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1971-06-17 - Orange Coast Pilot
ew • Ir or aste • . - l!.S.~ Bussia Tallas Set DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * On Joint Space Effort JHURSDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE ·17, )97 1' Drugs Parley Set For Joint Space Bid ~ACE CENTER . Houston (AP) - ~viet and U.S. space officials will begin negotiations here next Monday to\vard establishing docking syslems v.·hich would permit spacecraft from the two nations to link up in orbit. the Manned Spacecraft Center said today . The announccn1ent s?.iri that sc ientists ;ind en~ineers from the Sov iet Union will ..n eet with American counterparts in three working groups at Lhc r..1anned Spa cecraft Cenlcr 111 an effor t to develop compatible spacocraft dock1n~ s~·stems. Officials said working ~ro:.ip I \~tll assure compatabtlll.v in rendczvolLS and doc king : "'Orkin~ gr oup II "'Ill ~vclnp cnmpatihle rad1" ~uirlc.r<cc and nplir::il systems and 11orking group l!I will develop docking assemblies The meet ings are expected to last five days. Dr. Roher\ R Gilruth. director of !he Manned Spacecr aft Center, \l'i!I head rhc American teams. The 20-man Soviet delc~ation "'ill be headed by Igor P. Ru · mvanl.5ev of the Council on International Ccioperation in !'pti.:e Research and the Use or Space of the Soviet Academy of Sciences. The delegation will include cosmonaut \'italiy I. Sevasllri nnv. The American and Soviet l'ipace or· ficials re;ichcd an agreement last October "'hich included a schedule for joint efforts in creating compatible rendezvous Rnd docking systems. Orange Coast 1''eather Just R smidge cooler today and tomorrow a long the Southland with highs ranging rrom fiO to 75 and lows 53 to 60. Hazy sunshine in the afternoons with the. usu.al low clouds and fog In the early mom· , ing hours, INSIDE TODAY U.S. and Jopan sign treo111 vUl Jotelilte TV to ret urn Oki'nowa to Japonese rule . See story. Pa ge 4, •1rt111 • ..... II-If -• """'"'"" .... ' H g·-• M•ll9ul Mf'W\ .. _.,,,, ' Orll••• C.VftfJ ' (!1Mll .... ... 1¥"'11 ,..,.If' H ,_lcl • _ .. H·H en..-• lto<lt. "'''-'" , .. ,, 0..-111 Mtllctl • T•!"11iefl " ••ner••t "-• , ...... " 11·1• •111tt1ll-• ti-It Wtf!Plt< • ''"'"" , .. W~1M W•"' " ., __ ,. .... _ .. ,....,. lJ.U ·~...-" Wlf'tll N.wt .. • • • • • • • • • • • • • 'Public Enemy No. l'-Nixon WAS HE THE SOURCE? MIT's Daniel Ellsbtirg War Secre~ Leak Figure Identified NE\V YORK (AP~ -A former New Vork Times reporter said Wednesday night that the secret Pentagon report on the Vietnam was was given to the Times by Daniel Ellsberg, a former Defense Department employe now a senior r"search associate at Massachusetts lllslitute or Technology. Sidney Zion, the former Times man and former deputy U.S. attorney in New Jersey. named Ellsberg in an interview broadcast locally over WMCA radio. Zion refused to say where he got the in· formation. but safd he considered his sources "very impeccable." The Times had no comment on Zion 's statements. , . Meanwhile. a federal judge reserved decision today on a government r~uest to inspec t documents on which the New York Times based articles on the secfet Pentagon study of U.S. Involvement In Vietna m. - But he sai d he would not 111low a fishinc exped ition for other material the Timu may possess. U.S. District Court Judge Mun:ay I. Gurfeln said he was limiting the i;:ovcrnment's discovery motlon only to those docume nts received by the Times from the source of "the ·materla\s used in the three art.icles published so far. "I'm not tolerating any fishing er· )>edition into the f~ of any newspaP'r," Gurfe.in said. The government also seeks to bar the Times from resuming it! 11er~s of three artictes -.~u the Vtttnam atudY. It moved on Wedneiday, under discovery prattdures, to Inspect lhe documents 11lrendy alluded 10 by the Times and "other claaslflcd documents'' It bclle.ved to be Jn the. Times' possession. On Sunday, the Ttmcs begin publillhing excerpts from the ~7.volume Pentago11 IS.• TIMES, Pore IJ Governor To Continue 'Ranching' SACRAMENTO (AP\ -Gov. Ronald Reagan says he will conti nue to be a cal· Ile owne r as Jong as he can .afford to - not as a tax shelte r but because •·t like being a farmer." Reagan. who did not ov.·e any state personal income laxes in Ca lifornia last year, denied that his cat!lf' investments were made as a tax shelter. The Sacramento Bee and New 'l'ork Times reported Sunday thar Reagan is ;i cl ient of Oppenheimer Industries. Inc., a cattle management finn that offers its services to those "in a position to benefit from the tax incentives . ., Reagan. in terviewed by newsmen Wednesday after returning from a New Engla nd speaking trip, said he has been in the cattle business for 20 years. "Well, I still 0\'.'11 some cattle," the Republican chier executive said, his voice linged with impatience. "As long as I can afford to I'm going to con tinue. I like being a farmer .. , The Sunday article was lhe first specific report on Reagan's inveiiiment:;, which became a source of controversy after he .acknowledged that he had no state tax liability for 1970 because of "busines.s reverses." He added that since becom ing governor he had paid $90,000 in state taxes. Reagan said Wednesday, "I intend to go back to ranching and I don 't want to lose oul com pletely. I have invested in land to have a ranch when I flni&h this job." He ha s purchased a 771-acre ranch in Riverside Cou.nly. The Bee reported th.at Oppenheimer had purchased caUle for the Reagan Cat· Lie Company In Montan.a, and had registered brand.!! for the Reagan Cattle Company in Wyt1ming and Nevada although the Nevada brand had not been re.registered for 1971. Reagan· told a news co nference in Mauachu.!letta Tue1d1y he had never seen an)' of the cattle .. Tire Bloivs Out On County Plane A Ure blew out on Air Cal Flight 103 10 San Francisco during takeoff this morn- ing at Orange COUnty Airport. No one waa injured and tbe plane was not damag~: Air 'C#J officl!th1 .se.jd the nose wheel bltw whlle the jetliner was slill on the. runway, so the pilot coasted to a stnp, then taxied back to the boarding area where the tire was changed. The flight then took orr fn nt>rmal fashion, •lr?ort officials stJd. Thar She Blows D41LY "ILOl ,....,_ ..... T .... I~ Lun ch hour strollers in Santa Ana's new co unty Civic Cen ter were treated to an impromptu aquatic dis play Wednesday when the cap on a water main connecting the County Cou rth ouse to the county Law Library blew o!f without warning. The geyser was quickly quelled by workers. W. County Officials Blast Jury. Lo s ·AI Airport Plea By JACK BROBACK Of t!te O.Ur ""'" lt•ll The orange County Gred Jury 1ug. gcsUon that Los Alamllos Naval Alr Sta· lion be sought as a 'general aviation airport has brought an avalanche. of critlclsrn. from wot couoty offlcla.ls. The Jury said In a Jetter to the Board of Supervison that lhe Navy was declaring the facility surplus. But Second District Supervisor David Baker challengtd that aS!lerlkln. .. It Is not true. The Grand Jury Is la~ring under a Misapprehension lh11t is common," Baker said. "The Navy has not indicated that It might consider de- claring Los Alamitos SLaUOn surplus. "It is only discontinuing air operations there. and-the larKI Jg belna retained for !Upport purpoee1 Including boulinl IO< military pertonnel." Df:splte Baier'a·autrtlons, 11.1perv1Jor1 Ronald Caspers and Ralph Clark 11id the · need for ''""'al 1vlallon !ldliU.. in the oounty ~ a ltkal. Ind Jl!llhod throuah 1 vote lo have SUporvilot WDU1m Phlilipa lnvesUgalo the poulbility of ocquirlng the facility and report beck In four weeks . Baker !aid Phillips· invesUgatk>n would be a waste o[ time as lhe fact. were very evident now, And he added, "2!!0,000 peo- pl e in I.he wut part of the county arc d~d against we 11 1n 1irf"itld." The dtci!lon lo authortu th• Phillips study triggered • barra&e. of criticism. ' All Out War. Fund Asked FromSolons WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix· on declared drug abu se "publl c enemy No. I" today and called for a new all-out offensive to rehabilitale drug victims while pushing efforts worldwide to cut off the illicit narcotics supply, Nixon's long-awaited special messa ge. to Congress asked fo r an . extra $155 million to "tighten the noose around the necks of drug peddlers and thereby loosen the noose around the necks of drug users." Calling the use of drugs by American 1'ervicemen in Vi et n a m "especially disheartening,·· tilt President announced immediate establi shment of a rehabilita· lion prog ram for addicted servicemen heing returned from the war zone. And he asked Congress lo give the Pentagon authority to keep uniformed personnel in service beyond normal discharge dates ii they are addicts. After a two-year mfM!ting willl con· gressional leaders of both parties, Nixon announce d creation or a new Wh ite House organization lo coordinate the. effort. He named to head it Dr. Jerome H. Jaffe, 37- year~ld expert who pioneered in the field of her oin addiction and now heads lltinois' drug abuse program. Nixon said he cons.ider& th is problem "so urgent that it cannot be scattered through government an d mu11t be coordinated in one responsible authority" reporting directly to the President. He said the nine government agtncles !hat deal with rehabilitation, research .and t ducation in this field must pull together and "not at crOSA-purposes." While putting special emphasis on deal· ing with drug abuse Jn lhe services, Nix- on tiaid the problem was there "before Vietnam and wil1 continue after the war In Vietnam. It will not pass with the pass ing of the war in Vietnam ." Actually. Nixon acknowledged more than two week.a .ago lhat GI drug ad· diction i"n Vietnam I.a a problem. That left him wilh a what·to-do-about.-it decision t.bat has now been resolved. The President • gave coniresslonal le.aders an early·mornJng adva.ooe peet at his propo&al. Discussing "I.be_ Ude of drua abuse which has swept 'Al\)flrica in the la.st dl!Cade," Nix?q sakt a;ddiction "alfUcta: both the body and the IOU]" o( &hf: naliorl. Citing statistics, be. eailmated tl'6 met of .&upporting • drug. hlt>lt 11 rancinf from $10,000 to more thin '36,000 1 year. Ht u ld : , · "Th• linandll costs d! lddlctJoo. •, M said. "are more than '2 billion ewry year, but thege.· cosls' can at lt11t1 " mea sured. .The human cOsta cannot. American society ahouJd>.not be required to bear either .a>1t.." _ , To coordinate federal actlvlllea ia research apd educaUon in the affl, Nlloa announced creation by uecuUve ordif of • Speclni Aotlon"Ofllce of Drue A- Prevention within the White HOUie 1~ lure. lte uked Co"lfft,S to follow 1.1;p w1th h~ghslatlon that would ~ Wbll3' lhi• ofii<e and broldea lts)Ooli11. -- _1_3All '1' PILOT S lllund•). Junt 17 l'i/l --=------'--'-= ~Budget Battle Near? " Democrats Seek Vote on Reagan V ersio11 SACRAMENTO I AP l -Assembly • Democratic leaden; we.re pressing today kl' • showdown \'O!e on a S7.06 bill~ vFJi<m of GO\', Reagan·s 1971-72 stale Jiiidlet. Bul Rcpublieans hinted they might try to bJock pass.age of th& spending plan un- til Democrats cut back on SM8 million In nev.· spending the Democratic majority addtd to Lbe barebones Reagan budget propo.~1. Democrat~. "ho hold a 43-37 edge in lhe Assembl\'. must 1,1·in al least II GOP \oles for the· 1,,.,0--thirds margin needed lO send the budget to the Senate. .... t issue in the budget shov.do1.1·n is a potential tax increase of anyv.·he re fron1 ~ nul11on lo$! billion ~· · Tht S6.74 bllhon budget submilltrl last t 'eb. 2 by Reagan was prec ariously balanced without new taxes by detp cuts in numtrous state programs, denla.l of cost-of-living raises for state employes for the fir1l time in eight years and a major welfare reform program. Since then, new estimates of state revenue -based on a slower-than-ex- peded recovery from C a I i f o r n i a.' s business recession -have cut income esUmates by PJ3 million and Reagan S]Xlkesmen say the welfare reform 11·111 fall 1101 million short of its savings goa l unless a series of Reagan bills k1llc<I lasl week in the Senate are rev11·c<I. Meanwhile, lhe Democratic-eonlrolled Ways and P.ieans Committee re11Tole the Reagan budget 10 · ~Give state college and uru vcrs1ty pro- fessors a 10 percent pa y raise and give all olher state v•orkers five percent, at a total cost of $116.2 rni!lion. -Reverse a $72 million &h.ift of a surplus fron1 the State Teachers Retire- ment Fund to the general fund . -Pro\ ide $76,8 million more for the Uruversit~· of Calilor111a and stale col- leges. including their $39.2 million share of salarv increases. -Add. $45 million to the capital oullay fund for new state buildings. -C1ve local schools $4.9 m1Uion more. -Force lhe state to provide more money for v.·e\fare if the Reagan reforms fail to produce lhe savings promised, From Pagel TIMES ... lnvest11ae1at Sclaenae study entitled ;,History of United State!J Decision i\taking Process on Vietnam Policy." After lhe third insta!lmenl in the series was published, the government asked a federal court in New York to block fur\11er publication. Under a restraining order in effect until Saturday, the Times has run no more copy. Newport Man Jumps Bail Of $10,000 iI1 Las Vegas 'fh e case is to be argued Frida y. The government has launched an in· \'estig ation into the leak. Zion said he attempted but failed to reach Ellsberg at his Cambridge address all \Vednesday afternoon. A 111tionw1de hunt is on today for a Nr:wport Beach man who forfr:ited h.is Sl0,000 bail in a Las Vegas court rather than bl!!: returned to Orange County to face charges that he conned 150 local in- \·estor1 out of more than SI million. Gregory Pavlov. 43. of 398 22nd St .. failt<l to show up June: 14 for the es:- lradition hearin11. or dered by a Clark County Cou rt judge. Just six y,·eeks earlier the same judge had reduced the J\e.,..·port man's bail fro m i15,000 to $10.000. Pavlov, v;ho operated the M1do. Inc. enterprise from offices in Costa Mesa, is accused of persuading I~ Orange County investors -most of them in the Orange Coast area -to part with a total of more than $1 million ror shares in his hot dog machine syndicate. Investigators cl aim Pavlov falsely represented a yarn thal he was about to Coast Residents Join Competition At Senio'r Carnes Fourteen South Orange Co u n t y residents are ectranlJ in the seccnd •n-- nual Senior Sports International, former- ly the Senior Olympict \11hich will open June 19 in the Los Angeles Coliseum. Participating in track and field events are Jim Delaney or Laguna Niguel; Joseph Gross, Huntington Beach; John D. MacLachlan, San Clemente: James R. Weik. llunlington Beach; and Ross Win- ton. Corona de l Mar. Swimming competi tors include Frank E . Booth of Laguna Beach; Jim Eubank of Corona de! Mar: Ken Koster, Hun- tington Beach and Rita Simonton. Hun- tington Beach. Alex Gilbert of Fountain Valley will participate in both s l4·imming and track and field. Tennis competitors are Dr. &I ndy Bertsch, Cos ta P.1 esa: Do rothy Hogan, Costa ftlesa ; Mary Radabaugh, Hun- tington Beach: and Esther t.I. South, Laguna Beach. The sports competition v.·itl ta ke place primarily from June 19 through 22 in the coliseum and adjacent s w i m m 1 n g ~tadium . Entranl.5, all ove r 35 years or age , ll>'i ll partici pate fr om 30 sta tes and three foreign countrie..!I. OUN .. I COAST DAILY PILOT H.-i ..... '-111 -·-.... Cl• 11•• Olt.AHGI COAST f"UILISH ING <.flM'MY l•\trt H. W.M ,,.i..i, .... hlllbtW Jet.k l. c ... 1.., Vite p,..w.-ii .... "-•I ~ T\111111 ic ••• 11 ..... 1h•Mll J... M•rrhl,.. MMltSlre M llW C:••rl" H. L••• Jlltli1"4 P. Nt.11 MailMflf MaM!rlfts lllllltn DAl\.V Ptl.O'f, -'"' '""'lcll k _.......,. .... .. _..._.It.,.....,_ 4elly __. ........ ay atll .,._.. .. rn... ,... L~ ....... ......,, a-.dl. °""' ......... . ... ~····· ._..., ,_..,.11'1 Vtllrt, &M C'-'-"ti CJhl•--~.ttr4Wl'll rwiri-t ,.....,_ ~· ............. ... w.t .. ., ...... ~~ TJ cl as cn•t '41o4U1 aawMs• "'*" · 1 '41-Nn S.M TsAlh,T&tw Tals;1 a 1 4t,.....JI .,,..... ""· ~ C-11 ,.. .. ~ .... OINiMY. ... -'"'""· """''"''*' .. ....,,., .... ,,.. ... ........,!......,. i'l9<'M11 ~ ...... "" .. •1"""1t .-c:i.1 ,.,. ....... ~--· ..... dMI ,.....,.. '9141 ., "-' ·~ .... ~ ...... (1.1"-!Mo, ~-ltfl ..,. _,.._. ttM 11W11111111 ..,. -11 u .rl '""""''1' "'"""'"' gnM"""" a .11 ...,..,r,. put on the prod uction line a machine that would hold hot dogs in refr igeration until the purchaser deposited lhe t'1:lst of the meal in the slot. Then. witnesses told the Orange County Grand Jury. Pavlov told thein that the machine's radiant heal unit v.·ould go into action and the purchaser would have a freshlv cooked hot dog oo a crisp, white na pkiO .,.,·ithin se<'onds -\Vlth mtlstard. The Grand Jury indicted Pavlov on charges of fraud, sr-!ling stock without a permit and grand thr.fl. Pavlov was ar- resled in Ar izona. s kipped bail of Sl.000 there. and was subsequently arrested in Nevada \\'here he again failed to sho w for the extradition hearing. "We've got a good idea ll'here to look for him." Deputy District Atlorney Al l\·ovick said \Vednesday. ··Rut I'd rather not go into details al this lin1e '' A .,...itness told the Grand Jur\' !hill Pavlov displayed a prototype of his hot dog machine lo potential investors and indicated that he had 10 more in the back of the showroom. "All they were were false fronts on Coke machines. the wilness said. "lie never at any time had a machine that could economically be manufactured even if )t were electronically feaaible." Strike to Cl.ose Harbor for Day LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -Los Angeles and Long Beach harbors were scheduled lo be shut down for 24 hours, starting to- day, by a stop·work meeting (If the International Longshoremen·s and Warehousemen·s Union. ILW U Presi dent Harry Bridges 5aid ne1oti11tiollJ5 with the Pacific Maritime Association wUI be resumed within two weeks ''in a last-ditch effort to reach agreement.'' Bridges said he is asking approval of the membership to call a strike if a ne w contract is not agreed upon by July J, the day alter the present pact expires. Truck Driver Killed In Freeway Acc id ent Raymond J. Rice. 51, Montebello, was killed Wednesday when he was eiected fro m a tractor-trailer rig he wa s driving northbound on the Santa Ana Free11•ay near the Manchester Ave nue offramp, the California Highway Pa trol reporled. The big hauling rig .,..·ent out of control and struck a guardrail. officers sa.id. ff i'1"' .. ·~ • ""' • "! • • "' ' • _. ..... .... .;J".:..-,,,,, "' . "" ~ .. Agnew's Bag In Cambridge, no one was at ttre E\Jsberg home near Harvard Square tD- day. hut mail addressed to Da niel and Patricia Ellsberg \\"as piling up at the door. No one answered the telephone. Zion said Ellsberg, ··at a young age got a ve ry hot position a t the Defense Departrnent 11or k1ng in w mething called the international secur ity affairs division under J olin ~1cNaughlon." lie said Ellsberg turned dovish on tile "'a r in 1965 aft er a trip to Vietnam and thereafter v.Tnle numerous m em o s against American involvement the re. Zion said Ellsberg came into possession of lhe tornpleted secret Pentagon report after he left goverrunent service and "'hile working for the Rand Corp. There \va s no imnicdiate comment from Rand. v.·h1ch ha s conducted defense and other studies for the govenuncnt. Zion said Ellsberg turned the report over to Neil Sheehan ol the Tirnes "sometime in lalc to.larch ·• Zion was a founder of the short·lil'ed Scanlan's magazine. He made his com- ment on lhe Barry Gray interview pro- gram. ~ In a March 7 story on antiwar activity, the Boston Gl obe reported thl!lt Ellsberg was one of only three persons to ha\•e read the entire Pentagon study, Ellsberg's rurrent position is \.\·ith ~fl1"s interdepartmental Center for International Studies where he specializes in Southeast Asia. His appointment t nds June 30 and il was not known whether he ha s received a renewal. Ellsberg was graduated from Ha rvard College in 1952 and received a doctorate in 1963. He has worked for the State and Defense departments as v.·e!J as in diplomatic and consular services. Second Victim Of Blast Dies The second person inj ured in a toy fac- tory explosion in Santa Ana last Friday died e11rly this morning at Orange County J\ledicat Center. Linda Dyer. 19. of 2313 Anahurst Place, Santa Ana, daughter of r.1rs . Billy J . Dyer, died of burns over 80 percent of her body. the coroner's office reported. Last Friday P..1rs. J\.1argaret Delfin. 41 , cf 1006 N. Eng lish St., Santa Ana . died of burns received in the 5ame epx!osion 11 t L. ~1. Cox Manufacturing Co., 1505 E, Warner Ave. Si x other persons were injured. none seriously, when solid fuel used in model rockets exploded. firemen reported. Uf'I Tiii ... Los Angeles County Supervi!Or \Varre.n Dorn presertted the vice-pres· ident with a i;pecially designe d gol f bag that has a big. bright red cross on it. Agne'I'.·, \vho is notoriously 'l'.'e ll kn o\\'n for his golf "marks- manship." broke up 'l'.'ilh laughter al the presentation. Agnew \\'AS appearing on behalf of Nixon's re\enuc shar ing and ""'eliare refo rin programs in Los Angeles. ~ .... "' f ' -~I . . Marine Jet 'Sliced Into Airliner' f4 LOS A.~GELES (APl -The ta.II right \.l'lng of a f..1arine Corps jet lighter slashed through a \\'est jetliner in an air collisiu and 50 !Jv~s. federal invesligal sald Wednesday. / \ They sho\ll·ed ne.,..·smen a mOtkup· of DC8 being reassembled ln a hangar and the places where the tail cut through the cockpit and the l\'ing gashed into \he passenger compartment. The sole survivor of !he Ju11e 6 crash, r.tarine lst LL Christopher Schiess, has said •·the airliner hit us ." George R. Baker. who heads the Na- tional Transportation Safety Board in- vestigation into lhe crash, said "contal'! \\'S.S made between the nose section of the Dal in the left fron l and the right side \ving and vertical stabili1,er or the F'4." He added, "rm not saying who hlt "''ho, only th at those a re:is \vere apparently the ones that i1npacted togcthl'r.'' Asked if there v.·cre enlr_y and exit markings indicating the tail <ind 11'ing of the fighter had cut through the airliner, Baker answere6 "yes."' Baker al50 said the transponder aboard the Phantom, electron ic gear magnifying a radar blip an aircraft makes, was not in operating condition at lhe time of the crash. Boy, 6, Begs Food to l{ee1l 6 B1·otl1ers~ Sisters Alive A spokesman for the .El Tnro t-.tarine Air Station. base of the ill-fated Phantom. said he \vould ha1 e "no comment 1\hatsoever"' on the condition of the transponder. t-.laj. r.t ichael Fib1ch said that regul a- ti ons require that transponders must be workinf:! on takeoff hy all planes using the :11 r facility a nd !hat all departures are monitored. , MfAMI {U PI) -When the mil k truck made its pre-dawn hon1e deliveries, 6- year.old Oscar Henry did the breakfast "shopplng·• for his ::.ix brothers and .sis!crs. i\lost days, Ostar .,.,·ould return with 111 0 quarts of mil k. But on good day~. he'd get some bread. ice crea m or orange juice that had been delivered by the 1nilkman. After breakfast. Oscar .,.,·ould slart beg- ging and stealing dinner. Tuesday. Dade Coun ty sh e r 1 f f' s deputies were called to 5\sl Street to in- vestigate reports that some children had broken into a home. \\'hen Deputy Tim Adams arrived. he round ao open window and heard some rrying. Hr :-lipped around to lhe rear of the house and found se1·l'n bawling children staring at an empty refrigerator. Oscar told Adams !he.v were searching for food . 1he11 look him to \h('ir small cct- laJ:e do1111 !he street. Ad;i ms walked in- side, took one look and put in an emergency call for the ''Sa fe Streets Squad," the department's social action teani. Sgt. Rollie Biggs of the squad arri\'ed in minutes and !earned the children hadn 't eaten in tl\:O days. Oscar. '1'.'ho jusl turned 6, "'as head of the household. The olher children ranged in age from 5 lo!- ~·ear-old 1 .... ·in girls ·whose bloated stomachs and listless behavior told Biggs they 11·ere suffering from malnutrition. Oscar said their father had deserted th em "a long time ago." and their mother often disappeared for I \\'O and three d.:i~·s al a time. The c·ouage. Biggs said. ll'as almost barren of fur niture and "'.'.IS co1·ercd \\'ilh rihh. One roon1 was blocked by a four- foot pile of soi led clolhes. The chi!aren slept on \1~0 urine-soaked mattresses. The cottage had no elec- tricity, no gas and lhe only food in the place was three sticks of rancid butter in a roach-infested refrigerator. Biggs sent a deputy to a ne arby grocery and fed the kids. "ll v.·as like a transfu sion the .,..-ay those t .... ·ins sucked the rrulk out of the botl le," Biggs said. The year-old tv.·ins --Cecile and Cynt hia -\\'ere rushed to the counly hospital's emergency room. treated for severe malnutrition and were adn1itted to nearby Mount Sinai Hos pital. They weighed only seven and eighl pounds after being red, "and looked like they .,..·ere only two or three months old ," a nurse said. She added normal weight for one-year-olds is 20 to 25 pound s. A social wor ker located 2&.year.old ~lrs. P.tichele Henry \Vednesday and she .... ·as booked at C-Ounty Jail on charges of child neglect and conlributing to the dependency of children -misdemeanors pun ishable by a total or 18 monlhs in jail and a fine or $1.500. ··1 assume the Phantom·s transponder v.•as working ¥.'hen it le ft El Toro," he said. The NTSB is assembling the DC9 bit by twis ted piece in a hangar in Azusa a fe\v miles from the crash scene in mountiiins f'a~t of Los Angeles. About the fir~! 30 to 3;) fee! have been p;irlly pul baC'k in some sorf or order on a 11·ooden fran1e. A couple of feet behind the black radar 1lome nose a gaping holr i~ ripped through the cockpit area. wh1r.h has been reassembled from maf]y smaller pieces !hat came apart in the collision. The cockpit tear is slanted to the left in· licating the Phan tom was banlung away at the lime of impact. Further back in the shell a long tear goes through lhe passenger compartment <it about the floor level. cutting through the baggage area underneath slanting up to l\'1\hin a foot or so of the fif th passenger \.l'indow . Laying 15 fee t in front of the ai rliner is !he single piece of the fig hter recovered so far. a 4 or 5 foot fire-blackened hunk of its right "'ing. i'lalta Head Sworn Ju VALLETTA. i\l al ta !AP\ -Dom J\!in- loff, a 54-year-ald sociali~t pledged to ease i\lalla out of the Y.'estem military pattern. 11·as sv.'orn in today as primf: minister or the ~lediterranean island. ;;..~; . 1• 6 Fahalous Color! IF YOU CA.~'T CO:\IE L"'- Fabulous Shag I CAIL 646--0275 FABULOUS PRICE!: foc an "~ .,.,,,., ONLY ronsul t&nt \l"hO will 895 t'.'OTTI(' to ynur homr \\ith s.111mplr! Sq. Yard v.·ilhout any obli11:ation ,t o )'OU! by lri thi1 brilli arit nylon fie• shag Kara1tan's color wiz1 rd1 h1vt dr••mad up such 1p•rklln9 mi••I as lncr1dibl• l lu1, A"1•1in9 Whit1, E•tr1ordin1ry Gold and 1v1r1 Coiott•f Copp•r. F•bulou1 h11 m111 ny of th •ll c;olor1 . Th 1y'r• •II in c;.rtdibl•, rttlly • (Fabulous comes In e1clri119 ar" r111s with ~~1"9 frhtt•· A t " • 12' f0< .. 1y $134.951 Your favoritt inl'trior designtr u:l/I be happ11 to assist uou .•• H.J.GARRETf fURNll1J .RE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DES IGNERS Open Mon., Tllun. & Fri. lv.s. TRY OUR REYOLYINli CHARCOE 2215 HAR!OR BLVD . COSTA MESA , CALIF . 646-0275 616·0276 ' I • H D .1 u Ii " in d ' I ) • H11nii11gto11 Bea~ Valley Fountain Today's Fma• N.Y. Stoek8 VOL. 64 , NO. 144, 3 SECTIQNS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1971 TEN CENTS • Roper Vows Emphasis on''School Essentials' By RUD I 7\'IEDZIELSKI Jack S. Roper. suf)('nntendent of the Htlnttngton Ut·ach Union High Sch()(ll District, said tod:iy he rC'g<1rds the t;ix e!et·t1on \'tctory flS "a mandate to boild up the cducat1on:.1l progr<1m ~." "\\'e do not regard this m;inda1e !15 a license to s pC'nd." ;oddrd thl' supenn· tendPnt of the rive-campus district serv· Jn,c: 15.000 stt1dcnts. Roper pledged the emphasis in !he district"s program will be on such •·basics" as thf! hiring of enough teachers and counselors to meet an expected enrollment increase o[ l.500 students this fall. Revised figures today sho,,·ed lhe district had v:on approval of its 69-cent tax increase request .,.,.it h 18.397 "yes'' votes as C<1mpare d to 15.403 "no" voles. The measure passed by ~.5 percent Tuesday. Rnpcr said the additional funds. $3.5 million annually for the three.year life of the override, v.·iJI be used to replace and add lo worn-out equipment a n d • ! machinery in industrial arts. business and home economics cJas.ses and U1 science Jabs. Additional custodial and grounds help v.•i\l be hired lo lake care of needed pain· ting and repairs at some of the cam- puses. "These things are all corrective. that \s. they will bring the dis trict's high schools up to the same level that existed three years ago when the district began to slip back because of a growing money shortage," ,said Roper • '''\'el in this age, no school~ can stand still -they must move forward to keep pace \\'Ith new technologiral. scientific and professional developments. "So it's incumbent upon us to mov e for,vard also. not tnlo expensil'e ex- periments or educa tional fads. but into programs that have proved themselves relevant to the needs of lhe working 11 orld ." he sa id. "Industrial arts classes designed lo train students lo move directly into skil l- ed jobs will be expanded throughQut the distr ict and v.·ill move into fie lds new to Lhe district. Al the same time we are hard at work planrung the Regional Oc- cupational Program which 1,1·111 10111 us wi th two neighboring school districts in sharing vocational arts faci lities." In addition, Rope r said. the district wilt expand its \~Ork-experience program and special programs for gifted students which will include adv;inced placement and independent study. "Equal attention will be given to the needs of the mentally retarded, Drug Offensive physically hand1cap~d and emotionally disturbed students," he continued ... Drug abuse educ:it100 1s also on our hst of lop prior1t1es. And v.·ith a \·ariety of techni· que s. we will step up our effurts to ron· v1nce potential dropouts that they need schooling to cope v;ith li fe ," he said. ''This is a fairly good . if not complete skc!ch of 1,1,·hat we plan Ill dn. We have been thinking in tenns of these nedes ever since I came 10 the district. and it was on the basis of these needs that "''e deter- ntined the amount of U1e ol'erride we re- quested from the voters." Told Nixon-Calls Narcotics 'Public Enemy No.1' l , . J DAIL'( Pl~OT P~olfl DJ Tom llarl•J Tl1ur Site Blo1cs J.unc:h hour strnllers in Santa t\na 's ne1v C'(1Unty Civ1r Center were treated to an impron1 ptu aqua tic display \Vednesctay when the ra r on a 1\·ater t11 ain conncctin.i:: the Cnunty Courthouse to the county l~a iv Library bl ev.1 off 11 ithout 11·arning. The geyser 1vas quickly quelled by 11·orkers. P1·o seci1tio11 U1~ges Gi1ilty Ve1·clict f 01~ LA Off ice1· By TO:'ll B1\HLEY Of !•t Da•h p,101 ~T•ff Thr pril~r< u11nn 1n 1he S111ngrr h.1r rnurdcr 1r1;i l tod.i,v a~k ed ;in (lrttn~e Co11nly Supr 11nr C0ur1 Jury In fond plll11'f' offircr ('liltnn SC'husse i;udl.) of v11lunt11ry m;inslau~lllcr. lf IJ1e priori ,11ncs along w11h prn~C'rut<1r James S1ot le r'<, recommcnd:ilions it could rncan a !>ln1C' pnson term of 11p 10 15 years for the 26-year-o!d Los Angeles pa trolman. "Th::il dnr!-.n t 1n1~<1n 1hal we rule out any other verrficl. · Stotler ";irncd lhe jury In !he final day of 1he Huntington Beach man 's tnal for Jhr killing last 1'1areh 15 nf ri.l ark A. Bodgers. 29, of But-na Park. th at th is n1an \vas. a trained pohce man froin whom we exper teri much higher ~!.indard s flf conduct than we got at the Swinger bar. "I !rel real sorry for this guy ," Stotle r sa id "llere I an1 in the role of prosecutor agnin~! 1he very type of man with whom I hnve to work nearly every day of my lifr and l don 't like tt,e Job one little bit. "But a hu man life v.•as t.aken and , policeman er not, we just can't sweep this crime under the rug:· Stoller told the jur\•. "Mr . Schusse shot and killed fl-lark Rodgers and yo u have to decide your verdicl on the circumstances that ynu think prevailed oulside the Swinger bar that night." WASlflNGTON !AP l -President Nix - on declared drug abu se "public enemy No. I " 1oday and called for a new all-out off ensi ve Lo rehabilitate drug victims while pushing efforts v.·or!d·.'l1de to cut off the illicit narcotics supply. Nixon's long.i1v.·;ii Led special message to Congress asked for an extra $1!'15 mill ion to "lighten the noose around the necks of drug peddlers and therehy loosen the noose around the necks of drug users." Wes t County Assails Jury On Air Base By JACK BROBACK Of l~t DtllJ l'flol 111!1 The Orange County Grand Jury sug· gestion that Los Alamitos Naval Air Sta· t1nn be sought as a general a\'iation ai rport has brought an avalanche of crilicis m from west county officials. ·r11e jury sa id in a letter to the Board of Supervisors that the Navy was declaring lhe facility surplus. But Second District Supervisor David Baker challenged that assertion, "ll is nol true. The Grand Jury is laboring under a misapprehension that is common." Baker :.aitl. "The Navy has not indicated that 11. migh1 con!'irler de· clar1ng Los Alamitos Slation surplus. "It is only discontinuing air operat ions there and the land is being retained for suppo rt purposes including housing for military personnel " Despite Baker's assertions. supervisors Ronald Caspers and Ralph Clark said the need for general a\'iation facil ities 1n Lhe county is critical and pushed through ;i vote lo ha ve Supervisor Wilham Ph illips investigate the possibility of acquiring the facility and report bac:k in fou r weeks. Baker said Phillips' investigation would he fl waste of time as the facts were very evident now. And he added, "250,000 peo· pie in the west part of the county are dead against use as an airfield ." The decision to authorize the Phillips study triggered a barrage of criticism. Mayo r William S. Brown of Los Alamitos backed Baker's .assertions. ··Members of our city council and our ci· ty manager 11pent a lull week in \Vashington on this subject. It i.~ not just a city proble m. but a regional one. It means the life or death of our city." Calling the use of drugs by American ser\-·icemen in Vi et n am "especially disheartening," the Presidenl announced immediate estabh~hment of a rehabilita- tion program for addicted servicemen being returned from the war zone . And he asked Congress to give Lhe Pentagon authori ty to keep uniformed personnel in serv1ce beyond normal discharge dates 11 they are addicts. Afler a {w().yea r meeting with con· gressional leaders of both parties, Nixon NY Times Furor announced creation of a new White House organization lo coordinate the effort. He named to head it Dr. Jerome H, Jaffe. 37· year-0ld expert wh o pioneered in the field of heroin addiction and now heads Ill inois' drug abuse program . Nixon said he considers this problem ''so urgen t that it cannol be scattered through i;:overnment and must be coor dinated in one responsible authority" reporting directly to !he President. He said the nine government agencies Former Pentagon Aide . .. . . Lin~ed to VietPapers WAS HE THE MIT's 0 1niel SOURCE? Ellsber9 Truck Driver Kill ed Jn F ree way Acci dent Ra ymond J. Rice. SI. Montebello, wa s killed Wednesday wh en he was ejected from a lra<:lor.trailer rig he wa s driving northbound on the Santa Ana Free:way near lhe Manchester Avenue offramp, Ille California Higbway Patrol reported. The big hauling rig went out cf control and struck a guardrail, officers 52.id. NEW YORK I AP ) -A former New York Times reporter said Wedne.sday nlght that the secret Pentagon report on the Vietnam was was given to the Times by Daniel Ellsberg, a former Defense Department employe now a senior research associate at Massachu&etts Institute of Technology. Sidney Zion, lhe former Timesman and former deputy U.S. attorney in New J ersey, named Eltsberg in an interview broadcast locally over WMCA radio. Zion refused to say where he got the ill+ formation, but sa id he considered his sources "very impeccable." The Times had no comment on Zion's slalements. 1'lean1,1,·hile. a federal judge rese rved decision today on _a gqveroment request to inspect documents-on' which the New York Times based ar\Lcles on the secret Pentagon .study of U.S. invol vement in V1r1nam. But he said he would not allow a fishing expedition for other material the Times may possess . U.S. District Court Judge Murray L Gurfein said he wa s limiting the government's discovery mntion only !.o those documents received by the Times from the source of the 1naterials used in the three articles published so far. .. I'm not tolerating any fishing ex· ped ition into the files of any newspaper." Gurfein sa id. The government also seeks to bar the Times from resuming ils series of three articles about the Vietnam study. It moved on Wednesday. under discovery procedures. lo inspect the documents already alluded to by the Times and "other classified documents'' it believed lo be in the. Times' possession. "11 n1ay he 1,1,·hrn yo u reviey.· the ev1dent·e 1h;it ~nu d£'c1 de tn ~n for a mu!'rfer verdict or you mtty decide lo ac- quit 1his mrin and th at 1s your pri \•llege ,'' Stoller said "But we feel al th1.s stage o{ the trial th<it there 1Yere .<;nn1e m i t i ~ a ti n g c1reun1stanees 1n ofiicPr St:hussc's fa1'or ""hen he shn1 and killrd 1'!:1rk !lodgers." the deput y distrit! ;itlornrv <idderi Chamber Mulls Survey Tab On Sunday, the Times began publishing excerpl.s from the 47-volume Pentagon 11tudy entitled "History of United States Decision Making Process on Vietnam Policy." After the third installment in the series was published, the government csked a federfil court in New York 1" block further publication . Under a restraining order In effect until Saturday, the Times has run no more ropy. Schussc of 5'1i2 Hodgers Dnve. ad - mi11cd Hie killi ng nt Hodgrfs fron1 !he v.·it ncss box, lie pleaded !hat he v.·as sur- rounded hy rive to seven men, seve ral of v.·hom were c11ry1ng pool sticks and all of whom were determined to give him a beating for his trta1ment cf 8 bar patron's dog. He testified lhi!I he did not intend to kill Rodger s and tha l he rired 11 1,1,·arning shot at lhe group bt>fore hls second bullet entered Rodgers' chest fro m a distanct estimated at fiv e feel. Schu!'se lold the jury he v.'as "frightened. shaking and 11fr t11d·· and thal hr feared for hi~ lift> nt the hand~ of "those weird people " Hr !>a id he warned the group he 1,1,as a rnl1t·f' nH1ccr 11nd that be nasht'd his badi!l:e l)rfnr(I us1n~ hls gun outsidt the Bci1C'h Roulevttrd \<l\'f'rn. "You can"! Ignore the f:ir t !hil t he was 11 poht'e officer.' S!nl!er acidly rnm· m~n!eri thi~ morning "It hA~ to m.11ke a difference v.•hcn y()U eonsidc_r tt,e fact Sorne Direc tors Hope for Reimbursement by City By ALAN DJRKIN 01 lftt Dtll' flllel llall Some Chamber of Co mmerce directors ex pressed a hope Wedne.<>day nighl lhat I.he city of Huntington Beach would reim· hurse the merchants group, in whole or 1n part. for lhe study presentl y under way of municipal finances. The study is being conducted by the Sant.a Ana office of the national ac. C1)Unting firm of Ernst and Ernst. The 9C).. da y, ~tody, estimated to ro'!t S9.!i00. is nearing completion. The chamber received the unanimous approval of the city council to spon!!Or th e anttlysis for the purpose of preparing :i f1\'e.year fi nancial plan for the city. 1\uto dealer .Jack Groth opened a brief tll scussron of th~ slttdy tit & mCEt1 ng of the chamber directors. C.rolh . who ex· plained th11 1 he h::id missed previous meetings when the litudy was disc ussed. wondered why the chamber should have lo pay for It II the city needed it. "Normally It's a function of the council to insist on this kind of survey," he said, "just as you hire an archiecl if you build a city haU." President Allen Kli ngensmith. an at- torney. responded, "I personally hope we can get this underwriUen after it is clos· ed, partly by the ci ty. I think it's a good thing. All the city departments Invo lved are saying they are doing an excellent job." Klingensmith added. however, that the only way the chamber could get the study started was for the merchanl.s group to offer to fund it. ~1ayor C:.COrge ~lcCr.acken. a director of the ch.imber, PQ intcd ou:. that .such 11 study had been requested several time~ by different groups In lhe past and It was not done .• AB Klingensmith stressed that the chamber did not want anyone to feel It was anything but an imµ{rtial study, William Foster. manager of the Hun· lington Beech Company, observed. "l don't think anybody but the Pilot Clhe DAILY PILOT) thlnkl that way." ln •n editorial, the DAlL Y PILOT hq; urg!d the chamber lo release the Mme! a~ contribuUont of Ill members who are supporting the study. the ,aper alao 'has C(lmmended the chamber In •n ectitorial for Initiating the study. McCrack~n said thtlt he was confidtnt that If lhe council found the 1tudy ob- jective and useful the ci ty would authorize ttddilion•I 1tudi~ if 1 nted was shown. Kl ingensmlth repealed lh11\ It was 11 n Impartial evaluation and that he would like to M!:e the city reimburse the !See Clt,\>lllER, P8" IJ The case is to be argued Friday. The government has launched an in- vestigation into the teak. Zi on said he attempted but failed to reach Ellsberg 1t his Cambridge addrm 111 Wednesday afternoon. ln Cam bridge, no one • ., at the Ellsberg home near Harvard Square to- day, but mail lddrtaed to Daniel and Patrici a Elllberl ••• piling up at the door. No one answered lbe telephone. Zion said Ellaberg. "at 1 young age got a very hot position at the Defense Department work.in& in tomethlng called the international security affain division under John McN1ughlnn." He aald Ellsberg turned doviah on the war In 196S after a lrtp to Vieln1m and thereafter wrote numerous m e m o 11 against American involvement there. • Zion 11id Ellsberg cama Into possession (See TIMES, Pace J) • I that deal with rehah1\itation. researrh and education in th is field musl pull together and ''not at cross-purposes." While putt ing special emphasis on deal· ing 1,1•11h drOg abuse in the services, Nix· on said the problem was there "before Vieln:i m an d will continue afte r the wa r in Vietnam. It will not pass with the passing 0£ the 1var in V1etn::im ." Actually , Nixon ackno\\·lcdged more than two \veeks ago th;il GI drug ad · ISee DRUGS. Page 21 Court to Get 1971 Edison Prospectus A prospectus of the Southern California Edison Company. dated April I. 1971 . on the issue of three million share's of stock is being delivered lo state Supreme Court offices in Los Angeles todA y. Deputy Orange County C'1unscl John Po1vell said this morning he was al· tarhing the prospectus to his brief filed in answer to the rom1:1an y's petition for a new hearing on c.'<pans1c n of 1\s Hun· !ington Beach plant. Po"·cll expl,1ined that he objected lo the "alarmist and i n fl a m m a lo r y st:itements'' made by the. con1 pany in its court petition. In its petition, Edi sno asked the court 1n review the rltti!'ion nf ri.·lay 26 which fou nd that !he C'lmpany re quired au!horizat inn hrilh from the Orange Coun· ty Air Pollu tion Control District and the California Public U1ihties Commission to expand the Huntington Beach generating station. "If the decision i~ allowed to stand as Callfornia law it m;iy well spell catastrophe for C;i l1forn 1a pubhc uUl1ty regulation and virtually condemn large segments 1Jf the slate, and perhaps elsewhere. to power shortages. brnwn outs or eveo blackouts in the foreseeable future," the Edison petition said. In his comments lo the courl Powell sai d. "I believe there is a remarkable and enlightening contrast between the Edison prediction of i m m i n e n t catastrophe set forth in its petit ion and in its discussion of the same supjecl matter in the prospectus." Powell noted that in the prospectus that although Edison slate! that air pollution requirement! we re causing delays in power plant construction and increasing cosls the "most that Edison predicts oa !See EDISON, Page Z) Orange Coast Weather Just a smidge cooler today and lomorrow along the Southland with highs ranging from 60 to 75 and lows S3 to 60. fUizy sunshine in the afternoons With th,e usual low clouds and fog in the early mom· ing hours. INSIDE TODAY U.S. and Japa n sion treat~ tria satellite TV to return Okinawa to Jopants~ r-rdt. Stt stOT"JI, Page 4. •lrffl• • .. _ ... " ..,n,., • Miii~· ,lltldl • C•llftr•lt • "''''""· ,,.... u Cloec:k!l>I U' ' °''" .. '-" • Cllnll .... ... ,,,.,,. ,..,.., • ,_ .. • -h »U '~-• ll'Kt Mlrllth "" Otttfl "911( .. • Tt i.v"'-'> " ••Hwl!M fln1 • ll!Mttn , .. ,, llllt•t•ll>fNlll 11-lt •••llllr • ,l,..ll(t Jt-U Wllltt WI"° tt i.. .. w:_ " ... _.,,..... 1).lf A1111U-n " W«NN ... .. I f DAll Y PILOT H Tlllwtdly, ,,.,. 17, 1971 ·Budget Battle Near? Democrats Se k Vote on Reagan Version SACRA~!E1\'TO {AP1 -Assembly Drrmocratic leaders v:ere pressing today for a showdown vote on a $7 .06 billion version or Go\·. Reagan's 1971-72 sla te budget. Bui Republicans hinted !ht-~· might try UJ block passage of the spending plan un- til Democrat!! cut back on $348 rnilllon in ne.,,,. spending the Democrsl!ic majority added to the barebones Reagan budget proposal. Democrats. v.·ho hold a 43-37 edge in the Assen1bly, must win at !east ll GOP 1 oles for !he :v.o-th1rds margin needed to ~nd the budget to the Senatt. At issue in th e budget showdO\\'fl is a potential tax increase of any .... ·here from ~ million to $1 bilhon. Tb $8:'74 billion bud&e~bmltttd last Reagan bud&et to : Feb. b~ Reagan ,w ~arlOUJly -Give state college and university pro- ~alanc .~· e:oi by deep cuts ressors a 10 perCt'nt pay raise and give in num~r_ous state proif"ams, denia£ of all other state workers five percent, at a cost-of-L1v1ng raises for stale employ~--..tt'ltil cost of $116.2 rnilllon. for the first time in eight years and a -Reverse a $72 million shift of a inajor \•;elfare reform program. surplus lron1 the State Teachers Hetire- Since then, Ot!'A' eslimates of slate .ment Fund to the general fund. revenue -based on a slower-than-ei.;. -Provide $76.8 million 1nore for the pected recovery from Ca I if or n i ;a 's University of Callfornia and state col- busine!s recession -have cut incon1e leges. including their $39.2 m1Wou share estimate!'i by $?0.1 million and Reagan of salary lncreases spokesmen say the welfare reforrn will -Add $45 million to the capital outlay fall $101 million short or its savings goal fund for n1",..' slate building~. unless a series of Reagan bills killed last -(;ive local schools $-1.9 nHllion more. ""et>k in the Senate art" revived. -force the ~tale to provide more Meanwhile. the DemocrAtic-rontrolltd money for welfare if the Reagan rehtrms Ways and Means Com1nitlee re1•:rote the fail to produce the savings promised. Over 3 ,000 Seniors Fron• Pnge l Graduation Ceremonies DRUGS ... diction in \1ietnam is a problem. That left him "·1th a \.\'hat-to-dl)-about·it decision that has now been resolved. For Area Set Tonight The President gave congressional leaders an early·rnorning advance peek al his proposal. Disc:us sing ··ihe tide of drur, abuse \\'hich has swept America in the last decade,"' Nixon said addiction ··aff1ict;; both the body and the soul"' of the na!ion. !\fore than 3,00C studenl.s from llun-, llngton Beach, fountain \'a I I e \' . \IJestminster and surrowidlng com- munities will bid fare.,.,·ell to their alma maters in graduation ceremonies tonight . fount2.in Valley·s L-0.s Amigos High School .,.,·ill present 308 candidates at 6 p.m. in the commons. Valedictorian is Jt nny Pugh and Dr. James Young, a pr!)- Discussion Set Over Hunting ton Freewa y Project Residents of lluntington Beach and Fountain VaUey will have an opportunity to quiz stale highway officia ls about the Route 39 (Huntington Beach) fretway when the freeway Mobile comes to the area in July. The Freeway Mobile is a unit staffed by stale Division or Highws.ys personnrl who will dlscuS5 current d e s i g n alternates or the Route 39 Free"•ay with residents. The mobile unit will be localed at the l{untin,&ton Center Mall for two weeks begihning J uly 14. From July 28 to July 31 the unit will be located at the corner of Magnolia Street and Warner Ave nue in Fountain Valley. A division of hi.gbwm ,tptkes~.-id " informal meetings 1-wttti com mbnity group!: will be sought in order to di3cuss freeway plans. Residents and organizations interested in scheduli ng a meeUng may contact their public works department or Norm Brinkmeyer, design engineer, state Division of Highways, "(213) 620-3210. From Page l CHAMBER • • • chamber ror all costs. RecenUy, the chamber instructed the accountanls lO regard the city. and not just the chamber, as their client Chamber direct.or Pete Morton explained thal this meant that all Ernst and Ernst reports .,.,·ould be given to the council simultaneously 'A'lth their delivery to the chamber On learning that the chamber had made the city th! client for thr study. Councilman Jack Green quipped at a re· c-ent couocil meeting, "Ju!'! as long as they don't send w the bill ' OU.•61 CO.Alf DAILY PILOT 01';ANGI COAST "UlllJ.MING (OM.'~'t keltert N, Weei ..... !Oetll .... l"llbllJllU J .,1r •· c ... r,.,. V1u ,.,.~, ..... ~, ~ n."''' K ..... if ..... Th-11 A. M•r phl11.- ~,,_,..,. ldl,.... Al111 Dir \111 W•l °'"'" ~If 1.i....- Albert W. I•+•• AH.edelfl Edtfw "'"""'"" .... OHke 11111 l111h ••• , ........ M1 iH111 A4 .. r11t1 ,,0. 11, 7t 0, 92•41 .,_ .,,.. .. ._......••di' m,.,.,..,_ C-19 ,,,_.: l.111 W•I ••r 51 ..... H-.rt I .ell: ».» "'""""""' IMll:""•l"f Sell o.r-tN: JOJ fllf'fll II C..ll\IN ~ fessor al Cal State Fullerton will deliver the {'{)mmencement address. At 6:30 p.n. Marina lligh School \\"ill present its ceremonies in the campus bowl. A field of ?.bout 600 seniors will listen to addresses by Kenneth T. Zwick, valedictorian , and Dr. John E. Cantalon. \'ice-provost at use. Edison High School has scheduled its graduation ceremonies for 7 p.m. in the school amphithe11ter. Cl)-Valedictorians Philip Boese and fl.1argaret Borchers \viii offer parting remarks lo 473 candid2J.es. Also at 7 p.m., Fountain Valley High School will hold comm e nee men t ceremonies for 618 seniors in the am- phitheater. The valedictory "'ill be delivered by Miss Marion Lancaster. Westminster High School plans lo gradt1ate 667 seniors at I.he Lions .stadium at 7 p.m. The valedictorian is John S. Grr.ssbaugh. Huntington Beach High School. the oldest or the six schools. will hold its ceremonies at 7 p.m. at Shcuc Field. t\iary ~!argaret Sharpe. the ,·aledic- torian. will address a field of 451 can· didates. From Page 1 TIMES •.. of the completed secret Pentagon report after he left governmen~ service .antl ~ working tot the Ra:if Ootp. There was no immediate comment from Rand, which has cond t1cted defense and other 15tudies for the government. Zion said Ellsberg turned the report over to Nell Sheehan of the Times •·sometime in late March.'' Zion was a founder of the .short-lived Scanlan's magazine. He made his com- ment on !he Barry Gray interview pro· gram, In a Mareh 7 story on antiwar activity. tbe Boston Globe reported that Ellsberg was one of only three persons to have read the entire Pentagon study. E!lsberg·s current position is "'1th lo.11T"s interdepartmental Center for !'.lterna!ional Studies "'here he specialize~ in Sou!hea~t Asia . l-lis ;ippoinlment 'nds .June 30 and it "·as nQt kno.,.,11 whether he has recei\'ed a rentwa l Corn Blig ht Seen \\'ASHINGTON 1UPI) -'fhe govern· ment reports that corn blight has no\.\· been deteclrd in 124 counties in 18 sta te:<. but the nalion·s corn crop is s!lll "in generally good conditio n," ri1ost of the cases. it said. have resulted from volunteer seedlings which sprang up from blighl infested seed dropped last ye ar. ~ • ·• • • · . -.: ·.\'.. 1' r· h • ' ~ -•• '" A gnew's Bag Citing statistics. he estimated the co~t <Jf supporting a drug habit as ranging from $1 0,000 to niore than S36.000 a year. He said · 0 'The financial tQsts of addiction ,"' he said. ""are rnore than $2 bill ion e\"ery year, but these costs can at least be measured. The human costs cannot. American society should not ht required to bear either cost."' To coordinate federal activities in research and education in the area. Nixon announced creation by e.xecutive order or a Special Action Office or Drug Abuse Prevention within the White House struc- 1ure He asked Congre;s to follow up .,.,.·ith legislation that would fo rmally establish this office and broaden its pO\.\'ers. Warmer W eather Sends Thousa11ds To City Beaches An e!llimated 50,000 people sho.,.,·ed up at beaches Wednesday in Huntington Beacb. Guards at lht citY beiieh~ log"gei! 1'.15 rescues frocn riptides ~ning in the four 1o six foot "·aves. State beach guards said they pulled out U people, bul did n't hal"e the riplidC's rep.,irted by !he c·ity guards. Spokesmen for both agencies said Wednesday's crO\.\'ds "·ere some\\·hat unusual for this lime of year. and the city lifeguards are working "'ith about 25 men on duty -10 less than their normal sum- mer strength. The lifeguard summer con- tingent ~'ill go on duty on Sunday. Beach temperatures are in the seven· ties and the water temperature is about 63 degrees. The moderate surf. caused by a south ~"·ell . seemed to be diminishing this morning. but life guards said the riptides probably Y.uuld continue to be a problem. AAA OKs Hot Pants BOSTON CUP!) -The Massachusetts llivision of the American Automobile Association is admiring girls in hot pants and says it"s for safely reasons. "There. \\"as a time when fashion used to be a problem for women drivers,"' the AAA :o:;aid Wed n e ~ 1 a y . ··~111xicoats. 1nidiskirts. bell bottoms. :iipikecl heels - all \\"ere a hazard ro !he driv('r.·· 'rhe AAA said \1·ith hot pants. lx-11 bo!- !-0n1s won "! g('l enlangled around the foot pedal:o:; anrl skirts y,·ill not brcome tr11pped in a door. Los Angeles County Supervisor \\'arren Dorn presented the vire· pre!i· ident with a specially designed golf bag that has a big. bright red· cross on It. Agnew, who is notoriously \\'ell kno,vn for his golf "marks· mansh ip," broke up \vilh laughter at !he pre!ientatlon. 1\gne\\' \va:ii appearing on behalf of Nixon's revenue shar ing 11nd welfare reform progran1s in Los Angeles. ' Datwing Gir ls Governor Won't S top, 'Ranching' SACRAMENTO IAP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan says he .,.,,i ll continue to be a cal· tie owner as long as he c·an afford to - not as a tax shPllC'r bt1l because "I like being a farn1cr ... Heagan. who did not O\Ve any slate personal incorne taxes ln Califo rnia last year, denied that his catlle investments were n1ade as a tax shelter The Saeran1c11to Bee and Nc" \'ork Tin1es reported Sunday that Reagan 1s a rlient of Oppenheimer Industries. Inc , a cattle n1anagement fi rm that orfers u .. set\'ices to lhose ··1n a position Lo benef1~ from the tax intentives. ·· Reagan. 1nterv1e.,.,·ed by rlC'A'Sn1en \\'ednesday after returning fro1n a Ntw England speaking tnp. said he has been in the tattle business for 20 years . . '"\Veil, I still O"'n som!! ·cattle." \lie Republican chief executive said, his voice tinged with impatience, .. As long as I can afford to 1"1n going to contint1e. 1 like being a farmer."' Debbie h1cDonald. 10: J ane Allen. 9: Tina Burbank. 11. and Felicia C'ro\\1der. 10. practice the dance routine -'·By the Beautiful Sea·· - they plan to perform in Fountain Va!ley Founders D;iy an1ateur talent contest next month. Registration for the contest closes Sunday. Talent- ed amateurs cari sign up at the Fountain Valley Con1munity Center. The St1nday ar!lc\c \vas the first specific report on lteagan·s invest1nents, \l'hieh became a source of controversy after he ackn owledged lhflt he had no stale tax liability for 1970 because oi '"business reverses.·' He added that sinc1• becoming governor he had paid $90,000 in stale taxes. Reagan said \Ved nesday, .. I intend to go back to ranching and I don ·1 want to lose out completely. I have invested i,1 land to have a ranch when I finish this Job:· He has purchased a 771-acre ranch in Riverside County. Commu1tit)' Services U11it Sets Open House Tuesclay The Bee reported that OpP'~nheimer had purchased cattle for the Rr~agan Cal· tie Company in ri1ontana, and had registered brands for the Reagan Callie Company in \\o'yoming and Nevada although the Nevada brand had not been reregistered for 1971. Reagnn told a news conference in r.tassachuse11s Tuesday he had nevC'r seen any of the cattle, The Cornmunity Ser\"ices Projert for Fountain Valley v.•il) hold an open house Tuesday ;it the rounlain VallC'y Com· mun!ly Center. 10200 S!P.ter A1·e. Jerry Den1ing, projee1 coordinal\lr. s;iid the community is invited 1o see lhe projt"Ct office and to find out about 1he projC'ct goals. The open house ~·ill 'ie from 4 p.m. lo 7 p.m. The CS P \\'as initia!ly proposed as a Fountain Valley Park Included In Master Plan '!'he 17-acre Fountain Val!ey central recreational complex has movrd a step nrnrer to reality \\"ilh city councilmen in- cluding !he park in the clty's 1naster plan. t:ouncllmen also voted to add an equestrian trail to the master plan during their meeting Tuesday night. Both items .,.,ere reco1nmended by the planning com· mission Planning director Clin!on Sherrod s;ud inclusion or 1he park complex on 1l1f' master plan 1s necessary d !he city is lo be C'l1g1ble ror ~tale or federal aid 1n de,·cloping !he area. delinquency prevention project, Deming said, '"but ll'e i::radual!y expanded it realizing that if cornn1uni ly problems are to be solved <>. total communi!y approach will be nC'Cessary." Deming added that "It \.\'as not fC'l1 that new institulions and agencies are needed, but rather new solutions can be discovert'd through existing resources and instilutions." In addition lo Fountaz11 Vallev. a simila r project is under 1\'ay in PlacCntia. Fountain Vclley·s program, [)(>ming ex· plained. is being funded by a $2flll.OOO grant from !he :\"a1ionaJ Adminis1rat1on for Yout~ ~velo~mcnl a~d Delinq,uenc.v Privention. <1111f staffed by personnel fron1 the C'ounty depCJrlmen!'i of pro- bation. 11e!farf' and he:Llth. Dfon1ing, who is fron1 Ille \Ve!lare Departmrr1!. said port of lhe projert pro- IJOSill Sli'~es lhrll aJI phases Of inl· plrn1<:ntali1>11 of proposf•d projcrls :ire st1bjrct lo <1c·ccp!a11ct•. rejection or rL·v1sior1 hv tht• co111 n1un1l1es involved. Th<· firs"t pha se of !he pro]rt't ll"ill he !o survey 1hC' eo1nmun1ty to locatr al! resourees <1vailablc and di scover existing problems. using communi!y volunteers lo assist in \hr survey. In :irfdit1on. [krn1ng .said the proirct wtll be \\·orking: 11·11h lhC' p<>licr. the sehools ;ind lht' prnbulu•n depart111rnl "in <111 :1t1en1p1 tn .st•ek P.l!l'rna\1\·('.., to the JU\ e11 tle JUSl!ce .syi;tt m . ., I le told the reporttrs at the airport \Vednesdav that he wished thev \.\'O U\d spend as ·mucll lin1e inl"estigaling state legislators who "'haven"! paid any al · tention to the serious business of this session .. as they have probing his finan · cial affairs. From Pnge l EDISON . •• future ser\'ice is that il 'might be al· fected'." Po.,.,·ell also said 1n hi.~ 2l·page brie r that Jn the PJ;C decision of last June- ll'hich ordered construc11on of thr new units. the ron1mi~sion fot1nd thal the pro- bability of system-'A·ide outage ""ithout the new units was "'slight" Po\.\·ell also pointed oul that in tes1imony before the PL'C Edison ad- n1itted th:it electrical dC'n1 :ind 11as 111· creased by ils advertising program and lhal this demand would be rrduced ""i lhout the program. The attorney ~aid he took issue ~'it.h \he pr!ilion for a ne1v hearing filed by the PliC !hat the APCD's interest in the case was "purely parochial" a.nd lha! he li~te-d the support the district has rece1\'Cd from several en- \·lrnnn1enlal orien1rd ~l d !r :igt•nrJC'S. Po"·ell sai d lh.1! if lhr t'1•urt dncs not ordrr a new h1'11rinl! 0) .June 25 the dec ision of 1\lay 26 will stand Fabulous Color! IF YOU CAN 'T CO~tE L'\- Fabulous Shag I CALI, 646--027:'1 FABULOUS PAIGE! . tor an e>.'J>Cr\ <'M'p<l ONLY consultant 1\·ho "'ill 895 come to your homl"' .,. .. ith !lampl ~:. Sq. Y 1rd v.·1\hout any ohligstion tu you: lri· this brilli•nt nylon f•c• shag Ke resfen's cofor wlzerd1 he v• dr11~m ed up 1u~h sparklin g miJ11s es lncredibl, Blu e, AM ei ing White, E.11freord1n1ty Gold •nd 1v1n Coio11 1I Copp1r. F•bulous hes meny of th111 color1. lh1y'r• elt iricr1dible, r1elly. I Febtrlovl comes In exclth•t ar M l'Vt' with mcrtdtlng fr Int• A t ' :r 11' for CM1ly $1l4.95J ' )'our Jouor1tr inl trior dtsigner u:1/I be happy to assi.st 11ou ••• H.J.GARRETT fURNITtJRE PROFESSIONA[ INTERIOR DESIGNUS Open Mon., Th11n. &-~f. Ives. TRT out UVOLYING CHARGE 2215 HARB OR BLVD. COSTA ME SA, CALIF. 6~6-0275 6'6-0276 Tbundlr, Jimt 17, lq71 H OAIL 't PILOT 3 Rockwell · Ball{s at Laguna Niguel 1-,ransfer By BARBARA K.iElBICH Of IM D611'1t l'lltt SI.ti "The last thing we wanl to do is move out of here down· to La~una Niguel.'' a spQkesman for North I A rn e r i c a n J{ockwell's Electronics Group in Anaheim :said \Veclne~day. \\'hile confirming that transfer of part of th~ firn1 ·s Anahe~m operation to llol'kv•ell 's $24 111illion plant in Laguna Niguel still is being studied by top management , he added, ··No one here wants to 1ni'1ve , antl the move will be made only if we are convinced there is .absolutely no way to sell the Laguna Lockheed Buy Would Mea11 TriStar Death LOS ANGELES iAPJ -The chairman of North American Rockwe ll Corp. says his company \\'ould consider taking over Lockheed Aircrart Corp. if the financiaJly troubled aerospace giant goes bankrupt, the Los Angeles Times said today. However , Willard F. llock\\•ell Jr. said the firsl step he would take \vould be to junk the Lockheed LJO!l TriStar jetliner pr ogram. 'fhe TriStar \\'OU!d have to '"go dow n the drain " if North American acquired Lockheed. the Tin1es quoted RockweU as saying in an intervie'>I' Wednesday in Pittsburgh. Pa. l.A>ckheed is asking Congress to ap.- prove a bill that would allow the govern. ment to guarantee up to $250 million in pri\•ate bank loans to help underwrite the LIO! I wide-bodied jet plane. The LIOII program ran into financial problems when IWl!s-Royce Ltd., producer or engines for the jet, went in to receivership. Rockwell said some sort of receivership for Lockheed was inevi table and that even lf !lie company gnt its federal loan guarantee 1nore n1oncv would be needed later to con1plete the ;friStar. '"fhe only way Lockheed could conceiv- ably break even on !he projecl," Rock· v.·ell said, "'is by gelling the entire market for the airbus ·· But he said that would n1ean the !\·lcDonnell Douglas DC!O \\'OU Id have lo go "down the drain." The DCJO and lhe European A300 tri· jets are being aimed at the same airline 1narket as the TriStar. Rock.,..•e\I said if Lockheed "'as fo~ into receivership '"we'd be talking to the receiv('r. If there is any opportunity to make a deal and come out .,~1hole or to make money on it or to do a good job for our stockholders. v.·e'd certainly be remiss if we weren't right there looking at it "'Jn my opinion. the receiver has got to v:ri!e off the LI0\1. It's just plain murder." Rockw(']! said. "That's \\'hat is killing Lockheed ."' The board chairman of Lockheed, Daniel Haughton. has said 1he nation's largest defense conlraclor \\'ill go bank - n1pt if Congress does not approve I.he loan guarantee. Rockwell sairt he didn't think anv com· pany v.·ould be interested in ac(iuiring l.ockhecd and continuing th(' TriStar. ''They'd be damned fools or lhey can't und('rst;.ind figu res or they \\'Ould have to be prepnred lo lose $200 million lo $500 n1illion. ·· he added. The North American ch11irman said he thinks there \\•ill be s01nc mergers in the aern!>p.'.l<'r industry "'and if they are n1J'.ldt· \\c'll be s!and1ng nght in the fron t rQw.'' North American .. in 11crospace firm ba.sed Jn El Segundo. c.:irncd S64.7 million on r;ales nl S2 4 billion la st year and v;a:c; ranked SC\'Clllh in dollar volume of defense contracls. Nigutl facility, or le~ It, e\'tn on a floor.by-floor ba~." However, no solid purcha.R offers have been received shtce flour Corporation broke off its negpl.ielions in April, ac- cording to Rockwell officials, and it ma)' become llnancially necess11ry to move part of the Anah.im operat.ion into the now-famous. ""ziggi.lrat," a million-square- foot , seven-sUlry structure built in the style of a Babylonian temple tov.·er. At tilt time the Niguel plan t was .sl.trted in 1968, North American's Autonetics Division in Anaheim had 27,000 employes, more than enough to fill the new plant. with its 7,500 capacity and still leave the .Allahtltn facilities overflowin g. Since then, cutbacks in the aerospace program have reduced the Anaheim payroll to 12,500 and made it necessary t.o ease out some of the tulldings in th at complex, and place some on lhe market. Despite the cutbacks, the spokesman pointed out WednesJay, the firm is still "very much alive and kicking .'' with sales still up in the neighborhood of half a billion dollars a year. The problem is an ex~ss of space amounting to about J 1f;\ million square feet with the combined Anahe im and Laguna Niguel Jacilities. ,,. Ul'I TmPMI• RECONSTRUCTION OF HUGHES JETLINER BEGINS Officiel1 Report Jet W•1 Struck in Two Are•1 Marine Jet Tail, Wing Slashed Through Liner LOS ANGELES (AP) -The tail and r ight wing of a Marine Corps Phantom jet fighter slashed through a Hughes Air West jetliner in an ai r collision that 1.ook 50 lives. federal investigators said Wednesday. They showed ne\\'smen a mockup of the DC8 being reassembled in a hangar and the places where the tail cul lhrough the cockpit and the \\'ing gashed into the passenger compartment. The sole survivor of the June 6 crash. ;\-1arine 1st Lt. Christopher Schiess. has said ''the airliner hit us." (,eorge R. Baker, \\'ho heads the Na· tional Transportation Safety Board in. vestigation into the crash, said "contact \\'as made bet~·een the nose section of the DC8 in the left front and the right side wing and vertical stabilizer of the f'4." He added. "I'm not saying who hit who, on ly that those areas were apparently the on('S that Impacted together." Askt>d if there were entry and ex it markings indicati ng the ta il and wing of the fighter had cut through lhe airliner, Baker ansv.·ered "yes." Baker also said the transponder aboard the Phantom. electronic gear magnifying a radar blip an aircralt makes, was not In operating coodition al the time of the crash. A spokesman for the El Toro ~1arine Air Station . base of the ill-fated Phantom, said he \\'OUld have "no comment \\'haLo;oever " on the condition of the transponder. Maj. r-.1ichael F'ibich said that regula· tions require thaf transponders must be working on takeoff by all planes using the air facility and that all departures are 1nonitored. "I assume the Ph.,_,1tnm's transponder \\'as \\'Orking when it left El Toro.'' he said. Boy , 6, Begs Food to l\ee1) 6 B1·otl1ers, Sisters Alive 'The NTSB is assembling the DC9 bil by l'>l•isted piece in a har.;;ar in Azusa a few miles from the crash scene 1n mountains east of Los Angeles. About the first 30 to 35 feet have been partly put back in some sort of order on a wooden irame. A couple of feet behind the black radar dome nose a gaping ho le is ripped through tile cockpit are.a, v.<hich has been reassembled from many smaller pieces that came apart in the collision. The cockpit tear is slanted to the left in· licating the Phantom was banking away at the time of impact. r-.11A,.,tl (UPI) -When the milk truck made il~ pre-<la1vn home deliveries. 6- year-old Oscar Henry did the breakfast "shopping'' for his six brothers and sisters. Most days. Oscar would return with two quarts or milk. But on good d.iys, he'd get some bread, ice cream or orange juice that had been delivered by the milkman. - After breakfast, Osc.'lr would start beg- ging and stealing dinner. Tuesday. Dade County sh e r i f f ' s deputies were called to Slsl Street to in- vestlgate reports that some children had broken into a home. When De,Suty Tim Adams arrived, he found an open window and heard some crying. He slipped around to the rear of the howte and found seven bawling children staring at an t:mpty refri gerator. ()scar told Adam't they were searching for food. then took tum to their small co~ lage down ~ street. Adams walked in- aide. took one look and put in an emergcnc~· call for lhe "Safe Street$ Squad.'' the department's social action learn. Sgt. Rollie Biggs of the squad arrived In minules .and learned the children har'n"t ea!en in two days. Oscar. v.·ho just t ur ":i 6. \\'AS hend or the household. Tiit. Clth. r children ranged in age from fl to 1- yenr-old twin girl3 whose bloated slomachs ~nd listless behavior told Biggs they "'·ere suffering from riialnutrlHon. Oscar said their father had ck!scrted them "a long time ago,'' and thei r mother often disappeared for two and three days at a time. The cottage, Bi~s said, was almost barren of furniture and was covered with filth. One room was blocked by a four. foot pile of soiled clothes. The chilcire.n slept on two urine-soaked mattresses. The collage had no elec- 1.ricity. no gas and the only food in the place was three .i;ticks of rancid butler in a roach-infesled refrigerator. Btggs sent a deputy to a nearby grocery and fed the kids. "It was like a lransfll1ion the way those twins sucked the milk out of the bottle.'' ~iggs said. The year-0ld twins -Cecile and Cynthia -were rushed lo the county hospilal'1 emergency room, treated for severe malnutrition and were admiUtd t.o nearby Mount Sinai Hospital. They weighed only seven and eight pounds after being fed, "and looked like they \\'ere only two or three months old," a nurse s-aid. She added normal weight for onc-year~lds is 20 lo 25 pounds. A social v.·orkt.r located 26-year-0 ld Mrs. Michele Henry Wednesday and atie was booked at C.ounty Jail on charges of child neglect 8nd conlribu\lng to the dependency of children -mlsdemeanor5 punl~~ble by 1 total of 18 monlhs in jail and a fine of 11,500. further back in the shell a long tear goes through the passenger compartment at about 1he floor level. cutting through the baggage area underneath i;;lanting up to within a foot or so of the fifth passenger window. Laying 15 feet in front (lf the airliner is the single piece of the fighter recovered !O far, a 4 or 5 foot fire-blackt:ned hu nk of its right wing. Second Victim Of Blast Dies The second person injured In a toy fac· tory e:1plosion in Santa Ana last Friday died early this morning 1t Orange County Medic81 Center. Unda Dyer, 19, of 2.'113 Anahurst Place, Santa Ana. daughter of Mrs. Billy J, Dyer, died of burn.'I over 80 percent of her body, the coroner's office reported. Last Fri.day Mrs. Margaret Delfin. 41 . of 1006 N. English SI .. Santa Ana , died Qf burns received in the snme epxlosion ai L. M. Cox Manufacturing C.o., 150$ E. Warner Ave. Six other persons were injured. none seriously, when aolid fuel used In model rockets exploded, firemen reported. Alao complicallr.g any contemplated move tnto the Niguel plant would be Lhe problem or v.·hat part of the Anaheim operation to move . The Niguel facility is not quite large enough to house the !,argest division now in Anaheim. the Aerospace and l\1arine Products Division tAl\t PD) with 8,300 emp!oyes. If only part nf it were moved, it would be ne~ssary lo select from manufac- turing. engineet111g, testing a n d 1narketing functions , each with several parts or its own. '"1'here are a multitude of com- binations, but none \'Cr)' simple," said one executive. OU1cr sections or the Anaheim opera- tion are housed in speclaJly designed buildings housing delicate equipment and would not take kindly to movlng. Another consideration would be the fate of the firm 's minority hiring and training program und the lack or low-<:ost housing in !he Laguna Niguel area. In comf'liancc-.vlth reql'irements for flnns handling governn1ent t'Onlracts, North American has an active program for hiring lra ining minority emp\oyes . including Mexica n-Americans, blacks, In- dians and Orientals, and some executives of the firm envision problems in this area If a move 118$ t.o be made to South Orange County. The company would be more thin ha~ py to lease out the ziggurat in sections, ooe official said, pointing out that there could be four separate entrances with separate parking for each, making the building suitable for several independent operations. Jt could be used for any type of light manufacturing -or even house a large hospital or educational institution, it was suggested. The only use excepted would be heavy manufacturing -all other potential tenants will be welcome. Space Cooperation Near? SP.'\CE CENTER , Houston (A Pl - Soviet and U S. space officials v.•ill begin negotiations here next l\1onday toward establishing docking systems v.·hich v.·ould permit spacecraft from the two nations to link up in orbit, the Manned Spacecraft Center said today. The announce111ent 52.id that scientists and engineers froin the Soviet Union will meet v.·lth American counterparts in three working groups at the. Manned Spacecraft Center in an effort to develop compatibh• spacecraft docking systems. Offic ials said .... ·orking gro:.ip T v.·ill :issure compatability 1n rendezvous and doc king; working group II will de velop compatible radiu guldMce and optical systems and working group III \\'ill develop docking assemblies. The meetings are expected to last five days . Dr. Robert R. Gilruth, director or the fl-1anned Spacecraf1 Center, will head the American teams. The 20-man Soviet delegation will be headed by Igor P. Ru- 1nyantsev of the Council on International Cooperation in Space Research and the US<' of Space of the Soviet Academy of Sciences. The delegation v.ill include cosmonaut Vitally I. Sevastianov. The American and Soviet space of· ficials reached an agreement last October which included a schedule for joint efforts in creating compatible rendezvous and docking systems. Once compe..tible systems .a r ~ developed, it will be possible for astronauts Jn distress in earth orbit lo be rescued in space by either nation. This currently is not possible bocause of dif· ft'rcn ce in spacecraft systems. Special plants at special prices. Penneys Garden Shop. A 77" ~· Speclol buy. ?;,-. First l ady Marigold. • An early, compact plant with clear, yellow double blooms, long cutting stems. c S pecial price on begonia or dahlia plants growing in 4" pols. Buy several of each hardy, colorful variety while they're specially priced. 129 Pl1ntorMIL 2 cu. fl Give new pla nts and planting areas the proper soil. if ~\ J• \' ff ,\ I i \ '/ \ ,i~ '~ 44~ tray Bedding plant special. Vinca rosea is the name tor these lovely little periwinkles that are hardy, easy to grow. 199 Penne>"' All Purpose Fertilizer 1or healthy g ardens. 20 lb. bag. l\nnelft The values are here fNefY da\•. Charge it at these Pe nney stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Center. 111 Terrific price on hanging baskets planted with your choice of fuchsias or coleus for marvelous color effects. 7" size. as~ Your choice gl Gardenia or Star Jasmine. 1 gal. container. Choose Mystery or Vietchi varieties of the fragrant gardenia: Star Jasmine with its shower or tiny fragrant flowers. Speci.ally plioed. 239 Unlv~rolly COll1POIL Add humus to soil with lhfa highly organic compost 5 cu. rt. bog. • • • • I ' I I 4 OAllY PILOT Reds Make Big Attacl{ Below DMZ SAIGON (UPI\ -A battalion of North Vietnameu troop.s using flame lhrov.·ers, machine guns ahd rocket grenades at~ tacked a company of South Vietnamese marines just below the Demililarlud Zone (DMZ) today. 'l11e oulnumbered Saigon government soldiers killed 63 or the attackers. Communiques from Phnom Penh said North Vietnan1ese gunners kept up mortar and rocket barrages on the eastern edge of the capital. The firing could be heard in downtown Phoon1 Penh. Cambodian units fought back from ti\'er gunboats and from the air. The South Vietnamese command said the North Vietnamese battalion of some 600 troops att.acked the South Vietnamese company numbering 160 men in hilly jungles 12 miles northeast of the aban· doned Khe Sanh Base and six miles south of the DMZ. 1'he Saigon government unit called in artillery and air strikes in driving off the a ltack. The South Vietnamese casualties wtre described as light. Mil itary sources sa id nine of the m arines were killed and aeven •ounded. The Marines captured fou r machine guns, seven rocket launchers, a flame thro .... ·er and 18 rJnes afler the Com· munists were driven off. The South Vietnamese command said Communist forces shelled three South Vietnamese milit.ary positions and tv.•o district towns Wednesday night and early today in a string of allacks running from the coastal lowlands to ju.st .six miles northeast of Saigon. The U.S. command reJX>(ted meanwhile that 25 Americans were killed in the Indochina war last week, up six from the previous week, American wounded were listed as 199, a drop from 261 the week before. ft brought to 45,275 the nun1ber of American servicemen killed in the \\'ar since Jan. I, 1961. A total of 303 ,123 have been wounded. The fighting in the a rea just east of P hnom Penh was the 17th day of the bat- tle in marshlands leading to the capital's eastern outskirts. A Division of North Vietnamese troops has been trying since June l to push Cambodian fo rces from the area east of Phnom Penh in order to gain a strategic foothold within sight and rocket range of t he capital. The Communists al.so have sel up mortars to the oorth and northwest of the city. lh11f1d11, JLaM 17, t9n .a ••• "·' c::cJPHI •' . . -+--.• ) .; IPfl'INES · • •euAM "'..___ I :. . ·.. , --· -=----- U.S., JAPANESE OFF ICI ALS SIGN HISTOR IC TREATY ON OKINA WA Actual Takeover of Island by Japa n W ill Wait on Ratification Tl1ief Sa ys Sec1·et Pape1·s Included in Ai1·port Loot WASH !NGTON (UPI) -A confessed thief has told a Senate Committee his gang's ·Joot from raids on mailbags al major airports included top secret government documents from the Arn1y, CIA and FBI. Robert F. Cudak. a feder<il penitentiary inmate who appeared before the Senate Investigations subcommittee \1Jednesd11.y to tell about his part in the theft of $100 million in securities and other valuables, said he read the secret documents because "curiosity got the better of me." One or the documents, stamped "top secret," dealt with land-to-air ballistic miSllile plara and another from the FBI with "Cuban nationalists in t.1iami ," CUdak said. "And these could easily have been sold to the New York Times, foreign agents or anyone else?" asked Sen. Charles H. Percy. (R-111.) "Sure," Cudak replied. "There v.·as a lot of stuff in then1,' · But Cudak said he either burned the papers or "threw them in the \Vater" after reading them because ··1 was afraid of it." Cudak, 29, said lie came across secret papers "on about 20 occasions" v.·hite participating in !hefts from mailbags. He .said the document on missiles came from an Air Force mailbag he stole at New York's Kennedy International Airport. Cudak is now serving a seven-year sentence for mail theft. He was granted immunity from further prosecution to testify before the subcommittee, which is probing underworld control of a growing stolen securities racket. He was guarded by four burly U.S. marshals in plainclothes as he spoke. The witness said he worked with nearly three dozen other persons -many or th'm syndicate criminals -to steal valuables from 17 airports throughout the nation between 1966 and last year. ,, Chile Ass assi11 Sia ys Officers, Blows Self Up SANTIAGO, Chile f APl With ho1nemade ~renades strapped to his body. a leftist wanted for the assassina· lion of Chile's former vice president machine-gunned two detectives at their headquarters Wednesday a nd then ble\'I himself up. seriously wounding a third detective. * * * Senate Effort Fails Police said Heriberto Salazar, 45, \\'as one of three members of the extremist Organized Vanguard of the People who were accused of killing Edmundo Perez Zujovic last week. The others were Ronald Rivera Calderon, 25, killed by police Sunday, and his brother Arturo, 20. who killed himself rather than surrender. Police said Salazar went in the front door of the downtown headquarters of the plainclothes police. Chile's equivalent of the FBI. whipped out a submachine gun and fired a burst that killed t.,..·o detec- tives. Then he ran back toward the en· trance ;incl set off the grenades, killing himself a11d wounding a detective nearby. Viet Fund Cutoff Bill Heads for House Vote Riot police cordoned off the ;irca. believing !here might be more terrorists, but a seareh sho,,.,1ed Salazar was alone. Another terrorist ;it\ack was reported earlier in the day against a plainclothes police officer in the country's interior. WASHlNGTON (AP) -An amendment to cut off money for the Vietnam war beaded for a House vote today, given less chance or passage than a tougher move that failed in the Senate Wednesday. Sponsors estimaled 150 of 170 of the 4J.4 Hou.se members v1ould vote for the Nedzi- Whalen amendn1ent to prohibit spending for \\"ar \\'Capons after Dec . 31. 1971. Wednesday's Senate votes against two amendments Iha! \\Olllrl hll\'e cut off funds at year's end for al! L'.S. operations 1n Indochina represented ::i. 1najor victory for the Ni xon adm1n1strat1on But even in losing. the idea of selling a firm date for ending American fighting in Southeast Asia picked up five votes over a similar measure defeated nine n1on1hs ago. It was President Nixon's second major foreign.policy triumph in the Senate within a month. F'our weeks a110, senators rejected proposalfl lo fo rce withdrawal of up to 50 percent of American troops sta- t ioned in Europe. In Wednesday's first vote. the Senate turned aside a last-minute substitule by freshman Sen. Lawton ?-.I. Chiles Jr. (0. Fla.), to set a June 1. 1972, deadline con- lingent on North Vielnam's release of all U.S. prisoners 60 days earlier. The vote \'las 52 lo 4~. Then. by a counl of 55 to ~2. the Senate rejected the original amendment by Sens. t.1ark 0. Hatfield (R-Ore.). and George S. r.tcGovern ID.S.D.) .. ror a Dec :11 . 1!171 fund cutoff. This would have provided a possible 60-day extension should ~orth Vietnam fail to agree promptly to release U.S. prisoners. Last year. the Senate rejected a similar Jlatf1eld-~1cGovern amendment 55 to 39. Senators \\'ho voted against that amendment last yea r bu1 backed 1h(' Chiles amendment \\'edncsday included Sens. Milton R. Young iR-N.0.). ser11or GOP merpher of the Appropriations Com- m ittee, Charles Percy i H·lll.l. Roberl Packwood ! R-Ore.). Ted Stevens 1 R- Alaska). and B. Everett Jordl'ln <O-N .C. I. Sen. Clinton P. Anderson (D·N .M.), ab- sent and unrecorded a year l'lgo, backed the Chiles amendment. PackwoOO and Stevens voled against the Hatficld- McGovern amendment Wednesday. 1fi.,k• Tornado·es Buffet States 2 Persons Seriously Hurt in North Carolina ...... \,.J Coutu HI/¥ W'l•hi ... IOdlY lltfl! "lrlltot. wl"CI• llloh1 _,.., ...,..111,.. 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D•lt•n• Nt"' Yor~ 11'11 ... ~~""0' ll'l!ill!ll!l~ll!I .....,., ll'l"'B~tOll l'o•ll•r><I "•old Cltv ··~ s .... ,,..""~ SI l.w " $.on O•-$••Htt $POUnt Hlt h Low l"rK. " ,, 15 65 ~ . n •' ... ,. . . " ,, J~ ., .. . " " ~ " ~ 11 n .:it ll 61 " ~ " " II 71 IOI 11 " ~ .. " ~ n " . ~ " •• 71 " . !IJ ,. f~ JI 1(19 JJ 71 '' .. . ... IO ~· eJ . .. 1(1(1 ,, . ~ 11 ~! .. .. .. " I IJ ,, u " I I I Ol{inawa Pact Signed Treaty Reached on TV; Japan Youths Riot .... TOKYO (UPI) -The Uni~ States and Japan signed a hilitoric treaty via transpacific saleUlt.e television today to r eturn the v.estern Pacific fortress island of Okinawa to Japanese rule after a quarter cenlury cf American occupation since World War IL While leftist Japanese students fought. sporadic baltles with police in Tokyu streets, Foreign Minister Kiichi Aichi in Tokyo and sccret~ry of State William P. Rogers in Washington signed identical documenls to end U.S. rule o~ the island. The two officials faced each other on televisioo screens in the first treaty sign· ing by satellite transmissioo in history. Rogers read a statement by President Nixon that the signing of the treaty enables the United States and Japan "to \\'ork together in peace for the continued progress of our own tY.'O countries and for thal of the entire world." Thousands of Japanese 1tuden!JI, Com· mW'lists and Sociali1Us demonstrated throughout the nation a.gainat the treaty terms which will permit the United States to rnaintain millt.ry bdses on Okinawa after the island returns to Japanese rule. Police and students fought with teargas shells and Molot.ov cocktaib in several places in Tokyo. On Okinawa its,lf.' th<lusands of youthful demonstrators took to the streets of Naha , the capital, and violence broke out twice. Onct; a group of aboul I.000 hurled rocks and bottles at riot police and police made nwnerous arrests. Later at Naha Main Police Station. the demonstrators again threw rocks and bottles. Chobyo Yara, chief executive of the loca l government, boycotted the signing ceremony .in Tokyo. Both he and the demonstrators specifically objected to the continued presence of American military bases and what they considered the vague under1tand1ng over the removal of nuc~ar weapons, Under the treaty and allied documents, the United Stales said it will retain 88 military bases on Okinawa and return 46 installations to Japan. The agreement said that Japan will take possession of the island two months after raWication is completed by the U.S. Senale and the Japanese Diet (parlia· ment). No specific date was mentioned, but the United States is pledged to return the island chain lo Japan in 1972. The Okinawa treaty implies that nuclear v.·eapons \\'ill be removed from the island as demanded by the Japanese Communists and Socialists. but it fails to spell out the withdrawal specifically. 3 BIG DAYS --· ---· "NEW" WATER WIGGLE C.....!J-1/,l.1.1•.1..,, .. .......... _-..i.. ... @ IPOClll W"ll1.il .",'•" ~)m,~l.;,rt, TOY HOU SE-Cost• Mes• 223 East 17th Sfrfff EMiiy M t 1'11-& '"· "11 , 545454 '""'for~.,.. ttre familv - two to ••0~1 pic,.,..s! A IOfor, •J1c.ili119 ~· PROFESSIONAL FRISBEE Afnerica'1 lo~Qrol• gam• ol catch, Th;s frisbee Ot • pre<:ilion modf'\. PITCH BACK I TOY HOUSE-N•wpo•I llHch 3442 VI• L ldo I TOY WORLD-H•rbor Center 2l00 N. H•rbor EMiiy t1»J1• 67U.S!O "4111""'"'"' lM.I ;.;:;;,;•I. IMJ '""· N--S •• ' ' --- Newport Beaeh 'EDITION Today's Fbml N.V'. Stoen VOL 64, NO. 14-4 , 3 SECTION S, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1q71 TEN CENTS Drug Offensive Told DAILY "ILQT S!1U P~otl McNALLY BAND PLAYS COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES George Kn ig hts (b ark Gl asses) Leads Unique Musical Group Success Story 35 Graduate at Mc Nally Sc hool By GEORGE LEIDAL or "" ""'"' Pri.1 ti.ff The student graduation Spc!akers onct were potential dropouts. The com- mencement addresses \\'ere delivered by two probation department officers. The school band played "Close to You:· "I Bel ieve·· and ''1\merica l he Beautiful.·· The day wa s, like all graduation days, imporlan\. But for 35 graduates of Mc:Nal!y Con- tinuation School in Cost;i Mcsri, all of whom took advantage of an altrrnativc lo dropping out, tnday was especially im- portant. Principal Jack C. Coleman recognized the effoNs made by graduates of the con~ tinuation high school program and pre.~ented them diplomas. Richard Lyons, one of two studenl speakers, told the student body during the outdoor ttrcn11Jny, '\\'t: art: graduating There is nn rc.1 so n lhe re sl of you ca n·t dn 1l ·· Lyo ns, like his cnun!crpart student ~peakcr, th11nkcrl the principal and teacher~ ill ~lc!':a!ly "for helping me get my diploma ·· Ua v.n Cro1vlcy. no11ng that shl' at OM time thoUJ?hl she'd never be gradu.:it1ng. leaned comfortably againsl a pnst as she faced lhe group nf students, parent.s and fr iends. ''If it weren 't [or i\tlcNally I wouldn 't be • graduating .. , and as for the need for a diploma, well. what else can I say." Mrs. Kathy Geyer and Ron Laurse n were the two probation department of- ficers addressing the commencement au- dience. They credited !.he efforts of the student s themselves for working to ward a diploma. "Today 's graduate s are proof of the success of schools like McNa!ly,'' Laursen said. Early graduate Susan Myers W(IS nol present to receive her Governor·s Scholarship :iward. Teacher George Knights !ed the school band. McNally is the only con!inualion school in the sta te having a sc hool hand, a spokesman for the Nc1vport-~!esa school district pointed out. The McNal!y students graduating today are · Michael F. Aichlmayr, fred and John Ande rsen, 1\-leriam Brassel, Peggy Ann Contreros. Dawn Cro..,,ley. ri.l!ndy Cummins. Gina d1 Donato, Karen Faivre, Danielle Favre- Fclix. Don Gomache. Jack Hamilton , Kim Harryman, Sue He U, t.llke Hofer. Robin Holloman, Nan lrv,.in. Sparky Kolar. Richard Lyons. Doug Martin . Chris ~linear, Steve Minkcn, Terry ~1ulkey, Judy Mann , Mike Popov . Mike Rote, Susan Stuart, Debbie Stuvick, Kathy Surp rena nt. Pat Wheeler. Geoff Willson. Debby Thompson, Herb Bunker and Gordon Walck. Edison P1·ospectus Sent To State Supreme Court A pro spectus of the Southern Californ ia Edison Company, d.:ited Apnl 1, 1971, on the l!\sue of three million shares of stock ls being delivered to stale Supreme Court offices in Uis Angeles today. Deputy Orange Count y Counsel John Powell sa id this morning he was al- tachinjt Jhe prospectus to his brief riled in ansv.·er to the company's petition for a new hearing on expansion of its Hun- Uni;:ton Beach plan t. Pov.·ell explained that he objected to the ''al<1rmist and Inflammator y 1tatemenls'' made by the company in its court petition. ln it."i petition. Edison asked the-court m review the decision of May 26 which found that the company required authorization bolh fr(lm the Orange Coun- ty Air PolluUon Conlrol District and the Californ ia Public Utlllti~ C<lmmission to expand thf Huntington Reach generating stallon. "If the decision is allowed to !\land RS California law lt may well 1pe.l\ catast rophe for Califnrnia J')Ubllc util ity regula!lon and virtually condemn large i;eRn1enL~ of the state. and . perhaps el~ewhrre, to power shortages. hrown out., or even blackouls In the foreseea blt future," the Edi'.'lon pet11lon said. 111 his i;.nmments tn the court r owPll said, "I btllev' there is a remarkable and enlig htr:nin g C-Ontrast betwten the Edison prediction of i m m i n e n t catastrophe srt forth in it.5 petition and in its discussion of the same subject mattr:r in the prosptclus." Pov.·ell noted that in the prospectus lhat although Edi.son states that air pollution requirements we.re causing delays In power plant construction and increasing costs the "most that Edison predict! on future service i..tl that it 'might be af. fected '." Powell also said In his 21-page brief that in the PUC dec:lsion of last June which ordered construction of the new units, the ·commission found that the pro- bability or sys-tern-wide out.age wllhout the new units was "slight.'' Powell also pointed out that in testimony-before the PUC Edison ad- mitted that electrical demand was tn- C're.ased by its advertising program and that this d'msnd would be reduced without the program. The a.ltorney said he took issue with lhe petition for a nefl' hearing filed by the PUC tha t the APCD'1 interest In lhe ca1e was "purely parochial" 11nd th111 he listed the ll!upport the district ha~ ret:eived from several en- vironmr.nl:a l oriented state 11gencies. Powelt said that If the cou rt does nnl order a new hearing by .June 25 the decision or May 26 will s~nd. I Nixon Calls Narcotics 'Public Enemy No. 1' WASHI NGTON (AP) -President Nix- on declared drug abuse '•·pub lic enemy No. I " today and called for a new all-out offensive to ~~habilitate drug victims while pushing efforts wor!dv.·ide to cut off the illicit narcotics supply. Nixon 's long-awaited special message lo Congress asked for an extra $l fl5 rnillion lo "tighten the noose around lhe necks of drug peddlers and thereby loosen the noose around the necks of drug users." Grad Night Dawn Flights Discontinued Five "grad night " charter flights from Orange County Airport scheduled this weekend will not depart before 7 a.m , Air Califo rnia president Robe rt Clifford promised todGj'. Counly Airport Director Robert 13 rcsna- 11an said \.Vednesday there ll'Ou!d be no mnre of them next year, either. 1\ series of da\\'n takroffs Salurd ay niorning drew a for1nal protes1 hy the Ne"'port Beach Ci!y Council ~1onrlay niJ:?h!. The 6 a .m. nighL<; v.·ere returnin~ Nnrthcm California high school seniors home after a night at Disneyland Clifford said the "grad night'' charters are a once-a-year occasion. "it's 11 program Air California helped develop with man y northern California communities to provide planned and chaperoned entertainment for the young. sters,'' he said. Clifford said the council might not know that his airline "regularly turns down charter business -if it means e.1ttler arrivals or departures at Orange County between I l p.m. and 7 a.m. ·· Scheduled jet takCQff s are prohibited during those hours. ~fany residents thought all except emergency Oights were prohibited, too. Clifford sajd the airline diverts ''base· ball and other land charters ... during these hou rs .. , to Los Angeles Inter- nali nnal Airport and buses the passen- gers to Orange County·· Clifford pointed out last v.·eekenrl 's Oighls took oH to lhf' north. nver Tusl tn. ,.;ewport Beach councilmen noted lhal fact Monday. and said no doubt the Tus- tin city council v.·111 also be bringing up the maltl"r. Even though they took off !he othrr \VllY. they still woke up 2,000 Newport Reach residenls. 1><11d Councilman ~1ilan Dostal. Tire Blows Out On County Plane A tire blew out on Air Cal Flight 103 lo San Francisco during takeoff this morn- ing at Orange County Airport. No one wu injured and I.he plane "'as not damaged. Air Cal officials said the nose wheel blew v.•hile the jetliner was still on the runwa y, so the pilol coasted to a stop, then ta 'ICied back to the boarding area where Lhe tire was changed. The flight then took off in normal fashion, airport officials sa.ld. Calling the use of drugs by American ser\'1ce n1en in V 1 et n a m ''especially disheartening," the President announced immediate establishment of e rehabilita· lion program for add icted servicemen being returned from the war zone . And he asked Congress lo give the Pentagon authority to kee p uniformed personnel in service beyond normal discharge dates if they are addicts. After a two-year 111~li ng with con· grcssional leaders of both parties, Nixon NY Times Furor announced creatio n of a ne\\' White Hoose organization to coordina te the effort. He named to head it Dr. Jerome H. Jaffe. 37- year-<ild expert who pioneered in the fiel d of heroi n addiction and now heads ll!inois' drug abuse program . Nixon said he considers th is problem "so urgent thal it cannot be scattered throu~h government and must be coordinated in one r~sponsible authority" reporting directly lo the President. He said the nine government agencies Former Pentagon AUle Linked to Viet Papers WAS HE THE SOURCE? MIT's Danial Ell1berg Lifegiutrds Save 43 as 55 ,000 Flo ck to Beach Hol inl and v.•eather pushed 55,000 peo- ple down to the beaches \Vednesday. and Newport Beach lifeguards had lo pull 43 of them from the heavy surf. Lifeguards said there were no spec- tacular rescues. but a lot of swimmer!' found themselves caught in tough rip tides which followed the five foot \CJ eight fool surf ~lore lhan JOO swimmf'rs and surfers had lo be w11rne<I about the riptide con- ditions, anot.her 22 were given firsl aid lrealmenl for burns. cuts and other in- juries, and seven chlldren lost their mothers. Twenty-three lifeguards were on duly Sunday, with more watch towers st:t up each day. A full summer crew starts patroling the beaches Saturday. Air temperature al the beach was 68 degrees and the water temperature was &.1 degrees, warm for !his ti me of year, lifegua rds said. A crov.·d of 70,000 sunbathers, swim- mers and surfers was expected to strel.ch along Newport Beach's 6.4 miles of sa nd today. NEW YORK <AP \ -A former New York Times reporter said Wednesday night that the secret Penti gon report on the Vietnam was was given to the Times by Daniel El!sberg, a former Defense Department emp!oye now a senior research associate al ?-.tassachusetls Institute of Technology. Sidnry Zion. the former Timcsman and former deputy U.S. attorney in New Jersey, named E\lsberg in an interview broadcast locally over WMCA radio. Zion refused to say where he got the in- formal ion, but said he considered his sources .. very impeccable." The Times had no comment on Zion's atat.ements. ~1eanwhile, a federal judge reserved decision loday on 1 JOVetrunent r~uest to tnspect. ®cuments on whteh the New York Times based articles on the &ecret Pentagon study of U.S. lnvqlvement in Vietnam. But he said he would not allow a fishing expedition for other material the Times may possess. U.S. District Court Judge Murray I. Gurfein said he was limiting the government's disrovery motion only to those documents received by the Times from the source of the materials used in lhe three articles published so far. "I'm not tolerating any fishing ex- pedition into the files or any newspaper," Gurfein said. The government also seeks to bar the Times from resuming IU: series of three articles about the Vietruim sludy. It moved on \llednesday. under discovery proced ures. to inspect the documents already alluded to by the Times and "olher classified documents" it believed to be in the Times' possession. On Sunday. the Times began publishing excerpts from the 47-volume Pentagon study entitled "History of United States Decision ~1ak1ng Process on Vielilam Pnlicy ." After the third ins tallment in the series w;is published. the government c:skcd a fede ral court in New York to block further publication. Under a restraining order in pffect until Saturday, the Tln1es has run no more cnpy. The ense is to be argued F'riday The ~overnmcnt has launched an in· ves tigatlon into lhe leak. Zinn said he attempted but failed to reach Ellsberg at his Cambridge address all Wednesday afternoon. In Cambridge. no one was at the Ellsberg home near Harvard Square to- day. but mall addressed lo Daniel and Patricia Ellsberg was piling up at the door. No one answered the telephone. Zion said Ellsberg. "at a young age got a very hot position at the Defense Department working in so mething called the international security aff airs division under John McNaughton." He said Ellsberg turned dovi sh on the (See T™F.S, Page ZJ Jumps $10,0IJO Bail Hot Dog Fugitive Sought A nationwide hunt is on today for a Newport Beach man who forfeited his SI0,000 bail in a Las Vegas court ralhtr than be returned to Or~e County to face charges that he co · d 150 local In- vestors oot of more than1 I million. Gregory Pavlov. 4.1. of 398 22nd St, fail ed to show up June 14 for the ex- tPf!dition hearing ordered by a Clark COunty Court judge. Just six week."i e11rl\er the same judge had reduced the Newport man 's bail from $75.000 to 110.000. PavloV';" who C)pcrated the ~11do. Inc. en~rise from offices in Costa Mesa. ls aCcused or persuading tM Oranst. Cou nty lnvestoni -most of them in the Oranae Coasl area -to part with a total of more I.ban $1 million for shares in hi.a hot doc machine 1yndlcate. lnvesllgatora claim Pavlov falsely represented a yam that he. was about to put on the producUon line a michine that would hold hot dog11 in refrigeration until the purchtlser deposited the cost of the meal In the slot. Then. wilnei;ses told the Orange County Grand Jury, Pavlov told them that the mactilrMl"s r1dl.ant ht!nt un it would go into action 11nd the purcha ser would have A freshly cooked hot dog on a crisp, white n~pkln within llCCondi; -with mustard. The Crand Jury indicted Pavlov on charges nf fr8ud, telling stock without a permit and grand theft. Pavlov was ar· rested In Artzona. 1klpped bail ol 11,000 there-. and was 11Ubsequently a1Te1ted In Nevada where hr: again !ailed to show for the extradition hearing. "We've got a good Idea where to look fnr him." Deputy District Attorney Al Novick said Wednesday. "But I'd rather not go Into deta ils at lhls time." A Wltnes,, told the Gr11nd Jury th11t Pavlov displayed a prototype or his hot dog ma chine to potential Inve stors and Indicated that he had 10 more ln the back or the l)howtoom. • "All they werr wc::re false fronts on Coke machines . the witness 1ald. "He never at a,ny time had a. machiM that could economically be manufactured tven U Jt were electronically feaalble.'' that deal with rehalillitation, research and education in thi! field must pull together and "oot at cros!