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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-06-21 - Orange Coast Pilot7 ) • ' ........oast an s Li~ DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * In Knife Tossing Act MONDAY AFTERN OON, JUNE 21', ;1971 YOL..M. HO. 1'1, t ICCTIOMI, M PAell I • • • • • • •• • • • • • Los Alamitos Airport Plan Liz 'Target' In Circus l{11ife Act LONDON (AP) -Elizabeth Taylor tir- rived in London from Mexico today tell· Ing how she found herself al the target end of a circus knife thrower's dagger. ''It all started as a bit of fun ," said the s(ln·lanned movie star as she passed through Heathrow Airport. "But I v.·a~ very scared afterward.·• r.1iss Taylor 3nd her husband . Richard Burton. took a nicht off to visit a local circus nea r their house in Puerlo Vallarta . The spotlight fell on kn1fc-lhrov>'er Ale· jandro Fuentes. "He said something in Sp<.>.nish and 1 thought he wanted to announ ce Elir,abeth <ind introduce he;· to the crowd," Burton told newsmen. "The next thing I knew he was throw· ing daggers at her " ·Miss Taylor said : •·what we didn't kno\v was that the knifc!hrower was soying: 'Is there anyone brave enough to take a chance with my daggers'!' "He mentioned my name and I went in· to the ring all smiles, thinking he was just going to introduce me. '"Those knlve.!I really thumped around . Richard suddenly jumped into the ring over the barrier. I shouted lo him lo stop. I don 't know what he thought he could do.·• But the next thing Burton knew he was ln the act himself, holding a balloon in hill mouth and another rn hi! hand while the performer burst them with a knife. Orut(e Coa1t Weadler The weatherman pred.lcti hazy eunshlne today •nd 1\le!day '!'Ith patchy l9g along the ·coest in the morning hours. Hlgl\s today and , Tue8day 70 at the beaches, llO in-- llnd. Low lol\lj!hl 5S lO 62. INSIDE TOD/\ Y Tiie Costa Mesa Civic Pltly· house is winding up /ta sttUon wlth o prnductiall of WilLiarn Soroyon's "T~ Btouti_Jul Pe~ pLt.'' The f'laY ii rtVtt!tDtd rn. Ente·rtoinment, Page 19. '"'"" • -·ft , .. ,, C.llfe,.,11 • N1Tleflli H .... •• Cl'IKlllftt U• • 0<'4111 ,_,., " (l••olflell ~-· 1r1v1• ~ H (Mlle• • :c.r;iMl"Ctfl ,,.,, ·-· • ..... 0..111 "'·'~· " TtlsYl•llfl " lr:tlllfflll ..... ' T~ .. 11r1 , .. ,. •"Ttrlll"'"..,' "'" WM"'I' • """llU ,.,, Wll"• lll'ltll H Mt"IKOf'f " Wl'""''I IUWI lJ." ..... \. ..... fl " Wtrlll NtWI .. l»o IL Y l'!LOT lltl! P'IHll9 JUI•• Newport Nancy Kaye Smith, 16, a Co· rona del Mar Hi gh School coed, is the ne\v Miss Ne\vport Beach . The daughter of Mr, and Mrs. l.-0\vell Smith, 520 Begonja Ave., Corona del Mar, was selected by judges for -the city's Jaycees. who ~ere cap- tivated by Miss Smith's brains, be~uty and personality. Two Women, Boy Die in Headon Coast Collision • By JOHN VAL TERZA , • 01 "" O.ltr P'I... ,,... ' A tear;end collision late Sunday even· Ing sent a late-model for~ign, aedan spin· ning acroSl!I the unguarded center freeway divider at Capistrano Beach· and headon into a charter buA, killlnf.. 1 amall boy and two -women, all from •the San Dle10 area. \ Tht collision, which ultbn8:tely Involved fi ve cars and ~ bEck>led....U four Jane& dl 'the cro~ 1.Y'I ·north· bound fraffic a:s fire • aultttd by • wrecker, fought to pry two vlc:Unui from the tang1e of wrttkllt. The dead were ldeiitlOed •• Marcartt Speyer, 2'1. of San · Diego; · Dtrlene A. Bunn, 27. of Poln1 Loma IDd Marcut Wallenstein, 3"·· of Sin .Dteeo. All 1Ftre passengers and 111 •ere pronounced dud on arriv1l •t South Coast Community Hospital. The mJ&hap occurred near Ult San Juan Creek offraibp. Sour«s said tn unldenllfitd woman physician pas.sln1 the cr11h •lopped to render aid, g iv l n g mouth-to-mouth resuscit.attl:ln to the boy en route to the hospital. 11lt me,asure failed , 300,000 Sun Seekers Hit Beaches The heavens parted the usual low clouds and fog routine, the waters warm- ed, and 300,000 people flocked to the beaches along the Orange Coast Sunday. Newport Beach lifeguards described the June weekend scene as being "almost ·JAugurt." They estimate some 105,000 people enjoyed the last day of Spring at the beach of Newport Beach, Surf ran on- ly two to four fee t and water tem- peratures climbed to nearly 68 degree& on Sunday. Lifeguards logged SJ rescues. Saturday and 27 on Sunday. One 5-year old child drowned off the ne w Irvine Marina, the lone trag~y of the weekend. In San Clemente, 55,000 beachgoers wen~ logged ror both days. Lifeguards Sunday aided a 10-year-old girl who escaped drowning in the six-foot deep trench offshore from the city'1 north beach, lreoe Castro of 1606 Las Bolas, made lt lo shore unassisted and ther1 collapsed in the und, lifeguards reported. She waa taken lo South Coa.!lt Community Hospital for observalion. Rescues along the Orange Co#ist from Seal Be'ach to San: Cl~menle were light over the weekend. Lifeguards credit the dimirUsh.ing surf and the resulting near disappearance of side currents and rip- tide.!!. With 30,000 persons estimated at ~guna Beach, lif.eguarcb only logged eight re.!lcues, none serious, for the two day&. La11.1na Beach guards gave first aid to 98 victim& of minor beach accidenta in· cludln1 the re.!iCl.lscltation of a young Anaheim woman who coU1peed on the M1ln Beach. ~t. ~ton Beach city beaches, llfquar4a ettlmated 80,000 peTIOna · on ~ 111!11.ll&,OOO people on Sunday. w ·.IJllM.'lll':I lot.Jed J32 from a surf .90b: -to three feet. <!IT•~· !!nlorc<lllODt·Detall •1rhiilll or adult. and JuvcnUea the Wltttnd on cbargts rangln1 nUoorr pouessing 1lcohol to suspi· cibn of pouession of narcotica fOf'" &1Je, •nd CIT burglary. Capt. Arland Uuher, cornmander of the Hunllntton Beach PatroJ division .... ·w 1e • --... ' e nnt peop !O taow we have • bNch where people can come to enjoy thcmselvn. "1t-U they come to btfak I.he law, we will SH to it they go to J1JI, forthw ith," he taid. Huntington State Beach estimated crowds at 20,000 both days and re&C\let totalled 30. Bol.!la Chica Beach 1ttendance WU 10,000 both day11, Orange County Harbor Department reported "heavy routine flays " but no dramatic re•cue8 although ·I e.; ~ r a I aa11bo·at1 tipped c:iver In the medium surf. Keeping Cool 01"1 T•ll,MN As Las Vegas: temperatures soared Into the 100's, Sheije N·orwood, a Folies Bergere dancer. looks for ways to cool off. The 361i1.-24·36 per· former tries a peek·a·boo knit bikini which is obviously well venti· lated. 7-judge Panel to Decide ' On Times Viet .Paper Case NEW YORK (AP) -A. bt111ing on the government'• claim th1t tbt New York Tlmea should be barred from further publlf&Uoa of 1 ucret Pent1gon 1tudy of the Vletnlm war was postponed today to aliow tht: case to go befon a full aevt.n· judge panel of the 2nd U.S. Circutt CGllrl of Appe1l11 on Tuesday . The goVtrnment. which was defet1ttd· ln Ill move to atop further Times publka· tlon In • lowe.r coort, ~.ad been iebeduled to go before 1 three-man appeals panel lhia morning. Jn Wa1hington, mtanwhlle, lhe govem· ment 1rgued ln U.S. Diattlct Court that documenll rrom the Pentagon 1ludy Ultd by the. Woohfnaton !'\>It Jn wembllnl ~· atone.a oonlaln lnformJUon about.current operational plana In the war. -Both the Times and the POil remained under restr1!nla: not to publlsh 1rticles sbout the study pendJni outd>me of tho coort acUons. Prkir to the covemment'1 efforts· to otop fl"bll<atlon, the Times pubUahed three h)at~~ln)enta from the 11tudy and lbe Post-two. tn a br1tf filed for the 1ppe1!1 court, Lht Times 11r1ued that • forctd rtturn o! the claaaUled doctlmentl would violate fSee TIMES, Pap 11 Gr and Jury Get s Blast By Hosmer A call to conve.rt Los Alamitoa Naval Air Station for use by comme.rciaJ and general aviation was branded "ill-ad· vised" today by Congressman Cralg Hosmer (R-Long Beach ). In a stinging letter to the Orange Coun- ty Grand Jury released today, Hosmer protested the Grand Jury recom- mendation that the Orange County Board of Supervisors try to acquire Los Alam itos for use. as a public .airport. "The area wouJd be turned into a high decible sinkhole just like every othet commercial airport. despite all the pious promises airport promoters cusromarily make to lull nearby homeowners into false fee.lings of iiecurity," Hosmer said. "I can find absolutely no justification for the premeditated dooming of residents of Los Alamitos and neighboring Rossmoor and Seal Beach lo this fate.'' Hosmer said that West Orange County already ha s access to commercial and general aviation fa cilities at the Long Beach Municipal Airport. leSl!I than five miles away. .,In my opinion demands for civilian use of Los AJamitos right next door to an existing commercial airport ju.st because It is barely within the Orange County boundary, are i 11-adv la e d," the Congressman said. He added he would rather see the runways bulldozed out to elimina~ pressures for civilian access to the facili- ty. Hosmer said he has no personal preference for the future UJe of the-land -be it military rtserve flying, NaV)" housing or turning the area into a park - but. "I will do everything. poaihle personally and as a member of Congress to see that . thi.!I high-density residential ar,ea is not subjected to commertial or general aviation, which it does not nl!ed and whi~h. belongs elsewhere." Hosmer reooinited. the requests. of otper, military' organlutlons to uae Los Alaml~ for flight. tralnin~vlUes. He saJd the Army, Air Force and California Naional Guard "could be expected to be 11 circumspect in th~ oper1Uona M rormerly the Navy wu, and It appear1 at Utia Ume &hit those requuta may be honored , •Ubouih the final dedtJon ls yet to be made." 4. in Family Drown OEORGETOWN, La. (AP) -"'""' brother1 and 11.slers drowned ln 1 lake ne1r Gtorg_etown wl'!fln they attempted • recover a beach ball, authorities utd. · TWo of lbe younpten .,,,.. pll\Ylnl with the ball SAturday night ne1.r a lat. w.hen It !ell Into tilt woler. deputies 11\q. They w•ded Iller It but found the watet too deep and called ICli: help. The othof two wt11t to their •Mi and 11ao dr-.S. ' .. I CWL Y PILOT s Mondo&;, Ju11r 21, 1,71 Fossil Finih Valley Men Dig .County History Somebody Up Tl1ere By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of 1M 01UY P'lltl $1111 Digging for a desmostylll.'I iJ; not the kind of hobby thal atlracU a large foUow· ing. After all, few people know that a desmo.stylus is. much less v.·hl're lo find one. But l\ro Fountain Valley residents have been pursuing the elusive beasL y,·ilh some success for the past year and a half. And (or their efforts Jerry Yeager and Don Bunge have uncovered the skull of one that is nearly comple te. A desmostytbs i.s a prehistor i c predecessor of the modern hippopotamU5. Scientists believe it inhabited the cout of California about 2S million years ago. The desmoslylus was an amphibiOUJ animal and was one of the large r C!uadru~ of _its tim~. It fed on ~ll fish which jt pried up with hls tusks, and algae. Remains of the animal have been found In Japan and along th2 Pacific Coast from Washington to Orange County. The ;:inimal is Ulought to have existed during the Miocene and Oligocene Epochs which ~an about S8 million years ago and ended with the coming of the Pliocene Epoch about to million years ago. The Jee Age or Pleistocene Epoch wb..ich produced the mammal fossils now being uncovered in Newport Beach's Up- per Bay began only two million years ago. ''eager. Y.'ho keeps the fossi lizt!d skull In a crate in his garage. said he and Bunge uncovered it \\'hile digging in Trabuco Canyon. Or. Shelton Applegate, a specialist in vertebrate paleontology from the L<ls Angeles Museum of Natural History, said the find is significant because it is the first of its kind in the Orange County area. ··There i.s only one complete skeleton of a desmostylllll which is in a. museum in Tokyo. We have several pieces of skull and several teeth, but we don"t have a complete skull in our collection." he said. Applegate expre55ed hopes of getlin.g together with the lwo men to share thell' fi nds. Ye.ager said he v•ould like lo Joan the skull and some of the other find s from the Trabuco Cat1yoh dij: to the musewtJ, but for tbe moment the fossils are mak· ing the rounds of aome of the local IC!ioob. "I'm hesitant to part with some of th.is &tuif,'' Yeager said. "I'm sort of proud or il and f don 't want to give it up." The desmosty!us isn't the only sigr.ifi· cant find the two have uncovered. Yeager has a colleCtion or rossilized sea ~hells, shark leeth and large vertebrae, all of which are fairly common in this area. But he has also fou nd three very crude tools which some form of early man may have used to crush shells or bones with . Like the fossils , lhese tools have been examined by officials from the ~ Angeles museum "'ho vouch for tMlr .authenticit y. '"Actually, they say there ar e only twc> tools, but the third stone was found in the seme place and I think it shows defini te signs of shaping," Yeager explaiiled. "I'd like to find the remains of the man that used the tools.·• He said he and Bunge found the demosUylus. the teeth. 1\hells and tools in almost the same level of strata which has Jed him to conclude that none of them was found in the places v.·here they were originally deposited. This is not a particularly surprising conclusion in light of the fact that at times during the Ice Age the county shoreline started on what is now the slopes of Saddleback ~1ountain and that man is first recorded on earth during the Pleistocene Epich -some eight million yea rs after the ~1iocene Epoch. '°The fossils have obviously come do11·n from some other place4'Jp the c2.t1yon and it may be the too ls got there v.'hen !his early man made a camp on that spot,·• he ventured. Neither Yeager nor Bunge are pateon· tologists by profession. Yeager is a purchasing agent for a cosmetics firm and Bunge is a lead mechanic lor a Los Angeles-based airline. Both intend to keep digging. \'eager said they 'A'ould like to get some ex· perience with other knowledgeable amateurs and professionals in the field. DAILY PILOT $1111 P'~ol1 JERRY YEAGER DISPLAYS DESMOSTYLUS FOSSIL Fountain V1ll1y Men Dig Up Orange County History Court Agrees to Co11sider Wn·etap Issue Next Term W,\SHINGTON !UPI) -The Supreme Court agreed today to rule next term on whether the government may tap the telephone of anyone it believes to be a threat to national security without ob- taining consent from a federal judge. The lest case lo be heard next fall or ·winier involves a mounting dispu!e ove r a claim by Attorney Genera! John 1"J. .r.litchell that the goYernmenl's right of self-protection surmounts an individua\°s right of privacy in s ec u r i t y in· vestigations. J\1ilchcll has assumed authority to a~ prove telephone wiretaps in such in- stances but in the test case, lo be decided by a written opinion, the Justice Depart· mcn l lost on two lower court rulings. In ol her actions. !he court· -flulcd it is not mandatory For slates lo provide jury trials for juveniles even for offenses v.•hich v.•ould require a jury for an adult. For lhe majority, Justice llarry A. B!ackmun said such a pro- <:edure for juveniles ··is the state"s privilege and not ils obligation .. , Doesn't Like 0111~ Edito1~ By THOMAS KEEVIL DI t!11 0•11~ P'li.1 Sl•U Ei ther I'm indestructible or 1'1n not gelling the message. Don't gel me \vrong: flying is here to stay and f'n1 not going to 1ness with the realities nf life. I've been hoo ked on aerial form s of transportation since 1940, when $5 bought me a l0·1nin ute hop in a s puttering biplane al the ftli ssour1 State 1-~air in Sf.>dalia .. Since then l have flO\\'n in cverytning from the Roc>111g 747 to the 65-hp Aeronca t 'hamp 111 11 hieh I too k flying ' ' -CJ lesso ns and held a proud one-third 0\1·ncrship. · The variety of crafl and {'ircu mstanees has been wide and stimulating: aerobatics \vith the Blue Angels; a Mach 2, 41h-n1inute flig ht fron1 Long Beach to San Diego in a Phanton1 1''4; the last blin1p ride out of Orange County's Li gh ter Than Air Base; a catapulted takeoff over the Pacifi c fron1 the Navy l c~rri~r U.S.S. IGtty l·la1vk: a hover ing, bouncing • rtde 111 a 1'.1arine helicopter engaged in lifting a crashed Army helicopter from a steep valley on the island ~f llav.•aii; a mind·bl o\1•ing. lo\v-!evel pass· over Orange Coun· ty's n1a1n run\vay at 250 1nph in a t\1·0-placc Navy jet. . BUT SOMEONE MAY have started trying to tel ! n1e so111e· thing alxlu~ JO years ago \\'hen ... \veil .. you 're going to find this hard to believe, but \vhen • , . a Marine jet knocked a Santa Fe train off the track at El 1'oro. I \vasn't in the plane that lime. But I was on the train. It was a pretty v.·iJ d scene. Five or six tars, including the club car I \vas in, v.•ere twisted and smashed and turned almost on their sides after Lt. Phillip Schmidt skipped his flamed-out F8 across the runway and smack into th e engine·s pathv.•ay. No scratches, no bruises. A fe\Y years later a Lockheed Lodestar on \Vhich l \Yas a pas· scnger lost.an engine on final approach at Los Angeles International. The plane is ca pable of a one-engine landing -but it \vas the other engine that had been giving us problems. Foam units and fire ll'ucks abou nded but 1ve sli d in nicely. There \vas one nagging thought. The l\1•0-engine Lodesta r can lan d on one engine. but It can't rnaintain a 15,000 fee l al ti!ude on one engin e. That morning v.·e had crossed the Ca nadian nockies into Vancouver. I PUT THINGS TO test agai n in August. 1969, \vhcn :i 12-pa~­ scnger civilian helicopter augured in on the larmac in the liltle town of Gladstone. Australia. It \Vas a five-second-fron1 -disaster affair in· valving B'asoli ne, flames and explosion. I \Vas nex t to last out. Singed eyelashes from running through burning gasoline. Last \VCek l 1vas :iboard i\ir California's Flight 103. an 8:30 a.m. hop to San 1-'rancisco \Vhen so n1eone may again h;:i ve been try· ing to get a 1nessage to n1c... · It started routinely enough. 'J'h e captain .:innounced \\"C \\'ere cleared for im111ediate takC'off, \Vhee.led the Roeing 737 onto the n1ain run1vay and. under full throttle, started that accelerating ride that to this day I find exhilarating . ~ -Let stand a Georgia election law pro- vision that an independent candidate rnust obtain signatures of 5 percent of the electorate to be place d tin the ballot. \Ve \Vere loaded -a full house of 11 5 passengers and a crc\V or five, pl us a brand ne\v load of fuel. So I '"'asn'l surprised \\'C 1vere using up quite a hunk of run1vay on takeoff. The to,ve r passed on my righ t. That's about halfway down the mile-long strip. Fron• Page 1 NY TIMES ... both constitutional rights and right.! under the New York State "freedom of Wformation·· law enacted last year. Deciding to bring the Tin1es case before the full court of appeals, Chief Judge Henry J. Jo~riendly said : "This case raises a question of such ex· traordinary imporl.ance that it should be heard by all the judges." The decisioo was reached in con- sula&.ion oyer the weekend with the two other judgt'S of the three-man panel, J. Joseph Smith and Paul R. Hays. The Washington testimony concerning Current sensitiy ity or Lhe Pentagon documents was given by Dennis Doolin, depuly assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs. It came as the government opened its c:ase by renewing its contention that publication of the mater ial by the pres! would resull in irreparable damage to nae t1onal security. The Times case v.·enl before the 2nd Circuit on appeal by the goYernment folloY•ing rejection Saturday of the ,government's request for a preliminary injunction against the newspaper. DAILY PILOT H•llll•.._. ,_ ...... ..., S. c:ta aa,. OMHGI: COAST P\.lat.llHlflll:i COMP'ANY' ••Mrt N. w.,1 ,.r .. 1111et11 .,.. 1"1A>H~ J•cli I. Cu~•'t' Vb ,.,......... .... 0-11 MIMtli' n ...... ic, ... u ..... Tlri1••• A. Mur--lrii111 ...,..irlt M lltt' a.rt •• H. 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U.11 .... , (11.....,., hhc:~-­lry um.r SUS -111 -,. mell u .rs ,.,..,..,, ......., . ..,,,.._.. tl:tl """'""''' IS THIS A GARBENSTANGEL? CAN YOU BUILD A BETTER ONE? DAILY PILOT Challenges Reader• to Build (or Find) Competition Modals • Traders Unite! Pilot Seekin~ Garbenstangels It's tlme for a small confession. The DA ILY PILOT has, itself, been runn ing this ad in the Trader's Para· dise ·Section of the classified ads: GARBENSTANGEL only slightly used. What \V ill you trade for good, used garhensl.angel with right· hande d zoenstift, power dippo!eck and battery • operated piddl~ bottom. Now. the truth is lhal the DAILY PILOT ha sn"t got a garbrnstangel - with or v.'ilhout a battery-operated piddlebotlom. But the response by reader!l to this ad and to si milar one in "f..iiscellaneous \\'anted "' and in th e Di.n1e-A· Lines bas convinced the DAI LY · PILOT Promolion Department that there are Jots of garbenstangels out there. Or. if they don 't exist , at least there are plenty of garbenslanglers v.·ho could build them. The promolion dC'partmcnt got so steamed up aboul ii. in fact. that it : has started a search for a sit.e for the lir~I Build a Bettr;r Garbenstangel Con· test and R.allye In the history of the Orange Coast. So excited is the promotion manager about the possibilities th at he ha! promised eYen 1(1 dig up some pri7.es for thr best garbenslanJ!el built (or found in the garage and du sted off for lhe event I nnd entercfl in the contest. · Top prize v.·ould be in money -moybe even An1l'nclln -and there v.•ou!d be olher rewards. But first the promotion manager has to pro\•e gi!rlx-11.~1 ; 11,l!rls and ga r· benstranglers really exist and could be enticed to part icipate in his proposed first.ever cont.est and raltye. - Already radio personalities are talking aboul. garbenslangels. re:~ders are inundating the DAit.\' PILOT v.•ith oHcrs lo trade. buy or traffick in gar, benstangelN!JOme of lhe letters will be published during the nex t few da ys) and people are talking about garbenstangels ell over to~'lt. But to prove to the publisher, who pays the promotion manager's salsry and looks qulziically 11t expense account items such as "first prizr. Build a Better Garbenstangel Cnnle.!il ;:ind R~ll vt>."' i1 will ht> necessary rr,. '·ue garbenstangel fans or the DAILY PJLOT audence lo un1l behind I t. Agree lo build a garben~tangel -or at least find one to displa it the coupon below and assurt U1r world of lls rlr~l Build a Better Carben,_ ..sel Contest and R.a:llye. --------------Ye.s, 1 will build a Carbenslange:I -or launch a search for on!! T can -I I I I put into shl'pe. !or e1hibiliM at lb, Rallye:. Please tell me more. Name •......•••...............•............... Address ........•.................•••.... , ...• Phone ..••.....•.•...• City ................................ Zlp _., ....... . r.tail to Promolion i\tanager. DAI L'' PILOT. P.O. Box !5li0 Costa t.lr~a. Ca. 112626 -------------- I I I I .1 -Refused to interYene in the perjury conviction of Marlin Sv.•eig, former ad, ministrative assistant to former Mou~e Spraker ,John W. ~lcCormack. Sweig clai med he \Vas used as a "whipping boy" in !he government"s innuen ce-peddling case against lobbyis! Nathan Voloshen. -Agreed tn review next !crn1 a lower <'OU rl ruling striking down a Georgia Jaw whi ch made abusive language punishable as a breach of the peace. -Denie d a hearing to publisher Ra lph C.Jnz burg who faces a jail sentence for a 196:! obsce nity conviction. The wiretap test case accepted by IQr court came fro1n Derroit. ~ U.S. Dislricl Judge Damon J. Keith of J:>ttroit ruled such ea vesdropping un· conslitutJonal in the rase of Lawrenre Plo1rnondon. minister or Defense of the \Vhite Panther Party. He v.·as upheld April 8. 19i l. by the 6th U.S. Circuil Cnurl of Aprica!s. The Suprcmr Court \\'ill hear the case ne:o;;~ fall or winter and decide it later by "rillen opinion. Ke1!h ordered Ille ,11ovcrnment to hand nvr.r i!s eavesdropping records to Plan1ondo11. nt·t•used of conspiring to blo1v up !he Cenlri!l lnt<'1!1gcnce Agency officrs ;i[ Ann Arhor . ~·lich. \\'here !hi' pnrty is based. The snve rn 1nent admitt ed that ronver.<;i!t.inns or Plamondon had been overheard by n1eans of a lap approved by ~1itchel!, We were five knots from V2 -that moment when the pilot "rotates" th e plane, or points tbe nose sky\\'ard. Suddenly a bang. Then full brakes and a mighty roar as the captain threw both engines into full reverse thrust. I know that r un\'.'ay. I kne'v there couldn 't he anv great stretch of it left between us and a ro1v of pa rked planes at the end. And beyo nd that the 50-foot drop onto Palisades Road. A HOSTESS SAID someth i n ~ about seatbelts over the PA. I braced my feet against the seal in front of nle and sa1v those Glad- stone flan1es all over again. \Ve s topped 'vil h precious li ttle yardage to spare. A normal abortion, if there is such a thing as a normal abortion. "This is your captain. ladies and gentlemen." said the calm voice (\vhy must they aJways be so damned tool?). "\Ve. ah. ble\v a tire on the noscgear and. uh. rather than risk Jetting a piece of rub- ber fly into the engine ... \Ye. uh. decided to halt the lan din g." [started t he old inner debate again -hO\\'.many tin1es. ol' Tom? But I stayed aboard after the new \\'heel an d tire had been put on. mi ssed the morning meeting in Palo Alto. n1i ssed the 7 o'clork flight home out of San Jo'ra nc i~co. n1issed the 7:40 flight out of San Jose lo Orange ('ounty, fle\v PS;\ to Los Anj!eles. nussed the la st commuter flight to Orange County. leased a car, drove ho1nc and had a TV dinner at 11 o'clo<.:k. No messages. Aftershock Jitrg les Los Angeles Basin LOS ANGELES (AP\ -A rnoderatc earthquake shook pa r1" or the Los Angeles <\rea al 9·01 <1,m. loday, ap- parently another aftershock of the Feb. fl major tremor. There were no reporls of major dan1age , ?llhough one 1nfln !old polire. hi!l refrigeralor \\'as knocked over. Telephone service was dlsru pled 1n one area of the San Fernando Valley. An Exceptional l nvest rnent! Estate, Ladies Diamond Ring e 10.,6 CT. e FINE AMERICAN CUT e BEAUTIFUL MOUNT- INGS, 14K WHITEGOLD, I SWIRLING PRONGS e LIGHT CHAMPAGNE COLOR e VVSI CtARITY GuarantMCI to Apprei•• At 40 % Mere Than You Wiii Pay You must !ee this beautiful diamond ring. A buy such fl:S this i.s rare. Come in and ask for Bob or Dom RaciLi. DOM RACITI *OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK DIAMOND GUARANTEE When you buy • di•mond from u1 • we wlll guarante• that diamond to apprei .. at 40'/. MOR:E thin you peid for it or your money back. C•n you do a1 well el1twher•l COMPARE . i•~~~RT~~;~~~rrA ~ ~oati ~ 4~s..i:c::;~;:: llome Of Fin e Je"'"·elry -646--7741 j I i I H11ntiugt.oa Rea~h Fountain Valley • Today'• Flaal N.Y. Steeb VOL 64, NO. 147, 3 SECTIONS, H PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 2 r. ·i.1r TEN CENTS Airport Plan Hit Grand Jury Proposal Criticized ' '"' • DAIL'( "lLOf 'hOr. •1 Al111 Cllrlll11 HUNTINGTON BEACH FIREMEN FREE PICKUP TRUCK DRIVER FROM WRECKAGE Spect1cu\er Cra5h Pinned Victim Undel' Tree, left Him 'S1ti1f1ctory' Firemen Win Battle, Save Truck Driver Huntington Beach firemen worked for m suspense-laden minutes this morning to free a driver ...,.,.i in a crw;hed pickup truck th at landed up.side down underneath a tree. After jacking up the roof of the col- lapsed cab, the firemen pulled Frank Brosky, 56, free and he was whisked to f-{untington Inlercommunity Hospital with apparent head and hand injuries. A r;pokesman said later the Huntington Beach man was in "satisfactory" con- djUoh. The spectacular crash occurred at 8:45 a.m. on Talbert Avenue opposite Good Shepherd Cemetery and near the in· ter.section with Hartlund Street. Onlookers told pol ice that the truck ap- parently was overtaking another vehicle on Talbert Avenue -both were west4 bound -when the truck caught W curb ntar Hartlund Street and mounted the skiewalk. 'Rle truck dem olished & Ore hydrant. careened about 2fJ feet through a vine-fill· ed garden at 8322 Talbert Ave .. uprooted all elm tree, knocked down part of a brick wall and finished upside down aga inst another tree, with the elm still on lop of il. The truck came lo rest only four feet from lhl' bedroom Qf a home at 8312 Ta lbert Ave A neighbor. 1\lrs. Eunice t-.1cColister, s11 id she heard U1e sound of crashing metal and ran out of her home to find othE'r ne ighbors hosing the truck "'hich was still smoking. Crowds then wa tched in suspense as firemen set about rescuing Brosky, 18432 Patterson St., Huntington 8 each . Branches were cut away and rireman Bret Moorhead , the life support man. called into the cab to c2.\m the driver and bandage hi'! head wound. "We were unable to pull him out because he was a UUle overweight," Capt. Bob Baker said. "Also "'e were careful not to manhandle him because although he seemed okay, we did not know what back injuries he might have." The fire crews were finally able to slide the driver out on a board after they had j&eked up the roof of the cab. The driver ol the olher vehicle was not lnjured. Court Agrees to Co11sider .Wiretap Issue Next Term WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court agreed today to rule next term on "'hether the government may tap th e telephone of anyone it believ~ to be .I'll threat to national security without ob- taini ng e<1nsent from a federal judge. The lest case to be heard next fall or winter inv olves a mounting dispute over a claim by Attorney General John N. Mitchell that the government's right of self-protection surmounts ;iin individual's right or privacy in sec u r j t y in· vestigations. Mitchell has assumed authority to ap- Resignation Prompts Nixon, Teamster Meet M!Af\11 BEACH (AP) -James R. Hof- fa's formal resignation as president of the gia nt Teamster's Union wa.o; an- nounced today and President Nixon promptly arranged a visit ·with membera:· of the union's executive board . A Teams~er spokesman to ld reporters shortly be for e Nixon's arrival at the Playboy Pl aza Hotel, whe r the execu tive boa rd was in session, that Hoffa 's written resignation had been received Sun day night. He said Frank E. Fitzsim mons wa.s sworn in a5 the new pres ident of lhe 2,000.000 memher union this morn ing. Hoffa has been in federal prison , on a jury t<impering cnnviclion. since March 1967. He has unsuccessfully sought parole. On June 3. he let it be known be would relinquish the presidency of t h e Teamsters. Nixon's closed i;ession with the union executive board marked the first time any President has attended a Teamster function since prosecution of Hoffa began during the administration of President John F. Kennedy. However, Fi tzsimmon.o; wa3 invited b)' Nixon to a dinner for union ch.ief3 at the White House last Labor Day. prove te.lepbone wiretaps in such i1- 1tances but in the test case, lo be decided by 1 written opinion, the Justice Dtpart· ment Jost oft two lower court rulings. Jn other actions, the C'Ollrt: -Ruled it is not mandatory for states to prOvide jury trials for juveniles even for offenses which would require 8 jury for an adult. For the majority, Justice Harry A. Blackmun said such a pro- cedure for juveniles "is the statt.'s privilege and not its obligation . ., -Let stand a Georgia .election law pro- vision that an inde pendent candidate must obtain 3ignatures of S percent of the electorate to be placed on the bal!ol. -Refused to intervene in the perjury conviction of Martin Sweig, former ad· ministrative as sistant to former House Speaker John W. McCorma ck. Swtig claimed he was used as a "whipping boy'' in the government's inAuence-peddling cose against lobbyist Nathan Voloshen. -Agreed to review next term a lower court ruling striking do>A'n a Georgia law which made abusive language punishable a5 a breach of the peace. -Denied a hearing to pu hlisher Ralph Ginzbu rg who faces a jai! sc.1tence for a 1963 obscenity conviction. The wir etap test case accepted by the court came from Detroit. U.S. Di strict Judge Damon J. Keith of Detroit ruled such eavesdropping un- constitutiona l in the case of Lawrence Plamondon, minister of Defense of the \\'hite Panther Party. He was upheld April 8, 1971, by the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The Supreme· C.ourt will hear the case next fall or winter and decide it la~r by written opinion. Keith ordered the government to band over its eavesdropping records to Plamondon , accused oI conspiring to blow up the Central Intelligence Agency officel'! at Ann Arbor, Mich,, where the party is based, The government admitted that conversations of Plamondon had been overheard by means of a tap approved by Mitchell. A call to convert Los Al amitos Naval Air Station for use by commercial and general aviation was branded ''ill-ad- vised" today by Congressman Craig Hosmer <RrLong Beach). ln a stinging letter to the Orange Coun- ty Grand Jury relea sed today, Hosmer protested lhe Grand Jury recom· mendation that the Orange County Board of Supervisors try to acquire Los Al amito! for use as a public airport. "The area would be turned into a high Unification Bias Report Discounted By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI ot ""' Diiiy ,, ... llllf Charges that a county committee on !chool district unification is biased were discounted today by Steve Holden. a trustee of the Huntington Beach City (Elementary) School District. "The committee members are elected by all school districts. No one area has more weight than l'llnother . It looks at all of Orange County objecllvely," he said. Holden addressed himself to 1 request by Fountain Valley School District Superintendent Michael Brick that the Orange County Commitlet on School District Organization purge itself of six m~mbtrs. !rick .alleged th1t the committee was heavily '..stacked against a proposal for unification of the 52·!quare mile Hun- tington Be.ach Union H.igh School District. The propo!&I was authored jointly by lhe Ocean View School District and the Foun· tain Valley School District. Irregularities in the nomination of the membership have produced a voting bias Jn favor of the Hunlin gfon Beach City School District which is against the unification proposal, according to Brick. "Mr. Brick would apparently try to place members on the committee who look at his plan fl!lvorably," said Holden. "The comm ittee will take under ad vise- ment al! plal\s for unification and l'm su~ there will be other plan~ submitted." Brick's plan calls for splitUng the high school district into three separate school districts. each serving children from kindergarten through the 12lh grade. Adoption of the plan would mean the loss of both the Ocean View and the Hun· lington Beach City School Distric t as seoa rate entities. The comm1Uet will hold its first meeting on the Ocean Vzew • Fountain Vallty proposal June 24. Holden said his school board has neH.her re jected no r endorsed Brick's plan. He added 1hat uluma!ely hi~ dis- trict ma y advance a pla n nf its own. Holden sahJ ftirl her he had absn!ut.ely no intention of complying with Brick 's re· quest lo resi gn from the ro mmittee. Laos Costs Queried WASHINGTON IUPT) -Sen. Stuart Symington (0.Mo.), says the United States is spending $1 billion in economic and military aid for La0$. "The only published figure given to the people so far about what we're spending in Laos Is $52 million for economic aic!," Symington said Sunday. "Yet, I'm c~r­ tain in my own mind that ii you include the bombina that has taken place in La03. the flgure is over St billion." Thant Stricken At U.N .. Office, Calls Off Trip Story~ Trin1nphs UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -Secr•lary General Thant suffered ' ' 1 n in- disposiUon" at his office Salurday and his been indef""ltely confined to hls home by physlciam. It w1s announced today. A U.N. spokesman said Thant dtflnHe.ly had not suf fered 1 heart seizure but that the · n1ture of his Ulnw would not be kno1'11 pending the outcome oC mMkl.l lt.11l3. T'hant, 62, lmmediale\y cancelltd 1 lrlp lhiit wa1 to hive t8ken him IO the Soviet Union, Mongoll• ind Poland, with stops at Ethiopia and Switzerland. Th1nt h.u 11tid repeatedly r;lnce litst .January he would not be • clndidate for ree~Uon when hi~ Uirm as .ecretary gcntta.I e:mlres Dec. 31. lie said bnU. r1!blicly and prlv1tely that ont reaaon for !his decJ~lon wa11 extreme fatigue from 10 . 1 cars ln the office. Smash Hit Film Ends 26-week Stay at Newport By TEllR\' COVU:U: ff "" °""' ..... lltft "Love Story" has been • 21t-week affair the owners of Edwards Newport Cine ma won 't brush off as a "winter romance." "It was the biggest film in 40 years of business rot our circuit,'' 13JS Vic' Miller I assUitant to the vice pre.aldent or the .Edwa.rdl chain. When "Love Story" sheds Its last Lear Tu~l!lf at \be Newport Beach theater, more than 200,000 viewers will have 1ee11 ll there. "We RTOseed about hair a mlUlon dollars on it," Miller said. "If we oWTlf.d the Kleene1 concf'sslon we could have made a million." • All M1cGr1w and Ryan O'Neill took ovtr .tht Newport ICtterl on Ohrlatm11 d11y for 1n e-icluslve run In Orange Coun· ty -2tl wee:ka of a cluslve run . • • One otMr Dr8Jlll• County ·111tater. 111 Buena Park1 also bad an uclUJlve con- tract on ll. . ''Thil wu the lonll:ett any flbn h11s ever run in Orange County.'' Miller td· ded. "H's a co:od emotional picture. one Of I kind." "The critics knocked it. p.-e It lousy reviews," ht continued. "But J think ~ pie were tired of tM su:ploltaUon and vlcltnte shewed down their' Urroata. "It's just a beauUfuJ movie. people assodale with II. lt'a been done before under different titles. It's a good emo- tional picture. Some girls saw It 14 tJ mes." He 1&id the Ed,ardll chain bouaht lht film lut rwnmer, before it w1111 rtleastd. Christma:a day was the beglnnln(I of "Love Story" in all parts cJ. U1e country. "Newport II warea ~ ~ ll>t premiers, just like Hollywood. People 10 to the movies here," Miller said. He counted the 200,000 people who wat~ "Love Story" and estimated that Ogure ft nve and a half Umes the popula· Uon cf Newport Beach. "Love Story" even out pulled the Edwa'rda eeo:>nd biggest film. "Airport", which ran eight wttb at the Newport CJpe_ma and drew slightly more than 100,000 fans. "We Ulought busines1 was good then. nOw look. We've 1lready bought 'lbf: GOdfathtr' for the Newport thealtt. ''We're buying BOme films th11t haven't even been made yet," Miiier said. " 'Lqve Story' bad what we call 'legs.' lt drew people to Ne~ from San Diego, S.n Bernardino and Pasadena ." "ft wUI h< lib l°'lnC an old friend when wt take it off iht ceen." • decible sinkhole just like tvery othet commercial airport, despite aU lht pious promises airport promoters customarily make to lull nearby homeowners into false feelings of security," Hosmer said. "I cap find absolutely oo justification for the premeditated dooming of rtsidents of Los Alamitos and neighb or ing Rossmoor and Seal Beach to this fate." Hosmer said that Weat Orange County already has access to co mmercia l and general aviation facilities at the Lona Beach Mwiicipal Airport, lw than five miles away. ''In my opinion demand& for dvillan use of Los Alamitos right nut dam' to an ex.isling commercial airpor~ just because: it i.! barely wHhin the Orange County boundaiy. are ill-a dvi1ed/' the Congressman said. He added he would rather &ee the runways bulldozed out to eliminate (See HOSMER, P11e 21 6overtament Claim War Papers Case , Faces 7 Judges NEW YORK <AP) -A hearing on the govemmenfs claim that the New York Times should be barred from further publication of a secret Pentagon study of the Vietnam war was po.stponed today to allow the case to go before 1 full seven- judge panel of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Tuesday. The government which was defeated in ils move to stop fur ther Times Jlblica- tion in a lower court, had been acOeduled to go btfore a three-man appeals panel this morning. Jn Washington, meanwhile, the govern- ment argutd in U.S. District Court that documenta from the Penta1on atudy used by the Washington PO.!t In assembling its storiea contain Information .aJ)out current operational plans ln the war. Both the Times and the Post remained under restraints not to publish article• about the study pending outc<lme of the court actions. Prior lo the gove rnmenl's effort! lo stop publlcalion. the Tilne! published three Installments from the study and the Post two. In a brier filed for the appeals court. the Times argued that a forced return of the classified documt!nts woukf violale both constitutional rights llnd rig hts under the New York State "fr eedom of information" law enacted last year. Deciding lo bring the Time3 CRSe before the full court of appeals, Chief Judge Henry J . Friendly said: "This case raises a ques tion of su ch e1· traordinary importance that It should be hea rd by all the judges." The decision wa s reached In con- sulation over the "'eekend with !ht two other judges of the three.man panel, J. 'Lack of Candor' Cited in Nader Attack on Nixon WASHI NG TON (AP) -Consumer ad· vocate Ralph Nader today acCUSt!d the Nixon Administ ration of a lack of candor in its request for $250 million in federal loan guarantees for Lockheed Aircraft C.Orp. Nader. lestifying before the Senate Banking Committee, also accused the company of refu sing to disclose needed information. He said thla ia typical ot the "fl ippant attitude" which U.S. cor· porations have toward la1payers. Nader's lestimony was given along with that of three economists who aald approval of loan guarantees wouJd vlolatl free enterprise principles. One of the economists was Thomas C. Moore, .I'll professor 1t Michigan State University who until last yeartr worked for the Council of Economic Advise.rs and re· mains R consultant to the. council. Moore told a newsman he was testify- ing as an economics profesaor and his view8 did not necessarily ref.resent thole of the three.member counci . -..... Nader 1ald the 1dmln is tratlorf di.splayed a lack of candor by 1ubmlttlng proposed legislation that did not name Lockheed apeclflcally, Although lhia was done to avoid makJng the bill a private piece of legislation that wou ld be vulnerable to the obiedionl ol one congressman, Nader said the Nue in this cue Is too Important. Nader alM> ICCUJed Lockheed of ·"flsc:al irresponsibility " for I~ inability to atay within tht bounds of major military con- tract!. He aciiised '1!e company or buying ln or purpot!ely under biddln1 to v.:in fsl defense contracts which have so {tr cogt it $600 mllllon 1n losses. Already reeling from those lOSM:s, Lockheed neerui the •~ mllllon lft meet dellverlu of IU LIOll TrlStar altbul. Deliveries havl'! ~n deheyed by the receivership of Roll1-lloyee Ltd ., Which la maklq lhe caalnes for Ule Trtstar. Joseph Smith and Paul R. Hays. The Washington testimony co~lng current sensitivity of the Pentagon documents was given by Dennis Doolin, deputy assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs. It came as the government opened its case by renewing its contention that publication of the material by the press would result in Irreparable dama1e to n1- tional security. The Times case went before tht 1Ild (Set TIMES, P•&e 2) Council to Hear 3 Major [t,ems In Huntington Fluoridation, Oighl.~ controt1 1 t Meadowlark Airport , l'llnd thi pre--zonin& of 421 acres of Balsa Chica lands are the three main topics before the Hwitingtoo Beach City C.ouncil tonight. Councilman Ted Bartlett said tbi3 morning he will ask Councilmen to re- scind their decision of last· August to add fluorides t.o city water sup plies and to put the question to the voters. He wanl3 the question to be placed on the ballot for the councilmanJc election in April , 1972. Bartlett said he beneve1 he lw tht support of at least three other coon. cil men for this move -Mayor George t.·fcCracken , Jerry Ml!ltney and Donald Shipley. "We. may run into a little trouble tying it into the council election.'' he said, "but since all I am asking for is 8 straight Yes or No vole on fluoridation I don't really 6ee how it would make any difference. to anyone running. "Since the people seem to want a vnte oo it, I don't see any reason why t.hey l'llhouldn 't be given a chance to have their say," Bartlett added. The councilman emphasized lhat he la not proposing the freedom-0f-cholce elec- tion that is !>ting urged by the Huntington Beach Citizens for Pure Water, a group that is circulating petltkma that would in effect require two election! before Ouoridatlon is approved. About $70,000 hM been budgeted for Ouoridalion in Huntington Beach. Pilob who fly out of Meadowlark Airport may t~ out 1n afnngth to op- pose an ordinance that ls belnf in- troduced that would ban night flyin1. The law, proposed when homeowners (See FLUORIDE, P11e 2) We•tller The weatherman predlcta: hacy sunahloe today and 'l'uudar with palchy fog along th• c:Out fn Ille morning hour!. Highs todliy and Tuesday 70 at the be1cbts. 80 In- land. Low tonight 55 to a . INSIDE TODAY. Tht Coata Meaa Civic Ptarr· hoUlt it ·winding up ill 1e0$or& with a prodacctkm of William. Soro111Jn.'.1 "The Btautifwl Pto- pl<." Th• plaw ;, nvi<wcd 1- EYittrtaituntnt. Pagc-J9. INll"' • -, .. 1. c;1r...,,. .. • Nll .... 11 .._ ';! Cl\edll!lt 11, • ...... _ Clllttlfllll ... ~ sww••,.,... .. Cll!llcl • 5'.:i::-.... ·--.. .. .. ~-'"''"' " M l<llO•ri.1 f'.,. • l-...... ... .. ·~ ...... -.-. , .. ,, -• , .. _ ...,, ...... :1... • ..... _" " -· '".!l ... ,._ " -·- r • - DAILY PILOT 300,000 Sun W orshi}lers Jam Coast Beaches · The heavens parted tJ1c usual !OYl clouds and log rouLloe, the water1 wlU'zn. ed, a11d 300,000 people flocked to the be1chtr alon,c the Orange Coaat Sundly. Newport Beach lifeguards described the June weekend scene as being "almost August." They estimate some 105,000 people enjoyed the last day of Spring at the beach of Newport Beach. Surf ran on- ly two to four feet and wall'r tern· peratures c\inibed lo nearly 68 degrees on Sunday. Llfcguards logged 83 rescues. Saturday and 27 on Sunday. Huntington Bus Service 'Can Be Cut' A supporter of the recently app,rovcd likent tax override in the Huntington Beach Union lligh &hool District today urged the district economize ti y eliminating student transportation. Ronald G. Wymer, 21682 ~lilaria Circle, Informed district Superintendent Jack S. Roper by letter lhat it is an "unnecessary Expense to provide bus service for perfectly healthy young people.·• "There is no reason v.·hy a heallhy :young person cannot either walk or ride a bicycle to school," said Wymer. "If the parent feels that this is detrimental to their child then let them provide less 1itrenuous transportaUon . ·• A reduction in transportation for the district's 1$,000 students had been under consideration in thl" event the override had fail ed. With the passai;e of the measure the bu!les wlll continue lo run, according to Rope r. Roper said there Is a possi bility cf (lverhauling the district's bus system in the future to bring about more economic and efficient v.'ays of getting tbe students to school. "We're ~·illing to take a look at things. il-fa ybe it would be possible to develop a transportation system in combination with the city," he said. Roper added that he 'vould be against eliminating the system entirely si nce the access to the district's five campuses is provided primarily through freeways and .arterial highways without sidewalks. "It would be just too dangerous to walk and cross." he said. The S2·MJUarc mile Huntington Beach linion High School District provides da ily bus service only for students who Uve at least two miles from school and lhO!e v1ho are handicapped. In his letler lo the !Uperinltndent, Wrmer also urged adoption ol a year· rounCI att.endance pl111 and the ellmlna. lion of "overJpecialized" courses. Fron• Page 1 HOSMER ... pressures for civllian access to the fa cill· ty. Hosmer said he has no personal preference for the future use of the land -be it military reserve flying. Navy housing or turning the area into a park - but. ''I will do eve rything possible personally and as a member of Congress to see that this high-density residential area is not subjected to rommercial or general aviation. 'ft'h;ch It does not need and ""·hlch b@longs elsewhere.'' Hosmer re<"ognized the rrquests of other military organization! to US!: Los Alamilos for flight training activi!ies. He said lhe Army, Air force and California Na ional Gua rd "could be expected to be as clrcum~pect in their operatioris as f(lrmerly the f\avy \l'as. and it appears at this time that these reques~ may be honored, although the final decision is yet to be: made.'' DAILY PILOT OltAHGE CO.UT PU•LllHIMct COMrANY ••btort N. W19' Pr""-.,.. PulllllMf' Jt&lE ., c.,w Vkt '"'Id'"' _. 0...1 ~ 1lio1111• Kttwlf E~lter 11i11111• A. M"'''''"' N.1,....1111 EdllCt Al111 o;,.;,. W•I Or•noo C-1'f Ed/lot Alb1rf W . l1t11 At1•:l•ll ldllgl' Hptf .. ,_ .._. Offtc• 11111 a.aclri lt•l1.,1r4 M1J11~1 ""'',."' r,o. ••• 1to, •2••• _.._ c..-...-: m ,..,.t ... ..._ 0.19 ...-., Jll W..t ••r S!""' .. ....,...,. ._..I .. !(,,....,....,. SWl-rf a.. CJM11111W • """" 11 C..1111N lll•I Tet1plis• l114J Mt ... JJ1 • ClmllW ,,....,. .. MJ..1671 ~i. im, °'""' c.ett ~lttrilflt ...... 1. ,.. -....... 111 ...... , .... •111t11 --., ~ ....... ti "'""" _., .., ·~ .. """"' ....... ,.,.. 1111Mi.. .. Clllll'l"tllll -· ~ "'" ....... Jlllll 11 N.._, I.ell AM C91fl Mft&, C..11""'41, ~-111 ur""' 11,» _.,"'!'fl .., INll u .11 -"'· "'"""" ............. it.It -"'""" One I-year old child drot,1,•ned or! tht new Itvtne Marini, I.be lone u11edy oL the weekend. In San Clemente, ~.000 bl1ch&oen were lotaed for both c:l•Y•· Ufeiu1rdl Sunday 1lded 1 10-year-old girl who escaped drowning in the alx-root deep trench offshore from lht!: city·_, north beach •. lrenl!: Castro or 1606 Las Bolas, made 1l to shore unassisted and then colla psed in the sand, lifeguards reported. She was taken to South Col.st Community Hospital for obMrvaUon. Re1cu11 &lone the Oran1e Coa1t from lt1I 1t1ch to kn Clltmtnte were ll1bt ever the wMktnd. 1Jleruard1 credlt th• d.lmlnllhlnl surf and the resultizl1 near dlsappt!:arance of side currents and rip· tides. With 30,000 persons e!timated at Laguna Beath, lifeguards cn1y logged eight rescues, none serious, for the two days. Laguna Beach guards gave first aid to DAILY l'ILOT Siii! l'~fll JERRY YEAGER DISPLAYS DESMOSTYLUS FOSSIL Fountain Valley Mtn Dig Up Or1nge County Hi5tory Fossil Pursuit Pair Find Skull of Desniostvlus By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 Ill• 0•111 •Utl 11111 Digging for a desmostylus is not the kind of hobby that attracts a large follow- ing. After all, few people know that a desmostylus is, much less where to find one. But l1''0 Fountain Valley residents have been pursuing the elusive bea st 1vith some success for the pa st year and .i haH. And for their efforts Jerry Yeag er and Don Bunge have uncovered lhe skull ol one that ls nearly complete. A desmoslylus is a prehi s t oric predecessor of the modern hippopotan1us. Scientists believe it inhabited the coast or California about 2$ million years ago. The desmostylus \\·as an amph1hious animal and was one of the larger quadrupeds of il!'i timf'. It led on shl'll fish which it pried up l\'Llh his tusks, and algae. Remains or the animal have been found In J apan and along th~ Pacific: Co<'!st from \Vashington to Orange Count~· The animal is thought to have existed during the f-,fiocene and Oligoc:ene: Epochs whic:h began about 38 million years ago and fnded with the coming nf the Pl iocene Epoch about 10 million years ngo. The Ice Age or Pleistocene Epoch which produced the mammal fossil~ now being uncovtred in Newport Beach's t:p- Valley f rustees Askin~ Governor To Move Free,vay • FounLaln Valley School DI st r i c: l trustees are appealing tG Governor Reagan to eliminate or r~·route the Hun· tington Beach Freeway (Route 39 ) In Fountain Valley. District Superinlende:nt Michael Brick received the go-ahead for the appeal arter he had reported to tM board that the st.ate Highway Commission had failed to respond to a recent district request for new hearings on the route. The 1ehool diJtrlcl ha11 been fightlng the route. since il was adopted .by the highway commiJalon t~·o years ag o. The route would wipt out the di11trict offic~s and warehow:e near Newland Street and Talbert Avtnue. Brick cont.endJ Founllln Valley could become "IOOt city" if the route ind qther freew•YI are built. He noted th•l with \he San Dltgo Frteway and the: prof)03C:d Orange Free'llo'a)' and the mO\'e by Newport Beach forcta to move the Coast , Frttway Wand lt would mean !hat the community would be 1urrounded by frteways. The Fountain V1Uey city council I$ alao loo king at ways or keeping the Hun- tington Beach Fret'llo'IY out of lht city. M11yor Ed Just has 11e.ld lhat th~ dty would re.fuse to ti£n a freeway lgJ'ff- n1t.nt with the statt If necessary. per Bay began only tv.·o million years ago. Ye:ager. ~·ho keeps the fossilized skull in a crate. in his garage, s.9id he and Bunge uncovered it while digging in Trabuco Can)'On. Dr. Shelton Applega te .. a specia list in ,·ertebra le paleonwlogy from the Los Angeles Muse um of Natural Histo ry, said 1he find is significant because it is the first of iLs kind in the Orange County area. ''There is only one romplete skeleton or a desmostylus which is in a. museum in Tokyo. \Ve have: several piec:es of skull and several leelh, but \1·e don·t have a complete .slru!I in our collection,'' he sa id. Applegate expressed hopes of getting logethe:r with the tv;o men to share the:ir finds. )'eager said he "·ould like to Joan the .skull and some of the other finds from the Trabuco Canyon dig to the museum, but fnr the moment the fossils are mak· ing the rounds nf some ()f the local i.chools. "rm hrsitanl lo part wit.h somt of this sturf." )'eager said. "I'm sort of proud of it 11nd I don't "'ant to givr ii up." The de:smostylu.~ isn't !he cnl.v ~\f!nifi· l'anl find the t~·o have un covered. )'eager has a collettion of fossililed sra ~hells, shark teeth and large vertebrae. all ol which are fairly common in this area. But he: has also found lhrff very crude tools which some form of early man may have used lo crush shells or bones with. Like the fossils. theat!: tools have been f'xamined by officials from the ;..cs Angeles museum who vouch lor their authenticity. •'Actually, they 58 Y there: are: only two tools, but I.ht!: third stone was found in the sc.me place and l think it shows definite signs of ~haping," Yeager explained . "I'd like lo find the remains of the man that used the tools." He said he and Bunge found th• demos!lylu.~. the teeth, shells and t.oo\a in almost the sam(' level of strata which has led him to conclude thal none of I hem u'as round in th e places "'ht.re they were originally d'posited, From Pa9e 1 FLUORIDE ... prot~led noi~e and nighl fiying at Meadowlark sev eral months ago . would ba n all but emergency landlng.1 and ta keoffs from the Alrport two hoW'I after sun,,et or not later lhan 10 p.m. The. Boise Chtca pre-roning is to tone 299 acres or land o"·ned by Si(nal Properties to sing le family homes, " aces to commercial and 70 acres to apartment use$. Tbe plRMing commission has approved the sing le family and commercial pro- posal•, but i1 recommending lhal the apartment zoning ht delayed unUI 1n ordinance Is prepared a!Uowlng these acrts to be built 11 a pl1nned re1ldenllal development. flt victims of mloor beach accident.!! in· cludin1 !ht re1CUaclt.atlon of a young Anaheim woman who collapsed on the · Main Beach. At Huntington Beach city beaches, llfe1u1rd1 e11lmated 80.000 persons on Saturday :11nd 95.000 people on Sunday. We:ekend rescues totaled 132 from a surf that ran only one to th ree feet. The city 's Selective Enforcement Detail Jogged 100 arrests of adults and juvenilt!:s ever the weekend on charges ranging from minors possessing alcohol to suspi· cion of p<issession of narcotics for .!iall', and car burglary. Clpt. Arland Vasher, commander or the Huntington Beach Patrol division, said, "\Ve want people to know we have a beach where peQple can come to enjoy themselves. But if they corne lo break the law, "1e \\'ill see to 1t they go tB jail, lorthwilh," he said. Huntington Stale Beach estimated crowds at 20,000 both days and rescues totalled 30. Bolsa Chica Beach attendance y,·as 10,000 both days. Oranse County Harbor Oep1rtment reported "heavy routine day1" but no dramatic rescues although s e v t' r a I sailboats 11ppC'd over in the. med1u1n surr. They reported light winds fr'Otll the southeast over rnuch of the v.·eekcnd and lhe low clouds and fog usually expected in June only Hm1t f'd \'is1bility on Satur· day. This morning winds frorn the northwest at 1$-2$ knots were reported with visibillty or from three to lour miles. Study 'Not True Picture~ LBJ Says Pentagon Papers Distort His Viet Role NEW YORK (AP) -Former President Lyndon B. Johnson believes th!: .secret Pentagon study of the Vietnam war does not reflect the true picture of his role, ac- cording to reports in Time and Newsweek magazines. Time, in a report on the Pentagon ~tudy controversy, !aid that Johnson feels the documents "do not tell the true story because they are mostly con- tingency plans.'' Ne"·sweek said Johnson believes the * * * From Pagel NY TIMES ... Circuit en appeal by the government following rejection Saturday of the government's request for a preliminary injunction again.5t the newspaper. [n Washington, U.S. District Court Judge Gerhard Ge:se!J heard argument on a government requ est to enjoin the Post. Last week, Gese ll denied the government's request, but the District of Columbia appeals court overruled hin1 and sent the case back to hin1 for a hear· ing. - <lesel/ interrupted Doolin during hi s trstl1nony and moved the hearing into l'lerre! session lor further exploration of security mailers. In his New York ·rimes ru ling Satur· day, U.S. District Court .Judge f\1urray Gurfein rejected the government's con· lention -prese ntrd Friday by U.S. Al· lorney \Vh itney r\orth Seymour Jr. - that "inte.r\\·oven materials io the documents still have vitality and affect military matters and present and fut ure military plan.~ and policy." Gur.fein ordtred closed-door bearings in !he T1n1es case, bu t in his ruling denying the: governmen t request said: ''Without revealing the content cf the secret testimony, suffice it to say that no cogent reasons were advanct d a~ to why the!!!: documents txcepl in the general framework of embarrassment previou~ly mentioned. \\'ould vitally affect th·c security of the nation." Arguinent was expected to be much shorter than the nine hours of_ open court ;:ind secret .se!lsion testimony heard by Gur fein Friday. \Vha1ever lhe decision by the appeal!! c:ourl. it appeared certain to touch off a scramble by elU1er the Times or the government lo get the cast-lo the Supreml' Cou rt ror revie1v asking for im· 1nediale relieL Such emergency relief ptt1lions are usually address ed lo the Supreme Court JUS1ice presiding o\·er !he circuit 1n 11.·hich lhe case originales-in this case, Justice John t-.1 Harlan. Any decision by Gesell in the Post case would prohably be appealed immt!:diately to 1he court of Appeals there. S. l{orcans Kill Red study pr~nts a dishonest, distorted and biased picture 0£ his role and that the circumstances surrounding its being leak· ed to the Ne:w York Times "come close to treason." Quoting "thos e in Auslin privy to his feelings," Newsweek said the former president sees ••the ghostly hand or Robert Kennedy" on lhe Pentagon study. According to this view. Newsweek reported, the late New York senator needed an issue for his intended 1968 challenge to Johnson for Lhe Democratic presidential nomination and "pinned his hopes on Vietnam:· The study was crdered by then Secretary ct Defense Robert S . 1'.lcNamara . Newsweek said Johnson con· sidered McNamara "a Kennedy man.'' Time. which noted that it gave no $0Urce for Johnson's views, said Johnson feels that his greatest mistake in the war was waiting until he had been in office for 18 mont hs before sending American soldiers into battle "for hy then he felt that Vietnam was aln1ost lost." Time also said Johnsen believes he made a mistake in "failing lo institute censorship. not lo cover up 111istakes. but to prevent the enen1y fro111 k1101\·i11g what lhe Uni led Slntcs was going lo dn nex-1 ·• Ncws"'cck !\Uoted [laniel l..:llsberg. the man Y1ho was na rncd by a forme r j\('w York Times nev;sman as the source or !he 'fimes' docum ents. as s;iying in an ln· lcrview l:ist week 1ha1 hr had !riPd unsuccessfull y to gel Henry Kissinger, President Nixon's foreign affairs ad visor. to read lhe studv. "Now he can· read it in the paprr:s." Ellsbt'rg 1\•as quotrd as saying in ::in in· terview at his Cambridge. ~lass .. home Goi1ig Abroad before he dropped out cf sight last \Vednesday. Ellsberg has not been seen publiclJ since, although he telephoned the ~lassachusetts Institute of Technology, where he i.s a research associate, on Fri- day W report that he v;as well. "'I'm flatt ered lo be suspectt!:d," he declared in the intervi~\V but he refused to say whe1her he was !he man who sup.- plied the study lo the Times. Newsweek said. Time said that McNamara hopes th at the entire report \\'ill be declassified and made available to the public. r-.1c.Namara. now head of the World Bank, was reported to feel that lhe ~ensational v.·ay in whic h the documents came lo light "is tragic'' but that t~ country now shoul d "get on with the la.sk o[ learning" from them. Accident Victim 'Sa ti sfactory' An ll·year·old \lunl!ngton Beach girl is listed in saiisfa c!ory condition today •t Pacifica llospita l nfter she suffered a bro ke n leg in a traffic mishap Friday aflernoon. Police reJlOrt that Gai l C. Reis. of 7691 Ontario Drive. 1Vas crossing Pacific Coast Highway at 8th Street when she was struck by a car dr iven by David .J. Boylr . 18. of 17352 Santa Luc:ia SI .. Fountain Valle\', Triiffi(' officers are continuing in. vesligation in the case today . SEOl.L 1.1,r1 -South Korean forces ldllf'd one ,\orrh Korean Jntruder and captured another in a clash early Frid.av nn Sukmo Island, 35 miles northwest Or St!:oul . the Counlrr-Espionage Operations Command announ ced today. 'J'hese Huntington Bea ch_ girls .\\'ill be s.tudying in foreign la nds this sun1n1er under an America n Field Service program. Sue Pestolesi of Ediso n .1-ligh . Scho ol defl) is going to Argentina. \\·hiJe 'frich \\1aters of A1ar1na lligh School goes to Turkey. Both \Viii return in the fa U for thei r senior ye-ars al their respective schools. An Exceptional I nvest1nent! Estate, Ladies Diamond Ring e 10.16 CT. e FINE AMERICAN CUT e BEAUTIFUL MOUNT- INGS, 14K WHITEGOLD, I SWIRLING PRONGS e LIGHT CHAMPAGNE COLOR e WSI CLARITY Gu•r•nt~ to._~ .At .40% More Th•n _You Wiii P•y You must s~diamond ring. A buy such as this is rare. Come in and ask for Bob or Dom Raciti. DOM RACITI *DUA UNUSUAL MONEY BACK DIAMOND GUARANTEE Whon rou buy • dl1mond from UI we wil 1u1r•ntff th1t diamond to •ppr•ise 1t W I. MORE tli•n you J)o'td for It or your money back. Can you do •• well el1ewhere? COMPARE . J e1uelr'! &. cfoan ./J .,._ _ llll NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA ~ Home Of Fine Jewelry -641>7741 I I • ' Son1 ebocly-Up Tl1 er e Does n't Lil\:e Ou1· Eclito1· By THOMAS KEE VI L 01 tri. D•llT Ji'llOI Slt ll Either J'1n indestructible or J'm not getting the message. Don'l ge t 1ne "'rong: flying is here to stay an d I'm not going to mess \vi th the rcaliues of Ille. f've been hooked on aerial rorn1s of transportation since 1940, "'hen $5 bought me a IO-minute hop in a sputtering b1pla11e at the lt1issouri State r~air in Sedalia. Since then I have flown in everything from the Boeing 747 to the 6.J-hp r\eronca Champ jn \vhich I took flying f ·.;$. • ~ lessons and held a proud one-third o'vnership. The variety of craft and circumstances has been \\'ide and st1n1uJat ing: aerobatics with the Blue Angels; a ~lach 2, 4 112-minu te flight from L-Ong Beach lo San Diego in a Phanton1 F4; the last blimp ride oul of Orange County's Lighter Than Afr Base; a calapullcd takeoff over the Pacific from the Navy l c~rr1~r U.S.S. Killy lfa\vk; a hovering. bouncing ride 111 a Marine helicopter engaged in lifting a ~rashed Arrny helicopter from a steep valley on the _ island ~f 11a\vaii; a n1ind-blov.'ing, lo\v-level pass over Orange Coun- ty's main runvvay al 250 mph in a two-place Navy jet. . BUT SOMEONE MAY have started trying to tell me some- thing about 10 years ago \11 hen ... \veil. you're fioing to find this harcf to believe. but '11hen .. _ a Marine jet knocke a Santa Fe train off th e track at El Toro. I Y.'asn'l in the plane that time. But I Y.'as on the train. It was a pretty \l'ild scene. Five or six cars, includ ing the <"lub car I \Vas in. \vere twisted and smashed and turned almost on their sides after Lt. Phillip Sch1nidt skipped his flamed-ou t FB across the run\vay and smack in to the engine's pathway. No scratches, no bruise~. A few year~ later ~ Lockheed Lodesta r on which I \vas a pa s- senger lost. an engine on fi nal approach at Los Angeles International. The. plane ts capable of a one-engine landing -but it was the other engine lhat had been giv ing us problems. Foam units and fire trucks abounded but \\'e slid in nicely. There \vas one naggi ng though t. The two-engine Lodestar can land on one engine. but it can't maintain a 15.000 feel allitude on one engine. That morning we had crossed the Canadian Rockies into Vancouver. I PUT THINGS TO test again in August, 1969, \\'hen a 12·pas· Senger civilian helicopter augured in on the tar1nac in the little town of Gladstone. Australia. It \Vas a fi ve·second·from·disaster affair in· valving s asotine. flames and explosion. I was next to last out. Singed eyelashes from running through burning gasoline. La st \VCek l was aboard Air Cali fornia's Flight 103, an 8:30 a.in . hop to San Francisco when someone may again have been try- ing to get a message to n1e. It started routinely enough. 'fhe captain announced \l'e \Vere cleared for lm1nediale takeoff. \Vheeled the Boein g 737 onto the n1ain run\va:v and. under full throttle, started that accelerating ride that to this day I find exhilarating. \Ve \Vere loaded -a full house of 115 passengers and a cre\v of five . plus a brand ne\1· load of fuel. So I \Vasn't surprised 1ve \\•ere u~ing up quite a hunk of run\vay on takeoff. The to\ver passed on my righl. That's about halfway d o\Vll the mile-long strip. \Ve \\'ere fi\•c kn ots fro1n V2 -that 1noment \Vhen the pilot ··rotates" the plane, or points the nose sky,vard. Suddenly a bang. Then full brakes and a mighty roar as the captain thre\v both engines into full reverse thrust. I knO\V that r un\vay. I kne\\' there couldn't be any great stretch of it lei]. between us and a ro\v of parked planes al the end. And beyond that the SO·foot drop onto Pall!Sades Road. A HOSTESS SAID ftome thing about seatbelts over the PA. T braced n1y feet against lht seat in front of me and saw those-Glad· stone flames all ove r agai11. \V e stopped \Vilh precious little yardage to spare. A nor1nal abortion. if there is such a thing as a nor1nal abortion. "This is your cal>tain, ladies and gentlemen." said the calm voice (\vhy musl they a v.·a)'S be so damned cool?). ;iWe , ah, bl e\v a tire on the nosegear and. uh. rather than risk letting a piece of rub- ber fly into the engine ••. \ve . uh. decided to hal t th e landing." I started the old inner debate again -ho1\' many limes. ol' Tom~ But I stayed aboard after the new wheel and tire had been put on , mi ssed the morning meeting in Palo ,\Ito, missed th e T o'clock flight home out of San fo'rancisco. missed the 7:40 fli ght out of Sa n J ose to Orange County, ~ew 'PSA to Los Angeles. missed the las t commuter fl ig ht to Orange County, leased a car. drove home and had a TV dinner at 11 o'cfock. No messages. 11 M~nddy, JUM 21, 1971 H DAILY PILO!' :f Co -astal Zone Hearings Slated Tht California IAsi&lalW'• is beginning to tum its attention to the flood of bills on the controversial supject of coastal 10nt pre..servaUan and management. The Assembly Plannin& and Land Use Committee will hold hearings on two of them Tuesday and the Senal.e CommHtee on Natural Resources and Wildlife w1!! lake. testirnony on four others ne xt Mon· day. Cities along the Californi a, coast ha.ve almost unanimously de<:lared their op- position to all o! them. Generally regar~ as the most far· rea ching and the most destru ctive to focal government, is a measure in· INXluced by Assemblyman Alan Sieroty t D-Beverly Hills) that would turn over all 2.t1thorily over coastal lands to a ~late agency. A bill by Assemblyman Pete Wilson (R- San Diego), similar to one narrov.·Jy de· feated last year. is regarded as !he most palatable by beach communilies since it would permi1 much more local control. It contains no funding provisions, ho\\·ever. They will be before the Assembly com· mittee Tuesday at 2 p.m. \Vilson's bill \rould involve control ot property l,OO{I yards inland, \Vhile Sieroty'a lncliides evuylhi!JI to the nearest mouatain peaks or five milt:t, whichevtr is less. Two of the bills before the Senate Com- mitltt are companion measures to the .assembly bills. Also before the senate panel, however, will be a bill by state Senator Ralph C. Dills ( D-San Pedro) that parzllels ~·Hson's bill, but would involve control up to two miles. State Senator. James Q, Wedworth, (D· ·Inglewood\ has su bmitted a bill c<lvering state environmental controls and state coastal acquis ition. State Senator Dennis E. Carpenter (R· Newport Beach) said persons planning on addressing the CQmmittees should be prepared to commen t on four e<>n- siderabons : -The form m new stale and local organiiations proposed by the bills; their makeup and ability to dell\ effecUvely with land use Wues in the coastal zooe. -The preparaticm of a slate plan for coastal z.onc conservalion and develop- ment: the seleclion of planning ob- jectives. responsibility for initialing the t>leme ots of the plan, and final adoption of the plan. -Land use development c6ntrol durinc the plahning procw; at what Jgvel or le'vel of government should proposall be revl~ed and bow should their ac- etplabillty be detennloed. -Particular objections to any tl tb1 hills. .. IS THIS A GARBENSTANGEL? CAN YOU BUILD A BETTER ONE? DAILY PILOT Chlll•n9e1 Re•d•r• to Build (or Fi nd) Competition Model1 VCI Professor Gelbaum Traders Unite! Recommended for Post Pilot S eeking Garbenstangels Dr. Bernard R. Gelbaum, professor of malhemalics and associate dean of the School of Physical Sciences at UC Irvine, Liz 'Co-stars ' In Circus Knife Throwing Show LONDON (A P) -Elizabeth Taylor ar- rived in London from Mexico todav tell- ing ho1v she round herself at the target end of a circus knife thro\\'er's dagger. "It all started as a bit of fun." said the sun.tanned movie star as sht> passed through Heathrow Airport. .. But J was vr ry scared afterward_" ~1 iss Taylor and her husband, Richard Burton, took a night off to visit a local circus near their house in Puerto Vallarta. · The spotlight fell on knife·thro\\·er Ale- jandro Fuentes. "I-le said something in Spaoish and I thought he \vanled to announce El izabeth and Int roduce her to the cro\\·d," Burton told ne\\'Smen_ "The nert thing l knew he was throw· ing daggers at her." ~-!lss Taylor said :· "What \\'e didn't kno1v was that the kn ifethrower was sa~·ing: 'ls there anyone brave enough to take a chance with my daggers?' "I-le mentioned my n.aroe and I went in· lo !he ring all smiles. thinking he was Just goi ng to introduce me. "Those knive s reall y thumped around. Richard suddenly jumped into the ring ovt>r the barrier. I shouted io him to stop. I don't know what he thought he could do." But the ne.xl thing Burton knew he was In the act himself, holding a bal loon in his mouth and another in his hand \\"hiie the performer burst them ~'ith a knife. has been recon1mended for appointment as vice president for academic affairs at the State Unive rsity of New York at Buf· fal o. Officials al the Buffalo campus. largest ln the New York system, said Gelbaum's appointment is expected to be confJnned by !he Stale Uni versity of New York Board of Trustees al a meeting later this month. Last month, Prort>ssor Gelbaum was honored by the UCI Alumni Association as lhe first recipient of its "Ex- traordinarius Award " as the individual '·who besl exen1plifies the spirit and purpose of UC!," as well as its Universi!y Serv ice AVf.,3i:d .. for distinguished service to Ul'e liniversi!y by facuUy. ·A key figure in the academic planning o[ the Irvine can1pus, Gelbaum curren11y serves as chairman of the Irvine Division of lhl' UC Academic Seoate. Professor Gelbaum came from the faculty of the University of Minnesota in 1964 to become professor and first chairman of the department of mathema1ics at UCJ . He wu aamcd I S>; associate dean of the School of Physical Sc iences in 1969. He organized a series of programs to upgrade mathematics education i n Orange County's public schools and he has designed and implemented an in- tegrated mathmatics program fo r kinderg11rlen through 12th grade leachers under which 150,000 studenls are cur. rcnlly studying mathematlcs in the grade schools. Dr. Gelbaun1 also rlirecls the Computer Oriented Mathen1 atic~ Program, a Na- !ional Science Founrtation experiment on the ef fectiveness of desktop compute rs in grade schoo l classroom inslruclion. In 1966. Dr . Celbaum helped to organize !he UCI Industrial Associates program, bringing together major in- dustrial commercial firms with I.ht Un iversity ror mutual educat ion a I research and support benefits. It's lime for a small confession. The DAILY PILOT has, itself, been running this ad in the Trader'1 Para· d1se section of the classified ads: GARBENSTANGEL only slightly used. What will you trade for good, used garbenslangel with righ t· handed zoenslift. power dippoleck and battery • operated piddle- bottom. Now, the truth is that the DAILY PILOT hasn't got a garbenslang,1 - with or without a battery-operated piddlebottom. But the response by readers to this ad and to similar one in "Miscellaneous Wanted" and in the Dime-A- Lines has convinced the DAILY PILOT Promotion Department that there are lots of garbenst.angets out th ere. Or, if they don't exist, at teasl there are plenty of garbenstanglers who could build them. The promolion department got so steamed up about it. in fact. that it has started a search for a site for tht. first Build a Better Garbenstangel Con - test and Rallye in the history of the Orange Coast. So excit ed is the promotion manager about the possibilities that he ha ll promised even to dig up some prizes for the best garbenstangel built (or found in the garage and dusted off for the event ) and entered in the e<>otest. Top prize would be in mooey -maybe evt>n American -and lher• v.·ould be other rewards. But first the promotion manager has to ptO\'C garbenstangels and gar· benstranglers really exist and could be enticed lo participate in his proposed first·ever contest and rall ye. Alrr.ady radio pe:rsorialities are talking about garbenst.angels. readers are Inundating ihe DAILY-PILOT with offers to trade. buy or traffic in gar- benstangels (some of the letters will be published during the next few days) and people are talking about garbenstangels all over town. But to prO\'e to the publisher, who pays the promolion manager'.a salary and looks quizzi cally at expense .!lccount Items such as "first priie, Build a Better Garben!ltanael Contest .!Ind Rallye," it will be neces!lary for the true gar~nstangel fans of the DAILY PILOT audence to unit behind this effort. Agree to bu ild 11 garbens!angeJ -or at least find one lo di5play. Fill out the coupon below and assure the world of its first Build a Better Garbenstangel Contest and Rallye. --------------Yes. r will build a Garbenstangel -or launch a sea rch for one I can -I I I I put into shape for exhibition at the Rallye. Please tell me more. Name Address ····-········-························ Phone City ·······-·····-·············-·····-········ Zi.P ....•••......•••• Mail to Promotion ?I-tanager, DAILY PILOT, P.O. Bo~ 1560 Costa 1.fesa. Ca. 92626 I -------------- I I I .. El Rancho has the hottest price in town! 4. QUARTS ••• with free pitcher! • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • A whole gallon of 'vat.er ••• filtered And l'ianitited anll crystal clear ... in the &ensational new package -exclusively at El Rancho! And ,,,ilh 4 qu arts you get the free pouring pitcher! Use filtered "''aler so many "'-ays .•• in cooking, for a belt.er cup of cof fee ••• in drinking, or at your bar l ••• in the gall ey, the camper, freeze il for your picnic hamper ! You 'll love the convenience ! H1lf·r1llon Wa ter •• , (2 qts.).,. 19t. L d B •1 U.S.D.A. $149 on on ro1 .. f~~~ . . lb. Enjoy the hearty roodness o( finer bee f! Boneles~, fll1,'orful. tendert Meat Balls. ~~~H. ~~D! .. 7 9fb El Rancho'~ finer gr•de meat..s, seasoned ... topped \\•ith a to mato i;auce l Fresh Italian Squash .. . .. .. .. _ .. _ . .. .. . .. -19' As lre~h RS if yo11'd picked them yourself ••• anrl rleliRhtful to urve l Breast of Chicken or Turkey ·········---·-·-55¢ Lro·1 ••• for "' 1'1.R.lad or ll .!litnd"·ic.h ! 3Vt oz. pk£'. of t.a.!lly tendernesJf Prir.ta in. effecl.Mon. .. Tuia., Wttd., Junt ti. t i.;- No inJt,a lo dea.ltrl, 1Vo1v n1;a.ilobl'r i11. I.he n~111 pu.cka11r ... F'resh Sque,,zerl 0-rnngF. JuV-.e .•• Grn.prf ruil Jnict-•.• dr/ir:io u11 fr111t drinks! Enjoy the quclily .•. lh• convc11 iencc ••• and be Eco-looical.' Instant Breakfast 59' Carnation ••• a great way t.o start the dJy! All fla.'1'on .•. Ctn. of 6 pkgs. Vanilla Wafers ................. _ .. _ ......... 39C From the ha ppy Sunshine bakers ! Crisp ••• delicious v.dth milk! 11 m:. Downy Flake Waffles ... __ .. . __ .. _ 29t Serve them hot from the toaster ..• for a r ood mornin~ ! 10 oz. pk1. Sweetheart for Dishes .............. 39' Bir 32 ounce aize ••• with the fresh frarrance of lime aa • bonual ARCADIA : sunse1 anr Hun1in 11,, o• i1/',I· PASADENA : :::iii. SOUTH PASADENA : i'/i't/. HUNTINGTON BEACH : niti. N~WPORT BEACH : 1111 N••P"' "'"1 "" ([I Ranrho Centerl ~. 320 w~!il f.ulor ,td~ B1~11 .. f1e1nonl and ltuntrnglo n Or " W.1rnr.1 .Hid Algon~u1n R11Jrdwalk Cl'rtlt'r .. 2'1J~ £i1 ~th!11fl Or [astl1li1tl V1llAKe Centr.r ,, ' _, '"'. --· - 4_ DAILY PILOT R11 ss Space Defecto1· Questio11ed LOl\'DON 1 UPI I -British intelligence off icers questioned Soviet defector Analo- ly FedoSfyev today to detcrmi~ his im· port ;i11ce 10 lhe RuS!ian sp3ce effort and how he arrived in Britain , d1plon1atic sources said Th" so urces identified the 52-year-0ld Fednseyev as a prom inent eltcLron1cs eng1n ePr. but said previous reports from p,.ri~ tha! identified him as a top space olf1cial ,.,ere untrue. He disappeared in Paris three: weeks ago. His exact position as an tngineer re· mained unclear. but the sources denied ht> \\'!IS the Soviet minister in charge or snace research or 1..:oncerned v.·ith the Russian satellite program , as repor~d by French pol ice sources. The sources ali;o said FedosPyev came lo Britain from France by ordina ry com· mercial transportatnn, and did not arrive by· way of North A!!anl1c Treaty Organization (N,\TOl he;idriuarters 1n Brussels. as reported by the F'rench. UPI Moscow dispatches said there J1ad been QO mention in the Soviet press or r;idio 1>f !he defection. Such cases are almost never reported in Moscow unless !hey become serious internat ional in· cidenL~ and open government action becomes necessary. Arabs Get Together Soviet scientific sources discounted reports that F'edoseyev v.·ss a key figure in lhe Soviet space prORram and said he y,·as a doctor of technological science.!! ;:i nd university professor whose last pos t v.·as v.·ith the Institute of Radio and E!ec· Ironic Instruments. Saudi Arabia's King Faisal IL) presents a je\\·el studded S\VOrd to Ut\R President Anv,.iar Sadat at a state banquet in Cairo. The two leaders are expected to discuss prospects of an Arab summit conference over the conflict with Israel. The British foreign office said Sunda y lha t Fedoseyev, 52, \\'ho vanished al the P;iris Air Show three v.·eeks ago, "is in lhis country and has been given pe rmission lo slay." Family's Jor. Shattered: The government does not use the term "granted political asylum" so as not to pr ejudice any relatives the defeC'tor may ha ve in his homeland , the sources said. Last of 9 Babies Dies Senate Leader s l\1ove To End Draft Debate 'VASHJNGTON (UPI ) -Sen ate leaders prepared a petition to shut off rurther debate today in an effort to keep /he draft lrom expiring 10 days from nov.·. Sena te Democratic Leader hi i k e ~l ansfleld of h1onl.ana , and Republican IP.ader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, said they would file a motion before the end of business this afternoon to sidetrack a threatened filibuster against the draft ex- tension bill. SYDNEY IUPI) -The full tragedy struck Leonard Brodrick Sunday nighl v.•hen the Royal Women 's Hospital an- nounced the death of the Jasl oJ 1he nine children his wife had borne on June 13. The last lo die was a boy and it v.•as in hopes she v.·ould bear him a son that f\1rs. Brodrick had taken fertility drugs. The nonuplet!'i were five boy!'i and t'our girls and although tv.·o boys v.•ere sltllborn Brodick said he h<1d hopes ;i son would survive. Sunday night the last one died and he ,.•as shattered. ··All I wanted out of this .... ·as a son:· he 5a 1d. The birth of nonup\ets ,June 13 to h1rs. Geraldine Brodrick, a brown-eyed. 29- year-old socialite, created medic a 1 history. Eight children had been born lo a Tow1aspeople Care C1·owd Beats 2 S11spects 111 Shooting of Officer J\i"'EW 'YORK (UPI) -Al 3 !Lmc v.·hcn lhe cop on the beat is under attack from m;1ny 11egmcnts of 50C'le1y. the residents of a predominant ly c:rcck-Amencan ('on1. 11un1ty in l\"c\1' York hri1·e shov.n !hey r<1 re -Vf'hcrncnllv . \\'hen gunflrr hri.ke thr .'illcnrt• nf the pri>-d<t .,.,·n hour.~ ~unday, thr 11ord ~prt>11d lUirkly thrOUAh 1he l,(lnA l ~l;ind ei!,r 1-CC· 11011 of Q(1cen!'i that "a cop's been i;hot " :-\cighbor hood people , somt. in shirt ~1eerc!'i ;;ind ca rr~·ing Sunday nev.·spapers, ither!'i re turning from a late night on the to.,.,n. ran to .. ·ards the sound of the gun- firt' \\'hen they reached the scene of the 1hoo!ing. they aaw patrolman William &schel sprJ\\•led on the ~1rerr 11·11h gunsho1 v.ound~ in his h:irk ;ind ankle The rro\1·d turned angry. police ~a1d, and nioved in QO tv.·o suspects. a 00-yesr· olcl man Daniel Ransom, and hi s 6-Foot-6. 2flO·pound son. Jan. both of Long Island City. Thry btat the \l'.'O men lo the ground hrfnre being ~ubduC"d by pnl1 cc 'Thrv \1-anlrrl In kill thtisc t11fl io:u.1~ ·• said pa1 1·11l111:in .Jil111rl' ("npr, 1hc flr~t policemen to ans.,., er th!' 0tr1i·er-111.trnuhlr call. ··ir they h;irl c;irrirrl out !11r1r thre<1ts, they v.·nukl h;11·r lyn i·hrr! thc1n .. ··They were hopping mllrl," C'opr sa id. .,They were atanclin,I! thrir grounrl.'' He said he was "an1azrd ... nnt SCt'1n,i:- people flee but dn the oppositC"." woman in Mexico in 1967. but they had all died withi n 14 hours. Nonuplets were unhr.ard of. The Brotlrlcks already had tl'.'O child ren, Belinda . 5. and Jacqueline, 4. They had been born by caesari an section, ::ind docto rs presrit.ed gonadotrophin, a !er1 1lity horn1one drug, lo help \vith h1rs. Brodrick·s pregnancy. Doctors had told the Brodricks lo rx· peel scptuple ts, so they .... ·ere not toi.ally unprepared for the multiple birth. The birth!'i took on:y jj minutes. Two of the babies. both boys. were !'it1llb<'.Jrn. {)o('\ors said they had been rrushed in 1he womb. Four girls and three boys survived. They we ighed betv.·een 12 ounces and two pounds two ounces. The smallest was the last-born - a boy only six inches long . Policeman Kills Black Suspect In Race Flareup COLUf\.1BL:S. Ga . (UPI) -A black youth was shot to death by a policeman l'arl.v today during a flareu p of firebomb- ing 111 1hc racially-troubled cily on the ,\!:ib11n1a border. Pohce Capt. Bobby l\nQ:\ said !he youth. \V11l ie J. Osborn Jr. of Columbus, v.•as killed after he fled from a car being ch11sed by police and ignored orders to slnp l\nox said Osborn tried lo run over tv.·o policen1en at a roadblock and then iumped from the car wlth an ··object 1n h1 ~ hand ·· An n(f1('f'r t1rrd nncr ;it \J~bor11. thr·n "h(lt 11\lC'I: 1n lhr ;:ilr 11hf'n thr 1n<11\ rnn. and lhrn shol hun whrn tie v.·nuld 11nl slnp. l\11nx ~:11d ·111" drl cc1i vc chief i;ai d poll('(' h;:id \1 ;in tcd 10 qL1cst1nn Osborn aOOut the a1·med robbery or a small grocery in v.·hich Osborn an~wered the description of one of th~ bandits. Spring Leaves With Bang Wicle Area of U.S. Pla~ue<l by Thunderstornts California ~v<1nv, •hlr!OIH vt W••!htr nt•' f!I d•ortt• tonllnurd lod•~ lh,.:>11<1hetfl !~• uunT•I •"" ln!,1"1! ,..,19n• o• ~c,.m•<~ Ir U"lf•O '111•1 IMT•ll"ATIO"ol~ T"t twn l llt ll'lt !ti. "lll'>ttl ttO•nl no<I~ ol tft1 tl f!lr'I -..tor todt Y, o•!l<'-11< ..,.r .. 1M ll'>t ..it OI t0•1t'lt 11\d W.ln- "lna ol •llf""'IH· ll!ut ""9!1 ,.,;,. 1111, !t l<I" wll" • .. ~ Thun•f•.,irorrfl\ or<u,,1d 11-t tlew """°1"11 tO~ ,,,,.., "'" ""O•n•"G ''""' lfW Olllo v1111~ •o 1out.,.utttn N•w M•rlct. HN V' tlll/ndt rJlo<mt t•<tO IH>'l .01"11 •••I oorll,,.. of tt>o •t••• "'"' O•r•lllt. Wlf>(I ou1ted '" '"' •••• 110 to ~ m•111 on "-"'' 11' C"l'-· l\>o" wonch IOC'tl!•d I """' 1•Dt••"'"" •IK!tl~1I l ia1' "'' M•t"'•o1n A••nu• In 11'11 ~UV'• lo.oo T"' 100.foo! '*•di t lon Htt uo !ro•lle •• II dt"lll<d ovor t~• ,,,.,, •"" ..... 1 • ·~· .,, l)rldl1 J'IO 0111> •o 1"9 o•Oll'ld ~o ln- turT•~ _,, ,.,,.,,,.., TftU11dftttorm1 •"'•~I ott L1•.1 t "• IMO Clt•rlone, W""•• "TOM (t ttYI ... wl~_,,'1,. \~. ~1:'~~ :u"tv~~· tr••• ~ .... 1 (.IO</<I• ...... ·-"" '" '"~·· Mkh1 .. n t011nll11 !und•• 11<1! '""' M •I N ,_1..i toud•dowr>• . T,,u,,d •••'"'""' 1••0 1w•~I nOflPWllff'~ Col~'"do. ~•l!•"G l•1!"C" '""'" 001111e11"111 ""'' "°"" 1~.,, r .. n !ntl'>tl 01 r11n fell ourtno 1 ••• he<if otrlcd In _.,,..,.,.,., to*' M••ro co .. tal "'" tl)dtv l..,.I v1r11&11 wind• nlo~t '"'" >"0<<1lno ,.,.,.,,. MC.111'1'1'1• Wt\lf •lv 1e io 11 ~...,., '" ,,,,,,_"' lod.v '"" l uU<!IY !otllh "Kll Y ., I~ tJ. r ... l••• ,.,ff".,U'"' ''"'' ••om i.a le I) tnltnd """'''•""''' ''"" ''""' '° to lQ, w10.r 11m11rttu•• .i Sun, Hoon. Tide• ~11el\d "'"~ S•COllO !Doll MOMOAY ' )I t.., • ' ) 11 <> ""· t I TUISDAY .. "'"' ~1 ... Flrit lOw SICO<"ll ~··~ ~"'0"" Iii"' 5Ul"I 111\0I I H I m, M l'Ol"I 11011• • I•• m 10 '7o fl'I. l ' •O.•'"··'' 1 11 ~ .... , I (IO • m, } ) Stt•IOfnM Srl\7)1 ~"1. Teu1pernture• •t UN!T!O Pl_fSS IMTl•MATIOMAI. 'e"'""'"'"'"' •nd •r•(l•l!ttlon lor t~• 1•·hour <>er iOd ondlnt •I • t m, Hit~ \.-,.<t .l.l ~ov I.I •7 .01 .Ol~u""""ue ... ,.~ .. ,,.. ... !'.~'"'" (h1rtott1 • (hl(l lJO C•~c1,,....11 l ltWl1"11 Dtllo\ Oenwr 0.1 Mo!fltl 0.!!'011 F 1lrt!t nl I '"I-lulu 11"dl,...,..,u~ J1t~ ...... vlU1 1(1ni..• c11v L•• Vttt • 1.0• AO\tl lt l L&u.,¥1'1t "''"'"~'' "''"'"'' Ml•w•u••' M,n~•Al>Of •\ ~-O•l•~n• 'It"' Vo•- 0-nA~I ""'"' Sefll"IQI l'h1l•d•on•• ,_,. .. 01 ... ~·1••" Po•Hl <M!, Ori ~"""''''"'" ~t Louil St ll l •~• Ci"' lt n OIHHI l •l"I l''ll"l(•lt? .\ ........ .. " " " .. " .. .. .. •• " .. " .. .. .. " '" " " " .. .. • u .. " "' " ·~ " " .. " " • " " " " .. " " " .. " • " " ~ " u " " • n .. " .. n " p " • • " " • " .. " " • " .. ·" " " .. "' ... . .. ·c1 RevealS Officers' 'Threats' F1' 111cPHE RSON , Ga. (AP) -A former Cha rlie Company sergeant al My L;1i testified today in the pretrial hearing for Capt. Ernest Medina that high-rank· ing Army offit:ers threatened tn charge him with commi!ling crln1es at the Viet- namese village unless he testified against Medina. S. Sgt. Charles Lacroix. now stationed at Ft. Carson, Colo .. said that Col. Henry Olk, staff judge advocate at Ft. Riley. Kan., first questioned him about the fli y Lai massacre in November 1969. "The colonel told me I v.·as the poorest excuse for a noncomm issioned officer he had ever mel . . and that I coul d be charged for crimes at r-.ty La i," he testified. "But he said this might nnt be necessary if I turned state'! evidence for ~1edina." Lacroi" w;is the first v.·itness to lake !he stand as the pretrial hearing resun1ed today. Ar•HY Surveillance Laird Says LBJ . Ordered Spying WASHINGTON !UPl) Defense Secretary !11clv1n R. Laird said the "highest'' C"1v1 li an :authorities in !he .Johnson Administration directed lhe Anny to spy oo Americans, according le> congressional testimony released today . "The mil itary is !lOmetimes blamed for this operation." Laird said r-.tarch 4 in a closed session of the House Defense Ap- propriations subcommittee. "But this operation was completely known to the highest authorities within our govern· men!." 1'he spy actlvities, .,., hich incl uded keep- ing portfolios on hberal political can· didates as v.·ell as an tiwar and civil rights activists, were ordered stopped last r-.tarch I, Laird said. Former Defense Secretary Clark !\1. Clifford announced creation of a riot-con· trol command al the Pentagon April 26, 1968. He said it would oversee federal troops sent to cities during riots and \\'OU!d provide "prompt and effective sup- plementary law enforcement assistance." But the class1fi('d d!!'ect1ve eirculat~d by the Pen tagon f11·e dciy.