist rocket atlack on
Da Nang Sunday night killed three
civilians.
The U.S. O'.lmmand said 852 bombers
st.ruck a buildup of four Communist ID·
fantry regiments With artillery supPof t
Just bel ow the DMZ Sunday and Wday.
a
Cosmonauts
Dock Craft
With Sayut
MOSCOW (UPI) -Three Soviet -
monaut8 docked lhelr Soyuz 11 spacecraft
with the orbiting scientific rlaUon Salute
today and three imbed into Salyut to
establish the firs t orbital sp!lce Jabora4
tory -a sdenlific station as big as a
.small parlor and complete with chairs.
The SC>viet TaM News Agency said t1W
Jaboratnry was about 60 feet long and U
feet in diameter, with a total wei&ht of 25
ton.!'!. Television transml53ions showed a
room large enough for the cosmonauts to
spin. weighlJessly, heaa over heel•
\\'ithout touching any of lhe equipment
lining the walls.
The feat climaxed a 49·day effort that
Included a linkup April 24 between the
three-man Soyuz 10 and Salute. But Soyuz:
IO remained linked for only five and a
hair hours .and hurried back tG earth.
Indications at the lime were lhat one of
t~e spacemen might have suffered space
sickness Salute ha5 orbited urunann.ed
for the past seven weeks.
lt was the fir&t time a crew bas been
transported to an unmanned scientific
' station in space, and scientific sources in
Moscow s.aid cme or more manned
spaceships may go aloft soon to join the
Gpace complex as prelude to a permanent
Grbital laboratory.
"The crew of Soyuz: 11 hes boarded the
!tatiGn Salute," Tass said. "A Soviet
manned orbital scientific station is func·
Honing in space." However, a television
broadcast from the laboratory said
Viktor Patsayev 'and Vla'dislav Vollmv
scrambled through the linking pau and
commander Georgi Dcibrovolllk y re-
mained behind ·to supervise the operation,
A Soviet television round table of scien·
tists and cosmonauts discw:sed the
achievement for Russian aud~\;
"We are witnessing a qualitatively new
st.ep in cosmoiiautics -a long term
orbital station has..been built,'' Space
scientist Botls Raiscbenback told tbe
roundtable. . .
"The' qllesUons . 0£ SC~l')tlfic ted:liUaJ
cOOtrol of such stations J!reRnt big com-
plications •••. this · statJob s~~ permit
• mulUple doclclng. '!'bey mllll --receive not <me but anotbe'r &Np • , • and
It ls necellar)" to control the doclled,ap-
pa.ratus." '
'ra,. said the combln~ weight of So)'lll<
1 I and Salute w&s more than 25. tona.
SOyuz 11 roared. aloft Slinday a.nd ch.,.
ed I.he unm11nned Salute caPltUle to ort-61
rendezvous today. DobrovolBk.y, '3.· 11· a
•pace rooldt. F!lght engl-Volkov, '5.
was flight engineer on Soyu 7. Test
engineer Pat!Ayev, 37. aJ~ la 1 spaca
rookie who Is a pUot-tralned deolln
engineer.·
Tass said the SOyuz made an 1utomatk:
approach to within 100 )'ard.<I ol thfl Satuta
11nd the cosmonauts completed the~
Ing manually.
Afl4!r the two vt!hicles w • r •
me(hanlcally coupled, their eleclrlcalant
hydraullc communlcaUM1 were «0
Meted. The crew then checked the ~
necUng tunnel for air tlghtneu· lliill
(See SPACE, Page I)
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z DAllY PILOT 5
Serve World
r
As Leaders-
SCCSpeaker
"Chri.!ilianity ls nol anti-intellectual. We
cannot commit the inn tf bein& irrevalent
to the world.''
Peter Kuimic-. a student r r c m
Yugoslavia, spoke to his 79 fellow
graduates Saturday at grad u a t ic a
ceremonies on the Southern California
College campus in Costa 1'-1esa.
"This world is in 3 desperate need for
leaders. The social and political structure
ot this country allow• us to move Inlet
po1itJons of leadership. We as Christiana
1bould take advantage of this."
"~t us be leaders for Christ"
Kuzmic, key l!lpeaker for Saturday's
services, c::alled his Jello\\-' students to
serve in the world as Christians. and not
to seclude lhemselves from the world.
"We have an unchanging message." he
said. "But It U not enough to know the
truth, but we have to know how to com-
municate it to mi.idem man."
"We ha ve to recognize that we are !iv·
Ing in a highly complex world, and it is
real and this is our mission ."
He prai&ed SCC as a "Christian coUeg1
with a spiritual empbaa;is.
The school moved from Pasadena ll
Cos ll Meaa in 1950 and Is the oldest four·
year college in Orange County. 1t has
about ~ students with academic major•
in btun1nltles, rtligion, scienct, aocial
.scien~. English and history.
MonUJ, Junt 7, 1971
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N ,~ .. ~"f
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A Mother's Fear
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Dr. E. V. Pullias. professor of higher
education at USC in Los Angeles, was
also a guest speaker and repealed a
message similar to Kuzmic'&.
Dr. Pullias called on the students to
take their place in the world in their
chosen field and as Christians.
The concern or a mother ror her child is mirrored in the face of this
South Vietnamese woman. A caravan making a pilgrimage had at the
time been attacked by North Vietnainese in Quang Nam Province. 25
miles south of Da Nang.
He also praised this school and ollier
church related schools -the Assembtie.~ or God sponsor sec -for the lipecla l
work. He reminded students that the first
~uch school was founded in the lSOOs and
called Harvard.
From Page 1
MIDAIR COLLISION . • •
The JChool graduated 80 seniors Satur-
(lay with Bachelor of Art s degrees.
Ceremonies were held in the .school
auditorillm.
Two Brush Fires
Burn 120 Acres
Dry, erplosive brush plagued Orange
County firemen on two fronts (Iver the
""·eekend 11s blazes burned more than m
11 cres.
over the sky and we could hear sirens.
Gary Butters, 17, an Azusa High School
junior, was the first lo rea ch the scene,
racing 15 mile.!! on hill trail bike motorcy·
cle lo the source of the i;moke.
He could !iee nine bodies among the 50
* * * Hughes Releases
Passe1iger ,List
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Hugh<! Ai• Sunday afternoon a fire blamed on an
11-year-old Mission Viejo boy playing West today releued the following li!it of
wilh mat.ches burru;d over 20 ~ares~ ,.._cfewmen, f)d ,_.ng.-. on a DC9
north end of Los Alisos Road ~~?if~·.:. /i-a irliner fhll ~ wltll a military jet
Ten county and state fl~ iiimJ*110 ~ d · iubdued the blaze in two houri ·w110e Sun ay and crubtd near Los Angeles:
dodging rattlesnake!. "For 1 tin,t, tbl Crew
snakes were mo~ dangerous than the 1. Capt. Theodore Nicolay, 50, Seattle,
fire ." said one firefighter. pilot.
Sa turday, 100 acres of heavy brush 2. First Officer Price Bruner 49, Seat· were destroyed In Tonner Canyon -north '
of Brea. The blaze at one time threatened tie, copllol.
the Firestone Boy Scout Ca mp. More 3. Hostess Helena Koskimies, 30, Seat·
than 200 men battled the !ire for two tie.
hours before controlling lt. 4. Hostess Joan Pluyla1r, M, Seattle.
One prUoner·fireflgbler was bl!tea by s. Hostess Patricia Shelton, 28, Entiat,
• rattlesnake but is repo~d in a:ood
condition today. Wash.
From Pagel
SPACE LAB. ••
PaL,ayev l~d Volkov into the Salute.
T11ss disclosed the enormous size C!f the
airtight portion of the space \•thic\e -
about 60 feet long and 12 feet In diameter
with a caoacity of 130.80 cubic y:irds. tn
1ddition there were many scientific ap-
paratuSt"s ouUide the airtight com·
partmenl.
OU.M61 COAST
DAILY PILOT .. ...,... .... --c....M..."
H•ls;1w .... , .... ,..,.
S. Ch•1 ·a
OUNCJ• COAIT .-UILISMING COMl"AHY'
••~•rt N. W•.4 "•fi*d Ml P11111""9t
J•~lr l. C•ri•y Vim ,,_...,.,, .... 0-11 ,,,.......
Tli•"''' K•••ll ......
1••"'''" A. M•r11lriiM1 ~ ... ,.,.
Cli•fl11 M. LH1 Rich1r4 '· NfQ Autllloflr ,,,,.,..,,,. loll*" ........
QM .. MtM: DI W.t t1y 1"-t .. .....,,. •11<11: ._ Hewpon •111;tw1N u.-1<9d'I: m "-' •-Mllftl11"9"" •"Kfl) 1"TJ SNCll .... 1 .... 1 .. ... °""91 .. l ............ Cellllllt ll ..
Passenger!
Destination Salt Lake City unless
otherwise noted.
6. P. Allen, Salt Lake City.
7-8. Mrs. R. Bird of Carlsbad, Calif.,
and infant Bird, destination Boise. Idaho.
9. S. Boss.
10. Mrs. R. Carson.
11·12. Mrs . R. Davidson and Miss K.
Davidson, age 7.
13-14. Mrs. J. Dean and J. Dean, %-year.
old boy, destination Pisco, Wash.
15. P. Dunn of Salt Lake City.
16-17. A. Espilla and J . Espitia of Mex.
ico, destination Boise.
18. John Forgy of Taruna, Calif.,
destination Lt:wlston. Idaho.
19. K. Gabel, destination Boise.
20. Mrs. H. Garcia, des Ii n at I on
Lewiston. ·
21. Mrs. M. Carcia of Los Angeles, wile
of an Air West employe.
22. G. Hunte r of Salt Lake City.
ZJ-24 . Mr. and Mrs. J . Johnson, destlna·
tion Boise.
25. Mr. F. Kalbjltisch , destination
Lewiston.
26. Arnold Kaufman of An11 Arbor,
~ti ch.
27. J . ~1angran of Salt Lake City .
28. MC'CaU, no flrst name, destination
Pasco.
29. Dale Miller of Walla Walla, Wash.,
destination Lewiston .
30. T. Morris.
31. Miu J . MC'Croden of Napa, Idaho,
destination Bol9e .
32-33. Miss J . Potter, age 6, and Master
M. Potter, aa:e 7, destlnaUon Lewiston .
34-35-38. c. Pyke, F. Pykt and w. Pyke,
all of Salt Lake City.
37-31. Milt M. Rangel and P. Ran&e1
(lf Mexico, traveling wltti A. and J.
Espitia, No. 16-17 above, lo Boiae.
39. J . Reeves, • Union Oil Co. employe
In the Los Angeles are.a., de~Unation
Pasco.
4-0. R, Schoenhals of Salt Lake City.
41 . E. Smith of Silt Lake City.
42, Miss M. Sublc of Salt I.lik e City.
43. Miss K. Thoma.s, traveling with
mot her, Mrs. R. Carson, No. 10 above.
44. R. Vtncenl of Boise, destinlllion
Boise.
tS. Ted Wllker10n of Melba, Idaho,
drsUnation Bobe. ~
46. D. Zillman of lht L<ls Angeles area,
dr~tin11tion Lewl$ton.
47. N. !less, Ntw York City, destination
Pa5C(l.
43-49. Jdenllficatlont withheld pending
notificallon of relnllve!.
killed -including two babies -and he
was sickened.
"It \\'as really deslroyed,'' said Butters.
"There ""'as nothing left. lt was pretty
bad and made me not feel loo good."'
Extrernely heavy fog today hampered
efforts lo remove bodies from the char·
red scene of horror in the Van 'T'assel
Canyon :irea of Angeles National Forest.
"\\'e can't gel our helicopters into 1he
area unlll Lhe fog clears and that
might 11ot. be until noon," said a Los
Ansere11 County Sherifra spoke1man.
rHght 706, which had taken off from
Los Angeles International Airport al 5:50
p.rn ., bound for Salt Lake City from
Pasro, Wash.. with various stops en
route, ended tragically about 10 minutu
after takeoff.
The crash site is aimost inaccessible by
foot.
,\ command post was established in a
park playground, where black and while
sheriff"s cari1 made a grim eontrast tD
candy-sttiped poles holding basketball
backboards.
Marine Corps lnvestigalor!i \\"tre still
hoping the unidentified pilot or the 32Jrd
Fighter Attack Squad ron sur\'ived but
this appeared slim indeed.
"If there are any survivors it will be
the greatest miracle l'\'e ever seen,"
remarked County Fire Chief Dean
The mllilary fighter-bomber \Vas en
route home rrom a routine training
nlill.sion at Fallnn, Nr.v .. just before it
knlf P<I into the DC9 twinjet
Split in half. tht' big \tntr hurUed
straight into the mountainside.
'"There was no room for it to skid. II
fust v.·ent stra"1gh1 in, Y.'hen if hit the
~round ii broke a!l to hell ," said one
sherHf's deputy.
The scene itself v.•as hellish. \1•ith shat·
lered \.\Teckage still smoking for hours
after !he Impact.
Federal Aviation Administration in·
vcsligators noted ii was the first midair
collisio n -and first commercial alr
crash In the country -since Sept. 9. 1969,
when An Alleg"heny Airlines DC9 and a
light plane with a student pilot at lht ron-
trols collided in In diana.
Visibility was good, up to six miles. at
nearby Ontario lnternal!onal Airport,
\.\'hen the planes collided.
'"We don't place the blame. That's up
to thl" National Transrortatlon Safety
Board," remarked an FAA Sfl<lkesman
Sunday night.
Only 11 week ago, NTSB chief Charle!! o r-.1\ller reml'lrked in a newspaper in-
terview that the nation "had gonl!! 1 "i
years without such an accident.
From Page 1
MURPHY ..•
three volley rifle sa1ute preceded laps.
The White House issued a .state1nenl
i;aying, "The nation· stands in his debt
and mourns at his ~lllh. As America's
most dec::orated hero nf World War JI,
Audie f\.turphy not only v.•on the a<l-
rniration of millions tor his ov.'Tl brave tX·
p\olts : he al-'O came to epitomizt the
gallantry and action (lf America's
fighting men."
Murphy bec::ame #In actor after World
war II and ~u!fered in later year~ a
series of financial misfortunes. He
described his military exploits In a book
'"To Hell and Back." lie was engaged In a
modular housing venture when killed in
the plane cra5h.
Maj. Kennt:th Poller, Murphy's com·
mandlng f>ffittr When the br1 ve w111rTlor
won the Congrtssional Medal ol Honor
for singlehandedly tuming back a Vlelous
Gcrn1n n lnh1nlry 111ssault near Holtz.whir,
Franc::c, s:tflt"11mply :
"I never knew a better 90ldier.'*
'
Hate 'in the Majority'
Marina Grad Confronts UC Berkeley Left
Robe.rt Bowen is experiencing the hate
of the ·'love generation."
The 21-year-old graduate of Huntington
Beach·s Marina High School il at UC
Berkeley now and describes himseU IS
the rnost conservative sudent leader on
campus.
To his amazement. "he says he 's "never
been hated before by such a large ma·
jor!ty."
The husky senior v.•ith closely cropped
blond hair said the worst part of being
the most conservative senator in student
government at Berkeley ls that "many of
the people really, really hate me."
Bowen, the son or Mr. and Mrs. Robut
T. Bowe n, 5091 Caspian Circle , I-Jun·
tington Beach, said ,lhat on three oc-
casions "physical force" v.·as used to try
to stop him and two o~er moderate
senators from leaving the student senate
chambers.
He explained their departure would
have forced a quorum call and tern·
Motorist Enjoys
Sunday Snooze-
On Train Tracks
The freight train v.·as late and if it
hadn't been, Jaines Adrian Shankland
wouldn't be alive today to sit in hit
Orange County Jail cell. and renect on
what he v.·ould have looked like if he had
been sitting in his car at 3:35 p.m.
Sunday. "
'That's v.•hen the 46-car southbOund
freight chewed up Shankland's car and
the low truck that was trying to get il off
the tracks at Oso Parkway in Mission
Viejo. jusl 15 minutes after the sleeping
Shankland was dragged out of tbe vehi·
cle.
"He ""'as dead drunk ," sherifrs Captain
James Broadbelt charged today. "He
didn't know a thing about what was going
on and he'd have been there \Vhen the
!rain came iF our deputies hadn't gotten
there first."
Deputies found the 31 -year-old Tustin
man·sprawled on the rront seat of his car
v.'hich was straddl ed on the tracks
between Lhe north end of Caminn
Capistrane and the .south end of Cabot
Road.
They got the low lruck on the scene but
the 3:35 p.m. freight barreling through al
nearly 70 miles an hour ended any hopes
!hey had of getting the still 1lffptn1
Shank.land's ear of( the tracks.
The train smashed the auto into obli·
vion, sent a fender from the veblele 500
feet into the air to land incbee: away from
the sheriff's patrol car and heavily
damaged the tow truck with the other
flying wreckage.
Shankland was booked on charges of
tna\icious injury lo a railroad. Deputies
today said other charges may be riled
against the Tustin man .
There were no injuries in the Sunday
afternoon mishap. Railroad officials will
check the lead engine of the fre ight today
for possible damage,
Mesa Skin Diver
Injured i11 Surf
A Costa r..tesa man who was injured in
a skin diving accidcnl off Laguna 's f\.1oss
S1reet Beach Sunday n1orning is reported
in satisfactory condition at South Coast
t:omm uni!y Hospi1 al today.
Boy Boyelte. :15. nr 1800 r omnn<1 Ave.
\1as caught 111 heavy surf shortly after I I
a.n1. Sunday. police reported. Pulled
ashore by lifeguards he v.·as given oxygen
and transported to the hospi!at ""'here he
remained overnight in the intensive care
Ullll,
A hospital spokesman said Boyeue·s
condition was much improved I.his morn·
ing and he was lo be transferred to
regular care.
porarily blocked matters or interest to
lhe controlling left.
.. The problems and opinions that are
expressed against me are lhe same ones
that are out in the world -that
Washington and Sacramento have to con-
tend with," said Bowen, who spent his
freshmen year at UC Irvine.
"So if I want lo be a part of anything
like that, I have to understand the other
side. The reason 1 left Irvine is that t
wanted to get ~ and get into the v.·orld
and gel my ideas challenged."
Bowen, v.·ho plans to go lo law ~J
and hopes to entl'r either interoatiopal
business or the dlplotnalic corps, said his
out.spOken conservatism is a reaction to
the Berkeley atmosphere.
Despite the hatred shown again!lt bltn,
Bowen said he was not sorry he came' tO
Berkeley. !le plans to remain a member
of the ('lec.-ted senate until next Januaty,
f\finority cand1date.s are able to \vfn
student elections at Berkeley because of
the lov< voter turnout, rarely more than
10,000 of the 27 ,500 students.
..·~
White Bouse Apparel
Mrs. Nixon, Cox Dresses
Announced for Wedding
\VASlrINGTON (AP) -The dresses
the mothers of the bride and groom will
v.'ear at the While House weddlni Satur·
da y v.·ere announced today.
f\.frs. Richard M. Nixon. mother of
Tricia, will wear a long sleeved dress of
white crepe, overlaid with white organdy,
covered with pastel rolored floy,·ers, and
designed by Priscilla Kidder of Boston,
who is doing all of the bridal gowns.
Mrs. Howard E. Cox, mother of
bridegroom Edward r . Cox, has picked a
:iiingte buiton coat dress of silk water col·
or print of floral sprigs in shades of blue
on v.·hilc, with a pOrtrait collar. It \\'as
designed by Betty Kirk for B. L. Grirfith
of New York.
Mrs. Nixon's dress . .,.,·hich has a flared
circular ski rt and V neckline softened
with petaling, will be worn in her usual
length. just below the knee. It is in
delicate tones of rose, mint, mimosa. and
delphiniun1, the \Vhite lfouse said, \\'ith it
the Firsl Lady will wear a pink T strap
sandal design hy Beth Levine of Herbert
•Levine shoes in New York , and short
white kid gloves.
r-.tri;. Cox's dress has a princ-ess
si lhouette. The neckline is open, with a
portrait collar across the shoulder Hne.
She usually "'ears her daytime dresses a
bit belO\Y the knee. Her accessories in·
elude blue silk pumps snd elbow length
\~:hJte kid gloves.
The White Howe also announced today
that walkways. foyers and entrance ways
will be decorated for the wedding \\'ilh
Pilot Writer
T ak'{s 2nd Pl.ace
In News Contest
DAILY PILOT stiff wrilt'r ..A(!.~ R.
Vinsel won second pl.act f<r 1pot new1
coverage in the Associated PTtN 1171
Newtwriting Contest for state news
papers, it was announced today.
Vlnsel'a story roneemed a CO!ll Mesa
police officer \\·ho came upon an accident
scene and at first feared tM little girl
victin1 \1•as his daughter . ll turned out
utherw1se. First place in spot new s state
di\'islon went lo ,John Hurst of the Red-
ding Herord-Searchl ight.
First place for spot nev.·s in the
me tropolitan division v.·as won by Stephen
{;"ook and Jlurbert J . Bernhard of the San
Francisc:o Examiner for coverage of the
San Rafael courtroom ihooting.
T11e Associated Press News Execulives
Counc-11. In announ cing lhe award win-
ners, &aid that a record number or 287
entries were judged from a tolal of 32
newspapers In Callfornia.
potted trefS and there \\-'ill be numerqus
planter boxes filled \\'lth "'' h i ~ e_,,
geraniums, petunias and ivy.
'Job Hunters'
Robs CdM Store
A pair or bandits robbed a Corona del
f\.1ar liquor store of $430 Sund<1y night ,
first asking about jobs and then forcing
the clerk inlo a \\'alk-in rctrigerator at
gunpoint.
The holdup of Johnnie's Liquor SI.ore,
3:»7 E. Coast Highway. was 1he latest i11
a lengthy series at the shop owned by
former Newport Beach councilman Dee
Cook.
Pol ice said the robbers entered shortly
before IO p.m .. one of them telling clerk
Seyd Havens Jr. he had once worked in a
Kansas liquor store and was job-hunting.
Told there were no job openings, the
suspect started lo leave with his com·
panion , then whirled around with a .22
caliber pistol in his hand.
Fro111 Page 1
ALLEGHENY • •
flown lo New London . Conn. lt \\.'as to
have continued on to Newport Nev.·s, Va.,
following the stop at Ne\v Haven.
Most of the bodies were found still
strapped in their scats in !he burned
fuselage. Another large piece or the plane
was found about 150 !eet away.
A spokesman for Yale New Haven
Hospital said two men and a woman v.·ere
admitted after the crash.
The y,.·oman was listed in satisfactory
condition. No condition report \\'SS
available on the men .
The crash "looked and sounded like an
atomic explosion," said Nanc-y Palmeiri
or East Haven, who said she heard three
explosions as the plane hit the wire and
crashed at the end of the runway.
Mrs. Mary Baldwin of East Haven said
.she was at home. just getting out of her
car a.s the plane ""swooped in so lo"· 1 had
\o duck."
She said the t11·0 engine pl<111e lhf'n hit
the wires near her back yard and did
"sort of a turn, then came down and eli·
ploded ."
Marlin Patricelli of Ea!il Haven said he
:;;aw a hocly fly 0111 or !he plane and land
in a pond of ""'a!er, "waring his hands
feverishlv ··
Joseph. Horowitz. manriger ol a bear.h
club near lhe crash scene. said he heard
lhe plane bu! wns unable to see 1t in the
heavy fog. V1s1b1lily v.as es1imated al
less than tv.·o miles.
Horov.·Hz said fog hung o\"er the beach
and he finally saw the craft plunge oul of
the sky, bit 0ne of the collage~ and burst
into a ball or lamrs.
He said he heard screa1ns for help but
couldn't get near the flam ing aircraft
that finally stopped near his club's tennis
courts.
DIAMONDS CAN be a
man's best friend
•1no1 ''" fllltllr•llltl Ml~.
DEALS for DAD
MAN'S 1.42 CT. DIAMOND '" ........ ,_ ~ t•99 Flit c• mtd at. ---...
MAN'S GINUINI
ILUI STAl SAPPHIRI
! .. "':::~ •. -···· •O m•U • $199
MAN'S .30 CT. DIAMOND
-·........ $95
C.M.J.L XTRA
MAN'S .OS CT. DIAMOND RING
;:n::; ~~.'.". ... --$19.95
1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE FROM
SEE DOM RACITI
FOR DIAMONDS.
REMEMHR, A
DIAMOND IS A
GOOD
INVESTMINT
ONLY IF YOU IUY
IT RIGHT!
EXl'ERT
WATCH
REPAIR
DONI ON
PRIMlln DOM ucm
*OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK
DIAllllND GUARANTEE
Whtn .,.u ~uy • dl1mond from u1 we
wlll 9uarantu that dl1mond to appr1l1e
•t 40% MORI than you paid for It or
your monty back. C1n you do 11 wtll
tlMwher1? COMPARE.
• FIND IT HERE FIRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
LOAN, BUY, SELL, TRADI
1838 NEWPORT ILYD.
DOWNTOWN COSTA MtSA -
COME IN AND BROWSE AROUND
l'HONE 646-7741
S.tw1tn Harbor & l ro1dw1y
j
'
17
r
h
'
~-· ··--..-.. ,, .-·-· ........ .._.~ ···-' -
Hnntinjltou ._eaeli
Fountain Valley
-·:.-.-~. ·;; " . . .. ~ . .,.,
VOL M, NO. 135, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 7, 197 1'
Judge Nullifies
By ALAN DIRIUN
or '"' OlllY l'IHll Sl•tl
A judge has nullified the variance
granted the mulli-myfion Sunset Bay prcr
ject near Huntington Harbour on the
grounds that no legal hardshlp was
established for the development.
The judgment is expected to serve as
"a lesson" to the Huntington Bt:ach city
council and planning commission, ac-
cording to City Attorney Don Bonfa, and
a.ssure that iir future variance casu
''there is a government of laws rather
than of men."
The project, which envisaged a
peninsula with an II-story hotel and 11·
story apartment complex, was approved
6-1 by the city council in November.
Councilman Jack Green dissented. The
proposal had been backed unanimously
by the planning commission.
Orange County Superior C.Ourt Judge
Cla ude M. Owena has is.sued • writ of
mandamus ordering the city ·to set aside
•
the conditional exception that was
granted.
Bonfa hailed the dee.is.ion as a •·good
judgment" arguing lhat it reinforced an
opinion he wrote two years ago.
"If the council won't follow the city at·
torney·s opinion, perhaps they will follow
the court's judgment ," he commented.
"It should be a good le!son for the plan-
ning commission and city rouncil , a
!euon that they need.
"It's a great victory. Now perhaps the
•
Bay Project
council and plannlng rommission will
straighten out a bit and follow the Jaw as
it should be followed."
The case lnvolved a controversial
development planned by Real f'roperty
Management of Beverly Hills. The pro-
perty is on the northeast side of Pacific
Coast Highway between Admiralty Drive
and Anderson Street.
The plan called for an 11-.story apart·
ment complex, an ll~tory hotel, four
three-story apartment units, a four-story
•
office building, two shopping centers. 300
boat slips and homes and townhouses.
The area is mainly zoned R4
(apartments), but the development re-
quired a variance for densily Increases,
the high rise lowers, and the boat sli~.
The proposal received no negative
vole!! at lhe planning rommission level
and reportedly was backed by 80 percent
of the residents or Huntington Harbour,
according to a residents association.
But an airline pil ot and Huntington
•
Today's Fl•al
.N.Y. Stoek8
TEN CENTS
Permit
Harbour homeowner. Arthur Knox. &p-
posed the way the exce.plion was granted.
He hamme red away at planning co~
mission and council hearings that the law
was not being followed and kept referrm,
to an opinion written by Bonfa ln which
the attorney stated that either a legal
hardship or exceptional circumst.ance..s
had to be demon!trated bl order lo arant
a variance.
Knox and a group called the CJUzens
(See SUNSET, Page. 2)
eris Ill I air ~ras
17
New Haven Crash
2·9 Feared Dead
In East Tragedy
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) -An
~llegheny Airlines propjet with 31
oersons aboard hil a po .... ·er line, ripped
through some summer co ttages and
crashed into marshland near Tweed New
Haven Airport today.
Ecology Group
Urges Council
To Retain Laws
Members of an ecology aclion group
plan to strike back al the Seal Beach eity
eouncil tonight for its recent action to
1epeal two city ordinances which would
~ave prevented furthe r oil drilling in
~ffshore waters.
Thomas Brady, chairm an of the 250-
member Council for Environmental
Concern. said he will urge rouncilmen to
retain the t .... ·o Jaws on the books durina:
~e 8 p.m. council session. He says he hr;s
1 300 to 400 signalure petition to back
1.irn up.
The ordinances .,..·ere ordered removtd
)y a 4-1 vote at the t.1ay 24 council
neeting. because they were considered
tnenforceable by City Attorney Glenn
Watson. The final reading of repeal is
1cheduled for tonight.
Drawn up by former City Attorney
James Bentson . the ordinances declared
:hree miles of the city's offshore waters
111 "open space recreation zone" and ban·
ned the operation of polluting activities.
Oil companies planning to drill further
"1ells in the zone would have been re-
~uired to seek zoning variances from the
!lty before beginning with lheir ope ra-
lions.
"We were the first city in the nation to
heve an offshore oil ordinance and I think
lhe council acted prematurely in remov·
Ing it from the books," &aid Brady.,
The petition calls for the retention of
the: ordinances at least until a legal opi~
rOOn has been rendered by the state At·
torne.y General's office which is now stu·
dyin& the laws.
Some reports put the death toll a! high
as 29.
James Malarky, airport manager, said
29 persons were killed, and Yale New
Haven Hospital said it was certsin at
least 15 were dead.
The Convair 580 hlt the utility line as it
approached Tweed New Haven Airport in
hazy fog, t~cordifll lo M'lllfrky. Fiv'
beatb cottq-es nev the md of the
runway were struck, then tbt wreckage
crashed in two big pieces.
Allegheny aaid 28 pauengers, 1ncluding
two infant.'!, ahd a treW of thret wert
aboard the regularly scheduled flight,
which originated in Washington, D.C.
Police said it was believed moat of the
cottages were vacant.
Allegheny headquari.f!r1 ln Pittsburgh
at first said 29 persons were aboard, but
the passenger list later was revised
upward to include two infants.
The plane was Flight 485, which
originated in Washington , D.C .. and had
flown to New London. Conn. It was to
have continued on to Newport News, Va.,
following the st"op at New Haven.
Most of the bodies were found still
!"trapped in I.heir seats in the. burned
fuselage. Another large piece of the. plane
.... ·as found about IS() feet away.
A spokesman for Yale New Haven
Hospital said two men and a woman were
admitted after the crash.
The woman .... ·as listed in satisfactory
condition. No conditton report wa!
available on the men .
The crash "looked and sounded like an
atomic explosion." said Nancy Palmeiri
of East Haven, who said she heard three
explosions as the plane hit the wire and
crashed at the end of the runway.
Mrs. Mary Baldwin of East Ha ven said
she was at home. ju!l getting out of her
car as the plane "swooped in so low I had
to duck." ·
She said the two engine plane then hit
the wires nur .her back yard ,and did
"sort of a tum, then came down and ex-
ploded."
Martin Patricelll of Eaat Haven said he
gaw a body Oy oat 0( the pl8ne 11nd !Ind
in a pond of wafer, "waving hia handa
feverishly,"
• ' . . "
Scores ita Parade
... • •
OAIL Y l"ILOT Sit/I l"llo!to
Fount.air. Valley's entry captured the Queen's
Trophy in 26th annual Fish Fry Parade in Costa
Mesa Saturday. Fish Fry is sponsored by Lions Club
to raise funds for charity. Fountain Valley float de·
picted family outing at Mile Square Park.
Top of Pier, Oil Tax Bid
Set for Cou11cil Tonight
By ALAN OIRKIN
01 Tiit Dtlly l"Hot Sltll
Speculation on the future or the Top of
the Pier program and the proposed five
cenll a barrel oU tax was still the talk ol
the town In HunUngton Beach today.
Two developments added to the fire : A
call · by Mayor George McCracken to
ph1se down the scope of .the Top of the
Pier p1&J and the news that Councilman
Jack. Green. 1 strong Sllpporter of the oil
tax, will not be ah1e to attend the vital
meeting, scheduled to start at 4:30 p.m.
Councilmen today were going over a
letter they received fr om McCracken in
\vhich he 11tated that the expansion of the
Parking Authority, originally estimated
to cost $3.5 million, could now reach 58
million.
Beach Boulevard
Will Be Widened
In Three Cities
Traffic on busy Beach Boulevard is
going to gel worse before it get! better.
But it will get better, assures the
California Division of Highways, an·
nouncing that work has 11tarted on "·Iden·
ing the arterial ln Garden Grove,
Westminster and flunlington Beach.
The boulevard (roulc 39) is being wld·
ened from four to six lanes from Adams
A venue in Huntington Beach to Garden
Grove Boulevard. seven miles away.
The project, which also includes
grading existing portions of the highway
School Needs Outlined
The mayor aaid he continued lo support
ronce.pta of lhe project but would not en-
dorse a plan ,that "will Inevitably
necessitate large irlcreases in local tax·
es!'
McCracken announced that at
tonight's meeUng he would ask the staff
to prepare an ana\ysi11 of an alternate
configuration of the Parking Authority
not exceeding three city block:!.
and improving drainage . systems, will
cost about 11 .3 million. lluntingt.on Beach
and Westminster will cmitribute about
$28.000 for a share of the drainage work
and traffic signal updating.
Tax Ove rride Outcome to Decide Fate of Macliines
Worn-out equipment and obsolete
machinery are among the. flr11t items
scheduled for re.placement at the Hun-
tington Beach Uclon High School District
H the vote.rs approve a 69-cent tax over·
ride June 15.
"There Isn't enough money now1 and
there certainly wouldn 't be enough tr the
~roposal fails and the district is com·
pelled to operate on an lktnt tax rate
f9r the next fl.seal year beginning June
f," said District Superlnlendent Jack S,
Roper. ·If the tax request ls endorsed by
voters. Roper said. the district woukl
begjn filling the. equipment orders of the
six principals. Nea rly $200,000 worth .t
new machines have betn requested.
Of the tote! emouot, $40,000 would be
1pe.nl on industrlnl art& machinery at
Marina High School which is currently
working wllh hand·me...downs from Hu~
lington Btsch High School. aald Roper.
"Some ef thi1 equipment ls 10 ohaol1tt
that replacement pert.I for it baven'l been
available for year&," •aid Marina'• ln-
du1triaI art.a department chairman, John
Reed. •
Pointiilg to a lai1e hydraulic press
dripping oil, be added, "This macblne ls
no ldnger rtpairable. lt'a' all but Ulielus
for the 1tudents to Ult because tbere'a
almost no "pruM't. And the alurnlnum
melting pot over In t&e cortltt tlu tO bt
bandied with kid alma bt<a ... 'lbo ,..i.
ed aafety devicta ar• m.JuiqL'
''It'• Lbe same alkf .. in.:~ otber ·tn·
duatrial •rts c.lasses-bert,"'iakl Reed. "I
think people art 1olq ,t, a;k O>emselves
wbeth<r they slml!ly wanl the kldo to 10
through the moilim ' ol 'slUlng In a
classroom or whether they're wll\lng to
stand the coat of new mtcltlnery which
student& need IO tbe;j' CU learn I trade."
If the tai hike clfries, Roper Pld 1he
dl!trlct plfna to buy much ef . lta
mochlnery, · parllallarly for tho ipeW
•hoJis, frtm the 1tall 1t a 10 percent dll•
CtlUnt.
Also includtd In the replacement re·
quesl.s are :about ,$70,000 IC1f 309 new
typewrlttn, 32 calculators and 24 1ddlog
mac.hints.
The new equlpmeAt will replact
bus1N!ss machlnes ticht to 10 years old
at M1rlna , F«mllln Valley, Weatmin!ter.
Huntington ~ch. Edison and Win-
tersburg H!&lf~s.:and the district of·
Oct.~ ...
Part of the outlay would · also go lnt.
moc$em l~boraton equlpmtnl for science
claSIU at .. Wutmlnater High School and
in\O i5 n~lnl machines which would
rtplace rucblnes I.hat have seen years of
constant UM ·and are running up cosUy
repair bills.
"AU0 ol(tbe expendltureii will not pro-
•lde for addlt!Onal equipment which
might "t:l.1 be needed i( our enrollment
tncre1• by 1,ooo ·nnl "II, as tll)tcted.''
Rliptt· •kl, ''Th.13 money will only be
IJ!C'Dt qn . the replacement of exll1ting
machti'lery."
t j ' •
The present plan calls for the 1 ,~
t1pace J)8rking lot to be constructed over
fi ve block.a 'along Coast Highway from 5th
to Ist streets. plus a parcel owned by the
Huntington Beach Company southeast of
Lake Street.
Despite Green't Illness. obMrve.ra ~
day were figuring that there may still be tour votes on the council 1n favor of the
oil aevatance laL
A.a drawn up by City Administrator
Doyle' Miiier, the tax would bring in
fM0,000 1 year.
Grttn II In Jfunt!n&ton Intercommunlty
H09plt1I recovering from knee surgery
compllc1ted by an tnf<ctloa.
"The doctpr has told mt t might
possibly be oot Tu.~ay, but not today,"
GrHn a.id this morning. ,
Observers were suagesUni · lbe n•mt•
of councilmen Norma Oibbs, Jerry
M11tney and Al c:oen as being in favor of
the oil lax In IOtne form and In certain
circumstsnee1'. Don1ld Shipley aays ht
haa not made .up ~la mind yet but the tll
proporw.nta are hopln1 for his \'Ote.
'
Work started at Garden G r o v e
Boulevard May 19. A Highway engineer
estimated that excavation crews will
reach HunUngton Beach later this month.
The project will continue Into 1972.
The highway will be widened to six 12·
root lanes with eight-foot paved shoulders
and 1 curbed median. The Division of
HJghway1 rePorl.ed that et least one lane
will remain open in each direction
throughout the job.
A .I~ "?""' rb\lnd lh1t 1bout 35.000
vehicles daily use I.ho north-south arterial
in both directions at meln Intersections ln
l!untington Beach snd Westminster.
Sully·Miller Conlract.lng Co. or Or111ge
Is the. c:onlractor.
7th U.S. 'Troop Dies
SALONIKA, Greect, CUP!) -A.,.vtnth
American 1111rvlcemafrt died early today
from ·tnjurlts ttctlved'fn a Sunday night
colllslon between 8 U.S. military truck
llnd a Greek tourl11t ~us. Eight Grttk1,
includinR the bll4 driver, were also badly
Injured and •llktn to S.lonlka Municipal
Hospital.
'
El Toro ~e1'
Air West
Planes Hit
From Wire Suvlce1
A Hughes Air West jetliner w:ilh 49
persoos aboard rollided with a Marine.
Corps jetfighter at 12,000 feet Sunday
spiraling straight down into the. rugged
San Gabriel Mountains like a sbooUnc
6lar.
Only one person -tbe F4B Phantom~a
radar interceptor officer who parachuted
-survived.
Investigators were oc the scene tfJd.ay,
faced with the grim task of remo•lr11 and
identifying bodias and also the ineT•
puuling question to be. an1wend: ftat
happened?
No clues we.re. available to indicate wby
the two aircraft collided., the.· El Toro
Marine COrps Air Station jet knifirig into
the other'• fu.se!l&e, .In almost perfectly
clear weather.
AJr traffic controllers spotted them GD
radarscopes simultaneously, 1 e coo d'
before the impact and neither pilot
radioed any pre-colli!ion warning.
First L. Christopher E. Schiess, t4, of
Salem, Ore .. declined to discuss tbl cot.
lisio11 with sheriff's investlgatora after
being treated at Santa Tere!ita Hospital
in Duarte.
Marine Corps Capt. Larry Karcb. an El
Toro MCAS-based safety officer, likewiM
i;aid he could not comment on the. crasb
pending a military investigation.
The 98-passenger twin engine Hu11bes
jetliner was climbing toward normal
operating altitude when the plane!
smashed together at 12,000 feet, roughly
over Azusa .
Baggage, mail. papers and other items
flew through the hole. iD it.s .side.
"I heard a loud explosion and thought it
was a sonic boom, but then I looked up
and saw this airplane spiraling down,"
said Afike Zarate, 45, a U.S. Forest
Service fire dispatcher.
"And then It hit the mountaintop. It
reminded me of when the Kamikazes
were coming at me in the war, .. be ad·
ded.
Few witnesse! realized two planes
were involved, most saying they tbougbt
tbe Jetliner .had elp\oded in midair.
One was Los Angeles County Superior
Court Judge. Homer Bell, ol Monrovia,
who heard the loud impact aod ran
outside.
"ft was like. a sbootiog atar," aa!d
Judge Bell.
A . trio shoot.int: photognipbs In the
scenic area, John Roner, 19 bl1 sister
Diane Byers, 21 and her husb'and ~teve
!Set MIDAIR, Po .. ZI ' '
Oraage
Weathr
The· weatherman J)rfldlcta cJoucty
skies tonight ind T,ll~•Y morn-
ing with a chance of haiy 111Mhlne
in the afternoon& Righi today and
Tuesday It Ibo belc:lleo Ill Ind ii>-
Jand 73. Lon uoand IL
INSID' TODAY
SatUno cvrnt.t in the OrcnQif
Count11 Empirt S e a Scout
oiymptcs ar• teMdWed for t11ls
weekend. See Boa.ting, Pegs Id ......
C .. ,.,..lt
CJltdilfte U.
Cllult. ,_ ..
c ..... ..,.. °""' !Mtk• DlftrtM ••11'M111 , ... .............. , ·-· .. _
Alll l.Plllrt
M • " "'!: .. " " • • ,. ..
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•
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I .
I
(
z DAIL V PILOT H MMd41, JUM 1, l'ii"l
Docking Suece11
Cosmonaut Trio
Enter Space Lab
A10SC0W (UPI) -1'hrte Sovitt COS·
monauts docked their SOyui: 11 •pacecraft
wit.b the orbiling scientific station Salute
1oday and three imbed into Salyut to
establish the Hrst orbital space labfra·
tory -a scientific station as big u a
una!I parlor and complete with chairs.
The Soviet Tass News Agency said the
From Pagfl 1
SUNSET .•.
Zoning and Variance A.Bsociation took the
matter to court, spending about $4,000.
··11 was lht dtci.sion we wanted," Knox
said Utis morning. "We lee.I this kind of
decision has been made before but It la
the first time invol\'ini a Huntington
Beach case."
Knox said the verdict strengthened his
claim that the city's ordinance code
allows .11 conditional exception if a land-
owner can show he will not gel equity it
he developa the property within th e pro-
visions of the code.
"In other word.!. the city council and
planning commWion have not recognlied
that the purpose of the variance Is equi·
ly." Knox went on . "The de~lsion say.s
that it is not enough for the city coun ci l
to like a development or think it is good
for the city to grant an exception.·•
In his decision , Judge Owens 11aid the
council and planning commiMiion had not
based approval on any ''evidenUary fin·
dings of fact."
Bonfa said that the court found fault
"'ith the way the planning commission
had quoted from an ordinance in finding
a hardship. The city attorney said that he
bad repeatedly told the couocil tJiat
~videntiary findings were required.
"It was a strange case because in
!efending the city's action we were ac-
111ally arguing against our own opinion,''
Bon Fa went on.
\\'hat will happen to the Sunset Bay
>roject now ?
Assisting Planning Director Richard
'riarlow a.11id he widerstood the developer
:i.·as considering applying for a i on.
~hange. although • zone change would not
1llow the high rise 1tructures or in·
::reaaed de!Wtiu.
Valley Police
lnvestigating
Two Burglaries
Fountain Valley ])Oilce today are in-
reaUgaUnf two burglaries which resulted
1n a combined Joss of more than $19,000.
Detective Jack Trott said one burglary
tceurred Thursday at the home of Betty
Burkart, 10264 La Hacienda Ave. where
tlieves took more than $11 ,000 worth of
1ewelry.
The second burglary oceurrtd early Fri·
tay morning at Airway TV and Appliance
::Ompany, 10925 Kalama River Ave.
?ollce reported 20 color television sets
'a!ued at about $8.000 v.·ere atolen from
tie 11tore.
In the residential burglar)'. Mr8.
Burkart originally estimated her losses .11t
i7.000, but Troll said an exact inventory
raken this weekend revealed 2ll pieces of
e1ve\ry had been stolen.
Thieves apparently gained entry during
laylight hours while ~1rs. Burkart was
~t by twisUng open the door lock Y.-ith a
•Tench. Lhe investigato r said.
The locked door of the television store
~as apparently jimmied by lht burglars
"ho removed the still crated sets through
he store's rear door.
OU.Mal COAST
DAILY PILOT
-.....O• COAST PUM.1»41ff CCW.PAH't
le'-t N. WfM ,,._,._, W ,,_WW
J•clr: ~ c,,,r..,. Vlc:t ......... , .... G4Mrel ~
n-·· ic."1r 1411..-
lMlll•• A. w..-.i.1..-~ ··""' A1111 Dirlii• .,,., ~ '-'Y •crw
All:t1rt W. l1t11 ._ .. ,. 1;,ll'M'
MA11 .......... 0MM
lllJS l•1t h ktil•••r4
M•Jtl.t M4r•n: P.O. h• 790, 92641 --~ ••lfl1 m ,.,.., A....,.
C-M Mel: Qt W.I .. , l!r_,
.. ......, a..dl; -"'-' --~ a.ti ~l •...,. II C:..... ... ,
Ll.borat.ory was. about 80 feet lonf and 12
feet in diameter, wt th a total weight of 2.S
tons. Television transmissions showed a
room large enough for the cosmonauts to
spin, weighUessly, heaa over heels
without touching any of the equipment
lining the walls.
The feat clima1ed a 49-day f'ffort that
included a linkup April 24 between the
three·man Soyu1 10 and Salute. But Soyuz
.10 remained linked for only five and a
half hours and hurried back to earth.
Jnctications at the. time were that one of
the spacemen might have suffered space
sickness Salute has orbited unni.11nned
Jor the. past seven weeks.
It was the first time a crew has been
transported to an UM11Med scientif!C
station in space, and aclentific sources 1n
A1oscow said one or more manned
spactships may 10 aloft soon to join the
space complex as prelude to a permanent
orbital laboratory.
"The crew of Soyuz 11 l1as boarded the
1talion Salute," T:iss said. "A Sovit>t
manned orbital stientific station is func-
tioning in space." llowever. a television
broadcast from the laboratory said
Vi ktor Pat.sayev .and Vladislav Volkov
scrambled through the linking pass and
commander Georgi Dobrovolsk y re-
ma ined behind to supervise tlle operation.
A Soviet tele vision round table of sc.ien·
tists and cosmonauts discussed the
achievement for Russian audiences.
''We are witnessing .11 qualitatively new
step in cosmonautics -a Jong term
orbital station has been built," Space
scientist Bori11 Ralschenback told the
round table.
"The questions of scientific technical
control of such stations present big com-
plicatiom ... this station should permit
multiple docking. They must sometimes
rectlve not one but another ship ... and
it is necessary to control the docked a~
paratw:."
Tass said the combin~d weight of Soyuz
11 and Salute was more than 25 Iona.
Soyuz 11 roared aloft Sunday and chas-
ed the unmanned Salute capsule to orbital
rendezvous today. Dobrovolsky. 43, ill a
space rookie. Flight engineer Volko \'. 4S,
was flight engineer on Soyuz 7. Test
engineer Pal!ayev, 37, also is a space
rookie who is a pilol-trained design
engineer.
Tu1 ltlld the Soyuz made an automatic
approach to within 100 yards of the salute
and the cosmonauts completed the dock·
ing manually.
After the two vehitlea w e r e
mechanically coupled, their t\P:e\ricaland
hydraulic commwiicalion1 were coo-
ntct.ed. The crew then checked the con-
necting tunoel for air tightness and
Patuyev led Volkov lnto the Salule.
Ta111 dllcloeed lht enormous size of the
airtight porUon of the space vehicle -
about GO feet long and 12 feet in diameter
with a capacity of 130.80 cubic ya rds. ln
addition there were many scientUic aP""
paratuses outside the alrUght com·
partment.
DC9, Marine Jet
Crasli T errn ed
Worst in, State
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The fiery
crash Sunday of an ALr \\'est DC9 and a
Marine Corps 4 fighter in lhe S.an
Gabriel 1'.tountains kill!ng 49 persons wa:o;
the worst California air disaster involving
a commercial airliner
There v.·as na :i;ign or survu·ors from 43
passengers and five cr ew me m be rs
aboard the non·slop Los Angeles.to-Salt
Lake City jetliner.
Ca lifornia's worst air tragedy -
military or commercial -occurred on
June 25, 1965 when a jet transporl from
El Toro Marine Corps Air Station \loi t.h
Okinawa-bound Marines sla mmed into
the Santa Ana Mountains 40 miles
southeast or Loi Angeles, killing all 84.
persons aboard.
The highest d!'ath ton Involving a com-
me.rclaJ air liner prior to SW'lday v.·as 38
on Jan. 111. 1969. A United Air Lines
Boeing 7'!7 plunged Into the Pacific Ocean
minutes after takeoff from.-Los Angeles
International Airport. •
Five days earlier on Jan. 13 a Scan.
danavlan Airlines System jet crashed late
Santa Mon ica Bay while comlng in for a
landing al Los Angeles International. Of
lhe 4S persons aboard, 30 survlvtd .
All 3S persons on 1 Hawlhorne Ne,•ada
Airlines DC3 dted Feb. Ill, 1969 when the
aircraft new into the side of Mt. "'hitney
durln.a fG.mile-per·hour head\lo·lnd.
DAILY P'ILOT l!•!I I'~ ..
ADDS TO LAURELS
Junior Mi'' Gelger
Gwyn Geiger, 17,
Wins Another
Award for Charni
Gwyn Geiger, the celebrated J unior
1fi!is of Huntington Beach, has added yet
.another title to her already Impressive
list of awards for charm. beaUly and
scholarship.
Miss Geiger. 17. has placed third in the
Exchange Club's slatewide competition
for the Girl of the Year award.
Winners were selected JW'le 1 on the
basis or leadership, scholarship.
charact.er and exlrarurricular activities.
Entrant! al!O had to submit a 1,000 word
essay on "The Responsibility of a Young
Voter."
Exchange Club Chairman Burt Willis
said Miss Geiger had won the club's coin·
petition for !he award at Huntington
Beach High School and late r al U1c
district level.
A re sident of 8162 "Burnham Circle,
Miss Geiger, will graduate from •1un·
tington Beach High School June 17 with a
3.11 grade average.
She \lo'<IS honored as the school's Oiler
Girl of the Year anl)1as received honors
at entrance to USC~e she is planning
to go this fall.
In addition to being the city's Junior
Miss, Gwyn has won an award by the
Daughters of the American Revolution
and has been ~amed to the Out.standing T~enage~s of America.
Huntington Man
Finds Wreckage
Of Small Plane
The trained eyes of a Civil Air Patrol
member from Huntington Beach Sunday
afternoon Jed re:tcuers to the bodies of a
retired Air Force general and his wife
v.·hose plane has crashed in Ventura
County.
CAP ~1ajor Don K. Dome~·er, flying
ove r a pre.established grid pilttern. s:ud
he spotted the v.·reckage in a mountain
canyon about l 5 miles northwest of
f"illmorc.
Found dead in the ligh t. single engine
p!al'e v.·ere t;enf'ral n1charrl 0. Hunziker,
54. <ind hts wife, ~lar_garet. The couple
had bren missing since ~ .. tay 30 on a fl ight
lron1 l'alex1co to Sant a Barbara.
Au1horil1cs said the Cessna 182 \\'a~
~p(l!trd Os Do1nryr r <ii the 6,5(1() Fool lrvrl
of ll111cl'> Pe:ik The general and his "'lfl
"rr+:' still slrapped to their seals
Dom('ye_r, ~S. of 5041 V('n\uri Drive, ha s
been \\'\1h the J,Qng Bra rh Civil Air
Palrol's Al!' li escur Squadron ISO fur
e1ghl years. He used h1~ own plane in the
searc!i.
Genera! Hunziker, ()f Carpenteria. was
the former deputy inspector general of
the Air Force. He was also vice-<:am-
mander of the First Strategic Aerospace
Division at Vandenberg Air Force Base
from 1962 to 1965.
Wo1nan Solon Readies
Can1paigu for Mayor
BOSTON IUPl l -Rep. Louise Day
}l icks ! D-1\lass. I. was expected lo 11n-
nounce her candidacy tonight for l\tayor
of Boston.
City hall sources said Sunda)' ~lrs.
Hicks, a 12.000-vote loser to ~tayor Kevin
H. White in 1967. spent much of her
weekend lining up support for her bld.
B~ar~at Best
Ross moor Pilot Wins Air Rnce
From Wlrt Services
WILDWOOD, N.J . -A Rossmoor pilot
won the $1,300 top prlie In the Nation.111
Air Race Associalion competition which
wa1 marred by the death of four pilots in
two srparate crashes.
Lyle Sbtllon, 12100 Monteci1o St .. v.·on
his money by 100m1n1 around the
mairkera in his FBF Dearcat al 360: 149
mph. He wu 1n the W'llirnHed cl.11ss com·
petition.
The weekend air race continued e\•en
thoujih four pilot! were killed in tragic
•ccldenls Saturday. Vtltran observtr1
termrd it tbt: worst tragedy In the sport's
history.
'The first crash happened during B race
of st\'tn \\'orld War II tramtr planes.
fl ying In close formation at a speed of
:ibout 200 mph . A crowd or ~rnore than
10,000 JX'rsons watched.
The wing of one plane brushed the t:nl·
like canopy or another on a tight turn in
U1e first tap , causing one of them lo
crash. The other landed safely.
Two laps later. threoe planes collided on
another turn anri all three crashed.
The victims were Richard M.Jnges. J4.
of Fayeltviltt'. N.C.; Victor Bnker, 43, or
Glendale. Callt.: Joseph Quinn. 39. nf
Saugus, Ca liL, and Edward Snyder, 47. of
J:irkgm\·ille, r111.
-
, -
Hate 'in the Majority ~
' Marina Grad Confrpnts UC Berkeley Left
Robert Bowen ls uperiencing the b.te
or the ''love gneratlon."
'fhe 21-year-old graduate of Huntington
Beach's Marina High School ls at UC
Berke ley now and describes hlm1elf A3
the most conservative sudent leader on
campus.
To t1is .amazement. he says he 's "never
been hated before by such a large ma·
jori!y."
The husky senior with cloatly crop~
blond ha ir said the worst part of being
the most conservative senator in student
government at Berkeley is th .111 "many of
the pe<1ple really, really hate me."
Bowen, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
T. Bowen, S09l Caspian Circle, Hun·
tington Beach, said lhal on three 0(-
casions "physical force_'' was used to try
to stop him and two other moderate
senators from leaving the student senate
chambers.
He explained !heir departure v.·ould
have forced a ciuorum call and tern·
por11.rily blocked matters of interest to
the controlling ltft.
''The problems and op inions that .are
expressed against me are the same ones
that are out in the world -that
Washington and Sacramento have lo co~·
tend \lo'lth," said Bowen, who spent his
freshman year at UC lrvint. .
"So if 1 want to be a part of anything
like that, l have to understand the other
side. The reason I left Irvine ls that l
wanted to gel out and get into the world
and aet my ideas challenged " .
Bowen, who plans to go to Jaw s<:hoo1
and h-Opes to enter either inlerna~1on~I
bu!iness or the diploniatic corps, sa_id htJ
outspoken L'onservatis1n is a reac(1on 1Qo
the Berkeley ato1osphere.
Despite the hatred shov.'n against him.
Bow!'o said he "'as not sorry he came ta
Bf'rkeley. He plans to re1nain a membe.t"'
of the elected senate until next January.
~tinonty candidates are able to v.•in
studen: elec1ions at Berkeley because o(
the lov.· voter turnout, rarely more thaq
10,000 of the 27,500 students.
Frotn Pagfl J
MIDAIR COLLISION ..•
23, also wilnt>ss ed Lhe jetliner'• death
dive.
"\\'e must hz.ve watched them ran !or
JO second s before they disappeared
behin d the ridge." said Byers, a student
at Northern Arizona Unive rsi ty in
r·iagstalf.
Ruller said they first heard the loud
boom.
''Then v.·e saw black smoke." he added.
"And suddenly there v.·ere airplanes all
over the skv and v.·e could hear sirens.
Gary Butlers, 17, an Azusa !Ugh SC'hool
junior. was the first to reach the scene,
racing 15 miles on his trail bike motorcy-
cle to the source of the smoke.
He could see nine bodies among the 50
killed -including two babies -ai!d be
was sickened. '· ,
"It was really destroyed," said Buttt;rs.
''There was nothing left. It was pretty
bad and made me not fee l too good."
Extremely heavy fog today hampered
efforts to remove bodies from the char-
red scene of horror in the Van Tassel
Canyon area of Angeles Nationa l Forest.
"We can't get our helicopters Into the
area until the fog clears and that
might not be until noon ." said a l..08
Angeles County Sheriff's spokesman.
Flight 706. which had taken off from
Los Angeles International Airport at S:SO
p.m., bound for Salt Lake City from
Pssco, Wash., with various stopg ea
route, ended tragically about 10 minutes
after takeoff.
The crash site is almost inaccessible by
foot.
A command post was established in a
park playgro~ where black and white
sheriff's cars made .a grim contrast lo
candy-striped poles holding basketball
backboards.
~!arin~ Corps investigators were still
hoping the unidentified pilot of the 323rd
F ighter Attack Squadron survi ved but
th is appeared slim indeed.
''l( there are any survivors it will be
the greatest miracle I've ever seen,"
remarked County Fire Chief Dean
The military tighter-bomber was tn
route home from a routine tralninJ
mission at Fallon, Nev .. just before it
knifed into the DC9 l\lo·injel.
Split in half, the big liner hurtled
straight into the mountainside.
"There v.·as no room for it to skid. It
jt1sl went straight in. When it hit the
ground it broke all to hell ,'' 1;11.id one
sheriff's deputy.
Th!' scene itself was h~llish. with sha l-
lf'red wreckage still smoking for hours
afler the impact.
NEW LAMB PRINCIPAL
Stanley A. Thompson
* * * * * *
S. A. Thompson
Named Principal
At Lamb School Air West Victims Named Stanley A, •·1·om" Thompson has been
named principal or William D. Lam D
School in the Fountain Valley School
District. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Hugh<• Air
West today released the following list of
crewmen and passengers on a DC9
airlW!er that collided with a military jet
Sund ay and crashed near Los Angeles:
Crew
1. Capt. Theodore Nicolay, 50, Seattle,
pilot.
2. First Offic-er Price Bruner. 49, Stat·
tic, copilot.
3. Hostess Helena Koskimies, 30, Seat-
tle.
4. Hostess Joan Pluy laar. 3-4 , Seattle.
5. Hostess Patricia Shelton, 28, Entiat,
Wash .
Passengers
Destination Salt Lake City unlf'ss
otherv:ise no;.ed .
6. P. All__j:.tC. Sall Lake City.
7·8, Mrs. R. Bird of Carlsbad. Calif.,
and infant Bird, destination Boise, Idaho.
9. S. Bo6s.
JO. Mr!I. R. Carson
11 -12. i\lrs. R. J)av1d~on and t-.tiss K.
Davi dson, age 2.
13-1 4 f.1rs. J. Dean and J. Dean, 2·year·
old boy, destination Pasco. \\'asb.
J;i, P. Dunn of Sa!! Lake City
16-17 A Esp1!ia and .I. Espitia or 1'.1tX·
ico. drst1nat1on Boise.
18 .John Fnrg~· of Tarzana . Calif_,
destination Lewiston. ldaho.
1!1. K. Gabel , destination Ro1st
20, i\lrs. I I. Gan.:ia, de s liriation
LCl'.'i~!on.
21 t.1rs 711. Garcia or L-Os Angeles. \lo'ife
of <'In Air \Vest ernployc.
22. G. Hunter or Salt Lake. City.
23-24. Mr. and Mrs. J. Johnson, deslina.
lion Boi!t.
25. Mr. F . Kalbjleisch, destinatio n
Lewiston.
26. Aniold Kaufman of An1 Arbor,
1-lich.
'n. J . Atangran of Salt Lake City.
21. 1'.lcCall, no first name, dtstination
Pasco.
29. DAie Miller of Walla Walla. "'ash.,
destination Lewisl on.
30. T. Morris . :u. Miss J . McCroden of Napa , Idaho,
destina tion Boise.
32·33. Miu J . Potter, .age 6, and t.ia~ter
1'.i. Poller. age 7, destination ~v.·iston.
34·3f>.36. C. Pyke, F. Pyke and W. Pyke,
all of Salt Lake City.
37·38. ~1lss M. Rangel and P, Rang el
of Mexico, traveling with A. and J.
Espitia , No. 16-17 above, lo Boise.
39. J . Reeves. a Union Oil Co employe
in thP. Los Angeles area, destin ation
Pasco.
40. R. Schoenhals of Sall Lake City .
41. E. Smith of Salt Lake City.
'12. ~1 i~s M. SubiC' of Salt Lake Cily .
43. ~fiss K. Thom as , traveling with
mother. Mrs. R, Ca rson , No. JO above.
44. R. Vincenl -0! Boise, destination
Boise.
45. Ted \\'1lkerson of f.telba, Idaho,
df'slinatlon Bois e.
46. D. Zillman of the Los Ao&eles area,
destination Le\lo•iston .
47. N. Hess, New York City, destination
Pa~co.
48·49. Identificalion!I withheld pending
notification or relatives.
He replaces Leroy Green v.•ho will
leave lhat campus to open up. the
district's new Fred Moiola School in
September.
Thompson, 33. comes lo Fountain
\lalley from the Azuza t:nifil'd School
District where he v.·as principal of the
Murray _Elementary School.
lie had pre\'iously been empl oyed aR
\'iCe·principal and as teacher of sii;th and
eighth grade s!udents, 1111 111 the Azu1.a
Lnlfied School District The subjects he
lu1s taught include science, mathematics
and social science.
Thompson reeei\'ed his bachelor's
deg ree from La Verne College in 1961 and
his master's degree from Cal State l.os
Angeles. lie has also studied at the
Liniversity of Hawaii. UCLA and USC,
4 Cuban Fi shern1en
Facing T rial Today
KEY \\'EST, Fla . •UPI \ -Trial wa:!!I
set today for four young Cuban fishin g
boal captains accused or f1sh1ng 111
American waters.
Federal J11dge \V[!l 1an1 0 . l\1ehrtens
\\'Or ked to clear his regul:ir docket in
~lia.ml in order to btgin Ille procPed1ngs
hert this afternoon. Otherwise. ,<;lart of
I.he trial would be dela,ved un!il Tuesday
tnornini.
DIAMONDS CAN -~ a
man'Si best friend
•Int• ID" llluotrlllotl .,,1y,
,
DEALS for DAD
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MAN'S .30 CT. DIAMOND
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I
'!'IJird Day
S. Viets Battle
Reds Along DMZ
SAIGON (UPI) -South Vietnamese in-
fantrymen and marines battled North
Vietnamese troops along the demilitariz-
ed ione today for the third consecutive
day, The Comn1unists a!so shelled lwo
U.S. posilio~. knocking out a tank and
inflicting lighl casualties.
Today's fighting by company-sized
units over a wide area fullov.·ed a
""eekend or action in which the South
'-Vietnamese said that with U.S. air sup.
port they killed 308 Communists at a Joss
of six dead and 52 wounded. They also
reported a Communist rocket attack on
Da Nang Sunday night kll\ed three
civilians.
The U.S. command said B52 bombers
1lruck .a buildup of four Communist in·
fantry regiments with artillery support
just below the DMZ Stmday and today.
Correspondenls on the scene said they
could see U.S. AH l Cobra helicopters
blasling communist pvsitions for an hour
and a half this afternoon.
Casualties in today's fighting were not
reported by a communique said there
where light casualties and no damage
when the Communi sts fired four rockets
into Camp Eagle, IS miles northwest of
the imperial capital of Hue, late today.
An1erican units ha ve seen relatively
little action in the current upsurge of
fighting but a military source said a 5hell
from a Communist artillery battery tore
inlo an American tank and set off eK-
plosions and fire inside. He did not know
how many casualti~ resulted.
Whi t e House Apparel
Mr~. Nixon, Cox Dresses
Announced for W eddi11g
\VASHINGTON (AP) -The dresses
the mothers of the bride and groom will
\\'ear al the \\'hite !louse wedding Satur-
day were announced today.
t.frs. Richard M. Nixon, mother of
Tricia, will '"ear a long slee.,.ed dress or
white crepe, overlaid with ·while organdy,
covered \4'ilh pastel colored flowers, and
designed by Priscilla Kidder of Boston,
·who ill doing all of the bridal gowns.
t.1rs. llo.,.,•ard E. Cox. mother o!
bridegroom Ed.,.,·ard F. Cox. has picked a
single button coat dress of silk v.•ater col-
or print of floral sprigs in shades of blue
<>n v.·hite, with a portrait co!lar. It "'as
Pilot W riter
Takes 21ul Place
I ii Ne ·ws Contest
DAILY PILOT staff writer Arthur R.
Vinsel won second place for spot news
CQverage in the Associated Press 1971
Newswriting Contest for state news
papers. it was announced today.
Vinsel's story concerned a_ Costa Mua
PQlice officer who came upon an accident
scene and al first fe ared the litlle girl
victim was his daughter. JI turned ou t
otherwise. First place in spot news slate
division went to John Hurst of the Red-
ding Record-Sea rchlight.
First place for spot news in the
metropolitan division \\'3S won by Stephen
Cook and Hurbert J, .Bernhard of the San
Francisco Examiner for coverage of the
San Rafael courtroom shooting.
The Associated· Press Ne.,.,,s Executives
Council, in announcing the awar d win·
ners. said that a record number of 287
entries \\"ere judged from a total ol 32
newspapers in Californ ia.
designed by Betty Kirk for B. L. Griffith
of New York.
Mrs. Nixon's dress, which has a flared
circular skirt and V neckline softened
with petaling, will be worn in her usual
Jengt.h, jLL<;t be!O\V the knee. It is In
deUcale tones of rose, mint, mimosa, and
delphinium, the White House sa id. -with it
the First Lady "''ill wear a pink T strap
sandal design by Beth Levine of J[erbert
Levine shoes in New York, and short
while kid gloves.
Mrs. Cox's dre~ has a princess
silhouette. The neckline is open. with a
portrait collar across the shoulder line.
She usua!ly "'ears her daytime dresses a
bit below the knee_ Her accessories in·
elude blue silk pumps and elbow length
Vl'hite kid gloves.
The White House also announced today
thal walkway~, foyers and entrance ways
v.·i\\ be decorated for the "''edding "'ith
potted trees and there will be numerous
planter boxes fill ed with white
geraniums, petunias and ivy. ·
P oli ce Checking
Death of SA Boy
Toxicological tests' were ordered today
by the Orange County Coroner's Office to
determine the cause of death of a young
Santa Ana man whose body was found
during I.he weekend in rough terrain near
Williams Canyon .
The remains found by a resident who
was riding his horse .along mountain
trails in the brush-covered area have
been identified as those of J ohn f.1 ark
Barry, 19, of Tuslin.
• It is believed that Barry'!': death OC:•
curred about l\tay 28, shortly after he
was reported missing by anxious
relatives.
I ~---~~-:~l'.'.l
•~
TAPS AT A~LI NGTON
Audie's Widow, Pamela
.. '
Murphy Buried
I n Arlington
Ce m etery T oday
\VASITTNGTON (AP) -Audie Murphy,
the baby faced warrior \1Jho became
America's most decorated soldier in
\\'orld \\'ar I I, was buried today wilh full
rr.i\itary honors at Arlington National
Cemetery.
Among the mourners were about 40
members of his old 3rd Infantry Division
with whom Murphy fought at Casablanca,
Sicily, the beach at Anzio and across
France into Germany.
"One thing about him ," recalled
former Pvt. Alex Sabatini of Rutherford,
N.J., "If he ever took you out on patrol,
you always came back. lie had the right
instincts."
~lurphy was buried under the shade of
a black oak tree near the amphitheatre of
the Tomb of the Unk.,own Soldier.
Murphy. 46, died May 31 when the
~mall plane in which he was riding
trashed against a wooded mountainside
near Roanoke, Va.
His wife, Pamela, and their two sons,
'Terry, 18, and James, J6. were among
the severa1 hundred mourners and
onlookers thal included Gen. William C.
Westmoreland, Army chief of staff, and
George Bush, ambassador at large lo the
United Nalions.
Besides winning the Congressional
Medal of Honor, 1'.lurphy, who Wa!I a se-
eond lieutenant when discharged at the
end of the war, received the
Disti11guished Service CroS!l. Legion of
Merit 3nd Silver SLar with Oak Leaf
cluster. In all, he received 24 American
medals, three French award!': and one
Belgian medal.
Murphy's casket was borne on a horse
drawn caisson to his final resting site. A
three volley rifle 1alule preceded tap!I.
The White House issued a statement
saying, "The nation stands in his debt
and mourns at his death. As America's
most decorated hero of World War 11,
Audie Murphy not only won the ad-
miration of milliorui; for his own brave e:t-
ploits: he also came to epitomize the
gallantry and action of America's
fighting men."
~1urphy became ;iin actor alter World
\Var II and suffered in later years a
series of fi nancial misfortunes.
•
MOnOay, Jllnt 1, l.,ll. 0A11.1 nurr 3
Man Saved From Auto
Ca po W orker T ips Police in Kidnap T ry
By PATRICK BOYLE
ot ""' Dfiltr ,...., ,..,.
A San Juan Capistrano service station
attendant 14'83: credited today with
alerting police to the kJdnaplng of a Long
Beach man after the attendant beard
cries for help coming from the trunk ol a
c.ar.
The allendant, who~ name b.u not
betn released by authorities, Wa! on dul)'
at J a.m. at the Enco Service Station,
located at the Junipero Serra uit or the
San Diego Free\\·ay, An auto occupied by
two men entered the station for gas and,
after hearing the screams coming from
the trunk, the attendant took down the
license nu mber of tbe auto and called the
county sberiff.
Deputies ran a check of the car and
alerted Long Beach poli~ that it was
from their jurisdiction. The auto was
traced to a Long Beach automobile repai r
shop, wh ose <1wner had been reported
missing by his wife at 1 a.m.
The vehicle was stopped at ':40 a.m.
by San Diego sheriffs deputies IOUth of
Del Mar who, upon opening the trunk,
discovered a gun and several blood
stains. The· two occupants of the auto,
~1onroe Jones, 23, and Edward J. Cole,
20, both of Los Angeles, were arrested on
liUspicion of auto theft and kidnaping.
The missing body shop owner, Daniel
Barnett, 66, was found about two hours
later by the California Highway Patrol
walking along Interstate 5 south of
Oceanside. He was bruised and bleeding.
officers said, as a result of two severe
beaLings.
San Diego sheriff's deputies said
Barnett is Jn Tri-Cities Hospital in
Oceanside and is llsted in fair condition.
Authorilies said Barnett's wife reported
hearing a llCUffle coming from the shop
behind the couple's borne at about 1 a.m.
When she went to invesligate, she found
(Inly her husband's broken glasses and
bloodstains on the floor.
Supreme Court
OKs 'That Word'
As Free Speech
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme
Court ruled today that display of a com.
mon four.Jetter vulgarism favored by an-
tiwar demonstrators is constitutionally
protected speech and may not be made 4
criminal offense.
Addressing itself for the lir5t lime to
the use of the word, the tourt voted 5 to .f
to overturn the conviction of a man for
wearing a jacket with the wards "F-the
Draft" on it in a corridor of the Los
Angeles courthouse.
Justice John M. Harlan said in the ma-
jority opinion:
"While the particular four-letter word
being litigated here is perhap!ii more
distasteful than most other.! of il.!I genre,
it ill nevertheless often_ true that one
man's vulgarity Is another's lyric."
He was joined by justices William 0.
Douglas, William J . Brennan, Potter
Stewart and Thurgood Marshall. Justice
Harry A. B!ackmun dissented, joined by
eh.ief justice Warren E. Burger and
justice Hugo L. Black. Justice Byron R.
White dissented in part.
A spokesman for the San Diego Sher-1rr1 Department said Barnett, after the
initial beating at his shop, was again
beateri with fists and a wrench, before
being thrown from the stolen car. lie roll-
ed down an embankment into a pool of
water, the spokesman aaid, and finally
Driver
made his way back to the freeway.
Authorities could not uy what th9
motive fo rthe kldnaping was. The two
suspects have bttn returned to Long
Beach for arraignment on the charges of
kidnaping, assault with intent to cooimi&
murder and gri nd theft auto.
Saved
T rain Demolishes Car on Tracks
The freight train was late and if it
hadn't been, J ames Adrian Shankland
\~1ouldn 't be alive today to sit in his
Orange County Jail cell and reflect on
what he would have looked like if be had
been silling in his car at 3:35 p.m.
Sunday_
That's when the .fkar southbound
freight chewed up Shank.land 's car and
the tow truck that was trying to gel it off
the tracks at Oso Parkway in Mission
Viejo. just 15 minutes after the sleeping
Shankland was dragged out of the vehi·
t le.
"He was dead drunk," sheriffs Captain
James Broadbelt charged today. "He
didn 't know a thing about what was going
on and he'd have been there when the
!rain came if our deputies hadn't gotten
there fir st."
Deputies found the 31-year.-old Tustin
man sprawled on the front .!!eat of his car
which was straddled on the tracks
between the north end of Camino
Capistrano and the south end of Cabot
Road.
They got the low truck on the .scent but
the 3:35 p.m. fre ight ba rreling through at
nearly 70 mi.Jes an hour ended any hopes
they had of getting the still sleeping
Shank.land's car off the tra<::ks.
The train smashed the auto Into obli-
vion, sent a fender from the vehicle 500
feet inlo the air to land inche$ away from
the sheriff's patrol ear and heavily
damaged the tow truck with the other
fl ying wreckage.
Shankland was booked on charges e [
malicious injury to a railroad. Deputies
today said other charges may be filed
against the Tustin man.
There were no injurie!I in the Sunday
afternoon mishap. Railroad officials will
check the lead engine of the freight t.od.ay
for possible damage.
Children Lose Parents
In Murder-suicide Case
An 11-year.-old girl and her little
brother are orphaned today, alter a
desperate but futlle try to keep a
despondent, murder and suicide-bent
father out of the family 'home.
Orin J, !..<>wry, 39, of Torrance, finally
forced his way into the Anaheim area
residence at 9721 Kennelly Lane , killing
his ex-wile and himself.
Their divorce was final only a few days
ago.
Coroner's deputies said Lowry a~
Two Brush Fires
Burn 120 Acres
Dry, explosive brush pla1ued Orange
County lln!men on two fronts over the
weekend as blaze! burned more than 1lO
acres.
Sunday afternoon a fire blamed on an
I I-year-old Mission Viejo boy playing
with matches burned 01Jer 20 acres at the
north end or Los AJisos Road in El Toro.
Ten county and state fire companies
subdued the blaze in two hours while
dodging rattlesnakes. ''F'or a time the
snakes were more dangerous than the
(ire." said one fireJ ighler.
Saturday, JOO acres of heavy brush
were destroyed In Tonner Canyon north
of Brea. The blaie at one time threatened
the Firestone Boy Scout Camp. More
than 200 men battled the fire for two
hours before controlling it.
parenlly waited for hls former wife
Janet, 31, to leave for work.
Confronted outside, Mrs. Lowry ran
back in, followed by her former husband.
She tried to fight him off and keep him
out as he rushed lhe door.
The despondent man finally forced his
way in, despite resistance by Mrs. Lowry
and 11-year-old daughter Audrey, ac-
c:ording to sheriff's ho m i c id t in-
vestigators.
Coroner's deputies said he pulled a fU11
and shot he r in the head, then put a bullet
into his own brain.
The bodies were taken to Baggott'•
Chapel of the Bells Mortuary in Anaheim
after the murder·suicide.
lnvestlgatora aaid that b e 1 l d e I
daughter Audrey, the couple had a ,.. :
year-old aon. Dwayne.
Hit-run Vi ctim, 2,
In Critical Condition
A 2·year-old Sant.a Ana boy struck
down by a hit and run driver remains in
critica l condition today at Sant& Ana
Community Hospital.
Santa Ana police said they have no
clues to the driver of the car which
slruck down little Andrew Hays of 1617·A
S. Cedar St. and left the tot crumpled in
the street late Friday. The boy was found
unconscious In front of 1600 S. Cedar by
Gertrude E. Rowland of Santa Ana, a
passing motorist.
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" . --
4 DAILY PILOT
\
\ •' I ~ps
Chalk Up I
For Mother
By THOMAS MURPRINE
ot IN DallJ flli.t ll•lf
HAPPY WEEKENDS DEPT. -There
is nothing quite as thrilling as spending
your Saturday and Sunday with a clogged
bathroom drain.
Bathrooms reaUy look great when lhey
ar!: filled with wrenches, plunger5,
snakes, water and one irate wife.
Clogged drains arc a challenge. 'I'herl!
sit& the washbowl, half.filled with the
1nost awful collection of glug this aide of
a Huntington Beach holding pond, Pon-
dering it, you become convinced It is the
most immovable body of water ever
developed.
There are seyeral brands of chemical
pipe cleaners, all guaranteed to inst antly
eliminate clogged drains. We tried them
all. They all worked equally. Nothing. As
an alttmative, you can take apart the
pipes beneath the sink. This is fun wMn
the pipes come loose and all the glug runs
out.
TIIE OBSTRUCTION, of cour1e. is
elsewhere, lurking in some hidden place
v.·ithin lhe walls.
After two days of this kind of frustra·
tion, I had tun out of chemicals, worn out
one plumbers friend, bent the mechanical
.snake into a pile of wires and run out of
vocabulary and patience.
At this juncture, you might suspect
that in my weakened condition the smart
thing to do would be to call the plumber.
The only problem with th is i.s that we
have a Double EE plumber. Elusive and
Experuive,
SO, UNDER the circumstances, I did
what any red-blooded American boy
woul d do. I called my Mother. l whined
1ome about the clogged drain.
Well, she pondered, back in the old
days before they invented all th~e fancy
chemical cleaner-outers. what they would
do is boil up 1ome water and pour it down
the drain. Bolling water often did the job,
1he recalled.
We boiled water. We poured. Great
globs of gluck began moving about and
emerging from the stifled sink.
"It is going to eixplode ," the wife
predicted.
Fourteen kettles ol boiling water laler,
the whole mess was still bubbled and
gurgling like a witches cauldron. But,
alas. it wasn't draining.
THJS MORNING, after having shaved
In a dishpan, I issued the final edict. Call
the plumber. But th@re was a look of de-
fiance in the little woman's eye.
She announced she would try a few
more kettles of Mother's Miracle Cure.
I got a call from the wife a few
minutes ago . There was a note of
triumph In her voice. The 18th kettle of
boiling water had done the job and, she
reported. with a great sucking noise, the
drainpipe bad given up the ghost and run
free.
Sometimes from great adversities little
victories come.
With the help of Mother's boiling water.
Etna Lava Frightens
Sicilian Villagers
SA~'T'ALF'IO, Sicily (UPI !-Rivers of
lava rushed down one side of Mount Etna
today lo"·ards two fa rm hamlets,
fright.ening villagers who were told only
four days ago that it was safe to return
home.
Officials said ne1lhcr Sant'Alfio or
Fornazzo were In immediate danger
beCBuse the lava was still far above them
on the slope1 of the 10,902 foot tall Etn1.
y,·hich began erupUng 60 days ago.
Mondl'J', J11nt 7, 19n
'
' '
')
~-. .;.,
Mrs. Robert F. Kennedy holds youngest daughter. Rory Katherine,
during memorial services at Arlington Na1ional Cemetery Sunday -
the third anniversary of Sen. Kennedy's assassina tion. Behind Mrs.
Kennedy are Mrs. Stephen Smith and Sen. Edward Kennedy, sister
and brother of Robert Kennedy .
High Court Spells Out
Voting Law Exceptions
WASHINGTON (UP I) -The Supreme
Court in a pair of decisions spelled out to-
day several exceplions to lhe one-man .
one-vote principle at slate and local
voling levels.
In an Indiana case, the COIJTl reversed
8 lower three·judge federal panel which
had struck down the at-large elect ion of
.state represenlatives in Mario n County,
which includes Indianapolis.
The lower court. on grounds the at.
large procedure diminished the voting
strength of Negro residents and violated
the one man~ne vote requirement:;,
ordered the entire sta te red istricted with
each voling district electing on •
representative and one senator.
In another opinlon, the court overturn-
ed 7 to 2, a decision by the We st Virginia
Supreme Court which struck down the
state's requirement that a thrce-fiftl1s
majority vote wa s needed to approve
school bond issue which would exceed a
state constitu tional debt limit.
Sixteen other states have similar pro-
visions in their constitution.
The West Virginia court ruled that re-
quiring approval by more than a simple
majority was in violation of the one m.an-
one vote concept.
Similarly, the decision In the Indiana
stare representation case could have im-
pact in other states , particularl.v Vir~in1a
v.•hcre a suit affecting this year's election
is in prOct'ss.
Two Y•eeks before adjournin~ for this
terms. the court lnok these other actions·
~Ruled. 5 to 3, that a private in·
dividual who becomes involved in a ma t-
ter of public interest has no more prri-
tect!on · againsl libel Lhan a political or
public figure. The decision said in such
insl.llnces. !he person musl prove there
was knowledge a libelous sl atem ent was
false or wJ!h reckless disregard of
whether it was fal se or not. 'This is t11e
same yardstick !he court applied lo
public and political figures in past
decisions.
-Agreed to decide next term whether
the Wi sconsin State Assembly acted con-
stitutionally by ordering the jailing of Iha
mil itant Catholic priest, the Rev. James
E. Groppi, on charges of contempt
vdthout giving him opportunity to defend
himself from the charge.
-Let stand a lower court ruling that a
rail union may call selective strikes
against a few railroads in an effort to
achieve a national agreement. The action
NY Drawbridges
Left Open; Big
Headache Ensues
NEW YORK (AP) -Protesting the
state legislature's refusal to a.Pprove a
union negotiated pension plan for city
employe~. union bridgetenders left 28 or
the city's 29 drawbridges in open position
today. creating a mammoth traffic jam.
City trucks \\'ere abandoned on
roadweys in ke y spots, adding to the
lleup that backed up cars into New
Jersey, Long Island and \\lestchester
County.
1\ union spokesman said the campaign
"'111 escalate if the lrg1sla1ure does not
approve the pension plan before its hn-
m1nent adjournn1ent. The lawmaker.~
were worki ng in Albany with the clock
slopped ,;1nce a scheduled adjournment
Sunday afternoon .
"The enlire city could be shut down."
s;iid an aide to Victor Gotbaum, ex-
ecutive director of District Council 37
Af'I, CIO State, County and Municipal
En1plnyes Union. It represents 120.000 of
the nearly 400,000 city employes, but the
pension plen covers more than its own
membership.
Storms Buff et Midwest
Hail, Heavy Rains Acco111pany Tornadoes
California
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Yuba. City's
Body.Hunt
Called Off
YUBA CITY (UPI) -Unleas inlrared
and classified aerial photographs indJcate
more grave.sites, the search for more
bodies In the bloody Feather River mau
murder ha11 ended.
So far, 25 bodies -all Itinerant
Caucasian [arm workers -have been un.
covered in a 16-day search alocg the
banks of the river which winds throuah
the irrigated orchards of Northern
California called the "Peach Bowl of the
World."
"We consider the search to be ended."
Sutter County Sheriff Roy Whiteaker said
Sunday. ''\Ve don 't plan to do any more
digging unless something comes from the
infrared photos."
West.ern aerial photos of Redvuxid City
took infrared photographs of the 600-acre
Sullivan Ranch, where all but one. of the
bodies have been foun d, and adjacent
ranchland. The Infrared photos indicate
variations in ground temperatures such
as those caused by decomposing bodies.
In addition, navy planes took pictures
or the area Friday and Saturday.
Whiteaker said the pictures were better
than infrared and were classified but he
wouJd not receJv t the pbotograph.s for
several days. •
'Act Quickly'
•
Connally Makes ~
Lockheed Appeal
WASHINGTON (UPJ) -Treasury
Secretary John B. Connally said today
the nalion's entire economy could be
thrown into a slump if Congress refused
to take a quarter billion dollar gamble on
saving the Lockheed AircraJt Corp. from
bankruptcy.
Appearing in a crowded, hot Senate.
hearing room, Connally testified in
defense of the Ni:ron Administration'!
proposal to save the No. 1 defense con·
tractor with a guarantee that the govern-
ment would repay up to $2.Ml million of
bank loans ir the loa ns failed lo save the
giant company from failure.
Connally told the Senate Banking Com·
mittee he had reluctantly concluded that
the government must "act and act
quickly" to save Lockheed.
"Just al this time. wilh the economy
moving ahead and unemployment topping
out, the failure of the nation's larg~t
defense contractor -with 7 2 , 0 0 0
employes earning $8.'IO milli on a year,
35.000 supplies and $2.5 bi!lion in annu11l
sales -would, beyond any shadow of
doubt generate deepseated fears," Con-
nally said.
He added that "Uie result would be
market repercuuions lhat could severely
dampen and perhaps even thwart the
business recovery " from the 1970
rectssion.
Connally argued that 60,000 jobs in
Lockheed and _,ubconlractors would be
lost if the company went bankrupt. Tha
government would have to pay more for
weapons it now buys from Lockheed, ht
said, and lbe government's tax loss would
eiceed the $2!i(I million loan g\JattlJ\lee.
RUSSIANS RIP
SHIP; 9 LOST
PARIS (AP ) -A 20 ,000 ton Soviet
tanker sliced into the middle of a 2,'1'50
ton French destroyer Sunday, and nine
French sailors are missing and presumed
los t in the "A'estern Mediterranean.
The French Navy said the tanker
Busharov was making about 16 knots
when it hit the destroyer Surcouf 's
hridge. The ship broke apart later in the
morning, and the front half sank.
The missing men were all working in
the engine room. Another sailor was bad·
Jy bumed. A spokesman for the French
Navy said the tanker did not appear bad·
Jy damaged, and there was no in-
formation on any casualties aboard her.
chairs for dad
that do more than i
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,.~-' . to make him comfortable!
Here's o Bigger idea for the men in your life-years of
fatherly comfort in a .superbly crafted choir that mogicoll )'
unfolds into o super recliner.,. ond, a s in oil the Biggar
ciua1ity things, from one of th e great chair makers in
America. For den, stud y, family
room or in the living room, any
one of these will fit comforta bly
into any decor and do it with style!
b,
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Ing, H1lgM Jl lJi'', w;dth 31", ••Pih 36". $<olch·
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$1ro!ol11t1r. ~r111t1 St lt.00 '
NOW FEATURED AT ALL 3 STORESl
SANTA ANA Melo" -147-1611
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Newport Beaeh
EDITION
VOL 64, NO. ·13s, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 7, 197 f
• • • • eris ID I air
,
New Haveia Crash
29 Feared Dead
In East Tragedy
NEW HAVEN. Conn. (AP) -An
Allegheny Airlines propjet with Jl
persons aboard hit a power line, ripped
through some summer cottages and
crashed into marshland near Tv•eed New
Haven Airport today.
Some reports put the death to!J as high
85 29.
James Malark,y, airporl manager, said
MISS MERMAID OF 1971 c. c. oreai, 18
125,000 Attend
Fish Fry Event;
Pa.rude Saluted
The Harbor Area is semi.Quiet again.
The 26tb annual Fish Fry ind Carnival is
over .
, An estimated lUi,000 vi:Jltors enjoyed
the lhree-d11y re.stiva l an~ left behind
about $85,00) in gros.! receipts. Meiabera
of the Costa Mesa-Newport Harbori Lions
Club are still .counting the take.
"\Ye're very hi ppy. There were no in-
cident! 11t all. and ll gained more money
than la!t year," Mid Carleton "Bud"
Mears. one of the Lions who was •round
?<'hen the fish fry started in IMS.
The p1rade wa.s filmed for televi!Jon by
KTLA lchannel $) crews and announcer
Dick Lane of Newport Beach called Jt the
most impressive parade In California,
next lo the Rose Parade.
A new Miss Mermaid wQ 1elected Sun-
day al Costa .Mesa Park. She ill C. C.
Orda:r., an lf..year-old girl from Cnsta
Mesa. Her court cohslsts of J aqui
Krasco. It, /rom Ora'n.: an~ Heidi M11x-
wel1 , 21, from Huotln~ Beach.
Two other gii:t.· allo tooi .fish fry
honors Sunday. Mslla Eaplnda , 12-month
(Ste FISH FltY, P•ge t)
City Employes,
Officials Huddle
NtWl>Orl Beach city Offic\Als 1nd
employes began forma l negotlation.s tor •
1071·72 work contract t.od•y.
Acting cty m11nager Philip F'. Bet.
tencourt Mid he i~ hopeful & new •trtt-
ment can be reached wJthln three weUti,
In time to Inc.Jude any salary hlkies in the
1dnpted 1971-72 city budgel.
The council must ~dopt tbe budget by
Juntt SO. U no contfact 13 negotiated,
councilmen would have lo amend the
budget when 11 11.
.i
29 persons were killed. and Yale Ne~
Haven Hospital said It wa.s certain at
least 25 were dead.
The Convair 580 hit the utility line a.! it
approached Tweed New Haven Airport in
hazy fog. according to Malarky. Five
beach cottages near the end of the
runw11y were struck. then the wreckage
crashed in two big pieces.
-Allegheny said 28 passenger5, includlng
l \\'O infanls, and a crew of three wert:
aboard the regularly scheduled flight,
which orjginated in Washington, D.C.
Police said it was believed most of the
cottages <A·ere vacant.
Allegheny headquarters in Pittsburgh
at first said 29 persons were aboard. but
the passenger list later was revised
upwa rd to include two infants.
The plane was Flight 485, which
originated in Washington . D.C .. and had
flown to New London. Conn. lt Wl5 lit
have continued on to Newport News, Va.,
following the slop at New Haven.
FIREMEN SMOTHER BLAZE FOLLOWING TODAY'S CRASH OF ALLEGHENY AIRLINER
Plane Goe.s Down With 3' Aboard on ~ppr<M1ch to TwHd-New Haven Airport In Connecticut
Most of the bodies were found still
strapped in their seats in the burned
fuselage. Another llr~ piea o( I.ht plane
was found abo~t ,)50 feet away. Three Cosnwnnuts Dock
A spokesman for Yale New Haven
Hospital said two men and • woman were
admitted after the crash.
The woman was listed in 11tisfactory
condition. No condition report was
available on the men.
With Orbiting ·Sta.twn
The crash "looked and sounded like an
atomic explosion," said Nancy Palmeiri
af East Haven. who said she Ilea.rd three
explosions as the plane hit the wire and
crashed at the end of the runw1y.
Mrs. Mary Baldwin of E;ast Haven !!lid
she was at home, just getting out or her
car as the plane "swooped in so lo~:I had
to duck."
She said the two engine plane then hit
the wires near he r back yard and did
"sort of a tu rn, then came down and ez.
plocled."
Martin Patrice\li of East Haven said he
saw a body fl y out of lhe plane aDd land
1n a pond of water, "waving his hands
feverishly.··
Joseph Horow itz. manager of a beach
club near the crash scene. said he heard
lhe plane but was unable lo see it in the
heavy fog. Vislbilily was estimated at
le,c:s than two mile s.
Horowitz !laid fog hung ovr.r the beach
and he fin ally saw the craft plunge out of
the sky, hit one of the cottages and burst
into a ba 11 of lames.
He said he heard screams for help but
couldn't get near the naming aircraft
that finally stopped near his club's tenni~
court.s.
Newport Budget
Public Hearing
Slated Tonight
A public hearing on the Newport BeKtl
municipal budget, c1\led "tht beat I've
seen in years., by one councllm1n, wUI be
conducted by the city OOUndl t.oililh\ •t
7:30 o'clock in cu,. HaU.
Following slrld cOUnCll guidtllnea, ao-
M0scow (UPI) -Three Soviet cos-
monauts docked their Soyuz 11 apacecrart
with the orbiting.-1cientific station Salute
toda y and then climbed into Salute to
establish the first orbital spa~ labora ·
tory . -a scientific station as big M a
small parlor and complete with chairs.
The Soviet Tass News Agency said the
laboratory was about 80 fee t Jong and 12
feel in diameter, with a total weight of·25
tons. Telev ision transmissions showed. a
room large enough for the cosmonaul.s lo
gpin. weightlessly, head over heels
without touching any of the equipment
lining the walls.
The feat climaxed a -4!klay effort I.hat
included a linkup April 2-4 between the
lhree·man Soyuz 10 and S.alute. But Soyuz
ID remained linked for only five and a
half hour~ and hurried back to earth.
Indi cations at the time were that one of
Waitress Wins
Fish Fry Pinto
Merilee Kav,ich, a 26-year-old Newport
!each wa itress. normall y walks to work .
From today on she can ride - in a l!r'll
Ford Pinto.
Miss K.tv lch, of 1201 Pembroke Lane,
Newport Beach, won lhe car Sunday Al
the Jeth Fish Fry and Carnival.
•·I havel'l't g1't used to it yet ," she said
OU• m<lnli.n1 on the phone. "I don't have
any ttftllportation, it would ha,ve been
mother'yta! before L could ~ st1ved the-money for a car."
Her single ticket was the grand prize
win.nee Sunday n.igbt. She'll pick up the
car today at Theodore Robins Ford.
the 11pacemen mJght have ·JUffered space
sickness Salute has orbited wunanned
for the· past seven weeks.
It was the · first t).i;De·a cre:w has beien
transported to an unmanned scientific
station in sp3ce, and scientific 80UrCes in
Moseo w said one or · more manned
spaces hipS may go a)ofl soon to join the
space complex 11 prelude to a permanent
orbital laboratory.
"The crew of Soyuz ll ha~ boarded the
~t;ition Salute." Tass said. "A Soviel
manned orbital scientific station Is func-
tioning in space." However, a television
broadcast from the laboratory said
Viktor Pat.sayev and V\Bdlslav Volkov
,c:crambled through the linking palls and
commander Georgi Dobrovolsk y re.
ma ined behind to supervise the operation.
A Soviet television round table of scien.
lists and cosmonauts discussed the
achievement fnr Russian aud iences.
"We are witnessing a qua!it.alive!y new
step in cosmonautics -a long term
orbital slalion has been bu ilt," Space
!cientist Bo ris Ralschenback lold the
roundlable.
"The question!! of scientific technical
control or such stations present big com·
plications ... this station should permit
multiple docking. They must aometimes
receive not one but another ship , .. and
It i!I necessary lo control the docked ap-
paratus."
Tass said tM combined weight of Soyu:r.
J J and Salute w11 more than 25 ton&.
Soyu:r. 11 roared aloft Sunday and chl!l-
ed the unmanried Salute capsule to orbital
rende:vous tod•y .. Dotnwo\sty, -43, is: a
sPace rookie. Fllght engine« Volkov. -45,
was Oight engineer on Soyur 7. Test
eng11lftf Pat.uyev, 37, also is a .apace
rookie who 11 • pUot.trained design
mgineer.
ting city manager Philip F. Bettencourt · • C · · U C
has &Ubmiti.d a l!U million apendl11J 08tc JJieSG et°etltOftll
package that Is projttted to 1Uow a tWo , ·
Newport Officer . . . .
Saves Two Men .
From House Fite
·A -palttllling · Newport Beach policeman
today was credited with poMibly saving
tlie lives oC' two apartment occupants ,
Bfter breaking into their residence whlle
il was on fire,
Officer Mike Sullivan had to aroust
Steve Harmon and Jerry Garcia, of 1890
lsth St., to gel them out of the Oakwood
Apartments unit. inves tigators said.
Since , the blaze had just !tarted,
damage was limited to only $400. ac-
cording to the Newport Beach Fire
Departm ent.
No immediate cause was listed for lhe
rire. in which Capt. R. E. Blackman lllld
Fireman A. J. LaFrano iruffered minor
smoke inhalation.
A smouldering cigaret was considered
one possibility, however.
'Job Hunters'
Robs CdM Store
A pair of bandits robbed a 0Jton11 de!
Ma r liquor store of f430 Sunday night,
fi rsl asking about jobs and then lorcing
the clerk into a walk·in refr igeralOr at
gunpoint.
The holdup of Johnnie's Liquor St~re.
3537 E. Coast Highway, was the latest in
a lengthy series at the shop owned by
former Newport Beach councilman Dee
Cook.
Police· sajd the robbers.eqte~.aOOrtly
before 10 p.m., one of them telling clerk
Seyd Havens Jr. he had once' worleft in a
Kansas liquor 1tore and wu jobohunt.lnl.
Told there were no job openln11, tht
suspect started ·to Jeavt wilh · h1I com-
panlon, then whirled around with ' .n
caliber pistol in· hil hand.
Tbe council wlll begin tti rtView of tht . ·• and one-ht/I cen! ta1 cut. . G c I :t~t~!~~:~~·!~h!:~ · :. r~duat~ ·. 1t·es Re· evaacy
Councilman Don Mclnnl!, wM pl•Yed a • '
kty role In preparing the gUJdeHnes -
th!t included instructions lo low"-r the.tu:
rate ffom fl.225 to tt.20-per1t• ._..,.
ed valuation -had nothlq but praise for
86ttencourt'1 product.
"I wa1 real pleased with the way lht
ltaff has gone after this Ullnf. Ifs the
best looking budget I've .Jeen in ye an."
Mcinnis said.
Aa ProPi>l«I: t he dty will lptnd
ll00,000 "'°"' dbrlnl the 1"1·72 nocal
year 11 ln tht current year, despite the
Ux cut.
Bettencourt keyed h I a recom·
mendations to.an ant)cipattd 7.t percut
increase tn •SMaatd valuaUon -lhe pro-
perly tu bale -In Nowporl s..cb.
1'Chr.iatianily 11 JIOL antl-bstelleCWal.. Wt
cannot c<>m!Jlll tilt ~. al "'"" lrftle"ant to-tlii'\iof11!:"' -•. \ -~
Peter ' KuJmlt, a 1tudenl f r o m
YlliQll.t_vi•.. .IJN)it to his . 71 feUow
graduates Saturd:ay • at 1 r .a cl u a t I o n
cenmoaiea on Ult &.:ithern Calllorn l1
Colltp' campua Jn Coat.a Mes.a.
"This .world la In a atlperat.t need for
leader1: The iociiol and po1lt1c1l alruclure
al thii countrY 1Uowa UI to move Into
posJUoos ~denhip. We •• Christian• lhould U1te vantage or this."
"Let U1 be eaden•for Chrllt."
KuimlcJ ·kt speaker for S&turday·s
1ervlces, called tµ11 fe1JoW studeotf. to
eerve In the world ., CbriaUana, ud not
1b R<l~ tllioiMat .. '*· t11e '!••Id. '·""•-.. -...mr .._, .... he
lli4. ·-It ls not _ ... to /aiow tile uilih,.liuttwt h.i~~·ii; bow:-to'com-
m .. ate.Jt.to -modern m'an."
·•we have to reeop1iM D.l\ we are liv· Jni in., hJgh/y -pla w...td.· ond lt Lt
real and Ori11 IJ our mlstlOil."
r He pralNd SCC as • ''OlrisUan.coU.11
wltfl a splrltuaJ empbl.!ls. . ,
The school moved from Pasadena te
Cost• Mell in 1950 ind is the oldelt four·
ye1r college In Orange County. It bas
about $00 sludenL'I with academic majors
In huma nities, religion, •acienct, ·toeii.1
scle,nce, English ind history.
Dr. E. V. Plll/111, prolti!lor or blgbtr
ecJucatloo ot USC II Loo • A11fo1u. wu
al.so a 1uf1t rpe~r .~ {lpeated ·a
me11111-1im11., to x~ 1... ·nr. Pulli•s called on tM .. i\UflDb· to
lake ·Use.µ-pllct 'ID the. •world iD . tbe.lr
cl>oMn ri<Jd ond•u Chrlstlanl. ,
He aJso praised' tllls .rbool ind . other
churdi' related 1ehools -the 1Aseem~lff
or God apo""'r SCC -rot the aped.I
wOrk. Ha remlndfd i tudentl that the first
aucb school •H rollndOd 1n· tbe !!IOI amt
called HArvard.
The school· IJ'•duated eo· ltlfora Sltur·
d11y with Bachelor o( Arts degrees.
Ceremonit11 were held ID' tbe ' lcba01
1udJtorlum.
. . .
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
TEN CENTS
El Toro Jet,
Air West
Planes Hit
From W\re Services
A Hughes Air West jetliner wltb 49
persons aboard coWded with A Marine
Corps jetlighter at 12,000 feet Sunday
5piraling straight down into tbe rugged
San Gabriel Mountain s like a sbooting
star.
Only one person -the F4B Phantom's
radar interceptor officer who parachuted
-surv:ivtd.
Investigators were on the scene today,
faced with the grim task of removing and
identifying bodies and also the more
puu.ling question to be answered: what
happened?
No clues were available to indicate why
the two aircraft collided, the El Toro
Marine Corps Air Station jet knifing into
the other's fu selage, in almost perfectly
clear weather.
Air traffic controllers !!potted them on
radarscopes simultaneously, s econd 1
bef~re the impact and neither piloi
radioed any pre-collision warning.
First L. Christopher E. Schiess, 24, of
Salem. Ore., declined to discuss the col-
Hs~on with sheriff's investigators after
being treated at Santa Teresila Hospital
in Duarte.
Marine C.Orps Capt. Larry Karch, an El
Toro MCAS.based salety offiC!r, likewise
said he could not comment on the crash
pending a military inve!ligation.
. 'J'!le 98·passenger twin engine Hughes
Jetliner was climbing toward normal
operating altitude when the planes
smashed together at 12,000 leet, roughly
over Azusa .
Baggage, mail, papers and other items
new through the hole in it.s side.
"I heard a loud explosion and thought tt
was a sonic boom, but then l looked up
and saw this aJrplane spiraling down,"
said Mike Zarate, 45, a U.S. Forest
Service fire dispatcher.
"And then it hi t the mountaintop. If
reminded me of when the Kamikazes
were coming. at me in the war," be ad·
ded.
Few ·witnesses realized two planes
were involved. most .saying they thought
~jetliner had e1ploded in midair.
One was Los Angeles County Superior
Court Judge Homer Bell, of 1r1onrovia,
who heard the loud impact and ran
-0utside.
"It was like a shooting star." 1aid
Judge Bell.
A . trio shoaling pf\otograpbs in the
scenic area , John RoUer, 19, his !lister
Diane Byers, 21 and her husband, Ste:ve,
23, also witnessed the jetliner's death
dive .
"We must have wat ched them fall for
30 .seconds before they disappeared
behind the ridge ." said Byers, a student
al Northern Arizona University in
Flagstaff,
Roller .said they first heard the loud boom.
"Then we saw black smoke "he added.
"And suddenly there were ~irplane.s all
aver the sky and we could hear sirens.
Cary Butte rs, 17, an Azusa High School
junior. was lbe first lo reach the scene
r.cing 15 milea on his trall bike motorcy:
cle to the IClUtee' of tbe smoke.
Ht oould ttt ftine bodies among the SO
killed -lnc:ludlng two babi.o -and be waa sickened.
"It wu really destroyed ," sald Butter!
"1bere w1a nothin1 left. It wa1 pre ttf
fSae MIDAik, Pase I I
Weadler
1'be weatherman p~Jets cloudy
akSes tonight and Tuesday mo~
1nc with a ch.Ince of hazy sunshine
In Ille all•,._._ Hlgh.o today lll1d
Tuetclsy at the'-67 ond Jn.
land n: Lowa oround 11.
INSml: TODAY
' Sailbag ftltntl fri tM Orange . c6ountu Empire S • a Scout
ltmtpic1· ore •thedultd for W.
\Ottktnd. Ste Boe.ting, POQt JS.
DAil V PILOT "
Bfgge•t in County
Court Ju:ry OKs
'$21 Million Suit
.An aircraft owner and lhe four oc-
cupanlll of his ill.fated, twin-4!ngined
machine have receivtd more lhan $2l
million in damages from an Orange
County Superior Court jury which set a
new asseument reeord for the court.
The jury found for the fivl!: plaintiffs
and aga!.rut the Beech Aircraft Corpora·
lion after delibl!:rating for a week in the
courtroom of Judge Claude M. Owens.
Defense attorneys said immediately afler
lhe record award was announced Friday
that the panel's decision "'iii be ap-
pealed.
All live plainli(fs successfully alleged in
their consolldattd action that def~ts
the Beechcratt Baron owned by Westerly
Stud Farms operator Fletcher Jones led
to its crash on June 25, 1968, shortly after
it took oH from Fullerton Airport.
AirPQrt officials said the aircraft ap-.
peared to have trouble from the moment
of takeoff and it crashed in flames in
Buena Park less than three minutes aft.er
it became airborne.
Killed in the crash of the J onea plane
were pilot Roy Wilson Gregory Jr. 36, of
Palos Verdes, Calvin Martin Evelhoch,
33, of Santa Monica. Gaylord Ellsworth
'
ACTOR STRICKEN
Van Heflin
Van Heflin Still
Critical After
Heart Seizure
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Van Heflin, 60,
who 1Uffered a heart a ttac.k while Laldng
hla regular 2G-lap momlng awlm in his
.apartment pool, waa listed in critical C11n·
ditlon today.
'The veteran character a ctor had no
pulse and was not breathing. witnesses
said, when the fire department rescue
crew arrived Sunday morning. Rescuers
administered oxygen and external heart
massage and Heflin began breathing,
A spokesman at Cedars of Lebanon
Ji05pllal said early today that Heflin re·
mained In critical condition in the in-
tensive care ward.
J. W. Parks. superintendent of the
Sunset Marquee apartment eomplex, said
Heflin swam 21) laps around the pool
~very morning "like clockwork."
Sunday morning apartment handyman
Emitt Jecks. e2. saw Heflin gasp and
Jtrab a rung or the swimming pool ladder .
Jeeks pulled him out of the water and
Parks called the fire dep21rtment.
HrMin's most recent role w21s of ll
World V.'ar II demolition c x per t
determined t.o blow up a plane in
'·Airport." He won an Academy Av.·21rd
as best supporting actor in l94t for hi:o.
portrayal of a drunk ne\\'Spaper man 1n
"J ohnny Eager."
OUN•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
Warnick, 35. of Norwalk and Donald Paut
Peue, 21 , of Anaheim.
Suits were .!lubsequenlly filed by Jone.!,
Karen Evelhoch and her tv.·o daughters,
.ages 11 and 12, Ruth Marie Gregory, An·
na Mae Hadjes, mother of Wamlci.'1 two
sons, a1e11 12 and ll, and Janl.s F. Peue
for herseU and her 111 -mon tb ·ol d
daughter.
The jury gave Mrs. Greaory $5,450,000,
Mrs. Evelhoch $4 ,675,000, ~1rs. Pease,
$4,4$0,000, Mrs. Hadjes. $3,515,000 and it
awarded $3,5.12,000 lo Jones. who was not
in the aircraft Damages totalled
$21.722,000.
It was alter ed during the trial that a 40..
gallon guel tank an the wing of the
Beechcraft Baron model was defective
and that the firm was aware that it was
:subject to malfunction. It.! failure to cf·
fectlvely fetd fu el to the aircrafl's en·
glnc waa said to be the cause of the
crash.
Firehouse
Defendant
Late to Date
Firehoose b1r beUe Cynthia Drey r111g
the wrong 11ote today when she failed to
turn up for her trial with two co-de·
fendanta on charges of consplrina: to pre.
sent lewd entertainment at the Costa
Mesa tavern.
Superlor Court presiding Judie William
C, Speir• inutd a tI0,000 bench warrant
for the arrest of the 23-year-<1ld Tustin
entertainer a11d sent bar owner Raymond
Rohm1 28, of Co.sta Mesa and talent agent
Carl E . Crownover, 37, of Orange before
Judge Howard Cameron tor trial.
Mi.s.s Drey, green-auited, white-booted
a nd thoroughly breathless rushed into
Judge Cameron's courtroom two hours
later to find jury .!!election. almost com-
plete. She was ignored by the judge.
Defense attorney Berrien Moore said
duri11.g a recess that he believe_, the trial
of Rohm and Crownover will continue
without ~1iss Drey unless Judge Cameron
agrets to seat the curvy defendant this
afternoon.
SiI men and six women went into the
jury boI thia morning to hear what dep-
uty di!trlct attorney George McClure
said would be "co11vincing evidence that
the1e thl'ft personi conaplrcd with GUier
entertainera to present obscene perform-
ances at the Firehouse bar.''
Flrehouse dancer.!! Sharon D!boldt .11nd
Pamela Allen are 11chedulcd to appear for
the prosecution again.!lt the three co-de-
fendants.
Pro.!!eculion of Rohn, Crownover a11d
Miss J?rey on the obscenity charges fol ·
J°""·ed J!l"suance by the Costa Me!a p::ilice
C'.l( 52 citations to the Firthouse m&11age-
ment.
Franco, Successor
View ~lilitary Gear
f\IADRID (AP) -Gen. Francisco
Fr~nco and his successor designate,
Prince Juan Carlos de Borbon, shared the
reviewing stand Sunday during a 90
minule parade commemorating Franco's
viC'lory in the Spanish Civil War 32 years
ago
More than 500,000 people lined the route
of march as Sp11!n put ill'! mili!ary
hard""•are. much of it American made on
display. F104 Starfighters and F8fi Sabre.
jc!s built ln the United States new
overhead with Frenth Mirage flghlers.
I
D.AILY P'ILOT Stiff l"l'ltM
MALIA, 12 MONTHS WINS CONTEST FOR YOUNGER BABIES SHANNA LYNN, 20 MONTHS, CAPTURES 'SENIOR' BABY CONTEST
Mrs. Roy Espinda H•d 1 Lot to Smile About •t Fish Fry Mrs. Linda W•lker's D1ugliter Captivates Jud9es
~~~~~'-----'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~'---~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Fro"' Page J
MIDAIR ...
bad and made me not feel too good ."
Extremely heavy tog today hampered
efforts to remove bodies from the char·
red scene ()f horror 1n the Van Tassel
Canyon area of Angeles National Forest.
"\Ve can't get our ~elicopters into the
area until the fog clears and that
might not be until noon," said a Los
Angeles County Sheriff's spokesman.
Flight 706, which had taken off from
Los Angeles Jntemational Airport at ~:50
p.rti ., bound for Salt Lake City fron1
Pasco, Wash., v.·ith various stops en
route, ended tragically about IO"minutes
after takeoff.
The crash site is almost inaccessible by
foot.
A command post was established in a
park playground, where black and wh ile
Mlerlff's cars made a grim contrast to
candy·slriped poles holding basketball
backbo:irds.
J\1arine Corps investigators "·ere still
hoping the unidentified pilot of the 32.1rd
Fighttr Attack Squadr<ln iUrvived blit
this appe1tred slim indeed.
"If there arc any survivors ii \Y1\I bP.
the greatest miracle J'~·e eVl'f SCl'rl , '"
r~markl'd County flre Chief Dtan
The mllitacy fig hter-bomber was en
route home from a routine training
mission at Fallon. Nev . just lx>fore it
knifed into the DC!l twinjel.
Split In half, the big liner hurUed
strnighL into the mountainside.
"There v.·as no r oom ror it In skid. Tl
just v.·ent straight in . When 1t htt the
ground it broke all to hell.'' .said one
sheriff's depuly,
The scene llse!r was hell ish. with shat-
tered v.Tecka ge. still smoking for hours
after the impaci.
Federal Aviatinn Administrat ion in·
vestiga1nr~ noted ll 111as the f1 rsl midair
collision -and first commerci<1 I air
crash in th e country -since Sept. 9, 196!1,
when an Allegheny Ai rlines OC9 nnd a
light pl;ine wiih a studenl pilot at the con-
trnts collided 1n Indiana.
Vi.~ihility \l'llS good. llP 1o SI~ rn il('S. at
ne11rby Ontario ln\ernal1onal Airpvrt,
\.\'hen lhe planes rollided
'·\\1e don't place !he bla1nr That'~ UI'
to thf' National Transporlatinn S11fety
Board." remarked an ·F,\A spokes1na11
Sunday nigh!.
Only a v.'eek ar.:o. r>TS B chief Charles
0 J\liUer re.marked 10 a newspaper in-
terview that lhe nation had gone l ';
years wit.hout such an accident.
* -{:.,· *
Hurt on Coffee Break,
Worker Wins $55,520
A former railroad brakeman who was
struck and seriously injured by an a ulO
as he crossed a highway during his coffee
break has been awarded $5S,250 by an
Orange County Superior Court jury in
\.l'hal seems destined lo be a precedent-
selling decision.
l}efense attorney Malthew A. Witteman
announced irnmediately after the verdict
was brought in by the eight-member jury
that he will appeal the decision for the
DC9, Ma.rine Jet
Crash T eruied
Worst in State
LOS r\,..,-CELES CAP \ -The fiery
erash Sunrlay of an Air \Vest DC9 and a
f\1artne C.:orps 4 fighter 1n Uie San
Gabriel 1'.1ountains killing -t9 persona was
tile worst California air disaster involving
<! cununcrcial airt111cr.
There was no sign of survivors from 43
passeugers and five c rewmember s
aboard !he non-stop Los Angeles-to-Sall
Lake City Jetliner.
California's \~·orst air tragedy -
n1il1tary or commercial -occurred on
June 25, l~ v.·hen a jet transport from
El Toro ~tarine Corp~ Air Station with
Okina"''a-bound 1.1arines slammed into
1 ~c Santa Ana ~1ountains 40 mile~
southe:ist of Los Angeles, killing all 8-4
pt•rsons abocird
The hi~hest death !{lll 1nvolv1ng a com·
1ncrcial au· J111er pr10r to Sunday was 38
nn .Jtin. 18. 19fi9. A United Air Lines
BQl"'tng i27 plunged into the Pacific Ocean
n11nu1e.: altrr Takf'off from Los Angeles
Jn1+·rna11on al 1\irpurt.
Fi\•r cla.\'s c<1rhe r on J;in. 13 a Sca n·
d;111;1\ 1ar1 1\1rl111cs Sy1<!e1n Jet t-rashed late
~a111.1 \111n11·;1 l1;1v v:hilt• t:nm1ng ln for a
l:111du\~ ,,1 Lu~ An~cles lntrrnalional. Of
1hf' 45 persons aboard, 30 survived.
/\11 ~:'i fl<'r~ons nn ;i lh11vthorne Nevada
Au·lint'~ flC3 d1t>d f•'eb. 18. 1969 \vhen lhe
aircr;ift flew into the side of f\.11. Whitney
during 40-mile-per-hour headwind.
Atehi!On, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad,
the former employers of plaintiff Ivan W.
Hyatt.
Hyatt, 28, of Orange, was employed by
A. T. and S. F. ~n Dec . 8, 1966 on 1
railroad site in Gallup. N. ~1. when he
decided to cros1> the busy Roule 66 for
refreshmenl during his "bean break" -
railroad terminology for coffee break.
He was struck by a car and sustained
serious injuries that kept him in hospital
for the next 21 months. It was testified
during the trial that he still suffers
retrograde amnesia as a result of that
accident
It was lestified that the teenaged
driver of the car y,.·hich struck Hyatt was
uninsured and that Hyatt"s compensation
v.•as limited to the $18,000 he drew rrom
h1s own uninsured driver's prol'ision on
his personal policy.
He &ubsequenlly sued the railroad for
Sl00,000 and it was successfully argued on
his behalf during the tria l that an
employe is, in essence, still on lhe job
during his toEfee break and that he ran
claim damages even if he leaves the
employer's premises.
Lawyers involved in the action believe
that the jury verdict may set a new
precedent in California Jaw, particularly
where workmen·s compensation may be
involved in litigation . ll was noted during
the trial that no comparable lawsuit con-
taining Uie principles of the Hyatt claim
was in existence.
Tustin Clerk
Shot i11 Holdup
The clerk in an all night store in Tustin
was gunned down early this niorn!ng by a
bandit ""ho fled v.·ith an undetermined
amount <lf money.
Police said the v1ct1m . Thomas Grove.
22. of Tustin, u·as round on Lhe floor of
the 7-Eleven 1narkel, 16791 McFadden
Avenue by Alma L_ Thomas. of Santa
Ana . a customer at about 4:30 a ,m
Grove is in critical condition today at
Tustin Com1nunity llOBpltal wlth a bullet
wound in hls chest. Police have be.en
unable to queation him and .so have no
description of the band!!.
From Page 1
FISH FRY .•.
old daughter of fl1r. and Mrs. Roy Espui-
da. 315 21st SL. C.Osta Mesa, won top
baby honors for the younger division.
Shanna Lynn \Valker, 2a.month~ld
daughter cif Mrs. Linda Walker, 2029
\rallace St.. Cosla J\1esa. took baby
honors in the older division.
Lions Club members said there \\'ere
142 babies entered in the contest.
The city or Anaheim won the
sweepstakes troyhy for its parade float.
Other float winners were: Ch r i g t
Lutheran Church. judge's special trophy.
for religion :· city of Garden Grove,
queen's trophy; city of Orange, tlieme
trophy; Shakey"s P izza, ~1ayor's Com-
mercial Division.
The Lions Club Youth Award v.·as given
to !he f uture farmers of Americ.11 .
Thirty bands marched in Salurday'•
parade and there \\'ere a l-Otal of 140
parade entries.
About the san1e number of people 11!,.
tended this year's fish fry and related
event! as last year, but the Lions club
earned at lea.st $10,000 more. V
Aft.er e.xpenses are paid. aOOut $30,000
will be donatl'd by the Lions Club to
various activities and organizations in the
llarbor Area. A total or $285,000 in dona ..
lions tias been made over the past year.
Mr. Blackstock
Rites Wednesday
Funeral ser.,.ices are s c h e d u I e d
"\\'ednesday for A longtime Ne"'p0rl
Bearh city employe who retired .&~ a
pump npe1·ator after 26 year~. He dlcd
Saturday.