·J'.lUf'POltl." While putting special emphasis on deal- ing with drug abuse in the service1, Nix- on said the problem was there ''before Vietnam and will continue after the war in Vietnam . It will not pass with the passing of the wa r in Vietnam." Actually, Nixon acknowledged more than two weeks ago that GI drug ad- ~See DRUGS, Page Z) FAA Supports Flight Paths For Copters By L. PETER KRIEG 01 lfMI D•flY ,.1191 11111 A spokesman for the Federal Aviation Adm inistration today backed up the claim by Lhe f.1arines that they can't raise their helicopter flight path in bad weather. Don Meier, a tower supervisor at Or- ange County Airport, confirmed a con· tention by Col. Kenneth Dykes, assistant ch ief of staff al El Toro Mar ine Corps Air Station that the 600-m:> foot (mea n sea level) flight path used by helkopters at the Santa Ana air station during bad weather could not be raised. Newport Beach" city councilmen Mon- day night approved a t.entalive map for Spyglass Hill , a 120-lot tract to be built on property just purchased by the Irvine Company from Pacific View Memorial Park. Portions of the 45--acre pa rcel are more than 500 feet above sea level. The rooftops of Mme homes built UM!ra would · be less lhan 100 feet under the fli~t path, Mayor Ed Hirlh . on th! losing side of a 4-3 vote. called Ille condition "unsafe." Councilman Donald Mcinnl.1 however. con.tendt:d the Marines could' fl y their helicopters higher. Bu t Meier said fixed-wing a!rq~ft OJ> proa ching Orange County AirJK!ft use thJs area as part of their southerlt ap- proach at 1.300 feet. . And he ~Jnted out that FAA re1ula- 11ons require a 500-foot clearance be-- tw~en fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters using visual flight rules (VFR) In In- clement weather. . Meier .and Robert Bresnahan, county .siroorl admi nistrator. said it woold be "d1ff1cult. at best.'' tc raise the night p~tterns of general aviation using the aJrPOrl. ~feier said it wciuJd force aircraft to aporoach the airport al loo high an alti· tude . makin.ll' landings far too tough . "~fost of the pla nes here are flown by student pilots," he said, e:tpla inin1r an- nther reason why the flight patterns are keo1 low. "There are 11 nu rnber of factors alto- ~ether,"' he expla ined, saying another one IS thr presence of Marine jets al El Toro. "We've .ll'OI to stay out of their air space. too," he said. 'M ine Chief Warned . WASHINGTON (AP) -A federal judge today ordered United Mine Worker1 Presidr:nt W. A. "Tony'' Boyle into court ?vlonday unless some 50.000 striking miners in six st.ales re-tum to work by then. "If these men aren't back at work. I want you back in here at 9:30 Monday morning." U.S. District Judge Gerhard GeseU told union attorney Paul Connolly. Coan Weather JU!t a 1mld&e cooler tocUiy and tomorrow along the Southland with highs rangfni ·from ., lo 75 and Iowa S3 to llO. Huy llUDSb:ine in the aft.e-mOOftl wU.h tJie lllUll low -and f0f1n ti» .. r1y ....... ing hours. · - INSIDE ·TODA;Y U.S. and Japan tlgn trta.tu vie &attllitt' TV to retum Okinoaorti to Japo.neJt ru~. See rtorv1 Page 4. -~ ...... • -, ... !. ...... • Mu,...,_,, • C1Ukt•lt • --.. Cllffl:lllt Ut ' °' ..... ,...., ' Ci.ulllllf ..... ..... -• --. • -..... ·--• -·--DMtfl IM!lcft • ,_ M •dttetl .. ,._ • -1 .. lt . ..,, ..... , ... u -• ·-.. ., -·· , .. n ....._ " ·--... ..._ .. ·--... I ) • • ~ DA.IL Y Pl_L_or ___ N . Showdown Nears . Democrats Push For Budget Vote SACRAt\tE~'TO (AP) -Assembly Democratic leaders were pres.sing today for a shov:dov•n vote on a $7.06 billion \'ersion of Gov. Reagan 's 1971·72 state budgeL But Republicans hinted they might try to block passage of the spending plan un· ttl Dt'mocratJ cut back on $34a million in Judge Vetoes Ex-broker's License Bid A move by a Corona de! Mar man to regain the real estate broker's license he lost wh en he embezzled an estimated S'ltl,000 from an elderly Pasadena woman was defeated today in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Robert Corfman rejected the plea of J ohn Wilks, 41 , of 3200 Ocean Boulevard for reduction of his felony conviction to misdemeanor Je\'el after hearing arguments against the motion by Deputy District Attorney Jay ~foseley and attorney Richard Newell. conserva- tor of the victim's estate. "All this man ever got was si:s: months in jail and fi ve yea rs' probation for this major crime," l\1oseley said. ''Only $7 .000 in cash has been recovered and the prospects of our getting very much for the desert land he holds setm pretty poor.'' It w;is argued for Wilks that he is now on welfare and that he has pledged his tot.al assets at the disposal of attorneys handling the financial affairs of Mrs. Hate! Grant King, 77, of Pasadena . It was pointed ou t that his resumption of business as a real estate broker might help to defray the costs incurred by his earlier embeulement. Jt was argued against him that Wilks' defrauding or Mrs. Kin,q put her on wel· fare and that he heartlessly milked the unsus~tlng woman of her entire assets. Wilks and his wife, Carol , now 36, .,.,·ere .indicted by the Orange County Grand-:fury after an investigation of thelr conduct u conservators of the Kinii: es· tate: 'I'he charges against Mrs. Wilks. who has since dissolved her marriage, were ·later dismissed. It \OOk two trials to convict the Corona del Mar man. The fir1t ended with ·• ruling by Judge William C. Speirs that there was insufficient evidence apinst the realtor. ·. That ruling we11 ft•erse'(! by Fourth District Court ol Appeals. Boys Club Sets Summer Hours Summer vacation hours at the Harbor Area Boys Club start Monday, Lou Yan· torn, e1ecutive director, said today. He said the club will be open from 10 1.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays, and from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturdays. ' The club's pool will be open for re<:re&- tion sw im from 2·30 p.m . to 4;30 p.m. dur· ing the Y•eek and from 11:30 lo 1;30 p.m. Saturday5. The Boys' Club summer camp at Run · ning Springs is now accepting reserva- tions for two camp periods. Yantorn said. The two sessions will he July 26 to Aug. t and Aug" 1·7. The cost is $38 but boys rnus! be club members. Membership costs $5. Boys be t.,.,·een eight and 13 years of age m.1y attend the camp. OIAM61 COAST DAILY PILOT d'•ANCil! COAST .. UILISHIN~ COMl'AJtY lellwt N. Wee4 Pr.:den! ..... P11911111tr J•cli 1. C11rf•v Vkl' PralNll '"" G.rt9f•I MN111W rt.,..., k' •• .,1r ltllCN' n,,,," .... \ l11h11,hl11• MIMI•"' f'dllDI' L l'eler K1i19 Jiltwi'O'I llf(ll Clly EdllCN' ......... " .... Offtc• llJ) N1•,torl l aul•••r..! M11li"t Md1111: P.O. h x 1175, ,,,,J ,,_.,_ C-11 Met1 : DI WMI Ir( S~ ... .,_ llJCll; n: ,..,. .. 1 "'""""" Mllritlllflto'I IM<ll: l111l "9;d't ..,! ..... " ...,. (ltn*ll9: -...... 11 "tlmlM ... . •• ne \V spending the De mocratic ma1or1ty added to the barebones Reagan budget proposal. Dc mcx:rats. who hold a 43-37 rdge u1 ' the Assembly. 1nusL ~1n at least ll GOI' votes fo r the l<,1.·0-lh irds margin needed to send the budget to the Senate. At issue in !he budget showdown is a potential tax int:rcase of any where from $350 1n1 l!ion to $1 billion. 'fht $6.74 bill ion budget subn11\lcd last Feb. 2 by Hcagan was precariously balanced v;ithout ne"' taxes by deep cuts in numerous slate prog rams, denial of cost~f·llvlng raises for stall' employcs for the first timl' in elg ht years and a major welfare reform program. Since then. new estimates of state revenue -based on a slower·than-ex· peeled recovery from Ca Ii f o r n i a · s business recession -h;ive cut incnn1c estimates by $203 million and Reagan spokesmen say the y.•elfare reform will fall $101 million short of its savings goal unless a series of Reagan bills killed lasl week In the Senate are revived. MeanW'hile, the Democratic·control\ed Ways and Means Committee re1vrot.e the Reagan budg et to: --Give state college an('! unil'crsi ty pro- fessors a IO percent pay raise and give all olher stale workers five percent. al a total cost of $116.2 niillion. -Reverse a $72 million shift of a surplus from the Stale Teachers Retire- ment Fund to the general fund . -Provide $76.8 million more for the University of California and sta le col· leges. including their s.~9 .2 nlillion share of salary increases. -Add $45 million to the capital outlay fund for new state bu ildings. -Give local schools $4.9 milllon 1nore. -Force the stale to provide more money for ·welfare if the Reagan reforms fail lO produce the savings pro1nised. Summer Signups Set in Newport For Recreation Registration for Newport Beach sum- mer recreation programs, all 22 of them, will take place Saturday mor ning and all neict week at various locations throughout the city. Residents may sign up between the houn of $ a.m. and noon Saturday. er · MY day Monday through ~ follo~~ing SaWrday. al Mar iner's Park mulUpur· po!lt room the fal.and !louse.at Fashion ttllDCl •W '.et -Parks .. Belchu. and Recfeatkm Commission office, 1714 West Balboa Blvd. Most activi ties begin .June 28. Instruction will be offered in lhe fol· ]owing activities , in most cases divided into age or ability groups : Sailing, bay sv.·imming. surfin g, pool swimming, tennis, yoga, dog obedience. modern dance. decorative weaving, fish- ing, bridge, oil painting, ceramics, sculp.. luring and jewelry making. Sports activities spo~~ored by the de· partment include gymnastics. volleyball. badminton. physical conditioning, girl:i;. :i;.of!ball, a slow-pitch softball league, and golf. In addition . a series of excursions, most of !hem for chtldren. are also planned. The department ~·ill sponsor a trip to l.ion Coun try Safari .J une 30 , Sea \Vorld July 14, Dis neyland J uly 28. a cruise of Nev.·port Harbor Augu st II and a trip to the Rin~lin,11 Rrolher.<:. Barnum and B;:i ilev Circu:i;. Au gust 19 Chiidren·s cultural arls <'las~e.~ 111!\ :il~o he sponso ;ed at four locatinns lhroup:h- out the summer. Jn mo~! rase~. fee<:. are char~ed for the activit ies. Fees are due upon reg lstration. Frona l'age 1 DRUGS • • • dii;:lion in Vietnam is a problem. That left A{m with a what-t<Hio-about·it decision that has now been resol ved. The President gave congressional leade rs an early-morning advance peek at his proposal. Discussing "the tide of dru& abuse wb ich has swept America in the last decade," Nixon said addiction "afflict.s both the body and the soul" of th!! nation. Ciling statistics. he esllmaled !he cost of suppo rting a drug habit as ranging from $10,000 to niore than $.16.000 a year. Ht said · "The financial costs of addic tion." he said, "are more than $2 billion every year. but l;hesc costs can at least be measured. The human costs cannot. American society should not be required to bea r either cost." To coordinate federal activities in research and education in the area, Nixon announced creation by executive order of a Special Action Office of Drug Abu se Prevention within the White House slruC'- lurc. He asked Congres!I lo follow up with legislation that would formally establish this office and'broaden Its poY:ers. Corn Blight See n WASHINGTON (UPl l -The go\'ern· rnent reports that corn bli ght has now been detected In 124 counties In 18 ~tate~. but the nation"s corn crop Is s!ill "In gener.11lly Rood e<indilion " Most of lhc ca~es. Jt said. hnve resu!led from volunterr setdlings 1\·hich ~prang up from blight lnfested geed dropped last )'CIT. ·---- 1 SHAWN BISSONNETTE STEVE KOPANSKI NANCY PALMER CINDY BOTTORF KENNETH NEISSER JANET STANTON STEN VERMUNO Newport-Mesa First 8 Seniors Post Perfect Records For the first time in the history or Nev.·port-Mesa Schools eight seniors a t two high schools wUI be graduated wllh perfect, strai ght-A tecordl for '.1111 foo r years. Bolh Corona del !\1ar and Newport Harbr High Schools have designated four students as valedictorians. The outstanding students will not speak at their graduations today, however, since thcrr is no \\'ay to single out one of the perf<'C't studen ts for th e speaking assign- n1cnt. 1\ll of the \·aledic1orians pl;in to go on to co llf'ge in the fall. l\lany hn ve rccei\'ed multiple scholarships and a!J have been cilcd for thf'ir a ca de n1 i c ac· cornphshments in sev~ral fields. All are 1ifl' rnc n1bers of lhe C Ai ifo r nia Scholars hip Fcdcra\1on <ind have been drsignaled {;Ol'ernor·s Scholar. 'rhe outstanding ~tudents are: NE:\\'PORT llARBOR HIGH Shawn 8is1onnette, 17. son of Dr. and t-.trs. !I. \Vard Bissonnette of 1006 Snmersc L Lane, r-;"e~·port Beach, ~·inner of both Bank of America and i'\a. 11nn.1I i\1cril Scholarship a\\·ards. He pl:1 n~ lo a1lend Stanford Univrr.<:.ity. Audre Grnrieh, Ii. da ug hter nf Mr. and !\1r~ \\'11l1;i m U. Genrich of 370 E. 19th :::Ot . l"os!a :0.1csa. ts a Con1mun1ty College :inrt Vrlilh ll nddnt·k Scholarslup \\'inner and pl;u\:-. lo ;il tend Ornnge Coast Collcizr. Slr\r l\op:1nskl, Ji , Sfln of ~1 rs Rcrnil'c Knpn nski of 160! E. 15th St , Nc11 port ~nch. is a Cal State• Scholar~hip y.·Jnn1•r \1·ho plans to attend Stanford University. r.;anry Palrner. 17. daughter of !\tr. and :i.trs. Ravmonrl J . Paln1cr of S!S Kings P lace. Newport Bc;ich, ~·inner of a P-TA Scholarship, plans to attend UC Irvine in the fall. 1p· CORONA del ~tAR HIGH Cindy Bottorf, 17. daughter of tltr. and Mrs. Deane E. Bottorf of 1108 Dolphin Terrace. Corona del Mar. y.•i\l be a Regents· Scholar a l t;C Santa Barbara where she expects to major in psychology. t 'rom Page 1 TIME S ... \1·ar In 1965 alter :• 11 ip ltl Vir lna m and thercaft l'r \\TOie 11u1nrruus 1n e m o s a~ainst American in,·oh·t·tnent there. Zion said Ellsberg caml' into pos~cssion of the completed secret Pentagon report after he le.ft government service and \l'hi\e \l'Orking for the Ra.;id Corp. There \\'a~ no im1ned~te commf'nl from Rand, v.hich has c~ducted defense. and other studies for the government. Zion said Ellsberg turned U1e report over to Nell Sheehan of the Times "some!l me In late ftiarch." Zion was a founder of the lhort·lived Scanlan's magatine. He made his com· n1 f'n t on the Barry Gray In terview pro- gr:irn . In 1 M~rrh 7 'tory on ant i"·ar activity, thl' Boston Globe. reported that ·ii:Jl!_bj>rg wn~ one of only thr~ per~on!I to have rc:id lhe enrir(' P.enlagon stucly i':ll l!ber~(s eurrent position 15 ""·1th MIT'~ interdt'ptirlmental Cen1rr for lntcrnil!lon11l Studies ""here he s1)('riA lizl'.s in Southeast Asia. His appot nlment endi1 J une ~ end ll ~·111 not known y.·hether he h11s reccivrd a rtne~·al. , Kr nn elh Ed"·ard Neisser, 18. son of ~1r. and tl·1rs Carl Neisser of 2416 22n<'I St., Nev.'J)Ort Beach. expects W major in history at Yale Un iversity_ Janet Elaine S)anton. 18. daughter dt Mr. and Mr s. Charles B. Stanton Jr. of 6.1!1 Can1eo llighl 11nds Drive. Corona del :-Olar. \.\·inner of a Californi a Stale Scholarship wlll rnajor in languages at Univer~ity of Sant.:. Clara Sten Vermund, 17, .~on or Dr. a nd Mrs. Hal vor Vermund or 1210 Sand Poinl Wav. Corona de l ?11ar, expects lo major in hu inan biology at Stanford Un iversity. Bissonette played basketball for four years, and was a member of Key Club. and ln1eract Clu b. He y.•as Boys S!rJe r epresentative. Kiv.·anis Bo1vl and "It's Academic" team captain, and a winner in the Orange County Academic Decathlon. ?lliss Genrich ~·as a member or Girls' Athle1ic /\.~soc iatlon (GAA ) and Elys!ans Tri·Hi·Y Club. ) ' .. 1\1iss Palmer was active in American Field Servic e tAFSI. tht' scient'e·ccology club. Spuiis h club, yearboo k. senior class council, student-teacher actlvitles board and V•as editor of Flotsa m and Jetsa m student creative writing magazine. Kopanski \1·as a membe r of thr Y.'l'estl· ing tean1 and chess club. officer of Interact Club and competed on the Kiwanis Bowl .?.11d "It's Academic'' I.cams for Harbor High. Miss Bottorf. \1·as a memb er or Girls' League, was senior class vice president and is a candystri per at Hoag Hospital as y.·ell as being a volunteer at Fair\·lew State Hospital. Neisser was actil'e in class and student gov ernment, AFS. CSF, drama associa· lion . literary magazine, foreign language. speech and polilical science clubs, tennis and \\'as a n officer of Interact Club. Neisser \1'on l\.lasonic, Bank o f America, National l\.terit and School Service ?.wards, was a Boys' State represen tali\'e , ~·inner or the Orange COunty Academic Decathlon, scholastic athle1e, is a c:overnor's Scholar and 1nembcr of !he chemistry and math con· lest teams. Miss Stanton was active in student con- gres~. execu tive cou ncil, held cla ss and student government offices . was a member of AFS NJd officer of CSF. malh team n1en1 ber at the Orange County Academic Decathlon, delegate 1o (;irls' State and <,1.as on t.he drill team for three years. She y.·on the Elks youth leadership con· test. was most va luable girl student, won ~oroptimist, Bank of America and Na- tional r-.-leril a""'Nds. Ver mund y.•;:is artive in student con- gress, AFS. science club. s peech club, orchestra and played varsity tennis. He won the Bausch and L:unb Science A"'ard. ....·as chemistry student of the year, winnl'r of the academic athletic award and the School Service Award. f!·~·t ,.i;11 • . . Flbulous Color! If YOU CA:\'T C0~1E IN- CALL Fabulous Shag I FABULOUS PHICEI . ONLY 895 646-0275 for an expt'rl "''""' c:onsultan.t v.·ho 11111 rom"' 10 yoiur home 11·ith 111mplrs ~ithou t any obligal.lon to )'OU! In this brilli.1nt nylon f.1c;e •h•9 K•r•1f.1n's color wi1•rd1 fltvf Gr••m•cl up such 1p.1 r~lin9 rn ix•1 a1 lncr•clibl• Blu•, Arne1in9 White, f 1¢freordinery Gold and •v•n Coio11el Copp•r. F•bulou1 h.•1 m•ny of t h••• colors. Th•y'r• ell inc;r•dibl•, reelly, f Feltlltwt COMtt IR excltl119 •• rvt• with Matchhtt frffttt, A ,. I 12' '°' .. 1y $134.951 PROFESSIONA L INTE RIOR DESIGNE RS )~our /o.uorite inter ior drs ig11t r will bt happy to a.ssis i you .•• Optti Mon., Thuf'I . & Ff(. IYft, TRY OUR REVOLVING CHARGI 121 S HARBOR 8LVO . COSTA MESA, CALIF. b~b-Ol7S ·~•·Ol7b l I l Costa Mesa Today's Flilal EDITION - VOL 04, NO. 144, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY. JUNE 17, 197r TEN CENTS DA.ILY l'ILOT $11!1 1'~1!1 TIDE OF THE .FUTURE; A SEA OF FACES AT COSTA MESA HIGH GRADUATION 470 Students Bid F.1rewell to Alma Ma ter as Proud Parents Filled Stands Court to Get 1971 Ediso11 Prospectus A prospectus of the Southern California Edison Company, dated April l, 1971, on the issue of three million shares of stock is being delivered to state Supreme Courl offices in Los Angeles today. Deputy Orange County Counsel John P owell said this morning he was al· taching the prospectus lo his brief filed in answer lo the company's petition for a new hearing on expansion of lts Hun· tington Beach plant. Po~·e!l explained that he objected to the "alarmist and i n f J a m m a tor y l!itatements'' made by the e-0mpany in il! court petilion. In its petition, Edison asked the court to review the decision of May 26 which round lhat the con1pan y required authorizalion bot h from the Orange Coun- ty Air Pollution Control District and lhe California Public Utilities Commission to expand the Huntington Beach gene.rating station. "ff the decision i:s allowed to stand as California law it. may v.·ell spell catas!rnphe for California public utility regulation and virtually condemn large segmenL<\ of the state, and perhaps elsewhere. lo power shorlaRes. brown outs nr even blackouts in the foreseeable future.·· the Edi~on pt· lit ion said. Jn his commrnl.~ to the court Po11·e!l said, ""! believe !here 1s a rcrnarkable and enlightening contrast between the Edison prediction of i n1 n1 l n e n t catastrophe set forth 1n its petition and in Jts discus.sron of lhe same subject matter in !he prospectus.'' Powel! noted that in the prospectus that although Edison states that air pollution requirements v.·ere causing delays in power plant construction and increasing cosls the "most that Edison predicts on fu1 ure !iervice is that il 'migh L be af- fected'." Powell also said in his 2l·page brief that in Lhe PUC decision of last June which ordered construction of the new units, the CQmmission round that the pro- bability of system-wide outage without the new units wall "slight." Orange Coast ll'eatlter Just a smidge cooler today and tomorrow along the Southland wilh highs ranging from 60 ln 75 and lows 53 to 60, Hazy llunshine in the afternoons with the usual low clouds 'and fog in the early morn- ing hours. . INSWE TODA. Y U.S. and Joj)(l.n sign treaty via satellite TV to return Okinawa 10 Japanese rule. See story, Pagr. 4. •lrtlo• ' -· , .. " •••II"' • M\lful l '•llfl .. (•!lfo•llll • N•tlotl•I NirWt '" Clltdll"f Ut ' Or1119• ,_,., ' Cllttllll<ll •·M l•IYll "9rttr H Ctl!llCt • ,_.. "'" c,..uont'tl .. l!Mll """'"'1 ~" Otalll N"11c" ' T.-vl ..... .. 1:11"''" , ... • Tl•••"" , .. " l:11!1'1tlll"""' 11·11 Wet lMr • ''••l't• ., .. ,, Wllllt lflltW! n .. _ " lfll""'Mt't Nt..,. J).U ' 11111 Lf M'I" " Wwld N-. ... 470 Seniors Bid Adieu To Mesa High School By STEVE MITCHELL 01 ll!t Dt l1¥" 1'1111 Sltll Parents, grandparents and friends fi ll- ed half of LeBard Sladium at Orange Coast College Wednesday night to watch 470 Costa Mesa High School seniors receive their diplomas. As !he long procession of students wound through the football field to the stadium stands. an occasional maxi dress could be seen pecking under green graduation gowns. William J. Vaugh, vice principa l at Costa Mesa High School. introduced IC'hool bnard members and guests. in- cluding Dr . William L. Cunningham, Superintendent of the Newport-Mesa Unified School district. Rod Macl\.1 illian and Mrs. Marian C. Bergeson of the school board. Vaughn also introduced lhe Reverend Emil A. Balliet, president of Southern California College and Donald F . Achziger, princi pal of Costa Mesa Hig h. Class salut;itorian Bethany Bro\\'n ad· dressed the graduating class of 1971 on the importance of improving education. "Having general education has not hurt me:· Miss Brown said, "I know I"ll go on lo college and I've already chosen a career." "But whal. about the student v.•hn is not interested fn general education? J be!leve a student only !earns and retains what he wants to learn. Looking back at my general education. there were only twe facls 1 learned that came to my head. "I remembered that Zeus was the king of the gods Rnd that John Wilkes Booth slept in the same bed in which President Lincoln died . If 1 can only rem<'mber two facls, how many ca n the uninterested students remember?" "Of all high school students onl y about 110 percent attend junior college. You pro- bably think that's a pretty good percen- t:ige, and it is, but the sad story is that "nly 20 percent complete junior college • and on!y 14 percent complete four years.'' ;\1 isS Brov.·n suggested instituting a prn+ gram in which "students could be in- volved in vocational learning in subject! they are interested in .. , "Costa Mesa High has barely begun to talk about 1n1provcment. Lefs support our school. our education and our children"s education," she said. Principal Achziger urged students to appreciate '"the p~ lo the. jeft and right or you. v00r · pareilts .11 n d grandparents are the people who have provided you with a heallhier y,·orld. ''These remarkable people. because Lhey were materiallstlc. made it possi ble for you In work few er hours , have more leisure time and vis it other places. They made some mistakes too. .. It is my hope, and lhe hope of thesP generations. Lhat you will find !he ansl'•ers to today's problems." Dr. Balliet addressed the graduating class on "the generation of destiny." followed by Ted Tompkins, a ssociated student body president. William Vaughn gave special recogni- tion to the 124 honor students y,·ho were graduated with 3.0 grade point averages and the 16 gold seal bearers who main· fained a :IA grade point nverage th rough five semesters or more in high school. 1\Vinds H it Acapu lco ACAPULCO. Mexico i UPI ) -A fnnge of Hurricane Bridget emplied the bcache~ nf this fashionable Pacific resorl tnv.•n \Vednesda~·. b!e11: away e score of home.~ and left at least five persons injured. The hurricane uprooted t.rces. lifted roofs and toppled utility lines . It lef1 most of Acapulco without electricity and lQl\"- !yinJ: area1' knee·deep in waler after its two-hour sweep. Estancia Graduates Urgecl To 'Stick Your Necks Out' By TERRY C:OVR.LE Ot !flt Otl1¥" 1'!111 11111 \\'atch out world -here come the turtle!. That was how class 6peaker Ma rilyn Waterman greeted Estancia H i g tl &hool's 5th.graduating class Wednesday night. , · .. We are trutles in lhe sense that we 11re beginning to move out from our pro- tecUve cover ing of high 6Chool, and mov- ing gradually inlo the wor)d of reality," she told parents, classm11tes and fr iends. Miss Walerman underlined the role of a turtle w'ith a proverb: ''Behold, the turtle who makes progres! only when he sticks his nedl:·out.'' ~urged the graduates.of 1971 to stick their necks out and lo become involved with llfe. "We, the 1971 graduates. 11re !he gifts of the part. the prospects of the future. Each iJ an individual. but together we are a united force.'' "Wat.ch out world . We're sticking our necks O\lt and getting Involved.· Behold, the turUes CQmeth,'' she CQncludtd. A tot.al ot t65 graduates were honored for lhelr achievement!: as the class of 1971. Ceremonies were held on Davidson Field al Nr.wport Harbor High School. Another class speaker gave her claumatee: their "final exam." ., ··1t·~ self scoring, multiple choice with five answers, and we hBve a lifetime to complete it," explained Charis Combs. ··Tue test I! ll"i!!. what do we do with our high school diplomas?" she asked. The five choices she gave were: -"Put the dip!~ma in ti drawer, close our minds, do nothing." -··we can go forth Into that waiting world, carefully assess it and totally con- form." -"We can refuse lo accept common conformity. but conform to a common clique where UlUe bu,t the clique ls im· portanl." -"There's another alternative. We can join an extremist group, right wing OT left. and oppose everything that doesn't agree.·• -"This. one is hard to state in words. Hang loose. stay vibrantly alive. Consider this graduation as only a rest &top in life's long continuO".;., education. Be your own best unique self." "The an11wr:r is up to you," she challenged. Estancl.a Principal floyd Harryman described the 1971 seniors :111 ''the best adjusted cla.9.9 we ·ve ~ver gr11d111t~." .. In a time of extreme dejecllon, they·ve a.lwa)'• t.P.P..ri op timistic. They're hungry for success and recognition and they'll make it," be said. Drug War Mapped • Nixon Calls Narcotics No. 1 Enemy WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix- on declared drug abuse "public enemy No. 1" today and called for a new all-out offensive to rehabilitate drug victims while pushing efforts worldwide to cut off the illicit narcotics supply._ Nixon's Jong-awaited special message to Congress asked for an extra $15S million to ''tighten the noose around the necks of drug peddlers and thereby loosen the noose around the necks of drug users." Cal ling the use of drugs by Amer ican servicemen In Vie t n a m "especially disheartening," the President announced immediate e.iilablishment.of a rehabilila- tion program for addicted servicemen being returned from the war zone. And he asked Congress to give the Pentagon authority to keep uniformed personnel in service beyond normal discharge dates if they are addicts. After a two-year meeting with con· gressionaJ leaders of both parties, Nixon announced creation of a new White House organization to coordinate the effort. Ht named to head il Dr. Jerome H. Jaffe. 37- year-old expert who pionoered in the field of heroin addiction and now heads ll!inois' drug abuse program. Nixon said he considers this problem ''so urgent that iL cannot be scattered through government and must be coordi~ated. in one responsible authority" reporting d1rec!ly to the President. He said the nine government agencies that deal with rehabilitation, research and education in this rie!d must pull Democrats Press For Showdown Budget Vote · SA<;RAMENTO IAP ) -Assembly Democratic leaders were press.ing today for a showdown vote on a $7.06 billion version of Gov. Reagan's 1971-72 stale bud&et. But· Republicans hinted they migh t try to block passage of the spending plan un· li l Democrats cut back on $34fl million in new spending the Democratic majority added to the barebones Reagan budget proposal. Democrats, who hold 11: 43-37 edge in lhe Assembly. must win al least JI GOP votes for the two-thirds margin needed to send the budget to the Senate. At issue in the budget showdown is a potential tax increase of anyv.·here from S350 million to $1 billion. Thi $6.74 billion budget submitted last Feb. 2 by Reagan v.·as precariously balanced without new laxes by deep cuts in numerous .~ta le programs, den ial of rnst-of.Jlving raises for slate employrs for the first time in ei_ght years and a major welfare reform program. Since then, new estimates of state revenue -based on a slower-than-ex- prctcd recovery from C a t i f o r n i a · s- business recession -have cut income estimates by $203 million and Reagan spokesmen say the welfa re reform will fall $101 million short of its savings goal unless a series of Reagan bills kiJ!ed last 1,1·eek in the Senale are revived. - • ;j; . -,.. ' 1' together and "not at cross-purposes.'' While putting special emphasis on deal- ing with drug abuse in the services. Ni~ on said the problem was" there "before Vietnam and will continue after the war in Vietnam. It will not pass with lhe passing or the war in Vietnam." Actually, Nixon acknowledged more than two weeks ago that GI drug ad- diclion in Vietnam is a problem. That left him with a what.to-do-about-it decision that has now been resolved. The President gave congressional leaders an early-morning advance peek NY Times Furor at his proposal. Discussing "the tide of df'lli ebuu whic h has swept America in the la.al decade," Nixon said addiction "afflict.I both the body and the soul" of the nation. Citing statistics, he estimated the cold of supporting a drug habit as ranginf from $10.000 to more than $36,000 a yest. He said: "The financial costs of addiction," lM said, "are more than $2 billion everj year. but lhese costs can at least ht measured. The huma·n costs canno~ American society should not be required (See DRUGS, Page Z) Former Pentagon Aide Linked to Viet P dpers U,1 f•ltllJltN WAS HE THE SOURCE? MIT's Daniel Ellsbtirg Former FBI Man Wins Settlement NE\V YORK IAP ) -John F., Shaw, the fo_rme r fBI agent who resigned rather than accept a transfer afll?r being crtl.1c1zed for a letter he wro!e about !he bureau. ha.~ won a settlement of his case, his lawyer announced Thursday. Shav.·. 37, will gel SIJ.000 in back pay and the go vernment will remove and de- stroy fill prejudicial info rmation from his personnel file. according to Mel vin \\'l1!f. Shaw's lflW}'Cr and director of !he Amer· lean Civil Liberties Un10JJ Foundation Wulf said the settlement agreement with the ,ii;nvernmcnt was signed by him and Sh<1w and, fo r the governmcn!, Asst. U.S. Attorney Daniel H. i\furphy IL • ... __ " .. ' NEW YORK IA Pl -A former Ne11 York Times reporter said Wednesda] night that the secret Pent.Bgon report ot the Vietnam was was given to the Time4 by Daniel E\Jsberg. a former Defen54 Department emp!Oye now e senioa research associate at Massachusettl Institute of Technology. Sidney Zion. the former Timesman 80i former deputy U.S. attorney in Ne\I Jersey, named Ellsberg in an intervie\I broadcast locally over WMCA radio. Zion refused to say where he got the tn formation, but said he considered bi! sources "very impeccable." The Times had no comment on Zion·1 1tatemcnts. . . Meanwhile. a federal judge reserv" decision today on a government reques to inspect documcnt.s on which .the Ne\I York Times based articles on the secre Pentagon study of U.S. involvement iJ Vietnam. But he sa.id he would not allow a fishin' expedition for other material the Timet may pos!!e.s.s. U.S. District Court Judge MutTay t Gurfein said he · was limiting thl government's discovery motion only U those documents received by the Timet from the source of the materials used if the three articles published so far. "rm not tolerating any fishing e~ ped[tion into the files of any newspaper,• Gurfein said. The government also seeks· to bar tb Times from rest1m ing its series of thre articles about the Vietnam study. It moved on \Vednesday, undc discovery procedures. to inspect th d11cuments already alluded to by t:~ Times and "other classified documenh.~ it believed to be in the Times· possessio11: On Sunday. the Times began publishln& excerpts from the 47-volume Pentago• study entitled "History of Uni ted StateJ Decision JI.faking Process on Vietnanl Policy."' After the third instal!ment in thf series was published. the govemmenl asked a federal court in New York t4 block fur ther publ ication. Under ' restraining order in effect until Saturday, (See TIMES, Page ZI l .. " ·. ,t ... : s-. . ' o.r.n.v "'"°' .._.. ,.,.... ESTANCIA HIGH'S 'TURTLE$' MARCH TO tOMMINCIMINT AT DAVIDSON FIELD llthold,.tho Turtles Cometh, S1y1 Student Speaker -With Their Nocks Out r • • '' • .. ' "'I o ~H Y PI LOT c . Guai·d s Save 43Bather s .:'At Newport Hot inland weather pushed 55,000 peo- • pie down to the beache s Wednesday. and -Ne\1-'porl Beach lifeguards had lo pull 43 of them from the hea vy surf Lifeguards said there v•ere no spec- tacular rescues, but a lot of swimmer!! found themselves caught 111 toU&h rip tides wh ich follov•ed lhe live fool to eight foot surl h1ore 1han 300 swimmers and surfers had to be 11 ;i nied about the riptide con- ditions. another 22 \li'ere give n first aid treatment !or burns. cuts and other i~ juries. and seven children lost their mothers. Tu·ent\·-three lifeguards "'erf' on duty Sunday.· ""ith. mor e \1-'atch to11'er!i stl up r:ach dav. A lull summer crew starts patrolin!i the beaches Saturday. . o\.ir tr:mperature at the beach was 68 degrees and the water temperature was 63 degrees. warm for this time of year, lifeguards said. A crowd or 70,000 sunbathers, swim· mers and surfers wa s expected to stretch along Newport Beach's 6.4 miles of sand -today. Candy Stolen At Golf Course · An early morning thief took 25 candy bars from the snack bar of the Cmta Mesa Golf Course today. Police said the hungry bu rglar removed the outer screen of the snack bar window. but because il had bars on it, could not get in. Undaunted the burglar apparently grabbed a golf club and reached through tbe bars to snare the candy, police said. From Pagel TIMES ... the Times has run no more copy - The case is to be argued Friday. The government has launched an in· vestigation into the leak. Zion 11aid be attempted but failed to reach Ellsberg at his Cambridge addrl!S! all Wednesday afternoon. In Cambridge, no one was al ttie Ellsberg home near Harvard Square tir day. but mail addressed to Daniel and Patricia Ellsberg was piling up at the door. No one answered the telephone. Zion said El\sberg, •·at a young age got a very. hot position at the Defense Department working in gomething called the international security affairs division under John McNaughton." He said Elltberc· turned dovitb on th• v.·ar In I~ arter a trip' to Vietnam and thereafter wrote numerous m e m o s against American Involvement there. Zion said Ellsberg came into possession of the completed secret Pentagon report after he left government !t'rVi« and while wor king for the Rand Corp. There was no immediate comment from Ran d, which has conducted defense and other 11tudies for the government. Zion said Ell11berg turned the report over to Nell Sheehan of the Times ''sometime in late March." Zion was a founder of the short-lived Scanlan's magazine. He made his com- men t on the Barry Gray interview pro- gram. In a ~farch 7 story on anli\\'&r activit y. the Boston Globe reported that Ellsberg was one of only three persons to have read the entire P on study. EJ!sberg·s cu sition i-5 with MIT's tnterdepar nter for International Studies v•h r e specializes in Southeast Asia. His appointment ends June 30 and it wa.c; not known whether lie has received a renewal. O~NGE COAi T DAUY PILOT Robe.t N. w ,,d ,rn .a.,,1 1rocl ,1101l1lltl" J 1,k R. C11rley \li<e ,rt.llt"'I I nd G-11 Ml..., ... Thom•• K11¥il f.O•lor l homl l A. Murp\.ine M•n1gl1>11 E111Dr 0..1111 H. lo•H RO,h1rd '· N11f Aul11111; M1negl"" l!ai10,,. CMN MM• Offlc• • JJO W11t l 1y Str11t M1Hi~t Addr111; P.O. la11 11•0, '2•1• Ofkr Offk• N-POl'f l-'t"~ »XI Nntl:Of'I ••ulw1.,, """"' l 11d'I: tr. l"lr*ll Av1-k.,.,11n11o-;, l•t tl'I' u11r. '"'" ..,u,.•u• 5'11 Cl•"""''" JOS Nll'll'I l!I (1ml~o 111.til r.1.,11 ••• 11141 '4l-4JJ1 . Cl~ ,t.4-tl•I '41·1,71 c.y..IO'>t, !tll, Ore .... Otll l'llllllf"i,.. c-'"'· "'' """"" of&ril . ., 111vu 111i.,., &attari.1 ••ttll.,. &r 1avonlMfftft'1' "'9•t ln -'i' l>O r_...i..,.;"" wlll!O\ll o,.c.i.1 JI«• '"'"llr. .: ("yrltfl. '"'""'' 5tct>l'4 <llU petll ll ~lo 1! Mt...,...1 ll'ICn ,,,. CMll M1.11, Ctlll.,..,.11, $oibt(tlp!IO<'I ttr ""'i.r 1J H ....... n.!r J llY mi ll 11,11 _,,.,.,,J ... 111 .. .,. ,,.,, .......... &:I.ti ,.,...,"l'f. ThurSd4.)', JllM 1'1, 1~71 M<NALLY BAND PLAYS COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES George Kn ightti {Dark Glasses) Leads Uniqu• Mu1ic1I Group Sueeess Story 35 Graduate at McNally School By GF.ORGE LEIDAL 01 rho 01!11 Pllor Slt lt The student graduation speakers once were potential dropouts. The com- mencement addresses were delivered by two probation department offi«rs. The school band played "Close to You ·• ••1 Believe" and ''America the Beautiful." The da y was, like all graduation day~. important. But for 35 graduates of J\1cNally Con· tinuation Sc hool in Costa Mesa, all of whom took advantage of an alternative lo dropping eut, today was especially im- portant. Principal Jack C. Coleman recognized the efforts made by graduates of the con- tinuation hl&h school proiram and preaented them diplomas. Richard Lyons. one of tv;o student speakers, told the student body during tbf . ~r cvemony, "Wt 1 r e ~.1'ere 'l!'rlo rt11aon the rett of yoU c.aft't do Jt." Lyon11, like his counterpart sludcn! speaker, thanked lhe principal and teachers at McNa!ly "for helping me get my diploma.'' Dawn Crowley, noting that she at one time thought she'd never be graduating, leaned comfortably aga inst a post as she faced the group of studenls, parenU; and frjends. "If it weren't for McNa!ly I "'ouldn'l be graduati ng .. , and as for the need for a diploma , well, v.·hat else can I say." Mrs. Kathy Geyer and Ron Laursen we re the two probation department of· fi cers address!ng the commencement au· dience. They credited the efforts ()f the st udents themselves for working toward a d1pl oma. "Today's graduates are proof of the success of schools like McNal!y ,'' Laur sen said. Early graduate Susan 1-iyers \1-'as nrit present to receive her Governor's Schola rship award. Teache r George Knights led the school band. McNally is the only continuation school in the slate having a school band. a spokesman for the Ne"'Port·Mesa school district po inted out. The t.1cNally students graduating toda y t1re : ~1ichael F. Aichlmayr. Fred and John An dersen, i\feriam Bressel. Peggy Ann Cont reros. Da,...'n Crowley, Mindy Cummins. Gina di Donato. Ka ren Faivre, Danielle Favre- Felix. Don (;omache. Jack Hamilton , Kin1 J1arryman. Sue Heil. J\1ike Hofer. Robin Hollon1an, Nan Irwin, Sparky Kolar, Richard Lyons, Doug Martin. Chris Minear, Steve Minken, Terry Mulkey, Judy ti.1ann, ~1ike Popov. Mike Rote. Susan Stua rt, Debbie Stuvic k. Kathy Surprenant, Pat Wheeler Geoff Wil lson, Debby Thompson. Herb Bunker and Gordon Walck. l1ivest11ient Sche1ne Newpo1·t Ma11 Ju111ps Bail Of $lO,OOOi11La s Vegas A netionwlde hunt is on today for a Newport Beach man who forfeited h1 ~ $10,000 bail in a Las Vegas court rather t.han be returned to Orang<' Coun!y ro face charges lhat he conn ed 150 local in- vestor~ out of more than $1 million. Gregory Pavlov . 43, of 393 22nd ~I , failed to show up June 14 for tJ1e ex- tradition hearing ordf'red by a Clark County Court judge. Just six weeks earlier the same judge hlld reduced the Newport man's bail from $75,000 to 110,000. Pavlov. who operated the Mido. Inc. enterprise fr om offices In Co.st.a Mesa, is accused of persuading t50 Orange County investors -most of them in the Orange Coast area -to part with a total of more than SI million for shares in his hot dog machine syndicate. Inv estigators claim Pavlov falsely represented a yarn that he was abou t to put on the product.ion llne a machine that Boys Club Sets Summer Hours SUmmtt vacation hours at the Harbor Area Boys Club start Monda y. Lou Van- torn, executive director, s11td today. He said the club wlll be open from to a .m. to 5 p.m. Mondays throuah Fridays, and from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturdays. 'I'ht club's pool will be open for recre ... tion swim from 2:30 p.m. to 4;30 p.m. dur- ing the week and from 11 :30 to I :30 p.m. Saturdays. The Boys' Club summl'r camp at Run. nlng Springs is now acceptlna reaen>ll - Uons for two camp perloda. Yantorn 11ld. The two seasions v.·111 be Ju ly 26 to Au,i:i;. I aod AUR. 1-7. The eost I.~ $.'JS but hovs must be cl ub mr.mb~rs. l'\lembersh.ip COSttl '5. Soya bell'-'een eigh t a11d J3 )"e11 rs of &ge may altend Lhe carnp. "·ould hold hot dogs ln refr lgeralion until I.ht' pu rchaser de posited U'ie cost of the nieal In the slot. Then. witnesses told U1e Orange County I (~rand Jury Pt1v!ov told them thflt the 111arhine's radiant hf'al unil v.·ould go into ~ct irin end the purch;isf'r \\·ould have a fresh ly coo ked hot dog on a crisp. "·h1te ' napk in within seconds -with musta rd. I TI1e Grand Jury indicted Pavlov on charRe!I of fraud . selling stock without a 1 permit and grand theft. Pavlov WllS ar- rested in Arizona . skipped bail of $1.000 there. and was subsequently arrested in Nevada where he again fail ed lo show for the extradition hearlnR. ''\l/e've got a good idea where to look for him," Deputy District Attorney Al Novick said Wednesday. "But I'd rather not go into details at this Ume ." From Page l DRUGS. • • to bear eilhtr cost." To coordinate federal activities In I resea rch and education in the area. Nixon announced creation by executive order o! a Special Action Office of Dritg Abuse Prevention within the White House struc-1 ture. H.e asked Congress to follow up wilh leg:lslellon that would formally establish this oUice and broaden Its powers. The extra •t55 million Nixon seeks for • antl-drug efforui In the 1972 fiacal yeor that begins July I, would bring total outlays to '371 mUUon. Ot the 1dded funds , $105 mill lon v.'oul d be used for the lttatment and rth1tb llil :i- lion of 11ddicl1. The fes t of the money I would go for enforctmenl. rese1rch. l'ducation. and -lo tht lune of $1 mlllion -Arner lcan ald In lr:iin in~ t n· rorrement officers of other ee.1ntrir~ which are. the source. tJf n10.st ill egal drueis used here. Reagan Cattle'- I Governor Denies Tax Shelter Charges SACRAMENTO (AP 1 -Gov. Ronald Reagan aay11 he will co nt inue to be a c1t- tle owner as Jong as he can atford to - not as a tax she.Iler but because .. , like being a farmer." Reagan, who did nol owe any stale personal in eflnle taxes in California last Judge Vetoes Ex-b1·oker' s License Bid A move by a Corona de] t-.1ar man to rt.Jga·n the real estate broker's \icen~ he I hen he embezzled an. estimated $ 0, from an elde rly Pasadena woma n was defeated today in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Robe rt Corfman rejected the plea of John Wilks, 41, of 3200 Ocean Boult>Verd for reduction of his felony conviction to misdemeanor level after hearing arguments against the motion by Deputy District Attorney Jay Moseley and attorney Richard Newell, conserva- tor of the victlm's estate. "All this ma n ever got wa s six months in jail and five years' probation for this major crime." Moseley said. "Only $7,000 in cash ha s been recov ered and 1he prospects of our getting very much for the desert la nd he holds seem pretty poor_" It v.•11s argued for Wilks thal he is now on welfare and tha t he has pledged his total assets at the dispo!el of attomey11 handling the Financial affairs of Mrs . Hazel Grant King, 77, of Pasadena. It \Vas pointed out that his resumption of business as a real estate broker migh t heir to defray the cos ts incurred bv his t'arlier embezzlPment. · It was ar~ued against him that Wl!ks' defrat11iing of Mrs, l\in~ put her on wel- fare and thfll he heartlessly milked the un~uspecling w111nan of her entire assets. Wilks and his wife . Carol. nov.· 3li, ·were inditled hy the Orange County (irand Jury af\er an investigation of their cnnducl as conse rvators of the King es- tat e. The charges agai,.st Mrs. Wilk5, \Vho has since dissolved ht>r marriage, were !:iter dismis!ed . It took l"'o trials lo convict the Corona de.I Mar man. The fi rst ended with a ruling by Judge \.\'i!ham C. Speirs 1hat there "'as insufficient evidence aga inst the realtor. That ruhng was reversed by Fourth District Court of Appeals. Tire Bloivs Out On County Plane A tire hlew out on Air Cal FUghb 103 to S<in Francisco during takeoff this morn - ing al. Orange County Airport. No one was injur ed and the plane was not damaged. Air Cal officl als said the nose wheel blev: v.·hile the Jetliner was still on the runw ay, so the pilol coasted to a stop, then taxied bac k to the boarding arta ·where the 1ire v.•as chang ed. The flight then look off in normal fashion, airport officials said. year, denied t.hat his e!ttle investments were made as a tax shelter. The SacrarnPnlo Bee and New York Times reported Sunday th11t Reagan is a client of Oppenhei mer Industries, Inc., a caUle n1.11.nagement firm that offers its services to those "in .a position lo benefit from the tax incentives .. , Reagan. interviewed by newsmen Wednesday after returning from a New England speaking trip. said he hes been in the cattle business !or 20 years. "Well , I still ov.•n some cattle," the Republican chief executive said. his voice tinged with impatience. "As long as t can af ford to I'm going lo continue. I like being a farmer." The Sunday articlt "'as the first specific report on Reagan's investments, which became a source of controversy after he acknowledged that he had no state tax liability for 1970 because o[ "business reverses." lie added that since becoming governor he had paid $90,000 in state taxes. Reagan said Wednesday. ''I intend to go back to ranching and I don 't want to lose out compli?tely. I have invested in land to have a ranch when I finish this job," He has purchased l!I 771-acre ranch in Riverside County. Tliar She Blows The Btt reported that Opir~nheimer had purchased cattle for the n-~agan Cat· tie Company in Montana. and had registered brands for the Reagan Cattle Company 1n Wyoming and Nevada although the Nevada brand had not heel'I reregistered for 1971. Reagan told a ne~·s conference I" Massachu~tts Tuesday he had neve r seen any of the cattle. Fair Boa rd Meet Slated Tonight Preliminary discussion of the Orange County Fair. July 13-18, will be held at 7:30 o'clock tonight when directors of tho fa irgrounds bold lheir regular meeting . The fair board meets in the ad· minislrative building of the lairgroonds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. Dieectors will consider proposed ex· penditures for maintenance of the fairground and license agreements for some of the con cessions at the fair. Gordon Wheatley, Jr., specia l events director, will report on amateur en· terlainment lined up for the. fair . ·!.!(> ·'" ~. "· ~:t".'~) .. DA ILY l"ILOT l"hore "' Ttm 1tr11Y J,unrh hour strollers in Santa Ana's ne,· treated to an in1 promptu aquatic di" . ic Center '\'ere 'Y '\'hen the cap :1rd1ouse to the county LJ\11 geyse1 \vas quickly quelled on a 'r ater 1nain connect in~ the Coun l~ibrary blew off '"i thoul ~1arn 1ng. The by '''orkers. Fabnlous Colorl Fabulous Shag! FABULOUS PRICE! ONLY 395 9 .. ~.* 6"-i'" 1• • " -lF' YOU CA:\''T ('0:\lE L'X- CALL 646-0275 for an (':-,lX'rl carpet f'onsu!lanl \I-ho \Vi\J rn1nr I» ~·our hon1,. \\lth ~amplrs \\ ithout any obligalion to )'OU! In th ii britli e nf nylon f,,, ih •g K1r1st•n's color wit1rcl' "•"• clr11 med up tuch iperkling mixes •1 lncr 1dibl1 Blu1 . Amt111 in9 Wh ile, Extraordinary Gold and e~•n Colos\el Co pper. Fe buloui hes meny of thet• 'olori. They 're all incr•cl ible, r•elly. (FaWeus comn ht •xcltlnq area rug1 with m•tc.hfn9 frhtge, A t ' x 12' fer only $1 34.tSl Your fouorut 111terior clt s1g11er 1t1lll be happy fo as.ust you ... H.J.GARRETT fURNITLJRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Op1n Mon .. Thllf't. & Fri. £ye1. TR Y OUR REVOLVING CHl.lGE 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COST A MESA, CALIF. 4'6·0275 6~6-0276 (- I l ! l I \ 1 I . I \ { 7 •• Saddlebaek ~ ~ . - , VOL 6'4, NO. 144, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES Cle111e11te Cotincil. 11th Hour Meet Set for Budget San Clemen te's proposed ci ty budget and a Jong-standing community clubhouse construction contract both will wait until the eleventh hour for city council action. The panel Wednesday agrud lo hold a !ipecial meeting June 30 to resolve both issues. The date, in essence, is the deadline for action on both matters. Any salary increases for city em ploye~ ·would also be del2.yed until thal special meeting. Councilmen held an executive session, presu mably on the salary issue, after th e regular meeting Wednesday . The session, reportedly used to discuss the progre~s and thrust of very tough negotiations, this year, has been com mon in recent week s. Sources have said Ula! the city has stead fastly held out for no inc reases 1n pe.y for the next fisca l yea r. despite demands for substantial raises by e.mploye bargaining groups. The clubhouse Issue. at the urging rif two ma jor local clubs .• was delayed until th e special meeting as well. Low bidder Rav 'Mccaslin has agreed to hold to his bid until the end of Ulis month . Equestrian Area Opens Saturday In Community Mi!l'lion Viejo's hor!!e enthusiasts won't. have far to go to enjoy lhe pleasures of equestrian travel. The community's own ~uestrian Center will be opening Saturday. A part of the recreation center pro- gram the new facility will be located &0uth~asl of the Madrid model hon:ies across from the Ma rguerite Recreation Cen1er. . . ll will inr.lude five miles of lr<1ils which will run throu~h Oso Creek Canynn to \lhlderness Glen. The equestrian center will primarily be a place for rental and ~arding hors~. But it will also provide comm~n1ty havrides. steak fries. barh<'cues. nrl1ni;: le;'iOnS and songfests around we~tern campfire facilltic:>. . Roc.kv Ai;:uilar of San Juan Cap1Mr<1nn "''ill o~rale thr new Equ<'str~an Cenlrr for the recrralinn cenler. Jl w1\I be open from 8 a.m. lO 7 p.m. every day. Swim In Program Capistrano Registration for lhe first of a series .of three.week sessions of the learn to swim program offered .by .u1e Capistrano Unified School .rnstr1ct will be held Salur- day al the San Clemente municipal pool. Youngsters who have co~pleted . lhe first grade are eligible for swim s~ss1ons which will be available for beg1nner.c;, junior intermediate, intermedia~e a~d ~d v;aneed swim mers. Courses 1n 1un1or lifesaving also are available . The fee for each session is one dollar. Three-week swim periods will be of· fered through Aug . 20. The classes will start .J une 21. Registration will be conducted bet"•een 9 and 1 t :l<l 11.m. Saturday. Sel!lions ate limited to 20 members e•ch and will be. conducted weekday mornings. Specific Information will be available during registration. San Clemente Sets Symphonelle Co ncert '!'he San Clementi! C<immunily Sym· phonetle will perform a concer1 featuring tbe works of Beethoven llJld Moiart ,JUl'le Z1 In San Clemente High School'11 Triton Center. Cyr il G811i~ will conduct lhe fr!e public cancert which will begin at 4 p.m. Rnbln D11v \s will perform a clarinet snlo In Moiarf11 Concerto For Clarinet in A M11j0r. . . Twenty R ven mus1c1ans make up U111 symphonette aroup. ' Lellcrs from the San Clemente Art, and Crafts Club and the Wome.n 's Club both sought lhe delay to give the group! time to evaluate their financial situation. Some Joc;il groups had indicated they might donate substant ial funds to insure that proposed cuts in the clubhouse design do not take effect. San Clemente A1nhulance Subsidy OK'd 6}' JOHN VALTEltZA 01 Ille D•!IY l"!lol S1•ff San Clemente's ambulance crisis might end this weekend. In swift action by the cily council Wednesday the law makers unanimously transferred a city contract and a $3.000 annual subsidy to the nevdy created J{ospilal Ambulance Service. But there is a hitch. The firm, organized by ( o rm er employes of lhe ilJ.fated La Pa:i Ambulance Service which ceased opera· lion early this week. must conform to strict rules in the ci ty contract. The action ca me on the same day as announcements that La Paz. which served territory spanning the Saddleback Valley to San Clemente, closed its business . Kenneth llunter approached coun- cilmen to exp lain the progress of his new i;ervice. Hunter gave councilmen <.'Opie!f of an 1Jfficial document in which the riRhts In the city subsidy were granted to his firm by La Paz. He told councilmen that one new am· bul11nce wa.~ bein g prepared this week fnr lMJss!ble service by the weekend. He said his husines~ would provide "a better le vel of service with tx<tter equipment' Since the closing of L;i Paz. San Clemen te fire fighting vehicles. firemen and police officers have ossumed the tasks of emergency ambulance service. A fire chief's sla!ion wagon has been pressed intn use. backed up by other city r-ta tinn wagons in the case of an extreme emergency. rity Manaii:er Ken Carr Assured eoun· cilmen tha t plan "is certainly belier than nothing at all." The same veh icles and men have ofle n been used when private arnhu lances were unable to anJwer calls. Elsewhere in the U! Paz territory. am· hulancc service has been assum~ by Wind Ambulance of Laguna Beach and Tustin. Hunter told councilmen he h11d not had the chance to read the terms of the city contract. thu~ could oot promise II his firm could abide by the conditions. Councilmen stressed that if his proje<"I becomes reality. the contract and performance or the business would be evaluated In a special city council meeling June 30. 11 Studeitts Get '6 Year A·wards' Studl!nl:s In the sixth grade: don't u11ually gr11duRl.e In June, but nearly a dozen San Clemente younsters won special diplomas Wednesday lor being t~ rirst st.udenl.3 to attend thelr full &II years at Ole Hanson School. 'J'he eurprise award of the special ce.rtilicales was made dur ing · a n R~~embly Wednesday morning. ·'J'he eleven pupll1 were: the Ural evu to begin their &ehooling at the f111cllity and complete ~ix full year11. Next 11chool yea r they will begin classes ot Marco Forster Junior High School. Mrs. Gloria Bouman . a sch o o I secretary. Is the only dlWlct employe who has bttn with Ole. Hanson since ii..! opening in 1964. She owarded the documents lo Mark Taylor. Wendy Habig. Scott f'redlun. D11ns Ayer. Rand y "°IRrlln. MA.ry Aliet Gle~nl':r. Tt11cy Byrd. Breit· Butler, Mark Howman, Glen Rurri1 and Tina Dahlstrom. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE 1'7, 1971 • an 1n TWO MISSION VIEJO GRADUATES HAVE THEIR PICTURE TAKEN AT BIG MOMENT It Was a New Beginning fo r 450 Red-Robed Seniors at Wednesday Commencement Viejo Grads Bid Farewell 450 Kids Hear Speakers, Wade .Through Smoke Haze . . By PAi\fELA HALLAN 01 !ht 0.-llY l"llol SllH Fnur hundred and fifty Mission Viejo High School graduates bid farewell to UM! campus in a blaze of glory Wednesday - no names but plenty of ,11moke from a bomb which sent billows fl oating from the center of the dignified. crimson-robed figures. The graduates enlered the foolball stadium in stately procession wh ile stu· dent boC.y president Dnnna Connally welcomed an ove rnow crowd to ''Exodus· Gelle.sis : A Departure. Yet. A New Beginning". Robert H. Ferguson, former princi paJ. introduced honor st udents including Theresa Lyon. Pamela f.Iatsunka . Stev e Mc:Connelt and John Nimmo, who recelv· ed the school's highest honors . Bruce LeC\ar, the first student speakr.r. dedicated his address tn "all those "·ho judge a perso,, s integrity, not by what's outside but inside his head.'' "lfs lime for reflection and a purging of our souls to come up with a moral standard to live bv.'' he sa id. LeClar added that the lessons of histnry must not be forgotten . He thanked the former generation for technicologieal ad· vanrements to improve lives. and said his generation has a responsibility lo con- tinue the progress and solve the pro- blems left behind. "We cannot tolerate the devastation of our \e.nd, air and water. and increased population th at coold destroy us. We must work for better human relations." He said all men should live togf:ther as brothers yet as diverse indi'liduals a.s true freedom dictates. "We must eliminate war from our planet and end senseless destruction," he .added. He asked his fellow student.! to con· tinue seeking education and not to be "tno proud to compromise." "We have the potential to eJlo w men to live together as brothers. to wipe out poverty and war, to arrive at a moral standard and act upon it. And this day must mark the beginning." Student speMu Donna Connally told fellow araduatm not to stake a dream on a memory. "Protect yourself from a'n el· ·1stence marle up of memories," she 11aid. Shi': added that tach one wlll remember 8Ch0,ol days with Its smiles, words and wisdom, but each will have to' go his aeparate-·WDys alont. "YoUt most wonderful memory, should be of making your dream! a reality." she said , "A dniam makes every tomorrow a vl11ion or hope." Tl)e gra,duates received diploma!! from Tustin Unlon High School trustees Robert Airline Losses Told NEW YORK (UPI) -Amuican Airlines, Inc., reported Wednesday a net loss of '2.'*.000 for the month of May 1971, bringing lossca for lhl! first five month~ cf the year to ST1 .6?6,000. American said ill! net loss for ~1ay l11,11t year was $491.QOO 10,1lile the first five months in 1970 •how~ 11 net 1053 of 16.157,000. 7 Bartholomew and Chesler Briner. Many graduates had exuberant sup- porters in the audience. At ~ end of ~ ceremony the class sang thl':. alma mater. man y swaying and holding their hands in a peace sign. Just before the smoke bomb. a leltover from last year's independence day hid graduates from view,' MW: Connolly rush· ed to the microphone ' for an lmprornptu mes.,,age to .Principal Robl':rt Bosanko. "Mr. Bosanko, I love you:" Clemente Cof C Proposal In Council 2-2 Deadlock A cit~· cou11cilman·s proposal to in· crease San Clemente's contribution for ch<imber nf commerce advertisi ng stalled in a 2·2 deadlock Wednesday. Hon eyniooners Jn Clernente? It took flve days for someone lo think of San Clemenle as the pos.si· ble honeymoon hideaway of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Finch Cox. And San Clemente City Coun· cilman Wade Lower became the source in a call about the lwney. .noon cou ple from someone in Washington . "Some-One called me at 4 o'clock today to ask where Tricia was." he related lo fellow I aw make rs Wednesday night. "All they asked was 'Is Tricia there?' " "That's 11 heckuva.quesllon com· ing from :a perfect stranger all the way in Washington. "Especially .since I was taking a nap at lhe time." he quipped. For lhe cur ious, cheeks in San Clemente through lhe week bave revealed that the newtiwed! are not at La Casa Pacifica. Counc ilman Wadt Lower . citing a clty ordinance which ~ls a 11pecific £ormula for the ci ly donation. sa Kl tha t because of Increased revenues the city should grant l ll.700 In the chamber this year. A pro- posed. budgeted amount is $10,900. "We've gol a good thing going in the chamber advertising campaign ." he said, "why kill it now?'' B~t councilman Thomas O' Ke e f e disagreed, pointing to the tight situation In the proposed city budget. He said he was concerned that t.he chamber slil! has not instituted a mat ching fund POiicy to shore up the city contributi on. ~ money goes toward advertising the city's tourist attractions in media throughout the United Slates and Canada . "I also have doubts on how wel\ the money iS spent." he said. O'Keefe suggested lhat the mcnCy might be better used .toward improving thP..city's tourist facil ities. The conli-itiulion would come from a'40 percent chunk of the elty'11 tr~nsient oc· cupancy t31 (bed tax) revenues. · · Dr. Lcwer said that becallse those. re'1enues exceeded predictions t h I s budget · Ye·ar. under the forrTiula the chamber should recerve mort. · ~ Tht vote deadlocked when Mayor Walter Evan,11 abstained. lea.ving COUJ\· cilmen·Lower and Cliff Myers with' aye votes. O'Keefe and councilman Stan Northrup voted no. Slowdown o ·K'd Speed Limib Cut ·in MiBswn · l(wjo Spffd· llmill have btf.n. Ntablished ori Marguerite ·Parkway· tri Mission Viejo between · Tr1bUoo 1\91~ and Avery Park·way. , At the .ffil11<1t ' of · SUperyio-Or • Ralpb Clede and rttldefits of·the arq reprt1e11t;. ed by MJsslon Viejo' Homeownen ~: tkln Pt'esldtnt Michael Sheareri the coun. ty traffic· committee rK"Ommen<IN tbe limit& and ,Lhe.y wue adoJ1ltd u an tmergency meallJJ't by the Bolrd o( 6ufltl'\lllKlT'I Wedotsd111y. The new limlta, effecijve lmmedl•tely call for a speed limit reductloD from 61 {. mil" per .hoUr . u> 3S ~tw"n Trabue<! and '050 P1rkWaY and to ~ mpb4~t;.i~I'\ o.o.~d-Aveey ·))ltkways. . 1 , ~1!1'd. bt<ause ' ol the ,dllnjler to children in ~' uea and , the ~lilb of a l>oy J>lcycU.t ...,,.. ~ .,.. C1 a.r k uk~ the traff.io,111)Up, to tet the.JlmJted '°"' JM wt>ol~11U-.tob ·at 3S nipt.., But be iWR tcld ·that r1dlr·teeta showed this ta be lmpraclical. , ·cJark sald the emergency 11-.ws for the meaaure w1s necessary becall!e. or pedtiitrlans and cyclb:bi uilng the sum· mer recreaUon.center tn ~.-rea. ' Today's Flilal N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS War Report Source.May Be l(nown NEW YORK (AP ) -A formtr New York Times rt'porter said Wednesday night that the secret Pentagon report on the Vietnam was was given to the Times by ·Daniel E!lsberg, a former Defense Department employe now a senior research associale at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Sidney Zion, the former Timesman and former deputy U.S. attorney in New Jersey, named Ellsberg in an interview broadcast loca lly over WMCA radio. Zion refused to say where he got the In- formation , but said he considered his sources "very impeccable ... The Times had no comment on Zion's &tatemenls. . . Meanwhile, a federa l judge reserved decision today on a government request to inspect documl:!nts on which the New York Times based articles on the secret Pentagon study of U.S. involvement in Vietnam. But he said he would not allow a fishing expedition for other ma terial the Times may possess. U.S. District Ccurt Judge Murray I. Gurfein said he was limiting the government's discovery motion only to those documents received by the Times from the source of the materials used In the three articles published so far. "I'm not tolerating any fishing ex- pedition into the files of any newspaper;• Gurfein said. The government also seeb to bar the Times from resuming Its series ot three articles about the Vietnam study. rt moved on Wednesday,· Wlder discovery procedura, to .. 1.Spect the documents already alluded to by the Times and "olher classified documents" it believed to be in the Times· pouession. On Sunday. the Time.s began publish ing excerpts from the 4?-volume Pentagon study l!niitled "History of United States Decision ~1ak.ing Process on Vietnam Policy." After the third installment in the seril!s was published, the government t:sked ll federal court in New York to block further publication. Under a restrajning order in effe ct until Saturday, the Times has run no more copy, The case is tn be argued Priday. The government has launched an in· ve,<;tigation into the leak. Zion said he attempted but failed lo reach Ellsberg at his Cambridge address all Wednesday afternoon. Coach Clinic Slated Saturday Morning A m11ndatory clinic for coaches and assistant coaches for this ye ar's junior All-American ~'ootball League activities wlll be held at San Clemente High School Saturday morn ing . Parents of young1ters planning to play in the league also are invited at the 10 a.m. event in the high school Little Theater. Triton head football co.ach Tom Eads Rnd members of his staff wiU .conduct the session. PerMms eligible to attend c.an contact Bob Smith at 492-6246 i! they cannot at- tend. Oranlfe We•tller Just a smldge cOOltr today and tQmorrow along the Southland with highs ran·ging !ram !It ·to 7S arid IOW! 53 to 60. Hizy sunshine in the afternoons with -the usual low clouds and fog tn the e:afly morn- ing hours. INSIDE TODAY U.S. and Ja.,,an 1ign treotu lria s11t,Uitlf TV to rewrn OkMowo to Japant!ft. rule. ~. 1toru, Paoit 4. • ' • ''""' ... II .. bllfll'Rle Cl'ltcll!ot U,, Cl .. tltltf ,_, ,,.. ..... --=~~ '1.-.na -... ..._ ' ' • M • ' .... • • • • ,.,, .... " II -,.,, .......... , ...... ·• ............. ... _._.,. ' • ·=,.,_ .. . ' ,. .. ·--.... ·-· .. -.... =:; .... • • -·-,.,, -·-.. \ I ' 2 OAllY PILOT SC -· """' 11, 1'n . Boy, 6, Supports· Young~r Kids f\.UAMl (UPJ I -When the milk truck rmde it:ii p~awn home dellveries, 6- year-cild Oscar Henry did the breakfast "shopping" for his six brothers and sisters. Mo..'!t days. Oscar would return 'vith t 11•0 quarls or milk. Hut on good days. he'd get some bread. ice cream or orange j uice that had been dellvued by lhe milkman. A.ft.er breR kfast, Oscar would start beg· ging and ster11ing dinner. Tuesday . Dade County sher if I . s deputies ·were called lo Slst Street lo in· vestigale reports that some children had broken into a home. \Vhen Deputy Tim Adams arrived , he found an open window a nd Mard some crying. He slipped around lo t.ht' rear of 1he house and found seven bav.-l ing t:hildren staring at an empty refrigerator. Oscar told Adams they were searching for food, then took him to their smaU cot- tage down tht' stree.l. Adams walked in- .side, took one look and put in an emergency call for the "Safe Streets Squad," the deparlmenr s aocial action team. Sgt. Rollie Biggs of the sq_uad arrived in minutes and learned lhe children hadn't eaten in two days. Oscar. who just turned 6, was head of the household. The other children ranged in age from 5 to J. year-0ld twin girls whose bloated Stomachs and lislles.s behavior told Biggs they were sulferln& from malnutrition. Oacar aald thtlr father hid deierted them •'a long time ago," and their mother often diaappeared fo'r t~·o and ttiree days at a time. 1'he cottage, Biggs said, \VllS ahnost barren of furniture and was covered with l1lth. One room was blocked by a lour· fool pile of soiled clothes. The chlJ<iren slept on t~·o urine-soaked mattresses. The coll.age had no elec· tricity, no gas and the only food in the pl11ce was three sticks of rancid butter 111 a roach-infested refrigerator. Biggs sent a deputy lo a nearby grocery and fed the kids. "ll was like a transfusion the way those twins sucked thr milk out of the bottle," Biggs said. The year-0ld twins -Cecile and Cynthia -were rushed lo the county hospital's emergency room, treated lor severe malnutrition and were admilled lo nearby Mount Sinai., Hospilal. They weighed only seven and eight pounds after being fed "and looked like they were ooly two ~r thrtt months old," a nurse said. She added normal weight for one-year-0ld.s is 20 to 25 pound!l. A social worker located 26-year-0\d Mrll. Michele Henry Wednesday and ahe was booked at County Jail on charges of child neglect and contributing to the dependency of children -misdemeanors punishable by a total of 18 months in jail and a fine of $1 ,SOO. Laguna, Capo Districts Expand Vocation Class An expanded vocational training pr~ gram with courses in five occupatiorts ad- ministered by a full -time director v.'ill be offered next achoo! ytar in the Laguna Beach and Capistrano Unified School Districts. The programs will cosl $76,000 and the money will be rail'led with ta1 of alightly more than thret cents on property in the two districts. 'Ihe Laguna Beach school board Tues- day approved the 1971-72 bl!dget for lhe Democrats Press Budget Vote For Sliowdown SACRAMENTO (AP) -Assembly Democratic leaders were pres!llng today (or a showdown vot.e on a $7.06 blllion version of Gov. Reagan's 1971-72 slate budget. But Republicam hinted they might try to block pa"age of the spending plan un- til Democrats cul back on $348 million in new spending the Democratic majority l!ldded to the bare.bone.a Rtagan budget proposal. Democrats. who hold a 43-37 edge in the Assembly, must win at ltasl 11 GOP votes for the two-thirds mar11ln nteded to &end the budget to tht Senate. At issue in !ht budget shoy,·down is a potential lax increase of anywhere from $350 million lo $1 billion. 'Tht $6.74 bi!llon budgtt submit\.ed last Frb. 2 by Reagan y,·as precsriously balanced without new taxes by deep cuts in numerous state programs, denial of co.i;l-<>f-living raises for !late emplo~'es for the first time in eight ytar1 and a major wt:llare rtform program. DAILY PllOT OllAHG! (.OAST .. UIL\i141"6 ~,AHY ••i..tt N. W••• ·-ld.-11 ""' hl>lltW J·~k •. c •• , .... VIC9 JlrelO .. , aN °"'* .. .......,,~, Th-·· tc,.,.;1 1.cu .. Tli•"'•' A. M111rp\i11t Mt-lftt I.di• Qtffte H. le•• R;,\.~ P, Nill ,,...ltl..V ,,.. ........ fd!IW• .......... Offke Regional Occupational Program a:nd the levying of the 3.12 cent ta.1 per $100 of a!laeased prope!'ly valuation. 1be ROP board of directors, with two representativts from each dislTict, met recently and approved the five courses and the hiring of a full time director for the program. Hector R. NavBrrelle, 42. who is nn\v director of instructional servi~s for Cost.a Mesa High School. \~ill be employed at a salary of $18,500 to run the vocational training program. During the I97G-71 school year, when onl y two classes were offered, the program v.·as run by a part lime administrator. The five classes to be ()rfered to sludenta in both school districts are in the fields of health aide, cosmetology, moUlrcyclt mechanics, quantity foods preparation and comtructlon technology. District officials in a recent aurvey determined there was sufficient inttrest in these occupaitoins lo provide I.he training. A tolal of 90 students, mostly high school seniors, l'i'ill be enrolled in th<' courses, which will meet for several hours each day. In addiLion to the voca- tional training, the students will be ex- pected to keep up with their regular course y,·ork. Laguna Beach school trustees have lauded lhe program for providing voca- tion training to students who preftr gtt- tin g a job rather than going to roll ege upon graduation. Some 30 students received health aide or food preparation tralning during this past school year. District Slates Summer Classes Summer school classes y,•ill be offered at all four high schools (lf the Tustin Union Hi&h School District, beginning June 23. University High School, the newest &[ th" four. will offer a limited program, a district spokesman said, but complete course !lchedules y,•jlJ be offered at Mission Viejo, Tustin and Foothill high Khoo ls. The six week session is offered without C'harge to studtnls needing to make up course credits or those w\slllng to earn extra high school credits. Classes begin at 7:45 a.m. and end al 12:30 p.m. daily throughout the six·wtek session. Students may enroll in tw11 courses and earn a total (If ID course units. Schools will accept students up to the first day of classes. Agnew's Bag Los Angeles County Supervisor Warren Dorn presented .the vi~e-pres- ident with a specially designed golf bag that has a big. bright red cross on it. Agnew, who is notoriously well known for his golf "marks· mansh ip," broke up with laughter at the presentation. Agnew was appearing on behalf of Nixon1s revenue sharing and weUare reform programs in 1.-0s Angeles. Thurston Students Start On Bicycle, Camping Trip As a sign of their interest in the en- vironment. 26 students from Thurston Inlermediate School in Laguna Beach will embark Friday morning on a blcyclt and camping trip to Mission Bay in San Diego. All of the s~enls are members of the Bike Club at the school and were re- quired to ride on a 60-mile long bike trip to qualify for the San Diego jaunt. After leaving at 8:30 a.m . from the district offices on Blumont Drive, lhe group will head down Pacific Coasl .Highway, through San Clemente and on into Camp Pendleton. "Surprisingl y, all v•e had to do ~·as send a lclttr lo the base provost marsha l asking for permission lO go along their road," explained Mike Fickel. one of four faculty members who v.•ill accompany the students. "They aren't having any mock wars on the base. so y,·e can go through." After going out lhe Oceanside entrance to the base. lhr students will pedal on to Jerferson Elrmentarv School in Carlsbad, ,1•here they will spend Friday night. After leaving the school Saturday morning, the group will travel on into San Diego. stopping along the y,•ay to eat, s wim or sunbathe. One district 01vned pick up truck v.·ill accornpany the group and carry food. provisions for repairing flat lires and .sleeping bags. The cost for the gas for the truck and expen!les for thr trip averaged out lo ebout $12 per student. "H's going to be an end or the year fun trip for the club. All of the students are Warren Bolton Services Slated Monday ~forning Funt"ral services v.·ill be held f\.ionday at 10 a.m. for \Varren E. Bolton. a \on11.time Orange Coast resident v.·ho ll1erJ Tuesday al South Coast Co1nn1unity Hospital follov.·ing an apparent hearl allack. He was 48. f\.1r. Bolton had lived in Laguna Brach for the past few years and was a form<'r residenl of Ney,·port Beach. Hewes in the floor covering business and was affiliated v.·i!h several floor covering firms In both cilies. The &'rvices will be held in Corona rlel r.iar at Ba ltz Mortuary Chapt.I. Interment will lo\loy,· at Pacific View f\.fem orial Pl'rk. f\.1r. Bolton. "'ho lived al 288~ Zrll Drive, is survivr d by his wife, Marie : two daughters, Cindy Bolton and Sherry Smith~ two sons, Warren Jr. and Donald; a step-daughter. ~ise Cla rk : two step.. sons, Jeff and Patrick Clark: his motht:r, f\1r s. Gladys Bolton; a brothtr, Donald, and tight grandchildren. enthralled with ecology and this is their way of showing it," Fickel said. The only problem encountered in preparing for the trip was getting permission to spend Saturday and Sunday night! at Mission Bay's Campland. Fickel said he finally enlisted the help of the San Diego Evehing Tribune in get· ting the OK. All of the students are insured for the trl:i under school district policy, since the school board approved !he junket at last Tuesday night's meeting. Additionally, accident Insurance was Laken out by the club. Fickel said tha t the. cyclists are en· courAging anyone lo visit them on the trip or even join in for a fe1v miles' ride. Cyclist Injured In Car Collision A South Laguna 1notorcyrli.st suffered mi nor injuries \\'·ednesday when he struck a car pufTrng from the curbside of a hilly Laguna Beach street. Police said Nelson W. Kane, I!, of 31684 \Yildwood Road. was taken to South Coast Community Hospital following the 9 a.m. accident. which occurred in the 700 bloc k of \Vcndl Terrnce. Kane was treated for a serious cul on his ankle and other minor abrasions before being released. Invest igators said the mishap occurred when Kane, northbound on the narrow street. st ruck the left fender of an auto beiilg driven by Pamela Fraser. 39, of Ojai. No citations will be issued . pOlice said, because it v.'as determined that the actions ()f both drivers were contributory lo the accident. I Board Action Sought Recording Ires J aquin Parents A recording of an asserledly chaotic cla~s llession at Cordi!lerA School made on a s1nuggled recorder led to an emo- tionally charged session of the San Joa- qui n Elen1entary School Di s I r i c l trusteeea \Vednesday. Adding to lht furor y,·as a refusal of the board to play the recording before an au- dience of 150 parents, some of thein angry. 1'he recording was a major exhibit in a protest by so1ne parents complaining of ''lack of discipline" in tht f\.1ission ViCJO e!en1entary school. Trustees listened lo the recording in a closed-door session to \1•hi ch 10 parents and one elected. bul unseated. trust.ee were invited, After the hour-Jong ex· ecutive session !he board announced ils refusal to make the recording public . Spo kesman for the parent group 11'a1' Jim Ca rlin or l\.1ission Viejo \l'ho said he \\'as co ncl'rned noL onl y about the lack or control in the classroorn but also ap· parent lack of respect students are allow· cd to display to.,.,·ards their teBcher!l. "E<1ch parents had factual grievence5." he said ... \Vhen these parents gathered together y,·e stipulated th;i t each had to have first-hand knowledge of a problem.'' Some or the parents testified during the meeting that a program in which fourth, fifth and sixth graders are together in one "open·· classroom promoted chaos. Others asserted that teachers had been heard cursing. allowing children lo lie rio"'n on the floor. put the ir feel on the tables, and verbally abuse them. Carlin said parents had lalked to teachers and principals and tr ied to y,·ork out problems through channels but had not rfceived a ny sAlisfaction. They finally decided to take their grievances to the board. ·'The problem is children are gelling an inferior educallon." said Ca rlin. "Some of the problern could be solved by using common sense and selling limits for children. There ill no Jove wiU1out limits. J f you tell a chila ·I don ·1 care v.·hat you do,' the child ju8t remembers the first par1." He said some parents objected lo the "open'' classroom in which fourlh, fif th and sixth graders are grouped according to the!r abilities rather than grade level. "If there are to be experimental pro- grams. proponents should provide studies I.ha t show the programs are sound. Our children should not be used for ex- perimentation." he declared. Carlin said he expects lo y,•ork wi th the board lo iron out some of the diU\culties. J-le said there are many good ltachers in the school and hopes the program can be upgraded. Coldberg Quits Fir111 NEW YORK (AP\ -Former Supren1e Cou rt Justice Arthur Goldberg says he will leave a New York law firn1 lo relurn 10 law practice in Washington July I. Goldberg. the unsuccessful Democratic candidate for governor of New York last year. was a labor union lawyer in \Vashing!on from 1948 until his ap- pointment as secretary of labor in 1961. Jfe was named to the Supreme Court in 1962, but resigned in J9fi5 to become am- bassador to the United Nations. Marilyn Harris, Director ?f E?uca- lional Services. said tilt ad1nln1.strat1on Is planning to study all the charges i11 depth and will deter1nine procedures for U1e future of Cordillera. She .said pa1i of the problem appea~s to be nol the program it.'Jelf bul how 1t LS unplementet:. . The board took no formal action. Capo to S11e In Conden1ned Ho11si ng Iss ue By PAMELA HALLAN 01 !he O•llY P'llol !l•I! Residents of condcmnl"d housing in San Juan Capistrano n1ay soon be packing lhelr bags. 1'he City Coun cil vott!d unanimously this week to sue !he property owner lor failure to evict them. The civil sui! against fllrs . Lilli.in Zaenglein of Pasadena alleges fa ilure to comply with a ruling to remove the "unsafe, unhealthy" buildings from the premises. "ll will tie· an action to enjoin the property owner from a fu rther \'iolation of the law by allow ing the buildings lo remain and be occupied," said James Okazaki, city attorney. 'He said if the court rules in the city's favor, the properly owner \VOuld probably be gi\·en a few days lo removt the people from the premises and knock down the buildings and if they failed to comply they v.·ould probably be fined for each day the buildings stood. Okazaki told the council he had approached the District Att orne_v, whn handles criminal sui ts for the city. on fili ng actions £or ei\he.r viohition o( building ordinances against the property ow ner nr trespa~sing ag<lin~t the occupants. The DA's office declined In handle either one but ~u,!!gested the city file a civil suit, h~ related. Tht council expressed reluctance. to have to come to the point of a suit, particularly because three or the famil ies have made do.,.,·n payments on houses. The Arreola. Prado and Carillo h1m lli r<; are each trying to purchase homes. but in at least one case the residence won't be available until Oc t I. "I'm re.ally dragging ffi)' rec l • particularly ii the people are preparing In vacate. if v.·e take the court action lhev 1vil! be literally put into the street.'' said Okazaki . "The absentee property owner is nol capable of controlling the property ~o I think y,•e should go fory,·ard y,·ith the civil action," said Mayor Tony Forster . "If l'i'e do nothin!il . we are still liable for the premises. We have to proceed for the city's protection," he added. Councilman Bil! Bathgate said he hope~ the people can move before the court makes its final determination. Councilman Jim Thorpe said tht> cit_., should make sure the people are told about this development and made to i;ee the seriousne~s cf it. Flbalava Color! IF YOU CAN'T COME L>.;- CALL Fabulous Shag I FABULOUS PRICEI ( ONLY. 895 64&-0275 for an e~rt "'"" coruultant ;1Jl lJ•rw1t .A"•~u• M•ili.., ..... , ... , r.o. 1 •• ••'· 92652 ,_ Cls•••N Offlc• )01 H•rtli E:I C1111IN Rt•I, 91•71 °""°""" °" .. -....~ a» ....,., •• ., '""" ~ '9Kfll .mJ N~ a...1...,..,, ....,.... •••din UP.& llwll ., .. .,.~ 2 Suspects Rearrested In Park Meter Thefts \\'hQ v.ill come to • }'our home ''it.h aamplea "ithout any Oblfgat!Or'I to ¥0Ul I t..run• Btach polire: Wedntsday re1r- rt1ttd lwo au!lpecta chara:ed with operating a parkln& mettr theft ring alter a seriu of court proceedings ruulted In the palr'.1 reltase from Oran1e County Jail. Det C&rroll Bush 11id the two men wtrt released followlng a preliminary hearinc of tht case Tuesd1y at which an esstntlal wltneu falltd to appear. Municipal Court Judge Paul Mast onhred the charce1 di1mlutd ag1lnst Charles Leon Adami. 25, i nd Guthrie Edwin JOMS, 34, for lack of tvldenct. The two wtre first arrested In early 1'-1ay on C'h•raea fl f 11te11J n1 from p1rklng meters in co1sL1l clller from Stn Ole,ll'O to lhe S•n Fr1ncl1CO b1y Arta. Del. Bush &aid that after tht: char&es wl'.!re dl!mlM- ed, Oranae County Jail officials rtleased the mrn before Laguna Beach aulhoritie" could place a hold on the pair and refile tht meter theft charges. Det. Bush arrested Adt.m!l in Anaheim Wednesday morning and picked up Jonts •I 1 Placentia address later that if· 11'.!rnoon . "There was no problem," Bush said. ''They both kntw they were going to be rt1rre1ttd anyway." Of the four suspt('ts origln11\ly l11ktn in- to cwitody by police, only th!"ee now face prosecution. They a re Jones. Adam$ and J one•' wift. Beatrice. 21 . Char1:t:s hl'l\'e bef:n di am i~sed aa11hut Willt l)esn Rotramt.I , 21. who v.·a~ ar- re!!l.ed at a Santa Ana apartrntnl (\.1ay 6 with Adan,s. PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS In thi1 brilli•nf nylon ftc• 1h1g IC•t•st•n't color wi11rds hiYf dt••m•d wp 1uch 1p1rklin g tn i••• •1 lncr•dibl• 81u•, Am•1in9 Wh itt, E•tr1ordin1ry Gold •nd •v•" Co1011•I Copp•r. F•bulou1 h•1 m•"Y of th••• colors. They'r• •II incr•dibl t , ret Hy. ('ali1lo11 comn I• ncftl19 •• ,... wltfi IMtdilftf frt19t, A 9' I 12' for .. ,, $114.911 1'01.1r /avor1tc intenor dt:igntr wlll be hopw to cusist 1.1ou •.• Optl'I Mon., ThYn. & P,f, lvq. TRY OUR RIVOLYINli CHARGE 2215 HARBOR I LVO. COSTA ME SA, CAL IF. 646-0271 646 .0276 'f ' ' . -~--....... Laguna Beaeh ' EDITI ON Today's ~ID•I N.,... Stocks " VOL. 6-4, NO. 14-4, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE ·l7; 1971 TEN .CENTS School Principals Issue Staff Allocations By FREDERICK SCROEMERL 01 "'9 Ot llY "llOI lltff Principals of the fi ve Laguna Beach schools presented their plans for staffing allocations for the 1971·72 school yea r in a i;tudy session with district trustees Wednesday niiht. Under a new syslem, staff posilions next year will be based on ''sta/fing units." One staffing unil equals Sil.JOO, or lhe average cost of payi ng a full time teacher for a school year. Trustees present at the meeting in· eluded the soo n·lo·be·sworn·in board member s. Patricia Gillelle, Gerald Linke and Bill Thomas. • Under the tentative budget for next year, v.·hich must be approved by Aug. 9, the lhree elemen'i.ary schools -Aliso, El Morro and Top of the World -would receive an additional staffing unit each. Thurston Intermediate School would recei ve none and Laguna Beach High School would lose l .3 staffing units. Don Haught, princi pal of the high schoo l, said if the units were lost , it could mean the cancellation of advan ced courses in humanities. langua ge, auto mechan ics. m at he ma tics and phntography. The courses, he said, usually atltact less than 20 students each semester. "Another alternative," Haught said, "would be to increase the size ol. OW' basic subject classes in math, history and English. We might bave to put jg students ~in a class, opposed to our average of 28 students per class now." He said il would be unwise to increase the number of students per teacher, when il has been show n through recenUy released re!'learch by Columbia Universi- ty that lo\\'er studr.ilt teacher ratios make for better education." David Lloyd, principal of Thurston, said to maintain the "slatus quo'' at the acbool no budget cuts should be made. Because of the unique Thurston pr~ gram, which utilizes much "para.pro- fessional" staff and data processing equipment, the cost per student for education is high, Lloyd gaid. However, he noted, the scheduling used at Thurston allows for different group- in gs of students with tea<;llers. an 85 per· ee.nt reduction in the number of substitute teachers needed.and quick pr~ Cl!l!Sin& of tchool records. .. All of this makes Thurston more ef· ficicnt lhan traditional program schools," LloYd claimed. El Morro principal Bill Allen under the staffing plan. would have 20.8 unit.s to v.'Ork-wifh ntllt year. He said he would use the increa~ revenue to hire a full lime coordinator for the school's kin· dergarltn program,. who would in tum hire 1:1on·Pfofessional teacher& to work In the progr:&n;l. · ''In this manner. we would be able to reduce the r'atio of teachers to students in the kindergarten program," Allen said. Other additional revenue would be used kl pay a full time U~rarian, balf·time resourc e teacher1. upper and primary grade program directors and a volunteer a1n eac or Tree-savit1g Move Asked Of Council Laguna Beach ci!y councilmen were urged Wednesday to use their influence lo help save a grove of eucalyptus trees in Laguna Canyon. Several large tree.s are in the process ()f being cut down. artist Andrew Wing told the councH , and a line of "about 20" is lhreat.ened. Soma of the trees may be situ!led with in county flood control district property, Wing suggested, asking lhe council to alert cou nty authorities to the situa tion. Conserva\ionist James Dilley. describ- ing the grove as "one of th e landmarks of the community," also urged the council to make every effort to preserve the trees. Dilley said he woul d take up the matter with the Greenbelt board of direc- tors who might be persuaded to con· tribute Greenbelt funds toward saving the eucalyptus grove . The tree removal. the council was in· forme d, is being undertaken by proprr1y ov:ner Paul Westbrook. who recently was den ied Planning Commission permi ssion lo operate a parking Jot at the site . Ill t-.titligan Drive. riur ing the festiva l season. At the lime of the denial. com- m1~sioners noted that the number of tn:-es on !he property wollld make it un~uitablc for p11rk in~ use and indi cated !hey would no! look kindl y on removal of livr trees !o accommoda1c parking Other grounds for denial v.•ere difficulty ,,r ingress and egress and disturba nce to the neighborhood. Canyon residents who in1"1u1red about f('moval of the trees thts week. Wing tol1t the coun cil . were told it was a safety measure because the tree branches were becoming a hazar d. "If it's for !'lafety," &aid Wing. •'they only need topping.'' ·Airline Losses Told NEW YORK \UPI ) -America n Airlines. Inc .. rC'portcd \Vcdnesday a net los!'l of $2,080.l'MXI for the mo nlh of r-..1ay t97 t. bringing losses for the first five months of the year to. $27,676,000. Oruge Coa1t Wellther Just a smidge cooler today and l()morrow alcing the Southland with highs ranging from 60 to 75 11nd low!l Sl to 60. Hazy gunshine in the llftemoom wJth the usul1 low clouds and fog in the early morn- ing houn. INSIDE TODAY U.S. and Japan sign treat11 via sa t.tllitt TV to rl'turn Oktnawa to Jopo:ntst rult. Stt story. Page 4. l lrtlll ' ~ ... , .. ,, ... llllt • M~lutl l"-l • (tlli.r11i. • Ntti.1111 N.w> ••• Cllt<~l"''V1 ' Or11191 C11111ly ' Clt ttUIM ... ..... 1. "'"" " """" • ·-· U·1S Cr•....,., • IN<ll M•rk-'t .... ,,..,"' lktlch • T1l1Yl\IOfl " • ~.,..,1 ....... • "~··"" ll·lt •~••rt.._.. , .. ., Wtttl'llt • l lMllCI .... W~lt1 WI•~ .. ~--" W-'INtwt !).II .. ..-. " Werl<il N>lwl ••• WAS HE THE SOURCE? MIT's Daniel Ellsberg War Secrets Leali Figure Identified NEW YORK (AP) -A former New York Times reporter said Wednesday night that the secret Pentagon report on the Vietnam was was given to the Times by Daniel Ellsberg, a former Defense Departmcnl employe now a senior research associate at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Sidney Zion, the former Timesman and former deputy U.S. attorney in New .Jersey. named El~be.rg in an inU!rview broadcast loca lly over WMCA radio. Zion refused to say where he got the in· formation, but said he considered his sources "very impeccable." The Times had no comment on Zion's statemen ts . . , Meanwhile, a federal judge re.served decjsion today on a government request to inspect document.s on which the New York Times based articles on 'Ule Jecret Pent.agoo study of U.S. involvement in Vietnam. But he sald he would nol allow a fishing expedition for other material lhe Times may possess. U.S. Disltid. Court Judge Murray t. Gurfein said he v.·as limltin1 the government's discovery motion only to those documt'nl..s received by the Times from the source of lhe materials used In the three articles published so far . "I'm not tolerating any fi.Khlng e~ pedition into lhe files of any new1paper," Gurfein said. · $10,000 Action Dog Ban Signs Up Next Week Laguna Beach city councilman Edward Lorr brought up the ci ty 's dog ordinance again at the council meeting Wednesday in asking why the new I~ had not been posted on the city'& beaches. '!1!e ordinance, sparMi by Lorr ~al months ago, went into effect 'Tuesday and bans dogs from all beaches from I a.m. to 8 p.m. durln1 the eummer monthJ. Lorr aiked Oirecf.or of Public WoriJ Joe Sweany why sign had not yet bec:n posted on the beachts announcing the ordinance. The councilman 1aid he had hoped the law would have been posted for bcachgoeni much in advance of the June 15 effective date t.o give lhem advance warn ing. Sweany told th~ councilman his depaM.- ment had r.ncountered problems with the wordinl of the Utirty signs which in· fanned the public of special beach regulationa. City parks superintendent C I y de Sweetser saJd today the new sign& would proba bly be posted wilhin the ne.a:t week:. He said the l!f'ltire lot of thirty 1igna bad kl be repainted because the dog ban r~gu\alion mwt be at the top of the sign,,. To fulfill this requi remen t, Sweetser said the. original lettering -prohlbiling drinklf'li , littering, camping , and the like from the beaches -had lo be sanded off. Senior Party Won't Be Loud Residents surrounding Laguna Beach High School have been uk~ to "grin and bear it" Thursday night following graduation .:.... Ule "it'' referring to rioise that may be. generated from the Senior AJI Night Party, which la traditionally held at the JC.hoot for the 1raduating class. Parents ln charge of the party promite to keep the noi&e to a minimum at the party, which will be patterned after New Orleans' Mardi Grl!l. 1bey add that the Dixieland Band will perfonn tnalde and not outside, where the music would be sure to travel. Committee chairmen are al~ sending out an tnv ltallon to interested pe:r10ns to atoP by the high IChool Thurtday from g kl 7 p.m. to aee the Mardi Gru set up for the party. By Phil lnterl1ndf * r' -· ''Go Awayl Go Aw1y or I'll Call the City and H•v• You 81nnedl" Council Park Encroachment Flap Put Before Councilmen A flap over alleged encroachment into Heisler Park of 1 1idcwalk behind a North Coast Highw4y care ope.rattd by Laguna Beach Mayor Richard Goldberg and his wife , made il.!I way into the city council Wednesday, wilh inconclusive mulls. Furniture finilher William Leak and wrller Arnold Hano reiterated a charge made before the PlaMing Commlasion la.st week that a new eid~walk leading to a take-0ut window behind Sunny's Sidewalk Cafe, 199 N. C.Oast Highway, consUtutes a.n encroacbment and pmsible breach of lhe .city's reaponslblllt.y to maintain th• park for public, nt11-com- mercial use. Both Leak and Hano lnsl1ted they were not interested in political a1~Ct1 o{ the matt.er, but only in tne"'mannel'~ln whiCh the city was servinl tht public Interest. ' "Despltl!: bold headline, and a rather provocative editorial. I am not 1 political pe:r50n," Leak told Ule mayor. ''I want to assure you," Hano told Goldberg, "that 1 regard thl!: headlint ln one paper as cheap, sleazy and slimy. I am not concerned with the ownership or officers of lbe corporatlot1, only that the city fa ll~d in its administration of the park." Hano reminded the council th11t the deed to Heisler Park requires that it be maintained without commercial in· &tallations or risk rever ting to heirs of the eslate. Mrs. Bonnie Hano charged, "The new sidewalk is there to aerve the take-out window and clearly violates the restric· lion in the park deed." After leamjng from Planning Director Wayne. Moody that the Planning Com- mission had instructed the owners not. to oper1te the take-out window pending in· ve1ligation of the matter, cooncilman Roy Holm said he would like to wait and 1ee what the comm!eion concludes. County Studying Laguna Health Center Request Lagun1 Bt-acb'1 reque1t that the Board of SUpervisors 1pproYe 1 center for health ure. antl-4ruc treatment and aid to thfl needy in the city has been referred to the county 1dmln1stratlve office. ror study, • Court Upholds Bequest F'Uth Dletrtct Supervisor R o n • I d c..,. aff<r r .. dlq Ll"""''•·letitt of •Ppeal· lilllng Ill probloms. "id ':You hive jo admire tMlr frankness Jn ad· mJttlitC they are all .erewed up.'' · Caaperl ·added, "dl!:Central!Jll!d aervtee1 """"' like • good Id.. but If "" approYO 1 ~for Llguna every ctty ·Iml)'·want one .. WI ..,,Wd be 1etlln1 a precedent." An Orange County Superior Court jury has upheld the $10,000 be-quest made to a $$4·11-day practical nurse by an elderly Laguna Beach spinster who allerai thl!: wlll in the woman's favor ]u!lt three months before her death. The panel ended !iix days of trial be.fore Judge Robert L. Corfm11n hy rejecting lhe clain1 of principal ~neflr1ary Nancy Htnry Eaton of Chicago that her sister· in-law. M11ry Snlome Eaton, Sl4 Poplar St.. Lagun3 Beach, wits t'Ofrced into namfng Ev1 Ro binson 1s •n 11dditional beneficiary in a codicil to the wlll . Miss Eaton, 88, died In her bemt tn Nov. 10, 1980. She drew up bet wltl April 24& 111$S1 and added tbe codJcU on Au1. 14 ef that year. Her estate wu valued at about $100,000. Witnesses al.Id Mrs, Rob\nlOfl tended to the 11lin, Miss Eaton In the moriths before her death. It wu Letllfltd that Uie. ~ealtb of UM: old lady v!Aibly improved durinc the month that Mrs. Roblsnon w11 absent from the home i nd her dutlts as!l\gned to another nur!ll!. Laguna Beach attorney Marshall Beach fllattd that he supervised the drafUng ol the oodlcU 19d e.preued surprise whf:n MJss Eatvn told blm tb11t 1bt intended t. Increase Mri.' ~b!Mqn'11hart. to ll0,000 fronl ,tlle,lt,000 or!llnaUY outborized. Buch uld be told .Ml• EatM thtt .s.qoo would bt lllfllcltnt '°" Mra. Robinson but ~ clltnt Insisted ou tn- crea11tn1 ·her portion tf the e5late to 110,flflil. • Ml•s talon, a popular and e_roliflc writer,, occupied the home on Popl•r Street for many year1 with her 1f1ter, Qia.rle Eaton, who dttd on March to, 1989. at lht •Rt of as. Clote friends ol the 1ur¥ivln1 .1ister uid her hesltb deteriorated from the time of Cblril Eal«>·a.doalb. • I• •• He admttttd.. that Lapna hid 1pecl11li- td 11"oblema In rt!lldtntr and dlitiftce from canttall.zed county fatUJties 1n Santa Ana and Orange. "lt..dc>Mn't suit tbt Hie style Of eome of those ~le to come up to our bl& bulldlncs." the supervlM>r 1ddtd. The Lacuna Idler noted th1t lhe city 11ow h• lhe South Oran1e County Mental Health Strvlct and a Jtale Well Baby Cllnk. "But we need mueh more, Npe<~Y In anU-<lru& trutmeoL" • coordinator. Al Haven, principal of Top o( the Wnrll1. said in creased revenue at the ~I ~ used to add an aide to the prifl. ci pal's office, for teacher aide in thl kindergarten program, a part.time medi! technicians, and an add!Lional full-tima teacher if next year's enrollment top!i over 510 students. At Aliso School, Principal Lyle Procto: said he would like lo Increase the number of teacher aide hours in all grade levels. hire lwo tea c her assistants for the primary grades and increase the number of hours of the school librarian. ere Architect May Plan Project A na tionally known park architect ha1 offered to design a master plan for development of L2.guna's Main Beac'.'! Park for a fee amounting to about one· third the usual cost of such a service, the city council was advised Wedoe.sday night. Laguna resident Richard Bigler wbo tr1alntains tiliJ studio on El Paseo, within the Main Beach Park property, will design the p~rk for $7 .500, Cily Man2.ge1 Lawrence Rdse told the council. adding. "We were thinking the plan.! would cost 111,000 to $30.000 ... Councilman Peter Ostrander. a " 1rchltect. said the normal fee for such a project would be $5,000 an acre . and the t.ea ch park contains more than four acre.~. While 2.grf'eing that Bigler·s offer wa1 generous and most fortunate . councilmen agreed lo defer action on hiring hbn for the job until their adjourned meetlnl at f p.m. next Wednesday. so they may ha ve time to study the complete status report on tbe Main Beach prepared by the plan· nlng staff. The council did. however. approve the filing of an application for 50 percent federal funding of & .S00.000 project 14 complete acquisition and begin develop. men t of the beach park. An estimated S2I0,000 of lhat total "'Ould be requi red for acqulsilion of tlw Arco service station site. Admin istrative assistant Al Autry told councilmen !he Stale Department of Parks and Recreation, which administer• the federa l funds, v.·ould occept the development plan for the beach park at a late r date provided the application and other documents were received by the June 30 dead!ioe. City M!nager Rose said th a t preliminary staff study indicated there ia a good possibility Iha.I. ·'the beginning of a park" can be acllieved by next summer\ However, he added , "it will be e.a:pensive ... and federal and state financing will be mandatory for any backer• of ~ development." . Urging prompt acceptance of Bigler'• offer to de.sign the park mr.ster plan. Rose noted thal general and preclM development pl1n1 are essential to afl' quire such financing and noted that Bigl~r·s park plana are well known to t.be lnterested state deparlment. * * * 'Apartment Wa~' Posed for Beach. ,. Laguna Beach Taxpayers Jnald9't Marie Ware Mayer lot~ a aw-prised City, c.ouncil audience Wedne'aday that wbat'tJ really needed on tile Main Beach 1'. • "will of apartmenll" lo protect the downtown area from ec:ologJcal diluter In the form of wlnda tblt wfli funOol through the Canyon lf au structures ... rtmoved for 1 beach park. , • Mrs. Mayer • longtime ruldenL ad property owner who now llvts In Mllslr9ft Viejo. read a twO.~t txplM&tlon c1 hit theory. ~ · '''l'he e.xi.Kting buildfnp .QIVt protecll~ from natural breeaee," sbl u ld, "A w~ 1' mandatory lloflg lhe co.ttal fronta ... and If hllh rise buildings ere not-wan"4 lhe wall could be attraeUvt garden apart- ment ccmplc1es to a c c o m m o d a •• tourists. .1 "The city will aufftr pe.rman.t damage If the coastal frontaae ts ezpoMd to the element.s." • - • I I Z CAJlY PILOT SC Thu.sNJ, .Not 17, 1'7t Young~r Kids lltIAMI (UPI) -When the milk truek made il! p~-<lawn home deliveries, 6- yur~ld Oscar .Henry did the breakrast •·shopping " lor his slx brother~ and :sisters. M03l da ys, Oscar would return \1·1th tll'o qua rts of milk. Bul on good d•ys. he 'd gel some bread, ice cream or orange juice thal had bee.n delivered by the mil kman. Aft.er brealfJast, O,car would start beg· t;ing and stealing dinner. Tuesday. Dade County sher if f. s deputies "'rre ca lled lo 5lsl Strert to in· ''estigate reports that some children had broken into a home. \Yhen Deputy Tim Ada.ms arrived. he found an open window 8nd heard some erying. He slipped around to the rear of the house and found .seven ba\\·ling i.:hildren staring at an emply refri gerator. Oscar told Adams they were searching ror food. then took him to their small cot· tage do"'Tl the street Adams \\'alked in· :side, look one look and put in an emergency call for the "Safe Streets Squad," the department's aocial action team. Sgt. Rollie Biggs of the squad arrived in minutes and learned the children hadn't eaten in two days. Oscar. who ju~t turned 6. was head of the household. The other children ranged in age from 5 to I· year-old twin girls whose bloated stomachs and listleS!! behavior told Biggs they were sulfcrln& from malnutr!Uon. Oscar said thtlr falhtr had deserted them ·•a lon1 time ago," and their mother olten disappeared fc1r two and three days at a time. The cottage, Biggs said, \~as almost barren of turniture and was covered with filth. One room was blocked by a four· fool pile of soiled clothes. The children slept on tv;o urine-soaked mattresses. The <:otLage had no elec· triclty , no gas and the only food in the place was three slicks or rancid butter 1n a roach~infested refrigerator. Biggs sent a deputy to a nearby grocery and fed the kid~. "It was like a transfusion the v.