~ artrr the an- oounce1nent , 1nd ic·ates tile ecntcr was designed to perform roore dut lrs lha1' Clark nan1ed. The JI-page dJrectivc \\•as un classified l\\O \\'eeks btlore Laird ap- peared before the subt·o1n n11lle<!, and ~ copy v.·as printed witn its testimony. It describes the ··n1iss1on" oi the direc· !orate of military support as· "To procure. evaluate, interpret. and disseminate as expcdil1ously as possible information and intell igence rf'lating lo any actual, potential or p I a n n e d demonstrallons or other activities related to civil disturbances within the Con- tinental United States which threaten civil order of military securit y."' The directive al so outlines "pre. disturbance activities'' that !'ihould bt observed by th e surveillance agen cy. ETHEREA NEWPORT INVITES YOU TO MEET THE STAN LAWRENCE BEAUTY TEAM FOR ETHEREA MONDAY, JUNE 28- FRIDAY, JULY 2 . RESERVATIONS FOR A PRIVATE CONSULTATION BY APPOINTMENT ONLY. 10.00 RESERVATION FEE MAY BE APPLIED TO ANY PURCH AS E OF ETHEREA. RECEIVE YOUR PERSONALIZED GIFT WITH YOUR PURCHASE. PHONE FOR YOUR RESERVATION: 644-2800, EXT. 286. IN OUR COSMETICS. ROBINSON'S • FASHION ISLAND • • \ v tri ti of he c d' ob tal bo m pr d •• ne li bu ne ID Ill ,. Q F. of d I rt Beaeh Today'• ·F-hutl EDITION N. Y. Stoe"8 VOL 64, NO. 147, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, C.:t.LIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 21, 1.97f TEN CENTS 7 Judges to Air Furor Full Appeals Panel to Hear Pentagon Dispute OAILV rlLOT 11111 r 11e1. Kiss for Luci' Mrs. Donna Albus gives her pet 'Monti ' a buss on the head as she pre· pares him for the Orange County _Poodle Club's Eighth annual com- petition at the Orange Co_unty Fa~r~ro und_s. More than. 1. 50 poodles from San Diego to Bakersfield participated 1n lhe compel1t1on Sunday. Special Meeti11g Called On Newport-Mesa Budget The Newport-Mesa Unified School Dis- trict Board of Education has set a spe- cial board meeting to nall down details ()f the district'io; !971 -72 budget, to be 'held at 7 p.m. June 29 in the Lyceum of COita Mesa High School . 'Die meeting agenda 11lso will include djgcussion or the 197n.7J district goals and cbjectives as well as a study of data pro- Ne,vport Council To Resum e Stud y On New Budget Wit t! 11 predi('tion that f'mploye _salary ta\k..o; ,.,;11 be over bf>fore t/1e deadhne for budget epprov;>.I. Nev.·ptir.1 Bea~h council- men tonighl resume their rrv1e\\' of !he proposed 1971-72 munici pal spending document Acting Clty Manager Philip F. Bet1en- ((JUrl thi!! ~ning indicated he is hopeful negotiations with Lhe U1rce employe as- ~iations will be over Friday, in time to hiclude the sa\arle!! in final budget de- llberalions June 28. -By law, the council mu st adopt the budlet by June 30. Frequently, empl_oye negotions are not completed by the time and councilmen must tllen act to amend Ole. budget when they are completed. The council has onl y a few mett ac- tounts kl pass on tonight, after speed- ing through m08t rerommendations last wttk. cessing serv icf"s operated by the distric t. The m{'(!ting will be the last attended by Dr. William Cunningham whose re5:ig- nalion from the superintendency becomes~ efftctive Julv 1. On that da y he become.~ execut ive sCcretary of the Associlltion of California School Administrators, a newly formed statewide organit.alion hradquartered in Burlingamf'. His successor, Dr. John Nicoll i! ex- pected to attend the special board meet· ing June 29. Although trustees have adopted 21 $311 5 milli on preliminary budge t draft. the special meeting "''as called to review seve ral portions of tht' budget !hat had been left blank. The programs and M!rV· ices allocations lo specific school~ were nl)t includt'd in th<> early drafr, pending revie"'' or this year's expenses. Salaries and fringe bcnefilc; for teac.h- r r5: also have nol been set . pcnrlin i.:: out- com e of •·meet and roofer" session.~ or the district ncgo!lating council. Neither the boa rd nor the NC'wpcrt- ~1esa Educ o:ilion Association ha ve rt'- lcased further detalls on the progress of sala ry discussion since the board sent its written reponses kl teacher demands more than a month ago. The school board 's annual organiu- lional meeting at which newly elected trustee Donald Smallwood will be seated and officers will be elected, has been called for 7 p.m., July 6. Smallwood . 11 42-year-otd Co6ta Mesa attorney was elected to the board April 21l lo the seat being vacated by James Peytnn v.·ho ls retiring after 11 years or bo::ird service. In the same election, present Boil.rd President Selim S. "Bud" Franklin and ~trs. Mar ion C. Bergeson both were re- turned for four-year tenns NEW YORK ( AP J -A hearing on the government's claim tha t the New York Times should be barred fro m further publicalion ol a secret Pentagon study of the Vietnam war was postponed today to allow the ca se to go before a ful: se11en- judge panf'l of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Tuesday c The government, which v.·as defealed in It~ mo11e to stop further Times publica· lion in a lower court, had been scheduled Next Terna to go before a three-mu appeala pane.I this morning. In Washington, meanwhile. the govern· ment argued in U.S. District Court that documents from the Pentagon study used by the Washington Post in assembling ita stories contain Information about current operational plans in the war. Both the Times and the Post remained llnder reslrainl!: not to publish articles about the study pending outcome of the court actions. Prior to the go11ernment'1 Judges to Rule On Wiretapping WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Tbe Supreme Court agreed today to rule next term on whether the government may tap the telephone of an yone it believes to be a threat to nat ional security without ob- taining consent from a federal judge. The test case to be heard next fall or win ter involves a mounting dispute over a claim by Attorney General John N. Mitchell that the government's right or sel f-protection surmounls an ind ividual's righ t of privacy in s e c u r it y in- vestigations. Mitchell has assumed authority to ap- prove telephone wiretaps in such in- 1tances but in the test case, to be decided by a written opiaion, the JusUce Depart.. ment lost on two lower court rulings. In other actions, Uae court : -Ruled it is nol m21nda tory for slate1 to provide jury trials for juveniles even for offenses which Weild require a jury for an adult. For the majority, Justice Harry A. Blackmun said such a pro- cedure for juveniles "is the state'• privilege. and noL its obligation ." -Let stand a Georgia eleclion law pro- vision that an independent candidate mu st obta in signa tures of 5 percent of the electorate to be placed on the ballot. -Refused to intervene ln the perjury conviction of Martin Sweig, former ad· ministrative assistant to former House Speaker John W, McCormack. Sweig claimed he was used as a "whipping boy" in the government's innuence-peddling cose against lobbyist Nathan Voloshen . -Agreed to review next term a lower court ru ling striking down a Georg ia Jaw which made abusi ve language punishable as a breach of the peace. -Den ied a hearing lo publisher Ralph Ginzburg who fa ces a jail sentence for a 1963 obscenity conviction. The wiretap test case accepted by the court came from Detroit. U.S. District Judge Damon J. Keith of Detroit ruled aucb eavesdro.Painl un- constitutional In iltt case of'I.avJrenct Plamondon, minister cf Defellle of the White Panther. Party. He was upheld April 8, 1~71, by the 6th U.S. Circuit. Court of Appeals. The Supreme Court will hear the case: next fall or winter and decide it later by written opinion. Keith ordered the government to hand 011er its eavesdropping rtcord! to Plamondon , accused of conspiring to blow up the Central Intell igence Agency office., 11l Ann Arbor, Mich., where the party is based. The government admitted that conversations of Plamondon hid been overheard by mea9s of a tap approved by Mitchell . San Pedro Boy Discove1·ed Dead iI1 Newport Harbor Scores of citizen~ oo root joined 11 la.nd, 5ea anrl air search for a mi~~ing San Pedro bo y Sunday, but the hunt ended tragically when he v.•as fou nd, drowned, floating in Newpor t H;irbor. Chri stopher Lang ston. 4, wandered awa y from a !amHy sailboa t outing ot lhe lrvine Marina. 1353 Bayside Drive, .around $ p.m., accordi ng to police ~por~. His parenl,, Mr. and Mrs. John Whitney, notified authorities after their ov.·n 20-m inute search. A Newport Beach police helicopter crew covered the surrounding area, in- cluding Balboa Island . broadcasting the name and description of the lost child. Investigators said pa~ol cars found many persons, citizens and visitor! out hunting the boy .,~dthin 10 minutes. Crews from the Orange County Harbor Department and city Mar ine Safety Depa rtmenl<; were also assigntd. Fearing the worst, lifegua rd scuba divers entered th e bay waiera 11fter the hu nt on land turned up no trace of young Ch ristopher. Everest Conquerer -. To Lead U.S. Groups SEATTLE. Wa sh. (UPI) -The only man 1live le climb Mt. Everest twice will be in the Pacific Northwest t.hia summer to brttie up and down 14.41G-foot Mt. Rainier witb groups of tou rist.a. N11wang Gombu, .0, is visiting Jim Whltlllker, Seattle climber 1 n d busines1man who wa s th! first American top top the 29,028-k>ot Everest when be ind Gombu made I.he climb in 1963. Normally a time-consuming process. review of Uie budget this year went ouickly since Acting City Manager Philip F. Bettencourt was ti.nded a st rict sel of guidrlines to follow-In preparing the document. Be!lid~ 811\aries, councilmen still must 11ct oo retirement Jund monies Rnd the S.172,flOO Public Worb Dep.11rtment a.o the $78.000 Gener11\ Service Department. budget .. "Love Story~ Trin1nphs AU other departmental budgets. ~nd the cnpjt11! Improvement budget, were a~ved last wHJk with only 11 1m11.ll number of minor changes. ·tnnlght's meeting, which is open to the public. will take place at 7:30 o'clock In city .hall. Laos Costs Queried WASHlNGTON (UPI! -Sen. Stuart Symington (0-Mo.l. 11a.y1 the Unit~ Stat~ Is spending $1 bllllon in economic and military aid ror L8~. '"The only publl~hed fiRurt gfven to the penple 1n fsir about what we'rt iipending tn LAM I~ $52 mlllion for econom ic aid ," f;ymJngton 11ald Sunday. "Yel, I'm cer· Uln ln my own mind thAt If you include the bombing th11t h11:1 tUe.n place in Lao11, the figure 11 over •t billlon.'1 Smash Hit Film Ends 26-week Stay at Newport By fERRV COVILLE Of Ille 011tr l'llol St•" 1> .... ''l..<>ve Story" ha s been a 26-week af(~\r '"llle owners ol Edwarrls N'ewport Cinema wop'l brush off 11 a "winter romance." "It was the bigge!t film In 40 years or businesa for OUr circuit,''· 111ys Vic Miiler, usi!tant to the vice president of the Edwards chain . When "Love Story" !heds its ll!t ttar Tueeday 1t the Newport Beach O\e11ler, more Ulan 200,000 viewers will have setn It lhere. "We grossed about half s mU!ion dollars on It," Miller Wd. "Ir we: owned the KJeenex concession we could have mede 11 mill ion." Ali MacG raw 11nd ·Ryan O'Neill took evt.r the Newport 5Cl"etll on Chr\1lmlls d11y for 11n exclu!iive run In Otana:e Coun· ty -28 weeb ot uc/ualve run. One ether Orange County theater, in Buena P1ri, also had an e.1c/u1lve con· tract on it. "Thil wa1 the longu:t any film haa ever run in Orange County,'' Mlllu ad- ded. "It'! a good emotional picture, one. of a kind." '"The crltia knocked it. g;;.ve it louay reviews,'' be continued. "But I think ~ pit: were Ured of the iei:plollation and violence ahovtd down their thrdatl. "lt'1 Just a beautiful movie, people a~iate with It. It's been doM before under different titles. II'• a good emo. tlonal pict.ure:. Some &iris 1111w It 14 lime1." He 11akl the: Edward! ch1dn bought the film la9t summer, before it waa released. Chrlstm111 day wa" lht beglnnln1 of "1...ove Story" ln ell parll of the country. "Newport 11 an area &Mt 4leMrYll tbl J71'emler!. just like Hollywood. People 10 le the movies htre," Mlller taid. ire ccunted the 200,000 people who watched "Love story·• and estimated that figure at fJve and a half limes the poputa. tion of Newport Beach. "Love Story" even out pulled the Edwarda HCOnd biggest film , "Airport", wh ich ran elghl weeks Ill the Newport Cinema and drew alightly more than 100,000 rans. "We thought buJineaB WIS good then, now look. We've 1lready bought 'The Godfathu' for the Newport theater. "We're buylng 110me filrna Uult h11ven't even been made yet," Miiier said. ~ " 'love Story' h11d what we.call 'leg!.' It drew people to Newport from Sl'ln Diegp, S11n Bern1rdlno and P1aadent. ·• "T£ will bt Uke loslna an old friend 'When we take It off the acreen." I efforts to stop publication, the Tl.me.s published three installments from tht study and the Pest two. ln a brief flle<f for the appeala court, the Times argued that a forced return of the classifi ed documents would violate both con!titutJonal right.a and rlgbts under the New York State "freedom of information" law enacted lut year. Deciding to being-the Time.a case before the fuJI court of appeals, Chief Judge Henry J, Friendly eaid: DA ll.Y I'll.OT lt•tt;I' ..... • .·, L Mbs N....,!'°'"t · · . Nancy Kaye Smith. l8, a Co- rona de! Mar Hillb School CMd, i1 the new Mill'Newport Beach. TM daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Sinlth, ~20 Begonia Ave., Co rona ·del Mar, was selected b'y ju.d~fi for the city's Jayc~es, who were cap· tivated bY Miss Smith 's' brains, beauty and person~ity. 'Lack of Candor' Cited in Nader Attack on Nixon WASHINGTON (AP) -Consumer ad- vocate Ralph Nader toda y accused the Nllcon Administration of a lack of candor in its request for $250 million In federal loan guarantees fe r Lockheed Aircraft Corp. Nader. tes!ifying be fo re the Senate Banking Committee, also accused the company of refusing to disclose nerded information. He said this Ill typi cal of the "fl i(lpanl altitude " which U.S. cor- poration~ have toward taxpayers. Nader's testimony was given along with that or three economisl.! who aaid approval of loan guarantees would violate free enterprise principles. One of the economists was Thomas G. Moore, a professor at Michlgan State Univer11ity who until last year worked fOr the Council or Ec:cnomlc Advisers and re- mains a consuJtant to the council. Moore lold a newsman he was testify. Ing a! an, economics profes50I' and his views did not necessarily represent those of the three-membe r council. · Nader nid the 1dmlnl a t ral l o1t displayed a lack of candor by submitting proposed legislation that dkl not name Lockheed apecifically. Thant Stricken At U.N. Office, Calls Off Trip UNITED NATIONS (UP!) -Secrellry General Thant auttered • 'a n In- disposition" at hi! offloe Saturday and has' been lnde.ffultely confined fD ht11 home by phy1lclan1, It was announced today. A U.N. apokesman said Thllnl dciftnttely had not suffered a heart seliuni but that the neture of .his illness would not be miwn pondllt1 the outcome of 1llOdlc01 "'"· Thent. 62, immediately .cancelled a trtp that wu to have taken hhn to the Sovtflt Unloo. Monaolia and Poland, with atapt at Ethlopll and Switzerland. Thant b111 aald repeattdty alnct l111l Jinu11ry he would not be 1 c4ndidate for reelectlon when hit term u aecretary gener11l expiru Dec. 31 . Ht uid both publlcly ind prlv1t.ely that one re:ason for th is deciJlon w111 ulrrune faU1ue from to 1 .. r1 1n· u,, office. ''Thi.I case raises a qutsUon of such tt• tracrdlnary importaoce that it stx>uld be heard by all the judge1." The decision wa.s reached in con- sulation over the weekend with the· twe other judges of the three-man panel. J, J oseph Smith and P.aW R': Haya. The Washington testimony concerning current sensitivity er Ole PC11taacn document! was given by :Dennis Doolin, deputy assistant secretary of defense for ·fSee 11MES, Pip I) Hosmer Rakes Los Alamitos Airport Plan A call to convert Los Alamito. Naval Alr Station for use. by commercial and general aviatkln was branded i'ill-ad- vised" today by Congressman Craig Hosmer (R-Long Beach). In a stinging letter kl the Orange Coun- ty Grand Jury released today, Hosmer protested the Grand Jury recom· mendation th at lhe Orang~ County Board ()f Superviaors try to acquire Los Alamitos for use as a public airport. ''The area would be turned into a high decible sinkhole just like every cthet commercial airport, despite aU lhe pklm prOmbes airport promoters customarily make to lull nearby hcmeownera lnto falH feelings of 0 HCurlty," Hosmer uld. "I can ftnd absolutt.ly "" jultification fot the.piemeditated dooming of nsktentt of LOI A!1mitos a11d neighboring -and Seal Beocb ta QllJ fate.• HOl!lmer laid that West .Orange CoUDt.1 alr.eadf l'Jaa acces. to commercial and general aviation facllttles at the Long Beach Municipal AJrport, less than five mile.a away. •·tn. my opinion demands for d viJi&ft existing commercial airpvrt just because it is barel,y within the Qrange County boundary. are i 11 ·adv l red," the Congressman said . . He added he would rather see the runways bulldozed out to eliminate use of Los Alamitos right nut door to an presaures for civilian access to the facill· ty. _ Ho:imer :said he has no perllOMl preference for the future use of the land -be it military re!erve flying. Navy holl!ing-or turning the area into a park- but. ··r will do everything possible personally and as a member of Congresa to see that this high-densily residential area is not 1;ubjected to commercial er general aviation. wllich it does not need and which belong5 elsewhere." ' Hosmer recognized the requests cf other military organizations lo use Los Alamitos for night training activiUe!. He said the Army, Air Force and California Naional Guard •·ccu!d be expected to be as circumspect in their operaUona a1 tormerly the N!ivy was, and It appears at thla time that these requests may be honored , although I.he final decision ia yet to be made." Boston .Swim Stopped BOSTON (UPI ) -High win~. rcqb water and pollution prevented a 13-mile 1w1tn 1crol!: Boston Harbor by James J. Doty. who bad just reccvered from tw1 operations. Oraqe Weadlter THe weatherman predietii h127 111n11llne today and Tuesday with patchy fog along the co.&t Jn the morotnc how-1, RilAa today and· Tue>day 70 at the 0..cll<s, IQ In- land. Low tonight 55 la ttl. INSmE TOD-' Y The Cotta M1ia Ch1'c Plat/" hoU1r i.s toi,l'!PinQ vp its ''°'°" will> • J>10d..-. of Willlom Saro"o'!'I "Tlic. B•o.utiful Pef>.. pie." Th• plou ts rovi~d m Entntoi1un1nt, Page 19. ....... • _ .. . ... ~.,,. ... • N•,_.. ....... .. Kt.Int "'' • ·::=-~ : Cln•ltlW .... ....... • = au (l"hl_, • I Mftlft 1if.11 ·'"'"'*'kft " "'""'""' ~ afltw .. lffllll • ,,.....,. l• ,.ttf'l ... "-1 :::JI ·-. ·-· .,. ...... .. .. _ " ._.. ...... ,,.,, ..\. ....... " --.. I l • I DAIL v PI LOT 300,000 Sun Worshipers Jam Coast Beaches 1'bt heavens parted the u~ual lo" clouds and fOi routine. till: waters warm· ed. and 300,000 people flocked \o the beaches alon1 the Orange Coast Sunday. Newporl Reach lifeguards described the June weekend scene as being "almost August." Tbl.'y estimate some 105,000 people enjoyed the last da y of Spring •t the beach of Newport Beach. Surf ran on· ly two to four feet and 'ol(&ler tem- peratures climbed to nearly 68 degrees on Sunda y. Lifeguards !oiged 83 rescues. Saturday and 27 on Sunday. One $-year old ch!ld drowned off the ·ntwTrvtnt Mlffna, the lone tra1edy of the weekend. In San Clemente , 55,000 beachlotra were logged for both days. Lifeguards Sunday aided 1 10-year--old 1lrl who escaped drowning in the six-loot deep trench offshore from the city 's north beach. Irene Castro of 1606 Las Bolas. made it lo shore uoa$.si!l.ed and thtn collapsed in the sand. lifeguards reported. She \Yas t.aken to South Col!! Community Hospital for obMrvaUon. Rescue! along the Orange Coast from SeaJ Beach to Sin Clemente were ll&ht ever Ult wffktnd. LUe1uardl credit the dln\lnl.shlng aurf and the reau!Un& near disappearance et side currents and rip- tides. With 30,000 persons estimated at t.aguna Beach. lileguards only logged eight rescues, nooe. serious, for the two days, t Laguna Beach guards gave r1rsl aid lo THREE DIED IN SUNDAY NIGHT FREEWAY COLLISION OF CAR AND CHARTER BUS Bod i11 of Two Victims Had to Be Cut From Wreckage After Devastating Crash Resignation Prompts Nixon, Teamster Meet MIAMI BEACH (AP) -James R. Hof· fa·s formal re signation as president of the gianl Teamsier's Union \\'as an· nounced today and President Nixon promptly arranged a visit with members of the union 's exe<:utive board. A Teamster spokesman told reporters i;hortly before Nixon·s arrival at the Playboy Plaza lfofel, \\'her the executive board was in session, that Hoffa '• "'Titten resienation had been receiYed Sunday night . He said Frank E. Fil l.Simmons ws.s S\\'ot'n in aa the new president of the 2 .000,000 member unlon !hi! morning. Ho!fa hu been in fede ral prison. on a jury tamper!ng conviction, since March 1967. He has unsuccessfully sought parole. On Juhe 3, he Jet !t be known he would relinquish the presidency of the Teamsters. 1'ixon's c.\o&fd session v:ith the union '1ecutive board marked the first time any President has s tteiided a Teamsler function since pr05ee\Jtion of Horfa began during the z.dmlnlstralion or Prt.<i ident John F . .Kfnnedy ~ Howtver, Fitu!mmons was inYit.ed bv N11on to a dinne r for union chiefs st thi \\'hlte Howe lasl Labor Day. Bay Unit ]He el Se t The Lower Ne"1)0rt Bay Civic District Study Commllte' will meet. with iL, Cili ien11 Advisory Council \\'ednesd ay at ';" JO ~.m. at I.he Pa.rkJ, Beaches and Re- creation Department office, 1714 \lll!St Balboa Blvd, OUN•I COAST DAILY PILOT CfJIANGE COA5T l"UI LIJ HINQ COMl"AHY 1.t.,-, N. W.M P1•ioll.it •N Put!..,_ J •• ~ 1. Cutr.,. Vlec· ""-'""' ,,.. O~I Mll'lttlf' Tftt Jllt ( k't•Tir •t11tw 1'1101111' A. M urp~ine M•-;ntl l'.lllW L ,,,,, JC,;,, H"""I IMCfl Clly ftllltr ... ...,,.,, ..... Offke ]])) Newp1rt l1ul1~••<i M"1!1i11t A,4r1111 r.O. It• t 175, 92661 3 Killed in Capo Beach Freeway Rear-end Crash By JOHN VALTERZA OI !lit 011t1 !"Ii.I '"" A rear-end collision late Sunday eYen- ing M!nt a late·model foreign sedan spin- ning acroM th' unguarded center lre,way divi der at Capistrano Beach and lt'adon into a charter bus. killing a small boy and two women, all from the San Diego are a. The colli!ion, 'f'•hich ultunately inYolved five cars end the ·bus, closed all four lanes of the cro"·ded freewa y's norlh· bound traffic as firemen, assisted by a "'ecl<er. rought to pry two victims from the tangle of wreckage. The dead were ldent!f ied as r-.taraaret Speyer, 27, of San Diego; Darlene A. Bunn, 27, of Point Lo1na and Marcus \\'allenstein, Jin., of San Diego. AU were passengers and all were pronounced dead on arrival at South Coast Community Hospital The mishap occur red ne8r the San Juan Creek offramp. Sources said an unidentified \\"Oman physician passing th' cra sh stopped to render aid, g Iv Ing mouth-to-mouth resusc.itation lo the boy en route to the hospital. The measure failed. Another passeng'r In the expensive C.erman sedan "·as critically injured in the high-speed collision. Peter Speyers, 2R, husband of on' of the dead woman, "·as reported In critical condition today at Sou th Coast. The driver, Russell r-.tiller, 28, of San Diego, had on!y minor hurl!, patrolmen said. Drivers of the other autos, includina the operator of the charier tour bus, Ralph Adam5 Burch, 33, of LI Palma, \\·ere unhurt. Patrolmen said an intens i\'e 1n- vestlgatlon Into the cra ~h i.s continuing. Some report~. they said, pointed to a mystery car which cut a vehicle off near Youth Chops Off Foot for 'Si11s' ALTADEN A (U PI ) -A youna man screantin1 he had "1inn ed •&ainsl God '' by a;quu:hina hou1ehold insectl chopped on his l@ft root during the weekend with two hatch,ts. Sheriff's deputie1 sald Crei&htQn r-.tllltr, 22, hacked off tht root in what he bellev· td v.•as a ritual from the Bible. Miiier wielded the hatcheta alorit and apparently had nol taken drug:o; or alcohol prior to the act Saturday, deput ies reported. Miller hobbled around his ba ckyard 1creaming until his roommate found him and took t\im to • P1s1dena hospital. He was later tranaferred to Los Angeles County • USC Medic al Center where he was in satlafactory condiUon. Doctor• 1aid the sevel'ed fool could not be reai.. tached. The roommate tokf 1uthoritle1 Miiier believed he r1q uired punis hment for "willfully killinc'' tome anta and that he 'A'l nted to copy In example he belleved waa found in the book of Mathew. Shirley Firm Gets Classroom Contract The W. J . .Shirl ey Company ha1 beeo av.·ardtd 1 contract lo move a rtlocatable clas1room unit from TeW inklt Mlddlt School in Costl Mess to llarbor View El,mentary School, Coron1 del Mar . The firm '• bid of i1 3,800 wa s .approved tl!Cently by !he Newport-Mesa Unified School Dis trict board of education. the San Juan Creek Road offramp, caus· ing the rear-end collision. But patrol inYesigators said they were also checking into other traffic factors not involving the death car which could haYe caused the tragedy. The crash snarled traffic for al l,ast an hou r in all northbound lanes of ~ free- \vav as volunteer fi remen from San Juan Cajiistrano and Doheny stations v.•orked lo pry the victlm.5 from the car. The crash v.•as the !econd insta nce of multiple deaths attributed to the lack of a center divider in the area in the lasl ::ie~'eral n1onths. Late last year a car carrying a family of five ca reened across the divider nearby and plowed into a chemical truck. The blazing collision killed four persons, leaving a six-year-old boy the only 1urvivor in lhe family. Marine Refuge Expansion Urged Asse mblyman Robf'rt Badham (R· Ne1vport Beach ) has been asked to ex· pand his marine prl.'serve blll now berore lhe stale legislature to 1nelucte estahl1sh- ment or a marine life refuge fron1 r-.1nnarch Bay to Dan a Point. F'ifth District Super visor Ron 1 Id Caspers urged appro1·11l hv ! h e supervisors of the request f(l r !he bearh area. kn ov.·n as Salt Cree~, \\'hich lhl.' county hOPeJ soon to own. Th,re ar' currently manne preserve areas in Laguna Bea ch, Dane Point and Corona del r-.tar. Aftershock J ig g lcs Los Angeles Basin LOS ANGEL~S (AP ) -A moderate earthquake shook parts of the Los Angel~ area al 9:0l a.m. to day, ap- parently anothe r after!hock or tht Feb. I major tremor. There were no reports of major damage. althou gh on e man to ld police his ref rlgeralor was knocked over . Telephone: servlct "'llS disrupted in one area of the San Fernando Va lley. C&I Tl!Ch selsmologisl.'I aald the quake registered 3.11 on the Richter eca\e and \\·as centered in the San Fernando Valley. It was the. largest aftershock of the big quake since April 25. 2 Juclu strial A·rls 1'ca chers Honored Two Ne\\·port.-f\.tesa achool district in· dwtrlal arL~ te1chera have been named Teacher or the Vear by the Oranae U:lun· ty Industrial Educ.eUon Astoclallons. The a\\·ards rtcaanized ability ln te:a ching at the Intermediate 1nd the hlgh school 1,ve)J. The 'A'inntr1 art: Bert Peffers. teacher 1t Uncoln ~fiddle School, Newport Beech. and Dale Waters. Instructor at Estancia Hiib School, C:O.t.I Mesa. S. Koreans Kill Red SEOUL (AP) -South Kortt'n force.!I klll ed one North Kore111n intruder and ca!'tured another lri 1 clash early Friday on Sukmo Ish1nd. 35 miles northwest of SMul, the (:))unttr·E.splonaae Operatlona (.~'lrnn1and announctd tod11y. 98 victims of mlnor beach accidents in· cludln( the rescuac:llalion ol a youn1 Anaheim woman wbo coll•psed en the Main Beach. At Huntington Beach city beaches. llleguard& estlmat'd 80,000 persons on Saturday and 95,000 people on Sunday. \Veekend rescues totaled 132 from a sur r lhat ran only one to three fe't. The city's Selective Enforcement Detail logged JOO arrests of adults and jUYl'niles over the weekend on charges ranging from minors pos9essing alcohol to susp t· c.lon of possession of n<1rcollcs for sal~. and car bur1l1ry. Capt. Arland Ussher, commander of the l·luntington Beach Patrol division, said, ··"'e ~·ant people lo know WP haYt' a beach where peopl' can con1e to enjoy themselves. But if they come to break the !aw. we will see Loil they go lo Jail, /or\h~·ith, ·· he said. llun 1ingl on Slate Beach estimated crow ds at 20.000 both days and rescut:s to talled SO. Bolsa Chica Beach attendance 10o'as 10,000 both day!!. Orange County Harbor Department reported "heavy routine days" but nfJ dran1atic rescues although s e v' r a I saill'<la!s tipped ov'r in the medium surf. They reported light "·inds from the southeast over rnuch of the weekend nnd the low clouds and fog usually expected ln June only lintited vis1btlity on Satur· day. This morning \\inds fro111 th~ norllll'!est at 15-2.'i knots \\'Crl.' reported with visi bility of from three to four miles. Study 'Not True Picture'· LBJ Says Pentagon Papers Distort His Viet Role l'\E \V YORK (AP)-r~ormer President l.yndon B. Johnson believes the secrei Pentagon study of the Vietnam v.·ar doe~ not refl~t the true picture of his role , ac· cording to reports in Tin1e and Newsweek maga zines . Time, in a report on the Pentagon i;tudy controversy, said that J ohnson feels the documents ''do not tell the true tilory because they are mostly con· tingency plans." Newsweek said Johnson believes lhe study presents a dishonest. dislorted and biased picture of his rol e and th at the circumstances surrounding its ~ing leak· ed lo the Ne1Y Yo rk Times "come close to treason." · to prevent the enem y from knowing what !he United States was going to do next." Ne wsweek quoted Daniel Ell.5berg, the man who wa5 named by a former New York Tirnes newsman as the source of the Times' doc uments. as saying in an In· ll'rvi ew last week that he had tried unsuccessfully to get Henry KissingP.r, Pres!denl Nixon's for,ign affairs advisor, le read the study. "'Now he can read it in the paptrs." E!lsberg wa! quote d as saying in an in· terview at his Cambridge, Mass., home ht-fore he dropped out of sight la!l Wednesday . Ellshf'Tg has not be'n seen publicly since, although he telepho ned the t-.lassachuseUs Institute of Technology. where he i.s a research associate, «1n Fri· day to report that he 1Yas we ll. ··rm flattered to ™'~ suspected ," he declared in the inlervrew but he refused lo ~ay ..,,·helher he was the man who sup- plied the study to the Times, Newsw,ek said. Time said that !11cNamara hopes that the entire reJX>rl will be declassified and made available to the public. Mc Namara, now head of the World Bank, was reported to feel that the sensational way in which the documenl.s came to light "is tragic'' but that the country now should "get en witb the task of learning'' from them. Quoting ··1tiose in Austin pri \·y to his feelings," Newsweek said th' former president sees "the ghostly hand of Robert Kennedy" on !he Pentagon studv, According lo this vie"'. ~ewsweek reported. thl' late l\e\1• York senator needed an issue for his intended 1968 challenge to Johnson for the Democratic presldential nomina tion and "pinned his hopes on Vietnam.·' Reds Bombard S. Viets With Rockets, Mortar The . study was ordered by the n Secre tary or Defense Robert S. McN amara. Newsweek said Johnson con· tildered McNamara "a Kennedy man .. , Time, which noted that it ga ve no source for Johnson's views, said Johnson fe els that his greatest mislake ln the war \\'as \\'ailing until he had been in ofrice for 18 months before sending American soldiers int o battle "for by then be felt tha t Vietnam 1\•as almost !Ost." Time also said Johnson believes he made a mistake in "failing to institute censorshi p, not to cover up mistakes, but From Page 1 NY TIMES ... international securi ty affa irs. It came as the governmen t cpened its ca!e by renewing ill contention tha t pubHcatlon or the material by the press \\'OU !d rl.'sult in irreparable damage to na. lional security. The Times case \11ent before the 2nd Circuit on appeal by the governmen t follow ing rejection Saturaay er the governm ent'! request for • prelimin 11ry inj unction against the nt.,vspaper. In \\'ashington, U.S. Di.!!tricl Court Judge Gerhard Gesell heard .11rgumtnt on 11 gov ern mrnt rtqutst to enjoin the Post. Last 11·ec~. Gesell denied t ht'! governmenl's request. but the Dislric1 of Columbia appeal s court overruled him and sent th e case back to him for a hear· ing Gesell interrupted Dool u1 during hi.~ lrstin1ony and nioved the hearing into ~ecret session for furthe r 'xploralion of i;:ecurlty mal\crs. In his :'\ew York Time5 ruling Satur· day. L'S. \)1 <;1rict Court Judge fl lurr."i.V Gurfcin rejected the government's con· lrn!lon -presen!C'd Friday by li.S At · torney \\'hitne y North Seymour Jr. - lhal "1nte r"·nl'en mater ials in !he documents .~1ill ha\'e vita\Hv and affect n111i1ary 111tJllt'r5 and preseiit and future 1ni l1tary plan<; and policy." Gurfeln ordered closed-door hearings ln tht Times case. but in hls ruling denyin&: the government request said: SAIGON (UPI) -Communist troops hit South Vietnam 's Fire Base Fuller near the demilit arized Zone /DMZ\ with 1.000 rounds of rockets and mortars today and followed up with a ground attack, mili!ary !lource!I repor!ed. 11 wa s the second 1najor allack in ll'l'O days hut !he South Vil'tnatnese held off thl' assault. R:>2 bomber!! carried out inassiYe strikes in the general area . hi t· fing suspected North Vietnamest troop eoncentrations \\'ilh 500 tons of bombs in lhe ninth day of heavy air attack. l\filitary sources specula!ed the con1- munis!s ~·ere trying to overrun the base, five milC!! south of th' Dr--1Z and 20 mile:o1 inland from th' coast. to try to knock it out and try to gel al f .. 1mp Carroll, a big American base si:ii rniles to U1e southeast. Commun ist an i1s lr.ving to capture high ground just northeast of th' Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh also un leashed v.·hat a mili!ary spol(esn1an called an ''intensive'' mor1ar a11ack. The attack came white 11 Cam bod ian general and lhree U.S. milltary atta ches were visiting r(ot\\'ard po11llions in a U.S. hl'Jlcopter. They were not hurt. The genera l \\'as Brig G<'n. Nou Tho, commander of the 5,000.man government operat io n designed to 1wttp the Ulm· munl~Lll from the sv.·amp y area 12 mile!! northeast of Phnom Penh A U.S •m· bassy spokesman said Nou Tho was taken to the scene in an un marked U.S. Army Sorry, W 1·ong Singer And Co111 poser, Too Corona de:I tltar High School sophomore itcl1:=.sa Tosh didn't sing the song she 11rote tlie mu!'ir for at her school's j,7radu atlon exercises Thur.!lday. despite 1vh11t you may ha\'e read in the Dally Pilot. Jenny Quick'1 soprano 1roice deliv ered ''I \Vish I \\!ere a 'T'ret," a 30ng with lyrJc5 writlt-n by stil l anothe r 11tudent, Diane Schmidt . The D11tly Pilot regreb the IPJTQr. An ExceptionCLl Investment! Estate, La.dies Diamond Ring e 10.2' CT. e FINE AMERICAN CUT e BEAUTIFUL MOUNT. !NOS, 141< WHIT!OOLD, I SWIRLING PRONGS e LIGHT CHAMPAGNE COLOR e VVSI CLARITY Guarenteecl to A,pprai1e At 40'/. Mori Than Y~ Wiii Pay You must see lhl! beautlfUl diamond ring . A buy such u t.hil it ran. Come In and ask for Bob or Dom Rac!U . helicopter with y:hat the embassy called three "military attaches" and a U.$. pilot. Fi ve Soulh Vietnamese marines 1'er'e killed and 15 wounded Sunciay Jn a ballle \\'Ith O:lmmunlst force~ 12 miles ~ulh of the D:\fZ. military sources said. DllL Y l"ILOT 11111 l"llt!1 Lend< Tenrher• Longllme Harbor Area teach- er and high school counselor Kingery '\Vhitcy" \\"hi tencck has been elected president Cl f t he Ne\\'port·f\.·lcsa Education Association. a 750-ntember teachers' group affili at ed \vit h the California Teacher's Asso· lion ICTA ). \Vhileneck is a counselor at Estancia 1-ligh School. DOM RACITI f:QUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK DIAMOND GUARANTEE Whon T°" buy a diamond from ut •• wll auarantN thaf c:llamoncl to appralt• at 40°!. MORE than you palc:I for It or your money back. Can you clo •• well 1l1awhtr1? m J oli COMPARE. llll NE~:RT .~:~~~A f: oan h~ Home Of Fine Jewelry -846-7741 I • ' " .. -~ ,-_.,.. --.. --.... -. ·-· - ~osta Mesa EDI T ION VO(. ·M , NO. 147, 3 SECTIONS, 34· PAGES ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA 7 Judges Today's Final N.Y. Stocks -MONDAY, ~UNE 21 , 1971 TEN CENTS to Air Furor Full Appeals Panel to Hear P,~ntagon Dispute •1\· "' 'iLT "'LOT ttnt ,...,. Kiss for Luck "' ~·-·1<rt..,; Mrs. Donna Albus giv es her pet 'Monti' a buss on the heidi s she pre· pares him for the Orange Coun ly Poodle Club's Eighth annual com- petition at the Orange County Fairgrounds. ?\1ore than 150 poodles from San Diego to Bakersfield participated in the competition Sunday. Special MeetiI1g Called On Ne wport-M es a Budge t The Newport-Mesa Unified School Dis- trict Board of Education has set a spe- cial hoard meeting to nail down details of I.he distriot't 1971-72 budget, to be held al 7 p.m. June 29 in the Lyceum of Cost.a Mesa lligh Sdlool. . . The meeting agenda also will include 8isC1Jssion of the 1970-71 district goals and ebjectlves as well as a study of data pro- Mu rder Suspect Juan Co rona T ransfer Eyecl 1 YUBA CI TY <UPI\ -Sutter County authorities are considering transferring mess murder suspect .J uan V. Corona to San Quenlin prison for medica l c;:ire. il was reporled today. The J7·year-0ld farm labor conlraclor, eusptcted of kilting 2~ lransient farm workers. was admitted to the jail ward of tf11t.ler County General Hospital Friday alter complaining of chest pains. A. G«lrge Oakley , assist.ant W the director of the State Department of Cor· rectioM, said In Sacramento he had been contacted by Sutter County Sheriff Roy O. Whiteaker about "procedure.!"' for transferring Corona to San Quentin. Oakley eaid San Quentin bas the be1'l facility ln the state prison 5ystem for treating heart cages and other physical ailments. cessing services operated by the disLricl. The meeting will be the last al\ended by Dr. William Cunningham whose resig- nation from the superintendency becomes effective .Jul:; I. On that day he bf'CQmes executive secretary of the Association or California School Administralt)T's, 11 npw\y formed !iilatewlde organizat ion hPadquartered in Burlinga~. His successor, Dr. John Nicoll is ex- pected jo attend the special board mPPI· Ing June 29. Allhough trustees havt. adopted 11 $.10 ~ million preliminary budget drart. the special meeting was called to rev iew several pc-rtions or the budRel th at had been lert blank . TI1e program.'> and serv· ices allocatio11s to specific schools v.·ere not included in the early drRft, ~nding reviev.· of this )'Car's expenses. Salaries and fringe benf'li ls for teach- rrs also have no! been set. pending out - co me of "meet and confer" sessions or the district negotiating co uncil. Neither the board nor I.he Newp0rt· l.1esa Education Association have re· leased further details on the progress or salary discus.o;ion since the board sent ii!! written reponses lo teacher demands more than a month ago. 'T'ht!-school board's annu;ll organizll- tlonal meeting nt which. newly elected trustee Donald Sm.;illwood will be seated and oHice rs will be elected, has been called for 1 p.m., July 6_ Smallv.'OOC:i, a 42-year-old Costa Mesa attorney was elected to lhe board April 20 to the seat being \•acat.ed by James Peyton who is retiring after 11 years of board service. NEW YORK (AP) - A hearing on the government's claim that the New York Times should be barred from further publication of a secret Pentagon study of the Vietnam war was postponed today to ello w the case to go before a full seven- judge panel of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Tuesday. The government. which was defeated in its move to stop further Times publica· ti on in .a lower court, had been scheduled Hearing Set For Del Mar Widen i ng Bid A publ ic hearing on the rontroversial Del Mai Avenue widening project. ance condemned as a Boulevard of Broken Dreams if carried out. comes ba ck before the Costa Mesa City Council tonight. Little -if anything -i~ changed, i;ince a deci.sion was postponed Feb. 16 to allow further study. The item is one of more than 20 on an eight-page agenda and will likely come unper di scussion not long after coun· c1lmen convene at 6:30 under a new, streamlined schedule. City Manager Fred Sorsabal said today the city still recommends a widening along the north side of the street. ta.king 39 lots between Newport Boulevard and Santa Ana Avenue. Stale Division of Highwayli efficia\s have been prenlng l'of" an earlier deel1ion on the Sl.28 million project, which will probablv 110 higher, following rec,ent pr(). perty value appraisals. Plana for a Del Mar Avenue overcross· Ing on the Newport Freeway depend nn choice of a north or southside alignment and time i5 short. since preliminary con- slruction begins soon there. F'reeway alignment construction as far south as the northerly boundary of !he Orange County Fairgrounds should get under way shortly. A series of citi zen speakers at the last hearing assailed the widening designed to create an II-mile highway. carrying up to 44,000 cars daily on a direct route to the lJC Irvine campus. Some demanded a 5oulherly alignmenL Some pleaded th21t the $948,000 originally appraised for th' 39 Jots involved was loo ~ow, Others urged lhe stre-et be left as it "· Nol only Cost a "1esa. but NPwport Beach 11nd the state Division of Highways ;ire all involved ln th, packa g,, for wh ich plans were presented and adopted just t .,...o years ego. Thi.~ rules out dropping the widening In R~ feet. Reappraisals madr since ;ire ex- pected to offer more sallsf;iclion to pro- perty owners who mu st be relocated, One question raised wa s whether a hortherty alignment wouid match up to other <11ignments along the route. which will link Fair Drive , Del Mar Avenue , Campus Drive and University Drive . City M;inager Sorsabal said today th11t this angle -1Jne that failed to impress councilmen lour months ago -is out because the county can match either a northerly nr southf'rly rouf.e. 1 Funds heve 11lready been allncaled by \he county for construction. The original council decision was for 11 s1x·month delay subject to earlier hear· ing if the Sla te Divi~ion nf Highways began prodding for action. Construrtion of the actual wldeninp: il~elf -regardless of whirh ~ide -i~ scheduled for 1975 to 1977 in the timetable outlined four months ago. to go before. a three-man appeals p.a.Mi this morning. In Washington, meanwhile, the govern· ment argued in U.S. District Court th.at documents from the Pentagon study used by the Washington Post in assembling its stories ccntaln in formation about current operational plans Jn the war. Both the Times .11nd the Post r£>mained under restralnt.s not to publish articles about the study pending outcome of the court .actions. Prior to the govunmeot's Test Case Set effort! to stop publicaUoo, the Times published three lMtallmeDll from tbt study and the Post two. In .a brief filed for the appeals court, the Tim es argued that a forced return of the classified documents would violate both constitutional rights and rights under the New York State 1'(reedom of information'' law enacted last year. Deciding to bring the Times ca.!ie before the full court of •ppeal.!i, Chief Judge Henry J. Friendly said: Court Agrees to Consider Wiretap Issue Next Tenn WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court agreed today to rule next term on whether the government. may tap the telephone of anyone \L believes to be a threat lo national security without ob. taining consent from a federal judge. The test case to be heard next fall or winter involves 11 mounting di5pu te over a claim by Attorney General John N. Mitchell thal the government's right of self-protection surmounL~ an individual"s right of privacy in s t. cu r i t y in- vestigations. f\.1itche ll has assumed .authority to ap- prove te.lephone wiretaps in such in· stances bu t in the lest case, to be decided );>y 11. wrilteq opinion, the Justice Depart- 1inenl !Ollt oa two lower court rulinas. la other 1ctlcms. the court: -Ruled it is not mandatory for st.ates to provide jury trials for juveniles even for offenses \Vhich would require a jury for an adult. For the ma jority, Justice Harry A. Blackmun said such a pro- cedure for Juveniles "is the statt 's privilege and not its obligation." -Let .~tand a Georgia election Jaw pro- visio n that an independent candidate must oblai11 signatures of 5 percent of the electora!r lo be placed on the ballot. -Refused to Intervene in the perjury conviction or Martin Sweig, former a<f.. ministretive .asslstant to former House Speaker John W. McCormack. Swtig claimed he was used .llR 1 "whipping boy" in the government '11 ln fiuence·peddling c;.se against lobbyist Nathan Voloshen . -Agreed to review next term 11 lower court. ruling striking down 11. Georgia law which made abusive language punishable as a breach of the peace, -Denied a hearing to publisher R1\ph Ginzburg who faces a jail aenlence for a 1963 obscenit y conviction, The wiretap test case accepted by tbe court came from Delroit. U.S. Distri ct Judge Damon·J . Keith of Detroit ruled such enve&dropping un- constitutional in th• caa. of · Lawrence Pl1moadon, minister of Dt(enM, of .the While Panther Party. Ha wa1 ~bel4 April a. 1971, by the Ith U.S. Cttcuit Court o( Appeals. The Supreme Court will bear the case next fall or winter 11.nd decide it later by written opinion. Keith Order~ the tOY!l'Mlfni. tO band over it.s eavesdropping reeOrds to Plamondon. accused ot consplrln1 to blow up the Central Intelligence Agency of{ice.s at Ano Arbor, Mich., where the par!y.ls based. The gove rnment admitted tha t conversations of Plamondon had been overhe11rd by means of a lap approved by Mitchel!. San P edro Boy Discovered Dead iI1 Newport Harbor Scores of citizens nn foot. joined .11 land , i:.ea and air se~rch for a missing San Pedro boy Sunday, but the hunt end~d lragically when he wa~ found. drowned, floating in Newport Harbor. Christopher Langslon, 4, l'landered away from a family sailboat outing al the Irvine Mar ina. 13:>3 Bayside Drive, around 5 p.m , according to police reports. _ His parents. Mr. and Mrs. John Whitney. notiried authoritie., afl~r their own 20-minule 5e8rch. A Newport Beach police helicopter crew covered the liUrrounding area, in· eluding B&lboa Island. broadcasting the name and description of the lost child . Jnvcstigator11 1aid patrol cars found m1ny persons, citizens and visitors out hunting the boy wi thin 10 minute!. Cre"-'S from the Orange County Harbor nepartment and city Marine Safely Depart ments were 11lso assigned. Fearing the worst, lifeguard scuba div ers entered the bay waters .af~r the. hunt on land turned up no trace. of young Christopher. 'Hum bl e Harv' P leads Innocent In Wife's Death LOS ANGELES IUPll -llUc Jockey Harvey "Humble Herve'' Miller pleaded inoocent Mondfty to charges be murdered his wife. Miller, 36, was ordered fD atand trial Aug. 18. • ' The body of his wUe. Mary, 35, w1a found in the couple'• Hollywood home M;.y 7. An all-points bulleti;.n was !MUed frn-Milltr, who played popular maslc on radio station KHJ. He 1urrendered two week! later. Supe rior Court Judge Arthur L. He noted San Quentin. beside! posi;es1'- lng good physical facilities, draws from 1everal medicl.! con!Ultant.. in the. San Francisco Bey arn. Story' Triumphs Alarcon refused to issue a "gag order" in the case, requested by ddense attorney Grant Cooper, but he dld order the tran.5<:r!pt of 1 closed ' municipal court. prellmin1ry hu(ing remain ~aled until the trial. Under etate law, whtn a count y prisoner requlre1 medk.:al treatment Which cannot be provided locally, be can be trans(erred to the nearest state prison Po!MSling adeq\aate facilitlu i f peinni.s!ion 15, gr~ by a superior court judge and the state director of cor- ~ttons. The county reimburses the Patt. ,J VS'l'l N OGA T A GE TS DIP LOMA 1n December of 1969, Justin Ogata was paralyzed in a wrestling 11cclden1 a! Cnst• Mesa High School . La!it werk, In • whffl ch"ir and to 1 slandlnt tv11 tion from hill cl1:t.<im11te~. ti" irt•dt11ted from hqdl school. F'or his 111.ory, M!I Glenn Whltt.'s column In today's sports aecllon. Smash Hit Film Ends 26-week Stay at Newpou By TERRY covru.E Of !"-Dell't P-.t ..... "Leve Story" bas been a 2&-wttlt affair the owneri of Edwards Newport Cinema won't brush off a1 a "winter romance." "It was the biggffi film in 40 ye•rs of business for our circuit," t1ay5 ·Vic Mil~. assistant to the via! president of the Edwards chain. When "l.ove Story" shtd.s ib la5t tear Tuesday at the Newport ·Bf:aetl the11ter. more Ula.n 200,000 viewers will have seen it there. • "We grossed about half ' million dollars Oft It," M1Uer seld. ··1r we owned the Kleenu concession we could ha ve m11de a million." AU MacGraw and Ry•n O'Neill took l'>Ver the Newport screen nn Chri11tm11• day for an excluslv~ run in Orange Cmm· ty -26 weeks or e1clustve run. One other Oranae County theater. ln Buena Pa.ri, also bad an exclusive con- tract on it. ''Th? wu the longest any film h11 tvtr run in Orange County." Miller ad-- ded. "Jt"1 11. good emotional picture, one of a kind." "The critics knocked it, gc.ve lt lousy reviews." be continued. "But J think peo- ple were tired of the se:irploitaUoo and violenct shoved dowr, their throats. "It's just 1 beffuliful movie . people associate with It. h'1 been done be:fore under dlffe~nt titles. It 's " good emo- tional picture. Some girls saw It 14 Umes." He 111id the Edwards chain bought the film laat summer. before It w111s relcaatd . Chri11tma• day was the hegiMing o( "Love St.or-y" ln all part.. of the 001mtry. "Newport la an atta that deservee ~ premiers, jual like Hollywood. People 10 to the movies here," Miller said. H• count.d th< 200,000 people who watched "Love Story" and estimated that figure al five and a half times the. popula- tion of Ne,f1Xll't Beach. "Love story" e.vtn oot p1,1.lled the Edwards aeeond biggest film , ''Airport'', which ran el&ht weeks at lhe Newport Cine.ma and drew 1llghUy more. ~ 100.000 fans. "We lhought bw:lnesa WIS good then, now look. We've already bought 'The Godfather' for the Newport theater. ''We're buylng IOme films that haven't even been m11de yet," MUl er said. " •Love Story' h11d what we call 'legs.' It drew people lo Newport from San DieKO, San BernArdlno and Pasadena." "It wW be like loslnC an old friend when we take ll oft tbe screen." •I ' Cooper argued that extra-judicial atatemenb by the principals ln the case would endanger Miller's rlatrt ·to a fair trial. However, Alan:on ruled there wu in· aufflcleni evidence tn IUppor\ aucb . an order. Everest Conquerer To Lead U.S. Groups SEATILE, Waob, (UPI) -The only man alive to climb Mt. Everest tlike will be In the Pacific Northwut this summer to brm:e up ind down 14,4iB-loot Mt. Rainier with 1roups of tourists. Nawang Gombu, 40, is vlsltlnc Jim Whlltaker. Seattle climber a n d ~lne1sman who was the first American top top the 29,028-foot Everest wbea ht: i nd Gombu made Ult cUmb tn 1'83. ' '"Ibis case raist!: a question of such e.1- lraordinary importance th.lit Jt abould be beard by all the judges." The decision was reached in con- sula tion over the weekend with the. two other judges of the three·man panel, J . Joseph Smith and Paul R. Hays. The Washington testimony concerning current sensitivity of the Penllt:gon documents was given by Dennis Doolln . deputy assistant secretary of defense for (See TIMES, Pa1e Z) Mesa Council Sets Hearing For Budget Review of a $11 million fiscal budge~ (ollowina two weeks of preliminary study by five councilmen Is set tonight in Costa Mesa City Council chambers. ~The public hearing is scheduled f.11irly late in an eight-page agenda co·ntaining more than 20 Items. Finance Director Robert Oman outlined the 407-page budget documents before councilmen at lhe June 7 meeting, en. couragi.ng its adoption by tonight. No tax increase over the CW'Ten• $1.52 1/, rate Lo; involved in the budge'. although it i1 up $700,000 over the. 1970-71 version. Oman explained one factor is a $200,000 single chunk caused by a bi-weekly pay 1yatem that givu employes one extra check in the fiscal period each 14 yeara. If any cha.ngu a.re made, they won't likely be"major. '!be bala11Ced budget's larg~t 1ingl1 outJay is $3,687,380 or 35.7 percent for public safety operations involving police.. Ure and related branches. Opltal lmprovemei'lts comes neat, a'. 16.22 percent, or $1,675,700 of the $12 million tota l. The remaining ezpend ttures budgeted are brokeo down this way: -Internal Services, Sl,366,575, or 13.23 percent. -Public Works. Sl.347,945. or 13.05 per- cent. -Park!. Parkwa.ys and R.ecre.aUon , $&11.475, « 8.05 percent. -General Government, $681 ,310, or 6.60 percent. -Costa Mesa Galf and Country Club, $390,265. or 3.78 percent. -Special DistJtct.s. $348,575, or 3.37 percent. The budge t is balanced out by $?.220,00CI in the g'neral fund reserve. plus a varie- ty of other sources of income to city operations. Rtvenue from other agenries . such ag; highv.·ay taxes and the like Is the largest, with SJ.056.994 income anticipated, or 29.60 percent. The revenue breakdown ror 1971·12 looks like thi.'i : -Sales Tax, $2,645 ,000. or 25.61 per· cent. -Gene ral Property Taxe.s. St.885,000. or 18.25 perce.ilt. -Miscellaneous Sources. $1,190,09, or 11.52 percent. --Costa Mesa Park, Parkways and R«re.ation Dl!trlct, $884.225. or 8.56 per· cent. ....:Golf Course Income. $402,000. or 3.89 percent. ~11.sh Resources. $265.837, or 1.57 per- cenl One. pleasing feature of the bud get after a couple of bad se.aM1ns i1 a $10,00!l or better anticipated proftt from the 36· bole public golf course. Oru1e Weadler The weal.human predict. hazy sunshine today and Tuesday with . patchy fog •Jong the coast In the mornlng hours. .Hi(lht: today aDd Tuesday 70 at the beaches, 80 in- llnd. Low tonlgbL M to 82. JNSmE TODAY The Coato Mesa Civic Pl.art hou$e U winding up if.I 1ta.s01l with a production of William Sarouan'• "TM Beauttful Peo- ple." thf: pla11 ia rtvitwtd iii Enttrtainmnt, Page 19. ON ... u --I .. ~ C•Ufo'llil • M•l..,.,.1111 ... CMUk'llV' • OrH11•C-ty ci. .. 1111111 ...,. ,,.,.. .. ,..,... • C..fllfr • • :=Mlf11m 1S.11 c ... 11_. • .. ,, DMllt N•llrK " T...,_ltltt> " f911w1el ,.,. • -·· 1•1t *"'l•lfl--, .. ., WM-• Piotal!Ct .... Wlll~Wnll • -" -~-1f.U ......... " .., .... _ .. 2 bAlLV PIL~ c MfMly,JuM tl.1'71 300,000 Sun W or·shipers Jam Coast Beaches· The l'leaV?ns-parted tht' usual low .:loyds and foa: routine, I.ht walers warm. di, and 300,000 ~le flocked to Ute beaches alooR I.be Or<1.nge Coast Sunday. Ofte. 5-yttr eld child drowntd elf .tht new Irvine. Marina, the lClne tt11edy GI the weekend. taken to South Coast Ccunmun1ly }iospllal ror obatrvaUon. Rieacues along the Orange C.oast from St•l leach to Sin Clamtn\e were llght e Wr tht wtekl!n4. Ll!i1utrdt credit the dimln!Jhinf surr and the resulting near dJ11pptarance ef side currtnts a nd rip-- tides. Nt!!wport Beach lifeguards deSCt'w.d the June \\'f'tkend scene as being "almost August " They estimale some 105,000 people enjoyed the last day of Spring at lhe beach of Ne~·port Beach. Suri ran on- ly two to four feet and \Valer tem- peratures clunbed to ne.arty 68 degr!'tS on Sunday. Lifegua rds logged 83 rescues. Saturday .md 27 on Sunday. Jn San Clemente, M,000 betobtntn were lo&&ed for both d1y1. Lifeguards Sunday aided a 10-year-old girl who escaped drowning in the six-foot deep trent•h offshore from the city's north bc &Ch. With 30.000 pe!'s.ctns es11mated a t Laguna Beach, lifegu8.rds only logged eight rescues, none serious, {or the two days. Kitten, Kitten Irene Ca,tro ef 1606 l.as Bolas, made 11 to short unassisted and then collapsed 1n .the sand. lifeguards reported. She \\'as Laguna Beach guards ga \•e flr.~l ;11d to Kitten s peer out of their nest deep inside honey· suckle bush at the home or Mr. and ~!rs. Wiliam Browiling, 1762 Ana heim St .. Cos ta Mes a. Mother cat, a stray, made the nest about five feet· off th e ground, then gave birth to four k ittens. Brownings were un aware of their presen ce until the kittens we re a bou t four \Veeks old . Unfortunately, ll1r . Browning is allergic to cats, and the animal must find a new hom e. 3 l(illed in Capo Beach Freeway Rear-end Crash By JOHN VAL TERZA 01 1M Dlllr Pit.I 'llH A rear-end collision late Sunday even· ing sent a late-model foreign sedan spin· n lng across the unguarded cente r freeway divider at Capistrano Beach and headon into a charier bus, kllling a s mall boy and two women, all from the San Diego a rea. Tbe collision, ·which ulti mately involved five cars and the bus, closed all four Janes of the crowded freeway's north- bound traffic as firemen. assisted by a wrecker, fought to pry tv.·o victifM from the tangle of wreckage. Tbe dead were identified as Margaret Speyer. 27 . or San Diego: Darlene A. Bunn~ f 7. of Point lllma and 1'-1arc:us ~'allenstein, 3¥., of San Diego. AU were passengers and all \\'ere pronounced dead on arrival at South Coast Community llospital. The mishap occurred near the San Juan Creek offra mp. Sources said an unidentified "'oman physician passing the cr ash stopped to render aid. g i \' i n g mo uth-to-mouth resusc1 tat.1on lo the boy en roule to the hos pital. The measure fal!ed. ORANG>l COAST DAILY PILOT Oll~NGt: CO~JT PUI Ll5H!NO COMl'ANV Jt e.D•rl N. W ted ,.,,,.d.nt 1"11 J111&11erw J 1c\ R. Curl•v Vici Jlrc1;cl•"I 1nd C-Fll M•n•a'1' l ho111•1 A. Mwrphin1 M•"•a•na fa110t Ch1rl1f H. l oo• Rjcherd P. Nt ll • AUlstfn. M1111g"'u 1r:a110!'1. Cott• 11111'1• Otflr.e • l lO W11t ley S tr~of Me ilin9 Aclclr1n ; P'.0 . !Joi t S60, 92624 OtlMlr Of Pie" N-port 91ttll: JW Ncw::o•t lo~'Pl'lf' "'"'""'• •udlu ti: FOrttr Avl~U( 1-t11n!l1191oi Stltll: 111 1! I••<~ 8ovtov••4 S..n Cl1..,.n1t: JQS Horlll IE I C1111ioU1 R.1>l tlA1lY "ll OY. wM ""'kl'I h CDf"llllMd "'9 ,....,.,, ..... , ... ~i.Md lllt't' ••t 1p! 5....,. dot 11'1 Mtll~,. t'llltlotll tor i.Htlfll 111<"- Nl-; l_.,cll, C.Sll ~I, tot""llttflllot> 1!1-!cll. "°""'';" Y1lll f'. S." C~t1/ C._ittr-••• ''""'f&lck. • ..,,. wun -m!o~•t r.dlt•~. l'rlnr.l"I Jl>flllllfltl Ollnt lil 11 lX Wu ! Bl'f $tl"ft:. (Mii "'-""' l~HM 1714J 642-4JJ1 . Cl•lifi.4 .A4..nWtlt "4J·W71 C..,.rlf~ .. 1'71, Orl nH (l llot Pul>llJ!llfll C.-Jn't'. No ntwl 1"'19.t. lllllftt•lllM. tdl-1•1 "'•"... ., 1t ..c·ro1,1..-11 M •ll!o ....... be. •lllflllltltlll wlfflllho; .......... ,.,.. ) ro'llu~~ 0. ~: -. hr.O!d < .. M JIOl'"9 p11llll 11 N....,. 1-- l nol c .... -·· C1llfo7r"1•. t.llKrl.,tleft lly t ot• .... ltH ..,.,,11\ly> &I' iintll l~.11 -lll!'t'I n..tlllery lt1HM!llM, &:/,JI t¥11t1!1\ly, Another paS!enger In the e1pensive German sedan \\'BS critically injured in lhe high-speed collision. Peter Speyers, 28, husband or one of lhe dead wom8.n, was reported in critical condition today at S<iulh Coast. The driver, Russell f.1iller, 26, of San Diego, had only minor hurts, patrolmen said. _, Drivers or the other autos, including the operator of the charter lour bus, Ralph Adams Burch, 33, of La Palma, l'-'ere unhurt. Patrolmen said an inlensive in- vestigation into the crash is continuing. Some reporls. they said. poi nted to a m ys1ery car whic h cut a vehicle off near the San Juan Creek Road offramp, caw · ing the rear-end collision. But patrol in\•esigators said !lw}' were also checking in to other traffic fac!ors not involving \he death car "'bich could have caused the tragedy. The crash snarled traffic !or at !east an hou r in 111! northbound lanes ,1{ lhe frtt- \\"av as \·olunlcer fircn1cn fr on1 San .J11an Ca pi~trano a nrl Dohen~· stations v.orked to pry the \'ictim.s from the car. The e ra.sh \\'ll S the ~rcond in,.~a n.::c flf niultiple dealhs 111lr1buted to the l11ck of c center divider in the area in lhe !;1st several months. Late last year a car carrying a family or five careened across the divider nearby and plo wed into a chemical !ruck. The blazing collision killed four person!, leaving a 5ix.year-o!d boy the only survivor in the family. Hosmer Attacks Los. Alamitos Airport Plans A call to convert L<ls Alamitos Naval Air Station for use by commercial a nd general aviation v.•as branded ''ill·&d· vised'' today by Congressman Craig H.osmer !ft.Long Beach). In a stinglng Jetter to the Orange Coon· !y Grand J ury released today, Hosmer protested the Grand Jury recom- mend11tion that tM Oran&e Ccunty Board of Supervisora try to a cquire Loa Alamitos for use u a public airport. "The area wou1d be tumtd inlo • hi&h decible ainkhole just lik eva.ry other commercial airport. despite 1111 the pious promises airport promotel'1 t'Uflcmarily make 00 lull nearby homeawners Into falst feeling9 of s«urlly," Hosmer 111ld. "I can find absolutely no justlftcatJon for the premeditated dooming of reslden1" of Lo5 Alamttos and ne.l gh b o r ln& Rossmoor and Se11l Bt11r b to this fate." Hosmer said that Weil Or•nge C<lunty already baa ACct.aa to commercl1! and general avlaUon ftcllllltt at the Long Bt8.ch Municipal Airport, leis than fi ve miles away, Resig11ation Prompts . Nixon, Teamster Meet MIAM I BEACH (AP) -JBmes R . Hof- fa'a formal resignation as president of the giant Tea mster'!! Un ion "·as an- nounced today and President Nixon promptly arranged a visit with me111bers of the union's executive board . A Teamster spOkesman told reporters shortly berore Nixon's arrival at the Playboy P laza Hotel. \\'her the executi\"e boa rd was in session, that Hoffa 's \\Tillrn resignation had been received Sundav night. .He said F'rank E. Fitzsin1mon.o; 11t•AA sv.·om in as the new president of the 2.000.000 member un ion lhis morning. HoHa has bl'en in federal prison. on a jury tamper;ng conviction. since T\farch 1967. He has unsuccessfully sought parole. On June 3. he let it be kno11t·n he \\'Oulrl 1·elinqul sh the presidency or ' he. Teamsters. Nixon's closed s!'.'Ssion V.'L\h !he union execut111e board marked the first time any President has ;;trended a Teamster function since prosecu tion of Hoffa bega n during !he 2ilministration of President .!ohn F l\c nned~·. Ho11ever. Fi1zsimmons v.·as in\·1ted bv 1\'ixon lo a dinner for union chiefs at the \\'hite House last Labor Day. Aftershock Jiggles Los Angeles Basin LOS ANGELES (AP) -A mode.rate earthquake shook parts <lf lhe Uis Angeles Nca at 9:01 a.m. today, ap- parently another aftershock of the feb. 9 major tremor . There v.·ere no reporl!i or m 8.jor damage. although one man told police his refrigera tor was knocked over. Telephone service was disrupted in one area of the San Fernando Valle~'· CN Tech seismologists said the qua~e registered 3.!t on the Richter scale and V.'<ts centered In lhe San Fernando Vallty. It wa~ the largest after.shock of the b1g <1uake since April ~. Shirley Fh·n1 Gets Class roont Contract The W. J. Shirley Company has been awarded a conlract to move 11: relocatable clas.!iroom unit from TeWlnkle 1tfiddle School in Costa Afesa lo Harbor Vit w E lementary Sc hool. Cor ona del i\1ar. The firm's bid of $13,800 "'as approved recently by the Nt "•porl·Mesa UnlUed School District board of education. Council Strea111liu ecl Anyone "'l!h businds befo~ tht Co~I A Melltt City Cooncll should rem1:mber thl" Council ts now operating on a stre11m\Jn· ed schedule. Convening hour Is 6:3(1 p m . "'Ith no break prior to a 7:30 pm. srsslon • \ !II viclims of n\lnor btach accidents in· clud1n& the rescuscltation of 11: young Anahtim won1a n who collapsed «i the i\1a ln Beach. At Huntington Beach city beaches, lifeguard! e1timated 80,000 persons on. Salu rday and 95,000 people on Sunday·. \Veekend rescues totaled 132 from a surf !hat ran only one to three feet. The c11y's Selective Enforcement De tai l logged JOO arrests of adults and juveniles over lhe weekend on charges ranging lro1n minors f103Sessing alcohol lo suspi· cion of possession ol narcotlcs for :.li lt', and car burglary. Capt. Arland Uuher, commander of the Huntington Beach Patrol division, said, ··we v.·ant people to kn ow we have a beach where pt'Ople can come lo enjoy themselves. But if they co1ne to break the Jaw, we \\'111 see to 11 they go to ja1!, forthwith." he said. Huntington Sta le Beach es!ima!!'d l'ro\\ds at 20,000 both days and rellcue!i totalled JO. Bolsa Chica Beach attendante v.as J0.000 bottl days. Orange County }larbor Departmert reported ''heavy routine days" but no dran1at1i· rescues although s e v e r a I s<i ilboa ls 1lpped over in lh~ n\edium surf. 'fhey reported light winds from !he southeast over n1ueh of the \'.•eekend and the !01v clouds and fog u.~ually expected 1n .June on!V ltrn ited visibility 011 Satur· day This · morning winds from th~ nor1hwest al 1 ~2:> knots \1 ere reported wllh visi bility of from three lo four ITU!.e!. Study 'Not True Picture'· LBJ Say s Pentagon Papers Distort His Viet Role i\'E\V YORK (AP) -F'ormer President Lyndon 8. John.son believes the secret Pentagon study of the Vietnam war does not reflect the true picture of h is role, a c· <'Ording to reports in Time and NeWS\\'eek n1Agazines. Time. in a report on the Pentagon ~ludy controvers~·. said that Johnson reels the documents "do not tefJ the true ~tory because they are mostly con· tingency plans.·• Newsweek said J ohnson believes the study presents a dishonest, distorted and biased pltlure of his rolr and th at !he eirrun1stant·es surrounding i1.'i being lea k- ed 10 1he Ne1v York Times "come close to I reason.'' Quoting •·those in Austin privy to his feeli ngs,·· Newsweek said the former president sees "the-ghostly hand ttf Rober t Kennedy., on the Pentagon study. J\1cNamara. Nev.•sweek said J ohnson con· sidered McNa ma ra "a Kennedy man." Time, which noted that it gave nn source for Johnson's views, said J ohnson feels tha l his greatest mistake in the war was wa iling until he had been in o[fice for 18 months before sending American sold iers into hattle "for by then he felt that Vietnam was almost lost. .. Tin1e a lso s<iid J ohnson believes he tnade a mist a~e in "failing to institute censorship, no! to cover up mi stakes. but to prevent the enemy {ron1 knowing what the United Slates was going lo do next." News"·eek quoted Duni el Ellsberg. the man \\'ho was named by a former New York Times ne11.·sman as the s.cturce of •the Times' document s. as saying in an in· terview last week that he had tried unsuccessfully to get Henry Klssinger, President Nixon·s foreign a ffairs advjsor, le read the study. "Now he can read it in the papers," Ellsberg was quoted as saying in an in· te.-view a t his Cambridge, 1.1as!i., home befo re be dropped out ef sight la1t Wednesday. Ellsberg has not been seen publicly since. although he telephoned the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, v.'here he is a research associate, en Fri· dav lo report that he was well. ,:I'm flattered to be suspected," he declared in the in1ervie\\' but he refused to say whelher he \1·as !he man \\'ho sup- plied the study to the Times. Ne~·sweek said. Tlme said that T\lcNamara hopes lha t the entire report wHl be de<:lassifitd and. made available lo the public. f.1cNamara. now head of the World. Bank. was reportfd to feel that th• sensational way in "'hich the documents came to light "is tragic'' but that the country no w should ''get Cln with the Lask ~r !earning" from them. According to this viev.'. Ne\\·sweek reported, the late Ne w York senator needed an issue for his intended 1968 cha llenge lo Johnson for the Democratic presidential nomination and "pinned his hopes on Vietnam." 'fhe study was ordered by then Reds Bombard S. Viets Secretary ef Defense Robert S. i .1 From Page 1 With Rockets, .Mortar NY TIMES ... international security arfairs. It came as the government cpened ii! ca se by renev.•ing its contenlion that publication or the material by the pres! would result in irreparable damage to na. llona l security, The Times case \\·enl before the 2nd Circuit en appeal by the government follo"·ing rrjectio n Saturday of the government'~ request lor a preliminary J1Junct1on against tbe ne~<'spaper. In Washington, U.S. District Court Judge Gerhard Gesell heard argument on a government request to enjoin the Post. r.a~t week. Gesell denied t h e government's request. bul the District of Columbia appeals court overruled him and sent the case back to him for a hear- ing. Gesell interrupted Doolin during his 1c.st1niony and moved the hearing into .~ecre1 session for further exploration of securi!y rn1:1tters. In his P.'cw York Times ruling Satur· da}'. U S. Distr ict C'.ourt J udge i\furray Gurfcin rejected the governmenrs con· 1ention -presented Friday by U.S. Al· lorney \Y'hitney North Seymour J r. - !hat "in!er\\•oven materia:s in the dflcuments .still have \"itality and affect 1111l1lary n1al1ers and present and future military pla ns and pol il'y." Gurfcin ordered closed-door hearings in lhe Tln1es case. but In his ru ling denying the govern ment reques1 sa id: "i\'i thuut r!'vcal1n.': the content of the secret testur1ony, .~urflce it to say that no l'O,ll Fnt reasons 1~·e1·e advan~d as to \\'h~· 1hese docunirn1s except ln thr general fr.11nf>1-1•ork of f'n1harrfl SSfTICn\ prrviously 1ni>111ionf'cl. 11ould vll allv affect lhc ~Cl'urit y of thr nation " · Ar~1u11cn1 11•iv; cxpccl ed 10 be inuch !:ihOr!rr lhan the nine hours of open court ;ind ~f'rrrt ~ess1on testi1nony heard by Gurfcin Frida y. SA IGON IUPI) -Communist troops hit South Vietnam·s Fire Base F uller near the demililarized 7,one 1DMZ ) \\"ilh J .000 rounds of rockets and mortars today and follO\\'ed up \\'ilh a ground attack, military sources repor ted. It was the second major attack in two days but ihe South Vietnamese held off the assault. 852 bflmbers c<1rried out massive s trikes in the gener al area, h1t- ling s uspected North Vietnamese troop concentratiflns \\'ith 500 ton~ of bombs in the ninth day of heavy air attack. Alilitary sources speculated lhe com· munist!; \\'et·e tr.vin~ to overrun the base, fiv e miles south of the DMZ and 20 miles inland from the coa5t, to Irv lo kn ock it out and !ry tn gel at Ca mp Carroll. a big American ba.~e six milr>s lo the southr<1s1. Communist cnils tryi ng lo capture high ground j'ust northeast or the Cambodian capital of Phn om Penh also unleashed v.·hat a m ilitary spokesman called an '·intensive" mortar attack. The attack came \vhi!e a Cambodinn general and lhree U.S. military attaches \\'ere visiting forward positions in a U.S. helicopter. 111ey v.·cre nol hurt. The general \\'as Brig C:rn. Nou Tho. m m1nander of the 5.000-man government operation designed 1o sv.·eep the Com· mtrnists (rom the S\\'ampy area 12 miles northeast nf Phnflm Penh A U.S. em· bassy spokesman said Nou Tho .,.,·as taken lo the scene in an unmarked U.S. Army helicopter \1·ith \\'hat the embass~· calll"d three "1nili lary altar.hrs .. and a Ll .S. pilot. Fi\'f' Sou1h \.'ielnamrsr. m11 ri11rs wf're killed and 1:-l "·ounded Sunday in a battle 11t•ith Communisl fnrc<"s 1:! rnilrs south of lhr> D.\1Z. nuli!ary sources !'aid. The U.S. C()mrn and repor1f'd 2,.'lOO morr American servicemen were withdrawn from Vietnam l a~! 111eck. lowering lroop ~irength to 244.9(1(1 The 1-1•1!hdr<1"'al figure was the lowest for a week s ince mid· An Exceptional lnvest111ent! Estate, Ladies Diamond Ring e 10.26 CT. e FINE AMERICAN CUT e BEAthlFUL MOUNT. ING$, 14K WHITEGOLO, I SWIRLING PRONGS e LIGHT CHAMPAGNE COLOR e VVSI CLARITY Guarant••d to Apprais• At 40'/. Mora Than You Wiii Pay ''ou m ust see th is beautiful d iamond ring. /\ buy such as this is rare. Come in and a s k for Bob or Dom Raciti. r/!Je3a J etve/,.11 & cfoan 1131 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA J·lome Of Fine Je\v,lry -646-7741 F ebruary and was less than hall the 4.885 per 11"eek that had been the average sinca the se1·enth phase of the withdrawal pro- gram beg an. • In a delayed report. the command said ln Air F'orce Al Skyraider fighter wai shot down <>ver the Plain of Jar.!! in Laos F'riday, killing one American. It wa!i lhe fi4th U.S. plane reported destroyed in combat over Laos since sta tistics first v.•ere issued !oitarch 10. 1970. The command also reported an Army OH6 light observation helicopter wa! !hot down Sunday 115 m iles southwest of Saigon in the Mekong Delta. \\'ith onl crev.•man l'.'Ounded. · Mesa11 A1Tested For Second Time On Pot Charges A Costa Mesa man's name a nd addres.! lumed up on police records again Sun. day. after the same officer \\'ho arrested him a v.·eek earlier took him into custody on si milar charges. Charles A. Larca, 25. of 202 Rose Lane. \\as booked on suspicion of possession o[ n1ari1uana. Officer Denni!! Ho~!ifeld said he re<.·ognized Ule suspecl as one he had ar· res ted before along with a compa nion on :-;uspici11n of possession of dangerous drugs for sale. The patroln1an 1-1:en1 lo La rca·i; ht1 me ffl rhec)i a loud party al 3 a m . and claimed !he sound of a toilet nush1 ng led him to catch Larc11 in the ba!hroom. Ho.~sfr!d ~a id he ob!alllf'd <1 s1ra1nr.r and \\·as able to sift a qu<1 nt11 v of mari· juana as evidence. after '~'hich the suspect was taken in for bonking. DOM RACITI *OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK DIAMOND GUARANTEE Whtn you buy • di•mond from us W• will gu•r•nfff that dl•mond to appr aise at 40% MORE than you paid for It or your money back. Cen you do a1 well •lsewhtr•1 COMPARE. 7 7 . -... ... . . ... - Saddlehaek vor. 64, NO. 147, 3 SECTIONS, H PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 21, 197f Today'• Fln•I \ -N.Y. Stoeb TEN CENTS ' ac oast an s Govern1nent Claim War Papers Case Faces 7 Judges NEW YORK !AP ) -A hearing on the gov~mment's claim that the New York Times should be barred from further publication of a secret Pentagon study of. th e Vietnam war was postpcned today to allow the case to go before a full seven· judge panel of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Tuesday. The government, which was defeated in Its move to stop further Tlmes publica- tion in a lower court, had bttn scheduled to go before a three-man appeals panel this morning. in Washington, meanwhile. the govern· ment argued in U.S. District Court that documents from the Pentagon study used by the Washington Post in assembling its 1torics t'C'ntain information about current eperational plans in the war . Both the Times and the Post remained under restraints not to publish articles about. the study pending outcome of the court actions. Prior to the government"s efforts to stop publicati'on. the Times published three installments from the i;tudy and the Post two. In a brief filed for the appeals court, the 'Times argued that a forced return of the classified documents would violate both constitutional rights and rig hts urider the New York St.ate "freedam of information'' Jaw enacted last year. Deciding to bring the Times case before the full court of appeals, Chief Judge 11enry J. Friendly said : "This case raises a question of su ch ex· traordinary importance that it should be beard by all the judges." The decision was reached in con+ 11.llation over the weekend with the two other judges of the three-man panel, J . Prowler Escapes After Choke Try A would·be burglar who roused an elderly San Clemente woman after crawl· Ing in through a bedroom window Sun~ay tried to choke the Y.'oman before being frightened away. Lena M. Hodes, 76. of 311 Calle Madrid. "''as apparently unhurt in the assault 1,vhich took place at 4:05 a.m. Sunda y. The woman told officers she was l \.1-'<t kened by a man in his 20s. \Vhen the prowler notice d her he began to choke the wom an, The commollon aroused another occupant of the house and tlie intruder ned. Jnvestigators found a ~1arine Corps jacket in the residence left behind by the assailant. A name is painted on the jacket. pclice aa ld. Beatrice Smith Rites Conducted Wttkend runeral services we~ con· ducted in Colton for Mrs. Beatrice Smith. 75. of San Juan Capistrano. She died last Wednesday. Burial followed the rites Saturday in Mountain View Cemetery. Mrs. Smith, of 30751 Calle Chueca, San Juan, leaves her husband , J. Owen Sm ith; two sons. Joseph Smith of Foster City and William G. Smith of San Btrnardino: a daughter, Mrs. Owen a Amen of Dana Point; three brothe rs. Joseph c.neron of FloridA and Douatas 111nd Kenneth cameron of CAiifornia: 1. 1te:ter. Mra. M11rtha Rimsdall of Maine, and eight irandchildren. Veteran Marine Unit Will Hold Exercise Camp P~dleton's llit Marine. Oi~i!ion -honored in recent monthl by Preindent Nixon -will take to the field thi1 week In ll~ first exercises &ince retumi.na from Vletn11m. Exercise Bt.11 Thumpe r will be con- ducted the neit five day1. starting with a helicopter-borne 8ssaul t which will ae.iu and tceupy an objective. The a11sau1t group then wUI u:t up 11 Urt support bast on occupied lerrltory, bau spokesmen ~llld. • Joseph Smith a11d Paul R. Hays. The Washi ngto n testimony concerning current sensitivity of the Pentagon documents was given by Dennis Doolin, deputy assistant sec retary of defense for international security affairs. It came a.s the govemment opened il.S case by renewi ng its ron tention that publication of the material by the press wou!d result in irreparable damage lo na. tional security. The Times case went before the 2nd Circuit on appeal bY. the government following rejection Saturday of the gover nment's request for a preliminary injunction against the newspaper. In Washington, U.S. District Court Judge Gerhard Gesell heard argument on a government request to enjoin the Post. Last week. Gesell denied t h e government's reque st, but the District of Columbia appeals court overruled him and sent the case back to him for a hear· ing. Gesell interrupted Doolin du ring hi! testimony and moved the hearing into secret session for further expl oratioD of security malters. In his New York Times ruling Satur· day, U.S. District Court Judge Murray Gurfein rejected the government's con· tenlion ,..... preseil~ Fri{:lay by U.S. At- torney Whitney North SeYmou'r Jr. - that ';interwoven mate.rial.a in the documents .still have vilality and affect military matters and present and future military plans and policy.'' cu·rtein ordered closed·dtK'lr bearings in the Times case, but in his rullng denying the government request said : Summer Classes Scl1eduled At Saddleback Summer recreation will start Tuesday at eight schools in the Capistrano Unified School District. Afternoon playground activities will ht off ered at Concordia. Crown Valley. Las Palma s. Palisades, San Juan, Viejo and Marco Forster schools fromm 1 to 5 p.m. each weekday with Fridays at Con cordia as the only ex ception. An cxten:iive girl"s softball program also is being organized with team~ from each elementary school area to be set up. At \easl 18 or more teams will take parL Oth er spec la 1 activities include tennis lessons mornings and evenings and specialized arts and crafts at Crown Va lley and Las Palmas. At San Clemente High School, program:s will include girl'i; gymnastics and modem dance, plm boy 's "'eight liflinR and physical fitness. Most of the programs will continue through July 30. Pump Failures At Water Plant Kick Up Odors Unforeseen pump failure& at San Clemente's new water reclamation pl ant have caused ~ trmportry Odor problem, city offic ials conctded thl! week. But City Manager Ken Carr said that wllen replacement. parb to the failing pumps are. received lrom a New York manufacturer, the odor1 which have been wafting through the city'! manufacturing district and San Clemente Higb School will sub:ddc. "When the plant la working as designed -with all the pump• functkming -thtn the operation iJ vlrtually <>dorleu," he .said. "But in Ult past several wee.ks we. have had breakdowns. w~ch were t.o\ally un+ fore1een for a new ra cl l lty .•• brukdowns ln several types of pumps not ]Ullt one." . The plant has a speciall y de1igntd dome. over tht more odorous ttnk which usually trips all smells given off by the terUary treatment. Complaint.s have been aired In recent days ovu the smells borne each aJ- te.rnoon by the westerly M!I breeu. MIL Y l>ILOT Si.ff l'ltlllt THREE DIED IN SUNDAY NIGHT FREEWAY COLLISION OF CAR ANO CHARTER BUS Bodies of Two Victims Hid to Be Cut From Wreckage After Devast1tin9 Cr1sh Down the Mission Trail Big Skateboard Contest Slated MISSION VIEJO -A unique contest measuring akateboard skills will be open to MiS!iion Viejo residents 7 years old and up. The event will begin at 10 a.m. Tuesday at the Montan ow Recreat.ion Cr.nter. Winners. who will be judged by skill~ speed. and artistry, will receive awards. For information on registration call lhe center at 837-408-i. • B e ach Parl!J Planned LAKE FOREST -A bea ch pa rty for Lake Forest teenagers ls being organ ized for Tuesday. The group will go lo Balboa from noo_n to 8 p.m. Sign up at the Beach and Tennis Club for the beach party. For more in· formatio n call the club al 837·6161. • llom 10 Make Splosl• MISSION VIEJO -Nn summer would be co rnplete. v,·ithout a water fight. i\lissio n Vlejo's pre·teens will be invi ted to make rheir big splash \VP.dnesday. J une 2.1 at 1 p.m. al lhe Montanoso Recreation Cent.er. Admission will be one empt y half·gallon milk carton. • Finch lo Head VIP• Presidential Adviser Robert Finch vdll head the list of VIPs dedicating Dana Harbor July 31, it was learned today. Dozens of other political and com- munity leaders are expected to attend the rites eomprising the. formal dedication of the entire Harbor complex. The Dana Point Chamber of C-Ommerce Is playing a key role In the dedication ceremonies. Finch's last formal public appearance along the coast was as featured speaker at the first-day Jssue of the nation's nrst antipollution stamps last year. Those ceremonies were held al the Westem White House . ·• Tee. Swimmers Sought EL TORO -Teenagers who would like to earn their Red CrOiS aenlor life. saving ceklrlcate are being !Ought. Swimmers with certificates mi needed to ac'oom pany f.8ch child using the pool at Parklane Residential School for am· buLatory educable ment.slly retarded children. Park.lane will supply the. Red Cross training: for those Interested In being a lifeguard at the 5Chool. Anyone intere.sted may call Mrs. Edward Nelson, 830-2870, or Parklane at 83().7770. . • Swim Le11on1 MlSSION VIEJO -Swimming Jesson:oi for all age grouP11 liegin Today • at the Montanoso Recreation Cent.er. Children two to live year!I old must be accompanied ln the waler by a parent. For information 11nd registration call lht center at 837-40&4 . SeveraJ dally clau Umu 11e offertd. • Triol(illedinCapoBeach Freeway Rear-end Crash By JOHN VALTERZA Of tilt !)ally Piiot '"" , A rear.end Collision late. Sund1y evr.n- ing sent a late-mode.I foreig n sedan spin- ning across the ungu11ded center freeway divider at Capistrano Beach and headon into a charter bus. killing a small boy and rwo women, all from tlie San Diego ~ area. · The coll ision, which ultimately involved five cars and the bus, closed all four lanes of the crowded freewa y's north- bound traffic as firemen . ass isted by a wrecker, fought to pry two victims from the lang!e of wreckage . The dead were identified as Margaret Speyer. 27. of San Diego: Darlene A. Bunn, 27, of Poinr Loma and ~farcus Wallenstein , 3~, of San Diego. All were passengers and alt were pronounced de;id on arrival at South Coast Community Hospital. The mishap occurred near the S<in J.uan Creek offramp . Sources said an uniden tified woman physici an passing the crash stopped to render aid. g iv in g mouth·t°'mout h rPsuscitatlon to the boy en route to lhe hospital. The measure failed Another passe nger in the expc.1siv1>: r,erman sedan wa!> crit ically injured in 1he. high-speed colli sion. Peter Spcyers, 2fl., husband of one Ill the dead womttn. v.•as reported in cri tical conditinn today at So uth Coasl The dr iver , Russ el l ~fi ller, 26, of San Diego, had on!y minor hurts, patrolmen ·said. Drivers of the other autns. in cluding Everest Conquerer To Lead U.S. Groups SEATTLE. Wash. (UP I) -The only man alive to climb Mt. Everesl. twice will be In the Pacific Northwest this .iiumme.r to breeze up and down 14,-ilO·foot Mt. Rainier with groups of tourists. Nawang Gombu, 40, is visiting Jim Whittaker. Seattle climber an d ' businessman who was the first American top top the 29,(128.foot Everest when he and Gombu made the climb in 1963. the operator or the charter tour bus, 'Ralph Adams Burch, ~ tf L• Pama,, were unhurt. Patrolmen said an intensive in~ vestigatlon into the crash is continuing. Some reports. they said, pointed to· a n1ystery car which cut a vehicle off near the Sa n Juan Creek Road offramp. caus. ing the rear-end col!Jsio n. But patrol invesigators said they were. also checking into othe r traffic facto rs not involvin g the death car which could have caused the tragedy. The crash snarled traffic for at least an hour in all northbound lanes of ~ free· wav as volunteer firemen from San Juan Cafiistrano and Doheny stations work ed to pry the victims from the car. The crash was the second Instance of mu lt iple deaths attributed to the lack ef a. center divider in the area in the last several months. Late last year a car carrying a family of five careened 11cross the divider O('atby ;ind plowed into a chemical truck. The blazi ng coll ision killed four persons. leaving a six·ye11r-old boy the only survivor in the fam ily, Auto Crash Kills Clemente Youth The "16-year-0ld snn of a San Clemente ci vl\ engineer di ed of traffic injuries Sun- day during a mercy fl igh t lo a hospital in a Californ ia Highv,·ay Patrol hellcopler. Richard Toal , son of Mr. and Mr!. Richard J. Toal of 4101 Calle Abril, had been gravely injured in a single-car crash 4-0 mile! northea i;t of Indio. Highway Patrolmen said Toal's car overturned. The bny originally was treated at a hos pital In Blythe, but because. of his injuries doctors recom· mended his transfer to Loma Linda University Medical ctnler 240 mlles away. The CHP chopper was commandeered for the mercy flight. The boy died en route. Fireworl{s, Picnic, More Slated for ViejoFom·th A p1cn1c, A concert, • pyrotechnic display just under the st.ars-these were part of an old fashioned Fourth of JuJy. Mission VJejo's .seccnd an nut I Jndependence Day celebration will h11ve all those things and ·more, according to lhe Misslon·VieJo Activities Committee. Familie!I are. invited to bring picnic 1uppers to !he Mission Viejo gotf co'tlrse • 1round 4 p.m .. to dine on \he green gr.ass of the fairways. · Entertilinment w\11 Include square dan. cing, barbershop 1111artet and choral slnglng and mu&Jc by nol·so-old fashioned NK:k groupa. • Refreshment! wlll be available -at the Miss ion Viejo Inn withfoceeds-going toward the. fire.work& fun . The hlghllght of•the. evening Wi.U be an hour.Jong fireworks dilplay both ·on the ground and In ttie air. The. g:Ut(erlng show Js set to go off at 1:45 p.m. Marty Russo is general chairman of the event whi ch drew 5,000 people to the golf course last year. \(fnte tsposito is rntertainment ch11lrman : Ktrry Bslchtal and Art Hamer. refre11hments; Jim Toepfu ind Bob Aldrich, clean up.: Bud Gonztiles, Mlke Nason, and Russo, fireworkll, and publicity. ,1 Tot Drowns; Mercury Takes Jump The heavens parted the usual low clouds and fog routine, the waters WI.rm· ed, and 300.000 people flocked to tM beaches along the Orange Coast Sunday. Newport Beach lifeguards· de&Orlbed the June weekend scene as being "almost August." They estimate some 10.S.000 people enjoyed the last day of srring at the beach of Newport Beach. Sur fan on• ly two to four feet and water tem- peratures climbed to nearly 68 dearees oa Sunday. Lifeguards logged 83 rescues. Saturday and 27 on Sunday. One ~year old child drowned off the new Irvine Marina, the Jone tragedy of the weekend. In San Clemente , M,000 beachgoers were logg~d for both dayii. Lifeguards Sunday aided a 10-year·old girl who escaped drowning in the six·foot deep trench offshore from the city's nortb beach. Irene Castro of 1606 Las Bolas, made it to sho re unassisted and theri collapsed in. the sand, lifeguards reported. She wa.s taken to South Coast Commun ity Hospital for observation. Rescues along the Orange Coast from Seal Beach to San Clemente were light over the weekend. Lifeguards credit the d~minishing surf and the resulting oear disappearance of side current.! and rip- tides. Wlth 30,000 persena estimated at L.aguna Beach. lifeguards Mly logged eight rescu es, none serious, for the two days. L1guna Beach gua rdj gave firat aid l• 93 victims of minor beach secldents in· eluding the rescuscitation of a young Anaheim woman who collapsed on the Main Beach. . At Huntington Beach city beaches, lifeguards estimated 80,000 ~rsons on Saturday and 95,000 people on Sunday. Weekend rescues totaled 132 from .1 surf that ran only one to three fee l. The city's Selective Enforcement Detail logged 100 arrests of adults and juveniles over th~ weekend on charges ranging f~om minors possessi ng alcohol to guspi· c1on of possession of narcotics for sale, and car burglary. Capt. Arland Ussher, commander of the Huntington Beach .Patrol division sa id. "We want J)eQple to know we have ~ beach where people can come to enjoy themselves. But if they come to break lhe law, we will see lo it they go to jail forthwith," he said. ' Huntington State. Beach estimated crowds at 20,000 both days and rescues lot.ailed 30. Bolsa Chica Beach attendance "'as l0.000 botb days. Orange County Harbor Department reported "heavy routine days" but no dramatic rescues although Ii ever a I sailboats tipped over in the medium surf. Boston Swint Stopped BOSTON (UPI) -High winds. roug" water and pollution prevented a 12-mile swim across Boston Harbor by James J. Doty. who bad just recovered frOm twe operat.ions. Doty, 35, of Dedham. planned to swim from Graves Light to South Boston-Yacht Club to test his recuperation from twa cancer operations and to point ~t Bostoa flarbor"a recreational advantages. Oruge ' 'Weather The weatMrman predicts b1ey sunshine tOday and Tuesday with patchy fog alon1 the coast Jn the morning hours. Highs today alld Tuesday 70 at the beaches, 80 in. land. L<lw tonight. 