Rite~ for Je~sc 0 . Blai:ksl(IC'k. 6!1. will
brat II am in Pacific Vie\\' J\lortuarv
Chapel, with interment to follow in U1e.
~lemoria! p,,.rk
~1r. Blackstock 111 rd at 5.10 Aliso SI
and \1·as a member nl th/" l\'C'1>.'Pflrt
Harbor El ks Lodgr
He "leaves his 11·ifc. \1er:i . a tif'pht>\1·,
Henry Blackstock and nieces V1rg1n111
Baskims and Geraldine Jones, both of
llawthorne.
d&ANGI COA.IT ,UaLllMIMO COMP#JfY .
1.J..,1 N. Wee4 Air West Victims Named 'Dl'l\MONDS CAN be a· Pr•:Nnl ,,... l"VC11!1oPIW
J1c\: I. Curf'...,
WC.-............... ~I MllllllW'
n."'"' K' ..... 1r 1!1111"
n..,.., A.. Mur11hl•t
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L P1ler K•i•t
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... ,.,, '"'" OMw
)JJ) New,••t ltYl•••rtl
l1(t lli11t .Ytlre111 r.o ..... 1115, t!66J .,__
e."' M.1111 m w.: ••1 ''""' L'°""" ••di: JI:: ,.,.., A•tn ...
"-"'1119"', 9Mdl1 t117J •Mdl .°"'""'"' ... '*'*""'' .. HwWI •• ~'""" " ...
DAll.Y PILOT, wf!tl ..tl\dl II _....,, ... ,._,.,_., .. -~ ... .,, ..... ._
.. , ........ AlllllMt ,.,. '-"""-·~ ......... I tftdl. C:.11 MtW, H .... I ....... .....,., '-'•Ill 'f'1llwt SM Cit.._.., c ............. ~ieo.Cl. ..... "'"" ""' ,...,.... •tnM. ... W:llltl """""-......
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c....,.... .u...ttt1•1 u1.1~n
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SAN FRANCISCO I AP) -Hughes Air
V.'est today released the following list of
crewmen and pu1engtrs on a 00
airliner that collided with a military jet
Sunday and crashed near Los Ange lea;
Crew
1. Capt. Theodore Nicolay. :w>, Seattle .
pllol.
2. First Officer Price Bruner, -49, Seat-
tle, copilot.
3. Hostess Helena Koskimies, JO, Seal·
tie.
-4, Hostess Joan Pluylaar. 3-4, Seattle.
5. llostea.s Patricia Shelton, 28, Entiat,
Wash.
Pauenitrs
De•tlt11Uon Salt Lake City unless
<llhenitlae not.ed.
6. P .'ADen. Salt Lair: City.
7-8. Mn . R. Bird of Carlsbad, Call(,
and Infant Btro, de1Un1t.lon Boise, Idaho.
t. S. Boss.
10. Mr8. R. C1non.
11·12. Mrs. R. D1vldaon and MW K.
Davld!On, a1e t.
13-lf. Mr•. J. Dun and J, Dean, l -year·
old boy, destination Pisco, Wish.
15. P. Dunn of Salt Lake Clty.
16-17. A. FApitia and J . .E!pllla of Mex.
lco, desti nation Bol1t:.
II. John Forgy <lf Taruna, Calif.,
destination Lewl1 ton. Idaho.
It. K. Gabel, destination Boise.
20. Mrs. H. Garcia, d1 1tl nat lo n
Lewl111ton.
21. Mrs. ~{. Garcb1 of Lot ~ngelu, wil•
cf an Air We:i;t employe.
22. C. J!unttr of S;alt Llke Ciiy.
23-24 . :0.lr, and ~trs. J. Johnson, destina-
tion Boi ~e.
25. Mr. F . Ka lbjleisch, destination
Lewiston.
26. Arnold K11ufman of Ana Arbor,
f.flch.
27. J . l\1angran of Salt L.11ke City.
21. McCall , no first name, destinallon
Pasco .
29. Dale fl!iller n( \Val!a \\'alla. \\'ash.,
destination Lew1sT011
JO. T. f\lorris
31. Miss J . ~lcCrodtn of Napa, Idaho,
destination Boise
32-33. l\1iss J. Pollf'r, agt• 6. And f\IRster
M. Potter. age 7, destinaliort Lew iston.
3-4-35-35. C. Pyke, F. Pyle and \\' Pyke,
all of Sall Lake City.
37-38. M!.u ~f. Rangel 111nd f>. Rangel
nf l\lexico, traveling witll /\, and J.
Espit ia. No. 16-17 above, to Boise.
39. J. Reevts, a Union Oil Co. tmploye
in the Los Angeles area, destination
Pasco.
40. R. Schoenhals cf Salt Lake City .
41. E. Smith cf Salt Lake City.
42. Miss M. Subic of Silt Lake City .
43. Mis.T K. Thomas, traveling with
m01 her. Mrs. R. Carson, No. 10 Above.
44. R. Vincent of Boi11t, dest!naLion
B(llse.
4~. Ted Wiikerson of f\telba. Idaho,
dt'ttlnat.lon Boise.
43. 0 . Zillman of the Los An1eles area,
destination Lewiston
-47. N. Hess, New York Cily, destination
Pasco.
48-'9. Jdentifications withheld ptndlng
no!i flcat1on of relallves.
man's best friend
lllnQ• ... llhnl'lliofl ..,1y,
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• FIND IT HERE FIRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
LOAN, BUY, SELL, TRADI
1838 NEWPORT ·ILVD.
COME IN AND BROWSE AROUND
PHONE 646°7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA -letweln Herber & lroadway
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f;osia Mesa
EDITION
VOL. 6'1, NO. J 35, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES \
\ • . eris
New Haven €rash
29 Feared Dead
In East Tragedy
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) -An
Allegheny Airlines propjet with JI
ptrsons aboard hit a power line, ripped
tfirough A<lrne 8Ummer cottages and
cr19hed into marshland near Tweed New
Haven Airport today.
'
l
L
What, Me Run?
Rep. Wilbur Mills rD·Ark.),
chairman of the Hou se Ways
and Means Committee, said
Sunday he is "not remotely in·
terested " in t he Democratic
presidential nomination. He
.said he might run for vice
president, though.
• Some reports put the death toll as hig h
as 29.
James Malarky, airport manager, said
29 persons were killed, and Yale New
Haven Hospital said It was certain at
least 25 were dead.
The Convair 580 hit the utility line as it
approached Tweed New Haven Airport in
hazy fog. according to Malarky. Five
beach cottages near the end of the
runway were struck, then the wreckage
crashed in two big pieces.
Allegheny said 28 passengers , including
two infant!:, and a crew of three were
aboard the regularly schedulerl flight,
which origina ted in Washington, D.C.
Police said it was believed most of the
cottages were vacant.
Allegheny headquarters in Pittsburgh
al first said 29 persons were aboard , but
the passenger list later was revised
upward to include two infant:;.
The plane was Flight 485, which
originated in Washington, D.C .. and had
flov.·n to New London, Con11 . It was to
have continued on to Newport News, Va.,
following the stop al New Haven.
Most of the bodies were found still
strapped in their seat.! in the burned
fuselage . Another large piece of the plane
wa1 found about 15'0 feet iw1v.
A spokesman for Yale -New Havel'!
Hospital said two men and a woman were
1dmitted 1fter the crash.
Mesa Skin Diver
Injured in Surf
A Costa Mesa man who was injured In
I skin diving accident off LI gun a 's Moss
St re et Beach Sunday morning is reported
in satisfactory condition at South Coast
Community Hospital today.
Roy Boyette. 35, of 1800 Pomona Ave.
was caught in heavy surf shortly after 11
a.m. Sunday, police reporltd. Pulled
a~hore by lHeguards he was given oxygen
and transported to the hospi tal v.·here he
remained overnight In the intensive care
unlt.
A hospita l ~pokesman said Boyelte'1
condition Y.'aS much improved this morn-
ing and he was to be transferred to
regular care.
Three Cosmonauts Dock
With Orbiting Station
MOSCOW (UPI) -Three Soviet cos-' monaul! docked tnelr Soyuz 11 spacecraft
with tJie orbit.irlg scienlific station Salute
today and then climbed in to Salute to
atab\ish the first orbital space labora-
tory -a scientific sU!tion as big as 1
small p11rlor and complete with chairs.
The Soviet Tass News Agency said the
labor11tory was about 60 feet long and 11
feet in diameter, with a total weight of 2S
tons. Television transmissions showed a
room large enough (or the cosmonaut.<; to
spin, welghUe&'lly, heaO over . hee ls
without-touching any of the equipment
liniitg the walls.
tisl!: and cosmonauts discussed the
achievement for RU!Sian audiences.
"We are witnessing a qualitatively new
step in cosmonautic1 -a Ion& term
orbital station lla1 been built," Space
scienlist Boris Ralschenback told the
roundtable.
"The question• of scientific technical
control of such statMlns present big com-
plications ... this station should permit
multiple docking. ntey mlL!t sometime11
receive not one but another ship • , • and
(S.. SPACE , Pop II
' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . MONDAY, JUNE 7, "1971' •
r
l
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• Ill • • I ~air
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DAJLY P'ILOT $1111 P'~llf
TIJUANA POLICE 'SUICIDE SQUAD' WOWS ·SPECTATOU AT FISH F~Y PARADE
There Are 31 Men on Three Motorcycles In This Photo. Old lttcerlll Wai 27
OAILY l"ILOT Siii! P'"'tl MISS MERMAID OF 1971
C. C. Ordar, 18
4,800 -M~re Troops
SA:IGON (AP) -The U.S. Military
Command reported American troop
strength In Vietnam was redu~ 4,800
men last week. lt also announced that six
Marine Corp.11 units totalling 1.240 men
would rtturn llOOO to the United Stales.
125,000 Visitors Join
In Mesa's Fish Fry Fun
The Harbor Area Is se.mi-quiel aaain.
The 26th annual Fish Fry and Carnival ls
over.
An estimated 125,000 visitors enjoyed
the three-d ay fesllval and left behind
aboul $85.000 in gross receipts. Members
of the Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Llona
Club are stH! co unting the take.
"We're very happy. There were no in·
cidenL~ at all. and it gained more money
than last year ," said Carleton "Bud"
M~ars, one of the Lions who was around
when t~ fish fry started in 1945.
The parade was filmed for television by
KTLA ichannel ~) crews and announcer
Dick Lane of Newport Beach called It the
most impressive parade in California,
next to the Rose Parade.
A new Miss Merma id was selected Sun-
day at Costa fvlesa Park. She is C. C.
Ordaz, an 18-year-old girl from Costa
Mesa. Her court consists of Jaqui
Krasco. 19, from Orange and Heidi Max-
well . 21, from Huntington Beach.
Two other girls also took fish fry
honors Sunday. Malia Espinda, 12-month
old daught(r of Mr. and .Mrs. Roy E9pln-
da , Jl5 21st St., Costa M~a. won top
baby honors for the yoo.nger divl1!on .
Shanna Lynn Walker, ~111onU:i-0Jd
dau ghter of Mrs. Linda Walker, 2029
Wallace St., Costa Mesa .. took baby
honors in the older divlsion.
Lions Club members II.id there were
J42 babies entered Jn the contest.
The city of Anaheim won the
l!lweepstakes troiihy for Its p~r!de float.
Olher float winners were : C h r Is t
Lutheran Church, judge's· special trophy
for religion: city or Garden Grove,
queen ·s trophy; city or Oran1e. theme
trophy; Shakey's Pizza, Mayor'a C.om·
{See FISH FRY, Page %)
Annual Budget,
Fireworks Face
Mesa. Councilmen
A 10-page agenda including a $10.3
million annual budge t and 11 permit6 ror
cha ritable sale o( firewnrks is on tap for
I.he Costa ~1esa Cily Council toni ght.
Except for preliminary budget presen·
talion and appointment of two members
to the Costa l\fesa Planning Comm ission,
all items or business are relatively
routine.
Copies of lhe budget, up 11boul $1
million from last year. will be available
to Interested taxpayers through the city
clerk·s office for study prior to formal
hearings.
They will be distributed to councilmen
at tonight's meeting. which bt'lns with a
6:30 p.m. business session.
Mayor Robert M. Wilson will· ask the
council to reappoint PlaM!ilg Com·
ml58lon Chairman Charles A. Beck and
Commisaloner C. C. "O'llc" Clarke.
Four public hearings are scheduled on
rei.oning requests pa:ssed on by the pla.,..
ning commlision. while seven wne e:r·
cepUon pennits: are up for attlon by the
council.
Tut feat climaxed a 49-day effort that
Included a linkup Aprll 14 between the
three-man Soyuz 10 and Salute. But Soyui.
10 remained linked for only five and a
half hours and hurried back to earth.
Indications .at the Ume were that one of
the spactmen might have auffered space
alckne:u Salute bas orblted unmanned
for the past seven weeb.
f:osta Mesa Ceremony
A measure designed to improve traffic
now and reduce safety haiards on busy
Placentia Avenue in the area of Estancia
High School is also scheduled tor
dlscus!ion.
It was the first lime a crew has been
transported to an. unmanned scientific
staUon in apace, and acientlfic sources in
Moscow iaid one ir more mMned
1 aJ>90eshiPt may go aloft !oon to join the
1pace oompl.u ts p-elude to a pru-manent
orbital laboratory.
• "The crew of Soyuz 11 har boarded the
.11.1Uon Sa lull!," !au . aald .. "A. Soviet
'.manned orbital SC'lenllhc. stahon 11 func·
Uoning in space." However, a televbion
bro11dcast from lhe laboratory said
Viktor Pats11yev and Vladislav Volkov
·scr@imbled through the linking pats and
commander Georgi Oobrovolsk y re-
mained bdlind to supervltte tht OPl'fltlon.
A ·Sovlet·televili.on·ftlllnd t.able of tclen-
·Graduate Cites Relevancy
0 ChrisUanlty-h-not. anU:tntellectual. We
caMot romm~ .. tbt a.in of being irrelevant
to the world.'
Peter Kur:mlc, a 1tudent f r o m
Yugoslavia, spoke to his 7t fellow
gradu11te1 Saturday at graduation
certmonlr1 on the Southern California
College campus In Coal• Mesa.
"This world Is In a de!:perate need for
leaders. Tht.aoclal 11nd political 1tructu~
of thil country allows us fo move into
posiUons of le1dership. We 8s Olrlitlans
should take. advantage of this ."
''Let us bt leader• Sor Christ.''
J<uzmlc, key s~aker for Satunl1y'1
lervices, called hi• fellow students to
te.rv• in the world aa ctlr-1.sUan.s, and .not
to seclude themulves from the world.
"We have an unchanging mesaqe." be
1~id. "But lt is not enough to know the
truth, but we bave to know how to com·
munlcate It to modern man."
"We have to recognize that we are Jlv~
lng In a highly complex world, and· It la
re.al and this la our mission ."
Ht pr1ised SCC as a ';Christian college
with a 1plrltual emJ)basill.
11\i ~hoot~ moved from Pasadena to
Costa Mesa In 1951:1 ind Is: the oldest four.
ytar college Jn Orange County. It has
about 500 studt.Dta with aaidemic ma jors •
Jn humanJtles, rellgion. science, 10Cial
aclence. Engllsh and history.
Dr. £. V. fUlllaa...pr.ol"""'-PI hiah<r
""
educaliOJJ •l USC in Lot Allgeles, WIS
1lso a guat • apeaktr and repe1led a
message similar to. Kuzmic'1.
Dr.· Pulllas calltd on u:ie 1tudeot.s to
take thtlr place In the world In their
chosen field Ind ea Chrlalians.
He alM pral&ed this achoo! and 'oth'er
clfurch rel1ted .1Chools -the Auembllet
Qf God aponw sec -for the a,fclal
worit. He rtm.tnded atuderib that the' fir$t
such school wall founded in the 1eoGs and
calltd llarvard.
The school 1raduated 10 1tniors satur·
day with Bacht.lor of Arts degrees.
Ceremonies "'trt held in lbe acbool
auditorium.
·'
Public:, Works Director George Mad1en
ls recommending parking be prohibited
on both but only on the west aidt betWffD
th< ochoOI ll1d JoaM SU..L
Mesa Manufac.turer -. .
Reports Office Theft
A buralar broke Into o COila M.., In·
dus:tl'lil plant over the weekend, 1ootln1 It
ot-C tllon 11,oeo ""'111 ol olll<e 1111>'
plies and equipment. .f.oa ·ot·Grim...sbepard Monufoctarlns
tnc.. %10 Paufartno An.. Included a
type~ter'. <'llculator and radlo, ec~
cording to polict . Employt ·Norman
NlckerlOll dbcovered a wlndo\IF adjacent
to the froot door broken when he·arrlvtd
for work Saturday morninc.
•
N.Y. Stoen
TEN CENTS
r ·as
El Toro Je~
Air West
Planes Hit
From Wire Services
A Hughes Air West jetliner with 49
persons aboard collided with a Marini
Corps jeUighter at 12,000 feet Sunday
spiraling straight down into tile rugged
San Gabriel 111ountains like a shooting
at.ar.
Only one person -the F4B Phantom's
rl'!dar interceptor officer wbO parachuted
-survived.
Investigators were on the scene today.
faced with the grim task of removilJI and
Visitor Vlrtlm
One victim of the tragi.c m.idtiir col·
lis ion was id.entijred a.s Norman Hess,
who had been visiting his pa rents i n
Costa Mesa, according to inuesti·
gators.
He 1uas listed os an employe of Nu,.
clear Energy Insurance Corp .. of Ntw
York City. but it could not be deter.
m ined today who he was visi!ing
locally.
Identifying bodies and also the more
puzzling ·question to be answered: wbat
happened?
No cluea were available to indicate wby
IM 1wo aircraft collided, the El Toro
Marine Corps Air Station jet knifing intG
the other'a fuselage, in almost perfectly
clear weather.
Air traffic contrcllers spotted them 011
radancopes simultaneously, seconds
befora the impact ind neither pilot
radioed any pre-collision waming.
First L. Christopher E. Schiess, 24, of
Salem, Ort., declined to discuss the col-
lision with sheriff's investigators after
being treated at Santa Teresita Hospital
in Duarte .
Marine Corps Capt. Larry Karch. an El
Toro MCAS-based aafety officer, likewiss
•aid be could not comment on the crash
pending a military investigation.
The 98-passenger twin engine Hughes
jetliner was climb ing toward normal
operating altitude when the planes
smashed together at 11,000 feet , roughly
over Azusa.
Baggage, mail, papers and other items
new through lht!iole in Its side.
"I heard a loud explosion and thought it
was a sonic boom, but then I looked ul"
and sew this airplane spi raling down,"
aa id Mike Zarate, <45, a U.S. Forest
Service fire dispatcher.
"~nd then i: hit the mountaintop. It
reminded me of when the Kamikazes
were coming at me in the war," be ad-
ded.
Few witnesses realized two planes
wer~ in.volved, most saying they thought
the Jetf1ner had exploded in midair.
One was Los Ang eles County Superior
Coort Judge Homer Bell, of Monrovia,
who heard the loud impact and ran
outside.
"It was like a shooting st.ar," said
Judge Bell.
A trio shootini photographs in the ~enie area. John Roller, 19, his sister
Diane Byers, 11 and her husband Steve
2.3, also wilne!sed the jetliner·; death
dtve.
"We must have watched them fall for
30 seconds before they disa ppea red
behind the ridge," said Byers, a student
(See MIDAIR, Page %)
Weatller
1be weatherman ·predicts cloudy
· sides loolght ond Tuesda,y mom.
Ing With I chance O( hazy 1Ull8hine
In Ille on.""°"" Higho tnday and
Tuesday at the belches FIT and in-
land 'II. Lo" miund a.
INSWll TODAY
Saitfng eventa in the Orange
County Empire St a Scout
Otymplc1 art acheduled for &hf.t
w11tkend. Set Boating, Pagt l6.
" • " "" n n .. .. • • "'" " "
2 DAIL V PILOT c MoMf1, .lont 1, 1971
Biggest in Count11
Court Jury OKs
$21 Million Suit
An aircrafl ownf!'r and the four OC•
cupants of his ill-fated, twi n-engined
machine have received mort than $21
million in damages from an Orange
County Superior Court jury which set a
new assessment record for tht court.
The jury found for the five pla.inliffs
and against the Beech Aircraft Corpora-
tion after deliberating for a week in the
courtroom of Judge Claude M. Owens.
Defense attorney!! said immediately after
the record award was announced Friday
that the panel's decision will be ap-
pealed.
All five plaintiffs successfu11y alleged in
their consolidated action that defects
the Beechcrafl Baron owned by Westerly
Stud Farms operator Flctche; Jones led
to its crash on June 25, 1968, shortly arter
it took off from Fullerton Airport.
Airport officials said the aircraft ap-
peared to have trouble from the moment
of takeoff aQd ii crashed In name5 in
Buena Park less than three min utes aft.er
it became airborne.
Karen Evelhoch and her two daughters,
ages II and 12, Ruth Marie Gregory, An·
na Mae Hadjes, molher of Wamick's lwo
sons, agu 12 and 11, and Janis F'. Pt:ase
for herstif and her 18 -month -o\d
daugllter.
The jury ga\·e !i.1rs. Gregory $5 ,4~,ooo.
f\.1rs, EveJhoch $4 ,675,000. Mrs. Peue,
$4,4:,0,000, Mrs. Hadje.!I, $3,515,000 111d it
awarded $3.~,000 to Jone:i, who was not
in the aircraft. Damage.s totalled
$21 .722.000.
It was alleged during the trial that a 41}.
gallon guel tank an the wing of the
Bttchcraft Baron model was defective
and that the firm wa5 aware that it v.·as
subject to malfunction. IU failurt: to ef-
fectively fttd fuel to the aircraft's en·
gine was said to be the cause of the
crash,
Dt.1LY l"ILOT s1111 !"ho ..
Killed in the crash of the Jone5 plane
'4'ere pilot Roy Wilson Gregory Jr. 36, of
PaJ05 Verdes. Calvin r..1art.in •Evclhoch,
33. of Santa J\.lonica. Gaylord Ellsworth
\Varnick, 35, of Norwalk and Donald Paul
Pease. 21 , of Anaheim.
Firehouse
Defendant MALIA, 12 MONTHS WINS CONTEST FOR YOUNGER BABIES SHANNA LYNN, 20 MONTHS , CAPTURES 'SENIOR' BABY CONTEST
Mrs. Roy Espinda Had a Lot to Smile About at Fish Fry Mrs. Linda Walker's Daughter Captivates Judges
Late to Date ~~.=.::.-2'.__:.:c:~~~..:.:_:._:__:_~~-'--~~~~~~~
Suits were subsequently filed by Jones,
From Pagel
SPACE LAB. ••
Jt is necessary to control the docked IJ>
paratus."
TaS!I said the combined weight of Soyw:
11 and Salute was more than 1.5 ton5.
Soyuz II roared aloft Sunday and chas·
f!-d I.he unmanned Salute capsule to orbital
rendezvous today. Dobrovol.sky. 43, i5 a
!pace rookie. Flight engineer Vo\kov. 45.
·wa5 flight engineer on Soyw; 7. Test
engineer Patsayev. 37, also is a .space
rookie v•ho i.s a pilot-Lrained de5ign
engineer.
Tass said the Soyul made an automatic
approach to within 100 yard11 of the Salute
and the cosmonauts completed the dock·
ing manually.
After the two vehicles were
mechanical!y coup!td, their electrical and
hydraulic communications were COfl<-
nected. The crew then checked the con·
necting tunnel for air tjghtnt:ss and
Patsayev led Volkov intn the Salute.
Tass disclosed the enormous slze ol the
airtight portion or I.he 11pace v~icle -
about 60 fttt. long and 12 feel in diameter
with a capacity of 130.80 cubic yardJ. In
addition there were many scientific ap-
paratuses· outside the airtight com·
partment.
Sant& Ana. Man's
Body Identified
The body of a man found early today in
the Orange area bas been identified by
authorities as that of Robert Hernandez
Gallardo, 35, of Santa Ana ,
Orange County Sheriff's deputies said
they found Gallardo slumped behind the
v.•heel or his car which had apparently
been parked overnight on Santiago Road
tn El !i.1odena.
Deputies said there was no apparent
cause or death but they do not 11uspect
foul play. Coroner'!; officers ordered lox·
icologica/ lrsts !o determine the cause ot
Gallardo·s death.
O•ANGl C:OAST
DAILY PILOT
ORANGE tO-'~T PUI L1'1-l1NG C:OMPANY
Rcih•..t N. Weed
l"rn,Clitnl •I'd l"w~lll"""
J et~ R. Cw1l•v
\tic:• Prnlde11t •...i G-t•t M1111w
Tli•"'•' ke•wil ECll\ot
Tllo"''' .A. Murehin•
M111111t1o E.C1110r
C ht1l1• H. lo11 Rith1rd P'. Ni ll
Au ll11n. M•~•~;..~ ee111011
C1&hl M111 OHie•
310 Weit l•v !i1t11t
M1ili1uJ Add1e11: P.O. l o• IS~O. 92b16
~-H.....,.,t ._fl! Jl1' H"""°'"' llou·..,a•tf
~-l11CJI! tr. ''""": ••r~u• H"'"ll119fo1 1111,I>: 111,~ ltlCll llO~lt•l'd
5'11 C""*"H; Jll$ Nerll'I ~I C1rnono A•ll
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. Cl-"'M ..Wrnrt•1 '42·1671
c.yr!IM, "11, Of•llf'll C•ut l"w.,Jtfl'"' ltO!l"IPNl'f, HG ... WI tterl•1, 111\nltd~. "',.., .. , ,..,11.,. •• ••wn l••,,_,. "'~"'"
"''" bO ,_.11Ce41 w!ll>O\I, 1peclel Pl""
,,..._, 11 c:opyrltfl; ''"'""'·
\«*Ill tt .. ""''"" ,.,, ,, .,...,,.., .. m .. ,,. c .. ta llUlt , (•hMrftll, l\lllttr!"IM
9y Cf,.,... ti.ti -11\IYI "'T l'llft W.l'I ......,,.,, .. >11111.y fcotln.iW..., t 1 .ti _..,ly,
Firt!house bar belle Cynthia Drey rang
the wrong JtOte today w~en she failed to
turn up for her trial with two co-de-
fendants on charges of consplrin.c to pre-
sent lewd entertainment at the Co.!ta
Mesa tavern.
Superior Court presidina: Judie William
Frotn Page 1
MIDAIR. ••
a t Nortbern Arizona University in
F lagstaff.
Roller said they fir.it heard the loud
boom. c. Speirs issued a SJ0,000 be.:och warrant
for the arrest of the %3-year-old Tustin
entertainer and. sent bar owner Raymond
Rohm, 26, of Costa Mesa and talent agent
Carl E. Crownover, 37, ol Orange befort '
Judge Howard Cameron for trial.
"Then we saw black !imoke," he added.
•'And suddenly there v.·ere airplanes all
ever the sky and v.·e could hear sirens.
Gary Butters, 17, an Azusa High School
junior. was the first to reach the scene,
racing 15 miles on his trail bike 1nolorcy-
cle lo the source of the sn1o ke. Miss Drey, green-suittd, white-booled
and thoroughly breathless rushed into
Judge Cameron'5 courtroom two hoo rs
later lo find jury selection almost corn·
plete. She wa5 ignort:d by the judgt.
Defense attorney Ber rien Moo re said
duri"g a recess that he believes the trial
of Rohm and Crownover \\'ill continue
without Miss Drey unless Judi e Cameron
agree.s to seat the curvy dt!fendtnt thls
afternoon.
Six men and six women we nt into the
jury bo:t this mbrning to ~ar what dep.
uly district attorney George McClure
said woold be "co•vinting evidence that
these thrtt persons conspired with other
entertainers to present oblcene perform-ances at lhe Firehouse bar."
F irehouse dancers Sharon Diboldt and
Pamela. Allen are 5cheduled to appear for
the prosecution against the thrtt co-d e·
fendants.
Prosecution <Jf Rohn, Crownover and
Miss Drey on the obscenity charges fol·
lowed issuance by the C05ta Mesa police
of 52 citations to the Firehouse manage. rnent.
Waitress Wins
Fish Fry Pinto
Merilee Kavich, a 26-year-old !\"ele'port
Beach wa itress. normally walks to v.·ork.
F'rom today on she c11n ride -in a J!nJ t,ord P inoo.
Miss Ka vich, of 1201 Prmbroke Li ne,
Newport Beach. won tht car Sunday at
the 26th Fish Fry and Carnival
"I have111·t got used to it yet," she said
this morning on the phone. ··1 don 't have
any transportation. it "'ould have betn
another year before I could have saved
the money for a car ''
lfer single ticket was lht grand prize
winner Sunday nigh!. She"!! pi ck up the
(car today al Theodore Robins Ford.
He could see ninr bodies among the 50
killed -including two babies -and he
was sickened.
"It was really destro.ved ," said Bullers.
''There y,·as nothing Jert. It was pretty
bad and made me not feel lOO good ·•
Extremely hea1'y fog today han11>ered
efforts to remove bodies from the <·har-
red scene of horror in the Van Tassel
Canyon area of Angeles NationaJ Forr-.1
"We can"l get our heliqipters into the
area until the fog clears and th;.rt
rni11h~ not be until noon." said a J,(js
Angeles County Sheriff's spokes1nan.
Fli~ht 706, \vhich had taken off rro111
Los Angeles International Airport at 5:50
p.m .. bound for Salt Lake Ci1y from
Pasco. \\'ash.. 1vith variou5 i;lops <'n
route. ended lragically about JD rninu!cs
arter takeoff
The crash site is a1mosl inaccessible li)
foot.
A command post \vas established in a
park playground, 11 here black and 1l'h1tc
sheriffs cars made a grim contr;1sl tn
candy-striped poles holding basketball
backboards.
Marine Corps inveslil{ators \\"ere still
hopi ng the unidentified pilot of the 323rd
Fighler Attack Squadron survil"ed bi..t
this appeared slim indeed.
"lf there are any survivors ii \fill be
th~ greatest miracle l'l"e ever seen."'
remarked County Fire Chief Dean
The military fighter-bomber \\"as Pn
r oute home from a routine training
mission at Pal!on, J\e1·. just before it
knirt'd into the DC9 t11·injet.
Split in half. the big linrr hurtled
111.rai,i;:hl into !ht" mountain?1;idr
'"There v.•as no room for it tn skid It
just v;e11t. str;i111:ht in . \Vhen 11 hit the
ground it broke all lo hell,"' said one
sheriff's deputy.
The scent' itself \\'as hellish. \\"ilh s.h:i1-
lered \\Teckag~ still smoking for hour11
alter lhe impact,
* * * Air West Victims Named
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Hushes Air
West today rele.tsed the following list of
crewmen and passenaers on a OC9
•irliner that collided with a m ilitary jet
Sunday and crashed near Los Angeles:
Crew
1. Capt. Theodott Nicolay, 50, Se1Ult ,
pilot.
2. First Officer Price Bruner. 49, Seat·
tle, copilot.
3. Hotteu Helena Ko1kimie1, 30, Seit·
tie.
4. Hostess Joan Pluylaar, M. Seattle.
5. Hostess Patrlcla Shelton, 28, Entiat,
Wash.
Pusenger1
Destination Salt LU:e City unlus
Olhetwilt nottd.
6. P. Allen, Salt Lake City.
7-8. Mrs. R. Bird of Carlsbad. Calif.,
and infant Bird. destination 8ols:t, Jdaho. •. s. Boll.
10. Mn. R. ~n.
I 1-12. Mrs. ~1viclson and l\tiSI K.
Da vidaon, "It 2.
IS.I•. Mra. J. Dean and J, Dlll11n, 2-year-
Dld boy, de.atlnatlon Paico, Wash.
15. P. Dunn ol Salt Lake City.
16-17. A. Espitia and J, Espitia or Mei·
Jco. dc3tinaUon Bolu .
II. John Forgy of Tarr.an., Calif.,
destination 1Awi3ton. Idaho.
J9. K. Cabe!, de!tin1Uon Boise.
20. Mn. H. G1rci1, dt:atlnat lo n
Lewiston.
21. Mr1. M. Garcia of Los Anrel .. , "If'
flf 11n Air West tmployt .
22. G. Hunter of Salt Like Cily.
U.24. Mr. and Mrs. J. Johnson, dr:!tina-tlon Boi1t.
25. Mr. F. Kalbjleisch, destination
Lewiston.
26. Arnold Kaufman of An" Arbor,
Mich.
27. J . 1>1angran of Sall Lake City .
28. McCall. no fitst name, deslina lion
Pasco.
2;9. Dale Miller of Walla \Valla . \\'ash.,
deslinalion Le11·islon.
30. T. f.1orrls.
31. Miss J. 1'.1eCroden of Napa. Idaho,
destint11ion Boist.
32-33. Miss J. Potter. age 6. and r..1aster
~1. Potier, age 7, destinalion Le11•lst6n.
:J4.35.36. C. Pyke, F. Pyke and W. Pyke,
all of Salt Lake City,
37..JS. Miss M. Rangel and P. Ran11cl
nl Mexico, traveling wilh A. and J.
Espitia. No. 1 ~17 above, to Boisr.
39. J, Reeve5, • Union Oil Co. employc
In the Uls Angeles area, destination
Pasco.
-fO. R. Schoenhals or Salt LAkt City.
41. E. Smith of Salt Lake City,
42. Miss M. Subic of Salt Lake City.
43. Mi.u K. Thomas, travelina with
mother. Mrs. R. Carson. No_ 10 above.
44, R. Vincent or Boise, d!stlnation
Bolu..,
45. Ted Wi lkerson of f\.telba, Idaho,
de.<1Un1tion Bois~.
46. D. ZillmAn of the 1...o! Angeles area,
ctea:Unellon Lewi3tcm.
47. N. lle:i:s, Ntw York City, destination
P1at0 •
48-49. 1dentifltation11 withheld pendln&
notification of relattves. • -
Actor Van Heflin Critical
After· Big Heart Attack
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Van Heflin, 60,
1\•ho suffered a heart attack whi!e taking
his regular 20-lap morning swim in his
apartment poo l, v.•as listed in cri"lical con-
dition today.
The veteran characl.er actor had no
pulse and was not breathing, witnesses
said, when the fire departmenl rescue
crc1v arrived Sunday morning. Rescuers
:idnunistered oxygen and external heart
rnassage and Heflin began breathing.
A spokcs1nan al Cedars of Lebanon
Hospi lal said early today that Heflin re-
rna incd 111 critical condition in lhe in·
tensive care ward.
.I \\'. Parks, su perintendent of th,
~unset Marquee apartment compJ,x. said
Police Arrest 2
On Drug Charges
A team of detective& raided a C.Oata
l\lcsa apartment Sunday night, arresting
I \1·0 suspected drug dealers on five counts
1'ach, along wlth four companions booked
on lesser charges.
Police allege cocaine and mescalinf'
were invol ved in trall!actlons by lhe tv.·o
prinrip<il suspects, one a hospital
l'rnrloyc and the other a leather
('r<iftsrnan
Chris \\I Benzinger and Michael J .
Spears. bo1h of 241 \V. \Vilson St., were
booked 011 su~p1cion of sale of dangerous
drugs. pos.~ession of drugs for sale,
possession of heroin and otht>r charges.
Their tour young companions "·ere
1·ha rged only with being in a place where
drugs were being used, according to ar-
resting offirers.
Delail.<; or the investigation leading to
arrest of Benzinger and Spears v.·ere not
released
:\lariner Doing Well
PASADF.J\'.,\ Calif (AP! -!i.fariner 9
~'ruised snt~1:'11 hl y to11ard l\lars today as
scientists dt'l"ided \\"hethtr lo give the
spacccr:ift unolher gentle course cor-
r rc!lon. The torrect inn v.·ould be a short
hurst fro n1 the craft's small rocket
('n,1?1nc to finl' lune !he space ship'.!!
Lourst· to ~1ars.
JtIA:MONDS
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Heflin swam 20 laps around the pool
every morning ··Ji ke clockwork."
Sunday morning apartment handyman
Ernl!t Jecks. 62, saw Henin gasp and
grab a rung of the sv.i mming pool ladder.
Jecks pulled him ou t or the wat"er and
Parks called the fire department.
Hen1n ·s most recent role was of a
\\1orld \l/ar II demolition exp e r !
determined to blow up a plane ln
"Airport.'' lie won an Academy Av.·ard
as best supporting actor iu 1941 for his
portrayal of a drunk newspaper man in
"Johnny Eager.''
DC9, Marine Jet
Crash T er1ned
Worst in State
LOS ANGELES !AP l -The fiery
crash Sunday of an Air \\lest DC9 and a
~farinc Corps 4 fighter in the San
C:abric l Mounlains killing 49 prrsons 1vas
the worsl California air disaster involv ing
a commercial airlin<'r,
There \1·as no si gn oi survivors from 43
passengers and five c re 1v m embers
alxlard the non-slop Los Angeles-to-Salt
Lake City jetliner.
California"s worst air tragedy -
n1ilitarv or co mmercial -O<.'Curred on
J une 25, 1965 when a jel transport from
El Toro 111.arine Corps Air Station v.·ith
Okina\1·a-bound fl1arinc$ slammed into
the Santa Ana fl1ountains 40 milf'!
sou theast of U!s Angeles. killing all 84
persons aboard.
The lughest dea!h tnll 1n \'olv1ng a com-
mercial air hnpr prior to Sunday v.·as 38
()n .Jan 18. 1969 A United Air Line.,
Boeing 727 plunged into lhe Pacific Ocean
minules alter takNH from Los Angeles
Jn1ern;itjonal ll1rp0r!
Five davs C'arller on .r:in. 13 a ~c<in
rlana\'ian A1rlu1es Sy.~lcm Jet crashed !ate
Santa f.1onica Bay v.·hile coming in for a
landing al l..-0~ Angeles International. Of
the 45 per~on.~ abuarcl . JD survil'ed.
Al!'.!$ pcr!ion~ on a Haw1hornc Nevada
Airlines llC:l died Feb. 18. 1969 ""hen the
aircraft fie\\" into the sidt: of Ml. Whitney
during 40-mi!e-per·h'our headwind.
CAN be a
man's best friend
DEALS for DAD
SEE DOM UCITI
FOR DIAMONDS,
REMEMBER, A
DIAMOND IS A
GOOD
INVESTMENT
ONLY IF YOU BUY
IT RIGHT! MAN"S 1.42 CT, DIAMOND
~~n:C::'c!:~;.~~-~····· $499
MAN·s GINUINI
BLUE s;AR SAPPHIRE
!.~;::.... -·-----·-$ J 99
EXPERT
WATCH
REPAIR
l)QHI ON
t 'ron• Page 1
FISH FRY ...
mercial Di vision.
The Lions Club Youth Av.'ard was given
10 the F'uture F'armers of America.
Thirty bands marched in Saturday's·
parade and there 1o1•ere a total of 140
parade entries. .
About !he same number of people al·
tended this year"s fis h fry and related"
r.1•ents as last year, but the Lions club.
earned at least $10,000 more.
After e.xpenses are paid. about $.1D.OOO
1v!H be donated by the Lions Club to
1·arious activities and organizations 1n the
Harbor Area , A total o[ $285,000 in dona·
\ions has been made over the past year.
Antho1iy Rossi
Rosary Slated
Funeral rites 11'i!l be tonight and Tues,
day for 13-year Costa fllesa resident
Anlhony Rossi, a World War I veteran
acUve in. several organizations.
Mr. Rossi, of 696 llamillon St . died
Thursday_
Rosary will be at 7:30 o"clock tonight .111t
SL Joachim's Church, v>'ith Requiem
J\1ass at the same location at g a.m.
Tuesday. Interment is lo follow at Good
Shepherd Cemetery, Huntington Beach.
r..1r. Rossi was a member of the Eagles.
Lodge for 50 years an d also belonged lit.
the Veterans of Foreign Wars and the_
American Legion Pos!.
Survh'ors include his 11·ife Orso!ina,
sons Albert and Alexander. both of New
York, and Raymond. of Costa Mesa;
sisters flfary Tomasini, also of New York,
Pieina Sifansetto, of fllorongo \'alley;
seven grandchildren and one great·
grandchild.
Bel l Broadway J\1ortuary is handling ar-
rangements.
France Aloin T esting
Resu111 es iu Pacific
PAPEETl·:, Tah11 i 1L P!l -F ra11rl"
rrsu111en ils progra1n of nur1car 1e~t
blasts 111 !he Pacific Saturday. ~r111ng orr
a ")ow pov.·ered"' de1'/l'e al 1\lururoa Aloi/
al>oul 800 rniles '>outhe:is1 of hl"rr.
The official announccn1cnt said onl~· the
blast was triggered 01rr J]IP f\!11ruro.:i
Lagoon but unofficial repnrts here ~aid it
involved a test of a delonator f0r a
nuclear bomb.
MAN 'S .30 CT. DIAM<>ND
Wiit• tol4 $9 5
PUMlllS OOM ucm
*OUR UNUSUAL MUNEY BACK
DIAMDND GIJARANfil
Whtn you buy I 411moncl fr.m u1 we
wlll guar.n ... th1t diamond to 1ppr1lq
at 40% MORE thin you paid for It or
your money Nck. Can you do 11 well
elNwhert? COMPARE.
• FIND IT HERE FIRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
LOAN, BUY, SELL, TRADE COMI IN AND BROWSE AROUND
1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -lttween Harbor I Broadway
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Sad~haek Today's Final
N. Y. Stoek11
V~L. "'4, NO. 135, • SECTIONS, 48' PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 7, 1971 • TEN CENTS
• • ar run I na 01 e
El Toro Jet
Hits Liner;
49 Perisl1
From Wire Ser\'ices
A Hughes Air West jetliner with 49
~r&ons aboard coHJded "'ith 1 Marint
Corps jetfighter at 12,000 fee t Sunday
gpirali ng straight down into the rugged
San Gahriel Mountains like a shooting
1t.ar.
Only one person -the FIB Pha ntom ·~
radar interceptor (lf fl cer who parachuted
- survived.
Investigators \\'ere on the scene today,
faced with the grim task of removing and
Identifying bodies and al~tt the more
puuling question to be anS\1-'ered: what
b:;i ppened?
No clues were av ailable lo ind icate why
tlw: two a ircraft collided, the Et Toro
Marine Corps Air Station jet knifing Int o
the other's fuselage, in almost pe rfectly
clear weather.
Air traff ic controller.'J spotted them on
radarscope.'J simult aneously. s e c on d s
before the tmpact and neither pilo\
radioed any pre-collision warning. firs~ L. Christopher E. Schiess, 24, nf
Salem, Ore., declined to discuss the col~
lis ion wilh sheriff"s investigators afte r
being treated at Santa Teresita Hospital
in Duarte. Ma rine Corps Capl. Larry Karch, an El
Toro MCAS-based safety officer. lillewlse
11aid he could not comme_nt ~ the crasb
pend ing a military invest1gat1on.
The 98·passengcr t"·in engine Hughe.'J
jetltner was climbing toward normal
ope.rating altitude when the plant:s
smashed together at 12,000 feet, roughly
over Azusa. .
Baggage, mail, pa pi;;rs . and. other 1tem1
new through the hole Jn JlS side.. .
"I heard a loud explosion and thought it
was a sonic boom , bu t th~n ~ looked UP,
and sew thi~ airplane spiraling down.
said Mike Zarate . 45, a U.S. Forest
Service fire dispatcher. . .. And then il hit the mount a1n!op. lt
rt.mi nded me of w~en the K~~n1kazes
were coming at me 1n the war, he ad·
ded. 1 few witnesses reali7.cd l"'o P anes
we.rt invol ved, most saying t~cy .1hought
!he jetliner ti11d explod ed ln midair .
One was Los Angeles County Super~nr
Court Judge Hnmcr Bell. of ~1nnrov1a,
v.•ho heard lhe loud impacl and ran
outside. " ·d "1t was like II shoou ng sta.r, sa1
J udie Bell. -A trio shooting photographs . ln. the
!Ice.ni l" area. John Roller, 19. his sister
Diane Byers, 21 and her ~us.baa?. Steve,
23, also witnessed the 1et11ner t dea th
dive. "We mu~t have watched the.m fall for ~II seconds before they disappeared
bebitid the ridge." said Byer~. 1 ~ude~t
at · Northern Arizon a Un1vers1ty in
Flag:ota fl. Roner .'Ja id they first heard the Jnud
boom. "h 'd d "Then we saw black smoke. ea.,. e .
I •·And suddenly theri~ were airp~anes all
cver the sky and we could hear sirens. I Gary Butter!, 17. an Azusa High School
I junior was the first to reacn the sct:ne.
racini 15 miles on his trail bike motorcy·
cle to the source of the smoke .
He could see nine bodie! am ong the SO
killed -including two babies -and he
wB.! .sickened. ··11 wa11 really de &lroyed ," said Butler!!.
''The.rt: was nothing left. lt was Pfetly
bad and made me not feel too,. good.''
Extremely heavy tog today hampered effor~ to remove bodies from the char·
red scene of horror in the Yan Tassel
Can)'on area ol Angeles National Forest
"We can't get ()lit helicopttNI Into tbe
11tea until the log clears and th11l
m!grrt nol be unUI . n~n," said a Loi I Ar'lcele• C<iunty Shtr1ff ~ spokeirman.
Fllght 706. which had taken off h'cln
Los Angele!'! 1n1ernational Alrpor1 at 5:50
I p.m .• bouod for Salt \Ake City from
I
PallCO. Wash., with various at~s en
mute, ended traglciily about 10 minutes
1fte.r t.akeoff. ·'I1le crash site is aim06t ln acctsslble by
l .. t.' -ih~I A command po!il was establ 11 t:\l n ~
~rk pl1yground, where bl ack and w.hltt
J.herlff's cars made a grim contrast to
:andy-striped poles holding ba•ketblll
bactboafds. ~t11rtne Corpg inve.sllgalor• wert lt!IJ I hoping the unidentlfled pilot of the 32.1rd
, Ftstlttr Attack Squadron aurvlved but i lhli .~ppear«I 1lim lnde<d.
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One Will Reign
Fivt pretty girls have been p icked as candidates for the first annual
competition to select a queen for the Fiesta La Christianita Parade.
Kickoff of the fiesta is JuJy 10. The queen project was instituted by
the San Clemente Jaycees. From left to right are Sheri Capitain. 18;
Sue Chienobieff. 19; Pat Currey, 19 {seated center); Kar en Jacobson,
19; and Barbara Cheatum, 18.
Board to Examine Plans
For 3 Scl1ool Campuses
Plans for three school campuses in the
Capistrano Uniried School District wiH bt
examin ed by lhe Board nf Trustees a ~
tonight'.'J 8 p.m. meeting in ~rra Schoo!,
Clemente Roa<ls
Get Sealing Job
San Clemente's worst slreel~ began
receiving a coat of preserving slurry seal
la le last week in a city projecl which
might extend the life of at least 50
crumbling roadways.
The Mi11sion SIWTY Seal Company
under a $20.000 contract, is applyi ng the
mixture of pavlng oil, sa nd and cement
to the surfaces of the rqadwa ys.
But at besl, say city engineering
dep.art.ment spokesma n, the capping will
preserve the aging road! for about •
year.
The funds for the project are being
paid under a new city policy whe:reby
stale gas. tu rebates can be u&ed for
street maintenance 'snd repairs, instead
of major construction, e1clU!ively. •
Capistrano Beach.
Trustees will be asked to request bid.~
for the dcmo!ttlon fl/ La~ Pa lmas
Elementary school"s pre-Field Art s1rur-
tures and to approve preliminary draw-
ings for the structures tha t "'ill replace
them .
The boa rd also "'tll be as ked to revie w
plans for the Richard Henry Dana
Elementary School add ition "'hlch has
not yet been authorized for funding by
the state. Jn a memorandu m to the
board, Joe Wimer, Director o l
Administrative Services, suggested this
project be funded with local bond money.
Consl deraHon also will be given t:i the
Capl!trano Schoo!, the sHe of I.ht: old San
Juan Capjstrano high schoOI. The board
will M asketl to con11lder comm issioning
an architectural firm to develop a master
plan for the site.
Preliminary plaru are to use the site as
an administrative cenl.er for the entire
district.
Also on the agenda is an evaluation of
lhe kindergarten program in the
district, the reading program, and the
mentall y gifted minor program.
San Clemente Affected
'
2 Firemen
Injured
In Blaze
Two San Clemenlt titemen were in-
jured early Sunday morning as they
fought to control a blaze al a surfboard
shop which killed a watchdog and did an
estim11ted $5,000 damage.
Another weellend fire bl•cKened fou r
acrc.'J north of lhe cily.
The tw o men , volunteer fireman Phil
Peter and regular fire fighter Sheldon
Schmit, were given emergency treatment
at South Coast C.Ommunlty Hospital for
their injurie!'I and released. Peter, who i!'I
San C\emente'11 city engineer, required
six stitches for a cut on his wrist. He Is
back at work today. Schmit tore a layer
of skin from tbe entire inside of his hand
when he fell while flgtiting the flames at
Wetzel'1 Surf Shop, 1200 N. El Camino
Real.
Fire Chief Merton Hackett said the
' early morning fire waa confined to one
room of the building, although lhrtt ot)ler
room!'! sustained e1teruive s mo k e
damage,
The watch dog, a large collie, was tra~
ped In the building and overcome by
smoke, HackeU said. 'Jbert were no peo--
ple In the INildinf owned by Edward
Ryland, whtD the fire 11tarled.
Chief HMkett speculated Urie blk?4!
began from a smolderiag cigarette. that
may h~ve been left by one of several men
who left the buildinJ. earUer in lhe even·
Ing. Hackett e.!ltimated the structural
damage to the build.Ing 1t $3,000 with an
sdditional ,2,()JO damege to t~ contt:nts.
A leCOnd major wttlw>d fire started
Fri~ay evening and burned tor an hour on
the hill above Avenida Vaquero near I.be
reservoir. Chief Hackett said the blaze,
which eventu1lly blackened. four acres of
!he dry brush, m1y have re.!ulted from
some small beys playing with ·matches.
He said witnel.!es reported &et'ing two
youngster11 in the area prior to the fire.
Chief Hackett said 18 firemen respond·
ed lo the fire call and he crt:dited eiglil
l'ligh school boy11 who live in the area with
hel ping to bring the tire under control. He
sa id the youths brought shovel!'! and
y,·orked beside tne flremtn until the fire
was out.
ACTOR STRICKEN
Vin Heflin
Van Heflin, 60,
Suffers Heart
Attack in Pool
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Van Hefl in, ·60,
who suffered a heart attack while ta king
his regular 20-lap morning swim in his
apartment pool, was listed in critical con·
di ti on today.
The veteran character actor had no
pulse and wa s not breathing, witnesses
said, v;hen the fire department re11cue
crew arrived Sunday morning. Rescuers
admini11tered oxygen and external heart
mnssage and Heflin began breathing.
A 1pokesman at. Cedars of ' U:banon
Ho11pital said early today· that Heflin re·
mained in critical condition in the in·
lcnslve care ward.
J. W. Parlc!'I. auperintendent of the
Sunset Marquee aparlment comple:c, said
Heflin swam 20 laps around the pool
every morning "like clockwork."
Sunday morning apartment handyman
Emitt Jeclcs. 62,. saw HeD.in ga.'Jp and
grab a rung of the swimmJng pool ladder.
Jeck.s pulled him out of the water and
Park! cil.lled the fire department.
7th U.S. Troop Dies
SALONlKA , Greece (UPI \ -A seventh
American servicerTian died early today
from injuries received in a Sunday night
collisffin between a U:S. military truck
and a Greek tourist bus. Eight Gree ks,
including the bus driver, were also badly
injured and taken to Salonika Municipa l
Hospital.
Clemente Parking Lot
Gets Temporary Delay
Worll on a proposed lOQ.car parking lot
at San Clemente's North Beach area is
stalled temporarily, city aides saki today.
But paving cf the new lot will take
place as soon sa aurplus asphalt material
is available, they added.
The lot. to be built for beach u1ers
under a new · process first tested last
year. will occupy •triangular section ol
.city land once earmarked for a $&50,000
youth recreation center.
During the constru ction hlatus, parks
and recreation commissioners urged city
councilmen to abandon the construction
plans, and instead plaot the acreage In
tur{.
Councilmen recenlly ''received And
filed " the commission action.
Jn the meantime, city crew11 will wait
until a major pav ing job on a section of
Ola Vista is complete before spreading
quicklime Into the parking lot soil base..
T~ lime treatm ent, first used at
another beach lot last surhmer, create11 a
crude concrete for a base, eltmlnatlng the
higher costs of aggregate soil , ...
Because of the city labor in the project,
construction ai11!11 will be reduced -
achieving th e figure where bid.! will not
be necestary ror the project.
Materials for the project, councilmen
learned , would amount to about '3,000.
The date for the job's completion has
a:t\11 been aet for the July 4 holiday
weekend,
High Court Decision Due Clemente Police
Probe. 2 Thefts
A Clise currently scheduled to rl!ach lbe
U.S. Supreme Court l'OU'ld yield a half·
million-dollar windfall to San Clemente's
city coffen, but it all() woWd come with
tome hard and fast labe.18.
C1ty Manager Ke.n Carr said thl.'J wttk
that lf the Suprtme Court dectdn thst a
simple. majority passes a bond e.lectlon,
two ls.wt& which f1iled to muster lwo
t.hirds btrt last tprina cooJd be built witl:a
bond money.
"But in my opinion." the city manager
a.aid. "the funds .tould only be spen~ on
thl!: projects specified on lilt ballot"
Thus, if ttie offlcial'1 interPTtlatlon
holds, San cttmenll would have amplt
funds for a clubbou5e and btacb improve..
men ts.
But any 1urplus bond funds could not
be u9ed to short up crlmped ca tegories
elsewhere In the. city 's proposed budget.
The court's decision, official s have
~aid, would be relroacUve to a date le.it
Novt'mbt't' when a case from West
Vlrglnla had Its first verlict. tben went on
the iippeal clrculL
'T'he local 1le<:ticn took ploce April 20
and. yielded slim ma jority votes Clfl. the
clubholl~ and beat.h revenue me~s.
Two other sep11r11te ltem!I, p~
and development of nt ighborhood "rb
and 1 ~.ooo youlh recreation oill&er,
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railed to wln evtn a slmple majority.
Members or the high court wert u.
peeled to rule on the bond m1jorlty ques-
Uon before the long 1um~r recea.,.
In the meantime, l})t clly of San
t'leme.nte Is • nearing the extens\cn
leadlin• for bidt cn the commun!t)'
clubhouse.
contractor ~y McCaslln hu told
councilmen QMil hll bid Qfter for about
~".30.000 in coutrucUon, would bold until
the end of this month.
Councllmtn had agree.d to withhold any
1w1rd of contract unW settlement of the
Suprece Court case.
San Clemente police are lnVtJtia:attag
two weekend thefts in which 1 set of golf
cluba was liken from a parked auto aod
11 stone .statue wu removed trom a
por<:h.
The golf equipment was reported miQ.
Ing Friday afternoon by Don Schmlctt, of
211 Aven.lda San Pablo. He told police the
c;ar .was not locked when the club.1 were
taken, probably between 10 ; a.m. and
noon. The golf bag. choe.s and cluba were.
valued toUilly 1t ~14.
A large stone 1taiu. "•lued at Sl25 w9
reported stolen from the home ol Mtldrtd
P. Goutbey, 414 Catie Monterey. SM. aaid
the replica or "&becca" wu La.ken
1<>metime Saturday t venin;.
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Capo Man
Credited
111 Rescue
By PATRICK BOYLE
01 tllto Oait1 ~Ill! SltH
A San Juan Capistrano service stat.ion
atten.dant _was credited today with
alerting poltce to the kidnaping of a Long
Beach man after the attendant heard
cries for help coming from the trunk oft car.
The attendant, whose name bas not
been released by aulhorities, was on duty
at 3 a.m, at the Enco Service .Station
locate? at the J~ipero Serra exit of ~
San Diego Freeway, An auto occupied by
t•A'o men e~lered the station for gas and,
after hearing the screams coming from
lhe trunk, the attendant took down the
license number of tbe auto and called the
county sheriff.
Deputies ran a check of the car and
alerted Long Beach police that it was
from their jurisdiction. The. auto was
traced lo a Long Beach automobile repair
sh?P·. whose owner had been reported
m1ss1ng by hill wife at I a.m.
The vehicle was.stopped at 3:40 a.m.
by San Diego sheri ff's deputies south or ~I r.-1ar who, upon opening the trunk.
discovered .s gun and several blood
stains. Tbe two oc cupant! of the auto
Monroe Jones, 23, and Edward J. Co/e1
20, ~t_h of L:is Ange les, were arrested oii
susp1c1on of auto theft and kidnaping.
The missing -body shop owner. Daniel
Barnett, 66., was found about two hours
later. ~y the California Highway Patrol w~lk.ing along Interstate 5 sooth of.
Oceanside . He was bruised Bnd bleeding
officers said, as a result of two aeveri beatings. ·
~an Diego sherilf.'s deputies said Barnet~ is in .Tri·Clties Hospita l in
Oc;eans1de and 'is /isled in fair condition.
Au_lborities said Barnett's wife reported
hearing a scu.ff/e coming from the shop
behind lhe coupl e's home at about l a.m.
When she went to investigate, sbe found
only her husband's broken glasses and
bloodstains on the floor.
A spokesman for the San Diego Sher·
lff's Department .said Barnett after the
Initial beating at his shop, ~a! aga:ia
beaten with fists and a wre nch before
being thrown from the stolen car.' He roll·
ed down an embankment into a pool of
water, the spokesma n said. an d finally
made his way back to the freeway.
Authorities cou ld not say wha t the
motive fo rlhe kidnapi ng was. Th e twct
suspect5 have been retu rned to Long
Beach for arraignmen t on the charges of
kld naping, assault "'ith inten t to commit
murder and gr.and theft auto. ·
Pot Luck Slated
For .'Help Line'
The Saddleback Valley counseling
service which operates the area's "Help
L!ne·· will hold a pot.Ju ck supper June 13
to introduce its new counselors.
The meal and meeting wiU be held at
S:30 p.m. in the club room of Mount of
Olives Lutheran Church, 24m Chrl!ant.a
Drive, Mission Viejo. The Help Line was
rounded and is supported by the Sad·
dleback Ministerial Association and pro-
vides counseling for people who call 83().
2522.
Following the supper, several member•
of the service will present a olie-act play,
"Quiet Crie!," a drama aOOut suicide
prevention.
Oruge
Weadler
The weatherman predJds cloudy
skies tonight and Tuesday morn--
ing with a chance of hazy sunshine
ln the afternoons. Highs today and
TuesdtiY at the beaches f7 and m.
land 73. Ulws around 51.
INSIDE TODAY
Sailtng t'VeTtts in tht' Orange
• County Empire Se a Scout
Otvmpfc1 nrt' schtdMltd for chis
wctktnd. See Boating, PO(}f! 16. •
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Z DAILY PILOT
Air West
Crash Deatl1
Toll Li sted
SAN. FRANCISCO (AP) -llughes Air
V.'t.st today released the following !!st of
cf'f'Wm•n and passengers on a DC9
airliner that roll ided with a military jet
Sunday and crashed near Los Ang eles :
Crew
L Capt. Theodore Nicolay, '50, Seattle,
pilot.
2. F°lt'll Offl~r Pri~ Bruner, 49, Stat-ue . ropllot.
l. Hoattss Helena Koskimies, 30, Stat.
Ur.
4. Hos tess J oan Pluv\aar, 34 , Seattle.
5. Hostess Patricia· Shelton, 28, Entiat,
\\lash.
Passengers
Destination Salt Lake City unlu1
otherv;•ise noted.
6. P. Allen, Salt Lake City
7-8. ~lrs. R. Bird of Carlsbad, Calif.,
11.nd infant Bird, destlnahon Boise, Idaho.
9. S. Boss.
10. Mrs. R. Carwn.
11-12. Mrs. R. Davidson and Miss K.
Davidson, age 2.
13-14 . ~frs. J. Dean and J. Dean, 2-year·
old boy, destination Pa!co, Wash.
15. P. Dunn of Salt Lake City.
16-17. A. Espitia and J . Esp.ilia of Mex-
ieo. destination Boise.
18. John Forgy of Tarzana, Calif.,
dest.ination Lewiston, Idaho.
19. K. Gabel, destination Boise.
20. f\.frs. H. Gareia, destination
Uwiston.
21. Mrs. M. Garcia of Loa Angela, wife
cf an Air West vnploye. n . G. Hunter of Salt Lake City.
13-24. Mr. and Mrs. J . Johnson, destina·
tion Boise,
~-Mr. F. Kalbjlei.sch, destination
Lewiston.
26. Arnold Kaufman of An.I Arbor,
Mich.
7:7. J . Mangraa of Salt Lake City.
28. McCall, no fir1l name, deilint tlon
Pasco.
29. Dale ?o.1Uler of Walla \\'alla, Wash.,
destinalioo Lewiston.
30. T. Morris.
JI. Miss J . McCroden of Napa, Idaho,
destination Boise.
""33. Miss J. Potter. age 6, and Master
M. Potter, age 7, destination Lewiston.
34~36. C. Pyke, F. Pyke and W. Pyit,
all or Salt Lake City.
37..JB. Miss M. Rangel and P . Rangel
of Mexico, traveling with A. and J.
E!pilia, No. 16-17 above, to Boise.
39. J . Reeves, a Union OJI Co. employe
in the Los Angeles area, destination
Pasco.
40. R. Schoenhals of Salt Lake City.
41. E. Smith of Salt Lake City.
42. Miss M. Sublc of Salt Lake Cit)'.
43. Miss K. Thomas, traveling wllh
mother, Mrs. R. Carson, No. 10 above.
44. R. Vincent of Boist, d@stlnation
Boise.
45. Ted Wilk!rson of Melba, Idaho,
destination Boise.
46. D. Zillman of the Los Af11el es art:a,
deslinaUon Lewiston,
47. N. Hess, New Yorlc City, destination
Pasco.
4M9. IdenUfications withheld pending
notification of relatives.
Lag una Writers
Hold Readings
Three La guna Beach writers. potls
.Donald Justice and Rebert Peters and
Ronald Suken1k. author of the novels
''lip'' and "Out." will participate in a
public benefit reading in Los Angeles
Sa1urday.
The 8 pm. presentation at 751 South
Bronson Ave. ~·1U benefit Ka1ros.Los
Angeles. ~·h1ch sponsor~ groups and
St'minars and has been Identified as
Southern Califomla';, Esslen.
Other poets particip11ting Yi'ill be Ann
Stanford, Gerald l..ocklln and Don Eulert.
A donation or $1.50, Qr ft for studenu,
will be asked.
DAILY PILOT
CU.l't9~ c;oMf PUILll+UNC". CCMP.AM.'f
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~. JUN 7, 1'71
•
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: "
A Mother's Fear
.•~. ..
,
•• •. ..
The conrern or a mother for her child is mirrored in the face or this
South Vietnamese \Yoman. A caravan making a pilgrimage had at the
time been attacked by North Vietnamese in Quang Nam Province, 25
miles south of Da Nang.
Three Cosmonauts Dock
With Orbiting Station
MOSCOW (UPI) -Three Soviet COS·
monauts docked U1elr Soyuz 11 spacecraft
with the orbiting sci@ntific station Salute
today .and three imbed into Salyut lo
establish the first orbital 11pace labora·
tory -.a scientific station as big as a
small parlor a nd complete wlth chairs.
The Soviet Tass News Agency 511id the
laboratory was about 60 feet long and 12:
feet in diameter, wil.h a total weight of 25
tons. Telrv-llion transmissions shoy,·ed a
room large enougti for thf: cosmonauts to
11pln. weightlessly, healf over hel!ls
wilhout touching: any of the equipment
lining the walls.
The feat climaxed a 49-day effort that
included .a linkup April 24 between the
three-man Soyuz 10 .and Salute. But Soyui
10 remained linked for only five and .a
half hours and hurried back to earth.
Indicatians at the lime were that one of
the spacemen might have suffered space
sickne5s Salute has orbited unmanned
for the past seven weeks.
It wu the first time a crew hu been
transported to an unmanned scientific
station in apace, and scientific sources 1n
~1oscow said one or more manned
space11hips may go aloft soon to join the
spacE" complex as prelude to a permanent
orbital laboratorv.
'"The crew of Soyuz ll ha~ boarded the
station Salute." Tass said. "A Soviet
nl.anned orbital scientific station is func-
tioning in space" Ho~·ever. a television
broadcas1 from the \;:iboratory said
Viktor Patsayev and Vladislav Volkov
scrambled through the linking pass and
commander Georgl Dobrovol.sk y re-
mained behind to .!IUpervi~ the nperalion.
A Soviet television round !able of scien·
lists and cosmonauts discussed the
achievement for Russian audiences.
"~t are witne.s.sing a qualitatively new
i:.lep in cosmonautics -a long term
orbital station tiss bttn built," Space
scientUt Boris Ralsehenback laid the
roundtab\e.
"The questions of scientific technical
control of such S'lations present big com-
pllcaUons •.. this st.Ilion «hould permil
multiple dock.log. They must so metimes
re«lve not one but another ship • , , and
it is necessary to control the docked ap-
paratus."
Tass said.the combined weight of Soyui
11 and Salute was more than 25 tons.
T wo Brush Fires
Burn 120 Acr es
Dry, explosive brush plagued Orange
County firemen on two rf'Of\tA over the
\\·eeiend as blaze~ burned more than 120
acres.
Sunday afternoon a fire blamed on an
ll·year-0ld Mission Viejo boy playing
with matches burned over 20 acres at the
north end or Las Alisos Road in El Toro.
Ten county and state fire companie!I
subdued the blaze in two hours while
dodging rattlesnakes. "For a time the
snakes were more dangerous than the
fire," said one firefighter.
Saturday, 100 acres of heavy brush
v.·ere destroyed in Tonner Canyon north
of Brea. The blaze at one time threatened
the Firestone Boy Scout Camp. More
than 200 men battled the fire for t\\'O
hours before controlling it
One prisoner-firefighter was bitten by
a rattlesnakt but is rf'ported in good
condition today.
Mesa Skin Diver
Injured in Sur f
A Costa Mesa man v:ho was injured in
a skin diving accid@nt ofr Laguna's Mos!!
Street Beach Sunday morning is reported
in satisfactory condition at South Coast
Community Hospital today.
Roy Boyette. 35, of 1800 Pomona A\'e.
was caught in hea vy surf shortly .a.fter 11
a.m. Sunday. JXllic e reported. Pulled
a.shore by lifeguards he v.·as given oxygen
and transported to the ho.!lpilal wher! hf'
remained overnight in the intensive care
unit.
A hospital spokesman !!aid Boyette•s
condition was mueh improved this morn-
ing ind he was to be tranafened to
regular care.
l'11 ~1d Allo~ated
La.guna Coun cil OKs Displci y 1'1odel
The Laguna Beach City Council has
•srttd to allocate $$,000 for the C<ltl·
1truction o( a wori.ing bMe modtl of the
downtown buin, to be used for planning .
coordlnaUon and 1naly1ls o( specific
developmt11t proposals.
CouncUmen were unanimous ln their
1upport ot Pl1nnlng Olreetor Wayne
Moody's recommendation that the city
undertake to pay the full coat of such a
base model. estimated at $4.700.
The Cltiltns' Town Planning A.uoci•·
lion haa pledged •t.000 to pay for an \n-
ltlal aegmimt of a downtown model and
the Downtown Business Asaocl1Uon f!llsn
seemed ready 10 contribute, Moody told
the council.
However. he said, It w11 doubtful suf·
fl clent funds could be ralr.ed to C(lmplele
the modtl. II would aeem more ap-
propriate for the city to unclerwrl~ the
tull cost, Moody ~•Id, lt~avlng the prlvate
organluUons b'te to use their money to
consliuct modtls of proposals for build·
ings. mells and other improvements to
be set into lht base fO"r study.
The council agreed. \\'ilhout a dissen-
ting voice.
The propostd model will be constructed
to 40 feet. Total dimensloni of the model
maker Leon HafOin to a ac< of one lnch
to 40 feel. Total dimensions otfht m-Odet
v.•111 be about 1tvtn feet by six feet and It
will be made in thrtt sections lor ease of
handling. Moody said. ~1ove11.blt ll@ms
i;uch as buildings, lrtu. people and the
like ctn easilv be 1ttach!d or remov@d
,.nlf relocated "on sueh a modtl. the plan·
ner pointed out. Rnd it provides a
1o1·ork.3ble visual tool for study of proposed
devcloomenu.
Tht bR~l': model will Include toporraph)'
a nl'I natural features. road layout end
b1ock·forrn txi.iling building!.
Allegheny Plane Down
Prop jet Hit,s PoweT Line; 29 Feared Dead
runway v.·ere struck, then the 'rl'reckagt
crashed ill two big pieces. NEW HAVEN, COTin. (AP ) -An
Allegheny Airlines propjet with 31
perso11s aboard t1it a power line , ripped
through so1ne .sumn1er cottages and
crasht'd into mar5hland near Tweed .New
ltaven Airport today.
Son1e reports put the death toll &.!I tugh
I S 29.
James ?o.talarky, aiJi>ort manager, said
29 persons were killed, and Yale New
Haven llO!pilal said it wu certain al
least 25 we.re dead.
The Convalr 58(1 hit the ulillty line a:i it
approached Tweed New Hav,n Airport in
hazy fog , according to M11larky. f ive
beach cottages near the end ol the
Allegheny said 28 pajs~ngers, including
Jwo infants, and a crew of three v.'!rll:
aboard the regul;irly scheduled fllght ,
'rl'hich originated in \\'ashin~ton, DC.
Police said it was bellcvl'd rnost of the
cottages ~·ere vac<in!
Freigl1t Train Hits, Cai·;
Sleepn1g Motori st Saved
Allegheny headquarters ln P1Hsburgh
al first said 29 pt'rson.s wert' aboard. bul
U1e passenger list laler 11as rr1·1.sed
up14'ard to include two 111rant.s .
The plane was f"light ~8S. v.·h1ch
criginated in 'iYaslllngton, DC .. and had
f\ov.·n to New Lundon, Conn. IL was lo
have rontinued on to Ne "·purl f\ews, Va,
lollowing the stop at Nl'w Haven .
Most of the bodies "ere foun<l st ill
strapped in their seats in tht' burned
fuselage. Another large piece of the plantt
was found about 150 feel away. The freight train was late and if It
hadn't been, James Adrian Shlllkland
v.·ouldn't be alive. today to sit in his
Orange County Jail cell and reflect on
v.·hat he would have look:ed like if ht had
bean silting in his car at 3:35 p.m.
::iunday.
That's when the 46-car southbound
freight chewed up SbaniJand '.!I car and
the tow truck that was trying to aet it off
the tracks at Oso Parkway in Mis.!lion
Viejo, just 15 minutes after the sleeping
Shank.land was dragged out of the vebi·
cle.
''He wa11 dead drunk." sheriff's Capltlin
J ames Broadbelt charged today. "He
didn't know a thing about what was going
on and he 'd h11ve been there when the
train came if our deputies hadn't gotten
there first."
Dtputi!s found the 31-year-old Twltin
man sprawled on the front s@at of bis car
\\'hich was straddled on the tracks
between the north end of Carnine
Capistrano and the IOUtb tnd cf Cabot
Road.
They got the tow truclt on the scene but
the 3;35 p.m. freight barreling through at
nearly 70 miles an hour ended any bope.!1
they had of gelling the still sleeping
Shankland's car off the tracks.
The train smashed tbe auto int. ebli·
Police Checking
Death of SA Boy
Toxicologieal te1ts were •rdered \Oday
by the Orange County Coroner's Office to
determine the cause of death of a young
Santa Ana man wbose body was found
during the weekend in rougb terrain near
Williams Canyon.
The remains found by a resident who
was riding his horse along mountain
trails in the brush-covered area have
been identified as tho.!lt ef J obn Mark
Barry, 19, of Tustin.
It is believed that Barry's death «·
curred about May 28, sbortly after be
was reported missing by anxious
rel atives.
Orange County Sberiff's homicide in·
vestigators loday \\'ere scouring the a.rea
in search for clues to the young man·s
death. Thev refused to comment on the
possibility ·that Barry may be a murder
victim.
Budget Session
Set in Clemente
The San Clemente City Count-ii will
hold a budget study session tonight at 7
o'clock to discuss the controversial issue
of pay raises for the city employes.
Cou ncilmen and staff ha\'e repeate:dly
said funds do not exist for any substantial
raise;,,
llowe:ver, pohce a nd public safety
J>('rsonnel are asking for a minimum t ()
percent pay hike. Other city workers
have requested a cost-0f-li\'lng raise of
7.5 percent.
The session will be held in the con-
fe rence room next to council chambers.
\l ion, .!lent a fender from the vehicle SOO
reet into the air to land indtta away from
the sheriff's patrol car and heavily
damaged the tow truclc witb the other
flying wreckage.
Shank.land was boeked on charg@s of
malicious injury lo a railroad. Deputies
today said other charges may be filed
against the Tustin man.
There were no injurit11 in the Sunday
afternoon mishap. Railroad officials will
check th! lead engine of the freij:ht today
for possible damage.
Father Slays
Wife, Himself
In Anaheim
An 11-year-old girl and her little
brother are orphaned today, arter a
de.!lperale bul futile try to keep a
despondent. murder and suicide-bent
father out of the family home.
Orin J . Lowry, 39. of Torrance, finally
for.Ced his way into the Anaheim area
residence at 9721 Kennelly Lant, killing
his ex-wife and hims@IL
Their divorce was Unal only a few days
ago.
Coroner's deputies !aid Lowry ap-
parently wa iled for his former wife
Janel, 31, to leave for work.
ConfrOnled outside, Mrs. Lowry ran
back in , followed by her former hwband.
She. tried to fight him ofr and keep him
out as he rushed the door .
The despondent man finally forced his
way in. despite resistance by t.trs. Lowry
and Il-year11\d daughter Audre~·. ac•
cording to sheriff's ho m i c i d e in-
vestigators.
Coroner·s deputies said he pulled a gun
and .shot her in the head, then put a bullet
into hi.s own brain.
The bodies Y/tre taken to Baggott's
Chapel of the Bells Mortuary in Anaheim
after the murder-suicide.
lnve..stlgators said that be 1 ides
daughter Audrey, the couple had a 9-
ycar11ld son, DY:ayne .
Class Schedule
Wor ksl1op Sla ted
A workshop has been caned by trustee~
of the San Joaquin Elementary SchoOI
Districl to discuss class scheduling at
Irvine Intermediate School.
The mti!ling \\'lli take place Tuesday,
June 8 at 4:30 p.m. in the adminisliath·e
annex, J4&'.Xl Sand Canyon Ave .• East
Jr\·ine.
The board approved a ch ange in cur.
rl culum at Irvin! School during its la.st
meeting but criUcized the Admlnislralion
for not bringing schedulint: p!8.IU1 to
trustees sooner.
Propos;ils for making the lv."<>-ytar in·
termediate program a more cohesh•e unit
~·ill be oulli.ned by the achoo! principal
John Del Monaco.
A SJXlkesman for Yale New \1111 en
llospital said ti...·o men and a \~·01nan \Vere
admitted arter the crash.
The woman was listed in sat1.~lactory
condition. No t·oriditlon reporl v.·as
available on the men.
The era.sh "looked and sotinded like an
atomic explosion." said N<1ncy Palmc1ri
of East Haven . \\'ho said she heard 1hrf'11:
e xplosicws as the plane lul the wire and
('fashed at the end of the runw11y.
f..1rs. flt ary Baldwin or East ll11ven ~aid
she \\'as at home. just get!lng out or her
car as the plane "sv.·ooped 1n so low 1 had
to duck."
She said the two engine plane !hen hit
the wires near her back yard and did
•·sort of a turn, then came do"·n and ex·
plo'.led ."
Martin Patricelli of East Haven said hr
saw a body fly out of the plane aod land
in a pond of water, "11,a1·ing his hands
fe verishly.·•
Joseph Horowitz, manager of a beach
club near the crash scene, said he heard
lhe plane but 'rl·as unable to see 11 111 the
heavy fog. Visibility \\'as esti1nated at
less than t11,·o n1iles.
Horowitz said fog hung over the beach
and he fina lly saw the craft plunge out o!
the sky. hit one of the cot tages and burst
into a ball of lames.
He said he heard screa1ns for help but
could11't gel near the flaming aircraft
th at finally stopped near his t!ub's tennis
courts.
Ex-depu ty W in s
Cour t Delay
In Theft Case
A new move by former Orange Coun!y
sheriffs deputy Frederick lr\'1ne lo sup-
press evidence supporting charges that
he burglarized the Mlssiun \'ie10 Collnlr}'
Club today Jed to a further delay of h11
Supe rior Court trial.
Presiding Judge Williarn C. Spelrs
delayed the trial dale until 1\ug, 2 After
learning rrom defPnSe :tltomcy Clifford
Schaffer thal 1! will be la1r July befnre
the District Court of Appe;ils rules on a
\Vril of 1nandatc filed by the Los Angeles
lawyer.
That ~·rit '"'a~ filed arter Super\('lr
Court Judge II. \\'alter S1e1ner nn ected
Irvine's bid for el1rnina1Lon of rv1de ncc
that the pros{'{'ut1on considers to be \'llal
in its case against the former law1nA n.
Irvine, 42, of La Jlabra. was a rrested
Sept 20 ~hortly a lter he and a fpllow
deputy allegrdly r;1n~ar~rd the coun1rv
club's golf shop of hQtLflr ,110(] golfing
eq u ipmen t v.h 1le lhr.r 11ere
"1noonhghl1ng" as ser11rity J!11r;ird<;
Arresting off1ccir<; said lr\'1ne., rflm·
p:in1on ~urrrndrred on !he spot h11t
l rl'ine. de<;crihed a~ hrr~trk, a~srr1rrllv
cnn1mandeered a p:Hrul l'<i1· anrl led h1 •
fllrmer ICOlli>a gtJf'<; on Ii "1lrl r hase th~!
Pnded in Riversidr Cnunlv 11 1th lr\·1nr
holding a. gun.'? his head ;ifid th reatening
to co n1m1t suicide.
He 1o1·as la1cr indicti>d h~· llir Ora n~&
County Grand Jury f>n ehArgcs /"I f p,r;iprl
lhefl, auto theft. b11rg\t1r~. re,.r111 ng
stolen property and conspiracy_
DIAMONDS CAN be a
man's best friend
DEAlS for DAD
MAN'S 1.42 CT. DIAMOND =.:-::· ::.t:..~ ...... $499
MAN'S MllUINI
11.UI STAI SAPPHIH
! .. -::0 .... L -····-·-$199
MAN'S .30 CT. DIAMOND
-· ..w ..... --$9 5
C.M.J.L XTRA
MAN'S .OS CT, DIAMOND RIND
:~:':.'.'.'. ....... $19.95
1002 ITEMS TO CHOOSE fROM
SIE DOM RACITI
FOR OIAMONDS.
REMIMBE R, A
DIAMOND IS A
COOD INVISTM!NT
ONLY If YOU IUY
IT RIOHT I
•
EXPERT
WATCH
RIP'AIR
DONI ON
PhJllllD DOM •ACITI
, ~u~u:.,~~A~0=~E:AcK
When yw t.uy a d iamond from u1 w•
will guar•n ... that dlamc"d to •ppralM
•I 40% MORE then ~u paid for it or
ytur monty Utk. C1n ~u do at wt ll
t1Mwhere1 COMPARE.
flND IT HERE flRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
LOAN, IUY, SILL, TU.DE COME IN AND BROWSE AROUND
1831 NEWl'OllT ILVD. PHONE 646·7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA• -a.tw.n Harbor & l ro•dway
•• -
7
i I
!
I
I
'
Laguna Beaeh
EDITION
Today's Fl•al
N.Y. Stoek8
VOL. 1>4, NO. 135, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORA NGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 7, 197 f TEN CENTS
Capo Station Attendant Foils Trunl( l(idnap
By PATRICK BOYLE
Ot lh<I D•ll~ ,11•1 Sl11t
A San Juan Capistrano service slation
attendant was credited today with
ak!rting polit'e lo the kldnaping of a Long
~each man after the a·uend'ant heard
cries for help coming from the trur.k of a
<:ar.
The attendant, whose name has nol
been released by authorities, was on duty
at l a.m. at the E:nco Service Station,
located at the Junipero Serra exit of the
San Diego Freeway. An auto occupied by
two men entered the station for gas and,
after hearing the screams coming fr om
th~ trunk, the attendant took down the
license number ol tbe auto and called the
county sheriff.
Deputies ran 1 check of the car and
alerted Long Beach police that it was
from their juriadlcUon.· The auto wu
• eris
Tax Increase Seen
Laguna Trustees
'f o Adopt Budget
A pre liminary budget calling for a 31-
cent increase in the school tax rate 1.1•i!I
be adop!ed by Laguna Beach school
trustees June 15, it ~·as agreed Sunday
rouo~·ing a half-day study session by the
board.
Old and new board members met
throughout the morning with school
princi pals 111d representatives of the
teachers' association to .study budget pro-
posals.
They agreed that a tentative budget
reflecting a $282.000 lnc~a.se shQuld be
approved at the next regular board
meeting lo provide the county with a
base figure by its publication deadl ine.
The budget will be subject to modifica·
lion until Aug. 15.
The in crease , which includes all bonded
lndcbtedness as well as operating costs,
but does not include teacher salary in·
crea.'>CS beyond automatic increments,
would raise the school district tax rate
from the cx isting $3.03 per $100 of assess-
ed va luation lo $3 34.
f ollowing approval of the preliminary
budget June 15, the trustees will have un-
til Aug. 15 to look for additional places
where cuts could Pc made. The incoming
board me mbers indicated they would
need more 11n1e 10 study budget in -
formation thoroughly. They also will be
involved in teacher sal ary negotiation s
v1hich may affec t the final budget.
~1ajor item s in the $282.000 increase in
operating costs are $6$,000 for automatic
lncn'..>ascs in ~alaries over which lhe board
had no control: S26.500 for one new school
bus: 577 .SOO for purchase of additional
land at Top of the World: and 516,00f to
cover increas es in Blue Cross rates for
all cmploycs.
Supe.rintendcnl Dr. William Ullom said
be unde rstands I.he aew board plans to
Marjorie Beach
Rites P ending
In Lag una Beach
Memoria l services are pending at St.
Mary's Episco pal Church for Marjori_e M.
Beach . longtime Laguna Beach re~ndent
who died Sunday et her home , 1
Rockledge Road , at the age of 86.
hold a series of budget study meetings
between now and the final adoption date
in order to become completely fam iliar
with district needs.
V andals Flood.
Scouting House
Laguna Beach police are in·
vestigating an act of m1Jiciou.s
mischief that c1uaed a. mini-flood
at the Girl Scout house, I!KJ High
Drive, aver the weekend.
Parks Department workers .spot·
ted water flowing 1cross the street
early today and found two hoses
had been placed through llt'indows
of the Scout House with water turn-
ed on full.
The water was immediately turn-
ed orf but the extent of damage to
the interior of the build.Jn( could
not be determined until police
located a repre.sentative of the
Scout Council lo unlock the doors
and check out the inside.
One of the hoses, po lice said, was
placed through a ground floor win·
dow wh ich apparently bad a defec·
t1ve la tch, the other through 1
basement window.
Pedestrian Hit
In Laguna;
Doc tor Cited
A Laguna Beach physician was cited by
police on Saturday after his vehicle
struck and injured• woman·pedestrian in
a crosswtlk at BN>Adway and South
Coast Highway.
Victim of the accident, M a r i o n
Penhhollow Sneed, 42, of 425 Hill St. iJ
reported in good cogdition al South Coast
Community HospitaJ today.
She suffered multiple laceralions and
brui.ses and was kept under observation
in the in tensive care unit over the
weekend, a hospilal spokesman uld, but
was moved to a regular care room today.
Dr. Lawrence Franct! White, 70, of
2125 Ocean Way, Wall cited for alleged
failure lo yield to a ~utrlan in 1
cro.sswalk and driving a vehicle wilh
defective brakes, pcllce reported.
traced lo a Long Beach automobile repair
shop, whose owner had been reported
missing by bis wife at 1 a. m.
The vehicle was stopped al 3:40 a.m.
by San Diego sheriff's deputies &outh of
Del Mar who, upon opening the trunk.
discovered a gun an'd several blood
stains. The two occupants of the auto,
Monroe J ones, 2.1, and Edward J. Cole,
20, both of Los Angeles, were arrested on
•
sus picion of auto theft and kidnaping.
The missing body shop owner, Daniel
6arnctt , 66. was found abo4t two houn1
later by the California Highway Patrol
walklng along Intentate: 5 south of
Oceanside. He was bruised and bleeding,
officers said, as a result of two severe
beatings.
San Diego sheriff's deputies said
Barnett is in Tri-Cities Hospital in
Oct:anside and is listed in fair condition.
•
Authorities said Baraett's wife reported
bearing a scuffle coming from lhe sbop
behind the couple's borne at about 1 a.m.
When she went to investigate, she found
only her husband's broken glasses and
bloodstains on the floor.
A .spokesman for the San Diego Sher·
iff 's Department said Barnett. after the
initial besting at his shop, was agaill
beaten with fisb and a wrencb, befort
• Ill I air
0.1.tl Y l'ILCl" Sl•H l'IMlho
111 Bis' Ele1n.ent
Eil er Larsen, octogenerian Laguna Beach grceler. looks ri~ht at home
Saturday greeting crowds during parade of 26th annual Fish fry in
C0sta Mesa. The parade drev.1 an est imated 125,000 persons. The fund -
raising event is sponsored by Harbor area Lions Clubs.
Moms' Dresses Revealed
WASHINGTON (AP) -The dresseJ
the molher1 of the bride and groom wlJJ
\Vear at lhe White House wedding Satur·
day were announced today.
Mrs. Richard M. Nixon, mother of
Tricia, will wear 1 long sleeved dre.ss of
whlte crepe, overhlld with white organdy,
covered with pastel colored flower.-and
designed by Priscilla Kidder of Boston,
who is doing all of the bridal ~wns.
Mrs. Howard E. Cox, other or
btidegroom Edward F. Cox, ha,, k:ked a
single button coat dress o( silk w1ter col·
or print of floral sprigs in shades of hlue
on white, with a portrait collar, ll was
d&sigried by Betty Kirk for B, L. Griffith
of New York.
Mrs. Nixon's dress, which has a flared
circuler skirt and V neckline softened
with pelaling, will be worn in her usual
length, jwot below the knee. It i.! in
delicate tones of rose, mint, mimosa, and
deljlhlnium, the White House sakt With It
t~e First Lady will wear a pink T st.rap
sandal design by Beth Levine of Herbert
Levine shoe& in New York , and short
white kid glo•es.
Mrs. Cox'& dres.s has a pr1nces5
silhouette. The neckline is open. with a
portrait collar across the shoulder li ne.1
Sbe usually wear.s her daylime dresses a
bit below the knee. Her accessories in·
elude blue silk pumps and elbow length
white kid gloves.
El Toro Jet,
Air West
Planes Hit
From Wire Services
A Hughes Air West jetliner with 49
persons aboard collided y,•Jth a Marine
Corps jelflgbter at 12,000 feet Sunday
spiraling straight dov.'Jl into tbe rugged
San Gabriel Mountains like a shooting
1tar.
Only one persoa -the FIB Phantom's
radar Jnterceptor officer wbo parachuted
-survived.
lflvesUgators were on I.he scene today,
faced with the grim t~sk of temO\'Ina and
idenlifylng bodies and also the more
puzzllng questioo to b6 1n.swered: what
happened?
No clues were available to Indicate why
the two aircraft collided, the El Toro
Marine C.Orp.s Air Station jet kniflnf into
the other's fuselage, in almost perfectly
clear weather.
Air traffic controllers spotted them on
radarscopes simultaneously, se conds
before the impact and neither pilot
radioed any pre-collision warning.
First L. Christopher E. Schies.s, 24, of
Salem, Ore., decllned to discuss the col-
lision with sheriff'.s Investigators after
being treated at .Santa Teresita Hospital
in Duarte.
r.1arine Corps Capt. Larry Karell. an El
Toro MCAS-based safety orficer. likewise
said he could not comment on the crash
pending a military invesligalion.
The 93-passengcr twin engine Hughes
jetliner was cli mbing toward normal
ope.rating altitude ~·hen the planes
i;mashcd together at 12,000 feet, roughly
over Azusa.
Baggage, mail. papers and other items
fl ew through the hole in its side.
"!heard a loud explosion and thought it
was a sonic boom. but then I looked up
and saw this airplane spiraling down,"
said Mike Zarate, 45, a U.S. Forest
Service fire dispatcher.
"And then it hit the. mountaintop. It
reminded me of when the Kamikazes
were coming at me in the <War," be ad·
ded.
Few witnesses realized two planes
were involved , most saying they thought
the )ctliner llad exploded in midair.
One was Los Angeles County Superior
Court Judge Homer Bell, or Monrovia,
who heard the loud impact and ran
outside.
"It was like a shooting star," said
Judge Bell.
A trio shooting photographs in lhe
scenic area, John Roller, 19, his sister
Diane Byers. 21 and her husband, Steve,
23, also witnessed the jetliner's dea th
dive. Aulhor. world traveler, philanthropist
and churchwoman, Mrs. Beach had
played a promin~nt r?le In Art ~lony af·
fa irs since settling in Laguna in 1939,
following the death of her husband, the
late Albert J, Beach, mayor of Kansas Ci·
ly, Mo.
By County Petitioners
"We must· have watched them fall for
30 aeconds before they disappeared
behind .the ridge," 1111id Byers. a student
1t Northern Arizona University In
Flagstaff.
She is survived by a son, attomty
Marshall Beach of Laguna Bead\; a
daughter, Mrs. Eleanor Arnold of Kan.sis
City, Mo.: five grandchildren And nine
great-grandchildren.
A native or Kansas City, she was 1
graduate of the University of l\insas. She
was the author of two books. "Maynr's
Wife" and "First the Seed," a book aboul
her travels. and had an outstanding col·
lectlon of art ob}e<:ts frorn around tbt
~orld. ~frs. Beach was acUve In the Civic
League. the Republi can Club and St.
Mar y's Episcopal Church. At her request,
Ule h1mily has suggested lh1l memortJI
donaUons be directed lo I.he tducational
building fund of the church.
Mrs. Beach's remains will be taken to
Kar'ISaJ City for inurnroenl wtth htr late
husb1nd. P1cifie Vitw Mortuary . dire<>
lor11.
Boost • Ill
Lllillfta Beach mldtnt.s tllgfblt to
vote, but whole re.gLstraUon la nOt 1n
order, will have plenty of opportunity to
rectify the situation ll'lla '#Mk ae both the
county Registrar or Voten and an 1nti-
tl.lgb mt group seek to add names to the
voting rolls.
The "Yea on AUJl.llt Third Cam·
mittee," a IJ'UJP of cillaena favoring pa""'' of a 38.foot balldlnc bolibt ltlllit
in I.ht Aug. 3 apttial dlletion ls ur1ln11t
aupportel'I to be sure to register by
Thursd1y, dt>.adllne to regiat.er for I.ht
ldieduled elocllon.
'The comml.ttff has mailtd letters to
&SI per-who •i&nod anU·h\jll rile
Vote . Roll Seen
petitions but whose names were [I).
vaUdal~ tar registration deficiencle.!1.
The lelltrs aslt recipient.: to be sure lo
re-register prior to June 10 and also
makts a pitch for don11tions to help sup-
port-the committee's activities.
"The lew prop0ncnt.s of high rise 11re
diJproporUonately well-heeled," the letter
states. '11nd'und00btedly there will be 1
Oood o( expensive propaganda."
The re1!dent I.hen is asked to send his
donaUon to r.o. 8oJ" 1336 in L.1guna
Beach.
New voters. pt.rsons who did not vote in
lbe "last gentraJ ·eJection and lhertfore
bive been removed from the voter-rolls, ' .
or · pulOM who have moved since U!at
election may real.st.er th1J week 1t the
followini: locsUons:
Laguna Federal Savln&1 4c: Loan. 260
Ocean Ave.. every weekday during:
business how's: Leak Custom Finishes,
500 Broadway. weekda)'s rrom 9 a.m. to
noon and I p.m. tn 4 p.m.; Clty Hall,
June 7 through June 10 from 11 1.m. to 2
p.rn.
PertOM who will be oul of town on
election dtly, Aug. 3 may obtaln an
ab9entee b31\c.t during the period from
July 5·1D July 27 by •pplyJni.tD the cl\)'
clerk, ~ Forest Avf!., Llpn• Bu.el,
9USL
Roller said they first beard t.bt loud
boom.
"~n we uw blsck smoke." he added.
••And suddenly there were alrplanu all
over the ~ ind we could bear slren.s.
Gary Butte,., 17. 111 Aluia Hlgb Scl\ool
junior, WJS the first to retch the scene,
racing 15 mi1ea on his trall bike motorcy.
de to the source of the smoke. \
He eould tee nine bodies among the SO
ldlled -locludin1 two babies -•nd be
wa' 1lekened.
"ll was tealty destroyed," 1aid Butters.
"There wa11 nothing left. lt was pretty
bad and made me not feel too good."
Extremely heavy fog today hampered
efforts to remove bod.lea from the char--
red actne <lf horror tn the Van Ta.!lsel
Canyon 11rea of Angeles National Forest.
"We can't get our helleopter.s fr)to the
Area unlU lht fBg cleAra and thal
m1ght not be unW noon.·• said a Los
Angeles County Sherllft 1pokcsman.
being thrown from the stolen tar. He roll-
ed down an embankment into a pool of
water, the spokesman said, and finally
made his way back to the freeway.
Authorities could not say what the
motivt? fo rthe kidnaping was. The two
suspects have been returned to Lona:
Beach for arraignment on the charges of
kidnap!ng, assault with inten t to commit
murder and grand theft auto.
•
ACTOR STR ICK!N
Vi n Heflin
Van Heflin, 60,
Suffers Heart
Attack in Pool
HOLLYWOOD (UPf) -Van Heflin,!<!,
who suffered a heart attack 'ft'hlle tatting
his regular 20-1.ap morning 1wlm in Im
apartment pool. was listed in altical con-
dition today.
The veteran character .actor ha d no
pulse and was not breathing. wi~
said. when the fire depart meat rucUe
crew arrived Sunday morning, Retawr1
administered oxygen and external heart
massage and Heflin began breathing.
A spokesman at Cedars of Lebanon
Hospital .said early today that Heflin re-
mained in critical condition in the in-
tensive care ward.
,J. W. Parks. superintendent (lf the
Sunset Marquee apartment complex , said
Jieflin swam 23 laps around the pool
every morning "like clockwork."
Sunday morning apartment handyman
Emitt Jocks, 62, saw Heflin gasp and
grab a rung of the swimming pool ladder.
Jecks pu!led him out or the water and
Park5 caUed the fire department.
Hi t-r un Victim, 2,
In Cr itical Condition
A 2--year-old Santa Ana boy struck
down by a hil and run driver nmains ln
critical condition today at Santa Ana
Community Hos:pital.
Santa Ana police .said they have no
clues to the driver <lf the car which
1truck down UtUe Andrew Hays of 1&17·A
S. Cedar St. and left the tot crumpled in
the sLreet late Friday. The boy was found
unconsclom in frorit of 1600 S. Cedar by
Gertrude E. Rowland of Santa Ana, a
pauin1 motorist.
.
Orange Coqt
We•illet'
The weatherman predicla: cloudy
11dea tonight and Tuesday moro-
jng with 1 chance or hazy at.mshirM
tn the afternoons. mgb&. today and
'1'11...r.y at lllibeac:h« Ill and IJ>.'
land 73. w... ammd 51.
INSmE TODAY
Sailing eventf In the Onmgc
Countli Empire St o Scout
OtvmpiC.s art scheduled JM thi1
Wttktnd. Ste Boating, Page 16.
•
'
Z DAILY PILOT SC
Air West
Crash Deatl1
' Toll Li sted
SAN FRANCISCO f AP) -Hughes Air
West today released the following llsl o(
crewmen and passengers on a DC9
airUner that collided with a military jet
Sunday and eras~ near Los Angeles:
Crew
1. Capt. Theodore Nicolay, 50, Seattle,
pilot.
2. Fin:t Officer Pritf, Bruner, 49, Se.1t-
lle, copilot.
3. Hosle55 Helena Koskimies, 30, Seat-
tle.
4. HGStesa Joan Pluyla1r, 3.4, Seattle.
5. Hostess Patricia Shelton, 23, Entiat,
Wuh.
Pas§tngers
Destination Salt Lake City unlt.s1
otherwise noted.
fl. p _ AUen, Salt Lake City.
7-3. ~frs. R. Bird of Carlsbad, Calif.,
and infant Bird, destination Boise, Idaho.
9. S. Boss.
10. Mrs. R. Carson .
11-12. Mrs. R. Davidson and Miss K.
Davidson, age 2.
13-14. Mrs. J. Dean and J. Dea n, 2-year-
old boy, deslination Pasco, Wash.
15. P. Dunn of Salt Lak.e City.
16-17. A. Espitia and J. Espitia of Mex-
ico, destination Bobe.
IS. John Fori}' cf Tarzana, Calli.,
destination Lewiston, Idaho.
19. K . Gabel , destinalion Boi se.
20. l\1rs. H. Garcia, destin a tio n
Lewiston.
21. Mrs. M. Garcia of Les Angeles, wife
cf an Air West tmploye.
22. G. Hunter of Salt Like City.
23-24. Mr_ and Mrs. J. Johnson, destina-
tion Boiae.
25. Mr. F. Kalbjleisch, destination
Lewis ton.
26. Arnold Kaufman of Anli Arbor.
Mich.
rt. J. Manera.a of Salt Lake City.
28. McCall,. no first name, destination
Pasco.
29. Dale Miller cf Walla Walla, Wash.,
des tination Lewiston.
30. T. Morris.
31. Miss J_ McCroden of Napa, Idaho,
destination Bolat.
lt-33. Miu J . Potter, age 6. and Master
M. Potter, age 7, destination Lewiston.
34-35-l&. C. Pyke, F. Pyke and W. Pyke ,
all of Salt Lak@ City.
.'!7-.38. Miu M. Rangel and P. Rangel
of Mexico, tr11veling with A. and J.
Espitia, No. 16-17 above. to Boise.
39. J. Reeves. a Union Oil Co. employe
in the. Los Angeles area, destination
PMCO.
'40. R. Schoeiihals cf Salt Lake City.
41. E. Smith of Salt LUI City.
42. MW M. Sublc nf Salt La l(e •City.
43. Mi!! K. Thomas, traveling with
mother, Mr s. R. Carson, No. 10 1bove.
44. R. Vincent or Boise, destination
Boiae. . . . , ~
45. Ted Wllkenon cf Melbf. ~
destin ation Boise. t ·, ·
49. D. Zlllm1n ot the Loi Angtltl area.
dtstinatlon Ltwislon.
47. N. Heu. New York City, destination
Pasco.
43-49. Identifications wit,hbeld pendin&
not ification of relatives.
Laguna Writers
Hold Readings
1brtt Laguna Beach writers, poets
Donald Justice and Robert Peters and
Ronald Sukenik, author of the novels
•·Up" and "Out ." will participate in a
public benefit reading In Los An&tles
Saturday.
The 8 pm. presentation at 7~1 South
Bronson Ave. will bentfil Kairos·U!S
Angeles. v.·hlch sponsors groups and
.i;eminars and h•s been Identified as
Southern California's Esalen.
Other poets participating will be Ann
Stanford . Gerald U>cklin and Don Eulert.
A donation of $\.SO, or $1 for students,
'"'ill be ask~d.
OtAN•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
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1
A Mother's Feat•
·•
JI...::. __
~
The concern or a mother for her child is mirrored in the face of this
South Vietnamese woman. A caravan making a pilgrimage had at the
time been attacked by North Vietnamese in Quang Nam P rovince, 25
miles south of Da Nang.
Three Cosmonauts Dock
With Orbiting S tatfnn
~fOSCOW (UPI) -'l1ltee Soviet COS·
moaauts docked lhelr Soyuz 11 spacecraft
with the orbiting scientific stalion Salule
today and three imbed into Salyut to
est.abli.sb the fu-s t crbH.aJ apace labora-
tory -a scientific station as big as a
am.all parlor ,and complete with chairs.
:'!bl Sovlol Tul New• Aaency ... Id U..
hboratory was about 60. feet long and 12
fi:et in diameter, wilh a total weight of 2S
tons. Television transmis sions showed a
f'OOm lar .. ~ th' cosmon1ull to
1pin, we~~ ~ h~ad over heels
without touchfui. any cf the equipment
lining lhe walls.
The feat clima xed a ~9-clay effort that
included a linkup April 24 between the
three--man Soyuz 10 and Sal ute. But Soyuz
10 remained linked for only five .and a
half hours and hurried back to earth.
Indications at the time were that one of
the spacemen might have 1ulfered space
sickneM Salute has orbited unmanned
for the past seven w@elu.
It was the first time a crew has been
transported to an unmanned 1cientific
station in &pace, and scientific .!lources in
f.1oscow said ooe er more manned
spaceships may go alort soon to join the
space complex as prelude to a permanent
<lrbltal laboratory _
"The crew of Soyuz 11 ha!'! boarded the
station Salute." Tass said. "A Soviet
manned orbital scientific station is func-
tionin g in space." Hoy.·ever, a television
broadcast from the laboratory s:iid
Viktor Palsayev and Vladis1a v Volkov
scrambled through the linking pas~ and
commander Georgi Dobro volsk y re-
n1ainetl behind to su pervi~ th~ operation.
A Soviet television round table of scien-
tists and C'O.!imonauts discussed the
achievement for Rusi1ian audiences.
··we are v.·itnessing a qualitatively new
11.tp in cosmonautlcs -a long term
orbital station has bee:n built," Space
8Citntist Boris Ralschenback tcld the
round table .
"The qu!3tlons cf scientif ic technical
cootrol of ruch irtatk>m pr~nt big oom-
plication.s .. _ thls st1tion should permit
multlple docking. They must sometimes
re«ive not one but another ship , •. and
it is necessary lo control the docked ap-
paratus."
Tass said the combined we ight of Soyuz
11 and Salute was more than 25 tons.
Two Brush Fires
Burn 120 Acr es
Dry, explosive brush plagued Orange
Couo ty ftremep on two fronts ever the
weekend aa blazes burned more than 120
acres.
Sunday afternoon a fire blamed on an
11 -year-o!d Mission Vlejo boy playing
v.'i lh matches burned over 20 acres at the
north end of 1.-0s Alisos Road ln El Toro.
Ten county and .i;tate fire companies
subdued the blaze in two hours while
dodging rattlesnakes. "For a time the
.snakes were more dangerous than the
fire :· said one firefighter.
Saturday, 100 acres of hea\'Y brush
v.·ere destroyed in Tonner Canyon north
(If Brea. 'The blaze at one time threatened
!he Firestone Boy Scout Camp. More
than 200 men battled the fire for tv.·o
hours before controlling it.
One prisone r-firerighter "'as bitten bv
s rattlesnakt but is reported in good
condition tOday.
Me sa Skin Diver
Injured in Surf
A Costa Mesa man Who ·was lnjurtd in
a skin diving accident off Lagun11"s Moss
Sire('! B('ach Sunday morning is r('porterl
in satisfactory cond ition al South Coast
Corimunity Hospital today.
Roy Boyette. 35. of 1800 Pomona Ave.
v.·as caught in heavy surf shortly after 11
a.m. Sunday, police reported. Pulled
ashore by lifeguards he v.•as given oxygen
and transported to the hospital whert!! he
remained overnight in the in tensive cart!
unit .
A hospital spokesman said Boyette·s
condition was much improved this morn-
ing and he was to be trwrerred to
regular care.
l~11 ~1d Allo~ated
La~una Council OKs Di spla y ll1o d el
The Laguna Btach City Council has
agreed to allocate 55,000 for the con-
stnict:lcn of 1 working b11e model cf the
downtown buln, to be used for planning,
coordin1Uon and analysis cf !pcc\flc
development proposaJs.
Councilmen were Wllnl mOUJ ln their
support of Plannini Director Wayne
P.1oody's recommendation lh1t the city
undertake to pay the fuU cost or tuch a
base model. estim1ttd at $4,700.
The Cltlleru' Town Plannln& AsSO(!I•
t1on has pied.Ced $1 ,CXXI to pay for an In·
iti1\ segmen t of 1 downtown model and
the Do•'Tltown Business Assoelatlon also
setmed ready ta contribute., Moody told
the council.
However, he said, It was doubtful suf-
flclent funds could be ral"'-d to complete
I.ht model . It would s@cm more a~
propriate for the city to underwrite th11
rull cost, Moody aald1 leaving the private
organizations free to use lhe.ir n1oney to
CQnstruct models of proposals for bulld·
\ngs. malls and ether improvements to
be se t into the base for study.
The council agreed , v.•ithout a dissen-
ting voi ce.
The proposed model v.·ill be constructed
lo 40 feet. Total dimen~ions of the model
maker Leon Hafflin to 1 scale of ont Inch
to 40 fett. Total dimen!lions otl"he model
will be about seven fttt by six feet and It
will be made In three sections for ease of
handling. P.toody said. Move~b1t Items
11uch as buildlngs, trees . people and the
like. can e~silv bf! attached or removed
and relocated "on such a model , the plan·
ner pointed ()UI, and It provides 11
workable vi~ual tool for study of proposed
develrinments.
The ba se model will include loPocraphy
and n111ural te11tures. rottd layout and
block·form eiisting buildings.
---
Allegheny Plane Dow ri
Propjet Hits Power Line; 29 Feared Dead
NEW HAVEN. Coan. (AP) -An
Allegheny Airlines propjet with 31
persons aboard hlt a pov.·er line. ripped
through sorne sumnier cottages and
crashed into marshland near Tweed New
Jf11vcn Airport today.
Some reports put the death toll as high
as 29.
James Malarky, airport manager, said
29 persons were klTied, and Yale New
Have n Hospital said it was certain at
least 25 were dead.
The Convair 580 hit U1e utility line as it
approached Tweed N@w Hav~n Airport in
hazy fog. according to J\.!alarky. Five
beach cottages near the end of the
runway v.·ere struck, then the "·reckagt
era.shed in tw o big pleCi!s.
Allegheny said 28 passengers , including
t"''O infants, and a crew of t11ree y.•ere
aboard the regularly scheduled night,
\1•hich originated in Washington. D C.
Police said it wa s believed nlost of the '
cottages "'ere vacant. .
Freigl1t Train Hit s, Car;
Sleeping Motori st Save d
Allegheny headquarters in Pittsburgh
at first said 29 persons were aboard, but
the. passenger lis t later was revised"
upward to include t"·o infants.
The plane was f'hghl 485. "hlth
originated in '\'ashington. D.C . and had.
flown to New London. Conn. It wa:-Ip
ha1•e continued on to Newport News, v1t-;
following the stop at New llavl'n. _
Most of the bodies were found still
strapped in their seats 1n the burned
fuselage. Another large piece of the plane
was found about 150 feet away. The freight train was late and it It
hadn't been, James Adrian Shankland
wouldn't be alive today to sit in bis
Orange County Jail cell and reflect on
what he would have looked like if be bad
b<!cn sitting in his car at 3:35 p.m.
.Sunday.
'l'hat"s v.·hcn the 46-car southbound
freight chewed up Shankland's car and
the tow truck that was trying to gel it off
the tracks at Oso Parkway in Mission
Viejo. just 1:; minutes after the sleeping
Shankland was dragged out of the vebi·
cl<'.
"lie \\'as dead drunk ," sheriffs Captain
James Broadl>C'l t charged today. ''He
didn "t know a thi ng about what wa s going
on and he'd have been !here wben the
train came if our deputies hadn't gotten
there first."
Deputies found the 31 -year~ld Tustin
man sprawled on the front seat cf bis car-
which was :straddled on the tracks
between the north end cf Camin•
Capistrano aad the south end of Cabot
Road.
They got the tow truck on the scene but
the 3:35 p.m. freight barreling through at
nearly 70 miles an hour ended any hopes
they had of getting the still sleeping
Shankland 's car off the tracks.
The train smashed the auto inte t bli-
Police Cl1ecking
Death of SA Boy
Toxicological tests were erdered ioday
by tbe Orange County Coroner's Office to
determine the cause of deatb ef a young
Santa Ana man whose body was found
during tbe weekend in rwgh terrain niear-
Williams Canyon.
The remains found by a resident who
was riding his horse along mountain
traib in the brush<overed area have
been identified as those 9f John Mark
Barry, 19, of Tustin.
It is believed that Barry's death oc-
curred about May 28 . .i;hortly alter ht
was reported missing by anxious
relatives,
Orange County Sheriffs homicide in·
vesligators today were scouring the area
in search for clues to the young man's
death. They refused to comment on the
possibility that Barry may be a murder
Vi£lim.
Budget Session
Set in Clemente
The San Clemente Clty Council will
hold a budget study session tonight at 7
o'clock to discuss the cont roversial issue
of pay raises for the city employes.
Councilmen and staff have repeatedly
,;a id funds do not exist for any :<1ubstanlial
raises
Hnwe1•l'r. polK'I' and public safely
prrsonnel are asking for a minimum 10
percent pay hike. Other t 1ty v.·orkers
have reqursted a cost-of-living raise of
7 :1 percent
The s1'ss1on well be held in the con-
ference room next to council chambers.
vion. sent a render from the vehicle 500
fttt into the air to land inches away from.
the sheriff's patrol car and heavily
damaged the tow truck with the other
flying wreckage.
Shankland was booked on tharge! of
malicious injury to a railroad. Deputies
today said other charges may be filed
against the Tustin man _
There v.•ere no injuries in the Sund ay
afternoon mishap. Railroad oHicial:s wi ll
check the lead engine of the freight toda y
for possible damage.
Father Slays
Wife, Hin1 self
In Anahei1n
An 11-year-old girl and her little
brother are orphaned today, arter a
desperate but futi le try lo keep a
despondent. murder and suicide·bent
fa ther out of the family hon1e.
Orin J . Lowry, 39, of Torrance, finally
forced his way into the Anaheim area
residence at 9721 Kennelly Lane. killing
his e1-wife and himsetr.
Their divorce was fin:.11 only a fe"' days
ago.
Coroner"s deput ies said Lowry ap-
parently waited for his former wife
Janet, 31. t.o leave for work.
Confronted outside, Mrs. Lowry ran
back in. rollowed by her former husband.
She tried to fight him off and keep him
out as he rushed I.he door.
The despondent man finally forced his
way in. despite resista nce by Mrs. U>wry
and I I-year-old daughter Aud rey, ac-
cording to sheriff's ho m i c i d e in·
vestigators.
Coroner"s deputies said he pulled a gun
and shot her in the head, then put a bullet
into his OY.'n brain.
The bodies were t.aken to Baggott'.o;
ChRpel o[ lhe Bells Mortuary in Anaheim
after the murder·suicide.
Investigators said lhal be si de s
daughter Audrey. the couple had .a 9-
year-old .o;on, Dwayne.
Class Schedule
W orksh op Sla ted
A 11.-orkshop has bten called by trustee:'!
of the San Joaquin Elementary School
DL~lrict to discuss class sch eduling at
Irvine Intermedia te School.
The meeting v.·IH lake place Tuesda y.
June 8 al 4·30 p.m in the administriitive
ann<'X. 14600 Sand Canyon Ave., E:ast
lrvtnl'.
The board approved a change in <'Ur·
ricu!um at lr\'ine School during its lasl
1neeting but criticiz.ed the adminislratiou
for not hringing ~heduling plans lo
trustees sooner.
Proposii!s for making the two-year in·
termediate program a more cohesi ve unit
"'ill be outlined by the achool principal
John Del Monaco.
A spokesman for \'ale New Have n
Jlospital said two men and a "·oman were
admitted after the crash.
The woman was listed in satisfactory
condition. No condition reporl v.·as
available on the men.
The crash "looked and sounded hk(' an
atomic explosion ."' said Nancy Palmeiri
of East Ha ven, who said :-he heard three
explosions as the plane hit the 1vire arfll-
crashed al !h(' end of the runv.·ay. ·
Mrs. tl1arv Baldl'-·in of East Haven said
!'he wa s at ·home, just g<'tl1ng O\Jt of her
car as the plane .. swooped in so low I had
to duck."'
She said lhe two engine pl11ne then hit
the wires near her back yard and did
··sort of a turn, then came do"'" and ex-
ploded ."'
Martin Palriee!li or East Haven said he
saw a body fly out of the plane and land
in a pond of water, "v.·aving his hands
fe verishlv.''
Joseph. Horow itz. manager of a beac h
<'lob near the crash scene, said he. heard
the plane but was unable to see il in the
heavy fog. Visibility was estimated at
less than two miles.
Horowitz said fog hung over the beach
and he fina lly saw the craft plunge out of
the sky . hit one of the cottages and burst
into a ball of laines.
He said he heard sc r<'am s for help h11t
couldn 't get near the flarn ing ai rcraft
that finally stDppcd near his c!ub"s tcnni~
courts.
Ex-cle puty Wins
Cou rt Dela y
In Theft Cose
A new move by former Orange County
sheriffs deputy Frederick Irvine lo su~
press evidence supporting charges that
he burglarized the Mission Vie10 Counlry
Club today led to a further delay of h11
~uperior Court lnal.
Presiding Judge \V illia111 C. Speirs
d<'layed the trial dale until Aug . 2 artPr
learning fron1 defl'.nse :J1tornry Clifford
Schaffer that it will be lalr July before
the District Court of AppC'al.~ rules on a
\Vrit of mandate filed by Ille Los Angeles
lawyer.
That "Til "'as filerl after Superior
Cou rt Judge H. \Valier S1e1ner reiected
Jrvine's bld for C"l1mination of e\·idence
that the prosecution considers to be \'ital
in its case again.<;t the former la\\'man
Irvine. 42. of La Habra. \\"a '> arrested
Sept 20 shortly after he and a fell Dw
deputy allegedly ransacked the cnunt ry
('.lob·~ golf shop of liquor and gotr1ng
f'QUipmenl 11·hile they were
•·moonHghlln,1;:"0 as se i:urily gu rards .
Arresting officer~ said Irvine s com.
panion surrendered on the spot hut
Irvine. described as berserk. assenerll v
\"Ommandeered a pa1rol C'iH and led hi~
former colleagues on a 11 ild 1•hase th11t
ended in Riverside Cou nty with lr\1nc
holding a gun to his head anrl 1hreaten1ng
to commit suicide.
He was larer 1ndii:terl h.1• !he Oran!'.!e
Cou nty Grand J ury on charges of gr:1nd
theft, auto thefL burglary, receivin g
stolen property and conspirar.v.
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San Clemente
Capistrano EDITI ON
VQJ:. M, NO. 135, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 7, 197 f ..
ar
El To1~0 J et
Hits Liner;
49 Perish
From Wire Service1
A Hughes Air West jetliner with 49
persons aboard collided wilh a. Marine
Corps jelfighter at 12,000 feet Sunday
spW;aling straight down Into the rugged
San Gabriel Mounta in! Uke a shooting
1tar.
0-nly one per.son -the F4B Phantom's
radar interceptor officer who parachuted
-survived.
Investigators were on the acene today,
faced with the grim task of removing and
identifying bodiell and also the more
puuling question lo be ansv;e:red: what
happened?
No clues "'ere available to indicate why
the two aircraft collid ed, the El Toro
Marine Corps Air Slation jet knifing into
the other's fu selage, in almost perfectly
clear weather.
Air traffic controller.!! spotted them on
radarscopes simultaneously, sec 011 d •
before the impact and neither pilot
radioed any pre-<:ollision warning.
First L. Christopher E. Schiess, 2{, of
S.lem, Ore., declined lo d.iscusa the co14
llslon with sheriff'• investigators after
being treat.ad at Santa Teresita Hespital
in Duarte. Marine Corps Capt. Larry Karch , an El
Toro MCAS-based safety officer. lik~wise
.said he could not comment on the crash
pending a military investigation.
Tbe 93-passenger twin engine: Hughes
Jetliner was climbing toward normal
operating altitude when the planes
smash~ together at 12,000 feet, roughly
over Azusa.
Baggage. mail. papers: and other items
flew through the hole In its side.
"1 heard a loud explosion and thought it
was a &Onie boom, but then I looked up
and saw this airplane spiraling down,"
54id Mike Zarate, 45, a U.S. Forest
Service fire dispatcher.
''And then it hit the mountaintop. ll
rem inded me of when the Kamikazes
we:re coming at me In the war," he lid·
ded. Few witnesses realized t"'O ptanei;
were involved. most .!lay ing they 1hougbt
!he jetliner had exploded in midair. .
One wa s Los Angeles County Superior
Court Judge Homer Bell, of Monrovia.
who heard the loud impact and ran
outside. .. . "It was like a shooting star, said
Judge Bell. A trio shooting photographs in the
acenic area. John Roller, 19, his sisler
Dlarie Byers. 21 and her husband, Steve,
is. also witnessed tl'le jetliner's death
dtvr. "We: must have watched them fall for
IQ· seconds before they disappeared
behind the ridge." said Byers, a student
at Northern Arizona University in
nagsta{f.
Roller said they first heard the loud
boom .
1'Then we saw black smoke," he added.
1'And suddenly there we:re airplane3 all
ever the sky and we could hear airens.
dary Butters, 11: an Azusa High School
Jwtfor, was the: first to reach the scene,
racing 15 miles on bis trail bike motorc)'·
c:le to the source of the arnoke.
Re could 1te nine bodie.s among the SO
killed -including two babies -al'ld be
was .sickened.
"It was really destroyeq," said Butters.
"There wat nothing left. ll wa1 prelty
bad and made me not feel too good."
Extremely heavy fog tod_ay hampered
efforls to remove bodies from the char-
red scene of horror in the Van Tassel
Canyon area of Angeles National Forest.
"We can't get our helicopters into thl
are& until the fog clears and that
mJ1ht not be unlil noon." uld a Loa
Ansr:eles County Sherlfrr spokesman.