•ay those twins sucked the milk out af the bottlt," Biggs said. The year.old tv.·ins -Cecile and Cynthia -were rushed to the county hospital"s emergency room, lrealed for severe malnutrllion and were admitted to nearby Mount Sinai Hospital. They weighed only seven and eight pounds after being fed, "and looked like. they were only two <lr three months <lid," a nurse aakt. She added normal weight fOl' one-year-olds Is 20 to 25 pounds. A social woi·ker located 26-year-old Mrs, Michele Henry Wednesday and she was booked at County Jail on chargea of child neglect and contributing to the dependency of children -misdemeanors punishable by a total of 18 months in jail and a fine of $1,500. Laguna, Capo Districts Expand Vocation Class An erpanded vocational training pro- gram with courses in five occu pations ad· ministered by a full-time director will be offertd neJ"t achoo! year in the Laguna Beach and Capistrano Unilied School Diatrict.s. The programs will cost $76 ,000 and the money will be raised with tar of slightly ~ more than three cents on property in the two districts. The Laguna Bfiach school board Tues- day approved the. 1171·72 budget for the Democrats Press Budget Vote For Showdown, SACRAMENTO (AP) -As-sembly Democratic leaders were pressing today for a showdown vote on a $7 .06 billion version of Gov. Reagan's 1971-72 at.ate budget. But Republicans hinted they might try to block passage of the spending plan un- til Democrats cut back on $348 million in new apendlng the Democratic majority added to the. barebones Reagan budget proposal. Democrats, who hold a 43-l7 edge in the Assembly , musl win at least 11 GOP votes for the two-thirds margin ne"!ded to send the. budget to the Sena.te . . At issue in the budget shov.·down IS a potential taJ incrtase of anywhere from $350 million lo SI billion. Tht $6.74 bi!llon budget !iUbmitted last Feb. 2 by Reagan was precariotisly balanced without new taxes by dttp cuts in numerous state programs, denial of coat-of-living raises for state employe!I'. for the first time in eight years and a major weUart reform program. OIAM•t COAIT DAILY PILOT ollAHGO: CO.UT PUBLllHJMG COM,AHY ••lt...t N. w •• 4 p,_1119n1 ....t PllM.W J ... k •• CMll•Y Vlc:t ,...._. ,..,. o-.i ,,......t'r n. ..... , 1(1 ... il Efltw Tli•111•t A. M.,,1ri;~, Mt .... lllf ildl ... Q.rfM H. lM1 a;,1.1..I P. N1IJ Ml._ ,,.... .......... e'.flW~ &..1-~ Offk• Regional Occupational Program and the levying of the 3.12 cent ta:r per $100 o( assessed prope:-ty valuation. The ROP board or directors, with two representatives from each district, met recen tly and approved the five courses and the hiring of • full time director for the program. Hector R. Navarrette, 42, \\'ho is no1v director of instructional services for C<lsta Mesa High School. will be employed at a salary of $18,500 to run the vocational training .program. During the J971).7I school year, when only two classes v.·ere. offered , the prog ram was run by a part lime administrator. The five classes lo bt offered to student& in both achoo\ district1 are in the fields of health aide, cosmetology, motorcycle mechanics, quantity foods preparation and construction technology. District official! in a recent survey de termintd there wu sufficient interest in these occupaitoins lo provide lhe traini ng. A total of 90 s!udenls, mostly high school seniors, will be enro!led in the courses, which will meet for ~veral hours each day. In addil.ion to the voca- tional training, the students will be ex- pected to keep up with their regular course work. Laguna Beach school trustees h;:ive lauded the program for providing voca- tion training to students who prefer gel· ting a job rather than going to college upon graduation. Som' 30 stud,nls received health aide or food preparation training dtirlng this past school year. District Slates Summer Classes Summer school classe~ "'ill be nrrered .at all four high schools of th!' Tustin Union Hi&h School District, beginning June 23. Un iversity High School. the newest t1f the four, will offer a limited program, a district spokesman said , but complete course schedules will be offered at Mission Vit-jo, Tustin and Foothill high liChools. The siJ: week aession is offered v.·lthout charge to studenl! needing to make up course credits <lr lh<lse wishing to earn extra hi&h school credil.!I. Cluses begin at 7:45 a.m. and end at 12:30 p.m. daily throughout the six-week session. Studenls may enroll In t-...·o courses and earn • total of HI course units. Schools will accept atudenU up lo the first day of cla1ses. ' Agnew's Bag Los Angeles County Supervisor Warren Dorn presented the vice-pres· ident v.1ith a specially designed golf bag that has a big, bright red cross on it. Agnew, who is notoriously well known for his golf ··marks- manship," broke up with laughter at the presentation. Agnew was appearing on behalf of Nixon's revenue sharing and \Velfare reform programs in Los Angeles. Tl1urston Students Start On Bicycle, Camping Trip As a sign of their interest in the en· vironment. 26 students from Thurston Intermediate School in Laguna Beach will embark Friday morning on a bicycle and camping lrip to Mission Bay in San Diego. \ • All or the students are members ol the Bike Club at the school and were re- quired lo ride on a 60-mile Jong bike trip to qualify for lhe San Diego jaunt. After leaving at 8:30 a.m. from lhe district offices on Blumont Drive, the group wl!l head down Pacific C<last Highv.·ay, through San Clemente and on inlo Camp Pendleton. ··surprisingly, all we had to do was send a letter lo the base pr<lvost marshal asking for permission to go along their road," explained. Mike Fickel, one <lf four faculty members who \Vill accompany the students. "They aren'\ having any mock v.·ars on the base. so \l'e can go through.'' After going out the Ocean side entrance to the base. the students will pedal on to Jefferson Elementarv School in Carlsbad, v.·here they will spend Friday night. After leaving the school Sa ltirday morning, the group will travel on into San Diego, stopping along the way to eat, swim or sunbathe. One district on11ed pick up truck will acco1npany the group and carry food, provisio ns for repairing f!al. tires and sleeping bags. The cost for the gas ror the truck and expenses for the trip averAgcd out to about $12 ))('r student. "It's goiog to be an end of the ~'ear fun trip for the dub. All of the sttidents are Warren Bolton Se rvices Slated Monday Mor11ing Funeral ser\'ices v.·ill bt' held Monday at 10 a.m. for \\'arren E. Bolton. a longtirne Orange Coast resident ·who died ·ruesday al South Coast Cornmunity 11osp1tal follov.·ing an apparent hearL allack. He was 48. ~1r. Bolton had lived in Laguna Beach for the pa~I few years and was a fomie r resident of Ne"·port Beach. He was In the floor covering business and was affiliated with several Ooor covering firms in both cilies. The services will be l1eld in Corona de! f\1ar at Baltz f\.1ortuar y Chapel. Interment will foll ow at Pacific View Memorial Park. ti.tr. Bolton, who Uved at 2385 Zell Drive, is survived by his wile, Marie; two daughters. Cindy Bolton and Sherry Smilh; two so ns, Warren Jr. and Donald; a step-daughter. Dtnise Clark: two ~tep sons, Jeff and Patrick Clark: his mother. 1'1rs. Gladys Bolton: a brother, Donald, and eight grandchildren. enthralled with ecol<lgy and this is their way of showing it,'' Fickel said. The <lnly problem encountered in preparing for the trip was getting permission to spend Saturday and SWlday nights at ~fission Bay's Campland . Flckel sa id he finall y enlisted the help of the San Diego Evening TribWle in get- ting the OK. All of the studenl! are insured for the tri::I undet schoo l district policy, since the school b<lard approved the junket at last Tuesday night's meeting. Additionall y. accident lrui:urance was taken out by the club. Fickrl said th..1t the cyclists are en- cour11ging anyone. !o visit them on the trip or even join Jn for a fe\V miles' ride. Cyclist Injured 111 Car Collision A South Laguna motorcyclist suffered 1ni nor injuries \Vednesday when he struck a car pullmg from the curbside of a hilly Laguna Beach street. Police said Nelson W. Kane, 18. of 31684 Wildwood Road , was taken to South Coast Community Hospital following the 9 a .m. acci dent, which occurred in the 700 block of \\'endt 'ferrace. Kane was treated for a serious cut on his ankJe an d other minor abrasions befor e being released. Investigators said I.he mishap occurred v.·hen Kane, northOOund on tbe narrow street, struck the left fender of an .auto hei:Og driven by Pamela Fraser, 39. of Ojai. No citations will be issued. police said, because it was determined tha t the actions of both drivers v.·ere C<lntributory to the accident. Board Action Sought Recording Ires Joaquin Parents A recording of an assertedly chaotic cla5s session at Cordillera School made on a sn1uggled recorder led to an erno- t1onally t·harged session of the San Joa- quin Elen1entary School Di s l r I c t tru.steees Wednesday. Adding to the furo r v.•as a refusal of the board to play the rerording before an au· dlenre <lf 150 parents, some of them angry. 'rhe recording was a major exhibil Jn a protest by some parenls complaining of '·la ck o( discipline'' in the ~lission Vit'JO elementary school. Trustees listened lo the recording in a closed-door session to \\'hich Ill parents and one elected, bu l unseated. trustee were. invited. After the hour-Jong ex· ecutive session the board announced its refusal to make the recording public. Spokesman for the parent group \l'llS Jim Carli n of ~!ission Viejo \l'hu said he was concerned not 011ly about the la ck of wntrol in the classroo m buL also ap· parent lack or respect student.s are allow- ed to display towards their teachers. "Each pa rents had factual grievances." he said. ··wheo these parents ga thered together we stipulated that e11ch had lo have first-hand knowledge ot a problem.'' Some of the parents testified during the meeting thal a program in which fourlh. filth and sixth graders are together in one ''open" classroom promoted chaos. Others asserted that teachers had been heard cursing. allowi ng children to lie doy,·n on the floor, put their feet on the tables, and verbally abuse them. Carlin sa id parents had talked to teachers and principals and tried to work out problems through channels but had not recei\•ed an y satisfaction. They finally decided to take iheir grievances to the board. "Thr problem is children are getting an inferior education," said Carlin. "Some of the problem cou ld be solved by usi ng common sense and setting limits for children. There is no love withollt limits. Jf you tell JI child 'I don 't care V.'hat you do; the child just remembers the fir st part." He said some parents objected to the "open" classroom in which fourth. fiflh and sixth graders are grouped according to Lheir abililies ra ther than grade level. "If there are to be experimental pro- grams, proponents should provide studies lhal show the programs are sound. Our children should not be used for tx- perimcntalion." he declart'd . Carlin said he expects to \l'Ork with the board to iron out some of the difficulties. He said there are many good teachers in the schoo l and hopes the program can be upgraded. Coldherg Quits Firn1 NEW YORK (AP) -Fonner Supren1e Cou rt J ustice Arthur Goldberg says he will leave a New York law Fi rm to return 10 law practice in Washingloo July I. Goldberg, lhe unsuccessful Democratic candidate for governor or New York last yr.ar. was a la bor union \av.·yer in \\'ashington from 1948 unti l his ap- pointment as secretary of labor in 1961 . He was named to the Supreme Court in 1962, but rf'signed in 196~ to become am- bassador to the United Nations. Marilvn Harris, Director of Educa- tional services, said the ad1n!nistration ls planning to study all the charges 111 depth and will rletennine procedures for tho future of Cordillera. She said part of tl1e problem appears to be not the program itself bul how it 1:-i implemenleC.:. The board took no forma l action. Capo to S11e In Conde11111ed Housing Issue By PAMELA HA LLAN or !~• DlllY P'Hot ~1111 Residents or condemned housing in San Juan Capistrano may soon be packing their bags. The City Council voted unanim<lusly this "'eek to sue the properly owner lor failure to e11ict them. The civil suit against !l'lrs. Lilli an Zaenglein of Pasadena alleges failure lo comply with a ruling lo ren1ove I.he "unsafe, unhealthy" buildings from the prem ises. · "It will be an action to enjoin the property ov.•ner from a further viol ation of the Jaw by allowing Lhe btiildings to remain and be OC'cupied," said James Okazaki, city attorney . He sa id if the court rules in the city's favor, the property ov.'ner would probably be given a few dHys to remove the people from the premises and knock down the buildings and if th ey foiled to comply they would probably be fined for each day the buildings stood. Okazaki told the council he h11d approached Lhe District Attorney. who handles criminal suits for the city, on filing actions for either violation of building <lrdinances a~ainsl the property ov;ncr or trespassing againsl t he occupants. The DA's office declined lit handle either <lne but suggested the city file a civil suit, h~ related. The council expressed reluctance to have lo come to the po int of a !uit. particularly beca use three of the families have made down payments on houses. The Arreola . Prado an d Carillo fan1iliei; are each trying to pu rchase hon1es. but in at least one case the residen<:e won't be available until OcL ·l. "I'm really draggin~ my f e ct • partic ularly if the people are preparing t" vacate. If we take the court action thev \viii be literally plll into the street," said Okazaki. ··nie absentee property owne r is not capable of cont rolling !he properly so I think we shotild go forward with the civil action,., said Mayor Tony Forster. "If we do nothing, \\'e are st ill liable for the prernises. \Ve have to proceed for the city's protection." he added. Councilman Bill Bathg;ite said he hopt':. the people can move before the court makes its final de termination. Councilman J im Thorpe said the cilv should mak e sure the people are tnld about this deve!npmcnt arid made to see the seriousn ess of it. Flbnlan Color! If' YOU CAN'T COM& L~ CAU. Fabulous Shag! FABULOUS PRICE!( ONLY'. 895 646-0275 for an expert "'"'' con.sultan\ \\'ho v.i ll come to l 2 2 f•ret• A"lllU• M~11;_, •44r111: P.O. I•••••, t26S2 S-Ct1•••,. O"k• JOI Norili a C1111h1n l1•I, fl611 ---Cftl• .... ~ J3S W.1 tt•f Sil-WI' ........, ttKJ11 »SS H"P"t ..... ~ .......,. Midi• Ul7J ._,. ~re 2 Suspects Rearrested In Park Meter Thefts your home- "i th sampln ~ithout &ny obl!ption to you! Lagun1 Beach pallet Wednesday rtlr· Ttl~ two suspects chara:td with operatlng ' parking meter theft ring after a series or court proceeding$ ruulttd lo the pair'.11 rtleue from Orange Courity Jell. Ott. Carroll BuM 1aid the two men were releaHd foU<lwlng • prtllmlnary he1rlns of the c1se Tuesday at "'hlch 11n e5s,ntl1I w\11\eQ failed to appear. Municip al Court Judie Paul Mast ordertd tht char11s dlsmlued ag•ln'l Charlts Leon Adams , 25, 1nd Guthrie Edwin Jones, 34. for l•ck ~r evldenct. The two wtrt flrtt 11r~sttd In early May on charges of 1le1ling fro m parking meter• in coalltal d tlea from Sin D~RO to the. Sin F'ranelaco bay nre1. Del. Bush said that After the <:harges were dls1nlM- t'd, Or11n1e County Jail officials released the men before Laguna Beach authorilie$ cotild place a hold on the pair and refile lhe meter theft charges. Del. Bush arrested Adam."! in Anaheim Wednesday morning ind picked up Jone:. at a Placentia address later lJl•t •f· ttmoon. "There "'fl! no pmblem," Bush 5aid . 1'They both knew they were going: lo be rearrested anywey." to custody by Hee. only three now face Of the four~pecL' originally t11ken In· prosecution. ey are .Jones, Adams and Jone•' wlft, B trice. 21. Charge!\'. have betn dismissed 111alnst Willa De:an Rolra1nel, 21 , who was ar· re~ted 11t a Santa Ana apartn1ent May II with Adam s. 1,, ,thi1 brilli•nt nylon l•t• tha g l<•r••t•n't color wittrcl1 h•v• drn•mnd up tu(lt •p•r~lin9 mi••• •t lncr•dibln Blu •, Am•ting Wh it•. Ltr•ordin•ry Gold •nd •"•n Coic1••I Ccppnr. Fabulous h•t m•ny of thns• color&, Thny'rn •II incred ibl•, rn•lly. (fa61l11t1 comts 11 acttlat •• nttt wltfrl M9tdtf19 fri .. •. A t• z 12' ,_ ooly $1J.4.t&l Your fovor1Lt interior designer will be ham Lo aJsist 11ou .,, H.J.GARRETT fURNll11RE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Opel'I Mon., Thurs. & fri. IYes. TRY OUR UVOLVIN<i CHARGE 221 i HARBOR Bl VD. COSTA ME SA, CAllr.'- 616.02'75 616-0276 ' I I . --· ---. , .. Laguna Bea~h ' EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 6-4, NO. I~, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNll.I THURSDAY, JUNE IT, 1971 TEN :CENTS School Principals Staff Allocations By FREDERICK SCHOEMERL 01 tfle 0.!IY i-llel Jiii/ Principals of the five Laguna ~ach schools presented their plans for staffing allocations for the 1971-72 school year in a study session with district trustees Wednesday night. Under a new system, staff positions next year will be based on "staffing units." One staffing untl equals $11,100, or the average cost of paying a full time teacher for a school year. Trustees present al the meeting in- cluded the soon-lo-be-sworn-in board members. Patricia Gillette, Gerald Linke a!'ld Bill Thomas. • Under the tentative budget for next year, ""hich must be approved by Aug 9, the three elementary schools -Aliso, El J\..!orro and Top of the \\'orld -would receive an additional staffing unit each . l 'hurston Interme diate School would receive none and Laguna Beach High School would Jose 3.3 staffing unlts. Don Haught , principal of the high school, said if the units were lost. it could mean the cance!lali on of advanced courses in humanities. language, auto mechanics. math e ma ti cs and photography. The courses. he said, usually attrac~ lesa than 20 students each semester. "Another alternative," Haught said, •·would be to increase the size of our basic .!lubject classes in math, history and English. We might bave tG put 36 students in a class, oppose<! tG our average of 28 students per class now." He said it would be unwise to iacrease the number of students per teac her, when it has been shown through recently released re."iearch by Columbia Universi- ty that lower student teacher ratlos make lor better education." David Lloyd, principal of Thurston, said to maintain the "status quo" at the acbool no budget cul& should be made. Becau~ of the unique Thurston pro- gram, which utilizes much "para-pr~ fessional" staff and data processing equipment, the cO.!lt per student for education is high, Lloyd said . However, he noted, the scheduling used at Thurston allows for different-group- ings of students with teachers. an 85 per- cent reduction in the number of substitute teacher! needed· and quick prrr cessinc of &,,cbool records. "All of lhi.!1 makes Thurston more ef- ficient than traditional program schools," Lloyd claimed. El Morro principal Bill Allen under !be 5laffing plan , would have 20.8 units kl v.'Drk with rrext year. He said he would use the increased revenue to hire a full time coordinator for the school's kin- dergarten program . who would in tum hiu non-p(ofessional teachers to work in the pro~a"1· ' "In this manner. we would bt able t.o reduce the r'atio of teachers to students in the rcUidergarten program," Allen &aid. Other additional revenue would be used to pay 1 full time ti~rarian, half-lime resource teachers. upper and pfimary grade program directors and a volunteer a1n eac or Tree-sa vit1g Move Asl{ecl Of Council Laguna Beach city councilmen were urged Wednesday to use their influence to help save a grove of eucalyptus lrees in Laguna Canyon. Several large lree5 are in the process of being cut down, artist Andrew Wing told the council, and a line of ''about 20" is threatened. Soma of the trees may be situ!le:d within county flood control district property, Wing suggested, ask ing the council to alert county auth orities to th e situation . Conservationist James Di!ley, describ- ing !he grove as "one of the landmarks of the community." also urged the council to make every effort to preserve the lrees. Dilley said he would take up the matter with the Greenbelt board of direc- tors v.·ho might be persuaded to con- tribute Greenbelt funds toward saving the eucalyptus grove. The tree removal. the council was in- formed. is being undertaken by properly owner Paul \\'estbrook , who recently was denied Planning Commission permission lo oprrate fl parking Jot at the site. Ill r.1illigan Drive , during the festival season. At thr. lime or lhr denial. com- missioners noted that the number of trees on the proper!)· would make it un!.uitablr for parking use and in dicated they v.·ould not look kindly on removal of live trees to ;1ccommndate parking. Other grounds for denia l v.·ere difficulty of ingress and egress and dislurbance to the neighborhood. Canyon residents who inquired ::ibout ren1ov RI of the trees this week. Wing tn!rl the council, were told it was a safety measure because the tree branches were becoming a hazard. "If it's for safety," said Wing, "I.hey ()n]y need topping." ·Airline Losses Told NEW YORK (UPI ) -American Airlines. Inc .. reported Wednesday a net loss of $2,080.000 for the monlh of May 197!. bringing losses for the ~irst five months of !he year lo $27,li76,000. Orpge Coalt Just a emidge cooler today and tomorrow along the SouthJand with highs ranging from 60 to 75 and lows 5.1 to 60. Hazy sunshine in the afternoons with the usual low clouds and fog In the early morn- ing hours. INSIDE TODAY U.S. nnd Japa n sign trtaty vi11 satellite TV to rtturn Oki'nawn to Japantle rule. See !tnry. Poat 4. Sll'fflt • W•~ It.If ... 11 ... • M011111 llOIMt • c 111m11i. • "''""''' ..... ., CllMtil••• U• • o. • ..,. C-ty • Cl•tllllM ... ''""' '.,iw ,. , ....... • ·-· H•U c,,,,_,. • 1'9<11 M.,kel1 ..... 0."" Ntilkll • '!'1ltvl1~ " ldlttritt '"' • llllllfrt lt..11 ,,,,..,,.,_., , .. " Wt1tllff • II' llMllKt .... Wlllt9 W11ll • *--.. ._..,,. ..... n.u ........ " '#HM NtW• ••• WAS HE THE SOURCE? MIT's D•ni•I Ellsberg War Secrets Leal{ Figure Identified NE\V YORK (AP I -A former New York Time.<; reporter said Wednesday night that the secret Pentagon report on the Vietnam was was given to the Times by Daniel EUsberg. a former Defense Department employe no"· a senior research associate at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Sidney Zion, the former Timesman and former depu ty U.S. atlorney in New Jersey. named Ellsberg in an interview broadcast locally over WMCA radio. Zion re.fused to say where he gol the in- formation, but r;aid he considered hi.!I sources "very impeccable." The Times had no comment 011 Zion's statements. . , Meanwhile, a federal judge reserved decision today on a goverftment requeat to inspect documents on which the New York Times' baaed articles on"tht 11C:Tet Pentagoo study of U.S. involvemtnt ln Vietnam. . · But he said he would not allow a fi shing expedition for other material the Times may possess. U.S. District C-Ourt Judge Murray I. Gurfein said he was limitins the government's discovery motion only to those documents received by the Time! from the source of the materiai.!I used In the three articles published so far. "I'm not tolerating any fishin g ex· pedition into the files of any newspaper," GurfeU:J said. $10,000 Action Dog Ban Signs Up Next Week Laguna Beach city councilman Edward Lorr brought up the city's dog ordiaance aga in at the CQUncil meeting Wednesday in askinc why the new l!.w had not been posted on the city'1 beaches. 'nle ordinance, 1P1rhd by Lorr ~11 mo'nths ago, went into effect Tuesday and ban s dogs: 'rom all beaches from t 1.m. to 4 p.m. duriot tbt 111mrner months. Lorr aaked Directo r of Public Work! Joe Sweany why sign had not yet been posted on the beaches announcing the ordinance. The councilman said he had hoped the law would have been posted for beachgoers much in advance of the June 15 effective date to give them advance warning. Sweany told the councilman his depart- men~ had encountered problem! with lhe wordint of the thirty signs which in· formed the public of .!lpecial beach regulations. City parks supe.rintendent CI y d.e Sweetser said today the new .!ligns would probably be posted within lhe nt.lll:t week. He sald the entire lot of thirty &igns bad lo be repainted because I.ht dog ban regulation must be at the top or the sigru. To fulfill this requirement. Sweetser said the original lettering -prohibiting drinking, littering, camping, and the like from the beaches -had to be sanded off. Senior Party Won't Be Loud Resident! surrounding l..al\U\a Be•ch High School have: been uktid to "grin and bear it" 'J'hur9d.ay night following graduation :.__ the "it" referrln1 to noise that may be generated from the Senior All Night Party, whkll Is tradlUonally held at the school for the graduating clall.!1. Partints in charge of the party promiH to keep the noise to 1 minimum at the party, which will be p.ttttned after New Orleans' Mardi Gras. They add that the Dixieland Band will perfcrm lnslde and not ouUiide, where the music would be sure to travel. Committee chairmen are •1¥1 1tndln1 oul an Invitation ta interested persons to &top by the high school Thuraday from e to 7 p.rn . to aee the Mar<H Gru set up for the porty. . By Phil lntorl•ndi _-h;v· Go Away or I'll Call the City •nd H•v• You 8•nn•dl" Council Park Encroachment Flap Put Before Councilme11 A nap over alleged encroachment into Heisler Park of a sidewalk behind 1 Norlh Co11st Highway cafe operated by Laguna Beach Mayor Richard Goldberg and his wife . made ill way into the city et1uncil Wednesda y, with inconclusive resulUi. Fumiture finisher William Leak and .wrJter Arnold Hano reiterated a charge made before the PlaMing C:Ommiuion tut tttek that a ne w sidewalk leading to 1 take.out window behind Sunny's Sidewalk Cafe, 199 N. Coast Highway, COl\$lltt.1le1 an e.ncro1cbment and pt>s.slble bruch of lhe .clly'a responslblllty to maintain lht park for public. non-com- merclM ust. Both Leak and Hano insiiled they were not lntereate<f in polltlcal as{lti'.ll of ~ matter. but only in the4 mannei''tn' wh!Ch the city was servin1 the public lnferest . · "Despite bold headlines and a rather provocative edllorial. r am not 1 political person," Leak U>ld the mayor. "J want to assure you," Hano told Goldberg, "that l regard the beadUne tn one paper as cheap, 1leazy and 11tmy. I am not concerned with the ownership or oltlcer1 ol &be corparation, only that the city failed in its administration or lhe park." Hano reminded the (()uncil that the lfeed to Heisler Park requires lhal 1l be maintained without commercial in- .1lallation& or ri!k reverting to heirs of the estate. Mrs. Bonnie Hano charged, ''The new lliriewalk ill there to serve the take-out window and clearly violate!'! the restric· lion in the park deed." After learning from Planning Director Wayne Moody that the Planning C:Om- misslon had instructed the owner,; not to operate I.he take-out window pending in· vuligation · of !he m.atttr, councilman Roy Holm aaid he would like to wall and ste what thf: comm.IASion concludes. County Studying L~guna Health Center Request Lquna Beach's reque,t lbat the Board of supen~n . 1pprove a etnter for healtll cart, antl.<jrui treatment and atd to lhe needy ln the dly bas been referred to the county admln11trative offlc.e for 1tud)'. • . . Co·urt Upholds Beques-t P'Uth . Dl!l.tict Supervisor R 0 n a I d c.spen aner rudlna La.pna'a Jetter or 1ppeal··li1Un1 ltf probleMll, aaid "You hive-jo 1dmlre I.Mir fr.nltness in •d· in11un, they are 1U"iC1••ed up." An Orange County Supertor Court Jury haa upheld tha fl0 .000 bequest made to 1 SS\-a-day practical nurse by an elderly Laguna Beach spinster who altered the wl\I in the woman 's fa vor just lhr~ month!§ before her dealh. The panel ended six days of lrial before Judge Robert L. Corfman by rejectlnR lhe cl1im of principal belltficlary Nancy 1fenry Eaton of Chicago thal her sister· in-law, Mary Salome Eaton. 51 4 Popli:ir SI . Laguna Beach, was C1;1(':rcelf Into naming Eva Robinson as an addit\onal bentflclary Jn ai codlc:ll to the wUI.· Miss EatGn, 88, died in her be~e tn Nov. 10, 1969. She drew up her. will April 24& 11111 and ldded the codlcU M Aug. It 41f th•l year. Her estate wa1 ·"Vllued at about SJOO,(O). Witnesses s111d Mrs. Roblnaon tended to the ailing Mies Eaton in the monl~ before her death. Jr wu testlfled tbat the he1llb of the: old lady visibly Improved during the month that Mrs. Roblsnon wu absenl from the home and he~ duUe1 assigned lo another nur~. Lagun;1 Beach attorney M1rshall Beach r;tated that he Aupervlsed Utt drafting ol the codicil aDd espreued surprise. wM,n Miss Eaton told blm lbat abt intended i. ·•· fncreue Mr1." R.obiMon's lhlre to $10,c.:» from Ute fl,000 orlp\aUy autborlztd. llfac:h .. kl lie iold Mm Eatoc tlwt Q,(tOO would be IUfflcient for Mr1. Robinson but his: client lnslsted on ln- creaelng . htr portion of lbe. es late to ltO,!lllil. · . Min 'Eaton. a J)OflUl&r ud e_roliflc writtr, o«upitd the borne t>n Poplar Street for many ye1r1 with her alster, Qi.arle Eaton, who died on March 10. 1969, at the age of as. Ooat friend! ol the SU"ivin1 1illter aakl her health dttuklral.ed lrorn the Ume of Charle Eatoo'1,death. • ,, , Claperl ·1dded, ''decentrallzied services IOI.Inda ,JJke a eood .Idea but if ft approve a~ for Laguna every c1ty..,.y· wont one. We -d IM Milin( a pr<Cedent." Hi .dntli...i tlwl Laguna h•d spectallz. ed lJroblema In mldenta Ind dlltance tram centr1ll7.td county f1cilltln ht S1nta AM aJld Orange. '1t.doeaft't suit tbe llfe style at .Orne ol those people lo Ci>m< up lo our bl; bulldlnl•.': the supttv18or added. 'I'be Llsuna ~tter noted thlt lhti city 11ow haa the Soulh Or•n&e County Mental Health Service and a ttatt Weil Baby Cl:lnit. "But we need mucll mor«i. .,pe<~ly in anU-drui lreatn>ent." • ooordinator. AJ Haven, principal of Top of the \\'nr\11. said increased revenue at the achoo! be used to add an aide lo the pri~ cipal's office, for teacher aide in tM kinderga rten program. a part-time medi! technicians, a.ml an addilional full-time teacher i! next year's enrollment tops over 510 slodents. At Aliso School. Principal Lyle Procto= said he would like to increase. the number of tea cher aide hours in all grade level.!1, hire two t e a c h e r assistants _for the primary grades and increase the number or hours of the school librarian . ere Architect May Plan Project A nationally known park architect ha., offered to design a master plan for development of L2.guna's Main Beac'.1 Park for a fee amounting to about one.- third the usual cost of such a service, the city council was advised WedGeSday night. Laguna re!ident Richard Bigler wM inaintains hi!I 1tudlo on El Paseo, within the Main Beach Park property, will design the P'lrk for $7 ,f,00, City Man.t~et Lawrence Mse told· tht council, addin1i "We were thinking the plan.!1 would cost $25,000 to $30,000." Councilman Peter Ostrander, a" architect, uld the normal fee for such 1 project would be $5,000 an acre. and !ha beach park contains more than tout acres. While .agreeing that Bigler's offer wa' generous and most fortunate , councilmen agreed to defer action on hiring htrn for the job until their adjourned meeting at f p.m . next Wedne.!lday. so they may hav, time to study the complete status report on the Main Beach prepared by the plan· ning sta ff. The council did , howevf!r , 11pprove the fil ing of an application for 50 percent federal funding of a. ~.000 project to complete acqu.isilion and beg in develop- ment of the beach park, An estimaled $210,000 of lhat total v:ould be required for acquisition Of t.bl Arco service &ta lion site. Administrative ass istant Al Autry I.Did councHmen the State Department of Parks and Recreation. which administ.er1 !.he federal fund s. "'ould occept Ow development plan for the beach park at 1 later date provided !.he application and Dther documents we re received by the June JO deadline. Ci!y M.inager Rose said tha t preliminary staff study indicated there it a good possibility thaJ. "the beg.inning of a park" can be achieved by next summ6\ However, he added, "it will be expensive , .. and federal and state Hnancing will be mandatory for any backers of ~ development." Urging prompt acceptance of Bigler•1 Dffer lo design the park me....ter plan. Rose noted Lhal geoeral and preclff development plans are essential to * quire .!IUCh financing and nDted that Bigler's park plans are well known to I.be interested slate department. * * * 'Apartment Wa~' Posed for Beach. "f• Laguna Be1cb Taxpayer• -1Wesidillt Marie Wart Mayer told • aurprlaed City, Council audience WedMfdlly that wbat'U really needed on tl1o Main S..ch ii. • "wall of apartmenta'' to protect the downtown area from ecologlcaJ dlsuW: ln the form of wlnda that wUl f~ through the Canyon lf all atructurt.1 arti removed for a beach park. Mr•. Mayer a longtime resident acf property owner who now llvea in MiB!lett Vlejn. read a twO•page· explan1tWri ci bet theory. •· "'The exi.!ltln1 buUdlhga .;tve proteellon from natural hreeie1," ibe.uld. "A '1i&ll Is mandatory II~ Ott COHtal front...., and If high rise bulldlngs 1te not wan• the wall could be attr1ctivt1 aarden ·~ mcnt conlplt-sell to 1 c c o m m o d a ~i• tourists. " "ne city wU\ IUfler permanw damage if the coastal frontaae ii expoMd • " to Ute elements." ... .... •• ,. ~ 2 OJJL V PILOT SC Thursday, Junt 17, 1971 ,. Boy, 6 , Supports l ·.Younger Kids MIAMI (UPI ) -\\rhen lhe milk truck made Its sire-<lawn home deliveries, 6- .1ear-0ld Osear llenry did the breakfast • "shoppin&" for his six brothers and .a1sters. Most days . Oscar would rtturn with ·two quar13 of milk, But on good days , he'd get .some brf!ad . ltt cre21m or orange juice that had been delivered by the milkman. After breakfast. Oscar v.·ou ld start beg· cing and stealing dinner. Tuesday, Dade Cowity sheriff '5 deputies were called to fi lst Street to in· vest..igate reports that some children had broken into a borne. •• lVhen Deputy Tim Adams arrived, he )ound an optn VJ'indow and heard some crying. He slipped around lo rear of ijie house aM found se bawling children staring at an e e(rigerator. Oscar told Adams they were searching for food, then took him to their 5mall cot· tage down the street. Adams walked in· side. took one look and put in an ·emergency call for the "Safe Streel!1 Squad!' the department's social action team. Sgt. Rolli e Biggs of the squad arrived in minutes and lea rned the children ··hadn 't eaten in t .... ·o days. Oscar, who just turned 6, was head of the household. The other children ranged in age fro m 5 to I· year.<ild twin girls whose bloated stomachs and listless behavior told Biggs they were suffering from malnutrition. Oscar u id their father had de!:erted them "a long time ago," and their mother C1ften disappeared for t .... ·o an d thret days at a time . The cottage, Diggs said. was almost barr~ or furniture and was covered with filth. One room was blocked by a fuur- foot pile of soiled clothes. The children slept on two urine-soaked mattresses. The cottage had no elec- tricity. no gas and the only food in the place "'as three sticks of rancid butter in a roach-infested refrigerator. Biggs sent a deputy to a nearby grocery and fed the kids. ··11 "''as like a lransfusion the way those twins sucked the milk out of the bottle," Biggs said. The year-old twins -Cecile and Cynthia -were rushed lo the county hospital's emergency room, treated for severe malnutrition and were admitted to nearby Mount Sinai Hospital. They weighed only seven and eight pounds after being fed, "an d looked like they were only t.,.,·o or three months old,'' a nurse said. She added normal weigbl for one-year-olds is 20 lo 25 pounds. A socia l worker located 26-year-old Mrs. Michele Henry Wednesday and she was boo ked at County Jail on charges of child neglect and contribu!ing to) the dipendency of chlldren -misdemeanors punishable by a total of 18 months in jail and a fine of $1 ,500. Agnew's Bag Los Angeles County Supervisor Warren Dorn presented the vice-pres- jdent \\'ith a specially designed golf hag that has a big. bright red cross on it. Agnew. who is notoriously welJ known for his golf '·m arks· manship, '' broke up with laughter al t he. presentation. Agne\\' \vas a ppearing on behalf of Nix on's r evenue sharing and welfare refornt prograrns in Los Angeles. Thurston Stude11ts Start Laguna, Capo Districts Expand Vocation Class On Bicycle, Camping Trip As a sign {If their interest in the en· vironment , 26 students from Thurston Intermediate School in Laguna Beach will embark Friday morning on a bicycle and camping trip lo J\1ission Bay in San Diego. en1hra1\ed wiU1 ecology and this is their way of showing il." Fickel said. The only problem encountered in preparing for lhe trip was getting permission to spend Saturday and Sunday nights at Mission Bay's Campland. An expanded vocational training pro- gram with courses in fi ve occupations ad· ministered by a full-time director will be offered neJ1 t school year in the Laguna Beach and Ca pistrano Unified School Districts. The programs will cos t $76.000 and the money will be raised with tax of sligh tly more than three cenla on property in the two districts. 'Ibe ·Laguna Beach school board Tues- day approved the 1971-72 budget for the ' ~· . .' . Deniocrats Press Budget Y. ote For Sliowdow1i SACRAMENTO (A.P) -Assembly Democratic leaders y,•ere pressing today for a sho\\·down \•ote on a rr.oo billion version of Gov. Reagan·s 1971-72 state budget. But Republicans hinted they might try to block pa~age of the spending plan un- til Democrats cut bac.k C1 n $348 million in new spendin g lhe Democr atic majority added to ttlt barebones Reagan budget proposal. Democrat!'!, y,•ho hold a 43-37 edge in the Assembly, must win at least 11 GOP votes for the two-thirds margin needed to :send thf' budget to the Senate. At issue in the budget showdo wn is a potential tax increase of anywhere fron1 $350 million to SI bi\Hon. . Thi $6.74 billion budget 11•1bm1tled hist Feb. 2 by Reagan was precariously balanced without new la xes by deep cul'> in numeroUs state programs. den ial of cost-cf-living raise!! for state employes for the first time in eight years and a major "'elfare reform program. OIAN91 COAST DAILY PILOT CAANG-:. ~T PUBU~INO "°"''""" Jl:eb-rt N. W1el ,,.._ ... ,u!M.,..,. J.tli •-c .... 1.., Vic• .... Iii ....... ~·· Mwll~ .. fi•"'tl ICt•Yil a f lW n.e"'•t A. Mur,l.i1t• M•Mtl/'41 .it<lw Ch11l11 H. Looi ltic~•.nl P. N1U A11hl11t: MMet"'°' t.t••• i.et•H ..... om.. 111 fo•e1t A•t1tut M1il:11, ,,.~r•n: P.O. l o• ••6. t J612 s..c...-OMN lOI N1rt~ [I C1"'1 .. l ••I. 9267.t Otti.f' Offlc• Cfltl Mt-.•· ~ WWt kV '""" _. .._, Be-1'r »U _.,. Mult¥•..- .._..;,.,trcMI INdll 1111J ~ ..... ln'e ... All of the students are members of the Regional Occupational Program and the Bi ke Club :il the school and .,.,•ere re- levying of the 3.l2 cent tax per $100 of quired to ride on a 60-mile Jong bike trip assessed propc~ty valuation. to quahfy for the San Diego jaunt. The ROP board of directors. \\'ilh two After leaving at 8·30 a.m. from th e representatives from each district, met dis trict off ices on Blumont Drive, the recen!ly and approved !he five courses group will hea d do"·n Pacific Coasl and the hiring of a full time director for Highway. through San Clemente and on the program. into Camp Pendleton. Hector R. Navarrette, 42. l\'ho is no"'' •·surprisingly, all we had to do \\'as director of instructional services for se nd a letter to the base provost ni arshal Costa J.1esa lli gh School. will be askin g for permission to go along their employed at a salary of $18,500 to run the road." explained Mike Fickel, one of four vocational training program. During the faculty members who .,,.;11 accompany the 197~71 school year, \\•hen only two students. class.es were offered, the program was "They aren't having any mock wars on 1run by a part timt adn-.inisfator. the base. r;o we can 10 through." 'Ille five classes to be off ered to After go ing out the Oceanside entrince sludenls in both school districts are in the to the base. the students will peda l on 10 fields of health .aide, cosmetology, "b J efferson E!en1entary School in Carlsbad, E"''"•1"ech.,., qlll!J!lfy foodr •'wb;re they will spend Friday night. 1tion and comttuction technology. · !Xtter leaving I~ school Saturday t officials ift a reeint survey morn ing. the group will travel on into San ~etennfned the.re .w~s suffitient .In terest Diego. stopping along the way lo eat. In these occupa itotns lo prol'Jde the swim or sunbath<'. trainJn1. One district owned pick up truck 11·ill A total of 90 s1udents, mostly_ high accompany 1he group and carry fOQd, school senlo~. \\'l~J be enrolled rn the provisions for re pairing llal !ires and cou rses. which 'v11l n:ie.et for several sleeping ba gs. The cost for rhe gas for ~ours eac_h _day. In add1t1on lo _the voca-the trurk and expenses for the tri t1onal training. the stu dents will be ex-, d p peeled to keep up \\'i!h their regular a\t;r~ge _ou: to about S12 per student course-ivork 11 s going to be an end of the year fu n Laguna Beach school trustees ha\'e trip for the club. AU of the students arc lauded the program for providing voca- tion training to students who prefrr get- ting a job rather than going to col!ege upon graduation. Some 30 students reetived health aide or food preparation training during this past school ye ar. District Sla tes Summer Classes Summer school classes "'111 be offerPd at all four high ~chools of the. Tustin Union High School District. beginning June 23. University High School. the newest or the four, "''ill offe1· a l!mited program , a dist rict spokesman said. but comp!e!e course !lchedules will be offered at Mission Viejo, Tustin and Foolllill high schools. The six week l!ession ls <1ffe red without charg e to students needing to make up course credits or those wishing to earn eitra high school credits. Classes begin at 7:45 a.m. and end at 12:30 p.m. daily throughout the six-week session. Students may enroll in two courses and eam a total cf JO coun:e un its. Schools v.·ill accept ~tudents up to the fi rst day of classes. W arren Bol ton Se rvices Slated Mon day Morning Funeral srrvices will be held r-.!ondar at 10 a.m. for Warren E Bolton. a longtime Orange Coast resident who du"!d Tuesd ay al South Coast Comn1unity Hospital follflv.·1ng an apparrn! heart <illack He v.·as ~8- r-.1 r. Bolton had llved in Laguna Beach for the past few years and '"'as a former resident of Newport Belich. He "''as in the floor covering business an d wa! affilia teri \\'ilh several floor covering firn1s in both cities. The services \\'ill be held in Corona de! ,_,1ar at Baltz Mortuary Chapel. Interment \\"ill follow al Pacific View f..femorial Park. J\1r. Bolton. "'ho lived at 2885 Zell Drive, is survived by his y,•ife, Marie; two daughter &. Cindy Bolton and Sherry Smith ; two 30ns, Warren Jr. and Donald; a ste~aughter. Den ise Clark: two step- sons, Jeff and Patrick Clark ; his mother, l\trs. Glady! Bolton~ a brother. Donald, and eight grandchUdren. 2 Suspects Rearrested In Park Meter Thefts ed. Orange County Jail off iei1ls released the men before Laguna Beach auth<>rities could plact a hold on the palr and re.file the meter thtft charge1 . Fickel said he finally enlisted the help of the San Diego Evening Tribwie in get· ting the OK. All of th e students are in sured for the trb under school dis trict policy. since 1he :c:chool board approved the junket at last Tuesday night's meeting. Additionally, occident insurance was taken out by the cl ub. Fickel said th.at the cyclists are en- couraging anyone to vlstt them on the trip or even join in for a fe w miles' ride. Cyclist Injured 111 Car Collision A So~th Laf!'llil ~l<>r<Jllisl 111J1ered , mino r injuries Wed nt sday w~~n he struck a car pu!Tmg from the curbside (If a hilly Laguna Beach st reet. Po lice said Nelsoo W. Kane, 18. of :11684 \V ildwood Road, ""'all taken to South CClast Communi!y Hospita l following the 9 a.m. ac:ciden1 , which occurred in the 700 block of \Vend! Terrace. Kane "'as treated for a serious cut on his ankle and other mino r abrasions before being released. lnve~tigalors sairf the mis hap occurred '"·hen Kane. northbound on the narrov.· street. struck the left fende r of an auto being drt\'Cfl b.v Pamela Fraser, 39. of Ojai. No citalion!I "''ill be issued, police said. bec:i:usc it \\'as determined that the actions of both drivers v.·ere contributory to the accident. Board Actioti Sought Recording Ires Joaquin Parents A recordin a of an asser ledly chaotic class session at Cord!llera School n1ade on a smu ggll'd recorder led to an emo- tionally charged session of the San Joa- quin Elementary School Dis t r 1 c t trusteees Wednesday. Adding to the furor \\'3S a re fusal of the bo;1rd lo play the recording before an au- dience of 150 parents, some Clf them angry. The recording was a major eJ1h ibit ln a , protP.st by some parents complaining of "lack of discipline·• in the l\fiasion Viejo ' elementary school. Trus tees listened to the recording in a closed-door session to which 10 parents and one elected, but unseated. trustee were invited. After the hou r-long ex- ecutive session the board announced its refusal to make the recording public. Spokesman for the parent group was Jim Carlin of Mission Viejo who said he. y,·as concerned not only about the lack of control in the classroom bul also ap- pare nt lack of respect students are allow- ed to display towards their teachers. •·f.:aeh parents h<td factual grievances." he said. •·\Vhen these parenl<; gathered together we stipulated that each had to have first-hand knowledge of ;:i problem.·• Some of the parents testif ied during the meeting !hat a program In \'/hich fourth, fifth and sixth graders ;ire logether in one "open" classroom promoted chaos. Others asserted that teachers had bee n heard cursing. aJ!o.,.,•ing children to lie do\\·n on the floor, put their feet on the tables, and verbally abuse thetn. Ca rlin said parents had ta lked lo teachers and principa ls and tried lo .,.,·or k out problems through channels but had not received any satisfaction. They finally decided to take their grievances to the board. "The problem is children are gelling an inferior education,'' said Carlin. "Some of the problem could be solved by using common sense and setting limits for children. There is no love without limits. If you tell a child 'I don 't care what you do.' the child just remembers the first part." l~e said some parents objected to the "open" classroom in which fourth, filth and sixth graders are grouped according to lheir ab ililies rather lhan grade level. "If there are to be experimental pro- grams. proponents should provide studies that show lhe programs are sounrf. Our children should not be used fo r ex- perimentation." he declared. Carlin said he expects to \VOrk \\·ith the. board to iron out some of the difficulties. tlfe said there \rt,_mafm.1oact teachers in the school and'hOpes tile pzlOgram" can be upgraded. Go ldberg Quits Finn NE\V YORK I AP ) -Former Supren1e Court Justire Arthur Goldberg says he will leave a Ne1v York lav.• firn1 lo return to law practice in Washington July I. Goldberg. the unsuccessful Democratic candidate for governo r of Ne"' York la st vear, 1\·as a labor union la\l·yer u1 \\'aslungton fro1n 19"8 until his ap- po1nt1nent as secretary of labor in 1961. lie ll'as nan,ed to 1he Supreme Court in 1962, but resigned in 196$ to become am- bassador to the United Nations. ~1ari lyn Harris, Director or Educa- tional ServiL-es , said the administration is plannfnR lo sludy all the charges in depth and \viii determine procedures for the fu tu re of C:ordi!!era. She said pan of the problem appears lo be not the program itself but how it 1s lmplementeC:. The board took no formal acllon. Capo to S11e In Co11demned Housing Iss ue By PAMELA RALLA.N 01 r~t O•llr P'll.r S1111 Residents of condemned housing in San Juan Capistrano may wen be packing their bag s. The City Council voted unanimously this week to sue the property owner for fa ilure lo ev ict thenl. The civil suit against Mrs. Lillian Zaenglein of Pasadena alleges fa ilure to romply \\'i!h a ruling to remove the "unsafe, unhealthy" building s from !he prernist's. ··1t 1vill be an action LD e:ijoin the property owner frorn a furth er violat ion of the law by allowing the buildings lo remain and be. occupied:' said James Oka:taki. city al\orney. He said if the court rule s in the city's favor , the property owner \\·ould probably be given a few days to remove the people from 1he prem ises and knock down the buildings and if they foiled to comply they \\'Ould probably be rined for ea ch day the buildings stood. Okazaki told the council he had approached the Distric t Att orney, who handle s criminal suits for the <:ity, on filing actions for either violation of building ordinances against the properly n"'ner or trespassi ng~ aga inst the C1ccupants. The DA's office ·decl ined to handle either one llut suggested the. ci!y filP a civil suit. he related. The council expressed reluctance to ha\•e to come to the p<)int of a suit, particularly because three of the families have made dov,·n p;1yments on houses. The Arreola . Prado and Carillo families are each trying to purchase homes. but in at leasl one case !he residence "'on 't be available until Oct. I, "I'm really draggi ng my f e et, part icularly if the people are preparing tn vacate. If we take the court action th t v will be literally put. into !he street :• said Oka zaki. "'The absentee property o"·ner is not capable of controlling the property so J think ,.,.e should go forwa rd "'ith the civil action." said r-.1ayor Tony Forster. "If we do nothing. \Ye are still liab!e for the premises. \Ve have to proceed for the city's protection.'r he added. Councilman Bill Ba1hgate :iiaid he hope:'! the people can mo,·e before the cou rt makes its final de termination. Councilman Jiln Thorpe said lhe city !"hould make ~ure the people are told about this development and made to see the seriousness of \t. IF YOU CA>'<'T CO?>Q; IN- Fabulous Shag I CALL 646--0275 FABULOUS PHICEI ( for an expert .,.,.,,., ONLY consul tan l \1·ho v.·ill 895 comr lo ;ynur home """ith sampJ,._~ Sq . Y t rd \11thout AJ\y ()blivatton 10 you! In this brill!tnt nylon f•c• 1ha9 K•rtstan'• Color wirtn:l1 ftt vf drt•m•d up such 1ptr~lin9 mix•1 •• lncrt dibl• ll/ue, Amazin9 Whit •, Extr•ordin•ry Gold t nd •v•n Colottt l Copptr. Fabulout hts m•"Y of th •t• colo rt. They'r• •II incrtdiblt , r•aUy. Llgunt Buch police Wedn6day re1r- rested two guspects charged with oper1Una a ptrkin& meter theft ring after a series of .court proceedings resulted In the pair'a release from Orange County J ail. Del. Bush arrested Adams in Anahe im Wedne~day morni ng i nd picked up Jones 11t a Placentia address l.!lter that af· ternoon. f Fllli1l111 com" ... excftlltt •• ,... wt,. ~lwt frf1tt•. A t • • IZ' for ooly $ll4.HI Ott. Carroll Bush said the lwo men were released following a prellmJn1 ry hearing of the case Tuesday at which an essential wltne11 failed to 1ppear. Munlcl ptl Court Judge Paul Ma1>t ordered lhe c~ar1es dismWed a11alni.:t Charles Leon Ad ams. Vi, and Guthrie Edwin Jones. 34 , for lack of evidence . The two were first arrtsted In early J.-1ay on charge, of 11.ealing ftom parking meters In co13t1I cltleJ from Sa n Diego to the Sin Francisco b1y t rea. Ott. Bush said that after the charge• we re <lism ls1>- "There w11s l'IO problem," Bush :iiaid. "They both knew thi:y "'ere going to be rearrested anyway.'' Of the fou r suspe<:t1 orlgin111ly t11ken in- to custody by poli c:t . only three now face pro:iiecution. They are Jones, Adamll and Jones' w1fe. Beatrice, 21. Charge~ ha\·e l>een dismissed ag11inst Wlll 11 Dtan Rotramel, 21 , who wt1 •r· re!lted at 11 Santa Ana 'partment Ml )" 6 with Adan1!. PRO,ESS IONAL INTER IOR DES IGNERS Your favorit~ i11teribr dfsigntr wi ll be happ11 to ~1sist 11011 ••• Opn MOft., ThYn. & Fri. lvft. TU OUI HVOLVINIO CHAIGE 2215 HA RBOR BLVD. COSTA M ESA. CALIF. 646-0275 646.0276 I I \ I ! '· San Cle1nente Capistrano EDITION VOL. b4 , NO. I«. 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES Clen1e11te Co1111cil 11th Hour Meet Set for Budget San Clemente's proix>scd city budget and a long-standing community clubhouse. construction contract both y,•i\I v.•ait until the eleventh hour for city council action. The panel \Vednesd:iy agreed lo hold a special meeting June' 30 to resolve bolh issues. The date, in essence. is the deadUne for action on both matters. Any salary increases for city employcs would also be del2.yed until that special meeting. Councilmen held an exl.'cutive session, presumably on the salary issue, after the regular tnccting Wednesday. The session, reportedly used to di scuss the progress and thrust of very tough negotiations, th is year, ha s been co1nmon in recent weeks. Sou rces have said tha t the city has s1eadfastly held oul for no increases in pr.y for the next fiscal yea r. despite demands for subslantial raises by employe bargaining groups. The clubhouse issue. at the urging or two major local clubs, \\'tlS delayed until the special meetiJ1g as \\'Cll Lci1v bidder Ray McCaslin has agreed to hold tn his bid until the end of this month. Equestrian Area Opens Saturday In Community Mi ssion Viejo's horse enthusiasts won't have far to go to enjoy the pleasures of equestrian travel. The community's O\VO Equestrian Center .. viii be opening Saturday. A part of the recreation center pro- gram. the new facility will be located southeast of the t'o1adrid model homes across from the Marguerite Recreation Cent er H v•ill include f1v r mile~ of tra ils \vhich w 1\1 nin throug h 05o Creek Canyon to '\'ilderncss Glen. The equest rian center w1!1 primarily be a placf for rent:il and boarding hors~s. But it \1111 alw prnv1dc communlly hayrirles. strak fries. barbecues. rirling lessons and !'Oni;fes ts around v.:estern campfire lac 1Ht1es Rocky Aguila r of San .!tl<i n .c:ip1!'trano will operate the new Eques\r~a n Center for the recreation center It will be npen from 8 am lo 7 pm. every day. Swin1 Program In Capistrano Registration for the first of a series .of Uttct·\l'eek sessions of the learn to swim program offered by the Capistrano Unified School District will be held Satur· day at the San Clemente muni cipal pool. Youngsl.ers who have com pleted the first grade are eligible: for swim ~ssions which will be available for beginners. junior intermediate. intermediat.e a~d ~d vanced swimmers. Courses 1n 1un1or lifesaving also are available. The fee for each session is one dollar. Three-week S\Yim periods will be of· fertd through Aug. 20. The classes y,·il\ start June 21 . Registration will be conduc ted between 9 and 11 :30 a.m. Saturday. Sessions are limited lo 20 members each 11.nd v.•iU be conducted wee kday mornlng11. Specific Information will be available during registration . ·san Cleru en te Sets Sy111pl.1onelle Concert The San Clemente Community Sym· phonette will perform a concert featuring the work.! ol beethoven and Mo1.art June 'l1 jn San 'Clemente High School's Triton Cefltt.r. Cyril Gallic wlll conduct the free publlc concert which wll\ begln at 4 p.m. Rnbin DsVl!I will perfonn a clsrinet soln In Mnzarl's Concerto For Clarinet in A M;i;or. T\\enly K;Vtn mu sic.Ian! make up the symphonctte group. Letters from the San Clemente Art.! and Crafts Club and the 'Vom,..n 's Club both sought the de lay to give the groups time to evaluate their finan cial situation. Some local groups had indicated they might donate substanlial funds to insure that proposed cuts in the clubhouse design do not take effect. • San Clemente A1nhulance Subsidy OK'd By JOHN VALTERZA 01 1IHI Ol llY Pilot 1!1!1 San Clemente's ambulance crisis might end this \.\'eekend . In swift action by the city council 'Vednesday the law makers unanimously transferred a city contract and a $3,000 ;innual su bsidy to the newly created Hospital Ambulance Service. But there is a hitch. The firm. organi1,(!d by Io r mer employes of the ill-fated La Paz Ambulance Service which ceased opera· tion early this week , musl conform to strict rules in the city contract. The action came on the same da y as announcements that La Paz, which served territory spanning the Saddleback Valley to San Clemente. closed its bu.~iness. Kenneth Hunter approached CQcUn· cilrnen to expl ain the progress of his new service. lfuntcr gave councilmen copies of an nfficial document in which the rights to the ci\v subsidy were granted to his firm bY La ·Paz. lie told councilmen that one nC\.\' am- bul ance was heing prepared thii-\.\'eek for possible service by the weekend lie said his husinrss would provide "a bcller level of !iervice with better rqu1pment.' Since the closing of La Pa1.. San Clemente fire fighting vehicles, firemen and police off icers have assumed the tasks of emergency ambulance service. A fire chief's station wagon has been pressed into use, backed up by olher city !'talion wagons in the case of an extreme emergency. Cit y Manager Ken Carr assured coun- cilmen that plan "is certainly better than n0thing al alL" The same vehi cles and m('n have often been used when private arnhu!ances were unable to 11.nswer calls. Elscll'here in the I.a Paz territory. am- li11lance service has been assumed by \Vinrl Ambulance of Laguna Beach and Tustin. Hunter tol d councilmeo he had not had the cha nce to read the terms of the cily contract, thus could not promise If his firm could abide by the conditions. Councilmen :'!tressed that if his project beC<!mes reality, the contract and performance or the busines.5 would be evaluated in a special city council meeting June 30. 11 Students Get '6 Year Awards' Studenls in the sixth grade don't usually graduate in June. but nearly • dozen San Clemente younsters won special diplomas Wednesday for being the first students to attend their fuU 1lx year:s at Ole Han!K>n School. The 1«1Tprise award of the special certificates was made durlng an assembly Wednesday morning. The eleveo pupils were the first ever to begin their schooling at the facility and complete six full years. • Ne-,:t school year they will begin classes al Marco Forst.er Junior High School. Mrs. Gloria Bouman. a s c b o o I secretary, ill the only diSlrict employe who has been with Ole 11anson since its opening in 1964. She· awarded the documents In Mark Taylor. Wtnd~ · Habi~. Scott Fredlun, Dana Ayer, Randi' Martin, Mary Alice Glesener, Tracy Byrd , Bren Butler. Mark Howman, Glen Rurrls and Tina Dahlstrom . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1971 • an in TWO MISSION VIEJO GRADUATES HAVE THEIR PICTURE TAKEN AT BIG MOMENT It Was a New Beginning for 450 Red-Robed Seniorl at Wedne1day Commencement Viejo Gra~s Bid Farewell 45 0 Kids Hea.r Speakers, Wade Througli S1noke Haze By PAi\tELA HALLAN 01 tti. 01l1Y PilGf Jllll Four hundred and fifty Mission V1e10 Hig h School graduates bid farewell to the campus in a blaze of glory Wednesday - no flames but plenty of smoke from R bomb which sent billows fl oating fron1 the center of the dignified. crimson·robed ligures. The graduates entered lhe football st3dium in stately pro::;;ssion while .~tu· denl body president Donna Conna lly welcomed an overOow crowd to "ExodU!i· Genesis: A Departure. Yet. A New Beginning '', Robert H. Ferguson. former principal, introduced honor students inclurltng Theresa Lyl'ln. Pamr-l:i M at.~unka. ~lt>ve McConnell and .John Nimmo. "·ho receiv· ed the school's highest honors. Bruce LeClar, the first student sprakrr, dedicated his address to "all those \.\hn judge a person's integr11 y. not by wh:i\'~ outside but inside his head." "It's time for reflection and a purgin,g of our souls to come up \.\'ilh <'-mo ral standard to live by,'' he said. LeClar added that the lesson~ or history must not be forgotten. He thanked !hf' former generation for lechnicologica) ad- vancements lo improve Jives, and ~aid his generation h<1s a responsibiht y lo cnn. tinue the progress and wive the pro- blems left behind. "\Ve cannot tolerate lhe devas1a1ion nf • our IMd, air and water, anrl increased population that could destroy us. '\'e must work for better human relations." He said all men should live together as brothers yel as diverse individuals as true freedom dictates. "We must eliminate -...·ar from our planet and end senseless destruction,'' he added . He asked his fellow students to con· tinue seeking education and not to be "too proud lo compromise.". "We have lbe potential lo Nlow men lo live together as brothers. to wipe out poverty and war, to arrive. at a moral standard and act upon it. And this day must mark the beginning.·• Student speaJ<.er Donna Connally tolrl fellow graduates not to stake a dream on a memory. "Protect yourself from an ex· lste:nce made up of memories." she salrl. She added that e.sch one will remember 8Chool days with its smiles. wnrds and wisdom, but each will have to go hill aeparate ways alone. "Your most wonderful rnemory ahould be of me.k.ing your dreams a reality ,'' she sald . "A dream makes every tomorrow a vision -Of hope." 1'he graduates rectived diplomas fro m Tuslln Union High School trustees Robert 1Airline Losses Told NEW YORK (UPI I -American Atrtine!I. lnc., reported Wednesday a net loss of $2,080,000 for the month of May 1971. bringing losses for the first five months of tht year to $27 ,676,000. American said it.s net loss for flilay last y1ar. was ~92.000 while the first five motith~ in U170 1howed a net lo~ of 16.7i7.000. Bartholomew and Chester Briner. flila ny graduates had exuberant sup. porters Jn the audience. At l1ie end of the ceremony the class sang the alma mater, n1any swaying and holding their hands Jn a peace sign. Just before the sm-0ke bomb. a left-Over from last year's Independence day hid graduates from view, Mis.s Connolly rush· ed to the microphone for an impromptu message to Principal Robert Bosanko. "Mr. Bosanko, I love you." Cleme11te Cof C Proposal 111 Cou11cil 2-2 Deadlocl{ A c1ly councilman 's proposal In in- crcai.f' San Clemente's contribut ion for rhan1hf'r of co1nme rce advertising stalled in a 2-2 de adlock Wednesday. If 011.ey1nooners "hi (:le1ncnte? ll look live d;iys for someone to think nf ~an Clemente a~ the pos~i· hie honeymoon hideaway of Mr. an d i\1 rs. Ed\.\·ard Finch Cox. Arid San Clc1nente City Coun· cilmt1n Wt1de I..ower hecame the ~ource in a call about the honey- moon couple from someo ne in Washing!nn . "Someone called me at 4 o'clock today to ask where Tricia was ,'' he related lo fellow lawma kt:rs Wednesday night. "All lhey asked was 'Is Tricia there?' " ''That's a heckuva question com- ing from a perfect stranger all the way in W11shington. "Especially since I wa!I taking a na p at the time." he quipped. For the curious, checks in San C..1cmen!e throup;h the week have revea led t~at the newlyweds are not at La Casa Pacifica. Councilman 'Vade Lower. citing a. city ordinance \\'hich sets a specific form ula for the city donation , said that because of in creased revenues the city should grant Si 1.700 to the chamber this year. A pro- posed . budgeted amount is $1 0.900. "\\'e've got a good thing going in the chamber advertising campaign ," he said, "why kill it now~" But councilman Thomas 0 ' Ke IP! f e rlisai:;recd, pointing to the tight situation in the proposed cily budget He said he was concerned that the chamher still has nQt instituted a matchini; fund rxi!icy 1o shorr up the city contribution . The money goes toward advertising the city's tou rist at1raclions in media throughout the United States and Canada . "I al~IJ have douh1s on how well the money is spenl," he said. 'U'Keefe suggested that the money might be better used towa rd improving the city's tourist ra cilities. The contribution would come from a 40 percent chunk of the city's transient oc· cupancy tax (bed tax) revenues. Dr. Ulwer said that because those revenues exceeder! predictions t h i s budget year. under the fonnula the chamber should receive more. The vote deadlocked when Mayor Walter Evans abstained, leaving coun· ci\men Lawer and Cliff Myers with .aye voles. O'Kee fe and councilman Stan Northrup voted no. Slowdown Ol{!ld Speed Limits Cut Speed llmil.6 have been established on Marguerite Parkway in Miulon Viejo beLween Trabuco Road and Avery Parkway. At I~ request of Sopervii'iOf Ralph C\11rk and residents of the srra reprei;ent-· ed by Mission Viejo llOmeowners Assocl8· lion President Michael Shearer. the coun- ly traffic commlltee rerommtrlded the \Jmlta and lhey were adopted •s an emergency nieasure by the Board of Supervisors Wtdnesday. The new llm lts. effective immediately call for 11 11peed limit reduction from M • • Musion Viejo in miles l>'f' hour W 3S between Tr•buco and 050 Parkw1y and to $$ mph between O&o and Avery parkways. . Alarmed because of the danler to chlldren in the 1rea and the dea th of a boy l>icycliJt 1ome wNks •10, C I • r k .ss~ed the traffic Jl'OOP to set thi llmited- far I.be whole stretch at 2$ mph. But be was told that rtd•r te1ta showed this to be lrrlpractlcal. Clark said the emergency 1t.tu11 for the measure was necessary because of pedestrians and cyellsta using the 1um. mer recreation center In the ares. ' r • Today's Fbud N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS • ? • War Report Source May Be l(11own NEW YORK (AP) -A former New York Times reporter said Wednesday ni&hi. th;it the secret Pentagon report on the Vietnam was was given to the Times by Daniel El!sberg, a former Defense Department employe now .a senior research associate at Massachusetts Institute of TechnolOgy. Sidney Zion, the former Time11man and former deputy U.S. attorney in New Jersey, named Ellsberg in an interview broadcast locally over WMCA radio. Zion refused to say where he got the in- formation, but said he considered hi:; sources "very impeccable." The Times had no comment on Zion's statements. Meanwhile. a federal judge reserved decision today on a government requesl to inspect documents on which the. New York Times based articles on the secret Pentagon study of U.S. involvement in Vietnam. But he said he would not allow a fishing expedition for other material the Times may possess. U.S. District Court Judge 1'1urray T. Gurfein said he was limiting the government's discovery motion only to those documents received by the Times from the source of the materials used in the three articles pub~hed 50 far. "rm not tolerating any fishing ex· pedilion in lo the files of any newspaper," Gurfein said. The governm~t also seeks to bar the Times from resuming its series or three articles about lhe Vietnam study. ft moved on Wednesday. under discovery procedures, lo inspect the documents already alluded to by the Times and "other classified documents'' it believed to be in the Times' possession. On Sunday, the Times began publishing excerpts from the 47-voJume Pentagon study entitled "History of United States Decision Making Process on Vietnam Policy." Afte r the third installment in the series was published, the government asked a federal court in New York to block further publication. Under a restraining order in effect until Saturday, the Times ha s run no more copy. The case is to be argued F'riday. The gov emment has launched an ln· ve<tigation in to the leak. Zion said he attempted but failed to rr'lch Ellsberg at his Cambridge address all Wednesday afternoon. Coach Clinic Slated Saturday Morning A mandatory clinic for coaches and assistant coaches for this year's junior AB·American Football League activit ie.~ will be held al San Clemente High School Saturday morning. Parents of youngsters planning to play in the league also are invited at the 10 a.m. event in the high school Little Theater. Triton head football coach Tom Eads aod members of his sl.8ff·will conduct the session. Persons eligib le to attend can contact Bob Smilh at 49Ul46 if they cannot at- tend. Coot Just a smidge cooler today and tomorrow along the Southland wllh high11 rangina from r.o to 75 and lows 63 to 60. Hazy sunshine in the afternoons with the UIU81 law clouds and log 1n lhe early mom· Ing houra. INSIDE TODAY U.S. and Japan 1ign trtat~ via $OteUite TV to rtturn Oktnawa to Ja;anese rult. Stt &tor~. Poge 4. l lm• ... ,1 .. C.11,.,... CllKlllltl ~ (i.uln.tl '°""'' ,_ .... _ ... ,.., ........ 1111ert.1-.. Plflll!CI -... ,,_. : • • • , ..... • • • • , .. ,, ... .. 1)' • ., -.. " ....,..,.,. . ~ ....... , ONIMC-" t .,,...,.,,.. . ,_,, 1>U .... IM!Wt ..... " T~ II """""' . , .. ,, -. WM9W• ll .....,.,. ,....._ ,,.1, ,..,....... .. • • I , . l -, .· 2 DAIL_v_Pl_LO_T ___ ,_c ______ ,_,,_ ... -' .. '-' _,_,M_._1_1.;_1'_7_1 ---~Boy, 6, Supports .. younger Kids r.tlAP.tl (UPI) -\\lhen lht milk truck made its prt:-dawn hon1e deliveries. 6- .year-old Oscar llenry did the breakfast ·"Shopping " !or his six brothers and ~st.trs. M()St days. Oscar '°"'OU\d return \vilh two flUarls of milk. But on good d;iys, ~·d get some bread, Ice eream or oranse juice that had been delivered by the milkman. After brea krasL Oscar would start beg- ging and stealing dinner. Tuesda \'. Dade Countv she r i f f ' s depu11es ·\\'ere called to ~;Isl Street ltl 111- \•esliJilale r('po rts that some children had broken into a home. . \Vhen Deputy Tim Adams arrived, he Jound an <lpen windO\Y and heard some l'rying. lie slipped around to the rear of the house and found seven bin•:ting 0 children staring at an empty reFrigeralor. Oscar told Ada1ns they V.'err searching for food, then took him to their small cot- tage down the slrcel. Adams walked ln- '.side. tnok (lne look and put in an ·'emeJ"gency ca ll ror the •'Sale Street~ ·Squad,'' the department's socia l aclioo team. Sgt. Rollie Biggs or the squad arrived -ln minu!es and learned the children 'liadn"t eaten in two days. Oscar, '-"'ho just -tur~ 6, was head of the household . The other children ranged in age from 5 to J. year~ld twin girls whose bloated stomachs and llsUess behavlor told Biggs they were suffering lrom malnutrition. Oscar said their father had deserted th em "a long time ago," llJld their mother often disappeared for two and three days at a lime. The cottage, Biggs said, \vas almost barren of furniture and was covered with filth. One roon1 was blocked by a four- foot pile of soiled clothes. The children slept on l'A'O urine-soa ked mattresses. The collage had no elec· tricll y. no gas and the only food in the place 'A'as three slicks of rancid butter in a roach-infested refrigeratur. Biggs sent a deputy to a nearby grocery and fed the kids. "fl ~·as like a transfusion the v/ay those tY1ins sucked the 1nilk out of the bottle," Bigg s said. The year-<>ld twins -Cecile and Cynth ia -were rushed to the county hospital's emergency room , treated for severe malnutrition and were admitted to nearby Mount Sinai llospital. They weighed only seven and eight pcunds after being fed, "and looked like I.hey were only two or I hr et monlhs old." a nurse said. She added normal weight for one-year-olds is 20 to 25 10unds. A social worker located 26-year-<>ld Mrs1 Michele Henry Wednesday and she was booked at County Jail on charges of child neglect and contributing to th~ dependency of children -misdemeanors punishable by a total of 18 months in jail and a fine of $1,500. Laguna, Capo Districts Expand Vocation Class An expanded vocational !raining pro- gram with courses in five occupations ad· ministered by a full-time director will be offered next school year in the Laguna Beach and Capistrllilo Unified Schoo l Districts. The programs \\'iii cost $76,000 and the money will be raised with tax of s lighlly more than three cents on property in the two districts. The Laguna Beach school board Tue$- day approved the 1971-72 budget for the Democmts Press Budget Vote For Showdown SACRAMENTO (AP) -Assembly DemocraUc leaders were pressing today for a showdown vole on a $7 .06 billion version of Gov. Reagan's 1971-72 state budget. But Republicans hinted they might try to block pa!!age of the spending plan un· ti! Democrats cul back on $34a million in ne w !iipending the Democratic majority added to the barebones Reai;:an budget proposa l. Democral!I. who hold a U-37 ed&e in the Assembly, must \\'1n at least II GOP votes for the two-thirds margin needed to send the budget to the Sen!llt. At issue in the budget sho'.'·do'llo'Tl is a pctenti<'ll taK 1ncrrasP of any\\-·he re from $35(1 million to SI bill ion. Thl $6.74 b11!1on hudgel submitted last Feb. 2 by Reagan \\-'as precariously balanced "·1thout nev.· taKeS hy deep cuts in nu merous stale programs. denial of cost-of-living raise! for state employes for the first time in eighl ye ars and a major welfare reform program. OIANel COAIT DAILY PILOT OAANG::: co.ur PU!lliHIHI) (OMPAM'f ".eb•1t "'· w •• 4 p,...~1 enil Pul>ll.ntf" J ack R. Cwr11v V"' 1'r•IOffll •n~ G.t,,..•I Me~agtr 1\01111• K11vil f_Dl!or l~e..,11 A. Mwrp1'iia1 Mtl\lglng ED<llr Cll1rlet H. loot llic~1rtl P. Nell ,.'1!li...; MIM91'19 l"IMB Regional Occupational Program and the levying of the 3.12 cent tax per $100 or assessed prope!'ly valuation. The ROP board of directors, with two representatives from each dis trict. mel recently and approved the five courses and the hiring of a full ti me di rector for the program. Hector It Navarrette. 42. who is n'1w director of instructional serv1C(>s for Costa Mesa High School, will be employed at a salary or $18,500 to run the vocational training program. During the 1970..71 school year, when only two classes were offered, the program was run by a part time administrator. The five classes to he offered to students in both school dislrlcts are in the fields of heal th a ide. cosmetology, motorcycle mech~, quantijy foods preparaUon and construction technology. District oUicla!!!I in a recenl--sw:.i."e:}'. determined there was su ffi cient in terest in these occupaHolns to pr ovide the training. A tatal of 90 shidenls, mostly hig h school seniors, will be enrolled in th(' courses, wh ich will meet for ~vera 1 hours each day. In add il.ion Lo the voc a- tional training, lhe students \~i !I be e:c.· pected to keep up with their regular course work. Laguna Beach school tr ustees ha\'e lauded the program for providing voca· lion 1raining to studenl:s who prefer gel· ting a job rather than going to coltege upon graduation. Some 30 students recc1 vf'<l health aide or food preparation training during this past school year. District Slates Summer Classes Summe r school classes will be o!lerrd al all lour high schools of the Tusl1n Union High School District, begin ninh June 2.1. University 11igh School. the ne west or the four, will oHer a limited progra m, a dialricl spokesman said. but romp!ete course schedules will be offered al Mission Viejo, Tustin and Foothill higb schools. The six week session is cffered without charge to students needing to make up course credits or those wishing to earn extra high school credilS. Classes begin at 7:45 a.m. and end at 12:31J p.m. daily throughout the six-week session. Students may enroll in two cours:es and earn a total or 10 courst. units. Schools \\'ill accept students up to the: first day of classes. Agtaew's Bag Los Angeles County Supervisor Warren Dorn presented the vice-pres· ident with a specially designed golf bag that has a big. bright red cross on it. Agnew, who is notoriously well known for h is golf "marks- manship.'' broke up with laughter at the presentation. Agne\v \vas appearing on behalf of Nixon's revenue sharing and welfare re!orm programs in Los Angeles. Thurston Students Start On Bicycle, Camping Trip As a sign or their interest in the en- vironment. 26 students from Thurston Intermediate School in Laguna Beach will embark Friday morning on a bicycle and camping trip to M'ission Bay in San Diego, All of the students are members of the Bike Club al the school and 'A'ere re- quired to ride on a 60..mile long bike trip to qualify for th e San Diego jaunt. After leaving at 8;30 a.m. fr om lhc district offices on Blumont Drive, the ~roup \Vlll head dov.•n Pacific Co::isl lligh way, through San Clemente and on into Camp Pendleton. "Surprisingly. all we harl to do \\la~ send a lrtter 1o the base provost ma rsh.al asking for permission to go along thr1r road," explained Mike Fickel. one or four faculty members \\•ho \Vlll accompany the sturlents. ··They arcn•t having any mock \vars on the hase. so ~·e can go through." After going out lhe Oceanside rnlrance lo the base. the students will pedal on to Jef(erson Elementary School in Carlsbad. where they will spend Friday night. After leaving the school Saturday morning. the group will travel on into Sau Diego. stopping along the \\'ay lo eat, swhn or sunba the. One district ovmed pick up truck v;ill accompan y the group an d carry food. provisions for repai ring fL:it tires and sleeping bags. Th e cost for the gas fur the truck and e:tpenses for the tr ip ave raged out lo about $12 per student. ''Ifs going to be an end or the year Fun trip for the club. All of the students are Warren Bolton Services Slatecl Monday Morninf,{ Fun<'ral ser1·u·cs \\ 111 be heir! 1\1onday al 10 a.111. for \\'arren E. Bolton . ,1 long11me Oran)!.c ( 'oasl t·esit!rnt \1 ho rlt C'd Turstlay al 5outl1 Coast. Corn1n1n111 .v Hos pital fnllo\1 1ng an apparrnt hear I attack. lie v.as 48. r-.1r. Bolton had lived 1n Lagunn Reach for the pas! fe w years and was a former resi{lcnt of Nev.·port Beach, He was in the Ooor covering bus1ness and was afriliatrd \\'Ith se1·eral floor CO\'ering firms in bolh cities. The services will be held in Corona del ri.1 iir al Baltz ~tortuary Chapel. In terment '1.'tll follow at J'acifJc V1e\v J\temorial Park. J\lr. Bollon. \~ho lired al 288!i Zell Drive. is sur\1ved b\' his \vife, f..larie: tv.·o daughters. Cindy ·Bolton and Sherry Smi th : !l\"O sons, \\'arren .Jr. and Donald: a step-daughter. Denise Clark : two s\rl)- sons, J eff and Pa trick Clark ; his rnolher, r-.trs. Gladys Bolton : a brother. Donald, and eight gran dchildren. enlh ralled v.•ith eCQlogy and this is their \\'SY of showing it.'' Fickel said. The only problem en countered in prepari ng ror the trip \\'i S geltin~ permission to spend Saturday and Sunday nights al Mission Bay's Campland. Fickel said he rinally enlisted the help of the San Diego Evening Tribune in get· ting the OK. All of lhe students are iosured for the tri:.:! Under school district policy, since the school board approved the junket at last Tuesday night's meeting. Add itiflnally. accident insurance v.•as taken out by the c.lub. · Fickel said tha t th(' l'YClis ts arc en· eoura,::111g anyone 10 visit them on the trip or cl'en JOi.r1 1n for a le\v miles ' ride. Cyclist Injured In Car Collision 1\ South Laguna motorcyclist suffered rn1nor injurie!i' \\'ednesday when he struck a car pullmg from the. curbside of a hi lly Laguna Beach street. Police said Nelson W. Kane, 18, of 31684 \\1ildwood !load. ll'as taken to South Coast Comrnunily llospllal following the 9 a.m. accident. v.·h1ch occurred in the 700 block <1f \Vendt Trrr<ice. Kane was lrealed for a serious cut un hi~ 11nk.le and other n1inor abrasions before being released. Jnve.~tigators said the mishap occurred when Kane, northbound on the narrow street. st ruck the lea fenrler of an auto he1ng drl \'rn b~· Pan1el::i Fraser. 39, of 01ai. No ('Jtat1on~ will be issurd . poli<'t said, hccau.~r it v.·as determined that lbe actions of l)Qth drive rs were contributory to the accident. . . . ' ... Boord Action Sought Recording Ires Joaquin Parents A recording o( an asserledly chaot ic class session at Cordillera School made on a smuggled reeorder led to an emo- tionally charged session of the San Joa· quin £le1nentary School DJ s t r i ct trusteees \Ycdnesday. Adding to the furor v.·as a refusal of the board to play the rerord1ng before an au· dience of 150 parents, some of them angr~. The recording \\'as a major exhibit in a protest by some parents complaining of '·lack or discipline'' in the ~lission Viejo elC'n1enlary school. Trusl~s listened to the recording in a closed-door session tfl which 10 parents and one eleclcd. but unseated. trustee \1 crc in1•1ted. After the hou r-long ex.· ccutive session the board announce d its refusa l to make the recording publ ic. Spokes1nan for the pnrent group was Jin1 Carlin of ~1issio11 Viejo who said he \Vas conl'erncd 1101 only about the lack of cuntrol in the el;-1ssroorn but also ap- parent luck of respect student s are allow· ed to display towards lh elr teachers. ''Each parents had fac tual grievances," he said. "When these parents gathered together v.•e stipulated that each had to have first-hand knowledge of a problem.·• Some of the parents testified during the meeting lhal a program in which fourth, fifth and sixth graders are together in one "open"' classroom promoted chaos. Others asserted that teachers had ~ell heard cursing. allowing children to lie: do\111 on the floor , put their feet on the t:ib!es. and \'Crbally abuse the m. Carlin s:i id parents , ha d talked lG teachers and principals and tried to work oul problems through channels but had not recei\'rd any satisfaction. They f1na!Jy decided tr1 take their grievances to the board. "The problem is children are gett ing an inferior education," sald Ca rlin. "Some of 1he problem coul d be wlvcd by using ('flrnmon sense and setting limlts for child ren. There is no lovr wit hou t limits. If vou tell a chila 'I clon'l l'are wha1 vnu do:· lhe child just rcinembers the r'irst pnr1.·• lll· !i':!1d somP parents objrl'!rtl to 1h(' "npen" classroom in 'A'hic h fourth, fifth and ~1xlh graders are l,!rouped according to their abilities rather tha n 11:rade level. "Jr the re are to be experimenta l pro- grams, proponents should provide studies tha~ show the programs are sound. Our children !ihould no t be used ror ex· perimrntation.'' he declared. Carhn Siiid he expects to .... ·ork with the board to in:in out some of the difficult ies. He said there are ma ny good teachers in the school and hopes the progra]Il can be upgraded. {;ofdbcrg Quits Firn1 NF:W YORK I AP) -Former Supreme Court Justi ce Arthur Goldberg says he will leave a New York law firm lo return to law practice in \Vashin~ton .July 1. Goldbe rg, the unsuccessfu l De1nocratil' candidate fo r governor of New York last vea r. was .a .labor union lawyer in \\'ashi ngton lrnn1 1948 11nlil his ap· po1n11ncnt as sel'l'l'tary of labor in 1961. lie \\':!~ n:in1ed lo !he :"upreme Cour1 111 1!!62, but resigned 1n 1965 to become am- ba!i'.~ador lo 1he United Nations. t-.fa rilyn llarris. Director of £dura- tional Services. said thr. admlnlstrallon Is planning lo study all the charges in depth and will determine proced ures for the futu re of Cordillera. She said pa rt of the problem appears to be not the program itself but how it is implemen te<.:. The board took no formal action. Capo to Sue In Condemned Housing Issue By PAMELA HALLAN Ot t~t 01111 f'llot Sl1!! Residents of conden1ned housing in San Ju an Capistrano n1ay soo n be packlng thei r bags. The City Council voted unanimously this week to sue the property owne r for failure to evict the m. The civil suit against ~1rs. Lillian Zaenglein of Pasadena alleges failure lo comply with a ruli ng to remove the "unsafe, unhealthy" build ings from the premises. "It will be an action to e~join the properly ov.·nc r from a further violation of the la11• by allow ing the buildings to remain and be ocrupied." said James Ok azaki. city attorney. lie said if the court rules in the city's favor, the property owner \\'ould probably be given a few days lo remove the people from the premi~es and knock down the buildings and if they failed to comply they would probably be fined for each day the buildings stood. Oka zaki told th e council he had approached the Dis trict Attorney, who handles criminal suil~ for the city, on filing actions for either vio!a!ion of building ordinances againsl the property ov.•ner or !respassing against t h c occupant~. The DA ·s office declined Ii> handle either one hut suggested the city file a civil sui t, hr related. The council ex pressed reluctance lo have to rome to the point or a suil , particula rly because three of !he [amilies have made do1\·n payments on houses. The Arreola , Prado and Carillo fami lies are each trying to purchase homes. but in at least one case the residence won't be available until Oct. 1. •·rm really dragging my fee I, parlicularly if the people are preparin~ 10 vac<1te. If \\'e !Ake the court action thev v.·ill be literally put into the ~tree\.·· said Okazaki . "The absentee propert y owner is not cap<ib!e of controlli nf<: thr. property so I thi nk we should go forward wlth the civil action," said Mayor Tony fi'or~ter. "If we do nothing. \\'e are still liable for the premises. \\le have to proceed for the city's protection," he added. Councilman Bill Bathgate said he hopes the people can move berore lhe co urt. makes jts final determination. Councilman Ji1n Thorpe said the cHy should make ~ure the people ::ire to!d about this development and made to see the seriousness of it. <li-•~t " Flhalous Color! IT YOU CAN'T C0 1tfE IN- Fabulous Shag I CALL 646-0275 FABULOUS PRICEl i for an e-~rt ,.,..., ONLY coruultant v.·ho v.1.11 895 com' tn your home: v.i th umplts ":ithout any L ..... .._. Offk• 11? F11••I Ave~w• M aili~t at14ren: P.O. leir ••'· ,1,12 ht! c ........ Offk• 4105 N1rlh ll C1111ia1 A11I, 'J612 OtHr Offk" (Ol .. Ml'•I ' * Wftt llf '"'""' ............ a"'~' ll» Nt"''°'' 1°"1.,.1 ... HIM!lflt'911 a1H~; 11111 a"°'~ a ... i..o1td 2 Suspects Rearrested In Park Meter Thefts Sq. Y•rcl oblig11tion to )'OU I In th i1 br illi•nt nylon fec1 1he9 Kere1ten'1 color wi1ercl1 hevf dr1•med up 1uch tperklin9 mi111 ti lncr.dible Blue , Am•1:i"9 Whif1, E:ctr•orclin1ry Gold' end e\len Coio111l Copp•r. F•bulou1 h11 m1ny of th11t colori. They'r• •II incredibl1, r1eUy. La1una Beach police \Vednt.9day rear- rested two suspects charged \\'ilh operating a parking meter lheft ring after a serie11 of court procttdlng! re1uJttd in the pair's release lrom Orange County Jail. Del. C•rroll Bush lilld the two men were nltued folklwlng a preliminary hearing ot lhe case Tuesday 11t whi ch in essential witness filled to appear. Municipal Court Jud1t1 Paul Mest ordered the chlraes dismissed age.Inst Ch11r\c1 Leon Adams, 25. and Guthrie Lt1v.·\n Jones, 34, for !Ack of evidence The two ~·ere nr1l arrel'ited In early 1'111y on ch1rgt1 of stealing from parking meter11 In coasi..1 cltlea from San Olc110 to the San F'rantlsco btiY arta. Del. Bush --said !hilt 11.ller the charges were disn11M· ed . Orange County J ail olficia\s rel eased the men before Laguna Beach aulhorities coold place 11 hold on lhe pair and refile the meter theft charges, Det. Bush arrested Ada ms in Anah eim Wednesday morning and picked up ,Jones at 1t Placentia address later that af- ternoon. "There was no problem,'' Bush said . ''They both knew they ~:ere 1101t1g to be rearrested anyway." Of the four suspecls ori ginally ta ken in· to custody by pclice. only thret now fare prose cution . They art .Jones. Adams and Jone:f vdfe. Btatrlcc, 21. Ch11r1:es lla,•e been dismissed against \\'illa t>ean Rotralntl, 21 . who was ar· re sted at a Santa Ana Rpartmtnt M11y 6 with Adams. (lfollilloer1 tomes In •rtlrin9 ., .. ,... wlttt IMt'Cltl"f fTi1t9e, A 9' x 12' f., ooly $1J4.'5l l'our fouor11c inftrior dtslg-ntr will be hopp11 to a.ss iJl JIOU ..• H.J.GARRETf fURNrpJRE rr.OF:SS IONAL INTERIOR OESIGNE •S • Open Mon., Thun. l Fri. Ives. TRY OUR UYOLYINIO CHARt;f 2215 HARB OR Bl VO. COSTA MESA , CALIF. 646.0275 64lt.027lt i I I • • '. WHAT'S IN- OUTDOORS? By J111t NJE~11EC Deep sea fishing continues at a fair pace along the entire south coastline. Warnin g Iss ued A11glers Colorado River anglers were warned again today by the ~he four area deep sea fisl1ing h111dings -Art's, 0<1vey·s, Dfpartmcnt of Fish and Game ~~unt1ngton Beach <1nd San Clemente Sportsfishing are all f1sh-1~g. lhe local kelp beds and off shore islands and anglers are that striped hass le5s than 16 filhng their sacks wi1h lo13 of big caltco ba ss. bonito, blue pereh inclies in length n1ust be irn· and halibut. rn C'di;1tely released unharn1ed. A few log barracuda h<1 ve been caught and the yellowtai\ The warning can1e as the 11 e playing hide and .seek 111 the churn lines result of a nu111bcr or citaU011s Roger Ballard of Cerritos, Y.'h1le [1sh1ng aboard the sport-'1!".~urd on Lake Havasu during fi sher Thunderbird out of Davey's Locker, picked up a 13 1 ~ lhr past mon1h "'here Juvenile pound log barracuda ofr the du rn ping area on Catalina Island. slri1>ed bass of nule lo JO in· A few u!her log s weighing in excess or ID pounds \\'ere also l"hcs hal'e shOl\'ed up in the checked i:i at the popular harbor area landings. Sandy !loose of ,. ·h . . , Ncll'porl Beach 11·as aboard !he T·Bird uver the \\Cekend and ..:ah; ·Anglers cited into Judge ~rporled that f1slung was very good for bass, with a fair sho11'-Lla1·1d Aaron's Ca I z on a 1ng of barries. yello1l'ta1I and bonito. .Jud1c1;il lJ1s1r1ct Court al l;-ishing condi tions are ideal for a continued good t.ulr on !'arker Danl are being assess· all .species of game fish. There is plenty of l1l'e bail in the 1 ... ater ed S~ bail for possession or ! both anchovies and squid' and "'ith the v•ar1ning 1~·ater the yellows could r·ealty break loose. undcrsizc stnpcrs. The l6-1nch nl1nin1urn size lin1i! is irncnded to protect the -• Skilf hshing outside the jetty is finding lhe bass and small halibut ''cry cooperative and an occasional good catch of bonito is also adding to the action. young striped bass un!il they ,~019 111 Il ic~ 1.,,.11 :; The first salmon of the sununer season \\'as l'aught this past •. \Yeek . Bay fishing is good for bay and spotted bass to three Pounds for anglers t!'olling deep waler lures in lhe channels on the slack tides. Live bail fishennen are also being rewarded \\'ilh good calchcs or bass in the deeper chan~els. have had a chance to 1nature TO THE VICTORS -Co l. G. I I. (Jeff) Teeple, cen· and spawn. ler., presents the winner's trophy to Frank Fries. During 1962, 1963 and 1964 a J r., left. of Ne,vµort Beach and Dick tt>lyers of Irvine to!<ll of 96,193 juvenile stripers Cove. Laguna Beach, after the Pair l"apturcd lhe ll'Cre introdu ced into or jusl Gifford H. 'fecple men1bcr·n1en1bcr tourna1ne11t al above Lake Havasu in the I · rvine Coast Country Club. hope that they could mature, ________ :_:_:_:_:_:_:_ ___________ _ ~pa\1'n successful ly a n d establish a scJr.sustaining population. Sea T~11r~d1y, J11nt 17, 1q71 OAlL V PlLOT 2.S -------- Mile Square T our11ey Reucltes Sentifinuls , Midgets Vie Friday Fountain Valley ~11lc Square golr cours e's annual president\ rup tournament is in the se1111r1nals with niatches to be completed by Sunday Results of quarterfinul n1atches round Jtaul Quezada defeating Mike Murphy and Louis Pat11Ja1io de I ea l i n g George Roussos. They will meet in one semi in the first flight. Oscar CO\\'art de[clltcd .\1 arv Anderson an d Jerry Oavi..; tripped J\1ike Conley in the other half nf 1hc bracket Second fl ight quar1erfinal.~ re sults found Chris Chns!enson defeat ing Cary !\.night : !\en Hurley deferi11ng Jame~ l\lclnt~·rt". John Dohan deft'a!ing Ba1·1 Barton and t :eren Spro11iell d c f ea t 1 n g Joseph Thornpso11. Christenson and llurle~· n11'et 11·i1h Dohan racing Spro11·el1. The third fhght r('su lts found Ra~·nlond Gennawey defeating Tin1 Cra wford : George So\\'1na defeatin.-: Bob Visca rrondo; Jack Smith topping J i 111 Hensel: and l\e11 Higuera de· fe:-iting L<1rry Good 1llissif111. t'iej1~ t.·lission Viejo Countr.v Clu b 11·1!1 begin a JUnior gol£ pro- ,::rarn Tu<'~day afternoon <H 1 "'!lh pros Roger Belanger. Bob Harritt and R1c~ard 1\;lar!inez dtrccling the program and se rving as 1nslructo!'s. The !1rst session runs ror thrPe da ys lron1 Tuesday !hrou~h Thursd3y for boys and girls 8 through 17 at a cost 11{ J:·1 per person. Youngsters are urged to bring their ov.•n clubs 11·11h lhe course furni shing the balls. A se<"ond three.<J3y session 1v1ll be held July 6, 7 and 8. A group of -18 club members tr;iveled lo T1iuana for the third annual invitational over 1he \\'E'ekend. Compt>tition "'as by n1edal play usin~ a bhnd bogey systen1 of scoring. The low net 11·1nner \.\"as Leroy HP1\n1an with a net 65. Second place \.l'ent tn JOt' Ko- l111s (661 with Frank v.·ea1'Cr third ;:it 69 A 11e resulted fur follrlh bctll'een Spence Vay and Tony Moiso (701 and a th ree·wav tie resu l!ed for six!h bel1>'een°Bob Harritt, .Jim Gray and Bill F ulson1 (72 l. The Mission Viejo an1a1eur 1ournan1ent is scheduled for .July 31 with the next big event beini;:-the muscular dystrophy drive tourney on Friday, June 25. Another full sl:ttr nf various types of nudget allio racing is on lap again this weekend at El Toro Speedway. A{'tion begins at 7 p.m. 1-'ri· day with National !\lidgel Ral'· 1ng Association lime trial s prereding 8.30's troptiy ·run . Cov111a's Dave Fender iii rated as !he top driver after a ronl'incing win last wet:'k. Arter a week ort. the United States Racing Cub midgets \\•ill relurn lo El Toro Satur· day nighl with the same starting times as f'riday's N1\·IRA card. Current point standlng run· nerup Tony Simon or Upland ·~ the rnan 10 beat as he tries to 11·11her do"·n the lead held by L9.ke"·oo<l's Bob Olive ro. fA' doubleheader is !'!lated for Sunday night at El Toro with US HC nl i n i · s to c ks and modi(ied midge ts invol ved. Jon Rahe, rated fifth na · l1onally, is at the top or the modified niidget li st while Los Alan1tlos ' Steve Reich , llawl.hornc's Ma rry DuRae are na1ncs to watch for in min1- stock~. Sunday's racing also gel ~ under "·ay at 7 wit h an 8:3U trophy dash. S 1111 IJiCfl'• Yello1t,t11il Co1111f s D1·op 'lellO\Ylail have stupptd biting at lhe Coronado Islands. al least for a eouple or da ys, but they should show up in good num· hers again this weekend. The 11·ater lemperature jumped up lo 63 degrees and there is still lots of bait in the 11·ater. Skippers feel the yello"'S ha\'e moved on and are now u'<ilting for new schools of ye llowtail lo mo1·e up from J\·lexi1:an waters. DF C fisheries biologists say that !he striped bass in- troduced into the Colorado River fro1n the Sacramenl o- San .Joaquin River Delta may or rnay not reproduce thernsel\'es in s u r r i c 1 e n t numbers to add s1gnif1cantly lo the sporl catch. Deep Fish Report '=-~~--~~--------;.;;;;;;----~------~~------.. m•cO.rrol, 176 b1u~ ba... !D•¥•Y'l I"" LO NG lE•CH !lelm•n! "ll rl -ll ~n111~"' 11 t>•••· 1 boni!o I ••" -so an;lt,.: o ~•llO,.I•••, '1! <ah<:<> t>•u. so blue b•u. 11 bon•l<1, 30 •ocO «•d !'!••· ..oinl llndin•l -111 ,.,,.1,,, 1 ti.<. ••<ud•. lll II•"· 1\ bOfl•IO. I Yellow1tol, U r0<~ <Oii. 1 n•litout. 11 m•<~t•tl """' -"' '" 0 "" '·"' '"'· ' LEARN TO SWIM SptakinR or l\lexiean v.•aters. the <"old water off Cedros . cur· rently 59 degrees, is a great sign for that inside r\Jn or albacore lo de1·clop. Currents are good and there is plenty of bait all the "·ay up the coast ol Baja California. Yello1t·f11il llitii11g i11 .'!ie11 uf c.,,.,ez "TJ1c yello\1•tail arc all over the plate and the big bl11ck sea bass arc hitting too." is the report fronl \\'h1tey. 01~·ner or Angler's Center in l\'e\\·µort Beach, \Vho jusi rctu1·ned fron1 a thrcc-11·c£'k fishing lrip to the Ba y of Los Angeles. \\'hitey says 1ha t all lhe boals arc returning tu the shore \VJth full sacks or ~cl1011 s running to 20 pounds and thal fi she r· men are b.iiting lhc black sea bass 11·i1h l:l·pound .vc llo11•s. The ;:ivcrage weighccl in 1l'as "'ell over JOO pounds and !he big ones are bree1king up t<ickle . The water is wann. day fi1nc ten1peraturcs in the !)(l's but very lilllr "'ind is ha rnpcring !he anglers. Fishing shnuld be good lo excellent for the next three lo four 11·ecks for all gan1c fi sh found in the upper areas of the Sea of Cortez. 1-:.\·1·e lle11t F'ishi••fl Re1Ju1·fefl .fohn Good and lloy l)a\'enport. bolh of (;rani's f11r Guns in Costa i\lesa, just returned fron1 an excellent fishing trip lo !he .· river area htlo1"' Glrn Canyon Dam. The pair of anglt'rs boated up ri1·er about Jj miles and 11·ere i;uided to pools of irater le11min' 11ith l\\O to thrcr pound rain· bo11·s anrl c11throat~. The trout hit brst on eggs and worm.~. hut a rair number "ere pic·ked up on flies late in lhe t\'ening. The ri1rr is in good shape for boat trips and Jishing is eX"· pected to maintain a good pace. '1'1·11111 1lf111·i11g fo D ecp e1· \\111t1"1' The :i;tock1ng progran1 for rainbow trout at Big Rear Lake is in full s11 ing . b11l anglers arr having Lo v.·ork the deeper 11·aler in order to pi ck up the fighting bows. Corona de! i\·1'1r's JC'rry Thompson jus1 returned from the lake and said that angler:;; 1roll1ng r;:ddie Pope. O:ivc Davis blades 11·ith "'orms are pick· ing 11 p sonic 111ce fish to three pounds off !he points. Still fish· "rmen are using Tr\T and salrnon egg marshn1cllow comblila- tion:i-. ne<1r the dan' to slnng sn1 aller trout Thnn1pson tried for ba ss. bu1 reported th<it !he big broni\e· h;:irks have 1101 1n01•erl up 1n sh<11lo11· 11·ater ·'ct There is plent y nf ;:iction on .... rn;il! h.1ss hitting Sin1!hbaeks and Rapalas on !he surface. f1shc(J ne;:ir 1he 11·rerls J;itr in thf' f'vcning ·1·,,,.1~·tr llf1.\·es f '1•or11 t l1 e .~1.:!t Sornr d;i~· rlurin i:: lhe n1onth ~1£ June. six luf'li \' an_i:lers al Vail Lakr ;ind .;i~ luck~ an,21er~ a1 Lake llcnshav.· ·v.·ill be pick· Ing up tackle bO).f'~ dropped fro1n a plane l!n tho,,e lake,. Tht Tarklr Bil\ fron1 thr Sk~· l)ay. is !ht brainehild Qf Rob Barrt ll. ;ind I~ hei 11i:: l'O·'J>On!inred hy !hr '"'o partiripating lakrs. i-:ach ta1·l;lr b11x "ill ('ontain a gift ('ertific<itc for fishin i;: larklc ;ind 11ill hr rrdermed at rhr ta!'kle shop at lhe lake on \ 11hi1•h lht I al' k Ir h o x d r op ~-ThP d<i)' of the drop 11·ill not be announcrcl , a' U;:irrrtl ferl s this ll'ill gil'e an glrrs a chance at capturing " box durini; their regular l'isit to !he. la ke.. Fishini:; at hoth V11il and Hr nshaw is very _i:nod fo r ba ss, hlutgil and (·atfi~h 11 i!h cnippir heing listed as aclil'e onl y at Vail. Thc ~:i n Dirgo La kes are producing lots or sn1all bass on sur· fate plu gs aruJ "'orn1s 1111rkcd 1teep durin,e: th e day. Lo11er Olay, 'i\1iran1 ar and El C:tpitan ;ire the ro p lakes in thr San Diego rhai n. lr\·inr 1.:1kr is only fa ir For hass, 1rout and t•atfisb "'ilh no 11ctlo n on !ht crappir. Anahei111 Lakr 11ill hold its annual kid~ fish-out i\Tonclay. Kids un1ler 16 11•ill hr Rlh111td to fi~h free for the jroul in the lake and 11 ill be trealed tu ll frre holdog and c::oke, accordin~ to lake manager John 1\lnore. I The hi11:h sitrras are producing soinc l!:OOd t'alches of plant· ed troul at ;1 11 !he lakeside ~trean1s anfl lakes, bat Crow ley a r-1 • ti<1n is li~lrd as onl y fair. The b3rk eountry lakts are opening I up fast wit h Brook lroul i::etting the mo~I attenHon. The Brld,l!t· port area Is slow tor bolh river and l11ke fi shing but the stream~ are giving up some nice limits of rainbow!i'. ; . ' , Dod gers in Costa Mesa Dodger stars Sandy Vance, Steve l}arvey. coarhes Danny Ozark and Carroll Beringer 11·ill <"onduc1 <1 haseball clinic at Cos ta Mesa Cl!y Park, 18111 and Anahcinl on Saturday. The ptogr;in1 1s sponsored by th,. Dodgers. the Pepsi-Cola Bottli ng C.:11. and ls h1.oslcd by !he Costa l\1es;i Rrrrcation Department. day. l •~--------.1 Beringer u·11I g i vie in- struclion and lips while Vance And Garvey will demon!lrat.e techniquP.s ar.d teach funda· menials fronl noon to 2 p.m. Following the clinic. boys v.·111 have a chance lo mttt the Dodger players personally. Thi:rf' 11!$0 wll1 be a drawing for gloves. basebAl1s and bats.! Gnl.F Tl~S Wlltl l&'•"H•IHll<f~' '•t<l•C• ,Iii l~·· TODAY IS THE DAY TO LEASE A 1971 CADILLAC l'LliASf ("ll , ... ,111 NABERS I ~ NEWPORTER. INN PAR 3 GOLF COURSE I COSTA ME.SI. s:.ot wltt. thll •d W.,.k , • .,, 1..-----------ll 111"1cua1. I v•11ow1au. I wnlt~ "~ "'"· 10 «><k cod, 1 l!1h11u1. 221 bluo Dan. 40 rn•tOr rf l AT YOUR SAN Cll!:MENTI!: -U onqlor• ... 