66 to 62. INSIDE TODAY The Co$t4 Meso. Civic Play. house is . winding up Its seoaon with t1 productio-11. of WUUcm Saroyan'$ "The Beauti/u.t Peo- pl«." Th1 pltly i.s rtVitWt!d in Eniertalnment, Page 19 . ...tint tt _ .. , ... ,. C•llfernl• • ,,.., ...... ,. ... .... Ctl~kl"f "" • °'"""c_.., " Cle•tffltll .... S~l'Yle,.....,., " Ctl!llCt • 'C."' "'" c,.. ...... • S • M•l'1"tl ..... OMll'l i'tHk • " Tt .. Yhiell .. •dllllorl1I ..... • .. ...... 1 .... •ftl...,llft"*'I , .. , w-• PllulftC.t .... WlllttW1t11 " -~ .. .. w_..,.,... , .. ,, ..... _ " ---.. .... . ' ·-· B e a ri'!fJ• Slate d Zone Bills Eyed • • - By Legislature Somehod ri Up Tlle1·e Do esn't Like Oiu· Edi to1~ DAIL.Y P'ILOT Sti ff P'M18 Rolling Along The California J..(ogislature is beginning lo tum its attention to the flood of bills on the con1ro\'ersial subject of coastal zone prtservat1on and management The Assembly Planning and Land Use Commit tee will hold hearin gs on lll'o of them Tuesday and the. Senate Commilt.ee on Natu ral Resources and \\11ldlife will take testimony on four others next 1'.fOn· day. Cities along the California, coast have almost unanimously declared their op. position to all ol them. Generally regarded as the most far· rea ching and the most destructive to local 1overnment, is a measure in· troduced by Assemblyman Alan Sieroty ID-Beverly Hills) that would turn over all suthorlty df/er coastal lands to a .!Ital.a agency. A bill by Assemblyman Pete Wilson (R· San Diego), similar to one narrcrwly de- feated last year, is regarded as the m<>.!lt palatable by beach communities ainct It would permit much more local control . It contains no funding provilllons, however. They will be before the Autmbly com· mltt.ee Tuesday at 2 p.m. 26 members of the Thurston Intermediate School Bike Clu b and five facul ty members began pedaling towards San Diego . Friday. During the five day bikeathon -to show concern for the envrronment -the group planned lo camp, swim and sightsee. They probably also stopped to nurse some sore muscles along the way. Wilson's bill would involve control of property 1.000 yards inland, while Sleroty's includes everything to the nearest mountain peaks or flve. miles, .,.,·hlche\·er is le!l:!!, Two of the bills before the. Senate Com· mittee are companion measure. to the a&'lembly bills. Also before the senate panel, ho~·ever, will be a bill by state Senator Ralph C. Dills (0-San Pe.dro) that para.lie.ls Wilson's bill, but would involve control up to fy,u mlles. San Pe'dro Boy Disco yered St.ate. Senator, James Q. Wed.worth, (0- Tngle"'ood) has Bl.lbmitte.d a bill covering state. environmental controls and 11tate coastal acquisition. Dead in N e'¥po11 Harbor State Senato r Df'nnis E. Carpenter (R- Newporl Beach ) said persons pl?...nning on addressing the committees should be prepared to comment on four con· side.rations: Score! of cltiun.s on fool joint<! a lend. sea and air search for a missing San Pedro boy Sunday, but lhe hunl ended tragically when he was found, drowned, floating in Newport Harbor. Chrbtopher Langston. 4, wandertd away from a family sailboat outing s:. the Irvine Muina, 135.1 Bayfilde Drive, around i p.m., according t.o police reports. Hia parent!, Mr. and Mrs. John Whitney, notified authorities after their own ~minute search. .A Newport Beach police helicopter crew covered the BWTOunding ana, in- cluding Balboa Iala nd, broadcasting the name and description of the l03t child. lnvesU1ators said patrol cars foWld many person:'!, citizens and visitors out bWltin& the boy wilhln JG minutes. Crewa from the Orange County Harbor Department and city Marine Safety Departments were also a:11slgnt'd. Fearing the worst, lifeguard acuba Fisherman Hurt Entering Boat A Huntington Beach man intent on a day of deep-sea fishing nevtr madt it on the boat Sunday morning . He y,·ent. to the bMpilll . lratead. William Corbet, 66. of 301 Calle Miramar. suffered tom ligaments in both legs when he alipped and ftll as he began boarding a aporU isher at San Clemente pier. Firemen said the mishap CJCcurred on the ramp at Ult pier at 7:30 p.m. Corbet v.·u reported in satlslactory condition at South Coast Hospital. • DAILY PILOT OU.N';1 COA.IT l"UIU&H1N~ COM,AHV lt1Hr• N. W11il Prnklt'll 1/'Jd Pvllhhtt' J odr: I.. Cvrln' '\'k• ,,..i..,, ..... _., MlMW n.1"'•1 "···ll •1IW ,,.,..,,, J... Mv•t1hl~1 ,,,. .......... ,., ..... c.Ntltt "4. l111f ~icht•d P, Nell Aulllt n: ,,,.,,,._.,,.. l.lllWI ........... Oflk• 222 fllf ll ....... ~YI J,4~ili11g 1dclr111: P.O. l11t 666, t1652 S. Ci.-tto otlk1 JDS North ll C•ml~o Jl.11!, t26'7Z O.....OHkn C.19 ...... ~ JJO 'Nfll IUY ltt•t • .._,, ht(ll: m) NIWPl"I lou~r;I .. Hwr!I"""" a.tJ!; 11'1~ .... 16.,oltVtflf divers entered the bay waters after the hunt on land turned up no trace of young Christopher. -The form of new state and local organizations proposed by the bills; their makeup and ability to deal effectively IS THIS A GARBENSTANGEL ? CAN YOU BUILO A BETTER ON E? DAILY PILOT Chall•na•• Re1d•r1 to Build !or Find) Competition Mod•la Traders Unite! Pilot Seeking Garbenstangels It's time ror a small confession. The DA ILY PILOT has, itself, been ttlnning this ad in the Trader·1 Para- dise section o! lhe classified ads . GARBENSTAi\GEL only 8lighlly used. \Vhat will ycu1 trade for good, used garbenstangel with right· handed toe.nstift, power dippoleck and batt.e:ry • operated piddle- bottom. Now, the tttllh is that the DAILY PILOT hasn 't got a carbenstangel - Wilh or without a battery~perated piddlebottom. But the. response-by re11ders to lhis ad and to similar one in "l\.11scellanf'Ous \\ianl~" and in the Dime-A· Lines his convinced the DAILY PILOT Promotion Dep11rtme.nt that there-are lol!I of garbcnstangels out !here. Or, if they don ·t exist, al least there are plenty or 1arbe.nst.anglers who could build them. The promotion department got so steamtd up about it. in fact, that It has started a search for " r;lte for the first Build a Belter Garbenstang'l Con· test and Rallye in the history of the Orange Coasl. So excited L1 the pro1nolion manager about the possibilities that he bas promised e\'en to dlg up some pri1.es for the b'sl garbenstangel built (or found in the gar8ge and du:i:ted off for the r\·enl) and entered in the crrntest. Top prize would be In money -maybe even American -and thtre l'o'OUld be othe r rewards. But first the promotion manager has to prove garbcns1angels and $:a t· benstranglers really exi11t and could bt enliced lo participate in his proposed first-ever contest and rallye. Already radio per110nalitles ar'1! talking about garbenstangels, reader~ arc Inundating the DAIL V PILOT "'Ith offers to trade. buy or traffic Jn gar· benstangels tsome of the letters "'ill be published during the next few da)s) and people are talk ing aboul garbenstangels all over town . But to prove to the publisher. y,•ho pays the promo!ion manage r·s salary and looks qulu1c<1lly •l ell'penae account items ~uch as "first prb:e. Build '4 Better Garbenstangel Conle8t and Rallye," II y,·ill be necessary for the true garbenstanget fan~ of the DAILY PlLOT auclence l.O unll behind this effort. Aa:ree to build a garbenstangel -,leas! find one to display. fill ou t the coupon be.low and assure the world lrst Bulld a Better Garbenstangd CUlte1t and RaUye. ' -------_,_ ------I Yes, I will build a Carben11ta.ngel -or launch 1 Mirth for one I can I p'ut tnto ah•pe for elhlblUon at tht Rallye. Please tell mt more. I Name ...................................... ... ........... I I Addreu •.••.•.....••.......••••....•........ Phone ...............• I ~ .~ ..... I ~!ail lo Promotion ~·l nn:igr.r, DAI LY PI LOT, P.O. Box t5ti(I Cost..ir I ~le~a. l :i, 92626 --------------" with land use iuue.s in Uie coastal zont>. -The preparation of a state plan ror coa!lal zone conservation and develop.. ment: the selec11on of planning ob- jectives , responsibility for initiating the elements of the plan, and final adoplion ol the plan. -Land use development control during the planning procesa; at what ltvel or level of government should proposals be reviewed and how should their ac- ceptability be determined. -Particular objectioM to any o! the bilb. Bus Parking Lot Proposal Greets Board A bua parking lo t proposal which drew the attention of Capistrano Beach residents a few months ago ii again on the agenda for ton!1ht's meeting of the Truatees of the Capistrano Unified School District. Trustees will be asked to consider an agreement with the state for the te.m- porary abandonme.nt of La Play.a Strett at the 7:30 p.m. meeting in Serra School, Capiatrano Beach. County approval already has been ob· tained and with slate approval imminent the district wUI be able to cloae lhe street to through traffic and use it u a bus parking lot. A former proposal to use part of the Serra School playground ror bus parking was opposed by the communlty. The use of La Playa ""as an alterna!t proposal. Also on the agenda \I'll! be a reading report prepared by speci81 strvice1 director Jtr! Olsen \l'hich ·will ttll the board that between 72 and 76 percent o( all the elementary achoo! childttn are readinl at or above grade level, The report was requested by Board o( Trustees v•ho are considering how much money should be spent on a remedial nading program. Figures compiled from five standard test., show Uiat 1,928 children read above grade level, 770 read at grade ltvel, and I.010 read below. Figures based on teacher judgment and class performance differ slightly from test scores, The board also will consider proposals for a program for mentally gifted element.ary children. Last year's pro- gram was not ronsidered adequate , •c· cording to a dlstrict·Wide. study and workshop!! have been aulhorittd to im· prov e the program. T ,vo P edes trians H urt in Laguna A Los Angeles man and his wlfe suf. fertd minor injuries Saturday 11.·hen thty wt>re struck by an auto 11.'hile. crosslna Coa_,f Highway in Lt.guna Beilch . Police said Donald and ?-.ferle George "·ere knocked to the pavement at St. Ann 's Drive and Coast High11.·ay by 1 ('ar dril'en by Francts M. Hal!, SS. a\ro of Uis Angeles. The two \•ictims were lran~ported to SouUi Coast Community Hospital by am- bulance where they v.'ere trl'ated for minor cuts and bruises before. being rele ased. In vt!tlgators said the Hall ~·oman would be rited for failure to yield tct pedestrians In an unmarked crouwall:. By THOMAS KEEVIL 0t IM O.Or l'•i.I Sl•ff E1lher I'm indestructible or rm not getting the message .. Don't get me wrong; n ving is here to stay and !'~1 not going to mess \\ith the realities of life. f'\'e been hooked on aerial fo rms o1 transportation since 1940, when $5 bought nie_a JO·n1inu te hOp in a sputtering biplane at the l>.Ii sso_uri State _Fair 1n Sedalla. . ... Since then I l1ave flown 111 everything from the Boeing 147 to the 65-hp Aeronca l'hamp in \\•hich I took fl y1ng l ~ ·t; lessons and held a proud one·third o\\1nership. 'fhe variety of craft and c:irtun1stances has been v.·ide and stimulating: aerobatics \\'ith the Blue Angels: a Ma ch 2, 41z-1ninute flight from Long Beach to San Diego in a Jlhantoin F4: the last blin1p ride ou t of Orange County's Lighler Than Air Base; • a catapulted takeoff over the Pacific from the Navy l carrier U.S.S. Kitty Ha\v k: a hovering, bouncing ~ ride in a ~1arine helicopter engaged in lifting a crashed Arn1y helicopter fro1n a steep valley on the island of 1-laivaii ; a n1ind-blowing, low·level pass over Orange Coun· ty's main run\\•ay at 250 1npb in a two-place Navy jet. BUT SOMEONE MAY have started trying to tell me some· thing about 10 years ago when .•. well. you're going to find this ha.ref to believe, but "'·hen ..• a 1t1arine jet knocked a Santa Fe train off the track at El Toro. l 1\·asn't in th e plane that time. But I \Vas on the train. It \\'as a pretty \\·ild scene. Five or six cars, including the club car J was in , were t\\·isted and smashed and turned almost on their sides after Lt. Phillip Schmidt skipped his flamed-out FB across the run\vay and smack into the engine's pathv.•ay . No scratches, no bruises. A few years later a Lockheed Lodestar on n·hich I \1·as a pas· senger lost an engine on final approach al Los Angeles International. The plane is capable of a one-engine landing -but it vi>as the other engine that had been ~iving us problems. Foam units and fire trucks abounded but we slid in nicely. There was one nagging thought. The two-en gine Lodestar can land on one engine. but it can't maintain a 15,000 feet altitude on one engine. That morning \\'e had crossed the Canadian Rockies into Vancouver. I PUT THINGS TO test again in August. 1969, when a 12-pas· senger civilian helicopter augured in on the tarmac in I.he little to"•n of Gladstone, Australia. It. was a five-second·from·disaster affair in· volving ~asoline, flames and explosion. I was next to last out. Singed eyelashes from running through burning gasoline. Last week I was aboard Air Califor nia's Flight 103. an 8:30 a.m . hop to San Francisco \\'hen someone may again ha ve been try· ing to get a message to nle. ·1t started routinely enough. The captain announced we \Vere cleared for immediate takeoff. \\"heeled fhe Boeing 737 onto the main run\\•ay and. under full throttle, started that accelerating ride that to this day I find exhilarating. 'Ve \Vere loaded -a full house of 115 passengers and a crew or five. plus a brand new load or fuel. So I wasn 't surprised we were using up quite a hun k of run\vay on takeoff. The tower passed on my rfght. That's about hal(\\•ay dov.·n the mile-long strip. \Ve were fi \'e knots from V2 -that moment v.•hen the pilot "rotate~" the plane, or points the nose skyward. Suddenly a bang. Then fuJ1 brakes and a mighty roar as the captain threw both engines into full reverse thrust. I know that runway. l kn e w there couldn·t be an y great stretch of it left between us and a row of parked planes at the end. And beyond that the 50-foot drop onto Palisades Road . A HOSTESS SAID sorTiething about seatbelts over the PA. I braced my feet against the seat in front of me and saw those Glad· stone flan1es all over again. \Ve stopped with precious lilLie yardage to spare. A normal abortion. if there is such a thing as a normal abortion. "This is your captain, ladies and gentlemen," said the calm voice (\vhy tnust they al\l.o·ays be so damned cool?). "\Ve. ah . blew a tire on the nosegear and, uh. rather than risk letting a piece of rub- ber fly into the engine •.. \\'e. uh. decided to halt the landing." I started the old inner debate again -ho\\' many times. 01• Tom? But 1 stayed aboard after the ne\v \\'heel and tire had been put on. missed the morning meeting in Palo Alto. missed the 7 o"clock flight home out of San f'ranciscn. missed the 7:40 flight ou t of San Jose lo Orange County. fle\v PSA to Los Angeles. missed the last commu ter flight to Orange County. leased a car. drove home and had a TV din ner at 11 o'clock. No messages. Aftershock Jiggles Los Angeles Basin LOS ANG£LES I A Pl -A moderate earthquakt shook parts of the Los Angeles area at 9.01 am. today, ap- parently anothe r aft.ershock of the Feb. i major tremor. There \\'ere no reports cf major cla1nage. although one man told po!lce his rerrlgerator "·as knocked over. Telephone service. was di~ruplf'd in one arta of the. San Fernando Valley. Au Exce ptional lnvestnient! Estate, Ladies Diamond Ring e 10.26 CT. e FINE AM ERICAN CUT e BEAUTIFUL MOUNT- INGS, l •K WHITEGOLD, I SWIRLING PRONGS e LIGHT CHAMPAGNE COLOR e W SI CLAR ITY 0 "4r1 ntMd to Apprai•e At 404'1' Mo re Than You Wiii Pay You must aee this beautiful diamond ring. A buy such as th.is i1 rare. Come in and ask for Bob or Dom Raciti. ... meJa Jewet'J & 1131 NEWPOR T BLVD., COSTA MESA Home Of Fine Jewelry -646-7741 • DOM RACITI *DUR UNUSUAL MONET BACK DIAMOND GUARANTIE When you buy • dl•mond from us w• will 9uar1nt•• that diamond to •ppr1lse at 406/, MORE than yov paid for It or your mon•y back. C1n you do •• well •ls•wh•r•'l COM PARE . • -· ,-. . ... .. ... ... -·~ ... _ _.... -'fr---~ Lagu11a _Beaeh EDITION Today's Fl••I N.Y. Stoen VO~. 1>4, NO. 147, l SECTIONS, H PAGES 011,A.NGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 21, 197f TEN CENTS u ro ar a ers Tot, 5, Drowns Beaches on Coast 0 The heavens parted the usual low clouds and fog routine, the y,·aters warm· ed. and 300,000 people flocked to lhe beaches a!on~ the Orange Coast Sunday. Newport Beach lifeguards described ttie June y,·eekend scene as being "almost August." They estimate some 105,000 people enjoyed the last day of Spring at the beach of Newport Beach. Surf ran on· ly l\lo'O to four feet and water tern· peratures climbed to nearly 68 degrees on Sunday. Lifeguards logged 83 rescues. Salurday and 27 on Sunday. One 5-year t1ld child drowned off the new Irvine Marina, the lone tragedy of lhe weekend. Jn San Clemente, 55,ooO beachgoers Eiler Larsen In Good Shape Laguna Greeter Eiler Larsen is in "quite salisfactory" condition, a spokesman for the V e t e r 11 n s ' Administration Hospital in Long Beach said this morning. Larsen, 81. was admilted to the hospital last Thursday night due to a mild illness and loss of appetite. He was reported this morning "much belter" but no date has b@en set for his return to the Art Colony . Two. Burglaries Investigated Laguna Beach police are investigating I pair of weekend burglaries in which over $1 ,000 in merchandise was taken from l\\-'O homes. Officers said Virginia Chamberlin, of 521 Center St.. reiurned home at midnight Sunday and noticed a light on in her house and a door ajar. She entered to find the house ransacked and a color television valued at $450 missing, In· vestigators said. Police determined entry had been gained through a .,.,.indow, A home under construction al 915 Ba ja wa!I lhe si1e of a burglary 5ome time Saturday night in ..... h1ch $640 in power tools and building equipment were removed, offi cers said . The stolen iten1s were the property of house owner David Harvey, of Redondo Beach, and con· tractor Kenneth Jameson, of 24712 Santa Clara , Dana Point. were logged (or both da ys. Lifeguards Sundsy aided a }[}-year-old &lrl who escaped drowning in the six-foot deep t~ncb offshore from the city'1 nor\.h beach. Irene Castro of 1606 Las Bolas, made it to sbore unas!listed and the11 collapsed in the sand, lifeguards reported . ..She was taken to South Caast Community Hospital for observation. Rescues along the Orange Coast from Seal Beach lo San Clemente were light over the weekend. Lifeguards credit the diminishing surf and lhe resulting near disappearance of side .currents and rip- tides. With 30,000 persons estimated at Laguna Beach, lifeguards only logged eight rescues, none serious, for the two days. Laguna Beach guards gave first aid to 98 victims of minor beach accidents in· eluding the rescuscitalion or a young Anaheim woman who collapsed M the Main Beach. Al Huntington Beach city beaches. lileguards estimated 80,000 pereons on Saturday and 95,000 people en Sunday. Weekend uscues totaled 132 froi:q a surf that ran only one to thrH feet. The city's Selective Enforcement Detail logged 100 arrests of adults and juvenlles (Iver the weekend an cbargeJ r&nPtl frolll minClrs possessing alcohol to l\lspi· cion of possession of narcotics for sale', and car burglary. Capt. Arland Ussher, commander flf the Huntington Beach Patrol division, said, "We want people to know we have a beach whert people can come to enjoy themselves. But if they come to break the law, we will 11ee to it they go to jail, forthwith," he said. Huntington State Beach estimated crov.·ds at 20.000 both days and rescues totalled 30. Balsa Chica Beach attendance was 10,000 both days. Orange County Harbor Department reported "heavy routine days" but no dramatic rescues although s e v e r a I aailboals tipped over in the medium surf. Everest Conquerer To Lead U.S. Groups SEA'TTLE. Wa sh. <U PI ) -The only man ali ve to climb Mt. Everest twice wil l be in the Pacific Northwest thi!I summer In breeze up and doy,·n l4.410·foot Ml. Rainier y,·ith groups of tourisls. Nawang Gombu , 40, is visiting Jim \\'hitlaker. Sea\Lle climber and businessman who was the first America n top top the 29.028-foot Everest when be and Gombu made the climb in 196.1. Coordinating Council Set,s Membership Meet "Vignelt~ from lhe Per.forming Arts" will highlighl the an11ual membership meeting of the Laguna Beach Coordlnat· log Council next Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the high school auditorium. Mn:. Joe A. (Joy) Dkkerson has been Dog Walker Held In Assault Case An unleashed dog landed ib master ln jan Saturday altemoon when Laguna Beach police learned the man was w1nted on a $25,000 warrant for asgauJL Officers said Kenneth D. John!!On,, 35. was taken into cust.ody in lht 900 block of South Coast Highway after belng 1topped for vlolaUon of the Art Colony'• dog le.a.sh tr.w. While writing out the citation, Of. fk'er Jim Stln!OO called the station to re- que!lt a check of the man's record, a normal proctdure. Police Sllkl word came bRck via teletype that Johnson was want~ for •.!!Ault tn Foster City, localed in the S8n P'rarn:isco Bay 1u;,eR, Md bail had been se;t •t $25.IX(l. Tht dog alllO was taken in· to cugtody and turned over to the animal shell,r, nominat«I for president of the or11niza· tion. The posl was held Uli!I year by anthropologist Jcaeph Tomehak. · John Scott Trotter will emcee the per!onning arts show . Including Judy Powell in excerpts from Lyric Opera'11 "Sound of ~usic," Laguna Beach Civ\c Ballet in "Summer," Laguna Beach High School Girl11' Modern DAnce group, El Morro Elementary School 1tudenta with Tim Troy In excerpts from "Ml1ilslppl Melody," Henry Curtis p I a.y J n g Beethoven's "Sonata in G." and Junt and SOnny Budd with Lou.be Rk:hardm ln ''A Viennl!:Jie Medley .'' Nominated to serve as officer• for the council are Mrs. Robert (Dorothy) Jeyoe, fir.st vice-president: Mr1. 8 1rbar1 Rabinowit.sh, sec<ind vice president: Mra . Paul (C.rolyn) Eshner, re.cordin1 11ecret11ry: Mrs. John {Lida:) cravens. corresponding secrela.ty. and Peter Andre•&. treasurer. Nominated as dlrector11 are Wlllh1m Cook. Mrs. Allen {Dorothy) Cramp, Jam~ Dilley, Creorge Fowler and f~ Schoemehl. Ex-Officio members, 111 nciminated are Rd)' Holm , city councilman and Bill flllh and f\.1ike Moorman, L.agun• Beach Hl&h SchoOI AMoci&lod SWd"11 Body. I Phelfl w C~I• Cerrlt•l'I THREE DIED IN SUNDAY NIGHT FREEWAY COLLISION OF CAR AND CHARTER BUS Bodies of Two Victima Had to Be Cut From Wr•ckage After Oev•stating Crash Freeway · Crash Kills Three Car Rams Bus Headon in Capistrano Beach Tragedy BJ JOHN V4LTEIUA 01 iM 0.117 '"'"' Ji.tf A rUJ'-l!:lld collision late Sunday even· inc aent a late-moclel forei1n sedan 11pifl. ning acrosa the untuarded center freeway divider at capistriiao Beach and headon intp a charter bua. killing a small boy and two women, all from the San Diego area. The collision. which ultimately involved five cars and tM bus, closed all four laneR of the crowded freeway 's north- bound ' traffic as firemen, a!ll'listed by a "'TIICM:r, fougbl lll pry two vietiml from the tangle of wreckage. · The dead were identified as Margaret Speyer. 27, of Sao Diego ; Darlene A. Bunn, 27. of Point Lorna and Marcus Wallenstein , 3Y,, of San Diego. All were passengers and all were pronounced dead on arrival at South Coast Community Hospilal. The mishap occurred near the San Juan Creek offramp. Sources said an unidentified woman physician passing the crash slopped to PRD Action Delay Sought By Lagu11a Planning Staff Laguna Beach planning commissioners tonighl ~·ill be asked by the city planning staff lo delay action on the proposed planned re!lidential developme;nt IPRD I ordinance, even though the agenda In· eludes a second public hearing on the matter. Accord ing to the pla nning office. ap- proval of the ordinance should w;ill until Lhe ge neral plan has been CQO.Sidered and the new planning director. Wa yne Mood y. has had a chance to study the PRO proposal in greater detail. 1'he planning commission y,·ill have the. option of rontinuing the hearing or re· jecUng the staff request and holding the hearing anyway. The PRO standards provide for cluster housing on R·I zoned hillside areas within the city as an alternative lo si ngle resi· denti1l buildings. Clustering". proponent!! of the ordinance maintain, will reduce the need for extensive "rut and fill" opera· lions. Uoder provision" of the d r it f l erdlnance, four units would be allowed per acre of land. Critics of the ordinance have ·insisl.ed units should be calculated on tht ba,,i.s of buildable acreage tind not gross acreage. Commissioner• will also be asked to confirm that Ramona Avenue between T~tees' Kin the city parking lot l.o Laguna Avenue is an alley. TIM> confirmat ion is necessary so building department officials can t.a.ke ac· lion against one sign which marks the "Pepper Tree Pasco." The sign has been judged non~onforming under the present • ~ign ordinance by the city. Planners will also be a,;ked !o approve a conditinnal use permit from the Fe stival of ArL~ fu!staurant for on· premi,;es s;i!e of beer and wine during I.he festival run. Other itcm!I on the agenda include : -A request from Thomas J. Lingo, to Increase the allowable density at 615 Wilcox Way from eight to nine wiits in an R-2 zrone. -Request for approval of a variance from Earl fl.1 ills. 472 High Drive. Ul have a lot encumbered by a driveway ease-- ment and an encroaching swimming pool, declued a buildillg site. -A request for time continuation on a variance for a social club at 195.3 Laguna Canyon Road. --Conditional we perm it request from John Jorden. 260 St. Ann's to conduct a private fine arts school in the. R-2 zone. -A review of a proposed relocation of , the sign at McCormick Mortuary, 1795 Laguna Canyon Road. render aid, I iv i n 1 xnou\b-lbomouUI resuscitation lll tbe boy en route to the hospHal. The mea<iure failed. Another pas..\enger in the expensive Germ•n sedan was criticaUy injured in the high-speed collision. Peter Speyers, 28, husband of one of the dead woman, was reported in critical condition toda y at .South Coast. The driver, Russell Miller. 26, of San Diego, had only minor hurts, patrolmen said. Drivers of the other autos. including the operator of the charter tour bus, Ralph Adams Burch, 33, of La Palma, were unhurt. Patrolmen said an intensive in- vestigation into the crash is continuing. Some reports. they said. pointed lo a mystery car which cut a vehicle off near the San Juan Creek Road offramp, caU:S· ing the rear-end collision. But patrol invesigators !la id they we~ also checking into other traffic factors not involving the death car which could have caused the trAgedy. The crash snarled traffic for at least an hour ln all northbo und lanes of the free· wav as volunteer firemen from San Juan Capistrano and Doheny stations worked 10 pry the vic1ims from the car . The crash was the second instance of mult iple deaths allrihuted tn the lack of a <.'enter divider in the area in lhe last several months. Late last year a car carryi ng a fam ily of five careened across the divider nearby and plowed intn 11 chemical truck. The blazing collision killed four persons, leaving a six·year-0ld boy the only fiUrvlvor in the ramily. Boston Swim Stopped BOSTON IUPIJ -High wiods, rough water and pollution prevented a 12-mile swim across Boston Harbor by James J. Doty. who had just rerovered from two operations. Doty, 35, or Dedham. planned to swim from Grave!I Light to South Boston Yacht Club to test hi!I recuperation from two cancer ope ration!! and to point out Boston Harbor'a recreational advantages. Mom Asks School Trans£ er t...guna Beach school board member· eJtct Patricia Gillette has r~v~ permission for her 1+.ye.ar-old aon kl ai.. l<nd hijh adlool in the Newport-Me .. Unified School Dlotrlct . Mrs. Gilletle. who takes of_fice July I, aaid her son Geor1e has been attending Harbor Day School In Caron1 del Mar for the pa11t three yetirs and most of his fr:le.nda "111 be 1olng on l.o Corona de! Mar H.i11h School. She Sllld she bad rtttlved permission from Newport-Mes# officiflls and the In· ter-dl5trict move must now be 1pproved by llio IAlllU O..ch >dlOOI bold. Mtt. • . , Giiiette noted tM matler would come. up at the July I meeting Clf the trustees. The t.rualff.eltct said her aon had aak· td .that he be able to continue in Corona del Mar "because that Is where his rrJends ire." An Informed source with the Newport· Mesa district. where Mrs . Gillette Is t11 !IUb~titute teacher, confirmed that 5t\e ht11d reque~ted the lnter.<fistrlct tra.n!lfcr to keep her son In school with hi~ ac- qut11inUinces. The samt: .50\lrce. also said Mrs. Gillette had er.pressed concern that her &en might t>t cr\Liciud by L.aauna Beach •tudentA ' because of his mother'11 po111tlon on the Lagu.na school board. Laguna Beach school offlel1l11 noted that there Ja norm1lJ.y no inte.r-dialrict payment Involved In such traru:ft:n. "We hive enough chlldrtn We 11re trading for one reason or another that It balances out." the ~pokeaman nid. Du.ring her tlectJon campaign. Mrs. Gille.lie said titr son waa altendtn1 the pr ivate Ct>rona de.I Mir lnterm(!diate scbool because sh~ dld not •pprnve of LagunA's !nnov11livt Thurston Intermedi11te School bul Al that Lime she 1aid he planned l.o attend LAgunA Beach High Scl1ool In fail , U.S. Claim Scheduled For Hearing. NEW YORK (AP) -A h•oring on the government's claim that the New York Times should be barred from fW'tber publication of a secret Pentagon 1tudy of the Vietnam war was postponed today to allow the case to go before a full .even· judge panel or the 2.nd U.S. Circuit CAurt of Appeals on Tuesday. The government, which was deftl!lted in Its move to !ltop further Times pubUcai· lion in a lower court, had been tcheduled to go before a three-man appeall paOO this morning. In Washington, meanwhile, the gove.ru· ment argued in U.S. District c:owt that documents from the Pentagon study uaed by the Washington Post in assembling its storie.. o:intain information about current operational plans in the war. Both the Time!I and the Post remained under restraints not to publish articles about the study pending outcome of the court actions. Prior to the government's efforts to stop publication, the Times published three installments from the study and tbe Post two. ln a brief filed for the appeals court, the Times argued that a for~ return of the classified documents would violate both constitutional righb and rigbta under the New York St..ate "freedom of information" law enacted last year. Deckiina: lll bring the Tima cue before the full court of appe.alr, Otlef Judge Henry J . Friendly said : "Thi5 case raises a question of such u· traordinary importance that it should b. heard by all the judgea." The decision was reached In eoo-- sulallon over !ht weekend with the tw• other judges of the three-man panel, J. Joseph Smith and Paul R. Hays. The. Washington testimony concerning current sensitivity of the Pentagon documents was given by Dennis Doolin, deputy assistant secrelary of defense for international security affairs. It came as the government opened It! case by renewing its contention that publicalion of the material by the presa would result in irreparable damage lll na. tiona! !'ieeurily. The Times case went before the 2nd Circuit on appeal by the government following rejection Saturday of the government's request for .1 preliminary injunction again.st the newspaper. Marijuana Buyer Lo ses Pot, $100 A 17-yea~ld China Lake youth told Laguna Beach police he had been l.rying to purcha~e mariju11na was robbed of $100 at gunpoint Sunday afternoon on Laguna Canyon Road. Police said lhe youth told of .ap- proaching ""'o men in the 600 block of South Coast Highway to buy the illicit weed. The man reportedly told the boy they would sell him what he wanted •Dd the trio drove out to Laguna Canyon. The youth told \nvesligators he wu riding in the back seat when one of the men turned and pointed a revolver at him, demanding hi!I money. After the robbery, officers !laid the boy was to ld to get out of the car ind the men sped away. Weatlter The weal.human predicta hJtJ 11un.shine today and Tuesday with patchy fog along the coast in U.. morning hours. Highs today . and Tuesd1y 70 at the beaches, llO in- land. Low tonight 5r5 lll 62. INSmE TODA. Y TM Costa Me1a Civic Pla..,,.. howe i.s winding up iu 1e<1101' witll a product'® of William SrtrOyan'a "The BtouUfuL Peo- ple." The pla11 ii revi«iwed in Entvtainment, Pooe 19. . .. ""' n ...... .. " c.r.,.,.,.11 • Mff*loll N,._ .. c--""' u, • ~MllC-ty " (laulri.t ..... .,.,..1.,..,..... • C•.,.k.1 " :=M•r11.tl .... ..,._ • it-.tl OMll> Hittle• " , .......... " ltl!'trl•I ,.,_. • """" . .. ,, •~tlrillflftMftl 11·1' ""lftl' • "l•lll!C• ""' WlllM ,, •• • "'-·" .. w-·1111 ... , .. ,, A1t1tl.IM•,.. .. W•r .. N ... .. " ,. .. ~ -· B earing• Slated Zone Bills Eyed By Legislature SomehodJ; Up Tl1er e Do es11't Lik e Ou1· Editor D.t.ll'Y ,tLOT 11111 Plltl9 Rolling Along 1'he California Legislature is beglnning lo turn i~ attention to I.he flood of bll!s nn I.he controversial subject of coastal zone preservation and manage ment. The Asseinbly Planning and Land Use Committee wilt hold hearings on two or them Tuei;day and the Senate Committee on Na tural lksources and Wl\dlife will take testimony on four others next Mon· clay. Cities along the California. coa st ha.ve almost unanimow;Jy declared their op- position to a!l of them. Genera!ly regarded es the mo!l far· reaching and the mo.st destructive to local government, is a measure in· troductd by A.uemblymal'I Alan Sleroty (0-Bevtrly Hil ls) that would turn o\•er all e.uthorlty over coutal lands to a atate agency. , A bill by Assmiblyman Pete Wilson (ft· San Die10), slm.llar to one narrowly de· teated last year, is r@larded as tht most palatable by beach communities 11inct !t would permlt much more local control. It contal!u no funding provlllon11, however. They will be btfore the Auembly com· mlttee Tuesday at 2 p.m. 2.8 members of tbe Thurston Intermediate School Bike Club and five faculty members began pedaling towards San Diego . Friday. During the five da y bikeathon -lo show C{lncern for the envlfonment -the aroup planned to camp, swim and sightsee. They probably also stopped to nurse some sore muscles alon g the way . Wllson 'a bill would involve control of property 1,000 yards inland, while Sleroty's includes everything to the nearest mountain peaks or live milts, whichever ls le8.'1. Two of the bills before the Senate Com· mittet are companion measurea to the aS.!lembly bills. Also btfort tht ~ate panel, however, will be a bill by 11tate Senator Ralph C. Ollis (0.San Pedro) that parallels Wiison's bill, but would involv• control up to two milts. San Pe'dro Boy Disco~ered Dead in Ne,vport Harbor State Senator, James Q. Wedworth. ([). Inglewood) ha1 iubmltttd a bUI covering state environmental rontrols and 1tatc roast.al acquisition. St.ate Senator Dennis E. Carpenter (R· Ne"·port Beach) said persons pl2.nning on addressing the committees should be prepar~ to comment on four con· siderations: Scores of citizeJu on foot jol'n~ a lMd, sea and air search for a missing San Pedro boy Sunday, but the hunt ended trafieally when he was found, drowned, Ooating in Newport Harbor. 01riJt.opbu Langston, 4, wandered away from a family sailboat ouUna: r.t I.he Irvine Marina, 13s:J Bay!lde Drive, around t p.m., aceord.ina; to pollc. ._,is. Hla partnls, Mr. and Mrs. John Whitney. notified autborltie.s aJtu their own »minute search. A Newport Beach police .helicopter crew CQvered the 1WTOut1d.lnl area, in- c!Udinf Bs.lboa Island, broadcasting the name and descrlpUon of the lost child. lnvest.igators aaid patrol cars found many peNJons, citizens and visitors out buntlna the boy within 10 minutes. Crews from the Orange County Harbor Department and <:ity Marine Safety Departments were also a.salgned. Fearing the worst. llfeiU•rd acuba , Fisherman Hurt Entering Boat A Huntington Beach mall intent on a day of deep-sea f!.!ih lng never made It on the boat Sunda y morning . He went to the hospital. instead. William Corbel, 66 , of 301 Calle Miramar, suffer!'d torn ligamenl.'5 in both legs when he .5lip~d and fell ;i.s he began boardinJ a sportfilher at San Clemente pier. Firemen said the mi shap occurred on tht ramp at tile pier al 7:3Cl p.m. Cor bet \lo'IJ reported in satisfactory condlllon at South Coast Hospllal. OIAN•t COAST DAILY PILOT C>IUHGiS COMT PUl l.llHIMI>' COM,AffY ••\•rt N. w,,_, P 1111'""1 .... Plltlw..t' J,,\ •· c~r1.., Vkt """Ill'"' •M 0-11 N..lllgtf 11.•"''' K11¥il 11111111' l\.o,..t• A. µ~1"hi111 M1n1tl,,. EG•""' Ch11lt• M. leot •itht•d '· N1U .-.n11Ttn< "''"'Dini! '-'"0" ..... ,. IHcli Otrk• 11? Fo•e1I A"••v• M~i!i ~t 1dd1 1111 P,O. l o•'''· fl6S2 '•" ca.-.. OHie• JDS Nt,fk lJ C1111l~• ke1!, 92&12 o~, Gffl•n ('1i. M... ))) w~.t ,,., S!rHt .........,, ... tht "" "·~ •OOllr<l•rf Hllrl!ll'llllOll kldl1 11111 •MCA ...,,...,.,, divers entered the bay walu! after the hunt on land turned up no trace of yoUI1£ Christopher. -The form of new at.ate and local nrganb:atlons pro~ed by the bil\11: their makeup and ability to deal effectively IS THIS A GARBENSTANG!L? CA N YOU BUILD A BETTER ONE? DAI LY PILOT Chtllenges Readers to Bui ld (or Find) Co mpetition Mod1I' Traders Unite! Pilot Seeking Ga rb enstangels lrs tim e for a small confess ion. Tht DAILY PILOT has, it..!lell, been runnln; !.his ad in the Trader'• Para· dise secUon of the classified ads: GARBENSTANGEL only slightly used. What will you trade for iood, used garbenslangel \\·lth right- handed zoensti!t, pov:er dlppoleclc and biittery • operated piddle-- bottom. Now , tht tru!h is that the DAlLY PILOT ha sn't got a £arbtnstangel - wi th or without a battery-operated piddlrbottom. But the rt1ponse by readers to this ad and to similar one in "Misce lh1neous \Vanttd" and in !he Dime-A· Lines baa convinced tbt DAILY PILOT Promotion Department that thtrt aT'1!1 lots of ga.rbenstangel• out there. Or. Jf they don'l e1ist, at least there: are plenty of garben!tan;lers who c:ould build them. The promotion department got so steamed up ebout it, In fact, that it has sllrted a search for a 5it.e for the tirst Build a Better Garbenstangel Con· test and Rallye in the history of the Orange Coast. So excited 11 the promotion manager about the po11lbllitles th1t he haa 11romilled even to dig up some prlte.!I lor the be1t garbenstangel buil t (o r foun d tn the garage and dusted off for th e tV('n l) and entered in the contest. Top prlie would be J.n mone y -maybe even Anierica n -and there 1would be olher rewards. But first the promotion managrr has to prove garbenstan gels and gar· benstranglers really exist and could be enticed lo participate in his proposed fir st·ever contest and rallye. Already radio personalities arc talking about garbtnstangels, readers nre inundating the DA !LY PILOT v.·ilh offe rs to trade. buy or traff ic in gar- benstangel1 (SOnlt. of the letters \\'Ill be published during tht next few da)':'IJ and people are talkini about 1arben1Uingtls ell over town. But to prove 10 the publisher. who pays the promotion n1anagtr's salary and looks qulu.lc11.lly at e'ltpen~e account ltrms such as "first prize, Build t Better Garbenstangel C<lntesl and Rallye," H v.·ilt he necessary for the true garbenstangtJ fans of the DAILY PILOT a11denct lo unit behind this effort. A(rtt to build a 1arbt.natange l -or at least find one to display. Fill out the coupon below and 1uutt the world of lit firat Build • Better Garbenst&n&tJ Conteat and Rallye. ---------------I I I I Ytl, J will build a Garbenatangel -or launch a H:arch for one I can put Into •hape for e1hlbltlon at the Rallye. Please ttll me mort. Name ....•• ,, .................•••••..... ·······--,,, .............•.•.. Addrc1s ......••.....•.......•..........•....• Phone ·········'···i ·· City ... , ........................ -........ -Zip ............. . • I I ti1a1I to PromoUon Man11ger, DAILY PILOT, P.O. Box ISliO Cotti I Mt111, Ca. ~2626 --------------"' with land we issues in the coast.al tone. -The preparation of a state plan for coastal z.one conservation ond develo~ ment; the selection of planning ob- jectives, responsibility for initiating the elements of the plan, and final adoption of the plan. -Land use development control during the planning: prOCts.!I; at what l'!vel or le vel of government should proposala be revie\lo'ed and how should their r.c- «pl.'.lbilily be determined. ~Particular objections to any of the bills. Bus Parking Lot Proposal Greets Board A bus parking lot propo1al which drew lhe attention of Capistrano Beach rtsidenll a ftw months ago le again on the agenda for tonight's meeting of the Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School Dlstrlct. Trustees will be asked to consider an agreement with tht state for the tern· porary abandonment of La Playa Street at the 7:30 p.m. meelin1 in Serra School, Capistrano Beach. County approval already has ~ ob- tained and with atate approval imminen t the district wUI be able to close the rtreet to through traffic and use It 11 a bus parking Jot. A former proposal to use part of the Serra School playground for bus parkin g was opposed by the community. The use of La Playa \lo'as an alternate proposal. Also on the agenda will be a reading report prepared by special services director Jeff Olsen wbich will tell the board that bet\lo·een 72 and 76 perctnt of all the elementary sc hool children are reading at or above grade leve l. The report was requt.'lted by Board of Trustees who are considering how much money should be spent on a remed ial reading program. Figures complied from fivt standard tests ahow that 1,928 children read above gr adt level, 770 read at grade level, and 1,010 read btlow. Ftcure:, based on teacher judgment and cla11 performa.t1tt differ sllghtly from te st scores. The board also will consider proposals for a program for mentally gifted elementary children. Lasl year's p~ gram was not considered adequate, ac- cording to a dlstrict.wide atudy and work1hops have been authorlted to im· prov e the program. Two P edestrians Hurt in La g una A Los. Angeles man and his wHt suf- fert'd minor injuries Sat urday v.·hen thry were struck by an auto while cros sing Coit.5t Highway in l..2.gun1 Beach. Police said Donald and 1.ferle George \\'ere knocked to the pavement at St. Ann's Drivt and Coast Hlgh"''Y by a car driven by Frances M. Hall , SS, also o! 11111 Ange.lt.'1. The two victims were transporltd to South Coast Commun ity Hospital by am- bulance "'here they were treated for niinor cuts and bruises btfore being releued. Investi1aWrs 11aid the Hall woman would be cited for failure lo yield to pedestrian• in an unmarked crouwaJk. (12¥t~ By THOMAS KE EVIL 01 "" [111'1 ,., .. , 11•11 Either I'm indestructible or I'm not getting the n1essage .. Don't f'et me wrong: flying is here to stay and 1'~1 not going to mess "'ith he realities of life. I've been hooked on aerial for1ns oi transportation since 1940, \Vhen $5 bought me a JO-minute hop in a sputtering biplane at the ?.1issouri ~tale fa ir in Sedalia .. Since then J have flown in everything from the Boeing 747 to. the 65-hp Aeronra Champ in \\•hich I took flyin g ~·"' .,,-. "'~fl lessons and hel d a proud one-third O\\'nerJJ hip , ' , .. The variety of l'raft and cireun1stances has been \vide an d stiniulating: aerobatil's \\'it h the Blue Angels: a Mach 2, 41':l·n1inute flight front ~ng Beath to San Diego in a Phantonl F4; the last blimp ride out of Orange Coun ty's l~ighter 'l'han Atr Base: 1. a catapulted takeoff over the Pacific from the Navy l carrier U.S.S. Kitty 1"la\vk: a hovering. bouncing • ride in a Marine helicopter en gaged in lif ting a crashed Army helicopter fr om a steep valley on the island of lfay"aii; a mind-blowing. IO\v-level -pass over Orange Co wt· ty's main runway at 250 mph in a t\VO·place Navy jet. BUT SOMEONE MAY have started tryi ng to tell me some- thing about 10 years ago when , .. well , you're going to find this hard to believe, but \Vhen ••• a Marine jet knocked a Santa 1'~e train off th'e track at El Toro. l \vasn't in the plane that tin1e. But 1 wa s on the train. It was a pretty "'ild stene. Five or six cars. including the club car I \Vas in, "'ere twisted and smashed and turned almost on their sides after Lt. Phillip Schmidt skipped his flamed-out FB across the run,vay and sn1ack into the engine's path\\'ay. No scratches, 110 bruises. I\ few years later a Lockheed l.-0destar on \vhich I was a pas· senger lost an engine on final approach at Los Angeles Internation al. The plane is capable of a one-engine landing -but it was the other engine that had been giving us problems. Foam units and fire trucks abounded but we slid in nicely. There was one nagging thought. The t\l.•o-engine Lodestar can land on one engine. but it can't maintain a 15,000 feet altitude on one engine. That morning we had crossed the Canadian Rockies into Vancouver. I PUT TH INGS TO test again in August. 1969, "'hen a 12-pas· senger civilian helicopter augured in on the tarmac in the liltle town of Gladstone, Australia. Jt was a five-second-from·disastcr affair in· volving gasoline. flames and explosion. I \Vas next to last out. Singed eyelashes from runnin~ through burning gasoli ne. Last \veek l was aboard Air California's Flight 103. an 8:30 a,m. hop to San Francisco "'hen someone may again have been try· ing to get a message to me. It started rou tinely enough. The captain announced we were cleared for immediate takeoff, wheeled the Boei ng 737 onto the main run\vay and. under full throttle, started th at accelerating ride that to this day I find exhilarating. \Ve were loaded -a full house of 115 passengers and a crew of five, plus a brand new load of fuel. So I \\'asn 'l surprised we were using up quite a hunk or run,vay on takeoff. The tower passed on my right. That's about half,vay down the mile·long strip. \Ve we re five knots from V2 -that moment \\'hen the pilot "rotates" the plane, or points the nose skyv,rard . Suddenly a bang. Then full brakes and a mighty roar as the captain threw both engines into full reverse thrust. I know that runway. I kne\v there couldn't be any great , stretch of it left between us and a rQ\V or parked planes at the end. And beyond that the 50·foot drop onto Palisades Road. A HOSTESS SAID !iomething about seatbelts over the P.t\. I braced my feet against the seat in front of me and sa\v those Glad- stone flames all over again . \Ve stopped witb precious little yardage to spare. A normal abortion, lf there is such a thing as a norn1al abortion. "This is your captain, ladies and gentlemen," said the calm voice (\\•hy must they al\\.·ays be so da1n ned cool ?'!. "\Ve, ah. ble\v a tire on the nosegear and, uh, rather than risk Jetting a piece of rub- ber fly into the engine ... \\'e, uh , deci ded to halt the landin g." I started the old inner debate again -ho\v man y times, ol' Tom? But I stayed aboard after the new \!.'heel and tire had been put on. missed the morning meeting in Palo Alto. missed the 7 o'clo ck night home out o( San Franci§CO. missed the 7:40 flig.ht out of San Jose to Orange ('ounty. fle\\' PS1\ to Los Angeles. missed th e last con11nuter fligh t lo Orange County. leased a car. drove home and had a TV din ner at 11 o'clOck. No messages. Aftershock Jiggles Los Angeles Basin LOS ANGELES (AP\ -A moderate earthq11ake shook parts of the Los Angeles area &I 9.01 a.m. today, ap- partntly another aftershock of the Ftb. 9 1najor tremor. There "'ere no rtports of major damage. although nne man to ld pol\ct hi.! refrigerator was knocked over, Telephone servict was disrupted in one area of the ~an Fernando Valley. An Exception.al I nvestnient! Estate, Ladies Diamond Ring e 10.21 CT. e PIN! AMERICAN CUT e B&AUTIFUL MOUNT- INGS, UK WHITEGOLD, I SWIRLING PRONGS e LIGHT CHAMPAGNE COLOR e VVSI CLARITY OuarantMcl lo Appr1l1• At WI. Mort Thin You Wiii P•y You must see this beautiful diamond ring. A buy 1ucb as this ia rare. Come in and 1sk for Bob or Dom Raciti. CaJta m eJa J eivelr'I & e Coa1i llll NEWPORT BLVD ., COSTA MESA Hom• Of Fino Jewelry -~7741 DOM RACI TI *OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK DIAMOND GUARANTEE Whe" you buy a dl1mond from u1 w• wlll gu1r1nte• th•t diamond ta 1ppr1lae at 40"/. MOR I. then you paid for It er your money back • C1n you do aa will el1ewh1 r1! COMPARE . 7 I San Cle111ente Ca is"trano VOL 04, NO. 147, J SECTIONS, H PAGE S EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 2 r. I ~H .. • Today's Fl...r .N.Y. Stoelu TEN CENTS ' ac oast an s Gover11u1et1t Claiua War Papers Case Faces 7 Judges NE\V YORK (AP) -A hearing on the governrr,enl's claim lhat the New York Times should be b11rred from further pubrication of a secrt>l Pentagon study of the Vietnam war \•1as postponed today lo allow lhe case to go before a full se.ven- judge panel of the 2nd U.S. Circuit C.ourt of Appeals on Tuesday. The government. which was defeated in Its move to stop further Times publica- tlon in a lower court, had been scheduled tD go before a three-man appeals panel Otis morning. In Washington , meanwhile, the govern· rnent argued in U.S. District Court that documents from the Pentagon study used by the Washington Post in assembling its stories CC'ntain information about current operational plans in the ·war. Both the Times and the P{lst remained under restraints n{ll to publish articles 1bout the study pending outcome of the court actions. Prio r to the gove.rnment"s eifort5 to stop publication. the Times published three installments irom the study and the Post two. In a brief filed for the appeals CQUrt. the Times argued that a forced return of the classified documents would violate both eorulitulion•I rights and rights under the New York State "freedom of informatio n'' law enacted last year. Deciding to bring the Times case before the fuJI rourt er appeal1, Chief Judge Henry J. Friendly said: "This case raises a qu estion of 11uch Cl· traordinary importance that it should be he11rd by all the judges." The decision was reached in con· sulation over the weekend wit h the tw~ other judges of the three-man panel, J. Prowler Escapes After Choke Try A would-be burglar who roused an elderly San Clemente woman after crawl· lng in through a bedroom window Sunday tried to choke the woman be fore being frightened a1.1,ay. Lena t.1 . Hodes. 76. of 311 Calle f\tadr id. v.·as apparently unhurt in the assault ·whic h took place at 4:05 a.m. Sunday. The wnma n told officers she was 8\\akened bv a man In his 20s. \\.'hen the "prowler noticed her he began tn choke lhe woman. The commotion 11roused another occupant of the house and the lnl ruder ficd Investigators found a 1'>1arine Corps jacket in the residence left behind by the assailant. A namt is painted on the Jackel. pol ite gaid. Beatrice Smith Rites Conducted Weekend funeral services were con- ducted In Colton for Mr1. Beatrice Smilh, 75. of San Juan Capistrano. She died las\ Wednesday. Burial followed the rites Saturday in Mountain View Cemetery. Mra. Smith, of 307$1 Calle Chueca , San Jusn. leaveii ht:r husbMd, J. Owen Smith: two sons, Joseph Smith of Foster City and Wiiiiam G. Smith . of San Bernardino: a daughter. Mrs. Owena Amen of Dana Point ; three brothers. Joseph C.a.meron of Florida and Dougla& and Kenneth Cameron" of California; a glater. Mr!. Marth• Rimsdall of Maine, and eig:ht erandchildren. Veteran Marine Unit Will Hold Exercise Camp Pendleton's Ist Marine Div ition -honOC'ed In rti001t month!! by President Nixon -wl11 take ID &ht field this week ln \13 llr11l exercbea since returnina from Vieln&m. E,;:ercis1 Bell Thumper will be con- ducted the nr.J1:t live days. 1tirlln1 with • helicopter-borne assault whlth wiU seize and octUPY 1n objective. The 1ss1uJt grou p lhtn will u:t up a fire aupport b•~• on occupied territory, biUI spokesmen snid. - Joseph Smith and Paul R. Hays. The Washington testimony concerning current sensitivity of the Pentagon documents was given by Dennis Doolin, deputy assistant secretary o[ defense for international security affairs. It came as the government opened itJ case by renewing its contention that publication of the material by the press would result in irreparable damage to na. lional security, The Times case went before the 2nd Circuit on appeal by the government following rejection Saturda y of the govern men t's request for a preliminary injunction against the newspaper. In Wa shington, U.S. District Cou rt Judge Gerhard Gesell heard argument 011 a government request to enjoin the Pos t. Last week, Gesell denied the government's request. but the District of Columbia appeals court overruled him and sent the case back lo him for a hear- ing, Gesell interrupted Doolin during hi1 testimony and moved lhe hearing into secret session for further e:xploration ol security matters. In his New York Times ruling Satur. day. U.S. District Court Judge Murray Gurfein rejtcted I.ht 1ovtrnme11t'1 eon· tenlion -presented Friday by U.S. At- torney Whitney Norlh Seymour Jr. - that "interwnven materials tn the documenta 1ti ll have vital ity and affect military matters and prese nt aQd future military plans and policy." · Gurfein ordered closed-door he!ring1 in the Times cese, but in his rullni denyini the government request said: Si1mmer Oasses Scheduled At Saddleback Summer rerreation will 1\..art Tuesday at eight schools in the Capistrano Unified School District. AFlernoon playground activities wjll be offered at Concordia . Crown Valley, Las Pal mas . Pal isa des. San Juan, Viejo and f.1arco Forster scbools rromm I to ~ pm. each \\·eekday "·ith Fridays at Concordia as the only exception. An . ex t~nsive gir_l'!! so~tball program also is bring orga'n1zed with lean1s rrom each elem entary school area to be set up. At least 18 or mort teams will take part. Other special activities include tennis lesson~ mornings and evenings and specialized arts 11nd crafL<; 11t Crown Valley and Las Palma!. At San Clemente High School, programs will include g;rr1 gymnastics and modem dance , plus boy'• weight lifting and physical fitness . f\.f05l of the program• will rontinue through July 30. Pump Failures At Water Plant Kick Up Odors Unforeseen pump failureJ 1t San Clemente's new water reclamation plant hAve caused a temporary odor problem, city officials conceded this week . But City Manager Ken Ca rr 1aid that when replacement parts to tht: failing pumps are received from a New York manufacturer. the odor11 which havt been wafting throtJgh the. city's m1nuf1eturlng cUstricl Jnd San C~mente Hlch ,Scttool will rubstde. "When the plant Is workina u detlgned -with all the pumps functioning -~ the operation ii virtually odorleu," be uid. "But in the. past 11everi:I weeka we have had breakdowns which were totaltJ un- foreseen for a new fa cility •.. breakdcwn11 in uvual types of pumps not juat one.·' ' The'.. plant has 1 1pecially. dealgnad dome over the m()re odorOUI tank which usually traps all 1me\11 siven off by the tertiary treatment. Qimp\aintll have been aired in recenl days over the smell11 borne e1ch af· temoon by the we.ittrly aea brMU. '• . ~-... .. DAILY l'llOT $tiff I'~ THREE DIED IN SUNDAY NIGHT FREEWAY COLLISION OF CAR AND CHARTER BUS Bodi1s of Two Victims Had to a. Cut From Wreckage After Devastating Crash Down the Mission Trail Big Skateboard Contest Slated MISSION VIE.JO - A unique contest measuring .skateboa rd skil!l! will be open to Mission Viejo residen ts 7 years old and up. The event will begin at 10 a.m. Tuesday al the Montanoso Recreation Center. Winners, who will be judged by skill, speed, and artislry, will receive .awards. For information on registration call the center st 837-4084. • Bea"h Parl!J Planned LAKE FOREST -A beach party fnr Lake Fore.st l~nagers is being organized for Tuesday. The group will go to Balboa from noo." tog p.m. Sign up at the Beach and Tennis Club for the beach party. For more m- formatinn call the club at 837-6161. • How lo /Hakr Spln1h MJSSION VIEJO -No summer would be compl ete without a water fight. Miss ion Viejri's pre·teens wtll be invited to make their big splash Wedne!'iday. ,June 23 at I p.m. at the Montanoso Recreation Center. Admissinn will be one empty half.gal1011 milk carton . • Finch lo Bead tlfP• Presidential Adviser Robert Finch v.·ill h!!ad the list of \'lPl! dedicating Dana Harbor July 31. it was learned today. Dozens of other political and com- munity leaders are expected to ~tte~d the rites comprising the. formal ded1cahon of the enure Harbor romplell:. The Dana Polnt Chamber of Commerce Is playing a key rol r in tht dedication ceremonies. Finch's la st rormal public appurance along the toal!t was as featured speaker at lhe first-day Issue of the nation'• first anti pollution stamps last year. ThOle ceremonies were held at the We!tem Wl\lte House. • Teett Swlnamer1 Sought EL TORO -Teenager• who would like to earn. lhelr Red Cro1s senior life 1avln1 certificate ire being sought. Swimmers with cerUflcatH are needed ID 1ccompany each chlkl t11tn1 the pool at Parklane Reaidtntlal School for am· bulatory educablt menully retarded children, Pr.rklane. will JUpply the Red Croll tralnlng for thoM illterested in being a ll~gi.i.ard at the school. Anyone Interested may call Mrs. Edward Nelaon, 1)).2$70, or Pirklane _1t 830-1770. •Swim Le11on1 MISSION VIEJO -Swimming ~J.SOM for 111 age groups: begin Today. at the MootaMIO Recreation Center. Children two to five year11 nld muat be accompanJtd ln the wattr by a parent. For -inform11tion and registration call the center al 837-4084. Several dally cla tlmeS m offered. Trio .l(illed in Capo Beach Freeway Rear-end Crash By JOHN VALTERZA OI 111t Dlltr 1'1111 Iliff A rear-end collislon latt SUnday even- ing sent a late-model foreign sedan spin· ning atro55 the unguarded center freeway divider 11 Capistrano Belch and headon into a cbarter bus, killin& a small boy and two women, all fro m lhe San Difgo area. The cotlision, which ultimately in volved five cars and the bus, closed all four lanes of the crowded £reeway's norlh· bound traf£ic as firemen . assisted by a wrecker, fought to pry two viclim& from the ta ngle of wreckage. The dead were identified as Margaret Speyer , 27, of San Diego; Darlene A. Bunn, 27, of Point Loma and Marcus WaJlerutein, 3~. of San Diego. All were passengers and all were pronounced dead on arrival at South Coast Community Hospital . Tne mishap occurred near the San Juan Creek offramp. Sources said an unidentified woman physic ian passing lhe crash stopped ti> render aid. g iv i n g mouth-to-mouth re suscitation lo the boy en route to the hospital. The measure failed . Another passenger in the expensi ve r.erman sedan was critically irtjured in the h1gh·speed collision . Pett>r Speyers, 2R , husband of one of the dead woman, 111as reported in critical condition today at South Coast. The driver. Ru ssell r.fillcr, 26. of S8n Diego , had only minor hurts. patrolmen said . Drivers of the other aut0$, Including Everest Conquerer To Lead U.S. Groups SEATILE. Wash. <U PI) -The only man alive to climb Mt. Everest twice will be in the Pacific Northwt.11t this summer to breeie Up ind down 14 ,41G-foot Ml . Rainier with groups of tourists. Nawang Gombu, 40, is visiting J im Wh ittaker. Seattle climber 'n d businessman who was the first American top top the 2;9.028-foot Everest when be and Gombu made the climb In 196.1. the oper ator cf the cha.rt.er tour hu1, Ralph Adanu Burch, 33, cf LI Palml, were unhurt. Patrolmen said an intensive in- vestigation into the crash ii continuing. Some report.-;, they said, pointed to a my1t.ery car which cut a vehicle off cear the San Juan Creek Road efframp, caus- ing the rear-end collision. But patrol inveaigators said they were also checking into other traffic factors not Involving the dea th ear wbitb could have caused the tragedy. The crash snarled tra ffic tor at least an hour in all northbound lanes of the free- wav a~ volunteer firemen fr om San Juan CaPistrano and Doheny elations worked lo pry the victims from the car. The crash was the second instance of multiple deaths attributed to the lack or ·a center divider in the area In the last several months. Late last year a car carrying a family of five careened acroSll: the. divider nearby and plowed into a chemical truck. The blazing collision killed four persons. leaving a six-year-old boy the only survivor in the family . Auto Crash Kills Clemente Youth The 16-year-old son of a Sa n Clemente civil engineer died of traffic injurie-' Sun· day during a mercy night to 11 hospital in a California Hi~hway Palrol helicopter. Richard Toal. son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Toa! of 4101 Calle Abril, had been gravely Injured in a single-car cras.h 40 mlles northea11t of Indio. Highway Patrolmen said Toe:l's tar overt11rne:d. The boy originally was treated at a hoepit.sl in Blythe, but because of hi! Injuries doc:tor1 recom- mended his trarufer to Loma Linda University Medical Center 2'0 miles away. The CHP chopper \11a.s commandeered for the ime.r cy night. The OOy died en route. Fireworks, Picnic,, More Slated for ViejoFourth A plcnl~ • concert. • pyrotechnic display jWlt under. the ttan-these were part of an old fuhlooed Foor1h of July. Mtulon Vltt)o'1 1ee0nd an nu a 1 Independence Day celebr1Uon wW have all tho!e thing• and more. 1ccording to the Ml!slon Vie}o ActiviUes Committee. F1milies arr: Invited ID bri l'lg picnic suppers to the M!Ssion Viejo goU couru around 4·p.in. to dl.ne on the areen grHJ of the faj~a,ys. Entertainment will Include 1quare dan- cln1. barbtr11hop quartet and choral ainglng and mutlc by not.so-old fashioned rock croupa:. -· Refreahmentll will bet available tl the Mwloo Viejo Ion .with proaedl aofnl towt1rd the firework• fund. Tbe bigh!Jt:ht of the evening will be an hour.Jong firework.a display both on the ground and In the air. The &IJtlerlnc: show ls set to 10 off at 8;45 p.m. Marty Ruuo Is general chairman of the event Which drew 5,000 people lo I.he gnU course list ye1r. Vince E!sposlto ia en!ert,lnment chairman : Kerry Baichtal and Art Hamer. refreshments ; Jim Toepfer and 8ob Aldrlth, clean up: Bud Gmiuler, Miki Nason and Russo, fireworU, and publicity. Tot Drowns; Mercury Takes Jum_Pi The heavens parted the usual low clouds and fog routine, the wale.rs warm- ed , and 300,000 people flocked lo lhl beaches alon11: the Orange Coa,sL Sunday. Newport Beach life guards described the J une weekend scene as being "almost August." They estimate some 105.000 people enjoyed the last day of Spring 1t the beach of Newport Beach. Surf rtn on- ly two to four feet and water tem· peratures dimbed to nearly 88 ~grees on Sunday. Lifeguards logged 83 rescues. Saturday and 'l'l on Sunday. One 5-year old child drow~ o[f the new Irvine Marina, Ole lone · tragedy of the weekend. ln San Clemente. 55.000 beachgoers were logged for both days. Lifeguards Sunday aided a 16-year-old girl wh11 escaped drowning in the siJ1:-foot ·deep trencb offshore from the city 'a; north beach. Irene Castro of 1606 Las Bolas. made it to shore unassisled and the11 collapsed ln the :sand, lifeguards reported . She was taken to South Coast Community Hospital for ob:servation. Rescues along the Orange Coast from Seal Beach to San Clemente were light over the weeken d. Lifeguards credit the d~minishing surf and the resulting near disappearance 0£ side currents· and rip- bde1. Wilh 30,000 person1 nUmated at ~guna Beath, lifeguards only logged eight ~es, none aerioua, (j)r the twe days . Laguna Beach guards 1ave firit aid t• 98 victims of minor beat b acc ident& in- cluding the rescuscitallon ot a young Anaheim woman who collapsed on the Main Beach. At Huntington Beach city beaches, lifeguards estimated 80,000 pcrl!On! on Saturday and 95,000 people on Sund.ay. Weekend rescue l! totaled l:l2 from a surf that ran only one lo three feet. The city's Selective Enforcement DetaU logged 100 arrests of adults and juvenileJ over the weekend on charges rangln1 from minors pos1essing alc<Wol to JUspi· cion o! possession of narcotics fer sale. and car burglary. Capt. Arland Ussher, commander cf th: Huntington Beach Patrol division, said, "'We want people to koow we bave a beach where people can come to enjoy themselves.. But if they come to break the law. \11e wiU see lo it they go to jail, forthw ith," he said. Huntington Slate Beach eslimated crowds at 20,000 both days and rescues totalled JO. Bolsa Chica Beach attendance was 10,000 both days. Orange County Harbor Department reported "heavy routine days" but ntt dramatic rt!!!CUi.! although sever a I sailboats tipped over in the medium surf. Boston Swim Stopped BOSTON IUPI) -High winds, rough water and pollution prevented a 12--mile swim across Bostoo Harbor by James J. Doty, who had just r~vertd fr om lw• operaticns. Doty. 33. of Dedham. planned to rwim from Grave11 Light to Soulh Boston Yacht Club to test his recuperation from two cancer operatioru and to point out Bostoa Harbor's recr1ational ach'an tages. Oruge Wea tiler The weathennan predicta haz:y 1unshine today and Tuesday with patchy fog along the coa!l Jn the morning hours. Highs today and Tuesday 70 at lhe beaches, _, in- laftd. Low tonight 55 to a. INSIDE TODAY Tht Co.sto Mesa Civic Pla!l- house ii winding up its staJO" with a. production of WillJo:m Sarovo.n'1 "The Beautiful Pto- pl.e." The plotl is reuU!wed in Enttrtainmtnt, Poot 19. ... ... D :,,,._ , .. ,. C1llflt11l.I • •• CllKalllt UI' • 0.-1..,.c-ty " Clullfllf .... '""' .. ...,.... M c-1<• • :C:.1i1111t1.lh ,,.,, Cm-• ... .. 1)11111 Nttk" " '" ... ''"" " 111119<'111 , ... • .......... 1•11 •1t11M1l11IMlll , .. ,, WN!Mr. • ....... -wt11i. Wftll " .. N_ .. ~ ....... , .. ,, ... .-.. -.. I l ·' ·- •• OAlt\' l'!LOT SC ffeari!!iJ:ir Slated Zone Bills Eyed By Legislature Somebody Up Ther e Does n't Lil{e Ou1· Eclito1~ OllL V ,ILOT 1!111 PMt. Rolling Along The California Legislature is beginning to tum its atten1ion 10 the flood of bills on tJ1e conttovers1al sub1ec1 of coastal zone preservat ion and management. 'T'he Assembl y Planning and I.and L:Sf' Committee wiU hold hearlngs on t110 or them Tuesday and the Senate Comm1t1ee on Natural Resourcts and W1ldl1fe w1 :1 take testimony on four others next t.lon- da y, Cities along lhe Cal ifnrni.:i. coast h2.1·e almost un.:ini mously declared thrlr op· position to all of them . Generally regarded as the most far- reaching and the most destructive to local government, is a measure in- troduttd by Assemblyman Ala n Sieroty (D-Beverly Hills) that would turn over all mthorlty over coastal lands to a state agen cy. A bill by Assemblyman Pete Wilson (R· San Diego), llirnilar to one narrowly de- feated. last year, is regarded. as the most palatable by beach communities since it would permit much more local control. It cont.ain.!I no funding provisions, however. They will be before the Asumbly com- mittee Tuesday at 2 p.m. 26 members of the Thurston Intermediate School Bike Club and five faculty members began pedaling towards San Die,.go . Friday. During the five day bikeathon -to show concern !or the envuonment -the group planned to camp. swim and sightsee. They probably also stopped to nurse some sore muscles along the way. Wilson's bill would involve conlr~ o[ property 1.000 }'ards inland, ll"hile Sieroty•s includes everything to the nearest mountain peaks or live miles, whichever is Jess. Two or the bill& before the Senate Com- mittee are companion measures to the assembly bills. Also berore the senate panel, ho\l.·ever, wl\I bt a bill by !!late Senator Ralph C. Dills (0-San Pedro) that parallels Wilson's bill, but would involve control up to two miles. San Pedro Boy Discoyered Dead in Newpo11 Harbor St.ate Senator, James Q. Wedworlh, (D- lnglewoodJ has submitted a bill covering ,state environmental controls and state coastal acquisition. Slate Senator Dennis E. Carpenter IR- Ne1vport Beach) said persons plann ing on addressing the <:<1mmittces should be prepared to comment on four con· sideratiotl.'I: Scoru of citizens on fool joined a land, sea and air search for a missing San Pedro boy Sunday, but the hunt ended tragically ·when he v.·as found, drowned, floating in Newport Harbor. Christ-Opher Langston, -4. wandered away from a family sailboat outing & the Irvine . Marina. l~ Bayside Drive. around 5 p.m., according to police reports. Hit par en ta, P..tr. and Mrs. John Whitney. notified authorities after their own ~inute search. A Newport Beach police helicopter crew covered the .1urrounding are1, ln- cludln1 B&lboa Island, broadcaating the name and description of lhe lost child. Jnvestigator1 68id patrol cars found many persons, cilizens and visitors out hunting the boy within 10 minutes. Crews from the Orange O:iunly Harbor Department and city Marine Safely Departmenl.5 y.·ere also assigned. Fearing the worat, lifeguard ICUba Fisherman Hurt Entering Boat A Runtingkln Beach man intent on a da y of deep.sea filhing never made lt on the boat Sunday morning. He y.•ent to the hospital. instead. \\'illiam Corbel . 66, or 301 Calle ?.liramu. suffered torn ligaments in both legs when he slipped and fell as he: began boarding a t1portf1sher al San Clemente pit>r. Firemen Aaid the mi!hap occurred on the ramp at the ple:r at 7:30 p.m. Corbel v.·1s reported in satisfactory condiUon at South C-01st Hospital. OIAN•I COAST • DAILY PILOT c~o: com ,UIUIH1N~ COMPANY "•"•,. H. W••• Pr"illent ind Plfl.!l\.llef J.d, •. e ... 1 • ., \'1(1 '""""'""' .... Gel>lf.i ,,.,........ Th•"'•' 1e ,,...;1 IGllW TheMlf 1'. J.1 1,,.hl•• ,... ..... ! ... I.''"' Chrltt H. l101 a;.~ •• d '· N•ll .-.Ulsttn; Malllglto;I EGll.,, ....... a..ai Offke 21! F1r11t A•enu• M•ilj"' .c1c1, ... : r.o. ••• •6'· 97,Sl S-C'-'-Offk• 305 Norlh fl Ct ,..h10 11.,,1. ,2,72 Otkt-Ofncn Co1ll Mut• lY.l w .. : 11'1 Strtt-t N-rl SHcl>: ~JJ: N.-1 ,..,,,..,.,,_ H\#llln8itll hfdl: llllj hKll S011lt v11 • divers entered the bay waters after the hunt on land turned up no trace of young Christopher. -The form or new state and local organiza tions proposed by ihe bills: lhtlr 111akeup and ability to deal effectively IS TH IS A GARBENSTANGEL? CAN YOU BUILD A BETTER ONE? DAILY PILOT Ctl tllengea Re1dara to Build {or Findl Competition Modela Traders Unite! Pilo t See k ing Garbenstangels lt'i timr ror a small confession. The DAIL'' PILOT has, itself, bern running this ad in the Trader's Para· d1se section of the classified ads : GARBENSTAN GEL on ly slightly used. \I/h at will you trade for good. used garbenslangel vd!h right· handed :z:oenst1ft, power dippoltck and battery • operated piddle. bottom. Now. the truth is that lhe DAfL'' PILOT hasn·t gol a garbe nst.angel - with or y.•ithout e battery-operated piddlebottom. Bu1 the response. by rt"aders to this ad and to 11imilar o~ in "fl1ir;cellanfQus \\"anltd '' and in the Dime-A- Lines has convioced the DAILY PILOT Promotion Department that there are lots of garbcnstangels out 1here. Or. if they don·t e:xisl, at h~asl there are J!lenty of garben~tanglers who could build them. The promotion department 11ot so steamed up about it, in fact , that it baa started a search for a &ile for the lirst Build A Better Garbtnl!itangel Con· test and Rallye in the history or the Orange Coast. So excited is the promotion manager about the possibilities that he hlll' JlrOmise.d tven lo dig up some prizes for the best garbenstangel built 1or found in the garage and dusted off for the event) and enttred in the contest . Top prize would be In money -maybe even American -and there would be ot her reward s. But first the promotion mnnnger hll.!i to prove garbenslangels and gar- henstranglers really exist and could be rnticed 1u participate in his proposed first-ever CQntest and ral!ye. Already radio pcrsonalll.ies are talking about garbenstangels. readers are inundating the DAILY PILOT wtth offer~ to tr11rlf', bu~· or trafrtc in gar- benstangels \.some of lhe le11ers \\'ill be published during tht next few days) and people are talking about g11rbenstangels all over town. But to prove to Ure publisher. who pays the promotion man ager"lii salary and looks qulu.lc•lly at expense account Items such a1 ''first prlie, Build a. Better Garbenslllnge:I Contest and Rall ye," ii \\•ill bl' necessary for the true garbenstange.I fans of the DAILY PILOT audence _to unit behi_nd this ~ffort . Agr,ee: to build a garbenl!ilangel -or al least hnd one to display. Fill out the coupon below and aasurt the world of Its flr1t Build a Better Garbe.nltana:el Cclltat and Rallye. --------------v ... I will build 1 G1rben1Llngel -or launch 1 se1rch ror one T can -I I I I 'P\lt Into lhape for uhlblllon at the Rallye. Please tell me more. N1me .....••.......•.....••.....••..•...•..... . ................... . Addreu .••...••••............•..............• Phone ...•..••...•..•• City . Zip ....... .. Mail to Promotion Manager. DAILY PILOT. P.O. Bo1 15ell Ccsll .14.esa. Ca. 9282fl ___ ms. _________ _ I I I I " V.'\Lh land use issues in U1e coastal zone. -The prepara!Jon of a st2~e plan for coastal zont' const>rvation and develop.o n1cnt ; U1e ~elt><:tion of pl11nning ob- jectives. respo11sib1lily for initiating the e!ernents of the plan, and final adop tion of the plan. -Land U!le development wntrol during the planning process; at what level or lt'vel or government should proposals be reviev.ecl and how should U1eir ac- ceptability be determined. -Particular objections to any of the bills. Bus Parking Lot Proposal Greets Board A bus parking Jot proposal which drew t.he attentio n of Capistrano Beach residents a few months ago is again on the agenda for tonight's meeting of the Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District. Trustees v.·ill ht asked to consid~r an agreement "'ilh the state for the tem- porary abandonment of La Playa Street at the 7:30 p.m. meeting in Serra School, Capistrano Beach. County approval already has been otr tained and wilh atate approval imminent the district will be able. to close lhe street to through traffic and use it as a bus parking lot. A former proposal UI use part of the Serra School playground for bus parking wa~ opposed by the community. The use of l~a Pla.)lil!I was .an alternate proposal. A!So.oO the agenda v.·ill be a reading report prepered by special services d1rel'l-0r Jt•ff Olsen v:hich \1'ill !ell the board that between 72 and 76 percent of all the elementary school children are reading at or above grade level. The repo rt was requested by Board or Trustees v.·hn are ("onsidering how much money should be spe nt on a remedial reading progranL Figures compiled from five standard lesls sho"' that l.928 <"hildren read above grade le vel, 770 read at grade level. and 1.0!0 read below. Figure! based on teacher judgment and class performance differ slightly from test scores. The board also will consider proposals for a program for mentally glfltd elementary children. Last year's pro- ~ram was not considered adequate, ac~ cording to a district-wide study and workshops ha ve been authorized lo im· prove Lhe program. T'"'o Pedes trians Hurt in La guna A Los Angttles man and hi! '''ife suf- rered minor injuries Saturday wh en they were struck bv an au!o while crossing Cnast Highway in Laguna Beach. Police said Donald and ~ferle George \\'ere knocked to the pavement at SL Ann's Dril'l' and Coast High"'ay by a car dr1vl'n by Frances :0.1. Hall, 55, also of Los Angeles. The two victi ms .... ·ere tran~ported to South Coast l"n1nmun1!y H01Spital by am- hulanre \\'ht>re they v.•ere lreated ror minor cut.; and bruiSf's before being releB.Sed. Investigat ors said the lla\I woman \\'Ould be cited for failure to yield lo pedestrians in an unmarked crosswalk. By THO MAS KEEVI L Of tho D•I"" Pflo! Si.If Either I'm indestructible or I'm nol gel ting the message .. Don't get me wrong: flying is here to stay and rm no t going to mess \\lith the realities of life. f've been hooked on aerial forms ol transportation si nce 1940, \l'hen $~ ~ught. r.ne_ a IO -mi!1ute hop in a sputtering biplane at the A11sso_ur1 Statr !ai r u1 Sedalia .. Siure then I have flo 1vn 111 everything iro1n the Boeing 747 to the 65-hp Aeronc:a ('hamp in \\•htrh I look flying f · ~ lesso ns and held a proud one·third 011•nershiµ. 'rhC! variety of r ra ft and c:ii·c:urnst"-nces has been v..·ide and stnnu!ating: aerobatics 11·ith the Blue 1\ngels; a 1'.laC"h 2. 41i-n1inute fli ght fron1 Long .Beath to San f)iego in a Phantoin F4: the last bl1n1p ride out of Orange (.'ounty's Lighter 'rhan Air Base: a catapulted takeoff over the Pa cific from the Navy l c~rrie.r U.S.S. Kitty ~la\Vk; a hoverin~. b?u~cinf! , ride 1n a t\1arine heli copter engaged 111 lifting a 1.:rashcd Arrny helicopter fron1 a steep valley on the island of llain•aii ~ a n1ind·blo\1•ing. lo\1·.Jcvel pass over Orange Coun· ty's main runway at 250 1nph in a t\vo·plare Navy jet. BUT SOMEONE MAY have started trying to tell me some- thing about 10 years ago \\'hen ..• 1vell. you're going to find this hard to believe. but 1\1hen ... a 1'.1ar1ne jet knocked a Santa Fe train off the track at El Toro. I \Vasn't in the plane that tiine. But I 1vas on the train. It \vas a pretty \l'ild scene. F'ive or six cars. including the club rar l 1vas in , 1vere t1\·isted and smashed and turned almost on their sides after J,t. Phillip Schmidt skipped hi s flamed-out F8 across the runin•ay and sn1ac:k into the engine's pathway. No scratches, 110 bruises. A fe\'I years later a Lockheed l.,odestar on 1vhich I was a pas- senger lost an engine on fin al approach al J.,os An geles International. The plane is capable of a one-engine landing -but it \Vas the other engine that had been ~iving us problems. Foam units and fire trucks abounded but we slid in nicely. There v.•as one nagging thought. The two·engine Lodestar can land on one engine, bul it can't maintain a 15.000 feet altitude on one engine. That morning we had crossed the Canadian Rockies into Vancouver. I PUT THINGS TO test again in August, 1969, \vhen a 12·pas- senger civilian helicopter au gured in on the tarmac in the little to'>'-'n of Gladstone, Austr<1lia. It \\'as a fi1'e·second·from·disaster affair in· valving gasoline. flames and explosi on. I v.·as next to last out. Si nged eyelashes from running through burning ~aso line. La~t \veek I v.1as aboard Air Californ ia's Flight 103. an 8:30 a.m. hop to San Francisro 1vhen so meone may again have been try- ing to get a n1cssage to n1e. It started routinely enough. The captain announced \\'e v.1ere cleared for immediate takeoff. 11•heeled the Boeing 737 onto the main run\.vay and. under full throttle, started that accelerating ride that to this day I finrl exhilarating. \Ve \Vere loaded -a full house of 115 pa ssengers and a crew o( five. plus a brand ne\v load of fuel. So I wasn't surprised we were using up quite a hunk of runway on takeoff. The tower passed on my right. That's about half11'ay do\v n the mile-Jong strip. \Ve were five knots from \12 -that moment when the pilot •·rotates" the plane, or points the nose skyward. Suddenly a bang. Then full brake!! and a mighty roar as the captain threw both engines into fu ll reverse thrust. I know that run1vay. T kne1v there couldn't be any great stretch of it Jen bet\lt•een us and a row of parked planes at the end. And beyond that the so.foot drop onto Palisades Road. A HOSTE SS SAID someth ing about seatbelts over the PA . I braced 1ny feet again st the sea t in front of me and sa\v those Glad- stone flan1es all over again. We stopped \Vith precious little yardage to spare. A normal abortion. if there is such a thing as a nor1n al abortion. "This is your ca\>lain. ladi es and gentleinen," said the cal m voice (\1·hy must they a 'A'ays be so damned cool ?). '"\Ve, ah, bl e\v a t ire on !lie no~egear and, uh . rather than risk letting a piece of rub- ber fly into the engine . _ . \.l"e. uh . deci ded to hall the landing." I started the old inner debate again -how many times. ol' Tom'.' But I !'tayed aboard after the ne1v \\•heel and tire had bern put on. missed the morning meetin.e: in Palo Alto. missed the 7 o'clock flight home out of San Francisco. 1ni ssed the 7:40 flight out or San Jose lo Orange County. fie"' PSt\ to Los Angeles. missed the last cnnirnutrr flight In Orange County, leased a car. drove home and had a TV dinner at 11 o'clock. No messages. Af tershock J iggles Los Angeles Basin LOS ANGELE:S IAPl -A moderate earthquake shook parts of the Los AnJ:ele.~ a.tea at 9 OJ am . today, ap- parently anoU1er aftershock of the Feb. 9 rnajor tremor. There 11·ere no repor~ or major d:i1nagt, allhough one man told police hi,, refrigerator wa s knocked over. Telephone service was disrupted in one aree of the San Fernando Valley, An Exceptio1wl l nves t111e11t! Estate, Ladies Diamond Ring e 10.26 CT. e FINE AMERICAN CUT e BEAUTl~UL MOUNT· INGS, 14K WHITEGOLD, I SWIRLING PRONGS e LIGHT CHAMPAGNE COLOR e VVSI CLARITY You must 1ee this beautiful diamond ring. A buy &uch as this is rare. Come in and a&lt for Bob or Dom Raciti. DOM RACITI *OUR UNUSUAL MONEY BACK DIAMOND GUARANTEE Who" you buy • diamond from u1 we wil 9uarantM that diamond to appraise af W /e MORE than you paid for It or your money back. Can you do •• well el1ewher•1 COMPARE . "1!!:::Rl~v:~~~A ~ oCoan ~ 4~u:c::;~'c::-: Home Of Fln t Jewelry -~7741 I I l 1 J I I DAILY ,ILOT Sl'1t f'llOtt LOVESICK -James E. Smith comforts his young daughter, Jean Scott, over the pangs of first l'tive in a scene fron1 '·'fhe Beautiful People" at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse. =--======= r~ _.. -... .__,.j~ ~) SECOND FE ... TUrtE f' "THE BABY MAKER" . 1 jl oln untonvtnl1on~1 rnovlt lorbaro Herslley I l The modem ma"int of Emile Zola's mntc.r ,,l«'"l A OlSTJNCTlON fll.MS, lHC. RELEASE · COLOR "° ~ ~ t •-··-~ .t.NNA GAEL n NANA witll KEYE HJELM \ I \-' _, ' \ J ,_ l I I I I ' Lr 11 !..J '_j '_j tJ '.J !_I U H 1 .IJ Ll G /_J_,, (I;,,-' -;t1·u-_, -J.f.d -"ARTHUI HRlil -, !Ill 111111 _, HOWUOI. KOCH ........ "' ......... --~Tim* ... ,.,.. ..... La GP ... ---: . --·--~.-' . PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT ST ARTS WED., JUNE 23 '' , Wlondu, Junt 21, 1971 DAI LY PILOT f9 \ 'The Beautiful People' Costa Mesa Play Outs.hines Weak Script. By TOM TITUS Cl 1'-D•llY Pli.t ll11f Whoever first a d v i s e d against attempting to make a silk purse out or a sow's ear should have been acquaintEid with Mary Eastman Rigney. This skillful and sensitive director has taken what would on paper amount to one of the worst plays of the rapidly con· eluding season and fash ioned it into a delighlful evening of theater with her production <>f "The Beautiful Pepople" at the C-0.sta ?-.1esa C i v I c Playhouse. Will iam Saroyan's fragile fanlasy is not theater in the conventional sense, nor in a ny other sense that comes im- mediately lo mind. It is, rather. a collection o f characters moving amiably and unobstrusively through a cotton candy scripL with about as much motivalion as though they were created by a Pinter or a Beckett. The re are no conflicts. no dramatic climax, no insights into character or motivation and no real story develop- ment. The play, which is mercifully brief. merely rum it course and dissolves from the scene. But Mis.s Rigney and her disciples -for such one must be to undertake such a ques- tionable endeavor -carry out Rod Honored HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) -Rod Steiger was invited to the guest of honor at the Moscow Internationa l Film Festival. their mission as tho u ah ------------" "TKll aE.t.UTl,UL PllOPLll" "Beautiful People" were one ~.":!•E~~,~~1~1·R': .. ~~~~·r~·,.~i~~'~?.:<~ of the finest pieces of theater ~~a.,~~~ . .'!'....i ~~~~o1ioh~1~ :!<hJ•t~ ever written. And it is this F•U•" 11, ... n1e<1 t>Y 1111 co111 M••• fteJing Of enjoyment, 0 f ~h~~~~ r.:u*,J1~ ~u ~nt, ~~~ 'o~I~ 11Y in v 0 I" em e n t. w h I c h 1ht Communlly Ctn!t r l uOllorlum on fll1 Orl flltl Counr1F 1 lr o rouno\. lransfOfm.5 8 p 0 t e Il t j 8 I l y Ae>1rv11loru 1:1-!·UO.l TK• CAST tedious evening into a ow•n .,...11,1., 11111 Cull•n I bl "f rt' I Actr>t> Wtl>•'*' Je1n St~ot p easura e, I not pa ICU ar-Jo""·' w111,11r J1m1• E.. Sm••n Jy exciting. experien.:"e. ~~iii.':',.~r~1>1011Qm · ci~~~' F~1;~:~ Ap8'tt, from the t hr e e 010 HlllboO• l orry Pti110• f",o1h" H0<1l n • •••••• ~··~ Btll membe s of the Webster M1tn1<1 w11>11..-.• •. . Jul ~~"'"'"" h $!••• Jim Fttlt r family, w o comprise the core of the play. there is little re.la· tionship among the odd assort- ment of characters. The minor figures are little more than sounding boards for the es:- pound.ing of the principals' free-spirit philosophy. Ye I under t-.1iss Rigne)('s skillful direction. they take on, at least, a shape and form , Most impressive or the cast is Bill Cullen in the difficult role of lhc teen-age poet who lives on a virtual cloud of ir- responsibility writing one·word novels and busying himself in childlike recreation. CUllcn ·s ease of n1anner and natural ability overcome a good many obstacles, including that of an erm in a sling, the result of a ~do re~nt accident. Blending an ingrained aura or fantasy with the ap- prehension e ( encroaching 1"o:ol1ty. in the lorm of first discovery of love, is Jean Scot\. whose slage debu~ al the age of 14 is an auspicious nne indeed. t.1iss Scott d isplays a sense of 'en- chantment in her role as patron saint of the household !"'"'ict , and her transitions from fairy child to budding young woman and back again are ex- cellent. The imperturable patriarch .,,... &:41 ,.. ....... ..... ,.... ...... I N W-IND 1UISDA - Slr.lklngl" -P•~•'oP• c .n;11r. 1 N1w 'fO•-tl l!:!'J COl.~'"..CnJll'!S ,._, ... , I .t~-JACK NIC~OLSoN , ·····'' nvEERBJI >\ PIECES "") <"'OI ~0 -AND= "Melvyn Douglas is MAGNIFICENT!" -JUDITH CRIST., ·New York M•g•zine I Navar Sang For My_Fathar m-~ 'They were damned good cowboys, until they robbed a bank.• f.Em.~ Pre$1!nt5 A !l..AICE EDWNtJS FUI • M..l.JAM tOru RVNij OlrlUrl • ltNll ~N 'rl "'WlD ~" ~LYNN CNUI Ard I 'Wlfi R[)(EJHS • ~ ft Clnded °'1 aN:I HMAPll& • Pm.ICICI bf IUJ(f r.JN#JU .. KEH WM..f.S·lhir; bl' EM'! oo..DEMTtt ·~.fW.Vf!Df'I m~"'"""" -e EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT STARTS WED., JUNE 23 Choose One of the Many Coast & Southern Federal Offices to Serve You: * MAIN omcr:tth. Hiii, lo. Angt\M • 12:1-1351 * WILIHIAl 11 Q"AMl,.CY PLACE:3833 Wllthlre etvd., L.A.• 381-1295 LA. CIY1C CENTM: 2nd' Brot.dway. e•1102 * HUNTINGTON IU.CH: 111 Huntington Ctnt.r. (714) 9117-1047 •f this nighty family ls well played by J ames E. Smlth, who reflects a dash of Grandpa Vanderhoff and a pinch of Elwood P. Doud Jn his decepttvely shrewd live·and- Je!·live philosophy. It is less Srnith's fault than Saroyan's th.at his rambling soapbox oralory late in the play seem!'i contrived and devoid o f motivation. Into this cuckoo's nest only a stone's throw fron1 realHy come four other characters whose contributions are ques- tionable, but who come across quite adniirably nevertheless in the Costa Mesa production. Primary among these is Clark Farrell as a stiff-col- him.self transfigured. Farrell turns In a splendid performance, using a stiff physit.:al mannerism to its best comic ad\'anlage. T\\'O others, Lois Wilson a~ Smith's long-lost friend and Stan Bell as the parish priest. are drawn merely as listening posts for CUiien and Smith. respectively. However, both are effective in contrast as representatives of the "outside "''orld." Terry Phelps c~ates a fine con11c characlerizatioo as the gulleral·voiced lo~·n drunk, although his manner quickly becomes d istracting. Completing the cast are Jeff Newman and J in1 Feffer in walk-<in assignments. Aiding the overriding mood (If unreality is R ic h~ rd Andersen's larger·than·life set which straddles the fine line between actuality and im- agination. The use of a rear screen projection camera also he i gh ten s the effect. particularly the final tableau. "The Beautiful People" may not be a beautiful play. but 1t is very close to being a beautiful production at the Civic Playhouse. Fi n a I performances will be given Thursday through Saturday at !he Co rnmunity C ent e r Auditorium on the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa i'rlesa. lared welfare worker ~tlO 1;::====================~ casts a pall on the Webster j NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES life style but who becon1es sol'-~;:::::=~~~~-~-~-~~~~~~~~;;~-' enraptured by the family's! P""""f magic he 1;" d' ( EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEME~T l Al10 Thl1 DIJMy Fiim "Son of Flubber" Starting June '21 CONTINUOUS DAILY ;,c, .. ,~ aliens e :"'"'S"-"" bananas" = ~,,._,, .. -U111tllll A1'11111 - 2 d C d H• S~OW!lftlfl n ome y 1t -,..,,,1,. "THE TWELVE ff-.