Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-06-25 - Orange Coast Pilot17 FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 25, '197 1 \IOL. 64, NO. 1JI, 4 SECTIONS, 41 ,.AOll Girl Hounded Up • t --~ . ' " -~ ii!\ > ' DAILY l"ILOT Phtll by Rlt~lnl Kothltf PLAINCLOTHESM AN (LEFT! LEADS YOUNG GIRL TO JAIL She W•s Ona of Those Rounded Up in Seal Beach Melee Wild Me lee Breaks Out On Pier at Se al Beach By JOANNE REYNOLDS Hostilities be.tween Seal Beach police and youthful be.achgocrs, simmering gince Monday, exploded into a riot Thurs- day afternoon. At the end of the hour-long rock and botUe throwing spree, 38 were in custody and one officer was recovering from minor injuries. Officers from liuntington Beach. Los Alamitos, Cypress, \\'estm inster and the Oruge Weather The sun will peek through U111t ever-present haze th is afternoon and Satun:lay. bringing tempera- ture.!! to 67 along the coast and 75 inland. Lows today and Saturday 60, INSmE l:ODA Y Marv(lOU$ machi"nes which do absolutely 11nth ing, along with th~ir i11ventor nrf' the ~ubject of a \Vceke nder feature on Page 25 today, •...t"" ,. Cl llftrRl4 I Cl'ledllltt U1< 11 ci.'"'"" ll4 CM11(1 Jt c,........ u DMftt HefltH ' D .... "'' 11 •4111ffUH r-6 """'"'' J1 -1J HtroMt" It .I.RI 1..1.W.rl 11 "''""'' ' .Y..v1tt J6.J2 M4!tu11 11'111141• n Jlet!eMI 111_. +I °''"'° Ctlllt!Y t •11t1111r1n11 Jt.tt 1-11 ,. ... li'M-Mll'lll'I '1·1! Tti.t!WM! Jf "'"''"' Jt.Jt Wtlffllr I W~ll• Wit~ U W'""tll'l NtWI It-It w.,i. Ntwl •·J WHl!t!IW U-M Orange County Sheriff's Office. joined I.hei r Seal Beach counterparts in sweep. ing the youths off the beach. No shots were fired nor wa~ tear gas used on the angry crowd , eslimated to be b<-.h\•een 450 and 500. According to police, the riot started when undercover officers from Hun- lington Reach arrested three beach youths for disturbing the peace. The officers, part of l.funtington Beach's Special Enforcement Detail, had been called in Wednesday afternoon to a1rl Seal Beach in keeping the beach quiet. Chief Lee Case said "large groups or rowdy kids'' had been causing trouble on the beach all week and efforts by Seal Beach patrolmen to arrest !Uspecls for narCQtics violations or for being in· toxicaled in public where met with hootil i- ly, Tuesday , one s11ch arrest. led a group to attack a patrol unit and break out the windshield. Sgl. Pat. Sullivan de~ribe.d !he atmosphere on the beach as "tense, very hostile,'' Thursday morning. Sgt. Tristram Swan, commander o( the Huntington Beach SED, said Wednesday'11 undercover work was r e I 1 t i v e I y uneventful, noting that a few arrests were made. "But Thursday, they burned us right awftY (meanin1t the youths knew who the undercover officers were). A big group ~athered around three of us on the beach, yelling ob scenitie$, ~alllngs us pigs and narcs -the usual stuff.· . ''We took it as long a11 we could and then started arresting some of them for disturbing the p<.'act." Swan sl'id. "Everything was a,ll right when we to0k the first three over to lhe jall, but while "'" "·ere gone. some or them 1larted throwing stuff 11t passing patrol units, tSet: RJOT, Page II I -•Starla Patrol~ Delivers Healthy Baby enato r sea es ru en icts Rea~r Slaying Autopsy Awaited In Mesan Death Autopsy tesll!I wtre still incomple te to- day. as San Diego homicide detectivel!I sought to determine if Costa Mesa real estate woman J ean Smith was sexually assa ulted be.fore her brutal murder. The 56-year-okl realtor's nude body was found Tuesday morning on a freeway em- bankment in Del Mar , after she was ap- parently bludgeoned lo death with tv.·o blood-s tained rocks, found nearby. '"There's nothing new deve loped yet .'' gaid San Diego Deputy Coroner Max fll urphy "'hen asked about the case to- day. A visit with relatives in San Diego emf· ed late on the afternoon ()f Tuesday, ,June 15. when Mrs. Smith left the home of a slepso n, David Smith, bound for O'.lsta Mesa. She never arrived and was reported a~ a missing person the following da y, while Investigators believe she was slain not long after departing. Circumstances lead ing lo her brutal murder may never be known. California Highway Patrol officers ticketed and later impounded her parked 2 Mes a Officers Delive r Healthy Boy on Car Seat Police officers manning the front desk develop a sixth sense about people and their problems. but the crew on duty at Costa Mesa PQlice headquarters didn "t have lo use it Tbursdily. James R. King, 42. of 2613 Verano Place. Irvine. burst through the door at 3:40 p.m .• wildeyed. "My wife's having a baby in the park- In.I! lot." he cried. "Now!" Raci ng around the counter. Officer Sam Arnold and Policewoman Ila Dallas followed the fraP1tic father-t~be. "I've delivered several, but it was just my luck for them to be in the back seat of a two-door eedan, with no room to WQrk," Officer Aroold declared. " "I was wondering how we were aolng lo get her out!" By that time. Mrs. Nancy t . KJng, 25, was in oo shape to be extricated. "Tia comforted her and I did the delivery," said Officer Arnold, com· pliment.ing Mrs. King 's command of the unusual ailuation. "She didn't complaln • • • didn't scream ••• didn't say anything, until I told her it was a boy and laid It. on her cne.l "She let out 11 great big whoop that rocked the. parking lot," 1aid Officer Arnold. "J11mes, we 1ot. our boy," Mrs. Kini 1creamed. car, which was a short distance from the body's locaUon. 30 reet below the roadway out of their sight, A hitch-hiker discovered the body. Besides the gevere head wound, the member of the Costa Mesa-Newport H1rbor Board of Realtors suffered 8 broken left leg and rib, the autopsy show- ed, The body was released by San Diego County coroner's investigators Thursday afternoon. Pair Arrested On Welfare Fraud Charges An Orange County Welfare Department gocial work er and his wife were two of ,;even persons arrested Thursday by the dislrict attorney's office and accused of welfare chiseling. Social worker, Billy Joe Lee , 3:>, and his wife. Joyce 41 , are accused of welfare fraud . Mrs. Lee is a deputy clerk for the North Orange County Judicial District. Both were arrested afler district !t· torney 's investigators probed an alleged C>Verpayment of $2,164 to the couple by the welfare department. Welfare Director Granville G. Peoples asked for the in· vestigation after a personal examination of charges against the couple. Investigators said Lee was hired by the welfare department in November 1970, and Mrs. Lee was hired as a deputy clerk under the name of Joyce Noble in August, 1970, Also arrested Thursday in a move that brought the numbe"r or welfare fraud ar- rests up to 42 In a aix-month period were Micaela Lopez, 32, Sandra Pfleger, 28, and Janet Gray, 24, all of Santa Ana, and Leon Durresne, 26, of Cypress, and Linda Ann Woodworth, 22, of Garden Grove. Mrs. Lopez, ,Mrs. Pfleger and Mfl. Woodworth are accused of obtllning funds under the Aid to Families with Dependent Children program b y representing that their hwband!I were not at hotne and contributing to the lamlly income. Mr~. Lopez wu overp&ld 81,100, Mrs. Pfleger drew $1,070 and overpa9Jntnts to Mn. Woodworth totaled S 2 2 4 , In. ve5tlg1tors allege. Dufresne is accused or obtainin g SUJ in welfare funds by falling lO report lh1t he had rt!Celved a 1ub11tantial settlement from a lawsuit filed followlng 1n auto ac- cident. Mr3. Grsy, 11 cocktail waitress. Is l'C· cule<I of failing to repart her earning~ and of falsely 1t11tlng that her minor chlld was rttldlna with her. She 1llegedly w111 overpaid '307. I Sister's Grief I Drug Fight . ) ..... ' ~· .. IJl'I T1!1Pl'!t!t SISTER SHOWS GRI EF Brother 1st Mine Victim Flames Hamper Rescue Efforts In Sylmar Area SYLMAR (UPI ) -A smoldering fire in a 'ol'ater tunnel where 17 miners were kilt· ed ia a natural gas explosion flared up to- day and delayed efforts to remove re· mainlng bodies of the viclims. Fire officials said lhey would not send re scue crews into the . tunnel until flue holes were dr illed to clear· contaminated air (rom the five-mile shaft. Drilling crews already were at work pr~paring: vent holes and rescue teams were on standby . Construction timbers,·rubber hoses and olher debris at the worltlng area of the tunnel were involved in the reaimbustlon. "They had no lime to live," said fire department rescue worker Andy Kuljis. '·They died -(he snapped his fingers) - that fast. You lake a lung full of hol alr and you 're dead before your brain knows .It" Only one man In the drilling crew 250 feet beneath the gurf11ce survived the in- femo of blazing gases or the surfocating smoke that followed Thurtday's blast. The tunnel , IS miles frOm downtown Ll>.s Angeles, Is in an &rea laced with earth111.1ake faults . Officials blamed the faults for the aeepage or natural 11es. More than 27 hours aft.er the blast a.nd the 14-hour fire that followed. 12 bodies had been founrt In the five-mile long bore· tJnder construction ror the Metropolit.11,n Water Dl11trlct. Seven had been removed !See TUNNEL, Page ll Team Flees Harlem Site NEW YORK (AP) -Son, l!Mold I':. Hughes (D·Iowa), was threatened with bodily harm and chased today from the basement of a Harlem tenement that wu believed being used as a "shootinl gallery" by narcotics addicts. "I knew I was in a dangerOUlJ sltUa• ti on," Hughes said after getting out of the basement of the five-story building Ol1 West 137th StreeL It was across the street from Harlem Hospita l. Hughes was touring a section of Harlem with three other senators. all members of the special subcommi ttee on alcoholism and narcotics, He entered the building after residents pninted it out as a well known "shooting gallery" -a place v.·here addict.5 gather to inject narcotics. The senator, who was 8Ccompanled by news men, photographers and ~ television crew, walked through a dark corridor to a large area in the rear where aix persons were apparently preparL,g to "shoot up ." The men, startled by lhe bright camera li.i::hts, confronted Hughes near a tabl• where the men were reportedly preparing nc;rcotics for use. "Get the • • • 4 out o( here," one yelled at Hughes. Hughes stared at him dumbfoundedly. At th is point two young women who escorted the senator into the basement, turned and scrambled out. Hughes lum!:d his back on the group And walked out behind newsmen and the three other senators who bad entered the premises after him. Sen. JaCQb K. Javits (R·N.Y .). descri~ ed the basement as a "styglan hole." r.1arjorie Doxen, a member or the United Harlem Drugrighters, one of the two women who led Hughes into the base- ment. said three of the men in the base- ment had been "shooting it in the arm"- injecting themselves with druas. Race Brawl Erupts MATHER AIR FORCE BASE (AP) - Brawling "wi th r1cial overtones" ln· volving some 30 alrmen broke out Thur• day nlght at Mather Air Force But near Sacramento. BRIDES RECA LL 'N1XON DAY' A yea r ago President Nt1on made a &pecial trip to Newport Buch to attend. Ole wedding of hls nt~. La'Wrefte Nboa to Thomas Anfinson. On the same day, In the same churc• with the same minister, three othe• brides recited their vow!, Oid they feel their weddings were overshadowed by~ presence of the Bresldent earlier~ Where are they all today? See Society, P·l7. I I f I ~I j -- z OAllV P/LOl ' Guttman Slain President Death Attempt Foiled? CfnCAGO <UPI) -Secrel Service :igent! are trying to determine .,.;hether a n1~n slain Thursday evening in a shootou t vlith po lice may have come to Chica.:o in s n attempt to assassinate President Nix· Oil Gerald L. Warren, deputy White House press secretary, said today that the Serret Service "can find no connection'' between President Nixon's visit and the shooting of Jami's E. Beavers, 47, of Squire. \V. Va . However, \.\'arren said the Secret Service was continuing "to look in· to his !Beavers') past." Beavers. said by a relative lo be a critic of P resident Nixon's Southeast Asia policy. v:as slain by police in the Grant Park area Thursday evening aboul three hours before the Presidenl was to arrive at Me igs Field, atxJul a mile fr flm the scene of the shootout. Bea vers "'as c;ir. r ying tv.•o .32 caliber revolvers when he was killed. White House officials pointed out that Beavers bought the guns he was carrying on Monday aod that Nixon's trip y,•as not announced until Tuesday. Beavers' sister, t.trs. Walter Chambers of Squire. W. Va .. said her brother was known to be violent a nd had indicated he opposed Nixon's policies. f\.1rs. Chambers said her brother had once phoned lhe White House ovtr some mailer and that he \\'as dislraught by the fact that he was unable to reach the President. She said her brother left \Vest Virginia Monday morning and that she thought he had mentioned something about going to either Florida or Califo rnia . Nixon has homes in Key Biscayne, Fla .• a nd San C1emenle. Calif. Mrs. Chambers said her brother had a h istory of mental ill ness since World War 11 and tha t he had been confi ned to a West Virginia mental hospital after being tried for the murder of ber first husband, Ely Herley. in 19:>0. He was also arrested on a weapons ·r.h arge in Bluefi eld, W. Va., a month ago, :;he said. She said he was always talking or buying guns and \tilling people. "He told my husband he y,·as going lo buy three guns this time. though we never believed h im," she sajd. She described his mental aindition as unstable and said he was a relatively heavy drinker and was known to become violent when drinking. •·He acted "'orse this lime tha n he ever did before," Mes. Chamber said , noting County Street Improvements Get State Okay Four road improvement projects for Orange County have been approved by the State Highway Commission. Route 57 between Harbor Boulevard and Imperial Highway will be renovated at a ros~ of $32,000 prior to its removal from lhe state hig hw ay system. That por· tlon of tne highway will be abandoned by the state and become a I o c a I thoroughfare "'hen the nearby Route 57 -Orange -freev.•ay is compleleri. Pavement grooving lo reduce "·et weather skidding is planned for a L2 mLle stretch of !he Newport Freeway south of the Riverside Freeway connection. The project is estimated at $22.000. Installation of automauc ral!road crossing gates, is planned for two Joca· lion' at a cost of iJ2 .ooo each. One !lie ls the Lincoln A1enue crossini;t nf Southern PaciUc tracks and the o1her iii the Placentia Avenue crossing. Both are in Anaheim. OlAN•l COAST DAllY PILOT .............. ...,__ c-.·M .. OllAMI« COAIT l'UtllSHING COMl'AH'f Jl:•\•rt N. w ••• ''"'""' 911111 hitlll!Mf' J••• a. c.rf • ., Vb ,,,.~ .... G-tl M.....r n.1111• ic., .. n ••r,... lh•••• A. M•rpJ.l11• M9Mt ..... M l'°" C1i•rf•1 H. L••• Ricl.1ri '· Nill ( Aulll911t M91119lroo l!dl!OD -... c.• ,,.,..., m w..~~ ''""' N......., a.di: DD H I Oll-"9 a.......... a..ai; m """"' "'"'"'"' M1111t1rt1• t..ell~. 1'111 t ..adl 19u1...,.,,, IM ~: ~ Nini! II C."""9 " ... DAtt.Y f'tl.CIT, .... ""IOI It ComQlrotrl 1'1'19 "~ 11 .............. ltY •c .. t '-_, Ill ......... ..,.... .... 1...-ia ••di. '""""' .--. c::... .W.1, ..,..,,,,._ ~ .,_.Ill Ylll9"(, l.ift OiltMnf•I c..tl.,_.,,. t1t#1t11dt, • ...., ..... ..._. ~ .. ltllol. 1'111C .. I ................. .. • -W•I .. , lrrMt. caM M- Tal11.1Fl 17141 MMJJ1 ca , ,,,.. u ... rta.., MJ·'''' ._ 0 'a Al 0.,al 11PN Tcl11l1r1 '4ta..MJI ...,lllM. ttn, Or9f'lle c-.t "*"~' ... ~. ,.. -1111r1-. lllvlt.-.1 ..... .......... --... H _,1.-h IM< .... _, llio ...,.,,...._... Wllllloil1 .... 191 ..... ..... ""_,..ICM_.. l"'1Mlll --,_ .... ,.w •I N""'1 1-'t .... C.11 M-, C..U,...1111. llllllCr10flM ... _....,. t:l.tf -1111,1 W !Ml! II.ti fl'iallMltf'1 l'llllftfft' 1•1hl111r.t, U.JS -1t111, that her brolher had betn In the hospital several times. Beavers was shot and killed In a foot chase \\'ilh police Thursday afler a woman spoiled him setting a revolver down on a salt box in the park and notified police. After Beave rs was surrounded by p<ilice , he challenged them Ii> take away his gun, then began to walk away. Ht!. turned suddenly and firtd, hitting one patrolman in the thumb. . Other officers fired se\'eral shots, fatally v.•owiding Beavers. Authorities said the Secret Ser vice had found several suspicious aspect! in the case which might indicate that Beavers had planned an attempt on the President's life. J·lowever, authorit ies said. the tv.·o incidents could be unrelated. Won1an . Tells Of Copying Secret Data LOS ANGELES (AP) -A woman has told a federal grand jury probing lhe leak of a top secret Pentagon study that she was paid $150 by Daniel Ellsberg. a "dear friend," to make copies or unspecified docu ments. Ellsberg, is the for mer Defense Department and Rand Corp. employe y,·ho a former New York Times reporter said gave the Ti mes copies of the Penta- gon documenls on American involvement in Vietnam. Linda Sinay, ~. a lree·lance ad- vertising industry worker. told lhe grand jury Thursday that Ellsberg paid her the $150 in late 1969 or early 1970 to du plicate documents for him on a copying machine in her office, Mrs. Sinay's a ttorney said. The altorney, Luke McKissack, said t.b's. Sinay "didn'I give 1he m (the grand jury) any informallon they didn't already have.'' She ended tv•o days of testi mony by saying she did not knov.' the conlents of documents she duplicated for Ellsberg, 1\fcKissack said. The woman told newsmen she ml'l E llsberg in 1969 and last saw him a year ago. "He's a dear friend of mine and a brill iant man," she said. "f met him through a mu tua.1 friend about two years ago.'' McKlssack said tht woman's testimony would provide only "inconsequential in· formation" to the grand jury. Ellsberg worked for the Rand Corp., a Santa Monica "think·lank" at the time when t.be firm re<:eived lwo of the \~ aipies which the Pentagon made of i!s 7 ,~page study. Another person !illbpoenaed to appear before the grand jury, Anthony J . Russo. 34, worked for Rand from 1964 to 1969. McKissack said Russo al so "Yt'a! a fr iend of Mrs. Sinay. The Justice Department says the grand jury invesligation aincrms possible violations of national security lav.·s. Burning, Rolling Driverless Auto Baffles Vie,vers MENANDS. NY. <l 'PJ) -F.ven V.'ith eye\l•ilness accounts hy two pol1cen1en. a ne\'.'sman and a neighbo r, it's ha rd to beJlcve the story at>out the unoccupied car that rolled uphill, backwards while on fire. The. car, parker! near lhe lop of a hill on River Hill Roar!, caught on fire in this Albany suburb Thursrl ay night. After the fire burned through thP aut o's interior for atxJut five minutes. the vehicle began ''rolling'' uphill. lt traveled aboul !iO reel , c rossing roule 377, a rour·lane highv.iay before striking an earthen embankment. "Dadgumdest thing I ever Sffn," said V.A. Oberting, a nearby reside nt. ''J thou ght for sure somebody was in it." Kenneth Fonda, ooe or ty,·o ri.tenanrls policemen responding to the car fire. sa id he saw a ball of fire a11 he appro11ched - then saw the car mo1·e up the hill backwar ds. Joe Rossier. a night newsman 111 WAST-TV, was en route home from work when he .saw tile seemingly inexplicable Incident. Pedestrian Dies In Huntington A 13-year-old Huntington Beach boy was kil led Thursday when struck by 1. car as he led his horse ac~s a streel to its stable. Keith A. Ferrell, of 8291 Enfield Circle, was dead on arrival •l Paclrica Ho..~pltrJ, localed only 80 feet from the accident scene . The 5 p.m. accident involving a car driven by Joh n ~1. >farrlson, 2J, of 17931 Bell Circle. Huntington Beach, was the cit y's sixth traffic falll\ity of the year. Investigators said the boy's horse wr.-; not hit. Traff ic Officer Brian SuJli,·an said lhe Ferrell boy \\'as starting across In the 18000 hlock of F'lf)nrt:i Strer:. From Page 1 TUNNEL .•• .. from OW' shaft, five oUlen were walUng to be taken oot and rescue workers press· ed on through the smoke, seeking the bodies of the five men still missing . J l y,·as the third disaster to strike a portion of the multibi!lion do J I a r California Water Project, the most com· plu water work e\ler attempted, and the second explosion in the San Fernando V1lley tunnel in two days, Three five·man crews burdened with gas masks and heavy oxygen tanks repeatedly went down into the tunnel ln hourly t'yclc.s through a gaping air shaft two miles from tht entrance portal. The v.·ork was ei:tremt'ly hazardous because of the "t ero visibill!y" of the smoke and accumulation of unburned methane gas. Two firemen were stricken when they took the ir gas masks cH deep in 1he shall . They later "'ere reported in good con· dJt1on. "\Ve have only about 25 minutes 10 \\'ork once we take the !rain to the tunne l facr where the explosion &<.'curred because of the time limits on our air tanks." Kuljis sai d. "Our five.man crew gropes hy hand in lhe dark. I just return· ed now because I found a man's hand in the niuck and J'U need help to dig the body out." The miners. e mployes of Lockheed Shipbuilding and Constructi on Co. cf Seattle, broke into methane-bearing rock beneath an cfd oil field \Vednesday. t\ ~n;ialt methane explosion that day sligh tly injured four miners. Dr. Gordon B. OakeshoU. depuly chief of the Slate Division of Mlnes an~ Geology, said the Feb. 9 earthquake in the same a rea which claimed 66 Jives and ils hundreds of a ftershocks could have provided "escape pathwaYs" for pockets of methane. The sole survivor. a bra keman on the narrow.gauge railroad through the 21.foot high tunnel. was trapped for several hours in the rubble. "For abou t an hour after the blast I could hear the other v.·orkers calling ior help, and I think some or them tried trt "'a lk out of the tunnel. But after an hour J ~card no 1nore cries," said Ralph Bnsset. 33, of Pacoima. Calif. He was brought to lhe surface at mid, morning, covered v.·it h cuts and bruises and moaning v.·ith pain, Unable to describe what happened to ti is com· panions, hp said "we were told it was :.ale.'' Another problein faced by rescue \\'Orkers was that t11e bodies apparenrlv were scattered over a rubble-covtred section stretching 200·fet t from the tun· ne! face. Medina My Lai Charges Stick; Jury Choice Set Fi. ircPlfERSON, Ga. (UPI) -A m ilitary judge refu~ed today to dismiss m urder charges against Capt. Ernr st L. l\1edina, accused of presiding ot•er the ~fy La i 1nassacre, and ordered jury selection Lo begin July 19, Col. Kenneth A. Howard, the judge, d enied a motion by Medina·s ci vilian al· l.orney, F'. Lee Ba ile.v, to dismiss the cha rges on grounds that command in° Jluence played a role in bringing the 34. ycar-0ld t.1e6ina to trial. t-.·ledina said he "expecte1f' the judge·~ ruling. but "I thought it (request for d is1n issal\ v.·as a fleces!'iary step in my defense. r n1 s11ll confident thP fart.~ will <'nn1e nut 1n rhis !rial and 1 \\ill be round innocent. "I ~·e been v.·a1Li ng two and ont'-half ''C'ars. now , and l wanl to gC't it ovrr \li!h " r-.1erli11a ls speC'ificalty acrusecl of 11H1rdrring 102 Vietnamese c1v1Jian5 at r.1 .v Lai in 1968. \1·hen his inla111ry rom· pnn\ S\.\'Ppl 1 hrou~h lllp Viclnan1Pse h11n1!et. Lt. \\'11!ia n1 L. Calle1·. a com, 111andcr or one of the pfa1oons in t.lrclina·s company. 11·;is conv1c1ed t'arlirr !hi~ year of 1nurdering at least 22 civilians during that sweep. Howard denied a serie! of othrr defense motions, including one to have lhe Army pay for a puhlic opinion poll In drtcrrnine how members or lhr Armed Forces feel a bout Medina's guilt before a t ria l begins. He Jikev.·isr denlt'd mot ions to cm- panel a jury of ~1 edina 's J)('Ct S, as op- posed to his superiors. and denied a mo-- lion to have a random .selection of U10se rrom whom the jury v.·iJI be picked , Hov.·ard also ruled that the re!ults of a lie detector test, v.·hich shov.·ed Medina \YB! telling the truth when he said he d idn't order a massacre <1t f\.1y Lai, are not admissible. Hov.·ard did grant a defense motion re- quiring the government lo supply "at the f'arl!est possible moment" tht na.Jflc.s Rn d addresses of ;111 11\f' \Vilnesscs the govern· ment int ends to call In denying the n1otion to d ismiss tht case, Hov.•ard said, "I do not find the overall policy of the A rni~· was W deny this accused a fair conslderntion of the cha rges against him. "I find a fair and lull consideralion of evidence against him by tho.'\t required to consider It. "I do not find this lo be pervaded by command influence.·· Bailey askrd the gov ernment lo tell him bow long it expected to take to present its evidence in the case "$0 I can contemplate with horror spending the t n· Ure summer in Atlanta." Though the gcvernment did not r~ply. Howard asked !hat both side5 gel together and try to have the court consider only those mat- ters on which they cannot agree. Ba lley earlier had said the governmt nt told him that It \\'Ould call 90 to 100 v.·itnessts and that th e tr ial likely would last about seven weeks • Today's refusal by Ho<A·11rd to throw out the c11se follO\\'Cd a four-day pre-trial he&.ring lor Medina on Ole command ln° rrucnce issue. Bal!t y called 1nore thnn • d1zcn v•itnesst's dun ng thr. hearing. UPI Ttl1111Mt. Frono P .. e I RIOT ... and when we aol back to the beach, It blew up." The crowd took over the park at the root of the: pier and lM children":; p!ay arta on the beach. It was abo uL 3 p.n1. when the order to disperse "'as first ~iven, and shortly after Iha!, police began to sweep the beach. Sgt. Lee Gatti said a lar.l!e portion ot the crowd on the beach ainsisted of familil'! whn departed en muse when trouble starLed. Those in c ustody are bt>ing held on a variety of charges ranging from in· toxication throl.!gh failurr to disperse and from inciting lo riot lo f,lony baltery on a police officer. The injured Seal Beach officer James Gross, 25, wall knocked unconscious when a n object struck the fr ont or his pro- tective helmet, sending him to lhe pave· men!. ~roperty d?mage y,•as slight, police i;a1d today. being limited lo bottles throv.·n into Ocean Avenue, "'hich runs a long the beach front. The quickly controlled riot seemed to h~ve little effect on the dO\l'nto"'n shop- ping a rea on ~1ain Street as shoppers strolled in and out or shops a frw reet from the heavily clad officers who cap0 tinued lo arrest stragglers. Ca st' said he is anticipa ting a tense \l'eckend l.'JJd put his men on 12-hour duty. "At the moment v•e don't intend lo close the, beach, but it will be heavily patrolled. \Ve 11 be ready if trouble brea ks out a gain," he said. 2nd Mi11,e Vreti111 "We've never had any trouble like thiJ In the six years I've been here." Case ad· ded. ··1t used lo be like this 1n lluntington Beach. I guess this year they just picked Seal Beach." A priest with a Bib le on his lap rides on a rail c ar carrving rescue workers and the second victim to be brought out of the \vater aque- d uct in Sylmar following T h u rsday morning 's exp los ion. Gatti, reflecting the anticipatory mood of police, noted that of the rrresls made on the beach befo re Thu rsda y, non e \1·rre lrom Seal Beach, and of the 38 from the riot. ''most "'ere out of county, and only, a handful were from here.1' Coffee D1·i11l{ing Linked "And of course, there'll be others that have heard about the riot, plus most of the ones we picked up Thur!day have been released, so they may ccme back here looking for trouble." To Possibility of Cancer LONDO N I AP ) -Coffee drinking may cause cancer c1f the bladder . a group o( American ,;cientis1s said in an artltlc published F riday in the Briti sh medical 111a~azine, The Lancet. 1t said the possi ble connection between cofefe consumption arid cancer \\'as , discovered accidentally during a study associating cigarette smoking and cancer un a sample population of American <-"ancer victims. Burglar Drops Into Ship's Toilet Bowl \\'omen appear twire as prone as 1nen lo cancer infection through CQffee drink· Jng , they added. A burglar dropped through the hatch of a sloop moored in Newport Harbor Thursday, right into the ve9sel's head causing $50 da mage lo the toilet. ' The Lancet published the paper by thr Department of Epidemiology and Kresie Cen1er for Envi ronmental Health a t the Harvard School of Public Health. '11ie scientists who "'ere nol identified, !>aid they hall no t reached definite con· 1 lusions but "the relationship between {'Offeee drinking and bladder cancer war· rants investigation.'' Punted o"'ller J ohn 0 . Knox of Sanhl Ana told police the intruder who boarded his Qui Vive tied up al 2633 \V. Coast Highway then stoic only a $2 flashlight. Officer Donald Follett said tools and othrr valuables were in plain sight. TID VON HEMERT, l11c. brin9 1 th• l1r9•.t ••lt ction of ~u 1lity in••c~1"di11 to t• oft 111• i1t +Ii • l.h lory of our comp•n'I. ~ut~ fa mouo li no• •• H ... rft.11, Tllo1'U•,lll•, Dre••I, H9'!tot1. will oller 11 ltct•cl 9roup1 •I <ub1lt nlit l r1cl uclion1. All uphohlt rt d m•rcl.t ndit t will b• off•1•• tl moot •lh1cli.,.1 1t ... in91. TIO VON HEMl!RT w11 1bl1 to pu•cf.111 • 111111 quontity of '°4Clf1• Co.,111 Sohn Olld Chol" 11 1!01t·oul pric11. l o omont th1 fin t to 11l•cl, Up~•l1l••Y Oft 11/t "0_., ' ( SOFA SOFA NEWPORT STORE Ml"'lt CllMl,,_100" c;1....., Lln1n Pr1nf-(t"'rtlh "t '11'111 l h .... 111 11u1 a ...... u.,,...,i ''"" SOFA ., ... ~••" Gol~, Gt"n L!nrn l'rlM- PR. CHAIRS ... "" Ill) U ll N , LOUNGE CHAIR .. ,.~._ .. .,, ''"~ '""' ,..,,,.,, ""•" ll.1.1 SOFA SOFA Mo•t• C•""" 100" C•"n C..mow- Ctnlr••I W10 /rl\•'9• Conalt-44~ Ytllo•, tootd Ctr1lrfll Wtll LOUNGE CHAIR ~:~· .'~.~.: SLEEPER ·~· .. ,,,. LOVE SEAT ·-,, •• PR. CHAIRS ~~·~; •• '"' .,. ••• ... "" 1!1'1 .... LAGUNA STORE SALE SOFA •••• ,.~ .... , •• .,;. c.,,,,.,1,,,, W11r $399 SOFA H .. 11.,-1· $459 ... """ $I 59 PR. CHAIRS :-:.~: ',~;;-,;­ $259 SLEEPER ~;~ulOft l'l1•D-<~nlrl>11~• SOFA lhort1!>-tllllOOll 01rnu• S4B9 PR CHAIRS •••• ,.~ .... ,-$l 6B 1 i llk \/tiY•I $l 39 CHAIR ... ._.._,. $399 SOFA •••• "~~••" "'"' Ctll!,.lllllt Wall $299 SOFA '"~"~, .. -....... O.ld l'rlnl $479 PR. CHAIRS~;:;::,:.,,,~ $I 58 SOFA ~~~ """ $239 PR CHAIRS ·-,..,,,_ $239 I Mtft"tty $429 ROCKER "' OK•-· • 1110. "" "" HOI .,,, ... '* ... ''" Sl#f ... ... SIN M. ... UPHOLSTERY FEATURES ""' $369 S699 $179 $269 $619 $179 $199 $399 $4'9 $119 $459 $149 $169 PR. ROCKERS i:~::;;. '""' $169 $179 $429 $269 •. All 8 Way Hind Tied Conttructlon lilt ... * Mott Scotch Guard.d SOFA 1.11'1-.A.YI "''" Ull * Most Down Backs LOVE SEAT Mt .... Cl l'IM-Ct ltclt" Print Ct11l<'ll Wttl 1>7' * Many Contrasting W1lt1 * All Excellent Quality Mtft f .oth,, tOt t iolly tolot!td pi•Ct1 t i TRUI SALi PJllCIS, If ou• flo•1 itmp lt f t tt ft 'I !uit t~t l~!ftlJ, ~•"V of Ou• brt nd "'"''' will bt •v1il1b!t on • 1p1ti1I ordt r bt 1i1 t f rt4uc.•i !''lt t o. Doft I for91I O~f ,,..,,.., bocl ro1m, diftift9 1ocm I oc(11io11 ol collt t li•n• 1t f1!11111u1 tt V• '"9'! DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL-HERITAGE NIW'°Jl:T STOii Ol'IN 'llDAT 'TIL 9 7td 11111 flflld. " NEWPORT BEACH 1727 W11tcllff Or., 642-2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Prof111lonal lnttrlor D1sl9n1rs Available -AID INTERIPRS 1'110111 Till Fr•• Mott •f Orn .. C•••ty -S40·126J LAGUNA IEACH 345 North Co••t Htfhway Plione: 494-65 1 1 7 17 Hnnlinjtton Bea~h Fountain Valley --, ·-· Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL 6-4, NO. ISi, 4 SECTIONS, ~8 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JUNE 25, "1971' TEN CENTS Huntington Beach Unification Battle Looms By ALAN OtRKIN 01 !he Ot lll' l'lla1 Stt fl A battle will be fought over ways of dividing the 52·square·mile lluntington Beach Un.ion High School District into unified school systems that wiU instruct both elementary and hig h school age 1tuden ts. C:Onflict was assured Thursday night when the Orange County Committee on School District organizalion was told thaL Man Slain; Nixon Link Explored CJfiCAGO (UPll -Secret Service agents are trying to determine whether a man slain Thursday evening in a shootout with police may have come to Chicago in an attempt to assassinate President Nix· on. Gerald L. Warren, deputy White House press secretary, said today that the Secret Service "can find no ccnnection'' between President Nixon's visit and the shooting of James E. Beavers, 47, or Squire, W. Va. However. Warren said lhe Secret Serv ice was coolin uing "to look in- to his (Beavers') past." Beavers, said by a relalive to be a critic of President Nixon's Southeast Asia policy, was slain by police in the Grant Park area Thursday evening about three hour!! before the President was to arrive at Meigs Field , about a mile from the scene of the shoolouL Beavers was car- rying two .32 caUber revolvers when be was killed. White House officials pointed out that Beavers bought the guns be was earryina on Monday and that Nixon's trip was not announced until Tue5day. Beavers' sister, Mrs. Walter Chambers of Squire, W. Va., said her brother was known to be violent and had indicated he opposed Nixon's policies. Mrs. Chambers said her brother had once phoned the \Vhite House over some matter an d that he was distraught by the fa ct that he was unable to reach tb1 President. She said her brother left West Virginia Mon day morning and that she thought he had mentioned something about going to either Florida or California. Ni xon has homes in Key Biscayne, Fla,, and San Clemente , Calif. r-.1rs. Chambers said her brothe r had a history of mental i11nes~ since World War I I and that he had bttn confined to a West Virginia mental hospital after being tried for the murder of her first husband, El v Herley, in 19~. He was also arrested on 11 weapons charge in B!ue£ield, \V . Va., a month ago. g~ said. Eight Nomit1ated For HOME Unit 'Man of Year' Eight persons have been nominated for the Man of the Year award sponsored by the HOME Council of Huntington Beach. The awa rd , in honor of the late William H. Gallienne, manager of the Chamber of Commerce for more than 30 years, will be presented July I at the banquet in the Whistl ing Oyster restaurant, Huntingto n Harbor. Nominees for the award in recognitio n cf "outstanding civic achievement" and the. nominating civic group are : Richard Colla to. YMCA ; Gary Davis, Huntington Beach Recreation Aclivities Associa lion ; Monte Nitzkowsk i, Urban Land In.stitute Steering Committee ; Tom Severns, Sol Vista Homeowners Association ; Roger Slates:, Rotary Club; George Stokes, Ocean View Little League Parents and Orange County Young Repu blicans; Paul Sullivan, fluntlngton Beach Playhouse: and Irv Tucker, Golden Wes t liomeewners AsllOC.iation and l;.eague ol Women Voteri. Radio personality Dave Des.to will be the guest speaker and pment the award. BRIDES RECALL 'NIXON DAY' A year e.go President Nixon made 1 1pecilll trip to Newport Beach to attend the wedding of his nlect, Lawrent Nllon to Thomas Anfln!IM. On the sAme da y, In the st1me church wJlh the same mlnl~ter, three other bride11 reeiled their vows. Old they fetl the ir weddings were overahedowed by the prr.atnl"t of !ht Pr(!1idenl eatllt.r~ Where are they 111 tod~? See Society, P·17. two additional plaos on unification will be presented. They will be in opposit ion lo a plan sub· mitted by the Fountain Valley and Ocean View elementary districts that cans for the creation of three unified districts educating children from kindergarten through 12th grade. The Fountain Valley-Ocean View plan. which has been endorsed by the board of the high school district. was the only pro- posal that had been submitted pr ior to Thursday night's meeting in the cafeteria of Huntington Beach High School. But spokesmen for both lhe Seal Beach and Huntington Beach City elementary districts said they are against it and will submit alternatives. The next meeting of the county com- mittee is scheduled Aug . 26 . Committee chairman J oe. Coffin told the Huntington Beach City and Seal Beach districts to submit their proposals in full two weeks before that meeting. After the Aug . 26 meeting. another meeting will be. held and then a public hearini!: will be conducted on the plans. Tben the committee will send the pro-- posal.'! to the state Board of Education and one will be placed on the June primary ballot in 197%. Robert Zinngarbe, prealdent of the Ocean View tru stees, recalled that the last Lime the unification is.sue was put tit the voters it was a plan for unification of the whole district int.o one system and was defeated by a 7·1 margin. He said Lhe Fountain Valley-Ocean View proposal envisioned three districts which would retain community identity, each would have more than 10,000 students, with balanced assess.ed valua· lion and with equal distribution of present facll itle!I, Jn essence, the boundaries of the districts would be : -The current Westminster and Seal Beach elementary districts, p I us Westminster High School. -Anolher taking in the Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach city districts on the east side of Beach Boulevard along with Fountain ValleJ: and Edison high schools. -A third combining Ocean View and the remainder of the liuntington Beach City Districl on the west ~Ide of Beach (See UNIFY, Page Z) Pier Riot Erupts 38 Arrested in Seal Beach Melee By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 l"9 DallY ~ll•t lltJf Hostilities between Seal Beach police and youthful beachgoers, simmering since Monday, exploded into a riot Thurs· da y afternoon. At the end of the hour-long rock and bottle throwing spree, 38 were in custody and one office r was recovering from minor Injuries. Orfice rs from Hunllngton Beach, Los Alamitos, Cypress, Westminster and the Orange County Sheriff's Office joined their Seal Beach counterparts in sweep- ing the youths off the beach. '.Auto Kills Beach Youth With Horse A 13-y..,...ld HWllinlfob Budt boy was tJlled 'thundly when be atarW to lead Im bOrse 1crou a atreet to ib atabI• and waa 1truck by a car. PLAINCLOTHESMAN CLEFT) LEADS YOUNG GIRL TO JAIL She Was One of Those Rounded Up in Seil Beach Mel•• Keith A Ferrell, of 8291 Enfield Circle, was dead on arrival at Pacifica HO.!pital, whose enlrance is only 80 feet from the e.':cident scene. Sm_oldering Fire Halts Grisly Hunt in Tunnel Police said Lhe horse was not struck by the car in the tragedy which occurred In the 18000 block of Florida Slreet. The accident involved s vehicle driven by Joh n M. Harrison, 23, of 17931 Bell Circle, Huntington Beach. It was the city 's sixth traffic fatality of lhe ye.ar. Accident inves tigator Brian Sullivan 11aid Ferrell was starting across the p2.vement towar d the stable,, when he entered the path of Harrison's car. SYLMAR IUPl l -A smoldering f1rP in a y;ater tunnel where 17 miners v.•ere kill· ed in a natural gas explosion flared up to- day and delayed efforts to remove re· maining bodies of !he victims. fire officials said they v.·ould nol send rescue crews into the tunnel until flue holes were drilled to clear contaminated air from the five-mile shaft. Drilling crews already were al v.•ork preparing vent holes and rescue tcHms were on standby . Construction timbers, rubber hoses anrl other debris at the working area of the wnncl were involved in lhe recombusUon. "They had no time to live."' said fire department rescue worker Andy Kuljis. "They died -(he snapped his finge rs) - tha t fast. You take a lung full of hot air and you're dead before your brain kno.,..·s it." Only one man in the drilling crew 250 feet beneath the surface survived thr in· femo of blazing gases or the suffocating smoke that followed Thursday's blast. The tunnel, 15 miles from dov.•ntown Los Angeles. Is in an area laced with earthquake faults. Officials blamed the faults for the seepage of natural ga.'!. More than 27 hours after the blast and the 14-hour fire that foll owed, 12 bodies had been found in the fivt--mlle long bore under construction for the ~letropolitan \\later D1slr1ct. Seven had been removed from the shalt, five others were waiting to be taken out and rescue workers press· ed on through the smoke, seeking the brtd ies of lhe five men still missing. '·\Ve have only ab<lut 25 minutes lo work once we take the train to the tunnel fac e 1.•:hcre the explosion occurred because of Lhe 11me limits on our air tanks,'' Kuljis sa id . "Our five-man crew gropes by hand in the dark. I JUSt return- ed no\V because I found a man's hand in the 1nuck and J"ll need help to dig the body out." Officer Orva Akin said today the ac· cident is still being Inves tigated. Young. Ferrell graduated only recenUy from Dwyer Inte rmediate School in Hun· tington Beach and he would have been a fre shman next fall at Huntington Beach tligh School. Funeral .'!ervices were pending toda.y at Peek Family Colonial Mortuary. Woman Injured In Beach Crash The 1niners. cmployes of Lockheed Shipbuilding and Construction Co. or Seattle. broke into methane-bearing rock beneath an old oil field Wednesday. A small methane explosion that day .'!lightly A South Gate woman, Injured in Hun- injured four miners. tington Beach when a rock wq hurled Dr. Gordon B. Oakeshott. deputy chief through her car window, remained in or the State Division of Mines and satisfactory aindillon today at Ora nge Geology, said the Feb. 9 t>arthquake in County Medical Center. the same area which claimed 116 Jive.!!, ~1arcella Ruth BenJOn, 31, suffered a and its hundreds of aftershocks. could skull fracture when she wu hit in the have provided "escape pathway1" for head by a rock estimated to weigh half a pockets of methane. pound. The sole survivor. a brakeman on the The rock was heaved through the narrow-gauge railrosd through the. 21.foot passenger window of the car In which ahe high tunnel. was trapped for several was riding Tuesda y night as the auto hours in the rubble. traveled on P1citic Coast Highway near "For about an hour after the blast, I the bluffa area. No one else in the auto tSet TUNNE~ Paae l ) ... was injv.red. County 'Muscle~ Proposed Grand Jury Urges Strong A.dministrative,Chief , The Orange County Grand Jury today urged t.be Board of Supe"isors to retain a strong county administrative office. /\ jury resol ution said a strong ad- ministrative office was "in the intere1t.s or bot,b economy and efficiency of county operaUon." The Jurors also ura:ed the board of supervisors to "cont inue the high pro· fe sslonal quality n! tts department hea ds and 11dmlnistrative staff." Although County Adm inistrative Offlc<!r Robert Thomas was ntlt named directly, the Grand .fu ry resolution runs cOunt.cr tt't moves earlier this ye•r by SupervisOrs Ronald Cilspers ind Robert Bslun who make efficient l1SfJ: ol tht lllff of the charged the CAO with inefficitncy and coo:nty acfmiftl!ttative. office· ln tbe t,._ said that the b.urd should taki over · · tm!lta of both economy tAd Cficimey." greater control or 8dministr11UC11; I the ruotutlon.wtnl on : 'I'he jury resolution. signed by Foreman ''Coua&y department heads 'nd. 16- Dorten Marsholl of Newport Boch, urs-mlnistraUve at.an, disllngul&bed by thelr ed "that a strong county admlnlatratlve professional Lralnlng, experience and pro- office be retained w!Lh sufficient aulhorl-ven ability, look to · the board of ty ro admlnlster the. llffalr s of the county •upervisors fo r leadtrshlp 1nd direction. In the man efficient and the least costly "The re!ponsD>Ullits for fisc1l manage-- manner." ment decision, policy formulation abd The reS-Olutlon 8lso odvi~ed that "The leadership ln order lo be adequately car .. !upervisors are urged to keep the use or rled out would require th• full time of their uccuUve assislantl and personal each 11upervl~r1" continued the jury sta[ftat or below tile present level and lt rtaolution. ,• •t''' ·-' No shots were fired nor was tear gas wed on Lhe angry crowd, t stlmtltd to be between 450 and 500. According to police, the riot started when undercover officers from Hun- tington Beach arrested three beach youths for disturbing the peace. The officers, part -of Huntington Beach 's Special Enforcement Detail, had been called in Wednesday afternoon to aid Seal Beach in keeping the beach quiet. Chief Lee Case said ''large groups ()f rowdy Ir.ids" had been caus ing trouble on Saturday Meet the ~ach all wee.k and efforts by Seal Beach patrolmen to arrest suspects for narcOtiCl violations or for being In· toxicated in public where met witb hosti.11· <Y- Tuesday, one such arrest Jed a group to attack a patrol unit and break out the windshield. Sgt. Pat Sullivan desc ribed the atmosphere on the beach as "tense, very hostile," Thursday moming. Sgt. Tristram Swan, commander of Uie Huntington Beach SEO, said Wednesday'• undercover work was re I at iv e I Y, tSee RIOT, Page Z) Supreme Court to Take Secret War Paper Caper. F'rom Wire ~nicff WASHINGTON -The Supreme Court agreed today to me.ke an emerp:ocy decision on the di!lptJte between the government and two newspapers over their right tt> re.'!ume publication of the secrel Pentagon study o( the Vietnam war. The court anno unced lt will hear arguments in the controversial case Saturday at 11 a.m. EDT. The justices will hear arguments from lawyers from the New York Time! 1nd the WMhlngton Murder Trial Gets Three-day Weekend Delay By TOM BA.RLEV Of l"9 DellY r llet Steff An Orange County Superior Court Jury toda y began a three-day weekend brea k tn the murder trial of Paul Stennerson after hearing the testimony of nine pro- ACCUlion witneuea, four of whom were In the HunUngton Beach apartment wher• Art.bur Bashaw was atabbed to death. Pro1ecutor Pat Brian re11ted his case late 'Mlursd1y. Deputy Public Defender John Beauv1ltl will put on his defense of Sttnnenon. 2%, Downey, "hen the trial reaumed Monday btftn. Judge Raymond Vincent. Both lawym brought out what ap- peared Ill bt Ille moUvt In tho killing l11t Jan. 29 of Bashaw, 21, in their qua- t.i"onlng of Candice "Candy" Neal, a alight. 17·yttr-old witness from ~· Miss Nea l admitted from the witneu box that she had been intimate wllb Bashaw about 10 daya beklre he was stabbed and killed In his 1partment at 321 7th St. Sile confli'Jned for both lawyert that she told Stennenon of th& tncldent shorUy btf«e he leR for Hwitfnlll>O Stach to c:ontroht Baab1w. Balhaw'1 oeilWoor noiC~liat. -I Tappe. 2~.t.i!llled ~i,lllah&W """!"Ill hla" --' ''"' bolj> .aflei' ........... .. and Jom '~. u,.,Do-tnie:Y: ~ Buhaw'1_..;.rtniett Ill quesdon the. vio- tlm. ' Tappo .nd Molloy told the _jtlr'y that StenttlOO pulild a awlld-~• u II(. got tfle ...... of I fill with &iba· ond thol Baia'lf t_hi!f-off and to14 his attack«: "CoOl II. I don't want .,,yWn, 11> do With 11n1....," Both ~ ind M1a Neil -.1c1 ~ ntraon 1L1bbtd B«ahaw rt:pntedly In the chest and 1tam1ch and followed htm. dr iving the knife. Into Baahaw·s back. 11 the mortally wounded man staggered Into his bedroom. Tappe old SteMel'IOn w11 it.anding over the dytng Baahaw 1s he r•n Into the ISM TRIAi.. Pap I) ( Poat u well a1 the governmtht 's side fl the wrangle. The court continued restrictions im· posed on the Times by an Appeals Court ruling and applied the same rest raint on. the Washington Post. The government nearly lost its case without Supreme Court review. The decision to hear the case was 5 to 4 with Justices Hugo L. Black. William O. Douglas. William J. Brennan Jr .• Md 'Thurgood Marshall voting to deny the government"s request for a hearing. This would have Jet Lhe Times and Post pub lish stories on the war study docu ments without restriction. It takes the vote of four justice.s to place an appeal on the C()Urt docket. Undel' lower court orders the Poe;t ,..·ould have been able to proceed with ac· counts on all the secret documents in Sa.turday mornin~ papers. The Times c<>uld have printed only tho.se which the governme nt deemed not damaging to the national security. the court said the "special appendix" - a list of documents the justice Depart- ment is specially anxious lo suppress - must be dellvere'! to the Supreme C,ourt by 5 p.m. EDT today. The court &aid any other items which the government may h1:1ve specifie d aa unpublished since the 2nd circuit'• opirUon in lhe Timr..s case could be in· eluded and that the Times should be ootified as to what the items were. The court took the acUon at a regular Friday conference that precedes ils Mon· day court sessions. It had intended to end the regular tenn on Monday, but by ac· (See COURT, Page ZI Orufe Coan Weather The sun will peek throu gh that ever-present haze this afternoon and Saturday, bringing lempera· t.urte: to f7 1long the coast and 75 1n1and. Lows today and Saturday ljl. INSIDE-TOD.\ Y Morwlous machfnts which do obsoh,etlu -nothing, along wish their inventor ore the iubjece of a. Wrekender feature on Poat 25 lllday. '°"'!Ml,... ti ,. .. _. ,._. .... °''~" (_,,. t l ttJ•11t.... ,., .. ,....,. 14-1• SIM.II Merllelt D·U T1 ..... ltltft • """'"" •n WWIMr 4 Wllltl W•ffl 14 Wtt!l•ll"~ ....... 17·1f W111"111 -"1 ·-..... I. I, DAil V PILOT H rn-.,, June 25, l'f7t Charges De1tied f ! From Pqe I RIOT ... ~1 ' Chairman 'Objectivity' 1 ., unevenfful. noting that a few arre.sts were 01ade. "But Thursday, they burned us r ight aw&y (meaning ttie youths knew who the undercover officers were). A big group gathered around three of u.s on the be-ach. yelling obscenities, callings us pigs and narcs -the usual stuff. Charges that the Orange County Com· mitt.et on School District Organization is "stacked" against F'ounta1n Valley and Ocean View district intereslll . ..,.ere denied Thursday night by committee Chairman Joe Coffin. He reJl'Cled a call lrom these two districts for the rernoval ol stx members of the JI-man commll\ee. Coffin said lhe committee had "an e:x· t."e.llent record of objectivity'' and cooperation "'ilh local hoards and said that any plan on unification of the. Hun- lin glon Beach Union l!igh School District would be given a fair hearing. Coffin . speaking al meeting in the Hun· lington Beach High School cafeteria. said he would not ask any member to resign From Page l • UNIFY. •• Boulevard, plus Marina and Hllntington Beach high schools. Marx Dressler, super!ntendent of lhe Se.al Beach district. told the committee that his board was supporting a unifica- tion proposal with the neighboring Los A\amilos School District and that a plan v.·ould be forthcoming. Lionel Janecek, president of the Los Alamitos board, said thal b<llh Seal Beach and Los Alamitos were cut off from the. rest of Orange County by the Seal Beach Naval \Veapons Station and lhe Los Alamitos Naval Air Station and these districts v.•ished lo merge to preserve the identity of the communities. Asked what effect such a proposal would have on th e Fountain Vall ey-Ocean View plan. Qiffin commented. ··u blows the y,·ho!e thing ()Ut of the water from a financial consideration. The tv.·o things 19re incompatible." Harold Brown, president of the. Foun- tain Valley board. pointed out that the assessed valuation per student in the Huntington Beach Union High School District was $9,500 while in the Seal Beach-L<ls Alamitos dislrict it would be 115.000. Charles Palmer. depuly superintendent of the Huntington Beach City district. stated his district is not opposed lo the concept ()f unifying lhe school system, but is against lhe Fountain Valley-Ocean · Vitw plan. and woLlld present an alternate before the next meeting. YMCA Offering Many Programs For Summer Fun Summer day camp, speed reading and scuba lessons are a few ()f the programs to be. offered this summer by the Y,._1CA of Westminster-Fountain Valley. The Y Day Camp, to be held at Mile: Square Park, is open to boys and girls ages five lo 10. Each .session runs one \\.'eek beginning July 19. In addition to Day Camp, the Y will of- ff'r a Pre-School Papoose. Club tw o days a v.·ee.k for children ages lhree to five. The school will be held al the F irst linited f.1ethodist Church nursery school Jn f"ountain Va lley. Students ln intermediate and high school will be able lo participate In sail- ing courses, a bicycle caravan, skin and scuba diving classes and a speed reading courst. Registration for all or the programs i:; being taken at the Y~ICA ()ffice. 14776 Beach Blvd., \Veslminster. Further in· formation on the programs is available by calling U1e Y at 893-8511 . OU.Mel COAST DAILY PILOT OltANOE COAST PUILIMttNG COMl'AH'f llioh1rt H. W11I ll'rft.....,t ..... Pllblllhll' J t ck t. C1nf.'( ~ ,.,.,.. lll'ld Glrllral ,,...,.... n...,.,, K1twif lfllOr. 1\1111•• A. Mlfl',Sr.i-• ""9Nll"I E-'IOI' Al1111' Di,\i11 W•I Dl"tnO!l c-•y l:flllr AIDort W. l1t11 Ao-.lolto l•llOI' H1...i.,._ .._. Offlft 17171 a.1th l1vl1~1 r4 M1lllflf Mdr•n: P.O. 11111: 790, 91,41 .,_.,..... LlllJlilll9 a.di ~ m "llf•I A-C. .. M9itl Jal W•I lty Strwt ......., 9tldl• .JDt NOWJl(lr1 -.Ut....W 1M QlrMrdli »$ Jrlortll El Cl'"IM .... , ..... .,,.,_I ln41 "41-4111 or declare any auts vacant even ll he were empowertd to do so. Coffin wa~ responding to letters sent lo the-rommiitee by the f<~ounlain Valley and Ocean View district leaders asking for the resignation of Robert Bark of Anaheim and Robert ll arr oi Santa Ana, both of whom v.·ere elected ,._lay '!1. The letters poinled out that both these men reside in areas v.•hich Mlme day n1ay come in ""'ith unification proposals or lhelr ov.•n. The letters also a sked that the seats or four other members be declarrd vacant on the grounds that U~y also Ji ve in an area v.·hich may sponsor a unification proposal. The members named v.·ere. Roger Anderson, Huntington Beach, William Hall, Cypress, Steve Heiden, Huntington Beach, and Carlten L. Jones, Fullerton. Jn a statement to the press, ~ticharl Brick, superintendent of the Fountain Va\lry Dist rict. has charged tht com· mltlee ls weighted in favor of the in· tere:sts ()f the Huntington Beach City (elemenlary) School DislnC't. Later in Thursday night's meeting, meml>ers of the audience demanded that Coffin poll the committer members on lhe districts they represenl. Coffin branded the pull ··immaterial.'' pointing out that the group's task .... ·as to provide a countywi~ ma'iter plan on unification. The quesioners persisted, hoy,·evrr. E~ology Safe~ Valley Plant Danger Said Sm,all Construction or a $17.5 mi 11 ion desalinization plant and waste water reclamation complex in Fountain Valley will not create serious environmental problems, according lo consultanlll for the Orange County Water DislricL Jones and Stokes Associates, Inc. of Sacramento, reported lo district directors that construction of the dual purpose facility will have an overall beneficial im· pact on the environment. Following a four-and·a·half month study of lhe project. the firm said the detracting factors -air, water and noise pollution -will be minimized by design criteria. Neil Cline. assistant manager of tht 'vater district, said construction on the desalinization plant ls scheduled lo begin this fall. The district will pay $3.2 million and 1 state-federal grant will pay $4.4 million for the first module of the plant which. eventually is expected to produce 3 mil· lion gallons ()f drinking water J!fr day. The first phase will be used as a pr<r totype for lhe second phase v.·hich v.·i!I exoand the plant's capacity lo 15 milli()n gallons per day. Since there are no facilities of this size in existence, Cline: said, it is impossible to estimate how much the second phase will cost. The \l:asle water reclamation plant"s construction schedule has not been set, pending approval of a $7.9 million state-- federal grant. The water district plans to add $2 million ()( its money for lhe waste. water reclamation plant which will be built for a 15 .million gallon a day capacity. It will be modeled afler a similar facility at South Lake Tahoe.. Woman Tells Grand Jury She Copied War Papers LOS ANGELES (AP) - A woman has tol d a federal grand jury probina tht leak of a top eecret Ptnlalon study that ahe was paid $ISO by Daniel Ellsbe:rg. a '"dear fri end." to make copies of unspecified documents. Ellsberg, Is the formtr Defense. Department and Rand Corp . employe who a former New York Times reporter said gave lhe Times copies or ~ Pentn· gon documents on American involvement in Vietnam. Linda Sinay, 28, a free-lance ad· vertising industry worker, told the grand jury Thursday that Ellsberg paid her the $1$0 in late 1969 or early 1970 to duplicate: documents for him on a copying machine in her office, Mrs. Sinay's attorney said. The attorney, Luke 1.1cKissack, said Mrs. Sinay "didn't give them Ohe grand jury) any inronnaUon they didn't already have." She ended tv.·o days ()f testimony by sa.\ling she did not know the conients of documents she dupl icated for E!lsberg, From Page 1 COURT ... C'epting lhe case -with no indication v.·he n a ruling would c<Jme -ad· ]ournmcnt time was now unce r1?.in. One of the nine justices, \\l il\iam 0 , Douglas. already had lefl Washington for }1is northwest f!Ummer home. Hr ar- ranged to fl y back to lhe capital tonight to partici pate in Saturday·s hearing and the subsequent decision. A brief !Bed v.·ith the court by the Post earlier in the day said that if the justices allowed the government to block publ!ca- tion ()f the. Defense De part men t documents, they would be sanctioning a form of censorship olhtr federal courll have held unC()nstitulional. Other de\le\opmenls: -Former Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara labele:d the pacification pro- gram in South Vietnam ··a bad disap- pointment" in 1966 and told Pre.sident Johnson he saw ·•no reasonable v.·ay to bring the war to an end ~oon," lhe. St. Louis Post-Dispatch said. The newspaper, quoling from v.·hat Lt said were se:crel Pentagon documents. :;aid McNamara told Johnson in a memorandum dated Oct. 14. 1966: ··Pacification has, if anything, gone backward." ~ private memorandum was v.·rillen about 18 months after the . pacificalio'n program had 1otten under way. e 1be Chica10 Tribune, In a fmnt page editorial in today's editions, suggested lbat a group of rdltors .and aovernment ()fflcials study the secret Pentagon pt.per• te decide what can be published. and distn"bult the material to all lhe news media. e The late President Dwight 0 . Eisenhower set up a secret policy in 19M lQ eliminate communist control of Hanoi 11nd to reunite Vietnam under a pro--U.S. government, lht Chicago Sun-Time~ sl)"S. The copyright atory printed in today'll ed!Unna of the ntv.•spaper said that an Ap ril 2. 1958. Natlonal Securlly Council document showed th11t Eisenhower had Ctntr1l Inltlli,:ie.nce Age.ncy Information that the. fate 110 Chi ti.tlnh h3d o 11 e.r"'h c Im in g popular tupport thro11ghout Vietnam. ti.IC'Kissack said. The v.·oman told newsmen she met Ellsbe:rt in 1969 and last saw him a year ago. "He's a dtar friend of mine and a brilliant man,'' s~ said. "I met him through a mutual friend ab<lut tv.·o years ago." McKissack said the v.·oman's testimony v.·ould provide only "inconsequenUll in- formation" lo the grand jury, Ellsberg worked for the Rand Corp., • Santa Monica ''lhink-tank'' at the time when the firm received 1 .... ·o of the 15 copies which the Pentagon made of its 7 ,000-page study. More Portable Classes Okayed By Ocean Vieiv Ocean Viev.· School District trustees have approved a plan to lease four more portable classrooms for C()\lege: View &hool to avoid placing 240 student:-; Qn double sessions or busing them to ()ther schools. The action \\'as taken \\'eclnesday after a group of abciut 50 parents met earlier in the \1•eek ""'ith district administrators to \·oice concern about double st.c:slons and busing during expan.c:ion v.·ork 111. CQllege View School. The sC'hool board v.·as told by District Superintender:t Cla rence Hall that Collegt Vie\V was .scheduled lo be remodeled dur- ing the summer, but. becaust of dif· ficulties with lhr slate Allocations Board ()Ver the district's new "houst count." th e project has been delayed. Bids are now t'Xpected lo go out in September with the project completed for the 1972-i3 1chool year. The. possibility or placing the sludenll on double sessions because: of the overcrov.