0 b•"· 1 borracvdo, ) n1111>u•. ti m~c•~rel OCl!: .. NSIDI!: 90 1n11lrr1· 1 1141 ·b~~~~·~~~ t;:,~~0· lit 11""· l nal•t>ul.' ORANGE COAST YMCA NEWl'OR T t•rl'• l •""•n•l -61 1nq1t'• I barr•c1>Go. 5~1 bu•, 50 SE•l &1! .. CH -JI ~n9lf'i' IJ• 1111'-I llMr1cud• I m•<'•'~I lUtt 642-9990 l• ""9'f"· 110 1>on1!11, 11 II•••· 1 • n1111>ut __ __:''~-............................................................ ~ .......................................... ~ - ' ~.darnclest front•wheel drive, hlCJh speed1 small car you've ever seen. ~~ -CONTEST RULES NOTHING TO BU Y• REGISTER AT ANY YOUN G & LANE TIRE STORE The · Tho• ' '~· '' "' n lh<> !•ou OU'\ '•on! ""« ""'' kl>•ru ''""" '•• ""' ~•II ,,.. " , o!I '""" tor >·, ,..0, ,, •! u• •··l•O ~··A l •01 •o•d10 co • t ill '" I'•• ,..1.., ~,,.., •nd bt.nq •• .nto .,, o•• 0: "'' 1,, ''"'" H '"'" onu; "''"' ' ""'"'. l~t 5~•1" " you" lour Ooon o • •• ~ood •• '"'""', '°""" " '"'" 10 '"'"'" ,,. •pl •n·n1o><" l•n•,1••1• I'""''" ol Yo.,··~.\ l •n• •·•• (o, In< ., ,,, •d•'""'"G '""'''" or1., ,~01,., 10 '"' Ttd'f•I \141• ar 'lwcol 1,..., ond '"'" .....,.,, proli•bd~d 01 ,.,. !loo .,,nnt p wd! b. •0•1'•.0 oy ,...,1 el ,.,.p~ont .., "".,.+.,. l"'r I~ 197!, Subaru. At 70mph it doesn't e\lel1 breathe hart!. "Custom Power Cushion Polyglas'!t Blackwall Tires. Save $8.98 to · $1 4 .84 on the same tires that come on many:11 cars. • th'? ~;imr tire ih.1l'.• heM! ll1JJ'TOTftd 1s ltlmdard' or optiooal on mAny :l97J car~• \\'Hier anrl Jo11•P.r thAn comparable oeonv1mtional 111ze tite11, it offers a bro~rl footprint grip for a more stable tide anrl 1leady ~lrP.ring 1.onlrol • Z polye1'1er cord body plift1 and z trea d· firm ing f!bcrglass cord belts • \'.'id e low "78" HJies •ize11 11.Uwull JhplJCll •t111!tt S11U · r1nr111.Er.T11 Twbeln s Sizt .... PlllCE lhTrMeMt1Mlf 7.00-13 .$38.35 S21,71 f.1.99 B78·14 6.45-14 $35.90 $2UZ $2.08 C:]R·14 6.95-14 $38.55 $21.11 2.15 078-14 $39.25 'l71.44 226 E78-14 7.35·1 4 $39.95 $2UI 2.37 ,. ,g...14 7.75-14 $42.20 $31.15 $2.'i4 G78·14 8.25·14 .$46.20 $34.15 $2.69 H78·14 8.55-14 $50.65 $3UI $2.95 J78-14 8.85·14 $57.25 $42.M $3.05 E78·15 735-15 $39.95 $21.H $2.4" F78-15 7.75-15 $42.20 $31 .15 $262 G78·15 825-15 $4620 $34.15 $2.ll<l H78-15 8.55-15 $50,65 $37.11 $3.01 J78-15 8.85-15 $5725 $42.14 $3.12 L78·15 9.15-15 $59.35 $44.51 $3.27 - : ENTRY BLANK : NAM~------------ ADDRESS ___________ _ CITY _______ PHON ~---- • p,~ •....................... , OIL CHANGE & LUBRICATION Special Offerl t•lr• l"-• <•• w'ie t• Ill• .,.,..,,. oto/ Ovo "" CO<'• ••l'e•h ~ .... lt,e "\~ow-~ow" ~ "'"~" J'OU< co• '"" u•oo>hr• """ oofe, Don'! '"'"'I .•. ll"n& .,...... "" ;,. lodoy O•d ta•.• •""""'°9• ol th i1 lo,. P""' 0!11.r THIS WllK ONl T s3~~ ~od SI II 15-POINT ENGINE TUNE-UP 5 RACE CAR PRINTS f..il colo• """'" ,;,. '1"•l7 ... ,,;,,1ccl ••P""'IY 1.,, ~1""'· o..~ c;.,.ney'i A,...,;,.,,. 1091•, Dnn Go<lol'o Oroqolo" l'l)'"'"""' "'"O<Mda. M<(lor•n C.n.A•, S11i"t al ,1..,,.,;,a -littl •• ••• 600 "'Ph. SPALDING GOLF BALLS L:quld <•nt"' "Go-Flit•" 3 $13 3 G•••• ,._,.,1 ... 1 king d"1""'" .s. "< F tvr0<J'. la1h•I ... .,gh <•••" A 11,001 0 I ...,lwo al 11o ;, low-low J>•"<o1 YOUNG & LANI HOME PRODUCID GUARANRID RETREADS 5 WAYS TO CHARGE Ban~Americard-Master Charge -Diners Club CARTE BLANCHE-AMERICAN EXPRESS •Hr SIZI 4 for $44 .,., tlllllO ILIOHll'f" MOii• 6 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA LOCATIONS COSTA MESA 1 596 Newport Bl vd. 541-9313 'v'EN I URA LAGUNA BEACH •12 Oc:aa" Ava. 494-6666 BARSTOW TUSTIN 305 El Caml"o •••I 544-7650 RIDGECREST I JI DAIL 'I PI L01 SC 1~71 You1· /tlo11ey Finance Se1·vices OVER THE COUNTER lttpr"•t"ll •t In!.-t o• 1• -ll\lllli.tll •1 •ppf't•lf!ltl..,1 ' AM i ''" NAJD • >Cf" ,. -Iii~-r•I• 1 •• ,,,.,,~• ,,,.,_,.,... • ct...,m ..... NASO l11t1ng1 for W•dn•1d•y, June 16 1971 111 'Supe1·111a1·l(et' ~-~ .. "' .... , .. --~_ -..... .., ............. \ "' m •• .. '" 1' }•<~ P••<o s t 0 Pt n10 .. ' " " " " . 0 By SYLVIA POR fER Surrlv \OU haVf' al l'ad\ re&d about the next l'~ct1 ni; devtlopmenl on !ht' l s l111(jn cial scent most 1f no! all 1ht ma1or financial scr\1te~ \0\J ne~ available lo vou und~r ene roor Surel} \OU ha\e ~11e 1d1 heard sorne of the sl'I( 'x plana torv na111es 1hr lOl lCf t has 1nsp1red f1nan 1! s. u pe r ma1 ket f1nar 1 11 department storf' nne .. 1 p rinanc1at center l <'rt I f'rl financial planntr And of course ~u1 ell have noti ced scvtoral of merging 1rends wh1lh telegraph \.\hat 1s ahead ' " lhl lh} F'OR INSTANCE tn i1 merc1al or lull service lninks are '-Xpanding thr1r ac1111t1cs 1n rhe managcn1l'n1 of 1 vestment port/ ol 1os for bol h the htt!e and b g fello11 Thr\ are preparing income t 1)( returns for a fee aggressl\ clv promot ng !h(11r~1en s l1 e rstate pl anning s e r v 1 r es pushing 1nnova1 ons 1n pa1 ng 11f cust omer~ bills c1eaung new savings n1ethod~ main ta n1ng lrad<"rship 1n the 01crall len hr g r cld ~lanv banks a f' r HJ\ 1ng fa J Iv clo~c I EC.Al ~OTICE p • tll (£11flF (ATE OF BUS N E~S FICTITIOUS ~AME lht onO• qnM Oor• (• <lu< oo ~ bu• n<<> • Av•o • Co • M• • C• nr I C O•" I m n•n>• 0 8 EVE RLV >4 t.LS •"0 ~a <h••<on HOAn••m • •11 •u• DUKES OF' ,. 0 <Gl"TIOO><d a <'•m• " v '" ow nr n o"" no "" ••~ w~o • •n<IO •O 0P'1t• I • Du•n• F o ~ ~n0 n s •• "'"'"" !\••<" (. 0• rd M•• )\ O Oon•r ~• ! • • " c~ " ,, o • •• c On M•• l• •1 ~•> ""•lo •• ~" b cln •nd o 110 5•• <>r"'"" ..-~• M;o eel Duonr F 5h• n ~nown om• Ob• !no .,. '"" wno,. "'"'' vb c b-0 o tt.o "' n n " um•" •"O • • " •O~•d ...... u 0 "' •"'r !OFF C AL SEAL MA!> r.N 8 'fo •• ""b " "< o• Cl <>055f1 c C• to " 0 •n<i. Cw v Nv Comm 'on £•P •• Ao 0 197] l'ub •1ed O-•nQr Co• "'•' 1 •n<I Ju • l C 1 "" " I EC.Al NOT ICI:: I' •!U1 CEllT f CATE Of BUS NESS f!CT T!OUS NA.ME T~• unO• an•d oo•• (• ' h• our n9 • buon•u • 61 1 H Oo • J.,.vo (o• a Mo\o C • u O• 1 1 ""\ I "" n•rnt O YA.lEllM .. !(fJ> \PEC Al Ill ond na 10<! "' I 0'"' ...,,.a or h• o ow "' "' •on wnou n•m • n u 1"11 P IC' ol ••ld•n<t I •< !(>l\lOW\ lADobb •J l>v• l n Co II 01 ed No 7S 191 f A Dobb t J $<10 o Co o no 0 • ' Coun on M• ll t/1 b•o• m• •No •• ~vt>l t n•nd a ••d ~•• u onoV ·-~d T • ()(lbb • J •no"'i o "' 1,~ "'"''""~ o •n~., ••n ~ "' 0 ho "'hn n t um•" •"d •<~"""' •O••d n• •••<u •d Ol"FI( .. L SE"'l. " . MA ".'i 6l TH \OP r> N~ • V Pub!< (• Pnco•O <•h 0 on9< CQV" V M c""'m \lon { ~o ' 'II l'ub '~"" C •ng• { /J"'v 11 and Jun• J in " "' " LEC.AL ~o ru.:f'. ----F IU• • CT 1 OU ~ eu1 .. E~S NAM[ STATEMENT .. ""' " . IO • • l~• oowno b ul n•" •• i'IA CH~l PEA!>; N\1~~11 f " I IOO N•woo C•o • O '""'" C• on • llOl>t /./' II•< " 0 •• ?"O <oo ••• {I Qfl ·O~} W om C 0 A• (ofi • D o •Y<U~ (. b .. • • "° P r> ,,. 0 11)1) N•,.oo D 'l•w~o II •" ~· ·~·· '" 'I "". > • Tn b11• n• • b• nQ onou •o ••"••"'"''" ~omCO A 1~• ·~·"'· ••• ., ' \.Qv y . " (lo • o 0 on<>• Cou"I' on J • l•v• • J M•~~c O••V " ~""" < .. • 0 ,,. Puc " ~ O •~Q• Co• U• JUl'I ~ ' • ~ Ju • I I •WE ARE CELEIRA TING CHILDREN S MONTH lly T£RJtY GJtANT R Ph T 11t't r "f'l 11~ Ir bf' 11 , f'\r brat1 or\ fer 111sl 11t 1! 1\• 11 thlni.: undt 1 1hf' .i. 1 Mo If' art laking lht l1bf'rt u! d" c:t.r 1ni:: I h i.s Cl 1ld1r1 !!. Mon!h 1n ur 11harn11H'Y Af1rr 111! l;td<( Aff' "0111rn11ni: vttV "P"I lfl I 8 ,ld 11,,~ ! I' mo1 r 11uu1 JISI a d11 1 a w...,k Ourlni: C h il d ro ~ Month "'"will conr,,1111;11,, on hi" ink dl11pl1ty1 .. 1 111 d avallablt a i;:-r{'1tl n fl 1 v I~ old 11.nd T'lt"\'I' ti ~! nn add to lhf' htllllt.h n ut "n ;oyment ol nur rt 1ld1 "'' Stop by any thl'lt' du rlne rllr month to b('Jp u~ et>l brntr And don l lor1cl 1(1 bt 1111! tb• kick YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHON E US whm you need a dl"llvl'ry Wr "Ill d.-. l1vf!r promptly 'Allhout f!X tra chArs:c A Jtrtl!lt many Dt"Onle ttlv "" u8 fnr thttlr hMlth ~ \\f' \\,.lf'Q~ r~UH($ fo1 dl'h\f'T')' lir rvlce 1.nd ehar1c •ccounts P'AIK LIDO ,HAIMACY Ul H..,tf•I 1••4 N..,.t ..,_h '42·1 SIO ,,.. o.41...-y In 1 r r stop ('\l'TI nOI• SI J\111 ARI\ lnsurante. (OJ11pa11 es are e>.p<1nUIPJ.: 1he I rn1s or 1nsu ;inlr sold undrr tll( 11-1f l fc 1t re 11n1r~ hr 1l1h etr ThC'1 11rr n lll 1s111gll 111\)lOrt nl 111 II(' 1nak1ng ol personal as 11 \1 a~ 1n~t1tu1 on al loans rhe 111 surance salesm;in 11ho II-. nll!(Ual f 1nds IS ('otl1n1 onplalt s rOCI\ BROKER A( E f1rn1 s ;'Ir£' ~1ud11ng !he (011f1 pl 11 !1 UI 1o~t se nous1 rss Son c b1 okers 11 e cl11 ers II 1ng tJ1 llln 1ng rl al t st<i l~ and 1 rs1n1er l m;inagen1enl coin pan1es :O.lutu;il fund salesn1en 1111( ~ell lite nsur;ince ils !It v ll!l\( npl t~c \\ h I e no b1 keragr hrm ~ anything l1kr. a 1 e slop tent~r the giants ;ire kno11n 10 be \.\Ok ug on 1! 'i el st1!1 .... ay out 011 thtJ h 111111 ~ ltt <rgan1za\l<ln \.\h1ch offers in one place 1rul~ profession I high ( a 11 b r r a~i;lstancc on serv1tcs of sul h SC(J[>l' a~ 111\ cstment ad1 ice 111 stock;; bonds m11 u1I funds otl c1 nicdl 1n1s gu1d ance on a sound overall in suranrc progran1 hl'lp 1n niak1ng out ) our 1nrnml' ta~ a1 d t\JIJ planning for rctiremf'n! and your cstatt' bill p;iy1ng \\'HY IS THE fl/ I lll ii supC'rn1arkel so easv lo ex p <t in so d ff1cul 110 ach1e\e One stun1bl1 ng bloc k ht~ lhl \101ds I stn ssed ;ih Ve !rull prnfcs 101 ;ii t1 g Ii ( I b c Flr t!l~ f11cl !S 1hl1 lh(' ~U)llJJl l kt 1 lJll (OIJlC JJ lo tx st~ntr onlv \.\he 1 H 1s staffed bv e~perls Ir HJ rd 1n each area capable of g111ng the assistance gu1d1ng tt1c in rf \ 111111! \\'h IC' 11 e ) a r 1n drpcnd1:nl c11pc1 Is 1n rath arra br11 g ng lhrm toglll er "phnm A PA Gro "'" B~•" A E L•h 1>m E•o An F n " ~" (~ Am >v o A n (. "" A Mrd < AM 1e '" Am Wr O •n•O • Annou1 fl An••n ~ A (> nd A d ~J' " kMo<> A '.W G " "" n • 0 0 .. A P• ~y AICC B~ A (;a L Aulo Sd ace 1~d " 0 • • 0 ' " .. B~~rn RI 6 nq 11 " . ' O om ' fl~C e I' f'r '. H~ B• L ~ fl ~~ M I\ UP W II d Son . '" "" 8o~u• o 800 AH ~ ~~ n ' " s "~' ~ >• Se o fl nQ • B " B• ' , ' • • , " ' • .. " ' • , • ' ' ' " , ' ,. " ' " • , • ' ' " . '. ' ' ' " ' ' " ' .. , , ' , " " " ' " " " , , " • ' ' ' MM " • ,. " ' ' " • .. " " " • ' .. MUTUAL FUNDS on<• n< o~ou u l o<Ob Fl. .l•Qu n C 1•"1 w. •"'" F am•b• ' Fd\ O! •" M "';1''"'1'l 7.,.l(Ee'l."Cl'I """fVW ..... '"!(l)I Co !<MS no ~~~'j..~TNNEGs IKA. Ho1 ••s~~·s s~1 1• NEW VOii:!( ("'" I'"" G .. d • 0 • 0 "• "• 1 l n• 0 ow nQ ouo nv•• Bo• IJ 1' J ;f1l<•m•~ A JJ ·~"' '"DP'd """""'" GouP !(t•G : O U• A\\0< 05 o 118 Sl•!(•,am ~a o ol ~~u • 101 01 "•• r ID•••> ~e 6,~0~>:@•n•CP lO ne •1 ~ wh I q6illo >:t • IO •o • •u~I l•lllK•OQqA , (¢""' "··· b••"I n \ ll s ...... d 0 QO bd orl><>u~n Wll llJll(• Y ~vc I •>•«! Wedn d< 1 1) I IJ K•u f \• "1 fld A<• •~-. 1 o 1 ~1 ~•v•Fo AGE' F~d Sl \<6 John JJ}•ill<!(' (u•~ •Ab•~ 1 n 10!(• q f una• I"'"' PC Adnayruo• A no '117l0Ko,1n G wh 6) ~11 Cv• a Ill Y•Y11(nt• E '"•I Cu 8 7 76l ll51K k Co o;• 15 Cv• S• I • on o:"oo vo, IMI o? Cu >; 1?1 lof l.•n • n OlJ ll Cv Kl llloifLondlh 5J I~ Cv• S 910116 l.~nt Wd OJ OJI Cu• ~7 on 1 l.• •on n ' M Cu• ~J I~ ••ol••d• (p .5l l '° Cu• S• S1o \Jll•• Co• 79Jl•J F'Q ~ 4 ll •!llt\G P &•l VlKn(OO 11 ~;9Ltw1 8r Jll 0 • •I n 8ro 1 o 0•1 :;s Lqn~ \'>J ~\· s1LO~"" ~ °'' OM !)l~oq f " 9Q• 06 J)l.Y h ( OJ 60• 66'.I M•<I n G li9 ~0196 A~PO<l O)S ·~1;1•RV 01JI000Lno SOI M". n 6 lo Jt L0<>m ' S•~ ., IM'""" C 11 1111 C•noo J JOl JOM Bow 040 Oll top 00 1t0M~v LI> )11 J &S lu •lo •10M Co OVP Ln u A 001 ,,. Ouav ! O •6JL~ B ~ 1 <l J '8 N•d( >4 U l 96 Mo<1n• g 6 9 111M•d M t It\ Mann ll? 1 10M•<1 n OJO 01'M~ Gn 1 ~· ,,,,~. d n Vrn <OJ IOO•M ••«,u>~ Co /di• W l l<A•O" oOOIJ6 F• g J.(lOJ7~00(i A t F«•ut" nn n• O 9] 19 Md o • in a constructive profitable r ...... arr 1ngcment is sorneth1ng eJ;;e agn1n Wall Street Fo~"' }81 1 )01 N " )0 ··1Mow GI I Fnd a 1 0; Bl.I M• .. l"l Ill •«M .. S<><;>. 009 666 M•• G n ll76l•49M Mui Sc!n •!I ~lll'-'••• l •~119J Mnu n s.n,on 9 ~8 9 o.1 M• •• ' •O • •D Mo • G• fl V d Bo6 9 !~/f no l•011 •01IM" ~I fl"v >. G I, 6 •1 ~<!A una•• M "\I G \nolher s1un1bl r ~ blo( k 1~ 1he establ1shmen1 of staod:ird~ for such a group for these 111!1 br 1mprr<1I vr lo protell lhr pubiJC \nd a t!u rd I' !Ir sr!lug rf a schedule uf tr ~ foi 11 r ~crv1ccs and thr o v r a I I ser\itC \Vhal rn1ght ) ou do nu 1 thou ~h to 11np1ovt \Ollr 11 Ji ttr n .. 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Vo I <> ! l\onn •OJ 1 • """'Co l V " 0 I) 1111 D n )A < 1 •In Ca R llu• o /!~861 G;,n O!lO<O'llGS,0 l J I CG v <.I IO ••1 3' P S lJ ! 0 N H •<> C•oorn 10~ Bil n Qm •O 5 00>11 L~ fo!111ll n strong oa1 ns 1nC"P 1 G~ l6J JYI ~oc l l • OD N P••nt b "' Coo S• o 11 7 'I• c; n o 11 O 6' N I• I'! ~ ~a\ tngs 1lcpos1Ls of sa11n"S C•" • ~~ JI 1• ll N'""' "~ 1 1 o I"" ~""w i-1c ~~n nu •~n N•w w~ Ill\ so f• Stv ttnd lottn assoc1at on~ ass 11 e B " 9i lo• New o 11 1• • ~ >1 tnuG!'. 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' " l• 11•11 If.I 16-. 0 1''111 ' 't 1 ,i:,: 10 1'1~ . ,. ' r1" Jot > n h"' l "" I l&o ' .. '' 1e•1 , '1..: 101 'I" ., •• 11•1 ' .. ,, .. , 11 •• ' ' ,, 10 ' 1011 • n.\o SC • ' • " ' ' • " " " I .. ' '" ,_ " ' '' s : " .. ' " " ' • •• " I~'< ]~ " • " . " " • ' ' • ' "" IJ•• ' ' ' ,. ' " ' ' .. ' ' 'I • • • • ' M ' ' \ • " , ~ " " ' " " 'I '" " '" • 'i ' ,1 • " ' .. _, " " " " -' " ' • ' '" n·· l : ' ..i» .... ' " "' l'• ... •• I? o 1-1/lo _ .. .[ ' ' ' ' '" w DAILY PILOT ll .... IM•I • " ,:t ' " • • " ' " ' " " • ' " 1110 lo " ' • '" ' ' " "' "' .. " ,, ' . ' ~·: it ' ' ' ~.· ' ' ' ' ' ' •'• ~ •• li :1 • '" " . " . .. 00 '" '" ,,, . ' " ' '~. . ' ' " " ' l ' ' "' " • .... ~.,, .... '!" '" ~i ' " " ' ' • • • • ~fi . : " - I, -1' ll .. '. -" ' ' .. ! " -'' . " " ' "" " ' 12 • -' " ., ' " " ' " • ' • • • • • S•ltf Ot~• I "" H 9~ LtW (IOM Chll- " "' ' '" ' ,., l' ,. ll>• •• ' ' l I ' ll 8 " '" • • " ' "' .. • 191 + >• 0 • .,_ " • • • '" .. " " • ' • • ' " w ,. ' . 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" ' • ' " " " • " • • -· Briefs ' I The bull 1narkcl ha s tno vcd tnln a new ph<isc lhe old one h11v1n.i: fnrlcd 1n Ma; the D111rs I 1 tt fr observrs A sh1f• 111Je ridrr~t1p t'! !flklng place 1rt t1 1 II 1er dull ;ind lren<l lts~ markrt and 11 (' ne~t phase sho 1lrl foe us 1Jn the more spcculflll\e and low priced lype or 1ssur 1t adds • ' l , f l • i l l i ' t l r • . . ' r { . • . ' • ' ' • i • ' l ' .. • . ! I I I • I l l I . . ... . t• OAllY PILOT DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS fhurtday, JUM 17, 1971 MOLENE.NOWT~AT'KXJR OLD BOSS.CJ.IAM.El...EON IS NO ~-<:.CME 1 WOQI( FOR ME -fiJU.. TIME, .,. l'D Ll)(E TU.JONNY, BUT I !;ell'.:r lil8llP PClJCJ<. -GET RIO OF MIM. . ' By Tom K. Ryan U'L AINER SALLY BANANAS 5TILl:ME WRITES A NICE LETTER,.FO'A' CORPSE- 'Rt'MOVf YOUR f\AI 1'LfASf. YOU Al..REA17¥ INVE:NTORIED M'{ SCALP! Mun AND JEFF T~ATS°™E' WAY LIFE' IS-· TIME WAITS FOR No MAN! FIGMENTS S{TuE LOOKS CF TIH: ~-RAY, IT'S 60f A Pl>ETTY !...J.J6 R'L.'OT ! ,.,, PLAIN JANE ! I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I ACROSS l Col!idr noisily 'Wates !1 11 1·1~ to t arth in drops 10 TtJIS 14 As ian sh• 1b 15 Bring: s .... JI> Man's na"t l 7 lnw.11d: /\•1Jl. 18 Am,.ric .111 fruit: l word s 20 Peril:'] of 11rrr 21 Ba~ed fo!Xl i.Z ~\enu it~m 2J Flair '15 T 1d1est 2.1 TtiOl'nt Siililh chaiacter 30 Balls ll btrrmely r.aust 1c 32 Cot11p.1n~ er lion~ J l Ta~e on lriod Jfi; Let lt stdml ~1 G~s Dankrirpl :38 Small parasitic .Jrachn1d ,j9 Call ror ~rip •o Plays 11 popular s!)orl .. 1 Tht St. L01101~nct, r for onr '•2 Tur kish Inn 44 Condensation .. ,. " 45 Maclt more rnoder11 Yeslerda~'s P11zzle Sol~ed: 0£"'( -C A N 47 Movilblt " barrier •8Von- A L a &00 1'£ ~9 T1..i"spo~e rn!o: 1pe ~J !,lnH1!" fil1ll1!1:1 ~4 Pl~y V I N [ ' " ' n~r1QT'I rd i·1 .. .tll li:.11 ' 7 Wl"J'd~ •q S EEN S !~[O ?Y T [S~ 57 H~r~ sub$t~11ce ~& P1•;1t~ dtl -: C.11y of Uroguay 59 \ri --: Rou\1niztd. 2 words 60 Ttitrtlore bl Abse11ct flf IT'D! •OU li~ TrOOdeu !•a:~ h3 BOl'drte:I DONN 7 -· Bol eyr1 8 lnt'I Tride Org anization: Abbr. 9 Rect nl ]C E.mintlKt ll .A.wesomr lZ Biq quanlity: lnl!Ymal 13 Formol Pftclp!!a1 ion ]q Quic~ly 21 (qua I fO!Jl 1119 24 Conducte~ l ~!.isticale ~ b.tnd 2. Ur1asp1ralr 2~ Claws J One's share or 21> Finisti'tos tilt rx0tnses 27 R1,15sii11 4 Menial ntws agency 1nst1tutio11: l8 Eighl: PrtlllC Slang: 2 words 29 Chltf 5 Was in r~ecutives ol posses.sion of -a republic ti l119'tdient JO Pilt of snow of inks. JZ Turned white ' 1>·11,71 J4 Amrrit<;11 l"dlJJl~ JS V1vac1ou'io 37 Golfer'<;, :shM Ja Moved fro111 or;e c ou"try lo a,nother ~O Oisch<1r9ed: Inform~! •l Seaport of S, Ameflca: 1"f0fma l ~} <Jfler IOI' <;.Ale 44 SJ!tt k 4) !It .t& F01cet ~7 (rid of li!r 49 Obsce1\t mater ia l 51 0-ierltal Sotid;i 5Z For""rl1 53 Merited 1ift : Arclrtlc 5S Strike 51> Ma~aw 57 Fema!t i'l;}i"1al 12 !) PEANUTS By Al Smith By Dale Hale By Frank Baginski'.::;':\ WO\J! "'TI4AIS "TI-EA<ST"TrME I EVER SAW A MAN RUtlil >Oa:>SS WA"T~!f GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS .. " •• " ., ' -.. . -. -::_-::. ~45 -----=-~--:------ By Charles M. Schulz I kA1E TALKIN6 "'i} ~ .. l NEYER 1.)1'.>) OOT ltl SAi' - IF 5HE'5 A CREEPV-CRAUV, ICT~-FUZ2~ IJORM, l'U.. · PRO!\<\Bl ~ SCR£\.IL IT'§ VfF!/ EMBARRA,;o!N6 'l1l «:REAM !.>19< \ll!\lE MTRODUCED "[) lS<\llEONE'~ 6'1<!. ~END- JUDGE PARKER DON'T YOU EVER MEt..ITION SPENCER: F,A,R'MS lO ANYIOPY •. UNPEll:STANP? MISS PEACH • ~E1-t.'f ·1 Sc:jJtl)!, f!Piw,nc $1}q<f1 ~ TE<HMC~t-;""-·y DfPT. PERKINS VOU NEVEi.! ME"N "'O MA.JrM .. eiJT, SOMEHOW, YOU'RE ALWAYS PUTTING YOUR roor It.I YOUR MOUTM! SUP· ;:;.;;::i POSIN6 n!E OWNER: OF TME PRESS Sl-IOP C ... LLEP 5PENCE!l: FAR'MS "r-~I TO C.\.I ECk UP ON ME, .... MP ME Ti\LKEP TO A!!EY SPENCER? '''"' ,. ,, "''''''. '''"''' 1,,,,,,,,1, h!lth1• • .. By Harold Le Doux By Mel 'I 1, ( .. ~ .. , ( .. :. By John Miles ' . ' i l ' I I lost mc,i fortune in!lo8*,>Whip Future5-l StJe55ed wronii - \ THE SllANGl WO~LD MR.MUM ly Al Capp -bot I h""" one . ·• pnc.e.less ~~S!>ion which I am sendi~ to you-my daughU?: Mi..s ·o·eroom. , • ' ,. \ ·~· • -..__,_ ... ' .... ·~ ] . .... . -.. By Charles Barsotti By Ferd Johnson By Roger BoUen J:'l'l: e:>rA rQ~~TIEI:> uP i/J A~ 111Ali $! DENNIS THE MENACE ' I .,, 'P I« l:iit of " Ni llll "' Ill/ ab I or IH tr11 11 1~ I fl)( jut fJI' lhi.: L s:i . Pit l Pn m1 "" LI pri "" "' J'('( I foe '" go Jal ab "' '" T'C ., \VI' TIH krJ n, Jar ni lo; I P' I. "1 un be ni i thi m le lo i SC: Sc I" di rr • • d D • " f, Thursday, Junt 17, 11'171 $ DAILY PILOT :J . '--~~-=-~--=--=-.:.:.:.:.'--"' Roel{ well at La.guna Niguel Transfer By BARBA RA. KRElBICU 01 !~1 D•U1 J'll91 Sltll ·· 1'!1r la~t thu1~ \~e want to do 1s mo\•e nut of here dowu 10 Laguna Niguel," a .sµo kesn1:1n for No rth A n1 e r I c .a n ltock\'.cll 'i; Electronu.:s Group in Anaheim :said \\'edn.esday \Vhl!e cun fir1n1ng that Lransfer of part ti f tlif' l1rr11'.s Anahe1n1 operation to J(.ock wcll 's $24 m1ll1011 plant in Laguna f"igul'I ),,ld l is being :-.1ud1cd by top ntanagernt'nl , ht' added , "No one here v.:u1 ts lo 11lt1Vl'. and Ille 111ove will be inade only if \\'{: arr convinced there 1s <1bsol utc !y nu \l'ay to sell the Laguna Locliheed B11y • W 011Jd Mea 11 TriStar Death I.OS 1\:\'CP.l.ES !;\Pl -1'he chuirman v1 1\nrth An1crlcan Ho<:kll'r ll Corp. says h1:-. co1npany would consider t::ikl ng over L K.:k ht·ed Aircraft Corp, if th1· financ:ially troubled ;ic•rp,'ipncr J:(iant gol·~ bankrupt, lht· Los A n~f!l!·S 'l'iines s11id today. ll 1l11·cvcr, \\'il lnrd F, Rockwe ll Jr. said t he firs! step he would t;ike \vould be to Jllnk lhe L-0C'kheed LIO\/ TriS!ar jetliner 11rogran1. The TriS!ar \\'Ould have to •·go do1vn the drain" if North Ameri can acqui red Lockhet!d. !he Tin1es quoted Rockwell as snying in an interview \Vednesday in P 1Usbur•gh. Jla. Lockhl'<'d is as:king Congress lo ap· prove a bi ll that "·ould allo1v the govern- m('11t to guarantee up to $2511 million in pr!\ :lte bank loa ns lo hel p under.,vrite the 1.1011 \\"ide-bodied jet p!an<'. The LIO l l progr~n1 ran into fi nancial problems .,., ht>ri !loll.~· Hoy te Ltd . producer of f'ng111l'S for the Jl'I. "'enl i n to r1·t'C'1vershlp. BoC'kwell said some sort of receivership for Loi.:kh CC'd 11as inevitable and that even if the company got its federal loan guarl.ln tcc more n1oney l'•Ould be needed J11tcr to complete the 'friSt;:ir. '"The only v.·ay Lockheed could coriceiv- ably break C\'cn on the project,., Rock- \1•cl l said . ··is by getting Ule entire n1arket lur lhc ai rbus." Bu! he said thal \\'OUld 111ea11 1hr .\1c0onncll Dou glas [)(:;JO 11111ild hav e to go "do11·n thl' drain ·· The DCJO and the Europea n A.100 lr i· jl'IS arc being ;:iin1ed at the sa1nc airline n1arkcl as !he TriSt;i r. Bock11·ell said if Lockheed was forced into receivership "we·d be talking lo the recc11•cr. If there is any oppor tuni ty lo m;:ikc a dral and come out whole or lo make money on it or to do a good job for our s!ockholders, .,.,.e'd cert ainly be remiss if v.·e v.·cren'l rig ht there looking <II it. "In my opinion. 1he receiver has got lo \1•rite off the L!Ol !. lt"s just plain 1nurdcr:· 11oc·k.,.,·cll said . '·Tha t's \\'hat is killiug Loc kheed ·· 'J11c board Lhai rm an OI" LockJlet.>fl , llaniC'I l !:iu~hton. has ~a1L! the nalion"s l<u·ges! di·fc·n~e conlrac:lor 1l'ilJ go bnnk . 1i.1p! if tongrrss d()(!s not approve the lo;1n ;:;un rant L'e . J{ock\\•rol\ said )le didn't. think any com- panv "ould be interested in acquiring Lf'<:k heed and continu ing the TriS\ar. ''They'd be dam ned fools or !hey can't understand fi gures or lhey would ha ve to br prepared tn lose $200 niil lion lo $500 n1illlon ." he added. The :\orth 1\merican cha irman said hl' 1hink" there "ill he some rnergers in the ;n·rospace industry ·•and if they are 111::idr 11c'il be standing right 1n the front fj•ll .r.:orth American. ;i n :u'ro~pace firm liasC'cl in E:l Scgun1to. rarned S&4 7 mi llion <it! ~alr5 .. f S2 4 b1lhon l<i~! year and 11.•as rank••d ::;i•l'Pnth 111 ck1llar volume of defense ronlrat•!S. S 111nn1 cr Sign up s Nearly Filled The L:iguna Bcac!1 Bccr~at ion_ De~art ment j~ st ill accep11ng rcg1stratioJ1s tn a ft·"' of its summer programs. despite the fact th at many classes v.·cre filled almost imm!'diately after registrr1tio!l' began. Addition<il tennis classes h<l\'C been scheduled at the Thurston Intermediate School courts to accommodate the long v.·;liting list. Efforts are also being made to schedule an evening swim class to han· dle annther .. vailing list. Class openings still exisl in chlldren's rre;-itive dance. jazz dance for teenagers .and adults. dog obedience. golf, guitar anrl s1:rfin g. Rc~islra tion for these CQUrses is held during business hours at the Recreation Department, 17fl N. Coast ilighway. Re11orted Satae Niguel fac ility, or \ea8f it . even on a floo r-by-floor basis.'' }Jowever, 1ia sohd purchase offers have been received since Flour torporation broke off its negotiations 1n April. Oll'· cording io Rockwell officials, 11nd it rn ay become financially necessary lo move part of the Anaheim operation into tJ1e now-fam ous ''ziggurat,·· a n11llion-square- foot. Sl'VCn·story structure built in the sl_vte of a Babylonian teinple lo\'.'C.r, At !he time the Nigtiel phint was started in 1968. North Arner ican's Aut.onelics DivisJon in Anaheun l111tl 27.000 en1ployes, more than enough to fill the new plant, wlth ·its 7,500 ('apacity and still leave the Anaheim facilities ovcrno\jo·Uig . Since then, cutbacks in the aerospa L>e progran1 have reduced the Anaheim pa~·roll to 12,500 and made it necessary to ease out some of the builtl1ngs in that c:omplex. and place some on the market. Despite the cutbacks, the lipokesman pointed out Wednesday, the finn is still "\•cry niuch aliYe and kicking ," with s;1lcs still up in the neighborhood of :talf a billion dollars a year. The problem 1s an ex cess of space an1ounling 10 about 11'".! million square feet with the combined Anaheim and Laguna Niguel facilities. ' ; .. • ,_ .. .. A LAST BEACH EFFORT TO TAN BEFORE DEPARTURE Karen Cutkomp Will Get to Use Her Excellent French Coed To Fran~e Laguna /-I igh Girl Gets AFS Offer Laguna Beach High School student Karen Cutkoinp 11.•il! leave the Art Colony Friday to spend the sun1n1er in France under the American F'ield Service cultural exchange prograni. The 16-year-0Jd girl y,•as chosen frorn many hundreds of applican1s frorn around the nation who applied for the summer program. She v.•il[ fly lo N<·11• 'l'ork to join several other AFS·sponsored high school sludents for the tri p to Europe. From Brussels, Belgium. the group \\'ill travel by tra in !o meet their respective famili('s. Karen \\"ill be the guest of the Coste family ln :O.i arseilles. a port city of 778 .000 located on the ~-led ilerranean Sea. Claudine Coste is currently an ;\FS ex· change student slayi ng 11o·1th a farnily 1n New Jersey and \1'ill return lo France shortly af ter Kart-n 's arr1v;il Karen , v.·ho speaks fluent French and \\'OUld like to COnt1nU<: the study or languages in college, says she is very lucky Lo be going 10 France. "I cfJuld JUst have easlly been sent to Afghanis tan." ~he. notes. \Vhile in France, She \viii not be. attending school, as the sunirner AFS program is purely for !he {"Ultur;il enrichment or the students. She is the daughl r r of M.r. and Mrs. Thomas Culkomp of Three Arch Bay . The ta ll. pretty gi rl says ihe family she is lo stay \Vilh travels quite a lot and she will ha ve the opportunity to see much of the country. '"I am really ex cited about goi ng," she :-ays. "l haven't even been ou t of C;1l1forn ia be.fore. except for a fev.· shorl lrips lo Mexico." She \\'ill sprnd three \\rck<i. or the summl:'r in the Alps and sevrral n1orc weeks at St. i\laxime, a small seaport on the Riviera. S.Coast Grads Honored Three 1971 graduates of high schools on the South Coasl have been named reci- pients of $100 cash awards given by tbe South Coast Communily I lns pital Aux- iliary. From Laguna Beach lligh School. J\lelinda Cht>nowetb. 653 Thalia SL., was granted one of the three 81'.'ards. flffss Chenoweth is on the honor roll and has worked as a nursing aide at both SCCH and Beverly ~1anor. She plans to attend Sonoma State College studying nursing, this fall . From San Clemente 1-figh School, an award was given to Debbie Samson , 327~2 Alipaz. Sa n J uan Capistrano, secretary of the school's California Sch o I a r s hi p Federation chapter and active in the J\fedical Explorers at SCCH. Miss Samson is also emp10yed al Beverly !\la.nor as a nursing aid. She plans lo follow pr e-med ical training at UC. Irvine. Frum Mission Viejo High School. an award was presented to Karen GalVin, 5292 Sierra Roja Road , Irvine. A member of the school's California Scholarship Federation chapter, l\1iss Galvin plans to attend Orange Coast Collt>ge for a career as a dental assistant. According to Mrs. George W. Wolf, presidenl of the Auxiliary, the scholarships are awarded to graduating seniors to encourage students to pursue careers in tbe field of medicine. Woman Faces Rape Trial A San Clemente woman who allegedly encouraged a young C•mp Pendleton M11r ine to rape her J4-year-0ld daughter was found Tuesday to be sane and able lo f"ce trial on rape charge! in Orange County Superior Court . Judge Byron K. P.1cMlllan reached µia~ deci$ion after revlewinR psychiatnsL\ reporL\ on tht mental stature of the 58- yenr·old defcndnnl. She goes on trial Aug. 4 nnd wltt return lo the courtroom July 6 for a pretrial henrlng. .ludge McMillan 'll action came ju~t 24 hours after be sent Marlne Robel1 De.an Smith, 21 , to state priS()n for a six. monfus.to-S(l.years term for his role in a series of rape!! said by police to have been carried out at the mother's request. The victim 's sister told 0H1ce~ 1hat her mother encouraged Smith"s sexual relationship with the victim with the comment that lhe intercourse would "calm her down." The grey-haired defendanl engaged In ll long argument wlth Judge McMillnn before the jurist closed the spirited ex- change by refusina to lower her $S,OOO bail. "I'm not going to do anything about It in lliew of the gravity of these charges," he told her. She was led back to Orange County Jail. The defendant and Smith were arrested last April IS shortly after what police said was tht? third sexual assault on U!e young victim in a San Clemente motel. Poli ce said Smith !llole the woman's :.iuto and credit cards and headed fo r Arizona. He w11~ found aslttp in the. ca r ln Gila, Ariz., and returned to Orange County tor proaecution . • Also complicaling any cont emplated move into tht> Niguel plant \\"ou!d be the problem of what part ol the Anaht'inl operation lo movt>. The Niguel fa ci1lty 1s not quite large enough tu house the !'l rgcst division now in Anahc~n1 , the Aerospa ce and fltarine Products Division tAMPDI with 8,300 employes. If only part. of it \Vt'rt n1ovrd, it would be necessary to select fron1 manufac- turing. engi nrer1ng , testing and marketing functi ons, each \Vith several parts of its ov.·11. ''There are a 1nultitude of com- binations, but none very sln1p!e," said one e~ccuti\•e. Other gection!I of the Anaheim opera- tio n are housed in specially designed building!! housing delicate equipment and y,·outd not take kindly to 1nov1ng. An other consideration would be the fate of the ftrm ·s 1ninonty hiring and training progra1n and the la ck of low-cost houslng in the Laguna Nlguel area. In compliance with re(Ju\rements for ftrrns handling governrnent contracts, North A1nerican has an active program for hiring training minority employes, including Mexican·Amer1cans, blacks, ln- clians and Orientals, and so1ne execut ives of the firn1 envision probten1s in this area If a mov' has to be madt to Sooth Orange County. 'ftle company would be mor' than hap- py to lease out the ziggurat in sections, one official said, pointing out that there could be four separate entrances with separate parking for each, making the building suitable for several independent operations. It could be used for any type of light manufacturing -or even house a large hospital or educational institution, it wa.. suggei;ted. The only use excepted would be heavy manuracturing -all other potential tenants will be welcome. School 'Talli. of the State' Alth ough it may be hard for a strange r to find , Top of !hi' \\'orld Elemen tary !X·hoo\ in Liiguna Beach 1s 011e Qf the most talked ;1bout and \l'Cll·kno11·n schools in California educati on circles. Dur ing the pasl school scar, over 500 professional educ<llors. many from ou t of stt1tc, have visited the innovative school, cind according lu tour director Gail Gaston, "I haven"t had one. bad reaction. 'fhty loved it." Loc<1lt'd on a plateau overlooking thl' Saddlcback Vallc.v. the four-year-old school, under lhe direction of Al Haven, provides students Y.'ilh an interesting ap- proach to learning. 1'he large classrooms are fully carpeted and students move through !he school day usinc tape n:corders, slide projectors and other lt•aching nlds. Ot:'spit t:' the use of equipment. a close re lnlionship between studen!s and lenchcrs 1s emphasized at the .school. Princ ipal Jla1•en says the TO\V ap· proach to education is being copied by m:iny or the school officials \vho have \1 ltnessed the progran1 first hand through 011c of 1l1c tours. "Our concept has been picked up and copied ,by almost 70 school districts," Ha ven says. Th e tour program was begun in Octobt>r, 1970, by four interested mothers v.•ho felt Haven was working too hard in both running the school and showing It to visitors. Besides l\1rs. Ga!lton, the mothers involved are ArLis Atkinson, Lucille \V hltaker and Jean Brolherton. All have children at TO\V. Most of the people who lake the tour are teachers or administrators who have been sent officially by their school district, Mrs. Gaston said. ··El'eryone of them wa s ve ry stimulated and went away with Jitlle ideas aboul. how they mlght put some part or this program into effect in their own school," she said proudly. Special plants at special prices. Penneys Garden Shop. ,)\ 77<; Special buy. First Lady Marigold. An early, compact plant with clear, yellow double blooms, long cutting stems. Special price on begonia or dahlla plants growing in 4" pots. Buy several of each hardy, colorlul variety while lhey're specially priced. 129 Planter Mix. 2 cu. ft. Give new plants and planting areas the proper soil. ~\ ,. i \ . ' '\ 44~ tray Bedding plant special. Vinca rosea is the name for 1hese lovely little periwinkles !hat are hardy, easy to grow. • - • 199 Penneys All Purpose Fertilizer for healthy gardens. 20 lb. bag. \Y l\nnet1• The values are here~ day. Charge~t al these Penney stores: FASHION ISLAND , Newport Center. 111 Terrific price on hanging baskets planted with your choice of fuchsias or coleus for marvelous color effects. 7" size. 88ct Your choice _9f Gardenia or Star Jasmine. 1 gal. container. Choose Mystery or Vietchl varieties of the fragrant gardenia: Star Jasmi ne with its shower of tiny fragrant flowers. Specially priced. 239 Unlverally Compoat. Add humus to soil with thl1 highly organic compost. 5 cu. fl bag. 4 DAILY PILOT Reds Make Big Attack Below DMZ SAIGON <UPJJ -A battalion of North Vietnamese troops using name throwers, machine guns and rocket gre-.nades at- -~ed .a company of South Vietnamese marines just below the Demilitarized ZoDe (DMZ) today. ~ outnumbered Saigon government soldiers killed 63 of the attackers. Communiques from Phnom Penh said North Vielnamese gunners kept up mortar and rockel barrages M the ('asfern edge of the capital. The firing could be heard in downtov•n Phnom Penh_ Cambodian units fought back from river gunboats and from the air. The Soultl Vietnamese command said the North Vietnamese battalion o[ .some 600 troo1>3 attacked I.he South Vietnamese company numbering 160 men in hilly jungles 12 miles northeast of the aban· doned Khe Sanh Base and six miles south (If the DMZ. The Saigon government unit called in a rtillery and air strikes in driving off the attack. The South Vielnamese casualties were described as light. Military sources said nine of the marines v.·ere killed and seven wounded. 1lle Marines captured four machine guns, seven rocket launchers, a fliime thrower and 18 rifles after the Com- muni.st! were driven orf. The South Vietnamese command said Communist forces shelled three Soutlt Vietnamese military positions and tv.·o district towns Wednesday night and early today in a string of attacks running from the coastal lowlands to just six miles northeast cf Saigon. The U.S. command reported meanv.tiile that 25 Americans were killed in the lndochina v.•ar last week, up six from the pre.,,·ious v•eek. American v.·ounded were listed as 199, a drop from 261 the week before. It brought to 45,275 the number of American servicemen killed in lhe war since Jan. I, 1961. A total of 303,123 ha ve been wounded. The fighting in the area just east of Phnom Penh was the 17th day of the bat- tle in marshlands leading to the capital's eastern outskirts. A Division of North Vietnamese ·troops has been lrying since June I lo push Cambodian forces from the area east of Phnom Penh in order to gain a strategic foothold within sight and rocket range of the capital. The Communists also have set up mortars to the north and northwest cf the city. Thur\!UJ, Junt 17, 1971 .. .a . -t--· .. ' ) '"·' ..: '\;lPHILIPPINf& .. euAM . -:.-I . •.• I U.S .. JAPANESE OFFICIALS SIGN HISTORIC TR EATY ON OKINAWA Ac tu11I T1keover of l•land by J•p•n Will Wait on R1tification Thief Says Secret Paper s h1cluded in Airport Loot WASHINGTON lUPl l -A confessed thief hall told a Senate Committee his gang's loot from raids on mailbags al major airports included top secret government docwnents from the Army, CIA and FBI. Robert F. Cudak, a federal penitentiary inmate who appeared before the Senate Investigations subcommittee Wednesday to tell about his part in the theft of SIOO million in s1?Curities and other valuables, said he read the secret documents because "curiosity got the better of me." One of the documents, stamped "top secret," dealt with land-to-air ballistic missile plans and another from the FBI with "Cuban nationalists in Miami," Cudak said. "And these could easily have been sold to the !New York Times, foreign agents or anyone else?" asked Sen. Charles H. Percy, (R-lll.f "Sure." Cudak replied. "There was a lot of stuff in them." Bu t Cudak said he either burned the papers or "threw them in the water" after reading them because "I was afraid of it" Cudak, 29, said he came across secret papers "on about 20 occasions" while participating in thefts from mailbags. He said the document on missiles came from an Air Force mailbag he stole at New York's Kennedy International Airport. Cudak is now serving a seven-year sentence for mail theft. He was granted immunity from further prosecution to testify before the subcommittee, whlch is probing underworld control of a growing stolen securities racket. He was guarded by four burly U.S. marshals in plainclothes as he spoke. The witness said he worked with nearly three dozen other persons -many of them syndicate criminals -to steal valuables from 17 airports throughout the nation between 1966 and last year. Chile Assas~in Slays Office rs, Blo,vs Self Up SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) \Vith homemade grenades strapped lo his body, a leftist wanted for the assassina- tion of Chile's former vice president machine-gunned two detectives al their headquarters Wednesday and then blew himself up, seriously wounding a third detective. * * * Senate Effo rt Fails Police said Heriberto Salazar, 45. was one of three members or the exlremist Organized Vanguard of the People who were accused of killing Edmundo Perez Zujovic last week. The others were Ronald Rivera Calderon, 25, killed by police Sunday, and his brother Arturo. 20, who kllled him!!el f rather than surrender. Police said Salazar went in the fronl door of the downtown headquarters of the plainclothes police. Chile's equivalent of the FBI. whipped out a subn1achine gun and fired a burst that killed twn detec- tives. 'Then he ran back toward the en- lrance and set off the grenade s, killing himsel! and wounding a detective nearby. Viet Fund Cuto f f Bill Heads for House Vote Riot police cordoned off the area, believ ing there might be more terrorists, but a search shov.·ed Salazar v.·as alone. Another terrorist attack v.•as reported earlier in lhe day against a plainclothes police officer in the country's interior. WASl-IlNGTON (AP) -An amendment to Cl.It off mo~)' for the Vietn~m war headed for a House vote today'. gLven less chance of passage than a tougher move that failed in the Senate Wednesday. Sponsors estimated"'15CI of 170 of the 434 11ouse members v.·ould vote for the Nedzi- Whalen amendment to prohibit spending for war 14·eapons after Dec. 31. 1971. \\'ednesrlay ·s Senate votes against two amendments th.al .... ould have cut ofl funds at year's end for all L'S. ~r~tlons 1n Indoc hina represented a maJor v1cto~y for the Nixon adm1n1strallon. But even in losing, the idea of set1lng a firm date for e nding American fighting in Sou~h~ast Asia picked up fi\•e votes over a s1m1Jar • measure defeated nine months ago. It was President Nixon's second major foreign-policy triumph in the Senate -v.·ithin a month. Four v.·eeks ago. senators rejected proposals to force withdrawal of up to 50 percent of American troops sta- tioned in Europe. In Wednesday's first vote. the Senate turned aside a \ast·minule substitute by freshman Sen. Lav"ton ~I. Otlles Jr. CD- F la.). lo set a June 1. 1972, deadline con- tingent on North Vietnam's release of all U.S. prisoners 60 days earlier. The vole was 52 to 44 . 'Then. by a count of 55 to 42, the Senate rejected the original amendment by Se n~. Mark 0 . Hatfield IR-Ore.), and George S. i 1cG<i\'ern (D.S.0 1'._ for a Dec . 31. 1971 fund cutoff. This woul d have provlded a possible fi(l-day extension should North Vietnam fail lo agree promptly to release U.S. prisoners. Last year. !he Senate reiected a si milar Hat!le!d-'.\!cGovern a mend ment ~ tn 39. Senators who voted against th;il amend ment last year bu( backed thf' Chiles amendment Wednesday included Sens. ~llHon R. 'Young tR-N.D.). senior GOP member ol the Appropriations Com- mittee. Charles Percy (R-111.), Robert Packv.·oocl ( H-Orc 1. Ted Stevens j R- AlaskaJ, and B. Everett Jordan tD-N .C ). Sen. Clinton P. Anderson !O-N.M.1. ab- sent and unrttordcd a year ago, backed the Ctules amendment Packwood and Stevens voted against the Hat(ie\d- McGovern amendment Wednesday. 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TOKYO (UPI) -The United Slates and Japan signed a hlst.orlc treaty vie 1.ranspacihc satellite television today lo return the western Pacific fortress island of Okinawa t.o Japanese rule after a quarter century of American occupation smce World War IL Whi le Jeftist Japanese stu dents fought sporadic battles with police in Tokyo streets, foreign Minister Ki1chi Aichi 1n Tokyo and secretary of State William P. Rogers in \Yashington signed identical documenLs to end U.S. rule or the island. The two offi cials faced each other on television screens in the first treaty sign- ing by satellite transmission in history. Rogers read .a statement by President Nixon that the signing of lhe treaty enables the United States and Japan "lO work together in peace for the continued progress of our own two countries and lor that of the entire world." Thousands of Japanese students, Com· munisl5 and Sociali!ts df:monstr•ted lhrougbout tbe nation against the treaty terms which will pennlt the United States to maintain military bases on Okinawa after the island returns lO Japanese rule. Police and students fought with teargas shells and Molotov cocktails in several places in Tokyo. On Okinawa ilself. thousands of youthful demonstrators took to the streets of Naha, the capital, and violence broke out twice_ Once a group of about I.000 hurled rocks and bottles at riot police and police made numerous arrests. Laler al Naha Main Police Station, the demonstrators again threw rocks and bottles. Chobyo Vara, chief executive o! the l<>eal government, boycotted the signing ceremony in Tokyo. Bolh he and the demonstrators specifically objected to the continued presence of Amffican mililary bases and what they considered the vague under. over lhe removal of nuclear . Under the treaty and allied documents, the United St.ate! said it will retain 88 military bases on Okinawa and return 4G installations to Japan. The agreement said that Japan will take possession of th~sland two months after ratification is coltipleted by the U.S. Senate and the Japanese DleL {parlia· n1entl. No specific da te was mentioned, bul In Uni ted Slates is !l:.dged to return the island chain to Japar.1 1972. The Ok.inawa treaty implies that nuclear weapons will be removed from the island as demanded by. Uie Japanese CommUI11SlS and Socialists, but it fails to spell oot th e withdrawal specifically. 3 BIG DAYS ----~ "N EW " WATER WIGGLE c.-d ,..,. If, .. ,'°· U>'l ""''°"" .. -"'' :::;::i ~ ~AJhlf l!,W, .. ,M,., ~1);;,;Y))»"" HOPPITYHOP BALL OR HORSE By SUN RUSBlR HOUR'!. Of fUN oncl l!KI!•~ for ,+,.. entife lo'"ily. 11..,gged cunt. 1n,rcti<><'I. I ~1101,., to 6 I ". lo1y TOY HOUSE-Cotta Masa 123 E•st 17th Street o.ny ,.,,,, n,,..., • '•I. •111 t S45AlA I , PROFESSIONAL FRISBEE ,t..rrie•lca'5 favaril• game of cotc:h. lh i~ r .. 1bee i& a p••ci~icrn mode l. PITCH BACK l:i.etwrt"I• Ofl Y ball Q-q;. -THUMBALL ----~ 9 II'• tJI Ii. your thvinb ! ,t.. rugged toy f0t yard ond be<J,h ploy. lr><!oor, Cluld-oU ytor round-ony oge cor'I pl"Y. fun in· C:,..OM!I w!t)> ,k,11. 299 . .... J.fl ~ r@m"';;my~;;»~i))5>1ffiin) 1m) m TOY WORLD-Harbor Center • 2300 N. Ha rbor M*ll.•Tlttln. IMI ''I. lt·l l JI!, IM 1 s ........ .,., lAS.7032 a ., ' .h " T D h II p 111 " c cc h· .. p C> SC 0.lll y Jll LOT ~ I Leslie Bacon Free; Ciws \'let Secret Study U.S. 'Se lective Fascism' Huniphrey Says Joh1ison Maligned ' SEATTLE (LJPJ I -Anti...,·sr actlvisl ~slie Bacon, jubilant O\ er her release from Jail, Si(\'S her rreatment by the Just1tf• llepartn1en1 was "selective rascism " l:l<ul u1 a l111•e11der blouse <ind purple slacks as she left Jail \\'ednesday. ~l iss Baton said the FBI had no basis '•l'hatsoever for arresting her April 27 as a "material 1vi1ness'' 1n the !'.1arch I bo1n· bing of the U.S. Capito!. "I guess lhty picked me out of a hat," sht said. \VASll!:-.IGTl)7\ 1l "Pll St>n. Huhi·rt II , Hurnphrey believes Ly11don B. Johnson has been malign ed as a war Pre.llidcnt hy the Pentagon secret -study of 1he Vietnan1 \\'ar. The Atherton, Calir.. blonde said she spenl her first night of freedo111 at ;:i friend·s house. ''listening to soine niusie" find ··one thing !hat 1 feel badly trying tn unravel her legally about," llun1phre~· :;a id complicated lHr. \\'cdnesdur. ··is !hal these rcring ideas -ideas: v.h1ch anguish over thi!! ""'sr. I saw manpo,,.,·er and turn do"'TI lhJ Johnson sometimes reJecltd tum try la l1m1t the bombing. bombing of Ha i p b c n a: -and papers carrying out1 __ N_m_d_o_w_n_lh_o_J_o_in_t_Ch_1_d_,_o_n __ h_a_'b_o_,_:_· -------- policies. ******************* MERCURY SAVINGS and Joan association 1''01·111 of' Cance1· papC"rs portray Pre s 1 den I ··rrn actually a human Johnson as wanting tn 11;ige being again," shf' Io! d B l • <Hl all-ou! ml!Jt:rrv offcnsii•c Jn an an1Proon1 off the Sena te floor \\' e d n es da y. ininutes aftrr the Stnate re- Jei.:ted the tllcGovern-1\atfie!d amend1nen1 to set a rinaJ terminal dale for American partic1pAt1un In ~he war. llum- µhrey lalkl'd 1\r!h reporters about !he Pentagon papers. DeadJy Di sease Fells 13 Sc hool Classn1ates news1nen an1id t•hcer.~ by a (IC ef£ll and that ·~ Just not .tru<'' small group of supporters. Ever the loy<1l lieutenant , A 9th US. Circui! Court of Ki'lli'll !! Off Humphrey belu~vcs the Presi · Appeals Decision in San F'ran-~ dent under "·horn he served cisco Tuesday and ;inolher and who he tried to suceeed is legal action in Seattle \YPdnr.s-Alli' !!UlOrS 1ak1n,i;i a b;1d rap. Thr paper~ d&.v !reed her on a S!0.000 < 7 do not !ell the eo inplete stor~·. "1 1ratched President Johnson pracr1cally die over this issue." he said. "I haven't any doubt that v.hat he did he did out of lo1•e for his count ry and for its best 1nterests. lie may have been \1 rong , , . BUENA PARK Mercury Savings Bldr .. Valley Vie w at Lincoln HUNTINGTON BEACH Mercury Savings Bldf., Edln2er 1t Beech TUSTIN Mercury Savings Bldz., Irvine Blvd. at Newport A~e. ALBANY. N.Y jLJPll - The possib1!1ty that Hodgkin's D1s1:a~e . a fonn of cancer herlofore !houghl lo be non- <:un11nu111cable. may ha 1· e !>1•.i•pt tllnJugh a group of forn1cr t;J11ssn1ates has starred a search tnr men1ber or the cla~s of 1954 at Albany l-l1gl1 Schoo!. Dr. Pc!t'r (irccn1vaJd, d1rtc· House Cu ts Fi11a11cing For Fl4s \\'ASHl.~GTClN !Al') -The House pa:.st.>11 by \'01ce \01c a proposal lo cut olr production n1onC'y fnr 1ht Navy's Fl4 S\1111~1\lrit: j('1 l1ghtt•f Hep. !lo04 .. rt /.. Leggett 1 l)- Ca!1f 1, oppose.I the n101·c. saying the action may sa1•e the pl11ne's n1anufricrurer. 1he Gruinrnan Corp , SH)O 1nillion by allo,,.,·ing it to negotiate a mw contract. Bu! House Arn1cd Services Chai rman F', Edward Hebert i D-La . ). 1vho proposed the cutnff of $806.\ million in F'14 money . said revisic.n of the eorirracl ~·ou !d be subject to hard nc~otiation. Grumtnan had drscnbet.l a ~ I •·very appropri:ite'' !leber1':; proposal 10 halt production monry until the F14 's $2-billion cost overrun problem 1\•as soh·ed . Curtain Call to Happiness Change Dad from SAD to GLAD There's• frorit row center &eet rn.,.-ed for you at SOUTH COAST PLAZA N••r Th• W•t•rtall, Low•r LIYll 540.8262 bond. he says. tor of !he Cancer Control The bond "'3.S in connel'l1nn \\'11\'TE!l GARDEN. Fla And, he sa}s, 1he.1• /111! lo "/ am a sensJ111•e observer of the man . And I saw his ******************* Bureau of the Slale }lealth ""'ilh her indic!tnf'nt in New i AP I -D,ving LAke Apopka 's\ discern bet"'een memos of· Department . says 13 class York City on a lf'<ieral charge thousands of wildliff' \'iClims F-~------------------·----------------------------~ members and their close con-of conspirin~ in a plql lo suceumbed to a bacterial , tacts have contracted the firebomb a J\1anhattan Bank scourge capable of dissol \'ing ' disease. which affects the The s f' · "-t I h . an ranc1sro ......,ur !issues in the 111fectedl ymp oitic syste1n. ruled her $100,0oJO bail on the aniin;ils. ~t'ienlisls studying 1 Eighl of the 13 are dead. On-•·n1aterial witness" w;:irrant lhe n1ystery plague sa). I l.1 50 of lhe 317 members in musl be reduced to personal An ··aeromonas infec\Lon" in the class have been located to re('()gnh.ance pending appeal irhich bacteria be("()rne :ible to t.l<Jte. of her contempt sentence. break down the tissues of Black &Decker SPIJCIALS FATHERS DAY E The National Ca n c e r ~lie wAs sentence d to jail for alligalors. lurtles. fish and lnstilute at Bethesda, J\1d .. is contem pt after she refusf'd to birds is the culprit rcsp0nsible 1 looking into the matter. A answer federal gr&nd jury for carcasses sfrP11•n along the spokesman cautions that a questions about the Capi1o1 shores of Lake Apopka. Dr.1 report on the case by a group bombing and antiwar ac· Frank Haves . head of the • of Albany doctors needs tivities in general. Uni1·f'r s1ty "or {';eorgia School I further investigation. of Veterinary Medicine. said] Others initiating the in-\Vednesdav. I vesligation ""'ith Greenwald Befl Sti·ike Even as the team announced include Dr. Nicholas J. Vian-its findings. 1he Jl.000-acre na , a Li .S. Publ ic Health Seri--l"'f!ntral P\orid.1 I a k r ex- tiee. and Dr .. J.<11.:k ii>. P. Da \·1s Dea{IJi11 e Set perienced a major fi sh kill.I it:e Officer 111 (;reen,,.,·ald's of-apparently due to Q>;ygen of the Albany tl--\edical Col ]Pli(e KA:-!SAS CITY tAP\ depletion. II "as the latesl tn Thf' unusu.al grouping Qf !hr .Joseph A. Be1mf'. pre.~ident of a 5eries 11·hich began in !he c<iSl'S is the first stro11g \he Con1m unic<1 tion!'i \\'orkers summ('r of 1947 1vhC"n hC'a\'.1' l'Vldent:e, au1horities say. that of A1ner1ca. sa~·s chances of a loads of fertilizers ;ind mu('k Hrxlgkln·s di.~ease may be in· se!tlemen!. wi!h the Be! I began pouring into i!s 11·<iters feclious. \\'hi\e of\f'n fatal. if Systern In-fore a .lul y I ~ strike from farms on the northern' caught c;irly. the illness can deadline appesr 1'1·ery poor." shore. i be stopped. Thousands of delega!es 10 The investigation indiC'alcd The three doct ors, in the ir t11e union's 33rcl ;innual con -thnt enrichment by the n1uck 1 report. say the evidence they vention Jumped to their feet farms set the stage for a have uncovered so fa r sug-and chee red "'ednesday when speed-up in the growlh of gcsts that "carriers'' of tlie Beirne annou nced th at 500.000 bacteria and a change in the 1 disease can h<ive il and members of lhe union would eallng styles of fish and lransmil it lo others several strikt Bell al 6 a.m. F:DT July wildlife as they consumerl years before e\·er showing 1 ~ unless 1L n1eet~ their larger amount~ of the ba ck- S) mptoms of lhe illness. cremands. tena·filJed pre~·. ~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-- • ""MY KIND OF GIFTS"" flitlcdt, t'!~~r ~ FOOD GIFT PAKS Dad will enjoy the tas!e lempl- jng r:heesei;, smoked mea l and other foods mrn enjoy, .• in our complete selection or food girl paks. • TAKE JT wm 1 YOU OR WE.LL MAIL !ATII:EE."S DAY JUNE 20th PREMIUM PAK $3.89 Ii lon11-1irne f•vorite p:i!t, i1 ha~ an. r.d11rn Btr. r:oud;1. ~moJc-y !Smoked Cheete H•r), twn Chf'r~e Spteade, Mustard i nd Imported candies. PLEASURE PAK $8.98 1 '.~ lb. BEEF' S1iCK. Co1.1t.l11, !Jor1er1dl1h ~Auer, Mild Midp:el l.on11horn, Smoky !Smoked r:he~se Ilnr), 1wo C:hf"ese Spreads. Belle l'le\lr l..:btt11e plut lmporled &1ndie1. Westcllff Plaza ,, ...... ,,.. .. NIWt'OtT llACH 114-642..0tJJ M IDNIGHT SPECIAL $6.98 1'• lb. BEEF !-.JICK, Mild f\.iidgrf J.oni:?horn , nrlle Flrur Cher~r . Smoky (';flHJlrd Cht'esr. liar) 11nd imporled candi,.s to 'll<lf.I ~µar~I ... DELUXE HOLIDAY CLASSIC $12.95 1 ''• tb. BEF.F' STICK, Bl!Jh-. FlinJr Chee1e, Gouda. J-:ri1 "' Bir, SmokJ (Smoked Chee1e Bar), Cr1t1Ji:,.r ,, Bull er K1e1e Cheet<e, Mild ).fld,I"! J.onghotn. 4 Cheese Spre1u1.~. Sh1rp Chedd •r ~pread pl1.11 imported c.•ndiu.. Town & Country 777 S. MM11 S•. OaAH•I 714·S.l .. 016 Black & Dtcktr >,\" dd!J kit Includes Black & Decker standard ~· .. drill .26 pieces include wheel arbor, backing pad, 3 drill bits, Black & Decker sander assortmenl 12 pieces include #7410 hn ishi ng s.1ndcr. u~ 1045 dusness sanding :i11ach- ment and IO sheets of assorted grit abrasive paper. $25.78 'lalue . , , save $5.79.· (#7412) ONLY 1999 cotton buff, grinding ~heel, 1 5 assorted grit abrasive discs, chuck key, key t-iolder, p1as1ic carry;ng case. (-#7116) ONLY 1999 Get even with shrubs, hedges, with Black & Decker. Electric Shrub & Hedge Trimmers Double-edge blades have new exclusive tooth de- sign, Qfips foliage lor per· fe et. smoo!h cutting. Shape & groom hedges beau\1- fu!ly in minutes. 11 oo Stop hac1t1ng at hedges. Go electric with thi5 13" s1ngle-t!dg e mode!.. Shape bushes. shrubs beau· !•fu lly. F1nger11p safety switch, Sure-Grip rear hand!e. Side handle !or fell· or right-hand operation, Easy 10 handle. COMPACT POWER WORK SHOP. HAS 1,001 USES New con1t9tlt·tof'Qu•. perm•Mnl magnet motor ~ lwlo. 1M lofque of prw!ou1 mod1I&. Vlrtuatly Ital~. ewn wht>n you rea lty bur dcwn. Com•t. llght.91ght - with •II tha power ~OU Med fOf grinding, drlUlng, pollthlng, c•rvlng, ct.burring, aandlng. TovQf'I, shockproof La.1an hou•ing.. Walghl onty t oz. Pl'Oducn 30.000 RPM. No. 2tO ...... Tool_, ........•... , . , , .• , • , •. , S24 .fS No.211 ...... TodKHwffhS41111111M .,.,. ........... ····· .......•... 1J4.fl Bliek & Dtektr 7Va" c.lrcul1r NW Outstanding value. 1 HP burn-out protecled rnotor and 7y,~ blade 10 hand le big cv\111ig iobs v1ith ease. Ou1ck bevel and dep1h adjust· rnenls. Was S24 88 ... save $4.89 (#7301 ) 1999 Black I. 09Cker Jlguwklt features #7515 Jig saw with. tilting shoe. 10 piec~ Include U· 1338 blade assortment (2 U· 1350 coarse wood, 2U·1351 finewood,1 u.1354 coarse metal. 1 U· 1355 fine metal, plastic pouch), U-2151 rip fence, plastic carrying case: (#7516) ONLY 1999 • ' p WEBER JEIAI KETILE 49.15 C.m rofllttl llN~ <00ks Iha flavor in not oul I Adjustable dompt11 ~aull,t1 hut. savt charcoal. Rubber-tire d wheelt. 22%• dllm. top 11111. 29' h~h. Jel black por1:1la i~ (02) We have hundreds of Father's Day 1ift items . • Whether he's a handyman or not. We'll GHt Wrap, too . • • FREE! OP!N MON.-F~J. 9 A.M.·9 P.M. Sat 9 e.m.-6 p.m.-Sun. 10 a.m."'4 p.m. , I j • • -- DA.ll Y PROT EDITORL\L PA.GE Water 1' .. or the arid southwestern parl of the Uni ted Slates. no subject and no project can have more importance than the waler supply. Obvio usly, without water no other aspect or lUe can go on. California as a state. and So uthern California in par· licular, have been farsighted in keeping the flow of potable 'vater ahead of population gro\\!lh and need. The aqueducts, dams. hydroelectric power plants and irrigation projects which ma ke up the system both \Vilhin and outside the state stand as models. \Vithin California, the system has greatly reduced nature's O\Vn form of pollution -devastating floods \Yhich destroy li ves. homes and the land itself. But now one of the last phases of the State \\-'atrr Project-and one of its most vital-is in jeopardy. ll is lhe Peripheral Canal planned to carry fresh ""ater do"'n the eastern border of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. After years of study from every conceivable angle- agr1cultural science, engineering, ecology, hydrography, to name some -the canal was chosen as the solution. It would pro\'ide fresh water to feed the ag.ricult~re or !be Delta. constitute a dam against salt water 1ntr11s1on from San Francisco Bay, protect hon1 ing fish o n t~1eir spawning runs, and finally n1ove to Southern CahJor· J'lia to help relieve the salinity developing in \Yater from the Colorado River. Five years ago there v.·as no opposition. But then the industries '''ith more than a hundred plants Uning the coast of Contra Costa Co unty had second thoughts. Under fire as polluters of the ri\'er system and San Fran· cisco Bay, they sa\v the fresh water from northern Cali· fornia as a means to flush their pollutants. • Ill Jeopardy of doll ars each year in a campaign seemingly aimed at dividing the California delegation in Congress and there- by blocki ng a rederal 50-50 partici pation in the canal project Rep. \Vayne N. Aspinall, 0-Colo., chairman of the I-louse Appropriations Committee. has told the Califor- nia congressional delegation, ''Ge l yoll r own house in order before you ask Congress to appropriate the $120 n1illion federal share." The leader of the northern forces is Rep. Jeron1e n. \·VaJdie. D-Antioch. \Yho sccn1s bent on making sure the delegation ren1ains divided. 1£ this tactic defeats the canal project. the \Vale r \Vtll be sent westward, not to Southern California. If he succeeds, the stale \~·ould have to go it alone for the total $240 million bill. The <:osl \vould even· tually be repaid by water user s. but the state-federal part· Dership is needed no\v to get the canal built. Southern Californians. and the central Californians also adversely affected. should join in a strong protest to Congress. It's a T ypical June If you are a ne\vcomer to these parts, you're prob· ably thinking So uthern Ca!ifornia has been blessed \Vith uniquely dismal June \veather. Even if you have been around a \l'hile, and your !'Jle rnory has a tendency to.slip, you arc probably \vonder· 1ng \vhere the fabled California sun is hiding so many 1nornings this June. <::~~~\ .· .......... State la\\' does not recognize this as a legitimate use of precious fresh \Valer. Nevertheless, the industries ~et out to \1,1in that water away from Delta agriculture and Southern California by defeating the Peripheral Canal project. They organized the Contra Costa County \V"ater District. That district uses hundreds of thousands Relax. It's a typical June. Far be it from us to run do,vn the efforts of our chambers of commerce and Ca li· fornia \~·eather touters, but every June offers more gray, overcast. fo ggy. clammy mor nings than any other month. Ah, but the end of June is in sight. Wait around a couple of \\'eeks. .. ~OH, OH-HE~E GOES IH' 01.' IMA~E MAIN:' The Trouble With Most Knowledge ... "--.. ,~ ... -. ... .., (. • ;>(ii. ' ' l Svdh:y: · J. H.a~i~": i ;;,.." ' ' " • A.I ; I • ' _, :i..;..,.,.~ j ',, .... __... Thoug bls Al Large: The trouble 'Yi"ith most knowledge is that ii will not stop al what it does not knov.·: and this is precisely the place at '''hich Wisdom bcginc;. • • • The best lawyers are those ,\·ho com· prehe.nd most fully the case that the othf>r side is able to make out: thus, the person who knows only his own side of the case is the poorest defender of that position. A father v.·ho wants his son lo be a •·credit'' to him is un consciously treat· ing the child like an asset, and has only him self to blame ii lhe boy rebels into a J1abili1~·. • • Two persons -...·ho didn't care much for each o!her at school n1::iy meet 30 years latl'r v.1th co rdial embraces. not signi· f\'ing friendship so much as a kind of rftutuat self-congra tulat1on lhat both are s111l ah\e. • • • There art only 1v.o things no one \I'll\ "llhngly admit· a deficiency 1n the abih- ty to lo,·e. and a deficiency tn humor: }el, nbjecuvcly speaking . it seems as 11 half !he papulation is defcc\1ve tn one. or the other: else our society would be. far 1o1·armer and merrier th11n 1l 1s. :;. ... * \\le ar<' sill! \11 lhe infancy of c1viliia- 1ton , if 1o1·e use that v•ord as precisely as Bcrn<1nos. v. hen he ob s e r v e d : "Ci\·i1izal1on exists specifically so thal there may be no ·masses,' but rather men alert enough ne\cr lo conslilutute masses:· . ' . The !acully that is mosl taken !or Dear GI00111 y Gus Something rare in politics: Demo- cratic Senator and J\1ajority Leader !ltike !11ansfield applauding publica· Lion of secret documen!s sure to blacken th e Democratic leadership for escalating the Vietnam war. \\'hat wiU Fulbright say no,v? -J. D.S. Thil 1 .. tur. r•l~c11 r11ttr•' ¥""''• ""' M<;llUrl!Y lhoH ti ·~· "'"'"'."" S•n• rour "'" MIVt ,. GIDOmJ Gu\. OtilJ l'llet. granted by most of us is actually the r arest ability -and that is, to see what 'Yi'C really set' .. " . . Despite Bobble. Bums. 1f v.·e V.'ere given the gift of seeing oursel\'es as others see us, we would hotly denounce t.he portrait as an arrant forgery. The egotistic person aims at e!ic1ting respect from those around him ; \\'hat he fails to understand is that anylhing deliberately done lo elicit respect i1n· mediately cancels itself out and fotfeits that respect. (Sell·consciousness im~ mediately turns any virtue into its counterfeit.) Those v.•ho bl indly oppose cybernation and the use of robots in production, because they take the place of human t'.'mployment, should instead rejoice that inhuman and subhuman jobs \1·ill not be given to mechanical '"slaves." freeing men for more creat1vl and responsible tasks. .;: >I< $ "SuC'cess stories" ma~c drplorable bi· ographtes, for nobody but a ~aint can be sairl to be a success"; a~ Ar lega puni;· entty puts it : '"EYery life 1s, more or less. a ruin among whose debris \le have to discover V.'hal the person ought lO have been ... It's strange and sad how millions of so. called Christians haven"! the fa intest idea of what Jesus was talki ng about . they im<1gine He came to sa\'e those who were breaking the commandn1ents, \\'hen His mission v.·as to rebuke those v.·ho ''"ere keeping the commandments tor the v.·rong reasons. Fascinating and Original A girl growing up in Nazi Germany : !I beautiful young woman 's tribu\alioru in Soviet--<Xlnqucred Berlin; an aspiring actress's rise to fame and success in Europe: and America -these are the. ingredients of The Gift Horse. Hildegard Kners aulobioRraphy 1McGraw·Hill, 17.9$). One of Europe·s most glamorous stars. Miss Knel is best remembered by Amerlcsn audiences -under h e r Hollywood n;ime of Hildegard Nerr -for her pertormanees In such movies as "Deciaion Before Dawn" ,.. and a s ..---B11 George Dear George : t asked this Girl If she would go 1kJn-divinl with me and she slap- ped me Rnd said she wun't thal kind or girl. Why did she do that ? Doesn't she ~ what 1ltin-dlvlng f ill SLAPPED Dear Slapptd : Evidently. hut from a different frame of reference. Anyhoy,·, it could be worsl:. 1 have one letttr from a would·bt romeo who inYilcd 1 Jl.rl to go 1klnny-dlpping Md site. ihowed up wearing flippers aad full scuba aear. • \ The Bookn1an Ninotchka in the Broadway musical ;'Silk Stockings," 'l'ticy will now discover that she is also a fascinating, original writer whose book displaced Papilton on European best M!Uer lists. HILDEGARD KNEF Hved through searing Umes. and for all its !ltralght· forward unsentlm entallty, lhe fir11 h11-lf of The Gift Horse is a M'.athing account of wbat war does lo civilians. To 11tay with the man she Joyed, 19-year-old Hi1dtgard di!lgulsed her:!telf Ill! a fiOldler , fled Uie Russians through devastated Berlin, was captured, and endurf\d e 1 p e r I e n <: e s seldom known to v.·omen. even tn days of disaster. Tn contrtl3t to the starkness of tht 1o1·Ar episodes. the making of • Hollywood star 11nd the creaHon of • big Broadv•ay musical are de.scribed with hilarious and deadly insig ht. M11rilyn l\fonrot:. Elluibcth Taylor, Rock Hudson. and aboYe all ~,arlcnf!. Dietrich are 11mong thr per!JOna\ltles viY!dly port rayt'd In The Gift Horse - which for all its dram11 11 nd gl11mour is a candid , absolutely helfevable -'tlf·poMrai t of a ren1arkable woman. \1ictor de Keystrlln~ Like Ko1•eo, De11iocrats Escalated, Rep11blicat1s lfo1111d It Dowtt Pentagon Leak a Windfall for Nixon VV ASHING T 0 N -.M<1ybc the admin istration did not leak out the Pentagon's 2.5 million '\'Ord .. 40-volume report on the incidence of the Vietnam v.•ar but it is a v.•indlall for President Nixon just the same. The report in all its n1assivc detail sho\\"S as nothing else could hO\Y the Kennedy •. Johnson administra1ions took over the limited-risk commitments of !he Eisenhower admini· stration in Southeast Asia and made thern into a large · scale high -casualty 'Yi·ar wh icn Nixon is liquidating, In this respect !h<' Vietnam \var-wind down is like the Korean \\'ar, a confli~l underlaken in a 0 e m o c r at i c adn1inis!ration and brOllght lo an encl in a Republican administration l1 is somev.·hat ironic, but a tribute to the New York Times' news j u d gm en I and enterprise. thal il should have obtained and published such de v as I a l i n g documentation. The Times ha s not adrnired lhe \\"BY Ni;(Oll has been ge tting out of the ,,·ar but by its O\YO !'!andards it has e\"en less reason to adn1ire th<' \\'<lY Pre~irlent Johnson·s former Secretary of Defense '.'\lcNamara, Gen. ~1ax,\·cll Ri chard Wil son 'l'aylor. cl al, got into the \var. Ii" VIEW OF THE reeord as Jt 1s now so pa1nstak1ngly being set forth it is hard to 1111aginc how the Democratic presidential cand idates. v.•ho were right here on the scene but did not make kno" n any opposition lo the \\'ar in its incidence. could make any credible issue on !he way Nixon is trying to end the mess on at least a half-"ay constructive basis. To relate !he Cambodian and Laos diversions in the process of withdra,val v.·ith the Kennedy.Johnson escalation seems particularly absurd. The college den1on~!tators and their professorial mentors can "t be convinced that this is <1ny1hi11g else but a sneaky Nixon version of ~!cNan1ara 's y.•ar, but. 1nore mature element s \Vi\1 certainly be able to see the difference. Protests which might have been valld at lhe end of the. Johnson administration or al the Democratic National Convention have lost any semblance of a rational basis. NIXON KEEPS SAVl!'OG that to end a y,•ar is easy but he is finding il hard as hell It is hnrd to lose the illusions tha t led Johnson. ~1cNarnara and Taylor into cornmi lmen1s the y could not fulfil!. And it is e\"en harder to emerge from this darkness of disillusionment into the light of a v>'cll ended war \1•1th eoncepts or honor -;ind good purpose in111c\ If ire survive this one \\'l!hout shallercd sclf-respeet. it will not be due to the forehcarancc now of those who rcn1a1ned s1l('n\, y.•hen 1n advance of lhc presidential election of 1964 , grcal plans \\'ere afoot for the heavies! bombing operation the U.S. ever undertook. And in lha! year it was Bar ry Gold\va!er y,•ho was pilloried for being trigger happy! There is enough blame to go all the \\'av around. Nixon as a private citizen ;ind public man suppo rted the war. .Johnson changed his n1ind about the bnn1bing. fin nt!y brought escalation lo a hnlt and began to rn!ertain ideas for a v.·ind-do1l'n and v.•ithdra1val advanced by Clark Clifford. JOHNSON \\'ILl. have his own story to !ell ln his memoirs soon to be pubhi-hcd but it. is not likely to alter the record of cove rt. clandest ine and finallv dccepti\'c ;uh·anccment into a major y.·a·r 1\'hich the Pr"!:tgon itself has V.'ri\\en \\'hrrc were the. De n1 o c r at i c presidential candidates during lhe great deception~ Sen. George McGovern was in !he Srnate -saying not hing. }\arold Hughes was goYCrnor of Iowa :--say ing 1101.hirig. Edmund S. !'11uskie was in the Senate ·-saying nothing but novr remrn1bering !hat he had doubts. Hubert H Hu1npl1rey v.as vice president and sa\ ing plenty -all of ii 111 support of President Johnson's policy in Asia. /\or are columnists v.·ho thought An1('rica could do y,•hat it put its mind to do l'xempt from blarne They suffered, too, from the 'Vor!d \\'ar 11 mentality !ht1I !he United States had a miss ion and cou ld ca rry it out for the betterment of 11urld pe;.1ce and security. SO~tE \\'HO DOUBTED the wisdom of the esca!alion . but agreed with the objccli\'es, could sec no alternative to supporting !he ad1·cnturc once ii had be~un The \'ixon \\'hlte l!ouse says \1 serves no cnnslruc!1vc pt1rposc !o arouse ane 111 lhc bi1terncss anr! rrcritninalions bound \n rlO\\' fr0n1 the Pen!1-1go11·s self-analysis. But rn-;iybe !\ will if il only slightly thastens those \rho now make Nixon"s 11'3Y OUl or !he \Var nlOrC difficult by accusing him of the deception they so freely al!ribule to Johnson The cont rast is sharp and clear. Nixon is gelling out of the war !hat Johnson got 111:0, and !hf> record sho1\·s 1t. The Best Friends Mone y Can Buy Down in i\hatni. the exiles <ire still planning to liberate Cuba. And up 1n \l'ashinglon, n1y friehd, Co11gress1n<1n Toni Hces of Southern Cal!fornia JS planning 10 !1bt'rale C;i!al ina Island . Or the twn ad ventures, I prefer !\Ir. Rees·. ror one thing, Cntahna is le~s heavil .v dcf!'nded . F'or ano!her, ro.·lr. Rct.s has a ringing baltle cry that just nat11ra1Jv draw~ -;id· herents 'to his cause. None of this "Lib· ert.ad or death" stuff for Our Leader. "If we would win i•dependencf!. from the U.S .. " cried ~1r. .Rees ringingly, "we. ought to be worth a sugar quota of al least 10,000 tons a year:· NOW THERE'S a batUe cry to apf)l'al to all men or good sense:. As f\-1r. Rees explains. the \\"Otld price of sugar is four cents a pound .. But the. U.S. guarantees domestic and foreign prod ucers eight cents a pound. So every few years Congress pa sses a sugar quota bill specifying which dozen or mi countries get lo sell us some 4 mlll1on tons or i:;ugar al double the going rate. Countries "·hlch have h Ired Washington lawyers to seU their sugar to Congress this year , says fl.lr Rees, include P.talawi, the Malagasy Republic and Mauritius -just to name a few you poss\bly have never beard or. Thus, says Mr. Rees. lhe Republic of CaU.lina, once It's ~ frttd from impuilltst Los Angeles county, should be Quotes .JtA n Raun , f.a :\tir11d1 grade JC'bool tcachtr -''I strelS lo my students that the: lntrnt of ~·rhcrs and columnist~ i~ not nttes"11rily to ag ree with the m~· jorily opinion, but to somelimes bring out other point<; of view, prick our conscienct .&bclut 11\Jll.~lii.'('S, and shnkc us into do ing something abou1 i~" Art lf9ppe cinch for a good 10,000 tons or $800,000 1n fJUick profit a year, less lobby~ls fees. TIUS CERTAINLY isn't too much lo ask, says ~Ir. Rt'ts, for "a _nice sn1~ll country firmly anti·Commun1sL but in need of U.S. cash to fight the Che Guevara guerrillas in the h1nter!a11ds ., Being a busy, hard .\1·o rk1ns (Qngrcssn1an, ro.1r. Recs hasn·1 had ltnic yet lo work out lhe (!etails. But obviously, a number of problen1s fil<tnd between us of the Catalina Liberation Front and that $800.000 a year. First of all, where arc we going lo gel Che Guev;ira-!ype guerrillas to populate the hinterlands? The only I hi n g populating the hinterlands no1Y arc \\"lid hogs. And if ""e go storming ashore Victims Born of Despair "The: U.S. went on a holy war lo stamp out communism.°' said flam p a r I s Magazine, '". .and it brought home he roin." The truth in that assertion is bad enough. The irony is even worse, To think that the "noble" cause has come to this. The. additional irony is that deadly· drugs are being made a\'allable to American troops not by the e~my, bul by the Asian allies we are righting to pro- tect. f\.1ilitary personnel and c.\·en high· ranki ng cfricials of South Viclnam, Laos and Thailand apparently ha\'e been in- volved Jn the opium traffic from jungle areas of Southeast Asia. 'MIF. NIXON administraliOn may he able lo limit the:. problem by placing pre~ure on our allies to stop the drug trafhc. We have our doubts. however. 'Those making a profit from the opium bu.~ine:ss will not giYe up easily, Many farmers In these countr~ rely on opium crops for their subsillence. Still. cfforu to i::et st the source of c;iplum supply ;ire important . So are the pffnrls by the arml"d Sf'rvices lo treat ad- di<'lion once it has developM. But lht>y mis.,, lhr real ca use or the prob\C>.m. A.n Ameriran psychiatrist in Vietnam sald rl'Ccntly that the soldie rs 1:1r1t. reacting to Vic!nam mur.h as depr ived personi:; rtac l to urc In 11 ghetto, wh~re narcotics ad· Guest Editorial • di ction ha3 long been & seriou s problem. They take drugs and try lo forget. SOCIETY HAS treated the: ghetto drui:; victims harshly over the. years. putting them in prisons. giving them felony rerords that make lt dUlicult for them to obtuln jobs, doing little to change thf!. conditions that lead to drug use. The armed services acted much the same in handling lhei r drug problem at first. Counties.! servi~men "'ere punished or given dishonorable discharges t ha t deprived them of veler11ns' benefits and impaired lheir employment status_ Al the Yery least. It would ~m that the drug victims in Vietnam or in Amer- ica who suffert'd from the punitive a~ proach before laws ;ind policies were liberalized should be Cltare:d of damaging records. A dishonorable discharge can be changed. A felony ~cord-rot a <'rime later defined a' n1inor~an be erast.d. Rut lhe: coun1ry mu~! ;ilso get al the real cause:s ()( drui; addiction, whcUllY !he despair born of 8 V.'llr the\ rllUS1 be end~. or !he dc~p~ir of ghctto conditions that. can be alleviated , ~1inlK'HpQ,iis Tribune ~hout1ng.' Dealh lo lhe pigs';· there goes the old sugar quota . The ans,ver 1~. obvlously, Cuba. ::i-0 \•le. rent guerrillas fron1 Cuba, ec;tabl1sh a democracy·ln\"ing 1nilitary junta i n Avalon and pledge to fight to the la st American dollttr agalnsl a 11 o v.· I nt. Catalina to become a Communist baslion only 24 n11les off our shores of Lon' Beach. Think of lhe freniy that will S\\"Cep Ainenca: TEN Tl-IOUSAND tons? Congress will eagerly demand allocating us 100,000 tons. That" s the other problem. Wherf!. do 1o1·e get 1t? Catalina, unfortunately doesn"t grow sugar. Once agajn. the answer"s obvious: Cuba. \Ve buy it from Cuba at four cents a pound, sell ii to lhe U.S. at eight cen ts a pound and everybody's happy. Oiba"s happy to renl out guf!.rrillas and sell sugar. \\'e freedom-loving Ca lalinans are happy lo make U million a year. And .ti.merica·s happy to have its foreign policy justified by acq uiring still another new Jitlle friend in the Republic of Catalina. You know the State Department'• motto lhese days ; "If you can't make a friend, buy one.'' ------' Thursday, June 17, 1971 The •di,ori.al page o/ Che Doll11 Pilot seeks to inform ond 1tim.- u/aU readers by prrse:ntino this newspaper's opiniom and eom- mentary un topics of in,ert.tt (Ind $iguifica11ce, by providiflO a forum for the expression of our readers' opinioa:i. a1ui bu prt.~1>11ting the dfVf!.·rse vit:w· poinr.s of l11formed ob&£TV('t.f n11d spokt:s1ncn ot1 topics of !IL• dou, Tibbert N. Weed, Publisher , CHECKING •UP• Britain's Jobless Higl1er Than Ours By L.:\I. BOYD lXACT LY 34 out of every 100 infants would grow up to be lef\handed. ir their parents and teachers y,•ould leave them at hbcrty to do so. Such is the claun of a medical fello\v v"ho says he has devoted JO years to a study of !he 1natter. r..1a ybc. don 't knO\\', lie insists cvcrv babv 1s ambidextrous until I "year Old .!UST ABOUT S39,000 a minute, th<it's the fi nancing co~!. the interest. on lhe t!.S. Federal debt. Everv 1111nutc' Good night nurse" A.\1 ASKED IF unc1nploy 111cnl 1s as high in, s11y, l-;reut Br1t;11n now as ii is ;1round Lhc~e parts. Higher. Not ::.1ncc 3! years ago havr so many men bcen out of \vork there. \'OU 'VE II E A R J) of housemaid's k nee s and secretary's sprrad. but ha\ e you heard of stenogr~phcr"s v.•ri st? That's a S\1·rll1n~. ;i stiffness. an 1nfl:ciinn1al1on that crops up so111run1c" in the "·ris ts of Rirls 11 ho l.1 I)(' 01·ermuch Tho~c 11 ho (·on 1t' do1vn 11· 1 I h slcnoJ(raphrr s 11·risl should be p;iid 111rri t bonuses to ro\'er r11cd1cal c;( pcnses. Such 1s 1hc t·la1n1 of somf' \Von1cn's L1hrra1 ion ad- vocar es 11·hn merc!v w<1nt it mentio11ed. ThC'y do 'not intend to n1a!'ch on \\'ashing1on CUSTO:\·IER SE RVICE: Q. "\\'hen <1re you going to outgrow the use of th<tl insipid slang you affect'.' 1 111can phrases like 'ho1-1· conic' <tnd 'pritnear' and 11'.''11' ba ck \1·hen' and 'over younrler ''.'" A. If _vou are referring 10 thc rcn1ai11s of so1nc almosl 1111- p er c e pt i b I e Y.'l'Slern vemncular. you sc1ssorbdl. forget ii l'in mak1ne the rno~t of l't'hat's left of 11 like a bald man con1 bs hi!< hair Q. ''\\'ha\"s thc lar~est number of cars ever involved in a chain collision "" A. Believe 1t wa!< 1hat California pileup Y.hcre1n 234 cars dominocd IT 'S THE CONTl:::NTJO.'J of ot1r PlanC't 1nan th;ll most Capricorn lads wou ld n1akc good rodeo ridcrs. if properly !rained. Thr Capricorn. tir :says, is noted for ;1 rc;id1ncss to try again . Jn sport". 111 bu~iness. in lo\'r \\'~:H E ''OU A\\'AR f: the przza 111i111 sells bet\cr than thc h:11n- burger hereabouts and the laco better th an the hotdog? Hard to believe. Bul one ~urvf'y take:-maintains that. By hereabuulS, I n1ean all over the country. VOU\'G FELLO\\'. IF you r boss \ven• to tell you tomor- roy,· your work is unsatisfac- tory so you n1ust consider yourself on 60 :.lays' probation. hO\V 1vould you react? Scared'! Or n1ad ~ One or the other - ellhcr anxiety or aP.gc r -is 111ev1 1<1ble. Or so sa y the rncdicoes 11hu study SL1th. They say further your re<1ct1on 1ndic<itcs 1rhaL ailrnent you n1uy eventually co111e do11•n \VJth. Jf scared, you're 1norc apt to be a candidate for a hea rt auack. But if rnad . you're 1nore likely to develop a peptic ulcer. r.Iore good nc1-1s coming up. Stand by. ll APID R~PLY : Q u I le n ght. 1nadar11. <iny good surgeon will tell you 1t Lakes 111orc a11cslhct1c ro put to slccp ;i pers1Jn \\'ho !<rnokcs 1han a nonsinokcr. 111.;n C lllEF PROG - 1\'0ST ICATUH s<i<lly predict~ lhc return of knickers for s!vli.~h n1e11 this fall. \Vith krice-lcngth soc ks. And the old 11e11·sboy e<lp. Everybody up for the Charleston~ , . ON THIS T\IATTi':R of clothing. rnighl inention lhat while cvcr,v body 's talking about hol pants, it's the dcnim blue jean that's really gol the great grip on the. market no1'I. Did I tell 1·ou !he word den im can1 e from De\'1mcs. that South of ~·ranee to11 n where the blue d)C ori ginated? ONE THl~ti 1\!0RE. av('rage age of thosc classy citizens 111 "\\'ho 's \Vho'" today IS 58. RAPID REPLY : r-.-o. sir. \1hy 11·omcn hal'e mo r c surgica l operations than do n1cn is kno1vn. but \1'hY it gt·nt·ral!y taf.e :'. thein 50 much longl'r to recover is still a n1}slcry )'our q1ies!io11s at1d i.:or11· 1~1e11/.<> are 1.1Je/co1nerl nud 1r1/.l be 11sed i11 L'herk111g /lp 1vhcre ver poss 1 IJ I e l'/co sc uddrr$S 11011r lctrers ro L. i\/. BO!Jd. P.O. Bn.r J8i.i. f\'etv por't Be a c II, 926(i0. HAI-KARATE AFTER SHAVE SALE • ·rangy ~ccn r ·soot hi ns Limit: 2 per cu~tomcr NY Tin1es Nurture.d Expose Secrecy • Ill BOSTON !UPI) -The New York Times' reports on a Pen- tagon study of the Vietnan1 war were written in a guarded r..tanhattan hotel suite under secrecy so strict many of the newspaper's senior editors did not know of the series until it appeari:d in print, the Boston Herald Traveler said today. The copyrighted story in \Vednesday 's l lcrald said the "'riling of the report y,•as call- ed Project X by the Times. It y,•as completed, I he lleralt.1 said, "under condit ions of secrecy So slringenl that many senior editors in Ne w York and \Vashins:ton h3d no idea of the massive V1etna rn report until they read the first installment in the ir newspaper.'' The study started about ttlree nionths ago w he n report?'.' Neil Sheehan was pulled from the Ti me s ' \Vashingttn Bureau. Si n c e then. he and a handful of other reporters. editors and copy ee!tnrs were locke<i into the suite poring over the 45 \ olumes of the Def c n s e Department s:ud y, the Herald said. The report did not say .... ·here the study y,•as obtained. It y,·as examined under con- ditions of security perhaps s1n1ilar to the ones in effect when it was originally cusn· piled. Special idenlifi<:al!on was required for anyone trying to enter the suite and the ID cards were updaied the changed regularly, the Herald said. On.ly the top men al the Tiines knew of the report, in- cluding Vier President Jarnrs Heston, J\lanag1ng Editor A.r.1. Hosentha! and reP-:Orters J\1ax Frankel. Hedrick Smith, !'.: \V. Kenworthy and Fox But- 80-INCH HAMMOCK-LOUNGE ON SUSPENSION FRAME SALE Frec-:-landing, non-lilt Ira.me of ~lron i:: t ubular ~1cct :-upport s ;in invit ing Ucd o( hrC"C11 t·<'1 n1· as y,·1 t Ji ~t'l'il rate moi~t u re-proof pdlu\.\'. Di!-aS!'.Cmlill'S fo r \l'intrr slor.q::c. $1 0 !~1 14.97 0[10 ~0 Q!J 0 mDlf [§ 'J\nu . .; n1u~c·les. Ju.<.L a maltr·r )."car 'round use indoors or ou o[ hnrty mo\·c:n1ent-r oc k1 SALE ... fun fo r the family. -1retd10nu ncx. . . . .. , I I I f l.q:hl 11·c1gh!. fold1ng f r:une-l ;1,.,1 ·"' l ie 1 rul i::-cry 011t () ex -. 'I I s19s 8 {'IHll jIB!.!l-to-!ltorc, ca sy-L"arry. 1·rl·1.~111 t:-,, ! n1u:-.t· t·..; are cxcr- 1·1:-.cd :-afc ly. D ur3 1i [c l '1 polished aluminum L'.nlirnilt:d_ 11un1Lc~ or ro .... iti(Jns I Compare/11hini::-for y(•an; of :-crvicc. ter[1eld, \lit• report s ai d h:id a n1a1or story and \\B~ junction " to say nothing. Washington Bureau n1cmbers dcc1d1ng whether to run 1t. Saturday, copy editors were v.·ere given no 1ndicallon \\'h<il L<.1sl F'riday. the \Vashington only told they could have less project Y1as keeping She~han Hurcau \\'as told a big project space than usual -an 14,000 busy or v.·hen he would retu rn l'.ilS underfoot and all staffers wo rd story Y1ould be used Sun· The stories were 1nonitored lr-"-'_'_'_'_'"~de=r-a~o~·~·a~b~so~l;ut;e~io=·~d;';';';t~he~H~e~ca~ld~sa~i~d~~~~ by the Times· legal staff and publisher A r I h u r Ochs Sulzbel'ger, thl' llerald s~11d . Only twu Je<ik~ were 1natlC'' \Vashington Bureau rnernbers heard fron1 an otherwise un1den11fied ·'111ember of lhr Kenn~cty trll1n ·Iha~ a slu1·y ot unidentified proportions w:i ~ readv. No. 1 on the Coast Yo ur Hometown Newspaper Is The DAILY PILOT In ·the t.lay 20 v;;'J''~'~'j'~·o~"~''~·~==:::~=::===~~::'.'.'.'.:'~~~~~~~~ Nat !lentoff hutted the T1n1es! I ( ' . . ./""\ \ ,_ I .I ., GAVE '7'] - SALE $ FOR Grcac hu rs for the summer. 1'1en's -~'vlmsuit ~ a~~orted s tr l l'~. designs, .eolors, and fabrics. S"·imsuitj in :,,ilCS S·1'1-L-XL. "Swim suris or'e si•n1lo1 to rhe .l!uS!fC1f1nrr DELUXE PATIO SMOKER WAGON with handy storage shelf Recessing: door wit,h full·view glass windO'A-', wanning oven. 2 chromc i;rids, skewer, tines. g1vc:s 1na:1.1 n1111n sl1111n11n,e:-. at 'l'riple-larninatcd vinyl sling - .. ---------------------olEa :-.y, ph:asurahlc cxcrci:.c. 1J6.9S nylon-rcinforeed for strength • ' DIAL ANTI - PERSPIRANT SALE • For the entire family l.i111it: 1 per <u$l(J "tr1' GRANTS KLEENEX SALE • 200 Z·ply tissues Limit: 2 per customer SUPll-AISOUDIT DIAPllS $15 4sotdl• Plc10f12 REG. $1.94 SALE Birdseye weave cotton. So aort yet so durable! Baby Jeela comlorta.ble. Value! \ 'Natural stretch' sheer panty hose SALE c REG. '1.00 Snmle~. nv!on me•ft pantr hnM: for 1rnoo1h, wrinklt·freo lit! Nude httl. fa•hion shad~s: P/ A. TIET. We rcsene 1M ri.-:ht to limit qu•ntitia ~ NoM sold to dealers. 32 Gal. TRASH CANS SALE 9 REG. '4.95 Buy t h is.st urdy 32· ,.:al. tras h can. Con1 es in th rte coJ . o rs wirh a tig htly l{)(.·k cover. HUNTINGTON BEACH, -GRANT PLAZA BROOKHURST & ADAMS 962-3387 Hours: Daily 9:30 to 9, Sunday 10 to 6 ·' ' • • I l ndU.1.11 Band For ce d Off Nike Buse - RICHf\IO~D. Calif. 1 l.'PI l - Soldiers and police, with ~helicopters hovering overhead, moved in and ousted about 8S 1 lndians early today from an : abandoned Army mi.ssile base they seiud four days ago. It y,·as the second time in . less than a week l h a t :: aulhorities removed Ind ians t fn:im disputed government : land. On Friday, federal :·marshals ejected nbout I ~ In- . dians from Alcalra7. Island, : ending an occupation of 19 months. ThlltM_,, Junt 17, 1,71 Increases Approved LOS ANGELES (AP ) Southern California Edi.son rates for electric service will increase 13.4 ptrCt'nt a! a re.suit of the state Public Utili- ty Commission's approval of a $105.~ million increo!e, a .spokesman said today, The increase is expt'('ttd to Co.!ll !he average llomeowner $1.36 more a month. 1'he utilities commission ap- pro~·ed the inc re a st Tuesday. It is to go into effect in :Ml days. It will affect aboot 2.5 million customers in Southern and Central Californi a. EdiSOfl had sought a $128 million increue. In New York, b c a rd chairman Jack K. Horton told the New York Society of • ~ J, ~ b-17 ";/~;.:rl . ...__.-.,...> .:;.;4·~--.-...... ~!fr,.:;,,, f~-.. ~"""--. !o<o. l•I!. W...W ,;p .. ·-•..I. "I can't look-tell me they're not whitewalls ... " Others Get Eye Pa11el 01\.a ys Tax Revisio11 Progran1 SACRAMENTO !UPI) - The Assembly Ways and Means Com mlttee Wednesday endor~ed a $1.4 billion D e n1 o c r a t i c-written tax revision p r o g r a m over Hepublican complaints. J\feanwhlle the Se n a I e Hevenue and Taxation Com· mittee opened hearings on two Currently, the exemption is $7M! for owner-occupied dwell · ings. Gonsalves had proposed a $4.000 exemption. but reduc· ed it to $2,500. He said the measure is designed 10 "'n1ake 11 possible tor people who are l11·ing in their houses lo continue to livt in their houses.·• other major tax re\·i.!!ion pro-Soloiis Ki·zz grams. one sponsored by Gov. Hcnald Heagan and the other authored by Sen. (;eorge R. 2 PLosp1tltLe Moscone (0-San Franciscol. fl Committee C hairman waiter 'h'. suem 1 o -S B ·zz Bakersfield l, .said no vote. 0Up f, S wou ld be taken on either plan Security Analysts lhat Edi3on ----------------------- intends lo 11pend $62 mllUon on until rurther hearings are held SACRAMENTO (APl -The to enable the committee tc Senate Health and Welfare gain a better grasp or the Committee Wednesday killed componenls of each. two bills for tbi~ year to ban esthellcs and quality a11pecl! this year on its various in- stallations. He S&id this would amount lo 1bout 19 percent of Edi.son 's gross capital t1penditures . He C<1mmented lhat last year the company spent '47 mllllon, totaling 14 perctnt of gro.u capital expenditures, on environmental and esthetla contrcl. One i11 Five Troops Tried Dope -Repqrt The lower house package by Assemblyman Joe Gonsalves phosphate dctergcnls rrum 10.La Mirada), was approved California markets de.~pite although GOP members said testimony the detergents con- lhey wanted lo di~uss it tribute half the polluting before deciding whether to phosphorus in 111kes a n d support or oppose the plan. SACRAM ENTO (AP ) -A about drug use among U.S. Gonsalves. chairman of the streams. military study has disclosed servicemen in Vietnam. Assembly Hevenue and Tax-Assigned lo interim study that more than one in fi ve Russell Hall, <> rormcr ation C:cmmittee, said his pro-were measures by Sen. John enlisted ser vicemen returning helicopter crtw chief, said gram includes concessions to Nejedly ~R-\Valnut Creck l. from Vietnam th r 0 ugh boredom and the pressure of 'R.epublicans such as trimming and Assemblyman E r n es I Oakland has used heroin says the war we~e r~ponsible for the revised homeowners' pro-L a Coste 1 0.~1odestol. Ne· ' drug abuse 1n Vietnam. perty tax exemption. jedly's would have banned the -' --,,_ Two ring s for two· lovers ••• both ring1 $88.00 fl"'t ~·•llty t1i.r. ... t1 .... retbttr.fl l•l4K••ltl-.. ••"4 Eosycndit l•<'Jl'IS • sturf•"I occ.ounl~ ovailobl• .• up fo 12 mon1h1 to PrJf BonkAnwricard • Mo~l•t Chorg• 'THC STORES CONFIDENCE BUILT" E1t1hli1htd 43 Ye1rsl ~llMTIHOTOM C_IMTU IMth & l(~l11ttr ".,.Uftt!R I .. <~ l tt·Ull ".f..1:1011! SNOlllNI tlMTll JJfl Ml rtoff I fft. CH11 lolne ....... ONN MOM .• THU•S. & ••1. 'llL t P.M. • Jn loday's da111n raid, of- ficers arrested about 7S of the 3S Indians al the "'ba~ here. physically removing them and placing them in temporary howing at the installation, ac- cording to an A r m y : spokesman. He said therr was . no violence. The enlrance lo the canyon , leading to the missile site was blocked off by authorities who , kepf'nev;smen from the scene. Mass Slaying Sus11ect Gets Month Delay an Anny psychologist. \ -...;;.liiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiililiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiil detergents by 1972. LaCcsle's ~---'~'·"· ~= the men were heroin addicts.( _:___::._::._ ______________________________ _ odded M•j. Ec;c Nelso" 11 '( TODAY JN SANTA ANA "rn1 under orders of the Army and the Richmond ·police" to keep you out, Chief .Forest Ranger l..a rry Olsen told wailing newsmen. A crowd of about 20 hippie· ·type youths waited with lhe reporters and shouted en- e our age men t to the beleageured redmen. -'The arrests reportedl y came aher 1 poli« lieutenant gave \ht Indians a chance to leave the area v.·llhout being ar- rested. Soldiers stood guard after the arrests at the bast v.·hich v.·1s abandoned about ID yt ars ago. The Army spokesman said the base would be patrolled from now on. Smog Impact On State's Crops Told SACRAMENTO (AP) Somog cost California farmers $25,7 million last year by klll· ing or dam11ging their crops, a luding p 1 an I pathologist reports. The total d a m a gt un· doubtedly was much higher, said Arthur A. Millec-an, because his study did no\ in- clude crop damage that could not be setn. and did not put a dollar figure on dam:ige to fort!i1-! and h1ndsca~ plants. t.lillecan told lhe St<1le Air Resources Board \\'ednesday that e!itimates of crop damage in recent years have rangtd ai; high as $248 millicn. But he i111id 1969 was the fir1t year the !itate conduc1ed a statewjde survey on lhe jm. pact cl air pollution on Calirorni11"s S~ ~ bi 11 i ri n airlculture indus!ry. Smog damage in 1969 v.·as estimated al $44.~ million. M.illeeen, or the SI a t e A I r i culture Department"s Bureau of Planl Path<llogy, uJd farmers themsel\'es con- tribute le air pollution throuah burning wa!le pr o du cts, spraying fttld.s with chemicals and dt.posing .or barnyard wastes. But he singled out cnone -a component of photcchtlmlcal smog -a1 the principal k111er ef farm products. It w1s nJpOnslbl• for about half the damage found In 1970. he said. 'YUBA CI1Y IUPI) lnsi11ting Juan V. Corona is in- nocenr and "has nothing to be ashamed of," the ma ss murder suspect'11 new 21t- l.orney Wednesday won a month's delay in h i s preliminary hearing. Corona. 37, charged v.·ith 10 counts of murder in the killing cf 2;; ilinerant farm workers, sat quietly in court during his second appearance b e I o r e Judicial Court Judge J . J . Hankins. ··f.1r , Corona is innocent: he has nothing to ltlde," said Richard Hawk, the farm labor contractor's new l1wyer. He obtained a delay of lhe prellm.inll"y hearing until July 13 Ml he will have time to ramiliarize himself v.·ith the case. Thf' attorney told the judge he v.·outd look out for Corona''1 Interests in news coverage of the sensational case and later I.old reports he 11·as "giving real con11ideraticn'' to asking 1 for 1 change of venue. District Attornev G. David Teja rai1ed the isSue of news coverage, saying he v.·as ''a little disturbed,'' particularly about photo1raphs. 1 n d 111anted to 110 on the record 11s being "roncuned about due process." "The people of lhe United St11tes have got a ri11ht to know •bout this.'' said Hawk after the hearing . · ' H i s pri\'acy hAs 11 lready been in-I \"aderl so ho w a~ you going to, avnid it?" I But the auorney added it .,...,~ "unfortunate'' the news media had reported CoN.>n•·~ three-month stay in a state [ mental ho!pital :titer being diagno1ed as schizophrenic in 1956. <.:ranston Sets Seniors Race HUNTER'S BOOKS f THI wur~ PINHT 1oomom l'Oll 120 YIARS-SINCI 1111 Lec1ted At FASHION SQUARE IN SANTA ANA ~ (7141 543.fJ41 66,100 .... , & ,_,.... ... , JZ.000 u.-........ c.m IAR•AINS G•LOUI OPEN EVENI NGS 'TfL I P.M. said their e:iqx1sure had rang-• ed from one to 200 uses. The study wn.~ conducted in P.1arch by Letterman General HO>'pital of Son Francisco. where Nelson heads the anti- drug program ror servicemen. Nelson told a C:1pi tol news conference that 23 percent or the retun1ing ~erva:cn1cn had used heroin at least once -16 percent of 1hcm within 30 days' of their schcdu!Ld return lo lhe llnlted States. II is impossible lo tell how mnny Qf the men will become h:ird-t'ore addil·1 s. he :t(1drd. 11.·l:irljuan:i use. a cl d e d Nelson, "is almost a badge of acceptance amoni: so me servicemen In Vietnan1 Nelson said he is nol politically Inclined hut ''\Ve're oot going to have a drug pro- blem among troops i n Southeast Asia when v.·e don 'I have any troops in Scutheast As ia." The news c0t1ference v.·as called by Asscmblyn1an John Va11conce.Uoo (0-San J ose\. who said he 1vantcd to il-1 Justrale the "painful fa cts'' (A t Bullock'1 fHhion Square) (MONTE FACTOR/JERRY ROTRSC!llLD J MEN'S WEAR eEVERl..Y HILLS LAS vmAS 6HERMAN OAKS SANTA ANA f you were to die tomorrow ..... who would have the bur- den of making final arrangements? Would they know what to do? At Pacific View, we have helped hundreds of families through th is d ifficult fad of life by making all the arrangements with them before the ti me of need. We provided them with an itemized list of things that were legally necessary, others that were financ ially desireable. Yov see, something will be done when you die. And today, when there is no undue emotional stress, you can determine whet, and how much it should cost_ A phone coll to Pacific View today can save you money a nd your .survivors much anguish.. It ccn only take an hour or $0 in time , but it saves so much morel PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK ti MOR TUARY 3SOO l"AClflC VlfW DRJVf, NEWJ'O RT BE.ACH, CAllFO~N1A 92663 • IAl?E A 71 -41 6 -'' '2700 \ \ , ' ' ' ' c ' ' • ' • • • ' . Thur~11J. Junt 17 1971 OA.I LY PILOT 9 c___:c_;:_~~~~~-"-'C:.:..:.C::..:.-"' For the Record Salary Savings Told Vote Count Sy ste1n Upg1~ade County Job Free ze to be Lifted July 1 Delay eel U 11til B i1dget Review t 3 'fCR"Ri Births Moy M, U11 Mr. I nd Mfl. Eric M. F1l~rt. 20'1 Well•<•, No. l. C:ooll Me .. , bOV, Mr II.cl ""'"· Mk n1tl .... Gr1M, )01 1111, Coron1 dtl Mi r glr/, M• '"I Mro. 81nllo L..,..,, llt H1,.1 0<. Ol'onl P)el Mor. lloy, Mr •n<I M•t. K•n,...tn Bt"I. nu "I " St. No. C, M(,t.S S1nt1 An.o, 11/rl Mr. 11'111 "''"· J 1.,... Rlolev. u.in Orle1"' Clrclt, S•nll Ano, ll<>v, Mr. 1/ld "'" Ri v Fln~lt, f611 HloM!Cll Orl'o't. tiunllnqton 811Ch, t lrl. Ml'/ 11, lt11 Mr 1'1(1 M'1. Jami• N, E!Wlt r$on, n lt c..,1,11 Ave , G1rdtn Grow, gl•!. M1y H, ltll SANTA ANA -The fr eeie on hiring new or replacement employes by Orange County departments hu been lifted effective July l. County Administrative Qf. ficer Robert Thomas said the freeze. initiated last March I, would have resulted in salary savings of $750,000 to $1 million by Ju1y l . He said there were 8,103 employes on March l and 8,052 on June l , a net reduction or reduction in personnel planned 51 despite U1e fact that 2.18 for some dtparl.ment.s in 1971-SAN1'A ANA -A decision i.nothtr t;.·pc of voting systt>nl jobs were unfroien by 72 budgets and the natural on upgrading Orange C-Ow1ty 's met with nuxed reactions. Caspers. specific board action during slowdown in new hi r i n g Coleman Vote TaU)'tng System Only Supervisors D 11 v i d Board Chairman R o be.r t the f)('l"iod, He said 1f lhere had brought about by ., four-mooth has been delaytd by county Baker and William Phillips Battin said. "'It ls a question no t been a rreei.e 109 more cessation of testing and proc· supervisors until budg e t fa vored Hitchcock's re<:Olll· o( priorities and should be eniployes \1-'ould have bee n essl ng etnptoyes. review sessions in July. mendation. studied wi th other bud&et hired during the period . Thomas said, however, that A recommendation b y Fifth Di.<ltrict Supervisor items.·• cffered , Thomas promised board the freeze had cawed "un· Registrar of Vote rs Da vid Ronald Caspers cal!ed modi-Hitchcock said the Coleman members that, although they manageable backlogs a n d Sall y Bananas Hitchcock that the county fying the Coleman system "a machine wa3 designed to are lifting t~ fr~ze J uly I. no ca se Io ad s in m any I spend S!IW.800 to accept a \\'8stl.• of mone}'." cowtt 300,000 votes 1n a great incre<Jse in lhe county depa.rtments and a reduced Real Y Is · · • Varo Corporation offer to Supervisor Ralph Clark of reaoonable timP and th at • work force is anticipated. level of service'' thal will have: Ba nanas, That Is .speed up !he Co J em an Anaheim wanted more time to turnout of 127,000 voters is eJ:· Mt. I ncl M•I Jlobttl W. 1.11!11, Nf W, Wll1on St , C1>•l1 Mttl. bCY Mr. •nO M". Bobby 0 . 8r1>w<1, 1111 C....•ICI Pl1ce. (<»I• Mtll, bl>V. l--H=is~,~·~==n~s~l~"~'"':::__w::.:'~":__:•:__"':_:be~p:ic:k~ed:_u:'p"...:':"~':'~J~u'.'ly:_.:I:. :__:=====-===--=,-,=='---"~'~''.:'.chinery rather than go to study the \•ar iou.s alternatives peeled in June 1971.. Judge Gives ----------'-----M" Ind Mu John 0..ll MV. NI~ P1rl10 Ot., Mi11Ton 11\olo, qlr!. Mr, 1rid Mr1. Fred R. Ehorri, 2JJI Ck• cldenl•l, S•nla "'"'· bov Mr. 1nd Mf1, Joy 8. Hll<", 1&.1'1 Fl°"'"' SI .. Ce»!& Me11. 11lrl. Mr. 1tld M ••· M Cl"tl 0. 81n1n. 1W >.l; E. 81lbol lltvd., Ba lbo.1, qlrl Mr. ond Mn. Oon1kl Gib'°", 7111 "A" Pomon• Ave., Co••• M•11. bo•. M11 •. ltll Mr. ond Mr\, Diie ti!. Et>t•lOI•, 1611 A"'''"" Orwo, A.o!. l, Hunt!""'°" 81.i;h, bo"I. M•. 1nd Mn . LCMJI> ~r.,M•. :101~1 M1!1•0 Lin•. Hunlln;lt111 Bt•cn. bOy, Ml1 >I. Tt11 Mr . 1nd M " Mlch11el L P•rMrr. }W ll!h SI., Newoo•l Beien. ql•I. Mr •nO M". cor ... liu• OetLng, 11100 O•thld Av• .. ~01m!aln V•H1v, 1>lrl. M• ond M ... j""" E. Ml\dtDr 1nd, 10lft LlnOon Pll(t , Catt• Mew, bov. Mr •nd ),,, J 6mt• M Hl ()Pt nv, 1<11 Sanl• An1t /\Vt , CO<!~ M•>lt, ;Ir! Mr •nd M•" Poul A J1>,.oh, 100' Ge<>•al•, Hun!lnqton Boac<I, bOv. Vet Killer Life Term SANTA ANA Gecrge Albert Scoll was sent to state prison for life Wednesday for the killing of a wounde d Viel· nam War veteran whose reta. tions hip with Scott's wife led to a dispute bety.·een the two men . Jun• 1. "" The 20·year-old Pico Rivera Mt·,~~~1 ~:!.;u~·~~~bo.~'t>o8v~11ev, 'JI man qu ietly accepted the Mr. •nd M". JI-rt M. Ii•>!•"'• ltJt Po•• ar1•t01 c1rc1., Nt•""'°'' ftt•ch, sentence pronounced by M~·· •nd M" Peiot v...... 1Jt Orange County Superior Court M:.11e:~:"'M~~'. s~,~~ "'oi~1;.,~c, HO Judge Herbert s. Her)ands. A Jame• ~1 .• ""1. c. CDlfe Meu . alrl. 1·"'Y found him guilty of first Mr. 1r>d M". Fred Cron1c~tr, 1Hl El Cim ino Otlvt. cosi• M«.11, air!. degree murder last April 19 Jun• 2, 1tn ahd later ruled against the M~,e~~~~',Jj,,~·~~~,. "X:'~;~~Y<iir?" death penalty. M;;,1~";', ,,...,(~j,,:"~;::.1 0tr;ynin, ~IJ E. Scott was 19 when he killed "'~1.·c~~ r:..~. GM~~:· .. r.r.1hr .. , JU 161h 21-year-Old Philip Castanon, of MNew'i~d "'s',~: ~lc~•ue~,;n~ri:'·e~~~'. Pico Rivera last Oc t. 16. tic• Castanon 's battered body, with Mr 11'd """ llnthonv l!•umoatlt'•r. 1at11 Pon So11>011•n•, N•wp0r1 l!•acn. the throat cut from ear to car, M~v~nd M•• w1111afl'! Oic••"on, no was found behind a La Habra V!clorlo, C:o1t1 M•••· olrl ·id· M• and M" Antnonv l!lo!!l. 116J apartment bUl 1ng. 0r~":~,;1~,:'1i'a.S~!11v::;:1.1Jo'W11.s111n-Scott's companion in the r1r111 1.ar>e. Hun!lnolon B••t~ • .,;r1 . murder. ti.1ichael Thomas Ter- • Jun• i. 1t11 razas 22 or Avalon Catalina Mr. ond M•o. Robe1 t Oouola•, 1\5'1_,,/ ' ' ' s1"ar1 D•lvo, Ao•. 1. Gnrd•n G•ovo, Island, was to be sentenced to-M~'"tlld M" PAI waua. 111 lllh day on reduced charges of Site•!, He,.oorl B•acn,_bOv. •·-· l d Mr. •nd "'"· Do<igl•• MVet•, iH1 M. u.::ing an accessory o mur er. ~l1/~'11"" oriv•, Hun!ln<iton B••cn, He testified against Scott in Mr. •n<I M"~unJ~t>~ 1~11 Sa"~"• 11..0 the latter's trial. Tok•n SI., Lontr 801ct>, 1irl. M•. and Mr•. J~<~ A. Mull•o•n. ?OMl Rlve.,ldt Or,, S1n11 An•. t>cv. ,.... """ M" l!olMr! M. l <>f'vt r. 116 <:llfl Odvt. L111un1 8•1cn, olrl. M" 1nd Mn. M~llO Sl••, )Ill F!tlt la" I t,, Cosll Mt>•· t1e1 . Ju"I J, lt11 Mr and M" Terrv II Brof'n, 1l11 Corl!on Pifer, Co>1a Mu •. olr1 Mr. a nd Mr1. Ke"""" H10ltv. llJ ll;ah!on MCAS·H, S1n!1 "'""· <1lt\, Mr •no M" RoM•! C. ll loo» Jiil K lllvb•oo~• L~nt. Co•t• M~••· bl>~ Mr. I nd Mr1 Gar> L. Ott o. Jlt S•n !t rnl rdlno St , N•Woo'1 8tac<1, 111•1. Jun• I , lt1l Mr. and Mr~. Fore~l G. Smit!\, 'l4 M01nl"" C1t1'o'Ol'I Rd .. (or0f'l1 Cll M1•. oir! Mr. 11nd MrJ. ftrrY D, C<H. 11(1 C1brlllo S!, Coll• Me11. bOV "'M.'~~.M.:!e.':¥~1!!."::o~· ~:~~vl~t Mr, 1nd Mro, Slom1md H•u, 11!• Wln<1w1 rd l.1M , Hunl!r>0t1>n Boacn. ' M~1im.t Mri. ll:k h••d M•thl>tud. 71• All""""'~ SI .• C1>1l• M"51, •l•l. Mr. el\d M ... Rol•n~ JI. Govtr. 86D1 Sabi• Orlvt , tiun!lng!on 8 e1ch. bOV. Mr a"d M" ltf'V D Oo&n, 11112 111n Sf., Hunlir>0!0<> 9••<"• 11lrl Mr 11td Mr" J~ltn VI>'''" 11a.D1 JuttwO<>d Pineo. El To•=··~~='=·-- Death Notices B&YRLE Tllon>a• T. ltJr!•. F<>tr'11f r11 ldtn! al (lor1nlt CO<Jnly: l•lf 0, Loi An111I••· AOt rt. 11111• ol dt•l", Junt !J, !tit lltlov~ hw1t>Olnd ot M". M•ri•n o_ !t~rlo; Fll'1tt ~· Mrt. M1.,lvn B•vrl• !!Id· "')I! •I'd 1nom11 A. Bev•lt , 0•1ndt11•tr ... Mkh1el, Su••n •11<1 Slt Vl lt 11 ... 1 •. 51,...lct• wtr• neld IDd•V. Tl>ur1<111v, l pt..., •I '"" Chu•ch QI 11>0 Rt ttn!....,1, Fllflll L•wn Gl...,d~I•. fort1l l •wn MOr!ut rv. I OLTDN Wa""" E l!ol!C" Aoe •I ... r 111~ 1ell twlv•, L11ou"• B•arn. 011• cl dN ll>. Jone IS, !91\ ~"'""'I'd Dv wit1, M.,lr: 01ug"T'"' (i"ljv Ballon •nd ~n•""V S"'ltf'! •0~1. W11"•" ao1ton Jr t nd Oon•ld 6 otton. >'tn·dAuoMrr, Of~l1• Cl1rk : l!fo'°"'· J<t! 11nd P•lrlc~ Cl•r~; ....,,h.r, Mr\ G!•OY• 1!1>ltoo. b•O'ht " °""'Id 6ollori• 11nd elQM 0'11ntk~•'~"" 5.,-~!cet. S••uiaay, Juoe JJ, 1 '° n• B•llr corori• aol M•r cn1orl l!'ll@rt<1•n'. P•<"•c v .. w MemQrlol ""'~ 9~11 1 C.C1'"'1• dtl Mor Mor•u11,v, Oltf flO.,, GIROUX Jlbl •nd J G"DV• 111• IJni<ln f>v• Co•I• M•u . Dolt o• dot'"· Jun• 111. !Oii St"V• let • wi1T M h!l<I •' ROH·Bvi'I• MortU•N. """"· N•v•d•. w .. •c!i<f C~•n•I Martv•rv, 6.i&·-· Forw•rOlno O"tcforo, l'.ITTl!RSON Tllomn W•v•• P•ttt••On 4100 N•"'""'· NtwPO'l l!