~1.oo t 10, ... CHAIRS" (G) ;;,~~~-:io!WJ • -•-·· n ... ,~,, J.1C1l 1o.ot •c•1n• J.00. i. 1:';'";;;;;;;:'..I "SHINBONE ALLEY" l~l MATINllS DAILY IT'S SOPHISTICATED tNOUGH FO\\ KIDS, SIMPLE EN01JGH f , ... lOR ADUL'IS! carol cha~mnu eddie bracken sing! d1nca! •nclilttt! In .... ... THE WONDERFUL AEA L ROMAN CE OF AACHY ANO MEHITABEL THE STARS or llOllNntg SHINE EVEN BRIGHTER ·• G ., .. '\>I,""""'.. [!] PALOMAR Mcn.JRF.S Wl'ERNATIONAL P'RESWTS "RING OF BIUGllTWATEll" BOX OFFICE OPENS 7:15 SHOW AT OUSK ''All•y'" 9' 12:15, l :4S, 7:1$, 10:4$ "Wirter" .t 1:4$, 5:15, 1:45 MATINEES DAILY Coast & Southern Federal Offers Yo1,1 These Highest Prevailing Rates: OOMPOUND!D DAILY AND PAID QUARllfllY.• 5.00°1•-5.130/o PaubOOk; No Minimum • 5.25 °/•-5.390/o BANTA ANA LOAN llEAVICI AGINCY: * 1805 N. M•ln SL• (714) 541-1257 * IANTA MONICA: 711 Wllshlre Blvd •• 383-0748 * IAN PllHKh 101h I Paclno • 13f-2341 * WEIT COVINA: &ttfand Shopping Cir.• 331·2201 : PAHOttAMA CJTY: 1811!1 Van Nuys 81vd. •1!1112-11 71 TAftZ.ANA: 1875 t Ventura Boule¥9rd • 34$-3814 * LONQ 9UCH: :lrd I. Locus!• 4:17•7411 • °"' __ ,..,~1,. Dtl~--l .. ~4p!I With• $2,500 balance In your aav lng1 account. you ire ellglble to become •member. Subatantlat savings ire avallable when purChulng many lttmt lnciudlng automobile1, lumllure. 1ppllancn, jewelry. Plut many trte aeNicet -money order1, aare deposll boxet, etc . ThrH Month C1nlflc111; No Minimum. 5.75"'•·5.92°/• On•YMrCenlflctle; St ,000 Minimum. 6.00"/•-6.180/o Two-Y11r Ctrtlllcate; SS,000 Minimum. • E1'"41N lvtnuel Eernlngs ASSETS OVER $800 MILLION . -----~ -. __ . COAST I HERN FEDERAL SAVINGS I • INSURANCE TO $20,000 . • • ' " . ·t.• • • , ' ' -' --~----, ,J~0,_;•~~~'-'-'-"~''~~--'5C U.S. Banks Going Push Button Complete-New York Stock List But Most Custo1ners W elcq111e Coniputers, TV Ca1neras, Services !~:: ·~;, .. k• ........ "" , ,. AttecOll 1 lOI B)' DEAN C r.111.U .. R NEW YORK tUPIJ Banking, once a face to face metLlng with the neighborhood banker or his employes has gont: push bulton \\'hile some customers rue this latesl p h a s e of lkhuman1zat1on most of them welCilme lht computers, the. telev1s100 cameras t he buttons and the pneumatic tubes that speed transactions and elnn1na1e long v.::utin~ lines A ti oss countr. ctit~ck among the country s 14 000 full .service bank:. s hov. s JUSl how far they ve come since the days when new technology mtant a new rubber stamp or • better qualny quill pen In Buffalo for e.xamplc, customer.s of the Marine Midland Bank \Veslcrn can play a moncv machine any hour of the day or night All lhcr need do is insert a special lnchv1duaJ card tnlO tJ1e slot of an apparalus mounted -0uts1dt tht bank punch out an 1dent1f1callon set the dial for $25 or $50 and wait for tbe money to kick through the slot Television drive 111 banking 1s a feature at the Huntington National Bank s Nor t h Columbus branch 1n Ohio The custon1er eases his car up to a \\1ndo11,, talks lo a picture on the TV .screen and then Us<'S buttons to make depo~1t.s or t ash che('ks The Conunenlil l Bank 1n Ph1ladel1lh1a has a .,ecr£'t nu1nber gimmick Your money comes through \.11\houl a struggle at any of its 50 branches if the secret number you give the girl matches up with a report from a button operated n1ach1ne In Chicago, computers al Beverly Bank give I h e " ·t; customer one co1nprehens1~e monthly staten1ent I 1 s I 1 n g checking and s 11 v 1 n g s balances installment Joan and mortgage figures l n Bal11more, l::quitable Trust has a lai ge aulonlated scoreboard hunc on one wall Customers take a numbered 1 t1rd , just hke at some shops, then :;II 10 a lounge, sipping free coffee and rea din g .n1agaz1ne s untll the board <:alls them 1n a bur:;t of Hashing hghls Surety Nal1onal Bank o! Los Angeles wont say 11s money Is untouched by human band! but thats virtually lhe cast Its banli 1n !he Civic Cenltr consists largely of buttons, microphones electronic cash dra.,.,ers and the hke Anyone \\,1nt1ng ta bank pre:;ses a bul1on !alks 11ith a female falt showing on a television screen and warts brie[J y until the infernal machine crank..s out 1ns1ruehons When t h a l happens, and only then , cash <.!rawer~ are opened -0r loan applications processed At Chase Manhattan Ill New Yor k, and many other banks pe-Ople tan use automalic check depositors They feed the check and deposit shp 1n the machine and the whole ••t>t~W o,o thing gets added to their e.~.our 10 accounts withou t the bother of ::~Qo~£P~~; st.anding 1n telle r hnes ::;:P01~11~ In St Paul, 41n on-hne :~,,:1~1N~ 1~ t t t "·-• ..1ll•nllTr 1 1< eom pu er e 1mma es urc: necu B••llf'•Oll 11 for tellers to check out a :::~ c1~ 1.!i• .savings balance at First ::::: M'1111011 National Bank In Macon Ca s•t~h"o<J 1ll S.\IAClllb 10 customers at First National B•~1 L•b 11 !Uv~ C'cl :.0 Bank & Trust can pay up lo 40 e, •• 1.,,,. 1 ht b t'" b Beo1Fch I " separate mont y 1 J.:) y a~ck"'"" Jo r Ill h k h h l\oct Ole~ l!l 1 ng 1n one superc ec w IC p.,~11A1r 60 saves ti me and postagt :::~~~~·, v,'<'JIJ The Bank of oe;av; are In :~;rn~~w ~ \\11!nn11glon has a tal king ::::,,1,"1";!':''.o computer The girl behind the ~~~:~ ~,·~ counter picks up a special ::~::,K:15\~ telephone to check out a s.,..u pl• )J B~~ll \.DI i lo!) custotner The c o m p u t et """"u•i d ll•ngu•t In which can speak 64 wor s, eonow.1 •n d h h k d Ion 11 .. k•Y Pf><> oe~ t e c ec 1ng an o .... y1ng e~111 s11 1 10 of the CW'ilomer All the clerk ~11!01~'6t ,~0 d<>t:S 1s push buttons :\~;;Jf,':,0 ~· In the billersv;eet ~ords of 3~\1~,~ 1 J: Ra ymond True, a depositor al Bobb• ero, ~ng Co '° Surel y National 1n Lo s 1101.c~• 7lD t Booe! !Oii Ange es 'loo1<M•n 1 11 BO<"d•n 1 7G Bo,oN•• 1 iJ 901n;.on 1Do Mesan Given But Othev-Side of Coin Major Post On Railroad Bo•EO• ~~6 !lo• Ed of! H Bourn< I~< !Ir.on I ''""" !lri~St l Ml~ llro~9•St• v Sri•! My 1 10 er.,tMy 01 l e"tPol JOQ BrPot In 30Q lldwv Hal• 1 BdwyH al pf 1 11•-wvGI• 10 B~lynUG 1 /1 Brown Co • Found in Tiny Idaho Bank .... e ... ns~rp ~ ewnsno. 1 so erun•""' n Bl,ICV Et l 70 TROY Idaho (AP) -This no rthern Idaho farming coin- munity has only 514 people bu t 1ls bank has 6 000 .accounts and assets of $1 5 million The reason is that people bank by mail with the Firs~ Bank of Troy fr om round the world-Japan, G e r m a n y , South A1ner1ca A r r 1 c • Australia and even Pago Pago "We've been pretty lucky rnarnly because of I he ptrsonal attention we gn•e all our customers says Frank Brocke, the bank president Plant Again Back in Costa Mesa Explorer Motor H o m e Corporarion has returned 11s executive offices to the main plant at Costa Mesa from the South Gate, Cahforn1a offices of Anthony Industries Inc , its parent company Anthon y Indust ries 1s hsted on the American and Pac1f1c Stock ~changei; John G Templeton Ex plorer general manager said that added orrice space at the ma in plant, plus the ad vantages offered by working directl y with production made the move necessary Explorer is a m a Jo r producer of motor homes "'1th a capacity of eight lull sized motor homes a da~ Its pro ducts are d1str1buted lhrough outlel s stocking 30 or more units 1n El Ca1on, Santa Ana, El J\fonte and Hav\\ard Ca and bv dealers situated 1n all 49 slates 10°/o NNN CARE FREE LONG TERM LEASE l y Co..,,..ft, • .,.,,, .. Cllolft ,, ...... Ill$ ... •" t••ll l•Kll: (71'41 6~J-OJ90 FOR ADVERTISING IN OUT 'N' ABOUT PHONE NORM ST AN LEY 6-42 -43 21 'We don 't lose man y accounts once \\e get them " Brocke, 65 JOUled the bank in 1926 after working l\\o year~ for nothing as a cashier apprentice in nearb\ Kerr!ri ck while 1n high school Now he says he pays himself $20 000 a year He s an unusual banker in n1any ways Tro} s n1a}or, EI don Storn1 the oY.ner of an clec- 1r1cal business says ' How many other bank presidents do you know you can call any hour oE the day or night and get through lo 1 If people can I reach hun at the bank they ca ll him at home \Varno Lauri 11 retired schoolteacher 111 Cal1 forr11a explains \1 hy he banks by mai l 1n Trov instead of \.\1th a large branch bank around Lhe cor· ner from his home ' I started an a1 ~ount with !he bank 1n 1934 1\'h en l wa~ 1n charge of a camp outside 1'roy. They ve aJv;ays ren dered such good ser1 ice, I JUSl kepi banking v; 1th them ' Ive received a personal note al least once a month from Frank Brocke all these } ears-asking about the famil y, telling aDou~ the latest h<ip pen1ngs Jn Troy Thats the \\ay he is" Lauri savs his Arm y allot· ment checks \vere late 1vhen he was in Korea Me says Brocke lold his wife to go ahead and write checks and the bank would Co\er them at no cost until the Army squared away its bookkeeping. La1.1r1 seys there 1s no 1n- conven1en11e 1n cashing out or state checks The First Bank TOP RAIL POST A Costa Mesci man, Edward :=Fcou, 60 J M h h •• td lludo•tlnd urp y, as ""'en promo e eu11F.,..a 1 :io t th llula••W ;.o to lhe top sa es position in e 1111nkr 1hmo Southwest for Union Pac1f1c :~~~~,,.:'111 ."f Bu•!No• 1Sa Railroad B~•1No• ~f 1' Butndy 70 f.lurphy, 924 Jun1pero Drive, was appointed traffic manager ~~:~c;P .~: for the road's So uthe rn ~:\11~~"'~1,,0 Cahfomia • Nevada • Arizona l:::;g11'k~ 1 :J ,_ H "·F dL conerow "° u:orr1tory. t succeeu.:; re CdnP•c 3 ,i, (dP !n3 J.lq Morgan who has become C•n•tR 1 io of Troy's reputation surpns· Edward J. Murphy 1ngly is \\ell known to most ________ _c_:c__ ~IP ( 8dCIO general traffic manager at c:~~Y.;" loso Omaha for the we.stem 3tate.s ~:~~~E~, ~ bankers in every state and country l ve ever been 1n ' The bank does not charge for serv ll:es There s no c;harge for Y.r1ting checks no escrow fees no charge fo1 o1her services subject to ctiarge bv ·other banks ll somrone run~ into difficulties making l0an payments the bank can 1es him \\t!hout p1I 1ng up interest c h a r g e s Brocke says only a handful of loans have gone sour over lhe past -40 years Brocks says many tif the customers come from the University -0r JdahO 20 miles a\\ay and he credits students for the worldwide reputatio n of the bank 'We've nevrr advertised tiur free services ·he say~ 'Peo ple Just hear about us ' 2 747s Set Seat Record SAN F R A N C I SC 0 i B\V )-The 7~7 super Jet has M h d Ca•PTec l )O urp y ]Oine UP m 1937 carrlerco 60 C•rrG In, and has held numerous traffic C•rtw•1 -'Cl .. CeJ!l..Ckt 60 department p o s 1 t 1 on s 1n ~t:11ec11;0 1 "' Soth Ctr Id C1c~"'"~ u ern a 1 orn1a inc u mg ce1.one1tCP 1 c11an P'"'~ ~o !he general trafflC agenCleS at Cenco tn1 JO Con! ~dY San Pedro, Santa Ana and t:~11~~d 11~• Orange He has been general l!~n.':\.1 1 ri agent freight department at E~~:_.~, 1,1G L-Os Angeles since 1967 and 1n ceni ~0·• 1 tt d CenlelU! 911 rea y arr JV!' his nl'!w Tl<'ISt also will head c,erro co to t'Y ... lfeo' 10 An all time record fur quarter at Los Angeles c1r1 led 01"' pass enger loads ta111ed by l~111n~,1 ·~;o t t C~odb•n lnc-comn1ercia a1rp ane s w a s ~namos , 10 e~tabhshed here ¥.hen a pair HEW vo.cii.: 11>.PJ Mol'ld•v • toma11e c~'''"' Nv1 Aow Yor~ $1ock E~c~•n11 ptlc11 C ""'Minn ? of Pan American World ,010, H•t '~~-~1~~~ Airways 747 .! u p tr Jet ' (M•) Hit~ L .... CIM• '"' C~IPa J.j c~1mflron l <.lumpted a total of 760 peoplt -A-~~:~'!Y1 !o9' into San Francisco on tw o suc· Az.1cu1F )O• 11 13,, 13~ l:J.<I _ •1, ~~:!bQ'°t." ~ 1, cess1ve flights w1th11. 24 hours :~fLfoG1 ;a40 26• "• 6w. ·~ -'4 c~1 £111 111 I h th Acrn~I! 10 I~ fl,, ~~= ~· -'• ChoMll SPP o eac o er "'"'' M•'• ,, J • -\~ en, Mii SP 01 HJ 56'• 55\> 56 -'• ChlPneul 7 Fach flight was a scheduled ~:~1~1·, ,",• 16 11'• 11'• n"' -"c~111Pc• UP ., n ' ll•o 11'> -l'lo (h RI (!NW nonstop from Tokyo to San ~~~1~~~ ..o5• Jii •l ,-, •O' «>lo -'• chocFu11 1od '9.l ,,,, u >, 16'~ -1', Ch•,. cr1u }oranc1sco AttnoLt• 160 '"SI'. 5&, 56'• + 'l cn .. ,c11 <"~' !:L1:~: l~ 2 : 1~'.~ t~'' ~~1' c n•!•Ctt prn! 'llHn 1 ~ ' ' ' Chro"'"" ~D A 1,en 1.ii; wr ' •Ho •O» "'' -''> C~•ornt ~1 1 Your ltloney's Wortli A' • I iO', JO , 10 '-1~. (htVslr 6(1 t tOd 10b '' 56 • S•'~ 5•'• -I" (hrv•l~t wt !J'~~ •• ·,,•,, 217 1"• it• ]4'1> [I MfQ l'<g ,\,-•on• ,. h n l'o l '• 3'• c nnBPll t 30 '' G I• •l <l 0 -... Clnn Gf 1 56 • •• 1 10 1 151, l5'o U'> + •'a ConGIO "1 < ,1.,1"""" Inters 10,,5 Jt" 10~ 201. -•· Cm Mll•c 1 •O AlbOrloC ,, 31" J.l\• 31'9 -" (If F•nl J AJ!MlrUnt 36 10 11'-' 11 ~ It\ -·~ CJT pa ,ce Alc1n Al"'" 1 us 21'• n~, n , -'• cr•~•Sv• 110 :t~:S .. !V:3 ~ rl ~;,; ;~ , 1•·· + ~. c.rv 1n11 ~ AllAmLI 2•• 31 I , 15') -~. (olylny 111 81 ''' < '" 14., u•, Cl!Y St" 19 I> I~• .S' ll"' ll o l)'llf -'o (lo"' EQl•O Beware of V e11d Machine; Allevlucl I 411 1' 2:!•,. 2:! '} -" C lar~ 0 11 •O Afleg~uCIJ>fl 'llt\lo 31 J! -'•Ct\/ Clif llfl A\lf: w 1 J6 1?• 2\i:, 70'o ll'1 t \, (l~YEllll 1 1• A I "II Cl! I 111 JS. 311~ lO • :Ill • -1 Cloro> $ci ~1:11r.~,~~:,~ I' l~·· ~}4 }~'· .:. :~ ~:~:n~·~! ,·o 'l'I::" 0 ll II II -l • CN A Finl 50 ' 40 JJ lJ'1 JJ ll • -\I CNA pl Al'' A I edS!• <If I ll-0 51 56.,,, .II -t I Co;u1 51 G•~ Sou11ds Good, Could Be Bad B} 5'VL\'IA PORTER •small 1n1rstrTlf'n! V.ork in \our sp~ie 11me No speci;i l ex1>€rienc<' required ~lulti· bil lion dollar grov.th business Ser~ ice vending machines Placl'd bv QUr representatives tn ~our commun11, '' From coast to c o a s ! recentll ad~ \\Orded similarly lo this ha\e been n1ult1ply1ng u1 nt11 spapcr business op· por1ut11lv col umns The lures art obi 1ous ror !he clear 11n- pbcat1on 1s that 1f you have 8 few hours a 1\eek to sp3re \OU t.:an slart a small vending n1aclune bu~1nes~ and ei!htr make a good living or pad out _your income. The offers seem logica l too The \end ing industry has skyrocketed 1n the post•World War JI perlod, now exceeds $6 b11llon a year, 1ncludts more than I 000 vending strvict f1rm:i AlrMst l!'Verywhert }'OU turn you 'ec C-OUHlptrated I See ~Y Today's Want Ads • C,:.Oldcn la lht <.'Olor or lheee Retr1e\1e.rs AKC Champlon Jlne $125 e Don"t Oip yciur top, Roll It'!" I RoU IOP desk ltl exedlent condl:ion '18 ' lont. 43" high Jn a beauti· l\il Oak fln ish. • It • kite 1~a~n •Main a"ld this time U!f! rhe l>ay All tlie l111t1t atld no1 thP 11ky e Evt'ry Father ne-e.-b a _pcl, f nr Fatllf'r~ D11y look 1n thtr DAILY PILOT clAll1H llt'd ad1 Undl'.r ~ J. and ~ ont horn~ toda.v. mach1nrs for laundry. tl ry clean1111-: car 11a~h('s <i lld - n1ost of :it! -for cand\, hot and cold drinks ci garettes all kinds of food AND THE{{EI~ lies !he heart or the problem For ~Ou the neo phyte, can no! ex-pect that bv v.ork1ng on- Iv 1n your spa1e t1n1e \OU II be able lo meet Lhe st iff com· petition already e x 1 s I 1 n g among e s tabl1 s ht'd pro-- fess1onal Ftrn1s ) ou, the un1nlo1 med 5mall 1nyestor ca11nol rely on \Our ab1hty lo dif(erenha te brt\\et:n quahty 11ell bu1IL rnachu1es and the shoddy cqu1p1nent \OU m1ghl be offered bv fradulenl promoters now s1varm111g into this held As C Richard Schreiber, pres1denl of the Na t1onal Automatic Merchan· disuig Assn, to!d me In nearly all cases Qf 'blue sky' promotion s a small n1msy machtne 1s offered at a high ly inflated prire, bul l he neophyte c11n't tell 1he dif· fcrcnrc_ ' Ari d .\ ou ;i Jobless scat cd v1c11n1 of thl' 1969-70 recrsslon are so eager to believe the promoters that you l u 11 yourself into false assump· hons Just because you art nf- fered vendible products made by nationally known firms, for mlJlance, y o u incorrectly assume the: machmcll are. as f1rst-rate :is lhe products Btn' THE 8LU1''T fact Is that tbt vending bus1neis l1 a risky cnt'erprlse !or t h e. amateur, not at all sulled fnr part·Utne attention 01 sm.11 investments (The I y p i c .'l ! profit margin hi lc~s than 's cents per $1 of sates 1 Yotl II be w1 y bc:h lnd tht eight-ball unless you kno" wflich product., :utd brand! wfll sell 1n lhe machines, 11hat lype5 of location., ~Il l produce fl'Jl>U&h 11alt.s \!Olume to m11.k• A1114!d Super 111 1i, I , I ._'• cusr-• ''' '' Alll•C~ l>cp 110 U .. Tt ~ lo " Ailrl_IA~! 60 •o 1•'• 1• • Coc•[OI I .\I ti t ff AIP~ .. P Cem 1 1 , 11 , ~~,· -~ Coc a 811e 06 ll' 10\eS men! pay 0 A>coe I 10 16 60 , 591~ 59': -\: Col o;:o(n 01~ f!ere, therefore arc f,ve ,•M.,',',', •,o_ "8 ll•• 1J r1, _ ,, cotg P•t 1 •o <v ll 1/., ?l•o 2117 "t '• C_o•hnAI~ I I) rules to protect you AmH•., ua SCI 69 6.1~. 61 4 -l'· co111~ ... i~ .., Amt H PIJSO 1.11511 , 1•1 1n -~ •ICoHn, 11aa I 8 ' "'''"rflllr 10 •ll 61 61 '' _ , , Coton~ I •Ua 11 E 1111\!EDIAT ELY on""'""1,1rft .o 111 1~. ?9•, ;o -•.c<>101n1" 160 I ABaWor ll)q l t 7l ~ lJ lJ -• (Of! '"" ! guar( 1F the promoter nffl'ri> lo 11. Br~a• 110 115 •l '1 •l , _ '• coit in 014 is fi nd pruf1l;ible machine toca ~;;:8~~~1 1 1,r nt 'l '> '1" •l • -'• cou rn p!l .O f A C t~ pll 15 2115 J8' ~; l0" -1 CBS I -lOO t ions or ',)u or promises you ,1.,,.,., C•n;ent it 1~i: i ~ 1f: l :! ,',',', -',',' , ,, h I r h A Ch•" 1 t.O 33 Jl 14 ?~ 1+ " e p rom 1s own J epresen· ACry~vo 1 •O 1 75,; 1,1: 1,~ = ~ co1vP1c1 •1! tat11c ~ ,'.'",",,,',,','• 700 n.,_, n•. 31 _,,, caiS.oh 110 l "'it . It •-~• Cmb£n 1 •0 'This 1s u ~uallv a 1elltale ,•.01o•,',',', .. "",,, 111 .. ,. •S'• ••. _ , Cornl\orv •O v 71 I '• I'• 1\1 _ >'; (Qrnl~O! pl !'I) sign '~a\s Schreiber 'for the:.'",',"•'•'•"•' ,. n•. 1 '• 17 __. '• co..,wE 1 lGb 111 11\.o ll 711 + \,. ConiwEa ._.,, established vend1og machine !m ~·p 1M1 n1 •, 1•. ,.1 + \, toniE pit " manuf;irt u re rS neverAG1n&:~ 0 9 1 11 l.l~ n·~ ?~! ~1'~-, ~~~:fl~ \ olunt eer such aid First thev: ~~t~"o~11 i:io 11! lJ J~:: JI';= .: f~O ~,'/ 7~ Id ll l lhAmHol•t •O ~7 '''• 1 0 !!•1-,CamPu!Sr l\flll 11 1 WIS 1 0 compe e \\'i A Hon;. I Iii 160 1'I 16 ' ,,,. -I'> (0"1~!g Sou !heir 01111 prese.nt custo1ners,:..,H~i;,~•1,', 11 1111 ns•, 11s _,,ca"''"' so A HI )l '1 lll• lJ''• Coo' M •I• t llut pr1mar1lv lhey kno1v that ...,m,!.,~1~.,1~', u 1•' u•, u • .. '• coml/1-\1 1 :io >10 Jl , JO JO -!~o (Ofl'I< 8'l • the local 'ending spec1al1sl is : X.\~11~ !/~ 11~ d_; 1M'• 1~ • -11 con E~1, 110 (ar better QUahfJed to StJI hlS :N"1,t:~o'i'XI !~ J~': 3: 1 .,:,, _ 1 ~~ ~::::: t local market than au y :."',"",,, IM<I 1i. St'• J1•, s1 , --:i ' Con£ o•c• ~s _n lt 10h XI'• 10 .. -l\ Con Fd• , XI outsider ' ""' sn1. 60b 11 31 .io•. -»'• _ ~• con Fer pt• 50 A Sm1l! I fO JlO 14' ll•o lf'o C:Otl Fr._~, I (%1 COMPARE ANY promo-:;:::j•,~,''••"• 21 4flo .:i•,. -0'• +'It con lea11.,. 1 f j -•1 I! COtl NetG l n Ilona] offer you answer wtth !ms,~'~'l~, ,,'° 561 l'IJ'J; 10•1. ~ + ·~ con. P"""'' 1 A I 14'~ 15 IS -11'1 (Of\PW pf( 57 the equipment and prices of,. '1'& /1'::J' A m '2ll'I 2l1\ n·~ + '• CO<!Pw pf• 50 h A T T 'lf t\li. 9\~ f~ -I-"' (""'Air l l ot er manufacturers A:i:r&~ J"' ".)t .u ~" w.. +"' con•Can .~ Jll'1 J !6 '"" C°"I Cop U• I (31 lJAhVEk Ai QUALIFIED!~.TJ.•r;r ~ ~~• s. .. /i{~ ~~~l'rc::~,s, awyer c ec a I agreements Aw "'"', 1s :r--2<0 11 .. 111~ 11~ -,·~er c. pfA? so d do ts b I Am•'on 10 11 1''1 It JO -,4 Cl C• •flll J.O an wn paymen e ore A,m"'~ ,601 36 1511 1n, u~ -• co~11111 1 ug You n1ake any e-0mm1tmcnts , ... ""'i 10<: '° 111 3111, ~ JI•• con Ml• ~. • mac 60 II JI 36'• J61o Con! n11 1 Sil oral 01• \Yrltten Check the pro-:::P~?:-,•,• '•' ~1. •I • _,,, _ ,, c,ttnr 011 01 1 1 g l'o 1''> llo ont \II 10 1nolcr s reputahon with lht ",m•e~ Corp loo 11 lo · 1~\, _ •1 c,,.,, et 10 "lOlar I 10 1$ 37 M\' "l6 , "'! COnl•ol 011• Better Business Bureau in the:"''/' P•7 4S0 1 J J'• sJ .. 111, =r • cno11 01• sG , "''" P16 to t t (1>11Wl)<>d l fO comn1ur11ty tn \\h1ch be hasA,m•'"°.!."° 11 ::i., u•, J11 + '• coo~un• jO I d l "'tel "' 14 I'< f') f>, 'OODtlln l 4G 1ea quar er$ An1u1naa 1 1u ''" 19•~ n _ \ Cl><lt>"• L~~· """~ ~oc~ 1 1 lli• lJ , 3J\, -1• C-•r TR ~41 \\'RITE F'OR the Sman !:,orf. •no,,. 11 rr ""• 11 100•1 an u A ~ IY ll 4~1l I f \, •Ill_\; Ol!•l•nCI 1 10 Bu s 1 n ts' Adnunistrat1on s ..,::c,·~·.?s J! "l'I 1,' '''• -,, o"""'! Sot> 1 bt hl ·s 1-" c 10 1•11 ,~.., ,,,, + \~ c°"w1e1 !!I , • .adua Me pamp et, •8 tartu1,g1 A?>r°c:.'i' 1~ ;:~ ~~ ~~ =•" ~:.~.~ l~· n anaging a m • .a.,•,c, "' •JO 1 1r .. 111r. 11•" , c .. ac1u1 '° At t V d B I " Svc 10ll '1 13! IJJ\~lJ.l•o -1~• CPC l!>ll 110 u oma 1c en mg us neas, Aru11 01. 110 16'-' ,1,. 1~ -v. crane 1 loCb • t'bt I US ~-l Ard! Otft I llj •l \lo •G l(ll,, -1\\ !.-.CIFI" 11 av 1 e rom • UU'I "•11 P1v 1 01 lJ "°'~ '°'' 10,,. _ 1, roc~Ntt 1 Ml P nl Olrt W hi too Ar •111 D St• tl l\O rt< Th + \to -1( U fl 1ng f;e, a3 TII , 1\#1911 IU,.,Dw 1d l)lo lJfO l:lh -'"' Cr-tHlnCI I 0 C 2040J 3(1 ctntl Armet'lll Ut lN ln. 1\t + \' CrowColl "5f • · t"IC llf J • n 11l1 h~ t 1"-1,t S,_,, Cnrl! (5) CHECK PR 0 FIT .o.rl:1 "l~'.\e ~[g t~ f ~ +,. ~~nl::~ 1: poss1b1hlles wit b qualified :f:' c'::, 1: 1~ ~l '"' g,i~ -•• f:!)!.•:~" n11 loca l vending ftl"flll ·llsted bl =~~6.'1°1\a 1H ~ ~ m:=-1~ ~::.".'!.~"rt" tht! telephone ytJlow paaes ~.:I t'Cr" 11 • • '~ ,... -"' ~""1uw• " • AfdS 1kr t? ~~ fi H"-.... c1111.,H l'D The eesy~xtra·lncome-part-:r' ~r•M• 1 1;.; 11,, 11v. =-~: f~~~-:,·Mrn-1 time ploy forever blooJN -:11c~1 ., 1a ~J ,1 1 ;:.~ ~~ ~':: 11nd of course there still are "'1 'ft'f.:.,1111 1•1 11•~ "~ 1111,. o.~ 111 ... ,. ' 1 .a.tfllt;(ll '" 1tto ~J ~\~ JS --t / o .. n~ C• 111 t1pportun1lles Jn the vending"l111 1c11it1 i 1•111 11111t 11il'-o.r11"" >Ob A I Ren ""f& ~ ~ ll\'r s ,,. 0 .. 1 '"" •l ' 1ndui;lty But lhls will be a •1111 C""'1 ' "' JJ l•) J1>1 -·~ Ot1• Pr0<u• d I A1l11c, $Ck Ill /' J l -I• g•vtoCP 1 1• tW\tt lrra ()!' f OU Un11!55 ATO fl\( :OI• UI 1 'o IO'o 10, -, lYll~ U ,you first Inform yoursefr !~=::,~0t: " ': "1 ' 'i\' ..'.: .1~ ~:~l~~r' 1 :Z thoroughly on the pitfalls IS:~: f:'~ :n 1!~ 11•\ 1~:! -\.'t O:!"n '2:} 11 w.cll as the promises :~ ~1~,. ~ ~ ~; ~ t-\l 8:1"rt:.= ; IOn • ... • .... ... ~ ... -< 1-.,, .>mo11.1u1 Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List .... .. ·------------· Olllil-1 ... L .. °"" a.. Steel< Leaden llOllTSBAal!3 .... .. ................................................... 1::::::-::~i\'i;;:;:;;-~~~;-;:::::::::r (Ml.) .... LNO..Cllf.~ DOW .H)Nlt A.VllAel.l ""'"' Ytr1l!A.P ll'l11o11 Oew-J--· ... Market Fails -T-~ ~ lf.~~~ j,, ~:ia ~11;; ~ ~:~ I 1 ltf ~,,. To Stem Drop ITOCICS Uli§-.M IO 11'4 m°'::r' r:.'t' 1-d:r:' 1fw,'--1 ~ ~ """1!t11_. 2' T"' 21'.$ tU.Q 20l.l'I 11 -f.41 U 1w1 ! ... !! Vil 11~.lfl 11'.11 lU.11 lU. 1-AO~ -'j ~ Slk ,.,., 1"1,Jl ,.,,,. ,., "-1.11 ... , 01o11 • l••~Mtl!Ot\t Ill l ltltb ,,_ lf'I • .._,:1· n1 VII ~":'W . ,, •••.••••••••••••••••.• ! , 11 I \ u1f.Z ::::·::::::::::::::::::::: S:, fi ''<- 6$ attc. ··························' , .... ,. IE u~ llil :: ~ 1! ~ J~ •tt _ ~ NEW' YORK (U'PT) -Some mld·sesslon bargaJn ~' c~~' 1~~ W-~:.: u,~. __ -,1. huntina: failed to item a aharp drop on the New York .... ,_ ,.. •• F,g '' 1t.ook uchon1e Monday. """ ., a ~ "" ti~ t-~ The market moved 1ower 1t the 0-.. 1 .. :fi or mo-e:1r.,g·f.10 af~'1-ii -~ d ~ ...... uol'c.1:it 1 ,....,, s.1Ai ).j\t -..., mentum extendin' from Frt 1y'5 heavy ae ng, cut uMc .,,,, .n '::' '!: 1!~ 1Jr.: .:..:,g.. 11ome of its loaacs ln 1ubsequent tr1ding, but toward e~i1~~ ·.~ ,1,I ~ ~~ !ffi = the close wu accelerating on the downtltde. ~~ ~~ .. ~' 111. v._ ~ U: = Within minutes of the final bell the Dow Jones u .. i°" ·c;.. •~ls ~ :m ~~ ~ ~ In87d9u6stri0 .alhi!Averagde WU off around 10 points to ~:u1)U , 511 .sM .,, _ 1o1o • w e Stan ard & Poor'• 5Q0.11tock Index wu u .. k .. , 1~ ijus~ ~ H:1 ;:: down 0.93 to 108.46. Declines held a big le1d over tl:;>):~·~rzJT ,.. ~ s1,,. _,U advmcea:, 1,039 to 319, with 1,529 islues making the ~"""' ""•ctt , 41 '"" ""'_,_ tape .. I"..; pl ... 17 .... ~ 3N-114 • "klM"' .• '~ 1::: ~ ~ +: Volume exceeded 15-milllon 11bares, around the 8~~:1 Pt10 , 'f U: ~ U!t = ~ level of P'rid!y's activty. ~~~ 1.:, "' !'" 1•• l"" -1'" Br1dbu~ K. TI!.urlow. analyst for Hoppin Bros., u .. 1·-· ·• 6 M ,...,, IV.-1'. U 1.-cl •fl.20 :m .. , ,,"" ,,.(, -'1~ said the mar et 11t111 was reacting to the unpleasant u .. iicp ·"° SI 43'"1 4J d !Jo -Va Uftlt Fl" C:d ... n· in-. U\.11 -'\ flfWS about the mutual fund ind Ugh-.• th!t depressed U.,lt Gta .IO 1!1 .,..1 1•-14 ... , u .. l'I"'·~ Jl l 'l"' 12 + ~ the market so on Friday -redemptions of shares u"' 11 ,.1,42 l'lo l l'J 1fVt -Vt UnJenllks 1 , 1u"' 1u1.o1. ,, • .,.. -t\4 exceedin~ l!ialts in May possibly for the first time u~11 MM ,.,, ,. I''"' 1Fi'. Jt -'t u .. Mvclr l'° N 1 N ~ "' in the in u•--"s historv. unit ,.k Ml" ,.. 3'\lo JN '~-Va ...,., . ., us 1"160 if ll r.'':l j•f: f:4 ~ + " Thurlow also suggested that I persistent sk;ep-et,,!.!f' ,:1't " n. N -v. ticism about the st.ate of the economy also wu in· ul F'"' 1.• ' ' '' ' u Gy~,,.. l ·· flu•"cing traders and 1·nvetso-· u GVI> ""·"" ;; r.""i! r ~ -;,\ -· . ... us l!IC!u1! '° 2 11\.\ 11 +l 1 ................................................. J"l l••., ·'' '' ~ ,4 ·~~ -... u -tyC~ .... 20 1614 1, 11'li + Y. Ull"Cll iP"J.20 SC OAllY ,IUlT U ·~rg :O'l! -·~ :..i-· Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List • I .... - 22 DA.fl'V PILOT Monday, Junt 21, 1971 Lynch Cutter Wins $200,000 Facelift Rejuvenates Yacht By ALMON LOCKABEY ... " .... .,., Bob Lync.h'• 42·year-old M- Cl83S cutltt from Newport Harbor Yacht Club was so proud of her $200,000 facelift and general rejuvenation that she ~'On all three races of California Yacht C lub 's California Cup -both on elapsed and corrected times. It was the second Com· petition for the beautiful cut- ter since she was retired by the late Howard Ahmanson after the 1966 Mazatlan race. She-was first to finish in the Puerh> Vallarta race last February. The two 73 footers -Jim Kilroy's yawl Kialoa ! I . NHYC, and Loi Killam's ketch from the RoyiM., Vancouver YC. were no malch for the &leek Sirius II over the 24 lh· mile Olympic course of r Marina del Rey -especially in the light to moderate breezes which prevailed all three days. In the final race Sunday Graybeard showed a tum of apeed that makes her a first· ~finish contender in the up.. coming Honolulu race. She finished only one minute and 52 secoods behind Sirius (In elapsed time. But in Saturday's race Lowell North Wins Soling Wes tern Race • --r Lopez l.ake Duggan Cop_s Hobie Race LOPEZ LAKE -Sixteen- year-<ild John Ross-Duggan ot Newport Beach and Richard Loufek of Camarillo continued their heated duel for top na- tional honors in lhe Hobie Cat· 14 sailing fleet Saturday and Sunday with Ro.ss-Our;aan taking top honors In th< California St a t e Cham· pionships ht~. The two have been battling nip-and-tuck in every major regatta. thi! season. The s t a t e chainpionsh.ip Freestyle Sloop Takes Long Point Competition White's Landing on Saturday night. The best way to~'!f!Preciate a new'Mercedes·~Benz meet drcw 111 boats tn Uie Hobie-16 ahd Hoble-1.f class. Sou thland 1ki'Pp.tr• predominated in both cla&lt.1'. The six-race regatta, ~red on the best five , was .sailed in lS..25 knot "'inds. Thf! evenl was co-sponsored by Coast Catamaran Associa'lion a11d t-.1orro Bay Yacht Club. 'Final results: · HOBIE -16 A (17) -(I) 'Vayne Schaefer , San Juan Capistrano; (2) Hobie Alter. San Juan Capistraho: (3) Pat McCormick, l.JJng Beach. HOBIE-16 B (15) -(1) Har- ry HMsen, Bellflower; l2) J\1ike Dennis, Coronado; l3) Gerald Wallace, Morro Bay. HOBlE-14 A (30 ) - (I) John Ross·Duggan, Newport a,,ach: (2 ) Richard Loufek , Ca marillo; (3) Jeff Canepa, Santa Cruz. HOBIE-14 B (24) -t l) Dave Boyle, Newport Bea.ch ~ (2) George Stephens.on . Wood!Md Hills: (3) i:tandy Hatfield, Long Beach. HOBIE-14 C (32) -Jerry Stowell Seal Beach: (1) Jim Pendergast, Redlands; (3) Bill Giles, Mission Viejo. Led by Lowell North of San Diego Yacht Club, the top nine r;kippers in the Soling Class Western D I s t r i c t Cham- pionships at Del Rey Yacht Club Saturday and Sunday qualified for the national championships to be held at Marina del Rey July 31 to Aug. 8. mer and would not be on hand for the nat!ona.1s. This moved the 10th place finisher, Jerry Rumsey of San Diego, Into the nationals. is to test drive an old Mercedes~Benz~ Although the regional regat- ta qualified only nine for the nationals, Warwick Tompkins of Sausalito -·who finished third -announced that he would be campaigning in Germany the rest of the sum· North, three-time world champion and 1968 Gold Medal wiMer in the Star Class, virtually ran away with the district championships. He placed 1-l·z.6 in the regionals to score 14.4 points under the Olympic scoring system. Mar· ty Gleich of SDYC, the runner- up. finished 4·4·1-8 for 32 points. At Mercedcs·Benz, wC•ie not-afraid o1·1 :What one of our old cara will say about ,ournewcars. · So before you buy a new Merccdcs- 'Benz, we invite you to 1cs l drive an (lid Mercedes· Benz. Startin1' &om tile fu.Tcle\_ _ , When you finish your test drive,~ around the car and.look at the linish. ·..._ I Beach Cops Junior Cup At Balboa Two Newport &each skip- pers finished high on the list. Tim Hogan of NHYC, a former AH·American sailor from USC, placed fourth with 2·13-6-3 for 39.4 points, and his clubmate Roger Weise, a former national champion In the Intemational-14 CI ass , finished fifth with 7·2-4-15 i:ind 45 points. Finding a car to lest is really no prol>) lem. A neighbor or a friend may own one. (Your dealer probably has several on I hand.) But we urge you to be selective. Pick one with a substantial accumulation of miles. To keep the outside looking new, we] start protecting it from the inside.!.! ' .I ·'I"< Bodicsaresubmergedin' ·..r.-· rust-prookr. They emerge ,~·...-A 24 pounds heavier. ' Fletcher Beach beat out two rivals Saturday and Sunday to become the Balboa Yacht Club skipper in the Governor's Cup junior match racing series Ju. ly 8-9-10. BYC will host the regatta. Miss Beach, with Gordo Johnson and her sister Peggy Beach as crev.', v.·as tied at the end of Saturday's races with Alan Andrews. The elimina- tions went to the final race before it was decided. Second place skipper was Jim Nugent and third v.•as Andrews. Th is will be the first year BYC has had a girl skipper in the Govemor 's Cup. The only previous female skipper v.·as Los Angeles Yacht Qub's Mary Griffith. The match race series. pat. terned after Long Beach 'Yacht Club's Congressional Cup, has been expanded this year to in clude entries from throughout the stale. The BYC trials were sailed tn Cal-25 sloops. Lido Isle June Race Attracts 75 Lido Isle Yacht Club's June Regatta for small boats drew 75 entries io seven classes .i-rurday and Su n d a y • Moderate. steady w i n d 1 ~ut the weekend pro- ncted lively races in all claue3. The trophy winners: J:f~l)-!IA-(l)Jack McClarty, BYC, 111, pts~ (2) Merlin Gayman, ABYC. 12~ .. L!00-148 -ill Mike Flnk, !:lffYC, 7¥•; (2) Ted Hinshaw, UYC, I&: (3)' Herby Riley, UYC, 17%°; (4) Roy Woolaey, LlYC. 24. -KITE A (1) Hug9 Scbmldt, L!YC, 16; (2) Ter· rianne ~· NHYC1 20; (3) Oni Wliile.' ~ 23_ -KITE 8 -(I) Clark Polholf • """ 2~. -' .,.. A..., -(I) Mark c~l!f.1' NHYl!. s~: (ll Burdlcl< Roy, LIYC, II: (3) Kurt Schmid~ LIVC, II. - SABOT B -(I) BUI ru ... NllYC, U; (I) Mart All1- lJYC. 17_ SABOT C -(I) Jobn Loni, BYC, 24; (1) Regina Porker, NHYC, 25; (S) CuV DariWI, UYC, :ZS%- Light airs of£ Marina del Rey reduced the regatta to four races from the originally scheduled six. Al! rour races counted in the sroring. The Soling Class is a 27-foot sloop which carries a skipper and two crewmen . It reo!aced the 5.5 meter Class in the Olympics and v.'ill ma~~ its Olympic debut at K 1 e I . Germanv In 1972. Top io finishers in the Western Dis tr i ct Cham- pionships were: 111 Lo;vell North, SDYC, 1·1- 2-6, 14.4 pts. 2. t-,-tarty Gleich, SOYC, 4.4. J-8, 32.0 J. \Varwick T omp kins. Sausalito YC , !>-5--3-7, 34 4 4. Tim -Hogan, NHYC. 2·13-6- 3, 39.4 5. Roger \'\i elsh, t-.'1-£YC, 7·2- 4·15, 45.0 6. Jamrs LindJsey. Lake "t.lerril SC, 6-11·8·4, 50-7. 7. Bruce Peachey, SDYC, 12- 9-5--5. 53.0 8. Carl Eichenlaub, SDYC, 9- 6-7-9, 54.7 9. Don Bever, SWYC, 3-6-11· 13, 55.7 10. Jerry Rumsey, SDYC, 13-f).9-11, 61.0 Handicap Race Draws 49 Yachts Forty·nine yachts In the Pacific Handicap R a cl n g Fleet, the Small Yacht Racing Fleet and Midget Ocean Rac- ing Fleet participated Satur· day In Voyager! .Yacht <_;lub:s Dana P1>int Race. the. third in the Lloyd R. Massey Serles for PHRF and VYC Mi dget Perpetual Serles. Ray Booth's Num-Num ti from Balboa Yacht Club \\'as the winner over 29 starCera In Ille PHRF group. 'lbe c;ombined SYRF-MORF drew 20 starters and waJ won by Dill von KleinSmld's Star ShiM. NHYC. Final rtSUlta: i · ,- ji . ,, ' " ' Helpru1 hint: If you spot a Mercedes-' 'Benz with one of the badges shown be- low on the radiator, you've found an ex· ccptionally promising candidate to test. ' We award them 10 a Mercedes.Benz 'after 100.000, 200,000 and 500,000 kilome- ters. (The European equivalent of 62,500,j 125,000 and 312,000 miles.) Tlit one sure sign of tJgt i11 f1. M•rt:&du-Bc,.z. Radio tor b11dgtJ aWtJrdtd at the JC0,000.100.000 & 5()(1,()()() kilometer niiltstonts. Thesiglf of llM owner'.11 "aec," a '"Id /apt/ pin. (~~ ,, ' ., ·\ A ''•usperuion 1ystem''for: the exhaust system Take y(lur test car down a potholed ~road and listen foraudibleproteslsof age. A journalist from Motor recently put an eight·year-old Mcrccdcs·Benz roadster, to the test. "What impressed me most,"1 he concluded, "was the .solidity oE the· .body-not a squeak or rattle to be hcard."1 We're flauercd. But not surprised. Be- cause we view every part of a Mercedes- 8cni a& a potential rattle. ' Jnsteadofboltingbodyandframe: together, we fuse it with 8,000 or more welds. · Window glass rides in a' Channel that's buttressed in chrecdircctions. ... , The radiator is supported by rubber and framed in foam. Its metal never touches the rtU" .. of the car.., ' MotOr'sconclluion about a veteran of 110,000 milts: "Apa.rt from so mt loss of edge 11f tht top tnd t11/sont fell quiet, fluibfc llnd fret of rtJtllts 1111d tht oil prc.isur• netdlt was lllways h11rd -On the slop.", loi-igevity. So they areSticed-tft&tfBnd analyzed by infrared SJ>«tography. A revolutionary old car We even designed a special suspen· sion system for the exhaust system. Rub- ber"doughnuts" hold it under tension. A j rubber bumRCr is stationed at every point \of contact. Today an old Mercedes-Benz bristles, with features thac still seem revolurlonary compared to the '71 cars of other makers.' Accelerate onto a highway. The reason is simple. Our engineer. Notice how new and tight the engine, 'ing decisions.are made by engineers. Not An intriguing contest drivetrain and suspension feel. cost accountants. When they find a way to Recently in the Road & Track series · make an if!1proverp.ent, they make it.\ I! "After The New Wcari; Off," the engineer-Without waiting until it can be made as ing editor summed up 35 ,000 miles in his cheaply as what it replaces. Mercedes-Benz by saying simply, "The Take an old Mercedes.Benz through car is more impres~ivc than when new." some curves. Unless it's a prc-1930 model/ To keep our "ne\v" from \vearing ' you'll discover the nimble renexes that foff, we engineer the run· .come from fully indepen- n.ing gear to last as long. dent suspension. An in· as the body. A lengthy novationyettobediscov- but intriguing contest ercd by domestic sedans. indeed. Look at the model To make sure it \v iii, nameplate. If you spol an vital mechanisms must "E." the car has some· yass thousands of tests. , thing no American car We consume more R11b~tr "doughniits" sUJpend . ~ has an einspritzsystetn I Ja1lp1pcs and mufflers 111tdt r ttruron, • • • t than 40,000 gallons of rubbtrbumptrs isolarcthlmfromj (German for fuel 1n1ec· fuel a month testing every tht body. Theuhau.s1 systcni moy ) t i on), Developed for Mer- '1engine bcfore.installa-' neverrllltlc. cedes·Benz grand pri:t. 1tion. Some for as long as five hours. I cars, it provides a substantial increase in After nine succ~sive applications at power with no sacrifi.ce in ecanomy. i135 mph in a "destruction" tesl, disc ' Apply the brakes. Merccd«-Bcnz I>&:~ brakes tum fiery red. They must endure J lieves the brakes should be the most pow· this torture fifty different times-and su£-crfu_I part of any car. So we introduced fer no damage. disc brakes in 1961. Put them on all four Even seemingly unimportant items' wheels in 1968. No domestic sedan today like dashboard knobs must prove their offersfourdiscbrakes,cvenasanoption. 'one of 011r 1itw co rs. The ]j{) a fivt·1'4SSe111er stdllU wi.th ptrfonn1111ct. fe11111ru )'Ou'// !Iii/ apprtci111e i~h~11 it'l «1nold cor. · But that's not ' enough for Mercedes:) 'Benz. The inside of 'body panels that were welded air· t ight were painted; before welding. Outside, a Mercedes--: Benz is protected by four( coats of paint and primer:. I The front gets an extra coat'~ of chip-resistant enamel. ~ We even insuJate ' £~11 body pt11tflJ that_ the side trim from 1velded atrt!tht c.zn -· 1 . . corrode inside. So befo,c• thebodyw1thastnp wtweld,-sproythmt \ of rubber. And sheath 111i1h zim: oxide. An4 ,.mi the clips that attach it 1 vital c11ea.s byh~ with plastic grommets, so that metal U9 never bite 1hrough paint and start ru,t.,r The ''average'' Mercedes•Bem: $8,000 . There's nothing: "average." about a line of automobiles with an ave:rage sell- ing price of $8,000. Building automobiles you can appre- ciate when they're "old" cars. !Jas made our ne'v cars more expensive than most. There are ten Mercedes.Benz models priced from SS .445 to $8,663•-,vithoutop- tions .. And six limited editions, larsely- handcrafted, from SIJ,03210$30.352•. The coupon will bring a full-color bro- chure of the new Mercedes-Benz models. Jn the meantime, be sure and ltst. drlve an "old" Mucedes-Benz. And, just far comparison, an old anything else. After all, you live mo.st of your Ji fe with an old car. So yoo should know what your next car will be like after the "new" wears off'. •V.'t.11 Coa.1 pOrt"' ~lry. n<!uJl1~of \ti.n•.,.,..t•1ion, w~i'6- -.. .. tl• lo"""-nj, O!lltt' option•, t !Ue tad locol t.ua. ir •rt.'• ,• Cop1·rt,h11'71. M<n:edH·&mt o( Nort.11 ~,Inc. ,~--~------~----------~-t ,1 ®JIM SLIMONS IMPOITS, INC. L' 1 1zo w .. t w.,.... """" ·-: I s-.. AH, C.t'rt.ni&. t27t7 I I Plc•se 1end me your full-color-brochure er ~. J ·I Mezudea.Bml mo1orc.Us. ) I I Name I I I I A I I I ' a"' ta .--I I v t I I I I Z!p Tel~ .,I L·----.I ----.-..jl, • PJIRF -(I) Nurn-Num 11; (2) FroUc, J. Faerigan, VYC: (!) Wind Chi ld, Ltt Armstrong, VYC; (4) Laniru. Griffes & Harvey, BYC: (5) Kealoha, Wold & Malcha, VYC. SYRF-MORF -(I) St&r Shine; (2) Aloha 11, Glenn Reed. SSOC; (3) Sequoia, Jim Moore. SSSC; (I) Viking. Dan Jim Siemens Imports, In.c. 12ow. Warner Avcnue,SantaAna,california927o7 Phono: 714-st6-nu Plke,YVC. '~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Three -year Air Sample Tests Set t-.10UNTAIN YJE\V (AP ) -On the avt'rage of once a n1onth for the nex t three years, a plane carrying 500 pounds -0f instrun1eiits 11'111 sumple the air over !ht' Los Angeles and San frjincisco metropolitan areas. Equipment and techniques develof)(!d to sample the a11nosphcre of other planets \1·ill be used lo asscrnblr :i three- dimens1onal nirip of smog concentrations and analyze how they gol there and \l'hat thrv mean 'The program is a join! project H'l- volving the slate Air Pollution Research Center at Lhe University of California at Riverside anl the Ames Research Center, located here. of lhe l\ational Aeronautics and Spat•e Administration. Data gathered will be ;n·a1!able to ex- isting anti-smog agencies. a NASA an- nouncement said. 'The program .eoes beyond previous smog analyses in that it "'ill concentrate on the dynamics of the photochemical reactions of nitrous oxides. hydrocarbons and ozone in solar ultra-violet light al dif- ferent altitudes and locations, said Dr. Ronald F. Rcinisch of the Ames materials research branch. Festival P ylon Gets · Ne,v Look In Laguna Beach 'The concrete pylon. bearing the name -Of Laguna Beach's Festival of Arts \\'ill soon get a l\.\'O·Sided renovation, under two separate proJXlsals approved by the festival Board of directors f\1onday night. Directors approved expend itu re of $300 to be used for the preparatio n of posters announcing an all-California sculptor competition. The winner of t h c competition, to be judged by the Festival directors, based on i;cale n1 o d e I s su bmitted, will be awarded $1 ,000 and his v.·ork will be enlarged lo fit in front of the pylon. Grounds n1anager Mogens Abel said the final sculpture should be in place for lhc !972 run of the Festival. Directors also approved a plan from Abel for a large clock to be placed on the grounds side of the pylon, \\•hich \\'ill be visi ble from much of the festival grounds. Abel assured the board that the clock will be in and running by Festival <1pening night, July 16. Dana Point Art Guild Se ts Slide P ro..,.ra 111 0 San Clen1ente traveler and lecturer !\1arce!la Lange "'ill present a color slide presentation of a trip to the South Seas and Sou theast Asia tonight fo r 1nen1bers of the Dana Point Art Guild. The program, entitled • 'So n1 e F:nchanted lsles," will begin at 7:4:. p.n1 . in the Dana Point Community House. The program is open to the public. No admission will be charged. DAILY PILOT' !l•lt Phot. VARIED LAGUNA PRESCHOOL CURRICUlUM GiVES CHOICE Bored With Music Benj•min Fiedler P,.ints a Puppet Lagu1ia Y 0111a.gste1·s Pre-school l{icls Lear11 Ga1~dening,No11-violence By FREDERICK SCllOE~1EHL An old, rambling Spanish house on t-.1anzanita Drive in Laguna Be.:ich recently became th e home for a unique pre-school, ,.,,,hich among other things. of. fers instruction in organic gardening and ho•v lo be non-violent. Nearly all of the 30 students at the An- neliese Pre-school, ha ve t he 1 row n gardens, arid are growing lettu~. radishes, corn and carrots. Besides just sticking the seeds in the ground, watering them and \11atching them grow, the youngsters. ranging in age from three to six, get instruction on composting and mulching soil. No guns are allo"·cd for to~·s at the school and aggressions are channelled through painting or ··orff music." "It's a very rhythmic music," explains one of the school directors, t-.1rs. Daniel (Carmen) Leegant. "The children beat on drums, xylophones and bells and sing. It i:,ets a lot of the aggression out of them.'' Mr. and Mrs. Leegant along \.\'ilh Mr. and !\1rs. Paul Schimmelpfennig ha ve directed the school for the PljSt three years. It started as a baby ~itting service on Brooks Street and gradually evolved into the pre-school. .. But we found out that lt \11as a bit il- legal.·• Mrs. Leegant recalled, "so we bought this big Spanish house." rt has 16 rooms. plus nine bathrooms and sits on a heavily 11Jooded acre of land. It \1·as bought early this year by the pre- school directors for ~115 ,000, after being used as a retirement home. The pre-school opens al 7:30 a.m. and mornings are devoted to classes in music. painting, handicrafts and German language. German was selected because all the directors speak it fluently. '"\Ve ask the child \\'hen he arrives in the morning what he would like to do. He may go to any class he desires. and must stay in it for at least one-half hour," said J\1rs. Lecgant. "If he doesn't enjoy the class, or v.·ants lo do something else "'e let him do it \Ve arc not as free as !he Su1nmerhill inelhod, because \.\'C do have soin c struc· ture in our approach." For the most part, ho1Yever. lhe youngsters can "do their 0\'111 thing." An education philosophy statement drafted by the directors states: "If a child \Yants lo do not hin g but paint every day for months. he is allowed to satiate that need until he feels ready to do sometr.ing else. ··And we have noticed that when lefl tu lhen1selves, their degree or curiosity and own sense of readiness. children in- \"ariably and quite naturally broaden their interests."' An important aspect or the school's philosophy is for the youngsters "to get the feel or the basic elements" such as earth and y,•ater. For thal reason, the organic gardening i11struclion is offered. Schimme]pfennig daily picks up discarded vegetables from local markets and shows students how to "'Ork them in- to lhe soi l to make it richer. And \.\'hile il tends lo be a dirty job. the students arc encouraged lo do it and nol fee! bad ribout getting dirty. "Of course." noted Schimrnc!pfennig. "We get all !he children cleaned up before they go home." The majority of the afternoon llrne Is spenl \\'ith gardening and playing on the extensive grounds around the school. A large t"·o story tree house and a smaller •·.,.,itches' house" ha ve been built on the grounds. Class room Financing Meeting Set Ways of finaocin£ needed clas:iroom space will be discussed by th e Tustin Union High School District Board of Education al a special meeting called for 7:30 p.m. today in the conference room, J 171 Lllguna Road, Tustin. A representative from the Orange County Counsel, Robert t-.1 a t thew , secretary to the Orange County Com- mittee on School District Organization, and Ernie Norton, assistant county superintend ent of schools for business, "'ill meet with the board. Superintendent William Zogg said the discussion will cen!er on alternatives to calling another IJond election. Last Nov. 3, voters in the district gave a $25.8 million bond issue only a 52 per- cent yes vote -short or the two thirds \'n!e requirement recently upheld by the U.S. Su1>rc1ne Court. The district had hoped the two-thirds requirement Y:ould be dropped, allowing it to proceed with a five-year building plan lo meet growth of the Mission Viejo, Irvine and El Toro communiljes it .'icrvcs. 1'11can1\·hile. plans for a unification elec· lion n1andatrd for June 1972 c.re being 1lCveloped. The most favored plan calls for spliting thf' high school district into 1hrc<' unified dis1ricts one each in Tustin, Jrrinc and Mission Viejo. Trus1ces "'ill consider the errects or such a unification on any bond issue that 1nay be approved. Zogg said. 'The state education code spells oul ways in \.\'hich bonded indebtedness must be paid -0ff by the successor uniried districts. The possibility of Tustin meeting its space shortages by leasing classrooms also will be considered at tonight's 1nceling. Zogg said_ If thal alternative is thought to bf' una<'teptable. trustees will consider setting another bond election dale. Trustees Hear Phys Ed Plan For Handicapped The trustees or the Laguna Beach Unified School District have been asked lo appro1·e a special physical education progran1 10 lneel the requirements or ph,vsically handicapped yciungsters. According to district i n s l r u c Lion supcrinlenc!enl Robert Reeves, the pro- gram would be entirely self-supporting since the state would pay the district $23,000 in support money. Dr. Reeves told the lrustees therf' are 19~ s1udents al the five district schools 1rho "·oulrl directly benefit fron1 the :-pecial physical educri lion classes. One !cacher would be hired to run the pro- ,arain. he said, and would 1raveJ from school to school to teach the youngsters. As outlined by Dr. Reeves, students suffering fron1 many types or phys'ical h;uidicilps "·ou!d be eligible for enroll- n1eot in the course. School trustees will stud,Y the proposal and are expected to lake action C10 '.he item wmelin1c in July. s DAILY PILOi' 3 DAILY Ptl.OT lt8f1 1"11111• Kiss for Luck ?>.1rs. Donna Albus gives her pet '?>.Jonti' a buss on the head as she pre- pares h in1 for the Orange County Poodle Club's Eighth annu al com· petition at t he Orange County Fairgrounds. More than 150 pood les from San Diego to Bakersfield participated in the competition Sunday. Ex-chaplain to Return Trophy Samurai Sword SACRAM ENTO (AP) -A former Marine Corps chaplain sa)'S he is return- ing a 500-ycar-old souvenir samurai sword to the family or a Japanese soldier \\'ho had lo surrender it al the close. of \\lorld War II. The Rev. ~1crrill Follansbee said over the 11·('ekend he picked out the sword when he "'as stationed in China from an1ong "'Capons taken from defeated Japanese soldiers and put it in a warehouse for distribution to U.S. servicemen. -..... The Presbyterian minister said ht: kept La ndscaping S lated For J'\'ledi1uu Strips Ccnler divider strips on Crown Valley and Alicia parkways in Laguna Niguel will be landsca11cd in a cooperative proj· et!. between the county and Avco Com- 1nuni!y Developers Inc. Supervisors have approved spending $7.414 as the county's half share of lhe project. tJ'ie sword In his home for 25 years until "about a year sgo I decided the sword does not belong to me and should bt returned lo it,s rightful owner." City Will Share Water Line Cost A persuasive Jett.er from Laguna Bf:ach Mayor Richard Goldberg to !he Lagun a Beach County Water District was worth $3 ,500, City Manager Lawrence Ro.!e told the city council last week. The water board, said Rose, had agreed to chip ln that amount, represen-- ting half the cost of moving a waler line prior to beginning construction of the new counly library branch at Park Avenue and Glenneyre Street. The city will pick up the balance of the $7,000 tab. Furthermore, said ~manager, dlrec· tors of the water district have promised the mayor that work on the project will be expedited. El Rancho has the hottest price in town! 4 QUARTS ... with free pitcher! •••••••••••••••• A 11 hole gallon of "·a t.e r ••• f iltered anrl sanitized a nti crystal tlear , .• in the sensational ne'v package -exclusively a l El Rancho! And ,,·ith 4 quarts you g el the free pouring pitcher! Use filtered \\'ctler so many \\'ay~ ... in cooking . for a better cup of coffee.,. in drinking . 01· al your bar! • , . in the galley, the camper, freeze it for )'our picnic hamper! You'll love the con\'enience ! H1lf-c1llon Water ••• (2 qts.), .. 19c. London B •1 U.S.D.A. ro1 .. ~~~'~ .. $149 lb. Enjoy the hearty r oodncss or finer beef! Boneless, fla\'Ol"ful, tenclc1·! Meat Balls. ~~~N. ~~D: .. 7 9fb E l Rancho's finer g rade m ea ts, seasoned ••. topped \vi th a ton1ato aaucc ! fresh Italian Squash .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. 19~ As fresh as if you'd picked them yourself ••• and delightful to serve! . Breast of Chicken or Turkey .. . . .. .. .. .. .. 55¢ Leo's, ••• for a salad or a aandwich! 3 1/a oz. pkg. of tasty tenderness ! Prict3 in ef f f'cl ~ton .. TueB., lYt d., June 11. ti, f3 No sales to derUt rs . Nou; avn.ifa11lr 'in the nc1v packar1e ••. Fresh Sque~zed Ora1t{/" Jui-ct ••. Grnpefr·uit .luicc . __ drliciou~ fruit drinks! Enio'JI the qunlity . , • tM convenience .,. and be Eco-logical! Instant Breakfast 59' Carnation ... a great way to &tart the day : All flavors .•. Ctn. of 6 pkg1'. Vanilla Wafers .......................... 39' Jt'rom the happy S unllhine bakers! Crisp ••• delicious w ith milk! 11 oz. Downy flake Waffles .................. 29C Serve them hot from the to11.1;ter .•• !or a good mornir::! 10 oz. pJc.r. Sweetheart for Dishes ............... 39- B ig 32 ounce size • , • with the fresh !n grance of lime aa a bonual . ARCADIA : S11n1el and Hunlonilnn D< 11/M. PASADENA : iW1t· SOUTH PASADENA : iW!t; HUNTINGTON BEACH: iW1't. NEWPORT BEACH : 111 7 Newpa<I Blvil l"il IEI P.J•icho Center) .. J?O w r.~I Colorado Rlv1l .•. " Fre mont and Hunt1nRton Dr ',ri•1· Warner and Algonqu in reoardwalk Center) A','· lj55 Eastblulf Dr 1rasthlutl V1lla~r. Crnter I t 4 DAILY NLOT Russ Spa ce Defector Questioned LONDON I UPI) -British intelligence offlet:rs questioned Soviet defector Anato- ly Fedoseyev today to determine' his im· portance to the Russian space effort and how he arrived in Britain, diplomatic :sources said. The source~ identified the 52.·year-<1ld Fedoseyev as a prominent electrnnics engineer, bul said pre\•ious rePf)rts from Paris that identified him as a top space <Jfficial v.·ere untrue. He disappeared in Paris thr~ weeks ago. His exact position as an engineer r~ mained unclear, but the sources denied he was the Soviet minister in charge of ~pace research or concerned "·ith the Russian satellite program, as reporled by French police sources. The sources also said Fedoseyev came to Britain from France by ordinary com· mercial transportaton, and did not arrive by "'ay of North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) headquarters in Brussels. as reported by the French. UPI Moscow dispatches said there had been no mention in the Soviet press or radio of the defection. Such cases are :i lmost never reported in Moscow unless they become serious inttrnational in· cidents and open government action becomes necessary. Arabs Get Together Sov?et scientiric sources di~countcd reports lhat F'edoseyev 'vas a key figure in !he So\•iet space program and said he \vas a doctor cif technological sciencP~ llnd university professor v.·hose last post ,1·as with the Institute of Radio and Elec· Ironic Instruments. Saudi Arabia's King Faisal fL) presents a je\ve! studded sword to UAR President An\\·ar Sadat at a state banquet in Cairo. The two leaders are expected to discuss prospects of an Arab summit conference over the conflict \vith Israel. The British foreign ofriCf said Sunday lhat Ft'doseyev, 52. v.'ho vanished al the Paris Air Show three weeks ago, "is in thi:i; country and has been given perml:<>sion to slay." Family's Joy Shattered: The governmrnt does not use the lenn •·granted political asylum'' so as not to prejudice any relatives the defector may have in his homeland, the sources said . Last of 9 Babies Dies Sen a te Leaders A·Jo~·e To End Dra ft Debate WASHINGTON (U PI ) -Senale leaders prepared a petition to shut off further debate today in an effort to keep lhe draft from expiring 10 days from no11·. Sena te Democratic Leader M 1 k e l\1ansfie\d of Montana, and Republican lrader Hugh Scott of Penns~·l vania. said ~hey would file a motion before the end of business this afternoon to sidetrack a lhrealened filibuster against Ole draft ex· tension bill. SYDNEY !lPll -The fu11 tragedy :<>truck Leonard Brodrick Sunday nighl v.·hen th!' Roya l \Vo1nen's Hospit a! an- nounced the death of lhe last of tl1P nine children his wife had borne on June 13. 'The last to die was a boy and it y,·as in hopes she \1,·ould bear him a son that ~trs. Brodrick had taken fertility drugs. The nonup!ets were five boys and four girls and although two boys were ;;til!born Brodi ck said he had hopes a son 1,11ould surv ive. Sunday nighl the last one died and he was shattered. "All I wanted out of this was a son," he said. The birth of nonuplets June 13 to l\lrs. Geraldine Brodrick, a brov.·n-eyed, 29· year-<lld sncia\ite , created medic 11 I history. Eight children had been born to a Tow11speople Care Crowd Beats 2 Suspects In Shooting of Off ice1· ?\"EW YORK <UPI) -At a time v.·hen !he cop on the beat is under al\ark fr om 'll:ln~· seg1nent:c; of society , the res1dcnls nf a predomin;int!y \.ret>k-Amrrican C'\'lTil· i\un1!y 1n r->ew York ha\'e :-.ho11·n 1hry r;irr -,-t"hr1nrnt11·. \\'hen ,2Unf1re br~kr !hr s1lcnrP of th<' rrf'-da11n h1)Urs Sunda,·. the 11ord ~prr.:id -ju11·kly thrnu,'lh thr Lon,2' l ~land city ~l'C· 11011 0f QU!'f'n~ that "a C<Jp·s been .~hot." '\righhorhood pe<>ple. some in shirt "lffre!' and carrying Sunday ne.,,,'spapers. l1her!' returning from a late night on the (('lv.n. ran to.,,,·ards the sound of the gun· fire \\'hrn they re:aclled lht scene of the 1hoo!ing. they saw patrolman \\'llliam Brschel ~ra\\·\rd en !he !'trret wi!.h gunshot 11ounds in his back and ankle. The croy,·d turned angry. police said, :ind movrd in nn t...,·o suspects, a ro-year· nld man Daniel Ran som. and his &-foot·6. 2.)(l.pound son. Jan. both of Long Island Cttv. The~· beat the l...,·o men to !ht ground brfl"lre bE'i:ig subdued by pohet. • The1· v.antrd In kill th0se t1rn ~ur~." ~aid pal rn1ma n Jan1Ps lnpc', the first pt'.llicemen to ans"rr the ~ff1cer-in·troublc call. "lf they had carrird out tht>1r threats, thev ...,·oulrl ha.,·e hnchNI 1hem" "'Thty v.·~re hoppin~ mitd ."' ('opt' s<11d. "They v.·ere stand in,t! their ground " 'Fie sa id he "GS "amazPd. _not Sft'ing people flee but do the opposite " won1an in r.l<'-XlCO in 1967. bu!. they had all diC'.d v>itl1in 14 hours. Nonuplets 1-1'ere unheard of. The Brodricks already had two rhddren, Brlinda. 5. and .Jacqueline, 4. Thry had been born hy caesarian section, ;ind doctors presri!*.d gonadotrophin. a fertility horn1one drug. to help "'ith Mrs. Brodrick· s pregnancy. Doctors had told the Brodricks lo ex - pect septllplets, so they "'ere not totally unprepared for the mu!Lip!e birth. 'l'he births took onl,; :;:>minutes. Two of the babies, both boys. were stillborn. Doctors said they had been cru~hed in the womb. Four girls and three boys survived. They "'eighed betY.'een 12 ounces and 11-1·0 pounds two ounces. The smallest v.·a.c; the last-born - a boy only six inche.c; long. Policeman Kills Black Suspect 111 Race Flareup COLU:-OfBUS. Ga. IUPl) -A black youth ...,·as shot lo death by a pt'.llic:eman early today during a nareup of firebomb· ini;: in thC" rac1al!y-troobled city on the Alabama border . Police Capt. Bobhy Knox said the youth. \V i!lie J. Osborn Jr. of Columbus, V.'as killed after he ned from R car being chase<! by police and ignored orders to stop. Knox said Osborn tried to run ov rr tv.·o policemen at a roadblock and then JU!nped from tht. car y,·ith an "objecL Jn li is hand .'' An uff1ccr f1rrd oncf' at (J~born. th en shot h1'1te in !he air \1·hen the man ran, and then shot him 1-1·hen he 1,1.·ould not stop. Knox said. The detecti'-'C chief :<>aid po\icr had v.anted to question Osborn aboul ltie ::irmtd rob~ry of a small grocery in which Osl>orn ans...,·ered the: dc11cription of tine of the bandi!s. Spring Leaves With Bang Wide Area of V.S. Plagued by Thunderstorms California I • U,.1110 ,. •• SI INT••NATIONAL l~t •V" •'1•1JI> !t.. ~l!IM>I IM•M l>O"~ '" '"' tt•lll'• -· 11111••· olll(!t !lt' ,.. ... 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J\• ,~"""''''"'"'' ••o ,_.,, "°'IM•o•~ (olO<f"'°' ~•t!lno "II•<>•• W•lh oollbfU "I' ""' "''"' '"•" '••O ~~",!l :: :;',~.~t1.',.~v;.;;:, :,,~.(o'.'°"' Coas111l "•!• 1.,...Y, l..,,l Yt •l.ol>le WIJ\CI• "''"' •""' ........ ,,,, "°"" _,,.. -·'"''" 10 IO 11 •no!t IJ\ •II••--y 1"'1 T ... -t', >ll-tl\ 1'1d•¥ IO "' •!. Ca.1••• ,...,,,.,,1,, ... '""" '"""' l4 ... 7S. !Jiit "" •-•r•!v•t• ••-l<OI!• 10 It 90, ""'"'' ,_,.,u,. M. S1rn, Moon, Tld<!s MONDAY I \l o ..,, a 1 1.1: ..... :1 TUltOAt' J;.qt ~··~ " .... low-~"'"""' ...... S ocoJ\11 ,,.,. ~ ........ Ju, ... ..._11:, ..... •l•o lf'I, 10 •1 •"'· l' • °"' • '"" ., f •11~ ...... ' l)O • ,,, J l 1oh!r·'•"' Sfll 1 1~' m. Temperatures .. I Y IJHllf"D ,.ll:I JS INTlllNATIONAI. r.,.,.,.,.,,,,., .,., •~•.11u;.., 1w ff>• l""°"' .,.,,..., -l"v •! <I 1,,.,, "lt ll Ltw ""° Alt..nY tJ 61 .01 All!\JQ\J., .... "'"•"'• "'""""'•" ·~~ C~.orlorte C••<•.O -,: ..... 1 ..... 11 c lf'ttlt"" 011i.. .,._, o.. "'~"" 0.•<111! r.1lrt1<1,.l 1 ~-!ulv 1,..i,,,,.0011> )~<•11:•W•!I• O:•M•U C<h , .. ....... l<:" ... ,.,..,. .• L\'a,>l1~"lt ......... ~.:, ....... ,.,1 M·'*f <'I" .YI"""'°'"'' ••• Ot1•~~· ''h'"' .,...,., 0 "'•"' t"al"' !.,.,.,., ""··-·· ,. ........ ,. ... ,, ,, .. flort11.'G, 0.., !•er•"'•""' ,. l('a;·• ~!! l••• (<l'f '" l:h• ... ~·· .,,.,,.,_ ·~ ... ~-·1'4 "''~"°"'''' .. " ~ .. u " • ., ~ ., " ., n .. .. ., " "' " .. ., " " " • u " "' .. •• .. " .. .. ., " " • ., • .. " • " p ~ • " " ~ " • ~ " • n ~ n " n " • u • ,. " .. • " " " " • M .. µ " " .. ·" ·" ·" •• .~ ·" ,, ... GI Reveal.s Armf1 Surv eillance Officers' Laird Says LBJ 'Threats' Ordered Spying FT ~fcPHERSON, Ga. (AP) -A WASHINGTON (UPIJ Dtfense former Charlie Company sergeant at f..ly secretary Melvin R. Laird said the Lai testified today in the pretrial hearing "highe~t" civilian authorities in the- for Capt. Ernest Medina that high-rank· Johnson Administration directed the ing Army officers threatened to charge Army to spy on Americans, according to him with committing crimes at the Vitt· congressional te stimony released today. name!le village unless he testified against "The military is sometimes blamed for Medina. this operation," Lalrd said March 4 in a S. Sgt. Charles Lacroix, now stationtd closed session of the House Defense Ap- at Ft. Carson. Colo., said that Col. Henry prcpriations subcommittee. ''But this Olk, staff judge advocate at Ft. Riley, operation was completely known to the Kan., first questioned him about the My highest aulhorities wlthin our govern· Lai massacre in November 1969. ment." "The colonel told me I was the poorest 'l'he spy activities, which included keep. excuse for a noncommissioned officer he ing portfolios on liberal political can· had ever mtt ... and thAt I could be didates as well as antiwar and civil rights charged for crimes at My Lai," he activists, were ordered stopped last testified. March I, Laird said. "But he said this might not be Former Defense Secretary Clark M. necessary if I turntd state's evidence for Clifford announced creation of a riot-con· Medina.'' trol command at the Pentagon April 26, Lacroix was the first witness to take 1968. He said it would oversee federal the stand as the pretrial hearing resumed troops sent to cities during riots and today. \\'Ould provide ''prompt and effective sup- 1~-'-~~~~~~~~~~ plementary law enforcement assistance.'' But the classified directive c1rcula1ed by the Pentagon live days after the an· nounte1nenl, 1nd1catcs the center was designed to perform n1ore duties lhan Clark named. 1'he Jl·page d1rcct1ve •vas unclassified two weeks bt:forc Laird ap- pear('(! before the subco1nn1ittee, and a copy was printed v.•ith its testirnony. It describes the ··mission" ol the direc· torate of military support as : "To procur~. evaluate, interpret. ~nd disseminate as expeditiously as possible information and intelligence rt'iating lo any actual, potential or p I an n e d demonstrations or other activities related to civil disturbances within lhe Con· tinental United States "'hirh threate1t civil order of military security.'' The directive also outlines •·pre. disturbance activities'' that should be observed by the surveillance agency. ETHEREA NEWPO RT INVITES YOU TO MEET THE STAN LAWRENCE BEAUTY TEAM FOR ETHEREA MONDAY, JUNE 28- FRIDAY, JULY 2 . RESERVATIONS FOR A PRIVATE CONSULTATION BY APPOINTMENT ONLY. 10.00 RES E RVATION FEE MAY B E APPLI ED T O ANY PURCHAS E OF ET H E R E A . R ECEIV E YOUR PERSONALIZE D GIFT WITH YOUR PURCHASE. PHONE FOR YOUR RESERVATION: 644-2800, EXT. 286. IN OUR COSMETICS. • ROBINSON'S • FASHION ISLAND • ' , - 644-2800 • DAil V PILOT 5 W elfa re P1·o f its, Ads Cited Bill Go es To House ITC Says Cereal s Priced Too High ' t· f1 l • \\\SHINGTON (UPI ) Thf House was ready tn Ol?f',, de~at.e 1oday on \~'elfare tf'/·itnl. the biggest t-!11 it n111.st face thi s year. The $9 billion measure. "t>rkcd out after months of tllSl'U.ssioull by the House W a.1·.~ and '.\t rans Co1nn11 llft', would increase Social S e c u r i 1 y be11efits by 5 per cent next )ear: a tte1np(. to tighten operation of the medicare and n1t•d ic<iid programs: an d establish a t'On1pletely nPw - and far more costly -kind of 1 na11011al public 'w c If are ~y~le111. The tul!'s welfare provisions. lo provide federally financl'd l"ol~h oenl'fi ls fClr the first time \n !hf-\rorkin)i( poor as well as thP Jobless. 1o1·ere expected In hold !he tlouse·s attention dur· i n~ n1ost or two dayr. of debate and ~oung. Betause I h e pol1t1en!J.v popular Social Security and n1edicare provi sions are lock· .... ed into 1t.e bil l with the con- Stage Deb11t u,., 1•1•~~·" 1rovers i<il welfare reform, th<' Yol a nda King. 17-ycar-old daughte r of the late Dr. f\1artin Lu ther King. rnakcs ~~r stage debul as an actress in '.'tlan!a. S~e p~ayed the part of a prostitute in · rhe 0 \vl and the Pussycat." \\11th "11ss King 1s her leading man. Greg Palin. key 1ote will come Tuesday on a mo1·e tu kill the welfare sec· lion. lf that fails. 1he bill pro- bably 1vi!J pass and go to ti1r Senate. v.1here a s i ni 1 I a r Hou~~approved w e J r a r e 'V-°'SH I NGTO~ (UP I\ American!> a re paying IS lo 2S percent rnore 1hiin they sho ul d hn1·e ln for breakfast cerea!s bec<1us1· I.he industry spends hea\'1 ly on <1dvrruslng and makes unusually high profit~. <1ccord1ng to a ,.~e<lera l Trade Co n1missi on fl'vrCl study. The s t u d y IS s t i I I con· fidential because some of Jts proposals have not yet been acted on by the FTC's fi\'t con1missioners; iL was sum- n1anzed. hov.·ever. in ron- gressiona l testimony re leased late last "'eek <1nd elaborated on for UPI by FTC sources. The l l·rnonth study ron· eluded thnt thr 1o1•holesale pnre cereal makers charge grocers 1s about 20 percent abo1 e co~1.~. 111 addition the "suggested" retail p r 1 c. e , 1\•hich the gl"oc.er generally 11scs. is again 20 percent hi,1i?her "'Our preliminary analysis of the breakfast industry in· dic<i !es prorits far above cnm- petilivr levels. e :< c e s s i v e acJver!Lsing expenditures and nn rn1ph.11sis on price con1- petit1on." lhe FTC I o I d Cnngres~. Thr .study concerned only cn!d eerealS. An economist in- votved in it told UPT "if the etreal business became m ore compet1t 1ve. say like the pro- Treatment Against Cold Sores Bared 219 Safe In Rm1\va y refom1 bill died in con1n1i ttee last }'Car. Jacksonville Retains Cool ATLANTIC CJTY (AP 1 - Scientist!'i from Baylor College of Med ic.ine reported toda .v they h::ivl' rle\'f'lnperl a nr1v and effect11·c treatment for 8 P eri sh As Boat Blo\vs Up OAKLEY. ldaho tl:Pll - Eight 1>ersons, a1nong them a husband and wi fe and their l wo young children, died Sun- day afternoon ll'hen !he motor ()f a five.seat [)VWer boat Lhey v.·ere testing apparentl y ex- plocled in the middle of the isolated Lower Goose Creek Reservoir. Har kness said the si x adults, al! f'mplo.1·es of the Anderson Brothers Co. r;inch in Oakley JO n1iles aw;iy, were trying the. boa t out before bU)'ing it frorn Ray Anderson. their crnployer. The motor hRd just been overhnuled. The bodirs of f\.1rs. Annettr (;ooding and her ei ght-~·ear-0ld daugh ter floated to !he v.·est bitnk of the one-mile-v.·ide. four-mil e-long re.~cr\'nir. a popular fishing spot locatrrl amid loo lhills 1n a fa rming are<". the comn1on \'1rus that causes cold sores and fever blisters. The key to the trealment. thry said. is a con1n1on Hghl bu lb. Accident J A C K S O NVILLE, Fla. IUPJ ) -.Jacksonville's vio- Jen(f·torn black neighborhoods TOKYO I Ar'/ -As a r err.ained relatively c11!m for Norl11111cst-Orir1~ 747 .Jumbo 1he ~cc011d consecuti1·e night Jl'tlinC'r sped down I he Surday night \\'ilh only a few n111wa.v . a1 llanf'rla l ~t en1a· firtbon1bings and two ;illeged l1ona l Airport Sunday night lo snl:il:ng incidrnts reported by Their v.·ork has grea1er in1- plications than for only !ik1n infections because one type of the san1e virus -herpes s implex -is believed by many scientists lo cause can- cer of the cervi x But the scient i."ts did not elabora1e on lake off for Sa n Francisco, pol.~e. part of its l~nd gear col-h;o:,-i--------------------o;;I lapsed and the lefl wing lhis poinl . The new technique i s remarkably simple -a cer~ ta1n kin d of dye, one that s~rves to absorb light. 1s ap- pli ed to !he skin lesion and 1hc dye become.~ bound to the virus. The lesion is then e xposed to. or irradiated by, ordinary type fluo rescenL I i g h t • Someho111. the scientists said, \hf' dy<' combines with a por- tion of the DN A -or genetic l1aterial -of th(' herpes 1irus. The ,1pplic::ition of 1 is1- llle light a pp;irent ly resul 1,<; 111 sC"raped for 500 yards before the craft plo1'lf'd into lhe sofl e;1 rth alongside lhr concrete strip. Airj)Or l nrtK·ia ls said al l 219 pe rsons :ibonrd cscaprd in- jury. 1"hrrc 11· e r e 45 A m r r i c a n s ahnard -34 p;:issengr r.s :incl ! 1 n1cmbtrs of !he ere\.\'. A spok{'frnan fur lhe Na- l io nal Transportatlo11 Safety Roard in \V:tshington said there "'·as en n s i d ' r a b I e damage tt the plane but no fire, 8th Shootout Vic ti 111 Di es OCcaks in the DN A strands. n F:1"ROIT (AP 1 -l\nhert the doctors said. with the !i ghl IA'c l;ardner, who 1va." fnun dl bfi11~ <:oncentrated in the dve alive <>i!er gunmen f'ntered a ard thus inactivating the virUs suspec ted dope den and kill ed I an~ preventing the virus fro111 seven other persons. has died r cp.rod uring itself. The process oi gunshot ""·ounds s uffered in is called photodynamic in-I.hr attac k. acL\·a1ion. Police said c:ardnrr. :.ra. a• •41 I . 171h $TlllT (OITA MISA, CAL". l46-1211 "' ,,..,..,. TOMOllllOW -.. 5Clf.'-I CI" 0,. Ll\ltNG~ l l\•r• .,. \O"'• t1t•1 wt may ~ot ··~'"" (1 J A T•nU l oll y grh old IHI fn A ... u ... Mimi ...... ~n•«IV. ruo~ing ou• cn1nCfl tor ~l<e ot m1r><1 •n<I fu•I <On<l"lt•1l•M on our "'•'• on•••, 1n .. 111 (lf'l1l •"" .:11o<11, tt1rn • mtll>Od ror Llv••I ••· P•ft•l•OIV H0Wl F REE DEMONSl lll TIONS !Omn•ro"' 1lur'l O! 10 '"' ••'II I pm (My l H•OM (!"'"' ,,~."~9 tlOW YOGA (INTE ll, ,., l ll1n ~I C:O>'• N .,, ... 6"1>-1211 (O"'f "'YOU ~·· > duct section ol the grottry. lhe consumer mijht save 25 percent." In any C"&Sll!, he ad- ded. the saving would at leitst be IS percent. The sugar coated cereals, aimed at children and plugged hl'avily on "kiddie" television shows, cost about a third more than other ctrea!s, mainly becitu~ of big advertising budgets. the report said. The economist said tht three largest cereal makers Kf'l lo gg Ct1., General Mills Inc .. a nd Post d i v l s ion . General food~ -shitrt itbout 83 perct nl of the $9!!0 million· a ·year ctreal market He said "''ould·be competi tors a r e rtluctitnt to get into the cereal business because they could not spend as much for ad· vertising. Vacation loans with a smile. Hawai1. Mexico. The Sierras. Don't you c:lesemt a vacation? If fhe ""''is keeping you home. just talk to the friendly peopfo al Morris Plan. Yoo can bcwrow irom $100 to $5...000 ar more.on appi0¥81. and -payments ID lit )'Otr budget. You can count on oom1:eous. personaJ SCfrice., too. Just visit your nearby Moms Plan oClice -"'° AOOd -tor "'Pf good reason. or.-yoo need !<>getaway. Morris Plan .....--,_,_... Beach - 3 700 Newport Blvd. "On the ba"is of prelilnin;ir,· r x<onvict and s u s p e ct fl t rrsul1..; anrl tlw> .~implicity nf narcotic-.~ pusher. "as the af'- 1rca111enl." t he scirntist<; parent 1 :ir~rt of the gunmrn :-; a iii . ""e fetl th;it 11·h.1 r nlcred h1.~ aranmr.~I r hotl\'lynamic inact1\'alion is early las! to.londay and blaied l an e}cil ing and promising new . ....:··~·:'Y:"."~''~h~th~•~i'~<~u~n~s~. __ _11~"""""""""""""""~""""""""""~~""""""""~~~~---------------------------------­appn flch to recurrent herpes The oi lier dead ""re idf'n- lifif'd as ~1rs. Ciood1ng 's hus· band. Andy: 1he1 r young son: .litmts Shepherd : Ch a r I t s Qualls: Hflrold Oibbl r: and Ra~ mond Moore. s1mpl!ll nf !hf' skin and mu- c-ous membrane.~ " JULY 6th ANEW INDBPENDBNCB DAY FOR ORANGE COUNTY It takes a great car to make a great car deal. And ri t now your Pontiac dealer has both. SHIP,P.ERS & RECEIVE~S ' .. w,. ~1 -wi' ·. #:. ·'.'\ . « '~ \ ;.• .. i ! ·.~~. l CME opens Orange County Tenn· f'reedom 1tlasU Yes, CM E hi s eiven 1ff of Cl= true on• clay, direct servic~ to a nd from Or.n county by opanlne the first terminal any lntrastat C.rrlar hn ever o~ated here. \ N0\11' Oran11 County shippers ind recei\1'9f'J.,. nd longer dt pendent on the Los Angeles terminal •. ·\ and ·one Day Service.' to and from ell ll'llljor Clli· \ fornia point$, IS I r111ity. * tor information & pickup call (714) 693-9500 F;w;ql§ CALlfOflNIA M(JTOR fXPRf5~ ~ --~-.. I He's dealing on ery Pontiac. Including our big Catalina and our new Ventura n.:..the small Pontiac with the small-car price. \ - • DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PA.GE Major Public Service 'J'he Ne\V York Times, in publishing a Pentagon "lop scc:reL" report on h O\V the U. S. got into its Vietnan1 predicamen t, performed a n1ajor service to t he Ameri· can people. f\1any nc.111spaper~ -the New York Times certainly amnng them -are privy to sensitive mater ial and are :i ccuslon1ed lo rvalllaling it in the light or national :-cL'111·i1~. In tll1:. case. 'f11ncs editors '''ere convinced that 11n 1nforn1<1\HJl1 hL·lpful to the encn1y or har1nful to the l :., 1•.ould IJc involved. -\s tnr hc>lp1n~ the Soviet Union crack U. S. d1plo· nlallc :01d rnilitary lodes by publishing dispatches ver- batun, 1l 110llld be. na ive to think that our government ha<> not changed codes more than once in the several \C:irs ~1nce the \>'ietnam dispatches were sent. • '!"he revelations si mply document \Vhat the public ha:-long :-.cnscd aud some have kno\vn. They nail do\vn 1he 11a~s in \l'hich the Kennedy and Johnson administra· 11.,ll" 1111~led tile A1nerican people (for reasons they un· fl\lf'.,l1 onablv belleved lo be in the national intere.~tl, ihr 1'l'h.v eri.'.Lling the credil~ility gap that caused Lyndon J olui..,011 not to seek rcclcct1on, :\ tonstructive aftvr1nath of th e episode is likely lo ht' a nlilJnr revie'v and ove rhaul of the classification proccd1 1rcs. 'Secret'' and '"top secret'' have been ton of· lrn llf;C d to protect offirials from embarrassment instead of prolcclini;: the nation's security. . 'f ecl J(ennecl y's Lo'v Blo'v Sen. Ed\\1ard (Teddy) Kennedy has been having a fine time running for President ''"bile denying he is a candidale -just as his brolher John did in the sprin£ of 1959. That his tactics are succeeding am ong Democrats is shown by results of the May Gallup pol l. \Vhile Sena· tor Mu skie has lost nearly 40 percent of his first ballot s upport among rank·and-file Democ rats sin ce Nove1n· bcr, Kennedy has been moving up. Now Kennedy leads Muskie. J>ublic n1erno1·y of Chappaquiddick lin:::e rs as a blot on Ted Kennedy's C'haratt{'r -but ii is fading. 11\s inner c·haracter may be sho\vin g through the outer veneer o[ good looks and charn1. hO \VC\PC r. \Vilncss the cxtre1nely lo\v bl o\v he has just stru(·k at Presi dent Nixon. Kennedy said, "'The only possi ble excuse for con· tinuing the disc redited policy of Vietnamizing the war, no\v and in the months ahead, secrn s to be the Presi· d ent's intention to play his last great card for peace at a tin1 e closer to November. 1972, \vhen the chances \Viti be greater that the action \rill benefit the coining clec· lion campaign." It has been .asserted that some people tend to ac· tttse others of misdeeds of \l11lic h they thcmsclvcs arc or could be guilty. Perhaps 'l'cd's character \Vould per· n1il hi in to do that of \vhich he accuses Presi dent Nixon. But it's hard to S\Vallow that line that he or anyone else -De1nocrat or Republican -in a position o f po\vcr \1'ould sacrifice a si ngle American life for political gain. Adel this IO\V blo\V at the P resident to Kennedy's blooper of last Christmaslln1e. \vhen he sought political gain by releasing prisoner of \var names already kno,•:n to the PO\V families. and the Kennedy credibility drops another nolrh. Kennedy's right to ac:cusc others of cynicism has disappeared under the impact of his O\V l1 \1·ords and deeds. MAINLINoR.. I11 terpreting J es11s' Use Of 'P erfect' Dear Gloo111y Cus E11iotio11ally Healthy People Are All Creative iii Ow1i lt'ay ( . '"- 't, l S_y dney J. Harris.;. ! ' ' ' ' ,/ The rnormous response I have received ''• n1v recent colun1n about the ' nieehiies~ · lhat is blessed in the Bible -in 11iuch I pou1led uul that the modern n1ean111g 111 "meek" is far lrom ·what .!rs11s had 1n mind -prompts me to offer 011101hrr 11!us1ration of the 1Yays v•e mJc;lntrrprcl Biblical injunctions. "Be lhou. there.fore, perfec t," Jesus 1nslrucle.d the chsc1- plcs; and the word · pc rfr1 r· i~ a stun1- 1·.i,n~·hl r·1·k for n1o~t Jll'OPIC \\'(' know \\"C r:1flnnt he perfcC"I ; n< bnd~ i1111nao... can. \1.'11 lnoh upo n it as a •l 1s tan1 gn:i l \IC :-.l1ould ~1ruJ.?glc 10- \1 :.rd. :i nd ll'C do nol l.1kc Hu~ "impossible'' in~truction too :o...:r1ou~ly. BUT. i\S RUOOLPll UUL Ti\1AN. the f1nc~1 D1b!JC"ill rxcgctc nf our century, has il i·c!n~cul the Grcri.. \1cird for •·perfect."' .1nrl 11.~ lltbre\1' :in1ccedcn1. had 1nnre the 111r·11n111;• 11f "\\h•lll'. unfla11·ed, un- r r:i··~1'1.l. as a · prr!rrl 1·up·· 1:-. one ll1at •1· 1 ~ 11nl topplc or spill its contents and l11lf11I.; llS lunc\!1111 "p1·rf{·c•l h ., .11 •11:-. h11r11 tl\;1! llf•hfldy L'nuld l)C '1wr: t · !11 l11n1•i·ll 1<·hu)..1·cl uHt' n! his f ,,I ti"' lo ,,+\lllP, '"ll'.'\lu 1ouc ·allmC' '·,,, .. 1 ·• Thf.1 t '-' n11lJ••dy g11nll ('~(·r1H 01ir I .1'!h r 1r h•·;11r11 ';\~ J 111nn , ,Jesu~ 11as .1ll l11n a11 ,1rc 1Jf hu1na n lra1l!>·· ··r:E Tll OL. TllEHEFOHE. prrfrr t:' prnpc1 ly nirans. 111 1nodcr11 lingo, ··get On the chance New York Cily real· ly \viii split of( and beco n1e lhe 5Jst st.ate, folks back there are playing games with a name change. I like "Alaspooryork." But this is more realjstic: "No!und!and. ·• -J. J. K. r~;, fe•lun nti.ch r•tOtU' W•tWI. llOI ""'<U Hrlly 11\o).f ol lhl nt WIPll'e'-Sllftd rour Ptl Pff"I 10 Gl~mr Gut. Doll• l'ltol. )'Ourself together." II does nol poin! to some far-away ideal of impossible virtue, but to the immediate job or unifying the personality. It is "'hat lo day 's psychiatrist would call "jnlcgralion'' ()f the self, Most of us arc filled \vit h many disparate and contradictory tendencies; we are curved and cratked. inconsistent and pulled in opposilc clirl'tlions by our sense or values and our selfish needs. We wiU behave kindly toward someone we kno\v. and badly IO\l'ill"d ~f11ncone we don 't know. Ignoring the fact LhaL both are equally our "neighbors." \YE ARE ENJOINE I> lo bccon1e a "whole" cup that is stable and steady and seamless, th at offers the s;i1ne ease of drinking to anyone \vho takes It. /\ •·perfect cup .. is not some Pl;il(lnic idea l, but a real cup designed by an honesl craftsman \Vho kno\~S thal tonn follows function. And a "f)C'rfrct per~n"' 1~ 11ot a saint. but on(' whn puls 111111"elt lllgc1her for the function of" acting hke a hun\an be ing at all times. This 1s hard, but ii •~ 1101 11 npor-f.1 hlr 11 is a psycholog icnl t~1sk as rnuC"h "" a 1noral onc. t\nd 1t 1:-; "praf't1 c·:1I · r:i\hPr 1ha n L"lop1un . for thr <.'1":11 kcd c.·11(\ is t1•) gQrJd to it :;c!f or lo ari_voric else. Ttt brcome who you :arc -:ill the w<ty throuRh -is lhr only j nh 1n litr \w1rth pursuing. Jc~u<;' in11111ct10n 1<; rrally 11l111L 1nodern psychiatry 1s all ahout. A Good fluman B eing Tn !hr i=:£111nr Tr'Jd:i y'o; cdl11on (June I~) of the DAILY 1111.UT nntrs lhB l Ric hard t.torC'llo of f'o!nna 1lf'l l\t ;:rr an agrnl lnr the Bureau r1f i\:1 rcv11c!' Enforcc1nl'nl. y,·as killed in '"" lint• or dtil\' I \10n<IC'r 11liat lhal story, increasingl y frrquenl 10 lypc, n1cant lo most readers. TO HIS \\'lfE, it means he \\'on·l be. hnmE' lh1s eveninR To his friend~. thal he \1·on·1 he around for a beer -or coin· panionsh1p lh1c; weekend, To Eap:le Scou15. 1hat they've. lost onC' from their r:i11k!'!. 1'11 remember Hll:h shov.1ng off his new motorcvclc lo rny 5hn, Ted, on • Salurd8y aft.ernoon. lie was a good human being. JAY MOSEL!:Y B11 Geor•ge ---· Pear George: 1 can't figure out if you 're some kind of left -winger or some Goldwate r Establishment man - about Ole timf' I gel you pegged as a rtidical you turn on like a 13irchite. \\'here's your head . m11n? PUZZLED Dear Pui.:lcd: Spinning, cllt. Spinning. 1 belong In nothin g as I rlon 't make & j:!ood mcn1bcr or nnylhlng rve JCOt a mind !In opt:n lhc \.\'ind ~'h1~tle~ through. The no1~ sometimes wake~ up true believers. Mailhox lu11r1 ''''" r•Hltrl •rt w11comt Norm11IJ" wrilt rl .~ovtcl <°""'• lhllr MtUl !tl I" :JM worcl1 or llH. Tht rl•M 19 <"""'"'' 11111r1 to tll .. act •• •1iml"•I• Ilk ! II ........... ,1111 lf!ttrl mu•I I"· chlclt 1!tfttlur1 11H1 molll"' tdclreu, b~I "tmt• moy bf: wll!lht MI Oii • ...,.,.,, H •w!licltril ••-~ I• l "'trffll. Pfflrr Wiii "°' lie .... bllJl!tO A 111cmorinl 111ns.~ fur Riclin rd F'. fffor~llo 'll.IOS helrl Saturday nfle.rnnoii ot St. lp11a~11~s C/1urcli 71L Sacramento. fie /t'n ve.s his wife. She rry. of Corona det A'fn1·, oncf /!is parf'nls. filr. a ud " Airs. Fronk. Morello of 1'a rzo111J, -t.'d11.or t 'or .Ge11ercd AlllatltJn To the Editor: The Orange County Pilots Association "'ishes to express its support for 1he posi· lion Lhe Grand Jury has taken regarding Los Alamitos Airporl. II i~ very im- portant that Orange County tak e positive action now. We would like to De or any assistance. in lhis endeavor that we c<in. The residents of thr Lo:i; AIRmitos area must be li/isure<l that ;:inother Oronge County Airf)(lrt sH11a11nn ~·ill not dc\·clop, even If It 1s necessary to shorten the ex- isting runway. Thrrc is Httle doubt ltu1\ a general avi;l!10n a1 q)Orl CAn bf' dcvrlop,•d which v.·111 hr. con1patlhh' "11h 1he C'n· vironment surrounrllnR l..Q:i; Al;in11tos. ROBERT F. FALLON Pres1dl·11I Living, Like Art, Is Forever New The genuinely sane person is crcaiive. A. H. illaslow used to say thal !here are no exceptions to the rule that people who are emotionally healthy are all creative in their O\Vn way. Sometimes this creati vity is lhal or a n1usician or novelist or innovalive business or political leader .. Just as oft'.!n one can be creative in smaller but equal· ly gcn11i11e ways. Crca!1v1t y is l he ;ihiJit.v of th e carpen· ler. thc office ma n-' ager, the hQuse-or- gan editor, the housewife or teacher lo improvise. For the particula r needs Q( the job at hand, out nf thr particular ma- trrials al h:1nd, a unique and original .solu 11on nf a problem. Such a ~ohition immcdi ;llc!y sl rikc5 <llhcrs with a thrill of pl easure. so that they suy. "HO\V did you ever think of that!" THERE IS ALSO rrrativi\y in human relations. The ability of a comp any prcs1- tlent or manager lo lc<1d, inspire and 111old. hi.~ slafi and employrs 111lo an cnth11sias1ic and cooprr;;it1ve t('a1n is ccr· lninly an inst<1nce of crcativ11y. So 1s the brinp:ing llP of a i:lllh1. I Havakaiwa ' A good marriage. a happy family life. a good business partnership. a great love affair -all these are surely the products of creativity in human relationships. There is a sense in whiclt people in close association with each other are e<1n· stantly molding. shaping, creating each 1Jlher. A wife is in pa rt the creation of her husband , just as a husband is In part the creation of hi!t v.·ife. Each ha5 s e nsili\•iUes, enthusiasms, interests, vulnerabilities, which shape the pcrsonali· ty or the other. An outstand ing characteristic of the creative person. says tht psych ologist Carl Rogers, is thnt "\be locus of evalua - ti on is in himself." ll isn·t what teachers lhink, it isn't 1vhal the C"ritics think. it isn't ~·hat the neighbors think. Jl's \1'h:lt he !1ims elf lhinks that count~ RE:CAUSE THE creative person·:; ex- periences. past and pres<'nt, are at- cessl b!e to awareness ;;ind n1it buried in the unconscious, because he :-ees fresh ly and withou t rigid calC'gorizin~ and Jabel- inp: of lhe situation before h!m, he is u!t1malely his ov.11 judge of ll'hJt is need· ed. After all, past solutions are merely the solutions of people in diffcrent situa· tio11s. Therefore tbe creative person. even if he may welcome the praise or advice of others, is not dependent on them. Jn short, yo u·ve got lo see lhe world lor yourself if you wish to be creative. If you can see in any given situation only 11'hJI cver~·one else can sec., you can be f;a1d lo be so n1u ch a representati~·c of ~our culturf that you are a vict in1 of il. You ha vC"n 'l. got the malcrials to be or1g1na l 11•i1h. $inec you have befo re you just another su11Jset. just another fifth-grade class, :ust another balch of leftovers in the refrigerator. IL liiwever. you do experience the ''oi-ld fur yourself concretely and vividly, If you are opcrr to the. uniqueness of every ohJccl ond event. if yo u are open Lo your 01111 frc!1ngs and to those about you, wh;it is before you is not "just another" sunset. "'just another'' fifth-grade cla~s. "just another" batch of lcflovers. THE :\CT OF BRINGING logcthrr thr. uniqueness of yourself at the moment wi th the uniqueness or your niaterials at the niomenl and the uniqueness of other people's feelings at the moment -that is cre:a !i~·ity. whether the end·product lakes the form or a painting, a novel 1vay of presenting arithmellc, or an origina l casserole dish. \Vhlch is 11;hy arL is so intensely aliv~ - or perhap~ it is mure <iceurat.e lo say thBt. 1vhat con.<.litutes living <1nd wha l goes inln art arc pretl y much the sa in r thing. Cer· 1ainlv D. H. Lawrence ha<l something hke this \n n1ind \1hcn he 11·ro te 111 "/'lo1or ahty and the ,\'ove!'": "The 'tusincss or arl i~ 111 rr veal the rl'\:ition brt1veen man and his t1rcuman1· bient universe, at !he living 111on1C'nl ... \\'hen vnn Gogh paint~ sunn owers. hr re~·cals, or achieves. thr \ 11•id rela\lon betwee1) himself, as man. and thr sunflo11 tr. as sW1flo11·rr. al that quick momenl of time •.. ··A1'"U "TlllS PERFEC'l'ED relation bcty,·ee• n1an and hi" ctrcumamb1ent univer~ is life it~elr. for mankind. It ha<1 the folf1h·dimcns1on;il quality of eternity an<l p{f fectinn . Yel 11 is momcntaneous. ""Man and the sunflower holh pa.-:~ away t orn the moment. In the process of frirn1irg a nrw rclat1011:-;hip. The rl'lation beL\Vefn all thin gs c.·h11ngrs lroin d;iy In day, in a subtle sleallt1 uf lhangc. HcncP: art. which reveals or flt!i11ns Lo ano1l1er pcrfct:l re lationship, 1\ ill Uc forever ne1v." An:l for the creative ind lV iflllal , livini;. like ~rt. is also forever nr1\' B.v S. I. lfayaka"''lt Presidrn t San Francbto S1a1r College Final Choice--H um phrey or l(ennedy? \\.~SI Jl 1'\GTO:-J -\Vnat II u be r l l !11111pt11·('Y 1 ~ :o;ay 111g about 1 he lJc1nocrat1c pol11ical ou1look rnake:-~cnse 11·hrn s11n1l11.cd o( !races or the ~cn;itor"_, t'gri For 11·11111 hr is !\ayu1g 1~ .~1mpl.v 1hal nil D<"n10rrt111 c 1.:and ldate for tile prcsidr11cy h :1.~ ~ufficirnt. l':llport to ~1veer the pn111<rrics and go 111to the convention as 11ie u11co11lc~1cd lradrr lake may !::rilnund fll11sk1e l l;1n1psh1rr: Birch lnd1.1na: c;corse l\li:-c:o1 ('rn in a y \\'in Soulh Dakota and Jl;ebr;,iska , \Vil!u1n1 Pro:-.rn1rr n1:i~ gl'I the edl!C in h1s hoint• stal e ur \\'1scon':i1n. ....,,.J ' So it \1·11[ go in ro . -. . ! j othl'r states. nort h r . and sou th. \\ ith ni:ine of the candidates ..-.. l\c1v get conclusively ahead in the whole range o! pre.sidcntial prin1aries. Thrn il 1vill come rlO\\'ll lo California and New York, the last prirnaries in Lhe t1vo largest states. and Humphrey cRn drl'am of v.·inning bolh. The lasl rnaJOr harrier to his nomination for a !econd l1n1c. would then be Sen. Edward r.1. Kennerly in a showdown on the convcntion floor. TlllS VISION IS somcv.·hal like the day dreams of Waller Mitty, lhe hero or .Jnmes Thurbrr's New Yorker c5says, but it ha5 the add ilio nal meril or rinding credence l\l Jhe \\fhite House. One or -President Nixon·s chier political adviser~ writ~ the scenario the i;amc way, not preci5ely the same but with 'the sa me climax and no conclusion. This presidential advi5<'r doe! not know the Democratic parly quite well enough to write the conclusion at this early <late hut he does feel confident t.hat lhf' choice w11t finally lie hr.twetn Humphrey anrl l\rnnrrl.v. His 111dgn1ent "'3S nuiclc ;i couple of 1nonlhs ;ign ancl rvt'rylhin~ lhttl ha~ h:ip1)rn('d ~inrc !rnds !(i s!rrngt!J('ll 11. ThC' <lny drcnrn breaks b:ick 10 rc<1l1ty, nf C"Our~c. 1f Scn<1 !or l\1 u~kit' !!hnuld ri5e frnn1 hi~ ~lump. ano. 011 thr bn~is of a poll or 1wo shO\'.'ing he could bcaL Nixon. Hi charil Wilson sweeps tile pres1denl1 al prunane:;. Reality a!so brea ks through if a deadlocked ronvenl1on should decide !hill Senator Kennedy's popul:ir appeal rli:;pcls lhe shadow of Chappaquiddick. or if Sen. Henry M. Jackson moves out of the dark horse catcgor}'. l\l eanthnc, it does no harm 1f Senator llumphrcy pursues the polili('s or happiness in his 61 st year e1•en though at the end of the road hi s nom ination 11·uu!d n1ake certain another version of the. 1963 t.1cCarthy tun1ult. If Humphrey \\'ishes to he .1 power 1n Democratic poli tics, 1vh1('h hr. does, he has little? alternat ive lo hi s pre5rnt course o( acting like. a candida te and trying to lend 10 1h1s act the air or cred1h1!1ty IT JS HARO TO Si\Y exactly where l1umph rey lies 10 1he Den1ocratic political spcclruin, but one th111g 1s certain. Ue is cast agauisl thr. far \C'l1 which is trying lo niovc 1n and gain control of the Den1ocrat1c n1ai:hinery and the party's pol itical doctrine. t.1uskie·s drift to the left is evide11C'e or the trend, \,efli sh clements are gathering around ::>coa lor 11cGovcrn. rormer Senator i'l t<:arlhy 1s making attempLi to mold the doctrine of the party. Also on the' periphery arc Ramsey Clark, Arth':I( Schlesinger Jr., Joh n l\ennelh Galbra1~, John Ga rdner and a dor.en others w desire a new party and a new poli\' 5 lea~·1n0?. rar behind the con t r o I L d conven\1nn v.•hieh nominated Humpti/ey in l!IGB lntl blotting out all Democittic memory oir Lyndo,, 8 .. Johnson. ... lL This 1~ the fight in which ~Lor As Ele1ne1ital as Life,/ No longer dOC?s an eleclric po11er plant appear on the scene li ke a m,~sterious blac k box. A great deal of prrHminary publicity accompanies ils construclion. Company officials tell a!Jout thr type of plan t contemplaled -nuclear If' fossil fueled -and e:"(pJain in 1n1nutc drlail how it works. A leaflet of a Colorado power 1'tmpany Is typical. It prese nls a sc-Gematic drav.•ing or the company·s ne"·e.~I steam electrie generating st ation. The •rawing show5, in a simplified manner, ~xactly how a coal-fired power plant wOflu and how it minimizes, so far as po!Si11e.. any adverse impact on air and water huallty. Similar expl11nalory program:; a rt associate11 "'ilh cons t r u c ! iio n vf J;<'nl!ra ling plants all over the coufl try. IN TU ~: PACIFIC Norlhv•est.~hcre a nrv.• nuclear faci lity )s under con~ ru ction nn the Columhia River by invest '1'.lwncd po1vr.r ron1 panif's, a con1 pan.v offir.i(l l spoke nt i Chamber or Cofnmerce • .Guest Edito · ·] ' ' j meeting where he explained ~ ety fea- tures of the nuclear plant and ~escribt~ • why nuclear power developnfnl must continue v.·ithoul interruption./ Nuclear power i5 5moke\ess end non1itlng. As time goes on, It will vide the energy for recycling wastes d garbage dlsposa l, It will furni sh the eld::tric pov.