· Flight ""· which h•d taken off from
LDe Angeles International Airport at S:W
p.m.. bound for Salt Lake City frGm
PllCO. Wi sh., w1th varlow 1topg tD
ruute, ended tt1glcatly about 10 mlnutea
after takeoff. The cruh site is aimo1t inaccessible by
foot. A comm&nd post was established ln a
pal'k pl1yground. where black and white
sheriff's carll made a grlm cont.rut W
cendy4itripe:d poles holding basketball
backboards·
'Marine Corp! Jnv esllgaWrs were 1UU
hoplng the unidti1UliM pilot of the 3.2.1rd
lrt&bttr Attack Squadron .urvived but
ll!b oppeortd o1JJD Indeed.
run{_
One Will Reign
Five pretty girls have been picked as ca ndidates for the first an nual
competition to select a queen for the Fiesta La Chrisl.ianita Parade.
Kickoff of the fiesta is July 10. The queen project was in stituted by
the San Clemente Jayc ees. From left lo right are Sheri Capitain, 18;
Sue Chienobieff, 19; Pat Currey, 19 (seated center); Karen Jacobson,
19; and Barbara Cheatum, 18.
Board t o Examine Plans
For 3 Scl1ool Cam~l u ses
Plans for three school cam puses in the
Capistrano Unified School District w11! be
examined by the Board or Trustees at
tonight's 8 p.m. meeting in Serra School,
Clemente Roads
Get Seafing Joh
San Clement.e's worst streets began
receiving a coat o! preserving slurry seal
late last week in a city project which
might extend the life of at least 50
crumbling roadways.
The Mission Slurry Seal Coinpany
under a $20,000 contract, ill applying the
mixture of pavlng oil. ·sand and cement
to the suffaces of the ro&dways.
But at best, say city engineering
department sPokesman, t~ capping will
pmerve the aging roads for about 1
year.
The funds for the project are being
paid under a new city policy whereby
state gas tax rebites can be used for
street maintenance and repair&, instead
of major construction, e1.clusively.
Capistrano Beach .
Trustees will be asked to request bids
for the demolition of Las Palmas
Elementary school's pre.F'1eld Act struc·
lures and to approve preliminary draw.
ings for the structures that wi!l replace
them.
The board also will be asked to review
plans for !he Richard Henry Dana
Elementa ry School 11dditlon which has
not yet been authorized for funding by
the slate. In a memorandum to the
board, Joe Wimer, Director of
Adminis trative Services, suggested this
project be funded with local bond money.
Consideration also will be given to the
Capistrano School , the site of the old San
Juan capiitrano high school. The board
will be asked to consider comniissioning
an architectural firm to deVclop a master
plan for the site.
Preliminary plans are lo~ the site as
an adminlstratlve center for the entire
di1trict.
Also on lhe agenda Is an evaluation or
lhe kindergarten program in the
district, the reading program, and the
mentally gifted minor program.
San Clenaente A ffected
• I na
2 Fir emen
Injured
In Blaze
TwG San Clemente fire.men were in·
ju red early' Sunday morning as they
fought tp control 1 blaze at a surfboard
shop which killed. a watchdog and did an
e.slimated $5,000 damage.
Another weekend fire blackened four
acres north of the city.
The two men, volunteer fireman Phil
Peter and regular rirt fighter Sheldon
Schmit, were given emergency treatment
at South Coast Community Hospital for
their injuries and released. Pet.er, who is
San Clemente's city engineer, required
six stitche.s for R cut on his wri.st. He ill
back at work today . Schmit tore l layer
of skin from the e:ntire inside of bl! hand
when he fell while lighting the flames .at
Wetzel's Surf Shop, 1200 N. El Camino
Real.
Fire Chief Merton Hackett liaid the
early momlng fire was confined to one
room of the building, although three: other
rooms .sustained ei:tenllive s m o k e
damage.
The watch dog, a large collie:, was tra~
ped i.a the bu.ildinl a.nd overcomt by
smoke, Hackett said. There were no peo-
ple in the bulldi:ng owned by Edward
Ryland, whe:n the fire: starte:d.
Chier Hackett speculated the blra.e
began from a smoldering cigarette that
may have been left by one of several men
who left the: buildin~ earlier in the e~n
ing. Haekett e.stimated the structural
damage to the building at $3,000 with an
addilional $2,000 damage to the contents.
A second major weekend fire started
Fri.da y evening and burned for an hour on
the hill above Avenida Vaquero near the
reservoir. Chief Hackett said the blaze.
which eventually blackened four acret of
the dry brush, may have resulted from
some small boys playing with matches.
He said witnes.sell re ported see:ing two
youngsters in the area prior to the fire .
Chief Ha ckett .said 18 firemen respond·
ed to the fire call and he credited eight
high school boys who live in the area with
helping to bring the fire under control. He
said the youths brought shovel.!! 1nd
work ed beside the firemen until the fire
\l.'as out.
ACTOR STRICKEN
Van Heflin
Van Heflin, 60,
Suffers Heart
Attack in Pool
HOLLYWOOD (UPJ) -Van Heflin, 60,
who sul!ered a heart attack while taking
his regular 21).lap morning swim in hi.s
apartment pool, was listed in critical con·
dition today.
The veteran character actor h1Jd no
pulse and was not breathing, witnesses
said, whe:n the fire department rescue
crew arrived Sunday morning. Re1CUer1
administered oiy~en and external heart
massage and Hertin began breathing.
A tpokMman at Cedars of ~banon
Hospital 1aid early today that Heflin re-
mained in critical condition in the ln-
~ive care ward.
J. W. Parks., superlnt.endbnt cf the
Sunset Marquee apartment complex, said
Henln swam 2n laps around the pool
every morning "like clockwork."
S~day morning apartment handyman
Emltl Jecks. 62, saw Henln ga1p and
grab a rung of the swimming pool ladder.
Jeck.s pulled him out of the water and
Parks called the fire department.
7th U.S. Troop Dies
SALONIKA. Greece (UPI ) -A seventh
American serviceman died early today
from injuries received in a Sunday night
collision between a U.S. military truck
and a Greek tourist bus. Eight Greeks,
incl uding the bus driver, were also badly
injured and taken to Salonika Municipal
Hospital.
Cleme n te Pa rking Lot
Gets T emporary Delay
Work on a proposed 100-car parking lot
at San Clemente's Nor1h Beacb area Is
stalled temporarily, city aides said today .
But paving of lhe new lot will take:
place a.s soon as surplus asphalt material
is available, the.y added.
The Joi , to be built for beach wers
under a new process first tested la11t
year, will occupy a triangula:-section of
city land once earmar.ked for a $350,000
youth recreation center.
During the construction hiatus. parks
and recreation rommiasiontrs urged city
councilmen to abandon the construction
plans, and instead plant the: acre.aae In
turf.
Councilmen recently "received and
filed" the commission action.
Jn the meantime, city crews will wa it
until a major paving job on a section of
Ola Vista is complete before spreading
quicklime into the parking lot 80il bMe.
The: lime treaunenl, -first used at
anott'ter beach Jot lbt summer, creates •
crude concrete for a bate, eliminating Ult
higher c0-1:ts of aggregate aoiht.
Because o! the city lebor in the project,
con11truction co.st! will be reduced -
achieving the figure where bids will nol
be nece."lsary for the project·
Materials for the pro ect, councilmen
learned, would amount to about $3,000.
The d_ate f9r the Job'• completion has
still been set for the July 4 holiday
weekend.
. High Court Decision Due Clemente Police
Probe. 2 Thef ts
Aicne currently .xbeduled lo reach the
U.S. Supreme Cowt ·cOutd yield• a h•U~
million-dollar windfall j.) San Clemente's
city coffers, but h also.wouJd,come wllh
aome hard and fast labels.
Ci ty Manager Ken Carr taJd this week
that lf the Supreme Court decides that a
simple majority pasaes a bond electkln.
two iasuet whlch failed to mustef two
thirM here lut sprln« coo!d be bulJt with
bond money.
"But In my opinion ," the clty manager
said, "the fUndt could only be spent on
the projects apecilied on the ballot."
Thw. if the ofildal'a lnterpret.aUon
boldl, San c;J-. would hi•• t;npl• -..
funds for .1. clubhouse and belch improve.
men ts. · But ariy surplus bond funds could not
be used to 6hore up crimped calegorie•
r.lgewhere in the city's proposed budgel .
The court's decision, officlal1 have
,:a.id, would be retroactive to .a date last
November when a c81se. from Weit
Vlrglnla had Its Ul'ftt verllct. then went on
the appeal cirtult.
The local election took place April 20
and ylel~ slim majority votes on~ the
cluhhouM! and beach revenue rn easurel
Two other separate items . purchaae
11nd development of neighborhood parka
and a '3$0,000 youth reauUoa ccncu.
faJJtd to win eveit a simple majority.
Members of tilt hlah court were u ·
peeled to rule on the bond mojorlty qu.,.
Lion before the tone awnme.r recess.
Tn the meantime, the city of San
Clemente Is nearlnc the t.tttrmion
leadllne: for bids on the communlty
clubhouse.
Contractor Ray MeC111in has told •
councilmen that his bid offer for-about
J230,000 In construction, would bold until
the: end fJf this monlh. '
Councilmen hid agrHd to wUhhold any
•Ward or contract. uz:iUI 11tlllemenl ol the
61/prec.t Court cue.
Son Clemente, police . 1ro•ln...Uptlllg
lwo weekend thef!J In wllfcl»a IOI of goJl
ctuba wu' taken ffOJa1 It perked auto Md
a. •tone statue Wu reraoved from a
por<h.
The gol( equipment. •1s·reported miSl-
lng Friday .afternoon by Don Schmidt, ol
tll Avenfda Sin Pablo. He told polioe:-tbt:
c11r was not locked wfieri the Ciuba, were
taken , probably between 10 a.m. and
noon. The golf bag. shoes •nd clubl were
valued tot.ally 11 ~14.
A large stone 1tatue v1lu.ed at $125 was
teporttd atolen from tht home of Mildred
P. Gouthey, 414 CIUe Monterey. She uid
the replica of "J\ebtcca'' wu taken
oometlme Sllurde;' evtnfng.
Today's l'lna l
N.Y. Stoeks
TEN CENTS
Capo Man
Credited
In Rescue
By PATRICK BOYLE
01 ii. o.i11 ,.li.t 11111
A San Juan Capistrano service station
attendant was credited today witb
alerting police to the kidnaping of a Long
Beacb man after the attendant beard
cries for help coming from the trunk of a
car.
The attendant, whose name has not
been released by authorities, wu on dut.y,
at 3 a.m. at the Enco Service Station.
localed .at the Junipero Serra exit ol the
San Diego Fteeway. An auto occupied bf
two men entered the .!!talion for gas end,
after bearing the .screanu corning from
the trunk, the attendant took down the
license number of the auto and called the
county sberilf.
Deputies ran a check of the car and
alerted Long Beach police that it was
from their jurisdiction. The auto was
traced to a Long.Beach automobile repair
sh?P· whose owner had been reported
missing by his wife al 1 a.m.
The vehicle was stopped at 3:40 a.m.
by San Diego sheriffll deputies south of
~I l\-1ar who, upon opening the trunk,
djscovered a gun and geve.ral blood
stains. The two occupants of the auto
Monroe Jones, 23, and Edward J~ Cole:
20. both of Loa Angeles, wete arnsted on
Ju.!lpicion of auto theft and kidnaping.
Th~ miaaing body 1hop owner Daniel
Barnett, tif. wa1 found about tWo b9Ul'S
later by the California Highway Patrol
walkin1 along Interstate $ south or
Oceanside. He was bruised and bleeding
offiei!rll said, ag • result of two severe
beatings.
. San Diego s:ftttltrs depuUes said
Barnett is in Trl·CiUes Hospital 1n
OceansJde and is listed in fair condition.
Authorities said Barnett's wife: reported
hearing a scuffle coming from the abop
behind the couple's home at about 1 .a.m.
When she went to lnveatigate. she found
only her husband's broken glasses and
bloodstains on the floor.
A spokesman for the San Diego Sher·
!r~·~ Department .said Barnett, after the
1n1Ual beating at his ahop, was agai•
beaten with fists and a wrench, befor•
being thro}4'n from the stolen car. He roll-
ed down an embankment into a pool of
wa ter. the 1pokesman said, and finally
made his way back to the freeway.
Authorities could not say what the
motive fo rthe kidnaping was. The two
suspects have been returned lo Long
Btacb for arraignment on the charges of
kJdnaping, assa ult, with intent to commit
murder lllnd grand theft auto.
Pot Luck Slated
For 'Help Line'
The Saddleback Valley munsellng
service \4-'hich operates the .area's "Help
Line" will hold a pot-l uck supper June 13
to introduce its new counselors.
The meal and meeUng will be held at
&:30 p.m. In the club room or Mount of
Olive,,: Lutheran Church, um C1irisanta
Drive, Mission Viejo. The Help Line wa1
founded and. is supported by the Sad·
dleback Ministerial AssociaUon and pro-
vlde1 counseling for pe<iple who caU aJO..
2.122.
FollowinJ: the supper, several members
of the servlce will present a ·one-act play,
"Quiet Crie:s," a drama about IU.ldde
prevenUon.
We•tlter
The: weatherman predlctt cloudy
1kie.:ii tonight and Tuesday morn-
ing with a chance of hazy sunshine
In the afternoons. Highs todey l!1d
Tue3day at the beaches 11 ond Jn.
land n. Lo~s around 58.
INSIDE TODAY
Soiling evtnt& in tile Orang•
County Empire St n Scout
Olympica ore 1chfduled JCJr thlt
wet!ksnd. See Boating, Page J!.
l •llflll t• C1Utw11I• I
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Z DAILY PILOT SC
Air West
Crash Deatl1
Toll Listed
SAN FRANCISCO fAP) -Hughes Air
West today rele1~d the following Jii;t o[
crewmen and passengers on a DC9
airliner th11t collided with a military jet
Sunday and crashed near Loa Angeles:
Crew
1. Clpt. Theodore Nicolay, flO, Seattle,
pilot.
2. Flnt Officer Price Bruner, 49, Stat.-
tie. copilot.
3. Hos lt.U Helena Koakim!e1, 30, Seal·
tie.
4. Hostess Joan Pluylaar, 34, Seattle_
5. Hostess Patricia Shelton, 28, Entiat,
Wash.
Passengers
Destination Salt Lake Cily unless
otherv.·ise noted.
6. P, Allen, Salt Lake City.
7-8. ?-.lrs. R. Bird of Carlsbad, Calif.,
and infant Bird, destination Boise, Idaho.
9. S. Boss.
10. Mrs. R. CIJ'IOn.
11-12. Mrs. R. Davidson and Miss K.
Davidson. age 2.
13-14. Mrs. J. Dean and J, Dean, 2-year-
old boy, dealin1t.ion Puco, Wash.
15. P. Dunn of S.lt Lake City.
16-17. A. Espitia and J. Espitia o[ Mex-
ico. destination Boise.
18. John Fore of Ttnana, Calif .•
deslinalion Lewlston. Idaho.
19 . .J\. Gabel, dettlnatlon Boise.
20. Mrs. H. Garcia, deatinatlon
IA:wiston.
21. Mra . M. Garcia of Loa Anjele1, wife
or 10 Air West employe .
22. G. Hunter of Salt Lake City.
1l-1t. Mr. and Mrs. J, Johnson, destina-
tion Bolte.
25. Mr. F. Kllbjleiach, deatlnation
Lewiston.
JS. Arnold Kaufman of An.I Arbor,
Mich.
27. J. Mancr111. of Salt Laite City.
28. McCall , no fir1t name, destination
Puco.
29. Dale Miller of Walla Walla, Waeh.,
deatlnatlon Lewlaton.
30. T. Morrlt.
31 . Miss J . McCroden of Napa , Idaho.
destination Boise.
32-!S. Mias J. Potter, age 5, and Master
1'.f. Potier, age 7, destlnatlon Lew11ton.
34-8~3&. C. Pyke, F. Pyke and W. Pyke,
all of Salt Lab City.
37-38. Mlas M. Rangel and P. Ran&e1
ol Mexlco , tnvellng with A. and J.
Espitia, No. 1g..17 above, to Boist.
39. J. Reeves, a Union Oil Co. tmploye
in the Loi An&ele1 aru, de1UnaUon
Pasco.
40. R. Scl!Mnhal1 of S8lt Lake City.
41. E. Smllh oUalt Lake Ci\J •.
42. Miu M. Sublc of Salt Lan cttj>.
4.1. Miu K. Thomu, traveUna with
mother. Mrs. R. Carson, No. 10 above.
4t. R. Vincent ol BolH, de1tlnaUon
Bolae. \ :.'•/\."' 45. Ted Wllitrm or Mel~-?GUif
dettlnaUon Bolte. 1 •
te. D. Zillman of the Loa Anrelu attt,
destlnaUon Lewiston .
47. N. Hess, New York City, dea tlnatlon
Pasco.
43-49. ldentJfic allons withheld pendln1
noUflcatlon of relallve1.
Laguna Writers
Hold Readings
Three Lal[\lf\a Beach Y.Titers. poe\3
Donald Justice and Robert Ptt.ers and
Ronald Sukenlk, author or the novtls
"Up" and "OUt." .... -111 participate In a
public benefit reading In Loa Angeles
Saturday.
The 8 pm. preaent1llon It 7~1 Soulh
Bronson Ave. will bene£il Kairos·Los
Angeles. v.·hich sponsors groups and
ieminar1 and has been ldentiflf:d aa
Southern C1Hfom!a's Esalen.
Other poet.& p1 rticip1ting wtll be Ann
Stanford, Gerald Locklin and Don Euler!.
A donation of $1.50, or $1 for student!,
wUI be asked.
OIAM•I COAIT
DAllY PILOT
~ COAST PUIUSMIHO COYJ'AH't
••~•rt N. W,M ,,..:a.it .... J"UMllW
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Jil•ili"9 14 41•11; P.O. l a• 666, 91651 s-, c:1.-. .. Offk 1
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Cettll IM11' lJCI """' !11 '''"°' t1,wpwi1 !11t!<I: J1" l'l._I llllulPY•"' Hllll!Tlrlf"WI 9'1Cl!I 11Pi hiKI\ ...........
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A Mother's Feat• •
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Ul'I TolN~flt
The concern or a mother for her child is mirrored in the fa ce of this
South Vietnamese woman . A caravan making a pilgrimage had at the
time been attacked by North Vietnamese in Quang Nam Province, 25
miles south of Da Nang.
Three Cosmonauts Dock
With Orbiting Station
J.tOSCOW <UPI ) -Three Soviet cos-
monaut.a docked their Soyuz 11 1pacecr1ft
wil.b the orbiting 1cientiflc stat.ion Salute
today aDd three lmbed lnto Sal yut to
establiah tht flrtt orbital spece 11bor1·
tory -.. tcienUfic 1t1Uon 8i big IS •
!lmAll p&rlor and complete with ch.airs.
·~·So'llet TIM News'8-enc1 aid the
1aborat.ory wa.s about 60 feet Iona and 12
feet ln diamettr. with a total wel11ht ol 25
lpnl. Tl!flJo!!n .~m1Mlon1 lhowed •
.ioom lt'tJ.t•M'9" t~ co1monaut1 to
apln , we~t. held over heels
without touchliia: any of the equipment
lining the wall1.
The !tal climaxed a '9-day elfort th1t
Included a linkup Aprll 2f between the
three-man Soyuz 10 and s.Jute. But Soyuz.
JO remained linked for only Hve and a
half hours and hurried back to earth.
InWcations at the time wer~ that one ol
the 1pacemen mlght have auffered spice
sickness Salute has orbited unmanned
for the past seven v.·eeks.
It was the first time a crew hu bten
tran1ported to All unmanned 1cientllic
station in apace. and scientific sourcea in
J.1oecow said one or more ma nned
;o;paceah!pg may go aloft soon to Joln the
space complex as prel ude ton perm anent
orbit<1I l:tboratory.
"The cre'4' o[ Soyuz \I ha s boarded the
station Salute." Tass said. "A Soviet
manned orbital scientll1c st.ation is rune·
tioning ln sp11ce." llowever . .11 televlslon
broadc ast from the laboratory ~aid
Viktor Patsayev an d Vladi~!av \l olkov
scrambled through lbe l!nklng pass and
commtinder Georgl Dobrovolsk y re-
mained behind to supervise thP operation.
A Soviet telrvision round table of 5t1en-
tist.s and cosmonauts discussed the
arhlevement for Ruulan audiences .
"We are witnessing a qua\ltatlv ely new
step in cosmonauUcs -a long term
orbital station has been bu\lt," Space
&elenLlrt Boris Ralschenback told the
roundtable.
"The que1 Uona of 1clentlfic technical
control ol 1uch stations pre.sent big com-
plic1Uon1 ..• thla ataUon should permit
multiple dcc:kln1. They mual aomeUmes
rece.lva not Ont but anolher ahlp ••. and
il is necessary to control the docked ap-
paratua."
Tass said the combined weight of Soyuz
11 and Salute was more than 2S tons.
Two Brusl1 Fires
Bum 120 Acres
Dry, eiplosive brusll pla~ed Oranac
County firemen on two fronts over lhe
~·e•ktnd aa biaiea burned more than 120
acres.
Sunday af\ernoon a fire blamed on an
II-year-old Mission Viejo boy playing
'4"llh matches burned over 20 acres at the
north end of Loa All!os Road ln El Toro.
Ten county and stale fire companies
subdued the blazt in two hour! whlle
dodging rattlesnakes. "For a time the
snakes were more dangerou1 than the
fire," said one rirellghter.
Saturday. 100 acres or hea\'y brush
~·ere destroyed in Tonner Canyon north
of Brea. The blaze at one time threatened
the Fireslol'le Boy Seoul Camp. P,1ore
ll'lan 200 men banled the fire for lwo
hours before controlling it.
One prisoner-firefighter was bitten by
a rattle5nakt but is reported in good
rondition tod~}.
Mesa Skin Diver
Injured in Surf
A U:Jsta f\.1esa man who v.·1s injw-ed in
a !kin diving accident off Laguna·• Mos!>
Street Beach Sunday morning is reported
in satisraclorv condition at South Coast
Community Jio!pital today.
Roy Boyette. 35, of 1800 Pomona Avt.
"''as caught In heavy surf shortly after 1 l
am. Sunda~. police reported. Pulltd
as.hare by lifeguards he w&s Riven oxygen
and transported to the hospital where he
remained overnight in the lnteMlve care
unit.
A h<>1pllal 1pokesman 11id Boyette"1
condition was much Improved this morn-
ing and he was to bt trantferttd to
regular care.
l '11:1.:1d Allo~ated
La.guna Council OKs Displa.y 1'1od.el
•
Allegheny Plane Dow ll
Propjet Hits Power Line; 29 Feared Dead
NEW HAVEN , Conn. !AP ) -An
Allegheny Airlines propjet with 31
person~ aboard hit a J)()Y.'er line , ripped
through some summer cottages and
cra1hed into marshland near Tweed New
llaven Airport toda y.
Some reports put the death toll as high
8! 29.
James Malarky, airport manager, said
29 persons were kJlled. and Yale New
Haven Jlospit.al said it \l'aS certain at
least 2~ were dead.
The Convair 580 hit the utility line as it
approached Tweed Ne'4' llaven Airport in
hazy fog , acC<lrding to ~lalarky. Five
beach collages oear the end of the
runway y,·ere st~uck: the n 1he wreckage
crashed in 1wo big p1e<'.'ts. Allegheny .said 28 pas.scngers, 1nc.:ludint;
t"·o infants and a crew of three weN)
aboard th e' regularly scheduled flight,
\1·hich originated in \\'ashingt on. 11 C '
Polil·e said 11 "'as Delleved 1nos t uf the
cottages \\'ere l'ara.111.
Freigl1t Train Hits, Cai·;
Sleeping Motorist Saved
Allegheny twa<lquarters in P1t1sb11rgh
a t hrs\ seid 29 persons v.·ere aboa rd. _bu~
the µassenger list later "·as revised
UP"'ard to include two infa nts.
The plane '4'aS Flight ~8~. \\ hich
originatt>d in \\'ashlnglOn. D.C .. anti W
flown to Ne"· London . ('onn. ll was to
ha ve continued on to Ney,•port r\e11 s, Va.,
Jollo"·ing the stop at ~e"' lla1 t>n.
Most Qf the bodies Y.ere lound 51111
~trapped in their seats 111 lht hurnPd
fuselage 1\no!hrr large piece of the plane
11·as f.ountJ about \f){) feet away The freight train was late and If it
hadn't been, Jame1 Adrian Shankland
\VOuldn't be alive today to &it in his
Oran1e County Jall cell and reOtct on
~·het he would have looked ilke if ht. had
been 1lttlng in hi1 car at 3:S5 p.m •
Sunday.
Tbat'1 when lhe 46-car 1outhbound
freight chewed up Shankland's car and
1he tow truck that was trying to get it off
the. tracks at Oso Parkway In Mission
Viejo, just 15 minutes after the sleeplng
Shank.land was dragged out of the vebi·
cle.
"He was dead drunk," .sheriffs Captai n
Jame! Broadbelt charged today. "Ht
didn't know a thing about what was aolng
on and ht'd have been there \\'hen the
train came If our deputies hadn't gotten
there first."
Deputies found lhe 31·year-old Tw:tin
man aprawled on the frant aeat of his car
which was !Ltaddled on tbe track.I
between the north end of Camln•
CaplsLtanD and the aoutb end of Cabot
Road.
They got tbt tow truck on the scene but
the 3:35 p.m. freight barreling throuih at
nearly 70 milts an hour ended any hopes
they had of gelling the 1Ull sletplni
Shankland's car off the tracks.
The !rain smashed the auto Inti ebli-
Police Checking
Death of SA Boy
'fDxicoloaical teats ~·ere erderf:d today
by the Orange County Corooer1 OU!ce to
determine lht cause of death ef a youn1
Santa Ana man whose body was found
durln1 the Wttkend Jn rou1h terrain near
Wllllam1 Canyon.
The remain.-; found by a resident 1Gho
was riding his hor se along mountain
trails in the bru sh-covered area have
been identified as those flf John ?wlark
Barry. 19, of Tustin .
It is belleved that Barry's dtath OC·
curred about May 28. shortly after he
"'as reported missing by anxious
relatives .
Oranae County Sheriff's homicide in·
\•esligators loday "''ere scouring the area
in search for rlues lo tbf! young man's
death. They refused to comment on the
possibility tbat Barry may be a murder
victim.
Budget Session
Set i11 Clemen te
The San Clemente City Council ~·111
hold a budgel ~tudy session ton ight It 7
o"clock to discuss the controversial issue
of pay raises for the city employes.
Councilmen and staff have repeatedly
11ald funds do not exist for any substantial
raises.
However. police and public safely
personnel are a8k lng for a minimum 10
percenl pay hike. Other city workers
have requested a cost-nf-livlng raise of
7 ~ percent.
The session will be held in the con-
fere nce room next to counell chambers.
vion. sent a fender from the vehlC'le 500
feet Into the air to land incbea awa y from
the sheriff's patrol car and heavily
damaged the tow truck with , the olber
flying wreckage •
Shankland was booked on charges of
mallclou1 injury to • railroad. Deputies
today aal d other ehars:es m1y be filed
aaalnst the TIJ9Un man.
There were no injuries in the Sunday
afternoon mishap. Railroad officials will
check the lead engine of the fretaht today
for possible damaae .
Father Slays
Wife, Him self
In Anaheim
An 1 1-year~ld 1irt and her lltUt
brother are Clrphaned today, after a
desper1te but futile try to ke ep a
despondent, murder and suicide-bent
fttller ClUt of the family home.
Orin J. Lowry, 39. of Torrance. finally
forced hls way into the Anaheim area
residence at 9721 Kennelly Lane. kll!lng
hls ex-wire and himself.
Their dlvorct was final only a few days
ago.
Coroner's deputies said Lowry ap·
parently walled for hi! former v;ile
Janet, 31. to leave for work.
Confronted outs ide, l.1rs. Lowry ran
back in, followed by her former huaband .
She tried to fight him Clff and keep him
out as he ru1hed I.ht door.
The despondent man finally farted his
way ID, dtaplle resistance by Mrs. Lowry
and JJ.year-<lld daughter Audrey, ac·
cording to shtrlfl's ho m I c i de In-
vestigator!>.
Coroner's deputies sald ht pulled a gun
and shot htr in the head , then put a bu11tt
lnlo hi1 own brain.
The bodies were taken to Baggott'~
Chapel o[ the Bells Mortuary in Anaheim
after the murder-,.ulc\de.
Jnvestigalor11 said that be s id e R
daughter Audrey, the couple had a 9-
year<1Jd ~n, Dwayne.
Class Schedule
Workshop Slated
A workshop ha& betn called by trustee~
of the San Joaquin Elementary School
District lo discuss clai:s schedul ing at
Irvine Intermediate School.
The meeUng 'l'"lil take place Tuesday,
.June 8 at 4:30 p.m. in the adminislrati\'t:
annex . 14600 Sand Canyon Ave . East
lr\•ine .
The board approved a change in cur-
riculum at Irvine School during its la.!it
meeting but crille!zed the admin\~tratlon
for not bringing scbt:duling plans to
trustees !OOner.
Proposals for making the two-year In-
termediate program a rnore cohesi\·e unil
"'ill be outlined by the school principal
John Del Monaco.
A spokestnan for \'ale :'\e1v lla.,.en
llospital said 1110 men and a woman y,·ero
admitted after the crash.
1'he wo man \Vas listed in sat1:.:factQry
('Ondition. No cornlifion report "'as
avallable on tbe n1en.
The crash "looked and sounded !Ike an
atomic explosion." said N:incy Palm~iri
of East Haven, who sai<l she heard th~.
explosions as the plane hit the "·ire ~
crashed at the end of the runway.
Mrs. ~tary Baldwin of Eest llaven said
she \\"as at home, just getting out of her
car as the plane "s"·oopet! in so lo"· I had
to duck."
She said the t1vo engine plane then hil
the wires near her back .vard and did
".qorl of a turn , then came dOY.'n and ex·
plocled."
r..tartin Patricell i of East H111·en s.a1d hr
say,· e body fly out of the plane and land
in a pond of y,•ater , ""•avinf. his hands
feveri shly.·•
Joseph Horowitz, manager of a beach
club near the crash scene, said he heard
the plane but was unable to see It in the
heavy fog. Visibility was estimated at
less than two miles.
Horowitz said fog hung over the beach
and he finelly saw the craft plunge out of
the sky, hit one of the cottages and burst
into a ball of lames.
He sald he heard scre11111s fol" help but
couldn't get near the flam ing aircr art
that finally stopped near lus club"s tenni!
courts.
Ex-cleputy Wins
Court Delay
In Theft Case
A new move by fonner Orange Count y
sheriff's deput y Frederick Irvine to sup.
press evidence supporting charges thel
he burglarized the ~fil\slon VieJO Coun try ·
Clu b toda y led to a further delay of h11
Superior t:ourl trial.
Presiding Judge \\'1ll1a1n C. Speirs
delayed the trial date unli\ Aug. 2 eftcr
learning fron1 defense attorney CIH!ord
Schaffer tba! it wi!l be late .J uly befor1t
!he District Court of Appeal s rule s on •
writ of mandale filed by the Los Angeles
lawye r.
That writ was filtd afte r Superior
Court Judge H. \\'alter Steiner rejected
Irvine 's bid for el1m1nat1on of e1•idence
that tbe prosecution considers to be .,·ital
in i1s case against the forn1er lawman.
Irvine, 42. or Lil l!ebra, 11·as arre~led
Sepl. 20 shortly aher he and a fellow
deputy allegl•dly r:ln~:irkr·d the ll'.r\Jnlrv
club's gol f shop of hquur and i;:ol!ini;:
equipment "hile t he~· 11ere
•·moonlight ing .. a!' secunty ~urards.
Arresting of£icers said Jr .. 1nt•s t'Om.
panion surrende red en the spot bul
lrvin t". described as ber!'erk. :isserttdlv
t'ommandeered a pr1trol car anrl led h1~
former co\Jeagues on a "'1!d l'hasc th<il
ended in Riverside Coun1v \\'Ith Jr .,.1nc
holding a gun to his head and lhrcate nin~
to commit suicide.
lit was lattr indicted liy the Orangit
County Grand Jury on charges of gr:inr'\
theft, auto then. huri.:lary. r!'rr.i\·ini
stolen properly and conspiracy.
DIAMONDS CAN be o
man's best friend
DEALS for DAD
MAN'S 1.42 CT. DIAMOND
~~ft:-::·.:.::.~~ ...... $499
MAN 'S .. NUINI
ILUE .STAI WPHIRI
Sii DOM UCfTI
fOR DIAMONDS.
REMIM8ER, A
DIAMOND JS A
GOOD
INVISTMINT
ONLY If YOU IUY
IT RIGHTI
The Laguna Stach City Council ha"
agreed to allocate $5,000 for thf: con-
1truction of a wortlna bue model of the
downtown baain. to bt used for planning.
coordinaUoo and 1n1lya11 of specific
devdopment propo11al1.
./\
organiulion1 frH lo use their mon~y to
construct modelt or proposals for build·
ings, m!ll! and otber· improvem,nu to
be set into the base for .study .
•
! .. brl:.:-...... -· ········ ·-$199
MAN'S .JO CT. DIAMOND
:""' ..w ···-· .. $95
EXPERT
WATCH
REPAIR
DOMI ON
NIMtlD DOMIACITI
*OUR UNUSUAl MONEY BACK
DIAllllllD GUARANTEE
Councllmen were unanimous In their
support of Planninl Director Wayne
r..foody'1 recommeodalion lhll the city
undertake to pay the full cost of 1ucll a
baae model. esUm•ted at $4.700.
~n.e Cltlsens' Town flannlng As90cl11·
tlon htA pledged $1,000"to ply for an In-
itial se11ment of a downtown model and
lhe Downtown Dullness Assocl•tlon al~o
8~fl'ltd ready to conlrlbutt, Moody told
the councU.
Howtver, he 11ld , II w11 doubtful .auf·
ficJent fund• could be r1lsed to complete
the model. It would teem more ti~
proprl:ite for the city to underwrite lh•
full cost, Moody said, leaving the pr ivate
•
The council agreed, without a dissen-
tlng voict.
The propOsed model '4'ill be constructed
lo fO Ittl. Total dimens ions of the model
makl'r Leon Hafrnn to a 1cl1, of one Inch
to 40 feet. Total dimension., otf'he model
wtll bt about atven ftet b~ aix feet and It
will be made In three sections for e11e of
handlln(I . Moody said. Movrrble Items
~uch 111 buildin¥S. trees, ~Pl' and lht
like can easily be attached or removed
and reloca~ on such a model , t.he plan-
ner pointed out, and It provide• •
.. ~1ork11ble vi~ual toot for study of propc»ed
<lt>velopments.
The btse model will Include topography
l)ncl nnlurll'I features, road ltyout a.nd
hlock-form ellistlng buildings.
C.M.J.L XTRA
MAN'S .OI CT. DIAMOND llN•
;:.::; =-·~········ $19.95
1002 !TIMS TO CHOOSE PROM •
When yeu llJuy a dlamencl from vs w.
wlll tuaran,.. that diamond to appral ..
et 40% MORE than yov paid for It or
Y9Ur moMf back. (an yov do 11 well
el11whera? COMPAltE.
FIND IT HERE FIRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
LOAN, IUY, SILL, TRAD! COMI JN AND BROWSE AROUND
1138 NEWPORT ILVD. PHONE 646-7741
DOWN10WN COSTA MUA -lo-Harloor l lroadway
Power to the People
Contractors for the Southern California Edison
Company are providing just that, digging a trench
across Newport Harbor from Co rona de! Mar lo
Feninsula Point to provide a resting place for a
new•4,000-voll cable to service peninsula residents .
Project will take several more weeks, company of·
ficials say. The cable will be covered .
Drug Store Ow11er Fed Up Witl1 Crool{s
Forestry
Service
Mond1y. Jurit 7, llf71 DAILY PILOT 2 1
LEGAL N011CE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
f'ICTIT.J'ul'~USIN llS f'ICllTlO~Ut!Nf.U P+OTIC( IS Hf.lt(ll'f' Cil VElll tfllt "'-
NAM• ST'Ar•MalfT lilt.Ml ITAT•M•NT followl1>1 itltlnl of""-Ir .. ~ ... "'"""'""' •lrit .... ~ ...... hold bY "'--Po!k• 0.Nt•.....,I n.. JOl_I,,. --.,.. Tl<" 191-1111 ,.,_,, •i• doh .. 1t1 ff!.I' Cir. ti Cen1 ""-'• 1.,. 1 "'""' lfl
"'"'-••• llluu..t• '" THE G•EENl:Al', "'" 1'1Mlllhu"' MOT EL SUN'N S,t,NOS. 11 cn P•clfl< l:CC"• of II! ... ,.,. Ctol S.YI~ "•fff, .._.1111....... hac.11. C.HPWPll.I Co.ou Hlt1h,..•V, Hllllllnt1on ll<lc.t'I. -9<><<11 011•. -Pu••'"" bllo. -ti..., II•<•. th•-l>ik•o -"'~ un~"""'"" n..-.. 11.0bf•I u. Fl_.,,. .. 110'1 P1elh( Co.•! .... '""' 00..:. 01\f: <lllr>11llY ..... m-y
U Will/.,,. lof....W SIMf. I 'I JJ Hl1hw•Y. Hunh111tl011 llt•(h, lf!ly J. NOT ICE IS F'UAT.,EA: GIVEN lh•! 11 F. lltookhUfll '1rHI, H""llll'fl ... •Md!. F'i1her. 110'1 P•<llOC (OOH Hl1th•uv, l'IO OWllor •P•t•ro ,...., ~ro•tl hi• rges ... e C~~-:.-~·· l lf Slt fr, 1*2 •rook-II H11nT1nOIQfl flttc.11, JQWPh J. 0'(~nor, _,..,.,,'-ot 1 ... tr-rty wllllln WVt"' ll "11t Skvwt y, l>••..ilM. Mt•tll J. 0 Gotl-Ill <l•Y• followlne m. Ol/tlll~1to.. 01 !hit ~~1~~~1':.:~~~c!.,~~Hi ':~1':':.;.,tl "0'• mt 'kywtY, '•••OIH, Nor!co, thf> 11110 lfl9roto •lltll ••II 1n •ht
WAS l'lNGTON (UPI) ,..,.,,....,,111 ll>ulDIJMI uld wll<I!, Tn~1 llu1l~u I~ btlnt t-ucrtod br t ll111Ur. ii "'''' 1>t ont, .., In t111 c11w el l Wiiii•"' B"lhf>ICI ll•tr ''"" •I ':i1' u "F'f,:~, Co'1• Mt••· In ""'k h C•ot rhe or-rtv
'"'-MtrTn• L. S!trr Thi• 1111•,.;•n• 111«1 witll , ... Ca.univ •h1!1 i.. l<lid ,, Pul>llc IY(t~ ., • ilMt
iuc:; U.S. Fortst Service is li.n-'"1« , Clt r• pf °''"'' C011nrY ..,, Mircn it, •no ~11e 10 111 1nn...,"<td,
,,,.1111>1.d 011000 COlll O.!ly 110!, lt ll. OA.1£0: Juno 1. lt11
ding thal where there's 5moke M•Y 11, 10, 11 •nct Jl/M 1, 1t11 111,..11 Publl.i>fod 0 ,11191 c,,.11 0,1,., Pl!ot, 11:, E NElH
'
CHIEP OF POLICE th, ere's fitt -m<l.'llly from en· Mi r 1•· Ji i nd Jun• '· 11· 1'11 uu 1 •ubilll'ltd o r1n119 Co••t o111v ioo., •• . , ______ EG ____ N_OT_lcC-E----/--''-'-'--' Jun• 1, 1r11 1112.11
v!ronmtntallsts burned up L AL L EGAL. NOTICE
a bout air pollution . l-----~.~ .• ~ ... ,------1-------=.=.,,=M:-----1----L~E=-G::-cA~L-N=o=TJ~C~E=---
So the foresters . who believe '1;I~T;o~TsA:~~·:::' ·•i;:;:~0~r'A:~!.':::•
tn fighting fire with fire, are .,:"* f0Uowlt1t N r"°" 1, dolt1t Du11 Mn tu~~~ • ., ':;1~1111 "'"""" ••• <1clno
asking their critics whether THE &OAROWALIC, 111 Oc:H n CHANNEL llEEF, 'SlJ O<••n a 1....i .. A.Vl!"I~, l 11111n1 Botch, C1tllornl1. CorQ111 Of'/ M•r. Ct/1'. "111.l'..
,.J1t)I
ClllT1P!CATI" OP IUtlNISS,
Pl(TlllOUJ NAlo\a
T"" ul'ld1rol1n1<1 (tr!lty lntv •r• <-
ductlnt ...... 1 ... ,, •I , ... N•Wl>flrl ....... they would ralher have s......,.,ke 11_,, F', sioven.on, 1n El '''""· H. Ct<1•k A:ot1tr10. 1s1' Oce1n 11 .. ~, '"" Youn• llttcll. C1U!ornl1. Coron• att Mir Ct llr '1•U '""'"' c 51•-C. Coll• Me••· C•Hrornl1. und" "''
f . f l ,. TM• bullMH It btlflt tonducl.cl by Ill 11.obffll. IMO J~Urov . Ave .•. Eo<-i<lo, rlc11lleu1 II•"' II'"'' tf WEWl'OllT 1"110.. rom raging ores ires or rnoi .. i<11u•f. c.m. t10is. Elhttiolh B. ll!oo.ru . 1"'° ouc110N5 '"" lfltr 111<1 r1rm 11 cam-
f th t lied b · ll!GIH•l "· s"vtnion J•Ur• .. Ave . Escondido, Ct!ll, '101,, P<»td of tl\1 follawl,,. oeroono, '"f'lfil rom e con r o urning Thi• itittmont 10.., w1tfl '"• (ou111, T~,, butln•n r, o.1no c"""ucttd .,, • ,..,.,., 1" 1u11 "'" 111c11 •' •••ldonc1 •••
'th h. h th h cl•rk o! Or•ntt '"""'"' On Mt• )(I, ltll. ,.,,,,.1 01r1n.,,.,,IP. •• lollowi: WI w IC e agency opes Publi•h..:I O••n" co11r 0111w P11111, H Ct<1r1c ll!ot>ert~ G•nr O.ni1"•a . "11 "''"1' Aof )!,
to head off SUCh fires. Mtr 14. 11 t nd Juno 1, ll, 1'11 l l..,.11 Thi\ tl~tmunt llltd with "'' Cwnh• Co.it Meu. 1"1111 Evtrttt. l 1M Old Tun•
c1 ... ~ Of Ot1nv1 C""n'• on: Mov n . 1111 n•I 111<1 .. Lift ••"•·
The d .f . l d Pul>lo"".O OrlnM Coolf 01.tv Pllol , OtltCI Mlv 11, \ti! lemma was po1n e up M•Y 1._ 11 i na Jun•'· 1,, 1911 lU•·ll Phi!!• L. 11 E"v•r•tr
b F l S . Ch . f LEGAL. NOTICE , ____ -c-c-c-c------1 G••Y D•n1IQ<d Y ores erv1ce I e !-----------------s1•!• 01 c111•ornl1. or1rtt1 CD11nfy:
Ed d P Cl.ff · p..1111 LEGAL NOTICE On M•v 11, it11, bt to•e "''· 1 Not••• W 3 r • l In ,ICT!TIOUS !!Ut!Nl'SS 'ubllc in '"" ,.,, >1\d St11,, 1>1rion1ll t
Cong ressional les tim ony. ••• NAMI $TA1 EME NT l'lLl NO. F llU fl>Pflftd Pllll! .. L. ll, @•tffll Ind G••t
'" f(lll.,wlnt Pl'"°" 11 doing llu1\n"'1 PICT!TIOUS IUllNl.S.S OenUord •-n 10 "'* '" ~ !ho """'"' Te t f ' bcf H •• NAME STATfMt:NT ""'°'' n.om•• ••• •u.,.<•lbtd ro 1110 witlll"' S J y ing Ore a OUSe 'ALLEGllO DEL MAR llEt.UTY Th• lallowln1 1>tt1<1n 11 dalnt bu>l~1 ln1tfu,.,1111 and ·~-nowlltd-they t "4•
Appcopria!ions subcommittee, SAlON, 11n E. Co••' Hl111w1v, Co•on• '" ecutltd th1 ,.,., •• <lei M••· Ct ll!P<nl1. lOVATT'S GOLOENWEST, !NC , 0 0 lOFFICtA.L SE,t,Ll Cliff warned against "going to U, Jt n Homon. •10 l'Gln>tllll ,l,•t . Wo<nor A•tnut. Hunlll'IG!On l t1th. N\Jlll'I' BETH MOll TON Coron1 d1! ,.,,,.,, C•lllornl• l'/&1S. C1ll!o•nl1. No!t rv Public, C11!lornl1
extremes.. in demanding a Thh bu1ln"1 11 btln1 oonctuc1.a bv '" To••lt H1rdw1r1, • c 1 I ! 1 • • n I • Prln<IP•I OHie• In indlvldu1I. Coq>Oft!lon, lf.i Wtt~r Av1nu1, Hun· 0•1n11 C<>U"IV
tOla] ban On al] burning in the U J•n Ho,.,tn tln11!on Bt och, C1ll!ornl1. My Comml11!0t'I E~llrfl
Thli 11~1Pmont 111111 wl!h !h• C...,nly Thi• Du1lnen 11 conduc11>11 bv I\ Cll· April t, 1'/S
national forests. C••<~ Pl Or~noe CwnrY on J.,nt J. I'll, llornlt (Ort>or.tlon. PulltlJll'°" O•t nw Co11t Ot l/y "llot,
bV BEVEllLV J. M.AODOX OeP"IV County Antllonw Tov•tt, f're•ld~n1 MtY 21, JI 1nd Juno 7, I•, 1911 Uil!.-11
Fire, Cliff said, was used for c1e1-. T1111 "•"m..,, w11 m.., "'''" '""' c...,,,. Publl1~td Ora~o• Co11t Ot llT Piiot, IY Clor~ ot Or1r>01 Counry "" dt!e ln·/----cc~c-----~,----
many purposes, inc 1 u d in g June 1, 14, 21, :.. 1'71 !Jfl·l! dlc11o<1 bY 1111 111mo •bo~•. LEGAL NOTICE 'J>OINO !XTlll, LYNCM &. I UCNANAN,
e s pec ially in lhe Wesl -gel·r--------------1:~~:~.1 • .,., CtrMritl•ft """""
ting rid of logging debris that l..EGAL NOTICE 611 w iiihl•• ,,.,,., swire n• c•11T1F1CATI o" 1us1111 111
creates a fire haza rd in t he L•• An•••••· c11i1. ,..1, P'1cr1r1o us NAM•
F-llll flJ4'0C T~f ~ndt"•llr"lftt d.,..1 c•rllfy th• 11 (-
{OrCS{S. •ICTITIOUS IU51NE5S Publliht<I O•t ngop Co6ll Oli"" P•lot. <lurllnt I buslntu 11 •H N, N-DClrl In W ash ingto n and Orego n HolME JTAlEMl:NT J~n• '· 1._ 21. ,., tfll .J 1 ~11 a1 .. .,. No o . Newoor1 eetc~. c1111°"1111. T~o IOl1Qw>n9 p1ftono t •t <ltlint und" llW llcllfloul firm n1m• o1 AP•
a lone, Fores t Service offic ials bu•ln•,. "" LEGAL NOTICE c11111E ,,,., "'"' 1•1<1 ll•m r, cc1m11<1•HI oi
I d COSTELLO ol ND MA RSH, llll UI• tnt lol!owlnt pe,_..,n, wllav ,..,,,, 111 l11lt
s aid, oggers leave behin Li~o. Su•I• xio, Nrw11<1rr er1c11,
1
'"" ul~<f o• rrslarn<• ,. •• 1Gotow1·
them some 40 millio n tons of c1111ornr1 t 711611 '"'1"1 C•rmon John"°", 211 4hl u,.,,, l!l •ron J Co1l•llo. SlO S••vlr-.. SI., ClllTtl'ICATll! Oft IUllHIJS NowPOfl Bo•ch. Ct lltornl1, h igh ly inflammable l r ash L1gun1 Betel\. Ct hfo+"nl• •1•~1 . •1CT1TIOUI NAM ll Oi led M•v 11, 1'11 P~ul J. Ml'•h. '!Cl l ovo11• Tt<o unclrrolt11td <!.,... ct rll!• h1 ft co"" C•"n•n John•on e ver y year. W••!mln1lff, (1lolo•n,1 t ll7!, <luClln9 1 Ou1ln•U 11,ltlt Hl rllOt' l lv<5 , S1•11 pf (t lol01n11. O•l nOt Cou ... v:
"!f We Can'l USe rire, then T1'11 l>ulln•u I> O•lfl9 (Ondu(ltCI l>W •Coll• Mt )•. (t llfllf n .. , UNlu !1'f h< On M1v ll, lfl!, boloro mt, 1 No!tt'f
Gtnfl'll P1rtnrn.h;u, 1111°"' tlrm "1m1 of fll.EO T. HLUSH~O Pul>llC In •nd lor 111<1 Sti lt, peri•nt llf We run !he risk Of having WiJd llVrOn J . Co1lt ll" •nd l~I! 111<1 lltm 11 cor,u>o~~ Of lh• 11•••!1rt<I c;,o"''ln JOl\nlQfl ~llDWn IO mo le
fires Which Will nroduce more Paul J . M'"" !<>llowln1t !>Ir...,,, '"h"H n•mo In lu\t l l'lll l>e "" ""''"' W'-• nt"'I II lUbKrlbtd DENVER (AP) Joe sprayed wilh a dis abnng injuries during the rob beries. narcolics, ha·:e been hitting ,... 1~;, 111r•m•n1 hlrd wl"' tn, c...,n1y Pl•<• °' •••ldonc• 11 •• 1011owo: 10 '"' wn111n 1n11ru,.,•nt •nd •UMWI-·
h ;. stor•. sn1oke and more pollution and c1e,~ 01 Or•n•• c1111n1Y 011 Jun•>. 19 11 e.. f'•t<I l , Hlu1hko, 1n 1' 011n1"" od "" nKutt<I ,~. ,,,,..,, Eisenberg, operator of lhe chemical in the latest hoid up "But I've h ad so me scar y ~ ' d • f eeve11Lv J. M"ooox o.ouiw couniv P11<1, W•1tm+n11or, c 1111orn11, 10FF1c1"L 5EALI
caus e g~aler estruct1on o ciork. ot11<1 M1v 11, 1tn M••v B•ln M«ion
Corona Drug Store in Denver·s attempt. m oments," he said. h1ost robber:s think drug the environment than if you Put •;illt<I O•anvo c .. it 0•11v ,.1.,1. F•...i 1. H1u.nko Noh•• Pue.11c, c i utornl•
d owntown area for 35 years, is "l"•e r eached the poi·nl of no stores carry a large quantity Jun• 1, "· 11, 11. 1tn 1:ic·11 St•'•,"' c1111orn1,, or11190 CounlY: Pr1"<1"11 Ofllc• rn • "Let me show you this,'' he u se fire u nder controlled con-On M•r 11, u11, 1>e•or• "'"· • Net1rv oreno• county about to give it up. return, and don't think I can of narcotics, lie said. d,-,,·ons," Cli.ff s ai·d . ,u1>11c In •"" t« '"" s••T•. P•roon111y M• cornm1111on E•Plru
said, pointing lo a hole in a •PP•~••d F,.d T, H1u1n~o ~nown 10 "''to olP•ll t , 1t1J He's been held up 37 times, take any more." he said. "I 've "But about 99 pe r cent of Rep. Julia Butler Hansen LEGAL NOTICE bt 1h1 Pff~c~ who" n•m• 1t ouburibfd J>ub11111.c1 or1n11• cooot 011rr ~11111,
m081ly by persons wiUl guns. had all the abuse a person back room floor . "That's drugstores have very little, if ID·\\' a sh.) chairman o f the in·l-------,-_,-,,c,-,------1!: 1~: ~~·:~~1~··~~;"~~·,,.,~~ t(~r.owlftd;· Mtv 11. 14, 31 1 nd Jun• 1, 1r11 111,.11
More than 60 windows have should have lo take." where OM guy took a shot at any," Eiseriberg explained. l e r i 0 r Appropriations sub-1110T1c 1 TO c•ro1To11ts IOFFICIAL sEAll
SUl'ERIOR COUllt f OP THI MltY 8.in Morlen been broken -some in COil· "f c an 't just decide to quit," me when my foot was about "Most nior phine is given in committee. said the pr oblem STAYr: oF '"L1iro11N1A ,-011 Net•" Pu1>11,.c .n1o•ni•
nection with the robberies. dd d E . •-1· h " · d . · I · h hospitals, and heroin has been f b · 1 h f THE cou1111v OF 0111ANGI! Prln•IPll 0!11<• rn
LEGAL NOTI CE
a e 1sen1J1::rg " ve got to ere, 1n 1cat1ng a ew 1nc es o urning ras a so was "''· A.,.,J1, o r1n11• c .... n1v P 1ut1
He has.n·t kept track of the m a ke a Jiving and this is the. fro m the hole. outlawed as a drug since plaguing many cities. Jn the E1•a1e o1 v111G1NIA LEE T111IGGs. M• cornm1u 10<1 E1rulr•• c1:1111l'tC AT• OP 1 11111111 11
193 •. " Ooc••••d. APr l! t, ltlS l'l(TIT10US Pl•M NAlo\I amouot of c ash -and only way I know lo do it. No Usually lhe robbers have Pacific Northwest, she said. NOTI CE 15 HEPEll'f' GIVEN 10 !ho "u111J1hee Or•n•• coou 0 1;1, P1101. TM 11na•ril•....i 0oto ""'•bv c1111,,.
drugs-he's lost. one,-, g o ing to hire a 65 year goll•n cas h r a n g ing a-und The fr·r sl thi'ng they i•ell for wind storms frequently litter crt11no" o1 111. •bcl"• nomee arc•d•o• M•• i1 •n<1 Jun• 1, H. 11, 1t11 11u.11 11111 h• 11 c-...:11"' • r•1111 1>Y11nu1 •• ~ '" 1"" t ll """on\ l>iv•nt c111m1 1011n11 Int •n 1nalvldu1r •I IJIJ On I~• Mo ll. 11 .... n1
E isenberg·s left eye was old pharmacist." $100. he esUmates. is narcotics and the n ext thing ('ities with fallen tr e l'! s , ,.1a dec•d•nl .,~ ••<1ulrt<1 10 1111 LEGAL NOTICE P•r~ 5)1"""1"111 Ctnt•'· llutn• P.,k,
them, '*11h t"• nt<••l•rV vO<I<"•'•· In 1n1 C1flfa•n•1, ~ncltr lh~ l1uitlou1 lltm n1m1 swollen and red after being There have been n o serious Lately, youths, s ~eking is money.'' Eisenbtrg said. bra nches and leaves. .,111,. o1 'h• ci .. ~ o1 111, •bovt rn1i utc11-------:-:=-:-------1o1 rov wo111Lo •nd ,,, .. ••hi 11rm i.
l ... i00ii0i0 .. ilii0 .. i0•i00i .. llii0iOi0i0iOiOiOiOi0i0iOiOiOiiiiiiiiii0iOi0i0oiiO;i;;iOiOiOiOi00iiOiO;i;;iOiOi0iiiiiii0i0iOi0i0iiii;;;i0iiii0iOiO .. i0m .. iliiOiOiiiiO .. iOiOiOiijj cou•l, or 10 or•o•nl lht,.,, w!ln 11'1• l'·•ltlt compo'ed pf lhr tvlla-..1,,. "'""'• -..n-
Play The Advertising Ciame To Win
With This Rule:
Check Your Hat
I\\~·\ .. ~ "\
~--.-J
NQWY011SEE11 .. NOW You DON'T
r
But PIY u thCXJgh you did?
We don't btl/IV<I adY9rtlnrs should hlVe to play guessing games with circulation
figures. The facts are too Important to the effectiveness of their sales menages and the
coat of advertising space.
To eltmlnato the element of chance, our facts and figures are audiled and w rined by tho Audit
Bureau of Clrculationa. Through an audit report, ABC tells U$ and our advertlser1 ·
oxaclfy how much circul ation we have, where 11 Je dielrlbuted, what read•,. p1y, and the
•-rs to many other queatlono llbout our cfrouJaUon audience.
Don't gue• •kto w a-copy Df oilr Jateat oudfrn1port. Be ABC.Ure I
DAILY PILOT
noteUl•Y YOl!ch•"• 10 1111 uncltr1it nt<I 11 CIRTIPICATll OP. •UllNISI , "•mt 11 In t'ul! tnd l>!t<• fl! ttiktonct It ~ICTITIOU5 NAMI 11 l<>!l-1, 1.,.wll: the olll<o cl hi• t 1tornov1, HEA:I ERT Tllo unclorilirw<t do ct r!llY llltY '" Ellt rY O. 1tundt 11. 11n 'l'.rll.""lr• GALL ANO JOHN U. GA.LL, "°° Ovltll co..auc!lnt t llutlne11 11 t.i Wi tt 111~ St C.trd~n C.ro"'· Ct lilOfnli . 6ull<llllQ, 611 5...,11> Ollv1 51f .. 1, LOI C01t1 Mt11, C1!1!ornl1, u""or lhl 11~: Ot loel A••ll )l. ltll A.n••lt1, C1,llfo•nl1 tOCtU, ""'!en It lllt llllout 11tm nt m• of \(JI.WARD MolRINE (lien' o . Trul'$Cl~\I
Pli tt Cl! bu11n111 ol ltlt 11ncl1rtltntd In Ill SERVICE t nd !hit oold firm It <...._f'<I STATE 01' CAL tF'O•WtA.
mllltfl P<'•lfl11l"1 lo lllt 11111• o! Jt !d or l~f follow!nt N rW1n1, whOll n•m11 In COUNTY OP LOS ANC.ELE5, H. d~-nl, wllllln I011r montr" •lllf lt11 run ond •l•t•• of rt1ld1nc• ••• •• On A•rll l'OI, 1t11, btforo mo, 1 No!_.,.
'"'I ...,onc1llon d !hi• nollc•. tolklwt: Pul>Hc 1n 1na '"' ••Id Slllt, Ptt"t.on•ll'>'
0•11<1 M•Y 11, ltl! Lwl> R. M0111rtl1, 1.)IJ W!""''"'lf' t PHI,..., Ell•rv Tru"atu ~ ..... """ .... ,.
lr1 Elllo 1'rlo91 "•• .. Co110 Mn•. l ob E. Hoel•, IOI No, bt lhl O<!r11>n ""'°'' "'"'' Ii ouOKrl~ E ~KuTor 'N Millora O<t n11 10 lh• wlll'lln !n1tru..-.nl, •nd •c~-ltd~
pl Ill• Will of tht o"Mi M•r ,;,., 1111 . tel '""'~ 11'•1 h•·fl'"!;U!HI the ........ NlRllf~°f"GAnlL~dN~t<.J"::~';!· U •ALL Lou1, R. Mo...,rtlo w11n111 my h•Pld •nd "•I. · ~ob E Haoh (0F'F ICIAl Sf.Al l ill South Ollv1 Strltt, l ull• tM Slt!t o! Colllornl• Or1n1 c "'' ""''' , .,,,_ Lit An11t11, C1/Uernl1 ""' 0 · • oon.,. " ... , •• , (111) 'H·ll'' n MIY :IO, ltl!. tltlo•• "''· • Noll•~ No!lfV Publlc
11.trtrnov• for l!l'ICU!lr Public In 11'111 fOt' 11ld Siii• ~roen1/ly ••· In '"" lor l l ld iltll PulllllJltd Or1nv• Co11r 011ly 1"110!, Pt1re<I .tool1 R. Mont rl•O i nd l oll E. IOft·OC
Moy J! i nd Juno 1 11 21 1'11 lllt·ll """" ~nown lo me lo b• tllt H11on1 l'ubl11hod O••"V• c .,.11 O.lly '1101,
' ' • whoM n1<r11• ••• 1ubKrlbtd ro !~•within Mtv 17, 11. JI '"" Jun1 1. 1111 '"""
l][----------------]ln11ru"'ont Ind •dl'lOWlO'dted thoY fll• t (ut•d Ill• Hmt. LEGAL NOTICE (OFFICIAL SEAL! LEGAL NOTICE M>\ll V !JETH MOllTON
""""" NOl•'Y P11l>llc, Ct lifO<"nl• J'.(ln1 (lllTl'ICATI O'° •USINlll Pnn<l•ll 0111(0 In Cl/I TIPICATll O, IUSINlll,
P.ICTITIOU5 NAMI Or1nt o County l'l(TITIOUJ NAMa
Th,. undofllgnt<I <lot• ,.,111v ht 11 con· M• Corn,.,1n 1on l~•lrn Th• 11ndtrtl1ntt:1 -• corlllY t.. lo ftlPlo luc!lno 1 bu1!nen •1 1~ J•c-oon SI ., ,..,,11 t, lt/S ductl111 t but l,...1 11 i.o. »th st,.
Ml"'*IY CHv, C1lltornl1, Utld•r lht lie. 'ubll1~ Ortntt Co-II Ot ll\' Plt..1, NIWPOf'I lttch, Ct llfor"J1, llndlr 111• lie.
Hllou• tlrm ....... pf &ERLI N.TOM:VO M1Y 14, l! Ind JuM 7. , ... "" nu-11 llllou• llrm II.Im• d MAMECO •nd "'''
(0MPolNV Ind lhll "'" fir"' 11 <.,,.... l fld fir"' ll (DmPolld ot 11,. Poll ..... ! ...
"""" DI tt,. tollollllno person. -o" LEGAL NOTICE P''"°"• """°"* n•m• In lull t nd P!•t• of n•m• In full 1nd plt tt al ro•ldtntl lt/------~~=~------/•11ld•nct It 11 lol!~wo: •• roltows. ,. .. ,m E<lwud M•rllnd•ll Jr , us I I
R_,I 0. MoofO. !.611 M1n••um Or . CIRTll'!CATI" OP •UllNl:IS MDdtnl 11.Vf., Ntw_.t l!f•Kn, Ct lll, Hunrlnglon e*"'" (1lllotnl1 111it. ,l(TITIOUS NAMI( O•lld Mt Y .. 1t11
O•tt<I Junt i, ltll Th~ undrr111rw<t do ctrtl,.,. "'•v tr~ Edwt•<ll Mt rllf1<111, J•.
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Publlc m ond !pr lt!d S!t l•, Pfrtot1•1!v 1~11 ••la llrm I• c°"'""'" ol H'or IG(O>W· •ll PO!lr•d E<lwt rd M1rllndtlr. Jr '"""'"'
1oo•••t<I llOO•fl O .• MOO•• ~nown lo mt !n• 11or1on1. whou n•mtt ill lull t nd lo "'" to b• lllo ""'•on w~o" n'"'' l•
10 I>• lhr ''"''"" wt<o,. nam~ It oubl(f<D ,.11cro ol rl!ldf'n<:• •r. 11 fO!lOW1' 1ubU,.l>•d 10 1110 witMn ln1trum'"' •""
•d •o lht wdllln "'"'V"''"' 1na Crolfl11 Fono1llo, Ut (QflGttu. C<11!0 tt ~""''""ea~..i 111 •••<ultd !h• ""''· •<~no..-Jregr ~~ t•rcutfod th(••"'•· M•••· Colllornl• \0FFl(l,t,L SEol LI
10Ff (LI AL SEAL\ J•m•' p Sob•fl, IDS Mtln, NrwPGrl M>-lllY &Ell-I ""o •ro"'
J••<> t Jabot le1on, C1 lilo•nlo N1•1,.., Put.Ile. C•lllOt"nlt N~!lrY PuD'!< [1l0!orn•1 Ot lod Mtv U, 1111 Pdn<•l>ll Olfoct In
l'•lnc•1>1I Olllct In Chorln Pt,,.,,.lle Oront• CG<Jnlv
O<onQt C1111<>IY J•m•• P, Sol>fro Mv Cornmln lon l1oltt1
MY '""''"""on l.000<11 Slot~"' c111to•n11. Or•nv• Covnh ; Ao•TI t, ltl}
M••ch l. ltJ) On Mtv 1l, 1111. bf!lltt ,.,,, 1 Nt!ttY ,ub11,n...i O•t n10 (0111 Ot llt •it-..
Publ1tl>•d O•tnllf Cou l Dolly Pilot. Public ln ,na '"' ••Id Sl•tt . orrocn111v Mtv H, ''· ll •nd J u""/, ltl\ 1111 71
Juno I, h , 11. 11, lfll l•ll>IJ '"""''"" Ch1tl11 F'•-llo t r>ll J omu P,
SOl>tfl ~llOW" !o m• IO I• tho ""'""1 LEGAL NOTICE 11-------,---------lwh.,I• n1mt1'''1ub1C•lbtd ta !ht -..11hlnl---------------
LEGAL NOTICE lnil•umrnt Ind •<k'>CwltdOM IMY •~· If---------------] PCu!HI lht 11m•. ~OFF ICIAL SEAL! f'·ll11 P.IC1!TIOUI I Ul!Nlll
N"MI. t·tATllo\INT
T~t lo!klwl~• Otrlon> ltt ~ ...
1MJ11n111 ~•· CA.L Allll • flORlllEGO ltEl'lllGERA·
flON. M1ln 0111~• 6&1 ~. St nlt Ft, Sin· I• Ant. C1ll!ornl1 '110! CALIFOllNlol COMFORT AIR. tNC,
ll i<ll9'd 1. Mt<kor. P•11l<l•n!, t•I
JunlH t!I, Cot!O Mt ••• (1h•orn•• '1'1'
MtrY l•lh MorlOt!
Nottrv PuD•lc, Cl llfornlt PrlnCIPl l Ollie• In
Ortnvt C011ntv
Mr [Qfl'!m lu ltn E•1lr11
April t, 1•1S
Publlll'l«f or'"'' C011f 01rrv PlfOI, Mot 11, JI. l1 •nd Juno 1, I'll l!IC..I!
LEGAL NOTICE
J•• H. 019111, Vltf Pr11ld•nt. ll10l---------------
C11>dllo C1111r!. F1111nlt ln VI I! t V. l'-ll/lt
C•ll!o<nl1 '1IOI Clllfl,IC,,TI o • I UtlNl ll,
AMiin• '· l-lt,ltr, , S t < ' • I 1 • • · ~IC f!TIOUI NAMll
T""'""'· ••1 Ju11•"ro, Coort Mtu. ln• u""ottllnt<l """' <lflllv hi 11 cDn.
C•IUor nl1 ti•"· du(llnt • bu•ln•O 11 J11t L"'" 51,. l hl1 llu1lnfn 11 bel111 <onclu<!t<I by ' Con!I M111. Ctll torn\1, unoe• the ti(·
CotPCr•llon ll!IDU• fl•ll'! n1mt pf C ~l!Af!VE SioM<t : J 1-1, O"nr PACK AGING 1"'11 lhtl l•itr llftl'I lo Corl\•
This ll•l•'T1..,t tlltCI wl!I\ !ht Countv -"' IN followl"' "'"""'· .,.,,..,. (l1rk Of O.•nve Coun"" Oii J11no 1. 1'11. ~•mt In lull t ncl ,!•c• of rutdtn<• 11 11 S.v•flv J. Mt<tdo• Oel>UIV Counl'I' Cl•rll .... ..,,....,
Publl11\td Ortnt t Co.oil 01lty Pilot, Rl<hl r• PPCllk•ll•a. 1111 J ...... ,, U, 11 . 1f, 1•11 1Jf~l1 Or .. Lo• Alll•ln . C1UI.
P•t"' ""'' U, ltll '· l..EGA L NO'nCE Rkht •d 'ICl'lldlU•n
l!•lt Cl'f C•ll!ornl1. °''"'' Countv: 111---------------·/ On M1y U, lt l\. bc:ltrt ,,,,, 1 No11r.,
'J>uOllc Ill 11\111 '°'" ••It lltlt, PO•o.oNJ!Y
1ppe•rod RkhM"ll l>td'!l<kll•n ·-~ IO "'* to bt ,,.. ptrfff! -..tlOll nlfll• II lwDtc:t!btd to !ht wl!n!n •1n11rumr nt l l'ld •ck-ltdHd ,.. IAl<;U!N !flt ,.,., ••
(Ol'~ICIAL SEALI
P·ClflS
ClllTl,IC"TI OP aUllM•tt1 f't(TITtOVS NAlo\I
Tl\1 ~fl<llflllned "" t••llfy ft1 It COii•
<lud ln• 1 bu1l111n 11 1Ut w . Otttft
~ront. New""'I llo1cft. C•!llornl1, u..,.r
tftt !l(llrlout tlrll'I fttmo el B,t,LI OA
lllCYCLll:S •n<I lfttl Jt ld !lr"' h com·
POMd 01 !ft• followl11• Hroon, -..tlou
n1mr In full 1"'11 Pitt• o! •11ld1nc.1 I• ti
l<>flt)'WI'
JOSEl'ti 11!. 0AVl5
ND!ltv 'uOlli:, (t llllrnl• Prine/HI Olflct In
O"n•• Cllunlv
0•••11 L,w11 ll•Y•n, J7J
APT. a , Cot!• M••··
Mv1 Commflllon l ••lr• Jwn' ,1, 1•11 W, •11 i1., ,.ub!lohod 0••"111 Cool! OtHY l'Jlol,
Dtlt<I Mt ¥ 20, lfll
LOCAL
EDITORIALS
Th e DAILY PILOT
Quite Ofte n
Fightr C ity Hall
MlY 11, ll, JI tnd JUnt 1, lf11 11 &.·11
ZZ DATl Y PllOT SC
Bank Reports
Southland Shows
Steady Recovery
Even though it 's sti ll rocky
in many areas, the economic
picture for Sou thern California
has grown stronger 1n recent
months, one reliable 1nd1cator
reports
Bank to Open
In Santa Ana
For Mexicans
A new bank 10 serve lht-
J.1exican-Am"r1can cornmun1t y
of Orange County .soon \\ 111
vpen 1n Santa Ana
Banco det Pu eblo Co1n-
merc1al . 427 N Sycan1ore St ,
ha3 been granted permission
lo issue common stock by the
&late superintendent o( banks.
Hector Godinez, chauman of
the board of directors, stated
that this new banking in-
stitullon, has been authorrz.ed
to issue 100,000 sha re s or con1-
mon stock with a par value of
$5, and selling for $10 00 per
lihare Funding \\'Ill be entirely
throt1gh th:-. stock issue No
go vet nmental grants will be
used
No more tha n 2 perctnl ol
4.he present s toc k orfering, or
2,000 shares. can be purchased
by an 1ndiv1dual 1n this 1n1t1al
offenng. Minimum numbtr
available for snle 1s 10 shares.
Stock -purchases are not
limited to Lal1n-Amer1cans
Anthony Max well 1s presi-
dent and chief t'xecut1~e of.
!leer He has 14 years of cotn·
rnerc1al banking experience,
being president -0f the Pan
American Bank East Los
Ang eles. prior to J01n1ng lhc
organization of B:inc0 del
Pueblo Commercial Bank
Maxv.·ell said that I h e
purpose ol Banco del Pueblo
Cotnmeretal Bank 1s to ser'.'e
the Me1u can·Amer1can com-
munitv 1n a very special ',\:av.
It wiil be a bi-lingual bank
prov1d1ng a ru ll range o(
services ~·1th accounts 1sured
by the Federal 0 e po s i l
Insurance C orp or a I 1 o n
(FDIC)
":O.fany ~lex1can people h:nf'
n<'\'er used bank !:t'r\ ices
ma1nlv because they \I e r e
fearful not knowing I he
functions of a bank ' J\1:ixwrl1
said , "'and now thal a bank i~
being organized to serve thei r
needs and help them to un·
derslarnl the valuable rel11-
honsh1p betv.•cen 1nd1vidual~
and their bank , a positive con·
tr1bul1on will be mai;le to lhe
soc10-cconomic we ll being of a
greater num~r or Lalin·
Americans ·
According to ~l ax,,..cll. Ban·
co del Pueblo Com1nerc1al
Bank v.11\ serve the entire
community wllh emph::is1s on
service Ra1t's wi ll be com
petlt1ve The bank w 1 11
par11cipate in all federally in·
sured student programs , pro-
vide one-day service o n
per"!Oll-81 loans for autos, hard
goods and tht like, and Small
B us i n e s l Ad ministrahon
(SBA) loam for the small
busLnessman
10°/o NNN
CARE FREE
LONG TERM LEASE
., C .... llHY .,....'" Cll•lto m,-.. n u,-111 rffll
llXL 1714J 64l·0590
AJ pha B eta
Parent Firm
Sets R ecord
PHILADELPHIA (B\\')
Acrne ,\.1arkets Inc, which
<iperales Alpha Bela markets,
Alphy ·s family re staurants,
Hy·Lo drug stores and Value
J· air d 1 s c o u n t department
stor<"s in Cahfornia , reported
record earnings and !!ales for
the 53 11eck s ended April J,
Ellrni ngs a!ter I axe s
\\ere ~14 ,!l34 000 or $~ 39 per
sha1 c, an 111c.:rcase or 19 per-
t cnl over earnings o t
$!2 !'i30 000. or $3 69 per share
for tile :il 1vecks ended ~lart:h
211 l9i0 adj usted for a ~ per -
mt>n! stock dividend paid
.\larch 31
The S..1 69 ear1ngs per .share
for the prior year in cluded 1%
cents a share contributed by a
c11p1tal gain on the sale of real
estate nol usld 1n the business
S 11 l es 1ncr ea !!r<rl
SI 793,719 000, compared \.\'!lh
$1 ,650 249,000 ove~ a similar
period lasl year. a gain or
$1 4R 170 000, or 9 percent This
"as the third con~cu\1\'e year
that salrs hll\'C increased over
1 he prc11ous year
Alpha Beta. which ha~ 158
mnrkels •n So u i he rn
Cal1 fom1a . ha~ expanded its
rood store program in
Northtm Cahforn1a where 1t
now has 17 stores in operation.
In addition to Acme food
markets and its Cahrorn1a·
based companie!. A c m e
Markets Inc operates Super
Saver. eastern dbicounl food
markets; Rea & Derick Inc .
eastern drug subs1d1ary. and
J\hd·Atlanllc Harder: Inc . a
f11st.food resiauranl rranchis·
ing subsidiary.
LIMITED PARTNERSHIP UNITS
NEWPORT SHELTER, l TD.
A C1IH1r11!1 l lm!t•d '•rt11•r1h 1,.
h 1,i111 Fotll'l•tl To Pvrch•,• A
N•w~o1I l•1th Off•c• 1111111111••
He UMml PAITNllSHIP UNITS OP S1 ,CIH lACH
Ml11im1111'1 P11rf.h •'' l U111tt 't 'lt. Cw..,1111•••• Pr,fen•d R1t1 ef lt•tli"'
fr-,..,+ l11eo1111 Of n., 1'1rt11•t1h1,.
f•r f11rth•r l11f•fft'l1f1011 CA.Ll OR Wll:HE
SHELTE R INDUSTRIES, INC.
204) W•tdlff OrlN, Silt. 211 H1wp•rt h et:• •l4•1
714/641·2121
flll• ""''''-*,._... It ,..lltle!' •~ '"91" lo ... 11 """ • tollc h1tlot1 •• •~ 11!tt "' ... M Ml U11h. ,,_ tM., lol fftMI lftl'y lly "" Off"'41tt (lrcvl•r.
.................... t11 (.lflflonlll t~i. •I"' •-1 ilto<I-I~ fJ~ttl
"' ............. ..-f'f1ll .. ··-" •11•
Time for
Through a
QUICK CASH
.DAILY PILOT
Offerin g Set
By Stor es
Pacific >.1utual Life lnsurall-
ce Company has retained Fred
Schmid Associates. l.. o s
Angeles·Chicago-Honolulu food
f11c1hties planning, designing
and rnglneerlng ltrn1. to
design Its emp\nyes' cafetcr18
m the Ne'.lport Jo'lnanc11li
Center. Ne..-·port B e a ch ,
Csllfornla.
Jack K. 5ewf'll, director of
office strvlct!, said lht JOO.
I, seat carett:rla wlll be IC1Calt d
on the first noor uuhzing ap-
proxamately 10.000 • v c r al I
square feet.
•
;
Complete-New York Stock List
Ji lt• -lfWllLJ Mltll l.-( .... Cllt
llJ "l' U l 1 1111 -'• KS l-1'• l<''a l •'• + ~O 18 S.!, ll•> li b +'• 1• IJ.,1 1•~• l••o -• • 1120 S• SJ1, "~l -14 I 191, 19\1 19'1
732'>]~·,;:n ,
<I Sl'1 Si i• Sl'• +Ii 191> l'1 ' J!''o ]2'\• + .. i. /'j'; 1; 75 -)
1 li2 fl 61 -1 1100 l1';1 37' 1 J I"• -•'o
J101070 l <S •S <S •• ~ 1:r: ~·~ i;;; + .,,,
11 Jlh Jl'. J1'!o>-•o
5 «> J9'• "° + '• •1 2P• 13 111 ..... '• XIS ll'h ll''• lJ>re -\.II l't 15Vo 2•'• 2; .• , IOI !511 ll'o 14\'o -'>
21 39'• 31\ro J9 + ~ ll 60'0 60•,, '°~ + ~. 01 I•'• 14 I•'< + ~, ~]6 16'• '6~ 71>'• + v.
11 Jll, ll JJ·~ + '• 11 19'. l·~· 19 -+ '• 106 11•1 11~. v-. + ...
!I •ln <1'• •1'• 11 li JS•, J)'• + '• 11•1•1• lll .J<o', Jo 34-lo + ·~ :19• n • 1F, 22 + ~. 11 1a•, 11•, ll"• ~" 139 us<i iJ• +•'• •l ](16 10•'• le.I +J • 11 !&« 16 lo 1''1• •
109 u>, '''• 21 -lo ! 60'• 'VI• •0''• +Ji, •1' 'lJh JJ1• J) I -\o Ill 19 11•,, It + '• •l Jl4 JI JI'~ , •
:n 75 ''·'· 7•'!.o -\'i l /j ),._,
14 :;o •9'• :;o + '• 10 64 6l\1 ,. t ••
11 II~ 111!> II\> -\o
' JI', J!<o Jl'o +l o
110 S4 J.6 l 6 ~·· II lllo l~'; ];.>,:; + '• 1>• •• ~l 1• •Jlo + '• 119 lb, IS IJ'• -~•
1 16\o '16 16' I • ... 1&• 4''1 •o·. •1•, +.,. -L-
~~ N!OC f,1,45
Mld!p "'~ Mllu
Miii " .,~ ...
.. ...
I
Mond11 June. 1 1971 SC OAJLY PILOT .z:J -------
' Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
''* -. --------------.W..I Mltll L-CloM 0., .... ...
Oita I Nllll L.-Qlilllo C.., OOW JON•I AV.lt.U•I
....
llld• j " ..
•• '"" C1<11t Cn~ "-Yotlt{Afl/Flnel OVW-'-....... 1-----------------------·1•TOC1t1 ~ Hlwll LIM Clow ,.., U1P1~1 '° J :J.J i1~· I!"" -~ f~t~·fl( I l:l ~ "~ ~ "" t 11' '° 1"" """ ,..,.. ,11 ... t111M +o.•1~ ,,,.., f' 11 J1l2: i~ 11il t.v.w •• ,~"'1>." 11 ,,;;t, ~ ;m +~ n 41\.'I "\\ 41\\-" :iO Trfl !Hit n 1.2' n•01 22•ts-o.r• Stl!'el 7E '!' J1v. l'1 "-'-'!\ f\V~o~ ..a ~ ll " ni~ M k ;}: M" d is un 11•0<1 11•M 11a1t 11)'2-0.11 Tuli.c 1 • lSh • "~" +"' 11111 ~" ~ ~i"' ~.· 1, li 1~ .. s111 J1111.o Xlt'.31 JOIU *1t-oo10 u11ll "II n 'I" , 70111-111 w11 vn p11~0 'til.'t """ tll'I 1 ,..
-T-
' " 11 I ar e rxe 1rt nw.dl-In •tocb u...111 Ill .... ., ... , Ull UI w 2> .,. I"' l"tt t It Wn VII rf• "1 1 10J 11ll 10S 1\.'t
4 ""' -... T••n Jte.IOO Un "'JO ll P." l2 -Iii W•1! E" pf]'° l'O SIVt SI SI 12 J.1141 ~ ~ r.:IUI m.-u11111 Dr!H '! n U'il. fl ,,,W~lgf l lO l•Y ·~ •• ··i.. ~
It Ut\ '4 0.. -.... UI !l 2 .. ..5()(1 Un~llP 00 15 f•V. ., ,. t• 4 + ,.. l'lesfV<:O 1 OS JI 2• '3""' 2.1 l: J: r.~ J: -... Sfk • 1.J;;IUOD ~u~~ ~~II t;, H~ lfl; ~1~ ~ r. ~::~~: ~ ~ ~\lo ntt i!111 :+ "'~ • • ij-rr;'lldV '° "17, 21'l n"-4 w .... nrpt6 1J 1t 11N.111,.ll1'4 -
110 n•4 -"' -111 L h T din ™'"f: JO " •no • • • ~ -"'W'h••fPfn su 101 lf.\lo ""' 1•1,4 -• l!™o l ' 11 -"" I . ..."' Hff ~ "rr l7 lS ,. ' ,, • + '• W!IH p ,, ..,, rl40 "" !S'Ai S4 +11'1
J3S ,,_... U\~ 16\olo n 1g t ra g , .... I "'-u. QM QI p. ~ • ...t ,3?.~ l!..~ )) ~ -"" W~K p II ~I r140 •6'"' "5>t. "'ll '' t.!V. j S 2S -1\ ffi ,,., ~ .,.... ,,,.... 11»'o W~lfl Co l ~ 1• e7'4 11 17 -\to 1121J ., l~J'""+"" nr...nt c .,,t 3 ,1114 1~1 1)1,j,-"" l',"'"i >~ xi11 JG 1'll -<o1 w11 1cn «11> 711 16 lS\\" +v. 10~ ijkf"ll 'om" 1orn" + ::!' '~i.r corp ~ 104t. 1'"' 10 + "'..,, ,.~L .... ~ 1: ~ 11 ~ ~i\t + ""~~1'J Pf ~ ~J r,\41 itU'-Im -t :%
$11 V. lS\\ "'"° -I.Ii -U· V-Vt;A CO f ld & ll\\ lJ 73\., + \'I Wh re Motor :01 1•"'-t)'!. f'"' ~• IJ.S ••It •Jtt, + '41 I Ml 11'"' JI f1V. _ t >. \ltldt Ml 1? ~~ ll ~ 33 't Wh lf•ker '" 11~ IH 2 W. •1 J1 :16'41 ~-"" ~:f:W.llQ JI 2.1"" 3" ,.-.vl!ld<>Co eo ll 1...., .,. ,..,,+Vi wtclle•Corol .. ~.,.,.., .. ..SJ. * 2 36"" >&a >&v.+"" NEWYORK(UPJ)-Stockswere-1-edonmod '"'2 110 , Jl~ fi.,,, !1111 -v1=coro 1 10 '"',~,",so . !!G <o -111owi,b1srr l5b ~2• lo:>ti •~ t1111 -\61 :tXI ! ..... 111\i lt -"" UUA '' '., lllo ·~ VIK<>m wd lt' n wm Rou ..a I ! l1'• ~ 117,. t ~ 11 JSlllo :i5Vt wet • let M d D d f ·--'-l UGI • ' ,. ,:-. l'" ,,. "';:: ... Vlc!CornP » II 18 ~ '1 11 . -1olo Wllll•m• Co j.j '3\'lo ~ "" \(o ls"""' 11~ 11~ "" era urnover on ay eman or l'll.UUl.S was sow uMc h..i n • '"" "" ...-v.cll"'w ea 12 1s~ '""" ,~ _ 4 w .... ~0 w1 30 11 ,.,,., 2~ ~ 21 •h ., ~t. 4 .. + 41! d b Oll~rD &bollt r••lfig Interest rates Unarco ~ lO ll \ .. \l • ll -~ \leElf'w Ill m 9" lt 4 9>t -\.Ii Wrns 0 l>f IKI l J.I >I JI -V, 1 1•1'tlt11f\lt -'lo e ynewc ..... .., U11IN\llJ11 :~.J~~~::;.;:v.EPpllM 1S0108 101 IOI -"Winn .1 11& ~JI OJ{,.Q.<,•214 -V.
106 ~ U"' U!4 -V. Uu"" 'c!T,'••' 2 Id "\\ '8 ~ 49 ~ + "' va IP Pll .t5 1160 97 ~ •1 t 7 ~ + 1"" w1nnto:io Ina " •J" ll"t "'"" -~ J82 ll ~ Sl t • Th B k f Am th Id I st b nk •• \I• &P I' J .~ 12 11 n .._, w •EIPw 1.. 16 ?lllio 111.. Jl'lio ~• » :11 31 "" e an o enca e wor s arge a u .. f"' '"' " 11 ,.,,., '"" .... P l>f• :ro .i10 SI Y s.a ' w .eP "'u ~ 11~ rn1v. 101v. 10,,,., + \.i .. 506 JOV. 2t'4 30 _..., th t I h t I Unt:!Jlpl I 11111 100 lDD t ""vomado 61 ?~ l!'• lS14 -\twJKP5 116 l7 ·~ 16V. l~ "'1' 1~1~-~ announced a s wasrais1ng omemorgage oan u n e P •50 z1oos91l!9 .S9VJ ""vsicop • n 14 6~'' --\tw~c11 91 1 ,1\4 1,14 ,1"'+"'
1 •1111 •l?o '""'+~ t t t I 71L tf om 7 t Ab k Un EIP!lXI J!OO '9 1> •9V. ..,...,+l v.v~c•"M•ll '1~ is ' 15 ~ wo vww !O 2 1u~ 1111t.+• ., ,3,., 11..,. n ,,.._.,.. 1n eres ra es o rzpercen r percen an uo0 c1t 160 1~ ~~ 1!~ ~"'.-"'vwRu"u n 10 .)2 •• t•\'+ ~wo ... ~c" ·~ 2111 .. 11 211. _, 11 w,., l-l>.t .ssv. + "' k s••d th creases "are In response to re-uocai ..n..so ... ~ ><•• -W X Y w*' co .. u 16:1(,, " .. 16~ + .. " ,,... 2S'4 jJ4to ~ spo esman CL.I e lil VII Pac CP 1 JI SHll .JN, SN --'L WOOlwth :ro l!l Jl'rlo .Sllio s:.i-. 113'1'41 SJ J3 'lo ( ard Ls kls" UnlonPKll2 10J1 ~5'1olo ~Wacl'>Cp l20 2 61"\6\-.6\lo -.,Wonwp!?JO •1l lo ~73U. ,. ,r>., ,..,,. 16" _"" cen upw movemen m money mar e un Pee Pl ci ,. 10 ,,,.. n1i + v. waCl'IR• 1 0111 ,,, " 32 .. Jl"'' wortd Al w1 ., ,..,., u:io l •..., + '4
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LOCAL
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S•lla N ..
Clllll I Nltll Loft ti-Ch ..
Finance
Briefs
BOCA RATON, Fla (UPI )
-Three larse toy retailers
have Joined a cooperative toy safety program the Toy
M a nuracturers Assoc1aUoa.
announced The retailers are
Sears, Roebuck & Co J C
Penney Co and R H Macy &c
Co They will heJp the toy
manufacturers and the Boston research flnn Arthur D Llt..
tie & Co , to develop standards
for toy 11afety that the industry
and consumers can depend on,
the association said
LOS ANGELES (UP() -
Troubled Lockheed Aircraft
Corp has obtained a Sl23 II
milhon Navy cont ract to pro-
vide Poeeldoa ballistic ml!·
5ill'!!I
This Is In addition to 1120
JU11l1on order last July for
f~eldon missiles Of the cur·
rent order about $63 mUUon
was 1ubcontracted' to
Hercul es Thiokol for th •
poseldon rocket rm:iton
LEXINGTON Masa (UPI)
-Raytheon Corp Ms ob-
tained 1 $7 million Navy onla-
for shipboard radar equfpml!:nt
used In tcrt.lng mlsa1lt'9 and •
sotellltes
TO~E"O
C<'rp p'tins
opt"r~Uons or
(UPI) 01,.
to phue out
11' T & 0
d1v1s1on ln Wanen Mich and
o( Its Victor Sen! Oi l sul plant
In Chlcago by Aug 31 About
450 workcn will be dropped.
I
-----
U DAILY PILDT Monday, JuM 7, 1~71
J'AJllLY CIRCVS f>11 Bil Keane
"WI-at I I iked best about school this year was the
teachers' strike. n
Sear~hers B11sy
Team Hunts Lost, Injured
SAN BERNARDINO (AP)
- A group of 110 volunteers
has given a lot of time a nd
energy to make S a n
Bernardino Coun ty safer for
the lost tenderfoot or injured
traveler.
These volunteers. operating
as seven search and rescue
units respond to calls £or help
f rom' downed aircraft, lost
bikers and motorists who fail
t.o negotiate t r e a c b e r o u s
mountain r oads.
"Lost and injured people,"
said Sgt. Ollie Gray, who co-
ordinates the teams for Sheriff
Frank Bland. "That"s about
the only way you could sum it
up_ ...
The search and rescue team
m ember's job is a big one. San
Bernardino County with its
21.000 square miles is the na-
tion's largest. Its terrain
varies from scorching desert
to snow-capped mountains.
With metropolitan L o s
Angeles 70 miles w e s t ,
travelers and hikers often
become lost and injured.
During 1970, the teams of
men answered 39 calls in-
volving 57 victims. The
volunteers trained 2,2« hours
and spent 2,892 more on the
job.
"These people r e s p o n d
regardless of the hour of the
day or night or the day of lhe
week or anything else," Gray
said. "We've worked every
New Year's Day for the last
Lhree years and many a
Christmas."
Because of the varied ter-
rain, Gray said, it takes a
year to train a volunteer.
''He has to be proricient in
r ope management, rock climb-
ing, rappelling, helicopter
techniques and general moun·
taineering," Gray said. "You
have a year before he
becomes an all-around ef-
fective individual for you."
The work is un predictable,
Gray said. On the last call -
to aid an injured hiker in the
San Gabriel Mountains -two
men were dropped into the
area by helicopter. After an
initial search to pinpoint the
area, two teams began climb-
ing. On the fourth day. as the
teams approached the spot
where they . believed the in-
jured hiker to be, the victim
walked out O!l his own,
lie told the searchers he
heard the helicopter the first
day and, when help failed to
arrive, decided to come out.
So1tth Africa Notes
Decade as Republic
By PIJIL NEWSOM
l.IP'I f'01"11911 N-1 Aill l'lll
•-we are of Africa,''
declared Prime Minister John
Vorster of the Republic of
South Africa, "21nd we are
prepared to make our con·
tribution to the development of
Africa according lo mir abili-
ty."
The occasion was South
Africa's observance of its 10th
anniversary as a republic.
On May 31 , 1%1. in bit·
terness and anger. South
Africa had broken "'ith lhe
commonwealth of nations and
est.ablistled itself as a republic
committed to apartheid. con·
demned by new black African
nations and by mo:;;t of the
world as a blatant eicample of
the theory <lf w h l t e
gupremacy.
In the foll owing 10 years,
South Africa s ur vi ved
economic boycott and, in the
last year especially, ·won
positive gains for the Vorster
policy of "Verligte" which
calls for y,·orking toward
friendly relations with black
nations and preaching lo
qthe.rs the validity and merits
of apartheid.
Opposing the Vorster policy
within bis own nalionalist par·
ty are the "Verkramptes"
(literally the cramped ones)
who favor slricl isolationism.
Both major South African
parties, Nationalists a n d
United, favor racial segrega.
tJon but the United Party to a
ie..... clegn!e.
In recent mooths support for
Vorster bad come from a
surprlllng IQUree. It was from
lNIMAUgk .,....,.
President Felix Houphouet-
Boigny of the Ivory Coast, one
of the most prosperous of the
Black African nations.
Said Houphouet-Boigny:
"The revolting system
apartheid outrages us all ...
(but) it "'ill not be eradicated
by force."
Of lhe while men who rule
South Africa. he said:
"\Ve must help them to con-
sider them.selves first as
Africans regardless of color.
The future of the continent.
our joinl patri1nony, is at
stake."
Belv•een Vorster's a n d
Jlouphouet-Boigny's words
there was a remarkable
sirni la rity, and upon the Ivory
C.Oast president it brought
down the expected abuse from
more militant African leaders
such as Sekou Toure, presi-
dent of nearby Gu inea.
It made the Ivory Coast the
first black African nation not
economically dependent upon
South Africa to accept the
theory of dialogue over force.
There has not yet been time
to assess fully the effect of the
Ivory Coast action.
Ghana ha.s accepted the idea
or a diagloue with South
Africa in principlt and the
South Africans a re known to
have been in contact with
others among Africa's more
conservative leadership.
MaJawl was the first black
African state to establish
diplomatic tics with South
Afrtca.
Swaziland, Botswana and
Lesotho, all within South
Africa's economic sphere ,
have custom ag re ements
which CQu.ld ltad to diplomatic
re la lions.
Aga.lnst lta crlUcs, South
Africa has moved to the of·
tensive. To United Nations
demands that It give up
jurlsdictlon over the territory
or South-West Africa it has
replled with an offer to let the
people decide by n plebiscite
urder U. N. 8Upervlslon.
And despite U. N. con-
demnation, Its trade with
Western nation~ Is increasing.
STARS
Sycf11•v 01T1•rr !1 en• of tfl•
-rhf'1 tr••' 111ttolo9tr1. Hi1
col~ll'lit ;, 011• of the DAILY
PILOTS 91•et fe1ti1re1.
WOW!
""/a'' Dia .-Nylon Reinforced
GARDEN
HOSE
% "Jt50' nylon reinforced hose -
guaranteed for 5 yeors. RllSl proof
brass touplings.
REG . 56.29
SAVE 51.30
s499
TUES. & WED. ONLY
FAUCET MOUNT
HOSE
REEL
flow through reel keeps your hose neat,
out of !he way & teody for use.
Holdt up to
150 ft, of Yi" hose.
REG . $7.49
SAFETY
STEP
LADDER
COMPACT-DURABLE-llGHTWEIGKT
Mointenonce·free o!uminum frome -
folds for easy carrying or storage. Riv·
eted construction-slip praaf J" wide
bottom step & 6'' wide lop step for
comfort & safety. Nan·mor plostic: feet
-safety guard roil.
REG. $8.99
NOW
ONLY!
SAVE $3.001
DOOR
TUE$. & WED. ONLY
ADJUSTABLE
flRE PAN
;'I MIRROR ~ SALE!
Gel the full pie·
ture in this 14"x
50" door mi rror.
Full th ick: n es s
wood frame -
crystal cleor
gloss.
Your choice
of walnut or
moplo finish.
REG. $5.99
SAVE $2.00
CONV£.
NIENT
SIDE
SHflF
•
FANTASTIC BUY!
World Famous
TEXACO
MOTOR
OIL
High grade, lieavy duty motor oil p ro1ects
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REG. 30c
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Limit 12 Co ns Per Customer
JS PIECE
CUTLERY
SET
All the kitchen help you'll ever need!
lncludet 8 sleok ltnive1, 2 pc. carv-
ing set ond S pc. kilchen tilensil se1.
All hove wooden fiondlet ond a re
mode of stainless sleer. Knives fio~e
ever-shorp serroled edges.
SAVE $1 .00
REG.
$4.99
TUES. & WED. ONLY
I
FUll
WINDOW
IN HOOO SPECIAL BUY
_SMOKER
WAGON U.L
LISTED
MOTOR
REG.
536.99
Deluxe wagon with enclosed base
cabinet to store BBQ suppli es. Hood
assembly tilts bock for easy cooking
ond cleaning. Rotisserie spit and U.L
listed motor with o n/off switch . fire
pan adjusts to 8 heights and is remov·
able for easy cleaning. Up-to.dote
lime frost color with GTO green door.
$3" DON'T MISS OUT ON
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s2777
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SAVE OVER S9.00! T\IU. & WU>. ONLY
r
I
I
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\ Monday, June 7, 1971 s t...-.ILV PllOi 3
Viejo Duo Org·anize First 'Senior Olympics'
By PAAIELA llALLAN
Ol !M 0 111' ,ilQI Slltt
Worth Blaney of ti.fission Viejo believes
in "ping pong diplon1acy."
fie thinks sports events are a good way
to bring people togelhtr to talk over their
pro'·'~nui, improve thei r health, and
ma) J:! even close the generation gap.
Because of this belie r, he and his father
decided to organize a 11ew sport ing event
-one for senior athletes. It 's called the
••senior olympics."
Now in its second year, the Senior
Sports Internationa l will get under way
' !i•l.: '.
I
with track and field tvenb June 19 in the
Los Angeles Coliseum. Si i: -hundred
athletes from 30 stales, 1t1 e x I c o,
Germany, and Australia will be com-
peting ror gold, silver and bronze medals
-and all will be over 35.
"ti.ty father and I have always been in-
lerested in athletics as e i t h e r
p:irticipants or spectators," siiid Blaney.
"A couple of years ago we stopped and
surveyed the adult interest in sports and
found it to be thri\'ing, partly becaui;e of
a new e~phasis on exercise and physical
fitness and partly because of its con-
Beauties, Old u11d New
tribution to health ...
With so many people spending time and
effort to dbcipline lhemulve.s, the
Blaneys thought it woui.<l be a natural to
have o!ympic 11ames !or senior citizens.
They organized a nonpront corporation,
Senior Sports International, and arranged
to have any proceeds sent to a boys'
home run by !hi! Op(Unist Club.
Then they set out to rent Uie stadium.
"Last year y.·e had 2SO competitors
over a four-day period," -he said. "One
man frolfi Montana was 75 years old."
This year there will be track anQ field,
swimming, bicyclln11 h or 1 e a hoe 1 ,
arcbery, tennis and diving, CompeUtora
v.ill include May SuUOn Bundy, IJO, the
first great woman's tennis player; Sen.
Alan, Cranston; Stella Wal.ah, &old medal
South Coast
YMCA Slates
Summer Trips
Special trips to many Southland amuse.-
ment areas will be included In the seven
sessions of summer camp offering this
year by the South Coast YMCA.
Officials af the south County organiza-
tion sakl the special trips will be included
in each session of the camp acUvity at
Camp Dolph in South Laguna.
Special trips a~:
-San Diego Zoo and sum)Unding at-
tractions during the June 28.July 2 camp
session.
-Knotrs Berry Farm the week of July
~·--Sea World in San Diego, July 12-16.
-Los Angeles Zoo, for the July 19-23
session.
-Japanese Village and Deer Park, Ju.
ly 26-:W.
-Ringling Brothers' Circus at the
Forum Aug. 2-6.
-~farineland, Aug. 9-13.
Besides the special attractions, daily
activities will include hikes, 11ames, arts
and crafts, stories, and fishing.
Children ages 6-12 will be el!gible with
a limit of 50 per session. College students
uill serve as counselors and will be
assisted by teachers. Children must brin1
a sac k lunch and milk each day.
A $10 deposit is required for each chOd.
Total fee for the camp experlwce will be
120.
Drug Prevention
Meeting Slated
nwter ln the 193% Olympics; Burt
Goodrich, 1939 Mr. America; Doodles
Weaver, P~ O~en. Dean Smith, Dr.
Ceorge RhOden, and Dr. Stephan
Seymqur, all fqnner Olympic gold or
silver medalists. ·
"We want It to be fun and rewarding,"
said Blaney "That's why Y.'e started it -
to give the senior athlete recognition . But
it ~1tends beyond that because ii en·
courages sound pbys.lcal fitness , good diet
and good health.
"Intra-family relationships benefit
because other family members will be
encouraged to begin to improve their
physical fitness, .cltildr'n will imitate
parents, and they'll all have someting to
talk about.
"Just as !he regular Olympics have im-
pact on lntemationJ relations, our com-
petition is open to anyone in the world.
The program will bring people who are
managers, planners, politicians, blue-eol·
Jar, while-collar workers -people from
all walks of life togeth'r to exchange
ideas," he explained.
He said feelers have been going out
through int.ernatlonal publications, sports
, . ..
•
' t
,. '
•
figures, and associations to bring in mort
countries, but he boPe.s 11 will be a '1ow
process.
··Next year we'll add karate, gym-
nastics: bowling, shooting, softball and
badminton. But we don't think we can do
I.his overnight. w~ want to build a &0Ud
foundation upon which to build."
Blaney said the event Is sanctioned by
the American Athletic Union (AAU) and
alher sports agencies. Many world cham·
pions are helping with arrangements fo r
the amateur competition.
Looking to the futur,. Blaney srud, "I
see it becomlng every bit a! imporlaat as
the Olympic Games. It will be an eit·
travaganza. -the healthiest show OJl
earth."
The bicycle race took place in th' Rose
Bowl Sunday but most ather events wlll
be in the coliseum or adja"Cent swim
sladiam JWle 19 through 22 st.arUng at 10
a.m. each day.
Any man or woman can be a spectator
or a participant. For information wril.9
Senior Sports International, 619 S.
J)Jnsmuir Ave., Los Angeles 9'Xl36 or call
(213) 938-5548.
o< ~\ •,I
·\
•
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• · 1 l • •• 1,,
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. ~ t· :• .,, • .t( . ~ •• -..
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Judith Landrigan sits behind the wheel of a rare
Bugatti Coupe in Los Angeles. This car, built for
Lord Rotschild in 1936, is believed to be one of
only two remaining in the world. It \\'ill be auc-
tioned June 12. "Alternatives to Drug Use" will be
discussed by psychologist Dr. Neil E.
Matheson at tile Laguna Coordinating
Council's sixth drug prevention guidance
session Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the
Recreation Department building, 175 N.
Coast Hlgh\vay. Board Hires Consultant Dr. Matheson, now of the Institute of
'Therapeutic Psychology, Santa Ana, ha a
taught at C.a.1 Slate, !Ang Beach, UCLA
and UC Irvine and at Pepperdine College.
He has published many articles and Laguna District Saves $25,000 iii Programmi1ig produced films on cllnical psychology,
and served as consullant in community
and school drug programs. Among other
ttplcs. he will discusa the concept of
megavltamin therapy in the treatment Of
mental conditions as an alternallve to
drug use.
The Laguna Beech Unirled School
District has hired a computer consultant
hi a move designed to save an estimated
J25,000 in the programming or the
district's computer.
According to business superintendent
Charles Hess. the district needs to re-pro-
p-am its IBr.f 1620 computer as a re~ult
)f an expanded agreement for services
with the Capistrano Unified School
District. Under the agreement. Laguna
Beach will provide computer processing
~r scheduling. grading and testing pro-
~edures for the Capistrano District begin-
lfing in the 1971-72 school year.
Hov•ever. Hess said rather than pay
J25,000 to $30,000 lo have the new pro-
g-ram developed. he ~:as able to loca te an
entire 1620 program suited to Laguna
Beach's needs that lhe district could have
ror free .
Dr. Hess told school trustees last \vcek
that the El Monte Union High School
District would give the program to
Laguna Beach. In order to have the
scheduling and testing program transfer-
red from El f.1onte to Laguna Beach, the
trustees agreed to hire Mrs. .lill Ad-
dleman , an El Monte computer pro-
grammer.
Mrs. Addleman, Hess said. will
transfer El Monte"s information onto
IBM punch cards or disc packs and will
then come to Laguna Beach during July
to put the information onto the district's
computer. She y.•i\I be paid about $500 for
her time. which Dr. Hess .!laid will pro-
bably involve 100 hours.
El Monte plans to replace Its own IBM
1620 with a different type of a>mputer,
Hess said, due to growing needs for com-
puter services.
Hess said El Monte Is giving the
district about ZOO different computer pro-
grams in its package, many of which the
district will not be able to use. Hoy.·ever,
Dr. Jess said those involving inven tory,
testing, grading, scheduling and a few
others will be useful.
The only cost ID the district In ob-
taining the new program will be Mrs. Ad·
dleman·s salary. Hess said. She is to
have the new program in ope ration on
Laguna Beach's computer by July 15. She
Y.ill also develop inslructions "for the
district's compuler operato r to run the
program.
Square Dancers Set
'Flag Day Fling'
A "Flag Day Fling'' danee will be
sponsored June 12 by members of the
Shipmates Square Dance Club in Sin
Juan School auditorium.
Prizes and rtfreshments will be in-
cluded in the evening activity starting at
8 o'clock. All interested 11quare dancers
are welcome.
.,
_.
•
HE FEELS PHYSICAL FITNESS BRINGS FOLKS TOGETHER
Worth Blaney of Mi ssion Viejo Practices Wh•t He PrNche1
Introducing:
·Menu Maker Meats!
Lamb Chops U.S.D.A. CHOICE
FRESH SPRING LAMB
~-.... $1~~ ~LL ..... $1·~!
Boneless lamb Chops .: ...................... $1.79 ...
Saratoga cut ._ • offers you more good e.o.tinrr, minimum of waster
The most revolutionary concept in liquid containers-ever!
~-Price -with .savings p~ on t.o ~ou ! ~ Qmit)'-:-qua.Ii~ control by El Rancho! Kennetially Sealed_ longer produd:
life _in your refrigerator! Sanitized -h1ghe.st degree possible! Ec:o4oric:al -takes up Jess .<ipacc as waste, plus .•• degradabic in
s unlight! We know you"ll we1come the advantages of economy, quality, convenience and effective dispos..'Ll !
Dr1ng1 Julca ....... ~.~~ ......... 2'106
Pare fresh juice ••• BQueeted fur you ••• from ripe juicy Valenciu I Compare the difference !
rff-j -WITH FREE IJ I ,,21 'Ilia UH/Ill. .... ~.~!~ ..... cf r
and in the same revolutionary package!
Fruit Drinks .............. ~.~'.~ ............. 6'r
Delicioua flavors .... Punch, Grape, Orange, Lemonade .•. so refreshing!
b hllable In 2 Qu.t r.cl .•. llitll pitdlor ... 3'lc
P h I I Ba . ~l=o.<EIQfl ~ unc n gs ...... 1.~ ...... ~~'. ...... ~7 ·
Delicloa.s fruit drinks make great treats ... rnvorite navoni ... assorted
1 Lean Ground Lamb ... . . ... .. . . . . .. .. . .. .. .. . .. . . . .. 59:.
Fresh! and ground fresh! Quality Lhat offers more for the money!
or straight pacb; •. &nd available to you chilled or frozen!
Filtered Water .......... ~~~~~~~·--··--·-2r
•
Pepper Steak .......... u~o~.~.~ .......... $1.49 ..
llearty beef .. _flavorful, tender ••• ready for the.1ki1let or broiler. Priea '3 effectlfon.., Tut:1., Wt:d., Jutt.t 1, t, 9.
No •ala lo d.«Jkn.
So oonvenient ••• at home, camping, picnics, in the galley •.• !or cotre.,
tea. cookinc, drinking! ••• !,..... i t ! (2 Qtll1s ••• l9c ••• -pi-)
ARr.ADIA : s•o ·• ."1 H""''"g'"' o. !1!i'i!. PASADENA : r:,t,; "SOUTH PASADENA : :·1
1
1
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,'. . NTINGTON BEACH ~1:t'.1 NEWPORT BEACH : 111i tiewuui 1 s1,0 .,,,:
El Rars~.r Co! t•·r JlO Wr5t C1:11ora,1'.I fl ~'l • f r"f!ll r ' !TIC Hui ~1ripf 1l' 01 h "' ,. ' ,, ~' ·:' p ,',.,I . c~.,t ~ r /11~) [ 1<,!11111 11 01 f ,11,:'1rtJ~f Vil l.l\:f' Cent~ .
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f DAILY ~ILOT
\
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Chalk Up 1
For Mother
By THOMAS ft.1URPRINE
Of tti. oellr "'"" 111tt
HAPPY WEEKENDS DEPT. -There
iJ nothing quite a5 thrilling as spending
your Saturday and Sunday with a clogged
bathroom drain.
Bathrooms really look great when they
are filled with wrenches, plungers,
snakes. water and one irate wife.
Clogged drains are a challenge. There
slts the wa~bowl, half·l\llcd with the
mos,t awful collection of glug this side of
a HiJntington Beach holding pond. Pon·
dering it, you bec_ome convinced it is the
most immovable body of water ever
developed.
There are several brands of chemical
pipe cleaners, all guaranteed lo instantly
eliminate clogged drains. We tried. tbtm
all. They all worked equally. Nothing. As
an aJtemative, you can tile apart the
pipes beneath the sink. Thill is fun when
the pipu come loose and all the glug runs
out.
•• w I p
Kennedy Menaorial Mass
-•
Yuba. City's
Body.Hunt
Called Off
YUBA CITY (UPI) -Unless infrared
and classified aerial photogtaphs indicate
more gravesites, tl\e search for more
bod)es in the bloody Feather River mass
murder has ended.
So far, 25 bodies -all itinerant
Caucasian fann worker! -have been Un·
CO\l'ered in a 16-day search along the
bank! of thl!: river which winds through
the irrigated orchards Of Northern
C.lifomi.a called the "Peach Bowl of the
Wol'ta."
,;We consider the search to be ended ,"
Sutter County Sheriff Roy Wpit.eaker uid
Sunday. "We don't pl.In to do any more
digging unless aomething cornea from the
infrared pbot.ns. ''
Western aerial photos of Redwood City
took infrared photographs of the 60().acre
Sullivan Ranch, where all but one of the
bodies have been found, and adjacent
ranchland. The infrared photo.'5 indicate
variations in ground temperatures such
as those caused ·by decomposing bodies.
In addition, navy planes took picturei
of the area Friday and Saturday.
Whiteaker said the pictures were better
than infrared and were classifieQ._ but he
would not receive the pbotograp for
sevl!:ral days. •
-. . . ... -
'Act Quickly'
Connally Makes
Lockheed Appeal
WASHINGTON (UPI) -V.ury
Secretary John B. CoMally said today
the nation's entire economy could be
thrown into a slump if Coogress refused
to take a quart~r billion dollar gamble on
saving the Lockheed Aircraft C.Orp. lrom
bankruptcy.
Appearing In a crowded, hot Senate
hearing room, Connally testified in
defense of the Nixon Administration 's
propb.sal to save the No. 1 defense con·
tractor with a guarantee that the govern·
ment would rl!:pay up to $250 million of
bank loans if the loans failed lo save the
giant company from failure .
CoMally told the Senate Banking Com-
mittl!:e he had reluctantly concluded that
the government must "act and act
quickly" to Mve Lockheed.
"Just at thil lime, with thl!: economy
moving ahead and unemployment topping
out, the failure of the nation's largest
defense contractor -with 7 2 , 0 O 0
employes earning S830 million a year,
35,000 supplies and $2.5 billion in annual
sales -would, beyond any shadow of
doubt generate deepseat.ed fear1," Con·
nally said.
He added that "the result would be
market repercwn'iions that could severely
dampen and perhaps even thwart the
business recovery" from the 1970
recession.
Connally argued that 60,000 jobs ln
Lockheed and subcontractors would be
lost if lhe company went bankrupl. T.he:
government would have to pay more for
weapons it now buys from Lockheed, he
said, and the government's tax loss would
ei:ceed the $250 million loan guaranlee,
RUSS IANS RIP
SHIP; 9 LOST
PARIS (AP) - A 20,IKMI ton Soviet
tanker sliced into the middle of a 2,750
ton French destroyer Sunday, and nine
French sailors are missing and presumed
lost in the western Mediterranean.
The French Navy said the tanker
Busharov was making about 16 knots
when it hit the destroy er Succouf's
bridge. The ship broke apart later in the
morning, and the fron t half sank.
The missing men were all working in
the engine room. Another sailor was bad·
Jy burned. A spokesman for the Frenchl
Navy said the tanker did not appear bad•
ly damaged.. and there was no in·
formation on any casualties aboard her.
THE OBSTRUCTION, of courae. is
~\sewbere, lurking in some hidden place
within the walls.
After two days of this kind of frustra·
tion, 1 had run out of chemicals, worn out
one plumbers friend , benl the mechanical
snake into a pile of wires and run out of
vocabulary and patience.
At this juncture, you might suspect
that in my weakened condition the smart
thing to do would be to call the plumber.
The only problem with this is that we
have a Double EE plumber. Elusive and
Expensive.
Mrs. Robert F. Kennedy holds youngest daughter, Rory Katherine,
during memorial services at Arlington Na'ional Cemetery Sunday -
the third anniversary of Sen. Kennedy's assassination. Behind Mrs.
Kennedy are Mrs. Stephen Smith and Sen. Edward Kennedy, sister
and brother of Robert Kennedy.
High Court Spells Out
chairs for dad
that do more than
SO, UNDER U1e circumatances. I did
\\'hat any red·blooded American boy
would do. 1 called my Mother. l whined
some about the clogged drain.
Well, she pondered, back in the old
days before they invented all those fancy
chemical cleaner-outers, what they would
do is boil up some water and pour it down
the drain. Boiling water often did tbe job,
she recalled.
We boiled water. We poured. Grt!al
globs of gluck began moving about and
emer&lng from the stifled sink.
"It is going to explode," the wife
predicttd.
Fourteen kettles of boiling water later.
the whole mess was aUll bubbled and
1urgling like a witches cauldron. But,
alas, it wasn't draining.
THIS MORNING, after having shaved
In a dishpan , I issued the final edict. Call
the plumber. But there was a look Of de-
fiance in the little woman's eye.
She announced she would try a few
more kettles of Mother's Miracle Cure.
I got a call from the wife a few
minutes ago. There was a note of
triumph in her voice. The 18th kettle of
bolling water had done the job and, she
reported, with a great sucking noise, the
drainpipe had given up the ghost and run
free.
Sometimes from great adversities litUe
victories come.
With the ~Ip of Mother'li boiling wattr,
Etna Lava Frightens
Sicilian Villagers
SANT'ALFTO. Sicily (UPI) -Rivets of
lA v;i rushed do.,..'n one !lide of Mount Etna
today towa rds two lt1rm hamlets.
frightening villagers who were told only
four days ago that it was safe to return
home .
Officials said neither Sant"Alfio or
Fornaz:w were in immediate danger
because the lava was still far above them
()n the Slopes of the 10,902 fool tall Etna
.,.hicb began erupUng 60 days ago.
Voting Law Exceptions
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme
C.Ourt in a pair of decisiorui spelled out to-
day several exceptions to the one-man,
one-vote principle at slate and local
voting levels.
In an Indiana case, the court reversed
a lower three-judge federal panel which
bad struck down the at-large election of
state representatives in Marion Counly,
which includes IndJanapoUs.
The )ower court. on grounds the at-
1arge procedure diminished the voting
strength of Negro residents and violated
the one man-one vole requi remenls,
ordered the entire atate redistricted with
each voting district electing on e
representative and one senator.
In another opinion, the court overturn-
ed 7 la 2, a decision by the West Virginia
Supreme Court which struck down the
state's requirement that a three-fifths
majority vote was needed to approvl!:
school bond issul!: which would exceed a
atatl!: constitutional debt limit.
Sixteen other stales have similar pro-
visions in their constitution.
The West Virginia court ruled that re-
quiring approv al by more than a simple
majority was in violation of the one man-
one vote concept.
Similarly, the decision In the Indiana
state represenlatioo case could have im-
pact in othfor st:i tcs. particularly Vi rRini;i
"'here a suit affecting this year's election
is in p:roct'ss.
Two "'eeks before <1djourning for this -
terms, the court took lhese nther ac!ions :
-Ruled, ~ to 3, that a priv;i te. in-
dividual who becomes involved in a mat·
ter of public interest has no more pro-
tection against libel than a political or
public figure. The decision said In such
in5tances, the person must prove there
was knowledge a libelous statement wai'l
false or with reckless disregard of
whether it was fa lse or not. This is the
same ya rdstick th!' court applied lo
public and political figures in past
decisions .
-Agreed to decide next term whether
the Wisconsin Slate Assembly acted con.
stitutional!y by ordering the jailing of the
militant Catholic priest, the Rev. James
E. Grop:pi, on charges of contempt
without giving him opportunity 1o defend
himself from the charge.
-Let stand a lower court ruling that 11
rail union may call selective strikes
against a few railroads in an effort to
achieve a national agreement. The action
NY Drawbridges
Left Open; Big
Headache Ensues
NEW YORK (AP) -Protesting the
.stall!: legislature's refusal to approve a
un ion negotiated pension plan for city
employes , union bridgetenders left 28 of
the city's 29 drawbridges in npen position
today. creating a mammoth traffic jam.
City trucks were abandoned on
road\\·ays 1n ke y spots, adding to the
tieu p that backed up cars into New
.Jersey, Long Island and Westchester
County.
A union spokesman sa id the campaign
\\'Ill escalate if the legislature does not
approve the pension plan before it.~ irn·
nunent adjournment. The la"·makers
were work ing in Albany with the clock
i;topped since. a scheduled ad journment
Sunday afternoon.
"'The entire city cou ld be shut down ,"'
said an aide to Victor Gotbaum, ex-
ecutive director of District Council 37
AFL CIO State, County and Municipal
Employes Union. It represe nts 120,000 of
the nearly 400,000 city employes, but the
pension plan covers more lhan its o"'n
membership.
Storms Buff et Midwest
Hail, Heavy Rains Acconipany Tornadoes
California
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l"f wtllffl1' 11 IO It knDfl In 1t11r•
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rem. ... ••lv••• 11\d •r.c:IPll1tlon IOI'
l~I :24•"°'-'r PU~ tncllnl 11 I 1.!11.
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just sit around_l __ _
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8trato]oonger
1J'11ack._
a.
They bend over backward -· · ·
_ .. :_,,, to make him comfortable!