·ding that v.·as erpeeted or transferring them to Meadow Vitw or Star View schoOl.s was con.sidered. but the board backed a. plan to lease four ad- ditional portable classroom.s to ac· commodate the 240 extra .students. The total cost or leasing the portable. units will be $15,000 v.·ith the approximale C'OSt to lhf' di:;trict being $7.500, Dr. llall told the b<lard. From Pqe I TRIAL ... bedroom to pull the I>o\\'"MY man away from his victim. The final scene in Sttnnerson'1 aueaed killing of Bashaw was depleted to lhe jury by Laura Bashaw, 21 . the vicU m's i;lsler. who was asletp In 11n adjoining room at the lime of the scuffle. "I pw some guy standing holding a knife :and I ye\lrd at htm 'get out of here'," she said. 'And then ... and then ••• T saw Artie fall lng on the floor on h!.!l knees. holding his stomach." She told the jury that her only 1ub1f'· quent \'iev;r of Stenntrson was as tht 0nv.1'ley n1an ned from the apartment. ·lie rttn out fas!," 5he said. and the board was polled. with each member naming the district he reprtsented or whert he resided. Although it was not all brought out in lhl!. polling it was clear that lhe. backers or the Fountaln Valley-Ocean View unification plan were trying to estabhsh that Holden i~ a lrostee ()f the Huntington Beach City District, that AnderSQn. a member of the county Board of Educa· lion . resides in the Huntington Beach City District and is a former trustee of the district, and that Harr wa s nominated by the .Huntington Beaeh City District. Char!ts Palmtr. deputv superintendent of the city district, said that his board op- posed the Fountain Valley-Ocean View plan. Pair Arrested On Welfare Fraud Charges An Orange County Welfare Department social worker and his wife were two of seven persons arrested Thursday by the d istrict attorney's ()ffice and accused of v.·elfart chiseling. Social worker, Billy Joe Lee. 35, and his wife, Joyce 41 , are accused of welfare fraud. Mrs. Lee is a deputy clerk for the North Orange County Judicial District. Both were arrested afler district at- torney's investigators probed an alleged ()Verpayment of $2,164 to the couple by the welfare department. Welfare Director Granville G. Peoples asked for the in· vestigation afle.r a personal ei:amination of chargea against the couple. Investigators 11aid Lee v;as hi red by the welfare department in November 1970, and Mrs. Let was hired as a deputy clerk under the name ()f Joyce Noble in August, 1970. Also arrested Thursday in a move that brought the number of welfare fraud ar· reslll up to ~2 in a six-month period were ?o.!icaela Lopez, 32, Sandra Pneger, 28, and Janet Gray, 24, all of Santa Ana, and Leon Dufresne, 26, ()f Cypress, and Lioda Ann Woodworth, 22, of Garden Grove. Mrs. L<lpez, ~trs. Pfleger and Mrs. Woodworth are accused ()( obtaining funds under the Aid to Families with Dependent Children program b y repre!enting that their husbRnds were not at home and contributing to the family income. SISTER SHOWS GRIEF Brother 1st Mine Victim From Page 1 TUNNEL ... could hear the other v.·orkers calling for help, and 1 think some or them tried to v.·alk out or the tunnel. But after an hour l heard no 1nore cries," said Ralph Brisset, 33, of Pacoi ma, Calif. He was brought to the surface at mid- morning. covered v.•ith cuts and bruises and moaning with pain. Unable to describe \\'hat happened to his com· panions, he said '"\1'e v.•ere told it was safr." Another problem faced by rescue v.·orkers was that the bodies apparently 1vere scattered over a rubble-covered section stretching 200·feet from the tun· nel faC'e. The first body was round about 600 feet from the bore when the first team of rescuers in a rail car ran over it. 0£- fi cials said the unidentified man ap- parently ran the 600 feet before dying. "He made the supreme effort to save his life,'' said a rescue \VOrker. As weeping relatives looked on from a nearby hill, rail cars rum bled to the surface bearing bodies of the dead. Among lhe small group of persons, mostly women weeping, v.·as a mining in- spector who asked that he not be iden· l ified. "We took it as lo11g as we could and thtn st'artecl arresting some or lhtm for disturbing the peace."' Sv.·an said. '·Everything v.·as all right when we took the first three O\'er lo !he jail, but while v.'e were gone . .some of then1 !)larled throwing stuff at passin g _patrol uniU, and when we got back to fhe. beach, it ble11• up .'' The r.rowd took 01·er the park al. 1ht foot or !hi' pier and the children's pla.\' are;1 on the bearh. lt \1•as about J p 11\. 11·hen the order lo disperse v.•35 fir:-,t given, and s hortly aller that, po hce began to swel"p the btach. Sgt. Lte Gatti said a large portion of the crowd on the beach consisted o( ramilles \1·ho departed en masse. v.·hen trouble started. Those in custody are being held ()n a \'ariely or charges ranging from in· !oxication through failure to disperse and froin inciting tu riot to felony battery on a police officer. The injured Seal Beach officer, James (;ross. 25, was knocked unCQnsciou.~ v.·he.n an object struck the front of his pro- t.ecri1·e helmet, sending him lo the pave· 1nenl. ~roperly d2.mage 11'as slight. po lice said !oda_v, be ing limited to bottles th rov.'n into Ocean Avehue, which runs a long the beach front. The quickly controlled riol seemed lo have little effe<:t on the downtown shop- ping area ()Tl Main Street as shoppers strolled in and out of shops a few feet from the heavilv clad officer.s who con· tinued to arrest stragglers. Case said he is anticipating a tense v.·eekend and put his men on 12-hour duty. "At the moment we don·t intend to close the beach, but it will be heavily patrolled. \Ve'!l be ready if trouble breaks ()Ut again:' he said. ••\Ve've never had anv trouble like this in the six years I've bein here," Case ad· ded. •·Jt used to be like this in Huntington Beach. I guess this year they just picked Seal Beach." GaUi, reflecting the anlicipalory mood of police, noted that of lhe Nrests made on the beach before Thursday, none were from Seal Beach, and of the 38 from the riot. "most were ()Ut or county, and only a handful v.·ere from here." "And of course, there'll be others that have heard about thr riot, plus most ot the ones v.·e picked up Thursday havt been released, so they may come back here looking for trouble." NEWPORT STORE LAGUNA STORE ·~· SALE SOFA Mo rt• (U'Hft-1ot'' LllMll ,,;,,9 •IGI, .... \.. Mir'" (IPMt!-lllo-' CMrtrllUfll W11! -$369 SOFA •..-L111en '•lnl-Cttllrtllfflt Woll UH $399 Mttil .. _,. SOFA 111 .... m $459 SOFA 0.ltl VtlVot "" $699 .,,.. ,..._ ..,..i~"" u,;,. "" PR CHAIRS •••• "-'"'"· $159 PR. CHAIRS ~:,~; ~;;;;-'11' ... $179 ' Oll•o \lll•ft lllJ M. SLEEPER Mwi:ule1t '"~"'''"1"' w111 Dovl>l1 M11f~ 11'1.U $259 SLEEPER '!w:i~~lttl , .... -c""1111"' ....... $269 SOFA ·~·'-'"'' LI,..... ,rift!- SOFA l h.,rlll-Tlllt.i 01m11• -$619 ••Id, o ..... "" $489 PR CHAIRS •••• ,,...._.,_ $179 PR. CHAIRS $159 I lit~ Vll•tl II.I'M, OriX1l-9r-1111,.. lf\S ... LOUNGE CHAIR ,,,_._. ""~ ,.,., $139 CHAIR .. ,.._,~ ... ... $199 C-rlll Wolf UlS SOFA Morw1 Cl1"1611 110" ••-tll"'t•k-$399 SOFA ......... ,,,_,..,.. '''"' $399 COOllrlOI Wtll -c..,1,.111111 Wtl1 -SOFA Ml ... Cl_..,. T.i-, .... $299 SOFA l~lf'lill-TP .... Ctnltlll Wtlt "" $499 •i..o, 0.111 'rl"I "" SOFA M•f'I• c • ._, .... $479 lt..,;wlM Jlrl" "" PR. CHAIRS ::.;::.,,,_ $119 LOUNGE CHAIR "::: .'~':::. ,,.., ... 12•t $159 SOFA ~";;;:;-''"" SLEEPER ·~"' .... $239 . .. $469 ••• LOVE SEAT ·-""" . .. $239 PR. CHAIRS ~;::: • .:-:'"'-111t ... $149 SOFA lr1ll"1• '(•--Wltll-Gt .. , ...... "" $429 ROCKER "' ......... • . .. $169 PR. CHAIRS ~~:~; •• ltl't M. $169 UPHOLSTERY FEATURES PR. ROCKERS ~:~::;; ..... $179 *.All I Way Hand Titd Construction .ll, ... * Most Scotch Guard9d SOFA LJ--..,,.,. llrl"' 110 $429 * Most Down Backs LOVE SEAT ..... CO-.<•-'""' $259 * Many Contr11tlng Welti (•ftlrl ii "''" Iii ' * All Excellent Quality Miftyil ot~1r 1p1t.i1l11 11!1ct1d p;t t11 11 TlliUI SALi Piii/CU. If.,.,, floor 11111pl11 1 ,111•t jvit th! f lnq, !"'"Y of 111r b1 1nd 11111111 .,.;II be •~1il1bl1 •n I 1p1ci1I ord1r •••I• 1t ridvci d !''"''· D11t t f1 r91t ... , '"'"" b1dro<1m, dlnln9 r11<1rn a ICt11lo111I c1ll1cli1n1 •• f1b11l11111 OIY• +1191! DEALERS FOR: HENREDON_.DREXEl-HERITAGE NIWPORT BEACH 1727 W•1tcllff Or., 642·20.SO OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 4 li ___ ... NIWPOllir ITOll OnN FllDAT 'TIL' Profe11ion1l Interior D•sl9ner1 Avall1ble -AID INTERIORS Ph•• T•ll,,.. MHt •f o,... C.1t11ty-1'4D·12,J LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co11t Hl9hway Pho .. , 4'4-6.SS 1 ' I I I I I S1veete1as Pay Senate Extends Draft Two Years WA.SHJNGTON (AP) -The Senate has voted to extend the draft two more years, 11weeten soldiers' pay 52.7 b1tllon and chart an Jndochina \\'ithdrewal plan disowned in ad vance by the \Vh1te Mouse. But after seven weeks of debate the Senate's 71 to !6 approval Thursday o! the draf! cx1cns1011 bill may well be too County Street Improvements Get State Okay Four road improvement projects for Orange County have been approved by the State Highway Commission. Route 57 between Harbor Boulevard ""d Imperial Highway will be renovated al a cost of $32 ,000 prior to Its removal from !he state high\\'ay systen1. Thal por· lion of the high1vay .,..·ill be abandoned by the state and bccon1e. a t n c a 1 thoroughfare wh en lhc nearby Route 57 -Orange -rreeway is com pleted. Pavement grooving to reduct wet \\'ealher skidding is planned for a 1.2 n1ile stretch of the Newport Freeway south of lhe Riverside' Freeway connection. 'The project is estimated at $22.000. Installation or automatic railroad crossing gates, is planned for two loca· tions at a cost of $32,000 each. One site is the Lincoln Avenue crossi ng of Southern Pacific tracks and the ather Is the Placentia Avenue crossing. Both •re in Anaheim, late for Congress to finish fmal action before the present Selective Service Ac t expires next Wednsday midnighl Some senators threaten a fihbuster if a I louse-Senate conference kills or weakens an end-the-war an1endn1ent added by Senate Democratic Leader M 1 k e f\l <1nsfield One kno1l'ledgeble senator predict !!I final action may not co1ne before mid- July. The rtfanslield an1endn1en1 calls for a phased withdrawal of U.S. troops over nine months if all U.S. prisoners of war are released. It is likely to receive a cool reception both in conference and on the Honse floor. House antiwar forces never have mustered more than 158 congressmen to vote for any Vietnam withdrawal amend· ment. The White House hes said the Mansfield measure won'l affecl wa r policy. The conference has more than a doz@n differences to reconcile between the House and Senate ve rsions of the bill. One of the nlos! important is an amend· 1nenl by Sen. Gordon Allot\, (R-Colo.,) v.·hich raised the military pay boost to the san1e level approved by the House, but ~rrcad most of it among loy,·er ranks. Some senators had hoped to kill th@ d1·afl outright as a means of forcing the military to adopt the all-volunteer armed force concept nolV: The Nixon administration hopes the in· creased pay can prepare for an all· volunteer force after June 30, 1973. It says the draft Ydll be needed until it is proven better pay and conditions really can attract suitable volunteers. Coffee Drinking Linked To Po ss ibility of Ca11cer LONDON <AP) -Coffee drin king may cause cancer of !he bladder, a group of American scientists said in an article published Friday in the British medical magazine, The Lancet Women appear twice as prone as men lo cancer infection through coffee drink- ing. they add;.d., ,. The Lancerpublished the paper b)',µie Departmtnt of Epidemiology and Krf:llR:e Centt!r fo r Environmental Health at the Harva rd School of Public Health.. It said the possible connection between cofefe consumption and cancer \\-'as discovered accidentally during a study associating cigarette smoking and cancer on a sample population e1f American cancer victims. ·nie scientisls who were not identified, said they had not reached definite con· clusions but "the relationship between coffeee drinking and bladder cancer war- rants investigation." , 21ad Jtli1ae Victi11a A priest with a Bible on his lap r ides on a rail car carrying rescue workers and the second victim to be brought out or the \Valer aque- duct in Sylmar follO\'•ing Thursday morning's explosion. Solon Visits Drug Den, But Routed by Addicts ?\'EW YORK (AP) -Sen. Harold E. Hughes (D·lowa). Y.'as threatened y,·ilh bodily harm and chased today from the base ment of a Harlem tenement that was believed being used as a "shoaling gallery·• by narcotics addicts. ''I knew I was in a dangerous situa· tion." Hughes said after getting out of the basement of th@ five-story building on We.st 137th Streel It was across the r;lreet from Harlem Hospital. Hughes was touring a section of 11arlem with three other senators. all members of the special subcommi~tee on alcoholism and. narcotics. lie entered the building after rcsidenl!'i pointed it out as a y,·eJJ known "shooting gallery" - a place where addicts gather to inject narcotics. The senator, who was accompanied by nev.·sn1cn . photographers and a television crew. \~·alked through a dark corridor l() a large area in the rear where six persons v.·ere apparently preparing to "shoot up." The men, startled by the bright camera lights. ronfronted ltugheio near a table where. the men were reportedly prt.parinc; narcotics for use. "Get the . • • • out of here," one yelled at Hughes. HUihe.1 stared al him dumbloundedly. .At this point two young women who escorted the senator into the basement, tumed and scrambled out. Ftldi1, Ju11t 25, 1971 H DIJL.Y PIL.Oi lf Welfare Blauaed County Budget Boost Explained By JACI BROIACI 0t !Ml o.ur '"'' '"" mUUon drop tn expected st.alt: and federal revenuta." The: adrnlniltralive officer warned that the bud1et rntttl Ute essential and man· d1tary ohll9aUon1 of the county but that It provid.ci no fkslbllity. Last January, COuntr .-.dmini1tr1Uv1 Officer Robert Thoma• 1n 1 rtporl to the Board of Supervllors wamtd of ittonny fiscal seas ahead. He suggested that the county tax rate might have to bt In· creased by as much as 34 cents for the 1971·72 llscal year. Two supervisors shouted their in· dignation at the staten1ent and a few days later lried to fire Thomas, Supervisors Ronald Caspers and Robtrt Battin saw their campaign proml111 going down the drain ._ "If •• Jrlll: f1ced with additional -changes In either welt.re or medical pro- grams or a m•Jor dlu1ter, we are not read)' rnonl)'wtse." Later events proved that lhl pair did not have the necessary lhird vole to fire Thomas. Wednesday they got the lastest word on the upcoming budget and prob1ble tax rate -an increase of l8 ctntl on the present $1.70 rate. It th e tax rate does go up that much or there1bout, it will mark the first time In 11 y11rs that the levy has incr•&Md more than six ccnta In one year. The rite was $1.62 in 1911·62 and reach· td a hi1h polnt of $1.73 in 1966-87. Why is it necessary to increase that levy more thin 30 cent• In one year~ Thomas attempted to explain that in hi• budget message to the 1upervisors. "Of the nt million incm1e In th• g@ner1l fund budget (to $216 million), tl2 million result& directly from rising v.·elfare co!'itS, while anolher H.3 million reflects an increase in the number or judges and court related activities," he detailed. Thomas noted that outside of welfare, Medi-Cal and criminal justice related costs, all other county departments were asking for $400,000 less thai:i the current year. . . Board Chairma n Battin disagreed that criminal justice spending was man- dalorv. "I have said before that every new judge costs the county $250 ,000 to $350,000 when all the employes and equip· nlent and space needed to suppor1 his of- fi ce is included." Veteran Supervisor David Baker countered that argument v.·ilh, ''The county has no choice as to the number of persons placed on probation. the number of those put in jail or juvenile hall . As far as the district attorney. the county clerk, the sheriff and the probation departrtient are conctrned there is very little control on increased costs." Thomas said other factors. besidf!s \veil are and community safety, also had affected the budget. "Refuse disl)OS81 costs and a drastic reduction in an- ticipated carryover balances from thl• year which partially resulted in a $12.8 'Tl'lomu emphasized the major in- creues in the upcomina budget are all state f1r federal mandated programs over which the county has littl.e or no control. "We c1n't just say we Jre not going to take care of people on the welfare rolls." He again stressed that of the 115 !eparate budget unils. a •how an actual decrease in future 1ptnding, while 69 percent show a decrease, no change or increases of less than $100,000 over the current year. Thomas said the real answer lo a reduction In county epending lies in the field of lax rtfcnn, welfar@, Medi-Cat and the judicial and penal systems. "Nol until these are achieved can we really hope to resolve the county's fisca l dilemma,'' he warned. Missing from the budget are many ell'· penditures which some county officials believe are almost a necessity. tncluded are expansion of Lhe rounly's main jail, now admittedly over-crowded; addition of £our new courts on an u~ finished floor of the courthouse; badly needed regiona l parks and $1 million more in the contingency or 1'rainy day" fund. · The supervisors will have from now to August 2 lo try lo trim what Thomas calls an "awterity budget." Train Hits Car; Woman Unhurt A woman narrowly escaped death early today when a Sante Fe freight train crashed into her car in Placentia. Joyce Marilu Finklestein. 36, of 32.4 Swanee .Ave .. Placentia, leaped from the vehicle she was driving just seconds before a 57-car train demolished it at the Placentia Ave. crossing of the main San. la Fe line. Placentia officer James Waymire who investigated the accident sail! Mr!'i. Finklestein was south bound on Placen- tia, approaching the railroad track.s as a crossing suard ann started to com• down. She .applied her brakes and skidded under the arm into the path of the last.- moving freight t.rain. The Homes are priced from 33,950 The Way of Life is Free! Living is what you want to make of it in a big, beaut iful new home at Oceanview Park ••• now offering Immediate Occupancy in lhe Final Unit. .• excellen t Conventional Financing with low, low down payment ••• and you own the land! Quality 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath Traditional Design 2 Story Homes ucro a HOMES OCEANVIEW PAHK SERIES The Only New Cl ose-In Homes in Costa Mesa ' '\\ ____ ...... Sal" Office and Furnished Models ot 19th Street & Whittie r Aven ue Phone (714) 546·0337 -Op•n Da ily from I 0 9,m. until Ouslt. Fr°"' L •• ADAMS AVE. -l Af!Olh•r ••Jelltt • .,.~ W slcola I HOllIS I t 4 DAILY PILOT Frldl;)'. JIN 4s, 1~7l .--l,:;·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;. .............................................. 111 II . r-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---11 • Agnew Ton•• Ro11te t i I , ' 1 ' ' .. " 1 • • .. • UP'I frl1wsm11• Vice President Spiro Agnew will leave El Toro Sunday for a one month world tour. He will arrive at Guam 11onday, Seoul, Korea Tuesday, Singa- pore July 4. Kuwait July 6, Saudi Arabia July 8, Ethiopia July 10, Kenya July 12. Congo July 15. Spain July 17, ~1orocco July 24, Portugal July 26 and back home to \Vashington July 28. 21 Years Ago North l(orea Launched Attacl\: 011 Soutl1 SEOUL (AP) -1".4·enly-one year5 ago lt>day North Korea invaded South Korea and st.erted the Korean War. Occasional clashes still in terrupt the uneasy peace along the I51·mile frontier between the two nations. rushed to South Korea·s defense and rallied a 16-nalion force under the ban· ner of the United Nations. Dayan, Military Chief Attacked For Hawk Talk By United Prtss International A fi00.000-man South Korean force t quipped "''ith U.S. jl.'! fighter-bombers, missiles, tanks and artillery stands guard :~ i; 11Jong and below the demilitarized zone set by the 1953 armistice. These for ces pushed all the way throtigh North Korea. lo the Chinese border, but· late in November 1950. 300.000 Chl~se Communist troops "i'ent into ac· lion on two fronts and trithin a month had forced the U.N. forces back lo the 381.h parallel. lsraeli Foreign 1'.1inisl er Abba Eban lo- day criticized Defense Minister f\Ioshe Dayan for saying an outbreak of a ne·N war in .the Middle East is ineviUl ble and berated former Air Force Ch ief Ezer \Yeizman for 'saying Israel should occupy Cairo if a new war breaks out. Signs of other interna l dissebsion C2-me from Premier Golda Meir who told Bar Jlan University students today Israel fac- ed a greater threat from internal division and strife than from its belligerent Arab neighbors. She apparently referred to a recent rash of strikes and a thrc?.t by the naliQnaJ religious party to v.·Jlhdraw from !he coalition government. U.S. soldiers protected 18 miles of the DMZ front untlt 1t1arch. ~·hen they 1••ere pulled back prior to the reduction of U.S. forces in South Korea from 62,000 to 42.000 by J uly l ·: · Across the buffer zone are 466.000 Tired Spaceme11 Continue Work In Orbiting Lah North Korean troops armed ""ith Sovie~ military equipment. including f\11G21 jet fighters. heavy artillery and missiles. South Korean off icials claim that North l\orea ha s viola ted the annislice agree- ment by building in il.s half of !he buffer zone 50me 200 coocrele bunkers and nlher fort ifications armed ·y»itb aul oma1.1c weap(Jl,.;. Aul Norlh Korea's refusal to cooperate ha s stymied the Neut ral Na- t IOTI5 Supervisory Commission and the joint observer teams of the t"'·o opposing •ides. the agencies created lo help en- force the armistice \\'hen the North Korean army cros~cd the 38\h parallel at da\\o·n on June 25. 1950, it had 10 combat d1v1 sions armed v>ith 500 Soviet tanks and 2 000 ar111lery piece~. South Korea was dC'fended by 100.000 ill· trained men arnl('d with rifles and l18ht mlH:hine guns su ppl ied by the i ·ni1ed Stat('.~. MOSCOW ! UPI) -Three !ravel v.·cary Soviet cosmona uts worked al a long list of scient1f1c experiment::; today. including measuremen!s of hann done to their 01vn bodies by 1he1r record-breaking flight Georgy Dobrovotsky, Vl;idislav Vol kov and V1klor Patsayev have 001\n in space longer than any other men and earth oc1e11t1st:; ca.refully monitored the c·on· d1tion of their hea rts, muscles and bone:> to determine llO\\.' well lhe n1en survivc more than 19 days of weightlessness. The spacemen rcpo rtrd they felt v.r ll. but 4 touch of tiredness crept into 1he normally cheerful \'Oi~e of Dobrovolsk y, the flight comm ander. Israel also was having ma1or dif· ficullies ~·ith Arab guerrillas both tn the Gaza Strip and in other occupied areas. The lsr2"1i command said its soldie rs killed eighl Arab guerrillas in tv.·o clashe,.; in the occupied Golan Heig hts section of S}na this week. No Israeli casualties v.·ere reported. There have been ;i series of terrorist acts in 1he G,1za Strip. Eb;in :;ct forth his \'le"'" in an in· 1rrv1e1v' v.1th the Tel .i\1·1v r \orning nc11spape r Yedioth Aharono!h. Seoul It'll lo lhe invaders in thr ee davs •nd a large part of South Korea was Oc. ( pied v.ithin a month. The United States Tass. the Soviet news agenc.v. said ground control asked the cosmonauts Thursday who they felt. l ie said l~rael should pursue c!forts !o reopen the Suez Can rJ under an interim agreeme nt 1>.i!h Cairo but adn11Lted chances for such an accord "'Cr(' slim. He a!50 called !or a concentrated effnr1 t.o h1ghli'1:hl Soviet efforts to disrupt the in- ternallona! equil ibrium through Russia's pact with Egypt. ~ • I· • ~ 1 .· Rains Falling Over U.S. Showers Drench Midwest, Plnins, Pacific Northwest Cnlllor11ia T~ WM"''' •~1"'8'e!i to tw th•~•~• V-1'1Ct lr 'rllllY Iv I Pll'O>•~t ~!"· er/I C..lllor"'' 1ummt r w~eko"" low clov•b •'IC! IDm• ~ werr .,,.. dlc!ttl klr !ht coo"•I """ h•1<~ ,,..., In TM .....,.,.;,.,, tov•n•"9 oft Dr •"''""""· !"1lr wtdhtr "'"' 1>•H i<H11f 111, men! .r Soutft.,11 C1lllornl• •"6.\Y ond Si l· llrM~. with tooltr "'""'erttvrt\ In -· YI/Int. Htrf 1un1hlno wt~ ..,.,tU\I ""' i..t •ftt•/IOOfl l'louri •oOIY tnd \1turlltY '" .... LO"! .Onftltl l<tl, '"ITT'! 111111 ....,,..,.Ill,.. Chi,..., lht •lli!rmom•IO• flll(fvefl ... bt-11 ,, II ~ltM t nd UP 119 n .,.,,.,,. IM dlr. A hit" 11'1 M w11 fw...:11t Iv tlM(" -· "''"' • ~ ~ ..... tu .. ft( 1J. T"'"-t turtt of JS l'ft '' t M ou""" •i.t -• 1rt11k l9d !or ,,.. ..,...,,.111" ... ltM. HI ... le ...... lf\H'n •I tJ lft IN! hl9f\pr' Yt llftt l'O HJ .... lf\t ..,_ ,_,., -· fllrKt ll ..,.. ..... dt..,.I t •tto. with w1todt u• te 71 "'II" Mt ...,.,, .,..._ lotttt l 1!'191.11'1tlft MHft 111 no. •"--· T'°' h!wfo ,...,_,,.,.., Tl>u"""t y, ,..., h ~tt hlff' tot '""'' lo• L- IPHl'I "'"' 74 7J. -""''• -le• M.JO, Iv .... "* ....,, Ml Wll-~. l'tl,.,.. ftlt "·ft, ltlv.,slck ,.., 8•~-'•'••'d ...... l'•lm ie•lf>tt tOt•lOJ, S•n °'"" a...,, So"'• •trlw•• N+t •lld An•· ~ltfttt ,. ...... ,.. Sam,,..r11. ,..,.,. -· tfloMto Mid tlWft-, ... r.oww •• ''"" frWI "-tr c;,.,, L•Q1 t (rM! lftf mlcklM MJ111t)f .. I YtlltY fp !!Ho '""ti PIPI"' loon tl'ld llY<'l'I ,,.., ..... tllltm WIH'/llMI -· .. ,,.,fod IO< -"-ot "'' lowcf Mlcldlt Wnl, 1 .. Ille , ... ""'" ....... tlOtfl'I ,,..., '"" Pa<;ll:C. ... , lt ,"lflO 1111 "Ol'mw11tl wllft PUJ~ wr•. ll!Ct!IY ""•¥• rtl11 Mid ""'" -• ~-"'' tr.. Mori.r l!'IOU"• ltlftl. c-llafl(O. Ort~ ......... "<;~ \O llt'I 1 tJ 11!<11 .. of rein durl"' t ti~­'*" -ioa . ·1~t. '°""''''""' t"ttlOO'I o• ll>t coun ''" t.•O 11111. "'IVOO•. looa• Wl'Otl••· wit~ lh~~~:;~:,m;,,:'o:;:,:i:;, G~~. cr.1~1 •"".! ""'"'"' ••Ctl>t lot lht <nl•r>d or••• of t~o •ovll>Wot t ..-flt•• "" ~II' ,,,,.II CO"• ltllV" f.•t•I>' '"°'"'"' IOW !t n•,. P"••""'' 11 S0<i•t•11tn C••Ho•nlo O•.,.•t ., .... -•e """'''" '" II>< ilh "'''~ !••• IOw •I N .. 01-,J fl llf<I• .. \ CIHUtal Mary -~lne INt Y. l !f'l'lt Yt r1.oblt -.. ~ •I'll ...... 1111 Plllvt'i beclll!'I· 1,.. '""'"'" 1t ,., 11 k-• i., .,,. .. -· todl't t lld llll.lfdl1. Hit~ ~ lltr •S. CMUt l l-t•l11• .. rt "91 ltl!m t1 tf 111. l"lt°'d h'mMtUUrtl rtf'91 ll'llfrl 11 19 1(, Wtltr ~Nrtrurt w. Sun. Mo"'"· Tides 'Jl:IDAY l"tClld t.••h Ii l''·"'· J I Ste-•ow ) ll o m. lS ' "'' "·~" ""11 ·-i·~•lld "''" ~•to<'l<I IOw iATUltOAY 1 ,. .... J• •.• , ..... , ~f 11 l)o • "' J ' Ten1perot1ares ·~ VHll•D l'lltass tHTlllH•TIOHAl TtmH••tYr•• •no Drt clP•!llllln tor ,~, 2 ......... "'''°° tnd;l\9 ., •• "' Hit~ Lo* Pt•c. i All>liaverav1 ~• •• A!llM.o It 10 •ncl'la•tOt •• •I 4ou on 'lO ;.i; 1Jul!ot11 Ill) t4 .e1 Chot10!!1 11 tt Chif •"O •• ,. .U (ll'!C!"""" ,., 41 Cl..,tllfl4 11 tt 0•11•1 .. il o........ ti ll 0.S Moi,..1 91 .. O.!rolT • ,, l'rt \1111 f'lo )'I H........ IT Jt l"'Cll•-11• "' ~ .OJ 11: ...... c 11y •1 11 Lii Vn•\ 41 !4 l ..,llvlnt .. " Mtm""+t fl Tl Mllml 11 1' M ll'W-11 I I '3 .It AAl~f'lt•OOI•\ 7f JJ H-Otl .. ni t ] 70 .1' H-Y"'°~ tt 11 Oltlt~Of!W City '' 4o6 OtNho ion fl ,.,JO -~1... ., .11 "~•+1<1e•ehi1 " It ,._..r. iot u l',11l!WtO~ 11 II 1'Qt11t"i! AA •1 I 01 Jtoo.., C•tv J.1 s• IJ Jt""° I I Jt Jtlc~mot'ld 11 "" Jt {rtmt nla •~ 11 S• LOUii t< 11 S•" l••• cu~ •• " ~·" ()i•"'I •I ~1 ~~ .. "'"l'!Clt(" ,, •• LBJ Memoirs: Wicka Johnson Planned Buildup GARDEN CITY, N.Y. fUPll -Former President Lyndon 8, J o h n s o n acknowledge in s I i 11 unpub lished memoirs that he y,·as preparing for large scale military involvement in Vietnam in 1964 before the deplh of I.he U.S. com- mitment became public. according lO a story published in loday's r.d1tion of J'\ey,·sday, a Long Island newspaper. Newsday said the in£ormatKJn about the memoirs. to be publ ished in November under the title "The Vantage Point: Perspcc1i ves of !he Presidency," v1ere ob- ta ined from a publishing industry source. Newsday said Johnson also said in his memoirs: -lle first deeided to foll ow President John F. Kenned y's policy of defend ing South Vietnam while fl ying back lo Washington follO\.\'ing Kennedy 's assassination in Dallas in 1963. -Robert F. Kennedy volunteered dur- ing the 1964 presidential campaign to go to South Vietnam as U.S. Ambassador. -Johnson's sl<1temen t during the same campaign that he ~·ould no t send U.S. troops lO "do the righting that Asian boys lihould do for themselves'' meanL Amer ica should not "take charge" of the v.1ar or provoke a conflict with China. He said, "I did not mean that we were no1 jlOing to do any fighting for we had already lost many good men in Viet- nam." Newsday did not elaborate on these sections or the memoirs. Johnson depicted himself as being hesi· !ant for :several months over approving military recommendations for bombing raids on North Vietnam. \\'hen he finally authorized a troop increa se. "f v.·as con- vinced tha t our retreat from th is challenge v.·ould open the path to \Vorld V.1ar Ill. According lo Ney,•sday. Johnson on r..1arch 17, 1964. approved a recon1- me ndation by Defense Secrctarv Robert S. J\tcNamara to prepare force·s for .. a program of graduated n11litary pressure aJ:!ainsl the north." In Sept ember of Lhe same vear. .Johnson approved a plan for born-bing. again recommended by the military, to be 1mp)emented If Communist forces made a .. spectacular• attack in the south. On Feb. 7. 1965. he implemented the plan after having twict rejected advice • Ill 1964 from lhe m1htary to begin the bombing earlier. .Johnson met wJtb former President Eisenhower on Feb. 17. 1965. and was urged by the late f1vc-st;ir general to mounl a .. campaign of pressure., againsi the nor\h. Gls Confined to B.ases In Big Drztg Crackdnwn CAN THO. South Vie tnam fAPl -The; n1osl sweeping crackdown to date against ill ega l drug use by Cl's in South Vietnam is under v.·ay in the r-.tekong Delta . The 18.000 :;u ldiers sta tioned there are confined to lheir i11illtary con1pounds ex- cept for offieial business, and soldiers. civilians. veh icles and planes are being thoroughly se;irched for drugs. In a long nicssage io his men cx- pla1n1 ng the drivC'. LL Gen, J ohn Cushnu1n. the U.S. con1n1ander in the Dcl1<1. said: "The drug problem is ~nous. \Ve owe 11 lo ourselves and to the American peo- ple. nov1 and in future generations, to solve this problem ." The drive began v.•ithout prior notice on Tuesday. 1n the first three days, a quan- tity of heroi n and marijuana was seized and more than 100 Ameri can servicemen ~·ere arrested for illegal posse5sion of drugs or for being absent without leave _ Vietnan1esc and American aulhori!ies are cooperaling in thC' crackdown. which Cu ;hn1an said "is gning to make it very difficult In get unauthorized drug!';." Origina lly planned for three days, the dri1·c has been C':.:ten<led through ni:::d. Tuesday and probably will be extended agai11. sources said. Officia ls ordered a thorough search or <111 persons and all vehicles entcnng or Jc;iving U.S. military co1npounds. ~very a1rcr<1fl arnv1ng al a n1 ili1ary airfield or landing pad in thr delta ts sub- jected lo immed1ale S('arch, as are l!s crew. pa ssengers and luggage. :\II areas outside U.S. mlli!ary com- pounds have been pul off limits lo America ns. and no U.S. personnel are allowed to leave their compounds excC'pt on offi ci<1l business. Jn civilian area!, they are subjected repeatedly to 1earches by cruising niilitary police. In the initial stages of the drive, All building s, living quarters. offices and other facililics at U.S. mililary post~ v.ere searched. All Vietnan1ese personnel -milHarv and C"ivi lla n -al U.S. nulitary posts are also being searched. U.S. Art Dealer Pays $4 Millio11 For Titian Work LONDON fUPI I London.based American art dealer Julius Weitzner paid a record $4.032,000 today for a Titian to hang over the fireplace in his daughter i\1arjorie·s room . The painting. "The Death of Actaeon ," \\'<JS sold by the Earl of HareY.•ood. Queen Eli1.<1belh 's cousin, at a sale which set cit!hl. new "'·orld records for prices . \Vei tzner sa id he boughl the pa tn,ing pr ivate!,\'. not for a client, and added : "!t's no1 for inc. It's for my daughter." "It '~ii! fit perfectly over my fireplace." ~1 arjorie said. Although \\'citzner and his daughter li\·e in London, the r\ational Gallery. \1'hich hung the pa inting on loan Ior JO years. 1>.·as taking no chances. ll issued a statement sayini: i1.'I trustees believed that export of the Titian ln the United States or anyy,·here else "would be. a serious loss to the nation ." ~er's ~esa<Del~ar Gardens 2221 foirview Rd., Cos JO Mesa.Tel. 642-8686. Go first class . Rediscove r Brown-Jordan ... Perfection in patio furniture ... Tomiami. Now at sale prices. Choosa from our comp!ele selection of outdoor fumiture ond polio needs .•• dinette sets/choises/barbecue~ umbrellas/directors clioirs/side tobles. Honey/Honey, Sage/Sage, Brush/Levo, Zinnio/Zinnio, Gold~n Olive/ .A 2 'Toble with A orm cho ir~. $274,, $219./ .i 8'Toble wi!h 4 arm choirs, S296 .• $239./Adj. Choisewilh n rms. $126., $99./ Adj. Cho1~e wothoul o rm s,$112., $89./21• Squa re Side Tobie, $44., $36. /lounge Choirs, $55., $44./Rock;ng Cho,,, S65.,$S I • Tt.t .t,lr "fllulloft CO"l•of Oh+lld ..WICltll ....,......,,. "Vt l>•!!1rlofo It""" ,,.... 1!t "'°"t ''"' of t~ Liit "'"'"•' ••• 1 ... .,,....,.i. 1 .. 1 •• 11 .. 1 .. lllt 5,,., (;1erlPI Vt tfn t"ll lltM tmot 1,., "'4 _,,,,.,11 ""'''' ..... ii" ,.., ... "<lo v1ii.y Md "-•·W•I"'" ,,,,, v1,. 11'1111Y Wit 111•,.. ,, bf ).J tnllt l. HH0••1 t loo ..... ·~e 1\(1!1 ... 'POI On t!\f n1+11111 Tll\l•tllf> •' ''j o;t•Q•tn Tht t Y .. ftl•/\t ICIW *•• It 11 trio. H•Y. S~n lllt~I ' 41,"' Maoit ltl1t1 t .1l •·"'· '!Jo ,... l t Jtl'I l !ll• .... Stit 10.11 •·"'· IHtllt )' -II "'---------------------------------------------·------ Fetes Old Folks Nixon Winds Up 'Back Home' Trip CHICAGO (UPI ) -Presi· dent Nixon today \vound up a two-day campalgn-style ~wing of the Mlddle We st which began y,'J\h an emotiona l tribute to his mot.her 11nd end · ed with a promise to America 's sehior citi:t:ens. That promise y,•as contained in a speech scheduled at JO a.m. CDT today before a joint convention of the Nationa l H.etired Teachers Association and the An1eric2.11 Association or Re tired Persons in Chicago. Nixon, flying in Thursday night from a "back home in Tndiana'' reception in the corn country where his mother was born, was greeted by one of the nation's arch-Democrats, Chicago ~fayor Ri chard J. Daley. Daley gave Nixon the full Chicago welco me, including fireboa ls shooting c o I ore d spouts of y,•ater off I.Me Shore Drlve along the President's journey to the Continental Plaza Hotel. "He Io v es Chicago,., Daley said of Nixon. In Indiana , Nixon talked unabashedly or his Hoosie r- born mother and said, "my roots are here.'' Nixon pulled out all 1hl' slops in rural A1nericana v.·hen he arrived in the smi\11 tov.n of· Vernon. Ind., to dedicate a htack iron metal historical marker with gold leltcring denoting the birthplace or his late mother, Hahnah '-1ilhous Nixon. who was born on a nea rb y farm in 1885. Touched a n d responding f'motionally, Nixon spoke in front of the ivy-covered Jen- nin gs County Courthouse of his Quaker mother's "very deep religious faith" and "very great interest in politics." \ .. ,~T\~\\\ S I' rl'\l\ ~ ' a· f\\\!' • • l\i l{itcnen""' ' v~cto'~~ "' \ i , "i~~S\\\'~\\ \)\'I\\\• ' Heres your chance to buy a UNDIR COUNTER MODELS as low as KitchenAid dishwasher - at true sovings. Cur rent Kitche nAid models, not "stripped down " or "sole " models. Supply limited 540·7131 COSTA MESA FBI Says Extortion Try Halted GARY.Ind. tAP)-TbeFBi said today an attempt had beeo made to eitort $30,00J from publisher Walter T. Rid- der and that FBI agents critically wounded a former ~1npJoye of R idder 's newspaper during a gwtfight in tl1e course of a payoff. FBI Agent ,James T. Neagle said the attempt to extort the n101H'Y from Ridder, publisher of the Gary Post Tribune and vice president of Ridde:- Puhlications. had been made under threat of a bomb allegedly placed in the press room of the newspaper offices. Authorities said no bomb "''a.s found. A letter received Wednesday by Ridder said that if lhe bomb was found , the children of associate publisher C. Dar- row "Duke" 1'ul!y would be shot by a sniper. The FBI identified the man shot during" th e payoff as John E. \\'ard, 57. of Gary. He l\'as wounded in !he chest. No one else was hurt. Authorities charged 11 i m under federal extortion laws. U ruhrcll a -l y pc Loan Law Seen WASHINGTON <UPI ) - The Senate Bank ing Com- mittee probably 1vill write ::in umbrella-type bill to pr·ovide government backing for cor· pora1 ions in fin211cial troubles similar 10 !hose faced by Lockheed. iiccordlng lo a Nix- on Administra1ion offi cial. The con1mittcc held hear- ings on a bill th;il would enable the government to back $250 million iri loans ln Lockheed for construction of its Trislar Airbus Airplane Takes Off -No Pilot YU~1A I UPI ) -A light pl ane roared inlo the afr without its pilot Thursday end new for three flours before crashing into a mountain in a restricted military area near here. The single-engine Cessna 150 buzzed over thi s city for an hour before it headed into an unpopulated desert area. Tht craft <.'rashed 20 m i 1 es southeast of here. The would·be pllol. Charles F ox. 20, Calexico, told Sh~­ iff's Sgt. V<1l Quintero that the starter on !he plane wa s not \\'Orking and he started the propcllor by hand. leaving lhe throule open slightl y. Fox said he had set the brake. but the plane suddenly started mov- jng. Fox ran after the plane and fell while trying to climb in the door. He suffered slight in- juries. Fox had just fin ished taking a written pilot's exami nation and \\'as preparing to leave on a return fiight to his ho1ne when the LOOO pound plane suddenly took off. A r-.1 arinc helicopter followed 1he Cessna for about <1n hour, but could not go to the 11 ,000· foot allitude attained by the srnall craft A mi 1 i ta r y turboprop then trailed !he Cessna until it suddenly drop~ ped 2,000 feet, went in1o a slow spin and crashed into the mountain. Jane Fonda's Case Pressed CLEVELAND (UPI) -The Cleveland prosecutor refiled charges of assault anrl bal!ery against actress Jane Fonda 'fhursday. one day after a judge had dismissed them because they v.·ere lechnically unsound. SUMMER TRUCK LOAD EVENT c PU PAC~ $3.12 PER FLAT. MIX OR MATCH. MANY VARIETIES AVAILABLE SUCH AS: * PETUNIAS * PANSIES * BEGONIAS * SNAPDRAGONS * V!NCA * COLEUS * MARIGOLDS * ZINNIAS * ASTERS AND MANY MORE SATURDAY & SUNDAY ONLY! GARDEN CENTER NEWPORT BEACH • Fashion Island Store Only Stanton Contempt Weighed WASHINGTON (UPI) -A Jlouse Committee is espected to decide ne1t week whether to seek a contempt. of Congress citation against CBS President Frank Stanton for rtfwing to surrender fllm lUed in making 11 document ary ()0 Pentagon public relations. 7he subcommlttee says It needs the film . of which only i1mall portions appeared in the0l l-!~lt,.l'io "The Selling of the Pentagon,'' lo determine wheilier CBS us- ed misleading filming and editing techniquts. During a four.hou r ap- pearan~ Thursday, Stanton told the Commerce Investigations 11ut,committee that the unused film -called outtakfll -wa1 the equivalent of a neW!man'.s notes aDd pr~ tectrd from subcommittee tt-:rutiny by the first amend- ment. S ub committee Chairman Harley 0. Staggers, ( 0 • W. Va.). told Stanton that by his refusal to testify on the editing practices or to turn over the rilm "in my opinion you are now in contempt of C-Ongress." Staggers, also chairman or the t!ouse Commerce Com- mittee . said the subcommittee probably \Viii meet next week to formally consider the con- tempt motion. If approved by the Commerce Comm ittee and the Hoose. it would be sent to the Justice Department for prosecution. None of the four sub- comroittee members agreed •Nilh Stan ton's claim the oul- t<ikes \vere pro lecLed by !he First An1cnd1nent and St:rg- ~ers rejected the net1\'0rk ex- ecutive's claim that the sub- committee's action would have a "chilling" effect on network television reporting. Staggers said ''and you talk about ch illing effects . Thi~ P'rldar. Junf 2:5, 1971 I I I t I I ;~ I ' ' (media) runs chills up and I down the spine. When there is 11. I I DAJLY 1'11.oT I IN ORDER TO ACQUAINT THE MEN WITH DISTINCTIVE TASTES IN CLOTHING TO OUR FINE COLLEC- TION OF SHIRTS, WE OFFER A HAND PICKED GROUP OF BEAUTIFUL PATIERNS AT A MOST APPEALING PRICE. R.9. $27.50 lo $30 .00 NOW-$20.00 42 FASHION ISlAND NEWPORT CENTER untruth put on these networks ' 1 they can control this land and L.-------'-------' ----------------' you know they can If Lhey allow this to go on.'' Who cares whether you can trust a car sales1nan or not? Who cares whether .he gives you a fair price for your tr.ide-in? And a fair deal on yo ur new car? ~·~ And who cares whether you get good financing or not? Who cares whether the I . 1 salesman greets you with a smile or not? Whether he treats you politely?;' Whether he gives you the straight facts when you ask him a question?. Who cares enough to see tJiat you get the right car for your needs~ ~th the: ·-right options ••. and doe~11 't try to sell yo u into something bigger than you ' -' reaUy want? Who cares whetJ1er your new car is properly checked ove~ and set up before you drive it awa y? Or whether you get the kind of_~rviee' you need when you con1e back, or whether you ever come ,back ataU? . ·~ .. ;' ' ·yotft Chryster-Plymottth· Dealers ---o~ Costa Mesa Atlas Chrysler-P~mouth, Inc. 2929 Harbor Boulevard Huntin9ton Beach Huntington Beach Chrysler-Plymth 16661 Beach Boulevard I DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Is This the Best Use? The Huntingto n Beach City Council has reaffirm· ed its faith in the Top of the Pier downtown redevelop· ment program. It has done so by rejecting a move lo redu ce the scope of th e first step in the plan , the c r e a t i on of a 1.878-space parking lot opposi te the pier and fronting Coast J-l igh\va y. It has done so al a tinle when the faith of some people in this project is beginning to crumble. The basis for t he uneasine ss is thal ailment \\'hich seems to bedevil all la rge-scale developn1en ts, both public and private. Costs keep going up. f\ yea r ago, the expansion of the Parking.A,ulhoril.y -as the development is catlc~-\ras a 3\l: mLlhon pro~· eel, accordi ng to city hall estunates. Then a new acqu1· sitio n appraisal v:a s made. and engineering costs climbed, Now the officia l estin1ate places the cost at $7 .3 million, more than double the original projectio n in less than a year . That is a bi g jump. But some critics do not believe it is the final jump. One source claims that a more real- istic estimate would be S91h million. The argument for this figure is that the ci ty eslimate includes $4.2 mi l- lion for land acquisition but does not take into account the possibility that the appra is al 1night be 50 per~enl under what a jury will ~nvard in a county so conscious of private property rights. Admittedly th is prediction has been advanced by oil company interests, an ind ustry th at faces special taxation to fund the project. But then if the higher csti1nate is lo be questioned on those grounds, then so m ust the figures of ci ty staf- fers and consultants be examined, particularly the rev· enue projections. There is the question of 'vhether they approached their analyses from the viewpoint of show- Ing that the project is feasible. not '"hether it is feas· i~le. There are some who feet that fi gures have nothing to do with it. that the program is beini:' continued be- cause it was star ted, that it was sta rted because people believed in it. that people believed in t because they wanted to believe in it. and that they \\'anted to believe in it because, heavens kno\vS, they \\'anted to sec some- thing happen downlo\Y n. The plan \\'as born out or a dream -a nc\1• be gin- ning dov.•ntown, a new future for the ci ty. Bu.l It '\.as partially response to unhappiness and frustrat1~n \VJth the reality of .the past and present. And frustrallon can con1promise good planning. The general principle of upgrad ing the d O\\•nto~'n district "''as advanced in the 1965 study of land use made by the nationally kno,vn body, the Urban Land Instit ute. The idea of a Parking Au thority as a tool for redevelopment arose a couple of years later as an out· growth of a study on the relocation of Coast High,vay. The plan was broadened to its present scope under the expertise of Corona de! Mar plannin g consultant. Ted Adsit, with the support of many citizens' groups and the city staff. From a purely e conomic standpoi nt, the plan may still be a good one, if the supporters arc right and the critics '''rong. Downto\l.'n Huntington Beach does need drastic surgery. A parking lot \1•ould provide the econon1ic base for the spread of private enterpr ise, c:o n11nercial develop1nents in the surrounding area t1nd nlay indeed revitalize the bu si11ess district. Bu i . \l'it h the gro1vin g unpopularity of cars, smog and asphalt . is a parking lot the plastic face that Huntington Beach \\ants to \Vea r? It may not change v.•ith age but. no matter ho1v much l andscaping make·up is applied , it will always loo k plain. The question remains, is a parki ng lot the best use for the best land in the ci ty? H Subjectivity ls Impossible To Escape Dear Gloo1ny Gus As Case of Pentagmi Wai· Histo1•y Goes to S1apre1ne Co11rt • • • Everybody looks at the ·world through colored glasses. Nobody is able to look al it through a "clear panf," because ea ch tem~rament and persona lity colors i1s vision and ca!Js this color "lhe real \VOr\d.'' Some look through rose -colored glass- t>S. others through darker hues. Some see the world in a bilious tone. others .' in muted shades of gray, and sl ill 0U1e rs in dramatic scilrlet.s, or pale yellow. - The "realist," therefore is not one who foolishly imagi nes that he alone sees the world in its ''true" or ''natural" color, without tl1e distorlion ol spectacles - rather. it is the one who recognizes the parlicular coloration of his personality. and discounts it in his estimate of ''reali- ty." EVEN ~tODER~ science has become tncreasingly modest in its ,·;cw of ex· ternal objeclS. It 1s beginn ing lo learn thal •·subjecti vity'' is impossible II) escape in scientific research and in- vestigation : the very process or human €'xamination ilsc U d j s I u r b s lhl' "realness'' of tl1e objccl being inspected or measured or photographed. Thi~ is v;hy \Ye have i n I Y "mathematical models'' of the elemcnls In subatomic physics. anrl not "pictures" of tbe:se particles at work. Predictions and projcctinns about ••...,,ha t is going lo happen" in the next few years depend as muc h upon the tern· perament of the predicter as upon !he In all fairness lo the voting ma· jority in three of the last four high school districl lax override elec- lions, a new election shou ld be held as soon as possible to reduce Uie newly.approved rate of $2.54 {not $2.08) to a more realistic figure. Tiil• fMIVrt r.flt Cl1 ........ 11r.wi. ,.., N t tu.orlly l~tM ti !flt 11tw-.•1'*•. IW ''"" "' ,.. .. , tt oi-, ov1, DtllV ~1i.1. philosophy or history or ideology he espouses. TWO SEERS CAN !ake the same set or fJcts and inlerprct them quite differently -one using them to see nothin g but <-·haos and destruction ahead. the other using lhem as :,i basis for hope of prog- ress and reconcilliation in the conflicts (Jr man. And lhel r philosophies, while: preten- ding to be rooted In fact or theory. are little more than extrapolations of their In- dividual trmperamenls -rosy, black, or some shade in bef\\'ttn. Every idea they touch is colored by the "glasses" they in- evitably wear . BUT \\'HI LE SCJEST ISTS have learn- ed to allow for lhc •·personal equation.'' mosl thinke rs have not. A.nd \1•e ourselves ,gra1•1latc to those thinkers ( or soo1hsa,\'C'TS l \\'ho most closely ap- proxtrnJte our o '' 11 temperaments. brcausr wr find their ideas congenial, ~nrl not herause we have made any ob- !C<'!ll'f' c1·atu<1t1on of them. lndcrd. 11 i~ impo~~ible lo n1ak1' ;inv 11bJe<-"t1ve evaluat ion ol lhe ruture, for il 11=; prc ri~tly th e "invariables" in history lhat dclc nn!nc events. The most honest lh1 ng ,ve can do 1s to disco unt at least 50 percent of what \Ve "believe" as being in 1he service of both our self .interest and the part icu la r shade of glasses we were born \\ith. These Shouldn't Happen The tragic accidents which seem to be an UDavoidable part of summer vacations are made more heartrending by the knowledge they most often could have been avoided. There seems lo be an .absence of' tommon sense or lack of understanding of lav.is and rules 1n many of Ult mishaps. Traffic deaths and injuries are one thing but the drown ings. boating crashes and lost child incidents are another. They ghou)d not happen. Despite the many warnings, there are countleu people who go !iWlmmlng In lakes and rivers: which are '1tremely cold partkularly in the !iprin ~ ·when the ~melt runoff ls at its · height. The 111.JJ"Vfval time In !Uch water for the human body L!I a m•tter of minules. .4N011IER FACTOR Is the decepti\•ely .IWUt and c:bMg:tDs currents in the river:s. A qaW llPOf. ~.'-1 wiU be a dangel'O\IS 9(birtpool lnothtr. OUldren especially lhoalitf bi wa.Lcbed IO they do not get into Quotes Wmrd !'ttcAfee, Su Beraardlff. OD loworbiC ... •otlo( ... -"By wh81 JoClc does the <qUAI pn>lecllon clause of the !Ith Amendln<tll otop with ii year oldt? Why not extmi this con- atltut.lOPal IU•ranlM to tlme who have. the ttmporarr· mls'fortllnt of being 17. tlJ, or 2?" Guest Editorial lht'se places. ' I I ~I Another thing about children 13 they can disappear in the woods in a few seconds. They are present one mon1ent, and vanish the nexl Adults at camping and picnic spots :should never let them out of their :sight. Boating acciden~ frequently are caus- ed by violations of lhe law or rules of the water. Many boaters do not even know they are Jaw violators when they fall to gi vj! the right-of-way, go out on the water wllhout life )ackcta for every pusenger or overload the boat. It Is not uncommon to see eight people in • boat built for four. 'Mle continuation of boa t I n g mishaps at • Lime when anyone can buy a boat with no proof of abil ity to hind.le one will lead to the kind of enforcement boaters may feel Is intimidation. But un\e&s the boating, tnlhuslasta and in· dustry institute IOnle fcrrm of volunUry trainina. It will be imposed upon them. Jn fa ct, the Legislature shou ld be ron- !'lide ring a law tn require boat owners to show they know how to operat.e ont befort they can use it A boater licenilng sLatu te similar to th11l re q u i r I n t automobile drivers to be licensed by !he stJte may be inevitable. S•cramenlo Bee What Press Freedom Means to You \\-'instoo ChurchiU, British statcs1nan - ''A free press is the unsleeping guardian of every other right that freemen prize; it is the mosl dangerous foe of tyran· oy .. , Under dictatorship the press is bound to !anguish , an d the louds peaker and the film to become more important. But where free institutions are indiJlenous to the soil and me n have the habit of liberty, the press "-ill continue to be lhe Fourth Estate. the vigilant guardian o[ the righ ts of the ordinary citizen." \Va1ter Lippman. author. r e t i r rd ne"·spaper columni st, aos"·ering the question , "\\rhat right do reportrr.'i and editors ha\•e to criticiie?" -"If the country is to be governed \\'ith 1he rnn- sent of the governed , then !he s;:overncd must arrive at opinions about what their governors want them to consent !o. How do t/1ey do this? They do it by hearing on the radio and reading in the newspapers what the cor ps of correspondents te:!l lhem is going on in \Vashington and in the country at large and in the world. "I-Jere we perform an essentia l service. Tn some fiel d of interest we make it our business to find out '>''ha t ls going on under tl1e surface and beyond the horizon. to infer. to deduce. to imagine and to guess '>''hat is going on inside. and \\ht1I this meant 'yesterdav. and 1\l'hal il could niean tomor.ro~·. In {his \1·e do whal every so,•ere1gn citizen is sup posed to do, but ha~ not lhe time or the interest to 1!0 for himsel f. This is our job . ll is no me:in calling, and \V C ha ve a right 1.0 be proud of it. and to be glad that it t:s our 11·ork ·· Se n Robert f . Kennedy -''In my np1nion. !he nC\\'S papers are equa l II) thl" courts - and :.01netanes ahead vf the courts in our system -in proleC'ting the people's fu ndan1cntal rights," Albert Camus, 20th Century French 11u1hor -"A free press can of course be ~ood or bad, but most certainly \1'ithou! freedom it will never be anything bui The Vie,v!S of Adolf Hitler. Gern1an dictator - '''l'he organization of our press ha~ truly Uef'n a success. Out law con· 1·frning the pres~ is such that di\'- c>rgcncics of opinion between n1en1 - ber~ of the goll'crnment <irf' no longer an occasio n for puh!ic exhi- biti ons. 1\'hich are not the nell's- paper~· bu~iness. \Ve've e!im1n aL- rd that conception of political frer- dom 11'hi ch hold s that cveryborl~' ha.~ the righl 10 s<iy \\·hatever comes tinto his head.'' Nikoli Lenin, developer qf lhe bJd . l'rcedom i ~ nothing else. but a chance to br better, 11·hcrcas ensl;:ive- n1rnl 1s a crr!ainl y of tbe \1·orsc .. U.S. Sen. Wiii iam E. &rah -"If the press 1s nol free . ii speech is not 111- deprndr11! and un1ra1n1neled. if the mind i" :-ht1cklcd or ma<lr impotent throug li fe<1r. Jl makes no rl1ffe rence under II' hat form of J:llVern ment you li\e, ~ou ;ire " subJcct an d not a c.1t1zen.'' &cnjami o Franklin -•·1r :ilt 11rinlcrs 11erc de termined not lo pnnt any1h111g till they \l'C•rr sure it \\l'ould offend nobody, 1here y,ould be very little prin1cd." Justice ll ugo I.. Bla('k, U.S. Suprr1ne Court -··rof. the First Amendment does not speak equivocally. [1 prohibits any T'vo Dictators pulilical. economic ;ind social prin- ciplr~ and pllliC'if'S Qf ('Omn1un i~m -"\\'hv !:hvuld fl'rcdon1 of 'ipeel'h ·;u1d tr'cedom l•f the pres:-be al- !011ed" lrhy ~h(iulrl a govemn1 cnl \\'IHth is rlr;in~ 11 h:1L it believes lo he rii,:ht allow i!sclr In be cr1tic1z. ~'d " ft 1vnuld nol allo1\· opposition J,iv ll'!hal wcJpons. Ideas ;i re much 10orr fatal ll11ngs 1h11n guns. \Vhy should an;.o ni:i n be allowrd lo buy a printing press and dissC'nl- inate pernicious opin ion calcu- lat ed tu en1barrass the govern- ment?" law 'abridg ing frL'!'clOm nf Speech Or Of the press. lt 1nust be t:i\..cn as a torn- 1nand of the broadcsl -;)COP£' 1hat explicit l<ingu.1g<'. rend in 1h1 context o! a hberty- loving soc1et~·. \\ 111 allow ·· Justicr Louis U. Br:indcis, U.S. Suprcn1e C(lu rt -"ThC> function of the prc.c;s is \ery h1i.ih. It 1<; a!rnost holy. IL 011i::ht to ser\'r ;is a Forum for !he people, through '1'h1ch 1hc people mpy know free- ly \\'hat is going on. To n1isst.ale or supress the news is a breach of trust.'' Th on1as Erskine, Scotti sh jurist - ''The press musl be free; it has always been so and much evil has been corrected by 11. If government rinds itself annoyed by it. let it examine it s own conduct and I! 1\ill find the cause." Benjamin Constant. 19th Century freoch pain ter -"\\'1th newspapers, !here is scmctimes disorder: without them. there is always slal'ery.'' President James A. Garfield -'·Not for Its own sake alone. but lor the sake of sot1f'ty ;ind good govcrnn1r.n\. the pre.'is shoul d be free. Publicity is the strong bond 11•hi ch unites the people and the ir government. Authority should do no acl that will not bear the light." Justice fr.lix Frankfurter. V . S. Supren1e Court -''\Vithout a free press there can be no free soclr.ty. Thal is ax· iomatic. However. freedom of the pres! is not an end in itself but a means lo the end of a free soc iety. The scope and na!ure of the constitutional guarantee o( the freedom of the press are to be vic1ll'ed and applied in th;it \ighl :' Chinn Ho, cha irm an. Jlonolulu Star Bulletin -.. Of all lhe human rndeavors none ha~ the opportunity and the re- sp(lnsibility of reflecting man to himsel f as does joumalism. Not government. ".':ot la\\'. Not medicine. Not eni:1ncerin,1?. Kot finance .. Journalism offers the y,·orlrf a chance to kno'"' about ltseH throu.c:h prin ted y,•ords ., Roper Thanks Tax Override Helpers To lhe Editor: On behalf of !he 11untington Beach Union High School District, its studenl s. teachers, and the citize ns of the com- munities which it se rves. I want to thank you for the editorial support you gave lo lhe override approved June 15. and fC1r the balanced present ation you ga\'e lo both sides or this issue on the ne"·s page:i. There is no question in my mind th at the DAILY PILOT, by its coverage of !he election compaign. helped stimulate lhe interest which resulted in a turnout al the poll:i which was unusually large for thi.~ type of election. And \\'e are all grateful to the more than 1,000 campaign \\'Orkcrs v•ho dedicated themse lves to acquninlini;: ~veryone in the districl "'ith the i~sues at slake, and getting them to go to the polls. IF, FOR SOME reason. \~~ are unable to tl1ank each and everyone personally. we hope this will be regarded as a hearlfcll "thank you ." t thlnk, though, t!lal the biggest bal m for the hy-now·exhausted campaign Vl'Ork,rs will be the knowledge that from an tducational standpoint. we are now ~l or the tunnel and In the sunlight. One of the major impre&Sions I rt~iv­ td from this campaign was of the 'n- thu.,i11rtlc team spirit shown by the st11ffs o( the di.strict and of the individual high ~--B11 George ---, (Send your prohlems lo Geo rgt, c/o ttlls newspnper. Yeah, I know ll'tt not called the C/0 T 1-1 IS NEWSPA PER, but what U11-1t means is -forg~t It. Write to Ann.J I )lailhox Letttr.f fron~ readers are welcome. Norn1ally writers should conuey their rnessagcs i11 300 words or less. The rigl1t to co11de1tse letlers to fi t .fpace or e/imi.na re llbel is reserved. All let- ter., mu.st iuclr1ae s1g110 1ure and ma1l- f!!l1 address, bu ! t1an1cs moy be tvith· lield 011 req11est 1f s11fficie11t reaso11 i.~ <1pparent. Poetry will not be puO- lisl•ed . ~chools: \\ Is lhe kind of learn spirit !hf!! is bound to be carried over 11110 the giant effort thsit 1\es ahead -that of giving our ho:i's and gi rl ~ the best possihlr. prepara· lion for adulthood . ~J ACK S. ROPE R Superintendent of Schools Polll lcal Parn•lte• To the Editor: I picked up the pa per tills morning 11nd read , "Assembly Group Clears 1.9 Billion Ta:< Rise." "Assembly Passe:'f Bill to Permit 5~h Tipplers Tax ," and ''Ana- hei m City Council OK's I (~ Increase In Room Tax" 1rrom 5 to s r( ), The only thing that the go\'crnment tiasn't W ed yet is th' alr we brealhe. Some lame brain could really prove how smart he i!! by figuri ng out a method by 1,1·hich we could be laxed for the air we bre;ithe. If THt-; Art1£RIC/\N publiC' cont1nut~ to allO\Y these pohlical parasite~ to keer I Qbbllng us up, the· Communilits won't have to do us in. our elected C1fr1clals in our ritie.c;, counties nncl st;i1cs :lnd fedcrnl government \Ylll have done lhe job for !hem. Wake up. you people who go lo the polls. G£1l rid o( those ll'ho rcpreS{'nl lhc special interests and replace them y,•1th men ;ind "omen who will y,·ork for the prople's 1n!eresls-your.'i. n'HlC'.. the youni:l people "ho ha,·e <1lread y sern \vhars 1\Tong \l'ilh "the estabhshmf'n l" ;ind "ho arc laying do1\n 1t1r1r l11·r~ 111 a far away land lo perpetuate lhr exist ing niess our country is in. THR OUGH Tll E polls, fort·r tho.