·e.r for the desalting of sea water~ le. POWER CO~fPANY ~f'IO smen arc helping lo educatr people to fact that energy is thr key 10 ru turr li e on Earth. Know!edge ;ind undt'rstan4ing of the machines th:i1 proituce it . suih as elC'Clr1c power plants, i11 as elclll{'n~ as under- JJtanding lhc functionini; of heart in a human body. lnllustrla l >lews l\t:vJcw l!umphrey 11·111 ha vr In laht• a lc<1d1ni: p11rL on behalf uf lhe C"onvcn11ond! E!einenrs of \he \)rn1 ocral1r par1v v.h'l u1n11na terJ him <ind suppol'h''d h11n f11r dcctlon. THE FfGHT \\'ILL t:0:\11:: rir~1 in 1hc t·redenl ial s comn1i1ter anrt lhc p!alfnr111 committee. The. credentials comn11L1 11e \Viii decide thos!! contests on SC'ill •n;:. delegales arising from the McGovern. Hughes inspired llberalizat1011 of thr ron- ventlon rules. some of which are 1n con· fl1ct with stale laws. In the platform commlltee will arise 1111 lhose bitter divisions ranging ac ros~ Arncrican life on race, la\v and order. and on lhe Viet nam war which \\'as escalated in Democ ral1c administrations. Huniphrey has a record of his ov.·n to defend and he cannot do ii n1erely as a rehabilitated Senator from t.iinnesota content with !hr. dign ity and security of his restored position. But he can play .=- leading' part by rcstorini:: the credibility of his presidential potential, which he is now doing . Appa,rently he is ha ving some success. There is no leek or financial backing. A recent nieeting with finan cial angels on his 60th birlhday illuslralcd that. Nor is there any lack of will on the se nator's part. He is off and running. --·--- Monday, June 21. 1971 Tiie editorial pope of th!!" Daily Pilot setks to inform and stim- ulate readers by presenting thi3 newspaper's opin ions a11d com- mentary on topics of interest oM slgni/1conce, by 1>rovirl1ng n /orion for tile expression ()j our readers' opinion.~. ancl by prest11ti11g t11r. diversr viru1- pninl.! nf informtd ob.1rrvf'Tir 01ifl spok.cJ rncn on topics of Oit day. Robert N. Weed, Publisher MondaJ', J11nt Zl . 1971 DAILY PILOT 7 Our best refrigerators are on isale! No extra charge for color! I I J, Floor care things .on sale! Sale 4488 Reg. 49.95. Sava 5.07 Upright vacuum beats, sweeps and cleans s1mullaneously. Features 2-speed motor and height adjustments for in door/outdoor, short, tong and shag rugs. Attachment tool kit for above vacuum, $10. Sale 39 88 Reg. 44.95. Save 5.07 Custom canister vacuum complete with 4-pc. al!achment set and tool carrier in easy reach. Canister ha:s large ---~ wheels for maximum \.;;,-~. ~abil ity. Oust bags ;~./! _ included • . . '"-.,_ Sale s32a Reg. 359.95. Sn• 31.95. Penncr11t9 Imperial 1&.6 cu. ft . refrigerator. 139 pound freezer capacity, completely frost free, 5 cantilever shelves. White, coppertone, avocado or harv~ gold ••• color costs no more at Penneys. With 1utom1Uc Ice maker. Reg. 399.95. Sele $388. Save 31 .95 Sale prices effective tht'ough Saturday. Sa.le s459 Reg. 499.95. Save 41.95. Penncre1t1t 21 cu. fl. side by side refrigerator. 236 pound freezer capacity, completely frost lree, 4 cantilever shelves. White, coppertone, avocado or harvest gold ••• color co'sts no more at Penneys. With automatic Ice maker. Reg. 539.95, Sale $498. Save 4t.95 Sale $408 Reg. 449.95. Save 41.95. Penncre1t• tmperlal 1&.5 ca. It. side by side refrigerator. 213 pound freezer capacity, completely lrost free, 4 cantilever shelves. White, coppertone, avocado or harvest gold .•• color cosls no more at Penneys. With autometk: Ice maker. Reg. 489.95, Sala $448. Save 41.99 --=-= -==i::====--=-- Freezers at our special low prices. enne111 The values are here fN«Yday. '--- Your choice, $166 Penncreat• upright freezer. 435 pound capacity, 3 fixed "cold" shelves, 4 door shelves. White. Penncr11t • 15 cu. ft. chat freezer. 540 pound free zer capacity, movable basket, tooted divider. White. Rtlrigw•lars, froonrs and •tcuums •••ilablt •I these stores: FASHION ISLAND, Ntwport Center; HUNTINGTON CENTER , Huntington Boach. Uso Penntys Time Payment Plan. • . 8 OA.tl Y PILOT Monday, June 21, 1971 CHECKING •UP• Demoerats 'May Balk' \ GOP Fears Medi-Cal Reform Defeat A11cl101·age Most SAC'RA~!ENTO (UPI ) - 'rhe author of Gov. Honald Reagan 's Medi·Cal "reform" plan s a ys A s !e1nbly Democrats niay balk at ap- proving the proposal because Hiey fear !hf' $600 mlllion pro- gram does nol conlaln enough Ex1Je11sive City Chavez May Set Boycott B~· L. \I. BOYi> prl'Sf'nt the !1t!le lady \\1th the 0:'11.' T HAT LIST of c-1l1es ring. ~ald 10 be 1hf' mnst expensive •·r.JV E YOUR~"ELf a little YUMA, Ariz. fUPI) Cf'sar Chavez is threatening to have his United F' a r m \V or k er s Organizing Com- n11ltce lead a nationwide l:io}Coll of c;inl:.iloupes. 111 ]lit' 111 n:111on"1de. ~ea tt)e now rank~ '-11 ( San Fran- t'1.~ro ,'\r1 :I. Huriululu '\o 1 and Anrhor:1gr .\~, I llEA!t 1:-.: .\ti \'ll. thf' C'~u1 :11111ib<1! t•ats (JJJf~ cncnlll':>. int' 11idoc;111111b;1I f'lllS oln!Y fril•ndS 0 U r l ..'Hlj.(UCI~(' "n1an /"('IXJt\f.'d th:1L And rnut·h rnore. But I don't \\:Jn1 lo d\\t'JI unit.. \\'HY IS IT the )11ung Jad1e~ along 1he Prcif1c cua.~! 11 C'ar out fc11•er ra1rs nf st1>c"k1ngs tha n do the girl.~ !ln 1he 1\llan!ic l"oast '' A 110"(' 1n;1kC'r :.a~·s ~o. BU! 111thou1 <'"JJlanatiun. C'Olor tesl. ·· suggested Cednc J\dams. that lilerar y genrleman \\'ho investigal!'d many an odd phenomtnon. "f'refe re.n ces. research re1·eals. are as f o I Io w 5 lnlelil"t."lUl'JS of both SC:tes go !(Ir blue, athletes preftr red. e~ohsts pick yellow. convivial pe.rsons ha1•e a yen for orange, and the lo\'elorn. ble.~s their little hearts. revel in crimson.'' 'fhe threat came as a result of a CQnltact dispute with the F. fl. l!OURUC Co., which the union is picketing here and in California. Chavez s<1id he would c;;ill a boycott if Hougue does not sign a contract with lhe union. Y o11 r queslio11s <l?Jd com· :n1enrs ore welcomed a1ut As Chavez talked with in!/l be iised in Clieckiua newsmen the pHst Wl'Ckl'nd , high school and l' o t I e g e tip tclleret'er PO S s i bl c. students plc ked cantalouf)('s in :\)I ASt\EIJ \\'II'' I ht Please address your letters the field. rl'placing farm firstborn son usuHll)' tends to 10 I.. J.1. Boyd, P.O. Box workers who picketed the ))c more Sl'lfish or the 1875 , Ntivport B each, Hougue farm. The 350 students ~ oungsters. 'rhars too strong -=9=2=6=6="=· =========w="='='='=;=d=l='='="=h='="="===;I a word, selfish. Still. the fr firstborn son is definitely apt to dcmons1rate a greater degree or that th ing called 1 self-interest Schol ars wh o s!udy such m<itters contend ii n1ay be why lhe oldest boy so often is the mosl successful. CUSTO:'\IEll SERVICE: Q. ''The bartender bets a. round there was ;it least one U.S. President v.·ho played pro- fessional b<isebal!. Can you 1erif.v"" A. Tl'!! the bartender! tn Sl'I rhcrn up . \Villiam H(•W<ll'd T;ifl was once offered 1 a contract to pi1ch ror the Cio- c1nnati Reds. bu t he declin- ed .. , Q. "How small is the sn1allest bear?"' A. Under- :;\and a full-grown ant bear rnuld si! JUS! fine in the palm nf .l"our hand. Never saw one uf tho~e. though. TH lllf'~ ()UT Of fOUR ("1\11..ens in Au stralia can drive !(1 the ocPan 1n an hour. And occasionally do. no do\lbl. .. "".'JEVEfl 1\IARRY a man with damp hands,"' a d v j s es r.ladame Daria ux , suc- rinrtly ... A GOOD WATCH- 1)()(; in old Home was 11·orth more money lha.n a human sl;1ve .•. A.J\I TOLD a I f1ndu "'ife never utters her Jiusb;:ind 's nan1 r. \Vhy not? ... AN LX PEllT on card games ~<i.v); a superior poker player 11 (m·t bluff rnore frequently l han once every lfl hands. OPEN QUESTION: \Vhy did the oldtin1e German drinking! mugs have lids? TO ONE \\'O~IA N o r1 another. thcre"s a single th1 n1::\ a fellow has to ('xplain :ill of his life. \\'hen he's a S\\lfl lW1 in rugged tennis shoes, a hOQming hus1ncs..:.man, a ret1r£'d plulnsopher in th£' £'lubroon1. 1rs th is: \Vhy he d1cln'1 gel hnme earlier. Our LQre and \\'<ir rnan suggests ~nu give-this seriou.~ lhough1. Beauty Bulletin from Penneys: New "5-pin" perm! With this "Balsam Plus" perm, five pins is all the setting you'll ever need. Includes shampoo, cut and set. 1000 Fashion frosting special. 12" NEWPORT BEACH ~-­--..... n!' HUNTINGTON BEACH -.. -i;;.., .• , Jo<l -.. :1.l r/1 yc1un.r.; fellow. bcfor'~''_~y~oo'.'.'L---,================,--,==='I "'" I Sears I H•O .. Oot . ...U. o•D(.A. Keeps thirigs cleaner without e(fort, elimi· nates bath tub rings. YOUSAVEMOi\EY Soap and cloUtlng last longer. G"11le I• Baby'1Sld11 ~rnoo1hrr. E•Jlc:r Slaa"tt •·ert •'rtlh 1itd t..i t•• OhltN Sparkle Ask Aboal San Convmient Credit Plans Compltle JanallatJoa Available! Jasl A1i! Buena Park 8150 La Palma Ave . Ph . 8%8-4400 So. Coast Pia.ta 3333 Bristol St. Ph. 540-3333 moriey to prevent more cut-a 10 percent cut in the .amount maintenance organiiallons," backs next year. , paid to provider! and ln '!'he organizations would ht Assemblyman Willia1n P. "'none ssential" services In similar lo group health plans, C a n1 p be J l ( R-ll 11c1efl(la l>ecemher tn sa \/e a 11 but designed l'ipecifically for Heights). chairman of 1he welfare r t e i pie n l s a nd beaJth committee, said Suncliiy estinialf'd $J40 nHlliou. 'l'he v.'orkers who are not on l Democrats suggest add ing u1> services art' scheduled lo be welfare bul are loo llOO r to to $200 millioo more to Ille re1nslated July I. pay ex!ensive medical bills. plan lo guarantee it "'ill ht' The "rel11rn1" p1:1n 1\•ould The organizations w o u I d i adequately runded. not pr~vl'nt the J!OV(•rncr fron1 contract with the st ~oh1 1r1 pro- •·r am conl'erncd ;.it this l'u!ting back st>rvtt'es 1f ~le.di-vide for thf' medical needs or point that Democrats arc Ca l ran short of n1oney, Medi-Cal plltients al a f!u1 goi ng to want to pul more However, Can1pbtll s aid rate. Is Tarzan around? see women's sec tion to ddy! money in it than i~ available," doc tors ;u1d hospitals could Recipient:-; could r 11hcr join I said Campbell. 111·oid being affl'cled by futu re the heallh plan or cont inue to '-========================-======= ~T_h_•_•_d_m_;_,._·,_1r_a_H_oo_o_r_de_r_•_d_c_o_1_s_•_l_1h_r~y fo~'~"~''~d:_'~'h:':'':'h::_~':':'~lh:•'.:.."f•:m"'.'ilyc.::d:oc:l:o:r· _____ = _______________ ~------ Sew it for fall. Colorful fabrics at practical prices. Polyester double knit In textured and jacquard weavea. Fashion colors. 58/60" wide. 499 yd. 1 OOok acryfic Super Kashmir crepe in bold, bright prints and solids. Washable, wrinkle resistant. 45'' wide. prints solids Pen n-Prest8 Fortretll- 298 198 polyester/cotton Bellwether print and solids in bold fall colors. Machine washable. crease resistant, maximum shrinkage 2%. 4 5" wfde. pr;nts 16 9 sohds 1 5 9 enne111 The values are here every day. ' ' !, ' CHARGE THESE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE! - QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi (0 ""'• 1._ .. :;,-l>-4'•. 1--1?/L \1.'u,fd n,I," ,.._,...,,i. · "My peak ('arrllog-s years turn ou t to be my ha.rdcsl- working yea.rs, I hadn't counted on. that." New Miss Califorriia Likes Lib-To Point SANTA CRUZ (AP) -Nc1\'- l.v chosen \11ss C;d1forn1a says she is against the war in Vif'l· n;in1 and in Fa\·or of 1\•omcn's Hberatio11. '"up lo a point " pageant's 48·ycar history. for the talent part. she pcrforined ;i grn1nastit' ballet dance with a SpanJSh then1c. Activist Asl\.s Visit To State Mon!l.iy, Jun~ 21. 1971 DAIL V 1'1L0i 1 Big Budget Battle Climax Nearing· in Sennte ' SACRAMENTO f AP) -Tht> la~l wtek by lhl! Asse.mbly is costs. Democral-" insist it s ,ll!\\'ernor in lining ile1ns out of fo.1~i·Ca1. estimated from $98 Slate Senate is trying to adopted. That "orks out If! much n1ore 111 thr rl.'d. !hi.' budget 10 $110 per person. Thal'• decide this ~·eek ir it "tll $1.734.25 for a st<il•slll'.<&llv At the olht"r ('lld or !Iii" 'fhat ml!an.~ ii is likely thl' followed by assistance lo local make you fork over $3JJ J5 average ram1iy of hve in linal budget H.eagan signs will schools at $85 pee pecsoo, t t ·" t ,. t'f bud"et scale. the $7 48 billion nex year o u1e sta e govern· ... a 1 orn1a . b probably total ;ust a little Jess higher education at around ment. or if !hi! ficure ll'ill ht> 111e t"·o other fig ures are plan drafted bv Deinocrats un than $7 billion. If so. thf' $~'.!. local :i.nd state road con· SEAT'TLE (UPI) _ Leslie S.146.85 per person -or even v.·hal you gel by div id ing GO\'. the Senate Finance Corn1n1\lcc llverage Cahforn.ian will pay struct1on at about $65 and all Baron has asked c o u r l $360.99. ReRgan's original budget pro· v.·as reiected by one Dcino. fur it this 1vay: other state activities addin( perrnission to visit her parents 'That is what is 11.t stake for posal or $6.74 billion and the i:rat on that C'O~rnittee. 11 110 About $8() in statt' incornr up to about $50 per resident. in <;alifornia before going to the individual <..:a1Lforn1a rest· S('nate F'inance Committee's voted with Republicans to hold taxes. SlOO in sales taxes . S56 1------ New York to face bon1b plot dent in the long state budget $7 48 billion proposal a1nong it in toinniitlee bet·ause 1t \\a.i in gasoline and vehicle taxes, charges , her attorneys sald baltle coming to a cl imax the :?0,218 ,000 Californinns. so fur out of balanct•. $10 in inhcritancl' ;ind gift \:1x 1 KJDS Sunday. uext ID days in the CapituL But the ReaJ:a n budgl'I is St'natP Hepubhcans are not es, $12 on c1gari:tte taxes, $7 Miss Bacon, HI. was brought The $346.85 figure is the one nuw conceded by th'' P~µteted to put up loo btJ.: ;1 on liquor taxl'S, S~ ill the ratl' LJKE her~ frun1 Washington. DC, getting the n1ost attcn!1on lo· llC'publican g o v c r no r · s light iibout lhe tot<'!I size of the track ,1nd $55 Lo $60 in 1nd1rM·t to testily before a U.S. distrk1. day. Thal is lhe per capita assistants 10 be al least $304 budget ;approved hy llicir til.~es pnssed onto the publie court grand jury investigating cosl of state goevrnn1ent fnr 11111\ion out of balance now house -so long ;is lhe-rf' isn 't by businesses. UNCLE LEN lhe f..1arch I bombing or I.he ne-xt vear if the $7 OJ b1ll1on becau.9e of lower revenue l'Ontrol language in the bud.':et On lhe spendin.c: side. bii;:-I nation's ca,iitol. ver;;10n of he budlilel approved f'Stimates 11nd highfor welfart 1hal ~e\'rrety restricts lh<" i;tf's1 nu!lay 1s welfare and 'The antiwar activist was ,_:.::c::_::::_:::_::::._::.::~:_::c::__:::::._:__::::::::::::..:::::_.:::'.c:::____:::.:::___.::_::___::__::.::'____::::_:::::___:::: _ _::::_::__:_:::::_____::__::::::.:___:::_:=:==========i freed on bail last week and ordered to be in New York by June JO 10 faee a charge that ::;he was involved in a plot lo l)\>lllh a f\lanhal!an bank. J\liss B;icon·s de I ens c <:ounsel said they expected a decision from Fedrral Judge <:eorge Boldt by 'l'uesday on v.·hether she could travel to Atherton, just soulh of San Francisco. to visit her ramil y The teen-ager was rel eased fron1 1ai! ;if\er posting bail on !he New York charge. She had been locked up on contempt chal'gcs when she refused lo answer quest ions aboul the <·a pitol bombing. Her release "·as a result. of a 9th U.S. C1rcu1 t Court of Ap- peals 1"Ul1ng !hat she be (reed on her 01-1·n rcco1'ln1zanec pen- rling appeal of the contempt citation . Carpet sale! Save 13o/o to 20°/o Sole prices effKtitt thru Saturday ottly! .. f hope "'C g(•t OHi Of \11rl- nam as soon as pos~i blc.'· s;utl Ca rol_1'n Stoner. 18. a bruneHc frnrn San .\Talco Countv 1\·ho fl('fe;.itcd 34 other enntPstan1s to be narncd :\11ss California !971 Saturday n1ghl "It isn't right lha1 \\•e"rc 1herr." she tolfl ;1 news con· I ere nee. "bu1 the boys who ha\'e fought dcs1•r1 c all the support 11·r can gil"c." Mass Slayi11g Suspect Re1nains i11 Hospital jail ward a1 Sutter County General Hospital Friday after complaining of che.~l pains. The Bcl111011L (·ocd 1s 5-fooi.;,, weighs l !5 1xiunds an d n1ei'1s11res :~."i-2~<15. She wt1s 11·1nncr 1n both thl' l;ilcnl and hathing su11 ("nn1pe1ition, a f('al unmatcllrd 1n lhr bc;iuty YUBA CITY IUPJ) -Juan \1 Corona. 37. suspected killer of 25 transienl farm \VOrkers, rcn1 inrd hospilalizen today wl11lp coroner"s de p u 1 i es issued a puhlic ;ippc<1I in a1- tcmpls Lo identify the lnst seven bodies. Corona. a farm 1<1bor con- traetnr, was adml1ted to !hr tlis attorney, Hichard Hawk 0r Concord . said doctors brlir1'ed Corona was ::;uffering tro111 tension. Bui a ne\1·s blackout 111a s in1pnscd. and rif- ficial~ declined 10 discuss the hoi::pi1aliza!ion. ' Save up to 25~o on custom upholstery and slipcover fabrics. '---.,F..-or custom reu pholstering, you can choose fr?m ~4 different pallerns in a tremendous range of color.comb1nafl?ns. Fo; custom slipcovers. choose from a beaut1lul collectron of 100% cotton prints and solids. Regular IO't'f' Penney prices for our finest fabrication. Call collect (714) 523-6511 for our shop-at-home service, free. ~!'!!fin!fl oocor1to now! Use Penneys lime payment plan. " Reg. 7.99. You save S60 on 50 sq. yds. Now 339.50, reg, 399.50. 'Echo' give ~ yow 1he tvAu ty ol '~f'l lv ~h' uoderloot. Kod .. I f\/ r>Olye•!er p1I., 9•ve1 the eitc,.J!enl '"~''"'"ll!' lo lerp il looking beourol vl! In 17 c olnr< Reg. 11 .50. You s.a•e 115.50 on SO sq. yds. Now 459.50, reg. 575. 'T•opic l ~le' i~ o nylof'I shog sode~p. 10 1hick ond rich thot it co" make over Iii• look of ony moder" roomt 16 5tun"1"g fT•· r olor ellects.. "' Sale6?q~d. Reg, 7.99. You•••• S60 on SO aq. yds. Now 339.50, reg. 399.SO. 'Whisper' is o lw1 h, n•w look -"or os \hoggy 011hog, not 01 formol os plush A reo! foot-cuddle r, in 14 1mo1hin.g colors ll::odel® polyes1e1. Pad and professional installation available at low Penney prices. Bring ill y our floor measureme nts for a no obligation carpet estimate. Do it yourself Wall-lo-wall shag wi!hout co:sll y installation. Carpet tiles make It easy. Nylon pil e. Foam backing witt1 non-curling self· adhesive. 12:' x 12'" size 11les. 74.52 buys enoua;h carpet tiles for a 9 'x 12' room ennelfl The values are here every day. Foe c"pet ost;m•te c•ll tod•y: FASHION ISLAND, Newpod Centec (644 .2313); HUNTINGTON CENTER , Hunt ;ngton Be•c h (892-7 771 ). Use Penneys T;me P•yment Pl•n. • • : ! • • • • • • ' ~ t • I \ r J8 DAILY PILOT Mofld.i.y, Junt 21, 1971 ------- Family Chows Down on Meals Doctors Report Way That Relieves Itching, Pain Of Swollen Hemorrhoidal Tissues OLYt.1PIA. 'l\'ash !API - Like thousands ef • t he r Washin&loo fa1n1he.'\ ii n Olympia couple and their rour children s<ll down la~\ "·ec~ 10 meals costing an average or 28 cents per person. That is the ·amount lhc Washington Division of Public Assistance sciys a fan1ily of six can spend for groceries and rehited items en a "'rlfare allowance. But !his w;is 110 11lll:ire case The head of lhr fa1111J.v Lud Kran1er. earns SJ.'i 000 a ~ear as scere1ary of !>a!,,. \'lash1ngton '.;;; third t11ghes1 elective officr "\\Ir decided lu du !I bccaust we "'l'ff' ehallt'n!!•'d to." said Kran1rr llr explained that during lhe 1971 lcgislat1\'c session he y.·a~ talking to a group of ll'elfare recipients \\'hl'n one asked , him . "Do you kno11 11h<il 1t"s like? Have you ever been 011 \\·elfarr" .. Now Kr;imer and his fan11h kno\\' .,..·hat it's like. <'Ind they"re glad 10 bf' gelling bac-k to steak. corn on the cob and ' betore dinner · You l'<ln eal relatively 11<·ll. .. Kramer se1<l. ··but 1t"s awfully, awfully dull ·· They .... ·ent on the welfare d1el lcisl f.londay and wound 11 up Sunday night. ti.lrs. Kran1cr \\"ent shopping three times. spc11d1ng $19.76, $7.02 and fl· $Ii.SO less than the prescribed allowable for a family of six a .,..·eek . Although a 1ncnu p I a n Kr;.i111rr and his wife Pa!ril'1a obtained frum a 1vel fare group l"<Jlll'd for w<iter, toast and rofft•t• tor breakfast. lht> t\rd111er s round they eouJJ afford 1.1stant br eakiasL made 1111h powdered ntilk. \\'herr the plan called for h<1n1 hocks , f.·lrs. Kran1er tuu11d ,. hqn1 on sale . She found that lamb s h a n k , prestribcd 1n the plan. was S2.06 a pound so she bought chicken instead. Kran1er took bis luncl1 to the office in a brown bag, with a rc<tnut butter and jelly or tuna !1 ~h ::;andw ich. an apple or or<inge and a couple "'I cookies. If he had t«J go tl'I a hus1ness lunch. he ate in hi.• • f ~. ·t , ·. <i )~, - ' You r child's plwwgraph can win a spectacular ·2,soo.00 SHOPPING SPREE IN OUR STORE! And that's just Olle of the hundred.s of valuo.bk prizes and gifu tatall.ing •2s,ooo.oo in the 37u. Natiorwl, ChiUlren's PHOTOGRAPH CONTEST! JOI CAii Wiii OllE OF THESE llATIOllAI. l'llZU: Fir•t Priu ••. 12,500.00 Shopping Sp"• &cond Prize •. 11 ,500.00 Shopping Spn' Third Prize •• 11,000.00 Shopping Spr« Fourth Prize • • • 1500.00 Shopping Spree SO Fifth~. ea. 1100.00 Shopping Sp-.· •••• POITUU: SOLID STATE UDID~S ff,_ lllWIDS Of tlOfitOMal llDITIDll Wll "I a ... JG"ft'll • Shopping Spnoe ••• ,.., •paid· upcl>up-lhat leuyoa bay wb.-you Wut! It'• a map lo eoler .nd e111J to win. Let 111 ~your ehiJd and we'll enter a doplicat. ill the Cook.t al no at:ra charge. Complete d&- taile and rul• in oar Photograph Studio. Big NJ. ioo.-md kiddie-mobile gi ven to merycobt.uot. .... : .. c 1> 1,Cl!Ml....tt.ArldN,.....,,...._ ...... s,..w..-• .-u...udpboloer-pb---.Fwa••~: -IDT 7 . 495o-•JOC-9"CIALI portraas w1a..U•lilll , ___ v. ____ _,) l\nnetit l'Ul.L•ttTOlll o ..... ~t.tlr (ltf'!~r ? ......... lll ·•llj HEW,.0111 l •.IClll '••11.0n l•l•nd 'fld l'IOC• U4-:l11 011~,,_GE ··1~, C•lv" l ll·ftfl MU,..flHGl O,,_ .111.IClt .. ., .. 1.noten c~n,., )n<I !lctl)<, tf11111 ot11ce <rnd bad cof!t·e at the restaurant. When business t:alled him out of town for the d<1y, his brown bag wen! with h1111. The ctuldren. f.lary 14. Bill . 13. Ann, 12. <1nd John, 7. also carried brown b:tgs , passing up the 55-cent school lw1ches. The Kran1ers left beer in tbe refrigerator untouched a n d abstained fron1 drinks before dinner. For Kramer's 39th birthday Thursday night. they celebrated with spaght>lti and an 88-cen! bot1le of red \v ine. The Kramcrs said their! 111;1111 coinplaint \vas that the welfare diet wa s too bland and ! loo st arth)' The l'htldren and their reported she IObl two pounds. father did nol We I g h .. , used to hear people on tbemselves as the t!xperiment .... elfare say how n1uch they 'd ended. b"1 1'¥\rs. Kramer love !o be able to bile into a ALL·DAY CLASSES Enroll Now Fall Semester Kindergartea thru 8th Grade •Tea.china; the 4 R's with phonics • Ooor·lO·Ooor B11s Senic e •Before and Alter Sthool Care •Reasonable T11ition """" JUICY ~ltGk," s 8 id Kr;.1mer ··1 never rr<illy underblood that Nrllv I do HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS 111 Fountol11 Voll ey 168l5 lroo~llunt Street 962-1312 Keep yowr t;liitdrir11 111 IJOOd ho11d' First Applications Give Prompt, T e1nporary Relief in Many Cases 'l'here"i. ;i 111o~t ellcctive n1edi -1 c.1tion that in n1<1ny cases ~ivcs pro111pl relil'f for hours from such hemorrhoidal dis-! corn fort and at:lually helps I s hrink s we lling of hemor· rhoidal tissues caused by the inf\:in\n1a tion. '!'hr ans~·er is doctor·\('St£.-d Preparation tr. T here's no other hemor• rhoidal formula like Prepara- t ion H a nd it needs n o prescr iption. Ointment or suppositories. Nearl y Everyone Listens lo Landers Dinette sale! Set the table with the money you save. I /' I Ji ~· '· ' "· .... ' ' . • ' ,! : : " : .·:·,; -.: • 'I''''' .:',•, ,'',': ·.; '1' ', ~ ... :;-,:;:,·':·: .· . ' ' ., '' .... >., ''l I . ·.: ' ',' .. ' . ~ ' .. ' ' ' . ' ...... : .' .. L 1 ,' •' ,, '•' • I ' ·' . ''• I J, ----· I ·'-.. .. ". \, t' i~ l, ' ,. I I . t / I v, / ... Sale$99 Reg. $119. 7-pc. Modern slyle dinette liflt with oval table. 6 high-back chairs are covered 1n vinyl with gold floral and walnut grain patterns. Table lop 111easures 35•· x 48" and extends 10 72'" w1H1 2 lcaves included . • Sale$139 Reg. S159. 5-pc. Modern style dinette set wilh p lastic I able rop and lubl1lar steel legs. Chairs have !!y1cnc plas11c bac krests \v1th tubular steel legs and vinyl i..ovcr cd seats 111 b!ack poppy design. Table lop measures 36" x 48"" and extends lo 60" with leal included Sale$159 Reg. s 189. S·pC . Spanish slyle dinelle sel with octagonal 1ab!P top :ind w1ouQh1 iron !rim. 4 high-back chairs have :o.uppc:;i It'd v111yl seals. Table top measures A: ~ <1~· ;i.n tJ '.>.1,.,nds lo 66 "" \v1th 2 lravcs 1neludcd . S<t1C prices ellechve lhru Salurdi!y. ennelfl 1 he values are here every day. Avo;'.,ble of these •lores: FASHIO N ISLAND Newport Cen ter: HUNTINGTON CE NTER. Hun t;n 9t on Booch. Shop Sundoy, loo, 12 lo 5 P.M . • f 'A."'ILY CIRCl/S r..,_"" ..... ~. ·-·-.. bu Bii ICemae til gave that plant a drink of water . Do you hear it swo llowina?" Stude11ts Get Boost At Boarding Schools WASI-llNGTON (AP ) being educated together,'' What happens when a high Berkeley said. "One from a school student is taken fron1 a social sector seeking power Jov•er incoinc situation and and control over its own placed in an exclusive private destiny and the other from a boarding school"! sector which traditionally has Sponsors of a six year olc.I held inf I u enc e . Each modest, little p u b 1 i c i z c d group ... brings understanding experiment called A Better and mutual respect to the Chance-ABC.give this answer: decision making process." -Five of every six students Since the fir st 63 students in the procram graudate. \1·erc admitted to the program, -Ninety seven percent of said Garvey Clarke, black ABC graduates go on lo New York lawyer and ABC c0l\egcs, including Y a 1 e , director of development. "the Harv a rd , Dar t rnouth. trend has been to poorer and Columbia, Co rnclL Chicago poorer yo ungsters who do not and the University o f come from a tradition of Pennsylvania. education." -Al least 70 percent finish Slightly· more than 300 e-01lege . and sizable numbers students are recruited' each enroll in graduate schools. year. ABC estimates it costs Originally organized by 2J approximately $10,000 to Northeast private schools, the educate one student for three program is nonprofit and 75 years :plus an addUional $1 ,000 percent financed b5' the 100 for expenses to cover a participating schools th a t summer transitional program. include Phillips Exe t c r ABC raises about $1 mill ion Academy, Miss Hall's School. annually through foundations, Deerfield Academy, Th c corporations and individual Choate School, Brooks School donations. Clarke s a id . and St. Paul's School. Contributions have amounted National in scope, the ABC to n1ore than $4 million since program is aimed at ninth a~d the program st ar led. lllth grade students In Participating schools have situations that seem to rule spent. nearly $9 million. out academic success. Berkeley said ABC receives Although 76 percenl of the about t,000 applications each participating students a re year. Some 10 to 350 prospects black. the program al s 0 with the highest potential are includes whites and such chosen and offered to the minor ity groups as American participating schools. Each Indians, Puerto R l c a n s • school has the right of Mex:ican Americans a n d rejection. otheys. The student:; comc'l---'---------- from rural as \\•ell as urban -----------: areas. In 1970, 44 percent of the Incoming class were from families receiving v.·c lfare and 52 percent from b r o k en homes. ABC President \Villiam D. Berkely says the schools also benefit from the experin1ent. "Two leadership groups are Coast Author Has Story In Magazine A story entitled "The Diver" l'lbout a young boy's attempt to dive into the sea from the La Quebrada cliffs near Acapulco. ;ind \11ritlen hy Isabelle Zeigler, 556 N. Coast Highway LaR"una Beach. ap- pears in the June-July i~suc ~! "Highlights f or Child ren magazine. Miss Zeigler is a free lance writer who~ works have ap- peared in "McCalls." "Ladies Home Journal," and ''South." Currently she is working on 111 scr ipt for a film about Don Piccard, wn of the famed balloonist Jean Piccard. The film, .. Teh Buoyant Lire of Don Piccard," will explore young Piccard's pro mo t Ion of ballooning as a sport. "Highlights for Children," founded in 1946, is distril;>utcd to cloctors. schools and other iostltutions and is n o t 8vailable on newsstands. MAVCO . join the fun! may company presents a model summer workshop It 's a model work- shop just for teen s. Learn all about modeling, better postu re, advanced make.up and how to commu11icate with your audi- e nce. And you'll model in your very own fashion show. Five week n1 odel workshop 8.50 Regi ster now in the May Co Coed or Campus Shop. Classes Begin: rnay co buena park, Wednesday, June 30, 7:00 P.M. rn ay co soulh coast plaz<i, Tuesday, June 29, 7:00 P.M. I f .. ~-··· • I I ' I ~'" I I ! ·- I l • I l • l ! r I l I ! i I I• I ! 1 I I I I \ ' f l f i . ' ,, ''/.' • >' • ~ . 1' • J • ~ondat, June '21, 1'J71 -.. ·-~ ··- .. • > I .f • • ... • DAIL V PILOT U l i l i l i i I I I I I I i l i i , I i ' ' I l I I I l • once-a-year famous brands foundation sale a favorite bra and girdle .... two specials from Vanity Fair The Juliet bra and Tu lip girdle. Just a touch of padding in the bra. A-B-C c ups, white, black, beige, pink, blue, Girdle 1n white only. 2.99 to 12.50 reg. 3,50-15,00 a. lulie t bra A-B-C reg. $6, 4.95. $7, D cup in hlk, whL, b~e. b. Tulip panty girdle M-L-XL reg, $15 c. 4.50 "Every Body's~' bra B-C not sho1,·vn . SARONG d , 4.00 "Criss-C ross" bra B-C, 3.49, 5.00 D cup e. 6.50 "Body Bri ef" panty girdle. 5-M-L. f. 7,80 "Bod y Brief" underwire bra B-C 5.99, $8. D cup g. 5.00 "Trico-shape" IJra in \.Vhi!e or beige OLGA h. 6.00 "Freedom Front" bra. Sizes A-B-C i. 14.00 "Suddenly Slim" panty girdle LILYITTE j. 6 .5 0 "Fantasia" bra 38-52 B, 36-52 C-D KAYSER/PERMA-LIFT k. 3.50 "Whistles" bra I. 3.50 "Whistl es" brief m. 12.50 "Magic Open Oval " g irdle JANTZEN n. 5.50 "Second Nature" bra A-B-C o. 6.00 "Second Nature" padded bra A-B FORMFIT ROGERS p. 12.00·"Skippies" panty girdle q, 11 .00 "Skippies" regular girdle miy co foundations 44 5.95 12.50 J .50 4.49 5.49 6 .99 3.99 4.79 11.99 5.29 2.99 2.99 9 .99 4.49 4.99 9.49 8 .49 reg. 3.50-15.00 WARNER 'S r. 5.00 "Flo1,.ver Charms" bra s. 13.50 "Concentraie" panty gird le S-M-L I. 6,00 "Smoolh As You " bra 4.49 A-B-C 4.49 D cur GOSSARD u. 5.50 Flair bra B-C 4.49 $6, D cup v. 8,50 An swerette brief girdle w.13.00 Answer-Deb long leg panty gir dle YOUTH CRAFT/CHARMFIT x. 7.00 "Minimizer" bra 8-C 5.49 7.50 D-DD y. 13,00 "Hi Di ve" high lop panty girdle z. 12.00 High lop gi rd le PETER PAN aa, 4.00 "Simply Perfec t" bra. Wht., Bge ,, blk. A-B-C bb. $6 Underwired bra. Wht., bge., blk B-C 4.99 $7 D, VASSARETTE 3.99 10.99 4.99 4.99 6.99 10.49 5.99 10.49 9.99 2.99 5.49 cc. 5.00 "Mais Qui" bra 3.99 MAI D~NFORM dd. 5.00 "Tri cola sti c" bra B-C 4.19 $6 D cup 4.99 ee. 6.50 "Sea Dreams" bra B-C 5.39 7,50 D-DD 6.19 ff. 5.00 "Dreamliner" bra A-B-C 4.19 gg. 2.SO "Precious Lilli e" bra 1.B9 hh. 2.00 "Prec iou s Little" brief 1.59 may co south coo1t plaza, son diego fwy at bristol, costa mesa; 546-9321 sfiop mondoy th ru soturdoy 10 om to 9:30 pm, 1undoy noon 'til ~pm MAVCO .. -, ! J ~ .. . ._ J! DAILY PILOT MondiJ, Junt 21, )971 Board Approv es B1·idge Proj ect SAN7A ANA -A contrart lo con!trucl a bridge-over the Santa Ana Hlvcr Financing Progr11n1, \\'ith a total price Rail roll cl Gets Suecl 'Fo r Beans' SAl\'TA A~A -Floo d \\·aters that wash!.!d a\\·ay and ruined beans and grain \•alued at more than S41 ,000 have been blamed on the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad in a laYi·suit fiied this week in Orange Count y Superior Court. The Califo rnia Bean Growers Assoc ia1ion blames the railroad's fai lure to ade· quate!y maintain rai lroad beds and dit c!les in the vicinitv of its warehouse at 14972 Sand Canyon Ave .. l rvinc, for the flood s that deluged the stored crops on Feb. 23, 1969. l<ig or Jl.331.000 hav~ been ap- proved by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Given the grttn light were· -A $319,422 contract \\'Ith the Sully 1'.1iller Contracting Conipany of Oran~e to build a new Garden Grove Boulevard brld~c over the Santa Anii R.1\•er. -An agret'menl w \ I h Anaheim for lhe w1denin~ of Ba!l Road from State College Boulevard to Harbor Boulevard at an estimated cost uf $412.000. -An agreement w it h Garden Grove lo w id(' 11 Garden Grove Boulevard fron1 streets at an eslin1ated cosl of Gilbert Street to Brookhursl -An agreement v.· i t h $-146,000. An agreement \\'ilh Or- ange for the widening or Taft Avenue from f\1 ain Street lo Shaffer Street for an estimated cost of $154 ,000. CosL~ of the laHer three proj- ects are shart'd hy the counl_v and the various cities on a 50· 50 basis. W 0 11u11i Bar 0 p er11Lor Se ntence d Jur y Asks Pla11ner s' Spee dup SANTA ANA -A sJ>Cedup in considerall()n of matters before the Orange County Planning Commission h a s been suggested by the county Grand Jury. Jn a letter to the county Board of Supervisors, which was not acted upon lhis WC'ek, Jti r11 foreman D n re e n :-.1arsha!L notC'S that. a l present. thert· 1s a t.J1ne limit for insuring d1sposit1on of rnaners only in cases 111- BOYS NEED YO UR AID SANTA ANA -ln an effort lo overcome "summer slump" i)1 g Brothe.rs of Orange Coon· ty are seeking voluntce.rs to be adult friends ~a fat herless boys. "Suinrr.e.r l'an be a hard lln1c 1f you need a Big Broth<'r and thcre·s none avilab!e," Rnland Gilbert , acting ei- ecutive director said. Men 18 and older •·willing lo become involved and able to drvote a rouple of hours each "·eek'' rnay call 544-7773 for 1nfor rnation. Oc ulists T a ke R esc ue Lesso ns SANTA A.'IA -'The 11·ornan voh·ing tentati\'e tract n1aps. owner of a controve rsial Santa 'I'll<' lrtte.r suggests thal mat- Ana un·ern has been sen-ters dealing with l'ondition a\ ten<:ed to 10 days in Orange use pe r m 1 l s , adjustments , · d · ORANGE -A lll"o-lesson County Jail ror repealed viola-variances an zoning mane.rs should receive prompt action. course in mouth-to-mouth t1ons or a t•ourt order pro-The. jury also suggests the resuscitation and closed chest hibillng le\\'d conduct b:1 same time limits be appli~ to n1assages will be offered to fe1nale cnipluycs ul 1he Varn-mailers before the coun ty dentists July 9 and :10 at the pirc Hoo1TI Zoning Adminis1 rator. Orange Coun ty Med i ca I Judge Robt:rt L, Corfman The ori~inal proposal for the Center. Water sh ed Project F unds Sought SANT.ft ANA -Appllcat1on.s for federal and state funds for development of lhe 75,700-acre San Diego Creek V.'alershed have been approved by the Orange County Board of Supervisor!. The project, as oullined in a study by Lowry Engineering Scien1:e of Santa A.Ila, would 1nclud!: IJ dams and reservoirs at lhe mouths or canyo1tS and channel v.•ork to reduce erosion. Benerits seen include pro- tection from flood erosion and reduction tn sedim!:nt nowing into the Upper Nev•port Bay by 25 percent. Total estimated cost ol a five-ytar project is $4.34 n1illion. County officials hope to get $3 4 million in federal aid. The balance of $908,900 'A'Ollld be IM'gely reimbursed bv state funds. according lD Lo11o'I)' Engineering. 't;,------------Q Today, Monday, June 21 ~ i &Rbff SMNISH BINNER . I I ''"'" G'5pJc·ho -·r-.1~ ~:!s~1d. P.1dl.i v,11tn1 ''"' i I ,, ith Shrin1r, S...dlor~, CJ.1111~. S.1us:i,:.;c lnJ Chilt~ a I scr\·(·~I on~ bcJ of S:1lfron Jlicc. I Dessert, ·roasted Garlic Bread, Beverage. I Al so Serving Our Complete Gourmet Dinner I SANT'GR IA F LAMENCO GROUP & DANCERS I ! ms~~~!~~~ ! ~ 2241 W. COAST HWY., NEWPORT BEACH Y_. ~\ RISER YA TIONS SUGGESTED 646-5057 ~ ~~---------................... ~ No Contest Plea Filed By Dentist held the j<1il 1crn1 imposed on speedup was made May 18 by July 6 is the deadline for S pa n 1 s h . b o r n Conc hita Su pervisor Da vid L. Bakt!r of any dentist or dental assistant Escobar. '10. until Au~. 16 to Gardt'fl Grovr in !he wake of to register for the Orange <illow Uie tavern owner to file !he C(Jntroversy over the Sad· Cowity II ear t Association an appeal against his ruling. dlebaek Commu nity Hospital lessons. f''or information phone He found ~!rs. Escobar, _u_s~e~p_e_rm_i1. ________ .. _,_.a_oo_1_. --------------------------------------- guilty of violating Lhe terms of a stipul ation entered into v.•iLh the district attorney's uffiee in pr evious court action under the Red Light Abatement Act before Superior Court Judge Claude r..t OtA·ens. How's Yo ur Hearin g? Chicago, Ill.-A free offer of epecial interest to those v.•ho hear but do not understand v.·ords ha.~ been announced by Bf'!tone. A non-operatin~ model ol lhe smallest Belt.one. aicl ever n1ade will be given absolutely free to anyone. answering this •d\·ertisement. Try it to &ee how it is worn in the privacy of your own home v.·ithout C08t or obligation ()f any kind. It's yours to keep, frce. l t weighs less than a third of an ounce, and it's all at ear level , in one unit. No v.·ires lcad from body to head. These models are free , so we suggest you write for yours now. Again, we repeat, there i8 no cost, and cert.a.inly no obliga- tion. Write to Dept.. 28.16 , Bel- 1one Electronics Corp., 4201 W. Victoria, Chicall'o, JU. 60646. LOS ANGELES -Ne\\'port Beach dentist Dr. Joseph H. Vincent. 66 and his \\'ife, Mar- jorie. 64. ha ve entered a plea of no contest lo charges of submitting fal se income t:ix returns for the years \%.\ throug h 1966. The announcement of the plea, \\'hich admits guill. but protects the person inaking the plea from civil action, \1·as n1ade by U.S. Dist All)'. Robert L. r.teyer . Vincent who has offices al 351 1-los!Jital Road and lives at tr.922 Barum Drive. ll un- ting1on Beach. and his wife . answered to an indictrnrnt charging that they (lrt'ilted $58.000 in gross receip!s fr11m their tax returns during lhe three-year period. Alrs. Vincent v.·as office manager for her husband and kept the books. according to Arnold G. Regardie, assisfan1 U.S. attorney. --- But Judge Corltnan made ii clear that hC' is far from satisfied that lhe Red Light ('Q(fe wa~ constitutional in the lig ht of rect'nl courl decisions in the field or topless and bot- tom lr.'iS entt•rla inmenl. Judge Corrn1un reccn1ly rul- ed that nude entertainment of· !ered by the Firehouse bar in Costa Mesa \\'as not un lawful after the bar'.'i ov.•ne.r s were prosecuted under the pro- vision.~ of the Red Light st;itute. Rut he warned th e bar's operators that ~t he tav<"rn's continued operation n1ust not feature any or th t' a('tS of ICl\'d conduct charged h~· lhc district a1torney's of- fice. ;\lrs. Escobar eontinues 10 operate the Vampire Room de s11itt' the Alcoholic Bevt'rage Control commission's re\·oca- l1on of the tavern 's license. That ruling Is heing fought in the appellate court 20 F •shion Island, Newport Beach lerbeu1 De11yew Fcnhio11 S.wl., CeM•ltenf FREE DEMONSTRATION on the technique of creotin9 ele9C1nt doywear, sleepwear, and loun9ewear from Gin9erbread ... the new lin9erie fabric plus accessories by the Armo Ca. moken of Sibonne, Siri, and Ciao. TUESDAY, JUNE 22- 11 A.M. and 2 P.M. Barbara Danyow, Fashion Sewin9 Consultant, discuss and demonstrate th• followin9 : will OF BllTWOOD IVlllS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION ~HUNTINGTON BEACH BRANCH ~ TUESDAY JUNE 22-SATURDAY JULY 10 S828 EDINGER BLVD. (comer of Edinger &Springdale) IN THE MARINA VILLAGE ·~~r111 ~~· BBPllSB+BiiS FOR ALL SPECIAL HOURS WEEKDAYS FRIDAYS . SATURDAYS 9AM-4PM 10AM-6PM 10AM-JPM BEAUTIFUL NEW BRENTWOOD SAVINGS Fo r the Professwnal Management of your Savings I • • • LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE J.EGAL NCYTJCE LEGA L NOTICE liOTtCE 1,_YITIN<i !llDJ NOTICE tS HEREAY GIVEN 1n•• tr>t P·•lOJI llotrd o• Trutlt•• ol tne Oct•n View Cl•Tl,ICATE 01< llUS1f'lllS ~i;hool 01•1t1<t or O'""lle C1><m!Y. Hun· ,ICTITIOUS NAME 1<1>~1on 801\Ch. C~l<fgrnl1. will rec•IYt Tn1 un<lf"l~nea Coo• c••!llv no ,, <G"· bid• •o Pu•Ch~H Furnl1,,..e i nd EquJp. d< <:1l1>11 1 1>u"n~1t •' P o l oo I.Ill. monr. 111~, .,,II bt •tcelvoO uo 10 1 (1(1 lrvlnl . Colllotn'I 9106•, ll nd•r ln1 lie· om . Julv I. 1911. 11 lhe Admln11•<1tl1>n l•T•o~• lltm nonu ol Vl~fA Of'L 0 110 OU>et of 111n Sche<>I Q,1trlcr. 7911 IV&•nt • •NVESTMENT GllOUP 1no !hl1 st 'd !11m Av1m,., Huntln~lon 6eecn. Celttornl8. 11 I• "'"'POied ol tnp rollowln1 P"'"°"'· which llm1 ,ara llidt w!ll be ooened ,,.a wno<t n1me1 In full 1n<I PllCI• or ree<I to• I"'" ourcho11 ot Fun111ut~ ""n r toidtn<t '" •• lollnw•: Eou;~m•nl In ~<COtdln<e. "'I!" S~ec1•\G,.. .o\lblrt W . .o\n<ltrton. G•n••t l P•''""• lion• now .,,, 11!1 In !ht ol1<eo 01 11ld 4dOO S.••hote, Nowperf S • t < h , Ohtt"' C~luor11!1. lh• tr•dd" ;u•ran!•u 10 d~lh•rr l1tm1 N"""''" A. Woil:t. 11:i.. S•n<t K•v Ot ., "' IM<i l'l'd ~"le'" an •lte1n11• It c ...... n• d1I Mi r. <•lllornlo 91611. <t••ione•f'<I : ~no low l lclOo.-,,,..._, lo 1tltn1n1 E. Rlug, HlJ1 No110 D•m• fUfnl1n adoll•on•I t>urthe,.u trom llfJ"l1 lo Str~T, W1llmln11or. C•lol<>rnta •16!.3 lime with 01<! prite5 I Ul•lnlefd 10 llo•t• l . J.,,,I, nan VeiY•l1, Mlu •on Stpl~mr:>oor :W, 19/1 Vl•lo. C1llf<><nl1 f1615 All 11ems Dtovrojod tn•ouen tn•1 bi<t •h•U pnlllp H, JOl't» 1S31'S Tou~usP C•rtlt, romnl• "'''" C.ovor"m..,1 Cooe St(!•'"' §•n!1 Ant, Ct11forn11 tUOJ 4300 OD• He11m S. t.ulll. ••5 s M111001~ Allf . Tne Cell!ornif s1l1• to~ W•ll bl In t d Lo• Al\Otlt» C1ll!<><nlt '°°°"· ~Ilion ro th• orlcn qyotoel. Fo<1er11 E• Ollt<:I AP•ll ll, lf1! <IW! 1 ... •••mollon C<ttl•llC•'" .. 111 Ill Alber! W. Andtr1<>n lu•nlll!t'd, It tP<>lkeOll ~!•t• o! C1ll lornl•, Or1n1• CoonJy• lhe eo11d ol Ttu""' •••1t••• 1n1 o .. Aaru fl, lt 71, n.!a•• ...... I Notfr\I •'9til •o ,., ... """ '"" 111 D•O•. •'><I ID PooDli(; )ft uld •or ••IC ~Ml> 11~rW>n~ll~ ,.•I••••" .r·o~u'""t• '""'"'" .,,,,, • .,.., Albe,, W All<l, .. ,0n llnow11 ,0 OC E A .. VIEW rr~ la bl !n• P"''°" ...,01• r am• 1, SC/iOOL Ol§"l ~l(T ·,.n,crined lo tne w1thi" '"'""mi n! 1nr:r Av· c. ....... C. L<>11•ro ~c~~OWled~d nt ••1cur..i 1n~ .,,,,.. Cler~ o! "'• ICll=FICIAL SE.All 8<1<>1<1 o! Truottto Tom A. l•~~~" Publl•ht<t O•onoe Cn•1! D••lv N011rv P .. n1.r C•hlor hJt J~~· I ~, 21 , n11 l>•lnclPal Ofli(t In 0•1n•• Cwntv Mv Comm1.,,on l••lr•• J1nu1•v ' 1111 o.,.li!~f<f O••nQe Co••! D1Uv J>l,cl .J~n• l. u , 11. 11. 1911 1.00·11 LECAL NOTICE ·-f'ICTITIOUl IUSUlllt. LEGAL NOTICE .... 11. 'ICTITIOUi I UflN•U HAIQ' tTAT•M•NT LtGAL NOTICE 11.1,••io• cou•t Of' TH• 1TAT• Of' CAt.l•O•HIA iooe TNe COUNTY Of' O•AHCll IOllOWll141 '"'"°" It "91nt 111,.IMll .......... NAMI 1T.ATIMINT 101 ...... 1,.. "'"°" It -..i,.. ...,.._ '·~l!IO$ ClltTll'ICAlfi Of' IUSHtlli FJCTltlOU' NAMa T~~ un<1•ro10n.-.:t <I<> <••HlV tn•v tr• ""''"J HOflCI 0" NIA•IN11 OP' f'CIT1TlON f'Oft l'IOIATI Of' Will AliO '0A l l Tillll TCllTlMINTAAY 1101110 Wl.1 11101 l'!tlU• 01 J -f.S () (AAl fll J 1ct u t<:I. NOTICf IS HEl[IY GIVEN ,., •• LEGAL NOTICE .... ,, FICTITIOU I I UUNISI NAMI STATllllllNT T!,., lol~ .. r .. ~ P••-II 11(11"' 1)1.rolMU .. Do llnlo Pl•••· U01 Fr'-'11 Sr. S•ni& An•, I.all! llo•d rranlo.t.n G<oov•r Jr, !'611 M•P<><• '-"••. lu>!ln, Coll! Tnl• D'1Jln1>1 11 w lna co<ltlu(tt<:I bv • p1rM•rtnlD L!""O Fr1nklln C.roovor Jr Tn,• ttoltmtnr 111011 w lTn In• CO<JMY (l1rk ~ Or1n91 Cou,.!• on junt 10, 1'11. llv a1v1•lv J. Mt!l<kl~, D•PU!Y (o<Jn!Y Cl1•k f'ublllll..O ;'.>t1noe Cot11I 0 11111 Pllo! J""' t'I, 711 '"" Julv s. 12. lt11 1su.11 LEGAL NOTICE THE DANA COMPANY, J.Olt l II (Oltl t!l1nw1v, D•n• l>oln!. C• '10~ H•,.•Y >luck t1orrm1n :i..11s OM• S"•"" llC No I 01'11 ., .. , ... (I '1ol9 Tnh DutlMn II Doonu Con<lu<led bY •n lnalv1c .. ,1 Hen•· H IW"""" 111;1 1t•r.m1"1 l oltd ,.,.., '"' Couni• (lot~ GI 0•••• (~"<HY Oh Jun• II. "/I. II• •••H IV J, f.\ldOO>, o .... ., •• Coo.ml• Clt rt;. f'vll•hl'rl(I o .. nv• Ca•.r D•av Pf1o1. Juno I!, H ""' J11lv !, !l !fll IJ.oJ.11 LEGAL NOTICE CW!Ou<llnt • l>1J1•ntl$ at lllO Centonnl1I Ct•ttl'ICATI O• I U!INllS F·n 7! Wo y, Tullln, C1lltornl1. und•r !M• II'-•ICTI TtOUl NAME F ICTIT!OU! I UllNll! ll!lou1 lfrm n1mo cl COMPON[NlS -Ti'r• unc1,.lvnt<l aot• ftrh!~ i'r• !I con· NAME !TATl!MINT WEST'"" 1n11 11lc llrm h "'"'"""" ol dvcltnt o 1>u1lno!I •I l.a"l Gilo.,1 Dr . TM• tol+o..,lna """""" ••• c0,n1 "'" lollo,.,1.,. Pf•IO'll, wtloH n1m,. 1n tull 11unt lnt1on 13ta<~. Ct lllc•n••· ull<l1• '"' b<J >in•U n• ""° 1>18<U ol rnlOenco tro 11 lo<lo"'I' llt;tl!lou~ t"m ... ...,."'WEST !NDU~-VtCl0111'1 (!~Cl [ .i.Pts. !•5 V•c Jom11 11 D••· 1n11 S!orl< ...... Cl •· Tll!!:.S an<! !i'r•T Jlld !Ir,,, II ""''"'""a ..... SI Col•• /l tU . Ct•lt. 1110,, '0101. Wiiii• .... M•Y· Ill E Yi n I I ·~· 1011 .... inv Pf r1<>n, wl>ou """'' 111 O• T"<>m•• Do•"· '1l No•I~ 511f !311>t>1r. Or 1no1 '1161; 1 111 A llovc, l id h,oll 1na ~loci or r11la1n<• " 11 !O!· L•"•· No,.l>l!c! fl•Mi'r Cor~ Lint. Co111 Mis• fl•l4. low•· M•I, Oo•ot"' onon, 1'$ No•!~ ~•or Diie Mt• ll. I'll . Fr•<f W••!P~ol J<O? Gllt>lt! O• • l-1un, t ""'· N1wpor! l!o.o(~, (.111• JamH H. 0>1" flng!M 13•o<~. C•llfornl1 Tnl o but ln ou ,. llO<nn f OnO"<IM by 1 Wllllt A. Ml y DotM Moy J~. 1011 Porln,,,hip 11111 A. !loYd f°'«d W"tpnot M" DO'""'"' Doon S11t1 ol C1lltornl1, Or1n91 COllMY( $!11f of C1111orn1•, Orono• C°""ty: 1" 1 1 I 1 a Wl!h li'r C !Y On M1Y 16. 1t71, 1>11ort mt, 1 No!•tV On M•• 16. 1•11. he•oro m1. • Notory ·~ '~••m•n '•, • oun Public !" 1nd for 1110 Slft1. ""'""1•11¥ f'ubilc In •nd !o• ••la ~t110 por1<>n9llv ~1"'~ 01 ~· "'~" ~''"" ' ""0 J~nt 1 ~ 1"1 1 l 1>1>0ltfd J1mn H. Oy1, Wlllll A. Ml ¥ t DP&lf.-1 FtPll Wt•IC!il l k-n lo m1 ID er '" fv.r y • ld~O•· fl>U V Gun Y 1na 11•11 A eo.a u 1cwn 10 "'" ro loo IM loo "" "'""" '"""'' nom• " •ub1u lbffl : P 1 Pe•.....,• Wl>Olf nom11 .,, i ubtcrlt>t<:I 1o IO tilt wlltiln lnO!rum..,1 11>0 1c-t10wlldt· J ~b;\•n~ ,';,;~"~,• l.c~;•\,,?"'lr ll(>~o1T; tne wl,.,ln ln1trum1n1 tl\O t cknewllllte<I Id l\t 1•~C1•1...:t ti'rl ••fT'• un I U ' • lh•• ••ocu!ed tne •~m1. (OFFICI"'"-SEA~l (OfFICIAl SEAll J t1n L Joll11 M1rv lelh Morion Nolarv Pub11t.c11,Jorn01 ,.ott rv Public. Ctlllornlt Prl,.croll Ol••(e In P1 lnclo1I Olll<t In Or•1tN Count< Otl MH County My C'""'mlulon E~titH My Comml1t!011 E~pl1t1 M1t'n J. 1'1J Tnt Ao•ll 9, UH llutlllthtd Ott ntt COll lT Dt llr llolo!, 1, "irb!!lh•fl Oran;• Coo•! 0 1olw ••10! Moy Il l •I'll Ju~• 7. 1<. 11. ,.,1 !JJG.ll J uno 7, I•, 11. n. 19 11 ll11 II LEGAL NOTICE ,. .. .,. f'ICTll!OUt I UUHlll HAMI I T~TIMl!NT tollowln9 """"" 11 llOln• bu1ln111 DAil Y PILOT J 3 'War ls11 ~t Over!) Charlie 2 Not S<une Sil ice Viet Attack t,'tlARLJI::: 2. Vl~Ti\A,\l , ! UPJ l -Stttl helmet pu.shed fnrwa rd, bulk. flak jackel buttoned tight, rifle aver hl!I shoulder, "Tex·• Fo1lt:r L:i ready for lhe two-minute walk to bed. Skirting foxholes, his boots kicking up .s1na!I clouds of du st, .Spec. 5 ~fikt> Foster met>ts no tl ne as he hurries from !ht operations center past the durnpy :;ltt>I mesh· covered Ct"lnC'te\e bun k e r s dotting a wilderness. Fosle r"s moving silhouette 1s !he only sign ur life . not s blade of grass, a trcP . a bird disturbs the desola11on. Radio aerials po int sk}'\\•ard rada r di sh es wh i rl continuous I\. .. I guess ih!s place is ok;iy." say Foster , 2.1 Houston , 1·ex., as he shut:ks of( the gear 111 hrs sant•luiiry eight fe·el underground. .. 't'ou can e~ls-! nil rig hi . I guess, YoiJ 1·an hardly c;ill it living. 't'ou"re likl' a vegetablt>, It's sick. And when those rockets slarl C'nming in ... man. it get.~ you right here." He poin1s tn his stomach. It was one of "those" Communist 122·milllmeter rockets that Chan~ed Charlie 2 so that i\"11 probably nevt>r be the same again. That one rocked killed and wounded about 60 c;Js 1\lay 21. Along with its lwin ar!Jllerv basf' Al pha t 212 miles to the north, Charlie 2 is home tn Task Force 161. about 800 Americ1111s holding v.· ha t rem<11ns of th{' long·ahandnned McNan1ara line against Rf'd infi ltratio n across the dem1ll - tar l1ed zone 1DJ\1Zl. lt"s t1ere tha t Task Force 16l Operations Officer M a j . Richard A-f err 1t l . 34, Fayettevtlle, N. C , has spent every night for the past silc \veeks and says, "we fee l v.·e're still on the front line . The war isn't over here ·• The Gls \vho go out day and nlght lo the southern edgr of the !'UpflOsedly neut ral buffer slnp and other :ireas '"'here they may fin d their enen1y, spend lwn v•erks hrre then RO back tu the Quang Tri Combal Base for a v.·erk I~ rest Hnd catch up wilh personal affair.~. The one hrackel thal hit Charlie 2 on !\lay 21 wiped out the artillery base's bunker rlub. Because n1ost or the Gls 1n the bunkf'r al lhe lime had fled fr om the mess hall to the club, thf' nearrs! underground ~hC't!Pr, the men no longer eat !oge!her On orders fT"on1 the Saigon con11nand Bild the Quang 'rri headquar!er.s or lhe 6,500-man Isl Bngadr, 5th Mechanized U11itecl Way Camp Staff Pbsts Filled F1ve West Orange Counly residenl.!1 hare tx>en nem~ to staff positions el Un!l@<l WA}'~ \Voodcrafl Ranger~· Camp at Lake Arrowhead. Leading th e camp as c.:<r liiteC!tJr will be lluntinglcin Beach residenl Laddie A. Sch midlbauer, Jr A former playground director ror !h(' ll unlinston Beach Recreation Department. Schmldtbauer Ji ves at 16562 Trojan Lane. Ke ith Morris of Fountain VaUey, a .s1uden1 at Cal St<rtt Chico : Jeff Kirkpatrick of Huntington Def.ieh. ~ student a1 Orange toast UilJege and Paul Schmidtbeuer of Hun- Ungton Beach. a student at Golden West College will srrve as rounselors at I.he camp. Dan Nolan of Huntington Beach will 'ol'Ork as a member of the camp's maintenance crew. He is a student at Hun- lingl<ln Beach High Sdiool. The camp. which Is In H:. 49th year. is ope n to all children ages eight through 14. Jl features seven elght--Ony camping 11essions for boys and two for girls. It 1s a non-profit operation $Upported by lunds from United Way. LEGAL NOTICE infantry Olvisiun. the soldiers of Task i''orce 161 now have to wear Oak jackets and he!mel.s whenever lhey·re in the o~n. No one groups up. so chow lime is spread over several hours, the men cravding out of the bunkers 1n ones and lwo tu F:el their food and heacl bac k to thf'lr din1. dark dugouts. For the one or tv.·o 1nen v.hfl might be-caught w he u Cornmunist gunners open flre. the base 111 spnnk!ed v.·11h fou r-fool deep roxhole<t tha l :1 !ol d1er can dive into ;ind hunch do1~·n v.hile sh ra pni;-1 whizzes overhead. Alpha 4. a dust-choking. tortuousl y dun1py nde in an Armored Personnel Carner !APCL is the i;l'Cond fire ha.se the Americans n111n Ill the w utheastern sC'ctor of the l)~IZ. The South Vietnumese are responsible for areas to the east and "esl of a s1 x-m1le wicle strip running south fron1 lhC' zo11e down lo Quang Tri. The view fr om Alpha 4 • slightly n101·p 1han two n11les from the southern edge of lht• <le1narcel1on line. 1s straight into North Vietnam TI1e ha1.e. 1nakes the n1ounta1ns therf' look n1ore ominous than hills lo the Soulb. Just to the left can be seen the massive North Vietnamese nag rippling on its stair on the norlhern bank of lhe. Ben Hai River. On 11 clear day, the Gls can see f'ret!dom Bridge over wh ic h thousands or Viet namese crossed during the l'ountry's partition 17 years .1go. The northernmost spa n, on the Comn1unist side. has bef'n <lrnppt>d into the river Thcre·s no mistaking !hf' lines of bunkers. trenches and ernplacements. Back on !hf' b11se, a group t;i f enlisted men of an armored cavnlry uni! talk over the11· gripes with their commanding (lff icer. ··we aren·t going back out. unless some changes are n1adt.'' says Sper 4 Ron .4.lex:Jnder , :ll . Carrulhersv11!t. ~lo .... nother trooper. SptL· 4 Steve Davis. 23, South Gatt, Ca lif . chimes in wllh a coinplaint and others sitting 111 the <lusL beiude a hattered APC: nod agreement. Capt James Jl acketl, the 27- vr:ir-0l d com mander, listen~ attenl1vely and p 11tienl1 y explains the men hevf' lo go out. they JUSl can't wail back al ba:;;e to be surrounded And hiL llt> conv1nee!'! lhem , and th e n1e n l"hmb aboard lht>1r !ra{'ks and head out past l hf' hnes vr barbed vdrt ring1n11 Alpha 4 to go looking 101 Charlie, the Communi!t5. llere. like just ab e u t ev erv\\"here t>lse in Vietnam. the iroops ask each other. vr anyone who will llsten: "What docs it all nltan ? We 're going hnn1e. (;uys are still getti ng killed. \\'hat for:-·· Ra ck tn !he erganiztd, nf>at :ind rel11tively safr Quang Tn B:ise. !ht brtgade-surgton explains some or the slresses on Ure troops in nn area where lie says the enf'my has atwa~·" b~n 1nore .aggressive ttian other places. '"IL s amazing that we see i:o Fe\v guys with psychiatrie problen1s:' said Lt. Col. LawrenC'e Isom, 38, S a n Francisco. \Vit h the v.•ind down of America·s par1ic.ipalion , those left behind feel "sort of abandoned," he said. •·Jf we were lo try ta blalT;lc someone, then the blame is dn me. the lack of interest the An1encan pt'<lple have in the Job these guys are goi ng. The l!"oops are not being supported b.v public opinion, suppllrs. monev. Th<it"s reflected in the way ·the guys feel and they feel it very deeply. .. Thev fee1 let down in many wayll. i'he young kid. 18 or 19, v.·ho"s in for two years against his will. feels it the most. lie doesn"I wa nt to be the last American to be killed ..• be <loesn·t want to be killed!' ENTER NOW! Your child 's photograph can win a spectacular '2,500.00 SHOPPING SPREE IN OUR STORE! I Ancl that's just one of lht: hundreds of valuable prizes and gifts totalling ·2s,ooo.oo in the 371" JVational Children's PHOTOGRAPH CONTEST! YOU CAii WIN ONE Of THESE NATIONAL PRIZES: Fi,1r Prizt Stcond Pri:t 11iird PrUt ·. •21500.00 Shopping Spree •1,500.00 Shopping Spre< 11 1000.00 Shopping Spr« Fourth Prj,• • " •500.00 Shopping Sp"'' 50 f ifi!t Prizes. to. •100.00 .5hnpping Sprees Oft ••• P0"1AIU: SOLID STAT[ JtADIO/l"MONOQJtAl'HS TO ntl'HUNDREDS OF MONORAaLf MlNTION WINNERS I !lave yourMlf • SPopping Spree •.• Y"• a p1id· up charge 1ccount th at leUi you buy whatever you wanl ! lt'1•1n1p lo enter and eay lo win. Let ue photograph your child and we.'11eater1 duplicate in the Conlmt at no utra charge. Complete de- 11il1 ind n1le1 in our Photogr1ph S1t.u1io. Dig b1I· loo n 1011 kiddieooiobile. given lo e\•eryconte1Llnl. MCll: DIM C.,lltl, CMlll l•wett. Art~ Fr ...... A1rHct • ......._ Sptci•I pric:eo Oii m(lllt •l&n 111d pho101r•pb fi11iAh~ r., ~l•mple: CONTI.ST 7 495 011e S..10 CO'.lro11n1 IPl.CIAU porlrni.t.5 •nd. 1i1 w11l111-1l11t (TKAT'I MOil TNAM Y, Of"F Tffl REGULAR" NICI!) - P~•lot••p~ St~l1110 111 Floo1 Hu111111,10" l1•ch t•l·JJJI Ut, 21J ·. . :· •, . ·. • : " .; ... ' J:f DAILY PILOT For the Marriage Lice11ses Lie...,••• lu...e<! <n O••,_ Counl•, i UlfON·ll"1ESTlll(!( ~ low~• ... of 20280 l•nl•~· Ori••• tfoor1~o!cn &eKn """ O!••e J. •O Gj t<un'"""'"'' Bttch OIC.GINS C.OD~DE -Donol<I E , 0 o! 11 .. 1 S•llord Wr•I. V•r<l•n C..o•• l nO 11,,.,t M , ~ O! •41 (lll• M1Qutl, S•" Corrn~n•e l>.>!(OWS!(Y SANOEllS -O•m V . l9 ot lollJI C.r••""'" l •Of. flunl 1 ~otQn l <A<h •~O M•'• L, ll ol \Ill ~0<nh1ll (,<ti• t<unh"<!ton lie••!\ CllUMPLf ll•llLAlll -l••lon L , lJ ol 11>1 Br.on! 01<v<. Hu"ll~OI<><' lle"cn •n<I C~""I"" £. IJ ol "unhnolon B•~tn (;llAY Wlll•AMSON -M,!f,.el l , )I ot I/QI "'""'"' ... a W••"• L. 10 or 1015.I D•"Y Av• . Fouor"'" Vo Oi••· 8 AlllLEl1 WAGN ~R II•"• 0 1l or 'l071 E••T Mo .. oo•• li;o•d, ~•o.:•·~n •nd Vo<Olr IY, or IOoll Taylor, Hun• '"IC!<>tl ll<ICh E VANS·l-AflllOU~E -l •'" 0 . 71 ol )ll.51 B<oolcll~"'· Hun1ino1on 8•0<11 •no O.rlenr M , 30 o• Hun11no•on B••Cll WA LLACE·PA.lEl1S0N -Rol>"'I E, 21 of /1]9 Collon 5!fee!. NOWPotl !:le•<" ond Flo ... ~ E . ?1 OI lU·I We•• B•• s1,.,.,1, Co~•• M••• ANDE RSON ·POTACI( -$1ey•n R, 1! ot 1011 M"•m•r. Lono Be-.n ""0 Corolvn M , IV ol 11091 A. ~rr<rt, Hv<'••n~•Qn II•"~ Sr>E RL+NG·BERENS .-J•m•" C 17 o! ;ti);>() Ful•<>rlon, (o"• "'"'" •nd ""'""" I(. ?O o• Co lo M.,• E f\V FBV -8 •oto ( 1< ol 1111'1 Kne.,t,on. H"nun~ton B•~<h ~"d l1 1t• F , j~ o• H"nl•notun !J,,.~h WALLACE NEAL -D<in•ld 5, 10 QI 11\91 lr•ll"l<!IOn L•n• Hun1.,1q1on B~•'" ond 5d•t. I>-10 <>I 111;; W'>I Lo Poimo, Ana~•im CRUME-C.RIMF.S R•ch••d L. •I ol ;jll? An~erion Ori••. El lo'o •nd S•ndt• D, lJ of El Toto. JUNE llh MEND02A TH0MP50N BP<nod lnn, 71 ol \1711 We" B1oolc, S•n•~ "'"" <>nd jo.on C, JS ol 1 .. 1 Anoh•om, CG!ilo M""a MDRllOW·SMITH -1i; .. ,n .. ~· s . ?• ol !6C W••T Wll..,,A, Co••· M.-• <>nd cnr;~1;ne 11 , 19 "' 1 lll1 S•n!• Oom· 1,.,., CitCI•. Fou"'-'" Y••l•v. M ANN·Hi.JT TON J•me• W , JO ol IMl Wll~on, Cr~I~ M.,• ond H•lrn J . ~I 01 (.0,i.10• G IESER-C RtJl$E" ~ Thom~• M , ~I ol 1101 Sno-."<l•on P••e•. N"'"'""" 8••C~ •nd l(oron 0 , ?I of JI• V•l•n· c • S,•n (•ompnTe, k ETO·OEL VALLE -f••d J ' n ol llO•, Col"n< BolMO '"an<! ""d Alo•• M. 10 o! 1n·, G"n•f AY•, Bol!XI• , .. ,,.d !IOT·WILL -l>'"'C~llu• G , ll or UO We •T Wllrnn, (o•!• M""I Mia Rob•n C, 19 of Co"• M<'• JOll(·f-NSON HAl>T l>oc no•d A 10 ol 10.l (hooma n Av• .• St•nton •nd l in<lo L, 1! ol 10617 "''"' A·;o • Go•den Gro•~ o r YOllE RFl(H -R•n<lv L ' 10 "' 00 El (on;,no <lei M•r. l.•oun• B••<~ •nd Reh~<c~. 1') 01 lll' sne, •<na!an Pl•<•· ••un!inoion !\••<" H r'lDRlr .(IO l("(I M•(h~"' ('~I nl )JI AYot•dC· (O\IO M•><> •Ml f;•OrOf'•n"e, ~I ol 1!17? (h•'1•r Rood. V•ll• ""'~ V AN ROUN T-Tl'\01) -M1<h••I A " o• l'900 P•rlo.vi•w Lano l'vonr •nd r .,~1 A ,. o• 1!11? l~•'""'"'oo~. W~stmin>le' ~orLEll' MOUNT A Ill -Pobt<1 c. 11 .,, 7•Jl l S•~•a (Ii •• St<•~'· t'.l•n• l'Q<nt ~nd Virginia M , 11 of D~n~ Poln! J.RNOlDOLSON -Pon•ld l . 11 n! l!SI Ulltlrly, H\!nh~Q!On ll•aen •nd Lv«ll• A , II ol 9~1 TGUt•n, f oun• M:n Vallov k NEBL·SCHAR R -lnomo• E , 11 QI 1nis1 Ku••" Qr»1•, >t,•n"nqlon ll•Nn •nd Ann• l '~ "' H••"!•nq!on fl~•· 'i C.ARLAND·~LDBF":O#o.NZ. -H'<Old F Jl QI JI~ J••h Sl,or!, 'Jowl>Qrt B••cn "'"d v1r;1n1a C , 19 or N¥,.,~o•I fl•"'"· 1 0Wf lJlFll'l -Sh•" t ' 'n nf 110 to:o.tn I •lvn•. (ll•" •nd {•nd.:r J., XI ot }101 H••v•r<I, We\''T''""'' (;OEENWODD LE YYr.. Slo> P J~~· l•ll G•q• AY~. ""M"'Q'"" l'M• nnd Jon•r• R , 76 ol !Ill S'""" O"v•, .. unl1nQIOn tlc•<n [IA";0AR1AN AllOONIA -5.-01, P, 4• o< 18 N<>tlh Ea;! 981~ 11,~c•. Miami and Amy ~. IJ o! is• A•ler 51,.et, L~na Bea,n, SHEALO R-BOYCE -Oon•ld ll . l8 ol 101''' co1tln1 Ave .. !l•lbo• l•lono ~"" E lann~ L .. l • or 11 1 Diomono, 8all)O• l•l•nO VAN OAM·OlOL -lti•Odo" II . 16 nf ~nl6 S•••~o•• o""'· N••mor1 <\•·•(" 8nO (•t l~•n• M, 31 of llll Oot\"t t•n•. Co~I~ Me•• 8LA{><>RONOEAU -!,•rrY L. 1• of "ANSON <!•!• E Han>on :!801 Sano Dune L•n•. Coron• o•I M•t. Date of de.in, Jun• 18. Su•v1ve<! ~· hu•~•nd, lll)llort E H•n•on. "'"'· G•••· B'•dtOr<I •n-d R•nMll Hon· t-0"1 O•u11nter. Vit9inoa, ~ervic u ~nd•n<7 I! P•C•llC Yi•w Mor!uorv, Ii ELI.MAN F'""~ N, Hrllm•"-Ao• JS. "' 511 6•~ 5+, Hun!in010<l 8e•t~. D•te of Ot•ln. June \I C.rav .. iOe •••v•t••· lu"'d••· 10 AM .. Gooo ~ti~<>h••O {emolOrv. Smllti Mof1v•1', Olro<'•" Mii.LEi! C•,.•v• G Miller R•\<Orr1t ol El lo1n O••• o• oeMn, June 10 Ser•«•> """""'0 •' Mc(ormo'~ l.•aun• B••c" Mo,lvMV. St"WARTZ l ou"t An~• $<"'"'"'" 11•,1<1"'" "' Fo11n IA<~ Y•iley_ D•1' <>' Ot•lh, Ju~• 1~ S"'V'""' bV '""" R><~"'" •nd H•rold Stnwor11 St'>•C•• "''" l>o "''" 1n Fa'' M••"'1w. Ne'" YOt~ O•i""' Bro""'> Mortua•v. 1•1-71/1, ForwMd1n9 Ofrotlor>. W•TSDN c;.,.,1q 1~ Wal'°" o(l l 0 "'"""I.it (•<1111•, l.•olm• t<»ll. Ooot •' <100•"· Ju"• 20 Survlv•ll rw '"" W11t••"' 0 W•O<on ol Jnll1•n•PO"" o•u9n1•t, M" Eon"' ""' r•ll, L•••1"' Hiii• S••V1r•\, l "••<I•• II "M "• '" VI ..... (h•o•I 1~1e<m•n•, 11"'" """' M•''''"'", r.,•, wn1"1F• "a C•li< y,.,. Mot!<J-'V f"l«1 t~" Wfl.IGHl (""''" A W"~h' Ao• ~1. nl Ql'I (•""<11•.,.,<0d Dr , H~nl<oQlon B•~'" f),'t• 01 "'''"· Jyn• 11 s,., •••• ~ "" ;,1'" ""' • v.,. w,.on+ •0"'' LB. W"OM, GM~•n c,,~••; °'"''" •n<I C••df Wl•O"" ol R•"" 8 "' Wd9nl. Silyor!on. (OIQ.• Con Wnohl, Co'1• M~~' "~"9n1•"· 80tNr• No••n•. o ;o..,n, Colot•Mi Di>i• Dvor, (e<,ftr Rldgf, (~.,,.~, ,;sttt•, Zo"ll Bolon, O•~Y•<i Jf "ie Whole"••~. l •• VN•" J(I ll•~ndchlld•tn' l(I 9ro•l·O•~n~c..,lld<•"' 7 ''e•!·o••d•-or;nd<hildr•n. S•'"""' ""'' ""'" t<><t•» Mono••· 1 PM W•'''"" cn~o>t•, w11" R•v, Wtlloam B••m o•"C·~' lno lnl•,mfnl, P•«h' Y••W Momor,.1 P •r• W••l<lltf (118~1 MQtlu8tY, 6~0·•ISI, ARBUCKLE & SON WFiiTCLIFF MORTUARY •zi E. 17th St., Costa Mesa 646-4888 • BALTZ MORTUARIES Carona del !\far fi7:1·94Sll Costa Mesa 646+Z42' • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Mesa LI S.3433 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUAR Y 1795 Laguna Canyon Rd. •M-Ml5 • p ACJFlC VTEW MEMORIAL PA RK Cemetery !\fortuary Chapel 3590 Pacific Vitw Drive Newport Beach. California '"'"°' • PEE'K FAMILY COLONIAL FlJl'ERAL HOME '7Ml Bofu A Yt. Wu tmbllter 393-3525 • SMJTll'S MORTUARY 6Z7 Main SL -Hunttncton Bear.II Monday, Ju~t 21, 1971 Record " ~ n..., P1M ~•.oel, Wt•'""lll•''' end V"0'"'8 L, JO.,, ""'""'ln\lor MILO~EYICH lAl'E Y1nr<11I M ;8 O' \HI fltV<t Sh"''• ("•<O ~nq ~•IV•• ;.•, 71 of ~! Yer•~• P' lrv:M• Ru~ (;E 11-YOA~ I -llu ..... ' " of l11l Y••ano P<o<e ll•1ne a"O B•'t>"• A , lf or :Ill? O E"••lli . 11 .. 11e GO$'$' WILl.IAMS -JQt.n ~, ?1 O< 1)1~-B Porn ..... A VE , c~ .. ~ M~ .. Mid """'~ M n .,, 111 •, Tocai J.Y• fl••-1,1,00. POWELL 0U{OTE -J•rne> C-, 11 ot 111'> '"""" B~\1><;4 h ••l><I """ Lvnoa Ii ' l• or IUO ltt~ ~ .... !. N•"'""" 8t~C~ !fllMUDE l VALEZ -M1<~••I f , 19 or l•TI M.,n SI<•<•, w.,1m'"""' .ona llo~ M . l• 01 W•>lm•n\tt< lfMPC ETON MANN -llo~P'1 II 29 01 !150 WI""'•' A>e , (O<Pd M••,~ """ .JO A"nt. l• nl llll Orc•1•tO. Co,,. M<>o (•<ANOLEl'I 81.iC..:NALI -J""'"' l ,7 ot ~1~1 Wit"•'· "~n"n~l<n El•d•I• dnO florbor• A , <•cl 11/11 Ptl,.iro-. L•"" "''""""'I<' !HILLING CHA PMAN -Jon VI lQ Q• 11/&I O"••· G••'d•n G•o•" •"O L•nn• R . 15 or ll~ti W•>lrfn, ~lo•on Birt l1s ST, JOSEPll llOSPITAl Junt T! Mr •~<I M"· Aloo J Vouno. 1901 &•"""· NO. c. HUn!f"910n B••<n '" Ju"• 11 /\"< •"" M" W•"~" E. 8rdndll. l~U (rQYO<n Tor10>0, l<>•"O. O•ll, Juno 1! M' ~·1<1 M" leo l ., •. ,,. 1'~"' v •• Str•H• Loot. Hun1in9tc>r1 B•o<I'\, bO>'. Dissolutio11s Of Marriage f oled Junt U C•..,,,mrr. 11.ooorr J•m•I and K•ll•• E, WOO<!, l•• •nO E'•'' R•lph w "on1, Keotn Eawm ~no Glori• ~. • File<! Jun• U SrhfVY•t, l<:M•n J •nd llob•tt (. a 1o~•I•, sn~rvn ona GMy Ontt""'· Flo,d Dallon •nd Bolt• sn,•non G•olev, Sh"lt Y bnO 0.-L10n GM<nQtt, 51~Phtn p ""d M•u .. en IL Ru.,•11, ttono,; Tvc-~r •"d l•>< Foled Juno 1' A•m•n, S•n<>r• L •ntJ Allon L Komlw,l<I, Wt1118m J. ond (nM L P•ndle1on, Rich••<! wn.tncv ond Marv Ehl~~~·n L•n•. All+tur llc,,.;1 •no Gw•n M P.:ol'\u;. Jr., CMol L ""a Fron«' Edwaro {'"'"· Otooran N """ M.rh•M wavne Mocre. Alene N and ~""""'" Do•n tloln,, RoLen Thom~\ """ Mou .. cn Coov Cumot><·•I. !l•Pv E •no '!"'"'·"' C 6oya,1un. °""""" oi1d O•"a ~-· ?~rt•r. ""ul•lte J~an •"a Oenn1> Rovmond tlo''" l:IMP~ra Sue ""~ Rooet! 6•"d lord c;~'"''· Ellf•n Ro-. ~no J•me~ \oow•rl l o11nhridoe. (~rol Lou,;~ l1•um•1 ~no Cuoon" c_;,., N o'·"on, El•l"b~:o, A •nO l!ob•r1 M [;<Q,•M0 J r E<.i;1lw'" M ""~ f,.,, MrCo""'''-· Nano' +< •nq ftAnll All•n O'Lr,,.y, ~awtenco o.·~n •"d At1dfi~ '~ r 1ommo. N•"o l •en lmm• I(, ~01.Th Ruov• O~l!"< ~nn Pe•ce H•nrv '""'nn. C.n.r)e' A "n<l Sh.,lev Jea<1 Etmu••· ll•vmond J,rtnur •n<> M•rv '""'"d 0 1\on. (,irt!chrn N •n<l 0><•• !' D~· 1., D•""" Mv"~" •nd Jo"l• L<>U"• P,1~,lt·~•e•. MMO~'"T An'> ()!.•~' MarhncY. Jodnn~ •nd A1l >ou' ll +<.•u•.•r. t'.forolhV h ~"~ WolhMn 0. i..oroan, Coro• """ JO>•P" [I''"' J'<"'"' A aNI G<'!•l~•m• l t""o•n, Mc•v.n L """ A•,.l!ev Lee p 1,e:t·\, A" 0'> ~ .. ~<f rl,•ocv \ •~ Polef\ • .Jo•n MM' ~nO P~t>•<l I nnnlo , '•·' MMV \w.tn •'I" '""' "'· w (n,,mbN•, Dub"'" tl~nn~I: on~ Wdhani ~-·· ,.,. 10,._w<>W, Juno II MHl >I Wit ""' t ourln•• Ill Vlro n•• .tnn ! ''"" N, Pde,, C-"O' /.nn ann 1>,(0•<d \ \'l itl1"""· OnV•O Al.•n ano Do"" K•y Pole"'",, r • o,,,.,,n,. """ oo"~'~ (•o•t•, V·•<71n.• 1-~n~ S•'••""' l. Selby, J •cou•""" A """ """''"' ~ Col•. l?ob•tl G•n• ono PM""" ~"" r•o~""· c;,.,. M ond E"••< J GO<'Oh.rl, Ntl' Q•,:o ~n~ Gin"• Oon•!I ~""o""• Ge•••d1ne RoO•"a •nd MM•on ' Andtrw1, E<lw•rd A•l~ur •nd Llnd1 Ann S"""" Willord Wil~"· j(, •n~ l!onn't l t i L•nl M•nOall. [)t)ro1nv LO<JL•e "nd l?•lo~ [dw~'d P~wli~. J•n•e M. •11d Jo~~P~ G. N on<ll(lmn•, S•enoa S. ood M111hew ' Jat ""'"· C••ol Su• blld G•mo• L•nv '" Nt~I. J•me' R Ind M•ril1n J Harm\. H•nry P .• Jr_ in~ ("rolvn A. Sl~v<n•. Shi< I•• A 1nd C~•<I•> l Alll•oA. K•!hi.en M••;e ~nd W111.1m l/,,nOOIPh Eccle•lon. Ru!~ I'!, •n<I Ja>tn Lovan. S•rl<I'" J . """ Otlbetl I? F••vol, 0<;1rfn E. and Oan1~I J Ad•"• l(a••n F•v• af>d Laff' D••n Po,1, '''""' Kav 1nd F.dw~'d L~e CIM<, Vic~; L •nt! David t: Shel"" BorbM1 Eli•n •nd Paul lhoma> l'<r<no<, Hl)lla• LH Ind N•n<v Oe•nn1 Mirdmonl.,, llolle'I M •nd V"'"" F!Ynn, C••ol G, 1n<l 40t l•n J""''' B~" 0 ... 1~ Brv1n• •nd FfdMI P• """" P•!~•wn. A•,,on 1na l""''~"'" ll<lnur tlo•'·""'· o:~'"'"'" o 1nd M••v Ln·o <l•n::.~LOCUTOl>V OEC~E£$ [111tr•a Jun• I~ Hamn~'· Pol•t• G ond A'""" II.. L~~L I<~'"" M •nd .\'•'"""' 1 S<Mootm•'• OO••• bnO O~lb~" J. Hol>L\, J ohn D•V•d ona /,/.,,,..n A~n G<qlo~. J•, ~ntr<ov Mo~ and ll•U1'<0 ''""'""' llr•<••I!. LO""'"" L_ •n~ IJ~•1on JI, li~O<J.,. C•ouoe•I~ P •ntl Donnv tl. {h&1d01, Oa<I~~·' •n<I l>•<.11 ~~.t~~~;;·:· c~~n~tfl~,.~~: ~o;;: ... J..,n "'"''"~ ir.11,.,v, Ju•nl!• r,,.. •n~ '"'" /.no•tr l-o•nn'1U"1' 11••1>M• h """ '" """ L l u•~"' JlJdo•!• M,,, ""'J{M• I> c.,n,1>•·"9" l'"<il>••t ""•·o •·~ 0 1 v~ I "I"" V•" He<»" l ib••I ~••no • n, Jt onQ 'ona• ~•• (_"'"''""~"·J O<~ P onn Jnv l<.f'll~n. Mo•ltvn MMt~"t ond Jam~, 1 vw~<U Wdk"'"'"· G''•ld Edw••O onO Juan1 10 ''""'•' l!M~et, Cnnntt L •nU Lorrv D Mn<><!•. C.••'""" M •"a t nom•• Eow••d 1<0"""""' D•rl•n• I(~' •nd W"l'"m D•v1d Sh•~mon, Ann• M """ ~~~"' l 0Mnoll. W1l l •~m Don•IO •nd Orm•odo "'""~' 8 ovr10,,o, M~""' J~•n •no Oonela "''~""'f Dhun. R1I• /,\ •"O Jae~ A M~·•'O!, llo>< M ~no rAoch••I RidO I" B•verr• J of>d Ronold l . l(•O<I, LOV<>~ •nd Arton E Gonz•I••· Shar·•n O •Ml Tnarn•• McCo.n, Rul>orl L """ ll•rb••• L. liow•ll. AnOr•• M. 1nd J•me• f _ Slr•"e" R1tna,a lt>Om•• •r><I Jan• r 1a.xi. E:d••· Olv rnpi• ond c.~nl•• .JO<'I Pace, S&IY•to'I A. and M•rl1nn• FINAL OECl>E.Ei P•llv, lvnd& IC~y •nO J •m,1 11 , ~<icl,, AIPllon" G •rn! M llO••d A•t>ou•, M1•v El•ine •r><I Thom•• Ru,.tll C••l•r. RlcllttP Newoon ~1111 G•nl An" ..:,11y. D~""'' E •"0 5<0!!•t I.. p1,,,.,..,,.,., Anno M. and c;'°°r•e F. Wiiiiams. C•"•"• ~n<I L•''• c;, Le Pe•e. Wll•l•m ""~ Jun• ll•t~ll.m, F loYd """ N•ll•• Allen, (;orocn L. •ncl M•r;•t1I A Fro"" Cote. Jo•nn• M. 1nd A'b''' Q Y•naged&. Btvtdv J and B•ll l , FINAL DECREES liint•r•d Juno " Drl•r, John L. &nd 5u••""' S. Enif• .. Ju"• IS Lonoon. Cirolvn Anct,e• •nd Don11n SP~~~~, .. M. •nd w111 .. .., B . Urav1Q,,., M•n<><•• J•n• •"d J•(Ou•• l.oul• F•nw•c•, Jr_, A"n S •nd Fr•n~ P•ul. Bunc", Crn1t11V1 L, ...,p J•m•• OQtl••O C•1lt" Jr. All<f M •nd Don J. l'I"'•"· e,,,.1i. .. Etll•bt111 •nd ~Ol>ll•I Let!t r Flln&f.11• p,1.,. JO>ei>h i n<! l !'>elm1 (.:::::..:o. ,.1!.-lcli El•"'°' •nd Q!ln H•I lilooJ, ll(lbb!t J. 1nP H1rm1n L. $1orv, Ell1.iM!TI> Ooro!hv anti Geori1e ltobf•! S•ldttll. El•IM G, .011<1 1(1111\etll A . '"'"""' M1rQ1.11rllf L. •nd (h•n•v " 1·~~· (ll<lflff, Jt., c~ar+.• w. l t'ld Cll•ve~'.ht~n11 lH 11\0 Freel C l•wln, J1m11 A. 11\4 ~"'""'''"A. Gros,., em.u k. """ Ro1>ert o . Wl\Vlf, t.ltr¥ I>, i ncl Mlrll ~ lit""'"' Oftl\1'11 O.n"' 1nd lloc;Oi. l.oul1 ~{on. r 1n•v •ncl t•~v C l•vtr•n1. Pfltltl• G 1nd Wllll•m G, l)ttwt, Marv1nnl 11>d Willl•m ~. P<l•h~n, J•cmtflln• i nd llQv/\ (&tlf'r, l!vrttl E lll•~I~ •~II L• llny •t•IC~'··· J~m~• ~ ·n~ ~AH·•••n R, ir::.~1.1" e:~:1:::" :;:,M:-;;:,• 1~m•1 l::,r;:e~POQV A~~ -~~ f)ouol~I ,, t.1111v, "•'o~ o tnd M•rV ~- HURRY! SALE PRICES HONORED TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY ONLY! Deluxe Electric CAN OPENER 11With Bullt·ln knife Sharpenerl'' V Removable cutting ossembly makes cfeonin g a breeze. V Magneticlid lifter. V Cord •forage comportment. ·JI"' With convenient bottle opener. Vinyl latex WOW! Buy Several-they make great glltsl ~ Steel STORAGE SHELVING :36" wide x 12'' deep x 601' high. 4 odjustable shelves ore design~d like a steel bridge for great load-bearing capoc· ity. Silver shelves with fash io~ grey posts. Shelves can be raised, lowered or" re moved without tok ing unit apart- oll hardware is ~idden in com .. plelely enclosed posts. REG. $7.95 $ 95 Buy Several al This Give-away Price I •/a " Dia, x 50 Ft. Nylon Reinforced INTERIOR WALL PAINT •for interio r surfaces such as plaster, wallboard, wa llp aper ond brick. GARDEN HOSE ~hClerColo~ I Y!NYL·L ATI~. ·~T~I Ol w,i,ll.,,.,~r •Just roll or btush on--it's self priming end easy fo apply. • fQ•t drying a, .o~orless. . •Clean up brushes & rollers with water. REG.$ $3.49 29 $J,20 Offl •Buy a better hose-they're mode lo la•! longer without splitting or crocking. Double Tube • Sturdy nylo n reinforced bosa has ru~tproof brass couplings • •Remember-it's guo r .. onteed for five yearsl REG. $6.29 $ 99 SAVE $2;301 FIRST AID KIT For ou to, 1-iomt!, boot or compt!r. Contains olt neces-- FLUORESCENT FIXTURE "W ith Built.in f/ashrlght'' 1 --sory c:mergenC'f r:--_____., ~upplie~ in., sturdj I -·-l -· plo1iic co1e with l.l. I,~·.-1 ~1 bvilt·in flo1hli9hl & I t . 1 blinking red 1 1, 1.'..' ~·~"'-wo1nin9 light. ~~~ $RE2G. $39.999 ~rl~~i'°:·.., · !~;;:SAVE Sl.0 0! All Steel CAR TOP CARRIER •Chrome ploled tubu1or $lee! • 8 nor\omor- ring suction cvps for sure footing • AdjuJloble s1tops • Secure ly fostens IQ.car roof. $399 Aluminum Frame FLOATING POOL LOUNGE It floats! Suptt water lounge-50" fong x 24" wide, Tubv!ar ol11minu m frome wit h foam floats. Us& it in $749 lh• pool or Ml-j"t loy bock & re loltl REG. $9.99 SAVE $2.501 • Have more ligh t-more economically with this 4 ft., double tube fi.xlure with reflector. • for work or ploy crea-U.l. approved. REG. $12.99 SAVE $4.00! fixt.uro Ontr-Tubes ExtraJ SUMMERflME SPECIAU Pkg. of 2S PLASTIC GLASSES • Perft!cl for si.tmml!:rwhen you use so many glasses-no more dangt!rous broken glosses, •Crystal clear plostic in ''on the rocks" a nd tumbler sit es, • Use !hem o nce or twice and lhrow them away. REG. 49c ))c Pkg. of 2$ After the last dance, a tired debutante rests for a moment on the shoulder of her escort before they join other debutantes, escorts and stags at a breakfast. BEA ANDERSON, ,Editor MOIKl1y, June 21, 1f71 P1te 1$ A proud fath er, , Owen · Lincoln Fie ld escorts his debulanle doughier, Jo 'Ellen Field (above). Mrs. Ivan W. Stu rgis (at right), presentation ch1ir- m1n ties a medallion on dobutanle, Mory Michele Edelblute. Debutantes' Shining Hour By BEA ANDERSON An evening ot ucltement was lihared by lt young women who took center stage during the eJghtb annual Empire Debutante Ball. As they !hared the spotlight during tho presentation in the Airporter Inn, Jt was obvioim they were all thrilled. And conunent.s from the debutantes un· derlined their feelings. One described it as being "really great." while another confided she "didn't know It would be so exciting." "'At first, I didn't know what to ex- pect," said another. "I think I accepted (lhe invitation to be a debutante) to please my folks, but now alJ I can aay is It was really worth it." PROUD FATHERS While debutantes shared a thrilling ex- perience, it was obvious that their fathers shared somel.hlng in common, too. As they escorted their daughters down a white carpeted aisle to the stage, it was their proud moment -a special pre· Father's Day gift. Debut.antes, in whlt.e ball gowns, car- ried old-fashioned nosegays of mixed flowers and their on1y jewelry was a gold medallion on a white ribbon. Their youthful beauty was enhanced by the &et· ting -a recreation of a summer flower garden. After the debut.antes• unison curtsy, gaiety reigned as they and guest.! danced tfie evening away to strains played by the Eustace Ro)u orchestra. DEBUTANTES Debutantes, their parents and t scorl, are Miu Leslie J ane Allen, Mr. and Mr.ti. Roy Jefferson Allen, Norman Eugen• King: Miss Kathleen Merry Duncan, Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Vernon Duncan, Rick Lee Petros: Miu Mary Mich e I e Edelblute, Mr. and Mrs. Charin Graham Edelblute., Gregory Brent Orton and Mis1 :.to Ellen Field, Mr. and Mrs. Owen Lin- coln Field, 1bomu Lant Ewald. others are Miss Karen Anne J ohnson, Mr. and Mrs. Richard lllhnar Johnson, Donald Robert Randall ; Miss Michaela Beth Kelley, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Elmer Kelley, J~s William S. Fisher; Mi ss Cathleen Sui-Anne Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Laurence Martin, Michael Rahe, and Misti Mary Lou Myers, Dr. and Mrs. awies Uncoln Myers, Richard Miles limonln. Conciw!ln& Ibo ll>t are Miu l!ebuca Paige Slocum, Mrs. Waynt Warren Slocum, prnented by Jean Merrill Rasor, John Reese Tesman; Miss Sherri Anne Thornquist., Dr. and Mn. John Jerome Thornquist, William Cummings Parker, and Miss Gwen Elizabeth Wittwer, Dr. and Mrs. Jean Richard Wittwer, Daniel Joseph Hodge. Stags were Bruce Endsley 1 5cott }{allocll: and Gregory Lee Smith. John M. Rau, 00,l, lntrodooed honored -"· Including Dr. Leonard !. wser. DAILY PILOT PHOTOS IY PATRICK O'DONNELL ~idi11el11 Betti Kelley helps Kathleen Merry Duncan (at right) with a little primping before their debut. Below, Kathleen gets 11 little help from escort Ricli lee Petros, Slierrl Anne Thornquist checks her lipstick, while chatting with he r father, Dr. John Jerome Thornquist end Mary Lou Myers, EJcorts cut In after the tr•dition•I· f•thef.cfaughter waltt. Dancing are {left to right) Sherri Anne Thor"" quist with William Cumn'lingi-P•rker, Kathl .. n Merry Duncan with Rick ·Lee ·Petros and Gwen Eliz•beth Wittwer with D•niehJotr.eph Hodge. dirtclor of the Child Guldanct Center of Orange County which benefits from ball proceeds. Sponsor ls Harb:ir Key. Robert N. Weed served as presenlor, introducing debutanles and their fathers. Ball chairman was Mrs. Van R. Parker and assisting were the Mmes. Ivan W, siurgis, Norman Clrk!e, Jame~ Evan~. William Holmes, Homer Howard, .Alan Heims, Roy .lune, Glen Keller, Jean Miller. Frank Pend1tton. Frank !ebring, J. O~Bara Smitb, John Vi~up and Willtam Weaver. CI01ing the IS<r.IOft of pre-fiall parties wa.1 a crystal and l!ilver tea glven bY. Mrs. Slocum In hliinor of het debulante daughter. And closing ball festivities f 01' debutantes. their escorls and 11tags· was an omelet break.fast given in the home of Cmdr. (ret.) 11nd Mrs. f.turgls. liotL'I Wef'e Ori. afJd 'Mmes. 'fbomqUfll iind Myers. ........ -. -·· DAJl V PILOT Dentist Could Be Unnerved When Booked to Fill Bill DEAR ANN l...ANDERS: My husband aSHCI l'A'&Y II! monlh.5 ago. Uc was <' on&rful man and we had a gO(ld life gether, but I reahl.e he I~ gone forever ANN LANDERS now I must makt a new hfe for ysell. I am 4.1, look-younger, and have always m yself up. I ha ve a problem about '!_!!_!!"""'ones ~'ho have asked me out do ,.,r-1ntuest me. I see no point in ~ccepting dates just to be setn in public with a male. t The man I would like very much to go but with is my dentist. He was divorced i!:everal years ago and be is just about my lage. (Maybe a couple of years younger ) ke has always treated me in a somewhat formal manner. but I believe this is just F rrofessional posture. He sent me 8 I condolence rard when my husband passed away. I co"siderecl this a friend ly gesture. I'm a good cook and would like tn prepare a delicious meal for this man. I'll bet he gets tired eating in restaurants all the lime. Should l give hi1n a call? - WONDE:RINC; JN TUL...SA DEAR WONDER: Only if yn u gl't a tootbacbt. Nothing scares off a bachelor laster than • widow -who cooks. iY our Horoscope Tomorrow DEAR ANN LANDERS: Our daughter is planning to be married in the fall. We a\I like the young rnan very much. There is nne small problem. My husband had a bonl' disease as a chlld and it affected hlS hip. He has a noticeable limp. Our daughter y,·a nts a church \\'edding. which means shl' would walk do....,·n the aisle on the arm or her rather. Both my husband and my daughter are unconcf'rned about his handicap. They see nothing wrong with a man limping Libra: Get Down to Business SUMMER fUMWl1H MUSIC FOR ONLY $750 Children rearra n11asic and l111ve fun 111 "' w~kly oM·liowr den• .. 1.110111 (hltdrt• play what ''"'"" to M llmpl•, 1111oyobl• 'ilomn ~ with 1011tteh of 11otwr•, the 1owr1d1 ol OMr m .. • Y ''LITTLE (ho1dcol 099, wlt"tl r1-Cordi11'ill 011d dmpl• rhyth111 ir11rr11.,.....tt-l wt tile ,..,,. ... ha•• a pwrpos•. Tltey·re aimed GI d•welo pi...,. the ... 1nlcal h1ter-MUSIC nh altd tal•11h of th• chlldre11. Tll• 111roll1M11t f .. af '57.50 111111111 yo1t r (hlld to 1111 !11tbaak. LAND'' record, a11d four w .... ly (loun. YAMAHA s~~~~L 109 E. 18t .. , COSTA MESA 1 hr. clasw1 per w.:H-0111i11q or aftor110011 reality. Go to 11. LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 22): Ti1ne for game playing is finished . Applies to pro- fessional and social areas. Stick to latts. Forego specula· lion. Ride with temporary emotional bruise. SCO RPIO tOcl. 23-Nov. 2!)· One who is at a distance makes genuine attempt to communicate. Be receptive. Avoid domineering attitude. Give full play to creative resources. Fine for writing, publ ishing. SAGITTAR IUS <Nov . 22- Dec. 211: Encourage fresh rclJf)(ln-"e:;. Srr through cyf's of a ehild. ,\\t'nn.~ he aware, d.vn <1m1c. p1:reeptive. Throw nff tired nut1ons. concepts. A new sense of vigor prevails. CAPll lCOH ~ {Dee. 22-Jan. 19 1: R e.cent responsibility commands attention. Neglec· ling duties now could create future loss, de lay. Permit close associate to set pac!', create policy. AQU,\RIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Flexibility nu w aj1pear.s to bt' essl'nliat. Don"t paint yourself into proverbial cor· ner. Be delrrmined \\'ilhout being stubborn. A Cancer in- dividual cnu!d prove tern· por<iry nf'mcsis. PISCES tJan. 19-~1arch 20)· Basic substances dominate current paU1•rn. Don 't play games "·ith e1notions: stakes are high . Vou are about to cut through irritating red tape. Exude confidence in your own ability. from the back of ~ church all the way to U1e altar. l'n1 afraid the effect might be deprells1ng -or even ludicrous. l'erhaps my brothe.r should give the bride away . Ylhat is your CJpinion? OBJECTIVE MOTHER was not, ""Which was a big relief b!cause she would have been • very poor mothu. Zora come• Crom a family oJ alcoholics and menlal defeclives. It nearly kiUed me when my IOll married her but. I kept my mouth abut. The girl did not gradUlte from high &chool. She ignored all suggqUons that she enroU in night school and get a diploma. She sleeps all day. reads garbage, watches TV aU night. does no housework and drinks beer with her neighbors. A good ma rriage tbis isn't. concerned you are a marrled man. J have nothing more lo say." My husband says I let the boy dowri. Ht says our son was seeking approval and I should have glvtn il. Is be r lghl? - IDS MOTHER DEAR MOTHER: No -be hi NOT rl&ht. Your ICID showed lrresponslbUit1 and poor ta1~. Rt 11 still married a.ad be should not be bringing: a 11r1 to your house for appl1)Val, or for anything else. DEAR 08: The only thing depressing or h1dlcto111 Is your •Ultude. If the f1ther of the bride has a limp -10 what? He abould o:it" be dl'prlved of one of the 1tre11tut joy1 of bi• Ille simply becauN he his a pbyslcal handicap. Y o • r suRge~tlon that an uncle 1ub1titute for hltn Is WJlhlnkable. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Two years ago when my son was barely 20 he married an lll·)'Car-old girl because she told him she \ll'as pregnant. As it turned out she Last night my son called and asked if. he cou1d drop over with a surprise. I said, "Of course." lie came in with an attrac.tive young woman who seemed well educated and beautifully mannered. l was cordial. Period. This morning my son called .and asked. "How do you like her?'' I replied, ""3 far as I am What ts French kissing? Is it wrong~ Who should set the necking limits _:_ the boy or the girl? Ca n a shotgun wedding succeed? Re.ad AM Landers' booklet, "Teenage Sex -Ten Ways to Cool It," Send SO cents in roin and a long, self- addressed. stamped envelope in care of the DAILY PILOT. Soprano To Sing Famed lyric soprano Marion Moore of Philadelphia will perform during lhe meeting of the Orange County Branch of !he National League 0£ America n P en Women on \Vcdnesday, June 2J. Her program after the noon luncheon meeting at the Grand l!o1el in Anaheim will include such selections as Puccini's '"Un Bel Di Vedremo" and ''Lara's Theme·• from Dr. Zhivago. '·Revitalization of the Arts" is the theme of the meeting at "'h1ch state president. Mrs. Cornelia Sanderson will install !>I X newly admitted Pe n \\'omen. September Rites Set l\1r. and Mrs. Edward L. Hobel of Costa Mesa have an- nounced lhe engagement of Lheir daughter. Jeaninne Hobel to Michael J. Corkins. Miss Hobel is a graduate of £stancia ll igh School and al· tended Orange Coast College. llf'r liance. son or l\1rs. Allan F. :0.1 i11er of f\ub urn , Wash. .1nd llobcrt E. Lorkin"i of Portland. is a graduate of Auburn lligh School. He serv- ed in th!' Marin~ Corps and is a Vii!tnam veteran. They will exchange wedding vo ws Scipt. 4 in the Mesa Verde r-.1ethodlst Church , Costa r-.1esa . ·Guild Tallies Success Success of the &lh annual Peacock Hill National Horse Show will be celebrated by members of the Orange Coun~ ty Guild for the John Tracy Clinic at an II a.m. victory 1uncheon Thursday, June 24, at the Alan Holen home. Final results of the show will not be known for some Ume but exhibllors and spec· tators' contributions assured an outstanding success, guild members said. Mrs. Spencer Tracy, John Tracy Clinic founder, and July Day Selected fa sh ions for J udge and Mrs. Raymond Thompson d Fu ll erton , honorary horse show chairmen for 1971. drove into the ring in !'-~~~~~~~-' • 1914 si.ph'"s Dury<a Tour· JUNE'S BIRTHSTONE ing car during tht May 30 l show. p Junior exhibitors and adult-...f7. eat amateurs were awarded silv.er / yt€ / /tife trophi~ and . ribbons while 1h 11 ex.art~ competiton; 1n the Sunday € {1 open events vied for substan- tial purses. Entrants from Lhe Newport· Balboa area were: Allison Roe, Jeanne Stevens, N an c y Northcutt, Leslie Ripley, Sue Ellen Turner and Amelia Smith. Garden Grove-Hun-/ tington Beach riders were /.f'l"'-l ttl Shelly Havens, Valerie Smith JJ c>tt1 & and Wlie Sturm. 1he /fL& . y NOT? 'rhau9h •u• •Ptlll,.. 1 .. v•1 to.,... !Mn1 lfl be deolrtd, lh• 1mpo<U"I ltllnt II, WHY NOf enter OU< COUNT THE STITCH co"i.1t• Tno•I'• 11111 ti""' 1nd v~u 1u11 m19M wl~ • 1!1,.SO t#lll) &ROTHEii KN ITTING Mil.CH INE. 1b1olwlt11 tr"I Thtr.-'1 "° 1~i19ll!tn. The KNIT WIT 'The only gen1 th•l attain&;.., perfection in lhe .11e 11 , the Pc.11 rl i!I the Queen of Gems. It.. apecial gift i!I vit.ality. The Alexandrite lives two, live~. in color. By day it is a splendid. green, at night it becomes a colu1nhine red. lt is 1u1 eaptc.ially favorite atone for ml!n·a jewelry. Sli11 another birthstone for June is the Moonstone. lt. waa regarded aa a Jove charm during- the waxing of the moon, an augu1• dur ing the moon's '""an ing, Fculllo• blaM, N1wport hocll Ste11•wood C..,..,, DawM"y FOR REDUCING FAMOUS.NAME BRAS and GIRDLES Specials for a limit9d time only! Save on your favorite styles. Now is the time to stock up! • L I f i \ IUll ll'EJltl .A.TU.NTIC SQUARI 2140 S. Atl.wtlc l hrl. C.11 724·S990 430 PACIFIC COAST HWY., NEWPORT BEACH-842-3830 f1 l lM.kt Rttl .. ....... , ,, .... , 1840 West 17th Street, Santa Ana -543.9457 At.10 IN : A11t k•l111, C••lt11, C,t111h1w, O."'"eJ, 01• ... •lr, L••twtff, L•• v.,.11, Lltll Sttd1. New,.<1 lttc~. Mttlft Htll\'WtHo O~flrlt, "''''''"'' l•ft 0 1..,., i l ftll -~·. ''"" 11..-.r1, Su"""'· T•rJ•~•, Ttrrl<''" IM Whln l<tt". l<l C09vr10M. $'11, GIO•I• Mtflhtll oll\o•. Ct. '""· VANITY FAIR-SAVE UP TO 25°/o Reg. 6.00 "Jul;et" tr;cot bro #75-046. Be;ge, down pink, he aven blue, white or bleck. A, 8, C ···--··············. Reg. 7.00 D cup .... Reg. 15.00 double tulip gorier-less girdle #44-015. White or beige. Sizes S-M -l . Reg. 15.00 double tulip pontie girdle #41-015. Beige , white or black. Sizes S-M·L ULYmE BRAS-SPECIAL SAVINGS Reg. 7.00 underwire la ce cu p #479. Wh ite. Sizes 32 to 40. C cup. 5.49. Reg. 7.50 D cup . . .. -.......... -.... .. Reg . 7.50 tr;cot push-up #821. A. B, C cup 4.95 5.95 12 .50 . 12.50 5.99 5.99 GOSSARD NYLON TRICOT TRAVEL SETS Reg. 9.00 shift gown. Novy . S-M-L ... .. ... 6.99 Re g. 11 .00 duster. Z;p front. Novy. S-M-L ---····-·-....... _........ 8.99 Re g. 13 .00 culotte. Novy. S-M-L ................... _ ................................... 10.99 Reg. 4.00 scu ff. Novy . .. .... -.................................... _ 2.99 Reg. 8.00 short gown. Bl ue, p;nk. S.M.L ............ .. ................... -.... 5.99 Reg . 10.00 po jomo. Blue, p;nk. S-M-L ... _ ......................................... 7.99 Reg. 12.00 short cool.. Blue. pin k. S.M-L ........ ..9.99 CHARMFIT /YOUTHCRAFT SPECIALS Reg .. 5.50 soft cup bro #970. Wh;te or be;ge. Sizes 32 to 36. B, C cup ... _.... ___ 4.49 Reg . 8.00 copr; length g;rdle # 120. Wh;te or be;ge. s;zes S.XL 4.99 VASSARmE SUMMER SPECIALS Re. 6.00 unds rwire bre #432-4 . Whi te or nude. Size$ 32 to 38. C cup. 4.99. Reg . 7.00 D cup .... 5.49 Re g. 5.00 soft cup bro # 1900. W hi te or nude. s;zes 32 to 36. A, B, C cups .. . .. ··-·-............. -·-3.99 OLGA IRA Sl'ECIAL Reg . 6.00 soft cup shell bre #352. W hi te. Sizes 32 to 36. A, B, C cups . 01'1111 OAILY 11 A,M, TO . 1",M,1 MOMDit.Y AND ll'IUDAY TO t1)111'.M. CMAalll "YOUll ll'UtlCMit.IRI AT ,AIHIOHI ,Oil LA ,EMME. WI AC(:RjOT MOIT MAJOtl ClllOIT Cit.•DS 4.79 Mond(f, JuM 21. I9n OAJLV P'I LOT Family Unity Saved by Tube Vows, Rings Exchanged PESTS Work ., • Teem -BUT so do WE. By ERMA BOMBECK We had an awkward sllua· Lion at JUr house the other night. A slonn hit our area and at 9:1& p.m. «>ur (amliy was sitting around the televisioo set in, tola l darkness. We had never spoken to une ano~er after 6 p.m. before. In the first moments of panic. my reaction v.·as lo call the Red Cross and tell them our television set was out and could v.•e possibl~· qualify as a disaster o:irea . Then I got hold ()f myself, lit a citronella can- dle from the patio and inhaled deeply. "Well now,'' I dressing myself darkness. "Wanta stories?" said. ad- to the tell ghost "Are they better than the Alfred Hitchcock movie we sav.· last night?" Silence. .. Say." said their father. "did you hear the amu sing Sklry of the man who went in- to a bar and ordered a Bloody "Mary for his dog?" "Flip \.\'ilson told that one the other night," said a voice. Silence. "Hey, I know ," I said. "Did Daddy and I ever tell you about the crazy washer that walked that we bought when we were first married?" "A coop le oo The Newlywed Game had a crazy washer lhat walked AND a crazy dryer that had asthma attacks." said our daughter. Silence. "Did you know your Uncle Louie was hospitalized with a strange disease where his AT WIT 'S END teeth became loose? .. ''They cured that last week on J\1edical Center," said our soo. finally. our daughter said softly, "ls this v.•hat you and Dad did before television was invented?'' "What do you mean? .. r ask- ed. •· 1 mean did you just sit around and talk?" "No," I said sh arply, "sometimes the screen door would open and shut or one of us "'·ould break out in measles. \Ve had our giddy mo1nents." "f don't see how you did it," she said. "just sitting around night after night making con- versation. You never saw an Olympic Game Disneyland • . . Jac q ues Cousteau •. _ Miss America pageant • . • the 0 s c a r Awards ... Times Square on New Year's Eve .•• 'f he \Vorld Series __ . " "Poor devils," muttered our son. Our youngest son finally spoke. (I thought we'd have lo massage his throat muscles.) ''Just think," he said, "Mom and Dad's life has been just one long commercial." .. Don't knock it," said my husband, "If Sesame Street had taught us how to count soaner. you would n't be here." SAUCERMAN SCHOOL ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS SUMMER SCHOOL June 28 • Augu1t 13 (or any part thereof) Willard ff. Saucerman, Ed. D. Telephone 540-4060 School 541-1751 (ave .) ENROLL NOW FOR FALL ONCE-A-YEAR SAVE 20% REGULAR ON STYLE BRAS FROM Jantzen Ho ll ywood Vassaretle Ma ide n Fo rm Van ity Fa ir Ma rj a Olga Veta's lllTIMATt APPAatL ............. .,.., ...... PHONE 642-1197 ARONSON -HALL Newport Harbor Lulhfr1n Chutch was the setting for the wedding of Ann Elaine Hall and ~tartln John Aronson of Huntington Beach. Parents of the bridal couple are Mr. and ~1rs. \Villiam Merle nail of Nev.•port Beach and !\1r. and ~lrs. Arv i4 ArGnSOn of Templeton. Ort flciant was the Rev, Ronalq White. r-.otaid or honor was Miss Patricia Kelly, and bridesmaids were lhe Misses Charleen Pa r o ! e , Jana }linkens. Che ryl \\'inters and Jan Bunch. r..1onique Bordier v.·as U1e fl ov.·er girl. Tom McGuire strved as best man and ushers were Kenntlh Gray. r-.tichael Wilson. Jim Matheis and Allen Aronson, the bridegroom's brother. The bride is a graduate or Newport Harbor High School. Her husband is a graduate of Templet.on High Srhool and Orange Coast Colltge. They will reside in Kalispell, tfont. Aidt~ Pll4!1 MRS. T. J. BRAUND BRAUND-CHARTER St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, Costa ~fesa v.·as the setting for the double ring ceremony linking Penny Ann Charter and Terry Joseph Braund. The Rev. Kenneth Krau se performed the rites for the daughter of Mrs. A I Y i n Charter of Costa t.1esa and the later l\1r. Cha rter and the son of Mrs. Wilma Braund of Costa t.1esa and C. J. Braund of r-.1 inot, N.D. Given in marriage by her brother, Al Charter. the bride. was attended by t h e bridegroom 's twi n sister. Miss Sharon Braund as maid of honor. Bridesmaids were the Mmes. Robert Timmennans. the bride's sister, Bill Yang and Ah1n Gorden and Miss Lois Fuller. Robert Reed served as best man, whi le ushers were Glen Adams, Yang, Chris Tucker and Craig Charter, the bride's brother. The bride and bridegroom. 