•acn. O.•t of °'"'"· Juno 1a, 1•11 s1,...rc•• ,.,ndlno •' P1clllc V11w MorluaN. SANTO~ l!•v""'l\d £. S1nTo• Ao! 5l. 01 1'37? (,alM n G1!t LIM. Hunli'1Qlon 8ttc'1. O.•t ..i dtl!lt. Juno IJ Survlvl'd b~ w:10, fltl!Vi 1<11'1, GAtV """ 011nl .. P !,o"POJi douH•tor•. J1nlt• •owl J1ron1 F l!'I-· toclu!t; brothfrt, l.ton1•d ~•1'111>0: 1il!ft\, lront 1nd Elt•"Or S1~•1>t. ,_ Or •nd• d•u,hl•"'· C•I~~ ond 8.,b,., Suvlcu . r rld•" I PM, Ptll< Foml lv Cola~;~I Fu<>•,.I """'' ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUA,RY U? E. 17th St.. CG1ta Mes• 146-4888 • BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona dcl Mir . 873-9450 C0tll ~fes1 . . . . . 14&-24:4 • BELL BROADWAY ~R'J1)AR)' 110 BrOtdway, Cod.a Mua l Ll I-HU ,. McCORMJ'l;K LAGUNA BEACH ~ORTUARY 1'7tS Llpna Canyon Rd. 414-HIS ( PACIFI~ VIEW EMORIAL PARK et.try Mortuary Cllapel Potlffc View Drive N1 Be.acb, CaU!on.ll 144-11• • EEK FAMILY COt NIAL FUNERAL HOME I Botsa Ave. Wahnlaater nw.511 • SMJTil'S MORTllAllY 1%7 Main SL -UunUn«tO• Bead: Enterprise Crew Slates Coast Me et Former crew members of the USS E nterprise -the famous aircraft carrier that downed 911 J apane se planes and sunk 71 enemy ships - will hold !heir biennial reunion July 28-31 al the Neweorter Inn. All former personnel of the carrier 11.•ho would like to atlend the reunion are urged to conlacl E verett Ratliff , 8661 Crescenl Ave .. Buena Park tzip code 90620 ). The Enterprise was awarded 21 battle stars dur ing World War IL The crew's first reunion was held in 1958 . Rear Admiral Thomas J. Ha milton (USN, Re tired) will be the guest speaker at the final night of the reunion. Hamilton is the outgoing executive director of the Pacific Eight f oo I ba I 1 conference and a me1nbf'r of lhe 1\aliona\ Football Hall of Fame. El Toro Road EL TORO -Two state highway i m pr n v e m e n t contracts l\o'orth Sll.000 have been awarded for work In Huntington Beach and county territory near El Toro. A $21.239.50 contract went to Smith Electric Supply or Stanton to build left turn lanes and modify traff ic \lg h\s along Pacifi c Coast Highway at the Brookhurl'lt Street and Beach Boulevard intersections/ in Huntington Beach. J. F. Shea Company of Walnut won 11 $9,716 contract 10 install metal beam b arri'1"s along the four-mile segment of the San Deigo F' re e wa y between Moul ton Parkway and Culver Drive, north of El Toro. Brain Disorder Film Sc heduled A New York Him "t.1odern Chemotherapy Brain Oborders" will shown at 7:30 p.m .. Monday at Est.ancla High to members of the Ame.rlean Schizophrenia Association, Orange County chapter. An)'ont interested 1n the Illness of schizophrenia is iD- vlted. Estllncia is at 1.123 Placentia Ave., Coata Me11a. THE BEST Rrridel'llhip p o JI 1 prove "l'AAnuu" h1 '>""' ot the 1, 11rld'1 most r.•npu l;ar OOfl'llf' ~'r!/~· Rc11d It dally In the l)A LY PILOT. • Black & Decker 1/4 Inch Drill • Drill' .. 11 m0 11 ,;11, 1.,1, ICCY•~le lv • Well b.lenc 1d • • A 9re~I q•n•r ~I pll•p<>>• d r;U Model 7000 $8.88 3/8-lnch Socket Set e H iQh qu1!itv. p,of111;on•I i•l e H~rdtn•d t1mp•rtd fot yeen of U•e. 11-P'C. SET 29-Pc. Folding Drill Case & Drills ". • ti 16'-'h •~1b1 • Cut dow" •h•n• e Judi>: m1l1 I lle9. Sl l ,,S SPECIAL PR.ICE Black & Decker Hedge Trimmer • I l" 'hrub & h,cl9• iti'!lme • e Mo.,1 bl• h~ndl 1 lot 11 9hl "' 1.11 e Finger lop 1witch e Model 11 100 Power Ed9er e Two t1>al1 in ont l e Top 'onho l1 far •l lV h~ndl:n9. Father's Dav suner Values! Guaranteed 100 Years Turner Propane Torch Kit World's hottest pro pane torch won't tlog ... does the job faster a nd easier. 7-p iece kit int.lu dei fuel c.ylinder, brus h, pencil, so ldering tips , e nd spark light- er in heavy.duty metal ca1e. Mult i-purpose tool for houJe, shop, f<!ll rm. Model HT-9q, Servess Precisions Balance Bench Grinder • C omp lt l• with w or~ 1e1I i nd ••f•ly 1hi1ld1 e 5" G,;,.dor Whe•l1 Black & Decker Grass Trimmer e Fricfi"" <lvt,h e Mod1I 1 200 • Full l1n9lh h~ndl t e Ooubl1 int ul1t•d Reg . 8.95 s599 Black & Decker Pawer Mower e ll ·inch ""0!• -=-'\ "·'· \ e ln1u!1t•d m1>!01 \ e Up la p 1wilch e Mod.I 8010 ,.........---, \ \ 159'1 2-Arm Square_ Sprinkler • 50'11SD' 1qw1rt1 1 r11 e Sh1rm111 1pri"l l1r wt l•t1 up lo 50'1150' 1qu1 r• $1.99 2666 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA PHONE 546-7080 • WEEKDAYS .9 to 9 SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 9 to 6 Black & Decker 1h -ln . Compact Drill e lrnDr<>vod burn-out prah cted mo!o• e Tto pl1 A.•cluct;.,~ G••recl • lo~9 Lil. a ••• in91 e Mod•! 710S $19.99 Black & Decker 1/4" Variable Speed Drill • • • 1;nfinil• t peed loc~ Tt1 9~e• t<>,,h ol 1p•ed 21~0 RPM • MDd,I 7010 $15.99 Metal Saw Horse Brackets • Conn•ch 2.c·, inia ••w h1>n 1t • N1il on in1!a!l11;on For pr<>f•uion- 1!1 "' do-ii· 'fOUl\t ifell sac "" ~ 26-lnch Hand Saw e Sturdy •e•v qrip h •~d lt • $1.99 15-Foot Trauble Light e For 111 tha11 ht rd · IO·r11ch pl1ce • e Non 1l;p "'"ulcl t d r.bb1 r 1,.~dl• e "'' lhi• p•i<•, ll~rry I I L « I -. ~~--' 'JO DAILY PILOT Ttlur~d~y Junt 17 l'i71 ~~~~~~~~~~~- Emphysema Sufferers: 'Quit Smoking, Quit County' Ry TOM BAR.LEY 01 lllt 0 11!y ,, ... Sl1tr h:i.1 1!n;irk or lhC' d1.sc:;1se a p.ant·I ul t•.\pt•r!~ t>ll t'lll· pl1~ M'tn .... grt'l'd /lt n · ·rucsd;.iy 1111-:hL \1ct1m ~ :-.huuld 1111- SI Joseph Hospital in lhr tu~~1111al"s "To\1n llall lor J lc<il!h .. s~ lll!)OSJUITI Southern California " Ur s. Huss, Samurl Can1-!ra1a, Arthu r Os"·ald <irid John Somerndike ai;rttd in thei r panel discussion that em- physema is the fastest grow- ing disease in the United St:ites and that the malady to- day claims a million sufferers in this nation. So1ner11d1ke s<lid the acute lung infection claim~ more v11·!11ns than lung cancer and tuberculosis combined and that the mortality rate from emphysema has climbed to 600 percent in lhe last 10 ye;1rs. payn1ents are emphysen1a vi e· prevention as the best tool to lims and our stali.slics reveal be used by both doctors and that the dise<ise 11 ill very soon victin1s in the war on emphy- bectlme lhe most co1n1non se1na and iloss stressed "the cause of prolonged disability," tragedy of those victims who Somerndike said. He a rt think they're coming to us in disease is currently the rho.st the rirst stages of the di sease common cause of such ap--\\'hen the CQndition is actually plications. well adve.nced," lungs have "\'ast reser\e<;, or air ~acs , millions 1nore tha n we ac111aJlv need, ;1nd \le feel nothing as· the5c arc gradually destroyed over lhe months and years. Ross said the disease Is mainly confined lo 1nales v.·ith nine out of !O sufferers being men. ORANGE -A rapidl} gro\1- Jng ni.:,.mber of cmphyM>n1a suf(~ers are almo.sl l'ertaln tu khd lha1 kicking th£' cigart""lt•' habit and quitt ing i.rn0gg1 Orange County "ill pru\'1ch1 prompt relier for tlu• brca1t11ng difficuHies th11! are l h 1· n1l·d1;i!c·I~ ab11ndu11 ~n1ok1ni; l11Jt 11 n1:i1 n.11 be ~J ca~~ lo pull up i;takt·s and g1·t uut of !ht' 1.u~ All~l'lt'.s b;is1n ., con· eedi.'d Ur H:i~ rn11nd Huss or "eu1 for thuse who ('an l•'i.l\'t'.' the physic1:i11 said . "lht•re is no doubt that a move to cleaner air c:in do nothing but ~ood for a 1..hsease that is l'crtainly aggravated by I.he quality uf air \1'e breathe in "One in 14 recipients of Social Security d i s a b 11 i t y All four physicians stressed Ros.s explained that the iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iliiiiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiljj CARPET TOWN FINAL 4 DA VS ONLY! CARPET TOWN ·-~~ i;.5:: .. Ys ONLY I 1!t.s1zE 4 DA • . :1 12x11 .3 "Heavy Weight" ; 12x• INDOOR-OUTDGOR ~ ::~:o 5 Practic al Colors• di f a mous Name Buran it . ,. $199 ~12Xl9 ",d. $12Xll . 12Xt I 4 ~12XIO REMNANTS and ROLL-ENDS DESCRIPTION Heavy Sculpture-Avocado Kodel Shag-Green Tweed Nylon Shag-Pa le Gold Hi-Lo-Royal Bl ue- Heavy Cvmm'l-Gold Tweed Sh ... g-Avocado & lime Tweed Kodel Sh ag-Moss . Plush Shag-Wheat ·-- Kodel Shag-LL Green Nylon Hi-lo-3 Color Tweed Comm'! Nylon-Blue Green Plu sh Shiig-Wedgcwood R1.1bber s ... ck Avocot do, Comm '1 level loop Kodel. Avoc<Jdo Kodel Plush-Red Hi-lo Nylon-Blue Green . Green Comm'l-Hedvy Kodel Sh,,g-Antique Gold Nylon Shag-Pin~ . Plush Kodel Sh ag-Yellow Thick Shdg-Avocado Tweed Bl1.1e Tweed Kitchen Cpl. Comm'I Nylon-Rust . Hi-Lo-light Blue _ Kodel Shag-Wh ite Hi-Lo Kodel-Antique Gold Pluih Shag-lime 50 I Nylon Shdg-M i~t Green Kodel Velvet-White Sh ag-Sun Gold . Kod el Thic k Pile-Gold Hi-Lo-Blu e Tweed Carved Pattern-Red Tweed Sculptured Po!llern-Bronze Indoo r-Outdoor-Or a ng e Shdg Hedvy Wt.-lce Pi11 k Acti vity Carpel-Red Indoor-Outdoor-Bright Green Kitchen Carpet-Coral P ... ttern Sh.ig-Green Tweed Sculptured-Nubian Sands PRICE SIZE .. S9.00 12Xb.2 59.00 12X6.9 49.00 ! 12X I 0.4 99.00 t2X12 I 99.00 12X'l l .1 82.00 12X8 . I I 75.00 69.00 9.SX 12 99.00 9.9X12 .. 79.00 I0.6XI 2 36.oo I 64.00 I SX 16 19.oo I 12x 14.B I 69.00 I J2XI0.5 65.00 i 12X9 .8 96.00 12X15.J 35.00 12Xl3.7 19.oo 12x10.2 99.00 I 2X I 0. 7 79.00 12X IO.ll 99.00 12Xl6 48.00 j 1 2X8 .6 95.00 I I 2X9.1 I 79.00 12X9.IO 69.00 I , 2X I 0.7 72.0o ! 12X12.I O 59.00 ! 12X I I 89.oo j 1·2x11.6 89.00 I 12X9.b 74.00 t 2X I 5. 9 I 96.00 I 2X I 1.8 79.00 I 12X I 3.6 89.00 12x11 79.00 t LX6 .5 29.00 l 2Xl 9.6 129.00 12X8 .9 DESCRIPTION 2" Shag-Lim e Green Tweed Golden Tough Sh ag-Gold _ Tip She ar Scroll-Moss Sh ... g-Lime .... _.,, ....... . Ch.tg 2"-White __ ....... . Her.:.ulon Scroll Pd ttern- light Moss _ Tip She dr Hi lo-Moss Tweed . PRICE S9.00 S9.00 69.00 89.00 89.00 48.00 49.00 Hi Lo Carved Pdtlern-Blue Royal 52.00 Cdrved Hi Lo Pdtfern- Gold Tweed .. . .......... . Sb.DO Kodel Loop-Mint Green 95.00 2 '/," Shag Nylon-Avocddo 99.00 2 '/1 " Sh ... g Nylon-Off-whi1 e 69.00 Kodel Sho1g-Gold Tweed . 64.00 l ong Shag-2 Tone Green _.... 99.00 Nylon Sh ag-Roydl Blue .. ···-...... 89.00 Kodel Plush-2 Tone Blue ----·· 65.00 Heavy Sh ag-Light Green .. .. 69.00 Heavy Kodel Shag-Gold 74.00 Kodel Sh .tg-White .... 99.00 3-Color Ny lon Sh dg ..... 45.00 Kodel Shag-Avoco?do T""e ed 64.00 Plush Sh ag-Wheat Gold 65.00 Nylon Shag-Canary YeJ!ow 69.00 Hedvy Shag-2 Tone Gold 84.00 2 1/1" Sh t1g-Gold . . 69.00 Sh ag Plush-Kelly Green ___ 79 .00 Kode l Shag-Jonquil 62.00 2-T one Kodel Shag-Gold 1 04 .00 Heavy Sh<!g-While ··-·-· .. 95.00 Hi-Lo Tweed-Gold ......... 71 .00 Ny lon Shag-Pist achio .. 85.00 ~ Hi-lo Nylon-Green __ 24.00 Comm'I C ... rpet-Aut1.1mn 95.00 Hi -lo Kcdel-Sage ·-···· 49.00 59.00 12X8 Plush Sha g-Be ige ..... 79,00 12X16.IO Hi-lo Herculon-Light Gold 79,00 12XI 1.6 Kodel Sh(l g-Yellow ... 89.00 l 12Xl6.6 79.00 12Xl3 Comm'! Co!rpet-Brown __ _ Indoor -Outdoor Rubberbac.k-Red 49.00 I 2X I 7 .4 Short Nylon Shag-Gold . long Nylon Sh ag-l ighi Green 4S.OO 79.00 79.00 76.00 76.00 79.00 CARPET TOWN'S 4 DAYS ONLY SALE! The Price of any Remnant or Roll. End ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER! MANY, MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM ! SUNDAYS 11 A.M.-5 P.M WEEKDAYS 9 A.M.-9 P.M. SATURDAYS9 A.M.-6 P.M. A SI 0.99 Value . S . I pee. ia Purchase! Lirnited to colors in stock! ~our Choice-d patterns · Sculpture d or' P ractical Twee s Commercial Types .. t . M a n y COLORS 0 C\ioose f rom .• , COMPL ETELY completely \nlt;illed INST AL LEO • ASK ABOUT OUR OUTSTANDING DRAPERY VALUES ••• TO COMPLIMENT YOUR NEW CARPETING! BRING YOUR ROOM MEASUREMENTS • WALL. TO. WALL INSTALLATIONS AVAILABLE ••• MANY MORE SPECIALS TOO NUMEROUS TO UST WE OFFER 30-60 -90 DAYS ACCOUNTS , .. ,,,,,_,_ Phone 642·4305 WAREHOUSE Open EveninCJS 'til 9 p.m. Saturday 'til 6 -Sunday 11 • 5 Our Huge Buying Power For 30 Carpet Town Stores Saves You More! ALL SALE ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE e BRING YOUR ROOM MEASUREMENTS e EXPERT INST AL LA Tl ON AVAILABL E 524 WEST 19th ST. COSTA MESA NEXT TO THE BANK OF AME RICA . • . .. :· ', ,. . .. ' • ~.l Ii ' • Ii ~· .. • l\1iss Orange County, Bonnie Dr ury of Fullerton, gets an apprec iative inspection by a ~farine dur· ing prelirninaries of the ~liss California Pageant parade in Santa Cruz. The pageant begins today. Dr. Loh Tsai CSCF Outstanding Professor FULLERTON -Dr. U.ih Fullerton faculty since 1965. Seng Tsai is this year's winner Tsa i holds an h o nor a r y of the Out standing Professor membership in Psi Chi , na- A~·ard at Cit! State Fullerton . tionnl honor society in The award recognizes Tsars psyrhology. r-.tcmbership I~ . authorship of sch o 1 a r l y granted to persons ·who ha\'e publica tions and h is ef-made o u I s ta n di n g con- rectiveness as a teacher. lributions to the field of The author of 150 research ps~'chology on a national and works, the professor u r intcm:iliona! level. psychology gained wor ld\1·ide As Fullerlons' outstanding recognition for his \1•ork on professor. Tsai received an cooperation bct1\'een cats and honorarium and plaque pro- rats and his subsequent theory vidcd by the Fri~ds of the • of • · s u r viva I through Colleg e. He also automatically ~ cooperation .. ainong human was placed in nomination for .' beings. He also v.·as nominated 1v.·o $1,000 awards that are for the Nobel Pc:1cc Prize in presented by the trustee~ of ~: ,; ,. :· .· .. . .. ,. .· :· :: :· ' .. ,. , •' .· .. 1951. the 19-campus st.ate college A member or the Cal State system. ~--'-~·~~~~~~-1 * P. F. FLYERS Children's Sizes 5Y2 to 12 Red ond Blue s51s Y1lae •• • NOW 297 DlCK o•d TlNNIS SHOES Blue, GrHn, White and Block s7H Y1la1 • , , NOW 447 IAHKAMll.ICAl.D MASTll. CHAI.GI COMllR'I CHILDREN'S SHOES '3 HUNTINGTON CENTER., HUNTINGTON BEACH Thurtd1,, Junf 17, 1971 Board Endorses Strict Jet Rules DAILY "LDT J I Wol·ld Affairs Talk SchctluJ ed SANT A ANA -Proposed per900S died . cruising speeds In excess of koo ts or more ope rating strict rults for jet aircraft A resolution offered by 250 knots to ht flown under in-\vith111 75 miles of LAX be flight'~ in tM Los Angeles--Supervisor William Phillipi, strument flight rules or eqWpped with o per a b I e Orange Cou nty area have been chairman of Sou t her n poeiti~ raaar control when transponders ca pable of endorsed by the Orange Coun-t:alilornia Aviation Council, operating within 75 miles of pennitting the aircraft to ty Hoard of Supe rvisors reco1nmende-d to I e de r a I Los A n g e l e s International operate under positive radar in Uie v.·akc of the rCL"enl avia!ion officials thal: Airport . control. air collision in "1hich 50 -All aircraft capable of -All aircraft ca pable o( 250 -Restrictiofwi: on training and pleasure flights of all aircraft operating in highly congested areas where the dirtttor of the western region of the Federal A vi at io n Administ rat ion has determined such flights are a safety hazard. SANTA ANA -"American Diplomacy In Europe In a Period of Change" will be the topic of an address by U.S. Ambas1u1dor lo C.ermany Ken- neth Rush before a meeting of the World Affairs Council or Orange Cowlty tonighr at 7:30 p.m. at the Disneyland 1fotel. -------~-----------------·-~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ C. llH• <tttl'*-•I 1 .. 1 IHl"I: ".Sat i.,raet ion (i 11aru11 fer(/'' ' • (OPEN 1 DAYS A WEEK ••• DAILY 8:9/J.9 ••• SAT. 8:3/J.9 ••• SUN. 9-6) 5 1115.lQi:J, ~ 6GilJ, S 'Q115 I•.• .• 111: 11\"11 1<1 (o. !u u. •• Rtcommendtd by ROAD TEST MAGAZINE WHITEWALLS l:I BLACKWALLS / I FORD-PLY-CHEV SIZE: 7.7Sx15 (F78;1S) BRAND NEW FULL 4 PlY 1UB[L[ISlAR[00 h 650x13 (878/13) Blit>will ... [<eh.·o·SUI f•d. [<.Tl! [lt s F 0 R UNIROYAL LAREDO ! 91114(011/1411.11114(Fll/141 . J,ll11411ll/141 '1.611l15 *1795,7.75x15 (F78/15) $1995 '·'"'' ..,..,, (G71/l 4) (G 71/1 ~) 7.00•1 J ((71/l J) Belted or Whitewalls $2!~ ·M1! lrfil1llr i1 h l!d 8.SSxl 4 $2295 (H78/14) 8.S5xl5 (H78/1 S} FAT MAX RADIALS $] 6 9S , .. ~·~::" fd.U..Jui: UNIROYAL TUBELESS BRAND NEW FULL 4 PLY 6.so.13 $9951 fi;~i1141$]JQ95 (878/13) 7.75x15 (F78/l 5) fit~. LSI.Iii II 11.11 rn. (u jir In ..• Yl'~i1t•1l!t 11 il t<llt. .----BRAND NEW TUBELESS -BIG CARS!---. 7.00xl 3 8.2Sxl4 8.SSx14 8.SSxl S 9.00xl 5 8.8Sxl S 7.35x14 8.25x1S (H78/14) (H78/15) (L78/15) (J78/1l) (G78/14} (G78/14) 1395 1695 1895 8.85x14 $2695 (J78/14) 9.00/9.1 lxlS 8.85x15 (L78/15) (J78/15 } 111r~11lit\11u1IfllJI 11th. 111 l11uW1 ••"1:11. 11l111llll IUI u:u SUPll CHlOMI WHllLS.,, * NtW UNINCS !HSUll[ll OH 4 WHE(LS * REIU1LD All WHEEL CTLIND!RS• *TURN 1 •tsu1r1cr .lll 4 O~UMS * IEPAC• fROHT WHEEL $1995 BUll~'S VW S * ll ElD All llHES, lDD . ,',',',',',' """'"" * INSPECT MASTER CYl\I(. Utl 11£1 & IRAK[ NOSIS fill U.S. Cars $24.95 b * AIC 'RIHll IRAK( SHOES flffft llft1t,•r•u11~ t•ll11r•r fl•I"'" £1111 Coit if Nttdtd -* INSP!tl ;REASE SEALS rte "' 1t•t11 I r1ke M11ln1 ii it w1111 tut * flHE ADJUSTM{NTS fQI -•ltfl ••••tr tf 1Ue1 1u1r1nl11d plu1 ttrvl~1 Uri OF LINING Clllfll1 ''"'"'" Tlf'tntdo' UdOIJdD ,,, •• 1111· * IOAD TISI fO R SAfEn ltlf IMINltf It 41* 11ilts tr 90 ,.,,. AH 1tllu If tllltf: r.•lf 0• j Ir. 'I 10 d "llH<I"" t1l••if'I tr111,.t • n11 11 1r 'f'· r.ir1111 .. ,.,,~,111 IUC AllO COMMI CIAL U!!_MgP ED.------- 3005 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA CORNER of BAKER and HARIOR .... PHONE 557-8000 Ser1Jln9 Costa Me1t1-Ne..,,..rt Beach Arca Mark C. Bloome wlll not do ltss thon a Safi Broke Job! • 30,000 Mil• Guar. I rake Packa1• $A6ff --1mn111c • 40,0"GltMtta Gu•r. Jll•••• .. •••k• ........ . s56aa '~L Slit I I Ull llUrrtt 1,111111.11111. "unu tT1.11ous, Wlllll lllllllGIUTl.A {OJI lfllllMI GARDEN GROVE I 14().40 Brookhurat-530-3200 I FULLERTON 1321 Eu<l ld-170.0100 - OPEN SAT. & DAILY 8:30·9 ••• OPEN SUNDAY 9·6 •. .. • • ' ' ~ ' ) •' ; ~ { ' • ' ' • • ' t • • ~ .: --- I I ,I I I . I ® . . Maybe ... with Mammie's help you can give Daddy a very imporlant Presen l this year WESTCLIFf PLAZA STORE OPEN MONDAY I THURSDAY ·r!L 9 P.M. c B CHARLES H. BARR Westcli.ft' Plaza, 218 Marine Avcn11c. Newport Beach, Calif. Balboa bland, Calif. MIMllR AMERICAN GEM SOClnY Whirlaway Lace Pe9noir Set I . I Prettiest Thin9 To Unpack, Anywhere. · -I ; I In Blu• 32-3• \ -- .. $22. Veta's t1T1•ATl APPAllL .................... .............. '. i I ' r ' . . \ • • PHONE 642-1197 • 'one-stop' shopping a.t its finest! OPEN THURSDAY AND MONDAY EVENINGS HERE IN TIME FOR FATHERS DAY • ···--. -·--·-··-. "HAILLET " A Top Class Leat her Tenn is Shoe ·~orn by the World's Best Tennis Pll!l yers . 14.95 We also hi11Y1 lad ie1 Adidas. 1052 IRVINE e NEWPORT BEACH e 548-8684 I l:JL...:, I JS YOUR FATHER FOR CHEETERS ? * HALLI DAY'S Our cnl1Pr11nn of Silk !'\rr·kt1PS from Talbntt in Thf' Carmr! VaJIC'y is made to our ov.·n exacting spec1• fications. · Each nrrkllr is i11divi du11lly hand-cut and is hand· n1adf'. The silks are imp:irted from England, Switz- r rland and Yrance. Our s~lr>clinn ranges from a conservative ihree and nnt•-half inch \1-'ide to a fuller, more stylish four_ inchrs. ------ Srlrct from 8 hroad choicP or pAtterns and colour· ln};s tu satisfy the most discriminating man. Talholl: Hrpps. Foulards, Ancient h1adders and Trinity T\.vills from 7.00 17th l IRV INE AVE . -WESTCllfF PLAZA NEWPORT BEACH -PH. 645·0792 Houri; 10-0.-Mon. I T~u r1. 10-' I emorrs SPoR.TSWEAR ... •. * \.ksh.tclif§ P!azct 17t QI t<-1 IR.Vin~ NewpoR.t {?;eQCJ-'\ i f 1 b I I d ' " t ·.' BEA ANDERSON , Edilof ,. ... u Funding Drive Up and Aweigh " A shipboard gala is being planned for Friday, June 18. Lo launch lhe $3 million fund-raising d rive for the l\Ia rine Studies lnslitule at Dani. J)o!nt, featuring festivities on all decks of the Pavilion Queen. From the mon1cn l lhe ship departs on its three-hour excursion around the bay, the n1usic of a honky tonk piano will fill the a~r, and dancing and hot' hors d'oeu vres \v1JI delight the passengers. An1 ong celebrity guests will be Jean·l\lichael Cousteau, son of noted oceanographer Jacques Cousteau, Con gressman Ric hard Hanna. Se n. Dennis Carpenter, Superviso r Ronald Casper and their \Vives. The institute, to be constructed on a three and one-half acre site at the ""est end of the ne\v $20 n1Ulion Dana Poi nt ~{arbor, is the fi rst nonprofit agency in the natio n dedica ted lo the marine ed ucation of both students and the lay publi<-·- Since the land \\'as set a~idc by the Orange ('ounly Board of Super· visors more than l\\'O years ago. the staff of the institute has been conduc- ling en viron1ncntal lours on the site for students, teachers and the public. Negotiatio ns \VJl l begin th is su mmer for the lease and bui :ding plans '"i!I be fi nalized under the d irection of Dr. Donald A. ~lacLean , staff coordin- ator, and n1e1nbers of the institute's board of trustees. Nine distinct educational opportunities will be offered in the program \Vilh the facil ities to include marine laboratories. aquaria, a museum, si mu· lated tidepools, sern inar and lecture halls and docking for research vessels. DEPARTU RE TIME -'fhe gangplank is about to be raised so the Pavili on Queen can depart for a gala excursion Friday, June 18, launchin g " $3 million fund-raising drive for the ~tari ne Studies Institute, Dana Point. Checking 1n for the evening of dancing, n1ll.~ic and fun are {left to right) Dr. Donald A. ~1acLe<i n . institute staff coordinator, Ji.1rs. Ronald Linsky and Mrs. Ed\vard Cu lve r. DcvelopinJ?" an environment a\varcness a1nong youth will be a rnajor endeavor of the institute. to fulfill a portion of President Nixon's con1n1it· ment of the 70s as the Decade of Ocean Expl oration. ---==------ Friendships Forged To Fill World Gap Mother Goose Goes Mexican By BARBARA DUARTE Of 1h• 0 .. 11 Piiot s11n If 37 women. all specia\1s!s in their fields. l1ad their \ray, there would be v.•or!d peace . The ,von1cn -drawn fron1 such diversified b<1ek~1·ounds a.~ architcc:1ure. in in in g, journalism. soci<1l science, co n1municfl\i(]n:-;. medicine. business and the arts -paid their own v.·av for a onc-rnonth junket to lhe. Middle E:i.st and Soviet Union. The name ol the ~amc "'as Americ an \\'omen for International Unders!<inchng . And the rules or the g:in1e v.·ere stiling down \V 1 I h adversarie~ \1 1th !hi' go;il of becomini:: fn ends t h r o ti g h communic;it1on on 1h" level of common 1r.1rrest. "I firml y bl'llt'\r in l:i!king on a on~·!o-onc bas 1 s , '' declared Lagun a representa- tive r-.1rs. h1;inlcy L. Natland, an ::rnl/iropologist and prac- tically lifelong socia l \~·nrker. She participa ted on the I.our l'ls a nie1nber of the Stale Socinl \Velfarc Bonrd and child care spcci:ilist and found it most worthwhile. ONE OF SF.VEN Aviv. The delegation was headed by !\1rs. Elizabeth Koontz, who \Vas appointerl by President Nixon as director of the \Vorncn·s Bure;iu in I h c Department of Labor. Although th e jo:OVernmenl gives advice and consultation, A\VIU is privately sponsored. "And. v.·e v.·ere told to speak freely and express our own opin ions on any s u b j e c t including Angela Davis," she noted. Through disc ussion groups, field trips and pc r s on a 1 contact. Dorothy. Nalland secs \1·on1en as having thf' ab ility to 1ncld countries together. "Thi' idea of 1vo1ncn talking 1ogetlr.r 1~ good." she obi;crl'cd "\Ve all v•:inl pea re, and peace can only be achieved 1hrouJ?_h person a I contact .1nd understanding. CAUSE OF \VARS "lt"s governments I h n t cause wars, not people," she added. The t'>\(X'ri cnce also v.•as an eye opener. In Israel, the United Arab Republic and Soviet Union they met olher women who were high in their fields and poli tics. SEES NEW HOPE Mrs. Manley L. Natland most rnothers and fathe rs art: employed. As might be expeclcd, Russian won1cn weren't overly interested in wha t the United Stales is doing, and the question of dealin g w i t h handicapped children wen t unanswered. I By JACKIE COMBS Cit !ht D•ll1 l"Jtol Stiff Brighl splashes of color and hand· Je tt.cred v.·ords tel! the slory -thr.. ancient. Aztec legends passed fron1 generation to genernlion. Orange Coast College studenl Susan De Roque \Vall has writ!e n and i!lustrnted "Big Painted Book ." a storybook lo be used in primary grade social studies. "Irs sort of a ri.1other Goose for Chicanos." explained th(' sophomore hist'Or y m.1jor. Sosan adapted four Azlcc legends lo language elen1entnry school chi ldren ean understand. She also <lid all 1he illustrations in full color acr~hcs. copying ancient Aztec drawings. As a California history student of l'rof. Henry Panlan, she learned of the I.irk 1)f m:i tt'rial on Mexica n hentagf' for ele111entary school children. The s c chiklren are being deprived of kno1\•lcdi::r of their own culture, Panian told his C)i!SS. l 1~DTAN CULTURE ''I decided I \\"anted to give U1e kids an idea of their Indian background.'' said the Tustin lligh School graduate. In lieu or a term paper. Susan bega n lhc und~rla king which evolved Into a year long ~ject. much of the informatio11 fro m art and history books and ill ustrations fro m n1agazines . For1ning the basic storyline of "Big l'a1ntcd Book" arc Azte c codices. large c!oth drawin gs on whJch the Azlecs recorded lhe ir history. "They are Aztec hieroglyphics used ta pass along the legends. The lndian!l t;111ghl the children Aztec history -fore· ing I hem lo !earn by role," contin ued the author, STRICT CO DE ·The Aztecs appeared to have a strict rodl' lo dr:H\' by and couldn't get Into n1uch realisn1," she added. ~usan found lhl' ancient art work al"•ays "'as outlined 1n hl:ick and full of bright, natural colors f101n the dyes available to the Indian.~. "There "ere nu full-face v1rw s, only profile~ "'h1ch may have b1·c11 for rr!igious reasons " The book tells Lhe Aztec legend of ho1v l11c earth was fanned. the origin of the g0<ls, thc individual history of the variou!l gods and how the gods formed an d dealt with the people on earth. 111e Aztecs believed lhe eart h was destroyed fo ur times because the gods wl're angered when the people became co rrupt. 'fhe first three times were by water, fire and then the populace was eaten by jaguars. As one of seven California represent.'l!ivf'.c;, Do r othy Natland was proposed for the !ielecl group by the state board of the Am e ri c an Association of U ni ve r s i t y \\'ol'l'Y.!n. "The feeling al~'ays ·was most cordial and warm though methods in each country are quite different," she said. "The Rus si an11 hav e beautiful faciliLics for day care, and the program is one of rigid trai ning dating back to the revolution," she observed. "Children have been taught thty don't go to school to play, thus placing the U.S.S.R. in a very progressive positi on. The nearly completed book has been met with enthusiasm by her advisors. "1-lopefully. we 'JI get it published." she added. "The fourth time was a combination of the first three," she continued. "The Aztecs also believed there would be fifth llo\ocaus~ and the world wo uld be destroyed by earthquake. AUTHOR · ILLUSTRATOR Student Susan Wi ll She joined other members of the th ree-year-old AWI U in \\'ashington. D.C. for mominR coffee with r-.1rs. Richa rd Ni xon, followed by a State Dep.artmenl briefing and even ing departure for Tel "I believe we got an honest look at problems in the U.S.S.R .. " she said. Checking day care centers in itoscow, Len ingrad. Yalta <1T1d Tbilisi, she found child ren happy and healthy, despite the fact that "The Israeli people arc the most ded icated I've known," silt said. Without this (Set TRAVELER, Page 14) As Susan scoured libraries for material on Aztec legends, she fou nd she had lo rely on secondary sources. She gathered "I didn"t put that in the book because I didn't want to discourage the children." Rule of Thumb Wrong Measure for I Sizing Up Problem ·: DEAR ANN LANDERS : ~1y beautiful • daughter is a magnificent 5'11 " in stock- ing feet. WIJCn I tell you Eunice IS gor- geo us I am not exaggerating. People turn their beads to look al her "'hen sht" passes on lhe street. I am not saying this because t am' her mother. All my fri ends agree Eunice is breathta king. So v..·hat's the problem? 'Vell . she brought home 11 ma n she says she wants to marry. He is a dried up little runt at least six inches shorter that\ she is. Ile wea rs J:lassrs ;ind his hair i5 lhin on lop. He is unly 26 and alrcadv hr has lots. of dental work in his n1ou th. That ~htlmp should be dating midgets. I realiie look~ are not everything, Ann. but I am afraid [or my daught er's unborn • ANN LANDERS ~ children. A person haa to think about those things in advanct!:. And after all, Eunice's children will be my grand- children. Do r have a point? Please tell me. -UPSSI' JN LITil..E ROCK DEAR UP : Yeah. you've got 11 point - but Ir you part your hair on lhe 1idt", maybe nohody wilt notlcf': It. f.1y advice to you is keep your ideas to yourself. Thi~ dried up li1tle runt could be lhe mo1t wonderful husband in the world and a beautiful father ror )'Olif a:raodcbUdrea. DEAR ANN LANDERS : Several of my friends got busted l:\St week. They were silting around rapping in a gas station, smoking a little pol The cops rushed in , took everybotiy down to headquarters and booked them. Getting caught with pot is a cr imi nal offense in Texas. A guy co n get 1::. years in prison for it. Isn't this \vild? Some of tho~ kids who were busted are just great. ,'.nn. They aren't bums. Isn't ii lousy that these nea t kids will have criminal records for the rest of lheir lives just because they were blow- ing a little grnss? Please say something in your column to help lhc n1. Thanks. - HOUSTON HANK DEAR HA NK: I agree il JS lou1y lbat •id• who 1et cauaht 1mo•ia1 pol wUI have crlmlul rt:cords for I.he rest of the ir lives. 1 have stated this position repealedly in the column aR well as from the speaker's platform but t wlll say it again, The law1 on marijuana are moch loo scvtre In most stales and they should be modified. The pos•rsslon of pot should, ln my opinion, be a mlsdemcaoor and not a lTimc. I am NOT. repeat NOT , in fa\'or of the 1cl(allzatlon of marijuana, however. Too llUle is knowD about Ibis ft·eed a.nd ill el· feels over a long period or lime. But I do agree that what happened to your. frie nds Is unfortun ate. Nevertheless, there's a lesson to be learoed from It. Tbe law I• the l1w -evea If 11'1 ICK11y, and it 1bould be respected. DEAR ANN LANDERS: r am go ing with a man who divorced his wife two years .1go beca\J3e she had a problem with the word "NO.'' She couldn 't say it. He caught her wlth the land lotd, lhe delivery boy. the insurance salesman and the TV repair guy. In spite of her "eakncss for men , lhe g11I was a great housekeept!r and a wonderful cook. Bill and I plan to bf! married 1n Au~ust. lfe asked me what 1 thought about hiring his ex·wife lo wor)C: for us . He says he hasn't had a decenf meal since they separated, Is he ciazy? I'd l~e your frank opinion, What should 1- sa:y? -LIZ DEAR UZ : Yes, M's cruy. say NO;· Remember 1bat'1 die word Ilia ftrst wua:. had trouble wltb. Doli't YOU ba•• troubt~; with U, too, Dearle. ~ \\'hen romantic glances turn to warm en1braces is it kive or chemistry! Send for the booklet "Love or Sex and How to- Tell the Diftcrence." by Ann Landers. Enclose a long. stamped, seU-addrcsstcl envelope and 3S cents ln coin with yoUr. request in care ol the DAlLY PILOT. I I ' l I I ' J f, Olll~ PILO~ Thu!1day, J1,1nt 17, l97l r r .. ~·, .~~ ..... Spanish Night 7 ' ,.¥ Making final arrange1nen ts for a coc kla il party to take plate in the Spanish home of ?11r. and Mrs. Norman Wright of San Clemente are lleft to right) the J\1mes. Ben Hutc hings. !)at ~tcDuffee an d Norman Rudolf. Sponsored by the San Cl.eme.nte Com.munity 'fheater on Saturday, June 19, from 6 to 10 p.m., the af- faJr will benefit the Cabrillo Play ers. Home 1n Whittier Harborites Say Vows MRS. T. S. CASEY Home in \Vhittier are Tale Stanley Casey and his bride, the former Dianne Lynne Def..1ille 1vho were married 1n St. Andrc1•/s Presbytcri<1n Church. Nc11'port Beach. Till' Rev. Dr. Charles Dierenfield offici<1lt'd. Parents or the IJ('ll'IY\Vl'fiS" are Mr. and ,...lrs. Lesi ie B. DeM ille of Newport Bearh and t-1r and 111rs. Th0rnas C. Casey of Corona del Mar. :\laid of honor was M1 .,.s- J oyce We bste r , 11'hile ARMOND'S COIFFEUR PRE-SUMMER ...... SPECIAL- ~ Ptolw.ia1 .. lwlty Op~raton COMPLETE TINT SHAMPOO and SET $3.00 in LAGUNA BEACH no "'ppoir.tme11t nece~~a ry 211 A BROADWAY 494-6139 Nearly Everyone Listens to Lander s bridesmaids were t\1 i s s es Kerry l·larrison of Dundas, Ontario and Portia Campbell. Serving as best man was Joh n Quinn of Rochester, N. V_, and ushers were Douglas and .John Casey. ·rhc bride is a graduate of Coron a de! Mar High School and earned her BA in mathematics al v-.· hi l t. i er College \Vherc she is wor king \1iwards a master of arts in education ;ind a secondary teaching: credential. Her husb<"lnd, also a CdMHS i;:radoate. has served in the Army and now is a psychology 1najor at Vt'hitticr College. PairtoWed In Georgio P,';·. and M~. Craig l!et,~un of Nc>1'port Beach announced l11e rorthcorning 1narriage \)f his daughter. Cynthia Benson. fl graduate of Corona del Mar lligh School. to Robert Sitgreavcs of Bristol. Va. T he fuLure brid{'groorn·s parent» ,1rr the late .\1r . ;:ind !11rs .. Jack \Narren Sitgreaves. The July 17 wedd i ng L'<'rcnlnny will t;:ike place ln 111£' home of lhe br ide'!' 1nolhcr, f..l rs. Clarence Sills, in f..larietta. Ga. The bride·elect \1·ilt f1n 1sh her last ye<1r at V1rgin1a ln1erml)nt College ;1l ter Iler marriage. Belt Watched night for p<1ntsu1!s; 11•;1lrbc!" lh:ol change from hanging pen- d;in!s to encircling be J t watches. ANNOUNCEMENT ~FASHIONJ ISLAND • NEWPORT CENTER. SUNDAY SHOPPING 1-- ' t Th• following stores are now OPEN SUNDAYS FROM 12 TO S P.M. for :your shopping convenience: f' ... r:• 1.' AT EASE . 13. MARK SCOTT 2. BATH SHOP 14. MEDITERRANEAN IMPORTS 3. BOB BURNS 15. MUSIC HALL 4. B. DALTON BOOKSELLER 16. THE RIGGER 5. BROADWAY 17. RUSSO'S WONDERFUL 6. COCO'S WORLD OF PETS INC . 7 •. EL POCO 18. SEE'S I . HAIR HUNTERS 19. THE SHOWOFF 9: HATCH'S HALLMARK 20. SILVERWOODS 10. ISLAND COFFEE HOUSE 21. VIKINGS FOUR I J, J, C. PENNEY 12. WALTER CLARKE l:Z. KARLS TOYS HAWAIIAN SHOP SHOP THE OPEN·AIR , OCEAN .VIEW MALL Closed July 4, onty. . ' • #' •• Horoscope: Time on Scorpio's Side FRIDAY JUNE 18 By SYDNEY OMARR More celebrities, each day, are becomMg more lnlt:rested In astrology. Those born under Capricorn and Aquarius are In the vanguard. A r I t s in· dlvlduals, tbOugb sk.eptlcal to beg1n with, eventually jump on the bandwagon and lead the way. Bette Davis proves ibis point. Two of astrology's greates t friends are Capricorns: Henry ti!lller and Marlene Dietrich. As for Aquarlw. lovely Kim Novak is one -0f astrology's staunchest friends. beam . Tru.st hunch. Take in- itiative. One in suthorily will lend needed support. GEMINI (May 21-June 20 ); Finish rather than begin pro-- jects. Obtain hint from Aries message. D is e a rd the superficial. Wok be h In d scenes for vital answers. Concentrate on overall view. Study potential. quo. Do some personal ln- ve:stigating. LIBRA (Sept. 13-0cl. 22 ): Feelings you thought had been suppressed surge to forefront. Don't altempt to bat 11 e natural instinct.s. Givi;: fu ll play to creative resoorces. Partnership problern is set- tled. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20--Feb. 18 ): Emphasis on home, pro- perty values. Be perceptive where basic values are con- cerned. Don't give up something for nothing. Refuse to sell yourself short. Strongl ally is in your corner. scattered. Fam i I y rela· lionsllips may be the opposite of stable. Your innate sense of curiosity is part of your overall charm. You are not everyone's cup -0f tea, but very few can d.o without you. CANCER (June 2t-July 22): Desires can be fulfilled through original approach. Break with tradition appears to be a necessity. Unorthodox suggestion from friend can be constrtlctive. Maintain open mind. SCOflPIQ. (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Lie low. Time is on your side. Playing wa iting game. Do more listening than lalking. Permit mate. partner to take initiative. Gain now indicated if you allow others to set pace. PISCES (Feb. 19·March 21l): Accent on short journeys, dealings with relatives. What you thought was beginning may actually be ending. Ap-1 parent contradictions are due to fall into place. You will understand. j APPRAISALS c:liam<>ncll gem1lon•• •1tal1 i•w1lry ARIES (March 21-April 19 ): A void .>elf-deception con~ ceming finances, person a I possessions. Gel budgetary af- fairs i111 order. Plsc~s in- dividual exhibits tendency to spend freely. Make sure il's not your money. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You are making more progress than might be imagined. Taurus individual secretly ad- mires yo u. Overcrnne petty jealousies. Best lo leave details to others. SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): Relations with op. posile sex-are intensified . Children also play prominent role. ))() some per s on a I analysis. Perfect techniques. Get rid of shoddy methods, concepts. IF TODAY JS YOUR BIRTHDAY many persons are attracted to you with their1 problems. You seern capable of providing aid in fields ofl law and medicine. Currently, your personal conditions are S<>ulh Co••I Pl•1• C<>•I• M11a 540-YOb6 Bri1lol at I~• Sa" Di•<;10 Fwy. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Lunar cycle is high ; coincides with time when your judg- ment, intu ition are on the VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sert. 22 ): Accept social invitation. Open Jines of communlcalion. Highlighl ability to be percep. live, versatile. No time \() stand still. Shake off status CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Relations with opposite sel.: are intensified. Children alS-O play prominent role. Do some personal analysis. Per- fect techniques. Get rid of shoddy methods, concepts. DTEP.Y Motherhood's Mission Quality Footmeor For Women and Children Giant Steps Lead To Downhill Slide ' By ER.t\IA BOJ\1BECK collection, thus bringing the A scientist in California has total of chicken in nards in my figured oot that every day AT freezer to 320 pounds. after 35. the average adult WJT'S Sa turday : Mental loses 100.000 brain cells which deterioration n 0 t e d as affect thinking and memory. END My kids woul d argue that som-eone 1nentioned havin,r: a th e loss is considerably highf'r paternity suit and J said I '° than this. Since age 35, I hoped they didn't catch on J ,• haven't had an origin<1J dispenser. Daughter suggested because 1 don't have the legs · t thought, done an Y thi ng a companion to sit wit h me all to wear them. ~ SiRnifieant <ind 1\'hile olht·rs cl ay until Daddy could relie\·e Sunday: Fa111ily found n1c (i~f were 1naking gianl ~\!'pS for her in the evening. laughing hysterically o v c r q, I • mankind. l w<1 s making a Wedn esday: J-t ear d a Tom Jones singing. ··1 Who ~ AJ giant step wi1h the garbage. su~pitious rallle in the car. Have No thing." Family saw )Jo To pro\·e to you Lh1s is 11ot Druve it in\(1 the service nl> humor in it and concluded ~J-ir1- an idle observation. I took the station where 1hey discovered I :;hould be sent l-0 <1 thurch "f trouble to keep a di<1ry for <10 an aL·rosol can of dei(_'~r c;1rnp. ~]... i entire week, during 11•hich rolling <1round near my spare The seientisl from California \ ~ linie T scicntif!cally dropped lire. I am permitted to drive is on Lo something. He already · ~~ 700,000 brain «lls. now only if accompanied by a h:1 $ figur!!d out the brain drain ~ \t~ Monday . J 2 -Ye a r -o Id teenager. is caused by aging. irnpairC'd .,..JJ'~ 1vorkir1g on an Eng 1 i sh Thursday: \Vas called upon circul<1tion and other causes. · ~ ;:issi gn1nen t a.sktd me wh-0 lhc lo dC'!ern1i 11e tile :;ex of our lie has not figured out 11·hy 35 •• 0 fr E;11·l of Sandwich 11•as. \Vhen I harnster, which I did without is the magic year for I~' lo 225 E. 17th STREET COSTA MESA S48·2778 ATTENTION LADIES! For the man in your life, you'll find the quality and style you want to give at Jock Bidw ell's. For e•ample, a n out. sta nding Treviera po lye~ter knit ~hirt for a ll his casual wear, o rily Sl4.00. We have it ;n navy, wh ite, powder, celery, gold a nd brown. We'll gill wrap it for you (free ) and send you on yo ur way (happy) with compliment~ from ... BIDWELL OF NEWPORT • ' •, always carried his lunch to the was possibl e. i\1alc ha111ster 1s Ev('fl in the prime of my 3467 Via Lido-Newport Beach 673-4510 ,.,iff'..._ su,ggested he v;as the one who hrsitation, clairning no n1al 1ng drlcriorcition. ~'\ castle. 12·vear-ol d shook his J1ow in rnaternJty tops. senility, I figured that one ouL headands81d.''l'llcallupone Pricl:iy : ~1issed taking my At 35, most parents launch ~ ,t ,,, ~ ~~i·f ~ of 1he guys." discarded chicken inn ar ds their first teenager. After ~U·tl}~(,.,.. :;~~\ ~ Tuesday: Reachtlt 11 high,-~f~co~m~~lh~e~fr~e~"~'~'l'°~d~p~"~tl~'"~g~~lh~'~'~· :"'!p~c~o~l~e~'~'~'~'~·'.:_~i~t'~sL'.::::~~~·~~~<c:-~:f~c,{~~·,"~~·~ ~·==~~::-z~=~=-~·'il~·~·~~~~::~ level of inc~cy by them in the garbage bananasvi!le all the way. f""<rr'tJ..-·~ '~ - absmtminded1y 'e u r i n g po1vdered milk in dishwasher From Page 13 .. Travel er drdical!on thC'V <·nuld not drfrnd drn10(.'ra'ry as 1hry rto, she asserted. Sh!' lrcls they ar!' mak111~ :>n <.•ffor1. :ii ht!tle1· C'duc:al1nn \l'ilh !he nght h.ind, v1hilc f1~h1 1ng 11·i1h thr lrfl Egypl 1s JUSI 1n11 lat1ng .~ \lll<'lgr cl1111l! program 1\nolhcr nf the <.:oun1ry·s newt·s1 and 1nost inlrrc~t1ng prl)gr:irns 111 social \l'('l/:ir" l-~ rehabilitalion of pro~t1t11lrs. she found . Lluring 1 hr e e n1011ths in a spl'(·ial f:J (.'1111y. won1en le;irn a tr:lde as \vcll as sh::iring household duties. Problcn1s of homeless childN"n. delinqurnts. unwed mothers and poor students arc handled on a sep.'.lrale basis. Back hon1!'.' '1n 1he Art Colony \Vhcre she and her husb:ind, 11 profe!'snr of micropa!cntolofi.v, have residf'd for the past year. Dorothy Nalland has add~d hoM for hu1nanity. Free Children's Shows Chwck J oltft tlle M .. lc Malt will p1111n! fr11 1how• c:l1 itv Jun1 J7.ll.19. Thuri.-Fri. 11 2 p.m., l P·"'" <t p.m. 7:10 p.m. incl S .. t. 11 11 1.m .. 12, 2:11) P·"'·· ):)I) p.m .. 4:10 p.m. brin9 !h1 ch ilclr1n 1110 w11~1ncl .,f June 24-25 ·26 clon'l "''" MltcMll MotioMlftl Sll1wboat "Th e 1111 .,f th1 W~1 l1" 1ho .. lim11 Thu,.,-Fr:. I p ...... 1 p.m .. J p,M., <! p.m., 1:JO p. "'· •nd s,,1, "' 11, ! p "'·· 1 p ...... J p.m .. <t p.m, H11n1:n9!<>n C1nl 1• "'"II B11ch B!vc:I. i nd s,~ 0 1190 Fwy . ,, Su.ddenl~" lhc.wiqlb ~lq le o.> 4ou ' ptc.o.•c. r:<.S ... Tri. Ju.nb IS . to•,,, n. 51""'' qett.Q,'.d ;) 0 LLth Co a."' t-PI °'" 0. .3333 Brislt>I , Co~.H...;6. 5'i5 ·0'121f wO(!f}ma@@[l liJ@o@m VOLUNTEER ACTION !f you arc looking for an active summer Y.'hiJe n1ak1ng a vital contribution to your community, con- ~1 der tonlacting the Volunteer Bureau of Southern Orange County. 1'he office is open from 8:30 a.m. to l p.n1 . ~·t onday through Friday. The nun1ber is 642·0963 \Vest Orange County residents should contact I.he b urc<u1 se rving that area by calling 530-3270 fro1n 10 ;i 1r1 . lo 3 p.1n . l'rlonday th rough Friday. MOTIVATE CHILDREN 1'hc Orange County Probation Dept. is organ- 1.:i ng a pilot progra rn aimed at 1noli\•ating achieve- n1ent an1ong clen1enta ry school children. Volunteers Influencing ~tudent Achievement VIS.'\, '"ill \vork on a one-to-one basis \\'ilh young- sters recom1ncnded by the school staff. \Vi th"their parents ' pe rnli~sion . the children '''ill gain the com· panionsh ip and genuine interest of a new adull friend. l·lopefully. thei r scholastic and personal achievenlenl will be n1otivated . 1'ralning of rnore than 200 volunteers \.Viii take place during the summer. VISA plans to match one t•hild lo each volunteer during Lhe first of the school year. /\ lin1ited nun1ber of schools \.Viii participate. Individual s, service groups and church organ· ir.ations arc urgctl to investi gate the proposed pro· gram. 'fhc li me required of each person need n ot be great but a personal cornmit1nenl over an exten ded period of ti1nc provides continuity for the children. TEACHERS TUTOR ('rcdentialed teachers are needed to tutor jun- ior and senior students on a voluntary basis in the !!arbor 1\rea this summer. SE RVE PATIENTS \'oluntccrs for general office \\'Ork and patient ~crvitcs arc needed by the !\1ational Multiple Sclerosis So('icty of O range County, Garden Grove. Volunteers update prog ress records, anS\1.'er questio ns, acquaint patie nts \Vith the various serv· ires available lo then1 in the county and arrange for therapy. No special background is necessary and hours may be arranged at yo11 r convenience. CARPENTERS Fa1rvic\v ~late llospital has a need for a car· pcntrr. Sn1all cat'pen1ry 11·ork \l'O uld provide equir· n1cnt for 111otor·sensory trainin g. It \vould be an ex· cellcnt Job project for a ret ired person. For those looking for the right activity lo fill the ::;u1nn1cr, 1hc Volunteer Bureau of \Vest Orange c·nunly has ,)US!. the job. Interes ted persons should call U1c bureau fron1 10 a.n1 . to 3 p.m. Monday 1 hrough Vriday :ll 530·2370. SHARPEN PENCILS II you 11ould like to U!'C your secretarial skills 11hcre ·''Hi <·ould ;1ssist a large number of young pcnpl(•, t'(111:.1dcr 11ork1ng al Teen f·lelp in Fountain \"allrv \·011111t€·crs help teenagers find sumn1er jobs by SltJJ('l'Vlhlllg and counseling. assisting 1\'hile the ap· plicalions arc filled out and by contacting prospec· live cn1ployer~. ,L~r BRYA~I ;~~- (, 'I '· . 4 t ORDER TODAY 540-7717 WEEKEND NEWS Fal'hinn h.1~ ll~o h<'adlinf'rs this season -a lone ,;klrt .. 11wy t.l frnturf' e lo11<' Qr with another lmporta..nl Of'\'o·1 nnsh ••• o:;hor•t.;• Both skirt end short.'! are polyesler knl! tr•n1t1<'(I 11ilh nnr ~rra t stripc•il·rich polyntt"r r1 ri11' ~1i11 1 All ul 11<11-y ,,.H h nsvy/~'f'rtn/" hltc or blsck 111111 hln• k bt•tgf' n1«l '"'llilf' for sizes 38 to 46, SJO. REMEMBER : IF IT'S GREAT FASHION, IT'S HERE IN CUSTOM Sllll Av1ll1bl• on l y •t SOUTH COAST PLAZA, COSTA MESA Bristol at San Diego Freeway ~!•Dp •~••v noolll 1• ,,;ie 11.m.1 ,.,¥•t•., It M ' •·'"·I J•n11 lhurid•r. June 17, 1971 DAIL V PILOT J $ FASHION SAVINGS BffiER DRESSES, MANY SffiES iorecast shop 20 reg. $60-$106 3t.tt-H .n DRESSES, FORMALS, PARTY PANTS eveni ng shop 97 reg. SJ0-$60 1 t .tt·2t.tt DRESS GROUP. SIZES 14 1/2-22 1/2 women's dresses 57 reg. $24-$32 · 14.H ·lt.n POL VESTER DRESS FASHION> miss forecast 119 reg. S4Q.$50 FAMOUS MAKER CASUAL DRESSES daylimedresscs 61 reg. $1 6-S2& GROUP O F SK IRT SUITS. ASST. women's suits 65 reg. $60 IMPORTED POL VESTER PANTSUITS town and trdvel 4!) val $48 TWO PIECE SHORT SCTS 2t.tt . lD.tt U .tt $2t.n Ldmpus shop 43 reg. S 15·$18 l .t9 POL VESTER CREPE BLOUSES. better blouses 39 reg .. 13.Q0.15.00 l .tt JUNIOR SPORTSWEAR GROUP campus ~hop 43 reg. 8.Q0.38.00 ·J.99.22.99 SKINNY RIB TOPS, S·M-l young signature 55 reg. 7.00-11.00 4.59-6.99 WOOL-NYLON BOUCLECARDIGA NS. knit sporl~we.ir 72 reg. 17.00-20.00 11.99 RIBBED POL VESTER PANTS ·dctive ~porl:.wcJr 76 reg. 18.00 11.99 ACRYLIC BOUCLE SWEATERS, \vomen's sportswear 85 reg. 12.00 9.9t FAMOUS CALIFORNIA GO. TOGETHER$ c.oordinates 101 reg,9.00-21.00 4.99-12.99 FASHION IEWELRY COLLECTION jewelry 22 reg. J.00 . 1.59 GROUP OF KNIT TOPS, S-M·l • :iccessories 19 reg. 5.00 2.99 FAB RIC GLOVES, MANY STY l b gloves 3 reg. J .00·5.00 1.99 DRESSLS AND PANT DRESSES, 10-1 8 blou">Cs 3 1 rf'g 13.00-14,00 1.99 rA Sl-llON RINGS jrv,,clry 22 rf'g. 6 .00-7.50 2.tt BOY'S LEATHER SANDALS young people's shoes 70 reg. 6.00 l .9t VIA VEN ET O'S SPORTY SANDAL l nsua l shoes 129 reg. 14.00 .10.99 ALLEGRO'S WOVEN SLING SANDAL boulevard shoes 11 2rcg, 17,00 11.tt COBBIE'S "MIAMI" SANDAL Women's ~hoe!'! 51 ·reg. 17.00 12.9t l ODDLE R GIRLS· SWIMSUITS toddlers 128. reg. :J.SO 3.S9 DENIM SHOKTY PAN rs fO R THNS pre-reen::. 90 reg. 5.00 2.99 DRESSES, PANT DRESSl S, 4·bX gi rl's dresses 56 reg. 6.00 l .29 llTILE BOY'S JEANS, 3.7 l11tle boy::.' 52 reg. 5.00 2.,9 '1 lltRMAL BA~Y BLAN Kl l::> 1nl.1n1" 38 1cg. 5.00 3.99 MSORT ED HANN[l SU EPWEAR lingerie 79 reg. 3.59·4.50 2.99 LONG FLEECY ROBE P-S·M-l toungewc<1r SJ reg. 2 1.00 16.•t I AM ED 1 /2 SLIPS. SOME WITH LACE daytime lingerie 28 reg. S4-S& 2.99 GROUP OF PASTEL GOWNS 5-M·l ::.l{'('p lingerie 10 reg. S9·S 13 s.•9 PIJGNOIR SETS IN MANY STYLES "lcep linger ie 10 reg. S20·S3S 1 l.99 '.:il tr.AOHESIVE Pl·IOTO ALBU.I\·\ -.1 ,i11oncry 66 reg. 5.00 2.S9 or 2 for 5.00 i\1[TAL UNDERBED Cl IL '1 1 notions I reg. 13.00 '·'' ARCROSS VITAMINS, MlNLRAL) toilc1ries 136 rl'g. 12.99 2for 11.59 IOAMING BATH IN MANY SClNTS • 1oile!ries 136 ·reg. 1.29 .,, MEN'S, BOYS' WEAR ,\·IA YB ROOK[ 2-PANT )UI T:, nirn', sui1 ... .2 I rrg. 'fl.DO 74.00 MAYBROOK[ SPO RT COA 1 ') 1ncn'-. ~port,1\'r. 45 rpg. S5:i-S6r1 44.00 I 1\MOUS MA KE CASUAL PAN f') mf'o\ ~port.,wr. 1 3J reg. S 1 l·S14 5.99 NO-IRON DRESS SHIR rs men's furn. 6 reg. 5.00·7.50 J.69-5.tf MACPHERGUS T-SHIRTS n1C'n'~ furn. 127 reg. 3/4.50 3/3.7' MACPHERGUS SPORT SHIRTS niC'n') spl. furn. 84 were S5·S7 3.n MACPHERGUS KN IT SHIRTS nien'.., spl. fu rn. 64 reg: S5·S7 3.99 JAM STYLE SWIMTR UNKS barrton h.ill 83 reg. 4.00 2.5t YOUNG MEN 'S BODY SHIRTS p.1cc shop 130 reg. S9·S 15 5.H SOYS' SPORT SH IRTS hoys' furn. 2) reg. 4.0Q.4.50 2.tt FOR THE HOME PRESTO JUMBO TEFLON® FRY PAN sm.ill appliances 74, regularly 23.99 11.99 REGAL IN STA-HOT POT ~mall appliances 74, regul•rly 9.99 7.tt SANGOCHINA SERVICE FOR 12 china 46, regularly 96.90 59.tS MIKASA TERRASTONE 4S PC. SERV. FOR 8 t.hina 46, regularly 50.00 3t.9t NORIT AKE COOK·N-SERV E CH I NA t:hi~a 46, regul.irly 23.80 19.95 8 PIECE CRYST Al SNACK SET glassware 126, regularly 6.50 4.H EVERYTHING GLASS, SIT OF 8 ·glassware 126, regularly a.so 6.tt DIAMONT STEAMWARE, S S IZ~S glassware 126, regularly 1.30 79c ALABASTER ASHTRAYS FROM ITALY gifts 82, regularly 5.00· 15.00 l .99·11.n ARTIFICIAL TREES gifts 82, regularly 30.00 1 l .4t LIQUOR , GOURMET MOL EV VODKA QUART liquor 107. regularly 4.8.'i J.at DANIEL HOOPER BOURBON.QUART liquor 10 7, regufarly6, 19 4.99 1.R. PEARCE SCOTCH, QUART liquor 107, regu larly 6.19 4.t9 fANCY MIXED NUTS (NO PEANUTS! 1.. .i ndy 78, regularly 2.00 (X)Und 1.59 llJ., 2/J.00 CHOCOLATE PEANUT CLUSTER S (.Cindy 78, regul.irly 1.90 lb. 1.29 I~ . RUM FUDGE BALLS L.1ndy 78, regularly 1.50 lb. 1.lt I~. VAN DER LANN HOLLAND HAM sourmel 108, regul<1rly 3.40 tin 2.49 CYBUSCOCKlAIL SAUSAGI S sourmcl 108, regularly 89ctin 2for1.30 TOYS, SPORTS KENNl R WATER-GO-ROUND loys 42, regulady 19.99 STEEL WALL POOLS 7.99 loys 4 2, rf'RUl.:1 rly 11 . 'J'J. I J,99 7. 9t· 12.99 BATTERY OPERATED ROAD RA CE >Fr lo)'5 42, rC'gularly .'i.00 3.99 NEEDLEPOINT KITS -l rt neccllework 40, regul.irly S4·~ 18 2.99· 12.tt WINTUKYARN FOR KN ITIING .irl needlework 40, regul<1rly 1.90 s~r in 1.4t 1.ADll S 1.ARGl CLOUDHOPPfR lugg.igc 36, rcgul.1rly 4 2.00 33.00 f\.IAN 'S BROWN CLOUOl--IOPPI R luf,Sage JU, reglll.1rly 40.00 JO.OD 7·PC. GOLF ST ARTE R SEl- .. porl ins good~ 50, rcgularl\' 39.1)9 26.11 WOOD TENNIS RACKET WITH PRl;S ~porting goods SO. regularly 15.00 t .t• 4-LB, PQl.YEST£R FILL SL£EPING BAL "porting good._, 50, regularly 14.99 10.tt LINENS AND BEDDING o.,PRINGMAID OAl'.:>Y 10\i\lll~. WASl·I CLOTH<.., 1ov.1cls JO, rrg. BOc·l. 'JO 49c-1.29, 4/S.00 :-.PR1NGMAID SOLID TOVV l LS, WA~H CLOTHS 1owcls JO, rrg. 90c·4.00 S9c-2.2t 'UR llY COlTON PERCAll SI JUTS CASES sheet.~ 34, reg. 1.60 pr .• J.00 pr. 1..39·2.69 SURETY POLYESllR PlllOW:-i, 2~26" dome.tics 34, regul.irly 5.00 2.ff KENWOOD TWIN.FULL BLANKlT bedding 41 , rC"gularly 8.99 S.9t GAR LANDQUI L l lD BEDSPR l AD hN'.ld1ng 4 I, reg. JU.00·45.00 1 l .99·29.t9 '-,URl.lY MA 1 l:LA!>~E BEDSf'RLAD beddinR 4 I, r('g. 26.JQ.J7.r,o 21.99·31.99 MAJOR ELECTR IC S RCA AC/DC 6 BRAND PORTABLE RADIO rt1dio-; 71.9, W.l'.> 14';.l,95 ff.9.S G.E. rll TlR FLO AUTOMATIC WASHER major appliance~ 71 4, was 299.95 259.00 PHILCO 14 .3 CU . FT. REFRIG. FR EEZER refrigerator.; 72 1. WJS 259.00 229.00 ZEN ITl-1 12" DIAG, B{'rN PO RT. TV t.v. 722,speci.il 94.00 RCA I B" DIAG. COLOR PORT. TV Lv. 722, was 459.95 319.00 QUASAR II 23" DIAG. COLOR CONSOLE 1.v. 722, \vas 599.95 SSt..00 LAST 2 DAYS SUNDAY AND MONDAY Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. (except Dow;.town L.A. closed), Monday 10 :00 a.m. to 9:30 p.m .. (except Downtown L.A., Oxnard lo 9 p.m.). 11'.s your last c hance to get in on the big savings ·in every departmen1 throughout all eighteen May Co stores. • THE BIG ONE ann1versar • • HOME FURNISHINGS BURRIS TRADITIONAL RECLINER recliners 147,reg. 139.00 tS..00 7-PC STANLEY DINING ROOM ILJrn iture 142, regularly 680.00 .549..00 J-PC THOMASVILLE MEDITERR. BEDROOM iurniture 14), regularly $540 409.00 .l·PC SPANISH DESIGN BEDROOM lurniture 143, regulJrly $400 Ut.ot J-PC. MODERN BEDROOM lurniture 143, regularly 505.00 Jl9.00 FOUR STYLES OF SOFAS fu rniture 141 , reg.$ I 75·S21 $ 129.00 l HRH STYLES OF BOOKCASES furniture 141, regularly 149.00 ff.00 GOLD LEAF COCKTAIL TABLES furnilure 144 , reAu lJrfy 250.00 149.IO CURIO CABINETS furniture 144, regul.lrly S 199·299 $1 zt..$229 J..A.Z-BOY® RECLINER recliners 147, regularly 199.00 145.00 7-PC. DINING ROOM SET palio shop 14~ regularly 15 1.70 132.00 7-PC MODERN DINING ROOM SU 111m iturc 142. regularly 570.00 435.00 OPTIC GlASS TABLE LAMPS IJmps 6J, regulJrly 30.00 22.00 All-METAL POLE AND TR[[ LAM P; 1Jmps 6:l, regularl y 25 .00 17.tt DRAPERIES, CARPETS HOLLYWOOD BED COVERS. BOLSTER S -.lipcovers 113,rC'g. 15.00·20.00 9.49-13.99 ROMA SWAG PANELS, 48" \1\llDTl·I Lllrtdins 1 IJ, re~. 9.00-J 5.00 6.9t-12.9t TRUCRAFT MADl -TO-MEASU RE DRAPES draperil"s 11 1, rf'g. IJ.25-S361 10.65-$309 BEAOANGLES® 1-IANGING BEADS <.ustom ft.1brics 11 . rrg. 2.80-J.OO box 2..49-2.7' CUSTOM DRAPERIES, LI NING INCLUDED Lu~tom fabr icc;, 11, reg. 2.SQ..4.50 yd. 1.50 Jcl. KODEL® POL VESTER PILE BROADLOOM 1ugs 32, reg. 13.00 sq. yd, insrell .. Ln 'CUlPTURED NYLON PILE ARlA RUGS, 6x<J' .ire.i rugs 137, regult.1rly 40.00 29.tt I RAMED ORIGINAL Oil PA INTINGS piclures 75, regularly 55.00 29.H ALDO LUON GO BLACK, WHITE SUBJECTS 75, reg. 25.00 and 35.00 14.99 •Ml 24.tt SlAL Y lWIN/fUll MA TIRESS/BOX SPRI NG ~1cf'p shop 145, regulJrly 69.95 each 47.00 BUDGET STORE MISS[S' STR[l(l-1 PANl "· 10-18 ~por1~wcar 800 IC'f,ul .1rly h .<)9 4.99 WOMEN'S POL VESTER PANTS, .1 8·44 won1en·~ ::.port.;1ve.1r 8 16 reg. 9 .99 7.tt POL VESTER KN IT DRESSES. 12·20 1nisscs' dl'C"ses 810 regularly 13.99 l.tt IUN lOR WRANGLER JEANS, 7-1 S jr.sccnc801 regularly7.99 4..tt IUNIOR JERSEY DRESSES, 5-13 1r. ~ene 8 29 regul.irly 1 T .99 '·" DORffiE SUPPORT H051[RY hosiery 807 rri;:ularly :!.59 1.t9 Al.I. WEAT>-IER COATS, 7-15. 10-18 \Von1rn'~ co,11-. 8 28 rrgul • .rl y 15.9() 12.99 ~UMM[R l·ASl-llON /·lANDBAGS ll.tndb<ig .. 827 rf'g. 4.99·7.99 J,99.5,99 DOREHE LONG-LINE BRA> brds 819 regularl y 4.50·5.00 l .J0.3.H NYLON SLI PS, WID E CHOICE dayweclr 820 regularly J.(X).4.00 t.59 LONG NYLON GOWNS, 5-M·l ..,l('epwN r821 reg.5 .99·6.99 1H W O MEN'S 11 Al !AN SANDAL~ \vomrn'~ ::.hoc" B 12 wgularly 7.99 J.,. GIRLS' SHORT Sl l'. 3-6X Airl::.' \\'('~H 814 rl'f.i. 1.11'1 4 fw4.50 IUN IO R 130Y~ ~I ACK S, 4.7 \ hild1en'~ Y.'C.Jr ROB rr-gul.irly .!..flrl 1.19 ROYS' ~WIMWt.AR . 8 ·18 boy<,' Wf'J r 822 r£"gult.1 rly 2.bfl 1.tf MlN'SCARDIGAN SWEATlRS 1nC'n's sportswCJr 805 rC'gul..irly 11 .99 l .tt MEN'Sl LONG SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS men's furnishings 806 regul.a rly 6.00 l.99 MEN'S CASUAL PANTS, 29·)8 rncn's ~port~we.:i r 8 17 reg. b.CJq. J0,00 2 for 7.00 DOUBLE-KN IT SLACKS 1nen'.., c loth in~ 814 rr.1:ul.irly 15.99 10.t• NO-IRON TWIN WHITE SHEHS dome~lics 803 rei;:ul.lrly J .2 9 2.29 ~I x36" LMBOSSED SCATTER RUG> 811 -except Mon1cl<1ir. Ct1rlsbad, Oxt'lJ.rd reg. 3.49 1." COLORFUL BEACH l OWlLS linens 831 if perfect 6.99 J ... m.y co south coast plaza, san diego fwy at bristol, costa mes..; 546-9321 shop monci.y thru 5.ilurday 10 ilt1 lo 9:30 pm, NOO.y noon 'Iii 5 pm MAVCC> ' I I -. -' . . . . . ·-- ·Summ e r Sp lash es With Fun Summer act1vnies are in lull swing as Ille season descends upon the Orange Coa.st .setne. Cooferences. 1 6uqirise social c.ve11tl, festivals and unusual program.! fill the calendar. Wome n Confer Career and Lire Planning will be the topic of a daylong Conference for Wo1nen taking place Saturday, J une 19, al Mt. San Antonio College. \Vomen who want to kno\v what is happening in their world should attend, particularly !hose betv.·een 25 and 45 Y•ho are interested in becoming invo l ved in volunteer and community ac· tivlties. in entering or re- entering the job marke t or college or training for a career. H.e~istralion is at 8:30 a.m. F<1k• furs compete wi th the real thing -they are done in huge hair.hiding berets, caps and muffs. H•t with matching muff is of beige·toned lynx. Among the items unveiled at an "Accessorama" in· elude these little dunce capt -filigrH rings which cover the nails <1nd ride down to the first knuckle. The opening session begins at 9:30 a .m. in building 28 (college entrance 'D'). The fee for the conference is $1 .50 and incl ud es lu no:h an d refreshments. Following a ke ynote address by Mrs . f\1arie ~till s, president of the co llege, a panel pre.sen· tc:tion will (.'Over an overview or the Employment Picture for the 70s, Education Re- quired for Success in the \Vorking \Vorld, the Excit.ing World or Selling and the Op- portunities and Needs in the Area of Volunteer \Vork. Milliners Don Copycat Hats dy GAY PAULEY Ul'I WOMf_H'J fOITOlt NE\V YORK I UPI ! -The Millinery lndustry is caught in> in the same nostalgia for -'1e 1930s and 1940s as the rest of the "'Orkl of women's wear. • Veils \1-'hich came off many ·- years ago are back. Con1- n1entators al hat sho\1-'S talk about the Nonna Shearer hehnet, the close-fitting hat this actress made famous in the old-time movies. S\\·aggrr shapes \\'ith their '>''ide, turned- up brims are referred to as will be the biggest millinery thr Garbos. year Jn decades," s aid Hals of all shapes. sizes and Maybelle Hall , who staged and materials shov.·ed up in the he Ip e d lo commentate the Night Owls fashion show staged by the show. The Night o v.,ls or the f\lillinery lnslitule of America \Vhy more hats? il-irs. llall Nev.cport Beach Hoot 'n Holler ror visiting reporters in New said because "this is the era ROOSl will gather at 2 p.m. York to view the fall a nd nf individuality. the end of Su nday, June 20, in the Bethel winter ready -Lo.wear , boredom in dress." Women, in 1'o\li·ers recreation hall for the ""Any thing goes," \\'as the \li'ay short, will do their ov.·n thing last meeting of the year . Peter Shown. actor. singer in clothes selection. Selection. l\1iss Dorothy Dare is and the master or ceremonies, she feels, will include hats. chairman of refreshments and vocai'ized the new theme for Certainly the industry olfc rs decorations. the reporters. t'nough variety in shapes, sizes The first fall meeting will "Anything"' included tho~c and materials fnr fall. take place Sept. 19 and will be veils, sonic of them. scarf-likt··---------------'----'------- wra ppcd around the throat. others concea ling just the face ;is in a while fishern1an's ha l '"Looks like th e rl ying nun,"' one spectator quipped. Other shnpes included copies (Jf the newsboy h:JI. with its pu ffy crov.·n and visor brim ; a baseball vlayer's cap, done in C'rcamy v.•hitc fC'lt: lhosC' Garbo swaggers: dra ped turbans, loques. and the old· time clochl' wom by glamour queens of llolly v.·ood. Fake furs rnmpcled "'ith the real furs in the "skin deep" group at the show. Back full scale is gray fox. done in huge llair-hiding berets. lynx. mink especially in white. and then l'omes muff and cap of a fake ch i n chi J I a called ··chin· chillelle." """" ~Jt 1iJ~l~t '. The Norma Shearer helmet has bffn revived. The clos.e-fitting helmet by Winner appears to have met~I mosaics riveted on for protection. The hat industry rcrna1ns fiptirn islic. although ! h c hatle.~s trend uf Americ;1n 11·on1en has cut deepl y inlo lllcl r fi nancial returns 111 lh1' past few years. "\Ve believe fall and w1ntrr Valleyites Recite Vows \\'ayna Lou \\1 '11 i a m !; on became the hr1dr or ;>.1icha<'l 1 LeRoy Gra v d u r1n~ cerernoruc.~ 111 !hf' C"hurt:h of Christ. Costa J\les;1. Their parl'nt.<: cirr 1'11rs HO\\·ard L. Larkin .Jr and 1'1r:;. A. llarold '\"rbb. F'oun- tain Valley. Attendants \1·rrr Arlenr Kato, H;1t'V<'Y f\1cndoza and Randy Gani. The newlyweds. 1\·ho "·11! reside in Huntington Beach.I are graduates or Founlain Valley High S('hool ~nd ~l-1 lende<I G<ildcn \Vcsl Collegr . Teen Collars Dog collar.<: or braided metal. of leather. tif velvet ri bbon and embroidery are compatible to the trcn-a ger's life style. The adoleS<'ent pre fers to .,.ear more than one at a time. • Giga11tic Storewide A 1111iversary Sale 30% TO 50°/o Hot OFF ENTIRE STOCK -----0-0-0'----- IJA MPL( SAYINGS SIR JE Pant5 Outfit No Wale Cord Hot Pant5 Sets $9.80 .... 514.00 $1 3.30 .~~ •• ll~• ~"'"'"lc1 r' M•llf• C~•••• M1rlt<1uon C~•••• 114 S. EL CAM INO llAl SAN CLEMENTI, CALIFOllHIA 492-7804 NOW YOUR CHILD CAN BENEFIT SUMMER fUMWl1H MUSIC FOR ONLY $750 . , Children l earn tntt•lf" a nd l11ave I•••• I• 4 WHldy ......... , cl ... tnd~ c,)111 .... pl•y wt.t '""' re N Jl111p ..... ley.We t•- wll'tt 1011..-. of -'•"'• "'-... ~ '' ••' llM'· ci...tlc.i op. w~ ,.~ ... OMI al,..,.. r)iyl'tt111 '-'•=-·· .. lltt ... .-, ...... ,.,,.... ,..,.,. ........................... ....,.. "" -4 ,....,. •f fM. ell!.._. n. .. ,.11...-r fH ef S7.IO _.tltlM ,,., cWl<lll to llh ,....,..._, r.c.or<lll, -4 ,.., wweAlty cleMoM. YAMAHA s~~~~L 109 E. 18th, C OSTA MESA llr. clft\ft P'' -n-flM"t 9t" •fter•oo• ,.. . • • ' . • L d' • I f - · ... .. !he annual Ha waiian party. St. Mic hael's An ol d-fas hioned pit barbecue will take place from noon to B p.m. Sunday, Jone 20, at St. ~1ichael"s Norbertine Seminary in celebration of the Catholic institution 's 10th an- niversary. Thei"e will be open hou se alt day. commeocing wilh a niass at 11 a.m. followed by the barbecue. Music will be pro- vided by the strolling il-1ariachi del Valle Band. The ~minary is located in Trabuco Canyon . FY Arts Mrs. Helen Reed v.· i l I demonstrate her watercolor technique along with v.•oodcuts and drawings when she ap- pears before the Fountain Valley Aris Association f\1on- SHOWER CURTAINS by Jaffe ONLY $297 day. June 21. Trusl.ees include the Mme.s. The artist's totorfu! pain· John Hamett, Matthew 1t1isiak and J ulian Bacon. tings range from land:seapes'lr"""""""",.,_"'""""'""""'.i" and still lifes to rigures. TM meeting will be at 7:30 p.m. in the civic center. Daughters Officers of the Court Blessed Sac r a ment , Ca th o l ic Daughters of America will be installed at 7;30 p.m. MO!lday, June 21, in the Peek Famil Terrace Room . Mrs. l-1. Lee Burks will assume the duties of regent. Assisting her as vice regents will be 7'-1rs. Frank Kn.itell and il-lrs. Charles Grenchik. Other officers include the Mmes. Anthony De Luca. S e a n hlcLaughlin, Victor h1oore, Max Sluder , David Crockett and Miss Ada Di Pasquale.I a DAY •.• In 111i. c••• •·OAT II l•r "'' ,., ,...,. ILH:kJ wllln., w••• tH wl!h a IUt.Jt (;Jiii) I JtOTH•rt KNITl· INIJ MACHINI", 1i.u1vt1l1 1 .... 11 Why ntl (l"'I I• IM1y Ind fl'll~t Jeol< llUMI In DUr COU/'IT THE STIC H CONTI.SY. Tht rt'• M 1Ml1a- ·~· The KNIT WIT LOWEii MALL SPREADS * KING SIZE Sal• Good $)899 to $2999 Through Saturday REGULAR $60.00 REG. $3 .97 to $6.97 * Quilted, Polye1ter Motclllnt Hoek• S 1.1 f • Set Acetate, or O~•• 10 Olltt rtnl ~1n1rn1 tt Cho-u ''"'"' Wa1hable Cotton Bed & Bath Fashion Shop OUTLET STORE • 18591 Main St. Huntington Beach-847°0033 0 ' t • • • \ ~ t:~. Thursd1)', Ju111 17, 1971 0,AJLV PILOT }7 'Freaks ' Trace Henry 's Antics October Weddin g to Join Pair NEW YORK (UPI ) -llenry VIi t wasn't all that bad until he met Anne Boleyn. And lhc "Bloody Mary" ol the Tudor !:ra of Britain never deserved the title which today labels a cocktail. The authority for I h c portraits of some of the members of the roya l family from 1485 to 1603 ls Mary M. r.;i ke , a pretty b l onde housewife from Ridgefield, Conn., whose book concerning them is "A Crown for EJizabeth." "I never knew unlil I started writing some of the history tbat there are so many Tudor freaks," says Mrs. Luke. "Peo- ple write me, call me long distance, saying, 'Don't stop there. Go 011.' " There in her book is. when Elizabelh I came to the throne and the EUzabethan Era Y.'as born, 45 years of reign that saw England's sons sail the high seas of conquest and establish the empire. How does all of this relate to today? Mrs. Luke sees all history a reflection of man's behavior, the ·way he faced challenges and met crises in the past, and the way he faces them today. Almost all of Henry's mar· riages were political, she said. "And don't try to tell me this isn't still going on." The monarchy lhen was absolute, of course. But our syste1n of justice today isn't perfect either. The whole course oi British history might have been drastically different h a d Henry's wife of 25 years, Calherine of Aragon been able lo produce a male heir. Olherwise Anne Boleyn - \Yhere his dov,,nfall morally and spirilually began -might not have entered lhe scene. As it was. Anne prod uced Elizabeth I but failed also to beget a son . Her execution helped earn Henry the reputa· tion of the cruel, lecherous tyrant that has followed his name through the centuries. lfenry had some softness in him, Mrs. Luke contends, and Love is the only power. But to understand that Love is the only p ower, you have to see the spiritual nature of God. Of his child, man. And of the universe. l11en irrilation gives way. Anger and bitter feelings leave. Even disease is healed. For nothing can withstand the power of divine Love when you understand it. Learn more about this Love. And try out the proven teachings of Christian Science. Our public service is a sin1ple but inspiring one. Christian Science Sunday Services ({) ' ' COS TA MISA -l"ll~ST CHU•CH 01" CHRIST, SCI E,..tl5T HIO MH• Vttd• Drh••• Co>ll M•1I -11:00 1.m. HIJ,..Tll'ICft0" 111!.ACH -FlltSt CHUltCH OF CHRIST, I CLl"tlSt 1111 1...i 01111•, H11n1ln9!0<! l••<h -t :lO •NI 11 :00 1.m. NIWl"O•t BIACH -l'IRSt CHUll CH 0 1' CHll !St , SCll"tlST UllJ VII Lldt, N1wpC1rt l•lch -t :U 1rwl 11:00 1.m. NIWl'OllT IEACH -SECOMO c t1u •CH 01" CtllllST, SClf:NTIST 1100 1"1cltlc View Dr .. Cortn• d., Mir -10:00 a.m. July Date Selected A July 24 wedding in th e llarbor Assembly of God Church, Costa Mesa is being planned by Susan Lynn Harris and Christopher Paul Tambe. News of the forthcoming event has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jlarold Harris <Jf lluntington Beach. Miss llarris is a graduate o[ Edison High School. Her fiancc, f.1rs. Angelo THISTLE JIOOM Ois,rim;, .• tin9 5£r¥ice For PRIVA TE PARTIES IANQUETS • CLUIS W EDDING-RECEP'Tl ONS Especially for DAD or GRAD! The blunt front Is In pl u' new dre'' sol• stylin9 by Hush Puppies® fits the fashion bill. Business or pleasu re you'll enjoy the distinctiv e look of smooth lea fha r. Going place5. 18.95 l l1d< Le1th1r Brown l 9•fli1r WI.if• L•tlher RAY'S SHOES HARBOR CENTER e 2300 HARBOR BLVD. (Next to Thrifty's) Phone: 546-6775 • or Father's Day •• ,. Micro-size, Maxi-Quality portable radio with your purchase of any fine Ortho . ---~mattress! . ~., • 3 DAYS ONLY! Fi rmn ess and comfort. Tempered steel unit, crown flex center support, sisal insulation. INCLUDES ORTHO PAK &: DOUBLE BONUS! Super1or fealures provide $158 houD d t1ndJs1urbed slum-- bcr, Quality tor a budget. tndClde9 Orlhl>Plt l Docittle BONm Long-Ii fa durablllty. luting... I 8 comfort. Fine craflsma~ &hip, top-Una design. lncludel OJtho.hll: • Doabte Bonum k""'9t prices betatl!9 Or· abla prico. A Int• value.. scroll quilting topa euperlor lbo -• _...,. ot ""' s5a .,.., ......, at • '"'"'"'" •79 '"""'''"' doublo ""dlo $ I 8 1ho dealt directly With you. Aita bargain. construction, · ~ ~Bonus • ~ Domf!t .._ lnckldn DoutiJt 9onut . CORNER GROUP1 ·• -----CONVERTIBLE SOFAS \ ?" '·~. Sttll'll'llngl 10 pfeces lncltKle 2 o rtho button-free mal~ tresses, 2 box .springs, 3 8 bolsters, 2 qull\ed coverlets, s17 sn'l•rt comer table. I.CU of A "'&how off" in spare room, • Fall ... dl'in. Wide range ol ailos, '"'" """''""' '''''"" ·~ ·111 eludes Otlho M1 ttreul • ..... ·Dout>M BOllU9 atyle, tor law bud1>91L THE NATION'S LARGEST CHAIN OF MATTRESS SPECIALISTS LAKEWOOD SANTA ANA and ANAHEIM 4433 C1 nd l1wood Avenuo FOUNTAIN VALLEY 1811 West tincoln Avenue C•ndltwood ShoJ>9 (across trom Lakewood Center) Pho!M: 634·'4 134 16131 Harbor Blvd. (co rne r of Edinger) Next t o Zody'& Phone: 839 -4 5 70 Between Euclid 311d Brookhurst Avenue1 Just East of Fed Mart Phone: 776·2590 ''I I f • - J f DAILY PILOT Thursday, Junt 17, 1971 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTJCE LEGAL NOTICE fl'-P-4*'9 IUl'•ltlOI 'c~~T Oji" TMll" AMaNDMllfT TO Cl'ltTl•ICATl OP AMl'HOMl!NT TO t l!ltTU'ICATl 01' STATI! 011' CALlt'OltNll1 PO• 9USl!oll!I$ •H• COUNTY .. OU.NGll IUSIN•ss. f'ICTITIOVI Nit.Ml. PtCTITIOUI ...... Ml ' TIM -.!lfttd do c~111y 11\.tl TNv •ro TM 11..,,,,11.-oo t•tt•fY lhfl !Mio ••• fR. A .. tJO ~1119 • br.11',,...I 11 t i• 1!•11 k•lllil COl'(IV<llnil • bu-'""'' •I fll Ei>t Kito!ll lllOTICI: ~ Hl!AllllllO 0" Pl!TITlON A-. Ari.hftm, C111111tnt1, und!'r tto~ """""'· AMlloim, ColifOl'nl•. ~rwler ll'le l"Olt l'llOAATI 01' WILi, AllO l'Ok tl<1Uleu1 lllfl'I ,....,. of W.EStPOllT-CEll· !lctlllOU• !Urn _.,.., al wEITPOltT· LITTlltl TlilTAMENTAllY 1trros co •• llml~ P•rlM• ... lp. i ncl PUl<lt.IEO UNIT OEVELOPMENT co.,. EO!•l• al ANNA W.ClllOFT, De<11Md. 1ih1t w ld lltm lo ~ of Ille l110ow-Llmlll<I Par!ntt'1llp, i nd tnll wlO lltm I• NOTICE 15 HERESY GIVEN .111•1 -eemPOMO of !he tollow!nto MARY E. KENAN h•• 111.0 hert•n • ·~!.·Wn'-1 HGr... l ull<Hri, 11'(, t l• WoslPotl Hom-8ullde•1. !roe:., ti• pell!lon lor P""ob•lt ol will •"" '°' ··" K•t•Ht AVl'nW. A II ."'• Im. ::ts! K11tllt AVHIW, A II 111 t Im. IHU•nt• of L ... 1 ... Te11tmeflhtV 10 Ille 1lllot11l1 Celflornlt . pell!-• 1eleronce lo Wlllcll I• mt"e to< e ... 1-1 ltolaUtCo• CttPO•ti.,,,,. 61S1 Bulldef> Jl:o.outcn cor·Por•llar'I, '1)1 tu!'ll'l<!f Ptrtlcll!tt" t nd lhtl the l•m• end .. , c ... 1urv 8""'1t VtfG, lo• Ant•I••· wo.i Cet1tutv Boultvortl. '"°" """I••· piece of 1101rl1111 lht 1eme II•• b"" Ml ~Ctlllornlt '°"'3 Ct Utornl• 9(1(W5 tor Jul1 I, 1911. ti 9:30 1.m ,, In l"-.j; Ctbhrlon of Ct11!or11l1. ?l.O Bird lltOld, Ctblelon ol Cell!Mllle. llO Bini ROid caottroom ol D••••lfnent No. ) ol w!~ fi eottt Gobin . l'lork:lt J)ld ,..,,1 Gtl>IH . l'lotlOt JJ)d "'',..'·et TllO Clvk Ctn!•• Drive Wtil, 1n ~> 0.IM: Morch 7•. It/I Dtlt<l: Me•Ch ?•. ltlL tile Cltw or $&nl• Ant, Calltornl1. WESTPORT HOM E WE~T POll:T HOMIO llU!lDER, Oelf'd JuM l<I, lt11 8Ult..DERS, INC INC W. E. ST JOHN, '' D••n Rlctbl•I ' "o. ' I (ao'l!W Cltrk 'i: Pte1T!ll!nf ' P;t•ld::I !Ckl>el Jt0Gl!lt$, C""llt Nlil & PLOOSTl!lt • 8 UIL DER3 AE!.OU lll CE S !HJILOERS Jl:E~OUACES <Oll:P· \Silt Seurn ,.., ..... ..,,, •tv•. ,• CORPORATION 011.Al lON Ptrtn.unl, Cetltou•le MIU llv Jem..1 E. Rodwr1, By Jemt> E RodO«I T.i: llll) '3"1·1•U \ll(t P<1>l<le11! Viet Pr.,!<l~I Al10fMY> tor: ~lltt.nrr 1 CABLETON OF CAl!FORNI" C•BlETON OF CALIFORN IA Publllht<I Or•nllt COlll D1ily P•IDI. " ev li••old PU1~el11. Jr, B~ tiorold Pll•~ell!. Jt, Jun• 11. 11. 1), ltl! 1~)4.11 • P"•ldtnl Ptt1+a1nl Y"ATE OF U.llFORNIA ~1.llTE OF U.llFORNIA ) .• ~5 JSS. tliovNTY OF LOS .. NGELES l COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES I '('011 11111 l(!ll dlV ot M•r(ll. 1'11. IKfort D'I thi• ?•th dev o1 Mtt<h, lfll, belO'" f; l!>e ul'!ll!nl1ntd, I No11rv Public Ill me, 11,. ul'!ll!.,IOntd. o NoT•rv !"'Ubllc In ror u lO Ceunlv encl S•tlt, K•1ont!!v end IOt seld (euntv •n<I S1t•e, Pf"""'Uy i>e•r..:I DEA.N IUCICllEtl, known 1o !Tit tpptt ttd DEAN !UCK8Efl, kllOWn lo m1 IH !ne Pre.1lde"I or WESTPORT liOl.IE 10 be 11>t Pre•ldt'lll (II WESTPORT liOME t'utLDERS, INC ., tnt cM-•tion Ille! BUlLOERS, INC., tilt cor-t1lon Ille! h e<Vled tnt within ln1!•umf'nt. •nown 10 t•ecul..:I ll>e wltt>in 1n5uvmen!, k.-n lo ""' lo IH IM --who ·~KU•td fllr mt IO be , ... Ptf'l&ll -eAKU!ed lht .. lllin ln11n1men1 on be1'ell or wHll!n 1,,.1,umtnl on bth•U "' fltESTPORT tiOME 8U!l0ERS. INC., t ncl WESTPORT HOME 8 Ull0ERS. INC., *""""'~"""' to me !hot 1110' WEST •ncl t<know!tdg..:I lo m• l!>el ial<I ?!JRT liDME BUILOEll!i, INC. ••· WESTPORT HOME 6 UILDEllS, INC. t~ flUI ... 11\t Wll~ln fn"n1mt"I PU•\u1nt to Kultd the wilhln i11•!tume11! OUT\Ut"I to n. 8•·L•W1 or • re1olu!lon"' 11• lloerd of 1h av·l•w• or e te1olullon OI Ill 8oat0' or Cllr~lo,.,, O"ector._ -'W!fNESS nw htnd •ncl offlcl1I 1t 1I. !OFFICIAL SEAL! PHILIP GlUSl(Ell Philip Glv•kltf" N&!trv Public · Cellfornlt Nottrv Pubflc-Calitotnl• Los An~I•• Counrv Princloel O!llct In Mv Commi>lion E•plrtl Los Anvt lt• Ceunrv Fob. 1J. ltlS MY comml5110n E:cotrel l fATE OF CAllFOR"1 1A Feb. 28, lVIS ·~ SS $TATE OF CALIFORN IA l t'l'>UNTY 01' LOS ANGELES ) $S. On 11>1• l4!h dov ol M•rch, !t71, btlotft COUNT Y OF LOS ANGELES l ~. !ho vnoefll~n..:I. • Noi.rv Pvblk ln On !hi• 1•11'1 <l•V ol Mt•Ch, lt71, belor• lllO' lor 1ald Co11nTv ano s1110, Pt!"10f'lt11y mt . the vndersJvrttd, e Noterv Public In oopear.O JAMES E. ROOGERS, ktlOWn lo encl lot :.eld CouMY •"" ~(t!I. ptrMlnl!IV !N' to be !ht Viet Pttlldtnl of aol>t••td JAMES E. RODGERS, known lo llUllOEltS II ES DU 1t CE S CDR· mt to ~ the Vice Pt..sldtnl ot ft<lRATION. lht CorPot1tlon f111! •lltcUle<I BUILDERS JI: ES 0 UR C E S COR· fllt within ln•1'umt n!, k!>OWll lo mt lo be PORATION, me carpcr1llon tilt! t XKu1e<I fht "'"""" who ~•ec.,!ed lht wlfllln In-'"" within lnirrument. kl'IC'Wll to mt lo be LEGAL NOTICE '"'" "" NOTICE TO CRIE DITOllS JUPERIOlll COURT OF TMe STATE 0, CAL!FOllNJA l'Olt THE COUl<ITY 01' OltA l<IGE No. A·••>IS Ettlle OI ll:OBEllT A RT HU It LOCICWOOO. 1lso kllOWll 11 ROl'!ERT A. LOCKWOOD DeceeHd. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 111 Ille crt<!llot1 ot 1t>t tbove ntmt<l dt~edonl mtt 111 Pt,,.,,.. novl119 c!1lm• •talnu ine ,.Id o..ct<ltM ere t10Quht<1 lo lilt T!\trn, with 1no nt<eHtrw voua.er" In Int o!llte o! me clerk o! !ht obcve 1111111..:1 c""'rt, 0t 10 pr11e111 lhtm, wTlh rne nectua•v v<)Ucne.,, 10 Tiit undt•lltntd ti tho cttlc• o! ner 1ttor11ews : R-r1ton, How••• I. GerlenO', el1oniev•, ~ Campi/• Ori~•· Newpart Bte<h, Cel!toml• t~MJ, whlcn I• The PllCt ol bu5]neu o! ti\.• undtrtl9n..:I In ell mtltlfl pertal11ln9 IO lht en11t al ,.Id dec..:lonl, wllhln tour mon•n• 11ter lht Urn PUbllc1ll<1n o! 11111 1111tlce. Ot!td M•V 2.1. 1'11 J111el Lynne loc;kwood Adml111,1r1ttl~ OI lht t•11lt 0 1 The ebo~e ntml!I deca<lenl JtOleRTSON, MOWSEA & GAltLANO •Mii C1mou1 Drive N-porl •••cf>, C1U!ot,.l1 Tttephone: (1't) JID·Slll Al!OtMY1 hit Admlnlur.il1• LEGAL NOTICE . P-41'91 ClllTIFICATll!: 01' IUl1Nl$\ l'ICTITlOU$ MAME The u"6e•tkll'le<:I dOto certify "' I• (On· Ol.><llnt e 0'111,,.H 11 6o!O W. !7th NO. Jl, Cft!• Mo .. , (11/lo<n!t. uf\Oer t~ lie· TtllOUI llrin 1\1.1111 of l'tJlY(lt.llfT Ind fll•I ••kl firm 11 Con'IPOMCI of lh• loll<IW· Ing per-. -• 11•m• In lull t na Plett Ill relldonu I• t> lollowt. JOl1n E. C•rr, lijl We>tcll!I Dt., Mo •· New""'1 ll••tn. Cellh>tnl1. Doled M•Y 17, lt/1 JMn E, C••r Sit!• O! Ct lltor11le, Oronge (<111111" On Ml~ 21, 1'71 btlO•e me, 1 No!Mv Public In •ncl l<lf ••Id Stele, 1>erMmtliV •"""''"' Joton E. C11r k~O\O/n lo me •o i.. tilt Pll'"OOll whose n1me !o tu1>•crl1>td lo 1he w1thl11 ln11rumen1 end ''""°"'lt!!Yt<l nt •~t<ultd "'' l •mc. (OFFICI AL ~E ... l) Jos1<1h E. Ptvls Noterv P11bl!c. C•tllornl• Prlndp1I Ollie• In Ot1noe Ceunh Mv Commlu !on E~P•fl"I Jur.e 1!, 1~1' Publl•l'ltd Or•n;e Coell O•llW !>ll~t. M•¥ 11 end J une :I, ID, 17, If/I lllJ I\ LEGAL NOTICE ,,_ CERTIF!C.llTE OF I USU.ll!SS l'ICTtT10U~ NAME The undU>lgn!'(I dO•• ce•OIV I~ [• "' ... du<linv • t>Usineu et 4l00 C•m~u• D•lve, Sulle 180. N""'"""' 8t~t11. C•lllornl•. uncl-tr lh~ litlll•O•ll ll•m n•mo o1 Ill POLAR MAlE SALES tll fliE IEM· PORIUM •nd the! s•ld hTm " (Om- ro~d cl tn~ rollowin; 1>er.on. -..e n1mt In lull •n<I Pl6't ol re••donce 1, ts tollow' M•me Plemmons. 1'l Ceb•lllo. Co•tt Mo,., Cali!, t l626 Dall!I J~ne t. tY/1 M•me Pl•rnmon~ Sl8!t of Celi!orn!t, O••n!l't CouMy; On Ju"" I, lfll, bt!cre me. • Nola•~ Public ln •nd for ••10 Jl•!e, Pt•>0n•llv a1>Pt6t..:I M•me Plommon• 1<now" 10 n>e lo be Int <>e'"'" w~o•t n~me 11 •ub"rlb· td 10 !hf within ln•l•um•nl end •c~nowledgeo .nt t•ecul•O the ••m•. (OFFIC!l'l SEAL) Motv Btth Merton Norary Publlc·Callt"'nll Pr<r1tlo•I 011ic1 In O'•nve Coun1v Mv CornmTulon E~plrtl A1>rll 9, t97S Publl.n..:1 O<•n11t Coo•I D•ll~ Pllo!, JuM J, 10, \1, 1•. 1'11 l lll·ll •lfumtnl on IHhaU O! BUILDERS 1~ ""'''°" who tXO'CUled tnt wltMn 111· lliSOU RCE$ COll:PORAT10N. • n d iltllmtnl on behtlr of BUILDERS Publl1h1<1 0t1n1M coe11 Deil1 Pllol.l----------------1 M•W 11 end Junt J, 10, 11, ltll 1»:!·11 ---led~td 1o mo lh1I ••Id 8UILOERS RESOURCE!. CORPORATION. • nd 0 RESOURCES CORPOR.llTJON t xeculed •tk~wlf'dgt<I to mt lhll ••ld 8Ull DERS l~e wl!Mn 1 ... 1rumenr "'"flutnl lo u, Bv RE~URCES CORPORATION oJtcul..:I LEGAL NOTJCE L•ws at • rtoolul\on of lh Boord of tilt '"l!hln !nitrument Pwsuenl to 111 BV··J---------------- Olrec1or1. l .,.01 r "' 111 8oe d f ,..,_ WITNESS mw ~1nd tnd offl<i•I H•I. De-:':C1o":. e r u ion r o Cl"llTIF\CITf. OF llUStNE SI P litllP GLUSKEll: • 1WITNE.SS mw ll•nd ena offk!t l ••• r. l'ICTITIOUS NAME No!•fW Public . C•ll!01"•11• lDFFICIAl SEAL) Th, 11nderslgntd "" Url1!V lhtW erT PrlnclP•t Citic• tn Philip GluokeT con<1ucllng " blltln.e" " 7113 F1i,..,l•W l o• AMttlel C01111lv . Noltrw Publ!c·CtlUorn\t Roed, No, J. Co11t fN.••· C11oforn1t, Mv Commlulon EJP1rt1 Prin<loil O!llc1 In ullder the flcflTleus Htm name ol HUI F•b. ll. lflS LOI Anvelu Ceunrv ONE Incl lh•t ••ld firm h comPOltd al s;..,,TE DI' CALIFORNIA ~ SS MV Comm\Hlon Expirtl 1ne tollowlnt ~•Min" W""5e n1me• In full COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES J Ftb. ZI. 1'75 tncl Pl•ct • ol tt1IO't11Ct 1r1 t• tollow>: On lllll ?•th dev of MITC~, 1971, bt!Ott ST ATE OF CALll'ORNIA I W. l. lilggln, lit t n v • t n e I l l SS. Pesedtne , C1llt.; JMn H. Sllvtr. 3'd mt, lhe ul'!ll!rslgned, 1 Nolory P ublic In COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES I Slrlu• Drive, Huntington Beech. Ctlll,; -'d lot ••Id CeunlV •nd $!••e, ~•ICH'•llv On 11>1• '"" dev "' M&r(ll. 1971. btforo RobtrT H, Sliver. 51' l ido $1nd, il1>Ptlr..:I HAROLD Pll51(ALN, JR., FM, !tit unclerilgntd, a NC11rY Public In Naw<>orl l'!tnth, Clllf. '·"°"'n to mt lo be lhe Presldenl of ind !or ,..Id CoYnlv 1nd Sle!e, per...,,,.11~ OaTt<l Mtv 2~. 1911, C,,6-BLCION OF CALI FORNIA. !ht Cot· •PP"••ed HAROLO PILSKALN, JR., W l . lilogln -•!Ion 11\et •~<-Cultd Ille within In· known 10 mt to bt the Presldonl of Joh'I H. Sllvtt 1tr11ment, k-11 lo mt JO be !ht ""'""" O BLETON OF CALIFORNIA the car. Rot:>ert f1. Sliver who t•l.'<:ul•a lh• wl!Mn ln>lrumo'll on 1 1 1 • ''". 1 ' 1 1 , • 1 ' 1 bPh I! of CABLETON OF (AllFORNlA., poritl On n• t~t<ultd 1he W '" n· 511!t ol II lotn •• ~01 .,ng• e~ eun y: " Id olrumenl, known lo m• 10 be 111• ""'""" On Mev 1!. 1911, before "''" • Nol•'V end .o;knowl..:111..:I to ma •~•I •1 whe •~e<;lllea mt ... 11hln ln5!•um•nt on Public In •nd !or ••ia 5!1!•. D"'•onellW CABELTON OF CALIFORNIA ••tcuted bthelf ol CABLE TON OF CALIFORNIA, ~PP•••e<I W. l . Higgin. Jenn H. Sllv•r 11n~ !ti• wl1Mln !"11fumenl 1>u.,u11nt lo II• BV· •nd eck-ledged to mt lh•I ..,.Id Rubert H. Sl!vt r ~nown lo m• ro be lh• litWI or I ruolutlon o! 111 Board OI CABLElDN OF CAl lFORNl.O. e•Kult<I <>trion• wllo•• "•meo Are aub>crlb<!d fO Dlrtclor1. '"''' 1111 11 1 _.,100 WITNESS my hi nd •"d ol!lcl•I itt!. t~ w I n '" rumoni PU"uen o • !ht wlln n norrum•n .,,,, •• riow e 9e PHILIP GLVSICER BV·Lt1n or I reii<>lu Hon ol 111 Boord ol lh~Y ••ICUled th• 11me. Not•rw Public. CAll!ornl1 D~•lc._;~rESs mv h•nd •nd o!fki1! ••ti. (Ol'FIC~~v!E~~l~btn Prlnc!o•I O!tlct In fOFFtCIAl SEAL) Nol•rv Public· Ca!<tornit LO\ A119t1e1 Countv Philip Glu•k•r Prlncloll O!llt• In Mv Comml•lk>n E•Plre1 Noltrv Public.Ctllto•nlt lo• Angelt• Countv Feb. 11, ltl~ Prlnc:lp1I Olflce In MY CommlnlDl! E•o!•tl 911S·OC lo• •nvele1 Ceunrv Avg, 11, 191! P ubl!1hed 011not Coeol D•1" Piie•, Mv Commiulon E•<1lrt1 ,.,11.,,, Wll•on a. ~tortt • .r.ttorntYI June J. HI, 17, 1~. 1!'1 IJl!..ll Fob. ;za, 1Yl5 1n1 Al!tnll<: Avonuo LEGAL ~OTICE tUJ-0~ Loni B11c~. C11llo•ni1. 94lHI P.,tillv.ed O••n;e coa11 D•il• Pilot, J une ~. )0, 11, l~. 1911 llll·11 Publ•lhtd O•Anv• Coell Dtllv Polot. June ], 10. 11. 1•, 1911 ll19·11 LEGAL NOTICE ,,,,.. CERTIFICATE OF BUSINESS FICTITIOUS NAME Tnt undo.,IOntd °"'"' <••!\Iv ne I• con du.:t.ng • 11u.1 ..... ., 34Jl V•• OPOt!O, Newl>Of• ee1c~. CoHlo•n•a. una .. 1h• he li!ious l!rm •10me ot OE LUZ 11..._N(HQ~ UNIT NO. 161 OE lU1 RA.NCliDS UNIT NO. !9 end !he! ... ,,, 11rrn •) Con">Po•ed (II tne 1011ow•n9 oe•>On, wno>e n•n•• in lull and pl.w;e ol 1r•iaonct i. •• 1011.,..., R<>l>erl W. M•cM111011, C.tnf<tl P•rtn... 3432 Vi• 01>11tt<1, NewPDfl B•tch 91"'60. D•led M•• !O, 1'11 Rot>••• w. MtCM•hon Stat• al C•litornl•. DT•nve (ounl~; On M•• 10. 1911, betoro me. • No!1rv Public In .,.a !or 11id ~1ale, 1>•r.oon111v IP(le••ed R<>t>ert W. MecMonon ~nown lo me 10 bo Tho 1>tt<0n who~• ntme ii 1ub1CrlbOd 1o tho w\lhln ;n>l•urnen! •nd etOnowled~•d he e•rcuted !he ••m•. iOFFICIA.L SE•ll G""' V, Cnrhl!n}•n No1MY Publ lc•Cel1lor11lo Prlnci1>ol OIHce I~ Or•noo Coun•1 MY Comml.,lon E•Pl•rl M1•Ch 1'. 1'1~ Pu~!l•hrd O'•<iQe CO~•! D•llW Piiot, LJne 10, II,?• eno July 1, 19!1 lo.16-11 LEGAL NOTICE P·•lUl CElTlFlCA.TIE OF BUS INESS, F tCT ITIOV~ NAM E T~t undtr,.~nf'd dO"~ t••ll!v h• h ton ducting e bv~ln•" .i o~IJ W•'""' •v• , HunllnQton B••ch. Celi!o•n••· u~a•r !h~ LEGAL Nf'TICE ti~lll •ou• l"m ~•m• o! CJtl'ITlll !'I CflTl •ICATE OF I USI Nl!S$ LEGAL NOTICE UESTMENTS •ncl lhol ~81d lotm •• CO•n l'ICTIT!OUS FIRM NAME l ----::::::::_.::.::.--=:~--1--------;:;;;;;-------1PO•ed 01 m• tollow•no """~n ,,,,.~.,·· TIM-unO'.,•l~ntd dO nertbY cerlltw thtl 1'·•1007 "'"'t In 1~11 •nd nlac• or r•1•Cfnc• " •I -•'e conduclln~ 1 SotCltllV Whol•••lro. LEGAL l<IOTICE AMENOMINT TD CERTIFICATIE: OF tollow" Rtllll ~ncl Rubber Sttmo b~1lr.e11 (es Co-NEWPORT·MESA UNll'll"O BUSINESS l•roY J01•on ltMarl, 16101 Ml . ~ttlntrl) ti "601 De\rtY CI' CI e • FICTITIOUS N ... MIE (•c~umo Cl•~le. FaontM" V•llty, C•hl. W!•lmln1lot. C11U. f'1Ul, """'' lh1 Uc· S(HOOl DIS TlllCT T~e unde .. lgna<I do cedl!w Iha! !htY ••• Dllt d Mty 21, 1911 llllOltl lirm Mm! of E.H.M. ~tlt1 encl Notice \nvlll~I l id• COnO'UC!!nt t b111lntn ti ti• E85I IC11tlla lt•OV Jo,.Dh Lt nh••I St•~lce •o>d Ille! •~kl fl•m "comoo>t d of NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV'EN lilt! ttlt Avenue, ... ~•htlrn. C•lllcrnl1, Yf'>dtr !~• Sl•!t or C~lllornlA, Dranvo C01111tv: I~ tollowlrg ""'"on•. wf>Olot 'ltm!• In lull Boa•d of Ed..,.;e!lon o1 "'" N...,.Po•t·Me1e 11c111lou1 firm ntme cl WESTPOP.l-On M•Y 71, 1tn. ~!or~ mt, • N11M,... '"" PllCe el rt•IOcnc~ i re•• toUowJ, te-Uni!!~ S<hool Oiiltlcl "' Orin~ County, APARTMENT tiOME CO, 1 limited Public 1n ond 1or •••a S!llt , 1>er50nell• wl!· C1Ul01nl1, will receive stl\a<I bids UP lo Pot!"r'\lllo, •nd lhll s•ld !iTm I• com• """""''" Lrro• .Jo,.ph L•"~••J ~llG ... n !o Edw..,.d M. Mell~ol. 1697 Oelr1w Cit· 1:00 A.M. on 11'1• 1111 elev"' JulY, 1971, II PO>a<I ot lht !otiowong, mo lo be The ot r>On w~o•e n•me '• f ie, WtstmJnllt•. C•ll!. ?'16.!l Ille office of 1t ld Scl'>OOI Ol•trl<T. 1<><-1!td WtllPD" 1iom1 Bu1ldt r!. lnc . 9U sub,.rlb..:I to me w11~1n ln•l•um•n! en<l P•lrlcl• A. Mlll~or, 16'1 Ctl1•~ C.r· At 11s1 PlectnUe ... venue, Co•!• Mr,., E ••I ICnlelle Avtnut. A n • ~ • i m ' ac•...,w1..ioed he e•etu!ed !ht ••mt . cit, Wtllmln""· Cllll. f2"8l (•lllornlo, a! whlcll !Im• ttid Dlds will b• Cell!o•nle. (OFFICIAL 5EAll 011..:1 APdl ii. !tll ouC!lclv 0<>en..:I •'10' reod tor: BulldetS lte.ou"e• CorPo•1tion, ~1~1 M..._11.Y A. SCHll.OEOE'1 Edw••d H. M1llhol CANNED C.OOOS AND SUPPLIES Wt1t C,nluty 8ovltvtrd, Los Angel••· Pe1tic1e A Mollhot All bid• 8,, to be in eccord•nce with Calitorn1n 900•~. STATE OF CAL IF OllNI..._, [.,.,,.jli/on1. l~•!•utllons •nd SPecillcollon• Cebl,tcn o! Ctlllorn!o, 150 l'!Trd 11.otd. COUNTY OF OR ... NGE W!'tlcll art now on lilt In l~o of!lco ol !ht Cor~I Gable>. f'lor<do lll ll. On April 11. 1911. btlort me, I Net••~ PurCl>•ilng Agenr ct ,~;a School Di"•l<I. Oettd: Morch ?•. 1911 r ubli< In And IDT ••Id 5111t, P•t5<1nOllV WE5TPOll:T !"OM[ l'!UILD[ll.S, M>o~artd Edw•rd H. Mellncr ind Po!rlcl• USI Pl1c1n!lt A1t1nue, Co•lo MeJt. , •• , Coll!orni•. ,. A. M1111101 known 10 mt lo be 111r Ptt1<>•,. Eac~ bldorr mu•! submi! 1 ll!d dtPO>ll 8• Ooen 11.i<~b<!ll, '"ho•• nom t • •ro •ubHnbed lo the wllhln in the '"'"' ot • ,.,lilied ,,.. c••nle•'~ Prt1lden! ln•!rumon!. 100 •tknowtdVtd 1& mo 1hat Ch.Ck or • b\d bond ..,1101 10 !lvo perc!'I! aUllDE.11S RESOURCES COll:P· l~ey t~!'CU!ed rho •ame. ORATION Wl!ne1J my hand one! 1e1!. (J'•) ot r~t '"""'"' °' !ht bid, mid• av Jtm•• E. R<>dv111. tOFFICl•l SEA.LI Pt•oble lo !he order of Ille Now Porl·Mt •• Viet P•uidt nt Elol,. M. ()ougl11 Unllled $choot Obtrl(!. A P•rlorm1nco c-.8L[TON OF CALIFORNIA No•orv Publlc·C&lilor~i• Bono mew t>t te<lulred •• "'' dlKtollon of llv lto•old PUSl<t ln, Jr .• Prl11<lpi l Qlllt• tn lht Dl•ld(l, In rt>t euent ol lll!ure to Pr~Jidenl Counlv o! O•o,,g• rnT•r Into sucn conl••t!, !ht rvn sum ~TATf_ Of' CALlFORN!A 1 MV [omm1511on E:~1>l•e1 '"e•Nlf will bt lodel•td lo ••Id S.CllOCll I SS, APrll )9, 197' Ol•!rld of Orange Ce>unlv. COUN TY OF LOS AN GELES I !IU oc No blddtr mtv wll~ProYI' Iii• bid lo• • On 1hll 10Th dev or M•rth. ttn . ~lore Pubtl lhed Dr onet Coe1t Oe<I• 1>olot Pt•lod "' torlv·fi.,. f'-Sl ~1v1 1!llf lho mt, !no undrn•t n..:1. • Nol••Y Publlc ;,, Ju,.. J. 10. II. ;o1, 1911 lll0-11 cal• 1t1 •or me -n•n• '""'"""· end for ••lO Coun1Y 1nd 51ttt. 11e-.onallr -------·----LEGAL NOTICE The Bo~rd o! Educallon ol "'' N•weorl· •oPOa•td DEA" R!Cit!lEll. ~nown •o "'~ Me•& Unillf'd Sd>«tl Ol$!1lel 11•t1•t1 11\t to bt th• Ptrs1aon1 cl WESTPORT HOME «oh! lo ,.,_,,, onv nt ell bld•. i ncl ""' BUILDERS. !NC , 1nr co•P0•1llon lh~I ----------------nt ce.,•ruY t ccto1 The !ow••' bid, ind To e..-•cv!ed ll>f wl!~l" ln•!'"'"""t. k1111wn 10 P-41lll v ~·ve """' '"'o•mall ly "' lrrtgu11r11w in n•t to IH '"' Person w~o t•tcu•ed mo CElltTIFIC.llT' OF COltPDll!A.TIOl<I •• , b•<! •KOi"'"· Wl1hln ln!l•U•• .. nl on bthlll 0 ' OD!l<IG BUSI NESS UHOllll Oelt<l JU,., I, 1911 WESTPORT HOM[ flUfLOE~S. IN(. FICT ITIOUS NA.ME NEWPQ<IT ·MESA UNl flEO i nd •t knowle<!Qed 10 me 1~11 31•d "THE UNOEt:l~lGNEO CD11POA•~l0~ SCHOOL O!SIRICT WE~TPOA:.I HOME BUILDE RS. INC."' f'IQtt n1,.b¥ C•tllh lht! II h conau<I nQ • 1 n• O••~q• CouM~. C•l!tnrnoo t<ultd tnt wolhln '"''"'mt nl PU••u~nl ro l•int11I ~ ...... l>uS••eU o• '"°1 Boll• P.y t>Ot:IOIH'r' HA.AVEY Fl~HEll: ,,, ll•·llWI er I resoluT•On of lb 80•1d O! 1o venue, Wr>lmttlll~" c1111;£"r':i Fu;'/;{ Purt~e"nQ Agenl o"eclofl. tn• llc!lllou• f;rm n•m• 01 ~HI 100 WllNES5 ,.,, ~""" •nd olticlel 1'el, ~y MOll:.fUAt:IY encl ln1! lh• "•m•"' p ,... ~ I ·1 iOfflCIA.l SEAL) ••la <Cfj>OtAl1on •nd "' prlf1<1P•I Pitt•"' v 11, .. td v••not Co•>I Dli 1 ~· 01. Philip Glu••tr · "'!"'" h 01 follow' Junt IO •ncl Junt 11' lnl l-"l l·ll Nolorv Public CAli•OT~i• WEST MI N S T E It MEMOlllA.l j----------------"OllT"ARY ~nd C.All:OEtl Gll:.O"E PrJnolP•I Of!lt• In " LEGAL NOTICE l o• A'lv•I•• coun1v CHAPEL. 7IOI l ol1• AW e " U • • Mv (""'mluoon E~o1ru we1!mi111tet. Ce111.,.nlo. 1----------------F•b 18, 197~ Dtt..:I· Ju'I• 1, ltll NEWPOt:IT MESA N FIED STATE OF CALIFORNIA i1011r • Public. Cftli!orn11 Prln,IPll ()lh't In Or~n~~ Coun!Y My Comm•5'<0M E•Plrl• s...,1em1J>.r ?O, 1911 P uhll\h•d OtanQO Co8'1 0••1¥ P1lo•. Ml>' '7 •nd Junt J, 10, 17, n11 1'1111 LEGAL NOTICE F·1004 ST.lTEMENT OF Al.lNOONMEMT OJ" USE DI' FiCTlf!OUS IUS!N l!SS NIMI! lhe !o!low•~g P'""''" hove 1bondone<I lh• u~e O! lhO hclitlou• bu1ln•U nemo ELDARHEN COMPANY ~' 11 H1•bot lil•nd, NtWPQtl B••i;!\, C~lilOf"nl• '1MO Tn• •ic•i!•<)U• bu1I•••} nom• '''""ea !n ol>ov• wa• llled In O<•n1e Ceunlw on "''1 10, Jill Htnrw $cll••'tr. J•. 11 HArbo< l•l•nP. Newpo•l ae•rh. C•!Olo•"I~ t761'J E 1~a B S<h••l•t. 11 H••DO• 1!!1'10'. tit,~P(l/I Beoch, (oll!o•n·~ 9]1160 D••~I· S<h••I"' Ounl~P. !l ..... ,~. hl•!>'l, tlowP(lrt "'"'"' C~1Uo111lo tlMiO ln" llu~"'" .,.,~i to<>duc"d 111 • COP8r!n•••h•~ . 51g•od ". """,...., 91 ll·OC Pu~lr1h•d o-.,,.,. <0.011 111•1Y Pdn• Jun• ID. I!, 11 •"d Jul• I. 19/1 1'll 11 "' LEGAL NOTICE F·40U F!(llTIOUS BUS!toESS NAME STATEMIEl<IT fQllQwln9 ""''°" " doing bu1lne•I . . . •• •Mission~ Shapes lJp ·Cu,rvy Lynda Third Beauty for IMF By VERNON SL'OTT HOLLYWOOD IUPI) -It i~ a television maxi1n, women·s lib notwllh:.taoding, thal 1£ you're a feminine lead in a series and not beautiful then you'd better be a very funny lody. Movies have abandoned the· beautiful, shapely fe1nale for lhc most part in the nustaken belief :ln actJ"ess cannot be talented and extraordinarily pretty at one and the san1e li1nc. /\ beautiful, non .funny, ad· dit1on lo lrlevision this fall "'ill be Lynda Day peorge. seen briefly this year in "The Silent F'orce," as a regular member of the •·Jl.iission: Jmpos.slble" cus\. She is the third bci1ury to grace the :.how . JI c r predecessors \~ere 13tirbo.ra Bain and LfslJe \\'arren . L,ynda is ::111 exponent or 1he beautirul. \\'ell·rounded school of attresscs_ M(l reovcr ~he is <iWare that 1! she'd been Mrn ho1nely the ch<.1nces c)f hrr joining the CBS series would be nil. "l"d like lO lhink J \\IL!. hired fur rny :octi11g abllil.> :• Lyndt1 snid in her clue dressing ruO!Jl al Paran1ounl Studio5. "But there are \ ery few \1ays to use a girl in an aet1(1tl or adventure s<'l'l<'S. So I f{'t>I flattered that the producers \\'ant to use my physical ap- pearance Lo Its best v:1ntagc. .. au- "\~'hat good does being pre!· Iv or hav ing a good figure do a !i1rl if i! 's not put to good usi''! "] know 1'111 1101 the most beautiful girl in the "'orld. Far frorn it. But too n1a11y girls. especially ~ctresses, aren't making an asset of their natural appearance." ",\1i1~1Dn: lmpossi hle·· v,ilJ not re~lril·t Lynda's rol e to stenic: baekground. She ~\·ill play a eos· inctolog~. spel'ializing in dii;guiscs tiJld 1nakeup for the undt·rcovrr espionage i;:roup <'0111 prised rf. Peter Craves. Greg f.1orris and Peter Lupus. TV DAILY LOG . Off.screen Lynda is the \l'i re or actor Chris George v•ho starred in "Hal Patrol'' and the ~hort ·Jivcd "The 1111- rnortal." She 1~ a native or 1'exas ISan M~rcos J and a health burr Thursday Evening JUNE 17 6:00 0 Bil Ntws ~rry Ounp~y. (3) A8C News Re150nt1, Smil~. 0 KHBC News t om S n,der. O The Allt:11 SlloW Guesb ate Bud dt G1eco, Dayton Allen 1nd Barbara Nichols. 0 Sir O'Cb:' Mofle: ('C) ('JOI "Reqllitm lor 1 Ster•! AJent" (•d venh111) '6>--Stew1rt Granier, Dan. irla Biall!;hi. Pdt1 Van ['ftt Gecr11a Moll. hi [nf!ish actventurtr is called on by the Amt1ic1n Secrel SeMc• in T•ni:i1r la t1i:ht an entm, spy ntl· war~. He i.aves ttte Ill e of 1 lady pho!oer•phtr·•gent dter her partner has been murdered by 1 formet war criminal who ha~ betn elud1nii his pursuers ~nee the wa r. 0 I Sjly m The rlinblontl W Maw-it: (21/1hr) "SMKttnl fort~ (drama) '41 -Gary Cooper, Ward Bond, Joan Leslie. tD • Timt !or John /th1rtit'1 Pad €[i} r1•1r family al Notic:iero 34 a;) De1t!t V1lley 01y1 CB l • Hoi1 f11niliar to11 Conwt!o ffi Nrwi Ji m Haw!ho1ne. t>:lO (l ) News Bill tludd1. (6) Tllllh or ~nxqllf!nru fi/CBS Ntws Wattti Cronkite. (l2l NBC Nnrs. Oayid Brinkley. m T~t Fl)'in1 Nvn ID ttoc11epod11 Lodtt ml Seltdtd Fllfll/Music1le m The Olstr1 Repor1 (ETBA CD Nm 7:00 If) CBS ~ Wall er Cro11~1te. 0 m NBC N1ws D1Yld Brinkley. (Jl To Tell lht Truth O Whirs My Line? [@ Old; Van Oyk1 m l l0tt Liie)' ({) Dr•1ntt ID I i!f¢1Ak I Clilfdrt~ pf 1111 World Dinny K1y1. UHIC[f's amb1wdor lo tht children of !ht world, hosts 8.30 0 l}.9.1 ffi Ironside (R) "The Quin. cuot." lmn~Me setk~ 1 miss1n1: member of 1 !r+o of folk singer~ who h1Ye a penc.han1 for halluclnalory drugs. IJ HYPO 0 @@ m Bewiw.d (R) "Sa· mantlJa's P~ Wadoc~ ... Samantha re)!CU the 1d't1nces of a lo1mei warlock boyfriend wl!o tur"s him· :sell into 1 dOf, W Dnid rr0$I S'-tuests i re Author Jud1t/I V101st. 1u!hor l~ai: ~1rnov, and s1n~r Kuen Wyman. @ Olympic Balint ID HCT P1111tou1e "B1ogr1phy: Jul· •us Caesar.~ A lw{J ~our BBC Ptesen· talion of lhe Shakesp~arean lrRgedy, featuring M1u11ce D·n~am as t~e During Juneh she delvi:d into her pllrse to produce a plastic b;ig filled \Vi!h a dozen dff· feri;nt. colored c a p s u ! cs, tablets and pills. "Vitamins and food sup- plements," she explained. Lynda gulps down 40 scpar· a1c pills with each meal. She credits lhe organic vit::in1ins for her unfailing good health and energ,v . "I've even converted Chris lo taking as many vitarn1ns as I do ." Lynda conc luded. "Peter Lupus is a great believrr 1n vilam1ns, too .. and look 111hat they 've done for him." Dave to lJo~l Roman gener1I who is be!ra~ed by his ftiend Brutus. partrayed by Frank fmlay. fdl'!ard Woodl'lard 1~ Cassius and Robert Stephens is llOLLY\VOOD (UPI) Marc Ao!hooy. D:.ivc Garro\\· av v,•i ll be star· E!:)P•ttffnfe>rllvin1 hr1 s~ uf ···The CBS Newcomers." a one·huur co.111· 9:00 1f)(al CBS T11ursd•Y MOYit: (Cl Cd)·l':Jriely Sl'l"ICS that will be (2h1) "Fim to Fi11.ht" (d1ama) '67-;i sumincr rcpJ;icemcr1l (JIJ Chad ['l!rel1. Marilyn Ch:!vin. Dean CBS for Carol Burnett's shO\\', lagger. Bobby Troup, Cla11de A~m1, 10·1 1 p.n1. t.·londays, starting fiene H!!C~man. James Btsl, Norman JlJly 12. Alden. A Marine se1gea11t laces his I ;;--;;;;;;;;;;;;_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I ~reate~t lest al heroism 1f1er he Ii h~s W()ll 1he Cons1essmnal Medal ol HoOQI O Jtw; ruritiv• 0 (.3Jl6 )(IlMakt Room for Gtinild1ddy !R> "Women o! !he Wo1ld. Unite''' A ttDmen·s lrtedom Ad~111 il.1>-J ... U.U-Cl\1\dron 7Sc 1dva<:ale (Jackie Jo~eoh) d~m1nds FIRS T RUN Don Kno!h Iha\ Dan"Y d1op 11! ro~es about ti· "HOW TO FR o>.ME A FJCC" fGI mal!s. Plu• "ONE MORIE TllAIN TO ROI" CGI €E) Cfl1llen21 Will\ George Po~~nl ai) [J Pee.ado de Sofia l;(:":'~';';';';';-;';·;";';·";·;·;';';'";";";~ll 9:30 O @J rn Ad1111·IZ (R) "M1~nr Chr!d" In the m1d1t ct a bus1 al· lernoon. Ollite1s Malloy and Reed ~· m •n~iously search lor • missin1 rjiild l 0 0 (3Jf6)CiJ01n August (R) ""Wh0> 1-. '"°"""' '"'" D'" I Au~o~t 1e1U">ts to actePI evidence placing an old high sthool 1oo!b~ll 1 buddy among the prime ~uspects i~ !he murde1 of a young 'llt'Dman. 0 B1i:te1 W11d Nm €!!) Musit1!e/Pntor's Ont: @II U Ciuz cit M1riu Cr11u1 CI!)TBA '" 1ntern1tional tribu!e !D the ere· lO:OO 0 :@ €0 Dean Marti" (~) Oein's a11w1ty of )'DUn( people 1n lh1 U.S 1 M ~ 1 R th e · and other countries. 11ue;1; aie ero o t . u u.u1, P1ul I ynde tnd liay Med!Ofd. EI!) Quist lht Utin1 Wo1d O Ntwi g) A11relito1 Hrrro1 0 Mo'ile: "S~k Hl!ltt1n ind a!} Si Ho F~trlt Tu lht P11rt of Death" (my~tery) ·4•- CD MOTie '•mt 61:.il Ralhbone. 7:30 IJ (t /ramllr Alf1ir ~R) .lody iii ID Ht"' P111n1m/l 1~hman lhul!~ when I pro 1°'?1bal1 Qo~rtet· 10:30 l l l Rowndt1blt bJc~ (l1try P•n"tll) mvi!u h•m lt! IL:~;ii~iiiiiiiiii::..;;~~:::.:.J l!innrf, but hrs hero turns out la 0 Mol'l•: uPrKl1c.i!ly Tours" (com. edy) ·~'-ClaYdttl • Colbtrl, frtd '11ve !&ults. Mar.Muu11. 0 l[9J aJ flip '#illOll {R) Joe Na- m11h, Abbey L1nrol". Johnoy Mathis f6l Minllll Dillon i nd Geor2e Ctr1in guest. 0 m Thl1 ls Your Lile Hos! R1lph yor11n11 r n .. 'I JUDI !(AYE I EAUl'f ~ALON, ):\S Poln1'Ttln, Coro"' dfl Mar Wt'\lmln1!or Mtm0rl•! Morl~f'"Y SCHOOL DUTR~C~ ss. •ncl Gttdon Grovt C~1ool tool!<t !nvlllnt 110'• COUrlTY OF LOS A.NGflES I llOBEl!T OWENS. NOTICE IS 1-iEllESY GIVEN lh•I IM On lh111~th d•Y O! Mir(!\, It/I, b<!lott 0 • · · c •"•• Sloow Du,·• ••d Edwards ~~rpnsu The Carp~nlers. H,niel Ne l50n, and Milt Kamen Q) New. Btll Jottns. 1uesl. ED Tht Brain (R) ! S<'vr•erv Boaro o! Educallon at the NtwPOrl·Mt~I m•, In~ vnde•~ivned. • No!lrv PuCl<c In !IT ... TE OF CALIFORNIA U'llflld s,hool Olstrlcl of Or~nQe County, end !or 1eld Ccvn!v ~no S1•!0, Pf'•>0n•llv COUl<ITY OF LOS ANGELE~ I~ Co!U0tnl1, wlll t•t•IV! 5t&lf'<I bid• up lo ll>Pttred J•MES E. II.ODGE RS. ~nown 10 D" 1~11 1111 div ol JuM. A.O. lt11, 11:00 •IA. on !ht 11111 O•• at June, !911, me To ~ •~• ~le• P•tsldtnl ot ""l"'t me. • Nortrv P ublic l'I •~d tor •I l~e <Jllict o! 58 ,d School Dl•!rOct. BUILDERS 11 £I 0 U II CE~ COii 1eld Sle!t. """""-'I• ~Pllt&•..:1 R<ltlt.rl kKlled 11 Ill' Plecen!it Avenue. C011e POl ATION, l~t <O•P<>r8!1nn !~el IO:•tt U1!d Ow.,.,. known lo m1 IC be flit St<;rtle•w M••~· Ct lilnr"lt. •I whkh time ttld bld1 !~t wllhln ln•ltum!nt. ~nown to m• to be al lht corp<l'tlion l~tl ••K~ltd 111• will ~ Publltl~ ool'l..:I tnd ••id tor; 1~ ptr>Oll who ••r<U!ed !ht w•lhln •n ,.1111111 lnllrumtnl on btll•ll of !hi car· LllllARY F U A to ITU ,It E ANO •trument on l>Ph•H <>I 8UILDEll:~ -Ilion ""''tin nAmtd, t nd •c~nowle<lf· $1iElVINC. RESOURCES CDRPORA.TION, l 'ld M lo mt 1htl weft <otPottllon UIKW1td AH bid• ert to M '" t«M°"ntt wlth tcknowl-•O lo m• me+ stld BUILOEll~ M•r'IV~ L. Lonom, 1001 l rv•n~ •v•"'I•• Ntw,,.,rl lle~th Th•• bo•lntt> •l beln'f (Ond10tled by tn lncl'Yidu~I $09no..O· M~rllvn l -L1nurn "T~" ,1,1 • .,,ent "1..; wol~ t~• Coun•v Clor• ol D•An~ C0<o11tv on r.l~•th 1S, 1'1! IEVERL Y J . M/1000)( Ou•ulv Cou'l!V·Clt•~ P~bfi•h..:I O••nlle Co•>I Doil¥ P+!ol. M6v 11 ~110' JU"" J, 10. II, 1911 •J06.11 ""11mt. Con<1IT1on\. lnlhuC!I-ond ~illctllon• RE SOURCE~ COll:PO~ATION •x•cu!t<I WITNESS m• hind •I'd lt•I. -lei\ 8,. ...,... on Ille In ll'lt ofllct o1 flit tilt wllhln in1trum•11! ou<111•11I lo 11• 9.,. LEGAL NOTICE (OFFICIAL SEAL ) PurCl>•olng •9enl of w id kh<tol O!slti<I. l twl at • r11o0tullon pf lh 8 01ro of M;c••1• I'. V•rolt !ISi P loc:t nll• Avenu~ CCIII Mt11, Dlr..clo"'. J ------~ NoletV Publlc-C•lllotnit Ceiltornli . WITNESS mv ~Ind Ind o!llCl•I 1181. llAlt ll" P rlroc:lPl l Ol!lct 111 Eo<ll ll•d<!er m1r1t Jul)mil 1 b•O' llti>mll (OFFICIAL SEAll SUPEltlOJI: COURT OP: THlr Los All9t111 Counlv ill lht lorm "' • Clflllltd or Cl!hltr'1 PhlllD GIU>kt r ST ... TE OF C.lllFOt:l:l<l1A ,.Ot:I: Mv Commlulon ExPl•tl cl\Kk or 1 bid bl1nO' IOOU•I 10 llvi ~cent N~lttY Pubflt·C&l!lorn1• THE COUNTY OF ORANGE . J ul• 1), 1'1l IS ... ) "' 11\e ltnOullt "' Ille bid. mode Prlnclp1I DUl<t In N•. ,6-4'11" .UCMALT•ll, NEMl"ll, l'll"lOI oeveblt IC"'"-ordtr of Ille NtWl>"'l·M"-•I l <ll Angelt J Caontv NOT ICE 01' HEAlltNG PETITION FDR • IAYtTCH, A.,.,1. Unllla<I ~chool Dl•"l<I, ..,, Pe•IOTm9nct /o\W Commlu lon EapltH 0 11:01!'11 OlltlE(TING COl"VEYANCE 7'l WHI S.V.nlh S1•"' Bond mtv tit reQlll•..:1 11 lht dll<rtllcn el F~I>. 1!, 191S OF ~ER1DNA.!,. PROPERTY SOLO Oto Y., An""''' C1l11or"n!1 ttfl1 tht 0111rld. In !f>t '"""' ot llllurt le ~T .... TE DI' CALIFORto lA CONTt:l.llCT I Y DECEDENT A"'"'.... lttbtr"I C. Ctllltft !nllr lnlQ such (<lnlrKI, th• full •um ~1. I" I~• Mt lll• o! 11\t E>IAI• of GEORGE . tUJ.OC lhertof will tw totltlllld le illO $dlOC! COUNTY OF l DS ""NGE lE$ LOWELL BA.KEii. Jiit .. tkt GEOltGE L. 0 (])(j) tl) ! iJl(iAk !Torn Jones ![) C.d..i1 dr An1uslias i nd Som• f1ncy DnUIO Tom looes welcomes U!).11ct, Eloise lJ:OO f) Cf) al K11n l1ws •nd Gilbert O'S11lliw1n for I 0 @) a;) H11r1 musiut ho\Jr of tltRanoe. (61 De1tll Y1llty O.rs D OO fENtwi m Movie: "Tht Crlt1 Dl1" (drtrn1) '!i7-Rid1atd B11ah1r1, Simone SI· (!J 811\ Ill'• Cloc:t Q MilliO!t S Mtwlt: (C) {2111) "'ttp· leln Fm111 C.dll1~ l•d~entu11) '47- lymne f'owtr, Je•n Pttm, Ce511 Roml!ID. An 0Uice1 trom Sa•in :1ttk1 l1mt i nd fortune in lhf New World durine tile Inquisition i nd the utnquut of Muica. Bail!d on S1mutl Sh1ll1b1111r's llO'lel. ll:JO 0 ({) Mtri 'rilfin m Trdl • Con-rutnw 0 (lij} al Johnny C•IWll tI:l Cln11111 30 0 ~) (j) CE Dick C1ntt Im l'Ttlnitft Miwit ·~ublllt>ed Or•nlt (0111 Dt ltl" Pflel, Ololrkl of Orengo Countv, On !hll 10!11 dtv al Mir<~. 1971, befott ll""KER, JR_, e~t GEORGE. fl""l(ffl.. JR · Juf'e 11, 11 tnd Jvlw 1, 1. 1'71 1171·11. No blddtr mi w w\lhd••w ~1, bid lor 0 mf . !ti• undtrtl111f'd, • Noftrv "ubllc In ••• GEORGE SAKER, •~• G. l BALBOA :::::::.:.:.:.:..:c:cco'-::-=:::::::----"',lod ol !Qrlv·!lve IU I 01¥1 '"''!ht Incl IOt ••Id CounTv •"" 51•11· l>efMlnlllW 8AK£!1, Jll, ·~· G. BAl(E llt. JR •• ,._ .. ,,,, ..... .i,u MuJiul LEGAL NOTTCE dllt 1tl IO• l~t 01>tnlnv 111creol t PPt!trl!I liARDLO Pll$KALN, .JR .. DK•&•""· ~ a:JTaA Tile 8 0.,d al Educ•llon of mf Ntwe<>rl· known to m1 to be The Pro11d1111 of NOTICE IS kEREBY GIVEN lh~T 673 ..... -------,;-:=;-------JMe•• Unll!f'd Sd>ool Ol•l•ICI ·-•v•• ,.._ CABLE TON OF CAltl'ORNIA, Ille cor· ALISON 8AICER . lht EYec~ttf• ot int I 00 0 [I)•. (Rl Wh•• •• ,,,... JZ•l5 O Cotrlll'!Mlli._ lul11tl1 INrd -tV"t T·rnt4 rllf'tl to rlltcl l llV 01 •II f>IOi, ind not <>ort!lon fhtl aae<:uted !ht wl1hln In· t •!t lt of GEOR.GE LOWELL 11.lll;EJI:, : unur "' "' ' •r Ol'fH MOTICI TO ClllDITOllS rfCtSll•llW ecctl>I !hi lowtll bid, lo>d to 1trumenl. kllOWn TO mt lo bt !he -Min JR .. •~• GEOllGE l , B•JCEA:.. Jll: .. ~~• LlntM 11 bllndtd by I anlptf in In DJ! IULIC TRANll'c•r1 wilwi onv 1n1orm•fl1y"' lrrttult•ll, In wt>o nt<ulf'd Ille ... a111n ln11'um•nt on GEORG"-' BA."CE JI:, JR. .• "k• GEORGE •mbush 1 tonily mlJlt rlrl (Mtli1S.11 12;30m All·Nlsftt Show: ..,rantlnlttln ':41 (Sta. tlll "llll \I. · · n• bid lt<:tlvtd bahlll o1 CAB LE TOI" 01' CALIFORNIA.. flAICEll:. 1ke G, L, B•KE JI:. JR,, t~I G. ' 97"" ~ "'1" d .... ~ d 7" I.. ..... 'tllol~e I• Mretw t lwen fP tne Credi~• 'O.IM June 1 ·1111 i nd •c•nowl...:1.,ed lo me 111•1 said 9AICER. Jll' .• the decMI•"'· h•• !lltd Murpl!y) devotes h1n111lr lo a.rina l .., "" ''t it •r in t( $AM llUSCEMI Tr1n1l1T<lf, wl>OM NEWPOitt.MES.11 UNll'IEO CAllflON OF CAL ll'ORNtA t xtcwled htttln 1 P•lilio~ !or ~n order •ullletlrlng lor his wound and hflptn1him11· "Sw1fll TIM." JL; .. :::'; ... ::::.: ... .::~l~o:•:•;1;•,,;;:::; ~ tdd~f lf Jl60 H1rbot 8!Yd,j SCHOOL Dl$TAICT lht within lnll•um~nl l>U'•utnl lo lb IV· tncl dltK11nO lht E•..cu!rl~ <II file 1111" , UlSDAT c1111 Mftll, C1111nlY al D••fllt, "''' ., or Ol'•llee Couniv. Co!llornlt Low• ar • rtMJlurlon "' 111 80.rd of ot 1h• ~ll<lv~·n•ml!