~c "e rlf'f'I to ofl1 cc 111to kcep1n!! 1he1r cam· paign prom1S('S, not 1f1 .c;prc!al intcre:.l f ro ups or PQ li!ica l aff1lin11on~. hut to us, the wo1'king people of Amcric<1. fl 's t1mf' flur cler officials \Vtre ren1inded 1·· .' "I ·r11 an~~·· or the peoplC'.. nr;t I. It \1uny of the111 seC'm lo lorgP\ 1.. .,1r.1 1n1portant fact. \Ve tyou and I 1 J11re lhesc people to \lo'ork fur us rnot ~!)f'rinl interest groupsf and if lhey don'l produce for us, lhcy should be fired. NOW IS THE tim' tor all Intelligent Americans to come to the aid or lheir country. Let's stop the wagte of youni.:: people·~ li\'CS in VIBtnam . call 11 hall lo Increasing t<ixes and insi.'it on able-bOOied people earning rheir O\\'n "·ay in life . · rti. J. MONAHA N Cn11r1•r Ap111h11 To the Edit(J r I an) ,11 p11!1r11I &1 the /\mcric:1n ~lrd1ca1 Center al Dcnvtr. 1111 out.,landing hospital and rescarrh center de.\'otcd lo lhl' con· q11cst ur cancer. Since I ha ,·c been in !hi! hospital, I have been :iwarc of a great deal of apathy on lhe part of tlltl American public to a disease which this year will claim approx1n1alely .11even limes the number of American lives I01St in the entire Vietnam 11·ar. UJ\'LESS RAPID progress is made In research, nearly f'very American family y,·il\ be touched in son1e way by this dread disease. T would ~ke to receive let- ters from pe<>ple 1vho are intere~ted in • cooperat.i\'e effort in su pport of cancer research. It ii; my contention that we ma y be able to mollvate one ano ther. ~!/\H I E BIR CH Room :JIJ 6403 \V. Colfax 'lcnver, Colo. 802J f ---- Frid a y. June 25, 1971 T he editorlol pagt Of tlte Dail y Pilot seeks to i11/nrm a11d stim- ulate readers by pre:ienting t/1is ncwspoJ)lr'i opi11ion1 and com- mentary cm topics of it1tert st and significance. by providin~ a for11 m for the expression n/ our readers' opinions, u11d by prc1e11rir19 the diverse view- points of informed observers 011d spokesmen on topics of tltc dcy. Robert N. \Vccd. Pu blisher ' . • Newport Beaeh Today'• Flul EDITION N.Y. Stoek8 VO[ 64, NO. 151', 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, ~UNE 25, ·197 I' TEN CENTS Strong CAO Urged 'In Best County Interest' -Jury New Headqtiarters DAIL V PILOT Sr.II "hot. The l'{e\vport Beach Fire Department expects to move into lh is nc1v headquarters building near Jamboree Road and San Joaquin Hills Road in mid· August. The price tag on the building is $370,000. Eq uipment and furnishings, Including fire engine, will cost an additional $120,000. City also is hiring 21 new firefighters. Council to Hear Balboa Y aclit Basin Lease Bid A proposal to transfer the Balboa Yacht Basin lease from the Beek fam~ lly to the Irvine Company will go before the .Newport Beach city council Monday night The basin, leased lo the Beek famUy in 1950 along with the adjacent Beacon Bay residential area, is oot planned to be changed in any way by Ute Irvine Com- pany, a company spokesman !aid. However. it was learned today that a city-i nitiated study is looking at the possibility or moving the mouth of I.he planned promontory bay to the basin pro- perty. Current designs call for the mouth lo be 100 feet east of yacht basin, separated by the company-0wned land . George Dawes, Ne"·port Beach harbor and tideland administral.Or . this morninR confirmed the possible change in location is beilig considered and admitted, "]I h;:is Its pros and cnns." He conceded one disadvantage .. vould be dredging <lUt of city property ror a channel mouth. \\'hen the city would nwn tht channel mouth where it is now plan· ned anyway. Dawes said his ofrice ls looking at the possibility "only because w!Lh the transfer we n0w have phys i c a I al ternative!'! avai lnble l.o us that weren't available when the bay was first design- ed.'' Plans for the bay, to be surrounded by luxury single-fa mily homes, were ap· pr oved by lhe council one year ago. Dawes said, "Economic and engineer· Jng ractors" are being taken into e<>n· gideration. He said. ''There is nothing "'rong with the location of the mouth of the bay a!'I it no"' slands ·· But other officials indicated il mi ght nush better if it were moved to the west. , Saturday Meet Supreme Court to Take Secret :War Paper Caper From Wire Senrlce. WASHINGTON -Thi! Supreml! Court .agreed today to make an emergency decision CJn the dis pute between the government and two newspapers over their right l.<l resume publication or the Tricia, Edward Greet President At Camp David CA~1P DAVJD . i\1d. fAP) -Pres ident Nixon flew by helicopter lo this pres1dcn· tial retreat Fnday and was greeted by his honeymooning dnughler, Tricia and her hu sband, Har vard law student Ed- ward Cox. A~ Nixon stepped from the hr1icop1er l'ln the last Jej!: of a Journey from Chica.':o, t-.1rs. Cox drove up in a golf cart, walked over to her father :01d plan ted a kiss on his face. Cox shook lhe PresidenL's hand and I.he couple chatted with Nixon for a few minutes. Then, with Nixon at the cont.mis of the cart. Tricia got in front with him and Edward in the back &eat as they drove ()ff' . The Coxes disappeared fo ~ secret honeymoon hideaway after their June 5 White House wedding and speculation put them at various time.<: n1 the Virgin Is- lands and other Caribbean resorts. Friday's appearance at Camp David In the ?1-faryland mountains was their first .appearance before newsmen since the wedding. Nixon new into Washington from two days in Illinois and lldiana. secret Pentagon 1tudy of the Vietnam war . Th• court announced It will hear 11rguments in the controversial case Saturday at Jl a.m. EDT. The justices will hear arguments from lawyers from the New York Times and the Wa..shington Post as well as the government's side of the wrangle. The court continued restrictions im· posed on the Times by an Appeals Court ruling and applied the same restraint on the \.\'ashington Post. The government near ly lest its case without Supreme Courl review. The decision to hear the case ~·as 5 to • with Justices Hugo L. Black, William 0. Douglas, William J. Brennan Jr., and Thurgood r-..Yarshafl voting to deny the government's request for a hearing. This v.·ou!d have let the Timts: ~nd Post publish stories i,n the v.·ar study dncumcnts v.·ilhout restriction. fl takes the vote of four justices to place an appeal on lhe court dockel. Under lower court orders the Post. v.·ould have hcen able to proceed with ac· counts on all the secret documents in Saturday morning papers. The Times cou!d have printed only those which the government deemed not damaging to the national security. The court said the "special appendix" -a list ()f documents the justice Depart- ment is specially anxious to suppress - must be delivered to the Supreme Court by 5 p.m. EDT today. The court said any other items which the government may have specified u unpublished since the 2nd circuit'~ opin ion in till! Times case could be in- cluded and that the Times should be notified a.!I ta What the items were. --'Thi! Orange County Grand Jury today urged the Board of Supervisors to retain • strong <:tlunty administrative office. A jury resolutio n said a strong ad- ministrative office was "in the interests 41f both economy and efficiency of county operation " The jurors also Urged the board or supervisors . to "contin ue the high pro· fessional quality of its department heads tind admin istrative staff." Although County Admin istrative Officer Robert Thomas v.'as not named directly, the Grand Jury resolution runs counter to moves earlier this year by Su pervisors Slain Gunman A fter Nixon? Probe Slated CHl CAGO (U PI) -Secret Service agents are trying to determine whether a ma n slain Thursday evening in a shootout with police may have come to Chicago in an attempt to assassinate President Nix- •"· GPrald L. Warren, deputy White House press secretary. said today that the Secret Serv ice "can find no connection" between President Nixon's visit and the shooting of James E . Beavers,· 47, of Squire, W. Va . However, Warren said the Secret Sl!rvi~ was cootinuing "to look in- to his (Beavers') past." Beaver&, 1aid by a relative to be a critic of President Ni.loo's Southeast. Asia policy. wa1 slain by police in the Grant Park area Tbunday e.venin1 about three "®ca before the Preaidenl wn to anive al Ml!igs F1elct, about a mil• from. the ac«ne of the shootout. &avers was car- rying two .!2. caliber revolvers when he was killed . White House officials pointed out that Beavers bought tilt guns he was carrying on Monday and that Ni.Ion's trip was not announced until Tuesday. Beavers' sister, Mrs. Walter Chambers ()f Squire, W. Va ., said her brother was known to be violent and had Indicated he opposed Nixon's policies. Mrz. Ch.;mber! said her brother had once: phoned the White House over some matt.er and that he was distraught by the fact that ht was unable to reach thl! President. She said her brother left West Virginia ?o.fonday morning and that she thought he had mentioned something about going to either Florida or Califor nia. Nixon has homes in Key Biscayne, Fla,. and San Clemente, CatH. i\!rs. Chambers said her brother had a hisi.orv of menta l illness since World War II and that he had been confined to a \Vest Virginia mental hospital atler being tried for the murder of her first husband, Ely Herley, in 1950. He wa~ also ;i,rrested on a weapons charge in Bluefield, W. Va ., a mooth ago, she said. She oaid he was always ta lking of buying guns and killing people. "He told my husband he was going to buy t.hree gWl.'1 this time. though we never believed him ," she said. She described his mental condition as unstable and said he was a relaliVl!ly heavy drinker and was known ta become vio lent when drinking. "He acted worse this time than he ever did be.fore," Mrs. Chamber said, noting that her brother had been in the hospital several times. Beavl!r!'I wa!'I shot and killed In a foot chase with police Thursday after a woman spoiled him 1ettlng a revolver down on 11 salt box in the park and notifitd police. Jerome F. C<llLins, an Irvine Company 1pokesman. ~aid the company had no knnv.•Jedge that formal studies of this pr~ posal were taking place. "\\'e arc not studying it,'' he said, 1aying company officials had hea rd of th e Idea "but we don't know Y.'hat If anyth ing has become or it." Access Probed by Caspers He said company plans are nothi ng c:ii:· eept I() continue operation <lf the basin. 'fhe lease expires in 1987. The Beek family is a!'lking that the sub- lease be reassigned from l~ugh Bailey •nd M•rgaret Meisinger, who have held It in rttent years. BRIDES RECALL 'NI XON DAY' A year ago Pre!ident NJ:iton made a 1peclal trip to Newport Beach to attend the wedd ing of h.13 niece, Lawrene N'u:on In Thoma! An fin~n. On tht !itme day , In the same church "''ilh the sAme minister, three other brides recited the.tr vows . Did they feel their wedding! we re OVfl:r~hadowM by the prei;enCf of lhe President earner? Where •re thty Rll today? See Society, P·17. Bay Compromise Seen Impossible bj' Supervisor Filth District Supervisor Ro n a I ·d Caspers believes that greater , public ac- cess to Orange C-owlty ~che. can be achieved by -making a deal with developers bu~ that no compromise ii possible in the Upper Newprt Bay. Speaking to th!! Orange: County Forum of To'M"I Hall in Senta Ana 'I'huf!day, Caspers said, "I have filth that the private llnd public 1ecto111 need not necessarily be ll')C()mp1Uble. It ls not my de.lire to arbitrarily tun 1 public acceu through a. resort hotel lobby or private apartment complex. ''Whet can we do , however, Is cooperate with landOM1Cr1 Jn developlng pla nned communiUl!a wh k::h provide ac- cl!Ss at logical points with tram11 or peo- ple move:rs fr om Inland parking loL!. "Also lnc·Juded in our bag of tools, donatio ns or zub-market value sales <lf pr<1perty to u,e county could be offset by approval of higher densities crl!ating more pr<lfilable land U$CS." The statement was obviously aimed at thl! lrvln11 Company's plaMed devl!lo~ ml!nt or iU three miles of corstal ind hillside property between Newport Be:ach and Laguna Beach. The com1>3ny flr1t suggested the trans from inland parking lots. Rut it waz Ca:mers• ideR lbal • deRI rould be m11de ()frering higher denslly In retum for lower prices on property to be Wied for Jl"hlle-park!. When th11 supervisor got aroqnd tn the controversial Upper Newport Bll y pr~ .,.. } \ ' b\em his atlilude was quite different, however. Referring to a not-yl!t released report on lhe importance of pre11ervln1 the natural ecology of the Upper Bay, he aaid, "If this report ls adopted, it would Imply a 1lgnificanl reversal in lhe hi1torlcal direction ()f public policy up to the la11L few yeara. "The tmmMiate fmpllcaUon suuesi.. that the marginal public utlllty of an ad· dltlonal residl!nthli or com m er e i a I development here 11 much Jen than the marginal public utility of an ecologically .Prl!served Upper Newport Bay. "Furthermore, the exploi t1tlon <lf pllbhe natur~I resources Inherent In further re11ldentll1I and eommercia\ developmr:nt of thi11 area Is nc> longer !See CASPERS, rare t) • ' Ronald Caspers and Robert Batlirl who charged the CAO with ine!Uclency and said that the board should take over greater control of adm.inistraUon. The jury re solution, signed by Foreman Doreen Manball of Ne wport Beach, urg- ed "that a strong county adminis trative office be ret1:1ined with sufficient authori· ty to administer the affairs of the county in the most efficient and the least costly manner." The resolution also advised that "The supervisors are urged to keep the use of their executive assi~tants and personal staff at or bel ow tbe present level and te make efficient use of the staff of the county administrative office in the in- tere5ts of both economy and eUicleocy.'' The resolution went on: "County department beads end ad- mlnistrative staff. distinguished by their professional training, exp!!rience and pro- ven ability , look ta the board or Sl.lpervisors for lead ership and direction. "The responsibilities for fiscal manage- ment decision, policy formulation and leadership in order to be adequately car- ried out would require the full time ()f each supervisor," continued the jury resolution. '"Stork Patrol~ Mesa Officers Deliver Baby Boy Police office.rs manning the front desk de velop a sixth sense about people and their problems, but the cre.w on duty at Costa Mesa police headquarters didn 't have to use It Thursday. James R. King. 42, of 2613 Verano Place, Irvine , burst through lhe door aL 3:40 p.m., wildeyed. "My wife's he ving 11. baby in the park- in~ lol." he cried. "Now!" Racing aroUJld the counter, Officer Sam Arnol d and Policewomen Tia Dalla s followed the fralltic father-to.be. "I've delivered geveral. but it w1.s fust my luck for them to be in the back &eat 'of a t'Nf>odoor sedan, with n() room to work." Officer Arnold dl!Clared. "I was wondering how we were 1oinC to 1et her eut!" By that Ume, Mn. Nancy 1:. Kiq. U, WU in net thaPI to be utrk:atad. ''Ila comfor ted her and I did the delivery," said Officer Arnold, com· plimenting Mrs. King's com mand of the unusual situation. "She didn'l complain • • • didn't scream ... didn 't say anything, until I told her it was a boy and laid it on her chest. "She let out a great. big whoop that rocked lhe parking Jot," said Officl!r Arnold. "James, we got our boy," Mrs. King screamed. Officers Arn<>ld and Dallas rode with mot.her and son in the ambulance to Hoag Memorial Hospital where final delivery was completed. Hospi tal officials said mother and baby Qwlie, who weighed in at aeven pounds and six ounces, were doing fine toda:r. Arti-st Levels Charges At Council Over Eest A charge city ()fficials insulted or- ganizers of the would·be Balboa. Art! Festival and offered "vague and mis· lefKling Information when I.hey applied for permits more than a month ago" was leveled today by one of the exhibitors. Phot<lgrapher John Palmer, 34-09 New· port Blvd., made the 11.ccusation 8S city hall convened to process the festival.! special events application. It had been scheduled to open lhis morning. Approvals were still needed from the huilding and fire departments before license supe rviS()r Stan Hirschberg could let the festival begin . If they are not recei ved. he'll order it closed. Palmer, in his charges said "City hall has not cooperated to any extent - other than the nice letter from the Mayor that probably took three minutes to write." Palmer, nnf.: nf few at the scene of the festival grounds at the Balboa Inn on Main St. with closely cropped hair. said he and festi val organize r Jim Q.Jllen both had long hair and beards when they fi rst went to see the city. "They were very unfriendly -even rude," Palmer :said. ''We did not get the response you should get when you go to the city seeking information. WI! were given vague and mis leading infonna- tion .'' Cullen said that Hirschberg f()Jd him lh11r the four-week length of the festiva l did not fall into U>I! actual special event. category and hi! didn't think a permit would be needed . "Now that they've got everything Mt up -exhibitors dld tear Uie roo fs ()ff booths as ordered -they may not bl! able to open at all," Palmer said. "And they've got all the money they have sunk into this thing." A new wrinkle wa:s added thi11 morninr when one of the departmental approval! came through with a recommended con- dition that the ·fesUvaJ be allowed to operate only from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. This propoeat was crltlctzed by Cul\en'1 female mmpanion, 20 year~ld Jane Jerome:, who Insisted the evmilng hour! 'IVOUld cre:ate the best attendance. Plana: had called for festival to run f'rom '8 a.m. Burglar Drops Into Ship's Toilet Bowl A burglar droppt(I through tilt hatch of a $loop moored In Newport Harbor Thursday, right Into thll Ve!3el'1 bead, causing $50 damage to the toilet. Punled owner John 0. knox of Slnla Ana told police the intruder "'ho boarded hl.s Qui' Vlvt tied up at 2633 W. Coast Highway lhen stole only 11 •2 f1111hllght. Officer Donald Follett 1ald tools and other Yaluablct wtrt In plaln sight. . ' • to midnight. Miss Jerome also disc)~ that the festival organizers bad recl!lved endonements from 27 Newport and Ba.J. boa merchants endorslng the fesUval. Officials of tht Balboa Improvement Association join wilh Balboa Inn' man- ager Tom Nessa In saying they would not object as long as the festival obtained necessary permits . When asked if she though t everybody had learned a lesson and things might go more smoothly ne~ year, Miss Jerome ~aid, "\.\'e won 't be in this country next year. We 're trying to get money to get out of here." • W 01nan Wins Divorce, l\fate Gone 56 Years L~ SPEZIA. Italy <UPI ) -Marla Angio\a Arpesella won a divorce Thurs- day from the husband she ha!'I not see11 for 56 years. Mrs. Arpesella. 103. told a La Spe.t.is Court she was married to Aldo Arpesel!a in 1907 and they had two children. She said she last saw him in 1915 when they separa ted by mutual consent and he migrated to Argentina. Parliament introduced divorce In Roman Catholic Italy last Decembe.r despite &harp objections by Pope Paul VI. Cout Weather The sun will J>l!tk through that ever·p~l!nt haze thi s .aftemooo and Saturday, bringing tempera· lures to 67 a.long the coast and 7$ inland. U>ws today and Saturday '°· INSIDE TODAY Marvelou.s machtntll' which do abaolutelu nothing, along with their inventor ars the 1ubjtct of a: Wtelcendfr /taiure on Pao• 25 !Od,aw. ... u... ,. C•lltff11l.I I , __ ... u., 11 CllttlllM U41 C•llllU U c........... " 0.•ffl H91k• ' D!Wtttt ,. ••U•r"I I"-6 'J"-' Jl•U ~,_-lt """ La11119n 11 "'-11"'• ' -~ Mlrf\l.lol • .,.., n 111•1,.,,.. H.... •t Or•-,..,., ' •ntt~~h •tt '""" , .. ,. lloKll Mattltl'I D'll T•!fvltlf9 .M '"'"" ».It WMffllr 4 W!lllol WMll 16 WtfMfl'' '"91 IJ.U ............. .., ·~ .. ~ , .. ···' ·-r1 ' . ' I '• • r j • 'I DAil V PILOT N frld.o, JuM 25, 1971 Seal Beach Hostilities Explode • Ill Rioting DAILY PILOT Pho"" llr llkll•nl KHhlu PLAINCLOTHESMAN (LEFn LEADS YOUNG GIRL TO JAIL She Was One of Those Rounded Up in Seal Beach Melee 50 Cent Per Hour Meters Eyed by Newport Council Newport Beach councilmen Monday 1'.'iU act cn a staff proposal to double the parking meter Jee in lhe Ocean Front parking Jot at Newport Pier. n.e action. approved once by lhe coun- cil then deferred. is expected to receive continued oppo.silion from merchants in the area. even though city officials feel the new, 50-cent per hour fee, would help, not hurt, business. "The higher rates could serve lo ac- t ually stimulate business by increasing turnover during the day," Acting City 1'1anager Philip F. Bettencourt said to- day. A rate change for a 1econd public park- Ing area. the 26th Street parking Joi, is also proposed by BeUencourt He is asking lhe rouncil 1'.1onday to in· crease lhe weekday rate from $0 cents to ~I betv.·een March I and Oclober 14. There is currenUy a 50 cent daily charge on weekdays and a $1 charge on weekends year.around. Bettenrourl offered a similar proposal Bayshores Boat Slip Bid Gets County OK Permission to reconstruct boat slips on r.ounty tidelands in the c x c I us iv e Bayshores rommunity of Ne~1>0rt Beach has been granted by the superYisors to the lr\·ine Compan~·. Planned 1s the elimination of boat slips In [root of lhe C'Ommun11y·s .. play beach."' Rt-al Property ServicC! Ms been instructed to ne1?.nt1ate a long term le:i~e t\·ilh the Irvine Company for use of l.be !Ide lands . OIAN61 COAST DAILY PILOT daAHG~ CO.UT fl'UiLISHIWO COMl"AHV ' ••!JM N. w,., PrM:.W.t •NII hlolllhtt J 1t.k l. C'urf•v Vk:r~lrlllll~I,,,..,..... n."".' K",1~ir l!t/IW l'lio..,11 A. )il ,,,,1ii111 MolMl;tit EdllW L P1!1r l<ri19 loltwPOtJ S11<11 en, Edllot N'~..-..OMc· )))) Ntwport l•ul1v1rd M·.n;119 ""'•1••: r.o. ••11 t11J, t21.~J """' °""" C.M ~·~ bl W1'1 11'1 Slf'Wf ue-lacll: n: F9'nt ,._ "'-"",.,., ... di: 11111$ ... ell '°"''""I ... ... c.i.in.nn; as -.""" £1 '-'mlno Rul • , .. ., •••• t714) '4J-4Jll Cl..-.. Mos:thl I Ml01&71 c..rrltflt.. l,n, OtWlf9 C.tt.t 1"11911tt1"'41 ~1. ,... -•!Wlob. 1Uin!T'1f"lllfla, edi.r111 ""'""'" .. ... .... ,.11 ......... t• Mrlln _., -.... ~ ........ , """"" ,.,,. .......... ~,--· ._.. ct.. ,.., ... "'"' ............. hfcfil .,.. to.11 -. C..llf..,.ll. SWK'if'*I w mrrllr u.n ..... 11111• tw -u •.n nw!lllllY, P\flltl tf •lln1111N. U.lS .-IJll .... for the Ocean Front lot if the council declines to accept his first recom· mendation. He said the 50 cents per hour rate could be charged between the &ame March and October dates, leaving the rate at 25 cents during the winter months. As a second alternative he sugge!ted C'onverting only the two rows closest to the sand lo the 5U-cenl fee, painllng the posts silver to preclude use of the city's i15 annual recreation parking permit. Permits v.·ould rontinue to be valid in the row closest to slores, as they are noy,· in 1'.Icfadden Square. Jn still another proposal, ~·hich ht. \\'ants done regardless. Bettencourt said the city should alter the meters so they accept on!y quarters. ,;This change will prevent the practiCI!! of not paying lhe fee until just before the enforcement officer arrives and then in· serting only small CQins." he said. "Also, because lhe mechanism would be less CQmplex and Jess vulnerable to pop-top can rings. the quarter-Only opera· lion would be more reliable." Bettencourt made it plain he felt the ci· ty should have carried through with the con version of all the meters lO 50 cents last year. He. pointed out the resolution tn do so v.·as adopted one year ago. June 22, and conversion parl<; to 1mplrmcnt the change were received \ale 1n August. "Except for the three rows of meters in the Ocean front park.in~ lot. all ()f the recreation meters t McFadden Squarr. 19lh Street bf!ach and Balboa Boulevard median) v.·ere converted Aug . 25.'' Neivport Free uJay Grading Project Begins in Mesa Construction on a J2 million in· terchange for the Nev.'J)Orl Freev.·ay in Costa Mesa has begun. The bridge r;t.ructure at the ~ewport Boulevard intersection with Bristol Street and Palisades Road won't begin to rise until about Oct. 1, acrording lo state highway officials. Harvey Hopkins. rts1denl engineer for the slate Division of Highv.•ays, says front· roads. right-of-way lences and otntr aspects must be installed first. "A little work is going on now . clear- ing. grading. fence-removing."' he ex- plained, adding that traffic should be routed around the interchange site itself in late August. Work is being done by the Krus!!! Construction Company. of t-.1ontro.se, low bidder for the job. The existing Newport Frteway v.·hich ends at Bristol Street and Palisades Road will be extended lhree-tenths of a mile south. Grading to accommodate the eventual freeway construction further loward the cnast will be completed to a point below Del ~lar A~enue. The job is due for completion in roughly one )'ear, or sometime next sum- mer. Basically the interchange -.·ill be a Ne wPorl Fretway componenl, bu l Division o( Highways press officl!!r Charles 0 . Gustarson predic~ it will ea.!ie traffic congestion during complellon <Jf the Corona dtl Mar Frtf'way. Work (ln the latter. designated Route '13, lihould btgin next ye&r. while !ht Nl)v.'r}(lrt Freev.·ay Itself ~·lJl be done by lhf' 1.1!1' 1970s, he said • By JOA.JfflE RE\'NOl~ Of .. DlllJ ,. "'" H01tililies betwee.n Sul Btach police and yeu\htul belchflltr1, 1immering sin ct Monday, exploded into 1 riot 'Mlurs- day afternoon. At the tnd of the hour.Jong rock and bolt le throwing spree, 38 u·ere in custody and one officer was recovering from minor injuries. Officers fn)ln Hunl1ngton Beach, Los Alamitos. Cypress, Westminster and the Orange County Sheriff's Office JOined their Seal Beach rounterparts in EiWet'p- ing the youths off the beach. No shots were fired nor \\'a~ tear gas u.~ed on the angry cro"·d, es11mat('d to bt> bet"'een 450 and 500, According to police. the riot startrd l\'hen Wldercovrr officers Prom Hun· llngton Beach arrested three beach youths for di!turbing the peace. The officers, part of Huntington Beacb"s Special Enforctmenl Detail, had been called in Wednesday afternoon to aid Seal Btach in ketping lhe beach quiet. Chief Lee Case said "large group!! or rowdy kids"' had been causing trouble on the beach all wetk and efforts by Seal Beach palrolmen to arrest suspects for narcotics violations or for being In- toxicated in public where met with hostili· ly. Tuesday. one such arrest led a group to attack a patrol unit and break out the \~indshield. Sgt . Pat Sullivan described 1he almosphere on the beach as "tense, \'ery hostile." Thursday morning. Sgt. Tristram s~·an . commander of the Huntington Beach SEO, said Wednesday·s undercover voorlr. was r e I at 1 \' e I y uneventful, noting that a rew arrests were made. "But Thursday. they burned us right i"ay ~meaninp; !he youths knew who the und('rcover of11cf'rs v.·erel. ,, big group gathered around three of us on the beach. )elling obscenities. t•all1~gs us pigs and n11rcs -the usu;il ~luff. "'\\'e took it as long as v.·e cou ld and then started arresting some of lhern for disturbing the peace.'" Sv.•an said. "Everything was all right when we took the first lhree over to the jail, but while "'e v.·ere gone, some of them started thro"'ing stuff at passing patrol units. and when we got back to the beach. it bJey,• up" The tTO\\"d took over the park al the fool of the pier and the children's play area on the beach. ll v.·as about 3 p.m. when the order to dtsperse was f11st 11:iven, and sbortJy after that, poli~ began to sweep the beach. Sgt. Lee Gatti said a large porllon of the crov.·d on the beach cansist('d cf fan1ilies v.'hu departed en 1nasse \\'hen trouble started. 'Those in custody are being held on a varirty of charges ranging from Jn· toxication through failure lo disperse and from inciting to riot lo felony baller)' on a police officer. The injured Seal Beach officer. James GrOl!s, 25. was knocked unconscious when an object struck the front or his pro- tective helmet. sending him to the pavt:· ment. Property d?.mage "'as slight , police said today, being limited to bottles thro11.·n into Ocean Avenue, which runs along the beach front. Smoldering Fire Halts Pair Arrested On Welfare Grisly Hunt iii Tunnel Fraud Charges SYLr..1AR i UPI) -A smoldering fire in a water tunnel y,·here 17 miners were kill· ed in a natural gas explosion flared up t<>- day and delayed efforts IB remove re- maining bodies of the vic lims. Fire offi cials said thev \\·ould not send re~cue l'rews into the ·tunnel unt il flue holes \\"ere drilled to clear contaminated air from the five-mile shaft. Drilling ('rev.·s already were at work preparing vent holes and rescue teams v.·ere on lilandby. Construction timbers. rubber hoses and 11ther debris at the "'orking area of !he tunnel were invol ved in the recombustion. "They had no time to live," said fire department rescue worker Andy Kulj is. "They died -~he snapped his fingers) - that fast. You take a Jung full of hot air and you're dead before your brain knov.·s it."' Only one man in the drilling C"rew 2~ reel bf!neath the surface survived the in- ferno of blazing gases or thr suffocating limoke that followed Thursday·s blast. The tunnel, 15 miles frorn do"'nlown Los Angeles, is in an area laced with earthquake faults. Officials blamed the faults for the seepage of natural gas. More than 27 hours after the blast and the l~hour fire that followed, 12 bodies had been found in the five-mile Jong bore under construction for the Metropolitan \\'ater District. Seven had been removed from the shaft. five others were v.·aiting lo be. taken out and rescue v.·orkrrs press- f'd on through th!!! smoke, seeking the bodies of the five men still missing. "Wt have only about 25 minutes to v.·ork onre v.·e take the train to the tunnel Fro•n Page l CASPERS ... totally acceptable public policy." \Vhen questioned later on the Friends of the Upper Bay contention that from 40 lo 500 square miles of watershed must be preserved to protect the eslurarine quali- lv or the area, Caspers said: ·"You are referring to the entire \\'alershed. We must go slow· in our plan- ning. All land upstream is developing rapidly and seems to have gotten away from U!I. There v.•ill be runoff of in- secticides and silt but obviously v.·e can- not declare lhe ~·hole county a y,•ildlife preserve.'' Later in ans"·er to a question. the super\'isor said. "I believe $1.8 million "·i ll buy us good access to the Upper Bay. \\"e do not nerd the millions suggested to achif've our purpose " To finance the acquisil!Qn or \lpper bay :i.cccss. beach access and p.1rk lands, Caspers sut:gested: •·There are numerous stair and fedrral itrants u·hich the county has cmplo~·cd before and should continue filing for. Our ne.,.,•ly-adoptcd local park fee will help and grassroots county support should be specia l bond e!ertion or a bond issue mustered for a massive bond issue." \\'hen asked later if he fa\"ored a along ·with a general election. the supervisor said he fav ored a special elec- tion. "I don't v.·ant a general election where there is a heavy turnout," he explained. .. Give me a light ••ote where the two that are voling for my proposition outnumber the others." Caspers pointf'd out that there are 42 miles of coastline 1n OrangP County. "The public currently ov.'lls 22 miles of accessible beachr~ That is iust over 50 percent and our goal 1s 37 miles."' He said that an aoparcnt problrn1 with manv ~l('ctt'd offici al~ was that o( r('prCsenting the public in!rr('sl~ and at the same lime nol detracting from friends or business profits. •·1 must be some kind of a scre\\·00!1 because this i.s not one of my hangups. My first allegiance i$ to the public ~·ho overwhelmingly elected me to guide their CQunly through the problenlll and capilalize on the opporluniUes available to us." Caspers said he objects lo stall!! legi.'1\a· lion that would take over plaMing of the loc81 coastline. "The Board o r Supervisors unanimously feels that each eounty has the right to plan its ov.11 coaslal arra:· A questioner asked. "I( the rourts uphold the Irvine Comp8ny (on the Upprr Bay 111nd lf.'l"Chenge) wh81 happens lo the accrued I.Axes':" "It is true that the as..~essor thtel4' everything including the kitchen sink lnto the assessment of land there. The v.·hole thing v.·ill probably end up in ano!her !a\\·suit." he replil'd . face where the explosion eccurred because of the time limits on our air tanks." Kuljis said. "Our five-man crew grope!! by hand in lhe dark. I ju~t return· <'d now bf!cause I found a man's hand in the muck and f'll need help to dig the body out.'' The miners. employes of Lockheed Shipbuilding and Construction Co. of Seattle. broke into methane-bearing rock beneath an old oil field Wednesday. A small methane explosion that day slightly injured four miners. Dr. Gordon B. Oakeshott, deputy chief ttf the State Division of 1i1ines and Geology, said the Feb. 9 earthquake in the same area y,·hich claimed 66 li\•es. and it!! hundreds of aftershocks. could have provided "escape pathy,·avs" for pockets of 1nethane. · The sole survivor, a brakeman on the narrow.gauge railroad through the 2l·foot · high tunnel. \Vas trapped for several hours in the rubble. An Orange Counly Welfare Department Gocial v.·orker and his wife were two of seven persons arrested Thursday by the district attorney's office and accused of welfare chiseling. Social 11.'0rker. Billy Joe Ler. 35, and his wife, Joyct 41. are accused of welfare fraud. 1'.1rs. Lee is a depuly clerk for the North Orange County Judicial Oislrict. Both were arrested after district at- torney's investigators probed an alleged overpayment of $2,164 to the rouple by the welfare deparlment. Welfare Director Granville G. Peoples asked for the in· vestigation after a personal examination of charges against the couple. Jnvesligators said Lee was hired by the u·elfare department in r-,'ovembcr 1970, and Mrs. Lee v.•as hired as a deputy clerk under the name of Joyce Noble in August, 1970. .. For <ibout an Jiour after the blast. I could hear the other workers calling for help. and I think some of them tried 10 ·walk out of !he tunnel. But af!er an hour I heard ~o more cries." said ftalph Brisset, 33. of Pacoima. Calif. Geis •t11ir1g.t0' Also arrested Thursdav in a move that brought the number of \\·l'!fare fraud llr· rests up to 42 in a six-month p<>riod were Micaela Lopez, 32, Sandra Pfleger, 2.8, and Janet Gray. 24. all of Santa Ana. and Leon Dufresne, 26. or C~·press. and Linda Ann Woodworth, 22, of Garden Grove, Ile v.•as brought to the surface at mid- morning, covered with cuts and bruises and moaning v.·ith pain. Unable to describe ~·hat happened to his com- panions, he said ··y,·e \\"ere told it \\•as safe." ~1ark \\lorsnop, 15, of 2152 East Ocean Front, Balboa Join- ed the ranks of Eagle Scouts recently \vi th Troop 78 in Ne\I;. port Beach. t.lark a11ends Har· bor I !tgh School. Mrs. Lopez, ~1rs. Pfleger and 1fr!I. \Voody,·orth are :iccused of obtaining funds under the Aid lo Families 11.1ith Dependent Children program b y representing that their husbands v.·ere not at home and contributing lo the family income. TID YON HIMERT, 111,. br<nq• th1 l•r911t 1•l1ctio" .,f qu•lilv 1n•rth•"d:1• t• qo "" ,,1, "' th• hi1lory .,f our tomp•"Y· $u ch f1 mcu1 li••I •• Hl'f!r.-cio", Tho11111111'ill1, 0 .. .-11, Herl,.,•, will offt r 1•!1cl1d 9roupa ti 1ub•l•nti1I reduc llo"'· "II upho l1l111d m•rch1•dio1 will b• olftr1d •' mot! •ttr1cli•o 11•in91. TED YON HEMlRT "'"' 1bl1 lo pu1ch11• • l1r91 quonlily of 1111"'9• C•n.oll Sohm nd Cho!~ •I do1e-Dut pri<•I. 81 t mgn9 fh1 first lo 11 l1ct. Uphohh ry Oft 1111 ftf;)W, NEWPORT STOR E LAGUNA STORE SALE RIO. ·~· SOFA M•rwo C•~lllO'' LiMll l"rlnt c ... , ••• u ... Ill.it "" SOFA Mo..,o Corw,._IW' $399 Cr..,, Liftll'I Priflt-C..,lraih11t Wtll "" SOFA ....... 1,,, ...... 1· Sftf!'Tllt Oolol Yt!Vof "" SOFA •1110 C.-VIN"' lrf"llle "" $459 PR CHAIRS .... "~-'"'"· $159 PR. CHAIRS ~;::: '.~:::-11n ... I Oii•• V•l•ft l!O M , SLEEPER "~"'" ,,,._,.,,,~.,,q •• , Ooublo M•"-' 1)'1 " $259 SLEEPER ':.'::""' '"''-"'"'"""' ~,. SOFA 1~..-Nll-Tu!t.., 01mnt .... SOFA •·u·~·~· l,.1ntn Print-$489 G1'4, Or .. ~ "" PR. CHAIRS ::,;-•:,': .......... ~ PR. CHAIRS $159 llll ... g,...~11--Gr-$!riot 1)\1 ... LOUNGE CHAIR '"-""'"' """ '""' $139 CHAIR .,_,_,, "" C""lrUI Wt!I alU SOFA Mt .... Co.--11111" • ._ o..rNM-$399 SOFA M••eo C•rse--100"' '•!rot C°"lrtt! Wi lt .... C°"lr••llllti Wt!! - SOFA .......... C1...,....._.f"' Y .. ltw, C.ltl $299 SOFA S~trr\11-Tlll-. c ... 1r111 Wt!I M" ...... O.lol '•int "" SOFA "''"'" C•--l ll" "'"'~ ... llrllle .... $479 PR. CHAIRS ::::::-;nh '14' ... LOUNGE CHAIR "~':' .':7:, '"' $159 SOFA "~"~ HOfc•ltft Sin" ~ SLEEPER Hll"Cu• r iu11 '"' $239 LOVE SEAT ·-·~· $239 PR. CHAIRS ~-::; • .::-·-f1'1 ... ·~ SOFA .......... C•--W~lt-<11• , ... .,.. Mn $429 ROOKER "' •K•-O•• ' ... PR. CHAIRS ~:-:; •• t lll ••. $169 UPHOLSTERY FEATURES i.t.\.• $369 $699 $179 $269 $619 $179 $199 $399 $499 $119 $469 $149 $169 PR. ROCKERS ~;~::;-, .,, .. , $179 *.All 8 Way H•nd Ti.cl Construction 111' "· * Mo1t Scotch GuardK SOFA LI--••• lltllll 14H $429 1 * Most Cown Backs LOVE SEAT "'·~· (lro-.(tllodtr! ''1"' $259 * Many Contrasting Wtlt1 ""tr1M Wiii •11' * All Excellant Qu11ity Mo •v ."'"·· tp1ti0Hv 1eltcl1d pi1Ct• •' Tl:UI SALi ,.1cn. H t UI fl101 , .... pl11 •••"'' iu•t f!.t tlt1•9, '"'"V of ou' br1•d "'"''' will bt •~1il 1bl 1 •• • 1p1ci1I ol1llor lt11ia ot ,1J~c1d pri<11, Don't f1r91I our 111o•y btotl roo,.., di•i•q rog"' l occ 11io~1I c1U1,IJ011a •I f11t~1•~• ,, ... i•tll DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wastcllff Dr., 64'2·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Profrs1ion•l lnt1rlor Designers Av•llt1blr -AID INTERIORS LAGUNA llACH 345 North Co11t Hlghw•y Phone: 494-6551 ' Fetes Old Folks Nixon Winds Up 'Back Honie' Trip CHICAGO IUPJ) -Presi · dt nt Nixon t.och1y \\'Ound up a ll'l"O-day campe.ign-sty\e swing of the Middle West which began with an emotional tribute to his mother and end· ed "''ith a prom!~ t o America's senior eitittns. That promise was contained In 11. spetch scheduled at t i) a.m. CDT today before a joint ronven!ion of the National Retired Teachtrs Association and thr 1\n1erice11 Association of Retired Persons in Chicago. 1''ixon. flying in Thursday night from a '"back home in Indiana'' reception in the corn country where his mother V.'L'! born, v.·as greeted by one of the nation· s arch· Democrats, Chicago Mayor Richard J . Daley. Daley gave Nixon the full Chicago welcome. including fireboal!I shooting colored spouLc; of v.·atl'r off Lake Shore Drive along !he President's journey lo the Conlinenh1\ Plaza Hotel. •·He I o v e ~ Chicago," Daley said of Nixon. Jn Indiana, Nii-on talked unabashedly of his Hoosier- bom mother and said, "my roots art here." Nixon pulled out all thP. stops in rural Americana v.•hen he arri\'ed in the smtJl town or Vernon. Ind., lo dedicate a black iron metal historica l marker v.·ith gold lettering denoting the birthplace of his late mother, Hahnah Milhous Nixon, who was born on a nearby farm in 1635. Touched and responding emotionally, Nixon spoke in front of the ivy-covered Jen- nings County Courthowe of hiS Quaker mother's "very detp religious faith" and "very great interest in politics." ~ \(:\T\~\\\ f\\\SI ·t\l\\-, , • a \(\\cneo~' ' v~cto\\~ "\ , \ N ~~~\\fl\ \)\~l l ' Hm's Y""' clumce lo buy a UNDllt COUNTllt MODELS as low as KilchenAid a"1nrasher- ut true savin~ Current KitchenAid models, not "stripped down " or "sole" models. Supply Limited FBI Says Extortion Try Halted GARY, Ind. (AP) -The FBI said topsy an attempt had been made to extort $,30,00U from publisher Walter T. Rid· dtt &nd that FBI agents crilically wounded a fonner employe of Ri dder 's newspaper during a gunfigh t in the ('()Urse or .. payoff. FBI Agent James T. Neaglf! said the attempt ti>'extort the n1oncy fron1 Ridder, publisher of the Gary Post Tribune and vice president of Hidde; Publications, had been made under threat of a bon1b allegedly placed in the press room of the newspaper offices . Authorities said no bomb was found. A lett.er received Wednesday by Ridder 11aid that if the bomb was found . the children of associale publisher C. Dar- row "Duke" Tully would be 6hot by a sniper. The FBI identified the man shot during the payoff as John E . Ward, 57, of Gary. He WllS wounded in the che!t. No onl' else "''as hurt. Authorities charged him under federal extortion la11i·s. U111hrclla·l y pe Loan Law See n WASHINGTON (UPI) - 1'he Senate Banking Com- m illee probably will write an umbrella-type bill lo provide govcrnmenL backing for cor- porRtions in fin&ncial troubles s im ilar lo those faced by Lockheed. :1ccnrding !o a Nix- on Ad1nini s!ra\1on official. The committee hrld he<1r· ings on a bill that would Pnab!c the government lo bal·k $250 million in loans to Lockheed for cons1ruction of ils Tristar Airbus. Airplane Takes Off -No Pilot Yl':\lA 1 lPJ) -A light plane roared into the air ~·ithoul its pilot Thursday and new for three hours before crashing into a mountain in a restricted military area near here. The single-engine Cessna 150 buzzed over this city for .en hour before It headed into an unpopulated desert area. 'I'ht1 craft crashed 20 m i I es southeast of here . The wou ld-be pilot, Charles Fox. 20, Calexil'o, told Sh~­ iH's S~I. Va! Quintero that the starter on the plane was nol 11i·orking and he started lhe propcl!or by hand, leaving !ht throttle open slightly. Fox said he had sel 1he brake, hut !he plane su ddenly started mov- in~. Fox ran after the plane and fell wbile trying to chrnb in the door. He suffered slig ht in· juries. Fox had just finished taking a wrillen pilot's e:ii:amination and was preparing to leave on a return fiight to his home when the 1,000 pound pla:ie surlrlenly took off. • A fl.1arine hellcoptrr rn11011i·rd 1he Cessna for ab-Out an l1our , bul could not go to the Jl ,000- loot altitude allained by the sn1all crafL A m i ! 1 t a r y rurboprop then trailrd lhe Cessna until il suddenly drop· ped 2,000 feet, went into a slow spin and crashed lnto the mountain. Jane Fonda's Ca se Pressed CLEVELA ND (UPI) -Thr Cleveland prosecutor refiled charges of assault and bRttery against actress Jane Fonda Thursday, one day alter a judge had dismissed them because they were technically unsound. SUMMER TRUCK LOAD EVENT c PU PACK $3.12 PER FLAT. MIX OR MATCH . MANY VARIETIES AVAILABLE SUCH AS: * PETUNIAS * PANSIES * BEGONIAS * SNAPDRAGONS * V!NCA * COLEUS * MARIGOLDS * ZINNIAS * ASTERS AND MANY MORE SATURDAY & SUNDAY ONLY! GARDEN CENTER NEWPORT BEACH • Fashion Island Store Only Stanton Contempt Weighed WASIUNGTON (UPI) -A House Committee is expected to decide ne1t week whether t.o seek a contempt of Congres_, cit.aUon against CBS Presidmt Frank Stanton for rtfuaing to surrender film used in making a documentary on Pentagon public relations. TM subcommittee 1ay1 lt n~ds the film, of which only small portions appeartd in the H!im\iit!n '"The Selling of the Pentagon,"' to determine whether CBS us- Pd misleading filming editing l<'chniques. During a four-hour ap- pearance Thursday, Stanton told the Commer ce 1 nvestigations subcomm.itlee that the unused film -called outtakes -W'llS the equivalent of a newsman's notes and pro- tecled from aubcommhtte .!!crutiny by the fint •mend- ment. S u b committee Chairman llar!ey 0. Staggers, ( D • \V .Va.), told Stanton that by hi s refusal to testify on the editing praclices or to tum over the film "in my opinion ~·ou are now In contempt of Congress." Staggers, also chairman of !he House Commerce Com- mittee. said the subcommittee probably will meet nei-t week to formally consider the con- tempt motion. If .approved by the Commerce C:Omm.ittee .nd the House, it would ht sent to lhe Justice Department for proseculion. None of the rour 11ub- rommlttee members agrttd wi th Stanton's claim the out- takes "''ere protected by !he Firsl Amcnrlment and Stag- j;ers rejected the ne.twork e>:· Ccutive's claim that the sub· connnittee"s action would have a •·chilling" erfect on net"'ork television reporting. Staggers said "and you talk about chilling effects. This (media) runs chills up and down the spine. When there i! untruth put on tht!e networks ~ • • ~ Frldar. JuM 25, t~n I I I I I ~~ I . ' . I I I . • I I 11 I I ' I . DAILY Pll.DT Q IN ORDER TO ACQUAINT THE MEN WITH DISTINCTIVE TASTf.S IN CLOTHING TO OUR FINE COLLEC. TION OF SH IRTS , WE OFFER A HAND PICKED GROUP OF BEAUTIFUL PATTERNS AT A MOST J 'APPl;/\LING; PRICE. Rog. ,27.SO to 'J0.00 NOW-$20.DG ~2 FASHION IS[AND NEWPORT .CENTER • they can control this land and L..------..1..---------------------..i ~·ou know they can If they allow !hi.!! lo go on." i Who cares whether you can tru st a car salesman or not? Who cares whetfief' '"-' .he gives you a fair price for your trade-in? And a fair deal on your new car~ 1 And who cares whether you get good fina ncing or not? .Who cares whether. the 1 salesman greets you with a smile or not ? Whether he treats you polit.ely?1,.. :Whether he gives you the straight facts when you ask him a quest:;~ . (Who cares enough to see that you get the right car for your needs ••• with the· right options :6:. and doesn't try to sell you into something bigger tJW; y~ ~ ...t ---.. r ~eally want? Who cares whether yo ur new car. ~s p~oPl'.rly check_.8!,~!el] ~ and set up before you drive it away? Or whether you get the kind of sen-ice' . ·-.you need when you come back, . ! ........ .r~ ....... or whether you ever come , ' . 1back ataU? '-',. 'Yott ' Chryster-P1ym0t1th · Dealers --Oli!l'Dlm Costa Mesa Atlas ChtJsler-Plymouth, Inc. 2929 Harbor Boulevard Huntington lleacll Huntington Beach Ch1Jsler .Plytalll 16661 leach loulev41rd I • a· DAD.Y PROT EDITOR~ P~GE This Job City councilmen are going to Uke a second look at the dollarli and cents needed to update the Newport Beach general plan. What they are going to see is a mere $50,000 in tl1e account they have set as ide for general plan \vork . To do the job right, it should be in the neighborhood of $150.000 to $200,000, according to the experiences in other cities with special problems. Councilm en. defending the (act the project is under· funded. have olfer~d the expla nation th at the work will take longer than a year and the rest of th e cash can be included in next year's budget. But this 3pproach means the account \Vil! run dry by Noven1ber or Decembe r and be put on the shelf for six more months, forcing planners into a difficult re· starting process. ,>\ related question is ""h ether the work is done '·in· house" as the city staff \vants, or by an outside consul- tanl Councilmen have been :saying they intend to defer that decision until a new city manager and community development director are hired. This d elay and the bop-skip scheduling created by the budgeting could so prolong the program that it could get overrun by onrushing developments. Safety at Spyglass Hill A Jo~ederal Aviation Administration official ha:'!' backed up a claim by the U.S. l\1arines that they can 't fl y any higher over Spyglass Hill. Spyglass Hill , to be built on 45 acres of Pacific Vie\v Memorial Park next to Harbor Vie\v Hills. is .a subdivision tract approved by the city council two week:'!' ago that would have homes less than 50 feet below the flight path of those helicopters. Subjectivity ls l1npossible To Escape Everybody looks at the ~·orld through ~ colored glasse.s. Nobody is able to look al ( It through a "clear pane," because each ( temperament and personality colors its vision and calls this color ''the real \\"Orld .• , ' Some Jook through , rose · colored glass- ' es. others through 1 da rker hues. Some see the world in a bilious tone. others in muted !ihades of gray. a nd s ti l l others in dramatic scarlets, or pale yellow. ' The "realist," therefore is not one v.'ho foolishly imagines that he alone sees the world in its ·•true'' or "natural" color, without the distortion of spccl.acles - rather, il is the one who recognizes the particular coloralion of his personality, and discounts it in his estimate or ··reali- ty." EVES MODERN science has become jncrt'asing\y modest Jn i~ view or ex· temal objects. It is beginning to learn that "subjectivity" is impossible to escape in scientific researcti and in· ''t"Stigat1on : the \·cry process of human e~aminatlon itself d is tu r b ~ the ''realness·• of ttw object being inspected or measured. or photographed. This is v.'hY v.·e ha\"e. on I y "malhemalical models" of the e1cn1en1s in rubalomic physics. and not 0"p1cfurcs'1 of these particles at work . Predictions and projections about ''what is going to happen" in the next few years depe.nd all much upon the 1em· perame.nt of the predicter as upon the Dear Gloomy Gus v.·ho is going kl pay for the SE'em· ingLy permanent damage to th• pavement on J amboree Road be· ing committed by the dirt-hauling trucks ? -R J.C. 1"~11 1 .. rur• ntlltl'll <Uftrl' ,,_.. .i _,, .. rlty "'"°' ti ""' ,...,..._. 141!4 '"'" 111 _.,. M 01 .. ..,l' ..... D11tr ~1111. philosophy or history or ideology he espouses. T\\'0 SEERS CAN lake the same set of Jacts and interpret them quite dlf fe.renll y -one using them to see. nothing but chaos and destru ction ahead. the other using them as a basis for hope of prog- ress and reconcilliation in the conflict.s of man. And lheir philosophies. v.·hile preten- ding to be rooted in fact or throry, ar~ little more than extrapolations of the ir in· dividual temperaments -rosy, bl ack, or some shade. in between. Every idea they touch is ro\ored by the. "glasses" they in· evitably v.·ear. BUT WHILE SClE1'JISTS have learn· ed to allO\\' for the "persons\ equation:· most thinkers have nnt. And we ourselves gra• ilate to !hose lhinker); ( or soothsayers) \\'ho most closely ap- proximate our o v.· n temperaments, be<"ause \\'t find their ideas congenial , cind not because u·c have made any ob- jecll\"C. t.\"aluation of them. Indeed. it is impossible lo make any objective el'alu;i!ion of the future , for It is pre\'isely the "invariables'' in history that determine t\·enls The most honest thing we can do is to discount at least 50 percent of 1o1·h11t 1o1·e "believe'' as be ing in the service of both our self-intereat and the particular shade of glasses we were born \\'ith. l These Shouldn't Happen The lragic actidenl5 which seem to ~ an unavoidable part of summer •acations .a.re made more heartrending by !he knowledge they most often could have bttn avoided. There seems to be an •bsence of common seol!le or lack of understandipg of laws •nd rules in many I Of the mishaps. I Traffic deaths: and injuries are one f.hing: but the drowningll, boating crashes and Jost child incldent.s are another. They &hoUkt not happen. Despite the many warnings, there are com:d1esa people who go swimming in lakes Md rivers which are extremely cold. particularly in the spring when the snoWmelt runoff is at its heigh t. The I 1tarvivAI tJme 111 auch water for the human body is a matter or mlnutel!I. ANOl'JlEI. r ACl'OR i5 the dettplively IWifl and ~ c:mmJU In the rfverJ. A quiet ojlOt -., will be a d-"""' whirlpool -· QdJclren •..,tally obouJd be w1klled 10 thq do DOI ••l into Quotes ,,..._ ................. J Jo• lltac C11e •odlt ap -''By whlit · I;_.. c1oa 1bt oqut!, j1nlodlan. di!'!" 71t1e HUt Alrlendmont ot<>p wHh II .;.;., olda? Wiiy not -tllll .,,.,. llltidonal .... ..-to 0-.. ,, .... the llml>ORIY mllforlune of belnl 17, lf, or 2i" - . ' Guest Editori~~ ; . ·-. --~'};;;I these places. Another thing about c:hildrtn ls they can disappear in the woods in • few :seconds. They are present one moment, and vanish the ne.xt. Adults at camping and picnic 11pot1 shou.ld never let them out of their sigbt. Boating accident.s frequently •re caus- ed by violations of the. law or rule1 of the water. Many boaters do not even know they are law violators when they fail to clve the rigbt..of-way, go out on the water without life jackets for every passenger <ir overload the boat. JI is not uncommon to 11ee eight people in a boat built for four. The eonlinuation ol b o a t I n a rrthbaps at a ti~ when an}'OM can buy a boat with no proof of ability to handle ont will lead to the kind or enforcement boaters may feel La lnUmldaUon. But uni... the boaUng "1tbustut. ood Jn. dullry institute 80me form of '1olnntary t.raJning. it will be impaled upon them. ln ract, the Legisl•ture should be ('Of). aldertng a ltw to require 00.t OWMn to lhow they know how to operti.tl OM before they can UH It. A boater licenslnt llatu!e similar to thtl t e q u I r I n I automobile driven lo be licensed by tM state may be inevitable. Sacramento 8« Can't Wait The approvaJ came on a 4·3 vole when Councilman Donald Mcinnis, bimseU a pliot1 insisted the Marines could fly higher. Property rights are involved. But so are I.he rights ot lJ1e· people who would buy those houses -and the helicopter pilots. The question of their safety must be answered fllst. The council should hold ba ck fina l approval until the (ity staff can sit down with the J\1arines and officials of Orange Coanty Airport to determine if ne\v, hi gher night patterns for the helicopters, the airport traffic: and the jets at El To ro, can be developed. If they can, that's just fi ne. If they can't there is serious <1uestion \\•hether the. property shouJ d be zoned for residential development at this time. Again quoting the major. "They should have left it as a cemetery." That was its previous zoning category. There are of course other compatible uses. They may not be as economically lucrative, but at least they don't have to be dangerous. More Oxygen at Balboa The Balboa Improvement Association is back to life. Sammy Miller, for the most part, is responsibl e. From his familiar spot behind the bar at. Di!lman's, Samn1y first got himself elected president of th e group. "fhen he set to v.·ork. He ran a successful street dance to kick off J·Ja,\'aii !Vee k and Wednesday night put on a party al the Pavil· ion to pay for ne\V Christmas decorations he had already bought, obviously confident of ils success. \Vhat's so great about Balboa? ''There's more oxygen here than you can buy; a doctor told me that," says Sammy. N As Case of Pentago1i War History Goes to S11preuie Cotirt ••• What Press Freedom Means to You Wiosto o Churchill. British statesman - 1'A free press is the unsleeping guardian of every nthcr rig ht that freemen prizr ; il is the most dangerous foe of tyran· ny .•. Under dictatorship the press i); bound to languish. and the loudspeaker and the film to become more important. But \\'here free institutions are indigenou:'\ lo the soil and men have thr hab it or liberty, the press will continue to be the l''ourth Est.ate. the \'igilanl gua rdian of the righl! of the ordinary citizen." Waller Lippman, author. r, Ii r rd nev.·5paper columni sl, ausv.·f'ring the question, ··n'hat right do reporlers and edi!or1 ha\"e to criticize?" -"If the <-ounlry is to be go\·erned 11·ith thr con- sent of !he govt'rned. then the go\•ernrd musl arrive at opinioll5 about what their governors Y.'anl them lo consent to, Ho111 do lhey do this? They do 1t by heanng on the rad io and reading in I.he newspapers v.·hat the corps of correspondents tell thern is going on in Washington and in the country ;it large and in the v.·orld . "Here \\'f' perform an essential service. Jn some field of interest '''e make it our bu~iness to find out \\hat is going on under the surface and beyond the horizon. lo infer, lo deduce. to imagine and to guess what is going on inside. and \.\•hat this meant yesterday. and \.\'hat it could mean tomorro\\'. In ihis \\'e do \\'hat every sov ereign citizen is supposed to do, but has not. the time or the interest to do for himsr!f. This is our job, JI. is no mean calling, and .,...e have a right to be proud of it. and lo be glad !hat ii is our 11•ork " Se n Rnlltrt F. Kennedy -''In m11 np1n1on, the nt1\•spapers are cqu:il tri the cnurts -and somP.1irnes ahearl of the co11rts 1n our system -in protecting the pcop1c·s fundan1cntal rights ·• Albert Ca mus. 20th Century t"rench a1!lhor -"A free press can nf course be JZOOd or bad. but most certainly \l'ithout freedom it 111i!I never be anything but · 1'hc Vic\\'S of Adolf l/itlcr. German dic tator - "The organization of our press ha~ tr11 l.11 been a success. Our law cnn- t•cr111ng !he press is such tha1 d1r- crgrncies of opinion between mem- bers of thr go11em1nenl are nn longer an occasion for public c.xh1- b1t.ions. v.'hlch are not the 11c11·s- papers' business. \1ie've chm1naL· cd that concepti on of political free. dom 11·hich hole!~ thal cverybodx has the right tn say whalever comes linto his head.'' J\lkoli Lenin, deve loper of th!! bad .• Freedom ls nothin~ else but a chance to be better, whereas enslave· men\ 1s a certainty of the v.-orse ." t .S. Se n. \l.'111\am I':. &rah -'·If the press is nol free, 1f speech LS not 1n- rlepcndrnl and unl rarnmeled. if the mind i:o; .~h:iek!rd or madP impotent lhrou;:h fear. JI makes nr> difference under what tnr m nf ~ovcrnment you livr, you are a .~tl~Ject and nol a citizen." &•nj:imin Franklin -''If all prin ters 1•·erc: clrtern1inctl no! to pru;t any!h1n~ !ill thl·v 11rr·c Sllrr 11 11·nuld offend 11obody , ihci-r 11ullld be vr.r ) l1tllc pr1ntccl · .lustice Uugo L. Black. U.S. Supreme Co urt -'·f or the First Amendment docs not speak equivocally. Jl prohibits ;iny 1\10 Dictators pi1litic;il. f'CO t1omic and sotial prin- ri ple.~ and polirir~ of rn mn1unism -··\\'hy ~hCluld freedom or spccrh r111d freedotn or !h1> pre~~ be ;i). lrJ1 ,-rd'.' \Vhy -should a J!Ovcrnmcnl 11h1l'h is rlnln.i: Y.h.1! il belJc\'t'S lo be right allow itself lo be cri1H~ll.­ cd'.' I! v.ou!d nnl nllow oppositicn hy it'lli;1 J 11·eapons. ldc<Js arc m11ch niorc falal thlnss than f:Uns . \\'11.v shoulrt an.v 1nan be allo>v<'d 10 buy a printing press and disse1n· 1n<1tc pcrniriou~ opinion calcu- lated lo embarrass the govern· ment?'' l11w 'abridging frerdom of speech or or the press.' II must be taken as a com· mand of the broade:"t scope !hat explicit language. read in the context of a hbcrty· Jo111ng soc1ct~·. u•ill alloy.•" Justict l,oui~ n. Brandeis, U.~. Suprrml': Cour1 -··The funct ion nf the 1;re<;s 1s very high . lr is almost h<1ly It nugh l tn );erve as a forum frir !hr proplP, through 11h1ch the people may know free· ly 11he1t is going on. 1·n m1 sslatt or ~upress 1hc. news is a breach of trust.'' Thon1a s Erskine . Sco l\ish jurist - "The press must be free : it has ahl'aya been so and much evil has been corrected by 11. If government rinds itse!r annoyed by 11, lel it examine its own conduct and it \1·111 find the cause." Benjamin Constant . l!tth Centur y French painler -•·\Vith ne"'s paper-". I her e is sometimes disorder : \.\'i\hout them. there is al"·ays sla11ery ." Pre side nt James A. Garfield -''Not fnr iis O\\'n sake alone. but for the sake or sL1C·1cty and good go1·eri1ment. 1l1e pres,, :"hould be free Publicity is 1he strong bond 11'h1ch un1ti.'s !he people and the ir government. Au!horily should do 110 ac t !hal 111.i.IJ not bear the light " .Ju stice Felix Franklur1rr. U . ~. Supreme Courl -''Without a free pres~ there can be no free socie ty. That is ax. iomatic. }IO\\'f'ver. freedom of the pres~ i.~ nol an end In itself but a means to thtt Pncl of a free society. The scope and n:iture of the constitutional guarantcf' of the freedom of the press are lo be viewed and applied in that light ., Chinn }fo, cha irman, llon-0lulu Star Bulletin -··or all the human endea1·ors none has the opportunity and the rf'o sponsibilily of reflecting man to himSf'l t <is does journalism Not government. Nol la~·. :'\lot med1c1nc. l\'ol engineering. J\"ot finance .. Journalism offers the worlrt a chance t.o l\no1v aboul itself through prin ted .,..