91•ho will reside in Corona. are graduates or Costa 11.fesa High School. She earned h e r bachelors degree in social v.·t'lfare from Californ ia State College at Long Beach and he received a BS in electrical engineering at UC!. v.·hcre he is v.'orking tov.'ards h is masltrs. DTERY Atll STEP -8EllN,lll00 -KIMEL EQW,lll OI -GERBElllCH - "' Fl.. YE'I$ -U,$, KEDI Den<• Wear b~ O.nlkln CaperlD Dtnc• ''-C•r,ttctt¥• Sii-fff C11llollr• JJI l. 17tti St. Cen M"•. 141-1771 MRS. M. L. O"GARA McNALLY-LOBA CK Cheryl Ann Loback and Thomas H. t.1cNa11 y ex. changed vows and rings before the Rev. Dr. L. L. Grubb in Grace Brethren C h u r c h , Orange. Parents or lhe bridal couple are Mr . and Mrs. Flynn l,o. back of Costa Mesa and Mr. and Mrs. J-1. C. r.1cNa lly of Leavenworth, Kan . Matron of honor was Mrs. D en n is Kara s. "·hile bridesmaids v.·ere r.tiss ~fary Norris and Mrs. La r r y Lcback, the bride's sisler-i n- law. Cindy Loback was the flower girl. Serving his brother as besl m<1n was Robert McNally. and ushers were the b r i d e ' s brother and cousin, Larry and Stephen Loback. LeRUE-LOELKES Costa Mesa v.·iil be home for J.1ichael LaRue and his bride, the former Margery Loelkes who were married in St. John the Baptist Catholic Churth, C-Osta Mesa with the Rev. !\tark Stehly ()fficiating. Parents of the newlyweds are t.1r. and Mrs. Ferd Loelkes and Mr. and Mrs. Donald LaRue, all of Cos ta Mesa, Hooor attendants were 1\fiss Linda Da vies and J e r r Y Kre.sen. Bridesmaids were i'-1iss Nancy Julien, Miss Susan Pearch and Miss Barbara Olson. and ushers w e r e \Villiam r.toran, Michael Kime and William Dugas. Both the bride a n d bridegroom are Estancia High School graduate:\ and Orange C-Oa.st College students. ODERMAN-BETZLER Jeffrey Mark Odennan <1f Corona de! Mar claimed Marta Jean Betzler as his bride during nuptials in the Holy Angels Catholic Church, Arcadia. Parents of the nev.·lyweds are Pi.1r. an<! Mrs. Richard Betzler cf Arcadia and Mr. and Mn;. Samuel Oderman of CoroDa del Mar. "'1ias Vickie Betzler v.·as her sister's maid of bonor, and bridesmaids v.·ere. 1-f i s s e 1 Susan Wideman, r.1 i r i a m Tzutseh. Janie Peterson , Kathie Dixon and J o Hoffiens. Kathleen Hearne v.·as the flower girl. John Donnelly was the best man. Ushers 11i•ere the bridegroom's brothers. Capt. Dale Oderman and J\1ark Oderman and the bride's brothers. Kurt, Eric and Greg Betzler. Ring bearer was Michael Hearne. The bride is a graduate ()f Arcadia High School and UCLA where she pledged Kap- pa Alpha Theta. He r husband is • graduate of La Habra High School and graduated !umma cum laude fro m UCLA. Easy-care, wash-and-wear perm 17. 5 0 specially priced The easy-bree zy way lo give summer the come-on! Our specially priced Resror permanent, style cut, and Restor conditioner treatment ••. regularly 27.50 ••• oreated specifically to give you that born-free look of sofl, nalural curls, lustrous sheen, more body ·and managea bilily. Phone fo r your appointment today ..• • Mulicu.!"' • Ptdicura • Fxiah • (~ l••11ty Stutlie ' ~ O'GARA-VERN ON In a garden selling Linda an! fUck Vernon, the brkle's Let Vernon btcame the bride b~r. of fl.Uchael Larry O'Gara. The brld~. a l!Mlll Children's, LLOYD PE'ST CONTROL The bride, daughter of Mr. Home Society debutante, is •1 and Mrs. Richard C. Vernon of graduate of Newport Harbor Newport Beach, was given in High School, Orange Coutl marriage by her ~ather a.nd College and UCLA where 'he attended by her sister. Mtss ~p~le~d~g~ed~A~l~ph~•~P~h~L====~===::::::===~ Susan Vernon, as maid of i='" -- honor. I Another slstfr, Miss Cindy, Vernon with the l\f is s es Joanne Campbell and Linda Henderson were bridesmaids. Flowtr glrls v.•ere Hilary Crov.· I and Sheri O'Gara. ®illffilml~[ ~tabric savings The bridegroom. son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence O'Gara of }\emet, asked Glenn llndding lo bf! his best man. Ushers v.·ere Ralph Cross. Bob Cockle UP TO 70c YARD OFF ·,.I MRS. T. H. McNALL Y beautiful new fabrics perm• press coton 44"/45" wide • SAILOR DUC K PRINTS 100 •;. cotton 35"/36" wide • WHITE BULLSEYE PIQUE 100 •;. cotton 35"/36" wide • TERRY CLOTH PRINTS polyester/cotton 44 "/4S" wide • PIQUANTE DOTIED SWISS 100 "/. reyon 44"/45" wide • L YNETIE FLOCKED PRINTS polye1ter/r•yon -44"/4S " wide • CAMPUS SPORTS PRINTS polyester/cotton 44"/45" wide • ASSORTED SHEERS wide, wide color r•n9• COMPARI YALUIS TO 51 .69 TARD HOUSEoF So11ril Coo1t Plo1-lri1tal •1 s.,. Di•90 fwy. H-rtu-17tll ti l rit t•I Se•r. ..... -14Jolll1 C01to M-141.111' Orellto1olr Mon-Or•1t9•thorpe •1td H•r~or F1111erto-526-2JJ4 l11ot10 '-" C.11ter-l • ••Im• •f l t•nt•1.: ... lffWe Perk-121°6J21 - MRS. MICHAEL L•RUE lsla1zan hanging arou raltic? If "'rarzan of the> Ape;," puhlishf'd in 1914, is !h1·r<:, you <'oulrl he $7!i rif'h<'r. But you v>nuldn"L knnw this. Nnt, unlf';;;; yo11 h::id a copy of the "1111<1l;find1~rs' Vahu· (;11 irlr·," a. hrand -n1•w lii'itin~ of valu;dill' h!uik!';. .Just puhlishc:d, Lf]ii::; illustratrd hook l i~ls "'l'ar~.an" anrl almost 1,!iOO ut.h!•r "ran· booki:;" t.h:tl Can hrin~ throir f1ndj•rs :111yv.'lH'l'r• (rlllll $2!i to $.100 to $1,000 anJ nH1n•. 'l'he fact is, "rare luioi.I'" arf' n11l ran· ;1l all. ·rhcy'rc c•vf'rywherc. In attics. <:arag<•s. llr1sf'- mcnts. J'uhlic libraric'S. J•;vcn in your li ving roon1. If you triJl across the r ight voh1m!' liy r;llJ!:.ir 1\llan Poe, J\.1ark 1'wain. or Nal hanir.J Jlawt.hornP, you c·nn hit the liternry jaf•kpot. Tr you just happen to find a signt~I original ropy of .fames J oycc':i; "lJJysst!s," ynu c·an trarlc it for a dream vacation. You may not lie lhnl lucky. But ynu fan easily come up with a lesser treas ure lJy, :o;;ly, J ohn Stcinheck, W illiam J<'aulknt•r, rir l•:rnci:;t l·lcmingway t ha t you can sell to :lln1osL any l1ook dcalf'r for between $40 anrl $500. 'J'his unique book lists almnsl 1 /iOO work1 puhlish1·d h1<twcen 1818. and 1!:169 hy 11vl!r 1,000 :tul.hors. It is hy far thP. most romph:te, arcura1.c list. of it.s typP i.;vcr publishcrl . It givf'S a11lhi1rs, titles, dates and places of fi r..t puhlic·ation, .l:.1n1(•s l\1anninJ.' Ut•rg({uist, Ph i> .. is the <:on!)ult.ing l·:ditor for the "Rookfindcrs' Valot· (;uidr," \vhi ch alsn introduces you tn thr.·faSt:·inat.ing hobby of hook collcC't.in~-f)r. Ri·r.l!quist, J'rnfcssor nf J-list.ory al Villanova· I Jnivf'rsi!y, has p11hlish1!d m:1ny scholarly :tr1.i1·IPs and rt•vii·ws on Amerir.an 11istory, a ri ch hack.l!tOUnd to draw on for his :suhjccL o( "ran· liool;s." 'l'ht) pri('e nf this pricclcs.'i little volume is only $~t7ri, includin~ pr»>tal<(e anti hanrllin~. 'l'wo fur $7. Six fo r $18.!Kl. One trip to the attic can rC'pay ynu a hundre<l times over. Send yr1ur <:httk or money order for lhi1 "first t'lliLiPn" lClfl:\y. 'l'hen start hunlin~ for '"l'ar7.~1n" anrl those other ont~So-rare books. . .. ' • -· ·' ·, . ' . " ~ ... . . . . . . . . ' Jf CAIL V PILOT Morrd11, Junt 21, l 971 TV Review Special on /(illy Unusual Only Four Variety Shows Survive Cut By CYNTIDA LOWRY f\'EW YORK !AP) -The educational \elev~ion :stations' "Fanfare" hour Sunday night was an American version of a French one.men show , but more than anything else a 61). minute d!monstrallon of oovel effects that can be used to entertain the eye as well as the ear. The star wa:s the French singer and composer Gilbert Becaud who sang -mo:stly his own number! -for the boor. The show was alm ost Mondoy Evening JUNE 21 l:OO II ltr flkn Jerry Dunphy. (I) QC ..... Rtnoner, Smrtll. o o m M•lw lMpe 1111btll r.o11ti1111td from 5 PM. NIW York Mets n. Plltsbur1h Pir1l1s 11 Pitts· bursh's ThrH Rlwrs Sttdlum. 0 Tiit Alltn Siio. Guests: Blrti.11 NleholL Momt 1!1tl1 mlJSiul fl"CIUP, Bob []rl5f1!n tnd Clrol lhe Eltpti1nt U Sir O'aod Mot4t: "'JM Sapt-. fOlf" (d11rt11) '64-NK Culnnw , Betti Dl'lis, Nicola M1ur1y, lrtn1 Worth. An Enrlish ~hoolmtlttr II tridi;ed Into posin1 11 1 French no- bltmtn ind finds his lilt !Hlad with SUll!fns& IS ht b1com13 tilt ICllP•· rott or 111 ecc:enrric l1mlly. Q l!n m The flhrtsfllrltl m st.u Trek fl) A Tl., lor Jolin/Clllftlt'1 h4 I!) Fbfltr frrrd!y m 11otldtno l4 tir!) LI ltort f1mm..-M C.U..Ji (D rttwl Jim Htwthornt. l;JO (l) Nftl Biii HllddJ. CJ) Tnrtb w Colt~ (I) CIS Nn11 W1ttu Cronkltt. m TM n,lrr1 lhn m_,,... l!!!)W.CW fllm{Makall lli)TIA .... - ,.•CU "9n W11ter Cronkll1. ({I T• Tell Ille Tnrift D ""'1'11rty u.1 entirely in French , .11llhough Becaud's English seemed very good ;1.·hen he used 11. Just about every camera t rick in the book was used around him , all sorts of double and triple exposures. At one p0int he was !!nging in front of a moving gallery of old French posters. One whole number w11s built around oranges. another around roses and still another ar o und flashlights and all created bb:arre effecu. From beglnning to end, every thing but the music was m Olvld fnid 111ow Guests 1rt t.otntdl1nf1ctor Godfre1 C..mbrlda•. orpnltt Vl11ll rol, 1ulhor lerit Kosin.ti, t11d rtpGrter / 1ulllo1 Muy Th1)'tr. m""""' m '"'"'" kM' llilnr Cl!) Ml,_,tt. Ytkttl Sllow t:GO 8 lfl7btn'Y R.F.D. (I!) Mll!lt IK· llOIU Sun's 1dvice, quits hlf job at tilt b•krl'J and buys 111 tp larm. but !ht h•td wort r•h her and aht bt1ma Stm !or 11111' lroublts. 0 Mfltrit: (C) (2tlr) "T1•1 Hw, Wt ti"""' (COl!lldy) '63-lamu Sltwrrt. S1ndrt Ott, Au dt11 Me•d· ows, A f1thtr with 1 tolllJ'·agtd d1u(ht1r 1lloJ1:1 his lm11ln1tion lo run 11ml)lnt whllt 1ttemptln11 lo pmttd hls otl1J1tit1K. 11 Th f•cttfw 0 (])Cl) ED AaC Mond11 MO<lit : (CJ (Zhr} "You're A 811 l or llfcn(" (comedy) '67-[lilabtth H1rtmen, G1r1ldln1 P•Kt. Julie Harris. P1t11 Kastner, Mkhttl Ounn, Rip Tom, Tony Bill, K1re~ Blttll.. A rounr 11· br1ry book·$laeker wtlost f11her ln· sists. ovtr his motht r'I t111ful pm· !~sis, that he must "°" irp, "'°"'' to 1 rooming houv. (l)At ISRt @l M0¥11: "Tlle RI• 11111 F1R " ltgs Ol1mond," RIY DanltMI. Q) Ftfony SQu1d 111 htlltltl "Th• Triumph at Christy Brow11.'" Crltlcalty 1fllll·rectlved pro- fllt of lri.ti 1vth01-poet Chrl.ty Brown, • ctrttlrtl paltY Ylctlrrr lint• birth. m lo Mhtn lfls-1• ma,,.,.. 3': (~ (2'r) "Mtrl:I tllt Mt(r'llflceflt. .. m v h::a6o di $olle unusual. In fact, the backgrounds were so ingenious NEW YORK {AP ) -The: looked pretty rtlll('h like the and novel that they became vulely show , network ne•t one, particularly s!nce the foreground, throwing the television's single m 0 st the guest stats are making a show out of shape. circuit around U1em. popular form during the 1970-Still, the hour should be an Carol Burne t t . Glen I. · 1· f tho h 71 sea30n, goes on the en· nsp1ra ion or se w o pro· Campbell, Dean Martin and du ce the home-grown variety dangered species list in the Flip Wilson ha s escaped lh!!. hours whic h, partlcularly lhis Stars Slate 1971 ·72 season. whole&ale a:ilng , but the last season, ha\'e slipped into Out of about 15 prog rams in casualty l111t is long, ranging a dull rut. the category during the pa st from Ed Sullivan a n d * TV 'Harvey' fall and winter, only four have Lawrence Welk to Johnny Daytime Su n d a Y pr1>-survived for another year. Cash. Tom Jones and Andy gramming -on and off the NEW YORK (AP) -Helen One theory is that big, Williams. networks -seems to involve Veteran v j ewe rs, ac· bunche!. There are all the kid· Hayes and James Stewert will brassy v11riety shows, costing cwtomed If not reconcilced to dy show:s early in the day, recreate for television the $200,000 or more per program. drastic action, have Jeamed to followed by a scattering of Broadway stage roles they are victims of the eron omic take these upheavals in sb1de. religious programs. Shortly pla ye d last year in a revival of pinch because they are good Some seasons after a glut of aftc.rd noon there come. in Mary Chase's Pulitzer Prize for only one or !110 repeat situation comedies, they i;tarl rap1 succession, three news bro2llca.s~. '!'here are those -dropping like flies, Then '··tc'''le \\-'Inning comedy, "Harvey" " w programs, one pe r largrly older vie11,·ers -11,•ho Westerns suddenly went out of network. After noon, when no t The 90 minute special will believe thal variety has been style. After e rest, they ded ica ted lo sports. are hours be broadcast next season on guitared to death: all those always come back . v;hen one may get his fill of the "Hallmark Hall of Fame" long haired gu ys in suede Mean"·hile, there i:s .11 whole rea lly old and usually very by NBC. jackets and fringe st rummin· summe r to get through, and bad movies. Miss Hayes will play Veta, and preachin' about peace and variety show s are the broad· It sometimes seems a waste whose brother, Elwood P. love. Others insist that there casting equivalent of the that three of the best ne\\'S In· Dowd, played by Ste wa,l, is have been so many hour! of bl' h. g b In ' h terview shows arrive at what pu IS in us e:ss 5 am· friendly with a six foot , in-comedy with mu~lc or mu.s ic mock ree.ding·light, h ot for many people is a bu5y part visible rabbi!. "'ith comedy lhat one show weather diversion. of the day -12:30 p.m. lo 2 ----------------'c,,------ p.m. * This Sunday, CBS' •·race the Nation" kicked off the period with a leisurely and in- teresting interview w i t h presidential aspirant Sen . George l\lcGovern (J).S.D.). It \vas follo""'ed by NBC's ··~1cet the Press " with a father's day special starring Sen. Stuart Sym1ng!on 10.r-.10.), anrl hi! son. Rep . Jame:s W. Sy m· ington 1 0-~to.). Finally there \\-'as ABC's "Issues an d Answers" "'ith a pre·tapcd in· terv iew with West German Chancellor Willy Brandl. The simple format of "Face the Nation '' and "Meet the Press" -"'ell prepared, ag- gressive questioners "'ho keep the controls on the ques· !loners' side -is very :satisfactory from the viewers ' !landpoint. "Issues and An s w crs'' depend:s more on the fluency of the guest than Qr(lhe skills of the lnterviewefs. Until the last few holes in the finals of the U.S. Open Sunday. ABC seemed to be broadcas ting the most dramatic golf tournament of the year. J1n1 Simons, a 21. year-ol d amateur was out in front or the pack of the na- tion's best pro fe Sl lo n a I golfers. He fell behind at tbe end , 2nd FEATURE "Colossus. the Forbin Project",.,. '" HA11:901t SHO,.OtQ CEJfTElt l!DWARDS HARBOR ,:::.1 llCLUll•t . .......... , PLAYIND 81 I lllCl!l I T•1 111 l1c1r4 Gutsb ltltluit. Crttdtra CINMl•r ........ ,, Httty Grltt1 Oht S.nlf, r•• IN Tln1 Tumtr, TOllt' Jot Whitt. •nd Stlpptn'll'Olf. •m-m Oar Y1lllfllrrr Wlld1m1n (I!) f'JOIJ([J Dori1 DtJ (lll Doris pet-.11nd Jack Nick lau s and Lee 31.11dt1 her l1rmer-f1t1'ler ~Otn'Ar Trevino, who were tied, "'ere f'11•) to .i.n: 11.-for 1 .. k. thtn to play off I 1udden dea th 1111 to tlruni out IOl'M .. ., to kMP match today. him Imm belnK bottd lo dut~. 1------'-----------------------=----------------I "Will !ht 'Gltor Glides S11rvlvtT' II!) Cl11ist tll• LMnr Wotd OI AnPltol Jrlerm 7:913 a:l c ...... Sien'* HOl!l ~!l!­ f)ffi !f)Tlo-- ID T1 Tiii iii Trdl fD Wertcl P7m IE)Mnll' ..... .,_ .. mm ltJI IJ I]) "-"'• lwJ C1} LllCY wtllb to •ik lor two d1ra olf hvm 111;ut. but Is tfr1ld " bK.IVM fl Ktrly't mood. 0 Birt. Wm! Nm m Qi:ttst terr Admrtutl fii) MnkAlt{P1stol"1 Did: m u era • w.ri. er.-ail TIA 11• ""'f' ., ... D 1111!!- ~--.... 0 '1l l!J-llJ -....: .,,,... I .. (rrrntt!J) 'l2-8oris ~ Cdl~ Cllw. m.., .. Qecl 11"'8 ()) __ a am-c...""'""" oo II .ubltiMt lat. U CIJlil C!l'"" -'"" 111n11n kl raat ..,..,. m"""' c.. .. TI1t.rlldrf'oltd1 n. Ot(rolt Oiwflt. Cl m frt1111 A llnl'1 fJt "-11:•5 0 Mwlt : "lfflber's Moon,. (dra· "F1mll7 Tm." M111l1'1 f1mll1 llM mt) '43-Ct11rp Mont~ry. mt1l1 Ill• Is llnc1ndtd from 111• 1rl1tocrtcJ, ttio11fh IOtllt fl lltr 111· 11:15 11 Ont"" ..,._ cntMt Wtte kltln. ll:JO m MIMe; "1)t M111 T1llJ Would II""° Not Nin(' {horror) '39--&rll Klr· G Cil. fl W• AV., Oeed fllT loft', Loni• G117. ,_rtllf ~ mtft'IOIY 11111 to 19!11 lirfwtll f'ICOlltctlonl Of !ht ntW, ltJI· l9 1(111"'4!1 AdmlnlstratlM, th• *<*Int 1tJ d Pip, !ht Fl'IK6om RIM Mid tht ,nm Berlin W1n. Tuesday DXfflME M6VIE5 l:tl ........ --.. f ...... (CORI ..,, '35 -C.111111 lomfltrd, ftld MtcllatflY . .,. ('Wlltrm) '42-Rldl~ Oh, Frt~ GltfMd. ....... c.. .... ....-(1111· , • ., '41 -~rt ~"·['ti· ,,. ..,.,. ~· . .., ..,_ . -(-· hiN) 'U -lflll!'llll O'Htfl, .NII Ct11ndltr. 1 :00 fJ Mo.11: "Thi M11k Ctrp,r (eomtd7) 'SI -Lucll!e Bill, Johw .. .,. CIJ DU (l]ll!I - m .,.... .. ,hd lt1.r' <""'· !tty) '4S--Uo,d Nolan. Sirnt H1uo, 10:00 (]) ".INI"' rrw1r11· <di•ml '57 -(the! llrrymort, c.dl lllllllHr. 1:00 m-cr ... tf ..... (drtrrll) 'Sl -.otrJllla C.lwrt. Jtd ~ 2:00 D "A hll "' Ad""" Cd11m1) '47 -JMin Hooll1k. Ctnt Tilmly. .. (JJ (C) "T~ (dtll!ll ) 'Ml - Burt l •ncntl!t, GIM l ollobrlrlda. Tony Cuttla. Uil. (t) "1111 lrt...,. (ldwfttuN) '12-Anthony Otrlw. JodJ Lrwrlncl. (})hi 10 AN UICl11t. EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT• SHOWING NOW AT TWO THEATRES! STEVE McQUEEN takes you for a drive in the country. The country is France . ~ ' The drive is at 200 MPH! "LE MANS" . ' ·~~-~~. I , \\~/· . 'I -- A CINEMA CENTER FILMS .PRESENTATION lritten by HARRY KLEINERMusic by MICHEL LEGRAND·Executive 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 [!:1 ·~~:·.:::.:::00 EDWARDS' - AISOLUltLY TIIE UST CHANCE TO SEE "LOVE STORY" AT THE MOST BEAUTIFUL THEATRE IN THE WORLD. POSITIVll Y ENDS TUlS 6/22 • Jo~n lllliey &lay lltlland ~O I C(l(i I fWll:Pl J'tlll,f AND NOW FOR TffE FIRST ·TIME TOGETHER ANYWHERE ENDS TUES. JUNE 22 Meet Henry.!< Henriolla .. !he laugh riot of the year. · watterl1Dtlhau Elldnel1a9 "A fte<a Lelll" NOW IXClUSIVllY .WWI ~ =All>ROM:DA STRAIN l!ll- STEVE McQUEEN at200MPH! In Doris' profession y ou have 1.o ,.. know how to sell yourseU ';:; B~rbra Streisand George Segal . ~'<l'r: TlmOwl = -NOW AT BOTH EDWARDS CINEMAS- THE NO. 1 ATTRACTION OF ALL TIME! WINNER OF 4 ~c_:~:~; 11?AWH TAYlOR , ..!: ~~ ~Ef1l LMANOO\fil -<L~~Am RKHAR~ guRTON1 ~X HARRl>ON M ...... '""''°""' .. .iu.. ..... c.,, .• 1 WEEK ONl Y -ENDS TUES . IN HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER 2 MILES SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FWY, r .;.. I .. I I r. I DAILY .. ILOT Still .. Mi. LOVESICK -James E. Smith comforts his young d aughter. Jean Scott. over the pangs of first love in a seene from '"The Beautiful People" at the Costa ~lesa Civic Playhouse. ----~=----==== [ ·=---- SECOHO FEATUll!E I "THE BAI Y MAKER" la1bara Htr$11 ey ~------· ., I: ' • Th~ mod£rn malcing of Emile Zola's master p;«~· l A OlSTJNCTION FILMS, INC. RELEASE · COLOR 1"0 O!lt ~~ I 11 Ai;>Mlflll) \!!:;) -·--ANNA.~~El~~~ with ~E~E.::E~~·~·~•.I Plaza suite. Through its portals pass the world's most mixed-up mortals; -· \ I ' . : r_I .J J J ~ J ::./ ./ I i ·' .r PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT ST ARTS WED., JUNE 23 ' ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • COAST HWY. AT MACARTHUR BLVD. ~ NEWPORT BEACH * 644·0760 Mo~du, Jut1t 21, 1971 DAILY •ILOT J9 'Tlte Beautiful People' ""-. Costa Mesa Play Outs.hines Weak Script· By TO~f TITUS OI "" 0111y Pll91 S"lt their mission as though --.. ,-,-,-,.-,-,-,,-.,-,-,-.,-,-"-.. - .. Beautiful People" were one ~.a.~ve~~1~~1~11"1a~~~·~·~:l~:t':f,~~ of the finesl pieces of theater tor •nd ••t 111.1011 DY lllclle•d ever written. And it is this ;::.~:e~,.=;'!. •;: l~~"'~'":-,,:v MJ:~ Whoever first ad v Is e d feeling of enjoyment, of f11~;_~~ :.l .. ~J.~ °o~ ~ .. T, 1...:.0~ '0~1~ •.r against attempting to make a in v 0 1 v em en t, which '"• C11"'m111111. c,n1., 1vc111or111m a11 '' .,k .... ,. , .. , I . ea "'' O••"!l• Cc.inl! ' • I ' II ' 0 " II a •• "' ... o a sows r transform.!I a pot en I i a I I y 1t~H•••t1on1 y•· :io~. should have been acquainted tedious evening into a ow•n wuutu "1 1.sT a111 c1111en with Ma ry Eastman Rigney. plcaslf!"able, if no~ particular· ~;:~ :::~:::~ Jimt/'t11 5~f,'~ This sklllfu! and sensitive ly exciting. experience. t!..~11;z:•P~1~•b10uom ·· c1~~~· r:;~,~ director has taken whal would Apart from the three ~:~11.~11~":t.11 ·••· T•"li.':."~:1~ on paper amount to one of the members of the Webster H1rold W1b<1• ...... Jen Newmtn I I I S•t•I Jtm Ft!lu worst pays o the rapid y con· family. who comprise the core eluding season and fashioned of the play, there is litUe re la- lt into a dehghtful evening of tionship among the odd assort· theater with her production of men\ of characters. The minor "The Beautiful Pepople" at figures are litUe more than the Costa Mesa Ci vic sounding boanis for the ex· Playhouse. pounding of the principals' Will iam Saroyan's fragile free-spirit philosophy. Yet fantasy is not thealrr in the under t-.tiss Rigney's skillful conventicnal sense. nor in any direction. they take on. at other sense that co1nes im-lea.st. a shape and form. mediately to mind. It is, Most impressive of the cast rather, a collection 0 f is Bill Cullen in the difficult characters moving amiably role of the teen-age poet who and unobstrusively through a lives on a virtual cloud of ir· cotton candy script with about responsi bility writing one-word as much molivatlon as though novels and busying himself in they were created by a Pinter childlike recreation. (,'ul\en's er a Becket!. ease of manner and natural There are no conflicts, no ability ove~come. a good many recent accident. Blendint: an ingrained aura of fanta sy with the ap- prehension or encroaching reality. in the form of first discovery of love, is Jean Scott, whose stage debut at 1he age of 14 is an auspicious one indeed. Miss Sc o 1 t displays a sense of en· chantment in her role as patron saint of the household mice, and her transitions from fairy child to budding young woman and back agatn are ex· cellenl. The imperturable patriarch dramatic climax, no Insights obsta~Jes, 1~clud1ng that of an into character or motivation arm rn a shng, the result of a and no real story develop-1,-=-~:::;:;;;;~"11 ! menl. The play, which is I me<eilolly b<iel. mernly rnns ~m l it course and dissolves from th~~lce~ei.ss Rigney and her l 0 disciples -for such one must be to undertake such a ques- tionable endeavor -carry out Rod Honored HOLLYWOOD (U PI) -Rod Steiger was invited lo the guest of honor al the Mo.scow International Film Festival. P9fforr11eit(.H 7:JO Ir t :JO lqted "6 " All Seen $2.50 CWilllamGHolde11 r~ O'cNeal J , ~~!cMald~ r:, ....... ltdwwdaFIJm (;\Vild. Gaovers1 • "Melvyn Douglas is MAGNIFICENT!" -JUDITH CRIST., New York Magazine' I Never Sang For My Father ' l!rn -. ~ They were damned good cowboys, until they robbed a bank. 1 hl£100..oo..DWVM·IAAYUI Pi"esertt A flMCE ECM'Nl!S FUil · WtilAM to..OCN ~AH OlEAL. l(AAl_ IMl..IXN ~ -..w..o ~ Co-S\.lflTc;l l ~ CAll.fj Nd I l\AOE. IUPTS · wrillWI .nl Dndellbri' fl.ME EIHIMD> ·Pm.ad bri< ll.Al(f IJWNU.,.l(EN W~ bit.BIN Ql.OSMTH·IETRXXl!Jl;·PAHAWiOl"j ~--o EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT STARTS WED., JUNE 23 er lhls ftithty famll y Is W!'ll played by James E. Smith, who reflects a duh of Grandpa Vanderhoff and • pinch of Elwood P. Doud in his deceptively shrewd live·and- lel-llve philosophy. It (s les!'I Smith'• fault than Saroyan's that his rambling soapbox oratory late in lhe play seems contrived and devoid or mot ivation. Into this cuckoo's nest only a stone's throw from reality co1ne four other characters whose contributions are ques- llonable, but who eome across quite admirably ne\•ertheless in the Costa ~tesa production. Primary among these is Clark Farrell as a stiff-col- hl~U transfigured Farrrll turn1 in a splt!ndid performance, U"Slng a stiff phy5ical mannerism to its best comic advantage. Two others, Lois Wilson as Smith's long-lost friend and Stan Bell as the parish priest, are drawn merely as listening posts for Cullen and Smith, respectively. However. both are effective in contrast as representatives of the "outside world ." Terry Phelps creates a fine comic characteritalion as the gutterol·voiced town drunk. although h1~ manner quic::kly becomes d istracting. Completing the cast are Jerf Newman and Jim Feffer in walk~n assignments . Aiding the overriding mood of unreality is R i c h a r d Andersen's larger-than-Ille set which straddles the fine line betwe('n actuality and i~ agination. 'rhe use of a re:ar screen projection camera al!O heightens the effect. particularly the final tableau. .. The Beautitul People" ma)" not be a beautiful play, but it is vrry close to being a beautiful production al the Civic Playhouse. Fin a I performances will be given Thursday through Saturday at the Community •Ce n I e r Auditorium on the Orange County Fairgrounds in Co.sta Mesa. lared welfare worker who 1;::====================:; casts a pall on the Webster I NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES life style but who becomes so l<--;;;~~~~~~-~-~-~~~~~-~~~~;;;-' enraptured by the famil)·'s I """"'' m'gio he fi" d s ( EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEME~T \ Alao Thl1 DllMy Fii'" "Son of Flubber" Starting June 21 CONTINUOUS DAILY JACKOOl.U~b aliens !I ~lS.Xlff[ ananas" :;:.~:: 2nd Comedy Hit "THE TWELVE CHAIRS" !GI Mon ...,,,,, --·· l«t' 10 , .... ~<Min" I xt Orf!' .. , ....... ""--"UolO.&ti.l•&- "<kln"' ~00. s ).~, ;··;;-;::..1 "SHINBONE ALLEY" 101 • "RING OF BRIGHT WATER " MATINllS DAILY IT'S SOPBISTICAT£D tNOUGH ~ FO\\ KIDS, SIMPLE ENOUGH \t r, Il.7 lOR ADUL'tS! -- carol channing .. -... eddie bracken ... ,, ducal 1lldlltlt! In THE WONDERFUL REAL ROMANCE OF ARCHY AND MEHITABEL BOX OFFICE OPENS 7:15 SHOW AT DUSK THE STARS or IOlfNAq SHINE EVEN BKIGHTER "Ati.y" .r 12:15, J:41, 7:11, 11:41 "w ... , ... , 1 :45, s :1 s, 1:41 MATINEES DAILY Choose One of the Many Art Linkfetter Shows You Coast & Southern Federal Coast & Southern Federal a New Way to Beat Inflation Offers You These Offices to Serve You: ... Just Join Highest Prevailing Rates: * MAIN OfflCI: 9th & HUI, La.Ana•!•• 82S-135t 6$e COlll'OUNDID DAILY AND PAID QUARTlftLY.'" .. WILIHIPI! 8t OPIAMIPICY PUCE: 3033 WUlhlre Blvd., L.A.• :sN-1215 llHltlelS 5.00"l•-5.13 o/• LA. CMC CINftPI: 2nd & BrotdW•Y • 821-1102 P111b00k; No Minimum. .. HUNTINGTON HACH: t1 Huntington Center• Club (714) 907-1 047 5.25 •/•-5.39"1• IANTA ANA LOAN lfftVICI AGENCY: * tGN.MalnSt.•(714)547-9257 With 1 $2,500 b1l1nc• In your N ving1 ThrH Month C.nlflc1t.; No Minimum. .. SANTA MONJCA: 711 Wll1hlra Blvd.• 383-0749 5.75°1°-5.92"1• .. IAN 'IDPIO: 10th & 1"1clflc • 131 -2341 account, you art ellglbl• to b9comt .. WUTCOvtNA: ~tland Shopping Ctr.• '31-2201 • membtr. Subsllinllat uving1 art On•Y•trCtrtiflcete; $1,000 Minimu m. .. PANOPIAMA CITY: 8118 Van Nll)'S Blvd. • 112-1171 avall1bl• wtten purchaalng m1ny lt1mt • lncludlng automobiles, furniture • 6.00"lo-6.180/o TAJtlANA: 1!7SI Ventura Boulevard• S45-8!14 appllancn, jewalry. Plu1 m.ny .. LONG NACH:Srd & locUll • 4S7·7411 frH HNicH -monl)' ordera. TWO-YNrC.rtlflcate; SS,000 Minimum • ' .. C,.0--1 .... I p11 Dll~Hooi-h•lo4"' Hfe deposit box~ eto. • 1tteot1~ Annual Eemlr1p {----~--~--~- . COAST ANO SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS f --------·--~ ----- • INSURANCE TO $20,000 ASSETS OVER $800 MILLION . \ . ' ' . ... ,, , I • '' ..... ~~-··. " ...... " • • ,, ' ' ' . . ... .. " .. ._ ' ' .. ' . ' ~·· ....... ~ -· .. ~ ..... ' ... '' .~" .. ~' . .. • 0 DAI LY PILOT s Monday, Junt 21, 19TI U.S. Banks Goi11g Push Button Exchange In Tokyo Acti ve But Most Custo 1ners Welco m e Co niputers, TV Ca1ne~as, Services 8)',. DEAN C. AtJ LLER NEW YORK (UPIJ Banking, once a race to lace meeting with the neighborhood banker nr his employcs, has £one push button. While some custoniers rue this la test p h a s e of dehumaniLation. n1os1 of then1 welcome the computers, the television cameras, l h e buttons and the pneumatic tubes that speed transactions and eliminate long \l'alting lines. A cross count1·y check an1ong !he count ry's li,000 full se>rvice> banks .sl1011·s just how fdr the;,'vt'. come since the di!ys \vhen new technology meanl a ne w rubber stanip or a better quality quill pen. In Bulfalo, for example. customers or the fi.iarine Midland Bank·\Veslern can play a money machine any hou r of the day or nlght. All they need do is in.'lcrt a speeial individual card into the .slot of an ap paratus fTl(lunted outside the bank, punch out an identi rication . .set lhe dial for $25 or S!IO and wait ror the 1noney to kick through the slot. Television drive in banking is a feature at lhe Huntington Na tional Bank 's North Columbus branch in Ohio. The customer eases his car up lo a v.•.indow, talks to a picture on the TV screen and then uses buttons to make deposit.~ or cash checks. The Cont inental Bank Jn Ph iladelph\a has a secret number gimmic k. Your money con1es through without d :.truggle at any or its 50 branches if the secret ntunber you give the girl matcht's up \vlth a report from a button operated machine. In Chicago, computers at Beverly Bank give l he customer one co1nprehenslve n1 onthly stalement Ii s I i n g checking and s av in g .'I balances, instqllment loan and mortgag'e figures. I n Baltimore, Equitable Trust has a large automated scoreboard hung on one wall. Customers take a numbered ·{:( ·tt card, just like at some shops, then sit in a lowige. sipping fr ee coffee and r e a d i n g magazines. w1tU the board calls them in a burst or flashing lights. Surety National Bank of Lo,, Angeles won 't say its money is unto uched by human }lallds but that 's vi rtually the case. Its bank in the Civic Center consists largely of buttons, microphones, electronic cash drawers and the like. Anyone wan ting ta bank presses a button, talks 'with a female face showing ·on a television sc reen and walls briefly unlit the infernal machine cranks oul instructions. When ,I ha t happens, an d only then, cash drav.·ers are optned or loan applica tions processed. At Chase Mahhattan in New York, and many other bank.'!, people can use automatic chec k deposi tors. They feed the check and deposit .sllp in the machine and the whole thing gels added to their accounts wilhout the bother of 11t.anding in teller lines. ln St. Pau l, .an on-line computer eliminates the need for tellers to check out a savings balance at First National Bank. In fl.tacon, Ga ., customers at First National Bank ~ Trust can pay up to 40 separate monthly bills by filling in one 11upercheck whirb saves time and po.stage. The Bank of Delaware in Wilmington has a talking computer. The girl behind lhe counter picks up a special telephone to check out a customer. The c omp u ter , which can speak fi.4 "·ord.'l, does the checking and okaying of the customer. All the clerk does is push buttons. Jn the bittersweet words of Raymond True, a depositor at Surety Nationa l in Los Angcle.s : TOKYO (AP) -Trading volume on lhe Tokyo stock ex- change zoomed lo 42.7 billion shares in 1970 as the Japanese economy boomed. This total swamped the 2.9 billion shares traded last year on the New York Stock Ex· change. But the dollar value of the transactions was a n o t h e r story. Al the end of 1970 the value1 or all shares listed on thel Tokyo exchange totaled the equi valent of $25.4 blllion while the value of shares listed on the New York eirchange amounted to $636 billion. Th at's because the average value of a J apanese sha re is -41 cents, compared ·with $55 for New York exc h an g e shares. SHARP RISE But Other S ide of Coin Mesan Given Major Post On Railroad A sharp rise in l:ioih volume and prices on the Tokyo ex- change began in 1968 when foreigners -about 70 percent of lhe m Europeans -sought safety in Japanese securities du ring an inte r n a t i on a I monetary crisis s t e m m i n g 1from devaluation of the British pound and a rush to CQJlverl various currencies in· to gold. Found in Tiny Idaho Bank • ... TROY, Idaho (AP) -Thls norlhern Idaho farming com- munity has onl y 514 people, but its bank has 6,000 accounts and asset s of $15 million. The reason is that people bank bv mail \vith the F'irst Bank of Troy from round the \VOrld-Japan. G e r m a n y, South America. A r r i c a, Australia and even Pago Pago. "We've been preU y lucky ma inly because of th e personal attention we give all nur customers," says Frank Brocke, the bank president. Plant Again Back in Costa Mesa Explorer Motor If om e Corporation has returned its e;c:ecutlve offices to the main plant at Costa Mesa from the South Gate, California offices of Anthony Industries. I"nr .. its parent company. An t h ony Industries is listed on the American and Pacific Stock Exchange.~. "We don't lose many accounts once we get them.'' Broc ke, tiS, joined the bank in 1926 after working two years for nothing as a cashier apprentice in nearby Kendrick while in high school. Now he s<1ys he pays himself $20,000 a year. He 's an unusual banker in many \vays. Troy·s mayor, E J. do n Storm, the owner of an elec· trical business. says: ''How many other bank presidents 00 you know you can call any hour of the day or nig ht and get through to'.' If people can't reach him at the bank . they ca ll him at home ." \Vaino Lauri. a retired schoolteacher in Calilornia, explains why he banks by mail in Troy instead of with a large branch bank around the cor- ner from his hon)e : "I sta rted an account wilh lhe bank in 1934 when l was in charge of a camp outside Troy. They 've always ren~ dered such good service, 1 just kept banking with them." "rve received a personal note at least once a month from Frank Brocke all these years-asking about lhe family, telling about the latest hap· penings in Troy. That's the \Vay he is." Lauri says his Army allot· ment cheeks were late when he was in Korea. He says Brocke told his wife to go ahead anrl ·write checks and the bank would cover them at no cost unti l the Army squared away its bookkeeping. Lauri says there is no in- A Costa h1esa man. Edward J. Murphy, has been promoted to the top sales position in the Southwest !or Union Pacific Railroad. co nven ience in cashing out-of· TOP RAIL POST state cheeks. ''The First Bank Murphy, 924 J unipero Drive, was appointed traff ic manager for the road's Sout h e r n California • Nevada • Arizona territory. He succeeds Fred L. fi.torgan who has become general traffic manager at Omaha for the western states. of Troy 's reputation surpris· Edward J, Murphy lngly is \veil knov.n to most ------------ bankers in every state and Murphy joined UP in 1937 and bas held numerous traffi c department pos it ion s in Southern California including the general traffic agencies at San Pedro, Santa Ana and Ora nge. lie has been genera) agent, freight department, at I.h.'i Ange les since 1967 and in hi.'1 new post also will head· quarter at Los Angeles. country l've ever been in." The bank does not charge lor services. There's no charge for writing checks, no escrow fees. no charge for <>!her services subject to eharge by other banks. If someone runs into dirricul!ies making loan payrnents, the bank carries him without pil- ing up interest ch a r g es . Rrocke says only a handful of loans have gone sour over the past '40 years. Brock s say.'! many cf the customers come from the University of Idaho 20 miles away and he credits student s ior the worldwide reputation of the bank. "\V e've never advertised 1lur free services." he say:1 . "Peo- ple just hear about us." 2 747s Set Se at R ec ord SA N F' RA N C I SC 0 IBW)-The 747 superjel ha.'l really arrived. An all time record ror pas.,enger loads carried by comrnercial airplanes w a s r stablished here when a pair ~.~ of Pan American W o r 1 d w ll s Airways 747 s u per jets a treet d"mpted • lolal of 760 peoplt into San Francisco on two suc· cessive flights within 24 hours o( each other, Each flight was a scheduled nonstop from Tokyo to San Chatter f'rancisco. """"""'---~~,...~.~~~~ The Finance Mini st r y repor ted that in fiscal 1969 foreigners bought Japanese stocks with a total value of $1.66 billion. In fiscal 1970. the figure dropped to $1.04 billion. Americans have accounted for only about. 3U perctnt or total foreign investments, but Japanese b r ok er s say American investments have been increasing since last year. LIMITED NUMBER \Vhen foreigners s t a r le d buying stocks on the Tokyo ex· change. they concentrated on a limited number of high-pric- ed issues such as Sony Corp .. Hitachi Ltd., Matsushita Elec- tric Industrial Co .• and a few ot h e r elec t r i c a n d p ha r mace u tical issues. .Japanese investors rushed in . loo, pu shing the prices or those issue.'! to record highs. Foreign investors recently have begun to buy low -and medium-prieecl issues after foreign ownership of many popular companies reached the 25 percent limit set by Lhe government. John G. Te1npleton, Ex- plorer general manager. said that added office space at the main plant. plus the ad- vantages offered by workin~ directly with production, made the move necessary. }' 0111· ~loriey 's Worth NEW YORK (UPI) -"It ill possible that a psychologlcal frenzy cou ld force long term and short term interest rates dramatlcally higher.'' .DuPont Glore Forgan, Inc ., warns. The company says this could result in a "very seve re drop in stock prices" v.·hich the company says ••would not necessarily recover for a long time .'' Foreigners also have started buying government and cor· porate bonds whose sales had )>een sluggish in the past. They were be lieved· lo be buying short-term government bonds because these bonds yield 6.03 percent a year, compared with 3 percent for U.S. Treasury bills. brokers said. Foreigners also have increased their purchases of longer·term ~overnment Bnd corporate bonds amid mounting specula~ tion tha t the Japanese cur- rencv, the yen, may be rcvaiued. these sources said. Explorer is a in a j or producer of motor homes, \Vith a capacity of eight lull sized motor homes a day. It s pro- ducts are distributed through nutl ets stocking 30 or more 11nils in El Cajon, Santa Ana, F:l Monte and Hay1-vard. Ca .. ;ind b.v dealers si tuated in all 49 states. Bewar e of V e11d Ma chine; Sou11d s Goo cl, Could Be Bad 10°/o NNN CARE FREE LONG TERM LEASE I Y Com~•nv ·~•ro!ttl C~•I" Ill.DOG '' tll!,oot •II <••~ 111 11:11. 1714) 642·05t0 FOR AD VERTISING IN OUT 'N ' AB OUT PHONE NORM STANLEY b42·432 I By ~'YL\'IA PORTER "Small investmenL \Vork in your spare time. No special experience required . fi1ulti- bil!ion dollar grov.·th busines!i. Service vending machines. Placed by our representatives in )'Our coinmunit y." Froni coast !o co a s t recently. ads. \\"Orded similarly to this have been niultiplying in ne\vspaper business op· porlunity columns. The lures are obviou.s. for the clear in1· plication i~ Lhat if you have a fe\v hours a v.·eck lo spare, you can slarl a srnall vending machine business and either make a good living or pad out your income. The offers sec1TI logical too. The vending industry has .skyrocketed in the> posl·\Vorld \\'ar II period, now exceeds $6 billion a year, includes more than 6.000 vending service firms. Almost everywhere you turn, you see coin-operated I See by Today's Want Ads -~~~).:;;;;:~~ • Golden is 1he color ol .., thc~r-Rclr\<'1-·cr~ ,\KC Cllan1pJon line, Sl 2l. • Don't flip your top, Roll i!!i!!! Roll top desk in f',"cellent condli:ion 48" long, 43" hlg:b In a btauti· fu l Oak fini.h. • 11'.! lute sea900 again and 1hl11 time ~ the bay u Ike lirnit and not the sky. • F.\/ery t"l\tlier 11ee<i.'! a pcl , ~·or fathers 011.Y look In lh.o DA1LY PILOT class!. lled ads undtr pe :1 and I.like! ~ home today. macl1ines for laundry. clry (']caning. ca r \l'ashcs and - most ol all -for candy, hot and cold drinks. cigarettes. al! kinds of food . A\\'D TllERf:IN lies the heart or the problem_ Por you. !hf' nco1lhytc, t:iln· not expect that b~· \\-urkini; on· ly in your spare time . vvu'll be able 10 mee>t the l'>!il l coin· petition already c x 1 s \ 1 n g among e s tabli s hed pro- fessional nrms. Yol1 , lhe uninfonned s m'all investor, cannot rely on your ability to differeoliate between quality, well -built n1achines and the shoddy equipment you might be o£fered by fradulen l promoters nov.' swarming into this fi eld. As G. Richard Schreiber, president of the Na· Uonal Automat ic fi.1erchan. di sing Assn.. told me . "In nearly all casts of 'blue sky' promotions. a small flirnsy machine is o£fered at a hi ghly inflated price. but the neophy!e can't tell the dif· fe rence. '' And you. a jobless. scared victim of the 1969--70 recession, are so eager to believe the promote rs that you I u 11 yourself into false assump- tions . Just beeau.sc you are of· fered vendible prod ucts made by nationally knO\l'TI lirm.s. for instance, y ou incorrectly assume the machines are as fi rst-ri te as the producls. BlIT THE BLUNT fact l.~ that the vending business is 1 risky enterpriM! for t h e amateur, not al all suita-1 for part-Ume attention or small Investments. \The .t y p i c a I profit margin is less than 5 cent! per $1 of 1;ales.) You'll be 1Vay behind the elght·ball unless you kno'v which products and brands will arll itt the machine!, v.·hat types of k>caUons will produce enough sales volwne to make Lhe investment pay ofr. Herc, therefore. are five rules to protect you: (ll BE li\f,\lEDIATELY on R\J:lrd 1f the pron1oter offers to !ind profitable machine loea· li ons for you or promises vou heip frorr1 hi.~ own rcpreScn· l3(il'CS. "This is usual ly a telltale sign ,'' say:i; Schreiber, "for the cs!ab!ished vending machine manu facture.rs never volunteer such aid . First, they v.·ouldn 't wish to compete \Vith their O\'lll present. customers, but primarily they kno\V that the local vending specialist is far better qualified to sell his local market than an y outsider ... It) COrtfPARE ANY promo-- tional offer you answer with the E'quipment and price! <>f othe.r man ufacturers. Ill HAVE A QUALIFIED lawyer cheek all agreeme nts and do\vn payments before you make any commitments, ora l or written. Check the p~ moter'.s reputation with the Better Business Bure.au in the community ln which he has headquarters. i ') WRITE FOR the Small Bus i n e s s Adminis tration'll valuable pamphlet, "Starting and Managing a S m a 11 Automatic Vending Business." available from U.S. Govt. Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20402,· 30 cents. (S) CHECK PR OF IT pooslbillties ,., I t h qualified local vendina flnns lb led in the telephone yellow pages. The easy-ertra-lncome·part- time ploy forever bloonu - and. of course, the re still are opportunillM in the vending Industry. But this will be ~ disaster art a for )'OU uniess you first inform your.self thoroughl y on the. pitfalls •• well u the promlus. The interim con solidation may "persist a blt longer .'' Value Line believes. The newsletter expects the profit reco\•ery lo accelerate and possibly mii ke 1972 a re cord vcar. ''Fund am en I a I economic. corporate earning•;. <1nd monetary trends point tn\\·ard higher stock prices." Value Linc bel ieves. ''The fundamental economic forces at v:ork fa vor an im- provement in corporate pro· fits.'' Fraser fi.tanagement Associates believes. The com- pany says the profit rise shou ld sustain higher stock and bond prices. The company adds an "overstalt'ment of the negative psychologico l forces" has hampered speedier ~tock market gro~·lh . SUDDEN RISE Alarmed by the sudden rise in foreign interest in bonds, the Finance l\1ini ~!ry last fl.larch decided to halt foreign pu~chases as a part or its ef- fort to check an inflow of con- \'ertible currenr.v that has in· creased Japan's 'm o n e tar y reserYcs ~harply. bringing frircign pressure to revalue the )'en. Under risi ng pressure at hon1e and from abroad, the government is expected to lift some or its restriction <>n forelgn capital investments in the four th round of the na- tion's capital liberalization program scheduled for next September. Finance Ministry c£ficials have declined to say to y,·hat extent the restrieUons \vould be eased . The markt"t has f o u n d ll<11«'~ , , technical strength at the 900 · level on the Do\v .Jones '{ F • ~ Industrial Average, ac,eording , ma11 ce ~ to E. F. Hut ton & Co. ' The re· ~ cent improvement In the f. ulilities is a positive factor ~ B • f since this group oflen bottoms ~ r1 e s out ahead of the rest of the ~ list," Jlutton says. The firm also sees ''bullish im· plications" in the recent heavier rate. of odd lot selling. The market so far this year resembles the 1961 stock market, but whethe r or not 1111 will see a furthe r market advanct comparable io that yea r's followed by a correction next year, as in 1962, remains tc be seen, Wright Jnvestora' Service says. The firm also notes that cyclica l issues with earnings that are likely lo continue to decline du ring niost or all of the balance of this year have been go ing up on hopeful expectations. while utilities and othtr ''defensive·· Issue! h11ve registered only modest increase..' or h11 vt even declined. NEW YORK (UPI) International Paper Co. b~ begun construction of a $3.2 million primary and secondary v;aste water treatment facility for its pulp and -paper mill at North Tonawanda, N.Y. Thel unit. which will be able to treat 12 million gallons of waste water a day, is scheduJ. fd for completion by March 31, 19'12. NEW YORK (UPI) Westvaco Co rp. is closing down Its Covin(lon. V a . bleached paperboafd mill for one "·eek beginning July 5 to balance out inv e n l ory . \Ve;stveco said most of the 1,3000 employes affected will take paid vacations during the period. - Who Listens To Landers? • • f"'; \ . .. • SINCE SHE'S ONE OF THE TEN MOST INFLUENTIAL WOMEN IN AMERICA • • • • • • Just About Everyone Does That's Who You Can 'Lis te n' to Ann Landers '• '• ·, .. .. ' ' ' ' .. .. : -- ; .• ... . ' .. .. . ,• Da ily in The I DAILY PILOT .l. .. . . ' :: : : . " Buy The DAILY PILOT For Peanuts! Hera's here'• here'a CHARLIE BROWN .,. and LUCY ... and LINUS ••• and her•'• SCHROEDER ... i!d last but not l111t, her1'1 SNOOPY Phone 642-4321 (Circulation Department) to have the whole Peanuts gang come and visit you dally . • U DAILY PILOT Mondly, J1i1nt 21, 1~7 1 Lynch Cutter Wins $200,000 Facelift Rejuvenates Y acht By ALMON LOCKABEY ... -1•11w Bob Lyne.h's 42-year-old M· Class cutter from Newport Harbor Yacht Club was so proud of her $200,000 facelift and general rejuvenation that she won all three ract! of C8Jifornia Yacht CI u b 's California Cup -both on elapsed and corrected times. It was the second com-- petition for the beauti ful cut- ter since. she was ttlired by the late Howard Ahmanson after !he 1966 ?i-ta..zatlan race. She was first tG fini sh in the Puerto Vallarta race tast February. The two 73 footers -Jim Kilrov's yawl Kialoa J I, NHYC. and L.ol Killam's ketch from the Royal Vancouver YC. were no match for the sleek Sirius It ovt'r the 24 1~­ mile Ol ympic course of f 1tarina del Rey -especially in the light lo moderate breeres which prevailed all three days. Jn the rlna l race Sunday Graybeard showed a tum of !peed that makes her a first· to-finish contender in the up- coming Jlonolulu raC'e. She finished only one minute and 52 seconds behind Sirius on elaosed lime. But in Saturday's race Lowell North Wins Soling Western Race Lopez Lake Duggan Cops Hob~ Race LOPEZ LAKE -Sixlttn· year-old John ROl>S-Duggan oC Newport Beach and Richard Loufek o{ Camacillo continued their heated duel for top na· tional honors Iii the Hobie Cat· lf sailing fleet Saturday and Sunday with JLas&..Duggan Wini top honors Jn th< CalifGrnla St a t e Cham· pi<mhlps here. The two have been batUing nip-and-tuck In every major regaU& this seuon. The a la t e championship Freestyle Sloop Takes . Long Point Competition The best way to:~ppreciate ' a new Mercedes?Benz meet dre-it 111 boats tn lht Hobie·lf ahd Hobie-1 4 dau. Southland 1klpp°&r1 predominated in both cl~. 11\e iiz-race regatta, tiihd on the best fiv~. was ui~ in 1$-23 kJ'IOl winds. The event was cwpomored by Coa!t Catamaran Association &nd Morro Bay Yacht Club. "2n;id r~ull.5 : HOBlE-16 A (17l -. (1 \ Wayne Schaefer. San !Juan. Ca pislran-0: (2) Hobie Alter. San Juan. Capistrano; (3) Pat McCormick. Long Beach. 1· HOBIE·ll .B (15) -(l) liar- ry Hansen, Bellflower; t2 ! Mike Denni1, Corol\lldo:, t3) Gerald Wallace. Morro Ba~. HOB IE·l4 A (30) -(I) Jo/tn Ross-Duggan, Newport Be~: (?)Richard LoufJ i, Camarillo; (3) Jeff Canepa, Santa Cruz. HOB IE-14 B (2 4) -c(J) Dave Boyle , Newport BYl:h ; f2J George Stephen 1·0 n . Woodland Hill!'i; (3) Rudy Hatfield, Long Beach. HOBIE·14 C (32) -Jftty Stowell, Seal Beach; (2) '4n Penderga!t, Redlanch; (3 ) •11 Giles, Mission Vieje. J .. "'· \' ·1 " Led by Lowell North of San Diego Yacht Club, th!! top nine gkippers in the Soling Clas.s Western District Cham- pionships at Del Rey Yacht Club Saturday and Sunday qualified for the national championships to be held at Marina de! Rey J uly 31 to Aug. 8. mer and would oot be on hand for the nat.!onals. This moved the 10th place fin isher, Jerry Rumsey of San Diego, into the nationals, is_ to test drive~an _old~Mercedes~Berrz. -----·-·--,__ --- Allhough the regional regat- ta qualified only nine for the nationals, \Varwick Tompkins of Sausalito -who finished third -announced lhat he ·would be campaigning in Germany the rest of the sum· Beach Cops Junior Cup At Balboa Fletcher Beach beat out two r ivals Saturday and Sunday to become the Balboa Yacht Club skipper in the Governor's Cup junior match racing series Ju· ly 8-9-10. BYC will host the regatla. ~fiss Beach, with Gordo • Johnson and her sister PegP,y Beach as crew, was tied at the end of Saturday's races with Alan Andrews. The elimina- ti ons went to the final race before it was decided. Second plaa: skipper ·was J im Nugent and third ·was Andrews. This will be the fLrst year BYC has had a girl skipper in the Governor's Cup. The only previous female skipper was Los Angeles Yacht Club':i: ~1ary Griffith. The match race series, pat- terned alter Long Beach Yacht Club's Congressional Cup, has been expanded this year to include entries from throughout the slate. The BYC trials v.·ere sailed In Cal-25 sloops. Lido Isle June Race Attracts 75 Lido Isle Yacht Club's June Regatta for small boats drew 75 entries In seven classes Saturday and S u n d a y • Moderate, steady w I n d s throughout the weekend pr~ vided lively r3ces in all claases. The trophy winners: LID0·14A -(l)J a ck McClarty, BYC, 7y, pis; 12) Merlin G•yman, ABYC, 12o/•. LJDQ.HB -II ) Mike Fink, HHYC. 7'4; (2) Ted Hinshaw, LIYC, 11; (3) Herby Riley, UYC. 17'1; (4) Roy Woolsey, UYC, 24. KITE A {I) H11go Schmid~ LIYC, 16; (2) Ter- rlanne Parker, NHYC, 20; (3) 0 11t Wlele, BYC. 23. ltlTE B -(I) Clark P-. LIYC, 2~. SABOT A -(I) Mart G..ctlo, NllYC, 311; ( 2 l Bun!lck Ray, LIYC, 13; 131 Kurt Schmid~ LIYC. II. SABOT B -(I) em Rice, NllYC, 12; (2) Matt Alllo.,., LIYC. 17. SA BOT C -(I) Jolin Lord, BYC, 24 ; (2) Regina Parter, NHYC, 25; (3) Cbrll DarnaD, L!YC, 2511. North, th ree-time world champion and 1968 Gold Medal winner in the Star Class. virtually ran away wilh the district championships. He placed t-1-2-6 in the regionals to score 14.4 points under the Olympic scoring system. Mar- ty Gleich of SDYC, the runner- up, finished 4-4·1-8 for 32 points. Tu·o Newport Beach skip- pers finished high on the list. Tim Hogan or NHYC, a former All-American sailor from USC, placed fourth with 2-13-6-3 for 39.4 points, and his clubmate Roger Weise. a former national champion in the International-14 CI a s s , finished fifth with 7-2-4·15 and 45 points. Light airs off Marina del Rey reduced the regatta to four races from the originally scheduled six. All four races counted in the scoring. The ,SOUng Class is a 27-foot sloop which carries a skipper and two crewmen. It replaced the 5.5 meter Class in the OlympiC':S and will mak~ its Olympic debut at K 1 e I , Germany In 1972. Top 10 fin ishers in the Western D istric t Cham· pionships were: ( 1 l Lov.-ell North, SDYC, 1·1· 2-6, 14.4 pts. 2. ~1arty Gleich, SDYC, 4-4- 1-8, 32.0 3. \Var"·iclt Tompkin s , Sausalito YC. 5->3-7. 34.4 4. Tim Hogan, NHYC, 2-13-6- 3, 39.4 5. Roger Welsh. NHYC., 7-2- 4-15, 45.0 6. James Lindli:;ey. Lake Merrit SC, 6-11·8--4 , 50.7. 7. Bruce Peachey, SDYC, 12- 9-5--5, 53.0 8. Carl EiC'henlaub , SDYC, 9- 6·7-9. 54.7 · 9. Don Bever, S\VYC. 3-8-11- 13. 55.7 10. Jerry Rumsey, SDYC, 13->9--11, 61.0 Handicap Race Dra,vs 49 Yachts ·Forty-nine yachts in the Pacific Handicap Ra c i n g Fleet, the Small Yacht RaC"ing Fleet and ~1idget Ocean Rac- ing Fleet participated Satur- day in Voyagers Yacht ~lub:s Dana Point Raa:, the third in the Lloyd R. Massey Series for PHRF and VYC Midget Perpetual Series. Ray Booth's Num-Num JI from Balboa Yacht Club was the winner over 29 starters in the PHRF group. The combined SYRF·MORF drew 20 :starters and was won by Bill von KleinSmld'1 Star Shine, NHYC. Final rt.!UJL!: PHRF -{l) Num·Num JI; f2) Frolic, J, Fauigan, VYC; (!) Wind Ch i ld , Lee Armstrong, VYC: (4) L.inlru, Griffes &: Hllrvcy, BYC ; (5) Kca~ha, Wold & Matcha, VYC. SYRF·MORF -(I) Sloe Shine: (2) Aloha JI, GleM Reed, SSSC: (3) Sequolo, Jim At Mercedes-Benz, We're not afraid of l what one of our old cars will say about our new cars. ' So before you buy a new Mercedes-) 'Benz. we invite you to 1est drive an old: ,Mercedes-Benz. Finding a car to test is really no p roD:1 lem. A neighbor or a friend may own one. (Your dealer probably h as several on hand.) But we urge you to be selective. Pick one with a substantial ac:c.umulation of miles. Helpful hint: If you spot a Mercedes:i Benz with one of the badges shown be- low on the radiator, you've found an ex- ~cep1 ionally promising candidate to test. · We award them to a Mercedes-Benz• 'after 100,000, 200,000 and 500,000 kilome-J ters. (The European equivalent of 62,500, 125,000 and 312,000miles.) Tl•t 011tsurt sig" of agt in a Aferc:tdes·Bt"l· Riiiliator badgtl a\\'llrded at tht JIJ0,000, 200,000 & 500.000 kilomtttr miltStDntJ. Thtsign of 411 owntr's "11111," a 10/d lapil pin. . A c•suspension 1ystem" for· the exhaust system Take your tc.51 car down • potholed road and listl!n for audible protests of agl!. A journalist from Morar recently put an eight-year-old Mercedes-Benz roadster to the test. "What impressed me most," lie concluded, "was the solidity of the . body-not a squeak or rattle to be bcard."1 We're nattered. But not surprised. Be- cause we view every part of a Mercedes- Benz as a potential rattle. Instead of bolting body and fnme' toge I.her, we fuse it wi th 8,000 or more welds. Window glass rides in a channel that's buttressed in three directions. ~ The radialor is supported. ., rubber and rramed in foam. r_~s metal never touchCJ the real· of I.he car.., • . ' . ' Startin1 from the Wide , When you Ji.ni!h your test clrift:' ~ I _aroundtheca.randlookatthe~· .... ..__ To keep the outdde lookinc new, wsi 'MorOr's t:oncf11sion about 11 Vtttran of JJOJXJ(J milts: "Apa.rt from somt loss of tdgt at tht top tnd this ont ftlt quit I, fle.xiblt ilnd f rtt of rattles and thtoil prtSsurt nudlt was always ha.rd on tht stop ... We even designed a special suspen- sion system fo r the exhaust system. Rub- ber "doughnuts" hold it under tension. A I rubber bump,cr is st3tioncd at every pui.nt 4 ofcontacl. An intriguing contest Accelerate onto a highway.\ Notice how new and tight the engine, drivetrain and suspension feel. Recently in the Road & Track series \"Aflcr The New Wears Off," the engineer· I ing editor summed up 35,000 miles in his Mercedes-Benz by saying simply, "The car is more impressive than when new.·· To keep our "new" from wearing r olT, we engineer the run- n ing gear lo last as long --- as the body. A lengthy but intriguing contest. indeed. loiigevity. So they are sliced-irl,;;tf&nd. analyzed by infrared :spectography. A revolutionary old car Today an old Mercedes-Benz b ristles' 'with features that still seem revolutionary/ 1c:ompared to the '7 / cars of other makers • The reason is simple. Our engineer. f ing decisions are made by engineers. Not cost accountants. When they find a way to! make an improvement, they make it. Without waiting until it can be m ade as cheaply as what it replaces. Take an old Mercedes-Benz through some curves. Un less it's a pre-1930 modcl.1 you'll discover the nimble reflexes that 1 .come from rullyindepcn· dent :swpension. An in· novation yet to be discov. 1 ' ercd by domestic sedans .. To m:ike sure it will, vital mechanisms must pass !housandsoftes1s. ' We consume more Ruhbtr '0doug/1111as" susptnd Look at the modeP nameplate. If you spot an "E," the car has some· thing no American car has, an ein.sprilzsystem (German (or fuel injec-1 tion ). Developed (or Mer·\ cedes-Benz grand p rix- 'than 40.000 gallons of ttJilpipes and11111me.rsund~rltt1Sio11, r11b/Jcr bumpers r~olatt thtm from/ fuel a month tcsting every the body. The uha.us1 sysltm may engine berore installa-rit\11.rn111lc. 'ltion, Some for as long as five hours. After nine successive applications at 1135 m ph in a "dcs1ruction" test, disc brakes !urn fiery red. They must endure this torture fifry different times-and suf- fer no damagi:. Even seemingly unimportant ilems like dashboard knobs must prove their Ont of our 11t1u cars. Tht 150 o fi\le-posst11gtr std an wilh ptrformanct ftQ/1.1 r1.s yo .. ·11 still apprt.eialt. whtn it's an old car. cars, it provides a :substantial increase ml power with "o sacrifi.ce i" eco"omy. ' Apply the brakes. Mercedes-Benz b&l lieves the brakes should be the most pow~! erful part of any car. So we introduced/ disc brakes in 1961. Put them on all four, wheels in 1968. No domestic .sedan today offers four disc brakes, even as an option. start protect.inc it from the inside.[!1., llf ·,fl!t Bodiesaresubmeraedia."'"'ff._; ~ · nut.proofer. They emcrp r!' 24 pounds heavier.' • But that's not 1 tinough for Mercedes..) .eem. The in!idcof body panels that lwereweldedair· 1 I t ight were paintedj [beforeweldina. 1 - ' . .. 1 '''· . Out!ide, a Mercedes-. :Benz is protected by.four( coats of paint and primer.\ The {root gets an extra coat) of chip-resistant enamel. -.. , We even insulate ( ·"f Et16n llod1 p1'"'6 '$] the side trim from wddtd~r~11f"11 · ~ .• . • ~ corrod.• rruilf .. So 6 • thebody withasl.ri.p w.r Mld,._,,,..,,ltmt. · 1ofrubber.And :sheath' wlt11 iirteu:l4 .. Art4 • the clips that attach it 1_ J W.atu..,•1~· :~ with plastic grommets, so that metal cag = never bite throu&h paint and start nlll.{ The ''average'' Mercedea·Betu:: $8,000 . There's nothing: "a~""ttal'-'" •bout .. line of automobiles with an average &ell· ing price of $8,000. Building automobiles you can appre.- cJate when they're "old" cars. lras· made our new cars.morenpcn:sive than most. There are ten Merccdes-Benr: models priced from $5,445 to $8,663•-withoutop~ tions. And six limited edition!:, JariclY handcrafted, from SIJ,032 to $30,352•. Thecoupoo will bring a fu ll-color bro- chure of the new Mercedes-Benz models. In the meantime, be sure and test drive an "old" Mercedes-Benz. And, just for comparison , an old anything else. ; After all, you live most of your Ji(e with an old car. So you~hould know what your next car will be like after the "new" wears off. • ·• •WatC-. .... 91'~, ndulit•o/~ilort. "Mi. -u. {•bowm).oOiuopti..... ...... ....i local '-3,if ...,.. " ' CoprriP,lU71.Mvwla· ...... ol&ra~.Jpc.. ··-----------·-------~~ .. ~ ---·--., I • JIM SLIMONS IMro•n. INC • 1: 1Jt West W.,...-,__ .. I S.... A ... C•lhonll« t.1717 I I PJeuc send me your fulkA:llor broc:IM.an ef t&e ·- 1 Mcn:oeda-Benz motor can. ., I N•---------- 1 -...... -------" I a~ ____ __,.....__~_,, I" T-. L----------~-------- • ". Jim Slemons Imports, Inc. 12ow.w amer Avenue,Santa Ana,Cali fomla92707Phone:714-546-411' Mooro. SSSC; (4) Vlklog, D1n 1 -----------------------------------------------------Pike, YVC. - ' • d n t t d I ~ t n II . . • • ; ,· .. ,• •' ~ ' " Must Battle ' ' ~pencer Ends Long Slump; ... .~Earns Halos. Twin Bill Split May Gets Call _Against Bre\\'crs :In Tonig ht's Tiff KANSAS CITY IAPI For Jim .Sp!ncer, it was the best day yet of the Jfll season. ·f or pitcher Tom Murphy, it \\'as the 1'orst. Together they led the California Angel.'! to an 8-4 victory Sunday over the Kansas City Royals and split a doubleheader - ·ttie Roya ls won the first game f>-1 -that attracted 35,295 persons , the: largest ~rowd eYer to see " baseball game at Memorial Stadium. The Angels are now fourth in the Aragel Slate AH 01 .... 1 •n KM,.C Cl1tl A"ll•ls 11 Mllw•uk.., Artpel1 .i Mlh••l>kee Amer ican League West behind Min- nesota. They face last-place Milwaukee tonight with Rudy May, 3-5, on the mound for Californla. May faces the ex·Angel Marty Pattin, 6.7, ln the ri rst of a three game set. While Murphy was being worked over by the Royals, Spencer upped his batting average from .198 to .214 by hitting a home run -his eighth -a triple and three singles while driving in four runs and scoring two in the doubleheader. The big first baseman, whose failure to hit well up to now has been one of the Angels' major disappointments, hopes to i.eep his streak going. ··1 sti ll think I can bit .280 or .290," he said. "The toughest thing to do in ba seball is not to get on yourself wh en you're going bad. Anybody who says he d()esn"t gel down on himself when he isn't h1r ti ng is a li ar. f\turphy went 61h innings against the Royals, wbo scored.a run in each of the first three innings and had hits in the fi rst five, ending up with 12 off the pitcher. '"I had my wor~t stuff of the season," Murphy said. The victor-y gav1 him bis fourth victory or the season· against eight defeat! after Clyde Wright absorbed the loss in the o~ing game. The second game v.•as salted away 11fler 811 Angel rally in the fifth . Sptncer, Tony Gonzale!, Alex Johnson and Roger Repoz all had hits -with everybody but Repoz scoring -before Royals' starter Al Fitzmorris and his f1rs L reliever, Tom Burgmrier, cou ld get anyone out. ANGELS KANSA S CITY ,oD r nrbl •D r ~rbl .SIOOP•l•k,u 5110 J 11 0 Sch~el.JD •O)I J1 10Kl'IOOp,Jb i071 ,•1110!1$,C! JOOO I 0 0 0 l(lrkp.olrk.<: .S I 1 0 .SllJli•rrlicin,ID 000 •111 Ral•1.1b Ol! 0 0 0 Plnltll•, I! 1 1 0 • ! 2 0 R Ollvu. rl • O 1 1 J 0 I 1 Fl!fm"i~, p 1 0 0 0 I O 1 O Brgmflr•. a o o o o Hapl<in,, pl'I I 0 1 I Tot•! l<l!'OUQh. p~ 1 0 0 0 lt I 1' , Tott! 10 ~ !J •nge11 1(1n1~• (lly 101 1l0 001 -t l l!O t OOOO -• T Murphy l .1,11en F1•1morr11 l!lur(lm••ff Vo•t. !-IN:llu....i !,_ H I! ER II SO (W, • U l·l ) 11 • • J I ~~l 1 0 0 l 1 tl, 1·11" I 1 6 J 1 0 1 ? 1 ' 0 0 ? 1 o o r 1 S•v,,_l A11en, ,11000 WP-L Al11!1> l -1.Jl "-ll19J. Hitte~·s Unload 4 Gra11d Sla1ns; Smith Wins It NEW YORK -Major league batters hit rour grand slam· home runs Sunday, tying tv.·o records. P i t ts bu r g h's Willie Stargell, Philadelphia's Oeron Johnson and Allan- ta"s Earl Yi'illiams clouted bases.loaded homer~. matching the National League mark of th('ee grand slams in one day, 6:ihe seven limes previously. 1 Rick Reichardt of the Chicago While ~x also hit one, _equaling the two-le ague ~endard of four in ooe day. It was the Axth time thal happened. ~ Billie Jean Falls ~LONDON -An &-a, 6-3 victory nve r 4 ustralia's John Newcombe gave ~lifornia'11 Stan Smith the London Grass C:Ourt.. Tennis championship. Mrs . ~argaret Court of Australir took the *>men's crown with a 6-3, 3-6, 6-3 score t~ Billie Jean King of California. • · Co11nnrs-Trfumphs SOUTH BENO -Jimmy Connors or ,.... ; ~-.. ~ ' , ~ • • -,\ • ROYALS' JERRY MAY IS TAGGED OUT BY JOHN STEPHENSON. Ogata Proves to Be Chan1p Despite Crippling Injury No one. v.•tll ever knov.· v.·het11er Justin Ogata mighl hal'e become a champion \vrestler or not -an injury in December of 1969 left the young man paraly1.ed with a future of being confined to a v.·het!lchatr and almost no use of hi~ limbs And that's oot ;i lot lo look rorward to ;it any <1P,e. But when you are 16 il"s an especially dim prospccL )'rt snmehow Justin Ogata shoo k oul of •LaNH WMIT• --------"" WHITE WASH -.. - the doldrums, made the mnsl of hospital ronfihemenl and counted the blessing of havin~ a legion of friends. '"I w11s pretty down in the beginning." he admits. "But friends kept doing things for me and that helped a lot." Ogata koockled down aJld cracked the boo ks while doctors and therapy tried lo get back some use of his li mbs. They had little suC'Cess. So. after several months he was return- ed l.o his home and last fall be and his wheelchair were loaded into " van 11nd car~ off lo Costa Mesa High to begin his senior year. I~ wasn't easy, .Justin recalls. He had a difficult time bec111use he couldn 't hold ll pencil. And watching the oth'er kids run- ning 11round wasn't easy either. It wa" tough for several days but IS he did in the hospit.al , Ogata 1book off the bl;ihs and got with it. In fact. he got with it enough to graduate last week \\"ilh his class. He was i:;ivcn a hearl·\\'arming ovation by those a1tend1ng ceremonies as he \\'heelPd up to pick up his diploma . He has a splint that help~ move his wri51 !;0 he can fce rl h1mse!r or t;ike iiomelhing l1kr a diploma. He can'! hold a gl11ss. ho\\·ever. He pl;in.~ nn <'nntinu1ng hi.~ educ1111nn ;;ii Orange Coast ('oll~ge ;inrl hopes tn even- tually gel in a st111e. progr;;im for ht1n· dicappcd peoplr which will show him lhe things he would he able to do to possih!y eam a living someday. Justin slill isn"I clear on exactly wh;it he'd like to do and admits lh11t Mmetimes he catches himselr feeling sorry for himself. But he tries to subdue th ose feelings and keeps busy studying and goini;: out with the chair and van to visit his many friends. It look a lot of courage and plain olrl J?UL~ for Justin Ogata to pick up the pieces. get back at those books and graduate with his class. He may not have any medals lo show for what he 's done. But in his own rii:ht, he's a cham p just the. same. * * * Fnrmer Marina ltigh baskttball coach Lult. Olsen has been honored •• Metro Conference C08Ch of lhe year for taking h1 Long Bufb City Coll ege team to • u- cond •tr•lgbt loop tltJe and I.be suite crown. The C<l15man aw1ird1.,. wblctt he won, en- ('(lmp11se1 •II coaclie1 ln all conference •port.I. Quite •b boaor for lhe. aenlal, taJented Olsea. Mond"1. Junt 21, l9n DAILY PILOT Z3 Monster He Created Alston Asks For Patience; Cards in LA LOS ANGELES lAP> -Los Angeles Dodgers manager Walter Alston stuns you with his unemotional logic, even Jn the grip of a frustrating defeat. The dean or National League skippers lost a 9-7 decision to Houston Sunday . ri!oments after \\'alking into his C'ubicle, sitting down and ta.king off his shoes. he was excusing the player whose error led to fi ve unearned Astro runs, ''Bobby has been making son)e great plays for us and hitting the ball well," said Alston of rookie third baseman Bob- by Valentine. ''He"s entitled to throw one .away occasion<11Jy. \\'e just have to be. pa- tient." Optimisnt may be the only way to save Dodge r Slale A.II G•m11 on Kl'I CtfO) Junp 11 Jun• 11 Junf 1~ Jun• 1l Ju"• 11 Dodpe" Dodo•" Dodoor1 Ooclo•" Oodgero "'· ST. Louis ••. ST. lou•o ~•. S1. Lour> v•. S•" Olp~ •• s." o~ 1:SS pm. /~~PIT!. IJ·ss Pm. I.SS pm. •:.SS P "'· ~anlty, especially after the woy the Dodgers lost the game. Los Angeles scored four first-inning runs, v.·ipi ng out a 1-{l Houston edge, and made it :J-1 in the second when Valen1ine doubled, starting pitcher Al Downing singled and Maury \Vills hil a sacrifice fJ'o' 10 score Valentine. ·Bui with only one out. Bill Buckner doubled down to right and Willie Davis w;is intenl ionallv walked lo load the basrs. Ric hie Ailen steppt>d in but his ground b;ilJ turned in to two outs. ending the threat. Valentine's error came in the lhird. With a n1an at first and two out, the third baseman ~topped a .Jack HiaU grounder and rlipped the ba ll to second, The ball looped over Jim Lefebvre's head and into right field. 1'hen singlrs by Doug Rader. Hoger ri1etz ger and .Jim Ray 11ed the game at 5- 5. 1'hc innning produced five unearned A!;tro nins, a 6-5 lead and wh11t arnounled lo victory. The DodJ(ers try to rPhound fro1n thal di!;1nal defeat tonight when Bobby o·sricn, a rookie, n1akes his f1r.~t m<1JOr league start against St. Louis' Bob (;ib<;nn 4-5,' in the first or a three-game scric.~. O'Brien is l·l in nine re lief appearances this year. Su nda y's defeat left lhe Dodgers seven full games bark of St1n frencisco t1fter a Gian! fiye-g11me sweep of !he San Diego Padres. Howel'cr, Alston was so1newhal en- couraJ(ed by hi.~ !cam 's hitting. Buckner had !hree hits, \l.'i!ls, \Ve.s Parker ;ind V;ilen!ine two each and \hr 1ean1 wound Up With 15. 1-!0USTON •• • '~· .. ' ~ cbl OOOGEll~ Wyn11. t i • • ' , w.11,. " ' ' ' MOr(IA<>. 7b • ' ' • !Iv""'" •! ' ' • C.N:l~O. 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" ' ' ' ' • (-l•dM•"~ ' ' • • • 0 °""""'"Q ,, ' " '" • ' , ' ' Mo•I"' " ' • 0 • • V•"'" ' , ' M•,••loen ' • 0 S•v• C.i•~"'"~ Wf> p.•.,,.,1.,g, \l•n" ,M.1~•et1•~· Gl•ddlng r11 •~••II l -I''· A-1 .. 111 Cornell Scratches From U.S. Trials SYRACUSE , NY. -Comell. surpri~e victnr (ll'er the !J n1versity of Y.'ashinRIOn in the lntercollegil'lle Rowing Ai;sociation regalia. wn~ a late scralch tod;iy frorn !he U.S. trials for the Pan·American Games. Cornell v.•ithdrew from the competition because one of its oarsmen had lO un. dergo surgery. In today's races, the Washington varsi- ty eight rallied near lhe finish to nip a combined Penn·VeslX'r Boat Club shell by a rew feet. while an11ther combinalion bOa\ comprised mainly of 011rtrnou1h rowers defeated Brown by nearly a length. Pan·Am qualifying is being conducle<t this week over the same 2,000-meler Onondaga Lake course where Cornell's varsity eight erlged the Washington Huskies Saturday by four·ten ths of a sec· ond. Trevino Goes for Broke In U.S. Open Playoff AflD~IOltE, Pa. (AP) -Jack Nlc klau" plays his Frankenstein monster. Ltt Trevino, in an 18 hole playoff today for the 71st annual U.S. Open Golf cham- pionship . Nicklaus and Trevino wound up in a tie Sunday aner 72 holes , when Trevino mist1ed a six foot putt and took a bogey on the 18th hole, while Nicklaus two putt· ed for a par on the sa1ne green. 1bey each scored a par 280 for the 72·hole lest over Merion Golf Club"s short but de1nan- ding course. Nicklaus posted rounds of 69-72·68·71 and Trevino 70-72-69-68 lo set up the 25th plav11ff in U.S. Open history. Third round l<'ader Jin) Simons. the 21· yc::ir.old arnateur fr om Buller, Pa., who l<'d after three rounds, buckled under the intense 1)ressurc, double bogeying the final hole ;ind wound up wllh a six over par 76. lied for sixth pla ce. The Frankcns1cin monster creation by Nitklt1t1s was attested lo by 'l'revino after he shot a one under par fi9 Sunda y to son1e frorn four strokes off the 54-hole pace to a tie and playoff. Trevino told of how Nicklaus i;ave hiln v.•ords of encouragement last February. ··And I've played unbelievable since," said the 31·year-0ld resident of El Paso. 11 v.·as after an exhibition in West Palm Beach, f'la ., that Nicklaus and Trevino Practice, Radio Put Allison 111 Win Circle HIVERS IDE -1...ot~ of practice and ;in el ectronic gizmo h<tve provided Bobb y Allison with a new nickname in stock.car racing -"The Un touchable." The 33·year·old Allison used a two-.way v.•:i\kir·1alkie·lype r;id10 Sund11y 10 cap- lure fir st plal'<' in Ni\SCArrs 400-nti\e l ioldcn State t:rand Nauonal race rur stnck l":lrs. The 100-dcgrce-plus heat barely af- frcted hin1 TourinR Riversidr I n I er n a I ion a I Raceway's 2 6-mile ro;id coursf! al an average speed of 9.1.622 miles an hour, the resident of Hueytown, Alt1., notched his fourth victory in ;i rnw on 1his gruell- ing circuit v.•hich Hichard Petty once Own('d. Inside Allison's hclmer v.·as a sma ll rf'eeJl'C'r through whi<'h !he dnver lis1cn- cd In hi.~ brother I F:rtd1r 1 in the p1rs 1rll of crackurs and rou~h s1)()ts nn !hf' trar k. Allison, 11.c;in g a \' n i c f'. act u a 1 e rl 1n1crophone. was able to !C'l his pit cre1v know wh;it he w;1n!l'd done nn his ne:(t pit stop. saving precious se('-Onds. llobb.v is 11 devou! Cat holic and racP. day being Sunda y, he rn11de sure thingj v.•cre ~qu<ired av.·ay in tha! cnrner by at- tending church in the morning. And ap- propriately, the name or the church was, '"Our L;idy of Perpetual Help." An_d just_ for addrd insurance, Bobhy got in a little praclice for !hr ~OO·mile l'vent by spcndinJ: ::;aiurday night relax- ing behind the v.•heet of an older-vint11i;:e car on a small track ill ne11rby San Bernard inn. r S. -He won that spor1smen's race l<>o i\11 in all . it wns l"]tiilr 11 weekend fo r All1~0n. who now h ri~ won nr11rl v $100 oon Ill hi.~ l~ist four \\f'(·k~ nf rar111g .:ind is fourth in N/\SCAR poul! st;inr11ngs beh1or1 Prill' . .J:inl('$ 11.vllon of Inman. S C. and Crr·d (;nrdf)rl , i\rdcn, N (.' Pc!lv blew an rnginf' on the !10th of 153 laps and v.·oundup I.1th . Tiu• winner was happy 11hout the vic- tory bu! happier about the electronics. '"The radio worked really, really well." said Allison. "I w;isn't startled by It and once it really helped 111e out " A rra~h nn S·turn No. 2 left wrecka!Je all over. '"!'he caution flaR never came out." Allison s:iid. '"My rrrw hollered at me about the \\'reek in lhe t-sses 11nd l rounded lhe corner full bore -but I v.·a.s on my toes :ind wa llinli!'. 11nd there it was in front of mr, and I knew about it ahead of tirne and I slowed and got by without any trouble. ll lVEllS10£ -P•oc tnQ• or c•" '''' o" !••l k •t lo<lhh OI Golr;lrn ~IAll .-,0 N•S(.t,~ G••"CI NMl...,81 ~·~&.'.•' ••<1 8! ll.lvt •\ld1 !nl1•n•llONI R1c1 ... v I, llOf)by .1,1\l•o". Hu•yllln. A.I•. 1910 0,,.,01 Ill ltin. 11',J'IJ, 1ve•IQM •1>1..-t 9J•?i m,!., In l'laui. i/i9~•Y £1aer . C:•r"m'"• C.•111 . 'II om~. 1S3 llPt, ,,~j1fttil Gorder, A<n .. n, N (., "If M"cury, t•I i;ii1, " )1..,,11 Hylran l"m""· 5 C.. '10 For<!. ),., 11.110. S, J •·•v 011v11 , C.onco•d. Ct!ll., "10 Oldmotlll•, H~. 11,9•1 t, JOl'ln io•r11, H&vw1•d. '11 Plymau!l!,1t5, Jl .~s. 7. l<••ln Tt tft' M•n~•!l•n l•ICll. '10 Pl~mOOJt~, t... 11,J)O. "'Orrn•••vt drlv••" Olck llra..,.n, P~rtl~"!f. Or•., •rocl ('1!0 G1rnt•, LO» A,"gllrt. I, ktl!tr C•I", F'i'l>""· 'H Fnrd, UJ. tl.'7t. '· P11 F'fv. G"'!ln•, C•lll., 'I! Ford. 11,110 IO. !'tonk J1mn, l1-1'1ll11d, 'It c.,.._,,oltt. US. ''·°'°· Only Cl tl tltl\ll'll"f. had a t'Onvcrsa!ion in lhc locker room. 'l'rev1no rel"alled lhal he lold Nicklau" that he was skipping the ~1a sters because he didn "t feel his game was geared lo the course at Augusta. "He (N\<:kl<1usl said 'let mf' tell yo11 som('!hing.' He said 'you can play anypla ce you v.·ant to' He said 'I hope you never rind out how goOd you can play because it will gi'o'e the rest of us a little better t•haoce lo win ' '' Trevino said hr took these words of Nicklaus and ;it night though! about. whal Jack had said. "It was really something coming from a man v.•ho is the best in his profession saying that I am one of the best golf pros. ''And he g<1ve mr some tn· couragrnient '. And since then you can see the record. I've been right there knocking on the door for the last six, sevrn weeks." Trevino's record since th11t locker room {"f)n\'ersation is twc1 victories. twice he missed \\'inning by one shot. lost one playoff. finished set•ond. fourth. 10th. 12th and 37th and earned $1!0.000. Trevino indicated the magnitude of fac- ing Nick!au.~ in ;i playoff for the world's most prestigious ,::olf cham11ionship when he said. "I think that Jack Nicklaus is the greatest golfer that ever held a golf club in his hands. "Jack Nicklaus will set records before he retires Iha! no man will ever break. 1 rlon "l care how tong they have this ~amc. He'll be the toughrs! n1an in the world to beat tomorrow !Monday)." Nicklaus. v.•ho is seeking hi.~ 12th major golf championship, on!y one behind the record 13 earned by b.iintam Ben Hogan. had lrnuble <ill d:iy wi!h one of his best clubs, the three wood. He couldn't keep the ball in the fairway. Nicklaus knew that he could win ii all with 11 birdie at 18. end he gave it 811 he had. Iii.~ booming drive was the best he hit all da y, and he hit a four iron to the green 12 to lfi fetl frnm the pin. The cro\vd of better than 16.000 hushed as he studied !he putt. "Actually 1t w;is an easy putt." Niekl:1us rcla!rd. "It v.•as strail!ht ;ind I musl have pullt'r1 it a ft'w 1nl·hes nlf." Then he lapped in for hi~ p;ir and a tie. Nicklaus also had clutch putts al 1~. lfi.. and 17. rolling them in from t1bout six feet lv.'ll't' and four fret. "You've got to make some pulls along the hne lo have a chance," he said. Simons, v.·ho sought lO be the first ama1eur to v.·in !he US. Open since John· n.v (;ooornan in 19.13. said he slarted going bad on !he second hole. '"I cnuldn"l gel 1he bt1ll out of the rotigh., lhc~e ;ind after that J was s1.rug. gling . sard rhe \\l ake Forc~t senior. (l~g"("'';(,';,~;;;~t.'~8'.7 lh1 U ~. o,,.n ei Mrrlon Goll UCLA, the first freshman to caplure the NCAA tennis singles title, says he has no ir.lenlio n of tumlng pro. Co nnors handed Stanford sophomore Roscoe Tllnner a 6-3, H , 6-4 , M setback here Saturday In I.he title match. Emerson Wi11s; Ashe Sor"Vi"Ves s~are Bruin te1mm11l.t! Jeff Borowiak and Haroori Rahim won Uie doubles title with 1 7..fi, 7-6 victory over Trinity's top-seeded twosome of Bob McK inley and Dick tock ton. LOS ANGELES -The Rams a1tnounc. e the signing today of former C.olrten est star Randy Vat.Ah11, a receiver rrom · liford who was thelr 17th round draft hoice. WJMBLEOON. England -Newport Beach resident Roy Emer10n got off to a winning start In the Wimbledon tennis classic today, ~feating Czech Mila n Holocek, 6-4, &-4, 6-4. And Stan Smilh or Pasadena, seeded fourth and fre.~h from 1 tournament vi e· tory last week. br~1.cd through the fi rst round of lhc All f':ngtand law" tenni i1 championships. Smith, one of the !lip Uniiecl States hopc1, crushed Michel LcC\erc:q. 1 French left.hander, 6--2, 6-4, 6-l. Defending fhampio n John Newcombe of Australia. seeded secood, had only a blt more tn>uble with Bob Hewitt of South Africa. RtOring 11 6--4, &-3, 7.5 triumph in the tradttlon81 etnlf'r court opener 11s the two-wetk·long tournAme.nt got un derway. In othf.r opening malcbes Io n Tir lac of Romania wore down A. Amdritraj of Tndi• fl.a, 6-3, 6-1 , tind Bob carmichsiel or Au"trall• won by default over Jimmy ConnPrs of Bellev ille, JU. Arthur Ashe. seeded fifth, defeated Erik V~n Dillen. San Mateo. 3-6, fi..:1, 6--4. 7-~ •fler IJUrviv ing a few anxious mom en I.!. Van Diilen s11icl after lhf! ma.lch : ""fhe fourth set was the vital one. I had sl.x chances l.o breRk Arthur. But I t'Ol.lldn't make u.~ or them. "I thought I served well, often betler lhen Arthur. But he's a hard man to beat." "I wasn 't as !!harp today 11 1 would llke Ill 0 bc, but my game ls comi ng to11ether ," Ashe 11<1id. Thti Virginian produced b r 111 i a n l backhend!I -8nd those shots wt.re his mastery over th~ 20-ytar.old Van Dillen . JACK NICKLAUS MISSES BIRDIE, l I ! ' ' ·' ····~.j ~~ .. ......... '.~·~~.· . ' . -' . At·ea Cage1·s Sparkle Orange Coast area cager~ plll)'ed importan! rult>s 1n 1he South·s rousing 117-93 v.·in over the North alt-s!ars Saturday night in the sixth annual Orange County all-slilr b;1skt'I· ball gan1e at Oran~e Cuast College F11e of lhe area uugi:t"ts ll>ere members of ~larina Jim Stephens' v I c I or 1 ou s Rebel quintet v.hi!e Costa Mea·s John Se\'nlollr ol Ser- v1te was the loill' area reprt'- sentat 11·t' on the losing squad. Of the f11·e area athletes on the SotJth tll.it , four tallied 1n doubl_e figures v.·ith the firth managing fo breflk rn!n the :.coring colun10 Estancia 's S.1 1 Cary Orgill, 11·ho played forward hts senior )'ear as an Eagle. was lhe in- itial catalyst for the well- (lrgan1zed So uth l'rcv.·. The s11·11·el-hipped guard dazzled !he crowd of I ,700 spectators Y:i!h his rancy batJ. handling and good defensive ll'ork against Seymour. whe receipted tor only seven poi nls a!I night. Orgill ended up v.·1Lh 13 points. many coming in a first half Rebel explosion which the ex·Eagle ace was prin1arily responsible for lriggering. Piling up 10 of his lotal poin t production in the first half. Orgill Y:as al thr forefront of th~ Sooth fas! break. It was that surgr \\'hich smashrd a 29-29 deadlock and transformed it into a 40-3 1 Rebel advantage. Taras Young 's l .1 -point perforrnance \\'<IS less spec:- lacular as tile 5-11 hu sl!ing Newporl Harbor product seal-•; lered his haskel-making even- ' ',.11 • ... ~ . ~ • I • • DAILY PILOT Pho!o bJ LH l'•1~t ' ' ly between thf" !wo halves. However. Young's former 'J'ar team mate. 6.:1 John Kazmer, wa s Lhe spark in the i')outh's final nailing of the Yank~ coffin. ANOTHER REBEL BUCKET? -Gary Orgill of the South readies his aim on the basket as the North's Mike Taylor sticks his hands up in vain. VVatching !he play develop a re the South's .Jeff Butl of Ma r ina and \"ankee Abel Bernal of Orange. South recorded 117·93 victory. Kazmer popped through 10 t:1f his 13 poinis in !he final 712 minules "'ilh all 10 coming on long-range fiel d goals. A!thou,gh artempti ng \ ,, learn a ne"' position -guard -Corona del !\far'!!: !\lark Grigsbv apparentlv reveled in his 're.serve backcourL rolr- behind Orgill and Young. Seymou1·'s 50. 7 Places 4tl1; Spil{ers G1111 f 01~ AA U Meet The 6-1 1~ formrr Sea King !!:harpshooter enlered lhe <:On· test midw ay lhrough lhe first ha]( and immedlatel.Y went to "'ork: putt ing his nan1e rapidly into the scoring column 11·i1h three quick two-pointers in succession Grigsby finished rhe evening ft'it h 10 poinls. Perhaps the leli.~t kno\\'11 of lhe Sooth's five area players. Marina's 6-J 1i Jeff Rull. nevertheless 11•as an able defender "·hen called upon end he alro sank a field i,:o<il and charity toss. One of the gan1e ~ d1sap- poinlments "'BS Sr.1·n1our. 11ho bad rour f!Juls early. Mo"'ever, ii v.·a~ learnt·1l later that the Costa fl.le);<!. rr~1- dent v.·as being pla.11;uf'cf by 1n· ternal 1n1uries and hf''s ex- pected lo bE' OK in lime fur the July I ~!ate Norlh·Sou1h <'a ~e lilt in Oakl<rnd For the area H" h" ! f1vesome. S;iturday n1<1rkrd I.ht end of lhP1r nnn-rnllegialc playing careers. B11! 11 wa.~ :. sv.·eet one anyhn11·. SEATTLF. -Jim Se\·mour, turn1er t-1untingto11 BeaCh High and Golden West Qil le~e pe rforml'r , streake1l to a nifly 50.7 clocking in the 4~0 in- termediate hurdlrs fur a fourth pl;1ce finish SaturdH.\' in 1hr Nt:AA 1 rack clnun- pions hips. hert•. II<' 1n:1tc:hed his qualifying ti rne in the finals. Su no1\' !he potent NCAA field v.·ill join the res\ of the n<i ti(J n's r11nateur spikers for lhe AA U charnpionships this 11eekrnd 1n 1'::ugene, Ore. A fe11· cflllegians expressed d 1 s s a 1 ; ~ r a ct ion 111 l:i~t v.·eekend's r\CAA trark and litid championships hl'1d nl the Universit.v nf \Vnsh1ng1on stadium. Steve Prefontaine. Oregon·s long dislanf'<' n1aehinr ~l'en1rd the unh11 pp1t'S1 desp11e suf"· Cf'~sfulh defendi n'! his thrrr- mtlr 11111' 111 11 n1ee! r"l'ord !.1·:!11 I Hr :-~;1d hr d1sl1ketl !la' ITlll'k \l'fll('h hf' ~:l td 11 ;is 100 '101 and lrf1 hls fret blislered. "I got out or this nothing more than JU~t a good l13rd \1·orkou1." I h e 20-ycar-old sophomore ~mid. •. r ll'asn'l Vl'ry psyched u1> about this r:ic:e. II didn't rncan murh 11 1 nie. 1 was thinking about next \Vl>ek. nl'xt week , next \.\'('t.'k. 111e vict ory r;1tes '~ay down on the list in niy book.·· Halph Ma nn 1nanaged 10 control his elation also <Lfler he won the intermediate hurdles in 49.6. ~Hier !\\arty L i <1 u n r i (3:~7.6 \ and shol pu1 chan1p Karl S:i !b of Kan~as 11·nn thC'1r 11vl'nts for a third str:11gh! )C:lr "'Thrtt da .1·s runn1nJ!. on !his hanl concre!e track 1\·111 take somc!hin~ out or .vuu," f\1.1nn said One of thr gl;i rnrir n1ret1ng~ J., ;1 rr1urn 1n;i!cli bf'll, rt•n l.1- <1uur1 nr1d 11·orld l0f'l'11rd li(lldrr .1 1111 H1 1111. The big q1 11·~li•Hl 1~ rhe pollrn courit R~ un suffer!> lr11nl ha ,v f Pver ;.ind ,s,11 "' h1· 111;1v not entrr if !111' l)j1ll1·n c:ount is high. If i'refonl,1ine V.'OS unhappy al one end, UCLA conc h Jlm Bush balanced the scales <1fter his Bru ins v.·on the team ti!le, Sl:Oring .)2 points lo 41 for USC .;ind :ia for Oregon despi te nn unsteady performnn<'e fro1n USC's vau11tPd sprinter \V1llie l)e{:kard . Deckard. fcrvored in lhe 100. held Fridav finished l:is1. fir then faded .lo qualif.v Saturday fur h1~ other strong suit. the 220. ;Hid could onl \I !'ia.1•, "I 11as fired I was 1u.,l lirrd ·• 'I lrcknrd 11111 n1t1111 11g wf'll f!<l\t' uc; a hft."" Hu~h said ·\\Ir had tu l'Olll!" l hruu~h 11·1th lrl'ml·ndirn:. p<'rform ancec; ·· ~loh inder frill of Cnl Polv bv w.1y or Inch", :i!sn k1Cked :ii.Jou ! th<' wind. 1ll{}rr <'\:J<'tl v thr f'lork1ni::: 11f 11 · ll•· 11011 1h1• tn pl~· Jlllllp wilh :1 11 1nd ;11dt•d fi~·R ', l){'r1t1.\ l!of!(·1·s !•f l 'C'L•\ 1un1 prrl dur· 111g n ('altn, had :1 111t'1'I record ~i.1·7 ' :111d li:1 rl to st·ltlr !11r lh1rd Ba,seball Standings DEAN LEWIS t!JQM<)ITIAI A"IERJCAN LEAGUE East Dhris\on Woo lAHt Pel. GB Baltimore " 22 .6'5 Detroit " 29 .561 5 Boston 35 29 .547 6 Cleve land JO J< ,46' 11 New YGrk JO ,. \Vashington !J 39 l\'t 1l Oh•i1ion O&kland .. 22 Kan11as City 35 " Ptfinnesola " 11 Angels " 38 Olicago " 38 MilwauUe 2J 38 l•!llll y'1 llHUHI Ballon t. W11t11ntton l .455 12 .371 17 :&67 .'65 7 .507 101, .449 14 1'J ,J77 181, .J77 18', (lrtt1-ncl t, Dl>tnlll •• ~ GI.... IOIH>tnd«l Ith 1 .... 1"11 8•!11,..,,re 10, Ntw Yori! ~ IC•n .. , City k A ..... I I·• Chia,. H, 111\I~ I 0.k1-lld 11-t, 111\11 ... o,li(H 1·1 T•l"'• ••-0.kl•""' (11\>9 U•U •I Ml-1111 tC.,.lll~ t l l. fllOll~•lll'"°'t 400-... I) •I W.t1nl ... ton (Mtl.tln ,.Ul, nlol'ot ci.~tlofld !Mc:0. .... 1114 1 t i I OI'°" (LOl'll)OtO ,,)I, nlQ>l'>t IC1ft1•1 C1•y (lltol!tr ..,) I t Cl!IC$ CJOl\ft l - 1), nlpl!t A ...... !M•1 WI ., 11t111w• .... N p•u1 ... •·I), fl..,, °""' ......... Kl'Mifvlof. .\ATIONAI. LEAGUE Easl Oil'l~lnn \\'on Lo~I Prt. GH . Pitt."hur~h 43 25 N~1v York " 26 St. Louis J7 " l111C'a~o " '.l'.l ~lontrr~l " " Philadelphia 26 :l!I \\'t sl l>ll'1sion S.1n FrancisC"o " 2:. Ood~ers .. JO "' Houston " J:1 Clncinn11 li " :17 1'tlanta " '° San Diego "' 4fi 'und•y'1 ""11th Pl!l1bli•O~ 71, Monlf"I 1 J .0:12 ."87 .5:\6 5117 .~26 .400 fi48 .5S2 .47R .4:i(i .4~7 ,333 New Yor~ 1•1, Pnol•O•ll>l'll• '''• 11\11 G"'',. 11 lnn1n111 S1 L011•• $ C~•<•oe> i (ln<lnn•tl S·?, A!lnnln ,.0 H0<11f(ln t, l)od11ro I S&n F•~nr .. tD 61, $~n 0~ 7 0 Tt111y•1 GomH Jl ~ fi l ~ ljl: 13 ' l 151 i 7 12 131~ " " N•"' "'er> 1l(llO'\m1" l·'l •I P<!!l!>Untn (£11., 10 11, .,,q111 Mon••t•I !~lrOl'HTl•V'' 0 ' .ft., l!e..i l I ~· '1· G•n" 001 •t """"'" ~Na•h )• tnd aerorr 0-0 1. ,,.., ~·0111 Pllll•cltl1>lll.1 ill•lmf• 001 or C •~tl~~•ll IMf• (;.ICllUlft J.-1), n~hl li1. LDlol•• CG:t>•Dn j H I T °"'ttfl \0'8•:t" 1°)\, o-tty a•m" •<hfd111td 15TH ANNIVERSARY SALEll BIGGEST & BEST YETI DEA(N LEWIS 1966 HARBOR BLYD., COSTA MESA Mod1rn ' Complete Sen-ice & P.trf1 Oepf. Mod•rn Body Shop for All C.1rt 646-9303 540-9468 Oranae County's Largest and Most ~1odcrn Toyota an d Volvo Deal er OYllSIAI DILIYlllr l,.lCIALISTS ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS '71 COROLLA SPECIAL $1777 ~ Sf( THE ALL HIW TOTOTA CELICA SPT. CPI. IMMEDIATE DEUVEllY ~ VOLVO 1971 DEMO $2998 I •1 1od1"· t•dio. h11!11, •utem•t:1: ,, ... ,, USED CAil Sl'fCIAL I $1195 19,9 ltfN.\ULT SllO ~.n 1e ~··t•r I U!tld Nit • f'l'KlXIOI North Tough in Name Only So uth Stars Explode for 117-93 Victory Uy PHlL ROS.S 01 In• D•lt1 l'lltl 11111 Servite's John Seymour a.nd J)nvid Meyers of Sunora may be the onlv Orange County prtp basketball stars who have been invlled lo the July l 1'\ate Nor th-South cage classic iti Oakland, markers is N.so a series sCOr· ing record for one tca1n. ('fhe North all-stars prevail· ed 1n both 19fi!I and '70 v.·hile the NorLh-Sou!h gan1e too k a one-year hiatus in '69J. Taras Young 113), Tustin"s Paul Zyskowski tl4) snd Jim Keyes ( 11) of Santa Ana Valley joining the aroremen· tioned n<1 n1es in t"·in digits. For Stephens, he thought his squad did precisely v.·hat it was expected to do. 7:52 remaining in the tlff, the South came on like gangbwlers by responding \\'ith a 19-8 streak which in· ereased their premium to 107· 82 "'ilh 4:09 left. Stephens ha,d said before this year's matchup that Newport Harbor'!! J oh n Kazmer v.·ould have to be on in both the shooting and defensive departments i n order for the South to be suc· cessful. fn that string. Kazmer 1!0111ever. it was a band of uninvited H<'bels (uninvited to the Jul y I extravaganza l v.·ho cau sed eJI the commotion Saturday night in the six tb an- nual rendition of the Orange County version of Nortli.SOuth hardwood battle. Cornered 11fterv.•ards, the bespectacled head m e n t o r clain1ed. "I felt we had the better team going into the game. dumped thrvugh live buckel.5 with the clo\est being 17-feet away along the r i g ht perimeter of the key. No t rela.xing in I he i r unrelenting pursuit for the series scoring sl<'11dard the Rebels posted thei r widest margin (117-91) with jusl J7 seconds to go. \Vhen all the fireworks /mostly exploded by the South> l1ad concluded in the county clash at Orange Coast t:ollege. l\1arina coach Jim !'ltephen.~' Rebels were \\'ell on the long enc:! of Uie stick by a 117-93 1nargin over the Northerners 'in c I ud in g Seymour and t<.1eyers). And it v.·asn't just ;.>.1Jo\her South win in the coun ty cla!sic 111here the Rebe ls now hold a 4-2 overall edge. The victory was also the biggest rou te in the series (surpassi ng even the 11.4-92 South triuniph in !967) and it put the skid s on a tv.·o-game Yankee v.•in skein. The 117 Sears Kazmer ployed respectable defense most of the "'ay while shadowing Villa Park's 6-5 Pat l\1clnally. But the lithe, 6-3 Newport leaper didn't gain his defl shooting touch ( l.1 !otal poinlsJ until the crucial fina l minutes 1vhen the v.·inners buried the Yankees. Jt was his performance, coupled v.