<I d..c..:l~n• to conYfV c•~ the b11Vlw1cktl'L NOW-ENDS T -C•!lfOtnl•, ""' t t..11• l••ntllf 11 1b0ul te I'! Dl1rolh Ii f'ltlltr Ol•eciot• 1111 ,,...,.,ntl PfOPOrlv dncrl -btlow to CD " T It 1:00 IJ MO\'le: "l.111 ftr GDld"' (dram1) bl,,._ hi •AYCO, INC., • ror-•1'"'" P~•el't"1I,,: 1.:::tw wlTNES~ mr ~•ncl t ncl on1c111 1001. llOYAL ARMS, INC .• • C•lltorn11 ,.,,. Te T tM rw '41)-ldt LIJ'Plno, Cl1n11 Ferd, '11 , Slrlkingl" -~!':,'1:::~!'/'1'1" lr.,ntl«"• wi-bullNU .od••n I• .,_.~1100 tDl'flCIAl 3E..,,Ll POretlon, In tomol11nct with tht 1..-m. e! I •··' ~..t-..J !1\S L•UTtl c.."'"" l'!lv<I . Nori" PllUIP Gtus~tT "" wr+ll"" py•tt.8tt ond ••T• •9••.,,...nt f.D Wllllllnrtu W• 11 M'l"llW Youns. I ' c0&~r.r;ftMS,.._• -~-.,, \ 1-(0f!.,-wooril. """""' "' Loe "....+"' Slltt• Publ11~1 '?;jt'" C-• Dtllv "Itel. Nol••• Publlc-Ci \llorn11 dolt<! SePltmbe• t , n10. en•t•eO Into ~v O ,., ,.,.., • 11s -- 'ii-e.11IOl'nl1. Ju... ... , l4'7·11 P<lnd o1I Oltlte Ill dece~nt In ~II •H•tin.t, •• S•ll•r. •nlll b'I m Tei..•mt11 M•tlul (}) 0 ..J., '1ll" "''" :.._ JACK NICHOLSON Tltl IJl"W'fflv It M lr•ntltrfll ~ leo::.,9d L01 Ah'IOlt• (OUlll¥ ROYAL ..._'IMS, INC , t Cel1lor11l1 <'II'• - flt ... M•rti." l lYd .• CC!f•• MfH, C&o1"1W LEGAL NOTICE Mv Commlnlofl ILIPh tt ""''1lon, '' """""~'"'· Ind th• ..,1111on ") ... ~ P••U ol or-. $1tl1 ef c111~!1. ,..,, "· lllS hfJ be-en '" lot htl•l"t •n D<IPetlmtlll J --~... r I., .. ..,,.. •• I &lkl pr_.-\y It df>M.r1btd 111 ttM<tl tlH.OC at lht tbOv ... rn•lll..., Ceurl loc:ttf'd •' 700 • '·~ ~"' ,· • ftl,'r'.~IO ~,,,.CP ... I t-: All a!odl In lrMtf, fl'lll\lf'H • -1-nt Putit!,,...i Ottll'/ll C019t D•lt• Pitel. Chrlc (tnltt O•lff Wf\t, 111 tri. c!lv of ,. rl""'*"'r;,Q 9flCI 9lllMi wm of !tilt Mtl ~ •1111 1\1111 NOTICE l.otlflTIMO alDS June .J. IO, JI, '/<I, 1'11 llli-71 S•nll Alll. C1tl!ornl1, 11 t :lO A,M., Pn lht. Q "Wlf AlfiJrtlt" {drtmt) 'll -a«YI OtfllW bot•!-•-.. 1tAYCO-NOT1e1 t1 1o11111Ea" ,..,,n lh!ll "'"' .,,. d•• o1 Ju1v, 1111. f "day tJJT:: SEllVICE ~ """"" ti )NO 80t•d .. Trvot .... ot ''"' Foulll•!n Vl lln LEGAL NOTICE Th• ptf'-1 P•<iPor\¥ lo "" ((lf\V~Vtd r1 Horii Buthho!l. Citrl !"robe. -.SN O.-H...-..r .I... CHll Milla. (OVnl'r' el Sdl«ll Dlllrkl ef O<tl!ft Ceu11ht, eflO' trt "i!etrrd 11 dtK•lbeO' •• toll<IW•? lO ~ ) O< •t•I• .. al Ct Uj,gn\lt . C1t11on>l1. w111 tMf'l..., .,.,led b!Ot uo lo 7' ,,,,,6 ol c""'mon o!<X~ In 11ov,1 :00 i...~.i "*Id INi T_,..... (draml ~=-;,,.,.._ lr.,,11,, •lit "' c-..mmt•..O J:Oll ,.M, «1 "'"1lfll d1w of Junt ttll II I' IU• A•tni, inc , 1 Cotl!~•nl• cotcor••!Gi' DAYTIM E MOVIES '56--John Af:11, Cleo MOO!•. elttr 11\o )•"'&Ir .. JUM, \f ll, •I tM olllce ot uld kf>Oal Dhlrlcl 'urclll" •ICTITIOUS •U$tMll$ R:tlttf llCt II mtO't to tn• ptllllon 011 111• i:.: A.M tf 11....,..11 EiC•-Core .• 21'0 I,,. OeNr..,..nt al w!llctt lime Mlf ~o Ml.Ml STAT•MIM1' l'to•oln tor !Urlllft P•rtle11l1t~ 1:00 m "rortJl.ddt!t Str.r' (drall'ltl '119 Mo'110r .. Ml .. Ce11te -. (.,.,iy of •Ill bt ~ tM ••Ml tor lllt Thi follow!,,. Pf'""' I• Oolnt bY•l11ti1 0.11<1 Ju•t U, 101 '!00 0 "l'llM IMdl StOJJ'" (tof!ledy) -Q1n1 .t.ndfnl MlurMll O"Htll. O•I,,..., Sl•lt ti C•llfl1r11l1, Pvnh9w OI -""tr-v ¥tn. fl. W E. ST JOflN '42-tlt~dlf11 Colbtr1 Jotl McCltl . ' S.0 1.,. ei --ft 10 fllt Tr•M'""' t ll II ii lo l!t lu,,..l1""'d In U C'l•de"'t w m PEllK1N5 5CM00L DI' MUSIC, 110$ C.;.i~lt Cl••l ,"II Cl••I ""'-,, .. ,_. (diO• m•} "JS _ 2:00 o. · "Only l• Cl!! I'll'(' (tom. ody) ""•lllfl• _..,"""' ldd•l"lloU Vllf'f ..... ttto tll"clliUl\Otll ...,.... 011 !Ht lft lho purt!'l.ll O•tntt Av1 .• ('1tto Mtll , C11!1. Ill r~t SuPOrlO• (&utl •• ._. '' p J S II M I z tt I T ,...., It<"" flirt.<!"'" .. ., Ptll •• "" <kDl•lmeflf ol "'' l'(lll11l1ln \lt llrv Notmt p .. 11111 '""""" 'l'Ool/'7 SW llY WA.l 1ER T. KIN<;; G• r.no Arin H1rdl"' -ffr • er,, t I t1rn1. ,;;,:~,.-f '''' . ~.-.' ,o_!:~'.:", 1, ~ Nu!",~,.oi;_. LI:','::: CYor1"1 51 , 5•n!t An•· C•l1t. O•eu•~ m "·-,"w'o•ild W-HI• I~-" ldrl l:OO ~t) "Mi1hty Ur11fS" (tdvenhne) '62 """''"' ~-.. ,_ -·-"' • """ "'' T~l1 l)u1lntll It llOln; tordu<:ltd bY en DA.,tO S. TINC'iLl lt '" .. ' 'I -(d r M 0 ltAYco: INC.. 51•.wl, ~~:\;E~·~-;·T~~lllornl• t'llOI !f'Cllvldu•I A110•M1 .. L•w m.t) 'S8-[dmond O'B11t11, Mo"' UI')', OHi flftl •n °"lt c~r-ellen, 80A.lD OF Tt:IUSTEEJ, ~1'""0 NOl'm~ Ptrtln• Bu!CMM Sullt .,. l retm111 ':JO 0 (C} "Att1h With I Kill1r" (mrs· l••Mf"ff rOUNTAIN V.llLLEY T~l1 •!•l..,,tnl !llrP wl!~ Int county JOt N•,.Pflrl (tftltf Or.wt ·~· ·-,..... $(tt00l OIST RICT ,, ... 01 Or•n<M (oufllY <I" ...... '· !fH. NOW"'' lltt(h, (.111•n•ll!1 ,,... t:JO 0 It) '"Swin1•11' P•r•dl·-(mu tuy) ·~stftp~en Volin&, Huold J '"' M ..... •tw1. 81!"\IElll y J MADDOX. Ttlf'llll.nt. 01•) Ul·Jll) Slt •ll '64 -Chl1 Rlthlld, Sus1n $!tmt, Au5hll w.11;1 Ctotfl M-. c.!lflnll• .,." WILLIAM(. (llANE, Oiot!UIW cov~,, Clo•• AtlonttV '"' e••(Ulllr ate,_ ... ••'* CLEll( OF Tli£ llOAllO "llCI. 'vlrllY,.d Dt•"~t COlll! D~llw P•IM, PvD!llltfll er ~-C1a11t CM111 ,.llof. H1rnpshlrt, tiJS11n• I'! l~M Ll'1ln1. ,::,1r,r:'1 Ol'tl\M C:ot1' Dll"1 ui:.lr. JU::bli~"'i",. ~~;'" ((Ill! OlllV ll 'IQ.11 l ~fY 17 And Ju111 3. I~. 17, (t/1 1))f 11!ic':":•:•c1Cl~llC. :'~'·c'c'~"~-----~'~'"::.:':' !-------------------------------~~-~----~~~~~- JOINS 'MISSION' l ynda Day George PACIFIC WALK-INS Fdm•lv (n1c1 1~.nn•t.,1 t I>•< Hrir .. \O~ • ""'"'"'' tttrou·~ "~Y FAil l AOY" (llu• • r,..., A.•ldoro • Pe1ul1 ClMk "FIN l""N 'S RAINBOW" Oranoe Counry Ptem•••c f.oo~q•m•n'' ~·~vr• MrQ,.·e~ "LE MANS" !GI ~·••r N<cQu~tn "THE THOMAS CR OWN AF";.'-"""-" .,--,, . ., •·· ....... "" c• .. ~.- f\11 (QIOt S~owl ~1tve MrOu••n "BULLITT" p1u1 e ~eye o .. ~-•w"~ e W~11rn flt•"v "BON NIE llNO Cl YOE"' O•lve In ~how·~q! und~r 11 m11· 1 II• w ·~ c~·r~I "TtiE 6EGUtLED" (II:) PIU• • Ell•O• Gnu•~ "I LOVIE M'I WIFE" ~R\ ,., ....... ,. " ··~ ....... , ... ' 4•1 JU I All Colot r"'""Y (nl••l~inm•"I' J,,.,,.., GM~et • ~<H/~nnt l'lf'l~"'lr "SUPPOt:IT YOUP lOCAl GU NF IG HT fl" ~G! p1u• • O·c~ \O~n Ov•• ''Cl<llTTV CHITTY '!l:!;'jjl'~'' '1'1"r'··-·-~~;: 1111 ~ ........ . .. ~ ..... ..., )JIU/! i:•tlu.lvt Otlvro.ln ~howongl E llr~bt111 T~ylor • Pochard B~•IOft "(llEOP ... TRA." pill>' e S..cond Color re~tu•1 "THE LOST CONTINENT" ..... .,, ... .. L,.••~•••• ~J• 6111 Ex<IU•lv• Orlvt In S""w•n91 llar.v N•wmen e °""" J•ootr "VA.N!StilHG POINT " IGPI pr.,, • l'Alll 11•wmA~ • Robert PttilOrd "IUTCH CASSIDY I TH~ su ... OA.NCE 1110" (<1-Pl ~'"'"'" .. . w ........... I ~)1 n11 ' ·.· I FRESH FRYERS U.$.D.A. 29c CiRAOE "A" CHICkfNS WffOlE Boor lb. BlAOECUT CHUCK ROAST IO~~~:~EEF 49 c ~~~~.~~-59; lb. CUT-UP FRYERS 34c Pl'lll1" AllO JUICY ClllC•lllJ ...................... _...... I~ PACKAGED GOODS BUNS MAIY!if CUf ~OTDOG O• 33' MAMIUI C.U , 1 ct. ,_c. ........... , ........ . DINNER ROLLS """""·--·-·-·-.. 33' llAIVUI OAYIUOY.fO !IT CRACKERS ~:!~1.c1°o~~'..~.1.~~ .... ___ .. __ ,. 67C tr"' CEREAL ~~~:.~~:~.'..1~~-'-~-~~-~;,~~ ••• 39c I I I ; 11 .. -tt. -L •.• I\ I ,/I • • • • • lN\, (}{M£JL l.lWlU.{\ ENJOY SAVINGS wl LARGER SIZES! I LUCKY'S GUARANTEED VALUE PER MEASURE means that Lucky cus- tomers are assured that the larger size of an item will be priced at a cost per measure less than the smaller size. Buy the ~size for additional savings! MEAT ANO PRODUCE SOLO AT A POU/JO, PEA OUNCE, OA UNIT MEASURE. COPY~IGtlh(I 1971 by l"~~y S1or e1, l~r.-A.1L R•jih1' Re•e"'ed ,,.---':::'.'.'.':'"'.:-----, Drr 'rte• ,rotetllt~ ptlitJ 11ar- ~~ lARGE ~ lND ~ a1hti 111111 •ric11 11 ~. tltec!ht : lr1111 W1i1tsi11, !111 \Ith lhr1lue1 - i,y, J111 12ti, 1911, fl(lllilll ., t1st i•u•~i•s." GROUND BEEF lUCkY IONDlD fOR flAVOlt 59~. ROUND STEAK T0:~~~~1TY 89 c RIB ROAST ·~;,~~~~.0~~.~.~~~~ 79~ BONDED BffF lb. lUCKY ~ lOP QUAll TY BURRITOS '""'"· 45c 111111 C~OIC[Of llU H 1£0 ... - STANDING 8 8 BONDED 8(ff lb~ ~r~l~l~N~.~~ .~.\I\) Ol ,U. s 7c ~R~To~~~l~~~lf~(~~~f ::0.~~----·-·-$) ~~ FROZEN FOODS HOUSEHOLD ITEMS STEAKS ~~~~!~1,'.~~.~-'-~.1.~.~'.:~ ......... -....... 73 c O!SMWAllltl tllllC.llH .r ELECTRASOl uoL m ............... 49' BEEF STEW !~,~;~1G1 ..... -...................... 36' JOY LIQUID ~:~111.~~~: ......................... 82c FISH S Tl CK S ~·::.1 ::!~.~:.~:~:.~~~-~~.:. ....... 48' VANISH 10111lCllAllll 33' ~ 1001.<•11 ............ _.,_, SHRIMP ~·::.~::~~~.~~~-~~-~~ ......... -... -78' COMET ~~~u:~~~~~~.~-'-~~ ..................... -.27' JOllllllOllllUTI IUA.fAIT c SAUSAGE " OL m ................... ---75 ~NAPKINS ~O\c~~!!~~-~~.~~·-·---10c 'fXCEPl lONS ONLY ON fAIR·TR40EO ANO GOVERNMENT CONTROLLED ITEMS. LADY LEE BACON IUll Sll<ll l ·LI. ,.,. 53c BEVERAGE • SPIRITS ?::w~~~~~~11 '!!,~I~.~ ................. J 7c. ~~~.~~~-~~.!. __ ..................... 11 c ~J!~XP4Cl(. l60U•CtC411S ................ _. $) 69 YOUNG TOM TURKEYS 39c VIOA ,IAOl~,t.~ ............. -...•..... -..... __ Ml: !2~.~~-.~1~~ ~~0~11~1E,?~--45~ RIB ROAST ~~~~~~~ $JDS l~tll 10' llUA\lll 1011010 lllf ·•·--I~. ~~,~~, ~!~,,~:o~~~~lf ······----.. ···· $ J ~!·. BurLOW Ever)<iayPrice!."-1 UKAUNA KLUB CHEESE : HARP CHEDDAR: 69C 2 OUNCE CUP ---OSCAR MAYER WIENERS 79c All IH.11otruu111r._ ...... -... -1 Ll.ru. SMOKIE LINKS 83• OSt.U lll!U ................. _. ___ ..... U lf.,lC, ~lsll~~~,~~Y,~.~ ~"~'~P.~.~~-'H. 79c CREAM CHEESE 39' ,llllllll1111 ....... ' ................ 1 11 ,,,, ~!:11~!1~t~2.~.~!"~1~~-~~o~~'-69c ~.~c~1~1!1~~,~~~~~~1 -~-~.~,~~-~"· 6 9c OANOLA BEEF 57c ""l•ICM .............. ., ....... -.......... A IL Ill:. DAHOLA COOKED HAM 62• Stltn .... __ ................................ • It'"· POTATO CHIPS IAUll StUOOll' 49< , 120LIA5 ••• _._ ~1~~~0 ~~!~~.~ .. --·-' T" FOLGER'$ COFFEE 84•: GINO'S PIZZA ••&CllUH (6Cl.) c 11 01. ••c. ........ ---· 79 IVORY SOAP =~~~~~~ ............... -.-.32' ~9.~!.~!.~~2!~---··--... $711 PILLSBURY BISCUITS· 9c .,;.. SPAGHETTI "'""'·--·--.28' 'Tlllll itlGNITTl,111011 or MARSHMALLOws ::~!.:.. 21· •••HMtlllATu•t or CAKE Mix ::'i,,: ........ --62' 0UNl•ll Mlllll JNGH 10011 WMlll .,... POTATOES :::~·. . ......... _ .. 57' rHl!.IUll lllSTANI OlMfOIATIO MACARONI f~~~~~~:.~~~ ............ ~.-~.25' ~ CANDY BARS :~:~1t~~~~~-~ .. -... J4c (),' .... kJy&r! DRIVE DETERGENT$ J 15 14.0UNCI • aoir ............ . CANNED FOODS BABY FOOD ~1'.1::111•1:.~'.~.~~ .......... _, ... 9t ref"' PINEAPPLE ff,\' oT.t All ............... 26c CllUlll, C•llJMIO, TJDllU BABY FOOD ~.·~~~~:::.10' .................... .l Jt ~ PEACHES ~:~~.s1~1~~-~ ................... 27c BABY FOOD ~101?~~~~00~'.~1.~1•.1.~ .......... 2 3c .f/'4 MOTT1S FRUITS ;:~·i'.'i•1 ......... 29c 160LCl.ll ..... _ ................... - FOLGER'S COFFEE s , .. OZ. (All .... --·-·· .. ··--r FRUIT lOOi:tl lt.001.1 43< 30oz.c••····-······ _. TREET'uwu•lUll(lllOllMUT 55, 'CT-120LCAll ....... ,_. __ TOMATO PASTE ~~:~'.1cu•.-....... _ .... 29( ~ BEANS ;~:~~~.·.~~-~.~-~-~~~~~.~-~~~-41 c r:/'4' FANCY PEAS ~:~~~~~•--····-.. 18' TOMATO SAUCE~t:~:~.--27' WITM TOMI.TO 1111 01111111 t("-OLIVES ~:t~~~::~.~~.1.~~;:.~~-·· 49 ' ~ CLAMS !~'ri~~!~~~.·-~·-· .... -..... 29 c '7" GREEN CHILIS • "·""-.. -19 ' Olll'I Dl(IOl PlltlD ~ PICKLES i:~~1.~~:·.~~~-~-~~~~; ...... JQt tf4 SPAGHETTl~"1~1~!·:~:~~0L(t11 35' tf'4 P .D.Q. ~;~~~~-~~~~-~~~~-~~.~-... 49 c ef' CRISC0 ~~~~~~~1:.~_ ................ _ ••• 92' o"'4' SYRUP ~."o'i.1 n. ............. _ .... _ ... _. 31 c ()' •···k8t'&tf ()• lit .. kJy&ff. GREENBEANS 23c , STOIC(ll'CUT 1 SV2-0UNCI CAN..... . BAG PIZZA C.1110'1 "1'1110111 J lf.USJC.f B9' 1101.IJ,,.(f,,,, ........... .. ONIONS f:~~::;~~-~~~ .. ~···-· ... -........ 74c VEGETABLES :·~:.l,~~1.~.~-~'.~.~-~'.~.~ ....... 33' Glllll PllS Wl'OTJTOU ' <llJ"' SAU<t. tlA!. & ~IJIL 01110N!, CAllOIS W/llOWM IUC.ll ~Ulll. POTATOES ;~~~~'!!.~~~~.~~.~~-~.-....... 29' FRUIT PIES ~!'o~'.'.~r:_, ... __ ... _ ...... _ ... JS ' AP, LI, IOlllllllll r. (Ml•r f LEMONADE !~~'.~~~~~·-~~.~~~-~~'.~ ....... 14c SNACK TRAY ~~:~·~_';~~~ .................... 89t HOUSEHOLD ITEMS ~ TISSUE ~~=~~-·.~~~'..~~'.'.'.~.-28c ZEST SOAP ~!~1:~., ........ _ .... ___ 22c .,... FOIL llTllOlOIAlWMlllUM 69' 7Sfl.IOIL ...... -•• --··-·-., BRIQUETS ~~~-':!c .................. -......... 79( ~ PANTIES!~~:;:::~: ................. 53' DIAPERS ~~~:::.~.~~.~.~·-~:.~~-~~.'.'.,' l 01 PET FOODS •RUllll l la 116111 U'!tl ...... --..... Jtl Tflt (IYlll., .. '' 0111 n0tu WIOI uo•o• lllPT.) ; • '' /r., LDW DISCOUNT PRICES ON HOUSEWARES & BEAUTY AIDS MUG & TREE SET . ~ ll't1d1 ltr ' c1!fe1 •rt1k w•111¥rr yo1 .' .1 1r1! DtctrJli¥1 111ctlJl1 .. 111 11• .. lrtl iri1•tn '' U1i1 t1111r JI wt ll. OURlOW $)99 lVllYDAY PlllCE TRASH CANS OURlDW IVIRYOA\' PR/Cl BRUT PRODUCTS HAIR CONTROL 1r111-1r111y; 1111111' •1ir 87C ftl1ur1ll y. 7 OUNCE Sil( ANTl-PERS PIRANT ...: .. .'-- ARRID ANTl·PERSPIRANT nr ••r1•ct lamil1 ~nflra1t •..•• ,, , ... spnr t11c-ts J•1. llt11i·tk•tl1ck •r•llt· lio• 1raift1t 1d1r. w111ui. 99C U1,c11ltd. £1tr1-Dry. 6 OUNCf S/ZI •. RIGHT GUARD DEODORANT P11111tt1Dt !ftt1th !1r 1 m1n's 1etih, pnllt •~ou1h 101 1 •om1n's undtr111111: 1n ll11fy p~1-~1th11pr11 c11. RttU· $) 9 7 l1r 111111¥11. 1 JOUNCE Silt: . ·~SAUERKRAUT ~11'!~.}1•1 .......... 37 ( KLEENEX TOWELS 31 C DESIGNER 125-COUHT ROll ..... Pro1r~r1 1r1inst 0'11111' $] 29 WllttU. 1 OUHC(Sll( SCHICK INJECTOR 4's PINEAPPLE ~~~1r.c•ll ........................... 40 c IOCIO, (IUllllO, tMUllC ... CORN J TO•llfWllOll fll~!l 23' Cf' ~Ol.Ol~.160l.Clll .............. .. TUNA !~!;'.~~~~-~-~-... :::. ......................... 36c Pk1.tT I ~rtu t~roru ~!IOt. DDUBLEEOGES 's P11.11 :I S1p11 t~r111\111 ~ldtJ, 74c DAIRY PRODUCTS .BUTTER ~:~~~~~~~~.~-~.~~~.~ ............. -..... 81' ICE MILK ~!G,~~c111 ....... "-···-···········"·59c PLASTI C ASIORTID T.V. TRAYS READY·TD WEAR FASHION S " SIT-ON HAMPER Moitf"versi011 •f H .U. foshion1d ~fflStM lemp; liknk m1tol, ir11s < .. •, spherical 1!.ss shatle i• es1ortetl 1.J.rs. D•11111 el vses in· MIN'S KNIT SHIRTS . SUNMATE BEACH TOWEL JACQUARD BEACH TOWEL IM111tllul ilMf-ti•• Mt N1h 299 eJ •oeth ••• losh ;.'•""' ...... , i• toliulws c.ltr ll'ftt- lli•liMt 1..tl lf1sititt. ASSf'O COlOllS 2'7 l1.1ggtd, family-tiro p/01tic lur"""r hts ver1!ilat1il c1nt1r por1tls with dtcoroti,1 everlty, r1cesltil honill .. Choi cool Whito, Avo'a~o, Gold. BED or LAP TRAY 88( assn DI SIGNS Met.I ff•Y Is ler1• .-..• •• W4. Ml Mftl; ~,.Mwh l.,s J.u ffef fH JfM .. e. A WT!.ty 11 petftfM tM cfiMs. PLASTIC CORN HOLDERS .•.•. ; •.•. .19' llthhfeitliit Wifit· ,..,., .. tns t.y fl: .. ,,. ....... .; ..... '•r•.....e.Asswt .. ....... ,.., ... WHAM-0 MONSTtR 'ZllllOH BUBBLE SET 141 11 .. --i .. lt•l-k. .,. .. ~.,; ,.441 • .Hts tiHi .... .t littl1 .,.. ... 11-,,·· "'· 88 ( Hol4otullmNI .r•s•tk ••• •l'dlMl,SeW• i"ll .. Hs, elc. AiW1114 stylts.. PORCllllN 68( CAMPING GRIDDLE .. ,, TURDRDP 48( PATIO CANDLE ......... .. '"'' 298 S·M-l·ll Sitm"'er-<Mf short-de1vt llll•n knit1 in '~e1ty 11ri,11, ,,,.. •• ,...,,,.. colorint•· Many styl11 PIRMANINT PRISS WALK SHORTS Wtisl 1i11s '19 8 21t•40 I.. fltcy'r• coof, '"'"' Grnl MW ·,a.;n iit IMYtf· irM t•H•11/,.ly1111r •I•-'•· .. "*"''s ._,llM t• •"Y ii sHt•n's 11tpplyt NYLON JACKETS •••• 2" r-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------· . j rf' RINSO DETERGENT <I" DRIVE DETERGENT or LUX LIQUID ALL LOW SUDS FINAL TOUCH LUX TOILET SOAP l ! '90Z.80X 69c '90Z.BOX 75c ~:16~G:~~ 76c ~·;~~~~~~ $2 39 ll~U~~.·~~~· 7gc BAIHBAR 1ac :~i '-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------J . There Are Many Other Lucky Discount Supermarkets To Serve You In Los Angeles, Orange & San Bernardino Counties. ~:a~i;;:~::~,:~;~~~9s~~~c': ' I .· . . •. •. •. ' . - Sawdust Up1·isi1ig 1'he annual creative building spree for the Sawdust f<~estival on Laguna Can- yon Road is scheduled to begin Friday, J une 25. Sizing up the area arc (left to right) Hal Pastorius, Sawdust president Tom Leslie, Bob Riter and \Vifc .Joanne and dog Frobo. Tl1ieu Voti11g Curbs Fea1·ell STEWART HENSLEY \VASHIN(iTO~ (UPI) 'fhe Nixon Administration. publicly adopting a hands-off policy. is priv:i.tely suggesting to South Vietnan1ese Pres ident Nguyen Van Thieu a liberalization of the proposed ground rules for that countrv ·s coming elections. · Sonic nf Pn·sid<'n\ i\'i~nn·s advbers fear the election law recently pa:>:sed b~· I h e national assembly in S;iigon. under pres.s ure fro ni 'Thieu. v.·ill so restrict thr number of candidates as 10 lead t(I \\·idespread belief here and abroad that the Soul h Vietnamese are no1 being given a truly de1nocratic choice. The U.S. anibassador to South Vietnam. E I I s w or t h Bunker. is expected lo di scus.~ this. among other subjcel!'. during consultations here this OUTH CORS' ""A"" l A(,Ul.IA 8£AO< •9• 1'1• THE ROL LI NG STONES IN "GIMME SHELTER" \\'eek with '.liixon and other of fici<ils. Bunker is u n de rs to o d already to have talked with Thieu abou t the election law, \vhich reri uires presidential candidates in the October ballo ting lo be endorsed by 40 mc1nbers of the national ~1sscn1bly of 100 prov inci:il c.:ounci!n1cn. 1 ·.s. officials. fl'eling Lh:it till' split belwcen Thieu cind \"ice !'resident ~guyen Cao l\y i~ irreparable. brlievc the new gn1und rules v.·ill squeeze out l\y and all othrr potent\<1 1 opponent s of Th ieu t'XCepl for Gen. \)uung Van to.·!inh. <tn :1n1iablc officer who once held the top post £or a time during the period or rapid changes in the Sa i go n Ad ministration after the ouster of Ngo Dlnh Diem. \Vhilc Ille assembly ha s passed the new election la\\'. Th ieu ha s not signed il ye! and tile N 1 x o n Administn1tion apparently hopes to get him to Sl'nd 11 bnck to th e asscn·1bly for libcralizotion. position. just below the dcrnilltarizcd zon('. by srndiog in clements of lhe .104. 32() and 32413 divisions. The new clemenl! include cons iderable artil lery strenglh. Thieu has been C'"onccrned for so me lime over the possibility thal Hanoi will try 10 undertake a rnajor rnilitary assault al some poin1 ju~1 before tile October elections in an effort lo dcn1unstratc that \hr Saigon govern111enl ha s a v.·e:1k hold on snnlc arcns ii clain1s to con1rol. L.S. offici;1ls are beginning 1n share th is concrrn. 'rhey nntc> that Hanoi. contrary 10 previous custom. is continuing to send men and material south along 1he Ho Chi f\1 inh ·rrail 1.o positions where they may join cxistinJ::" Co111muniSt forces for a drive into the central h igh land s (Jr southeas1Wi1rd toward Saigon. Fairvie"' Accredited Fairvie\v State \lospital ha~ once :igain been given a ful l 111·0.year accrcd1Lation by thr .Jn1nl Co 111 in 1 ~ s ion on /\ccrcditation of Hospit:ils. Accreditation n1cans lhe . . .--:-.·.·.···· .... ····· .... . . . -. . . . Po1ve1· Bloc lndo11e sia to Go To Polls Julv 3 go,.mm'"~' program. The,\ also forbid criticis m of the \l'a y the program is being Bv PHIL NE\VSOJ\'1 carried out. Indonesia will hold its first gener al elec tion in 16 years on July 3, and not one of the Also banned are any v,,·ords country's nine political par ties or deeds that might cont ribute is expec1ed to erncrge a lo a comeback of the winner. Instead. the winner Commmunist Party or any V.'ill be som~thing called the aLlempt to exploit Sukarno or Sckber Golk.:ir which the a candidate's association "'1th l llursday, Junt 17, l!J71 ''Artistry in Moving" DAIL y PILOT J BB for the BEST MOVE of YOUR LIFE " Call: 494-1025 580 Broadway-:; For Top Sports Coverage Read tl1e DAILY PILOT government says is not a him . pal'ty at all. fiPiOiO--;;;.;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;....;-;;;iO,_miOiOiO_,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-iOiO;.;;-.-;;;;;;;;--...--··-----------------f The Sekber Golkar is a loose ! confederation of labor unions .. int clleetual organizations and ! othe r basically nonpolitical groups v.·hich by something less •han coincidence also includes government c i v i lj1 workers. t.overnmcnt v.·orkcrs are· forbidden fr om mainlaining1 political affi!iatior.s but are ordered to join the Golkar. \Vith an unlimited treasury, army support and government \1·orkers dov.11 tc village ch iefs I on its side. the Gotkar indeed b:.>coines a forrn id a b le opponent. Opponents claln1 the vlll ag£ 1 ch iefs have been ordered to, produce a certain number of votes or lose their jobs. j Big loser in the election which is to name provincial j and city (.'OUncils and 360]' members of the house of representatives. is expected to l be the Nationalist Party of the late Former p re~ i d e n t • Sukarno. I . . I Espccia 1.v 111 t e e m 1 n g ecntral Java. the Nationalists formerly \Vere easily the most influent.ial arnong the political 1 1 parties. But the bloodbath which lollov.·ed the a t I e mp t e dj Communist coap in 1965,. con vincing many that politics! v.·as an unhealthy occupation , plu s the years of political silence that followed. could 111ark the beginning of the end 1 for !he Nation<ilists despite , SI rcnuou~ efforts by its rrrn<iining leaders. In addition lo public apathy,, other factors also work in favor or the governmcnl in these elections whi ch are to l prepare the people fOf" .1 1 rcturo to civi l rule. Declared one lndonesian 1 politician: I '"The simple Ja vanese gives l1 is loyalty to re s p e c I c d' pcrsona!it.ics. not to political ideas... · 1 Th;i! rnrans thal the peasant whn once looktd up to .lavan~se nobility now looks up 10 the military government ! <ind wilt vote the way he !llinks the government v.·ishes, I Other fa ctors are the rules under which tile campaign isl being wa ged. Thf'sc rules forbid critici~m , of Pre~ident Suharto or thel Final Stocks In All Home I Out of school and on the streets. Or out of school and on the iob· Iii up to you, Mr.Businessman. GM A KID A CliANa lHIS SU'vlMER. GIVE Hl'vl A JOB. CONTACT , ....... .101:1 llatioHI Alliance of~ .· COLOR -fl.AlEO V,. Nixon :111d his advisers al ~n arc ex pec1cd to dbcuss w!lh Bunker ! he considerable increase in !\orth Vietnamese tni!itary strength in Quang Tri Province. the nor1hcrnn1ost of ~iul l1 \lietnarn , v.'hcre llanoi noll' h :i.~ ;i i le.1~1 n i n c rcgiincnl s. Thr C:o1nmun1~\s reren11y beefed up thei r strength 1n this slrategir joint cornn1ission has survc\'Cd Editions Fa i rv IC\\' ;J nd I OU nd j t s ~=~~----~;~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;:~~ ----------· t;ieilitics and med1cBl sta(f arc -----~ in keeping 1hc slandards for good hospital care ,,, ""' "' n11. '' ·~ : ~:~.:·:: / J•·•"• H:IW~--'r»ll·~..O::····llll RICHARD BURTON IN "VILLAIN" COLOR -RAlED R Karl Cha rles Germar, Oocfor of Chiropractic Phy~ical & Manipula tive ••~ Chiropta(:tic Tr11atm11nt ••• • •• Phy~ioth11rapy ••• MONOAY-WEDNESOAY-FllOAY The JOinl co 111 rn is s i on t'On duets lht' hnsp11al surveys on a voluntary basis. they arc nul req11ircd by lhr stair F:1irvicw 11·as built 1n Costa :\lt·sa in 195!1 and is operated by the state Dcp;i rlnicnt of J.1en!al I l~·gicnc. There are J.89{1 patients from Lo s Angeles. Orange. San Diego and Imperial counties. 'U.S. Fan1ily' Lectures Set "The American Family" is !he subject of a public lecture series to be offered by UC Irvine Exlension beginning June 21. P'ropirr dh:i911olh c111d trirat"'•"t ..,., sen>• ,i_ 11114 fltff•tlflt- -ly Appo""'-'tt- Specialists from the fields of sociology, psychology. lav.•, medicine. history and political science \viii be preS<!nted during the weekly lecture series in ·which four units of credit may be earned at a cost of $60. Non<redit enrollment is $50. 492-3532 Si HAILA ESPANO( 14' Aft. SlRRA -SAN ClEMlNl( - Adventure Travel Service -PRESENTS - DODGERS vs. ASTROS ·TAMING OF THE SHREW Doc19er Stadium Fri. Nit-.iune 18 leav• Legun• 6:15, d•partur• fr~m l•iiur• World 6:30. Tran1potfat1on provid•d by our-Ot•rt•r-•d Oelux• LimoBus Coech f•afuring c:off•e bar and luxury 1••tin9. Complet• round trip includin9 choice stadium reser· vafions $5.SO. SATURDAY MATINEE, JUNE 19th leav• Laguna 11 :00 a .m. aboard our Chartered Delull• limoBus Coach. Arrival at San Diego's Fis h Grotto where lunch i1 available in many fin• r•steurants h•for"e 9oin9 o-n to th• "th•ef•r for t he 2 p.m. curtain. W• will be home around 6 p.m. Complel• 91rc ur1ion $10 .00. CALL ADVENTURE TRAVEL SERVICE 332 FOREST AVE.-LAGUNA-494-8048 f FURNITURE A totally exciting plush, turry nine.foot tufted sofa The big, new plush design in a dfvinely comfortable sola with a deep fu rry fabric and dianiond tufting. Shades of mink, silver, gold or olive, The '500 look al an RB price! LOS AN GELES: 6121 Wilshire Blvd. Miracle MilP.; 11 0~0 W. Pico Blvd.; 8840 S. Weste1n Avt:. ANAHEIM: 1672 \'I. Lincoln BAKlRSFtllD: 3010 Ming Ave. CHULA VISTA: 476 Broadway (Soon~ CLAREMONT/POMONA: 232 £.Foothill COVINA: 94S N. Arusa DOWNEY~ 943S [.Firestone CLCNOAlE: 3J3 N. Ce11tr~I Av!. GR.I.HADA HILLS: 10100 Balboa Blvd. HUNTINGTON BEACH: \9431 Beach Blvd. LA HABRA: 1720 W. Wh1!11cr l ONG BEACH: 2189 La~~wood Blvd. MONTEREY PARK: 415 S. Atlantic Blvd. PASADENA: 85 S. Rosemead RIVCRSIOE: 10.000 Ma11:nolia SANTA ANA/lUSTIN: 1703 E 17th St. SAN BERNARDINO: 999 S. "["St SOUTH IAY: 15533 S. Crenshaw Blvd. THOUSAND OAKS: 244 Thousand Oaks Bl{d. VENTURA: 3409 Telegraph Rd. WOODLAND HILLS: 22223 Ventura Blvd. ' SHOI' 1 DAYS A Wfil( •WCEKOAYS 11 UNTll 9 • IATiJ"OAV 10 UNTIL 6 • 5UNDAY 1 UNTIL 6 • nt£C PARKING · fR£C OCCOR-'TOR SERVICE• rREE DCLlvtRY · CONV(Nlf.NT RANK lCRMS . : .. ACT Dire~tor at SCH Bonaventura Staging 'C harley's Aunt' South Coast Repertory is ex- panding it.s artistic talents thi:I month in th e form of a short, energetic whlrlwind of diree· torel activity known as Robert Bonaventura. Bonaventura, who is In Costa Mesa (or five weeks as gues t di.feel.or of South Coast R.€pertory's c u r r e n t pro- duction or "Charley's Aunt," is part or a new pl an to bring in "new blood," according to David Emme.s, SCR's artis tic direc tor. -ti r' SCR 'I MP'l1RT' Robe rt Bon•ventur• produetions including "Tiny Alice," ''Under ~1ilk.wood'' capacity thL-. summer at the San Diego Sha k esp e ar e Festival. He v;orked nn ACT's world premiere musical ''The Selling of the Presldent" and dJrected fi lm sequences f o r the company's production of "Llttle Murders." A native of Pennsy!va11!a, he jolned ACT after working a t the Pi!lsbW'gh P I a y h o u s e where he n·as the youngest director aod stage m~nager in the history of that organiza- tion. He also attended cinema school at UCLA. \\rhen he finishes the SCR engagement. he mo\·es first to San Diego for "Anthonv and Cleopatra" v.·ith Rabb, then to San Francisco for an ACTl workshop production. To com-1 plete the .~ummer. he'll direct 1 a.n opera in norlhf"rn Califor . 1 n1a . ' "FREEFORM 11" S~ows 7:30 & 9:30 Rated 'G' Thursday, J une 17, 1qn John llarfey &Ray llillaud [Qf;o I W,1)1: A PWJIOJIO l'(1IJ( DAILY PILOT J9 DAILY PILOT Sltlf Plloll On loan from !he American Conservatory TI1cater in San Francisco where he ~olds the t itle of dircclor of artists and repertory, Bonaventura is directing a cast of IO for a June 25 opening of the famous farce. "Charley's Aunt'' will be presented We dnesday through Sundays in a surnmer- Jong run at SCR's Third Step Theater, 1827 Nc"'porl Blvd., Costa ~1esa. "I keep busy,'' he notes, "but I like it. It's all I \\'ant to j and ''Oedipus Rex." lie \\'as do. Jn fact, it's al! J can do." also associated ·::;tfi AC'T's ac-1-~_".'_'_'.'.'.~'.::_~'._.'.::~:"'.:__'~,-,,..-.,.,...,,....,.,.._,...~j Ginger Peachy ''Charley's Aunt" is not an unfamiliar play to Bo'na ven· tura, \\'ho has been associated with several o th e r pro- ductions, including one in San Diego last summer. "There and at ACT, as elsewhere, au· c laimed Broadway revivnl of •·Tiny Alite" in 1969. Susan Pe ck, \Vho plays the title role in the F'oun· tai n Valley Community's 1'healer's .. 1'ime Out for Ginger," is carried \•ictorious!y by Nick J\1osc and Jo Richardso n· in a scene fro1n the cornedy, \1•hich opens June 24 for a four·day run at the .Fountain Valley Community Center. Bonaventura \\'as sn~ial associate to Ellis Rabb on ACT's production of ''The Merchant of Venice" and \Vil! v.·ork with Rabb in the same d i~nces have lined up to laugh1-----------1 at ''Charley's Aunt." he said. !rd ANNIYER5AllY PAii.TY More 'Sesame' Type Kid Progra111s Planned As a young director , Bonaventura has g at he r e d some impressive credit<; and has learn~ theater from some Now'• lh• dl•l'IC• "'' yoy w11o h•v• leading directors, among them Mver ""n THE ilOA.THous1: "' join our <Y11omen and lrlwid1 16f \Villiam Ball, artistic director ...,, 1119 Yt••I~ ciJtbr•ll•n of ACT. J-l e has worked as associate dfrectoc foe Ball THE BOATHOUSE since the 1965 founding of the I 515 5. MAIN, s.-.NTA .-.NA By HICK DU BRO\V llOLLY\VOOD <UPI) Non-comn1ercia l television's "Sesame Street'' is still the class of U1e field iu children's progra1nming, but it's impact sce rns to be spurring the upgrading of sho\\'S r o r youngs1crs on the commcrc13J net11·orks. It's hard lo say, 1ruthful!y, just how much the Saturday morning kid shov.·s will re-<ll!Y be improved because past pr<r- miscs have usually turned nut lo be thinly ve 1ted doubletalk about programs lhat still 011·ed more lo rnayhem nnd idiocy than to tasteful, worthwhile motives. company, on a wide number of nel\1·ork as being' not only for --- children. buL a Is o by "ml:~ ~ltW-J<'7hf""!ni">'SW'!.· 1 ~-~~ children." A partici pating .seco.rrto ,.l!ATu111: ~ program of the National ~ "THI IAIY MAICIR" ' ~ • ''J-'J••Jt Educat1on Association, the ! An 11nconven(fo"1r mov11 ' ttlllllT largest teachers' organization ~ in Amenta, this series. done lorbora Henhey ~ ~.:::' o(:~·'.u,;:· live, has three niajor goals: "To help children make their own val ue judgments; to ' build oral vocabularies: and to~ enrich a generation of children who are already in· formation-rich, b u t ex-! perience-poor." There 1vill be no scripts or instructions for lhe children q v11ho take part. They v.•ill decide on wbat they v.·ant to talk aboul or do, and !hen talk "'J about it or do it. ll may in-1 ' volve discussion on the one ~ hand. or film clips, or playlets, The rnod~m 1Mlting of Emile Zota•1 m.dcr pi«•· or .111hatcver' ~ays G~rge ":· A DISTINCTION FllMS, fNC. flnEA.SE. COLO A tlO OHt IJNOUI ® )leinemann. vice president in 11AOMITTW charge of children's pro· ANNA GAEL -NANA with llEYI HJELM ' gramming for NBC. TV: ~~.wr..::mrs.w::w• lftlf'".;L-P -.... ~ v."'~·-· ~ ';We'll be as intrigued "''i th 1he broadcasts as, 11·e hopc. !he home audience will be!' RATED G·. BUT MAY BE TOO INTENSE FOR YOUNGER CHILDREN. The story covers 96 DI tha most crifiCBJ hour$ In man's hist~! ... The~ae will las/ througl) your f1fa1Jmel • ROB!RI WISf _,,.,, ~NDROt.EDA smAIN "-AR!HUR 11\l· DA~O WA'fflf · J!MfS DIBllN · KIJIRHO ..... ---.... ~--.... .,_ ... ,.... --.. -- 60k;5 lt·•tN N(lSONGIOOiNG · MICllAELCRICHTON • ROBERI WlS('CILMLttl J .-=::;.;-.::i ~ ca A v~\'Ell'A "'tnl!I£ · n 01N1C.a.01r PWO'l5IOH' Exclusive Engagements NOW AT BOTH THEATRES The problem, of cour~e. is that unless all the networks commit themselves 10 Jm· proving children's shows !o an intelligent level, lhere js still sharp corporate concern about how the competition is doing: ln the ratings. And there h<i~ definitely not been crn all-0ut- commitmcnt to improvement in youngsters' programs by nll of the networks. A !.hird nc 111 youngster.~ series on NBC-TV this fall 11·ill be "Barrier Reef.'• 111hich \1•111 combine adventure fiction ( lnternationol Spies, etc_) v.·ith a good deal of film and lnforn1alion about under11·ater EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT• SHOWING NOW AT TWO THEATRES! One can, however, see somr. hopeful signs. ABC TV has in the works for this fn!l a Satur- day morning series cal!ed "Curiosit y Shop," \I' hi c h scen1s to be dirccliy in· fluenced b~· the impact of .. "Sesame Street" -no I necessarily the same t}'pt' of sho11•, but certa i nly en· couraged by the success of the · non-co1nmcrrial nct11·llrk en· try. : Over at :-:se-T\'. • 1nean1~h1 le. some major : cha n~cs :ipparcntly arf' Jn the • \Vork.<;. First of a!J. /he '. nl'1work is invnl vf"d 111 a Ion;:: "1cr m study ol youngsters :ind television violence. Second. snme new Saturday mr>rning shows on NBC· TV !his fall op· pear headed in R \rorthwhile . dircclion. · One of these series, ··~f r. : Wizard,'' a charming and in· :telligenl show involving scicn· : tilic experiments, is ac. : tually an old program !hat is : being rrvi11<>d -and thal·s a ll : to the good. Then there is a new weekly NBC-TV hour each Saturday ' morning to be called "Take a Giant Step." described by the activities. NBC-TV says this series is about "a ship's exploration of Australia's fascinaLing barr ier reef." thal episodes "\\111 C'manatc from a 220-ton research vessel'' and lhat the :<tflrir"> "will feature some nr thr most vivid and unique under\1·atcr pho!o_graphy ever srrn on ielevision ·· The net\\ork <idds 1hat thr ship'i; rrew "1nrh1des an rx- 1x rt i;kin diver :ind a n1:ir1nc bio!og1s!. ThC'ir funr11nn i~ !n !oc,1re sunken \\'reeks .•. that of!en contain valuable or dangerous cargo. On board is intr1ca1.c geological equipmenl necessary to probe the ocean floor." Ron1ero Repeat HOL LY \VOOD (UPt - Cesar Romero will repeat his villain role in .. Now You See Him, Now You Don't,'' a Disney .studios sequel to "The Com puter \V ore T ennis Shoes." NATIONAL GEN ERAL THEATRES GllNOA .14CKSON-llt"I hr•ett fM "WOMUi IN LO\'I"" KEN flUSSEU:s Film '"TH• IW"fllffl: IOt'lillls· OPlN 6:41 STMMcQUEEN takes you for a drive in the count ry. The country is France . ~ The drive is at 200 MPH! "LE MANS" , \ I A CINEMA CENTER FILMS PRESENTATION l ritten by HARR Y KLEINER"Music by MICHEL LEGRAND-Exec ulive Producer ROBERT E. RELYE Produced by JACK N. REDDISH · Directed by LEE H. KATZ IN ·A SOLAR PRODUCTION PANAVISION"Colorby DELUXE. A NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES RELEASE Jg)'\.';:!:•,.:::;,:•,... ,., ... HIT I ''THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR" I H•ATRE l<I...,.., 40.IM), COii.i M.J\.O. '"'JN/ SO·ll~I "' -... --~-,., EDWARDS HARBOR c1i;:1.:...t NOW EXClUSIV!L Y .mlr\'Jf....,.. ?:ANDROftEDA SIRAIN @!)- IU.ltl Oll l lVO. AT WILIOll' IT. COITA MflA . f'6·0~7J STEVE McQUEEN at200 MPH! .... -.. ~ ..... tot·· ... 1 .. -1 ••. J.01 "LE MANS' .. ..,,., ...... a••-."°""'00 _.,,..,,..,, In Doris' profession you ha,·e to ..., know how to sell y ourseU ':! Barbra Streisand George Sega l ' l'heOwl andtbe l'us3yr.at -NOW AT BOTH EDWARDS CINEMAS- IDWAllDJ -.~-~-IDTH IATID "SP" CINEMA VIEJO. ._......,.,.,.._ MISSION VllJO VAlllSHJNG 13G-69,o POINT" -. BVftHCASSlOVANO THE SUNDANCE KIO (LJO\BEIH TAYlOR JJ>~~ !JM~~&Kl <L~O~AT~A ~CHA~~ BURTON' ~X ~A~l>ON .. M.u.1 AHrOHV .. .llA.a.I• c.u.vi THE ORIGINAL AND UN-CUT ROADSHQW VERSION • 1 WEEK ONLY ENGAGEMENT • •1-4 11 Ci.-Wttt• "'IJlrSTIIUOAT, Tllll lllUIT It ltoUAllt"' •AUOATllAllOl2• ™• "'~· ~ Sottif-<t -srns ovn 1tcK1.AWO" Kids Like to Ask Andy OA.IL.Y PILOT Sea ' Scouts H oM Sailing Competitio11 ' Tltllf'Sday, JIHtf 17, l'i7l Runa Run Race Gilbert Makes It 3rd Straight Witt Gil Gilbert or Beverly Hills ht-came lhe first man since 1966 lo win three consecutive West Coast offsh o re powerboat races last Saturday when he upset H onolulu sportsman J im Pnueger for first place in Rum Run VII. The 29-year-old real estate developer averaged 62.5 miles per hour for the 94-mile run from U>ng Beach Harbor to Malibu Pier and back to Long e.Bach, bringing home his 20- foot Spectra Marine Special of the Pacific Class 5() seconds the Long Beach Hennessy Cup world championship points race v.·hich will headquarter as "'ell as finish off the fantail <Jf the ocean liner Queen !\tary In Long &ach Harbor. Safe Boating Week Slated July 4-10 Sea Scouts were busy <JVer a ahead o f Pflueger's 32-foot vl'ide front last saturday and Offshore Class boat, the "Safe Boating ls No Ac-Hungry F isherman. cident" is the lheme <Jf Na- Sunday with sailing com-The triumph of the little ti<Jnal Safe Boating Week petition in Newport Beach and boat over the larger one which will be observed lhis Florida. followed \\·ins by Gilbert in year from July 4-10. The local sailing coinpetition last February's Long Beach-By Preside n I i a I pro- was part of the Orange Catalina Race-Cruise and in ctamal1on, the a nn ual drive Empire Council's Explore r May 15's Border Dash from \Viii get u n d er way Olympics. Long Beach to Mission Bay Independence Day with 21 na- Winner of the gold medal and made hlm the first driver liona l organizations and hun- and the first to have names since Peter Ro lhschild of dreds of local bciating groups engraved on the DA I LY Newport Beach in his national emphasizi ng that s a f et y PILOT Perpetual Trophy were championship campaign <Jf makes for more fun on the Scott Stevens and Tim West of five years ago to score a lri-waler. · the Huntington Harbour Ex-ple. Parlicipa\ing locally will be plorer Ship 412. Gilbert acknowledged thal units of the Un ited States The saiHng compelition was he'd have been unable to Po"·cr Squadrons and the . held orf the Sea Scout base in claim three straight over C<Jast Guard Auxiliary. : Newport Ha rbor. Second place larger, more sophisticated The campaign is under the : went to Bob Whitford and Offshore Class entries had not chairmanship of Rear Adm. A. -,.1ike Taylor of Ship 711, and bad "'ealher forced can-C. Wagner, chief of the Office thi rd was Ship 556 with Steve cellation <lf the 176-mile Long of Boating Safety, U.S. Coast Sellers and Brent MuHord. Beach-Ensenada International Gua1·d. !\'!embers of Costa !\1esa <Jn April 17. Some 7,500 kits of pro- Sh ip 306. the "Flying Toads'', And he'll have lo be n1olional 1natcrial for use by participated in the national satJsfied at best "'ith viclorv community g r o u p s and regatta at Pensacola. Fla. last <Jver West Coast special clasS organizations have been issued Friday, Saturday and Sunday, category entrants Aug. 21 in to support the drive. \vinning the competition with --------------"-------- 14 races. Those attending the national regatta were Randy Gordon, Lynn Dorius, Rick Ainenda. Dan Su 11 iv an , Kathy Easterbrook, Bill Ben I I y , Kevin 1-laug. Bill Mudro, Scott. llarris, Robbi ~1cNutt. Phil Kratzer. Stu Hall and Skipper Bob Jessen. Ship 306 is the firsl lo allow girls to become Sea Scouts. 'There are only three girl Sea Scouts the U.S. and they reside. in Newporl Reach. They are Lynn • Dorius. Kalhy Easterbrook and ~1argaret Dixon. The ad- mission of girls v.·as made possible by a Boy SCQuts n1l- ing last year which permitted girls to par1.ic.ipale in Scout Explorer programs. Long Beach Plans Two Sea Eve11ts Within the shadows of the ex-ocean liner Queen Mary, t v•o organizations of v.•ater sportsmen will conduct racing: events Saturday in Long Beac-h ll;irbor. Kalifornia 0 u t rig g e r Association IKOA) stages its first of four 1971 regattas for th<> Polrnesian-stylc six -man outrigger c.1MCs st.art1ng at 9 B.m. Saturday. In a separale event, the Na- lional Doryman·s Association stages its Queen t-.lary dory race beginning al 10 a.m. for \\\"o-man surf b<Jats represen- ting lifeguarrl services of coastal cl!ies from San Diego lo Santa Barbara. The outrigger regatta v.·ill Jnvolve men and v.·omen pad- cllers from six clubs, including defending national champion J\ev.·porl Beach. 111e dory race will have teams en1ered from Santa Barbara. Carpineria, Ventura, Zuma Beach, Stlnta Mon ica. Manhallon Beach. llermosa Beach. Redondo Beach, Los Angeles City Beaches, Long Beach, l lunlinglon Be a c h. Newport Beach, San Clemente and San Diego. LOCAL No othtr n,w1p o1p•r tellt you fl'IOre, every dey, eltout wh1t'1 9oin9 on In th• Gr•1ter Oreng• Co••t tlio111 the DAILY PILOT. SEVEN ·Ham- burgers $100 with coupon -I M Cl ::::t I I r1ease join us today !or the first showing of !heo's Interio rs. at true_ savings. I UNDER COU NTllt MODELS Curren! Kilch enAid models, not "stripped down" or "sole" mod els. I as low as '-.s22a. Supply Limited FREE 540·7131 COSTA MESA WHIZ RING COOL DEN FRIED CHICKEN with purchase of Giant French Fries G.inos 968-7666 PARTY 15 pi1ce1 of t~ick.,., 6 di1111er rollt & liontv. ~'J------'- 19051 . Brookhurst St. at Garfield, Huntington B•1ch -· .. l/N-8/iOOK Texaco MOTOR OIL Heavy duty motor oil pro. tccts your cor'1 engine against wear end corro- sion. SAE 20, 30 or 40 weight. REG. 33c Emergency ROAD FLA.RES A warning for highway repair or occi- dents. Burns fo r 15 minutes, Buy se'l:erol & keep 'em in your trunk. REG. 33c Easy Mount SIDE MIRROR • A must when pulling c boo! or trailer, • Fits right or left side of all cors & trucks. • lns1anl on and off. REG. $5.49 $499 2 Gallon GAS CAN • lock seemed melot construction. •Vented, disappear· ing spout. • Re flective finish for highway safety. REG . $1.39 99c ''U.S. Rubbe r'' BIKE TIRE SEAL Seals small punc- tures & leaks. Easy to use-will not in· iure rubber. 4 c z. tube. REG. 29c See How Easy It l.s. Bottle Cutting Demonstration This Sat. II a.m.-5 p.m. At both of our .stores • Portable Camper's FLUORESCENT GREAT FOR DAD! LANTERN •Uses 2 stondord 6 volt batteries. • Twin 6,000 hour fluorescent tubes. •Con be hung from above, ottoched to a vertica l surface or carried . • New space age high impact plastic consfruction. • Quiet & completely sofe--18" toll. REG. 522.99 SAVE 56.00! ~ .,~~: ~ • !o •• <.: . • jo ' • . " ..... r Bicycle Thermos" CATALYTIC HEATER &-' 7,000 BTU-perfect for comping, boots o r trailers. &-'Heats for 16 hrs. on one filling . ~ Spill-prooltonk. $1499 ~ PoHshed aluminum. &-' Use top as a hot plate. REMEMBER DAD! Shop & Compar• at $39.99 TUBES & TIRES TUBES-High Quality All regular sizes available. TIRES-!~~1k· Sizes 20icl75, 20ic125, 26icl % end 27x1 v4 REG. TO 2.19 NOW 77 ONLY ( REG. $1.09 Metal Covered FOOT LOCKER 1u1 Olll At UJHR.OOK Git tMl Sl(OllD Olll nut • 30"x16"xl21/2 " •Oliv e or blue metal • Bross-lik e trim & hardware. • Lock & key includ - ed.• Great for storage & travel . • A must for campers. REG. $10.99 SAVE $3.001 .,.. & & !IM ---111' A Sell·Out last Time! W• Bought Morel ~ BICYCLE ~ AUTO RACK I Place your bike in this rock a nd it travels with you. Steel rock attaches to car bumper, REG. $5.89 SAVE $1.001 • FATHER'S DAY SUNDAY, JUNE 20 'one-s top' shopping at its finest I Thursday, Junf 17, Jl~7l OPEN THURSDAY AND MONDAY EVENINGS 9 • DAIL V PILOT ZJ -------~----~~----, FROM .•• • HALLI DA r .s MEN 'S • THE STOREKEEPER • RION HARDWARE • SAY-ON DRUG • CHAS. F. BARR JEWELERS • HICKORY FARMS • WESTCLIFF SHOES • PAPER UNLIMITED • ANTHONY'S COBBLER'S • WESTCLIFF PLAZA BARBERS • BANK OF AMERICA • MARKET BASKET • DARRELL'S TUX SHOP • MONTGOMERY CLEANERS • DR. LOU ROY ELDER • PLAYBOY HAIR STYLISTS • DICK VERNON'S • YETA'S • JEAN DAHL • LA GALLERIA • WESTCLIFF PLAZA SHELL • HUMPTY DUMPTY r-~-------··-------~ FRIDAY & SATURDAY ON OUR MALL MANY MODELS OF .•• VOLKSWAGEN PORSCHE AUDI DISPLAYED BY •.• C 44!> £. COASf HIGHWAY ~ (11 8dys1d1 Dnv1} NEWPORT BEACH 0 ' 673-0900 s e~I~'~ PORSCHE AUDI \ ZI DAIL y PILOT Tbi.ndq, .htnt 17, 1'971 Scorching Marks • Ill at UCI By HOWARD L. IW'<ri'DV Of -o.1" P i19t l!afl' Juris Lw:ins of l})f' Marines may not have had a pace sttlt'r in tlll! IOO mrter run but Ron Coleml\n had one in the long jump Wednesda y night .11nd as 11 result ht INped to a Jiretime best of 27-0l 4 at lhe UC ln·ine track in Uie lirsl day of the lnterservict 1r<1ck and field chain· p1onship.~. &cond night of Uie twilight aflair starta al fi tonight "'ith !ht publle in\•ited free of charge Coleman. the defending champio n in the. k>nl jump, "'alclled as Arm y team- matt Henry J. Jac..Uon leaped 2&--3~. on Dodgers Find Hitti11g Eyes; Host Montreal LOS ANGELES 1AP f -Thfo Los Angeles Dod~ers might !ay that their re· ('ent road trip ll'as a hit. Eighty hil s. to ~ precise. The Dodgers. who l'a me \\lest from Brooklyn 13 years ago as a hard-hn1ing c·lub. seem to have rel urnt>d to that mold and as Los Angeles rests today. the. team can reflec t on their new. lofty position in tht' l\'at ional League \\'est. The I.earn is only five games out of first Dodg.,,. Slale .-.11 G6rnff .,. 11:1': (6'11) J\JM IJ Dod9•" v• i"lo•"lon 1 II D "' June lt Do<lo~n v• liou••O>"> • ll D "'· ., u . "'· I !S ~ m. J~~ 111 Oc<l!lt " ~• ..... ~ ..... J~~~ J) 000Qt•• v• SI 1,.o~i• after v.·inn1ng six of nine road games and rolli ng three games closer to the Giants of San Francisco. The Dodgers collecled 80 hits in the nine games despite ripping only 18 in three games against the New York Mels. Ironically, the Dodgers lost tht game lo New York in which they got the most hits. The Mels jumped on Bill Singer for a 7-2 victory W~oe!!day afternoon as Los Angeles had nine hils. The games just prior saw the Dodgers l'i'in 3-2 on three hits and then 2--0 on six t11 ts. H the upcoming 10.ga1ne home stand - v.·ith J\1ontreal . St. Louis and San Diego - is to be successful. The hitt ing will ha \·e to l'Ontinue because of tht' illnei;.s and in- jury besert ing the p1lthinl( staff. Cla ude Ostttn has mentioned a bad back, Don Sutton a bad shoulder and Singer a bad leg. \\'illie Davis collected a single to extend his current hitt ing streak to eight gamt'li and the Dodgers' Golden Glove first baseman. \\'es Parker , is now 14-for-28 in his last seven games. LOS ,t,NCOlllS N@:W YOlllt .. ' ~ t91 •9 •~··1 Wdl, .. > • • (••.,ford , " ' ' ' W 0 &•••• rl ' ' ' p J.H•"· u • ' W Por•tr, " • ' l~!OO~r~, " • • • t<o !I .. ' ' • ' V•lll"\ll~r, ~ • • ' !>•ng••' • ' • • MOtllr'. P • • • O'fl«•n • • • • /.'~I•. ~ ' • • p.,.,,, p • • • F"'i""'"'· ~ ' • • l o!alo n ' • •• ,lf>9•lft Now Y.,-k ' -Joro..,~•n '· LOB -Lo> '""11•1 .. I ~·. Ov••. • '""•" ~enlM 1 "' S·"ll" ll .!-!01 M<><'"•' 0'8'1•~ ·~· ( W••l,t m, (W ~II l(oo'""" 1'• rC.r a,.. s~ •• -·~«,, • .,, 211n • .. .,.,1.~"· .. • • ' ' • Jor9..,'""• " • ' ' ' • fl•no. " • • • • ' Sn•m1•v, " • ' ' ' I(""""""~· • • • • • • MCG .. w . • • • • • • K••o-1, " ' ' • • Soo9lr!on. " • • • • ao, ... 11, io ' ' • • "-'11<""'°""· 3!I l ' ' • • Foll, ~ • • • • • ov ..... ' ' ' ' ' • ( Wllt!•m" • ' • • • • Mo••~•ll, I! ' • • • lo!•I> " ' ' • ·~ ~ OIO -l ·~ "' l h -I ..... , .... 0 0 -... Yo •• ' N•"' Yo•~ " " K ••e~ " " '" " ' ' ' • '" I l J f <mt l(ranr DOOI .. II -J N M II E• II 50 ' ' I o o 1 0 0 0 0 ' ' ' . . ' . 0 0 t I ? " ...... 0~"<• - Troja11s Battle For NC AA Crown Toni ght 0\1A llA 1AP1 Can Southern California's a('e p1trher slOp hard-hitting Southern llli nots~ The 1971 College \\'orld Series title hinges on the que~t ion and the ~ru.,.,·er ~·i ll corne tonight v.·hen tht' 11'1'0 clash. · Defending champion Southern Ca1 edg- t'd fourlh-ran~t'd Tulsa J.2 \\'t'Clflftday night on pi!c~r P.,ark So3.ie's ninth in- ning f'ingle and ga1n{'(t the title showdown ."·1th No. :1 Soulh<'rn lllil'IOis f~Ul, "\\'e tt'f'I 11o·e have a ~core to se\l\e and can't \\lU! for the ballg;ime ton1orrr1w night, :;<11d USC Coach Rod Dedeau.~. ~·ho~ team lost to Southern Illi nois 8-3 111 Ult !'t:cond round <>I the double:-elimlna-twn tournament last Sunday. ' Top-rankt'CI Southern Cal l~l3) will be bidding for i~ eighth title -•nd third in four years. Dede:au1 has coached six of the: title v.·inner~. Dedeaux will start junior all-America Steve Busby t 10-2 l 11o·ho was touched for al• hits and all of s 1 1.:·~ run!I in the: 5t>- t.-ond ga~. ··we might nol ha\'t pitche-d wt.II the last time agaln111 them. but I think he will be more settled this time ... said Dedeau1. Southern Ollnob Cflach Riclard JontS s•id be would •tart righthandtr Ditk Langdon (12-1) who ha1 11Jven up lhrtt e.1rnf'd runs lo 11 Hr1es innlnfs. "This is the ""''Y tile 1erie1 should '"nt1:· nld Otdt•ux, .. with WI throwlng our M.st a11lnf&.--tbelr be.it."' Sogge. a j\j\Jor rlghthander now 13-1. f'xc·.,1le:d wtwnver the '1'rojat11 needed him again!l TU158, whk:h 1oat for lht se- 4-uJld i;.trRIJlhl nltlrt lo Southern Cal, lie ~cauered ei1ht hJta, struck out h\'e, and came up with • cralty eighth Ir.nine p1ckoll mo ve that ended 1 one-out. ba1ie1· lotdtd Tuba thrtaL. his first effort to get Ult competiUon under way. "Thi! startt'd my adrenalin 11oing up and I wa s all psyched up to jump after he irot off that f1r!ll o~ ... Coleman !laid after the competition had been completed. •·11 \\'BS a lremf'ndous thrill -in faC"t. this par1icular 1ump is the biggest thrill ol my sporls career ·· Coleman didn't make ii on his fir st jun1p. lie did leap 26-3 the hrst lime around but "as 3 1 of llln inch behind his buddy and teamm ate. On the second leap, ho'"'t'Ver. he sailed out 27--0~4 to eclipse Norm Tale's workt . '• best this year by a half ind!. In eom- pletlng hill fantastic four-jwnp series, Col.eman had t'"o more jump:i o( 26-11 , and 2&-5, by far his beat ever, lI1 high school in Oklahoma. he '"·u a four sport star including baseb.all where ht played shortstop and pitd)ed and had a baiting a\'t'rage of .400. He almoi;i s igned a pro contract bul felt that football "·as his future and at· tended Southv.·eslern Sta te College in \\'eatherford. Oklahoma l'i'here he played some baskrthall but concentrated on foot- ball and track. "His best effort before coming into the: ,- str"\'ice was 2UYr." coach Ralph Higgins said. He was Abo the: first to confirm the fact that Coleman's e lf or t wu the: be•t in tne world this year. "Jackion helped him a great deal," HiggiM added. "I think the facilities here are marveloll! and that is why I sug - gested the meet be staged hert'.'' Luzlna C011tlnued bis romp over all op- posiUon in winning the 800 mett:r.s and praised the track for his effort. "11tls track is as good as any tartan track around and better than mosl of them." He: was happy lo have defeated Ken SweMOn of the: Army for I.be second time thi!I year -ooly I.be second lime IDe lWO ha\'e meL. Fred Newhouse of the Army was an upset wiMer <>Ver Larry James of the Marines with a hne 45.9 effort in the 400 meter dash . ._..,....,., Throw -1 l •tr"! H•tl (,t,"''VI .,,, 1. 11: .. Mou 1M1r1Mt) \,._J; J. 0.1• Fr"6rlc• c.-.r ... vl 1..._.. 1,.-lllfl'll> -1. R.., to+•men !,t,r,..y) 11\.: 1 ._..,,.,. Jlt~iOn (At,..y) M"": J J im ll ~IMhll (,t,r,..y) 2!-.,,.: f G1ry R11n-1er 1.-.1, l'"'ttl ~; t. Mlt~ Pitt,.,,.,, !Ml t1""1 JJ-1 .... 110 ..,.,., h91l ""rdl" -! Gt.,gg M1111e IC:...•I Gv1rd l 14.•; :t. O.v'ol Stt _._ ~.-.rm~l U.l. )_ lac O....ldoon !J.lr ~o«•l u .1. • L••rv W••th• .... l Ml•"-1 15.UJ }, VII khi.•lll>Q !N•v1l n .1. IOll me!er ""' -1. JUl'I• lullnr. l~•lna! l ;()',I ; J. li:N s..........., (,t,rmyl l.•.J: ) Jllh~ p,..,., (~rl,,..I 1: •. ); 4. 1..11•"1' l.,...11,... (Arm,J . k D.-,lll' ~llOT P-.-, Pllrkl O'o.tlllt ll MARINE JURIS LUZINS OUTLEGS THE ARMY'S KEN SWENSON, MATE JOHN PERRY TO TAPE IN 1,47,9 VICTORY FOR 800. Downing Lik e Having Ri se n From the Dead LOS Al\'G£LES tAP I -His eyes g\11· ter with excitement. The excit ement that being in a pE"nnanl race ca n bring to a ballplayer. Al Do\\'ning is \\'i!h a con- tender a~ain and he lo\'eS 1l Dol\·ning, re scued fron1 the pitching :-crap hea p by the \AJ,; Angr les Dodgers, has be<-n a vilal factor 1n 1.,, ·~ t·harge batk into the :\a11onal League \l est pen- nan l piclurc Suddenly. the arr11 thr ~ew Y11rk Ya nkees ga1·e up on 1110 years ago. has r isen fron1 !he dead. ·'Being wit h the l>oc:lgers 1~ great:· said Do11o·ning, '"JUSl like be ing with the Yankees \\'as greilL They\·e won before. They know h01\' to 11o·1n . You ha\•e no idea v.·hat a diHerf'nce that can make.'' Do~·ning \\'as a 1nembrr of pennant winning teams v.·1th 1he Yanks, in 1963 and 1964 -lhe last tin1c a flag new in the Bronx. In those day.1:, his left arm could lire lhe ball 11oith tremendous \'elOl·ity. Then came the arm ~oblenl$ that seem to catch up sooner or laler with most fasthall pitcher.1:. Af!er a couple of years. the ''anks gave up on hin1 and he drifted to Oakllllnd and then lo ~1.iJv.·auker . The Dodgers, meanwhile. spent all ~·inter trying lo pry ~me left-handed pit- ching help loose . They were h<ll on S.m McDo\\·eirs trail for a" luie but couldn·t make that deal and finally. a f'"" days befo re training camp began, i:t"tlled for [)oy,•ning in eJ:change for ou\flelder Andy Kosco. The dH rert'nce between wanting McDoy,·ell and settling for Oo11o·ning is vast to say the least. "In camp," said Managtr \\'alt Al8lon. "we: kept using the younger guys. Bui he: kept pitching well and eventually, y,•e decided he might be tht' answer alttr an.'· Somey,·here between his Yanktt days. the sorry ~1 3 season he hid wt th Oakland and ~1ilwaukee last year, and his ac- quisition by lhe Dodgers, Downin1t:·!I carttr was reborn. "J realized thal I'll never throw 15 hard a1ain as I could w~ I nrst came up," said Down ing. "Fortunately, I learn- ed to be a pitcher. Evtntually tvery fastball pitcher has to male th•t ad- justrntnt The sooner he: doea it, the bet- ter if is for hlrri." So now Downing depends on changes of speed. pitching savvy and the know·ho111• 1ai~ from nine: big ltap se:11sorui. "His control is improved and he has more of •n assortment of pitches," !Rid Alston. "He h15n"t had a bad outing yet. Ht's J ilched well t\'Ui' Umt. f'\'f lUtd -· LONG JUMPE R RON COLEMAN Get1 World'1 Best at UCI, 27-01/4 Robinson 's Son Killed in Crash NORWALK , Conn. !AP ) -Jackie Robinson Jr., 24-year-0ld son of the former Brooklyn Dodger baSt'ball star, was klllt'd early today '"'hen his car struck a bridge abutment off lhe Merritt Parky,·ay , state police said. Robinson drew national attention in 1963 when he was arrested on a charge of possessing heroin. He was ordered con- fined for treatment as a drug-dependent person. Police sa id young Robinson sulfered a broken neck and died 111 the wreckage. They said his car l'i·as traveling abo1•e the 55-mile-per·hour lin1 it. The accident took place al the New Ca- naan A\·enue <>verpass. and Robinson was tr~veling west. toward Stamford, police 15a1d. Old Pro ARDt.IORF., Pa . ! API -Jack Nicklaus is ju,,! an ordinary putter but bulldog determination and bull strenglh should pull him through to the U.S. Open golr lilll' he.rl' thl~ y,·ttk, predicts old D\Jtch Harrisoo. "I never thought Jack could pull much bul he"s tht> only man slrong el1Qugh lo li(el oo t of th(' l'Qllgh ~rf','. !>aid lht-61- yea r-old rluh pro. oner kno~'Tl as 1ht Ark.ansa~ Traveler. "He's ,l!OI powrr and ('()fltrol I ne\'er sa"' a m11 n "'ith more detl'rminH lion. lie ought to "'in l'\'t:n if ht t"'O·pults t'\'ery gncn " Al 61, J~arri.son is the oldesl man e~·er Impending Slaughters UCSB Really in Tough With Wild Grid Slcit e UC Santa Barbara has outdone Cal State: (Long Beaeh ) when it comes to challt'nging the giants of biglime col- legiate football. I thought the Long Beach institution had .,.,·on hands dov.11 \\'hen it came to stepping out of class. You ma y recall tha t .._ _______ _ WH ITE WASJ-1 ------ Gl..l'trfN WN!l l< it has scheduled the Un1vcrs1ty or ~fiS!liss ipp1 10 the 197 1 grid openrr and the ga!'T)(! "'Lil be at Ole ,._liss. But at least Long Beach has enjo~ed recent ruccess v.·it h its foolball progran1 under fr,rmer Hun tington Beach High athlete Jim Stangela nd. It play t'd LouiS\'Jllt' to a he in the 1970 \Pasadena Bowl. And "''hile that game is a far cry from en}Oying national prestige. il at least reOeclS .some 1neasure of ac- complishment. Of course it doesn't compare in stature lo the Gator BoYll. where Ole ~liss lost a 34-2! thriller to Auburn on ~e"· Yea r's weekend. Santa Barbara. on the oth er hand. hasn"I C\'en la~ted much good fortune at any level of pl ay . The c:auchos struggled through a 2-9 campaign in 1970, includ ing 64-7 thrashing at the hands of San Diego State and a 63- 21 drubbing from Texas Tech . Therefore, It 11o·ould seem tharhaving to face \\'ashlngton and t11e lini\'ersi ty or TennesM"e is li ke sending a newborn lamb lo a pack of "'ild dogs -er:;pecially \.l'llh both of those ga111es being on the road. If the Huma n!" Soc1et1· had an \· control 01·rr football those miitches 1\0uld pro- hab!y nr1·r r C'01ne off. \\'ash1ngton and Tennes~e may h:i \'e In ad1usl lhrir scorrbnards lo three d 1p:1L~ for lht' home sehMI ~ !;(·iirP \.\hen the~ ff"Pet l CSB ~ha dr~ 111 !hP ( •l'Qr£1il Terh·CUnl· berla nd game \1h1ch Th<' lurm('r \.IOO 22~ U' Speakinp: Qf th e impendin g Santa Barbara-\.\'ashinj!'.1on ma ssacre. the latter \\·ill p:rt pltnty of hrlp from thret former Or angr Coast area types. Charlie Buckland i \\'estminster High. Goldrn \\'est Colltgf' l. Tony Bonl\·ell ~ llunlin~ton Reach llip:h and Golden \\'est f plu~ Stt1•e \.\'!('zbowski j Lap;una IWa<"h llii::h 1 can all e:r~cl to see be111·y dut~· Ibis fall. Burkland may start al a rornerback and got ra\'eS from the lluskit's· resume of sprin.e: foo1hall. Bonwell loo ms as lhe So. ! safety and \\'if'zbo~·ski is a barkup cornt'r ha rk. Ste1•e's mall(ie tOt' l~ a big item In de- mand al Seattle: lootba\I games. It click· t'd for 34 ~l raigbt suettssful ton\·er1lons last ~ear and sU of nine fleld goal tries. * * * Pappy llart or Santa Ana is retiring .l!I ma nager of Lion!! Drag St rip in Long Beach. He irot drags going at Orange County airport in 1950. liar!'~ \4'ife Peggy. son Jerry and daughter Joan have all been hot-rodde:rs in the speed-0riented family. Favors Nicklaus to qualify for the U.S. Open Cham· pionship, which star~ ilS 71 st run loday 01·1'.r the Marlon golf club course. Puffing on• smelly black cigar prior 10 teeing of f, the sharccropper"s son from Little Rock sat In lhf! locke r room and lrt his memory drift back over 40 years of compeLitive golf. "Ont' thing J learned:' he drawled. "Golf tournaments are never v.·on . TIK-v are lo~! I nt\·er ft'll I v.·oo a tourname01 in my life. I backt'd into it . Somebod}' losl " . l)ld Outch ('an1e clo.~e to "'inning tht> 1954'l Oprn here. He three-pulled tht> fir~t and ninth holes on Ute final round and ,. finished a ~troke bac k of Ben Hogan. Ct'()rge Fazio and Lloyd 1'.langrum in lhe historic romeback event won by Hogan in a playoff. Dutch won his first tour loumamen1 tn 1939 -the Bing Crosby Open -colltcling St.000 fie also "·on the Te,;as Open. a prize of Sl.200. lhs best yt'ar "·as 1940 when hi!! tntnl pri1.e nlOrlt'Y v.'3S SltOOO. lie rrma in('(f on the tour for n quartrr of n ('en tun , leav in g In 195~ lo ~r\·e tr AchinJ; jQb~ in Okl:ihQ ma :1.nd the l>lyn1p1c Club '" San r ranc1sco ht>fore n10\·ing to St. Louis, He \4'00 the li S. Seniors th·e tunes. 1·at o: I. kb Jlia..,.. !Air l'or~•I 1:16.f. J••.iln th111• -I. Alllit l•"911M !.-,,,,,.,, '4-1; I. lllU k hl'flld! (,t,rmyJ !S-11 J. aoe 'Wttl• (Army) tu.I; f , T~~ S.ti. C/rAl t"-) ltt-11 Siio! ""' -1. llrl<Q WLIMltll tArm•J ""lO'~' ? PtoU Gary CN9V'/) UI; 1 Cl•-loll !M<l •lfl .. l 52-S; '· io: ... /rAon IM•rlntil) »W.; s. c. • .,. p,,. !.IHll (NI Y1) Q .T\,, 1-mllt -• -1. c .. rto Scullr fA•,,,....l I• oo '' 1. Gory Wnl t rlltld (.-,,.,,,\ U;S4.0; J, G..-ry W•ll- •erf~ !Ar,,,yJ tl :OO.J. Hit~ I--1, JOI\,, Honfltld ''"""'I 6-1~1 7 llt""e Olo.otl (.-,f,,,'(l M ; l, 11111 MCC .. llOn (Air l'Otco) 1-f: " H...,.,. Jl t loon (,l,•"'Vl M . 100 mdu d•~ -1. Cl'le•ln G•..., (A•myl 10 l : 1 Ra.Don o.,,dley (Ml <l,.1$) 11.l : J i'<•rlle•I K•ln• !"'' Foret) 10,1: ~. II.., Vtuohtn l..,rmt1 IO 4l S l!•rl H1rrls (,t,rmy) 10 S. a mu..-d•oll -1. l'•ld Ntwfloull~ 1•,,nvl a.It: J. l ••'l' J-1M1rl,...! "'•· J J,,.. 11i.,,. <1•11 '"''"''fl '7.l , • Oni. 11.tilh (Army/ •I 1, L 11111 Enn!• {.-.rmrl • 1. LOOO ,,_...,. rwi -I, Cl\lrlh Mns..,..r (ilo ir l'0tce! U:l~.a; 1. Pl'lll Camp (N••r J l •.1•1: J. l ilt ltl~e t,,,.my) l":lt·'' f Mlkt Mln l .. 11...,t IMltl'*J lt::M.t; s, Mite Gr090tl9 (Ntv~J U o. '· ~'s Wrong For Wright; Angels at KC Poor Lefty Phillips. If it isn't one thing. It's another. Firsl there was the benching of Alex J ohnson and then rumors of weapons in the clubhouse. Then the manager was forced Wednesday night to experience "'hat he called "my n1ost fr us trating loss " and forced to make "my toughest decision as a manager." His starting California Angel pitcher, Clyde Wright, befuddled the Boston Red Ange l Slale .-.n Gt,.,.I IHI ll:MPC 11101 J o;ne 17 """"" ot l(On .. 1 (ol't Jun!' 1l '""""'' ~' K~n••• CH' J une 19 Arniols •I IC1n .. , Cir. S lS pm, S 15 p.m 11.15t m. Sox on one hit !hrnugh eight innings bu t Phill ips yanked him for a pinch hitter in the eighth because the score board dic- tated such a mo\'e. The Angels, on tv•o unearned runs, trailed Boston 2·1 at the time. The Sox '"·ent on to '"'in 4-l after Carl Yastrzemski"s 1 .... ·0-run homer off reliever Da\'e LaRoche in the nin1h. California left immediately after the game for Kansas City where it will open a 13-game roarf trip tonight. sending Rudy ~lay , fresh off the disabled list. against the Royals' Dick Drago. \\'right had retired l!I men in suc- cession \\'hen Phillips pulled him. "l knew I had to do 1t .'' Phi ll ips sa.id , "but sentiment nearly got in the wa y of my decision." ··You had no other altemali\'e, Skip," \\'right lold his boss. Boston srored two unearned runs off \\'right in the seCQfld inning on lll com· hination of J im Fregosi's error. a walk, a passed ball and their only hit off \\'righ t -a run-scoring single by rival pitcher Jim Lonborg. BOSTON C.-,Lll'OJINl,t, .. " ''I ., t ~ rltl c.-'"~ " • • • ... !Om••, " • • ' 0 J i\'t~oM, .. ' ' • Gonll lf1, " • • ' • " ~"'\<1h ,, • • • F•toQOS•c .. > • ' 0 "•""'"''~' II ' ' ' ' .-, J<>llnwn, " ' • ' • "•''oco H;, " • • • McMull•o, " ' • ' • '.cot' " ' • • • Si>tn<•" " ' ' • I! (OO•Ql(oro, t t ' ' • • S1opt.1n>0", ' • ' • .O>eJih•Otl ' ' • • • 8•"V• " ' • • • l<>l'l>O•Q, • ' • ' ' W••Q"'· • ' • • • Qeoor. ~ • • • • Qvit, " • • • • lolloo:~•. • • • • • l~toll " ' ' Toto lo " ' • • 11 .. 1..., '" ~ orn -• (alotor"ll '" ~ ~-· ' Frf90'I " -II"°""'" ' COO -llot!on ' c.11..,..n11 ... "' -Y&>lfl•'T'U I If), " - Alom.e•. I,. M • IR II SC l Ot1b0<9 fW l·Ji ' ' 1 1 • l WflG~t !l .7·H I I l 0 ? 2 1..oll<><"• 1 1 ? G ! HI P -t ¥ l o-100•Q !11"'"1 l'i'~ -Lonoor~ "~ -Stop/11"\oon 7•mt - 1·1 1 Ai·.....iao<• 1~ 001. Autry Mak es " Sugg es tions For Cherubs LOS A~GELES IAP ) -Gene Autr). n1ajorit y stockhol der and ch~irrnan of the boa rd of th e Californi a Angels, said \\'ednesday ht>"s planning to ht re an ex· pert on morale to he lp alleviate clubhouse feuding . The comments "·ere rt'porled in today's Los Angeles Times by columnist John Hall, 11o·ho in terviewed Aut r\' the dav after Hall reported that some ·Angel Playt'tS hsd guns in their lockers and thal di"ens ion on the: club v.·as rampant Autry said he didn't bel ieve in \'Otes of confidence for managers but said he gave his co mplete: backing to Manager Lefty Phillips. Ht' added that he plsnnt'CI two mO\•es to help pre\•ent \'iolence from r\ar· ing : -The hiring of s special player counselor -··somebody like former Detroit manager M;iyo Smi th " -to \4'0rk c-losely with lhe players and the managfo. n·ent. He would concern himself "'ith the little problems tha( arise belv.·een lhe players and front ofr ice. Ile v.·ould bf: • neutral advisor to both side11. -Election or a tean1 captain ..... ho \\'OU!d add leader11hip on and off the field. He v.·oold either bt elected by the team or appointed by the manager. Autry said he hadn"I jumped forward earl~r because he ~ not like to ~nd-guess the manager or general manager Dick Walsh. Hf' also pralstd Phillip!!. ''()Jr manager doesn't nttd a vote of con8dence," uid the former CO\\'bo y-singer-11rtor. "l';obody has considered letting !...('fly fll'! a\.l·ay at any time. E\'f'r ybo<ty I've talked lo has 11!v.·ays had noth ing but Lhe be~t to say aOOut Lefty 11s 11 b11seDall man. I think he's an outstandlna n1anagcr." Iha pio ha " alh ye a TI ooe IOla '" '"' ~ pla '"' coo uo B wa wa Ire~. juni T Mc: P<ri th• eas ..,, the ... . .. c hh N" II "" I< re~ F ' Car '" sta fro 11 nf hoe lot \~l'r hts lh' J ~av son • 1 del m' hi in yo l y" get I '" ly. '°" ha Pil is c:o J8 ba lo • M y b E. A "' SI "' p At1t eate1·s' Remai·kable Year E11d s Qulckly now, can you name any school that has won lhree NCAA team cham- pionships this past school year ~ You don 't have W look very far if yoll are from the Orange Coast area. UC Irvine's amazing a thl etic program has done it and the feat is even more remarkable whrn one realizes the athletic program has betn going only SL'\ years. UGI has won three swimming titlcS on HOWAR D HANDY a national level ; add two in tennis and one in water polo and you come up with a total of six in as many years. Only UCLA has a chance t~ duplicate the Anteaters' 197{}-71 feat if it wins the university level tennis title this week. The Bruins won in basketball and volleyball. Congratulations are in order at UCI and tennis coach ~1yron ~1cNamara may need a truck to carry home the tennis hard.,..·are for the ne)(t fey,· years \\·Hh freshmen and sophomores dominating the :scene. * * * l\.k!Namara'1 band of warriors b a ve played a 1n erry tune ~·Ith university level foes this \\'eek aft er annex ing their se· cond straight NCAA C'Ollcge division cro..-·o. But it will soon be a parting of the '\\'3YS for the coach and his ha ppy band of warr iors. This despite th e fact f'-''O are rre~h n1en. one a sophomore and (lne a junior. The parting, fortunately for UCI and J.1c~Jamara, is for the summer va<'atioo period only and all vd ll be regrouped in the fall ·when school begins again. Bob Chappell and Glenn Cripe ..-·ill lour eastern cities. picking up valuable eX• per'rnce for the future. •·The summer tournament season in the east can't be beat fo r young pla\·ers seeking to further themselves In t bi s gatne," l\.1cNamara 5ays, Chappt"ll and Cripe are freshmen. Gre~ Jablonski is a sophomore and Chu<'k Narhand a junior. \\'hat about the coach during the sum· r.u•r months? Is he tired nf tf'nnis and seeking a respi!e fr(lm the gan1e for a few months? · Far from ii. ~fcNamara will spend Che summer in Carn1el \Calif. I conductin~ :i nine '-''Cek summt'r camp for aspiring ~·oung net '!'tars of pre.college age. lie '-''ill be there from June 28 to Aug. 28. * * * Once arounrl 1he sports beat . If vou noticed a similaril" bet\recn one of the h\~h Jump ('f")111pel.ilors <inrl 1hc hrilrl ju<lge \\·ennr ... da ~· ni~ht al the Jnrrrscrvicr t r:ick rnet't at l'CL ~ou \1 rtrn'l St'eing doublc Lew \lo~ t 1s a se1·cn f•l'll JUrnper and hi.; fr1the r is ;in AA ti offlc1al in ch'1rge. of thr JUmfl compe\lunn Norm and Larr~· Sherry of baseball famr l.~orm is ao Ane:els coaehl arc off· season resident~ of ~fi ssion Viejo. Joe Anderson. catcher on the UC I nine, gare up being an Angel batboy this sea· son but remains with the organization as a member of the grounds cre"'· Lave1·'s Dra 'v 1.0NJ)()N 1 A Pl -Rod !..aver ol Uirona (lei r.1ar. fa\T1r1te to \\'in the \\,.imhlrdon men·s singles title and No. 1 seed. found him ~ell \\'ith a rug(,!etl drt1w \\'ednesrlay in a bid to regain the lille he lost last year La1·er has dra11·n Bora Jovanovic or \'ugni:!:iv ia in the fir:<:! rounrl and should gel into the third round. If he succeeds. then he runs into fourth ranked Clark Graebncr. of l\'e1v York Ci· ly. Even if he defeats Graebner. then a fourth round 1natch looms against pro- bably Tom Okker of Holland or Nikki Pille or Yugoslavia. All-Star H South roach Jim Stephens or Marina is rfght. Newport Harbor's John Kazmer could be the big ke y 1n Saturday night'!I .t8) sbcth annual Orange CoU11ty all.star basketball clash al Orange Coast C:Ollege. The fi..3 leaper rrom Nev;porl i.s tlcktted for lhe Rebel starting lineup at .a forward spot alongside of Pacifica's fi..S Jerry J.111ras. Kazmer's ex·Tar tea mmate, 5--11 Taras Young will be holdinp; down one of the back~urt spots with ~I I Gar)' Orgill of Est.ancia "'bile 6-611 Jim Keyes of Santa Ana \'alley ~ill be manning the all·irn· .po1rlant lo"' posl (center! assignment in Stephens' low post orrensc. In direcl contrast. the North 11!1·slar11 will be operating out of the 1·2·2 set up prat liccd by Sonora·s Paul Bush, the Thursd•r. Junt \7, 1'171 _,..,, ....... =_,,._ w N :s:: ~::snf!J~wwa• • • AFS Students Give Sports a Try ' 1 ' f By PlllL ROSS • 01 ""-o.nr 1"1111 s .. rt The principal job of lhe American Field Service has been to provide a 'A'Drth'A·hile exchange llf students :1 bet\\'eeO American and fore ign high schools throughout the years. But, alas. lately the AFS progra1n has taken on another ty,'is\, especially in regard to four of the Orange Coast area high schools which participate in the program. IT\ the 197().71 school year. lht AFS nol only sent S<Jme highly·rated academicians from O\'ersea.~ prep schools into the area. But. in the case of the four area institutes of secon· ) darv education mentioned above, four or the scholars turned out to be. prelly fair athletes too. Corona de! Mar was graced by the ., presence of Ethio pia's Friew Kelemu. "·ho lettered in cross country and track and field, <'arting off most valuable Bee honors in lhe latter. At Edison, Swedish exehangt> student I..ars Danielsson spent much of his lime on the bench but he did see enough action to eam himself a Jetter t1 on the Chargers' varsity basketball team. Eslancia's foreign contribution lo ~ area athletics "'as South Africa's jl Howard Bennett. a letter y,•inning member of the Eagles' ~2 CIF AAA football playoff entry. And, Brazilian Geraldo Souza made an UJISU~essful attempt to make Jlun· ~ tington Beach's basketball squad but then ended up contributing a major role in the Oilers' varsity track antics. One of the most interesting stories relating to the quartet is recalled by Corona spike mentor John Blair in regard to Kelemu. He says, "F'riew didn't realile any difference bet"·een his black skin and that of the other team members. "But when ~·e went against school11 which had black kids. he "·as amazed al being called a soul brother." Two Countians Mal{ e All-CIF Baseball Tea111 Anaheim High first baseman Ron Knaub and Santa Ana pitcher L«Jnard l\1orales are the only Orange County players honored on the AJl..CIF AAAA division baseball team, annoU11ced today by the All·Southern California board of athletics. Knaub, who helped guide the Colonists to the Sunset League crown, landed a first team berth. He batted .390 during the past season. Morales compiled a &.1·2 record and a 0.64 mark for the Saints. Both are seniors. Dennis Littlejohn. who led North 1'or· r anee to its first CIF baseball title, was named player of the year. First Team Pos Player School <"-Littlejohn. N. Torrance JS-Knaub. Anaheim ~H-:'1-litchelL N. T{l.rfance JB-Sain. ~1 ira Costa $.\)-Rasmussen. Arcadia OF-~1arple. Hueneme OF-Donnelly. Culver Cily Of-l\1atter. Lake11·ood P -Larsen . Alhambra P-r.1bbon. Leuzinger P-D:ividson. Chaffey l :til-Redoglia, Pasadena litil-~lartindale. N. Torrance Second Team ('--Salvesen, Redlands JB-Collins. Warren 2B-l..e\\'is, Crescenta V:illey :!S-~at.lin. Chaffey SS-Glenn , Buena OF-Convertino. Bishop Amat ()F'-Kr:irner. Chaffey OF-Anderson. \\'. Torrance P7 Trumbauer, Thousand Oaks P-f'_;ngel ke, St. AnUJOny P-~Iorales, Santa Ana Tblrd Team C-Kachaturian. Whittier IB--1\fcNallv. Redlands 2B--lrvi~. ·Buena JB-lfamblin. f\till ikan SS-Russell. Redland! OF-Fa!zonP, Keppel OF-Allen. Riverside Poly OF-Battle. Centennial P-Young, W. Torrance P-Farenbaugh. Alemany P-Shinholste.r. Downey Util-Garcia, Hueneme Yr. i\\•g. . Ir. 382 Sr. .390 Sr .. 356 Sr. .433 Sr. .400 Sr .. 407 Sr. .47.f Sr .. 4~ Jr. 11 · I Sr. 10.:1 Jr. 17 ! Sr. .:194 Jr .372 Sr, .4fil Sr. .:111!1 .:186 .:i90 .375 .349 .390 .~llO ,_, Sr. Sr . Jc_ Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sc. Sr. Sr. Jc. Sr. Sc. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sc. Jc. Sc. 11-4 6--1·2 -'"" .397 .321 .3:13 .410 .38 1 .440 A62 11 ·4 H}l g., .371 Starters Yankee head mentor. The North starting five l''ill feature Sonora's ~7. 19(1.pound county player of the year David ~1eyers and Costa Mesa ·s ~1"1 John Seymour of Servile at the wing positiom. Villa Park's 6-S Pat Mclna\ly and Lowell's &-4 Randy Dickinson man· ning the post slots and fi..I Tim Horton of Sonora out on the point running the of· fen se. Acrording to Stephen!!. "1 think our key is Kazmer. If he's on and playing well, then ~·e·11 be tough. "We count R lot on hls 1hoollng and defensive piny." Stephen!! fir,11r"" In also rtly henvily on .!iuperior muscle po~·er up fmnt wlU1 most of tht South b1g men h1nling Sllbst.antial "'eight advantages n\'er Lheir FRIEW KELEMU GERALDO SOUZA Apparently it remained only that - amaLen1ent -as !he slender African sped to a 1:27 .8 660 best and copped HOWARD BENNETT LA RS DAN IELSSON third place in th<1t event in the lrvine Leaj:!ue Bee division. AltOOugh J)aniclsson wa sn 't as sue. cessful as Kelen1u athletically. he did manage to t.aUy two Important points in the Chargers' mldsenson up.set of archrival Fountain Valley. According W Edison cage tutor Dave r.1ohs, Lars had played somt ball in Sweden. °'I had originally heard about him through either our \'ice principal. 011en r-..lillcr. or Lym~n Clo1vcr, the activities director .And then Lars aµ. proached me !hr first or second dav of school and he 1\·as on th(' varSity roster a II through the season." Bennett·s acclimation to America n football took some time evtn though he \\'as a skilled rugby player back home. The ~II. 195-pounder a Is o participated 1n junior varsity V.Testl· in g but rcceived one of his biggest thrills on the gridiron. .,,, here he booted an extra point for coach Phil Bro1l'n·s Irvine rU11nt'rsup. Sa~·s Brown, "if all exchange students "·ere as squared away as 1!011·ard is. 1t 11·ould be OK." Stockily bullt (5·8, 175) Souza found his athletic lode al Huntington on the cindrr paths. He posted sprint b<!sls of 10.3 1100) and 23..1 (220), high jumped ~6 and ran the second leg on the Oilers' school record (44,Jl 440 relay combo, \\'hich also included Steve Pickford, Jim Ni!lko11·s k.i .and George Fierro. An excellent soccer piayer . Souza drew this comment from Oil City track coach Paul \\lood . "he carries the ball with his feet like one of us \\'ould carry it v.·ith our legs." Th e four will bid adieu to the Orange Coast area in a 1natter of v.·eeks and will close out their Arncrican stay with an AFS.sponsored bus tour of the country prior to departing for their various homelands. Although they may not realize it. the quart.el of foreign ex change students will leave indelible impressions at tht area schools "'hich t~y leave behind. -" ' ~ .. .. • • : • ( I I l' ' ( ' ' ' ' " j Sports Clipped Short W omen Netters Get Host il e LONDON -lt looks like a lively, temperam~ntal \V1mbledon Tennis Chain· p1onship lhis year. F onner UC! student stormed off 1he court Beckenhnm last week disputed hne ttills. Patti Hogan in tears al bet::ausc ol Juhc Heldman of New York fl ounced orr the Queens Club court at the London Grass Courts Championship \Vcdnesday af1er losing a match against. Britain 's Virginia Wade. •· r had been accused onC'c or 111·1ec or triking point s that didn 't belong to me,'' l\1i ss Heldman sald. Mi~s \Vadt• replied: "I certalnly didn't call her a eheaL There was really no need fnr all this because she was playi11g so well ·· e Trne1' F e ud Boils SEATTLE -US. 1raC'k coaches' spokesmen called \\'ednesday for ac· ceptanee of Tom Hill 's high hurdles lime as a world rc('ord. stepping into a reud over s.1n<:t1on1ng of track meets. The !.ta!c1ncn t i""ut•d h\' 1he cnm1n1l\t'(t as 11. m!'I in S!'attle follo11ed charges hy I isTFF Prcsld('nt \\'a1·11(' Cool<'Y 1hat the AAU ··has openly u1\•1trd 11;.r'' hy 1hrr:r tt·n1ng athletes' c!t~ibility. Iha! the AAU tias refust'ci !ll subn11l as :111 111· ternatrnnal ft'('(J rrl the ll2 second time 1!111 recorded in 1970 \\•h1le an Arkansa!I St:•lc runnt•r. and th:it tile L1STFF plea frJr n1rn1bcrsh1p in !he US. Olyn1p1c C•nn111ittf'e ··has been t;ib!ed '' e llo11er irr JJ111c~nii HONOLULU -Third baseman <;lc1e Rover. rcle;isrd lron1 the Atlanta Braves :if1 Cr l:ln explosive dispute with club vice. presidi·nt Piiul Hi chards, signed a con· lracl \Vednesda~· to play with the Hawaii islanders or the Pacific Coast League. Boyer. 34 and a 15·se;-i.son veteran of lhe ma1or leagues. is expected lo be in the Islander lineup against Portland Thursday night. e """'"'"" Upsel ~,\STOOUR.'if.. England C:eo rgcs <_;oven of France upset defendin~ ch<1mpion Ken Rose "·all of Australia in the lhirrl round of !he South of F.ngland tennis championship \Vedncsday 4--6, S.3, .... ln the second round Edison i\landarino R e 'Veal e d Northern adversaries. The South also will boast a dcfeni>il·c edge. al though lhe Yankee.~· top five L!l potenlially explosive with heavy poinl· makers like Meyers (21.7), Seymour (19.3) and ~fclnally (17.1). If Keyes should falter in the Rebels' low post role. Stephens has agile Paul Zyskowski (61) to step right in there while the North rnnk!I thin out after the rir5t fi\•e, with only 6-6, 215--pound Mike Taylor of Sonora offering any !!Olace to Bu~h on the boards. All in 311. the outcome appears to bt a question of whether the South di;fense can hold down the North'11 M:flring guns and whether the YenkC(s' thin front line can make hcad"·ay t1Gain~t the beefy Rebels. of Brazil ousted flay Barth 01 San Diego. 7·5. 6·2, but two American 1~on1en ad· l'<rnced. • ·"'••g11r "'''J 1)11 s i11g e LAS VEGAS -BoxinR great Sugar ll.ay llobinson "'as on the sarne card witti l\'ancy Sinatra \Vednesday. It 1rasn·1 box· ing. It was show business. The forn1er 1niddl£'we1ght and "·eltcrweight chan1pion opened "'ilh Miss Sina!ra in !he showroom of the .lnterna· tiona l l!otel on !he Las Vegas Strip. su~ portini;: her act with a quick dance routine ;ind fast jokes. "You pay your dues in show business," Robinson said ;ifter ;i rehearsal before the ~how opened. ··Going Ja rounds was never like this.'' Bobinso n. now :iJ. "'o rked as a singer and <lancer even tx-rore he retired for J;ood 10 1965 . ··J'm the biii:i::es1 h:i1n in the .,.,·o rld .'' he said. ··and I love perforn1ing. I al"·ays gel c·:lrrird :i"'llY \\'1!h .,,,.h;it I'm doing·· e 1•re1t111t11rP ·"if111i11g :'\EIV YORK -The llo111;1rd Porter case has flared again and thrra1 cned !o· da.v 10 "1/M: out V1llanova·s ~realest basktlball seasC1n. The prob!en1 t'rUJlll'd anew \Vrl!nesday upon disclosure of p:.ipcrs filed in federal co11rt here 1har ~:iy f'or1er dirt indeetl sign a pr11f.:'Ss1onal contract I a s t f1{'!'etnber wh1lr sl 111 playing for the \\'1ldcats. l f so. the Wlldcals could have erased fro1n the record mosl ol lhe victories in lheir 27·7 season, including their run- nerup finish to UCLA in lhe NCAA chain· pionship loumament in whicR Porter "'as selectt>d most valuable player. They also supposedly would forfeit some $6,500 revenue from lhe tournament. e S tt1r• Seek C'oach SALT LAKE CITY -An attome\' for former Utah Star Coach Bill Sha~man s:t1d \Vednesday Iha!, in his opinion, Sharman is free to sign a contract 1vilh ally basketball le.1m he wants. The Stars saiil Tuesday they're look ing for a coach lo replace Sharn1an. Du l the,Y also said that if !he L<>s Angeles Lakers try lo sign Sharrnlln, they will face legal action e NCAA 1'r11c1' ~Jeel SEATTLE -Oreii:on's Sieve Prefon· ta1ne, \lillanova·s r.1arty L i Quo r i, Sotilhern California·s \\'illie Deckard and UC LA 's Wa yne Colle1l prove why this 50th National Collegiatr Athle1ic Associa· lion track meet 1.1·ill be a \\'Irle.open af· fair Prelnnta1nr runs lo delt·rHI his lhree. 1n1lc title n•hile L1q111Jr1 seeks tn become !hr fourth man t'\'Cr to wu1 1he mile lhree. s1raight year~ 1n the n;J1111nal col· h•giate championslups. Deckard 1n the 100 and 220 and Collett in the 440 face. even stiffer eoznpetition in actirin starting !oday at the Unil'ersity or \Vashingtnn and winding up Saturday. Ba,seball Standirigs AJ\.1 ERICA'.'J LEAGUE Ea~I UivlJion \\'on Los! Jlaltin1or~ " 21 Dclro1l 35 27 Boston 34 27 NC'll' York " 11 Cleveland 28 32 \VashingtQn 21 38 \\'csl l)ivision Oakl:ind " 21 l\:in~as C11y ::z " l\l inneo;ota " 32 ('al1 lnmi11 29 35 Chicago 22 11 ?\1i!wnukce 22 ll Wt<111,1C1•y't lltMltlt Monnt'<O!a 3. (l~vel8rod ' !11!11"'9" I , Mllw~u~e<' l Npw York J, 1111110• ((!y 2 O.!n>I! 1. (hlt80!l S O•~l•n<I S. Wll>f'tin.gron I 60,~n '· "'""•I• I Todt y'1 Oom" Pel. .6'8 .51).'; .557 .468 .4'7 .356 .661 .561 .467 .453 .386 .386 GB • 41: 10 10 J6l.::_ 61,, 10 13 16' ! 161 ! O<tl•Oll !(•In '"I at Clrnlofld !MtOo-11 T·Jl, "IOM M,w Yor~ r~tot!ltmv•• 7·fl •I 8•1Hmort (Ooll-.on l-fl. 111a1>1 &n,t lo (Ha1.ier o? or M•r }-f ) •' K111u1 (111 10.~oa 1-'l. nlQM c111ce110 (Jonn .)..II "' Mln-11 tWlll"'"" 1·1 ~·"'•'''a ...... 6 o•fOI> fl W•1l>'1>11'""• nlO~I 0.1ro1t U Clt •l11\n0, noglll tow Vor-11 6•111""'''· niolll A•t•l• "' l<nno•• Clry, nl<gM Chkt90 I! Ml""l'Ot~. nlllftl ..Oskl<lnd .i Mllw•utH, nlfllt NATIONAL LE AGUE East Dlvl11lon Woo lo•t P\Usburgh .. ,, New York " 25 St. Louis ,. 29 Chirago .11 " l\iontreal 2; " Philadelphia 25 ,. \\'tsl Oi\•ision San Francisco 41 ,. _, Los Angeles 35 " tlouston " " Atlanta :10 ,. Cincinnati 27 ,. San Diego 2.1 41 Wld111••llf'1 lln ot11 Clnclnn•TI I. St. lou•I 0 N..,. Yer-1, DM19tri 1 AH•nl1 I , (~It-S MOnl •f"I '· son OllQOI O P~ll .... •l,,,,11 f , S1n F"ndtc:o .I Pl!11bloran •, Ho1111on • l N lf'I Ot mn Pel. .625 ,576 .554 .492 .439 4IO .621 .547 .... .455 .429 .359 GB 31.1, '" ,., 11 \.1a 13~:.i s ' II 121fl 17 ~r l•ult IC••llOn l~J) 11 C~!t100 1-!on 0-Gi Atlonll {Jl:Md •·'I •I Clnclnnll! 1Mo11n l-11, njg~I 0<-lf g1me1 'theG11Ttcl 1"•14•'1"• ··-· Ph\l.odel1>hl1 11 "lew Ya•-· nivlll Monlrtll •I Pnt1bU19h, n\thl .a.11111!1 •t Clnclf>,,..11, night S~n OI• ti Jin ttr1ndl6'.o, I, lw~llll!hl HoY1111r1 11 DMtfft, nlvtit lSTH ANNIVERSARY SALEll BIGGEST & IEST YETI DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA Mod•rn & Compl•t• S•ryice & P•rf, Dept . Modern Body Shop for All C•r• 646-9303 540-9468 Orange County's Largest and Most ri.tCKtem T oyota and Volvo Dealer OYllSIAS DILIYlaY SPl(IALtm DAI LY PILOT 23 Clobb ered; Bruins Lead SOCTll BEND (A Pl -Dcfendlnr; NCAA tenn is champion UCLA may very well be arr:u1ging an all·Bruin nnale ht•re Saturday. And 1he top-seeded Bruin , defending singl{'s charnpion J e f ! Borowiak. \1·ould likr nothing better. UC lrv1nt's college division champion team was elim1n;1ted fron1 the <'on1· petition when 1he doubles tean1 of Bob Chappell and Glenn Cripe lost Ill a duo from Corpus Chrtsll 1n straight sets, 6·2, 6·2. The Joss came in fourth round play \\'ith the AnT.ealers getting a total of nine points in the competitio n before the final Joss. Three singles and a doubles <'omb1ne "'ere lost on Tuesday. "It really doesn·l matter who yo u play just as long as you reach the finals,'' sau.J Boro11-·iak. the sentnr star who plans to join the pro tour next "·eek at Wimbledon. "But r11 have lo admit. it woulcl be nice fa cing a tcan1n1ate 111 thr finals:· Boro1viak said. ··Thal wuuld mean ~·e have the title clln<·hed .'0 t:CLA , which broke Southern Cal's four.year don11nal!on of the chain~ pionships last year. held a con1manding position. The Bruins entered today's quarter· linals at Notre Danie with 2G points. Small college po11'er Trinity, Tex .. was close behind with 25. buL lwo 01her previous contenders. Rice and Southern Cal., dropped out of contention with 23 and 21 points respectively. The UCLA arsenal, anchored by three of lhe top four seeded players. was intact for the quarter.final s. Lefty J imn1y Con· nors. a freshman ranked second behind Boro11·iak. and Pakistan Davis Cup star Haroon Rahim gave the Bruins three of the eight singles players. But spunky Trinity ace Bob McKinley. the younger brother of pro star Chuck McKinley. has different pl<lns. "I play the key match today. If I ('an beat Connors, then we're r ight back 111 the picture.'' said the f>.foot-6 McKinley. gifted "'ilh the san1e fighting spirit of his older brother. Veteran Trinity coach Clarence Mabry, \Vho also coached Chuc Ji: McKinley, agreed. "He's just got 1o co1ne throui;:h for us or we·n be so £ar down the line "·e'll never c:aLch up," said l\1ahry. Tri ni1y placed two players. up~e1 11•111· ner Brian Gottfried and l\1 cKinley . 10 the quarter-finals while Stanford. Miami, Fla., and Rice had one apiece UCLA was the only entry \Vt\h t1vo doubles teams re- maining. "I .think 11·e·re in good shape. The tables tul'ned around some"·hat WerJ.. nesday,'' said Bruin Coach Glenn Bassett. tie cited the !acl that previous co.leader Rice. Soothern Cal and Trinity all lost ke y players Emerson, La vc r l(nock Off F ocs LONDON !AP\ -Newport Beach's Roy En1erson. un.~eecled for the first lin1e oil \\limbledon since. 1959. defeated Cliff Richey. in \\lednesday's third round of the London c:rass Courts Championships. Riche)'. seeded No. 6 £or next y,·eck's \\'imbledun. Josi his bid lo advance 10 the quarter·finals "·hen Emerson beat him S. 9, 6-4, 7 :i and Corona dl'I Mar's Rod Lnver defeated Zeliko Fr a n u Io v i c . Ytigosl:lvia. 4·6. fi.3, S.4 But St:\n Smith. No 2 Lil the United Stairs and ~o 4 al \\'1rnbledon, rmerged a" on e of 1.hree Americans In make the final eight Smith ll'as a 6·:1. 64 V1l'1or over l~ay 'Ruffel ~ of Australia l\1art y Riessen ad- v:incrd ,1·ith a 6-3. &-2 victory over Pancho C.onzalrz and Tnm (;onn;in beat Terry Addison of Australia 8·6. (l.3 . DEAN LEWIS !TJOJYJO ITIAI ANNIVERSARY SPEC IALS '71 COROLLA $1777 ~ Sii THE ALL NIW TOYOTA CILICA sn. CP'I. ' ........ ' ";;",;.';;"~"-';;;'~·.,•;;';;";;. .. ;;.';... .... -1 VOLVO 1971 DEMO $2998 14Z t•cle11, , • .110, lt11ts r. 1 utem1 lie tr•"•· USID CAI SPICIAL $1195 l t•t at.NAULT 111 11...,,., lle•tf1', f •oeld. Jrllc• IVIU.*) • 2-t DAILY PILOT Thurso.lY, Jwlt 17, 1971 ;. Alamitos HB, Estancia Tie !J_T_h_e_A_~_ ... _"""_!_,:_1 !"_":_r_ .. M_e_i_ho_d-1 Huntington Cyclist Favored Entries Fountain Valley, SWING AND SWAY DOESN'T PAY L• ~-••n. ,._ 1 .... 1111 -"" ~ -& ..... """ "'l 1:U •·"'· CdM Nines Win " ..... '"'~-11·1 ·"' &I fud• .. , .. & "" MK '" "' •• •• "' •• "' •• '" "I ' " '" "I "' •• '" "' '" . " '" .. uo. n~. "' "' "' "' ,,. "' "' Fountain Valley Kiwanis Club won a ~ ~Ion over r\ewport Harbor on t he strength of two base hiu while Huntington Beach and Estan- ci a wert playing to a 6-6 deedlock and Corona de l Mar loppled Edison, 3--0 on A one- hilter It. was all a part of the Hun- tington Beach summer recrea- tion league for high school u n dereraduates Wednesday night. Fount.a.in Valley made the most of lhe t11i·o hits, both for utra bases . lo post the. vic- lorv. A 11i·alk to Mike Fink.lea and a fielder's choice put Allen Zimmer on. Bob Maisey then doubled kl dri\'e them both across in the fifth . In the si:iith, Joe Burks walked and Clarence Aust.in tripled to bring the final tally aCTO."j,.';. Estancia scored three ti mes in thf' seventh to tie Hun- tington ~ach in a game that was called after seven innings because o( darkness. Both tea ms USf'd numerous ple_vers with frec;hman Tim Haye.s striking out three batters in 1wo innings without giving up a hit. Under the lights al Costa ~fesa city park, the Sea Kings of Corona had three pitcher~ combine on a one-hitter. Craig l\1allory started and worked three innings. striking out six. H<tntlnt-I•••~ (I! •• V•n"""•"fO"• " "''M0<e. n Miii•, 0 111..,.-11M1ugh. cl L L" '· t w~i•~· 7,. ven'•""'"'· lb Luno. " l(.,,nl!<I>. ii ~lovl•, o Mel!,• ltiuo, I'll &IOOl<I, lb Plummtt, <f ll•"'ln, •' Cl1rolll , "" T'oooll> lb MO•~•·~· J.t:I 101111 ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' " • • • ' ' ' • ' ' • • ' ' ' • • • • • • • • • ' ' • ' • ' ' " ' ' . E11•n<>~ * !~ J-& t s f<un!•no•on 811cll 001 000 0-4 10 5 • • ' • • • • • • ' • • ' ' k l'lu1!1.,., l.•,fWU. (I IC•lllne, <I '°"•I, u P<>•lll, If ........ f\dlo. ti JOIW>Mlll. ( P-•11, >o L--•-.rl MCCl•ron, 1• Mavn , • , G•1nt. rl lJ•m1t1<>. P ,.l•!lt .• .. • • ' ' ' ' • • ' • • • ' • • ' • • • ~~ I N•w ... rl Hlrtlo• !I) .. ' ' ' ··~·•.,•1. ,, 1t.11 ...... . Wln<1•rO, U T•~ll. lit Wh/11, IHI w •• v ... ( F.,.tu. rl Mt!<ko"men. <l<t C~••d. cl ' . • • I ' ' ' ' • ' • ' • • • • • • • ' t-!IH , lll 101111 " . "" 1t1w1•I• Cl~• (ti Mu~•1r, u I omm.,. 11> Ct frOO. 1"·1> S.llot. lb l,•l lWY, I> ll"nh1td, ltr·Ct Colem1n. Jr lb llr1l,..rd, cf Tn1l1r. lb M1ymu, rl !lutlo." •! • ...,t, < .a.uuln. c F!nlo.I .. , i>-11 Tott la .. ' ' ' . ' ' ' ' ' ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . . ' ' . ' . ' ' " So:ert '' ln~Tn1' . "' ' ' • • • • ' ' ' ' • • • • ' . . ' • • ' • • • • • • ' . "' ' ' . ' • • ' . • • ' . ' ' • • ' . ' . • • ' . ' .... • • • • ' ' • • ' ' • • • • . ' • • • • • • • • ' ' ' . ' ' ' ' . l'OwP.,..-1 M11-11!1 000 1-• t 1 FV Klwonlt c1 .. 1o m 011 ~_. J 1 l!tl-{11 L.,.u, rl G • .a.11i.. 111 ,1,1 ... f•cftln.. lll P1r\l'f", lb M • .-1i.., • W1ln1Nrttr. 1b Wtft1, Cl c"""'" II Mll lH n. II Oldhtld, c (l•Hlll, c Tol•l1 .. ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • • • • • • • • • • ' . ~ . Cet1M 4•1 Mo• (II &•~··· ''""' Cllnlto. <I Pt rktr. II 0.nnt •, n 51•tlP, lb P•lmtr. c Joi!,..,.,. cf·o Gri9.i:>.-. " Nie'""· Jb·n MU!, ID er;ck•""· 1b·t C1m1 .. n. )O All<lt""'I. 711 Moltory. o Se~•!. rl .. • ' ' • ' ' • ' ' • ' • • ' " S<frt •1 1nnlnt• • ' • • ' ' • ' ' • • ' • ' ' ... • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' • • • ' • • ' II rb; ' ' • ' • • ' ' ' • • • • • 0 • ' • • ' • ' ' ' ' • • • • ' •• • ' Ea "o" IX'ICOO'l -O 1 Cl!font 011 M•r 210 IXI• -l J l ; i •• .. 0 9 The t•o main ol:ljtctJvn .. or lllc ba.ckswin1 are simply lo put. the dub into polition ror its return to the ball and to tu.Uy coil the bia muM:les of the bi.ck. and lcp. You'll accomplish neither of thctt 1oals, however, ir you allow your body 10 sway laterally to the right durina your backswin1 (ill ustration II). Th.is sway not oftly move1 your dub out of position and ncptcs the coili.na or your mu1elea, but aJao up$ets your baJa.nce. To suard 1pin1t 1wayi r1.1. •imply keep your head in . ila oriJinal polition lhrouJb.out yoJ.1r backswin g. Also, never let any or your weight shift onto the outside or your rlibt fool. ·rmaaioc l!idin g a wooden wed1e underneath th is portion or your 'hoc to 1u1rd apinsl improper wei&bf 1hiftin1 (illu1tration #2) .. GOLFING PRACTICE NOW CAN PAY Off LATER! Tht Arnold Pt lmtr bookltl, "PrKtlct , .. showt you how to prKtict tt home for powar pl1y on your lrtorlle co1i1rst. S.nd IOC t nd ~ 1t1mptd r1t1i1rn tnvt1lopt le ArrtO!d Ptlmer, c.to this n-.p1per. Alan1itos Results C111r • Fl•t F lllST 1..-CE. -~51\ Jl •d'-l Y•lr ol<I> c l••m rno. PU••• l \tOO. ~n1lbY $un i.-aalr I 1.4<1 ! 00 l 00 Wl'cft Crttl< Cftic IM•<Oon•kll •.OO l.tG leo Vi n Roc~e• (CltOOl•I 1.00 Timt -.JI 1/10. .-100 ill•n -L•lln Troublt. Ten•·• P•oMronl, 1(1.,..t•I> 110,. Otvm1>l1 Ml!I. Gold ll.111..:t!en, CMp1w1 ll•I VI, !'otr1!d1..d -Gr1"""1 Miii.,., f lnllY'I 8•Mn1, SPtt<lv "'°''°"• ,.rlU Clllc SECOND It.a.Cl'. -li.o v1rd1. ] y11r Old• & UP. Cll lMlnt. PUfll U)OO. M<:Hi1 Oi•I t.a.lllton) ll..!O 10.00 I ... L• Yf'llUI ll•r Luc lKe nl•I t.00 J." 'll"T" ll.&Cl . ,j(ll) y1rd1. l Y•lr old> I. U!>. Clllm!n1 PurH SJ•IXI U!llt Ptrctnl ll•llt!.lm > 1.20 •40 ll!O Truly loo \Ht •dlngl l!.llO 6.IO Rol!Jc~ln• Roe' ICltdcHl • -0 Tlmo -.lG J/10. .a.itc Ill~ -W•l<ll Mo l•1v<I. Uncl• Et••r. Jtlltrp, Llvol' Lukt Nt KTllC"'•· lt)(TM •.a.CE. -150 Y1rdt. 3 Ve1r cit" c 111m1,,.. PurH snoo. L l&M~lftt &Id (Mini l .00 11'1 j 00 $~01• Poll.PY lll.ln1ldl) 7'.l'O !OllO J"v" S!&r CW1r<I! 1.00 flmt -.11 J/10. Huntington Beach's ding national spee dway motorcycle champion Rick Woods finally returned to lhe 1o~1inner's ci rcle last week and he 'll be the favorite this Fri· day nigh t when a c t i o n resun1es at the Orange County FairgrotJnds in Costa tttesa . As usual , the ik:vent card begins at 8 o'clock. Woods emerged victorious over Van Nuys' Steve Bast and Topanga's Sonny Nutter in last week's handicap main event and then returned lo capture the scratch main event. Costa r-.1esa's Ed Williams dumped Newport B e a c h · s Sumner McKnight In the special match race but the lat- ter came back to record a win in the closely-contested han- dicap consolation race. Woods' ll-year-0ld brother, Gene, rode a Yamaha specially prepared mini-en- duro to victory in another of last weeks' special events. SigHups Set The junior bantam division of the Huntington Beach Jr. All-American football league will hold signups Saturday from IO a.m.·2 p.m. al the 1t1arina High gym. Boys between the ages of 12 and 14 residing in Huntington Beach. Founlain Va 1 J e y , \\'cst minster, Newport Beach and Costa Mesa are eligible with weight limitations rang - ing from a minimum of 100 pounds to a 140 maximum . Eligible youngsters must show up at the registration location with a parent, birth certificate, report card sho w- ing at least a C average and a $5 registration fee . SooltMI Ptl<I ILll>t\lm) l.00 s:i • I S j/ ft Jf Time -.lt 2/JC. r IHR p ~e 0 Sct•lt~ed -&11ck l•or.. S~••~Y Tt•~Y. llov•ltll• Brown. Sotln~ R~\h, .-1,0 """ -Chi<• Recount, P1lleo IEVt:NfH 11.-cE. -810 ~··di. J !l•r Tim• BountTn llob D1ndy'1 EU>o "''"' 111111 & u~. Allow•<"<••· Pur1t A · r · 11 •• monc' l'I•• 80 ... 11;,,, 1-11n11, c:.1.d tl!IOO tno o competitors from Lad. Sl••1 (M1ro1nvl 10.Ml '·'° •Ml the Orange Coast area are scralchl<I On 1i.r1, M11u r Full Moon Mi n 11(1n•t) u . .i 5 llO h •. . d coo.-c.r. Morrom. Mr. Mlt111. .t<>•e<lv L••• ILl,.,,•ml • oo among t c top 11ve in iv1duals 11m1 -.•• J111• in !heir specialties on the final ~ :1"oi:'.'':!:1; ;;1:.::."1 lu•r • 1 No'""'"" CIF Southern Section track NINTH 11. ... CI. llG ,.,Cit. 1 YN • 0181 ._. & ""' f!!tltll I. ......... Cll""I"'. P"'" • S"IJOCI C11l1011r'>s •II(• tl3liO.. Marina in Loop Lead After Downing Lions •10t1TI+ .... C(. -•OO Vlfd• l v••• d r Id h 11 THt•O 11.1.ctt:. -lJO Y••<h. 1 .... ., aid otd• 1. "' 1.11_1.,11 Pur11 uooo an ie ooor ro • ..,.1oen1 '""" 1" c.111. ,.,,,,. 11-. "•<Ille c'''""' <"'d•l•l 1•.llO , «i •.10 Ney,·port Harbor 's J\1 a r k llt><:\11 lo !""-!S1r•un l 1.lO l .IO l .«I lloc•v 8••<11 M11"ir: !P•G• •IO J.IO St I d d · h vu1Mr•bl• !Mlfdlri11 l.• '"° 100> T-cc .. doul 1.xi evens an e 1n t e top spot Llmu, !l••ott1• <Sm11111 1 . .0 nma -·'° 0110. in the shot pul with his 67-21' Tim• -.II •110. Ne w;t11Cft•t. h th .a.r ... "•" -11-1. 11.-,,,, Lvnn eave at e recent :slate CH . M IN &•v &ruti., M•r llO'Y•I. NtNTH 11..a.c1. -541' .. ,,o, J .... ,, finals and also .,.,.as third in lbe ~~·:,•,,'t:O'. ~0: , ... ~·· .a.~1o;1";"!~· Pu•" u :m. discus at 170-41 ~. , s 1,.,1 1111119 (P•lt4ol . ""'""'"'' {Clnlo••l ' T .... 10 Pln~l1 'Wll11lnl • GUf'~·· ll~Uf'•I i.a.•Uton! .y11n ~ ... moll rPI Dt! lloc~""" lV1119/\nl • 0".r"<I (M11tl -M ·n 01~ ... onci a .. ~ ((•Olb•I Fhoftt Pl•n l ~•n-•I .a.11e I Uelbl1 '•Gl"'I NI) ~!•lie i lll:lnold•I .,. IHI"' Gvl•• •Lloho"'I .•,Gt lt nllo r11111v) .-:~· .. Luau Set "' ,.. "' '" "' "' '" .,. ' " '" '" "' A fund·raising luau to help ·. send the Orange Coast College ; crew lo the Henley Roy.111 -Reeetta in Loodoo. f.Jigland. the end ol this month will be held tooig'>t at the Pirate boalhou~. 1901 \\'est Coast lf\l'Y , Newport Be11ch The S2.5 d1Mer..a-plate affa ir will 1oclude roast pig and terivaki chickt'n thighs and :-"'·iii ,l!t'I under v»•~ at 6 ~ • A him abou l Orange Coast :crew .... ·11l be sho1•;n for the 'first t1mt. Marina High School took over undisputed possession of first place in the Long Beach Cav College summer basket- ball league Wednesday night by defeating area riv a I \Vestminster. 53-44, Coach Jim Stephens' Vi king cre w put together a good se· rol"Ki quarter to forge Into a 29-16 halftime advantage and lhe Yikes were never headed, allhough c0ach Don Leave~(s Lions closed the gap in the late stages. Tht victory leaves Marina wilh a 3-0 league record y,•hile the loss v.·as the fir st for the Lions in the LBCC circuit. "\\1t' ROI behind early .,.,·hen they outscored us ltHi in the SCC()nd quarter and that \1as the game ." a disappoinled l..ea•·ey satd after the action. Bruct' 1\!iller of :v1ar1na '.l.'as high point man for the game Baseball Shoes Football Shoes Tennis Shoes Basketball Shoes Soccer Shoes Little League Shoes All Purpose Shoes Bicycles Tires Tubes Accessories Lizhts Repair Bally Carriers o,... 9 to 6 C .... d Sundayi v.ilh Z3 while Dean Bogdan was used spzi ringly throughout the contest and closed with six points. ,.ou11.TH 11..a.c1. lw ..... a,, 3 v••• ~:r;,::,"Jo1o 1 .. 0.1,1 11 to 1~:: 1: His Junior teammate, Terry 111<11. c1.1m1n1. "11'" n100. M•. P•" Buri~· IM1rt) •llO Albritton, '.l.'BS the shot put &usrt r cu11 II•• i.a.d11r1 •.to o.to J '° Tim• -.11 1111. runnerup at 6.).5 while Corona 0.<t•I S1r.c1s1orm ~"•••I '·'° J.10 Nt tcr1!c/\". I R•,•I s .... , !C1r11er11 de! Mar's Nick Rose finished limo _ .!1 1110. II l'IC .a.Ct.a. l -Wllcll llo<kll & d I .a.100 Ile" -Ul11• S1an. l lH t (;11, Wtr!..-~11~. "•" 11 ... !t. !hir in the 880 at I 5_2.7. . 011w "I••· Dtck1'1 Vt"ll. 11.N f M., piiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiii~-1 Leavey praised lhe y,·ork of Jeff Siemens allhough Te rry D•YIV J lfW, L..,-. M•r-. /I Scr11d1.0 -CttmJc, M•. 5/\atv, Ni<.1 Nt11, PIF M.trll , Meisenheimer was high pOlntl ;:;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;jl mAn for the Lions y,•ith 1511 followed by Glenn Lantaff with 12 and Gordon Bl akeley with 10. M oill" !li:<;1Qen .-o ... ,. ~~·~ w ........ , MorlM CU! " ' ' ' ' ' ' " .. ,. 11 • 1l ' . ' ' • ' ' ' • ' .. : • ' ' SUMMER FESTIVAL OF CADILLACS 5w•"•on '"ttt!on itCtllft T6!tll ' • ' PLIA'l C.a.LL Mt.ti• It 11 w,..1,,.1 ~t1tt !") ' ' " " " .. .. "' /A t i""""""'' ... ' 1 1, !.cvr~"'«" o O I D l ~~••!! J I 0 11 JMn""' I GJ1 1l>ftlt•1~ 1 I 0 JG! ("• 0 ' I 1 51...,. ... 10)1 ro1111 11 11 11 4" Mt lfllrT>t M 1•ln1 7t, Wtotmlt1f!or U Tennis Rackets Dunlop Wilson Davis Bancroft Tennis Dresses Tennis Shorts Tennis Shirts Tennis Sox Tennis Stringing Handball Gloves HandbaDs Paddle BaUs Paddle Rackets Table Tennis Paddles eans Nets Volleyballs • Back Packing Supplies 538 Center-646-1919-Costa Mna • SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT DIAGNOSTIC CENTER GOODYEAR TIRE CENTER SERVICE DEPARTMENT PARTS DEPARTMENT BODY SHOP RENTAL LEASIN G ON EVERY NEW & USED CAR·TRUCK FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS 50 GALLONS FREE GAS FREE 4 WEEKEND CAMPER TRIPS PLUS $50 CASH SPENDING MONEY GOODYEAR BLIMP RIDES 50 VALUABLE PRIZES IN ALL CDMI IN AND HIOISTER NOTHINIO TD IUY ND DILllJATION Theodore Robins FORD SO YEARS 0~ SERVICE TO ORAN•E COUNTY UNO~ft SAM E OWNERSHIP 2060 HARBOR BLVD. Co1fa Mes• "42-0010 DAILY 10-10,SUN. i -7 IC••,.. •.a.nl•T ou.a.•.a.Pn11 ,,. ... ~ ......... , ... . 1. '° •• , .• , ,. ... i. .. .. If ._n • .., ..,....,,, ••""•ti••· Aher to o,.., w• will r epl•<• tflot ...... .., ........ ,. r•• e"1r f.r lh• c:ri .... , ...... ,..,. ..d •• llo• ,._.,1.r t•lllRI prl<t •I tlo• ,. .......... ,., ......... r11104 11••r ·-lflMI •• ,,.._,, wt •••'"'- FISK BATTERI CUSTOM 1495 24 MONTH GUARANTEE PREMIER G24S 12 volt <•Cftln~ 1'195 36 MONTH GUARANnE PRES~~ PLUS 2095 42 MONTH GUARANTEE 'G••d•. tine, ]f911, cr q~•ll(t r9~ntt!t"" tf!!ll<• !~ ~·'""'" •l~nd•rd .,t rn1rktttn. No lnd~11ry orandard ••1111 • 2 FOR 897 4FOR13 97 RIDE 12eo .. CONTROL REAR EACH PENNZOIL 20 wt. 30 wt. LiJ[J]@'ii'O@ LiJOlll AUTO AIR CONDITIONER .DELUXE 149" • tnst1ll1tion Av1ll1b11 AFETY SPORT 159 11 AUTO AIR CONDITIONER SERVICE Kii Plwt fTltll'I elld IWtt 11 nfldtd '1 SANTA ANA •iln1H Strht •t lrl1 .. I. 1400 lil"f•r COSTA MESA \ M•r•or lowl•••rd It W/11on, 2200 HarlMI' llW. WESTMINSTER lw'h loultv1rd •t Mcl'addtn. !!440 l f ech 11.111. • • l l • ' ' =· •, < ' . ·. ~ ~· · . • WHAT'S IN- OUTDOORS? By IDf NIEMIEC I• ------=~:=..1 ~--=· Deep sea fishing cootinues at a fair pace along the entire ~jouth c.'{)asllinc. :~ The fou r area deep sea tish1ng landings -Arts, D::rvey·s, ~Jiuntington Be.ach and San Clemente Sportsfishing are all fi sh· ~'ing the local kelp beds and off shore islands and anglers are •,.filling their sacks with lots or big calico bass. bonito. blue pert-h ~d halibut. ~. A few log barracud;i have bren caught and the yclh111\a1I ~e playing hide and seek in the chum Jines. :~ . Roger Ballard of Cerrit.os. while f1sh1ng aboartl 1he sport· : [Jsher 'l'hunderbinl out of Davey·s Lockrr. piekt>d up a JJ 1:i !pound log barracuda off the dumpu1g area on Catalina Island. ~· A few olher logs y,·eighiog 111 excess of JO pounds \1·ere <ilso • ch~ked in at the popular harbor 11rea landing5 Sandy Hoose of ;Ne"'port Beach was aboard the T-Bird 01·er the weekend and • t eported that ·fishing °"''as very good for bass, w1lh a fair sho\1'· ing of harries. yellov.'ta 11 and bonito. Fishing conditions are ideal for a cont1n oed good bite nn all Spe<'ies of game fish. There 1s plent y of hve bait 111 the 1\·atcr • 1both anchovies and squid ) and \1·1th the y,·arn11ng y,a!er the :, yello.,..·s could really bre<'.lk loose_ :. Skill Jish1ng outside the JCll Y is finding thr bass and sm;ill ;:lialibul ve ry cooperative and an occasional good calch of bonito •'is also adding to the action. ::: The first salmon of the summer season l\'as caugl1t thi s p;ist :~\\·eek. Bay fishing is good ror bay and spo~ted bass to three •pounds for anglers trolling deep irater hires 1n the channels on the slack tides. Live bait fishermen ;ire also being re\\'ardcd wllh good catches of bass in the deeper chan'.lels. Sa11 Die9t1 l'ellotcttait Co1111ts Dr op Yellowtail havt: 'topped biting .at the Coronado Islands. al least for a co uplt: of days, but lh t:y should show up in good num- ' bers again this <A'tek.eod . , Tht \\'.alt:r tempera1urt: jumped up lo 6l degrees and lhrre •is slill lots of bail in th e watt:r . Skipptrs feel tht' yello"s ha\"t: · movt:d on and art: now wailing for ne1~ schools of yello"tail to mo\'t up from ~lexican waters. Spt:aking of ~lexican y,·aters. the l'old ~·ater olf Cedros. l'ur· rcntly 59 degrets, is a great sign for that inside run of albacort: to dt:\'elop. Currents are good and thert is plenly of bait all tht: ~·ay up the roast flf Baja Calif ornia. l 'ello1vl1cil llittit19 i 11 .