·ords.'' Divorce: Some Can Be Own Lawyer To the Editor : Divorce has caused emotional strain and a financi al burden to many people \\'hen they are poorly Prepared lo deal v.·ith either. The new California Family 1..aw Act greatly rtduces these hardships by eliminating fault finding as a basi~ fur marriage dissolution and by prov iding for equ itable division of community property. In some cases it ma y be feasible for an tndividual to act as his O\.\'n attorney and thu s save the cost of attorney fees. UNDER THE NEW Cahfomia Family Law Act, the only grounds for marriage diasolullon are: (1) irreconcilable dif. ferences lhat have: caused lhe ir- remediable brea kdown of the marriage, and (2) Incurable insanity. Professional marriage counseling i~ available at no CQSt in counties having a Conclli11Uon Court. This counseling is av1llable either btfore or after dissolu· lion proceedings have begun. It 1s B11 Geo1·9e --~ Dear George : Are you I.he columnist ·who tclls people how lo make attractive ash trays Crom uld bottles~ R.E. Dur R.E.: No. I'm the columnist who tells peop" to juM go ahead and dump their asllea on the noor . This pince ia past hope. anyhow. (Send YoUr problems to George, c/o ills newspaptr~ Yea h, I know It's not called !he C/0 T II 1 S NEWSPAPER. but whal that meitns la - forgcl I!. \Vrite to Ann.) :\1aiU>ox 1.ctters from reacftrs are welcon1e. r-.·ar1r1111ly tt1r1ters should convey lheir nie.~~aoes 111 300 u•ords or less. Th e riglit to condense le tters to fit space or c/11111uale libel is rf.,5erved. All let· lers n111st include sig11ature and mail·· i11g address. but nanies may be wi th· held on requ est t} sufficient reason is (lppore11t. Poelry will tiot be pub· lished. necf':>sary lo file a Petilion for Con· t·1l1atlon 11·it h lhe Super ior Court Clerk , TO ACT AS VOUR own attorney in 11 marriage dissolution. start by asking lhe Superior Court Clerk for the Dissolu- tion P:ickct. Then locate the nearest law library ror reference material. The new California Family Law Act and ap- propriate court procedure!t can be fou nd in Decrings Civil Code 4500 to $0()() and Jh1 les of Court 12fll to 1290 (in the 1971 Pockel S upp lements and other references that may be available. The court clerk cannot help you in any v.•ay or give advice. You will be on your own. T hope concerned people 1n other 5lates v.·ill work for &imilar improvtments in divorce leglsl11tion. JOHN PA'M'ON ff11ma11 LIUerl>119s To the Editor : As a visilor lo the 1tatt beach 11t Corona de.I fl.1itr. I 11·1111 disgusted hy thr. 11mounl of lillcr lcrt t>y puaons v;ho ui;e !ht> beach. This In spite of trash can!' every fey.• yards for 1hc purpose. P('oplr, of course. have the freedom to choose to completely ignore these. I am told that from July 1 through 1he \1·hole sum mer. lhere is a tot:i l ban on dogs being aUo"'ed lo run on !hr beach, because of the chance of their fouling. I A~l 1"0T A dci;; ownt'r. but oul of in- terest I walked lor almost an hour and saw no sign of dog droppings any\\·hcre. If Ne1\•port Beach Cily Council is to deprive dogs !he freedom of tlle beach f(lr t"xcrcise arid pleasure. 5Urtly it 1\·ould be in order to deprive human Hllcrbugs this pleasure also. ALICE DU\1'0N Sierra T\1adre Deliglrtrul Eve11l11g 7o !hi:' Editor· On behaU of the Exchange Club of Ne"'porl Harbor J \\'ish to extend ap- preciat.ion for the excellent community support of the Barber Shop Qua rtet Saturday, June l!l. Net proceeds,1Jf lhi~ 1tctivllv will he donated to the local Youlh Eniployment Service. A n10.s\ delightful evening was enjoyed by over 800 person11 in attendance at the Harhor High School Auditorium. It i~ anticipated thAt lhis .... ·ill become. an nnnuaJ club event for a "·orthwhile ac· t1v1ty. JACK F. KING Pruldent Cn11cer Apalhll Tri the Ed 11or · t Am a pt1!.i('nl al lht AM!rlci'tn Mrct1r:it Center at Denver. an oulstanding hospital and research center de\'otcd to the con- qJJe~! of cancer. Since I have been in lhi1 hospital, J have been aware of a great deaJ of apathy on the pa rt of th• American public to a disease which th1.• year \\'iii claim approximately seven times the number of American 11\·es lo.•t 1n the entire Vietnam 11•ar. UNLESS RAPID progress is made in resea rch, nearly every American family will be touched in some \\'<IY by th11 dread disease. I ll'ould like to receive lel· ters from people who arc interested in a coope rative effort in supporl of cAnCf'r rt'search. II. is my contention that v.·e may be able to motivate one another. fl!ARI E: BIRCll Room 313 HM W. Co lh1K Denver, Colo. 80214 -----~ Friday, Jun• 25, 1971 The editorial pooe of tht Daily Pilot .seeks to fu/orm aud stim· u/ate readers by prese11ti11g r.hir tU!Wspa per's opinionl!I ntrd com· m4!1ltory urt topics of i11teres£ and significance, by providing a forum for th• exprra sion of our renders' opinions, and by J)Tt.!tnting tl1c diverit vitw- point.f of h1formtrl obs«rvtTs 0111! spokesmen on topics of Elie dcv. Robert N. Weed , Publisher t I ' .r 1, • h ' ' r 0 a 0 k 0 • ~ h ' • h I c ' b n t I I I ------ Costa Mesa Today's Fln•I EDITION N.Y. Steeb_ voe. 64, NO. 15 f, 4 SECTIONS , 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JUNE 25, 1971 TEN CENTS Man .Slain; Nixon Link Explored CHICAGO (UPI) -Secret Servitt'! agents are trying to determine whelher a man slain Thursday evening in a shootout \>o'lth polict may have come to Chicago in an attempt to assassinate President Nix. on. Gerald L. Warren, deputy While House press secretary, said today that the Secret Service "can find no connection" between President Nixon's visit and tbe 6hooting of Jamcii E. Beavers, -47, of Squire. W. Va. However, Warren said I.he Secret Service was continuing "to look in- to his (Beavers') pas1." Beavers, said by a relative to be .a critic of President Nixon's Soulheast Asia policy, was slain by police in the Grant Park area Thursday evening about three hours before the President was lo arrive at Meigs F'ield. Bbou\ a mile from the scene of the .shootout. Beavers was car· rying two .32 cal iber revolvers when he was killed. White House ofric1als pointed out lhat Beavers bought. lhe guns he was carrying on Monda y and that Nixon's trip was not announced until Tuesday. Beavers' sister, Mr.s. Walter Chambers of Squire, W. Va., said her brother was known to be violent and had indicated he opposed Nixon's policies. Mrs . Chambers s;iid her brother had once phoned the White House over 11ome matter and that he was distraught by tbe fa ct that he was unable to reach the President. She said her brother left West Virginia r.1onday morning and 1hat she !hougbt he had mentioned something about going lo either Florida or California. Nixon has homes in Key Biscayne, Fla., and San Clemente. Calif. Mrs. Chambers said her brother had a hll!itory of mental illnel!is since World War II and that he had been confined to a Weit Virginia mental hoapi\al afl.U bein& tried fo r the murder of her first husband, Ely Herley, in l~. He v.'as also arrested on 1 weapons charge in Bluefield, W. Va ., a month ago, she said . She gaid he wa ~ al"'·ays talking or buying guns and killing people. "He told my husband he was going to huy three gun~ this time. though we never believed him." she said. She described his mental condllion 85 unstable and said he was a relatively heavy drinker and was known to become violent when drinking .. He acted worse this time than he ever did bE:fore ... Mrs. Chamber said. noting that htr brother had been in the hospital several times. DA Arrests 7 On Welfare Cheat Charges An Orangr Counl y Welfare Drpartment r.oc1al "''orker and his wile were two of 1;even persons arrested Thursday hy the dis!rict attorney's offltt and accused of welfare chiseling. Soc ta I worker, Billy Joe Lee, 35, and hi~ wife, .Joyce 41, are accused of wetrare fraud. Mrs. Lee is a deputy clerk for the North Orange County Judicial District. Bolh were arrested after district Al· tomey·s investigators probed an alleged overpayment of $2,16.f to the couple by the welfare department. Wetrare Director Granville G. Peoples asked for the in· vestigation after a personal examination of charges against the couple. Investigators said Lee was hired by the we\farf department ln November 197n, and Mrs. Lee was hi n!d as 1 deputy clerk under the name of Joyce Noble in Augu11t, 1970. Al.so arrested Thursday in a move that brought tile number of welfare fraud ar· l't:!!lts up to 42 ln a six-month period wer• Micaela Lopti. 32, Sandra Pfleger, 28, and Janel Gray. 2~. all of Santa Ana , and Leon Dufresne. 2fi, of Cypress, and Linda Ann Woodworth. 22 . of Ga rde n Grove, Mrs. Lopez. Mrs. Pneger and Mrs, Woodworth ere accused or obtaining funds under the Aid to Families with Dependent Children program by representing that their h~ba.nds were nnt at home and conlr1bu ting to the fAmily income . BRIDES RECALL 'NIXON DAY' A y('ar a80 Presldtnt Nixon ttu11de a apcci"I trip In Newport Beach to attend tbl' y,·eddlng of hi." niece, Lawrene Nb:o n ti! Thoma~ Anfinson. On the same day, in tM same church "'ilh thl! same minister, Lhree other brides rt'Ciled their vows . Did they feel their "'·edding:i ..-·r:re overihacklwed by tht prt~ence of lhe President r:arlier? Wbera Aff! thty all today~ See Soclr:ty, P-17. Strong CAO Urged 'In Best County Interest' -Jury PLAINCLOTHESMAN !LEFT) LEADS YOUNG GIRL TO JAIL Sht WfS Ont of Those Rounded Up in Seal Beacli Melt• :Wild Melee B1~eal{s Out Near Seal Beacl1 Pier By JOANNE llEVNOLDS cu tM 01llf P'llol $1111 Hoitililies between Seal Beach poHce and youthful beachgoers, gimmering since Monday, exploded into a rlot Thurs- day afternoon. At the end of the hour·long rock and bottle throwing spree, 38 were in custody and one officer was recovering from minor injuries. Officers from Huntington Beach. Los Alamitos, Cypress. Westminster and the Orange County Sheriff'» Offic_e joined their Seal Beach counterparts 1n sweep- ing the youlh~ QI( the beach. No shol.s were fired nor wa.". tear sa11 used on the. angry crowd, esllmated to be be!¥o'een 4;,() and 500. According to police. the riol :io;tarted when undercnver officers from Hun· tington Beach arrested thret beach youth!i for disturbing the peace. The officers, part or lluntington Beach·s Special EnrorC(!ment Deta il, had been called in Wedoe3day afternoon to aid Seal Beach in keeping the beach <1u1et Chier Lee Case said "large i,:rn ups or rowdv kids" had been causi ng !rouble fln lhe beach all week and effort~ by Seal Beach patrolmen to arrest i;uspet ts for n<ircntic.o. violation.". or for bc1n~ in· 1oxicaled in public where met with hostili· ty . Tuesday, one such arres! led a ii:r0up In attack a patrol unit and break out the windshield. Sgt. Pat Sullivan described the: atmosphere on lhe beach as "lense, very hostile," Thursday morning. Sgt. Tristram Swan. commander of the Huntington Beach SEO. said Wedne.!!day·s undercover work was re I a ti v e I y uneventful, noting th al a few arrest!'l were made. "Bul Thursday, ther burned us right away (meaning tht youths knew "''hO the unducover officer• were ). A big group gathere.d around thrte·of·ua Ml th& buch. ;.elling obscenities, c111\ings us pigs and narcs -the usUJl stuff. "We took It aa long as wt could and then sta rted arresting some of them for disturbing the peace." Sv1an said. "Evcrythlng was all right when we took the first three over to the jail. but while (See RIOT, Page?) Tricia, Edward Greet Presi dent At Camp David CA~1P DAV ID, ~cl. (AP) -Prl"Sident Nixon fl ew "by helicopter tn this presiden· tla! retre;it Friday and was-grt"tl"d by his honeymoo ning daughter, Tricia and her husband , Harvard Jaw student Ed· "''ard Cl'lx. A~ Nixon stepped from the helicopter on lhP last tee: of a journey from Chicago. ~Ir~ Cox drflV!' up in a golf ea rl . walkt>rl over 10 her fathPr a"d pl;interl a kiss on his face. Cox shook thP President's hand a nd !he couple chat!cd with Nixon for a few minutes. Then, w1tb Nn:on al the controls of thr cart. Tricia got in front with him and Edward 1n the back seat a11 they drove off. The Coxes disappeared t<> a secret honeymoon hideaway after the ir ~tme 5 White House wedding and specu!alJon put them al various tim~.!: i11 the Virgin ls· lands and other Caribbean resorts. Friday·s appea rance at Camp David in the Maryland mountains was their first appearance before newsmen since the wedding . Nixon new into Washington from two days in Ulinnis and 1'1.diana . The Orange County Grand Jury today urged the Board of Supervisors to retain a strong county administrative office. A jury resolution sajd a strong ad· ministrative office was "in the interest~ of bo th economy and efficiency of county operation.'• The jurors al.sD urged lhe board of supervisor! to "continue the higb pro· fessional quality of ils department heads and administrative staff." Alt hough County Administrative Officer Robert Thomas wa s not named directly, the Grand Jury resolution runs cou nter to moves earlier this year by Supervisors Flames Halt Rescue Work At Tunnel SYLM AR (UPI)-A smoldering fire in a water tunnel where 17 miners were kill· ed in a natural gas explosion flared up to- day and delayed efforts to remove re· ma ining bodies of the victi ms. Fire officials saitl they wou ld not send rescue crews into the tunnel until flue holes were drilled to clear contaminated air from the five-mile shaft. Drilling crews already were al work preparing vent holes and rescue teams were on !ilandby. Construction timbers, rubber hoses and other debris al th e working area of the wnnel were invclved in the rewmbusbon. "'They had no time to live," said fire department rescue worker Andy Kuljis. ''They died-(be 1napped hiJ fingers) - lhal llff.. 111!1 l>Q.a lung foll ~ bfl •~ and yoci'rt. dead Wart yoor \rain knows IL"' Only on e ma n in the drilling crew 250 feet beneath !ht aurface survived the in· fern o of blazing gases or the suffocating smoke that followed Thursday·s blast. The tunne l, 15 miles from downtown Los Angeles. is in an area laced with earthquake faults . Officials blamed the faults for the seepage of natural gas. More tha n 27 hours after the blast and the 14-hour fire th at followed, 12 bodies had been found in the five-mile Ieng bore under construction for the Metropolitan Water District. Seven had been removed from the 6.halt, five others were waiting to be taken out and rescue workers press· ed on through the .smoke, seeking t.he- bodies of the five men still missing. "We have only about 25 minutes to work once we lake lhe train to the ltmnel face where the explosion occurred because ()f the lime limils on our air tanks,·· Kuljis said. "Our live-man crew gropes by hand in the dark . l ju~t return· ed Q(lW because T found a man's hand in the muck and l"ll need help to dig the body 01.11.'' The mine rs. employes flf Lockheed Shipbuilding Bnd Construction . Co. of Seattle. broke into methane·beanng rock beneath an old 011 field Wednesday. A small methane explosion that day slightly injured four miners. Dr. Cklr don B. Oakeshotl, deputy chief ()f the Stale Division of Mines and Geology, said the Feb. 9 earthquake in· the same area which claimed 66 lives. and its hundreds of aftershocks. could have provided "escape pathways" for pockets of methane. The sole survivor. a brakeman on thr: narrow-gauge railroad through the 2l·fnot high lunne.I , wa11 I.rapped for several hours in the rubble. "F'nr about an hour after the blast. l could hear the other "''orkers calling for !Set TUNNEL, Pqe !) Access Probed by Caspers Bay Cornpromise Seen Impossible by Supervisor Fifth Ol!ilrict Supervisor R o n ll I d Cupera beJievea th!H rireatcr public ac· ceM to Orange County beaches can be achieved by making a de11l with developers but that no compromise iJ possible ill the Upper Newport Bay. Speaking to the Or~nge County forum of 1'own HaU In Santa Ana Thursday, Caspers .!iald, "J have faith that Lh1 private and pubUc sect<>rs need not necessarily be lncampatible. ll is not my desire to arbitrarily fun a pub\lc access through a resort hotel lobby or private apartment complc•. "Wha t can we dn, howtvtt, I~ cooperate wi th \.anriowners In developing planned cnmmunltic" which provide: 11c· ceu al logical points with tra ms or peo- ple movers from Inland parking loll!. "Also included in our bag of tools. donation." or rub-market value sales of property to the <X>Unty coul d be (lffset by approval nf higher den~ities creating more profitable land uses." The statement wu obviously aimed at the Irvine Company's planned develop- ment o( its thrH miles o( t'Olsta1 aM hill!llde property betVi'eeA Newport ~ch and Laguna Beach. The comp1ny first :wggested the tr&ns from inlt1nd parking lots. But t( was Casprn' lct£a that .:_ deel coul d be made. offering htJher de~y In re tum for-·1ower prlct!I OD property to be used for public park.,. When the supervisor g0t around to lhl controvtr1lal Upper Newport Bey pro- blem his altitude wa.s qulte diff erent, lwwever. Referring lO a not-yet released report on the importance of preserving the natural ecology of the Upper Bay, he &aid, ··1r th lll report U adopted, i~ would imply a 11lgnirlcanl reversal 1n the hlltorlctil direcUon or public pollcy up to the last 'few ye1r11. ' "'"1t Immediate lmf)lleatiol) suggesls that the m1trginal public uUUty of an ad· dlllonal residential or co mm 1rc 1 t I development here. ls much less t.ha~ the marginal public ullllty of an ecologically prellCNe:d Upper Newport Bay. "l'iirthermore, the exploitation of public natural resources inherent In (urther re1identl1tl and eommerelal developmP.nl (If thl!'l llrea Is no tonger . (Su CASPERS , Pa1e lJ Ronald Caspers and Robert Ballin who charged the CAO with inefficiency °and said that the board shou ld take over greater control of administration. The jury resolution, signed by Foreman Doreen Marshall of Newport Beach, urg. ed "that a strong county administrativ e office be retained with sufficient aulhori· ty to administer the affairs of the county in the mosl efficiellt and the least cosUy manner." The resolution also advised that "The supervisors are urged lo ke ep the use of their executive asslslanl.:!!I and personal staff at or below the present le vel and ta make efficient use of the staff of tbt cotmty administrative office ln the i& terests of both ecooomy and e.ffic.iency." The resolution went on : "County department beads and ad- ministrative staff. distinguished by their professional training, experience and pro- ven ability. look to the board of supervisors for leadership and direction. "The responsibilities for fiscal manage. ment decision. po!iCy formulation and leadership in order to be adequately car· ried out would require the full time ol each supervisor.'' coolinued the jury resolution. •stork Patrol!') Mesa Officers Deliver Baby Boy Po!itf: otficers manning the front desk develop a sixth frf!nse about people and their problems, but the. crew on duty at Costa Mesa police headquarters didn•t ha ve. to use il Thursday, James R. King , 42, of 2613 Verano Place, Irvine, burst through the door at 3:40 p.m., wildeyed. "My wife's having a baby in the park- ing lot," he cri~. "Now!" Racing around the counter. Officer Sam Arno ld and Policewoman Ila Da1\ag followed the frantic father-to.be. ··rve delivered several. but ii was just my luck for them to be in the back :seat nf a two.door sedan, with no room to work," Officer Arnold declared. "I was wondering how we were going to get her out !" ~y that time, Mrs. Nancy E. King, ~. w• ln no lb.ape to be "l"i~ ••Ila comforted her and I did the delivery," said Officer Arnold, com- plimenting Mrs. King's command of the unusual situation, "'She didn't complain • • • didn't scream ... didn't 5ay an ything, until I told her it was a boy and laid it on her chest. "She let out a great big whoop that rocked the parking lot," said Offioer Arnold . "James, we gol our boy," Mrs. King screamed. Officers Arnold and Dallas rode with mother and BOn in the ambula~ to Hoaa: Memorial Hospital wbere final delivery was completed, H06pital official! said mother and baby Ckarlir:, v..'ho weig~ in at seven pound.I . tll!d six ounces, w,.. .... lino lotlq. Supreme Court to Take Secret War ~aper Caper From Wire Services WASHINGTON -The Supreme Court agreed today to me.ke an emergency decision on the dis pute between lhe gov ernment and two newspapers (Iver their right to resume publication of lhe secret Pentagon study of the Vietnam war. The court announced it will hear arguments in the controver!ial case Saturday at 11 a.m. EDT. The justices "''ill hear arguments from lawyer11 from the New York Time.oi and the Wa.&hington Post as well as the government's side of thP ¥.'tangle. The court continued restrictions im· rosed on the Time11 by an Appeals Court ruling and applied the same restraint on the Washington Post. The government nearly lost ll!'l case without Supreme Court review. The decision In hear the ca11e was 5 to 4 with Justice$ Hugo L. Black, Will!am 0, Dougl11s. William J, Brennan Jr .. and Thurgood Marshall voling to deny the government's request for a hearing. This would have let the Time.oi and Post publish stories ..,n the war study documents without re.!!lriction. It takes the volP of four justices to place an appeal on the court docket. Under lower court orders the Post would have been able to proceed with ac· counts on all the secret documenl:!!I in Saturday morning papers. The 'I'ime1 could havr: printed only those which the government deemed not dam11Jng to the national security. The. court uid the "special append.is." -a ll11t of document.! the justice Depart.. ment L, specially anxlou11 to suppress - must be delivered to the supreme Court by 5 p.m. EDT today. The court 11ld 1ny other Item! which the government may have apeelfled a.a un published since t.he and ctrcuJ~'a opinion in the Times case could be in- cluded and that the Times should be notified aa to what lhe Ile.ma were. The court took the actlon at a regular Friday C{)nfere{lce that precedes ill Mon· day court u.saloo&. Tt had lotended to end the regular tum on Monday, but by ec.. cepti:ng the ca1e -with no lndlcation when a ruling would come -•d· joumment time w11 now uncerl-'11. One o{ the nine Jusllw. WWlam O. Doogla•. already t>,\d left W•lhlnlton for hi• n«thwest 1Wf!rMr. llome. He •· Liquor Bill Backed SACRAMENTO (UP I) -An Assembly committee htlll endorstd leg\slatkm to aUow an JS.year-old to buy ind drink a dry martini or 1ny <llher alcoholic beverage al 11 licensed e11tin& place ptt>- vtded he 11 accompanied by • parent. ranged to ny back to the capital tonlgM w participate in Saturday'• bearing aM the .subse<iuent decision. A brier filed with the court by the Poat earlier in the day 1a ld Utat if the j111tlce1 allowed the government lo block publica~ tion of the Defense Departm ent documents, they would be sanctl<lning a form of censorship other federal eourUI have held unconstitutional. Other developments: e Former Defense Secretary Robert S, McNamara labeled the pacUication pro- gram in South Vietnam ··a bad dfsa~ pointment'' in 1966 and told President Johnson he 11aw "no reasonable way to bring the war to an end soon." the St. Lciuis Post-Dispatch said. The newspaper, quoting from what It said were secret Pentagon documenlll, said McNa mara lold .Johnson in a memorandum dated Oct. 14. 1966: "Pacification has. 1£ anything, gona backward." Tile private. memorandum was writlen about 18 months after the pacification program had gotlen undtt wa y. e The Chic.11go Tribune:, In a front page editorial in today's editions, suggested Utat a group of ed1tors and government officia ls study the secret Penta.g<ln papers to decide what can be published, and distribute the matertal to all the news media. The aun will peek through that ever--present hate this afternoon and Saturday, bringin1 tempera· tures to fil along the coast and 75 inland. Lows today and Saturday IO. INSmE TODAY A-1arvtloU! machine$ which do absoluCeLy nothina. along with thtir invt"ntor art tht 1ubjccc of a Wttktndtr ftoturt on Pape 25 today. -" C1'*"""'4 I C:llllK ..... Ut . II Cl•uHIM U-41 c:-1t.• n c......... Jl DMtlil HMkn t OI-It ••1111r1.i ,_ • 1"1-fl,JJ -" AllllL ....... II Mllrt.1 C -.... Moltllel ....... It Mt lltMI .....,_ W Ot•• c .... ,, ' 11111-Mlh »tt ._.. 14'1' .__.Ml ..... lt-U Ttl..,hlM • --" .... ..... """ . WlllN Wnlt M __.,, """ 11·1' Wtrlll Ill-W ... ............. i ·-i I I I c Frldu , Jµne 2~. l'i71 Realtor Slaging Autopsy A waited In Mesan Death Autopsy tests were still inco mplete to- day. as San Diego homicide detectives .aught lo deterrnine if Costa ~lesa real ut.ale woman Jean Smith '4'BS sexuaUy assaulted before her brutal murder. The 56-year-old realtor's nude body was found Tuesday mornin g on a lreeway em· bankment in Del t.!ar. aft er she \l'as ap- parently bludgeoned to death with l\l'O blood-stained rocks. found nearby. "There's nothing neY: developed yet ,'' said San Diego Deputy Coroner Max Murphy when asked about the case t1r da.v. A 1·isil with relatives in San Diego end· eel late Ori the afternoon of Tuesday, June 15, when Mrs. Smith left the home of a stepson, David Smith, bound for Costa Mesa, She never arrived and wa s reported as a missing person the following day, while investigators believe she was slain not long after departing. From Pagel CASPERS ... totally acceptable public policy." When questioned later on the Friends of the Upper Bay contention that from 40 to 500 square miles of watershed must be preserved lo protect th e esturarine quali- ty of the a~a . Caspers said: •·You are referring to the entire "'atershed. \Ve must go slO\\' in our plan- ning. Al l land upstream is developing rapidly and seems lo have gotten away from us. There ~·HI be runoff of in- secticides and silt but obviously we can· not declare the whole county a wildlife preserve." Latu in answer to a question, the 1Uoervisor said, "I believe $1.8 mill ion will buy us good access to the Upper Bay_ We do not need the mill ions suggested to achieve our purpose." To finance the aCfluisi tion of upper bay acces.'I, beach access and park lands. Caspers suggested : "There are numerous state and fede r<i l grants which the county has employed before and should continue fili ng for. Our newly-adopted local park fee will help and grassroots county suppor t should be special bond election or a bond issue mustered for a massive bond issue:' When asked la ter \f he favored a along with a general election. the supervisor said he favored a special elec- tion. "I don't want a general electi on where there is a heavy turnout," he explained. "Give me a light vote .,.,.here the two that are voting for my proposition outnumber the others." Ca spers pointed out that there are 42 miles of C'Oas11ine in Orange Co unty. ••The public cu rrently owns 22 miles of accessible beaches. That is just over 50 perttnt and our goal is 37 1niles." He !aid lhat an apparent problem V.'i\h many elected officials v.·as that o( representing the public interests and at the 11ame lime not detracting fro m friend! or business profits . "I must be some kind ol a screv.·ball because this is not one of my h11ngups. 1>1y first allegiance is to the public \\'ho over~·helmingly elected me to Rll ide their rounty through the problems and capitalize on the opportunities av ailable to u~ ·• Caspers said he objects lo state legisla- tion that would take ol'er planning of the local coastline. "The Board o f Supervi~ors unanimously feels thal each county has the right to plan its O\I n coast.al area " ORA.N~E COAST DAILY PILOT 011. ... HGE CO ... ,T 1'U&Ll1HltlC. COMPANY ._oh••t N. w •• d 1'r":d..,I I nd Plll>h\.l'I ... J •<k R. Curley vie. 1'rn1c1..,, •ml <>-••I ~n•~r Tho"'•' Keevil [d•:Ol Tho"''' A. M urph in~ M1~•91ng [g,ror C•lttJ Mn• Ortic.• .llO W11I ltv Str•tt • M1 Hin9 Atltlr111: P.O. lo~ IStiO. ~lb~ti OtMr Offlt" H .... 11111" ••1cll: UD Ntwi:orl &011''"""''" lkO~ l atc1': 77: "'"''" Av"""' Hll'\11 ... 10.1 a11dl: 1111:. &••<~ 11&~1'"''" St11 C1t,...,,i.: JDS Horlll l l (1m•N1 Rt~I l)AILY l"ll.CIT, ""'"'"""le" h comll!Wll '~ Ht'Wt·l>ta&, !I po,ollllol>cd •tllY t•,IPI S~"· Ct Y Ill -•••!• edl•-lor U..Uf\t It•<"· ~; 8~dl. Cot!• -·· l'+llftllnOIDr. euct1. """""Ill v111•v. ''" C14P.....,,., Ct ,lltt -•~• Srddll lll'"· •IO!'rl wl!h ~ ~f1len.i dlllo<t. l"rlflCIPt l fl'll\11"9 lllt "lo ~ 11 m .,,...r ••r si ..... co.ti "'"'"· , ........ 11141 64J-4J21 Cln!IHW .Atf•.rl"'•t 642-1671 Cotrrltflt, 1t 11, 0•11190 (0111 Pubtl1,.INJ C-tft)'. loll MWI \lllriM, hlv<tfll"'~'' ,.., ..... 1 1!'111,... '" .ll•C"'ll• ........ " ,,~.1 .. .... , 11o rfPO"OdUC td "'"-' IJ'Klll ,..,. ..... ..., 4'f (W't'l'i9h; IWMf. ~.if dloH •llt• ,,.Td 11 H1wt1Df1 ••tth -co.•1 Mn•. c111Wftll. $11111K•IP'"'" fW' P"'ill' U U -1"'1y. IJV mtll U I' """"''11 ft\llll•rr tlUll,.tllo<\1, I~' f~ "'°"lhly. Circumstances lead1nii lo her brulal murder may never be known. California Highway Patro l ollicer.s ticketed and later 1111rounded her parked car. 1'.hich \\':ls a short dislance £ro1n the body's Jocahon , 30 feP I below the roadway out of their sight. ,\ hilch-hiker clJSl'OVPrcd !he bod) Besides thr sevrre he<1d 11ound . the n1ember of the Costa Mesa-Ne\\ port 1-larb<>r Board of Realtors suffered a broken left leg and rib, the a\J!Opsy shO\\ · ed. The body \\'as released by San Diego County coroner"s investigators Thursday afternoon. W on1a11 Tells Of Copying Secret Data LOS ANG ELES (AP ) -A woman has told a federal grand jury probing the lea k of 11 top secret Penta gon study that she ~·as paid $150 by Daniel Ellsberg, a "d~ar friend,'' to make copies of unspeci fied documents. E!lsberg, is the former Defense Departmen t and Rand Corp. E'mplo~·e who a former New York Times reporter said gave the Times copies of the Penta· gon docume nts on American involvement in Vietnam. Linda Sinay. 28, a fr ee-lance ad- vertising industry v.·orkcr, told the grand jury Thursday that E!lsberg paid her the $150 in late 1969 or early J970 lo duplicate doc uments for him on a copyi ng 1nachine in her office. Mrs. Slnay's attorney said. The atlorney, Luke McKissac.k, said Mrs. Slnay "didn'l give the1n /the grand jury ) any information they di dn't already have."' She ended two days of testimony by saying she did not knO\Y the contents of documents she duplica ted for Ellsberg , 11-fcKissack said. 'T he \1•oman told newsmen she met Ellsherg 1n 1969 and last saw him a year ago. •·He's a dear friend of mine and a brilliant man."' she said. "[ met him through a mutual friend about two years ago." McKissack said the \Yoman's testimony wo uld provide only "inconsequenUal in· formation" lo !he grand jury. Ellsberg \1·orkcd for the Rand Corp .. a San ta Monica •·think-lank" at the lime \1•hen the firm received two of Uie 15 c.-opics which Lhe Penta gon made of i!s 7,000-page study. Another person subpoenaed lo ;i ppcar before 1he grand jury, Anthony J, Russo, 34. \.\'Orked for Rand from 1964 lo Hl6~. ~1cKissack said Russo also was a friend of r-.1rs. Sinay. The Justice Department says the grand jury investigation concerns possible violations of national security la\.\'S. From Page I RIOT ... \1'e 11 ere gon<'. some nf lhem started thro\.\·ing stuff al passlllg p3trql uruts, and l\'hf'n \\'e got back lo lhe beach. 1t blew up " 'fl1 c crn\1d 1nok over the park al thr foo! of !he pier and the children's plny ar(';i on the beach. I! \.\'<IS aboul :i p n1. 11·hcn tbe order to dis pe rse was first ~11·en. and shor!ly :if\er that, poliCf bcsan lo sweep !he beach. Sgt. Lee 1..;att1 said a large portion of 1he crowd on the beach consisted of families "ho depar ted en masse ~·hen lrouble start!'d. Tho~e in custody are being held on 11 variety of charges ranging from 1n· to.~icalion through failurl.' to disperse and from inciting lo riot to felony b.!ltlery on a oolice officer. The injured Seal Beach off icer. Jan1es Gross. 25. \.\'SS knocked unconscious ~·hen an object struck the front of his pr~ lecti\'e helmet, sPnding him to the p11 ve- men1 Property de.mace "'as slight, poliC'e said today. being llmited to bottle..~ thrown in to Ocean Avenue, "'hich runs alo ng the beach front. The quickly controlled riot seemed to have little effect on the downtown shop- ping area on M;un Street as shoppers strolled in and out of shops a few feet fr om the heavily clad officers who con- tinued to arrest stragg lers. Case said he is anticipating 11 tense \\'eekend e11d put his men on 12-hour duly. "At the momenl we don't intend to close the beach, but It wll l be heavi ly patrolled. \\'e'll be ready if trouble breaks out ag11 1n." he said. "'We've never had any trouble lik e this in 1he six years I've bee n here ," Case ad- ded. "fl used to be like this in Hunlington BE'ach. I guess this yea r thty 1usl picked Seal Stach." Gani, reflecting the :intu:ipatory mood or police. nnted that of the Nre.sts madt on the beach before Thursday, none were from Stal Beach . and of !hf' :18 from lhP riot, "most "'ere out of county, and only a handfu l "·erP from herP." "And of t'oursc, lhere'll be others 1hat have heard about the riot. plus most of the ones v.e picked up Thursday have bef'n released. so the.v may come back here looking ror trouble .. , Grand Jury Clear s Data Chief Orange County Tlat..i ~ervices director Robert Farn1er \\•as given a clean bill of he alth today and his advtrsar~. Tax Collector Rob{>rt Cilron. was 1·r 111c11.ed b.Y the County Grand Jur~ The iury. acl!ng :.it !hr request of the l"OUnty Board or Supervisors, said a tull investigation into ( ·11ron ·s r 11 a r g e ~ against Farn1cr re1rHlrd "no f'\ldence to support the allegation~ ' The jury report. siRnetl b~ Foren1an Doreen f\.1::1rsh<1ll of Ne\1·pt1rt Beach. saiQ, •·V.'c feel that th1· ~1tua!1on nugh1 nol have OeC'urred \\'Jlh lhe rr s ul1ing detnn1ental effect on county go\'ern1neo1 and morale had Citron used all the coun- 1y procedures a~·ailable to h1n1 ·• The fitron-Farn1er feud originated May 4 11hen thf' tax collector chargell before the board of supervisors that lie could get a data processing job h<' ,yanted done for $20,000 !PSS by giving i1 to an outside firm , rather 1h11n to Farmer's depa rtment . Citron also charged that Farmer's departn1ent \.\'as inefficicn!, waslefut 11 n<l incompet enL SI NGLE-CAR MINE TRAIN BEARS BODY OF SYLMAR TUNNEL TRAGEDY Explo1ion and Fir• Third Oi111t•r to Hit W1ter Proj1ct Since 1960 VICTIM Supervisors Ronald Caspe~s and Robert Ba ttin supported Ci tron and were lern- porarily joined by Supervisor Ralph Clark. 'They tentatively voted to accept the outside offer by Securily Optimatio11 Service of Los Angeles, a subsidiary or Security Pacific Bank. SISTER SHOWS GRIEF Brother 1st Mi ne Victim f'rom Page l TUNNEL ... help, and I think some of them tried to l'.'alk out of the tu11nel. But alter an hour T heard no 1nore cries ,'' said Ralph Bnsset. 33, of Paroima. Calif. He was brought to the surfo:ice at m1d- mnrning. co vered \1·ith cuts and hru1ses and moan ing \\'It h pai n. Cn ab!e 10 df'~t ribe .,.,hat happened lo h1~ co1n- p:inifln5. he ~aid "we 11crP tolrl 11 •1as 5llf(' - ,\nolt1rr rrohlen1 f:irrd b\' rrscuc v.nrli rr.' 11 a.~ tho:it the bod1rs appa rcn11y \1 r·re ~<·11t trred over a rubble-covered seC'11 on stretrh1ng 200-feel lron1 the tun- nel !;ice. Thr first h11dy \\·,i~ found aboul 600 feet rronl the bore when the first le:i1n or rescuers in a rail c<1r ro:in over II Of- ficials said 1he unidentified nian ap- paren1ly ran !hr 600 feet before dying "He made the supreme effort to sa1·e hi~ life.· sald ;i rescue \1•orker As \let>ping relatives looked on from a nearby hill. rail cars rumbled to the surface be11ring bodies of lhe dracl . Ainong the $m<1ll group of persons, mostly ~·omen ~·eeping. was a mining in- ~pector "'ho aske d that hr not be 1dc11 - tif1rd. "There's an adage 111 1n1ning that 1! s a man a n1lle," he said. "One guy dies lor eve ry mile bored." At Sylmar it \.\'as \1 orse. It \Vas a Ht!le 1nore th11n three men a mile. Road Widening Project Ending \\'klening of Sunf!o\\cr A\'enue. a $16.237 Job stre!ch ins 860 !ett from Fai rview Road lo a point ealilerly of that intersection in Costa 1\lesa is "t'll along to~·ard completion . The iob bf'1ng done by the R. \V, McClellan <.:onstruct1on Company is ~cheduled for completion July 9, one month after it .,.,·as begun. Traffic is l1n1ited to t"·o l;i.:irs dur ing alano~I th(' cntirr period And n1olorisL~ ;.hl)uld u.~r a!1e rna1e routrs unlil C'urb.~. gutters. :sldC\\'Alks paving and other Im· prflveIT\f'nt.~ Arr rlonr Cost of thr projrct is financed cn\ir('ly b} stiite ;:as tax funds und ,·oluntary l11nd df'diC'silion by developer;. of the adJticcnt prupcrty E~ology Safe~ Valley Plant Danger Said S111all Construcuon of <1 $17.5 mi 11 ion desalinization plant and was te v.·ater reclamation complex in f ountain Va lley will nol create serious environmenta l problems. according lo consultants for the Orange Co unty Water District. Jones and Stokes Associates. Inc. or Sacramento. reported to district directors that construction of the dual purpose facility wi!I ha ve an overall beneficial im- pacl on !he envi ronment. Follo11 ing a four-and-a -half month sludy flf lhe project, the firm said 1he de!rac11ng factors -air, 11·ater and noise µolhJ!ion -will be n1inimized by design rri1l'ria. Neil Clint•. a~s1stant manager of the v.·;iter d1stnct. said construction on the 1lesal1n1zalton plant is scheduled to begin ttus !all Thr tl1~tr1ct "·ill pay SJ.2 million and a I state-federal iirant ~·ill pay $4.~ million fo r the first module of lhe plant v.•hich eventuRlly is expected to produce 3 mil- lion gallons of drinking water per da}'. 'The first phase will be used as a pro- totype for the second phase which ~·ill expand the plant's capacity to 15 mill ion gal lons per day. Since there are no facilities of this size in exis tence. Cline !S aid. it is impossible to estimate ho1Y 1nuch the seco nd phase ~·i ll cost. The wasle waler reclamation plant ".s <:011struc11on schPdule has not been set. pending approval of a $7.9 n1illion st ate- fedc r11! grant. 1'he water d1 strirt plans lo add $~ n1illion or its 1noney for lhe 11astc water teclamalion plant which .,.,,ill be built for a 15 milhon gallon a day rapacity. II \\ill be modeled after • sunllar facility at South Lake Tah{){'. 2 2 Farmer \\'as allowed to reply t1.10 weeks later and said his depa rtmeni could do the job for less than the outside firm. He said Citron had based his charges on "incomplete and inaccuralt information bl'cause or hi.~ delibera1r failure lo follow l:'Xisting coun1y policy and coordinate his actions wit h ap- propriate county departments." The Grand Jury report said their in- vestigation revealed evidence to agree v.·i th Farmer's charge. Baco n Appeal Nixed B\' United Press lnt.ernaUonal A Federal appeals court upheld the con- tempt citation and jai l ~entence against Leslie Bacon 'fhur sday arid a federal grand jury indicted the anti\\'ilr activi~L on conspiracy to bo1nb a r\e11· York b:ink The 9th ll.S. C1rC'uil Court or Arpc;il~ 111 San Francisco stayed its decision for 30 days lo allow attorneys for the 19-year- f)!d Atherton. Ca lif.. girl to appeal the derision lo the l" S. Supreme Court. SM is free on $10.000 ba1! 7 ' TED VON HEME .. T, l"e. bri ,.91 111• l•r9 e1I 11!1ctio" of <1 uat;1y m•r<~1 ndi1• to go c" 1•11' In the hillorv ol cur tcmp•ny. Suth f•mcu • lin•• 11 He11rl'doft, T-0!1111t'lllll', Dre1•I, H1rlto9•, will offer 1P l1cled 9rcup1 al 1ub1tenlial reduclion1. All uphol1t•r1d merchend i1• will h• offered el mo1I e ltrecli•t 1t•in91. TED VON HIMERT w•1 1bl1 to pu•ch•t• 1 !1r91 qu1nti.._, of Me1•9e Cor1ot1 Sofo, a11d Cherin •I clo1e-0~1 pri,••· II• 1mon9 t~e f;"t t1 t•l1ct, Up~o l1t1ry on •1 le now, SOFA SOFA NEWPORT STORE/ M•"'• Corion-100'" GrN • Lint" """'-''"''"'""' ••It Shl•t•ll &!u1 G•••• v11v11 Stri~t PR CHAIRS ..... "~"-'""" l 0 1>•1 Vll•l1 SOFA ,.,,,,_,°' .. Go ld. Grein PR. CHAIRS t lJf "" nu N , LOUNGr: CHAIR , ..... ~ ... ''"'" •. , .. ~ Co•lr11t W111 UIS SOFA SOFA M•l'9t t 1rwn lOCI" GtN" D1m1 ... - Co•1t111 Woll M•l'9• t 1rw,.......t" Y~lltw, 0614 Conlr11t Wilt LOUNPE CHAIR ":.-:· .'~~ SLFEPER .......... . LOVE SEAT "'"" "'"' ... ''" UJt ·~ "" $ltt N . LAGUNA STORE SALE SOFA M•r90 (H•i.orr--100" Lon•n l"rtnl C•nltHll"'I Well s399 SOFA '"""~" Gell! Y1!••t S459 PR CHAIR~ ... ,. ""'-$l &B 1 w Te110 .. ~1rl~• ,269 SLEEPER i:.:;1~~lt11 l'11,e-C1ntr11t••• SOFA S~1rrjll-TVllH onn11k S489 PR CHAIRS """ ,,~___,, .. ,_ 1 Si i~ Vel••I $169 Sl 39 CHAIR .. ,_, ... ,. ClftUIJll•t W•lt $399 SOFA .... ,.,._, ... "'"' $299 "OFA '""'"~ ... ~ .. \J •1vt. IO•loll l"•lnl $479 PR. CHAIRS ~~:~:"; ... , $ l 69 SOFA ~·;7;::;-""" $239 PR CHAIRS ·-"""-$239 I Mlnler1y $429 ROCKER "' OK•-Oo• •• llEC. u n "" S21f ••• llOl.IO • •• l211 ••• "" ••• IUf N . "II tt. UPHOLSTERY FEATURES !,Al l! $369 $599 $179 $269 $519 $179 $199 $399 $499 $119 $469 $149 $169 PR. CHAIRS ~-;::·~;; •• PR. ROCKERS ~;;;:~~, $169 $179 *.All I Way Hand Tl.d Con1truction * Moat Scotch Guo1 rded SOFA Ll"'-A~v• S!ro~• * Most Oown Bo1ck1 LOVE SEAT ..... '""---''"'~ "'"' (l n.,•11 Wfl1 t , I JIJ $429 1 $269 * Many Contr11ting Welti * All Excellent Ou•lity I • Me~y o!he• 1p•tiell1 ,,1,,t,d p;•<•• 1! TR UE SALi PllCIS. tf 1u• f!oor ,,,..p\e1 er•"'' iuit I~• thift9 , "'•~'f 11 our bt•ntl "•m•• wll! b1 •~•ilt hl• "" • 1pec.iel orJt r h11i1 1 f t•du'ctd p•it••· 0011'1 lor91I oll• m•ny btdreom, clin•n9 roa"' I •tct1io11t l c1U•t lion1 11 f•hul ou1 ,, ... in91 ' DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL-HERITAGE NEWPORT BEACH 1727 WeSlcllff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 NIWl'OIT STOii OPEN PllDAY "Tll t Profes!ional Interior Designer• Available -AID INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co11t Highway Phon•: 494·655 1 ' I I l I I I I I I . • i Fetes Old Folks Nixon Winds Up 'Back Home' Trip CHICAGO (UPJ) -Presi- denl N11(on today wound up a lwcrday campaign-style s11·ing nf lbe h1iddle West which began with an emotiona l tribute to his mother and end- rd v.•1l h a promise t o Am eri ca's sehior citizens. That promise Y:as con lained in a speech schedul~ 11t I{) a m. CDT today before a joint convention of the National Retired Teache rs Association and the AmericBl! Alsociation fJf Retired Persons in Chicago. Nixon, flying in Thursday night r ro m a "back home ill Tndiana ., reception in the corn rountry \\'here his mother was horn, v.·as greeted by one of 1he nation's arch-~mocrats, Chicago f.1a yor Richard J . Daley. Daley gave Nixon the full fhicago welcome, incl uding flreboat:o; shooting, c n I n red spoul.'l of wattr off L._iJ<e Shore Dri ve along the President's journey lo lhe Con! inental Pl11u Hotel. ··11e I o v es Chicago," Daley s;1id ol Nixon. In Jndiana, Nixon t11.lked unabashedly or hi5 Hoos!rr· born mother and said. "my roots are here." Nixon pulled out all thr stops in rural Americana when he arrived in the small lo"'" or Vernon. Ind .. lo dedicate a black iron metal historical marker ·with gold lettering denoting the birthplace of his late mother, Han nah !\1ilhou~ Nixon, who was born on a nearby farm in 1885. Touched a n d responding emotionally, Nixon spoke in front of the ivy-covered Jen· nings County Courthouse of his Quaker mother's "very deep religious faith" 11.nd "very great interest in politics." :f ,~,rt\\\ t~\\...;f '\'\lt • ~ \8 \(\\Chen'"' ' ~~Ct~\~1 ' \ ' ''I'~~S\\\~\\ \)\'1111 ' Here1 yo ur chance lo buy a 1 UNDEll COUNTlll MOD.ELS I a:; low as 1-.s22s. KilchenAid di1hwa1her - at true savings. Curren! KilchenAid models. not "1tripped down" or "sale" model1. Supply Limited J·ft1r~'~ \\1hiJ c there's a good selection! • 540·7131 COSTA MISA FBI Says Extortion Try Halted (;ARY, Ind. (AP) -The FBI ~aid today an attempt had · been made to e.xtort $3(),00l.I from publisher Walter T. Rid· der Md that FBI agents critically wounded e former en1ploye or R idder '~ newspaper during a gwilighl 111 ihr rourse of e payoff. FB I Agent James T. Neagle said the attempt to extort the n1onry from Ridder, publisher of !he Gary Post Tribune and vi~ president of Ridde:- Publications, h!!.d been made under threat of a bomb allegedly placed in the press room of the ne"·spaper offices. Authoritie.!!I said no bomb wa& found . A letter received Wednesda y by Ridder said th11.t if th e bomb was found, the children of associate publisher C. D11.r- ro\v "Duke" Tully would be 11.hot by a sn iper. The FBI identified the man shot during the payoff as J ohn E. Ward, 57, of Gary. He wa~ wounded in the chest. No one else was hurt. Authorities charged h i m under federal e:t tortion !aws. U111brel la-t y pe Luau Law ~ccn \YASHl l\'GTON (UPI \ - 'fhr Scna!c Banking Co m- mittee probab ly \\•i!\ v.•rite an umbrella.type bill to provide government ba cking for cor· poralions in financial troubles !lim ilar lo those faced by Lockheed , ;iccording to a NL"<· on Admin islration official. The committee hrld hear- ings on a bill that would enable the government to back $2~0 million in loan,<; lo Lockheed for construction or i1s Trislar Airbus. Airplane Takes Off -No Pilot Y U~l A tUPl) -A light plane roared into the Rir without its pilot Thursday and nf'w for three hours before crashing into a mountain in .11 rest ricted n1llitary are a near here. The single-C'ng1ne Cessna 150 buzzed over this city for an hour before it headed into an unpopulated desert area. The craft cra.~hed 20 mi I es southeast of here. The woulfi·bf> pilot, Charles Fox. 20, Calell:ico, told Sher· iff's Sgt. Val Quintero that the starter on 1he plane ~·as not \Vorking and he started the prope llor by hand. leaving the 1hrottle open ~lightly. Fox said he had set lhe brake. but the plane sudd en ly started mov· ing . Fox: ran afler the planr and fell while trying to clfmb 1n !he door. llr suffered slight in· juries. Fox: had ju.~! fini shed taking a ,1·rittrn pilot's examina tion an d 1Yas preparing to leave on a return fl ight to hts hon1e when the I.WO pound plane :;uddenly took orr. A r...1arinc heticoµ1cr follo\\'ed 1he Cessna for about an hour, but could not go to the 11,000· fool altitude attained by lhc !-.mall craft. A m i 1 i ta r y turboprop 1l1cn !railed lh c Ccs~na until 1l suddenly drop· ped 2,000 feet. we nt into a slow spin and cr;ished int o the mountain. Jane Fonda's Case Pressed CLEVl':LAND (U PI ) -The Cleveland prosecutor refiled charges or assault and battery against 11.ctrPss J11ne Fonda Thursday, one. day after " judge had dismissed then1 because lhe.y were technically unsound. SUMMER TRUCK LOAD EVENT c $3.12 PER FLAT. MIX OR MATCH. MANY VARIETIES AV Al LAB LE SUCH AS: * PETUNIAS * PANSIES * BEGONIAS * SNAPDRAGONS * V!NCA * COLEUS * MARIGOLDS * ZINNIAS * ASTERS AND MANY MORE SATURDAY & SUNDAY ONLY! GARDEN CENTER NEWPORT BEACH • Fashion Island Store Only -· DAILY l'lt.OT I Stanton Conte111pt Weighed WASHINGTON (UPI) -A House Committee is expected to decide nei:t week whether to setk a cont.tmpt of Congres:s citaUon against CBS Prtsident Frank Slanton for refusing to aurrender fl lm Ut.td in making a documentary on Pentagon publ ic relations. The subcomm ittee says It needs the film, of which only sm11.ll portions appeared in the H!!~r?!!r "The Selling of the Pentagon ," lo determine wbelher CBS ed rnislr:ading filming and editing techniques. During a four-hour ·~ pearance Thursd11.y, Stanton told lht Commerce Investigations subcommittee that the unused film -called nullakes -was the equ.ivalent or a newsman's notes and ~ tected from subcommittee scrutiny by the first amend· menl. Su b committee Chairman Harley 0. Staggers. ( D • W.Va.), told Stanton that by hi s refusa l to testify on the ed iting practices er lo turn over the fil m "in my opinion you are now in contempt of Congress." Staggers, 11lso chairman nf the House Com merC<' Com- mittee. said the subrommil\ee probably \\•ill meet next week to formally consider the con- lempt motion. If approved b~ lhe Commerce Com mittee and !he liouse, it would be sent to the Justice Department for prosecution. None of lhe four zub- <'Ommiltee members agreed v.·ilh Stanton's claim the out- IAkes were protec~d by the First Amendment and Stag- ge rs rej ected the network ex· cculive's claim that the sub- r-omn1illee'~ action would ha ve ;i "chi1\ing" effect on ne t\vork television reporting. Staggers said "and you lalk <'lbout chilling effects. Thi~ tmedia) runs chills up and clown the s pine. When there is untruth put on these networks they can control this land and ~·ou koow they can If they 11.llow this lo go on.'' ~ I I I I I I I • ' I ~~ i ' m I I 1 I I I I I I I I l , 1 ~I I 11 \ ' . ' . I I I . ' • IN ORDER TO ACQUAINT THE MEN WITH DISTINCTIVi TASTES IN CLOTHING TO OUR FINE COLLEC- TION OF SHIRTS, WE OFFER A HAND PICKED GROUP OF BEAUTIFUL PATIERNS AT A MOST APPEALING PRICE. Ro9 •. $27.50 lo $10.00 NOW--$20.00 42 FASHION ISCAND NEWPORT .CENTER Who cares whether you can tru st a car sales111an or not? Who cares whether .he gives you a fair price for your trade-in? And a fair deal on your new car?, • And who cares whether yo u get good financing or not? Who cares whether the , salesman greet~ you with a smile or not? Whether he treats you polit.ely?, Whether he gives you the straight facts when you ask hiln a question?. Who cares enough to see that you get the right car for your needs·~ with the ·-~· right options .•. and doesn't try to sell yo u into some thing bigger than you . -' really want? Who cares whether yo ur new car is properly check~. o~~~ and set up before you dri ve it awa y? Or whether yo u get the kind of serviCe· you need when you come back , or whether you ever come back at all? - • ·'·· ~ ' ,. . ·your Chrysler-Plymouth Dealers --·~ Costa MeMI Atlas Chrysler·P~mouth, Inc. 2929 Harbor Boulevard Huntington Beach Huntington Beach Chrysler-Plymouth 16661 leach Boulevard I I • DAILY PROT EDITORIAL P AGE I Nickels, Dimes Did It They had a dream. Today, the dream is reality, emerging from a 12- year can1paign that at times v.1as a nightn1are of frus· tration and uncertainty. They arc in dividual s involved in one or the most tenacious fund-raising programs to survive for so Jong. especially at the community level. ~,lany \vould have given up in despair years ago. They didn't. They had a dream . The dream that today is a reality lies under the .summer sun al Costa ~1esa's Fairvie\v Staie l~ospi tal, filled \\'ilh splashing. laughing children. The dream is a therapeutic S\Vimm ing pool. dedi· cated recently to serving the retarded \Vith both physi· cal an d mental handicaps. Comprised predon1inantly of citizens outside the actual hospital staff, lh e lireless pool committee never gave up. Not even when a crisis developed two years ago over stale authorization limits on when and if the pool could be built. 1 Not even \vhen bids finally \ve nt out, only to come har k in showing rising prices had inflated costs above the funds collec ted. Surging ahead \Vilh another ca1npaign, they pushed the total to more than $62,000, cut out some of the equipment and they '"'ere finally over the top. A variety of methods \\'ere used in the long cam· paign, but Dr. Anthony Toto. superi!J le!l~ent and medi- cal director, credits the old standby: tndiv1dual response. "The prin1ary contributions \\'CIC the nickels and Subjectivity 1 ls Impossible I To Escape E\ll'rybody looks at the \VOrld through colored glasses. Nobody is able to look at it through a "clear pane," because each temperament and personalily ct1lors it5 vision and call.s this ro/or "the real \\"Orld ."' Some look through rose • colored glass- es, others through darker hues. Some see. the \11orld in a I bilious tone, others in muled shades of gray, a nd s till others In dramatic scarlets, or pale. yellow. ' •• 1'he ·•realist," U1erefore is nol one \Vho foolishly imagines lhal he ;ilone sees 1he v.'Orld in its ·•tnie" or "natural" color, "v.•it.hout the distortion of specl.<lcles - rather. it is the one who recognizes !he particular coloration of his personalit~·· and discounts it 10 his esUmate of ··reah· ty ., EVEN J\10DERN science has becoml!. increasingly modest in ils virw of <'>:· ternal objects. It is beginning to learn that •·subjectivi1y·· is 1mposs1ble to escape in scientific research and n1· ve:;tigation: the \lery process of human examination itself d is I u r b ~ the •·realness" of lhe object be1ng 1nspcclcd or measured or phntographec1. This is v.•hy 11'c have on ! y •·mathematical models" of the clements jn subatomic physics. and not '"p1cturrs·· vf these particles at \vork. Predictions and projt>l'llllno; ;ihout "'what is going: lo happen" in the next lrw years depend llS much upon rhe ten1- perament of the predicler as upon !he Dear Gloomy Gus It's amazing how DUE due process can be, and how· SPEEDY justice can be, when the govemmenl, and the people running il. v.·ant to curb newspapers like the New York Times. the \\lashington Post and the Boston Globe. -G. A. L. t hl• t•••~•• rdlfCll r••Hfl' vltw1o - MCKl••llr l,.,.M •I "'• 11•wu•,1r. ltn• r•~• p.t -v• "' Gl•mr o~s. O•ltt l'IMt. philosophy or history or idwlogy he espouses. T\VO SEERS CAN take the same :sel or fa cts and interpret them qulle differently -one using them to see nothing but chaos and destruction ahe<id. the other usi ng them as a basis for hope or prog· ress and reconcilliation in the conflict! ol n1an. And their philosophies, \Vh1\e preten· c1ing to be rooted in fact or th eory. are little more than extrapolations of their in· dividual temperaments -rosy, black, or some shade in betv.·een. Every idea they touch is co!<)1cd by the ··glasses" they in· cvitab!y v.·ear, BUT °""HI LE SCIEr-..IJSTS have learn· I'd h1 allow for the "personal equation." 1nos1 thi nkers ha\·(' not. And \\'e oursch·c~ gravitate lo those thinkers ( or soothsayers ) \\"ho a 1ost closely ap· prox11nate our own temperament~. ht>c-.1usc y,·e find their Ideas congenial, :ind not because \IC ha1,1e made any ob- jrctil·e evaluation of them. lnderd. it i~ impossible to make any objccti1·e c1·:iluation of the future, for 1t is precisely !he "invariables" in history that detcnnine <'\'ent11. The most hone11t thing 11c ca n do 1~ to discount at least 50 percent of \\"hfll \l"e ··believe" as being in the service of both our self·i nterest .and the particular shade or glasses we wer• born v.'ilh. t These S hould1i'tHappe n The tragie accidmts whtch stem lo be an unavoidable part of summer val'ations are made more heartrending by the knowledge they most often could ha ve been a1,1oidecL Jliere seems to be an absence of common sense or lack or understanding of Jaws and rules in many or the mi shaps. Traffic deaths and injuries are one thing but the drownings, boallng crashes and Jost child incidents are another. They gbouJd not happen. ~plte the many warning!, there are cwnUeM people who 10 swimming in laket and riven which are extremely cold, particularly in the .!!Pring when the enowmelt runoff is at its helghl. The t.Lurvival time Jn such water for the tluman body 11 a matter of minute'.'!. ANOTllER P'ACl'Ofl is lhe deceptively nift and chancin& currents in the rivers. A qulet apo& ope'dly wW be a dangerous whirlpool an6tbtr. Qd.ldren 'especiany abouJd be widdJ&d 10 Ibey do not. 1et into Quotes 1 Wirf McA.lte, Su Btrurdltto, on lo•ahC .._. vottlt ap -''By what loglc; doea tbe equal prolection cleuse of lhe 1481 Amendment otOp with 1 & ,_,. olda! Why nol eJtend lhl• o>n· lltlbrtlonal parantte to thoffe who hive the temporary misfortune of belna: 17, .11, ar J7" Guest Edilorial lhrse places. Another thing about childreo Is they can disappear in the woods In 1 few i;econds. They are present one moment, and vanish the Ol!.Xt. Adult.!! at camping and picnic spots should never let them out of their sight. Boating accidents frequently are: caus- ed by violations of the law or rules of the water. Many boater.s do not e.ve.n know they are law violator• whtn they ran to give the right-of.way, JO out on the Willer without IUe jackets for every passenger or over1oad the boat. ft Is not uncommon to .see eight people in a boat built for four. The contlnuaUon of boa t In 1 mishaps at a time when anyone can buy a boat with no proof of ability to handle one will lead to the kind or enforC'tlnent boaters may fetl ia intimidation. But unless the boating enthualasll and in- duslry Institute &c>me form of volunta17 training, It y,·iU be lm~ed upon them . In fact. the Legislature should be con· aktering a law to rtquire boat owtlf!!rf to ~how they know how to operate. one before they can use il. A 00.tcr licensing 11tstute similar t(l thot re. q u I r Ing automobile drlver11 to be lictnsed by the state may be inevitable. Sacramnla DH dimes," he says, recalling lhe 12 years it took to get the pool. "Persistence and persc1,1eranl'e an1ong dedicated in· d1 viduals made the dream a reaJity," he observes. And none could \\'ant greater satisfaction than watching wasted bodles grO\l'ing stronger and more co· ordinated by the day. Understandably Upset City haU giveth and city hall taketh a1va y. not nee· cssarily in equal proportions . Consider the Dennis Bergs. \l'ho recently losl their lofty ash and gained a spindly carrot"·ood in compensa· lion fo r erroneous orders to a city park\\'ay CIC\\'. The unwanted tree \\'as at 829 Governor St., but the crew went lo 829 Congress SL, the Berg home, \\'here l>O\\'er saws began \'.'ailing and steel teeth began gnash· ing. :\ green haven for chirping birds toppled. Now the Bergs \\'ere understandably upset, dcn1and- ed a replacement tree. Agreeing their \Vish was a con1 · mand. city hall besto1ved upon them the \robbly carrot· \\100d. Mrs. Berg maintains it looks like a carrot. Vo\ving to fight, she checked Legal Aid, was told the ci ty's maximum size for handing out trees is lawful and told us the other day she "didn't have a leg to stand on." And that \VObbly carrotwood isn't much to lean on, either .•• c ~I'll ... ~ +NO NEWS IS 600~ NEWS.* A s Case of Pe1ita901a Wai• Histo1•y Goes t o S111•1•e111e Co111•t ••• What Press Freedom Means to You \Vi.nstoo Cblltcbi ll , BritlSb slate&man - "/\. free press is the unsleeping guardian of every other right that freemen prize; It is the most dangerous foe of tyran- ny ... Under dictatorship the press i:'I bound lo languish, and the lotJdspeaker and the film to become more important. But 11'here free institutions are indigenous lo the soil and men have the habit of liberty, lhe press \\'ill continue to be the FourU1 Estate. the vigilant guardian or the rights of the ordinary citizen .'" Wl.lter Lippman, author. r rt Ir I!. d ne"·1paper columnist, answering the question, '''i\'hat right do reporters and editors ha ve lo criticize:" -"'If the counl.ry is lo be governed \\"Ith the con· sent of !he governed, then the governed must arrive. at opinions about what !heir governors want lhem to consent to. How do they do thi s'.' They do it by hearing on the radio and reading in the newspapers \1·hat !he corp.!! of correspondents tell them is going on in \Vashington and in lht. country at large and in !he 11·orld. ''Here \\'e perform an essential ~erviC'e. In some field of Interest \\'e make it our business to find out 11•hat is going on under the surface and beyond the horizon. lo infer. to deduce. lo imagine and lo guess vrhal is going on inside, and \\·hat 1h1s meant yesterday. and ...,·hat it coutrl mean 1omorrow. Jn lh1s \\'e do 111ha l every SO\'ete1gn citi:ren is suppo~ed lo do. but has not !he time or the 1nicrest to do for himself. This i ~ our job. ll is no mean call ing. and 11·c h<11'c a ri'lht lo be proud of ii. and to be glad that it is our \\·ork ., Sen Robert f . ~ennedy -"In n1y op1n1on. the. n!'wsp:i pers arc equal to the courts -and somelimes ahea d or the courts in our system -in protectlng the people ·s lundarnc11lal rights." Albl!.rt Camus, :roth Ce11iury Freoch au lhor -··A /rec press can uf,ooursr be .r.ood or bad , but 1nost Cl'r!a1nly without frcedon1 it will never be anything but The Vie,vs of Adolf Hitll!.r, German dictalor - ''The organization of our press ha!