•ith a! le r n a t in g clutch jobs by Eslancia's Gary Orgill I 13). Corona del Mi.r 's Mark Grigsby (10), Jerry Maras (171 of Pacifica and La Quinta's Jetr St. Cl air (l6 ), whi ch turned the trick ror the South. Maras and Mcinally (17l tied for game high-point honors. All in all, eight Rebels hit in double figures with Nev.·porl'.s Prices effective Sunday 6/20 thru Tuesday, 6/22/71 •·1 think everybody on the team was up and we just did il by applying the hard work we've learned in pri>ctice and not forgetting it. •·we just seemed to havr more steam and fire left than they ,:lid toward the end -and that was probably the turning point." The Rebel cagers did ac- complish scoring outbursts in the middle of each ha If I the contest was played v.·ith a pair of col legiate 20-m inute halves instead of with the four- qu2,rler prei:>"type s e tu p l which provided then1 with 13 (in the initial period ) and 18- point leads (second ha lf). But it was a fina l uprising in lhe last 71h minutes \\'hich put the North lo sleep. Showing an 88-74 edge with Ntrll! fill " • HDr!O<I • • Mu"° I ' • Bu~ol ' • MC!n.tllv • o.ew"'' ' St•mour ' 5t ll , Oltklnocn , ·~· , T avior • h\cyors • • •tl•n ' ' TOT•I> " " South ll\/) " ' Youn1 • Olocn ' Gtl~~·~v > • Qtglll • ' Bult ' ' Scnulfl , • Ml<•< • Kt1n ' K••mer ' lv•--•-1 • " Ci.It • To11h " " Halnlmt: ~'" Sol·d \\·r 1ervi ee and rtpair 1110~1 f•rtory i n ~talled 0111d nrii;ina l Pf]uipment :n1ln air eonditionerr; SP ECIAL 5-POINT AUTO AIR CONDITIONER CHECK-UP $169.95 Auto Air Conditioner '"''"'"' 9 88 SI j,Ou $J4 Buy Now for Summer Comfort • Fast" cool-d own for "'r ight now'" comfort, high C.F.M fo r greater air circulation • C htcl .inJ Tighif'n Yoor Bths • ( hrl k Ref tl~erant • Fits most Ame rican cars ;,nd A(hl As Nc-c~rv • C hr{k U1I Compression Le1·rl and ~f'ah • Mounts neatly under dash • ( he-rl.: Sysitm for Lrali:s • Llt•n Your Condenser ~. '( .. ·, - -~-._< -~--·~- t~irf" l<~xtingui.!!her 1099 ~rnr, I.ow l'rir~ For car, t ruck. boat or home, I.CC, UL and Coast Guard ap- J)ro ve<l . Air Adjustal1le Shoc k Ahsorl>er11 B•Jul•r ~.i l .~l 49?.? F.asy to Mounr 'l"railer ft.lirror 499 ~iouots on car to see around lil,rge load. RrJular !I J.99 Has many uses for camping, picnics. #61915 Expert Installation A vail :i l· f"' S ,4JIE $10 Enclooed AU-Wealher H eavy Duty Top Carrier Bar Top Carrier Rtir:ul1r 139.99 2 999 :,-;.~" 899 Holds 12 cu, k Locks with padlock. Ny lon Slip-On Seat Co,·er Rt,:ul•r J.l.9Q 399 Quick-fit Slip-on seac cover in colors. Series ll'7427 L Brackets adjust to lit all cars, Heavy 1inps. -~208 ,,_ Vent Auto · Sear Cu1hion R,,i1l1r 13.:.?9 267 Fits all auro scats. Can use with scat belts. #7389 " ' ' ' • ' • , • ' , • ' • •• ' • • ' , • ' ' ' • • ~ l l nfla.,te o r deflate quickl y with trunk o r bumper mounted fill valve to compensate for varying loads. l 0 .'t" Sr.nrJ Rrvolvin& Cht1rge Prices Effecti,·r. Sund•)'. June 20 lhn1 Tn1:sd1y. Jone 2% ·, $HOJ' '>UNDAT I 1 NOON 1o S 00 pm ·MONDAY 1h .. 1 llllOA'f 9·JO., "'' to 9 00 pm • '>A1UllDAYS 9 JO nm tot. 00 p "' · I Rf I Ptllll<IN< I ........... <o"''" _ .. __ .... _,,.,. ......... ........ .... .... . ...... ........ .. _ ..... .. .. ~ .... -· .. -........ ....... .., )"' ... "" ........ ·-......... ·-..... . ....... OIO·IH!, Hl·ltot ..... -......... .. .•. ,. ...... ,~ ........ -o•• ......... ·-......... "'"' ........ ... ... , . ...... >IJ·"" ........ -~· ""'··-· . ........ ... _ . ...... ...... ,, . ....... ,,. "" """ .......... -··~ ...... ~. .. ...... ·-·,-~.-... ...... ,, . ....... ... "" -·--.... •• " ' , " " . ' • • ,. ' " •• " • " " ' • " " " " " '" • • • g r t t r f; •• • ' ' ' , , • • f: ' ' " ' ' • ' ' ' .. • ' FV Nine Downs Southpaw Steve Fox pitched the Fountain Valley American Legion Junior baseb1.1ll tcan1 to a 2--0 victory over host Fullerton Dodgers S u n d a y night at Amerige ·Park to move into strong contention for the National League lead. The win moved F'oun1<1ln Valley to within one-half game of lhe Dodgers who are 6-1·1 as compared to 6-2 for Gene Marinaccl's Fountain Valley crew. In other wrekend Legion ac- tion, Fountain Valley tripped San Clemente Saturday, 9-1. San Clemente also lost a fleartbrcake~ _Sunday, 8-7, to Rancho Pacifica. Mission Viejo spilt a pair of games, losing Saturday to Bolsa Grande and defeating Los Amigos Sunday, IU-2. The Harbor Dodgers Jost a 5-2 decision to Tustin Saturday and forfeited to Saddleback Sunday. Westminster lost to Anaheim Schutte in a single game Sunday. 1'1-2. The Fountain Valley victory over ~l!n Clemente Saturday came In rather easy fashion as Dave Lynch lirniled the visitors to four hits and one run . But the big story for Foun- tain Valley came Sunday night aL Amerlge Park. catcher \\'ayne OuelleUr. "The kids really played well tonight ," ~1arUiacci said after the arc light L'OnlesL "I felt like I had a little pro team out there the way Liley kept (Jlugging away and finally got two runs. But the big sUlry was the defense and lhe pitching of Fox." The first and only run fox needed came in the third fra me •.\'hen Matley tripled and scored on a single by Ray Eckles. Steve ~1itchell belted his se- cond homer of the year and his second in two weeks against San Clemente Satur· day. ~1lss1on Viejo should have won a pair of decisions bul lost out Saturday by com- mitting four errors in the bot. tom hall of the ninth. Three ~1ission Viejo players l1ad three base hits including Danny Brennan, Mike Grimes and Rick \Vhite. Brennan opened the top or !he ninth with a single and Bob Tilton \Va[ked. Grimes then singled to bring a run across and break a 7-7 deadlock. \Yhite singled to load the bases and Bill Schwartz drove an insurance lally across. But victory \1-'asn"I in the books as four errors and a couple of bloop base hits that re!l iu short center field ga\·e Bolsa c;rande three markers and a 10-9 win. Sunday Mission Viejo's young Nick Gnlespie of Laguna Beach High struck out 16 Los Amigos batters and didn 'l give up a base hit until the eighth in winning, 10-2. Bqth runs v.•ere scored in the ninth. Scott Tolbert had four rbi and he and Gillespie each had a triple and a single dur- ing the game. The Harbor Dodgers lost a ~-2 ventict Saturday then \Vere forced to fo rfeit bec;iuse of a shortage of players Sunday. It wa s Lhe thi rd forfeit of the year for the Dodgers. \Ve s tminster's Aincrican League entry was outclassed by the Anahein1 Schulle team in a 14-2 defeat Sunday. Deep Sea Fish Report Two W1Umlftllor tU ~ e•!e11,~. <•·"> C••Pm•n. II wnue!eY. n NOdl1"4 n Oe91n.llrf;ll. lll lilun<1el. c.lf.cl EIPl"'!JI, 11-("l•P •i•~OltY, :14-p.)D lu911l1. 1b-JI> l !•CI•~. p o r1ul1•. 11., ' To!•I• JS , " ... • • • • • • • • ' ' . ' ' . . ' . . ' . ' . ' . • • • . ' . l 10 1 ••• .ln,on11m Scnutte 1'1 001 OC!'-1• 11 t Wt ""'tnUt• 000 JOO 000-7 10 I MIU.Ion Vltlo (f) T B•tnn•n, ~t l<>l!M!•T, II Aoncran. !D l(enl••· ~ 0 Br1nn•n. ,. Waru. 1b Titton, 11> G•lm••• c WM!t. •! GUle>O•t , <I scnw••ll. Jb To!•ls .. • ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' " • ' • n rtl ' ' • ' , • ' • ' ' • • ' ' ' . , . " • • • , • ' ' • • • • M .. s.cn V<eio 011 007 Oll -' 11 • 8 olw Gr•nde m 01G Oil-Ill t f DUnl•ln Vall1y (1) 511.m&\i, lb Mo!C~lt. 10 V•rne•. lb M•rlr•, cl Ouele!te. c E~ltn, 1f Ecklt>, cl tl 1c~~ • ., Fo•. o To!&I• •br~rDI ' . ' • • • ' • ' ' , ~ Scor• bY !nnlnDI • • ' • • • • • ' • • ' • • ' ' • ' • • • ' • • •• Founl~in V•l•ev 001 010 000-l S o F u11er1on Oo<lP•" 000 000 OOl)-4 5 ! Mlulon Vtelo (10) .. ' h rl>I ' ' Foes M1rMr DMH" Ill l'l•I""'· ~ l119ot"· ti> V..rv Fol!or, lb A1 n<11ll. 11 Vyn, I! L1m~1. 10 ao .. 1~. '' Wohon, 1l Ptr-1~1. lD Grill FOl1t r, ~ Cndotm•n. < P-rh,< He~•h, p V•llere, lb Toll I• .. ' ' • • • • • ' . • • • ' • • • • • ' . " ' • •• • • ' . • • ' . • • ' . ' . ' . • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• Tu>!ln 000 1X10 U0-5 1 H•rller Ooo;1ri 000 011 000-l o 11.•n•. lb 5t• Clemlflll !71 ···~•bi ' ' . ' ' . J Sodnoman. u T1wm•, .,.11> ll••<llan, ID Oouql•"· ,, Scori M'klo•, c "''"""• II o Alltn. II 0 S•t •e Ml~lo•. cf Nll lHn. P.71> lol•I• JI ' • • . ' • • • • • • • • • ' . ' . ' " ••• ~"" (ltmt n,. 000 OlO OCl•-1 11 ~ R•nc~o "•"Ile Jll 010 on-a ' 51n ci.m..,t• Pl '" r ~ rt>! IC1no, " J O O O .1. Sprlnoman, 20 • ? O 1,um1. cl·la ) O o o Rt1ch1n. c·rr J o 1 o Wllllo,e-r. Ill.cl o l 1 Aron•,11 l O O O Allen. II ) O O 0 8. So•lnq"''"' lb T O O O S Mlklo" lb ? 0 0 0 $it•t Ml-IM. rt J 0 0 0 Oouqlau, a l o O O Nlel10n. p I o o O IO!tll XI 1 I '°"ntalft Volloy Ct ) .. ' ' ' ~ rDi ' . ' Mond.l!, JliU'lt 21, 1971 OA!L Y PU.OT J..> Will Jinx Angels to Play Wives -Continue One •f the moil unwual and games o! the ~ason wlll taltt shirt!. their hwhlnds' road In Elims? place at Anaheim Stadium j-P..--iiiiiOiiiiiOiiiiiOiiiiiOiiiiiOiiiiiOiiiiiO'i Saturd<iy night, July 3, prior to , the Angtls' rtgular gamr The No. l spot in the 1971 \Vest C.oMt Match Game against the Oakland A's, I Wives cf mort lb.an 1 dozen Eliminatloru has been a jinx Angels pl ayers will perform after four weeks of bowling at against their hU5ban ds in a I Kona Lanes in C.OSl.a Mesa . unique softball ma tch, begin-I Pour differenl bowlers have ningat 7:15p.m. I vaulted their way into ~ top T p0silion, only to be ousted in he ladles \1-'i!I be given al the following wetk. sllghl advantage, inasn1uch as ' Costa Mesa's F'red Doughtr-lhe men will have to bat and LEASING SALES SERVICE Plf .. S( CALL S<IO-ttOO C08JA ME.SA ty is currently lodged in first throw opposilt. lhe ~·ay they place, holding a 56-pin margin usually perform, and t h r l over Ontario's Greg Bader-wives will get .six outs. I deen as action r es u me.! The wives will \\•ear shorts tonight t'l 9. -~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;~~~~~~ Dougherty rolled a 901 ]j series last Moo day , including a 298 game. lo jump from the l No. 10 position. Sa~ Bernardino·s Ga r y ?\.fadison, the defending cha m- pion , fell from first to third1 last week while Dana Point •s l Clyde Lacher, the leader two \\'eeks ago, dropped from third to 111.h. Th~ first week leader-Tor- rance·s Jerry O'Neil-is in the No. 61 spot. Pot. 1owl1r City I I, frod Ooua~u!~. Co•ll M"• J,J~• 2. Gr~ Badtrde~n On11rlo J 291 J. G••V M1d"l•on, S.n eun•rdlno 3"795 •. Frtd B•rn,ol. l u111n 3 '·rn ' 5, Ml<• SmlTn, Anth~lm i'ni 6. John Snaro, E11elno J,'nJ Jot Mlntn" Anan~lm J llJ I. JICk l(lntlty, S1nT• An• J '260 Oouu J011n10<t, Lonq Bt•c~ i '.210 10. Nl(O; SllQ•llo, Cotto Me•• ],751 1 O!ner1-11 CIY~ L•c~tr /O•n" Point) l.ll1; 1•. lloY Wit'°" C01ta Is Tarza.n around? see women's section today! Fo:ii: went the full nine in. nings in IXISling the shutout. He struck out 10 opposing bat- te rs and in two bases loaded situations, he settled down to strike out the final batter. l ertnn•n, .. Toll<>n, JD l Olt>etT, If l\>hCr•fl. ID o 5,...,,..n. •~ Grim••· c Schwan1, 1b Ba.-on, " 11;cMrll'IO<', ti Gille•oie, o Total$ • ' • • ' ' • • • • • ' • ~nlmai•. l~ Frlt1, <I Mllcht ll, ID Mtrltv. II Ec~IH. JD V1rneY. n Eblin, rt Ou1tt!lt. C lvn<h. D • ' ' • ' • • ' ' ' • • ' ' ' M~;a 1 l .7111: J9 !llfl j ac• lranch ': -'~"~"~'~"~"~'~"t·~·~·""~'~·: .. ~·~·~,:·~:·:·:":··~'~I :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::':! ;--tc..,r. M1>0 l.111. , ' ' . ' ' ' J1 lO II lot.is • Score llV innonq• ' ' " • ' . " ' .. • ' ' • He was helped by some ()Ulslanding fielding by center fielder Pat Marley a n d Los Arnio<» Mlssk>n Vlt lo ••• 000 000 OCIJ-7 l I J10 OH 06"-10 11 I S•n C!1ment1 000 001 OCO-l i S Fl>Unllon V•!lt Y 101 JH Ob-f II 0 ,, BFG'S BEST 4·PLY NYLON CORD TIRE WIDE, STRONG SILVERTOWN CUSTOM Fils many M1wrick1, Hornets, Comet5. V1 li1nt1, Falcons, Rambler Americans, size 878-1.C plus F.E.T. tif ,1 ,96 per tir .. SAVEUPTO $30ASET $ Fits manv VWs, Moau1n91, Corvairi, Darts, Barracuda·s, Chevy ll's, Ramble111, •izea: 5.60-15, 7.00-13. and C78-1 4 plus F.E.T. of ,1.76 ta ,2.07 per tire. Fits mitl'IV Javelins. Che11elles, Camaros, Caugars, Firebirds, Rebe! .. .Amba11adors, Carvettaa. l orino1, Plymouths, · .siies E78·14, f78-14 ind F78-15, plus F.E.T. of 42.21 ta •2.42 per tir1. Fits many Chevy'1. Dodges, Fords, Oldsmobiln. Pomlsca. T-Bird1, Buiekl, Chry.,._ Mercurys. •izM G78·14, G78-16. H78-14, H78-15, plus F.E. T. Of t2.25 to •2.80 per tirt. Abov.pir;a pM ....... Whk...,.,..~ Nghlr, BUY NOW FOR A SAFE VACATION SALE ENDS JUNE 30, 1971 WE HONOR ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS MASTER CHARGE BANKAMERICARD Safe-Long Wearing- Top Quality Tires at $988 Low Prices! only ALL SIZES FROM VW's TO Oi4DILLACS Cdl1c br1k11 1Uoht1y higher ) Tr1ilttd IFG Mtchlnics will: • ln1t1ll New Llnlog1 • R11p1ck Front Whnl B111ring1 • lnapect Entire 8r1ke Sy1t11m • Corr1ct 8 r1 k1 Flold Ll'Vll SAFE, WORRY·FREE VACATION DRIVING ,Trained BFG Mtdi1nics will; • Allgn Front End •Repack Front Wheel 8e1ring1 • B1l1nc• Front Wheel• 'Inspect En1lr1 Br1 ke System ONLY $11 44 All Car• COSTA MESA: ORANGE: WESTMINSTER: ,,. JONES TIRE SERVICE JONES TIRE SERVICE L l. LlffiE BIG 0 TIRE IRSAVlll" RAMAL 1'IU - You can get a 4 ply nylon cord tire with 21 month guarantee for 21 00 at lots of places. At our place, you get two. 2 for 2190 (1 .76 led 1~, e a l ll !111 11•1<.I 1rade-11 650· IJ blJ c~wall lubele~r ) Foremost• Relianl ~ ......... •••"<ha• Gu>•O•I<• '••••I"'""'"' I ... ii'" ......... ,.an "''•'•""' • "''""" '" I "'""'U•' ...... ,, .... ' '"" i•«'•OI ''"" ''"" ,., •u~<..-0"'"' "'"' '"'" ...... '''" """''nl•• ! ,.,.,,.,, •" •u•<I "'"'" •• """°' ' •••• ,. ... v., ..... ,.,,,, ..... '"' ..... ,.,.,. '''"" . mn""" nl ""'"""'"' I• v"'" ''" ""'''"""•on• """'"'" d""'"· '""''"•I •n '" '"" ~· ~011. •\OU• .. "''"""·'""'" •... , .. '''"·'"'"····· ... ~ .......... _ "" .... '"""'"'' '"'" '"" ~·" •, ''""""'" ... ,,.,, ... .. '•<ft••I' •'·"" >••. '"'""'' '''" "'"""" "'' • "'w I•••.''" '"'" '"'""' ""''• "' "" """""' !""' '""" '""''• •••'""'"'!.,.,.,.,LI• ''<l"<•I 1 •' "" t ••. ""' ·~• '"' O<lw. '""'"'""' '''"""' '''"''""·'""' w.ri ,,unw • . .;•. n• '' • ••' '"' '"""""' j""'""• "'"" ,.:,~:·;.':,'.'!",;,"~··::;·~·· •. ~ :··.~·;·: ', ::.:.: ,,..·,:,-~;'"', ·~::.::::' ~ : ,;;·',:. : ' ... ~"·; ', :···~:·:, ~:::·-:~."' .~ .... ·~.::.":;·~::::: ~ ""'"""""' 'OllCMO•Y •ll<J l C(T ION f:!J"'l!"NTI:[ (H .. 11 1 .. ~II("~ .. OW ~OU" (.!JAii ..... I LL WOlll<~, ..... '""'"' ........ . 10 ............. " ..... . ~ .... '""'"'"'" .. ., ... ~~···'"""''"" ....... .. .... ,, ,, ....... . "'" U fO ~'"''<';.•. W• ,.,.,,,, '""·•••<•• rn,.mou "" ,.,. "'· ''"'' ""''" """• ''" • """ "'"'" yn•k ,,. '~0'"" n• '"'''"'" t• '"" t••• ..... """ 4., . • ,,, '"' '""'""'' •'"'" , ... ,.1 ... "'''""•'• ........ .. •·• h•'"d "" '"' ,,.,.,..,,, '"'" '••·•n•••'•'"""'""f "'"'' .~ .......... ' ,, . ' ' .. , ............ '"'""'" ". ,..,. , ... ~, ...... "' ..• ' ......... ,., .... ·' "•" "'''""''""'''. •· .. , .............. , ..• '"'""""' ~;~ ... ~·~·~.;~.;:."';:.~· :. ·; 0h: .'.: :,~d1::.;•·:::::·.;'.":0:. ·-;.~; "'~'""''-'"'"""•···· ' ''"' """"""' •I •••I h o ""'" • I' " 0"'V !1>1 ........... ,, .... , ' " Blackwall lubeless Size Fed. 11.t 775·14 2.14 825-14 2.32 855-14 2,50 775-15 2.16 815-15 2 37 845-15 2.48 ••••.• Whitewall• oo4, SJ more. PrK:e 13.95 15.95 17.95 13.95 15.95 17.95 r------------l! '(ft.,-lt_'4fil:l'l·-...----, Closeout! 666 Odg. 8.99. Slip-on vinyl headres11. Deluxe hcadrr ~ adJl!S!s up and down for individual 1:omlofl. Several color choices. This week only! I .. Penneys service 795 A11 cond1honer chock 'n charge fo r original equipment and add<in uni1s. Most American Cara Monday, Tuesday and Wedneadayonty Yes, you cdn shop 12 to 5 Sund•ys, ~oo, at these Penney Auto .Centers: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Conter. HUNTINGTON CENTER. Huntington Beach. 2049 Harbor Blvd. 1100 Tustin Ave. 7352 W•stminster Av•. ., (•t l•Y) IAcr011 fro"' n._ Poet Office) 1 ii~ IL.~..!64~~:··~2~1~~54:0-4:::3•:1~~!..~~~~5:32:·3~38~3:...~~~.!_~~~~'~9~3·=55~7:2 ~~~~~~~~::-::-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::'~~JI ~ ~~ Use Penney's Tim• Payment Pl•n. - I \ .. ' ' Mond•Y. Ju11r 21, 1971 • ' 1,.:.....--~· • ! . • CIA ILY .. ILOT l' ... i.> bf LH l"•Y ... ~ READY TO FIRE -Neu1port Harbor's South all-star John Kazmer poises to fire a field goal attempt over the head of Yankee Mike Taylor. It was a typical pose as Kazmer canned 13 points in a 117-93 South win in the sixth annual county all-star basketball matchup at Orange Coast College Saturday night. Soutl1 Has Dreamer's Backfield It's a dream backfield S ou th I a n d sportswriters have been talking about ever since the players involved were sophomores. And it has come to pass. It is the array of stars the South Shrine team will field in the 20th annual Shrine North- South charity Football Game on the evening of July 30 in Los Angeles ~lemorial Coli- seum . Jn the charity grid classic benefitting the Los Angeles unit. Shrincrs Hos pitals for Crippled Children. the South will br in g to geth er quarterback Pat Haden f Bishop A m a I . ) halfbacks Anthony Davis !San Fernan- dof and Allen Carter (Bonita ) and fullback Larry ~fushin.~kie 'Tf'mple Ci1y ). Arlrl lo 1 111~ group \\·1dc receiver John fl.1cKay of Bishop Amat and i!'s liU le wonder Snuth Cf)- Bucs Zip to 3-2 Win Over Rustler Nine Any similarity lo lineups for the regular college season is purely coincidental at this time but the Ward's Pirates toppled the Senik Rustlers Sunday afternoon, 3-2. Jn a r-.tetropolitan summer baseball league game at Golden West College. The Pirates. as the name implies, are largely made up of Orange Coast Co 11 e g e players ol next year while the Rustlers are from Golden West. Sunday's outing found Dan Quisenberry and Mark Barr hooking up in a tight pitching duel that was broken in the top of the eighth when the Pirates put two runs across. Each pitcher went the full distance and each had nine strikeouts. Barr gave up seven hits and Quisenberry nine. The Rustlers took the lead in w1..-'1 P'lrlltt U l .. ' ' . w.1..,.,, .. Pol m•r. er Fo1T•'-.lb Morl1n, < Fulh1rT>. II 51rT'D•"'1, I b Si,,.on!, r l • • ' ' • • • • • • ' . ' ' ' . the seventh inning, 2-1. Bill Shubin opened with a base hit 11 rbl and stole second. Mark Rogers ~ ~ then tripled him home to put 1 o the Rustlers in front but i ~I Rogers was left al third . ' . ' " ' . ' . Z•l•<1orl. •I F l~ld•r. 7b (hu•Chlll, 7b Oul•~•t..ny, I> 11 '111. Oh l•b••~•f. I> To11I• " ' S1nlk llu1!1eto ()I llo~•"· <I H1mmo'" lb oce~. lb W •l,nn, " e .,,.,~~ < (110~'. lb ~"''P•<in, II ilo•m•. Jb ["1n<1>. JO .. ' • ' • ' " • ' • • o o I ' " • ' ' 'I :1 • • 1 .. ; I ' . ' . ' • ' ' ' • • • ll "''""'"~"V~' H o O o CHOOSE FROM A CHOICE SELECTION TODAY NABERS cnaches Louis Birnbaum nl ~~"M" .. r1 1 1 o) ~ B•''' <> O o Hollywood and Dick Saltrr To••" l.I 1 1 1 Sc~r~ b' ;"n1~0 1 I (Arcadia) are drooling. r ~ , COSTA MESA Th . U w .. n•1 p.,.,., oo• ooo 011l-J 1 l I .. rs quartet rerpesents 1c Senr~ Q v•"~" ooo 001 100-1'_'_'~·~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~:,::f~:~':~,p~~~,~:~,~~:~ld ~TRUEST TD FORM ''Birnbaum and Salter are ciuick to agree. "And our defensive unit won't be far behind." They were referriog to the platoon headed by a I I · American Linebacker Forrie Martin of Blair H i g h (Pasadena) the same school which provided the South with record-setting Jim McAlister a year ago. Of the four top tracks In CalUornla last year, Lot Af•mltoe had the hlghe1t percentage of winning favorites.• Come out and have the NIGHTIME of your life with the chart-smart 11t thl111a1on! Night Racing; June 9 thru Sept. 8. Monday thru Saturday. Flr11 of nine ra~: 7:45 pm. Nightly Double: 1st and 2nd race.. Exact1: 8th end 9th. 'Flgurn lumllhtd by D•llJ ll•Clng Form, Trl•"Sll• Publlc•tlon1, Inc. ~ z ct ~ z ct !/) 32% 31% 29% For Adwance A•••rv1tlon1-'°" TIM' TP"AOI. Ol'NIHCI: I '"Oft "fHlllVtO l lU.TI : (211) 4S1.on:I • (114) 127-t471 (213) 4S1·1Ht • (714) 527·2231 LodlH 5.,. Evtry Tundty Night! Los Alamitos ' • ,-~-·· . ,. ~ Baseball Stars Kessler , Fargo Named All-CIF Laguna Beach outfielder Greg Kessler and University third baseman Steve Fargo are the only Orange Coast area players having been :selected to the official all-CIF AA or A baseball squads. A senior at Laguna. Kessler was accorded a first team berth on I.he AA unit while junior Fargo was one of three utility performers chosen for the A team. All • CIF Baseball first Team Player School Pos. Avg. Class Whitfield. Palo Verde or .471 Sc, Ollar, App le Valley OP .512 Jc, Kessler, Laguna Beach or ,360 Sc. Massari , Antelope Valley 18 .391 Sc. White, •Antelope Valley 28 .S I I Jc. Escobedo, Coachella Velley 38 .359 Sc, Triska, Bell Gardens SS .387 Sc. Leavitt, Charter Oak Util. .347 (9-2) Sc. Hillman. Sonora c .351 Sr. Tippit, Antelope Valley p 1~5 (074) Sr. Diaz, Brawley p 13-3 Sc. itigdal, Northview p 8-2 (0.91) Sc. Players of the year-Dan Tippit, Antelope Valley and Terry \Vhitfield, P alo Verde. All · ClF A Ba st>ball Player School Pos. Avg, Class John Johnson, Rosamond OF' .393 Jr. No!te. Paraclete OF' .303 Sr. Wood, Webb OF .421 Sr. Gay, Yucca Valley 18 .395 Jr. Hernandez. Avalon 28 .600 Sr. 1'.1ontan. Pater Noster 3B .471 Sr. .. - Marina , Seal Beach Drop Baseball Tilts KfMlfttl .................. rlM Ill Corona's O'Brien Sets Mark The Kaufman-Broad-Marina entry in the Long Beach Police summer league drop- .. ' • "' Parry O'Brien, compeUng ped a 7-1 de<:Jaion to the Jets for the C-Orona del Mar Track while the Seal Beach team Club, established an American (Huntingtoh Beach High) lost age group shot put record S\Jll-' a 2-1 verdict to the Stars Sun- day in the Seniors Sport! day afternoon. ·-·'b C.n1pti.ll, lb (tfKI, ( Mm..-... R<>M.C! EUl.on, • Ft l1, rl L-r, ti Dlllet!, ~ti Tltl•I• IC1utm1n-8·M International spike meet at The Marina. team w a s Jett • ' • ' • ' ' ' ' " • ' • ' • • • • • ' ' ' ' • • • • • ' ' • • ' . . ' • ' • • • • • ' the C<:ili.seum. limited to lhrte base hits in•iiii;iiiii;iiiii;iiiii;iiiiiiii:ii;iii~~ii;iii~ o·Brien put the 1&-pound Josir.g to one or the tOp teams;i PS shot 53-4 for an American 35-in the circuit. Marina is now 3-GOLF Tl . 39 mark. 4 for the season. w1!fl ......,.H11M11u,. Seal Beach evened its record l'r•ctic. "' T,,. The Corona del Mar 4QO.. at 3-J in the loss to the Stars NEWPORTER INN meter team broke the ex-who have dropped but one PAR 3 GOLF COURSE is ting mark for the 40-and-game in summer league play S1 .oo wlrh ttih •d weeti days over class with a 44.7 clocking.li~t~o~d~a~t~e.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Included on the foursome were Dick Stolpe, Phil Schlegel, Don Badine!li and Sh I r I e y Davisson. 'The 50-and-<>ver 400 meter relay squad from Corona alS<J lowered the national standard .,.,,ith a 50.5 clocking. On the team were Bob Foutz, Rich- mond Morcom, Leo Wal1.C1Jk and Ross Winton. Another mark was establish- ed by Corona 's George Kerr in . the !&-pound shot ( 4 o -4 9 years). He had a mark of 47· 01r.i. The old record was 35-9%. ~ SAFECO INSURANCE • FIRE • AUTO • BOAT • HOME • BUSINE SS Bob Paley & Associates ~ Cobb, Notre Dame SS .542 Sr. 1 Fargo, Uni versity Ulll. .490 J r. In the 12-pound shot put Corona's Nate Heard won the 50-54 year division with an ef- fort of 5()..5 and teammate Jack Thatcher was victorious in the 55-59 bracket with a top mark of 42.9;-,. 474 E. 17TH STREET, COSTA MESA 642-6500 -546-3205 J im Johnson, Rosamond Vt.ii. .516 Sr . t Robarts, Flintridge Util. .458 Sr. Rhodes. LA Baptist C .475 Jr. KIRK JEWELERS COSTA MESA Kcrrbor c..,., 141-t4U Stackpole, Elsinore C .390 Sr. McElroy, St. Genevieve. P 12-2 (0.86) Jr. Sudduth. Holtville P 8-2 (0.88) Sr. Farr, Pater Noster P 11-2 (0.49) Sr. HUNTINGTON BEACH Hu11tht9ta11 CftN......at2·SI01 Turner, Notre Dame P 14-1 Jr. Player of the year -Marvin Cobb, Notre Dame. 1388 WHEEL l'OlVWAIT1 llSI YOUll ·-ClllOIT CAAO 011 YOUll .... ,,1( AMl fUCJillO m 7.7.5·14 8.25-14 8.:15-1 s 8 • .5.5-14 8.5.5-1 s l l .. t~WAl-1. , .. c. IAttl $11.97 $15.97 $17.97 $19.97 $23.97 t .56-IJ l!loctwoll, T"""-s Plu1 Fo:!croi [ «•"' T ••of 1.7S •~d tnd .. in u,. orf -~. WHITEWALL 12 97 WNfTIWAU. l'lUf n o. ••1C1 Ill. TA• IAC:ll IA(M Tiii $12.97 1.76 $16.97 2.01 $18.97 2.14 2.32 $20.97 2.37 2.50 $24.97 2.54 An ,.n. .............. bolM ,.,. •""' ........... tt.. j.tt r-r •r, WI llSflVI THI llO~T TO ltMIT.QUANnTlll I FISK PREMIER · 5s1 ·~,, ........... "'-.,_.,. ruw Tr•t. •u••AllTU ftlAD .. l .. lt-OllT GllAUJ<Tlt •U .. I .. '""or< 1~•.,ftl-ooot°'t -.,.,.,~, !otU\oft-••• of .,on<111 ..... ll'd ~n lh• "'" l•ooko. 11 ••• ,,_, lo '"" '~" 1111" d••• b"o" 1~1.,,. 61 "'' ,,.,.11 •• ~ .,.i .. nl ~"• K""" •Iii .. ,,. •• ouo,.•-•' oo t~• '""""" •I "'"' ~_.i.,,1 E 1c1" T ••of 11,76 Oh~ "O<f•-•fl lit•Olf 36 MONTH . you• Ut. GUARANTH . WHITEWALL ·16" • ~~~ WMtflWML l'Ull ID. ••• JIK;I lit., .... "n ·-IACll IACM 1 .. 1 6.M-11 1111.117 1111.117 1.7• CJl-Ul(JM) 1111.117 120.111 .... 17&.1411.UI 120.111 121.117 2.11 '7&.14 (1.71) 121.117 122.117 ·~ na.11 C7.1tl '1-~2__ •7&.14 jl .15) 123.117 $24.117 ,,,, ., .. ,, rt.11) ~~-KJ'l-1~ !~~ 127.117 128.117 Kl'l-11 .... . ·-...... _ ......... __ ot "'"""""•-ii-lo ,., -· .-.-1 ... (1>..,1>« .i,...,,.,_loo _ ... ""•oiolOOl ... -J ft.I.AD LIPI GuA•unt' uor~11ro1llllo..,.1e .. -• .. .....,· -u•loot '"''~"'uo ,_l<•f-' ....... t•·-····-... -.... 1 ......... _ ....... ··--.., l(•otl) " •• , -·•loll•.,.,~"' ..... ,•! "" """""' ........ .i-11: ....... .... " Ko "IL!o•, olU..r """" <ho ih .. , •••• '" ollo•o"''" .., U.o ,,.,._ ol ......... , ...... 1_11 •·--· ,, ........ 1 ......... o!At •• Tblo , • .,,,.. .. ,.,., ••• _,, 10 -• ........... ...i "" •ftd .. ··-........ ""'' "oll 11 ..... ,. ... c .... ... •••• , ... 011 ... -.... ·~· ...... 1 .. 11 .. ,. -· "' ...... ,, <»• ........... . "'l•OI••~~ JM,,,,_ <•Olo< .. .. IALANCE (off your cor) ...... --' 77¢ .... SANTA ANA COSTA MESA ldlnttr ltr .. t •t lrl1ttil, 1400 Edln91r Harber laultvercl •t Wll•on, 2200 HtrlMr ll'lf, TIMEX REPAIR Authorized Orange County SALES AND SERVICE ==~ HEAVY DUTY ·MUFFLER 9 88* ){ .. 1 F•••o. •:~ .... , ... , p1, ... 11u 1lmart BAn taT CliAllAICTEt . r-....-.-.. 1u.i. "..,'•I .,.,..i. ... u ..,.....,._., d•r..,,; ••• AltoT to rl.,,, "' .. 111 ,..rl•0<th<-loo•~.,'""<~""'"'" nnl• lot""' ,,.,1..i or o .... n.1o;o buad '" th• .. ,.,.,,, .. u1oc pdo;~ ot tb< i;.,. of nto..,,, ~,......,...., "'"' '"""lfi"' •um!ooc or montl>•, .•r.ta~•. llo•. 1,,.1 "' .,,m~ """ .. ""'lion ,...1,1.1 '" ..,.,.,.. "'"~"'~or "'"'~"''"· No Ind'"'" "'"d"d '-"''"· ~ a TRACK STEREO ~ 1rmt !~~~N ~~~~~~LAllX .A.ND FINE !Ll>ll>G . u,,.n .o 677 11IATIJJ.1:1!1 • 1111 .. C.-• T-LI .. ~·"' . ,., .. ,..,. ....... • ••n•-T• a.11 • o.t0rr Jil••• ~ r-• ~~~iu-. ,,,,,11.,;., ··-..... 1.bl• llil'i~N..TTPE-STEREO Sf'Eil.ERS ...... ~.77 Pair 4 TftACK ST!RIO TAPES ........ 99t "'· .... 119 Selectlon of Artlsh YOUR CHDICElaa·c RISLONE GUMOUT """ •m ,,,,.. JACK S'' TIRE PUMP 99C Tit9 h• ll·ltlS .. l.71 00 C.11 Pevr 8PMt ... 18i IAJ{;](!;f!O@ LiJ OJ;J AUTO AIR CONDITIONER .DELUXE 14911 _ lntt1ll1tlon Av1lliblt AFETY SPORT 15911 Al/TO AIR CONOITIONER SERVICE 511 Plut freon end Dlrtl If nltdtd WESTMINSTER Argonauts ' Krzyzosiak Nabs 440 SACRAMENTO -Ton v r;t Krzyiosiak or Garden Grov~ )..,;} .;' .,. Sears was the lone Orange County Yt'inner in the 12th annual Golden 'Vest track and field meet staged at Sacramento ~· State College Saturday nighl L'i L.-------------J, before 5,200 fans. Krzyzosiak won the 440 over a sta r-studded field o j perforn1ers froni across 111e nation in a brilliant 46.9 t'!Ol'k• ing. He is the California slate 440 champio11 . The only olher winner in lhe meet. fron1 Southern California v.•as Dv•ight Stones of Clendal!' \\•ho won the high JU!llp at fi-8 with fewer misses. L.omi:xx:'s Charlie Jackson v.·ho led thal school to the C a ! i for n 1 a state prep title recentlr finishe<l seccind , in the 180 low hurdles in 19.2 _ behind double 1\•inner Handy Lightfoot of Plainvicl'.'. Tex. • Jackson was fifth in the high hurdle event v.·ith a 14 .2 clock· ing to 13.9 for Lightfoot The meet is an annual event held for graduating high school seniors from <1cross the United States_ !t \Vas originally start~d in Southern California. Only other counlian listed in Lhe fi nal tabulations "'as pole vaulter Ron r.1ooers of Valen- cia in a tie for fifth at 14-8. 100 -1. Dill (O•!roi1) t .S, z. Perrv (Po•I Ar!t>ut. 1PV.l 9,9, )_ MOrri• (l11com~. W••ii/ 9.!. ~ -1. 0 111 O•lrOt!I 110.1, 0 'Con· n•ll (Fl:och••ler, NYJ ?l,S, J. P•"• (Port A<"TllUt. 1•><-l ?LI MO -I. Knv<<>""~ 1G11 r11en Grov•\ ... 9. 1. Bn>wn IW1100. T•~.I •1.2, l, Gr•nt !Hou•T""l •l,S, 01he" l<1cluden "-Tyl~ (S"n Diego) '4!,1, I, Beffy !Lo• Al'\ft•lesl "8.•. 8&0 -1. Gu~«-"1"° I No.in Borgen NJl l :Sl .I, 1. 1 .. 11eY (_Al•••nnr1~, "' 1:Sl.t , 3, Sm•t~ (S•m•Dury, onn,l I S2.C. Mil• -1. Feig !Eugene, O••.l l :IO,!. 1. Ourldn !River Grov•. 111.) •:l l.2, l . 1-!o rp..er (5~n Oloool <'.1!.J 011\ors In· eluded: •· Cumming~ IS11nle M11rle) •:ll.6. 2.rnlle -1-Me,.icll: !N•w Leno"' 111.l 1 ,$<.9. 2_ F ll!el l~11n Oi•pOI !.S-8.1 . .l. Sml!h IWict>l!11, K•.l 9.00.0. '· Hale !Mo••11e J 9 DS.7 120 HH -1. l1gh!IOO! (Plain••SW- Te~.) 1).9. 7. Rlcc11rdi lh•lin, NJI I• GI J. l"o>te-r IG~Hne>, SCI U C, • Hal lin-vleWOOd l U.1-Otllero lntlude<f s Jtd<•on (Lompoc) 1•.2. 1110 LH flurn) -1. Lighll~I (Pl~in­Yiew, Tt• l I~ I. 2-Jae••"" (lomuoc\ 19.1, I. Be!w r {itenlon, We\~ I 19 l J» IH -1. Kni11lil iWor"11n111on. Ohiol ll.~. 7, Galiev (Cll!l'r Cree~. T••-1 l l \, J, Yo"n9 (Ml , Vernb<l, NY! 37 ! O!he r< oncludeCI I. i-l a I I < lnqlewOO<I) 3'1 .8 Sl>ol 11"! -I. Cor!lne !Prince!.,.,, NJ! i.A·9, 2. Colfmen (>tumble, l ew.l 61•3, 3 LeDuc fl•com~. Wtlh.I 61·1 L-Lun1p -1. w nliam• 1Fro•~ol ~~''"· ~. Fll11oen IR•vtrnea<f, >JV ) ?•·R l Perks !Oavton) 7'·l'l:l. AU m11rws wind aided_ J(IV-Plin 1. F•ant•s /Eugen~, Or•\ 'll·~. 1. Matlin IHo.,ma, L•.I 23~-IO, l George (FlllmorP, Ulan) 213-0, Hion lu<nP -!. Slone.,.lGlend•lel 6 J, '· EldP<> IF rpsno) ~-!. J. 5mi'n (Mcl'her1on. K•.I 6·8. Otner• inctun•d 5 oi:o11ne~ ll°"9 llPacnl 6-! Pole V!u lt -I Mar1in 15t n Jo•el 1;. •· 1. Wl>i!P. !Compton) 11·6, ]_ S!rr•ll {Hollvwood .. Fla ) 15-0"•· 0 1he" i~ clu<:led'. s. 1•~ b~lween Mooe" fPlacP<i- lial •nd Se11ter (GT"'1d•le\ 1'-8, 8 Y•le• !lnolewood\ 1~-6.~ Ol•CVf -1, l-IOW"rd~~Cl''1i't) 1!• ~. !. McGol<to-lcl< !Oro!ino, lll•llol I~!-!, .l !mitn (T"comt . wa1n ) 17a·l. l rlplt iurnp -L Mcllridt (M! Vernon, NV) 11·6'-w. (olO-IO'•l, 1 Co~w•v !Cu.,.,M•no) •Q·l I>,, J. W""•"'' ~ .. S<><>) •9 .. V,, i , l uc<e' IF•e-snol •?· Laguna In 16-5 Sethacli Only one game \1'a"' pla~·t'd Su nda y in lhe S;1rlrllch<it:k su1nmer baseball lr;.,,11e ~·11h Foothill defeating L :-i g u n a Beach. 16-5. in ac11n11 nn the Saddleback College f1ekl. One game \vas forfeited ~ ~iss1on Viejo chd11'1 have enou gh player~ 011 hn nd lll con1e.~t the S ;i fl d I c b a c k freshmf'n and h.1d to forh.•11 the decision, Sa n Clemen te and lJn1v~rs1- ty were sc::hedu led Lo play lhe other game bul a conflicting Amer ican Legion Junior Ul t brought abo1J!. a poslpone- ment in this one. Laguna moved In front in the first inning with a pair flf runs but fell behind to stay in the th irrl as Foothill gained momentu1n as the game pro- gressed. Doug Fnll. coach of the Saddleback College team and d irector or tl1e s u 1n 1n e r league. stages a speci11I con- test before each game and Sunday's base running event was "'on by Greg Kessler of the frosh team when he circl- ed Ule 00.ses in 14.!> seconds Kessler is a former Laguna Beach High ~tar. This Sunday tv.·o batters from each of the six tea:in~ entered in the league will vie in a hon1e run hitting contest. Each player will be given 10 !Wings of the bat and the one hitting !he most hon1e runs will be declared the winner, -{:{ -tr * Latu•• •••th «Sl n ' ' ~· C"""ln, lo , ' • Gtrl"°". lo ' ' ' 01..-t -•· ,, • • , ' G H!t tlll,1 II ' • • • SwN ""' II ' • • • Cott•M, • > ' • • Cr•w""'I!. ( ' • • • Rodrlt Uf/, rl , • • Hortl\. 10 ' ' • ro•~11 " ' Scor• .. '""'!Ill ' ' • L•~v~• ,.,.,~ X'PQ(l!!O)-~ • : I "9otl!IJI OIJ 11• •~I• 10 Tire and Auto Center Ask About Sears <:onvenient Credi.tP/a11$. ALLS'l'A1'E Paeae nger Tire Gnaranlee (;uar&Qtl'!ed Again111: All tire failures from normal road haz- ards or defec ts i n materia l or workmanship. For How (_,,onJr: For the life of 1heorlginal tread. Wha t S"arl'i Will Do: In e11:- c hJ.nge lor 1hc t ire. replace it. charging on ly for the proportion of current selling price plus Fed· c.:ral Excise Tax thar represenu tread used. Repair ruUI punctures ar no charRC· (;uaranteed AsainAI: Tread weaf-out. fo"or lfow Loni(: The number of nionth~ specified . What Sraf'l' Will Do: In C-X· change for the t ire. replace it, charging the curren1 selling price plus Federal Exc ise Tu less the followingallowance: Month• Guaranteed l ftto 24 '27 to 39 Allowance 10% 2090 •UINA 'All( tll·•.t.OO, SJl ·•SlO <•"IOOA '"U( lOO·Oltl COV!i.,A 9H.Ofl I ll MONIJ ••l·)fl 1 COM ,lON •l••lll l, tll•S7•1 ' (;\li.tD.lll 1•1·1004,241,-4•11 r.1onday, Ji.mt. 11. 1971 OAJL V PILOT 21 The Silent Guard II Guaranteed 36 Months 6.::iOxl:l 'fubele~s Illackv.·all l'lu~ SI.76 F.E.T. And Old Tiro SIZE r •• a.-1., r. ET r.-1... r , .• -;-fuliel ess B l ac k~all _!1._SHx_I~ J_ l_.CJl__~ I. 7f-.__ _7_J.~1xl4 J!!:'>3 2.14 tt.2:ix 14 21,lJ;\ 2.32 'l'uLele!is Whitewall ·-------_f1.~0'(l'.!__~l ,l.1J:l 1.76 _ 7.:1:-ix I·' _ lll.1J:!__1-:!.0 t _7.75x 14 _1-:! I .'I:! __ ~_J_ii_, _ H.:!'.;~ 11_1-:!·~~~_.:l~­ _H.!"i:ix I 1!_ ~ :!7 .113_ 2:.'.'io _ _8.lf1..:I;) :!~•.'>J :!.'.17 B.1:ix l:i :!H.•I:~ :!.1lil •Deep rrcad for grc:itcr mileage .•• wiLle tread for bcrrer trac· rion, surer stops and safer cor neri n,!;; Price• effective thru Saturday, Jone 26 •Patented safety should er for positive steeri ng and cornering control, rugg:ed const ruc tion ttCU1"W00D •••·S941 tNOLIWOOO t11·JStl IONG •l•CH •l)·litl lt YOUR CHOICE: Any Size Listed Aul!lin MGH Austin Healy MGB Dall!Ull Hillman F'iat Porscl1e English Ford Renault Lotus !:iaab Opel Toyota Simca Triumph Vauxhall Vo1kswa gen Amli Volvo J\'l4.lfg3D Alfa-Romeo Lancia <:orlina SunbtllOl And Many More . ' ru FRIDAY 9:30 o .m . ... OlYll!fl( & SOTO 7fl ·S21 ' Ol•NC.f (l}t.JtOO l'A,AOINA •ll•lll l,JJl-4211 Sears 1!1!11111'111!1!1. • POMONo\ ., .. ,,., "'o f ll.4t4, t•Nl• ff l"!HGS M4-&011 1695 ·rul1r.le:-~ lUac k.,.·a ll " rlJu~ F.t~:r. Eai.:U !\n<l OJ<l 'fire SIZE •-•·•· ._ l'r!fto f.l!.T. ---111.ACKWAU, 5_:_:!0!_1] lf1.9:i 1.36 !}.f10x 13 16.95 1.411 f1.IHl:i1 13 16.95 1.60 _:i.20x l4 e: 5.fiO x 14 l(t,9.:l -t .!}4 !l.60xl5 16.95 J.:l6 Whi1cwMll." avai l11ble in n1ost "it.~~ nl s:~ ~1ore PerTit'fl SANTI. l"IA 3•1·ll71 S.t.Nf"-llllONl(A l 9•4 711 SOU'FM COUI '1.UA :1 40..Jl» fHOUIAND O•l(;I ff1.fS61:1, Sl:l.•11l l fO llANCl S.t.J•IS11 UlllANO fl!•\921 VAl~-1" 7•1·•••1 ..... ,,,. VllMONT ,, •. ,.,, S••lol•<llon o .. o rMIO ... t• T Q"' #tt...., ... Ii I ' ..,l._:;DAJc:.:l ''-'-'.::"c:"c.T ________ .::M::"':.:'.::a 1. J1111t 21 , 1971 5CORN IS NOi A,y..()NG TMEM. HE W"'S TO MEET M~ l-IERE. ~ t \NONOER WMO ~ARE . Lt!t'S $EE WHAT°5 eACK OF HIS TARGET RANGE. TUMBLEWEEDS AUNT HILll!'&ARV, !MY I ASK YOU A P<RSONA~ QUt'STION ? MUTT AND JEFF l KNOW I PROMISED THE SWEET WOMAN I'D GIVE UP SMOKING BUT ONE LITTLE - FIGMENTS \ Kl;~~{DS) SHOE~ ) AGA:j WW< IS IT 1HAT AL~ YOU MR THINK Al'OOT IS CA"lffilNfr A MAN ANP Gffil~ MARRIEV!' OHOH ··SHE'S BACK SOONER THAN I EXPECTED' ~ .-. -' . . •, ' ~ '· . . ~ Ll'L AINEJt By Tom K. Ryan SALLY BANANAS By Al Smith GORDO By Dale Hole MOON MULLINS PLAIN JANE By Frank Baginski ANIMAL CRACKERS ACROSS ••Shut with lorct 1 Briwl 4fi Eflat~d 4 Clitw upon 47 lntt~il s noisily •q E!.lm•atro Cl A peorlG1m 1r.g lur.t-c,f 1rt •riv a(. Abt.w . t• Arab cloak 50 Jnlorm1t room 15 Rr !1tu19 to !II Napoleon's part o! thr 11r plKr of t>•ilt- Sa!IJ'day's Puzzlr Solvtd: G RS[ C A S H flA P ll [[R O NT O I A G O l•O EH U HIV{ll SAl ' . 1& Copal, tor oor 5Z Br91n work1nQ: 17 Val1can City 2 ll'otds pal~cr 54 T .~~of 111, l'l C<1p1tal o+ lo<1rst ran~t Ghani ~a CaL1sr 10 20 Io ont s1d' brcomr woin 21 l lcrnsr · Abbr . bO Estuary 21 --of 1811 bl Oialtcl '23 Girl's nlm• bZ Bas s or 2~ Striti'" alto, '-9 \11ocffll --fA Exam111r r 2t. At110l.'1l ol bit TV 1 claim on Ill i11S i.f'1 19 BtVff;Jgt 31 "Much - Aboot Nothing" J2 Citizen r:J 11:19a J l Ptace into an orbit ,J6 Slavl' JI Knight's tit le )9 Ai.tltorltat ivl' COl!lmlnd 41111111l•111tnt hl'llng 1 btoad ftat blld• 43 -~rule: ,_,, t 2 1 " t7 ,. ' " II commtrcia l writ~s: lriforJTl31 b7 Gn1w~ bl State: Abbi. &9 Otr11i -o Si!i1ll tUP 70 Took repos t 71 T i~ ~iod DOWN i c~ °' ... Moroi;:co l Flrshy J bots on loot 4 81 U of y1rn S Coal sculllt • ' ' " m" •• ,. •: 1·•1" lO JS I\. •• .. 41 ~ .. ' •. .. ' I ~ -" ' " " .. • ,. • ( R I l~E~ C RC6~ b '11 71 & Ttie wh•I' 3~ C,.rla•n i1~1s poplar Ire,. 37 Trans~rtat 1001 7 Harbcrs fer char9e ~mall boats •O Lu11c11roo·~~ 8 Outranlo;s 42 l<u)(J of ~C •d 'Sketch •s Ot tile ~~rly 10 Asl.'. to 1th¥!\ pa1t of the day 11 As rich ---: ~8 Flotvorful 2 words dressings 12 Russ ian servtd Ofl food 53 Flavor comlllU"lt SS IRWard: Anal. 13 S1n\<1 --Sb Grttk 18 P1ot~lr<I rnark~plilce by tradili0!1 57 -011~": 24 Fights Pr ott ss1<JiJI 25 Item cl nilval 9ollt1 ordn~t ~~ Not;i --- 27 Steps OYff bl Prov ided a ftnct lll1J11'V 28 F1mtd violin: ltlllporanly lnform1I &2 Lar11' JO Timr-prr iods cont1int1 JJ Ont rrsunb· ii3 Room In 1 lino anothff llartm )4 Of tilt nos• 65 Vim: lr1I01'~~1 ' I ,,p.;. 9 •• u " " ,;.:;;. ~ " . " ~ " . ,, " \Ir " ,, " " l"S'. 32 " ,, '1· " " ,, -.. . i .. -~· ' " ! ·11 " » -,.,-" -.. y 1t - PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH • )('.E 1..t.Y S'c.HOO l.- SUMMf'll. So s P1.ACEMl'r-li SE.t l/1C.( ~ ''jovit !tJN\Nift UJl\.l &f: .~vcn Mt>-.f -:;u~'l<JY/ . . 1 f. yov ~AYE 5o,..t -.f t"'PrlJ'-Mot.J5'f • ~/,,.,,. PERKIN~ .:: /;.:':. ~:~·~·::.,J fll');e... •• J ' EXC.USE, r.re. ms ~ ISllr ltUb 1 ,ljX)f'~1~ ~tr? 1 ~ z By Charles M. Schulz WllAT IF ..o<JR ADVICE OOESN'T ~ELP ME? 00 ! 6ET M~ M~E~ ll/>f;K? ..-------. 11lAT's CINE <lF1HE FIRST ·°™INOS 1HE~ !EACH 'IOU Iii /i\EDICAL SCHOOi.! By Harold Le Doux • M~V&E I 'P &ETTER NOT CLE"N TME ROOM •• SO HE wo~rr KNOW I w"s IM MERE •• NOW LET'S SEE-WE "'VE SOME OPENl'<GS FOtt GAl<AGE·CLEMEltS, TOPSOIL-TlJl<NEltS, AND ORl\IEWA'l·SWEEPEJ!S. AltE '>'OU .JOKING? WE W.NT EXECUTIVE POSITIONS! By Mea ltJG.HT! LAST WEEK WE \\C~KED AS EXECUTNE PANDELION• PICKEllS! \ I .1 I' ~-.... :. By John Miles ' . ' ' -:r'M &lRR<l- ~AT WAS 'IHE Q,Jl;SilOIJ f' •• MR.MUM -. -~ ly Al C.pp .Hl:'.:Nl lO T1JRN DCJ'IN)J THET!n.EOF.M155 UNl\/E.RSE!WrTHOUT MUFttlNG~E'S F'EELINGS• By Charles Barsotti By Ferd Johnson DENNIS THE MENACE • I JUST 1\W;l/T 'OfO LIKE 10 KNOW.1JAO ... E\'Ell!MING JS OKAY UNtlell 1HE CAA !• • 1; !! !l , • ' I I • • , Moll&y, JUM 21, 1971 DA1L 'f PILOT 8 Everyone Hos Something lhot Someone EJ,e Wonts DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Con Sell It, Find It, ·Trode It With a Wont Ad The Biggest Mark(!tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results HouulforS.ie I~ I _,,,... I~ I -..... l~I --I~ I _,,... I~ REALTORS 644-7270 . . •• ' COME FOR A VISIT Stay for a lifetime. Inviting 3 bedroom home \Vith a lovely 12'x30' solarium, 3 ba ths , car- peting, draperies and 2 stone fireplaces. Nicely decorated and neatly landscaped. Has COJ\11\ilUNITY POOL, rec hall and put- ting green available. Years of happiness for $59,500. Dove r Shores View Ho111e I-land carved imported •;B.o\RCELLONA " doors welcoine you to this absolutely fantas- tic vie\v home, with its 5000 sq. fl. of unique custom features -too numerous to mention. 5 Roomy bedrooms. 5 deluxe pulhnan baths, fan1ily room. gracious formal dining room gourmet kitchen, maid's quarters, 4 car gar- age. Exquisi tely landscaped. l\1ake an ap- pointment to see this most amazing hon1e. Priced to sell at $169,000. 644-7270 //"40#-Sffdd · U/11/HlUI'. t1()Ml'.S R9al E1\1!1, 17s.al00 THE FLETCHER'S A beaurifut Broadmoor Har- bor Vie'v Hills 4 bedroom \\'ilh l'XCiting floor plan that's JX'rfcct for adult en- 1ertain1ng and i;:ro1-1·ins, ad- venturesoine children, The Gen.ral REALTORS -ASSOCIATES NEW LICENSEES * AT HERITAGE, BUSINES~ !S GREAT * Second Cos ta :t.1esa Office no\v open and in need of several ne\v staff men1bcrs. Step ahead. Excellent training program f..,r fa st start. * JOIN THE HERITAGE TEAM * Let 's get together for ~·tails. Call 546-5880, Larry Campeau or Dave Myhre. propl'rly backs to a pasio .JI. and has a11 ope n spaC"ious "l feeling abotit it, Everything ert age is i rn m a cu I a 1 e a nd t he re · s I "!!l!!l!'!!l!l!!l!l!!l!l!!l!!!!!'!!l!l!!l!'!!l!'!!l!l!!l!l!!l!'!!l!'!!l!'!!l!'!!l!'!!l!'!!l!'!!I!! numf'rolls dr.!1gh!!u! d(.'{'Qr-/!! a l or 1ouchf's thruot1t. PRICED AT $7~.500. OPEN SUNDAY 1-5,' 2600 WAVECREST U/11/l«lUI'. t1«lMlS Atll E111tt, fint-eooG 2Ul E. (Oi~I Hwy. Co10N. O.l Mi r, c.lif. Mont icello Condo. 1n choit'.c adult Sf'<'tion. Pop- ular 2 lx-droom balL'Ony mo· dr.l, in beautiful conrli11on • Call now for appt. to l'iee. Asking $22,950 * * * * * * TAYLOR CO. CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX -$54,500 Walk to beach. Beamed ceilings, FR, 4 bd· nn. front unit. 2 Bdrm, 2 ba. rear unit. 2 Gar. 515 POINSEITlA OPEN DAILY 1-5 ,JO ~·our 26th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 1 ,G_•_n_•_r_•_l~~~~~~J-G;o;n•9r;•.I:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;, MESA VERDE • 2 DELUXE 4-PLE XES 4 BEDROOM Sp:i(\ :; BR & 2 Ba In choice SUBSIDIZED PAYMENTS N.Fi. a t'•'l'l. Ch.vncr \van!s Cul de Sac corner 101 Ho1nr. fJtlll'k salr. Plicc<l lielow v.·1th roo111 ror trailer or mkt. NE\V 80% loan. 7%. % boat •l-bl'droon1~ & lnr1;r Jlurry, ihese won 't last. dining ai•c11 Out-of-Arca O\\'ner must sell. Try 10',; $72,500. EACH do\\'O S3J,jf)(), 616-7171. Bachelor ;ipt IX>h1nd garage can help p11y for this ch.111111- 111;::. well groomed homr on a !al'gr, manicw-cd, t.!ornrr lot. Fnu! h'ef's and flowers ;:<1!urr. 2 hu£;c hdrn1s \V/ \\'Hlk-ln l'iOM'1S, S('P d111 rn1 , encl. hk. J)Ol'l'h, 111.tkf' a General Your Gain- Neighbor's Loss Thls llt'W l1s1tn~ will sell qu1 C'kly as 1he: home is 1n1- rna1.11lrdc 111 antl out. It lraluN.'s 3 brdroo1ns, 2 ba!hs, and lam1ly roon1 plus patio \1'llh BBQ. New '!iihag rar[)\'llni,: thruout a n d bPaulllully dN.."Oralrd~ This lovely tmn1e tn1ly sho.vs like a nlorirl. P t·•cC'd l'll!hl for fast ~a!<' a! $31,:xio. :;11»-2:113. EASTSIDE UNITS :;._! B<lrn1s, fu'Cpl, hfalrd pool. Zonrd tor 3 n1ore L1n1!. ;\ge 7 yrs. $5.COQ dn, $49,750. ')llcscl\~~('.Jlcaftr 546-5990 oflnJa JJ/u PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES 3 Linda Isle Drive Quality construct., new 5 BR., 4 ~ ba. home w/waterfront liv. rm. & din. rm. Oak panel· ed family rm. w/frplc. 1'-1str. BR. w/sitting area & frplc ...... _ ....... _ ......... $179,500 For complete information on all homes & lots, pleast; call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620 General Peninsula Point Cape Cod, authentic copy or Poy Barry Wills, archi:cct fro1n Boston. Beaut. 2-sly. honie. l Door from OC'Can, v.·/unob!>truc!ecl view .. patio • s11ndcck; on oversi:te lol. Truly one of a kind hon1e: 4 bdrms., 2 ba's., n1ust see Sweeping Golf Club View ZERO . by app't. $T9,50o. . I Call: 673-3663 673-8086 Eves From the giant master bclr ~uite. This beautiful Harbo1· View home overlooks big canyon Country Club. Thick shag carpets every"1here i~ eluding all 3 bdr & 21~ baths. A sunken livlng room v.'ilh huge fireplace and CllS!om drapes. The ~iant family room is jWit o[f a gourmet kitchen & both o verlook 11. beautitull y landM:aped backyard with a cu!>tom patio & lots of privacy. cau for fln ap- pointment to visit a world of oom1or1. $a2,900. ca 11 546-2313. Do,vn pa)·menl k only $3.'JO tnllll l'OSt to f']ualilied GI buyer, :lOOJ sq, It. 4 BR, 2 BA. lrS" lan1. nn. GI ap. pra1SC'd a l $33,500. Larwin Rea lty, Inc. ~1562 B~hursl. l!n1gn Sch 546-5411 anytime College Park 3 + Pool Sharri hon1c amon; i;harp neig hborinf!: homes, Newly pai111rd int('rtOI', goo d rar[ll'ls, !\J any h u i I 1-i n shelv<'s for sl\lrHg<'. Al- !ractivr pa110 .adjoll\fng a fin" pool \n tropi c al landse!lpl'. Aet quickly, -it \von'1 lasl at $31,00J. Call ~16-2313. associated BROKER~EALTORS J:OJS W lolboo 67l-l66] $16,500 FULL PRICE No lie, great locahon nol too far fron1 the beach, l luge bedroom v.·i1h convertible den, Lovely tiled bath wilh sunken type tub and shov.·cr, Scparatf' laundry room. Huge yard 60 x 160, lols of roon1 1o grow, Suhmlt your do11.•n pay1nent after 1nspec- !lon, Walker & lee 21'90 Harbor Blvd. at Adams s.15-0465 Of>Cn 'til 9 PM Newport Shores Beauty EASTS I DE 5 UNITS A lovely 3 oedroo1n 2 bath o\vner 's home wilh a swim· m'ni: pool, located 1,n front of !ot 4.·separale 2 bedroom hon1es on rear of property, Present income $'1i0. month. 1-'ull price $19,950 IS THE PRICE !or thi:; very lovely 3 bed- room, 2 bath home. nw Joan is high enough so you can assume with pa,ymentll of $16() per month, which in· eludes all. ~lodt>m built-ins. deep 1nlc carpeU-, also niatching drapeiir , Double g11rage to bool_ Call Walker & lee 2790 Harbor B1vd. at Adams 545-0465 Open 'UI 9 PM College Park POOL 3 hr, 2 ba. Cul-rle-tiae. ~Jany extras. May assumfl 5r/o In. $32,900. 540--01·15. Corona def Mar Unique Duplex Have ~·ou ever longed fot a Y.'oodl'd glen, 11. quiet haven in the midst ot a bu~ 11.'l:lrid'! This 3 bedroom &. g11est apartment pllL~ a l bedroom unit are so unumal they were written up in a leading magazine and mu11l be seen ro appreciate. S8t900. Call 673-855(1. i \o ·THEREAL '0-e;~r{i!~RS WHY GO AWAYI 11 2 Homes, 2 therapy pool,, 2 blocks to big bcsch. Im-! mac, Larger lot . .$61,500 University Realty : 3001 E. Coast Hwy., Cd?tl i 673-6510 I CAMEO SHORES : NC\\f s br, 5 ba, 2 Wf't bll.l'S, I h&f pool, $89,500, 673-61l!J Wide Open Spaces ~I ··""°'""'/REALTORS i {Formerly Delancy Real Estate) 2828 EAST COAST HWY. OPPORTUNITY ~r•fl<'l01l~ home for ;i. small I ii0iiii;;;Oii0ii0ii0iiiiiiii0ii .... t<inuly Easisill" ioo & only 2-STORY ELEGANCE 2SOO square feet of gracious Irving in this 4 heclroom, den & bonus room house on 1he canal, Priced \1•ell at $49,500, Ce.II 67J-85j(). $75,000 In this age of wall to wall house, are. you looking far a home wil hout that hemmed in feeling within Wfllking distance ot the beacb. & !!hopping areal!. All this can be yours -plus extra In· come trom the other unit. Come and take a look "t this 3 and 2 bedroom duplex. You wUI new TI'grt>I it, Call 6~. Anytime CORONA DEL MAR , CALIF. MAKE OFFER- for you lo make more money. NPrd three rmi·t tin}(' or Jull ome licenscd Real Eslatc Salrspcoph.'. right away. Cali tor i.11- tervie1v General General ____ _ YOU HAVEN'T 4 BIG BEDROOMS SEEN THIS tra11d:-Vn1.-·rRl·LEVEL ho1nc 01vnrr llnxious lo gPt going, -l Br:., 2 B!1., rnlry hall. cov- en'll pa110. Large fenced R-2 lot 1r/alky for fulurc rcn!:i l incomr. Nr. J\''p!. 1-lghts. nn fllllrl Pa!incr SL $Z9,000 Lachenmyer YET! j nl'ar ..... t1u1/i Co.o.~i /'l<1%a wJ1h If ;,:ou're looking fu r a vrr')' fO!t.\J ,\L DJ.-...Jj\~ <ind s tep Sf>CCJal honie in Cosla i\lf'sa 11011 n tnn11ly ronn1, PLUS Realtor CLIFFHAVEN ·1h J bd 2 b hig ki l4'11cn c11 tin:: ;i r·f'a 100: v.1 r, alh5, farnily ~ l Open 7 days wk f 186(1 Newport Blvd .. C.:'-1. Call 6·Hi-:l9~8 I [Vf'S 6~6·4."177 11J0n1, VC'fY clc;1 n & neat lla\·c )Ollr 011 n ll'ork shop throughoul, fl't>Shly painted, or J1obbi(• atea 1n tht.~ 3 car ~hag cpl, large lot, nicely gan1ge. It you need the landscapM, room for Ad· very Oe~t. Tl-IJS ONE IS clitionat C<ln.'llruction & pool I:il:\IACULATE. 0 n I y + boat I trailer I enn1prr S~.500:~ Assur11r 6*~" VA N 'p!. l lgh1s. <tl'('a, '.!BR., ~ ba. w1.1.ile fJr., kitchen bltn~. EXECUTIVES carpctJng, large ya rd . CA LL 0 ''6·2414 One or the nlost popular. ~ ~ Luxunous: l1v1ng! Large """"""-forinal d ining. separate d in· and a 5~";, assuniablr vri. loan \1·11h TOTA!. PAY· loan -you Jll!'lt found 11: 1\lEXTS of SZS.I PC'f 1nllnth. R EAL T v rite, huge ran1ily room \Vllh Price SJJ.500 P l1 one 5-l&-2.313 for add11io nal in· forma1ion. UPPER BAY COATS & · WALLACE REALTORS _54µ141- lOpe_n Evenings) Ntar Nr.,port Po st O rflrr fi1·epl & \1·e1 bar. ol Large ~ b<-1(1oon1s! Bea11t ld~t·flil, $30,500 FHA/VA '1"' 1"' .. ""m. c.11 J l.).S.J2.J toprn evcsJ. Large lrrt'gu!ar 101 "'Jth plen- ty of 1'00111 for boal, caniper & trailer. Quie t rtree lined cul-de-!lac and t:lOS<" by ~chool. Charming 3 bedroom, 2 hath homr, family room \vith B-8-Q, cozy firepl and J ,-.,-~~-~D-~~l-N~-~N~-E~-~R~-,,.-&~-~,,.-~, 11•e1.'-shaded coverrd pa!io. Macnab-Irvine CONDOMINIUM Roomy ThrC'e Bdrn1., l\\O Billh, Din. Rn1 .• f:ll'c1, li:1t, I Rralty Corrip<iny nnd pnvn1C' [Hr.110. /'.,llJOV th(' 0 f I • !-1\Vl;\1.\ll:\'G l't)OLS ·ha<!-cean re n t nco me. Everyone; fJ UlllH1es to 11.'I· COCKTAIL i;umc this low inTrrf'st lnan. Call ~,.J~S424 (open eves.) HOUSE !Jadm1n!on l'Olll'I!>, ~ult1 11g THREE BR·Z bath \!Olis near One or Ha r bor areas top lo-1'\ewp0r1 P1rr. 6 :vi·~. J1C'", grrens and lw;HH1ful1y n1:11r1. 1 " 1 Al ca11on,, "f'<1 ts.· 1~. pi~"" har, lf'(;C/11 y N'vCf'<"JJ'/t!f'(. -" ~v .. ,~, 1a1ned landscapinl'.;" f<.1r only r<'ady bookrd a lnlost sol\d building, f1xt11res, old J1c-ensc $·l7 a moiilh, Prrc·N hl'low for summer -and 2 units & 12 yr lease.not pcrccnl- <'Onlp<irable t'Onrlon1inrunis rf'nlrd for next winter. ~ a ge, owni>r rel iring artcr 10 -!rt us Sho\v YOU this Ont', $140,00C _ nlc-e!y furnished BAYSHORES years. $65.00l do~·n. Kermit -Good financing. JUST LISTED Riggs, Bkr. 546-S!l!Q Eveni11gs ca11 646~5i9 HARBOR VIEW HILLS Famdy size canyon view hon1e Spacious Pnclo5rd yard 1vith room !or lar1;e pool 3 Bl'flroom~. 2'.o.i ht11 h~ }"amily roo1n & fireplaco Plus brc11kfas1 roonl $.i7.300 REA LTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 House of Lourdes Nr.11t, trim 4 Or • 2 Ba!h Homt' 1$ ready 10 occupy. !<"reshly palnleit fully CRrpetcd, ('()\lt'rtrl pt1Ht1, hlock \.\'llll~. Ha~ l ''Ao a1su1nablt' lr11H1. !'>lay be ~hown •nylltilt:, Phn ne 546-731~ or 3,z.2535, Fil.II price: SJl),900. 1-o·THEREAL ·~ESTATERS "-' • " 1,•,. ' . , ... for Hat !!em under try 1h~ r eMy P\'1f'hf'r $50. Macnab-Irvine 2-Sty. home nr. swimming BAYCREST! 642·823S 67S.J210 beach, pr.rleci for lge, fam. Lik~ new custom home in Complrte children's area UP· one of Nev.virrs (inesl loca- ~~~~~~~~~~I stairs, w/<l hllrms. & lge. tlons. Completel y BEACH HIDEAWAY fam. rm., lge. master bdrm . redecora!ed with new Plcnly of room to add to this & lonnal area down. $85,000 carprls, drapes &. paint. 2 hdm1. fnn house, very --Available for immediate OC• c:losc 10 our be.51 beach. cupancy $58.900, 464-TITI. Sonic view of the harbor cntra!'l('r, $45,000 CokhNell,Bmlker 675-3000 .....__---.-..:......1111 Call for "Hornes --..._. F"or u~·1ng" J\1agazine ------·---1 JBllA\' ,\ llE.\1'11 1 UEAl:I'\' •~r . fST 1'1 ,1 '1 675 )000 j ' -__ .. 833-0700 644-2430 . . . . A Bug's car! Lot" or tr~s & lUSh Jnd.!ICpg. 2 Extra bldg~. & all In xlnt oond. Owner ---~------1 W/Clll'I')' lst T.D. Selling New Model Hom• prlct only $:l7.500. "S BR. 5 Ba, just compleled, CORBIN "''w ol Bay & Hills. Formal • din, hrraktast rm. tam nn w/wrt lmr, JIOOI. Also view MARTIN i•" '"ii -••ill build "' your nt"ttls. \-o·THEREAL .~ESTATERS " ..... ~',''"f''~• $23,• SWIM POOL TIMEI SHUFFLEBOARD 4 BDRM.+ DEN ''Activity home." in prime location, Spacious rooms, enll")' hall, 2 separate bathJ, park like yanf, brk op!!.n 'Iii 9 p.m. 5'10-1720 TARBELL 2955 Harbor rv AN WELL."i & SONS 200 ... Galaxy Ot. Dover Shotts &lfi-l~'iO Open Da ily REAL TORS 644-7662 PAY only 11"1 1,,, monlh DlilUXE TRIPLEX total tor lhls quiet " bedroom, 2 bath charmer LIDO loadro wllh good!.,, All 3 Unul!l'., on th.e Island, nr11r lt>nns and no down VA . 8hop&. Take a fax deduction $26,500 touil. Broker -llve in one or rent all 842-4455 or 54n-5140. thrrc. .J BDRii.f. 2 ha. Glen ~tar. Pete Barrett Realty Spu, pnld. kit. fam. rm., OPEN SAT & SUN 1-!a Property and apPliantts. ln Up·tOP condition. $53,500 ')llcsa\<~< '.Jlrnftr 546-5990 642·5200 bltn RIO, d!lhwshr. pantry,l!J:~~~~~~~~~ PERSONAL ttsainf' f!'.lrce pnld. l,v, rm., 1~1 .. UPRcl. •HOME + INCOME9 J:arrlflce sale ()f executlVf' ept, dl'Jll, 2 pa1tos, lush 4 Un1h, $5;1,000 , $6,000 Down, ~ho11o'p1f'Ce. Vac/Hl!. "•Ill ps1y l1indscp. gd. toe,, S28.500 .Bih hffirm~ -+ firepl11. Slf:OO buyer '• <mfll, $3.5.000 ownrr. 002-6&25. Lf.AOF.'R.Sl-llP R.F:. 11.11 !rrm~. Brok('r <7 1•11 F"1111t re~ult.s I\~ Ju!lt a phone li-1248.~ or &.ll-~466 B·l2-11~1:1 f nl!rrl r.11ll 11w11y. 612-5678 1 \\'11r11r1• ,1', Orr.k, 1!11111 Bc·h._ $28,900 Unsurpasst>d view -pool -Newport Newport •• Fairv iew 646-8811 (anytime) Assume VA Loan J BIW.roon1 2 bath~. c:rp!s, drps, fa ht,, f irepl, rl1.~h­ \\'Shr, bltn.'I. Jmn1rri, O('C'U- pancy, $28,000 w/,i,2j.(J(k) GI loan, 3 Bdrm. Home 1'~ Bath, CO\'Cl"f'd p.ario, t:ar- prrs. drape. ... IJllirL :l>l rect. S!J,j(.O. Trr •• ~i; Roy Mccardle Realtor 1810 Nt>v.•port nh·d . C.~T. 548.7729 EDISON HI "TRIPLE A" AREA : Slory, :. Brf!rni, lrJ:; srr !11m I'm, forn1;il ri1n rni, r:>:- L''Cpl1onal fF11nlly h111110. Cooct Joan fl~~ump1:::::1, or n11 dn GI .. !ow <ln Fl!A. Cy<"'lr :o 1hc lic11ch. full JlrlCT' $3•1.500. int•lurles land. MARINER REAL TY 842-J5olt 2.1 hrs. <1 ns. 11erv. DELUXE DUPLEX T11.o quality horn~ (J.J BR. 1-2 BR) on lrg ~ .ac:re I'll. Both in xlnt ~and w/hrd11.·d floors, shingie roof. plas1er 'A'alls & nl!W carpela. Scp- iilra1e yards and g-arageg. Priced only $35.750. X I nt tf'rms avail. Call 546-5880 (open t:~·es.J. I 9 ~~~~1 • • • • • Perfect Setting Glorlou• trees irurround tlils eye appealing 3 hedroom 2 bath home, Sec the tree hOUse 100! Good Newport BeaCh loc:atlon, convenient to Mariners School &. West- clilf 8110pping. Price re· duced for quick nlf:_ Arnald & Freud 388 E. l 71h St., C.M, 6'16-7755 day11 I &t6-5.l38 f!Vtl NEWPORT HEIGHTS Walklna: dl11anee to an setiool1. Separate chiJdret11 play )'ard with dlmbl11~ t~. Good 11lte room and big bright klt..:hr:n $.1,,000, cau 646-1111. 1-0 THEREAL \" ESTATERS ''' '. ', ' I ' I 'I B11y the MW Jturt J bdm1. plus convert. den. C:reat kitchen w/adjo1n. fan1ily nn. Closf' 10 U.C.I., on (Jlllf'1 Cul de Sac. fee land. $79,000. --Coldwell, Banker ~ 833·0700 644-2430 * MESA VERDE~ 3 BR., lam. rn1. 2 ha , New cptg. Jmma!'. <'Ond. A!.'auL grnds. cov. p;Hlo. $36.900. George Williamson Rf.Al.TOR 673-4350 64 5-1564 Eves. *OPEN SAT./SUN.* 3044 MADEIRA Lovely 3 BR., fan1. rm., 2 oa. Over 100 sq. yds. ol nrw, qua/, carpt'g. lmm11c. cond. Bea111. iJ'OUnds. Cov, pallo. $36.900. George Williamson REALTOR 673-4350 &15-15&! Ev~s. 3 HOMES WITH HIGH ASSUMABLE FHA LOANS jl) :1 BR borne 1'21 3 BR & t-"an1ily rnt <31 4 BR k F"an1- 1ly Rm. 1\IJ ca11 be purchas- •t Fairview 646-8811 (1nytlm1) REDUCED TO SELL EASTSIDE COSTA MESA, newly decorated anrt carpel· rrt 1'hrc-e Bclrm •• T\\-'O Bath ho111e 1,1-·i lh double gar3.1,'1!, fenced ya1·rt and fruit trf'es. No do\11n VA or low FHA rerms, l ull pric:e only $25,500. 171 000 Co1ta Mes• *VETS* Owner Transferrtcf Bring your ellgibl!ity !or thi5 1poUess 3 Bdrm. 2 ha. home, incl, f'.A. heating, stone frple., J6.-..:20 cov'd. patio. Fast rosscss. Scll thr old s hirt r.l on lOIV rlov•n , 011nrr ear- Buy !he new stult 1·ies 2nd. l\la,y Jeasr. or lease/ * 358 ESTHER * Drive by thiio: niee. ranch ~lylc l Bdrm., 1~6 bft's., brtck !rplc., shak• roor. aose 10 all si:hools. f 'HA. G.I, Terms. OUered f o r $27,950. E\-en1ngs Call 644-700l General op11o:i. For llf'IXllntment - -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:,J JEAN SMITH, RLTR r 10() 1-:. 171h SI., CM &16-3255 MORGAN REAL TY ' . ' . . .. rOREST [ OLSO~ . ''"" llEAl. TOR S OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK RANCH 2 STORY 4 +DEN+ 4 BA 1 Acre. Horses "Walk to Lake" Back Bay Are Unbrlirvahlc! Quil't !J-ee lined St. l(1 this gorgc- 11us "~•Id "'llrld Cha rm· er:' '1 maJ>S•vc bedrooms + hugr paneled hr.mlly ronm ~ 25' picture \Vin- dow in Jiving r oom with 11niquc fireplace. Large 250 !IQ. ft. drr11m kileh- l'rL Wall nf J;las~ or>ens \t> elevated patio with :'lpccl.8c1ilar view. Zoned for horsrs. Truly a show- plaer. Grf'llt area for children. fl-lust ~"JI quick. DIAL 645-0303 Would You Believe LESS THAN $75.00 A Month rnvestor's spe<:ial. Take over 5 ~ annual 'f. rate FHA Joan. Neat and clean 3 bedroom home. can be yours for less than $75 a mo nth. Rare find nt>stled on huge well kept lot. For thf' porllcular home buyer or the dl~rning lnvn- tor. Don't fall to lnVe5• tlpte this onu!U&l o~ pnrtunlly. Won't laat so hurry call 645-0303 f ORISI E 01.\0( "' RFAITOR S • JUST REDUCED dO\\'n ru S:?3.SCX}. 4 BR 21., BA, rt)11 rm. h<lnu!'l rm. dill .c:ar. ~ur1rr slu1rp .. :1va1! J"Jl,\ or 1u> rin VA 1rrrn~. Own"r lravini:: are11, must (\r!), Cal! J~ll-1 l;'JI (Clpf'n e\'C!>. I «V'l1s Hl!ITAGI ~ tlAl UUll STEPS TO OCEAN- $26,000 JUST LISTED 3 Bclr1ns -Xlnt cond. CAYWOOD REALTY 6306 \V, Co81!1t Hwy., N.B, 548.1290 IT'S A breew •• 11ell your ltem11 .ith ease, use Daily Pilot Clas&1fled. 642-5678 COURTYARD ENTRY $56,500 Chf'erru1 4 lx-droom \Vest- c11t1 home. 211' Baths: lge. l111111ly rn1, wit h (ireplacr. S!11!1ng glr.5s dOQrs !rad to 1n1pn:'~Slll!" yard. Owner transf('rrcd. ~ ColdweD,Banker ~ 833-ll700 644-2430 KING O' THE HILL With view all around. 3 Bel~ rm. 3 BC'11c:lles w/key acCi'!i. Beaut., breezy It clean as a ~'histle! $46.9:11}, Home Show Realtors "Armc:hair H~hunlr.ng'' 3535 E. G>Mt Jl\.\y,1 Cd.l\I 675-7225 67U642 675-6459 Outstanding Location .J br, 2 ba, lge kilchen/din'g area, frple. brick palio, tree~. corner house w/side- yard for lllmt or trailer, 2 n1lnutes ro maJor t;l1op'1.: <'('1111·1" rrrrway~. &ehool.!<. 1 . ~ a1•1·e park. $31,500. 5-lfi.JO~ti. ' OWNER DESPERATE Vacant, newly dee, xtra nice e ·1-de·sac Jot, 3 lrg BR &: 2 BA. Room to acid mol't'. Make oUcr, A.~king $28,950, Larwin Realty, Inc. 21562 Brookhu111t, lln!gn Bch 546-5411 anytime 3 BR, 1 ~ BA, all new inside !: out. Lge yard, storage 1hed, c:ov'd pa.no S23.900. 646-92-IS. 657 lkacb St. Open Sat.\ Sun HOUSE Hunting? W&tc.h the OPEN HOUSE column. S©\\~}A.-ilG£!rS~ The Punle wilh the Builf-ln Chuckle O Rearrange lellers of the lour ICrcimbllld' wordl 1-- law to form four lilflPle words. SANEA.U I • i• I I I• I VIP TO I·. I I I 1· . t , i-... ,"-A""l•'"G"'1"-E..,1-1l-,I h~ w~~~111 cc;~1d~:, . _ . _ . "" she hod Just prepared. She ._..__._._..__,.A aold, "Harold, ~must be some- N E E F A 0 rlhing WtClng with our ...,;_,,,. I I' I I 11 °' fy°"irir: ~h.d~~ ~ -- -• • you devt1lop frtim Jf9S) No. 3 below, & ~~~i:1~M~e~~E~f1JUS r r r r 11 r I' I () UNSCRAMalE LETTERS TO I GET ANSWllf I I I I I I I SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 I • • • 30 DAILY •JLDT MOftd1y, Junt 21 , 1971 l~ I _ ....... Huntington S.ac:h .. I '~ I~ I -·- Newport Beach • c • ( '( . '. • • j • ' ' ' ' -~ ' . '. , ... -. I~ 1~-·~~_·:·"~llil I -....... I ~!_-_ ... _-_]~! _ ...... l~I [ "-'""""'~RMI ]~ ~~~,:;;~~ Real Estate WantH 114 HouYs Furnished 300 Houses Unfurn. 305 HouMS Unfurn. 305 Apts. Furn. JIO ~~-,..-,.~..,..~~~1 -~~~~~~~~ Generel lrg hn., 1 ba . P\•t pa110. Pool. ~2263. 546--025-1. REDUCED $2,400. 4 BEDRMS, 2 BATHS-VACANT BROADf\IOOR Turtle Rocle, 3 br, 2 ba. 5461 C.alo~·ba, SS3·32&1. S3J.SOO includLfli land. Newport S.•ch Cost • Mesa ..;.,~,!1!;::,.~·!;bj"' "I * CASH BUYER * FllA 1..o&n ~11h g1_,: .11nnoal COUJ::GE P k 3 Rr, 11rrt pool, 2 BR, 2 BA . ~·/dtn nr l BR. * SUNNY * Bl' O\\ner, j br, 2 ba, frpl. MW cp!, nr town. $25.:.o<J. 64&.U.17 ar1 s. Laguna Beech Si..i]'f'r sharp '4 BR 2 BA, ~rcenla.J:;e rate. 1'otal pay. Dcin 1 luit your hOnit, wood pa n.l'a, lrg t l'k:I patio, 11'/ll'pk, l'J)I!>, tlrp:., h-z 1 * ACRES * .1eU it to us. RENTAL FINOEllS J • 1 b I * ment $148 ptr month. Sharp ow 1natn1. a..•e S 2 7 :i 1;ar .1:11r. v1t111· o a)•, I * Mot• ·Apt,, 3 bedroom hame glistening Save time, save 1nonl!'y, Free To L11ndlords 833-8146 1\'ll.lk1ng d1s1<111('r. 10 srores Sli..ill io "' 1 Bt>diooros :"lfESA Verde by owOl!r 3 BR, fam rm. 2 BA . p1!!0. Open dally $29,950 5-l:'>--2075 - hrdWd tJoors. brtrk f.u'tp!, 1 Vl£W 11 11'iw crpts .{ drps. hlrin R · 0 • • and d111h11'Shr. Prolts5 !ds~pd Yantast1c-octan vtt~·. Spat· O\'l'rs1zed tor. Full prlee ious home wi\11 large, !eve! $29,500 Cl 01• FHA tern1s. yard, pine rrets & pario. imme<:I. llrm ottrr. Broktr N I · 11 I \\'ilh JiAR.DWOQD FLOORS. 6-45.0111 e CHAR~11.NG :.! br, c1'pls & Pl ~ t;ti1 ~"><' l 1 ls I · LOI'/ RATE3 e CAPITAL J51ll J 1 B ~ l11Xu11ous baths, inodern INVESTMENTS •p~~·~l5~"'"W.;1'~"~·~C~N-•_•_M_w_• drps, sro~f' & rC"fL·i~. !enced f n10 /\\'ail u~ Y f.!• \\rth·~lOO :'\lo. built-in kitchen. Ready for yard. Neai· \\'r,.tC'htl. l l65 app1 , tl46-IMO:! ri .. 1]\ RaJt, .-\1'a 1J. CUTE 3 br, 2 ba. !ge yd, nice pa!JO As~un1P SJ89 nlo pymn!s .at ~.J.000, 6"6-81.3!1. l BR on estate size ~an \'lt 1v lol, S.24.950. 0\1.'0f'r. ll}IO Linden Pl. C.\l . 642-1122 can ll·l7-12Zl , Bean1td (0t'Jl1ng 111 hv1ng SEYMOUR REAL TY roon1. 2 t~1 ... pl:H·t-s. Bi..id l·ln l~J41 BeJf'h Bl\'d ,, Htin SC'h kllrhen With chs h11oshrr. 3 Op.-n •ti! 9 P'.\f B<lrn1s., 2 balh<i & fanHly 1'00n1. $41,SOO. Cali - s.12-1511 & 540-5336 FR rv 1 .(. d immediate occupancy, Gi l EE!! 645-1S48. S PA:-11 :0::1! Honif' Xlnt tit Colol' . A r .nn buyers 11·elcome. CALL! Li1ndlordi;.Owner5 ~ouiilc, infanr ok. llO 11r1ghbol'f10od. rn l lo bf'arh • Po.11, Pool T11ble Walker & Lee I II •I \Ve 1~·111 rtftr tenants to you J*tS. S165/mo. 1 :1:::.c ,,aJk 1,) .,rhl._ l.r·i.; .~RR 2 • "Ound,, Firu1nclal FREE l b ,, B\ •. I ' :!:is /\f'llt)(lll Bhr1. O C arge. , ,. any A10..:arl•J j 4 8 _I 4 o ·, •)r ' . :.01n,;rn 11• 1'111, 1 111 ! n1. ~;;;;;;~~;;1 dtsu·&blt ttnant.5 on our ~~1"82·l fau1 rn1 .. fJ'pl t·. 11/w ...... h<1::. 1 ·~1.~-9i.1.1 Z790 Harbor Blvd . at Adams ,,.... ~ '\l \\ O\\ ~~·R 1 i:.•~n-•-"-, ~n .01 9 PM 11•a1t111g hst. J BR ,,.,2,, 8 . blrns (,ard!'nrt, \,ilJ/nJn ·. • .. ·llllttr .,...,...,,,...,.. '-'I"' Bushiess ALA Rentals e 645-3900 • · "" ~-San!<1 Ana Lr"'" '.lh.~;91,1 '!:..\\" \l.'1.:-.i•\lil'-.. \\J::~ I' Dove r Shoru e EXCLUSIVE e l of a Kind VU HO~!E 5pacl0Us O!d \\"or!d Contemp. design 4 BR + maid·~. 41:.: Ba th. 10' antiq. doon:;. Spac- ious gourmet klt~hen. foun- tain atnum. ~-car gar. \VLIJ trade do\l.n CaU onr ;,.IS-72~9. 5-IS-~207 East Bluff THE BLUFF Air Conditioned By Nature Cool C'ltan ocran brerzts, n'rn\·tn1en1 location & added ..AO tan REAL ESTATE lami.ly 1'00m, This 4 brd· 1190 Gltnntyn". :51. rlOm beauty 1s nlade tor j l'.1-1-9 173 5.19·0316 .\-Ci.I only SZ7,500 all 1erm5. * $38 900 * ~~or ~1-ore 1n!ormat1on call Sell or lea~<' w/opCJon · 12-ll~.J. Vl"!\\, c1Jsto1n b1J1lt home. -.,,,, .. =r"sr"c"L~1=n~·~;.=RE~A--I O t ., 200 s1~1n10 ' BR. 262~nt11 --------I S d O RO ppor uni y •DREA.\lYIBr_w/pool, Anll Avt. S !0.)/1)10 B~:AUT 11100. I0\1!1l10USf 3 CA A e O"·ner tran.sler forces qllltk util pd. '113. ID<'FVM>tl l S45-""'"l Br ~·i 8<1 . fi'pk. pa lin,1,.,,,,,.,,1, 1.,,111 1.iiul"" 111 • sale ar S.H ,500. Assume I ---==~'°'~o=-.sc-1 -· ~ • S.ll,<XXl VAloan.3 BR,2BA * OISTRIBUT R ALARentalse645-3900 East Bluff f)(l(ll. '! ta1 ~.-1 , all bl~,1,1)<, i.,,1111 :>.lrrh1r11·a11tJ 11ar1110,. NEEDED * 1·1 p1,.. dra pr~. l.r~,. s_ ' I _ . l + ~wim. pool. P'rin. only, STEPS TO BEACH X 111 ;L!.:-4-;'l n t1r ~·11i-l!'l!'ll llh<'lr "fi!IC'l<IU~ •tJOI' <'O&· 64~27'1.i Lim1tl'd nun1ber of DJSfRlB· • -· h'a 1111ni t1>rt ap1 <tcs1"rlrd · U'J'ORSHlps now .,,1\able ]ro I Br. Kids &-'"'· Sl3.J. 4 BR. !rg Yd, v1r 11 $4J) nlQ f'1r~l1•knd~. " · ~ · e " '" H11111~hf'1t 1<11• 't)lr .~ ,·0111· 1n )QUI' a1e<1. New !\lulll· ALA Ren tals e 64S-3900 ~ear pk. Children OK We$tm inster ltul e !li-airrl pool e l\Hl•h· d &i4-j,fi()7 ~hll1011 Dollar advtriise Costa Mesa .-:ccc-:c-~=7.'----r ,1 11 1nd1rl'('I l 1g-h1111~ • Pudding & Fruit Cups, sold Fount•in V•lley J BR,'.! BA . li>rlC"ed. Pf'!!> 01~. l;f"!u;..I"' H 0 Adulr~. \o pcl ~. 1hrough Auto1nauc r.lerchan-4 BR, 2 BA. Completely Nr 111 Sehl. Jt·cnt \\'a_\., I RR.-Sl 7:1 furn. Acreage for sale d istrs. If qual1 [ied, )OU 1vlll furnished. $325/mo. LP.G 4 Br, 2 Ba homt, trplC', l\'tslminsr<'r S1lO :131-6.).11 UT1Ll1'1ES !NC LUDl::D 150 be pro\'ided 11·lth fill equip-.. Cal! 642-5964 * bltn r/o. dshwhr, .,.,/1y Houses Fur n . o r ~.1 \\ 1\lil~n 1>4:.!-1971 Live Like a Kin9 DOWNTOWN l..t'vel yard J.• pauo area. Xlnt, close in location. PLACE REAL TY 4g.i.97°" 2969 So. Coast ll11y., L.B. VALENCIA !I! :..no r in ----:-.,-.=----111rn1 and lot:a t1ons. &nd IX' Huntington Beach i:pls, & drps, db! ga1·. -Unfurn 310 WESTBAY "21 " LANO trau1ed HI •lll phases of this S325/mo. Call '.\Ir. John.son • , S?lJ oO (';pw 2 Bedrooin rurn- OPPORTUNITY highly luCl'..<ll\'C husiness. 2 BDR'.\l. nf'ar beaC'h , al · ;wJ-1720; tves ~9-2644 Gen•r•I i$hed apai·linr nr. LlL\'llriou~ A beaunfu! home tn th!' bluff~ C\Jstom cottage. 7 & den, ,~·1th a park for a backyard. f hrd1<"Ct flrs. 50· x 150' tre'f' :J bf'drooms, 2-12 barhs. Li.Ix-I ~h<uled lot. aUey access for urious l11·1ng here All main-boats.-traili>r. Block to park 1enance 1s prov1d~ !or !he Oty. 5:ell n-IA!V.o\ or name Ja11•ns and 'lhe co1nn1un1ty your ternis. 8-!7-8,j{).I pool. &st buy 1n the Bluffs/ " "3.500. C'11 613-SlSIJ, • It@ I !!1 ;49 i. .:::;w 1..t'1sure \\'or!d. Dr p s, i;hu!lf'rs, crpts, 11 ii-. cond . d~h11·hr. dr lllxe J9nd~caplng al! for $27.500. 830-6726 or 833-8787. Laguna Niguel lO Beautiful level acres_ 70 (NO SELLING1 You rnus1 !ra<:tlve nl:'1ghborhood . S160 Huntington B•ach LG 3 bed ·t . t d adul! livi11g. Dec-orator <.-al· mlles to L.A .. F\vy 39.i. 19i3 be reliab!C', have a good car f'll'I' mo. lease ad u l ! s. iu:.c pain e ·I ors. Individual garages. Pool \\/ill see complet1011 of Lake and 4 hours a w«'k spar!' 53G-64:i4 or 53fi-33.'.l5. Execut" H carpets " drapes. lenced &· s a. J:il E:. :.>!sf!\!, ti4ti·!6titi Perris. Feasibilily study lime and he ah!e lo make IYe Ome yd. fam. rm, chtldren & ;p 1 . ' 2 BDRill I BA nevv crpts & Raom To Graw ""1S ok. s21:; P/"f Broker+ HOLIDAY PLAZA ' avai.lable. :.Iobde home park im. m!'Cliate inve.stnient. of drns, g~rdene;, 6 hlks from ,~ t 1 -housing. Prieed for im-~2100 00. isccui ed1 . ~00 h~~ch Sl6.i. 536-iOO.~. 5 Bdrm 3 ba shortwalk to 812-1,ll..). DELUXE Sp1:1C'ious I BP. metllate sale. l ".000. "' addt•••; •ntl pho>• "· h · 00 " "·-I C nd • · flll'n apl S!li. He;itcd pool. ,,,,. n1 e, "·' . " r... 11t:ac , s pplng, $Crl'JU s. o om1n1ums \ 1 '" Ad·, EXTRA VALUE! numbl'r, to i'l.:eii·porl ln!cr-Laguna Beach 1 ~M 1 . 1 1 1 . U I JlO .• nipe p11r"0ng, .... ts· no ~ge 1v. 1 m. W I rp ., 01-n urn. 196-p C'.\T Beaui . v1e1v ol mis.&· valley. I HOPE GERRIE national D1str1hutJng Com. 1 Br houst SlliO-Studio S8J. n1aJ din, rm., garden k1 r., General pets. J omonaG. · · E 3 Bdrms .. Jamily rm., 2 REALTY pany. Dept , #2llA. 3700 Permanent-Older :;alaried pool 1.ablr size fem. rm. w/ * • STU~'NJNG ARD N "·' B t full Ind•~ 2 /'\C'v.·po11 Blvd., Nco,1·porl adults. 494-SliO. second frpl., ll'et bar, decor-COSTA 1\l T "" l APTS. Pool '2 I.: :I BR·s. Tn· e EXCLUSIVE AGE!\'TS e SALES -LEASES Less Than Rent Immaculate 3 bt>droom close to San Diego free"•ay. Bring your own spade and plant ynur 011•n back yard. Vets - about SJ98 mo. pays all. ""s. eau i Y ""l"'· 645-4400 645-3320 A . ' esa own,"'us.e, f l t k U I s1·· Elks. to school. $31.900 I Beach. Cal.J f. 9'2li60 Houses Unfurn. 305 alive btams, patio. 1·a1Sf'd BR, panelled den g, bunk &an;,?~ s; ~ s~--: $2~1 Laguna Niguel Realty &l3 Dover Dr., NB = * FAillOUS BR.AND NA.t\IE pool 1~1d_eck. Onl y S~ pe~ r m, l 'USC. drps. For rent 01· , •• ~·1. ui·n •a · 830.5050 496-5791 CANDY SUPPLY General r.io .. avall. July ls!. il.3&.l3~;i sale. t213) 5-17-9136 or fil4), _..,_.r_,_'""-· -------1 2-114 Vista Del Oro :\'ev.'port Beach 6-~-113.1 Huntington Beach Walk To Ocean 3 BR + 2 BA $22,750 Nothing to do here, just move 1n. 20' x 25' l1v rm with mil'· JT,red v.'all, brick !pl, \v/w C'l11ls &-drps, b1!1n R/0, huge patio. Submit. C a I l 8-17-1221 SEYMOUR REAL TY lTI~l Beach Blvd., Ht gn Sch Open 't11 9 P~1 $16,990 2 BR. 60' :-< JOO' fen<."t'd lnt, f'lec blhn RIO. d~rung area, FA ht, crpts. drps, dbl gar, boat door, paymts less than rent" l' 1llage Real £state 962-4471 < r~:.i 546-8103 LEASE OR Sl ,DDD LEASE OPTION S250 mo. Vacant 4 BR, sharp shag crptg, close to Catholic Church & beach. MARINER REAL TY 842-i'>41 24 hr. ans. serv. The DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S leading Marketplace 20 ac:res for sale near San DlSfRlBUTORSlilP or 842-1~44. 962-3286. BUS!i\'ESS fi1tns s pe. c: I a l SACRIFICE -&aut 2 yr Lu1i; Rey Dov.'ll GoU Course (PART OR l:""ULL T!!\tEI e 7 sty, 5 BR/3BA sp!1 t lt v. 3 BR home-Frple, lge fenced EA STBLUFF Condominiuni, 1 "'kly ratts now offer~ to old, 2 br, cl yd, 2 pa1ios, \1ith spectacular view of . Republic Honie. Nr. S. back yard, 2 ba, crpts & N' 4 BR T . p 1 , f"\'eryone. Lo1\' a.'I S36 "·k. 'h'g •pt,, .. ,,.,,, dp•. bltn•, p-• . d ~·mv available in Orange Coast Plaza. Lease or Lsr d e1v . enn1s, oo . "·ol tk 'lot•! '""J Np\ ~ ..... ~ d.JOmar mountains a n Co d r rps, cov 'd patio. Nr schls 1,~-834 = .a J• ._, ..,,,,, Panel gar. con1n1 pool, bt"h ocean wat<<. Po"•et & unt,y an SWTO\IJl{ mg Opt. $325/mo. & \I ~ II Do I 1230 ·• '1 641-4 Bll'd. 6-1~744.'J. areas <\JI Joc;:ifions are . r.""nne ug as 'I•---.,.,,.----I o=7c'-'--'----~ mbrshr . fan1a ~t1r v!ew of telephone on property . . · ·. . • l'.\1:v!AC, 3 Brl2 BA. illcsa 1TIO, No lse Cltan1ng dep Corona del Mar S\1ALL apt, older sini lt". 89J.-R.)33 .).15-04.58 REAL ESTATE by McVay rnls & hi.lls. S32.500 or bsl S.l OOO per acre. Terms lOniniercial or f<iC'tory fli rn. Verdt ntw rp!s, c!rps. \Valk q·d S.l&--18"~ It 5 30 $110. Ut\ls pa id. First k las! nlr. Open house Sun . 232!H available. Sbeher Industnes c;hed by us. Qual.Jfil"d per· to shop'g. $265/mo. 1 13re · ;i;i a ' · *ON THE BAY * mo's tf'nt Clean up drpos Ti>lfai r I Crown v a I I e y 11141 .,,2820. son will bC'rome distributor NELSON REAL ESTATE BDR~l. 2 Bath.. ntar Unrxcelltd view! Exel. :! BR. · · · -I I 1 I b I 2.13.1 Elden. Le ss Than Rent 1-!igh!andsf 495-0823. -~===~~~~-or our tandy 1Nt'stles. e 5-16-5386 e sc_100 ;;, s ores. ea f' 1 · :! Ba. condo. Sallna, pool. /----------I Payments just SJ78 on I.his 1----------5 ACRES $690 F .P . Planters, Tootsie Rolls, J\li!k _ 1 S2~0/mo on ,year lease. Boa• slip aval!. Yt11r lse. $25 Per W•ek & Up 3 tx:lrm., 2 b<:t ., home. Cor-O\VNER tran~ferred & must $SO dn. $10 n10. i % \nt. Riv. Duds, etc.I. Sl~;~a~'~dBr&\V/ frpl , gar, %..~9105. Cali for ~pp't. BACJ.JELOR b. 1 BR. ner lo! w /boat or traile r sell this 3 BR, fam. rm. erside County, Near inrer· NO SELLING ~~ · B '"1 s *'64s.o111 3 BR condo, xl nt .atta, Don Franklin Rltr 673·2222 1V & maid strv avall, ~pace. Lrg. tm . 11n., lovely home in xlnt cond., comp.&. i;ta1e 10 F'wy. Good invest• Very high income potential ue •aeon c~ts/drps, 2 ba!h, S21;,i mo, Costa Mesa 450 ViC'!oria, C.111. o·pJ, palio. laundry rm., pror. lndscpd .. Prtce just ment for fUtllre. Owner. You must have 2 to g hrs. 4 BR 2 81 bl . Id . $.)(t ~c 968-7318, 54-1·88~7. ATTRAC furn. Townho""<, d d S:l-l 50Cl 0 ~1 1 530-1993 • '• tns cpt'S rp5, "" bhn. kt Take: over low in· re uce • · ' · pen '·: -· per "'eek spare time (days frpl I/yd, gar.' Kids/pets. HOUSE for rent $180. ..* POOL TJ~!E ** E/sidec 2 Br, 11; &, pool. 1erel'.t Joan & move in im· hou~e 1·5 Sat.. 3 O 318 cc~.-m-.-,0-,..,-------or eves 1. s2:i~. Water • trash paid. 3 4 . BR, \!~nt 1te!Jo. nr OCC No ptls. S17J. 646-6610. n1e(!1ately. Only SZ7.500. ACT Benec1a. Lingo Real Esrate, Lots/Crypts 156 Slm CASH REQUIRED Blue Beacon* 645-0111 1 Bdrm. Crpts. 962·980S. S2~0 mo. 1nc1 r!:i~ ~;;",~I 'o~.-,~.~p=.-;~n~,-----1 FAS7. 519·772-1 or 892.3912. 499-1397 -----"'-----For morf' tn!ormation II rite : ., & ma1nt . :IS.S.-S.:'3J/.HG-4,6Q .. PRICE P.EDUCED * Lo'do l'le FOUR i;paces -r.1eado\\•\a~'tl "D!STR!BLiTOR DtVISION MINI RANCH 4 BR, -ba ., bltns. c~ts, drps, Hunti t Beach South Pac J f i c Vil'!"' #')' •· ' _ pallo, fence. $225 mo . ng on Tihuron Condo 2 story 3 BR ..... P.O. Box 1739. Co-$7.'1-lncluding ul11. Cozy sn1all 52g_3801 'll3 691-!!J'l? I:--::~-------. b ' l\lemorial Park, $1100, \Vrite Vina. Cal if 917?.i _ lncl i.ld!' ,.,..110,. w/ ,,,·,,,, yard.,• or· ••· 3 BR , -'· ba, crptsldrps, fain rnt. f~ dtn. "i>I ar. I *WATERFRONTS* Jack F . Fellin, 15931 \V. 1st ... ., •• "' bl S shag cpt air rond Lo dn phone nun1ll('L' Lots of trees. Country at· 1NE\V 2 BR houst, 12 blks. 10 Ins, l•J . J as~u mr i~an. ~ qu.alifying'. ~BR.~ ba. JOxl!H 11 l p1er &. Dr. Golden Co. 80401. rr.~phere . Pets ok. HURRY heach: bltn"', cpt, drp p Call 961-12' .. l 8"7·85071963·1178/968-4377. shp & i;antiy bf>ach Sl9S,SOO Commercial WE DARE YOU on this one! l!O!J England 536-i983 Duplexes Furn. 345 SUPER CLEAN S!'e1ng is believing. l';Jove in tbls lovely 3 bed room for $4250 . I S93·8i13 ;,.i;....o.i.;g I REAL EST A TE 1 by McV?y SELLING YOUR HOME? OFF LIDO I Property 158 10 c'hf'tk us Oi.11. \\'(' are a Blue Beacon* 64S-0111 I .. * LOVELY 2 BR. Priva rc C-l·H. Vacant · · · · S199,500 highly reftrenced company. LAGUNA·Sl;i 1111 pd 1 Bf home. S19::i/mo. Costa Mesa Condo 2 BP.. 2 ba. Pool & INVESTMENTS \\"e ="EED ,\'Q\'i. Respons1. s ; ·, C/D,J 1 ·. e• . 962-7137. FURNISHED Dnpl•·. apt, I boar sli p a vall .... 199.500 hi 1 1 . . tv re . v~ry nl(' -1• -;--c--~------I " .• \\'ITH ''l\-IAJOR" t i>eope 0 service high Bl B, * 645-0111 Irvine · BDRM. No ch1lrl ren or pets. LIDO REALTY INC. TENANTS·LEASEBACKS valuine product rou1es. Parr ue eac:on 3317 Via Lido 673-7300 f I C 1:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 \\lork'g g!rl pref. Call aJtns OF'FICE or i.I 1. time. onipany st'ls $13:'>-2 BR w/bltns. cpts, drpi.;, ltl phone ring. 5.;S-28i.\. BETTER HURRY COil-1ilfERCIAL i..ip busincss physically & se-\ViD lmma<'' Child ok, * SU.\li\IER RENTALS * 1,.C::O::::::-;;c:i:=::--= Tl'I see this 1mmac. 3 BR. 2 k APT BLD'GS ~ures locauons. Co1nmer<:"· Bl · B ~ * 645-0111 2 BR. 2 Ba . tnhse, 2 mos $325 Duplexes Unfurn, 350 ha .. ,~·1J~P. liv, r m. Loe. on W. R. DUBOIS, INC. Lill &-factory. ~: N~:eo be h 1 B 3 BR. 2 Ba. rnhse, 3 nios SJi5 C n d I M end ol Isle. rR.E. Broktrs) S.)3.9'l4j TO STAR T CASH e Ai lo ac · r, * TIJRTI.E ROC!\ 1t oro a t ar O\"LY $.¥.!.~ -,,~ .. L~N~T""'s~u=""""Fo=R~U~S~E~R-: REQUfnED rpts, dl'P~. all Ult.I pd64,l l31209o'o :; BR, 'l Ba ............. S:l.)(J SPA CIOUS 4 BR 71i, BA all "" ' ? ~ • Sl~97 rn S:?!f.l.l ALA Rentals e • 4 BR 2 Ba ...... ~····· ~.~~3 hit c l! & d. •1 · WALKER REALTY Corner C·-zone Jl!r.<122 .1 60 rlaysatccr s!Jrr,company I * u :--;ivERSJTY PAR!\'* ns. rps· rps. mmac. 675-5200 6000 sq ft hldg. Parking_ '''lll finance 7.i.-,. of planll{'<f • SPACIOUS '2 Br, b~~:· j 3 BR.° 21 i ha, tnhse , , , • S.17.i 644-8799. RE'DECOR.-\TED .1 Br, 2 Ba Orange, 1\1any uses. $87.500 f expansion. Call collrct or cp!s. ~rin;, 2 car gar. l' > 4 BR. 21 ; b<1. tnhse .,., $350 l ;c~.~.~.~.~M"'e~s~a----- home. lrg lot. must sell or cashllerm~. Sangslcr . P.Pa! I 11-rue dtrect; .'llar"ering Di. ok. Sl:iQ. 3900 3 BR. 2 Ba. furn ...... S~OOl :":'.'.:::-C--0::'.:'.:'.""'°_'°"',_.""'° trarle. 671.7185 Estate, 532-'!200 '.\Ir. \\heel· vi~ion u 1. tlZ.?11 !lnwthorne ALA Rent als . 645· 3 BR. 21 2 ba ............ S350 :'ITESA VERDE P.ENTA.L Mesa def Mar er. I Bhrl. Torrancr, Cal if. 90503. e RENTF:R 'S DP.E.-'\~1-2 Br, 3 BR. 2 Ba. house ...... S32J HO~lE "ith 3 BR 2 BA on Frt>e appraisal -\Ve buy Duplexes/Units 121:;1 373•3236 C'D. rncd yd. Kids & pets. qu1er strtef. Lease o r r'1u1t1es. Personal anenllon. 4 Br. 2 ba. many custom I · (i' d h•11 month-to-monrh at S2SO. sale 162 ' DISTRIBUTORS m ,;, ' .· ·. re I c.11 Agt/""141. Z1 ~Ts. P>:perienc!'. featW'e5.. $31,.)()(), Assume ALA R I I e 645 3900 ~ . " Fl' P DUPLEX -NE''' Po R T I KE ED ED en a s . 'co=;-;;-;;--..-,-,.-,..,°""..._ COLLINS&WATTS .i . ,A, r1n. only, 'DUPLEX 2 196.' .. "2,. E•·o;. "''·" ,21 ."&-.'"21 !\'E\\' 111ult1 rnilhon doll~ · br, b I I i n s , ,.,, .; ·~ <n .,.. .,.. ~, REACH. 1 br, no \'acancies, · rl d -k .. r e BUDGET Booster-2 Br. C'rpts/drps. pl't pa tio, ,18 OOO e 8'1' oiin<'t·.'· bt. 2 b•. pool, S24,:.{lll Appl by owner 1 a \·erhse snac pack p~ ln•d ·id •n•I ''' kod• & REt\LTY 11.,0 =. .• ~ ,,~89. 11:ar. • ·1· ''9~ · (lucrs_ :'loEED NO\\'' ~ Yn · ~" • "' Univ Park Cen!tor tn.-1ne ""J""W 2 flR 1 '~ BA' OOLL HOUSE cabana \\/IJ ha!.· ~l"I ba_r, ;)'I..., I, prls $130. . ' 1 .. --...,.-.-~---' 1 b \J I P 166 Rrhabl(" 111en or 1\'0n1c11 in ALA. R I • 6453900 1 Call Anytime 833.0820 Newport Beach ,\linl·carP thnrout, no )'ard · u P um · . any cusrom neome roperty ,our ;;rf'a 1.., ~" r 1 1" e e n ta s • ~~~!!:::l:i:l::=~~~j;;-;;;::c;;-;:-;;;;;;::-;;;;;:;;;;:-; .. -,k. It "On'1 la•o, •all j !ra1u r"~. S40.IVVI 546-1 740 · • ,.,. n ~ ... ' '""' *LAGUNA BEACH* fa~1111Q\'1n1!'. ri'l1n 11J'l('r111cd LONG HAIRS , . . . 2 Br. 2 ba, frplr. d:<h\\·shr. SINGLE. TV, pool, pets ~k. Dana ,\farina lnn, J4lll Coasl Hwy, Huntington Beach la Quinta Hermosa Spanish Country Estate Liv- ing & Spacious Apts. Ter· raced pool ; suni<en gas BBQ Unbelievable Llvini;: -Only I Br unf $1SO.furn $175 2 Br unf $175 furn $210 ALL UTIL INCLUDED S~C'ial Bonus; a silver· plated candle snuffer Jg yours if you bring this ad \\•hen you visit our modtls. 4 biles S. of San Diei:o Frwy on Beach, l blk \V, on Holt to 16211 Parkside Lane. (71 ~) 817-5+11 .-\tODERN 1 BOR'.\1 4 BLOCKS TO BEACH PHOXF.: 542-7962. BACHELOR apt, J mile from hrach. gas J.· w·atrr paid, S901mo. 213: 592--29n N•wport B•ach na11 -Me•a Voide prnrlU"l.1. u1 r o 1n p 11 n" \\'ELCO:'l!E•. I -Bdrnis .. 2. Bas "· ·•· S27;i_ Elk l{l OC'ean. k storr~ S2.10 7 Uni!s -562.500 ' ~ 3 BR 2 "· 132 B.\CHELOR v.·/powtr bo t Larwin Realty, Int". :-ri·ur!'rl I fl 1· .1 t n n ~ rom-J BR House on 1i ACP.E! · °" .s .. alr1um ·• , mo yPar IPa~I.'. 642-2020 · " a · 21:)1i2 Brookhurs1, Hn1gn Bch I E XECUT IVE HOME 5 U0•:,",,·1,..",'· •. 000 niPrcial or 111'Hl i>. PAR'r sini·e. refrig, cpt¥, (!rp~.13 BR., 2',~ Ba, lan1 , rn1 .. S32~ da)·~. 646-611 4 el'ts. 2"' ni a;\ Studio apr nn chan. " ~ BR 2 B f S33 nrl w/float. $200/mo on 546-54 11 anyt ime l;,hr,:)ba.ZiOO ftofel!'l;:Rnrt" f s t·nHs . SJ'j'j,OCIO OT~ FULL Tl\1E 6 tn J2 rh1l rh-rn, Pf'1s. Singles ok~ '' 1 2 a, am.rni .. ·.;i 3 Bdrm, 2 hath .r·ireplace, yearly leas". Util pd P Pitntollrrl drn 11· 1\ 1 b ' h'U ,..... l<r 1 ' Il l SI " l it I pd I BR, 2 z Ba. la 111. rm.· $3:,0 . . Y MTS LESS THAN ' " ar"' 4 Una;:; -$213.000 r.~ ,,,_r '" '" sr n:.:: ·1·1• t 1 . ,, 8 $3 -rrfngrrator & hu ilT-ins. 6i:l-2ti62. R ENT. ONL y $22 ,900 ! f-""lO\ ;il~,1~_,SJ2.9.'i0, By 011o•n. 01hPr~ fO l"hOOse tro111 r-A~H Rf.QLIRED: Sflil 1'l Blue Beacon * 64$.0111 ·; :R., ;1 a, inc gdnr '' !.l~~ l 32a rnolsea.rly 67.'i-0:'18~. 1 c-..,-=~~~---~ er :'J.I~ ~ PL ,.. ~2!'.l~?l. \\ ntr filr ninr<> in·,--1 • R., 1 Ba , fam. rm.· a1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii * LP.G 2 Br. turn apt. 93.j 3BR'!<irgf')ard!fru 1t rl"f'e:.~1 -···-··· ,\,EREALTY -l'.H-97fl.\ f .• :-..·-r .. ,BDR'.\l.,F.amUynn.,park 1 BR . '..?'~Ba .. lani.rni .. I' VA FHA 1erms. Newport Be ach :'$!'! So. Coast H11y . s'u'.'P"P'L"',."· pt. 0' ~.NT l ?,~? l\ke yard. Costa Mesa. Kids ri·urtl~ Rock brand ntw S36.'i 1 r------~ ~'.~9rfy~~ !!~'.! p Shl~i!,m,,',· • HAt-FDAL REALn· *' ...........__ T s . CJX .l ,l,l, OK brk. $Xii a month. NO . ['¥] "" ~~2.+lO;l Eves: 5-11-24~6 OCEANFRONT ~EEHDEELrJ?ER ~~;ll~Rrlnc('C~hn~~~l1~~:;~1;:,r91):,05 FEE. s.i0-1720. i\pi •UnenulorRent .,.. ~38..:38.or brfore 6 pm, '.\ILJ.ST Sf.ii! fJ Bdrm. 2100 ~q DUPLEX 1 .St r th1'3e i;; un11s J11,..nme 1---------3 BVJL\t. + lamtly rm., lull fl, Nr bPach, r v Sch Dist. 0 d Bed Ba Sl 1 2-10 S107 000. s2· 001 t TO BUY OR d1nill.i:' rm., built-ins., brk. 'll11li"l 1i11lil, CANAL VIEW FURN. VRLY. . \!a ny ~!ra~. Suhmit i~rm~. ut~tan ini: J -:.? • th ca;h 9(;2.4219 ' -''· SELL A BUSINESS S39(l a mon1h. t"O FEE,1 S.12.:JOO !162-06~2 \Ton-Fri ~::~~~d 1:~;1or~"arr/•1c:~111;. 2 BR .. Hi;e + 4 Units, nn lor l ~T~LLBANk O B.~SE. SAL!E~ GNew·po rtl, 540-1720. ---''I l.1·11hor Apts. Furn • 360 General S-5. Art 3 g, v.·k:nds : lurn.shrc! E:\l'C'll<'nt rr111;il m S;...J {)(K) I SG :M . e ro er 1111 n1pa t iy aner• "SINCE 1946" .,·,·,.·,·,£9. orr. · nC'. ·· j 111 6 ~,,., ;\\'t' C\l '"".,.-.'.':":'"".::'.'."':-~'.'.:':'":'.:::'.':°"' Re.nt Beautiful Furniture Br upr apl. !rg covered porch. 64 2.4816 " <irr.i \\'alk 1ri f'<'f''""tl11ng A ~~ 7 ,., O '"'' "' " .. · 1: 1st V.'estern Bank Bldg 'J •• um (' ". IV n r &-IHl ~o· 540 0608 tl LEAS!:: OR LEASE-OPTION for as litUe as $0:'.j()(l. 6-1<5-'illl. 5,j7_2360 ! 1 . · any me lb 5 ...... 2 510..,,, I Un1vt.t-s11y Park ONE H OCEANFROt\'T 3 BR/2 B~. I yr lse. S32;)-S375. 221 ~ \V , O c eanfront. 61.:i-6060 6i.':>--l l10 ' SPA:-JISl-I HOUSE ON COR· I !\'ER · Lge 3 hr, 2 ba, blln~. frplC'. lge deck pal10. crptd. ill u~t ~I'll, Chl·ner, S2.\.j()Q. 96S-<OIO Harbor Highlands BY o~·ner 3 bedroon1 E: Den. tv.·o baths. Frp!c, ne11· \\''" CBl'ptlS. \\'alk to ,\Ja11!'ll'rs Park, l i b rar y, &C'hool~ & shopping. Op<>n Sat ].j, SHn 1-5. 2100 Oo\'er De. Irvine CORPORATION OWNED ' · \\le necrl ~ale~ peoople 111 ........ rooms. •J O 833-0101 Nights MONT 26 10 826 Ntw Un11s. Struc--G!rnmar homt. 8 I t 1 n s, a ys tu re n1 in 10...,, sptndablt. GOING COFFEE S H Op ltrepl, lrg Jt nC'ed yd. Only ~'"''"'"!!'"'~'"''"''"'!!!I Somt trade, some 1st user. FOR SALE~ Sli5 per mo. Ca 11 Laguna B•ach complete with Bkr 6-14-426.l. .,. * 547-00:\6 ** Agt/546-1141 . FOR LEASE your 100°!. SUMMERS FUN IBIPLEX -2 blk~ trom e BEAlJTY Sl'IClp For Ltase e RURAL-Singtes OK. Sivt AT VICI'ORlA BEAa-t Purchase Option Hf're.'s a rho1re rlup!tx plus htach. S38:l. mo 11lC()mt , Reason11hlt \\'ell t <-tnb. tt>f, CID. Yi ac lot. l;tLJ pd. l:nique 3 bdrm. home", lo-Ind. item selection. 011·!'ler's hideaway. O's1ze R· S3.i.<XXl Hurry/by O"iler .. 1 Hunt. Beach loc, '162..&19i Sl.J.j. ca1td on the. ocean side of 24 Hour Dely. 2 lo!. Lo!s o! p;irking !or 536-16i4 eve. , Money to Loan 240 ALA Rentals e '45·3900 h1~·}' .• 111 Vicrona St ach. CUSTOM \VA TERFRONT 3 BR. 4 e.. homt , ne"'ly redr c., on aan. dy beach. St ,000 ~10. Bill Grundy Rltr. 642-462fl • \\'ll\'TER RE1'TALS e Rent NO\V for &!pt.! 1\BBE\' REALTY ~2--3!.>0 ~-our b'Jt'~t~ :<hor1 S!Ppi; 'o I Lots for s.1. 170 I Outstanding ocean \•iew, :?Ii Fur niture Rental ht-aeh. Qui· k flO~~es~. Oll<'r· 1 t TD L • SPREADING ROO~J.:t Br, balhs. '.." sunkt:"n !Uh<;, 2 fire-517 \\I. 19th, c.r.1. 5.iS-3~81 Newport H•ights I'd for $·18.:J:(I -f..· ~·ou nwn ./.CHOICE golf cou™:° lot , S oa n C D, kids k ptls ok. $180. plar.P~. 1 111 ms!r. bch·m All An1heim 7i4-2800 the land. Takr <1 look, )OU'!J Ni~ur! C.C., Laguna Niguel./ ,..., ALA Rentals e 645-3900 I red crdar exte~ior. Antique LaHabr,.. SM-3708 CLEA:-J l or 2 Br. Adil.I. no "-glad'"" d1ri' 101 ':\lii6'. Ovt rlooks .1 st l 7 .~ l~EREST t' 1 1 d c I B Ibo I I pets. 1-4? kit. SlTa-S l~. 2·121 ~ 2 d TD L CoronadelMar s .. 1ne!gass\Ytnow. oor· a a sand "" MORGAN REALTY ~~:~)'1 _ & iTfen. S36,000. n oan ed skylights. Kilchcn ,v/a.JJ l ::--::::--0::::---..._-~ E. 16th St., NB. fi46.JSIJJ 67J.6642 675-6459 '°"'=·~~~c---~,.-~ I C,\,\IEO Htg hlands, pnva1e 1.; enter 1v/a.tlachmrnts. 3 BR .. $295 & 1 BR S175. LRG I br fv.rn npl. Car port, C!iffhaven Cottage VIE\V lot. Capistrano Becac:h, Te.rms based on equity. beach. 3 & fan1Uy. Ch1ldn!n built-ins Including Nu tone ~!odern, nlct, stt_Ps . to . S. All utUs , $175, Eve 1 . laci ng nr1y homes, 0\vner. 642-2171 ,WJ.0611 OK. $450, 1110. yrs 1eaSt, Deedtrf a cce~$ in nothii·ay, "'·'·. Yearly, Util Incl d. 548-3136. 3 br, 7 ha. floor ro celling ._,... fj7 .>838 1 ~~~-c-------I VacV!t and ready ror you 1 brick lrplc 11, 'rt1ls<'d n1;rr. 646-139& eve!. Serving Harbor area 71 yn, Avail Aug J»t. R!tr 675-6000. leads to 1he b~ach. I;;:~~;;---=;--;--,----Apt. Unfurn. 365 tn occupy, $-U,500 wiu b.llY ble htarrh. Opt'n btam ctil· Corona del M•r Sattler Mortgage Co. LUSK Hafbor Vltw Hills. 3 YRLY. LEASE Balboa P•nlnsula this 3 br. townhou~ \\"1th ]rg!, b!1ns, Extras inrl: W ie view lot 673.21)10 336 E. l7tb Street br. 2 ha( fam rm. Yr. !Sf'. S.'00 !ltONTlf 2 _ General umpus room PN'\"IOllS ~\JV'l A il l~ ~\JSSrON REALTY BDR~I. frplc, balcony, 31J -;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;o;j r · C'Op per plu1nh1ni. fenN"d R•nc:hes, Farms, +>v-• .mo, va Ai.lg. ;i, _ E. Bay. S2.1l mo Lease.I " o~·ner ins1alltd btaulifuJ h.lck yard. vit ... · de (' k Groves 190 Cash f aSI I Gantentr Inc. &H·2883. 9S.'i .so. c~st ~wy. 1..11runa ytarly. Inqulre. 41 ·Ap r. c 1hag: carpehn-" and \\•all· $38,!l:JJ. By Qll'llPr, Ca 11 • 2 BR, 1,2 BA, St\'/rtl, C'pts, f'H O:'\E 111·11 494·0731 6i.1-13Zl or ~8-77il. I YEN DOME papers. Lois or pauo area &16·9724 or &12.0010. :xi ACRES Prodllcing Oranze, 1st & 2nd Trust D•eds firps. Ocean View. S26.5 Laguna Hills e Rater by \\'te.Mn Ocean L\IMACULATE APTS! and H!tlp gardening-. Ove~· * MUST SELL * ~ro\'e in Riverside at Van I FREE APPRAISALS 67:Hil4j or 646-22911. I Lovely B&chclon 1-8 R ADULT and look~ park arta and renrus BY O\\'NER uren & Cle,•el1nd Goodsu• I Costa Mesi Investment 4 BR. Adults onl" no -1s. 3 B,R. 2 ba .,all Plec hl!n1. pvt illald .str\'icp. ~I. Uni. , FA.i\IILY Sf'ctlon la.c1hr1es site for trailer pk or u-548-771 1 anytl , J• ..-pa io, poo prlv, S2-l9 mo • 67H~.JO • Cl h I i . d h II Bl'auutuJ 3000· Bluff~ Condo. division. On main hwy 10 me 't ar lrase. S29'.l mo . !l62-9.i2l tl !JAA..6!1-6 · 1 ose to s opp ng, Parle · ...... · re ,· \'lew 01 ll'al,.r " \lghl~. :'ll1rch Jield. \Vnle Chas. 6il-~tlli Sun " >\Ion onl). r . . I . Coron• del Mar * Spac1ou~ 3 BR's, 2 ha GrMn Beh loc, F11bulou" Marrin, 370 No. ;\lain St, HOMEOWNER LOANS C t M I Newport Beach * Swim pool puUfT"ttn 26x!B ripn A~k1na $.i.2.500. Rlwrsldt . 92501 Rtal r s1alt: &: pP™1nal prop. os • esa BACHELOR APT-7 yrs old. * F'rpl lndl~/J nrhy fac'la REA'.n• SH·l606 or 8..\1-0173 Real Estate erty loan.s from .sfJ.000 up. e 4 Bdrm, 2 Ba ipaet !or LSE 2 br. c r Pt 1 / d r p-. clean & a!tr11ctivt. ;\Ian 1945• Anaheim A Univ. Parle ~ntPr. llVll'IC E!AYCREST Beauty b y nl.8601 lloal. No pe1s sm. Oi~h~·shr. ga rb. dlip. Pool pN'f'd. 675-j 720. COSTA l\1ESA s::~ Call Anytime. Al3.-0fl10 owner. 4 br. 21, ha, Pfl'l'l, Exchange 182 St .. te"'lde Finance Cn. * 642-.)964 * ~~538j~r dr, S39a rno. Costa Mesa O'i''NER -Broadmo or TurtJ~mck. ~ BR, 2l,\. BA, fam rm, din, rm. atrium, ~ p1 1i0~, c ompl . land1c.apil\i'. 19'131 Sitrra ChulA Rd. $46 .. iOO ~3.'\-.1i9!i. fAm rm,, D.R., let 11imple 3 BR, 2 BA. new heal ·air 110.l S. Al'l~httm Blvd, AnMI OPEN SAT. t ~lJN Ju1t for Sing1e Adult• 101. Open Su n 1-5 pm l't'frirrarlon ('4 1on1, h,ated TIRED 01 that ol d rumitul"I!? 2 BDR)f 517n f\fO. R\·o 3 BR':r;, \\'alk ro btAcb. SHARP 2 BR-$170 SOUTH BAY CLUS ~S-l\21 ~. J)O(ll, furnished 1 blk P11.lm It's re.Uy no! !Mt h.ud 'll' $30() :\lo. l'I ' yearly l~.llf;I', er .. m CtJll.1~. htd pool, APARTMENTS \VESTCLJrr :-; e 11• t ~ ~prlnis ShOppln; Crnter, to n!!plB~. Jll~ W11tch the .l. .l RA;'llONA \\'A Y C.;r,Y11·00r1 RP.11hy !?-IS-1290 Adult•. Ava ti, 6170. 642.9520 N•wport Beach dtC'<lr11.t~d ~hr,~ ha, !am s,Jj,000 for 1.8.guna, Ctl;'IT. furnlture l mbcellanto-JS H!lL:~E !or l'f'nl S18 0 . SPAC!Ot:S 5 hr extci.l!iveBACHELOR 11 p!. lurn. SIOO 880 ln:Jne Ai•t . rm tw>iul'l ct11!1nr. 'h.11rle 1 N~ivporl aN'a. 0 1~·n "r columru In lh• Oasslfl~ \\'Aler-tr~~h p31d. 3 Bdrm homP fll'torlookin1-rountry nm. u!\J P~l r! !'\o ptls or 1!r\'irnt and 16lh) 11'"~' $i i.('i00_ Ag• 646--1456 i fiT~77 . 1_ .. _,_,_;o_~ _________ c_._P_"_·_"_,__,._o:_, ___ ....,..1 rluti $335 ltllSI'. Ml-2357 C'hild!'!'l'I. &12-401 4 l ___ ,_71_4~1_64'-"l-~O=l~l~0'---1 ,-''J, J,.11141 21. 1971 ITT p L "J LY1 PILOT ¥ ..... llSJL---1 ~ Apt. Um.m. 365 'Pt. Unfun1. 365 Apt. um.m. M5 Apt. Unlum. 400 Office Rental 4tO Penon1ls 5311 Loaf Gatdenlnt r---.,-,.----cororw1 dtl Mir Cotta Mew Costa Mew Newpot1 llMch PLUSH """'° rm, prt bo, MOOIRN OFFICES *TULLY lJCENSl:n * LCgr -Briel..,. oonl&lnJna /., LANDSCAP'INO * HARBOR GREEN~ ----------DELUXE APARTMENTS NO\V AVAILABLE Air Cond • F:rplc's • 3 S\vlm· ming Pools -Heatth Spa • PARK NEWPORT drtu, rm, de1k, etc. no * COSTA MESA * Renowned Hindu Splrltualillt paPf'n tmporta.nt only to tw lawns. °'" removal, APARTMENTS cooldna:. nr So. c.at Plua. J7S. & $110 Ptr mo., So. C!.!if. Advice Oll all i:nattch. 011o'MJ', it.ward. No que• iprinkltn, drains, arbon, B&chdor, 1 or 2 Bedroom1, Buslne1s man pt'!f, $23. wk. P':nt National Ba.nk Bldg., Low, Manit.p, SU.lnen tioru uked. Inche1 Away, paUos, fence•, wan.. Lk"d and TownhOUaea. Spa, poola, or $90. mo. 546-8393. 230 E. 17th St., C.M. 6f2-1'8.5 Reading1 riven 1 rlt.YI a 1799 Newport Blvd, CM, amtr. UH Malter Owl•· tennb. From $175, Acroaa FANTASTIC pvt rm &t bti for 8 u1lne11 Rental 443 w~kN.1~ -~~~~o~: ,64...:'"""°""-';·c:-;:=c:-=~-ll ~;s~.=F.!t~ GARDEN I STUDIO APTS &1:h. 1, 2, 3 BR"s:. frcm JUO. ~et.ttao.n Way, CM. ON TEN ACRES Tenn!1 Crta: • GAl'rle It. BU- 1 I. 2 Bil. Fura .. Un.turn. .$159.50 A'ITRAC. 2 BR., l liard Room. trom FIU!hlon Island at J&m· lady, planned comm. Univ. San 0.mente BLACK Labrador rnale pup-tor avdtinins Ai •m al I boree &. S&n Joaquin H1Jh: Pie, Irvine kit/ l&und priv.·i,-,,.=RA-c--, .. -..,--&-o-11-lce C92-91l6, C92.-0070 py, Vic O'eicent Bay• lanciscapl.na; .emcet, c&IJ Roads. (TIC) 644-lm. 833.0811 spaces. $50 & up. Owntwn -=---------La.rul'lll. Girl heartbroken. Ml).M98_ Serv1nc Newport. WESTCU Going 011 1wnmer vaca-Gene.roua rwrd. 2 l 3 : IF DELUXE LARGE comtort&ble rvom San Juan C&plsl?ano nr tlon! 2 mature 00 II 0111 796-U7!. CdM, Col't& Mii&, Dovv Fireplace. I PrJv. paliol. BA., crpts, drps, bum ctll-1 &: 2 BEDROOM Poola Tennlt Contnt'l Bldst. ings, patio entry. Adlt1 f'~ROM Sl30. 2-BR. cpts. drps. tor rent. Oinie.r Warner & mission. 493-USJ. ' d ··"" ~::.;;:.:.:::_7"""_c-~-~ Shore•, Wntclltt. C"-1c d&hwr S . d 1 H •-• Call stu enu wui ma1ntl1n pro--::Am-•··•t •-·h ,_ vi-~ •VI · · prtna ae, l&" °""" EXCLUSIVE shop Art ..... & ~... .... .:u1,1 "'""""' -l .. AL'S Land.acaplna. Tree. 900 Sea Lane CdM 644-2611 only-no pets. Ref's. 2354 ~ JEDITERRANEAN (MacArth"' ;,, Cou1 Hwy) Sa,ta Ana A.,, 673-039'. "" NEAR beach-2 br. New, unfurn. Refrig & stoYe, e1tin1 bar, crptd. Util paid. Ample parking, Pvt palio. Perfect for singles. r.1onthly re.nl .