-~f;.~·'.--'"~':.-..... Here'1 a Biggar idea for the man in your life--yeors of
fatherly comfort in o superbly crafted chair that mogicall -,
unfol ds into a super recliner ••. and, as in a ll the B~ggar
quality th ings, from one of the great chair makers in
America. For den, study, family
roo m or in the living room, any
one of these will fit comfortably
into any decor and do it with stylel
b •
"' STU.TOLOUNGll LOU.CK-A...,Jlcibl• 111 bloc~, oolll,
'1ag•. f•alu,.1 "Motic H•all,.11." (efll•"'PO•ory t!~I·
1110 . HtitM Jl '/1 .. , wlclth 33", d•r-lla l6". S<ol<ll·
tarcltd. f•11• S:Jl 9.00
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5<:01th9arfttl. Htlght lO 1/1 ", wiclth 31 1/t ", c1111th
JS". $249,00
a. St•AtO•UTll--1~ ,n.,., toltl, 1a91. $co1chga•d1tl.
Haight 39'/1'', d•plla J6'/, .. , wltlth 32", $129,00
MaftJ .ih•r 111!•1 ••ollablt lft beth Strotolowftll'' ontl
S1r•lale1I••· 'l'fl"' $129.00
NOW FEATURED AT ALL 3 STORES!
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Indians
'Capt11re'
Ru sh111ore
... .
~IT. RUS HJ\10RE. S . D .
(UPI) -A group of Amtncan :1":" ~
Indian<:, who say the federal J!l!ll!'
govern men t in 1868 promised 1 lhem everything in South '(
Dakota west of !he f\tissouri l
...,..,er . climbed ML Rushmore •'
memorial Sunday and refused ~' _
to leave. ~
Brt"·ecn 40 and 60 Indians
scaled the memorial "'hich ' :,.
consists of sculpted likenesses r ~., ,. '
of Presirlcnl!': Washington. Lin-•
---
coin, Jefferson and Teddy
Roosevelt. Twenty-0ne !}('rsons
were arrested and charged
with climbing Mt. Rushmore. APPROXIMATELY 60 INDIANS CLIMB MT. RUSHMORE , REFUSE TO LEAVE
a misdemeanor. Officials Ar rest 21 Protesters, Some of Them Balanced an Edge
The Indians represented 1hc------------------------------'----
Crazy Horse Mountain Movf'-
menl and the American Indian
f\toven1ent Most of the !wclye
\vomcn and nine men arrested
1vere released on bond early
today, according lo •a
spokesman at the county jail.
The arrests ca1nc after i\·11.
Rushmore National Memorial
Supt. Wallace McCaw climbed
the mountain to talk v.·ith the
Federal Agencies Protest
Standards for Clean Air
protesters. He told them they
faced arrest if they did not
leave by 2 p.m.
Park officials silid many in
!he group left but others refus-
ed Lo accompany rangers
clown lhe mount;iin . TI1e rnen
\\·ho sta.ved were dragged a
shnrl di.~tance l1nl!I they
agreed !o walk and the 11·ornen
"·ere carried a short l\'ay, they
~id. "The procedure was
dignified on both sides," an of-
ficial said.
McCloskey
Eyes Race
CONCORD. N.H. (UPI)
Rep. Paul N. McCloskey IR-
Ca!if.), said Sunday he would
en!er the New Ha mpshire
presidential primary lf Presi-
dent Nixon continues "his war
policy" or continues bombing
North Vietnam.
Party officials are not
declaring their support for
him because "some of them
feel Ibey have to be loyal to
their President's policies," be
told a news conference.
\VASHI NGTON (UPI) -Al
leas! two federal deparlmen!s
strongly are pressing the
En v i ronrnental Protection
Agency (EPA) to t'ase its
clt·an air standHrds.
Shorr ly after announcing the
clean air rules on April, EPA
Administrator \Villiam [) .
Ruckelshaus ~~1as summoned
lo the \Vhite House to hear
coniplaints from agencies in·
eluding the Commerce
Department and lhe J•'ederal
Power Commi.s~on ~ FPC),
administration sources said.
Commerce Department of-
ficials :irgued that the FPA's
standards. v.·hich every in-
dustrial facility must meet by
rnid-197:'. were loo strict and
l'flSil y fnr business.
The f PC contended lhe
rules would requirr Jndus1r.v In
use so much "clean" fuel thal
costs v.•ou!d soar and natur11I
gas supplies. already short ,
would be overtaxed. F"PC of-
ficials also said the standards
might rorce some electric
power plants to shut down.
blacking out both consumer.
and industrial users.
Que sti one d by UPI.
Ruckelshaus declined I o
drsruss the meeting. H e
acknowledged. however, "we
make every agency in govern-
ment mad'' by imposing ai r
and water cleanup standards
affecting industries regulated
or ovcrs('('n by Co1nn1cret', the
FPC, the At omic Energy
C om m i s s ion and the
·rransportation Departmenl.
Al the \Vhite llouse meeung.
sources s a i d • Ruckelshaus
defended his air standards on
the grounds they were re-
quired by the 1970 Clean Air
Act. which stipulated that the
ru!~s must be based only on
publ ic health nel!ds .
Ru ckelshaus has a r g u e d
repeatedly that the' act pro-•
hibits cons i d e r a t io n of
r conomic burdens, fuel sup-
plie! and their factors.
Effects of Gl11ta1nate
On Brain Cells Cited
PASADENA (UP I)
Glutamate, used to enhance
!he rlavor of meat. can caust'
a disruption in the brain cells
of tesl animals. according to
Dr. An lhonie Van Harreve\d or
!he California lnstitute of
Technology.
CJutamate is jnvolved in a
brain prece.s s c a ll ed
''spreading depression" in a
fashion related to blackout
urnum
*1919*
Pinto!door
t66 .. 1css 1111n vw nJ
The llttl• c1rtfrn e11r. Pinto Is 1ized sma1J, llke the
economy Import, b ut It's bigger on value. And Price is
cnly 1he beginning. Pinto call• lor only half •• m.tny oil
c hanQel a• VW. One-sixlh lhe chaasl& lubes. So ea1y 10
Mrvice lhat you can do moat routine malntenal'ICe you r· Mlf. And Pinto 11 b igger on performance . It hes a 75-l'li>
engine thal hes averaged over 25 mpg In almuleted city/
auburbln clrlving. Sporta-ca r lype rac,k-and-pinion aleer·
Ing. Wldar 11ance end lower allllouette.
FORD@a
*2175*
Maverick! door
rorlcsslhln NoR I door
The Simple M•chlne. Meverick'a pric• make• h almpl1r
to own lhan Nova. But thal'1 not lhe only reason we cell
II the Simple Machine. Maverick's 11mp1t 10 drlvt and
park because ol its ahorter wheelbase and amall11 turn·
ing circle. Simple to aervlce beceuae ft'a been daalgned
lhef wey. Maverick ofrera a 4-door aedan for a low price
OI $2235• ($145' • leas than Nov.t 4 door). Or choose 11'19
sporty Grabber model. A choice ol an economical V.a
and three thrifty Srxes.
•Ford'• 1ugge1t9d ret•H pflee tor Pinto t nd M•v•rlek, How.ver, lh• models t hown ere •<l\llpped with •oe•nt group
(Pinto $80; M•v•rlck 1521 a nd wh!t• •ldewa ll 11111 (SH). De11ln1t1on cha roe• (Pinto s 105: Ma't'•rlck S1&0).
O.alar preperatton ch1 rg11 (It1ny), 1\at• •nel local tall'•• •r• •xtra.
••eomperl1on b11•d on man ufaetur•tt' •uoa••l•d r•t•U prices for c1<>111t comp1rlbl4i
bOdy styl•t ol low.11 priced mod•I•, t0tnP1r1bly equl p1>9C1.
PINTO WEEK AT HOLLYWOOD PARK-JUNE 22·26. SEE YOUR NEARIY
FORD DEALER FOR A FREE CLUBHOUSE ADMISSION TICKET NOW!
MondaY, JUftt 7, 1~71 DAILY PILOT §
Nation's Police Chiefs Meet,
Probe Way to Stein J\illings
WASHl r'\GTON tAP\ -Al· Justice Dtpartmenl grant. 52 most of the dealh.s occurred
t~·. Gen. John N l\l!lch~l and officers have ralltn in the line while the off icers were respon-
FBI Director J . Eda ar Hoover ef duty since Jan. I. ding to c•lls or making ar-
Tbe total for the full 11 rest.s. at least 20 are at-
have called together law en-months since the count began tributed by tht lACP to am·
forcemenl officers from each jg: 100& the IACP says. \VbHe bu.shes.
of the 5(1 states to discuss how F===============================1
to stem a r lsing tide of pollce
murders .
Following up a White House
conference one J u s I i c e
Department efficial deicribed
as "window dre.ssing ,''
Mitchell and Hoover have set
up a lwo-day working 'eminar
v.·lth pol!C"e officials at FBI
headquarters.
Scheduled to attend the
sessions beginnlng today was
the top uniformed off\cer of
the New Yori\ City police
department, wh.ich has los t
seven men in the past fiv e
months. He is Chief lnspector
Mi chael J . Codd.
New York Politt Com-
missioner P a trick V.
Murphy, saying he was disap-
p0inted and dismayed at being
lert out of last Wednesday 's
"'hite House conference, has
a ccu sed the Nixon
Administration of inf u ! in g
politics into the issue of police
safety. ~furphy, a Democrat,
WIS left off the list by Hoover.
The White House meeting
and the current sessions were
ordered by Nixon in the wake
of killings of I wo officers in
Washington and two in New
York .
According lo 1tatist1cs on
police deaths compiled by th e
International A!sociation of
Chiefs ef Ptilice under a
Fire Rampages
In New Mexico
Get The Jump On Father's Day
DIAMONDS PUTA GLEAM IN HIS EYE
A look that'll mab J'" gt.am. An #J loot.~ loc*. Try it! A diamond ring can't
min.. In white or yellow 14 kt. gold. $&Md thrt mod beautiful rings in 1ha w orld by
From $150. flJieahl'C ~
Establish 43 Years!
HUNTINGTON
CENTER
tr.a.CH & IDltilGIR
HUNTI NGTON II.a.CH
192-5501
If yaU're thinking of a loan for a car
or a1po1 If pool or pool table, drya;
waslllficabin aviser or wo.td avise,
now.
Right now United California Bank is hold-
ing an Interest· Free Personal Loan Sweep-
1takes. If you're a California resident,
21 or over, all you have to do is fill out an
entry blank at any one of our 238 of!i""5.
It's that simple-no purchase required. If
you apply for a personal loan for any
&lllOunt up to $10,000 and it's approved,
you may win it interest-free. If you don't
apply for a loan, you can still win: either
a ca.oh prize equivalent to the interest on
an average UCB Personal Loan with a
two-year maturity or, on approval, an
interest-free loan. And since there'll be a
sweepstakes winner for every 50 loaM
approved nntil July 31st, there are plenty
Of chanCM to win.
So if you've been waiting to apply for
a loan, you'd be wise not to wait any
longer. Come in and talk to ua today. You'll
find we have everything from a vacation
loan that Jeta you wait three months to
start repaying, to a property improvement
Joan that finances 100% of your expense
and lets you take up to 10 years to repay.
In fact, no matter how you look at
the facts, you come out a winner.
UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK
..
I
-..
DAILY PU:OT EDITORIAE PAGE
Mystery • Ill
An atmosp here or tension and concern surrounding
the Board of Supervisors and some of the new members'
appointees \\'as evident again last week.
•
This time the cau se for bluster and angry state-
ments was a paiP. of biJls in troduced at Sacramento by
Assemblyman Kenneth Cory (D·Anaheim).
One bill, AB 2935, allo\VS the tax collector to de·
posi t funds in any legal depository of his choice and
provides that in the event the offices of treasurer and
tax collector are consolidated, the new office shall be
that of tax collector·lreasurer. The lax collector would
be the advantaged incumbent in the first election to fill
the combined office.
It appeared this \Vas a move by Ta..x Collector Robert
Citron through Cory to gain an advantage for himself.
But Cory told the DAILY PILOT Friday that the bill was
only a "spot bill."
"Spot biUs'' are devices to hold a place in the
legislative process. They may or may not be used, and
they may or may not be amended into an entirely differ·
e nt bill.
Cory said that within t wo weeks after the bill's in·
troduction it was clear there would be no need for it
and he has no intention or doing anything with it.
The other bill , AB 1838, authorizes a board of .su per·
viso rs, on request of the ta>r collector, to contract with
or employ parties for furnishing assistance lo the tax
collector.
Cory said the bill was requested by Citron. lt ap-
parenUy followed Citron's dispute with the county Data
Services Department and his effort lo place a computer
job u1ith an outside firm without competitive bidding.
The State Tax Collectors Association is against the
Tlie Angle of
Visio11 in
You11g, Old
Each age of life has its O\lo'n angle of
vision, and few persons possess a
panoramic view al any given time. \V hcn
\•>e are young. ·we are psychologicall y
short.·sighted: as we become older, v:e
get long-sighted.
\Vhat I mean by this is that older
persons !encl less to see v:hat is in front
of them lhan v.·hat is at a furthe r
dista nce; \lo'hile younger persons tend to
'ce only v.·h<it. is directly in front of them.
Older people look into the distant past,
v.·hich is in better ro-
('US fo r them 1han
t he immediale
scene, whJch is
blurrl'd and confus-
ing, for 11 is too
close.up to accom-
moclate their angle
of vision. This ac-
counts for their im-
pa!ience an d in-
comprehen!ion with today's activities.
YOUKGER Pl<:OPLE, on the other
hand. 11ever look back and rarely look
for .... ·ard more !han a year or two; only
\1 hat 1s right heforr thrm steins ··real."
gnd both pa:-,l :ind fu1ure set'm in·
substantial. And !hi.ls. their impati ence
;inrl llH'On1prehcn~10n ;i.·ith \hr ·'less0ns of
h1s!ory .. and the "dangers of rhe future ·•
Our range of vi~ion changes. 1m-
perct>ptibl':,• but steadily. as v.'c get older.
lntetlecl ually, Wl'! turn fr om myopic to
presbyo p1c, and so ea ch comir\g gener.a·
U<in has the task of reminding its elders
of 11ha! stands before us now. not when
\1·e were rhildren and w;ilked three miles
lo schxil in the snow.
t J
Dear
Gloo1ny
Gus
No\Y that mobile homes are as big
or bigger than stucco homes, isn't it
tim l'! they al.so paid their fair :share
of property taxes -those horrtes
that are ne\·er moved, that is?
-G.D.
Tiii• lellwr• r~i.cis r•ad••1' v;ew1, Ml
RKfHl •llf .... M t i tllt noWWOl ... r. '''"'
flur ptl ,...¥1 ,. Gloem, G~t. D•llf ''"''·
JF THE r>.llND does not grow as the
eye changes. then we beco me fixated in
the past and judge the present by sta~
dards that are inappropriate or
unrealistic. Wt. imagint. that our past
formulas for coping \Oo'ith life are im-
mutable laws of eternity and we
transform v.·hat v.·ere relative guides into
absolute norms. This infuriates young
people.
\Vhite ii is doubtless ()UT job lo remain
C'lpen to the present. the fault is not en-
tirely ()n ont. side. Young peoplt. must
learn lo enlarge their own angle of vision
:iio that the present falls into a proper
perspective bet¥1·een past and future, and
so that lheir desperate sense of "im-
mediac y" does not degenerate into
barbarism and witless sensuality.
WHEN I WAS YOUNG I was very good
al disct.rn ing the falseness in idtas and
lnstitutions and people: all intelligent
youngsters are na tural critics : they are
excellent at spotting phonies, fab;e;
arguments. self-ser.·ing ideas. This
negath•e function is useful and astringent
for the social order, and must not be
repressed or rejected.
As I got older. I began lo see the other
side of !he fabr ic: !he t.ruth and goodness
and vitality in people and ideas and in·
stilulions, despi1e their flaws and fa il·
ings. Someho\\·, lhese two viev.•s must be
joined together tG obtain an accurate
portrait of the human sociely, so that we
can develop a proct.ss lo encourage the
positive elements and discourage the
negative. No one yet is doing this.
Support Greenbelt Plan
To the Editor·
Citi zens of Orange County will soon
have the chance to accept a plan for the
preservation of lhe Sar\!a Ana Ri,·er as 11
1>cenic greenbelt from !he ocean to !he
county line. near Prado Dam_
It is hard to believe, but the Santa Ana
River is the largest rh·l'r in Southern
California, in tenns of drainage arl'a,
Flowing from th e peaks of i\1t Bsildy, r>.11.
San Gorgonio, and the San Bernardino
mounla ins in gene ral lhrough parts of
four counties to ils QUtlel between Hun-
tington Beach and Newport Beach. this
unique walercourse is v.·elJ worth re-
taining in as natural a state as po55ible.
ITS LOCATfON In !he midst of this
most urbanized area of Orange Count y
makes the river an irreplaceable op-
portunity fr:Jf' the creation of C1pe.n space
where it is badly needed,
Tht Santa Ana River Greenbelt Plan
en visions a stries of parks. wildlife
areas, and open spaces adjoining the
ri\'er and llnked by riding and hiking
trails, enhanced by landscaping on the
levees. It will .someday be po!iSible to hike
from-the dvermouth lo f'ealherly P•rk,
!topping lo teat and p(cnlc at park Site$
along the WI)'.
THE GREENBELT Plan will create
PMU when! they are most needtd. The
IOD acres of sllte-owned land ~hind
Fairview Hospital are Included In this
dream of green breathing 'pace. Lon&
promlltd Yorba Park above Jmperl11I
BoUJevard tn A.nahtlm is anolher k•y
part of the pl1n.
'lbe Orant,1 Couoty Board o f
( ... ~~· --,. . • • Mailliox : .
•• t -' I· ......
'" ·---·~· --
Lon•"' ••-""'" t rt ... -. H1r1111111
W<lltf1 """'"' ,..,.vtr t~elr ""'""'' lfl * ... ..,, tr lloH, Tht rl1~! It CtlHl•111t lt11'l"' t. 111 -• •r tllll'!IM ll l! ... 1 It ftffrY ... jl,11 Nlltn l!IUll Ill•
<IV<lt •l1.,.1wr1 tl!ll 111•111111 ••Mt. .._,, ,.,,,..,
"''' ... w!-lf .., '"""' It l lllfklMI! rtl -ll
''''''"'' """" wlll llfl .. ~lloll.....,
Supervisors '4-'111 consider the Greenbelt
Plan at a public hearing early in June.
Citizen :iupport in the form of letters,
phone: calls, and attendance a~ that
mee ting will help l-0 convince the
supervisors that we want and need
regional parks. hert. and now, while the
opportunity st!U t.xists. Our supervi sors
are David Baker an d Ronald Caspers,
515 N. Sycam ore. Santa Ana, 92701.
' SHIRLEY PRICE
TMy'll Fh1d l\'o Life
To the Editor:
When the American and RllSsian $pact
probes have explored Mars, they will
doubtless find It sterile . They are now
Mlding out hope for some sort of :ilmplo
life , amoeba or moss, or aome such life.
They will find nont..
flfr.rC"ury is much too hot lo :iusta ln any
life, while Mar' and other planets are too
cold.
Our un ivtrse \va~ created for one
planet. earth. Earth was crtated for
man. Yt.s, Virginia, !here is .1 God
JAMES W. BOLDING
Santa Ana
bill and Cory n·ow says, "If Orange County doesn't want
it, I won't waste an)' time pursuing it."
So seemingly endeth the latest chapter in the evolv-
ing mystery story centered in Santa Ana.
Bureaucratic Bungling
A two-year statewide effort to develop "meaningful
goals, objectives and priorities" for public education in
California i.s off to a typically disappointing start.
School districts along the Orange Coast have ~ ex-
pressed dismay over the short notice given them to par·
ticir,a te in development of the goal setting E!rocess time·
tab e.
It seems a survey of school superintendents and
school board presidents was mailed too late to provide
enough time for adequate, in-depth response.
Neu•port·Mesa received its packet fro1n the J oint
Committee on Educational Goals and Evaluation only
a \Veek ago last Fr iday. ft was due back in Sacran1ento
last Friday.
That is four working days to anatYLe what may be·
come a significa nt force in public education.
But beyond the bureaucratic bungle or n1ailing the
packets "bulk mail" is this disturbing footnoted advice;
''A failure to respond will be interpreted as en·
dorsement of the proposals."
The .legisl~tive committee was charged with findin g
\vays of 1nvolv1ng all the state's educators and citizens
in the process of setting new goals.
Perhaps Assemblyman John Vasconcellos, commit.·
tee chairman. will consider changing the unrealistic
deadline for districts' responses. If not, it is doubtful the
proposals will reflect anything other than the commit·
tee's views, endorsed only by tacit default. "That's it, you hold him while I fleece him!"
Getting in Touch With Ou1• Ow11 Real Feelittgs
How are You? -or Do You .l(now?
It has often occurred to me !hat many
people do not know lhe answer to the
question , ''How are you?" Some people
are so bu:iy reeling what they are sup-
posed to feel that they never get in touch
with their own real feelings .
Carl Rogers says that a psychologically
healthy person's feeling and emotions,
resentments and tensions, are to an
unusual dt.gree ''a cc ess i ble to
awareness,"
Each of us hes some kind of se lf-con-
cept or self-image.
Thus, we may think
of ourselves as effj.
cient or inefflcit.nt,
hard-boiled or kind·
hearted. artistic or
practical, But also
we all have feelings
that do not fit our
self -concepts. The
man who thin ks of
himself as ha r d •
bolled may feel a
twinge of humane sentiment that he
does not know what to do \vi.th. The
person who thinks of himself as ex·
lremely gentle may suddenly find in
himse lf a cruel impulse.
THE SELF-DEFINED highbrow may
feel a lowbrow urge to go l-0 a prize fig ht
or taller derby. The husband \.l'ho has
been openly scornful of his wife's interest
in modern art may unexpectedly fi nd
himself warming up to an imaginali vc
' ..
1 • ~ 1 " ~· I ~'lfByakawa
structure by Cla es Oldenberg.
\\'hat so-called "nor1nal'' people d<1
with these wcllings of unexpected feeling
is lo suppress thern, lo deny !hem to
av.·art.ness, since to admit !hem tn
awareness would re q u ire the
reorganization of lhe1r concept of
themselves.
The way in whi ch ~ psychologically
healthy person differs from so-called
"nor1nal" people in this respect ii; th at he
Is awa re or his own feelings. He does not
try to suppress th~m . Often he may act
on !hem. But even if he does not act on
them. he is able to admit them th
awareness. Let me , quote Carl Rogers
from his book ··on Becoming a Person··:
"TlflS PERSON' \VOU LU be (!pen to ll1S
own experience .... In a person v..hfl 1:>
open J.o his experience ... every stimulus.
·whelher originating in the organism or ln
his environment, would be free ly relayed
through the nervous system v.·ithout being
distorted by defensive mech anisms."
Rogers ta lk about one of his patients:
"Formerly he could not freely feel pain
or illness, because beini; ill mea nt ror
him being unacceptablt.. Neither could he
feel tenderness iind Jove for his child,
because such feelings meant being wrak.
;u1d he had to maintain the fa cade of
beini; strong.
··After therapy he can be genuinely
open to the experiences of his organism
-he can be tired 1vhcn he is tired,.be
can feel pain when his organis m is in
pain. he can freely experience the love he
tcels for his daughter. and he can fee l
;'ind e.~press the annoyance for her \Vhcn
he feels annoyed .. ,
··Thl're are no barriers inside himself.
no inhibit ion~ \Vhic.h would prevent the
full experienl'ing of his O\Vll emotions."
ABRAHA!\1 II. 1\lASLOW was also in--
tcrestcd in this subject and it is curious
how he and Roger1 C1Jnverge rrom d1f·
lcrenl theoretical sources. J\·laslow says
of the heallhy_ self -ac t ualiz ing
pc rson111ity, '"Their case of penetration
into reali ty, thei r closer appruaeh to an
animal-like or child·like al'ceplance and
:;pontaneity imply a superior awareness
of their own 11npulscs. their own desire.:;,
opinions and su bJeclive reactions in
gcne r:il."
So the big question is not what kind o[
se lf-concept a pe rson has. but hO\\' ngidly
he holds It, Just as the map is simpler,
more abstract and less com plicated tban
Uie territory it stands for. so is the self-
concepl only an abslraclion of the sel f.
rr my self-concept defines me as 11
gentle. kind·hearted person. and if I take
m~· self·defi nition loo st!riously, !hen ~y
definition f never have cruel or sadistic
frel1ngs , If sadistic feelings occur, they
have to be denied to awareness. I cannot
permit myself to be aware of my
nonltindhearted impulses. hov.•ever r_are
they may be. Therefore. in one respect at
least. I sha ll be like the famous man who
shouted at his secretary, '·You know god-
dan1 \'tell I never lose my temper~"
THE ADVA/\'T AGE OF the study or
scn1a ntiC's -v>hich is less a study of
language than a study of 11·hat !anguag•
stands for -is that 11·e arc made con.
stantly aware that every concept. t.very
1\·ord or phrase or image , niust shade off
al the edges into unknown territory. Thi~
is as Lrue of the self-co ncept as of any
other concept. So !he psycholog1cally
ht>;il thy person expec ts the unexpected
\1ithin his 01vn thoughts and feeling s. He
is not co1npelled lo deny these feelings to
aw;u·cnei:s
Srn:r11tl's sau1, "Kno w rh.11self.'' But he
;il.~o ~<11d. ••\\'l1,1!cvrr authority T may
ha1·c rc -:ts solely upon niy kno\1·ing how
lll!le I know "
\Vhat Socrates said about knowledge
applies '.l'ilh special cogency to self·
knowledge. The 1nd\v1dual v.ho says, •·1
know myself," niay very well not know
hi mself. Il ls the Individual who knov•~
how little he knows about hi1nself who
stands a reasonable ch:incc of finding out
something about him~clr bclnrc he dies.
(To be continued 1
By S. I. Hayakawa
Pres!dt.nt
San Francisco State Collea:e
Democratic Candidates All Wrong
W ASHJNGTON - The Democratic can·
d1d ates for president have brilliantly sue·
ceeded in opening up their own credibility
gap on one of lhe most critical questions
llf the time, agreement between the
Uniled States and Russia on curbing the
bomb.
To a man these. aspirants have made a
polillca l issue of the most serious
bu:ilness afoot in international affairs,
and to a man they have been wrong.
Tht.y chorused and parolled the idea
that !o go ahead wil h
1he ABM and the
iafeguard syslem of
nuclear defense was
a provocative act
which wou ld sub-
marine the SALT
talks. ThP refore we
must stop this de-
fe nsive program
' .. ?9-· -, ,·.
/~·. . ., -.•
dead in Hs tracks -
to insure that the Russians would be
rt.asonable.
Deployment of safeguards, proclaimed
Sen. Edmund f\luskie in Ma y, ''is a pro-
vocation we cannot afford."
l\10VJNG AllEAD with ABM . asserttd
Sen. George fl.1~overn in February,
''will greatly reduce the likelihood that an
arms control agreement which is ac-
ctptablt. lo both the United States and the
Sovit.t Union can be round .''
Deployment of the ABM woul~ upset
B11 George ---,
Dear George:
I'm still young enough to love
dan cing and kic king up my hetls,
but my husband is alway~ "too
tired" to go any whert>. Can ·you of-
fer a !Kllullon?
RESTLESS AT 28
Dear Restless;·
Wtll. I can try. How About
\Vednesday night about t>ightish?
Richard "'il son
the balance of strategic forces bct1\CCn
the U.S A. and the U S.S.11 . "Thereby un·
per iling the arms control talks and lrig-
gering .another round in lhe srratt.g1c
arms race," announced Sen, Mu bcrl H.
Humphrey.
Arguments of sup1>Qrtcr s of lhc ABl\.1
system lhat i1 s con:-truclion w i 11
strengthen lhe U.S. in bargainins with
the Soviets is "particularly fallal'1 0us,"'
sa id Sen. Edward M. Kenn edy .
So we went ahead ll'ith lhc /10111
system just as the Russians ;:ire going
l\hcad with th eir nuclear progra ms and
President Nixon \\·as able to· Rnnountc
that we had gotten off dead centl'r in the
SALT talks. The Russians agreed In
move toward an agreement on ABM and
on offensive ·weapons deployment. thus
breaking th rough a critica l Impasse \v ith
a seco ndary ~ffect of exposing 1 he faulty
judgment of the prophets on the Senate
side of tht. CaPHol
TilERE ts NO Cl\USE for snu.:kr rs,
political or othcr\\'ise over the collective
pratfall of the nuclear str;itegists on
Capltol Hill. They led an edilorial chorus
'4-'hich chargtd lhat Nixon dldn"t k.nn\v
what he was doing and In his ~tubborn
obstinacy was discarding man's last besl
chance ro save it self from nuclear
destruction. Moreover lh!s obstinacy
grew from Nixon's blind ;:inl1·tommunlsm
carried over from his dll\'S as a red·
hunter in Congress. -
The Russians. with all their distrust of
Nixo n, knew better than thal. The chief
American neGolintor, Gerard C. i mith, 1s
undoubtedly right that 1he Russians
would h11vc regarded with a nllxlurc of
disr~spcd and suspicion Amcr tcl\n a\1an·
donmenl ol ils programs out ol sorne ii·
lusion that this would soften up the
Soviets.
lt cannot be repeated too often that the
Russians are realistic, pragma11c and
r<><:nect power alone in their relations
11·11h the Unitt.d Stales. Nixon, in this
ca~e at leas!, proved that he understood
y,•hat motivales Soviet lt.adcrs. They do
not respect weakness or abnegation. They
respect adversaries who pursue lhci r ciwn
best inlerests impervious to intimidation.
jusl as the Russians themselves ptirsuc
their oy,·n Interests'.
THEY ARE UNDOUBTEDLY av.'are
rha t tht. Nixon administration is
rlrtermined that they shall not gain the
111Jvan1age from the results of the SAL 1'
lalks. just as !hey have no lhought of
h:inding over the ad vantage l-0 the United
States.
One does nol have to buy y,•ithout
Cell Security
Press f.01n ments ...
Towanda, Pa., Relt'ie.w: "Animals may
nol be able l-0 tell mfln in so many words
what they lhink of his lifestyle, but lhty
rnanage to get the messagt. across. Like
the gorilla ·which escaped from the S<ln
Diego 1..oo. In the past when an animal
gained his freedom In this manner ht.
usually led his captors on a merry chas<',
savoring to the lasl inslanl his freedom .
Not lhls timt'. \lllthln 15 minutes the
J:orilla was found back al her cage
'scared lo dea!h.' according to her
keeper .. r.1an mny not hnve reached th~
point .1Vhere lie is y,·ill ing to trade mode rn
t'xlstf!nce \Yith llll it~ probl<'ms for the
security nf D rcll. but 1f the i::orilla has
reached lhat .su:ige. can 1n11n be far
·behind ?''
seeing 1he priee i\'1xon's mounting con·
fidencc that lhe agrr.rn1ent by the Sovie t
leaders '"·111 produce ct1nslru c1ive results.
\\'hat is more purch:i sab!e is !he evidence
thfll he knov.•s belter how tro go about
moving toward an agreem ent than his Of>
po ncnts in U1e Senate 1hought.
THEIR FACES SHOULD become all
the redder when Uiey consider thal the
movement in the SA~ T talks LS accom·
panied by a Soviet initiative in discuss·
ing mutual troop reducuons 1n Europe
and new arrangements in Bertin more
acceptable to the West.
All Of these lundamenlal and cri tical
f.roblems -nuclear disarmanenl , lhe
ermina tion of the war in Jndochin.a ,
troop dispositions in Europe, relati011~
wilh China -havt been made politi cal
iss ue s wilh a highly virulent content.
from any detached point or 11iew that
is deplorable. In fa cl, Nixon is .ac~
complishing what hls opponents merely
talk about, and lhey might well consider
Ir the security and well-being of the
Untied States does not require at this ~
~nl a decent bi-parUanship in foreign
affairs.
--W-
Monday, June 7, 1971
Tht editorial page of the Dai/11
Pilot seeks to iujorm and stim.·
t1late reader.s by preaenting thi3
11e1vspaper's-opi11lo11a ond coru-
tne11tnry (11~ topics oj i11tereat
n11d s1g11if1C(HICC, by providing a
foru1n for the t xpression of
011r rtndrrs' apin1C111s. un(l b"/I
prescn r111(1 1./1e d1 vtrsr 1;icur
poin ts of n1 forn1ed. ob.~rrver.t
on1t SJ1okrs111c11 on topic.s of t11e
dn!J.
Robert N. \Veed. l>ublis.her
.
1
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T
I
h •
.!
l
I
t
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r
f
t
Mu•lclan
Orange Coast College
freshman James Garn·
er of Ne wport Beach
'''ill perform a tl\olen·
delssohn sonata tonight
at SL Jame~ Episco pa l
Church in Ne,.., port
Beach at 8 p.m. dur-
ing an OCC recit..al.
Tl1ai-Red
R elations . '
; Improve?
BA NGKOK ( U PI )
Thailand evidently has applied
the brakes in its drive towa rd
a rapprochn1enl with Com-
munist China.
\Vhen Foreign fo.·1 i n is t c r
Thanal Khoman return cd
from a trip ribroad on ~l ay 8
be said Th ailand's effnrts lo
establish a dialogue with Pek-
ing had begun to bear fruit.
''The situation hos im-
proved." he told «O in-i:
terviewer. "Peking leaders
have begun lo understand us .
It may le.;d to a real
·dialogue."
Thanat. who first appealed
.to Peking leaders for open
talks two years ago, said the
latest approach had been
made through ''lhird coun·
tries'' v:hich he declined to
name.
Son1c of Than<.:t's crilics
, promptly charged he v.·as
mov ing too fast in seeking a
reapproachment with China.
One vernacular newspaper
critic of the China policy had
reporte d Thanat supported
China's admission to the
·Unit.ed Nations. Thanat denied
•. this.
ffe also attacked his press
critics \vhich resulted in a pro-
test bv four journalisls's
-ci ssoclaiions which s a id
Thanat hacf falsely accused
nev.·smen of taking bribes to
£lanL news.
A foreign m i n ist r y
spokesman said the protest
was based on a "complete
misunderstanding'• and added
that it was "unfortunate" that
th e Bangkok press associa·
tions had •'tried Ul make fill
issue of a misunderstanding."
f\lean v.•hi!c. SQmc top
government leaders ;;ppcar !o
be advocating slo11'cd up ef-
fort s Inward ;a Peking-
Bangknk thav..
Oepu\y Prime 1\\1n1<;tcr Pote
Sarti ~in also Sf1 1ct he thinks
Thail and should not rccognit.c
Ch in.~ because that na!ion still
has a Pfllicy nf sup/)Ort1ng
r.nmmun1st insurgcnc.v i n
Tha1!anrl.
Depul;.r r·orc1gn l\11n1.5tcr
Sana K1ttikachorn repor ted
tbal the national security
cnunc:il had decided thri t
Tha1\11nd should nl)L open lradc
with Pek ing 11l this time .
The Bangkok Post reported
t hat orders for a ~lowdown on
appro11ches to China came
'l'ight from the lop -Pri me
1'-1inistcr Thanom Killikachorn
1:1nd Depu1y Prime Mini ster
Pr;ipass Charusa thira. a ma n
Some consider !hf', nation's
most politically power f u I
·leader.
These two leave Foreign
Minister Thanal in I he
minority: Thanat saw im·
i:irovement and a chance for
dialogue where other govern-
ment leaders were more skep-
ltcal.
Sanga, the deput y foreign
minister. may have been
trying lo pull the foreign
ministry ba ck in line wttb
government policy when he
5aid that. Thailand had to be
careful about 11eeking dialogue
with Peking because "a small
nation Itke us cannot push tbe
event.''
Sanga, brolht'r of the prime
minister. also said loo rnuC!h
talk abou t approac hes through
lhi rd countries would not be
useful.
KIDS LOVE
UNCLE LEN
I Saturdays in
I Th e DAILY PILOT
•
•
DAILY PILOT 1
The values are here for
Father's Day and every day.
4" collar sport shirt
w ith short sleeves.
Dacron~ polyester/
cotton. Fashion prints.
S-M-L-XL.
398
Every day
1000/o acrylic knit shirt.
Classic collar styling.
full fashioned in lots
of stripes end solids.
Men's sizes &M-L-XL
Every day
Long point collar
shirt, short s leeves.
Dacron• polyesler/
cot1on solids with
contrast stitch.
S-M·L·XL.
3!~ryday
Wallace Beery collar
on striped knlt cotton
shirts with short
sleeves. S-M·L·XL
3 98
Every day
1----. r----·
Mock turtle neck cotton
kn it in assorted stripes.
Short s/oeeves, chest
pocket. S-M-L-XL.
398
Every day
50% polyester
SOo/o cotton long
sleeved shirts in
handsome stripe or
wheel patterns. Sizes
S-M-L-XL.
798
Every day
ennelfl
The values are here f!Neryday.
CHARGE THESE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE!
100".4 acr;lic shirt has
high crew neck. short
sleeves. Horizontal
stripes and solids.
S·M·L-XL.
3~v~ry day
100% Banlon• nylon tu/I
fashioned shirt with
classic collar, short
sleeves. Horizontal
stripes in navy, beige,
olive and wh ite combos.
Sizes S-M-L-XL.
698
Every day
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f DAILY PILOT ll'londl.y, Ju11e 7, 1~71
-By Phil lnterlaiicll · ' Governor Still Asks Compromise
b-7
"And the soup du jour for the bore du jour.•
Trans-Pacific Row Try
To Continue This Week
ENSENADA. Mexico (UPI)
-Two British adventurers.
their first attempt to row
across the Pacif ic Ocean
aborted by stormy seas, plan
to try again Friday.
John Fairfax and Sylvia
Cook said they spent most of
the first few weeks of the in-
itial journey lashed together
~cause of high waves and
winds.
"f was seasick every day for
the first v.•eek." said the 31~
year--0!d Miss Cook. who can·
not s\•:im. "h-1y teeth never
sUlpped chattering. And I will
admit I was scared."
They lefl San Francisco
April 26 and last week they
came ashore 35 miles south or
here, minus their radio and
~ boat's rudder.
Fairfax, 33, whn row~
acroS! the Atlantic alone. s3id
"we had a hell of a time. 1 had
more problems in the last fivt;
w~ks than I had in I.he entire
six months that it took me to
row across the Atlantic."
Fairfax, who wa.s washed
overboard three times. said
his main concern was just
keeping afloat. •·we had only
two days of sunshine. All the
rest of the time it was sheer
hell, stormy with winds in ex-
CtS!'i of 50 miles an hour."
"r never expected to get to
Mexico," said Miss Cook, "but
Brown Asks
CourtRu1ing
Over Voting
FRESNO (UPI)
Secre tary of State Edmund G.
Brown says he lhink1 the
courts should decide whether
young voters should be limited
lo casting their ballots only in
their hometowns.
Brown 's statement was in
rererence to a recent ruling by
Attorney General EYelle J.
Younger which doesn't allow
voters between 18 and 21 to
vote anywhere bui in thei1
hometowns.
"Younger has given one in-
lerpretation cf the law that
does find support iD lhe
statutes," Brown said.
He added, however, that the
question should be decided by
the courts and said he an-
tici pates the filing of a lawsuit
challenging the a t t o r n e y
general's opinion.
State Democratic Chairman
Chari~ Manatt last week
asserted Younger discouraged
enfranchisement of potential
voters between 18 and 21.
Manatt accused Younger, a
Rqiublican. of issing the rul-
ing because college-age voters
are-registering predominantly
as Democra ts.
Be~ring Over
SAN FRANCISCO (lJPJ) -
The federaJ commission ln-
vu:tlgating the California
RuraJ Legal Assistance pro-
gram has ended hearings and
will 1ubmit Jts findings to the
U.S. Offke of Economic Op-
portunity June 25.
it's nice to be warm .again."
The 'couple plan to resume.
their voyage to Australia. on
Friday when their ~foot
rowboat will be np.aired. The
delay on tbt 8.000-mile voyage
means, however, they will be
in mid-Pacific during the hur-
ricane season.
Probe Slat.ed
Into Slaying
Of Convict
SAN QUENTIN (AP)
InYestigalion continued today
into the stabbing death of a 28-
year old convict killed Sunda y
at San Quentin Prison as he
and other inmates \\'alched a
show lln Indian dancing.
Stephen Kovac, serving A
six-mont h lo 1$.year sentence
£or burglary in Madera C.oun·
ty, was t.be fourth inmate to
die in a &eties of 17 stabbings
bere since January.
Racial tension was blamed
for earlier ti:labbings, after
which part o( the prison
populalion. was put under
lockup.
But duty officer Joseph R.
O'Brien said prison activities
would continue normally and
no lockup was plaMed. He
said because there was no
tension at the prison he believ-
ed only one other inmate was
involYed.
O'Brien sald no weapon was
found and there were no
suspects. He said investigator5
were probing Kovac's files to
see if he had any record of
enemies at the prison.
O'Brien said Kovac was
slabbed in the back. near the
spine. as a crowd of convicts
watched a show in a lo~·er
yard.
Kovac. bom in Nevada, was
transferred to San Quentin in
September. 1969, from Folsom
Prison. He was first im·
prisoned in 1965 rrom Madera
County.
U.S. General,
Wife Killed
SANTA PAULA (U PI )
The bodies of • retired Air
Force general and his wife
were found Sunday after Civil
Air Patrol ti:earcbers ccmbed
half the r;tate In a nint~y
search.
Maj. Gen. Richard O .
Hunziker, 54. and his wife.
Margaret, disappeared last
Monday wben their light plane
went down on a pleasure. flight
from Calexico, on the Me~ican
border. to the cen t ral
CRlifornla town of Santa
Maria. Both bodies were.
recovt.ttd from the wreckage.
STARS
Svd"•Y Olft1rr 1, erie ef the
worli'1 f•••* e1+1elo9•r1. Mit
c:olumri i1 011• e f Hie DAil Y '1Lors t•••t f1et11•••-
l>octor~·Reportl)Vay,..That
Relieves"lt.ching~Pain' Of.
Swollen'HeinorrhoidaliTissues
first Application• Give Prompt,
T empor•ry Relief in Many Cuea
11wre'1 a moet~tfed.ive medi-inflammation. The ansv.-er ia eatlon t hat in many ca sea doctor-te&t.ed Prcporotiofl Ir. C prompt relie.f fer houri )-" There's no other he.mor·
1Uch hemorrhoidal di•· , thoida l formula Jike Pre.par•· ~ and actually helps ti on H 1tnd j t need s no
shtink 1wellinir of hemor· prescription.\Ointznent,or
rhoidal liuuel cau,,ed by the • auppo&itoriet.
I
Reagan Aid Reform Nearing Final Showdown NEU RO
MUSCULAR
RELAXATION
SACRAMEN;J'O (AP) -
Gov. Reagan 's weUare refonn
plan heads Ws week for a
possible all-0r-nolhing vote in
a Democrat<entrolled com-
mittee.
The Republican goYernor
baa uid he's willing lo com-
promise, but · has reject.ed a
tentaUve combination welfare
reform program worked out
by the chairman of the Senate
Health and Welfare Com-
mittee.
On Wednesday, three
'Q'e.lfare. packages are up
before the commiltee headed
by Sen. Anthony C. Beilenson
lD-BeYerly Hills ).
Beilenson had hoped lo win
committee approval cf a con-
ti:ensus program using the best
cf all lhe packages. The com-
mittee is controlled &S by
Democrats.
The 14-point Be ii en so n
outline sent to lhe governor
last v.·ttk was rejected on
several counts:
-It did not require lhat
able-bodled welfare recipients
labor on a public work force. if
they didn't find a job or enter
a job training progta.m.
-"There would be no con-
trol oYer the 3rowlng caseload
as we bad proposed," Reagan
said.
-There would be no col!t
savings compared with an
eslimated savings of f l'lO
million in the Reagon plan.
But of the $170 million, Leg-
islative Analyst A. Alan Post
says only $34 million \\'ould
come. through legislation. The
mt would be through imple-
menlation of administratiYe
regu.latiOOll, he said.
All .sides dispute e a c h
other's figurt"s er.. welfare
costs and savings. A meeting
was planned today in an effort
to Iron cut some of those dif·
ferences,
Although Reagan said Fri-
day that he still is open to
compromise, it appeared there
was one point, at least, that
could not be negotiated.
Reagan wanl~ a "closed·
end " appropriation on we.Jfare,
The Superefrigerator.
meaning the budget would
contain an upper limit on
welfare spending for lhe ·year.
lf circumstances -.such as
increased caseload -thrpal-
ened to push welfare o\'er its
budget, payments to recipients
would be cut back to kttp
spending "-'iU!in the budget.
Democrats have voted in
budget sessions to k et" p
welfare as an "open-end" ap-
propriation. That means U!al
full monthly payments are
made to all eligible recipients.
w ..
ll•rl Cllart.. hfwl•r, D.C.
• H•w M.tll-4
• Freed• .. frM r.-..
'hy•i<•l I Emofion1I • rr ..... n..t.,, ........
Dt. S•tlteri..4!'1 TKblt111M
• '•'"'--_,, .. , ....
.,,.,., NICISSAIY
MON.-WID.-111.
492-3 532
14• ..... S..rr• s.11 c1.-r.. c.t.
If you can match the features,
you won't match our price s288
1. Your choice of left ••• or right hand door c.pening.
2. It's complete!
frost free ••.
in both the
refrigerator
and freezer
sections.
3.Big
147 pound
freezer
capacity.
4. Choice of white,
coppertone, avocado or
harvest gold ••• and color
costs no more at Penneys.
7. Cantilever
shelves ••• the
utmost in
storage
flexibility.
6. Twin porcelain enamel
finish crispers.
5. 18 cu. ft. of total
food storage area.
Penncrest® washer sale. Save 21.95 on each one.
Sale pr1cea effective through s.tcwcS9y onlyl
Sale $208
Reg. 229.95. P•nncr11t9 waaher with I
programmed aenlngs. 8 programmed wash
St!llections. liquld ble~ch dispenser.
Fabric softener dispenser. Choict!I of
wh ite, avocado or harvest gold ••• color
costs no mqre at Penneys.
Sale $178
Reg. 191.ts. PartncrMtl' •••h•r with '
•PHd Mtllngt. 4 wash/spin speed
settings, 3 wash/rinse temperature
settings. All over white Porcelain
enamel finis h.
Sale $198
Reg. 219.15, Penncre1t'> washer wtth I
ptogrsmmed Httlng1. 6 programmed wt!h
selections. liquid bl each dispenser.
Wat er level selection. Choice of while,
coppertone, avocado or harvest gold , , •
and color costs no more at Penneys.
JCPeryney
service
enne111
The values Cl'8 here MK'/ day. It's all part of the value
· at Penneys.
714·5H-MOI
Av•ilable at these Penney st ores: F•shion Island, Newport Beac~, Hunt ington Center, Huntington Beach. Use Penney s Time Payment Plan.
I
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Yuba Ciiy Offi~ials Don!)t Fii Mold
Sheriff Neat, Conservative; DA M.are Flashy
By GEORGE SKELTON
YUBA CITY (UPI) -The
dtt@ctive work a n d pros-
tcUlion in the Juan Corona
Case is being directed by a
~ffiall-town sheriff and dislrirl
a ttorney who could easily fit
into an)' ''big cily " cnme-
fighting team.
Defying t he slerco\)'pcd
country sheriff image. Roy
Whiteaker has no drawl, no
pa unchy midsectiO R, no well-
worn khaki uniform. The JI·
I
•'
year-<1ld lawman speaks with
poise and in perfect English,
he stands a we!l-proportioned
6-feet: and he wears neat, con-
servative business suits.
District Att orney G. Dave
Teja, 37, is a bit more colorful
-packing an automatic pisto l
&n his belt, smoking a cigar
and declaring !hat '\necktie's
are a barbaric custom." But
he too is well-groomed. all
business and boasts a 75 per
cent CQnviction record in jury
trial!'!.
I See by Today's
Want Ads
• Are you llw. ran1bler
type?? \Vell then make II
f'asy on yOOrseH, boy a
]9(',S :\®Honda Scraml:fler,
roday, .. ~ ~ !
e 11·~ "Sumn1er ln the city''
Buy yotirself a Surfcraft
:su rl'board, tike nr\\'.
Have some \Valer fun~
e Unemployment go i fl i;
do11>n now! Lo!'sa posi-
tions offered you in our
help wanted <: o ! u m n.
Check them out today~
"My r eccird of felony con-
victions is pretty toed," he
says.
Whlteakrr is the youngest
sheriff in Calif&rnia and has
beeo in office en/y !'lince
J anuary.
"No sheriff sbou~ have to
start up his career like th is,"
fie say.o;.
Teja and Whiteaker are
good friends, next d o o r
neighbors, work c Io s e I y
together and are handllng the
murder ca~ \\.·ith extreme
caution.
"One &f the things I've
learned is to never be con-
fident," Teja say!. "Con-
fidence is very bad for a trial
allorney."
T h e prosecutor acknow-
ledges that his case
against Corona "appears". so
far. to be based primarily on
circumstantial evidence, but
adds "I like to lry circumstan-
tial cases because t he y
present a challenge."
After an initial comment to
newsmen that he felt Corona
was the killer, most (If
Whiteaker'r public remark..,;
ha.ve been a rriendly, "L have
no comn1enl about the in-
vestigation."
Both he and Teja are nov;
under a court order not to
discus..,; pertinent fact..,; in the
LOCAL
No olb•r n•w1p•p•r tell1 yo11
more, •very 4ey, ebouf wltef1 • ======================='/I 9 oin9 o" in tl.1 Greeter O re119e Coetf tlt •11 f+i e DAILY 'ILOT.
Enroll
Now
Fall
Semester
ALL·DAY CLASSES
llilldergarten thru sth Grade HAWTHORNE
CHRISTIAN
SCHOOLS • Ttacbhrt tile (R's with 'Phonics
•Door-to-Door Bus Service
• Before and After Schol Cart
• Re1sonable Tlitioa h1 F111111t.l11 Ylllley
16115 l r1111kh11rst Strwt
,,J.)JlJ
(Day Camp starts June 21 , , ,
thro11ghout ..,;ummer.
... , ye11r ~ltHdnttl
h1 .......... ..
Summer School starts July 6).
' '
Floor
care sale
Sale 7488
Reg. 84.95. Upright vacuum
converts to can~ler by
twisting a dial. tt beats.
swee ps and cieans at !he
same time and has height
adjustment for indoor/outdoor
normal and shag rugs. Comf0'1-
able hand grip. lrlple filler
system and !ting size
d isposabJe bag.
Attacbment tool
IUI lor llP'lght
cleaner, $18.
Save 10°1
Sale 79 88
~ IU5. ~ •-foatures 10-pc. attachment Mt. 3-way sucti on
Mfactor and 2-SQeed motor. Audio and
-indlcatOll warn wnon di._
able d"81 bag lo full Alf llool -.,. t>ao 2 winyf .,.__ Attacl>-
"""'1s stO<!I CO<npectty Oft tho top.
Salo prices effective through Sllutday
l\.nne.,1
Available at these Penney stores: Fashion Island, Newport Beach
Huntin9ton Center, Huntington Beach. Use Penneys Time Paymeillt Plan • ••
case.
Teja·, is' 8 typical American
success story. His father was'
born in India and journeyed lo
America to study medicine at
!he University of Arkansas.
8 ut the depressioil forced him
out Of school and inlo l he
California fruit orchards as a
farmworker. He later bec11.1ne
a foreman and then bought his
own small ranch.
Teja's mother is an Anglo he
fondly refers to as an "Arkie"
and his wife is one-quarter
American Indian.
Whiteaker was brought up in
Los Angeles, beca1ne ar, Army
~1P and served in Panama.
where he met his wile and
learned lo speak f I u e n ~
Spanish, a skill that has been
useful in the Corona 1n-
\'('Stigat1on.
\Vhiteaker attended Yuba
College and Sacramento State
College, served on the Yuba
City police force for nine
years -first as a beat cop,
later as a detective specializ-
ing in narCQtics cases -then
challenged a six·)'e&r in-
cumbent last November and
bea t hitn with Teja's private
support,
Teja's previous bigge.~t case
witn th e recent conviction of a
man involved in an interstate
counterfeit ring.
Teja, a University of San
Francisco Law Sc hoo I
graduate. also "-'On re-election
for a third four .year term last
November.
The public f'yc has been
prilnarily on Whiteaker so far
in this bizarre case but now.
as !he emphasis s11·1tches from
the peach orchard cemeteries
to the courtroo1n. more and
more pub/icily is being focus·
ed on Teja.
"I kne1v this WfJUld CQ1ne
eventually," he laments.
Princip a l i11 Dallas
Black; School White
DALLAS t UPll-At Arthur
B. Kramer Eiementary School
the kids come from the sur-
rounding neighborhood but the
principal comes from across
town .
''You might say I'm a bused
principal," said John W .
Roland, 141e black principal or
the predominantly w h i I e
school.
A year ago Rol and \\'as prin-
cipal of an all-black etemen·
tary school and Kramer was
all-white.
Now Kramer, a 1nodern
brick buildJng school Wcated
in an area of $50,000 homes,
Bandsman
Of Year
Selected
A l3-year-<1ld saxophonist
has received the Bandsman of
lhe Year honors in the Foun-
tain Valley School. District
band competition.
Keith Wehner, a student al
Fulton School, received his
award a~ the recent Districl
Band Awards Night. The
honor is gi ven to the student
who e xcels in mu s i c ,
citizenship and service to the
band. Keith has served this
year as president ot the band
and is the o.n!y member who
has participated in the district
band for four years.
Anolher Fulton student , Elia
Piroui, 13, received the award
ror the mosl musical growth.
He is a trvmpel player with
two years' experience and
finished the yrar playing rirst
trumpet for the district b.'lnd
Another trophy was awarderl
to Lee Stevens. 13. of F'ou11ta1n
Valley School fnr earning the
most points during the ~·e;ir.
Lee C<>mpded 871 points by al·
tending regular rehearsa ls,
special rehearsals, concerts
and by playing solos.
J\fembership in the di strict
band is earned by the best
musician! from F o u n I a ! n
Valley·s 13 schools. Under the
direction of Marlo'il:e Earle
!hey rehearse every f\1onday
from 6:30 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m.
and perform at special func·
lions throughout the school
year. "
has ,two black students and
Roland.
The principal said there
have been nc> color problems
during his year at Kramer.
"I've had a strange feeling
about that. I dor:'t think they
had any attitudes formed
about race before t came
here." he said.
''I have never felt while
being here that I was looked
upon by the kids as being dif·
ferent. ''
The. 44-year-old Roland said
parents have not caused any
problems either.
"If the parenls had reserva-
tions they didn't show it. The
parents have bent o ver
backwards to help." he said.
Roland was transferred lo
Kramer under the Dallas in-
dependent school district's
"crossover" program. The
program represents school
desegregation on a faculty and
administrative level.
Dallas school officials say
the program adds to the stu·
dent's education.
"We have. a conl\uence of
cultures which in v o Iv e s
everybody. We feel we have a
pluralistic society and all
groups have made important
CQntributions," said Larry
AS(.'(]ugh, assistant to the
Dallas Superintendent o f
.schools.
But Roland said for the
white s!udents at Kramer the
opportunities to learn about
other ethnic groups a r e
"really limited."
"f l perhaps has been too
1i1nitcd." he ..,;aid.
He also said that students
graduating from Kramer to
one of lhe Dallas junior high
schools •·don't perhaps kno1v
as much as they ("()Uld about
othrr ethnic ~roups. ''
And Roland said the pro-
blem cannot be so]\·ed by
sin1plv adding more material
on other ethnic ~roups to the
clen1entary s ch o o I 's cur-
riculum
R<1!and men1ioned I he
possibility of exchan,lle pro-
grams which v.·ould allow the
student.~ and paren!s from one
part of tov.•n to meet with
~tudents and parenl.s frorn
other areas of lhe ci1y.
Hr ~aid even lhese pro·
grams would not be enough,
''but al least It's a start in the
right directioJl."
' MEDICAL ASSIS TAllT OI
I KIPTIONIST
DENTAL
ASSISTANT
Sltorl. j,oteMiff tollftet f1l1f qualify yoe
Cll an Au i1lo11I ;. the ollt<ot ol o Ph~i.i<io11
.,. 0.nll.t. <I -Ill prog<o• 1,.. P•~lof M·
•i1lo11t 01 M...ii<ol 0111<• l~<•pl ..... itl, 7
-th P'°9"(11" fOI Mecli<ol l•nlo•I. Do'f
.,.. -11ing clo•""'· lil•li,,.. ~I
enii"""'9 .t -OllcliliOMI ""'·
Southern Calilomia CoTiege ..
Medical and Dental Au istants
(formtrfJ l•• A...-N1 C.11..-l
••
•1 flit Amfflti .. t.n.illl .. .t ,_ I tw1. A11A. .. Tri. Mt! ttcMk .. ScMI.
w ........... .,.. ........
17 17 South •• 0""" ••
Anohelnt
Ph-635-3450
'
'I
i
I
Mond.ly, June 7, l!J71 OA!LY PJL01 I
These gas ranges
clean themselves.
1
269 95
Penncrest~J Imperial 30" gas range wirh se!f-cleaning oven
panels. Everkleenl:ll oven panels clean themselves during
regul~r oven use. Full black glass oven door, p rogramm~d
oven control, fluorescent light. White, coppertone,
avocado or harvest gold .•. color costs no more at Penneys.
Pe nncrest:!l.Jmperlal 36" gas range with EverkleenoJ panels
In white, coppertone and avocado ••• 279.95
Available at these Penneys stores: FASH ION ISLAND, Newport Center:
HUNTINGTON .CENTER, Hunlinglon Beoch. Buy ii on Penneys lime poymenl pl••·
WHAT HAS THE BEAUTY OF NEFERTITI GOT TD DD WITH YOU???
After thirty th rrr centu1·irs,
rurrent man !I.till r!'mrmll<'r!I.
the classic beauty or E~'Yfll·
ian Queen Nf'fcrlili as n1ore
ot a fable. Th" .,.,.;re <1r Kln~
Akhenatcn, her hc-au!y wa.~
worshipfl(!d by \hr-Pheroah
civi\i1.ation.
Because of the ti rl"·ork
piec«I together on the grea l
templc11 at Karnak \\'f' arc
provided a. glim~ or her
ft1nlastic rxlslt'nce. We 11er
heT in UM' lli!hl of proud and
Intense wc>man.
Regard!~ r:ir who wr 11rr,
we all )>05.~!'ls an inh rrrnt
quality lhal ma.ke& \a at-
trB.cOve to othe~. For In·
11tMct"; 8 wi(~ !'My be bf!JU·
tltul to her flln'J ily bH!au11e
of her devo tion. She is pie-
tu1•rd \\'ith an l\uroa of re·
sll('Ol and Jovt' .
'Totally diff1•n•11t. i11 !hf\ alh·
lt'Ut In thr family who is Rd·
mirl.'d, f'vi>n l'nviM for lhr
llth" filnf'Sll n f his physical
skill RI SJKll'IS. To be ablt' tn
cRplurt' his musclf' Cl)l1rdlno -
tlon !Incl action nt hi.o; favor-
ile sport is a trophy in itse\L
On thl" lhtht side, most peo-
11le have ldlqsyncracie11 ...
especially when It comes tD
the protcssloruil m11n. T·lr is
ca.."t by his llfes tylc \\'hii·h ht'
brlng11 with him to the offk·e
t'ach d11y. It i!f his pcrsonali·
ty. Hrnce, we may hav,. lh,..
dcnUst who ir 8J1 avid fisher-
man. A charicature mh:ht
reveal him daydreaminio: that
he ha~ hooked a whopprr 11 1
the l"llPC'r\SC or e11lracting
sonic 1:0001· pa\1rnl!I 1nolar.
Our bu~ini>!i.s Is lo capture
lh(' personality of J'l<'o11le on
1·anv111s. ll may "ntail a bit o(
convcrseUon and It fr1v CflS•
ual ph<:1tol{raphs. As \Yi th thr.
abovi> palntitJI:' of NefC'1'li tl
1ht' Rrl\\'Ork i~ 11roducC'd In
rich and J)('tccptlve <.'Olor.
()ri,:;inal. thrs(' olt~ er~ in·
vHh1Rhl1• In timr for you can
never r•>cii.p ture the moment.$
they rC'prCf!t'nt.
Should yn11 likP l(I consider
our srrvlcl' pk·fl~(' ,i:::lve u~ a
rllll. You 1,11ill rind us pleas-
ant and inlormativr. We wtll
shO\I' you actufll work done
for rCAllnlc and fRir pr-lc~L
15r;, of our Jncomr befortt
rxpen~P!I i!I donated to Chil-
dren.!i Hospital,
22s 11th st. INTROSPECT Huntington Beach
(714) 536-4271
•
\
\
l
-
CHECKING
•UP•
l(iss it1g Spreads
Ger111 s-Stop It!
.... ;.
,;
'
By L. ~1. BO\'[)
A FE~llNINE Cl.I EST is
tomping on me. "It's your du·
.{y as a purveyor of public in-
, onna11on." says she. "lo ex-
• lain thr con1ami1Jation in our
ecology. Readers belie,•e "'hat
-1hey st'C' 1n print. Just tell
: them, and they 11 ill stop in-
• feeling unc ;:inother." Jlcally
: think so~ All right. consider
! ki.ssin~. Bac1criolog1.sts know
·• thf' mouth 1,; (Inc of the !cast
: clean of the bod y's orifices.
: K 1ss1ng is terrihly unsanitary.
~Just a1,ful. Don 't do it
~ ~~{~10;1~-p 1~c~1~, that oughl lo
I 1r·s A SClt:NTIFIC FACT
that brown-eyed i:ir!s see bcl ·
!er in the d<1 rk than do blue·
!
eyed girls. did you know that'?
... THE TRAGIC
STATISTICS prove each
month of each vcar the most .s:dan~erou.~ day Or your life is
:the first day after yo u're born
•. ' . \\'H E~ A COUPLE·s in·
t come passes $10,000 a vear,
:v.·hat the "'ifc spends-for
;clothes 1u~t about doubles.
~\Vhrn II passrs SJa.UOO. her
~clothing costs JUSt about dou-
:·hlr again. 1rs a matter ur
:-Ceco rd. .
: OPE!'; C!UJ::~l l O~: \\'hy is
4!t evrn those J apanese who
::'drink heavily almost never get
~angovers'..'
' ? IT'S NO NEWS !o gardeners
':J:hat v.hat happens to a lot of
;seeds is lhcy·re c;iten by
!birds. vermin. \''h::itnot be fore
~bey ever sprout Now , though,
'>on1e ingenious fC'llOY.' has fix -
ed th::it. He put s e eds .
per[ectly sp::iced, in a roll of
[ancy tape. \'ou dig a furro"'·
plant the unrolled tape , cover
Y.'i!h dirt. and water ap-
prop r i ate I y. The tape
dissolves, but not before the
Sl'eds take hoid. Pretty nifty.
Understand these t a p e
gardens are turning out half
again as much c e I er y ,
cucumbers, whatever.
CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q.
''ls it true a starving man
stops feeling hungry after a
few days without food?" A.
That's fiction .. , Q. "Did I
understand yo u to say nobody
ever suffered a ne r vous
breakdown because of
overwork?" A. Such is !he
contention of numerous
medicoes.
A NEW YORK
PSYC HI ATRIST sends a lot of
his ruslomers into permanent
residence at mental hospitals,
As might be expected. Out of
curiosity recently, he too k a
long look at his own records
ol'cr !5 years. They show June
is \''hen the fey.·est nr his pa:-
l1cnts st'em to cnme unravell·
ed. i\1arch is when the most
<ipJX'ar to do so. He said he
checked out this discovery
with professional compatriots
;ind found to his surprise the
pattern was consistent.
Y ouT questions and com·
ments are welcomed and
ll'i /I he used i11 CHECK·
I NG liP 1nhereveT possi ble.
P!ense nddress your let-
ters to L. /If. Boyd., P. 0 .
Bor 1875, Newport Beac h
92660.
--. . . -. . . . •
Ex-heroin Addi~t Wants to Help Others
PALO ALTO (UPI) -Ken-in Palo Alto, himself.
neth f.icDonald experienced McDonald quoted law en-''I be ca m e a· detestable
the hell of heoin addiction for forcemenl 11·gu<es w h ,. c h · · I h h d creature. a cr1m1na l at I a
27 years and now he wanls lO estimated ol the 50,000 heroin-always detested , .. a burglar
devote lhe rest cf his life ta addicted soldiers returning to helping others shake the habit. the United Slates from Vitt· · ta support my habit." J\lcDonald said he "wanted
McDonald, .U, once a jazz nam within the next year,
drummer in the San Francisco S,000 will settle in the Bay to die'• every t ime he took a
Bay area, got hooked when he area. fix . "ln the end . I prayed to
W. h h God wmeone would put some-
was 15. Si nce then he has s pent " tt two to t ree persons thing in the heroin t was using most of his time 1n and oul of affected by each addicted C:t,
th
"'
000 I · h to cause 1ny death," he said, jails. including a four-year at means , peop e 1n t e
stretch at Leavenworth, and Bay area will be invol ved ," Things got so bad, added
has been married four times. said McDonald. "A hardcore McDonald, that his little.
He rttenlly was cured of his heroin addict cannot kick the daughter was walking around
hab·t n hi's own H n-d the house poking a penci l in addiction during a successful 1 o · e ""' s hel her arm to imitate her father 's
methadone Lteatment pro-p. use of a needle. gram. He has formed a non-··1 cannot describe the
cumbed for the same reason.
Such incidents prompted the
former jazz musician t o
rededicate hi5 life to trying lo
eliminate the heroin add1ct1on
problem in his home county of
Santa Clara and eventually
throughout the Ba y area.
He descrll>ed Santa Clara
County's drug prevention pro-
gram as ''goo d but
overburdened'' with facilities
to provide methadone threat·
KIRK JEWELERS
COSTA MESA
Harbor Ce11ter-545·t 411
ment for only 400 of its
estimated 3,000 addict!!. An
additional SOii addict.s are on
the waiting list, he said.
One of the goals of Drug
Awareness, Inc., which has an
attorney, a psychiatrist, a
1udge, policeman and
businessman on ils board of
directors, is to provide each
high, junior high and a ram-
mar school wit.h 21ccess to a
counsel-Or who would be a
rormer drug addict.
"Such a person could better
commwiicate the real pro-
blems of heroin addiction In
the. younger generation since it
is apparent police agencl~!!
have had limited success tn
this regard," said ~icOonald.
He noted that the crime rate
In Washington, O.C., dropped
511.i percent after a methadone
treatment program w as
launched.
TIMEX REPAIR
profit co rporation called Drug changes one undergoes under t-.icDonald said his (ourth
Ay.·a reness. Inc .. and is trying heoin . Ifs brutal and in· wife died from an overdose of HUNTINGTON BEACH
to raise '50.000 in order to ob-human. It's unbelievable. a heroin and si:t months later, a Hu•tlJHJt .. c.,.,.,_,92 •5501
Authnrized Orange Coun1Y
SALES AND SERVICE
tain a matching $150.000'.l-~p~er~so~n'.'_~co~ul~d:__~d~o:_~th~i•~~lo'.'__l~o~ng~l~im~e_:f~r~ie~n~d-a~l~so'.'_~'~".'.'.:!!'!!'!!'!!'!!'!llll ~!'!!llil!llil!'!!'!!i!!!!'!!'!!!llll'
federal grant to build a clinic
to treat methadone problems
,
GWC Voting
Announced
Daniel Mc.Kerren and Phili p
Marshall, boJh 19 and Jormer
classmates at Newport Harbor
High School, will head Golden
West College's student govern-
ment ne:tt fall.
'The IY.'O Jaw enforcement
majors. running as a ticket.
outpotled rival candidates to
become pre~idenl and vice
president respectively. of the
associated student body.
Mc Kerren. who succeeds
Glen Burch as head of student
government, is the past presi-
dent of the Golden West Law
Enforcement Clu b and former
chairman of the campus-wide
Renaissance Days.
F.:lected as student represen-
tatives to the three governing
councils of the college were:
To the President's Cabinet
-Alice Nobella and Kenneth
~tc Mullen, both of Huntington
Beach.
To the Coun cil on Cur·
riculum and Instruction -
Robert Baldwin, Huntington
Beach.
To the Colle,ge Affairs Coun·
cil -Wray Eggart. Slanley
Roa ch. and De~m(lnd Starr. a!l
of Huntington Beach.
Dad can relax. Our easy chairs
are even better values on sale.
Vibrator
he!ps ease stress out o f
tense muscles.
Heater
helps relax tight muscles
with deep heat. Sale$139
Rea:. $1 !59. Heater/vibrator rocker recliner
with 3·position seating comfort has carefree
Herculon• polypropylene olefin covering.
Available In nutmeg, green/gold.
Heater and v!brator are U. L listed.
,;; • .. Vacation loans with a smile .
·.
t-.fL IAal<ico. The Sienas. Doni 1'J8 deserfe a vacation?
ti the cost is keepmg yoe OOme.;ost talk lo Che lriendly people
at Morr Ls Pl an.
You can borrow frum $100 to $5,(0)or mof&Of'I approt'al,
and schedule payments to fit yoor budgel
Yoo can count on cooneous, personal osei~-~llic;eiN>, too. Just
'"5lt yoor neart>y Moms Pla'1 ollice _, yoo AOOd money
klr any good reason.
Or. when yoo ~·
Morris Plan
' Beach -3700 N ewport Blvd. -673·3700
Ii
Sa le prlcea eftecttve thru Saturday.
·1
,.
Sale$95
Reg.$109. Tracl itional
stylt rtcllMr ho1 2.po1i1ion
seol design and features care·
free Herculon® polypropylen e
olefin cover, 3 colors, paprika,
coin, 1ea moss.
Sale $189
Sale$1Q9
Reg. S 129. larly American style
swivel rocker.Maple fi,,ished wood.
Polyurethane foam cushions, multl.
fabric: patchworL
Reg. $219. Traditio"al styl•
racker, swivel reclintr.
Re clines to 3 po1i1ion1.
Penney'• pr1ceo lncludede1Nwy
within loc<ll dellwty eren.
'2 Colors crushed velvel, mi,,ltor gold,
Sale$119
Re1. $139. Mode"' style swlwtl rocker
leotu ret r•ve rsi bl e CIJ 1h io"• cove red In
'While or oronge vinyl. Matching ottomo,,,
R•g.$60 Salt$50
l\nne'f•
The values are here fN9f'/ ~
Use Penntys time payment plan at these stores: Fashion lslend, Newport Beech, Hun tington Center, Huntington Beaefi.
Shop Sund•y too, 12 to 5 P.M.
•
Work With Animals
Prisoners Find New Life
CHINO, Calif. !AP 1 -A
year ago "\Vhilcy" wa s a 4J
year-old illileratc doing f1\'e
years lo life fur armed rob-
bC'ry . Today he skJrns through
college psychology books.
Mel "''as a 30 year old luncr
NfVll l.diJN"iJ.ot 1ld. r •• 1;r,9
wb•n your loHe t 0Y•rflow1
TOILAFLEX•
Toilet ~Plunger
·Unlike ordinary f'lu11~cr1, To1J.oR<:1
<f.c>ooo not pcrnnl comprcued ai1 <>•
mCH)' wat<:r I<> •Pl•oh b•cli o< e•Capc.
With Toil alfr• !h~ fun prenurc plowt
l hrough the cl<>ll'"l n1a., and
awlU.c1 ii down.
• $UCTIOH.itJM sro~ S,LA$H.11ACI(
• CfHIT~ IT5tLr, CA ... 'l SKID AROUND
• TJ,1"(11(0 TAil CIWlS A!R·llGIH f lT
Get UN GitnulM 'To;11n,1•
S26$ AT HAIOW.t,lf ST0-f$
I wiLh an IQ •·abouL one 1>01nt
above lettuce." Today he talks
easily 11•ith st rangers. drop-
ping phrases like "operant
t·onditioning."
The 1\1'0 are an1ong 2~ Of
socicty·s rejects whose llves
hi.l\'C been changed by contael
with 48 parrot~. three llamas.
cighl dog:J, 111·0 golden eagles
and a duck. The 1nen and
animals are participants in a
training progran1 al t he
(afifornia Inst itution for fo.leu,
a mini murn security prison.
The facility's A n i m a I
Psyc/J()]ogy Clas.-; wu s lctunch -
i•d last August on the premise
that inn1ates helping a11in1als
c;1n help then1selves. "Th e
progra1n was sold on the basis
!llat it 1vould install patience
and .<;e!f control in the men,''
savs Ilic instructor. Charle:; .Jcffrc~·s, once an inmate
hunself.
Act1;1alJ~·, ·I.he results ,,·eot
beyond tiiat. The experience of
!raining animals not only gave
the men an 1nlrrest in life, of-
fit ials sav, but it also stab1!1z-
ed l11e1i personalities ;ind
eriuipped thczn \l'lth a skill
useful in Ifft' outside •·\Ve
hope to &et every one of these
men a job 1vhen he leaves,·•
s11v~ Jeffreys.
'fhe class 1ncC'lS th1ily in a
riuonsct hut in a steel fcnc.~d
con1pound of this instH u!ion 40
mile.~ easL of Los Angeles.
They study
work 1vith
afternoon.
San1 ple project: Teaching :·
Pharaoh and Elvis, colorful :
hybrid macaws, a routine that ;
would go over greal, say, in an :
a.musement park. ..
Pharaoh, at one end or a
small stage. picks up a play
telephone in his beak and says
··Hello.'' \\'hen he sets it down ;..,,;:A,:=;
F:lv1s runs up. grabs it, and ··." · '· ':-~
crooks, ··Bye bye." Then he .. ,~~ '' ,,(;. Y.
puts it back on !hr hook. runs ~11111~~11111~~~~~~~~ to his end of the table and.:.
rolls ove r as if in a paroxysn1
of laughter.
Students say they taught the
birds !he !tick in a week , us-
ing time tes!ed psychology
techniques such as "escape
a n d rein£orr.cn1enl con·
ditioning" and special methods
devel oped by their instructor.
··~ny animal can be taught
ahythll1g :of 1vtrich ·1· 1 ' .'I
physically capable." says Jef-
freys
"ThC' other in1nates think
\lc're a bunch of sissies." says
Ronni e. a J\1exican American
who pu1npcd gas before con1-
ing to prison a decade ago,
··until they hear 1vc 're gelling
$90 a 1nonlh and a future job ·•
l\1os~ 1nn1ates. working at
pnsnn shops and lhc farm.
get between S!J and $24 per
mon!li.
2 Students
Get A\vards
~leri l scholarships h a v e
been ay,·arded to Goicien \\'e~I
Coll~ge social sc1·v1ce students
Cheryl Case and BeatrJl'e
Helstrotn.
The $SO cash <1wards wrre
presented by the Orange Co<tsl
chapter of the N a 1 ion a 1
Association of Social \\'orkers.
l\tiss Case, of Garden Grove,
and f\1rs. Helstrom, Hun-
tington Beach. were seleclcd
on the basis or go od
scholarship and the cap:icl1y
lo 1nake a contributions lo
social work.
Do it yourself.
Instant carpet!
50 sq. yds., jusl 199.50
when you do it yourself.
Metro polis solution dyed
Polypropylene • olefin
1ndoor-outdoor carpet witl1
extra heavy foam ruOber
backing Snip to f11
yourse lf 1n 3 handson1e
l~vel looo twe ed color combos
4 9 ~.yd .
50 sq. yds., just 249 .50
when you do il yourself
!-rnqr:incf: con11nuous
!1t<1rnr-n l Ounnnr •nylon sht!q
pile CCHOf'l \Vllll f"'Y (ICI tip;i•1 /
foanl rubbf'lr b;ic\.;1ng Snip 10
lit ycti·~('lf 111 !our c1c111ng
~ol1d color~
50 sq. yds., iusl S '..'~S
when you do it yourself.
'New World 100 ~"
continuous f1famen1 Ouoon! •
nylon carpet wirh cx1ra heavy
foam r Ubber backing. Snip 10 flt
yourself. Choose froin3 oalterns
and !our colors
Bring in your measurements for a n<H>bligation estlmale. lnslallation available ii needed.
Do it yourself.
lush wall-to-wall shag at such a11
affordable price. A 9x12· 1Joo r costs
iust 74.52. Hovo'? Do lt yourself with
carpli!t tiles! No costly extras, no
waiting lor ins!allAlion. J ust plac!'l
and Pre5S '. .. walk' on ih·~in r1gh1'
away! long \'/earing, f!asy-to-clean
nylon. Foam rubber back tor comtor1
underfoot Decorator co!Ots.
jlilillil.._,
Charge ii •I tHe follow ing stores: F•shion lsl•nd, Newp orl Beach (1>4~·23 I J) Huntington Center,
Hunt ington Beech (89 2· 777 1) Use Pen ne ys Time Peymen t Pion .
Mond111, Junt 7, 1971 DAILY PILOT J J
Blacl{ Czech City Fights to Be Clean
OSTRAVA, Czechostovekia
fAP) -People call this coal
and steel city ' ' BI a c k
Ostrava" but the pollution ex·
perts say its future is no
!oncer black.
''\\'hen you v1s1L us two
years from now. we 11•ill have
met the slate standards for
clean air for a proper human
environ1nent," Jiri Loksa of
the city f;vvernment predicts.
Lok s a addressed partici-
pants in a Unite{] Nations
sponsored 1n~rnational meel-
1ni:: on n1an's environn1enl.
Delegates f r o m European
countries and North A1ncrica
n1et in Prague, !hen traveled
here to inspect air and w<i1er
cleaning and urbanization pro-
grams in CLechoslovakia and
Polish Silesia .
lnduslrial soot and smog hit
the eyes and noses of the
\'isilors from East and \Vest
as they arrived by bus in the
Czechoslovakia'.'! niajor in-
dustria l region.
Zdenek Kupka, n1ayor of
Ostrava. told the experts that
1hr Co111munist party had been
"the only organ to make ;i
systematic struggle for a bcl.-
tcr life for the miners." lie
denounced the pre-Com1nunist
order as a systen1 "where
1nen are turned in!o cripples
and leisure lime turned into
more work."
Loksa said l .000 Ions or soot
a rear from steel and coking
furnaces fall on each square
kilotneter-247 a c re s -of
Ostrava, compared lo 4,00J
t ons four years ago. Within two
years, Loksa said. the fallout
"'ill be cut in half to a stan-
dard se l by the slate.
:\I the K!CrnenL Go\LY.•<ild
Sleelworks, n a in e d for
Czechoslovakia's first Co111 -
munist president. s m o k e
stacks on nine furnaces we re
c1nitt1ng !hen white vapor or
nothing at all. Bright red
tiro1\·n smoke spe1ved from the
control ." an official said.
Vaclav Kosar, mahager or
!he big steel11.'orks, and his
aide5 said the plant hi!ll! spent
150 million crowns or nearly
SlO million in the last decade
on soot suppression. making
its steel cost almost I percent
more.
Officials said the mill has
three mcehanical separators
iible to clean 80 percent of the
e.i:hausts and new electrostfc
devices produced under SwiM
hcense able lo clean 92.6
percent.
The steel mill chief was
11 s k e d whether production
goals had priority over pro-
tecting the environment and
whether. as in some countries,
il wasn't cheaper and simpler
to pay fines and continue Pol-
luting.
His answer wa!: •·we are an
l!!conomic en terprise , of
cnurse, but we are also
Ci lizens of this community. We
are concerned first of all wilh
the health of our ciliiens. In
our <.'Ountry, where we are
short of labor , the labor force
ls our greatest v&.luable."
Keeps things cleaner without effort. sJir ··
nates bath tu b rings. / \__
YOU SA VE MOl'iEY
Soap and clothing last longer.
'•l.'.ottl•
Min•••' "-iild11p
;... Pipt"•
Gt1tllt 10
Baby's Sl!i111
Srnootlter,
F.•$itr S!Nivtt
.4sk About Surs Convenient Credit Plans
Complete Jns1a1Ja1ion A\'allable! Jusa AU!
•
10th furnace and spread over !34S!
t1011•ntown Ostra va . 1~~~~~~~:----:::'.~':'.".'::"'::':':":"::7:::"'.':'.'":::"":::::::---1 ''Thr soot suppressor lias I I Bue n a Park 8150 La Palma Ave. Ph. 828-4400
h•'rn turned off 1n th,.,1 111:1> i s 3333 ~'.;~~~:~1' 01~~1 ~~~~~a~~u\i·i~~~ l;~: 1 .. u .. :.~~a~. So. Coast Plaza 3333 Bristol Sl. Ph. 540·
rcC'l i1enes.~ Qf our pollul1onl l-.;;;;;;.:;;;:;;;.:;:;,:;, _____________________________ ..
Fo1· tl1e
Reco1·cl
Dissoltitio•ts
Of 1'lar1•ia~1e
F1l.O M•• 14
""""'"· l nom.o• \V .or~ Dn,.tn .. W~con,, Gr•lrudt M&"I And Oudl•v
llut>
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D• le~ ll••t1. l>meh• ~. •nd G•~•iel ' l'nlo• C'""" M on<! Jotin c; Bun.,,1on1; llonn1 L~n~ •od Antn nnv JoHon ~·no•q N••d1 M •nd Wel<IOn W
f.l•<!Q''"· S•nd•• Ko• 1nd Wi!h&n" -.1. "" ~~rk •,.lt1. Pitul ~con 1n<1 Joitnne
MM1•
h •ll, J'm ""~Ev• fll• f+~''· Jndv •nd Fin"' D•I• ni.o' Jann Ed"'•'d .. .,<! C•,~I f· (•l•h•"· Joonn ,,.,,,. •nd w111,~.,, Poo-'
'""'"""'"· ~····· J ••'<! • """"" c. l'<Cnu~'"V "'''"'' •r~ W1I , . .., l<•d• lloD.,1• I> '"~ 1(•0<1811 [
F11eo M1Y 11 ,,,o-• ... otl JOVf'l>ll .. l>'IQ•"• """ r1•<1 i
11 "''• 11~n•'1 l'""" ~ntl "'''"' J••o 11•·1~·~· ~""'" l!'nn •n.ri ~'""'"'" ' ·~~<I· 1)1•""'' ~hlrlon l\oy •"<.I ""'•l•V M r~""'"'c". V<"n• Lou,•• on<I w111,~m
Mooro
>l"<l·n. ! "'"I• r •n<I f;•o•~• •
r,.,., Jo ll•n• ~"" ll ><h•'o 111
0 1 (, o~•""· Va••'" C on<! .o.nt~on• 1 ..... ,
F·•H Mo• n
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n•I 000 I\""'"'" 0'"'" ••<I C~hn l••I••, llon•l<I W •n<I P"J<l•nc• P
l'!O•O"''· Ecmm• L<>I• •ml Allrr<I Ja•n
Ila<;"''· Soll• Jn• •11<1 W•!IF•m Ool•
Jnno<. l>i'~rc Ch•''"' .ono M.r•o ~~ ..
~Hal! O••n• "'~ri• •nd 1101)1''1 (on••d
(~G•tY. L•w•f'n<e E """ f••ncu E.
Kolbo. J•nlt• 811<1 lcult
tJoll. J""n M And Jame• 0 J•
.lbu<lo. N•ncy Toni orl<I Victor llo•
P•nn•lt, G.0'9f W. J•. •"11 lll•n<I• J.
M•rcoll•. H•len """ C~or1e1 tt .,.,,.,o,,, Jonn P~lllio •nd 81llY L•nor,
F o<11 ... Janen• tt• '"" Orltn E!IWl•d Jtn~1~. Conn~ A.. •"" NMI C
~0'1Ch•1, 11,nwn Jf,111<1 Vl•nd• .O.lbtr!1
G••ftne1. O•bo•all A.. 1n<1 JQl\n J.
G-ltllow, lllllV A.. I"" Oon11<1 11!:.
Oob•Q, llot1n!~ t ... 1"11 A:oberl Wl•M
c o .. ln1. S11'1dr1 0 . 1nd II.ell J
M1f!lne1, E1!1•be•ll ,lnn 1"11 Cl1t1no;f
l"f Cit,,.., Ji....,,..ie R. and M••v C
(1r111e. w m11 ... "· I nd JOYCI l . ''"A.I.. OECllll!'I!' E•l•rff Moy J• LvJ t , 81rbtr1 Cht •ltne 1nll f 11n~ E'u•ent LIYl•dvre, Geroldln, IE:, itnd 11.o••• Tl>Qm11 G~<lon, E~lvn •nil 01n!1I F 0Vtt, Anrni LUI Ellen Ond Mklllt! Oe1n Gutrm1n, E1<11 Ml.t 1nd 111.ov...-E'dWard
1111111•. Mt"!ll Gltft '"" E .. trvn M. Pur ... m. 11111111 e. 111<1 w n.11111 ,., l!T~d 0111-M••••••! tnd Tllo!'r\11
Hiii, 'C1c1otl1 l . tr>d llltllttd l. '"r.:'· Oo<>1ld Earl 1nd Melbt 'w tmor1. Mtrl•m 01rr1nt t nd lllobe<I
to1u1 sirru. Clv"" E. tl'ld "1t•lci1 J.
Wllvort. t<uri.v Tt•Otl'I••. Jr .. 1nd M1•v M01111fll " " ... • · ... _. ·
H-tn" tlro<!t Kt'!' '"" O.r1rt Ml~l\t~I
L.,,tr., !l<O<lc.rl1 .A/let 1nd L-1• ll!(h· . ..
Modllr11. 111.ober' l"r•no:l1 •nd lor01r1 J~tn
lllob!1on, Gtn1 lo!st '"" Wllll1m .,.,,, ....
111. Ji n Ind Genlt P~tlit1. Vlolll (1rala 11'0 Jt"'9t Pot!nr llut-. OK•• C. 111!1 P1rr1er1 l., ~·.~'l.~°'/t:n~i1 •:f ,t.!c,ndJ1..:iin M
lllou. Jr .• Mitrllvn "· ~nd Gto1'11t J. f~lffef MtY fJ S""°J'"· Ju1n11• "''"' •nd eai-11 L" McDvn1!0. Jl;IUit re N,1nd Miry .......
c;.,1m1n ..... 1rlv 0 , •"" Oo<>okf L "'•"""""°• M1wl1 t-11'1<1 W1!11r llOU lf••lltw. l!ltlfl AltlctncNr t lWI filon'I•• ' t 1•oon. 811~ ..,,..,..,,,., itlld f nom1• g
l.•rl(ln, Jtl!ltll• 11,,. inti Lau1•r><~
Wll!l1m
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C•l1!, Mrr!lf Fovt '"" Edw1rll K•v .. , /Vltrv J1r-t •"" iltlChor!I 0 K•··~· Jr .. v1.,1 ... 11 S11'11fr1 •1111 V\Mt""
Mkn•~
(l1rk,..,.,, M1'1n. •"" r.,,..
a ...... H11fn M, •DOI lClllll II:.
MO>!lll" M•rv Lrn" -''"'" I 81M1m1<, Deni\!' l lld Mtl't Thf•H•
(rill", 1111141•• ,,.., o.r.&16 w.
T•blll1'\, lltn NrwtM •NI Vlffllb Jover
r ,.,,.,,°"11, JOl'>n J. •"" OIQf J1.11~111
25% off custom
reupholstery.
' ... -
You pick the otyle, you pick the fabric. You save 25% on
custom reupholstering. Choose from 34 patterns In countleea.
colors. Select your fabric from crushed or patterned velvets,
nylons, H erculon • olefins and many more, In stripes, plaids
and patterns. Regular low Penney prices for<>ur finest
fabrication.
Call collect (71.4) 523~6511 .. for
our sflop-at-horne service, free •..
. ..
I
I
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If DAlLY PJLOT
'.
"
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-I
. . ' .
' '
Beauty Bulletin
from Penneys:
Get ready for summer fun!
With a fashion cut by one of
our experts. 2 7s
Or, get your hair in shape
with a Helene Curtis Springtime
Perm. Gives hair back its
natural body
and spring. Including
shampoo, style cut, set. $1 0
~ASHION IS LAND, New port Center
HUNTINGTON CENT ER, Huntington Be•ch
Father's Day is June 20
LAST 7 DAYS!
"!'' e on\'f ·~ d ,1111 d \.il1'1le \\er en s
... o 12th Jone . .-..-
Large, lovely 11x14
Father's Day Portrait
that says ''We love you!'
only 5 88
v .... a mognlfloef\t 11"14 Solon """'811 •••
(l!I0'9 !hon hd the alie of thla--l
or you and both your chlldron and lhe lwnlly pell
A warm and wonderful gift tor Did on Father'•
Dey !hot koepa on saying -We-you" au year
long! RamomlH!< you Oan charge h Ill Pal\nOy'L
. . '
~nne'll
ttUt..L.•ltTOM
~lltflf91• C....ltl ll'ld ,.,, 111 ~
l'll'Wl'OllT l lACH
l<•tlllOtl hl•rol
,.,., "-· 6U1lll
HUNTIHOTON •l'ACH
H11n11.,....., ("11•• ll"ll ,_, m nnl
Penny Pincher Ads
Turn Sen se Into Dollm·s
. -. ' ' ' . . "
Honorar!J Doctor Pay Row
UCI P1·of Honored Heading
For Court By Former School
ANA An SANTA
IRVINE -Jlenry Cord
~1eyer. proressor of history al
UC Irvine, has been honored
by his al1na mater, the
Universit y or Colorado, ""'ilh
the award or the Jlonorary
Doctor or Humane Letters.
The honorary degree wa s
presented at conunenctment
exercises in Boulder, Colo.
A charter member of the UC
Irvine faculty and former
chairman o~ department of
history, Me.was cited for
his outstanding t e a c hi n g ,
research and for his role in
developing the history depart·
ment at UCL
Me yer recei ved his
bachelor's degree in history at
the University of Colorado in
1935. lie went on to earn hi s
n1aster's degree at l h e
University of Iowa and his
doctorate al Yale University.
He taught for 2{l years al
Pomona College before com-
ing to UC! as chairman of
history in 1965. lfe returned to
full-time teac hing and
research last year.
Professor Meyer also has
served for 10 years as a mem·
her of the Educational Testing
Service an d the Co 11 e g e
Entrance Examination Board
an d y;ith the Advanced Place-
Craft, Hobby
Coin petition
Set at Fair
WINS NEW HONOR
UC Irvine's Meyer
mcnt Program ln European
his tory.
An authority on modern
German hislory. Dr. 1-.ieycr"s
book "Mitteleuropa" is con·
sidered a classic in the field
and was awarded the George
Lou.is Beer Prize in 1956 by
the American Hi s tori ca l
Association. lie has received
numerous honors and aw ards.
Jncluding Ford Foundation and
Guggenheim fellowships and 1
Fulbright Re!earch Award.
unemployment ins u ran c e
di.spute that has produced dif·
fering decisions by two state
agencies will be aired June 16
in Ornnge County Superior
Court.
Judlje Robert Banyarcl wiH
be asked by a former Collins
Radio of Newpo rt Beach
employe ~ reverse the recent
decision of the California
Unemployment Insurance Ap-
peals Board and order the
agency lo rectgnize that he
was entit led lo $195 in
unemployment in!iurance for
the three weeks Aug. 15, 22
and 29, 1970.
lrvi11e Prof
In New Post
IRVINE -Dr. J an1es L
M c G a u g h, pr ofesso r
psychobiology. psychiatry and
human behavior. has been
named chairman of l h e
Department ol Psychobiology
at UC Irvine.
He succeeds Dr. Hichard E
Whalen, who returns t o
fulltime te ac h i n g and
research. McGaugh served as
dean of UC l's School ul
Biological Sciences from 1968
lo 1970.
Cary S. Appcl's claim had
earlier been approved by
llcferec \Y1lliam Ryan who re-
jected the ruling or the
California Hurnan Resources
Dcparlmcnt thal Appe l wasl;;;;m;;_,.,;;-__ ...;;.._;.._.,j
not entitled to lhe jobless pay. DARE TO COMPARE!
Appel wa.s released from hi s W• ll<t•••nttc you cannot buy l"<!u•c
$35-a-week job on July 31. t••mn 11kc ouri 11 1ow•r pr.cc>.
1970, in wha l Collins Rad io THE THINltEll DISCOUNT
said was an "economic cut-611 w.;,~~,~~,-~11c00:1• M•u
back." But his claim for IN•<t i. M<Do"11d·, H1m~u·~"'~1
url'.!mploymenl pay for thel~:-;-;-;--:::::::::::::::::::~~I three weeks in question wasl;:
denied when the hum an
reso urces department learned
that he had been paid $1.173
for that period by Colli ns
Ra.dio.
Final Stocks
In All Home
Editions
Electricity Is vita/ to your way of life.
So Is a healthy environment.
We're working to bring you both.
•
SAVE:ryoo
~·· ,,. .
fOR THI GRIATflT
GOLF BARGAIN
EVER OFFllED
The Crafts and Hobbies
Divisi on of the 1971 Orange
County Fair will feature 220
more categories and many
more pri7.es this year than
ever befo re.
Am ateur cralt smt>n will be
ab\~ lo enter 1he1 r \.\"Ork in an \'
o( the total :!60 scctionS
a va i I ab le . Atnong lhc
catc~ories for entry are: bead
work, candles. ccran1ics, china
painting. rnosaics macrame
and sutche ry. ~:ntrics must be
a;;ubmitted by June 18.
1son
Three large specia l Cl\\'ards
will be given int lud ing the
Grand Award of $50 for the
most outstanding entry in lhc
en ti re crarts div ision.
The Judge's Choice Aw.ard
ot eight creative craft classes
\Viii be given by the Co11ta
f.1csa Hcl-reat ion Department
for the n1ost creative entrv .
Nine 11 11.nrds of ~ii t
certifica!e.~. books or t•1·11ft
kits wilt be given for the hcst
entry in various categories.
Some changes have t:ft'n
made in lhe rules gove rning
entries. At the 197 1 Fair in-
structors. judges <ind those
who sell their hand icrafts will
not be allowed to ente r for
competition or exhibition
Exhibitors will be lim1!ed lo
one entry per srttion \vhe rt'
1wo have been per1n1Ued in
lhe past. All ;irticles enlered
must have been completed
withi n one year of the open-
ing date of lhe Fair, July 13
Any craft whirh has been
f'nlercd previous!~· in an~·
Ort1ngr County F;ur w11! nnl
hr chg1ble for entry ln the 1971
f t11r.
Orange County designl'r·
rrnl L~n1c11 will dernonstra lr
thei r \vork be~innirig July 1~
and cx1ending thro11gh July 18
al the Fai r. E<ich day 1v.·o dif-
ferent crafls will In presented.
"'In lhe procr:i:t" ilem5 as
well as completed works '~'ill
be Sho\\'n.
County Pair
Face Court
In Fraud
SANTA ANA -A Newport
Beach man and tlie a1.lornry
"'ho allegedly helped him plan
the $160,000 embezzlement o(
an Orange County insurance
com pany have been ordered lo
race trial Sept. 20 in Orange
County Superior Court.
Judge Byron 1\. McMiilan
ordered Ralph K. Benwarc. 31 .
of 411 JSth St. and Orange at·
1orney Richard Murphy to
return to cuurl Aug . 24 for a
pretrial hearini;: ln!o charRes
that they defrauded t h c
Cali fornia Caduceus insurance
group.
Both men were indicted by
the Or an1;e County Grand Jury
after a si,Jc-rnonth 1nvesligation
into the ope ·ations of lhe
California Caduceus con1pany
and the Casually lnsurance
Company. a subsidiary or lhc
C<iduccus organirJl!ion.
T o generate electricity, Edison has ·. of the area, Edison launched an
harnessed the spring thaws in a part.: extensive conservation program.
of the High Sierra of Central Cali-· This includes scientific management
forn ia. Ove r the year s it n1 cant build-"J of thousands of acres of timber on
ing 15 major dams and ~ix lakes in Edison-owned land.
an ar ea no\v known a s "I3 ig Creek.': Special protective n1easurcs arc
Today Big Creek is one of A1ner ica's taken against dan1age by tire,
largest hydroelectric J)O\V{'r insects and plant lliseascs.
develop1ncn ts. I t prov illcs low-cost Selective cutting ancl thinning
electricity, fl ooll control a nd \\•atc r prevent so1nc trees from becoming
con~ervation. ove rgro\vn giants and others fron1
I t's a lso a vast rrcrC':l t in n n l'! a
open to the public.
EYe ry year the n1an-n1adc lakes
attract boaters, \vatcr-skicrs,
fishcrn1cn, S\\lirnrn r rs a nd ('\'Cll
skin-d ivers. At Can1p Ediso n~ ·
Shaver Lake, can1pgrounds 'vi th
electric outlets offer can11)ers
many of the comforts of home.
To protect the natura l r esources ' • .{. ;,1, ,
/,;, ' ,Ii. I ·?,! . rl/!i
di~
916 •. l •> ' ',}l
bei ng crushed and
stunted. Trees f oi-
reforestation a re
raised at Edison 's
nurst'ry \v he re
\
seedli ngs of nati \·c
trees are under
\
•constant production.'
These practices
'; provide an annual
yi eld of healthy
-·
timber; eliminate waster,;! aii'd inma.,f
criminate cutting; help prevent soil(
erosion and protect the watershed.
'
Edison's forestry program has
earned an award from the Western
Pine Association designating the;
Company's timberlands as a
Certified Western Pine Tree Farm.
Jn the years ahead, Edison will con-
tinue to control tl1e fl ow of water in
surrounding streams to help assure
good trout fi shin.g-. \Ve also pl an, wi th
lhc cooperation of th e U.S. Forest
8ervice, to add more hiking trails,
an<.! i1n proved r oads, together with
a boat-launching station, a ''isi tor L
i nforn1ation center and hundreds or
new ove rnight camps and day-use
facil ities.
Preserving the natural resources a t
Big Creek is one of the many ways
we are working to protect lhe
environment we share. sC-E
Southern California Ediso11
B('nware served <i~ prr~idcrlt
of Caduceus with Murphy, 41 ,
as chairman of the hnn rd.
Murphy \\'RS president or the ~ma llei. C11 ~uaJ1.v i;:roup wl 1h Btnw11 r~ under him IS vicc1 _'.=~~~~:.:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Iii:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ presidtnt. /_
n
s
J
T
• h
s
e
a
0
r
p
" ' " m
• " " ' ' ' • ' ' • •
' ' • ' '
' ' ' • '
For Coaataty .Jobl.ess
City E11vironment
Cla ss Set at OCC
An intensive 16 week course
to meet the environrnenlal
n~s of city planning will
start at Orange Coast College
June 14.
E n v iron1nental J>lanning
Technology will meet cighl
hours a day, five days a week
through Seplcniber 17.
The program vdll train both
n1en and women wit h the
equiva lent of two years of
h igh school drarting lo w?rk
vo'ith city and county p\annmg
st.airs in the proper develop-
ment or urban areas. Pur-
pose of the course is to help
eliminate the env ironmental
and ecological problcn1s and
unbalances wh"ich now exis~.
Students will earn 12 units
of college credit fo r the 16
y;ecks of study . Subj~ts will
include transportation studies,
pollution and noi~e control,
color infrared aerial photog-
raphy analysis, land u s e
planning, open space concept
end recreation11l uses and
others.
Samuel Peterson, director of
Fo1· The
Reco1·d
Dissolutioiis
Of .lffarriage
£nter1d M•V ,,
lc~muck, Arleen V. •"'1 P~!llip If ~~.<~I ..... M•"ofie ! and Joh<1 HAro ld 11,/lingham. lfo~rl Emet~on and Murorl El1ta~1n
Heng. Kim O~n and Gail Su1~nne
~trrell, r>io•ma J. •nd Oav1d Roy
A.chow. Ro,1e E•!her •rid ~llnlry
!'arold
Gr1vt•, Mlll k •nt R. and Ch1rl•s Allen,
"· H1rrer1. Augu"rne and Ermellno1 Mell, Eval vn z. and Kennelh w
M~1rs. c;ertrude Eli11beth and WITl!t Paul
flo•lwick, Jack T. Ind Marfa E. ~ChUmlCher, J1mr~ T, I nd C1rolvn L.
Drews. M1rY1nn,. and w ;i1;am R.
GA•c•A. Evtlvn ana luiJ Toma• Ste••n~n. W llHam E. end Prarl A
P•es,on, M1t1on Ro11l•t 1n<1 Arv11e
fl•1ver, Carol A. dnd S!anlrY K
Gon•alves. G"l•I Lee dnd Larry Lerov
"Ynl. Llnod M1"t and Mtl!on Edw1•d
H0t<M. r1rr•c11 l(av end w.u11m
Rltnard
Pi<~eu, Jer1ld Lee and VJrgfnfa Ltt
G r1,1nd•lrom, Leann<a M. Ind A!t>ert H, &ro..,n. fhl!Od<>te R. ena M•tile
IJc ni.11 l\1otices
BEACH
l.\1riorle M. Be•<f>. •I Rocl:..l~ge RMd,
LaQ1tn• Be1c11 Da•e of o .. th, June 4.
'eN•Ce• pend•ng at P•citlc View Me-monal Par~.
BLACKSTOCK
Je.•e 0 . 8lac1:..1roc~. 510 Aliso St., New.
PCr! Beach. Da le o• dearn, June }, S1rr-
vl•e<l t>y wot(', V~ra: neot>ew, 1-ttnl'Y
Alacl:..1"x~, CoS!d Me<a; two fl•l'<t•, V>r·
plnia 8a!k•"1\ &nd Go:raldone Jone1o. boll>
ot HaNtl>crne . .Service" We<tneldly, l!
t.M , Peot.c Y1ew Cna..el, Interment,
Pad l<e Vlo:w MemoriM P•r~. PecHit
View Mor!lier•. 0.rKlo••·
BR OUWER
fltnianiin IC. flrouwer. 1'1 E 1611> Pl•ce,
C.O•I• Me ... ~"'"''"M I,. WI!!, Ele•Mn
10•>. R1<1•1'd H. Brouw~r, ol Honcl1rl11:
11111ghler. M"· 8•~•• J. 8 1111Che1, Cor-
on .. o.er Md•: sislt'••· Mrs. G•or11e Orson,
""" Juan C110,•Tr1M: Mr• Roy~ L. ~•vii, 0•~ Perk. lllonoio: two orena-
Cl>iloren C•Y<>to1de •e•vict•. luesdAy. II
1'M, Pacl"C Vl,w Memorial PArl:.. f"n.
romt>ment, Pacrt1c Vorw M..,.,o•••I Par~
Petillc v.~N Mcr•u•"· O<rec!QrJ
HELLMEllS
Emit D. Hellmt"· •119 ll•Yt• Ave,
Nt'N?Ott BNC" Oare Of de.t!li JU"• •
LurvovP<I bY w.te. Gt•Ytfl V >te!lmt•~.
deuph!er, M•~ fle•••lv lou•O,n, CO\'• M•••· lwo '""'· l'loOe•! <l'' flOOUs•nn Oe<•, OM He11me•1. Lnnq Be•<~ 1"0
''"r'> on G.,.,..,,., •. btOlt>P•. /'l~t• ~·~11.
Mt"' Newport B•a<~ •~v~" qr~"dC""·
aren S•rvocn , l1r•Sc:I•~ II AM, P~P'•C
Voew ("Apf l, wn" ti•• J•me.1 G fll••n
"fll(ll••nG Btllr Co111 Mt•• Mor!ua<v.
Dlrl'C!o••.
HINES
Violel V H •~f' l )O Le-clro•!, L~qU"•
8e8rh D••e ~I ~al"· June O !te"'""'
pend'"" •I McCorni•ck lt~\/"" BNc'1
MortuolrV.
McCtA!lilE
fle!tv J•n• McClllre. Age 411, D! 2217
!lolly L"ne. Newl><lr! fl~•clO. D•Tt DI
dMln, Juno: • !t1rrvl•ed bv l>u•bend, Bru<~: !wo cl.!uunte'I, Gill, cl Newoor!
Beac'1~ """""'""Weller, "'""'"°rt Be•c~;
mo!IOer. Mrl M•nn 1e Brinn, erio Ont
ar•~Och•!d P'fVl lt ~"'""f' wort Mid
IOd•V. Mon<lav. 1 PM. 8•11 8•0•d .. ••
Mo••U••Y, wlrlO Rev L<>t~ r::11<1:..ing.,
ftl/lcia lOng. lltll ll•oadwev MO•luerv, 0•·
rectors SAMPSON
Hu9h R Stmoion 1116 FIYbV Dl<ltf, l •-
fll~~ fl•.orlO O..le ol dttin. Junt 6.
ser.,cel l>C!f'ldint 11 McCormick Lteun1
lltoch Morlul rY.
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
'27 E. 17th St .• Costa Meta
I BA!.l"Z :::ARIES
Corona del Mar . . 673-IMSO
Costa Meta . · · · · lft-UU • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Co!IUI Me1a
LJ 8-3fS3 • McCORMlCK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1795 Laguna Canyon Rd.
lfl-!MJ5 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMOlllAL PARK
~" ~ Cbpel
UM Pactfle 'View Orlwi
Newport Beodl, Callloralo .... .,. • fEEK FAMlLV COL0~1AL t'ONEl\AL
HOME
7801 Bol11• Ave.
Westminster st3-35!5 • SM!TU·s MORTUARY
m M11ln SL
53M539
Ra.1Ulna:ton Be.ad
•
the program. said, "The:re is
going to be an urgent need for
this sort of trained person. We
are all aware of the urban
problems which exist, and it is
tin1e we started training pe~
pie to do something about
them."
Peterson said that OCC will
be the only community college
in Californ ia offering such a
progr&n.
The class wi\1 be limited to
30 students. and persons in·
!crested should c a I t in1·
mediately for a reservation,
Peter.;on said. The course will
be especially useful t o
unemployed men and women
looking for a new career,
Peterson said.
Instructor for the class will
be Khosro Khaloghli. I-le is a
graduate ol OCC, and has a
bac~lors degree in urban
planning from California Stale
Po!yt&'hnic C o l I e g e in
Pomona. Jfe also has a
n1asters in p u b I i c ad·
ministration from th e same
school.
Persons interested in enroll-
ing or wishing more in·
formalion should cal! Khaloghl
at 546-5619. or 834-5829. They
may also call Peterson at 834-
5812.
County Man
Faces Court
SANTA ANA -A Newport
Beach insurance man accused
of failing to file his state in·
come tax returns for the years
1!:166 through 1969 has been
ordered to race arraignment
Tuesday in Orange County
Superior Court.
Judge Eugene Langhauser
closed a two-day Santa Ana
municipal court preliminary
hearing into charges a,gainst
Frederick A. Farnum. 50, of
5223 Bruce Crescent, by orde r·
ing higher court action gainst
the defendant.
Agents of the state's
Franchise Tax Board in-
stigated prosecu tion of
Farnum after an investigation
which allegedly revealed that
he evaded payment of $4,339 in
taxes when he failed lo file
returns for the four years in
question.
Transient
Faces Trial
SANTA ANA -A transient
who allegedly emptied his
shotgun into a neighbor who
complained about his loud
playing of records has been
ordered to face trial on
murder charges June 30 in
Orange County Superior Court.
.Judge B}'ron K. i\1cMi!lan
set lhe lri<'-11 date for Ronald
Duane A l 1 en , 19, an
unemployed transient. Allen is
being held in Orange Cou nty
J;ii! without bail.
He was arrested las! April
)fi by S<inta Ana police shortly
after he allegedly shot and
killed Herbert Grimes, 42 . a
neighbor in the sa111e apart-
ment building.
Debciters
Take Title
IRVINE -The UC Irvine
debate team has captured the
All-Ca l Tournament
sweepstakes against teams
from throughout lhe state in
its first year of intercollegiate
competition.
Members of the team who
v.·on the top prize In com·
petition at UC Santa Barbara,
are Clark Gross (Jf Los
Angels and Robert Wilkin of
Arcadia, both freshmen. and
J ohn Mangels of Irvine, a
sophomore.
They competed a g a I n s t
teams from StanCord, USC,
Redlan& and the other UC
campuses.
Headquarters
At Red Cross
SANTA ANA -'!'be new
hadquarters tor tlw( Oran&•
County Red CrOM hu opened
for business at 601 N. Golden
.Cli;-cle Drive her.e.
The tw~tory facillty coll-
tains 12,103 square feet of of·
fice and laboratory space to
service various -program! in~
lllnted by the Red Cros!I. The
;'Kfminlstrative aress, disastcrr
relief offices. blood program
donation area and a proc-
ess.in1 laboratory •
Westminster
Trio Get
Jail Terms
SANTA ANA -Jail tern1's
have been prescribed in
Orange County Superior Court
for three of five defendants
indicted by the Orange County
Grand Jury on drug charges
following their arrest at a
Westminster home.
Judge James F'. Judge
ordered Kenneth D. Donahue,
25, of 5582 Walter Circle , to
serve six monlhs in Orange
Cou nty Jail and a further
three year s probation on
release.
fdentical terms were
ordered for his wife, Debra
Kay Donahue, 21, and Alex -
ander Sebastiano, 22, both of
the Wa lter Street address, but
the sentences on reduced
misdemeanor charges were
suspended in favor of pro-
bation terms.
George /\1elro, 24, of 411 'h
6th Sl., Huntington Beach, was
r uled to be. a narcotics addict
and committed to an indefinite
term at the C a l ifornia
Rehabilitation Center at Nor-
co.
All four defendants and Jack
Arnold Todd, 23, of the Walter
Street address, were arrested
last Aug. 3 by Westminster
and Huntington Beach police
who carried out a combined
r aid on the Donahue hon1e.
Todd failed to appear for
sentencing. He is being sought
on a $10,000 bench warrant
issued by Judge Judge.
2 Students
Elected UCI
Presidents
IRV INE -The Associated
StudcnlS at UC Irvine has
taken a new turn with the
election or co-presidents of Lhe
s tudent body for 1971-72, but a
ballot. measure to make stu-
dent fees voluntary has failed.
Elected by a wide margin
from a field of nine candidates
were. Steve n Chadima of
Downey, a senior in social
sciences. and Patrick Moore
of Los Angeles. a junio r ma-
joring in history.
The ballot measure v.·hich
would have made AS UCI fee s
voluntary gained a large ma-
jority of those voling 1805 yes
lo 453 no). but failed to carry
because less than 40 percent of
the students eligible to cast
votes turned out ror the elec-
ti on.
Under the present student
constitution, all students at
UCI n1ust become members of
the ASUC I and pay a $7 per
quarter activity fee . A 40 per-
cent turnout of eligible voters
is required iJi order lO change
the constitution.
Oth e r s tud e nt ad-
ministration offi cer-" elected
are Vice President Thom
DeLapp of Irvine, a major in
history, and Secretary Gary
Barrett of Whittier , a major in
social sciences.
Three. Held
On Hash Rap
SANT A AN A -Three South
Coast men who allegedly had
18 pounds of hashish in ttleir
possession when arrested have
been ordered to face trial June
22 in Orange County Superior
Cour t.
Judge Byron K. McMiiian
set that dale for Chet Ben·
netle, 19, of 2041.f Sun Valley
Road, Laguna Beach, Thoma!
Dean Calhoun, 21, of 31478 Oro
Place, San Juan Capistrano
and Russell David Burklin, 20,
a transient whose last known
home was in Laguna Beach.
'rhe trio was arrested last
Feb. 4 at 2.12 Woodland Drive,
Laguna Beach. All thrtt: are
f~e. on ball.
Bids Ope~irig
ORANGE -BiW. will be
opened June 21 for overnow
protection fencing In Oranae
County's O'Neill Park.
111e projtc1.1 to prevent
de.<!tructloo from flood waters
11 estimated IO coat ff.S,000.
l ;se Sears
Re,·ol\"ing
Chnr~e
rferrific Value!
Cotton Seersucker
_)
Playwear
4 for
$
Sun11uits For Boys' .• ,
snapside plackets, adjust-
a ble straps.
Bubble Sunsuils For Girls'
__ . fashionable zipper
fro nt.
.. • • Creepalongs , •• button
~ shou lder straps, hi_gh bil> ~"1~ :"~. front and back. In -".o •. ::' . ' • • .. :_.:&.ci>_~ Siles S·J\l·L, t • ~ll:r••>
'
1
' o.o .ii /?. • • "C•e ..:>-<:"•· .:;:>.:-0"".., •t\11.j-
· ..
---.. " .,
·~
I ,
-·
Prices ·Effective
Sunday, June 6 thru
Tuesday, June 8th.
Li111ited Quantity!
NEW SH-OPPING HOURS!
SEA RS NOW CLOSES AT 9 P.~f. ~'I ON DAYS
THRO UG H FRIDAYS ... AN D A'f 6 P.J\L (I\'.
SATU RJJAYS ...
lliE JF S1 '0Rf; Jl<>l'R S
Sunrlay• ~-oon lo 5 p.111.: Mr.1nda ys thrn Fridaya 9:3(' a.m. lo Y p.nr.
Saturdays 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
SAVE $21!
.. -xsNMORE .. .. . . = ..
~=====~
Kenn1ore 2-Tenip
Electric Dr·vc r
f '
ResuJ .. 8129.95
*108
"Heat" aettingdries all
fabrics qu ickly. "Air
Only" nuff$ blankets.
pillow dries rainwear.
Convenient built-in lint
screen traps dulling
threads and lint.
160110.
r.,onday, Junf' 7, lfl71
Hoy's Sport 01·
Knit Shirts
Sizes 6 lo 12
Pe rma-Prest ii> sport shirts
... short s leev<"s ... sem i-ta-
pcred and regular cut in
11taids,so!id colors.·
lli-t rcv,r nec k kn it shirts
\I ilh cont rasti ng trim.
Western J ea ns
". t:re $3.69
OAJLV PILOT J !I
2for$5
Traditional tapered style u·(~ .
jea ns with \'Ulcanized / ·
double knees. Fashion co·.
!ors. 6-12 regular. slim.
---
Were SIB lo $20
.\[en·, Orlon 1l
SM·ea t.er Sels
100~~ \·1rg:i n OrJon'!l acrylic 1097 J;nk kn it card;gans w ;t11 .
d yed t o match buttons,
s11•e ater sh irt has rib knit
r o!Jar, short slee~·es. I.n as-
sorted colors.
_.\ss<•rled ~fe11·8 Lambs' 'U'ool s~·eater! •••••.• 4.97
SAVE
$1.03
Regular. -Slin1 t:ut
Rugged Denim
Roebuck Jeans
Regular S6.511
547
• i ; Blue denim R oebu ck
meet the toughest Job
head on. Strong blend of
cotton and Dupont® 420
nylon. Double stitched •
seams and bartacked re-
inforcing fo r loni!t wear.
Regular c ut 30·44. Slim
cut s izes 29 to 38. ,
' . ..,
·~HOP \UNOAYS 11 NOON tn •,PM r110NDAY lhtu ffl:IOAY II JO AM l o Q 00 PM 'iiAlUROAY'ii Q JO AM I O 6 00 J'M -IRlf PARKINt•'
-····~ 111·-.tll .. JM
··-··~ ........
'~o.H·UU,•H·'1••
u ....... ......... __ ....
•O ·IO!l .. -... Ui.1-., IU·•&l 1
".,. .... _ ........ ......... _
"'1·1111
•-l u(ll ..... 1 ..
0t•-&JOTO , •.. ,, ..
o••-U•·ll" .........
611-.IUl,lll .. l \1
I Sears I . ., ....... .......
'I'·'"' ,.~ .... '"""'
"'• .. II
...... ... _. ...... ,,
'""'" CO•lf ot•t• o•t·llU '""'""' .... "''°"M.IU·IU!
...... " ... ...... 11
~ ..... '"l·•••" .... u,a
~U•O"I
llt •l tll
SotitfMtlwl
-~ ... Or l-~ ....
•
' '
•
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• .. -. -·· ~ ,. • • _,, $ > ...... •' . •· •
J,f D.\JlV PILOT Monday, JuM 7 }1~71 •
F,1lllff, Y ClRCV.o; 1>11 BU K eane 'City Needs Homans' 'Just Sligl1 t Bit
Of 0 ii Ca11 l(ill
Life Slow ly Returning to London:
By KEVIN D'ARCY l-9...., i1'11W1nd .i limn -Ul'i
scale, so ii needs thf! prtsence wa lkway -above or below or is the Barbican which. at an
of humans. on a level with the ground -overall cost of over $12t
we haven't had time to study LONDON _ Life _ in the The second reason for want-and to give a public right <lf m•'ll•'on i~ meant t.ventually to FAJHBANKS !L'Pl 1 -How
n1uch of an 011 spill docs it
lake to ruin hshlng~
thal )'Cl.'' I t I U . the • forui of permanent residents ing the city repopulated ron-way n re urn or us Y provide accommodation (or
Sonie laymen brheve oil _ slowly is returning to t'he ~r.ns more pr act i ca I allow lhe developers to build 6,500 people. It also will ~ouse
Just I 110th of a leasJXIOn of
PrudhOf' B<1y crude oil to a
qllart of water, according ttl
expt>rimcnts at the L'n1vers1ty
of Alaska.
.spills cul orr needed oxygen, City of London, !he world economies and not so much over that part of the ground a big arts cent.er. which itself
but Dr. f..1orrow said this was financial cen\l!r v>hich teems the cost, time and trouble that that normally would be a will cost $40 mil lion, and lht
not the case. Water used ln \\'ith workers by day but is met by the many com-pavcmenL usual shops and services. Two-
univt'rs1t y experiments ha~ virtually is de~erted outside muters. Any city needs a cer-Then, to encourage the third s of the a·rea is open
been carefull y aerated and offi<..-e hours. tain proportion of people who rtturn of people to use 'The space, with eight acres or
l:1ck of oxygen is no probleni. Into the sciuare rnl!e of "The are close lo hand and able lo City out of <1ffice hours, tile landscaped gardens and three
Dr. James E. !\\orruw. a
university zoologlst working
with the Federal Pollution
Control Adm1n1stration. 1s 1n
tht midst of a two ye3r study
on 1he way crude 011 alfccls
salmon .