> truly been a success. Our law con- cerning 1hc press 1s such that div- ergencies of opinion bel\\'een mem· bers or the governmenl are no longer an occasion for public exhi· bitions. \\'hil'h arc not the ne\!.S· papers' busines.~. \\le 've e!iminat· ed that con crplion of political free- don1 1vbich holds th;it Cl'erybody has the right to say '"hatcvl'r cornes tin to his head." Nikoli Lt:nin, de~·rloper or the b.10 ... freedom l~ nothing else: but ~ chance lo br better. 1l'hereas t-nslave· men\ is a certainty of the v.·orse " U.S. Mn. \\'illlam E. Borah -"If the press 1s not free , if speech is not 1n· dependent and untrammeled, if the mind is sha{'kled or made impotent through fear, il makes no difference under \\'hat lornl of government you live, you are a ~u bject and not a citizen." Benjan1in Franklin -''If all printers y,·ere determined not to print anything till the y \1•c:re sure it l·l'Ou ld offend nobody, the.rt' 1rould be l'ery little printed."' Justlr.e Hugo L. Blark. U.S. SuprenH' Court -"For thf" First A1ncnd1nenr doe~ not speak equil"ocally. JI prohihl!s any T,vo Dictators political , economic and social prln. ciple§ and pollcie~ of communism -··\\lhy should freedom or speech and freedom of the press be al- lo1red ~ \\l hy should a government 11·hieh is doing 1\hat it believes lo be right allow itself lo be criticiz- ed"' It would not allow opposition by le!h<il 1vcapons. Ideas are much n1ore fata l things than gun s. \\'hy should any man be al!owcd lo buy a printing press and di~sem­ inate pernicious opinion calcu- lated lo embarrass the go~·crn­ ment ~" l,1\v 'abridging freedom or speech or or the press." It must he taken as a com· n1and of the broadest scope that explicit language. read in thP context of a hberl~'­ lo\·ing socie!y. 11·11J allov.·.'" Juslic~ Louis 0. Brandeis. U .~. Supreme Court -"The function nf the press is ver y hig h. Tt IS alm ost holy. lt nught lo serve as 11 forum for the pl'oplc, through 11·hich the people muy kno1v free- ly 11·hal is going on. 1·0 misstate or suprcss the ne\vS is a breach of trust." Thomas Erskin~. Scottish jurist - ''The press must be free: il has always been so and much evil ha s been corrected b) 11. If government finds itself annoyrd h) it. le:! il examine its ov.·n conduct and i! will find !he causr ." l!enjamln Constant. 19th Century French paintl!.r -··\Vith ne11·spapers, there is sometimes disorder ; \\'ilhout them. there is ahvays slavery.·• President James A. Garfirld -"Not tor its own sake alone. but for lhl!. sake of societ y and good governn1e nt. the press should be free. Publ icity is the stronJ( bond 1vhich unites the people :ind lh!'ir government. Authority should do no act that will not bear the ligh1." Justice Pelir Franlirurter. V . 5 . Supremr Co url -"\Vithout a free pres11 there can be no fre~ society. That ts ax- iomatic. However. freedom ol the pres!! is not an end in itself but a means to th• end o[ a free society. The i;cope: :ind n;iture of the constitutional guarantee nf the freedom of the press :ire to be l'ie.wed and applied in that light." Chinn Ho, rhairman, HonoJ11Ju !51.ar 8ulleli11 -··of all the human endeavors none: has the opportunity and lhe rP- sponsibili ty of reflecting man to himself as does journalism. Not government, Not Ja1\·. No t medicine. l\"ot engineering . Nol finance. Journalism offers the v.·orld a chance to know i:ibout itself through printed 1\·ord~. '' Divorce: Some Can Be Own Lawyer To the Editor : Di1,1orce has caused emotional slrt1in 11nd a financial burden lo many people \\'hen lhey are. poorly prepared lo deal 11·ith either. The ne1\' California Family Law Act greatly reduces these hardships by eliminating fau lt finding as a basis £or marriage dWolulion and by providing for equitable di1,1ision of community property. Jn 11ome cases it ma\• be feasible for an individual to act as hiS own attorney and thus save the cost of attorney fees . UNDER Tiff:: NEW Calffornia Family Law Act, the only grounrts for marria~c dis.solution are: (I I irreconcilable dif· ferences that have r.aused the ir- remediable breakdown of the marriage, and 12) incurable insanity. Profeuional marriage counseling i11 available at no cost in counties ha vins a Conciliation Court. This counseling i~ available eilher before or arter dissolu · lion proceedings h3vc begun. 11 i11 .---By George ---1 Dear George : Arr. you the columnist y,·ho le\11 people how to make attractive ash trays from old bottles! R.E. De.llr R.E.: No, I'm the columnist 11·ho tel\1 people lo just 80 ahead and dump their uhea on the noor. This place ls past hope. anyhow, (Send your problems 10 r.corgt. elo lfli:t newspaper. Yeah, J know Ifs not <'"alled !hr. cro T 111 s NEWSPAPER. but ·\1·hal th11t mean_, i3 -forget ll. Write to Ann ) Ma ilbox I.ctters front readers ore welcomt . Norn1ally wr1ttrs s/101dd cot1ve11 their messages in 300 tvords or ltss. Th t rigltL to condeuse leUers to fit spac• or elimi11a!e libel is reserved. All Ltt· ters must i11clllde sig11at1tTt. a11d mail- n1g addrcs.~. bt1t uamts may be. with· lteld 01' Ycquest if sufficient rtasoll f,f apparent. Poetr11 wilt not b1 pub· lished. · necessary tn file a Petition for Con· ciliation 11·ith the Superior Court C\1!.rk. TO ACT AS \'OUR. own .attornl'y in ~ n1arriagc dissolution, slnrl by asking the Superior Court Clerk for the Dissolu· lion Packet. Then localr the nearest law library for refcrenct. material. The ne\v California Family Law Act and ap- pr opriate court procedures can be found in Oeerings Civil Cock "500 to SIXlO and Rules of Court 1201 lo 1290 (in lhe 1971 Pocket Sup pleme nts and other rererence.\ that may be available. The court clerk cannot help you in any 11·ay or gl\'e ad1,1ice. You will bt on your own. 1 hope conarned people in nlhcr at.ates will \\"Ork for similar improvements in di vorce Jea:islaUon. JOHN PA T'l'ON Oetlghl.fHI Evening To the. ~;ditor· On behaU of lhe Exchange Club of Ne.wport Harbor I wi.!lh to r.:rtend ap. prttiaUon lw the. ex()fJUtnt ~11nily ~upporl of the Barber Shop Quartet Saturday, .Hine 19. Net proceeds of 1hi5 o:ict 1v1ly v.·ill ht donated to thl!. local Youth Employment Service:. A most delightful evening was eoioyed by over 800 person~ 1n altendance al the Harbor High School Auditoriurn. It is an!icipated that I.hi~ \\'ill become o:in annual club event for a \Yorth1vh1lc ac. livity. JA 'h I.' Kli\'G Prcs1drnt Cilot cer .'11•n l l1 11 To the Editor I am a patient at the An1t'n~\fed1cal Center at Denver , an out standing hospital No thi11g Sacred ? ' P r ess Comments Buller. i'l1o., Batel County Democrat: "\Ve'n! just 1s tired as anyone else of hearing about all that is 'wrong ' with 1h1s country, but a developme:nt in New York City ... DOES make one wonder what'~ lhc use. A religioui; c:ommentator on ~ radio station reporte:d ... that a certain n1ajor church in New York is ra i!lin~ upv.·ards or $100,000 to t!mploy round-the. clock armed guard~ to protect the church from lhe.n. vanda1i~m and other crhni11,al cie:me:nt~. Then, on tori of th i~ the United State." Senate building i~ damaged ex. tensively by a bomb explosion. Is the re 110lhing-8eered tttymott?" and resrarch C!;!nter de1·otcd lo !he rori.- qucs1 of c<incer. Sinl'r I ha ve been u1 lhia hospital, I have been a11'arc of ci great deal or .apathy on lhc pa rt of the American public to a disease v.•hich lht:t ye'.a r will claim approxin1ately "ICVCD limes the nun1ber of Amer ican lives IOIK in the entire Vietnam v.·ar. UNLESS RAPID progres11 is made in research, nearly t vcry American family ~ill be tou ched in some way by thl~ dread disease. I would like to receive Jet- 1crs from people who are interested in a cooperative effort in support of C'Rnl'er re.c;eaf'Ch. It is my contention that \Ye ma:y be able to motivate one another. MARIF. BIRCH Room lJ.1 640.1 W. Colfax Denver, Colo, 80214 ---- f'riday, June 25, l97l Tht editorial po.Qt of tht Daily Pilot ite.ks to inform and stitn· t1lott rlMdns by fn'tlenting th is newspaper's opinic>n$ and com- ml'.nlar11 on topic! of intertst ""d tivnificnn.ct, by providina a. forum for tht t'.tp1'"1!!$$ion of 011r reoderi' opiniO#S, and b!I presenting the dinerst vir.1t1· J)oin!s of infornitcl ob.~erver11 and spokesmen ort topics of tl1a day. Robert N. \Veed, Publis.hcr 'I I Saddlehaek 'i'oday'a Final N.Y. Stoeks voe. 64 , NO. 15 f, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAG ES ORAN GE COUNTY, CALIFORrillA FRIDAY, "UNE 25, ·1971 TEN CENTS Major Budget Costs to Confront Councilmen San Clemenle's "bar~bones" city budget \\.'ill meet its final test Wednesday night as several major, expen sive issues confron t city councilmen in an eleventh- hour session. The budget -which by custom is ap- proved by July t -reflects a light finan- c ial picture for the next fiscal year. But several major expenditures will be ~nsidered as well. They include· -Requests by public safety and miscellaneous city employes for raises and increased fr inge benefits which have bee n tensely negot iated for the pasl .!'everal weeks. Pu blic safety workers seek a change to the state-ad1ninistered, PERS (Public Employes Retirement (System) pension pla n, plus large in· creases 1n all wage categories. Other workers seek a host of benefits as well as an average 7.f..per cenl wage increase. -The expen!ies for a new comm unity clubhouse costing '230,000, a sum which enator • I ' Fire Stops Workmen 'j In Tunnel ""' ... UPI T•l ... l!alt SISTER SHOWS GR IE F Brother 1st Min.e Victim Dow11 the Mission Trail All-a ge Dances Slated in Vie jo MISSION VlEJO -Twn dances--0ne for jun ior high stude nts an? the othe r f~r adults-will take place ttus weekend 10 Mission Vjejo. _ The junior high dance will be ionighl from 7:30 to 10:30 o'clock in t.he. Mo~­ tanoso Recreation Center. Adm1ss1on 1s $1 for members and $1 25 for non· member~. · An adult rock dance will lake pl ace on Saturdav. June 26 fr{lm !l p.m. 1o 1 a.m. ~t I.he 'Montano.c;o Cent er. The cost is $3.50 per couple. A bar will be available. • C:la••e• lo Be 11ln MlSSION VIEJO -Baton and dance classes will be orfered beginning ~1ond~y. June 28, at the Montanoso Recreation Cente'r. . tnstruction in basic and intermediate bnton for girls S.15 will be given during the six week session . Beginners wlll :o1t11rl and I tJ.m. and intermediate will meet at z p.m. Cost if $10 for member1 and $20 for nonmembers. The da11ce classes will be eight wee:kJ tn ballet and lap. Three se.ulons for v11.rlous 1ge groups will be given for $10 for members and $20 for onomembers. · • Swhn J,es•ons LAKE FORE.ST -Swimming lt:issons for children and adu lts begi n Monda y. ,Junt 28 al the Lake Forest Beach and Tennis Club, li!SIOOll will µke pl1cc Monday thl'f)Ugh Friday until July 15. Adultl will ~ Instructed from noon to 12:30 p.m. with children 's classes running every half hour from 10 a_m. .Junior life i;evlng will be tau~ht for ~ 11·1~ yea.rs or age from 11:30 8,m. lfl 12 :30 p.m. Srn ior life u vinR w\U he of· fcred to thQJe_l~~)'ears old and older a\ the liame time. , I . SYL!l.1AR (U PI) - A smolderi ng fire in a "'ate r tunnel where 17 miners were kill· ed in a na rural gas explosion flared up to- day and delayed efforts to remove re- ma ining bod ies of the victims. Fire officials said the y would not send rescue crews into the tunnel until flue holes were drilled to clear contaminated air from the five-mile r;ha ft. Drill ing crews already were at work preparin& vent holes and rescue teams were <111 1landby. Construction timbers, rubber hm;ea and t>ther debris at the working area of the tunnel were involved in the recombustion. "They had no time to live ," said fir e department. rescue worker Andy Kuljis. "'They died -(he snapped his fingers ) - that fast. You take a lung full of hot air and yo u're dead before your brain know1 it.., Only one man in the drilling crew 150 feet beneath the surface survived the in· ferno of blazing gases or the suffocating smoke that followed Thursday's blast. The tunnel, 1;, 1niles fron1 downtown Los Angeles. is in an area laced wi!h earthquake fau lt s. Officials blamed the fau lls for lhe seepage or natural gas. More than 27 hours after the blast and the 14-hour fire that followed, 12 bod ies had been found in the five-mile long bore under construction for the J\1e!ropolilan \Yater District. Seven had been removed from the shaft, rive others "'ere waiting lo be taken out and rescue "'orkers press- ed on through !he smoke, seeking the bod ies of the five men s\111 missing. It "'as the third disaster to strike a por tion of the mu!tibi!lion do I J it r California Wate r Project, the most com· plex water wor k ever attempted. and the second explosion in Lhe San Fernando \1alley tunn el in tv.·o days . Three ftve-man crews burdened with gas masks and heavy oxygen tanks repeatedly went down into the tunnel in hourly cycles through a gaping air shaft two miles from the entrance portal. The work was extremely hazardous because of the ''zero visibility" nf the smoke and acc umula1ion of unburned methane gas. T"'<:' firemen were stricken "·hen they took their gas masks off deep in the shaft. They later were reported in good con· dition. Cat, Bird Gone In Clemente An expensive, exotic S o u l b American cat valued et $500. plus a mynah bird and other pet supplies and equipment were stolen from 11 San Clemente business, it was discovered Thursday. The theft or antmals and supplies v11lued at f777 was discovered as Mrs. Tom McBtan opened the P:iws and Claw~ pet shop at 804 S. El Camino Real Thursday. Police s.aid the burglary took place sometime Wednesday night • , or. Thu~y morning after IOrne· one pried a rear door to tht new pet 11tore. The valuable ut. 1 margay, rese mbles an ocelot, officr:ra said. O!hrr item~ stolen in the burglary !"eluded an expensivt set nf dog clipper11, 1 bird cage, f)lus a i;pir1il 1pikt used t.o ~haln dof;&. might be siphoned Crom city re.'5erves. Wednesday is the deadline for awarding a construction contract to the low bidder before prices would increase and the proi· eet would have to readvertlsed. -The projected new fire department headq uarters bui lding with a budget of about $140,000. The faci lity is still in the planning stages, but councilmen have in· dicated an immediate start in con· struction as soon as working drawings are completed. ees -An expenditure for a new lifeguard reseue txiat tG replace the existing city vessel which Lifeguard Chlef Dick Hazard has termed "woefully in need of replacement." The reconstruclion under a matching-fund grant with the county of El Camino Real from Avenida Pico to Camino Capistrano. The badly-needed road repairs amount lo a city con- tribution of $114,423. -Replactments and additions lo the. city vehicle fleet costing $45,507. -Replacement and building of new water mains at a coat of nearly $61,000. Councilmen for lhe past seve ral years ha ve been committed to holding the line of the $1.39 tax rate -a levy which already is close lo lhe legal maximum. The city's cash re.serves, which draw Interest each year, ~already were tapped la&t year for the $200,000 purchase of a arco SINGLE·CAR MINE TRAIN BEARS BODY OF SYLMAR TUNNEL TRAGEDY VICTIM E.l(plosion and Fire Third Disaste r to Hit Water Project Since 1960 County Welfare Worker, Wife Seized in Fraud An Orange County Welfare Department r;oclal worker and his wife were two of seve n persons arrested Thursday by the dis tric t attorney's office and accused or welfare chiseli ng. Social worker. Billy Joe Lee. 35. and his "'ife, Joyce 41, are accused of welfare fr aud. Mrs. Lee is a depuly clerk ror the North Orange County Judicial District. Both were arrested after districl at· tomey·~ invesligalors probed an alleged overpayment of $2,164 to the couple by the welfare department. Welfart Director Granville G. Peoples asked for the in· ve stigation after a personal examination of charger; against the couple. Jnvesligalors said Lee was hired by the wel fare department in November 1970, and Mrs. Lee was hired as a deputy clerk under the name ol Joyca Noble in Au.iust, 1970. De~isio11 Due Fate of Clubhouse Set Wedn esday San Clemente ci ty councilmen next week plan to decide the fate of the pro- pm;ed new community clubhouse,-an issue accompanied by this week''s recom· mendation by some park& commissioners that the rire-damaged building be restored , not replaced. The cloudy vote of lhe comm1ss1on- wh.ich acted wilh two members absent- yielded a majority viewpoint among the three. The two vote11 recommending agaihst a new clubhouse do not constitute .a ma~ jority of the five-member panel. The existing clubhouse structure. ex- pokd to the elements for nearly 11 year and one-half, might not be restorable at all sald city Parks and Recreation Direc- tor ArUe Watennan thil week, "I knew restoration hat been talked about ever afuce,t.be fire, he aald, but we have to remember I.hat the elements have taken their toll at the build ing, v.·hieh has been exposed a Jong time,,. he s11id. One other factor ln aoy restoration of the structure Is the section of the city zoning ordinance covering restoration of structures which have suffered 50-percent or more danage £rom fire or other casualties. The ordinance Rt.ates that If 1uch a !lnlcture is resl<l'ed. the entire building would have lo conform to existing building codes. Presu ming tha t the city would abide by !Is own bult<ting regulations, It would mean a vast rebuilding project at the fire-ravaged clubhouse building. One wing ha!! been proposed ~ be remodeled and incorporated into .&he new clubbouae buildill(. San Cl.enumte Action . ' Firew:orks Fate Hangs Fire Fireworks may be making their la1t stand In tht!i city of San Clemente this Jnd~pendence Day season, if city coun- ' cilmen fulfill a promise soon. Three days 11fter the a.Musi 1rnok1 cloud clears. councilmen are t.tpedtd to meet to determine if • proposed bin on the aale or nonprofessional pyrotechnics should be enacted. The n!:MOn, said councilmen last 1pr lnR. was the growln;: numbtr of fires ~nd pole nUally dangtrous pranks caused by uniiafe us@ of fireworks. Lasl ~r·1 ~sea!IOn p~uced sev~ral amoii ~ ii!Cldenf.j I~ 11J'UCfur6'. , I Gras.! fires caused by unl8fe UM of UM devites were numerOUB u well. Only tttree organl:tatlons have received permi511ion to iieU fireworks ln the city-two veteran groups and ·t.be local Junib1' All-American Football t.e·ague. U the propo!ed ban likes pl1ee, aomt O!'l""lllon could be expected. The veterans organiulkins have used the profrb from the u ltt or fitewotka at 1tands to off~ tht. 111rge cost of tbe an- nual firewo rb presentation from the Sen Oemente pier. The costs for the extrav11gaJ1la offered free to anycwe who wants to watch. run ln the tl'K1l1AaJfdJ or· dollar• tacb yiar. - .~ Pr!vato d"'1ation3 Also a'\ IOUgbl to help with the ,e1peme1. The footba ll league, as well, reapa. bad· ly needed reveflue'ffom the nle. 1 ~ But aafety, despite I.be obvious) flnan· clal benefit, Is the reason behlnd 1u.e pro. pQSed ban, said councilmen. One othm' factor also ·mi&bt enter into the fireworks issue. Councilmen were forced with a ClM· tioversy early in lhe sprlng •hen epoktsmen for 1 South Coa1t •l"fl youth activity JOught permi!sion to sell flre- WIJT'ks u well. Council~ denied the .re- quest amid complaints ~ ~ acUvlty 'Wli& bfttJ\I allwed\10 IC 1!'9QP9·only. triangle of !and near North Beach. Spending or those fund.!i lessened the amount of int erest income. which ne:xl year is projected al about $120,000. If councilmen approv e the existing pro- posed budget, with no increases in salaries and no expenditure for the clubhouse, lhe $3.6 million sum would be more than $400,000 below the total budget figure for this (iscal year wh ich ends the 11ight of the special Wednesday meeting. ar 1 Newsmen , TV Crew s Threatened NEW YORK <AP) -Sen. Harold E. Hughes (D-towa ). was lhrea lened wilh bodily harm and chased today from the basement of a Harlem tenement that was believed being used as a "shooting gallery" by narcoti cs addicts. "I knew I was in a dangerow situa· lion ," Hughes said after getting out of the base ment of the five-story building on West 137th Street. It was across the gtreet from Harlem Hospital. Hughes wa.s touring a !ection af Harlem with three olher senators. all mem bers of the .special subcommittee on elcobolism and narcotics. He entered the building after residenlJ' pointed it out as a well known "shooting gallery" - a place where addi cts gather lo inject narcotics. The senator. who was accompanied by 11ewsmen. photographers and a television crew, walked through a dark corridor to 1 large area in the rear where six persons were apparently preparing to ''shoot up." The men. startled by the bright camera lights, confronted Hughes near a table where the men were repor tedly preparln& narcotics for use. "Get the --• • out of here," one yelled at Hughes. Hughes stared at him dumbfoundedly. At this point two young women who e~corted the senator into the basement, turned and scrambled nut. Hughes turned his back on the group and walked out behind newsmen and the !hree olher senators who had entered the premises after him . Sen. J acob K. Javits (R·N.Y.). describ- ed th e basement as a "stygian hole." Marjorie Doxen, a member of th!! United Harlem Drugfighters, one of the two women \Yho led Hughes into the base- ment, sa id three of the men in the base- .m~nt .had been "shooting it in the arm"- tnJecltng themselves with drugs. Race Brawl Erupts MATHER AJR FORCE BASE (AP) - Brawling "with racial overtones" in· volvlng some 30 airmen broke out Thurs- day night at Mather Air Force Base near Sacramento. Weather The sun will peek through that ever-present haze this afternoon and Saturday. bringing tempera- tures to fl along the coast and 75 inland. Lows today and Sa turday 60. . INSIDE TODAY Marvtlous machtnes which do nhsalutely nothing, along with tht ir inventor ore t.ht su.bjtct of o \Vtekendtr feature on Paoe 25 today. ... ti,.. M (tl'*-tlt • Cllot(klM U• II CIH.tfi.. U.~ c-k• » (,......... » l)Hlfl Jt9nr.. ' DI--11 •fl"'111 P199 ' ll'lfllM• tl·IJ ..__ It AIWI L-\ 11 Mll!MJI' I Ml¥1t9 Jll.H ' Mlllwaol '"'"" !2 __ ., °''"" (tvll!J ' ... ,."'.~" .. ,. '""' '"" '""*' Mtrbl'I tM1 Tti..klM • T1M1lert »a Wtl ll'>tr I WlllM ·-11 W_.I NI .. 1'•1f W1rf<ll N... 4.l w.-....., lt-l4 ' " • • I !~AILV PILOT _ :C Frldu, JuM 25, 1~71 I H~meowners Eye Summer Activity Program i ' .. j I 1 ~ ... _vi t '~ ~: rla " bi in gr otl " ye . f~ WC \\1 ra pa an ly. inc '" l h: <So vc: .. "r• or "n in of I .. , Jl': peJ I r j • an "" kn be ... un of tlll .. r'\ "" Ill ~ .. ... bu I ... •• "" • A summer retl"f:ali an program at Lin· d~ Vllta kbool for Mlsalon Viejo area youhpttr1 wu proposed Thursday at the general metting of the Mission Viejo Homeowners Association. The program would be held eat·h weekday aflunoon and would be open to children in grades one through six . Although only a score or residents were present at the meeting. many parents ex- pressed support for such a program . one saying it seemed geared to children "not cild enough (or Little League and the Grand Jm)' Clears Data Chief • Orange County Dala Services director Robtrt Farmer "'as given a clean bill of health today and his adversary, Ta:< Collector Robert Citron, was criticized by the Cou nty Grand Jury. The jury, acting at the request or the county Board of Supervisors, said a full in \'estigation int.o Citron's ch a r g e ~ against Farmer revealed "no evidencl' lo ,;upport the allegations.'' The jury report, signed by Foreman Ooreen Marshall of Newport Beach, said, "\Ve feel I.hat the situatio n might not have occurred with the res u I ling detrimental effect on count y government and morale had Cit ron used all the coun- ty procedures available to him .. , The Citron-Farmer feud originated t1ay "4 \~1hen lhe tax collector charged before the board of supervisors that he could gel a data processing job he wanted done for $20,000 less by giving it to an outside finn, rather than lo Farmer's department. Citron also charged that Farmer's department was inefficient, wasteful and incompetent. Supervisors Ronald Caspers and Robert Battin supported Citron and were tem- porarily joined by Supervisor Ralph Clark. They tentatively voted lo accept the outside offer by &.-c'll rity Optimation Service of Los Angeles, a subsidiary or Security Pacific Bank. Farmer \.\'as allowed to reply two Wetks later 11nd said his departmen t could do the job for less than the outside firm. i-le said Citron had based his charges on ''incomplete and inaccurate information because of his deliberate failure to follow e1:isting county policy and coordinate his actions with ap- propriate county departments.'' The Grand Jury report said their in· vestigation revealed evidence to agree with Farmer's charge . Train Hits Car; Woman Unhurt A woman narrowly escaped death early today v.·hen a Sante. Fe freigh t train crashed into her car in Placentia. Joyce Marilu Finldeslein, 36, of 32"4 Sy,·anee A\·e., Placentia, leaped from the vehicle she y,•as driving JUSt second! before a 51.car train demolished it at the Placentia Ave. cros!ing or the main San la Fe 1inr. Placentia office1 James \\laymire who 1nvestigated the acc1denL said r-.tr~. F inklestein vras south bound on Placen- tia, approaching the railroad !racks as a crossing guard arm started lo come down . She applied her brakes and skidded under the arm into the path of the fast- moving rre ight train. She received onl.1' monor injuries as she suddenly stop ped the car. OIAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT Qu,i.l(;.:i. CO.UT PUBll~HlNG ~Ol,.,,A'-1'1 k•li••t N. w ••• Pr•~•nt 1nd PutlllJl'llf Jock It C11rl1v \'Jr.I rra..,...1 •"" ~·1 ,,.,,,.,.,., l.,.,,, •• ..: •• ~u EOi!OI' Tllo""•' A. M11•1t1'ii1e M1n1ll"9 EdllO< Ch1rl11 H. loot lliiloi1rd P. Noll ,M1+111n; Mo..-.1"' Edlloro ............. Offk • i11 F1r11t A v1nu1 Maili~f •d'••11 1 P.O. l oir '''· fl~~l S.. Cl ...... Offk• JOS No1lloi II C1,,,ln• R1tl, 9267 2 °""' OHl.-C-11 MHI' l» WH I ll'f ltrwf ~,.., ,..,..,; nu "''"'""'' ...,...,., ... t4 .... llftl10ll •I-": IH'IS a.eh llllln••~ t)AllY P lt..OT, Miii ..... Id! 11 Cll"lltlMf ,,,. .....,._ .. ,wil ..... cit~ .,.,, """ -~ llo -onlll ... ,, ..... tw '-"""• I MC'I. ....... , l>w<"· C..11 -· H.....iloofltoo .. cl<. ·-''"' \t•llt'Y. ,... , ........ ,., Clfl9~ •HI .. clcllctoK•, t ...... •!IOI -,,......, .. illtn, hl'-ll,., ....,,,,"" pl ... t .. .. Ja W.1 .. , Stt•:, C.I• ,,,._, T•••k••• t71"41 64Z-412t ~ .t."'4i•W11 6•J·S6TI ,_ c.._.... All D.,,•tt-'-1 , ........ 4fl-44lf a.,.-.................... 1 • T .. •••••• 4f4.f466 ~!, Yfn, On.... Cfftl Pvt.1itt1"" • C.-t11y • .,. -'"',.,, ''""""·-· ""nr fM'lftl' ., ,.,,...._.. ...._ MIY If 1# ¥ f wl.....,. ..,,.., ,,_, ...... ,.., .. .....,,.., --·~tr.Ill ........ ., .._. ~ t tlcl (Olll ~I, (.1IH-ll. ......... .......... toy t1ttllt' S>.tl --.11uf 1 ...., ..,.u U.I• ~I fft!IH1ry -.111111_., &1,J' -IMY. swim t.eun.'1 The woman noted she would like to have a place where she could send her children and not have to worry about them. Homeowners AssocisUon director Dick Niederhauser noted the program would cosl about $1.150. most of which would provide salaries for \\\O Staff 1ne1nbers. Niederhaust>r said he hoped the progra111 Y.OUld begin \A.'llhln !J1e next few wet'ks and noted Jl would only bt' a pilot pru- gram as iL wou ld only be held at one school in the area. • t\orrn Williams, a Linda Vist.'.l School tucber, would direct the proaram, Nltderh1u.s1r uid. Williama was present at the meetlflg and 1aid he fa\•ored a "structured playground program" 11.ress. ing indi viduaJ rather lhan tea1n .ac· ltvities. .. , don't think the skilled people 1n rerreatinn arr.> looking at the neerls of the children.'' Willia1ns told 1he group oi parents. \Villiams. who has been a schovl teacher for the past two years. said he 2nd Mine V~titn A priest 'vi th a Bible on hi s lap rides on a rail car carrying rescue Y:ork~rs and the seco~d victim to be brought out of t he "·ater aque· duct 1n Sylmar rollow1ng Thursda y morning's ex plosion. Jaycees .in San Clemente Seel\: to 'Tal\:e Over' Parl\: San Clemente city councilmen next month will hear proposals by the loca l Jaycees to assume I.he total development Yes on August 3 Group Spo11sors Open House Laguna's anti:high rise group. the Yes on August 3 C{ln1n1i1(ee. y,•111 hol d 11pcn house at its nel'. hC':i dnuartcr<;. 812 Sou(h C.Oast Highway, fnJn1 4 to 7 p.n1 ~unda). Printed information on 1he {'Conomi1'. aesthetic and cr11!og11'.'al a~pe<·t s or the high rise issue \\'Ill be available and 1:on1. mittee membr.>rs 11'111 be rrcsenl to answer queslton5 . arro rding to press chairman ~1ildred Hannun1. The public i.\ inv1l.t'd to a1tcnd and refrcshmen1 s will he ~crved. The head- quarters also is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. Tlie committee i5 supporting a yes vote in the special Aug, 3 election on the in- itiative to lin1 \t building he i g h I throughout Laguna lo 36 reet or three stories. Ccx:hai rmen of the \'cs on Aug. 3 com- mittee are Lo is Jeffrey, rorn1er unit chairman fo r \he League of \\'omen Voters and John Brand. professor of geography at Orange Coru;l College. where he was advisor to the OC~ Young Republicans and president of lhe Laguna Civic U:ague. of a landscaped park al Linda Lane -a project \Vhich is planned as the forerun- ner to several major recreation projects by the group. The park _project al Linda Lane rel'.'el\'· ediniual exposure this v.·eek befort> parks and recreation commissioners y,·ho heard ideas to use volunteer labor and mater ials. plus an estimated $5 000 to ST.000 In rlnnated funds rn 1tf'vl'h•p the can~on near a c1t.v bt'::ich 1n!(1 :i pla~· ground and p1cn1l' area Al Fi!gcr .Jr .. recenlly·elcr tccl .1.iyrf'r president. said the Linda Lane pla11 1f ii 1rins c11y mnst1H -11•nuld hr thr stn rt .. r rt Jong ~.;i·r1(''\' or grf'O'Jlht •ll )II lltf'c·1s u1H.Jt·rl<.1ken In the cit) h} lhe ser\ IL'I' E!rou p, Tht· l.1nd.i 1,;-1n£' pn11r!'I ha"< ;tlrf':id.v bct~n 111:1stcr pl:111ncd i11 a dnnu11lln hy the Pod l;infls rape archltec!urn! firm in cen- lr:il ()range County. Fi!ger said . The two.acre park has been graded and eriu1pped with a large parking lol by the ('it\'. r ontr;iels have been tel for thr C(lll- :o;tr'uction of 11c1v rest rooms in lhe beach ;:irea nearby. Fi1J!e r told comniissioners the dray,•in11:s incl ude trees lining both sides of \hr pHrct.1 leadlng to !he beach. otht'r tand scapin~. plus picnic and playground JartlJ!les, along with a sprinkler system. The funds for the proiecl. he said. \vould come from com n1u11il y projects. ~rants by service groups. pl~ indh•idua\ donors. Linda Lane's deve!11pmr.nl would h&\'e been covered had the recent parks and recreation bond issue proposition C pass- ed the voters. Sl1ut tles S l a t e d Air Service Begins Local Hau.ls Airport Service, lhe firm lhal Pioneered 5huttle transport to Orange County Airport in J9S7. y,·ill in the ensuing \1•eeks, begin !iervicc to both Orange County Md I.All Ange le.s International Airporis from Laguna Hills .and ~ilsslon Viejo. The California Public Utilities C-0111. mission announced that the Airport Service will be operaling with fares al 11 from Laguna Hills and 11.25 from t.1l$$lon Viejo to Orantie County Airport, and J."1 .and $5.25, respectivt.ly, one·v.·ay lo Los Angele.1 International Alqxirt. The commission. So.I. the sa1ne tirne, denied the applicallon or Leonard L. McGee, ol SaddJeback Stage Lint. which. It allowed to operate, \\'Ould provide essentially the 1ame a:trvlce. AirPQrt Se.rvlct wlll provide two round trip5 a da)' Tht· Sl'l1tdule frir ~!1t<·11n \'a· jo and Laguna Hills residents will look like this: Leave lission \1iejo 6·30 a.n1 : 9:3U a.m. LA-ave Laguna Uills 6:40 a.m.: 9:40 •.m Arnve Orange County Alrt>Ort 6.~ e.m : 9·SS a .m. I.cave Orange Counly Airl)Ort 7:00 O'l.m.: 10:00 e.n1. Arri\'e Los Angeles International 8:00 a.m.: ll :OO a.m. Lcn vr Los Angeles lnternatlon•I 12 . I ~ p.m : s· 1s 11 .m, Arrive Oran,::e C-0unty Airport 1: JS p.m : JO·JS a.m. ~:.ve Or:tnRe County Airport I :20 p nl 10.20 n.1n. Arrive La11:una Hiiis 1:35 p.m.; l\);3~ a.m. Arrh·e r-.l1!e!ion VteJo 1:45 p.m : IO:•S :i nl \ had spent many years in the recreation field . Wl\llam1 taid he planned to atttss \n- dlviduaJ 1ports and have such activities •• carpentry, bike repair, pottery, soc. ctr, "'irestllng and track and fie ld. One 1nan asked if the private recrea· lion centers in the area v.·ould not take away from the attendcnce at thr. pro· gran1. A .!\fission Viejo ton1pany official said that only about 40 percent of lhe f::i.n1il1es living 1n the l'.'ommun11y belong lo lhe cente:rs. About 2,000 youngsters Ht- tend elementary school in Mission Viejo, Homeowners pre:s1denl r.11ke Shearer noted that he could not a.sk the county to fund the program unlesa it was shown to be su pported by a large number of residents. "There are not enough people hen.• to shoy,• the \\'1shes of r.11ssion Viejo." Shearer noted . Several residents had gone door-Lo-door Sl't>k1ng suppot'l and son1e :100 signed forno~ had been recel\•ed by the assoc1a11on supporting the pl'O- gram. Niederhauser noted that onl y one of the replies received had been negative and the wo1n1n h.ad V.'rttten that Uie pro~rl.Ul "would become a babysitting service." The writer said the parents "should cet off their duffs and take their klds to I.he parks " rather than send them to an organized program. However, parents at the n1eet1ng sho11·- ed strong support for the proposal and one suggested it t·ould help cul down on the vandalism to the parks and "might pay for itself." About $6,000 must bt spent in the coming fiscal year to repair vandalism to the landscaping 1n lhe area, president Shearer noted. Lagunan Named • Ill Fraud Alleged Artists' Guild Firtn Operator Indicted A Laguna Beach man was one or three men indicted Thursday by lhe Orange County Grand Jury on fraud charges stemming rrom 1heir operation of a modeling agency \/1al \\'as closed dO\\·n last week by a Superior Court judge. Mill.on Moore. 51, of 3222 Cliff Drivt>. was the onlv one of the trio \Vho showed up ror arrii.ignnoent in Superior Court. Judge Robert L. Corfrnoin delayed his ar· raignment unfil July I and issued bench 11arrants f()r the arrest of co-defendants Philip J . l\adeau, 30, and Michael Ger<'cy. '.!6, botl1 nr Los Angeles. Homeowner G1·oup Ready To Fight Addecl Density Investigators claim all three "'l'l'l" ar· live in the oper::i.tion nf lntroduire Artists' Guild Corporation {!AC ) and falsely pro- 1n1sed top television and 1nodeling con - tracts lo hundreds of Orange County girls v.·ho responded to n e w s paper ad- vertisements. They said many Orange Coast ~rls 1vere among the appl icants and the tes!imony of t\\'O Newport Beach students: \\•ho v1ere allegedly hired by the trio to lake pictures of prospective 1nodels led to the filing of the district attorney 's civil action against JAG and its principals. Representatives of the A!.'gean Hills J.Jomeo\\'ners Association in f\.tission Viejo are expected to protest an increased dehsity proposal Tuesday before the Orange County Planning.C.Ommission, The county planners will be holding a public hearing on a proposal by Alscot Development Compwy, developer of the .Aegean Hi lls community, lo increase the allowable density ()f a large parcel <lr land. The 22 acres uhder consideration lie norU1 of Alicia Parkway and just south of a junior high school site owned by the San Joaquin Elementary School District . Alscot wants to increase the density ()f the properly from four and one he.lf unils per acre -single family homes -to 12 dv.'elling units per acre -apartments or townhouses. A representative of the. homecwners group appeared recently at a meeting 0£ San Joaqui n school trustees seeking sup- port for the protest. The representative told the trustees the propMed density in· crease could increase the area population ln a greater drgrec lh;:o.n the school "·as planned to accommodate. Homeowners also contend l he ap::i.rtmcnt-type homes planned for the are::i. could not be compa!ible vlith the ex· isling single farnily units. 'rl1e planning con1mission hearing is schedule for I 30 p.m. Tuesdfly in the commission hearing room located in the engineering building, 400 Civic Center Drive, Santa An~~ Welfare <.:ases Down SACRAJ\1ENTO (AP) -State \\'elfare Director Hobert B. Carleson says Calirornia's welfare caseload dropped by 20.000 during 11ay in the wake of tough administrative changes ordered by Gov. Reagan. The 1'1av le1'el was 2.25 million reci· pienls. onii: out of every 11 Californians, Carleson said Thu rsday, adding "\\le are very pleased with the caseload figures for th is month and I feel a trend may be developing.'' Witnesses reportedly told the Grand Jury that they were charged rrom $400 to $600 to attend modeling courses and that they later discovered that their in- structors were non-professionals who had very little experience of modeling. Investigators said the girl! were assured they were in the hands of .,world renowned" photographers. They said the applicants were actually Jn the hands of young Newporl Beach students who \\"ere paid -like the instructors -$5 to $7.50 an hour for their services. Moore, Nadeau and Gercey were in- di cted on charges of conspiracy to cheat and defraud. Grand theft was added to the counts against Nadeau and Moore after furlher in\•estigation of IAG 's operations at its TO\l'n and Country, Orange, outlet. Superior Court J udge Robert Banvard granted an injunction against the ·firm last week: after hearing testimony repealed by v.·itnesses at the Grand Jury hearing. · TID VON HIMIH, lllC. brinqo the h rq••I 1ol•tlion of quo!itv m1rch a•di1• lo q• •• 1tl1 i" t he 1'ii1tory .,f •11' cemp1•v, Suth f•meu• lin•• •• H'1!redo1, Tho111et1.ill1. Dre1ol. Herttet•. will 0111• 1t l•ct1d ogroup1 et 111b1lt 11li1I r•duction1. All 11p~ol 1t1 r•d m1tt1'11ndiat "'ill liot of!t t•' tt ... 011 t H11<liv• 11vi11g1. TED VON HEMERT wto 1blt to p11rcho1e t l•r91 q uo11lily •f Mll'fl Co...011 Sofa Olld Cho1!'1 t i ~IO••-oul pricto. l o t mont the fi11I It 11 \t d. Uphal1tt l'f on 11!• now, NEWPORT STORE LAGUNA STORE SALE •EO. IALlf ·~· SOFA Ml~• Ctr'M-100'' Li•O!I r tonl $389 con1ro 11lnt Woll •m SOFA MU'll (f•IOn-100'' $399 GtH• 1..1111n r r1n1-(0111rt1tl11t Wtll u• SOFA Mtf'll•-" $599 SOFA ,~ ... t(ll $459 OtW \11lv"1 "" l lut Or-\lfi~ .. Stri,. Hlf PR CHAIRS .... ,._,., .. $169 PR. CHAIRS ~;;: ~;:-...-R7'f "· $179 J OllYO V•'-orl 1111 ... SLEEPER M~ui.n riolcl-Ctnl111!1111 Woll oeuDlo 111•!1,..u tlr.L,H $269 SLEEPER ~;~ullft r itld-Contralllnt 116',JO $269 SOFA 1••••111-Tllftlf ou11•1-••• $619 SOFA ,~ ..... , ... Lln111 '•Int-$489 O•MI, Or"n "" PR CHAIRS ..... ,,_.,_ ,pft, CHAIRS $169 I 11111 \ltl"fl IJlf •· $179 Oruol-4•-ltr1" JIU ... LOUNGE CHAIR .... M-· "-'""' $139 CHAIR .. ....._. ·~ $199 C111lr•ll Woll tl.U SOFA ""'"'" corw-,.~ Gr-01111111c-$399 SOFA ""'"'" Ct,__IM" '""' $391 Cffl!rool Woll ·~ c;.,.tr••ll11t Woll .... SOFA M•rti• C";•~~" Y.tllw, hlll $299 SOFA Uo'"'lll-T1111clt. $489 (IN1 .. fl Woll ... l lUa. hlll Prlftf "" SOFA ··~,._, ... Hor~Wllfl Jtrlpe ... $479 PR. CHAIRS ~::::>;"~ ,, ..... $119 LOUNGE CHAIR ·~-: .'~-::.~ "" $159 SOFA ........... SLEEPER $239 H1t(1W! Stripe .... $469 ' Htrtllllfl l'!tll '"' PR. CHAIRS ~::;"'~:-·,__ LOVE SEAT ·-v .... $239 1171 -· $1 49 "" SOFA ""·~· c1-.w~11,_ $429 ROCKER "' ......... • .... $169 Oelll itrlfltlt "" '"' ... $169 UPHOLSTERY FEATURES PR. CHAIRS :::i; ... PR •. ROCKERS ~:::;:;, , ... $179 *.All I Way Hanel Tltd Con1truc1lon tUt u . * Most Scotih Guard.cl SOFA "~'" "'" ••• $429 * Moft Down Backs * Many Contraatlnt Welts LOVE SEAT··~,._,_""' C•11ttt!I W•" U:rt $259 * All Excellent Oua llty M•nv .otloier 1p•ci1!ly 1tl•c+td p\1c•1 t i TIU[ S.t.t l PllCIS, If 1 ur '111• 11,,,pl11 t r111't i111f th~ tloionq, mo,,., of o"t brtnd "'""''' will b1 I Yt ilt blt on t 1p•cit l 1rdtr •••it 11 '"'ll&tol ''"''· 0011'1 forq•l o~r m1ny b1droo110, di11i11t 1Gtm I 1cc11iont l ,.rrtlti1n1 e t ftltwlo1n ,, ... 1 .. ,.1 DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE NIWl'OIT lTOal OPIN P:alDAY 'TIL t 1tt1.11lfAIMI." NEWPORT BIACH 1727 Wutclllf Dr., 642-2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Prof•salonal lnttrlor D•1lgn•r1 Av•ll1blt -AID INTERI O RS '°""""Till"*-MMI •f Or..,.. C•1JJty -1~0·12'' LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co1st Highway Phone: 494-6551 7 i I 7 .. .. .........-. _ ......... - Lagu11a Beaeh, VOL 64, NO. 151 , 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, ~UNE -25, 1971 enator ees arco SISTER SfiOWS GRIEF Brother l 5t Mina Victim Flames Han1per Rescue Efforts In Sylmar Area SYLMAR !UPI ) -A smoldering firt in 1 water tunnel where 17 miners were kill· ed in a natural gas explosion f1ared up lD- day and delayed efforts to remove fe· maining bodies or the victims. f ire officials said they would nol send rescue crews in1o Lhe tunnel until flue holes were dr illed to clear contaminated .eir from the five-mile sha ft. Drilling crews already voe.re at work prepanng vent holes and rescue teams were on Elandby. Construction timbers. rl1bber hose:.~ and other debri.~ at the 1-1 nrk1ng arra of !he tunnel were involved in Lhe recombus11on. "They liad no time to Jive.'' said fire depart me nt. rescue Wflrker Andy Kuljis. ··rhey died -!he snapped h1~ finger~! - that fasr . 't'ou !ak e a lung full or ho! air Bnd you're dead before your hra1n knows it ., Only one man in the dr1 ll1ni; crew 2.'iO feet benealh the 5Urface survived the in- ferno of blazing ga.~e~ or the 5uffocat1ng smo ke that fol1011.·ed Thur,c;rlay'.~ blast. The tunnC'l. 15 mlle,c; from downto11.•n l.J>s Angeles , is 1n an area laced wit h <!arthquake faulls. Officials blamed the faults £or the seepage of natural gas. More than 27 hour.~ after the blast and the 14-hour fire that followed, 12 bodies had been found in !he five-mile long bore under con~truction for lhc Metropolitan Waler District. Seven had been removed from the shaft, five others were waiting to be taken out and rescue v;orkcrs pres~­ ed on through the smoke. seeking the bod ies of the five men still missing, New NeuJspaper 'Village Sun' Set for Laguna A new tabloid newspaper titled the Village Sun is scheduled to make iL'l bow in Laguna Beach Jul y 9. Ari Colony writers and artists have volunteered lo contribute to il'l pages, ac· cordinti: to Publisher Dennis Madison, owner of Laguna's Fahrenheit 45l Bookstore and Art Gallery. Peg Smiih. former managing editor or Uie old Sooth Coast News, will serve as managing editor of the Sun. Margaret Malla wltl be producUon manager and Sally Sears advertising manager. Amon& Initial column contributors are Bel.Sy Ro.~. former managing editor of the Laguns Beach Post, .lack Seymour, Pete. Fulmer. Arn'old Hano. Dick Clark, Ed Vitn Deusen and l..arry Taylor and c~rloonlst., Ed Nof1jger and Roger Armstrong. ~ The paptr will be published t:vl'.ry other week in July and August and weekly 1tarting in September, Mrs. Smith aaid. •Retni•i Strength' " Grand Jury Asks L:i ~ For Strong CAO ·· The Orange County Grand Jury today urged th e Board of Superviso rs to retain a strong county administrative office. A jury reso lution said a strong arl- minis~rative office was "ilt the interests Pair Arrested On Welfare Fraud Charges An Orange County Welfare Department soc ial worker and his wife were two of seven persons arrested Thursday by the district attorney·s office and accused of \\·elfarc chiseling. Social worker, Billy Joe Lee. 35, and his wife. Joyce 41 , are accused or welfare fraud. ~1rs. Lee is a deputy clerk for the North Orange County Judicial District. Both were arrested after district al· lorncy's investigators probed an alleged overpayment of $2, 164 to the couple by the welfare department. Welfare Director Granville G. People! asked for the in- vestigation alter a persona l examination CJI charges against the couple. Investigators said Lee wag hired by lhe welfare department In November 1970, and Mrs. Lee wa5 hired a! a deputy clerk under the name -01 Joytt Noble in August, 1970. Also arrest ed Thursday in a move that brought the number or welfare fraud ar· resl.5 up to 42 in e six-month period were Micaela L-Opez. 32, Sandra Pfleger, 28, and Janet Gray , 24 , all of Santa Ana . and Leon Dufresne , 26. of Cypress. and Linda Ann Woodwor1h, 22. of Garden Grove. ~1rs. L-0pei. Mrs. Pfleger and ~1rs. Woodworth are accused of obtaining funds under t.he Aid to Families with Dependent Children program by rPprP:"enting that their husba nds were not at home and contributing to the fam ily 1nrome. ~1r~. Lopez w;is overpaid $!.JOO, ~rs. Pfleger drew SJ ,070 and overpayments tn Mr!>. Wood1ol'orlh totaled $2 2 ~, in- vestigators allegP. Dufresne is accu.~erl or obtaining Sli.10 1n ""'C!fare fund~ by failing tn report tha1 he harl received 11 substantu1l settlement from a lawsuit filed follnwini;: an auto ac- c1rlen1. ii-Ir~. Grav, 11 cockta il waitress. i!i ac- cu~cd nf faihng tf) report her earn in~., and of falsely stat ing that her minor child \\'a.~ re.c;irlin~ with her. She allegedly 11.•as overpaid $307. ' Services Slated For Mary Ewart l\.1r&. Mary Ewart of 65 B Calle Aragon, Laguna Hills died Wednesday at the age of li5 . Services for Mrs. Ewart will be held Siit. al 3 p.m. at Pacific View Mortuary Chapel in <Arona del Mar with Rev. Don Baird nF the Commun ity Presbyterian Church in Laguna Beach al'! officiant. Entombment will follow at Pacific View l\.lemorial Park. ~1rs. Ewart is !IUrvived by her husband, Foster. of the family home : 11 sister, Jean Seitz.man or Florida, and several nieces and nephews. The (amily sugge1ts contributions le Uie American Cancer Society. BRIDES RECALL 'NIXON DAY' A year aao President Nixon made 1 special trip to Newport. Bt<1eh to <1tlend the wedding of hla n!ect, Lawrene Nixon to ThomAs Anfln&0n. · On the same da y, in .t~ qme church with the same minitter, three eth6r bride11 rl'cited I.heir vows. Did they fetl lhP.ir weddings were overshadowed by lhe pre.~ence or the President earlier~ Where <1re they all today~ Set Society, P-17. of both economy and efficiency of county operation." The jurors also urged the board of supervisors lo ··continue the high pro· fessio nal quality of its department heads and administrative staff." Alth-0ugh County Administrative Offi cer Robert Thomas was not named directly, lhe Grand Jury resolulion runs counter to moves earlier this year by Supervisors Ronald Caspers and Robert Battin who charged the CAO with inefficiency and sa.id that the board should take over greater control or administration. The jury resolution , signed by Foreman Doreen fi.1arshall of Newport Beach, urg· ed "that a strong county administrative office be retained with sufficient aulhori· ty lo administer the affairs of the county in the most efficiect and the least cosUy manner." The resolution also advised thal "The supervisors are urged to keep the use of lheir executive assistants and personal staff at or below the present level and to make. efficient use of the start of the county administrative office in the in- terests of both economy and efficiency." The resolution went on : "County department beads and ad. ministrative staff, distinguished by lheir professional training, expecience tn<f: pro- ven ability, Jock to tile bolrd G{ supervisors for leadership and direction. ''The N!sponsibdities for fiscal manage- ment dec~ion, policy formulation and l~adersbip in order t.o be .11dequately car· rred out .-oold require the full time CJf each supervisor," continued the jury resolutJon, 011e of Two Twin Brothers Dies Following Crash One of lwo burned in an h.\•i;-: brothers, seriously au lomobile accident in Laguna Beach over the Memorial Day Weekend. dierl early thls rnorning at Orange County Medical Center in Orange. An aulopsy to determine the exact t:ause nF dearh of Gary Dean Rodriguez. 11 or Norwalk 11.·11J be crinducted later to- da y by the coroner's nHice. Gary's twin bror,hcr. Larry. had jusl been released from OCMC a week ago. after receiving treatment for minor burns. The acciden t occurred in the evening on May 30. when the ca r bearing the Rodriguez tw ins, an older brother and lhetr mother. was hit by a vehicle driven by ()avid Al.11n St"fwarl , 21. of Tustin. The Rodriguez vehicle immediately caught fire and turned over. Stewart was arrested and charged wilh felony drunk driving. later arraigned on ,June I, and held in custody al Orange Coun ty Jail until June 15, when he posted $1250 bail. WRONG WORD A printer's error turned the word "ac· cept.ance" lnlo "exception" in the last line of the editorial headed, ''Protecting Laguna's 1'rees." on Page 6 today. The error occur red too late In the prin· ting process for correcti-0n on the ediloriN page it.self. $1,000 Donation • • • ' •• l!LAINct.0TfiESM4l'l'1LIFTI LqJ>S.~G GIRL TO J/\)L <'§e·wi1 Ono Of "i'hose"Roundeil Up l• SOii BHch Moloo Wild Mclee Breaks Out Near Seal Beacl1 Pier By .JOANNE REYNOLDS Of 1'119 OlllY l"l!ot lirl ll Hostililie~ between Seal Beach police .11nd youthful bcachgoers. simmering &ince Monday, exploded into a riot Thurs· day afternoon. At the end of the hnu r-long rock and bnttle throwing spree . 38 were in custody and one officer was recovering from minor injuries. Officers from Hu nting tnn Beach, Lo~ Alam itos, Cypress . \Vestminst.c r and the Orange Coun1y Sherfff's Office ioinPd their Se al Beach cnunterp;irts in sweep- ing the youths off the. beach. Nil sh0ts were fired nor was trar ga."l used on lhe angry crowd, estimated to be between 450 and SOD. According to police, the riot started when undercover officers from l-lun- lington Be;ich arrested three beach youths for disturbing lhe peace. The officers, par t of Hunt1nglo n Beach's Special EnforcemPnt Detail, had been called in Wednesday afternoon to aid Seal Beach in keeping the beach quiet. Chief Let Case ga id "large groups of rowdy kids" had been causing trou ble on the beach all wetk and efforts by Seal Beach patrolmen lo arrest 1u~pect.1 for narcotics violations or for being in· toxicaled in public where met with h~ili· ty. Tuesday, one such arrest led a grou p lo attack a patrol unit and break out lhe windshield. Sgt. Pat Sullivan described the atmosphere on the beach as "tense, very hostile," Thursday morning. Sgt. 1'rlstram Sw11n. commander or the: Huntington Beach SED. said Wednesday's undercover work was re I alive I y uneventful, noting that a few arrests were made. ··But Thursday. they burned us right away (meaning the youths knew who the undercover officers were). A big group gathered around three of us on the beach. ycllini;: obscenities, callings us pigs and narcs -the usual stuff. "We took it as long as we could and then etartcd arresting rome of them for disturbing the peace:· Swan said. "Everything was all right when we took !he first three over Lo the jail , but while we were gone, some nf them &tarted throwing stuff al passing patrol tJnill5. .:ind when we got back to the beach, It bl1>w up." ThP crnwd took nver the pa.rk al !ht. root ()f the pier and the children's play 11reil on the beach. Ir. was about :i p.m. when the order t.o disperse was first ~1ven, and shortly after that, police began lo s11.'eep the beach. ~gt. Lee Galli said a large portion t'lf the crowd on the beach consisted of f.:imities who departed en masse when trouble started. Those in custody are being held on a variety of charge! ranging from in· toi;ication through failure to disperse and from inciting lo riot to ft.tony battery on a police officer. The injured Seal Beach officer. James Gross. 25. was knocked unconscious when an object struck the front of his I"°" tective helmet, .sending him to the pave· menl. Property dr.mage waS" slight, police said today, being limited to bottle! thrown into Ocean Avenue, which runs aloog the btach front. Football Project Begins Annual factlifting. ol the Laguna Beach High School football field, boosted by mort: than Sl ,000 In community donatjons, may coin lhe 1chool district nothing thle tUmmflr, The dofl1tion1 are being fQ\icited 1 by 1JChool board member BUI Thomas, who •&reed ~ ra!Ae U. funds H lht school board would Jllow the newly-formed .Junior All -American Football lA!1gtM: to use. the field. ~ boa.rd agreed 1nd Thomaa Im· mediately f6und don-0r1 to aupport hall • the eo!lt of the '2,000 project-. The school district is providing the manpower . for the· rennovatlol1 and the dOnatklns are bting med to purchase needed fertilizer~. gr•sr aeed and. oilier .nee e ,., 1 r y mater/111. Ground 1awdust has already • been 1pread over the much-used field and ~7 bwhtls of grass !llolons Applied. The are.11 has also been rolled, packed and fertlllz. ed in preparation for the fall foOtball season. Planting directfonf'-from• Ralph Daly of Cal-Turf, seeding provided by Burt Mack 11nd sawdugt provided by Andy .Johnik>n .. haVe ma.de the ptojtct "Coit leis ·U\all it usi.tally does,',' schoi>I offlciala 1ai'd.:' To lMure the atta Is not U!led whlle ·the neW grau ia taking root. a chaln link renee has bttn· erected around the field. Offictala ·had plenned to rent the 1,()00. foot fence. but .discovered they could bl.I)' It fQr about lhe 8M'Je prlct, $1 ,100. The area will Ix fenced off until Sept I. Today'8 Flnal N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS ar Newsmen, TV Crews Threatened NEW YORK (AP) -Sen. Harold E. flughes (D·lowa), was threatened with bodily hann and chased today from the basement of a Harlem tenement that was believed being used as a ''shooting gallery " by narcotics addicts. "I knew I was in a danger-0us situa· lion," llughcs said after getting out o{ the basement of the five-story building -0n West 137th Street. It was acros.s the 1treet from Harlem Hospital. Hughes was touring a section of llarlem with three -0ther senators, all members of the special subcommittee on alcoholism and 'narcotics. He entered the building after residents pointed it out as a well kn-0wn "shooting gallery" -a place where addicts gather to inject narc-0tics . The senator, who was accompanied by newsmen. photographers and a television crew, walked through a dark corridor In a large area in the rear where gix persons v.·cre apparently preparing to "shoot up." The men, startled by the bright camera lights, confronted Hughes near a tabl• where the men were reportedly preparing narrolics for use. ''Get the • • • • out of here," ont yelled at Hughes. Hughes stared at him dumbfoundedJy. At this point two young "·omen who escorted lhe senator into the basement, turned and scrambled out Hughes turned his back on lhe group and walked out behind newsmen and the lhree other senators who had entered the premises after him . Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R·N.Y.). descri~ td the basement as a ·•stygian hole ." Marjorie Doxcn, a member of tht: United Harlem Drugfighters, one of the t.wo women who Jed Hughes into the basei- ment, said lhree o( the men in the ba!lti- ,~nl .had been "shooting it in the arm"- 1nJecl1ng themselves wit h drugs. Cotmty Planners Set Laguna Meet Planning matters affecting the Orange Coast will be reviewed fi.fonday afternoon at a joinL session or the Orange County and . La~una. Beach Planning Com· m1ss1ons 1n city hall at Laguna Beach. The meeting will get undrr way at 3 p ":I· with a pres~ntation by represen. !at11•es or the lrvtne Company of their plans for development or the coast between Laguna Beach and Newport Beach. At 3:30 p.m .. F. G. McLellan, county dtrector or building and safety, will show earthquake slides. At 4::W p.m. members of the two Plan- ning Commissions will enter joint discussion of Laguna Canyon pri>blema. The meeting is open to the public. Orange Coat Weather The sun will peek through that ever-present haze this afternoon and Saturday. bringing temper.11· tures to 67 along the coas' and 75 Inland. Lows today and Saturday 80. INSIDE TODAY ~!orvtlous rrnichine.s which do absolktely nothing, along with their inventor a.re the •ubject af a Weekender feature on Poue 25 today. ... 11119 :14 C1f1!9f'~le I Cfll(JUlll' u. 11 (llHl""41 lJ-46 C•mlc1 JI c,......... ,. Dt•lll N•llc. t 01 ..... c.. 1• ld!IOrlll I'-' l'lftlM• ft•ll N.,__ lt ,t,1111 Lt .... .,, 1' MlllMr & Mevi.t »lt ) Mvhi•I '"""' n Nllltolti Ntwt .... o.. .... CWlltY •• 1t11t•vrU• •tt lffrl't , .. ,, SIM-M•r1ttta 2Nj T11tvtti.t1 • '"'-'"'"" ~ Wtl llttr ' WJtlt. W..,, 14 W-·•'"""' U•l t Wortd M-... ............ lMt I I I l I' I ' ~i I t t ) r I • ) I I l • c I I b I I • I Ii f I ti f Frldl)', Jullf 25, }q71 Homeowners Eye Summer Activity Program A summer recreation program at Lin- da VlJla School for Mbllon VltJo art• )"OUbllta"I wu propoMd Thunda.y at tht general meeting of the Ml!!lon ViejG Hom~"-'Tiers Association. The program would be held each weekday aflernoon and would be OPfn to children In grades one through six. Although only a 11core of rt.!ldenu: were present at the meeting. many parents ex· pressed support fo r such a program, one saying it seemed geared to children ··not old enou&h for Little Uague and the Grand Jury Clear s Data Chief Orange Co unty Data Services director Robert Fanner \\'IS given a clean bill of health today and his adversary, Tax Collector Robert Citron, \\'85 criticized by the County Grand Jury. The jury, acting al the rtquest of the county Board of Supervisors, said a full investigation inl.O Citron's ch a r g es against Farmer revealed ''no evidence lo support the allegations." The jury report. signed by Foreman Doreen ~1arshaU of Ne"·port Beach, :!laid, •·we feel lhat the situation might not ha\'e occurred vdlh the resulting detrimental effect on county government and morale had Citron used all the coun· ty procedures available to him." The Citron-Farmer feud originated May 4 \.'.'hen the lax collector charged before the board of supervisors thal he could get a dat a processing job he wanted done for $20,000 less by giving it to an outside fi rm , ralher tllan lo Farmer's <lepartmcnt. Ci tron also charged that Farmer's department was Ineff icient, wasteful and incompetent.\ Supervisors Ronald Caspers and Robert Battin supported Citron and were tern· porarily joined by Supervisor Ralph Clark. They tentati\•e\y voted to accept the outside offer by Security Optimation Service of Los Angeles. a subsidiary of Security Pacific Bank. Farmer v.·as allO\\'Cd lo reply two v.·eeks later and said his department could do the }ob for less than the outside firm. He said Citron had based his <:harges on "incomplete and inaccurate. information because of his deliberate failure to follow e_xisling county policy and coordinate his act ions with ap- propriate county department!." The Grand J ury report said the ir in· '·estigation revealed evidence to agree with Farmer's charge. Train Hits Car; Woman Unhurt A \\'Oman narro\\•ly escaped death early toda y \.'.'hen a Sante Fe fre ight train crashed into her car in P lacentia. Joyce Marilu F inklestein, 36, of 324 Swanee Ave .. Placentia, leaped from the \'ehtcle she "'as driving jusl seconds hefore a 57-car triltn dcrnolished it al the. Placentia A\·e. crossing of the main San ta Fe hne Pl acentia officer James \\'aym!re who lnve~!igatetl the accident said Mr~. Finkli!'ste1n was south hound ()TI P!acen· tia, approachinR the railroad tracks a~ a <'ross1ng ~uarcl ann ~tart ed to come do" n. She applied her brakes and skidded under the arm into the path of the fast· moving freight train She received only monor injuries as she ~uddenly stopped the car. OIANll COAST DAILY PILOT Oii.A N(;.! COA5f l'U lll~HIN(;. COMl'AN'f ••litrt H. w •• d J oclr: "· Cu•lty Viti l'ral<lt•u 1nd G.,,.,11 M1111otr Th'"'"' 1<11~il Eolto.