~e11 of ('01·tt•: "The yello1~tail are all over the place and the big black sea bass are hilling too." 1s the report from \Vhitey. 011·ncr of Angler 's Center in Ne1rport Beach, 11·ho just returned from a three·1l'eCk fis hing trip to the Bay or Los Angeles. \\"hitey says that all the boats are returning to the shorl' . v.·ith (u ll saeks of yellows running lo 20 pounds and that fishrr- men are bai ting the black sea b<is:; with Ia-pound yello11·s. The average 1veighe<l in was \\'C!I over 100 pounds an d the big ones are breaking up tackle. '-The 11·atcr is war111 . da~· time ternperaturrs in the !}{)"s but ~ \'cry little wind is hampering the anglers. Fishing should be ~ good to excellent for the next th ree to four 11·eeks for all i::ame ~ fish found in the upp<'r areas of the Sea of Cortez ::~ J;,\"t•elle11t. •'is/1 i11g Reptt1•le•I John Good and Roy Davenport. both of fJrant's fo r Guns . In Costa i\lt sa. just ret urned from an t'Xcellent fi shing lrip lo lhe : ri\·er area belo1t• Glen Canyon Dam. •. Tbe pair of anglers boatt:d up ril·er about 15 miles and y,·erc guided to pools of M"8ltr teaming 1t'ilh tno to lhrer: pound rain· boy,·s and cuthroats. Tht trout hit be~t on eggs and worm~. but a fair number "·ere picked up on flies l<tle in the evening. The rh'tr is in good shape for boat trips and fi shing is tX· ptcted to maintain a good pace. 'l '1•01rt 1ll1t1·i11g to IJeepe•· tt.•rfe1· The stock ing progr<irn for r<iinbow lroul. al Big Bc:nr 1.:ikc Is in full swing. bul anglers arc having 10 11·ork the dc<'pcr v.:ill'r in order to pick up the fighting bo\1·s. Coro n'1 del !llal"°s .Jerry Thompson jus1 returned from the lake and said !hat anglers trolling Eddie Pope. Da re Davis blades 11 ith 11·orms Jrl' pick- ing up some ni ce fis h lo three pounds off the points_ Still fi sh- ermen are using T'.\I and salmon egg marshn1el101v L'ombina· t1on s. near the dam to string srnaller trout. Thompso n tried for bass, but reported lhaL 1he big bronzr- backs have not 1nnved up to shallo.,..• 11·ater yf'l. Thcre is plent.v (Ir action on ~n1al! bass hilling Smithbacks and Rapalas on Lhc surface. fished near !.he 11eeds late in lhe e•cn1ng . 'l 't••·klr Rtt.l"P.'C 1~1"1J111 tl1t' .fiil.;~I .. Some da~· d~ring !ht month of Junt'. six hick)· ilnglrr~ ;it 1 \ail Lake and st.\" lurk~· anglers at L:i kt' Hr nsha1v 11ill ht pick· ing up larklt bo:i;r-s dropped from a plan(' on tho~t' lal.t'~. Tht Tarklt Ro\ fron1 !hr Sk~ Oa .1". i~ tht' brainchild of Roh Barrt'IC . and i~ beini;: 1:0-~ponsort'd by !ht 11111 pa rtleipatin~ lake~. E11ch tarklr hn ~ 11 ill eont::iin a gif! (•ertirica1r For fishing ta(•klt. and will he redeemed at lhe tRckle ~hop a! lhr l:ikc on 1\'hich lht la c klt bo :\ drop s. Tht: day of !he drop "ill not be. annou netd, :is llarrt'tl ftels this will gh·e anj!lers a l'han<·e •t capturing a box during lhtir regu lar visit to thr lakr. ' fishing at both Vail and llenshay,• is very good for bass. bluegll and catrish 1t ilh crappie being listrd as al'th·t only at Vail. The San l)it:.i:-n Lakes are produr ing lots of smell hass on sur- fact: plu,c:s anll 11·orms ~orked dttp during !hr da y. Lo"·er Olay, A-1iramar and El Ca pitan arc lhr lop lak:ts in the San Diego chain. Ir\ ine I.a kt Is nnly Fair fo r h1'1SS. trout and 1·atfi sh with nn acHon on thr crappie. Anaheirn Lake \I ill hold i!S annual kld.~ fl~b-out i\lun1tay. Kids und t'r 16 14•ill br atln<Aed to fish frtt for l lht: trout in !ht lllke and 11ilt he tre;i1td to a fret hn ldog and roke. accordinJ: lo lakt manajttr .John :O.loort. I Tbt hiRh sierras are producing somt good eall'hcs of plant· •d trout at all !ht la ke side strea1n~ and lllkes. but Crn"lcy ac- 'uon i~ listtd as onlv fair. The. bar k country lakes arr opening "up fast u·llh Crook in1111 Jt:rlling the most attention. The Brid1te-pnrt area is slow lor both ri\·e.r and lakt fishing bu! the lilreams •re giving: up Mlmt: nlct limits of ra inbow~. Dodgers i11 Costa l\'lesa Dodger ~tars Sandy Vanct, Steve Garvey. co11chcs Danny Ozark and Carroll Beringer ""'ill C1lnduct a baseball c.Jinic at Costa Mesa City Park. 18th ~nd Anaheim on Salurday. The p1 ograin is s ponsored by the Dodger,;. the Pepsi.Cola Boltl1ng Co. ::ind 1$ hos ted by the Cost a Jilc.~.a Hc<·rcu1 ion Dcparlmcn1 . d•Y· 11 ---------: Beringer will g I ve in- 'ltruction and lips y,•hilt Vance ;ind G11rvey ""'ill demonstrate techniques ;1 r.d te11ch funda· mentals from noon to % p.m. Following !he clinic. boy!' will have. a chance to mttl the I Dodger players personally. There also will be a drawing ! for gloves, baseballs and bats . ...... -----------.,, TODAY IS THE DAY TO LEASE A 1971 CADILLAC NABERS GQLF TIPS w1111 1.. ... tt•11dlc1,.. Y'.:./~ _/;/J/J I"»...,, Pr1cl+ct "'' Tl\9 ~ NEWPORTER INN I PAR 3 GOLF COURSE I C.OSTA MESA I SI .GI wlttt tflllt •II •Mii 4•yl ! L.-----------' War11i11g Issued Colorado fl iver anglers •1·crl' \1•arncd again today by the Dep;1rt1neut of 1'1sh and 1,;ame that stnped ba .... s less lh:.in 16 lnches in lcn1::th mus! be 1m· n1cd1:.itcly rclea:.cd u11har1ned. The 11 arrung t·anie as the result of a nuinber ol e1 t<1l1uns 1,,~ucd nn Lake lla1'asu during tile past month 11 hcrr Ju1enile s1riped bas.c;-of nine to 10 in- ches ha\"c :.ho"·rd up in the e<1tch. An~lers cited into .Judge David Aaron·s Calzon a .l11dic1;1I l>i~lril·t Court <ll Parker Darn arc being a:-sess- cd $50 b<i1I for po:.:.l"s.s1on of undersize strl[X'!"S. "l hc l6 -1nc!1 111u11111Ln11 SlLC !unit JS 111lendecl lu pru!t't"I !he ~oung striped bi'.iss until 1l11'y P~o1• ,, 111c~ e•u•n have liad a ch11r1l'C 10 n1ature TO THE VICTO RS -Col. C.~. ll. (Jeff ) 1'ceple. een· and spa11·n. 1cr. presents the u·inncr"s t ro ph y lo frank Fries. During 1962. 1963 and 1964 a .Jr .. !eft. of Ne\vport Beach and Dit k ~lyers of Irvine total of 96,l!ll ju\cnilt' stripers Cove. Laguna Beach . afte r the Pair captured the \1•ere in!roduced u1to or Jtist Gifford 11. Teeple me1nber-n1cmber tournan1ent al above Lak<' Hav;isu 111 the Irvine Coast Country Club. hope that thl'y could n1ature . __________ :.._ _____________ _ :.pawn successfully a n d establish a sell ·sustaining population. 'Thurwla1, Jun t 17, 1Cl7 1 DAILY PILOT 2;; ------- Mile Square Tour11ey Reaclies Se11tifi11als fouut<un Valley .\11le Square golf cours e 's annual president's cup tou rnarnl'nt 1s in the sern1f1nals <A'Llh rnatches to be completed by Sunday Results o f quarterfinal ma ~ches found Raul Quezada defeating ~like ~·!urphy and Louis Patalano de f ea t 1 n & (;C{)rge Roussos. TI1cy will meet in one semi 1n the first llighl. Oscar Cowart defeated .\larv Anderson and Jerry Davi.~ 1ripped ~l ike Conley in the other half of !he bracket Second flight quartrrl!nals re s ul!s found C hris Chnstenso11 defeat1 11~ <:a ry KnighL Ken Hurley defeating Jaine:-i\lclntvre : Joh n Dohan defeating B<irt R<1r1on and (;eren Spro"·etl def e a t 1 n !::' Joseph 'l'hon1pson Christenson and Hurlev n11•et 11 ith Dohan fa cing Spr.owt>ll The third tl igh t rrsu ll !> found Hay1non<l c:l'nn<l\\'ey defeati n~ Tim Cra1vford : Grorge Sownia defeating Bob Visc;irrondo : .l ack S1nilh lopping J i n1 Hensel : and Kr11 Higuera de· frating Larry Good .illissi•ttl 1,.iejo 1iliss1on V1e10 Country Club will begin a junior gol f pro· grain Tuesda y aftrrnoon at I "uh pro.<. RoRrr Belan_ger. Bob Harn11 and Richard Mafttnez direl'ling the prograrn and scrl'1ng as instructors The first session runs for three days from Tuesd;iy throullh Thursday for boys and girls 8 1hrot1gh 17 at a ('Ost or !5 rer person. Youngsters are urged to bring their O\\TI clubs 11·11h the course Jurn1shing the balls. A second threr-day session \1·1Jt be held Ju!y 6. 7 and 8. A group ot 48 club n1ernbr rs lral'eled to Tijuana for the third annual in1·11a11onal O\'er the 11·rekcnd. Competition 11 as by nic<lal play using a blind bo~l'Y system of scoring Thi" 1011· net "'Inner was Lero.v l!r1t1nan 11·1th a net 65. Second plaee went 10 Jue Ko- lins t66 1 11•1th Frank \\"e;il'er third at 69 f\ tie resulted for fourth between Spt."nec \'11~· and Tony r.lo1so 170 1 and a three·y,·ay iie resuhrd fnr six th bety,·een Bob llarritt. ,Jirn Gray and Bill F'ulson1 ~72 f . The l\·lission Vil'jo an1a1eur iourn;i n1ent is scheduled lor July Jl with lhe next big el'ent bein~ lhe n1uscular dystrophy c1rivt tou rney on Friday, June 25. Midgets Vie Friday Another full slatt. or vanoo~ t) pes of midget auto racing 1~ on tap again this weekend at El Toro Speedway, Action begins at 7 p.n1 .. Fri· day v.ith ~ational t.lidget Rae· ing Associalion lime trial! preceding 8 JO 's trophy run Cov1na·s Dave Fender i~ rated as the top d1'1ver after ii convincing win last week . After a week off. the Un1~d States Rac111g Cub midgets \\ 1!1 return to F.I Toro Salur· day night 11·1th the san1t s1a rt1ng times as Friday·1 N:\IRA card Cur rent point standing run· nerup Tony S1n1on of Lipland 1"- the man 10 beat as he tries 1" 11·11her do.,..·n the 1rad held b) Lake110(>d 's Bob Olivero. A doubleheader is slated ror Sund;1y night at El Toro wllh L"SRC ni i n i ·s t o c k s and 111od1f1ed 1n1dg t'\s involved. Jon Hahe. r<ited fifth na· t1o nally. is at the top of thr mocll!ied midget hst while Los Alainltos· Steve Re [ch . Hawthorne "s Harry DuRae are names to y,·atch for in min i· stocks Sunday's racing also gel~ under way at 7 with an a 30 trophy dash . DFG fisheries b1olog1sts say that the stnpcd bass in- troduced into the-Colorado Riv er fron1 the Sutran1cnlo- San .J o:iquin R1 1'rr l)C'lta n1ay or rnay not repr od uc e th<'mselvcs In s u r f i C' 1 e n I numbers to add s1gnifican1ly to the sport catch moc'.r•I, ll~ blu• b•" (0•••1·~' ;-.----------------------;:----;..ooo---------------····~·. Deep Sea Fish Report LONG •EACH l lrlmonl P oor\ 11 onVI•" 11 fl<I>~. l OQf'•IO llH'• >o ~~91•r1 • ••llowlaol l'l>e ~&ll<G b•'5 .J T>•v• b•~• 1) t>on•lo. JO «><• tOd t P;or. pftln! Ll ftd•n•) -1• •n~I•" l l>•f· '"'""~ J ll fl<I••· 11 1>oru!a. • ••11-•••I, !! 'c(~ coo:. I l'l•I·~"' n moc~•r•I \AH CLEMENTE -16 on•"" &10 b~'·I I bi'f•Cull•, l h•l•b"'• 91 "VC~er~! lOC-•rl It~ ~~O'-" 1 lJl O•U. I o~"•tvOi I •"low••·I 1 .. nil• "~ be\I \0 rc<i.. cO<I. 1 •olobul. lll bluP b•u ·~ <"~<••·pl. OCEANSIDE O'(I •"1"" 1 bor ratuG•. I O<>r,.IO. }/I b~u l n•loOvl. l t:>••c• J•• D•~' ~EAL IE-C>! -71 ~"Vl~rs · ll• b.,,. I oo .. •c~~· l m•<~«~I ,.,,.. LEARN TO SWIM AT YOUR NEWPQltT (•rl'I l.l<Ml•n•I -~I •nOI•'• 6 b•rrocu<)• ~jl bA'l, Ill l • •nV'""· l•O bOno!o, d 0&~$• ; ••1obul. ---"~..,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,.~ ORANGE COAST YMCA 642-9990 \ The.darndest front-wheel drive, • high speed, small car you've ever seen. _d~· CONTEST RULES NOTHING TO BU Y • REGISTER AT ANY YOUNG & LANE TIRE STOR£ The · 1.,. ' ' qM1 II •n '•D~' .... I ... :... '"'• ~ •O•r11 .. ,,. ........... htil ••• , <r .11 ,...,., !or ' ' -'"' .. 11 ~,1•0 u,_ O I >0> <<•0 to ~O ,, "I '" .~,, ,..,.., ~lo.•I •~~ D""'I " ,~10 • y or• 01 °'' 1, 1•0-.<. I• '"'" ••'•• f ,,.1 '' •••~r. '"' X.h;" •' ""''"· •ovr '"'"'° • .. ~ood °' ••rO<!• • (<1111n1 " 0,._ '" .,,,.,.., •-'t •<>I ••~'~,. .. I• 1 "••" '"""''''' ol '"""~A I•" '"" {o '"' ., "' •""•"•"·•• •<>••<•" Of!-. '"bl""' '• •"• ''""'' "'" o• lo.;01 ,..,. ••• •O•O ""''" "'°"'"•!•• o1 ,.. r~. ,.,,.,.,.., ... 11 ,,. , .. ,,,.0 ~, """'' •• ,.,._, .,.. •• """'' Julf 15 1971, Subaru. Ati'Omph it doesn't even ~athe ~ "Custom Power Cushion Polyglas'~· Blackwall Tires. Save $8.98 to ., s1 4.84 on the same tires that come on many '71 cars. • 1i:P ~~rnr tirP: t h:il"~ hi>l'n "PT"""'fld 111.t' stftld~td or option11l ttn n1~ny J'lil rnr~ • \\idPr ~nd \n1••r.r lh1111 t:omp11rable t:onvention~I 11re l ire~. II nf fer~ 11 h;o~r! ~oo!ptUit grip fot a more a11ble ride anr! .'.'!1r>arlv 111IPP1ing r.on lrnl • 2 poJy,.~l er cord body pliu •nd 2, tread· hrming f1Uerg!as s cord helta • \•;ide lo1v "78'" •eries size• BIK.k111ll la~llC!l •·1~!11 Slll · 1'111 F1,. ll. lu T~b1!111 Siz1 Pr let HICE Mo 11'1111 N1tff' 7.00-13 $38.35 $21.71 !.1.99 878-14 6.lS-14 $3.5.9-0 $2UZ $W8 C78·14 6.95-14 $38.55 121.11 $2.15 078-14 $39.25 $21.44 $L26 E78·14 7.35-1 4 $39.95 $2UI $2.37 F7S-1.( 7.15-14 $42.20 $31.15 $2.54 G78-14 8.25-14 $46.20 13.US .12.69 1-178-14 8.55-l4 150.65 $l7.tl $2.95 J78-14 8.85-14 157.25 5'U4 $3..05 £78-15 7.35-15 $39.95 $21.95 $L46 F78-15 7.75-15 $42.20 $31A5 IL62 G78--15 8.25-15 S46.20 $l4.15 $L80 H78-15 8.55-15 SS0.65 $3Ut $3.01 J7S-15 8.85-15 $57.25 $4U4 $3.12 L78·15 9JS..15 S59.35 $44.11 .$3.27 ENTRY BLANK NAME~·----------~ ADDRESS. ___________ _ CITY _______ PHONE ___ _ ., .. •••................•...•. , OIL CHANGE & LUBRICATION f•.lr• )'o•r ••• w.lr••• t.lre ••~•to •••I 0..-cor <o•• ••oe•h ho•• tho ·~n<>w·h-M le "'olo )Ou• '"' '"" '"'""'~•• o•d '"''" O..•'• ,..,:r bt••o T""' co• '" to<:loy <>•d lc>lo D<i "'""'Q• o! lh" lo "" P"•• ol+o•t THIS WRIC OM. y $]66 ··~ $5.50 •O..t SI ,/ .... ~ ..... 1 ....... 15-POINT ENGINE TUNE·UP IHCLUDfl AU l AIOl AND lHll W(UC ONlY , .... ,, lllllD lflOW ' .. ONlT s13sa '°" vo• A .... ,_,. p lug,, po;fth, ,..,..,, ~ftt! <oood~~••• ~'"'• •v• •pt<•ol"h w•ll <l•o• lvol •"• • ·•' b<>.,I, o" fol!0< <>•d ba""Y• <>ftd <+>•<~-·t~'""" U l ••• .,;,.,, d"lrobulO< too, •-•••, '•gulo•o•, g•n~•o· ~)'l~ll~ ~d:";';' lo•, lo• l>ell, t?hntl•r <0'"'P '•";0" <>•d boll<t•y. '•• "" «>•di"•" 5 RACI CAR PRINTS hill <olDF it';ftl1 . ,;,, 11"'oJ7'°. rri~led ••llf .. oly Jew G.oodr-.... °"" G<trnoy'• A"'e«co• fa~e, o..~ Go<1Dt'1 O.ogo•••. 'lrotovlk lo"0tudo, M<(I<>••~ (o•-A•, S"";' "' A.,.,;,.,_f;.,1 ''"' ovtt 6IXJ "'pk. SPALDING GOLF BALLS Liquid C•nt•r "Go.Flit•" Gi•u -•i•lit•I lo"' ~;•lo•<• I. K • rwr0<y , lo11;"' •wg~ ••••r. A ,,.,.1 .,.!w•"" .. ;, low-lo>w o•i<•I YOUNG & LANI HOME PRODUCID GUARANRID RORIADS Tlll:AD 5 WAYS TO CHARGE BankAmericard -Master Charge -Diners Club CARTE BLANCHE-AMERICAN EXPRESS . ANY SIZl 4 for $44 "'" St.IOKTl V MOltl 6 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA LOCATIONS COSTA MESA l S96 Newp""" llvd. S41-9313 VEN1URA LAGUNA BEACH 412 Oc-n Ave. 494-6666 BARSTOW TUSTIN 30S II Camll'fo leal .S••·76SO RIOGECREST s Your Money Fina11ce Se1·vices OVER THE COUNTER •• ,..,....,,., •• illlsr-Mlltl , ... 11n.n1 ., .,..,., maltly I A.M ll'Wll ll.t.JD ,,..: .. ff ...i "'""" ••I•• •• ,...,•w1 fNl•IL•w~ • oo..,mlulM Ry SYL\ 11' PORTER Surrh \Ou I :111 alrcad1 read about 11ir nt>xt x 11 1g dtvrlopmcnl 01 ll'u: L s l11;i i c:-iaJ 5rtne 11111 1 f nnl :ill the maJor fin 1ncial ~er1 re>~ 11 11 nttd C1Vailable lo 1ou 1 d<'r one rool Surtl1 111u h 11t <1hl .. d1 heard ~onl( ul It 1 !>rH ~' planator1 n:11nc~ tht 1f11rtpt has1nsp1rrd 1n 11nl t i s u p l' r maJ krl f1nanl lill rlepart rnen1 !>turr 1:1111 lt 11 f1nancral r Pnlcr 1 rrt1!1rcl financial plann1 f And of lOUrSl' \LJI('[\ I ~I ha\e noticed SC'\f1<1I ol 1nr merging trends '<' h1rh r 111 telegraph \1ha1 1~ 11 ea11 FUil l/'llSTA'\CE l !!l merc1al or lu!I 'tf\llt hani...~ are expanding their act 111 (~ n the mariagrn en\ r r 11 vestment portfol10~ for bi 1h !he l1l1le and big lt'llov. fht \ are preparing 1ncon c I 1" returns for a fer a ~grrss111 I prorno11ng thr1r ex I ens 1 1 e estate planning s e r 1 I l ,. .._ pushing u nnvat1on~ n pa1 ng of rusu11ners bill~ lreat1ni; ne w sa1 ng~ methods 1na1n \a1n1n~ \l"!ldrrs h p !n the rneral! l('ndu1~ l1rld \1 in1 banks arr mo11ng fair\\ cl01Jl' LEGAL '\01 lCE ~OHi C £1tl' CATE 0 1' BUS HESS I' CTtTIOUS HAMf T~• ""~' '"'<) nO"t < v <!u(lftQ A l>l"ft' • 11•~ •~t A •~•Co~IA••C••l '"' < c~• ,... ft~" t c DU•O ~ 0' ll[V[lllLY HL L~ •nll "• ••i <""'l>O'o<l 0 I • I~ I>"' n1> P• C n•mo •II Pl<• 0 0 •• o~~n• ~ ~ ~~· ,. ' •• '"""° fl••~" Co D••O"'I l ~ 01"•r Md $• o c~ on• 0•9 '~V ' . ' ()ft W•Y 1 t1 bt o t mt• Ne•~ "ub t n •r>O lo ••llS•• "'-.en• Y•c """ ..,, D"•"• F sn1 ., ~"""'ft o mt c b• ~ ... ,,..ft ... ~., """' • , r '"" no win n n ""''" onn •c•no tooeo "' O•O<V •II • •m• 101'~ C l<L ~~-/Alt 0 6 P05>C..N '<o ••Pvbt (IO ft • r c 01 Ct • Q ~·~• Ceu • /Iv LO'T\m •on l p Ap 10 OJ Pub •~•II 0o •n•• (Cl • OC o•l•""J"nf S OI ,, " t EGAL 1'0TICF. p •1•11 0 ' "' Cl•l F C•T[ OF ll US N(\S F CTIT!OUS NAME ,..,!~ no":c ""'"~;:, ! ... ~.•,.· ... · ... /l,v• Cc1 1 M• ~ Co n• < • ''°"' I m ftl m t o WA1Elll AKER s~et •l s1s ona no ,.a ..., , .... -<rt "" lo OVY ne oo !Oft wnc" ....,,.,, n lu 1M P o<• o! • dtn<• •I lcllow• l A Oobc Av• Tu " C• 01t11 •1 1S t ' T >.0cDb f j ' .. 0 •• • • • c C• c ~ o • 1• rn " °""•IS •1 b•o ~vlt tn~o •O 11>H•••'•Cl~n 1obr "''" '"~" >• ... ~ 0 ,... ' " H o o no . ' •<k""" oCO a '" •<~i.d • 0"' O~F ( Al S(•L ~A"Y~! 0 <1.0 l'ino v •ub C• on • P np~O <t 0 1nGt (O< ft M• (on muon ( o " A• I • I •vD • •d o •~ c .... ,, Wov )1 1roa J~n• \ Jli. i ,, ' LEG AL ~OTICl: '"' ~,, .. •• ~ ~'« .. c. • • ,. ,, • 'ni..o • Cl 1 OVS •US roESS rolMl l l •llMEroT ··~ • " '" ' " . • ' " ~ • •• •• ~ p, 0 ' ' • ' ' ,..,..,.."'"" ·-· .,.. *'' < , .-0 p /O •t ->eP>"" ' " • " . .,.~. ••!'">' f'<) ... t~. c t•olG o....,t ("" ~~J no / t ~ atv•,.. .voooo O o (roro •l •• P ut> ~ o ~ """' (o• • ' P ~ J11Mt ll •o...,JW 1 ... 'WE ARE CELEBRATING CHILDREN S MONTH liy TERRY GRANT ... T hr-rr " f'H., ! br•lllll lvl 11 I 3lJ 11 \~) th1 ni.; ond" 1hr ),\ SU '\" art Ulkln~ 1 hr Ullo 11 of dr cla1111:: t h•" Ch1ld1en1 Mnnlh n uur f!hll11Tl8C)' Aflrr ;di kld" n ,. ~ull l'fh n~ ver\ 1" 1111 flrd rl"~'r'" morr 11 111 Jull -111 day or a Wf'~k Durlni: 'Chlldr f'n ~ ?.fonlh ,,. ,,111 ron vn11e1 .. on Inn I! <1l•plR)rd and avallti.blt 11 r.:rr 11 m n 1' lteim. 11!d 1nd n1 th11• r Mn add If thr hrall/1 11nd rr Joyn1r111 of 1r 1 hlldirn Stop b) any 11n • d 1r ni;: I ll~ roonll'l In hr!1 u.i ,.,.1 l11111r A.rid d ln l for .i,:rt In brins the kid~ 'OU l)P. '\flt R lX)CT'OR CAN PlfONf. 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' 'l ''" J l • • l' ,, . . 31 )'() • ' • )'() • ~;i•J1 ·,;· 1 I I 6~ I I I i I , Finance Briefs i~ ,; 11 , 1"' .. , Considering spo! ntws and I I 1\o 111 -) f • 1 • 1 o s 1 undamP.nt11I~ the market con '· 19•• lt---I I 1 ·~. •j ~ ~\o t .., 1nu's to act rca~on1bly well • 11 f •• I" -10 n Id d , .. 1l•• n11 , ,, _ neyno ~ an Lo htlleve~ 1 '' '' '~-" 1'h h I • j , Iii. fl'• .. ,, ' com pany ~ays I ' over al l , , .: .,1,~ • currtnl trad 1n~ 1nd!c1tes th!'! i m 1!~ i,~ r m11 rk r.t n.u entered a phase of ' ',, ," /', !:, , price reahgnmrnl A11sum 1n,r , the! oo 11urprise e)tment of ~: ~·· i ! 1~ .., bennshness is ~uddenly 1n I ,.,. •••• '"' -0 A..I 1 ,, ~ 11>.:; ,. .... lrV'JUCt'd there stilt appear~ 111 '~··0 ~••-''"' I d '· 1 1. 1 • 1, _ , nn va 1 rea80n to r.""nge our '! 1!. ,t ,t~t -': previous <1p1n1on that the 11 J . ~ • J'' ~ 11 ultlmate high~ fl)1 the Do' lS ,. 'fiw 21tlo r ... ' i ,",' ',,~~ ,,>, •• _ avl':ragts in 1971 h11ve not vet r .... bl'rn recorded R e y n o I d :s ~1 1~ 11\0 lJ 1"f i': t ! : 1 -lj--'-'cY_'-----------1~ un \• ~ 1l" -~l ... , •• , .. ~ .. 1 tn t•to 11 1 , " 1, 'o 11 ... Hll -\\ -r·Z- i I ; { • I ' • l • • i ! •' ,: • • ; ' • . ' ( ' ' . ' r t ! ' i { I . • I ' • ' ' • I • ' I I . . • ' . • I I I ' I • • I I ! • t ! .. l .. • . l . ,, • • 'j I • TUMBLEWEEDS ! ·1 ~ • ', f I ' T""'1da.y, Junt 17, 1971 MO-ENE,t<Ol/'™AT'W:l.JR OLD BOSS, a.tAM£L..E'Qt IS NO N()RE-<:OME ' \VORK FOR ME -f:UU.. TIME. . .., . . 'R~MOVI' YlJUR f\AI 'l'U'ASE . '(OU AL.REAP'( INV!:NTORlftl M'{ SCALP! Mun AND JEFF MoNDAY 15 GONE, "l"uESDAY IS GONE Tt1E S ' WEEKS >!ERE IT 1 JUSTFUTBY "1"'1URSDAY ALREADY! T>IATS1l-IE WAY LIFE rs - T rMEWAli'5 FOR No MAN! FIGMENTS B{n<E l.00"5 CF Tl!E X'!<AY, !T's wr A Pl1£TTY LOJ6 l?COT ! PLAIN JANE ~~ ---•1.:· j DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I ACROSS l Collide noisily 'Waltr lal h.liil ' fo t arth • 1ri drops 10 Trar' )C Asia" sll'ub ]5 Btiri11 : S.p. ]f, Mari's ni!lmt ]7 Inward: Anal. l a Arntr1ca11 l•uit: 2 "'ords 20 Ptdod of h mt 21 B1ktd food 2:2 ),\rnu ilt m ?l Flair 15 Tidirst 27 Thtl"rle 5"11lh charactrr ,0 Bills Jl Elclrtmtlt causlit '2 Com~ny ol Hom. ') Ti ler on food O& ltt ii stand J 7 Gaits bankrupt 08 S.rna!t parasitic ;irachnid Jill C11! ftt ht lp 410 Pla ys a Popul1r spod 41 Tht SI. Lawrtnct , I« ""' ~2 TiEklsh Inn <44 Camtrnsat1on 45 M:.dr morr modrrn ~7 Movab!t barr1rr 48 Yoo ~IJ Tr•nsposr irrto !~Pt 50 Ml11ult Ol~n\1\y 54 P!ay 11tdormtd I 1 smJll tnw.i\ 2 'NOl!h (i!U P 111 1 t •II I( IO CA S I R(() P 1 ~~ 57 H!'rd sullstanc ' ~B P1u1\a dtl -: City of IJrL1gllay 5'1 In·--: Roulin 1zrrl: '2 words bO Thrrtlort &l Abstric:t ol mo11on b2 lroddtn \1ac~ b) B()'drr,d 7 -Bolty.1 8 111\' I T r1dt Organization: -'bbr. I) Recent 10 Emint11Ct ] 1 A.wtsDTlt 12-Bill quan!lty: lnfama l ll FOfmof prrc.ipitation ]q Quic kly 21 [qi.Iii! footing 24 C:Orlducted l Mast1cal~ a band Z Un1spi1atr 25 Clan J O!le's sharr of 2& Fn1ishtS lht rJCprns~s 27 Russi~n 4 t.lt n!al nt'WS agrnc.y 1nslil11tlo11: 28 Eight: Prtlhr Slang: 2 words 2'1 Chltf 5 Was irl t •rcutivr s ef posussion of 1 1rpubli' O ln91"tditnt JO P!lt of snow of inks 32 Turntd whilt 6117 71 J4 A•11tricar1 Indian~ JS Viv acict1s )7 Golltr's shout 38 Movrd from ont t oontry lo anollwr -1 0 Disd~argrd . lnformiill -11 5taport of 5. Amtrica: tnfamal •) Offtr for salt ~~ 5Ptt lc •5 Statt 4& Fact I 41 End oF lift 4fJ Obsctnr mat"la l 51 Ontrt'I! S«it~ 52 For111t1 IY 5J Merittd ~ift : Archaic 55 Strikt 5~ Mac~w 57 Fer.a lt an 101 .._ ........... .. ·--.... -... ~·- PEANUTS WOODSTOCK 1..:~ .. '1\; ME rJ MEf.i ~ NE:J GIRL AZIEJllD JUDGE PARKER DON'i YOU EYER MENTION SPENCER F"RlrAS TO ANYBOPY •. UNOER'STANP! MISS PEACH .. r i -I l=-1--+-i!- '(al'! SCjJOO(,. l#NllATIC Soq.,.., ~ 'ff<llHC.IL,;,,J.._,.'Y W''J: ' • • • l I L l'ERKINS ' . . . . . .. . . . . U'L AINa STIU:HE WRITES A NICE LE I I ER.FO' A' COP.PS£- By Tom K. Ryan SALLY BANANAS By Al Smitli By Dale Hale MOON MULLINS By Frank Baginski ANIMAL CRACKERS VOU NEVE!l' AAEA.N NO MA.RM •. etJT, SOMEHOW, 't'OU'RE A.LWA.YS PUTTING YOUR' R:IOT ll<l YOUR MOUTH! 'SUP · PO!,ING TI-IE OWWEll OF TME Pllt:SS SHOP CA.LLED 'SPENCEll J=AR'MS /--...-.) TO <.MECK UP ON fllE •• A.NP I-If TALl(EP TO A8BEY SPa.CER? ''"· ',.,., " .. ·JJi ~E, :I'D ·-~ -ro!.·. evr, :r. c/J1C By Charles M. Schulz By Harald Le Doux COME ON .. LET!. 60 SOMEWl-l~E FOR Pl.NWEK''. WE'vE 60T TO MAYE A LOWt:t T.t.LK TOGETHER, J=AV ~ Tl-llNGS JUST AREN'T GOING TOro_,1===l VJORK OUT WITH YOU STAY· - ING HERE IM TOWN! . ~ ' h IJI "II I! ' "I I" I By Mel . ' . \ f 1 I ' .c.:·· • : '.. l < ·-._ I •. ,' J µw. • .,, ~,.,.it By John Miies ' . . ' . . . , .. . -- THt STIANGI WOllD MR.MUM ly Al Capp -buti t>aveone --.~ pnceless pos:.ession which lamsendi~ to you -my~n~, Mi$s ·o·erown~-. 15'' \ 1'"F'CO'. . -,/ WMAT? . ..,, ' '· -. .. . .... By Charles B«sottl By Ferd Johnsan By Rager Ballen :t'VEGOrA ~11ft> rR i/.l ~WI<!>! DENNIS THE MENACE I \ Looking For Someone To Take An Order? We 6 re Ciood At It We'll even pay the postage to get you to give us an order. Get ready for some quick profits by mailing in your order today. Put a hard-working DAILY PILOT classified want ad to work for you. USE THIS ORDER FORM USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY POSTAGE! 5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES I I I z 1'11141$ I I - ' I I $4.SO I I I $S .80 I I I I I I $6.80 PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0 ,wOI,,~ lo• .......... "•1•. ~.,;.~;~, •••••••••••••••••·••••••••·• Cl o11 if,c1 1;,,, , •.••.. , ................... , •••••• , •• ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, t< .............................................................. . J.JJ rt11 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • 1 n llMU TIMll 'TIMES --- $7.40 $11.70 $17.70 $9.08 $14.SO $22.50 - $10.76 I $17.30 $27.30 TO l'IGUlll COIT 'ul only ••• ..,o,J ;., •tt~ 1p•c• t bovf, lndwd• y•wt .ddr ou •• pl.on • nw"'b•r. Th o coi! o( you• •' ;, •I l~• ond el t1'o line o~ w~i .J1 t~e lo•i wo1 d of '!'OU r •' i1 W"filo te,,, A<IJ $2.00 ••fr• if .,.,,. ,.i,,;,, "'' ef DAIL '1 'JlOT lor IUfi tl wil ~ mtHtd re• c;•v •• , •••••• , •. ,,, ••• , •••••••...• ,~ •••••.•...•••••.•••• ,. ••••• ,.1 •• 1. ------CUT HI•• -"ASTf OJril lOUll fN'i'flOrr ------- IUS IN ESS R ErL Y MAil ftnt c.i.11 ....... rt. II, c..ll• ..,..._ c:.1u .. .;1 Oron91 Cout DAILY PILOT p, O. lox 1560 C-Mtte, C1llf, 92626 Cl1ulfltd D1,1, . . . . . ... , . Or Give 1Us an Order by Phone At 642-5678, The Direct Line to DAILY PILOT Classlfled Want Acl RESULTS . ' •. . ... .... ... ~0 DAILY PILOT Thursday Junt 17 1'71 II LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL Ilo'OTI CE , --,------,-.-u-,-n------Ol'""ClilL I O&llD Oll&"IG( ,JIOCflOll"GI o• o• 1UPEllV•~•s COU1'1TY, CALl,OlllNlt '"' •• C••T1P'1C&TW OP' I UJllll$1 llCflYIOUS ll&Mi I \ T .. e ~enJ•....S -L~•Utv tte It •1t.Mouc:11"• • bu•l<W•• .1 ,_,... E•"~iuu l>r • H~ flM<fl, C•lllO"ft•t ._ '"" ,fl"tl lltr f1<111!...,trol'. :i..•I le.o<I>, CttllOt I I•. U.-IO>e th:ll!oeu• tit,.. ftt...,. el • J l!:t•lbll,/" C .. lfUrH C11 Otl.Jt Cool!ur.-. ; L•l~re Worlll .... 11\11 •••G 1 ..... " ,com-"' mo IO\low\ftg ~"""• wl><I•• flt-1" 1u1r t ftd Pit<• ol ro11cronco •• •• lol~ ~'""Ant, Ctll+.,..,,,. JUftt I, lt 11 • ••t~ltr "lffl1ft' O! ll>O b•d al ~~Porv>\C" o• O••M• (O<Jftlr. C•••IO•n·•· t lWI •••1ono u ,,.. GO\'t/ft1ftt flo.ro .i "'" Q,~lfo(I~ "''"""" Dr l~o &N•O ol Su11e1 .. \<I••· "'' n<•a Jv...., •· It/!, t • • lO l<M '"• '~""''""~""~"""'"'"ho" r.•,n• <1r.,..,.t Dov•O l Eh'-•' V«• cn11•m••1 wot111m J. ""•l'>P•· "-'~" fl Clttt. . , ..... ra 'lo' C•>Pf 'I • ...., I ... C11rli. At11>1•• I! w II•"'"· Cnt •lmero -"" ••c.110<1 'I Otllt1 G. Mo••" wn G1llH!'1 Cr • Mu,,1ln11-fl••c~ L.altf Ot1.o J1mo 1 .. 1t7T Dt llt • C. Mo<•ft ~le!o .r Ct lltotnot , Ott ftN CO<Jn!~• Oro Ju,.. \t, ltll, ~. flt, • >Jo••,.,. fl<illllc '" '"" '"' ••'Cl S!tl•. ~"M>fttli< •P<Ot-tl.O Clellt1 C. Moron -"C•n to ..,. ,1..,, .. m•nl l!ou (:(lr"•K1"'"' orod Tt• Ctntfllol'O'" tr• OtOM°" MOr11•1iO to "'" (GVftl• ti IC<tPll'<I I"" lilelro•• tulll(lri/.., Nfwl>Q(I Ou"'' S!t!tmon! al Grou l!«:t,cl\ a •oct.-.., Ctllt •• l•tel m at1 111 1ccrorea. l"l o r<1v e m1n! com<1I•••.,.,, •C•"<tW'"d~eG ond ••• tioo-o t"O"""'"" Unh•~1 1 nc o• v t r• o u • """!ton• !Qt c•rto ft (ou•I• O•Ponmt n•• I 11•1n•td ~°'"'"' on Otn1oa cl.,m• II ocr...,1..:1 {ul•o• D<tv1 l<uc~ •••lfl<ttM " ••<1•o•tO. "~'"'"'" !of eor!1fn Cou"tv •01.,tm••h .,, ou1'>0••1t'CI leP0'1 i. orO t r.., "" "'f l l'llfft"' t i IN Pt-l ml "•llil'lto l!ner•oot "'•· l'"ur!"•• •+!ldv 11 aull>o<•l'\11" llKtooliOftol loec~ Acc11s S•uGV -roa • F'cilllen Conlte>I Mll'ILt!e O•der " ,,....,a,.;, ll'lt '"'""t to to IM 11>0 ""''""" "'l>o•• "'"'' " ..,lnct!IM<I 10 ll>t w~"'" '~"""''•N t nO t Ck!IOWIM•e<:I ~ f\KU1tQ !~• 1t m• (Ol'f'ICIAL l !Al l J •en L Jntn• "Iola•¥ F"u~1 < '"' '"'"'" Prln<,P•' 0'1''" ·~ Oranli• (ovn" Mv Ccm"''"IOll l ,.,.,., N,t r<f'":, 19'J 'ub1,~n..., 0ftftV• Cou• Oo 1 ~ •c' J~ne 1', 1• 1nc Jul• 1 f 1111 11)•-n LEGAL f\"OTJCE unH••zo '"" "°'""'" o• D•n•11 ..,., "4M ------1"' 11\t MN ocal C•nl•< •• ooro\f'CI. fworth ~e<c1"<1 ST•• ... •mP•O••"'•ft ... D1vl1'"" Of l""" N' ins, &re •«•P!N !•• BGl•d ''"'"~""' oct.,, on •B 1!38 ll•IO<•Ho~ c! , ... 01 FICTIT'OUS IUSINESI NAM( iT.l.TE ... l!Hf n.1 !Ollaw1n• ..... o... a•• <k,.n. ,.,t •. ~ ..... r ..... , ..... ,.,;,,.,, PIPI !•'le •"" "-'•'"'" 01 "'·Ii•""" lift• '' •u•no<ue<:I '""' ( l IN 100 LIOUOfl~ l&M PIHtl\I •• ,,,, ... ,~. '"' Coe.r l!ovt •• '"'""''""'*"' S!, Ce>lt M•w . C•l•IO'"'" •Pmc~1 I • ..., PUbhc "'''°""' <Cn•llUdlon N .... ,., ... I( OolbY, •ll Emtrolo BIY. u e •<<•Pl..,. Bu•~·' Troft•'"" ... Lt~un1 llflCI>, Ct hlc•ntt p•tf'•.O \"/. F llCl\tft I\ 1ulf\<1r1•.., Ult ol Wt•n• E F'&ul. 10f , Olit• 51. Cot!• ~., "'"''" olt ,.. fol' Coun!Y tiu11n1n. Npoa, (alllotO\it. P•-IPli•lltliOll '"' I It ! I i 0 ft t I l1>i1 bu•ln1" " bf1ftt C-•cted ti,l,~l"<~l•u•tl fffl I• ""'"""lt'CI •I"'! af 1 ;•n•r•I "',."'""'" W•r <en"•<'• ere t Pe•oYf'd At•fft'r'lfn1 N. It OttlD• •c 9Ut•dnt•• IJU '""'" No. JIO. Tl\11 •ltle"l•nl hlf'd "''" 111• C""nlv (0-..:l '•ons I• tl>PrO•~ C••lr,1 Intl•• (ltrO.. ol O•t"ot tounr-. o~ Jwne ~ 1~11 D• l!oncn ar<a N.•"" Plan of Ora1n1•• l •v•rl• J MaOO<" OrcuT1 (O<Jn~, Cler~ •nO•nff•ln~ ""''"' d8rttt'r'l•M I ' F'wbl.,llf'(I Or~n<;e Coe" Oo '' F'ol~r toO•O•.O l.'<Cc•t'r'I''' Avt , • ! r ••I June II, h •nd Jul• 1.1. ltll lllOll ,..,o•o•~m·•r. •~•••""•"' " •PP'O•o<I. 1,100•1 Ur•"'" ~o•..et'r'l•nt• •'• •~P•O•f'd LEGAL ''OTICE ""''llC 1•'•"0 VtU•O• Fu•I e..... " -------·~·=c",.cc._c._ ____ 1"""'""""'· T•• (o"•<lor"• 5olt No lM6 ;, T·l1'U , ... ,.1.a, 5.,.,,,, O"•e ,, .,, •• ,.., SUPl!lllOll COUllT OF lME" O•hnou•nl MO<!,t•I Ctnl<t t<<oun!\ o•t STJ,Tf_ O' C.l.Ll ,OlMl.I. FOii t'litn!'<I 10 coli•<tion 09•n<v fletriftg I< f1'1E COUNTY OF OllA NGE ,., on oroPO>~ •nn•••hon of T•ec1 TOil NO. • !JIU lo S•rttl L•9h''"~ M••n!•n•n<• 0 1" No NOTltll!' 01'" SALE OF 'Ell~ON•l 'RO· 10 (.,t.1n <.,..,<lrurt•on coMrt<I b!d dtl•• PEllTY AT Pl!IVATE Si&LE •'" ,.,, cneno• <><dOr> aooro>f'd. t W't rd• 1" "'" Mt"" o1 '"' E•ll•• "' mt~· an<! •omolo'l1~n• •~~nowltQ9f<I I E.I.TR ICE M PETERSON 00(tl<f'd Aopl0<••1on '°' DIJtr•!lont•~ Grt n! I• NOTICE I~ MEO E&Y GIVEN m11 ,,.,. •OP•C•f'd AoPOI"""""" !o lhe "t•lon•I U'l<l&r•(gn.., w.11 1e11., Qr•••'~ •••t to '"• "•''' .l.~v1oorY T••,,., .,. evt~orlll'<I f\I'""" Dia~•• uPO" T"e 1 .. m, ,,.a re"· Acrou"lob1l•1' <or '"!fin med•<•I ''"'" dl!•ons h~rto!!er mtnllon,.; 1na •ul>it CI to trcou•h 11 ~11rn1""'"" I!:•• o I u 1 f on ~""'""'"!'°" D• mo CD\/•1, 11 o"e rno•d•"; 1ne Coh•orn'o St•'• CcroMri Wll1nl1e 60U1trt•a, !iu•t• 1)1J, Lo> Alll>l••l•O" .l.nnue! St,.,lft&r " ~Oo!t<I Af111t l11. (1/llornlo ti J C.O p.t'r'I on JVft• l.,...POr&•V borro"''"' 01. mon,es II n, 1'11. t ll '"" rie"t. 1.11e. lfttffnl. """/""'""'"'"' 5111,..Countv F<'• frolo<t•on ""''"'"at·~• •ticve·no"'"" a!'<.OtN ,, '"e AvrHmt~I I> eoor.,..1<1_ R••••ed F~ lme Ii( 111, '°"''"· 1,.,cr 011 .,8,.,., 1,tl•. ind Sen.a~!· lnr '"Vfl<ul1u•ll .St •v'<•• " '""'"" '"" '"' •~It•• "''· I>• oooreloon, 1o<trov..,. l!eKtlutlon ~·~era,~ CounlY· d low o• 0'""'""'1••· o<GulrM 01npr '"'" ""''"" G••""'' '""'' 1rt1v•t••• " edaplN! or '" 1acr1r on 1o ,,.0, cl !~t "'"'""'"' 11 lt;••IOl"'n '' •uP""t!e<:i 10 c-rore • """' t~t tl"lt d hp• a111n '" •"" 1o fnt Juov.,h••I A>lt"""'ft' .l.09etl• 8Mra i.110 .. ;nv at•<"Of'd fft....,•l "'°""".' '"'~' d"<I '"'"'' i re •......:t•f'd. Lo Cot!nt · Prom'"°"" ncl• '" •~t tare .omounl cl RN M•rt S•orm ("•~Ml 1mofttnf dO,....ln Sl..il• I! on w"I~" Int pron<ool• ~noo•a " oooro•.-d _.,,,....,b!v ll+H No :l1JJ " 1>M•t1C• ,1 Sl.llJ I• 51,cr o•om.,,o,, ""'' ""'""'"" C•;'•" C•l>t> ar• •u!hort<"<I le """'"""'" '" 1ne t""aoro!.ve Putch••lr•• i• 1KurM b• a d....a °' >rul! "" rpal arc-p,09,arn O' Jt.,~ml"• H11111ra h P<"r1Y dllC~lbf'll •I IQllo"'>" • cO•T"nfn<lf'd , Tht prGDO•t'(I Tranlllf of le• • '" 61ocO K al !tel > ore C~ktn• cimc F'ot"lllercn l•"O for ~ u D 1, c Trott. '" tne C1•v or N""'""" 6••< . '" •K••allOllt l uu •I .u ....... 1e<:I ...... lft•"•· t~o (O\ln!V cl Or1n11-. .Stet• Oii hen I• ••1en<!OO IC •tlt<:T Ore""e Coun!y Ct lilo'"'o• ~•"''ma p •«O•de<l '" fl.,,,., •• !he 1911 '"" oi mo PecuDhcen Nt· 1. P10• 15 01 Ml•c•ll•n•oc'I Mao•. honol Car»enllon. The 5.,..,., 1a;0~rne<:1 on record• af ••la 0•1"9• CouM•, lo;•lhff ''""'"'Y cl Re.~ A. Pe•••- w.ih '""' POtUcn "' •h• Norlh•••'e•ll WILLIAM E. ST JOMN hall c• Oc•1n .t.•t .• 1<1,olftlft9 •aid lpt"" Clu>. of 111e tnr Soutl'tw.,I •• Vtown Oft \aid moo Boera cl Sui>!ntl'a" a"" t i tb•nO'cne<:I b• ,.\<llulion cl !h~ C1~~1CIA L PllOCEl!O!NGS 0' '"' •• (o!Y C! Newpor! llP•ch, "eorde<t llOARO OP SUPl!llll!SOJIS Jol!IJl •V I., 19J1 I certtti..:1 •<>1>• of ORANGE COUNTY. CALl,OR"ll.I. wfll<I> WI$ ••<orde<:I J anuorv S, 1911, '" 51Mt An1, (1lifor"I • 8(1<11( J30 F'tllP Sol ol Olllcltl l!eto•d>, Ju"' t , 1'11 bauMf'd on !he No•thwt>I b~ •~t A ret ul1r t'r'lff!int cf 1ne 6oo•d of .Sou!hwe•le<lv aralc"va!io" o• 1he 5uoff~'""" cf Oran;e Covnl•. tot1lorni1, Nortnwelt•"V ll"t of ••Id lnl and 11,0 ''"'"Ii a~ •~e C.o•ernlni Boord o• br.t.J"C:ie<:i on lhe SO<i!h•llT D~ lho Do\!foct• '"'"'"~" I>• II>• Bc•rd of 5oulhWO>I"''~ c•clon9•ilon "' tn• S~P•.V•!<lrl, "fl hP!O' J\lft• '· !~IT. a! t •lll S0t!IM1t•erl1 111\0 or ••<d lt1. ... M Tl\• lol'OY••nQ """'"" m•mb•" ~ln• EJC CE PT tho Nartha•"•rlv !S 00 !•ti "'"'•n! Oa•1d L 6t~•r. \'•tf (h1irm1n. af ••Id IOI WUl••m J PnlU•P•· Rolon I Clark, l ldt c• o!Tt•1 et• l~vllr<f tor !~• ore. l!oneld I'/ Ce•~·" ond '"" CIP<~ ~,,, 1na mu1t l>e '" w• 1'~11. """ ..,,11 ~• Al>\Ont , R. VI. 6allm, Chtirman -en rOCPl•f'd •• int '°"' othct ot Allan A ••<ll•on ~111e1. On• W'"""" I O<Jlt•a•d. ~11<1e !JH. (nano• of z.,.,e Cast No lC 10-'1 h lo• -""·~1.,. C1\.to•n.1 11 ""' ''"'' atter to••n 11...:it• sub,.,•nllll'I +o Jul• ;1 , 1~11. 11 IM t>uDl;co!oOll cl 1n11 nol•Ct ...,., Deto•e •XI AM Tia•! MdP Ila. 61•1 ii II>• mtk•nll 01 "'" •••• l e•m• ana co...:i11""'1 al ••le· C11h ;,. l•wful moMr ol '"" Vft•11'd S••"•· •I>'• ot "" """""~ proc1 IC be ••Id 11 ••• ,,,.,, el pre,..,.1.,i1011 ct D•d 1...:i tale~t• "" <o•· ll•m•!lcn ol HI• I» •~• (OU" T~• rlllM I~ ,.,.,Y.., lo relttl t n• tfta 111 &la• Nollt• •\ ""'"" tu•l~t• "''"" tho! 11 llM P•OPl•lv •I ""' told on the el0<•••lO dov. "'" um• .,,11 be •Old 1ub/t<1 •o "'" ltrmt 11><1 <Ol"'<t•loOft• aoa1e ,...n•1oftfd on June 7'/, lt/1, ~I J 00 p "'·• t1 tnt pllct I OOY• Otillin•!t<I D.t.TEO Junt " 1~11 JESS L llCKELi..t.u,T. J~, •• .. arnln<>f1'1or .l.LLl.H .1.. SIGEL, INC. OM Wll1h11e l lvd .• Svllt 17'11 lei .t."1t!tt. C•l!llH'nlt '91111 Toi. (111) '2'.0111 Al!or"t1 !or Adt'r'll•ht•e!o• PLObllV."'1 O•ongt (°"11 J une 1~. 11 !I. ltll O••l~ f>•lo•, U!l·ll LEGAL l'iOTICE APPIOV-<I •nn•···•·cn• 10 ''''"'" WJntlnll a'""'h ••• ooc•o•e•. O•dononct Na. 2J01 •I OOOXttf'd lne OPatal cl , ... """""""' Union W••er C.omPtftY "" U•e Pe•!f'il No. J1JA I• 11r•nl.O T"• •"'l'tal o! M Ya<~• oro '"e Oe"11!_J1 1 S...:11r.tY Otflcor Permll I• Ol<'ied. l{'_t fl°"rd ~al!irmf'O ,,_. •"""'M"'e•t ..,. 11\e .l.>1h!an• F'l•nnlng Ou tci,,.-•• tl>e S•c<•lt<' to '"" F'o1nn!nt (.om'"f/nio" T•t &oerd •d1o.irneO. WILLIAM E ST JOMN (lull o• !ht eo••d o• suo"v'"'" Publi>ned Oren;e '°"'' 01,l1 Polo!. Juno 11. 197! 1•?>'1 LEGAL NOTICE l'EC.At NOTtC( NEW,Ollt·Mf ~.I. IJNIF!ED SCMOOL 01STllllCT Nolie• lft•i!lftt B•d• NOllCE IS MERE&Y GIVEN !htl !h' lloerd cf Eau<l1•"" o4 '"• N•"""" ~\•;• Unll•e<:I !lcl>POI 01>1rlct or Ort n•e c.,.,nrv, ----------------Coll•ornf1, will <•<ri•• •••lf'd b•O• vo 10 J T·l1ttS p M' Juir '· 191\, •I I/le c!t;<• al •••O ~U P'ElllOll COU lT l'O~ TM• S<h<><>l 0 111"cl, la<&I~ #1 TIST Pl•C'nl11 Sl.l.lli Cl' CALIFOR1'11.I. f"Oll AV•"ut, (OSI& 11.e•~• (111Jorn11, •1 w"ocn TNE COUNTY 0 1' Oii.i.NOi. '""" ••id bias wlll M oubl.colly ei>•n1a lolc. A·HIM 1...:i •ttO !or NOTICE OF Ml!AJl ll.jG 0 11 PET ITI ON MEATl ... G SY~TE\< ANO AOD•TIONS FOil 'ROllAllE 01'" WtLl .t.NO 1'011: "T NE •V POllT M•RBOO M•GM SCMOOl lETTlU TEST.l.Ml!HT.t.llY All bid\ a•~ to D• '~ 1ctOtOf<'CO Wtll\ E1111e at LAURA J !OENNI~) to"C:11llon•. ln•l•u<!,Cn\, 1nd Sn•e<l,rll<C•i WILLEY, .1,0 •"Cl""" ~· L•Ul!A J "'"''" ... 11(. ... 1.1. Qft '"• oft1ce o• F 1 WlllEY. t ntl 11 l .l.URA J. DENNI~, AftOttw1, Inc ., IUJ l'I ll&IPn<•I Otl••· Dr<Pt$f'd. Fulltt!Oft, Ctl to•n•&. 1na mt~ Dt cb!11nea O.OT l(f_ IS M!ll(:6V (,!\'EN '~·· wi•• H0.00 a•~G••! MlfOe-Otr••• "''OOCI 11•• •·~a ,..,.1" Eecn b•dO•r mu•1 •u""'•t •bod eeo<>' t • l>I!' •'on to• 1.,ob••• ~· ,.,u ""° •o• Jn rne •orm o• • <••"""° o• <••"'•·, l"'"~te of L•llff• ltl19''""'''v 10 '"@ l fl\or~ or• b•O tt<lnO oaufl to !.vo ot<ttnl "'""'•O•tr rt•erontt •o w•·<n " m~a• tot (' • "' •~• 1m.,.,r1 o• I•• b d. ""a• + •""t' oo•t<t u·u•. ~"'° '"11 1~• """" er.ti ' ••••b'• •o '"" r.•a•• "' '"t N• ... ~c•t ~·e;o •'•t~ .,. """' •o •nr ••m• ~~· .,. • ., ,., Un•l•l'd .Scooct 011rr .c• M ,~, •. ,."' er i<)r J~IY I 1011. OI • 10 ,.., , \1' :~•l 11•1U•e 1C t ••~• '"'Owen (Onl•ec•. I"• ceu•l•oom <>1 Oecer!t'r'I•"' >10 1 ct •o a IO'"""""' of •n• '""Cl ,.,.,1 !>• •o"""~ e• c""'' o! 100 c.-c Con1t• O•••• wur, oft '" t"• ot 1 """~ '"• •ull '"' .. , •• ,...,, ,.,. c l'Y c• ~1n1& 1.~ •. Ct l •orft·• "''Ii b• •0•1• •M to ••'a 5tnoo. 0•11•"' c• Olll'd Junt I•. 1011 O•enor Ccu"!r w l ~ T JO"~ Nn ~·ca"' mo~ "'""o·aw "1 b ~ •c• • Countr Cl•r•· P•''"" r>! •o•fY 1,,. <}I Q~•' alttc 1no i II BENNISON a••• .. r IC•'"" oo•nono in, • .,,, lllt S.wl~ S•rint S!rell, SW"t Jl)t Th• Q,\l••CI hi ' n•>tfm,,..o ·~• ~'"°'" LOI .t.ntelet. Colllor noa ~ll n'"'"••l•nq '"' ot P"' Ol•m "'~'"' '" too T'"': ftlll ,2 .. ltO:I ID('I'"' "' W<I•<" '~" ... 0,. " ro b• .t."crn'v ""' '•h!lon1• DPrt01m •d lo< t•<" c•1'1 ~r '""" c! llubl.,~ed Ort n•• ''""' Ct•I~ P1io•, wlH'•m•<1 n•«l•d !n ''''"'' IO• (On!rf(!, June •6. 1r. 7'/, 1911 112,.ri w~•Ch .... 1 be •wMOtO •o !~e >Y<<eu!ul ----b•da•r. lo b• 11 tone,.,. LEGAL NOTICE Cl•n•l•cotl(ln ----------------l cemt<I! M•w:i•• Co""•ft! M9"'"• ll04h~O t M '"~ me,nlne <lCor1Tor , .. _ flCTITIOUI flU "Nl!~S ttllMi Sf.l.Tt!Mf.NT 'UICI' JUftt 11. lfn C•"'•"' M••o<1 Jev•ne•m•n Fo~m~n &Ile otr neur f bov• l"t lollo"''"g "''\aft " dc•"g b~""'" F"'""''~ 60<; P•' "°"' al!ovt '" ,.,." .... llENTAl EOU1 PMIHT SUPPLV OF (lt<trl<•tftl t ALI FOll"ll.l.,6'1(10••ft911hO•Pt c.,~ ... I Fo•tm t" AYt!l\le, Su•lt t<. l~t"I P • r ~ • F<tremo~ Co!ll.,..no1 1~~,.,,1,,.,,~ l&T~Elll , INC. !Ct•l•,..nlt l 68'!0 Foromao Ctl!lt So••<•• Ort"'"""'"" """"""'' llu•ftt Par!<. Ci l>I• Soh•~• C•lllar"/1 c••t•l,.a we•a•• Th•• bvtl""" I\ tMCl..CIM bt I CO•· Lllll>ff" "'''Ion• L•IM<'. !ft( L•tt<i"''· 11en•r11 or co"'''"<"on $1t""11 Ct>trlt1 A J•1n'°" II, (,01 t'lll 0•1 0,0.1,.,0 l•tt<lrtr Pr11ldf"I GI• l"C:i 0•• O•Otl•ftf 11.••cct• l"" •!tiff',."' Wit 1.JK wl!n ltte '°"" oat ltftO .. ,..., •o•m man ..,. Cit"' c• °'""•• C"""'• en dt •• '"' p1"" !atr• ••tt •oo:I bv Ill• 111m<t 1"'>v• (o.,,.. l •••·• S•t >un ..,,,., 1 ~"''"" <tr!itv tl>tl '"" lc•fll'O••• I< • Oetraune f.""""" cor'rt<1 '""' cl 1n• ..-1t l"11 on lilt <ft "'' j('",,.,.,0 1 olflte. Grouo 1 Willlt"' E S! JM>" "'""" l CO«l'llY Cll•O C.•o.io , I v: fl•ve•l1 J. Mt'CldOr. C.ro..p $ Oeovtv G • ~~•;11.!·1,.,0~~,:~•5~~~·1,:7'· ,~!,." !Ge ,... ~N• "'o'" tn•" u. """"'· C:t Ul«nl• ,..,, 'l~':·r~~":.~'°ft >UP, ..... ,.., MOV•I• ••t• ·~ .,, t .I S •• "' "' • l•S ' JIJ '., ... ~ its . " "' . " "' . " . " ~, ...... ~ubllltlld Orw~>~" 01111 F'1IOI. Plu"IW•~ lft~ •1••"'''"'" JuM 11, ,, '"" Ju11 1. •· lf71 l•n-11 Gan•••1 'l>f•"''" -:0'• t ttOVt ••on Jo..•....,.mon •tit LEGAL NOTICE • l'or ..... tn -10"·• ab•~• troll Jourftt't''"ll ft .... 'l•ll•rt rs ''"''"' For""'" "•''"'"' ,ltll•r T..,dff P1t1•er T•"°"' $,,..! .Mtlll Wffllt" SllMI Mt+al 'Norlltr f 11 MM ll'lt ll'l"t llt r , 1-11 .1.-"111Cto ll'tt lt M -•lovfol I• ( .... 1wm1ry .. u~ s.111ori inr s o1 '~' (t lf .. Mt Ltloor CCCII. T"' "'Holnt K°'""'ll ti wtfH ll bat- M """ • '-"'"'"''" -11,.. ftv .r 119"1 Ill """""· Tiit '"' ti 1'fflljav trod 8"<11-Miit t>htU lti9 et II-t rod -M•. It Wit M !!It....,.,.., -!ht c. lrKIOO IO ........ 1M C'"l'rld h _,,.,., IN:! -'""' "'"°""'-VMtf ~'"'· IO tl't' Ml llH tl'tlft tl\t l•f.tl JHCllfl• ftttl 10 .i1 W()fl"''" -••ovM bv ,,,.,.. In l!>t tit(Ullot'> ~ Jlw ("Ol'liflCI, lh• l ot •d ti !du<tllott '11 tto. Ntw-1· Mtll U/1111"' $Ci'lf0f Oltlfl(I ,.,,,.._, "'- 'lf!'t! 10 tt/H 1 t l'IY Ot' oh D!tl, tlMI llO! l'lf(t<tU rlto t«WI IN i.we1t Did ..... lo wt l•• •~V l"''""t llty ot l"-.Ult rlfy In t nV bla rKelv.il Ottfd Juft• U, 1111 NfWl"OJIT•Ml!Jlo IJNl •lfO SCHOOL Ol)TllllCT O•••" e.,.,,.,, <•Ultr,.I• I • o.totftv Mtnrtv ,1.,,or l"urc1>11lnt .t.M"' .. ,,.11 00 l"utn.,,w Cl••"11f coe1t c.uv '11t1. ,,J1tllt IT, 2'· lt)L l J~·ll . ' . -' .., 6 4 2 -5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 -5 6 7 8 .... ' ...... , ',, OCEANVIEW 3 Bdrms. $19,900 Tha!'s nght: Hard 10 be!1!':..-e bl.J1 true. A 3 bedroom hoine & 2 giant lots for th,. price o' I. Price includes lull s1le alley. R-J zoning, You can h11Ye many n1ore un11s all "'ilh OC!'llfl \'l<'W. One-hall mllf' !tom beach You ir:iine the tt-rms. fanta~tic va111f'. 0on·1 '1elay. Call !"il~1 !".162-J~5. HIRlSl E OL\ON "' , 11£A l TOR.$ l!JIJI Brookhurst Al"e. Huntington Beach CORONA DEL MAR This fine duplex has o·.1·ncr's apt. of l bdmis. & guest rm., plus a 2 bdnn. J'f'nlal un1L Uxated 1n n~ of i'\r11. port's hf>st tf'n tal area~. Priced lo\\' at S.17.!IOO 675-3000 Call ror "Honics For L1v1ng" :.tagaz1ne GOVERNMENT REPOSSESSION Pn~d lov.· at $22,000. for big .3 bedroom. 2 bath OOnie. Dbl garag<'. and n f' a r sci'lools. Total of Sll:l a month pays all 1nclud1ng ta.'(e.:. and ins. 11 l1h SJOOO. do1\11paym110 an~onr Hut- ry! c~tl :HO-ll:il 10rrn £ve~.!. HERITAGE IW llUrt CUTE AS •..• A Bug's ear! Lois of 1rees & Jush lndscpg. 2 Ex tra bldgs. l< all 1n xlnt cond. Ov.•ner 1\•/carry 1st T.D. Selling price only S2l ;)(~. CORBIN- MARTIN REAL TORS 644-7662 ---$-500. DOWN __ _ r •• ,, ' ., '' "• • , .. Ui'i lCJUI'. ti(J~l'.S li••I E•1•te,61~·IOOO HARBOR VIEW Bargain llstu1g Popular Broadmoor sph1 lrvPI . .; Bft, w11h fan1ily 1"00111 a11r1 ldrgc J1111nc r•lQn1. So1nr \'1r11'. .'\H'rls ~n1e •1ork ancl a nl'W bar k yarrl hu1 this m.-ans :;au1ngs lor 1he buyer. Pnc- 1 ed to sell ai Sf>-l,9j{)., or use }Our 1msg1nat1on. C.tll U-NEEK 67.J-6000 Ui'ilCJUI'. tiCJMI'.~ l'ltal E11t1•. ll7S-MOQ lHJ e. c~a'r lhl't. CorOl\I Dtl Mar, C111r. j Monticello Condo. in choice ad11lt scrT1on. Pop· t1!11r 2 bedroon1 balcon.v 1no- rfel, in beaut:fu! C"<lnd1t1on. Call now for appt. to see. Asking $22 ,950 2 DELUXE 4-PLEXES Spa< l BP. S.: 2 Ba in <"ho\ce NB. <'lrra. 011·nr r 11anls quick ~a.!,. Pflf't'd bcln1v 1nl.r '\F.\\' so·~ l'lan 7·~~ llurr,\. lh,..~1' 11nn'1 l:i ~r. $72,500. EACH .. . . -. . " , . . •.. REALTORS 644-7270 SWl l\I ON A BUDGET Large he<ited pool for tons of summer fun. '\'ou'JI like this .'1 bedroon1, fan1iJy room home \l·lth a!l ll s carpeting. draperies. electric built-1n kit chen. 2 baths and it 's close to school and shopping. Has existing VA loan. Reduced to sc!l no11·. at . . . $33,950. 644-7270 /"lt<4tt1e-Smid ~I "'"~'""')REALTORS i (Former ly Delancy Real Estate) 2828 EAST COAST HWY. CORONA DEL MAR , CALIF. General I G 1-----~~~~---~~--~~nera ''Fantastic 4 BR. -Dove r Shores Family Home" -4 Ba. Localrd Hl bt'au1if111 up(l<'I' .\! ~"8.r·J•i, ln1• h:i~ lu hr a J Back Ba). tul·de·s.1t· 5treel "8.,:-;"I' Bl'Y" i ;rrst 1lc11s 1 cla:-r 1~ Y~!t.~. Bo.1, ('!uli, !1111ri 11111111:, t.1n1ily kitt·h,.n REALTY COMPANY 642-1771 Anytime WESTCLIFF Ideal location for this J hc<l- monl P()Ol. h11n1r. Lnl.~ o! rl,.o:k1ng 11r01u1d thr IY/OI <•11\'I h<;.: fl.lTlo Jn1· f.1:n1l.v r nJ•l)· n1rn1 Ll:Jvrly llllt'rlnr 111lh (!011hll' s l}ll(' 111.,,pl.11'(' S~9 .. i00. CaU for i1ppoin1n1rn1 /:. l11krng tr,11J,;. I b<·droonis, .~· fl11ung 100111;; ,<;pi.ln1.~h l ilC' 212 lJarh~, l,1fJ:f> fan11/y S•IUJl'f'S ~iJ011'. f.ntr)' r.oattO. mom. 2::1 ·' 40 .\nthony PoOl Three t·ar b<lrage. Al Fink. \1·1 rh Jacuzzi J: poo:iJ .s11·rC'p. :'lfany, n1any other :=:[!f'1'111l features. Plra5e call for in· .specuon. Sl7,2.'ll. ;>.16-2313 ~ Coldvvell, Banker I -' I " I ..... 0 COM PANT 11111111111 ft-iiS. 833-0700 \ 644-2430 IQ :-er $1 6,800 V.A. I I .\nyone qu.il1f1f'.; ~uliJcct lo \",\ Lo .. 11 1111h ti '. annu,,! f""r!'l'nl ;1~r ratr. rot.ii p;;~- DELUXE TRIPLEX OPE'\ :'.\T .~· ~l"'l J.:1 P 1••1)• !"II ;tn1I ar1•l!"lll"e>. 111 11p-i1111 , 1111!l1!:1.n. -546-4141- (0psn Evenings) lll•'Jll Sl~>: prr 1nonrb Sharp J brdroom horn" gl1.s1Pn1n11; 11·1th HARD\\'000 FLOORS ;: luxuriou,; ha!hs. modrrn I huJ!t-111 kllChC'n, RC"ady 10 ()('CUP\' 1n1mc•hatr ll' GI $53,500 "lnutl\irk::Rcafty 546-5990 Jlnda JJ/o PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES 92 Linda 1,1e Drive Beaut. 5 BR. 4 ba. home w /formal din. rm. &. family rm. 3 Frplcs. Outside stait\\·ay. Built·in r,un cabinet & bookshelves . $145.000. For complete information on all home s & lots, please call: BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR 833 Dover D r., Suite 3, N.B. 442-4620 General * * * * * * TAYLOR CO. CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX \Valk to be ach. Beamed ceiling!;, FP. 4 bd· rm. front unit. 2 Bdrm. 2 ba rear unit. 2 C. gar. "Our 26th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realton 2111 ~an Joaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER 644-4!10 General I General Builder-Speculator ;;;;;;;;;;;E;;A\;;;T;;S;;l;;D;;E = Special Thu; nt''I' listing has polrn· 1ial plu~. pl11s• On 1hc prop- f"r.,v 11·e have 11,·o SC'parate houses 1ha! ha\·c been renl· ed like a111·;i\s hut !he !ot measu~s 11Xr' hy .11)(1 ft. dei?p and is ront"d R-4 and can handle 10 un11s 111(hout ;i. 1 :irian<>E> lr1 rl and 1hr prir r ·~ 11th! .1! S.'.:1.,.'>0, Tr) S:i.OfJO 1~)11n_ 011nr r all.\IOlls_ .it;i.;!:;].~ BEHIND IN PAYMENTS 5 UNITS A lo1·e ly J ocdroom 2 bath O\\ner's home ..,,·ith a sv.1m· n1·ni; pool, localed c..n tront of lot. ·l-stp11raie 2 ht'-droom homes on rear c l property. Present income Si70. monlh. Full pl'ii:e $75,000 Newport •• Fairvitw (1nytim•) $23,000 FULL PRICE 1 ~~~~~~= Short distance to ocean and NO DOWN GI .shopping. 3 queen·s1z.eci bed-OR lJJIV FHA TErl::l1S. roon1~. master hedroon1 ha~ Chowe E11s1~1de co1 ner nt.u lu.\11nnus p1·11a1e h~th_ Jdt·aJ g1·an1n1cr ~chool and Hrini fl oor plan 1<11 h lo1s ol roon1 _ 1'a1~er 1n1ennodiatc 5Choo.I. L.p_;:;r;ido?tl l'<!l'pets an rJ T lu·rr B<lrn1~ .• 11~ !311ths, n1.'l!!"h1tii; dl'l'.IJ <'S SlS.£00 y_.\ nr 1' carrie!!n.(!. 11alnllt cab· Lean 111111 p:.ymrnts n! Sl~:o6 1ne1s and frrshl.v redPcor11 t· Jlf'1' 111nnth A11)onr i·tin ht!)· f'rf Clout.le ga rage. CO\·Pr«! t "\LL pi1110, lenr·C'd 1n rf'ar Y<Ll'd "1111 r1u1t !JPt'.s. P nct lo ,.,ll at only s2:1.9JO. 11~ ll.l1hor Bhd ;:ii .\11~rns ~tl..tHG.i Orit·n 111 !l r\1 -~-! '.\IO\C's yoll into th1.c; ~ BR ~ ! Ba homE', ne1~· crptg th~u-I oul, new copper plumb. I O\\'NER \\'ILL SELL 0:--' CONTRACT V ACAi'\T JEAN SMITH , RL TR. 100 E. lith !'L. C~I 646-~2.l,·, 246 ACRES ~I buvrr~ 11'f'lcnmC' CA.14L! ~:,:"~~.::,~~:~v!~~'.;; I Walk~~'°~ Lee ,,,....F A_N_T_A-ST_l_C _P..;OO;;;L;;_~ I s WEET -N-LO VEL y anrl '()() !'(J. fr P.errca!lon Is th1.s 3 bedroun1 l'~ bath VAIL LA KE J()t1 A{'l'C"S a! $6JO pt'I' a ,·1'i'. ~ Acre~ at S<OO J"M"r a crf'. 126 .. \errs "'il l di\"lfic_ O\~·c l~! TD or 11'111 rx{'hrtll~P Pete Barrett Re alty forn111J rl1111n~. ~rparalf' r11n-17'.1!1 1!tirlJ01· 81\d a1 .\rl,1n1~ rt1r. hticr fan1J!,v ruon1 111Tll l :5-:.·i.0·111i Oprn ·ri1 ~ DO P:'ll t11·1•vl f.· 11r1 bar 4 L;ir::(' N'd1·on11~·! R1~11u 1 i.1~r·rul ,1111 1111'. s1;;:,on c;i11 ,,1:~\\.121 .,,!',.JI o'\"I'~ '· 642·5200 ----DOVE RS H-OR ES- \outh ~ (~ oast v1~1V home. Jl~S Sant111~;n T'lr. • Best buy -srae. ;.. BP. ·l h;i. I Adapu1ble !Joor pl.111 /or couple or lge. family O"t"<ly I dl!corsted, By ilPJI I S~l ,000 ~ Bill G•undy, Ro alt o• $29 950 83l Do\·er Dr, X.B. fi~2~1620 1 Assume VA Loan :: 13,..d1 no1n '..' l•iith' ;·rpt~, 1lq1~. 1 .. 111, l1rPpl. il1sh- 11 5 hr. blt1n~ J1n1nnd <Jrr11. p;inr~ ~.'~.f«l 1' ~?.'i.ril)(l t:I l\'11111 Roy McCardle Realtor JSlO :'\r11pnr1 Bhd. C.:'11. 548-7729 J Hou~~X &'E~h~:r un:, Elegant 2 Story ni>ar ~h<>pptng ~ h"~pi tal I ~ _P-"<l1•···1n1• • .J, l>aThs. 111:;,.. I Genera l I E11cell•n1 renf;il .it~ \ l' .111ti.y Rmn1, i),.n, tit>a1111- Price _ ~ \6.~ii.(I 1 11 \1 ll\ P·'I" r. n1a .;;n1h1 ,.nt Roalonon1l('!i Co1 r Ii; 1·'ii00 I hn'rl;i rr. L..11 bl' noon1~ Hulll ·H\ r.1n£,.. & ()1'rn & l . BR . Vacant-.S2o,ooo-I r.-1 1..r>t YI 1; 1 .~IJ-ra1f'rl :ii- 11'~. H<l. t\1 ~ lluri')' !fu11·1 Call P;il \\'ood ,i-,.~,1111 I·~·· 1 NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD •i1</i11:.<li,.1. '\n rJ•111 1n1 m~. "•'' 11 T I 'l )' \! d•l.)7~11 TARBELL 2955 H<trbor NEWPORT HEIGHTS '" •II ·'' l:r,,.,1.~. St'p,!rillt> f'htltlrf'llS pl,1y ~ill'd 11irl1 «l1n1hi:1,; rr,..r. C<"><I ~11r r,.10111 and t11g bright kilo.:hcn s:.3.000. Call 6.16-ilil. * BEACH DUPLEX* I Block To ocean: 2 dR. furn. un11.s, lo111er •1 ,used brick I lrplc. Xlnr rcnt11J arf'a~ s~~.:.on C II .• , ,.,~, 61~ ".,." ,. . ' " . b 1,\·,""1, •· ....... It'~. I associated BROKERS-REAL TORS .102S W lolboo 67J·l6•J Commanding View or Nt..,,·po11 Harbor & OI''" the land. A \'C'ty rh~rmin:; ro0n1y 3 Bdr hC1111r nn 11. l1trge lot in Nc..,,rpn1·1 Hl!i)!:hl.c; for $3-1 ,950! One-of-a-kind. Call 646·7li\. R .E. LICENSEES GEf \\'ITII TIIF. HOT 0:--'E. (' Q. tllskr JO salC"S f1r~1 mon1h, List or lnlnlt'd\arr buyrN. furn. FtOQr I 1n1,. op· !lonal Pt 11m" Ot-.:. Qu 1n- r;ird HJ')· 612-ml. 2Jrn rr. • • • • • Commercial Lot 642-5678 I 111\ \'"pq \'11]1 ~! , (" \f l;.j'._; \,l•I' .\ rr;il hiJ\ fnr SI~ /YI(), . ~ r· . fORl\l -£ 01.~N • ' llllr ltFA l 7(111 -$ OPE:\' 7 OAY.5 .. \ \rEEJ·: RANCH 2 STORY 4 +DEN + 4 BA 1 Acre -Horses ''Walk to Lake" Back Bay Are Unt'L1>h,.\i1bl"' Qui"! lrPI? l1n,.d ~t In th1:, ~orcr· f"Hl~ "fold I\ nl'lrl 'hlll"ITI· <"1' ··<I 1nR~~l1I' h,.drnrin1s hu;;r panclrd laindy ro)(')rn' :!.Y p1t·t111f' 11in. d t•\\ HI Ji\111£: 1'•>0111 \\1th unJQUC" 11repl;H·f'. l,;'!rj.!r :.?:'>O ll'l It. d rri1111 k1tch- r11. \\.flll "' i;::lR~" ~iprn5 1.11 rl<>VHlrr! patio ''1th ,;prrl11.r1liar '1f'1<. Zftnl'd ffir hors.r~. Truly a <;hf"t\I • pl~£',._ Grl'ill 11rra f'lr chilrl•·Pn . :\[u,,1 ~rll r1u1ck. DIAL 64S-0303 Wo uld You Believe LESS THAN $75.00 A Month Inv~stor's s ptcial. T11 kr o\·er 51. annt;11l ·~rat,. FJ-1,\ l.iiin. :-ital and clran :> brdrnom hon1C'. C1111 h<' ~ u11rs for lei's th11n $75 A month. Ra r,.. f ind nestJed on hu~c 11·tll kl'fll lo t. For l h<> 1'£1rlir ul11r hnmC' b11r"r or lhr d1~crrnini;: invt'S· tor. Don't fail to invM· tl~8!" this unu!.uaJ op.. rortunily. \Von't lasl so hurry call 64S-0303 f'ORL\l E OLSON' .. '""~ JITAtTOlfS P.oom 1111h h11;;« b111lt-1n l\f'I h;ir anrl roo! \ablr, ho111r lcx:alrd 1n a1:ractJ1·e :\ell"port Jlr1i::h1s Clo~e 10 11011, dnuhlt• .:anigr 1Jff al. lry. l{ftQlll lot' ltVHI 1)1· !J"IHJ-' r,. I '1'1•·~d lr111 I•• l.:<I. ,\ rnu~t j ~rr· f.,r onl.1 S2S ,:iJO. Call , GREAT FAMIL HOME 111ak<:' lh1., a h·H11,. f11r l'C'al l;;J!llh r'llJH~ !11<'111. ,\/Id ! hf'rll"<)i'Ol>, '.? l•,olli~. b1·.1nd 11"11 "~h:1g II' \\' 1·.i1·prt111,c. .i nd ~n 1'\1~n 11;: 1.r Lfl<1ll a11)onr 1\•ll ..1,,11111r .-ubJ1•i·r qiin Ii! 5-;:,.l\i::n 1 h1 i'~'· ;innuaj p1•rt·r11t;;~C' .COlES\\IOFmiY&CO .• REALTORS 1 rdt('. Rr!ll'f ~r,, 1111, onr l•t· 1r-1 RMltl ,,, .. ,.i1 1111 < L"1 lllr k1rfa romp lhru 1h111 F r,1n1ast11· :!fiOO sq. root Chlf llav,.n home 1n Nt1\" port 11.-i.:hts_ 4 bedrooms and f,,n1dy roon1 v.1!h tlin- 1r1~ roon1 ma1d.c; quar1t""r11 1n1h ho1h f:rrat backyard i11!h c l1n1h1n11: trE"rs. R~duc <'d S~OOQ S-li,9.i() 6-16-ilil. :~:~n~1 1"· flf s:;oo<i cl(!lln ir-DELuXEDuPLE x-j Walker & Lee r"." ·1"''"' '"""·' oJ •. , BR. :!:!"II) ll,\J·h.1r Bhd ;ii ,,rJ,u11., '.J 1.1qr,_, < lf>"n ·r d '.\ P.\I J $22 ,500 Swim B11rn1 r11,.a 1·~ Pool 1-! Bf:• l•n Ir>; '1 ..icrr !01 I J{.):h 1n .\ln; , (•fld \1 hnl11.J u • .-,r •. $hln~lr nnr. rila~h'r ,1 a lls ,t 11r11 , ,1rrl·J~ S"P· .,1,11,.. ~ilnl' 1'1 w1·(j "II;,. 1,·rn1~ ;,1.111 '"I" II"'""• :i111J 1:;arar:r~. 5-. .'1.Tll ~In I c d! .'>!i'i·~"{"' --HERE IT IS ll l llu;:r Bt'drooms · :!. LUX· 111·1,,11< 8a1hS 51~.l)YI P~il"~ • \-.\ ;111r! rl!.\ Tcn11! CATpPlll . Bt·i.k F1r~p\,.<r · DllUble I •·ti .. !r -frn,..rd Yard . ,,. r · 1, OJI' '1 r :11< l1.1n1i~ 1~·111. <ts:t-l 1\LL ;u r •• ~n;1 l<.11!, "'"l""• <iJl;.:P . fl 111•1r i 1 rd l ';ir 11 Iii! ~ f•ll1 1 -..'.:==~0:.----====~ Walker & Lee •10 "" OPEN! ~7()(1 I/art.or Bll·rl °'' 1\d:ims TARBELL 2955 Harbor :.'.! \\' '\r1bf'I, l"Ornl'r of l 'J m· :1ti ·fl411:1 011"11 ·111 !I P:"ll Mesa OeJMa~ 4 Bedrooms & Family Room $29,500 • Frr .. hl~ n1u11trvl • '\1>11 <;Ji:ti:; ra1w11ni: • r.111f11.<.t1; ~hruhJv.ry • f.~r,..llr111 10<'3 !10n • ~JI\ .1l'r :111,1011~ Phc,11r ·,16·1:113 for adcl1tiona! inf,orni .. 111111. * EASTSIDE UNITS * 3·2 Bdrm~. !u·eni. he11trrl fJOfll. Zoned fnr J mnr.- un1ts. Age i yrs. $.1,000 dn. $49,750. • )llrsti\crbr J\rniil' 546-5990 BEST BUY Back Ray • 3 bt'droon1 & a hl'Ru t1 f11] Tah1111H1 /IO!ll. .111.~r .~ b!fl('ks 10 lht> Y,\f(',\ and lllf' Bay, Call for riC'ltuls '.;IG-2.113. Li~t'°d 11 $39,500. ... 'THERE~ \1: ~\>T~IE , .. ~ RE POSSESSIONS Sp1'rkhn~ rltan h0mt5, som.- 1 nt'11·ly pa1nlf'rl & <'Al'pt-led. 2 I l . I ,i:,. .1 Mrm.; !=;n111c 11•11h 11,..r ,\. :"<.olirl. L1k•· 11r11 :1 Brt. NOW REDUCED .i BA d1n 1n~ nn. l1rn1l.Y rm. • • -. f:llnlr11 J..11rlirn. lnad~ nf I B.~ Big: C'J1'1111a hc>.lch. ~1oraii:"· crr1~. drri:< lr1eill ~!'11 "~1. n1cr~1. 11·;i1·n1 & f·,r !)(};II. C<,ni rn1rnt 10 $f1ar1011~. J BR k !a111 rm, ~··11nnl~ &. Nl11!J1 Coa~! Phtlll ~1v,pp1n.i;:. ;\!011ne: &. n1u~r 'rll. Pr 1{'{'r! accord1ngly a1 S37.!l00 . .}10-!1::91 Lat'S:C' lrl"'PJ:Ular IOI II llh p!rn- ry of 1vio1n f•lr hU:il. ran1prr ,\: Tl a1lr1·. Quirt H'•'f' J1nl'd 1·ul·dC'·1>3l" llr>I! rh);:,.. h,, ~f'Jmul Charmine :; hl'dtl)OnJ. :.'. hath hn111r, f~n11ly ron:n 1• llh B·B·Q, C>ll} f11'C'PI and (l'CC'·ShadC'(1 C'O\C'l1"d pal lO, E\·rryotlt:' q1.1alif1rs tn as- ~llme rh15 1011• 1n1ct'<":<t loan. Cal! ;,.J.i-842-1 hlflf'n ('~·cs. 1 i. • rlo~(' 10 !110 11,,1cr. J1.11l c111 $.iJlOO to S7<1,j()() Home Show Realtors .. ,\1•n1cha1r 1-lousrhunr1n2" ::.l.1.."1 £. Coil~! lh11 '., Cdl\I 675·7225 _E_X_E-CU-TIVE-H~O~M=E~S 111 lJo1 rr ~hell f'~. Wf':<lrliff, B;i) i'l'f"'.'(! 1'\r11 port J !Pighl.5, Cu1un" Hi~hlanrl.'1. OcPan· 111"11 C1'1t 11m1 [.. nnmr vour rlr~11·r~-Ou1· kri11•·l~dg~·Rhle l'<'IJ1"P${'n!atj\·ro; will b.-h""p- r .v ro .!=Cl up an appoln1mt"nl fr•r ,1n11 Walker & Lee 2013 \\'e~h·Hrr Dr11·"' fi.1J'l-i711 Op«n 'ti l ~ P'.\1 \outh {-oast -. * MESA VERDE * 1 3 BR .. fnn1. l'nl. ~ ba. Nf':W cpl~. Jrnn1ar. ronri, Bfoaui. ~ l g111rl.c;, 1·n,·. p;,f!o. S31i.!l00. LEISURE LIVING Geo•g•. WllHamson H~.Ar .ror. LOW DN. $28,000 673-4350 64l-ll64 Evts . Xo yant ""'" Lo'ttly 2 BP., MESA VERDE :! 8;1 , nrar flil> F"iri?pl . fe111 rm + 1!11 al'f>tt, bltins. line I On a 8ud9H rrpt~ ,t. drps. dbl ~ar . y,.s folk!!, 11 Dandy l bf.d. Lachenmyer R l',,llor 10pt'n 7 day.c; \\'kt !C5fl ...:ewporl Blvd., C ~f . r.1111 fi lfi·3.'12'l I Evr$ 640-~!l Sell the old !!U!fBuy the n,.11· i:.111rr room 'l Bath r or rru1J dinins H ome> on a Quir t lo1v fr4ftlc srrrrt In Degir111hle ~le.a Vrl'de. Only S28.2SO wilh 10..-~ d0\\11. &73~. \O THE REAi. \""'\. ESTATERS . n•l •1 I ' Arnold & Freud I ::..~:.. E l"ith :it. (11:i;1~ :°llf'ca f'l\1(11;; FllA·\'A r.in• t,..rm~. I (min s~o.ooo 10 s.io.0()0 ...... -........ -~-""'-""'°'"~ ('OLLJ\ • .; k \\ATIS l ~C" 8~~3 Arlan1.\ A1'1". %2-:\.il3 2199 lll'l rh(lr, CnsUI l\!rSA For be-st rcsu!t5'. &1:1-Mi8 -----------1 rr·s BtAch hou~e flm~. B!r - DAILY PILOT DL.\1E -A I Iles! selection ~ver! Ste the -Ll:-iES east ~'Ou just pen-I DAILY PILOT CJiisltied -----------_R_E_.l_L_T_O_R_,:' ____ r._rn_-_;-_, i:J nie~ 11 ri"Y. sertlon nowt lhur~da)', June 17, 1471 DAI LY PILOT 3J Everyone Has Som eth ing Tha l Som •one Else Wt n!s DAILY I PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Soll It, Find It, Trade It Wit h a Want Ad The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results R11! Eu 111, General Huntington B•ach Newport B•ach THE l I VI NG END ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; l.;~1;;U;;;S;:T-;S.:;l;;l!".;'.".Bd;;;;nn:;--, ;,,;;,,,;-,;;;I. q ~ 15,800 v .A . Th" end to n1011·1111:. Nlg111i.;, PANORAMIC VIEW fQUR-PLEX POOLSIDE 11, :"r be-ach, fV Sch Di.~1. AnyonC' qualifies .'ollhJC'l'l to General Corona d•I Mar Corona del Mar Condominiums. for sale 160 Jl"1nl1tlg, ..:lipping, 11111)111!11~. PARADISE :.Olany xtras. Sulln11t rern1.'o, FHA Loan \Vith 6\4 annua.J PRICED BELOW MARKET nailing. h~1mm1•r1ng, 11 rc·d· lSl~22 & 2524-26 SEAVIEW 1 $:2,;,oo. 962-o69~ 1\lon-Fr1 ]X'ri:rntagr 1-ate. Total pa)'· 1n::. pound111~. ~t1\111g, d1;;. 3 BR, 2 BA 8-.l. All !i & "'knds: 1nPnt $1~8 ~r month. Sharp F'1rst time offered. Spacious I I OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1-4 ----,0 ;:111i::. ll anun~. P a~tl·r1n~. + POOL l-"''~"~-~":.::::·'·-------I l hedroon1 hoine gl1str.nin1; 3 BR, 2 Ba 1111lrg fam!ly rni rak111.!:' .\\'D ·r11r LI\'. L ( d · · C d 1 '1 J t l rvino 11·1th liARDWOOD FLOORS. & ,,·et b;i r, dbl garage. JN<.; BECJ:'\i':l:'\'G. iihtu you oca e in prime orona e 1• ar oca ion $28,950 f;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;f '' 1 . "-h -" 1 . 00. C arpels -drape s -land scap e d - sola r li ghting -u:1.unous vat s, n1uul'm grar 1ous ll'llll':' in c ice purt•hil ~l" !lu-. ·nu·"C' Bc11·1n. B d · · ln1mac ldscpg, :su'-r . sha.rp built·in kittht'n. Ready Jnr C.:\T. area, Nr OCC and T " d r an ne\v 1nvestn1ent opportunity ... ~ SUMMER FUN • 110 oRth (.'Oil om1niurn IQ-OFFERED EXCLUSIVE LY BY _ homr, huge fpJ, w/w crpts ., 1mmC'dia1 e occ11pancy. GI Cl\'IC et>nler. A~kina; ln.950. rare<l 1n rhr Uf11){"r bay. l::n. I drps. Bllln r lo. TC'[ng. Is youn; in lhls 3 BR., ~'~ buyers \\elcon1e CALL: Lar win Realty, Inc. JOY a planrwd L'OJl\r)lUllll)' WILLIAM WINTON. Real Estate \\a~hC'r. rlryer plus is land Ba .. family rn1. Townhouse Walker & Lee 21.Jti2 Brookllursl. Hnrgn B~h 1>1 th t 11 o pool~. p11rr1n:; bar and a J7' x 38' cool pool N°{"ll'ly rE'drcoiatC'd, Grrat 546-5411 anytim• i::1·el"ns an rt b:td1111nton 1 229 Marine, Balboa Isla nd 675-3331 1n a niaint. tree y;ird_ Sub· gre{"nbelt locat1011. \\.alk1ng . . 'II ~·ol1r1 s. ~rrfrl'f' l1v1nb al i 'l:'"'!""'':"'""""""""""""~~""-~~"""""""""" 11111. Call s~1.1n1. ff1~ta11('(' to 'ichool, pools. 2700 llarOOr Blvd at A·l~ms [ Bl~'\t;r :-ipa nlf ll 3 BR • ~ nnly S3.i.T.l0 l'lth 1rr n1:.. Gener'al Coron• del Mar SEYMOUR REAL TY 1rnn1..-& gol!111.1; S32.9:i0. S.l;}-046..1 Open 'OJ 9 P:'-1 BA, fpl, pvt patio, a!V! ddhl ----------(i ,i.;a1', pool, 111 :'-1,,sa er e LUXURY r'.XCCPT!ONAL VA I u I!. 17141 Beach B!vrl .. l-ltg11 Bch d h"ll WESTCLIFF CC, C . .\1. 7 l~·:}I0-07ii2 Op1'l1 '111 9 P.\T re I Ecau11 1l1Jly la ndsr1pwcJ :; Bf.'d. ::..c=-- & VERSATILITY ll iirb o r V1e1\' H i l ls , ,.. D J /U '1 1'00111 , 2 B:irh. fan1 .. ,,,, l•t'g" up exe1 n1 I Hroad111oor :!, 2 )TS. nrw. ' "' I 162 Ll'lok at 11us one & )/JU 'll Ad ult oi.:cupied . V1c11. 4 Bi·. Air Conditioned ·· l~E:,\LTY living rni 11 1 l.r~lc. H & ~-•a• IJf' f·n1n rrll('rl !n a~r('(' w1!h 21.' ba, den. &14-6593 a ft 8 N t Unl\'. p11rk CC'nltr, Irvine Anrhon,v pool, ff'f' sunple DUPLEX -NF:\\I P ORT Busi~1es1 Opportunity 200 Huntington B•ach _ COTTAGE -Fu r n i shed! .\,\J" cl t Fl n, $85 mo, until 1rn=l. I Candy * Panty Hos• \\'omen pi'f'ftlTI'd. 536-7870.1 1,,0 sl!'lhn~ 1n\oh·r(I) 2 BD~I. I BA. new crpts & CASH REQU J RED <lrps, gai·dt nf'r, 6 blk! !ron1 Phu1 one , .•••••••••• S385.Cl0 beach Sifij. 53&-7003. P!1111 h\O .......... Sl l:'il.00 Laguna B•ach P.an rhi·~~ •........• $192.iOO Inquire about all. E . ...:cellenl 1 Br house Sl6G-Studio $8.l. 1n...:om(' for a few hOurs Permanent-O!r!er ulari'1'.I 1• ct"kly work. (Days & E1 en· ;i.d1111,.,. ~9-1-81 10. 1ngs 1 RPl 1\J 1ng and rollf'<.'1 · Newport Beach ing n1onty fl'Olll ('"Oin l'per· 1---------- il!f'd f!ISpt'llS!'r,; In Coita '.ltOBILE ho mt, LIM art!\ :'-1,,~a an<l s11rmund1n.i:; ·ea. =-:e11rJy nt w I hr. l1:e ha!h. \\'e C'~tab!1~h 1~u1c. (Handle$ l'l'p1.'o. rl rps, yellow bl tn~, 1.1:1111{" hrund~. 1 For personal encl patio. 50' to bay&. pool, in1rr1·1cw ~rnd nanie, ad. S2.l:1 n10, yrly. Adult'i, oo rl1·,,,~ -inrl phon" nt1n1her to pers. 6iJ-Si!).i >luJti.srate Dist., Jn...: .. 1681 ~,~P-A~C~IO~u-s~;-,-,-,-,-..,-,-,-ivt \Y. Bt\ladway, Anahe1n1 , hon1e ovPrlook1rti:" C'oun!ry C;i. ~2S02. 171~ 1 Ti'8·:io60. r luh. $33.i leA ~I'. ~J-2357 Houses Unfurn. 305 us tha l ti's aho111 thr i;harp-::P.\I. Y a Ure Call ,\nytinlc &1::.0820 Jo1. _,\l us~ see to appl't'Cla f('~ BEACH. 1 br. nCI vacant'lP~. r~t S..· nio:ol ra~le fully df"l:ol'· Costa Mesa Cool clean ocean bret'zc~. $~9,j{)(I. ~hO\\'J\ by a ppt. only !2.J.500. App!. by Oll'ner 1 a lrd llo:inie around. 4 bdr .... ,----------convenient locat1011 & added 2.STORY condo h 0 m r . -By 011·ner. F1'0n1 i; to 5. ;;.ti--0297. TO BUY OR 3 1 ~ ha1h, lo1111al rhn1ng Outstanding Location fai nily ioom. This 4 bed· Ground to roof .i;laz1 ng. 2 l'all 5--19::z29:;: a/lt>r 5 & on l·l-n_<_o_m_o_P_r_o_p_o_rty ___ 1_6_6_ SELL A BUSINESS room, f11 m1ly rr,(tm, & t1rf'· .J br, 2 ba, lge kilcheni dln'g l<lOnl beauly is made for patios + atrium, 4 br, 21 2 1~·kenrl 6'1 2-2589. HOLLAND BUS. SALES General IRVINE TERRACE Perfect d;iy ,i:, night View of entll'P harblll' Spacious Bayadtr·e hon1e PIT The ~th .... ,. ,n lh a 1 1 h k .vou only ~2i.:i00 all ttrm:s. ba. lge la.m. rn1, h"':;: r_m .. -C-lt'f-fhavon Coltag• * LAGUNA BEACH * "The Brok!.'r with Empathy" •1u ai"f'a, 1'P <·. rir pa1io, f'"or more informa tion call I J d S.JO j(] " "-liln:·!.' ren.,,auon room (pool ti ees, corner hoUSf' w/side &.J2.z:;.~;:;. orn1a in g rn1, ·' . .; br 1 ha, floor to ceiling 7 Lin us -$62,.JOO 1716 v 1ange ,\vP., C.!11. e FIXER UPPER! 2 Br, Jncd yd, encl g&r, kids & r>"L•. Sl30. t11 blr stl"' 1~ s~parared ya1'd !or boat or trailer. '2 833-1337 brick frplc I•' raised mar· 5 Unu~ -$80,000 &15-0 70: 540·0608 anytime lrn111 thr tnain JI\ 1ng q11a1.. m1n11 1r.s 10 major ~hop 'g BROAD:'>lOOR T11r1le Rock. bJI' hellrth open beain «C'I)-0Ct?anrron1 \\'e need sales people ALA Rentals e 645-3900 4 bedron1s, ~ ba1h~ bJ!h11rd 100111, \1·r 1 bar Ser•oanl':o; qu11.rlrr,. '"rs & ha~ !ls 011 n ba1h_ ••enter, lrttl\·a.ys, srhools, 3 br. 2 ba , :tt6l Cato1~·ba. 1ngs, bllris. Extras lllcl: 8 t;nus • SJ7j.()00 ProfC"ss1onally lands~<iped & ~(I aC're p ar k. $31,500. 8:i3.J26·1. $3.l.800 including ('Opper plumbing, fenced ~ Uiuls -$21:;,QOO GOING COFFEE S H OP e COZY COTTAG E! HUI' · yr'!. Kids & P"l!. Avail today. SlOO. Spacious ,i::o11rmr1 k1 tchC'n $180,()00 d "<'Ot<l.IPd. :'>/('ii roi1 Beach :-)16·3086. -'=~fi~~~~==jj _I~'~"~'·'--------b11 cl\ ya rd. \.'ICW d <'c k. Or her.~ lo l;'hoose fron1 FOR SALF.~ le" land in f'IC'ganl nc11 1...::.:.:.:.::::c_ _______ I ELEGANT TURTLE ROCK NR UC!. 3 S38.~. By O\\'n<'r. C a 11 PLACE RJ::A LTY 49-1·910-I *'*' 547-0ro6 *'*' ar('a_ Call >16·2313. L IC ENS ED HOME MANSION br, 2 ba. d raped, lnd~cp<l.1_•_1~6·~'--"7'~0~'~"'~'~·"'=w_. ~-__ 296_·_9_Sn_. _c_0•_•_1 _1_1w_,y_. -· 1 • BEA t;TY Shop For 1.Paqo for foster C"hildi'f'n or ~nior $;>1,9:,0. 5 BR, 3 SA, JOO{l frne"rd. ~Bel?w n1arkel by BALBOA COVES 2 BR . H~e -+ 4 Units, rn1 l"r P.easonable. \\"('11 r srah. ALA Rentals 0 645-3900 S\55-C'OZY 1 BR Cottagl'! on '1 ac. UtJ! pd. Long ha ir ok. Siu• B•acon * 645-0111 Citiz.rns.] Bedrm plu~ 1r, 1 1 11 ._ 1 ,_o_"_"'_'_·~'~··'-:.cc'·'~'°:....:c'_v<_,_. __ 1 WATERFRONT n1or<". $.'>1,000 Inc. S6,.l00. Hunt. Beach Joc. 962-6497 s q '•' cargar. !l 1upo(l .1. A~s u m e 7'~. Ow nr. dnrn11!-0r:v. S27 /i1Jl £:0.1.~r. 6' r \i.\ loan. For ni! Laguna Beach Transferred . !\lust sr-IJ! Mon•Y to loa n 240 P R I .157-2360. ete Barrett ea ty <lin rm, ~p1ra1 staircasr, ~ Prune loc, 3 BR. 2 ba. ~I ngle __ -,~~~~-~- 642-4353 sunkrli tuh, up~r'ded thernio WHITE WATER VIEW i.locy. Ne1v!y f!ecor. Fencrd ~'6 to 826 i'tw Unit~. Struc_. ~~----~~-1st TD Loan $165-SPACIOUS~ 3 Br, 1 ~:r B,1, R10 , cp!s, drps, klds ok. Blue Beacon * '4.S..0111 LEASE OR LEASE-OPTION 1Vl'l h :':i bedrooms, 2 s!ory Glrnmar home. B l ti n 11, RE.'\LTORS :-i!;>;CI:: 1944 * VACANT * Fast Possession Cnn1r1le1 .... ly rr<lrmr . n e 1v \\' w ctil'P·, frple. all blt-1n k 111 y~n; ~ sr•<H·. bdrn1~ 11• :! half..~· S11hn111 1rr1n~. r iD.9.)() 0\\11'E.R-~ br, 2 ba. IO,OOO ~q appr'i. Truly 11n elegant ~-1'0111 this n11n t cond. 2 bdp rn1 yrl .. \(I fl. hoat slip,. $7.i,j()() 1nrc n11n lOr" ,.pcndahlP.. n11·n-yow·-011 11 «Pl. a 110 Bill Grundy, Reallor Sonic 1rarlr. son1r l.~l usrr. 7';'(; 1:-.ITEREST 673-4400 fl cul .dr·~ac Jo1, pr o f nian\lon. lndscpci & <!er Hrdiid a rea. lg!'. h!d. l)Oul. Ck1,e ~33 Dov('r Dr., N.B. 642-4620 Rk r 61·1-1£6.j. 2nd TD Loan ll If to shop'i;. & b('ll<'h. S23,j()O l~==~=~~~--oors, lux crptd, $32,900. FAMIL y POOL HOME t:ASTBLUFF--4 hr, 2 1 ~ ha. lndu1triel Property 168 :;v,_:i)l~l Jn· r n1 , rh11 rn1, lan1 n11 . 2 E TC>rms based on equity. firepl, Jrg fl!!rx:ed yd. Only Need a Dormitory? T his un11 ~ually sharp. l re.~h· ly pa1n1,.rl hon1r has lhrer Jovrly bedroon1'i. Onr of \\'h1rh is hu:::c -apprn~1· ni111C'IY 2rr ' 10'. ~·e how !lus roon1 11as adap\cd 10 aC'C'Ornmnrlat(' four hoys. Thr homr·~ many rrallirf's al."f! * TRIPLEX * Govd rental Joe.; 3·2 bdrin.'o., i;:ood f"Ond. No vacanc1I'~. I IOO(f f1nanc1ng, 0 1/ered for s::; .. ·i00_ \\'EST~/ DE l Br,,': ba hOlllC, 962..iM7J ( ~:~ J 546°810] 4LSs~'."i",v'"., ~l~11·nm1 .• 1',·. ·&2 1 ~ _.b,:.·:·. frp lc-!:<. tlt nc!(r. (It)! g;,r·Rg". INDUSTRIAL 1 NC0~1E VACA I L " ",,., $69.:.-00. Convl'niently loca1cc\ 2'100 i;q /L S28.:l(I. NT. Ch k h 1 _. O('"an ''lcw. f ee i;u11p!t' or C 1 ,1 h 1 ,_ 642·2171 545°0611 $21:; per mo. C al I Serving llarlxlr area 2:1 yrs. Agl/:>16-11•11. rn1s. eery lie . \\'r oa11s 1n os a "esa r is fi wry, ;,\R·09:l'l OWNER SAYS C I " P" 1,.a,,,.. holrl lan<l a1 h11.1rr11 ,,~ I hi k t ol storage ootp nuR<' ;J1.111 ~11 1, or eons rue· · · · · ·• option 30 yr j '/, mo rtgage. ~lONTJCELLO To1vnhou~c 2 SUBMIT \11/J~r . ti'f'Cs. Enclosrd yard ill~-Ol·I~. lion hltig 1~ l yrs old . lrg brs. 2 h11 . Pvt pa\10. 4 hedroo111, l ba ths ran11ly ""Li x :10 htd & l!ll'd. pool.t----------Dcsiqned for up In ~ Pool, 546-2~3. 546-0254. ruoni. 2-story, cU!-Oe-sac ~ic(' def'k & Pa110 ari•;is. In BAYCREST FA:"au ly b y tr nants, it i~ 1()1":, lt'a~td &. Sattle r Mortgag• Co. '-N~E~W~2 ~B~R-.-ho-,-,-,-. ,-,-.-1-,,-,-,0•1 MORGAN REAL TY 673-6642 615·6459 111C'lurJ,. a ll:1 ~ston .. pa tio College P a rk and bu1l1 • 111 harhrcu,. P()OL 3 br. 2 b• c f " _, Pl I "o 2'1' I . I u-ue _ar. {"a.o;r c11 I J-w· ·• " or an :'>lanv PXl ras .• >1111 a~sun1c app01n1n1en1. S27.00J. 6~, In. $::2.!)00 ;,10--011:1. --- I Corona del ~!! ___ _ CAMEO SHORES l -~:"==o''='C'=~C'7~= I::...:qu"uely ll"w 1n & nu t'. DO YOU HAVE Thi.~ hon1t ''i 4 0r ~.or~. :; h~. \D 'THEREAL ·~ESTATERS \.... Of'<r•uriTLl9f'M J n1C>n1bcrs 111 your fanuly'.'? hf'atrrt .t· fil1rr"d P'"'I allo,11 If ~. 11·r ran sr ll YQ11 rhi.• ynu rhr ul11 n1<1.te Jn luxur- gre;1I 4 hrd1·oom ho1nr nn l•ills !c11 111ly l11ln,t:. Th" en- the "NE\V F.11.A. Progra111 '' l'hant1 ng sll nSf't t l1 mmr1·1ng for just $100.00 els rlown PilY· nn 1t1" w<1t1>r a1 !hr harbors menr, Thi~ homr. 1~ ready In f'l11J'il nr,.. cr"alr~ JUM thr occup}'. Carpr!~. dr!1 /)('s. 2 «l rno~rihr1·(' rur t"ntrrt,.1ning I L1xur1011.~ baths YtdJ pr1t·" a t 011,. nf rhc hnn1f'\ 11r1 BY 011·nt"r. :: hr. 2 ha. lrpl, nP11· ··pl, nr to11·n. S2j,;,QO, &l&-8217 al! ;). --------~~ :\!ES,\ Verde by owner 3 BR. h1111 rm, 2 RA, patio. Open rla.ily S19.9:.0 ~15-207:1 J BR on {"State :siie ocean view lot. $24,93'}. 0\\'ntr. ][l-10 Lin<ler. PL c;o..1. 642-1122 East Bluff 5 BR.· 3 BATHS S48,950 -EASTBLUFF - IS S2::.~. Call 11~ now -11 c'JI h°'l'S $~~.;,(l(), Cnn1c sr r 11~ s1>{lw you the hoU~C' and c.\· .:ti 4.}12 nosbury Rd. Cd,\J . F't't'l<h J'!rll nl 1n & out 11l aln the progra 1n. fii.1·60~1. Ne11'l:v carpeted & ri raped W lk & L •""'=~~----!'rI'f'rned.1n p11t10 3 er ee DON'T CALL ME "'' ,.,,.". 1.m,1, .,..., A DUPLEX Lo\\' rr11H1r .'ilN'l'I 2/!iQ l-larhor Blvd. at Arla.ms ~)!:\.{»6.i 0 pPn 'Ill '.l P \1 _ , 11 Blk. To pnva l" p11 rk OC!' .. \:--; ~idc ol h1gh"ay. 2 -Really n('at neigh.,..,~ $2f900 ~ BDRM + O EN AI R CONDITIO NED I 'l p,,,rl rn::im hou~f'~. ExrPI· ) !>ihamefully l0w IC'aseiiolri lr 111 1nco111r. and can br 1 Chct'khnok 1rrms '""ll"l1110~1 anyt1mr S1 'i.~'olJ ('.ill r,.11 .1t.~l Aroket ( ,,ll 11;1.~:,:,o k1r af1/.01nt· -~~----'--1111.111 I F!R. ~· 3 ba. 11\·. rm, rl1n rm. ran1 rn1. 2 frplf's, <11nPl!P. r1 hl i::.1r;icr, oc:PFln \'If'\\ ft>r S1tn rile or ll'llSI' hold land ;it bu~rrs Of!!lrln /I) l°r 1'f. m"l ll:R<;:I' /).!\...fl] 1~. Beau11ful hon1r ~or•·cri air ll• allllt: ,\· h11u11r!1ho'J l. il•l' \'1!\{i111011111i.: ! 1111,1 h.111.1 cr1111·~1 floor plan. ;-o:r111 l))lrk ,·,•rr"1111:::. h11il1.1n r·;ncr .\. GARDEN OF EDEN C1rr11 .\· rl1•l1,1."h1·r, I' I 11 SI \"o ·~tll'd in lhis irJral sr inni:: driuhlr l\\'r·1 1<: l,1 I., l1pen t1l • 0 ·ir 1-1 ~11.~ a homf' hu11 1 /or naltir{" , Pill. ·' 1. •JI I C I TARBELL 2955 H rbo '11''Ts_ otnpr:r r1r111tt'." ()n ---_ "' r 1 1h1s 4.1 fl, R-2. VH''I' In! ,\lfi- New Model Hom• dr1·n as lomnn.,w 1;:!11~~ '-· 1 5 ~R. ;, H11 .. ru~t rrrn1 rl"t"rl. 1 11oorl '!. bedrr,0111, f,i111 1ly 11rw of B"Y /:..·JI ills. Fonn 11I room, 2 f1rl'pli11'r~ s,~1.·.rJO rJ111, b1r~klil s1 rm. fam rm Unive,.sity Realty l\·\\('t h;1r, fl'll'I. /\Isl' I 1rw ~0\ll !. c.~I Jh1~ Jlj,";.f,,ilO 101~ a1•;Jil -11111 b111lrl to your -OPEN-'Tll SOLD- nE:cd.~. IVAS \>ELLS & SO" 1-5 P .M . 2006 r.11laxy Dr. Ikil'r r Shor"~ 706 MAR GUE RITE 6.\6-1.i50 Open Dally Z BR. fronl hou~e plus 2 BR. LARGE and ROOMY-11 nr ll:"D 2 gur.~! rooms. All o: rh1.~ for only ~S . .-iOO. ."1 Btdrm:s, ri1n1ng rm & r11m· Lly rm. Bi~ fc ncf'd yd E~· cepllonal huy for a largr ;i.M ac1iv" fa mily, $6:1,000. H11.rbnr J li.i:hlantl~. Pet• Barret t Realty 6·12-5200 SCENIC PROPERTll::S • 6T.'l-~li26 • 2 Br. I B1 -+ 1 Br .:tpt on 45' ln1 s. or H,1;." S4i.OOO firm Rrt1 1ni;:: ~~-66~13. \\°c 'll ht'.'lp you sell ~ 642-56i8 Huntington Beach Macnab-Irvine R.raJty Comp11.ny MERIDITH GARDENS FINEST Beaullful 3 BR., 211: ba. horn(' w1forn1a t DR . & hUgt-pa n· f'il'tl FR. 1,.Jfi replacc. Up. gr<idcd thmu.ghou! -pool 111zP }ani '>l'/li. 1'0vertd patio. Dr ive by th1~ cul-de-Mc homl! a1 200.il ~lidland Lant iorr Adams I. then c a 11 67;,.:n10 for app't. 10 see. $13,9.lO Macnab-Irvine 642-1235 675-1210 $©ltd{} 1A-!!a £ti'S" The Punle wilh !he Bui/I-In ChucHe O ll90rronge 11!1t1r1 of the four )trO"lbled words be· low To form lour s!rnp!• words I TUPPIL I I ' I I 1 I 11---rt-U~, P~t;,,..1 L~, ~1 t I ! I YAHER .• i--~1 ,~1 ~1 ~1---i • A "u;,m, If you eel slowfy, . • • _ you will eot less. Tkis Is par. '--'--'-...L-'--' ticulorly true if you're port of I LAYFUT l o b ig -. •-n •-1, ~,-T,-T,-T,-T1 Tg-O · C01"11>111r• th• tliu-::1:1• quoled bv l•ll•nw ,,, th• m1uln{f WOfd vou d"1rt.IQO frO'ft •lei) No. 3 b1low. 8 PP.INT NUMBER!O l[llfR5 lt l 1 THfS f SQUARE S Ul..i5CPAMBl f A60 VE lEIJ[llS 10 c.r r ANS Wt I' ..._SCilAM·LETS ANSWER~ IN CLASSIFICATION !00 ~!t't"e l All 1er n1s. Prire good fl('1>:hlxlrhood, (')OM" ro oiine.r, 1 l>r. 2'~ ba, pool. y1rl<l~ 11 solid 10~~ t XPlusiv" S31,9j(]. BKR 842-TJ.li. school ~. S~9)i00 fa nl rm. D,R . lei" simple of Joan payn1ent,. Submit HARD TO FI ND :01 Open Sun 1.;, pm 1 rrn1~. Sh,,ltl'r lndustrie~. L ho I .~l.'Wl21S. Inc. 2Q.13 \\'tsk·hlf Dr, N.6 . g,. n1e in orran ront 1-----------1 OCEA ... ·~+"O'T I 643·2820 or p1·eJ.: 67~>-7422. nc1.1;h~1Qrhood 5 bdrmi.., 1 "' " · dup ex ha'~, hui::r ll\'ltli;:: rm. "'' S-li.000 ---..,--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiil frplr, Fonn11l du11n1: arr,1 .• ~11 nr Tt·adr for 11n 1l.'o Li:", 11cll rqu1p'd. ki rchtn. ~O RTI N CO. 612-:..000 WALK TO OC!:AN 3 BR + 2 BA $22,750 :-loth111g to do h{"rc, just n1nve 111. :?Ir x 2;,· hv rin wi1h n11r- 1Y1red \\all, hrick lpl, wr111 crprs & drps, bit.in R•O. Ct•nuallv Jocalrd rrcrea !1on \\:ESTCLlfF r..: e 11 l y rn1 . Ovr'r :l.000 sq. fl. nn nTK' dl'!coraled 4 hr. 3 bn, Jam lrv"l Surrouridt"d by n 1 r" rn1, b<'an1 <·e1l1ng. ~haric i.:::11n1r ri .~. patio 111'1'a1< A tree .... S3.l.900. Agt. fi.lf}-1456. very fun<:lio11111, 11·,.11 plan. • \\'ESTCLiPF . lmn1ar 11- ·ned ho1nr. Askinit $87,500. ~, hLI{;(' pa!!o. Su bmit. ca l JI e:!'::i!Jll~~ 1\17-1721 ,l'rl'•-~I °""" SEYMOUR REALTY * 49!1-'2800 * :i Bedrooms, l ha th ON PLACENTIA AVE. COSTA MESA 86':,,;~;~·. StJ;i.ooo, Best term~. lncomt' $j(l()., w11h n1uch roon1 r0r more buildings, Roy McCardle Realtor 1810 Ne1\'pr>rt Rl vd., C.l\l. 548-7729 AN indu .. 1rr81 Iii", 1 fO 3 .~rrt>.~, N\\•prt Brh. C .\f. Ca.~11 f!UrC'h8~1'. \Vn!e 1r1. \'("l'l/llt>nf Drpl. Rox l ~l.i, l\'"v.·porl Bch. Rt al tor ~ pro1(!c!ed. 171~1 Bl'ach Blvd .• Hrgn Bch __ N_E_A_Rcc_Bc.:Ec.A_C_H __ 1 Open 'ti! 9 P:'>l """""""""""""""""""" 2 Bdrms., J 1.11 baThli. J Blocks BUILDERS 10 h(oach. Al! 'l'ood cx1rnor CALL (!) ''6-l'l'l----------A •• '4, Lots for Sal• 170 71":A7TY"'7 ./ CHOICE i;rol! rou~ J01, DREAM HOME \\'r ll J11ndscapP<l. gra~~Y yan-1. "'!lh {'('l\'PrE"d pa r10, Brentv.'OOd q ua li ty, :ster 11p Onl~· S29.500. Call • to lu:i;ury 11·i1h 4 fJl<l\"JOUS bedroom~. Truly a plea~u rr. ll S"t" !.· protid 10 o w n. S~.-..!100. Call 5.12.2.·~.:i ..AO tan REAL ESTATE Nt1r Nrwpotl Po11 Orflte ~igul'l C.C , J;11i;!l1na N1g11rl, 101'x1$6'. Ovrrlook~ l ~I 11..,11 E1l1tr, Gen1r1I 150 1111r11 ay &· iTet:n. s:6.000. 492-00liL VIE\\! lo!. Cap1~rr11no R"::ich, fal"1 nc nP11· home~. 0\1nt-r, f).;;).-1::1~ 1'\'f'~ • -ii3ii3ii6iiEii.iiliilii!h-Sii"'ii'ii'--I beach: bllns, cpl, drp. 1109 England 536-79&3 Cash Fast! 1st & 2nd Trust D•edt FREE APPRAISALS e \\!OS & PF.TS WELO~lE! 2 Br. CID, lncd yd $140. ALA Rentals • 645-3900 Costa Mesa Investment • SINGLES OK! Spac 1 Br. 548·7711 anytime ~t\' ref, C1D, all uttl pd. _ . SIJJ HOMEOWNER LOANS , ALA R•ntals f) 6'1.S-3900 Rf'a\ <'Sla te & J)E'rs.Qnal prop-2B~d-r l; n do I'<' n er1y Joan.<; from S.J,OVJ Up. farm~u~. "11s is" -$1:;, 772-8601 mo. 1,o;l Jo la~t + .$50. 41: Sra1e'>l·1dr Fi nance Cn. Jor, 531>-2533. 110,l !-i. Anahe1n1 Blvd, Anah ----------1 '1.)l).JNCLDS UT!L! Neat 2 Mortgage s, Br. bl,ns. rot or 1inJ<tle1i, Trust Deeds 260 Blue Beacon* 645-0111 NEED CA!-iH $1(XJO OR !\!ORE F"P A\'L'n Thrrft for a Real f:~tJ!C' Joun. Upon appi'Olal us!' lht' rnoney howevrr you 11k". Al~ a~k a bout our un~cUr't'ri p<'r:'IOna! ]1)ans. AVCO THRTFT 620 Ne11·pn11 Cr ntPr Dn ve 8l3-3-HO $~C.OfJO Isl TD on C·2 parcel. Sold 11.l S60,000. Strong huyer 1 ~ 1-on~1n1ct 1ng bldg. J"nr r. ln<lscpg. f'IC. Pay.~ S.12(1() qrtl y. incl. 9"~. Discount 1n .... ,, Birr 4!1.1-11~1~. ~135-F./S:i<l! 2 Br 1v/ gar & y11rcl . Consi<lr r pet. Blue Beacon * 64.S-0111 3 BDRM., Family rm., parl; !ikC' yard. Cost& ~1r111. Kfcls OK, brk., $200 a nwnth. NO F'EE. 54()..1720, 3 B!JR!lt. + tamtly rm., full dinina nn., built-Ins., brk. $391' a month. NO FEE. Ne"1>0rt. 54~1720. Corona del Mar LIJSK Harbor View llills, :; hr . 2 00, f11.m rm. Yr. l:v lllf~~~~~~~~~ S.l()fl ml). Av11 il Anit. 15. Corona def M•r ~ I GarriP~r 11Jf' 644·2883. L11 rg" view ]0( 67~.2fl10 I I ~ --~-1 Acreag• for 1al• 1100 GlennP)'rc S1 4'.J.1·941.1 ~H~-0~11) 20 alTf'S for sale nea r San Less Than Rent * Sl B.900 * -St"U or lrn~e v. rrp!1on \'11'1>., cu~to111 built honi!.'. Luis Rt'.'y Ori'>l•n Golr Cour~e 1111h spectar ular view of Palon1ar mountain~ anrl ()('ean walrr. Po111rr &_ Tmmarula tc ] bedroom clo~c Lev{"! yard &. pa t1n aN"a. l(l San Diego rrec"·ay. Bnng Xlzlt, clo~c ul loca!lon. '"Irrhone on p r o pe r t y . your oll'n spade a nd plant PLAC~ REALTY 494·97!H s,;.00'.! per acre. Ti:>rm~ 11vallable. Shelter rndustries your Ol\'n back .V"<1.l'fL Vets -296!1 So. Crnt51 liv.'Y., L.B. ~714) 64~2820. 11bnut $198 nio. pay~ all. VALENCIA !\! .. n o r in~~~~-----~ 893·8;i33 ~5-m.58 U isure \Vorld. [l r p s ' l Ar rP lullv l mp roved , REAL EST ATE 11 ndC'rgroun•I u t 11. nr shullt!tS, crpt~. air. cond. Phornix. By owner. SJ,5(() b M V. d~h11 hr. dt luxc b1 nrt ~cap1ng &l2-!1/" 1 Y C Y all !or $27,JOO. 83G-6726 or'---·-'-·-------g_i.1-117~7. Cem•tery • PRicr_: REDUCED * Lots/Crypts 156 Tiburon Condo. 2-siory 3 BR. WESTCL!Ft' NlEA lam rm, lml din. "''E'l bar, 0111ner lra n.~rtr forcf's qu1C'k FOU R !ipaces -?>feadowla\vn shag .-pr.~. air-rond. Lo dn. sale at S.f.l,'.iOO. Ar..~un1e Sou!h . p a c 1 f i c Vi~w assume Joa n, no qualifying. $·11,!XXI. VA loan. 3 ~P., 2 BA ~lf'mor1al Park, $1200. \\lnte 847-&j(J7/968-1178/968·43i7. + swim. pool. Prin. only. Jack F. f'('lhn. 1fl931 \V. ht &16-2745. Dr , Golden Co. 8Mllt. Hou1e5 forR~t ..... 2 Br, 1 Ba + 1 Br apt, blk Mountain, D•sert , na 1 . hr h. S32:i/m0 yr !se. l'\o Resort 174 1 C'h 1lrl/p e !s . Rtt l l n g CRESTLl:-.:E C'1b1n -p11rl 962-66~~~-Houses Furnished 300 28R~~1 ,~8~-----I rrv.·llt'rshlp \v I 2 othrr 1 . 2 A, 1111/\'l!f, cpt5, r11n11J1e~. S•l,000 6.f<l-.'i4 7~ General rlrp~. Ocran View. $26j. Ranches, Farms, Groves 180 2n ACRES producing Orani:;e Grove In Riversidl! al Va n Buren & Clev@land Good si1e !or tra iler pk l)r r;ull· rifv\sion. On ma!n hwy 1o fllarch f!eld. \Vrire Chas. i\lnrt1n. 87n No. fl!a!n St. Rlver.iide. 92501 R•el Estat• Exchange 112 675-6J4j or 64f)..2200. e QUIET PL1\CE! Pool fn r I ~--~.~-------1 rC>laxin£, eleganr 1 Br. U11l Costa Mesa r>d. $12j. e f:AST~IDE! Sp11.c 1 Br. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 c, n. ~rv/re f. $1tll. e YR ROUND BEACH LIV- ING! Roo my 1 Br. O u.Jd ok. $125. ALA R•ntals e 645-3900 ---MINI RANCH ALA Rentals e 64S-3900 e NEl\'PORT HGTS! 3 Sr, C 10. huge yd. klds le Pf!/a. Sl95. m I 'I. ,,p BY owner: 4 BR, ram r m. 4 Lots in Harhor Rest ST.JO 3 BR, 2 BA . ntw hf'at -11.ir •• 11 kt:1 j ,,.',, l ;.-lgc:o.,.-paT.,tiC:o,=1=h•~g-"-c~p=t ."-Good--l~,~·~·~h:.'.::fo~c::_:•=;::.::S~200::.__'_0,_,_.1 refn&f'ralion (4 ton). hl'aled • • ...... • re.·ms. S.ll ,500. 494.0386 ~4.~175 or ~7836. pool, lurni11htd 1 blk Palm d Sprini;ts Shopping Centrr. $75-lncluding uri]. Cozy small cor1age w/ privatt" yanl. Lota of trN-s. Country .&.!· mosphel'f'. Pets ok. HURRY on thi1< one ! ~lu• B•acon *·_64>0111 $Th-UTIL PD! Pr1v BaC'hrlor nr lito~~. Pct considered. Blu• Beacon * 64.S..0111 ALA R•ntal1 e 64.S..3900 CHARMING 2 Bdrm Muse Clo~e to \Vestclllf Plaui. . Crp1~ & Drps 1165. mo. no rhilrlrt;n or pets. 645-18'8. COLLEGE Pk 3 Br. hid pool, 11·ocxl panl',e;, lrg encl patio, low ma int, I..!! $ 21 5 . 83J..8146. SELLING Li o Isl• Comm•rci•I $3.l.000 for l..agUna, Cd:\!, * NEW LISTING * l....;.P_'°..:."°-'..;"''----1~51 N•wport '"''· Ow"" YOUR HOME? P'rre appraisal -We buy equities. Personal attention. 1.• yrz. experience , COLLINS & WATTS INVESTMENTS 67:Hl677 • 5 Bdrm1 .. .1 ~ baths. D1n1ni \VITH "MAJOR" R•al E1tat• Want9d 184 room. 45 Ft. IOI. Largt:, TENANTS-LEASEBArn:S sooth patio -$79,500 OITICE !)6'.:.~2.1 Evti1. 642+0427 WALKER REALTY COMMERCIAL 67.S-5200 & APT BLD'GS SUPER CLEAN w. R. DUBOIS, INC. 5"r1ng ii> belirvi ng MOVI! in V11cant lot 32xllll • • • • $34.500 (R.E, Bmker~l 833-!}«5 thl~ love!y 3 hedroom tor l BR. 3\-i. ba. •5:1188 • S94.500 XLNT BUY FOR USER S·l2.50-'1 BR. 4 ba. !l07c88 • • Sl35.000 Corner C-2 20ne 119x122' REAL ESTATE LJDO REALTY INC. !l(]()() ., It bldg. p,,~,,.: J.l77 VIA J.llX) Oranri:t. Many U~ll. $87.500 by Mcvay 67).7300 ('ll.IJh/l@rm~. ~ngster R~al [,.!All', 532-ZXIO or 543-7137 lrg home. Big family CH~R~llNG 4 hr, 2 ha, :'>Ir. \Vhttler. ' POOL IH/F I' 'BR' 2{)' x 20' $65,000 Open "~t.k days 10.l:;cc.:...;.:,cc:;.7 :__ ___ _ lam nn• l . Ba ' Ca.n·t be 12. Sat &. Sun 2.-.. 217 Via Condominiums be11.t! fri>q;r Dr?s! EbolL Prlnctpal1 only. for 1al• HAF~DAL REALTY Mot• dol Mor BEER BUDGET 160 8'2-440:1 Evt;1: 5'41·Ul6 4 Bt. 2 h1, m11ny custom BEAUTIES 4 Bft on lgt; cor lot, Cov'lf fratUtts, $31.500. Assume 1-2-3-4 Bedrm. Priced trom Pfll ">1•/kld'1 playhH. New 5~( FltA. Prin. 0 n I y. $1:5.900. 81!11.ch atta. No ~h1~ crpt -iant:I'&. H@a\>y 54fr.5027 quttllflng on aoocl assu~ble 11h1kl'! roof, N1w paint f'HA IMns. 1n~J dt /o ut . U n d er M•ia Verd• Larwin R••lty, Inc. 11ppr1l111I, 1142-4.179 CLEAN :'I hr. 2 ha. cov'd 21562 Brookhunt, Hn!gn Bc h I Br. 3 Ba T'lwnhou•r-Vi1111 patio. Ry l'.l'>l'ner. S2:l.!150. 546-5411 anytim• * CASH BUYER * Don't llfit your homr. sell it to us. Sa\'e tJme, uve mol\!y, immf!'d. firm ot1er. Brokrr e CAPITAL INVESTMENTS e 812·7577 & M0°5336 $220·POOL! 2 BR. 2 BA tv.•n· hse. chHd & pe1 welcome. Blu• a.aeon* 645-0111 RENTAL FINDERS FrH To landlords 645-0111 4J5 W. 1 trfll, c .. t• M"° FREEll landlord1..0wn•r• \Ve Wt/I N!frr tenants lo you FREE of chUK!. • .~1a.ny de&lrable lenant5 on o u r wa ltinc llsL ALL Cl~h buildtr requiN'S older homes for duplex, triplex, Nv.,,rt Bch. Submit location -priCI!, Constnlc- lion Dept. Box 1 5 1 5, NeWJl(lrt Bf•ch. Realtor protected. ALA R•ntal1 8 6'1.S-3900 ---------· [\/e'U help )'(IU 18.UI 6U-M7! VACANCIE.'i Cost nlOney! LANO MMed ror 'mall apt, Rent yOUr house, apt .. 11tor1 duplt x. tri plex. lnduatrlal In bldg .• etc. thru • Daily Pilot N.R.. C.L\l. or 10 mil! Cl1s11ifle.1 a d. tAd1u'. Call G •or & e • I ~""""'-"c,.:C""',.--,.~~',,-, ~2-4000. II )IOU elf ln th4l' C'h1~g!fl}ld SECTION ! Somto0ne Is 1904 FEDERAL AVE l bdnn, l Ba. Ren t $UI() Lyfl p RJ!y 58l \V, 19th :>:IS-9493 543-2542 2 BR, crplJ. drp1, wtr pd, i.tar. fncd, no pets. Adlt., $16~. 548-1405, ~762. ' 1 BR, 2 ba, cpta. cvd pafi:I, rlsh1r~hr. sm . 2419 Fairway Dr, !!62-8530. • 4 Bclnn. 2 811 3Pfl<:e lor 0031. No Pf'ls sm. ... 6'12-.19&1 • HOUSE for rtnt S 11 O . \Valt r·trash pald. 3 Bdrm. Crpls. 9152-~. Fount•ln Vall•Y LRG 4 Br. 2 Ba homr, h'Jll~. bltn rlo. dlhwhr, w/'llV cpla, le lfl"pS, dbl rar. - S325/mn. Call Mr. Jolmlon M0-1720; evrs 54~2&4' f'o RESULTS YoU can ()8. pr.nd cm. Ca.II tti. SUpef. S al 11 1 m an, Dall)' Pilot Cla1~!fled &Cl-.5671 • place your ad a: cha.rp It! P11 (·1fil· :I fl'!Ol•. t@nr'll!I rrt~. Fi21neln11: 11v11.ll. 54,)....6084. "\YJ::f:;D II ~ N!lp'°. .clea n 1111 un1111·whirlpool 1 m l. ~~st dn.w in the \\'e5! 0111 lhe trt':lltllrt!I A trash - lrotl'I hl-1trh. Si7,2."'~i. 9701 . , 1' 0 11\y Pilot Cla111llled lum lnlo c111h thru a Dally Vrrr!r ~!11 r. !162-276!1 Ari. 642.-5678 P ilot Cl1u~ifled ad. Jj.42-5678 I!. YoU ad la the clu1!tl~ SECTION? Somtone 11 watehln1 for It. [)I a I ~today! watehlna f<1r It. D 1 •I &.::..~78 today1 The r11.1te1t dniw ln the Writ For lhar 1!.-m u~r $50. 11 Dally P1lot Clu1lfled try th1J Penny Pln.c'::;"":::'--.L::•:::"'"· ::.":!l-::56~1~8'------ •• . 1 ... ' l , •• ' . •••. 1' .. ... .. . ' . . ' . - f. DAILY PILOT ThuMday, Junt 17, 1971 \ : l~ ___ ... _ ... ~11.11!~1 1 ~' .-;;;;-·~· ... ~]~;;;fl! I •"•""-~"•" IM_,._~ ;;,;~-·;;!;;;;'-I _....,;;--;;;;-;;;;;;"';;"""';;;.;11•;;.I , HouMs Unfurn. JOS Condominiums Apts. Furn. 360 Apt. Unfum. 365 Apt. Unfurn. RtllUtlS Summer R•ntals l6l Apts •• Apt1., 420 Office Rent.al '· .. 320 ----------1,..--.,-------.... Hwtiington B•ach Unfurn. Dana Point Cot ta Mesa Costa Mesa Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 * NEWPORT BEACH * BA y t-·P.DST.l\GE: SALAD.A., 300 to I!.00 IO<I. IL •· Costa Mesa ::c:c:::-:0-::::---:---""'.~I ------------- ,. VACANT 2 Bn. '''" ""'"1--------SING LE, TV, pool,"'" ok. FAIRWAY HARBOR S"nta Ana Santa An.a Dock, lish, S\\'1n1, pvt. bf-Ach, l OttDec, 61:K.1862 pkg. :? lo 8 p<'ople ·~-~~~~~~~ $1-IO .-SJj(I. pet' Ilk. Junt' Ju-is70 SANTA ANA ~VE, C)t RIO, FA hi, crp1s, tenN"d * * POOL Tlfo.IE * * Dana i\farina Inn, 341U 1n ldscpd, dbl g11r. $1~ f)f'r 1 BR, ~lonllrcllO. n!' OCC Coa!il Hwy. ly Aug Sept l(IJ ~.: from 300 1q/!I. :!Sc: sq It. ,. "' mo-1!1 mo only. Vtllagf' S?-)() mo. uicJ club h.!il', 11001 Huntington Beach VILLA APTS. TOWNHOUSE Real E.!itale 962-4-171 or & n1a1n1. SJS.8535/54&-4760 ~103. Duplexes Unfurn. JSO Edgf'watioi• 8il-2&i6 1--675--24&1 or 541-JOJ:l LA KE Arrov.ohearl: tor North Business Renta l 44.i sho1t-Joe : a vail July & AT'TRAC ~101·e & olhct Aug . 4 BR.. fam. rrn. & J spaces. Sj() ~ up. D1\7Jlt""n ~a111,. rrn. !teas. innnlhly San Juan Capistrano, ru·1 3 BR home-F'rplc, Jge ll'ntcd _.;._ ______ ~ back yanl, 2 b11, rrpl.!i & Corona dt l Mar La Quinta Hermosa 2 & l BR's Privare patio pool • indiv. Jaundry tac.· 2217 Harbor, Nr, \Vl!son 2 BR on 1 fi r. X!nr conrl. Lrg. close;s ... carpor1. :5130 drp~. cov·d p11.110. Nr schls \ & r.teDonnrll Dougl11~ SZ:Ul 1110, No Is,.. Clean1ni;: df>p f'l'Q 'd. S.16--Hl.i."1 ;irt ;, '.IO. • J BDR~l. 2 B111h. nf'ar !'PACIOliS 4 BR, 71) BA. 11!1 blln.~. Crpts & drps. Immac. 61 \-Si9!1 Costa Me'a Spanish Country Esla!e Liv· Near Orange Co. Alrport & inr & Spacioull Art11. Ter-UC!. Adults only. ract'rl /)001; .sun~f!n gu BBQ 20122 Santa Ana A\.'f'. • H~ated pool-Adul1s only • No Jlf'l.~·1\dj. ro i1hopping UnbchcvRble Living • Only l\fgr. l\lr.s. Joachim, Apt 3·A I Br unf $150-fur n $175 M6-4:i215 * * * N•ntnl lu l'E'l>P. Pa I' 1 Y · ~··on -193-lJU 6i3-7136. nu.,~i · ~~·-·co.--:~ -;-f.IJD Balboa Pcn1nJ>ula, 2 Industrial Rental 450 Br apt. prk'g, lnrlry. 1 blk to I NEW INDUSTRIAL ,,rhrlol!<, ~tort~. hear h · i\11-:!'A VERDI-: RE:'\TAL 2 Br unf $175 fur n $210 LIKE LIVING IN s:C~ u~~u~ci;uo~J~er-HARBOR i~~~1 ?~~ ,~~~-E Cp~s: bay or bcaC'h. $100 per 11.-f'k BLDGS. & up. Cal! 673--1526 or * COSTA MESA* S250/rno on ~~ar ll"a~. i HO:'>IL \•llh 3 BR 2 BA on ~910:;. qtllf'1 strPet Lease or 3 BR ronrin. \Int ;u·Pe. m<1nlh-lo>-n1onth al S2,'.i(I. pla!ed candle muftt-r Is I b TOWNHOUSE tlrp~. ('I)('· pallO. !:~u:: }~U}'~·~sitr~r;: ~~er~~ WILSON GARDENS 67,j...J&l2. l!OU. JJIS & 1740 sq It un11s Rentals to Shar• 430 P111a1e ollices. plrnty ol po.rking . r\Car SD Freeway. C. NA1'TRESS RE:ALTOR <"p!s/rirps. :.! ba th . .S2 1.~ n10, Call Ai,:1 /~fi....1141_. ___ _ S."-(1 Sf'C, 968-iJIS. :lll-liR.ii. !'PARKLl.'\'G 2 Br. g11r, nu HOU!'E 1n ('0111'!. 2 Br. crp!~-1 C"J>ls & drp~. t>!r ll11rbor & f'REE Room & boa r d , Apt1 4 blk:i: S. or San Diego F'r1vy 2'll7 Harbor. near \Vil;;on Ph. 6~2-QSll all l pm. CUSTA .'\IESA 6-12-148.)! pi11to ~i;n \\'. 17 th. !\I) D \'w!oriH . Cpl, l child ok. C.\1 ,).18-2!1.1!1 S16J. 89l-i9l1. on Beach, l blk \Y. on Holl ;> BR. JI,} BA ~'TUDJO , to 16211 Parkside Lane. TO\VNHOUSE. $1~0/mo. 1 1 HARBOR GREENS. -.°"'" lMl.l' •CMll'Yfllt'lfT corn:,1, I<'"""''"..,,. p,. ~._ 11.,,,. oo 1-<. .,....,,J Balboa Isl. in exchange for good rooking & goo d <'On1pan). ,\lust havr full 11n1f' iob eJsc11her~. 6•:J..77.3. Rent a ls Wanted 460 I, 4 BR, 2 ha .. bl!ns. rpts, rlrp~. ri11rin. fr1x•1• S'.''.,!.J nt o .','.'S-l'IDl or 21.~ 691 -8:':'.'1 Irvine ~--~7 2 EH. Du pll'\. Rang!'. \'rpt'd, pa11n. atlult5-no pe t!<. !i21 ~hal11n11r !Jr. Sl6.l P.cai:or 612-~".m l.JUPLEX. 2 hr, b I t 1 n s, "UllllEI' RL'NT II " * f'1·p1~/drp~. p111 patio, 1r '' • ' • L I ' ..V • • 31j0 :J.15-6889, gar. 2 BR. 2 B~. tnhsr 2 n1o~ .$32.J ~---~-~--- .1 BR.. 2 Ba. tnhsP: 3 n1os $37.'I Newport Be ach + TIJRTLE ROCK * 3 BR. 2 Ba ............ SJ;.(I 1 BP..2 Ba · ............ S37i • L.:.\'I\'ERSITY P,\RK + :>BR. 21, ba. 1nhse .... S3i.i I ~P.. 7'1 IM. Tnhse .... $3.iO 3 BP.. 1 Ba. !urn ...... SlOO l BR. !11., ba ............ U)O ~ ER '! Ba oousr ...... s:.:25 i)red hill REALT\' L:niv. Park Cf'n!er. lr.·1ne Ca.JI An ytime .\ll-0820 ,) BR .. 2 Baths ........ $32.J 3 BR. & la1ni!y rm, home. !incl. gardC"ner1 .... S3-l5 3 BR. 2 Sa. Choice green. belt Joc1.t1on .......... S32.) I BP ... :.!1 ~ Ba. & fain. fill. Tur•'e Hock, nrly n~w .$350 :t BR. ? baths ........ $27j "ll ob ,-1 \•\11 I. ---'llvul!ur · Sli,CE 19-\G" 1:.1 \\'e,,1rrn Bank Bldg I >111\·rrsih· Park 2 Br, 2 ba. lrplr. d.~h,1shr. 1. Blk Lo ocean. & stON's. S2.Xl 1110 )'f'ar J,.a~"· &12--2020 rlays, 6-16--6114 el'es. ~ ~-----~ AP"' trneoh lor Rel\t Apts. Furn. 360 General Rent Beauulu.l Furniture for as li1t lc all ONE MONTH complete with your 100°/o Purchase Opt ion lnrl. item selection. 24 Hour Cely. CUSTOM Furniture Rental 517 \Y. 19th. C.i\f. 548-1181 Anaheim 774-2800 La.Habra 694-3708 Balboa Island 2 BDR:\!S., rrplt". Pr1v. patio. $?.00 Yl'ly inc uul. 2 BR 2 Ba apl $2.)() )Tly .• \\'1n\nn Rral Estate 6i~:;:;:;l (7111 8'7-:'.1441 e llea!ed pool-Adults only "iili5i'm;""t'9ili':';';'i"'"i i~·~N~o~"';!"~--~.,~d~j ~l~O~'~h;o~p~pi~o~g GARDEN & sruo10 APTS •:'>IODf:HX 1 BDR.'11 4 Bcch. l, 2, 3 BR'11. from S-110. BLOCKS TO BF. AC 11 Park-Lii..e Surro°Unding 2700 Petei-son \Yay, C.l\t, PllO~F:: 5 12-796~. QUJJ:.l. L>ELVXE 546-0370 !-'REF. u1il, fun1 1 Bil a p1 NI' l-2 & l BR AP'TS ~Jj9,j() ATTnAC. 2 BR, 1 b<'ach, pool. $1::0 ll ll. Call Al5o furn. ::iarhclor P . H BA., t·i·pts, drp~, beam c..1:'11. 53&-3'i77, :'!36--1282, :;:i&-1:\lili. rv pa\los * ld Pools 1ngs, pa tio rnt1',1'. Adi!~ Nr !!lop'g * Adu!ls only Newport B•ach on!y-oo fM'ls. Rrf's. 23;).l :IJOB JLE homf', Lido Martinique Apts. San1a Ana 1\vr, 673--039.i. Nearly oew I be lge ',',·~~-1777 Santa Ana Ave., Cl\1 * THE GABLES * • r,, ,~h ' crr11 c., l,,.,rm&"t PIOl"'lrt cr~ls, drp~. yel,low . bltn~'.,,'•'•''•·•A•piil•l•l•3""""""".,"6-""5>4""2 2 Br, J1 i Ba w/ gar. SJjj_ en1'I patio. JO' to bay & pool.l" Adlh>. Cpt~. drp~. bltns, Ind Apt Unfur n * Spanl'sh Elegance yd w/ pa!IO. \\11r pd '.M39 • • '233 mo. ydy. Ad"lt" oo pe!s 67.l-87:16 Orange ~vr:._~·-6~~ Ne wport Beach 365 1 Aph., ~ Furn. o r Unfurn. 370 Ocean Vi_e_w--F=u-,-n-.~Y~d~y 1 Quiet Adult Living * TOWNHOUSE * -------.-.,.--1 Senta Ana SI • d • bl 2 Br. 11 .. s,, cp<.'. ,,,.1,., .. P•· ;\lDDERN 2 BR, I '• ha. ! ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 2 BR, 2 BA , bar rype k11. . iag Cpl rps !ns ~ . B ·1 I p I e Al U il Pd '"· ,\rlult•. 1160. HOE • .'\!el-rrp 1 s , ti rp s , hl [111 S, upstairs Lrg rer nn, pa110 eauu u oo I t v VILLA MARSEILLES • ·1 Bl' 11-0 ody Ln. 7118-1768_ d1shwshr. Couplf' or 111alll re 1;rnflr S300 n10 . .'i21-323-I ~ -.. ' ~=~~--~=-~' adult. .$\6j_ :11o. &12--4387. BRAND NEW _ . • Adlllls only.no P4'ts SPAC 2 Bl' apts. $14-0. !lrd SPACIOUS SJSJ, Bl::AUT l BR. niarvf'l-2·11 Avocado SI. ti-JS-097!1 p I Pl C FOR Lcil!SC, new deluxe 3 Br. ous vie11·, Spa, T<'n111s &1.,.,...,..,...,....,...,,..,...,..,.. 00 · ay ~il. Ills, ih·p~. 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apt" F Bhn.~. paHo, kids ok. 2 Ba. apl. Stl'p5 lo ocran c"°"'==''c·c'-'-'·="'-'-"c•_64 __ 1"=I096_._. -,·IA,;\IAZIN(.; Adult Livi n z 1998 i\laple No. J 3111-7660 Rrf, 1l'.'q. days f213l 861-1319 Adult Living LRG I hr furn apl. C111• poi·\. Beaut. l & 2 BR furn or uni 2214 Co!lf'gr ;..:0, fi t;~fi-22117 ('\'t'S 42131 69i -6934. Furn . & Unfurn. All ut 1ls, Sli::i. E v e s . Apts. Stll clean. ovens, Dishwasher • color coordinat. E.'t Bluff E-BLUFfo~, 2 Br. 2 ha , bl!ns, _ _, I' I h b o oo 'J?I' cu app 1ances • pus s ag ,,..,,...,. ·"'· U/\Y Cin 2 Br) displs, shag -----------· Back Bay Vic". S?20. lea$e. =~-==~~~~~~! d · · carpet • choice of :l color OCEANFRONT J Br. 2 Bil. (·1ns, rps, Jatui:i:1 & i>auna &M-0608. yr lea~e. S32,"1-S37~1. 22 1.1 \V bath!>. lht~r pool, NEWPORT BEACH 'oc~,-,-A-N-,_cR-.0°,-'T~3~B-,-.-2~8c,-.. · I schemei • 2 baths • stall ood I d -showers • miiTOred 11,ard-Oceanlront. 67:...1.110. Merr imac-W s Vi la Grana a Apts. I yr ll'alif'. $~2;}.S,17:;. 221~ .uj .\h•n·1111at \\';,p .. , C.;iJ. Four bedrooms \Vitb baJcon-IV.-,..,~~..,, "f•-"' 6.,~l'JO. robe donrs • indirect light-• \Vlfl.'TER RENTALS • " '-"',-.,,. "" ~ ~ ing Jn kHchen . breakfast Rent NO\V l'ti r St'pt.~ l<I"'' BROS A ic, a bove & °"lo w, Gracioll! "'-' · - -nnoun ccs Jiving & quiet ~"ITOl'nding1 S_•_n_l_•_A_n_•_______ bar • huge privale fenced ABBEY rtEALTY &12--38.iO Apjs. Now Availal>le --patio . plush landscaping • YEARLY. la rgr 1 Brt. Rik MEDITERRANEAN f()l' farn!!y ii·iUi ~hildrf'n. 3 1-lr.atcd pool~ brick Ba.r-B-Q's. lar£e hea!- ~~--~ 1 t.li )J'. uld 1\01·k1ng ~1r! look· j 111g lor roon1-n1a 1e & Apt. ro~ta \lel>a·N<:11•pon Area. I 616-1011 3 GIR".LcS--"-,-,c, -..,c,-.,c,c,-c,-, I sharr 4 br houi,e 111 H.B. S60 1110. ;.:;6-1991. ' t'E:'>IAL E 30 lo j(I !o share 2 BR, 2 Ba apl, LtlXllflOUS recreation. Call &-16-837:'!. Office Rental 440 RENTAL WANTED .'\la1ure IH1:.1nes.~ l"OUPle dc- siies ro ho(ll "It 1jus1 11\'t aboard 1 or funushed honl~ or apr. Preferably on !hr bay. ~·ron1 July !st Co 11 1 least Alig. 31. No pets, chtld· 1·e11. Un1n1pca chahle cha1'- acter & bank l'elerences. , \\'ill exchange 1ninor srrl'Jc-I es lor part of rent. ln!cr· \·1cw welcomPd. 673-1202 \\'ANTED • 4 br, !gt' !iv/d in ar<'a, pa110, \\'ithin 10 mi. MOOE RN OFFICES San CJe1nen1e. 11·16 rno. l!el * COSTA MESA * p11rchaS!' option. \VUJ arrive I June 27111. Need no latei· $i~1. & SllO per n10 .. So. C11l1f. J l ?-\\1 Cl F.l'l'! :'\';l!iona! Sank Bldg.. 11\an u y -11h, n1e a~-s1l1cd a(! #ISO, Dally Pdol, :?30 E. lirh St., C.:11. 0.12-1 18:. -_ P.O. Box l:itiO, Cosca i\lcsa. Ot::SK ~pace available ~50 Calif. \11626 I n10. \Vtll provide furnilure a t s;; n-.o. Ans\\'Cl'ini Sf'rvice \rJLL g'.I\'(' 0\\ ncrship C'il.fl"I il\'ailab!c, li87J Beach Blvd. plus n1odera1e 1·cn1 lor your llun!ing1on Beach. 642-4321 hou,,e, ap!. ne-.\t 6--8 \\'reks. Du1 ~late rnother, co!legr DESK s pace available $:-,0 mo. \Vil! provirle furniture daughter. Local refrrence~. at $5 mo. Ansii·ering service \\'ard, 19000 Tho rnhill. Sun available. 30::; No. E 1, _c_;,cyc.cCc'c·c'c7c14_,_6clcO.c296.\~"·~-1 Can1ino R ea l, S a n RETIRED COUPLE Cle1nen!e. 492--4420 \\'ould lik r to find I or 2 Br --------~~~~ ba.v F..· IX'ach. Adult!. S165 VILLAGE Near Cnrona de) J\lar lligh Largr Clubhou~e etc. BBQ d 1 1 1 School. }'irepliH:f'. u·c! bar & Child Carr Ccnlrr c poo s & ana · ---67j....67.l\1 aflrr 3 J1n1. :!100 ll<11"00r B!vcl. b .1 1 k' 3101 So B••'•tol St "·L••'· -. 01 1,·1., '2' sq fl. PP.OFESSIONAL Bldg. 45c ~q fl. Ai r-cond. crpls, drps, ,.:rl parkln>:". Xln! Joe. l:;Q f~ lith Sl. C.:-.1. PF:TE BAr.- RF~TT RLTY. 64:l~t3J3 house 11 11h a }'ard. Corona del ~Jar or Ne11po1·1 area. Ren1 no1 lo rxcecrt Sl:lO. llr~vr ~ roy pood!rs. 6{>-2633 ~fl 6 E A C H ELOR. no~--drinkl!r nr<'cls singlr or small <lb! lurn 0 1· nnfurn, llf'ath front u1 1-n itche n appJ 1a.nccs. Great 1~ew 1 'l & 3 R<ii'1ns ' ' "'" .,~ " " Newporr Heights Costa J\ieJ;a 835 A;\llGOS \VAY s.14.zw1 SOUTH COAST (!J r.JL N. of So. Coast Plaza) Carpet-Drapes-Panel \Valls -;-:;:;~-;-:;::-;-'it-:;;;;;::-;;;;J ---~>l~l'cl~> ,,,~-1~·8~0~1~0___ c I· It B k & C Santa Ana Nr11·por! & Bay Cent"r CLEA., I ,. 'R• lrll>s -~ oa\\'c . an er . o. VILLAS PHONE, S57·8200 ......... ,' Bl d Cl! .~ '' ~ '· ' ' "" COUPL"'S' "'' '1 . A ;'I 5221 ,vJ-: c11·p.ort 1· . · · L k S 'l" · 2121 L .., 1' anaging genl .,., · 1101 :llac1\r11lur Blvd. pet~. >: ·11 1-.">-Sl .)(l . H.00.\t-,\IAT~:) Huntington Bea ch :~1&-8s2:; fAl so i ~ off a\'a1!) 646-1:2~2 E. lfilh :'1 .. NB. ti l6-l50J ,\'cw :o.uper :l BR, 2 Ba1h, DESK spar" av11ilablc .$j0 prrl Local J'rl'~. (71~ 1 . Dayl 83J..O\OI Nights 3 BR. modrrn. nice, .strps 1o [""""""""""""'"""""""'"" 1 ~urh Bay. Yrarly. $29j ut1l Laguna B•ach 1n('l'd 6T.>--J.i:':S. Apt. Unfurn. 365 fl'plr, 1\C'l har, bran1<'d cciJ.1,:-:B~R"'°. 02::.,-h•-.-:.,·,'.,-,-,.",-,.-. c,-,,-,-,·. I 'Acpc.tcs-.,--------~ mo. \VIII Pl'O\'ide furniture 111gs, panelling, p r 1 \!a tc lrpl, cri1. tip-., P\'! palio. J;(a l'. Fu rn . or Unfurn. 370 1 '~--"-'_'_"_" __ ~] ~ at S::i nlo. Ans11ering service General pa 11u, 11!J rec. lac1L i\rlu!Ls. 1111" pd . .\'o llf"l~. S./j() _ . _ Bl'a:lablc. 222 FOl'f'st Ave, /\u pc-I~. t ron1 S80 per Chllc!. u i.;. i\ 1 11 1 1 7, I. Huntington Beech Laguna Brach. -194-9166 roo1n111<11 c. g , 67•7 •:0:~.::~.::1 ;;;;;.F;;:;:;;~~~~ 1 * • 0.16-00i3 * * I .. ~ .) <if1 ;,:;o. ON BEACH I Roams 400 OrFJCE fur rcnr Sh.1rr VEN DOME 61ti....J30:1. I EXECLTJVE fantil}' adult~ required 2-3 br. house on lca~r 101• Aug . l {213 • i ::~9-J;s2. ~-.,.--~-1 \\'ANT~:o 10 rent-i;:at'age ff)\' FOR LEASE AT VICTORIA B~.ACH Unique 3 hdrm. home, lo- ('ated on tnc or.'eRn ~id<' n! hll'y .. al V1cln t1il Be111h . .-Outstandin;: ON'<1n \'if'\\', 212 ba!hs. 2 sunkrn tub!<. 2 fil'f'· places. J in instr. lxlt'm. All l'f'd crdar exrrn"r-Anlique ~t;:i1ncd ;::la ss 1\ind1•w. Colo1·- f'lf ~k) li~ht.!'. K1h.:hr.11 1v111ll huiJt-1 n!:' int'luding .\'utonr r. e n I e r 11·1a t1ar.hn1cn1s. nrrrlcd aerr .<1s in pathway, leads To thr. brarh. \"RLY. LEAf:.f: S.1.)1) ;\10'\'Tll :'\ll!'SION Rf.ALTY !)Sj ~. Co.-ist J!"'Y· 1 ... 1-:::una rHO~E 171 n <F.11-0jJ! Lido Isle FOR RF.:'\'T· Unf 72j \'1~ L.1rlo l\'o rrl Cilll •21:>1 9.l!-O!l:1o ()r 11131 :?7fl·l.~14i. N e wport Be ach Balboa Peninsula ------L1\RGE 2 hr, slo1·c, g11r. ~p 11 r P 1\/a 1 1 o rne .1·~-Dl~lACUl.A1'E APTS! NICE & QU-I ET--rpt..;, rip!;. $16;, 1110. Phone • P.00.'\I 11uh pnva rr bach in Rrrrpt1on 1:;:t a1·at1. l!'\·ull" boa! s torH~r Ul N11pt, c.~f. i\rra. 6.J6--.j367. Sli\GLF.: Co11agr 11111 prl. ADULT and :! BJ~ . .::1·111:0., dq1s, balcony, jJQ-6()27. NE\V 2 BR. APTS ni~·r lin11t>rsity Park homf'. I n d us ! r i 11 I Con1p!e.\ ~I ?,() mo thru 9 l:\. Si:j 01., FA:\ICT..Y Scctlvn lockcU J.:<il'. ;-..1· bus & lhC· . f rom $2.'lO :'>la lure 11 ork1ng u·oman or i;,13-3622. I 11 "1 ' Blk b & ""' ,,,. '"''. "' ..• ' 'I •3 sr.. rlosr !n hei!.rh ,\'o c II I I d -I Personils 11 111 "r-to ay · v.:1·1 Closetoshopplng, Park "r,' '" 1'" P"·~· ... i.ii ...,.fs Crpt~ dips stovr Call Furniture Available 0 "~" £11 pre r rr e ·\\'ILL shar(' l i;-c. 111crly l 6i:; .... 1368 *' Spacious l BR's. 2 ba _±ily_ J~t .Sl l.i lllll._6-lj '...:.Jj!:•. .~:i~.H'J. ·' ' · Carpets-drapcs-Olshwashtr s:;.',..li:i7 f11 rn1J>!1rrl ofri<'t<. Spa('IOll~. I ~·;;;;;;;;;.~;;1 2 BDR.\I, frplr, bal<'On,v_ 31.i * Swi,m pool, put/grr.cn QUIET-Nie:• View! hca!cd pool.saunas-trnnis PLUSH ~!udio 1111, p1·1 ba. il lfY. 11/bay 11r11·. Lois of l llO E. BaJ . $2."(I 1no, Lf'allt' * Frp!, Indiv/lnrlry far.'111 2 lir, drps, nu crpli, Baker 2,1~~-studio apL r~t;1 S81" rec room-ocean views drrl'~. rn1, drsk. t i('. no parking. 6.\:KJ.:.61. Pe rsonal1 )'f'arl) !nq111re ;r.I Apt. C. 1845 Anaheim Ave, Ha1·bv1• Sh\'Jp'g. Locked gar. "" mn" 1:1·1r,,f'L. A' ts, no pa!ios·ample parking (·ook1ni;. nr :'in. Cs! . r. la111. 1 e OVF'ICF: spat" in J.irlo I----------- 6j3-L'J21 or .'!48-7771. CCSTA MESA 61 .,2821 Adi''' . II . pr1s. e ~ .-l::H . S · 1 8 1 ''" k I -ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. "" s, no prr.~. ·l,1. ----ecurlly guarc s. 11~:ncss nu~n rr;~. .,, 11 · Shop~. 600 ~rr fl . 2nd fl1lc11·. Phane S.12-7217 or 11-r1tr • Rcrles by \reek-On O!·Pan ,..,... .. ..,..,,..,...,.,..,..,.161.i-.r.i;:; <Jr &M-ffi j3. Lagun a Beach HUNTINGTON •11 S,IQ. 1110 . .>16-!<i,,9.i. arros~ froni R•chard ·~. ~2:,0 }).D. Box 12~3 CostA ?llf'sa. Lovely Bachelors, l -BR .B ._•_lbo_•_P_e_n_;_n_su_l_• ___ l·--L I K E-A-HOM=E--LA RGE' il<'ron1 Tnr ;>,!11rl1n PACIFIC ~-i_-1::'\' B;1chrlo1 ·~ l' '' n in lllfl. fj\2-1.)11. JNCRLAS YOUR BUST 2" I ;\laid sr 1•\·ir·t>-Pool. Util. -[ • S'i.'>--8i40 • DELUXE ~ Br, 2 Ba. Oprn .: hr, 2'~ ha, ]\)()()sq ll, n 11· Fanta~t ic 1•1r1v, !1 pl. hl1 -1 ns, " !'r fnµ.. Ii >:. :\r ~.1d1. Pl l J700-NE\\ipoRTBLVri:-3:B or mol'r. 11-Jfabulou~ nr11· =~= 11otl1'C :-itin \l-1. :ll4'·• E shar; rpls, ciosels ~a lorc. $1'1.l hr. 1\·01•k. 11ornan only. 711 OCEAN AVF:., 1-1.B. -~hn11 rr ,I· rn1r, c<1rpol'l. I .., ON THI-; BAY* br11 . Call Da11n. 494-1003, OCEAKrRONT COTTAGES I ' bl" d -f"l4 "'6 1187 "~? l''I C l\i 60! · 1" "'81 Sav Al'"· i;38-•1!l ·l!l l'e u1S, Sl'p Ill J'!U, llr 1\\'ilil fi/:20 . 178-1166. I ) _,,, · · ~.:'..'::....__'._:___ 1 ti7:J-246·lorJ4l-:-,0.'12 C'.\l. or;>,,...,,... P.eas.~~·~~~i'sra1cs. ",_,._,_;,_"-'-"c"-·~-----l:_:c_c_. l_l9_5._>,l5_"_LL0>_, ____ 'M7.-,.~v~.-,cdce------l ore open 10 am-6 pm Daily LARGE ron1fo1·tahlc 1'00111 • i\'EIVPORT Beach Delu~:e Singles Dance Cla11 ~~~~c Corona d•I Mar l.'\J.\IAC 2 HR, Crpti:-, 1h•ps, -------.-. \\11LLIAl\T \\'ALTERS CO. fnr l'rnt Cornrr 1\'a\'ncr k V iew offices. A1r-contl. Pr1v. Elegant iltn1osphel'I'!. OCEANFRONT 2 br. Q1uet bl1n.i., Bean1 ceiling. Adults. DLX 2 & :'. Br. 2 Ba, r nc!I""""""'""""""""'""""""" Spnngda!t::. Hlg Bch. Call Ba. 2400 \V. Coast 111,·y :)34.2221. 11dul1~. no JIP!1'. Jul & Aug, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ;.;0 pets, F'roni Sll.i. l!li-I s;ar, ~1 ·[1 & up. RC'nh1I Ofc: Parkl1kc Bc-arh LJv111~ 11r1rr 7 pn1 '!•16-7~11 . · · m, 0,. ,.,. ''· '. 67"-;'""2. 11. 11 0 ?.O!l~ :'.lace Avr 7'-16-1034 /or Adu!l s ( XL~T OFTJCF: Spare nn1v u • ,r-..,,, ~ -"' at'f'. pt>n HJ.~ or call ' ' ' '. ' LARG I!. 1wm Jor rrnt. Kit-1 LTOO RLDC. 33·· v· -~ N B h Casa Del Sol llV!li. '• ,).) ia Costa Mese n.~ l6-:i:!86 afl 6 Pill. ewport ea c "hrn pr1v11rr:rs. l-.n1ployrrl Lido. N.8. 673-4501 ort• lJUl-'LEX-ilt'hv:t' '! Br, hl1 n~. * Ste p' t o Beach * I.· ~ GP.-'11rn unf P1 1 pa-f"'t'~011 Sober. SG.'l mo. * SUNNY * r rp!s. drp$, rPf1·1g, frplc. 2 HR. 2 ha .. hlln ~ Oi·('an tin, l'l-plr 1n '!Br., r lr,at .. 1'<, :•·l~-t.11 6. * * * AC RES * ON TEN ACRES "!Ir, pill10, Jndr'-' nn. ''''"·'· d c I '" ,,,,,,. Pf'ls II 1·L ' " J vl('W. Arhilt~ only. No p<:t!. ~u11 ~1r·, r1 ·· · . L !urn rn1. p11 h;i., k.r * The fastest dr111v in the \\'es! . • Daily Pilot Cla.&sil1ed _\rl. 642-5678 * * * * Mot el-Aph. * 1 & 2 BR. furn. & Unl\irn. No ""IS. SlJO. 'ill Joann St. p> d 1· "' <It I '" Yrly s2r;, ;\v111 l. .luly l\1. ;lj't'r' I' -I " . .), Pl I. ~f'P rrrr1::. nirn. ;-..o I :-;1 url10 .(. l Krr!roon1s Fireplaces I pnv. patios . ..,-BP-11-HA°sharPrrr t; t-• * • * 21661 Brmkhllr:-t :o;r, HS. I ~rnnkin;;: f;lf>..Q.l l'l ,---------------------, LO\V RATE!' Pools Trnnls Conlnl'I Bkfst. ~clrp~'. J~~ sq'. fl. ,,;·ailahl; ", l'R. "· h.>. hlt l1·. t:luidl"f'n * 171 !\ !16'.'-6{i.·,;i _.. L-n-r·, -'PA' I " 11 11 I !2' 11-·k 1100 'I ~ 0 -• • Cdlf &1 1-11 " ·• • -~=c:-7 br•l rnnm. n"ar ::.0 .:> • .-. nmr -X n11 ' '" · "0· :J1J1J .x:a """"'· · ··.:u 1n111 . ~hi.1 n10. fll3 Valeutta, ""IC'.Cllll" 1j,",l)(l Yeal'I)·. 1\\'a11 -1· KI DS W-ELCOME--1 c011~1 Plaza, pvl ba &· r nt' Trader's Paradise n<>11::hll'1rhO""I. rn1 t" W-11rh. 1 Daily R3tr~ Ava il. {i\'iarAr1 h11 r nr C(l11st H11-y) Apt. l\'o. l, .\ii-7j68_ ;i hl .. tWlll, \I.Ri k 111 •i·hl« I.re :l AP. 2 " Cnlor TV .• \1r-C:r.nrl ~ :\Inv<' tn 1oda,\ A11n1rt1\·,. 1 . .!IJ-~~il • I' I p T bl .. BJ::1\UTl!-ULl &tB1l c .. 11 . 6i3-.:li!i.1 612-?'1.a E\'{'.;, r.. :\Bl' ill)! $J''l 51Sn \I! -~-----R~ ~11nkf'11 l1v 1·n 1 rl1n tin. 1 • 00 , ool a e ;..·EAr. bl'11~·h-2 hr. Nf'11. ( -• ' · .,,. 0• • l,i\!; Brh. 'l ~tudrn!~ prrf f;1 1n n n. (rpl,., 11 /11· ~ll!l C, • ~unr\~ tinfirrn R<'lrii.: t..· ~!O\r "111t-inporllry lo<iri!en ,\pts. ('\:It'd~. pool, fll'ls nk. i7i,:i 1'!'1 f'n l Ba ,i;. patio kil -" ' .. u I 1' P:it10~. 11-pl f'S , JM)!. !"r 1-.<H 1 pt 8 or D • blln~. S.'lj()/n111 !r~$e', 23111 ~P\lfl"rl Biid. r:t1111.., bn1 , 11pld. 11 P"-"· $l)J-Sls.·1 Call .).Jti---.iJG:': \.r~ ~ •11._ 11_, pp 1,1:. Sl 20 ·l~i-1.li::S !lfi~7~~ ii-IS-~1:1:1 An1plr p<11 k1ni::; P\I patio. --__ ___ ll!~-.110 or '.J@.1,.t() • 1, 1 1 I 11 >I I 2 Bil 2 "' ,,.,,,, "·pd " --~-~~I FURN .. •lrg rni. pr1v honH'. 2 BP.. 2 Bi\. "/r!rq-,,.-,-.-8-P.-. NE\\' 0\\1NJ::R-u11rlrr er rr1 nr ~111g <'S, 1 on i y • · ... '" . It ~ & l BIJR;il:-; .. slZll UP. nlalr only, /\\all .rul~ \~!. ;-.;~:IV :llANAGE;itP.NT rrnl S~:il Jsl & las! 1no hl1ns, rn!'I garagr, lndry Palin, poo l, (' 11 11 rl I'" n . , . . ,; ~ u·/frplr. "Ill~. rlq1~. In< 2 rcq·rl, .rr0 rlra111ng frr r111. tlP;in $)6() n10. -PAR K-NEWPORT ~10RA J.;A1 APT:'. \S&>:J _J-.1 rs/1\rPkrnrh. ti \6-.. 01. car i:ar. \1"11' of hay, GARDEN LIVING .<\v11 1I .l11ly ls!. C11ll all 7pn1 :'>-IG-0092: 1111 6pin J7i -2:1J8 APARTMENTS J\lora i.;111 Ln, 11 hlk E. ol Roam & Board 405 \\'al kins: rlista nrr 10 ~irirr~. Qu 1r1, at1rac .. plf'11~ar1t. Ulll ~rtys ~3-4·ln2. ___ .