Fish Lhat sur\•ive volatile oi l City" (as distinct fr on1 the do that kind of work which corporation of l.()ndon built . in acres of lake. The Oats in the
four days generally last a long vast sprawl of greater Lon-really is essent.ial to tht day-1962, a housi ng estate in The Barbican are being teased at
time. he said. Some ha\'e don) almost 400 ,000 people to-day now of affairs: the City for 1,400 people or the economic prices. which means
survived as long as 30 days crowd each morning. They cleaning, the supplying of food lower middle income groups. they are too expensive for tht
under the slirk_ complete their day's work and and drink and serves that But the biggest development lo""·er income groups.
"\.\'e·ve noted a peculiar .1/ leave again in the evening. people who need to travel a:;o..::::..::::~~:.:-~-~~~c_~~~~~::~;,;~;,::;_,_~
•·If "'e use a conenlrate of 3
1-2 grams of crude 011 per liter
i11h1ch equals l/10 of a tea·
sp<>on per quarler) we knock
off about 80 to 90 per cent of
ihe salmon 1n .four d:iys," he
said.
type of behavior in fish sub-'> "JI Only 5,000 pe<>ple actually distance wilt not or cannot
Jecled to oil." he continued. Jive in The City. This long has supply.
"First they go up to the top of ~:' :?:.;~t:~ been a matter of concern, for The City or London now ha
lht \Vater \\'~h their backs h I bo h he k I two reasons. set in motion a plan lo restore "Are the5e t e peop e we ug t t steo s or 0 sticking up lhrough he slick. ne 1s that The City is the area to one where people
Then if they're going to die, Of ore they the on~s _for the hamburgers?" architl!cturally based on a can walk in peace, without
··rhe lowelf(lll'lcentrate \\'c
use. the lowci' mortalil.v. \Vhcn
"e get down to around I• 10111
of a gra m per tiler we get no
mortality at all"
lhey lose their equilibrium, system or small, winding competing with cars_
tilting over until their heads.-----------'-------------strel!ts that compensate for The plan is to link part of
are sticking right up,., tails being a hazard to traffic by the c::ity with an endlf'ss pat-
straighl down . Occasionally l{i. •·d L•k t A k A d being ideal, in size and pro-tem or walkways. The city
thf'Se fish regain their balance s ) e 0 s n y portion, for 3 constant flO\V or authorities now ate expected
and survivf', but not often. people. to insist that developers pro-
It depends. though. on how
long the uil has been exposed
10 air.
Oil also raises havoc with i========================---2T~h~e ~C'.'.it~y~i~•~b~"~il~t~l-O~•~h~"~m~a~n'_~v~id~e~s~"~P~P~O~rt~ro~'-•'_!pe~d="~'~":'"~I
the fish digestive sys!cm .
"If we let it slay in the open
air ror a week." he added,
"there is no rnortali ty al all.
\\'hatever i!: doing 1he dirty on
the fish is somet hing that
evaporates. ll's high volatile.
"John Sweet al Atlantic
Richfield tells us their crude
won't have this vapor -Iba\
1! \.\'ill be evaporated and nol
go through the pipeline. But
-_-:r - -
. ' ..
' ..
Men • JO ' ,.
Sei·vice • ' s
Ric hard G. And~son, son or
~-fr_ and 1\l rs. t dv.•in \V.
Anderson of I !21 Park St.,
Hu ntington Beach. has been
pron1oted to staff sergeant in
the L;.S. Air Force
Sergeant Anderson. an en-
tomology control specialist a(
Tyndall AFB. Fla • 1s assigned
to a unit of the Aerospace
Defense Command wh ich pro-
tects the U.S. against hostile
aircraft and missiles.
rather like a double dose of
castor oil would in a human.
··or did anyone ever give
you a dose of kerosene for
<.Toup?" the scientist asked.
"About the same thing."
,.iorrow has discovered lhal
fish which survive volatile oil
have slightly less potassium in
their blood and slightly more
acid and chloride.
··The most peculiar thing of
all is that one protein com-
ponent of the blood almost en-
tirely disappears," he said.
"\Ve're working on identifying
that. but it 's a tough job."
As for the taste of oil
adapted fish. lhere·s a dif-
ference. Dr. Morro \V shudders
at the thought of being taken
too seriously on this point , but
he has experimented in a
casual fashion on the gou rmet
aspects or the prob lem.
"Just for fun, we fried up a
few survivors and asked peo-
ple around here to comment
on the taste." he said.
"Re sults were a l most
universal. The ones that had
survived the most oil tasted
bad. We ustd lrom \JHMlth of a
gram ~r liter to 3 1-2 grams
per liter. ihe fish that had 6-
IOth of a gram was voted as
tasting best. 0£ course, it was
only 11 people, you kno"'• and
it could have been the cook-I
ing_"
With fellow soldiers of the1 ;·-===========;
2nd Birgade, 82nd Airborne
Division, t1. Bragg, N.C ..
Sergeant David K. Ku hns, son
of J\fr. and Mrs. Charles W.
Kuhns, 890 \V, 15th St.,
Newport Beach. participated
1n exercise "F:xotic D:incer
JV" conducied 1\1.ay 5-17 in Lile
vicinity of Camp Lejune,
N.C.
Sgt. Kuhns is a squad leader
In Com pany B. 3rd Battalion
flf the birgade's J2 5th In-
fantry.
Army Pn\•ate Randall E.
Prt:slf'y Jr .. son of Randall E.
Presley. II ~ Piazza Genoa .
:\'e"·port Re11ch. recently com-
plell'd eight \.\·eek s nf basic
trainin,g at tl1c L.: S. Arin\ Tra1 nin~ Cen1er, Armor. Fi
Knox . K~
He rf'ce1\'ccl in~1ruct 1nn in
dri ll and eeren1on1cs. weapon~.
1nnp rradlni::. combat t:i rti!'s.
n11litary courtrsy. m1h1ary
jusl\c('. first aid. and arn1y
history and tr;1d1t1 ons !
Arn1v Pr11·atc Kent 1\1.
Chapnlan , son of ;..1r. and ~1rs I
Edwl'lrd C. \h:ipn1an. 450
Pacific Av~. \Villows, reccntlv
completcd eight \1·ceks Or
basic I raining at F'1 Jackson . s.c.
He received in struction in
drill and ceremonies, weapons,
map reading, combat tactics,
mili tary courtCS)'. military
juslice. rirst aid . and army
history and lradillons.
How's
Your
Hearing'? .
Inside you'll
find it's
And Now The
Packar;i• Includes.
Chicago, 111.-A free o!Tr:r of
.pecial interest t.o tliose voho
hear but do not u ndcrslantl
wordA ha.ft been Rnn ounced hy
Bel tone. A non-0pcrRtin~ modt:l l
of the smal\e!!lt Belt.one ai<l "'·rr
made will be given ahMJ!utely
free to anyone an11wcring this
advertieement.
*TOTAL
TELEVISION
*All The San
Dier;io Channels
16, a and 101
Plus Santa
Barbara's
Channel 3
Weekly in
Try it to 980 bow it ia worn
tn the privac,. of your own
home without oo-t or oblla:ation
of any kind. It'• youn to keep,
free.. it .Jteiibl leM than a third
of: an Ounce, i nd It's aTI at tt.r
ltmil, in OlH! unit. No wirm lead
~·body"' h .. d. TbMe models are frff, !IO we
.anest you write for your•
n,Qw. Again. we rrpe_al., there i1 _,emi, and certainty no obliga··
ttcm.: Write t.o Dopt. 28.1& • 13el~
t.ol'.le EJectro:iict Corp .. 4201 W.
Vlet.ori1, Chicaa:o, lU. 60G4G.
TV WEEK
Daily In The
DAILY PILOT
THE LONE !ANGE!
!N PE!SON
[WITH SlLVBltl
Here's your chance lo meet The Masked Rider of the Pla ins and his Trusty Steed.
Bring the kids and the ca mera to the bigg est celebratio n· We st of the Pecos!
-+ME RIDE 4 tt-*4-
LIVE ELEPHANT
DAILY 11:30 AM to 1:30 PM
at
NEWfOltT NATIONAL EANX
~ AIP.POl\T OFFICE~
MICHELSON at MacARTHUR
-tM GRAND OPENING*-
FREE
PRIZES I
JUNE 8,9,10
*********~*****~ t THE REAL 1'< SEE lBE
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!
DAVIS BROWN
TELEVISION • APl'LIANCES
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l11tegrily and Dependabititj' isi11ci 1947
COSTA MESA-411 E. S•ventHnth St.
,.,_,,,. 0.11, •-•. '•'· •• ,
EL TOR~Laguna Hills Pla:r:a !"ltat 1oo S••'911l
IJ7.JIJD D.Oy ID•6, Tl111n-. '''· 10·•
HUNTINGTON BEACH-Brookhurst & Garfield
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Second Te1•11a?
Nixon Campaign
Speculation Out
By HELEN THOMAS
WASHINGTON (UPI)
President Nixon bas not yet
ann ounced whether he will run
for r~lection .
doors to Americans for the
flrsl time in 26 years.
But the betting by White
I louse watchers is that be will
i,eek another term -and in
fact . the campaign already t.is
under way.
Incumbent pr•ldents have
strong advantages in fortlgn
travel jU!l before a major
election. Former Prisldent
Lyndon B. J ohnaon found bia
polls going upward when be
took the White House on world
tours in search of peace.
Nixon's aides are devoting
long ·hours to s tr a t egy
sessions. His press staff and
his "advance" teams {or turn-
ing out crowds and whipping
up enthusaism for their man
are being bolstered .
Tbe President himself has
cautioned against those who
wouJd speculate that he would
be satisfied with one term.
And there are few political
pro! who believe that he is
ready to toss in the towel.
But to hear \Vhite llouse
!\'ews Secretary Ronald L.
Zfe gler tell (t: "The President
hasn't given any consideration
to those (political) matters.
lie hasn"t been considering"'
election plans.
Since last fall when the con-
gressiona) elections turned out
to be a GOP disaster, Nixon
has stressed that thls ls hill
"non-political" year.
In reviewing the betting he
found that v.·hat he thought
\l.'aS his most saleable issue -
law and or~rc had Jillie ap-
peal al the polls con1pared tG
the sagging economy and the
Vielnam \\'ar.
He 11'as not expected lo
repeat lhe mistake in 1972. His
strong moves have been in the
field of foreign policy, and he
is trying for a string or suc-
casses to show the voters.
He fully expects the U.S,
role in Vietnam t'o be down to
a minimum by the lime the
election rolls around.
The.re are other happy signs
for him on fhe world horizon.
The Soviet Union is ready to
ta lk seriously on offensive and
defensive arms limitations.
And Red China is opening its
It is not ooly possible, but
higbly likely that Nixon will
seek a 1ummit meeting with
the RU11ians before bis first
term end1.
A journey to the Otina
mainland, the first fo r an
American President, is also
the stuff thet would make
Nixon's campaign strategisll
leap for joy. The image of a
v.·or-ld statesman never hurt
any President.
The President looked and
acted like an active cam·
paigner on his recent trip to
Alabama where be pulled out
all the pQli tical stops, riding in
an open car, plunging into the
crowds and telling an editor-
publisher gathering of his "ut-
ter contempt for the double
hypocrilical standard o f
Northerners who look at the
Sotith and point the finger and
say 'why don~t t b o s e
Southerners d o something
about thelr race problem.' "
Southern strategy or not , his
sympathetic remarks carried
favor in lh~ region.
There are other signs in the
wind . Nixon is eJ:pected to do
more traveling around the
country. He alse is beginning
to hold mo~ press conferences
and increasing his public ex-
posure.
Although he is not yet ready
to say the word, hls daughter
Julie Eisenhower says she ex·
peeled her father to be in the
White llouse "rive and one
half years" more.
And Martha Mitchell, wife er the man who is expected to
run Nixon'g camp!ign, says
the President Is going for a llt-
cond term.
8,000 More Vehicles
On Streets Tomotrow
By LOUIS CASSELS
\VASI-i!NGTON (UPI)
Here is a fact to ponder next
time you're fighting your way
home through a rush hour
traffic jan1 :
By thi s time tomorrow,
there'll. he 8.000 more cars,
trucks and buses on the rMd.
Admittedly, that is not a
cheerful lhoug"tit to roll around
in your mind as your car, bus
C,r taxi inches forv•ard . But it's
a fact whose implications
;A.mericans sooner or later
must face.
This country.'s motor vehicle
population-the total nun1ber
of cars. trucks and bu11es
registered for operation-is
increasing al an average rale
of 3 million a year, which
figures out to a bit more than
8.000 a day.
Jn 1952. we had to find room
on our streets and highways
for 52.6 million vehicle5. By
J969 , just 17 years later, the
figure had doubled . Thi!! year's
1ot;il re~istration is estimated
at 110 nlillion vehicles. 1
To provide running room for
this avalanche of automotive
equipment. \l.'e are spending
upw ards of St$ billion a year
for new highways and r;treeta.
This hul(e outlay enables us to
pa ve the equiv alent of 1
million acres of land each
year. We now have one mile ot
road for every square mile or
land.
Look at it another way :
·Americans. who comprise onlv
6 percent of the world's
population. drive 53 percent nf
all the pass enger caM and 3ll
.percent of all the trucks and
bu.!les in the world. To get
around. we need. or fttl we
need . an average of one: motor
vehicle for every two persons.
The Briti sh and W e s t
,Germans get along with one
yehlcle for every five persons,
:the Italians with one for every
;;even persnns, and. t h e
·Ruiisians mal:e do with one
vehicle for every SO citizPns.
11 the quality of men's li\•es
'can be measured by the
atiundanct of motor vehicles
tht1~'l>OSSf:Sil. we Amttieon can lay undisouted claim to ~. \ rld'!t hl_ih e<11t standard
of JI:. But II thel'f'. cnuld
t be. more to life than
<"!a.SC ~slv tl'oing and O'lmlnll
ln n1hbtr-Ured C'(lnvev~~,
f\f()f'lellec1 hy mnnn:iclclM>elch-
1J\J Jll'ISOline e!'lpinel'I '
,Jf Amtrirti n' ~rm't ._,.,.;., tn
•'l"f'"tl" !1"rln11!1IV ~th th~•
'11!1P"Y ha'liC ouec:tlr.,_ !k,.v'll
'9'Ali:e uo ert '""" 1., f1"-i it ""• h-t'n ,.ni;wen"d for tht:m by
dtf11.ult .
of cars ralher than people.
The motor vehicle lobby
already is so powerful that the
nation 's capital cannot obtain
funds for a desperately Meded
11ubway system w i t h o u t
throwing in a new network of
freeways for autos.
To question the desirability
of endlessly increasing the
number of cars on the roads is
regarded in some quarters as
a downright un-American act.
I own a car, and aa things
now stand I'd be terribly
inconvenienced without it But
if better mass transit facilities
were provided-as they could
be in evt!ry city with a fraction
or our annua1 outlay on can; -
l"d gladl y accept some fa irly
drastic restrictions on my
"right" to drive a private car
into congested downtow n
areas. I'd even go along with a
Stiff federal tax On' the iitcond
or third vehicle owned by any
famil y. In fact. I'm v;illing to
put up with any intelligent .and
"'orkable !OCial control that
will spare our clviliiation from
finally bogging down In Ill
own automotive tratfic.
Obviously, no one In his
right mind would propose a
ban on production or motor
vthicles. They play a vital part
distribution is a m a i o r
ln our national life. and their
distributlonui11 a m a j o r
ind11stry whOff t c o n o m I c
welf•re is properly of concern
to 1111.
But to acknowledl(e these
facts is not tant"mount to
11ayin ii; that a large and
<"ontinuinl( annual lncre•1e tn
the number or mot.or vehicles
QPeratlnir in Aml"rica t 1
necessary and desirable.
Bird Stamp
Selling Soon
CommemoratiVe s t a m p !
honoring the 50 lo 60 re-
maining California condors
will be on sale at txith Hun-
tington Beach pQSt offices
beR:iMina: June 13.
Pmlmaster Pete Di1'abio
said the eight-cent at.amp wnl
show the 1\ant bird ln full
ntll'ht.
99r cltle11 lncre11isin 1lv are
~d for the convenlenc:e
The postmaster satd thf'
C:ilifomia condor rtamp i~
blll('k orinted with three othe·
v.·ildllfc coni;ervation st1mrr
fe1ttur\n1 11nimal~ threatent.•
bv environmental deterlorP
tlon nr n1an-macle h11ardr
They are the polar bear. th'
trout ud tbt alliptor.
•
THE
BIG
ONE
DAILY PILOT J5
LOWEST PRICES OF THE YEAR •
...
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• • •
,, """~ .....
,· t,~~ . ' '
.. .
•
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• • .
f •• •
' ,., ' ..
1 .. . • • " . " •
juni6r duck go-togethers,
crisp, cool and easy-care
Sunbright and summery. Save on famous polyester and cotton duck
go-togelhers. We show patch ;>ocket pants and pea jacket. Find a
•kirt and •hort sleeve jacket too. N•vy, red, brown, white. 5· 13.
1. 18.00 pea jacket 10.99 b. 15.00 pants, bullon-front 7.99 '
7.99 and 10.99 value 15.00-18.00
ord~ by mail or phorlc f\tA 6·3~):;
"
I
'f!lli
JdiJJ
I ,: f
shorty pants set in
striped seersucker
Seersucker! Such fun in shorty
pants and tunic top. Navy, red
or brown striped \vith white. Arp
nel"triacetale<ollon. 8-14.
8, 9 9 value 13.00
•
boclevaid --1 &~II 18 st0<es
this ribby knit skirt
great looks, easy-care
A famous kn it skirt. You'll love
how easy it washes and dries_
Polyester knit. Black, while, n•·
vy, brown. Choose sizes 8-18.
7. 99value14.00
5kirts & coordinates 101 ~II 1 B stCftS
may co. south co11t plat•, sin dlego fwy. at bristol, cost• meu; 54~932.1
shop mond1y thru 11turd1y 10 1.m. to 9:30 p.m ., sunday noon 'tll 5 p.m.
MAVCO
r
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.JI DAILY PILOT
Catalina
Monday, Jl.lllt 7, lC171
Balboa Skippers • •
Isle Race
June 19
In Quarwr Final
Balboa Yacht Club skippers A.!5ocialioo.. The next hurdlell
Balboa Po\.\·er Squatlron·~
annuill Catalina I s I a n d
Rendezvous is scl1cdult·d for
.June 19 at E1ncrnld Bay fl('ar
Lhe west end of lhe island.
won quarter.final eliminations
in two North American Yacht
Racing Union events over the
past weekend.
will be the semi-finals against
winners from Norther n
Ca!Uo rnia t.o determine who
will represent Areil G
!California) in the finals for
the two prestigious :sailing
events, later in the swnmer.
.
-.... '-Sailing evenls In the Orange
County Empire Sea Sco~t
Olympics will be. he!d in
speedy Flying Jr. dinghies oft
the Sea.Scout Base in Newport
J-l arbor nellt Saturday',
Top feature of I.he rrn,
dezvous is the B9b Bogen
Memor ial Trophy 'prt'dlctcd
log race for all inboard
powered bo:ils. It is open to all
boats 01>.·ncd or skippered by
members in good standing of
the L:nited States Po"•cr
Souadrons.
The race will ~!arl frnm 'wn
area~. Ncwporl Bt•ach and
L<lng Beach . jiQth flrPts v:·11l
)ng their roursrc; to f1111~h
simultant>ou~lv ;H Sl11p Jlot'k
off the C<itahna l sthn1us
Boats st a rt 1 n 1?. frflnl
f\'f'11porl v.il! st:ir! off lhr H-2
belll}uoy and lra1·r the ll un-
t1nr.!nn Bcarh R-8118 to 110rl
before proceeding to Ship
Rock .
Long nr:it'h hoats will sl:irt
nff the whistll' h11n~' at !he
Lon.i: Be<1rh C'nlr<1nCf' <111d
]r>::irc !hf' Long Point ll;i~·hrr
500 Yard~ tn nor! before
fin iohin,i: :ot Sh111 Hf"IC'k.
The ri'lcc rnmmi!lcc is com·
rioscd cir .J11ck Hon!'\', Jerry
HellninJ:? and Gene De Ynunf!.
Log form~ m11~\ b<' rccci\'crf
bv !hr CQrnn1ittee prior to 8
p:m. June 18.
Bill McCord
Leads Field
In Regatta
811! !\lcCord of Balboa Yacht
Club topped 32 rivals in win-
ning the Class A division of
Bahia Corint hian Yacht Club's
annual Lido-14 lnvitational
Jtegatla Sunday.
Ed Gold of Voyagt'.'rs Yacht
Club v.'as the v•inner in the
Cl ass B [anks.
The BCYC event is the
oldest Lido-14 regatta in Lhe
Southland. Jn the early years
ii drew over 100 entries, in-
cluding a junior division which
is no longer sai!ed. This year's
regatta drew 33 in Class A and
2i in Class B. Final results:
flo11ol1llii Racers Set
For Newport Fitti11g
Tv.·o of the glamor yachts
scheduled for the July 4 start
of the Honolulu race are. in
Newport Harl>or for last·
minute filling out for the 2.225-
mile race.
First to arrive \\'as tliark
Johnson's 73-foot Windward
Passage. Shl' had a ne11' main·
mast installed at Lido
Shipya rd. The a 1 u m i nu m
•·stick"' was the largt'S1 ('\'1'r
built by Sp;i rcr:ift of Costa
Mesa. The new mast has big-
ger sections and hea1 1er wire
head and back stavs. It is
nearly 300 pounds heavier than
\\.'P's prel'IOUS mast.
Other v.·ork being done on
WP includes checking and Im·
proving her steering
assembly.
Also arriving at Lido
Sh ipyard last 11·eek was
Greybeard 1he 73-foot Can:.·
dian entry v.·hich l1nishrd se-
cond n the rrtt'nt C1:1pc Toll'n
t() Rio race. '!'he yai.:l has an
unusual underwa t er i1p-
prar;1nct· \\'ilh ii fin ki::cl of
abnu l 12 feel draf1. anrl a strut
wHh a t11·0-bl<H!ed pro1K·l\cr
exiting from 1!. (;rC'yhr;1rd 11 Ill
be !irsl s<'cn 111 ac!1nn 1n
Sou1hern C;illfnrnia at the
California Cup Scr1C's al
t1l;i rin11 dcl Hrv ng<11nst John
B. K1lroy ·s K1alna 1 I. t\ewporl
HarbQr Yacht Ch1h: Bur-
ran('er 11 i:l-fno1rr frfJm i\rw
Zea land. and Bob Lynch's 82-
J uanila Top
S1C\i• Rrad h1ri1·s ,J uan1\a
fro1n the hnsl l'luh v.as the
o\l{'t atl ;ind l'l;is<;, (" \\·111nPr in
BAh i;i (nr1n!h1nn Y:~t h1 ('lub"s
lnrt1;in Hnrk ll :iC'c. 1hr 1hirct
feature in thr A111:1·lm.1n
Senf's for P;icif1r I l:inc!irap
R;icinl! F"lrr1 yi'lrh(s .
_There v.·rrl"' ~2 r nt ries in
ihrce c!::is<;cS in 1hC' race.
F in;il rr~t1l1 s:
OVE RALi~ -II\ ,Ju:inita:
<2) Pao P:io de Kv.·:>1~ Dennis
Mason. BCYC: 1:t1 Tex Maru ,
Barno tl1a 5on, BYC'.
CLASS A -ll J Orlin. Don
Price. s..;;sr: (2) Puff. 011\'e
Slnnc. RCYC : 1~1 P.ir il1r<1.
Ed\\'Brrl B Isett. fl C"Yr
CLASS R -(\) (;nlrli1nrk<;
ti. F:rl Arnri1rl. Rrvr· '''
Alnh1 II. r.1rnn n ,.r..i . S~"r:
('.I • "·~~mer. \Ve1~s & J()hn~, B,... •. .,
r•.~t;S C -(1\ .luan1t-:i · 121
P :io Pao de Kwai ; 1.1~ Tell.
Maru.
Connie Leach
Gal's Champ
Connie Lench of \Vind·
jammers Y.:icht Club top[lCd
gevcn qualifiers for I h e
Corooado-2.S Women's N:itiona1
Champlonllhip in. a
preliminary 1alloff at King
Harbor V&ehl Club Sund11y.
The flnals will be sailed June
27 1t KHYC. The seven
quaiUfittl we:re :
(1) C Sea, Connie I.each.
WYC; (1) }(wlnayao. Virginia
Atkinson, WVC ; l 3 ) In·
foot cutter Sirius II, also from
NHYC.
Buccaneer has not yet made
her Southern Cali f ornia
landfall on a 6.000-mile. cross-
ing from Fiji. She was a con-
tender in last year's Sydney·
Hoba rt race.
Ken OeMcuse's Blackrin.
runner-up to \\' i n d w a rd
Pass:ige in the 1969 Transp;ic.
is cxpf'tted io !i?.:ive San f'rnn-
cisco June 18 to be on hand for
the start or the Honolu lu raci?.
She will have her racing ere\\'
on board and \\'ii! simulate
racing on the trip south.
I Although Blac kfin finished
an hour behind \\'P in the 1969
race, she was given credit for
first lo finish and a new
r C'Cord aFler \\'P "'as penalized
two hours on elapsed time for
a starting-line foul.)
Sumner 1\. 1 Huey) LoJ1g's
Ondine is :, San Diego out-
f1Lling f1lr the race. Ond ine is
alv.·ays a tnugh cnmpc\ltor in
ariv tong dis!ancc race and
1~ill be an1ong th e half-i:lozen
73-fnoters competing fnr first
10 f1111sh in the run lo Diatnond
Head.
Se11ior Title
For Ullman
O:nr !'!I man of Ralboa
\";ieht \uh adrl<'rl thf' sen1()r
\:1plf's Sabot nallon:il eham-
pu1n~h1 p to his ros11"r nf rn:i1or
~ach11ng \'ltlortr~ Sr11 11rdny
and Sundav at ~1 1~sion 8 ;i1 ,
l 'lln1an .s-corP1l thrre firsts
and two second~ 1n winn lni;::
the Sabot cro1\·n nl'er 3! riv;il s
The you n~ BYC skipper is ;1lso
the Lido-14 na1ion:il rhan1pion
11nd h<is ~cored numflro11s \\'Ins
in national anrl intcrna11nnal
com]l{'l1l1on in 1he Snirr CJ;1<;~
nunnrr-up in the v.·crkr nd
S<ibol eompetilinn v.·a~ Hri;111
Thomas of 1'1ission Ba~· \',1ch1
C\11b v.·llh t7¥, pointS. 0 1h"r
lrophv winne rs v.·err· l.1 l
Charle.~ tlferrill. A.RY C. 2.1
!4) Jeff 1'1c0ermainrf. AAYf
30: (5) Don Hodges, ABYC, 30
Starfire
Tops Cove
I
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Ralph F iecllrr's Encson.-:15 1
S1:irfire was the Ocean Rar1n~
£111 is ion winner in King Harbnr
\'acht Club'!: Paradise Co"t
race SaturdJy and Sunday,
Fin::i l results:
OCE~N RACING \!I -( IJ
Slarfire: (2) l~usi_on (N·41 l
Ed McDowell. KHY C.
PHRF'·A (1 2) -(12) lligh
f"lyer (Y·30 l, Robert Ha yes.
\VYC; 12) P.iagic, (S·27 ) Henry
Peper. SMYC: {31 Colleen JI,
(Excalibur-ZS) Ed Cnnnor,
KHYC: (4) Oamare (E-32 J
Davld Ros.'!. WYC.
PFRF·B (3) -(I) Good
Life (l-32) Warren
Thornburgh. KHYC.
MORF" f7) -11) Hurricane
<N-27) Jon Williams, CYC; 12)
TeQuila, 1Ca\.29) Cliff Ek,
PMYC.
Argyle Campbell, with
Gordoo Johnson and Bruce
llumann as crew, won the
quarter finals of the Mallory
Cup romretilion at Del Rey
Yacht Club in Soling Class
sloops. The Mallory Cup is the
North American men's sailing
championships.
Fletcher Beach of BYC was
the winner of the Adams Cup
quarter-finals at Sanla Monica
Yacht Club. Her crew was
Susie Taylor and Pegg y
Beach. The Adams Cup is
Norlh American's women's
sailing championships.
There was no report on the
v.·inner of Uie quarter finals
for the Sears Cup. North
American junior sailing cham-
pionships.
Campbell and Mi ss Beach
sailed under the banner of the
Southern Ca\lfornia Yachling
Echo Captures
Thistle Crown
..
'
Skip Kempff's Echo from
California Yacht Club is the
new Southern Cali f orni a
District champion in the This-_
tie neet. Kempf( finisbed 1·1-2 , .
in the three race series sailed
out of Balboa Yacht Club
Saturday and Sunday. i~
Runner-up with a record al
3-2-1 was Shenanigans, skip-'
pered by Bob Van Reit of
South Shore Sailing Club.
Chuck Spurgin at the helm of
O'leers was third with a 2+3
record.
SEA SCOUTS MAN FLYING JUNIORS FOR OLYMPICS
Orange County Empire Sailing Events Scheduled S1turd1y
The races will start at t l
a.m . 'They are part of the Sea
Srout Olympics which will be
held June 111 at Santa Ana
Valley High School. The
regular Olympics will consist
of standard track and field
events, plus s w i m m i 11 g ,
wrestling. s u r f i n 11 and
motorcycling.
Perpetual trophy for the
sailing events is b e I n g
sponsored and dedicated by
the Orange Coast Daily Pilot.
The boats are being loaned to
the Sea Scouts by Orange
Coast College and UCT.
The races will be conducted
on a round-robin basis, the
number or r a c e 11 cor-
responding to the number of
crews competing.
'Why·thousands of Americans will spend_$6~900
. -
.for a 'Mercedes~Benz thats
three feet shorter , than American luxury cars.
At Mercedes-Benz, we define luxury'
a bit diffC'rcntly than most automobile
makers.
To our \11ay or thinking, size for the
sake of 5izc is not luxury. It is was1e.
If adding an inch to a Mercedes-Benz 1
\11on'1 contribute to some function, Mer-.
cedes-Benz engi neers won't add it,
Eric Dahlquist, in a recent issue of
IAfolor Trend, commented on lhe size of
the American luxury car.
"Stunned by such mass, the passen·I
gerentcrs 10 find that siz.t does not equate
\l'ith room .•. "
Thl' Ml'U-<'des-Bcnz 250 Sedan is tliree
feet shorter than the shortest of the do-
mestic luxury sedans.
Yet it is a curious fact that the 250
concedes almost nothing inside.
Mrrctdrs-Stnt
•nRinttrs bl'lil'llf
bot It /randJ hrlcmi
011tlrt-111/irr/. So
tlrty built four
critical c:on1ro/J i11to
a !oi11glr stalk and
p<>Jr liantd it a
fh1s rr'J lr11g,th away.
·-
In its recommended position, the seat
seems too far from the wheel. And it's
too unyielding to be called "luxurious."
Bui that strange scat position lets
you drive \\•ilh lhe \vheel at at"m's length
and your back fi rmly against the seat's.
And Iha/ gives you better control.
The "unyielding" seal, it turns out,
'was designed by orthopedic surgeons to
give rirm supporl. You'll cippreciate it
more after se11en l111J 1dred miles 1han you
do .-ifl er :r.e\·cn.
If you prC5s the floor swi1ch lo get
your high beams, you"ll gel a squirt in the
\I indshicld instead.
Thal's because a curious-looking
,stalk, posll ioncd precisely a finger's 1\1.,,,_ __ length from the \11hcel. embodies four dif·
fcrrnr controls. '•·r11nr1~1! uot a po1ticularly big car, 1/ir
Dtt on11nnd11/10'1 is \\'tll·p:a.,ned and quit•
1aa1>1Y r 11oui:l1 /o• co115idt ration b)' /lie
clra1•ffc11r-dnve•1 rltc1uivr." -Motor
The engineer is king
A Mercedes-Benz is as different from
a domestic luxury car as automobiles,
each \l'ith four \Vheels and an engine in
front, can be.
~icrccdcs-Benz is one of the few auto-
mobile makers left in the \Vorld where the
cncinecr is still king.
Design decisions are made by cin en·
ginccr, not a styling \11hiz o r a marketing
\l'i7.ard. At Mercedes-Benz, the engineer-
ing department still tells the sales depart·
menl \11hcn a ne\v model is ready.
The result is an automobile that has
been bui lt lo an engineering ideal.
And an automobile that is fundamen.
1:illy different chan any buil! in the Slates.
From oddity to necessity
To the uniniliated, !his
approach may appear to have
d isadvantages.
Your first lime behind the
wheel of a Mercedes-Benz is
likely to produce a \'ague sense.
of di~oricntation.
Hic h and lo\v bca1ns. tum signals,
\11indshicld '"ipcrs, and their two-speed
control all can be operated '~'i thout tak·
ing your hands from the wheel. Or your
~yes from 1he road.
Such oddities, admitlcdly, takesome
getting used 10. But I here's a reason for
every one. And, before you know it, the
odditie s have become necessities.
No domestic sedan .••
It is at the wheel a man discovers the
performance characteristics that make
Our ZS() Std11n. Tht tditorJ of
P.totor Trend 111ag,a:i11t ca/ltd
it "-·. lhe nroJ/ con1rallablt l1ii;l1-sptcd JrdAn 1<·e"1·1
l tJltd."
Mercedes-Benz unique
among the world's
motor cars. Mercedes.
Benz engineers
believe that a car's
abil iliesshould be
limited onl y by road
and conditions-not by
· its own design. Every \
Mercedes-Benz bu
fuUy independent
suspens ion front a11d I
'rear.Adai1J1concept
Used, without ~ccption,
on 200.mph grand prix cars.
provides the maximum possible
cornering power over a variety of road
surfaces.
No domestic sedan has it.
Every Mercedes-Benz is equipped
\\/it h /011r massive disc brakes. Standard,
not optional. Because, to our way of think-
ing, It's unthinkable to relegate the best"
brakes you.can build lo !he op1ion list.
No domestic sedan has them on all
four-wheels.
And every Mercedes-Benz has a steer-
ing system so precisely balanced that t he
car seeks a straight path on its own.
No domestic sedan can match it.
Even the Grand Mercedes 600, a
three-ion limousine, notes Afo/or Trend,
" ... \11ill outrun and outmaneu\•er many
sports cars."
Join the club
But the final word on the distinction
between Mercedes-Benz and domestic
luxury cars belongs 10 a 11roup of Mer·.
cede.o;-Benz owners.
Owners so enthusiastic 1ha1 they've
formed thirty-11110 chapters of the Mer·
cedes-Benz Club of America.
Each year they hold more than 60 It>
cal competitions and l na1ional rallies.
It's thciropportunity, in performance
events, to extend lbeir cars to the limits
of which a Mercedes-Benz is capable.
Not everyone j oins the club.J
Mercedes-Benz owner s who rally
their cars are a relatively small share of
our owner!!. But, then, no,domeslic ·hm•
u ry car even h~5: a club. ·
$6,900?
Our pumtit of engineering ideals hu:
placed Me rcedes-Benz .automobile1
among tbc world's most costly.
The suga:ested retail price of the M~
cedes-Benz 250 Sedan, with automatic
transmission, is S6.S 131.
With such popular options as power
stetting, white sidewall tires, and radio
w ith rear-seat speaker, you can spend
over $6,900.
And thirteen of our m odels cost
more, including the 300SEL 6.3-dubbed
by Road &-Track "merely the world'•
grcatestsedan ... "-at $16,3551,
But if your tastes do not run to the
conventional luxury car, we. think you'll
Any /ru;ury cor can look gnod in tht coun/ry
cluh drivtw.y. Altrctdts-Rt"Z tooks good
i11 pl acts lik£ l.im£ Rock, Road Aintri.c:a and/
l.aguna Stea.
find Mercedes-Benz automobiles well
worih the price you pay.
./And if you'll fill out the coupon be-
low, we'll send you our least expensive
production. A fu ll-color Mercedes-Benz
brochure, absolutely free.
fWttt C'0111l JYQ"1Dfrnlry.ti<lu.....,Df1,...,,5J111rt&1;..,,~
w1!11 {ll>D11,n), otbu optim>Jo, 6'&1a ..iid lo<.al u...u, U ..,.
CopJri&bl 1971, ~ ·-d >lonia-'-"b, lm. ,--------------------------. I ® JIM SllMONS IM101tTS, INC.
I , 120 W. W•nM, A•-••
I S..r. Au, Callfonii. 92707
I I Please stnd me your full<0lor brochure or tlw
I t.fcn:.:tdt~-Brnz moior c•rs. I 0 Plr~ include' the Mtrccdcs-Bcnz Guidt to Euro.
I pc•n Delivery.
I ·1 N•~------------
: Address'-----------~ I City Slil I I Zlp Telephone I ·----------------·1
Jim . Slemons Imports,· Inc.112ow. Warner Avenue, S•nt• Ana , c..Jiforni• 9z707 Phone : 714-346-411 4
nJah(rcc. Nancy ''eits, f'\ecl\,==-'========;i
No. I: (4J Nu\ Loa , Robbie
MOnison. XlfYC: 151 Sunny. THE BE ST
Mftr"'lin Stmrm, F'lcct I: j6J lte1d1riliip poll1 p10"• "P111-
"" tto~h" ;, n111 of the wo rld'• 111011
Alegria, Loi11 Newbcri[. f'ltctl p o p1il•• (omle. 111ip1, R••' It J; (1) Rascal 11, Ani ta Gil· L:":':'•:_'.:'':..'.'.":·~D~A~l~L:Y~P~l~LO~T~. _ _JIJ _________ _::..; __________________________________________________________ _
fonl, Fleet ~ .
•
•
• .. -· t • ~· 1.i!:<.r. '-· ,, ..... ~ . '
•
UPI Ttlop~O!OI
Tricia Nixon, whose
life is like a
f airy tale come
t rue, will wed her
Prince Cha rm ing
Saturday, June I 2,
1n a historic White
Ho us e gard e n
ceremo ny.
BEA ANDERSON, Ed itor
As her wedding ddte
approdches, Tricia
N ixon surveys a cotton
and cardboard mock-up
of ,her wedding cal.>
with h1rr mother, Pe t .
The seven-tiered cake
will, oceordil'f<J to the
bride-to-bt,' dwarf
her 6'2". fiance.
Nixons Bid Near, Dear
Wishes
By J O Ot..sON
01 1111 D•ll, 1'11;9t Sl•ff
If the v.·eatherman cooperates with
Tricia Nixon on J une 12, she will bt: th•
first While lloust bride to have an ou~
door ceremony at the Presidential
mansion.
The eighth daughter of an ineumbent
president to e-:change v.·edding VO\\'S in
the histllric setting, Tricia has planned
her v.·edding to Edward Fineh C-0:1 with
great attention to history and the place
her own ceremony will take in it.
Helping the bride make her day a truly
n1emorable one \\'ill be a small group of
farnily members and clost" friends rrom
the Orange C-Oast , including her aunt and
uncle , r-.1 r. and ~\rs. F. Donald Nixon of
Newport Beach.
'l'hc Ni xons will have lo hw·ry home
• from Washington follov;ing the wedding
to attend their son Richard's graduation
from Corona del r-.tar High School.
Also jetting East 1vill be Lawrene and
Thomas Anfinson, the F. Donald Nixons'
daughter and son-in-la\v, who became
parent!l of twi• girl s April 22.
GRANDPARENTS
The new arrh'als. Rebecca Jane and
Kalhlcen Elizabeth \Viii miss the historic
occasion. hO\\'ever, and 'fill stay v.·ith
the ir grandparents. r-.tr. and 1'.1rs. Elmer
An finson of South Gale.
A dea r friend of the bridegroom'!
mother, r-.-irs. Glen Thomas of Newport
Beach will be among the guests. Mr!.
Thomas, who has kl'lown Mrs. Cox ever
~i nce their children were young. met her
in Ne\V York while both were li ving there.
Mrs. Thomas plans lo spend some lime
In her old home tov.•n before traveling 1o
the \\lhile \louse, then \vill stop in On1aha
on the way bac k to \'isit her sister. l\\rs.
Ch arles Deering.
Also a ttend ing will br ~1r. and r-.1rs.
1-lerbert Kalmbach of Newport Beach.
Kalmbach is a Wesl Coast business
associate of the President and longtime
friend .
Conclud iog th e list are form t r
Secretary of the Navy Charles S. Thomas.
l\1rs. Thomas and Mrs. Howard Seely" of
Newport Beach, Mrs. Nixon's biographer.
l\1rs. Seelye, who is in the midst or
chronicling the First Lady's life. v.·ill
observe the ceremony "from behind .1
pot1ed plant." making notes for her book.
\\'EARJ NG GOWN
Tricia. the blonde, 25-year.()ld bridt'.
will further break precedent by leaving
the White J1 ouse after the ceremony
wearing her weddi ng gown. Pas! brides
have changed into traveling c lothes be·
fore exiling. ~liss Ni xon \1-'ill make a pub-
lic departure from lhe North Portico
after tossi ng her bridal bouquet.
The newlyweds "'·ill cut a se\'en-tiered
wed d in g cake before lea\"ing. a.id
will dancf' to the music or the U.S Army
String~ and the society band of Bill Har·
rin~ton.
'fhe string group v.·111 play. at Tricia·!!
r equest. •·\Vater ~lusic ." "Greensleeves."'
"Romc0 and .Juliet.·• ''Sv.·an L;i ke."'
''Somewhere" and "Je~u . Joy or Man's
Desiring.''
llarrington·s band v.•il1 include sho\¥
fa\'oritcs , Burt Bacharach"s tunes and
v.·al!zes.
The honeymoon destination will be a
secret. returning Tricia and Ed to their
policy of living private lives in the very
pu blic spotlight of the Presidential aura.
F'ollov.·ing the honeymoon. I h e
bridegroom will accept a summer posi-
tion in the office of U.S. Attorney
Whitney North Seymour J r. of New York.
where he hopes to work on public service
cases.
When he finishes his graduate v.·ork at
f{arvard. he will serve for two years in
lhe Army as a reserve Stt{)nd lieutenant.
Abound
Taking time o ut fr o m preparat ions
fo r he r weddin g , Tricia Nixo n
rel a xe s with the Pre sident d ur ing a
trip to the Western White Ho use in
San C lemente. Tri ci a ho lds her
do g , Pas ha , while the Presi d ent pets
his dog, Ki ng Timahoe.
.-:' ' ,, ~
' .
"'., '( j
\ ~ ' \
• -. ,_
'
A storybook ch•pter will be added to history when Tricia
Nixon, pictured with her father, becomes the eighth White
House bride.
' .1
• '
I
Hostess Deserves
~\
" Toast for . Not Bottling Up Convictions:
DEAR ANN LANO l::RS. I am 16 and 1
depend on you r column lo learn many
1hings I can·t ask questions about.
Recently yoo printed a letter about VO.
\'ou described the symptoms or gonor-
rhea and syphilis.
A bunch of us kids were talking about
that column and no one knew for &Ure U
it is possible to get VD any o l her way be~ides ~xual in1ercourse. W i 11 you ple;i~e tell us~ -OUl\18 IN ARIWNA
OEAlt ARIZ: The ansv.·er Is ye1. II is
i;ifl ef'd pn~1lhle In ge t VD without having
1Pxnal lnlcrcoul"!ie. F'ir ~t. itnnorrhea : This I nf e c 11 o a s
h:1ctcriu can live onl y on a mu~~· i;neqi-
hr Hne. The eye Is lhe secood mo1t
'ulnerable spot. f)o norrhea of the eyeg
tri n be picked up by anyone whose C'yt:s
ANN LANDERS
come bt coalad wtdl U.. bacUriL A alrl
CkQ pf ge1al&a.1 IODanilea from k avy
petting If her partner II infected -and
remain a vtrg1 n.
Syphilis can be picked up by any~
who bas an open cwt or sore if that sore
romes in direct «intact with the secre·
tlons of an active lesion or a syphilitic
person. Doctors have gollen 11yphlll'Ji In
this manner. Tf a girl with an open sore
nr a cut on her !Ip ld11se11 a boy who has
an acLi ve chancre on his llp or In his
mo.ill, 1be cu get sypbOI.$.
I repeat: lf anyone who ttads lbls col·
umn ntpttts be bas VO, go to lbe City
or County HealllJ Department. You will
be tested and treated free 11f cbarge.
DEAR ANN LA NDERS: My aunt ha.!'! a
habit that drives me out of my mind .
\\lhcncver she begi ns to rtcounl the
details of an incident. she gets ,snagged
on some unimportant delail such as, "No
it wasn't Helen's birtt1day, it was her
w~ding anniversary or was it her
son's Bar Mitzvah? Come to think of it It
was her birthday because I remember
the cake with all the candles and how
everyone san g .. ,'' By the time she
decide! when it was, evttyone has stop-
ped listening.
Last night awtlie &tarted agabl with,
"Was It Tuesday, or was It Tbunday .•. "
I thought l'd scream . Why do otherwise
intelligent people do this? Suttly they
realize it doesn 't make an iota of dU~
fcrence to the llstener. and it ruins the
story. Please tell me what's wrong with
them. -U OF CHICAGO
DEAR U: Self·lnttrrupter1 are com ·
pulslve about 1etUn1 tbe details 1lral1b'
for their own peace of mind. Thf:y
btcome annoyed wlti themHlve1 for oot
reme .. berlna: -exactly -and are
determined to flgitre it out, even tbouch
It ruln1 the story. Otca1lonally these peo-
ple are saved rrom themselves by some-
one who says, "Get on wttb the story.
It dotsa't matter wilat day U was."
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband
and I do not drink alcoholic beverages
nor do we ierve ale-000! in our borne. Our
religion forbids it. Il was never a pro-
blem when we lived in a community
where many others In our social · circle
adhered to the same practice.
My husband was transferred to Toledo
recentl y. His colleagues have been
wonderful and sQOn we must reci procate
their hospitality. While they are aware
that wt do no\ drink, my hu:iband says
they might consider us pceuUar if we
don't serve cocktails when they are oUr
guests. I don"I want to alienate him from
his business associa tes, but I would fetl
guilty if 1 broke this tradition . Please id.
vise. -LOS •
DEAR LOS: Anyone wbo tflll9ldtrJ ,_
"peculiar" becaase yoa are faltllf11l ea •
reUglon whicil prohibits alcohol II aot
worth bavlna: h• Ute house. Stick w~
your cenvlctions.
Drinkin& may be "in'' to the kJ<b )'Oil
run with -but it can put you "out" f.o r
keeps. You ean rool It and stay popular.
Read "Booze and You -For 't'eenagti~I
Only." Stnd 35 cents in coin and a loliig,
self·addresse<I, stam ped envelope with.
your request in care the DAILY Pl~.
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Jf DAJLY PILOT
Beauty Secret: Enioy It
By JO 01.M>N
01 IM Dallt ll'lllt 11•0
Bet.ii.ah Rot.h doesn't promise
the fountain of youth or a
method to retard age in her
new volume, "Tbt tnterna·
tione.I Beauty Book,'' but she
does guarantee a lol of fun
and a decrea~ in !tie charge
account.
Mi• Roth. w ho ac-
c om pan I e d her late
photographer husband, San--
ford Roth, to all I.be important
capitals ol the world to
photograph th< beautiful peo-
ple, collected a porUolio of
tricks that women do at home
between visib to the beauty
salon.
She has been told beauty
secrets by maids, princesses,
fr iends and st.rangers, in such
unLikely places 8.!I bus stations
and gypsy camps and aboard
the Paris Metro.
All the secrets, which Mis.!
Roth presents in a light and
humorous m a n n er, use
organic 1naterials, 1nosl or
which C<lfl be found in th,e,_
refrigerator or pantry. s~
has tested them all in her
Beverl y Hills home and ap-
proves them all.
1be. lively author, who lived
in Rome for eight years. feel s
that American woinen are
"unsophisticated babes in the
wood" as far as cosmetics are
concerned. "American women
use too much of everything.
They really fall for ad-
vertising.''
She believes that European
women take better care of
themselves. and that feminini-
ty is at its peak in France.
"No ooe would dream of doing
their own hair in Rome or
Paris," she illustrated.
Using the fruits of the eatlh
Hearts Warm . to
Alpha Phi alumnae bad a
heart recently and it hi! given
new pulse lo C h ildr en's
Hospital of Orange County.
The Southern Orange County
chapter raised $1300 through
lts hurt lollipop sale after the
naUonal group adopte d
"'heart" as a philanthropy, and
,purchased a cardioscope for
the hospital.
The machine, invented a~
proximately 25 years ago by
: DaJlon.s Instruments of El
Segundo, is a versatile
'machine capable of di.splaying
:e I e c trocardiographs, elec-
troencephalographs and blood
pressure.
is chlc now. Mi" Roth related.
"Cosmetic fir1ns are getting
ol)lO the organic bandwagon
but are putting I.hem in expen-
5ive bottles \Ve 're all suckers
for pretty bottles"
·ro beat the high cost of
being beautiful, and lo have
some fun along lhe way. there
are a few of Miss Rolh's sug-
)lesHons from her book, which
she reviewed for members
and guests of Pi Beta Phi,
South Coast Alwnnae Club,
1 .. 0VE APPLE COMPRESS
''From a geist,a in Koyoto.
Just cut a thick slice from a
tomaLO (love apple) and rub it
over your cleansed face.
Concentrate on the areas
which are plagued w i th
blackheads.
"Tomatoes contain vitamin
C and an acid which removes
the dead skin of the epldennis,
Need
allo.,.,·~ng the material plugging
pores lo es:ape. 'Ibe tomato
lreat.ment may be used u
often as needed, or as a part
of a daily routine. You should,
you know, remove the tomato
from the face before you apply
makeup. A Ni3h with a piece
of cotton and skin tonic should
be sufficient.
LA P ASSIONERA
"In a bowl put l.be white of
an egg, a teaspoon Of fat-tree
dry milk and a haU teaspoon
of honey. Beal with a fork u~
t1 l mixture is blended. Cleanse
the face, apply ma,,11: in a thick
layei-including the throat and
keep it I.here fc., about 20
minutes.
"It's better with your shoes
off, lying dOWTI in a darkened
room. Remove with tepid
water and riMe again with ice
water or skin lot.ion."
l
I
Poundage
Preferred
ANN ARBOR. Mich. (UPI)
-The husband who needles
his wife for being fat may be
the main reason she became,
and stayed that way, reports
Prof. Richard B. Stuart or the
University of Michigan School
of Social Work .
The co-author of a forthcom-
ing book on "BehavioraJ Con-
trol of Overeating," has found
that some men want to main-
tain their wtves' extra poun-
dage as a "personal one-up-
manship."
Others believe it keeps the
women from be in g pro·
miscuous. and some think
plumpness is attractive.
•
Storybook Exposed
Medium Mixes Myths
'f1ie feminists are In a sweat
again. This Urne over lbe im·
age of women depicted in
children's books. The Oaddy.s
get to fix things, play ball, and
go to the office, while the m06t
positive lh.ing the Mommy
does is push cookies.
A groJP called the Feminist
Collective on Children's "Media
is geUing together a
bibliography of children's
b:x>U to be ca1led "LiWe Miss
Mullet Fights Back." {Or as
one feminist said, "It's about
time: Miss Muffet defended her
tuffet.")
I, too, hav
children's
ferent reas
some clown
fiction?
a quarrel with
s, but ior a dif-
Why didn't
me they were
For th St several years
of motherhood, I went through
life saying, "Look, look. Ted-
dy. you have pulled the 11h ton
birdbath over on Mommy's
leg. Run, run, dear, and (etch
Daddy, Daddy wears a tie. He
works in an office. He is a
nuclear physicist. ( N e v e r
mind looking it up in the
glossary. you Timmie.) Tell
h1m to hurry home before I
bleed, bleed, bleed to death." I
felt like a fool.
Then one day my kids said,
"'ReaJ people don't really talk
in triplicate. Mom."
''You're kidding," I said.
"Also," they addtd, "if you
throw a stick at Spot. she'll
bite you sometimes. And m05t
Daddys don't wear suits. And
most Mommys make slice-n-
bake cookies and ou r nun
wears loafers because she has
a plantar's wart on her foot
and our milkman uses four
letter words when the bottle
breaks."
"What are you saying?" I
gaspe<l.
"We got another flash for
you. The book in the school
library on Joe Namath has
been edited for sixth graders,
Tom Sawyer was really an un-
AT
WIT'S
END
derachiever, and Alice in Won-
derland had a bad trip."
"Then you mean to tell me
you don't buy f""erything you
read in children's books?"
equality. ethnlc slander and
n1ale chauvinism.
I liked it better wht:n the
books lied to me.
DTERY
AIR SlE" -BERNAltOO
-KIMEL EOWAROS.
-GEIUIERICH -
PF Fl Y6 RS -U.S. KE DS
[).once Wt1r i.., O.On>kln C•pulo Otn<:• S'-5
(.lrrtc11wt SMft Nt CftlldrH
115 E. 17Hi SI.
Cothl Mno • 541·1771 "Not since we saw the
Mommy dressed at breaklastl~~~~~~~~~~~ with a smile on her face." I
I suppose some day soon l
will pick up a children's book
and confront realism. Mommy
will be an unemployed ad·
vertising executive, her 1Y4
planned children will be in a
day nursery. h.er dog, Spot,
will sulk under the porch
because in the name of
ecology she was spayed, Dad-
dy (in a unisexual society) will
skate in the roller derby on TV
and Ule entire family will
gather on weekends to protest
the war, poUution, racial in-
Teenagers
Spending
NEW YORK (UP) -When
teenagers do their buying for
back·to-schoo!, they s p e n d
more than $2.2 billion in 60
days.
So says a magazine, basing
its say-so on two new surveys
showing that teen girls and
college freshmen do more
buying in the months of
August and September than
any other time.
During that t w o-month
period in 1970, the nation's 6.9
million high school girls spent
$1.8 billion on clothing and
some $391 million on non-
fashion and \v ork items.
BE FREE ...
of: FACIAL. HAii.
FO"CVElt•· LET US SHOW
YCXJ HOW l'.ASY IT IS
TO ftEMOV£. EXCESS -HAI"
WITH MODE.PIH
A model designed rive years
ago by Dallons was purchased
by lhe alumnae group.
For use either as a master
i'.lr ''slave" unit, the
cardioscope is used in surgery,
recovery r o o m s , inle.nsive
care units and in conjunction
with other in.strument.s.
White House Recipe
t:Lt:CT"OL YS IS,
MCDIC:ALLY Ar'r'"OVED, it
SAFl'., FAST 1 GEHTLEt
CONSULT WITH OU"
LICQ(llO TECHHfCIAM
A control switch can in-
«ease amplification or a weak
patient's heartbe.at )(} time.s
Jor easy viewing. and a built-
In speaker provides an audible
beep.
Wedding Cake Flops IH OU" aEAUTY SALON.
Alpha Ph i.s participating in
t~ fund -raising drive included
the Mmes. Richard Lartelett,
Margaret llatch. J a m cs
Florance. Charles Glasgow , R.
E. Haddon. W. A. l/('rsey,
Edwin Bowen. Ken Walker,
Lawrence Littrell. B R.
Brad.shaw and 1'homas Black.
. · ..
~ ... ,· .. f . . . -'
WELCOME GIFT -A cardioscope has been presented to Children's lfos.pital or
Orange County by Southern Orange County Alpha Phis through funds rajsed
from a lollipop sale. Accepting the machine and describing its functions to Mrs.
James Florance is Dr. Lloyd \Vergeland, president of the Orange County
Heart Association.
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The White House's pastry chef
said today he would retest the
recipe for a small-size version
of Tricia Nixon's \Vedding
cake which a New York Times
home economist said produced
''soup" and "mush."
"It worked in the \Vhite
llouse kitchen," said Chef
lleinz Bender of the recipe
which v.•as pro\'ided by the
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
\Vhile l·louse Tuesday for a
home ver.!.ion of the 6·foot, 10
inch, 350-pound wedding cake.
The Times said today its
home economist, Jean llewitt,
Capricorn: Be Open-minded
tried the recipe for a size to
serve 25 and that it "produced
mush on the outside of tht
layer and soup on the inside."
Some parts of the cake also
burned. the Time' said. ''The
oven wa s a mess,'' !he Times
~irl. TUESDAY
JUNE 8
By SYDNEY OMARR
l'1rle Ariel ctilld Is a• e%ptrl·
JUNE'S BIRTHSTONE
...n. Peatl '"~1 -<y!.Jtltt t ht {-1 tJlv.
men~r. an Individual to the
yo u try to restrict or
domlaate. the Arle1 will rebel.
AJUF.S (March 21-April 19):
Get together with family for
purpose of Jong.range plan-
ning. Key is to m a k e
necessary concessions. You
will not have everything your
way, but you can make
headway on basic principles.
TAURUS (April ~May 20):
Don't fool yourself about
money matters. some will
promise you many things -
but you should get these in·
tenUons in writing.
GEMINI (May 21.June 201:
Lie low : play waiting game.
You gain by be.ing a shrewd
observer. Accent on tJublic
relations, activities of mate,
close assoclate.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Lunar position aiincides wilh
time to cement relations with
co-workers, associates .
Improve standing among
fingertips. This y o u n g s I e r
\jo·ants to lead, to p~:>neer. If
peers. Do special favors. They
will be returned.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ): At-
tention is commandt!d by
children, creative projccls. Be
·willing to rnake changes.
Stress indepcnd<'nce a n d
originality. Member of op-
posile sex pays meaningful
compliment. Pride soars.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22 ):
Event which occurred in the
past may have direct bearing
on current decision. Sagi!·
tarius individual appears lo be
involved. Domestic area is
emphasized.
LIBRA tS<>p t. 2.1-0cl. 22):
Relations \jo'ilh close relatives
are cmphas\zrd. Be flexible.
willing to laugh at you r 011"n
foibles. Scl'\.5e of humor now is
a must.
SCORPIO {Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
You find how to use material
at hand to grealesl advantage.
Be aware of apparent minor
matters. Thorough check or
LOSE WEIGHT FAST!!
10 Pounch Tht Vwy First w.-
.-.1 ""' • -p'--..00 ....... , -..,. -Nd ....,...;II -fl E$1 ASSUlll O, lHIS rMO-
(j .. AM WILL WOii(, h~ -ll..t Of' .-.a .. t.tll twl¥o:Y_ .. .,.._....,_1Nd_
"""""9fl • --el NC:i. b'wlif'Clt•..,..Mel' ..... _,
Wot"'"'""•»--•. OU'l l'UI.,. tS l'.ASY K. l..:Z.a
N«J If lri&AY ~Vf:. YOUR llr [.,
1ir!a1ls is a necessity.
SAGITTA RIUS (Nov. 22·
[k>c. 21 ): Your ability to iden-
tify \1'i!h persons. event.• is
enhanced. You know where
)'OU want to go and beco_~e~
more aware of current PO\N
lion.
CAPRICORN (l>c('. 22.Jan.
19); Some conditions,
especially those involving
family mt'!mbers. arc due to
.settle. You gain a more
mature understanding of those
around you -steps are taken
lo enhance security.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18 ): Accent on how lo achieve
desires. Key now is in·
trospeetion. Means find out
v•hat it is you really need.
Some friends are sincere, but
misinformed.
PISCES (F'eb . JS.March 201:
Appearances could be decciv·
ing; gel to heart or matters.
Nothing seems now to happen
halfway ; it is all the way or
nothing. Career matters, pro-
fessional endeavors dominate.
!!!.'re is the recipe as put out
bv lhe \.'ihite !louse:
·usf' 11 12-inch by 2-inch
round paper-lined cake pan.
Crrarn logether In a blender 1
pounrl of sugar. J pound of
butter (al room temperature),
8 ounces of cake Oour~ grated
rind of two lemons and a pinch
of salt.
Add slowly I l el!g whites un-
beaten: sift together t pound
c11kr nour (4 cups and 2
tablespoons l and 'i1i • o u ft c e
baking powder (2~ teaspoons)
lhen add 2 egg whlte.s slowly
uni ii smooth.
Beat 7 egg white! with '1
nunces of sugar (l cup). acJ..
din~ sugar slowly to egg
\\·hitcs before they are com·
plctelv slifL
Fold egg white~ into cake
flour mixture, then pour bat-
ter into pan and bake for
about 45 m lnute.s In a 325
de.2ree oven .
The Time.s concluded that
one of the main fa ults with the -c=--==--==-==--=,--
BONDED WEtGHl' CONTROL DtVlSION
~EOSVlvtCE C'ICl#Nt'f
PC..90Xttl011 IANfAliM.Ot.l.W,.,.
...... ....t flllt '°"" "'8olllW w.lttrt ~ , ..
'9u ntw-v • 1-2.J,..g;-.1 _. to&l>ed _ _ _.No. ol lbU lillards., t.-•-:II-.
.... hldy. lneloM le
•wi Atm;Ql11-Scll:.I"""°"~ "-••---~.,..'"'---<o•·._ _ _,.,._ ..
•
~ ait... *111'• _.._ "Tloel._ • t..t -~'T BC· ~A I"ll.fir Of Tl-C STAT1sr1c:.. THIS FAN-
, ASTIC 1 Ml CT CALlW "110ND(0 Wt:ICJH'T
O')WTll()I. -.,.., I f] hf:ol..,.,.,,.. -.,.... •Ill tier
.,_ bOct\f., .-i Md•--'¥~ .......
alll .............. klllo-1<"(1 "" ~ ~ ....
-...-~-1koot!""""""-V""'l~r<'l ._ "'··-rNll"--"-'°~~ .... !,,,.....,. ~I,,,,_, OUl'I Pl.NII IS SAJ r /.NO $Ul1~ ·""'
·~ .... ., ............... -1"-• oi.:ior·J --
recipe was that it called for
"too much egg white." It also
said the oven should be hotter
and the baking time longer
than specified.
Infonned of the criticism,
Bender expressed surprise and
a spokesman said he would try
il again in the White House
kitchen .
ROBINSON'S
NEWPORT
YES,VES, NANETTE
MAKES WAVES FOR
SUMMER WITH f
THE HELENE CURTIS
PROTEINE_ PERM
LOTIONS OF LOVE, WITH PROTEINE
ADDEO l'OR HAIR HEALTH.
SPECIAL SUMMER PRICE, RE<3. 215.00.
NEWPORT
VALUE, NOW 115.00, INCLUO!N<3
CUT. BEAUTY SALON •
ROBINSON'S
• FASHION ISLAND •
Friends Find
Triple Treat
An art showing, talk on book
collecting and luncheon will be
combined for the annual
Friends of the Newport Beach
Library meeting Wednesday ,
ARTIST-HOSTESS
Mrs. William 8 . Malouf
June 9, in the Cameo Shores
home of Mrs. William B.
Malouf.
The hostess. who also will be
the featured artist, is a
recogni7.ed painter who has
been described by critics as a
"rcslraincd impressionist.''
Also an accomplished ln·
terior decorator, she paints
what appeals to her most and
lhererore bas difficulty releas-
ing her work to others who
also would enjoy it.
·Mrs. Louise Duicb of Whit·
tie; will speak on Treasures in
Our Trunk, the art and techni·
ques of collecting books as a
hobby. and retiring library
t.ruslees will be honored by
Mrs. II. B. Benjamin, Friends
president.
Receiving service recogni·
tion will be ~1rs. T. Duncan
Stewart and Mrs. Hancock
Banni ng Ill.
Assisting as liostesses will
be the Mmes. Bert Coffey,
Benjamin, Walter W h i t e.
1-tcnry L. Schone and David
Boyle .
Blessed Sacrement
Scene of Ceremony
The Rev. Thomas Dunne led
the afternoon exchange of
wedding vows and rings in
Blessed Sacrainent Church of
.\Vestminster for Carol Ann
Oglesbee and Timothy Joseph
F odor.
The bride, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard A. Oglesbee
of Costa Mesa, was given in
marriage by her f a t h e r .
Parents of the bridegroom are
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Fodor of
Westminster.
Mi ss Sharon Oglesbee was
her sister's maid of honor, and J
Miss Stephanie Oglesbee her
nower girl.
' t A sister or the bridegroom,
Miss Kathy Fodor and two
cousins of the bride, Mi ss
Karen Paisley and ,...liss Kathy
Macl{essy joined Miss Lynn
Dunnuck as bridesmaids.
Serving as best man was
Robert D. Harris. Ushers in-
cluded Larry A. .,~odor,
Richard T. Geck, l\1anuel
Perez and Terry Rosenbaum.
A graduate of Newport
Harbor High School, the bride
Summer
Events
Shape Up
Social events are prominent
in club planning sesSions along
the Orange Coast.
Beta Alpha Xi
After cheering the Angels on
lo victory Saturday, June 12,
members of the Beta Alpha Xi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
v.•ill adjourn to Me 'n Ed's for
pizza and more fun .
Alumni Club
John McKay, head football
coach for lhe University of
Southern CaHfornia will be
special guest and speaker for
the annual spring dinner of th
Newrort Harbor USC Alumru
Club Saturday. June 12.
O .• W. Richard will be
master of ceremonies for the
6:30 p.m. event in the Santa
Ana Country Club.
Gamma Alpha Nu
~1rs. Joanne Olson of Hunt·
lngtoo Beach will open her
home for the nnal meeting of
the year of Gamma Alpha Nu
Qlapter of Bela Sigma Phi at 8
p.m. Monday, June 14. Secret
sisters ";11 be revealed and
drawn again.
Social evenls are prominent
In club planning sessions along
the Oraf!ie Coast.
Christian Women
Sewing for Summer will J>e
featured for membel'3 and
guests of the South Coast
Christian Women's Club dur-
ing a Tuesday, June 8, lun ·
cheon at 12:15 p.m. in Ben
Brown's restaurant, South
Laguna. Mrs. T e r r y Armstrong,
operator of the Fabrlque and
BouUque In Mooarch Bay, will
ahow a fashion variety for
summer. Bob Greenwall, a
youth counsellor. will be the
guest speaker. Mu!iie v.•111 be
p rovided by M ike
.Montgomery.
Eastern Star
A F'rlday, June 4. birthday
p&rty for members of Eastern
Slar of Laguna Be&ch will
light up the evening beginning
1t & p.m. In the Masonic
Tcm le.
.">< j; ..•.
.. ',Mi,~
...... ~"° .. MRS. T. J . FODOR
also attended Orange Coast
College. Her husband, who
presently atlends OCC, was
graduated from Lakewood
11igh School and from aviation
schoo l in the U.S. Army .where
he completed five years of
service.
MAVCO
.'-...-/,.. --·
join the fun!
may company
presents a
Young Beauty Sum
mer Workshop
Know som eone 8
lo 13? She'll love
looking prettier.
And will learn just
how at our Young
Beauty Workshop.
Posture, g room-
ing, hair care,
modeling tech-
niques. There's a
fa shion show too.
Each five week
Yo ung Bea uty
Worksho p 7.50.
Register now in
1h e May Co.
Ch!h:lren and Pr~
teen Shop. Classes
begin:
M.iy Co. South Coa!;t
Pl;n:a, Tue!<.lay. June
22, 2:30 p.m.
THE
BIG
ONE
LOWEST PRICES OF THE YEAR •
\
nylon polo shirts
gre at color c hoice
3 • 9 9 regul •rly 4.99
Come find them in grey,
white, red, navy, brown, bl ue,
yellow, mushroom and black.
Antron® nylon polos with
c hest pocket S-M-L.
mis::.es' Spolt!:>We•r 600
doubl e-knit
polyester pants
1o·.99 reg.1S.99
Belt-loo p fla res slyle d with
Weste rn pockets. Ma chinc-
washable polyester that never
needs ironing. Brown, navy or
blue solids. Ban-Roi® waist .
30-38.
men's sportswear 81 7
..
summertime shifts
dynamic prints
2 • 9 9 reg. 3.99-4.99
Easy-going cool sh ifts th al
spe nd the summe r at home,
I hat go neighbo rhood shop-
ping. Cottons, cotton sail·
cloths, with-it prints. S-M-L
lounge\vcar 81 5
famous m ake
pants and jeans
2/7 .OOval.&.99-10.00
All P!'rm anent press. Tape red
leg belt-loop models in solids
o r stripes, cuffed or finished
bottoms. Navy, medium blue,
brown, whiskey, more. 2'8-40
men's sportswear 817
Mondi!. Junr 7, 19n
women's dresses
cottons .•. j ersey s
4 • 9 9 comp, v~I. 6.99
Half sizes 14 y,.24 Yi , and larg-
er sizes 46 .. 52. Cool, easy-lo·
wear dresses in a ll cotton or
acetate jer>ey. Choose from a
wide array solids, dots, prints.
womcn'sdresses 816
.
I
l
. : ..........
:;
.:.·· ..
Wallace Beery
shirt buys
3 • 99 regularly4.99
Four-button fro nt, short
sleeves. Solids and stripes-in a
smash of colors -Wallace
Beery cotton knits th-at a re
great with jeans, shorts...S.M-L.
men's sportswear 805
may co ~th a>a! plu.a._san dieJ? fwy at bristol costa meu; 546-9321
'
shoii monday tlini satWday 101.111. tO 9:30 p.m., sundly noon 'Ill S p.m.
DAJLY PILOT
misses' summer
skimmers, shifts
4 • 9 9 regularly 6.99
Bright little summery cottons ..
.5 styles from whic h to
c hoose. Shown .•. green or
lurquoise polk<Hlotted skim-
n1 er fo r su burb or town. 12·
20.
misses' dresses 610
our polyester knit
men's sport coats
29.99 reg.40.00
,,
..
New doubl~knits that feel so com-
fortable, all polyester sport coats in
so lids, stripes, geometrics. Wrin~·,
kle--free. Blue, rust, brown, green·,
more. 36-46.
men's cloth Ing 814
.
'
. ' I
'
.· .~ .....
'
~.
MAY· CO ,~
BUDGET : . ,
STORE$.\ . '' ~·
•
'
•
d DAI LY ~JLCIT Monday, J11nr 7, 19 · l
Shirtmaker Delight
g'~ £},;, ft,
(,°)) ;~ : ~ r0\1~'r) 0r n~~~1 u1 ~l'
(J l~a21. I f i ' 11.
(__\_I ~if
I I ~ ..,_.-.__ .... vu 70951 Antone II i
'
A modern shirt dress designed by Antonelli or
Italy -the wide curvy collar tops the narrow V-
slashed neck and is bowed. Short deeply puffed
sleeves are cuffed and perky.
The body of tbe dress is A shape and is en-
hanced by a deep center front pleat. The self-belt
cinches in the waist with a purchased clasp buckle.
Fabric suggestions: linen, cotton. voile. shan·
tung, knits, jersey, crepe, surah, synthetic blends.
70951 is cut in Misses Sizes 6-18. Size 12 re-
quires approximately 2~ yards of 45" fabric. This
precut, preperforated Spadea Designer Pattern
produces a better fit.
To order 70951 ; give size, name, address and
zip. Send $1.50 postpaid. Address SPADEA, Box N,
Dept. CX·l5. Milford, N.J. 08848.
PAITERN BOOKS BY CLASSIFICATIONo Sep·
arates and Sportswear -$1 postpaid.
Panhellenic Names
Scholarship Winner
Miss Janis Susan Pendleton
has been selected by Newport
Harbor Panhellenic as reci-
pient of its 1971 Minerva
Award which includes a medal
and $500 scholarship.
The presentation was made
during the aMual Sorority
Information Party to the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
George Robert Pendleton of
Balboa Island.
A Junior ma)onng t n
psychology at UCLA, the
award winner has maintained
a B average while being active
Jn Alpha Chi Omega sorority
and other campus groups.
MINERVA RECIPIENT
Jan\1 Pendleton
She is publicity chairman
for Associated W o m e n
Students and Shell and Oar, a
member of lhe German and
ski clubs and has worked on
the Unicamp fund drive.
?-.1iss Pendleton is a 1968
Corona del Mar High School
graduate.
'
llill Crowning Glory
beauty salons
llttl Mall AID lltlKIAYS
SHAG CUT ... SHAG PERM
lhnowlaog«lookl Bentlfllly Sft95
..W by os carrf111 pw11. Complete . 7
BUDGET PERM ••••••• -.. •595
(NOITNII Heir)
.. T.w..i Uww.t
SHAMPOO-SET
STYLE CUT
IOUTH COAIT rLAZA-,..._ M6-711N u..u...-•.r •...,. ............
,.., I. 17th It., c .. te M... ,,_,. ......,If °"" ....... ......,.
'
-
/
Groups Make Use of Lazy Days
Su mmer's hue and It's time
for luncheon and dinner flings.
Orange Coast groups are com·
plying wJth the season for a
variety of reasons.
Rebekah lodge
Mesa Rebekah Lodge 402
will hosl a buffet dinner at
6:30 p.m. Thursday, June 10,
in Peek Family Colonial Ter-
race R o o m , Westminster,
featuring a eorps of artis ts
from the Orange Empire
Chef's Association.
Wilh proceeds to go to the
Rebekah Children's Home in
Gilroy, the chefs will present
meats, salads, breads and
fruit, explaining the methods
of preparation and decoration.
Mrs. Henry \l.'edesweiler
and Mrs. ~falcolm Overton
are accepting rtM:rv1Uon& for
the event.
Clipped Wings
Ofvera Street's picturesque
El Paseo Inn wlll be the set·
ting for Clipped Wlnp' annual
installation luncheon Thurs·
day, June 10. fiesta is the
theme of the 10 11.m. event,
chaired by ~1rs. J a ck
Schlemer.
Accepting offices v.·ill be
~1rs. Emmett Oehlert of Costa
Mesa, president, and Mrs.
Richard Miller. Orange·Q>un·
ty vice president
Orange Distriet
All chairmen of clubs In the
Orange District. California
Federation of Women's Clubs,
Junior Membership, will be
guests at a get-acquainted Jun·
cheon Thursday, June 10.
Hosting the 11:30 a.m. event
will be Mrs. Slanley Hetllnga
of Hunlington Beach, fi r!it vice
president. A special guest will
be Mr!i. Robt!rt Calderwood,
prts1dent.
Loguno Mermaids
A fashion show narrated by
t\lrs. W i I I i a rp Holey put
members of Women's Division
of the Laguna Beach Chamber
of Commerce in a clothes-con-
scious mood beginning with a
social hour at 11 :30 a ,m. to-
day.
1'he f\1ermaid group
dined in Hotel Laguna at noon
while viewing fashions from
Lois Paul, Gladrags, Les
Gamins, Deauvllle, Beach and
Boulevard, Robins, Carrlbean
Shop, Rene's and Edith ~1oss.
Toastmi:streas Club at 9 a .m.
today, in the Municipal Galf
Burgess, Edward H'Ard and
John Green.
Deputy Returns
Courte restaurant. li" _________ "i
Mrs. Carlton Young, former
worthy matron of the San
Clemente Cti1pter of Eastern
Star and present deputy grand
matron of the 9lst District,
will return to her chapter to-
day.
Mrs, Young will award 25
year pins to the Mm es. Ira
Nelson, Roy H aw th o r n ,
Charles Higginbotham , Dixie
1.-0v.·e and 1'.1argaret Hopkins
during an 8 p.m. ceremony.
Speakers were the Mmes.
Le111ie Denil!IOn, Betty Chapin
and Lillian Kutkow ski
demomlrating letters, body
language and listeners. Table
topics and greetings V.'ere
given by the Mmes. C. L.
STARS
Syd11ay Ornarr 11 •na of tha
world'1 9ra1t aitrologa11. Hi1
c•lu'"~ i1 0"1 of th1 DAILY
PILOrS 9raat fa1turas.
General chairman will be Mrs. I ';;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~!I Howard Monk. II
Talking Tools
Effe ctive communica-
tion tools were used by mem-
bers of the San Clemente
DOOL ":.~= HOT ""'
e On• w .. k Special e
P£STS
BORING YOU?
.... .. ........ ········ •• ...,... ...
~. 14\ ' ••••• ,, • ......... {'It ' ....... .. .. ...... .
<:-.· ... ,, .. }\~IA , """;
Girls Up i'n Arms Over Legs
MYSTIQUE AND
ION &UISSI YARN
Acrylk, l'IKl'll!1t Wfi.l'llbla.
11 i.11111n t. <h-from
~~~~~i~°. ....... 69'
The
KNIT WIT
, ........... r\,.. , ..... .
CALL
By MARGUERITE DA VIS
WASHINGTON !UPI) -
Sagging panty hose that
wrinkle around the ankles and
develop holes or runs are
breaking the budgets and
morale of millions of
American GirUi.
Rep. Leonor K. Sullivan, D·
Mo., says they are entitled to
bitter complaints.
"The anguish is real, but
soluUons seem to be elusive."
she said Jn a 11ouse speech.
''Many women understandably
believe the government should
be doing. more-or at least
doing something-about it.''
Her correspondents insist
there should be s o m e
standardization of lengths and
foot 11izes. But most of their
angry complaints are directed
against holes that appear in
their panty hose.
Manufacturers generally
guarantee the product against
runs, and it is true that few
runs appear. But women who
wear panty hose say that
holes are fully as unsightly a.s
runs, if not more so.
accompanied the panty ho.se reported. "But perhap11 they
that prompted her to write her have not been hearing from or
congresswoman, who relayed listening to the right
the inquiry to !he FTC scientists. I am sure there are s ... r~ CD••t
LLOYD
PEST CONTROL
MOST EXPENSIVE
At $3 .50 a pair, a woman
wrote Mrs. Sullivan from
Oakland, Calif., panty hose
are the single most expensive
article in her annual clothing
budget.
chairman at that time, Caspar many women scientists who "1•1• L .. a11a kctc:t.--494·4401
Sa11 Cle_,_..,24401
Co•fa M .. -442·5,22
T. Weinberger. would consider this indeed a LowE11 MALL
•·oo the v.·ords constitute serious problem-those who '"'' ~
misleading advertisin& if theli~w~e;a~r~p~an~t~y~hoo<~~-~";;;;;;;;;;d~;;'~'>~H§'~' ;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;::;~ stockings 'guaranteed not to
run' go into holes?'' she asked.
"Nobody's fooling us -we
know that non-ruinable panty
hoSe could be manufactured. if
it were in the manufacturers'
self-interest," she wrote.
"If stockings were a product
used by men, Congress would
have investigated their shoddy
quality Jong ago," a law school
student wrote, and suggested
a suit be filed against
manufacturers.
Mrs. Sullivan took a hand
early in the game, with a
lelter to the federal trade
commission (FTC) about a
complaint she received from a
college English teacher. It
was the ''guaranteed not to
run'' message which
She said the reply
apparently amounted to, "a
'hole' is not necessarily a 'run'
or vice versa." so there
appeared lo be no violation of
the fair packaging Jaw.
APPEAL ~tADE
Next she appealed to the
Natlonat Science Foundation,
asking that a study of panty
hose be included among NSF's
research projecls. She said
success in this endeavor would
save money for American
women and permit them lo be
chic when wearing panly hose.
"The NSF has not
considered this matter one of
the most serious confronting
the scientific commuhity," she
Famous dan river's
"HOYA" COORDINATES
• ploids • dots • fancies • solids
sparkling c o lors, muted pa5tels
Reg. He yard-Save 30c yard
HO IRON, MACHINE WASH
100,. con oN
TERRY CLOTH
colorful mod de~igns on hea vy,
thirs ty cotton for pool or shore
funweor.
Compare Values at $1 .49 yd.
M""'l"'W_. ®® lS"/36" WW.
YD.
SCULPTURED RANCH
DENIMS
for hot pants, knic kers
Compare Values 11• Sl .98 yd.
~@ Cette11
44"/41" WI• YD.
JUST ARRIVED
JACQUARD STITCH
11to111/i ounc•
I 0 posh colors plus wh it e you'll
love them all summe r .
Compare Values At $6.98 yd .
~ (o)oo (o)o~•. Sl"60" WI.. L.:ff (5?.)~
DAVIS • BROWN
TELEVISION e APPLIANCES
NOW OP.EN IN.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
SERVING HUNTINGTON BEACH & FOUNTAIN VALLEY
Intioducto12y
Frigidaire
More in Less
,. ' •
More room In less space for the no-space age.
Just int Our lnttoductory lhipmeld of Frigidailre Mote In Less Relf9!irators.
We cen'I wait '° ahow hn Off. So -·"'offering fl'W9r)' one 811: special -*'gs.
&.It Oflif .tlllle ._ last.
Frigidaire! 15.2 cu. ft. Refrigerator
only 30" wide
and 60" high.
Big! 10.43 cu.~ retrl99rator MCtlon
plu1 4.75 cu. fl lreezer section rated at
1&6 lbs..slorage. And 100% Frost..f'roor.
You'U MY• ha'f'll to delrolt. Reversa-
doors may be hinged lor right-a<
lef't-hend opening. lrt-ll'wMloor twin r&-
rnovable egg :ser...ers. separate com-
partments for IPflllds •nd •necks,
deep s/'letl tor h1H-gaHon milk cartons.
IT'S FRIGIDAIRE MONTH! SAVE!
Frigidaire! 1003 Frost-Proof
Side-by-Side
~ 00% Frost-Proof means Just lhaf
-flO messy defrosUng ever! 18.5
cu. 1t of food $1orage space In a
cabNt only 30" wide. 6.04 cu. ft.
lreeref stores up to 211 rbs. of
food. Add.-On AU\OrQ..BtlC: Ice Maker
may be Installed now or later.
HOUSEoFFllBRICS COSTA MESA
,4,·1614
411 LS....,..... St, 0.Uy f .f, s..t. t-6
S..~ C.OJI "•-ltittaJ at Sin Oitgo F~
Coile M........a41-1116
0 Htllf9'felr M•ll -Oran91l~o•pa i nd Ha rbor
f•llerto11 -126·1Jl4
HeMt .... -17th al lri1t•I
'-ti! ..... -14J·llil
•-• '•"' Ce11ter-l1 P1!ma at Stanton ..... ,.,. -121°6JJJ
EL TORO
IJJ.)IJI
HUNTIN'GTON BEACH
f6J0 1Stt
hlly 1 D•l Tiier., frl. 1 O·f ..
lroMh"' & •ort'l.l._Oelly f·f: S9t. f.6
SIRYICI 'HONI: 141·14J7
~·---·-···-4·-· .............. ----------
Power to the People
Contractors for the Sout hern CaJiforni a Edison
Company are providing just that, digging a trench
across Newport Harbor from Corona del Mar to
Peninsula Point to prov ide a resting place for a
new 4,000·volt cable to service peninsula residents.
Project will take several more weeks, company of-
ficials say. The cable will be cove red.
Drug Store Owner Fed Up With Crool{s
Forestry
Service
Urges Fire
f rom raging fo r est fires or
f rom the controlled burning
with which t he agency hopes
to head off such fires.
The dilemma was pointed up
b y Forest Service Ch I e f
Edward P. Cllf! in
Congre5.'iional testimony. ...
LEGAL NOTICE
F·lllt
PICTITIOUS I Ul lNl:SI
N"MI ST ... llMINT
tallowl111 peroon I• doln• bli1ln1~1
Mond1y, J unt 7, 1'971
1.EGAL NCYl'ICE
TesliJylng before a House •1 : A.LLEGllo oEt M/l>.tt llE/l>.Ul"f lh•
Appropriations subcommittee, SA.LON . 1111 E. c.oa11 Mlgnw•v. co,on• 11: dol Mi r. Ci llto<nl1. lOVA.lT'l GOLOENW!.Sl . INC .. Od7
Cliff warne d again st "going t o V_ J1n Hon11n. •10 Pl>ln11n l1 Av1.. W1rn1r Av1nu1, Huntln1ton lootn. Coront Oel M1•, C1llforn!1 t1'JJ. Coll lo•nl1.
extremes" in demanding 8 lhl• t>u11n1u I• H int cc.nducto<I "v 1n Tov111 H1rdw.,1, • c •I 11 o r n I • il'ldlvldui l. CorPGr1r.on. "'' W1rner Avenu1, Hun.
total ban on all b urnin g in the v. J•n Hom•n 11n~1on B11c11, c11uorn11. Thi• stil•ment !lied wl!h 1110 Countv 11111 l)u1lntn 11 con<l<><!H by A (11•
nalional fore~ts. c1.-~ 01 Or1nge Co...ntY on Jun1 l. 1911, ltornl1 <<>•POr11lo11. bv 8EVEALY..J. MAODOlt OIPUtV C11<1n1v A.n!N>nv lot>tt H. Preslatnl
DAJLV PILOT %.I
LEGAL NOTICE
"·llUO
Clllllt<ICA.TI Of' I UUNISI,
PICf lTIOUl HAMI
Tiit ~ndtral1111C1 ct rlllv thtY "' tll'>-cl1J<ll•t 1 bu1IP1tll 1t llAI N""'parl l lvO,
Fire, Clifr said, was used ror cie·-· 1•1• •1tt•m•n• ,..., med wit•"'' coun· Put>ll•~ed Oron•• CNst Doll y Pllol, IV Clor-ol 0•1n11 C°"'n!y o• cl•lt ln·l--------------
many purposes, in c I u d i n g Jun• 1, H, 11, 11. 1t11 1Jt1.11 a1coted b• 1111 111m1 11><1-w•. LEGAL NOTICE l'DINOI XTl.lt, LYNCH & IUC:HANlr.N,
especially in the West -get·i---~---------A.11v1. ·1-------------,. I C ti ,.411H
ting r id of logging debris that LEGAL NOTICE 1,';1;:1~1~'::! ,T::"."s~~~. 11.. c1ttT11t1c>.T1 o• 1u11N111
creates a fire hazard in the L1• .... ,, .... c1111. ,..i, 1'1c11T1ou1 NA.Ml
I F·l ltl fU4-0C Th• una1r1l1/\f<I aoe1 c1r!l!v Wit 11 c•~
QreS\S. FICTITIOUS I Ul!Nlll Publlihed Or1 ntir Cot•! 0 1i1¥ Pilot, dUCli"lt 1 &uslneu 11 41-1 N. Ntwjl(!rf
In Washington and Oregon NA.Ml STATIMIHT Jun• 1, H, 11, :it, un loOl-11 fllvo .. No. o .. N•w&Ort &••ch. c 1111orn·•· Th1 followlnt ptn.on1 1r1 doln11l----------------IUnd1r 1111 llcllllcl\/1 llr"' """'' OI A.P-
alone, Forest Servic e officials CPusln•n '"' LEGAL NOTICE c ... RE 111<1 11101 ••id 11rm I• • .....,,.,,.., "'
d COSlEllO A.ND MA.RSH. 101 \111 llll lo!lo,.ln1 Pfr\On, W/\OW nt ml I" lull said, lo ggers leave behin Lido. 5ul1'1! XIO. NtwP<>•I e11c11, •NI 11ac1 or rulde...c• 11 ••follow.:
them some 40 million tons of c .111oni11 •1uo P'-41ttl c 1rm1n JoflnMl'I, 111 1111 1tr111, 8vr°" J_ Co•1ello. J20 Sttvltw !t., ClltTIPICATI: Of' I UllNllS Ntw.orl l eich. Ct llhlrnl1.
highly inrlammable tr a sh L11un1 Bttth. C1lllo•nl1 f l6!1. l'ICT1TlOUI NAMI 01llMI M•Y u. 1'71 P'•ul J . Maron. !101· Lovo11. lho und•rtlil'llld doe1 c1r!Uv he 11 co,.. C••m•n Jonnion
every year. Wt!l,....lnolt r, Ct lif.,..ni1 t1'1f. ducllno I bu1lntS1 1t 111' Ht •llO• llvd, Slalt 01 C111torn11. Or1n11 County' "Jf We Can't USe fire, then Tlll1 bu1ln•11 11 b•ln1 conoutlo<I llY 1 Co1l1 M111, Colllo•nl1, und1r lht lie· On May l], 1'11. bt-lor• "''• 1 Ne1tr11 Gtnlf•I P'irtner11tlo llllOul llrm n1m• or FREO T. HLV5HKO Public In •nd for 111d 51•1•, ""on11i., \~e run the risk o f having wild evron J. c0,11110 ••d 1h1t ••Id llr"' 11 comP01ecl ol tnf '"""''.., c:1rm1n Jonn•on kn-n 10 m• I• f I 'ch 'll od Piu• J. M•••n loll-i'!O <>1r11>n, whO•• n1me In !ull ind be lh• ot r11>n who•• n1m• 11 iubocrlb ...
DENVER with a disabling
in the Jatesl holdup
(AP) Joe s p rayed injuries during the robber ies. narcotics, have been h itting ires w 11 WI pr uce more Thh oia1em•n1 ll!•d w11n 1111 c °"'ntv 01•<• 01 1uld1nc1" •• 1011owo: to the wllhln 1n11rumen1 •nd 1anow1.a1· smoke and more poJlu\ion and Clerk ol Ott ngo Coun!y on Juno l. tt11 bV F•ld T. Hlu1hl<o, 1;,11 011n1nn Id 1nt l~tcutld tilt 11m1.
Eisenberg, Opera tor Of the Chemical "But J've had some scary hi.S store. • I BEVERLY J. M ... DOOX Otoul• CounlV Pli c•. Wf1tmln11er. C1fllornl1. (OFFICIAL SE~LI cause g reater destruction o ,,,,._ -e11.a M•Y i1, n11 M•rv attn Morion
Corona Drug Store in Denver's attempt. m oments,'' he said. ~lost robbers think drug the environment than if you Publi•had orange c: ... tt 0 111, P11o1, F .. o l . Mlu111~0 No11r, Public, c:1111orn11
d owntown a r ea for 35 Y'ar~ ;o "1· h d h . I stores .. , large q"an11·1y Jun1 ' 11 l T ll 1'11 lll'1·11 S!lll Of C:1!llornl1, Ort .. 91 (Olln-lv : P•lncl1>1I 01rlc1 I• ~."' ve reac e t e point O no "Let me show you this," he .. rry a u use fire under conlrolled con· · ' " ' On M•Y 11. 1911, be!oro m1. • Motor.-Or'"'' cou"1v
t boul to give it up. r eturn, and d on!t think I can of nar cotics, h e said. d ·1· " c1·11 .d Pu~llt In 1nd for ••Id Sl1l1, 1>trionl l1¥ MY C:ommlulon t:•olrH s a id , pointing to a hole in a l ions, 'I sa l · ~P''"'"" F,.d T. H1u1~Ko ~nown 10 m• to AP•ll t, 191s
He's been held up 37 times, take any m ore," he said. "I've "But about 99 percenl of R ep. J ulia Butler Hansen LEGAL NOTICE b• '~• <>1rion who11 n•m• h 1ub1ulti.d Pub11111.o or1~u• c wtt 0111y •11o1,
m ostly by persons with g uns. had all the abuse a p erson back room floOr. "That's d rugstores have very little. if (O.Wash.) chairman or thr in-T-nHI ~: t~; ~~,=~~1;••;~;"',~'m~'."' i c•nowlld•· Ml~ 17' 1'· 11 '"0 J un• 7' 1'11 1111'11
M o re than 60 windo ws have should have to take." w here one guy took a shot at any," Eisenberg explained. t er i o r Approprialions sub-5~:;~~~-1g0J::o~;o~~. tOFFlC~.~ .. 5E1~~~ Morio"
been broken -some in con· "I can't just decide to quit," me when my foot w as a bout "Most morphine 1.s g iven in committee, said the problem $TA.TE of' CA.L1,011N1A Po• No1 "' Publl~·c111torn11
nection with the robberies. added Eisenberg "I 've got to here," indicating a few inches hospitals, and heroin has been or buroing trash a !so was THE co':.~.T!1~~71o•A14o• ~;~r;:=~:·~~::!" '"
He hasn't kept track of the m ake a Jivi ng and this is the fro m the hole. outlawed a s a drug since plaguing many cities. In the E11ot• o1 v111G1 N1" LEE TttlGGs. My cornm1111on EK,1r ..
1934." •d 01c11\0d. Aorll '· ltU
amount of cash -and only way I know to do It. No Usually the robbers have Pacific Northwest, she sai • wor1cE u 11t:11 Eev GIVE N 10 '"' P~b11,~.a O••n•• co111 o.u, r 11o1.
I. I ~ d ... ' MIV Jl '"d Jun• 1, U, 11. 1'11 lllJ.11
drugs-he's Jost. one Is g oing to hire a 65 year gotten cash ranging around The first thing they y ell for wind storms ~requently Jt\er ~~~ ~~· ... c;i,:,• n." .. ':':.~' ci:~:, 19.:~.t ~.
LEG AL NOTICE Ei.senberg 's left eye was old pharmacist." $100, he e stimales. is n arcotics and the next thing cities with falle n tre e .s . 111d dec..ien1 ••• '"u1r1<1 '" 1111
b h d I Ir.om, wnn 1n1 neceu•r• vouch~ ... t" 1neJ---------------
l!WOllen and red a fter being There have been no serious Lately, youths, Iii f eking Is money," Eisenber g said. ranc es a n e.aves. o111c1 oi t•e ci .. k o1 111e -·• •• 1111.0 p_.191,
l ...................................... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliililiiliiliiliiliiliiiiiiiiliili .. iliiliiliiliiliiliiliiii .................................................................. ,ltO<l•I. or 1o •rtn nl tn1m. wllh !flt ClllT1f'ICATI 0 .. I USINllt, n•e•u•tv "°"t/lt r•, lo Ill• unoerol•nlll 11 ~ICT I TIOUI HA.Ml: 1ne olliCI OI hh 111orn1v1, HERIEllT t~1 ur>dttlll nM CS. ctrtllv """ 1r1 GA.LL A.NO JOHN U. GALL, 000 Ovl•!I cenduCllM 1 &u l ll\ft.I 1t N I Wtll ll!h SL,
LEGAL NOTICE
t> 41'91
celtT1PICA.TI 01' •UllN•tS
f'ICTITIOU! f'lllM "l.t.MI
Tht und1rol1nlMI 01111 ""'b' tt r11t\1
''"' no h cc.ndutlln1 1 rtltll butl111n 11 1n lnd lvldu•I 1t Ill) On Ill• M1!t, l u•n•
Park !hopa!np C1n11" lutllf •••-· C1!1totnl1. untie• Ill<> llctllleu1 firm n""'
ol TOY WORLO 111<1 11111 1111 flfm II
t ""'POllCI of 1no follow!"' '''""'· "'*"011 n1me 11 In lull i nd P•tct ol rttl~1Mt 11
ti lo\1-1, lo.wit: EU1ry 0 . ltul'lcl1ll. 1711 Ytrklfllflt
G1rOt n Grow, C1lltorn!1.
Play The Advertising Ciame To Win
!lulldln11. tl1 Souln 011•• Sl•H I. Loo Co•!• Mtl•, Ci llfornli , under 11>1 lit·
AnR1le1. Ctlllornl1 fl:ICIH. wllk h II 1111 !Ill""' 11,,.... n1m1 o1 SEAWA'tD MAll;INE 1>l•tt ol buolnn1 ol 1hl undt .. 11~1Ct I" ~11 SEllVICt: t nd 1n11 ••Id tl•m I• torn-td
"''"'" <>1rl1lnlr\I lo 1'1t eu111 Pl 11fd of 1n1 tallowl•• ,..,.0n1• wnou n1m11 1 .. dtct<lfnt, wllMn lour m001ttu t fl lf rn1 1~11 ind plt tet o4 rtlldtn<e "' 11 llril publl(1Uon of llllt nellc:t . lollowi:
Dl lO<I MIV )I, "" L11<1l1 II. Mol\111111, 1H5 W•1tmln•H• lr1 Elll1 lrl111 Av1., Co.11 Me11. l!tl>b t . ttooh, ~Ho.
E•tcu!or 1 r.i. Mtlllrd, Or1n1e.
011..i ,,.,,11 "· nn
EIWrv 0. Tr\l~Mlfll
lTAlE OF C.t.LIFOlltNIA.,
COUNTY Ot< LOS ANGEl!S. M . On April M , 1171, H tor1 me, I NortltY
Publle In 11\d Ill" 11ld 51111, 1Hr1n~1llll' •1<>11rld Ell1rv TrvHdoll _,.,..,,, 11 m1 Ill
H !ht "'"°" wllPl-I tllrM (I IUbUTlbff
lo !ht wlllll" lnllrumt nT. 1ttd l <k-1141 ..
.a lo me lrWll lie •~1a.1led W..1 """''
WllMll m' h1NI Ind -1.
With This Rule:
Check Your Hat
NOW Yo11 see 11 .. NOW You DON'T
But pay u thcugh you did?
Wt don't bellevo adverlloe11 ahould have to play gueaalng gamM with circulation
nguras. The facll are too Important to tho effecUvanooe of their aala1 m008lgoa and tho
coot of adverllslng space.
To ellmlnata lhe elament of ch1nt11, our facts ond figures are audited and verified by tho Audit
Bureau of Clrculationa. Through an audit report. ABC tells u, and our 1dv1rU•r•·
exactly how much circulation we have, where lt la distributed, what r11der1 pay, and the
answere to many ether qu..U01m llbout our circulation audience. •
Don, 1111• Ilk to.-a -copy cl eur latest audlt'ropcrt. Bo ABC.Urol
DAILY PILOT
ol I~• Wiii ol lht Oi tld Mo' 2(1, 1111
1110v1 n1mt11 atcld"'t. L II 11 Mon1rtll
H11:••••T GA.LL AND JONN u. •ALL .: IE. H .... 11
611 Seutn Oll•t Sl•••t, 1•11• -S!t!t of Cilllor1111, Or1n11 Cou nty:
'•"',. An11ln , c,1Ufo•nl1 tffl4 On M•Y 10, 1"1. Hl•r• m1, 1 Noll•>'
t . CllU 111· Ut Publle In 1nd for 11ld S!1!1 peroon•!lv ,.,.
A.111,.,tY• ltt l•HUltr D•• Id lo...lt It Monorl"9 '"d l!tot) f
P'ubllll'IO<I Or1n111 Coa1I 01llf "llOI, H...,;, kn""'n to' "'' 10 111 lht <>1roc.n~ MfV l l 1ttd June I, H, ll, lfll IJ<if./1 wN>ll n1m11 1r1 1uD1trl~ld 11 lhl within
l l---------------l ln11rum1n1 •Ml t cknowlo<IHcl tilt' ,,,. ecultd th1 11m1.
!O~Fl(l"L IEALl LEGAL NOTICE
(OFl'ICIAL $EAL!
M1rv J. OoltOfl N0!1rv Publlc
'" Ind k>r o•ld 1l1tto
'°"-0( P'ublllhtd Ori n" Co.ti 011tr 111'1111,
Ml" 17, !•, 31 1ttd Jun• 7, tf11 114"11
LEGAL NOTICE 11:----------------1 MA.ll:"f BElH MOlllON p.oe.n N1>11rv Public. C1tltor,.l1 P-41171
c•1tTlf'ICAT• OP I UllNllS P'•lnd oll Ot!ltl In c••TIP1CATI OP •USIN•ll, f'IC:TITIOUI N ... MI! Or1"1t COi.i"!' l'ICTITIOUI NAMI
Th• und.,tlOnffl oon corll!• ~· 11 con· Mv Corn,....1n lon 11:·.plr11 Th• uttdlfi!tfOed dolo c1rlll'Y 1'11 11 co,.. luctlnt 1 nu•ln•H 11 150)1 J1c~11>" SI , A.orll t . 1t1S duUlnO 1 &ullnH • 1t lo06 JO!h S!.,
Ml<lw•Y Cl!Y. Ct lllorn11, un<l•r '"' tic. Pub1!1h.a Or'"" C••I Ot lty Pilot. N~Pfl'I l!teJch, C11lhlrnl1, und1r "'' lie• lit'°"' llrm ntmt of llERLIN·TOK'l'O M•• lt, )1 t nO June 1. U. 1'11 llS_,.11 !ltlou1 !!rm n•rnt ol MAMECO •nd lh•T
COMP..,NY •nd 1h•! u ld ti•"' 11 t..,... tfld firm 11 comPotf<I or 1'11 lotlowln•
POied o! 1n1 !ollowln11 ""''<'"· w!io1t LEGAL NOTICE ottton, wno1t n1m• In tull "'" •ltc1 t i
n1me in full •nd ol1c1 of rrslO•ntt 1•1-----------'-----lr11ld•nCt 11 11 tol!tWI' t• lol-o: P-41'7? Edw11d M1r!ln<l1l1 J,., us I I
Rot>ort 0. l,\Ollro, SllSl M1n11um Or.. CllTll'ICA.TI. 01' •Ul1H•SS MOd1n1 A~1 , Oltwl'Ol"l llt1cn, (1111.
Huntlnll°" 1!t11cn. C1llfotnl1 "11;,. F ICTITIOUS NAMI Doled MtV •. lt1!
Doled Junt •. 1'11 Tilt 11..Ct'll1nH1 do certl!Y 1111v 1re EOWtrd M1rllttd11• Jr.
ti O Moore c-uclln~ • bu1!"'" 1! 1076 Pl1ctntl1, St1t1 ti (t lilO•nlt . Or•n•• Cou"I¥:
~181• o• Colltornl8, Ori n•• Ctunlw: Cot!• M•11. C11!!o•n!1, """"' '""' !fc. On May I•. "71. Htor1 m1. 1 Nol•rv
On June " 1'11, btlort me, 1 Not•" 1111°"'' II•"' n1m1 of VOLIC!lUNE 111<1 fl'ubl!t In •nd /or ••Id St1t1, Pl'lonallv
Public In 1M '"' 11ld ~1•1e. t1fr11>n11!>' !~II ltld lirm It tomP01td of th• fellow-1oot1rld Edwt rd M1rlln<11l1. Jr kMW,.
•oo-eorld Ron•rt o Moor• ~newn •o mt '"' oof11>111. "'"01• n•m•• '" tull 1n<I •o "'' 10 Dt Int otrl°" '*"'"' n1mo II to II• !ne ,,..,..,,, wnou n1mt I• •ub1cf1D· •ltc~• of "'ld1nc• ••• •I +011ow1-111n1cribed lo 1~1 wllnln ln1lru"''"' i nd
1d 10 1n1 w11111n <Ml•um1nl Ind Cn1rlt1 01.....,110, '" Cc.n1r1n, C0tt1 1c~now!la11C1 h1 t•tcull<I tn• 11m1.
1cllnOWltdo• "' ••KUted In• .. ..,.. ,,.~ .. , (1lilo•~I• {OFl'l(l ... L SEA.LI
(OFF l(l"L SE ... LI J1mu ... Sob1ro, !CS M1ln, NIWoorl MARY I ETH MOJI TON
Jt~n L Jobst l t•ch, Ctlllo1nr1. Not1rv Public. C1lltornl1
No!•r• P'wbl•«Ct lllorn11 Dl!ld Mt v 11. It/I Prlncl~I Offlco In Pr.nc•Pll Olllct I" (norl•t F1no~1i. Or1n91 Cqunlv
0'•11V• Coun!• J1m•1 p So~ott M>' Comm111rc.n l•ollll
• • . •
Mv c.....,mlu lon E•P"'H 't••• o! C11itor11I•, Oro nv• Countv: Aorll f , lt1! Mlr(h l. !tll on Mt' lJ. 1Jl1. bt!Ot• m1. ' Notarv l'ubllthf<I Or•n11 Co••! 0 1llv 1'1!1111 ~ Publll~•d 0•01190 Coto! 0 1111 Piiot. Publl( '" •nd !or 1old Miit. 1>1t1cn11tv M•v J1, l •. ll i nd Junt J. !Ill 1111.rj
Junl /, H. 'll, ll. U/1 U ll>ll •ot11rl"d C:h1rt11 F1,,...llo 1nd Jtm11 P. •
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE Selle" ~"own 10 mt lo b• 1~• peroon•
who11 n1m11 "' 1u-1tr\IHld to I~• w11~1n lnl!•~m•nl •nd 1ck...,wlld1td llltY ••· 1----------------
tcUlecl' lht ••m•. "IOTIC• 0111' t•uSTll'S , ... l. -• '·1221 IOf'FICIAL SEAL) T.I. M.. l ·U+ll
f'tCTITIOUS IUllNl!IS M t rV 8t1n MortO" C" T111M11v, Jvn1 1'. 1'71, 11 11;• r
NA.Ml STATEMENT Nt11•11 Public, C1lllornT1 A.M .. TITLI IN~U"/l>.NCE ... NO TllUJI '
T•• fnll.,...lno P•rooni 0,1 llel"' Pr1,.cr111 Office 111 COMP/l>.NY, 11 dutv ·~•Un!ect T1u1• •
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CO,.FIC:IA.L SEA.LI Wtp, Tv111 .. , C1H11r,,11. undtr lh1 II<· 1,.y, .-,, htrtlt1. -..
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LOCAL
EDITORIALS
The DAILY PILOT
Quite Often
City Hall Fights
Otll MIP tJ, 1t11. OIM .. Trwtl, ""· °'"-..... ••H"-•s J...,t, H, OP• •I Tiit T•111l1t t M ti 1111 1111'1~ cr.11 .. "
Wllllt .... Mly DY ••kf Ottcl .. lru11. ="
1111 "'-· 81Yd f.. btlllfl(!1rr ulldt r 11kf Oftd wt -I.
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Ind 911! ... 80,d -new• It "'t lo bl '"' s.11. fM untltr1!"'9tl <•Ulff Mid MOllN • ''''°"' wile•• n1mu "' lijbtctibllcl II <If O.i11111 1nl Elt<llM It Sii! It bf lllt win.In ln11tufftltfll •Ml o<•-lldtlMI r.corftd! 1 .. lht (tlllfllY wlltr1 1111 rftt ..
lh•V •~tcutlllt lh• .-mi. IN'-'" I• locllld. 'I
IOl'l'ICIA.l. II.ALI O•lt ! Mty 11, lt tl 'l M~rv l tth Morion Tlllt '"''"',..• .,.. Trvtl Cl""''"' No11ry Pw~llt. (1111or~1t •• ,,Id T,u•t••·
,..1 ... i..t1 Otllt l In •• I Y M•rvll o . ...,,.,.. \I
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I
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!
;2! DAIL' PILOT s Mor.da~, Junt 7, 1971
Bank Reports
Southland Slwws
Steady Recovery
Even though it's stlll rocky
in many areas, the economic
picture for Southern California
has grown stronger in recent
months, one reliable indicator
rf'pOrts.
Ba11k to Open
In Santa A11a
For Mexicans
A new bank lo serve the
r.texican-Amt'rican' community
of Orange County soon \\'ill
open in Santa Ana.
Banco dcl Pueb lo Co1n-
n1crcial. '127 N. Syt•a1nore St ..
has been granted pcrn1ission
lo issue comrnon s1ock by llJe
~tale superintendent of banks.
11ec1or Godinez. chairman or
lhc board of directors, stated
that this new bank ing in-
6litulion. has been authorized
to issue 100.000 shares of com-
mon stock with a par value of
$5, and selling for $10.00 per
share. Funding ·will be entirely
through the stock issue. No
governmental grants \\'ill be
used.
No more than 2 percent or
the present s tock oflel"ing, or
2,000 shares, can be purchased
bv an individual in this inil ial
offering. Minimum number
available for sale is JO share~.
Stock purchases ar• no l
limiled to Lalin-Americans.
Anthony Maxwell is presi·
denL and chief executive of.
ficet. He has J4 years of con1.
mercial banking experience.
being president of !he Pan
American Bank. East Lo.~
Angeles, prior to joining lh~
organization or Banco de/
Pueblo Commercial Bank.
Max\\•ell said 1ha1 the
purpose of Banco del Pueblo
Cornmcrcial Bank is lo ser\·e
the Mexican-American com-
munily in a very special way.
lt will be a bi-lingual bank
providing a full range of
services \\'ith accounts isu red
by the Federal De po s 1 t
lnsuraoce Corporation
lFDICI.
":\·!any ~-1ex1can people ha\t
ne\'Cr llS(-d ban~ ser1 ICCS
mainlv beC"ausc thC'y w e re
fearfUt. not knowing 1 he
functions of a bank," !\laX\\"<'11
said. ''and now that a bank 1~
being organi1.ed to serve their
needs and help thern to un-
clrrstand the valuable rela-
tionship betw~n individuals
and their bank, a positive con-
lribution y,,•i ll be made to the
socio-economic well being of a
greater number of Latin-
Americans.''
According W l>l axwell. Ban-
co de! Pueblo Commercial
Bank will serve the ealire
community with emphasis on
service. Rates will be com·
petitivt. Tht bank w i 11
partici pate in all federally io-
surtd student programs, pro--
vide ont-day service on
personal loans for autos. hard
soods and the like. and Small
Bu si n es s Admini.stration
(SBA) Joans for the small
businessman.
10°/o NNN
CARE FREE
LONG '1'£RM LEASE : • .,~..-.-Qlalll ............ atl, ...
llQ. ln4t '41AIH
Indicating a slow but steady
recovery, Security P n c if i c
Bank's Southern California
Monthly Summary idlO\\'S a
s light advance durlng the first
parl of the year.
The bank's Econom i c
Research Division, finds the
economy in So uthern
Cal if or n i a 's Ul-county
region-as measured by the
bank's seasonally adjusted
business index-advanced 2.6
percent during 1971's first four
months wheR measured against
the comparable 1970 period.
"Each month this year has
posted 1970 . 1971 advanc·
es starting from .08 percent
in January a n d increasing
steadily to 4,Z percent in
April ," said John H. Owens.
ass'istant vice president, ad·
ministrator of the Economic
Hescarch Division's Business
Studies Section.
"During this year·s first
four m on! hs-January·
April-the bank's seasonally
adjusled index of department
store sales aveaged 111.2
(1967-llJO)-up J.2.
April's preliminary reading
of 117.I marked an all. time
high for Southern California's
department store sales and
represents a 7 .2 perceht im-
provement over April 191o·s
level.
Hevie\\·ing 1970. Security
Pacific Bank's !\tonthl y Sum-
mary reports that increases in
Ca lifornians' personal income
f.1ilcd 10 match those of
1!.169-up 7.6 percent during
1970 versus 8.5 percent the
previous year.
In turn, this affected the
$2.8.7 billion volume of taxable
retail sales which. after ad·
justment for price changes,
represented a 3.S percent
decline from 1969 levels.
"In Southern California,
$!6.8 billion in taxable retail
sales represented a 1969-1970
gain of 1.0 percent, but a ·real'
volume loss of 4.1 percent.''
explained 0Y.'en;;. "Lasl yea r's
it!umping retail sales were in-
creasingly evident during each
quarter of 1970."
Alpha Beta
Parent Finn
Sets Record
PH lLADELPHIA (B\\IJ -
Acme ~1 arkets Inc .. which
operates Alpha Beta markets,
Alphy's family restaurants,
Hy-Lo drug stores and Value
F:iir d is c o u n t department
stores in California, reported
!"ecord earnings and sales for
th(' 53 \\'eeks ended Apr il 3.
Earnings after I ax e 3
"''ere $14.934,000 or S4 .:J!I 1wr
share, an increase of l9 per·
~·enl ove r earnings or
$!2,530,000, or ~.69 per share
for the 52 weeks ended !\larch
28, 1970 , adjusted for a 5 pcr-
1ncnt stock di vidend paid
fll11rch 31.
'rhe $3.69 earings per shart
for the prior year lnclucled 12
cents a share contributed by a
capital gain -0n the sale or real
estate not ustd in th e business.
Sales increa s rd
$1,793, 719,000, compared "·ith
$1,650.249,000 over a similar
period last year. a gain of
$148 ,470,000, or 9 percent. Th is
was the third consecutive yenr
that sales have increased over
1hf previou.~ year.
Alpha Beta, which has 158
markets in "S'lru t h e r n
California. has expanded ils
food start prograrn in
Northem California whert it
now has 1? swres in operation.
In addition W Acme food
markets and its California·
based companies. A c m e
Markets Inc. ope.rates Super
Saver, eastern discount food
markets; Rea & Derick tnc.,
eastern drug su~idiary. and
Mid-Atlantic Hardee Inc., a.
fast-food restaurant franchls·
ing subsidiary.
LIMITED PARTNERSHIP UNITS
NEWPORT SHELTER, LTD.
A C t llfou1i• l ll'l'llt ed P.trt11erthi,.
h loi119 Forl'l'led Te P11r(h1t• A
Nowport le1ch Ofn, .. l 11iltll11g,
HI UMnu PAITNllSHIP UNIH Of S1 .0M UCH
Min;,nuM P11rt1'i110 l Unit1
f "!:. Cu11t11l1ti..e p,..f,,,.,. lteto of A1hl•11
,.,_ He! hteolll• Of Tlie "•rtll•nlli,
F...-hrtt-lof-oti•• CAU Ol WJtllE
SHELTER INDUSTRIES, INC.
2MJ ............. , h ... Z1 S, N..,.,. .._. tl660
714/641-ZllO
QUICK CASH
a DAILY PILOT
Time for
irDttough
" •• -• • p • • • '
Takers for This?
'I'his 1963 aerial shows midtO\\'n section of Manhatta n and some of 1be valuable
real state property included in a land sale proposal made last week by the
bankrupt Pe nn Central Transportation Company. The company still operates
s-0me of the pr-0perty i,nc!uding several hotels. ---
UCB s,viss
Subsidiary
Pact OK'd
BASEL. Switzerland (BW)
-Uniled California Bank
i UCB), Lo.'! Angeles, an·
nounced Iha! ii.'! subsidiary,
UCB-Basel A.G .. has filed with
rhe Swiss
settlement
creditors.
t ourt a proposrd
agrec111enl w1Hl
Pursuant lo !ht proposal.
the creditors will r eceive from
UCB-Basel A.G. a moralorium
dividend of 45 percent. In
order to preserve its goodwill
and its reputatior1 for in-
legrily, UCB-Los Angeles will
make available to creditors
funds for an additional pay·
1nent of 55 percent plus in-
terest so they will receive IUO
percent and inlercsl as pro-
vided in thC' propoSt•d agree·
ment.
A spokes1nan for UCB
!'itated that the 1erms of the:
proposed selt\e111e nl are in ac-
cord with previous an-
nouncements 1hat tlcposilors
and credilors of lhe S8 percent
01vnt'd Swiss subsidiary would
be fully protected by the
parent bnnk.
In August i! 1vas discov~red
that UCB -Basel AJ~. ti.id i11·
<'Urred substantial lossel! as a
result of unauthorized com-
rnodily grading by certain of-
ficers of lhe Swiss subsidiary.
Since September the bank ha~
been operating under the
supervision or a court-ap-
pointed trustee.
Off cri11 g Set
By Stores
NE\\' )'ORK - ( B\V ! -The
public offering of $35 milhon
o[ Brondway-l!a)e Stores Inc.
81 , percent sinking fund
debentures dut 1996 al 100
percent and accrued interest
frorn !\1ay 15, 1971. \\'as an-
nounced by Blyth and Co. Inc ..
m:inager of lhe underwriting
group.
Net proceeds fro111 the sale
of the debentures initially will
be added to u·orking capital
through the repurchase of ac·
counts receivable sol d to
banks a n d Broadway-llale
Credit Corp. During the next
two years approximalely $15
million "'ill be used to
purchase fixtures and equip-
n1enl principa1\y for new
stores and the balanct of the
proceeds will be used to pay
current matur ities of long-
term debt and for working
capital.
The debentures are nol
redeemable prior to May 15,
1981 at an annual Interest C'OSL
to the company or less than
8.25 percent. Otherwise, they
a re redeemable at the option
of the company, at prices
declining from 108.25 percent
on May 15, 1971 to 100 percent
oo and after r-.111y IS, 1991, plus
accrued interest in each case.
Firm to Design
New Cafeteria
Pacific Mutual Life Insuran-
ce Company has retained Fred
Schmid Associates, Lo a
AnReles-Oticago-lfonolulu food
facilltlea planning, designing
and engineering fir1n , to
design ii.$ employes' cafeteria
in the Newport F'inanC'ial
Ccnler, NC\\.'port Be a c b ,
Callfornia.
Jack K. Sewell. director of
office services. sald the :'Joo.
sc11l cafeteria "'Ill bt: located
,,pn the first floor utiliiing .ap-
proxlm11tely 10,000 • v er a) I
square fetL
111 High Gear
Sunset Ford Wins
Major Dealer Honors
By CA RL CARSTENSEN F.ven Corvelles have comt
Bob lleusser·s !oiunset Ford alive locally \Vilh six sales in
in \\'cst niinster has just been the last three "'eeks. Connell said As Ca11forn1ci is lhe top selected as one of the nation's srnal! car market 1n U1r euun-
outstanding Ford dealerships lr.v over 35 p~·rcent ur ::ill
::ind has rcceiv<'d the Con1· Ve ga$ produced arc headed
pany's Distinguished Ac:hievc-for west cuasl dcl1vl·ry. To
keep Vena sales al a ""ak menl Award. t> t'~
This award is presented "in Chevrolet is produci ng over
recognition <J f progressive 100 Vegas per hour on
111anagement . , . • modern lwo shifls~or aboul 1600 a day.
sales and service facilities Connell's stock based on the
. . . . sound merchandising rate of sale, is about a 30 day
pr;icllces .. high quality supply. By the way, Chevrolet
standards and con· dealers are in the midst of
I · :inother contest now <ind the tinuing interr~t in rl·n1 er1ng superior service In i.~ord Costa ~1csa dt'a lcr is \\'ell
u\vncr~ .. 11 goes periodically ahe:1d of objective al lhe mirl-
t11 dc:ilers n1eeling the stiff re-w;iy point. \\'inners of thic;
ciu lretncnts demanded by the cont~sl go to Tokyo and Hong
division. ; Kong \\"hi le the y,•1nn1ng sales
The aii•ard is nOLeworthy rnanagers head for I he
bceause Sunset Ford is only 1n Bahamas.
its second full year of opera-
tion and the dealership's quick lftllt-M'":I"~~
growth can be credited mostly
to very imaginative merchan-w ll st • t
dising techniques employed by a 1 ee
the creative Heusser.
Cliatter As the architect ot !he
firn1's success, Heu sser. who
is a former Chevy salesn1an
and following !hat. GM of
;inother F'ord dealership. con·
linually builds effective lraffic t•::. ' :--i
building pro1nol1ons for all 'fhe '1vcrages arc showing
departn1ents. lleusser ~ays signs of firmness after four
!here ah~·ays is "a direcl cor· weeks of 1hc1r intermediate
rel:ition between satisfied cus-
10111ers. vehicle sates, and decline, TPO Inc. r; a y ii .