- TJ.0,..11 A. Mur~~!~1 Ch1r!11 H. loo' R oc~o ·d ,, Ni ll ,.,.,1.i1n. M1...,gO.g l:a!IOr• l ... w11• lffc• Offk• 212 f or11t A~••u• M ~ilifl' 1ddr•111 ,,0. t ot ~•6, '14SZ 5-Cle-•te Offkt JOS North fl C1mlfto ~111, 9?•72 Other Offic" C11.ltl M•••· jJO WK! 11'1' ~lflolot t.1-•I l11r1<: lU! N1-1 l t>Ul ... I,,, Hllf'ltl"'191 .. a.ell: 1111~ 111'" l &wll>'1r4 DAILY J'tl..01, will! -ldl II ~1Md 11't t.ltw1-Pr-. II ~l>htd "llY t•~tllt s..,..,. "''' ffl ..,,,..,. MU-for ut~• II••<"• ,_....,.., lteKfl. OMlt ~·· H\lflf\f>tt., .._,.. F_HI,.. Vt lllT, Sift CIO...,.,tt/ ett4f,,_ 1N ,.,,,.,,tdl. 1 11 .. wl!ll .,. r...--.i tdl!ltll. P•ltKl,_I "'"'',... 111111 II et -W.t 111 Str•:. C•te Mf'll , , ... , •••• (7141 &42-4121 C'-'lfle4 A~llf &-42·1671 ... C..,_.,. All hpott-•h: T...,..• c•2-442l .............. "" 0.,on.Mhl ' To..,..._ 4t4·f 4&6 ~. '"'· On-(Mll """""'""" • C-""J', NI -llOl'IM, l°"",,..llltt'• l!lllltorlll ,..., ....... dlvl"llll""'"" ....... "''' 110 ,.........,.. •\I-I ._t.11 ...... ,.. ... "' °""""' --· ....... £ta. ~ .... Mloil 11 Nt--' ltKl'I ..... C..I• M••· Ct tl•v•I• $At•rlplltlo bv r••"" "·" -~"'iv: .., ..,.11 n.ti "'10fl"'IYI ml!lll•t .... u.11,.,.,..., '11~ ,,_,~, .... I 1wl.m tet.m." The "·oman not!'d she would l!ke to hive 1 pl•~ where 1he could aend her chlldt'tll a.nd not hive to worry about them. Homeownert A11ocl1tlon dlrtctor Dick Niederhauser noted the progran1 would cost about $1,150, niost of which wo u!d provide salaries for two staff members. Niederhauser said he hoped the pr(lgram would begin w1Lhu1 the next few weeks and noted it would only be a pilot pro- gram as it 1~ou ld only be held at One school in the area. Norm WWlana, a Unda \'llta School teachar, would direct the proP"am. Niederh1111er aald. Wlll11m1 wu pretent at tht mliUh1 al\d Ii.Id bl fa vored a •·1tructured pl1y1round program" 1\Z'Nl- ing individual rather than te1un ac- tivities. "I don'l think the skllled people in re<:reation are looking at the needs of the children,'' \Villiams told the iiroup oi parents. \Villiams, y,•ho has bttn a school leacher for the past IY.'O yea rs, said he 2tad Mine Vieti11a A priest \Vith a Bible on his lap rides on a rail car carrying rescue '~·ork~rs and the seco~d victim to be brought out of the y,•ater aque· duct Jn Sylmar following Thursday morning's explosion. Jaycees n1 Sru1 Cle1ne11te S;in Clen1cn1e city c·ouncil111en ncxl month "·ill hear propo~al! by lhc loca l Jaycees to assuine the total de velopmenl Yes on August 3 Group Sponsors Open House Laguna 's anti-high rise group. the Yes on August S Comrn1t1ee, will ho!d open hou:-:e al its new hf';idquarters. 812 Sou1l1 Coast Hi~hway. fron1 4 Lo 7 pm. Sunda). Prin1cd in lorn1atinn on the e('ono1nlc. aesthetic and ('COlClRiral aspect~ (If 1he high rise issue wdJ be av<11lable and com· mittee mernbe!'~ will be pr<'scnl to <Jnswcr q11r.~\H111 <;. <1f('r1rrli11g to press chairman ~lildrt'd H11nn11n1. TI1e public i!i i11vitcd 10 <Jlt.cnd ;ind rcfreshn1ents will he ~erv('d The hC'ad · quarters also is open frorn J() a.n1. tu 5 p.m. da lly. The romm ittec is su11porting a ye s vote in the special Aug. :\ eler1ion on the in- itialive to limit building he 1 g ht throu ghout Laguna to 36 feet or three. stories. t:~chairmcn of the \'l·.~ nn AuR. :\com- n1Htee are Lois Jeffrey, forrner unit chairman for lhe League of \\'omen Voters and J ohn Brand, professor of geography al Orange Coast College, ·where he was advisor to lhe OCC ''oung Republicans and president of the Laguna Civic League. or :i lands<.'apr.d park <11. Linrla L;inc -a pruJecl v.'h1cl1 is planned as the forerun· ner to several 1najor recreation projects by the group. The park project al Linda Lane re<·e iv· £'dinit1al exposure this week before p:irk11 and recreation C()minissioncrs who hc::ird ideas 10 use \'Olunteer labor and 111atprials, plus an e!ilimaled $5.000 lo $7.000 in donated funds to develop the <.anyu 11 nc;1r a city beach 1nlo a pl.11y- gro11nd and picnic arf'a Al F1lger Jr .. recen1l 1-elected Jaycee president. said the Linda Lan e plan -ii i1 1\in5 city cor1sent -\1ould be the start rif a long !'erlf'S or 1<'.reenbe\t prOJeCt.!I 11ndC"r!t1ken 1n the city by the service )t/'OUp The l.1nd:i Lane project has alre1u1y ht't'n 111as1cr planned U1 a do11ation by the l'od landscape archilCclural lirin ln cen- !1·al Orange C:ount.11, Fliger said. The tll'O·ac·rr p:irk has been graded and C'fJUlpped \1·i1h a larp:c parking lot by the 1·11y. Cl'lntr:icts have been let for !hi' con- structlon of ne\Y rest rooms in tht beach area ncarb~·· Filg('r told commissioners the dr;i\1·1nss include 1rees lining bo1h sides of the JHlrN!l le11d.ing to !he bt'ach. nthPr landscaping, plus picnic and playground farili!iei;. al ong with a sprinkler system. The lunds for the project. he sald. ·would come from community projects. grants by servict: groups, plu! Individual donors. Linda Lane'!' development would have been coi•ered had the recent parks and rl'crration bond issue propo!iiUon C pass- ed the_ voters. Shuttles Slated Air Service Begins Local Hauls Airport ServiCt'. lhl' firn1 lh<ll Pioneered shu!tlc tr11r1spor~ to Oran.[\e County A\rp<>rl in 19:i7, will In the ensuing wttks. begin service lo both Or11nge <Aunty ?Jld Los Angeles lntcrn11llon11l Airports from Laguna Hiii:; &nd Mlssioh Viejo. The California Public Utilities Com- mission announced Lhat lhe Airport Service will be operating with hr.res at $1 from t..guna HUis and Sl.25 fron1 ~iisslnn Viejo to Orange County Alrporl . and SS and $5.25. rtsptcUvely. one-·way to Los Angeles roternstion11 I Airport. Tht eomm lulon. t!.I the same time, denied the 11ppllcalinn ol Leonard L. ~1cGee, of Saddltback Sta${e Line. wh ich. If 11Jlowed to ope.rate, ""'Ould provldl!t es~en tially the same servlcf' Airport Service will provide '""'() round trips a day. The schedule for t.1 i~sloo Vie- jo and Laguna Hll!s residents will look hke this . Leave !~~~ion Viejo 6;:10 a.m.; 9:JU ;i.n1 . IA'ave Laguna Hills 6:40 e..m.; 9!40 11.n1 Arri\'e Orange Count~· Airport 6: r.s 11 111 : 9.SS a.m. Leave Orange County Airtw>rt 7!00 ;r m : 10:00 11.m. Arr ive Los Angeles lnternaUonal 8:00 11 .m.: 11 :00 a.m l.A!a\·e L-Os Angeles Jnte.rn allonal 12: 15 p m.: 9· 15 a.m. Arr ive OranRt County Airport 1:15 p 1n : 10 IS a.n1. l.e?.VP Orange County Airport 1:20 pm .. 10:2Q am. Arrive Laguna Hills 1:35 pm : 10:3fl n m Arrive il11Mion Viejo 1:45 p.m : 10:4:i nm • " ' had ape.nt mariy years in lhe recreation field. WUllams aald he planned lo atrt11 In· dl vldual 1pori.I and ha ve such activities al c1rpentry, blke repair, p0ttery, SOC· cer, wrntllnl and track and field. One man asked if the private recrea- tion centers In the area would not take away frorn the attendence al the pro- gran1. A Mission Viejo com pan y official said that only about 4() percent of the fami lies 1Jving in the community belong tn the renters. About 2.000 youngsters al· lend elementary .school in ~1ission Viejo. I Homeowners president fo.1lke Shearer noted that be could not aak the county lo fund the prol(l'lm unlet! It wu ahown to be supported by .a large number o( residents. ··There are not enough people here to show the wishes of Mission Viejo,'' Shearer noted . Several residents had gone door-LO·door seeking support and ~ome 300 signed forms had been received hy the assoc1al1on supporting the pro· gram. Niederhauser noted 1hat only one of the replies received had been negallve and the 'ft'om an had wr!llen that the pro1ram "would become 1 b1by11ttln1 NJ'Viet." The writer 11ld tht parenll "ahould aet oft their duffs and lake their kids to the parks" rather than aend them to an org anized progranl. However. paren!s at the n1eeting show· ed strong support for the proposal and ontt suggested it could help cut doY.n on the vandali!m lo the parks llnd "might pay for itself." About $5,000 n1ust be spent in the con1ing f!s('al year t.o repair \'andallsin to the land~{'aping in Ute areOl, president Shearer noted. Lagunan Named • Ill Fraud Alleged A rtists' Guild F ir1n Operator Indicted A Laguna Beach man \\'as 011e of thrl'e men indicted Thursday by !he Orange County Grand Jury on fraud charges stemming from their operation of a modeling agency that was closed down last y,.·eek by a Superior Court judge. ~tillon flloore. 51, of 3222 Cliff Dr ive. \vas the only one of the trio who !hov.·ed up for arraignment in Superior Cour1. Judge fiobert L. Corrman delayed his ar· raignment until July 9 and issued bench warrants for the arrest of ~defendant.! Philip J. Nadeau, 30, and Mich1el Cercey, 28, both of Los Angeles. Homeow11e1· G1·oup Ready To Fight A{lded Density investigators claim all three \\'ere ac· tive in the operation of lnlrodulre Artists' Guild Corporation (!AG ) and falsely pro· mised top television and modeling con· tracls to hundreds of Orange County girlt> who responded to n e w s pa p e r ad· vertisemenl!. They said many Orange Coast girls were among the applicants and the testimony of two Newport Beach students v.·ho were allegedly hired by the trio to take pictures of prospective models led to the filing of the district atl.Orney's civil action against IAG and its principals. Rtpresentatl ves of the Aegean }!ills Homeowners Association in ~tission Viejo a re expected to protest an increased dellsily proposal Tuesday before the Orange County Planning Commission. The COWlty planners will be holding a public hearing on a proposal by Alscot Deve lopment Comp2.ny, developer of the Aegean Hills commWlily, to increase the allowable den!ity of a large parcel of land. The 22 acres uhder consideration lie north of Alicia Parkway and just south of B junior hlgh school site owned hy the San Joaqu in Elementary School District. Al!COt y,.•anl.'J to increase the density or the property from four and one hill units per acre -.single family homes -lo 12 dwelling unlts per acre -apartmeo!s or tOY.'Ilhouses. A representative of the homeoy,ners group appeared recently at a meeting o[ San Joaquin school trustees seeking suir porl for the protest. The representative told !he trustees the proposed density in· crease could increase the area population to a greater degree than the school wa! planned to ac~ommodate. Homeo"•ners also contend th e apartmcnt·type ho1nes planhed for the <irea could not be compatible y,•ith the ex- 1:;1Lng single family units. The planning commission hearing is s<'hedule for 1 :30 p.n1. Tuesday in the c11m1nissio n hearing room located in the engineering building, 400 Civic Center Drive. Santa An& We lfare Cases Down ~ACHAfo.lENTO (AP J -State \\'elf are Director Robert B. Carleson says Callfornia 's welfare caseload dropped by 20.000 during r.1ay in the wake of tough administra tive change! ordered by Gov. Heag<rn. The fllay level v.•as 2.25 n1illion re{'i· plcnts, one nut of every II California ns. C11r\eson said Thursday, adding "We are \lery pleased "·ith the caseload figures for this month and I feel a trend may be developing." \V itnesses reportedly told the Grand Jury that they were charged from $400 to $600 to attend modeling courses and that they later discovered that their in- structors were non-professionals who had \'ery little experience of modeling. Investigators said Ille girls were assured they were in the hand! of 41world renowned" photographers. They !aid the applicants were actually in the hands ot young Newport Beach students who were paid -like the instructors -$5 to $7.50 .an hour for their services. Moore. Nadeau an d Gercey were In- dicted on charges of conspiracy to cheat and defraud. Grand theft v.•as added to lhe counts against Nadeau and 'Moore arter furthe r investigation of IAG's operations at its Town and Country, OrCtnge. out.let. Superior Court Judge Robert Ban yard granted an injunction against the fir m last "'eek after hearing testimony repeated by y,.·1tnesses at the Grand Jury hearing. · f 2 1NJ,., "Htau/. '"' SUMMER SALE TID VON HIMEllT, i11c.. bring• th• l1r911t ,,11ctian of q u1!ity "'•rclu•cli~• t• 90 o" 11!1 i11 lh• hl.!ory of our company, 5ud• f1moui lin•< 11 H .. nt4011 , Thom•.ille, Dre.101. H9"1 .... e. .... ,II off1r ••l1ct1d q•aup1 1! •ub1hnli1I r1ductian1. All uph1>l1!1r1d m1rth1ndi11 will l.1 off1r1d •' ,.,o.t 1H•1etiv1 11vin91, TED VON HEMllT "''' 1bl1 lo purch111 • lor91 cr u•ntity of Mo"1• Conol Soln ""d Cll"I,-. 11 cloo1-owt p11c 11. 11 1mo•9 !ht lit1I lo ,,J,,t. Uphol1t1ry a• 1111 """'· NEWPORT STORE LAGUNA STORE SALE PIO. ·~· SOFA M lf'I• C1r .. _IOO" I.I-P'tlt.1 (..,1r11U<19 Wtll Utt SOFA M•t'I• C1tY,._10t" $399 Ot"" Lln111 P'rlnl-C&ftft11lo11t W1ll Utl SOFA M .... 1•1-r SOFA $~trr!!I $469 e.ld VllYll "" 11111 Gt"n Vtl>'ll l!rope lllt PR CHAIRS """ '""~'"'" $169 PR. CHAIRS ~:.~: ~~::-.:-11'1 ... 1 011•• Vtl~ll 11'j ... SLEEPER Htr<1tl1n ~l1 ld-4.1n1,.0liMI Wei! oeu-1• M1ttr111 1111.u $269 SLEEPER ~~ltltft P'llld-ttMfllll~I '*· .. SOFA l~trrill-T<lflt(I lh mllk ti~) SOFA 0···~···· l!ft.O ~rlM-$489 Gol•, OrMn "" PR CHAIRS ··•· "' ....... _ PR. CHAIRS $169 1 11111: v.tvll . ., ... 0 ...... 11-0r-11r1~1 uu ... LOUNGE CHAIR "''"M~'"' ""M "'"' $139 CHAIR ... ~,~ ... '* (MINot W'tll Ul) SOFA M•rt• C•""" 100'' o r-1>1m11~-$399 SOFA Mu·•• e .... .,_1w· l'r•ftl Ctftlr11t W1U U M c ... 1 ... 11n1 Woll .... SOFA Mll'fl (•'"'~~~ l'1tltw, e lld $299 SOFA '"•rrl!l-Tw••. Ctftlrtll Wtll "" 11111, Otld l'rlftl "" SOFA "'"'•·~··· ~o«•IM tltl" .,. $479 PR. CHAIRS ::::: ... ~ l lft ... LOUNGE CHAIR ".:~'.':7:. UH $169 SOFA '"'""~ SLEEPER ·~""' '"" $239 MtrnlMI Sir!,_ ... ••• PR CHAIRS ··-, .... _ LOVE SEAT $239 1 MtnltllT 11111 ... 5rMft Vol~ot om SOFA Ml'9f C•r11-W1'1•-.. II ,,ift.tl "" $429 ROCKER "' .......... ... PR. OHAIRS ~~°';; ... nnt1. $189 UPHOLSTERY FEATURES ••LI $389 $699 $179 $269 $619 $179 $199 $399 $499 $119 $469 $149 $10 PR. ROCKERS ~:-~::;, $179 *.All I Way Hand Tied Con1truction VtlVtl Ill' ... * Mo1t Scotch Guarded SOFA Ll,,..__A•1t• S!tlp1 IUI $429 * MOit Down Backs LOVE SEAT ...... __. .... '""' $269 * Many Contrastlnt Welts c ... ,,.., ...,.,. 111' * All Exctllant Ouality M1 ny olht r 1p1d 1lly 1•!1ct1d pit ,11 11 TllUI SALi ,llCU. If our f!11r 11 fllpl11 111ft•t Ju•+ th1 lhin9, '.'"'"'Ii of Ou• br•nd n1m1• will be ••1ll1bl1 '" 1 •p1cl1I 1rll1t b11;1 1t r•4uced ptlt •t. 01n I f1r91I our m1n1 b•droom, di•int ''""' I 1t•11J111•I &11l1tllon1 11 f1~ul1w 1 11•• ln91I DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL-HERITAGE NEWPORT BEACH 1727 W11tcllll o,., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 HIW'°IT STOlll O,IM •llDAY "I'll t Proftt1lon•l lnt•rlor D•1ig,,t r1 A..,11fablt -AID INTERIORS ""•"°Toll,,.. MMf of o.....-Co111ty-140·126J LAGUNA BIACH 345 N•rth Co11t Hl9hw1y Phon•: -494-6511 I 7 " • 7 San Clemente Capistrano voe. 6•. NO. 151, 4 SECTIONS, •s PAGES EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALlf()RNIA ........ , • \ Today's Final N.Y. Stocks FRIDAY, ~UNE 25, 1971 TEN CENTS Major Budget Costs to Confront Councilmen San Clemente's "bar~bones" city budget \\'i1\ meet its final test Wednesday night as several n1 ajor, expensive issues confront city councllmen in an eleventh· hour session. The budge t -which by custon1 is ap. proved by July I -refle cts a tight fi na n· c!al picture for the next fiscal year But several major expenditures will be considered as well. They include: -RequesLs by public safety and miscellaneous city employes for raises and increased fringe benefits which have been tensely negotiated for the past several weeks. Public safety worker! seek a change lo the st.ate-administered, PERS (Public Employes Retirernent tSyste1T1 ) pension plan , plus large in- creases in all •,•,1age categories. OLher workers seek a host of benefits as we!l as an average 7.5-percenl wage increase. -The ex penses for a new community clubhouse costing $230,000, a sum which enatot IJPI T•l11>hoto SISTER SHOWS GRIEF Brother 1 tt Min• Victim Dowu, the Mission Trail All-age Dances Slated in Viejo ~1ISSION VIEJO -Two dances-one for junior high students an? the other l~r adults-will take place this weekend 1n Mission Viejo. The junior high dance will be tonight fron1 7:30 to 10:30 o'clock in t~e . Mo~· tanoso Recrci:ition Center. Admi ssion 1s S.I for members and $1 2:'.I for no n· members. An adult rock dance will take place on Saturday , June 26 from 9 p.m. lo I a.".'. at the Montanoso Center. The cost 1s $3.50 per couple. A bar will be available. • Classes lo Begin J\llS.SION VIEJO -Baton and dance cl asses will be offered beginning Monday, June 28, at the Montanoso Recreation Center. Instruction in basic and in termediate baton for girls 5·15 will be given during the: six week session . Beginners v.·!11 start and I p.m. and intermediate will meet at 2 p.m. Cost If $10 for members and S20 for nonmembers. The dance classes will be eight week!! \n ballet and tap. Three sessions for various age groups will be given for SIO for members and $20 for onomember1. • S"'I"' Leuon• LAKE FOREST -SwimminR le:Monl ror children and adults begin P.1onday. June 28 at lhe Lake f'oresL Beach and Tennis Club. Lesson~ will take place Monday through Friday until July 16. AduJta will be ln~tructed rrom noon to 12:30 p.m. with children's classes running every half hour from 10 a.m. .Junior lire saving will be taught fo:- those 11-14 years or 11ge from 11 :30 a.m. to J2:30 p.m. Senior life r;11ving will be of- fered to those lS years old and older at the same time. • Fire Stops Workmen In Tunnel ... ... SYLJ\1AR /U PI ) -A smol dering fire in e water tunnel where 17 miners were kill· ed in a natural gas explosion flared up le> day i1nd delayed efforts tl'I remove re· rnaining bodies or the victims. Fire officials said they would not send rescue crews into the tunnel until flue holes were drilled to clear contaminated sir from the five-mile ahaft. Drillinc crew11 already were al work preparing vent holes and rescue learns were on standby, Construction llmbcr11, rubber hoses and other debris at lhe working area of the tunnel were involved in the recombustion. "They had no lime lo live," said fire departm ent rescue worker Andy Kuljis. "They died -(he snapped his fingers) - lhat fast. You take a lung full of hot air and you're dead before your brain knows il."' Only one man in the dr illing crew 250 feet beneath the surface survived the In- ferno of blazing gase11 or the suffocating smoke that foi!owed Thursday's blast. The tunnel, 15 miles from downtown Los Angeles, is in an area laced with earth(]ua ke fau lts. Officials blamed the fau!ts fo r the seepage of natural gas. ~1ore than 27 hours after the blast and the !4-hour fire that followed. 12 bodies had hc£'n foun d in the five-mile long bore under construction for the t\-lelropolitan Water District. Seven had been removed from the shaft. five others were w11iting to be taken out and re~cue workers press· t>d on lhrough the smoke. seeking the bod ies of lhe five men still mi ssing. It was the third disaster to strike a por tion of the mulribillion do 11 a r California W;iter Project, the mosl com. plex wate r \\'Ork ever atlemp1ed. and the second explosion in the San Fernando V;illey tunnel in two days. Three five-man crews burdened with gas masks and heavy oxygen tanks repeatedly v.·ent down into the tunnel in hou rly cycles through a gaping air shafl t"·o miles from the entrance portal. The work wa s extremely hazardous becau.91!: vf the "zero vi sibility" of the smoke and accumulalion of unburned methane gai;. Two firemen were stricken when lhey took their gas masks off deep In the shaft. They later were reported in good con. dition. Cat, Bird Gone In Clemente An expensive. exolic Sou t b Amer ican cat valued at $500, plus a mynah bird and other pet supplies and equipment were stolen from a San Clemente business, it was discovered Thursday .• The th<'fl of animals and supplies valued at $777 was discovered a1 Mrs. Tom McBean opened the Paw11 and Claw11 pet shop at 804 S. El Camino Real Thursday. Police said the burglary took place sometime Wednesday ni11:ht or Thursday morning after some- one pried a rea.r door to the new pet store. The valuable cat, I margay, resembles an ocelot. officers said. Other items stolen in the burglary h1cluded an eicpenslve s-et nf dog clipper!: 1 birdcage, plua • spira l spike u11ecl to chai n dogs. might be sipboned from city resuves. Wednesday Is the deadline for awarding a construction contract lo the low bidder before prices would increase and I.he pro]· eel would have to readvertised. -The projected new fire department headquarters building with a budget of about $140 ,000. The facility is still in the planning stages, but CQUncilmen have in· dicated an immediate start In con· struction as soon as working drawings are completed. ees -An expenditure for a new lifeguard rescue boat to replace the existing city vessel which Lifeguard Chief Dick Hazard has termed "woefully in need of replacement.'' The reconstruction under 11. matching-fund grant with the county o( El Camino Real from Avenida Pico to Camino Capistrano, The badly-needed road repairs amount to a city con- tribution of $114,423. ' -Replacements 11.nd additions to the city vehicle fleet ~ting $45,507. -Replacement and building of ne.w water mains at a cost of nearly $61,000. Councilmen for the past several years ha ve been CQmmitted to holding the line of the $1.39 tax rate -a levy which already is close to the legal maximum. The city's cash reserves, which draw interest each year, already were tapped last year for the $200,000 purchase of a arco SINGLE·CAR MINE TRAIN BEARS BODY 0 F SYLMAR TUNNEL TRAGEDY VICTIM Explosion and Fire Third Diu1te r to Hit Water Project Sine• 1960 County Welfare Worker, Wife Seized in Fraud An Orange County We lfa re Department 11ocial worker and his v.·1fe .,..·ere tv.·o of i:;e\•en perso n:-; arrested Thursday by the district altorney's offi ce and accused of welfare chiseling. Social worke r, Bil!y Joe Let, 3J, and his wife, Joyce 41. are accused of welfare fra ud. l\irs. Lee is a deputy clerk for the North Orange County Judicial District. Both were arrested sfter di!ltrict at- torney's investigators probed an alleged overpaymcnl of $2,164 Lo the couple by the welfare department. Welfare Director Granville G. People!! asked for the in- vestigation after a personal examination of charges Against the couple. Investigators said Lee was hired by the welfare department in November 1970, and Mrs. Lee was hired as a deputy clerk under the name of Joyce Noble in August, 1970. De~ision Due Fate of Clubhouse Set Wednesday San Clemente city councilmen next week plan to decide the fate of the pro- posed new community club house-an issue accom panied by this week's rec.om· mendal ion by some parks commissioners that the fire-damaged building be restored. not replaced. The-cloudy vote or !he commlssion- which 11.cted wit h two members abse nt- yielded a majority vie wpoin t among the three. The two votes recommending against 1 new clubhouse do not constitute a ma- jority of the five-member panel. The existing clubhouse structure, ex· posed to the element! for nearl y a yl"ar and one-half, might not be restorable at all said city Parks and Recreation D!tec· tor Arlie Waterman this week. "I know restoration has been talked 11.bout ever since the fire , he said, but we have t.n remembe r that the elements have taken their toll at the building. v.·hich has been exposed a long time,'' be sa id. One other factor In any restora tion of the structure is the section of the city zoning ordinance covering restoration of structures which have suffered 50·percl'nt or more danage from fire or other casualties. The ordinance 11tates that if such a gtruct.ure 111 re&tored, the entire building would have lo conform to existing bullding codes. Presuming that the tily would abide by its own ·building regulations, it would mean a vast rebuilding project at the fire -ravaged clubhouse building. One wing has been proposed to be remodeled and incorporated into the new clubhowe buUding. Saa Cleuiente Action ·Fireworks Fate Hangs Fire Flreworks may be making their last 111.and In the city of San Clement4! thia Independence Day season . If <'ilY coun-- cilmen fulfill • promise 500n. Three days after the annual smoke cloud clears. c::ouncilmen are el'pected to met! to determine If a proposed bin on the 11ale of nonprofe11ional pyroteclinica should be enacted. The reason, 1aid councilmtn lalit ~ring. was the srowing nurrtber of flrc1 nn rl potentially dangerous prank! caused by unsafe use of fireworks. 1..,s\ year'• season produced 11everal smoke bomb incident.s In _ structures. Grass fires caused by unsafe use of the devices were numerous aa well. Only lhree organlutions have ~ceived permission to aeU fireworks In the city-two veretan groupa. and the local Junior All·Amerlcan Football League. If the proposed ban tekes place, some opposition could be expected. The vl"terans organiiations have used the proflta from the s11les of fireworks at 11tands to offset the large CO!t of the an- nual fireworks presentation from the San Clemente pier. , The costs for the ertrsvagltnZa offered frte to 11nyone who w11nts to Wfttch, run In the thousand! of dollars tacb year. Private donations 1lso are sought to help with the, erpenses. The football league, as wl"ll, reaps bad· Jy needed revenue' from the sale. But pfety, despite the obvious finan- cial benefit, ls the reason behind the pro-Pol!ed btn, 181d councilmen. One other fa ctor also mlgbt enter Into Utt! fireworks ls1ue. Councilmen we.rt forced with a con· troversy early in the sprln& when spokesmen for 1 Sooth Coast are youth activity sought perml!ls!on to 8tli flre- wm-ks as well. Councilmen denied the re- quest amtd complaints that lht activity Wiii being aJJowed to select &roupg only. triangle of land near North Beach. Spending of those funds lessened the amount of interest income, whicb next year ts proiect ed at about $120,000. If councilmen approve the existing pro- posed budget, \1'1th no increases in salaries and no expenditu re for the clubhouse, the $3.6 million sum would be more than $400,000 below the total budg~ figure for this fiscal year which ends the night of the special Wednesday meeting. ar Newsmen, TV Crews Tl11·eatened NEW YORK IAP) -Sen. Harold E. Hughes (0-lowa ). \Vas threatened with bodily harm and chased today from the basement of a Harlem tenement that was believed being used as a "shootinl gallery" by narcotics addicts. •·1 knew I was in a dangerous situa· lion," Hughes said after getting out of OW! basement of the five-story building on West 137lh Street. It was across the street from Harlem Ho!pila\. Hughes was touring a 1ec;tion of Harlem with lhree other senator1, all members of the special subcommittee on 1lcobolism and narCQtics. He entered the building after residents pointed it out as a well known "shooting gallery" -a place where addlcls gather to inject narcotics. The senator', who was accom panied by new smen, photographers and a television crew, walked through a dark corridor to A large area in the rear where six persons were apparently preparing to "shoot up." 'l'he men. startled by the bright camera lights, confronted Hughes near a table where f.he men were reportedly preparing narcotics for use. "Get the -• • • out of here," one yelled at Hughes. Hughes stared al him dumbfoundedly. At this point two young women whn l"scorted the senator into the basement, turned and scrambled out. }fughes turned his back on the group and walked out behind newsmen and the three other senators who bad entered the premises after him . Sen. Jae<>b K. Javi!s <R·N.Y.), describ- ed I.he basement as a "stygian hole." J\farjorie DoxE>n. a member of the Un ited Harlem Orugf1gh1ers. one of the twn women "'ho led Hughes into lhe base- men!, said three of Lhe men in the base- ment had bee.n "shooting it in the arm"- injecting themselves with drugs. Race Brawl Erupts MATHER AIR FORCE BASE <AP) - Brawling ''with racial overtone~·· in- volving some 30 airmen broke out Thur:;. day night at Mather Air Force Base near Sacramento. Oruge Coast Weather The gun will peek through that ever-present haze this afternoon and Saturday, bringing tempera· lures to 67 alons the coast and 75 inland. Lows today and Saturday 80. INSIDE TODAY Ma.rvtlous machines which do absotuttty nolhing, along with their inventor ore the aubject of a Weekendtlr ftatur1e on Page 25 today. ... 11111 t4 <•11 ... !tll • CM(-1"' UI \I ci.ulllttl U-4• C11nk' JJ ('911 ... •d JJ O.tl!o H•llct1 t Dl•trc.1 11 •tlllf•••• ..... ' l lnt..c• ll·tl 1101"<-1' ...... 1.tn<ltt• ,, ~lllMIM ' "'41¥1ft •» ' :..--... ~-\-1••-J..~ frid•Y. Junt 25, 1'171 Homeowners Eye Summer Activity Program A summer recrtallon program at Lin· da Vbb School fur MWion Viejo atta youtig.sten was propo.sed Thursday at the ge~al meeting of the Mission Viejo Homeowners Association. The program \\'OtJld be held t'ach weekday afternoon and Y.'OUl::I be open to children in grades one through six. Although onl y a score of residents WCje present al the meeting, n1any parents ex· pressed support for such a program, one saying it seemed geared to children ''ool Dld enough for Little League and the Grand Jury Clears Data Chief Orange County Data Services director Robert Farmer was given a clean bill of health today and his adversary, Tax Collector Robert Citron, was criticized b}" the County Grand Jury. The jury. a cling at the request or the county Board or Supet\'isors. said a fuil in vesliga lion into Citron's ch a r g e !'I against Farmer revealed "no evidence to support 1he allegations." The jury report. signed by Foreman Doreen Marshall of Newport Beach. said, .. \Ve feel that the situalion might not have occurred v.·ith the re s u It in g clc!rimental effect on county go\•ernment and morale had Citron used all the coun· ty procedures available to him ." The Citron-Fanner feud originated ~lay 4 ""'hen the tax collector charged before !he board of supervisors that he could get a da ta processing job he wanted done for $211,000 less by giving it to an outside firm, rather than to Farmer's department. Citron also charged that Farmer's department was inefficient, wasteful and incompetent. Supervisors Ronald Caspers and Robert Ballin supported Ci tron and were tern· po1'rily joined by Supervisor Ralph Clark. They tentatively voted to accept the outside offer by Se<::urity Optimation Service of Los Angeles, a subsidiary o( Security Pacific Bank. ' Farmer \\'BS allowed lo reply two weeks lat.er and said his deparbnent could do the job for less than the outside firm. He said Citron had based his charges on "incomplete and inaccurat.e information because of his deliberate failure to follow existing county policy and coordinate his actions \Vilh air propriate county departments." The Grand Jury report 11aid their in· ,·esttgation revealed evidence lo agree with Fanner·s charge. Train Hits Car; Woman Unhurt A woman narrowly escaped death early today when a Sanle Fe freight train crashed into her car in Placentia. Joyce ~tarilu Finklestein, 36. of 324 Swanee A\·e .. Placen!ia. leaped from the vehicle she v.·as dr1,·1ng JUst seconds before a 57-car train demolished il at the Placentia A\'e. crossing or the main San ta Ft line Placentia officer James \\"a)mire \\ho investigated the accident said ~!rs. Finklestein "·as south bound on Placen· tia. approachin i;t the rai!road trac~ a5 a crossing guard arm s-..ar'~ tfl rome do .... ·n. She applied her bra~t a~n tk.Jddiffl under the ann inti) the f-4:..i cl: l~ fast· moving fre ight tra1r>. She received only rrHYr. .:.;..:."""-! aJ ~he r;:uddenly stopped th! ca: DAILY PILOT (iRJ.!l:..: (.!.lo.!; P'.l.J\.>' ,.(, :.~·Jo~'( ........ "· ......... Pr_ . .,.,.,..,., .. ._,. J.,~ '-c •. 1.y Va Pr&_,, -C..-ot ~rl' Ti.o"'•' YooTil 1 ...... 7h11,..•• A. M111pt.:., Cli•tlt1 M. t.,.,, R:~~··.I '· N,11 A.nl1••n. Mtfl..iO"" EO•'O'' l ....... ""'" Ofll~• 222 foreil AY•ftu• lol •ilift9 ecl1he11: P.O. 1 ... ~''· 11 l•S1 S.• Cl•111•11N Otrk• JOI Notik El C1mi"o Roel, 91672 0th•• Otflc" Ca.It """"" »:t Wn! !!It S1•"t tffWllO•I 8.-c:t.• ll" Ntw-• ll ou'""t'lf Hvrlllllf!Oll &ut!\: 11111 l\Ncll Baule.-•1d l)lf\.Y Pl~OT, W.111 ~ l• coml>l.....S 1~1 N _ _.,_ II. pulll...-.0 ol••tf toco11 ~­ ffeY 111 _.,,.,_ tlllll-,., UClll'I• 81K11. ~r it..c11. 1;91.M M .... , HWll\nOI ... e09d\o ,--'91rt V1llW, l•" Cleme>ll•I c.tol!'-. .,.. '""11''0" •lrt w11.11 - r .. .....i tr1115'n. P"rlroelpl! "'"''" •IMI • t i JJll W•l .. , Stt•:. Coell ""-• , .. .,,._. 171~1 ~2:-4JJ1 ct.alffM .,,.,.... •• "J·J•7• s.. c ............ f"f-•l'I: Tsl1 pt I f 492:-4410 ...,._. .... An 0.,•lf-tm: t...,••• 494-94'' c...,.....,.f, 1•71, Or.,... Cini "u~ht.T,,. . ,_,.,,_ "'• -· ,,,,. .. ,, m'"'"''-· ... -)ti ......... er t l->lt"""lt ....... ,, ..,.,. .. ........,IKM w,1"°"'1 lol'Ki.I ,.... ...... "" "" -·· -· ~ ,,_ pMi.te •otf ti H-' I•~ .,.. O-!• M••• (ot.•-la. ~.rlpt ..... lll'r Of•ler $1 2' ""''"'I'' &y "'"' Oii ......,."' ... 111i.•r on11M1 '""'" tl.15 """''~''· S\\"im teun." The \\-'Oman noted she would like to have a place where. she could send her children and not have to worry about them. Homeo\\-11ers Association director Dick Niederhauser noted the progr:fn1 11 ould cost about $1, 150, most of whielt \l'OUld provtd~ salaries for two staff mt'mbers. Niedeihauser said he hoped the pro~ra1n ~·ould begin Wllhin \he ne.>:l fe11 \',L•('k.'i and noted ii \vou ld on!y be a pil ot pro· gram as it would only be held N. one school in the area. No nn Williams, a Linda Vista School teacher, would direct the program, Niederhauser said. Williams wu present at the meeting and said he favored a •·structured playground program" 1tress. ing 1ndiv1duaJ rather than learn a<> t1vi!ies. •· 1 don t t'!1ink the skilled peoplt in l'C't'rc<1l1on <ire lolik1ng .'.l\ lhe need~ of the children ." \VU tiams told the group oi parents. \\'illiams. who has been a sch00I teacher for the past two years, said he Ul'J Ttltpholt 2nd Mine l' ~ti1tt A priest 'vith a Bible on his lap rides on a rail car carrying rescue work~rs and the second victim to be broug ht out of the water aque· duct in Sylmar following Thursday morning's explosion. Jaycees in San Cleme11te Seek to 'Take Ove1·' Pru·l( San Clemente city councilmen next monlh will hear proposals by the local Jaycees to assume the total development Yes on August 3 Group Sponsors Open House t..a~nna ·s anti-high ri~e group !hr. Yes on Augu st 3 C'fln11n11trr. 111(! 11 .. Jd lll\l'!1 house :ii its 11l'll ht"<HltlUrlr!cr~. 81'.! South Coast ll1gh\1·;;iy, fron1 4 lu 'i pm. Sund.:J~. Pr1n1ed inlorina\1on on till' crononnr. ae5thet1c and t•c1)\f•Rlc-n1 ;i~prC"1 " 111 1h•' high rise issue \1·1JI br av:111<1blf· :ind corn· m1ttee members will be presenl 10 ans..,,·er questions, at('Ording 10 press chairman i\·lildrrd ll;innun1. The public i~ 1n11tl·d to al1rnd :inrl refreshments 1.1ill l)f' ~f'r\Td. Thc> hr.1d · quarters also is open fron1 JO :i.rn . to 5 pm daily. The Cflm~1tlee is ~upportins a ~t'~ \'utc Jn lhe special Aug, 3 elec!i1u1 on the 1n- n1ative to limit building he 1 g b t throughout Laguna tn 36 rl'el or !hrc·e Fl0 r1€'5 Co--chairmen of the Ye~ on i\ug 3 coin· millet are Lois .JeffrP\', fnrmrr uni! chairman ror the Leaj,ie or \'iomen Vot.ers and J ohn Brand. professor of geography al Orange Coast College, where he was advisor to !he OCC Young Republicans and presidenl of the Laguna Civic League. or a landscaped park at Linda Lane - a project \vhich is planned as the foren1n- ner to several major recreation projects by the group. The park project at Linda Lane receiv- cdinilial exposure this week before parks and recreation commissioners "'ho heard ideas to use vol un\el'r labor and ma1crials. plus an eslimaled $5,000 to Si.GOO in 1(•1n~11ed fun1!~ 1•) dp1·cJop 1he (':lll}un ne::ir :i 1 ily hr:ilh 11110 .1 pl:i~­ grvund 11n1f p1 l·n1r arc;1 ,\I F1lger .Ir .. recenth-f'lt:'Ch'l'i ,J.1\t't'~' pres1d('nl. said till' Lind<I Lant· pl :1 n · 11 H win." 1•11\ 1'<1ll"•'n! -1111uh! 111· !hr s1;i rt I f ;1 11111,.: ~rra'o,; • j ~ft'1·nbcll i't"l'il"('!o,; u:idrrtakcn in the t'l!_r IJ.1· !he ser\·icr ijfflU \). Tl11· l ,1nd 11 \ .. 111t' p1·111l'<'I !1;1" :1ltf'.'.l<l1 hc1 n nl.'1.~tt•r plannrd u; :1 d11n~it1(111 h1 !he f'orl landsc;ipl.' arr'l11!f•1tur;i! f11·m In. ren- l1'ill Orange Counry. Fliger sair1. T11e l"'U·<1cre p:1rk has bl'cn graded ilnd equipped \1 llh :1 l~rge parking \o1 by the C'1ty t\1ntrarls lla1·r bC"cn lei for 1he con- struc\1(11'! or nr.1\' re.st rOQrns in the heach arr.a ncarb\•. l'ilgC"r lol 0 d eo1n1niss1oners Lile dr:i\1 in~s includr lrce.; lining bolh side~ (lf !lie parct'l leading In Oir btoaf'h. other l:inrlsrapin_E!. plus picnh· ;ind pla~·ground l;11·i11t1es. along with a sprinkler systen1. Th(' funds for lhe projecl. he said, 11·ould con1e from cornn1unity prnjects, .crants by ser\·ice groups. plus indi\'1dual rlnnnrs Linda Lane's devel11pmenl would have been covered had the recent parks and recreation bond issue proposition C pass· ed the volers. Sh11tt l es S late d Air Service Begins Lo cal Hauls Airport Service, lbt !Inn thal Pioneered !ihuttle transport to Orange County Airport in 1957, will in the ensuing Wff':ks, begin service lo both Orangl' Coun!y Md Loi Angeles International Airport.s from Laguna Hills and J\1ission Viejo. The. Callfornla Public Utilities Coin· m1 ss1on announced that· !he Airport Se.rvlct w\11 be operating "'ith fttres at SI lrom Laguna Hills and Sl.25 from Mission Viejo to Orange County Airport . 11nd $5 and $5 ZS. re~pet'livrly. ont-14'ay to IA1s Ange[C3 International Airport The c<>mmission . .-.t !hr s;itne lime, denied lhe applicallon of lA'onard L. McGee. ol Saddleback Stage Lint'. "hlth. If allov.·M to operate, v.·ould pro\'ide t ssentially the same service. Airport Service vdll provide lwo rvu nrl trips a day. The schedule for ~li.:;.s;tln \"ir.· jo and Laguna Hills residents will look hke 1his· 1.ea\'e hssion Viejo &:30 a.in.; ~::kl a.in. Leave Laguna Hills 6:40 .3..m: 9·•0 am Arrive Orange County Airport fi :~ am.: 9 :~ a .m. Leave Orange County Airport 7:00 .:im ; 111:00 a .m~ Arrive Los Angeles International 8:00 11.1n.: JLOOam Lca1·c Lo~ Angeles lnternatlonal 12 .15 p.m : 9-1~ 8 m . Arrlvr Oran~(' County A1rp<Jrt 1. l5 p Ill . 10. 15 :i .n1 \.A.>r.ve Orttnge County Airport I 20 p n1 . 111 2fl ;;i 111 Arri\'e Laguna Hll!~ l.35 pm.~ 10 .35 A Ill ,\rr1\'(' ,\lls.<;!on \'if'JO 1.45 p.m : 111 :4~ 111r.. had spent many years in the recnation field. Wtlllams said be planned to sLress In- dividual sporU and have such aetivitirs a s carpentry, bikr repair, ixittery, soc· ctr, wrestling and track and fle ld. One nlan asked if the private recrea· lion cente rs in the area would not take 3\~ay fron1 !he attendence at the pro· grarn. A fl1i ssion Viejo cornpany official said 1ha! unly about 40 percent of the l:in111ics ti\'ing in the cornn1unily belong to the centers. About 2,000 youngsters at- tend elemen1ary school in Mission Viejo. llomeowMrs president ~1lke Shearer noted that he could not ask the county to fund the program unless it was sho\\--n to be supported by a large number of residents. "There are not enough people here to show the wishes of Mi ssion Viejo," Shearer noted. Several residents had gone door-to-door seeking i;u pporl ltnd so1ne 300 signed forn;s had been rccei\'td by the CJSSOt1a11on supporting the pro· gran1. r\1ederhauser noted that onlv one of the rephes recei ved had been negative .and the woman had written that the program "would become a babysitting st.rvi~. ·• The writer said the parents "should grt off their durfs and lake their kids lo the parks" rather than send them to an organized progranl. Hov.·ever, parents at lhe n1eeting show. ed strong support for the proposal and one i;uggrsted it could t\('lp cul doy,n l}n the vandalisn1 to tl1e parks and .. might pay for itself." About $,6,000 must be spent in the eoming fiscal year lo repair vandalisni to the landscapu1g 1n lhe attil, president Shearer noted. Lagunan Named· in Fraud Alleged Artists' GuiUI Fir111 Operator Indicted A Laguna Beach man \vas one of three men indicted Thursday by the Orange County Grand Jury on lraud charges st.emming from !heir operation of a modeling agl'ncy that \\'BS closed do~·n last week by a Superior Court judge. tltillOn tlloore , 51. of 3222 Cliff Drive . 11·as the only one or the trio \Vho showed up for arraignment in Superior Court. Judge Robert L. Corfn1an delayed his ar· raignment until Juty 9 and i~sued btnch \1·arranls for the arrest of co-defendant! Philip J _ Nadeau, 30. and ri..1ichael Gercey . 28, both of Los Angeles. llo1neowner Group Ready Investigators <.·laim all three were ac· live in th e operation of lntroduire Arlisls' 1 Guild Corporation ~ IAGJ and falsely pro· mised lop television and modeling con· tracts to hundreds of Orange County girls \\·ho responded lo n e w s pa p e r ad· vertisements. To Fight Acldecl De11sity They said many Orange Coast girls \Vere among the applicants and the testimony of l\1·0 Newport Beach students \\'ho -.1·ere allegedly hirPrl by tile trio to lake pictures of prqspective rnodels led to the filing of the district attorney's civil action against IAC: and ils principals. Representatives of the Aegtan Hills llomeov.'ners Association in r-.lission Viejo are expected to protesl an increased dehsity proposal Tuesday before the Orange County Planning.O:lmmission. The county planners wi!I be holding lt public hearing on a proposal by Alscot Development Compeny, developer of the Aegean Hills community, to increase the allov.·able denllity of a large parcel of land. The 22 acres ullder consideration lie north of Alicia Parkway and just south of a junior high school site owned by the San Joaquin Elementary School District. A!scol wants to increase the de nsity of the property from four and one hzJf units per acre -single family homes -lo 12 dv.·elling units per acre -apartments or to~·nhouses. A representative of the homeov.tiers group appeared recently at a meeting or San Joaquin school trustet:s seeking suir port for the protest. 1!he repre:sentative told the truslee.5 the proposed density in· crease could increase the area population lo a greater degree lhM the school "'a~ planned lo ac-eornn1odale. llo1neo1.1·ners also contend ! he :ipartment·!ype homes planhcd for lhe arra could not be compatible "·ith the ex· isling single family units. The planning commission hearing is schedule fo r 1 30 p.m. Tuesday in the commission hearing room located in the engineering build ing, 400 Civic Center Drive. Santa An?.. \Vc lfal'e <..:ascs Down .St\CflA1\1E~T0 1AP 1 -Sia!(' \\"elfare DirctlOI' Hobrrt n Carleson S<l)'S <..:alifornia's 1-1·elfare easeload dropped by 211,000 <luring 1\·lay in tbe wake or tough administrative changes ordered by Gov. lteagan. The May level "·as 2.25 million reci· pient.s. one out of every 11 Californians, Car!eson sai<l Thu rsday, adding "\Ve arc very pleased \\'ilh the caseload figures for this monlh and 1 feel a trend may be developing." 'Vitnesses reportedly told the Grand .Jury that they v.•ere charged from $400 to S600 lo attend modeling courses and that they later discovered that lhtir in· structors were non.professionals wbo had very little experience of modeling. Investigators said lhe girls were assured they were in the hands of "world renowned" photographers. They said the applicants ""·ere actually in the hands of young Newport Beach students ~·ho "'ere paid -like I.he instructors -$5 lo $7.50 an hour for their services. Moo re. Nadeau and Gercey "·ere in· dieted on charges of conspiracy to cheat and defraud. Grand !heft 11·as added to the counts against Nadeau and Moore after further investigation of IA G's operations at its Town and O:lunlry, Orange. outlet. Superior Court Judge Robert Banyard granted an injunction against the firm last week after hearing testimony repeated by witnesses at the Grand Jury hearing. · TIO VON HIMIRT, l11e. b.t"q1 th• l1r9@1! •elecli"h of qu1lity m1•ch1 ftdi1• t .. c;• 011 ••f• i11 t he ~i1tory .,f "ur comp•"~' Sutli f•mou• li"t1 •1 H ... rt-don, Thom•'rillt, D,.ll.i, H9"1 ...... .,.;11 """' 1elect•d f:jfOVPI 11 1ub1lenli•I •edvtlion•. All vphohlered ,..,r,h1"di1e will b1 Dflored •' m.,11 •lfr•tli•1 1eviftq1. TED VON HEMERT "'"' 1b!e to purche1e e l1•q• <11.u1n1;+y Df Mof1• Cano11 Sofof .rid Choftt 11 ,;1.,, •. .,uf p•ict•. 11 emon9 tht fOrit to 1t l1cl, Uphol1!1ry •11 •• 1. """'· NEWPORT STORE LAGUNA STORE SALE RIO. ~4ll! ••• SOFA Mo1"91 t:orw,,_IOI'' l !'*" l'll"f $369 (Ofllro111"' Woll ,.., SOFA M11"90 C•r..,1>-!00" $399 °''"" "''"'" '"""r-conr,111,ng Wtll ... SOFA M.,,,.,_,. $599 ~~"'"" $459 Vo"' VII~"' sa:~ SOFA l luo Gr"'" \lolvtl S!•ll>f •llt PR CHAIRS .... ,..,_, .. ,. $159 PR. CH AIRS ~:.::!cs~::-UTt M. $179 , ~ 011•1 \lol•tl ''" ... SLEEPER 1-l..-<111•~ l"lolll-Con1re111n1 Wolt $259 SLEEPER ':.i~vleft .. ,.iO-C...,lfltTlnt $269 r;>ou&l o Mo!lron llfl.M .. .,. SOFA l he!'rlll-Tirtt .. O•m••~ "" $619 SOFA ,.,,.,_,~. Linen l"•lnl-$489 0.11. Gr-"" PR. CHAIRS ~~~:::;----$179 PR. CHAIRS $1 59 Ult ... ore~tl-G...., $111 " nu ... LOUNG E CHAIR , ..... ,_ .. ,. "·~ '''"' $139 CHAIR ......... ~ ... "" $1 99 Cenlroll W•ll tlU SOFA Mo~• '''"°" Hit" Orfftl 00"'1•~-$399 SOFA M••t• Co..-100" l"rlrtl $399 c ... 1r111 Well ... (Ofl!t001/1>9 Woll ••• SOFA Mo .... Co..-a~" fello ... , Geld $299 SOFA s~.,.,.111-T••-· $499 Conl••fl Well "" ''"' .. Id 1'•1111 "" SOFA ..... "~'W' MercvlM ilrij19 '"' $47 9 PR. CHAIRS ;;::::., .. -l l W N , $1 19 LOUNGE CHAIR ":.~· .~7.:-: ••• $1 59 SOFA ·-;,,_ $469 SLEEPER ,_ .. "•• " ..... i. 1!""9 "" "" $239 LOVE SEAT ·-.... $239 PR. CHAIRS ~'::'.:..--'"' ... $149 ... SOFA M•~· C•--WhH-°'~ '•lt>t• "" $429 ROCKER "' ·~·--·• • "" $169 PR. CHAIRS :.:'~":; ... Utt ... $1 69 UPHOLSTERY FEATURES PR. ROCKERS ~;~::;, $179 * .. All I W•y H•nd TiH Con1truetion SOFA LOVE Veh ol lUt N . * Mo1t Scotch Guard.d \.lm..._A~wl S!•ltN ,.,, $429 * Most Down Backs SEAT Mir•• (ll'Mft-(11.cltll '•1111 $259 * M1ny Contrasting Welts c""''" wen 1)l't * All Excellent Qu11fty M111l otlier tpetie!ly 1e!etltd pi•<tt e l TIUI SAll PllCIS. If our ftoor 11mp!tf t rtrt't juif t h• l~l ft9. "''"Y of our llrt "cl ft •m•• wlll b1 , .. ,il ,bl , on • 1p1t i1I or.le r lte1i1 •I ttdute4 price1, Ooft't for9 1t our "''ny boclro.,m, clinin9 room I Ot,e1io11 1I col11rii•111 11 f1t.ultut 11~ 111911 DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXE~ -HERITAGE NEWPORT BEACH 17'1.7 W11tcliff Dr., 042·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Professionel lnttrlor Designers Avall1blt -AID INTE RIORS LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co11t Hlghw•y Phont: .(94'6551 ,,.., .. Toll frff """' •f Orlnlf'I C•••ty -14D· 1 J6J • J I J I r ridaJ, Junt 25, im DAILY PILOT % -~. You Need Good Program to Figure Economy By NORMA.N ANDERSON 01 HM 0.llp 'ri.1 '"" You just c;in't ignore these facts: From U.S. on Down, No Indicator Can Clarify Picture "According to eur latest data. employment tot a I 1 reached .11. 1971-higll in eight Southern California CQuntil'!I during April," said assistant vice president John H. Owens, administrator or economic research's business stud1e.,. section. -Generally opt i n1 ls tic forecasts for ),1ay busmes.s made a month ago ... did not materialize; -California".s total pro- duction of goods and services grew. . . but manufa<'tures continued to lag behind the }'ear-ago level ; -Despite an unclear in- ternational monetary picture, rising interest rates, con- tinuing hi g h unemploy- ment. .. ; ... Chief economist \\'arned. . . that the United Stales laces a six percent in- flation rate next \'ear: -Orange Cou'iity's cost of living took a 1.2 percent hike. -Economists hope the .sharpest increase in the <'Ost ·- of living in 15 months is an ex· ception instead of a new trend. These are all evaluations from reputable. re I i a b I e business indicators -They are taken out of context <ind eliminate qualifying phrases -But they seen1 to lend con- siderable weight to a Labor Department report 1.1onday in Lhe DAILY PILOT which said: -··recent claims of victory over innation may have been premature." And then. of course, there is the stock market \\'hic h tells its O\\'n storv. \1ith its fluc- tuations coniirming, denying and qualifying the "-'hole pic- ture. These isolated quotations ~· . are lifted from press releases and news stories which come at regular intervals to this and other ne"·spape.rs, from banks, chan1bers of CQrnmerce and business research institutions. They reflect the results of surveys, reviews. comparisons of statistic!, and a variety o[ other fatlors. Jn few cases d{l('s any one risk forecasting !he status of the nation's economy. Any attempt to tlo that now just can't be done . '!'hose \\'ho view the picture optin1islically ha1·e much on "-"hich lo rely: those \~ho see it pcssin1istically are standing- on just as solid ground and both sides reflel'I the na- Lyon Van and Storage Now Allied With Transamerica Transamerica Corporation and Lyon Van and Storage Company ha\•e announced the acquisition of Lyon b y Transamerica for 4 1 5, 0 0 0 shares of Transamerica com- mon stock. John R. Beckett, chairman of the board of Transamerica Corporation, termed the ad- dition of Lyon a natural ex- tension of the corporation's activities in the service ric!d. Robert D. Ford \\•Ill continue as president anti chief ex· ecutive officer of Los l\ngcles- based L3•on. Founded by a group or in- dependent California movers in 1928, Lyon ranks ninls in size among interstate movers, \\'ilh 48-state authority and 1970 revenues of 22.3 million. Over half the company's revenues are derived [rom in- terstate operations and specialized packaging services to the aerospace industry. Lyon operates through a network of 32 com pany facillties and over 500 agents around the world. Transamerica and Lyon first iinnount·ed their agrce- 111enl in principle for the ac- quisilion in July, 1969. 'The transaction subsequently was approved by the C i v i I T.E. Drumm :· To Speak ~ . I'd {#. y ' At Meeting .. Thomas E. Drumm, recently appointed as national ombundsn1an for business. \\'ill make his first public address al the Orange Coun ty Chamber of Com mer c e Business 0 p po r t un i lies Con ference in the i\naheim Convention Center Tuesday. Aeronautics Board. "'hich had jurisdiction be cause of Transamerica's ownership o[ Trans International Airlines, a supplemental carrie1·. and the Interstate Commerce Com- mission, Y:hich regulates in- terstate movers. Beckett said Lyon "·i ll be operated v.•ith the group of companies v.·hich report to Dana Leavitt, Transamerica group vice president for finan- cial, tit!e insurance. and relocation services. Leiivitl i.~ also president of Transamerica 'Title Jn.~urance Company, a ma.1or 11tle in- !' u re r headquartered j n Oakland. Bo1id Sales Show Rise During May Sales of Series E and H Sav- ings Bonds in California for the rnonth of l\1ay •.•:ere $31 ,22!,252 as compared to $30,327,219 'or the san1e month last year. 'l'otnl accun1ulated sales for !he first five months of the '"Take Stock in A1nerica '71" can1 p aign a1nount lo $159,044 ,620 -an increase of $6,02..l904 over the same period in 1970. Orange County sales <'Oil· Honwidc pi<'ture as portrayed by the Nixon fldministration thii week : '"B ul if the (President's Na· Honal Council or Economic Advise.rs) was cautivus, sonie olher administratiDn officials were nol." It was thl' Purchasing t.1anagement Association for Orange County hi;:ch had an optimistic fort•cast a month ago. That forecast did not. ac- cording lo their nex1 1nonlhly survey, stand uri. indeed, the group's projert10n for Jun(' business is just '"not en- couraging." C0:\1PANY REPORTS They report: "Both production and new Hopes Told For "'est In Trading SAN FRANCISCO tBW) - Trade bet1vcen the Five Pa:-:ific states and world markets is expected to rise llQ percent to $40 billion annually by 1980. \Velis Fa~go Bank said Thursday. In a new and extensive study on Fh•e Western states -Alaska, California, Hawaii, Oregon and Washington -the Wells Fargo report examines in depth their position and in- fluence in world trade. Harold L, Buma, vice presi- dent and manager. Economics drpart1nent. explained that the five states account for 17 percent of the nativn·s volume or foreign trade and 3.5 JX'r· cent of the entire "·orld volume. The report says the greatest potential for trade growth lies "'ith the Pacific Rim countries of Asia since half the total trade of the Pacific states is already V.'ith this area. The Chinese market in particular could potentially act as a powerful stin1ulus . allhough not immediately_ In \\'estl'.rn Europe and Canada. prospects for trade gains are also hright since The import potential per person is high and rising. In Latin America, the report states. private in· vestments anrl political stabili- ty \\'ill eventually be translated into i n c r e a s e d foreign trade. orders fell orr In t.·lay. The employment index worsened Inventories o[ p u r <' h as e d n1aterlals changed little but prices were up fraclionally." But the.n there comes another evaluation viewing the scene differently. It is a survey of 12 leading economists and analysts who make up the econon1ic ad- visory board lor the Western business-financial newsweekly 1nagazine, California Busiiless. Almost unanimously they in- dica te the national economy is continuing to sho1\' a growth trend headed mod e r a t e 1 y up"-'ard. And lending so1nc support lo this opt1n1islic outlook 15 a TAKES NEW POST Gilbert Lomeli 2 Con1panies Join Forces Don Koll Company. Inc., Newport Beach b u i 1 d e .-• developer, known for · its suc- cess in developing built-to-suit properties, and Union Rea\('O, a subsidiary of U n l on America, Inc.. h ave an- nounced a long-range, joint venLurc lo develop. ret?~n ;ind sell build-to-suit indmtrial and com1nercial facilities C11lifor nia. Known ns Union-Koll, lhe California partnership h as completed construction of its first project, the 28.000 square foot l\1SI building al Fischer and Red Hill avenues in the Irvine Indu.strial Cornplcx Orange County. Drumm, a Ion gt i me specialist i n international business affairs. will disc uss MAIN SPEAKER Thomas E. Drum tributed $994.363 lo the state ,--------------------, the art of doing husiness with ------------ tbe federal government during a luncheon for lhe 500 Orange Coun1y businessmen expected lo attend the one-day eon- ferencc. 'The nation's f ir s t om· bundsman for bu~1ness will be introduced b~· chamber presi- dent Edwin II. Finster. The conference program. designed to explore n e w business opporlun1tics in government procurement and foreign trade, as \1·ell as small business, runs fron1 8:15 a.m. to 4 p.m. in lhree concurrent lieSSi005. Local Airline Aid e Na111ed SA;>/ FRAKCJSCO -~B\Y) -(i. Robert H.enry, 11 tor 1nanr1gement figure for nearly 20 years 1n !ht'.' airline in- dustry. has becon1e a general partner in Beauvais. Robert.~ and Associates. a leading management and 1ransporta- tion consulting firm based in San Francisco and \Yashlngt on, D.C. total for 1-lay. according to Donald P. Kennedy, volunteer county chairman. Last year the same nlOnth produced SR34.692 in sales and the five- n1onth to1al \\'BS S-1.287.386 as rompared lo $4 .743.957 record- C'd in the counly for this year to date. 01her rncou1·ag1ng nat ional ~ales trrnds \1·erc noted by Kennedy "Se rie.~ E Bonds alone tallied the highest sales 101a1 ~ince 1945, and 24 per- cent more lhnn in May 1970. l\1oreover, J:: and l·I redemp- tions. at cost price, \\'ere the lowest of any f.1ay since 1954. and 22 percent less than in l\lay 1970.·· he reported. "'The {'<tsh value of Series F. and II Bonds and f'reedom C1·edit Che~k PT&T St<1rts Crack Dou1n /\ Pa<'ific Te!epl1one official reporls lhal Uie con1p~ny Is stepping up efforts to l'Om bal the unlawful USt' (1f un- authori1.ed credit crirds or unauthorn:ed 1elephone nun1her.! to avoid tharges. In Santa Ana, division manager Standlee Kauti s:i1d Iha! from now on, aH new telephone directories will c<i•TY a "':iming in !he introductory pages lhal such misuse of nun1bers is cause for prosecution. Kautz quoled the "'aming as saying: '·Anyone v1ol11t1nl( Section 502.7, C:i lifornia Penal Code. by ;1!te111pting to avoid la1vful ch<irges for telephone 5ervice may be fined up to $5.flOO and imprisoned up to rive )'ears." Jn addition. Kautz said, the con1pany i.~ t;iking .step! to post the \varning in ;::.iblic phone booths. Finster said that Drumm. with almost lhrer decades of service in business-oriented federal agencies. is we 11 qualified to serve as a com- munications interfa ce hctwcen go\•emment and the nation's business community. Since 1952. Henry has been, successively: execu1ive vice president, Bonan1.a Air Lines: president, Pacific Air Lines, and president of Air \Vest ln<'. Share~ oUtstanding at !he end ~----------------------•! of r-.1ay reached another all· time record of $~.4 billion. which is more than 23 percent ()f the privately held portion or the public debt."' JUST WHAT'S GOING TO BE NEEDED IN THIS AREA? General Telephone Officials Study Aerial Photo1 for Guldtllnea Plio11e Fir1ns Pushed To Anticipate Needs By LEROY PC .. E U,I l v1l.,.H Wt!lt'I" t-.'E\Y YORK CUPI) -\Vhen the telephone company errs in forecasting public demand for service, it's a double em- barrassment. The company loses revenue by not being able to supply the phones and services re- quested. In the process of tryin g. lo calcl\. up, overload situations generally develop, resulting fn poor service and di ssatisfied customers. New Yofk Cily, for instance. has had telephone probleD\.I for monlh.'I. The company ad. mils its failure a few year! back to recognize the depth of today's demand aggravated the problem. KEEP AH EAD The answer [<: kl keep ahead of dc.mMd through surveys !hat anticipate the !Cope <Jf it. General Telephone and Elec- tronics. biggut of the in· dependents, even has gooe to the air to do this. It use! small airplanes. rather than the traditional physical surveys b y auto1nobi le. in some areas, especially rural ones. GTE says aerial surveys nnt on:y a re more effective in many in· stances but a!so 50 lo 60 per- cent cheaper. This system. however, is useless in a high density area like New York City which has rar more variations in telephohe use and services than a small community. Jack Finn. who manages forecasting for New York Tel, has a slaff or 50. It makes three .!urvey! a year because the demand pich1re c a n change with dramatic speed in lhe city. SURVEY EFFECTlVE On the other hand , Del Moort. operations vice presi- dent of General Tl'!ephone of the Southwest at San Angelo, Tell:., finds the artlat survey (S(e PUONES, Page Z'Z) report fron1 the Bank or California which says that even despite setbacks 111 rn:iny cconornic ~1reas, the state's cconon1ic standing is 6.8 per- cent ;'!head of last year. citing specifically thal utilities and services showed strong year- tc;year-growth and pointing out tJ1a1 construl1ion has re- bounded in recent months. A4ditionally the bank points out that personal incon1e out - paced inflation. But the report qualifies, it was only by a fraction and certainly not to such an extent as lo outweigh rorresponding increases in personal tax pa~·ments, and consumer interest payments and the general over-all rL~c 111 ----··----- cost of living. Perhaps the most pertinent, from a local s t a n'd point ('Valuation, is th at presented hy security Pacific Natlonal Bank, which eoncedes thaL n1any national ;ind local in- dicators suggest an improving eco1l0my, but , the report con· tinues reluctantly, "Southern California "s e1nployment and unemployment levels fail to reflect !hi! trend. SEASONAL GAINS Compiled by the bank"s economic research divi:;ion. this study shows there have been some seasonal gains in total emp!oy1nent 1 eve Is : ho""·ever. those gains have been far below expectation. Projecting future employ- ment trends. Owens "'ex plained that Sou t hern California '!! economic and employment base will continue il!I shift to the nonm.anufacturing employ- ment sectors: se rvices , wholesale and retail trade and government. "We can r:rpect a continuing aerospace employment decline throughout 1971 , in!o 1972 and no marked improvement until possibly as late as 1973." '·Se vere budgetary pressure on NASA and the Departmen~ !Ste P ROGRAM, Pagt 2.2) Auto Club Picks Mesa Chief Auton1obile Club or Southern California has named its Costa r-i:te s:i office manager, Gilbert l..01neli cf Huntington Beach, as manager of region IV con1- prising eight district offices in Orange County and some 114,000 member-motorists. Beginning hi ~ auto club career as Redondo Beach service representative in 1957, Lomeli subsequently worked with the Club's Travel and ~rncrgcn<'y Road Se r vice divisions before heading the organizalion'5 Costa .l\1esa of- fice. A native or Los Angeles, he served with lhe ·u.s. Army from 1951 to '54, then attended Pepperdin~ College where he received his bachelor's degree. A member of Town lla ll of California. Lomili is past com- mander of American Legion Post No. 373 and currenlly holds the rank of captain in the California National Guard. He is also a member of the Kiwanis Club of <M:ta Mesa. :iou nt:iy ]1:ive licJrd of energy !