$250. ls! & Ja5t mo req'd. .$50 cleaning fee . Auail. July 1st. Call aft 7pm wkdys 6734452. *COROLIDO APTS* J BR Studio!I & street levels. $185 & UP. Oshwshr. Frplc. Dbl carport. LARGE Pool. Call 673-3378. PARK your car & walk: nr ocean, nr ahop'g. New apls. 2 Br. 2 Ba, bf!am ceil. M&.ny X'!ras. 331}.A Marguerite. 6T:H873 or 548-7983. 2 BR. Crpl8, drps, gtove, r~frlg, lrplc. ' u n d e c k . Adults only, no childr~n no pets. S225/mo. Y e 11. r I y , 673--9234. FOR lease-Deluxe new a.II elec 2 BR, l BA . Unobstructed \'l!!v.• ot bay &. ocean. Adlts only. 61~992. COM most unusual 2 Br, beams, bltns, pclio, lots or trees . .$350/mo. Avail July l. 613-7629. Costa Mes• FAIRWAY VILLA APTS. 2 & 3 BR10 Prlvat.e patio pooJ • lndlv. 1aundry lac.' Near Orange Co. Airport & UCJ. Adults only. 20122 SMta Ana Ave. Mgr. Mr1. Joachim, Ap! 3-A 546<2\S HARBOR TOWNHOUSE 22'17 Harbor, near \\1ilson : BR, 11n BA STUDIO TOivr--'HOUSE. $140/mo. e Healed pool.Adults only e No petli·AdJ lo shopping PerS<·Llke Sur rcunding QUIET • lJELUXE 1-2 & 3 BR-APTS Also Furn. Bachelor * THE GABLES * VILLAGE 2 Br, 1 ~' Ba w/ gar, .$155. 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.M. Adlts. Cpt.s, drps, bltns. tnd (TI4l 557-8020 yd w/ "tio. Wtr pd. 2'39 -Hli!!i!!AiiR;iiB'"oliR!iiiii Orange Ave. E. 636-tUO. * TOWNHOUSE * 2 B,. '11 ... ,,~. ""'· ,.. TOWNHOUSE tio. Adults. ;iso. 140 E. Met. ody Ln. =>48-1768. 2217 H·~-N ••---........ r, r. Wueun SPAC 2 Br apts. $140. Htd 2 BR on 1 fit. Xlnt cond. Pool. Play yd. Cpl.Ii, drps, Lra. dose11 • carport_ Sl3o Bllns, patio, kids ok. a Heated pool-AdUltJ only 1991:1 r.taple No. l 548-7660 • No pets-Adj. tc 1hoppln1 ?.?14 CoUege No. 6 646-2287 I SPACIOUS-NEW 1 & 2 Br. LIKE A HOME Lux Apts. Pool, D/W, encl 3 br. 2¥... ba, 1600 sq It, n '" gar. beaut. rec rm &. \aun- shag cpts, closets galore, dry fact!. Nr. QC ccllege &t el~c bltns, sep din rm, nr tr1vys. Adults, no pets. acc . .s19s. 54s.11s2 612-4410. DUPLEX-deluxe 2 Br. bltns, 2 BR apt near everything, crpts, drps, refr\g, trplc, 2860 J-llckory Place. 1 child gar, patio, lndcy rm. Adlts. ok. Sl4Cl/mo. M6-7'9lT. No pets. Sl~. 722 Joann St. u Ee1t Bluff 2 BR, 1.,., BA, sharp, crpts, ----------drp.-;. llXl sq. ft. Available .. now. $165 mo. 973 Valencia, Apt No. l, 557-7768. * BEAlTI'lFUL l & 2 BR. Contemporary Garden Apta , Patios, fr p I c s . pool. $151)...$l8). Call 546-5163 e FABULOUS 2 sty. \iv rm w/spirlll strs, frpl, 2 Bdrm, 1 'n Ba, $1&5 tropical pool. 145 E. 18tb St. 64:i-4603. $135-2 BR. nu paint. bltns, cpts. gar, upper. Adlbs, no pets. Nr. Harbor & Adams. 54~357. NEWPORT BEACH VIII• Gri1ni1de Apta. four bedroom. wHb ba.lcon- ieit above ' "'elow. Gratiot. Jiving & quiet &IUTOltnclliW !or. family with .zhlldn>n. Near Oirvoa de.I ri.tv Hlah School. flreplace., Wt!! bar .It built·in kitchen appliances. 835 AMlGOS WAY 6'-4-2991 coia~u Banker &: eo. Managing As;ent 541-5221 Huntington Bei1ch Adults only. after 7 pm 84&-7311. C•nt•• 14.. S C 0 ,, 1 pe. v OCCUP)' .... .:.an •vr Harbor HI. Sm value, but 1731 Be<Uord Ln .... • .... . , ~e room while owner's U loo removal. Ya.rd remodeling. Manaa:er * Apt-E SLEEP'G room $14/WK. LagUna. l..ee $2ll mo. Ref.s. away. REt"'S AVAIL. call lam Y heir m. !Wwa.n:I Truh hauling, lot cleanup. Call 646-83'12 East Costa Me.sa. Prrfer 805:527-7322. 548-5613 ah 5pm Mk tor for .eturn. Pls call 67>-l.355 Repa.lr sprinklers. 673-1186. ~~~'-"'""::..:::;::.,., __ I em P l(l y ed ma.n. Calli,-~~~~~-~-~ Andy or Scett ;;o-;r;-~;;;-;';i',;:" ..,.:,-:-;:--....,,---* LAWN SERVICE '* AlnN~~~W•~t 1::.~:h• 646-8n6. lndustrlel Rental 450 ..:.:S::;i"ng_l::,~,=D::e;;:n_c_e_C_I•-,-,-RE w ARD· Ir i • h Setttr Front yard $10. per month, Room & Board 405 El female., 21,.\ YJ'I, kilt vie. baclc yard al&0. Wt'edln&:. OAKW D GARDEN *Newport Beach* 'iM~~ph•re. Nwpt Bch. White &pot on yard cleanup. 96i.uu. ~:~~T.:;~~!n Goin& on summer ~-;('. NEW M-l Building WE iuarantee to Increase ,'~'~'~"~-~MU«l~"CC~·;:--,,-:---,.,--Expe:---,-. ,,.,-,..,.~-.. _,G,.ardo--,-nu-,-I Irvine. and Dover Dr. Ion! l mature co I I e i e 810 Production Pl. your bust at leut 1 cup si.ie. BLK male poode-O.C. Llc. Complete yd service. Neat student& v.111 maintain pro-1100 to 4200 sq. ft. No. 476, ~ p&il\led toe A Rella. Free est. SU-4389 ,(714) 642-117'0 perty It occupy house !or Occupancy July 15. FabulousKathyAllacu~om naUa. Vic: Center St S50 SitACLIFF P.!anor Apt.I. 2 free room while owner's 833-3535 Mr. Hertel Art-! "b~r~•~· ::"""c:..,11=77..cc· ____ ~ Reward ~3.45, 642.-9315. JAPANESE expert &arde.ntt. Br. A1ao l Br. avail July 1. away. REF'S AVAIL. Call Courtesy 1o Broketa GOLF -Itvtne Olu! C. C LOsr 1 Cmpl yd service W/ pwr Crpts, drpa, bltns, pool, priv 54S-56l3 a.ft 5pm, Ask tor membership for uJe--tuma. b -P.ta ~ Be~ Pf PY. equip. F'l'ee est. 64~1196. patio, studio type. 1% Ba. Andy or Scott. NEW INDUSTRIAL 6"2-2511/ev" MS·~'2. rown co ar, ne err; SPENCER'S Lawn Service Infant ok. 5'8-2682, 1525 BLOGS. CdM. R..ward. 67l-1B33. Free est. Lawn care, clean. Placentia Ave.. A!.k about Summer Renti1li 420 * COSTA MESA * LOST-I 1¥9 longha.ired all ups. Reuonable. se5:h3 our dlsoount. 1200 . J[S] bl.a k cat ,,, ...... tall · -~-~-------3 BR 2 ba. homf! ln Lake -1516 & 17-40 aq It units. Lott Ind FOYii c . ·~ • vie LAWN Malnt. HaW.lng, new BREATH TAKING .VIE\V AJTO~head. Walk to Village. Private ot1Jceg, plenty of '---------Davenport Island. 846-2633. laWlll, de.an-up, pruninr, $215. Hu2e 1 br apt. High on All bltrui Fo Jul $600 F parking, near SD Frt1?way. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 iLCU'isri'f:_JD~l·•m;;;Qoi>naf"i.,~liiiilia1~..,,;-i& -""=~·~·,.•~'·~Call-~546-'-~'=37'_, __ Back g .. ,. B!ulfs w/2 pvt ' r y . or C. NATIRESS REAL1'0R ddl I VJ CdM HI -EXPER H .. G ~ ...1 .......,,..,1 h ,~ 1 Augugt $700. 8 3 7-89 3 Cl, COSTA MESA 642 1485 Found (frH ad1) 550 wt ng r ng. c . awauan an..ener .,.. oonys, ... ., c, ea""' poo. 67!>-3749_ · ~ Sehl. 644-1033, 642-3739. Complete Gan!enin& Ser· loads or clo:se!a. Call: 745 Rentals Wenttd 460 vice, Kamalanl, 646-C676 Domingo Dr (by CdM H.S.l LAKE Arrowhead; top North GREY &: Slack sl?iped REWARD! 645--1260. shore Joe .: avail. July & FURNISHED apt. for retired female cat.Be au t It u 11 y Mlllaing 4. wkli, 1mall Exp. Japanegl) Glltdener Aug. -4 BR., lam. rm. & gentleman. perm an en 1. marked. Very ..Uectlonate. gray Ii: wht cat. 64Z.3444. Complete Yard Service OCEANFRONT 3 Br/2 Ba, I R hi VI M · N B Free e~timate 557·9:tif ~e rm. eas. mont )' Near water, Wr ite c. onrovia, · · YORKSHIRE Terri.er, Vic: yr lse.. "2>$375. 2214. W. rental to resp. party . Classified Ad 39, Daily fi.45--1773. Eaatbluil area. Reward. LAWN CARE & iarden 0 c ea n front · 67S-&l60, 673-7(36. Pilot, Box 1500, Chsta ~fesa, Found Very &mall !!;male 645-lID or T14-7W \ll'Ork, li1ht hauling. Exp'd. 6T5-l410 ________ 1HAWAIJ beach h.se on Oahu Ca 92&27 black w/some whllt trpaD, Rtuonable. caJI 54.3-9735. MODERN ~ BR, l~ ba, North Shore. 3 br, fully tunil'P~L~E~A~S~E-1-5 -yr-o-ld-d-,-,,-h-te-,.1 Pekenese CdM. Fl•a collar. [ ~ FREE e1 t. Compl or partlaJ c r pt s, d rps, b I t Ins. S200/wk. Avail JWy l-Sept. & mother neM to rent or lse _646-<14:.::..:.::"::_______ ~ •nd ~ I l -1&-wn-;~m~.,--~"'-·~~=d-•~an-•_•·-L-I di1hwshr. Couple Cit mature 30· Write Farrell, PO Box unfurn small home \\'ill SHAGGY do&', approx 5 mo, . . M. Gardening. Ml--0975. adult. .$165. Mo. 642-4387. 563 Walalua, 96791. treat with loving ' care. female, white &: black, Japane1e Gardener Senta Ana BRAND new 3BR furnished Perm re&idents. 645-4947 found on 8th St., H.B. Babysitting Exp'd. Yard Work ----------I apt. Balboa Peninsula. \Vil! ri.1AnJRE business couple _53&-__ 1'65_._______ Clean-up, Planting 646-0Sl! 3 HeatM pools rent !rom July lhru Aug. 31, w/SOII, 14 desires 3 br 1 FEMALE longhair calico, COSTA MESA G•n•ral Services ab•-BBQ tv;o month period only. No •• 1 ca' . Y!Y Large u uvme etc. 1 673-8148 renl4.L, M hi sch! district. full grown, Has white !le.a PRE SCHOOL Child Care Cenler pt,;_ • r.>Jn:. Webber. 673-1520 or collar. Vlc. 9th A 10th St. • nIINGS by Moow-Lt. elecl, G 1 2 3 Bdrm Special Summtt Program. "'s' o"'uwTH' C&OAST s CLEAN Bach. apls or slping1 ~5J6..8-~3Ml-·-------I Balboa Blvd. 673-~75. l8tJ: & Monrovia, ;ii day + plumb, fence . tile. Ir.tins. DELUXE l Bltns, cpls, gar. bale, 962-4180. Br, xtra lg. drps, refria;, like new . rm!, Sieps bch, s75twk & B A C HELOR, non.-Orinker FOUND male cat, ittY& full day se11lon1. p~ Carpentry "' paint i1tc. * FRESH AIR VILLAS .up. 315 E. Balboa Blvd. needs 1ingle or small dbl white stripes lont bat r proirram, hot lunches. Agtt 1""',..'"-°',,._"-·------I UOl MacArthur Blvd. 673-9945 / 11 "'" •133 I Walk 3 blks to Beach! · furn or un furn, beach lront w cc ar . .,..""" Z-6, hrs 6:30 AM • 6 PM. Hau Ing *REGENCY* 2 Br, 1 Ba, crptg/drp1, 1e.lf clean gas oven. encl pr, pa- tios. 548-3605. 377 w. Wilson. *GARDEN APT-2 BR $140. Bll.ns, ga.r, patio. Adlts, nn pet. 160-G E. 21st SL 548-2127 Beaut. bi& 2 BR aptl, w/w l•---·546--S8_23 ____ IBEACON BAY 3 Br, encl prcr. Local ref's. (714) Follnd little poodle Vic Y01'k· $18 wk-COMPARE! 6"2·-4050 crpta, drps, bltna except I'@· lpti., patlo, frpl, priv. area. $300 646-5305. town & Water bury H.B. YARD, &:araae, frlg. $150 & $155. 1 child ok. furn. or Unfurn. 370 ~7~73-50$ or 213: TH EXECUTIVE family adul!s Identify & Oaim 962-4521 Bd'!?y~. ~bi~m!~1!1~~~ ~~~:a~:~·. cleanup!. dirt, ivy, backhoe. No singles, no pt>ts. 536-1711 required z_.3 br. honce on Found In CdM Friendly ...,,_ XI 847-'"'""'. General OCEANFRON "~ n't play tacil, hot lunches.1 ==-~~~=----I Children W•lcome T corner. 5011 least' !or Aua:. 1 (21JJ dish brown puppy w/fiea Ce.ri. teacher, rets. 549-0726. CLEANUP &. Hauling, tr'ftl 2 Br. $159. AU extras. Pool. . Seashore Dr. Duplex. 2 Br 339-3782. collar. Dr. Stockton 673-1050 trl BLOCK to beach. Execullve down; new upstairs -4 BR LIC'D CHILD CARE m top remove PT~ f'+urn. avail. 17362-A KC<'l-Apt. 28R, 2 Ba. Patio, 2 Ba. 64J-0744_ WA NTED to n;nt-aarage for Pre1c:ription men's sungla1-Harbor &. Bala!.r, CM. 5 yn. cleanM ' lvy a:· re n c e son Lti. 842-6235, 968-7510. rondeck. Yrly l!e. $290-$325. . boat storage 1n Nwpt, C.M. ses, V!c BofA, W. 19th St. exp. Reis. S4S-29\13 removal. Jack 54~743. $\35 + 2 BR. CrptlJ, drps, S4S-8S32 LIVE on Balboa Island this area. 646-5367. 545-1855 TRA d. I 7701 Sl · awnmer. $90 I MO & UP. C:..:'-""'--------Ci1binetmi1king SH & Garage clean-up, isposa • stove. ate.r, Costa Mei• \Vomen only. 127 Arate. \VA..i-.;TED 2 or 3 BR OOuse \VHI'fE rabbil w!th brown 7 days. fJ,O a load. Free est. SPACIOUS Deluxe 1 Br. Bibi Apt. 3. Call 774-3398 or 675-J6l3. \Y /garage to clean & fix up. nose and. ean. Vic. CllU Anytime.. 54&-5031. range, dsh1>.·hr, refrig. shag 530-3682. A.l\IAZING Adult Living Call 64~ all 6. Drive. 54S-269i. CABINETS MOVING, praae dean • up ::~· 54!7~l. gar, Rental 2 BR, bltm, crpu, drps, $135 Beau!. 1 & 2 BR fum or uni BS~~~~~~~ ~P~P;ii;,J:I~~~~~~~~~~ FEMALE ~x!e Vic & R~!!f.?r~1:TIONS & l!W haulln1. Rea.sonable. per mo. 1 child o k , Apts, Sell clean. ovens, k 673--6898 i: 1 )~ PAlizada in San Oemente Fn!e e1ttma1ea:. 64!>-1002. IM~1AC. 2 Br, crpts, drps, Tr 11 dew ind I Re alt)'. D/W (In 2 Br) displs, &hag ~ ' ' • -Annou11eemtr1t1 ~ C92--2753. 541-4220, 646'-219 Ho bltns, beam ceilin1. Adults, 847-8511. cpts, d:rps, jaCUZZl & sauna LIDO Is~e. 5 br. Avail vikly.1;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~·;;~· 1 cFOUND:::..:.:.:=..611_7 ___ m_aJ~,~--~e Carpet S•rvlce u1eclNnlng no ts Fro .$150 197-4 baths. Huge pool. 6/'16-7/I:> & 8 / 2 9 • 9 / l 2. pe . m . MODERN 2 BR duplex, M1r•1·m ac Woods 673-7677 or 673-8127. puppy in CdM. 546-6449. JOHN"S Carpet .I: Upholst1r,,i HOUSE OF CLEAN \\'allace, 5'16·5386. frplc, bit-inf!, crpts, drps, Legal Notice1 510 Lo1t 555 Cleanen;. Extra Drl Comm'! & R.esld. Cleanl111 BESf area -Adults, no petg. well maintained. 2 children -425 Merrimac Way, C.P.f. BEAl.ll' 2 br apt on the I -~--------~ e1t. * 642-6824 * Modern 2 Br. Sl;.<L Bltrui, ok. $135. 847-1876. * BACHELOR 1 Br 2 Ba wal1.>r, Laauna Bch. Avail I wW not be responsible for HEART-Broken ram i I y. Shampoo tree &e0tch Gaurd MeliB. Cleanin& Service Prv patios * Htd Pools Nr shop 'i' * Adults only cpts, drps, i;ml pa. t io. I~~~~-~~~,...--.., $115 UP. PooL. ' Ca I i July !JI!. Call 646-60~!) any debts other than my Mla1ln1 1!nce June 7th. ( S 0 11 Re t 8 rd ants)' Carpets, Windows, Floor etc. 5'l8-Z765 SPAC 1 Br, quiet. Frplc, encl 642-2lSL SUMMER rental-July only. 3 own. FranceB M. Duke. White long haired female De~a.sl'I'.!l & all color Rtild . .I: Commc'I. o:.iD .1111 '"' gar. cpts, drps, xtra 1tor. b 2 ba 2 000 ft t r A -1-25 brighteners & 10 minute ~ AVAIL. July l. a ttract. 2 Br, All •l•o. Adlu. 11-45. 8177 r, · ' sq 0 iv uto traniporti1t on 5 chihuahua. White with pale bl~ch !or white ca-11. Bay & Beach J anitorial Martinique Apts. 1777 Santa Ana AVt'., Ci\f Mgr. Apt 113 6-46-5542 *** L IKE LIVING IN YOUR OWN HOME .•• 2 Br, l V.. Bia unfurn. ~ts, drps, encl. pa!io. WILSON GARDENS Apts Ph. 6-12-6811 ah 1 pm. * Spanish Elegance Quiet Adult Living Shag cpt e drp& • hltns BeauWui Pool • AU Uti! Pd 2 BR. $170 Adults only-no pets 2-ll 1\vocado St. 64&-09i!l Huntington Beach area. . .$300 mo. 548-2n2. be.ige ear1. ··ch 1-C h i'' . '"" Crp 1% Ba, crpts/drps, bl tn!, Garfield H.B. 962-5083. l ;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;llR.Mi~li0i5h.ml~i30IRESPONSIBLE party t o Re.v.•ard. V!t'!nlty Baker & Save your money by aavinf l!!, wlndowa, floors •tc. refrig. Pool. No pet 5. !-----,...----~ R•nt•I• to Shi1re 430 drive my clean 8 u I ck me extra trips. W'll ..:le.in I -"'~'.,· ,;&;;Co;o;,mm;;-,"'17. ;;646-=l~'°-'-·-I 646-66lO 2 Br, clean&: attract. crpt!, ON BEACH I F11.lrv!ew. 1169 Donel Lane l!vini" rm dining rm & ha.II · drps, bllns, alr-eond, nr. • ~Rm & bd Balboa Isl Skylark w/only 7.000 mi, to 549-2351 (neighbor) .SlS, Any rm $?.SO, couch HOUSECLEANING 2 Br. unfurn apt, $135. mo. schools, shop'g & park. Kid& in exchange fo~ iood cook: vie ot Plttlburgh, Pa. Gas & .LC.:,:.:S't_;cltl~l:_•_C_k.;::._m_"1ac-'-,-,-,-wh l WINDOW WASHING In!ant ok. Nn pet!.. Joann ok. No pets. 830.1548. NEW n!!R$23o APTS Ing & a:ood company oil pd. Lv by 6125· 675--5252· ~ & feet, wearing tlea col. !,~t1~n~: !!t~~~. i~ i --.,,,~*="~3-4=4!,.7=*=,.....- SI., C~t. 549-3-437. I ~·-i•·-, A·-••·b'-(female). Must have full 6117 700 Blk. Summit L.B. do work -···" "-" nf. HOUSECLEANlNG 2 Br. studio apt, enc &ar. c ..... u ,,... v ...... ..-3 ~-~ I & 2 BDRilf, pool, 1 chlld nSO mo wTr pd. Adib!, no Carpets.drapes-dlahwuber time job e.l&e.where 675-727 ·1 If") .::R=,..::.=ard:.:._'94-8968.:.:.::::.:=----~ 5.31-0101. Any type.. Exp. Reuonable OK. $160. up. 324 E. 20th St. pels. Refs. 842-4549. be.a ted pool-saunu-te.nnla 18 yr, old working girl Jook· hrlon•li GOLDEN Retrlever, vie. or CU:AN CARPET S46-08Zl. 645-4761 * 2 BR . close ID beach. No ree room-ocean viewa ing for room.male & Apt.\~;;;;;;;o;o;o~~~ C.Ulta capi1trs.no, 2 )'?'II. no ..,. 15 Ironing 2 BR. Duplex. Ranae. crpt'd, pets. Crpts, drps, slove. Call patios-ample parkfna: Costa J\.11t11.-Ne1.1·port Ania. 530 .::ll~o.~bo'."'-y~··~"":::::'·~'=''"'::..::340:.:::·_~ OUR BUSINESS lroninr & Alterations Patio. No ..,..ts. ~165/mo s~c 9942. Security i\W'lh. 646-70-41 P ·-'-'-'-•_n_•_I•------LOST ?.1in. brown poodlt. CHAD\VICK & CO . .,... ~ At My Home Realtor. 642-2122. 2 BR, pool, crpts/drps, HUNTINGTON 2 BR hou~. So Laguna& ALCOHOLICS Anonymous, le.mrlt, 4 mos old. Vic. 441' 645-.3925 Free Est. ~111 545-7641 3 BR, 2 Ba !amily Apt. adults, no peta. 220 12th St. PACIFIC Share with )'T'li non-1moker. Phone 542-nlT or write St., N.B. 673-7574 alter 6 Diamond Carpet Cleaning-'M'•"•::o::n::ry~::...:.=---1 Crpts. drps. pool. No ,,,_ 219 lSth SI. 711 OCEAN AVE H B. Call -494:4-479 P.O. 8oX" 1223 Costa Mesa. Sell Idle items now! Avr size room S8 per.s. Jl75/mo. 557-4 057 " · Office A.enti1I 440 RepairiJl.&: & lnata..tlatlon1 MASONERY WOR!C A 1 l Li1g un1 Hill• (714) 536-1487 * * * * * * Free E1t. 64!>-1317 t;ype1 Free ~1t. Tborouihly 2 BR. 2 ba. Bltns, Garage, 2 •3-B~R~.-,.2 -5~,-.-,-p-to-.~.-rp-,-.-poo-I Ole open 10 a.m-6 pm Dally DESK space ava.llable S50 DRJFOA~f CARPET CLEAN expel. 642-1948. children, No pets, $165. t WilLIAM WALTERS CO. mo. '\'ill provide furnlturt ,~------------------.... Reasonable Ra!H. p · • & 1111-H Del ~far, ~8-8278. use, d'v.'shr, dbl gar, v: · "'""""""""""""""""""-at .SS mo. An!i\vering service a intlng mntnce. $275. 49-1-2661 P kl'k "· Ll . avall•ble. 1787,-"·•ch Blvd. Tomlin Svc * 557-9669 Paper ha nging $170-2 Br, 2 Ba Studio apt. ----------ar J e 00::11.ch \'Ing °" • crts, drps, patio. gar. Adj Na wport Beach tor Adults Hunt.1ng1nn Beach. 642-4321 Trader's Parad1'se I •STEAM KING •p ·-R-0-,-.-P-.-;,-ti~n,-. ..;...E-,-,-.. -·11 10 shp"g. 285 Ogle. s.ll!-t!301 Casa Del Sol DESK space avail&.ble $50 up 10 40o sq ft $32.50 s!(lry, low u s225 w/gd COUPLES or fl 2 BR BRANO NEW mo. \Viii provlda furniture Guaranteed work 61!>-3139 ROOi\1-l>JATES \\IESTBAY ~l. new $155. 1 BR. FrpJc, indoor/ 1 & 2 BR-furn/unf. Pvt pa• at.,. mo Answering !lervtce C paint. Avg rm S18. Airlc1s •pts $1~. Adlts . 151 E. 21st ,. ~1 · 2 BR I ~ · · , • nes arp•nfer spraying-accous. celllngs1 2 Nrw super 2 BR, 2 Bath, outdoor kitchen, he.atM pool. LO."""' c in · e evators. available. 305 No. EI I frplc, we t bar, beamed ceil· ·si S42-4005. See at 20432 Santa Ana Aw. dshwshrs, o-pts, drp!, Pets Cam l no Re 11 I , Sen CARPENTRY coats $l5. Roy, 847-1358· ings, panelling. pr l vat e. 3 BR, lam size apt, bltns, or call 557.oni. accepted. From $145. Clem•nte. 492-4420 t • MINOR REPAIRS. No Job PA INT I NG: Hone• t, patio, All rec. f11cU. Adults. <I.rps, v:/w cpt, gar. nr NOW OPEN 71861 Brookhurst St, HS. PROFESSIONAL Bld,1:, 45c I mes Too Small Cabinet in ,,,,. guaranteed work. Llc'd. :m:!t:. From $80 per shop'g &. schls. 962-4180. 20432 Santa Ana Ave. Sp&c. 1t (TI4) 982-6653 * sq fl. ~nd. crpl.oi, <lrps, •' 1; ~th• r ablne.tl, ~I ttf'1. Call 6'f5..5740 aft * * 64!i-OOT3 * jr TOWNHOUSE, 3 br, 2 ba, io1,1s 2 BR, 2 BA w/trplc. prl. 1 & 2 BR. From $125/mo. "d parkin1. Xlnt loc. 350 E. dollars 54.&-8175 U no answer leave 1-----------1 cpls, dps, blms, pOOls, Dild· patio. Loads of clORl.I. Hld. OVerlOoking beaut. garden )7th St. C.M. PETE BAR-rnq. &t ~2372. ff. O. No Wutlng NICE & QUIET ttn OK. S225 mo. 546-3710. pool. $l9S. 5ST-02ll P3tio &: hid pool. Adults. RETI' RLTY. 642-053 Andenon. *WALLPAPER * 2 BR, c('lJU. drps, balcony. NEWLY DECORATED l br 1035 l2lh St., across from l)eLuxe OUice 525 1q ft. ANY si JOb. ~1Jd., Comm'!, Wh•n )"OU call "Mac" locked gar. Nr bu.a &: the· E-BLUF'F', 2 Br, 2 ba. bltnl, LaJce Park. SJ&-2692. r ---t-DraP9&-Pane.l Walls Je~· sloop ••. stortd .i.t J-lc.ve tree & dear hoUse + Indus,, Apta. All -...., 548-1444 '46-1711 studio, 1~~ ba, crpts & drp5. Back Bky View. $220. l1ue. N""" .l Ba C t ( Vl'"" J'~ly '~td.lt1•1•45""1,!:_ ~ ... ~A~~~ $150. ~l-5297. Sf+.-0608. e OCEA.'ll V1EW·FR0~1 ~~..,_,rt l.i.vd'.~ fl.1ar1na de.I ~y . • lnclud· ~~dee!, ~~:al e~~llY 1?! ;~1 Reu. Free est. PAINTING. proleuional. .. .... ""' J'".,,,... 2 a. d 1 ........ i Br. turn ,.,.. ...... -. ..,... Jng triller) • , valued al $.:.o,....,..., .-.Cuo..uie --un.. • All won ~. Color 2 Br, .. a u ts, no pets. WESTCLIFF 2 Br/l'iii Ba ~·-.... " '""" (Also'~ oU avaUl ~6-1252 12 100 00 w/~ d 1 --mmo-1-•. -· F'* "\VEED It Ir: reap" .. clean ,,__ D · Co CAM PLAY A, 141h 6 , · • . . ...11. ~ or "' ..... • .. ..., • "" Cem•nt. Concrete s Pl c I al I 1 t. 9 6 2-61'3, out the treasure• Ir: trash _ 1616 ......_. ... way n ve, lita Twn,hse. Adlll only • no Walnut, Call 53t)..336?. * NEWPORT B?:AOI * jewelry, antiques, car or Co. Realtors, 673-!M95 547·144.l. tum Into euh thru a Dally fl.lesa. Ph. 54().64S3. pets. l7l8 Bedford Ln. S7to. Acr"Oll from ctvic center. s1,1bmlt. 67J.OOJ2 SO. LAKE TAHOE ~ a.ere PATlO Specla.lll ls. Add •p~R"'O~F~E=s~s~1~0=~,_A,..,.L~Pa,..,.ln-.I l ~P~!l~o~t ~Cl=•~•:;•lll::::;:ed::;ad::;;;. ~64~2-5678o;;;;:;~\=le~·=u=h<J=p~you':::=..U==' =..,...,.;;;:;::;;;..!~54= .. ="~";;;:;;;;:;::;;;;;;:::;;;;;;= N•wport Beech Alr-Crpt'1-Prk'g, 300 to Two 4-p\ex apt. bldgs, in lot. l'Ully lmproved. N1at ~~~~to~ .!°: d•t:i!!:. ttnc-lnter/exter, Honest VISTA DEL MESA l.000 aq. tt. 35c. prime Newport Park Lido everythln1. Trade tor •uto, r-•·· work. Llc. & Ina. 548-2759, OetOee .,. 673-5862 _, '1I htl ,_, B boat or wh•t have you ? ed elpeclally tor )'OW' home. ~ A.urtm..,h area; .,,.so I Y Uacu en n..•11'· E I l==="·~~~~-~1 •-E~ JI bl •C11 H olf I bs T to 646-8371 eves & wlmd1. '"I"' '¥· x Per en Ce• 1 • 2 BR. Furn . .I: Unf. Dtlh. D ~ apltrt ava a e """ ogen g cu . radc r Satlffa~Uon. EUCJn 6 Soni EXTERIOR, Uc. j., IN. washer -Stove and Retrls -mo. MU pro\flde turntture 130,000 hOme . S48·S21Xl 2 lAts San Clemente, val ConstructlOn. 548-0169. Frff ffl 17 yn tlCP. Shag trpl'2·Lr1 tt.e center. at .SS mo. An.~lilrlt'lg service :; older unlta In near by $32,500: street to street, will I "•""•::::~C;O~N~CR:...::.ET:;_E~."'Floor;, Acouatlc: eell\ng. 645--SlSl. nENT Start.a fl&i ava!!&ble. 222 Fattllt Ave, Beach dty. SubmH TD's, take 11 units, Submit units , INTER Palnt!rl(, •ccnus. Tuttln & Mei• Drive tairma Be..1ch. C9f..9C66 larger units or ?? ($18,800. houae, 11>'•. or ? patlol, driVH, sidewalks, ceillnfl. Ava. home $70. * 54M8J5 * e OFnCJ: TN Lido Shopa. equity) Nl!WpOrt Bah Rlty. lifS.164.2 alabl:Rtu~Don M2-8Sl4. El:'ptrt work. M.7..CU!. ~~~----"~-1 000 aq, rt. 2nd fioor, across Agerrt 642.7000 ClCMENt WOR.f<, no job too Stucco & J!:aws $.'!(!. _s;a;";'•;:;;;Ati;;;•;:;;;:;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;.I trcn'l Richard'•· $250/mo. SALE or b'&dc: 4500 1111 ft So. PU&dena. Contl'l.ctor 1mall, reuonable. f r te Colltie alUdtnta, DO • ~2'-1511. SS8.500 Enallsh Tudor Home WU! ttmodel borne or· •Pt • l:ltlm. H. Stufilck. 5Q.8h.5. dr1nklna. 5'1-6f9, VILLA MARSEILLIS 3700 NiWPORT BLvt>, NB In Riverside for Mach prop. :re re::°~nd..:.,:i.~ QUlLJTY Ctrnt nt Work. Let· PAINTING/;pctnc. lll yrs BRAND NEW +ONnttBAY* ~rty.Mr.Hayei.SamAnn. Mrs.Pal'tkh.2U'J99.SCU. Georre do It. Ll c 'd . tn Harbor aita. Ltc A: SPACIOUS 615-2*4 er Ml-!i032 sirona Rlty, Inc 682·ll33 bond9d. 66-1695. bondfd. R«f'• t'llrn. eG-2IM 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apfl. e NEWPORT Beach DellJ(fl d lr bPI b :.M. condo/townMuae, 1 Contrector p • l N -·oi-~-. U A4ult Living > VI "I • '· --• Pri IVILL Lra • I t vl ra.• b .. , .... -.Jed den l. bunll: ,. '"'~ _'"" .... ew 011 cei. A.t•'U.lt"'• v. t r or 2 alm06l n~ 40 000 ,..... .. ~ Yn tn Harbor art • •-.. •urn & Unfum Ba. ·-w ~-·1 H~ ' ' rm. n.•• lor ~auonat MY W•" -·"'11"" '---· L ......,. • r ' • --v · ......... ..~. mU• 7-~14 •1-s •-rim• for _., "-"' '"'1UOI' bondld. Rff'• f'llm. ,..., -~abwu!W color coordtM.t •J"" ...... • proptrty lor my tcJU.lb'. :W re.p&lt. Wallt, ceUtnc. f1oon -. . , 11 -1610 SAN'fA ANA A.VE, Of gcod atmpln1 tent a1 t ... t 147.9133 °'" 114 sd4296. etc. No Job toe llnall. _..* LISCD PAINTING ea •PP MCel • plush .-C l'rom 300 tq/ft, 35c aq fL Ux13. Call Alleo. 531..e541 carpet · ch:>lct off 2 COSorl _ _!~~:MM~.!;orC,5'~~~~-/;TY;-c;;n.;r-'i;g:'-;.;;;;;;;;: BEAUT. hi dnert slMltlftid S47-«l3S, :U br UL NfV, Rn/Ap!s, ... ~~TMI" •• 'm•~ ·-~'~QUICK CASH vw camper '19, poptap, •rea. llome " g ac. Pttm Addltlo111 * it.modellc& Pf••ter, Patch, Re;Mlr ....,..,.. ......... __ tint. Jlir, ena ~· 0°hauld, Gcrwkt A SOit. 1Jc -'-· ............. , ..... ,_ ... K..t. .. _. ....... 1_. ~ or .tr..nd IW. Vtl. sao,OOO. 8'J3..4041 "* it-. .. _ '" ·-Pa•·• n-Ad'-. ._ ........ ' ............. ""! .... t-. ' MW ui-. IC\.lllm ...... r ._.y Want ti..Ch ptVPl'rt1. can "'7Al!U .c-w•~ """"'n.fl\ - Ina In ldteben. bne.ldut TIVl"'ounH • wk.For$2600eq\,llly\ri c_al', '94.4T46 498-1331 uc·o c.cn.tr. Remoct.llna: Acceul. milllll•. •tucco bar · llu,p prtvate r~ It N ~Pl IQ btlat. pl1t11e or T -...ems. ---"'------Addlllc1111, Plal'll, Layout, rtan. Fre. ••ttmate1 . Pt\tto • plu.h .1an~ · D •1L~ PILOT J Bit. 2 ·Ba. ruv.;:;Jd; SWAP -Crtat otne. 't8 Karl !:. Xtndall, su..sau. Q.S..S!Sl, ~ ttt s. bi1ck &r·B·Q •. laJ'l1 hll(. IQ hOme for borne or unJtl Ouyaler, ')4' travtl tl'&ilar, i5an:lenlnt • PATCH P1.ASTERING ed poola A: lanai. , Carlabad ttta er Oranp Besenjl, Butet Hound, '$4 All l;)"Pe1, Fne Htimal• 3l0l So. lrlttol St. w• T AD C.OUnty FOrtlnCo Olds Sl&rftN -for boat QAJU)DIJNG, d•anup ' c..u M6-fl2!I £\ii !di. N. of So. Olut Plazl) l'i Realto.:.. · 542.5000 or ! 531-6027 )'IU'd matnft nanot. Exp cd· Plu"'blng Si1nt1 An1 ltft 1tudtnt1. -:c:'.""::-":'°"'-=--1 PHONE: 557"200 842-56711 * * * * * * ,._ bt. ..,._1143 COLE PLUMllNO Y Yor bell• n11uJIJil W-sm--2C hr ffrvlcl', 645-1111 ·. • \!< , ., . I I I . , . ' ........ ~ ... ~· ~-.-"'··· .. ::1 _.,, ........ . ,-,·~ .. 'J !r . . • • DAILY PILOT l4ondl1, .Junt 21. 1971 Plumbing Help Wanted, M & F 710 1 ---J~ '---[ _ ...... _,·-··~l[Il] I ..... ,,,.. J[Il] I ....... -fill .__I _. ,,_, =-___,J[jJJ [ .... ,..... J[Il] ~I ;;;;;;;.....,;;;;;;; .... ~jtfij~.1J 1~1 ~ ... ·~·-;;;;;:I;;;[§] ~-~~~~·1 h elp Vo/a nteci, M & F 710 Help Wanted1 M &. F TIO 1H•o.lp·W·a·nt·ocl-, M-A·f'·71-0 I 1Ha::;ljjpjjWjjajjnjjhd,miiMm&~F~7~10:1 .... p W•nted, M & F ~ Appliances I02 Mi1c1 ilaMOV• Ill LEW 1>Jw & Som Plwn· AUTO SALESMEN blni r?pair, n!pi~. n"model Openings for 2 .salem'l('n, ex- fW'W COM I. Jo)"ee t' s I pc:rienc:.'t'(i or not .,.,, o-.An • Tov oi.mmisoiioo ~·~~==~ fiX:-.!BING REPAIR e Demo plan No job too ll!nall • Hosp1tahza1ion • &IZ-3128 • • Iru;urance e P rofi1-11haling Roofing Ask for ~Ir. Roberts AUa., CilJ"}'Sler-Plymouth T. Guy Roofing, Deal Dlrrt:t. 2929 JlarOOr Blvd. I do my own work. 64~1780,-Costa M<'Sa 54$-9500. -~-I BUILD 2nd inc. sell Basic Sewing/Altera ilon1 H &, othe r Shaklee Prod. 1860 Nrwp::irt Blvd. 646-4523 e Dressmaking -Alterations C M. Special On llems ~====---~-Call Jo • 646-6-146 BABYSIITER, my home EUROPEA.llJ Dressmaking. 6125-1130, J\lon-fri, 7 am • Expertly Custom lilted, Ac-_4_p_m_. 540-1639 11ft 5 _Pm_._ cur. Rea.s. 67l-1S49. BOYS 10-14 ALTERATIONS to deliver papers in the San Phone 642-7806 Oemente. San J uan Capis- trano and Capistrano Beach Alterations -642-S845 area. Neal, accurale, 10 years exp, CAIL Y Pl LOT Tile ~92-4120 CERAI\i!C flle ne"' & BOOKKEEPER FULL CHARGE EXP'd tibergl.lu repalm.ari. Olpper lofarlne Corp, 1731 S. Ritchey, Santa /Ina. t'llif:llGLASS J ore n1 a o wanted. Exp'd only. 642-9683 Fee N-aoti1ble Bookkeeper f' 1C ••.• ID $150 F lnanci.&.I Stn1tsl VJ Fe• Paid Typi&I, 60 w.p.n1. , ..... $-150 t Soni£' Sli J FM Pos itions Recep t. ••• • . . . . . . . . 10 S443 ! Lite Bookkecping; Act·tng OO?rk ..••.••••. }133 (10 Key & Pos1iJig ) Yee l· F'N!e J obs Many Other Positions Avail. RUTH RYAN AGENCY 179.1 Newpori, CJ\.i 646-48.~ 17931 Beach, }!B 847·9617 --remodel. Free est. Small job! welcome. 53&-2426. 5 yr.; exp. lhru financial FORE~TAN -Luntbcr yard. Tree Service GF.:NERAL Tree Serv. Yard Clean-up. Sprinkler repairs. Reos. 64&-58<8. l _ ___,!rr:1t .__ ~ .l!.!J Job Wanted, Male 700 statements. Attracti\'e ap-1 Must be evp'd • wen qu aH - J)f'arance for ironl ofc & fi('d CaJJ Jim Gorman recl'ption duties. Substan-839-!1105. cial Corp. in N ew Po r t G -=l~R.:.::Lcc..F~R~l-D_A _Y--1 -1 -,, Bearh. Salary open. Send resume to P.O. Box 171J, Newport Beach 92660. CASY.llERS, car wash, flll! tin1e & part time. Call &14-4·1.iO. CLERK TYPIST iH.'<"l'<'laMal, public rela!ions per~"Unaliry, F/Pt. Mus t h1n·e vrry nice. appe arance, tlress very ~harp, great phone voic:e, No exp nee. $2.00 hr. Nice S.A. olfice. 547-5&46. GIRL FRIDAY For Ne"·port Beach Ad Agen- cy Pres. All skill!!: includ- ing SH. Sharp looks. Jong hours. good pay_ 833-1670. KEYPUNCH OPR. A, least 1 yr ~per. w/lBM ~ &. !19, Alpha. numeric req'd. MU$t be able 10 de- velop program ca~ & punch a \'a.rie1y of applica- tions. For Appointment Call Industrial Rclatlons 17141 494-9401 TEL ON IC NOW !&kin&; appllcaUona tor RN'S for LVN or RN J'f~f SERVICE CENTER WHlRLP?O~ au!Q W&.liber. LIQ U IDATING debt/coll I •GENCY -S40. V.r st1ngboU5e e.l e c ltt'.1n11 by pv1 pty. z1 ...... ~ ho!teue1, wa tr•11e a , 11 to 7AM abllt. Parlt Lido "' d ""er, 135. Both ~ cond, ···-d._... ..___ ~--· Ce 500 N r. --N B "' """'' automatlC"S. Orandn\I, lac-l:•nWIUln""· ,....,. undf"t 18. Con va lesc e n t nter, ewpori. '""'""·"'• • · · guar. It delivered. 54&-8611, Apply in pttlen, Colony 642-80f4. F.quaJ 0 pp 0 r . 847 0115 ly/pack. full hfet111e guar Kitchen, 3711 Harbor Blvd, employer. * Bkkpr F /C $550 -o • ~ less 1hw1 'rt price. Beaut & C.M. IRN=-'--~,~,,~,-. -L~VN=-,.=11,~1,.-,&' I 34 Yrs min. e;icper, Know MAYTAG gl as dryer, ~~-be~t qual, Tru rlift! 1tind . •• & I Ma""'• e cc d""er _, 1··-ct & assure st ( & OPENING tor food Service Aide1 all ahttu. Bapti!1 gen' I ledgtt/S ~yro 1 $SOO aoih iood cond:~ GUar & r:i:ke our. Also 5 big !lets Manager. C&ll All' appt. Convaluctnl, fi6l Center St, * Rectpt_ •C Y . delivered. 546-8672, 847-8115. wa terlss, Jo-ht, stnlss, llJe- 833-3595. C.M, Accur. typlrt. Koow gen 1 . C I . tri tiine rookware, 1/3 price. Ali OPERATORS • •porllllwtar ore procedurH. 12' f't'O~tltee o dsp01 re . ~· Ml nJ Good Sa.lea * Gen'I Ofc $SSO dbl door, 4 yrs olJ. $65. unbelievbly beaut &. hvy St.~.':'.~J-N.s. pay. PERSONNEL rouN s TRNE Koow't Clf bkkpng. Good typ-673-4609 att 6pm. quaJ. Al.so $10 silvr certll1. ""W Samsonite su1tc:ses, grn, Part Time POOne Work. NEW IRVINE OFFICE isl. LGE Frigida ire w/bottom wh1r, oliv. blu. Scuba tank!!:, ElfceUenl Potential! 11 )'OU are aureuive, en-* Sec'y/Salts $500 freezer $100; new 4-.b~rner yell 72• J , new. It's good, e P46-4309 eves • thusiaatic l. want lo work Good typist/Jlke thctawig elec range. $75. 548-826;i St"e sell. 9ti~lOO. PART TIME w/people, we will train you equip I: a busy job, STOVE, good t'Ond. b ood • -• 7 10 to make above avi incoqle. Clean. $3S. l\-1ov1ng. 1\-lahog r M!t, i lndustrits Inc. • .... pees . pm eves. Ca.ti Mra. Watllon, 833-1100 Free & Fee Por;;1lions Call 646-3198. mauress, sofa, rocker & ol· Sat lG-3 Dennis & Dennis Helen Schaffer roman, occasitinal chair. Lanuna Beach Du · I •-Furniture 810 t bl lomp hvy ,,.., • t' 'to exparunon o our ... Peraonnel Agency 644-4981 a es, S\\'ag , EqwiJ Opportunity Employer cWtiet. in So. Calit. llt'e havt: 2082 MicheJ&en Dr. .!!!!..,!!!!'!:;;;~.., ... ,.,j-*;;IMAfiO~Vfil~NiiG:;:S~AALL'EEi""-:;*;-1 area rt.lg, ru-,:~r, {l~r SCl1.lb- LITE HOUSEKEEPING • "'""" .....uu.. . -· "'.man. Prominent inter. deco.rator "~" .,...,,,,.. _, 3 immediateo openi(liS for lO 1-·-. "·"' SERVICE s·-Sal I ber & polis1w:r, mirror PlC· !Tlt!n. Train at our Vl""nlf:. & ,_.... lurt's, misc. """""<»03 a.&t & Supervision for 2 girl!i 10 & M-.. ·-•'cal ... , ..::;-ptul. 7T27i pllime, eves w .. ,...,., ex-forced to vaca te srud10 by pm, Sat. 12 L'do J I 642-6&30 ...... ucu·• .._.. '"'' per, Neat in appear. Apply June 30! 30 To SO'iO re-due--'--'--~----~-• • 1 s e. . Must be 19 or over. New Sale• 2!190 Newport Blvd, C.M. tionsonquality furn.,lamps, FAMIL~ VACATION LUHRS BOAT CO. contract enable 111 to start · Cab•·,, ''' -01 !tlammoth E picrures & access. • ~-849 W, 18th Sl., C.M. men at $458/mo. Xlnt op. MANAGEM NT 9:30 To 5:30 Daily Lakes. See Tahoe, V1rg1n1a • CARPENTERS portunity to gn.dua.ie to tuJJ $50,000-$100,000 TOOL & 181l \Vl'Stcliff Dr, N.B. City, Bodie. Y,'k S95. 531-3374 Immediate Openings time positions. days or 540-c:.il 7. E..'<per"d only need apply For Persona.I l nlerview CUSTOM made bunk beds r.raintenance (714) 776-8551 MEN MILITARY WOMEN CUTTER w/8 vrry lrg bltn dra11•crs. POOL Table, slate, PLUMBERS HELPER Sat &. Mon 10a.m-5pm Box i;pgs & n\alt encl. Red , return, balls, Clle~. auto $-100. IF YOU HAVE THE DE-white, hlue. 1\1u.st see to ap-Good ccnd. 557-9499 Land development co · PART time, exp'd DONUT SIRE TO IMPROVE YOUR GRINDER pre. Cost $675, .sacrifice 9xll OVAL braided cotton localed in Newport Beach MAKER. a.U 968-1051 btwn CAREER ALONG WITH 127'. 96' ~2. k · I b "' O"'VlN rug, bro\11n &. orange. E ;iccel · see .r; ma1nt. p u m e r s 7am-10dm. INCREASING YOUR F l- helper. Position req's 3 yrs =p-A~ST=E-U~P-A~R~T~IST~.-,-,-,.-r-.1 NANClAL POSITION, WE OPERATOR KlNG Sz Bdrm set incl cond, $20. 6'16-5463 dil'!!Ctly related e x per . req'd. ~Joanne. \VOULD LrKE ro CHAN· dresser, desk, bkcase, .ma!· \VATER Bed $19. King or Sprinkler repair knowledge 646-0164. NEL YOUR TALENTS & tress, bxsprngs. Haywood Queen. S yr r a cto r ~ helpful. Xln't wages le OiiiiOOiiiijOiiiiOiiOiiOiiOiiO I ABILITIES 1'0\VARDS A High School Diploma Wake!ield, $450. 64.J-5468 guarantee. 646-6634. M.aries w/a stable co. Call PRINTED RIOi, REWARDING & SE-plus 5 yearl minimum Tl·IIS BARGAIN RANGE 36" Wedgewood, salar ies w/a stable co. Call CIRCUIT BOARD CURE FUTIJRE. eXperience on #l Cin-\\'ON'T LA.ST. gridtile, $50. (2) Stereo J\t n . Saurwein, 5 40 -08 91 cinnetti Tool & Cutter Beaut. $1000 sofa for $200. speaken, 10", $60. 675-6145. bet"•n aAM & SPM wkday&. Increases in our commer-NO EXPERIENCE OR Grinder. Will sharpen Like new, hurry. 1H4-l5.J6. HEARING aid in eyegla!!:s ciaJ electronics bw;iness DEGREE NECESSARY IF end mills & grind form S A CRI F I C E , E ar I y frames, including battery have created severaJ new YOU WANT 1'0 START A tools. American sofa & loveseat. charger $75. 546-M37. ........ ition' in our exceptional PROFESSIONAL CAREER Near new. Paid $550, seU --'--'-'-------~· ENT HAND carved ciutom tables Print!Pd Circuit Board Fa· IN TIIE INVES'J'M 1 Please Apply $295. Adjusla bed, dbl, $15(). l\larketil'lg * MEN * {Five} Newport Beach prop. mgml Going on summer vaca-ofc. needs gd typist w/ lion 1 2 mature c o 11 e g e strong background in ac- !iludent& will mainta in pro-I cmg. Perm. po!. Gd !ulure. perty & occupy your bouse Salary commensurate w/ for free room while o"'ntr's exper. Please Call (114) ay,·ay. REF'S AVAIL. Call 557-7954, ask for ~lrs. Peter- 54S-56U ah 5 pm Ask for I son. GIRL !or collee shop work. Andy or Sco!t. COOK -Dishwasher. Apply Will train. Apply 3021 B El\lPL. \Vanted as Assisrant at Original Sam's Pizza, Harbor Blvd ., C.l\I. NEAT APPEARING I! you are singlt:<, 19-25 & V.'Ould like xln"t earnings to start v.•/a rapidly growing co w/an oppor. for advance- ment & can begin immecl. Apply IOA.\f '1il 2PM, 15-10 E. Edinger, Suite i, Santa Ana. Calif. cility, F'!ELD. YOUR EARNINGS 963-3507. & chest to 8 f!. $99. 145 E. MAY BE $50,(XX}.noo.ooo In PeborsonBI d 11th in rear. Su "Chips'" ' SILK SCREENER . TOUCH-UP PROCESS. OR HELPER PER YEAR IN. COI\1MlS· 3333 Har r v 4-poster mahogany bed v.·/81-'8-',-'1-'1 ..:M..:,..:,,..=-c,-,-'.-h-eo'-vy-'-d7"-ty-.-I' AP1 ilfanager. Experienced I 88~7 Adams, Huntingto n GENERAL OFFICE. Young J\1ainlenance man. Also car-Beach. local co. in a prestige per cleaning & floor v.•a.xlng. c;o~o0·,~,-. 7b-ro-,,-.. -Q-,7.,,7"~,7 •. -.~,"'n busineS!.. Beautiful modrrn 531.0101. Brown's, 31106 S. Coasr Hwy, olc. Great oppty. $450. Job Wanted, Female 702 South Laguna Call Sally Mart. ~i4Q..605:i . I COSMETICS COASTAL AGENCY SCRIPPS College Jun 1 0 r Attractive \Vomen 27~ Harbor Bl a l A<lan1s desires pos as hve-in \Vanted 10 teach .makeup l!EALTH Food Store neerii; mother'li hlpr . WSI. Exp I •••h·,·q""'. W/train. Exec 1 · I .. " ... young man nr perm pos1. Refs. Leave mes~age or po•. ,·n,.,.,~ •vail. Viv i a n e •• o"ll I ·' """' til:in. App ly 1072 Bayslde Dr, Susan Sldnner 5_....., • ex \\'oodard Cosmetics Sul>sid-~2 before 4:30. I iary of Gen. Food!. 544.-1464 , •N•B•.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,..,.. ... _,. I PRAC. Nurse!, Compar.=ons, I Hskprs. Llve in or out. l\tonlhly rates. E mplr pays I fee. Health & Family Care Agency. 1805 N. Broadway, I S. A. 547-6681. MATU RE. tthncd v.'Oman available as companion· homemaker 10 lady or gen· tleman. Live In. have car, btt to mi.vel. Call 830-3191. SECRE'TARY "'ant& 3 or 5 I HOUSEWIVES Immediate placemt'nl lor 5 Jad iC!; needing par1 lime 1··ork. C a I! Lois today, 537-3123 !or il'l!erview • .ep· poinlment. Fleetwood Enterprises, Inc. IISKPRS Emplyr pays fee. George Allen Byland A~en­ ls expand ing 1tte corp. "1alf cy 106-B E. 16th, S.A. in the 1\1odular Housing Di· l•"..,7-"..,39ii5ii· iiOiiOiiOiiOiiO- vision to meet new grov.'th dayg work "A'tek. All elec-requi rcmt"Tlt~. An exper. Irie typewriters. Excellent COST ESTJ.1\1ATOR is need. referrnces. All olfic~ i;kills. cd now! no bookkeeping. 546-6522. I ~ • - A I O E $ FOR C 0 N-Suctt'Si;;ful candidate v.·ill VALESCENCF.:. e 1de r I Y1 havP. 3-5 yrs residential -· care ar fam!ly c a r e . 1 housing exper. as an esti- llomemaker~. 54.7-66!11 n1ator v.•ltTI an architr.clural Accounting lirm or building contracror, !RVJNE PERSONNEL E X ECUTIVE P er sonnel Age ncy Ca ll Bett y Bruce Acctng. Supv to $1000 Escr ow Ofer to $650 Sec'y /Ins to $600 S.c'y/Racept. to $600 Sec'y/ Mktng $57S Clerk Typist $416 Receptionist $416 Ktypunch/Trne to $300 A/P Trno $350 410 W. Coast Hwy., NB Suite H 64S-2716 MANAGEMENT C·-. Off ice moving nenr \\li\J perform ma•lerial take· SERYJ ""• CES•A r ENCY X-r.tJLITARY OITICERS O"'"'' Co. Approx. .Jul) orfi; & prt>pare complete '""--' " " BE'TiYEEN AGES 25-30. •-t. -·, brigh! ""rsonable b1Hs of ma ten<il~. WilJ ca!-~ .~., ,.~ IF YOU H1\VE RECENT· )'OUng girt 10 work in acctng cula.te ":1atenai costs&. pre-1 Sales Ord Coorchnat1.r to $!rJO LY RETURNED F R OM dept. Acctng exper or so me parr f1111shed-prodUcl de-~c'y Ins. Jue Sh ... , lo $600 VJETNAi\'I \VE HAVE A college acclng prrl'd. 1~i1e live ry c.'Ol'l!s. If Y?U \\•an\ Bookkt'eper .... · • .. to $j()() JOB TIIA'I' YOUR LEAD. typiiig & ability lo operate unhmHrr! opportunHy, !\loll Suf)('rv1sor/Fi!cs ..•. to S~(XJ ERSHIP QUALITY \VILL acctng mactunc desu"('d . your resume today: A1R O crk .......... 1o $·1j() ~-rr RIG HT INTO. YOU \\'di trai n 1n S(.lme areas. i\1at"h1ne l,Jookkr1•pc r to $).j(J \\'ILL ACT AS .'\ RECRUIT- Call t213l 4~1!11, An Outstanding I "l'COUnt1ng Clerk ...... $1131 ER FOR A LARGE LAND ALTERATION lady !or men's P lace To Work fln1'1 Con1rol Clerk 10 $-1~ IN'VEST:'ITENT ro. TNTER· L 11t"Omen'9 clothin~ 40/!U' 1 N'<··J Bookkc('pcT .. · ·· · $600 Vil:.>V PEOPLE \\'HO RE- 11t•k no Sat. 499-1060 Fleetwood Clrrk T,vp1sl ........ io 1'100 I SP0:-0.'D TO OUR ADS. "•'··Wa nted, M & F 71 0 Enterprises, Inc. ,\lall CIFrk ............ $Jl:1 c ,,N'T BE APR.AID TO I";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; P. 0. Box 763.'i.\V T.v1n~1 .................. $.17:11 i\lEt..1 OBJECTIO:-\S. I R1 vrrs1de, Cali!. !17.i!J Clt"l'k ,\l.alh apl1tude .. s:110 Adm. Sales I Eqllal Oppor. En1p!o~'t'r Exel'. 5f'('l'f'1ary .... 10 $i>ii0 • ~::ilary + Bonu11 Plan NO COLLEGE NECESSARY Cift.:DJT-c:Hr:c1..;r,R. I• Plush Offices Pt~'flsant outgo1111: girl w!io , 48ll E. 10th 1111 lr.•1ne1 Cfll 1 • fnnge Bt'nerir~ J 1k~ phone ;1•ork. illodl'rn I 642-1470 • Slart lmmefliatcly srnall Qfr of na1 1n 11al t'-0. Lit!' typing, ;o-;1arl $.'\60. 1 • JE\\'ELH V CA1tEr:n. Qr Call Sa!ly Hart, 5-KHiO~i:'i pnr tu n l t y..(Jpt>nfn~ for· AS A TRAINEE JN OU~ COASTA L AGENCY man1u:cr-1rauwe \1 /wnrld'~ EXECUTIVE SALt;S DF.· T.90 Hnrbor B! al Adam~ largcsl jcwt'lcr. X I n I PARTl\1ENT \'OU \\/ILL 1 DA y COOi\ _ malf' bencf11s. Apply 11! Zale's LEARN HOW TO RF.PR E-DA'i \\IAITRESS _ 21_3;; J c11·cler.;, 17 fashion l!!:land, SENT OUR COMPANY. Appl y in person 0 n I y NB. No phone calls p!eal'lt'. Y.1HI0 t WILL GJVE YOU Dclanry's Sea Shanty 630 TifE st'ART OF A SE-j L!do Park Dr. N.B. CURE, REWARDING F U-D E 1\1 O ~ ST-n' AT QRS'-: T\JRE. I TUf!J'lf'l'\\'lltP Plltlne & car rl<'£1"~s. No inv, i.:ood pay, o Jmmed. Limited Opening! 8.10-02S6. e P\ui;h Offices l ---=~====-• Full Fringe Beneht" ( DENTAL RECEPT. e Free Day/Nigh! Tra1nini.: l)(>!-.k only. Denial eX"f){'r. e Company Car Plan l necess. Some Sats. Salary ope1. fringe bene!it!I:. H.B. YOliR COl'o1PENSATION art'll.' !IAI\1-6PM, R-IS-3540._ f.1AY BE $20,000-$100.<XJO DENTAL Asst. Ex per . PER YEAR AS AN ASSOC· cha1N<ide. 2 Days per v.·k. !ATE OF COMMUN ITY leadinsc to future, full lime. LEADER, PROFESSIONAL 846-0697. SALESMAN. DAVID B. D_EN_T_AL_C_h_•_lr_A-,-,.-. ~E~,-,,.,-, LOdKINGLAND, FAMOUS prct'd. Ne11t'JlOM Bea c h , R.. J;.. BRO~R. 646-4801. ~LL NOW 547-4i771 --o=RA7P°"E"'R°"Y"--I HemmlPl' ~ immt'd, Ope.ning1' 1"'-lnees. Beach Dnlpery Serv. ~ \Y. 17!.h, C.M. AM for Mr. lngrem DRAPERY OPERATORS & tabler. CLASSIC DR.AP· ATTRACT. WAITRESS ERIES, 546-1'31. Expor. NO< under n. NO * 0-1-IVER~~5-*~ PllONE CALLS, Apply In ""°"· SOrf ' S!rlo!n, 5'30 No Exper11111ce w. eo..t HW)', N.B. Nec:-.vl ASST. Mar. Ttrrl.flc oppor. --· r to )Dln )'OUfll fut ~ Mu.~ haVe cleu Caitf. drfv. Jr . T t1b l o 11 c h a i n . In.If record. Not undb' 25.. ie'pp1-mu.t be ...... YELLOW CAB CO. R ea d 7 tor lut ad-186 E. 16th St., C.M. Vt nettM.nt. ~ • b 0 u I d t ---=e~.= ... -r= • .:;v;,..,.=-;,-&.--- 1\AW pttV\ou• • e 111111 I t baclcpuund wtobiectJw ol Chor•I Accomp.An • usumlnR full maM.~lp M("lj~ in hljh tm:IOi for ol upaomlnr n('w •tore&. 1'ar Sept. 1971. 7'1UJt hive top Or&ftfJ"' eo. ,pp1y rngr. 11hi /11y I liif\(f'f'lldtnc. Con- ctn·1, So. eoo..t P laza, ta.ct ~Jni, 'Rt"yflOlds for appt Colt&~M-"'·"'°~'-----_•_1,_re_..,_,._w~·-"'-~_1_1_n_._ Junior Accountant M I g h . ..choo\ diploma ~some colleie pr<'lt'rred I, knov.•IC'l:lfi:£ of 11.ccount ing or tt!ated area&, expe.ri- r nced In payrol! and ~in1e ke-ep!11g procedUJ'l"1. anJ methocll. Apply In pt.nion nnly 333.l HARBO R BLVD, COSTA MESA ATLANTIC RESEARCH Sys!t'ma Divl!ion ol the SuaquehanM Corp. F.qull opportunity en1ployer ~We/Female KEYPUNCll Opr. WN!kend Alte.moona Peraonnel Dep!. J1oag l106pllal, Ne11t'port ~.!.Ch. LOOKING for M'VCTlll tX · ?"rle.nerd, matu~ cleanin~ matrofll! for hlJth dl'mond eommerc.!11.I b 11 l I d I n JI , Newpor1 111't'a, rart llmto. f!VH. ~=-,,1Z2, DAJLY Pllhr for 11c1ionl call 6'42.$7& ~ &l\l'f'I CALL NOW Mr. 547-6771 A1k for Kent Ad•ms MASSEUSE Attract1 vr girls. Good houri. Xlnt S. Open 10 A.M. Call &12-0450 ,\I E D I CAL SBCRETARY. pa.rt time, H1g. Bch, Write Clnssiried Ad ~o. 164, Daily Pilo!, P.O. Box 1560, Ctlsta i\1 r~a . Ca. 92626. ~t F:N, "·omen .l children v.•anled for a S!l1ld It ~urf com111erciE1I. No ex p e r . necess. 1213) 46l .JJ59. t.llDOLE Rged Christian lady oo smoking or drinking lo live in & hel p care for SW'f!el elderly ladY. U hse"A'Orll:. Atrac .. priv home. Send ttf'a 1o: Classified Ad No. 183, Dnily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Cos ta Me11ay Ca. 92626. NEED 2 Girfs To Work Scrv. ~ta, T&lands. Sorrtf: bklqrng know'I. 19471 Beach Blvd, H.B. NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 ' Co.'. M... drawer dresser S150·. mar-SIO NS & SERVICE FEES. $Iii). Excellent condition. h!e end table $25; 7 drav.·er . desk $15. 673-7737 0 r • 637-4156 • 545-2486. e Start Immediately • Cadillac Car Plan _R_A_N_G_E--,.-.-. -w-.-,-.-.-w-ood-,1: ATLANTIC Tiie Screener• position reef s at least 6 mo'• of r;ic- per, including contact film, screen making &. screening. The Touch-Up opening ii; for R fully qualified journeyman wi no less than 2 Yl"!I exper. The HelpeNJ; posltion is a tralnee opening requiti ng de- pe-ndabillty &: willingoe55 to learn by doing. 1...ocated in the lrvinf Jn. dustrial Comple;ic Dana off- ers opportunity, good rnm- pensarion &. oomprehe.naive benelits. 1\pply In periwn -DANA Laboratories 2401 CAMPUS DR. ffiVINE, CALIF'. Nr. Orange Co. Airport EquaJ opportunity t'mployll'r PR 0 FE S SlONAL phone so.licllor • Dana Polftt, San Clemente, Capllltrano area. Work In your O'Nn home. Be. t deal In area. Phol'lf 835-1465 between 9:00 a.m. ud noon. R. E. LICENSEES GE7 \VITH THE HOT ONE. C.Q, .\lake IO i.ales lint month. List ol immediate bu~·m !urn. Floor lime op. tlonaJ. Pt. llme OK. Quin- tard Rlty. &1Z..2991-251h yr. R.E. Gal t,ri Legal Sec· y Exec. Sec'y Scc'y/Bkkpr A~lng Clerk Constr Sec'y rill' Supervisor Prorl, Co11tro! C'lrk i\Ted Ass1. OB /gyn Reccprioni5t G 0 .• it'l!l:llrance Cler k/Typist 1"'1 1650 1650 $550 '"" to t';Jl)O '"" $450 1450 to ~150 ... l400 • Plush Offices • Hawaiian Vaca'!ion AS AK ASSOCIATE OF DAVID LOOKINGLAND, INVFSI'~fENT ANALYST, P E. BROKER. WE'LL IMMEOlATELY GJVE YOU 1lt E CH ANCE TO OR.IVE &: O\VN A NEW 1971 CAD· ILL.AC & OUR COMPANY WILL PAY FOR tT. CALL NOW 547-6771 A•k for Mr. Little SALES We nttd people now 10 work a11 aa.les ft'PI & sales mgr.s in Orange Co. Must be neat, aggressive &. willing to v.-ork . .No exper necessary, we train. Own car. Apply in pt>rson, 1il32 Irvine Blvd, Suite I, Tustin, Ca.'-.,.--I SECTY. REAL ESTATE RESEARCH Systems Division Division Of The Susquehanna Corp, Equal Oppor. Employer NEAR new gorgeous "'ction- al cos! $ll00 .• sacrifi ce lor $450. plus hcrculon sofa. & L.C. &1j..0036 S:\1'ALL Danish d in. set. ·1 chrs S4i 23" Silvertone TV & ~tereo ~moo $50. Both xlnt cond. S.16-5902. DRAITE~verything goes. Great bargain~! H u r r y, 72312 \V. \\'Uson c :-.1. 5'18-3768. gr iddlr, S50. !2) Stereo speaker!, 10", $60. 675-6145. : PORT. Elec:, Organ. F Uii IZ ' v:/amp & carr:y!ng case. Call :>48-4218. NEED A RUBBER STAi'dP ? Call 536-3364 Lo w prices, fast service! Mualcal JnstrunMnts m : GRETCH guitar & Guild amp. $200 for bo1h, ;m ' each. 644-586-t TOW TRUCK DRIVER 2 Pc. 7 ~!z ft \Ving back couch PRACTICE PIANO Over 71. exp. pre!. 1\.C. Au!o. in cut ve lvet in ohve gret'n $75 * 548-85.12 1705 N. ~ Camino Real. & cranllt'rry print $10() or San Clemente. olft'r, 54&-1692. Office Furniture/ TYPIST-i\1on & Thurs, 12 to DINETTE set Lan hope Equip. 124 4. Internatiol\lll POB 2202. chcsl freezer' chai; crib lB,\t Electr ic Typewnter, Newport Beach. chest: m isc. ~38.' ' ft;,o, VI ETNA~ VETERAN BABY furniture, alt your __ Call 846-40'.H. One in a hletime oppor, to baby would need Like new J\1 0 DEL ~ Savin C.Opil'r start on mgmt career in a Stroll-o-c:hair set'. 495-S.17L $-100 or make oiler. local branch of one ol caun-\VA S H ER Id . 5'19-4186 tr~~s bi~ .companies. P!1an· house ho ld rye~,urn~~~~: Pianos/Organs n.,., tr11.1nu1g program ets 9GZ..6.172 for a l. you learn v.•hll c you earn. . , ~ PP _ F ine henerL ts pkg, Ca r. ex· S~~ A BED & cha.1r $50: penses pairl. Slart $~,JOO. d1nct!~ set, 4 chai rs S12; WOULD YOU BELIEVE ll6 !-,REE ORGAN LESSONS Coll Bill llarrV>r ri.10-ro.x; olher items. &12-52~7. Secre1:ariaJ position .in acti\'e ··~ as long as you like! No ttg- Realtor'i. oUice. Beau!ilul COASTAL AG .. ENCT ELEC hospital bed, con1 plcte istrallon. No obligation. Jusl new otfices in Nev.•port Cen-2790 Harbor 8\ a t ,,dam!!: SJ2j; twin bed, roinpJ ele Come. ~1ondays 7:30 Pill ter. Congenial •ta.tf o! ma-WAITR ESS, coffC"e sh o p . Sl;"i, 537-1189 COAST MUSIC ture personne-1. A lront of· Apply in p<>rson 1-4 pin. Garage Sale 811 642-2851 fice position requiring good Over 18 .• No phone calls SAL E: New console piano, telephone voice, SH &: 181\l please. Kona Lanes, 2699 EST1\TE sale-:\lar 11nsville 9 1~alnut $Y.J:i. Ste inway, Exec. abiliti es. Rea\ estate 1-larbor. C:\I. pc oak bd rm Sf>!, l""1n I Kawai, \Vt1rlit7.er, 1\llen experience not essential. but Waitress E xp. postf'r bf'ds, cur1·ed sec-UJ1vrey, Conn. From $j45.' helpful. Prefer young mar-\V!'st!'llrf Pcr.;onnel Agency, tional, d 1nt'1lr, f a n cy · RENTA LS SlO/i\tO. ricd, local resideni. "1-·or in-2W3 \\'~!cldf Drive. Call glass11are, mini b 1 k e , F IELDS PIA~O CO, tervie1v telephone f\lrs. Mr!. Schmidt 61:J-2i70. ost\lost-ope, 1est rquip. l\!nn. 18.13 Ne"·port Blvd. Duhl, Monday, ----~-~-l'ues &. \\'ed. li a7 \\', BaU Costa Mesa 714/&l:J-.32JJ W · 64 91 Xl n'I Open1n~ ;·or I'd egey N. Taylo< Co. 4-l 0 JIAIRDRESSERS _•_._No. 4. Anaheim. SALE: New Sprnet, v.·aJnut, SEC'Y EXEC. 67H232 or 675-3701 LARGE ~terl case desk; $:i95. Ste1n\\·ay, Ka v.· a i, This co. pres. is still 11fi'ki11g 78x38 Double p Pde s 1 a I, \Vurlitzr r, Conn, A JI e n, hi8 p r i v a I e confidential cr nrer dra"·r r, l dr drav.·er!> Lown>y. REfv'TALS, gec'y. Tremendous oppor. I Merr:halldi•• II"'-. J full ~uspcn~inn, lock. Al~ }·J~:LDS PlA~O CO. 'v/preslii:c Irvine a r e a . V lrathrr S"'tvel c h a i r UG.1 Ne11·port Blvd, firm. Top salary & hrne f1ts. L--------w/arn1s. :\1akr offer. 569 \V. Costa ,\fcsa 71,1/64~3250 Call Miss Laura, 5j7-6122, 19th SI, Ci'vl. 64:H l!W. 1-1.~.\l .\·IONO, S t t: in way , Abigail AbOOt P ersonne l Antiques 800 PORCH SALE ).a1naha. New & used Agency, 230 \V, \Varner, SCRAM LETS T;ihlc a11d <.:hairs $20. Misc. pianos of most n1ake1. Best Suite 211 , S.A. • Iienis 5l!J-IS90. 2:.ltll S. buys in So. Ctillf, at Schmidt S ret E Hickory, S;inra Ana Music Co., l907 N. Main, ec ary· xec. ..,1. Aoa. For "rt"!. ol l"'""e financial ANSWERS PATIO sale -Parts for 3!l()l c:=:::.:.::::::... ______ , •' ~& DON 'T sell }'our grand piano. NEWPORT institution Nicely decora ted cu in en&. nu tlres G78xl4. Let nie take care ol it fOT Ptrionnel Agency modem ofc in new bldg. Nausea -Pivot -iltange w/less than 100 mi. Al1-0 ~ou. No children Best of 133 n_. 0 N B Good 1ec·y akills, Great co. -Deafer. -ANTENNA n1isc other parts. Call c<1re-will be lak< .•• Ca I I ""' ... tr r ., ' • Pfl.YS ft!!'. To $55o. A husb&nd compl11.ilX'd lo \Vayne 96S-1374. 5'IO 2719 5 " '42.3870 Ot•-, F~ • ,._ J-~ h. .1 ~.. TV ·'I · · aflr pm. ,.., ''"' 0< .... """ 1s Wl c .euuut a u nncr f\10VING -1\olust s e 11 Recept. S.C'y $541 .67 C.a.l! Jean Brown, 540-0055 she had jus1 prepared_ She t>Veryihing, All dav Suri. CLOSING OUT Ulvely smilina: person who CoASrAL AGENCY said "Haroltt, 1t must be 1\1on. 610 i\1arguerlt~, CdM . Brand new Wurlitze r plllJlOll liku people 1 1ncr.-,1 it. 7790 Harbor Bl at Adams JIOmething wrong with our 673-9225 &. orgft rl!, Fanta1tlc ~ah. l<rttl d ie.nts In lovely orc1. S.c'y to $650 ANTENNA." SPECTACULAR Ga rage * 547--068l * Pleuan! variety duties. Call x.tn't promotional potential ANDREA'S Salr. Approldmaiely ID Stwlng M•chines 128 Ml1s r>.!elank.o, 5 5 7-6 12 2 , wfexpanding N.B. constr. ANTIQUES lamilies all at one location. Abigail Abbot Pel'50nnfl co. Ulv<"IY ne"' ofl's . Just Received Something lor eve r y one Age ncy, 2l) \V. Warner, Pleasant ro-v.-orkers. Call NEW SHIPMENT f'ven a boat & camper. 345 Suite 2U, S.A. J\Uss Laura, S 5 7 -61 2 2 AU&IRALIAN, ENGLTSll E. 191h SI, C.M. MZ-1269. Rec•ptionlat to $450 AbJ.&:all Abbol Pe.rsonne! &. FRENCTI PIECES GARAGE Sall? Sat, Sun, Plu&h new lndtlf' art'11. olcL Agency, 230 \V. \\'a.mer, 2380 Nev.'J)011 Bl., C.M. l\l on . Wash er-pwr net'd rt!«pl. lo bandle c!lll Suile 211• S.A. 645-4870 mower-misc ilem~924 Vic- &reclor I great cliellt•. S.cretary Daily 10-5 * Sun, noo_•_·_S tor ia, C.M. Typing. c.au Miu Roae•nnf, Ute-Shorthand. Cons. S550. • ANTJQUE • 1,M=1,-.'-.~11-.n-.... --.--~.=11 M7-6122, Abi1aU Ab b o I Call l..on'a..ine, Westclilf Per· SHOW.SALE Personnel Age ncy, 230 W. .-..nnet Arency, 2043 \Yest-,JUNE 24, ~. ~. 'l1 * AUCTION * SPECIAL ./ Cht'Ck, oil & clean sewing n1achlne 99c. 'A't"e only. 54;;..g238 Sporting Good1 '"' o,,. 130 \VILL trade large b t 1 t vibcrator OR 2 al most fM)w 40,000 mile 7-7!r-t~ tlreA & rims. FOR good camplni;: tent .et least 11-13. Call Allen, 537-&-t l. Wu!'fr, Suite. 2u; S.A. clllJ Drive. ~mo 80 Antique e;ichlbiton; Fine Fumlture RECEPTIONIST Sec'y Ac:ct"9 $450 Anaheim Convention .A N!nn &: AppUance HUNTING rifles A one .45 Pf'MIOnable tca.1 w/gd ~n1 Fantastk ally beautiful ofa; ~I \V. 1K~ellThll, acro1Fs' t~m AUcikmll }''r\day, 7:00 p.m. pistol. 645-4964 ore 1k11ta, ~tosUy cuatome.r at Orange Co. Airport. sncy 8'"'· urs, n. ~1. w· d • A 1· 8 TV R l IO P,"IS"· l"PM m y s uc ion arn 1 adio1 H IP'i, relatiol'l'!. Start S350 Highly desirable variety ..:.·.:.:;~",;.;'=;"""~~~:;,·=--I Call Mary Lt'e, ~-6055 po.~ilion. Top twnefits.. C111l ROLL TOP DESK 20r.>1,1 Ne.wport, CiVI 646-8686 ,,,s,.. .. _ .... _____ ....:•36:: COASTAL AGENCY fl.IW Connie, 55 7-61 2 2 , Oak-t>xcellent cond ition Sl50 Behind Tony'• Bldg l\la!'J 1971 ZENJTII & Adm!r11.J 7i90 Harbor Bl. al Adam• Abip ll Abbol Pr.n10n nt"I 48" long, 43" high 67S-1047, STEREO S85: bdrm set SSO: r.lose-ool aale. Lo"·e •l RECEPTIONIST A~ncy. 230 \\'. Warner, Don. 9eW mach $20: adding mach pricet:. 3 yr picture lube, 1 Groovy pl lor •mall ln~1t. 1 _s._11_,_21_1._s_._A_. ----AN'TIQUE Hand c r 11 n k SIO: inJ P 'i'll': CB t~ter; Yr part11 I: .wrvlce. Antenna ment compt.ny w/plu.th otf. S.C p b on o ~ r 11 p h , Re c o rd Slmp!IOl1 gencscope SUIO. in•tllJIN'.1 w/aH ronMle.s, Ice:'. ""''"'!"" desnhle. u1. retery aloragt', -coat $80; It'll ~. 642-9816. ABC color l'V, 9021 AU11111a. •.rt<... Young co. $650. Construction II B ~• .. ~ """'· _........ .... 111-.. INUr· 497-1084. HANO ca.rvcd custom 1ablea · · ;J\)(l"',),)Q. """"' • , co. c...n Loral.tit', W~lclitf ance, 3 wk \'&CR lion, Appl,y PeMIOnnel Agency. 2043 ANTIQUE 19th C e nt u r )' & chests to R ft, S99. 145 E. 1WO KlJi • model l 4 ~ltm or Tuel, JO to 6. "The Westdlft Drive. 645-mo telephone, w/bAt1ery box. 17th C.;\I. In reAr. &e •p e a k er 1 , m a t I' h In t CI t y" Shopping Centre, Perteet. Appraised Sl 7S, .e:ll "Chips.. &n:lb1y e11blnel J4j() total. F":a.nk ef America Tower SEX:RETARY. e:iiJ)trien~. SlOO. 497-1084. FURN, Whirlpool ""'-"· nn· 6U-57f.S. bide. 1 City Rlvd \Ve.•!, Sttlte lor 11ummer monOts. Sou th OAK Anl!ques: s " r v e r lique dah~ & glass 2-7 d"llY ~1-.,-TV--.,-. -1,.---s.Z-- 71 8-71h f1oor, Oran£t. L~.gun11 !Aw rirm. Salary w/mlITOr, S65 clw'~t $45, or by app't. 329 B. Callrlllo, Cuorl conrlillon Retept, -$400 fn(I. Call 499-427ll. dnoswr $35 & M 111 c . C.M. 61&-954~ * fi7~ 176.1 • PBX, typing. Call Loni.lne, SERV, ~la. llelp p/lime. :)4(}..j098. The faslest dniw In I.he \Vr,111/2 Pod.11;til<!: llfX'Bk~ \\'~!(liff p,~nnel Aaen('y, Arro, 19\h .l. Newporl, Co11t11 F'11~1nosulla'11.i-3u~1 a phl'lne ... 11 DAily P Uot Clu..•lfle<l !il"N'Q. C'llll mh!A hr1uii'. ~1 21'H3 \~'e-,tcl l fl Ori~?. 645!170 ..:.:M='="=·--_ r:n11 awa,y . 612-fi67ll Ail &12~;;';711 _ t>rirli ~I0-227!1 Af!l'r !I p m DAil Y PILOT :J3 1~·_ .... _. y~___,fi I I~ l.__•_ ..... _ ...... __.llill 1l:awbllbi If* I -....... 1§1 I ........... 1§11 _,__ 3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.00 Bo.ts/ M.rine Moblle -tJSMoWlo-HI Autos, Import.cl 970 Auten, Imported 1§11....._ ._ ...... _ ... ~1 §1 1 ~! ;;;;;; ...... ;;;;;; ...... ~l§l;;I 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported t7CI u BEAUT pupplPI. All l'Dl-Equip. '°' ors, htal!h)' I.: cut r.. I ::CC"C:°':'.'.,,_ _____ _ ·c n ll 1c ·Samoy r d nW.. OXIDIZED gla.a;s hulls, 641'>-81~9 rtslottd to t1ng. Juslt:r. \\'axes lhat n sist dtterient ' Adon1hll' k1 tlf!ls, 3 hlflck wa.shdown 10 r 6 n\O. +. ct 11grr s1 r1pe<t. I 1urlu1M-Sl.2.) to ;:2. per IL Xlnt -e~I! elr, . X.lti-:>8 19 refen>nce1. Call 54-1-26&3 for ~-~1 DARLING 11 Slanitr.e k11-appL tens, hi;hrkn, 7 wk:\ old. FHE~. C11.ll 54!>-3604 F.VINRUDE 25 hp. outboard $~:.. gas !ank SlO. Gt>rin. 1h hair Poioll'r. pu~ 96:.1-5003 brd IOV('S kids, pt train's- hunUng. 836-4493/~S-0813 LOVABLE. hea.11hy k!t lt>r1s. 9 wk~. 1111.rl shots. H.!lt'brkn. Xl nl Y•/children, ~14 BEAUT r yr old Jeni CJ!hP: needi; k11ls &. Incd )'rd. 54 j..il35J Af! 6. ----,=...,----~ Chlhuaua, s1nl hlk, 1 )T ma!t', ilhn!s. h~f' brkn, Ile. Older · cpt 53ti-9'llil I "s~1L"'v~E~R'""1~~,~.-•• -.-ooo-. ~,~, ,-. -,-,. I old Ir Apn('OI l'O<'k-a-pou, 4 mo old. 6-\1-9161 11/I 4 p.nl. Bo.ts, Power 906 Fl.AT bottom drag boat, 1 yr old, fresh tngint, 455 cu in 1427 Chevy), CUilom tor racing, injected t u e I e r . Enderly Injec1on flo\\'ed t'ng1ne by Joe R e ath . Hallcratt racing 1tttrln1t. CRsRle racing rear box, heavy duty ever r lde, litainle~s .steel ha.rdware, ~foon tank, {"1J.Sfom \\"OOCI dtck, gold medal Dake 11•/rompttition ora .. gt trim. Ry .11.ppt. $9000/o f t t r, &.6-60Ll, 9.1'.!. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil-'""-:'.w~E~P~A~Y~T=op=--\KARMANN GHIA INSTANT HOUSING CASH 1S Models on Display MOVE IN TODAY ! --featuring -- *VIKING * KEY WEST * KINGSTON * llOISE CASCADE Sintles -ExJNndos CAPITAL SALES HUNTINGTON SHORECUFfS Beach Blvd. (Hiway 39 btw n AUanta & Indianapolis, 1 mi. N. Pacific Coast Hwy.) 17141 536-BB16 ........ ---Mobil• Hom•• NOW OPEN CONTEMPO. 135 for UHd can 4 truclu, jutt call u, lot free eattmales. GROTH CHEVROLET Aak tor Sales Mansi;"' l8211 Beach Blvd. Hun!inzton Beach 147.6087 Kl !.ml ANNIVERSARY •50 PINTO 'V/AlfJ'O, Trans. SS day, Sc mile. THE ODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA. ~IESA 6"12-0010 WE PAY TOP DOll.AR FOR TOP USEb CARS ''7 KARMANN GHIA Ai.\i/F~1. S97'5. 675-798t LOTUS LOTUS AU1'HORIZED SALES &. SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Coast Hwy. Newpon Beach MERCEDES BENZ Oi ,,n9e-Coun•y'<, L.i rgest 5f'l<?ct•on Nf'w & U$Pd Me1(cdf's Bf'tiZ Jim Slemons Imps. W.1r11er & Main St. B 0 RD E ll Coll 1,.._G"'--;:;:;;;n Shep pup11ies, 8 wkJ;. U~d tu childrrn. S:I0--4836 aJt 6. LYMAN Classic 18' launch. Boats, Slips/Docks 910 LAGUNA HILLS 23301 RIDGE ROtrrE DR. lComer of Moulron Pkwy) LAGUNA HILLS U your car ls extra dean, Sant,, An.1 546·41 14 le* Us tint PRIVATE Party. 1960 7 wk old pupp1c~ pe.rt English Bull 546-7110 A1on1ir four englne 11·1U1 lo\\' BOAT slip a vail, J uly lit, for hours. All ne1v ch.ron1e 60'-70'. \\'ide dip. Bout has been beau11fully 673~ n1aint.ained and .s Io red I =--c---=----.,.=--"'°o-c= under n('w full cov e r . Boi11t1, Speed&. Ski 911 I[ L J _·_u"c~ink='~'-'"="~'-'°,."",,_'"'7ta"b"Jy_... 14' Ski boat, 75 Evinrude. Gd I hts and Supplies ~ $1,950. 644-ll40 to ttt. i;hapf', big whl L '.r, $550. J~iiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiij~~ BAY OR FISHING 847-6578, 846-57-t2. ~ BOAT !~~~~~~~~ Cats IS2 21' Lapstrakt Utility. Voh'O I ; 11.,,.1 . pO\vcr, S199:'i. Transportation 'LUFF"\" long h11lr male LIDO SHIPYARD ki tte11. Unusual Blsck & 900 Lido Park Dr. \Vhi1 e l\!arkin,c:s. Only $:,, Nf"ll•port Beach 1169 Dor!iet Lanr, C.~J. l96S SfAR1''UTE J7' I/O. BAUER BtnCK '.\l ercedes $650, Nev.· tires , 234 E. 17th St. R/H, extras. Loe at ed ~stige adult ~mn1unity sd· Costa Me:sa 54S.TI65 Superior & p J a ce n t i a . Jattnt, to Lei.sure. WMld. DIPORTS WANTED 5-18-3197. .BeautilUl 1urroundmgs, All 1 ,,~~~~-~=-~ Juxury appointmenl.t, Thc.r-Oranae CounUn 1965 l\1ercedes 200S. Xlnt ti l s xtr TOP $ BUYER ('()nd, many >:tras. Special 1peu c poo auna.s, e • B", ... ~TOYOTA ~-•bill '·~ tab!•• u..i... •.......,,.c.x ~u.~p<>nsion. Orig owner , _....., gym, . .....," ' 18881 a.ooh Blvd. m uch much more? It e. h 842-m9 CALL 830•3900 ac . P b. 847-85551----M-G~--- • ATIENTION River Ra.11! Autos, Imported 970 ---------- Delu.'le mobile horn.t located • 011 the Colorado river, 8 ml. ALFA ROMEO • THINK N. of Parker, 4 A/C units.I-----.-----"~G" ('Ompletely turn, sleeps 8 (in ALFA '64 Sp1der-Reblt tng, ~).Take OVtt payment.I; ~· to P &: cover, $1000. $2,000 for m y e q u i t y . 613--9894 Alk for Dave. ~-=n="'~· ~~~~1 AUSTIN HEALEY "fRIEDUNDER" MG MG AtmlORIZEO SALES Ir SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS SUNBEAM '61 SUNBEA.'tt: ALPIN'E New clutch, Low mllf'age AZ.f /F''.\1 $ll50 or ~st oUer, cau Dan -54.6--4478. '64 Alpine: convl-58,00J mi, new paint, o'drive. ~lich·X lire1. $485. 675-2:805 TRIUMPH '6.I TR4A IRS Am/Fm a;tetto radio ...ttt whJs, tonneau, rac irn w/ bf int , Blw; 6 It 9 Mon-Fri 673.9605. 1961 TR.-l 1400 ~7215 1966 Sunbeani Alpine, 3100 W. Cout Hwy. \Vire whttl1, good Newport Be11.ct. fl.fake: ofter. 54S-2070 conv. j -7,'.;;;:,;-;;;-.~'7::;,=,-·I ""d. VOLKSWAGEN '65 MGB: New tirea, needs l --~T~O=Y~O=T"A~--1.69 V\V Bug -G 0 i n i pain!, 13es1 oHer. ovtrseas, need to 11tll. Ex· 5@.Jl26atr7pm cellent cond j 1!on . MGB TOYOTA NEW ~71 Radio/beater, rear spe11.ker, HQ DOWN padded dash, fender gua.rd1, bumper guards, 11·ood stttr-1\IGB '61-Yf'llO\\', lo r.11. Xln t rond. A~l/f':'-1, lots of ~­ t.ras, ~take olr. 962-3521. PAYMOO Ing whet!, cocoa. maui. Ne...,· tune-up and brakes re.Urwd , PORSCHE '56 Porsche European needs body Yr"Or k. Good en,i. RecenUy overhauled. N'w heads. For sal' or trade, I $700 or bsL olr. Sl.1-0936. '67 Porsche ~ Spd . _Black. l\lany >:tras. Good oond. Asking $3.!)()f), Call betwn l2Pi\t & 5Pi\f, 963-9556. 1979 PORSCJ IE 914: Yellow, FM s!erro. low ml. perftcl rond. $3500/Bst o f l e r 675-1570. PORSC~IE factory lpecia.\Lst, 9ll-912--356 11ervice/repair. Personal att., E d g a r 536-5803. 1962 PORSCHE lfiOO N $61 .01 MONTH* 36 mos. Det. pay prict. sz.ist.36 or cuh p r i c e µ:x}l.55 lnci. Tu: Ir Lie A.P.R. ·1~.54~. Serial No. 134347, •on a ppr oved credit Bill Maxey Toyota 18881 BEAQI BL 847·8555 HUNTINGTON BEACH Anniversary Sale 1171 TOYOTA $1777 ..De.Mlew W TOYOTA 1966 Harbor, C.i\I, 646-9303 coupe, clean. r..1us1 seU im-1969 Toyota Corona, 4 dr, 4 med. Best offer. 615·1570. Sl>d. rkh, xln't oond. '1050. 1960 CLASSIC P o ts ch e 645-3768 . Call 548-6113 afttr 6 p.m. '69 VW WestWia camper, AM/Jo'M-extra.etor, Ptrtect cond, $2700. 968-5495 . * • '69 VW Bus, "1nl cond., $2200. Call 5f6-~ oc >K>-98'4 '69 VW Sundial camper, ex- cel cond. $~. Call aft ' pm, 549--014:.l e '64 VW delux l:ku, new engint, lr&flll, &: litt8. $ll00. * 962-3987 * '67 VW SUNROOF Rtblt eng. Low miles, new brakes ruoo. 962-7606 '62 V\V Sunrool AM-FM '6! Eng. Fanl.Utle oond. ;625 or oU,r. Call 675-7821. ~· '69 We-slphlllla Camper. Nicest in Town! All .suvic' rtcords. fi7>00Jo. '67 V\V, reblt e na:.. new brakes .&: ball. Go o d cond. $850. 646-l3lJ. . SIAMESE SEALPOINT 120 1\lercury w/pv.T trim. Female kinens, $15. 54ll-Zi38 8('(1Ut yellow • gold. Like. SEAL.POINT Slamt'se s1,_ N~11•. Only 40 hni: en en.a. , wks, fem11lP. L1~·t'ly & house Trlr & Coast Guard equip. trained. 833·2)20. 536-6313. b09• IB' sourncoAST utility - lnlert'tptor eng. SIS radio. Bait 1ank, pump$, Good ~'Orlll. S!l.iO. 21'.l/6fi6.....lfl.ll!. C•mpert, S•l•/Rent 920 FOR sale lift new '69 camptr w/boot .l heavy du- t.y suspension abocks. $850. 8' cab over, ~19 alt 5. e Dai.un Camper Shells • Fbrils, a1um windows, Sum· mer saJe $175 & up. 530-7310. 2 BR 1'.lobillo Home. $60. rent. UJM eEACH !HWY. :rtJ SJS-4296 eves. All day Sat. Is. '66 SPRITE, Sharp! New 89J.7566 e 537-6824 Sun. paint & clutch. Pirell1s. i= 'lG b .1 & Runs d. $795. 644-0350/ """ ' . re u1 t eng trnM. 940 rM-'l3iN,g '.\lust ~ell !or summer tun! roadster convert. Xlnl ronc1.1 •.~69cc...C~O~R~O"N"A~. -,~"'~.-.u~c7k 673-~7 ,hilt, A-1 mint. $1,250 or '&I Porsche SC.-Immaculate mske ofter. 673-2250. car Inside &. out. Extn..5, 548-6677 or 847-53&5. TRIUMPH VW 1969 WtstpMJl11. Camper. 1 New I'lld!aJ tiru. Pvt put)'. Call 644-4792. Motor Homes $f~'i(). 5-l&-80.13. e 19&1 PORSCHE "C" Xln1 rond. 1 ovoner. nra mrm.n>H '69 vw. 21,000 rnlltS. Excellent condition! GREAT Danes Al<.C. fen1a!e fa11 n pup~. Chan1p .stock, Sbo1v qual ity. ; 962-4631. '67 Dorl&e Camper Special Pop Top. Like nl'IV cond. $7100 or ofr. &12-6M6. CONDOR '62 AUSTIN HEALEY SPRITE RUNS GOOD $3!'lO 64:1-1313 '67 :\!GB rdstr. x'ln1 cond. Call 6i.'l-671 ! VB STAG NOW ON DISPLAY Come In tor a test drive! FRITZ WARREN'S $1485 * 54&-~158 ' Dachshund Puppies J !cmalr. 1 1na!e $2:. * 548-586:! '61 An1 ph1 Car-Co1nbo boat & c11r_ '71 C. !\f. E . sticker. 'ii aurn plate!, Make ofr. !213J Thf' yacht that'~ llO't a boa!. BILL COR\VIN FORD aJ; x'tr11.s lo mi's after 5 pin, ~().3393 1970 PORSOiE 914 :\1111; 11•hl.~. $3500 6·12-98:19 eves 1165 VW BUG $6.10 1 • 642-9859 * 3:i&-3321. CAB-OVER Camper, side en- tr. Long bed, Chevy. i1000. 673-1420 Orange County'll Condor Di1· '61 AUSTIN Hea1ty 3000 Fo:.: RESULTS .)"OU can Oe- tributor, 230 S, Main St., X'lnt cond. Top &: Tonneau. Orange. Close to ftU.tt ma-New titts It ' batt. Jm, pend on, Call the: Super-SUNBEAM SPORT CAR CENTER 710 E . ht St .. S.A. 547-0764 Open dally 9-9: closed Sunday '61 VW BLUE $1300 Pvt Pty: 8-t2-7155 1161 VW BUG GOLDEN rtetriCVPl'S, AKC Chan1p line. $125 542--S:l77 (IERt'llA.,"l Shepl1crd , : fen1ale puppie.~. * 7'lz...4726 * AKC '64 TROJAN 30', twin 8.CJ"eW, L!kf' ne1\', fully equipped. .S.%00. Pvt pty 846-9060 \\'ANTED l3' BOSTON \VHALER. \\'/40 hp motor. 548-7470. 20' SKIP JACK. xJnt rond l.oadelf. Call Ted P.ogers, 6i3-5252. Cycles, Bikes, Scooters jc)r treewayi, 639-1!5() Or 963-1228. 8 a I • 1 m a n. Da.lly Pilot KI 7..out. IMW Cla&slfied 642-5678 - --------IT •:;:•a::ll:,::o:;:ra::,•.:,U:,:t::_lll;ty!.....-14::'..7 [ """";lut;;;;;;;tt;.:<;:;;ui:;;;:;;-"\ "°"' ad & chMie Ill TH• -Automotive ExceUence 6' Utility Trailer & HONDA $30 Good "''"'· 67S-"'19 Autos, New placo 980 'll6 TIGER. 289, 4 V, hrd tp, posi, ne~· brks, tires & bait. 2 tops, 557--8886: 540-8376. '59 TR-3 $27S 644-1692 Good IMJ)e, ntOO. 646-54()5 , '66 VW SQBCK $!IS ! For bes! result~! 64l-5ii78 DAil.Y P IWr fot' action! * 675-5250 * Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 OBEDIEr\CE clas.~ 10 s1art \\'t'd., June ?.0th, i 30 p.n1. OJM'n 10 al! dogs ()\'er 5 n1o's old. Cla.~Sf'S h!'lrl 111 !he N.B. Irv\nC' arr.i. ~6-4921<;. • Auto Service, Parts M9 * * 21' CHRIS CRAFT w/!anrlem trailer. $1500. Call {TI41 82S--8138 ~'FRIBMJtlBr 25% DISCOUNT en a.II . ao1omo1.v• ....... ~. '""'"' ROY CARVER, Inc. -9MCll flMT, .., 537-6824 • 8!J3.7S66 ad for d iscount. Sp«:ia1 2925 Harbor Blvd. !;{'rvlCH for t'lectric cars. Colla Mesll 546-4444 ?.I I N f AT U R E Sthnauv•rs pups. FPmalcs SRJ. AKC rt"Jt. 5 1vks. 2 11dul1 femalt' $9."1. Adull male ~05. 6-12-1 '26!1. 13' \\'haltr v•/40 hp Johnson, trailer k optioru;. Jn F ine !\haJll''. S1295. 673-8261. CAPRI NEW 20X52 2 BR, 2 ba, ~ID Automollve, 784 Newton, Rrady to move in. l l\.9W. Costa l\.ltsa, 642-3625. Ex- Term1. Grtenleaf Puk, pirea 6/25JTI . 1----------·I 19' 5"11flite 120 Mere. x!nt cond \\'/trlr. $3500. 110, 1150 \\'hlttitr, C.~f. 548-1698 ----------1'71 Capri 2000 t1uto, an1/tm, a!l 5pm. AlJTO parl.g '56 Chev front lo mi'1, Pri\'l!ite p&rty. t>nd '56 Chev doorg 4 door 837-9696. AVGHAN Hounds, AKC. 10 "k11. fl.tales 1an .,~1/blk 111ask. Ch 'stoc k, !'hols. 838--3138. Gf.R;\TAN Shorthair Pups - AKC ct111n1p ~irf'd_ Firld or 11hn11·. Jlurry /or p 1 ck. 962-31121. ~54 '70 KA\VASAl\I 238 Fae. \\"J\NTl'~D: trailer tor 2o tt. 1ory -buUt r a ce bi kt. 3,000 Jb, bo '.. 1"ickel-plaled frame. 2.iOcc • fH&-4638 * w/e>:tengi.,.e enr modilka- tlon. Jmmac. Only $400 ~ Rent/Ch•rt'r 908 tBIUf' book $700) 536-3410. Cal 25 + Catlin• 27 1\lUSf ascrlfice ! '69 1-Ionda Guarantee the Jov.·est ratea in 90 Scrambltr . '67 Honda 00 LO V .A B L E f E' n1 a I,. So, C&lit "Ca tHna cruia. 1'rail, "68 Bultaoo .2 0 0 \\'f'1marnn('r S:i. To good I ing club".' Location Ntwport Sherpa. '68 Bronco 50cc horn!'. 20.~1 J\le!ll Dr. S. A. }!arbor. 714/968-4840 for info. m lni bike. 546-3189. lights. 557-9l19. BL u E \VAT ER YAOIT I ~.10~H~O~N~O~,~,~L~,~.,~.~,~,c~,-.m-. i\KC fernale Se!IPr. 1'7 ~r CllARTERS Rarnt'11 l"lutch, v.Terked but desirP~ finl' hon1e 1\"/rhldrn. CruiM? or fish boals to 40' repairable. 1111.ke o f I er. 213/599-6J'24 J1n1. day/11Pek rrs/call &16-9001 847-1~. l .~,,~~H~o-oo7a-C°"'1.~35Do-. -Al.,.,-.,,.,.,-c ne\\·, 250 ml. ~-lust uU im- med. C:Ost $792, Asking $59:>. J nh11 7 14/63~14~1 days. B,\SS.F.T, hf-aut1ful I ~r old lt>n111.lf', Al\C. \'ery \o\l'able S?.O. 5-l:i...-09311. GER'.\IAN Shepherd 9 \\'ks old. pup5 by ch. Broon"J; lla.mm11 CD. ~7-1484. ~=,.--SCH~ AU Z ER PUPS Groornir1g. s!ud fie r \" 1 c e . Tl'rms. !!4&--083!1. TO\' s1h·rr poodl~,-,-,-,---,~,C''° 10.v fh1hual11111. Rt as . &!2-4!1\~ or !i~-1-3~~:, Hor1e1 856 1-~~~~~~-~ • * * .. sr r R.ITEll i::r.lt.ling !I )T old sad(llrhrl'd PRlom ln o Jur11prr. F.ngll fth I \VM"tPrn "Dapper Dan". S47:.. 64G--R523. e LGE CORRAi. FOR RENT -$20 mo. Back Bay 11.rt'a. 54;,...5911 eve11. Livestock ... u ... _.....,.... 851 I~ e '69 BERTRA~l 2;.· fl.Ying hridgr, 1r1m tab1. 2 radios. 150 hrs. &12-5607. Boats, Sail '69 BSA 6.iOct: Lightning ~1 A L I B U o u l r l g It' e r Touring moclel-A6Jt.. l flil v./traJlPr. G<>ot-.1 sails. $450 owner. lo ml, xlnt cond. or best orter. See at $1000. Ph: £46..&377 slt 5. 'Theodore Robi n., Fon1, ~ Harlx!r Blvd. Co~ta !i!e5a, '69 V\V, :.l-L\.f, perfect cond. t>42--0lll0. All extrRS & I t r" i c' records. Dr. Scott ~ r O!l SALE -I nu:1n1t Stall or 495-4343. ,\Idler sa••bl, I rs r i ng '70 TR.I UNCPH Daytona ~ Srhock saboT. ~toving·must cc, 1700 mlles, Xlnt oond. srll! $l2j each. 67~7ll9. S950. 494-1224 644-5il7. 0 . H NOA 305 dirt b1kt, '89 2.'i" SLOOP J957 Englitt.h f"ng. Costume pipes~ 1esl Sleeps~ SS RDF -$6,000 or Xlnt oond. S.JOO_ 968-l228. tr11.rle lor truck k Camper 1971 Yamaha 360 Nt~·. only ti7;,...5332 bet 5 Pi'f. 300 nii, lii U1t edl. CaJJ * KITE No. 359. XLNT 6T;i.-i21J. CONDITION. 1 1<A~.-W~A~SAK~~,-.,~,---A~l~moo-l $6:25. 673-4818 Brand new. Low1 CATA:.IARAN 13' sailboar. ~!iltage. llJS-5201 Cal C&I \\'/trlr. Xlnt cond. 1 -,-,,-w~G~iri-.,-Scb-..,~.-M-b-U..-. SIOOJ/olfer 847-7354. 2fi". * S50 COL. 22, like ne\\". St!I or 'ft 54S-78S7 • ltadt. LosdP.d. ()y,'Tlf'r Slip '66 NORTON 750 Chopper &W-7159/642-~16. Complet,Jy !"#built General 900 3 GlAu sloop1; Cal 34, S8SO !Jr be11 offer. CAPTAIN Ericson 35, Lion 35. 67~27-t9 Unlimited llce:r.se -an>' jlM>51 * Avco Birr, 675-8990 * 191 1. J1onda. CB 750. 2,00J l•· E"l"'p-·-Xl·t ro·• mllt1. 8 inch lorkl, -••· Ions. 30 Ytars experience ·• "' ,.,,.,-. " nu, ,.- 11111 Ai powt'r, Proft'Ssiona l Dacron Balls, 3 hp 0/8 i. pull backs. $1595. 714- 'J)Orl fi~hini; guide; i\-!air.a.n trlr. $700. 837-3679. IHS-2237. & Cen~ral Ameriea & P~c1!-VENTURE. us(!(!, fully eqpt 1969 HARLEY DavlM>n -74 ir Const v.·a1er1 • ln~truc· !or racing, Jots of xtns. Show Chopper. MU 1 t lion In l)rnlt handllng, M:ll· $197!J. 968-9658. M.cMflce. Mu11t &ff to ap. m1n11hlp, DR It cele~isl prtelale. 635-8116. mvigalion, P ICK UP l KITE Sll W/ROAD TR.LR. e '70 125 MX • 21." tront DE'IVERV ANYW11E'RE: XL.NT COND. S550 " 67 .. 146 * whttl, ftltron. $400. Xlnt C•plain & wife 1v11\lshl' !or * .,.... rond. 9Jl Poppy, CdM .• rxtended cn.1isin11:. Exlf'n· KITE Ir TRAILER llive admlnit1rati\.·e experi· Excellent conditkm. SCH\VINN 3 &pd m&n1, Id rrict, &tfi-2977 '":ii. SH-1008 cond $35.: Girls SchwlM .no 644-0-101 LY~tAN Cla111ic 18' launch. KITE J';o. 625, Tl('ll' m••I .l. Atom ic:: four rnsi;int \.\'l1h low n.idder, 2 sails. \.ood racing '64 GREJ:."VES 250 tt, brand hourt. All nrw chromt'. T't'~Nt ~. 673-0731. new t ng, new challl. XI.Ill Boal has hren ~1111tltully 1 ,~U~RO;,.,.RA=-21=· ~,.~,-,-"'°""~. =~ot~.~, I =co=""~·~""=-·-"~"""--,.,,.7·....,,..,­ malnt.a lnffi 111\!f 110!""fl undrr 4, xttu Nwpt 5!.ip $1BOO/oC· BONANZA, minl bl~ dln!M nf"W full C(IV!r. "Drink• !er n -t : -t94-2971 eng. xhrt cond. m/M'll by el1ht comfortabJ.y." $1,950. Boats, Slips/Docks '10 Tues. 644-0751. 644-1140 to aet:. GrRL."S Stinara1 bike, aood i' Dinghy & 31i HP motor, Jiiii tank, e1n, lift ~h\lJl\I.. 11 license. r.ood cond. SIOOll)•t nfr. ~.';-59711. · 9011, Mo t or & Trailer s.~ • 642-!"6.~2 g;-yl BF:nG LA ~" rowbost. l,ikf' 111'\\, everylhlng 1n- rl111Jf'1I. 11 50 fi12-Mr.O Boal Slip fnr nnl, condlticn. m. 1'146-7817. 1!de tie up to 30', tall 61>1145 Moblle Hom•s '3S SLIP SPACE AVAIL ADULT PARK • C.M. 'el 2S'-30' SAILBOATS LAnrtr, ~~2. 2 br, 2 ha, * 67:\-Mli 1r lln!Nl ''dndo.,..11, \\'fr afnr, PRtVATE' bo11il 11ip ava llah!t two 5x7 stOf•l e thed•. feric- J uly 1s1. Si(!t> l!t up, 2'1'-30' trl ~·rt, lfll18C p &CS-0783 1i7:...A·11~ C,.11 &4l-.567R A Sa,,.! --- ' ,1·agcn two s tra.tght v:lf'~l---0=-=-T~S"U=-,---·I pair of 10 inch fl.1 ickey A N Thomson tift's 54~1690 :.1201 ----------1 S. Hickory, S.ota A"•· DOT DATSUN IMO v..s ttat~ad t>ngine OPEN DAILY parts. Starter SlO. Gt'flt>ra-AND tcr $10. alum. hell.ch $15. !or SUNDAYS 11135 Beach Blvd, pair. \Viii trade tor 40 r·orn PU, body part:3. 836-5672 HW!ti~on Beach 4-sale? ! 1971 VW Super Bug,1~-""~~==~"'-"°""'-·----I en1int 1600 cc. Dual portt d '68 DATSUN t dr. a uto, h'ads. Under 1000 ml'a. R&.Jf, low nil!ts, xlnt cond. S4.50. Tom~ 549-3558 or art 7 $1300. 633-9110 or 540-277i pm: 5-IS-1610. t1·es. \V MTED (IJ ?1-funcie trans. \\·/H11ksgt'. Call M8-4648 VW 40 HP ENGINE - 1970 Da!JUn pic:k·U J'I Xlnt rond. l.s.i miles, ~8-T.-f.!2 DATSU~ 240Z, gold, stick, must u !L 2m milts. ~=~====~~~ 536-7.143. ; §] ·70 Dat.o;un 2402. Yt"ll011', 111' w.•W. 'f I ~ slick, air, m11gs. 10.00J mi. • . S200 undrr Flook . 64-1-\'iO!i. '70 DATSU:-1 \\"itn. auto. Antlques/Cl•sslc1 'S3 Am/fm. i\1akl' f)lr. Pv! ----------1 pty: !'14.4 5.12 or &1&-M•10. 1940 F'onl P .U. V-8 nathead, good •ngine. Needs ~"Ork. FERRARI 1.1,QQ, or ~ otl•r. 836-5672. Trucks 962 RECREATION CENTER ROY CARVER, Inc:. 2925 Harbor Blvd. Cotta lt1tlll 546-4444 '6j ford. -t ,.,.hl dr, winch, FERRARI AuntORIZED SALES & SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS 1100 W. Cout HW)'. Newport Beach FIAT 1011' Travel Quttn. manyl----------~;:'.'~~";:; (iiiiitu '68 Cht\'Y M window van Pu.ti bu!ton radio, hf:atl°'r, flt'\\' 6 plys. Xlnt concl. $1600. 497-1084 ~ ... "FRIEDLANDER" '68 CHEVY LONG V/tN Fae 11710 llACH llYD. VS, Muncie 4 1pd, paneled, IHwy. Jtl wldt eva.11, vent wlndow1.1 __ .,_~_7~"'1~··=~"~'-""-"--t 11715 or "'' .. .,,_,.... JAGUAR 1959 CHEVY t,w Ten P.U. l--=,..,==c=----w/ca~ ' pm '68 JAGUAR '$ Q)evy Van, hvy dty l own.er, XKE 2+2, auto, pwr trantp. Mechanlce.lly Jood stra'. Factor.y Air Cond, Dlr, cond. S350. 549-4.186. Take ama.11 dOwn or wUI fin- •;;.,, FORD 1().wheei DU~1P ance Pvt Pty., Call S40-J100 1:n1ck. S1DOO CC' best otter. or 494-i:iO& Call J<ton &tt JO 817-lTJJ. llMO Ford P.U. V-8 flathead, p:d •ncine. Neofd.s Vi"Ork. $300. or bNt olltt, 136-5672.. Au!M Wanted Ml ANNIVERSARY •IO AUTOS WANTED Top doUa.r tor clean used ~n. Set Andy Brown. THEODORE ROllNS FORD 2)fiO llARBOR BLVD. cru::TA \f r~c-., ~,~./\I.Ir am. JENSEN JENSEN Th• futeat draw Ill the Wel!I -. ll 011\11 Pilot Cla 5~lfiNI ,\11 Iii~-~ :~ __ ,,_,.....,,_ ~'""''"'· '""" '"'"· !i <;IOIT ••n-..oo~,r-w-. --H ••'"'~'",i l...i(lU. lH J LUXURY-BUICK 1111. M.I. lirrmv •• tCN>lfDI. ""'1oo11 _. .... r1...,.u,_. "'"' '69 Chevrolet '69 COUGAR 3{4 TOH PICI UP c-'-·-•-1---... IACIO" '" tOllOITJOIHNI;, • --•-1< Tt .. ,..1 .. -.. ,_ \""""' ..... IHI, ,_Ct on All CCNlr(-Cl'fZl lfl --------------- TlMPlST l'llli ....... h~ ............ 11. ,, .. , .. 1,, ....... ' ~ •• , .. {YWU"ICW!' '63 FORD fAllLAHl STATION WAGON .... _, ___ , -· tul1W) "'°" !« .... C• ... $588 DOW•1 1100 1o .. __ __, ... ,,.... ... .. _ _,,...,.... .......... -... .. ................. ---.,... .... ... ~Wo#f M-Tfllll -,.ta. II •M<li ... ,7 • -....-~ ....... ~·-' ,,,, _____ ...,.... ~.... '"'"'••• 11111.1•. ~ -~, ................. 4-(l'«;l•l TI r&811~ Mil 15.M1' IMMEDIATE DELIVERY S..l1Jl71W 4000-., ......,...,.---., ... .... )_..._ ......... ,_., .U-.(D:MU(1'7•1'l A ... N,• $598 $588 '67 MALIBU '69 CAPRICE COUPI """''""'•·,..__,,., """'_, ___ ~ -,_...,. .,...,.. loitl. ... c--..--.. --fllJj fll) v;,,yi 1..r.1 .. .,i;..11..,t -· ... $1588 $2188 '66 Mustang '65 Rambler '69FIREBIR '68 Chrysler '67 BUICK STATION WAGON •••->< r,..,._,._ IHMI I -lft'I·•~ '-i.-4. l.ACTtlll' .. ~ ..... _ . ....,.._ ..... ...,.,.. lc-n~Jn N•w,ttrt C•1to111 ~--""-· l .. ffo '"•"'1•11 ·-l(llJG«I~ Doo!1 ...... _ ... l( SAii( ------,..,,. -.-. ,...., .... ~-,-~ $2388 •2019 •1797 DUI -- " • ' • . ' l • I l 1 • • i ! . • • • ~ I I i' .. DAILY PILOT . -...... 21,1'71 --. l§f l ..... ..: .. --- -··-~-····· " -"THE.SMALL CAR -STANDARD OFQVALITY:THRQUGHOUTTH~ WORLD" .BELOW· I$ TME CQMPA'IUSbN CHART ••• Let Coste Me,.. Datsun s~ow ·YI"' tRo 2-door or -4-door Oolsun · 510. It's pecked fuU ~­ emos ••.• N,L A1 NO EXTRA COST. FeelurM such as tiriled cjless, white ·weUs,:reelinin9 bucket sHls, full eerpelin9, flow-through fresh air system, disc biakos and fully independent roar: suspen•ion and en OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE • , • ALL AS STANDARD EQUIPMENT.-Come in •nd ~est drive now, while seJ.ction i1 good. •: • .:=.~~=T:N .. !'L~=~~g:s 1971 Datsun 510 Sedan· Comparison Chart ' . ... Wl'l••i. Engln• B••• l•ngtb Wld .. Make Cu. II\. HP. '"· '"· '"· GllflUN PL 11t :t·OOOI 11.S H 15.3 111.t t 1.c ·-.... ~ .. .• 112.J. ~1A COLT 4-000R 17.5 100 15.3' 180.I 11.f FIAT 124 SPECIAL .... 1• 15.3 151.1 .. .• .. . GREMLIN :111.0 121 96.0 111.3. 70.8 . OPEL KADETT ~O. 31 :iS.f · .. 15.1 111.1 11.t . PINTO 97.1 7' 94.0 113.0 1$.4 :IOYOTA CORONA 4-000R 113.4 108 95.7 1U.I II.I . ·VfGA SEDAN 140.0 .. 1~.o 161.7 15.4 VWSEDAN ... 1 .. .... 151.1 11.0 SUPERVW H .1 .. 15.3 110.1 17.4 VW TYPE 3 ... 1 .. .... 170.1 63.2 An i~(OI,..._ bo-1•• .. d ,..,,..!/••Iii!>• <II prinlong. __ ,_ oi..olu!o at<.uracv cannot o. gu.,•-·...., •II SCK>h<.•U..... •••..,~lo .~.,:,g. ..,,1......nf'IQl•r.a e I MILE SOUTH °' THE SAN DIEGO FREEWAY COi.ND: 0, HARBOit & - PCNDIROSA . Heigh ·~ 11.t II.I 83.1 '3.1 51 .1 OU .... !5.1 51 .4 59.1 51.1 ..,,, I 540-6410 Aee•I. I Wl'ehl· .... U>o. Lboil<P. .... .... 2t.S 13,5 "JOit 21.7 14.0 2120 21.1 1U 1H2 ·2s.1 18.3 213! ··20.5 15.3 . 1717 . 30.1 11.1 2013 "25.$ 18.5 2170 20.1 13.5 2100 24.3 14.5 1IOI 341.1 11.1 1111 33.0 11.3 2220 34.2 .... Attention D•tsun Owners 11 Ye11r O.hlM. 1a tr..._ 11 Mrftl 11111r. If (OSll M_. Dl!Hlll. (Try "" •Olll -) I , .... Overh~•d lftd; Rei1r .... c ... SUspenalon .., .... l:~l_n• vu V!S V£S YES YES YES . NO YES YES NO YES NO NO NO NO NO NO HO NO NO NO NO YES YES NO YES YES YES NO NO YES NO NO YES VH No . . 'f '""' ['IO'-'°'""' W~nl D .... •Rut En;·~~ 1ow"'9 ....... Plow-Tl'lru Tum"'91 freilft °""" .,, F< vu 31.4 '<S )1,4 vu .... NO 31.1 NO 3U NO .... vu 31.5 ... 31.5 VE~ .... YH .... vu i1.a NO au • • • • • • • • . • • · . l§J I ---J§ll Auta1 IDr S.le !§] 970 Autos, lmport.o 970 iiiiiiiiiiiiiio • Winner of the treacherous ast African Safari. ALL THIS AT NO . EXTRA COST , Reclinin9 b11clc•t •••ts Flv •-main-b•i1ring 96 HP ovarltaa~ cam anli!ine Up to 2S mila1 par 9allon 0-60 in 14 1aconcl1 Milly independent r••r 1u1pan1ion Frcnt disc br•lca1 31.4 foot turning circN Stand"i-d all-1ynchrema1h 4-•p•a.d. tran1mi11ion loptiotial automatic. i1vi1iltble l Tinte~ 9li1ss, whitew•lls, flow.throuth fresh i1 ir. system. .Al/ •f M-4xtri1 cost. $ Wt art Introducing a new hi51her trad ... ln allowance during our big expansion pro- ' gram • DATSUN SlO 2-DOOR + T•11 I l ie. I 0 & H e SERVICE e AND WE MEAN SERVICE! To Your Complete Satisfaction At All Times! ONI 0, THI MOST +tec1 & rKomme11ded Dahu11 MrYICe .._,,._ I• S...... C..ff. Wlrtl 111ve/Wlect lleet1M4 factery trained r.ch11lclOM, •'THI 'INIST Of 2401 MAINTENANCE" ANT fUnTIONI AIOUJ SllYICI CALL THIS SEll:YICE HOT LINI 540.0213 I A.M. TO I P.M. ONLY A COMPLETE WELl.. STOCKED PARTS DEPT. 11-. lrnpomd 970 .""""' lmpor19d .,i ., . .,Ufo!; l~rt~ 970 Autoo, UHd ~YOLKS AGEN voucswAiEN r vdLKSWAGEN ,,. Aut.o, UIOd 9'0 Autot, UHCI --D-0-DG_E__ FORD 990 Autos, Used MERCURY 990 j Autos, Used _!!! ~ iii VW CAMP Mobile, now '69 YW BUG . ''""' ..... 1271111. r ...... ,., wlmar wheels., dlz. (YXU- -. 797) $.1396 1Ul1 price. Call • 494-7744. ' CADILLAC CHEVROLET '65 vw l"""' ........ "b""' La'll•st S<rloctl.,. "v"A"'c"'A"T"'1o"'N:-:-:s"P"E"c"1"'A""L-l ·iM!i:ooooDG~E'1n.rt;;;;-H;;"";;;;;,:-:. • --::1"9s"t""'G"'A.,.L"'A""x"1"'E--'"'·°'69~M"o"'N"'T'°E:-G::-o::-:-M..,X~ April 1st. Holley 2 bbl. OF. LUXURIOUS '69Chevrolt!tSport Vu.Tur· r· ~o~ tire•; :4°·<'.:Uitin., 4 dr, P /1tttring, P /brake1, WAGON Porsche dial. & roil, ma;: 'CADIWCS bu hydromatic, V3, radio, 2 C~~-~oo';in~ · ~iny · op. Air coDd. Rad io, heater. Talk About .. vacation •pec- wh hei!ls, custom pllf!~ ex-Sota~. etc. "' Dod -tt p.m. BQdy & interior in good con· la.I , this is ii. F'ihished in au11t & loll ot extru. Se8t In Orai,ge County $2J9S ·.,. re-Dart $450 or otht. dition. $300 or best oUer. white with red int. E-::iulp. offer or trade for VW BUI. f'63 thru 1910's Call ~7369, Ext.. 11 ,ab. '549.0214 im::ludes .&ir, radio, power 548-0380 MacH -..... sPM call ul-!m ' . • b ' d VW dbl cab pickup. New '64 VW OeluXe Bus. Good · ibeii OWATU '66 Ford Econoline Supervan, ! ttnng ra cs, wsw an • :1600 engine, llOit camp~ engine, good body, ne.\\'. '65 VW ~ &39·f600 OR SlJ.o6GI '65 Dodie canv .• bl1ck, air 3 spd, 6 cyl, panelled. $950. itll priced to sell fast ;,t pa•-t •"" 2007 ti~s 50 000 mi 11000 caah cond., ndi<l, one owner. 11091~ w. "·'boa, ".B. only $2295. Lie. ZVC-346. ... · ...,,-· 6n-4o72 ' · _ '_ Diamond button&. tuck Inter. ~~ Corner lit « Harbor $595. 330-8875. ~ °"' •• Johnson Ii Son, 2626 Harbor OLDSMOBILE 196.S OLDS Cutlass 2 dr h.t. 11·/4 spd. New tires, xlnt cond. i\1ust sell. W i 11 11·t1nlP.~ale. S1275. &12-9863 or 642-4~2j. '70 CUTLASS Supreme Conv. Air, iJO"''er, lact stereo. Xln't rond . !\lust Sacr1L~ . 646-2811 . ~ . 980 ~': =~-illPoi:·heH°!ty i 2600 HARBOR BL., "61 CHE~~~. 283 FORD G.M,C. Blvd,,~~~ :~~:v-5630 ~=~;::::::::::::::=::=:::::::::::::::='=::::::::::::::::===ii dist. l\lakl! offer. Cal I COSTA MESA n hi ml' •· I e i ·-'· au ... , pawn, MARQU~S BRGHM 846-45'12 or 847-6253. 540.9100 Open Sunday R&.H •·'-....... R""" ok '61 GMC SUBURBIA '.Y OLDS H oliday, trans.m isslon Meris work, othcrv.•ise runs good, $125, 962-ZIOS8. ' l ·.ova·;SJOCIED! ~ ----3 . 0 ·Over-- DEA ·-~ ... iN@ME' : . .. ~:ciny -of our l, ''" :lUND.~EW .,~i--GOJ ct. .... ~ ..... .,. f •. t.roftill ,...:-•nil" illic.d le Miil f'Ma. i.:..i.o a,.d adof only 3'f.1 Got tf.,.ar end~eof ~ °"'~"'!-o~• .°' °"f btalMf ne.w • ···••'i• \9' ....... "..0"'"• -~~a -.-·~._,T~ •\.i= .I at • ~ •Y •· .... .., • 4 Dr. H.T-. This car is load- •fl960 V\V truck °'•°'Mr "''6 CAD, 4 DR. look& aood. Ideal I 0 r Carry All. VI, ~ aeeta, •ble ed. Vinyl roof. twin comfort o::invenion: 1965 1500 I!""' SEO, DE VILLE tee~r. Mom's 1econd car , ~~ 1 '68 TORONAOO. hke nf!w, SZ250. or trade lor late. mo- de! pick up. 496 .. 1.'>83 .,.. Ol' Did'• v.uk hone. Only -. rM...,. C?Unge seais, 6 way power w/xtras; 1968 tra.na. S600 or In shining bi&ck with lull S200 '·" Ink 6''l ,., $1995 lor driver, power·'A·i ndows. oUer. 847-562-t power equip. The Kelly 4i. ....u P •· ,,_ l<u aft tilt wheel. AM-FM Stereo. PLYMOUTH ~~r:!r~UGx~ntAM:!1· =~:!eN!u:m = f; l:& CHEV, 8 Cyl, C&rTy all Macffoward :~o~~;;~a~i~!e~:~T l ·6i.: PLYMOUTH Fury 2. $1350/olfer. Pvl t . only $l49!l. Hurry 1or this Camper. Equip: "ir, P .T. S39-96Ca O!' 5..1l-Cl60! roof. Lie. 4.~8-AOV. Johnson 31.0t'Xl )11lt>.~. Xlnt cone!. L7:J...4152. p y · one. Lie. SB0-155. J ohnson axe!, dual l&ll lanla, 2 &pd TH&ODORE Corntr 151 b Harbor & Son, 2626 Harhror Blvd.. :'11usT ~l'!'. l !JOO. ~.16--.1110. =~-------1 & Son, 2626 Harbor Blvd., trans, xlnl cond, $129.i ROBINS FORD Sant11 An11. C t ~1 r-10-)6' --1966 VW v.'/ail new 1729 CC Cmta Mesa. 540-5630. 492-filS.5, 492-5ij7 all. 6:00 rn; a ' csa .. ~ · ,I() J~I \',\!.!ANT. i;i:ood trans- cam, Pll40's, ,1c. Porsche ~=,.,,=~~-"---p_m. 3)6() Harbor Blvd. LINCOLN "70 MERCURY porla\Jon ~·11r $125. eng Spare whJ8 & more • 1969 CADIJ,.LAC Sedan de ~--------Cmta Mesa -642·0010 COLONY PARK R:l~·2ti26 494--0cJ21 or 673-2469. . ~'ille . All power, tilt steer-· One Owner '69 Ford ·Ranc:hero '70 LINCOLN 10 Pass, Wagon . A like n('v.' * 1964 V-!lc-•c----1 ll-~~=--=---l 1ng, AM /FM stcrt<>, !ealher CONTINENTAL 19.000 mile beauty done in REBLT Y.::NG. SJOO * '67 BUG • R&.H, good uphol1tery, vinyl rool, iood '36 °"'v, Need1 IOme work. 390 V8, automatic tra111., 4 Dr. t'inl1~ in p&ate:I yel-8uruhine yellow "~th saddle * Call 536-9423. * cond, Orlg owner. $950. rubber, factory warranty. Body in Excdlent condition, power •tttrina:. vinyl top, lo1o with wtilte vinyl rwl iTltf!rior and a host of luxury 842--85« or 96.S-8763 eve.a or $44~. 64 5·3434; non $200, 6J8..5r570. e-tt. Md a host of Oontinentala equip. to please anyone, PONTIAC wknds. "A""". ,. "•~~-.=-~~--~~ -95 · •· · Oo , ---------'«Vii<;;;;;;-;:;;;_,o.:;o;;::;l;C,~ii,-i;='~...,,....,.--=--..._ ~let, Jeq: than :nl ~ optJOnai equipment. me •Ven Vinyl Roof. Must be 1 · '65 VW, xlnt cond, R&.H, new BEAUT C.Ordovll1'I Cou p• mi. Ob ,q , fae air, •td a.• -cHOW"' •d in, look It over, test dl'lv• 1een and driven. Lie. AOV-'69 PONTIAC G. T.O. ti!'*' .r. brakea, $696. Evea, D.V. 1969. full power, beaut aJillt. Want to-trade b lc'll l'Y&A a.£ it!" You "ll like thb one. Ser· 488. Johnson & Son 2626 This is a ni~ :ar with J\1ed 557-6174 1tef'f!O, all xtru. 40,CXXI mi, motoreycle. 492-766C 839-9600 or S3l-06lll ial 821470. Johnson A: Son, Harbor Blvd,, C.osta '1\.fesa. Gran Ml't finish 8et off with '65 VW $7SO w/~ tires, 1hoc:ks. Way ·"FOR ~l: Oomtt ht &. Harbor 2626 Harbor Blvd., Co.sta 540-5630 Dk Green Vinyl roof, ma1 * 545-0775 * under blue book, al $-419S Ol' '57 Cbl!vy Nomad, $600. Santa Ana 1'1esa. 540-5630. '69 MERCURY type whee!.s, air cond., pow. VOLVO bst otr. ~7~. 646-5367 '64 FORD Futur.r.. Small V-• -'71 Lincoln COLONY PARK er steering and brakes • ~ C .Sale Pl'lced at S199'J, Lie, ll ---------l'6& CADILLAC Fltttv.'OOd otEVY '&f MA1J8U," 327-350 260 ena., re.bl•· o'~·•., ontin•ntal Coupe -IO Pasg, Siation Yi'agon. Full XTG .,.. .. ..""""'"" -92.l J ohnson Ii. Son, 'Bluudutm. w/cNise con-AP, 4-epd. Fut, $800. Ca.II pwr. atef'r .• new pa.int I. Fully loilded. Miene.Jon X pow!'r, door locks, A1\! rFM "626 liarbor Blvd., Colt.a trol. Ml!Jt lff to appttc. 644-5864. tire.1. $795. 642-940S or tire-!, etc. Save now. Only 111erco radio, lop rach. lac-ti.lesa . 540-5630 $Xlll_l· Pvt Pty: Nelson "'60"'0!!N="'°.-;·I"m'"p-. ,..=""rn"'"·.--. 536-0098 A1k: 1or Cuey. · ' $62'5 1ory air, ~tc. Priced right. '""""'°" 300> w Cout r-· '6' PONTIAC • . .. , ... Du-<xh. "" "' ... ~ ... 197\l FORD LTD, ...... M H -.... M H d Hwy, NB .. 6'2-1000. -· $2SO. "'3-1'5!. wlblk Int. All -. a ir. &C 0Wcu.. &C OWar ·GRAND PRIX 164 C ILLAC .... ~~· The pride of the Pontiac line AO • '71 MONTE CAJU.O 23.000 mi llllOO. 6'2-1.539 alt '30-951)) °' m.-139-9600 OR 531-0608 eQ"iPP'<I .;th vieyl roor, . 'Ill.a ~~O' "FRIEDWIOER" ••!! .... Qt fMWT • ., -· Fact air, A-ete.--Mtb: offer. 5· Corntt lit I. Harbor Corner Lit & Harbor air, power stcerina: a 11 d 675-&109 '67 LTD 2-dr, vinyl top. l Santa Ana Santa Ana brakc5_ Test drive this one, CHRYSLER owner. Xlnt cond. All ex-l---;,61=-.,.L'"IN"c'"o=-L"'N--1 ;.68"-W"A"G"o"1<,.c"o"1 "P"'k-"'A-cfr,-. "1,""pe $2975. Lie. YCH-8-47. Johnson ~'rrl66 • 537.Q::H 11-~---'---~--ILike new. Full po'A·er +air Alllilv · Sille .oond. ""· <VGJ057) 1795 fiil1 , m 11m2'ti """· c.u .... m .. 1968 CAD Sedan 'de Ville -'69 CHRYSLER 300 4 d Fully equipped. Ul50. c..ii hc!tp llill _ ,. .. u' 1r' •• 5 ,, .... ...w , ..... , me.1,•. ... pm, ....,........,,.. mf.'ey xtra1. $.2,596:644-6197. . CHEVROLET CO!tVEI IE :'° ::_;.~~~ 7°: '67 Ctl.MOLU white wired inl:f:rior, rol:.h. B.!:L AIR. SEDAN )Ori -•94-«& Vl,..aulom&tie,.n.dio, buttt, t_ O'nd. · power •terrine • tnta, eir Auto., UMCf .. '90 cood.it>onlns. (UIC\",-m) '6' 'Vet.ti' ~M «ii" .ml JOO hp, +.pd, AM/FM, map. Mint mnd. $1650. 61S-3lll .. COUGAR traa. ll.600. Evl!a 4M-708l CONTINENTAL CPE. deck, full p11.·r. Perl col\d. & Son, ~26 Hll.rllor Blvd., '69 BRONCO win. ~whl A 1hlny black IM!auty wilb 1192-9863 or 896-JOjl \\'ork. Costa Mesa. 540-5630 drive, r&h . gd mi. Pvt my. &ir And al] the equip. you'd MUSTANG '68 BONNEVILLE 2-<Joor $1900. 642-7781 or 675-3680 expect to i.ind In a· lull'UJ')' h.I. 1.-ull power except for l9'ro Gal SOQ , 4 dr. ht, p1/pb, cu-. You have 1n See thl1 ---------JX)v.•er seals, am/Jn1 radio, •ir, new tin!s, 17,000 mi on Uc. zyo.931, John10n 1966 Mus tang V~8 April 1Uld color, I 0 w , $2.800.· IJ0..6097 _. Son, l6:l6 H1rbor Blvd .. Auto. pwr 1tr, R&ll, lo mi, milcaRc. F'or Mle by' ~-Emno; Va11 Bir 1. •"*· 1-0oota.,,,.,M.,•,.",_·"-====-beautiful rond. Pvt pty. ol'lginal ou.'ntr. Asking price.' ·~ '67 <DR CO Mu11 ~ell S'IOOO. 497-0975 5-f l"95 C It ~ ,,7 like new, crirts A paneJl.na. NTJNENTAL 1 · "' ......,.....,., 6, 494--0763 OUtt '45-4033. XLNr COND, BSr OFJ\. 9pm/or 675-51\l or 49.>-4124. 644-6414 6".l94.2 1963 Muatang-VB, a ir cond, •70-G=T~0---·1 '88 fURD Torino GT. Orir • •u LINCO'" ~· • d m nsole.. ~ tha.n 13.000 mi. Ra A' ownr.· Low.....-...:. .. .., • ., .• Good .. .,. _.,. ""'"· , r . m tr, 4-speed, Fl~ll1ont -•~ Low 'I · 4 lop '"'Ade Mobil 01 ~, les~ · __ -.... _ m1 e., on.a. Gwne.r. &• ....,.,.,. wide oval1, aha""·all black! $1095 · -ATLAS <.VllU, .. ,,,.,.,_ Immac, !Olided wlextru lhan 100 mi. Disc brakes. '" 'st <X>UGAR.,. au• tram. '71 FORDS: ·cal a :1 l e 1 , fi.U-4124. 'Mlnt cond. S2250, 675-1239 Sacrifice~ S-400 ' take Gver ~ -O\JT!I ' payments! 646--4665 alter 5 IUICK CHRY.>L.IW\o'"PLYM ....... , ...... ah',··~~. M\tt,• .. -j; ....._._ Uertz ---:--:-::::::--::=---'65M""'""g V3A"t REAL • k """' tt.-Blvd. ;.;;.,,, ml, P.llO. siMia. ~ c..t>:CTiii ,,;;-0 MERCURY -~· · · "'· ~ w"" ""''-~ --~----~ • ~ JtM-... ,..~~ '9t 0Dupr pct ·Xtl1. l510iV, 'A 1'0Rl> Torino GT. Ocie -:-:::-=::;-,:::'.;'Z":::::-":,->10 PM. ,_.,~-I,' 1 'vs""'t 1e.1ts, ""' r.olU\-.io;i run-'89 IMPALA ff J ~ ~ OWN'. Lo,. book $1100. Ccpd '61 COUGAR XR ·7 "°'°'===,..--,.,.-~ .. .,,_. · au o, , P 1. Neu olrw cond. Cleall.lr59M ml. ' • ~!· ,.!. ~comi. n::;: cond. STUIU. . 1bt lop ait in the. Cougar 1:to~~.ANG~n~irp~~j I ;;;""o-'r:l;v,.,._,.-;:::;;2S::.-,-=-:..,---I Pis, P/wndwt, a • 2 new m.n93 eves A w'knd1 ,10 [ORD RIJlcliml, ltne.;finl!tted In Putet Blue CC'lnd. S12XI. 675-4l3J '69 GTO Judge, 4 1peed, vf'ry tirM. N.. mutfter. $7SO. Tact >Jr. low ml .. l.Mded, -· and touched off W'lth a DATk good cnndi!ion. S2XKI or best ti13-2US. dlr .. Ta.ke 1mall down ot DODG-E ~ Blue Vinyl rool Don't ml• '70 Mustang l\f11ch 1-.\ll, offer. 54R--09111 jtoct. '2300. Call Mr. McKen-.(94..7505. '64 DODGE-GT. New el\l'lne. • '155 ford CCluntry -Squire WK'R-058. John!lltln J, Son, m1 w111r . S2.i9a. ~1-6.l~-d('pcnda.hlt. Sncrifice 14;;o 1968 ftMEJU. .. f'Ully equip-fnlele. Call 541)..3100 .or tllilll nre al only SJ999, Lie. au!~, a '.r, Pl~ •. PIB :iO,OOO l '64 LeM11 ns 2.0r t.'OUPf". Vt>ry dry &c-.ooo btwn 1:30 A s 1'Tum=-:cwi:c,c-,.,,,....,1""1em-,..,1n"toc--:qulok=c 1 brake.a, clotch i til'l!1. Sac. J wqon-Cond cond-Be1t of-2626 H•rbor Blvd., Coata For lhAt Item under $5(1, l"lt offer. &l:>-.,~'M :1.-iiiiiiiiii ____ _. __ tm.;,'--••--~I~·-='!.:.'-------ca1h, c11l Mz..5611 $650. 212!t Mjrwr, CM _,,_,._,._,..... __ ,. ______ M_.,._. _._,._ .. _""'-·----try the Penny Pin<:her ;;:i.,m,.1P Yf'.IU .sell!-642_5678 ' 1 ' ~ • • •