~ood advertising. \Ve always Al!hough there arc no concrete
keep this in m!nd. ·· signs the correction is leveling
COl\Tf\.'El.L CIJE\'ROLE'f
SCORES BIG IN COl\'TES'l'
Chevrolet Division recrntly
l""nm pleted !heir 1wo 111onth
''Chevrolet Leads The \Vay"
sales cam'paign and John Con·
nell and Con1pany came home
a big winne r.
The Cosla 111::-sa Chevrolel
draler fini shed second in the
entire L. A. zone \Yilh a big
\.12 percent. of their sales ob-
jective. Seventy eight dealers
coinpcted so the finish speaks
·well for Conn-e.11, new car sales
rnanager Hoger L\1iller ;ind
staff. John and Joyce Jeave
soon for a trip to Stockholm
and Copenhagen, compliments
of Chevrolet Division.
Everyont on the new car
staff won something and Con-
nell said it was gratifying
begluse ""-'t le11d all the
way.'' Asked about current
sales Connell said, ""•e're
about tSO percent over a year
ago \\'ith all cars sellin11: :it the
same or better ra!t and Vega
being our real plus this ytar.''
out. the finn feels there is a
"strong J)QSSibihly" s ome
averages may level nut dtiring
111r nl'>il three to four week~.
"\\'1th volume al a low point,
the list over~old and near sup·
port. and the odd·lotters still
heavily on the sell :-.Jdc, the
balance of indicators are
weighing hc11v1cr in favo r of
the bulls," 1"PO believes.
NEW )'OHK (uPI )
Beaunit Corp. announc ed
Tuesday il will consOlidate its
rayon production at Elizabeth,
Tenn.. and close its
Childersburg, Ala., rayon mill
late in August. The company
said the Childersburg plant
has lost money for six yea rs
and "no turnaround is in
sight" because of declining de-
mand for rayo n tire cord. The
plant employs 836. Built in
1950, it is the third rayon plant
·to be closed by Beaunit.
SUNSET FORD WINS AWARD -Bob Heusser
{left), O\Vncr o r the Westminster .~qrd dealership
accepLi;; Distinguish ed Achievement Award from
f'ord's assistant district manager , Jirn Upp.
•
Duplicate
Facilities
Hike Costs
By JOHN CUNblJFF
Af' lvlln1u ,..,..1y1t
NEW YORK (AP) -A ma-
jor contributant to the bigh
cost of medical service is the
maintenance of d u p I i c a t e
facilities by the individual
hospitals. clinics and other
units that serve a single area.
One of the main causes of
inadequate medical care is the
inability of smaller hospitals
to attract top flight personnel,
not solely because they are
unable to afford them but also
because they cannot offer op-
portunities.
Experiments now under way
in several communities sug.
gcst that the problems might
be licked through mergers in a
n1anner somewhal similar to
those that produce the co01-
glomerate corporate form in
the business \\'Orld.
RESULTS •
In North and East Arizona,
1~·here nine hospitals ranging
from 14 lo 724 beds have been
merged into the Samaritan
Health Service. the movement
is u·ell beyond t h e ex-
perimental stage and some
results already are in.
Stephen Morris. president of
the 'Phoenix based service and
president elecl of th c
American Hospital Associa·
Lion, reports "the n1ergers. i
\l'i\hou t exception, h a 11 e
!it rcngthened the fioancial1
base of the merge institution.I
particularly with regard to
capital lunds."
He lisls five aspects or such
accomplishments:
l. A greater capacity to at-
tract high quality manage-
ment expertise. "A single
hospital. I th ink, does not have
the financial ability to pull in
thr data processing people, the
sysle1n analysts, the cos!
analysts.'"
2. The capacity to organize
and plan on a regional basis.
The tiny hospital at Grand
~anyon, for example. now has
the use of the_9pertise <UJ.d
facilities of the huge Good
Samaritan Hospital in
Phoenix.
:l. The capacity lo beller
utilize medical a n d pro-
fessional talent
4_ The capacity to oHer
economies of scale, such as in
lhe operation of data proc-
ci:sing e<1u1pn1en\. laundries.
purchasing ... \\It saved $90.000
in insurance premiums la st
year through centralization."
5. The capacity to provide a
eomplete range of health
services. The goal is "one
organization tbat can produce
a total package rather than
requiring the patient to go lo
four or five different organiza.
tions to get his health care
program piecemeal.'' I
T\\'0-VEl\R STUDY
And 11·hi!e slilt a1vaiting
rr;;ults of a two year study of1
<'0$IS. !\1orris already can
report a slo1ver increase in 1
costs than the n a l ion a I
:iverage of hospitals. In 1969,
San1aritan·s hills rose 8 per-
cent compared 11·ith a national
aver11ge of 12 ; last year the
percentages \\"ere 9 and 15.
"Our aim," said Morris in
an interview, "is to show that
medical services can be pro-I
vided in a voluntary way and
by the private sector instead
-Of u·aiting. for the government
to take over."
This is a real fear among
hospital-administrators. "As
we failed to recognize the
needs of people over 65 we get
Medicare," said Morris. "I
lhink wt didn't respond quick·
Jy enough and so the govern·
ment had to do it. The sttme
thing can happen to the whole
field or medlcint if we don't
provide the ways a nd means."
ONE PART
The corporate management
form is only one part of the
solution, Morris b e I i e v e s .
Rigid thinking must be routed
and imaginative, creative at-
titudes must be encouraged.
The insurance industry. for
example. still writes policies
t.hal -Often require the patient
lo ht hospitalized before pay.
ment. thu., encouraging pa-
tienU who eould be treated 85
1mbul1torles to take to a bed
instead.
Altitudes of p11tlenls ind
many physicians also may
have to change becall.!le there
is widespread belief, based
partially ln humane con-
siderations, that C?ncourage the
use nr the most costly t'mpita\
• faci\ilits when home C'are
Jnigbt be a!I effective.
"We're going to have to
deve lop a program to keep
people out or the acute cen·
ters," Morris bcUeve1. "There
will have lo ~ "' greater
emphasis nn J)n!veatlon and
-0ut patient care."
. " • ' .. . . -
THE NEEDLE
IS MIGHTIER THAN THE PEN
And the man who
knows just li ow to turn
the phrast to get tht
most -0ut of tht barb is
DAILY PILOT co,umn-
ist Sydney HatTi.3. He
ha! been called the
modern • da11 Ht n r v
Mtnckt n, If you're
ready for his ILS t of the
acid adjecti v t and
t hou g Ii t • provoking
prose to give you the 1·
t1eed!e , •. if you want
to find something to
think about in w'1at you
read ••• if ;oou have a
sense of humor, 11ou
b e L o n g with readers
1vho delight ;n telling
other! what "S¢ said"
i"n. one of the notion's
most • Quoted columns.
Some Sample Barbs
Recently Thrown
By Sydney Harris:
"One of the highe1t paid jobs in Am•ric•
consists of standing up in front of a mic-
rophon~. Hpa rating the good reeords
from th• bad ones -and pl1y1n9 the
bad on•s."
"!l's sad but true that while alcoholica
a re the best argument for abstinence, !O
many abstainers are equally effective ar-
eument for a littJ.e drink no\v and the n."
"Moat of the so·called 'incompatibility• in
m1 rriag• springs from the fact th1t to
most men, sex is an act; whil• to atll
women, it is an emotion. And this diff•r~
enc• in attit ude can be bridged only by
lov•."
"111e sole difference bet\l.·een a 'dedicr
led crusader' and a 'nosy reformer' con-
sists ln our agrcemeut or disagreement
with his objectives."
"The most explosive combin•tion in the
world consi•ts of sincerity add•d to
lgnoranc•."
"\Vhenever 1 am the recipient of an ex-
cessively hearty handshake, I suspeC't
l\~r. ?.Iuscles is trying to sell something,
hide 60mething, or prove something."
Check The Editorial Page .
For This Signature
Help You Find The
Latest Quotables Created By
'The Needler" For His Col-
A Regular Feature of ·
It'll
umn,
the
DAILY PILOT
Your HolJMltown Dilly New1p1p•r
I
'
r. ,.
' '
,.
'
. '
..
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Buy The DAILY PILOT For Peanus
Here's
0 . c .
~
here'• 'li(e'1 hent'a
SCHROEDER ••• and
last but not least ,
here'•
SNOOPY
CH,t..RLIE BROWN .,, •nd lUCY ••• and j\.INUS ••• and
Phone 642-43?1 (Circulation Departme11t) to have the
whole p"°nts gang come and visit you dally.
I
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"
'
• -
-· . --... -·-·.....----··~. -................... -.. ·-·-.... . '"'•'r! . . • ;.I'"' :
J4 DAILY PILOT Monday, June 7, 1971
FMUL¥ CIRCVS \ 1>11 Bil Kea...,
"What 11 iked best about school this yeor wcs the
teachers' stri ke .•
I
Sear~hers Busy
Team Hunts Lost, lrijured
SAN BERNARDINO (AP)
-A group of 110 volunteers
has given a lot of lime and
energy to make S a n
Bernardino County safer for
the lost tenderfoot or injured
traveler.
These volunteers, operating
as seven search and rescue
units, respond to calls for help
from downed aircraft, lost
bikers and motorists who fall
to negotiate t re a cherous
mountain roads.
"Lost and injured people,"
aaid Sgt. Ollie Gray, who co-
ordinates the teams for Sheriff
Frank Bland. "That's about
the only way you could sum it
up."
The search and rescue team
m ember's job is a big one. San
Bernardino Cou nty with its
21,000 square miles is the na·
lion's largest. Its terrain
varies from scorching desert
to snow-capped mountains.
With metropolitan Los
Angeles 70 miles w e s t ,
travelers and hikers oft.en
become lost and injured.
During 1!110, the teams of
Dlen answered 39 calls in-
volving 57 victims. T b e
volunteers trained 2,244 llours
and apent 2,892 more on the
job.
"These people respond
regardless of the hour of the
day or night or the day of the
week or anything else," Gray
said. "We've worked every
New Year's Day for the last
three years and many a
Olristmas.''
Because of the varied tcr·
rain, Gray said, it lakes a
year to train a volunteer.
'"He has to be proficient in
rope management, rock climb-
ing. rappelling, helicopter
techniques and general moun-
taineering," Gray said. "You
have a year before he
becomes an a ll·around ef-
fective individual for you."
The work is unpredictable,
Gray said. On the last call -
to ald an injured hiker .in the
San Gabriel Mountains -two
men were dropped into the
area by helicopter. After an
initial search to pinpoint the
area, two teams began climb-
ing. On the fourth day, as the
teams approached the spot
where they believed the in·
jured hiker to be, the victim
walke d out on his owo.
He told the searchers he
heard the helicopter the fi rst
day and. when help failed to
arrive, decided to come ouL
So1tth Africa Notes
Decade as Republic
By PHIL NEWSOM
Ul"I !"°"'Ito" H9WI A"•IYll
"We are of Africa,''
declared Prime Minister John
Vorster 0£ the Republic of
South Africa, "and we are
prepared Lo make our con·
tribution to the development of
Africa according t.o our abili·
ty."
The occasion was Soulh
Africa's observance of its loth
anniversary as a republic.
On May 31, 1961, in bit·
terness and anger, Soulh
A!rica had broken with lhe
common wealth of nations and
established itself as a republic
committed to apartheid. con-
demned by new black African
nations and by most of the
world as a blatant example of
the theory of w h i t e
supremacy.
In the following 10 years,
South Africa su rvived
economic boycott and, in the
la.rt year especially, won
positive gains for the Vorster
policy of "Verllgt.e" which
calls for working toward
friendly relations with black
nations and preaching to
others the validity and merits
ol apartheid.
Opposing t1'e Vorster policy
within bJ.s own nationalist par·
ty are the "Verkramptes"
(literally the cramped ones)
who favor strict isolationism.
Both major South African
parties, Nationalist.I a n d
United, favor racial segrega. "U.X. but the United Party to a
leolerdeiree. · In recent months support fOr
Vorster had come from a ·llD"Jll'isinl Dlf'Cf-Jt was from
President Felix Houphouct-
Boigny of the Ivory Coast, one
of the most prosperous or the
Black African na tions.
Sald Houphouel-Boigny:
"The revolting system
apartheid outrages us all .•.
(but) it will not be eradicated
by force."
Of lhe white men who rule
South Africa, he said:
"We must help them to con-
sider themselves first as
Africans regardless of color.
The future of the continent.
our joint patrin1ony, is al
stake."
Between Vorster's and
Houphouet-Boigny's word s
there was a remarkable
similarity, and upon lhl' Ivory
Coast president it brought
do.v:n the expected abuse from
more militant Af rican leaders
such as Sekou Tou re, presi-
dent of nearby Guinl'a.
It made the Ivory Coast the
first black African n;it ion not
econorilically dependent upon
Sooth Africa to accept the
theory of dialogue over force.
There has not yet been time
lo assess fully the effect or the
Ivory Coast action.
Ghana has accepted lhe idea
or a diag loue \\'ith South
Africa in principle and the
South Africans arc known to
have been in contact wilh
others among Africa's more
conservative leadership.
Mal awi was the first black
African state to establish
diplomatic ties with South
Africa.
Swaziland, Botswana and
Lesotho, all within South
A£rica's economic s p h c re ,
have custom agree m c nl s
which could lead to diplomaLlc
relations.
Against its critics, South
Africa has moved lo the of·
fenslve. To United Nations
demands that it give up
j urisdiction over the territory
of Sou~West Africa It has
replied with an offer to let the
people decide by a plebiscite
under U. N. supervision.
And <l~ite U. N. con·
demnation. its tradtl with
Western nation:; is increasing.
HURRY! SALE PRICES · HONORED TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY ONLY!
.5/a '' Dia. Nylon· Reinforce~
GARDEN
HOSE
jA "x50' nylo n reinforced hose -
guoran!eed fo r 5 years, Rtilt proof
brass couplingt.
WOW!
REG. 56.29
SAVE st.30
$499
TUES. & WED. ONLY
FAUCET MOUNT
HOSE
REEL
f )W lhrougfi reel keep$ your hose nea t,
o~· of the. woy & reody for use.
Holds IJ,, to
151 ft. of Yi" ho!'.e.
RIG, $7.49
I
\ -
SAFETY
STEP
LA·DDER
COM PACT-DURABLE-LIGHTWEIGHT
Main lenonce.free o!uminum fram e -
folds for .eo~y carrying or storage. Ri.,..
et.ed construction-slip proof 3" wide
bottom slep & 6" wide top slep for
comfort & safety. Non-mar plastic feet
-solely gua rd roil.
REG. $8.99
NOW
ONLY!
SAVE $3.00!
DOOR '
MIRROR
SALE!
Get 1he full pic-
ture in !his 14"x
50" door mirror.
full thick ness
wood frame -
crysta l clear
glass.
Your choice
of walnut or
maple finish.
TUES. &. WED, ONLY
CHROMC
PLATED
GRIDS
,AOJUSTABlE
FIRE PAN
FANTASTIC'BUY!
World Famous
TEXACO
MOTOR
OIL
High grade, heovy duty motor oil protects
·against wear and corrosion--keeps your car
running better. Choice of SAE 20, 30 ar 40
weight.
REG. 3Qc
"TUES. & WED. ONLY
SAVE OVER 25°/of
Limit 12 Cans Per Customer
15 PIECE
CUTLERY
SET
All lhe kitc hen help you'll ever need!
Includes-8 sleok l nive s, 2 pc. corv.
ing set ond 5 pc. kitcheri utens il ser.
All hove wooden hand/et and o re
niade of stainless steel. Knives hove
ever-sharp serrated edges.
SAVE $1 ,00
REG.
54.99
TUES,& WtD.ONLY
fUll
WINDOW
IN HOO D
U.l.
LISTED
MOTOR
REG.
536,99
SPECIAL BUY
MOK ER
WAGON
Delux e wago n with enclosed base
cabinet to sto re BBQ .supplies, Hood
assembly tilts bock for eosy cooking
and cleaning. Rotisserie spit and U.l .
listed motor with on/o ff switch. Fire
pan adjusts to 8 height s and is remov-
able for easy cleaning . Up-to.dote
lime frost color with GTO green door.
DON'T MISS OUT ON
THIS FANTASTIC BARGAIN!
s2717
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SAVE OVER s9.00!
'
DAILY PILOT H.
Life of Triumph, Tragedy Ends for Steinmark
HOUSTON (AP) -Fred<lle Sleinmark,
Ult plucky football player from the
University of Te113 who refused to give
up~ after betilg struck by cancer, died
Hue late Sunday night with a recurrence
()f' the disease.
Death came 17 months after Stein-
mark's left leg had been removed in an
ellort· lo stop the disease.
He had re-entered M. D. Anderson
Hospital and Tumor Institute -where
tb'e original operation was performed -
Api'il 2".
Fot the defensive star of the
Longhorns, • December 11169 hdd both
triumph and tragedy.
On Dec. 6, President ·Ni.zon w11:1 among
the fans in-li'ayetteviue: Ark. as the
LA;>nghorna made a fantastic rally to whip
Arkansas IS-14 11nd gain the national foot-
ball championJbip.
But Dec. 12, Anderson surgeons am-
putated Steinmark's left leg tfler
discovering a bone tumor in his th igh.
His remarkable recovery al first
surprised even lbt medical experts. Just
211 days alter the operation, Jan. I, 1970,
he saw his Longtiorn teammates defeat
Ncire Dame in the C.OUOn Bowl, 20-17.
He returned to AU3Un and continued bis
studies and last season served as an
a&!ist.Ant coach ·for the Longhorns and
also scouted.
He made marriage ~Jans but the: an-
nounced marriage date came several
weeks ago with Steinmark:.in the hospital
11nd gr·avely IU. He had been listed in
critical condition since he waf admitted
and sources said !hen il was onJy a
matt.er or time.
Steinmark had been a two-year starter
for the Longhorns, altbOugb he was only
Uf'I T....,_ft
S.10 aOO weighed but 1'8 iwnds. Coach
Darrell Royal said many Umes, "Stein-
mark wu all heart.'' '
Royal, athletic director at the Universi-
ty of Texu, said he had been in almost
constant touch with doctors about Steln-
mark's condition.
"It is really a sad thing ," he said. "It
was expected and ·still we were not quite
rudy for it. He was a courageous young
man. He made quite an Impression on
this campus and the men that fallow him
will feel it for years lo come."
He playtd virtu.aUy ·all of the Arltansas
game and .waa congratulated by Prtal-
dent Nllon. ~. -·~
He had-first j»IDJllaitied about soreneM
In bb left thlilr in Texu' fall practices.
But once the season was under way, he
forgot about his ailments and glay~ the
kind of football that brought Texa1 an un-
beaten record.
After U'le Arkansas game, he told team
doclDrs about the discomfort and they
ordered x·rays. ThL x·rays discl01ed lhe
tumor~
Doctors at ~rson said the malignan--
cy -called bone sarcoma -originates
tn the bone ltstlf. They said bone
sarcoma gives no evidence of IL!
presence until it either grows outside the
shaft of the bone, forming a bulge, or
causes pain from pressure.
They said there was no evidence: foot.-
ball playing had anything to do with the
tumor.
No funeral arrangemenls have been a"'"
nounced.
Futui;es of Lefty, Alex
Remain
By ROGER CARLSON
01 11M D1lty 1"1'9t i!l lf
California's slightly tar.nished Angels
returned lo Anaheim Sunday evening to
await the arrival of the New York
Yankees Tuesday -the beginning ol a
period which will see the Angels go to the
plate on 34 consecutive dates (including
three doublehe&ders).
It follows an eventful II-game road
trip, a span that began in Oak.land where
Charlie Finley is finding it difficult to
give th ings away.
It ended in baseball-mad Boston where
the Halos salvaged the trip by knocking
off the Red Sox twice: behind the
superlative pitching of Tom Mur phy 13·1
5aturday) and the combo of Clyde
Wright-Da ve LaRoche 15-2 Sunday ).
A~ a result . manager Harold "Lefty"
Phillips' crew won five, lost six away
from home.
Under Cloud
The 1970 American League balling
champion bea:an the sojourn on the bench
-got• back In the lineup after an ap-
parent agreement with Phillips in
Oakland -then !oared his way back to
the bem:h in Boston.
Approached over the weekend the con-
troversial riddler .said, "I'm too smsrt to
be playing -you figi.1re it out.
"I'll lei you lloow how I am on the
15th," he said In referring to the waiver
deadline regarding trades.
PhiUip!' futu re remains in the airwith
a total absence of comment from general
manager Dick 'Yaish since tl\e oul!et.
The Angels' GM was in New York Sun-
day in preparation of today 'S< f~ee agent
draft meeting. He was, ho we v er ,
unavailable to all, including Phill ips.
"He's incognito," surmised Phillips,
who has had no commUnication with
Walsh si nce Oakland a dozen days ago.
In assessing the recen t venture Phillips
said, "Sometimes It takes a day or two
before a team reacts."
This was in reference to the AnRels'
nifty two-game performance following
Friday's dismal 10-1 loss when Johnson
was pul down by the Cherub skipper.
"These two ball games have been the
best we've put to.ether ba ck-lo-back this
season . The pitching, the fielding,
everything," he said.
And he credited the inspired play of
Fregosi fi;ir a major share of the
turnMound.
"Jim's the one guy that really hurts me
when he's not playing . He'.s Lhe difference.
... he knows what I want done and be
takes charge," said the Halo skipper.
Fregosi's appearance in the starting
li~up marked the sixth straight slarting
assignment after a foot Injury sidelined
him since late April.
He led the Angels wiih a home run and
single Sunday and showed his llilyle of
midseason form in the fielding depart4
ment.
THE ANGELS' SANDY ALOMAR STEALS SECOND DESPITE ACROBATICS BY BOSTON'S DOUG GRIFFIN.
But the major focal poinl of the IJ.day
journey was the continuing and perplex·
Ing question of the managing status of
Ptli.llips and the playing future of Alex
Johnson.
Should Phillips be axed by Wal sh,
replacement possibilities have ranged
from Warren Spahn to Jim Fregosi to
Rocky Bridges. The Angel boss called the Boston series
significant and said "This got us started.
When we came in they (the Red Sox)
we re first in the East.
Bike Trip for Champ
Excitement Too Much:
Tar Coach Blows Cool
If you have any doubt as lo the ex-
citement coach Jim Hemsley was ex-
peiiencl.ng after hi! Newport Harbor
High shot put duo of Mark ~vens and
Terry Albritton place 1-1 in Saturday 's
state prep track meet at U LA , get a
Joad of this:
Hemsley first dropped his camera,
which is supposed to have a lens slightly
more valuable than the crown jewels of
Erfgland. Then he was frantically
1earching ror his program.
He finally found it -clutched in his
hand.
And excited he surely deserved to be.
His lads had peaked al the right moment.
Stevens improved 91h feet from 1970 and
his Saturday efford of 67-21• stands as a
state meet record and the best throw in
the United States this year.
Albritton's 65-fl at the state meet is an
improvement of 11 feet over last i;eason
and is a v.·orld rerord for a 16-ycar-old.
Also, Ne"·port Harbor finished third in
team standings -a fantastic thing con-
sidering the Tars had nOl won a daul
meet this year.
Stevens v.·ill get dov•n to selecting a
Canonero II
Sale Deni ed
NEW YORK (AP) -Pass Catcher is
the Belmont Stakes winner but the ta1k of
the thoroughbred racing world stUJ ls
canooero II, and the talking that counls
U that of atlorneys and aocountant.!I.
The KV!lucky-bredo~rid< of Venauela.
ll'lme Triple Q-own bid ended with a
fourU.:.plaet finitb in S.turday's Belmont,
'lfiU almost certalnly be sold -in ract,
there have been reports he has been llOld
but ~ have beeo denied by owne.r
P>.dro Bap\\sJ.o.
"He wHI be sold •ft.er the Belmont, win
or )<>Bt, if tfly terms are mel," the
Venezuelin·ll'Kh.tstrlalist aa'id a few days
bdore 'll\""8'.imont.
And <SesPlie ~ro lf'.s defeat ·and
C()ntinued questioning af hls fitness, it ap-
ptired Sunday that many pe0J)le are ln-
te~sl.ed ln meeting Bapt.ista11 terms.
"We already have hid sh: telephone
cells after the rice: from people con-
flrf"!lng ·that they still want to buy eanC.W:O 11," V1ct&r Sclalom, a clo5e
~. -pt111'WM11Lln-o'liDl:IShip Of other
bc:ints and spOkemlen for Blptl!ll, said
Slitotday.
·;.. 1for reports that a ~deal had been
made. "BapUsta denied Siturday befure
thl!"fl'lct that,...,. t million,. '-Y'"' teasing
deal h11d been made with a Florlda group
and Sclelom denied Sunday that lhe colt
had been S4lld ID 11nolher Florida group
for leSlJ than '2 million. _
Seia!Um al80 said 11n offer had been
rectlved from iJa Rlnaconda, the race
kack tn C.racas. '
university ror continuance or his tduca~
lion. And Albritton can go after the 70-
foot b11Tier nexl year since-he's a junior.
In fact. if he hadn't been put ahead a
grade earlier in his schooling he would
be a sophomore thi s year.
ZOWIE! Al that rate h~ might have
been the world's first prep over 80 feet
, someday.
This kid is so strong he can probably
put the 15-pound (college weight) M or 5S
feet -another world best for his age
' •Ll:NM WHIT•
---WH I TE
WASH ·-------
level. He shoved the 16 over 50 feet as 11
sophomore.
Albritton is also a super fine football
player and it took some man-to-man
talking by his track coaches lo get him in
the proper frame of mind for track.
Sul once an understanding was reached
he went to work and despite some trying
pe.r~nal problems he got his mind focus·
ed on the shot put.
Hemsley no longer had to coax him to
practice for more than lfl throws a day.
He went out on his own and threw 40
times daily.
Stevens. meanwhile, went with a tough
weight program and built , his muscles
from being able to bench ~ ~
pound~ in Sept~mber to the point where
he can press 340 now.
He's had offers from USC, Colorado.
Kansas, Washingto,n. Washington St.ate,
Cal and San J!>se State. Newport , bead
coach Bob Hailey !eels Stevens can .aet
out to arlound 65. f~ with ~ CX1llege shot
before hjs uhiversity carter ends# ,
And if Mark goes ' to cal, .ht:'.11 have
former shot put-ace DaYt" Maggi.I d to
coach him. Alto, be knew?; M11g1nl · •t
Los Altos High before. lJte ~,.-f,4rnli,.1
moved to Orance Cowlty Uhe year• •-
However, Stevens may go el!JeWhe~.
Kansas has produced · trtmendoair .mot
putle.n -like Bill Nieder, .Ka!;l!-Salb,
Steve Wilhelm.-etc .. Aftd. KU had ;I .
reasonably good discus thrower--·-•cbap
named Al Oerlet who has won the Olym-
pie! four U~es·runnlnf.
Of ocourae OtrUr . .xi Nieder came
Under otl><r K.,_.Al!lmes.
.By Jbe W.IY ~,Jiil lf)elld·moot.ol
tho -<blc,cDnc ·'"" the ....... hoplf~~:'"' c-1 •. lh'•·~ •llh . _...,._ SchalU..
He.'U1 IUJ'e!y ~e pll!llty of pJeaaant
memories to occupy his thoughts wblle
pedaling,
And one of them may be how the !lite
meet exploits of be and Albritton shook
up Hemsley.
It was a memorable octaslon and they
delerve a lot of recognition f('lr the no-
toriety they brought to the area.
·-. . ~ 1r'i ... ..
'· ... , •\ .,,
l ' ., --·
' Indy-Milwaukee Winner Gets Reward
AJ Unser of Albuquerque get.oi a big kiss from hi s
mother, Mrs. Mary Unser:, after winning the 150-
mile Rex Mays Classic Sunday·. at Wisconsin S.tate
Fair park. Unser won $17;4~5 in same car that won
a week earlier at Indy. Jot! Leonard was second fol-
lowed by Billy Vukovich, Wally Dallenbach, Art Pol -
lard, Johnny Rutherford and Lloyd Ruby.
Kodes Captures
French Classic
Tough, Little Man .Wins
PARIS (AP) -The French Open ten·
nls clf1mpionshi~ ended on a fll'Diliar
-Dickinson Tops Nicklaus
nott ~Sunday with •n East European ATLANTA (AP) -"He·a a touah. IitUe
Champiin .. in the. men's .singles, alid 'an men," Jack Nicklaus s1id after he had
Australian tops asnoni tbe women. bdWed to wiry, cbai~rmoklng veteran
Gar.doer , Dlckinson in a audden death
The defending chaihgion, JaniKOOhtof playoff for-' the $25.000 lln!it priu in the
Czecbo,1ovak14, won the ;men's ;crown .Atlanta GoU ,Classic.
from Ille NqlUe of Romania in•a• four-Each fired reiulation .70'• Sunday,
·set matcb. tying for the lop spot an·er the 72 boles
Since the French cbampivu!lhip1 were with nine-under-par scores of 27S.
F Dickinson, a onetirile Ben Hogan pro-
ope.ned to foreigners tn l9'2$, . rink. • t.eae. who effectl • •bite Cap and many
Parker of tk United ·Staief .. _ Jaroi]•: of1J~'1 mannerisma, e_se.aptd with hi~
Drobny of Czechoolovakil, "Tony'~ . ..,,th UU. In 20 yuro oo the pro tour
of the United SlJ!es 1Dd "N~· Sunday when Nicklaus U!ree-putted the
P~anctJ.i. olsJtalJ_hlve, "°'1"'two 1con..I f!ftt ~tr' holt -f~. a bocey. "J was !~.
at<;U(lve uuea, but.no one h11 ,v1 '!'"~ pr<ttrsoci<! "'"""· lifil 1'11\lt pt •••Y.
It three. ' • =::~~·U:C::~ :.,.~t feattd
Evonne Goolaaong,-1 l t ~ y·e·air ···o.J.d "I thrtt-putted Ont of Jfle last seven
Australian wbo 11ttm1 1headed·fOr JeMlJ greens 'in lbe ·loumey 1nd•th1l'1 the dif-
greatness, won the women 's tingles nnal
over Helen Gourlay of A'.:stralla.
The only American championship w•s
picked up by Arthur A.'ll'le and Martin
Rleuen, who won the men'1 doubles.fl'Otn
Stan SmlUr and Tom Gorman.
• •
ference."
Dickinson, 1t 43 one or Qie oldes~ men
In tlle field, had to fight the strength-sap-
ping heat and leg-testing hills of the B.as:J.
1yard per 72 Atlanta Country Club courae,
•loo J.llked •hout putting.
..I've.been on the: verge of playing well
tor quite some time ," the 11Um. 135--
pounder uid. "J've !lrially got aroµnd lhe
putting eome. And that'11 a lot of preasure
off" your long game.
"Why, I alao three-putted f"~ Umea ell
week and that's way abe.ad of t.be·game
for me. •
"It's a peculiar thing, just.puUinS." be
continued. "It looks so eaay. You aree· 111-
tle kids and older ladles knoc,klng Jt in
from everywhere. Then you aee a pro
who can't make a , abort one and you
wondu.
, ...... ,,._...,,
CILl,OllltlA I OSTOM
•••ll••l ••rllrl>I "'~mar. 71> • O o I C.rilll~, 11> • O I O llfPO!,lt SOOOll!tmll~.d ll l O
Fr-I, u • 1 1 I Va11riem•WI. I! • 0 I 0
McMullen, .)ti l o ! o PelrD<•lll, lll J o I 1
Spw>cer, lb • o I 1 !tent•, lb • O O !I
T.Conloll1ro, rl 1 t o o 8.Conlohara. ct • 1 1 O
C.0..UI••• II l I l 0 A1>1rl<~. u • 0 0 I ~·""'_...,· c 1 0 0 0 JD\~..,,.. c J 0 , '
""°""·c 1ooos1-1.a i100
llffry,ct JllO LN ,p 0010
Wrkl~!, p l 0 1 I Po~lt!lc~, plo 1 I 0 0
Ullod11. ~ I I I I Bolin, 11 II t I t
"''""·• 0011 Lyle, 11 o o t I
Toi•!• C•lllOl'nl•
Tol•I• J:tJ11
100 100 :Jill -J
··~ 000 001 100 -2
-2:lt. •ttllrld•rte• -71.Ul.
Alston Pardons
Allen Absence
As LA Wins
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -The gam!' was
all set to start SU11day and the Los
Angeles Dodgers had taken the fi eld. But
Richie Allen. the leftfielder, couldn't be
fou nd.
So, at the last possible second,
manager Walter Alston sent Bill Russell
into teflfiel d.
All Russell did was triple, double,
single, bat in a run and score another a•
the Dodgers tripped the New York Met~
4-3, before 48,227 Dodger Stadium fans on
Oldtimers Day.
Allen was the leftfielder on the lineup
card Alston presented to the umpires
prior ID the st.art of the game. So Richie
had to take the rest of the day oft when
he didn 't make it by game time.
"It was not intentional," Alston said
aft.erward. "There was a Jot of confusion
because of the oldtimers game . Rich said
he was in a hallway by the clubhousl!I
talking ID a friend and didn't realize our
game was starting.
"It looked a lot worse than what It
really was, J guess. But it wa1
unavoidable."
The manager preferred to discusa
Russell 's big day which enabled lhe
Dodgers to climb within eight games of
the San Francisco Giants. the close!t
they've been ID the lead in the National
League. West in a month.
"How about my choice for Rich's
replacement," Alston said with a grin.
"He didn 't do a bad job, did he?"
The Dodgen thUJ closed out a highly
successful 1-t homestand, their best or
the aeason, u they beaded out on a rune.
game road trip ID Philadelphia, Montreal
and New York. Bill Singer will 11tar.&'
against the Phillies' Chris Shor.t In the
opening game of the eerlea Tuesday
night.
Russell 's triple In the fifth lrinlng tum-
ed out to be the winning run as the Mets
threatened In the ninth , •coring one run ..
1'hey fell short when pinch hitter Jerr"f
Grote lined Jnto a game-endlnC
doubleplay. '•
l'llW VO•IC LOS ANO•Lll .
•I r -1111 Mallfll, d 4 I I I Wlllt. •I
~ft •t I I Mlt1, rf
"-• rt J I I I W.0.¥h, ol
Cl--, lb ••I I I "..All .... ti'
AIJll-te. a J t 1 0 lhn1el!, If S..-. II"' I I I I W,l'l ... ff, 1~ SlnO~. If J 0 I I Lt'lto•r1, 111
Oyw, < • I I I Jud1lfl•. c Fell, fll ~ I I I Hiller, c IC_,..."' p 1 I I O G1rvty, .Jll
Mtrt~lll, P"I t I I 0 OowrllnQ, '
lt,Ttyltl", ' I I 0 I ar.w, ' Wtlt,P"I 1 111 M(0•1 .. , 11 I I I 0
... tlllrtiil
• • l • : ; ~ ·1 •••• ~ : : ·t
J I I f ' .. . l .... .
l 0 0 I
1 O l I
• 0 ••
Groft. ptl I • I I 111'~ fl l f .i T11!1k ,., 1 I 4
Nt .. 'f'Ol1I 000 100 !*1 -J
La. ""tel" 000 110 llO:o: -I e -Glrww. Cltncltnorl lrt-. o~ -HI'# Sevt -8rt'IW9r. W,. -bowi11"1. f l,,.. -2:11, """•nc:• -... 111.
\
. '
1
. .
• -.• •• • 'r ...... ~ ,._ ,•' "
H DAILY PILOT MoncUy, Junt 7, 1971
Newport Duo · --
1-2 • Ill State
Spike Classic '
By PIUL ROSS
Ol ""' 0.11, ~'"-' 11•11 LOS ANGELES -l\lark
Stevens niust be sitting on top
of the world today as hf:
prepares for Saturday's Al!-
American High School Track
and Field championships in
Hinsdale, Ill.
The senior from r-<ewporl
Harbor lligh shucked off any
problems he has been elt-
perlencing lrom mus c I e
spasms in hi:i; right h.1nd. And
he lei ll all out Saturday as he
captured the stale shot put
crown with 1 meel record
heave of 67-2 1 ~ in the 11lat e
prep track and field rinals at
UCLA.
His gargantuan e ff o r t
overshadov.·ed a nearly-as-im-
pressive feat by junior te&n]·
mate Terry Albritton, lhe run-
nerup in the same event with
a cereer best of 65-5.
Thw tht muscular tv;Mome
paced Newport Harbor High to
a third place finish in the 53rd
running <>f the , California
ch ampi on s hip s as LA
Hamilton topped the field with
13 poin~ and Lompoc was .se-
cond with 11 .
Newport was a 'A'hisker
behind with 10.
Asked aft.erwards if his
father's recent volunteering to
assume Mark's next car in-
&urance. payment was his big-
gest incentive. the &-J. 21~
Pounder replied, "No, my in-
centive was ·• as he
poinlr:d a!!uredly I o w a r d
Albritton .
5tl!vens added, ''I was very
disappointed to have l<Mll to
him (A.lbr!Uon) in the CIF
finals ."
This pl'tlmpted Albr itton to
• ~-
l320 \lictor
Mission Viejo ll I g b
junior Ed Radermacher
captured the exhibition
1320 Saturday at the
state meet. l{e toured
!he UCl~A oval in a
~:05 .9 lifetime best.
Check Out
This List .. -· 0£ Losers • .
1-0S ANGELES -Turn in
~ btst overall performance
et your life and go home
aftt"'ards with only con-
stlaUon.·
&ch is the cast for the 15
sbtb-place finisbert each June
irJ. the California state prep
t1'ict and Held final s.
1f.ere i11 the complete list or
n6&scoring s ixlh -place
tifiahers in the state finals:
100 -l .t, Sam Burns \El
~Ito). '2o -21 .5. Vince Brown
<ftllll>urS)-a. -47.3, Greg Jones
(tron-e).
• -1'!12.7, Nici< Ro"
(()Jrona del Mar!. f.fne -4:15.7, Larry Lawson
( Jl.dlands l-Twt mil~ t :03 .6.
W,tliaDI Schmulewlcz ILln-
coln. SI').
... IOI -14.2"'. \\'lllit
H¥f1Uton (Rit hmond l.
dO LU -. tl.i~·. Todd
Gordtmlr (CleodoraJ.
1411 ttll1 -IU, Edilon,
Sl«kloo.
Mile relay -J : 1 I . I •
Crtn&bd ILA).
Hieb Jump -H . Gre1
Gdnucb (Cuti< Pork. SD).
Lon1 jump -23-6, Mark
Oqhorn iBerktleyl.
Po\f: Vault -I~. Tom
lfmddllfl'I tlloover. Presno).
Shol l'llt -llM, Jim Godsey
(Md\all<y•lllo ). o--1n.i. Ron Bouch
•~IOGld><, Port<rvilltJ.
insert, "l was equally as
disappo intttl to Jo.st lo
today."
Al any rate, Stl'vens' mark
puts hi m atop the all-time
Orange County shot I is t
(ahead of Sunny Hills' Dave
1-lurphy 'A'ho 14'ent 67-1 in 1966)
and betlr:rs the old slate
meet rerord or 66-11 by Long
Beach Poly's John Hubbell in
'66.
An d Stevt>ns also assumed •1
the role all the best prr:p shot-'
putter in the nation this sr:ason ~~
as his toss at UCLA vaulted
him past Greg Cortina (ti7-0J t::
of Hun School in Prioceton, f
N.J. llopefully, Stevens v.·ill
meet Cortina Saturday in
Illinois.
The Tar senior's great
Saturday series of puts went
like this : 62-81~. 66-tl'/4 • 67-21/,,
64-511,. 64-1. foul and 64-6.
Junior Albritton. who
figures 70 feel i11 a rell!onable 'a
go1l next spring, also only had
one fo ul put in his seritll with
hls second be.st effort measur-
ing 64-~~.
Nick Rose of C.Orona del
~far got boxed in too much in
lht 880 and lr:ll .shOrt of earn-
ing a medal.
STATE MEET ELITE p . DAILY I'll.OT Sl•'.f l'IMtot . . -oint·winners in t he 53rd annual state high school
Howe\•er. he did manage
sixth place with a lifetime best or 1 :52.7.
Garden Grove ·s T o n y
Krzyzosiak SC()red a come·
from -behind victory and miss·
eel by one·tenth or a second of
equaling I.he meet 440 stan·
dard in 46.7.
Santa Ana junior Bob Har-
re.U was fifth in a career best
47.J clocking.
Tony K also placed third in
the long jump al 23-Il'i4 with
Fresno Edison's Randy
\Villiams being deprived of a
nwt record ther"e as a 5.9
mph aiding wind was recorded
on hill ~~:4 .leap.
Fourth in lhe long jump
went to Loara'a Steve Baxter
at 23-10¥.z while Valencla's Ron
Mooers closed out the Orange
County scoring by s01ring 14-
10 for a like placement ln the
pole vault.
Dale Fleet ol San Diego
Clairemont ran to an 8:53.8
fastest-ever California prep
two mile triumph and also
claimed a meet record.
He was dogged by Upland's
Gordon Innes, whose runnerup
8:54.4 is the best ever in the
U.S. by a junior.
The third placf! finisher
I.A Wi\son·s: Jose Amaya
\\'as also timed in 8:54.4.
Casllemon l of 0 a k I and
lowered the rnttt mile relay
.standard lo 3:13.2 while Lorn·
poc's Charlie Jackson tied hl11
day-old record in the IW high
hurdl es with a windy 13.6
clocking.
A 7-l l~ bes t by Fosbury
floppe r Dwight Stones of Glen-
dale \\"as good enough to erase
the 7-0 \4 meel re co rd
est11blished lasl season bv
Oceanside's Jf.'rry Cu!p and
tied in friday·s prelims by
St.ones.
It wa!I also a nationa l in-
terscholastic standard by a
quMler of an inch.
track champ1o~sh1,ps shot pul mount the vi ctory stand at UCLA Saturday. New-
port Harbor Hi gh s classy duo placed 1-2 with Terry Albritton (left) second at
65:5 and Ata ~k. Stevens {top) the winner Y.'ith a meet record 67-2. Also seen are
t~1rd place f1n1.sher Ran~y ~ross (Crespi) and Larry David of Camarillo (fifth).
Cross and Albritton are Juniors. ~~~~~~~~~~~-!
State Spike
Summaries
100 -I. Rt<ld\ck (H1mll!o,,, LJi) t 1,
'· aomm1rl!o ICr•11moor, S&n 8rurw:>I
t .•1 J. Rurtln (Elo•n~<>w••· R l11Tol '-11
'· Tllom•• P·••mll!on. LJil ,.1; S.
.,_,, 41"111>1><.>•t l t.7.
no -I. Bomm•fi•o ICrts1moor, S1"
llrul>Cll 11.1; 7 l"Oml • 1H1mll!on L ")
21.l ; I. s<ml•<' lo c~t<~ al p.1>olos; •.
Sll1v•rs (Jill>•nv) 71.~, ~. J •ck..,,,
1c ... ,..,n111. Compto"l 11 ~-
...0 -l . I(""°''•~ CG•rdPn Grovp) •.1; 1. J""n'°" 11i.ir. P••1d1n•l ... 11
J. l•rtY fW1shln9tton, I.Ji) .. 11: •.
11.--n (l"llhburrl '1.J; '· Ht rr•ll
fS.nt• A,,.1 41.J.
MD -I. 1(1•llnt tMornln1uld•.
ln11tviooodl l ;ll I ; 1. !~o!t IE\ Corr"cl
1:,l.O: J. N1Jms cCrtnsllt.,., I.")
l :n .11 '-S•• to11 V•llt. Ccnco•<ll
1:11.7; 5. H..;nu n IGl1nd<H"1l l Sll.
Miia -I lubb CC:ltvt lt nd. Rtlt<lll
f :ot.11 2. Cummlnt• !A:lv/\1111, '•nit
M••lt ) 4:10.1; J. M1,.n111 IRttlof>dOI
4·11.1: 4. H1r<>1r IClt lrtmcn!, SOI
4.11.]; I. Nlchcl11 IRtedltV) 4:12.l .
l wo mil• -1. f lit! lClt lrt monl,
SOI l .Sl.I l 1l~tr mf•I lf<crd ); 1.
J nn •• !Uol •nd) 1 ,).1.i ; J.
1t.m•~· (Wlloon, Lit.) I ~· ., •. H•I•
CC•moollnac. Mor •v•l l ,!1.7; J. Mtn-
do11 cttallx, Lt M•-"'l t :OO.I.
llO HH -I. J t CIUOn (Lomooc)
lltw: 7. G~ulo flock~, LJil !J.l; l.
M~l1y (lll~trllltld/ l J.I , •.
81rth,,lcmrw !F remon!. Oa~l•nO) U .,;
'· Ch•t dlt (Qoo Pu1bl<11, Gol•!1 I U .1
110 Lli -I Mo1lrY f81Wu 1llrld)
11.!w; l . Jt<k1on tloml>O<l 11.S; ).
llle•tr.dH (HCIOv•r, f ft •nof 111: •.
li1mlllon (A:lc~mond) 11.6; '· MYor•
ll"lf<lmot!!l 11.1. ~ rel•Y -1. El C1rtllo •1 I !•ll lo
m H ! rrc<H"d); l . Frt mon! ILJil •1 ll J.
Crtfl"11W IU.1 •1.'; •.Si n Ol•t<> •1.11
.l. H•mlnon CL") It.I
Mii• rt llY -I . C1Sllt monl l \) 1
l ot1te mHl •f<<H"dl: 1 W 1ol
ll•~•rtfltta 3:U.t ; l. Oomlnourr
iCom1>t""I J 117; I Mc•nln91ld•
111'41........,j l .11 i ; S. W•onlnv!l!'"I (LJiJ
J 11 o.
HIDn lump -l . S!°""' lGl1ndtlt ) I·
1°1 (n t l i o"1 I ln!.,-1<;tiol•llk '""
• t. 'I mHI rKO<OI; J. Eldtrl
if rt1nol 1-9, J. l(ctln•• 4M<lllk1n.
L""I llo1chl t-9; ~ Mllltr i Plr•u~I
HUii 6-t ; !. B•rt~olom•W tFromon•,
O•kl1ndl • 1
L-lump -1, Wlllo•m1 !Edi"'"·
'"r•1no1 76·J.l.>w: J lh c ... " (L0"9 B••<~
Poi.I 1.S·t'•, J. 1(•1r101T1k (G1,a1n
Cirovt \ )l-11"'; I B••l•r llOor1! 1l-
IO'~: '· J1cko"" llompo<l JJ-6•~. Polo ~tull -I. Quin" (MOflroo. LA!
11·1: 7. WMl1 !Oarnlniuti. como1~n1
II.I; J . M1rtln 1c • ....,..., ~n JMt l H·
10; '· M-1 IV•iotnclt. l"lt<tfllll ) U•
(Stt Spike, Page Zf)
Sports 111 Brief
Rigby Stands Out
~fIAri.11 BEACH -Cathy
Rigby. a barefoot blonde from
Los Alamitos 11·00 all £our
events \\•ilh 15-yea r-old Kim
Chace right behind her f.'a<'h
tlnte Saturday as U.S. women
domina ted lhe World Cup
Gymnastics Championships.
Peter Rohner of Switzerland
was best all-around in the
men's competition. scoring
over 9.fl on each even t and
winning the horiwntal bar
competition.
Miss Rigby, 18, drew pro-
longed applause from 2,000
spectators and she swept the
all-around in women's co1n-
pelition.
Judges awarded her a near·
perfect 9.8 out of a possible
JO.O on the balance be.am.
Tired Champ
JACKSONVILLE , Fla.
British Amateur Ope n cham·
pion Steve J\te\nyk says he's
too "super saturated'' in golf
to take part in Tuesday·s S<'C-
lional qualifying round of the
U.S. 0Pf.'n.
l\1eln yk, a 2 ~-y e a r· o Id
Ja<'ksonville public rela tions
nian, returned Sundlly front
the Bri!ish Open in Scotla"d
""he re be b<'al J im Simons of
Buller, Pa ., 3 and 2.
"Enough is enough."' said
Melyn k who played 36 hole11 a
day of competiti ve golf in
f.'ig ht of the past 14 days.
"J don't think I could play
ano ther 36 holes," he said.
··vou become saturated and
lhe n super saturated. I "ve
reached the latter.··
Necaxn Wi11x
LOS AN GE LES
Substitute Francisco Linares
K'Ored from lS yards out with
JS minutes to play to giv e
Necaxa of Mexico a 4-3 upset
victory over West Ham United
of England jn an international
soccer match Sunday.
Linares. \I/ho had entered
lhe game moments before,
took a pass in front of the goal
and drilled the ball past goalie
Bob Fergusen to gain a split In
the two-game series between
lhe clubs.
B<"fore a sparse crowd of
5.787 al the Memo r i a I
Coliseum, West Ham , with lwo
members of the England's
1966 World CUp champions.
rallied from deficits of 2-0 and
J-2.
1'Jexico Leads
Mi'.:XICO CIT\' -~.lexico
took a 2·1 lf.'a d over New
Zealand Sunday in the fi nal
elimination round of 1hf' Davis
Cup Norlh American Znf1" t-•·
\\'in ning. the doubles ma!ch of
the rivl'-game sf.'ries.
Mexico's dou bles champio n
Marce lo Lara and Luis Garcia
dis posed of New Z<>alandera
Onny Parun and Geoffrey
Siinpson 3-6, 6·2. 12-10 and 6-2.
Ba,seball Standings DEAN LEWIS
!TIC>JY!OITJA!
At.!ERICAN LEAGUE
East 01\'lslon
W .L P<'t. GB
BaJtimore
Boston
Detroit
Cle\•eland
New York
Washington
Oakland
Kansas Ci ty
f.tinnesota
Angela
Chicago
?.tllwauket.
31 " JI :l2
28 25
2.1 " " 30
19 33
Weil Dlvl1lon
37 18
26 2.1
21 21
26 29
20 28
20 29
S1t•rl•v•1 ••••Ill
AllMI• 3, 1or1on , K•~··· Cltv n. N•w Ytlt 1
Dtl"'ll 1. CMc:e.o J
e1111mo•• 11, 11o111 .. 1llllH ~
Cltvel•"" 10. Ml"-!• 1
Otltl• ... •• Wl"'°l'llllOl'I I Su,,.,tr'• lt11wlh
ltlllmtt~ o1, MllWl~~ft I
MIM•oct• •. (tt u•I•,.., ~
.620
·"' .528
.451
.43~
.36.'i
.673
.5.11
.500
.473
.417
.Ille
l " ,
4~
812
91.'.!
13
8
13 ~1:
II
c~~ 1. C.!•t lr '· 1111 ·~ontl t •m • _,llOM\ll rtlll "-" s, lllton ' Now Yo.-S, K1ntl \ C1tv !
O.~l•nll I, W11~lfl'llon I
T ... J'IGl-
Not ··"'" Kfltf\llft.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East DIYl~lon
w I.
SL 1..-0uis
PitUbu rgh
Nf.'W York
Chicago
ri1onlreal
Philadf.'lphia
34 21
21
20
" 21
20 :12
\\'est Oh·ision
San Francisco 38 19
Dodier~ 29 26
l{ou~ton 27 28
Allanta 25 :11
Clnclnn111ti 22 33
San Diego 18 S7
! Setw•of•Y'1 •'"""' l !. 1..111.111 '' Cln~!n~n J M011tr111 1 Si n Dlt"llO 1
f'MIH111pt,!1 s. S111 Fr1ncllce J
Houtton 1, l'lthburo~ l
•t11nt1 6, Chl<IW i. 11 tnn!nol
Dl<llltl J, N~w Yo•k ~ Su,,_,,,, 1t11un•
CM<••o ,, "!l•MI l
St n Ditt o l ·t ......,n!ro•I O·t °"""'' i. N•w 't'or~ I
Pel.
.618
.611
.600
.4111
.4.'18
.385
.667
.527
.491
.446
.41)0
.321
GB
.,
1\1
i i ~
91i
121 ~
• IO
121'z
15
19
Pllhl<l•ll>"i• 1.3, S111 Frt ritlico ~~. wc:&n'9 ''""'
11 inn1n111
Cl"Cll"'lll " $! Louil ' P'ltlol>u••~ •, HO«Ol<lfl I
T.0''' Ottn•1 ,.U!llbu't" Hlrol•• J•l •l C"l<•to lP1..,.\ .. I
\I. lt111•• l l••ru 1·11 t! Atl1n11 Cit-6-ll.
11lt M
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~
0 Ryun Places 10th in Mile; 1
Moore Captures Marathon
A week-long <'ase or hay
fevr:r apparr:ntly helped bring
a tf!rnpo1-ary slowdown to
world record holder Jim Ryun.
who finished IOlh in a Held of
12 mllers Sunday night at the
third annt111I Twilight t(ack
and field meet in Eugene, Ore.
A current Eugene residenl.
Ryun fell back to a 4:07.S a!'I
the former University of
Oregon star from Norway -
Ame Kvalhe im -won the
event in a lifetime best of
3:54i.4
The latter caught a current
Duck ace -SCJphomore Steve
Pte{ontaine -on the final
curve and outsprinted him to
the finish .
Prior to the Eugene meel .
Ryun, whose 3:51.1 in IM? still
stands as a world record, had
only sf!tn outdoor action this
season three weeks ago at
Philadelphia's Martin Luthf.'r
King Games. At that time, he
was beaten by a str:p by
Villanova's Marty Liquori with
both runners being credited
with 3:54.6 clockings.
However. he was unable to
get anywhere close to that
performance before a scream-
ing throng of 1,200 fans in
Eul{ene Sunday.
The Eugene gpectaton were
also able to watch the national
AAU maralhon, which was
being run in conjunction. with
the Twilight meet.
Ken Moore of the Oregon.
'frac.k Club put on a Cinishing
sprint to win the marathon in
two hours, l6 minutes and 48.6
seconds.
He outdistanced fellow 1968
Olympian Jack Sh01ter of the
Florlda Track Club, who ran a
2:17:44.6 in his first attempt
al the 26-mile, 3115-yard distan-
ce.
The latter Is the defending
AAU three mile and six mile
champ.
Although Moore's clocking
"'·as good enough lo win Sun-
day, it was far short or his
best-ever 2: II :35 effort whi<'h
he recorded last December in
J apan.
He averaged about 5:15 per
mile in his Eugene triumph.
Third and fourth place
finishers in the marathon \\'ere
Herb Lorenz (2 :19 :16.8) of the
Pennsylvania Athletic Club
and the New Haven Track
Club's John Vil.ale (2:20:25.0).
Meanwhile, Saturday many
of the nation's best spikers
converged on Berkele y's
Edwards Stadium for the Ken-
nedy Gamr:s.
After winn:ing the too ln t .4
against a strong field and
anchor ing the USC quartet to
a 39.6 440 relay victory, Trojan
junior Willie Deckard an-
nounced. '·my goal is to go to
thf! Olympics and set a world
record in the 200 meters."
However, his hopes were
tarnished slightly a few
minutes later as Don Quarrie
of the Southern California
Striders zipped to a 2:0.5 mark
in 220 with Deckard taking !If!•
cond in 20.7.
All told, nine meet recor~
fell at Berkeley with one being
claimed by Sunnyvalt'!'I Fran·
cie Larrieu, who set an
American "'omen 's standard
in the mile in beating Francie
Johnson in 4:41.5.
The other eight records went
to male contestants.
They included a 1:47 .S in the
880 by I.he Marines' Juris
Luzins ; a 288-foot javelin
throw by world record hol der
Jorma Kinnunen of Finland; a
233-6 hammer throw by Baton
Rouge's 'fom Gage; a 17-5
pole vault by Rice's Dave
Roberts ; a JJ: 10.8 three milt
win by Arizona schoolteacher
George YounR:: and a 7-2 hla:h
jump by Minnesota'• Tim
Heikila .
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Huntin gton Gridders
To Utilize Quickness
1\.nteater
Netters
Seel\: Title By PHJJ, ROSS
Of TIMI (11lty .. ilot Slllt
Quick ness appears lo be the
name of the gan1e for coach
Ken ?l~oats and his Huntington .
Beach Oilers wh en the. subjccl
of the 1971 Sun.set League fool·
bait campa ign comes up.
Although the Oilers say
goodby to over 1,000 yards of
offensive quickness in the
quickest of the quick -all·
league tailback Garlh Wise -
thert!'s no real need to moan
at Huntington.
For, Moats bas his pick of
mercurial specimens, both in
ihe line and the back field, for
the '71 hostililies.
A good deal of t hat
quickness was on display
Saturday night at Huntington's
Cap Sheue Fi eld. Of course,
Slleue was one of the in·
terested spectators QJl band in
the Oilers' annual orange and
while intrasquad spring clash.
Some of the old names from
last season were involved. But
th ere were also some new
faces v.·ho (or(.'ed Moats to
crack an occasional sn1ile.
The lus~le ended up in :r
rlea dlock \v i!h each side pick·
ing up a single louchdov.'n.
However, in spite of the tie
Trito11 s
E11d Drills
in the scoring, Moats ex-
pressed p1ea s ur e with
everyone's pe"rformance and
n6ted that il could be chalked up as a very good spring. It's encore lime for coach
"This time it wa s much like Myron McNamara and the UC1
our 1969 team," he said. Irvine tennis team.
Area fans will remember McNamara takes a group of
that the Oil City gridders posl· five players to the NCAA
ed a 7·2 '69 slate before dro~ (college divi si on) cham-
ping t-0 1-8 \asl fail . pionships at Indiana's Depauw
tw1oats went on, "the attitude University today to defend the
Is the thing that counts this title won last year with a
time of year. And the alt itude record s~tering 2fi points.
has been very good overall . The AniealC)s will be minus
"We're not very big but we t,,..·o of the <performers who
have pretty good quickn ess." made it an all-UCI finals -I
Since he was obviously but he has added a pair of
elated at the progress of most brilliant freshman prospects
of his charges. the veteran who threatened to dominate
mentor didn't jump in singling the action in both singles and
out many individuals but did doubles from beginning to end.
put in the good word for a cou-Lost from the title winning
pie of performers. team are Earl O'Neill (singles
.. Kyle Van Amersfort is n't cha mp) and Craig Nes!age
very big but he got a cha11ce (singles n1nnerup ). These two
lo show what he could do at combined to gain a finals
derensive back ." Moats said. berth in the doubles opposite
··And our lit!le blond·haircd teammates c:rcg Jablonski
kid Dave Clapp also did a fine and Chuck Nachand (the
joh out there too." Clapp also defending champs this year ),
plays in the defensive secon· But that's the story or a
dary. year ago.
·'J \Vas al so very pleased This lime around, McNa·
with all of our recei vers and mara wasn't even sure until
\Vilh !he 0\'erall play of !he of-entry deadline whe!her his
fcns1ve line. You'll notice that doubles duo would even de·
\1•e had n1uch more lime to fend the tit le,
throw the hall," added floloats. .rriblonski has been plAying
He concluded, "of C(lurse u·ith both NachAnd and Steve 1 one of the goals in the spring Newbrough with McNnmara
15 to try !o develop depth. And 1naking his decision to take1
1
I believe we did tins:· the defending champs on Wed-
l\1oals used 2ll players both nesday night.
,vays in 1hc inlrti-squad tiff as In singles competition il will
Wit h its spring gaine out oi the .,.,·hite team struck paydirt hE' Bob Chappel! playing in the
the way, Sa n Clemente High 's on a passing play and !he No. J spot and Glenn Cripe as
footba!l leam was scheduled to the No. 2 man. Both are orange group tallied on a run. i;pend the next three days Quarterback Jim Ptiartin hil freshmen and should be
reviewing films of Friday wide receiver Joh n Garland among the top-seeded players
night 's intra-squad lilt. with n I!>-yard TD strike on an in the NCAA competition. "'Ve're going lO review the Chappell is rr-0m Santa
films and discus" positions op!io n play for the whiles Barbara and holds a national '·'"· · h whlle running back Paul \\•ith differenl ,.,ju.:; wit any F k i·unior ranking. · 1 k " is ness sco red lhe orange changes tha l we mtg tl nta e. Cripe is a Newnnrt llarbot six-pointer on a pitch-Out from r-said Triton head coach Tom graduate and after recovering EAds. ~1artin. who quarte rbacked r r 0 m a b 0 u 1 w i 1 h
. both sides along with P'O-The skull sessions a re mononucleosis early in !he
11cbcduled to end Wednesday. spectlve junlor Bill Harbin. sea10n , has come on strongly
Friday night's touch gan1e to hike over the challenger's
ended in a U-0 tie with the G position.
i;ophomores playing t w 0 o)fc1·s Feted Jablonski will play In lhe
quarters and the seniors mix· No. 3 spot and Newbrough will
Ing it up in the final two Greg Sciarrolt.a walked orr complete the i;lngles lineup as
stanzas. with most valuable honors for the No. 4 man.
Eads used four quarterbacks the Mission Viejo High golf With Chappell and Cripe
with senior Johh Springman, team. wlli ch held ll'i awards teaming together (0 play in
juniors Bill Kenny and Rick banquet Monday night in !he the d o u b I es competition.
Ahrens and sophomore Dan i;chool cafeteria. Jablonski and Nachand will be
Dodd seeing action in one Teammate Tom Martin was seeded no better than second
quarter each. picked as the most improved in tbe NCAA meet despite the
·'The squads were divided golfer 1 role of defending champions.
down the middle, so no onelji"iiOiiiOi;;;;:iiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOi~iiOiiiOi;;i;;iiOii!I squad dominat.ed." said Eads.
"Springman and Kenny did
•really fine job and Cl;i,rk Jar·
rett Jose Malagon and Bob
Fry (running backs) looked
good."
Eads also si ngled out wide
receivers Charlie Dargan and
Mark King along w i I hi
linemen Bill Madden. John !
Romero and Mike Dunham.
Madden played cent.er nnd
linebacker, RoMl.'ro ~rk.ed
both ,.,·ays ~t a ~ckle spot and!
Dunham Is t1 defenllive. end.
• • • • •
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Eacb commented lb.at the
d•f'"" and offense • .,e ra;,.I Bob Paley & Assoc·1ates ly tven In the scrimmage.
"I\ went pretty good for A
spring game . 1llt kids !!howed 474 E. lnH STREET, COSTA MESA
a lot of spirit and they worked 641-4500 -546-llOS real hard.'' ,._ _____________________ _.
..... . "
MondQ, Junt 7, 1q71 OAIL 't' PILOT ~7 ~.
'·
Ogle Nabs Tars' Ogle--Cool in Clutch
Individual
Net Title Newport Net-Ace to AttendHoustori
It was .a very good la!ll two
weeks tor Bob Ogle of
Newport Harbor High.
On May 28, Ogle was in-
strumental in pacing his
Newport 1'Ars to the CIF'
AAAA team teMis crown
while operating as the squad·s
top singles pla yer.
Then last Wednesday the
blond -haired senior advanced
as one of the top qualifiers
rrom the CIF individual net
pr(!Jiminarics at Santa Ana in-
to the l\na\s Saturday al
Newport Beach's Balboa Bay
llacquet Club .
And he capped his most
rewarding fortnight in lhe in-
dividual linals by sweepin g
through four Saturda y r·ounds
like a scythe, en route to the
singles !i!le.
Ogle disposed of 1-Iarvard's
t.1artin snarer kl the first
round of the finals by 6-t and
6-0 margins and then stopped
Santa Barbar;;i 's C ran d a 11
Edwards, 6-1, 6-1 , in tbe se-
cond round.
1'he slick Tar then scored a
surprisingly easy th ird round
trium ph (&-0, 6-J ) over Long
Beach Poly's Joe Edles before
bettering Miraleste 's Randy
Evett in the finals, 6-1. 6-3.
Estancia sopOOmore steve
Pt1allott was el iminated in the
second singles salvo, 6-3 and
6-5 by Evt!ll while Newport's
Kim Perino-Dave Eastman
and t.1arina's Stu f..1cDowe!l-
Ptlorio Parker were knocked
out in the second double!
round.
By HOWARD L. llANDY ::...: .. 'l
OI llN '1toil, l'llol ll•ff
There isn't a member of the
Newport Harbor IJlgh tt.'nni! I
team that begrudges the fact
Bob Ogle seldom practices
with the squad .
Ogle has been the No. 1
singles star for Newport dur.
ing the entire 197 J season and
bis coolness in championship
play can best be attested by
the fact he lost only one game
in lhe fin als with Santa
Monica.
~,,,~v~~i !ii n~;'Qi. --...., "'l~ k I
• 1.~ ~~
;
Ogle posted three 6-0 vic-
tories and one at 6-l in win-
ning four matches as first
singles player.
··I fee l I can help the team
more when I play against
other competition in prac!ice
than ir I stay at school and
practice," Bob explains.
"l don't mean lo sound
boastful or to run any of the
other tellm membe rs down,·•
he Qu.ickly adds.
No fu.rther explanation is
needed.
Young Bob Ogle is an
outstanding tennis player and
one that many experts predict
will go a long way.
f.fyron McNamara, coach of
the highly successful UC
Irvine team doesn·t hesitate
to tab Bob in the following
manner:
"He Ydll be a member of the
U.S. Davis Cup team before
many years. He's that good
right now," McNamara says.
And yel the UC! coaclt
knows or Ogle's intentions for
BOB OGLE
!he future -accepting a
scholarship to attend Houston
University. '
··rd like to attend UCI but I
would have to spend a year in
junior college first," he
reveals. "At llouston I can go
right in and play 'vith a
scholarship as a freshman ."
Bob's ol der brother Jim is
currently a me mber o{ the
UC! team under McNam11 ra.
But what is the attraction at
Houston?
"They have a good tennis
p1·ogram and besides, the No.
1 player is leaving school after
this semester. Their second
and third players are also
leaving, n1oving to West
P6inl. ., Bob says.
When lold of McNamara's
prediction. he smiled broadly
and said simply, "I'd really
like to play (or the Dav is Cup
te11m . But they hold a Junior
Davis ('up camp in the east
and I haven't been able to af·
ford it."
Bob is not only an outstan-
ding tennis player but spends
his surruners leaching others
the finer points of the g::ime at
the Mesa Verde Country Club
in Costa f.1esa.
His high school coach. Pat
Wilson, offers the highest
praise for the young net star.
"He's a great one," Wilson
says. "He gives you 100 per-
cent all of the lime and lhere
aren't any hi gh school players
arou nd v.·ho can slay with hi m
very lo ng.··
Ogle looked back over the
record for a niomenl and ad-
ded:
··1 lost to my doubles
partner when we played Long
Bt'ach Wil son early this year
and I was tied by ):{alph Hofer
of Santa Monica (7·7)."
His tennis partner is George
Hardie of Wilson and Bob
means part ner on weekends,
not during school competition.
In the cha mpionship match
at UCLA, llofer played in
· doubles competition, by-pass-
ing a classic rematch be tween
the two.
Ogle revealed that he has
pl ay ed in weekend
tournaments \\'ith llanJie for
n'ost of his tennis life (since
he was 12 years of age). Tba.t
1s a period or six years for th•
l&-year-0\d net star.
Ogle has played in singles
con1petlllon in prep circles
since his freshman year.
"I played in one doubles
match as a freshman agains t
Rolling lli\ls," he l"f;Calls . That
was in a year when Rolling
Hills won tbe CIF cham-
pionships.
Two of the team's strongest
boosters this year in the tiUe
malch at UCLA we re
members or the team a year
ago -Glenn Cripe and Robbie
Cunningham.
Does Ogle think it helps lo
have the m on hand?
··1 really think it does. When
you know players of that
calibre are lhere pulling for
you, it is a real shot in the
arm.
\Vhile he will be away rmm
the Orange Coast area for his
college career, remember the
name Bob Ogle when the
Davis Cup team is announced
-in say, two years time.
Mesa Captain
Jon Marchiorlatti w a :i;
elected Costa Mesa High foot-
ball c~ptain ror the coming
season by his teammate!
following the spring windup
scrimmage Saturday night.
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S.ddleba~k Loop Rustl ers
'
VniDuoCombine Get Split;
To Toss 1-hitt,er Boes Fall
University High '!i J e f f
Slye.rs and Rick Peregud com·
bined lo throw a ~hitter in
pacing the Trojans lo a 2-1
viclory over Miss ion VieJO
Sunday in the feature game of
the Saddleback College sum-
mer baseball league.
In other tilts, San Clemente
edged Foothill, f..J , and Sad-
dleback turned back Laguna
Beach, 12-4.
.Styers tossed the first two
innings and Peregud pitch~
the last five in pacing Uni.
11\e duo combined lo strike.
out 10 Dia blo batters with
Peregud getting seven.
The lone Mission Viejo hit, a
line drive single to center
fie ld, came in the sixth inning.
triple and two rbl
Steve Carpenter, R o c k y
Schact, Scott Jobannea and
Tim Wright all had a pa ir of
hits tor Saddieback. Carpenter
tripled and doubled while one
of Johannes' hits included a
two-baser.
Mark Diercks and Paul
Carlson hit safely twice for
Laguna.
Third round action Is set this
Sunday on the Saddle.back
College diamond with San
Clemente a n d Saddleback
meeting at JO, Foothill facing
University at 12:30 a n d
Laguna Beach battl in g
Mission Viejo at 3.
1n11, 1b
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• • ' ' • • • •
. ~' ' . • • ' . • ' , , . • •
Golden West College's sum-
mer baseball team split a pair
of games while Orange Coast
dropped it!I Jone tilt in
Metropolilan League action
over the weekend.
Golden West fell to Orange
(Chapman), S-6, Friday night
at La Palma Park, then
upended the La Fonda Jrs.
(Fullerton JC), 11·7, SUnday at
Golden West.
Visiting Orange Coast fell to
host Cypress , i-2, Sunday.
Pat Curran paced t h e
Golden West attack. He slug-
ged a booming home run Fri-
day night and had a twi>run
shot over the center field
fence Sunday and also col-
lected a triple.
,
Legion Baseball W rapup Yule Guns ·
'
FV, San Clemente Split For l{onor:
John Yule, one of tht
Orangt-Coast atta 's !eadlnl
prep bastetti.11 playen: <?f re-
cent years, is carvinR a suc·
cessful college playing career
al lhe t}nivers it y or
Oklahoma.
A pair of splits on the Na. In San Clemente's Sunday
tionaJ League scene were the tiff , righty Rich Douglass best Orange Coast a re a American Legion b 8 s e b 11 1 1 relieved starter Terry Nie~n_
teams we re able to garner in and picked up the wln on the
the weekend's action. mound.
Fountain Valley's National The biggest offensive spurt
League entry visited Anaheim ror the winners came in the
Reudy Saturday and came fifth when they batted around
home with a S-1 setback. and pushed in five runs. Tim
However, coach Gene Wright smashed a solo roqnd-
Marinacci's Fountain Valley lriDper in lhe frame.
nine pushed its record to 3-Z John · Wade. Nick Gillespie
Sunday with a J.{I blank job and Ron Jessick 11 h a r e d
01<,•r invading Tustin. pitching chores for first-year
Another are.a senior circuit Mission Viejo, which blew a 3-
squad -San Clemente -was 2 lead in the sixth inning on
stopped, 5-3 by visiting Tustin four fie.lding errors.
on Saturday and then returned DaMy Brenn an was the big
home to chalk up a M victory gun for Mission Viejo wilh a
over Saddleback. pair of doubles while Bob
American League games on Tilton accounted for two
Saturday saw the vi:!iting sin~lcs and a pair of rbi.
Fullerton Angels beat Mission Righth ander Steve Tisdale
Viejo by a J0-4 nod while went the route and allowed but
Westminster was edged by in-one ea r n e d run for
vaders from Los Amigos , 6-5. Westmin.!ter against Lo s
Sunday host Westminster Ami'!os. But it was fill to no
9copped a 6~ verdict lo avail as the host!'!" cashed in on
... """""" lfl .. ' . "' "-1111•"""· .. O. 51rlt1gm1n, Jll'
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• ' • • • • •
The former Newpor t
l-Jarbor, Corona de.I Mar High
product has started at center
the pasl lwo years for the
Soooers and has competed in
the famed National Invitation
Tournament at New York 's
Madison Square Garden.
And he h~ aooUler ye.ar of
eligibility left at Oklahoma.
Tbus he becomeis; one o{ the
candidates for this year's
Yardley Trophy -whidl is
presented annually to the top
athlete from the Harbor area.
This year's trophy will be
r " rM given at a stag dinner Tuesday
llr1or1v, <f 6 o, •, nigtK at the Newporter Inn.
Tlo.dtlt. r1 0 beg' t 6 30 w~11t1w, l!i 11 2. o Social hour ins a : .
N0<1t1r.d, lb ' o e 1 Yule has matured into a =~~~~¥~·~: ~ r : : toug h rebounder and although
University scored its two
runs in the initial inning on
singles by Ti rg.lgoe and Steve
Fargo, a ground out and Bob
Patterson's line drive one-bag-
ger lo left field.
Missfon Viejo got on the
board in the fourth on a walk.
a stolen base, an error and a
squeeze bunl
N, Pore;ud, t l
511~,. rf 1
Sly"'· p 1
• • • • ,
• • • • • • ' . . ,
Freshmen Scott Wilson and
Gary Simpson also sparkled at
ba! for Golden West Sunday.
Wilson had a double &id a
single and drove in tour runs.
Simpson balled in two runs
with three singles. The
Rustlers' Blaine Calder hit a
home run in Friday night's
loss.
e1111'1(1i., 11 1 1 •' •, his scoring dipped last y1lar he .1 ~!'..-'.19;;; c i ! 6 0 can be a dangerous offensive
Anaheim Heffron. a trio of Westminstf'r errors.
LeftHander Steve Fox was a Scott Bradle.v banged a
l ottl• JJ J • I
tcert k' 1ftnln"
M<>uo~1n, ~ 1
To11l1 7T
Mlui"" V!tle (I) Meanwhile, Orange Coast
was held to six hi ts by Cypress
\\•ith the big blow for the
Pirates an eighth inning home
run by Tom Sampson.
hardluck loser for Fountain mundtripoer with no one
·valley in the Reudy conflict as aboard for the losers · while
he pitched a complete game. miites Bob Nodland and Gary
His teammates were victims Rungo had two hits apiece.
. ' . 1'u1!11> 000 101 01'-J 1 i
~"" Clemflllt 000 OJO OOlt-l 4 ) , Cfllpm1n, 2b 1 o o o threat. ,_, • LU,.':i:;:n, P 1: ! ! ! Yule began to b}Qssom a.s a ~
Meanwhile, San Clemente
scored three limes in the fifth
inning to defeat Foothill.
The big blow for the winning
Tritons was Rich Douglass '
two-run double in the fifth.
San Clemente had t o
overaime fi ve errors to beat
the Knights.
In the Saddleback victory
over Laguna Beach, Craig
. .\nderson Jed the way for the
\\'inners with two sing les and a
Estancia
Grid Ac e
Does It All
Wha t is the missing in·
gredient when you mix in a
balanced running game with a
passing threat of ability but
ba~·e trouble getting the of-
fense in gear?
Or a defense where the
&eeondary covers intended
receivers like an umbrella but
the opposition gains yardage
consistently on the ground?
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Mh.i>N Vl41• (4) ..
of 11 strikeouts at the hands of l"...,ft,•l~ v111w 01 1'!1"""· lb • B•11Yr, ph I
Reudy pitching. M110..i1. 1b ·~ ~ ~ ""i
CH1Mt1 Wnt !61 In Fountain Valley's win co1.,,,.,,, lb c o o o
11ov, ... c• ·~ ; : "'J over Tustin, tall righthander ~~ii;.~ rt : g g g
s11ubln, c1 11 o o Dave Lyncb allowed only Eblen, '' 1 l 1 o
Jon11. lb o o o three hits and two walks while SMm111, 111 ? o r ' Curri n, rl 1 1 l (1rro11. 1b 1 o T t aurn"'' c • o , 0 striking out nine in picking up Marlev, 11 ~ o 0 0 ..,.,,m., Jb 1 o o his second .straight shutout. O\len.tte, c ' o ' 1 C1lcler. l!I 2 I 1 HI•, " ' 0 0 0
Slmp'o". 11 t 1 1 o The big ·blast for San V1rn~..-. lb l 1 1 o
ll•ml11on. :111 J 11 1 1 Clemen!e in ils Saturday loss Lrnc:~. " ) o o o
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' • ' • ' • ' • • ' • ' , • • • •
sc•r• b'f 1nn1"'' potential star while playing
11 r.i ' r 11 • Wtder Bill Bloom at Corona .
1 1 ooJ oo' 001-4 u 1 del Mar .
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ro1.11 1i 6 • s •• ~c~,~a~i~RiA~n~d~e~'~'~'"~·~w~h~o~s~oc~k~ed!:'.a~3~'.'.:_~~J~~~~-~'l'_~;;;::,;:~'._'.~~~~·~'!j'LJl__~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1 ' 1 !ft• luslln 000 O"lO 000-0 J 1 Fullor!Of'I Angeli Ol'O 004 ~10 l• • • .,. " ft ft , ~ • solo homer in the fifth inning. ,.ount•ln V•lllY 062 ooo Ol•-l • 2 Mluio.. v1e10 om 100 HID---' t 4
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36 MONTH GUARANTEE
~FULL '·PLY NYlON CORD IODY
~ 12/32" TREAD DEPTH
-
The answer is , a strong r 11 • r h • S•" Clomt"lt 100 030 -• 6 S Cotti Mew 000 010 010 -1 4 •
IU~A •r lllflllfttl
forward wall -one that can Fooiti.11 101 010 -, J 1 c..-p•u• CMI 01> ot~ -1 1• 1
get the key block on offensel,;;;;..:0..:0;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;.-;;;-.-.,..;;-,..-.-.-.-.--•'ii
and rnakc the early tackle on
defense.
Coach Phil Brown at Estan-
cia High feels he has the
answer to bolh problems for
the Eagles this year and
enthusiastically proclaims lhe
merits of his leader on the
front line.
Craig Dennis, a twG-year
\·eteran or defensive play and
an honorable mention All-
lr\'ine League sta r a year ago
as an offensive tackle, is the
boy in question and the. one.
tabbed to lead the Estancia
Eagle swoop th rough the
Irvine League.
"He's a winner al\ !he way.
He's been a great one ever
since he was a sophomore and
I wouldn't be at all surprised
to see him emerge as the best
lineman In the area this year.
.. He hasn't missed a game
ln two years and he's an
outstanding student as well ,"
Brown uys with enthusiasm.
When tht Eagles 11'1! on of·
feme, It will be his duty to
lead the interference o n
1 sweeps around the. ends and lo
block 1n opposing lineman or)
linebacker when the play goes
throooh th• llne.
At "4 and 2t0opounds, he Is
physically equipped to handle
the si tuation.
Dennis' niche In the Eagle
offensive lint has b e e n
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ol the siluation Uial will propel
him into the. limelight a5 a key
cog in the machinery.
But what about dtfenae'!
''I prefll!:r to play deleMe,"
he 11ya with • nonchalant at-
titude. ~'Thert'• a li ttl'! more
chance for ~tact when you
are playing defen.i: and the
mol'1! contact I havt, the bet·
ter I like it."
·i. hb rol• of l...tlng the
Eqk! running iame around
the CGrM.-S, be WW hive pier>+
ty of opportunitJ for contact
'on offense as wtll and lhil
should plta.e hJm~lmmc:n1t:IJ.
.. I'm looklnc forwanl to I~"
he SilYS enthusiastically.
orr the football field , Craig
1tays in 1-h1pe by 11dJng ln the
w\nltr monl.hl In local moun·
tain areas.
And wilh 1 &rade point
,.ver111e ol 3.0, ht wiU hive Ill·
tie dlfficulty m1klnc tt "*'
atmo1t anJ ICbool he c:b6oeel
to further l1't .underv-cfu1le
caN!e.r In 1Mklnc a teecbbW
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Theodore Robins
FORD SO YEAlS OF SEll:VlCE TO
Oll:ANQf COUNTY UNOlll: SAME
OWHE11:$HI,
2060 HARBOR BLVD.
Co1ta Me•• 642-0010
And coach!~ credenllal, ""-------------------
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•
•
'
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I
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• • '
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Spring Tilt
Pleases
The~Palmer Method
Artist Boss
By CRAIG SHEFl''
Of IPMI Dolly l'llt! Sl•U
Laguna Beach liigh football
f&n3 are fairly well convinced
l.hty will not see any 49--0
games with the Artists on the
loelng end next season.
• 9
§
AM Artist head coach Hal
Akim agrttd after his football
team had completed lls go...
minute Maroon and White in-
tra -squad game S • t u r d a y
night. .
~
f
j
I "Did you see those kid! out
there tonight They wert
hungry and mad. And I'm real
pletsed to see th at. No sir I
don't foresu aiiy 49-0 games.
We'll be right in there," said
the enthusiastic Akins. ReprdJeu of the type of shot ••• putt, chip, pitch,
There were, of cour~, good fairway wood, etc.,. you ahoaJd always imaline, bdote
and bad points in the scrum you pky it. how that shot should look. Tbj1 .mC1.111
won by Norm Borucki's white actually Kkdins a apecific·lpOt on which you will land i;quad by an 8-6 count.
"First af all , and most im-the ball.
portantly was the mental at-P:y plannia1iheadin1hit manner, you force you.net!
litude. The kids came out to into makia& a positi ve decision. You ma.kc yourself
play and they did a good job in think about doing somd.biDS succasfully.
that aspect. And our fun-Positive thinkin& is vital in aolf. Plan to·make a
damenlal play ivas good -&ood ·thot and you probably ·will. But if you're ifraid particularly our blocking and
hitting. 'l'hose guys were o! maki.o& a bad shot, well ••• u comedian ~p Wilson
really hitting out there. Say1, "What you sees is what you Jit."
"'The mechanics ·were pretty
s loppy and dUr passing was Got.FING PRACTICE NOW CAN PAY OFF LATERI Th• .• 11.n ....
spotty, but we haven't really Ju1t'.publishld A mold Parm•r boo«!•!, "Pnlctice,'~ thOW'I )'DU how
Worked On .our "'""Sing this " praetlc• •t nom• for l)OW•r·play on )'OIJr bYDrit• courM. . ~ Send 10, •nd • stamped, rllorn •rw.lopi, t.o Arnold Pal,,,.,, 1pring. And of course we had c/o this n"'1pap1r. ·
a few fumbles. One time it '--'--------'-"-'------------------'
looked like a Chinese fire
drill."
But overall, Akins was
plea~.
"I'm pretty optunistic
think we're going to have a
good football team."
The Laguna coach had
praise for a number of players
-particularly ta i Iba c k
Telford CotLam and guard
Ma rk Diercks. '
"Cotlam was really a slaad-
out and Diercks was our
o~tanding lineman," said
Akin!.
Others pr11ised i n c I u d e d
outside linebacker K i m
Johnson, linebackers Jeff and
Skip Winship, Spike Atkinson,
lackle Chris Ullom a n d
defensive back Tim Sweany.
Cottam had a number or
fine runs with his best one
coming midway through tM
5econd quarter -a 36-yarder
that gave the White team a 6-0
lead.
' Quaf.terbad: Gary Fiseue
made it 8·0 after running in
the conversion.
The maroon team's six-
pointer came on a 70.yard
pass-r u n pla y f r om
qu;n-t.erback Kelly Ak ins to
end Joe Lambert. s .... 'eany picked off thret
peses for the maroon team to
stop potential drivff: by the
white team.
Spirited Mesa
Lacks Numbers
By HOWARD L. HANDY
01 .... 01111 ~11•1 11111
It may take them a sbort
whilt to get going but Coi!:ta
Mesa High will field a spirited
football team in the fall .
"I think we have the poten·
tial for a good team but we
are sho rt in numbers," cnaeh
John Sweazy said after the
two-hour Windup scrimmage
session Saturday afternoon.
"The ad,·antag_e is all lo the
defense in the spring. I think
the kids learned what they
have to learn this spring but
ifs a different game when you
pul the pads on.
"We don't have enough
bodies lo go all out. The boys
you see out here have to make
up three teams for us in the
fall -varsity, junior varsity
and sophomore.
"l think we have 74 or 75
boys out for football and that
means about 25 per ttam."
While Sweazy watched as
bis assistants put the Green
and White squads through
their paces, be entered the ac·
tivity frequently with sug-
gestions to the teams and in·
dividual players.
Doug Brown coached the
Green squad while Don Burns
had the victorious White unil
that had to depend nn a late
pass play by a pair of
sophomores (in the fall) and a
pass interception to sCflre two
touchdowns.
Jen 111archiorlatti grabbed
an errant pass and returned ii
23 yards for the first scere.
But it was an 80-yard pass
play from q uarterback Steve
Sharp to Ed Pippin that
brought about the lone of-
fensive score of the a fternoon.
Both Sharp and Pippin will
be sophomor<!s in the fall and
the duo brought a smile to
Sweazy 's face after the com·
pletion that sailed ()Ver the
bead of the Green secondary.
Sea Kings' Killefe
Named Top ,4tlilete
The Mwlang first offensive
unit played on the while squad
and included Pat Ka lama al
quarterback \11ith Bob Bom-
bay. Don Delaney and 7'.1ason
Hungerford in the backfield.
The Green backfield com-
bination was composed of Flip
Damell, Gary Shetler. Joe
Artbur and Bill Clark a nd ii
was this group that put the in-
itial Ji rst down on the books
after the two squads had ban·
died about for about 211
minutes. Darnell ran 20 yards
on a bootleg pl11y.
Karl Killeftr was selected
BS athlete of the year for the
1970.71 school y'ar at the
Corona de! ~1ar Hig h awards
banquet Sa1urday in the school
cafeteria.
V1•••IV -M V"• O:e•I O:lllfl~' !ri•
u~••·"I " J,I..: 1t1m11y. J dl l!•Jc~~
•nd ~""" .S•mullt: mo11 omp•11v.,,.
1.'ll<OI"' O.Mlllo; ollllll""l"' l flll.,,. IC••'~ S1Mu•l1: bul blDl<ker: Tim ••no•I. .l<'"'0' v1rol~ -MV'' ~~i• L1<iOorl'.Wlu1~: ei>-c11111IM: l rll" c11,.,.,. •• ,~., Jot Toa!I; ...... t 1m.
,rovod G••• WllHlt r.
r rc111 -MV,: ..... , °""'"' ltl·CIP..
h i"" llr•"I 011<1•"· JIM G1rn •"" 9o • W119Glll n'IOll lm••o•ld: Gerrv ,._,~.,.. w.,... ,.. .. v ..... ¥ -MY': Gtrltl •• ,,.,.,,
(IPll\11: (;r" l ol!t! met! lmptOYod;
J(ll>n Holv.,.ko; 11Ullhl'ldl,,. .. nlor:
k ufl Krvml>hOl1. 1!1•1 -,..,..,.,, l rvc• Ktvm.i.011; coe-
'""" !lrl1n MlllU.; ""''1 lmprtt¥1d:
0•"• 0110. .
'" -MV,: John C11e; Uitl""'
s,m°" &ovoney; """'' 1m1>rov9!!: J•V S!1f1m1n.
Cr-CMNrf
MY': O•tk 01Yl l'O<l "'1l111 : Oidl 0•• 1nd "l!d< Ito .. : ll>MI lfnllrc,.,.ld:
J9'1n AMr11; OU!lhnd.1119 1enlot: "°""
(;llf'IN>n.
lltk.t"M• ll•ro;rv -MV': Mlrt Grl•i&y; c~
c1•!•ln1 : Ki ri Klllthr l!'ld [)oft
IC llllen; motl lm11rowcl; Jolln llumnlf;
C>Jh!alldl"" 11nl!)f; Mtrk Orl•fllY.
Junior v1r1llr -Mii"' M•r~ l~~r#f; c10!1ln: Oen Grf1111~, molf
l"'"'oYld: Ktn C1rli.on.
SOJlll-• -Miii"; Jahn Mor11n1
c1011111 : Ml •C AlllfflYI metl lm-
~l>YHI; Pt! Wi ii
F11.,,m111 -MV': P .. lt ,._"'lff l
t 11l1\11: J im IE lllCIMI moll lflllrw..,; ,,.,,... °"'"''"· WrloffllJll
V1r1\tv -MVP ; Tim •1M1I; C• c1ot1\n1: Tim la~I I ntl Oo"' C1.,r1
"'ol! lrotp•IY..,: WtUr Cl1rtl.1 Olllflt~
dlnl tf'!llor; Tim laMtl. Jynl... Y1r1lfy -MV,: kotl
Hlll't•d l c11•t1111, KtHY W1rnn1 """' .......... tt1 ; kb ltltd\11. s"''''"""" Vt "lhl -MVP: Kur! k rvmlfltlll; ~•C>lf\"i l(vn ll:•um""'411 .,_, ~ ,,,_, 1 ....:1 k~lu ourtlt l'Allnt
lllller: Gtrtl'I '"-· !I .. -Mii,: 0tvl OlllH Clit!llll' l•I•• NilUtlU -· lfl'ltrtvW: Stoll P1~~·
Cot ~ M'll,, Ltr•r Gt1"/ Utlt ln: f lmtorl ..,..,l'Y, _, ,,,,..,.\'If: JOllll
Crlfr!p, 1 .... 11
ll1rtltlr -Mll,1 .W.11 ~ll!llff" C..•
Rebel Coach Set
•11,.: lit·•~ S11nuell. mo11 1 ... .,,c¥t <1·
01~ 11111., C>Jh!1n!!I~• Hftlo,. J~~n
Junior vt rJih -Mll P' 01n Gr•t•t>•:
c1pttln: Oan Gr!11nvr m Ol1 rmprovff;
l rl1n c11..,eric~.
Ff.,,~·OOl'h -Mii,: Tim (1Hi1Y1
c 11>!1ln: FrO!d MooreJ mott lm~r~vod
A l1n J1~n1.
frl tk •n.d r:l1!d
V1•11!v -MllP : Nie~ llOll: lrl·CI P 111111: Jo/In M;lu , Ct rlo To1ll t nd M•ll
CW < "'O" imOfOYO!d !IOI> Frllll il••
out\1tn<lln1 1tn1<>r. Oick 01J. ~" -MVP: Fr1 ... KITl<?IVI most
IMorlWod: Nit re WJnnt .
,., -MV1'; l ob Wlltol'll moll Im·
proved: S<:on Cul1,..u.
flflnlt
Mii~: Dick Mlll1r; up!1!n: IC.1rl
1<:111111•; ,,.,,,., ITTIPr.......,: Jo/In Cull'!<' ou11!•..,,lnt 1..,Jor : Ken Ntl1H•. .. ,
M\11'; l ""' 0ufff'll (IPll /11: TMt
Cllttfl; ,.._, lmorO¥ed: J1llwl M!llil.leJI
or.1to11""1"" ..,,,..,, Jim l!JWln.
After the action got 1 Jillie
heated with tempers fl aring on
five occasions before a halt
was called, the White first of-
fensive unit made its best
!howina: of the day pic king up
a pair of first downs with
Kalama hlttirig Marchiorlattl
on a pw pl1y, then running 20
yards ib a duplication tf
Danlell'a acamper.
79 Nig~f;s -of Racing
'
Set for· L'os A lamiws
night's racts, and th~y 'll take
entries for Frid•Y evenifll'1
program Wednesday moraln1.
SPIKE ...
LOS ALAMITOS -The
popul1tl0il •t. ·~. Alamitos
Riice Coune ·tn·c,r fl 11 e·d
tremtr1do"9IY t v er ·thrl
weekend · u horse1. ttalntrl,
jockeys, grooms and Qt.her
stable r~a etnplo)tea 1rrived (Condrmiid from Pap tel from s .. " Mateo to get r~y 101 I. Cll!'Tlll 1cro1~1. fn(lllO) 1•10.
5Plolt ttul -I. MPW.. U'l-' f()r the ,,.night quan.a. ~rse t-it•llrlrl, ,,.,,,, hlltl m111 r«<>rd)/ '· ' '• t .r... Alk!ltoil (Joi.....,.,, H..-borl "41 3. racing season uil · opeu~ c,.. fet1111, .1:nc1 ... 1 "-•"'' .., M•,..
WedMsd1y evening. """ u... 01tw1 61.f'A1 a. o..,w -ICl"MTlllO) tl-1\'io.
The quarter borse·season at 01te111 -1. Oi1'I f""""'",.' 1aM1 Bay Me d Clo··• S Jurd ' o-.. ...... u ... .-.n.1 urt .. 1 ~. OVl'llflt r a ow1 ~ a ay rC•nt11011Mo . ...,., .. ,1 1n,.1 •· F11o night. and horses which h.ave t111-.. .. l'1 11"'' t...•llll'teklm. ,,1o
been campa;lgning at the Sin "''01 ''"1• 1'1 ... 1 , .. .., ICDl'l"t! Htllllli.rt (Uil Mateo track are being v1nned u. Lom-·"· NMWWl "••Mr·
to Loll Alamitos. Critt~ •S•" '"""''° t1ornr~1 ICom<Monl ...,, IEI C•l<llO ,. •Kii· Over·900 horses will be bed-ll•-•••11•111 11111 01~"'" C•O¥• • -"' d d ,_ ' t · Clt ll'_. !SOI •"" Mor11l11111d1 e .... wn prior o ope.n1n1 H.,.,_.1 1 ·~h. c'""''""" (LAL
night u lhey prep1re to race c-...i-(1t1MC11J. c • '''• "'o "'
f l I II Jul !O.•l.,lllJ, f dl-ll'r-!.t MtlnrM Dr approx mate. y m on in 1u 1. ,er1, .... 111, lllCI c 1....01i. , ·-· purses this 1ummer. a11rr rl"1~1. c.,,..,11 11111 •• d l/IO.orlOt)I 1119111111 15•Mt Morlt l. Entries for Wcunel 1y'1 U1t11rw1. Lou1 rLA ), f rtll'IC>tlt 1LA1. nlne-ract procram •Ill be w,,.r ••t.,1n.11. L-11 .. (~ 1'oJy.
Pro-tlld C111•I IEM.1neJ • .. ch.
taken Monday morning by'-;iiiiiiiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiiii~iiiiiiiii;~j r1clnc 11ecret1ry Danald Smith Ii
ind his staff, the feature on
the initial card beins: the GOLfERS
Sl0.000 Inaugural for three-w1111 "-M.rk-.
'•ltllc• "' n.. year and older h1ndlcap NEWPORTER INN
hor.w:s going 3SO yirds. PAR l GOLF COURSE
Mondrt, JuM 7, 1'71 DAIL V PILOT .19
Sea Kings' F ootbal.Z Ace HB Aides
Change
Grid Job s
Uses Positive Approach
Dana Point's Cl yde Lacher
bids to keep the No. I sp<1t in
the Wesl Coast Match Game
Eliminations tonight when the
third round of bowling gets
under way at 9 at Kona Lant!!
in Costa Mesa.
Lacher rol led an 178 lf:l'ies
last Monday ID move up 13
notches and hold a 1-pin ad-
vantage over former Costa
Mesan Fred Bernal.
In the third sp¢ is defending
champion Gary Madison, the
left -hander from San
Bernardino. Madison vaulted
from the No . .f l spot of the
previous week.
The only other area bowler
in the lllp Hi is Costa Me5a 's
Fred Dougherty who currently
holds down the No. 8 spot with
1.667 pins -ju~t 49 behind
Lacher.
Ken Carpenter was a name
synonymous with the 1938
Olwnpic Games and also with
• well-known radio announcer
on the air wa ves during the
'30s.
The Olympic Games discus
thrower from Compton and the
University 1( S o uthe111
Ca liforni a won a gold medal in
8$"lln in 1936 and is currently
the swimming coach a t
Compton CoUege.
The radio announcer was a
national favorite prior lo the
advent ()f television when J1ck
Benny was a household must
on Sunday evening r or
listener! across the nalion. He
occasionally appears on a TV
commercial these days.
There is a tbird Ken
Carpenter looming bright on
the horizon in the Orange
Coast area who is making a
name fo r himself at Coron•
de! Mar High.
C&sta Mesa la st year and have
used it ever since,'' he says,
Corona's supennan, K en
Carpenter. at 6-2 ls a bl()nd,
good-loctkin,g yo ung alhlete
with 11 poa)Uve approach to the
aame.
"l think this team has a
vepr &oocl attitude and that v.·e
have more speed than we had
last year," he says in sum-
marizing the situ ati on.
Coach Dave Morland concurs
in the evaluation and adds:
"Something has to happen this
year . We've been worki ng long
and hard enoug h to bring a
wlnnlng ~ason here ...
Turning lo Carpenter, he
war:es enthusiastic. 0 "He's the fastest lineman
we have hid. He's a good stu-
dent and isn't prone to injury.
He will play both ways for us
" in the fall -oflensively aod
defensively."
Line coach Dick ~lorrls
seconds the ev1luation .
··ne was • fi r&t string
player last year and he is
stronger and quicker 1h1s
spring. He is undoubtedly •ne
of the be st linemen I have
ever coached."
Carpenter hasn 'I decided &n
his future but leans toward the
d iscus thrower's nemesis at
the moment -UCLA.
Did he play Pop Warner
football prior te entering high
school?
"No. I was always Loo big to
play' in Pop Warner. I did try
Little League baseball but I
wasn't too good at it and
decided lo stick with football,"
he says as his coaches be:am
with anticipation.
The Huntington Be a Cb
Oilers' losaell have been h,1.rn-
ed into gains for the Orange
Coast College Pirates and the
Edison Hlgh Chargers.
The DAJLY PILOT learned
today thal Oil City football
assislanl5 Ron MacDonald
and Dennis Casino have ac•
cepted grid aide jobs with the
Chargers and Bucs. Both
m()ves are effective for the
1971-72 school year.
7'.facDona!d . 30, 1vi !I be
tutoring the defensive line for
cOach Vince Asaro's defending
CIF AAA tillist Chargers and
will also assume duties as a
physical education inslructor-
at Edison.
The 120-man field will be
redu~ to the top 60 following
the rompletion of 28 games
and will be cut again to the
lcRding 36 after 36 games.
The leading fiv e bowlers· will
lhen battle for championship
hooors folJ()wing the com-
lie is no relation to either of
his tv.·o famed namesakes -
in fact, he knows Uttle or
nothing about them er their
deeds of yesteryear.
Ba se ball 's Top Ten
A 1964 graduate of Cal State
(Long Beach ), wh&e he
played offensive guard and
linebacker for Don Reed,
MacOon11!d has been a line
coach at Huntington the past
two years.
The 29-year-<>ld Ca1ino will
help head man Dick Tucker
out with the defensive secon·
dary at OCC and will also
teach history at Fountain
Valley Hiflh.
plet!oo of 5! games. \
T .. U l lWlort
f'ol. 1-l•r c rrv ~111•
1. CIVd• l •<hff, DA,.. Polnl 1,11•
2. ~•tel l•rn1!, Tu•lln 1.102
J. G•rY M•dl•o11, 5an lern•rd<n" 1,ttl
4. J!"' Hurtt. L-e .. ch 1-613
5. W1tlr Wtl,.." S1nll Ant 1.111
'· J e ck MtP'll~, 5tnll AM 1,61' 1, Gr..., 81dtrdttn, 01111,10 1,'6t t. Fri!! Qo.ugh1rl'/, Cot!t M•t 1,461
t. Miki SmUh, An1~1lm 1..U
lo. Gl•nn Alli-. W~l!li•r l ,6J2
11. G1rv Yam1uchl. G••!!..,. I.loll
11. S!t¥1 SChWt r!fMlfr. Po1111>'" 1.W
\J. M1r!y Atl(lorl(ln, Ant ht ln'I 1,631
H. Gl•n Chri1ttn1•r.. loo Anftltl 1.631 lJ. Ari God!!i•<I, T1m1>l1 City J,6l'
1•. J.,ry O'N•lll. Torr111c• 1.l ll
Thi s Ken Carpenter is a 20>
pound tackle OI the Sea King
football team and during
spring drills is seldom seen on
the field wtthout his Superman
T-shirt.
White leads his teammates
to sometimes call him Clark
(Ke.nl) the fabled newspaper
reporter who turns t o
Superman and \vears the
bright S on a shield.
"I began wearing the T-shirt
for football when we beat
TRUEST
TO.FORM
AMlllC,._N LIAOUI
P11.,.,. c11,1i.
O!lv• Minn
Mutotr H'f K•Hne 0~1
llol•• !IC
I . lloJlln90n .. I
I!, Sml!n '"" llh lC11•r"dl Cnf
To••• M\n
0111 ICC
Uhlatndtr Cit
0 Al I H Pel.
•6 Ill )I ... 116
Jl lt1 31 .. ,,.,
•J Ut 11 • .3?1
,, 11111 '° .l21
J.O 1'3 21 11 .316
,, 110 31 6.5 .JlG
)9 10 '' ... :)Of !) 11,,. .. ·*
.. !Ii " .s. .301 0 lll t 1' .301
011¥1. Mlnl\f10!1, 111 W. Morton, 0. 1,.111, II; Olli. K1nu1 CllV. 11; R.
J•<kM>n. Otklelld. I I; C11h, 011rou,
'' 1 11111 llllM In
1<:11111:1......,, Ml,.n110t1. '7; ,,,~111,
&<1111.>n • .CO; llndo. 0 11<1a"d, lll; W~lt1,
Now 'fork, lS; J. Powell, 91lllmor1.
)1; Mure .... H.,. 'fork, 3l
NATJON.ll. Ll,,OUI
Pl•r•r Clwt 0 A• I H , •••
l •..O. SIL ~ zn 4f II .~s
W. DIYl1 LA ~ 11• lol 17 .1'0
Torri ilL ll JOI lS 1• .154 , .... ,gh .. 110 ll ... "6
Gerr. Sii. tt l l4 JI' JJ .lJ:I
J. AICMI Hin 4 1J2 I 1 !J .l<t 9«k1rr (nl JI? ?10 .U 7l .l4
Lt490¥r• LA :II Ill ,. ".m
M1r1 SI' J.O 1n :» 57 .lJ3
ll r1n._i NY 33 IU 1• 11 .3l0
Ml!llllllUM • Sltr .. 11. 'llhburth. U : H. Atron.
A!l1nt1, II; .. /'Id!. (lll(lnntll. I(;
Ct11t!!t, Att•nlt, ll; I , W!Hle'"", Cll!-
clto. ll l 1....:11. SI" "'l "l'lltO, ll;
MtyJ, ~lft ,,l "l'iKO. 1).
ll""l a1t1N I~
Sl1r11ll, Jlll!ll>urt h, ''' "'torr,, !I.
l c-Jll '1; Ii. A••1>n, All111t1. 11; (If.
,, .... 1. It. Lovl1, :111 Slnto. Ch!c•H,
~.
A Redlands University grad
in '64. C1slno was a wide
r eceiver and collegiate ltam·
mate or University High grid
chief Jerry Redman ind
Estancia head mentor Phil
Brown.
He's handled the defensive
b1cb the past two seasons for
Oller coach Ken Moat!.
Of the tour top tracks in California last year, Los Alamitos had the highest
percentage·of winniog favorites.• Come out and have the NIGHTIME of your :
life with the chart-smart set this season! Night Racing; June 9 thru Sepl 8. ~· ·
Monday thru Saturday. First of nine races: 7:45 pm. Nightly Double: 1st and
2nd races. Exacta: 6th and 9th. ~
'Flgune luml"'9d 11J D•"1 Rttlng form, Triangle PubllCllllons, Inc.
37%
HOLLYWOOD PARK 32%
SANTA ANITA 31%
BAY MEADOWS 29%
.,
For Advance Reservations-
FOii TURFTEllMCE -: : FOii -D KATI:
(213) 431-0922. (714) 527-4471 • (213) "*1·1381. (714) !127·2231
LADIES 50¢ EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT
West of Disneyland on Katella OS
Al Hill, who COIChtd &ls1
Grandt's Mal.lldorz to lb e
G1rdei Grove Ltasue baaeball
tllle flil sprinr, hall been
selected to co1ch the South In
!he foUTth aMUAI Klwanla all·
!lrlr baseb1ll 11me June 2• (3
p.m ) at La P1lm1 Park, the
DAILY PILOT learned e1·
clu.!lvtly tod•Y· Tuesday morning, f:nlr\es $1.00 wltJt thl• 114 ... k ~•Y•
will be drawn tor TbursdaYIL:;;;;;;.;;;;;:.;;:;:,;;;.::;:;;.;:::;;JI------------------------------------------------------
.•:
,-,
' '
' ,,
I
I
... . . .
fQ DAIL V PILOT Monday, J1Jl'l4' 7. \q71
Sears
Tire and Auto Center
Prices Effective Sunday, June 6 thru Saturday, June It
NEW
SHOPPING
HOURS
SEA RS NOW
CLOSES
AT 9 P.M.
!!ON DAYS
THROUG H
FRIDAYS
... 1\ND
AT 6 P.M. ON
SATURDAYS
NEW
STORE HOURS
Sundays
12 Noon to 5 p.m.
Mondays thru Fridays
9.30 a.m. to 9 p.m.
S11turdays
9 :ma m. to 6 p.m.
. .
The All NE W WIDE 78 ~cries l 'read
2nd Annual
GOLDEN
STATE 400
Supertred ''78''
~:~~~::::!~ 16 ~!T
• Bel led Construc-
t io n (rayon carcass
plus 2 rayon bell:-;J
fo r greater stabil-
ity, performance,
safer handling.
• 1-'eatures the soll
ride of rayon cord
'''ilh reinforced
tread area to re-
duce squi rn1 .
• 1'1ore road con-
tact for safer slops
and superior han·
dling.
Ao<IOl<ITI••
SIZE 'T••4~•· F.E.T. -Tubeless Blackwall
C78-13 16.93 -2.00
E78-14 20.93 2.37
F78-14 22.93 2.54
G78-14 25.93 2.69·
Tubeless Whitewall
C78·13 19.93 2.00
E78-14 23.93 2.37
t'78-14 25.93 2.54
G7S-14 28.93 2.69
H7S-14 31 .93 2.95
G78-15 29.93 2.80
H78-15 32.93 3.01
HeaV)' D11Ly Mufflers
Lifetime Guaranteed for as Long
as You Uwn Your Car
H ...... ,..0.11 Mum,.,.
Li(e tl-G11ar•Pl"t.:
If mufflr1 l••l• Jue tn
driecn in m•tc n•h or
wnrkm•nJlup o r blow-
avt, MHl•WI itr· WCll.f·
buf while otiA•n•I ru1·
cllii#r owru cht \It, it
will be rtpl.-rd upon
rc1wa. free of ... h..rJt .
If the defn-u•t m\lfOtr
WU lns11lltd hy Stan,
'W(' Will i1tt1.JJ thf' MW
mufficr w11h l'l<l ch•rat
b labcTf.
20%
OFF
Sears·
Regu1ar
I.ow
•Large, full ·lenglh tuning
chamber fbr better sound·
silencing • 22 ga. outer
shell galva ni zed on both
sides ror l.onger .wea r • 26
ga. steel oval mu m er in·
ner shell . , . 30% thicker
than one sh~ll mumer~
.r~ils most American c nr~.
l~xpert Installation
Avail1ble
SUNDAY
JUNE 20, 1971
1:00 P.M.
25% Off
f;'J0l' THRILL PACKED Ml'l!"G
5te 1011 name• in NASCAR stork r:or\nr ...
lndud"•~: llirll1r<l f'etl)'· Bobby Ju~r
Do,·od l'~a""""· !lobby Allioon ind otll~~ tor• n~mt.1. JloorinR down th~ lon~. !>.ark
olr~lghl 1t ~veed• up lo 100 Ml'll; ra~inc
~··~r ll"·~nirl~'' 8 turn roiod four•c for • 1rnroe 1>r~.OOO.
Th• C<>l~P.n Sl•'" 400 nnP. nr twn m•i<>r
•lock •·•r roJd •~Cr• in the 1<orld JS •~nc· l1011ed !Jy !he N•!ional As,oci•lion fnr
Stork C•r Au!omoblle Racing. \NASCARl
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SANTA MONICA
)94-•71 I
SOUTN COA.ST rLAIA
140..JJJ)
~ \
•
THOUIANO OAICI
•• , ... ,"" )21·11.)1
TO•IANC(
s•2-1s 11
uf'lfND .. ,.,,,,
VAWY
76l·M•1 , 914-1110
VI IMO NT
75•·1911 s.,1,1.,,1." ou., • ._, • .41
wT•urM.tMr~
. ' . . ,_ ''• . . .....
,..
'Man Who Came to Dinner'
Drags Heels at Fullerton .
' ' By TOM TtTU~
O! !~t D•ll~ ~Ii.I llllf
One dii;tinct dlsadvantage of
bting the third con1muni!y
theater group to pr:esenl the
,...fame play over a span of two
~1onths is that the production
\;'must necessar1!)· be evaluated
·t.with the olher two still fresh
;~n mind. And while com·
l parison may not consciously
b4! made. the knowledge of
"'hat could be accomplished
with the .~ame .~cript persists,
nevertheless,
Despite some gl i\lering in-
dividual virtues. thl.!re are
many things "'hich could be
done wilh the f u J I er to n
:'.J"ootligh ters' version of ''The
""'an .fiho Came lo Dinner,''
:\\the most immediate of >A·hich
would be informing the (a.St cameo portrayaJ_ .t. a thinl1
and direct.or that the play is, disguised Noel C'011.·ard, is one
afte r all, a comedy. There of the handful of performers
seems to ~ some serious v.·ho rescue ''Dinner" from the
reservations on lhal point. doldrums of an ex:haustingly
Director Mitchell Sanford overlong evenin,i::. But most of
must stand priniarily lo blame the major supporting roles are
for the dragging of ensemble eqacted so low key and de11dly
heels th r o u g h o u t this • sErious that the play borders
J\auf1nan-Hart revival. Jnex-011 drama.
perience 1nlght excuse one or A notable exception is the
two actors for !ailing tn 81rong performane" of Don
establish and maintain a Rhoades in the key role ef
salisfactory pace -bul when Sheridan Whiteside, around
the majority of the cast----. ~.,=Hi "'"" w~-,.---
trudges lhrough the show as if c1.Me; To 0110 .. E•"
l k th A comt<:lv bv Gtorgr 5, K•ulm•n •rod mourners a a w;i e, e ....,0,. Har1. ,,1,eCTr<I D• Ml•cl•tll 5•n·
responsibility lies in the 1or<1, ••cnn!<•l <11<tc1or t"°" com"'""'
II •leer m•n"g~, 51••• 01t.o<n, 1el <1t•ivn department &( OVera in· by Mltcnrll S•n!ord er>d Su1•n Nrl><m.
le'pretation, P••"'"'"' Frid••• •n6 Sn!u"'"'" '"'°"Qh Junt ll by lhf ~ .. 1i.r1011 This presents a curious Foo111vn1.,. •' 1nr Mu<~•"'"''''
d f S r d · h' C•M•r, lit llurnt VIII• Oll•t, para ox, or an or , rn IS F11nerton. "'"'"'••Ion• si1.~u.
-:-----------------------THE Cl.ST Shr •l<1t n wnn .. lat .. Oon llho11<1r'
M899if Cv!lrr .. ,K•lh~rlnt tuC~•lt
TV DAILY LOG
B<r! Jtlltrwn il lll (hrlOll•n
l orrtfnr 5M•l<IQI> , J•cou•lin• M•S.:•olt
Ern.•t Sltntev .• , . E ~atfto Wtndtl
Mr,. S•A~I•• . .. . G•ll Cnu<Mcotl
Or . Broaiov ........ Crf19"1on """'"' M iu P•t•n .. ' Anlf• M•lll.
lltnlo . I.eon C1>mn1en
l•Vfflf Carlt0<1 ••·. M!l<l<~!f S•nlotO Rlrh•rd • , •• .• ,.. . Jim MAndl90 Jun~ ...... , .• ,.......... M•'V Elliot!
' ,};',.,.
Monday
Evening
JUNE 7
to 11press his 1fftctlon ro1 hl1 u -
att kw1.
QHYPO
John .. •• Don Wall
S•c•n . .. . . ..... Ed•n Tom1>euliu1
H•"llt Sltnl•Y •• '"" l..011 t•tn•rd Gi11ger Sttappers
0 {])al It W8' 1 VtrJ Cood Yu 1
Mel TOJmt hl»ts. Spec i1l 1uuts Ill
S)d Ctes.1r, !>.ft Gll'rOWIY llld TV
col umnid CAtll Smith, Y••r n -
pfised: 19'9.
Pr<of•ssor Metz ••.•... .C••I Nelson
S•rll!Y , •..• , •.•••.• ROl>tfl MtftC!o111 David Emmcs Oeft) and Ronald Bousson\ hold an amimaled conversation In
whom I.he entire play is struc-this scene from "The Ginger Man ," currenUy playing Fridays through Sun·
tured. Rhoades is v ita J, d ays at Soulh Coast Repertory in Costa Mes.a.
dynamic and authoritative in -----------------------------------
his whee lchair-bound r o I e,
1:00 f.I Bi1 """ Jtrty Dunphy,
(})ABC News Re1xiner, Smlth.
O KNIC Jrltw1tlYlc:t Tom Snyder.
0 The Nltn Jllow Gu..U: Louis
Hye, Renee Arm1nd, Fred Smoot 1rid
Ken Murray.
D Sb O'Clod: ~ tt) (90)
"Btlld of lttt IH*" (west«11) '52-
Ji rnes Sll!<*•rt, Roek HudJc'". Arthur
Kennedy, Julle Adam1, lor1 Nelson.
J1y C. Flippen. In ls.47 1 wagon
h"lln fUidl llYft the lilt ri4 I ltltn
1boi.rt to b1 l.rncllrll. bvt !ivtl kl
regret tt.
m o..111 frotl SlllW Dud.Jn Koff·
min Is 01vid'1 only 1utst. m....,,.
fI!) P'.n."' fol' LM111 EID-•--
HO 8 N.,tMirry 11' .D. Clll s.m l1tet
probh1m1 whtn Allee 1uurna hoUM·
kHp!nr duties IOJ him 111d his '°"
Mike.
abetting a powerful voice with
111killful use o! eyes and other
mannerisms -in short. a
complete characterization. On·
Jy in the area of timing does:
Rhoades waver, and here only
!i!igh!ly.
Barbara Giving Up
Her 'Ironside' Role .
Whiff enpoof
Singers Set
For Concert
€11 Spy
CDTIMfll~ msar TrN
EI) A ThM ler Jolrn/Ch111it's hd
@!i) FbW f...tty
111-...34
fD Dle1li Ytllef O.,S
al) Lt Ko!-1 ft•lll1r con ConMlllo
Q)""" nm HIWlllomt.
l:lO !]) ,._Bill Huddy,
(J) Trl'lll tf Co111eq11111ces
(J) CIS Ntw1
tll'NIC .._ m Til1 Flflnt Miii'!
fI!l~1tlMll
@:) Setldtd fllms/Muslu lt m T"9 Dnlrt Report EID TIA Ell••
f:OO I> CIS Jllftol Walter Cronktt1. ~ D m MIC "-Dlv!cl Brinklty,
)ohn CNncell11, frank McGee.
(I) To T911 tllt Trvtll
fJ Wti1t't MJ Unt!
@!Did ¥1n Oyl1 m I loN Lucy m l]) Dr11nt1
fD Our ¥mldll111 'MkMmea "OI
Broccoli ind Pelical'll ind Cell!)'
ind Seals ... IR)
€!!) CMsl 1111 U\'lnt: Word m Anaelitot JrltlfOI
CI!J Sl No f uaas TY m Movit GIN
o ®l m w.w ""...,, M..n.
(C) (?hi') "SM HHI; Who lllllcl tM
Mrrttrlon Mr. flll•r {dt1m1)
[fl!etl: B«flllrie. llrut» o.tn, S.m
J1ffe. wm G•. J•r D. C.nllCNt, JudJ
GH«lll. C1fll\fJ11 M1th•1, .x,t,n Mt·
Gi'vtr, A 11011-politleal 111111 la Pf!·
auaded to nlll for iMrltt of • small
west«11 town. en. f11cilfv1 0 (j) (I)!!) AIC ...... Moot«
(C') (2itr) "Si.et Loud-lMdlr, I
Don't Vlldlrdlnd~ (dr1ma) '66 -
R1quel Welch, M1rcello M11t~1nnl.
1t1ll111 Welter Mitty Isn't surt If lit
wftrie.s.std 1 mu1dtt or only 11111,tned
II.
{])AllllUI
m '""'' lc!ud tll) I iJ1C1.o.L I H1111Cbtrl tnd \111·
111t1: Wbo Is liulll)1 TeJ1ord T11lor,
U.S. 1hie[ counwl 1t !ht Hu11mbtr1
tritls; A. frtnl<. llMI, dtftnM llOIPI·
•l m t111 Tokro tri1f; 1ftd otti.r
U.S. llil'pl!rts l11 lnt1r111liot11l ltw diJ.
e1no1 whethtf Ille pretteltnts •I
tllotlld be tpplitd lit !ht •• , ill
lndochint.
fE)lOMh1M
8) SOnriNI mu ,... •Soll•
t:JO 1J C1J Dem Dey (R) Ytn >ohntott
1utst dtrs 11 Doris' 1l®elro1ti11c.
nglbond covi.in whom alM 11nl11ltn-
t!on1lly lrfnslorms into 1 11trwu1
wrtck of 1 busiJ11Uma11,
0 ttndl• '""' m Qllf.ll * Advlllhrt
tJ!) Mutlalt/l"tlto(1 Dlllt
CE LI Cm .. Mtrl• Cnicn
Chiefly responsible fo r
slackening the pace to a era"'!
i~ Katherine Luckett. who
virtually sleepwalks through
the role of White si de 's
secretary Maggie with a
distressing lack of conviction.
Her romantic interest is solid·
ly, but again too softly, done
by Bill Christian whose low
key interpretation min imizes
his effectiveness.
Jacqueline Masciola i,~ far
too genuine and emphathelic
to be convincing as the bitchy,
phony actress recruited lo
spirit the youn~ writer away.
Eugene Wendel is overly
restrained as the harried host,
while Gail Chudacoff ;is his
wife plays her scenes as
something t'.lut t1f a Creek
tragedy.
On the plus !ilde. Leoa
Compton generates some sore--
ly needed laughter in a late
11.ppearance as a Grollcho
Marx prototype; Creighton
Barnes is splendid as the
wispy. nbsequfous doclor, and
Carl Nelson docs wonders with
a tiny cameo scene as the in·
sect expert.