>amc West Texas from which we've ~hort:igcs J1iuing parts of the country. brou gh t you gas for nearly 25 years. !ihort:"lgcs th:1t incluc..lc natural g:i s. We're h elping finance c xploratio11 Can jt h:tppcn hcrt'? fo r new gas fields there. As f:ir :is your hon1c nrcJi; arc But whethet by pipe or by ship, c oncerned, no. Wc'l I be a hie to supply gas f ram one o r more new sources :ill our "firn1'1 customers, such ns 5hould be bolstering prcscnl supplies )1 on1cs and businesses and 1nost within a few years. jndustrics. (Si nce we don't have an We've been serving Southern l()vcrabundancc of g.:is, \VC may have Cal ifornia for over JOO years n o\</. i t ojntcrrupt deliveries more of ten to And we intend to goon like this!or e>ur jndustrial customers, who arc a nother ctntury or two. ! Jlrepared to switch t.oother fuels , ...#to .. SomhanC.JlfomlaC..Comrtaay whencver0firm" c ustome r:;• : ,_, _,,.~, • ..,.o1,..,1 .. 1•""""''"'l*"'.;r 11ceds require.} " --r,. But in a few years, as · Southern California grows, <Jur present sources will not lie able to keep up with the -. e xpected ~ro\vth. •••• ••• That's why the Gn . .; Con1pany js lining up added supplies now. We're looking in Alaska. An J C anada.And in Centra l and South America. 'fhesc places offer huge potential natural gas d eposits. Wj th . . problem s to match. • T h e te rrain is either roadlcss ice ·• •• a n d tun d1a or roadlcss sw amp and ····-" •• jungle. To get the gas ou t, we may !i have to b u ild thousan ds of mjles or : ! pipeline-being carefu l to maintain l --:.--:. the land's delicate b:ilancc of nature. -:. ~. plants to ljqucfy the gas at minus • ...... "··· ••• Or we may have to build expensive 6 ·--:.. ... .. . 258°F, then ship it home in tankers ~' ··., •• .. .. bu1lt like giant lhcrmos bottles. gg§ ........ ""······, Another pro mising source is the ~ ........... . "Wt'rt lnYUlin& ln 10DlOlliOW. ... I I I I I :· . . . . r " •' ~ " .. ' .. • • , ' ·' a:'Z OAJl Y I ~LI PROGRAM NEE DED • • • (Conll•Ded From P1gr ZI I of norn11:1\l} aerospa~ s n1aJot custonlf'rs -mea~ th11l much of our spec1ahzed comp I e x uf aerospaL-e workers v.ill havr too httle v.ork. and no real promLSC of sizeable nl!.W cun tracts in U1e next year to pro- vide thal work he :;aid Based on various econo1n1r.: indicators 11 appeal s unlikel y Mriy cos• ef living 1ncrr:iSC" Comm erce Sec re l ii r ) t.h1ur1cr Stans bel1l'~e5 "I'hl' rate of 1nflst10n has now comt' v.1th111 controlable OOundane.s and th1ii has tw:>en 1ch1~ved "1\hout a maJor d1slocuhon 1n the nat ions t'COnornv I guess thal mrans v.r ti JUSl ha'e to 11.a1t until all the aul l ontat1ve June 1nd1ca!ors <ire 111 before v.e (an tell l\h.'.11 h :ts bf'en 11a1orly d1!.located that So u t her n C11hfurn1a ~ aerOSpflct e.rnployn1ent 11;1lJ re I:'-"' bound lo 1\s for1ner ltivel ----... , In any t'aS<' .,, tliat one industry should 1101 be as 1,rreat 111 lbe fut ure as 11 ence 11-as At the s<1me l1n1e the rtpor! c.'DnU11ues while n1a11uf<it:lunnl( will probably Con11nue to pl iv a maJor role 1n tht• Soulhland WallStreet Cliatter employment 11.'!L dominance t~ .. should gradually give \1 ay lo the nonmanufaclur1ng sector~ NE\V YORK I UPI l "h1ch experl.'!L ant1c1pate will current market provide the future 1mpelus ff r ina} repeal 1ts Southern California s I (Ing term em ployn1ent gro111th Bank of Cal fornia also views the manufacturing tr d 1 c a I or s "1\h gloo111 specifically ci\lng dechnt' 111 transporla\Lon e<1111pment pro- duction for the May decline bul agreeing there was httle niovemenl anywhert' else 1n lhe fi eld So 1l 1s clear that not f'ven lhe besl ef experts 1n eluding the gove.1 nment -can <.:heer anyone up part1curlv using any ki nd cif rt'lt 1ble report or figures 1110VING UP\\ Ann If !here 1s a nJ f'n couragement 11 can best be rxpressed 1n the "ords or a United California Bank offi cial "ho stlll sees the economy moving sharply upward moderately upward \\ere his words and his en couraging outlook "as shared somewhat by Harold Suma vice president and head economist at Wells Fargo Bank 1n San Francisco who is still verv opltmtstic I m pleased \'lllh the at: lions of the consumer <ind the recent wage sel\lements of the alum inum industry don t in dicate to me an escalation or wage bargaining which all serm to agree will lead lG severe 1nn at1on 10 1972 IN PERSPECTIVE So perhaps the month b} month surveys should be put ln a heller perspective and the nation take heed of that ad mm1strallon spokesman v.ho doesn t believe anyone should push the panic button after !hr 10°/o NNN CARE FREE LONG TERM LEASE l y Cernpany •JM••lltl Ch• • '" -•• 'us ocio • 1 •••" IRKll C714) 642 os•o MAZDA ''ROTARY ENGINE'' FOR INFORMATION ON TOYO KOGYO STOCK CALL 639-3131 835-0404 DIVERSIFIED ... ... I t•<" A ••• SECURITIES INC n11d I9ti5 and the period assuming Iha! the <:ur rt'nl economic long term bull Up{\Cle marke t '"d have not yet run their Spear & Slaff says total dechne of 100 courses 1f so a points to the 850 level witlun a long market rise 1s Jikel) it rhe extent of the decline term adds in rrl<ition lo price and time 11ould depend en ne"s events as they unfold spear observes 'fhe market 1n 11s recent dechn"• has stilt no\ done anvthing different from 1\s pallern 1n previous bu J 1 markets according to E I Hutton a one third pullback Moul "hat ha s occurred IS often regarded as I h e minimum retracement likely to occur in a ma1or advancing phase It says adding that the reaction remains w1th1n the confines of a bull market The 11verage person appea r~ lo have adopted a s1del1nc~ ~lance 11.nd is waiting for the market to do somet1ng Reynolds and Co obser\ es Others 'probably mo re astute are e!lher upgrad ing their portfolios or n1ak1ng selections for present or futu re purchases of stock<: that are selling quite clearly 1n upward trend pfltlerns or ap pear on the verge of a move up from long establL~hed 11c cumulal1ve base formations The stock mlrket is c!earlv sens1t1vr to the txistence of the problem currently facing \Vash1ngton '4h1ch 1s no longer ho11 to start a boom or bring 1nflal1on under conlrol but rather ho11 to prevent a classic business depression aceording to Hoppin \\atson and Co Its cont1nu1ng s!uj.! g1•hness 1n the face of much pessimistic sent tment 1n du:at es tha t 1t 1c; bell lng the ~o,ernmcn\ "ill bUCcecd the anahst adds NEWPORT SHELTER, LTD A C ol fo" • l m led Po '"'"h p I to n9 f o m~d To Pu~~.,. A N ~"'po I Btoch OH co Bu Id n9 oot i M l l D P'AllTNfltSH P' \INT~ QF' HO l•tH M n mu.., Pu ch••• J u~ h ,./. Cumulat1v • Preferr1td Rat• of Return Sl!f l T~I( lfli:OllSTl<l•S I:\( 10•1 Wu < ~I Otl~t Iv o Jlt Nt•,.•! lt<1<~ no• 11 4/•45 ?120 ln, oavr ! ,.,.,...,.., h nrllll.-on 011rr to w<I ...,.. • oot ( 1 en ol on o ., ,, ... , • M l Untll Svc~ .11 .............. .,. Joy .... Offtr ~. Clt<UI•• lnYnlrn..,I tlrnlt9111 1'9 C•l ternlo •n-• •"" -• In<•-IR ••en• .i Jlt.OO """ • n•• -"h • •«•n" n1.-. New I 'u• All lhf's ~!~ti'~ h n1 1n~ ht-,.n J:rilrl 1h15 lllnJUlll:c m L ;ip1~ .i ~ 1 ~ .. mtittrr (I{ 1ccord onh 100,000 Shares '.@~ WILLARD BOAT WORKS Common Stock Par Value S.10 Per Shar. Price $4.00 Per Share Cl1J'llt"S or th,. f'ltrr-rln~ l:'l rc111~r m11y be nbtaJncd fl"' m t lw-utwleN:I~ flt W'- li'Cfl'ld dealt-ni: flnly In sint"I \\here Ill st W'("!Jr\t111 mn\ ho lrgally nrfcrrd Gusr. M ERJ-IAB & Co? lNc S•nla Ana, Calf. • OVER THE COUNTER l ~G•ntr "' AAt C<> S AFA P S ll AIO Int t 11 1 l S I ><: I A"IM (1> I ·~ ~ ll••rtNnUllw• lftl•r ... 1llr ..... uo ... , •I •""'lllfnlftly f AM Ire"' NAIO f'rl<n M Ml --td•il e< llMrW~ rn.lttM ... •• ~ernm ,._ NASO l11t1ng1 for Thursday, Jun• 24, 1971 " " " PHONES .. (Conlinued From Pa,i:e %1) for SCI VICC as lion grov.th rt1F.N HHI EF'J:o:D inns survt ;or~ b r 1eff'd b y H ,~Lo .. -A- I.I • ' •ll 66'· ' 51 ... , ' '" " " " " . , ". ' " ' ' .If •l " ' " ' . " '" " ~~ " " ' • ' ' ,,_ '" "~ "~ ' " " '" " • " " " ' • • " '" " . " '" " " ' ' " . ' • " " " . "" '" " '" " " " '" • ' '" " • " • .. " " " n •• '" . • " ' . ' " ',) ,, " .. ' " ~ '" ,, . ,. ,,. ,. '" " '" 11 6• " '" " . ... " • • '" ,,, .. • • ' , • ' . I~ " • .. " " " " '" •• . . • " " ' " " • ' '" • " " " " , .. " ' . " '" • .. "" " " " ' " " . " .. • •• ' .I • • .. 61 6) 9 10~ ' . ~ . , " ' ]f> • ll \ IH• t , 11 II •• u 1 • 7'o 11 7~ I l9V. Jl 3J l l ll~ •.I ., 46 ' ' " " " ' , " . ' ' ., . ' ' . " " " ~!': 1 ~; 1 " '" " ' " • " " ' ~ " n " , • "' ' ,. " " ... ' . " • " ll ' " ,. "' ' '" ... " " '" • • .. " " " '" " " " • '" ... • , '" • .. ,(' Complete-New York Stock Li st '" . " " "' ... ' .. ~ ,o<o ' " " ... :M )I ' ' . . ". ' . . " 1 ""' . " JQ3 1 10 ~ lU J , ' . 174 4 1G 31 1?6 ~s , n !/ o ))(l 1 • . " ' " ,. ' " . ~s 1e ·~ 11 S7 o , .. " . '" " 111 1 • 10 11 1U 'XI o 1 19 • 16 11\.o , " IJOQ lS ~ ... " , l:M ]t 1•1 11 • " " ' " IS 16lo 61 1& " . • • r 116 100 ' , J • 10 " " , ,,. 1so 61 17 •1 •5 s • •1 IS •• ... • • " . ' . 1111 .... " . • '" '" • '" " .. ' ' " . • " " "' " " ,,, ... •• "' ' • 19 ' ... " " ' ,.,, • • n•-" " l< • -.. ,. • • U I•<• -u i. u , 1'.,. ' .. 7• 76 76 ,.,, " . . . '" l.I • }O 1111~ 109 " • " " ,,, ,, '}I •O • 9 •• " ,, J1 21 2• .. • • . " .. '" ... •• " '" ' . '" •• n •• 131 Jl IJ 71~ • 10 . " ' ' ". 10 1l 1n , '• • • h S J .. 1 •S , ' &II 11 ' IO• 111 o -C- 10 Hlo • • " ' 1 t 111. " " 110 n, 1 10 ).< Jl , • ' ' 1J 61 ' .. ' " !:I.I •• 7 6) • • • TCl(t 68 161 lJ 65 70n " . •D 6 t ~S! !8 ... " ' ' .. . " ·~ ~8 n ;6 ~ Si• 1 o . ,, . " . . " . " 9J " . ,. " . " ' " . •S 1• )0 s • l!I "16 1i )~ • ·~ 49 • . ' IO ll " ' ~ " ~. Joi • •• " . ]/ 'l . " ,, J? ' . • • 1J " I 10 • ' ' '" '.'It 1, • • ,~, 7~ • , ' •• ' ' " 1 }I] 1 6 1 70 SI l 40 • ••l • • " . 10\o , . .. n ' . li'• '" ... , ". "' .. •• ' " " . " " ' ' .. • !/>~ • '" " ". '" ". " '" " . •• ' .. ' , ' " " ' " ' "' " 41 • ., ,, 1• . .. ' " 11 ,79 + 7•1 7• ' .. 1\. JO\. . ., ..... 'Ill. 'iO . 7)o 71o 17 17 70 ) 'XI. S6 1 '6 0 ~ ~~~ ~ ~ \J. -,, ,. . " n .i\o •O ' u 111~ e ' " ~ ll' , In , . ' . 1• ,,,, - u~ 1t4 -• • . " l • J"1o .. " ' ' 7• • ,, ' " '' , ' ~ .. .,, l? 4~ • • >t71• 1~ ]!) .. •61 JI' • ltl 1 " .. ' . . ?J .... l<I n I 1 ' " " 9 l"'· l• 1"' •l • •l l 7l.0. 17 .. . 161 )J 11 •Olllo )O . " .. " ,. " ' ~~ ~~ •1 •I ' " ' ~· J• .. • ' "('l 4< • .. .. . " • • ' ,. 00 ' ~ IJ< "1 'J~l . ' 1116 " } . ... ' " 7 J ll ' " M 1~ ' . 5 \ :: • "' .. • ,. ., .. .. " • • , .. " .. '" "' ' '" " '" ' ., " " .. ' " " " !i ., .~ ·~ " " " .. " " 'I " "' " ' .. ~, ~' '"' II~ ~ r. ... " '" • • .. " " • ' ,. " ,. " '" • ' ' .. , " " .. ' , ~ 'l ' •• ., " " U" r., .. "· " . '" l • '" " '" ,., •• " ' '" "' "' ' ~ '" , ,, " l! •I " ~"'it " ... " " '" .,, " " " • .. ·~ n " , '" • ' " . ' " ' " u ' .. ' • " • "' ' • '" ' " ., ... 11~ ;t • u 7J • ' " 119 311 ~" 'iO '' • 71 II 1•1 1J • ,, 1J ' " 7•) M • " " I 11 o lS 10 > Jl ., ' " •! 7]t.;, ~~ l$ ' ~100 7Jj -G-., , .. ' . ". Ji/ • ~ ' . ' ,, ,, " " 70 •• 6 16'~ ]9 ' • • l l • 11 , • ., 11 n ' n 11 •l " . . " gs 19 • 59 ) .,, ' ". lit ,., 7H 51 o " . 111 JI , 15 11 • 91 i• l? lt " . ' . J S6 n ' ' l } JJ 1• 7? " . " . "~ ~· 0 • l•J XI o • • ... 1'7 ll' 99 :lJ • . " ln or , "". • • " . ... n ' ! 19 • ' ' :)j)) u. 71 ll • 160 " .. •J 9 • ' " " ,, 6 • 6l 7• • 1)1 1ll ' ll Jl I 7l 1 II Jj o " . , .. I 79 ' •l I o , " 6l 63 J 0 'l 1! 1" • . " I! J4>~ , . ,. ' ""'" 7 ,.,, II• l l\o ••• • 7! I •• U6 70'.l 116 • •I 1!>1o 101 ,. ~ ' •1>.l "" n ,. •lo ' " ' . "" " IJ6 1f , ' " ... ' ' -HI- " " ' • ... " ' • " •• ' • ' ' ~ , '" • "' " • " " " ~ ' • .. ' " ' '" " " ' '" • •• "" " " "' "' "' " "" ' " ", '" ' . ' •• "' " '" '" ' .. .. " " • • ' ' !.I •I '" '" ,. . ~ • • " ., ... '" .. ' ... " . n•. " ~. " . ,.~. " " '" , .. .. '" ,.. '" " . " • •• " '" ". • ~ ' " ~ • " " " ~'. " • .. ' .. '" " '" ' • " " '" " '" '" " " •• ;w. •• " .,. " • " ... " . w '" " . '" ~ '" "" ••• " '" " . ' " • • '" .. ' . " " .. . .. " , " ' ,.,, '" " ,,. " . "" ... '" " '" 1ta; ' " ''" " " •• • •• " " . " . ' . • " • " .. ? ~ • • ' " . " 10 " II • o II'• •I• " , 10 •• • r • ' .. ' w 11 .1•11s .. +1 I.II I~ IOJ IOl'il -.. llCl"Xl"lO"+• 11 •I"' H o ""' -•• I JI • )t" )tt,_,,._ '!: n; 1:~ nt: ... " i.1¥1 .. <11.•t. l •I hi Id -ll~ li..!·ll~lll.+ .. 17 7S" l!h ,~. -~. I» •'1 1 •l U"'-+'-lt SI 'Ill • !.O"" -to 19 J.11J.l •U -\lo 1 lo-lo J61o t i> l l ll... ll • ' 11 ) 11 , 7H1 -h 1 10 .01.0 1 +1• 1 1611 I l6ta l!l o l~JI• •I 1& • IJ>o H> • 1 /I TT 11 -1 S JI\• l! J~ J~',:~~il~:! 17lO l JQ JO'-' !l , .... ,, • l1'i0 + 10 d •7'· ,,,,. llOOlo O \ 10 . o . 01.+ 36 11 )~ ]J, 1 , • l s ~ ,~l~;i~~~!"!~ 9S 1 o,; 91 , -! ' ,. • ' t • ~ ' J,6>, So\o ;a •I ' «I «I -! St ?l>o 11 1110 I ... , "" 111. l ;>.,, + 1100 S/\iit SI 511., • ~, 'l J' .. ~~! ~l .= ... ; I? ll o JI JI-. l '1•1 •1 11) i 1:"' ,1J· 1'C': _.., .. 1l1 ll o 11 ll o -fl • 16 11, n• 13,+~. 167 ?71o ?<l o ?1 ~+ • fO I 1 1 • I I! o l 11 ~ •ll lhl -"o •• ,., 4 1• u ,. 1 ' 1~. 0 l)l, 1.lll J I ll '>~o -\f •I 3' :M J.I s 6 • 6 • l?O ll 6 I I • ~1t \1~.\~I -! Hiii '°' 109 69 106 ~ 10 lo.IV. JC•1111 18 ~ so 01 'o 101 101 Sl •O Jt> Jti -; )J •.i. •• • .,,,. -• •17 'o11 '1 -'· 1 8Sl5 1S -1 • v •• ,. 19•+ 11 I • I> 17 , + 0 3l •11'1'-· !i0 1S 1 1.>15 -' SI 11'4 11"4 11 111«> s.n 3-37 :J..J2 1l ~;. ~;.i ,;1• + 1611~71 11 J ll p•, lf • "·-·· 1 Jl o 37 37 '-~ 6' o/ 4t, ..,.._ • -J-K- 116, ,~ ,~ 6 ltt, It U JJ l?•o 12 !1h - IJ ll>o 1H• ll o 1 •• ,. •1,., •!' -• • 60 '''• !~-·· lll ll .. JI•• l l i -"' u ... "" .u.-.. fl'OO ll', I•> h • + ~1 l0711 l 1 21 '> ~ JI Jl>o ll'!o + • 57• " '17'• n -1 • 19 l• Jl• :M + • It 5/l i !fl,,~, SJ A -\, • 1l . 'lo lJ + ''4" 1110 SJ SJ .5J 10 19 • I~ o lf;'o + , I 1' 71'• 1t -"• n sJ s11o s1~ _ v. IJS l l'o J JI .. + o l70/D70 1 /5 7010-l'o I 61 61 61 ->, lolO 37'11 JI• J7 'a + • 5! lt<lo It• 191~-0 ' ,, 0" ., ,. + H 161 16~ 16 -''o 61 JJ • lJ I lJ.i,i, + \1 )I ~ «) "° 7 7110 11V. 11 • -0 S lO' JI! XI •-~• ti ,.,, ,. 16 n 111. 12~. n • + I 3' , :):1 J'l -'• 17 S8 SI l 51\1 -t 1 ' n~. 13, 1)1,_; l 7• • ,... ,.l, -11 J• l • ,,. • ,.. 79 791 79 , 11 n ,;1 .23.,.._ I 3'1'< Jllgl .19,. 76l6ll>•l6 +•. I ii> ll ~ 1 1'0 -li J);o Jl J) ~ 111 ,...._ :n•o ?H• .+ •26 7.>hU .Jo IJ51 Il l JJ,r,. -2 I 10) lOJ , IOl , -9 IJ o I.I 15\o l'Ot 2S o 13'14 ?I I :o-5 SI .10 51 +- 91 ,, • 19'olo ,.,,, -~. .. II • !t ... It~, -, I\ l)1 XI J'.1~1 +•• ·~•161& II •9 o "'~ '9':. ~J ., ~· .-. -r • 1 •I •I 111'!., > 4J , I J o 11"-Ii U 11 • 1''o. • J7 ll Jp, 19 J0i1 lO ~. +-.. S ll 1 11'\ l2J oJ •l 4} • ll11S o ll •llo 1 7J"' n .. 71•• .- ti •I• 40 > • > +~. -L-• ' " , ifl, J ·~· ,, 10 t ll • ' !/ • 16 37 " . ~ ' Jt ) lS It ... 16 ... 11 u 1, . " IS It>;, ' " "'' ., . . " » .. . ,. ... la 1• so ,.., ?• SJ • 11• ,. /1 '" ' " ,., " ' " '" "' " ' " . .. ' . lS'o .. '! ' ' ' » ' 17J SJ ll , 100 n • . ' '" , . ' » ' '~ !O 9! 'l"' . " 1'1 s ' ' , ... lo 11 , -M-- '" " " • • " ~' 17~. " . •• '" ... '" '" ••• "> ... " . ... " ... 7 lt>. " ., . '" " " . ' ,. .. » " " '" " ' . '" " '" " " " • • " " "• " " ' • , ' '' n • n 7• I I ' . . D • • •D • II o 16 ~0 • I n l• • 3't .. •• •9 ' •J 0 ., l)Q,JG , I JI 17 'll .JI. ~., ll•• ll • j(t JI Jo>.. ,,, J~~. lA • "' )I lJ ., " n n 15 u . 1S1 1 • "'" ll IS ll 46" 1S6't 6!• It JI IJ!0 •1 lSG .. ~I ~ :w J}', "° 1'(I • 70 ~ . " . t st .59 11 S7l, !I o lJ ID IOo •l 7•l 7•· •1l!,J1 11 •O o n i ~~~.~: 31 l ! • l• ] 1J I )J 01~,ll 111 ,77 , •10 J• ,. ii •1 •1 t•I If J.4 1t l• •• 6 •I ' 111 • "• ~ ,.. ' llVo " 111<1 -• il\ -• 10 ........ ~-+ 11•. .. • JH•-• ~ -4· l .. + •• !& .. -'" l,, ' ' '91> -I llV. .... ... • " ., " • l'' ~ ' . • 11 4 -• ~l . -.. " .. :: . ~ .. " . l< • -• •• ». -" .. ' " " ' . "' " 11! ~1 "; '" " , • • " ' • •• 10 " ~' •l ' - l ,,_ ' ' " " • ,, 11 ' -• " ., " ' • • .. lO ' ~ • ~ -~. " " + JI • -•• 31,. -.. 11 + • 1.1 \ -~ • ,,. :r: -'t !l~~ -• -0 _, l l'• -• •• + . ,_ J9 i • Slit ~ " ,, . - 31,.. -~ ' . "' ". -'" l i.-1 " ' . " '" I~ _,., " . " '" " -l~ 1)• 111 I' u' ~' on ?l 11 • ' n • ii , \J(t 1 )1 • • •l 0 1 " ., JI ~ ..0 't , , n 5• , •1, IC8l •P , 11 t u 1 /J7"' :»~ .~ 7 f , • ' 10 ~ -• • 11 . -.. 11 ~ .. •J • +1 " ,, ) - SJ\ -'i; 111• 4 • ID .t'' ';,' -. • ,. • N ~ N N N N ~ N N N " ~ N N ' N N N N " ~ ~ N 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 g ' ~ ' ' ~ ~ ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' i ' ' > ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' rr day J nt 7S 1971 sc'--~~~~~o_AJ_L_v_P_ll_oT~2~~~ Frida)'·s Oosing Prices-Complete Ne,¥ York Stock Exchange Li st "* IM•I • ... '10 • It 111 1 6 l • !) ll ~ "· II.._ Ii , S• !11. l' ! • l• • ll I ' I ' u n •• " ' '" 1 ... .. Sto~k Leaders MOST SHARES " " • "' " ~ • " • • • 10'• () ol •I j9 .\9 ... " '" If , -" • ,. . .. ~ ". ' .. ' • •! •! • " . ll JI ' . ' ' " ' • 1 ll • ' , . " ' • " ' . ., " ,, 6) . " " ,, " •I t J . ., " . , " .. ' " . " "' " . ' ' ' ' '. " 11'• ' . " ' ' " . ' . ' " 11": 'l>CA. RCA (\og! t l'!(A o J ~ 11 ll .,, ,., ll J!I, '" ' " •M , llleoa ~9 CD • "e•O n9 ! ~· --.\ lidil Ba A JS • " -N- • ' "' • • .. ... "" "' • .. "' " n • H " " " " " '" H • • " .. " ' .. .. • ' . •• " • " . '" " " ,., •• " l\' • ,,., '" ll'o • . , '" "" " '" '" '" '" H " '" 2l•o " •• ,z. ' ' " " " " I ' " 71 6~ '" '" '" ... • '" ,,, " " '" ••• " ... " '" " . 18\o " '" '" " ,, " .. " , " 'I'• " , .. ' f;'• " 10•. ' " ,. " ,,. " '" " ,, .. " ' .. . " JO 10.\ 0 7l'• ) 01 ' I 00 )0 l 10 ~ 8• 11 ' " • 11 • ,,. ,. !.\ ,, '' ' " " " " " . ft, " " " " 1~1 a •• 21 l7 , JI JO • ?O 11 <\ ' " ' .. • ' ••• " • " .. • • " , " " . '" . A• •I ' I jp>O U 17 31'~ ll 9~ ll.. 1l o 7J n " ' ' ' "" " ' '" ,,. • '" '" ••• " " .. " " • 1 1"0m" 100 "e~v B t l(l l>e <" C" 10 li~Ab~I oQ M:e «)n ~I IQ ' ' l1•o -... ·1:~1:~~·. 'i'~ ' ll<ecut; c c., R~P'1D~ I oQ R•ld I( M 1 R•V(O 0~ ii llevo P (OP I Rev on I '" • ... , ••• " ' '" " ' ... , . .. ' " " Re• C~n lo) I"'•• cnn 10 I Rc•n Ind ? •O ,0 Re•n<> 1 Re•nMo O Qo, ,/1 Pl• 10 Rn• n~ola 1fl ,R<n<110 I~ R '""'' • I R ""'" P (>Cl 11 •o• r l!O 1 i;> o G n<t 60 0 lloGnP!0 Rl•A<I 11 R vl1~•Fd1 'o lloarisr 11<> , RQt;,~(c (I -lo :g~ ;~H ~0 Rocnc, ? o Roen lo 1 , Rockower 1• -RockM o •O ~ Rot-rnH Mt> ROI> Co SO 'o Ro n•lnc 12 • " :~~"~c.,., 0 Ro~Am" Ro•CCo • I' + 1 :g~gu• .j 8:: llr•• t 1<1 •RlECoo I? lluc~• Co Run 10<> tS • RYd! 5, '>0 • , 31'-I'> S~l""•d Ind 10'• S1leW1• 1 JO 16 • S Jo•M I 50 ?6 ~S JoLP !GO 71>-U Sil~"" ?'O ,,. I ~Siieo•" ltO 16 + S1nOG1• I oe lJ ' + 'to Stn!ie • Au<> IS StJlll&mo 40 29\~ SJuanR 1111 1'1 0 -+ S•Folndll>O ?lo -SFelr.d pl 50 •Ho -, S1nFt n! )) 15-'o -~ So.we Sci lO , .. " • " . '" " . '" '" ' .. " " " " " " " . • " . • ". ll s,v&nne 1 ? S111A Sroo ,, Sox"" Ind Sena,,;• Cp ,., Scnnva !ft +~1 SchePot0 -It Sthll rB 1 60 -~ Sen mbt •O -" -" _, SCM Cn <> i~o~AL ;g ~sl Sco1Fe1 80 Scott Fo 40 Seo Pac• Soc• 10 o Scov ~1 l0 • Scu<I Duo V +•~Uddp o sncLnlo ~~<IN d A• Seag vr d .~ • .,ro1.a S o llp <O S•<tr~n Ln• • S~co Inc 01 St '"'' J(lt> 11 • Sll•oP I Ind se1 -~s .... 101 1 ~ ~l > $1\f ll T U<i 15 ! oSl\e ~G 10 loll .... -+ •iSl\o !G ot >S 11 • Siie wVJm 1 l'l •-+ \S~•I tH 10 ->oSf "P•c. !0 lS" f 5 9n• Co HI iil'• ~ .. s 9<>•1 "' 0 11" -.-• S 9n~r 01 l ll •-=-.S oro<le Io ll1<J+1S ,.,ml>•< ''• -'o S mmon' I~ Sl,_, >-loSmoP• lilt> •l -'-<Si"llf(O l<O S4o -•Sn;~ ~ll \0 r1 -+ • ~~=9~'6' 1'" lo ~k]l(pp » •iS•YI "" IO 16 S<nl l\AO ¥> 7i Sm ~I •O 1J>o Sml h l(F 1~ Smuck~ 10 1g • ~g~~. ~·" ;.o • 1~""'( .. 11 , nnv ro Olu 36 " ;~g( nr 01': '' sr~r1JJ ,1l • St1Jr I l'D ~ ~CV "dwn c • " ,. 6~·· " " " '" " ~a1. " '" " " " " '" ~ .. ' " " • ' , . 0 • " " • ., • " ' " • So<1v..n r eo Soe• I'S I l~ louC•IF ;.o • Snti•h Co 1 '6 ' Sou n(,E I !Ml \1>11NG1t\ I •O \ou11>n P~c l \oullnll•JJi Soolh R• ~ s~uuc.~ ;~ lw• A • I \wt f'\ /< 0 Sot • Mui \11< '<II <~q '•\rrnorE 1 ~ .... ~o 'lo I I •l\av• O ~GI ~qv 111> o \CU ~I\ I> • OY I I "' S R•"<I ~ \~11'<1 rJ\n B "~" <0 < d I -' ' ~ o r. '0 ' ~10 IJ Pl'<I \<10 011 ?7U ~no• rJ l ' " ' s p ... ~ ~ \., II ' So to (ftd~ ) ••m '"""' 23•.:J.OO !JI 900 , ... I I JOO lo.I 100 .. ~ lO• ..00 lo JOO ~1 l!8 , .. n 100 .,. " ,,_ .... ... •• '"' "" '" '" " '" ' . '" " '" N.Y. Wintaers and Losers - • 10'• '' ? • ,. 1t ' . " n 16 '" ' 19 'Q ., 1' " . • • ' .. " ' . " " ' " ' • ' "' " •• .. • ' ' 1 ~·: " " • '" !1 '• ' " • 11•1 ' • " " " " " " ' • " " 1. -Ii ' '" I•'-• ~ .. ... Hlth L"" (IO"" (lo .. Q • • 0 i•6l~.3t l6l A , 17' lt )) , .... 1liio 11 .. •ll:W J' 11 •l • ,U1 •I"> ~ • .-.n .• . , l 'XI In / M ' ' . I •1 l~ ' (/ 10 •a • II 1 o I• o I< JlB d < I ol 41 " M ' " " '" • " " " .i I 111 " ' l· • • j) J,j ... ' . ' 10 1 ... , ' J~ l: . 1•t. )9 ~1 ll • •• " • ~ t o I~ o A\<>tO~dPrn •11 Tot.ii Up Ho)'.tl Jnns Re 1 al Inns of 1\mt nca Inc hll' It pl rtc<.I J.:rO~<\ soles Of "" lil '>3" rrnn1 n1 lv.nrk opera t1( n~ fur ~11\ -a 47 4 percent 1111•1:l'C 011r lht $1 55399 4 i.;n"~ ~ii ~ 101 ii for the san1 e tnor l11 I 1-.L 1c 11 I ht flgl11 t rl p r ~cnts sate~ [ H \IHC lll11lllh ffUlll 11) t'nlrl nd l11'll1Jr holcl.'i Jolly KlnJ 1 1 nil) Hes! ~IT Ir ts <ind Lo.~t Kn 1L.:l1l t 1ckt 111 Loun&CS ac turd1ng-l 1 !'. Clrl t 1Hgosn1n Ch 1 rn1 111 or the Board and Pres1de1 I Coinpl ete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List " • ' . • '" .. •• • " ' 10•• ' . " • " ' ". ' '" • •• ' " ' ' " ' ' ' • ' •• ' . " I• • " • ' . SIU Cllcl• J HI;~ ' ' " ' ' ' ' • • I~ 16 ' ' ' . . " ' ' " ' . " ' ,, ' • • .. " . ' ' I l ~ ' ' ' ' " ' • • • ' ,' ' " . ' 1 9 ?l • d ' ' I\ W ' ' . ' '! \~ ' " ' ,, " • " . ' ~ h•o JI J! ' " ' .. I 1n • ' " " ,, ' ' IQ 71 ' " " ,. '" • • ' ' ' " ' .. ' . ' • " ' . • • • ' . • ' . . " •• , '" " l •• 0 •• " . .. • ' • " '" .. • " " ~ • I • ' • • ,, • ,. • " ' " ' . ' ' " IK 9 • to 1 o e -E G-' . ' " " ' . ' ' " , ' ' " " ' ' ' • • ' ' , ' 'l. 1Y ?• ' ' ,. ' ' " ' " ~' I• ' " ' • ' ' " " ' '" , . " ' ' ' " ' • ' ' ' ' . JI 4 • I l • I 0 1•. 11 11 I ~ •' 1! 11 te 11 ~ 10 7 • 0 10 x; It , ' . l\ 1 0 16 lS', ' " ' " 71 11 I~ • o " ,. " • ' ' ,' .. ~ ' " " ' ' ' ' " , ,l " l " " ' • " ' ' • , ~ ,.: ' '" • " ' . ' .. ' " ~· • " , .. ' . ' ' " , .. " .. ' '" " •• ,. ' .. " . '" ' • JJ • ' " ~ u . " , . 1J ~'lo " , " . ' . l! ,. ~ I 10 I 1 .. ' . I " ' . " . , " ' " 1~ i II 10 • 11•-. " , .. .. ' " ' . ,,. '" " " " ' 0 " '. , " " . .. ... .. ' .. ' " ' ' . " ' • .. .. ' " • • " '" ll ~ .. u ' 11~. '. '" •• .. .. " ' " I • " ' • .. ~· , .. .. • ' . ' " •• • • ,! ' " " • "• ' '" " ' ' ·o ' ' '" ' ' , ,. ' ,. • ' • • • ' " • " ' " '. .. " ' ' ' , ,. ' ' '" • ' ' . ' '" '" "" , • ~ • ' " . , . '" '" " " ' , " .. "" " " ,, • •• •• • '!. ' " -" ... " '" • • ' '" " " ,, .. ' }) ' +-'" -I~" -+ ,,_ "" -' . l~I .. "' " . ,._ ] ... !. : • IJ•< ,.., 11<1 J <Ohl fng JMTitl"'"" Jl'ano• ~ GI Jtllo~Pn J• .... s ' J•v•Con l~ontln~ ~~ .. I)~ ~~ Ju • Co • " In /71 '"~~· M)I • "" 'I II wl " ~·~s· 9'J • • fo " .. " S•lto llMh I Hit~ l.IW Cl&<I "' '" ' " .. ' ~ " ' " " " , ... -• .. " • " ,, l • + • • " " " ' • " ' ' ' , ' ' 1•• ' ·- " ' , .. • " " . ' ~ " u ~ 76'• 76 11 • 71 ·-.. •S '"' -H I- ' " ' .. " . 10 1l ' " ' " ... ... ' . " . • • • • . ,. '" ' " 0 I< J• " • ' ' ' ' " • • 10 1• " . l ., • ? 11 > ' .. '\ 1'9~. • • " . 1 I• • • 3J•• 1. ' .. " ' I lJ • 16 1~ ~. ,, , . ,. '.19 • .. " ... , .. '" .. .. • " " • " . " •• • • " • • ' ' 0 " " ' '" ' ' " " " " " " • " '" JJlo " •l'~ " ' " .. , '" • " " .. " '" . .. • o I ' " . ' , ? • 111 7a • • ~ 1Q • 10 " I , I< 1 11 o H I I! ~ ' . ' 11 I I ?1 •I •I~ ' " ' " ' ' ,. . " 70 I•'• 1J o 0 ' •• -J M- " . " .. 71 . ' l• • • • i? '• . ' 1! ) • \~ ,,,.. ' . ,, ' , ' ' ' lJ " .. ' • .. " . • ,. . " ' l• r " ' " ' . ' ' • ' • l ' " • " " " . .. '' 1' IJI l ' " ' ' ' " . ' . . " ' •S 61 1J •l " " l II o ... 111 11 • ' .. ~ :·· " ' 'i ,1 ~ 1JO 1!l. ' ' , , • • " ' ' ' . lo t o n i • ' " • 10 • ' ' ' " 1) )lo 11 ' • ' 11 > . ' ,. 1~ • • • • J~ II • Ji '' • " . ' ' . ll 61 11 " i 1~ • ~1 ; ~ 16• ,,~ ~ ti 'o 7• • "' ·: 1~ ,, l1 ... 14 II , 1' ' -. il i~ , ,. 11 1to II l!'ili tf ~i ' '1~ '1 ' • •• . " ' 'I" 7• I lo 1! t : it ~" J1)\ ~". ' " " '" " • .. ' " • " I " • ' ,, ' " .. " • ' ' " " • •• '" '" " .. .. .. .. .. ' ,JI• '" " , •• " ' " " ' " . , '" " ' " " " .. ,,. " . •• ' ~· " . • '" • .. " ,, " • ,,. lJ l ,,. '" ,. '~ " , 111. ,,. " '" " " ~· "' '" • • " . ' \ '" ' . '" '" ' " • ' ,, ' • • ' ' " " ' ' ' • ' ' • ' ' • " " MMQ Inc Mo"° E' Pd Mo< on S 11 M"' a no\ M1Ve nl0 May 511 '>O Mo~ ollO MPS (o lO oMPO Ve.., Mu I Am 10g Mu!• Co S•tH Nu (hdt I Hlth ltw Cl110 Ch9 .I u ... ! ,.,i. , " t i II' 11 1' • n o , . , " ' . . ' ' .. " -NO- ' • "' " , '" " ' . ' ' • l• • ' , • " " " " ' ' ' .. l?\. ' ll'o '" " ' '" " " ' ' ' " ' " ' • '"· " ' ••• " " '" ' ,. ... , 1' .. ' • " l••• •• " ' " . ' " ,,,. • " " " " • , lo > 11 " ' .. . ... " .. u • " . ' '" ,, • .. " .. " ' • ' " ""' • " " " ' • " " • ' ' ' ' , ' " 11oa ' ' " ' ' "' ' " • ' " • .. .. " " .. • • " " ... " ' 101. • .. ,. " . , ••• ' '" " " " • "' • ' " . • ' • .. " ' ~. ' " .. " ' . .. 10 ~ '; ' ' n 16 • • " ' " . ' ' ~ 1; • " " ' ' " " "' " ' " • " " .. ' ,, " " • " ., " • " ' • • " ' ' ' " '" • ' ' " ' ~ '" .. " ". .. " '" ,. ,.. ' '" ' ,,,. " "" ,: "" • " ,. " . '" ". " . u '" " .. " ... , . • " ... ,, ~ '" .. " " ' " " .. " ' . " . .. ' " " " " ' . ' ' 7 '1 '' ' . . . ' , 11 I J 1J • " . • q • • ~ t ! ~I ?l'o l1 " 6 ~ ~ ! • ' " ' 1 1~ 0 l 9 1 1 11 111 16 • II ' . . I ~ ' l~o ., ..... I t o 11, !Olloll ~ ,9 '• ' ' ' 6 JJ 11 • 11 'P o ., .. I 1 ''" 1l ,... It •? ,.. 11l.. -RS- ,,_ ,. ' " " • ' " ' " ,.., • 101 • .. "' " ' . .. , ' l• • + .. " ' " •• ... ' . • '. '" ' ' ' , " " • • " • • " .,_ .. " • ' 31•~ ' -" ' 10•~ " "' '" '" " ". ' " " ' " " '" • ' " " ' " " " .. " " • ,,. ' • '. -.. " ' " • " • ~ • ' '• ' . ' " " " J )\ ) .. )l ,+ s !Jh lllo 1JV. 70 s • I Jt& 11 , IP., I 6 Slo H I.I 1' o J s•~ s '> 1 11 o n , 4 16 IS o •• lll ~ 1' . ' , J ' 0 7>o ) 1 • 11 ·~11.11 10 • ' ' . . ,. 1 1 ' ' ' 110 6 • ' ' ' . ?i !'> S4 ~ 7l 'l I ll 11 1 ·~ 1a ,. 9•o 16 ll 'o ' 31 I ''• 1 '"' 1 ~ 1 • .. ' .. } 71, l•• I H .. 1•\o ' 10\lf 10" • n1o n, ,. . .. . ' ' . , io JD~ >e1 J llh IJll 11 !'II ' • 1~ n 1) 1' 11 ~ 100 ... 1~ ~: 1!•; 1r~ IJ ~... ' ' 7 "• ••• \t •O , :rt • I IJI> IS ~71 .. ,t · l )I , l l '> 41 1!'o 1J o lJ l!'• l• • •• 1i ' ~ 0 ~,:..;,i , . . ' '!lj,l,, '1~ ,:-: 1l : • 'o .1 . ,, ' t I o I o I 11 t 1 ~ J,: ,:· "• • ,. .. -,, - '" • " ,. .. " . • • ' . "• ' ' ' '" Mlgh Low 10 1t • ' ll • ' ' ll 10 .. ' ' • "" Clo•e Chg r 11 , Nh ·~• 0 1 wntn~1[ I Wh •• "' So •t \hd1 I ' .. " • Hlth '". •• ... Low c Oii Cft .. " . • in o .i. .,_ ... '" ' ' " . o ·111>n •r"' " l N n ~ I <I 110 W cc Gno . . •'• -, " ~ o }'o !I• 1: I Zt';:'r~ • 1• , I )/ 1 "'• 11 +-"' ll 6•llo e• 01 J! ' " ' . ' ' .l• ~i • • ' " '" ' ,, I"" ' C!F 11:1 • • W \D<I(<> I JI 6 • w "'' '" "' •• W •onll I l 1 • • 6 • • ,. 1i• l.S»-•- 179 lo8•+ • II II o l/>o - " ' ' ~1 ., IW •on Ph 11 l w,nsn •o •o -w .. ,.,so eo I I I 7 > + \ 1 ~ 9 • ' " ' .. " '" ' .. 1 W Qn5owl 1• w ~~nn~O 1 I• 1> 1• I 11 • • •l· - ' 5 • Wov ln~v• 16 e., a . ~·+~ 18ol ol,o -• . ' • Wood nrl ~11 • 18 18•• 81 l 11 • ' .. " 1 W&<llOQYa 6 1•11 61 6-l U •• • • w ~th~ fn l;1l1i. ~i.1l'i..+1 l :11 •• 7• 1~ . ' ' ' ' ' " ' •• W JO:h1H~a 11 • Wh_A ~;a ·•~1'·1'~ • • ' • ~ W~nao<I s ~o 5 , l o -VI I W•~ L'"' 1• • • • • ~ 1 Vv n () ll 1l ~\ ~~o -. ~ l~ • l!I J~\, • " • " • y~' d 1 V~n•ll•f • 110 0 1 ' ' ' " " ' " ' • ' . ' . 11 )1 " . ' ' ' " . " ' ' ' . ~· 1~ ' " ' " ' • " ' ' " , ' ' ' ' ... ' • 1n•. '" " 1•1· ' " • " .. .. " ' " " '" ' . •• " '" ,, ' . '" • " • " .. J l • 71 1 1~ 10 I I ... I , ' ' ' 1 ~ ,; 11 • 1• ' " ' ' • . " ' ' ' " . 16 ,, . " " . ' . ' ' ' " ' " " . . " ' ' ' ' ' " " • • " ' ' " ' ' " ' • • " ' ' " " ~~ " " • " ... )ho > 1 " ... ' " . • ' ,, •• '" " " ' • ' -· , .. ' • " ' ' ,, " ' • " " ' ' . n11n.n JI t • • , • ' '" ~ 0 qc, 1-"ll l• I ~ I IQ 0 ,~. ., . .. •l I~ , 10 , 10 -fZ- '4 I~ ' • . ... ' ' 11 11 ' ' ' ' " ' ' " ' '" " ' ' I ' " • ' " !I • ~ " ' " ' • ' ' .. " " ' ,' " • ' I ' ' " ' • " 0 • ' '. 1•'· ' '" • " '" , • " ' .. " . ' " ' • .. ' ~·1•1" l 1 I • 1 •?•?~19 }/ 9 0 • • I I I I 11A 1\. I l l ~ •I ! 1 7 • ' ~ JI ' • I • o )b ,. 16 1 I & 8 110~~& 11 "• j • 4lo l• I< • 1\o I I.. I • t>o ~ ,,.~.11 11 1 l• e:i. 11. 1e • l6•1'o6h 1•111•s . ?1 6J & f1 ID l J • J o b It ... 19 0 ?I ; ' ' ' ' I \ I IJ • I • l • s • 11 1t 11' 10 l n "" ~ ~ r n H 1• tunlood' J 1 ' • -' ' \Vo\SllINGTON fUPl) Kats( r Cen1ent &: Gypsum Corp of Onkland has signed 1Jg1 tl r 11;nts 11 f1n:inrf' con- srrucrion if :i $2fi 1111llron er : n1f'nt n11ll al TJ1h1nong near' J<ikart~ lndones 1 I\ !Iser I a~ 5J )lf'rcrnt of 100 'lr1!111i Otltrputnersarcan, l nt!ont~111 g1;p1n11en!owrierl> p II ( 1d ~ Jh s1d1 lrl{'S nt: II ( ., rJ J h 1n~ 11 IV ish1 ngl1Jrl rn I JI r k of \ ui.;1 ca 111 San I r 11(1,c( I{()(. II! STIR N Y <UPf) Mc( rflv. F.:di son Cn ~n n 1ntt d 11 will ( lnsc its food C'(!l 1pn1enr pl int u1 J{ochestcr u!l1ng 70 workers becau se of sir w d<'nl ind u cl w 1 ! I tr u1~frr lhc opt'r tl!on to 1ls \li;onqu1n ll! 1 l.inl J\OH,Ttl\\:-; f unn IC P!i -lr1ttnrnlCorr has an nnunrt d 11 11111 rno\" some or 11~ nl 101 fa1 luring nprration'I' ll• 1b; Srulh ! arohna plant 11htn t '-I~ 1rr lo11rr 111 Qrder ! rr r( I f11rt 1g11 l1l1npr!1!1on 1!11clq1nr!1 r~ 1 1 l 1rn11 n .<1/ lv0r1!011n !ti nn1p<inv ru 1k( ~ 1~ lOd ! 1rn ni;~ pia nl') pins in J ~1n di 111n1ors Ill !IH1!T i I I T I fllr \sl11t1rp h1<: rhl;unrd " ~I~ 1nill n1 .<1ddl! on to an Annv !on!r,l(I In prn1 d,. l ~nks ual cngr11cers cornbal 1 eh rt lrs \\ASl!JNCTON I Ul'I\ Blake Cnn~r nut1nn ro has olJ.. f uncd t $10 mllhon Army order tn hu1ld a four slor,Y' structlrre at the \Vhite Oakoo ~td h1boratory compleX' s., ....... ,. 5" •• I 9u ,., "• uno!I cl~r l l ~ j I 18 6 ~· 6 1 Un "" or~c w •• notca r•lf• of o v • tond! n "• lc•tOO ng 1•~11 • e onnv1I dl1bv ltmenl• b••~ on ~. !•'1 "Uf 1, v o 'o"' ""nu• nrcl• •'on Sne' • or t • • d • ~""a' or p~vm• t nnr "" 9- 11 17 •~tl 18 ll J? J) ' ' ' 1 l l 1 -V-V •11•"•-s • • t 9 .. I I I I + • • • ' 0 • 0 l) l • 11) 71 .. -+ 1 ,, ' • l ••l'lol •J 1(1))?•11 n~!~rl "' •~vu • a • ~ r ...i In 1r.. lo low n~ lo~!tlO!U 1: 1~ I~': 11~ + ~ ~I Vt 0'1 f•.,:jlv dl!f>!I t>r ••-d 11 IJ\illol'I j 11 1!'> 11'4 ltl'J + \ date t-0.C:lar..i or P•ld 19 l1r !M1 '1• 11 :it 11"--11~ t e1r ,.,_Oecl•rlPd or "' d tlltr 1tod1 11 I ~ I~ I div den<! or IP Ir OP •-()oo<; ••I'd Of',.,,, ,. 11 1'-'t 7"1 1~11 yHr 1'1 1ccumu 1!lvt lnut wit• II IB 10 '1 -diYldRndl Ill ... urs n Ntw luut -'f ,r• ,f ~ u ' = -! P1ld 1ftlt ve•r di• de~d omll!td d .. l'9 1 ,~. -1 _ ~'II leneG Qf no t el on Tt~tn II lt•I dlYldtnf n l! U o n .,.1.,, mnl nQ r-DKlt•...:r or Dtld In l'7D Pl.,. 1 ) • )~ ) o + • 1111<-dlv1M""" 1-Pold ft lla<:k du•lnf • '~ }.,, :._ ho 'lt10 n!lm1led c•lft v• ut on tr-dlvld" tJ l'(l\o '»'-o lO>a -or o..:illl bu!lon dfl• ' ) i • I S r-S•t• I" lul l~ 1! 1l , 1~, f d-C•lled •-E• 111¥lafond v-E• di,,.. 1 1Q o \~>. !~ <l!nd •n!i •~I,, I~ ul .,,.., '-E• d •1•1- U II I~, 1~ 1001°"' •-Er ,a~1 rw-W ll&ul .... ~ 1; • 1! ' '!1 :1 ";'i:,:,.:";;1~w~~· "~~~ wn~:.~::7 :.~ 11 6 0 ! ~ ,:14'••V '~ : : : ~ VI-I" b•~~ UP rv ... •tfl ...... ~10 - J , , , l!t nu ta q•n 11•<1 ur>tlolr lht ~ ..... 11oltl' •I •Ila •6 •I • 1 .,er o• >Kw It"' """mtd bv ul(~ co..., 611 I • • ) ~A~ ot • -E• nt1 to (1-C••I !lctlt'- IS t ,._ I ~ \ S '"'""" I 0t~ I n lltl ~-M1t11 M 1 I• $ p.. 1-0• ""°" a~ Iv "'1>•1•"' bv m1tvr 1y ,~ • ! ._: n ..; 0 , <>11-"ltt d•• <It v••v 11w-E:c wtrrtnl• ~)1 ,1 • f"tv•11 lo ••~ 1 1 o ll • ,, -\o --------------- ! I 1 [ ~' I • .. 24 DAJLY PIL~, rr1d.1~. Junt ,S, 1971 ---- Sturges, Grant 2 Newport Men Seek Cup Defen se Two prominen t N e w p o r I Beiteh yachtsmen have been added lo the board of directors of the California lntemational Sailing Association. 1he grou1) that is putting togethe r a 12· meter to fO{ a \V:.-sl Coast hid for \~ Arnerica's Cup defense. The Newporters are George Sturges and Robert Grant. both of Newport llarbor Yacht Club. Peter Davis. commodo re of NHYC is presidt'nl of CISA and one ol the spearheads to build a Yi'est Coast IZ-mcter. find good people elsewhere ." said Trepte, adding that so1ne tethnica! help n1ay h;1ve to 1..·on1e froon fhe Ea s1 Cor1~l- Trepte said the New York Yacht Club's decision ro delav the next America's Cu P defense until 1974 .... ·as a great boost lo the West Coast efJ'ort. "'\\1e didn't t11inli the request for e delay ~·outd have much of a chance. But it's a real blessing . \Ve're a 1 w 11 y s fighting time;· said Trep\e. Most From Coas t 69 Boats Vie in Transpac There. will be 69 boatJ rn ttie 1971 Transpac race from Los Angeles to H.onolulu starting July 1, and 39 of them ~'re built in the Newport-Costa Mesa area. Ten boats in the race will be flying the colors of lhe Newport 1-farbor yacht clu hs and will be manned by local crews. In ::dd1llon, several other boats in the race will be manned by local cre11,·s. There will be 25 Cal boats in the race, 14 of ~·hich will De the famed Cal-Ws which have copped overall h a n di cap ho:nors in the last three Transpac races. Cal boats are designed by C, \V i I I i a m Lapworlh of Newport Beach and built by Jensen Marine of Costa t.1esa. that battled dO\\'O lo the wire at Diamond Head in the l91i9 race. be John Mclnty1'9"1 69-foot Barona (formerly 'n feet) arid Larry Oohtny 's 'TS-loot ketch Kamalii. Loca l yachts scheduled to start in the race are: ALICE, Ca\-39 ~loop, Paul Loveridge, NHYC. BLUE STREAK. C <'.I -:l IJ sloop , t;ary Myers. NHYC. DOROTllY O. Columbia-:::7 sloop. Ro be r l Beauchamp, NllYC. E: N C 0 R E , Columbi3-4.i sloop, Dick Blatterman, Bill La~·horn, Herb Riley, Fred r.1acDonald, Balboa YC. KIALOA !I, 73-fool 'i'ilWl. Jim Kilroy, N!IYC LOCO VIENTE ti , Columbia-50 sloop, Jim Seals, BYC. Gene Treple. veteran San Diego yachtsman ha ~ been named ai:; manciger of !he syn- dicate which \viii monut lh<' potential \Vest Coast defender. Two of the immedialr ques- tions facing the group is I~ budeel and findi ng a nav:t l architect. Then comes con- struction . COAST GUARD RADIOMAN STANDS WATCH AT POINT VI CENTE STATION Other locally produced boats \\'lll be nine Colu1nbia. lour £ricson.11 and one Schock. The other lou r 73-footers \.\"ill be Jin1 Kilro;,'s y<1w\ Kiatoa 111. lrom Newport Harbor, Huey Long's Ondine, Ne York : Tom Clark's cutter Buccaneer, New l.ealand, Pl 1d Loi Killam·.11 Graybeard, Van- couver. NALU IV. 48-loot sl0tip, Frank Rice, NHYC. Trepte. 45, accepted the position at a recent met>llng or the CJSA board The fa ct that has allowed Trepte to go outside the state raises the names of such designers as Britton Chance c i Jr. and Bill Tr_ipp, along with oa~ , such local designers as Gary NANl/\oiAR, Cal-40 sloop, Dick Plaan, Bahia Cor1nthian YC. PACIFICA, 49-foot yawl, Edward B. !sell, BCYC. "! am very ent husiastic and encouraged about how it is going ," said Trepte. "\\1e have a lot of momentum now, and ii looks like it \.\'ill a!J come aMut." Mull and Bruce King. Chance was th e redcsigner nf the 1970 de fender Intrepid. Unti l recently he was reported linked to a Sou1hem syndicate. Point Vi cente Cre-iv Plays Vital Role Highlight of the race \\'ill be the <'~'ll icipated duel for first to finish bet1-l/ecn six 73-footers. including Mark J o hn son 's \Vindward Passage and Ken DeMeu.se's Blackfin, the pair Two other "goldplaters" \Viii WARR IOR. 50-lool cutter, Al Cassel, BCYC. Bes;des lhe development of 11 t2·meter yacht. CISA is also in\'olved in boating education a nd Olympic de\•clopmcnt Davis said Trepte's main function wou ld be recorn· mending a desi~ner a n d bu ilder plus oversceinA the <:ampa gin which 11,·1JI climax wit h the 1974 eliminations for the Ameri ca's Cup. The board has given Trcple lhe opportunity of g o i n g outside the stale to seek help in constructing the best. boat possible. "Up lo now we have been looking only in Califo rnia. Yesterday the board told me we have to gel the right people to win and can 't confine the search Lo California if we can Trepte said the CISA would announce !he designer as soon as possible. "Al this time I have to i1nd out \\'ho is not tied up .... ·ilh another organizallon ," he ad- ded. (Olin Stephens. designer of such defenders as Colun1- bia. C on s I e 11 a ti on and Intrepid, is designing a ne1v boat fo r the former Intrepid syndicate.) Trepl e will be assisted by CJSA di rector Joe Jessop Sr., one of the founders of the proj- ect. Trepte said a budge\ has been submitted which is in line and reasonablt with past costs. As soon as it is ap-. proved, the fund-raisi ng proj- ect will begin . Mari11a del Rey Race Planned for July 2 \Vindjammers Yacht Club of f\1arina del Rey an d South~·estern Yacht Club of San Diego have issued in- vitations for the 4th annual t.1arina del Ray to San Diego Race which gets under way July 2. The race will he a festive af- fair fro m pre-start to post- fini sh. Festivities start with an l')pen house at Windjammers Yacht on July 1, fea turing refreshments and cocktails. Disposal U11its Slated For Harbor T\\"O holding lank dumping stations for boaters 1 n Newport J!arbor v.ill be 1n· stallf'd by \hf' County !Jarbor Department The dumping station.~ will have automated p u m p 1 n ~ fa c1htics for srnall cr:ifl and the U.S. Coast (~uard vessels in l\e11·por t !\arbor Both 11 ill be ins1allcd at the lhirbor Department docli a Ion g Bayside Drive. one for use 'by !he !11,0 Coast Guard cullcrs stationed there . The Coast liuard \.\"111 ton- tribu\e $2,000 IO\.\'ard the total i 9.400 cost of the installation. A ree to he cbafged recrc:i- tional boat operators for use of the pumping facilities has not been determined. The equipment 1.rill make it easier for boat O'tl'TICrs lo c<>m- ply with new federal regula- tions that prohibit dumping n•as\.e. material into the bay or ocean waters. l'~ar!y on race da y WYC ha.11 arranged for e no -h os t breakf ast at the \YindJammcr Restaurant. South\.\·estern Yacht Club talies over the fesllvi!ie ~ after the finish of the race. The club \.\'ill host a steak-fry Saturday night Trophy presentation will be Sunday morning. The fini sh line this year will be 1noved to the No. S buoy out side San C>iego I/arbor. lhus cli rninating the loca l kno~·ledge required for racing inside the harbor. The race is open lo all yach!s affiliated \\•1th SCYA and ~A YRU yacht clubs. All yachts must have valid ratio~ <:ertificales in Ocean Racing ICCA), ~10RF . PHRF, or ORCi\, Certificate.~ must be vahd as of June 25. Entries musl be in the hand~ of entry chairman no later than 6 p.m. June 2~. SLunn1 er S un Series Se t The Bahia Corinthian \'achl Club ·will starl ils annual Sun1 - mer Sun Series 11[ sallboat rar.1ng today. The fir st series 1ril! start Friday and continue earh v•eek through July 2.3. The se- cond series "M'ill start Aug. 6 an d continue through AuA. 27 . Each srries consists of fotir races \\"ilh one throv•out 1n determining the final resulls The fleet will be divided into Class A. boat! 20 feet overall an d larger: Class B. boats less than 20 feet , and Class C Sabots and Flippers. Starting lime for the first class each ~·eek will ht at 6 p.m. Ya~hting Angle Boaters Form Fisliing Club Now that lhe fishing season ts r•pidly •pproaching, Bahia COrlnthian Yacht Club will hold .-n organiiatiooal mttling Wednt:sdly, June 30 to form an angling club of thei r own . Btginning at a p.m. in the clubhoute. lllOI Bayside Drive. J ack Ruddi s, 11kippcr or lhe 1portrlsher "Irish Ro ver," \\·ill 11t!Ye a lecture on "Fishing Tackle a n d Techn1q11t>~ ·· Highlight of the lecture will be fllms (nken In R :i J :i , California, show ing techniqu<'s he uses In catching hi s marlin. Accordinfl to Mr. 11nd /\fr.~. Lyle Sandlin, in charge of !he club'• a:peclal activities pro- gram, the film al so touches on some of the Baja resorts and the city or La Paz. Mrs. Rud- dis will be present to olfer her advi~ and knowledge of thi.!1 great resort area. Last su1n· mer during one week of fi shing in the Sea or Cortez. Jack and his rirstrnete Jean- nette. tagged and released 27 marlin. Following the leclurr unit £ihns. ground work will be laid for the angl ing club ~·lthin BCYC All this pron1i~11 to!)( a wr!I 11ttended event members are ur:ged lo call the cl\j.bhouse for re:1trvatioo11. lly i\LJ\10N LOCKAB EY One usually thinks ol e U.S. Coast Guard station as a spot in a busy harbor w1lh plenty of cutter.~. helicopter.~. f i x e d aireralt and even 40-foo! boats al tht rc::idy. Would you believe a Coast c:uartl station on the t-oast of Southern California with none of these, and yet plays a v1ta l rule in the missions of the Coast Guard'! Locatt'd at Point Vict'nt. just v.·e::t of Los Angeles II arbor, is a Coast Guard stat ion that has rwo jobs. Out of it.<> crew of 36 111cn, lwo are rt'sponsible for !he upkeep or the J>oin t Vincent Lig htholtsc. The rernai n<lcr or the crc>v. r.01nposed pr i rna r1ly of radiomen, \.\'Ork the Coast Guard radio slal1on there. When a mariner discovers he is in !rouble and needs the :1ssislance of the Cciast Guard, he r:idios a distress call on frcque11e1t's 2t8Z tan11 and 156 8 ~ vhr ) ll1s l·:ill i'> receiv- ed by lhe Coast Gu:1rd station HI Point Virentc anti is relayed to lhc l llh Coast l:uard Dislr1C'I He s c u e Coordination Center al Long Beach. Last year the Pt. Vicente Radio Station was involved in more Lhan 1.400 Search and J<escuc jSAR) cases. According to J\'la s!er Chief Radioman Robert A. Cas tor, operations in lhc s!ation are 1·onduc·tcd on nn around the <.'locli bnsis. The day is broken down into lhrcc eight-hour ~·atchcs. \Vh1!c on \Vatch. each n1an h<is a particular area of I responsibility. 1'he areas the rnen \.\'Ork are rt'fcrrcd lo as '"po.~ition.~ ·· Three 1>osillons ,1rr main- tained 24 hours a dav and a fllur th one 1s used dliring the dayt im(' and as a backup in lhC' rven1 of a brr:ikdo\\"n The pcn:ons 01anning the r1r~t pos1l1Qn relav~ dist re ss n1essages and general lraffic , hy 11s1ng the intcrnation:il l 1\lorse Codt'. Thf' watch-I Ytancler 111 the st·cond post· t1on is responsible for rel:iying l !hr sarne type (lf n1t5~age by v111ce rather than totlc The ~econd po~1tinn nlsii put s out 1 f1\C "'e<ithcr broatk·asts a da y. Chit•f Ciistor s<nd Pns1tion l\o. 3 i!'i nol norn1~1llv n1anncd on a con1inuou.~ basis. During bu sy lin1es it helps 10 relieve lhc "M'ork load of the other positions. In this area. a voice broadcast is lransrnilled lwo limes each dav for the marine operator ~KOU J on matters of 1 in terest lo bo3lers in local 1 \.\·111ers. I In lhC' fnur1h position, lhe l ~·al chst:inder relays n1essages I from merchant vessels Lo the t Auton1ate<l r.1erchant Vessel Report System ( A M V E R ) headquarters in New York A~IVER was initiated so that , merchant vessel~ traveling Ship Rock Race Slated I Ship ll.oc:k off the lslhn1us of! Catalina will be the ~·ealher 1nark in the fourth of Newport' H a r b o r Y a c h l CI u b 'sl Ahmanson s e r i t .11 I his · "'eek end. The 60-mile Ship Rock Race will start al 11 a.m. Saturdav off the Balboa Pier. The finish '\ will be off the Newpor~ Pi-er. In addition to th<' Ocean Hacing nee\ race around Ship1 Rock, the Pacific lland1cAp and ~l idl{CI Occ:i11 RacinR F'lee1 \.\'ill sail a 3~11 :-mile course rro1n Ntv.'port lo Poln! f'f'rrnin and rc1urn fl10RF \.\'ill be ~ailin~ for lht' Elon Br<>wn and Corkrt! Troph!('g, and the PllRF wlll bP com·[ pet.1ng for the Dickson Trophy. around 1he world could be kept lracli of by means of a Coasl t ;uard operated comp u l c r system. It processes sail plans that arc sub!Tlit!ed voluntarily by p<ir!lcipating 1n er c h a n t \'esscls. then keeps track of lh em during their voyages by <."On1put1ng I he i r locations. .'\1\IVER also has on record all participating vessels 1vith a doctor on board so that. in an en1ergency. immediate assistance might be given. Aside froin the watch posi- 1 ions. the station also has four leletypes tha t are used for the relay of 1nessages to various Coas t Guard units. 0 n e teletype links with the distr ict office in Long Beach, another is an F/\-1 back up link so lhal if the telephone lines arc lost lransinitt cil of messages by tcle1ype could still be main- tained. A lhird teletype is called the SARIP1\C -Search and" Hescue. P<1c1f1c ~ which is hoolied up \\'ith all Coast Guard district offices on the West Coast. The fourth unit is linked to all Coast Guard units ashore and afloat in the I Ith District. The teletype system is used ror Coast Guard ships, rather than merchant vesse\5 because rnerchantmen haven·t gone to the teletype system . The commanding officer of the station, \\'arran t Officer Pat rick J . Flynn Jr.. said thev 111ay rece ive ''smoke letters;' tlr letters or praise for their efforts in certain cases. Balboa Boat Crews Hosted Skippers and ere"'!. o I B<>Jboa Yacht Club's entries in the Honolulu race 11.·ill be hosted" and toasted Saturday 11ight at the BYC c!..:bhouse. The BYC entries are Loco Viente II. owned and 6kip- pered by Jim Seals, and EnC(Jre. co-o"·ned by Dick Blatterman, Bill Lav1horn an d Herb Riley. Another member of the syndicate ls !~red M<icDonald of Newport llarbor Yacht Club. Loco Viente II Columbia-SO and Columbia-43. Give yourself a brake ••• COMPLETE ff BRAKE RELINE 95 most American cars HERE'S WHAT WE DO I e N•w Ll11l1tt Fro11t I lMr e lt•bulld All WhMI Cyll11dfi1 • l'acl fro11t WhMI lfftl119' e lto1urfote All PrulM • lled-Flu1h & Adju1t Hydroulle 5y1tom e ltoitd l o1t Cor US E GENERAL'S CONVEN IENT AUTO·CHARGE PLAN ~ no money down ••• months to pay SMALL CARS & IMPORTS 1395 TIRES :,'.,'; Whitewall DATSUN .TOYOTA Ol'll-FI AT 600112 •&011J 56011 J 12011 J SUMMER VALUES Black walls Belted G78xlS 600xl3 E78xl4 P.S. INDY RADIALS! GENERAL JET RAD AN MAG WHEELS -FRONT END ~ALIGNMENT ~ 1~0i!OTIV.:CAUlll~I c_~ l'llO~T!V'l:C>"ll"I ~ <IOl...OUf) Crooked wheels rob your car of maximum performance, ride, steer· Ing and ti re wear . We c orrect caster, camber, toe-in, toe-out to your car manufacturer's specilica- tion11 , and safety check and adjust your steering. 0,1/y $8~~ .. S1end••d -comp.et ~lll:MOll ... LIMITED TIME Off.ER TIRES WHITEWALL ISllght l l•ma l C••ll~<-&uick-Lin<tl" -c11ry1I••-"•,. & Mucu•' Git 71.1 s Hit 71-IS Lit 71·1 S $299~•T $1.96 TAKE YOUR PICK! USED TIRES , .......... ,. ""' $ 5 95 pl,,. tltll 11M1 IK.11 tu " tANKAMIRICARD MASTER CHARGE Don Swedlund SET OF 4 • • • • • • fOJI O CHlYltOLIT DAlSUN TOY OTA 11'11n ••P• llMI ~U11) I-HOLE MAGS AVAILABLE fo r ¥4 ton C1mper1 and Pick·ups, 1li51htly higher. COMPLETE CAR CARE Since 1959 Hours: 7:30 to 6:00 Dally P1iblic Access Caspers Sees No Bay Compromise Filth District Supervisor Ron <1 Id Ca~pers bchcves that grti:lter public ac· t·e<;s to Urangr County beaches can be ;irh1r\ed by 1nuku1g a deal with de\ rloprrs hut that no comprurn1se 1s pos::;iblt-Ul 1hr-l1ppt•r Newport B~Jy. Sreak1 ng to the (lrall!:(C County Forum of T1J1111 11:111 111 S;1nt11 Ann 'fhursday, (a::.pl'tS Silld. "] ha\"(' [ailh that the pn v~t\C ;uid publu: sectors need not 11el·C<;sar1I~· be 1nco1npalible. It is not my dp~1re to arb11r<1r1ly run a public access through il resort holL·I lobby or private ap:ir!m(lnt co1nplex. '·\Vhat can \1'e rlo, however, i<:: rn''\lrr;itc v.·ith l.'.lnd(l\\ ne rs 111 de\"(llnping pl:tnnrd t.·0111n1un1ti('s 11 hlch provide ac· rr·s~ i-ll logical point s wi th tran1s or pea. pie rnovers from inland parking lots. "' . .\l ~n includr<I in our bag of tools, rlrinat1ons or sulJ-markct value sales of ]J""Opcrty lo the county could be offset by ;iµprovill or higher densities creating 1nore profitable land uses."' 'fhe stat einenl was obviously aimed a t the Irvine Company's planned develop-- 111{'p! or its three miles of coastal and hillside property betwcrn Nev.•port Beach and Laguna Beach. TI1e company first sur,gc sted the !rans from inland parking lot~. But it \Vas Caspers' idea that a deal <'flt1ld be made offering higher density in re!urn for Jo,1·er prices on property to be used for public parks. \\'hen the suorr v1sor got around to the cnntroversi.'.ll l"pper Newport Bay pro- h!t>m his attitude was quite different, ho"·ever. ncferring to a not.yet released re port on !he imoortance of preserving the nntural eco log,v nf lhe Upper Bay, he s;lid. '"H this report is adopted. it would i1nply a signH1 r.anl reversal in the h1s1orical direction of public policy up to tl1e last few years. "The immediate implication suggests 11-iat 1he marginal public utili!y of an ad· rlitional residential or com ni er c j a I dc\'elopmen! here i.~ rnuch less than the 1narginal public u1ilil y of an ecologically pr,,servcd Upper NP\\'J)()rl Rav. '"furthermore, lhe exp!Oitation of n111Jlic n:itural resources inherent in further residential and commercial r!evrloprnent of this area is no longer lotallv acceptable public policy."' \\"he n questioned later on the Friends (l[ ihe Upper Bay contention that from 40 Ill 500 square miles of watershed must be preser ved to protect the esturarine quali· ty of the area, Caspers said: "'i'ou are referring to the entire watershed. We must go slow in our plan. ning. Al l land upstrea m is developing rapidly and seems to have gotten away from us. There will be runoff of in - seC'ticides and silt but obvio usly we CAn- nol declare the whole county a wildlife preser11e." Later in ansy,·er to a question, the supervisor said, "I believe Sl.8 miltlon v.•ill buy us good access to the Upper Bay. We do not nt>ed the milliom suggested to achieve our purpose." To finance the acquisition of upper bay access, beach access and park lands, Caspers suggested: "'['here are numerous state and federal grants \.•1hich the county has employed before and should continue filing for . Our newly-adopted local park fee will help and grassroots county support should be special bond election or a bond issue mustered for a massive bond is~ue.'' When asked tater if he ravored a along with a general election, the supervisor said he fa vored a special elec- tion. .. , don't want a general election where there is a he::t.vy turnout," he explained. •'Give me a light vote where the two that are voling for my proposilion outnumber the others." Caspers pointed out that there are 42 miles of coasUine in Orange County. '"The public currently owns 22 miles or accessible beaches. That is just over SO percent and our goal is 37 miles." He said that an apparent problem with many elected officials wai; that or representing the public interests and at the same lime not delracting from friends or business profits. ''I mtLc;t be some kind or a screwball because th is is not one of my hangups. t-.1y first allegiance is to the public who overwhelmingly elected me to guide their county through the problems and capitalize on the opportWlities available to us." Caspers said he objects to state legisla· lion that \YOU!d take over planning of the local coastline. "The Board of Supervisors unanimously feels that each county has the right t.o plan its own coast.3.I area." A questioner asked, "If the courts uphold the Irvine Company (on the Upper Bay land exchange) what happens to the accrued taxes?" "It is true that the a!\Sessor threw everything including the kitchen sink into the assessment of land there. The whole thing will probably end up in another lawruit," he replied. t.\IL'I !"II.OT Iliff Pn.o11 Spraice Up Bobby Palmer, 6, tidies up the San C lemente Chamber of Comrnerce float that will be part of the city's July 17 La ChrlstianJ.ta Parade, celebrating the first Christian baptisn1 in Californi_J, n•ar San Clemente. The float is also entered in the Huntington Beach Fourth of July Parade. Viejo's Service District Budget Stays Uncl1anged r.1ission Viejo homeowntrs were told Thursday the 1971·72 service district budget for their area would remain vi rtually unchanged from the previous year. Homeowners association p re s i d e n t Crown Valley PTA President Elected !\1ri. Jack Wllcox has been elected president of the Crown Valley Parent-- Teacher Guild. Other officers include t.1rs. Stephen Ozimac, first vice pres ident; l\lrs . Anton Emmerton, serond vice president; Mrs. Edward Smyth, third vice president; Mrs. David Johnson, treasurer; 1'.frs. Michael Mc A 11 is le r, rorresponding secretary; Mrs. Bradley C a r I ton , recording secret.ary: t.1rs. \Villiam Cole, historlan; fl.1rs. Charles Gasse t t, parliamentarian. and .1'.trs. Joel But-- Wworth, auditor. Mike Sheerer told the members at their quarterly meeling that each home would again be assessed about '38. 'J'here are. some 3.300 homes in Mission Viejo, almost all of them in the $JO,OOO price bracket. Shearer gave a breakd own of ho\Y the money would be spen t by the county, notin'g that most of it, $22 per house, \\'OUld go lo\\•ard the landscaping or parks and other planted public areas. About $10 per home would be spent on fire protection, $1 on slreel sweeping and about $1.SO ror accounting and miscellaneous costs. Shearer said each home v.·ould be assessed $3.50 which was not budgeted and would be reserve funds. He then sug- gested some possible programs on which the money could be. spent. l{e noted that the teen ctnter. proposed in 1970 but not built because no suitable site rou!d be found, was still a J>O.'Sibility. He suggested the money cwld be wed lo landscape the slopes along the roadways surrounding La Paz JunJor High School. • frld.iy, J11N: 25, 1'~71 VAILV PILOi' ~ Welfare Blamed County Budget Boost Explained By JACK BROUCll ot ""' Oalllt Piii! tMff Last Jqnuar)', County Admlnl1trative Officer Robert Thon111s il'I • repttrt to Uie Board of Supervl~r1 w1rntl(I of stormy fiscal seas ahead. He 1u1geated th•~ the county lax rate might have t.o be jrr c reased by as rnuch as 34 cents tor tht 1971 -72 fiscal year. Two supcrvisori; shou1ed their in· · dignation at the statement and a few days later tried to lire Thon1as. Supervisors llonald Caspers and Roberi Battin saw their campai&P pro111J.es jlOing down the drain. Later events proved that the pair did not have the necessary lhircl vote to fire Thomas. Wednesday they got lhe lastest word on the upcoming budget and probable tax. rate -an increase or 38 c~nli on the present $1.70 rate. If the tax rate cjou 1a up that much Qr thereabout, il will mark t,tie first time in 11 ytars that Ute levy haa lncrµsed mort than 1J1 centa in one year. The rate w1s •1.n in 1961.ft:Z and reach- ed a hi1h point of $1.73 In 11166..e?. Why js It necessary to increas. that lavy more then 30 cents in one year? 1'hom11 1U.mpted to ••plain that In his budget message to the !upervisors. "Of the tl9 million increase in the 1ener1l fund bud1et (to '236 million), m mllllon re.mh1 dlrectly from ri1ln1 ·weHare co1tt, while anot~r $4 .a m illion reflects an increa.e In the number 0£ judges and court related activities," he detailed. Thomas noted that outside or welfare, Medi·Cal and criminal justice related costs, all other county departments were asking for $400,000 less than the current year. Board Chairman Ballin disagreed that criminal justice spending \vas man- datorv. "I have said before that every new judge costs the CQUnty $250,000 to $350,000 when all the cmployes and equip- ment and ~pace needed to support his of- fice is included."' Vcleran Supervisor David Ba k e r countered that argument with, "The county has no choice as to the number of persons placed on probation, the number or 1hose put in jail or juvenile hall. As far as the district attorney, the county clerk. the sheriff and the probation department are concerned there is very little control on increased costs." Thomas said other factors, besides wellare and community safety, also had affected the budget. "Refuse disposal costs and a drastic reduction in an· ticipaled carryover balances from this year which partially resulted In a $12.6 mtnie,I dtPp in expected state and federal revenues." The aPrnfnilWative officer warned that lhli budget mee\f the essential and man· <latory oblifltijortl of the county but that · lt provides no fln;l.Jlity. "If w1 are f1<*d v.•ith additional changes in eiU!:er Wtlf1re or medical pro- grams or a n}fjor 4j,.ster, ~·e are not , ready mol)iJWlse." T}lomas emphas~ the major in- crease• i1J the upcoming budget are all state or federal mandated programs over which lh1 county has !Jltl.t or no control. "We can't jus~ say we arr not going to take care of people on the welfare rolls.'' He again slressed that of the 116 :i;eparale budget units, 42 show an actual decrease in future sf*lding, while 69 percent show a decr1111e, no change or increases of less lhill $100,000 over the current year. Thomas said the 'rt&I answer to a reduction in courity apending lies in the fie ld of tax reforrn. welfare. Medi-Cal and the judicial aod penal syslems. "Nol until thfft are achieved can we r eally hope to retolve the county's fiscal dilemma," he warned. r-..1issing from the budget are many ex· pendituret which some county officials believe are almosl a necessity. Included are expansion of "the county's main jail, now admittedly over.crowded.: addition of four ne\v courts on an un- fi nished floor of the courthouse; badly needed regional parks and St million more in the contingency or ''rainy day;'' fund. I The supervisors v.•ill have from now to August 2 to try l<l trim what Thomas calls an "austerity budget." Public hearings begin on July %2 and the budget must be adopted 10 days lat.er. U11en1ployment Talk Scheduled "Unemployment in Orange County" will be the topic of the Saddleback Republican Assembly meeting, Wed- nesday night, at 8 p.m. at the Taj l\.1ahal, 23521 Paseo de Valencia, Laguna Hills. Speaking on the subject will be Donald S. Wilcoxon , director of Experience Unlimited, an orga niza t ion for unemployed aerospace workers. Carles Ketchu, president of the Sacf. dleback Republican Assembly. will lead • discussion of the impact of the unemploy· ment situation during the 1972 elec!Jon1. The public fs invited to attend. The Homes are priced from 33,950 The Way of Lite is Free! L1v1ng is what youwant to make of it in a big, beaut ifu l new home at Oceanview Park •.. now offering Immediate Occupa ncy in the Final Unit. •. excellent Conventio nal Financing with low, low down payment .