~:-LG 2 ~2-ha , pool, ad!i" BaC'helor. 1 or 2 Bcdroo1ns. B"arh Rt Garfield 7l~: I :,.cc-.---------7'.'pt Hgt~ Sehl 111 ~ t . O D O TS 962-119flt ..01n,11; on .~11n11nrr 1·ar11t-SJ'.JO/mo. i\\'llll Jul). By p;:i1d _ l!l'a\crl pool. *CR LID AP * :l.l, no pets. SlJJ incl ull. andTov.'nliou:;es.Spa,pool.~. ion'.' 2 iiiature c olle i;:P I BR.· $145/mo. 2 BR Stucl1111 & str<'P! l<'vrl~. \\'ill furn. Ca~a Blanca ><>1ni~. ,.,.,", ili.·1. Arro~~ I & 2 BR. Y.-1'0111 S12:1/1110. > I II app!, 6-16-8402. " s ur l'.'nls 111 m;i1111;:i111 prr>-80' Catch Ri.i:: :"-fotor Sa 1Jrr. --~--~ AD ULTS. Sl~.'1 & UP. D~h1\·~t1r. F'rplr. Apts, :l.18-2-\0i. from F'ash1n11 lslanri at Jan1-01f'rlook1112 hra11T. ;::11.1'd1>n pt>rty & occup_v hou~r for SS0.000 Vahi CJear. \"'ant So. ,.-BEAUT. moll. 101\nhou~ :; i¥) \\', 181h S1., C.~I. Ott/ "arpo1·1. LARGJ:: Pool. e f''ABULOUS 2 .'lty, Jiv rm horel" & ~n J(1arp1i n Hills pa110 & htti pool. Adul1f>. frpp n>'l111 11·hilf' nwnf'r'.~ Calif. Land suitabJ, for inl-Br. l12 Ra. lrplr. palio, c II 673 •~1s · 12 I < I a -··"' · \1·/spiral sir.., frp!, 2Bdnn, Roarl.~ ti1 \t h,14-1'.JOO 10:1 ° t 1 .t , ~rrn~s t'Onl away. REF'S AVAii... C11ll 11M de\'tlopnicnL Anxious. pool, 2 rl'lr .itar. 11!1 bltn~. HOLIDAY PLAZA . '· -.~,, ""'~' <'rpls, dr~fl"~. Lea~P $2"ij, PARK )'Our c11r A: walk: nr 11-.. Ba, S!Sl IT\lplt'AI pool. -\\'E~STCLllt"-Dt:l.U XE L11 kf' P11~~"·'· J.U\-J613 iii! .lp1n. A.~k fol' 673-7:'!1~ !II 7123-4 710 or S.l6-~991 DELUXF: ~ai:-ious 1 BR ocran. nr .<1hop·g, Nr11• ilpt~. J4:i E. J81 h St. &12--460:-l. 2-BH cpt~. rh·p~. e OCJ::.'IN VIE\\•-Fr.D;\1 Andy or Sco!I. 4 11 1~,,-,-,.~2-,-,-0,-.y~b-l<cl<-.c~7.--,,-. I k--' furn api $l.>-i . llratr.d pool, l Br. 2 Ba. bf'a1n cc1I. .'\!any Df:LUXJ:: I Br xtra 1.. frplr_ dsh11T, 51.ll I Br. furn 01• unfurn Guest Home '"""" f'Vt>f> '" 'M'~· Amplt pa rking. Adult~· no x1ra:.. J.'\0-fl :'>111tgurrlte, 811115, <p>>, <lt:ps.· l'efn~.· 1 Atlnlts onl.' CA.Sil P LA''A. !·1th k ft . C .. \I. "' choa·,. corn<'r. H uses F _u_r_n-.-,----1-; p C\f -,-.,.,,---------\IS.DOO cq, tor holl:;r , ·u. 0 · pets. """ omona , ' · fi7.i-·ll!7J or :'Hil-i!lS.l .(('R r, bal<:, hke n ew , l'i:il Bf'dlorrl Ln. \\'alnut. Call ~i. PRJV. roon1 for l'ln am- Unfurn. 310 BUSINESS mrn~ ,. pt r 1a 1 962-4180 bul11tory J:Ut'sl. Nu11·111ot1s plrx. The f'ox Co. r.r~J. kl ' If " , FOR lrasr-Df'luxc-nr1\ all · · ,\Janc"ii"ti,: ~~~P2t-E Newport Beach ini'"l.<. 612.~,,2 "' .ll0-2.°"2. tor~. ti1.~-9tr1. General 11 y rat~ now o Pr"'" o elff 2 Bil, 1 B A _ * REGENCY * a """'''""~''-=-~J C--:.-;::;:CT,:;-~~---.. ""' " 111 __ • ____ .. S k -\VJ::STCLlf't' LOT ~· 0 r. c \'eryone. Low B.'I :l6 \v · Unohstn1c!rd 1·1r1v nl bll,1· .~-2 Bi". l Ba. crptg/drp~. self St:ACL!f'F ;<.tiiOOr Ap!s. 2 RESORT Summer Rentals 420 i.·n u in· 1 .. , ,'£\\'PORT Se11La1·k :.101el, 2301 Npt g B Al ·1 LIVING • " " LG :l bed Ju~! pa111t<'d. O('f'an. /\rtlt~ nnly. i.1--0$2. clean gas oven. encl ger, pa.. l'. so I Br. 1tva1 .July 1. Blvd. 616-7\lj. c I bl I J :; BR. 2 h11 ho111e in Lake BEACJI HO.\tE_ 2 BR duplr:.:. Ga.rai;:<' rc-rrii;: hos. 5-IS-36Q.j. 377 \V. \\'1lson. rp1s, < rp~. In~. poo. pr1v L111'1u;,> apt \i\·1ng \\'llh S1 n1 l · S~~~t11~~p!p,111d~1c;;~st ~~nf~:; k gas rang<' furn. No Jlf'IS. * GARDEN APT-2 BR pa!io, stuclio lypc, 11,J 811.. lion 1n rt'rt'('flfion ... .S\1·1m-~17~~·~:.11.i.·o~\·;:~.Yt~~.l11fo~~ I;).~~~;;, cl'lrpe!li & tlrape!, ft-nccrl 1 c~~---~---- yd. tarn. rm, <'hild!'f'n & r>r!ti ok. $215 P/l'o1 Broker - 842-145.i. Mes• Verde 3 BR. 2 Ba , din. rm. Pool. S175 Uni. $295 ful'n. ~ladgi! Davi~. Rltr 642-7000 Condominiums Unfurn. 320 COsr"A M~ Tnv.,nhol11e, 1 BR. pl';.nellf'd rirn f.. bunk rm. <'UJ:!. drp:o.. 1-"or N:nt (I( ull". 1ru1 547~9136 or (71 41 !162-3286. EA."1'BLUrr Con<b'l'linlum. New 4 aa. Tenni1, Pool. 1.m. &i4-4334 Coron• Ml Mar *ON THE BAY* UntxceUtd view! Exel. 2 BR. 2 81. rondo. S..url<', PQl:ll. Ro;i• •hp .,.,11, Ye11r Ju, Call !or 11.pp't. s19;1, 1110. 2321 2nd Av<'. Sl •IO. Bltns, R'!ll', patio. Adl1s, Infant ok. :HS-2fiS2. 1j2.·1 1n in;:. 1rnn1s, btll1ards. sa11d ma's N'n!. Clran up depos. 673_7:!06. nn ""l. lOO·G ", 2!.•i St. P lacenti11. Ave, A!k about \•ollcyball. health club~. Angu.~t $700. 837-8930, H''t' sloop •.• ~101'tll .~t 2.13.'I Elden. ""' &:.. ,, our discount. SllUnl'IS. r lubhousf!, party 67:>--3749. 11111rlnit drl Rey , .' i includ· $:ZS Per Week & Up COM niost unusual 2 Br. 518.2127 SUBLEASE -$350 room, m;id<'nl cennis pro & JI A\\'AIJ brach hst-on Oahu Ing 1reiltr 1 .• valucrl At BA01ELOR & 1 BR. beams. hltns, p1.tio, loti of LG 2 BR, 1 '~ ba , Neiv a·prs. E.-.:er. 3 BR. Park i'<r wport pro shop. & n1uch more-. North Shot'f'. 3 hr, fully furn $2,100.00 . • v.1ttacl<' for TV & m11id 5erv 11va11. ~'.·e:;J_7S5~'"10· Avail J uly ~rp:1 ~:.11~~ s.~~~.i~~~[~~g Townhouse. 1\fagn1flcenl Bay ~in~les, l & 2 Br. Furii/ $2\Xl/wi<. Av11il July 1-St'pt. jewr.lry, 11n11qu c-s. car or 4:,0 Victoria, C.:-0.1. .>44_9681 • Vlei\.', lfnfum. No pt-l~. No Unrurn. T{pn1.~ from $13.i. , • 30. \V1i 1e f'an·ell, PO Box .!11thm it. 673-0002 CC~I PLETELY furn, 1 Bdrm UNF'URN apt 2 Br, 2 &, ' · I r hildren und,.r 1:i. ;,46-4701 No lcaa l'equirecl. .)63 \V11.ialua, 9h791. Jla\'r frf>f' k cle11r hoU.-f' +- ;i.pt no pe1 s. 131 flov.·er St. il~hwr. bltn kit, rpt~. drp, TOWNl-IOUs.t;, J br. 2 ba. before~. ~~-068,1 wknd~. BE1\CON BAv 2 hr 11pl • .July trn~! drrd. lotel NTUI y of .$1 10. mo. 6·16.i~ Srl:'i/l\JO. C!!l1 67·'!-40.1..'l ~p~i;, d~. bltns, pool~, Cllild-BRAND NEW .sDUTll g ,,,-CLL113 Sl t:l, Aug $1.J.J, St'p1 $115 p~r lsl8.:J.i0. L\chang" for un its A'tTRAC hirn. Tov.'nhOu!ie, Cost• Mes• ' OK. S:rf.l n10 .. ws .. 1110. S!::U. l BR. t'rplc, indoor' uu-~t lnr s1n~l " P"Ql'JICI i1k. 67J-.6S~S. or con1n1rrcial, Thi> Fox E/alde 2 Br. J 'i Bfl. pool . "",,--,,.,-...,c--".:""---: NE\\'LY DECORATED 2 br nucc!oor ki1clwn hea11'<1 pool N port Beach CLEAN Bach. apl~ .,,. ~!pi~'. Co. Rr11ltor~. 6i3-9 1!l'i __ 2 RR. 2 ba, Rlln~. Gara.;:e-, 2 J<1utlio. 1' ba crpls & d....,s .,,._ -·~2 0 .' ·' A · ow No pel5. S175. 646--&ilO rhiltlren. i'o prl~ S\6.J. _ ~ • ''' • _,......Bl"""'.'." ,.,..11\11 · na ve. Irvine & 16th St. 1•n1!. Strp~ tx"h. Si:1/1•k I.. T•1o 4.plrx ;ipl. IJtd~~-111 * +EXTRA lgt 1 br. 181-H [XI ar, !"l48-~278. SJ.)()_ &12-·1797· Or <:all s.>1-0211. 64>0550 11p, ~1 .'1 E. Ba.lOOil Bh·rl. prllllf' ~P\•PQ1 , P11rk J.1do turni!lhtd. Si l> mo. 988 2 BR, 1, ba 1 d E 1 2 Br, 'l Ba .. adult~. no prls, NOW OPEN 6i3-99lj area; ;i.lµi shtdllly U!it<I S r n 1\llulon· Dr. or ~139. patio. r.r:i of c~l~~~c. n~ ~~!:n CaPcha".~.~ ,,on,c:ve, Costa f'O.l32 Ninta AM A1·e. Spaic-OAK\VOOD r.Ar.Df:N APl'S LlVE on SAlhoa J~l11nrl this llogt'n goll cluhi;. Trndc Cor DUPLEX 1 Br; rurn. Nr C1br1llo 642-393.l . ...... • .,...,...., J.), IOU~ 2 BR, 2 BA W/frplc. pn , ll"t'!'Orl ll\'irt~ for ;i.dultsl sumn1f'r. soo I i\fO A UP. $30,000 ho~ . .>JS-."1200 •boP'I. qu.et, no dog~. cart; Sl70-% 8~ :l Ba Studio llpl 2 BR, 111 BA, J>31ki. Gar, patio. ~d~_of clfl!e!s, Hid. N•wport Be11ch \\'on1Pt1 only. 127 Aga!e or molorcy<:les, ~2720. Cpl.~. d,Ps, patio, J:llr. Adj hhins, AduH5 Sl5(). mo. lJ.16 pool, $19J. 5:17-021 1 l6th & Irvin• '42-8170 fii:>-3613. :. ol<k>r units in llf!llr hy to shp'1:. 2'G OR"lf'. 5411-&JOI ~nta Ana . 6-ll-0070. CANAL VI E W -COROr-;A tlel ~tar pn\'a!r Beach rlly, Submit ro·s. a!a~AR:iJ~,i~R;;:17!oo1. \\'ESTBAY 21. n<'w 2 RR f'RQ;'l.'T 2 hr, rrit drp~. 11to1·i>, FURN. YRL Y . l\todel~ ()peT! Deily 10 lo$ hon1f' M'f'1•1. J br, 2'1 hA, ~~~~;.,units or .. ~ l$1S,800, Adulti . Avail. 612o. IH2-95al "P*' $11111. Ad lt' 1;.1 E. 21!! f,.ncrrl Yrl. g11r. Sl.\J. 2&19 t hr upr apt, In;; covet~ VISTA DEL MESA comrt turn Ch1ldrc-n 1' prl! A 1 612_.000 !\! &42-490;). OrAn g<", l\pt. A. :;.18-9592. por.::h. &12 • .m11> Apartme n ts OK Aug. $27"11k .6~4-1 1Ti, I crn ' --Save )'OUT \.U • lf 1 noT -, \Yhat do you hh\'r to Ir.ult-~ far! Jusl l"l!Aeh for yoor 3 BF!, f11 m ,11~ apl, bl!n~. •'! AR . P'1 yard. 11:11 res:r . 13EAUT1FUL P111'k Nr11 pr1rl I X.· l BR. Furn. & U11f. [h~h. J\.B. J hr. Mu~" lorJ11l~, A112 I l.l~I it h('r~ _ In OrBnr;?1t phone: .t call DaU)' t Joi r1rp5, w/"-' rpt , 1:11r, nr lh11r!r<'n &.: prt.\ ok. $1l5 1ub len.<1f', I tw , vif'w.; 5 111"1-11•~hrt . Bto\~ 1111d R1'frig • 1n Rr 11ron Ba), pr1. lx'h. Count' .11 li1f'R!'•I read trad. c;.u:rlfled 642--5671 Olarr• ~hnp'g & 11rhl~. !l62-4lll0. ~12-.'~2tl rrnx. 1211. ST~1.lf(I 1'<'1 f11•'. Sh&ll rrr1t';:;-Lq;:; Rf'r l'cnt~r. ~l:l--Oi!ll. ini: ~t .&l2_5678 lines times dollars VARBE:NSTAl\GEL on J y ~lightly u~t"'(I. \\ har ;1111 yeru n-adc fol' s;(}l)rj_ used i llr- bens!ani;:rl 11·11h right-h11nd- erl zoenst1rr. powrr dippo. Ir-ck and batl<'ry. opr.rat,...I •n(1dlrbol1om. \Vr1!<': Cla~s1- l1Ni Ad No Iii. Daily Pilot, P.O. 8(1.\ l.J60. Cos1a :\fcaa. C.\ !l2r.2ti. Outt!;o;-~tc,,-l'ac,-,-,c,cd-,-,-.,-,-,. ('I ' II Ill h'ilde lg£ Garben- ,1a 1n:r1, i;:ui rar, oil pa1n1- 1ngs or ~,, • • :ll8·iti·19 • 1r \\;1111 Van camper or mint· hserar, trd: '67 Cor!ina k 11, .:1c n1· Palm Sprng5_ Bal on lnd Sij()_ Pyble S50 st>m!- yrl.11. Tora.J Vain eq S2600. j.,li).1131, ."(). LAl\E TAllOE 1~ acN" l•JI ~~ully in1pro\'C'rl. Ne11.r r1 r r)th1ng. T1•a1lr 101· 111110, l>li:ol •or nh.tT h~\(' you '.' 6-!U.:>:~il r1r~ ,~· 11·knds. 'J [.(I!~ ~fin Clrmen!r, '"'I. S3'1 .. JOO: ~tree! to ~trc<'I, 11 111 takr ll unu~ !'uhmu unit.,~. hoU>'('. ro·~ OJ' ~ '\'C'11·ixir1 Rci1 nhy. 67:\-1642 3.-. -P11.sarlrn11 Contr.lrfor "ill 1i:on1orir1 homt-Ol' BPI l.r ca rr for 11'.l'Ollnds ln trafko ll'.1r rea~ne hle rtn111 I. Cllil \Ir,:. Pan~ch. 21,1 i(l9.5-l\2. 2 :\t, c.••nrl,, toll.·nhou~r. t b,, f)llnllf'lrrl drn k hunk r111. Tradr lor 1't'f'l'ra110111l1 prnJ'l('i'ty for 111y r11 11111 Zll jli·!ll:il or 71 1 :l62·32S6. Don rrankhn Rltr 613-2272 ANY 0 11)' ta lhe BE~ day to nin Al\ ad! n~ eelay • .call lodl,)'. 642-567! your ad -today! Tradc-r'i p4rarhl.I' rolumn 1~ 2 Hi· unfurn :t p1. Sll'i. n1n ~n.-, ITll" 61.\4li7i 11!1 fl p.n1 R l~:'\T ~l.'l1'1S Sl'i,l The Ill.SIPS! r!nw in 111r "'t!~I Tttrn unu&td Jleni& into quick !nr you? 5 Lltlf!s, S 03y~ !or ln!Anl ok No pr.ls. Joann For 111a tlie1~nnrr S'.°iif Tus tin & M •sa Drive •. , 11 D11 lly Pilot Cl1151lflc-.:l 1 * * * * * ciuh, call 642"-S678 SJ. C111J tM•y •.. 612-J671. St, C.\I. .'l~'.J-.:1~:1i. ll'Y the Penny Pincher * 54s.4155 * 1\rl. 6,1~'8 !ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!IJ!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!;I * Th ul'Sda,y June 17 l~n OAILV PILOT !:J :-'1~ ~--~1~~, [ -----1~ r --·-1 ~1 ~[i~ ..... ~-"~1~rrn 1 ~1 ~ ....... ~-~)~[Ill~'~, ~~ .... ~ ...... ~1rrn 1 ....... ::-Jrm'c ~~1 [Il] 1 ....... =-j1~ -. + =• w n;s :w &o3 ~WW• II 1 Carpet Service Houteclunlng Job Wanted, Female 701 Help W•nted, M & F 710 ----...,..,------1-°'°-:,..,--,---,--,,,....,--- fl FUU.Y LICENSED * CLEAN CARPET HIGH School grad wlll clean PRAC. Nurses, Compar·ons, APT. MANAGER Escrow Officer Renowned ll!ndu Sptntual~t IS ~ (C.f.1. areal Mesa HskpNi. Live In or out. C'ou11lt-!or 32 un!LI. Husband Ailvu·e on 1111 matters. OUR RUSU.:ESS Verde, t.teu. Del t.11ll', 1'.1onthly rates. Emplr pays may have ()!her JOb. Musi ~lO \'rs E'XPf'f liivl', ~!11.rri.11,l!ie. Busine1s CHAD\\'ICK & CO College Pk etc. $2, hr. 4 hr. fi.>e. H('a.lth & Famliy Cure be good handyman. f::xp 'd. E X ECUTIVE Headings gi\•en 7 days a 64~92a fl'('(' Esi, 642-6111 1ninlmum. Call L ind a Agen~·y, 1805 N. Broadway, 7l·tr:i..'!6-1258. P er sonne l Agency "f"l'k, JO a,m. to IO p.m. Di&Jnoral Car""t Cleaning !>l5-6723· S~·~·~·~"°:,:.c7...S~·=1~·-----l-AUTO-SALESME_N_ s .. 141,IQ H\V. Coo&t Hwy~.~~-16 31:.! N. El Caniino R.1.'n.I. ,.~ llOUSE OF CLEAN =E'"ECUTlVE S u .,...,."'' San Clenirnle A\·g Sile roo1n $8 •"-' e c re t a r Y 01..:nlngs for 2 5alesn1en, e.'<· I .,.,,~..,.--...,-~._ 492-9JJ6, 492--0070 fitipairing & tns!al!ations Comm"! & RA!11ld. Cleaning wan1s 3 ur 5 days work-perienced or not. I' E V I & Free Est. &1~1317 Free est. * &12-68.24 * w eek, A 11 e J e cc r i c • Top commisst0n xper • oc• Going-on t.'.Um1nrr 1'aca-DIUFOAi\l CARPI!.---X-CLEAN life!la Cleaning Service typewriters, E :-: c e JI en t • Demo p!an Choral Accompani•t uon~ 2 mature co 11 o g e Reasonahle Rat~. Carpets, \Vindows. Floor etc. rPfeN-11\.'e!i All office skills, 8 Hospitalization 0£.>edt'd in high sct\00\ tor studcn1~ will rn111nti11n pro-Tomlin S•c * 557_9669 Resid. & Commc'l. 548-4lll no bocikkrC'pJng. 545-6.122. • Insurance Sept. 1971. i\l ust hove top 1ier1y & uc\:u11y liousc for " ability & sii;ht rcadlr1g. Con- t .1 C liOUSECLEANING and win-}.f"\TURE, refined \\1.ll11an • Profit-sharing ,,_ ''"'· n-y·old• to• •PP! lrC'e roo111 \1 11 r ownrr"s a r penter be '"' ' "" " ~ • dow washing team. Call available 11s L'Ompan1oft· Ask for li1r. Ro 1•ts & lnlerviei'i, 543.1121. away. REF'S AVAIL. Call CARPENTRY 673-9.122 or 673-87'.IJ. bousckecycr to 1.!idy or i:;cn-AtJHs Chrysler·Plymoulh ;;IS-5613 alt 5pm 1\!k !or E'"l'"D ·· .,, , 5 lo 9 tlcnmn. Llvn in, have car, .2'1l!l HarbOr Blvd. '' ''" re s, Andy or Sco11. MINOR REPATRS. No Job Bay & Beach Janl!or1al ,. d ,1 N' 0 ~·-. w1·-'o'"'• n00-, .1~ tr-10 trnV"I. Call 1130-313!!. Costa 1\iesa rm. ''ot un er · . ' o, un or Too Small. Cabinet in gar-.... 1,..,, "'-' ., ' .... ...... '" I~-=----h(l)id;iys, Kramer's, l!;llh &. PREGNANT? Adopllon, 1o1•es: & olh er cahloets. Res.&Comtn'l.646--1401. AIDE S F'O R CON· BARYSITTER . D11.ys now, Hail-i. abort ion,va11ec l omy ""' ""' counseling &: inlormalion. 545-8175 Uno ans\\'er leave Ironing VALESCL'\CE, el derly r1rs la!rr. S & 10 yr old.IEec-~.p:C-C· :::..-~. -----642-4~::6 msg. 111 646-2372. H. 0 , care or family c Ii r e. Your home or n1ine, 48th ; D, w11it17ss "·anted - Anderson. lroning & Alter11tioru1 Hom<;>makers, 547-6681 -: :\'Tl 5-Jll-ti!1.i7 Nea!, attracuvr, ov£>r 21, GOU ' I C C C. If --• l.. ' · ' · · "'anted for split shift. Glx>d memb;rs~~r =:.~s. ANY sz job, Resid., Comm"!. A! ~t~764~me EXPERl~CI::D SECRI::. • BABY SITT EH \\•an!ed for lips Steer & Slein, 1170 &12-lall/eves 54S-!17'l2. lnrlus., Apts. All types·~~--------TARY \\'istws PSrt Un1e :: c-h lldrcn Fri & Sat 1."'l'f!S Baker SI. C .. \1. See ?>!rs. !~~~~~~~~~~'.! ""rlc. R!'as. Free est. Masonry summer \\-Ork, Call &16-07~2. Call &l&-2f..00. Baker al 2 pm daily. I: ,I ~oo~--'--'~OO~l_. ~--~---I M c-A~SO=N~E~.R-Y-~l~VO""R~K--A-,-11 Help W ... 1ted, M & F 710 BAR:'>IAI D, exp. Relief sh!!, EXP. Food Checker/Clsh!t'r:- [ Loil i nd Found ]rQl Cement, Concre:e types Free f'Sl. Thoroughly 30-35, n1usl be neat. Apply Full time. ~\pply in pt>r..tin, . L:iJ PAT IO s iali" •• A dd f'Xpd, &12-19-18. ACcoki;l,"J'ST"""',, '",•b,!P gi,',"", ]fl prrson, 1 (!A ~I -I 2. Ne1vportcr Inn. lG--:! Bobbie pee s...,. v:or or us r 1 m .. u~ Hi-Tide, 12nv. 19th St, C.1\.1. Purdy. dlslinction 10 your home Painting & ha\·c t'.~p and be depen· ~-' ------- Found (fr•• ads) SSD '-''ith;;. custom patio design. Paperhanging dable. Call betlreen 4 & j BCELll\"E Fashions n"e<ls 3 EXPER. Fro11t Ofc & PerHn•I• ·-··1--------SJC .elp Wanted, M & F 710 t le.p W•nted, M ' F 710 ri•lp Wanted, M & F 710 ~ W•nt.d1 M & _!l~ ..,---..,..-----,=-,.,-10 UT STANDING po::ltlon11 SECREJ'ARY, tut, a~Ui UTE HOUSEKE!!:PING w/desli::n tinn ln N.B. MUJI typla!, IOme s hor t h • n d, &: Supervision for 2 girls 10 & be x.ln'l typist w/good good 1pelltt. So. Cout 12. Lido Isle. 6-12-6830. __ clerieal background. Ablr to Comm. HNp., 3Jm Col!.•t -assume var i ed ofc , Hwy, S. l.aJI:. -49S-1Jll, Ext. re~ponslbilltles, BeS(ln V.'l'lrk I ="'=·~--------1 immcd. G#-1520, 557·7883. SE?ill ~Ured Man To Work As P/Umr Bld1. CUJtodlan, X·MlL!TARY OrFICERS PART timf!, exp'd DONUT t<.feaa Verde. Resp. depen- BETI\'EEN AGES 25-30. MAKER. all 968-1~1 btwn dable, non drtnker. &47-9696, IF YOU llAVE RECENT·1.;:'•~m;.·~l;O.~m~. =~----1 54&-282Q. LY RETUHNED FR 0 ~1 e PRODUCTION s0E~R~V~J~C~E-s-.. -.-S.-lo_•_A_l_to_M_.I VIENAM WE HAVE A SU PERVISORS • Exper. F ull A p/timr open. JOB THA'r YOUR LEAD-Ali three shills, Xlnt tutu~ t11gs. Apply 7am-4pm. Ray ERS!f!P QUALITY \VILL for effective leaders lo Join Catty Chevron, 004 So. FIT RIGllT INTO. YOU !he Harbor Area'• ta.ates! Coast H\\'Y. Laguna B. MANAGEMENT \\'ILL ACT AS A RECRUIT· growing company, ER FOR A LARGE LA ND ?.lacGREGOR YAC!-IT SHORT Order Cook !or Mex · INVEST:'l!ENT co INTER· CORP. ican ~stauran!, days. Ap- VJEW PEOPLE WJ.10 H.E· 1631 Plarenlla, C.l\f. ply in person, El Matador, SJ"'O~D TO OUR ADS. PROFESSJON"AL phone 1768 Newport Blvd, C.M. CAN'T BE AFRAID TO soliri!or . Dana Point. San ltlEJ::T OBJECTJONS. Clemente, Capistrano area. • Salary + Bonus Pl11n • Plush Ofrices • Fringe Brnf'flts • Start ln1mcd1ately CALL NOW 547-6771 \Vorl< In your own home, Br I deal ln art'S. Phone ~\465 bef\1·een 9:00 a.m. 11nr! nron. REAL ESTATE INSTRUCTOR SI S,000-$20,000 STOCK CLERK Read bills of m11tC"r\aJ, till job boxf'S, record ent:rys, ~ iilocking. F0r Appolntmio:nt Call Industrial Ri'l11tlon.s (714 ) 494-9401 ed especially for your home. only, 5-J·l-Sl)(J.1. slylists in this aJ'C'!l No col-~1edical Insur. Age 3Q.45. 3 J\10. old m1x(l(f Grrman Quality, Exp e r le n c e . PROr. p111111 ing. 1'~xtrr 1 !t•c-ting or drlil', Car necess. Salary comm C' n s u r a t e Ask for Shephrrd -Collies. \Jrow11 Satisf11ction. Eason & Sons story, low as 1 $225 \\ 1 fgd Adm. Sales ~3~~~7r5~n, 539-543S or (2.I3l _"_i•_b>_lity_. 55_7"_120L____ Mr. Kent Adams TELONrc OYNA~1IC ENTHUSIAS. \V/blk nose, found vie Cec.11 Construrtion. 548-0769. paint. Avg r nl IS. Air ess X-MILIT ARY • EXP ' D. fi b l" r glass ..... ,,,,.,.. ____ ..,,.,.,.. & Ncwrr..irr Blvd., C.:VL Hos -.-.--C-O_N_C_R_ET_E-.-F-loo-c-s. spraying accous. cei!in~~. 2 BE!::LINE Fashioni;, earn $3. lan1ina\or & finishe!'. MASSEUSE TIC INDNIDUAL WIT II THOROU GH KNOWLEDGE OF' LICENSED TRAINING FOR CRASH COURSE. heige flea collar. 2598 Willo. pa!los. drives, side\\·alks, COil lS $15. Roy, 847-1358. $20,000 + 10 $8. + bt>autilul t•lo!Jies. 646--0244 CM " 2-8" \\'i> 1nun. Car nec:css:u-y. . ~~~-·' · slabs. Reas. Don o4 ::>1 4. X . Pa1nlcr. no 1~· school Call tiil-9Si-I or 539-5·l3S. FE:'l!ALE s1ng.:r 21-28, ~lust f'""OUN D 2 kittens -Grey CE:'111::NT \\'ORK, no job too tear.her. Ex1c r I Intl'r .. ac-00:-J'T LET Y 0 11 R -------play instrun1ent. All trpes st ripe .t: black vie Slaler & snialJ. rea.o;-onable. r r r e eous. ceilings, airless rquip, TR.A INJ'.\'G & .\IlJLJTr GO • BLU~ DOLP.H IN • n1usic fo r group Jn C.:'11. Be11ch, H.B. If not clain1rd, }:s1ini. Ji. S!uflick, 54~15. \\'ork guarn. Reos. 646-IJ19 TO \\'ASTE, \\'HE'.\' YOU t""RY COOK 642-5526. EXPERIENCED ~~~~~----they'll be d es lro ye d. C PAINTIN G: H one s t , C1\N APPLY ITTO\VARDS FIBERG' 'SS •· 842-1306 days. _o_n_tr_•_c_t_'_'-----· m•aranteed ""Ork. Lic'd. AN EXCITING RE\\",\HD-3355 Via Lido. N.B. LJ\ -niC you a _ •• 00 0 BOAT BUILOER--Piant sllperintendan! or St.fA LL yng mixed Beagle r.tY \Vay, quality home Local ref's. Call 675-5740 aft JNG P ROFE""<;J NAL CA· forC'man seeking m 0 re 5 REER THA·f CAN LE,\D · _., d k breed V.'/fle11. collar. brn & repair. \Valls. ceiling, floors ,-·--=~,-.,.,..----E.-.:penenco:u ec assem· resp on s i bi li t i es & \\'hi. Vic: Mesa Verde area etc. No job too small. i • No \Vas!in~ TO FINANCIAL J:-JDEPE'.\'. blrrs. bonrlrrs. opportunilles? \\'e need a S.IG-00.12. 547-0036, 24 hr ans. serv. * WALLPAPER 1:t DENCE & PRESTIGE. Appl:it<. Ranger i·ach:S, Divisional Supervisor for LOVING black mo!her cal Additions * Remodeling \Vhen you call "J\lac" 3000 l>ulln1an, C.i\I. our reinforced p I as 1 i cs found vie \Vildrrnes.5 Glen. Gerwick & Son, Lie ~S-1441 646-JTil •No college or exprr. nee---BOYSl 0-14---1 plant. r.1ust have co111plete 67'""'1 * «•21·0 essary. knowlrdge in all phases ol t.l i5sion Virj.), 830-9.185. .,...,.,.. ..,.~ I P1\INTING. proress1nnal. lO deliver nnfV'rs in the San !----------,.._.,.. fiberglass parts & toohng. FOUND male cat. grey i. LJC'D Conslr. Remodeling All \\"Ork ~rn C0lor TO BE!\EFIT FRO:\! OUR Oenien!e, San J uan Capls-Ultra niodrrn 35,000 ~q. t r. \\'hi!e stripes ! o n g ha Ir Additions, Plans, Layou t. s pc c ! a 1 i 51. 9 6 2 -6143, CO.\IPAt\IES TR..o\l:'\'l:'\C tra110 and Capislrano Beach plant, monorail con\"eyor /\llrac!iv~ girls. Good hours. Xl nt ~. Open 10 A.flt Call 6-12-1}1~ 0 START 111-lt.1EDJATELY 7M~A~T~E=R7IALS 1£ and 1 in g e TOP C0t.1PENSATION Clrrk, hvy Iil!lng, Also e FULL FRINGE packaging, Inspect., ship. BENEFITS ping clerk. Apply in pc'roon, e PLUSH OFFICES B.i\l.J. Lob, 11135 Condor, F.V. -MECHANIC 547-6771 A1k for Kent Adams i\lust be A·1 foreign mtthan· RELL\BLE girl w/car for le & some domesuc. C~ance babysitting/companio n to 9 to own your 01,·n business. Id · 1 yr o gll' -some housework, 1 :~5:30 daily. 5-IS--9658 or 834-5527. ""/collar. 5-1~1~3 Karl E. Kendall, 642-3811. 547-14~1. PP.OGR,\:'I.• JIEAnF:n RY area. sy~tcm \\"ilh separate spray FOUND "'hite Siamese vie Ga,·dening PR 0 FE SS 1 0 N AL Pain-0;\VE LOOK tXGLll:\fl, lN· DAI l Y Pl LOT are11, ovens. grinding rooni, 2100 Harbor Blvd., C.t.1. RN 'S for LYN or RN relie! M A 'h & 'l · ----'---.,...,..--ting-inter/exter. Honr st VESTl\!Ei'\T Al\ALY.'iT, H, ~92·~420 for high volun1e & high :'ll ED IC AL SECRETARY, 11 to 7A.!\1 shift. Park Lido II c r u r " a1n. AL'S GARDENING --~~,._:,._co'.=---1 '1"191~ \vork. Llc. & ins. 548-27:i9, 1::. HHOi\EH. 'l.'OU'Ll.H:\\'I·: l!OOKKl·:EPE!l quaily productio n. Ready p:irl tin1c, fltg. l3ch. \\'rile Convalescent Center, """""' ''· fo r gardening & imall &15-53.10, Tr APPLY '..'OURSEL1'"'. .for the 11g gres s i \'e Clnssifil'd A<l No. 164, Dn.ily 642-8044. Equal oppor. BOY'S bike found o n lanciscaping services, call FU Lt. CHARGE; , 1 p 1 1 B l C\t c ll 54:0-5l98 Se · N 1 EXTF:RIOR, Lir. & Ins. \\'Ortl\ HAP.D, \V,\i'\'T TO 5 yrs rxp. thru financi;il l nrepreneur. rese n Y Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa employer. 11 e aric , ··· a · rvmg ewpor . Free est. 17 yrs r xp, Bl':SUCCESSFULs,HAVF. stu!t'mrnts. Attractive ap-US('d for RIV produt'!ion. ri-Iesa,Ca.92626. R.N relier LVNfelie! ir. ~IG-2.)30. CdM, O>sta ~1esa, Dover· . T &IN 191 TllE 1 NC E ~ T 1 VE TO l nterested in adding more --• S!liALL brown male puppy S~h~'~"~'~·~W7~''~lcl'7ilL-::c;-~.,.-Acou.stic r.ei ing. · pearant•e for front ofc .i:: pruduction lities. J\'ational ~IE N ·\Vo m r n, S i1le11 Aides all sl1 Uts. Baptist vie. BPach & Garfield J-J.B. PROFESSIONAL !I! A I I\ T. INTER. Pain!ing. ncro11s. ?>IAK"E BIG :>.JO:-;EY FOR reception dullcs. SutJS1an· Co. with many fringe bene. can1pi1lgn, l?l·ll 839-52,;,~· Convalescent, 661 Center St, 962..{)7~2. u·ec work, Prun ing . ceiling!. Avg. home $70. YOURS£L1'' & FOR US. clnl Corp. in Ne 11· p o r I li!i;, localed in th r State of !rave mess. 956--09/IO, Billie c .j\.I. · ~'-~~-~-~ . ,. & e d Expert 1vork. 8•17-4128. Beach. ~alary open. Send \Vashington. Send namr, Sn inr. -'ii~iii ... iiiiiiiii--iii F'''"d-,. Cd'! f"•l••d!y t"d· spraying, isease w c --YOUR Cll!\lPE"NS,\T !ON 0 n-171" • " " ''"" " con trol. Sprnkler -repair. S1u1•co & F.avf'!'> $50. rr.~umf' 10 P. · ""'" J, Addrl'ss & telephone no. to MEN \\'omen & children Sale1 dish brown puppy w/!lca Clean up jobs. George, Co:illege sttldents, no \.IAY DE S20,000+ YOU R Neii·port Brach 92'660. <:lassified ad No. 17:i, naily 1van1ed for a sand & surf lndustrlel Inc. Laguna Beach Eounl opportun!ly einployer Telephone Credit Interviewers. \Vork Ir o m your home \Vkd11ys, eve1, Sats. Exper. only. Call (714) 523-8634 9:30 a.m. 'tll 3 p.m. Ti'PIST. Modern o t c . Cheerlully decor11ted In ne1v development. Ex p a n 1 Jo n creales an opening for a 1!rl w/a !mile. Young lrlrndly <.-o-1vorken1. Start $375. Cal! r.tary Ler, ~ COASTAL AGENCY Z'i!Ml Harbor Bl at Adams USED CAR SALF..S.~AN Good opporlunily. ~tuat be 11b!e to close own deals. Call owner aft 9 PM 53&-2677. \VAITHESS, co!fee 1 b o p . Apply In person 1-4 pm. Over 18. No phone calls pleage. 1\ona Lone!, 2699 Harbor, CM. ____ _ WAITRESS Exper. for dinner. Ch•er 21 . P/lime, Costume su pplied. Berl!nrr Reslaurant, 18582 collar. Dr. Stockton 673·10all 646-5893 drinking. 5-18-1.'H9. FIRST YEAR IN ('Q;\l:'11IS· C.\SI IIF.Rs-:-cru:-\::-ash, hill P1lol, P. 0, BQx 1560, Cos!11 commercial. No c x per , 7=~-~~-,--=.,-., SIOXS & SERVICE FEES, '' c 1 f 9""?" TUESDAY, June 8. Bicycle. AL'S Landscaping. Tre e FOR clean &.. neat paintint;, limC' & parl tin1e. Call .!_ csa. a 1 ~"""' ncer~s. 12\3) 461-3359. COMPANY .... h Bl•d. H.B. Ma1·1ners Pork area. Jden-removol. Yord remodeling. interior &-exterior, Heas. 6-l·!-14:xl. • Start Jmmrdiately tify. &t2-fl335. Trash haullng. lot cleanup. rates. Call Dick. 968-4065. 0 Company Car Plan S'.\1ALL young Siamese ca!, Repair $1>rinklrrs. 613-l!S6. PA1 NTING/p11pering. 18 yrs • LibPraJ Fringe &ne!lis rna!e. Found on Little * l.A\\'N SERVICE * ln Harbor alea. Lie & e Plush O!hces Biilho.11. 1.~land. 673-439-1. F"ront yard $10. per month, bonded. Ref'a furn. &12-2356 FOUND-young ha10.'k. O\\•ner back yard a lso. \Veeding, p At N TING/papering. 18 identity, SJ(HI4L yard cleanup. 962-8612. Yrs. ln llarbor are11. Li!' & Lost SSS Japanese Gardener bonded. P.ers tum. &IZ-2355, Exp'rl Yard \\"ork * LESCO PAINTING RE\VARD for return o! Clran-up, Planting 646--0619 Rrs//\pts. &15-2399 CALL NOW 547-6771 Ask for Mr. Buxton CLERK TYPIST Part.Time -UNITED - CALIFORNIA BANK 201 Avenlda [)('! Mar San ClC'mente 492-Sl 23 ~ Doctor olficr in NB ls look- ing for m11ture front o!f1ee girl. General o lf ir e, scheduling 11ppts, 1nsuranct:. \\'ill lrain. \\'rite classihr<l ad No. 163, Daily P 1to1, P.O. Box 1560, Costa il!esa, Ca. !12626. TRAINING \V0\1AN to clean wc!l. 4 Hrs. ~tlDDLF: aged Chri~tian l11dy S2.50 Iler hr. 363 No. 110 smoking or drinking to Pt\OGR.AM Ne"'flOrt Blvd. C , M . ll\'C in & help c11r1? for S\\'«t NOW OPEN 67J...0.138. elderly l11dy. l.t hsework. XJn'I Opening For Atl'at' priv home. Send re.l's HAIRDRESSERS to: Cln~sified Ad No. 183. 0 NO EXPERIENCE NEC· 675-4232 or 675-3701 Dail)· Pilot, P .O. Box L'.i60, E SSARY. • • I ~Y~07U~N~G,._:,.wocc.""'cc."=to-"w~o~tk~!-" Costa l\!csa_._c_a._.!2626_. --OUR CO:MPAJ'oJIES SUC· pharmacy. Some lmowiedge MOTEL MAIO CESS IS DUE TO TIIE of bookkeeping helpful . Call P/time, l it·Schl girl OK. GREAT SUCCESS OF" THE 842-1189 for appl. female l'al lost vie Bushard G d • E~pcr-J11pancse ar ener. Plaster, Patch, Re;lair · ' .t: \\'arner. Black longhaircd Complete yd service. Neat ADMINfSTRATIVE Equal Oppor. Employer CELCOATERS-- E.'(pt'r. Apply, r.t11cGregor Va t h! Corp, 1631 Placenti11, C.ill. 67>1S41 PE:OPLE \\'HO WORK FOR /~-~·~-~·~~-~~~~~~/ us. I M'"""""" I~ ' \l'/liTe spot on chin. !Jloks & Rel ia. tree. est. 642-438!! PLA STER-Patch-Rm Add~. Persian. Nerds m e d i c a 1 care. !! !ound, please call JAPANESE expert gardener. Accou!. ceiling.~. s 1 u c c o Cmpl yd service w/ p\\'r rf'fi n. F!'f'e es Ii ma I es. '141968·lw..6, equip. J'ree est. 645-1796 . SJ5-3D.31, 545-15118 aft 5. HEART-Broken r am 1 I y. 1-~~=~~P~L~S--R-,-, -I~A\VN t.lalnl. Hauling. new * PATCJT A TE NG illissing ~inrc J11ne 7th . illwns, cleon-up, prunini. All types. Fl'f!e e11tima!es \Vhile long haired female Free est. Call 5·16-7379 Cnll 540-6825 ch ihuahua . \Vhilc wilh pale 1 .:c:.::...:::::.-=-'-"o~~--1 :.,.--,~------ beige ears. ··Ch 1-ch 1 • ' • Exp. Japanese Gardener Plumbing Reward. Vicinity Baker & Complete Yard Service --------.,--Free estima.te 557.9264 LF.\V Tflkas & Sons Plum· Fl'lirview. Jl69 Dorset Lane I -=~~~=~---.-I bing repair, repipe, remodel 546-36fi3 /Neighbor). L1\\VN CARE & garden neii• const. Free C's 1. LR~E~\~V~A~lt~D--~,~,~1-,~h-oS.o-cn-.c· I "·ork, light hauling. Exp'd, fi/r.,_8340. rrmale. 211 yn:, lost vie. Rearonob!e. Call 543-9735· PLUMBING REPAIR ;\\\"Pl Sch. \\lhite spot on EXPER. H11waiian Gardrner No )Oh t•IO sm11U chei;t, &12--&141. Cnmplete Ga rde ning • 642·3128 e Srrvice. Kamalanl, 646-4676 1--==oc-.c;-;;,...;;o;:;,,--RE'\\"ARD -i;n1all blk poo· COLE PLUMBING d!e, niale wired rollar, he E)([lf'rlf'ncerl Garrlenf'r!' 24 hr service. &t°>-lllil no. ·111'1811 VI(', ~le~a d!'I 1'1 & :'1·1 Gard .. n1og .S.-rvice I =-~---~--- TRAINEE Sol!rl career opPQr, Local hf'adq11Jrlrrs of lending in- suran('e f1n11 Exc<"p!lon11l on rh JOb ua1n1n~ leai!1ni:: direcl!y to administrative serv1r"s m<1nar:;l'n1cnt. Pre· fl'r m.1rrfed, stable i11d1\"1r!- u;;I \\•/slrong: 11Herest in o!c. mgml. B.i\, degree re11'd. Fee paid by employer. To S700. Also F'ee Jobs :R.VINE PER..SONNEL SERVICES~AGENCY 4~ E. 171h fat !rvtneJ C.!11. 642-1470 >lar. 546--0342 all 5.30. &12-~,.166 flit 5P~l Roofing AIDS & TEACHERS YORKSHIRE Terrirr, Vic: FREE c51. Comp! ')r partial LEE Roofinf". Co. Roolinl! nf ;\r , you s!!ll Jnoklllii!: !or Tilf. F.·•>hl>>lf :11.rea . Reward. la\Vll m11int. & cleanup. L. all trpes. Recover, r<>pa\rs, .. C 11 Sl" •1,1 " d · "'2 •97· .~11mmf'r ,0°/? a """. 6!j...J£1\ '1r 77~-7~4.1 r.1. Gar en1ng. ""-u a thf'r-mri t'(Tlf coating~. whi!e ,. 9 • , ~,::..:_c:c,,.o--~--~-. bo d·" 1 ""kdy~ .J..~ pr.·., rl .. ;, [lln. ,. · · r ,,,,,.,,., Garrlenrr 1" color. Lie/ n '"'' 11 nee --.... _ GOLDEN Retn(•ver. Vic. 1) " ~ AL1"l "A1"10" I d f Exp"d, \'ard \Vork '47. fi42-7222 ·.n '' a Y or n1en s Casll11 Capistrano, 2 yrs, no 9 I=-=-~~-=-.== & "·omrn's f'lo lh111». ~O. hr '' "4"'0 Clean-vp, P lan!ing 646-001 T. Guy Rool!ng. Deal Dfreci. " Ile, hoy'! pe1. -' ,,., . -· ,,.k "" <0 1 1~ 1"<0 I _:,~=.:,.:;~----.,,-PROF. LANOSCAP ER I do niy ow·n "'orl<. 645-2780,. .,. .. ·-..·~-·-·.,·-"-·.~-·...,..,. LOST ~tin. brown poodle, 54 9 90 • remt>Je. 4 mo~ old. Vic. 4~th Very ~. 496-1150, t:ve. ~·~S-~5·~· ~-~----ASSEMBLY St,, NJt fi7.l-75i4 8rter 6 G•neral Services Sewing/Alteration• INSPECTOR i\1 1N. wht Poodle, Nane!lr. ntINGS by t.!oose-Lt. elect., TIRED OF clotheli th111 don"t PBE Has an ilnm('{hate orcn· Re\\'<rrd, lost nc11r Marco plumb, fence. tilr. In!'itlns. Iii? Young German Ma sler ing for an in.q>ector 11·/6 fon:tl'r Jr High, 493-3665. __ 1 i>tamstN'511, neu.· In area, mo"s 10 1 yr rxper. inspect· Carpentry • "°'nt etc. ~<'ks cHentll, Dean J\.lixon ing PCB's & suh-:isse mbliel'I. S-15-0820. 547-162"7. i\lusf know calm-C'Odl'! & he STUDENTS wilh Tr 11 c k . ~.~0-,..-,-,-m-'1tl~"1<---.71~1,-nt-U~.,-,-5 fam iliar wlassembly \\"Ork· H11uling. Gardening, Clean. Special On Hems manship standards. up. fA5-IM3 aft 5 PM, CAii Jo + 64h-644fi Hauling EUROPEAN Drt1~making. Babysitting Ex""rtly C11stom fitted, Ao· ,\pply in J)t'rson. PEP.JPHERAL BU!'JNESS EQUIP:\1ENT, INC. 17112 Am:-strong (lrvil1f! Industrial Complrx) Santa Ana, Calif. 9210'5 YARD. garage, cleanups. .-~ BABYSITTING -n1y home. Remove trees. dirt, ivy, -'-·"'-· 71'«7=''~·~"~'-7:184~:'·=~-I Lrg fenced yd. F ull or p! ~kiploader, backhoe. ALTERATIONS time, Meaa Verde. :.46-8118. 847-2666. Phone fi42-7M6 ""'-""'· ~C7L:E•AN=U:P-,.&-H,,.-,u1•;~"-•·..,.'""-Alterations -642·5845 BABYSIT my homl', 1\leta trim top. remot·e. garagft del i\1ar. Babif!~ \\'elcomc. cleaned, ivy k ! enc e Xln't pity facil. hot lunches. removal. Jack 54&-4743. Cert. teacher. refs. 549--0726. ~CL~E~AN~-u~,~,7,-,-,71,~11~,-,-. 8ABYS1TTING v l c i n 1 t Y hauling odd jobs, new frnce /\dam~ e nd ~arh Blvd. & repair. Reu. 548-6955. fenced yard, meals, ex-TRASH & G1tnge clean-up, cellent care, ~1586._ 7 dflYI. $10 a load, Free e1I. BAB'iSIT my home or )"Oun;, Anytime. 5'S..5031. cl&)'I or cvP.1. Costa Mesa J\.fOVING. garage clean _ up 11re11. 6't6--0l"Tl. &-lit!' hauling, Reaonabl~ BABYSI'ITING In my horn(', Free estlmates. 645-1002. ~Ion. thn.i F'rl. 536-8005, Houseclffnlng Prtemn &hool O!st. C•rpet Service JOHN'S carpel &: UphOJgtery Cleaner1. Extn. Dr\ • ShAmpoo free scotch Caurd {Soll R•t ardant~). ~uen a: !Ill color hrightt'nen I: 10 m inute bleach !or "-1lile. carpe:t!. Save your mon•y b)' sa vina: me extrll trip1. Wiil -.!lean livtnc nn dlnlng rm & hall SI\ All)' rm $7.5(), rourh $10 t;/111lr $5, 15 3•n . ('Xl'J. I~ w~1 rount1, tJ(lf method. I riv work m,yaelL Good rel. 531.()101. HOUSECl..EANlN(i WINDOW WASHING * 543-4487 * HOUSEKEEPING $20 a day. 541-1530 NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 Neat, accurate, 20 years exp_ Tllo CERAMIC tile new & remodel. Free est. Small jobs welcome. 536-2426. Turn East on Alton oU Red 11111 (3 blks Korth of i\1ac· Arthur . Red Hill interi;ec. lion) turn right at Arm· strong. Tr•• Service ASST. Mgr. Terrillc oppor. to join young ·f11st growing .,.......,.----,:--0'."'-:I J r. Fa shio n chain . GENER.AL Tree Serv. Yard Applicants must ht 25-40. Clean-up. Sprinkler repairs. Re a d y tor t.ut ad~ Reas. 646-584.t 11<'.ncemrnt. Shi' s h o u i d .__I _,.....,_ ..... _..lllll Job Wanted, Male 700 ha\'e previous 1 r I l i ng b11ckground \\•/objective of assuminit full managerah!p of upcomine: new .~lores. For Orange Co. spply rnJtl'. Chris'll". So. Coast P lau, Co11t11; r.1esa . ASST. BOOKKEEPER Going on 1ummrr vaca· Accnt. rec. pay, ful pac~ tlori? 2 m11 ture college otlic:"C, call Lo:-aln<>, West- 1tuden1t v.ilJ malntaln pro-cllU Personnel Agency, 2043 puty ii: OCCllPY your house Wt'S1cll!I Dr ..• ~.B. 645-2770 fo·· free room whn*' awner's ATTFfACT. WAITRESS av.'tly. REf'S AVArL. C411 Exper. Not undrr 21. NO 548-5813 af1 5 pm Aak !or PJ10NE CALL.<:. Apply fn Andy or Sc<'ltt. pcnon, Surf lr. !'\lrlofn, 5930 ASSISTANT Apl. r.111.ngger. \\". Coiist llwy. N 8 . Expcr!ented t..falntl':n11ncr 1--=..:.;;-=---- mAn, Also c11 rpct cleaning &. fl oor waxing. 5.11--0101. ·• .. For lha ! Item under try the .Penny PU'K:her COOKS Pl tuTle Nires 1~ .~· Over APPLY AT CARL'S JR. lB9'51 B!'ookhurst GIRL FRIDAY For Newport Beach Ad Agen. cy Pres. All skills inclUd· ing SH, Sh11rp looks, long ho urs, goad pay_ 833-1670. }·ou11tal o VR.lley GIRL FRIDA y newport personnei . agency 83:1 Dov('r Dri\'e Newport Beach &12·3B7o y 0 u R OPPORTUNITY I ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;·;~;;; TO BE AMONG THESE I' PE0PLE IS 0 NL y A Antiques PHON.1'.: CALL AWAY. ANDREA'S ANTIQUES 100 ~" :\lgr. Darrell Buke:_ Apply i11acGregor Yach I COO!( -D1sh1vashcr. A[lply Corp, 1631 Pla('('ntia. C.i\1. nt Or iginal Sam's Pizza, ---R E G I F I t $800 8/:·17 Adams Huntington GIRL, room & hoard $25 a · . a r o WE'LL PREPARE YOU TO ENTER A REW ARD· ING SECURE PROFES- SIONAL F" TEL D TIIAT \VJLL ENABLE YOU TO AOHEVE FINANCIAL JN· DEPENDENCE & THE HEIGHT OF PRESTIGE. Just Received NEW SHIPMENT At'STRALIAN, ENGLISH & F'RENCH PIECES 2380 Newport Bl. C.M. B h ' "'k, Help w/2 children dUr· E xec. Secy $6SO ~ac · ing July & Aug 833.0161 File Supv $SOO COOI.:. broiler or sau!e. Ben '. -. -Recept. Ca ll Dir $425 flro"·n·s. 3ll06 S. Coast H\\'Y. llOUSF~l\Ei::PER-: co1n1mn. Prod. Contr l Clrk $450 &15-4870 Dally 1~a * Sun, noon-5 ANTIQUES -}'M·Sat·Sun. 10100 Meadnw lark. Brookhunt to f o u n t a i n Plaza. Opposile F. V. Drive. South Laguna ion for roople. L11·e in or Med. A••f. OB/gyn $450 • Start Jmmed1a1ely -out. Ex('('! e11\·1ronmrnt. COS~1ETICS Call hefore 9 am or alt 8;30 I,.--..--.... .,..--... •Company Car Plan A11rarllve Women &\l-2flii.ll NEEi> 2 Girls TO" \\'ork ~rv • Plush Offices \rante<l !o te.::ich makeup _r~·-.....:..-·~----,-Sta. !~lands. Some bkkpng 1rt'hri1quc~. \V/tra\11. Exec t!SKPRS Emplyr p11ys IP€' km\\•'!. 19471 Stach Blvd. ro~1lions 11va1I. V iv l 11 n r r.e(lrge All!'n !3:1 l11nr! A~en\\"no<!.~1·r! Cosnl•'llt'S St1h~1c1-(',\" 106-B E. 1!itll, S.A. H.B. lar.)I of Gen. ForxJs, :~1·1·1'154 , ~"~'~-'~'-"~·-~~~---~0\V tnklng n[lpli('alion~ for AS ADDED INCE'r-.'TIVE I ~''~·==~~--- & TO HELP 1\1AfNTAIN ANTIQUE Hanri c rank OUR Ql;;\LITY !~IA GE phonograph .Rrco r d \\IE;'LL GIV E YOU THE storage. cost $80;' u ll $40. Clli\NCF. TO O\.\'N A NE\V 497-tos4. -----··o • F. E p L. 1 hoste11se~. l\'Rit re11sts. nA\-=-cOoK -n1ale H LS .f\ E f-R-IVf'. 11 · 1lish11·;lsh<>rs. Not under 18. D1\Y \l'AITHESS -21 -:::; J.0\'rly home \I"/~ rh1!drt'n. 7 561 l A[lply in per.;on, Colony Apr,ly 1n pcrsun o D l Y _Rel._plea.~r~')--~·~-Kitchen, 3211 Harbor Blvd, J9n CADILLAC & \VE'LL ANTfQUE 19th c e n tu r y PAY FOR lT. DAVE LOOK- telephone, iv/battery box. INGLAND, lNVEST'MENT Perfect. Appraiaed $l75, sell ANALYST, R. E. BROKER $100, 497-1084. !Jcl11nf'y·~ Sra Shanty 6.'lfl 1HOUSEl<El::PER -live 1n C.:'ll. Lido Park. Dr, N.B. I 1''/0\\'n car rnr fa!hrr & 12 DELIVERY yr 11lrl son. 714-644-1~:9. _ OPENING !or Food Service r.tanai.:e r. call tor appt. \\!I LL BE YOUR INTRO-Appliances 802 DUCTlON TO OUR COl'<I· Ne1\'!papcrs To Stores. Sat. 2 8J8.JJ95. hrs am .'i,, pm. Sun 3 hrs am 0 p EN r NG for exp'd PANY TRAINING PRO· WHIRLPOOL auttl washer. GRAI\I. $40, \VestinghouSI'! e I e c -S20. You r 111110, P 11. or ma!ntenanC'e foreman. Call 11•ogon prefd. 962-2396. .. _ ~. or appt. 838-3595. dryer. S35. Both good cond, guar. ol deUverrd. ~l. 84.7-8115. D E ~t 0 N ST R ,\ T 0 R S -~ _, OPENtNG tor frod Service Tupperwarr. Phone & car · Managtr. Call tor appt. CALL NOW 547-6771 nece~s. No inv, 1ood pay. SJS-3595. ll'l(i-02!ifi. KENl\!ORE auto wa sher modrl 800, $75. Ma:;tq elec -------DENTAL RECEPT. IR\/INE PERSONNEL SERVICES .,.AGENCY Desk only. Dental exper. necess. Some Sata. Salary ~t. frin1e bcnelHs, H.B. area: 8A~f-6PM, 84&-3.'i40. Prod Control C1erk to $450 DENTAL Asa t. Exp e ;_ Ins. $ec•y, lite SH to S600 C'halrskle. 2 Da»s per wk. Clerk Typist to $400 leading l\J future, lull lime. Sei:'y/Bookkeeprr $600 84&--0697. Sec'y/Corp, Law S600 DONUT Shop ladies needrd Girl Friday t500 25-44. no ex' per. nee. Mr AIR Bookkeeper Type -:-0 $4JO Donut 135 E. 17th, C.M. File Supervisor to $500 DRAP~RY OPERATORS & A/P Bookkeeper lo~ tabler. CLASSIC OR.AP. 488 E. 17th <a1 Irvine) CM ERIES, M!l-1431 , 642•1470 * DRIVERS* N E I JANITORS, men & women, o xper •nee Part·& tun ttme, Apply 249 Necessary! "B" E. Emenon. Orange. Mu111 hav" clea.n CAllf. clrtv. LEGAL SECRETARY in11: record. Not under 25. Exper. Call Pamela YELLOW CAB CO, S<l-8458 186 E. J6th St., C.M. Llc•ns.d Re•I Est•te DRIVER & Gtoneral Htlper, Saleswoman-part time. aver 21, know Ornnae Co. ti.lust have good phcme per· & gen"I area. Own tranlp. aonallty. Euy, plraMnt JOb. 548-8491. Guaran!N'd wage. C.U t.1rs. DRIVEWAY Sa I e 1 man 5imlth, 64>3900 ·wanted wtlubc rxper. t.1itt--rvHRS BO~A"T'°""C"'O,.., -I die agl'"d pref'd, Boyd's 849 W. 18th St .. C.~1 . Arco. m E. 17th ~t. C.~I. e £ngint' Illlltallen e 1-:XP'd liberitla.~1 rcpa.im.l\n • f lntsh C8rpenteN • Cllpper J\.1arlne Corp, 1731 S. lmmt'dlale openlng~ Rltrh"Y· S!intn Ann. Exper'd only need applr:_ Sri! the old 11u fl Buy the new 1lulf Dall)' Ptlot Want ha.rgalrui 1Alort. Ad• have A.k for Mr. Nordin -· SSS ""ih x1-1 -• OPENINGS for part time/:::::::::::::::/ "":!· · °" " co ...... food ~erv!ce he lp. Call all l -· ~ gtlat & dellvered. 5'46-8672, P 1t1. 1138-lJOJ. Salet ="='-'=115~. -------I OPERATORS • sporls\\·ear PERSONNEL BUILT-In oven I: range top, f\.!fg exper. only. Good pe.y. COUNSELOR oven coppertone, ran t " S d "'° ,._ NB white. B"'nd new. Make ar . • tea y. ~,. · · TRAINEE iiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiilliiiiii NEW IRVINE OFFICE 1'" !16:1-4"2 PRECISION FRIG I DA IR E aato U )'OU are aggttnive, ell-dl1hwuher, x.lnt cond. Mov-s RS thuslastic & wam. to work AS EMBLE wl people, "''e w1ll train )'OU lfli, miat .ell. $55. 646-91!6. 1"0 make above avr income. REFRIGERATORS S35 A Will perlorm assembly work Cali Mrs. \Vateon. 833-2700 $75, Whirlpool \Vasher ~. 1 r highly 1kllled nature on Dennis & Dennis Eire. dryer $25. 646-7820. exJ)('rlmen!al & prototype Pertonnel Agency FRIGIDAIRE re.trig w/top ~heet mrtal components ol Xl82 Mk:helson Or. ftteier, sood concl. ~. r.los" to'l~ance aasembly Irvine, Calif, 549-3131. ~tructures. H!.11h school t:c'l· 1 .,..,"'!~"'!~~':':""".,. ucatl(ln required plus Si' sALESMAN )"l'ars e)(J>Crlen~. 11.Jw . .,, ... 1ive )'Oung man, call -APPLY IN PERSON - 333.1 llARlIDR BLVD. COST A MESA, CALIF. ATLANTIC RESEARCH SysterM Division Mrs. Schmidr, WestclW Pel'90nnel A I e n e y, 2043 WettcllH Dr._ N.B. 6'.>2710 SALES Woman, reliable, tor Bakery & daU. Apply 819 W. 19th St, C.?tl . SEC~$600. S/H 80, t,yp;ng t,,,+, youna co! CA.II Lor:·lne, Wutcl!U Pmonnel A,fttlcy, 2043 Westclitt Dr. N. 6-15-2770 FEE rd. (alto fee Jobs.) SECRETARY, experienced, for 1wnmer monttui. South L .. .iun11. law finn. Salary S400 mo. cau -t!rJ-4273". Furnltur• 110 DANISH modmi couch .. Cha.11'1 • $35.00. AfttT 4 p.it\. -557-4600. WASHER/dryer. mltc. hou1ehold Jumlture. 962--6372 for •ppt. MEDITERRANEAN Buflel w/matchlng glass d o or hutch, 6 mos old, 644-~ MUST se ll c u1tom nau,aa!\yde aoi. ii:. love 1eat, tables, etc, 6~. --~-· 11' GRE:EN angle couch, Sl:50. 6" belae coucll $9). 87.3-0337' IDDE-A·SEO, Vectra p}Jl.ld, like new. Cost $.~, Mii A D!v!fl6n of Susquehanna Corporatl<ln SERVICE Sl&. SalesmM, tx• _I_ .. ~· _67_~_33 _____ 1 f)t u11.l o17POrtunlty employer per, p/llme, nut •ppcar. A rood want ad 11 a alJOd • • Apply 2580 Newpm'I. Bl, CM. investment ., lhllrsdaj', JUM 17, 1971 t ,I& IWL V PILOT to I"--[ _ ...... _-____,][§] I -I ~ c-ll§l [ ~~~ Jl§l L__I _ ...... _, .. __,Jfl I 3 Linn, l Timts, $2.00 -i1 Fumltvre 110 Garage Sale 812 M lsce ilaneous 111 Miscellaneous PO\VER Mower - Slratton. $22. 646-1287. 111 ! '81G b l.fall' b •tarting u.le flt ll room& ot tum, ~·tll encl. r wlwt sofa l! kive seat, fonnaJ dinina: rm 5el, hidt · a-bed, Imported teakv.'OOd tables, occasional ch.airs, beaut Spanish k l n g ~ i z e bedroom set. 6' colfC'e table, % end comoclr~. Mi:tgnavo~ Imperial Ar.1/Fl\.I 1ilt"1'e'l, 7' cabinr! ~'/remote conlrol. Also Wrslinghou~e color t consol"· e1 r. ·"'iU !!acriflet: all. 213 -445--1253. MOVING EASJ'. Console l'OI· or TV, relrig, Ea r ! y American c.'01.1ch, lounge cllalr . r.taple erld tablrs & coffe-e table, 4 M~ple drning chairs, 2 t\\·in bed w/hdbrds. playpen, cr1h mattress. baby i t t' m 11, :i.nacks, 1ablt's. !{)J'S. kltChE'n 1trms, microphone s!and, speakers w/<:ab1~l. misc. f'rl, Sal & Sun, 10 am -~ pn1. 119 Heliotrope, CdM, 644-1995 JOHN'S BIKES .FREE to good homt>, where MOVING ~ Reg'd thorough· 1here is ume 10 Gh•e "Jody" bre,.1 gelding. GenUe gd En- IQ\5 fl l lovP c .. ,mi. Shep. .1:1.ish ~lilllers horse S235, _ t~EW _ N.B. Tennis J. S\.\imming ml)C. DeautUul with children flr bt'!t ctr. Alt. -4 Pi\1. '&I Amphl Car-Cornbo boat & car. ·71 C. t.1. ~. 1ticker ·11 auto plates. Make fl lr. (2131 l3S-l121. Club lull membership tor 4 n1os has all !ihol!. Call 646-4&14. \VM.'1'ED: trailer for COLUMBIA · d ... 8,, 07.,.., &rl-65:!7 eves. 1...c-=------000 lb bo PREMIUM & STEYR 1.::'m:::m:::::•::.·.:~:=:c"..::~::..::.::•:_" __ j-"'==~~~--~1 * ,. * * SP IR l TED 3, . M''•cellaneous 2 ADULT Fen1nle ca t.s, 1 gelding 9 yr old saddlebred ·o-=~·=........,.C:,::::'.""*::.-~.,...-1 4:e se!l'Ction ol l sJ'.l('e'!.!s :; 5 spt'('d & IO t;pttd bi~ Wanted 8'20 \.\'h ile, 1 charcoal each Pa Io m 1 no jumper , '69 BERTRA)f 25' fly ing I 2 w/11111teh1ng rnale kittens. Engli~h I \\'!'Stern "Dapper bridge, trirn tabs. 2 radio1. 10 S'pt't."'d •••••• 7 .50-$ll9.:ic> USED GARBENSTANGEL }-i·ee to good home. 5'16-3708 Dan". S·175. 646-!!523. 150 hrs. &12-5607 5 spPCds •· · ......... S65-$~ t.1ust have right-tianded alt 6 pn1 3 speed! ............ S47·S6l · · STALL ~pace .ava.ll -Boats, Rent/Chart'r 908 _ USED_ :t.0t:risti!t with f".OY·:er dip-4 '.I'll old spayed fernu!e. n1on1hly & quartt'rly rates. - 20 ft. INSTANT HOUSING 15 Models on Display MOVE IN TOOAYI --f eaturing -- *VIKING * KEY WEST * KINGSTON * BOISE CASCADE S\ngles -Expandos CAPITAL SALES : MOVING Fri! i\lust Sell! New 14.l cu JI f ngida1rr rell'ig lavocadol S200. 6 pc. kng io:z bdrm set !)11'(1itl I $500. M11ple lx>okcase bt'd & chf"st. Beaut. din rm tahle w/4 hi back c·hrs. Antique gold 2 pc sect ional. ··Ka r en ·• drum set ~·/snare. high ha!, rlrum ~I (Blue Snarklc/, China. toy chesL 837-6919. ---BRAND tlt'W t;tud10 f'Ouches w/bols!ers, covrrlrttf' & matching 5wag la1np. Si9. Crushed vrlv<'t living roor!'I C'haJrs, $25 each. Bcaut1fl!l ~1 pc. Spanish Bdrn1 group, SS9. urr. 1885 Harbor Blvd., C.!\l , 5-18-9-157. :-OlOVING -Hoover nooc srruhber . Kenmore washer, lamris, ches!, room divider, rourh, men's sOOes 8V,EE, s1hl'r, l'l')'stal, Lcmogrs platrer, elcc appliances, poleck. \Vould accept early s,11110yer1, "Shar!o\v". Shot~. Xlnt r iding lacil. Riding Cal 25 + Catlina 27 3 SPEEDS * 5 SPEEDS model \lo'ilh bat1erv--0perated Loves children. 536-8907 all lessons avail. ~~la46. Guarantee the lowest rates in STINGRAYS puldlebottom. Write: Class1-6. Live$fock 858 So. Calir, "Catlina cruis- -REPAIRS-fied ad No. 114, DAILY 4 Adorable k11tens need lov-ing club". l.oration Newport PILOT, P .O. Box15ti0. Costa 2 m•I"•. 2 Midwest Warehou•• lla.rbor. 714/968-4&40 !or info. \Ve'll repair all makc-s & t.I CA 92626 1ng horne. ~ modC'l5. Also havt' 1mrts. esa, • · females 7 ~·ks. Trained. Bankr uptcy Sale BLUE\\' ATER YllCHT 23-IO NF.\\'PORT Bl.VD, C:O.! * Cash for Furniture 644-1Ci12. Ovt'r $10,000 of saddlt'S, bri-CHARTERS HUNTINGTON SHORECLIFFS Beach Blv d. (I1i\vay 39 btwn Atlanta & Indianapolis, 1 mi. N. Pacific Coas t Hwy .) 17141 536-8816 pi('IUl"l'S, 00oks, mo V i t' screen, roof!op Christmas d1spl<1Y. i\1uch more. 418 Ogle Circle, bflvn 16th & 17th off Irvine, 01. W •• kd.y. Op.n '10 pm Applianl'es. Anything o I :.:.:.;~.,,--,..,..,--.,.-"°'I dies & tack ~o he auctionerl Cruise or fish boats to 40' ~ '" N 'unk "'7 5636 1'1 \'E,\R old brown & S.t. & Sun. 9-6 p.m. v ue. o J · -"' -· off regardless of price. Have day/\.\'t'i.'k re~/ call 646-9000 black lernal~ Ge r in 11 n l"l!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!"'l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"'!'l!!!!!'!!!!!!l!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!~l\ 6-15-472() STOVE $35., Re frig $20., ShephE'rd dog "''/tags. Call sclec:ion of over 200 saddles Boats, Sa ii 9091: _ Will Take Trade-Ins _ 1\langle $10. Auto \.\'asher &!5-l928. plus handmade saddlt>"S. ' Cycles, Bikes, Mobile Homes 935 SZ5. 5-!S-35Q.I. ORANGE COUNTY ,\1 AL I BU out rig g e r Scooters 9'25 826 FH.EE to gd hnme-:0.1alc FAIRGROUNDS \\/trailer. Good sails. $•1501----------1• ATI'CNTION R1vcr Rats! MOVING SALE * AUCTION * Pianos/Org~ns Bo:\l'r. fa.,.,n color. AKC. 88 f·air Dr,, Ci\1 or besl orfrr. See at Deluxe n1ob1lr hon1e \oca!£'!l· EVERYTHING GOES FRIDAY 7:00 P .M. WOULD YOU Ohed1ence tra1ne<1. 639-1'L15 Sat. June 19lh . 7PJ\1. '? Theodore Robin~ Font, 2060 THINI (}~1 thi' Colorado r1vrr, 8 m1.j JUNE 18th BELIEVE all 6 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1t11rOOr Blvd. Costa i\'lesa, HQND~ N. or Park1~r. ·I A1C units .. STARTING I' I f I I SI FINE FURN. FROi\1 REPOS-FREE ORGAN LESSONS FP.EE _ 2 m111e kittens: -1, --------~ 6·12-0010. romp t'lf' y 11rn, s reps 111 THURSDAY 10,00 A .M. 0 " I~ ""'' I T k y ' ,, SIONS & r.10DEL H i\t J::S I l'k N part Snuncsc, I 1'gcr s!ript"d Bo.ti and ., JR C SU s · a f! o rr paym n ; Ping-Pong • Camping Tent . Bdrm & dining rm sell!, Di-a.~ ong as you 1 e! o reg-Mar' e Equipment tC;.. 'ORONADO ]~. No. 531 •'FRIEDLANDER" 52/100 !Qr n1y e qui I)'. Toys & Games ~ Househcild ~i istrauon. No obligation. Just ~~s-l"!,'.•,t!e Jl('(l ple 0 11 l Y · 111 iv/trailer k comp!. ~quip. _6_·1·_1·_7190 .. ~~--=--vans, » attresses, Dinettes, Come. tltondays 7:30 pm .,., ~. u_, th 1 ld J -:--Iteins. 20012 Harbor Isle Clli'.'Sts, Sewing Machinrs, ss an yr 0 · mrnac. 1..-•llACM (HWY. #l :! BR '·JobHe llon1e. SGO. renl : Lane H.B. 968-521 4 Commodes Bl1rfets, J1u1ch· COAST MUSIC 6 Luvely k1ncns 4 llousehrok-General 900 cond. $!,275. 641-2015 537-6824 • 8!l3-1566 .it:39-l:ztJ6 evr.s. All day Sat. & : b< "'· Otf<"c' "·•k•, p.1,.0 642-2851 en & "''Caned. 6 11·ks old. e 14' SCOflPION . F'brgls. _ S \VAREHOUSE Sale. Lum 'r, " " "''' " "' \""king ror ~-A homes. Xf••l ·-"'· 12~.· . ''"2846 0 , 500 CC 1970 Kawasaki J\1ach un. !·Id"•, pl,mb;og fixtur('S, "''" Coloc TV's Ste ...... ·s SALE; NC'1t' conso!r \.\'alnut. 'ft' b"""' CAPTAIN ... u " "" ....-M H -· " ·· '"u • 1•9• SI 1· .. y K ,·1 ~I0-49011 2!3/l"l·o·2oo , .. ,,. HI. Red. !\!any Xtras, Im· otor om11s 'oo-, ... ·,odow•. eTc. Sat & New Ca'"""·· & Ord""~. Re-~ ;i. e n .. ·a • a ..,,." · ., u 1· · I ' • 11 "" " • ,.., , .... , w I' 11 Lo n 1m1tcd l cenSc · any gross n1ac. Must see this one. ....,_....., Sun. J une· 1~20 VallE'y Rd rosses~ed 19&1 Custom ~,ord. ur itzrr, A en, "''rey, DAR LING ca!it·o kil11"n & rnns. 30 Ycan; experience • 3 Alberg 35's. 1 at S'\61"1. Fanta~tie road machine, CON DOR btwo Ham'.l•o & Vl"lo"''• R f . . SI IV ,._ Conn. From $545. l•""l'r rats Alf . A Bk 1u " • e rigs, OVl'll, a511crs RENTALS $lO/il-tO. '" · · sail & power. Professional nice. vco r . Si3:=... &l6-8385, i<!O Center St, Ci\! & J\1'UCH J\10RE! FIELDS PIANO co. ___ c='1c1_'o1c""_1c1c"'---·1 sport fishing guide: ~1exican 7i 4/714-7208. Ctll. The yacht that's noi a 00a1.! 940 ~ BREAKING up housekeeping WINDY'S AUCTION 1833 Newport Blvd. NEED good homes Ior moth· & Ccn:ral America & Pacif. 3 ~!ass slix_>ps; Cal 34, NEW 20XS2 2 BR, 2 ba. BILL COR\VIN FORD ! GOOD usable sofas. $25 each. • Good Hems & clo1hing to Costa Mesa 714/6-,15-3250 er calico .~ 4 klltcns. i.: C.oast waters · lns!ruc-Ericson 35, Lion 35. . Ready 10 move in. $ll,950. Orange County's Condor Di!·~ 5 good useab!e livi ng room Id G I Th >18·0813 1;0 I ""I h dli * A BkT 67" -* be so · arage sa e urs COil1E BROWSE AROUND SALE: New Spinet, walnut, ----n n UIJ.d an ng, sea-vco · .,...,""" Terms. Greenleaf Park, 1ributor, 230 S. r.1ain St. 1' DARK walnu1 hut~·h & sf'r\1· er, x:ln( t'Qnd, $50. 3 high baC"k blark vinyl comlor! chail'!!, $39 each. Double headboards. 11o•hile 1l1ry las1, Sl each. VF~'. 181\5 Harbor Blvd., C.M. 5"18-9457. chairs, $9 each. l -15 cu fL ihru Sat .. June 17, 18 & 19. ~~95 St · v · F'REE Killt."ns. manship, DR & cell'stial Oran"e. Close to !hr""' ma-· "•p-"oo• f . 0 ·' 1 . f ... , 2075'1, Newpon Blvd. .,._, . e1nway, n aw a t, . PARTNER or buyer v.·antcd 1750 \\lhittier, C.)l. 5-lS-1698 ., '" l .. , .. •• • • "' 7 1 6 m 224 A,-ado I C I C I nav1gat1on. PICK UP & f · f •-18' 0 am o P • . .,... • Behind Tony'• Bdg i\lal'l• Wur itzer, onn, A I en, a I or Ke1tenburg K-50. l aft 5pm. JOr l'('e11o·ays. <>->"· ::l() r : \\'t'stinghnU.'lt' refrig., S69 C 'l ''"177' 7 DELIV ERY ANY\\'HERE: '--7,c~~-~~~--Kl .:• . .,.,,,.. ,. Costa i\lt'Sa * S46-8686 Lo\.\-rey. RENTALS. 83-1-:5071 or 675-414 O\.\'ner, immac. 644-5016 " 1969 \'amaha 2j()cc 7-0.1-lt I UF'F, 1885 Harbor Blvd , _:=.:...:~=~-~~--FIELDS PIANO CO --captain & wife availablr for I C.!\f. 5"18-9'l57. NEIGHBORS JunktFiques. 1 __ 0c.:.PcE::.N_:DcAc!Lc:.Y_:9_;:10:_:4_ 1~, Ne.,., . ...., • .', Bf d • FP.}:E K1tlf'ns, 2 Or.i nge extl'nded cruising. E xten-Jj' Enterprise-Xlnl cond. Twin cyllnder. Dirt & st~! Sunl}f'ani F'un"·i:1gon !\1ntor Nan1e it we have it! urn.. 0 ,,., ,..~. " • Tabby'"· male. 1 dark Cal· d . . . Di:tCI'Oll sails, 3 hp 0 /B & model. Runs slrong. 4100 Home. Slcf'ps .J. Scat !J. ! rug<. clothes. June 17-20. 534 Rental Wanted Cosla ;\lf'sa 714/645-,:1250 · , -,zs-sive a 1111"1strative experi-tr!r. $700. 837-~"79. miles. Asking $350. 835-1492 !2400 * •.·"~01','"'I Jl'O, fem. 962-.. -' ence. 6-16-2971 ""' '" "' S. Baylront. Bal ts. 10-<I_ Young married couple, firs! 11Ai\L1\101'D, S t E-I :i way, T VENTURE day or nigh! A d CUl'E orange k1rtrns -igcr SCRAM LETS 4 , use{l, fully cqpll~CO.~-"""C'=-=-~~ uto Service Parts 949J GARAGE Sale Sat & Sun child on rhe way, drsires a Yamaha. Ne1\· &. use i;triprd. \\'hile frf't k ra ce. • for racing, lots of xtras. 19TI Honda CB 150, 2,000 • Antiques, king .r;z French rrasonable rental, small un-pianos of most makes.h&dst \\'i!I drlivM". &1S·0715. , $!!175. 961!---9S;,&. miles. 8 inch forks, peg~. ~-sale~! 1!l1l V\V Super Bug,; Pro" '--'~ s"ite, sofa, 1urn. 2 BR or Jarpe 1 BR buy~ in So. Calif. at Sc m1 t r ANSWE pull h k 11·9· 114-engine 1600 cc. Dua l nnrted1 • ''""" "I I C ·~1 N '' · ',. Old F I · h St:tte ~ RS SABOT -b · hi I ac s. a a. ,~ i\l isc. 2801 Scaview, CdM hour.e or cottage. Not over "us c o .• ~ . ·am, -r em r1s ' r,,,o rig r e< &t9-2'237 heads. Unrler 1000 mi ':;.J $110. Husband, 30. has good Santa Ana. g{! home. F'IJll-rare.. Trophy winner.1,c,..c=c:.· _______ S'i50. Tom: 549-35.18 or art 7, , BEAUT dresser, an1iqued GARAGE Sa!e: En Ii re job. Cnll eves & \\'eekends, CDOCC,Nc"cTc,c,cff_yo_"_'_"'_'_"_d~r-w-o-o. 54D-:l!Jlll Pulpit -Plume -Raven _ $295. Bargain! 5'1S-1Tl6. 'iO Honda CL.350. Almost pm : 5'\l!-1610, blue, handcrafted 45 yrs household, aquarium, books, &16-4665, Le>! me take care o! it for K 11TE~S. Also 1 ll"C'f' Dane-Faulty -'f'Al\.1ILY l"\ITE 611 \VfROAD TRLR 11('\.\', 250 ini. !\lust .sPll !~· DA1'.1AG ED '64 F'orfl Gala.'llf'; MOVING ; like new deluxr coppertone v.·ashcr & dryE-r $195. 2 pm. nau~hyde t u rq uoise sectional w, / corner tbl. $65. B I u e nylon crpl \\'/pad lL"<911:' $50. 540-6484 . ' ,, 0 . Ma!ching setee, vel vc! desks, furn. etc. 12 3 1 A tru' ff 1 XL."I' COND s·~ · med. Cost S792, Asking $;,95. I B EXERCYCLE, MrdiTer-)OU. No children Best o l'rcise les~nn. 292·1 S. Const · ism: you e-a1 soiv-· :~ :i..... J h 7141639-14.l d Srd. Xln'I. 1rans. Sc-JJ all or·, "phol ""rf ""'nd. L"" bk,.•e, Alabama, Hu n · · I l I u ·11 I Tl · * 67."'1'6. * 0 n ·· 1 ays. ,..~ -.v '" ~~ rancan sol;i , B-B-Q, n1isc. C'<tre \Viil be taken. C a Laguna. 49"1·692·1 y, YQ WI l'at l'!lS. i1s is """1 ., nny part &16-!1720. : $27, antiqued dishes 1669 GARAGE Sale Sat Only ~b,ii-s, !bl•, sew 1 n g 540.m9 aflr 5 pm. parlic ularly 1rue if you're '-'f'fE N 62• .. 1969 1-ION DA 90 Trail Bike. T I . A CM 64"1384 -• 704 I' 1· ....... • " "' o. :i, l1cw· m;i.st "' New cond. Ooly --"" m1, us1n ve, '·"" .,,,rn-.ipm. ~e1ouv"", 1. di! 11 f f"'"IOf •h•'g f'Ai\JfLY dd 2 ·1 Good · ~ ~ mac i1nr, i ma ress St', CLOSING OUT lB ''" "' · ru "r ~ai' ., .. , · · C'\I 1· II l IJ'd "·d• f l ~ ~ ' '' · ·• "ng $2:t5. 673-,9991 till 4 pm I §: 7' Sofas, lik• """· assorted "· 111 8 ey • 1 au.: "• f · '1 h ' lS' R · 11 0 fho -~ · I lfi80 67' 07'1 · j . d .. ·ti ~e mirror. ,.uC' more. Brand ne1v \Vurlitzer pianos Pet~aindSoppHe• ' rinr u ·1-•u ._.ui~rr. rcrorc . "· _,...," · 675--5170aft5prn. Auto1for Sal• M.·:' -lo-, 179 ''· 8' Sn,.ni"h ining set, pain ni:;~ etc. ""''1"21 3· 10 I J h D " ._u •3 ··-" .,,..,,.. " · & orga ns . F anlastic deals. [~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:[ ·">- 1P 0 llSOn. u<u Sf\'0\VBIRD, glnsscd dacron .69 BSA 650rc L. h -~;;;;;;;;;;;;; ea. 8' Spanish !!Ola & love PORTACR.lB $10; lub, car.: STERE0 58.i: bdrm ~et 550: * 5'!7.Qt).~1 * c.'Onlrol~. E'.xl ra tanks, sail. !railer, '7! taG:s. $17J. Touring od l-A6.~g 1~1111 ! seat in good condition. $69. rler, seat, SI ea; "glass srw mach S2ll; adrlih~ mnch 850 f'xcellrn1 ocean fishing boat. 546-299-1. nl e ;l ' ~11i:: UFF', 1885 Harbor Blvd., dra~ S2 / pr; tiou1irrue l lO·, inf s..,,·ing: CB te~trr·, l\.1UST Sell Heintzman Pian(), P_•_'_"c,..G_e_n_•_,_•_1 _____ 1 l mmaculate! 51295. 536-6651 ..CC:C:.C:~-------1 O\lo'ner, lo mi. xlnt cond. Antiques/Classics 953 ; M 5-lS- 1 920 'V 19 s c \l ldn't rond. Reas. olfer. ~ 6 AURORA. 21' fgls s:oop s!i-: $1000. Ph: 6-16-8317 aft 5. 1 C. . 9'15 · ill'ms. • · th 1 .. _._· : Simpson genesrope Sl&l. "!"9887 DARLING Spider monkry -1c'-"-·---------4 1 N 1· $1800/ f '31 FORD l\1orlcl A. 283! ., 11-. • • x ras 11tpt s 1p o · .,, vw 24'1 rt d SA CR I FICE, Earl y HOU SEHOLD itents, ho~ & 6~2-91116. Fcma!r, lame. Custon17' Dir.ghy & 31 ~ HP inotor. ler11·1: 4!H-297l · · • pe eel con· Chevy eni;. Auto .ran~.1 A · f & f ·I t 171"' t I Sewing Machines 8'28 --• .. _ · I •1 k ff 1a k 1·1 h' :;:~~~:..:.::;~=--I All extras & se r vice A\ h mecrican so a · ovesea!. grr s ny~. . .. 'l .aure T\VIN )ledit hr ~e t· I ---'--------..,,·..,urouc inc. ,, a e o er. gas · n , oars, 1 e cus ions. -. 1-F''.\l, tr, all llC'\\' inL/ Near new. Paid S550, 5r\I Stre('t, Fountain Valley. mar-prool, encl c:hrst of 673-8626. '11 license•. r.ood cond. CAL 2S-Loaded Racer records. Dr. Scott a#-5262 Runs pcrlecl! $1995. 1 S295-Adju.sta bed, dbl. Sl50. REF'RTG , desk, clothes & rirawe rs & nigh! s!an(!, ./ Chec~po~lC~~can i:tny Cats. 852 SIOO/b"t olr. 5-15-,5978. 1"~"'°:.::·~"c'o"~'"'";'c'~v~'";'.:1,~4"!>1:.C·'";'o'l'.l,o~c:,..049C,5-~l34~3;,. "'"""'---~ 1 =6c7._:H<X~'c·'-------~ 968-3501 . misc.fOT!;a\e.-Fri &Sat,108 $97.:':IO :;et; 10' sofa, $200. sewing machint' 9'Jc. One .16' RUNABOUT. 7:> hp Boats, Slips/Docks 910 1969 itARLEY Davison -11 Trucks 962 ! 4-poster maho~any bed \V/8 Aga1e, Balboa Is. 644-1536. ..,,·ee only. ~5-8238 3 BEAUT. Lovable domestic Johnson, Good fur skiing or ____ ..;.. ______ , Shoy,• Chopper, ~1u s1 dra11,,er dres~er $150: mar· ------kittys need a IJJrnc. 10 wks r is h i n g . Goor1 rond. BO,\T !<lip avail, July 1st, for sacrifice. l\1ust see to ap-'66 DODGE PICK U-P J• hie end table S25: i dra..,,•er * * l\l!SC furni!ure & BALBOA Bay Club i\1t'm-TV, R a d io, Hi Fi, old. Xln't ht'alth. Recen!I)' S.i.crifice! ST475. 842-1128. 6(1'-70'. \Vidc slip. preciatr. Sl:J..,11;1 16. - clorhes, Fri, Sat & Sun. 17i3 bership. Owner's r:qu1ty Ster eo 836 t \Vh'J o i'Y Jasl 673~ ! desk $15. 673-7737 or Kenwood Place, C, J\f. S650. \Vritf' to Cla~sified Ad 1'rail('( · , 1" 1 · · 32' ULJ:.:SLI.,, p..111y or flshioi;: 1971 SACHS i\loto Cross. D 200 ~. Ton, 4 S"""d, Radio, ~5-2486. ?.~ D111ly P ilot, Bo.'< 1560. 1971 ZENITH & Admi ral Cal\673--2922art4prn. hnat + tll<ll'll'ing. No. f-82. Boat Slip for rent, Xlnf conrl. 54Ki C all llratl'r, w car:;;r inciud-' 9' wall cabinel: 7' sofa bed: 1cH_•_•c•c•chco_l_d_G_ood"-C'c:.-8_1_4 C~sla :\IP~a. Ca 9W26. clo~c--0ut salr. Lowes I f'LUFFY Ion~ hair male S3200. 673-:::611 or 546-007i.11. side tie up to 30'. 6c\&-5.llOO a tier 1 pm. 1ng sto1·r. i;ink, Ice Box "I. kitten. Unusual Jllack ,f., ~~co:;C:;':;11c6~7;";1"1c'1;;'~--1 a vocado re[rig w/ic e USED home furnis hing• & -1 E d 1 · Sal Ru prices. 3 yr picl ure tube, 1 Bo at . Mot or & Tra ilec -'64 GR.E;EVES 2.](l <'C, bran(! Beds, (LJ.1.1mi~ maker; modern brlrm turn. appliances, all xlnt r onr!. p { eolo ition e m-yr part.!; & service. Antt>nria \\/bite 1'1arkim:::s. Only $:i. ;:--:00 * 612-5J.~1 SLIP SPACE AVAI L nc"' l'n£. new chain. X!111 $1299 10352 Kuku1 Dr, H n Owner showing, l ;; 3 5 niage. Mic prices: ~as "''1111 1nstalle!I \.\·/all console~. , c'c"c'_c°".:..."_'_1_u._o_oc, _c_.,_f_. -..~ 2J'-JO' SAIL.BOATS cond. $32.}. 962-05j7, HIGHLAND MOTORS I heiitcr , loy~. etc e1c. June 1· Boats/Marine * 673.G6()1 * 968-7027. Ne11o·por! Blvd, c ;i.1, Fri. l ~t!i, 20th , 21ilh &· 271h. 4Jj ABC t'Olor TV. 0021 Atlanta, Dogs 8~ Equip. 904 =---~-------1 :2•1" ENGLISH Metor. gold, , 2115 Harbor Blvrl._ ! 2 PC. Stx:lional beige I 7!72_''-·~------~ JleliolmpP. Ave., Cd:'ll I ~l~l:;.B~·-96~8:·11:3~2~'·---~-,-l;;;;~;;---;;:::;:;;:;::;-p;;::-I Boats, Speed & Ski 911 lO spd hikr. $60. Cos•a 1\lrs;r r~ti-51(}1 naugahyde. Perfect $75: Machinery 816 FOB. sale -Stereo in bfo;ol!. GERfllAN Shol'!hfllr PllJ>s -1 -----------* £73-1:110 • N d bl 1 t i' "\VOLLENSAJ" turret c11n1-reddish ,vnlnut 6, console. A!\C chnnlp sif('d. Firld or 2.1~S hp n1otors. like nt'w ss;; l!!' CALIFORNIAN lGO hp.I ____ ..::,:::_::::· ___ _ ew re ta e amp J.1 -----------f'ra''8mm S·IFi Kod11kn1ov-sho"'· Hur"" !or p ick. r a. l·O.hp 11 /'J' ptastirrin 1-0, 11.D, trlr, radio, bai t '69YAMAHA100.l.ike &14-5068 I HP If · . I '" GE G11 rrarri Hirn th!, Norelco 'J 1 k Al t $200 Kc ogg American air ie projrctor ~mm "'" ~ 96243$21. hoal S7J. 327 \V. \\'1lson, Sp. an , n1any other aC'C'f'SS. Jlt'.\I'. us sre. DELUXE round bed w /gold compressor; Alcmite whcrl aulo ~·asher $80. 700 Hudson 12" co-axial speakers. s32:i. . 1 Se 29 (';'11 SZ.J';)5, n.\2·1G.1G or €13-6190. 5~6-341 0 headboard & ma t chin g OOlancc.r; stc-am cleaner; ~1;,..7982. 642-29-10. BEAUT. ·11 ~ nio. Iris 1 ~ !1€'r -·-.'C'-oc~-RECREATION CENTER 1. 1969 2 3 ,. puppy, Ail St)(llS. C.~ll llor· BltlTIStl S..agull eng, 3 !IP Gl.ASPAH. Ski-boat, 80 hp '70 K1\\\'ASAKI 250. Factory bedspread, $150, al~ l twin VG~n No 1 rman .borin.e; ba 73 " 2 "·t·. 1 ... 1.0 ,,.,_ m•ll. & '-x l\.10TOROL.\ "'''· Day ~7.1-,00. •v" w l f'.11. Jon"' shaft. U•·" 5 .illl'rc. Con! 1111 trlr .,.,·/nc11o· built race bike. $400 ROY CARVER, Inc., IX'd S25. Cal! 96S-6193. ""be e ec ho1sl. 6~2-:13 . .x· ·~ n " ""' Console Colnr TV· just .,., · " .. -•-u 536-3410 l ~=""'~C...=--~-~' I 1747 AnahPim Ave. C.i\{. .!;firings. Good cond SIS. ~rt. $% be r I £7;,. \736. 1ln1t·~. :Sl2:i. f>.1(}..{}.166. tirrs & brarings. S950 or bst · -2925 Harbor Bl\·d. ' KlNG St Bdrm set incl _ spent · on new tu ~. 0~ ---ofr ·.---12·i.1 Costa ]llrsa 546-4444' M . II B18 T1\in ~\le hdboanl. \lo'h1te ne\\' 10·-. Sell $175. fi.16-6972 ;~Rf',AT D,·i•I"" _ ,\KC, THJ\l TABS lo• 30.3~· >-nt · ••'' ' · ;\lOVINr.4 mllst £Pll~ '69 500 , ' · J dresser. rle~k. hkra~P. mat-1sce aneous '" "" ·~ ' ~ "'-"' · h '6° Cl!EVY LOKG v NF 11•i !h i:;:old trim pl11~ bed· or 497-IOSI. . frm;ilc f fl.\.\'Tl llU[>!., (hi>.mp SJ2i, 1,l' Ski boar.;;; F.vinntd<'. Gd Tr1ump , srmi rhonper, ·~ • A a.-. tress. bxspmgs. Hi:t~'\l'ood 7PIECEo;,;,groom·-·; lrameSIO.Call63S-SJ70. I t k Sho q ualit y r tl(lnr 6i~2'i71 rl~\<: ~ha[Jf'. biJ:; \\'hi L'J', $5:.iel. perf.tvn<l,$1000.6--l6->:22t V8,'.\lunc1e4 spd,paneled,; Vi'akefield. ~150. &144168 = ., Tl\'O ''Lil , m·'el 12 ~ oc: ·. 1" · .-.--. ·• . "---•••d o I t d · ' - --n. un 002--11).\1 -!IP I 11 S-17-6.-iill, ~1&-a742. 1910 Kav.asak! 90. . -{' 1·;1 s. vrn \.\'In OW!.I flC \.\TOUght iron pafin Si'!. CASH REGISTER l'peakers. matrh in ~ ..:_ · '" ·.vi nrudr .•~1. IY'plh --:'lllln~l $l1!1JorTrade 497-1084. , 3 PIECE Colonial hv rm UthC'r odd piel'.'t's of furn. & Na ·ional, niodcl Zl. Gllol(I Brir,ilnv calanet 1150 to lal. i\flOltABLI·: TOY l'l'IODLF. r 1nrl"r nrw Rrythr(ln :S21.1. '69 TAIHTl 1ype_ hull \\1100 ml)(hfica!lon!<, rlirt only. , ~ ' furn .....:rd a"'XRflo & ·1 .,. !"'"" -., , ~ -II \I "· I''" C 11 6'" ·>10 r,, CHEVY 3~ Inn Pick Up, ' "'"' . tlllSC'. 1 ems. IJ't:>-"'-"'· \\'flfkln~ f'Ond. Call llolhs-fi.12-57£'3. rurs. ~1lver. sro. 6~:.....Sl!I li13-IJ 10, . p . l'f'C. D<.'S\ offer. (il·I/ -JU. a 't\)-.1 • pumJlkln, S12'5 Also nP11r -~ ---- -• is-2-12 ---------= Xlnl rond. $12j(). Camper' ne~· air cond. SIO:i S.!6-iJO!i. Th• R eal Slim Gym 1rr·~ N"ursrry, ~H6-552.i. ~l ' TV's. s 2o _ SZ:l _nr .i:\-1-:l~~:l._~----5 llP "l<'f'l'Ul'y {l B, Xlnl 1 .. ' · 1 · · '70 T1~00IU1\.IPH D~~;1or1a :',()(! SlOO. 01•nPr :,JS-32fil. ---Cns1 $9.~~rll fnr f";iO. Cail; y ,\Cl 1Tc1ub~nbersh1p Gf\Od c·ond1t1ori OEAl.'TI r LJL rom p u P s. Mn(!, $!:?.\ 12' P;inyan boat "s•"~ .. '1.,.1°2'2;1 4es .• .\..nt cond. ,., t"OHD \Q.ii·hrrl DU;\11' DOlJBLF.hed.bookcase)ll"ad-21 ~1'5!12-2116. 5150. he!n\V ru~t. E\·r~ ,. 6;:;...1;i;:i * ninrr~. ,\l\C. 11/<111! ;..i.~s2-,7 nfl ·I I I~ ··"'· '· board S2l Ch .. s! 4 rJri:tW<'r --~ !rurk. :Sll'OO nr best offer needs" relinishi~Jo;, S 1 0 . R.J\j\;Gt; 36" \\'edgev.·Nw!. f~lol-6740 or days 833-1611, X 2 Porl<tlile ~prakPrs tor __ fi.1:_2 1fl9 or Ri'l...001·1 Boats, p ;Wer 906 Transportation .:I 1964 L.1mhrctta. ~('O(Jtrr, 1:-0 ~:17_17:i.\. · &ID-SS?3. ~ridr!\(', s:11. 12 \ Ster•·o 22S7. Sl('rco_ c~ilunillia hranr?. ~ J).o\rll~Jl UNf) 01 " I,.. 111\C, \1 ;;;;;;;;~;:;:1clas~. R-100 m 1 I<'~. Good ~TMCaker$, 10'", $60. tiT>-li14i \\'!GS .. For ~ale or trar!e (11 ea•·h. :;!(}-2279 aflcr 5 p.m. at1hl1rr. 11 1~·ks old 1\·/shots L'[ AT ho ! I 1 • 111 1<1. $2':'..0, 962·32ll3 Auto Leasing 964 SOLD ROSE\\'001) carver! <. , .' -· · ,. • !lorn !lrag boat. 1 yr C ;--------.........., 4 GAS stnve S2n: \lo'ood dlncfte Cfl value: s!ra\\'hcrry hlfln(I, :\!UST srll G.E. ~terro $.iO .. ~12-1 1·11 11lrl. fr.-.~h l'T11.';inc, 4JJ eu in ampers, Sale/Rent 920 70 Y_A:O.·IAl.IA 100, tw.~uT. • LEASE • br . set. :l pcs. !.fahog. gi:tmr _. 1 h bl 1 dk h & blk 0 I ·~ Offe P lhl;2Frenchchairl'-.Sr;lid &4 chairs,$20;Re1ng,S30. rrn(I~ on<. rn · ,1·/ree\ rnpP. \Val n11! YORKS!IIIO·:TEllRlER 1127 01r\:,'l cl1~1orn for ny :,,,,.,,mine\,·, r. r1. '"'"~"a 6·12-481R (lr 534-JS!l.1. k 0930 AKC I · ~ _. · I : ' ,. ,· I * CAi\lPF.R Shell, I fl over par!y &1=>-3:>&1 Teakwd. sglc, bPd 673-20l0. ,.,...,.,..Q. r;ibinrl. L1 ·r nP\\'. 6-1:>-~., ,,_ pups -. i' 1nmp1on s1reu. rar1ni;:, nJr('1t'11 u e ~ r, c ih F ils "' -8-rt h d · · · SCFA BEO • h 1on llOLLY Furnace 1 00,000 TAKEOVF:RlC1acres,NO STI-~REO 11.v~!rm \V/f1ni"hrd Sl:!1.J&11p.li7~._1f;o,·, })tt~!'rly lnjr1•!nrs flD11·rd 1~~k.L1ke ne~ Only· be;, llONDA .30~1 d1r1 bike, '6~ u c air .... : 2 N --------1>ng1nr by Jnc Rea t! · 1 rng Co~h pi""~ and 111 rline\Jt' St"!, 4 i'hnirs t U : RTIJ. 1 season I.lid. $95. Call 00\\'N, t .'i n)(I. ear Jge t'fl.hint>t, tflflf', A ;I.I/ f :\l. SCOTTISH Trrr1r r puppy -1 • '>n 1ntck 2 \l'C'l'ks" C11l aftcr ' · nnr "" se I "" · 1 , "'' s-1 ~~3--1714 lakl', 968-0047. turntnble , S250. %2-4S1S A'KC ni;ilr :l nlo old Cllallrlra.ft r~ring ~tecring, 5 1rulf.-r!nn1 ;~756 Xlnl ('f)rnl . $300. 968-1228 . o ''""r 1 m~. IJ't.-"' · _ · n:,;~~~::'-;~rtg.;,';~; I i~~~~~~~~~~~-· · · -·. as 11 e r11cin~ rear hox · · b'I H 93-5 CHINA CABINET, .£€'nuirw. t"ARill t-·resh Eggs ra1"1>d 11t RANGF. 36" \\'edgc..,,·()O(.l, \l'/S!r0l~. SlOO. 0Ci2-l:i2·1 heavy duty ove r r ; de: * CA:\lPER Sl1eJJ, l ft over Mo 1 e omel walnut. modern, quallt)', :1Chool farm. Costa 1\lesa Hi griddle, S50. 121 Stefl'.'O 1 '~ DDBER;\fAN PUPS, 7 wks; ~t;iinlrss steel hardware, C'ah.F1tsany li-ft.lx'(ltn1ck, CONTEMPO Sl50. 5-18-l2lO. ,\g Dept. ~5-9431 speaker!., 10", S60-675-614:1. "--'-~_•_•_Y_'_'_~ ~ Both male; l rerl-1 ~!~~· 2 !\loon lank. cus!om \\'Qllrl Like ne\.\' Only bren on JR VINE COAST COUNTRY BICYCLES, Stingray~: l-~5 _ _ 5~5. Ph: 79 rlE>ck, golit mrdi:tl flake !rur k 2 weeks!! Call aher LGE 4-piN'.'f' M>ctional. IUJ'· CLUB t.fEt.fBERSHIP i;p, Sl5-S30. 24" & 2fi", 3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.00 POODL"E PUPS~ 8 Wks, 3. \\'/competl1ion ora~ge trim. 5 iF'ullerlon) 5:&.1T.16, LAGUNA HILLS quoler., $200. Call 6T'..-7737 or * 6-.~ ""7S * l l"$2. 3 IJO 64,_1272 >Ia!•,· 2·Fem, By 1lf'IJ?l. S 9 0 0 0 Io If t' r, f'OR ... 1" l'k . .,0 54S-24lt6. •~ .xi ""' ;>, ~p. . . &o6-60Jj 9-11. ,,.. " 1 e nc\1 "" ;\IOVING -Berls. n1g sham· Belt !'o1assaFter. heavy duty. KllTENS 9 ll'ks, 2 blk, p1. ilr ~l6-4300: * ' ('am[>('.r "''/boot & heavy du-2-1.301 RIDGE ROUTF. DR. CRIB $10, ~·ardrotx-che~I S20, poocr, surfboard for Mic. 313 $,;(). ExC<11lrnl condition. !'iiarnrse male & fem11.l.-_ LG AFGHAN 3 1110. Exttp!lonal i!lf.S STAR-FLJTF. 17' _110 . ty suspen~ion shocks. $!150. (CoM'i<'r of Moulton Pk\11·) ~m=..:: table & 4 chn: 11th St., H.B. Apt 9 • 6.l7-'1156 • hr. httcr traine1!. i;.i2-5ltl?. prr!1gree AKC. Cre1tm color. J20 lllercury "''/p.,.,·r lrim. R' rab ovt'r. 5-l:>.ll(l19 aft 5. Preslige ad11H romn1un11y, · · PC -$125ur . 962-9805. llrau1 ~'t"\101v ·gold, Likf' e Oo!•uoCom-•Sl•"ll·• 11djaet>nt to Lt'is u r c RT. Elcc, Orange. Full gt 9X9 Ct'nter pole lt'n S.10. GOOD hon1e ne<'drd ror N 0 ·' 4 h " in . " " I A J\ C \\'h i ! e Gr rm an ' cw, iuy 0 rs on ~ng. f brgls, alum '"indows. sum-\Vorid. Beautiful sun'Ound . DAILY P'tLOT tor action! Call 642-5678 le Sr\vt ! ..,,. amp I. carrying case. Baby rrib & mattress $10. playful Jrmale kitten, half T f • c -G -·'I Cali Ms-4218. ~hrrhcnt ;\!ale t:_ frmale, 4 r r "' ~st ua,.., equip, nier ~le $175 & up, ings, .... luxury appo1n1. S.18-7934. Persian, b&w. 5'15-4!HO. '>-ll-031~ 5'"'7310 Th · I l _':'·~N'~k~•::.· ::.":':"':::::~'!1~70. ~---·l-·r:;o;;;' >J·:r.,,v,;nc."'•-··::o·-:;,:~::.·==~~cc~~·I ments. crapcut1c poo . 2 LOVABLE dow:. 4 mm; DO f E S GOING OVERSEAS f\.vo 40' DCFB Chris',;, Xlot Sauna.<;, E"<erC'ise gym, 4 Old, G"nnan ~he""m h.-& '' RAB .. Aust .. hrp. p11J>-b'IJ··-tabl h h ' •" ""1"" • f • f 1 7 k Si\CRIFICE! 1fr Ocean run-cond, Local. ~ .. a1 ·-.soo. 1 1 ... u t's, n1uc . muc B<agle t~.~. 963-2832. rues, mile "' Pma f'. \.\' s. vne ~u 1'" had 1~1 ~ho!~. ~l~. 11.boo! \\•/trlr. $11,000 Vahlt' Avcc. Bkr, 114/774-i208 moil!! F'REE J<ittens \\'/6 & 7 toe~. !or $995. 991 \V, l!lth, CM . See beaut. furn models In Grey & "'·hitr, Ttlflle & y 0 UNG b I" c k ma 1,. &Hi-2712 68 V\V Bu~. 9 pass. Very park-like setting. . reinal". ~S-67j7. 6 wks. Liibrndor. l..OV<'! k\it~. AKC.1 -~~~-------Clean. 1114) SM-1381 from CALL 830.3900 I fjii,i'T,~:;;;t'-j;;;;m;:-'t;;;;;;: II ;;'''.{>"'~"~·;1~:·~·!.''.'.j:>-<l:'.7:73"'.7.:.,,-~l l8' SOUTI-ICOASf utility -8am-5pm. GRAND OPENING I •'REE lo good Jlome. Lon.e; Inlcrceplor eng, SIS radio. 1966 VW Camper fully eqpl. hri[rt>d ~payed ff'1nalt' cat. GE!ltllAN Shepherd 9 y,·}<,; Bail lank, pumps. Good O l.''k•• ... h;ldl''"· 5.I" ~."so. olri. pups by C"h. Broon 'g Immric-. New t'ng, $2100 . * M VE RIGHT IN* .. .,..,,.., lli:tminii CD. 547-14R4. 1="'7."'=· ~1~"'°~· c'c"~1666-4,.-.,;;c•~l8C. _ 962-3959, h!w 5 & 9 pm. '68 Champion GER.VI AN Shepht'rd Pup fl"t'e I -~sct=i=N~A7.U~Z~En~-~p=u~p=s'--CUST, 2li' fish Cr, moorini. '61 Dodge Canlper Spt>i'ial . 2 BR, I ba .......... 12."<50 10 l<QCXI hon1e. &15-0983 aflrr • , 11lps ~. heAd, .i;nl, fly brdg. Pop Top. Like new con!l, 11 Salcn1 lloust, 4; 30. Gmoniin1t:~,~~9 st' r " 1 e f' ' hull L en~ gd, 2 nu gas tnl<ii, $2100 or ofr. 6~2-65'16. 2 BR, J ba • · · · · • • •• • 12\fl(l 9 ADORABLE killen.s .. 3 Trrm~. ,.. d in,i;:hy. N.11. S3200. 962--0806 C I B lk '&I Sahara W-exp11 n, i,rar k, 1 1igrr 1triprci. 1 Horses 856 27· CHRIS _ ·~1e11 n. ~c es, es, 925 2 br ................ 12x9l 1or101~e shell r te. !14&-:1819. ~-R.i\!lio phone, ot·, F/Gl coaters '11PaceM't1er,2 br .... 22x.'"il '68 Cad El D<inuln , . S 139 1no '70 F'ord 500 G11la,xlc 4--<fr .............. $i9 mo '(i9 Chevy Caprice 2-dr ............... $j!J mo '£9 :F(ll\i LTD 2-d r .. $79 mo All Crir.~ \\'ilh Air SOUTH COAST CAR LEASING 300 \V. Coast llwy, N.B. &15-2182 Eves: 673-8269 Autos Wanted 968 WE PAY TOP CASH tor used can & trucks, Just can U! for fret? ntlmatl!a. GROTH CHEVROLET Ask tor Sale11 Man11.a:er 18Zll Beaeh Blvd. Huntingtfln Beach 841-6087 KI S-3331 ANNIVERSARY •so AUTOS WANTED Top dollnr lor c lC'11 n u:icd a-rs. St>r Anrly Brown. THEODORE ROBINS FORD ,'E(°JS'Tli:RED 1,~ AHAB d [nghy. i\1ust sell. A5k1ng :':':,..,~-,-,...----'69 Skyline, 2 BR, 1 ba 12x52 GELDING, 4 YRS OLD. $5.:t!l.I. Bkr. 613-1570 1971 Yamaha 360 Nt'11o·, only '70 l.a Paz, 2 BR, 2 ba 24:dil 2060 HARBOR BLVD. 6-14-5014 300 mi. ~fusl 1e!I, Call •n Custom v.·-caba.na, COSTA l\.1ESA 642-0010 rEi\1 ALE p up par! Doherman, hsebrkn, g d W/kkls. &15-2507. PET remale rabhll ~1th hutch, can ~~11-12'.l 1 FREE-KITTE ~ 96S-362G --------K 1 TT ENS Call &II 5.W, 5'16-:t'itfl ----FREE KITTENS G1~.r..in 11.ri 5:.10 rm HOUsf-:Tiun1 lnc;~ -\\"~tch U1P OPEN HOUSE column. ___ _:-,,:c:.~-~=119' 1008 JOHNSON Surfer. 67S 12 e LGE CORRAL FOR Or.fC. t/0, !J..pa1111. XJnt :>-ll. t Br ................. 8.x30 \VE PAY TOP OOLJ.AR RENT .. 520 mo. Bliek Bny fish, 1ki boat. 1360 0 . Honda '69 CB 350 '6!1 Klrkv.TIOd, FOR TOP USED CARS art'a. S.l:i-59ll pves. 84&-2204. Sar. OHrr. &12.2895 2 BR. 2 ba ••••• •••" 201<45 , U :rour car ts e:<tra cit'U -------'52 Cu:5al ~·-cab-to move 8x30 llf'e us nn 1. 8r.At1Tlf''UI. 11 Arab, 5 yn1. \\'ANTED 11· BOSTON GIRL'S Bike S25 or Iksl of· UNITED BAUER BUICK I'll rrii>.kl" a r!e11.I you can'! WHALER \.\'/40 hp n\Otor . fer. MOBILE HOMES 234 E. 17th St. pa~~ up 9f.~;.Q6. ~IS-74c7~0c· -~--·--~fi-09$'.l,_557-9.~·ll Orang• * Co1ta Mesa Cmi la Mcsa 54&-77tQ .-.,vr..-ol!I rht'!'i!i\Urm;r;, 20' !)KtP J1,CK. Xlril mnd. Biil.TACO 175 r!1r! hike. Ex· 633-'2961 * 645.3140 -IMPORTS \VANT~ \\l"!I 1r1l r1<'d. Call Connie, IAB1lrr!, CRU Tf'd Rogers. prin!'lon -relea~e. Ne.,.,• ~ lt10~7i,(!7, 67l--.\252. ' tililll. ~16-3060 ADlll.T PARK • C.M. 'G!J Oran~ Cnun!1('1 -- -Lanet>r, 20x52. 2 br, 2 b11, TOP S BuY~.:n n t 1c1<:-1.-1." GF.LDING '66 O\VE~S .'Ill ft dbl. plnk. f21 MINI Blki:s, :oilnt corld. tintt'ii ~·lndn..,,.3, wtr slnr. BlLl. l\1AXEY TOYOTA 7 Yc~r!I" G<'ntll'. S2"JO. TS, $S, D~~. + r"<tr11~. $l'i -$:i('J. two :UC7 storage shedii. fcnc-111.1181 Be1ch Rlvit, :~1S...i659 Sll.5;\1 PriV. l'ry. fi..l:!..il2;1J. 5'1S-56J!I f'(I yd, lndscp 645--078.' H lleach. Ph. 847.85~~ I .· Thursd~. J11rw 17, 1971 lw!Ol for S.I• 1§1 I 1§1 1 Aolot for $1!1 l§J ~I ~_ ..... _,·'·_,J§J 1:-I •'""_."' .... ~ 990 Autos, UMCI 990 Autos, UMCI 1§1 [ '"""''"· .J§J ~I ..... _ .. _ .... ~!§]I 1§11 Autos for~• AU101 lot5 .. 1t Autos, lmportitd 970 Autos, Uud .·Autos Want•d "8 Autos, lmporttd 970 Autos, Import.cl 970 Autos, lm,ortM 970 Autot, lmportH 970 ANNIVERSARY •lo --'-J-E"-N-S--E-N--l--T-O~Y-o=T-:-A-- Pl~'TO \\ ,\VTU Tr:.11.~. $,i day, '.io-nHlt". THEODORE ROBINS FORD ~l();() llARBQI{ RI.VO. ('().-.;Tl \1 E.-.;,\ iill-0010 Autos, Imported 970 ALFA ~~~.IEO ALf"A '6"1 :'pid1'r-P.Pb!I l>r\", nt>11' 1 op & <'()llo'r $Hl'.J(I 673-989-1 Ask fur Da1t;>_ AUSTIN HEALEY 'li6 SPH ITE, Sharp: N1>w r1ai111 ,t, ,·lul('h, Pi]'('ll1s JENSEN AU1'll0RIZED SALES •. S£RVJCE NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \\' Coast Hwy , Ne\\'por1 .&·ach LOTUS LOTUS A lITHORIZED SALES & SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS P.tuls gd, S!H:.. IH4.9.1.'j(] ' J IV 644-'.130!1 100 . Coast H11•y, TOYOTA NEW '71 NO DOWN PAYMENT $69.01 MONTH' 36 mos. DeL Pa.>' price. $2484.36 t1r ca~h p r Ic e $2003.55, incl. TM .M Lie A.P.R. 14..54'14. Serial No. J343-l7. •On approved credit Bill Maxey Toyota lAASl BEACH BL. 847-~5.55 HUNTINGTON BEACH Anniversary Sole 1971 TOYOTA $1777 VOLKSWAGEN '69 V\V Bui -Goin&: over1tas, need to sell. Ex· VOLKSWAGEN '84 YW BUG tel lt>nt condition . Radiolht>atrr, rear !peaker, 4 ~pt>ed. 111d10, heat~r. Unbt'- paddi•rl dash, fender guards, h1'.table, undc~ 40,~ ~ctual bU!llP"I' guarrls, viood sieer·· milt'!;, Cherry. Barwick ~m in..: 1\hl'el, CQ('Oa ni11ts. Nl'I\' ports, 998 So. Coast Htg~· tunt'-up and brake! relined. 11'ay, UlgUila Beach. 546-40;il Call :.lS-6113 after 6 p.n1. t-°'-'"-· ~·9_7_71_. __ ~--- '6j V\V 1600cc engine. rebuil1 Ap rU ls!. Holley 2 bbl. '69 YW BUG Porsf·hl' d1s1 & coil, lna11: Auton1at1c Under 12 000 mll-\~'h\'t'ls, cus10111 paint, ex·£'!, Radi0, hl"&!tt: $1099. h11usl & lots o! extras. Best 8arwi('k f.mpor ls 998 So. olfrr or trade for VW Bus, ,.._A 'I · B h -., -~~o \.A'O.Sf,. 11y., Laguna eac . ~)·'" · 546-4051 or 4S.J..9m. '68 VW FASTBACK !qr, ract lo. beaLHi lul, nell'. \V\"A 218. $129:> Hke '65 YW ---'-----YO L VO Anniversary Sale 1971 VOLVO $2998 ..l>eaJt Lewi.I \9 VOLVO 19-16 Harbor. C.7.t. 646-9303 Autos, Used 990 e FLEET SALE e '&I Cud Cpe de Ville $1075 '&. L1nmln Co11 1'! SS7j ·c9 Ford LTD 2-dr hrd1ri air s21:io '68 PonUac Sa!ari StaUon \Vagon. Air $187:i '66 ;\lustang shR rp "' clran SOUTH COAST CAR LEASING $875 __ C_A_D.,,..IL_L_A -o-C-CADILLAC • CAD. '69 SEO. DE VILLE Faclory Air CondJtloning Al! Leather Jnttrior Full p01'.'er, padded top, ~er eo. It.I t & !~le!COJllC steering. door lock.<!, sentinel, trunk o:~ner & many other delllXe extras. (98:lCTQ l. $4299 ~1!~,~ AUTHQRI Z(D OCAL[f\ 2600 H Af:BOJ1. BL., COSTA :\lESA 540-!HOO Open Sunday • '66 CAD. 4 DR. SEO. DE VILLE • CAD. '61 CPE . OE VILLE FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING Full power. padded •lop It beautiful Firemist finish, ph1sh cloth &. leather inter- ior, stereo. n1any other dlx. Xlr&S, iVSF:6921 $2999 ~1!~~ AUtHORllfD 0[.0.LfA 2roJ HARBOR BL., COSTA ~1ESA ;;40-9100 Open Sunday • --------Newport Beach 'Gl AUSTIN llcalr, ;;ooo I :°' .. lr11 eood. Top ,'I, T-Onn<'au. 1 MERCEDES BENZ .JJerut Le.wi.! QP TOYOTA Harbor American 646·0261 1'169 Hl\~BOR, COSTA MfSA Diarnond button & tuck inler, Just rebuil! 1500, Hol!Py 2 hrL carb. Porsehe ('(Jl) & dist. ,\fake ofl<'f'". Ca 11 8-16·1">-11 Or S-J7.62."1.1, .100 IV, Coast l!wy N.B. 64:>-2 182 !:vcs: •673_8269 In shining hlack with full po111er equip. The Kelly whole.!!ale Blue Book is $1800.00. No11• on Sale for only li149'J. Hurry for this one. Llc. SBD-135. Johnson & ~n. 21326 Hii.rbor B!vd., Costa l\lesa. S.10·5630. Largest Selection OF LUXURIOUS CADILLACS Nf'll' r11·e~ .~. han. .'i!l9:i. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.l~J96~·~G~f~fo~<~bo~'~· ~C~.'~'~· ~·~":'-9~30~3 9GS-1'.!2~. · • 1%9 To)ota Corona. 4 dr, 4 '69 YW BUG '6:.l AUSTIN H~aley runs good $350. 6-1 2-1:113 BMW Sprile, Automotive Excellence & ROY CARVER, Inc. 2925 1-larbor Blvd. Costa r.I esa 546-444.•I • "67 B:\1\V 1600-$1500. New brakes. 011·ner's pride . 64&--0:i2:l day~. CAPRI '?l Capri 2000 auto, 11) n1i's. Priv;i1e 837-!16%. am/rm, party. New & .Used ~~ercedes Benz Jim Slemons Imps. Warner & Main St. Santa An.1 S46-4114 PRIVATE Par\y, I !1 60 spd, r.~h, xln 't ('ond. SI050. 6-l:r.3il:i8. TRIUMPH THE TRIUMPH VS STAG NOW ON DISPLAY Mercedes $6j(l, Nt'I\' 11i·es, Con1r in for a T('st <!ril·e! R/H, cxu·as. L oc11 t<'d FRITZ WARREN'S Superior & PI a rt' n 1 1 n. SPORT CAR CENTER :i.1g..3197_ 710 E. 1st SI., S.A. 5-17-07&1 280SL Siit:k. Lo m1. Ch1;1rcual 0pc'n dnily fl-9: closed Sunday grey. s1ngll~. iop. Call '65 TR4AI RS 6-1\.238!1 or :J.l0-9&!2. An1/Fn1 stereo rarli11 w ire 11·/1nag WhL'<'I~. d lr , (YXU- 7871 $13!15 Ju!! p1•1ce. Call 494-774( 195il V\V p1rkMup. '.\lechanicn.I li t1 l!:i'lll', new l\rl'~. 5.'J.000 orig rn i. Good L'()nd mech. $425. :\4i-70~9 11knds. ;\1EHCEDI::S 220S '6:i fully 'll"hl ~. tonneau . rac g"rn 1,1:/ f'Qp. Inc air. m/sre to app. hk irrt. Btw: 6 & 9 i\lon-Fri • V\V '69 BUG -AM/Fr..f, S217:) 673-5620. evr 673-0728. 673-~. sun roo f. Xlnt 1----,,106=1 ~T~R~-,~---$1.1.JO/offer. Pv! li'IOO 67J-ll:i~2~. =~-~~- ----------1--=~;i~0-~·~,2~1:> "Iii CA \1PP.R Van ohaul f'll~, MG VOLVO '67 2+2 V8, P.S., Fllct a ir . X!nt rond. $1700. 838--334.4. or 6·U-0433. ~THINK 'BT 'VO!YO' , __ 1_u_1c_K __ in Orange Countt 1963 thru 1970's 1968 RIVIERA-Fully t>qiilp-"FRIEDLANDER" ped. "'00· Call "" '1oKeo· I --;'""'64"C""A~Dl=ll~A~C -I d ry 642-4000 b!\\'M 8:30 & 5 ib di. ~CA~L~ AUTHOflll.EO O£AL.Ut ZSOO HARBOR BL., U7JO llJl.CM (HWY. 1'1 893·7566 • 537-6824 •Nkdys. CADILLAC CONNELL COSTA MESA Lik(' ne\1'. Ful! power + air 540,9100 Open Sunday c.:ind. dlr. (VGJ037J $79j tu!! prier, Call 49~·774l EL DORADO 1968, exec. car ~--'-----''---I loaded w/xtras, stereo tape. A good \\'llnt ad is a good Xlnt eond. Pri. ply. $4200. Art. 673-9330. CADILLAC • CAD. 1"9 CONVERTIBLE FACTORY AIR CONDl'MONING Beautitu.t Spanish Silver tin. ish w/black top &. fUIJ ftd leathtr inter, Full power, lilt & telescopic li"tee~. door lock,:, cruise rontrd, auto. dimmer, trunk ope~. du.a.I ccntrol comfort front stat!, etc., etc. Absclutd)- looks & runs like the day it l~lt the shOv"room Ooor, (YC'.Vti6l $4221 ~1!~!i AlJIHORIZEO Of...Uft 2600 HARBOR BL.. COSTA MESA :H0·9100 Optn Sllnda.J • CHEVROLET '64 CHEvY Impala. Auto. Full power, Xlnt cond. $550 • 54&-9795 • FOR SALE '57 Chevy Nomad, S600. 646-5367 ' ' IV HIT E ELEPHA?n'S" overrunning your hoU9eT "Cash" .. &ell them thru Daily Pilot Classified ' Autos, Used CORTINA '67 FORD Cor11na CT >.1111 1"0nd , 4 ~pd, R/H. frhgl ~ ii res. ne11' ball. z 9 .-1 0 . &14-4086. (aiftl THINK m .. ~ .. "FRIEDLANDER" ,59 TR-J $~2~7~5--·l B1i::: t.r~s. :\lu:.t ~ell lh1~ wk. &l-1-16:1:! :1~k·u~ S7:~J. ;i ·I R-:-1 2 1 S . : •. 1~-l~J:\~ VOLKSWAGEN ·r, ! V\\' nus -N{'<'ds paint & \l('.lholi;trry_ 01het'\\'l~e good • '6-l V\\' rlf'lux hu~. 111>\1' 1·ond. Sli5ll. 5-L'>-73711. CHEVROLET'S ( ~~ DATSUN '68 DATSUN SEDAN 4 Door. 4 ~p('('([, Radio, Heal- er. !XCZG231 , B;ir11•1ek Im- ports, 998 So. Coast H igh· way, Laguna Beach. !HG-40.'il or 49·1-!!771 . DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAYS 18835 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 1'42·7781 or 5'!0-0442 '68 DATSUN 4 rlr. aulo, R&H, low miles, x!n! cond. $1300. 6l8-9110 or !"M}..2777 t>ves, 1970 Datsun pick·up Xlnt ronrl. Lo mlJ('s, ;l l8-7.J92 DATSC'N 2.wz. gold, st ick. mus I ~rll. 2n1 111 i I es . ;)3f>--7343. -.,-,-D-A~T~SU~N~-,-,"-,-,,-,-,~,,,,-. A.\1/F:'l1, $2,025. ~18-11532 or 64&--8440. FERRARI FERRARI AUTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS engine, i1·ans. & lll'l'S. SlJIXL * !l!i2-3~JS7 * 1971) V\V JJeluxe campt'r, ll15t 81!ACM CHWY. :tt) \\' J I p I fl I 893·75f.6 e 537-6824 '\i7 V\V SUNROOF "~1 a ia. -op. op ~· en · 1 -----M=G~----IRehl l eni:;. 1..-011. rnilt:'s, new A.\l/F:'IL $3195. 548-74Tl. AUTHORIZED brakf's Sl200. 962-7606 1969 V\V CAMP Mobile, new SALES ,Ii,. SERVICE '66 V\V CiJ!TIJlC'!' IV/ Pop Up. radial ores, s:nao. !'\'f.11ly n1·t'rhl'rl. $1750 Ph· 1----"-"-'~"~'~--7 l'\"~'.~-673-~~1$.~. 1968 LT blue V\\i Bug nePdS '6:. V.\\'. Rug, ~1111roor. xlnl H goor! home. Clran. Sl,000. C'Ond_ S.775, low mileage, Call all ii, 5.17-9117, NEWPORT IMPORTS !iT1-J12~-'fi6 V\V Ohl cab pickup. New ---~------. 3100 \V. Coast Hwy. ·~ V\V Bus. >-:ovd ''onditlon. 1600 Pr1g1ne, SOit camping Ne1vport Beact. li li95. Private par1y. Cail l<•p, p<1inr. ·1~7-2097. ----O~P=E~L----1 67.1-l i~:!. '!i'l BUC , look!'< awful but ----------'62 V\V Sunr~IO! A,\f.F.\l '6!1 rtln~ guul Dune buggy .\-1UST sell th is 11·cck~ '69 Eng. }~antaslie ('fJnd. $623 or 111 at" r i al . Rest otter Kadrl!e Ra 11 ye Low offer. Call tii:t-i~:ll. "V•'f s.100, :1.~7-1771 ('Vf'~. n1ilea~r. .~11lk<' o ff e r . '6!1 VW Can1pn1'lhi!f> Poplnp, 19<11 !~V\V S.-rlan, :-;I nt 541}.5415 or fM2-3873. lent & reira~tnble step. Xlnt cond1t1on, RIH. Good tires. PORSCHE t.'()nd. $2,9~15. 962-6290 $1.'>!t:'i. By iirrt nnly, call '61 VW b < '' t -·• s•1-8Il-211 •1 7::J(J.9 :30 pnl .~'0:-:0'.:C°"C".".,.-----I U , • 11 (.'().,u. ~ .1. l~~=~~=c-c=:;-::= '6J J)ORSCllL Super 90. A.\1-."l!•reo 1ape. Jlm ~15, J289 ~. '6."1 V\\', xln! rond, IU·ll, nrw f''.\1 stf'rl'o lap(', 11 c 11. Coast, Lai.:u11a Bt:h. 111"l'S & brakes, $69::i. Eves, Dunlap~. ('l1rnmf' 11h1•1'ls. "69 V\V, 2100 miles. ;,~7 ... ~~i-l r;irk. hn11u1rula1e~~ Phone "Excr!lrnt ronrlition ' J91i6_W_' -.. -,,-b(-'k·.-,-,~rll~o-, - -l:}l-lfl7< afll'r 6P:\L $14~5 * ~>-16-51~ l•Jr. ~lnl Mnd. S995. -* 4!H-71~2 * •:-,1; Porsche F.uropean 111·Pds 1965 VW BUG $650 ho<ly 11·ork. l;ood !'ng. * 6-12-!JS:f.l * ·i;~ V\I', <111!0, xlnl Jtecently O\'l'thaulrd. N~\\ I-=~ ~==-Sl200. ''r ,,rrrr. hl'llds. }"or .<;air nr !rad<'. '69 VW BLUE $1300 ;. &16-2577 * $71'(} nr h~L <1fr. R~.1.ori:\6. P.,·i Piy: 842-715~ '(ji V\V, rebll eng. new ·57 Porsche 5 Spd, Black. '66 VW SQBCK $995 brakes & bait. G oo d ,\!any xtras. C.1J1Jr! conrl, * ~7.i-5T.i0 * rnrid. Sl!SO. 646-l.11.~. llsking: $.1000. Call betwn Gfl,\DUATION ,:;i f!. VIV bu){. VIV 1969 Westphalia Can1per. 12Pl\l J 5P.'.\1, 9fiR-9;66. F.x<:e!lrm ru1111ini;: e•Jnrl. Nr\\' radial 1ires. P\'I party. 1979 PORSCHF~ 914: Yrll(l11·, S.100 * * * 496-1160 Cnll 6·1·1-4792. F:\l slerrn, lnw n1i. Jl••r[,.\'I 1968 VW BUG--'6S VW $750 Cflnr!. S3500/B~t 0 ff c r r.ooo Shll!W. Sl 100. &l~;.;,.iri:, * :..i5-07i'5 * !ii5-l~70· ·-o "\\'I ' ~.6~9~v=w~CA-MPER $2SOO --.. .. . 1 v JU", ra11iprr t"Jn1b0. PO/t.'iLHE.: lactnry Sflf't lali;;r, Excell1•nr t'Ol1rl, $2,')()I), ~~~f;J~'~·~J.lltl a .. llc::'':::::=o : 911-912-,,~ ~ .. r1·1cr/rl'Jlll1T e 67: .... ~9-li cc :: I'rr~onal s it., i-: d g a!"!=-~-~----= '6!1 \'\V \Vr~!falia <"!Imper, 3100 w. Coast 1-lwy, ;1:\!i-:~0.1 For lha l llrm unrt('r $50, A'.\1 /F.\t-('xtr:ir10r, Perfect! Ne\1·porf Bearh l~i:I l'\!RS\l!I·: 3.".(iB lflJOS try !he Penny Pinc~-_c_·'-"'-·-'-'~'°"-· _'1<_'-_'~''~95_·~= 1 t·.~62-,-.,,,~r.~.,~. ~,-+~2.~LM-,~,-,-«-r, rng11ll' Aln111st <·oinplele. Auto!, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 I Con1p!r1 r h151011. \' e ry Sl.',f). ;i.;&-~!00. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii clean, S3!i:JCI. Dny~: 644-0126 '6K PORSCHE Tar11;a 911-L l::vr~; 49!i-3911 .'l·L()OO n1i. All ex!ras. S·I~ FIAT • Complete S!ock oC llBBD TlllrL11 S... "FRIEDLANDER" 1l7SO llACH ILYD. IHwy. 191 893-7566 • 537-6824 HILLMAN '&I HILLi\l,\N STA \~'AG. Runs good -~w u~ed rt'huilt ~unbeam rnR. and rrct>nl tr11n5. Has t ii-('s, 11·ind~hitld, 3 rioor~. ~teering 11·hE>rl . _ . a de11.d give away at 5 hill!. £7.\..7142 '64 HlLL~1 AN Hu~ky -Lo milNige. Good <.1>rxl. Si9"5 or offer. Ph: ;.48-6479 JAGUAR '68 JAGUAR 1 owner, XKE 2+2, au1o, p'.IT i11 rg, F11t1ory Air COl'lfl, DJr, Take small (!own or \\'Ill fin· ance Pvt Ply .. Cull ~0.:1100 f.>r .C~7506 can f\cn art 10 8111, 1967 .C.2 J11.,11:u1U" roadsttr, ~llvrr grey, blk top, chrome "'ire wheel. .. mech. rx>rfc-ct. $2,SOO or tK>st ofrrr. Ca.U before 1 pm, 675--4123. 19~6 XK-140 J11 gu 11r JW11dstrr. C.d b(ldy, en11:. trnn&". Int nt.erl~ \\"Ork $~. Call art 6, 64:l-•U9Z. 1971 ,/11.g Xl\E l'(lnvt -· A.'.\1/ FM pwr flntC'Tinn radio, Ii.In') ml . $5300. 67!j....TI.\•I Sell tht old stuH Buy the new sh.LU 171·!) ~WR--2.131. 1!16:.! POl!SCH~~ 1£00 J~ roupe. rlran. ,\Ju~t srll im- mf'd. Bf>~t offr r. i;7~.1~,70. 1970 PORSCHE 914; Y(:llow. F"'l slcreo, halanertl eng. XJnt l'<lnd. $.1500. 67.'J..1570 1960 CLASSIC Po r ~ch e 1uad.~Ter convert. Xlnt cond. li7.~2&17 e '.i,i POR!'CH1': "'/rtbll '62 lll(l(I !iUP£'r tn11:inc, &s! orr~r. l!46-4779 "64' Porsche SC.-lmmaculatr- c<ir insirl<• & out. Extras. :~liki677 or 847-538.5. 1970 PORSCl!E~.~9~14,- ~IAg \l'hls, $3500 642-!l8.i9 eve~ '64 C Porsche -$2800 New engine. 673-2531, '63 PORSCHE S.. Xlnt ('Ond. Radio, gd tires, 1w\.\.' paint. S2:i00/0lfl'r, Fuller 642-1403. '59 PORSCHE -mui;t sell BEST OFf'ER! See at 39.19 W. Coast Hwy, N.B. LATE '69 911-S. Sunroof. All '70 ('quipmenL llbar1h ex· haust. &IG-5488. SIMCA '7>9 SIMCA II.RONDE, gd car cheap ln.nfl:. fl~. 5-1().0CJ89. SUNBEAM '&t Alpine convf.58,000 ml, nrw palnt, o'r1tivt, Mich-X th·e~. $4R.'i. 675-2805 -TOYOTA~- 'fi9 CORONA, 4 dr, ~llc:k ~hih , A-1 n1 ln1 . lil.250 or rn11ke ofrt>r, 613-22:,0. ~II the old 1tufl Buy tile ~w atu tt BILL JONES Sportscar Center ~BBB INTRODUCING THE ALL NEW 128 RALLYE LOWEST PRICES ALL MODELS • 124 •_128/. 850 All MODELS All COLORS HIGHEST TRADES llGISTERED NlW IXICUTIVI 124 SPORT COUPE Fteto1v W.u11 ~tv. R1d io, H11l11, Low Mil1191 $2695 JI 1294'14 All new complete automotive service d .. pertment -16 st•lls -expert staff of high· ly trained m1chenics. Complete body & custom paint shop tool llDDD B. J. Sportscar Center lllJ Herber lfTd. tit Ad!lfllt. C"te fll-, 140 .... 491 ' \ BIG CAMPER CARNIVAL!! HELD OVER .THIS WEEK THRU SUNDAY! SEE OPEN ROAD CAMPERS e BALBOA MIN I HOME e WEEK 'N DER CAMPERS e SUN DIAL CAMPER CONVER SION S e RED·E·KAMP CAMPERS e BARTH MOTOR HOME e DUAL ALL PURPOSE FUN ' VAN PLUS COURTESY DISPLAY O~ CAMPING EQUIPMENT lo TENTS SUPPLIED BY THE GRANT BOYSI TALK TO THE FACTORY REPRESENTATIVES AND THEY WILL ANSWER ALL CAMPER QUESTIONS BIG 1 ~ CAMP.ER· SPECIAL BRAND NEW '71 3/4 TON FLEETSIDE Heavy duty ltaf 1u1pen1ion, 350 VB e ngine , turbo hy• dramatic tran1mi11Por1, 9augts. !787) (6)59421 BRAND NEW '71 3/4 TON CHEYENNE C ustom sport truck. 2 ton•, 91u9 1,, radio, camper wir· in g, power 1teer., -400 cu. in. V8, H.0. raar ltaf 1u1p., H.D. 1hock1, wood floor, camper mirror,, AIR CONDI. TIONING, bucket 1e1t1, ti11t. g!a,1, etc. (239 1 (609878 1 $3357 26 $4239°0 AND FOR It YOU GET A LINED CAMPER SHELL AND FOR I; YOU GET A LINED CAMPER SHELL NEW CHEVY Y2 TON BRAND NEW '71 EL CAMINO S.S SB&l 03 .:~~'~:;, 1 Wl'fOOW ITICl(I~ Cowl induction, radio, H.D. battery, power i le1ring , spe~i al 4 spetd, 365 HP eng .• con1o!e, air cond., bucket 11ah, t inted 91111. 1683) 1138263) 8' BOX FLEETSIDE PICKUP NEW '71 EL CAMINO V8 engine, front 1tabili1er, heavy duty rear 1prin91, g a ugei. ( 6380721 1100) 11 10~44 1 We have Blazers -4 wheel drive pickups and carryalls - l/4 Tons -Vans -El Cami- nos -1 Ton's -1/2 Tons - Your choice of equipment op· ii):;:-----' tfons too! CAMPER VAN CONVERSIONS NEW '71 CHEVY '/• TON SUN DIAL CAMPER YAN VS en9ine, 1utomttic transmission, camper equipped with bubble top, sink, stove, ice box, store9e, curtains, etc. sleeps 5. (S57T} (121759) NEW 1 TON !FUN YANI CRUISER YAN VS engine, automatic transm ission, twin beds, sink, stove, ice box, pop top, end all the other convenie nces needed for vact· lion !revel. (897J CONNELL Chevrolet 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 546-1200 I : j f' . I f- ) ... ' I: ,, 'I I , .,. .· ·~y PILOT TlulnOQ', June 17, 1971 §JI .lutostorU• l§l .__I ·_"··· '_""'·__,)§]I ........... ]§][ !§J I~·--"'-""~!§] I AulOI lof S..la l§J I 970Auto" Imported 910 Autos, Imported '70Aul<ls, Imported . . . 970 910 AulM, lmpo""" DATSU "THE SMALL CAR STANDARD OF QVALI1'Y THROUGHOUT TllE WORLD" BELOW JS THE COMPAR.ISON CHART ... Let Co•I• Mesa Datsun show you the 2.door or ~.door Datsun 510. It's p•cled lull of Winner of the treacherous ast African Safari. extra• ..• ALL AT NO EXTRA COST. Features such as tinted glass, white walls, reclining bucket seats, full carpeting , flow.through fre 5h air system, di•c brake• and fully independent rear •u•pen•ion and an OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE ... ALL AS STANDARD EQUIPMENT. Come in and test drive now, while selection is good. A'S: AIOUT COSTA MISA DATSUNS Hl6Hll TU.DI IN ALL OWAHCI 1971 Datsun 510 Sedan Comparison Chart ALL THIS AT NO EXTRA COST Site Wheel· Engine Base Length Width Heigh! We ight Make Cu. In. HP. lo. lo. '"· '"· Lbs. D.lTIVN '1. f'lt .. ooo. t7.S .. IS.2 1t0.I ~.· SS.t .2058 4-DOO" tf.S •• "·' 112.2 '.ti·~ ., .. 2014 COLT 4-DOOR 97.5 100 9S.3 160.6 61.4 53.6 2120 --FIAT 124 S~ECIAL 88.0 " 95.3 158.8 64.0 53.8 "" GREMLIN-199.0 128 96.0 161.3 70,6 51.8 2633 OPEL l(ADETT NO. 31 65.8 S6 95.1 161.6 61.9 55.4 1717 PINTO 97.6 75 9'.0 163.0 69.4 50.0 2013 TOYOTA CORONA 4-DOOR 113.4 108 95.7 166.9 61 .8 55.1 2170 VEGA SEDAN 140.0 90 97.0 169.7 65.4 51 .4 2190 VW SEDAN 96.7 " 94.5 158.6 61 .0 59.1 1808 SUPER VW 96.7 " 95.3 160.15 67.• 59.1 191 8 VW TYPE 3 96.7 " 94.5 170.8 63.2 57.9 2226 ~Ii m•N m•M>" ~''""'" <O"!C!., 1•m• o! ~""""" H ...... ,,.,_ •t>!.~•ut• •«<1••<1 c•~~or !lf 9""''"'e•Q, •"O "" $~tt1•C•l,nn• ••• ~"o•""' to cnan~~ w I"~"' not.~. Ac eel. Front Overhead 0·60 Ind. Re•r Oise C•m Lbs/HP. Sec. Suspension Brak•• Engine "·' 13.S YES YES YES 21. 7 1,,0 YES YES YES 25.5 13.J NO YES YES 25.8 16.3 NO YES NO 20.5 15.3 NO NO NO 30.9 19.8 NO NO NO 25.5 16.5 NO NO NO 20,1 13.5 NO YES YES 24.J 1•.s NO YES YES 30.1 18.1 YES NO NO 33.0 18.l YES NO NO 34.2 18.5 YES YES NO '''0"1 £n1 •nf·l •O•' \'1~•~1 rl• '' •R••• f "{l ne fl••• 5 .. ,ng >'"" Flow-Thru Turning Fresh Circle .,, Fl YES 31 .4 YES 31.• YES 30.2 NO 35.1 NO 32.8 NO 34 .8 YES 31 .5 YES 31 .S YES 33.0 YES 36.0 YES 31 .2 NO 315.3 e Reclining buck•t 1eats e Five -main-bearing 116 HP ov•rhead eem e ngine • Up to 25 mile' per gallon e 0-60 in 14 second, e Fully independent •ea r suspension e Front disc bra kes • 3 l .4 foot turnin g c ircle • Stand.trd atl-1ynchromesh 4 -speed transmission I optional automatic availa ble I e Tinted glass, whitewalls, flow-through fresh air. system. e All at no e xtra cost. s We are introducing a new higher trad•ln allowance during our big expansion pro- gram. DATSUN 510 2·DOOR ''Ask a Dlltson Owner and Then Decide.~~ + T •• & Lie. I 0 & H I DI I Fwy. San • l"o...0.•oio • Adams f .. ~ :c ... ----___...... I 540-6410 I 2845 HARBOR BOULEVARD, COSTA MESA e 1 Mle Soortl of TM Sot! Dle<;10 Fr-..y e CorMr of Harbor & Po116eroso Attention O•t•un Owners! I Your O•l1u", lft !radt, It wort~ ll'll>r• II CIKll MUI D•hvn. (Try YI .lllCI _, e SERVICE e AND WE MEAN SERVICE! To Your Complete Satisfaction At All Times! ONI OP: THI MOST rfffNC.tff &-rec•111-no.d Dot1111 serYlic:o 4opts. 11 So11tk.r1 C.lif. WI~ 111ellfled lkeaed t.ct.ry Mlltff tKf111 lcl•M. '1HI PINll1' OP ltU M.t.fNTINANCI" ANY QUISTIONS AIOUT SIRYICI CALL THIS SERYIC! HOT l!Jr~I 540..0213 I A.M. TO I r .M. ONL'f A COM~LETE WELL STOCKED PARTS DEPT. Autos, Imported 970Autos, "'?'P't9f .970Auto1, Imported m-~ m-~ m-~ m-~ m-~ m-~ ~ BRAND NEW 1971 GREMLIN $195 101'l $55~~AI DOWN MONTHl'f' $1791 $!t5 l•l•I 4ft, S5S.4t tf!•l ,,,..,t.lf PJMI, iftCI. I••• lilt_ .. ••4 •!I li•••C• c~•••H ff •PP••••<I cro4il 1,, 14 •••· Dlfern41 ,,,,, •. pri<• I• Slltt. Ct•~ p•it• i1 $ ltlS.SS. AIHIU.U PllCQTAGI IATI 10.?0il. No. 153609 IMMEDIATE DEUVERY NEW 1971 HORNET No. 153059 NOW $2196 58 ONLY ···67MERCXl7 (°"At ,__ __ ....,. .... ...... 1UlW1 '70 OPEL UHTTl ....... ......,. ............. .,aOlld' t ··1395 '64 oi:o$ 98 ............ 01'M1U • '695-' '71 FORD IAl(I WMCMf u.-•••anm --....... . $115 VALUE A•oilobl1 Oft M$1I Modfls OI Greml"'to. 'Mlmm&.~ ... .......... '71 Ambassador " ' '· STATIOllWAOOll . $JM~31 UITID ~. ~ ..1 i1 •• FROM wrNDOw $TIC No. P. 17.5 .. 04 $395 '68VW rlfTII•<• '67 FORD 2 DI. A .. t'81111.P_,_.. a.-1'11114) •995 '70 AMBASS. Slllto" WAtOll 1o1.~rr.to.000111.-...,, ~6!6&ot CHEVROLET CHEVROLET DODGE LINCOLN MERCURY PLYMOUTH '67 CHEVROLET ~ BEL AIR SEDAN ,vf a u!oma Lic. radio, heater, power steering & brakts, air uiud1tion1ng. (UK\. ~52) e 1957 CHEVROLET ~ Good cond. ?.1ake offer. Call &t;,.-0452 '67 EL CAi\1JNO, a llto. PIS. PIB, Ai\.t/F!\! radio $1100. &16-~90 af1rr 1 pm. CHRYS'L~E=R- .......,._. ---- "GA Dodge Dart $4j!) or offer. Call ~16-7369, E:tl. 11 aft :JP;\! call 64~792. FORD '70 LINCOLN '7tl COUGAR, 16,0ClO mi's, "65 CUDA lastback, V-8, CONTINENTAL FM st,reo, xln 't cond . $2595. au10, R&H, good 1ires, neW ~ Dr. t'inished in PllSlel ye!-_,_,_,....-co~'~· ==~~~--I brks k 'hocks. $ 715 , !01o with white vmyl roof MUSTANG , _>_1:>-_•_•33~---~--11 nd a hos! of Connnentals _______ ._ PONTIAC optional equipment Come 1968 r.tustang-V8, air cond, in, look it over, tesl dMve console . U-51> than JJ,000 mi. _ '""~tUV(. ii'.' You'll like this or1e. Ser-4 !op grarle Mobi l tires, Jess '69 PONTIAC G.T.0 . • •~ ~~ i11l 821470. Johnson & Son, than 100 mi. Dl.~c brakes. This is a nice ·ar wi1h l\.1ed 1 Cl!RYSLER-PLYMOUTII :t., : ·, ~ 2626 Harbor BJ\•d .. Cost& Mint co11d. $22;,Q, 67j...\2:19 Gran Met finis h set off wilh I 2929 Harbor Bh·d. i\lrs11 • 5'10-5630. :siiMustang f'astback-2+2 Dk Grren Vinyl roof, ma~ Coo;ta ;\1esa ~16-1934 4 Dr, Hardtop. V-8. Au1o. '68 LINCOLN deluxe 1n1en or. ' l)'pe wlieils.. air oonrl .. pow, P.S .. P .B., FaC't Air Cond. CONTINENTAL CPE. ;i.:ii-1888 er sfeetlng and brake! ~ '63 IMPALA SS (VEG3301 $ll9' TH:~:o:E A3 :h~~~ :i:a~~ :C~~~~ )~~:~ '6i/d~~~~~~~·rf'Qairi 1 :~s: ~~9~~1oh~:so~1~· ~i~j $1095 ATLAS '67 CHRYSLER 2 Dr, HT. V-S, Auto, Rad10, HIGHLAND MOTORS ROBINS FO expect to /ind in a luxury clean. Sl.l95. &16-6251. ~1~.sa.H~~~ Blvd., C.OSta HealPr, P.S., f1u: Air Cond . 214.'1 Harbor Bl\'d , RD c<ir. You h11ve 10 ~,. thi! '!'609lM~NK'll~.! .. ~c~kc.••opo~c'tt~roofurr~. 4<1 ~~;,~~~==-_; I While S1dewRIJs. Bllckct Costa ~r~11 64.l-'.'J.104 2060 !-!arbor Blvd. rin , Lie. ZYD-~33, Johnson ~pd, xlnt cond. Prl pty. '69 PONTIAC Seai.s, Console. real ni~. '69 CHRYSLER 300:--.i-ctr C~ta .\leM 642-0010 & Sen. 26'26 H11rbnr Bl~·d., $2lfl). :>46--3009 GRANO PRIX ChPr1 y? '.'.l llM Ser hdtr, full P"r. !o n11IP.<, ;11r, I ·n~ FORD Fu1ur:::i. Sn1all V-8 -~osr11. ;\fesA. ~..!Cl-3630 '6j •\111s1an~. V-1! Auto. RE:1\L 1The rrnde of !he Pontiac II~ HIG~~~l~r~r~~!.ORS ni ;itly '\11'11.s. S2.~ffo h-1·1-ll~7. j 2h0 Pnt:. rrhll: a ir-<..-ind : 1 '66 Lli'COl.N C'ln1. 4 dr. CLEAN! SS2.i Z,.!8-Gl:l-1 brl"n err11 1r1lf'd w11h vin)I roof: I Cosrn .Yle~a &1."1-:1 Hl-l '6f CHEYE(LE Super Sport, 4 Speed R.1d10 Hearer, compe1tion 'ora nge: SS package CZDTI9.ll Bar- 11•1ck Impor,ts, 998 Sc. ·Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. 54&-4!>:>1 or 49-1-9771. '61 GIEV. IMPALA, 2SJ Co E ---p\ir. s!<'rr . nr" paint I.: I 1/11" mill', orig nwnPr. .)..10 P.\L i'l lr, JXlllrr slrrr1ng 1 n d M T 11rc~ soo~1 612-9-lO:i or ln1n1ac·. loaded 11/Pxtras ------ -I br:::ikr.s Test dri\·p r h1~ one j36-009S A~k lnr Casry 6~2-1 124. ! "6j .\!USTA:'\'G, VII, a111n. P"r $297:1. Lir. \'CH-8 17.J~hnsoq e ·66 CQ;\!F.:T-Vj(, auto 1r11ns. lo m1 $700 or hf'i.l offer. 642--024j '65 COMET. xln"l C'Ond. fl.IRke olfer. Call 893-3012 all 3pm CORVAIR '67 4 DR CONTINENTAL i;lerr. $.SOO or li~I olr. Call &. S<in, 26Z6 Harbor Blvd.; 1970 FORD LTD, gt'f'rn Cindy, J<l0-4221 aft 4. C(lsla ~1!'sa. ;j.IQ.;)630 xt..'IT COND, BST OFR. ---H "'/btk int. AU ro"·er. air. 644-&184, 644-2942 OLDSMOBILE '70 GTO 23.CKXI m1 S2&>0. &12-I;J.i9 a.It . ;. MERCURY Ram Air, 4-speed, F~stoni ~.,.-,O~l~d-,.-.6-9_L_O_x_u_,-y-5-0-d•.I wide ovals, sharp-All black? 1959 GALAXIE FAcroRY Sacrlhce~ $400 d.. lake cve.r· < de. P/steeri"". P/br·''''· R pavments' 64S-"""~ ·'ter • .. ., "" '69 MERCURY Ar CONDITlO~'INC ' . """"' ... ., Air rond, Radio, he11.ter. . & weekends MARQUIS BRGHM F\Jll power eq·1lpmen1 incl. ~-,,=,,,-~·,.-,.-~~-'I eng.-hl ~i's, auto. po"'er. I "fl6 CORVAIR. 4-sp(I. R&H. fatr rubber. Rllns ok. Xhl! conrl. R11di11! looks good, Irlral f o r 646-1732 or 616-0042. teen11i1e,r, ~1on1's second car CORVmE Body $: interior in good con-·5-G • p · o. < Dr. H.T. Th;, """ ,., l-·d· WI s teering "'hf''?!, fa ctory .l ranu rix, ~crilice: d1lion. SJOO or hes! oiler. ~. ..... ~I t II 3rd ed. Vinyl roof, twin comfort 11tel't"O tape, lll05 1 l.IJ deluxe 1 us se car. white 549-0214 Joun.e:e seats, 6 w11.y power options. i\1ust be Sttn & exler. & inter., P/B, Pis; -~1~9~59-G'ALA"X'l~E~-I for dri~r. power window!, dnven 10 appreciate \)'JD. P!W, FRc air, Good tires, 4 Dr., P 1Steering. P!Bra ke~. tilt wheel Al\1·Fi\1 Sl ereo. C521. . Xl n! cond. S83l. 96Z.l'.l29 a ir cond. Exc,-.Jlt>n1 !J"an~por-l•ir C'Ond. 'and morP. Sh~ ..... NABERS CADILLAC 1970 GRAND Prix, Juli pow·. ·s.1 COUPE. red/blk inter ~" .,.,,..,. l"RBD J8 000 · · "' tat1on car. '300.00 or best yr tlow "'It h black in!rrior A ......,., ,,.. R.BL.. er. . mi, carefully "'/'L9 JjO LT-I en~. xtras. oiler. roof. Lie. 488-AOV, Johnson COSTA ME;:;A m11 inlained. A·~k\ng 11verq• or Dads work horsr . Only S200 takes pink. 64;>..2J42 aft •• '69 IMPALA H.T • ,\lint cond, l\1ake offtr. 549•0214 & Son, 2626 Harbor Bl\•d.. CALL 540-9100 rerail book. •92-9533. ." ' • A. I . 5J4-ll4Jl. ~Ill MesA. 54().56Jo OPEN SUNUAY 1958 Pontiac Ch.Jetton, au~ act 1r, ow m1 .• Loaded, '69 "" 1' 4 pd -ooo e BRONaJ 4-wheel d-,· ... , --=~====~--1 di T k ..... rve r. i; · ""· • v~ 1968 OLDS Cutlass 2 -'-h.J. good oood. S12S or btst 0£: r., 1 e small down or ·1 °-1 rr 1 k •port ""ckag•, v•, "'h. '70 MERCURY "' f ~ ... !162-27 _ d C U ~.,, mi f'S. .,.,5 o rr a es. ...-•"' w/•I spd. New flrf's. xJn er . ._.... 61 or ua e. a .,...,.3100 or A" 11 sl •II limited slip, sw,·og ,,_ COLONY PARK 494-7;j()lj. , m:v ca s, mu fi . mr.iunt. l2300. 1\41 &i6--0715'" JO Pass. Wagon. A like new rond. Musi sell. W i I ! 1964 LEMANS: Bue sea , 67>-7792 1\lholri1ftle. Sim. 642.-9863 or coruo!e, au!o, VI, p/1, Ne 1966 CHEV. 8 cyl, carry all 'f.9 Con.·erte h~. cnni·. 3;,c.,i '62 ford-VS. gd eng, tires, 19.000 m ile beallly done in 642-422S. pert. '495-S625 . camper. Equip: 1ur, P.T. pd Good 1 pain! & in1er. i\·lust i;el! sunshine: yf'llow "'"ilh saddle r 5 . mRgs, year, exce · · 1966 LeMans ht .o;poc> • axe , dual gas t11nk!, 2 .o;pd d ., 1-. 4-1408 today. $19:), l.rade. &l:r.1983. interior 11nd ll host of lu.'(ury '70 CUTLASS Supreme Conv. · • · roupe. , tr I t _.. fl~' '-"°-"-·~~'°"· ='N~·~·~-~~~·---oq"IP J pl A" ,_ air. AM/FM, •II P"''r orig'" ans. x n co....,, ,;r,;. i · COUGAR J\fUSl'-A-NG 'lifi. Orig owner, . o ease •nyone, ir, power, ..... c! sterl'O. o $1 075 675-7036 ~ 492-6183, 492-5i57 a lt. 6:00 niust sell, goin~ ovef'llefts. even Vinyl Root. Musi be Xln't cond. Mu!l Sacrifice. wncr, · · · pn;. Lo m i. R&H $899. '499-233.5. seen and drlvf'n, Lie. AOV-6'16-2811. '69 CITO Judge. 4 s:peed, vefl! •69 NOVA V-ll I . '69 COUGAR gold, XR7, 351· 488. J ohnson k Son, 1626 '6l OI . good condition. $2200 or be~\ , ac. air, vinyl 4V, po~r brks, r;!ttr., win-'68 FORD Torino GT. Orig H1rixrr Blvd., Colla ~tea. ds. lge engine, full pwr, offer. MS-091! lop, 3 "'° tur~hydro trAns. .. ··' owo<. Low """k lllOO, Good · Iii.ct air. Dnmac int. ?<.1ech. '---::-...-o==~--'~ N M. h dows .,. 11u10 !Tans, ""nl uuu 540 5631) 1 RAMBLER ew 1c elin tires. Xlnl cond. 673-6742. • OK. $345 or be1! oUer. 71•: cond. Sl800. 8'm--9226 or cond, S2·500· 5ra-3i93 {eves •6t MONT!GO MX 495-4462 526--2968. & wkndsl. '64 r'ALCON 4 dr, 51.000 mi. WAGON :;;i;;.c.:;;;,·,.,--,.,=,,,--;=·J--~":-=-:""':':"':,,._-..,i: IM, .. cul.ATE " A ,. s·~ '"' o1"' euu .. ,, v ' . '64 RAMBLER : '61 EL Camino, ,... •II ...... • 4 eng., s ing .,,,.,, Talk abou1 .. vaca uo· , -· .. post-tract. ne" pai ·t. fires, Call owner 673-3067 Oria:inal owner. Beaulyl Tip ' • po\l<er Ai\l-f:\1 327 cu. Auto. lal, this is ii, Flrrished in top cood. See u, drive it. New Tires, mags $1500. 5hoc~. A homb, -492..J117J. '67 LTD 2-door, vinyl lop, while with red int. F.o:ulp. Private ply. 548--0769. 2 Dr. Auto, Radio, He•ter. 673-6178 af! 6. DODGE LOADED. inclUde.c air, rad io, power (0PE739 ! 1963 Chevrole,t, less fhan DI $16.U, Eve5, 494-7081 steering: & brakes, WfW and PLYMOUTH $49t . mi. on en£, lac air, sld '64 DODGE OARJ GT '67 f'ORD F1lrlane. 390 V-!: ita priced. to sell la11t <.I .63 PLYM0um t"W')' t HIGH~AND MOTORS . 5hlft. W11nt to tr11de for la:e IUJfO. Full poweT. Air. SI~. only $2295. Uc. ZVC-346, 3'.000 Milot. )Qnt co~ 2J(j Hubor Blvl!. molorcycle. 492-7664 642--4814. JohnlOl'I ~ ~. 26)1 Harbor M"'' -. -. •w "'IO. Coit1 Mesa 645--~ '-;c,-.;-'-.,c.-,-,~~~-122:> &!ant 6, Aulo, Radio, Bl"d "·'' M ~~"=""' ...... _,,, ~ "64 Chev V11n V-8 2SS cu. il!'ater, Extra Shllll>. (ORN· '68 FURD Torino GT. Orig v ., \,Ml 3 rsa.. "'~ '58 Plym pod tl'llMp 511\: '63 6 cyl Ramblr.r OUlio New paint, lf!a!r;. M"ml cam-3051 ownr. l.D1'' hook $1100. Good '61 COUGAR XR-7 &42-5069' till) tn-tl!it Aak 4-dr, P /1. Exe. dNn aulo, per. 6'12-2507 aft CP:\t. $574 cond. 673--0742. The k>p cat In the Cougar for Bill.' · ln xlnl cond. $3.'iO. "5-4796. HIGHL 0 --.-..,,-,,-,-.,.-,.--1 line, finished In Paatrl Blue '70 El Camino, !ow n1i., 11ir, atHom. Xln! cond. Sl.iOO. Pvt ply ~!H-0620. AND M TORS '71 f'ORDS: G al & x I e 1. and toucht.d oll wi!l1 a Da rk "UICK CASH 21.S.) Harbol" Blvd, ~1us111nir11. & Thril'IO!. Her~i Blue Vinyl mol, Don'i ml• .., Cm<111 ~1r.<.a &l.1--~ Corp. ~714 1 ~-lhla one al only $1939. Lie. THROUGH A PRIV. Pry. '64 T-Bird $11:95, T·llRD ·. • '55 ClfEV V-Primo ron<l . 9"\4 DODGE DART ___ jl ~f'ORO • dr Sf'dan .. As 111. \VKR.Q.i!. John5Cln It &i n, DAILY PILOT ruu power. lib n • w New everychinR,! I O\\'IM'r Nt rl' cond. ?\lake of· ·71 license. $61. 543--0J l6. 2826 Jfarbor BJvd., Coal• WANT AD Loc•ted SuPtrior & Placl!,.:r 1.---~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~-c-~.-'-"'-""'--ll:....._ lo.r. 6~ 2.i69-"~"'-•_A_,_•_A_,_ •. _c_,_1. __ ,_1_ ... _.~,...-:-"'°-'-·~----·~--~~~~~---"-'·-""';..;;.~'~"'~·~~~~- •• :