By VERNON SCQIT
UPI Hollyv.'ood Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD ]UPI)
When "Ironside,·• of the lop !I)
Neilsen Ratings, returns lo the
air next yea r it will be wi.lhout
officer Eve \Vhilfield played
by Emmy-winner Barbara An·
dersorr.
Barbara. a blonde ...,.ith a
tinkling bell voice , may be the
first actress lo quit a hit
televis ion show in its bloom of
popularity.
Pernell Robcrt.q and Da vid
Canary depi!r\ed "Bonanza'~
for greener fields that never
materialized. Dennis Weav('r
w a lk ed away f rnm
"Gunsmoke," the lonp.est-run·
ning drama Qn !he tube. 13-0h
J~ort.nn exi~d "Wagon Train"
at it.s: peak .
None of the actors aflminerl
regrttting their decisions. But
one seldom sees the names of
Roberts, Canary (Ir Jlorton
adorning ma rq ut'cs or
television series of their own.
They wanted out to do more
important, challenging th ings.
Miss Anderson asked for h<'r
release out of fatigue.
"l underwent a serious
operati(}fl I as t September,"
Barhara ~aid. "and was back
on the se! in three v.·('l'ks "
centrating more and more on
guest stars.
"That left the three regulars
on the show -not counting
Ravmond Burr -more or less
as 'window dressing."
There is anolile.r factor in
Barbara detaching her s e I [
from one of video's top shows.
She was married lo a Beverly
Hills stock broker four months
The \Vhilfenpoofs of Yale
University, will make their
first Orange County concert
appearance Sunday evening at
Corona Del Mar High School.
The 14 Yale seniors com-
prise a group lirsl forrncd in
1909 and rrnewed eilch year In
the prescnl. The close blend of
ngn. voices and intricate musical
"I'm settling into married ar,,angements h;ive r s\abli~ed life now," she said. "And a style enjoyed by enthusiastic we've bought a new home. audiences in the East. and And ser iously, 1 don't miss th' .
i:;rrirs. \\lhrn 1 see the reruns adopted by many similar
it's like watching another AC· ~roup_s on C' amp us cs na-
trcss; as if I'd never appeared honwidc.
on tc series to begin v.·ith. OlllM• Hoelnc co•ST tne:.HW..V & m1 n.
~~e .. wh;tr;eld i; a ;trnoger to ~/.?iiima
Now ro.1rs. Donald Burnell, ~ j~-·-"'~l
!he Tennessee-born beat1ly 20lhCentury·fm Presents
contractua!!y cannot work inl
another series for more than
t.hree years.
"That doesn't bother me,"
she said. "I haven't any desire
to do another 16cries. But J
would like to make ·some
televisi(}fl guest spots Bnd
n1aybe a movie or two." D. H. LAWRENCE 'S
"WOMEN IN LOVE"
IJJ1lll1dJl1•fl!lf~, 11 liii)T8.\
Anita Malk is widely funny
as the put-upon practical
nurse, while Loi.~ Larnard is
less successful ;is the dippy
sister. Jim Nandigo and r.1ary
E!liotl are satisfactory as the
Stanley youngsters. w h i I e ~ B (IJ G1J1111110U (R) '1~1 New-Robert r.1endoza fall ers a bit comtfs." Jon Vci!ht ol•ys 1 tern -10:00 U Cl) SIUJllllll 1'11)'11ou51 (R) I · D
Now Barbara was beginning
In sound more like Bob
Horton. Pernell Roberts, ti a!.
'"Then. inste;id or tt1kin,ii its ;;;~-~~~_:_:~~~~~~..:::~::::::=:::c=:o:::o=o=o=o=o==,I
usual hiatus, the series began I NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES · · ~ ,. ........ s st1 '"' ns the abor organ12cr. on •gtr wLo settle1 in Dodge Cl"' wi!lt "Cr1$11. """ """· UMn I 11
'' '1 L ....__ h d ,.. • 1 Wall and Eden Tomboulian, his tether (llarl 5,.rnKrn) tr>d is 1nd Rutn rwonln ea '"' u,, n ane>ther 10 weeks of shows fnr "·----------------------~ next season. So I asked tn be1 · bullied lntll 1 tttil lirtit. this episode. which ~eals wiH, Gne the latter spor11ng a delightful
emtrte11t'f I" 1n 1round -the-c!oc~ Irish brogue, are v.·ell cast as removed from the show. And
lhat was that." O @J m from I Bird's (Pf Vltw Pf)'Chi1t1it nrvlce. the cook and butler. "Hlgltl1~d fli11g." Mdl•r ind l1h12ir ''The Man Who Came to Or was it? Barbara was d1:icover • d1t!tte11I kind ol spi11I 0 ctl1n1tl !i NtWI !l:f't'in Slndrri. th h Dinner" is a fragile piece of growing restless on e s ow 1han !hry •~peeled Wilen they visit 0 Btrtlf Warcl HIWI h
Period comedy, ,equiring deft any crw. I Sconi1h tistle. m News Pulntm/Fishm1n. I Id 't h handling to bridge !he gap ·· cou n see v.· ere my 0 Vlri\ni1 lir1btnt l!J "'• .. P Al Hunll hosta. Guest t ·b t • 1' ~ I t from Thir1ies staging t.n ('l)n r1 u ion wa !\ ,,5 m1 .... r an 00 Movlt: "Till ltrlfl" DiU PtJw. ii Gary Cros~y. Seventies audiences. Sanford 8!> it had been in the first tv:o
ell, Paula R1ymond. £El Hit dtl Mo111111t1 chooses to ignore the play's years of the :-cr1ro;," she sail'{
0 m Cl)! l i>l(IAL I Th• Und..... 0 . ,,. '"' -· .. comic possibilities and presenl "The ~cripts w e re con-Workl of Hcciuu Cout1al~ "Or11ons 10:)(1 M0\111: . ) .,tz:t . ot Galipsros." (R) Capt. Cousleiu Jrloon" (1dllen!ure) 47 -W1ll11 m it at face value, ll regrettable ----•
ln~Mtigetei ltlt Ille ot !ht mystMi Holdt". Aiint 81~"· Stcrr!lni H1y· error in judgment. BALBOA'
ous drip of !ht .._ !ht Mirine den, Sonny Tulb. Two more performances of 67l-404I
111u1n1. IE BUI .loltM ""1 !he Kaufman-Hart play will be o Miiiien s Ntolk (2"r) "Morabl• fI) twnnt E""1I Conr11t fJf th• presented. Friday and Satur· ~!:
Juni" (romtdy) '63-Ulll P1!mu KPDL Youth ltldMti!p S11'1'1l111r day al Fullerton·~ Mucken·
London lt•ll• 1c.lrtu Is !01ttd 111 lle1d •I tht Blltmor• Kole! on M1y 7 !hale r Center, 119 Buena Vista :'n!. ';:,..~..-.
repr1151 htr dtslres for 1 Bo~tmi111 tnd 1l!1nded br 350 11111-fl'tdt lrtt Drive. l,L.;;;...;, ____ _;,;::=
!He b~ lier ttrl!tr ind 1rialocr1!1t Ngh school 1tudtnts. li"ii0iiiOiii0iii0iiiOiiiOiiiOiii0iii0iiiOiii
llusb•nd. Ill CMIM M AApstln
m Tritt\ • QllllM[lllMll i 1 :GO a CJ) cm """
QtnTaAT11l1! B @ m ....... m--oo -,..., ..,, GICiH91 JO D (})GDNen
et o.1t..v1 D ..-: "'W1r b 1W" !d111111)
ail TIA '64-Tony Rits.n, .hJcfJ Di n.
r:ss m Cutst1o1t .s. ..,.,._ m Mwir. ........ • """°". (mys.
!try) 't6 -BIH Goodwin, ''"e am•,.._"_ m"""'""'. "Wake-Up, 01rlln1." (If) Don [mt1·
ton (81rry Hilson), 1n 1dl'll1isln11 11:)0 II Cl) M.v Qriffl~
tiectr!lve. ·llC>PM hb: 1ct1e11·wilt fi1 aJ m Joll~llf ClllM Orvld
()1nel 81tlr) will Pt llP ~ .. dream Sttlnlltrs is 111bstitutt Mil.
ol beln1 • Bto1clw1y 1t1r l~r I D (}) 00 $ Dkt C.Wltl
fufl·tima rolt II Ills SpoUll. m lttfltr II• d b) d m Tt Tiii the Trwtll Tilllll 11 r ' wa. N. v, BomMrs. ID Werk! P'r•
G)~ t!VI ..
lmT-.nlt
'"' l!!l"'
••
Tuesday
I 1
'::DXVTIME MOV1ES
•.•• "lnJ t.Mll(' (C:On'l..ty) 'l7 -
4.M\U111d, ;.tw Arthur, ,tnti.
Afllf hit" (m)'lttl'Jl '42 -
l)oltlevy, Mlrl•m HoDklni.
..,.,. K11kM Cl1b1lr t ll t rr"
(1PDrlS) '51-Thom11 G11111t1, Thi
Globetrotte rl. Oonit~y Oandrldl•-
t:lO D "'T1it ... ,, rr .. Tuai" (c:om-
tdy) '51-f4ow1rd Ovff, MO!lt r~ ...
• ..... ...... "" ...,.. Cblot·
tm Clb•tldilrl
12:>0 m .,... ~ .... • "W
Wtlr" (mys:ttlY) '37-ltir!t Stan..
1:00 IJ Mwll: "Alfllr 11 Trf11141t"
(mnftrf) 'S2 -Gltnn Ford.
CD DO CIJm •..,
nphY) 'g\ -"" Dentftll, Jtrnt
M111rlltld.
10:00 ()) .................. ,~
tu11) '52 -Je11t ~ .ltfftl'J
Hunttt.
l :OOm "A Jlllpt tt ltMellMf' (mys.
leiy) 'tZ -Brhn Ah1me, l"retta
Youn&-
2:00 IJ "tt!Nlcb fMlr" (blo1t1pl!J) '63
-Stuul Whlt1111~. S1mrny D1vl1 tr,
];00 (}) "lcnllll el' f•f" {1V19tnU) '61
-Sust11 Str&Jbtfll-
4;)(1 IJ "l•rm'l Stcrlt Trt1wl'T" (ad·
Wintur1) ''I -Jollnl'IY Wtb.,null.-,
M1ut1an O'Sulllv111 •
(}) S. lG AM lltl ...
ALSO PLAYING
Hoblowtho ~
Dotort Fox lo Holll,·, ........
BuPlian
L'll.ii/an
1Ra I'
~ • 1.JrMRSAt ricn.:. ruM:a.or
I mi -, ______ _
NOW-ENDS TUESDAY
8 Academy Awards I
:?o..~ ..... -PA'l"l'()N
GF.ORGE c. --"·-· Iii: SCOTl' -l!!!'l
-ALSO-
"PATTON" 7:00
"MASH" 9,55
e Starts W•dnesday e
Academy Award Winner
-BEST ACTRESS-
GLENDA JACKSON
D. H. LAWRUICE'S
"WOMEN IH LOVE "
lhuh·d 1\1 11 .. 1• "
& James Earl Jones
20th Centvry-Fo.: Presents
, TheGreat
· ~hite Hope ·
I ..,....,... -IGPI I .... -
"WHEN
EIGHT
BELLS
TOLL"
{GPI
Mond.ay, June 1. 1971 DAIL V PILOT II,
'Rip Va11 Wi11kle'
La1·ge Cast Set
For Youth Show
One or the larsest rasts In Dave Peck, Scott Monte, Joel
the history of lhe Jl unUnJ;ltnn Strauss. John Palafoulas,
Beach Playhouse has been Sharnn Kennedy, Darlene and
amassed for the theater's ~\arline Brothers, Lis a
summer child ren's productu1n Ftrguson, Carol Ann Wall.
•f "Rip Van \Vinkle." Courtney Cnrglll. Denise
A cast of 29 youn~sli'r-; .in1{ Kelly. Trish Hannegan, Sharon
adult s bas bee11 .'it'll'Clt·d fron1 V.'orn1us, Dave Jones, Glenn
a field Of 1~ by director Nick l'isti('r, Lisa Johnson, Susa n
Sylvester for the show, wh ich Powers, J)elore5 Roberts, Lin·
"'ill open July 9 for three da :O.lurray, Tammy to.'\urphy
wrekends. and 1\olon1c<1 and Ci n d 'I.
Plnylng the !it!e role of Rip Postrna.
v.'ill be. Ken Clifford. The part -(;;;;~;;;:::;;;;::ii ef Dame Van \Vinklc w1tl be
divi ded between Sabin a ~
Johnson and Ann \\';:~lkcr, with Q;pm
Celia lboscn t:.kmg the role l 0 of Dame Buskirk.
Others in the large cast arc
Dixie Patty, K;ithy Baker,
Daniel Sanchez, r-.1ark Hoist,
Nick Stone, Cathy Carlson.
-"""'""""" flJaller Matthau
Elalnel1D9
Jack (l)eston
"Aftewleal"
ll:ll ,_ "' MOVtEWl "°"
Aho Co.-d't -GP'
JACK LEMMON
'"
"APRIL FQOLS"
NlW"O•r lfAfH -.i ..... .,.,,.._ •• ,.~ .. !••• 11~. lolo •• o•. 1-IUO
NOW THROUGH
TUE SDAY
"GIMME
SHELTER"
5TARRIN~
THE
ROLLING STONES
• ••
Joan Biez
In
"CARRY
IT ON"
WEEKDAYS-7 P.M.
CONT. SUNDAY l P.M.
LASTWEEKSt
2ND TOP HATURE
"MllS. POlLlfA.X. SPY" IG)
Ali MocGrow •Ryon O'Neol Roted (GP)
''LOVE STORY''
l!:DWARDS
HARBOR c11:':~ 2
l MILLS sour" r ''" Ol[IOQ fWT. HELD OVER
Rock Hud~on ond
Angie Dic kinson
~Maids all in a row
Plul ·Mic ho el Caine In "GET CARTER " (RJ
COMING JUNE 16 "THE ANDROMEDA
STRAIN"
Richard
Burton
1"Villain"
r"' "'~G
"THE BEST MOVIE SINCE 'BONNIE ANO CLYDE'!"
,..,_,,,.,,.,,,,.,,I_ . .. ... ,........... THE .. ,-.,., ___ """' 2NO TOP HIT
Jome1 Gnrncr
"AMAN
(4l\l0
SLEDGE"
STARTS FRI., JUNE 18
Rran O"N•U • W•lllom Holdtn
' "WILD ROVERS"
Tll.."1-COlO'
Al W . ' "IN JEAICH or so alt Disney s TMICASTA'WJ.Y S"
!TARTS WID , 6 9 ·"THI OWL AND THI PUSSYCAT"
l l
I
I
•
3! DAIL V PILDl
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
•
MUn AND JEFF
' \
FIGMENTS
WH~H
F/N6ER' · ':..
DID~ ...._::
HIT? P"I
'
'·
PLAIN JANE
-·· .
--· 1, J_ 1~ 7 !' • ..
fO OFFER T19UV YER eREAKFAS:
M I DON'fWANNA 'MllARRASSYA
PAL! ... SOME PEOPLE!S SENSITIVE{
'!101JT LErnN' OTHER PEDR.EO PAY
FER -rnEIR MEALS! ... MAKES 'EM
FEEL CHEAP! ....
•·I
·"· •.
I JUST
. ·. \
'
ly Tom K. Ryaa
'BllTDOESN
T+l.trr GIVE-
'>':>U A
HEACW:l-lE?
By Al Smith
I CARRY
ASPIRIN/
By Dole Hole
By Fronk Baginski
J •••
U'L AINll
.._.
SALLY BANANAS
-GORDO
.. ,
ANIMAL CRACKERS
!DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R • POWER I PEANUTS
ACROSS 44 lnspectCJ · Al:b .
45 Patt of
1 E11!1sh Spanish
D"•~Oll\ Sahara .
•··--Ctiaco ) WCl"dS
5. A"'tr!C:M! dS Mo~t omoortant
•!9•01\ ptrsnn; Slang
10 Stc~t 51 Plt~as ing ta
v 1:" ~ 1-,r~ lhe monrl
}4 81/ kol!l•••Q s: s.g .. ~ of!
111l anrl fro11 S4 Rt~tmhl•oQ
~1 or~~" a 11lt
JS B•ancl1t~ SB And olht•~
lb Cohomn•:>t 2 word!.
---Bomhtck 5q PolChtr
17 Kind of ltn\ bl frtoch school
1& -··· Corntr 1>2 Br ltl wr1lttn
19f11Sed commtm•c~l ion
matr11als ustd bJ Rti9n1nii
in rm~i~ glass Hindu qurtn
20 Shipboard b( Big rmmller
t mployee in La~ VPq~S
2Z Cold-blooded bS BarracllCla
vtrttbrate b6 Hopt ot mak·
24 Nol whiSPfltd tog a prol11 ~
2b M.ttlt fun of lnf(l{mJt
27 --gerieral: '7 Tire ftillurr
2 words
JO Organ of DOWN
hea1ln9
JI A natt011 l "T ~rn as
32 Long-wiogHI has,·-..
ins eel" 2 Oil! herb
Z words J Oit f!a~t
37 N.Y. Giant 4 Opposite or
grt t l ''windwaid"
:!8 FOl'estall S Commits •
40 female n1H lar ceny
41 Difl!t: ft Holdtrs of
2 words acadtmic
43 The buttocks degrefl
' •
Satutday's Puzzle Solvtd:
•
" • ' ' ( ( s
f, 17171
7 Fore t Into 35 RI?
plact Jf, Novel
a or 111e USA ; characlt r
Abbr. J8 Ptrtainin9 to
'1 Cardinal pun isb""nt
nurnbtl J't WeMl'fn
10 Part of tht badmen
body: 2 '!l'OldJ 42 Frrnch
11 Sharp rid9t : fll:plOftr
Arch1t. around Llkt
lZ Facial Michig;in
e1prt SSion 43 Wtight lostr
13 Disli~td 4b Unclos t ;
Zl Undt190 Port.
dKompo$il iOCt 47 Literar y
23 B1ist'. Dial. Jbridgmt n!
25 BtJS ol)fl'at~s 48 c~ta1n yt ar1
27 Fall down in one's lift
heavily 4't Came out -
28 Forma l --: 2 words
declariltiOll 50 Chatter
2'1 Preposition 53 E~charlQt
)3 Of the frOCfSS 55 Dtlighl in
of aging 51ri Gteek goddess
34 Mountain: 57 Spilt
C11t11b. fCJ111 lriO Compass point
JUDGE PARKER
~_. ••• ., .... --=o==""'-4 ME.-.WWH ILE, A.T TME MOTEL ••
\IE5, I WA.~T TO MAKE WOULD 'K>l.1 PO ME A FAVOR
R E<.EIV\NG
SOME
11"1E:XPECTE'P
INFORM" Tl OM
A&OUT
JOM;itN\I KA.NE ,
SA.M. t1~1VER
PHONES THE
AIRLIWE !
" li:E-SERVATION ON THAT i\NP CALL nus NOAABEe-? IT'S
!=LIGHT! IT LEAVES ~ WHE~ MY eo'f f:R1ENP WORKS!
7:10 Tllt!t EVfNING, THEY POt.l'T LllCE HIM 6ETTIN6
15 TWAT 11!16MT ?' CALLS FROM WOMEN !
MISS PEACH
PERKINS
LESTI!"',
WILL. 'ftJll.(
He:LP US
CLE/IN IS'
'1l<E
STOCK r<ooM?
--------
SOl.\ETHING
VOCI WJ.tilT
ME TO
l'tll MIM-!'
By Horold Le Doax
HIS NA.ME IS JOMNNV )(•.'..JE!
TRL HIM ntlT r;,., "'~NTS
MIM TO CALL ME~ A& SOON
AS HE CA.N •• TMAT I 'LL &E
WAITING Nil MV ROOM!
ly ~·
"
~ . .
.
.
--~u .. ~.'4..
ly John Miles . '
'
. By Gus Arriolll
By Ferd John50n
I PoNIT I EVoN <SOT
A l<EBUTTA~?
By Roger Bolen
co..re. NO\ll ! r11e MJ&l.EM
l$IJ'f' ~ e,ID, I/Of !
• 6lvE Mi 1UE TICKET! 1 no'
lllM ~ a:w> M' 1HE IJ6lfF' 1• •
..
--
. -.. '
LEGAL N011CE
WANT
TO
CLEAN
UP
ON
YOUR
CLEAN
OUT?
FDR
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
DAJiY I'll.OT "',,,. ............. ""'--"-....-~-
DAll .. Y PILOT WANT ADS
--.. l~I ---
oflnJa Jjl
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
l2 Linde lale Drive
Elegant new 5 BR.. 4lh: ba. home w/formal
din. rm .• fam. rm., wet bar. Impressive en·
try court w/16 ft. mahog. doors. $179,500.
For complete lnform•tion on ell home1 &
loh, pl•aM call:
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
133 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620
GI REPO
. $22,950
Located ln eo,ta Men on a
big 66' x 233' lot is a 4 bed-
room, 2 bath 111.mily home.
NeY>'ly paintM inside &: out
and has a brand new roof,
$1000 do~·n and pymt.I of $196
per mo. taxes included, Hur-
ry on this one !!
Newport
••
Fairv iew
646-1811
(anyti me)
B/B
'll YEARS OF
REAL ESTATE SERVICE
IN TI-IE HARBOR AREA
General
S Br. & Fomily Rm.
Lrg. 2 1tory Contell"ijlOr'lll"y
?.1esa Verde borne on pool
size corner Jot. PRlCE RE-
DUCED $l400. No down to
Ve!s,
$'40,750
2 DELUXE 4·PLEXES
Spac. 3 BR 6. 2 Ba in <Yoice
N.B. area. Ownt'r want1
quick sale. Priem below
mk1 . t-.'EW 80% Joan. 7% 3
•1urry, lhese won't last. $n,soo. EACH
HARBOR ESTATES
Too much city life? Let us
BEACH COTTAGE
cozy FDR COUPLE
Quaint ror.e rove~ sea ea!:·
ll\&:e. Perle-et ior eouple or
ba.cheiol'. Hua:e mstr. suite.
Loada of doeet r;p:,t.or:. FOR..
MAL DINING RM. All tiled
kitchen&. bath. Li.i6h carpet·
inp Lavish dfforative walls.
2 covered patios, AU dichon·
dra lawns. Brick planters.
New paint. New root, R-2
ion~. Walk to beach. It's
a doll house. Won't WI •
Bettt>r hurry, Cal I tn41
962-»8.'i.
I OHISI J 01 \0\
RfAi -o'<'~
19131 Brookhunt Ave,
Huntington Beach
TAKE OVER
FHA LOAN
All it take.11 ls a small dov.:n
payment to assume thi.11
J.""HA loan with payment of
$22:2. P'lr month INCLUD-
ING TAXES. \Vhat )'OU get,
11 a nellt 3 bedroom home
with .11~11.te dining room.
store fi"'°plaC1!, and built-
ins, including d:ish\.l·asher.
It's on a corner lot wi th
p;pa~ for hoat and it has
those h11.ro-to-find HARJ>.
\VOOD FLOORS~ Al $26.~.
if1 worth a look. CAMEO SHORES
Magnifiicent view. PriC1! jul!t
.reduced S2.~ Immaculate .c BR., a ba., 'MtOm ··bti.
home in one M our best
area. 3 Priv. beach en-
trance&. New pri~ fTJ .500.
ahow you th\g tne aurrnund-• CQATS
Pd; THRE£ BDRM:; 'JV..'O --·&· . ,
BATH, FAMILY ROOM W
1-I OM E . Douhle prage. . ALLA.CE
Three Patiol:, room for boa.I REAL TORS
675-3000
mu.\\ ~ 111:.\fll
lli:,\U'\' 1:\1'.
f'>r1.19 &7~lo.;
or trailer srorilJe. Near ~141-
Jchool~. 11hopp)ng and MW (Of>t:n Ev1nin91)
Clty Hall. Will IM'll with [Z=:il:::i==:i=:i=:i:::::i:::::i=:i~ Jo'Jl.A. OR V.A. TERMS,
lull "''" .,,, 1"·""' DUMPY DUPLEX
$29,950
4 BR. R·Z
Nee.r Nt"W}>On Hts. en qu1'l!f
Palmer St. :3 full be.t:ha, en-
try ha1J, patio. R.2 lot W/
alley fur tu~ rent.I in-
come & value. $29.oOo or
~'I ottrr.
3 BR. & DEN
Near Clitf Dr. CUnom tdne
only 6 YT'& old. 2 rut! batJois,
kil. blt:ll!!, patio. Dbl. pr.
on alley, A ~ buy at
$3<1,500.
4 BR. PLUS
&ycre1t area.. 4 bdrmii plut.
family rm, dirrinc rm, 2
bal.hs, tile entry, dbl. frple.
Wide so· Jot. Owner Soinl
. east, asklng $39.!00.
CALL 0 64,·14! ~.~ N11r N1•pert Pe•t Otflcs
YE·DLE FARM HOUSE
6 BR'S. HOBBY RM.
TilAT'S RIGHT! 6 lltlre bed-
rm"s. Mammoth livinr UM
with cozy ceiltng-bi frplc.
"Copper l\:rttJe'' ~n
wilh loads & loads cf ator-
age_ Brilliant burnt or~
carpeting. Sep_ mstr. w.ite
with 19' dosel!J. J. lirt!e
pa.int C'Ollld make thit a
showplace. Hurry. Call (nf>
962-5585.
rom.'' 1. Ol\O\ ,,,.._-v .. ·
191n Brookhurst Ave.
Huntinction Bffch
THE
LYON'S DEN
FIXER • UPPER
2000 aq ft of living area, 2
r.'."usi\le tittplace:o;. all blt-
ins. l lrg BR, fl.n'li!y & bon-
IU rm. 6% assumable loan •
i227 mo, pays all. Xlnt area
• All 'lerJTl.o!; -$32,950. Cail
MS-.8424 (open eW"S.)
Eveniflg1! Call &12-7438
Hnltap Capimano
Valley
Nffds T.L.C. (tender tovtnc
care I, $100, down plus clos-
ing cost1 under 221-02 FHA.
Live in 1-2 BR unit &. Je t the
otMr one help PQ your way.
Big 1o··x l!Xi' i-:it wTth block
wall enclosed yard.· Who'.1
first with $100. !
Immaculate. 3 bdr. 2-1,i bafh,
large wa.!nut-p&nelled f&mily
room with charmiJ!t Ued
brick fittplace, formal din-
ing room. Manicured land-
1caping with aprinkler aya-
lrm. Located Jn fineat Hunt-
ington Beach nejptxdlood,
cloH kl beach, ~ &
Ahoppin,g. J>riett $42,!500.
Phone 546-2313 lo!" appoint-
ment to 1111!1'!,
I acr• hilltop zoned for
hone1. 00 min. to Newport
~ter or Santa Ana.. Park-
UJce grotmd1. 3 Bdnn., 2'.i
bsths. 3200 .q. ft. ouslom
OOllt. Better hurry! $87.500.
Newport
NEWPORT
HEIGHTS
Walkin& dillta nce to all
school11, Separate childrena
play :yard with clJmbini:'
tree. Good S'ir.e room and
big bright kitchen $33,900.
Ca.II 646-TI71.
133-0700 644-2430
••
f•Jrvfew
64Ulll
l•nytlmoJ
Macnab-Irvine
"ON THE BEACH" -a-
20 UNIT MOTEL. Pool, SWEET •N•LOVELY
O THEREAL
"\.. CSTATr.RS
·Realty Company
TURTLE ROCK VIEW
Truly gorieou:o; 4 BR w-for-
maJ DR, large FR. Be-auti-
Jy upgrade din all attas.
Adult occup ied, You own the
lsnd, $48,000. can 6~321 0
for a ppt.
and l ~ocks from Pier
It Ocf>anlli~. Good year.
round r Annual .:-r o B s
S,11.500, Real value at
i 24D,OO'I.
Au1t in Smith, Go rman
REALTORS, 222 E , H1(hland
Ave ,, Sa11 &mardino.
1714) ~-4801
4 PLUS
LotJi of extra& • 2~ Battu:,
encloMd patio. f bedrooms.
can>el1. dra'l)P.t!, fenced
yard, d()IJb]e riarage. 1"\Jll
prjoe u;,950. 0wn"1' mo'Vlng
Scanh. M~t sell. C&ll
540-u.51 (~n f!Yl!'8),
I Y ="~~1
$29,950
Ele<Jant 2 Story
4 Bedroo1n.1, 3 btth,0 Huce
Family RoQm, Den, beautt-
M wall paper, magnUiCf'nt
tlrepla~. La~e Rooms
Built-tn nJWe I: ~ it.
di.trwa.ber, Na dawn W:rma,
open tit 9' J?M, 540-17~
TAQELL 2955 Horbor
1ac1c Bay Area
4 Bedl"'W>rn. 1"4 bat~. family
rm .• dinln1 nn, 1 Fittplae-
"· modrern kitchen, A LL TJQ.~ AN'D A VlEW TOO!!
S30,"15G.
Roy McC•rcfle, Realtor
1310 N~rt Blvd., C.M.
.541-mt
MOTEL
1' UNITS 4 COFFEE SHOP
140' x 1&2' corner, m&Jor
hl;hw11.y. Cotttt ahop le•&-
ed. S.'r!O. montJ'I. AMJTTloe
f'x1.5tinc $80,000. I&t T.D.
m .<Xi> """"· Pete .a.rrett Rulty
642-5200
Trad.et'• PandlM column l•
ftlr )'(NI 5 UMs, 5 0 1.>"1 for
~-c.n todt.)' •.. 642-am.
iJI ttilii 3 be:droom 1 % bath
home located in attractive
NeW'POrt Heights. Oo~e to
evf'rything, move in condi-
tion. double J!:arage off Ill-+
lry. Room for boat or trail-
Macnab-Irvine
642-8235 675-3210
• • • • DON'T PALL OUT er. Piiced low to go. A mu st
eee for only $28.500. tall
qu ick! 67!1-4930. • ~·co.· ~--..._,11.ent
LINDA ISLE
Baytront vacant lot
Bttt available location
Room tor IAJ"gt yacht
fl'j,[XX)
REALTORS
SINCE lJM4
673-4400
$24,500
3 BDRM.+ DEN
NO DOWN TERMS
Bftuttful home, entry hall,
spacli,us rooms. p111Jo. se-
cluded rear yant btO-tm.
TARBELL 2'5.5 H•rbor
*WATERFRONTS*
Appl'Olch tio Udo lale
Vacant Cl-H f199.500
121 Fe-et In Thi! Cow1
OF TREE HOUSE
at thi• lovely 3 bedroom 2
bath home with beauti'tut
'tT"et'll It. convenient Nt"\l'J)Ol't
Beach location near !l.1ar-
lnen School I< Weatclltf
Shopping. Only S33.00J.
Arnal!f & Freud
~ E. 17th St.
REALTOR..<;
Co!!!a Mesa --EASTBLUFF
A ''Beat Buy". Reduced
$1500, 3 BR. plus famUy
room, 2~ Ba., 2 huge frplc11,
a.II-electric kiltchen, many
•XIMl.11, I a II t e f u I decor
throoghoUL N1>w $411,500.
HOPE GERRIE I REALTY
645:"00 645.3320
833 Dow:r Dr., NB
CORONA DEL MAR
CUTIE WITH A VIEW
Secluded 2 bedrcom pool
home In the-popular CotMA
J.lltftland1. New UPCJ't.ded
•hag lhruout. Unbelievable
144.1'0.
Walker & Lee
4 BR, J h1tth1 SOO.~. XH3 Westcliff Drivt
L ldo Re•tty Inc:. 646-T111 Open 'tU B PM
3317 Via Udo 673-m New Mod.I Home
PAY $158 Pl1" month for this J BR, 5 Ba, juat ~mpleled',
1haf'l) 3 bedroom. 2 bath vltw of Ba_y A HJlla. Formal
hupln with f l rep I • c • , din, btt:l.ldut rm, ta.m nn.
buil f..IM, "''~'" -~M'I", W.Wtt"'"bl:t; pool. AllO view
•net more, 5% % IOAn. kit• avail -will bGDd to )'l')Ut
Wa.lkl!I" A Lee, Rttlton, nf'ld1,
Ml-4456 er Ml)-6140. JV AN WEU.S 1: !ONS
-Ll_M_P_l_D_Pro_l,-!-b<d--roo-m-,.I n>S G31uy Dr. OtiveT Sho~
room ID run, Mavins In July M6-t!'IJO Optn Dally
i nd 1<M'Cfd to aac:rtllce now. * MESA VERDE *
All Ttnnl. VA no down. Lo~y lmmac. home. ,Beiiut.
Rc1tllon, 1 4 2 -4 ~ 5 S or rroundt. Ow. patio. J BR.
~l40. • f1tm. rm. 2 Ba ths. US.900.
Tht: futt1t dp.w ln tht W#1I George Wllll•mton
.• a DA.ily Pilot Cl•Alfitd R.E>.1.TOR _._._. _W-5671_"-'-----· .613--4150 M.~1564 Evt11.
10 THE Rf.~/\L
'."-ESTATf;RS
College Park
$136.00 Tatal l'mt.
.This 3 Bedim home ia locat-
ed on a t:J'ef! llned atreet
clo:o;e to schools &. shoppln&'.
It hu 2 baths a Mp. tamlly
rm. built-In ldtchen, showg
like a model home. ~
2629 Harbor, C.M.
-FAMILY HOME
COMFORT-
Retax and r njoy Family Liv-
ing in this 4 bedroom Hunt·
ington Beach Home. Cook
i11 luxury on BI-Gas h1 •
Sem!-FonnaJ Dinlni Area..
Lets of Spa~ to relax, 2
bathroom:-;, and loadfl. or
shag carpets. Call 842-2535 •
10 THE REAJ,
10,. E~TATf:RS
$500. DOWN
Moves you into thia :t 81\, 2
Ba home, new crpta: ibru·
out, new eof)per plumb.
O\.\oNE'R WrLL SELL ON
CONTRACT. Vacant.
JEAN SMITH, 11 L TR
100 E. 17th St., CM &46..JZ>S
DRILL YOUR
OWN OILWELL!
Lot 50 x 1'3 on Paci.lie Caul
Hi1hway, In nnter of oll·
field In Huntincton Beach.
Mineral rishts induded ln
price or $55,000.
BmkPr W -2535
BEACH Kl!YS
Go with lhil t Bdrm, 2 Ba.
Omina. del Mar JIOC)I. hotne.
Secluded yard &. lowly lan-
ai. You awn land. $43,a
HotM Show RNtt.r•
··Armchair Houd$uatiflS"'
3MS E. Cna1t Hwy •• QIN
67.1-7225
$750 Total Down """ 221~02
Gov't prtlCTam. 4 bedroom.
2 bath ba.rpln, no ups or
#Xlra.t. Hlln)'! c.1! Walket'
' Lee, Rt-alton, ~ OI'
54()..5lf0.
NOW'S THE
TIME FOJ
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DA11.Y PILOT
WANT AD
642-5671
•
"
•
. . ' \ . .
•
U ~\'fin.OT M:MdQ, June 7, 1971 \·~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;====;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::.~~~------------------------------+-----------""'\ I I
i Everyone Hos
Something The+
Someone El•e W enh
DAILY . PILOT CLASSIFIED A S You Can Sell It,
Find It, Tredo It
With a Wont Ad
·The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast esults
{ Houwfors.t
General General 1-G_•_•_•_•_•_I _,...,.----
----------One Of Balboas
Few Triplexes--
GORGEOUS
DOLL HOUSE
Huntington Beach
PAY TAXES??
RENTING?? OCEAN VIEW
Cemetery
Lots/Crypt a l5' Real Estate W•nted 114
FOUR '"'"" -M'"''"""'" * CASH BUYER * South Ps.cili c vt~w
Memorial Parle, 5~. Wrllr Don't ii.st )'<>Ut home,
Jack F. Fellin, 15931 w. lst .se.U it to w.
Or, Gotdro Co. 80401. S&ve time, u.ve tllOllf'Y,
CRYP'f·Lllgunita ~oLr l , immf'd. tirm oller. Broker
Business
Opportunity 2DD
A ONE·MAN
BUSINESS
$2,000 INVESTMENT
(Cen Start Part T ime•)
completely remodeled Inside
and out. Roman tub!. nPW
deep tthag, all new built-Ins,
..,,ood paneling, C('(lar
,-lose!A. v.·el bar. hand s1ilin-
l'd beam rrihngs, 1 block
to the heach. Tot,oi.J income
Now'a !lie t.Jme 1Q, 1nvrst in a
ar full price of SZl.9j(). 3 hu~ home to p11e on laxes next
be.drooms with 2 ba.ths, im-year. Approx. S.30 Pf'r mo,
macula1e thruout. Carpels savina:s on lhll! 3 be-droom
and glistening ha.rdwood bc>auiy. GI's no nionf'y need-
f!oors y,·uh matching drap. ed \Vith 101111 p:iyrnent ol
es. Submit down payment approx. $161 l>Pr month in·
on $16,100 GI Loan at Sll5 clurie:s II.II. Home has all that
[)Pr monrh: lnclud1ng taxes you nf'ed a nri 1nore. FULL
or NO DOWN to Gt _bllyer:s PRrCE is $22,9'50 You c11.n·r
or FHA Terms. Call atrord 10 rent ~ny longer.
2 BR , 2 BA. home surround-
ed by mal\lre fruit &. i&hade
tree!. Builtin kitchen wilh
dishwasher, dining room.
den. Fireplace, beamed ce:il·
ings, douhle garage. RE·
OL:CED.SJ7.750. Call •
Pacific View. 1 J e CAPITAL
• • Call 673-7706 *'-INVESTMENTS e 1 LlJ.':hl. plrasanl. EXTRE:\IE·
S.12-7377 &: 540-53..16 L\' PROFITABLJ:; BUSl-
o/ ~775.00. A pro[lf'rty you
""'ould be proud lo own, For
appt. 646·TI71. .A-Olan Condomlnium1
for salt 1 ~~~~~~~~~~ ?>.'ESS lif!Nlcing local :stores, 160 1; rtr. \1i th a NATIONAL.LY --------11 11•1 FA:-.10US f-0 \'f)AR OLD
1-0' THE REAL
\"'-ESTATERS
Walker & Lee CALL
'"JO 11.,.,..,, Blvd .• , •d•m• Walker & Lee
PRICED BELOW rmn<bl . FOOD BEVf.llAGE prom~•
MARKET !';;;;;;;;;;.~~ which is a lfOUSEHOLD
REAL ESTATE
4 BEDROOMS
1190 Glenneyre SI.
494.9473 549-0016
BY owner; 4BR. lam rm, lge
patio, shag cpt, Good tefms.
S37,.'JOO. 494--0386.
. I• \\'OBD !N A.i>fERICA, is
F1rs1 llml' otle~. ~cious Business consumrd by 1he 1'HOU· -L , , '. I , •'ft Here'i; a large, single story floor plan in a
custom ne ighborhood near the golf course.
Large, private lot. Plenty of trees. Heavy
shake roof and Jots of charm. Owner trans-
ferred East. J ust listed at $43,950. One-of-
a-kind.
REPOSSESSIONS
5-1.'l-046J Opt'n 'Iii 9 p ,\f 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Ar!ams
UNUSUAL house & Joi. E-Z ~.;..946;i Open 't1I 9 PM J BR, 2 Ba 11;/Jrg IAmUy rrn C) portunlty 200 SANDS DAILY in this rom-
& 11·r.1 b11r, db! gu•g<. p
Sparkling clean homes, some
ney,•Jy painted &: carpeted. 2
J,4 & 5 bdrm11. Some with
malnt. 4 br, lrg sliding glass[ ____ _. ____ _
lam rm, lvg rm, dbl i;ar. 'l $18 500
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii mun1ty, An rlenjoy~ L!FE-graciou~ l1v11\: 1n choice II TIM"E RE.."'PF.AT BUSINESS.
c .r.1. area. Nr nee and
c1111c center, A.\kinit S22,9".JO.
Larwin R•alty, Inc.
"mUNer6e:Rca~
2150 Mesa Verde Or. • Costa Mesa
e Phone .146-5990 ' . ~
General General
****** * TAYLOR CO. *
LINDA ISLE -$145,000
Elegance & warmth in this fine home on ex·
elusive Linda Isle. 4 Bedroo ms, study (or)
5th· BR}."·family rm &· fo rms! din-ing ·area.
Plumbed for pool. Pier/slip. Cali to see.
i'O...r 26th Y eer''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Reahors
2111 Sen Joaquin Hiiis Road
NEWPORT CENTER 644--4910
/IJore Real
Estate on
Preceding Pqe
Gener•I
t.Senerel
LAND OF GIANTS
ContJnent.aJ A\·enue is A
QUIET El'o'VIRON;'\IE;o.:T or
COLOSSAL TR E ES that
ket>p you cool and comfor1 ·
able 1n ,','Out KING-SIZE J
bedroom homt". EN J 0 Y
I pools. FllA-VA ronv. terms,
from .S20.000 to S40,000.
COLLINS & \VATIS INC.
8843 Adams Ave. 962-5523
NEAR EJ Toro Rd .. altrac.
3 BR, den, trplc, 2 BA, crpt,
lndscpd, bUc y,·111J, cul-cle-~c
61.. walk to elem. 1ch!, ~ii
m; to !tee-way & 2 shop cen-
tesr. S26.500 Appl only
837-0046
VA Rcpo S23,4j() total Jor 3
bedroom, 2 bath. Anyone
quahfie.d, no discr1m1nation.
Walker &: Lee, R.ea.lton:,
842-445..5 or 54G-5140.
College Park
OPEN HOUSE
3 BR. Poo! and large cover-
ed paho, Ntw 1hAg carpet
rhn.1ou1. 'Blf"in~. C.Omt"r !M
with room for boat or camp.
er. \Valk 10 schools and 5hop-
ping. 10% down. Conven-
Jf1on"l financing 113,950.
549-0530. 2546 Greenbriar,
off Pr1nC'l'1on.
Corona del Mer
CORONA HIGHLANDS
Beautiful wood panehns; tn
Olis custom bwH house. ~
Bdrm., J Ba .. den &: formal
1.tin rm. 2 ff1>l!'s, S&l .:-,00
MORGAN REAL TY
673-6642 675-64591
YA /FHA
FORECLOSURES
OVER 35 HOMES
ALL AREAS
YOUR HOBBIES in your Drastic Rffluction
l + l SlllOO down $21.450
3 + 2 $150 down S21.75(1
5 + 2 $750 down $2'1.450
"PAUL BUNYAN \VORK-Harbor View Hills 2 Yn;.
SHOP," with private bath, ney,'. Adult occupied. 4 Br,
adjacent tn oversize garage 2'ii b;i, vil'w, All. J pm:
With roncrete apron. NPw 6-M~:'l'.'.l:i.
carpeting fresh pain! and I •c~0-,,~a--0M7o-,-.----
large play yard wi(h ora.nge
trees! Al! Jor S25.950! As·
sume. 5%% loan or gubnu!
FHA· VA TERMS.
NEW Spa.nish Duplrx, JBR.
2 BA. 2 BR, 2 BA, Corner lo!
Private. Cpts, drps. Fenc!!'d
ba. Convenient, quiet ·inc 1
nrar all sch!s. 2 min. to S.D, CLEAN UP & ~AVE
or N11'Pt fWy. Az.alrai;;in gdn l BR, 2 Ba. forml r!1n Area.
very ez to mainlain . all pu sh.bulton kllch. O ose
Outdoor outJets & lights, !rt sehools, shop~ & ocean.
ChrL-.tmas li~hts b I f • i n , F'ull p.ricr S18.500. Submit.
\'arious trees. Sprinkling Call 847-1221. ·
sys, frnt &. bk. Ne"' ..,,,ater SEYMOUR REAL TY
hlr, dshwshr, dlSPOsal. 2,098 17141 Bell.Ch Blvd .. Hli;n Bch
~q . fr. -.t60 sq ft gar. Open 'Iii 9 P:'ll
Sl-l,500. By "wner. 546-3fifr0.
Outstanding locetion
4 br, l ba, lge kitchen/din'i
area, [rplc, brick patio,
trees, C'OrnPr house w/side
yard for boat or trailer. 2
minutes to major :i;hop'g
center, freeways, schools,
50 acre park. S31,500.
$16,950
2 BR, fiO" :.c JOO' lenc:rl lot. dhl
gar, elec bllin R 0, ri1n
ar .. a, tOrml hv rm, FA ht,
<'rpts, co\'ri patio. walk t<J
shopping. Paymt! chC'aper
than rtnt.
fr16-3086. • ' REPOSSESSION, by owner .• 11iage .Real EstJ te
Spread 'your wing~ in this t62-4471 ( :;::J 546-8103
llP8Ciou ... 4 BR + den, pool f•----------hortu!. Eat.in k1tchen, lge. POOL SIDE
!emily r m w/trplc, shag PARADISE
carpeting thruoul. lmmac Var.ant .1 Bil.. 2 Sa. pool home,
cond. Sale or trflde for h · . JI ho Call !l4G-8''26 Ift'~ pfl1nl 1n k our, nPw
sma er me. ' -· \'-'I W sh<1g 1-rr1:s, usrd hnrk
EASTSJDE BY O\VNER !1rrpl. fo1ml din area. l\"ire-
LGE 4 Br, tr, 2 ba, fully cpl. ly ldsrpd. Big. b1g pa1io.
elec kit, lge Jot, $34.500. Pri1·ed 1o srll now 11.1 S24.l!OO.
Asrume 511%. 2147 Allter, Submit -Ct1IJ &17-17.!1 ,
548-0.171, 54>-<735. SEYMOUR REAL TY
FllA Appraisal S23.500. 3 Br, ITI·ll Beach Rh·d .• !!1.::n Bch
2 ha, shag crpl~. nice drps, O[lf'n ·111 !I P\I
rlbl . gar. 642-2.\9-1.
3 BR on estate 'Size ocean CLEANUP & SAVE
view lot, $24.~. Owner. Jusi reduced 52 000 Z1 Ba
JIHO Linder. Pl, Ci\1. 642·1122 :i BR, bii:; ~rl. 0a!J . m~ern'.
i\lESA Verde by owner 3 BR, Qu1f't are.a. Fl, price S27.9.}0
fam rm, 2 BA, patio. Open 5.\5-0458 &93-853..1
daily $29,950 545-2075
MESA VERDE HOME
3 Br lge kit, nice fncd yrd.
By O"''ner $17,000. 5-1~
Dover Shores l + 1 ~ S.!l5cl down $22.950
4 + J s~ down S2'2.9!XI
3 4 1~ + F.R. S!k.10 rln J blk to srores. Principal.~ e EXCLUSIVE e
YANKEE,
COME HOME
S23.950
4 + 2 sr.:£1 down $'24.500
3 + 2 $950 down $25,450
4 + 2 SlCXXJ down S3ll.950
only_ 1·19,!r.1(), 546-?787 hr.+ 1 ol a Kind VU H0i\1E IO th1r; lovely 4 bedrm POOL
fore 9:30 AM or alter 9 Pl\1. 5000 ~q. fl. ContemP. Old HO:i.1£_ O~LY S800 lo!al
154! Win1ergrren Pl., Apt. \\'or!d design 4 BR + costs to G/'.S. VACANT &.
Lido Isle
TRADE Penin. Point 4 br, 2
he, Cape Corl. edj hesl
ocean beach. F"r Lido Isle
borne. Principals o n l y ,
673-2.U2.
LIDO Isle lot -57'x88',
!el(;est avail on lhe island.
Via Lorca, $52,500. By
owner 213/449-2998
3 BR/2 ba, on ti;. lol!l, Will
LEASE w/option or take
TRADE. 673-TI85.
Mesa del Mer
4 Br , l ba, many <'Uslom
fcature!. $31,500. Ai;;sume
5i_. FHA. Prin. o n I y ,
546-!i027
EARLY AMERICAN
Immac 3 BR &: farn, 1 BA,
beaut !cpd . S31.90o. 5'Mi-2803
Newport Beach
$15,IDD V.A.
Anyone qualifie1 subject to
FHA Loan with 614 annual
pPrcentage rate. Tota.I pay-
ment $148 per month. Sharp
3 bedroom home: glis!enlng
\\'ith HARDWOOD FLOORS.
2 luxuriou! baths, modem
built·in kitchen. Ready !or
immediate occupancy. GI
buyen; welcome. CALL!
Walker & Lee
7790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
545-046.5 Open 'ti! 9 P~1
CORON ADO homt, 3 BR.
Family rm, Plush shag
carpet throughout Lors of
orher extras. I mme f'I
possession, S32,500. 837-9500
or ll30-2SQg
BAYCREST
2600 gq. It. 4 Br/2~~ b;i, fam
rm, d1n'g rm, pool, $77,fl()().
ffPf'l Xlnt ternts.
D.F .. Rasniusson: &16·856.i
HARBOR HIGHLANDS
21562 Brooklniri'll, Jlntgn Bch
546-5411 anytime
COUNTRY Club Villas, by
owner, Be11ut Span!.~ 3 BR,
21.) ba, lrp!c, pvt pa:, Adj to
pool area. \Valk to r.1es11
Verde Cntry Clu~. Dbl
garage, 714/5'»-0761
HELP!
We are 11. rapidly ex-
panding national cor•
JXJraUon in need of a
distributor to pur-
chase and liCrvice an
unusual product -A
TALKING VENDING
1lACI-JINE. There 8.re
Industrial Property 168 many choice locations
a vailahle in your area
a nd v..·t are looking for
someone lo develop
lhis markel. ON PLACENTIA AVE.
COSTA MESA
86"x47~'. $6;',,000, Be~t lenns.
Income :S.iOO., w11h m1ch
room for more build iniit·
Roy Mccardle Realtor
1810 Newpon Blvd., C.r.t.
5411-7729
lf ynu have a car
11.nd can spare as little
as 6 to 8 hour$ v..•ttk-
ly, you can enjoy an
excellent gupplemf'ntal
income. Your invesl·
menl nf $800 to $9,000
can grow into a Cull
t imt income.
Income Property 16' WE ESTABLlSH ~~~~...;.~;:,.,.~~l ·ROUTES
• COSTA !'lfESA JlO PETI:S0NAL
SALES CAL.LS
, 1'.1ACHINES DO
J TIIE SELl..JNG
'vending is B vigor-
1 6us $5-billion .plus re-
crssion proof business.
Your Sii.JPS ere cash.
No credit risks. Your
PQUipment is on the
job da.y and night.
earning PXlr!'I inromP
for you and your fami·
ly.
12-2 Br Garden Housel! a.II ·
w/alt. g11 ra.ge11 & pa!los. Or .1
valuable 172x204. 1 blk Bani \
oI America. 2 mi. <"ICean•
Income Sl ,945/mo. $169.sd'.
Good IPrms. G11il Parr
Owner 545 Berne.rd SI, C'•t
646-44.10
INVESTMENTS
'VITI! "t.tAJOR"
TENANTS-LEASEBACK)
OFFICE
C01\1MERCIAL
& APT BLD'GS
W. R. DUBOIS , INC.
fR.E. Bmkers) 8J3.g4'45
7 Units -$62 ,500
Orean side of hiwey 1,:/1n-
comr over $700 mo. A iOOd
huy for someo~.
PW\CE REALTY 4,qi.9704
296!1 So, Coa..~t Hwy., L.B.
INVESTOR wanled JJ com·
\\Ir t rain. counsel,
,::ulde and help you gtt
i;tarlf'd in a business
of your own. No ex-
!)('rll'nCe necessary.
Thr work ls enjoye ble
a nd ras.y.
Thii'I 1s thr ag,, nf
;ii utomated m~r{'han
d1si11g. ·Our f'QUipment
is the linrst quality
And our' f!nar.k itf"ms
Are nAtibnally adver·
lised brands. If you
"ill return the coupon
n,,Jnw \\'P \vill lie vr1·y
mrrci!'ll de v e Io I' hen t . !111.11py to discui\s thi!
Sll8,CXXI cash req'I. WUl Oflportunity .,.,·ith you.
re!urn 11'iD NNti, Bier. - - - - -642~590. VENDA TAlliER. l NC.
2-4 Prexes. J2 gare~. Pric-2800 W. :!\.1ockingbird Lane
LOW DOWN
PAYMENT
ONE LOAN-NO 2nds
NO LOAN FEES
ANYONE CAN BU Y
I
8, C.~l. App't only. maid's, 4~~ Bath. 10' antiq. only $311,500. * * EASTSIDE door!'. ~pario~s-gourmet C~LLINS & WATTS 646·0555 Sharp 3 Bdtm, l~ Ba, hwd kl!chen. f~untain atnum. 4-962-5:")23 t~ve~. 642--0-127
fir~ fa h1 lrg lot. boat 11c-Cilr i:;i r. \~tJI trade rl•11""· 4 BDR:'11, 2 ba home ln Glen
4 br, 3 be, 51,4 FHA
S39,950 Owner ~2063
Pel et 7% times IO\o! gross. Dallas, Texe~ 75235
S20JXXI cash. 962-42:9. I Am intrr,.stf'd in
more inlorm1111on
ebn11t making monPy
In thp vending bus1-
nP~!<. I have a tar and
f;-J'I hnurs per Y.f'f'k
,;Jl8 rP timt.
COLLEGE PARK
!.ARGE LOT
ce~~. $Z7,5oo O"'ner m11y I ~\!';1 .-oo 11 • ~1~·7249 r<l ar Fully !anrbr11J'lf'(l.Closr
help iln1l.llce.· Don't 1\al\ • East Bluff 1n ~hfl't! 11rra.~. schl~. park
• Call ~l&-0814 11 & b1·h. S29.7?!0. Call 962-2237.
BILL FULLER REALTOR e EXCLUSIVE AGEl\"TS • 1~~~--~-~--
A STONE'S THR OW
TO THE BACK BAY
$25,950 PRICE
Lots for Sale 110
AVALO~. Catalina -40x1!i0
R·3 lot Priced ~low &fl"
praisal -for ~C'r1ph<>n:
HeiiC.O Re .. I Est at e Inc. I 3 BR• 2 BA
815-76 11 LThlshomehasallolthe.fea·
====~-·~~-~ SALES -LEASES Huntington Harbour !\.IONT!CELLO TO\\nhoUSI' 2
lrg br~. 2 ba . P\"! patio.
Pool. ;);\fi.-1263. :">11>-f125-1
BUSIEST marke.'olace ln
tc: .... T.. The DAIL\ PrLOT 1 Classified section. Sa v e
money, time k ef!ort by
AnTichalr.
f *'• WATERFRONT-3 Br, 2
3 bPdrooms. Sl'parall!. ramily
room, 2 beautHul baths, Pol·
ishecl hanly,·ood floors. To.,.,·.
Pat Chaney 5l"i Pa~ro
Orlando Santa Bro'J.ara, Cal.
enn.e; !had" tn'!ts, .!-urrounri 1 _9_3_11l_5·~-~-----1
lhlA 150 It. farm-s1zl'li In!. CHOICE goll COi.iT"' In!, ."ii.
Gov'! eppratsed end 11fl-guPl c .C., La~1a ;-\1hU"~·
provrd Not one thin rl1me JOI' x 1)16'. o .... rlnrik~ 1~1
!or Vf'lf Don 't drag your fa 11-.vay k g,......n, S.1fi.00l
D i ran invest over
$900. * REDUCED $1 000 * 1 """ < qualHr" mMy 1 ~Ple h'l)'.11" to find 1n "
t S.ll'l .000 or l.~t op1 . 0y,'fler ~ 8'1. ~unde{'k + lxiaL <lock
64 H132 or fi4t-7411.
O I can ln\"est over
'900().
HURRY ON THIS!
5 BEDROOMS
VACANT
Harbor View Homes
Bt-autiful recidence with 11,iet
ba.r, lovely c:a.rpetinr, aeu.
cleaninr ovenJ. Quick pos-
11!'SSion. Owner anxious'
NOV' ONLY S58.50J
INCLUDING THE l.A.~D
CORBIN-
MARTIN
REALTORS 644-7661
EASTSIDE
tjlUALITY BUILT
3 Bedrooms plus rue11 l'IOu~.
wood ahingle root. p.lasr.er
walls. b&rdwood Ooors, d~
tached doublP. 1eraa:e, tn.Jit
trees. Jl"s a be..auty at
m.!:M~A,Uum.llble 63 loan
~llable.1 Call ~1151
(Open r.ve•;). .
14" ::r:~1
*POOL HOME*
Ea.a1dft -Just ttdeoonikd
.t. in bnmaoulai. condition!
3 BR. 2 BA, all~leetrfc bltn
kilcbtn, new d'Pi.:, p1 int I:
...... OnJ.y 137,0DO. Call b'
appolntroeni.
S'TJ..3663 641-225.1 !:vff.
associated
ORO l':EF!~ llfll.l r ORS
J 02' "" s,.,. ·0 ~,, 6~1
STIPS ro'aEACH
J.!t;v. .A.--frarM. 3 SR. +-
tamU7 rm. Q)mu Jot.
, OnJ,y S$l,too· -kmtl
CAYWOOD R!AL TY
&308 W. Coe.it Hwy., N-B. _,290
ir.mgl" pro[lPrly E1<te!lent
locallon, very sharp condj.
li'.Jl'l, rMm fl)r boa!. tra!ltr.
pool. arlrl1t1onal conitruc·
t1nn. etc Nicely lan<11;ea)'.N"<i.
fn11! trees, sprmkler sys·
tem, 12 x 15 c-overeri patio
-and }I 51.; .... .; 11$Sl!mable VA
loan. Price S31.!'J.O. Pho~
MG-2313 to see.
SLEEPER
.3 bed.mom l'lofT1f!' with 2 baths,
forced air furna.!".e, t1re-
pl.a<.'f!, electric bu1lt-1ns for
f\fom In thig .&pace 11aver
kuchen. Ca~a 11nd drar-
M, re.ady for ,.,.,,ur move in.
AU thi! tor s:n.ooo ..,,,,h
eurrent f"HA Loan 11.'ith In·
I.al payment5 of SI 70 per
month. Don't pass this -
CALL
Walker & Lee
Rea Hora
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adami
M~ Open 'tJI 9:00 PM
NOW VACANT
Jmmed. posse11Pon. Sharp,
thArp 4 BR 2 Ba. hOme 1n
prime location. Covtred pa·
tio, 11one B·B·Q, modem
kitch.. coey firepl l ctose
to shopping. FHAIV A terms
or a.uwne: 61,1';{. loan~ $200.
mo. incl. taxe.&. Ca.U ~4
(open eve&.)
Costa Mesa
IOR[Sl [ 01.SO~
'" 11£/tl TOP :.
OPEN 7 DAYS A \VEEK
Would You lellev•
LESS THAN
$75.00
A Month
Investor'& s~clal. T11ke
()Yer 5'4 annu11l '% rate
FHA loan. Neat and
rlcan J bf!droom homr.
C.an be your11 for lt'ss
than $75 a month. Ra re
find nest.le<'! on hu~e
"''ell kept lot. For I he
rar!lr11h1r hnrne hu,rrr
or the d1scernlna: Inv"!;•
tor. Don't rnil to !nvrs-
tii::nte this unusual o
]"lOrlunlty. \Von't last
so hurry _ f'.al I
645-0lDl
rea ty 1~1.vino--
:'.!\•I Vista Del Om
.'"t""''fYlr! BPach ~1·1.1 J.l.1
Fountain Valley
4 BDRMS +DEN
CUL-DE-SAC
TURTLE ROCK
Pnrular pl;in t complt!tly
lanrl~c11perl, brri'ut1full.v 11'a!l -
p~rrr"d & ~bsolutely 1m-
macula1e F,r!("r than nr1v
Allrl .Y{IU Ill\ n !he l1111d.
$42,~(IO.
v.J
fer!. CALL ·1'.Yl.0661./ J\·~me ...... Walker & Lee I, CllOICF: ,., ,,,.,,,, '"'· .,,,.~.,.
' Nigurl C.C, ~' un11 N1~11,.1 .
2790 Harhor Blvn. at Ar!11rns !O\'x\Rt;'. Ov rlnoki\ 1 ~1
5'13·0163 Open 'Ill 9 P.)T fa irway k en. $16.1)()()
BA YCREST Beauty~ 3 BR, 4!12-()66!. ! Phnn,. ( ) ···-·
2(i BA , fan1 ily rm. frf' Corona I Mar -Dept. fi147C -
City . Stalt .... Zip ..
Room for boat nr 1railcr. lm·
maculate. il'lullt sell qu11:k.
Price redm:eri. lmm('d1all'.'
posses~in11. Submit fllA or
VA tf'rms.
sirnpl1'. Room for pool Large v1ey,• lo1 67.1-2010 fAt.10US BRAND NA?.1E
. . ·.; red h·1ll 1 __ 15
_2.-'.\00-._
64_,_.,_"_'_°'_"_'_'-_'I0_2' Dft.f.'rl'Ju~~~~';fu, Newport Shores rop. 171 (PART OR FULL TIMEI
s \V \Vashingl n fn gTf'al Now available In Co~le
HAFFDAL REALTY
~2---HOC1 [Vf'!i: ~1·2446
REALTY
Univ. Park Ccn!f'r. lrv1ne
Call Anyflr11e SJJ.()8:20
_H_u_n~t-in_u_'-°"--8~•-•-ch ___ 1LOVF.LY 2 :sty Broadmoor
XL.N 'T opportunity 10 be ut-Tun!e Rock home y,•/lge
!led &. acquainted before. vie~ lot. 4 BR, 3 BA, lam
new school tenn period 3 rn1, 2 pallns. J car gar. 1
Bclrm. 2 Ba, Fem. rm . cor· blk ro park. pool1 & tennis
I lk. d 1 1 crt. Nr. schools OY:ne.r, ner ol. wa 1ng is . O 8.l1-20"7
J::lem .-H1gh schorils, shop-1~--'-·~-----
ping center Storage rm !or BROADi\IOOR _Turtle Rock,
boet or treil('r fenc.Jd back, :l hr, :l ba , .'1461 Caro1vb11.
1.1ke O\'er 6* "':-loan. Open 83J·:l264. $3.i.800 including
Hou.se Sun. 12:3!>-5 ~7724 -''-"-'-·-~------
or 892.591:;. L•gune Beach
Forest E Olson. Reallor REDWOOD & GLASS
eTIBURON CONOO.e
3 BR, den, Xll'll bltns. dp~. · · · · ~· r.1e1 a and surrounding
cpl, S27.000. Avail immed. recreafJon a approx .... areas. A.II locations are
Ry flwner. 64Z-3'404 prm. e r.res -new C); let home on commercial or factory fur-
clples. Sta~ J-11.1.)' t S4!l.SOO nlshed by us. Qualified Pf';r·
lerm5, H. L. M singer, 9703 son 1.1.·ill become distributor
Santa Ana ~pirn t.i..ke ~ Toulle. ror our candy I N<'!lles,
Wash 98&19. ' PlanteN;. Tootsie flolt!I,
SHARP 3 bedroom. lrg lam ftCCCC:L:CC-.. :ct::----1~1ilk Duds, etc.I. Very high
rm, sep din rm, bllln fpl, , income potential. You n1ust
crpts. drps. oovd patio. 11u-1IO have 2 to 8 hrs. per "'rrk
h ~ !ro ------+----Jsrarr time (days or f'VC'sl. Jl("r 1 1lI'p yaiu. nt &: ~a.r 20 ACRES prod htl Or1 n~e S2100 CASH REQUJRt:D
1rir1nklers. Buy 1t GI AP· Grove In Rive hie 11 Van f" n r m n re inforrnfl.tion
pra1sal S26.500, or assumt BuN!n le Cl ]And Good \\T!lr: "DISTRIBUTOR 01-
5';. GI 111 Sl53. Ptr m1J. Xln! 1 site for lni.ilet pk or iub-VISION •23," P.O. Box
S.A. Ell'l'fl. S min lrom So. division. On io hwy 10 17.19. Covinfl. Calif. 91722.
Coast Plaza. .1 ,..,,__ Include phone number. ~larch field, r1 e ........... 1.1~~""~="~~===-
JOHN H. IRWIN 1'.iarOn, 871) ~ ~le!n St. DISTRIBUTORS
636-4470 Riverslde. 9250 NEEDED -3-.-,-. -11-,-.. ~-,.,,-m-,-.-T-h-,-v-,-_ 1 =-~~~-"-t----·J NI::W multi-mill ion rlo!Jar
•J Reel E1tete advertit;ed l'in11.ck p11!".k pro-
Lenion! L.ol'ngwor1 hy design· cleane&! well kept yard. Exch•nge 182 duc(a. NEED NO \I.'!
BACHELOR 2 srory ~BR, tam .rTn, frml ~. Un1qu" J Brlrm. 2 Ba1 h. Back yerd lull ol flowera, Reliable men or woml'.'n in
din, \~·el b!lf', !hag crrts Asking S.19,500, G! loan Chetrful w111lpeptr. For 3 BR, 2 BA. ne heal -a ir yotlr &rea to I er v i ( e ''BEACH." thrwiut. e!ec
0
kit. air.cond. avail. appl.. &f2.-4610. ;!:;'.'~~~~~:: on~ik h~~~ f11.11.mDvh1a: coin opcralrd
rov'd patio, 2cargar. Apir. REALEX Sprinlitl Shop ~ ~nler, products In com p11.ny BARGAIN l.llOO 11q. ft. VA/FHA terTns. REAL ESTATE ~ 11ecured lo c11 tion1. eom·
7 ·~1 rn.r.~ ·~~11~•u1s lle1t E1t1t1. S3.'>.000 !or un11. CdM, . I f Il r.11.ney beachf'I Md 84 ...,.,., ...,......,,, "'"" . 917 Glrnnryre, Laguna Geoer1I Nc..,,'por! 0 w n er mrrc1a or ac!ory. PART
I •94 8561 67' ~11. OR FUU. Tll\!E. 6 to l2 lhe l'Ollr ol the surf ~ I!' -"' • .........,., 1 ..::11•1 r. • I~=~= ;;-:"';';;-:-;-::-:--,:l,,,,cc;c;;,;I houri per v.·eek. No sclli~. kuu~nt:.fu':i'° lh~~t~~g; ~ ,'l.t;1j ,:.!,, PANORAMIC VIEW Real Estate nt..i 114 CASH REQUJkED: sr,oo to
Sp11.cious Jlvlna: room, -••_.. • •,... Newpr 4 Bdrm. family room, Acreeg• for sale ISO ~::-;,,;::;;.:,::~.;;i~N~lfU~M;.:,; $299j, Wrile for more In.
bright 1hlny kltch"n· 3 Bath., 2 lrplc ho~ wl 1 ,.::::-7,~""=:~1~,.:-:..,::r:,c-::,.""'.,'""s.n"' lonnation: INSTAA'T f OOD
J_8!J_e bedroom1-IN· be11.m celhngs. Ask In 1 Lu: Re Do Goll Course s,_ SUPPLY P .O. Box Jl~.
cµ;DES llvtnr .room 4 HUGE 18DRMS. .$62,;:()Q. C..n am1me S-X % 11 y "'-n Tornnce, Calllornl1 90505. r It nd _,._. with apectaeular view ol WE S p EC I • LI • E JN urn ure • r1:.1,,gera-ON 1 HUGE LOT Joan. "' ~ Tnclude phone number. tor. CN.'ner llquid11tlnE" Palomar mountains And S-E-1.-L-J-N-G CONOO's.1.,. __ .., _____ _.
for fl'11t sale. Don'!. p11g1 Owner moving 10 ~s!ee REAL EX ocean w11.ter_ Power a-1•
n;;;:;;: • ..__m, l""l up thtt hrl•k-mnmlng an.d &a.>"11$'6 ,,'~SeU /'\ow". Full REAL EST ATE telephone on '" P" 1 ,. . Bulyers ""'11.Jtlna~:_i::w. Our TO BUY OR ~ " uo;u,iuu .... n1n on the "'nit. Hurry poce . ..Ju. 917 Gll'nnf')TP. Lllillna S3,000 per acre. Tl'rms u esmen a.re "11'1Qed, Ut-SELL A BUSINESS
painted, arpeta Ir: drapes. -won't la~t. Dial f 54$-045.~ 893·85.1.3, -o==~49~._~8~5-61-~-· I most protecUon . for )'OU HOLLAND BUS. SALES fenoed yd.. ta.m . rm.. '45..0lOJ i -11v11 il11.hle. Shell.l!r Industm~ whf'n sclllnJ; youi home or "The Broker with Emp11thy"
children & JM!I• OK . $215 ~'-•· WOODSEY Setting· 47141 64~2820. lnCl'I~ proptrt,y. , ttlS OrAn~ A\•e., C.M.
p/m, WaJl«!r & L~«. ~ PRIVACY StERRA foo1hill1, 5; ac I'll'. l•rwln Rtelty,Jnc. 545-tlTO· 54().l'.JliM t nytlm•
Realto,.., A42 -44.5S or l-lBRUn1r1~C11'\SP1obea<'h. Sh11wr L.ekt , pat'l'.'d trnta. 21502 Sr"'1churst, lhl.i:n Bch \\'e ~eed lllleg le:
54()...5140. '"'!...,"!'~ .... '!"~...,..., .. [ lm1n11c11l11!,.' 1\f>king $•11.~iOO. r ler . hr11ut ""'tXldl!d. A SfPFJI 546-5'11 •nytl!! peop
, 'W~lJTE .ELEPHANTS'' 2 Slory 3 BR 2~ BA. dtn rm. REALEX ~~~l Pf.r ae. Bkr. , "WEED It A reap''\~ CATERING truck l eNtllb·
OVl!lmfnning )')Uf' boult'!' lrg f1m rm v.·/llnop!, ta}(!' REAL ESTATE out the h'l!a11ures At balh _ li~ht'd route 1n Lagunl! arr11.
"Cuh" .. ae:ll them tbru 2:299 lf.irht)r, COllA MHll {)\'e.r !i~';' .. Fl!A._ f l Price Dl7 Glrnnryr". l...aiUn• DA.Uy P ilot Wahf Ad• have tum into cuh thru =lly fully licensed &. 1niul'f'd.
o.lly Pilot O.s•lfied 1 1!•-•"'"""'""'"""'""'1 -ll'.:'.::'·::""°~· B::;y~°"""::::!!:'..;'·~968-:::"=:::5'::,·_i ___ _.:49::4-:8~5~6~1 ___ bqain1 r 1kn. Pilot Oullfled ad. . 71 $tMlll Clis h. 714: ~~1
NO SELLING!
AS PRODUCT /BIGGEST
NAME IN rooo INOUS-
TRYl IS PRE-SOLD THRU
EXTENSJVF: AND CONTIN-
UOUS ADVF.RTJSJNG ON
TV. RADIO, ~lAGAZINF;S,
NEWSPAPERS. ETC.,
fC0~1PANY PRODUCT
SA.LES IN E."<CF:";S OF 11~
Bil.JI.JON DOLLARS AN-
NUALL \' l. CO!\'Sls-TS Of'
COU.ECTJ;o.:I. FOR. ?>.fER-
CHANDISE SOLD AND RE-
Pl.ENISHING I NV EN.
TORY.
REQUJR.E.'vlENTS:
~·lu5t aspire lo
INCOME OF
$3DD WEEK UP
have 9erviN'abll' car, START
rr-f!IIEDlATELY if accepted
and HAVE the nec:e~sary
S2.lXXJ for inventory NO\V
in lhP bank.
for 10Cfll inleiv1e11•, Include:
yl'ar t"a r, specific tlme (dur-
ing business hour.; I NOW
availablP to ~rviCf' llC·
Muni.~. iinrl phonr nurnbf.r,
\\"ritr Cb1ssifird Ad # 132
D11 1ly PiJoi. P .O. Ro.'< 1560
Costa 1\lrsa, Calif. 9'2626
BEAUTY salon . 1~'Pll
t:~lahlishrf'I, n\11n('r retiring.
6.~2710 nr 548-52U ·
GOING COF'FEE SH 0 p
FOR SAL[!
• * 547-00.16 ... *
Money to Loan 240
1st TD Loan
77o TNTEREST
2nd TD Loan
Term, based on equity,
642-2171 545-0611
Serving Harbor area 21 yrs.
Sattler Mortgage Co,
336 E. 17th Street
Cash Fast!
lst & 2nd Trust Deeds
.!'REE APPRAISALS
Costa Mesa Investment
548-7711 anytime
VE!'i"TURE: capilal nl'Prl,td
!or 2 nintinn p l rtures
S7;l(],(){l(l 'lr 1 nicotinn r1cture
f'lr $1\)(1,0()0 D1~r1hutinn
~rt. Can 1\lr. Rir·r at
21.l/7i>7-432.1 nr \1r. Hlll mAn
et 21.i/.l40-!IS22 ~\·es or
1vkncl.~. Prim:1p11l~ nnly
Mortgages,
Trust Deeds
$•10,00J Jst TD on C·2 p;i rcel.
Solcl 11l S60,1"00. StrQng buyer
i~ a'Jnstructin2 h)f!~. ltnc-e.
lnrifl<'Pi;:. tlc, Pay11 St.00
qrlly, incl. !l~. Disrounr
lD',D Bkr. -193-Jl:.J.
Hoines for Rent I~
Houses Furnished 300
Gener el
'
* * * Sl::oO-Uttl pd . Ne .... 'J>Orl~ Year·
ly! 1 Br. compl turn SngJ5
ok.
$130-t BR. C'otla_::t~ Yd w/
fruit lrfors, chlld pct ok.
Blue S.acon * 645-0111
RENTAL FINDERS
Free To Landlords
645.0111
4JS W.1 ttll, CMI• w ..
e XL.VT UX:ATION! Cozy
pad.-AJI util pd, $115.
e BRJ\CABLE: 2 Br. i..ove:ly
Rarden. Chld.rn/1ml pet, S.170
.ALA Rentals
1999 Harbor e 645-3900
Balboe Island
4 Br. ~ b11. hon1" Pier w/~7'
nn-.i . a nr W ""'~hr dry
"''"" .Jun" 19-AuJt. ~1 111!>0 ~rt 11 nn 20!! E. Blly
f'ronl D11.lhi)a I ~ I 11 n ii
67l-1n3.
-
. . ' .
-.-7,1971. o.111.Y "'L.91' .•
. [ ---l~I l~I ---..... ·~
l•.._ ___ F_u_m_i_lhod __ :ioo_ -u.,..._
C.0...n. ct.I Mar Costa Mes•
Rentals to Share
BACHELOR wtll :IUN-o.ta Bolboo PonlMllN
VACANT July 10, Beaul turn 3 BR. 2 ha, C:rpt.,.drpe:, Bltn I :c,,.,,=-----......, l--.---.-W--k-0--~---.-.~-~-n-•·s_Stu_dlo ___ , ;;:::;;:::;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;:::;;;;;;;;;;![l2EBRiii'.". -Nt;;;.w;-,..,.;;;;,;:; ... ;:--dm.;;,.;;:,[,s.,..,.,n_t•_Ana_______ Meaa ~ ~-=. •
house, 2 BR. Cdllt. kilehen, 2-ftr car., Fncd BEAtrr. mod. townMu.se. 3 ~te•eichei: •. ~ -BR.ai: ~/Doe.t i:pt :+ * Spanish n..ance locked 1ar Harborl.8Wr l Hea~ pds ~G~.-,----'::..;,,fw.;.;.;.·~-"----.-=I
** 675-5529 * * lot, 215 Costa MeM St. $275 ~. ;\tC&~~Jti t::: Maid ll!fYIC"e. PooJ. Utl.I. poW!r boat. $200 per mo 011 I.NI ~~o. :.:;,.l5. No . peta. ~ ~~:!c..:.., BBQ
l;F"'ou=n°'1"'01"n-V;';'oi;ll::.oy----I mo, l'6M. 6#--0345.. n11 carp, drapes. ~ f295 • 675-8740 • yearly I~. Utll pd. No Quiet Adutt Living DI.X 2 l ! Br 2 a. encl Great MW· l, 2 • l Bdrna SU~IMER N!nla.I avail June
3 St~;":·tr1!. ~~e:n~':~ ::s;~~no or ~l ~c~~~~ jpts·3~e~ 1 .-"-1-;-"'-~ .. -, .. -2662-,-~-... --w-/so-od-~-IBe~~ ~b·U~~d PT. Sl45 '=up.' Rtnta.I otc: · SOUTH COAST
18. t br. $300 mo. Chl.ldren & schools &. sho p p In I 1·5--1-.-_-H_l_h-1--Balboa Blvd, 673-9!M5 hanilng trpl. Nr bch. S2SO 2 BR 1170 3095 Mace Ave., 546-lOM VILLAS
J>C'lA ?!? 962-3533 arta .. $22.l mo. S4.>S239. 1.n .,.,""~ • D • ---------.. ul ~ ~-rt 11 __ ...... 1101 MacArthur m~.
GARAGE, ·-..... $%». per "motl:lh.
·~* Offic. R.,,tal
Corona dltl Mer )II' be.. No pets. ~7-8400 "'"" ta ouiy•no ptts r-Wpo -~ ~
Huntington Beach J BR home, 2 ba, family rm, IDEAL Homo-5 BR, 3 Bii. ~------...,.,..-! ,;N;;o;;w;;;po;;;n;-;:H;;o;;:l";,h;;l-;-1---12u A\"OCado St. 646-0979 DELUXE PROF. SUITES
littl, dbl range, lge tncd-i11 Ne w shag, Spanish entry, nr A11RAC. Bach apt, $100 i· • A New W•y To Ltvo 1761J Btach Blvd., H.B.
$200, 3 BR. Den, 301 Lincoln. yard. Sharp, $2Zi. CaU schls & &boP'i · Stl--2.157. ncl. util. Busineu man. DUPLEX apt-Lge 1 br furn , RING BROS. Anoountts in Newport Be•ch ll at.J Plentiful Jlknl, A/C, jan.,
By appt only. 546-#26. Houses Furn. or Qu iet. No rook'&· S al hwy. wtw crplg, drp1, dlsposa.1, Aptg. Now Avai/ab(e OAKWOOD GARDEN lt•WI ,-mW, new cal'pei. / p&lnl/
213/8ffi..2867 NEW 3 Br, 2 ba, dbl gar. Unfum. 310 , ~"~;..4859~-· --~--,...,.--tile. Newly dec orated . MEDITERRANEAN APARTMENTS . 4"'. 125 to tOO ,ti. ft. SWiii
I BR. MedallW>n Condo ail beau!. upls/drpg, nr ---------11NJCE apt _ priv balcony Adultl:, no pets. Worlcing VILLAGE On 16th Street btwn I. Ph. 547·2521
bltn&. re!rig, end patio, schools Ii: shop., $28.i mo. C...r•I wtharbor & ocean, view. woman preferrrd. i 121.50 1400 H1.rt>or Blvd. lrvlne and Dover Dr. Room1 400 DESK 8J&t9 aftilabhi
pool, quiet. $130. 67>5034. 2048 Garden Ln, 548-3763. Incl Utll $lT5/mo. 2JOO mo. 308 Catalina Dr . oma Mesa mo. Will ~ flD'nituft'
LEASE 3 BR, Frplc, Shut. Seavlew. 54S-716.i. ITI41 5ol-80'10 {7t4I '4l ... l70 FURN. Util pd. Jdul for at $5 mo. AMwerina: arvice
Laguna Beach ters, Crpts. Cov'd patio, ~e 1---l~B~R~.~, -,~,--1 CLEAN I or 2 Br. Adlts, no 2 BR. FROM Sl55 PARK NEWPORT student. $S5 per mo. Com-ava1Iabl•. 17175 Beach Blvd.
OCEAN view. y,•aJk to beach, tncd yard. S210. 557-709. *pr~ patio: ~~~ ~· ~~ pets. Lg: kit. S1J5.Sl50. 2-121 COMPLETELY REDEC, APARTMENTS = bL Female only. Huntington Beach. 60-4321
2 BR, beamed ceiling, -1. Realty Company E . 16th St. NB. 646-1801 CLEAN • cozy FAMILY B&chelor, 1 or 2 Bedroom1, DESK 8pace available $50 .. " Huntington Beach Larkspur. S38-7447. $300 .yr ise. Refs. req. I-=-"------· I BALBOA ISLAND Apt. Unfurn. 36S UNITS. CONV. LOCATION. and Tawnhouaes.. Spa, pools. LIVE on Balboa Isla.nd ill.is mo. Will provide furniture
494-3834, 871-9m. NE\V hse. 3 BR, bllns, 3 BR unlurn. $325/mo. yr\y. VERY private l Bdrm, VILLA MESA APTS tennis. From $175. Across summer $100 a mo. Women at $5 rno. Anawerln&: ~
l;H:;:o::u::00=:-10U-;:n"f"u""rn-:-.-""""=' I Dshwsr: Frplc, Crpts .~ lease, ttfax. 3 persons. CaU evt!rything furniirhed. $195. Ganer al T19 w. Wl!Jon 6'16-125l from Fu hion Island al Jam-only. ?\take Reservations available. 305 No. EI
305 drps, $235 mo. Ref's req'd. Maxine Williams for appt. University Realty 673-6510 -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; =~==-~~=~! b::fte It San Joaquin Hilh mw. 127 Apte. 675-3613 C'a rn i no Real, I a 11
General 539-Tr';>!I 2 BR, Utilities paid, Adults, • HARBOR GREENS Roads. (TJ4) 664-1'». ROOM-priv e.ntr~ Ii: balh, Clemente. 492-40>
* * * $1 85-2 + OE:Nr w I frplc,
b!tns, CI D, gar, yd, Kids/ .. ~.
LAGUNA. Private Beach! 2
Br hse, Jdds/pets/sngls ok.
$225.
Blu. Beacon * 64>0111
e WALK TO OCEAN! Nice
l Br. Cpts, drps, child ok.
Sito.
;250 mo. lmmac 3 BR, shag no pets, J200 mo ~ yearly. VEN DOME GARDEN A STUDI'O API'S SEACLJFF Manor ApUl 2 employed man pttf'd. _No PROFESSIONAL Bid&. "'5e crpts~ drps, bltina, 11J"l>Jl], 642.IZlS '7.S.3210 675-3511. IMMACTn.ATE API'Sl Bacb. J. 2, 3 BR'1. from $ll0. Br, Alao 1 Br. avail Jul). L amokenl. 6T5-0ll0, 548--7197. .l!f ft. A!l"-O>nd, n-pta, drps,
w tio. fnced. Ownr 7/1 Costa Mas• ADULT and ~eteno.n Way, C.M. Crpts, drpir,. bltn~. pool, prtv BEAUT. Room !or rent, ~1'h~M~~~ 3:J:
842-5302 FAMILY Section patio, 1tudto type, 1% Ba. prlv. en~ & bath Coata
2 BR, l ba, beaut crpts & Unbelievably Beautiful I .L 1 p k SPAC 2 Br apl• mxn $140. Infant ok. 548-2682. 1525 Mesa 646-8l37 Rl:'lT JU.TY. ~ VAL D' ISERE Garden Aplli, COM to NtOpp ng, Ir Hid pool. Play yd. CrpU, Plaa"ntia Aw. Aak about . . ' Det.uxe OUlce ·~ 1q tt.
drps, Garage, new range, Adults _ no pets. F1owe.rs; * Spaclou1 3 BR'•, 2 ba drps, bltn.~. patio. Newly our discount. LRG bedroom, private err Carpet-Drapes.Panel Walll
huge patio, gardener. ~No Realty Company everywhere. Stttam A: * swtm~poot, puV&J'ttn decorat@d. Kiili ok. LOVEL y BAYFRONT trance. Near South Coast Newport " Bay Center
pets, $l9a. ooi-n37 NEWPORT SHORES Waterfall, -15' pJOI Ree. Rm, * lorpl, lndlv/lndry fac11 1008 Maple No. t 646-2'll7 2 B F •<U..t Plaza. 540-5615. 2052 Newport Blvd, CM 2 Boru.1 home, 1 ba. new JMS An )Ml A r. rom ~· C>,lao % oU avail) 646-1252 4 BR. spotless hotne on water USan!urn"""· .Sgtrol'm'"l1Bdrm3, •. sEE' "'rr~, • m ve. LRG :z BR, cpl!, drps, bltns, Furn/Uni. ROOM, private entrance, k1t-crpts/drps, ranl.ener. \Valk ,..,=/ COSTA MESA «0 -• •-rl il ~ DESK _ .. _ .. ,_ • ...,.. .,........, mo. · ........ -.n pat., gar., No pob, •135, Aft NEWPORT TOWERS cnrn p v eres, ~ a 1pa.tt av ........... _. to beach, n10. 536-7003. ........... p ... -10 • Ul -·· ·-· ~ ar90ns, ~ 5: 548-1867. * 00-2202: * month, 548~. mo. W .,. .. ,....,e ~w,,.tuft 3:~~!.ba, bltns, crpt!; s210 HOLIDAY PLAZA JSOL~ s~~· tr'u:· LRG. 2.Br, cpts, drps, bltns, BWFFS dlx Townhouae -2 Room A BNrd 405 :~ai:-. ~~~
Call M2-2708 641-8235 67S.3210 DELUXE Spacious. 1 BR APAR MENTS 1-2 childrt'n ok. Nr achls & Br, 2~ Ba, bltnir. trptc,l---------
e RARE INDEED! 2 Br, 1.,-,,--.,-,,.---,.,,-"""",--,. furn apt n35. Heated pool. T shopg. $l50. 962-3055. patio, encl gar, Quiet. Mr. Going on 1ummer vacat. ~Lao\lna="""'°"Be=•c.:ch'=.C".,.__;.o,..=.~:I
fn cd yd, kids & ~rs. $135/ 4 Br, cpls/drps, bl1J1s. fned, Condominiums Ample parking. Adu/ls • no Newport hach * DLX 1 Br. pool, lrg Jones 644-1.133; aft 5 pm. \on! 2 matuni c 011 e g e 3700 NEWPORT BLVD. NB
mo. patio, $225/mo. 528-3801, Unfum. 320 pets. 196.l Poniona, CM. 880 Irvine Ave. closets-. adlt.!. Util pd. $l40. 6f4.-0!M(l. studentJ will malntaln pro-* ON THE BAY *
ALA R I I 842-1961. ('-"-a-• 16th)' 1y • •-· 1 STh-2464 or 541-5032 en 11 s BAYC LIFF MOTEL L.Lv """ '"' 1884 Monrovia. 548-0336. DELUXE 2 BR l~' BA per •occupy uuuse or 1999 Harbor e 645-3900 Irvin• Huntington Beach {7J.41 64~550 _ '. 1 . ' tree room while owner's • NEWPORT Beach Delu;ce
* 1t: LOI\/ \VEEKLY RATES * Balbo• Pen1nsula $125-lrg 2 Bl', gas pd. AdulUl crpts, drps. bltinA, patio. ay,·ay REF'S AVAIL. call View oU!ces. Air-cond. Priv. * * 2 BR, 1% BA , crpL~, drp.~. Kitchen, TV's, maid ie.rvice. ov~r 35, no pet5. 360 Vic· Nr. HOAK HOllp. $185. Adlts 54g._5613 a.ft 5pm. Ask fgr Ba, 2400 W. Coast Hwy.
$145-2 BR! Bhns, lncd yd, 33 BBRR .. 2 Baths ...... · · $325 ~~1ins, l ",'s,~rtd629ryr, Ca 11 tieated Pool. BRAND new Deluxe 3 Br, 2 1ji:;touru"Oi·054"&-0240-';7,;. >-;;;;;;;;-l;;i;64Z-4"""38"7.""""=--'"'"-'l~A~nd:"!'.y_:or'.:_'Sco~l.':I.~~-= INDIVIDUAL OFnCES Ch;Jdren okay . & family rm. horn•, uc!ore . ~.rl . 6 ~' LARGE 2 · 6~ .3,,..'l Ba apl!!. 1600 block E. BR, upatain. \VESTCLIFF 2 &. l~~ Ba, Summer Rent•li 420 New Irvine Indust. complex. {incl. gardener) ··•· Sl45 Townhouse Unfurn. 335 SPECIAL Lo Rates from S25 Balboa Blvd; cla&e to ocun Crpb, drps, range, carport, Twnhse AdlU only, no pets. Top Joe. 833-3443 anytime $110...J BR! :l Ba w I trplc,
bltns, cpts, drps, gar, yd.
Kids/pets ok.
Blue Beacon * 645·0111
e 1\tlNI RANCH! 2 + Fam
Rm. trpl, cpt/drp, dbJ gar,
kids & pets. $195.
3 Bij.. 2 Ba. Choice green-or bay. ! yr leue. fncl No pets $130 673-TI78 1728' Bedt rd Ln $710 f"',-,,-,.,--0...,...,..,.-:-:'.'"'.': belt lOC1trion .......... $325 Newport Beach "''k. Kit avail, maid serv, D/W, dri>!f, frpl & crpt. EW , . . . o . . 303 Sapphire-Bal Isl 2 Br/l
4 BR., :.11,1 Ba. & fam. rm. TV & ph. &>a Lark ~.---a 2 BR, 11"'•m Aloelilings, 548-7533. b& cottage, avail June, $140
Turt:e Rock, nrly new.$350 * Adults Preferred * t-.lote!, 2301 Npt Blvd., 0.1. ~161 dicys, 673--0253 eve.! wuuu pane ng, rec N 'PT I 1 l e wt r fr n t wk, Ju1y $165 wk, Sept 1-15 ~BR. :z f!ath$ .•.•...• $275 2 BR. 2 BA. 2-carport $~, _64_&-_7~'~"-·~-~~~-1 ~2 -8r-.:.~"~'.-,'·-~--.-.,--31-5 fe~~~;1 $l65.~,!'~73ts, no w/pie.r-tloal, l br, 2 ba. $165 wk. Mr. RobiMOn,
3 BR. 2'1i BA. 2-car gar. sm ,.*WINTER RATES* ..,,.,. · .. "" ucucony, pe ..... 387 ~w~y St. ·· ~le, 1Lindeck, $375 yrly lae Davl5 RJty 64Z-700'.l.
REAL TOR 5'18~ E. Bay, $225 mo. Lease :;;;;;;;;;;;:;c;;;;'00-;'';;;;-;;-;;;-1,C'.'7'.!>-:.7~'72'.!:.. ------iBALBOA ISLAND ~. .~ ** ALL SU MA1ER! ** I I I C '"rn "' year y. nqu re at apt. · TOWNHOUSE 3 BR, 2 BA. . PARK Neur.r.rt i~e l br. dlx No Ba·-nt, , .. .:.. ,.,,.· lh. Duplexes Unfurn. 350 Quiet • A!t..rac Studios & 1 673-1521 or 548-7771. b -..-'.!I :J' .. " ""'" ,_ BR's, SI 10 up, Adlt1, no I ~---d~I~~---i'3• drpj ltn1s~2 swim-health 1pa, $1111/mo. 4 . r.to n75 wk. 3ll No. Bayfront
Corona dtl Mar pe!;;.2135Elden.MgrApl6. Corona •Mar mng pooa. .. ..., mo . or longer. Will consider JWM! ll-l9th. 3 BR, $XKl
'l1111(1 'i· II 1 l.
- --'l 1 l'ntlnr
NEWPORT Financial Cen-
ter; up 10 1.J)J gq ft. Im~
med occupancy. 6#-5252.
( XI.NT OFFICE Spul! now
avail. LIDO BLDG, 3355 Vil
Lldo. N.B. 673-4501 * NEWPORT BEAOI * 300 to 1000 sq, tt.
DttDee, 673-51!62
e tl.lOVE UP! 3 Br, 2 Ba,
bltns, dbl gar, kids & pe!J!.
i 11a. "Suo;cE 1946"
54&-3710. tum. SlS-9391. ~ ~·uc.. · CORONA Highlands-2 Br. * LRG 1 br centrally Joe. ur->-JV>.J 1670 SANTA ANA AVE, CM
11,i Be.. gtv/ref, Cpts, drps. Pool, carport. adult~. no $165 2 BR individual unit!, Aptt., WAIKIKI be h I di ru ~m 300 •q/11. 35c ., IL ALA R entals
1999 Harbor e 645-3900 ls! \'Jesfern Bank Bldr
1:niversity Park
Days 833-0101 Nights
~-frplc!. dishwashers. Adult&, Furn. or Unfurn. 370 ac ap ' x m ~ '"
' no pe1>, A•ail J•"y 1. "l E.·---------·t "' -,.-."--~-;0--,-0---.,;;I Ocean Vu. 449 Morning Ca· '(Sets. .,\3j mo. 560 \\', ~ on wal-Short or long -om or 541-~°'
* * *
nyon Rd. $275. 64&-2290, Haini!ron. 6 4 6 -4 16 0 (Ir ft " ..., , . Al "
61 j.-614j 54:;..-0760. .._ .._. 18th St. 642-5340. Costa Mes• term. M 2 Br, unt. Bu1inas1 Rent•I '"3
S90 BACTJ~ \\'/stove, refrig,
rpL~. drps. lrg yrd, £/side.
Sngls ok, 2 Br.. 2 ha. summer •. $.12.'i. C •• I. M... -*~G~A~R~D~E~N~A~P~T~2 ~B~R TEN CRES 2 BR, Pool. New cpts, Cl0&el ---------1,="•l-.1563=,-·-,.-:-;-,,,.-,-,I D t Balboa • . ON A to shop'g center. Couple on-AMAZING Adult Living 301 Edgewater--Bal : Bayfrnt 0Wft OWft
$l6a. Bllns, gar, patio. ;Id/ts 1 A: 2 BR. Furn. A Untum. ly. Nope'-. 540 '°°'· 313 E. Be•"'· 1 • 2 0 .., ... __ ·-• w/pvt bch. 3 Br/2 ba, PENN
-I BR HOUSE! :? t'rplcs, gar,
yd, kids/peti; welcome. ~11\0.
Blue Beacon * 645-011 t
e COZY COTTAGE! Hu ge
yrd Child & peL ok. $100.
3 BR., sumn1er ........ SJ7:i.
4 BR. 2Y, baths . , , ..• $350.
3 BR. family room, Turtle
REr-.10DEL l Br w/w bltns, no pet. 160 G E. 21st St. , l . "' C>'"'QJ.) "" uo• uuu .,. "'"' M ""
brick gas frpl. beams. patio. s.18•2121_ ~:~ ;C::ru;' C:~:i:·i '::C:: 17th Pl. Apts. Self cle.an. overu, garage. r. n<Jbinson Store For Lease
l adlt, no pets. $134 ~arly. f 'v°'E~R~Y,.-"N7ic-,-c,-;&-· °'2~s=R 900 Sea Lane, 00! 6"-2SU * REGENCY * D/W (in 2 Br) dtspl1, shag aWI ~alty 64l-700J Rare find , huny, 1100 9Q. ft.
OPEN HOUSE, 336 E. 20th Trailers, SlOO & up. Ch ild !MacArlllLII' nr Coalt Hwy) 2 Br. l Ba, crpl&'ldrps, ulf cpts, drps, jacuzzi & aauna UDO Iale stepa to beach. + (ltf ttrttt IWki.n&. pmne
Sr. s.i2-ss2t1. ok. ll~ E. 16th St., CM. clean a:as oven, encl gar, pa. beth!. Huge pool , ~!ly 1,. b~ ba~ Ju·, ,,,M&-=231=6'=. ,-.,-.,---.-I
Rock. Avail July 1st .. $350
3 BR. 2 baths ......... S32.l.
3 BR. 2 b.i 1hs: IUl'lllshed l Br. frplc. patio, beanu. &U-12b.l. * COROLIDO APTS * tlos. 548·3605. 377 W. Wiison. Merrimac Woods Y. ug ..... .,t. 1 WANTED\ Antique a hop
$134 yearly. l Adi!. Open l BR, pool, ickal !or 2 Br. sludJCS &. stree t I~velli, *GARDEN APT-2 BR 425 Merrimac-Way, C.M. Rent•la to Sh•ro· •JO Interior decorator, or r
eSPACIOUS~ 2 Br, Jrg yrd., i" . d h·11 houS<'. 187 E. llst St. bachelors, $1 2j & $133. 2 $1&5 &: up. Dam'hr. frpi, dbl $140. Bltns, gar. patio. Adlt1. TWO 1 BR apt. .• unf, $125. BACHELOR to ihare 3 Have 1400 eq. ft. 7 rm.s. S2SO
av;:·!I. i\u~ l~t ........ $·100
I k'd k ' '° I re I 642-8:i20. BR. $]j(I. Adults. Spac. 1993 carport. LARGE Pool. no pet, 160-G E. 21s t SL Adul ts, no Pl!t5. 82.0 Center bdrm·. compl. ·-w/ col-mo. 42.5 N. Npt. mvd. Mr. enc gar, 1 s o . I..,,, .: 1----------1 Ch " 540 """" SI c M 64"••1 '""' "' ALA Rentals LARGE I Br. newly decor, urea. ""v~~-673-3378 5-tlJ.2127. ·• · · _,..,... · TV, frpl. On sand. Call John Robinson Davis R 1 ty
1999 Harbor e 645-3900 r.J: .. \Lf'i bcarn. frpl c, P 11110 · S118 1 --$-25~.,.-,-w-.-,-k~&-u_p __ f'OR lt'AS& deluxe new all * BEAUTIFUL l tz 2· BR. Huntington Beach Fullerton 5 58-1000 or =64~2"=711=00·=~-,--,--.o.-I
I yearly. l adlt. 642-8.320. BACllELOI! &. 1 Br:.. elec 2 Br, 1 Ba. Contemporuy Garden AP~. 675-8387 SHOWROOr-.t, mfg. A: ofHce FREEi!
1
Univ. Park Crn1er, Irvine Suniet Beach TV & nlaid scrv. avail. Unob$1rucled view of bay &. Patk>s, Ir p Jc s. pool. WOIUONG gal will !hare space. Park\Jlg. Oo1e-ln
Landlords--Owners Call .\11y 11n1e $33-0810 ~j(J Victoria. C.:'.I. ocean. Adlts only, $390 per Sl50-$165. Call 546-5163 ON BEACH!· t.a494-4653gu~.. $85-$395 Mc . W ·11 I I J I 11-. 2 BR. G•rage. '• blk to ~=c7~~-'--~,.-I 67"-2 cule b • Y v I e w hou!!e -e wi re er rnan s 0 you "" e LRG 2 s-. in1n1ac. Shag , _m_o_o_"-"-'-'·--~~=~--CLEAN dehixe 2 BR studio / CdM •~ FREE of charge ••. i\tany Laguna Beach bench, Roof garden ,v/o-' '·co·i 1 .• 2 B Cpl d • 1 Cl w same, ' ..,.. mo. -··----carpel, new deror. poof, " mos unusu11.1 l', s, rps, poo . ean NE\V 2 BR. APJ'S 673-1039. $85 S'-fL 1tan! or ofnce, near de~irablc tenants on our FOR LEASE ce11n vie"'· Like new . ~16.J. Adults, no pets . bt'am5, bltns, patio, lots of re5pomlble adult!. 1 child From $230 Miidon, Sin Juan Capo.
'1·aiting list. AT VJCI'ORIA BLACH S:l2-5<Hl. ' &12-2181. trees. S350tmo. Avail July, 7.o~=64&-04=,,_°'-·-.,,-=-~I Furniture Avallabio YOUNG MAN/itiar. with Now avail . 493-115l.
ALA Rental! • 64;..391:() ~~~~~~~~~: ' " I . nme Furn'd l BR apt. So Unique 3 bdrm. hon1e, I~ fBR. 2 ba, sunken !iv rm, 1. 673-6 · DELUXE new 2 BR apt, Carpet.1.drapea-dlshwuhfr Bay Club, 645-4949 Lone Industrial Rental• 450
3 BDR.Jl.1., Family rm., park ca!ed on the ocean side oJ I I~ frplc. balcony, SlSO/mo 1255 ~,~B~R-d7e71<D<-<.~W~•l7k-lo~,,.-,-r7h. crpl1, drps. Soft Y.'a!er, healed pool-.saunu-leMill hair only.
like yard. C(l.Sla J\1esa. Klds hv.'Y·· al Victoria Beach. Apartment1forR1nt 9 Baker St., Cilt. 54(1..2570. Adults. >16-4431 y,•kends, range, gar. Sl9Cl. 548-1309. rec room-ocean Ylew1 EAST 17th ST., C.M..
OK, brk., $3JO • munth. NO Outstanding ocean view, 211 • * * $~$.llj, Nice 1 br. l32 '833-1471 wkdays. * LRG 2 Br Mesa Verde patto1-ample parklna J\IAN 35-(S, •hare apt wilh Shop & attlce. 220 'Powe.r •,:,r.::F..::E;,,·,c"::.O._lc.7'11::.c..~-~~ haU1s,25w1kentub:<;.2tire:· 1 c' =~nr=~~~--~,-·1 ,pstr s, locked gar . Seclll'ityruard.1. same.A!Broi 645-3lt7 att. 63.JSCJ.ft·. 67S-6'700Broker " I 1I \\'. l\'i son A\'e, •. I . SHA 1-bdrm, carp.. rps, 9:30 PM, days JE7-6879. J BU&~. + farrn ly rm., u places, I in mstr. bdrm. All Apt1. Furn. 360 fH:-r.4.i30. priv. pa tio. Ground floor. $145-$\50. No pets, 5.'iT-8400 HUNTINGTON Stora,. 455
dining rm., built-Ins., brk. red cedar cxteMor. Anliql1e Scenic Propert ies 675-5726 GTRL to share 2 'Bdnn apt. $390 3 month. NO FEE. General $135, Beau t1!ul 1 br expando $17G-2 Br, 2 Ba Studio apt. PACIFIC pool, lenn". Cdilt $18/mo. Storqe Room. 2417 Neu:port. 540-l720. stained glass "-·indow. Color· niobile. hotnl" 1::2 \V. \\'Uson NEIV del~e 2 br, 2 ba, view, Cpt5, drp1, patio, gar. Adj Orange A~. Costa Mesa.
'1'.l skylights. Kllchen w/all Rent Beautiful Furniture Ave, C.M. &l.>-4530. befit area, dbl gar.~ yrly. to shp'R· 28.". Ogle, 548-8301 7U OCZAN AVE .. H.B. 644~· Ph. 6~7469.
Costa Mesa built-ins including Nutone tor as little u NICE 1 br dplx. Quiet. Se p 673-®l. Eait Bluff <nti 536·1481' =~=..,,,.,--,:--='I
VERY CLEAN &. VACANT c en ter y,•/attachments. ONE MONT ff I ·~b=y-"g~•~r·~•~"-·_1_'.,'~"'-' _o"~'-'_'°_· Costa Me1a 01e open 1D am-& pm Delly QUICK CASH Rentals Wantec! .f60 is this 3 bedroom hQme only Deeded access in pathway, no pets. 548-1021 WILLIAM WALTERS CO. HELP leads tn !he beach. THROUGH A ! r-.tust move by June ~o~~~a~~az~'.di..ea~•:111~rq:;~ YRLY. LEASE complete with ATTRAC !urn. Townhou~e. FAIRWAY NEWPORT BEACH Pa.rk.liJle &ach Living ~th, Nttd 5 BR home Sor
at $2·!0 per n1on1h. CaJJ s.l..i-0 l\tOJ\'Tlf your 100°/o E/side 2 Br. J ~. Ba, pool. VIiia Granada Apts. for Adults DAILY PILOT 1-3 yn, N.B. 673-1076. e~en1. 546-4141. -MJSSJON REALTY Purch•s• Option No pets. $175. 646-f,6!0. VILLA APTS. Four ~001n1 with baJcon. Casa Del Sol 3 or 4 BR. 2 Ba home. San ·~=-,--.--.-== 985 So. Co.isl l·f...,·y. La.guna lnd. Hem r.leclion. I BR, Me!a del Mar Area. IH above .l ~low. Gradoua WANT AD Clemente area. e: mo 1-ue, 3 BR. fenced yard, bit-in~. PHONE (Tlof J 4g.i-0731 24 Hour Dely. No pers. $13(1, mo n t h . liVina £: quJet 1MUT011nd!na 1 tr 2 BR-rurn/unr. Pvt pa.· up to $300 per mo. 544-1568.
' nt'w crpt &. pl!.int. Avail 546-9787. 2 & 3 BR's f(lf fanilly with ~dn>n. Uo. trplc in 2 BR. elevaton;, ~ -.. -
6/1 0 . .$250. mo. North East La9un• Hills CUSTOM Prlvale patio DOOi • lnd!v. Near O:irona del Mar High dlhwahrs, ('11)1!1, rfrpA. Pel.5 *
l c .r.t. Days 546-9222, eve!; 1---------Furniture Rental D•n• Point laundry tac.' -SChool Fireplace wet bar 1 ~epted. From Slo\5.
5-l.>-4354. $285 n10 lea~. 3 BR. 1BA. 517 \V. 19th, C.1\1.. 548-3481 Near Orange Co, Airport Ai · built-In kitchen a'ppl!ancei. 21661 Brookhurst st. 1-m. ~~~------·I air cond, crptd &. dshwshr. AnaMlm 71f.2800 SINGLE, TV, pool, j>els ok. tJCI. Adulta only. '""'AMIGOS WAY •••~ • 1714! ~=• • 2 BR-Crp!'d, garage, water 8J0.63l9 Dana tt1arina Inn, J4lll ov.;i .,...._..,~ .:IQV'VU,hl j a, trash paid. rel'i; rt"q.1,.,,---,.,.-~-----LaHabra 6M-3708 Coast Hwy , ~122 Sant& Ana Ave. Cold~. Bank.er A Co. * :z & 3 BDRMS $150 UP
1 $150/mo. + $50 dep . No Mesa Verdo Back Bay Mir. Mrs. ;::i;21hlm5 , Apt 3·A Managing Arent 541.S~ PatHl, pool. Ch 11 d re n :
! pets. 2272-D Pla c entia. Huntlntton B••ch ........., NEW DELU MORA KAI APTS 1•""' CLEAN, l br, 2 b a , 1 BR, heated pool. Xlnt loca-$ nd • XE • · ...,.,,
I 646-5637. cul-<le-.sar., 1st & la!lt, 3:250 tion, Adults, 00 pets, Ref 's, la Q , ff P•rlc-Llko urrou Ing 3 BR. 2 BA Apt b-lease. lncl ~fora Ka r Ln. 1-'. hlk E. of
4 BR/2 BA, fncd yard, lea.se.. 4!14-6953. Avil. July $135 mo. MS-4MS. Uinta ermosa ~IEf. 3 a1:t~~ spac. muter am~. dln rm ~ at Garfield. TI4:
Children "'"'!come! ls!. &:: dbl prap, auto door -==· ~=~==-II * IH:Z-6014 • "N"'o_w_po-rt'""B'"o-o-c'"h---·l &.lboa ltl•nd Spanish Country £t!a'4 Liv-Ai.o Furn. Bachelor ope:nu avail, Pool A Rec. KIDS WELCOME '•3~s"n"a"'."'2"b<cc-. ""c"p1'°1d"'rps,,.,-."'1"•"r. SUNN Y mod. 3 r 0 o ms ln&; A: .SpaciOUI Apts. Tel'-~ W:~ •* ~~:=9Y area. Move In trJda,y. Attractive 2
Harbor HI SCh dist, rec fac * THE BlufU 3 Br. w/dine.ttt, disp, Nr. beach. raced pool; IWlktn pa BBQ • $l65 • &: 3 br apts. $1J9.tl!9, All
..-/pool. 545-»4l. Townhouse. Formal din nn. Aecom. 3. Summer gea.oon Unbelievable Llvfnr • Orlly Martinique Apts.. ass Amlp Way, NB xtru, pool. pets OK, 17'131
The fastest dn,in the W&at Many rirtraa. Immediate oe-$900. or $175 mo. Yr lse. 1 Br unf $1SO..fum $175 lT17 Sant.a Ana Ave,, CM Mant.ged by Ktelaon Ln. apt B .or D
* * * *
Trader's Paradise
lines
times
dollars
*
.• a Daily Pilot Classilied cup. $375/mo. Call fi.U...&69. util inl"J. 1:11 Pearl. 673-2004. 2 Br unf $175 fum $210 Mgr. Apt 111 6f6...55C WILLIAM WALTERS CO. W-n10 or 988.1510.
1 Ad. 642-5678 For best results! 642--5678 we·u help you .etH 642-5671 ALL UTIL INCLUDED HHuunniitlnnggtfconmBBouechdl--!iNeii;:w;ppo;rtrtBhoo;chCil'---!1...-----------------Jl I.;;;;;;;;;""'===...;;:;====:;;;::=~=:=:;;;~;;;;:;:,. s,..w !lo""" • '"""' * BRAND NEW * La
S@\\dtllA-~t-tps·
The Punle wilh 1he BuiH-111 Chud.le
I RADAH 1.t I I I I' .
.
Hiiibiiiy'& lan-.nh ·~
tin-. '1 r'flHf a g:irJ who can
cook rike my mother, ahe loob
l,.._,F,..E"'""E'"B:-:l-L:-_,l '!''inkltd like my -• 6·T
. I 1 1 .I I I' _ ~nTnf!:t~?E~
• PltNT NUMBERED l[TI[R$,IN
.THESE SQUARES
6 "i~·~;,:,~E mrus I I I I I I I •
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFIED 700
''""' candle antd!er ta . Seascape A-VISTA DEL MESA "~b;-:,;:.,~,;:-your1 11 you bring this ad LA COSTA APTS, 1 • 2 BR. rr·• Apartments ~· • U •
when Yo\J vliit our models. Bltns, awtmmtnr pool A pr-LDVELY new 1·>-3 BR. 1 11 2 BR. Furn. " Unf. Dt.sh. <11,000 m ea, ttlll untler
( blks S. ot. Sa.n Dleao Frwy qt, AU utU pd. $150 ID f170 blk trom. octan. Crpta, drpt, wuhtr ; Stove and Ref'rta:. :"'an~, 64~1~ for older
on &ach, l blk w. OIJ HllU mo. Adul ts. no pet.a. patio. dahwhr, .undeclt.. frpl. Shag crpl'g-Va Rec cent.er r or · >
10 l&2ll Parkside Lane. 354 Avocado, CM. MU70B l05 15th St. 847-3957 RENT Starta $155 • llave Kimball l]>inet piano,
(T14) gi7.5UJ. ./ Ol.EZ ORO APTS Tuitln & Me•• Drive Dux man·1 cha.Ir 6 ottoman,
UNFURN 2 BR, $18 5, S234 AUanta. 1-2.3 Bdrml. * J.45..415$ * pr (If Lancer 77 Q>krl. Will
1-BR .• 1wlmm~ pcot 2 Dtamatlc 2-41.)t. liv. nn. Pool. Privale rara;e. exchand for am car or r
Bib to bl!ach. Adulta. No w/lrpl.. Overlooklnr ' W•hr/dcyer. 536-0!J&. S•nt• AM 6ra-459S.
pell. $135 per mo. tropical lndle;Pd •'Nlmmlrc 538-2727 For trade: '71 VW Super
Tradewlnds Rnlty M.7-85U pool Ir. patio, 145 E. 18th St., NEWLY decorated 2 BR 2 VILU MAISllLLIS Bua, 1600, trade tor rebuild·
fm..MODERN, tee 1 Br. nr &4'""4603 BA ttudkl. Ocean v~w. BR.ANO NEW • able 1500 an4 equity. Tom
beach. Cpts. drapes. dt1p., NEAR NEW $175 • S BR, blUna. nfria, private pa.Uo. SPACIOUS ot Mike 549-$ or a!t 1
etc. 210 Oticago. S36-4281 d cw n 1taIr1 w I b It n 1 Tradn'1ndl R.e&lb' M7-8511 1 & 2 ldrm. Apts. pm : 543-1610.
Lido Isl• dllhwuher. trplc, J..car 2 BR, tt11U. drps. No peta. Mult llvlnl 1964 NEWPORT all pawn-
p.r .. on cul-de-&ac hr 1thl. OUld OK. Laundry TOOm. Purn. & Unfvm. ChryJ'ln-, x!n( cond. P'or
BAYFRONT ap!1. 320 Noni 34? Woodlantl Pl, Apt No. A. Front yud, $130. 968-0064. Dilbwaahn'. color-coordlntt. Van, Station W•""n or Id! · lk Call collect 213Jt93..ZU alt -..v ~~:iy~~~: .. 1 ••• ~pt*::S: 6:30 pm. SHARl' 2 BR. W/prlvaey. =~_: phtlbot I -ahaa oont&intd .:n!f!· ·~ f,-,=';;-:--::--:-:,-=,,-f Cpr., drpll, 1ar. Oilld OK -t"""• • WNl'-'l' _..._.
Newport Be•ch LARGE 3 Br. ' Ba. ()p«, ~. Stl)..3ll:z Owner. ac:bemn • 2 be.h • 1t..U Trade Pen!nsldl Pl 4 sv J draPl!I, 1160 to $130, OPP'N showers mlTrotwd 'IWard-'"
• WJNTER RENTALS • &it. Sun 10 to a. Mon. $-7, LeguM hedl -i.. --· '~'--11-'< ba., Cape Old home, )t.dJ to &...... • UJU..LOW\it .,..,t. bnf ottaJ1 beat:h W/bol.t ~n! NOW for Sept.I 1010 A. 1016 El Camino. e N'EAR BEAOf 1 BR., 1'7' ltw 111 kitchen • bnaklast yard. FOR. Lklo We home •
ABllEY REALTY &12--3850 558-lJ7'4. . Ba. Pool. Adults. Least. 2175 bv • bUa• Pttvata ter1CeC1 Princl~ only. 67l-23$2
SPAC. :Z BRI :Z BA. loy,·er * •M.ESA VERDE 2 Br, S. Cout llwy, ~. paUo • pJUth JandKapJnr • SO t
duplex. Adu t~. rer1 mi'd, eh:c bltN, nu paint, cl0ttd Lido Isl• h1tk Bu-8-Q'•. lup belt. I ft (l Bl!ach Blvd fnmt·
$2.10. mo. 642--:\082 ewir, pr, upr, fl•~. AdJ t1. ed PGOll A 1lnaL Qe, $39,000 vaJue. Want:
Sa\'9 your '*' · tf't not M3-Q57. 2 BR, l BA, t>.y view, f'nah 3101 So. lrl1tof St. tncomeitomtnnde
far! Jusl reach rnr yuu-LRG 2 Br fn duplex. ptlnt, nt'W crpta A drpa, (%ML N. ol So. Cout Ptual m.f.tn· ~
pholll' A call Dt.ib" 1 dot H11mllton W. of Harbor. 1tovt A: r1tr11. Ava.II Im· S.nta An1 ' l!Vf!•
C'.aul!l<d ~ a..,.. """'· "'"•· ........ AdwlA. mod. "l::= !.&'"""' l'HONE: 5574200 * * your ad -today! no pet•. $IM. ~1$73. Ettat. ~· *
2 lot&, Palm Sprtnp, tree
... clear. Want un.11.!1, TD's,
V&n (contained). SUbmll
Nancy J. Moore Ral11",
613-31D1 ,
WILL Trade ('Ol"Mr Rf let
at Salton Sea, N, Shaft.
Pavtd, water elec.-!or aeU
cont. mobile heme or r
call (213) '61-0109. evet.
CR E V Y CAP.RICE '18;
Trad& for eqUlty in houat
In N~ or eo.ta\M-.
Area.
• "'-<611) •
BeautU'UI. Boxer pups. WW
trade for : Photo eqpt, pow.
er tools, l1pklary eqpe ot
Wha l ?f
842..f2l2 or 962-2331
rANTASTIC lotewr 1*1"
ocean View tot. C.,platnm.
n•.OOOeq~. hr nxer qppe.r
0:>5!.1 Meu to 8an ~
te. "«t ~2425 O'!' 87J.41m.
F'uft rac. Otd1, 3)f q . +
4 ~ atJck. E111 Mutw
llydro. $l!iOO equity. f.or car °" boat. Tn.de for IDDIDl'-
C)'de or ? 9192-aT.
* * *
,
. --.
IWl.V Pll.OT M~. J"" 7, 1'71
lfll)I ~ . ...,..... ][Ill
llOntal•W...W "' Loot SSS Gard..,lng Halp Wantad, M&'f 710 Halp Wanted, M & F 711
AL'S GAJWENmG e Dreaamatirw -Alter&HonJ ASST. BOOKKEEPER EARN FOR A SUMMER GDtEltAL OP'flCE. Younc $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ * OPEN TO PUBLIC * ftlr ~ A •mall $p9dal. Oa Hemt ~-&q'd. A.pply. 16.lt VAC.4.TJON, A CAR., CAMP k>cal co. tn a pre1tip
landtcaplnc Ml'Vioea. eaD Call Jo * MM448 Pla.oentia, CM. OR COU.!:GE FOR. YOUR buaiMu. BuutUul modenl
5tQ....5198. Serv1nr Newpcrt. EUROPEAN DreurnaJrinr. BABYSITTER 1« 2 yr ol.d, CHILDREN. Be an AVON ote. Crea.t oppty. $450.
CcU.1, O:sta Mesa. Dover Expn'UyCUstom titWd, Ac-full tune. Reliable . Repre&entativeA:urnextra call Jean Brown, 540-6Ql5
Sh:fti, Wtstclltt. c:ur.Reu.673-1849. Preferably mature, moMy, Wla priua. Meet COASTAL AGENCY e LANDSCAPING e ~ people. Have tun. It'1 euy 2790 H.a.tbot Bl at Adams
Alt.rations -'42-5145 . !~,, ~;.t,. ·~~,~~ JUJt call: HA IR DR E··~·. ·-.-th ROTOTILLING, 2!1c: SQ FT, Ne11, •ccunate, 20 :;t!an. @Xp_ BE ..........,.. .....,....,....... ....,...,~ cuu
SPRINKLERS, SEED & iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiil space to renl_ Good 1.0a-
--~
9'.JD LAWNS. LIC'D<DNTII Tllo COMFORTABLE ESCROW ASST. """and J'U'\dn1. HW W•~
114lt} ----------==.:.""'=·=~==~-·ICERAMJC tile nn le N'Md ~ Rtt.t.Enate ~· ~need 673-4186. .. l:mmmmmm~~~ Sc hools & * LAWN SERVICE .,,,. ...,..1 °r"-.. t Sm.all penon unmiediatdy. For tn-UNITE O CALI F ORNIA H~DWARE s.Ieam.an H.W. Inst ruction• 575 Front yard SlO. prr month, nm......,.· 1: n:e e& · trrview call \Vr11ht CG., 126 Rochester,
back yard also. Weeding, job1 welmme. 536--2'36. W. E. Lec:hen myer -BANK-C.O.ta ~1eaa.
Pe rsonals 530 PRIVATE aw immin1 iD-yard cleanup. 962-$il2. Tutoring l86o Ne,.,..._ Blvd., ~.M. 3141 E. Coan Hwy. LH~O~U~SEKE===E=P=IN~G=--,D~•-p7L·I
l----------1 atruction. My home, $2.50 .. ,....... • Corona die-I Mar
FREE!! per le590n.. 615-8634. AL'S L&ndlcaping. Tree SPANISH T UTORING' M6-l928 or 56-J.48.1 673-9240 needs exptt!e'nced CU~
removal. Yud remoddmr. S all R BOB'S v-•aJ "--•lJity Em-i--DIAN, Ill.to MAID. Appb Tn..b ha .. H ~-Jot d<an"P ummier mo, aces. e-as_ ...,... .. "'l't"'''" i-'-7"" Pft1IOCllld,SouthCoastCom· ~. · ratn )'OUr home flr mine "'!'!!!"'!!"""!!""'"'!"'~'"'""I Flot ill• 27 of th• U.S. [ S.W:-.., Rilpllra JGifl Repair sprinklers. ti7l-Ufi6. ti7i2380 * 8 tct 10 AM . "HO~fE OF TiiE BJG BOY" ESCROW flUioer ftir Laruna munity Hospital, 31872 COUI
Co.st G uard Auxil· _ .~ LAWN Malnt Haulin&, new Nirucl ottlct, 5 yn exper.1_"-""~·-""'~~'"-Lagw>a. ____ _
iary will c o n d u c t lawns, clean-up, pruning, _u;..p1_W_l_••_•_'Y:_ ____ 1 TflAINEE·COOK rtq, uJ..ary open, Call HSKPRS Emp.lyr peya ftt.
co u r •sty exe min-,_Y... __ .,_1_. _c_oJ_r_;,.;._n_79 ___ 1VINYL weldinll[...CUll, bunul, Nea t appearing,~ char. ~-GeoJ'lf' Afuon Byland Aaen-
e tions of power boats Babysitting General S.n'ices tears. Custom dyeln1 {all NO EXPERIE1'1CE NEC. ESCRO W Of'FJCER-Work cy lllfrB E. 16th, S.A .
on Saturday a nd Sun-COSTA MESA colon) £49..-2237 <mobile) ?-.faJly fringe benefits in pluah ofc. Gttat bendit!,,_54_7-0395_,=· ====--I
nd 13 Husband Bu...,! Call MOClle •~0 .,... • ., •->~"-·-2 =,• <PM Daily ,~ HOUSEKEEPER day, J une 12 • PR E SCHOOL "'3 6-~ ir ~ u.LC6v """"'" $ ..... No wcekenda. Hourg 9-5.
a t the Harbor Ma... -o.......--S45--0S:m aJter pa 151 E. 17th, C.~f. Co. wantA &harp per!IOn to M.atutt ~1• iirl flr'T
Special Sum.mer • ... A-....... , -~B=till~'='=·"::.:."'c..:""'='=' .:.Th="'="''--I [11] v-··• -ty tm ... -·t'r • ......, Call ~3 l::!~fr~t 1~::':a l: ~~o=~.~ p~ 1
H a u llng LuPfJ•wt I IJ BOO~~;~R • ;,. time, ~ ~~~ ~ * * HOUSEKEEPER
unt il noon and from program, hot JuncheL A&"• YARD, 1arage, cleanup1. ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~! Hunt Bch buaineu nttds COASTAL AGENCY ,. LAUNDREM 1 PM u ntil 4 PM on 2-6 hn 6:30 AM-6 PM. Remove trees. dirt, Ivy, I full chara:e bkkpr fo1· ap. 2'T90 Harbor Bl a t Adami Call 64&-7764
both da y a. Ber nie .us· wk-COMPARE! M2-40SCl =~r, back hoe . Job Wanted, Male 700 ~~1620 hrs. Pf'r wk. EQUIPMENT' INSTALLMENT
Gr•nich, the c ourtesy ~·::•~8:;38-;::;523;;7·=--~-· I'"""""°,-;:-;:;:::;::;:-;:::: MECHANIC 111 LOAN CLERK
examiner for F lotilla BABYSITTING -my homf'. CLEANUP .I: Haulinf, tree SCR·AM-LETS BOYS 10-14 SQ7 to $877 per mo_ Min. Exper. ~9371
27 has a grou~ of 10 LrE fenced yd. Full flr pl trim top, removf'. 1arage5 to deliver papen in tM San req. 3 yrs exp at journey-
t rained i xe miners to time. Mesa Verde, 54&-81.18, cleaned, ivy & f ence ANSWERS Oemen1ie, San Ju.an Capis-mM liewl, h.11. ind. File
a ssist him in this •c:· S.W-2'794. I't'moval. J ack S4&-47Q. tra.no and Capistrano Beach application by w'ed ., J une
t 'vlty Pran.are now BABYSmJNG by th• "°"', P..10VING, Garage clean--up uea. 16, 5 p.rn .. Penonnel Dept., 1 • ,..-... &: lite haulinr. Reasonable. Httocby-W-Wt -Drama DAILY PILOT Rm su
for the coming boat-day. v.·eek, month alao ~vcn-Free estimati s. 645-1802. ~lief -'.FAnrER 492-4420 CTTY OF COS!A ?t!ESA
ing season and;• :~ilto~i.c~~ and 'TRA=-SH--&-G-...,-,-cl-,-.,.-,-p, Hitlbilly'a larnt'nt: "Ew:ry BREAKFAST COOK 77 Fair Dri~. C.?tf, 92-S
caive your cou ety I -=~~~~-.,,.-~c I 7 days. $10 a load. Fret" est time I mff't a r!rl whG can Exper, MU.It be ovtt n . Ap· 714/834-5350 l -'d=•=·~·~l.~~====--c-· I WILL babyiiit by the wttk. Anytiine. 54g...503i. cook like my motht'r, 11hl:! ply in ptt90rt, SUrf A: Sirloin.
* FULLY LICENSED + Lovina: care. So. Coat.a I co-'-~-~-'-----I looks wrinJcled tikt' my FA-5930 W. c.out Hwy, NB.
Renowned Hindu Spiritualist ?-.fesa. 645-457t Housec leenlng THER "
Advice on all mat!en. HOUSE OF CLEAN . . BUSINESS Systems f/time BABYSITTING my home, YOUNG man, 31, educated tn or p/timie. can for appl
Love, Marriage, Busine11 Jrg tncd yd, hot meals, day Comm'! k Resid. c:eanin1 Denmark, SttkJ MW fit'lds. Mfr.5471.
EXECUTIVE Ra"Cl.ary for
marketing dept. Mftr Co. rmnNE DCD~,.,.,0..1<1
Sll.lary to $550. Ph for appt . 11'\.VI r~"'ll"llLL
=540-='"'='=· ~===~I SOO'IC£$1'AGENCY EXPER. SECRETARY
FREE
REAL ESTATE
WORKSHOP
FiJ>d Out
1. Why selling reaJ estate can be a most re·
warding profession!
2-How you can earn iostanl cash even before
licensed. .
3_ How you can get free •' reaJ estate license
.f . ~~g~ can enroU in the lree CJS Real
Estate Sales lnsUtute & learn every as·
pect of real estate from freshman to mag.
ter sale!imanship.
5. How you can become a branch manager
of your own office. .
6. How CJ S will help you own your own 0U1ce
when you qualify. CJS -WHERE OP·
PORTUN ITIES ABOUND ! Now more than
30 offices in 24 months! lOO's of more to
come! Get in on the ground floor! W~ ~ill
train you at no charge from your. or1gmaJ
licensing to owning your own office! CJS
says -"It is possible to make more than
$50,000 ll year on a full time basis."
PART-TIMERS WELCOME •
COME AS YOU ARE
EXPERIENCED SALESMAN WELCOME
• BRING YOUR FRIENDS
LEARN MORE ABOUT THE BIGGEST
& MOST EXCITING THING HAPPENING
JN REAL ESTATE -THE CJS STORY!
LIMITED SEATING
SO COME EARLY
Tuesday Evening, June 8 • 8 PM
Newporter Inn, Newport
1107 Jamboree Rd. -Bajboa Room
Free Parking
CJS REAL ESTATE 639·4982
• you pay only for material!' which is 100% Rt'adings gi\'en 7 days a & nite. 642-5299. Free est. * 642-6824 * E -d -! &t_,=~o-.:.._ __ ~--~ Y.'eitk, W a.m. to 10 p.m. >.~nenct' in e ec. engr. CAR hops or waitresses. At-
'.ll2 N. El Camino ReaJ, INFANT CARE your homt'. Bay & Beach J Mitorial quality control. Also 20 yrs tractive w/bubblinr to ssoo refunded on first commission. Typing 50 w.p.m. SH 85 Sccf'f'ta.ry
San Clemente Tender & aacting. Crp!s, windows, floora etc. yachting e.xpr. Speaks 5 ~r50naJHy, p/tlmf'. The "'"" $ , $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ "' .... ~~=~~~~~=~~~~~=~=
w,p.m. Secretary Ute SH
UNITEO CALIFORNIA s..,...,.,. Ino. 492.-9136, 492..007G New born to 8 mo. 67~2761 Rt's, & Comm.'!. 6j&-l401 languAges. Personable I< Zoo Re!L (Coast Hv.')' at l~~.::'..:::'.'.O::-'::.:::;.::...._. I ,8~AB'°'Y"S~l~l '~I E"°R:-.:-rQuaJ~~il~;,.~ willinr to learn. 494-1861. ?ttacArhtur) -BANK-GiMFriday 10 S!iOll Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help W•nted, M & F 710
Going on rummt'r vaca-?-.leu Clelllling Service
rion! 2 mature co 11 o i e exp. colliece girl to live in. Carpets, Windows, F1oor etc. Goiog fln gummer vaca-CLEANING women for J.ri 201 Awnida Del ?ttu Typist '° sm --------
students will maintian pro-1 _6~13-6667::..:.:.:..=·~---~~ ~sid.&:c:omrnc'l.54S-41.ll tion! 2 ma~ co llf'gt' mmplex, Mu3t be exper,
pcrty &: occupy hou5e for \\'AR..\f loving cart" brl!ak. &: srudtnts will malnt.ain pro-Full ()r pt-timf'. 54fr..50ZS.
tree room while flwne r'1 lunch. Music &: craft!. HOUSECLEANING and win-pt'rty &: occupy your hou.M.>
away_ REr·s AVAO... Call Fenced yard. 549-2615. dow v.·ashing team. Call for frtt room while <1Wntr'1
San Oemente Ins. Rater
<Tit ) 492-51.23 (PerlOIW)
Equal Opportunity Employer Dictapb:lne Typist
~==:::=:::=i;;=:=:=:=:jund~ter Ouk
"' l500 .. "" to l.l60
548-5613 a1t 5pm Ask tor 673-9322 or 613-8793. away, REF'S AVAIL. Call
Andy or SootL Car pet Service HOUSECLEANING 548-5613 aJt s pm .Aak tor
Clerk -Typist EXCEPTIONAL
SALES
OPPORTUNITY
LIFEGUARD-with it x pt' r . lo10DELS nttded to wea.r
Mu.st have WSJ. S2.25 per hr revolutionary nu 24 hr a da,y
to mrt, Mission Viejo Swim t-yela.sllcs. Individually ap-
,: Racquet Club. 837--t070. plied to yoUr own by special
MACHlNlsr Jig'. fixture pro-lechniquie lo last 1 to 2 rnos.
M•ny Other totype 1 production. Muat $20 per al to othl!n. Youn
Positions Av ail. be all around. 540-4TIO. are romp. &. you can earn l.,'.;;~:_;;;;::::..,.,..-,-,.,.-:-::-1 J OHN'S r--t &: Uphollte"" ,_, .......... e ~ Andy or Scott. Gal Friday type of job to PREGNANT? Ado Pl Io D, '-""'t"-•J ,........, ...,.,... • I __...
abortlon.va1ectomy Cleancn. Extra Ori I -TROUBLEShoot&:Research· start. ~mg, filng, 5"""
C8S E. 17th (at Jrvinl!l CM 'MAJO==s,----~M=ar=EL~ money jusr by lookinz
642-1470 2 Full time, $1.G5 hr. beautiful. Day or eve. for counselln&: k information. Shampoo free scotch Guard -'°"-'-"~g_______ your acct. problems: eve .&: phone voice. Prefer someone
642-4436 rs o i l Reta rd a nt g), IRONING dcne in my home. wlmda. 675-5307. wi th classified advertising
all lo 11 •-~. \ "· 1 -~---~~-~==I experience. Excellent com-ALCOHOLlCS Anonymous. Degreasera k co r per ,... . r..'\ct . won<. Job Wanted, Fem•le 702 pany bienefjtll, & advance.
Phone SU-1217 or v.Tite bnghleners & 10 minute Newport, Costa 1-Jcu. atta... ble11ch for wi.;te carpel!!. 642-8581. PRAC, Nurws. Companions, ment oppartunitiH. Cost.a P.O. Box l2Z3 Costa Mesa. "-v• ~·r m_::_, by .,~ .. -~--------1 ?-.tesa area. Write ClassHif:d .,... J~" .,.,,_J ..... -l I Hskpta.. Liv• in or out. GC1LF • Irvine C,oast C. C. ron ng t.. Alteration1 E 1 ad •5. Daily Pilot, P.O. --benhip tor ule--b!nm. me t'xtra trips:. W1U clt"an At My Home J\tonthly rates. mp r pays -o--;=-> ,...__ M 92626 ~ifilveves s.M-11'2'J. living nn dinil'lz rm & hall 54fT7641 lee. Health &. Family Care ou... ~. """'"" Ha ·
Sl5, Any rm $7.50. couch 'P~a""i·cn~lt.~n-g_,&-'-----Agency, 1805 N. Bro&dway,,l===----~---I Sf-les· Dence Cla ss SIO .. _ •~ ·~ · S. A. 547-6681. CLERK """isl wanted br in-··• , Cr>11.lt ..,, ...., yr1, vcp. ts p h I ~• Elepnt atmosphere. what counts, not metlvx!. I aper •ng "9 HOUSE KEEPER. cook, suni.nce flUice, located ln
Un1 imltt'd compensation po.. INVOICING CLERK
tenli&I with lutuf'f' maMf"· Typinc, know kardex. local,
ment oppoi-tunity for quali-call Loraine \Vcstc:lilf Per-
tit'd per50n with salt's or IOlll'lt'l Ag~y 2043 We51.-
public contact backrround. clill Dr., N.s _' 64fT2T7D.
,.._ ,__ . . . • ....... JANITR.ESS, p/tim•-4-5 hn ........ mpren•:11111vt' tralntne ...... h initial three year Wary + eves. Nev.'J)Ort Bcac area.
. . pl 1 di no to S2 per hr lo atar'L Exper. coml'i\lmon an ca -·• 1 545-8771 !ftI'ai&'.hl commimion11_ no ncceu. ·
534-2221 do v.·ork myael(. Good ttl. BARNETI' PAINTI NG : practical nurse. Full CdM. Contact Betty ,
JOANIE: 531--0101 or 815-72.)3. Special ot1,r. Stucco eavei, charre. ?..frs. Gr ab am .. 1..,6~'"""'~~""~·=.-====• 1 Annual ie-arninp exct'f!dlng
P!eue contact lt!om &: Dad-Diamond Carpet Cleanini labor/mat'!, 1ing!e $135. 2 543-9755, rm 205. COLLEGE STUDE NT $<'(1.000 not uncommon. Ex-
J. C. PENNEY CO. * Fuhion I11&nd *
dy! Avt aize room $8 Story $185. You trim & uve. Ar DE s FOR CON-Stock Clerk f/time. Summer cellent frince benefit11. A
FREE Facial. o i , c over Repairin&: &: Wta..llation1 Lic'd. 846--093", 968-3236. VALESCENCE, ie 1 de r I y employmenr. Cea.neut, ~-~ to be your ow11 boil.
beauty by Mary Kay, Call F~ El!it. 64>1.317 'P=R~O~F~.-.-,~Ut-trn~. -<.-=E-<t-,-,-1 1 ca.re flt' family c are . ture, draft exempt. Apply in
l~N~rta~.~830-~~7338~~!o~<~~·p~p~t~.~ICARPET r;hanrpming, dry story, low a.s S22~ w/i d Homemakers, 547-6681 Pf'l'50n, Kirk Jit\\'elef'!I, 2300 I Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. foam. Rt'5id, comm', win-paint. Ave rm $18. Airle111: WANTED: day work, ex-
Send tt1Ume k pergona.J data
1,1i tll bus1neAs backl1'0und to
Cla&Sitif:d ad lll, D•ily
Pilot, P. 0 . Box ljjj(), Colla
-REQUIBES -
Immf!dlatie P/time
SALES HELP
No, Exper. Nttftll. 1~ dO'WI &. floor1. ~ t'lt. spraying accou1. ceilinp, 2 per i enced a.nd have1 _N_O_P_H_O=NE~cC~A~L~LS,_'--f loll ..s Feud 962-0611 coat5 sis. Roy, 847-13.\ll. re1,renCf'5, m • day. COOK L ORIFOk\f CAJtPET CLEAN No \Vasling 54Ul781 Pll!'aaant rourmet cook. fut
Rcuonable Rates. *WALLPAPER * LADY \•:ishes daytirn~ "''Ork. u gtta.St" llghtnina:. No
M~a. Calil. 92626. XI n t. working: conditienll,
OUUtandlllf bendi~.
Found (fr" ads) 550 Tomlin Svc * 557-9669 \Vh'n')'UU ca.Ji "~lac" Good k rel i able.. hang-ups k wi!linr to work !-------...,.--Carpenter 548-1444 646-1ru Refe~nces. 541-~t. long hrs for low pay. But
PAIR of ladle• dark len1 eye p RO FE s s Jo NA L Pain-Help Wanted1 M & F 710 ""'ill settle !or a hi&'h pril'ed
iJu.8c1. Could be pf't':srnp. CARPENTRY ting-inler/exter. 1-f on e ~ t broiler man. Able tet "''Orll
hon. Vi.Ila Sbopp1ng Center MINOR REPAIRS. No Job v.·ork Lie. &. ill!. 548-27.)9, ADMI NI ST RATIVE eveninit •hift w/beautiful
An Equal Opportunity
Employer 1-f!F
=--=·--===:--
E xecut iv e
Personn•I Agfncy
&U-8461. Too Small. Cablnet ln pr-64.'">-53j(), well t'ndmo.·~ w a it re 1 s .
T RAINEE S • /L I F'OUND male cat, PY :'"I a.ges ~ o I her ~•blnietl. Acoustic Specia list Local headquarterw or lead-Ph. 675-o.\74 tor appt. ec y ega t o $650
$600
* APPLY IN PERSJN * 24 Fuhion Island N.8 .
F.quaJ opportunity employer
* JONES TIRE SERVICE
Is expandlnc in Ora.Ace
County and ~quires
EXPERIENCED v.tilte atripes Ion r b 1 1 r 545-817:> I! no a.n5Wf'r leave ··rat work 847_4128 ing insUTance firm. On-the· WOODY'S WHARF E xec:. Sec 'y
w/collar 54~133 msg. at 646-2372. H_ 0., · Newport Be •ch Sec'y/Ins. to $600 ... Commercial Salesm'n And LESCO PAINTING job-training leading to •d-S ' /R t $500 up *Tire Servicemen Found lll Cd.\t Fnendly ~-eraon. \. 'e-•td k Ap•· s-vt'n '' ministrativ, ~rvic-•, U""r-COOK, jntervie\ving now. ec: Y I C•P
d nc ..,, ,,..._, a: -~"'" ,.. R t'on'st $416 * F'ront El'ld ~!echan.ic11 di&h brown puppy w/tlea A.\'Y &Z job. P..t'!.I ·• Comm'l, · u· ' r / Ex1 visor. E1'cept1onal c;u·1.-er Evening 1h1t1 . ecep 1 1 to $SOO * Brak~ Mttha.nics
ronar. Dr. Stockton 673-1050 Indu~ .. Apt.s. Reas. F"ret: f'st. I couL. ~,·11ce 1~?· ..,,!1 · opPOr. B.A. req'd. To S700. 6T:i-2C61. NC R Tr•inH Salary plua bon~ ' 962-1961. I ic n~ . .,.,:; . ..,,,,,. A t T in e $375 SMALL prescr1pll0n i;lU&e!, Fee pa id by eniplnyes, e COOK (try). Must bf' fully c:c: ng ra e Opportunity to adva.nr.e
bl /dU'k fra me s CABl.'JETS&roomAdrl1t1on5 IPAINTING : Honf'st . A!soFttJobs ,'lp'dl.:.fasl.Ch.anceto 11.d-1 CompAnypa\d benefil!I. ~ 0 ong w · . ._ .. 0 'llO ~uaran!f'ed \\·ork. Lic'rl '410 \\', Cout Hwy., NB }.. ! 2049 H bo Bl d
&46-0J7f_ ~~;9~ ie 11 n g • """""' ' '
5
1..ocal refs. Call 67~~740 a ll IR\ITNE DCOC"ONNEt_ ~~~c1;.· \\' 8 g e ' 0 P' n -su11e H 64:>-1116 pp y: Colita r.~~u.r \' ·
SMALI. bla.ck &. brov:n soort I ~---~--c---. ' UV ~~"'!!~~"'!!"'""~l-Jii-:-Si'Ci!E'fi:Rir· J
Faye, 54>!Mn 1.st app, Pick your own hn.
~1rs. Baker 645-4122.
t.rAINTENANCE ?tfan for ----------1 small nuning t.::ime. Call f.tEDICAL RECEPTIONIST.
fn4) 494--8075 tor appt to in-lntriguinc oppor. in tfV! ofc
tervi'\\'. ol local <loc!or w/an elite
M'1•
SEE OUR ADD UNDER
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES
"A ONE-i\fAN BUSfNESS
$2,000 INVEST:\JENT
{CAN START PART Tl:\fEl
MANAGEMENT
X-MILITARY OFFICERS
BE'T'VEEN AGES ?"";>-30.
IF YOU HAVE RECE!llT·
LY RETIJRNED FR 0 "1
VlE'TNA"f WE HAVE A
JOB THAT YOUR LEA.D.
ERSHIP QUALITY WILL
FIT RIGHT INTO. YOU
V.'ILL ACT AS A RECRUIT·
ER FOR A LARGE LAND
INVESTMENT CO. INTER·
VIEW PEOPLE \VHO RE·
SPOND TO OUR ADS.
CAN 'T BE AFRAID TO
?.fEET OBJECTIONS,
• Salary + Bemus Plan e Pllllh Ofllett
e Fringe Bent!Jt'I
• Start tmm~iare!y
CALL NOW
547-6771
Ask for Mr. Reifert
practice. Ll\e typing, Slar1
1400.
Cal! Jean Brti\\•n 540-ti05S
COASTAL AGENCY
2790 Harbor Bl at Adami
t.JGR. Tra.lnee, illlervw at
Kt'ntucky Fried Chlckt'n,
2929 E. Coazt Hwy, Cdl\f
NEEDED: Hou~kttPl!r. 3
dayl! a "'k, Must have own
trans., rl!Jiabll!. Some
baby~it!in g involv~.
67:)-5611 .
ilnllV>1JClll .,
persilllllll
agmcy
833 Dovl!r Drive
N1!11-port ~ach
642-3870
L99al Sec'y• to $650
"fin, 2 YT'!!: CaJlr. G.P. Xln't
skills, Beautiful ottic~.
Legal TrainM $500
Goldl!n oppor. tor riri w/J(!
typmc k Sl-1 + de5u-e m
Jeun.
haittd puppy. Vic Beach &r. Cement, Concrete PAINTtr\G, professional. AJl SERYICES•AGENC:Y DEi\tO~STRATORS -Tup. EXEC SEc·y, :'ou C'an J RtH s !cR.ETARY
Garfield. H.B. 536-6936. CO ETE Fl w o rk Jt u a r n. c 0 J (Ir 488 E. 17th fat Ti-vine) C.;'.lf. penvare. Phone & c11 r w'ar )'OUr pantsu1tA w/thl1 Litt' S • . typinr , Fe-e Pd., i\iAJ'fICURIST-Exp"d, par I 1-':.:.C=-=--~-~-· ,. • NCR · oon. · Ii l " 3 necels. I\o 1nv, ~ '''" cr••ti·v, -"P •! ,·oun" ad Cal\ l..oraJne, Westclitf Per. t i m e . A pp I y K e 11 y YOUNG male tabby cat. no pal!os, Ori\'e~. 11dewalks. lpt'cia st, 96 -w.4 • 642-1410 6 ""'"' "''" ... ...,
Soc'y $550
\\"OTk "' pres. Good 5l<ill3,
sharp. •ttnctl\'e. Respons-
1ble posilxin, Good tuturt.
~7' 1441 830-0286. men Room al I~ top l!Onnel Agency, 2Ml Wert-Templeton'&, 445 E. lllh St.,
-collar.19 Vic Dover Dr ·
1
slabs. Jtea~. Don 642-8514 QUA-LIT~' ,_ . . 1. j ~z=:=::i::Cr:!==:=::=llrD~EijN~Tf,A~L:'AA;,.~,-.;~;;;;,,,;; .. ~.~·y~i· \\'/'""'win< co. Sbu1 S6()(). cliff Dr .• N.B. 645-7770 C.\f.
"""'" . ICEi\IENT WORK, net jCtb too ~ l.lll,nor pAln 11\i Adm. Sales ~ • .,u '" Cl< eaii'He!t'n Hayt'l, 540-60:D FE~JALE-3 mes. old puppY !mall, reaaol\able , Free by coll,ge student, w/ttf. prevent1vt' nurse. ~tatutt COASTAL AGENCY :'tfATURE wom an to cook
.. ,. k e 5.16-1162 "''oman. enjoy people. Exper di.ruler tor Ice lamily 5 w/bobbcd tail. vie. L'ith le Estim. H. Suuiic · 548-8615. L ET US prel'd but intelligf'nce •nd 2790 Harbor Bl at Adams J. W. ROBINSON'S daya/vik. Hra 3-7 pm.
Tustin. 5411-7339. PATIOS, walk!!, <!rive· . .in-YOU Supply Th it Paint . START YOU enthusiasm may make dif-EXPER. C1eanlnc Wornan e NF::°'A''PORT BEAOI e 2131592-5775.
YELLO\V para.keoet Vic of 300 gWJ new lawn~. 1aw, break, Roomt; painted SlO ea, Call IN THE ference. H.B. 962-2436. for comm'l bldt. 4-5 hn I ~M~A~T=URE~;:::p<:c..n-on.-=~=-=,=x=p<=-r.
bklck of 16!.h place 1n C~f. remaw. 548-8663 for e~1. ~540-=_'M6~-,--,-~~· I FASTEST GROWING DE NTAL R E CEPT. nl teJy. 6Tl-8219. Hu lmmediat. neceu. Train for mgmt in
Lost 555 Cont rector FOR cle•n & neat p&.intlna, F IELD Dt'sk only, Dental f'Xpe.r, EXPEJt. Grocery ctwcker, openin1 klr unique saJes field. 557-I69fi.
GOLDEN·cnlor ed
cocker-~etter. lonc-leu:ed.
Brn. Collar an&. to
"Shamice "' RE WAR 0 !
548-0517.
MY Way, quality home
n pa.ir. Walls, ceilinf. floors
e!c. No job too small.
5'17--0036, 2t hr anJll. 11trv.
interior It eJCterior_ Rieu. ne-ce115. Sornt> Sal'!.. Salary fema.le. Refs plt'aH'. Apply
r ates. Call Dick, 968-4065, 'Jll E l N v Es T i\1 ENT open, fringe beOf:cfitli. H.B. morninp, COM! Su?@rmark-M•na9ement
PAINTING/pa.p!!.rinf . lS yrs FJELD IS GETTING LARG-atta. 8AM-6P?-.1, 846-3546. et, 1'«7 E. Coast Hwy, CdM .EX'pr.rie~ _ SALES MGR.
In Harbor iuea_ Lie .l ER EVERYDAY & \VE DENTAL RECEPT. No S..ts. EX.PER. Sales lady want~ e Full time, xJ11't co. bent:· WE NO:D SEVERAL
MEN'S TAILOR
bonded. Ref11 tum. 64Z.23S6 CONSTANTI..Y NEE D NE\V H.r11 ...... OP'n. Name your trom P>lluion Viejo area for fits, ES EX Add11iona * Riemodehng-.... ~ P..f£N WTrn SAL -Cerwick k Son, Lie. PA I N TINGlpa.perin&. 18 P EXlPLE TO HELP MAN· own hn. Bfoautiful otC" In heller ladiea ready to \\'ea.r Pl:Jt. 6: 11fE ABILITY TO ~fAL.E dos : v.·/ wht mane:, 673-6G4l * s.19--2ljQ Yr,. In Harbor area. Lie Ir AGE OUR CLIE.NTELE. gf'f'at location. Lite ea3y skop. Lillian'& So. Cout AJ'ply in ptraon 10-5 p.m. LEAD & ?-.IOTfVATE MEN.
wht nose, le paw&, whl tJp I ;JF,~c;;;;;;:;:-R,;;;';~ii;;;; I .~ho~od~•~d·~"'~'~"~"~•~m~,!64~i.'.:!23~"6~. \!'Ork. Start S400. I ='P~\~ua:,:;:,, ~"~"""""c..,·~--..,.--I • 2 Fu!Uon Ill., N.8. NOW IN EXPANSION o n ta I I, 1 on C a Ir, LIC"O C.On&lr. Remodelint: P a ti DI NO DEGREE OR EXPEll. Call SaJly Hart. ~ EXPER. ~1achi11f' 0 pr . Efual orportuntty employer STAG£S .I: POSmONS TO
.. Nicholu". vie H . B -Additiona, Plans. Llyout. NECESSARY. Y 0 U' LL COASTAL AGENCY • -rh•, drill P"~ • mill. K I E K ndall 642-3811. ....., .. BE FJLLED Ji\JMEDTATE-Hurtbroken. 5J6.-n36. ar · • · PATIO Speciallllta. A dd START JJ\fMEOIATELY ON 2790 Harbor Bl at Adama Apply in penon. 8 .>81·~~~'!'!:~~~'!'-'J LY. WE ARE A PRESl'JGE
Elect rlc•I di,tinctlon to your home A nJLL TRAINING PRO-DENTAL Asst_ E xre r . Production P l, N.B. KITCHEN HELP CJMPANY wrm A HIGH LOST, vaJua.ble men'• 1hot's,
Vic: Back Ba.y. Am pl'
reward, O>nract Tony
""""· 644-<I!lS LOST: White Cd&Uel. Vic
Rarbor V iew H i lls
REWAJU>! 611 o;>1.
LAPIES wata jewltd band.
Lott In H.8. or Newport lut
week. Reward-6&-8176.
LOST: er.me C'.'Olor" dof. 6
mm no Ue. Lone thin Jep.
lath • hvlne uu. 6Q.61199.
LIC'D Eltctrkian, ma.int.
serv. Alto, rtsid. tnduattlal,
642-4474.
PROFESSIONAL MA I KT.
t:tte work, pruntnr .
aprayi.11.1. dlHue .l ~td
control. SJ!mkler t'f!palr. a • .,. up joba. ~.
~5893
.,i!h a custom. patio de1l1n-GRAM THAT MfEN FIN-chainlde. X-ray, pourinc: FEM-Help bietwn .».so yn Female 545-3061. QUAIJTT I~! AG E_ TO
ed elCJ)ecl&lly for )'0\11' )SHED \V I L L IMMEDJ. model1. 642-7998. dd, 30 br1 a wk, 9:M l altor •t ory A H!:LP y 0 U CONTINUE home. Quality. bperlen~. ATELY ENABLE YOU TOl='="'=='='=""-~~-1 rl Satlafactton. !:a1'0n .A: Sons START A UFE'TIME PRO-DISTRIBUTORS wanttd for am·2:30pm, ~lon-r · & Equipment OUR COMPANY IMAGE -
Con.stroction. s.43-07$9. FESSIONAL 1SUSINESS ~tianlc tle•lth It ecoloey Sat. noon to~ pm. Appl)' Tec:h nlci•n WE'LL IMMEDIATELY
CAREER. hne. 499-2~781646-7056. before 91.m or &ft 3pm. $593-$757 Per 1tto. Hi·Seheol MAKE rr PC>ssmLE FOR
P laster, P•t c:h, lltep•lr * DO YOU WANT A Donut Shop, 9069 Adama, Gra.dua.tion l'Tqllittd. 1"Ue YOU TO OWN A DRIVl: A
* PATOI Pt.ASfE"RJNG AS AN ASSOCIATE OF STEADY PART TIME H.B. t !'IPllt'at!fln by Friday JWM N!:W 1971 CADllJ.AC AT
Ail ~Pf!I. f'rtt eatimata! O AV E t.OOKINCt...ANO, JOB~ Jn\t>ttstlrc iun:ey FIBERGI.ASS molden. Ap-25th, 5Pi\T, Pl!noll9f:I Oe,t.. COMPANY EXPENSE.
Call ~25 FINANCIAL INVESTME)lj'T type job from home. NO pllcationa: 1l(IW be i116 taken, Roam 511 . e Stan immredlatt'l)'
ANALYST, R. E. BROKER SELLING. \Vrltie brlefiy to Oipper Ma.rtne Corp, 1731 S. -CITY OF -e ComP91lY trainlna
Plumbing YOU'lJ.. BE WORKING Cla.,&ifled ad No. 145 The Ritchey, Sanla Ana. COSTA MIESA e Ptu.h 0Ulce11
Expier. JeflantM Gant.Mr, LEW T&b1 & Son'1 Plumb. WITH THE BEST ?o.1.AN-Dai.Uy Pilot. 330 \V, fta.y, FIBERGLASS ml.fl fo r 77 fair Ori~ 92Sl6 e F'ull lrina:e b!lnthll
C.Ornplete yd lf:Niee. Neal 1·n R-...; Rep!-Re~ AGEM~ • SALES KING Coeta Me18, Ca!U. 926Z, patclH!p wort on boal Call !TI4l ~ y 0 UR OR!Em'ATION
Y,_vn:r,.r Ttnitr, Vic: • 0·t•~. c---eat 64,,..389 g -..-r. ....-. L"' .,. PEIUOD WILL BE UNDER ~"~ "" """',. ~ rn: dt'L Frte e11t. 646-8340 ANYWHERE TO LE' AD fivlng phone number. all 4 pm. 54&-1338. LABORATOJtY tecbnldan. tut\latf UN ~ ENJNG C THE SUP£1\V1SION OF Ge-lill or 77,_.f.., · JOHNSON'S CARD PLUMBING REPAm YOU TOWARD FINAN IAL * DRIVERS * GAL FIUOAY dinkolly ..,.,m.._ Sta" DAvE LOOKINGLAND, JN. I;'.;;:;~:.;;.;;,:;..:.:.:;:.-=.,,. I Yard c.att. clWMJJlll, plan-No job too imaJI INDEPENDENCE .l 'tltE Typ\11 in aalta de-pt. $)]).. ttfistry ttqUired. J..mft\ed!-y R
2 Ji«)6. oU Lab mix pupp», ti ne. gprinlden. 9U-Z1S. • Mi..3128 • H~lGJrT OF PRES'J'JGE. No Ex ... rf•nc• $600, No blc mi. but nation. •te miployment.. AM VESTMENT ANAL ST, · -• -'·" < wt1t ft. vk r-E-BROKER, CONMUNrrY
E xec:. Sec'y to $750
L.A. a.rt8. Carttr TYPI!. Con-
fid ent aaJ , rood skills. \~"ark
w!V.P,
Sec 'y $500
Con5tr./Mktng helpful. SH &
typinc. Grov.ini: firm.
Soc'y $525
Ideal candidate I.a of So. Am-
erican oriJln. Bi-~,
m~ica.I bclqmd.
Soc 'y I F. C. Bkkpr $560
Good trin1e biener!ls !or "''O-
m4Il w/top skill&. Bealltlf'l.n
Latuna AJ'lea .
A/ P Bkkpr t o $550
Min. 2 yn con!ltr back~und.
Lile typlni .
NURSES
11unin&:
prtf'd.
trainin& -15 11!1"\111!W:
A.idea for ama.ll
horM. Exp•r .
\Viii c o n1lder
rl&:hl party. fTI4l
lot appl to ln.
NURSES AIDF;S
Xlnt v.·erklnc c::andt-.
I; "Empioytt Mnetits, ,..._
OPENING tor food Service
P.fana.pr. C.11 h:ir appt.
IJ8..3;&S.
P-nmc .sum.mer Work
COLLEGE STUOENTS
..... ~ -· ...... -Exp, Japanae Gard~r COLE 'LUMBING N I ally lmCtwn m. lnV(ll\lfld In St>uth C.O..st Community LEADER WHEllE y 0 U
Npt. Jtcts, IU-6& Complet. Yard Servlce FOR Y 0 U 1t CAREER eceuary hl(her priced waterlront H<igpltal, Sou!h Lquna, Natl CDJ'll-wilt nttn • lltntt·
LOST: Dowr p In• eh• r , rrte •attmate 567-92154 2t hr ~rvi<:e, 64-'"1161 OPPOJ\TIJNTrY CAU. Tf\1-~futt have clean Calif. drtv. home• deJll'H a perwonabl.e 499--llll. I.xi "6 ':i-:t :r;!T:-6: i-: ed number ol S\lmmer jobs
m&Se, t ma cenck-~ 2 EXPiii Uawallan Cardl-ner lltooflnt ~fEDl.\TELY FOR. YOUR lnr record. No t undtt 25.. l!v•ty YoUl'\I lady to .111l•t LEGAL siCJttTAltY ANCJAL SE c ·u Ft rr y Ir: r~ CoUirie ace 11~men: Tt\l.t
Wb-$50 new. IJ&.00 ft.on. C 0 m p I e 1 • Ca rd e n I n 1 •L-E_E_RM--!.,.-r-C.-.-Roo--flnr--Of APPOINT'f\t[NT WTTII OU ft YELLOW CAI CO. tut movinr l&ln cl"!W. Ex.pier. Call Pa.mt.la 'T"R.EMENOOUS P1tESTIGE )Ob will otler f\Jn 1: f'Xper.
LOST) pupplet, 1Di4 male A SeMoe. Kamalanl. ~ all t)'JM's. ftec:cvtr, nptlN, PERSONNEL DEPT. 186 E. 16th St., C.M. r.fu11 type 60 w.p.m. f'rel. $43-SU8 CALL NOW In the f1ekt flt v.'Om ens IA'8 h·
b1k 4 wbl female, 00 • J•ptuwse Ge.rd-Iner ther-rno roof eoalinp, white DftlVEWAY Sa I,, 1m 11 n IOlTI• SJI. Bctwn oll'• ll-JO, riJ\ED or that old tundtuNT 547 6771 ion,, Mu1t be r.~idtnla ol
Qralwt, C.)I'. _SCl-.1749 Exp'd. Yard work a. color. Llc/betnded a!nct 547-6771 "''ant~ w/lubt t'Xper. Mid· Ans,.,-er phones, plot llAWa, II'• ttially not 11'.at hard -this •rt• tor summer. ?\o
RJ.'WAJU>: 8o)1I '&'btt.e ltalf· O taTl-f.lp, Plant:lna M6-4)619 ~·~"~·-"-i._7722~--~~-dle •lr"d prt'f'd. 8oyd'i; Ar· mfft v e r Y lnt~l"t511nr to replac.. Jullt Midi lbt exP'f. ntcfst. Coad f'litn-
u .. A·-•-~ -~-\ • ., sE C d I T ~ •--fl ~ Io· ~ A•k for Mr. Sh•ekel cv, .fOO E. JTth St., CO. C.M. people. Call fTI4l '44-136'1, fla'n.lturw a m.llOlllaMoos Ask for Mr. RolAnd lnp pott'ntlaJ. CaJI ~!13 an "' -.... .,., _..,. JAf'AN'E.,, • r en n I -vuy ......, ftl, ~• ire..... Alk tor Mr. Taykir, -•,-·• I• .,. C••'-.... I"!'!!'!!!~!'!"!!"'!'!"•• H1rrlt. ln•1 5"40-2710 l11t 70lr'Dl2. 644.Sttl ~. ?feat work. Oeanup I ~ my O"'"n \l'Ork. 64)..77IO,. rltr .. DAILY PlLCTt' fOr attlmll .,.,. ....... ----~ ~ -~1 -...... Soi~!®.'! f or be~f l'l!ru.lta! ~ Call su.:!671 • Sav.! We'll help >W ,.u1 iUOMil Sectlc4. -Call=.::~::::::::.::•:.S.=.:"'::.'c... __ .~•::.•Wlt=:.· ______ 1 w,,r btrp ,.. .. n, W-5671 -· · --· , ---=...;._-"---·'---...;....'-------::7
' ..
......,, -7, 1'171 DAI\. Y I'll.OT
1! Mod-. I~~[ ;;;"""'"~" ~'~;;·, [ -"'=-I~ ( --1•1 T-i• I
100 Mlomlew Ill TV, Rodie, HIFI, Oonorol tuMoblle-• ns Truck<
J[Il] [ I~ I I IJ I 1§1 ---
l41p w.n1oc1, "' & , 111 H•lp Wontel, M & I' 710 Antlqun NI
OPENINGS JM part ti~ SECRETARY A)ilDR£A'S
~ ~rvloe hl:lp. C.U All 1 C'.ocwl t,ypin&. pre~r. rrlf'dicrJ ANTIQUES
P~r. 138.tlOJ. exprr. ~r.onnd Dept, Hoaa; Just Recelwd
OPENING ktr v:p'd llosp, .NB_ NEW SHIPMENT
maintenance toremtn. Call [ ,;o;;o;;o;;;;;;o;;o;;o;;o;;;;; J AUSTRALlAN, ENGLlSH
fbr appt. 838-3595. * Sec'y L ... I $5.SO l F'RENot PIECES
OPERATORS -aport.weu So~ R. E. or Eacrow back-~ Newport 81., C.M.
Mli exptr. cnly. Good pay. ground helpful. Fee pa)d, fW5...487o
St.r.ady. 642-3472 NJ3. Other 1'"re-r & t~ Jobi Dilly 10-5 • Sun, noon-5
PHOTOGRAPJlf;R, , x per SERVICF: CENTEI?. A.'iTIQUF. Hand crank
w/childrtn Salary optn. AGENCY phonoiraph .Rtcord
Apply in pf:t10n, Chri&tlan 300 Nt-wpon Centrr Dr., NB 11crag,, COit $80: IM!ll uo.
S!udi09, 1.1:00 Long ~ach Sulfe 535 644..(98} t97-JOM.
Blvd, Lyn'>lood, Calif.
P/TIME trainee1, HS or col-
ltgr.. No f!:w::per. nP«11, The
Zoo Re1ta.urant, Coa:;t ffy,:y
al l\facArthur.
ANTJQU!: 19th Ce n I u r y
telephone, w/batte.ry box.
SECRETARIES 1~L-,.~~·i·1'.m_~~-~"'-~-· -'-175~· :="
s ..... 116
JOHN'S BIKES
-NEW -1968 MOTOROLA 2 3 ' '
Coiumbla.Pttmiurn-Steyr CoNDl• Cokt TV; jUlt Fl.till• 27 of....,._ U.S. Some UKd blii.u In itoclc lpt!nt $96 on new tubet. Coal '~
FREE!!
2J40 Newport &Ivel. new $521, Sd1 S175. 6*-6972 Coast Guerd AuxlS.
Cost• Met• or 497-1084. lary will c • n cl u ct
Op.n 6-10 Wkcleys PACKARO ~Btll Stereo ceurtesyexaml,...
S • i AM/F~t. walnut cabinet •tlon1 ef power be•t•
•t. & Sun. ,.... $1iO, 673-1017 &tt ti pm. on S•turd•y encl Su,... '4.l-4no -\VilJ t.akf, Tradt-tns-day, June 12 •nd 11
at th• Harbor Mas· * AUCTION * , ..... v.. JIS ,. .. dock•• Nowpon Fine r unu. ._~--,,,---~ Beech from 10:00 AM
Ii: Appliance 3 Llnei, 2 Time•, $2.00 until noon •nd fr.,,.
Auctions Friday, 1:00 p.m. 1 PM until 4 ' PM on
Windy's Auction Bam BEAUT. Tabby kl t ten. both d • Y 1. l}ernle
20751,lr Newport. o.r ~ brownish/atty _ Ion&: hair, Or•nich, the courtesy
Bl,_ 1 I 1 1a Id exeml-r for Flotill• &hind Tony'.1 U& ?tat'l ma e . w . o , ...
MEMBERSHIP. Haebroken. 54&-4537 27 h•s • group .t 10
INSTANT HOUSING
15 -ls on Dl1pl•y
MOVE IN TODAYl
-featurin& -* VIKING * EDGEWOOO * KEY WIST * KINGSTON * BOISE CASCADE
Slntle1 • Ex,.nclh
CAPITAL SALIS
HUNTINGTON SHORECUFFS
Beach Blvd. (Hiway 39 btwn
AUanta & Indianapoll1, 1 mi.
N. Paclflc Coast Hwy.)
17141 536-1116
1967 FORD % TOii
V-1, N.w Paint. : Spnd,
c.,,,..,. Equjpped, """"' (G3991l) mas •.•. ~
l1lXl Hartior Blvd.
REC'JtEA.TION CEN'1'Eft
ROY CARVD, lllC.
2925 Hubor Blvd.
Costa Meta 546......,..
PROFESSIONAL phont
solicitor • Dana Point, San
aeme.nte. Capiatnno arr:a.
\Vork in your O\\'n home.
Be. t df'al tn arr:a, Phont:
83.>1465 between 9:00 a.m.
and noon.
KENMORE auto \\'asher. N!WPORT ll!ACH BLACK & rrey Striped kitten trained ex•mln•r1 to
ATLANTIC late model, completely rt!blt N S C u• ,v/.,.:ht ~...,,, 8 ...,'ks old •11ist him In this •c·
RESEARCH $70. U'l}!rlpool elei: dryer, TEN I L D Hsebroken. Nf'~• aood t lvlty. Pr•pilr• now
1!155 GMC. rec. rblt ens. •
hydroma tic trans., n e w
!!!!!Jl!!ll!l!!!!!!!!!'!!l!!!!l!!!!l!!!!f!! 1-• ..... ad ...... Mobile HamH m $.ll)t). G:l-!Oll.
H good cond S3S. Guar & Charter tamlly tf'Mii .Ii home eoon! 5'8-4537 I th I bo I as open ings !or Senior-type swim mtmbenhir. Moo pl"' l=="""=.,,---,;c-cc:-="' or e com ng • • I :':t, I . . h ........I ' delive~. 546-8672, 841-8115. n .. ~. . nd , ... &ecre ar1~ w1t t.uvu typing transfer t{e, 644-1140 FREE kitten1, Beaut ~J 1ng •••son • .. MarN~ NOW OPEN
&: SH 1kill:s. Sett starters & F"RIGIDAIRE &lo\'t' Cw;tom ~Fo=R-~lm--_-,,-•. -,---~1 -t female, 9 \\'ka. celve your courtesy · CONT&MPO.
'61 CORVAIR J>.U.
(l)ixf. l2SO ar but .... ,,.,. RECEPTIONIST. Young
la"•y er nef'ds your
per!!Onalil)' & charm. Ofc in
1nodem center. \\'Ill train In
1,gal terminology. $425 mo.
Call Helen Haye•. ~-
ability to v;urk "'~ith a mini-Imperial, lnfina!e hear, dual m~iate 11 e • ** 673..el &I lsll!' dec•I.
mum of supervisJOn. ovens, storage underneath. Xev.-port Beach Tennia .It. 1 -----~----LAGUNA HILLS ·n Doda'e Tndftman 10D.
C •""" S\\•imming CI u b mem-GREY 1triped k 11 t en, 13' Au.EN Speed bolt plus loah; Speed & Ski ff I -•,.. RIDGE ROUTE DR. Take over P9J'1Dl'nta wlftli B 04f _.,.,. Make oUer. ..,,,....~
w "!6 m 1737 bership, 833--0720. ho!JM>broken, to iood home. 60 hp Seo. N outboud motor 14, OUTBRO ., HP M (r---ot M-·•---.. ) ol A. Ml)..8241 -APPLY IN PERSON -1~~~~~~~~0~'~·~·~'.:C'.:'..'.:':_-,--ll 'i'n:i'iif'.~'A>ii>;;;;-:;;;;;;;:-96S-l33l and trailer $350 • ....., ere, ....,.,....,. .,,,.....,., ~ ..... ~ l-..c_,;.r,"'""c-.m.--1
'itOTPOINT auto v.·uher, FRANCISCAN Fine china-sJ1_729' Elee starter. Trlr, Water LAGUNA HlU.S '66 FORD JAN
COASTAL AGE.~CY
2790 Harbor Bl al Adams
3333 llARBOR BLVD.
COSTA ].fESA, CALIF.
}.1nt cond $40. Spel!d Queen Sll11tt Plne-9 pJa~ ttttinp DOr.JINO • Felix · .i\foms; -akiis, tow rope, 2 anctms, ~rtl.re adu!t community ad-
elec dryer $35. Guar .Ii + servinr plttn. Cott $331.. Cau, ready to leave neat. 7 1' Dln&hy If 3~• HP motor, misc equip, All tor $400. All Jactnt to Leituft' World. l Spttd. Radio 6' ~. I
dellvered. 546-8677, 847-Sll5. Make otter. 546--0205. Wk'I, hMlbkn, 644-5678. CU ta.nk, oan, life cushion&. 5: 567-6716. Be11..utifUI SUJTOUndinp. llll cyt (9135)
RECEf>T\ONIST
Orthodontic oli: . .I Yr secre-
tarial exper. req 'd. Xl11 '!
oppty, 1'0r appt., 644-1408
Aft 6 & \\'knd8, ~4--0753,
ATLANTIC
RESEARCH
KEN,\l!OR.E "'asber, $3S, ex-MAKE AN OFFER? P..1ALE Slameae. Very a.f-'Tl licenlf'. Good cond. 15' GLASPAR SO HP Mere luxury appointment., '!'her. ' $1215 ~llent: ~ wu~r A Complete M"I of \\'orldbook fttlionate, needs 1ood $100/bat <1tr. 54S.-5978. elec, controia, wtnd1hleld 1.peutie pool Sa~. exer~ llW IMr.
Dryer l'll't. 540-l095 Encycki()@dlas -l\lust ae:ll home. ~16. \\'ANTED Avon or 7.odiac trailer, $695. 642-!KOS (If' cite S)'l1l. 4 biniard tabln, "51 ... ~ W
C&.ll 557-88&5 KIT'I'ENS by ma J t e 1 e c11.pable ot 40 hp inotor. Will 536-.{l()9S uk for Cuey. m\K'b much mott! .
KENMORE elect. dryer, ex-BICYCLES d Good mother. 2 ma.le % ielnl.le buy with or without mot<1r. 13' boat powered by 40 HP CALL 830-3900 noo Harbor Blvd. M5-fMai ~~ni::i·54~ii:s_ ~. Call aelection. ':u··~~.~ 6' misc. hlbrk. 536-0294. l213l 626-<14111. enr, 11"1 whffl tnr, ~75. NEW Mobile Home IJx5l. 2 Auto Lff•lnl "4 REUEF Aides Needed all
shift•. 1.LV.t-7PM Fu JI
time. Bapllit Convalescent,
661 Crnter St, C.M. 548-5585.
co~ 12 St!ncraya. 1-J-lD •P· BEAtrrlFUL fiuUy kl.ttle• 14.' FACT'ORY ai.u. awr 4.93-41l4. BR. 2 be. $12.'500. Set up •1----------·
cu fl, xlnt 642-1172. w/thlck tur. bebroken 2 WGOd" .lki/tlahlna' boat C•mpers S.le/Rentt20 lndacpd 1n Coata Mea.'• • l£AS£ •
colld. $75. ....., .,,,,_,. FISHER Gelger counter t!gen, 1 b A: w. ~93. w/tniler, $2'5 or <1fler. ' GREENLEAF. PARK. 1150
968-7936 or ""-.xJ.N '42--0584 • Whittier Ave. . • 1~=-~-~----$25.00. DARLING kittena -2 1\1ters 1 ~~=~·.,_,,_,..,,..,--=,-I Dalwn Camper Shells • S48-l69S * M&-251.0 'a cad El Dorado •• $111JllD
Systems Division
R•c•pt
Gen'I Ofc
Sec'y
$475
to S550
$575
A Division ot
Susquehanna Corporation LRG. Jo'rost free bouom ~-~=="'='~-7291""''---~I -2 litters. LafUna Ni.cue! 16' BO AT w / trtr. 7.5hp Fbrgls, alum windows. SUm· 1 iiiOiwKmiH:---,Mii[ '10 Ford !OJ Galaxit
t'rffzer ntrig. $110. Call CATA.VI.ERAN l~"". bst otr: I '7""'='~·-•~9!>--'36~7~5~, _...._-,--~·-c I o.b., eng. Xlnt cond. $495. mer sale S1T5 .r.: up. I Motor Homn MO f.dr •••••••••••••• J7t r»
646-7820· &: '56 Chevy drl!vel')', leu 2 Vi'hippet dop ma!es, Beaut All Cout GuUd APP . 530-7310. 't9 Owvy Cat:*'b •Equal!!!!!!!!op!!'portun!!!'!!!!!i~ty~•~m~pl~-!!!!~/'.F~u:r~n~l:tu:r~•:_ ___ _:•:l~D title. make ofr. 548-9755. animals, A.Kc. to YeTY .pee, 96&-6829. TW9'.0' DCFB Chrla'a, Xlnt 1969 21' Dodre Paee-Anow 2-dr ............... $1'9 inc ~ e KING SIZE e home, 548-31157 a.tt 5 WANTED: Small Bo a I cond, Local, One at $20,500. Motor Home. Will trade. '69 Ford LTD ).dr •• $19 mo
SERVICE Statian Salesman 0\\.'NER 1acrif1ce 1'.led iler-BEAUTY REST MATIRES.'i I ~.C,.-,.C:,=,,'-'--'--~ w/mooring Ave<,, Bier. TI4/n4-n>A Oy1: 6G-337J, Eve a : All Can with Air
Many Oth•r
Po1itions Avail.
"'antrd for NeWpOrt Shell, n.ne&n Jumiture. Custom 8 Xlnt cond $50. 646-SllS5 BEAUTIFUL ahorl haired or slip. Bal Isl or Cycles, Bikes, S48-36n SOUTH COAST
2800 Weit Cout Hwy. N.B, Vetcn .ofa & loveseat, ki tten&. 1 ~wks, ~ tood V!c. 213/473-0011 -.. Trailers~ Travel MS CAR LEASING
RUTH RYAN AGENCY
1793 Newporr. C:\1 646-4854
SERVJC."E Statlon Attend. 1.telody chairs, occasional 6 SURFBOARDS 5' 6" to !I'. homf"ll. 536-EO Scoot.rt 7~ -W. Cou! H-, N •
110 I "' Xlnt -' 6106 14.' V Haul runabout. 10' 1kH .-. -• .-. Pt/Mt PhiliiPs 66'. COml!r &11..in, coffre &: commode · o..-. COuu. KTITENS by malteae '68KOMFORT16%', aleept;.,,,...... --·.--
17931 Beach, HB ~7-9617
R.E. Salespeople -full or n. H -~ e~' \\I. Oce&n Front, 642-3830 111el or trade, make Qfter g Blk k 1~ ... • ,,_ '"""'•'"" .,,,"-,,,_ .._.t wy .,.,... ...boa. Blvd, tables, qui.Illy 6-pc king Jll(ltl\er. 2 male 2 female 3.~ Yuk A C '! TMm · e rac , awn .. ,. . ......--. part time, Holidays -Sa t. & COLEMAN !txl2 t t, till · LJ• on ve, ·" · Jl195 341-&JS Autos Want.cl ~
.... u .; . h 8' 1 exper. nE'C'!!I>. loc l "''· req. bdrm set w/armoir, S.pc en .I tn Mbrir:. MS-O'l!M. HONDA. ~"~'-w~·.==·.,.c.,,;=~· -==i·---------~I .xin. Ou u you WI$ . s box •~ 6&l y · +.....;. "-ta. I--~~---~~~ lloofl/Marfne -;;; contract in Calif. Quintard SERVICE Sta. Salesman, queen dbl bdrm set, dinette •......,.. ic..,,...,.......,. 3 Yr old Puttbttd Doxie. To to4 Tr•ller1. Utlllty M7 WI PAY TOI'
Realty, 1sn lfartxir, C.~1. exper, p/time, near appe11.r. !amp1, pl11.quea, 19" TV , Mesa. !!' .. ul.,'! or!. older chldrn, only. Equip. • SMALL uWJty tra llll' r' CASH ~2-2991. I'll start .vou with Apply 2590 Newport Bl, CM . Tonka toys, boy11 m i!c PORTABLE Wuber, sood =<>-<>•" l'....a jUl\D'I
1 266 J st CM BO T trail t u· bo JIUUllAIWU\ ·' closed-ln, Xlnt coM, Good a l!sl of buyers, I'll train SE\\'ING nia ch oper. Power. lems. oann • cond. SM!. At.>, couch A: A tt or al. · b 1 Sl.O 64&-968l ~u. ~ter dre~. Exp only, btwn }l&rbor & Fair1:irw, l chair f.15. ~1'91. ~ Good condition, $80. ~ ...... ~~ • A uy ,a ll'-·le p · ~
R.N .. Exper tor OPf't11!in11l~p;~·..,~·;·~··~·='~'"~2~w~·h~il~u~.,~•;t.,Jr.bliikii'no<rt_h~o~l~W~il-""~"~·;;;;;;;;;;;;!1 'm=v=!N=E~CO-AST'=-co==UNTR==y'1 1 ---jL ~--·~•-n-_1_°"--*-~=l~===-~----~-i,-"~'•..,,-.,,.,rv=-~·~·'.'"':'.-•-"-'..,,..~-'
room. Xlnt fringe benefits, 7 SHEET:\IETAL TRAINEES GIRL'S whHe provenctal CLUB MEMBERSHIP _ . ~ Boats, Power 906 MINI-BIKE, Taco w J th 4-sa.le! ! 1971 VW Super Bur.
lo 3:30. P!eagc t'ontacl Mrs. lmmedtate Opeoings dresser, tramed mirror .It. * &75-3075 * Bria:P I; Stratton 1 HP ena:lne 1600 cc. Dual ported
............. -..
oall ......... _ ...
GROTH CHEYROLET Franciscu!';, c .r-.1 . 1.lemorial Good P11..y! Call No1•:! nife 8tand S60. C'Ollor 1V $60. TAKE OVER 10 aetti, NO FLAT bottom drq bot.I l yr motor, banana au.t. rood heada, Under HIOO mi's.
Ho11pi!al, 642-2734. 9A~l-!IP:\l, Sat. !IA)t-6Pr-.I 673-1011 alt. 6:30 P~1 DO'\\'N, Sl!I mo. Near Ill' Pets. General l50 old lrr•h engine e,> ~ in condtt\on $75 Jirn Curley $Ci0. Tom: 549-JSSI or aft 7 AU t:ir Sales~
RECEPTION IST . Genenil Orange Coast DELUXE round bed w/gold lskf', 968-0047. SUM·?..tER SAVINGS <ci Chevy), ~1tom tor M4-ll4.l'. pm: MJ..l6lO. lS2ll a..cb Bl9d.
OUicf' \\'ork !or J 0 c 11. ! Employment Agency headboard A mat chin g CH ARTER MembtI'lhlp, Now On Your Pitl'a r11.clna, injected f-ue I it r , HONDA 303 dirt bike, '6!1 VW ENGINE 40 HP Hunttnstan 8Mdl
brokt>rage firm . 1~ r 11 v y 1869 Ne\\-port Blvd, C.M. bedspread, $150, also 1 twin Ne1.1-'J)On &sch TetllliJ Club, Portrait Enderly Injeetort· flo14·ed ll'nglne. Knobbie 11re1. ~; flU-7957 att c IC7.a7 KI f.ml
trlephone duties, Good tyn. 6t).3111 645-3112 64'5-3113 bed $25. C&ll 968..(;193. l 250 6'13-6900 S>% Color D\lcoUnt «ngine by Joe Re al h . cuatom pipea &: 1Ut. xln"l m WE P'"Y TOP -, •a .. · · Ha.llcraft n.clnc ateertnr . cond, SJOO. 9611-12211. 1 -1600cc DUAL portbead• .... ~ ing N!CJUlred. 9-5 Mon-J'ri., "iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillo10VING!! Kina; slu box ~ Ml II %>% B &: W Di.lcount VW engine l 063 aria' FOR TOP tJ!ED CARS Pltase C'all Pam 494-!1781. 1 ._ ....._.,__ ....__... see •neoul PHONE 546-981.3 Cua.le racial rear . box, '69 VW, '"'· perfect cond. ml! •2.o:n ;. •• ~AA • •• SHIPPJNGCLEJtK matu;,::·A":;1LIJU ,u•a•lllntW, Wanted 120 1 ~--------= heAvy duty """'rr 1de, All cxlna "= aervlcll' es,_,__,, .. ._ u)'OUl'c:atlsaWa
SAI.$S help wan!ed. !tfu.t Requires bright young man $100 . ......,.....,.. • C•t• 152 511lnle11 aleel hardwart, J'K()rd1. Dr. Scott ~ .. UI !Int.
have exp, Apply !n pe~n to take ov-Btoek room \n. UKE new! Velvet llOfa .L ?>1oon tank, cu1torn wood -~-••••. §1 BAUER. BUICI J11..ckie'a Fashion Center, 7j ~· l t " t t I d WANTED by pvt pty Ford PUREBRED Siameae kitten. d k Id --·a1 n-• •• ~~ I -· r:. 1-IL ,·t-ntory e1c, far 1mall elec· ovell!:a • CUS m u r · Club wq. or Oiatuu '69 or Have had &blta. "'"" each. ec • iO •neu ,....e · Auto1for~ !":'\ ,.__,,_ .,.. •-a ........ Huntinglon Center, H.B. -~:... na r" d'~~~--. To g ....... l!h oak !Ablel. rn-69l6 _, "''/competition oran .. trim. 70 ~AW AS AK I 2!JD .,_, ....,. .. Mesa ._ """"" ... ~ •u-iuu•w-_.. later. Will pay up to $3000 543-31'8. Sid rxt f aJ SALES\VOjl,lEN -1~-nutn1ent $6C(I, MAPLE furn. Couch .r. cuh. 540-8299 or fi7fr$JOO. By appt. S 9 0 00 Io ff er , e111'1 er, or 1 e or IMPORTS WANTZD
excifing nrw c-areer owt. rl)\l'tl-..rr' OCDC"t"V.""'" malchJnr chaJr, 2 end tbls & WANTED HANO PAPER FREE ~15. 9-12. =sJor truck or car. Gener•I 950 Orust: Olwttlee
w/unllmited "arning pote n-'"YH"'L r l.J\,,J'\.A"tl"tl:L 4 bar stoo\1. 968-9608 CUTIER 1&-24" SIA.l\fESE KmEN BAY or FISHING Bo•t TOPS BlJYD.
lial. S.W comm. Pf'r t«"ruit 5ERYK::ES•AG£NCY * CONTEM. ~·alnut BR. 1t ~3$12 * 963-9'<11 21· Lap.trake Utility.Volvo 1969 TRIU:'.1PH 500 cc ~ '61 T-Blnf, '61 OfEVY 4 BILL MAX!:!' 'IOYOT.I. + '7r. F\lll or pt. time. t • .,~ ........ che t d SIAMESE Kitten1. trained, pov.·er S199S. owner; 2,700 actu&I l!ll, door HT. Alao wanted % or 11181 a.di Blvd. .t .
Studrnts over 18 OK. Mrs. 488 E. 11th (at Irvine) C.M. :i;,.~~';" apr 1 & re~:~: Pi•nos/Org•ns 126 SLS. Blue point mother $10. :zo• ~·r Gl&mour Cit1-In1er· $895. 968-28n l ton truck in need of K BHcb. Pb. IC7.m
r-.1arkley &4.>-41Zl. 642-1470 833-3856. 546-4508 evrtnga. ceytor power, s1645_ 1968 Hod~ka Ace 100 dlrt/i"~P*~"~·;;"""'~-'a'""'~~"~'~-""~i'nil~~~~~~~~~~
SALES TRAINEE WOULD YOU Dogs IU 16' Dyer Glamour Girl.can bike, x1ri 1 uind. PX>. Cy Antlque1/Cla11lc1 ffJ
15 ;-r old Promotional Ad-SOCIAL·ACTIVITIES FURNITURE r;ale. Ver)' BELIEVE be custom bUilt w/ 1u or N••'t'l'Lan, 49'-8691. I Autoll""'* 11"'!\
wrtis!ng Firm needs 3 DIRECTOR . reasonable. rnE'E ORGAN LESSONS 1 love anlmal1, my wile die-sri powf'r. e ~HP MINI BIKE, 19'1 Cad!Hac (.QI.ch. A d&Mic Piii
young men. Company lls!ed Give your all to a .)oh_ ma-968-
7936 or 962-3650 aa loni u you like! No rer-~~n·~J:F71::!,1~ ct!:~1 LIDO SHIPYARD GOOD OONDrnON -in~-~~ib~ly~~~U~•:":":-:~·1:=~~=~=.:~=~
O'I 2 s!ock e.xdlanges, Na-tu.re peI'IOTl, call Loraine, G•r•g• S•le 112 istntion. No obUj:ation. Just part Golden Ret., 2 ralico 90o Udo Parle Dr. • Call ~ .. ;$YBJ. 131...(11511,
tioowfde TV. If you llI"I' Westdiff Pel"IOnneJ Alt'ncy, . Come. Morlda.y1 T:lO Plll ats, all apayed females &: Newport Buch '70 HONDA !IO CI.. like new. Dune IUftll•• t5' Autin, Im,...,.. '71
•arnin, les~ than 1ien "'k. 2043 \Vestditt Dr., N.B. PIANO, amaJJ uprig~t. $775; COAST MUSIC '-· b Im all 2'1 • ~· cu•t '61117 hp..,.._ ... 1.Dw miles. S295. AUSTIN H•aLEY ~ oJ\1 6-lj..2i70 blAck rrcllner chalf', $15; Ml-~l ,..,er • yrs . -.._ ... ,.. MT!tl.36 CU!I'OMA1um body'liSVW " liUll Call for 1nterv1e w :J>J.t ... ~36 · full length MW!krat coat, 714./96!h'563 H.B. VS Slpt; 4, 1alley, head, • hul:I • 1 _________ _
;\1on & 'tul's after .J P.~t TELEPHON E rei:eptionl1!. $75: GE beater, $8.S<I; gla.is *PIANOS-ORGANS * QUALITY line bred , hand· 1/~. lg alt dk. Penn. •lip. '66 NORTON 700 Ompptr. chi I~ to~ b~~a '61 Aultl.n HM]ey 300), xln't
SALESMAN, TIRE 2">35. Pftime t'Vf'JI, 1788 lop table A 4. chain, S65: 3 C.Onn-25 pedal $:,95 rai!ed, promising, i how or JI.lust 1ell! $2500. 673--0285. Cornpletely ttbuUt. ~or 91 1 1 1' · · cond, new Urei A: batt, wtn
Cail ~tNi. Schmidt_ \Vestdiff Nt>IO.lJOr! Bl, Costa r.-1eu. lovf':ly bA:r 1toola, $30; l&mpa Allen'i aave $$$ ob If d I e nc e pro •~eta, l&' nBERGLS 1\d or llshirw, best ofter. 675-7749· Truck1 ff2 whla, top ii TonMtU. Mew·
"Ji Jl Ka:~·ai 5'9" IB.\'t> 11250 Doberman pi11scher "''P'· 70 h M I •· 11'-· 'TO TRIUMPH 0 a"'" """' 1~-11 I 0 91 Personnel Ag;ency. 2)(.1 e er iro!lll, laaater, all ai.Jes Jo"rit>ndly te!ephcne inror .. ~ P ere tru, .,. new ...,..,na """' BJLL BARRY .. ,... mU1t a e • l ·
We,,1c liff Drive, N.B, SAVINGS & LOAN clothing, book•. Jot.• of riEUJ'SPIANOOJ. Afari i ncre1 ! Kenne!1. $1250. 539-1995. c1~l~~ ~.e•. Xlnt cond. ,_ .... _,,1"',...,."'°"°"""°'""~-I
MS.mo. l111.J1 a IX'rman<'n! POl'lil lon •• Hema. ~31Jl, 2-14 Monte l8.1.1 Newport Blvd. :=.46-0989. WANTED: trailer for 20 tt. """· ...,............, ' '61 HEALEY JOIO
SecN'tary a !rllrr • ~w acrourrrs clerk Vi1t1, C.M. Cos!11. ~eaa TIVM.:.-3250 OBEDIENCE clau to at.art J,000 lb, bo..t. BRIDGESTONE '68-lOOtt. PON"IUC-GMC-FIAT BT7 Con\.WI, Runs roOO.
Pertonn•I S.c'y :0;~11f! w~~~· :;::: :eri:. l--G~A~R~A~G~E-S~A~L~E~I-HA.\.L\10ND. St e In., a y, \\'ed., June 30th, 7:30 pm. * 646-4638 * Xlnt mechanical c:ond, Sl75· NEW '71 GMC kdca rood. Many tun milel
:\ewpori Beach !':Onality. Typin g required. Stov'. ff'trlgerator. av0('.1do Yamaha. Ne" A uHd Open to all dOK~ over S ~o·i '69 BERTRAM ~· flying 646-0037 Iii T. Piclcup & I Ft. let!. $795. 546-nMJ.
)1a.lor land dfv~)opmen l eo. A ~ ~ ,. •-1. green SXIO Pr. \\"hlte retrlg-piano. of mot1t make1. Beil old, Clu1es he In the .B. br!dre. trim tab1. 2 n.dloa. '69 HONDA 450, Xlnt cond. C•m-r '66 AUSTIN ff•akY -ires ..,,.. ... >. nnge .... ne 111, Irvl!'lf! a~l' M6-4928. u. ,__ ... ~ ~1 E I il t.:R-r-<NON 11ttks Pf'r:mnmol w.cretary 111 k' rf V.' era tor $65. Sittper 110ta, xuld huya ln So. Calif. al Schmidt ]...., ru-.. . .,.._....,., xtrtmr. o m eagt, u .... ,. Full ...,.,,]__... z11"'1t" ,,n!. Mark Ill. Good ooad. In .Ir . good wor 1ng ~n 1Uon1. e ,....00 ,1 1 Co ·-N ••.i~ K-9-50. Callinr ali-yard $750 646-6662 -.. -1'1""" ........... a11sJ.St pe~nnel manager in wUJ train, \\'O RLD SAY· .,, . and mllc-h more. 1Il7 "us c .• U11• • .iu....., Boats, Rent/Chert'r tof · · ~ clus. Heavy duty F'1t out, overdrlvt, ~.
all an-as of employment. \V. Balboa. NB, Santa Ana.. avenrrn, Train now for HONDA '69 CB350. Beaut. 11p)"\nnot, '--'"-bootter, 3.7 IMW PQI' 2 rNGS " LOAN, 291 s. Coast, l--""',.C.~,c:-:_~---1 ;,-,;==,,..,,---.,-"';;'.,-.,.. mockioa-JqU&d. Start June -"'6 Y .,,._. irion reqUt1'!"11 yrs per-Lagun11 Be11t'h, GARAGE SALE BALDWIN Acroaonic Spine!, lth 7 ~ M-~ t K C•I 15 + Citlln• 27 Lei. mi..S~.~J.,S25.. resrule,3apeedautomatlc, ___________ ,,
.:>nnel ex...-., lite Sil & f,Q -=;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil I al" t al I 17""' ' ·""· ., uncrtl "~ .,....,__ -•· h ~... dlo " ,,-. • S N'Pf'r IOf!I, chairlf, lable.o:, "'' ••U , rro.1 new. ""'· l'lf'ls ~9 Guarantee the l<n\•est ntes In ul.11&. • pu1 •uu•wn ra . Automotiv• JUceJJ_..
w.p.nl. typini. Stable co. TELLER lamps, carpets, 1love • 1022 Victoria St., C.M. ,')() Calli "Catlil'la crui.t-1970 Norton 750 Cammando Plumbinc throuj"bout. Flvt G
wfxln't benefits. !'f'nd n~-much much more. 1717 w. I ~&46-87l07"0-C'°"0~'~'4;.t;889~-'-==--~ GREAT Dane• AKC, tn~ club"." Locatlon Newport Road1ter, 1900 ml, mint aallon butane tank complete
ume ,\·/salary hi~oryD '1° Balbo11, N.B. 673-4001. HA.'!MOND oraan. model femalk • ~ pi.11)9. C'M.m1 1 P Harbor. nf/961-"'1 tor info. oondltton. 112X>. 4.97-alll. Jnaulation. TMIUe windowa. C!a.~s1l1cd 11d • 1,,.,,. ai Y M-lll, Marie preMt. •"alnut •toe ' ooa.r... qua t Y. * 36' Luxuoy YACHT AMERICAN Eatl• TSOcc. Twei~ voit llshtina ayNm.
Pilot P. 0 . Box 1560, Cost& Bookkeepin1 & or caa:hi~r ex· Machinery ll6 w/back crW. $1100. Eve: ~ i>. 1910 but a.In d I i"ourtft pllo plutic
MeAA. Ca. 92626· per, prefe~. Ty~ ~ JO"" TILT arbol' table 18~., 673-5122. iiEALlHY be~titul Labra-* *D!0~kor &!'~ Xln 't cond, ~!. ~~~· ter tank~ tJJty ~ U.U:: ROY CAIVIR, llC.
SECRET ARY w.p,m. ~1 ust be able 10 work Blaakwell De:lta g mo old 1 LE~STER=~~Sp-IM_t_p ___ :~WO~, dor puwiu $10. Call l9M 305 HONDA Scrambl et Ice box, two plate, burner, ~ Harbor Bhd.
NEWPORT BEACHee Sat. 9 'Iii 12. P1eaae c..n 115CI. 499-36S7. ' Gd cond. SU-7983 or com• fff' at 223 Bo.Its, S.11 tot Xlnl cond. $350. u . atorqt, hand ta.ilOftd drap. Costa Meu S44 ''''
\Vith a mini mum ol 3 yrs ex. 962-5651 . MJ1eel&.neous IJI MU773, Oceanview Ave., N.B. 24, AUX. Slp, IG&ded for farn . 962-7891 eries, Sleeps Ill!: w/opUonal DATSUN per in a Manu ia<:1ur1ng Or. MJNl SchhaWlit't puppies •-·• lll'le tab}« q\IMn ftz. Md, __________ ,
WAREHOUSE ASS ISTANT Sewl-Machines au crulalni, d!llY, mtr "'°"HONDA ~ Mlnt BJJct. suo. .. .... ..-.-,.. P·-·11o~·-,69 DATSUN WASON ranlzation. You 'll havf' to be . ~ANTASTtC SALE I 111 ... AKC, betut. dlspoalllon. $75 Be t u tak See Kare 111 add h toward 70 ........ -.. "" ....-u ,,....
a ?TAI \\·hi:r. at ma int aining Unu1u1l opty for nghl ma~. Wal. J uoe 9t:h ONLY f>pm-1970 N!:COU Lydia. hardly up. !'>40-9846. 543-3340. ~ ~l&~ntla.~0.1. 6'2-C~ :: ~cc.~ dra'lreh, Many other f«•
rtt·onh, handling corret1· \\'ell ertbl Tf'xtile Fum '" 9pm TAKE ADVAA'TAG.E of t1•1!d. Fully auto. td forB -~EA-UT~. -,-\O•mo-.-,,-,.-.-.. ~tttt-1 ""''·
"""'lf'nce tSH is de1irablel N.B, lnvnl\of'd in sport I< t•-~~,, oUon all m•reh•n-knll n..1n •Mi~ ... ,,. ... d u ho PRIVATE party _..ntll ID Moblle Herne1 935 SALE $3987 >"'"" h Ind look1 fo "'' ROJ · 1· ...,.,.. ~. now •1JJ· J>UPPY. llau ha ll • ta, leue a l2 lo 25' Mil boat on1----------
& receive visilon I< phol'W! yac t uilry. ng r dise at thf" 8#-G!I. Must .ell. Eves; 67>1738, fl.Ill ti lhl bu' DISTANT HOUSING ca.Us. \~·e ttq. an individual mpor15iblp JndivldU&f, A11-.,---,,.--,,.--,---,= 1 a me mon Y 11. m
.ume an dutin rela1ecl 10 Spertlnt Gooda aG STANDAllD Poodle• AK'C 1 No clul» p1t1111! a.o-s.426 that is neal, accurate, tt-"GIL YBI L" ?-tale; 1 female, rarw Choe, I ~""'"='"-"-'.,'--'~"-,-.,,I aource_lu\ 1, wn&tile w/a. warehotae: Shlp/receivr/ SURFCR.AF'l' aUJ1bo&rd 6.4 .. , SABOT. wood, aood cond, WH\' WAIT7 flare lor d~ttfI. Good btne-atocJt/lnvenlory & *om e (it's a Oiscoum 'Otts. Shop) like new, ~ 7 mo old. 6t&-4UT. Complete w/aall $175.
ti,_ customtt contact. l"llll time, l ·~ 1._.,11. • "~" ..,_ l"·n) REG. St. Bernard AKC, fem. * 545--221S * The all ""' Vlllao HOUN ... oca ...... at <;;>110r1 Magnolia, ... .-...:u.:t rw d. 200 w '-· I.vi. MobUe ... pmn. Salary to exp. can J"ountain Valley. "usrn==-=o'=mr=-,.-u-,'""t b..-0~.-,~,, I 9 wk ol $ or M ofr. AUJtOlU 21' lil• a1oop alps VT It l)'lltm1;
CALL P!RSONNEL Mr. Butd\. MS-1066. * * llW83I * * 645-4756. 56-476.1... 4. xtru Nwpt alJp $UDO/a£. with aloplna shake l'ODf c:an
W It /II tood condition, $SO. Call I 'oo=•~ERMAN==-PU=P"'•" • .,,-• ., .. -: fer TI4: .fM.29'7] be youn bOWI Modell M (112) 441 -1171 • re11, P me. 7• COUOf -· 5• -.. h 646-1239. ••-1 •--• 0p-~· I E pl Ex N Under 21 NO • ..... """"" • Both malt: l r'f'd.. 1 blr.ck. G'----~ Cal •i _., &Y at. • • '""t".. _ ... n ty m O)'f.r per, ot r · J.'O· double 1-d $50· two DIVING reu, rtrulatcn, J. $45. Ph: 548-3192 3 .... ....,...~; "'"• BAY HAlllOR * Sec'y $6CIO PHONE CAIJ.S" Apply ln twt~. M5 ea. (•all h.me1 valve, Nlkono9 fluh., tte. Ericson 35 l.Jon 35. MOllL• HOMIS
But)' chaDrnrtn.r PQ!lilion tor penan, Surf 4 Sil1ol.n. 9!30 Incl.): afau top 9-'?"0Ught New A ua.d, '75-SOJ.5. D~~B~U~ker * Avco Bia-', l7M990 * 1'25 8alt:tr St., ea.ti MtA
l!Xf'C. tiKl')' who llkei a dy· W. Coast Hwy, N.S, Iron table. lXfl', $35. All tn "TV=,-=R"..i"=1o","'H~l:o,1',;;I;,, "'--* W.2265 * • 3 Albur 35 .1. l at Sl6M. Juat S. ol S.O. JWy al ffvbor
namic !:ms. Ftt split It tt-\VAITR ESS Vlpu, owr 21. good cond. ~ Sttreo 13' All nice. Avco Bkr, 714/MQ.IN70
lrnbuned. Apply Flyin& Bull fr .I-"-----'------I •-,,,..-,_. ..... .,..,.,.,,--QUALITY A,.h.an Hound1 -7t4/n4-7n. MOBILE Home -, 11_,t.I
0th<, ''" 'l ""'Jobs 673--0977. M•M•IRSHIP CLOSING OUT R•,. .. n»i.. I blocit, 2 blk-•--Sit 10oc• flO ,_, ••RV!CE -~· ... 1-__ , ~ D muked cream.1. Ml-1857 , -ts, II' "1 EmbuaJ, ~. 2 br, 2 b«. """' ... """''""'" WIG ~ 111 ..,,,,...," f::&per, •ALBOA llA Brand new Wurtitttt pi&J'IOll I dbl AGE~'CY Apply In ,,...,,, ~ E. l ith D y CLUI ..... ,_ rov n-n., .Uv-m·'• I BOAT -"pa·-",, .. , .. ,., ,_ rs rms, awninas, Mmp, Phone f44.UU A orpna. F1ntutkl --· ~ ~. "" Kl ..... wv ...... -aklrtlnc, fenced )'d, porch
!ilXJ 'Newport Center Dr .• NB 1 -;;is~c~CX.MN. ;;;-;;;;ikj;;-"dO;;ui/,.,,==;;-,.,.-=-,-,-/ ;rur;N;•i°r;[""i=-:;:;;;,;*;;;~ wkl, A.Kc. llhota. Rcu to 80'·10'. Wkk .Up. w/rod trnn nlltnp, Iota of
Suite SM 6"""'911 1 WOMAN to work In donut 11.lltNTABLE and apeaken ;ad'i;,-,bo~m~e;;.;;.,,.....;-;;:='--.-·-=: I--,,,.,,..:'~™"°';.;;~.,.,,,,--·! txtras. Dohtey park
•hop. No phOn., calla pleau. LEAVING Ana; Forced to trom portable .111: r' o . BEAUTJruL T-eup I Uny Boat Sip tor nnt. Villa.at, Sp a, D.P. (l ctol:a SECRETARY
. Bl-Uf111/&l Spa"""
At I~ 2 )Tt m:ent aper.
Prone!ent In SH Ir typlng.
.tel, otc ~1. SOmir
medical I pha.rm•ctullcal
"~f': htlpfUI. but no1 nee-
...., Mali lwt1tt, atatll'I&' qua!·
iflejtiona 10 P. 0, Box 1990.
Newport Besch. 9'Ji60.
rut rmilta ut 1u•! • phQIW
call away • 64~
Wlncbell'' Donut Shop, 2947 .ell f'amlly rnernbenhlp ln wJ~fin ndlo. Stereo and toy poodle pupplH, 1'1111 tcJ7 1'6t Ue up tr. IO'. from l>oMn)o Stai. Bcb)
Harbor Blvd. C.M. ~AUt N.B. Tennis ii: mm ndkl llftd work. 120. •htd Mrvlct. 1113-tTlJ Call 175-UU Chlldrtn me. -....tao.
Xln"t Open!Jw For ~~ 1"ol1 price. S40-22'7t&tttr5p.m. POODLE PUPS: I WU, J. SLIP SPACE AVAIL ltu Hliititi$T -UdO •
HAIRDRESSERS I;;;=;:;;'-::.,.,-.,.-=,.-:::-I MOVING, mu.11 Mil new Male; 2-F'em, %!1'..JO' !An.BOATS Ewin. Ip tQOJtr. 'br~ Xfnt
tl?S-4112 or l!Ts...3701 REDUC!: 11.fll' ii: fut wtth ·sy1vanl& color TV, "mot• * 846-U)J * * ~ * oond. 'Take OWJ" pymnb.
YOUNG wty pholo&'fapMn GoBew Tableb • E-Vap uintrol • &nltnna lncL i21a. HWMs IS6 --=-c.~:,,.,=--1 Wu ~; llOW u:io:>. bolJ>'r. So"" t)'Pl"I. sai.,,. .. ,..,., dll•" CltAWTORDS ....,16.1 _ _ TIMI! FOR SAS-1"1.
..... Apply In ........ "' Phamacy. u= .. "'RC"'A"""TV~B~la"'ck-.,._...,.,.,,,.,., HOME '"' ,, .. ., • " old QUICK CASH
Christian Studkll, l l 3 lO ANTIQUE popoorn nlk-ln -.·orlu tin«, 613-0114. trro mart, exct:llf!nl tor c:hlld~n
Ln n 1 B • • c: h Blvd ., booth. perlect op• rat In' I ;W::'::'.";,,e.l~bol;;='=' S~P*::;.:0<~!;-C:;,· =I ;e•~',::•.:cd":;,';;;":,,· ;,Sl:"O~mo,..,. ,;.><J).'"'1;;171,... THROUGH A
LJ-n•ood, Calif. C<>ndl!Jon. ""1. Pbono 21 " COLOR TV, UHF-VHF, 9 ye •Id R<r. APPALOOSA DAILY PILOT
fm' tNir Item anew m. &l).()(DO or 4M-4977. $125; portab/r, color, sus. Ct:LDlNG, $500. w ANT AD
try th• Periny Plnchll!'r t9.l1 '4t.a11 a t.wt _34_..-__ .______ Ph.. ~. "t
BY owner, Jlx«I, ht up In
adlt pk. wl11tlttitW I: a.vna. ,..,,., ,,.,.._,
SELLING Your llDttT "Ult"
wHh UL .Mil It tut. Dally
Piiot C...tnf'd. &CJ.«rl
$499 DN •
VI, .. .-• ""· -""· '85 DATSUN ,. wld• aval1. Yfnt wlndowl.
11715 "' 'l'rade «-IOM. < opd. .a.. F...U,,.--
1M1 Of.EVY P.V. £1-. nana 1\ra erwiM nd., 1..,,., rt-
xlnt, sn>. tfred nr.mu. Sac::rif*.
nn PacUJe st, Of. IPJVSU) Wt1l tl)e trade "'
1941 WJll,y'a Pick.up fr'Uck all ftn. pvt, pty, Call 5t0-3lDlt
puta brand MW. Jlt.ldy lo or 4N-750I llfl 10 A./11,
drlVe. ~ ot S4t-IUT. .119 DATSUN PTO<VP
• EXTllA lllWU' • .._., m-2111
I
'DAil Y P!lOT
1§11 ~1 _.,. ...... -~l§l..;/1;; .......... I. ;;;;-..... ;;; ... -'---;;-';;-l§J;;-_1.-... _-..1
_ ...... _1§1 .. Q .:.I _ .... :~ ... -~.! iia
9711 Autor. lhod 9'0 AulM, ~ 9'0 Autor. Uloil 990 Autos, ··u,..i 990 ~-""'°• \.lsod . · = .)§1 1 ..._ ..... _ ... _-__.1§11 1§11 ·!§J I' A.-tor-• --,o
Autor. l.._i.d 970 Autoo. lmponod 970 AUfol, l-19'!
V~~~~~_EN CHEVROLET FO.RD OLDSMOBILE PONTIAC PONTIAC £
'69 VW B_UG____ •67 CHEV. RO'.,. •1n.9&;c5;;MUSRiMT~•11iii>,.-l ,-_.-0-1 ---1969 PONTIAC GTO
--.-,...,.,,.--VOWWAtilN DATSUN
DOT DATSUN
OPEN DAILY
AND
'67 vw Bus ~· . Mii -' d• "'"'"· v.' BILL BARRY PRICED AT WHOLESALE Oriifnal owner. Beauty! Tip Beautiful llmP frost metallic Cttstom paint, new tirn. very Atttomatic. Under JJ,000 mil-
cl..,,. $1895, • '•Radio, beate•.t.130BQKl.
BEL AIR .SEDAN
V!, automatic, radio, heater,
power stttrin,r .l brak~s, air
coni:litioning, (UK\':Ol)
COl1'\ll!'rtible-, 219 VI F'J1girM!, top cond. See It, drive JI. 1,.1,, with .. ~__,,, • .,,.;"" Ian·
-
S~~---Pri 1 1y "~o""""" Ponti.c -GMC -Fiat " '"'""""-... tr ~••>&, .,,;iu, nine Vile P · .,..,..,,rn.,. NEW dau & inleri-Or, Auto triud., SUNDAYS
1li3S Bee.c.b Blvd.
~Bea.eh
142-ml or Y0-044l
Barwick lmporta •. 9911 So.
Thi.I c:ar bl.a pused the VW Coast Hwy., 1.a&P11& Buch.
16-point aa!~ and pertonn-546-4061 or 494-9771.
other MUl'Ungs »'choose 1966 Olds 88; 4 dr. lo mi. radio, healer, power steer.,
fn>m. ISJCJJl) Clean! Clean! Clean! Call '71 FIREBIRD pm-.·er br-o1.kes, 11tr cond. etc.
'"" ''"· " " ""'' 'h"'k"' i--,,c:&9~vw=~e~u"'G_.__ and thoroughly reoondiUon·
$1095
ATLAS •
-
. aft 6; 499-3574. f.'ully lac!O'"" -ui-...A, E II I -··· 1h-·--···•~+..., PLYMOUTH ., '• .. ~ "'' '" <O•N> '°" '""•"· ~ • ~ (L000151J oul. S2075. &-e & drive 10. 1!1tJ Datsun Sta.lion Wagon.
Auto trans, am-fm rafl10.
lug. radl, )ow mile11ge,
$2200. 548-85.12 or 646-&440.
'63 MG !\lidgeL body, pa.int,
top. eng, in t, exc, New
brakes & tires. A ateal
below Blue book $5.50.
675-1263 Tom.
ed. We guarant~ 100 1/o tbal
w/U repair or repla~ all 2 kl cboose from. l w/alr &
major mechanical par1s• for l w/mag Wheeh, .dlr. (YJd\'-
30 daya or lCKXI miles, which-717) Sll95 toll price, Call
CHRYSLER-PLYMOIJI'H
2929 Harbor Blvd.
2100 H•-Blvd. 645-0466 ===-----$263 ON. doy. XTG 923, Joh"'°" ~ ~71 FORD WAGON PLYMOUTH '6.S 4 ,Dr Sedan, $89 89 MO Son, 2626 Harbor Blvd., • • °""' M'"· >10""° The bealrtiM Courrtry Sedan. •.,"'oooo traClns, &le~" under $263 is the total down pay-. 64 000 Very. ve'"" low mile .. e. run , · ean ~. Pvt 1964 LE Marus Pontiac. , ., 61 • ..,.,.,., men1. $89.89 is the total .,A I
0:wta Mn.a 546-1934
1964 IMPALA FERRARI ever cornea fitsl 4'4-774(
•Engipe • ~miyion • .~,.~vw=~ ... ~.-,-. -A~m-.. -m-,-.,-. I ConverUbl~ VI, Auto, lkrl:·
Front Axle • Rear Axle As-new brks, re-bit. erwine,
power, tacklry air. So new party, ;>-.....,.;, orig. m1..,s, aulom,. P '·
it should be on the ahOw· PONTIAC mmrt111y payment including owner. 495-5625
FERRARI
AlITHORIZED
SALES &: SERVICE
MGB semblies e Brake Syslem good tirea, S1400 4' SDI. et Seal.!, Radio, Healtt,
tax, li(.'('nse and linance
room. 371BSX. charges on apiroved credii RAMBLER
$3195 '69 PONTIAC for 3fi months. The cash e '64 MGB $6DD
8 am·5 pm : 644-3268
• ~-~ al S ~ TO p c:.ut ,.,,,.,.. P.S., P.B., Elect WindoWa, ....a. ... .-.c :Y••em. . . . ..........,.....,, A' ....__... . 1 ir ""'IU• crw&e conti-o ,
(O'rnJ291
GR.AND PRIX price including tax and lie·
r.tUST SELL ense is S2970.15. Dcfl'rred Harbor American
'!''-NEWiiliRt ..
.: IMPORTS
* * '64 MGB, $875, a.EAN.
673-2358 ASK F'OR GARY.
OPEL
VOLVO
Anniversary Sole
1971 VOLVO $2991
11'5
1KMIWI ~
2100 Harbor Blvd. 645-4M66
Attractive lime frost fintsh price is S3499.04 inrluding
with black interior. Equip. taxes, license and finance '64 COUNTRY SQUJR£ ped wit.h auto trans., radio, charge, Annual percentage
heater. Pow ste"°·• pow rate 11.96 percenl.
, 1, .()/ o I
191>'1 H.>.~~Of: CC~IA MESA
'62 RAMBLER St11 . Wq:. $300
Factory Alr. PIS -P/B.
Towlng hi!ch. 642-8512.
T-BIRD
brakes, pow windows a fact Over 135 New & Used Can CLASSIC '60 T-Bird, Air ~e~~::~· ·ek~pe~19rce!r ~~:· .,'::; fie.Gil LeJDiA . 196& CHEYELLE A;n~~nd~s~. ='. a ir landau a bcaurlitii car ·ro Choose from ~~· ~na:vr: 11~g:~~
FIAT motorcycle call aJt 6 pm -YOLYO (0SJ·7S3) throughout. Shows good Open tilt 10 p.m. pearance, S475. 833-0194
494-34?9. ·2 Door, 6 cyl, dttc, 3 Speed, $995 care. YER 897. $2!175. John-20oo E , 1st SL, Santa 'Ana ,62 T B. d t' ......... 549-30.n.·~t. 66 or 67 (TF\'774) &On & Son, 2626 Harbor tlrit St. & S.A, fN'Y.) -tr • new Ire!'!, 5"""" BILL BARRY l:i~PEL: Ver)' good cond. 1970, HARUOR Bl.VD. 1946 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 -tM41M-'• "41.~--_ Blvd., Cos!a Mesa. 540-5630 558-1000 body & e ngine, St75. Call
e Aft 5: 548-3979 * COSTA MESA ~ ......., '~ '69 FIREBIRD Conv. Clean ---.~7D~G~T~0~---lh"'~2-='~1~"~·~--,--,;=I
PONTIAC-'70 YW BUG--~ .. -l!_YO' '100 Harbor Blvd. 645-0466 low mlle11ge, tires like. nu'. Ram Air, 4-speed, Firestone '64 T-bird, Vogue tires, Wire PORSCHE 2100 Harbor Blvd. 645-0466 MUST sell, '70 Ford Sl975. 644-7036 or Mgr o! wide ovals, sharp-all black! wheels, Full pwr & a.ir. GMC-FIAT Mustang, 302 VII, Auto, U.S. Na1'1 Bk, ~11 Sacrifice! $500 & tak, over' .:.'.::'3-8:..::'°.::'c.';.;'.:."=·-~~--I PORSOiE '68 912. yelJOY.• 1 owner, like new, dlr Auto '6' Chevelle, Full ~ip'd PIS p di b '· LIANT NEW wfblk int. A~llFM. nu stick, only 12,000 mi.' (621~ ''FRIEDLANDER'' incl fac air, Pwr disc brla, ....; Raw',. "~ooork.!i, ~ir '69 GTO Judge, 4 speed, very paymenlS! 646-4665 alter 5 VA CAX r~.... · 11895 Call co.,.., 10• ...,, nus, good rondition. $2"l00 or best & weekends'. '71 FIAT l\1ich, chr whls. 4 sp, S3975 l «u pnce · IUM ••AO. 01..,, •• P/S, Auto trans, la.ndau $2450. 557-1516 morning or offer. 548-09l&
or beit oiler. 832-()335 aft 6 4!M-7744, 893-7566 e 537~ top, Mic~lin X radial titts, afternoon. 1938 Pontiac Chiefton, auto, 1960 VALIANT; Ru11.1 gd Stl5
SEDAN & ~·knd.s. 'i•6''Vwi"<d•iJ1-;;;;;,-;;;;-:;;ku;;;;--;N;;;;;h--.,.=7,.:....:;....::.:..::::;c_,"' Custm wheeli, s.s S96 e"", I =~=~~--~~c1Fast results a~ just a phone good cond. $125 or best ol-or best orfer. '· ca P1<: P· .•w Autos, U··• 990 .... '69 FORD Bronco 4 hi -" "' ~78 7 ~0• ~ $1,79 DN. PORSCHE factory specialist, 1600 engine, soft campmgl ----=-=..,.--,,....-handling & chrome packare. w c ...... away-.,._..... fer. Call 962-2761 or 635-8681 * Can· 6 5.,,...,., ,.
$4 89 Mo 9ll-912-356 servicefrepair. top, paint. 497-al97. e FLEET SALE e priced lor fast 1ale, only drive. Sport! package, R&H , Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990
9. • ·-' Ed I'~ Pv 714 "'° ,,_ 1.::"'":'.:.1.::'."'ii°'ii· i;12700~· ~646-0715~~·c_11r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;i;;i;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;:;;;~ Perso,,... all., & ll r '67 vw '64 Cad Cpe. de Ville S1D75 J.;J;JJ.. t pt;y, J~. I
$179 i1 the total dO'.\-'n pay-536-5803. '66 Olds Delta 88 sedu '64 Chevy ss, arr, bucketJ, LINCOLN ment. $49.89 is the total I~~=-,.--,,,,--..,--,-C to · t monthlv payment induding 1967 Ponche 912: 5 spd, U.s'. m pam · full power, lo mi's, $ll75 rlh. PIS, PIB, S199.
tax and license and finance mags, tinted gla.u. Al l $1295 '64 Lincoln Cont'! $8~5 Mere w/lli:t, p/s, pb, ct1n-'69 Muk III, fully loaded. Jn
xtras, mint cood. $3700. Th!• .. ~ .. ha, ............ •"~ vw '68 Pontiac Sa,fari Station course cond. SlOOO. Call xlnt cond. $5400. Ca 11 charges on approved credit '""!'91 ....... ~ 1.ne 1875 642--0Slll 'eo~~~-~~~-~~· I 16-point gafe!y and perform· Wagon. Air S F111t Eddy: 4~1590-• for 36 mf'nths, The cash :-: g p s ... SOUTH COAST '67 4 DR CONTINENTAL price including ta:c and Ile-1968 11 onche Targa ...... anc~ test. It is fully checked MUST sell 068 Impala &-pass
ense is Sl6!1l.75. Deferred Beige wl b!k int. AM/FM. and !horoughly recondition-CAR LEASING wagon, Full pov.·er, Fae air, XLNT COND, SST OFR.
price is s1975.04 including K. Elliott, e\•e 675-2347. ed. We guarantee 100% that 300.W, Coast Hwy, N.9. l.lltJ or xtn.s, Very clean, 644-0484, 644--2942
ta>., license & finance 1970 PORSCHE 914; Yellow, we'll repair or replace all 645-2182 Eves; 673-8269 Bes.I cash oUer. 673-5494 MERCURY
charge. Annual percentage Flt1: stereo, balanced eng. major mechanical parts• for 'Of 2+2 V8, P.S., Fsct 11ir.1 _•_fl_6-0,pm-o7. ===~--
rate 11 .96 percent. Xint cond. S3500. 675-1570 30 days or 1000 miles, which-Xlnt cond, f,1700. 8J3-.3344 or CHRYSLER 1970 MERCURY
Over 135 New&: Used Can TOYOTA ever comeii: lirst. 642-0433. COLONY PARK
To Choose From . •Engine • TrammiaioQ e l--2=T-,.-.,-po--crta-t!o,,.-o-,,.,.--'69 Chrysl"er 300, 2-dr hrdtp. WAGON 10 PASS.
Open tit! Itt p.m. TOYOTA NEW •71 r~trAJae e Rear Axle As. '63. Chevy, '61 Comet. '52 tuU povter, tac air, vinyl ''IJKE NEW" 19000 MILES
200'.l E. ltit St., Santa Ana NO DOWN sem ies . • Brake Sygtem Chevy P/U. 646-SSS4. roo f, AM/FM, S2495. Smart tulip yellow finish with
{1st St.. st S.A. Frwyl • Electrical System. BUICK 644-~. 5addle town interior. Equip-
.reB-!OOO ~ -:;c°"o=N==n==N"'E==NT=A""""L-1 ""' !or 1""""' 11"''"•"'"1.
• Comple!e Stock of PAYMENT c· ... ' ~ '68 BUICK Sport Wai . Like Full Power factory e.ir cod.,
19 CONT N T Tilt &trg wheel. Twin com-DBfl ~ "'w, 7 pau., a.to "'"'· 7D · I EN AL ... $69.01 MONTH• ~ pis, p/b, radilli t:itt&, COUPE tort lounge seats. Landau
'
2...,. ""' ~-root, mot rack eic, See and 38 mo&. Def. pay price. warr. S ,,;i . .......,....,,v... "EXCEPTIONALLY dri be . I test Ve this autilu car
Tllh• 5" $2484.36 or cash pr l c e ' l!l&t BUICK Riviera, full CLEAN'' today, AOV48&. Johnson & "FRIEDLANDER" pm.SS. In<!. Tax • Lio · pow". xlol "'""· $995. Slrikiog BW"K"ody """ FIN· So _ H bo APR. !. r:~ct. ....... , N . n. '"'""' ar r Blvd. . . . ... ,.. • .,.., • ..., o. 67J.-n70 da)'l!, 492-4160 eve ISH with black landau &.: Costa. Mesa. 540·5630 '
l.143<7 CADILLAC marchin&: leatMr interior.
1J7SO HACH ILYD.
(Hwy. :Jtl
893--1:166 • 537-6824
1969 Fiat BM coupe, brand
new metallic paint job, ex-
cel ruMing cone!, aell-lock
tape deck, ;um (cherry)
645-00SI.
JAGUAR
'69 Jaguar coupe XKE. Fae
air cond. Lo mi 's, Xlnr
cone!. 673-5556.
JENSEN
JENSEN
AUTHORIZED
SALES '. SERVICE
~
3100 W. Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach
KARMANN GHIA
'71 KARMANN GHIA
Only 1165 miles. At1tomatic.
radio, heatrr. (27;.DDZl
$2499
Harbour ·v.w. •
IBTI.l BEACH BL. 842-4435
HUNTINGTON BEACH
LOTUS .
LOTUS
AUTiiORIZED
SALES & SERVICE
..-NEWPORT. -
IMPORTS
3100 W, Coast Hwy.
Newport Beaeh
MERCEDES BENZ
·~ appro\led credit 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 61 Equipped with the finest. .1970 MERCURY
Bill Max T 1970 HARBOR BLVD. . MARAUDER f1I( oyota COSTA MESA Largest S.lectioft Full power, F.tctocy Air, · •N~ BEACH L. 847-tt OUS ste~ tape system, new SPORT COUPE ~.. B ..,....... '62 VW Bm-rebuilt en.a:. traru OF LUXURI tires plull' much more. See & "LIKE NEW" 18000 MI.
HUNTINGTON BEACH $850 or offer, CADILLACS drive this be11utifUI car tD-Popular powder blue finish '71 NEW TOYOTA * 644-5'12 * d.,, 601ABY. '°"""'" • with Jle•mtula Bl>te !Mda• '65 "<1\V, $650. fn Oro1nge County Son, :3826 Harbor Blvd., roof Ir: matching interior.
IL TON Day S39-ll15 19'3 thru Jt70's Costa M~. 540-5630 Luxury equipped, auto trans,
l l Eve11 6'ffi..563:9 ibeij, ~.68~~1,~N~C~O~LN~-c~.-,~0 .. -0-.. ~ .. • 1 raruo, hea~r. pow steering,
'65 SQBCK, 8.0CIO mi'& an ~ Immacul11te. Must 1e1 I . JJDW brakes, power windows,
Pickup with camf)tt, Radio, reblt motor, amtfm radio. S3100 or make o tter , factory air cond, Malntain-
heater. dtr. 6 ply tire~. Full S79.'>. 6/;)-'1958 aft 4 pm. ~~ 67~90 aft 5 pm. 4!d like new in every re-
pric@ S2300. •RN122!H91. 1~~~-~~~~--1 spect , &e & drive today. T~ r;mal.i down or older 1965 Green V.W. Sedan one 2600 HARBOR BL.. '66 Lincoln gold Continental 415ADE, Johnson & Son, 2626 owner. l\.Yust sell u=:.oo. OJSTA .. ~~· coupe, vinyf top. Full pwr, trade. Will fin. pvt. ply. Call .,..,..., ,.u;..;,.n, Hiirbor Blvd., Costa Mesa.
540-3100 or 4S4-7506 alt ID am ~646~·.,l'8700-.-=-,.-----·l ""=·.c"::"°:..,.,~~Clpec,::;,o::._;S:;Wld;=IY::o SI09S. 645-1260. 54f>.56.10.
=cac==-.,.-,.-.,,= '10 VW 0.IW< eampH, 1967 CADILLAC '6l LINCOLN, F>lll .,_, !""' MERCURY C•ll o m '69 COROLLA 2 DOOR w ... ,.,,. --top, FUiiy Ai• "'""· Ot-ig ow ... ,, $!75 .,....,.. be t ff ~7l-7008 Monterey coupe. $245(1,
4 spd. dlr. Excellent condj.
tion thruout. (XAN789) MW!t
sacrifice. S1099 tuJl price.
Take small down or older
trade. \VUI fin. pv!. pty, Call
540-3LOO or 494-7506 aJt 10
A.~r.
Anniversary Sale
1971 TOYOTA $1777
~eMLW!i& W TOYOTA
1966 Harhor. C.r.I, 646-9303
1969 Toyota Coron11, 4 dr. 4
spd. r&h. xln't cond. $1050.
645--3768.
TRIUMPH
11-IE TRIUMPH
VS STAG
NOW ON DISPLAY
Come ln for a test drive!
FRITZ. WARREN'S
SPORT CAR CENTER
710 E. 1st St .• S.A. 547-0764
Open daily 9-9; r.kxled Sunday
'64 TRA A-IRS; Am-Fm
stereo radio. wire whls. ton-
ne11u. Xlnt corul. 5.1&-4062
eves.
'li6 TR4A. bllK!lc J R S
overdrive, R&H, Lo mi 's,
S1200. 6Th--C410.
VOLKSWAGEN
t"(JUip'd, w I tent, AM I F'M or s o er. * 675-0191 *
S3500. 548-74TI • 4 Door. Brouiham. Full Pow· Continental Mark 11
·70 VW YUKON YELLOW er, Air Conditionlng, Light $1200. 494-5692
blk int, 17,000 mi. ' Control, Speed control. CORVETTE !>34-812S 5.39-8003 mack Landau Top, Must
• See, (1VP380)
1910 VIV B"'· • " "' •• I. •3095 1958 CORVETTE AM/FM, 18,000 m i. Must
iPl l. Xlnt ct1nd. 675-7419 ?N4te<U~ 1969 VW CAJ\1P Mobile, ne11.·
n1d1al tires. S2700, 2100 Harbo~ Blvd. 6<l.).0466
&4'1-4792 1959 CAD Coupe de V. New ,66 YW C tires & brakes. Motor. amper h'nns, p11inl, etc, good rond.
Sperial custom paint. New SJOO. 842-8224
4 Speed, Hardtop, 11oror &
Trans. overhauled, Red &
Black. llVZ570)
11095
MUSTANG
'65 MUSTANG
Convertible, V8,, ~ apttd, ra-
dio, ht'!a!"r. (PJZ299) All
set for summer lun..
$798
Mike McCarthy
BUICK
tires, EL DORADO 1968, exec. cu ===~=-=--· 11.::= n-...._ Bl d . S D F $1995 JMi\iACULATE., 417 e"""., ..u.J ""'a'"" v . at .. wy
2100 Harbor Blvd,
loaded wl xtras, stereo taPl'· "& Ol'l.O ~~•1 / SJ! "~ posi-tract, ne-v p.ai:-t, tires, ,,,, ..... .,,.... . ..., .....
This c11r has pe.ssed the VW "1"t cond. Pri. pty, $4200. 100ck11. A bomb, 492-3873. 1970 MUSTANG CPE.
16-point safety iind perfann-1_Art_, _67_~_9330_._~---DODGE SUPER SPORTY
ance test. lt iii fully checked '56 Cad, good body, runs, Be11u1iful Royal Blue meta.l-
and t.ho roughly recondition· 3-2's, HA,Yea wheels, $50. He with wh!te unique %. lan-
ed. \Ve guarantee 100% that Call 893-0757. "64 DART GT, R/H, Auto, da• •• ~ tra"' ,. 'II · ___, '---=-o--=-:7'o-=c--,~ 1 •::ui , "" ., ra to, we repair or '"1"1~ alli-CAMARO ........... t res,-.,.,. heater, power 'tttring, ere.
major mech1uricaJ ea.ru• tor 546-1595 * 968-2044 a reaJ beauty. 049 ADG.
30 d11ya or 1000 miles, which· ---------FIREBIRD ever comes first. CAMARO '67 Z-28 vinyl .top, , John!lon & Son, 2626 H11rOOr
•E/liine e Tran!minion • maroon, Rally. New tires. Blvd., Costa Mesa. 540-5630
Front AxJf! e Rear Axle JU. Excel. 545-"F.J)G. 31£& Loren '69·FIREBIRD, low. mile1 .. l '65 MUSTANG
hi· e B·· t. g Lflne C M · otfer owner, full -~r, Call alt 4 sem ies ~ y:stem ' · ' .,.... 289 Fastback 2-2. Stick shift.
• Electrical Sy:stem. CHEVROLET pm &f9-0588; 968-6829. new tires and maga. Many
FORD •""' ulnts. Mak. oil".
1003 CllEV. > -· 283 644·0154 O~ Od ~~-~U,:~ :'!~i~~~~ 4 Dr.~~5Js,:~~,~~::~es, '66 V-8. 3 pt 1 own.
S J' man from H.B. $375 or best air eorid. ExceUenl transpor-S850/set; '63-Dart 6 cyl. ~ ~ otter. 846-M37. talion car. s.,m.oo or best auto $450/best. •e.. '67 CHEV, lmpala, 2 dr Ht. otter. e 6t2-M66 e
' P /S, auto, r11dio, tac. JUr. • 54f..02T4 °66 Mu.llang, orig. owner, lo
Xlot "'""· lll'I>. 540-71l23 ;--,, .. &.& ..,M"'U;:;ST""A"'N"G-ml'•. good "''"''· ""· 549.3031 Ext B6 or 61 after S pm. ~
1910 HARBOR BLVD. 1'·•=1~E~1-c=-.-m~1-... -.~-~==p·, 1 'fill Must11n1 6 CJI. ~ I H,
'67 VW Bus. NeW en1r. COSTA MESA P/S, PID/B, AIC, ~It, Hardtop, 6 cyl, aU1o. dlr., a uto, new tirea. Jmrnac.
w/rulll'Bnty. Xlnt con d , '66 VW Bufi, rebll eoe. New turbo hydro, lo mi '". Sharp. (SQV120). 'Full price Orig. owner $825. 646-U71.
Must sell. 8J8...8690 531-&nS 8AM-5PM d S1095. Can 4!M-774'. d11;tch. Be1t ofter. Call aya, '65 Convt. MUJtan,, auto
'59 VW CamprmbUe Poptop, 546--0510. 1969 MALIBU, landau top, '69 FORD 8ro'10C). 4-whl tn.na It top. Good cond. ;580.
tent &: tttnlctable ttep. Xlnt ''5 VW $JSO auto traft!I, air, PIS. $1995. drlw, •port J>ackqt, VI. Call 64~U60.
'
• ~ _ ••, .ii-. mnd. $2,~ 982.-fivw 290 * 83.3--0108 * rth, bucket 1eat1;, limited
""' -;;u;. ..._. .L;>'IV * ~ -. .11,. X111t cond. $2700. '67 XTRA lf\a.rp MUJtang. new, · mD~. $4,950. XJ nd ;l>l!'l5 '69 vw camper, Xlnt cond, '68 OIEVY Wqon, Belair, 6~ Blue w/vtnyl top V--3, A/C, Air " 'JU , . new MleMlln 67~~ . 546-41'o Whl Exha11st system, $2150. :m, 9-pa!s, Fae air, P/S. I ·.~.,~nm°"'o""'F~al"oo-n-.~Good~.,.-"'-"-. Jo ml. S1495. 673-UlO ~ &.U2l1. : · 1r * * ~95 * * New bniln!s, Clean, Sl29S 1 ''6"-'"'0M=u=sr=A"N=G~H'-'-CC...-p/~.-11
., , _ ... ~. ·1·-', ('' ,, .. -; ...
Got sot for • super summer with ono of t heso 9reol Mercury St)
tion Wagons, these Mercury Station Wagons are still wearing pre-
summer price tags. Don 't wait too long, before summ er arrives!
PRE VACATION SPECIAL
1971 COLONY PARK STATION WAGON
Crow COii .. ,., ride pod.099
Pow•r 1ic:I• win.low•, •29.<4V VI. Twin
comfort loun9• ,.eh, No11 •xh•u1!
1mi11ion 1y1l•m~· Corn•rin9 l •mp1.
WSW H-781 15 !1t11d Tir11, Tilt 1l•e•-
ing wh•el, Auto..,1lic •p•td control, 6.
wev PWR 111t drivtr 1ld1 , Rtclinin9
pa111n9er 1111, Ctnl•r fecin9 retr
1eah, Tin+ed 91111 • co..,p!elt, l119·
9•91 c1rrier -w/eir dell., C1rpei1d
lo ed floor, Station w19on, Pedded(
Lockeble 1id• llo••9• cc..,pert..,ent,
Power door loci ... Aulome!tc l•mpere-
tur• control, AM r1dio w/1ler10 l1p1
sy1., lnl••~el wind1lo i1ld wipe,., OLX
1111 & FRT. 1hould1r b1lti. App•••·
1nc1 prol1clion qroup, Rtmcle CTL
ltfl hi nd mirror.
• S9561 I
DISCOUNT
$1077
FROM WINDOW STICICIR !"RICE
NEW 1971 COUGAR
'66 VW Xlnt cond. Radio Pvl pty. 833-2512 dition. 2m N. Seville, Apt. C, "" '&f 230 SE ~n.1.A.ir. p>WU, new 11~. ~. • 70 VW BUJ de l ll xe S.n demente . new lirel, Stl!iO. Automatic Tr•nsmission, White
ftne ~ .,~~~ • C•ll ·. ~• ~AA • W/lunroof. Red, $.2,'fOO or 1963 Chevrolet, JeU fh&ll JOO 'iiF<;;;"'i• iiOj•rf\rtu;:&"mO. l --=~~""~·~·~,,.,:~-·11 d n p s $3466 1 ___ _:-~~~---/''ii''iWS.L'.i-;;;;;<;-;e;;:-;ru;; I best Uer 67l-?2J6 ml. on efl&', fac air. 1td '62 Ford falco Futura S15CI. OLDSMOBILE si ewa s, O:wer t.ering, Pow· ~ .,G '&4 VW Bug,.t.bullt eni, 1un o · 1hilt. Want to trad• I« lp UC•aood:fine tnnsp, body 0' '-d
rool, e:xci!.l,.·cond. $575 or '6' VW Sedan, xlnl mnd, motorcycle. ~18&4 llil[htly dl2;5al·mll I -::,..,,,.,--,.~,---~ •r 1sc Braus, AM R·e io, Tint· 1---.....,,.;.:='----h="',-,'=1 ="'~'"~·~-~'--' -,--c 1 $600. CHEVY Wagon 1968, lo mi'1, '68 ro1t0 T. Urfr • Olcls. '6t Luxury SH. 1d Glass, Deluxe WhHI covers, AtmJ~ ·~P~~t:.cttl. ctol. n:,: ~~=:r. ~~~~·t cond. $11~. ;,,~ . Good cond. A1R b)'~~~ING lf91H537702.
SAt.E8 ·M-SllllVICZ 673-M aft S pm ~ at 1709'it W. Balboa ./ 1980 Chevy. Xlnl b'anl, =·..,-="'ro""'RD=~XL,~-,..~~ltd~tp-.1 FUD power equipmenl lncl.
·•• vw ""•-l r...1..i .... 1 Bl:vd. Ne'NpOf't Bch. $2500. ve-.I>e-oo-... 1-, Cl 1d t nd ,...1 tilt •ltoerl"I \V'hee!, factor:y r~EWP ORT
IMPO RTS
... ,,........... ..,. ........ -·3 rv -"""" ~ ear. n co • r; J:IOWU', &lfl'f!O tape, most all deluxe
owner. $500. '67 VW, reblt eni.. MW S-... • <>Q.1""1755 air. $4116. M&-1534 options. Musl k teoen a
C81l art S pm, 536-1789 brakes /!. baU. G 0 od '62 Chevy Wagon, rebuilt ·a; Ford Galaxte 500, pYJr drtvtn to apprttlate, CYJO-·a &g. Xlnt eond, 411 tlpe cond.. W). 646-333.1. eniine, new bt'alw:a, good b &: 1. conv. Must sell. 377 E. 032).
l.100 w. o..i. HWJ. ckck, COO!I mata. MoviD,-, "&4 vw Camper, '68 1600 e~. ti~. sm. 546-5.1!7. I ~1•~lh~·~c_.M_._~co-~!6S.~~--I • NABERS CADILLAC
Newport Bead must 8811! 66-4039 ha ht11uter1 I: bl& titts. Must 195S Chevy 2 Dr, Needs llttle 19&t Country Squire full pow-:2600 HARBOR BJ..., l'e"""·6.l=--:M°"G~"'M"Jdp-;-,-~-:G:-.,..~ I •57 VW BUS. MINT CON· 1ell S150. ~I. ""'Ork. Be.11 otter, in.3785, er, tac a ir, $700 or btt CO!ITA MESA
mectt cond, 1515. C e Jl DmoN! Xtru. Must M!U ·g2 VW, ~bit l&oo enr. Leta 116% 24th St., NS. ofr~54.S..Oftl. CAU. 540-91M
+-TAX l l lCfftsl
Karen, Sd-.!J&4. • SJ,9l). ~ · of i ·1ns. $750. Faat ttSU!ll are ju1t t phone HOUSE Hund~? Watch the ==O~PEN==S~UND~_A.;.Y~~·ll
fbr beat rauttat 6G-5671 We'U htlp YoU ae!l! Ml-5671 96l-5llG6 * 162-l!MS call away -&4~. OPEN HOUSE column. ~D::AIL~Y:._:PILOT:::;::::__:lof:::_,:•:::ctto::o:._! th•iiii'1"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::::.11
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