•• and you own the land! Quality 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath Traditional Design 2 Story Homes •' ucro a HOMES OCEANVIEW PARK SERIES The Only New Close-In Homes in Costa Mesa Surrounding the Beautiful New 2'f.r Acre Marina View Park --····"~""'"' Soles Office and Furnished Models ot 19th St reet & Whittier Avenue Phone (714) 54&0337 -Op•n Deily from I 0 •.m. unt il Ou1k. • NEWP>O~T BEACH . ' ' I J I -. . . j r I : I : . • • I ; ·Agnew Tour Bo111e f I i 8 ~ ~ ' ; \ l l l • • , i :: • . .. ' • ' ·1 I . ~ • • • • • ~"-. .. A S e Ul"I l'l.,...,mtl> Vice President Spiro Agnew will leave El Toro Sunday for a one month world tour. He will arrive at Guam Monday. Seoul , Korea Tuesday, Singa· pore July 4, Kuwait July 6, Saudi Arabia July 8, Ethiopia July 10, Kenya July 12, Congi> J uly 15. Spain July 17, Morocco July 24, Portugal July 26 and back borne to \Vashington July 28. 21 Years Ago North l\.orea Launched Attack on South -· SEOUL (AP) -Twenty-one years ago • t.eday North Korea invaded South Korea and started the Korean War. Occasional c.l.ashes sUU interrupt the uneasy peace along the 1~1-mile frontier between the two n.aUon.1. A 600,000.man South Korean foru. .-•• equipped with U.S. jet flghter·bomber1, · missiles, tanks and artillery stand'! guard alona: and below the demilitarized zone set by the 111~ armisti~. U.S. soldlers protected II miles of the DMZ front unUI March, when they were pulled back prior to the reduction of U.S. forces in Scuth Korea from 52,000 to 42.000 by July I. Aeross the buffer nme are 466;800 North Korean troops armed with Scviet military equipment, including ~tlG21 jet fighters, heavy artillery and missiles. South Korean officials claim that Nor th I\~• has violated the armistice agree· menl by building in iU half nf the buffer tone liOme 200 concrete bunkers aod other fort ifications armed "ll>'ith automatic ,.-capons. But l\'orth Korea's refusal to t"OOperate has stymied the Neutral Na· lions Supervisory Commission and the joint ob5en1er ''"ams or the lv»o opposing aidits. the agencies created to help en- for-ce the annistice. When the North Korean army crossed the 33th parallel at da\\11 on June 25. \95C, It had 10 combat divisions armed with 500 ~let lanks and 2.000 artillery pieces. South Korea was defended by 100,000 i\1- trained men armed "ll>ilh rifles and light . m,;ichine 1uns supplied by the United Stateli. ru.Yled to South Korea's defense and rallied a IS-nation force un~r the ban· ner of the United Nations. These forces pushed all the way through Nortlt Korea, to the Chine" border, but late in November 1950, 300,000 Oiinese Communist troops wtnt into ac· tion on two front.! and within a month had forced the U.N. forces back to the 38th parallel. Tired Spacemen Continue Work In Orbiting Lah MOSCOW (UPI) -Three lravel v,·e:ary Soviet cosmonauts 1-1·orked at a long list of scientific experiment.s today. including measurements of harm done to lhe1r oY.n bodies by their rocord·brf'aking fl ight. Georgy Dobrovolsky, \lladis!av \'olkov and Viktor Palsayev have f!0\\11 in space longer than a ny other men and earth scienlisls carefullv monitored the con· dilion of lhelr heai-ts, mt1scles and bones to determine. how 1-1·elt !he men 1;urvive: more than 19 days of weightlessnes.~. The !pacemen reported thf'.y fe lt well, but a touch of tiredness crepl into the normally cheerful voice of Dobrovolsky , the flight commander. Tass, the Soviet news agency, 1aid ground control uked the cosmonauts Thursday who they fell Dayan, Military Chief Attacked For Hawk Talk By United Pre51 1.nte111atioaaJ Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban ~ day criticized Defense ?tiini~r Moshe Dayan for saying an outbreak of a ne:w \.1-"ar in the Middle East is inevitable and berated former Air Force Cb!ef Eur Weizman for saying Israel should oa:upy Cairo lf a new war break! out. Signs of other internal diuehsion came from Premier Golda h-feir who told Bar Jlan University students lOOay l srael rac· ed a greater threat ·t rom internal division and strife than from its belligerent Arab neighbor:s. She apparently referred to a recent rash of strikes and a threat by the national religious party to withdraw from the coalition gavemment. Israel also was having major dif. ficulties with Arab guerrillas both in the Gaza Strip and in other occupied areas. The lsruli command said 1t.s soldiers killed eighl Arab guerrillas in two clashes in the occupied Golan Heights .section o[ Syria th~ week. No l:sraeli casualties "·ere. reported. There ha,·e been a 'eries or terrorist .acts in the Gaza Strip. Eban set forth his view:s iri Jn in· lerview v.ith the Tel Aviv evtflin& ne'A-·spaper Yedioth Aharohoth. He said l.'lrael should pursue efforts tn reopen the Suez Canal. under .an interim agreement \\ith Cairo but adnUtted chances for such an accord were .1\im. He al.so called for .a concentrated eHorl lo highlight Soviet effofU to disrupt the in- lernational equilibrium through Russia"• pact vti th Egypt. j Seou1 fell to the invaders in three days • and a lara:e pu1. of South Korea was OC· i pi'4 within • month-The United Stai.s Rains Falling Over U.S. Showers Drench, Midwest, Plains, Pacific Northwest California TM _,.,,.,. ••-•9'1 lo M "'''1"' .... "l<1IY l"•kMY for 1 1IH11PTt lovll!· ..... Ct!ltomlt ...,,,,,,,., -tl'WI. l.-cioun •Piii -'" -• ,,,.. ~ .. , ff>t -Ill! t fWI llHCI! .,..., In "'9 ,,,... .. 1111, 11111n1.., .,, .,, ·-· ... ,, -"*' .......... 10..i 19' ""'" Ill .....,.....,. C1lllern1t _,.,. 111c1 ll1· .,..,.. Wl!l'I cotllr ,.._aNr.. I" -¥Ille-rt. He'n' wnth!M _, "1¥K111 ..,.. ""' .,.,.,_ "°"" ffllllV 11'111 Stlll ... IY -.-~.-. .... i.1•11,wi...t11t11 ""',.....rvr. ell•,,.., -.,,.,,.._ ••• flltefWtl ... ~ 6t II llltl!I ~ I/ti .. n: ..,,.,. -.,. A Mef1 ef • -tine.lot "" IN.Kl'I ..... wtlfl I ....... ~lu<I .,i tJ. ,.-~ _, 1S lo 11 .... 1111111"1" .... -..... ldM ,... ""' _,..,, '"""""· "..., """"'"""'" .. •1 hi Ill• ~ """"'" "' llJ '" "" --!l Caa1tal _ Tem11eratures I' IJNITIO 1>11111 INf•ltl'IATIOl'IAl T-l'U•t"\ .1M er«li>ll1ll011 ''" Ille 1~r "'~ -Int 11 • 1.m . • Ml11'1 ..... l'rM. A.IM u•r-,. 11 Alitni. 11 10 AllCho•"• '' • .... fell " ... flult1l1 to 4.-1 .61 C"9tlOlfl ti .. (!\'c-., .. ·'' Cln<l-li M 11 C!..,..TtM If " n.111. .. ,, Dtnv..-., Jll ~MO!-,, " t191rolt • •• ,,,_ ,, ~ Mtl-H Jt lftdltnH11tli1 .. .. ,A1 k•-C11y ff Tl Lt• VM11 61 5' l eul1vlll1 • 61 Mempni. t• 7t .o,111,,,1 u .,.. LBI Memoirs: Wicks Johnson Planned Buildup GARDEN CITY, N.Y. (UPI) -Former P resident Lyndon B. J o h n a o n acknowlcd&e in 1 t i 11 unpublished memoirs that he was preparing for large scale military involvement in Vietnam in 1964 ht-fore the depth of the U.S. com- m.ilmtnt became public, acrording to a story published in today 's tdilion o{ Newsd.ay, a Long Jsland newspaper. r.iewsday said the information about the memoir!, to be published in November undu the title "The Vantage Point : Perspectives of the Presidency." were ob. tained from a publishing industry source . Newsday said Johnson also said in his memoirs: -He first decided lo follow President John F. Kennedy's policy of defending South Vietnam while nying back to Washington following Ke nn edy 's a!lsassination in Dallas in 1963 . -Robert F. Kennedy volwiteered dur· Ing the 1964 presidential campaign to go to South Vietnam as U.S. Ambassador. -Johnson's statement during the same campaign that he v•ould not send U.S. troop$ to "do the fighling that Asian boys should do for them.selves" meant America should not "take charge" ol the war or provoke a conflict with China. He said, "I did not mean that \\'e \\'ere not going to do any fighting for \\'e had already lost many good men in Viet· nam." Newsday did not elaborate on these Jections of the memoirs. Johnson depicted himself as being hesi- tant for ieveral months over approving military recommf'ndations for bombing raids on North Vietnam. When he finally authorized a troop increase, "l wa:s con· \•inced that our ret reat from thi~ challenge \\'OUld optn the path to World "'ar Ill. According lo Newsday, Johnson on f\1arch 17, 1964 . approved a recom· mendation by Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara to prepare forces for "a program of graduated military pressurf' against the north." In September of the same year, Johnson approved a plan for bombing , again recommended by the military. to be implemented if Communist forces made a "spectacular" aUack in the south. On Feb. 7. 1965. he implemented the plan after having twice re.jec~d advice 1964 • Ill from lhe military to begin the bombing earlier. Johnson 1not with former President Eisenhower on Feb. 17, 1965, and was urged by the late five-.slar general to mount a "campaign of pressure" against the north. Gls Confined to Bases In Big Drug Crackdown CAN THO, South Vietna m (AP) -The most sweeping crackdown to date against 1!legal drug use by Cl's in South Vietnam is under \vay in the Mekong Delta. The 18,000 soldiers stationed there are confined lo !heir military compounds ex· cept for official business, and soldiers, civilians, vehicles and pl anes are being thoroughly searched for drugs. In a long message to his men ex· plaining the d rive, Lt. Gen. John Cushman. the U.S. commander in the Delta, said : "The drug problem is serious. We O\lle it to ourselves and to the i.merican pe~ pie, now and in future generations, to :;olve this problem.'' The drive began without prior notice on Tuesday. In the first three days, a quan· lily of heroin and marijuana was seized and more than 100 American servicemen \\'ere arrested for illegal possession or drugs or for being absent \\'ithout leave. Vietnamese and Ainerican authoritiei1 a re cooperating in the CrackdoY,.n. which Cushman said .. is going to make it very difficult to gel unauthorized drugs." Originally planned for three days, the drive has been extended through next Tuesday and probably will be extended again, sources said. Officials ordered a thorough search <lf all persons and all Yehicles entering or leaving U.S. military compounds. Every aircraf\ arriving at a military airfield or landing pad in the delta 1s sub- jected to immediate search. as are its crew, passengers and luggage. All areas outside U.S. mihtarv com- pounds have been pul off tirOits to Americans, and no U.S. personnel .are aflowed lo leave their compounds excepl on official buslness. In civilian <1rea~. they are subjected repeatedly to searches by cruising military police. In the initial stages of the drive , all bui ldings. living quarters, offices and other facilities at U.S. mil ita ry post~ "-"ere searched. All Vietnamese personnel -military and civilian -at U.S. military posts are also being searched. U.S. Art Dealer Pays $4 Million For Titian Work LONDON (UPI) London-based American art dealer J ulius Weitzner paid a record $4,6.12.CKlO today for a Titian to hang over the fireplace in his daughter t-.farjorie's room. The painting, "The Death of Actaeon," \1·as sold by the Earl of Harewood. Queen Eli7.abeth"s cousin, at. a sale \\'hich set e ig:ht ne.w '~orld records for prices. \\'eitzner said he bought the painting privately. not for a client , and added: '·Ifs not for me , It's for my dau~hter ." "It '4'ill fit perfectly over m1 fireplace." J\iarjorie said. Although \\"eitzner and his <laughte r" live in London, the l\ational Gallery. '4'hich hung the painting on Joan for IO years. was taking no chances. It issued a statement sayiniz iii t ru5lecs believed that export of the 'J'ilian lo the United States or any\\·here els- •·1-1·ould be a serious loss to the nation." ~er's <Mesa'Del <Mar Cjardens 2221 Fa.WOW Rd..Co:;la Mesa. Tol642-8686. Go firsi class. Rediscover Brown-Jordon ..• Perfection in polio furniture ... Tomiomi. Now cl sole prices. ... "'"'""' .... -._, ..... . W•N ..,.....,IN 100t "I'. t.!tlll .,.,i.~i. wll'llh "'-"' 111d ,.,oml111 "°"'" bK-· 1,.. Wfti'erly II II 11 k ..... I 111 l tNI'• -,.,,..,. t NI l.fNrU"f'. Mith ,.... Ot• •J.. MllwM•t l t 6.1 .U .tttt ......... w tot 71 11111" ... ....,, ...... _.ttl ,,_ .. ,.., ,.._ 111 "" -· TM lli9fl ftrftMf•hitl T"'-'~•"• tflll Ii. flftUH "''-' 1W i..Mv '" 1.-ltold'I ... 1 1•7S. ...,.. Mtnlu ... ro. '""""'* llMIO. Ml. W1t-lllMO. 1>11-•ll ""'· 1ttwr1• ,..., a.1r.er11i.1t ....... "9!"' , ............. kn 01-11.-. "'"'• •• ,...,. ... .. '"" ,.., •. """"'"'"" ""' .,.. n. Alf' f'diutlln (4rl1ref 011tflcl .,...,~ "'"""'" ..,., l<rllttkl<I ~ .,..... M _, ,,_. flf Wit LM MHlt• .. ,111. ........... '"llftle!\ 111 !he 1111 .. ...,.. VtllW fNI 11~1 "''°' Ill !ht -.it""''' -"'' t !\11 S..11 ,..., ... ,. """" .,.. ~•·W.111111 ,, .. .., v~ ...., ,..., •l>Kflol " 111 14 11111u . c.,.1••1 '""'-•tu••• r1111• "-'' fll 10. lnlt nd 11m...,11'U .. 1 r1111t l•Orll 11 "" ''· w .... ''"'"''"""' "' Sun, Mof>n. Tllles II:" t .ll't. S,7 J:ll "·"'· 1..S IAlUllOAV jllnl ~Ith l"lrn ,_ )••oriel lllfl'I ~..;~1111 ..... ?.1111 .,, .... ., • "' Moeri llJUI t .n 1.m. l :Mt,M. J,t •·'1 '·"'· .. ,I U·Cf 1 m. J.1 • ,,~,.,.,. 1.• ··" 1 ·0l11!". 11t1 11.n ''"'· Ml"""•POI,. 11 !J ,...... OrlH nl IJ 1' ..1' Ntw Vt•~ t t Jt Ok~CllY " """ °"'"'~' IDl'I •I fl1• llC>1tl.. t1 II flhllld•lctMI " 7J ~h· lt>ll ., l"l"I_..., fl M fl~lfnd M ,JI 1 ~1 ll1~1dC I.., •l ~ .ll 11.tM 15 .)t Ille~ n ., S1cr1,,.,.,._t1 M .\J !t, \."'111 ~ 71 Si l! l.1.,tCll'f •4 " _. Chocm franl ...-complete selet!ion of au1daor fumlMa end pallo.-ls ••• dinone-/chaise./borbecue' umbrellas/ diredan chairs/side tableL Honey/Honey, ~/Sage. Brush/I.ova. z;rria/r.,,,,ia, Gold.en Olive/ . 42'Tablewilh 4 arm chair>, $274., $219./ 4B'Table with 4 arm cliain,$296. $239./ Adf. Chai:;e w•lh arms, S 126., $99./Adi. Cho;,., wilhoutarm>,$112., $19,/21'SquoraSido Tabla, $44, $36./Loungo Chai,,, S55.$44./Rocl<inilChair,$65,$51. S•11 01-11 61 '""''•lltllC. ., ~ !==============================================~ $11ttl1 M II .ti Fetes Old Folks Nixon Winds Up 'Back Home' Trip CHICAGO (UPJ \ -Presi· dent Nixon today wound up a lwo-d;1y C'ampr.ign-style swTni:: of the f\1idd!e \Vest which beg11n \\'ilh ;in emotionril tribute lo his mother and C'r1d· ed "1th 1:1 promise t o Arncnca 's senior citizen.s. That pro1nise was contained in :1 speech scheduled at IO a.in CDT today before a joint convention of the Naliona! Retired Tt:>achC'tS Association and the AmericP11 Associ ation of Rl!t1rcd Persons in Chrcago. Nixon. Hying in Thursday night fro1n a •·back home in fndi ana" reception in the corn country where his mothPr was born, was greeted by one of !he nation 's arch-Dernocrats. (h1cago r-.tayor Hichard J. Dale~· Daley gavr Nixon tl1e fu ll Chicago 11'elcon11', including fireboats shooting co Io red spouts or y,·alf'r off Lake Shore Drive along the President's Jfl urney lo thl' Con!inenlal Plaza l lotel. "He Io v es Chica.go," Daley said of Nixon. In fn diana , Nixon talked unabashedly of his Hoosler- ho rn mother and said, "my roots are here." Nixon pulled out all the stops in rural Amer icana whe11 he arrived in the sm<'Jl town or Vernon, Ind .. to dedicate a black iron metal historical marker with gold lettering denoling Lhe birthplace of his late mother, Hannah Milhous Nixon, who was born on a nearby farm in 1885. Touched a n d responding ~motionally, Ni>.:on spoke in front of the i\•y~overed Jen- nings County Courthouse or his Quaker mother's "very derr religious fa ith" and ··very great interest in politics." £ ,~,T\~\\\ f\\~"'1 '{\ll•:. ~ • a l(itcnenf).\ ' v~Ct'~'~~ "\ \ i ''l\~ ~S\\\1l\ \)\'1111 ' Heres yourchonce lo buy o UNDER COUNTER MOOlLS as low as KitchenAid dishwosher- at true savings:. Curren! KitchenAid models. not "stripped down" or "sole" models. Supply Limited Hurry ! \Vhile there's a good selection' 540-7111 COSTA MES4 FBI Says Extortion . . Try Halted GARV. Ind. (AP)-The FBI .said today an attempt had bten made to ext ort $30,00ll from publisher 'Vatter T. llid· der and that FBI agents criticall y wounded a former cmploye of Ridde r ' s new spaper during a gunfight 111 the course. of a payoff. FBI Agent James T. Neagle said lhe al!empl to extort the money fro m Ridder. publisher of the Gary Post 'rribune and vice prtsident <1r Ridde;- Publications, had been made uhder threat of .a bomb allegedly placed in the press room of the newspaper offices. Authorities said no bomb \.\'8.S found. A letter received Wednesday by Ridder said that if the bOmb was found, the children of associate publisher C. Dar· row "Duke" Tully would be shot by a sniper. The FBI identlfied the man shoi during the payoff as John E. Ward, 57, of Gary. He was wounded in the chest No one else was hurt. Authoritiu charged h i m under federal extortion laws. Umbrell a-type Loan Law Seen WASHINGTON !UPI) - The Senate Banking Com· mittee probably will write an un1brel!a-!ype bill to provide governmenl backing for eor· por<1 tions in fi nancial troubles si milar to !hose fa ced by Lockheed. according to a Nix- on Adinini st ration official. The coinmittee held hear- ings on a bill that would enable the govemmenl to back $250 million in loans to Lockheed for constructio n of its 'fristar Airbus. Stanton 'rida)', June 25, 1971 DAIL\' PJLOT f; ·-------~= -----========= Airplane Takes Off -No Pilot ,. . . Contempt ·Weighed WASJIINGTON (UPI) -A Hou.se Ccmmlllft is upeded to decide. next week whether to aeek: a contempt of Ccmgress citai.Min against CBS Prffident Frank Stanton for refusing to 1urrt.ndtt film used in ma.king a documentary on Pentagon public ~lations. The rubcommittee aays It needs the fllm, ot which only small p:n-Uons appeittd ln the "The Selfing af the Pentq:on," to determine wt.ether CBS us- ed mtat .. ding lllming and editini ttt:hnlques. I'.Min1 • four-hour ap- pearance Thnnday, Stanton told the Commerce YUMA <UPI} -A light plane roared into tht air without its pilot Thursday and flew for thrtt hours btfore crashing into a mountain in a restricted military area near Jnv<?sligatioM • llUbcommHltt here. that the unuatd fUm -~alled Tbe single-engine Cessna 150 outlake.s -"'Wll the equivalent buzzed over this city for an of 1 newiman•s notes Hiid pro- bour before it headed into an tected from subcommittee unpopulated desert area. Th& acrutiny by the first amend- craft crashed 20 m i I e s ment. southeast or here. sub committee Chairman Tbe would-be pilot, Charles Har!ty o. Staggers, ( [). Fox, 20, Calexico, told ~-w v ) told SLlnton th l b iff's Sgt. Val Quintero that the · a. ' 1 Y his refUNil t.o te.ltlfy on the starter on thf. plane was not tdltlng practices or to tum working and he started the over the film "in my opinion propellor by hand, leaving the you ire now In contempt of throttle open slightly, Fox said t:ongress." be had set the brake, but the Staggers, also chairman of plane suddenly started mov-the HoUU! C.Ornmu~ Com- ing. millee. said the subcommittee Fox ran af~r the plane ind probably will meet next week fell wh ile trying to cli mb in to fei rmally consider the con-~he_door. He suffered slight in· tempt motion. If approved by Junes. o; the Commer~ CommHtee and Fox had just finished laking the lloose it would be sent to a written pilot's examination ihe JustiCe Department for and was preparing to leave on pros~~tion. a return flight to his home None <>£ the four aub- when the 1,000 pound plant: committee members agreed suddenly took <>ff. with Stanton·s claim the out- A Marine helicopter f<>llowed takes ·were protected by the lbe Cessna for about an hour, First Amendme nt and Slag- but could not go t.o the ll,000-gens rejected the network ex- foot altitude attained by the ecutive's claim that the sub- small craft. A mi Ii ta r Y committee's action would have turboprop then trailed the a "chilling" effect on network Cessna until it suddenly drop-television ttporting. pe~ 2,000 feet, went in!o a slow Staagers aald "and yoo talk spin and crashed into the about chHllng effects. This mountain . (mtdia) runs chills up and down the spine. When there is untruth put on the!e networks IN ORDER TO ACQUAINT THE MEN WITH CISTINCTIVli TASTES IN ClOTHING TO OUR flNE COLLEC· TION OF SHIRTS, WE OFFER A HAND PICKED GROUP OF BEAUTIFUL PATTERNS AT A MOST APPEALING PRICE. Roq. $17.50 lo $!0.00 NOW-$20.00 Jane Fonda's Case Pressed they can control this land and ,_ ______ ...._ _____________________ _, you know they can if they CLEVELAND (UPI) -The Cleveland prosecutor rri\led charges of a.uauJt and battery against act.rt.u Jane Fonda Thursday, one day all.er a judge bad dismissed them because they were technically unJOund. allow this lo go on." \Who cares whether you can trust a car sa lesman or not? Who cares wbetliei" !he gives you a fair price for your trade-in? And a fair deal on yow= n;w~~ And who cares whether you get good financing or not? W'ho cares whether the ' . ' . 1 salesman greets you with a smile or not? Whether he treats you politely?, SUMMER TRUCK LOAD EVENT :Whether he gives you the straight fac ts when you ask him a question? I .......... • 'Who cares enough to see that you get the right car for your needs •.. with the c $3.12 PER FLAT. MIX OR MATCH. MANY VARIETIES AVAILABLE SUCH AS: * PETUNIAS * PANSIES * BEGONIAS * SNAPDRAGONS * V!NCA * COLEUS * MARIGOLDS * ZINNIAS * ASTERS AND MANY MORE SATURDAY & SUNDAY ONLY! GARDEN CENTER NEWPORT BEACH • Fashion Island Sta,. Only • ~ight options :':. and doesn't try to sell you into something bigger t!Ulii• y~ . . -r really want? Who cares whether your new car,~s p~operly. chec~~ o~~~ ~ and set up before you drive it awa y? Or whether you get the kind of_~' you need when you come back, I Y"_-.._• ,-I or whether you ever come • ' . 1 back at all? ( • ' I • • • ' ·yoo· Chry.sler-Plymotlth Dealers --OBDID COlta Mesa Atlas Chrysler·P~mouth, Inc. 2929 Harbor laulevard Huntington Beach Huntington Beach Chrysler .Pry.th 16661 Beach loulevanl • • I • ( r . ~ ~ DAILY PILOT E DITORIAL PAGE Pain Dana Point is begtn ning to grow again. .~nd with the gro"·tb com es pain. at Owners or homes are complaining in appeals to county supervisors that new development is elimin· a ting their vie'v of the sea. . To the hon1eov.·ner, the Joss of that panorama lS a considerable one. The zoning, however. ha~ existed since 1951 . Own· ers or lots are exercis ing their right to build on the property. Bctov.', Dana Harbor is n1oving along toward completio n, a catalyst to the building acceleration. ··).'ou arc paving the way for a tenement area by allO\\'ing one apartment per 1,000 square fee t," con1· plained one resident. Resident s are allowed to appeal the decision of the county zoning administrator if he grants an encroach· menl permit. nol an uncommon practice because of the hilly terrain. llo\vever, the decisions seem to be running con- sistenlly against their a ppeals. It seems that lh:e Dana Poin t homcov•ner is a victim of poor past planrung and zoning, and may \Ve il be stuck \\·itb the fact. Protecting Lagtma's Trees Last year in La guna Beach, the touchy topic of t.he day \Vas dogs -the r ight of the dog owner to exer.c1se his pct in public parks or on the b€ach, versus th~ right of the non-dog O\vner to be protected from roving ca- nines. This year, the touchy topic seems lo be trees-the right of the property owner to t~m, top or even. remove lrees from his land. versus the righ t of the public to en· joy that \Vhich o nl y God can make, regardless of it! location. There probably are at least as many tree-lovers as dog·lovcrs. They are equally emotional. So the diSJlUte Dana Point seems likely to · eonUnu.e unless the city can come up with an equitable 10lution to · 11U!fy property owner• and tree fans alike. One promising proposal is the establishment of a sort of city "tree bank" into whic}\ a person who nmoves a tree from bi! property .could donate a subl!Utute trM for planting in some suitable spot. Another plan would preserve "landmark trees" by making it illegal to cut down exceptional trees without official permission. ~ Most citi.iens probably classify themselves as tree· lovers, or at leaiot don't ·harbor strong feelings: againfit trees, so any reasonable tree-protection plan probably \\.'ou1d win exception, if it can meet the te!t o! legality • F iesta La Christianita There were t!mes in San Clemente when the now· commonp.lace opening of a tuperrnarket sparked cele- bration in the streets. The city's first modem food store, jn fact, sparked that sort of enthusiasm. But it seems as the years pass in the city, fol ks just seem to want litUe of the fanfare and celebration. Yet there are opportunities for lhe old-fashioned county fair zip to emerge. Each JuJy the Fiesta La Christianita takes place, and each year it seems harder to find the fiesta spiriL In an all-out ef1'ort to restore the old flavor lhis year, Chamber of Commerce and volunteer group work· ers have tried just' about everything -from advance· sale tick~t offerings to the restoration of tht fiesta queen competition. It will, only if San Clementeans shed that shell of complacency and join in the spirit of things. Dozens of persons have worked hard for months trying to create an annual activity which live! up to its name -a fiesta. Join the fun. '=-<-_. ~~,,..... ~ --'.~--:--""'::'?':c..,._~i:; f----~1"1 .. 1 ~~ •No NEWS IS ~00~ NE WS.q s Subject ivity ls l11'i poss ible To Esca pe Dear Gloomy Gu s As Case of Pe11tagon War· History Goes to S11p1•e 1ne Cotirt • •• Everybody looks at the world through colored glasses. Nobody is able lo look at it through a "clear pane, .. because each temperament and personality colors its \•ision and calls this color •·the real world." Some look through rose • colored glass- es, others throug h darker hues. Some see t~ \\·orld in 11 bilious I.one, others in muted shades of gray. ;a nd s t il I others in dramatic scarlets, or pale . -)'ellovt, The "re alist," U1crcforc is not one who foolishly imagines that he alone sees the \1·orld in its "true" or .. natural" color, \1'ithout the distortion of spectacles - rather it is the one who recognizes the partic~lar coloration of his personalit~·. ri nd diticounts it in his estimate of ··reah- ty:· ' EYEN !'110DERN science has become lncrea~ingly modest in 11s 11c1.,. of ex- lernal objects. It 1s beginning lo lcan1 that ''subjl'cli\'ity·· l.'i impossible lo escape in scientific research and in· vestigation: the \'Cr~' process of human examination 1\self d is I u r b .'i the ''rl'alness·• .-if the object being inspected ()r measu red ()f phot()graphed. Thi" is v1hy \to'e have () n I y •·mathem;itiea l models" of the elements in subatomic physics. and not "pict ures'' of these particles at w()fk.. Predictions and pmjections aboul "'v.hal:is going to happen" in the next few yea r.'i depend as much upon the tcm- perarqcnt of lhe prediclcr as upon the lt's amazing how DUE due pr~s.t can be, and how SPEEDY justice can be, when the government, and the people running it, want to curb ne1\·spapers like the l\1ew York Times, the \Vashington Post and the Boston Globe. -G. A. L. flli1 , .. ,.,. n nem rw.-n• '"'° - llK•Hl fitf "-M II "'9 ............ JefHI ''"' "' ..,.,. ,. •-r ..... 0111»' r111tt. philosophy or hist.ory or ideology ht espouses. TWO SEERS CAN take the same 1el or raclS and interpret them quite differently - one using them to see oothing but cha os and destruction ahead , the other using them as a basis for hope of prog· ress and reconci\!iation in the conflicts of man. 1\nd their philosoph ies. \\'hil!: preten- ding to be rooted in fa ct or theory. are \it Ile niorc than extrapolations of their in· div id ual tem peran1en!s -rosy, black, or some .~hade in bet v;een . Every idea they touch is colored by the "glaSlles'' they in· evitably \Year. DUT \\'lllLE SCJEl"ITISTS have learn- ed lo :illo\Y for lhe ··per~nal equation." most \!linkers have not. And v.·e ourselves gra\'Jlatc to those thin kers (or s~lh~ay<'rSI \1·ho most closely ap- prox11nate our o '"' n temperaments, becausc \\·e find !heir ideas congenial, <1.nd not bccaus€' "e have made an y ob· jr>c1 1\e e\·aluat1on of them. lndf?ed. 11 ls impossible to make any 1JbJrc\1\·e e,·aluation of the future . for it 1s preciselJ the "invariables" in history that determine even t.s. The mO!St honest 1h1ng v:e can do 1s to discount at lea1t 50 percent of what \\e "btlieve'' I! being in the service or both our self-intf're!l and the parlicu!ar shade of gl3"es we wer• born "'ith. These S houldn't Happen 'I'be tragic accidents v;hich seem to be an unavoidable part of summer vac ations are made more heartrending by the knowledge they most often rould ha\'e been avoided. There seems to be an absende of common sense or lack of und~g or laws and ntles in many or the mir.baps. Traffic deaths and in juries 11re one thing .)ut the drownings, boating cra5hcs and IOll chUd incidents are another. The~ ghould not happen. ~Ile the many warnings. there are countltsa people who go swimming in lakes• and rivers which are extremely cold, ~cularly in the spring when the ~wiPelL runoff Is at ·ils height. The IUfVilal Ume In 1uch w11\er for the humait body 1' a matter of minutes. ANOTREfl FACl'OR is the deceptively nifl •nd cbaaClnl currents in the rivers. A qulol opot .., cloy :trill be • dangeroos whirlpool -· Ollldren espedally •boulJI bl walclied-ao Ibey do not gel inlO Quotes ' W.td McAfee. Saa Bnunllno, oo lowtftac dlle votlq 11e -"By what Joglc~doel the equ1l protect.iOn clauiie or tile Hlh ~"' 1top wllh 18 ,.., : okll? Wiiy not at<,.i lht• con· .Utallonal &~-<to "'°"' who have (be ~p0rary ml1fortune ol being 17, 11, or 21" I Gu est Ed itor ial ' . . . these places. Another thing 11bout childttn is they can disappear in the wooda in a few seconds. They are pre,sent one moment, and vani!:b the next Adulta: at c.1mpina: and picnic spots should never le t lOOn out of their aighl. Boating accidents frequently lrt c:aua. ed by violati(lll or the law or rules of UM waler. Many boat.en do not .even kno• they art la" vk>laton wheft they fill to give the ri&ht-of·way, go out on the waler without life jackets for every pti~r or overload the boat. It ls not tme0mmon to see eight pecple in a boat built for four. n.e cont.inUauon or b o a t I n 1 mishaps at a lime wbm anyone an buy • boat with no proof of ability to handle one will lad to tht kind of enforetmenl boaters may feel js lntimld1tlon. But unle.ss . the bollin& entbusiutl 111d 1~ du.stry tnsUtute aome fmn of voluntary training, ii will bf. Jmpoeed upon lhtm. Jn fact. the Ltglslatun ahould be ~ a:ldering a law to require boat ownen to show I.hey know haw to open.le one before I.hey ean use It A Imler llc:enatng stat ult 1imll1r to that re q u I r I n & autom()bile driver• to be Ucenstd by the statt may be lnavltablt. S.cr1muta Bel What Press Freedom Means to You WbtsWD·Cburchill, Brf1l11t 1tate1m11 - "'A frtt press 'is the unsleeptng guai-dtan of every other right that .freemen priu; it ii the most dangerous foe of tyran- ny ••• Under dictatorship the pre.ss is bound to languish, and the loudspeaker and the film to become more important. But where free instituttons are indigenous to the IPOil and men have the habit of liberty, the press will rontinue to be the Fourth Estate, the vigilant guardian of the rights of the ordinary citizen.'' W1lttt Lippman. author. t et Ired eew!lp1per ~lumnist, answerin& the 4111esUon. "Wb•t rtgbt JM reporters and editors h•ve i. critkb:e?" -"If the country is to bt governed with the con- sent of the gOvemed, then the 1overned must arrive 1t opinions about what their governors want them to consent to. }low do they do this7 They do it by hearing on the radio and reading in the newspaper!!: ·what the corps of rorre.spondents tell them is going on in Washington and in th e cowitry at large and in the world. ''Here v.·e perform an e!lsential !lervice. ln some fltld of interest we make it our business to find out wha t is going on under the surfatf: and beyond the horizon , to infer. to deduct, to imagine and to guess what is going on inside, and \\·hat this meant yesterday, and \\'hat it <XlUld mean tomorrow. Jn this we do \\'hat every !!OVereign citizen i.!I supposed to do , but has not the time or the int.erest to do for hims~lt This is our job, It ii no mean call ing, and we have a right to be proud of il and to ht glad that it is our work.'' Sen Robert r. Kea.nedy - ''In my opini on, the. ne.wspapera are ~ual to Ult courts -and some\imts ahead of the courts: in our syztem -in protecting the: people's fwidamental rights." Albert Camu1, Mth Century rrench aulbor -,. A. free press can of course be good or bid, but most certainly v;ithout freedom it will never be anything but T he Views of Adolf Hiller, Gertnan dictator - ''Tht organization of our press bas truly been a success. Our la1v con· c!:ming the press is such that div- ergencieS of op.inion between mem- bers ot the govenlmenl are no longer an occasion for public !:xhi- bitions, which are not the nev.·s· pipers' busine!ls. We've eliminat- ed that conception of political free- dom \\'hich holds that everybody has the right lo say \l'hate\'er comes tinto his head .. , l'\ikoli Lenin, de\•cloper of tho bad., , Freedo1n Is nothing else but • chan ce to be better, v.·bereas enslave- ment i1 a certainty of the worse." U.S. ~11. Wiiiiam. E. Bor1ll -''If the preS!I i1 not free. if 1peech is not in· dependent and untrammeled, if the mind is shackled or made impo~nt thro ugh fear, it makes no difference unde r what form of government yoo live, you are a subject and not a citizen.'' Benjamin Franklin -"lr all prin\er~ were determined not lo prin t an.vthtng t\ll they 1.rcre sure it would offend nobod y, there .... ·ould be very little printed ·· Justiet llugo l,. Black. U.S. Sup rrn1 r Courl -'·for the First Amrndn1r11\ (locs not speak equivocally. lt prohibits a11y T \vo Dictators political. econo1nic and social prin. ci ples aod policies of com1nunism -"\\'hy should freedom of speech and freedom of the press be al- lov.·ecl? \Vhy shou ld a government y,·hich is doing 11 hat it believes to be righL allow itself lo ~ .. criticiz- ed? It 1vould not allow •t position bv lethal weapons. Ideas ri re much rTiore fa!al things thnn gun :;. \\ hy should any mnn be allowed !O huy a printing press and cllsS('lll- ina te pernicious opinion calcu- lated to embarrass the go\'t rn- menl'."' \a,.,. 'abridging frccdo1n or sprerh or of the press: It must be 1:iken 3s a C'Olll- mand of the broadest scope lh<1I explir1t language. read in the ron!cx t of a hberl y- lovi ng society, will allo1v ., Justire Loui'.'li 0. Brandeis. U.S. Supreme OJurl -"The function nf th<' press is very high. It is alnl{lSl holy. It l')UJl:ht to serve as a forum rpr tht' peopl e. lhrough v.·hich the people may knov.• free· 1~ 1~hat is going on, To miss late (Jr suprcss. the news ls a breach ol trust.'' Thomas Erskine , Scoui sb juri!'it - ''The press must be free: il has al"'ays been ~o and much evil has been rorrected hy 1\. 1£ government finds it.self annoyed h) !!. Jet it exa1nine its 01\n conduct and it "'ill find the cause.'' Btnjam in Constant. 19th Cenlury Frenrh painter -.. \Vilh nev.·spapers. there is-sometimes disorde r; \.,.ithout 1hem. !here is al ways slavery." President James A. Ga rfield -''Not for its own sake alone. hut. for the_ sa ke of socif'ty and good government. 1he pre ss should be fret. Publicity is the stronR: bond v.·hich un ites the people <ind their government. Authorit y ~hould do no act that \\'ill not bear the ·light." .lust ice Fel ix frankfurter . U . l'i • Supreme Court -.. \Vithollt a free presii there can he no free society. That is ax- iomatic. However , freedom of the pres! is no~ an end in itself but a means to th• rnd or a free society. The scope end na turf' of the constltul1011al guaran!ee or lhe freedom of the press are lo bl' \'ie\\'l!d and applied in that hghl." Chi nn !l o. chairman. Honolulu Stllr Bullrtin -.. or all the human endeavor!'i non t' has thr opportunity and the re· ~ponsih1lily of reflecling man to hi mself as does journalism. Not government. J">ot la11 . Not medicine, No l engi neer in g. Nol finance. Journalism offers the ,1·orld a chance to know about itself through pnnted "ords," Divorce: Some Can Be Own Lawyer To the Edi tor: Divorce has ca~d rtn0tional 1train •nd a financial burden to many people when they a~ poorly prepared to deal v.ith either. The new California Family Law Act greatly redu~s !hue hardship11 by eliminaUna fault finding 1s a ba11i1 for marriage diuolution and by providinc for equitable division of community properly. In aome eases ii ma y be feas ible for an lndlvktual to act u his own attorney and thw n.ve the cost of attorney fees. UNDER THE NEW California Family Law Act, the only grounds for marrl1ge diqoluUon a.re: (1) irrecooc:ilable dif· ferenctJ lh11t 'h1\'e c.1ustd the lr· remedl1ble breakdown of the marri1ge, and (1) lncurabl• insanity. Profesaional rnaniage counseling Is available at no cost in counties hiving • c:anc1uation Court. Titla counse.linlJ Is available eithtr before or after dls&0IU· Uon Prootedtnc• have begun. It ls nectUltJ' 10 ru. a PeUUon for Con- cDi1Uon with the &!perior Court Clerk. TO ACT AS YOUR. own attorney in a marrtqe dl&IOluUoo, start by ukin& the: S-lor C.U.t Clerk r.r Ille oi...1 .. U0n Plc:Ut.. Thon localo 1be nurut llw llbmy far rtferenct 1n1terlal n. new Callfoml1 hmily Law Act and ap- propriate court proctdura' can be found In Deerlna1 Ci•il Codt 4S<IO to 5000 and 1111 Gee,..e ---.. !Send ,..., pn>blcma IO Georte, c/o tbls newsp.per. Yt1h, I know It' 1 not called the C/O T H I S NEWSPAPER, but whtl lhtt mean1 ta -toraet iL Wrile to AM.) Mailbox . - Letter• from readers arc tcelcomt:. Normallv writer• 1hould convev their mes.sages in 300 word.! OT leu.. Tht right to condenie Lttttt• to fit 1po.ct or eliminate tibtl i! rtseroed. All ltt· ttr.t mvst include signature and maiL- i ngi oddrts.!, but ttmnt.!I may be wi!li- h.eld on request if sufficient re ason iJ apparcn.t. Pottr11 will not b• pub- lished. Rules cf Court 120t to ll90 (In lhe t97t Pocket Su p p l e m en t s and other referenct1 that may be available. The court clerk cannot help you in any -·ay ()r i ive advice. You will be on your own. J hope concerne:d people in other •tales lrill work for similar improvemenl~ in dlvorct le(11lation. JOHN PATTON Pollt l.,.U: P•ra11te1 To lbe Editor : T picked up tHe paper thll mornin1 and rc1d, "~Y Group Cle1r1 t.I BllUon Tu RlH," "A.atmbly PnteS Bill · to Permit 1% Tlpplm Tax," ind "Ana- heim City Council OK'1 I% lncrt1se in Room T1.x" (from s io •~C ). The only thing Uu1t the govtmment h•m'l tll.xl'd ytl 1' the 1ir wt: brtalhe. Some lame brain could re1lly prove how amart he ll by fiprin1 out a method by which we could bt ta1td for the •Ir 'I"• bre1the • [1' nm AMERICAN public conUnUlf'I ti') allow these political parasites lo ket'p gobbling us up, Lhe Co m1nuni sts v.·on·l have to do us in , our elected officials 111 our cities, coun ties and slates and led('n1l government v.•ill havl! done lhe job for them . Y.'ake up. you people .,..•ho go to the pollii . Cet rid of those \\'ho represent the special interests and re place the m w1!h men and V.'omen \vho vt'i\1 \\'ork For the people·s interests-yours, mine, the young peopl e \\ho have already seen wh11rs wrong v.·ith ''th e establishment" and .,..,ho are la ying down their lives in a far away land to perpetuate the existing mesJ our country iii in. THROUGll THE pnlls. force those \\'e elect to ofUce into keeping !heir cam· paign promises, not to special interest J!roups or political 11ffiliations. but to us, the worki ng people of America, trs time our elected offi cials v.·cre re.minded they are "the .servants" of the people, not their maJler.!I. Many of them seem to forget this very important ra ct Wt I you 21nd I) hire the!!e people to work for U! (not Sl>t'Clal interest groups ) and If Uley don't produce for us, they should be fired . NOW JS THE time for all intelligent Ameri cans lo C()me lo tht aid of their country. Lefs 1top the waste of young pcoplc'J lives in Vietnam , call 11 halt to increuing t11:ies and lnsi!l't on able·bodied people earning their O\.\'n v.·ay in life. 1-t. J. MONA.HAN Cancer A pat h11 To lhe Editor: lam 1 patient at the American f\fedlcal Center at Denver. an ouL~tanding hospital and research center devoted to the con- (\uer<t of cancer. Since I have been in thilf hospital. l have been aware of a great deal of apathy on the part or th• Ametican public lo a diseast' wh1r h th1:ir ~·ear \v~ll claim approxin1alely seven times the number of American lives \osl in the entire Vietnam \\'ar. Ui\'LESS RAPID Pf°Ogress is made !n research, nearly every Amt'rican family \\'ill be touched 1n some 11'ay by this dread diseast. I \1•ould like to receive let- lers from people who are interested in 1 cooperative erfort in su pport or cancer research . It is mv contention that .,...e n1ay be ahle to moiivate one another. i\lARfF: BIRCll Room :u:i 6403 \V. Colfax Denve r, Colo. 80214 ----- .Friday, June 25, 1971 The ecLJtorial page of th~ Dail11 Pilot seela to i11jorm and stim-. ulate reader.t by pre.te111ing thi.t news po1>('r '.t opittfon.t and com- n1entan; qn topics of interts' and sig11i/iconct, by providi ng o forum for the exvres.Jion ()f our r cnder1· opinion,,, arid by prcseriting tlie divtrse view- points nj informed ob servl!'rs und .~pokesmtn Oil topics of tlu: day. Robert N. Weed, Publisher Leak Big Headache For Nixon WASHINGTON 1UPJ) - Both President Nixon and his chief foreign policy adviser, Dr. Henry A. Kissinger. v•ere gald lo be deep!y concerned a bout publication of the secret Pentagon study on U.S. in· vo!vemen! in Vietnam. Their c:oncern stems not so much from 1he substance of the docun1e11ts as from the im· p!lcatior.s o! a security leak of the sensitive con1n1unications that circulate at the highest levels of government. \\'hite House o ff i c i a Is privately concede that the documents !hemselves dn not furnish valuable inforn1ation to the enemy. and of course, the Nixon Administration has no interest in defending the record of the Jo hn s Gn Administration on Vietnam. But lhe Presidenl v.•as said to reel that he had to order the lea ks investigated and hall publication jf possible not only to fulfill his obligation to en- force · the Jaw but .also to d iscourage any such future disclosures. Publication by lhe New York Times .and Washington Post nf the assessments which shaped the American involvement in Vl~tnam during the Johnson years and oF the documents ,,.,·hich oul!ined in more detail than ever before the clan- destine American involvement in Southeast Asia have damag- ed the Nixon Administration to a certain exten1 . They have had the effect of eroding the crrdibility of President i\1xon 's c 1 aims ebout Vie1nam by confirming the suspicions of many that they v.·ere not told all they need to know by President J ohnson and feeding the suspi- r.ions that the same situation now exists. Bu t the President·s chief concern 11,•a,:; ~11 1 cl to be that rear (lf publ1 cat1nn woulcl ln· h1bi1 his key ad\'isers from giv i ng h i m candid assessments of ~ens1live s1tua - tion5, lt is a source of i;m - b a r r a s~ m P n t !0 the grive rnme nt 11,·hen 1t;; rnn- fiden11al cnmmunicat1nn s with othPr gnvernment~ are mildP pub!I(' k:~J NEW CROP BABY KOi CARP 10 ......... $3.50 25 ......... $8.00 50 ........ $15.00 100 ....... $28.00 WATER LIL LI ES 2 for $5.00 WATER HYACINTH 5 for $1.00 ALS O TANKS FILTERS STANDS A CCESSORIES Pacific Goldfish Farm VI SIT US l'ltOM l&.S.--C .. •9'11 f11t1, 1d41 J~w•'tl• ii , w.,1..,1~tt•r Oft t~• !1" Olll'•lt l'•"*•Y •I G<l!d~···' • J tli• lt).'111.l ' -"* JUST SAY ''CHA.RGI IT" 1.99 OFF ACRYLIC TOP • 100°/o acrylic top • Sli p-on style with mock crew neck • M, L, and XL sizes SUMMER FABRIC CLEARANCB • Fabulous clearance 5 9 ¢ • Prints , so lids, ploids • B<?.19 , bright colors Friday, Jurtf 25, 1971 OAJL Y l'ILOT l SHO' EARLY SOME Q UANTITIES LIMITED l JACQUARD BEACH TOWElS 111 • Absorbent cotton terry • Wove n reversible print • B•g 2 811 x 5 6" towel • Seo 'n sun prints • . -. ,. lllfl'llllA SPICIAll . JUICY WARDBURGER . I.ND FRENCH FRIESI • ,. t• .,99¢ I ' • . • Tasty hamburger with \ crisp french fr1e1 •' • lettuce and tomato •.,. • A yummy Sorurday treatl I c-~ ~ '.~~~·: '\'~\. . . '~.': I ' ' ' I . . > ;;.· .. -.,; .. ._ . • Heiny fo r best selection SPEC IAL REG. 994 • 1.49 .. 1 1-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~+-~~~~~~~~~-""~.,;..;--..-.;.;..+-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~+-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-f. ' s.~,~'J • Soft cotton · j I ' ' TANGY FRUIT SUCES! • Tos te-te mpting fru it slices from Words • Orange, lemon, lime ~ and raspberry 66L~ SPECIAL 32-GA L. PLASTIC TRASH CAN s10 OFF ROUAWAY BED! • G rant 32.g ollon ca pacity • Strong pla stic contoiner • l ock tig ht lid • No more rusty cons J • ... • Big 30" rallaway 2 9ss • Innerspring mattress • Rolls on ca sters • f'olds ea sily, neatly 311 SPECIAL SAVE 70 ' LN. FT. ON RAILING OFF CHEST FREEZER! : ~o1d~u3:2 l~sesf~ s 14 9 • Coun ter-balanced hd • Foam-insu lated • Ornamental iron roding 9 9 ¢ • 3', 4', 6' sections • Treated to prevent rusf • Use indoors o r out LA CIENEGA FULLE RTON ro c.en990 01 18H'I If het1• 836·7922 horbot crt Of0'1'•1ho•pe hCN n 4-8 -l.$~ TORRANCE NORWALK HUNTINGTON I EACH g,.t omo #o.,,>O!'I 'jUG•• ,,,,pe,,ol 01 r'IOf woflr blvd .d'}"' ot beo(h boulevard phori• 5.t2 69 1 one 868·0911 OrHJ 71A·892·6611 INVIGORATING MASSAGER • Heavy duty profess ional style massager • Soothing, invigorating to sore or tired muscles 4ss. SPECIAL SAVE s31 ON POOL OUTFIT • Acrylic filled , cotton ' 1 flannel lined I ·? • Cotton shell with :; full canopy ' •euo • • • "' . ' ~ 2.61 OFF 1 Y2 TON JACK ' • • Kit incl udes filter, $ 74 ladde r; strong supports • 12' x 36" pool • GAL. CHLO RINE 464 3aa ' • 11/, to n hydraul<c 1ack • Eas y to handle, operate • Lift'rng range IS 7· 14" • l·p1ece pumping handle ----L----:..,...:-. I. SPECIAL! CANISnR VAQJUM s20 OFF ELECTRONIC OVEN . :~~:~~.h ~~e~•th $329 ll S·V ava 1lab1hty • See 1t de manurated1 s29 • Bi g, powe rfu l motor • Easy·roll wheels • Vinyl b umper • Uses dispo sable bags SANTA ANA PANORAMA CITY J_ O•et!leOO·~~·~~~ "G•OH'O bf!1lol OT 1evenf9.enlti •oboo• 01 •OM:oe phont 541 68'41 pt.one 894 8211 """' -e S73 l 110 VENTURA CANOGA PARK I COVINA 500 M)Uth mill' rood 'OponrJIOIO bClU ICl"'CO 01 ,Qo• 0. "God,..O A8.S·.SA2i 642 7.SAI hen• 1000 OffW -"Otte 9&o ''II " .. .. ; . . ( ' . .-. ... .. . ,, · . '" .,-. , . ' • • -.. • .; oAILY PILOT Fuda1, Ju!lt' 25, 1911 Crop Dust Fumes Threaten 1,000 IMPERI AL (AP) -Toxic fumes from a burning hangar full of crop dusting in· secticides has forced evacua. tion of 800 to 1,000 residents frc;>m a 25-block section of this dese rt community. Sixteen persons w e re lreat!d by docto rs for in· halation o( the fumes and others were reported feel ing ill or nause-ous. All were reported in good condition . The quarantine of the 450 was initially ordered for 48 hours after the fire of un- determined oril~in broke out about t p.m. Thursday But P'red Singh . coun!v health director. said it coold be lifted sooner if tests today shov:ed the fume s had dissipated. hangar "was gone before we could gf't the hoses uncoHed. We ha d to pull back before v.'e could get the chemicals out." The fumes. while .. ex· tremely M zardou s," probah!y ,\·ould not be fatal. Singh said. ''They just make you av.·fully sick." All 50 firemen who battled the blaze v.·e re nevertheless put through derontaminalion and placed under observation for 24 hours. They and everyone else .,a,•ho worked in the area also wtll be given blood tests, Singh said. Coro11a Returns To Jail YUBA CITY fUPl ) -Mass murder suspect Juan V. Corona. is welt • enough to return to his jail cell today; one week after he \\'as hospitalized with chest pains, doctors have decided. Physicians .i;aid Corona, 37, ~·ho has lost 25 pound s since his arrest as suspect in the killing of 25 it inerant farm v.·orkers, had suffered no heart damage although tests "sug· gested 1 her e was a disturbance.·· "Our feeling is that the chest pains were probably the result of tension." said Dr. Thomas Leavenworth, chief of staff at Sutter County General Hospital. "He is experiencing no pain now and seems more settled now.·• QUEENTE By Phll lnterlcmdi "'! guess it's for those who have a change of he.art, t>e> to speak.,.. The fire ''v.•ent up like a tornado," said Victor Bar ion. city civil defense chieL v:hn lives a block from the Imperial County Airport. After the evacuated area was cordoned of£, it "''as patrnled by police. sheriff's deputies and hi g b v.· a y patrolmen. A n evacuation center was ~l up at the coun- ty fairgrounds but mo s t person~ apparently chose to slay with friends or in motels. Sheriff Rov \Vhitea ke r said--------------------- Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers An airport worker said the .,,ood-frame corrogated meta l ln1perlal a to wn or 4.000, is located 90 miles east of San Diego. Corona was io be returned to. day to his cell at Yuba County J2j l across the Feather River in Marysvill e. GAL. NOW e WHITE BIRCH ~:;; G~~-NOW $1495 e WHITE BIRCH e ALDER 20" BOXES 24 " SAVE 50% e SYCAMORE • CAL & EURP. • WHITE BI RCH • MULBERRY e FRUITLESS MALBERRY e CORKSCREW WILLOW e PEACH e FIG e FLOWERING PLUM Happiness tor Roses is GERMAI/I(!" ROSE GUARD"' PUNT FOOD ~~ SP.~t. si.oo Triple Action HEDI ROllS llLS INSECTS ~ITROtS w!llll •reeds Ro!>ts with balanced ltr11illtf •Kills Aphids .1nd olhu $Utkin& instcls • Conhols more Iha!\ 24 ll1llerent t;rom.es and wetd5- Sib.size $2 49 Reg. $3.49 , Kill 'EM WITH KINDNESS ••• USE GERMAJ~' SNAIL, SLUG & INSECT KILLER • Sprinkle on like ult • No pellets.- • no mounds • l ns attradiwt to ch!ldrllli ind ptb. lib.size 994 Reg. $1.59 MARIGOLD & PETUNIAS Regular 79¢ • ALDER • SYCAMORE LIMITED SUPPLY PLANTS BEAT SUMMER HEAT With Gromulch Mulch root areas well to conserve moisture HAND PRUNERS NOW 99' GREEN ACRE LIQUID PLANT FOOD 89' ,,_._, 1 G.Al Slll LIGYSTRUM TEXANYM PRIVET REG. S1.f~t GAL NOW 98 ¢ OF,1!!111 GOO~ T"IU JULT t. 0111 TILL SUl"l'Lll S LAST 39c OPI N MON,•SAT, •·• SUN. f-4:l0 II PER TRAY • • OYD'S a NURSERY and LANDSCAPE CO . f. •. :-' L Liquor Servers Liable SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A bartender who sell~ drinks lo an intoxicated customer can be sued for injuries to • third person, the Ca lifo rn i a Supreme Court ruled Thurs- day. The case involved Miles Vesely, injured in a n automobile acr:ident n e a r Mount Bal d y in San Bernardino County April 9, 1968, who sued for damages and included tavern owner \Villiam A. Sager as a defen- dant. Vesely charged Sager had permitted his employes to serve drinks to James G. · O'Connell knowing that be was "becoming excessively in- toxicated" and would have to drive down a steep, w"1ding, narrow mountai n road on leaving the tavern. It was while driving down that road that O'Connell's car and Vesely 's car collided. Senate Increases Budget, Assailed SACRAMENTO iUPl) - Six men wenl behind guarded doors toda y to v.-rite the. Legislature's final version of a $1 billion state budget that wa.s almost certain to.require a major tax increase. G<iv. Ronald Reagan, still trying to avoid a tu hike through austerity speoding, Welfare reform and income tax withholding. branded a budget passed Thursday by the Senate as "reckless" and "outrageous." The $7.37 billion Senate budget -out of balance by around $800 million-was ap- proved 31..J with little debate. ll then was promptly rejected by the Assembly, setting the stage for a two-house, six- m e m b er conference com- mittee to negotiate a fina l budget to send Reagan. The negoliating commillee CQnsisl.5 of four Democrats and two Republicans. They are Senate Finance Olairman Randolph C.Ollier (0-Yrek.a ); Assembly Ways aM Meaiu chairman Willie L. Brown Jr. ( D-San Francisco ; S e n • t • Republican Leader Fred L. Marler J r., of Redding; Stn. St.ephen P. Teale ([)..Rall Road Flat); Assemblyman Carley V. Porter (0-Compton) and As.semlbyman F r a n k. Lan· trrman (R-La Canada). The Senat.e budget was about $640 milliOft more thtn what Reagan propoHd lul February and $360 million more than what the AMembly passed last wtek. ' · Next Wednesday midnight is the legal deadl ine for th• Legislature to pa1s and the governor to sign a new budjet for the 1971·72 fi scal year. "Again we are almO!t at the end of the fiscal year.~ ob!erved Re11gan. "and th• Legislature still has not eom- plet.ed its deliberations on a budget 11eeded to operate ltl~ government." A.Ill SIZE REG. 8.99·9.99 >], 99 QUEEN SIZE REG. 11 .99 9.99 KING SIZE RfG. \.4.99 11.99 Save s4 noW on Dacron. polyester fOC111 pilows -caalfJI Inner ,polyvrethone foam core; colorful print cotton tick. Soft or ftrm. Regular size. $8 QUEEN 2/10. 99 $10 KING .. 2113. 99 2/799 110. $6 IAat 6 File $365,000 Cycle Noise Suit ORANGE -Six Orange Park Acres residents who claim !n ~ir Orange County Superior C-Ourt action that their lives have been made a hell by the seven-days-a-week activities of bike riders in the nearby motorcycle park ha1·e gued the development ow ners and the Irvine Co. for S.165,000 In damages. Dr. Irving and ~1 rs. Julie \\/. Rappaport, Dr . Jack Wayne and ~irs. Patricia M. Andrews and R.A. and Bettie Jan Pole- UC I Grant TQld lRVlNE -Dr. ~1urray Krieger, professor of English at UC Irvine. has been awarded a $13,300 grant hy the National Endowment for the Humanities lo support the Ct·:elopment of a book on literary theory. quin e!aim tha t normal con- versation, t e J e phone con· versati<>Ni and televisX>n and radio activity in the i r Brentwood Drive home s are almost impossible bt'cause of noise generated by un- mufOered motorcycles in the park. All three couples -state they have unsuccessfully appealed lo both defenrl ant companies to halt the disturbance and have appealed in legislative hearings for laws that will compel motorcyclists to install mufners on lheir 1n;ichines. They state many other residents of lhe 700-acre tract are similarly affected by the noise generated from the motorcycle park. Many residen ts, the suit Has Heart Dr. Jero1ne S. Tobis of Corona d el Mar, a member of lhe UC Ir- vine faculty, has been elected to the Board o( Directors of the Orange County Heart Associa- tion. states, are affecled by '"general n ervo us n es s • ------------ physkal debilitation a n d Final Stoc~s lessened enthusiasm for life" In All Home because or lite din generated by the motorcycle park. Editions • lank Fl11oncln9 AYaUable 45 YEARS OF DEPENDABLE SERVICE NOW 3 BIG LOCATIONS Guiden West & Warner 401 Main Brookhurst & Warner HUNTINGTON BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH FOUNTAIN VALLEY SAL•I ON\. Y SALIS ONl'I" 842·5596 536-7561 962·2456 For Top Sports Coverage Read tl1e DAILY PILOT Requests For Parks Readied SANTA ANA -Federal funds lo help finance three county parks are being sought by the Orange Coun ty Board er Supervisors. Requests will be madt for granlli from the federal Land and Water Conservation Fund for Laguna Niguel Regional Park. $325,000; Mile Square Regional Park in Foun tain Valley, $265,450, and El Torfl Community Park, $86,250. A request for $300,000 in federal funds for Sall Creek Beach was eliminated because Kenneth Sampson, co u n I y director of harbors, beaches and parks, said the proposal was iJJ.timed because negotia- lions to purchase the beach are under way, but have not been consumn1ated. Al! the federal grants musl ht': matched by local funds. New School Plans OK'd SANTA ANA -Plans for a $1 .4 million deparl!nent or education building 1n the· Orange County Operat1ons Center 11! Grand and Mcfad- den Avenues have been ap- proved by the county Board of Supervisors. The three-story building, de signed by architect R.~L Tllon1as of Newport Beach, will go to bid on August 2. "CHARGl IT" fE@ijhii'' •• IRO 000 000 ••'• '""'" "'"' Defendant Admits Reduced Charge s SANT A ANA -A Tustin man who ooce confessed lo the killing of an Orange Coasl College coed and then suc- cessfully appealed his fi ve- years-to-lire state prison term has pleaded guilty to redueed charges in Orange Co11n1y Superior Court. George Arnold Vick, 30, of- fered the plea to amended charges of· voluntary mansla!Jghter in the killing of Susan Carol Adams, 20. and was ordered by Judge Robert L. Corfman to undergo a lhrce- month diagnostic srudy at the Chino guidance center. He now faces a possibl~ prison term of one tn 15 years or a lesser tenn in the county jail. depending on Judge Corfman's reaction to the report . Vick \\'as arrested June 25, 1969, short!v after ~i1ss Adams was suffocii.tcd v.•ith a plastic bag in the Tustin apartment shared by the couple. It was lest11ied that the c n u p I e argued after Vlek admittl!d spending saving.! that were to take tht-m lo Australia and thal he ldlled her in a fit of rage. . Vick's lawyer argued before his client v•as sentenced on Oct. I, 1969, that the victim's body was cremated before there had been any o~ portunity for i:linical ex- a rninalion of the remains . Such an examination. he sairi . might have pro ved that Vi tk 1vas not enlire!y responsible for the girl's dea1h. Superior Coort Judge 1 now Appellate J ustice) R o~ e rt Gardner rerected the argu- n1ent and allowed Vick to offer his guilty plea. He described the argument as "Bordering on the realms of fant.asv." The Fourth Dist rict c0url or Appea ls reversed the dec ision and Vick was ordered to face a new trial. t.lAIL'I PILOT l) Cash Bid By Nurses Rejected SA~T A A~ A -Oran11e County Supervisors have lurll" ed down a request by the Visiting Nurses Associ ation for a $15.000 grant t • 8vercome deficits in the chari· ly program caused by cuts in J\ledi-Cal payn1ents. Superv isors took the advice flf a panel of deparlment heads who reasoned that such an allocat1an could set a precedent for o th e r in- dependent croupff who are los- ing money under Mrrii-Cal and fl 1 he r slate-Operated pro- grams. St1perv1sor Ronald Casper.-; of Newpori Beach urged Coun- ty Administrative 0 ff ic e r Robert Thomas In study tht. problem and search for a method to aid the nurses, ··The group provides a vita! function and some kind of ac- llon may be necessary In the fu ture." Caspers said. Dozens of great · styles ••• many colors ••• selections! everyone in the family! Hurry for . best shoes to fit Women's dress shoes 397 749 Regular 7.99 to $15 fO . Women's casual & flat shoes Regular 6.99 to 10.99 Little girl's shoes•~ 1o J Regular 6.99 to 10.99 47 591 to Ladies sandals Regular 2.99-10.99 111,0 541 LA CllNIGA .. ._ ...... 11 ... "· .Jj.Jt11 NOIWALK ...,.,,,,, .............. """· 8~.{)911 fUU[ITOH ........... _ •• '-pe J U.1»·1JOO HUNTINGTON lfACH ood-,o• ... ~~ e.,.,i. ...... ,..._ 1u.1•J·66ll Men's dress shoes 697to 1697 Regular 9.99-$25 Little boy's shoes a~ to 3 391,0591 and big boy's shoes 3~ to 6 Regular 6. 99-10. 99 family canvas shoe specials!. Women's 2 .99 -5.99, Si1e l to 10 ., ... , .1.97-3.47 Children's 2.99-3.99, SizC!l5y, to 3 .... , .1.97·2.67 Men's bosketbcll shoe, Size 6V1 to 12 •... , • : . 2 .66 Soy's basketball shoe, Size 11 to 6 . , .. , , . , . _ , 2.66 SANTA ANA i.. ...... "' ,,.. ........... pi..... j41-6'41 VtNTUIA JOO """'~ ... of','""" ''l )•11 ~1·1,•I ,ANOIAMA CITT ........... , ...... 19•-1111 CANOGA ,AIK -r.pleoo ~-tJ.1000 ltOSIMIAD •o.,~•<>C! ~'vd 01 tao b.•_d_ ~.. -,...... 3TJ·lll0 COVINA ho"OftO:O ... -._.....,,,,. ... .,.., .. a -fte.7411 • • • • • • I • ' l J I J f DAI LY •tcDT For the Birth• JUNI U M• t n<t Mn JM l •• ,,.,.,, I,, All\ ••.. Oc•111116t. •l••. JUMI 11 M• .... M•t. Jl,llHI" A.r ... -. ale V•l- IO!"I• 1111, N1. I, '"" C..,_,,, IN•. M • 11'11 Mn, J-• I['"'''' L•flcf>, .rrH. Ci llo "•ll f\I. s .. , C-H. lie~. M' .... M•I . .J.<iri11 G-tl U!lt• II. )UJl Goe•t Cl•tlo. MIU~ Vlelo. t iff. JUNI U M • onil """ J ... 11 A!.... 1olnm*' •· mu 1ri111oi.o. ii. 1111 J u • 11 ,.,, •• ,,_ ,1.1. M• 11'111 Mn. Curt" (liofltl JI-''' lill ·~ ... Id• l -'••· $ti\ ,,_ .. 1,, tl•I Di••olutiott• Of Marriage PllM J •M ll _,,, Sl.,tl«• f . t /1111 L....,1, G w 11...,. Mtrv •11r1i..111 Wlh.., """ Jin""' f E 1"11111, o.i'llillf J111\ftt• ...... Albfrf l~o•I 'm'"'· fl\""'"' ,lorco """' Jtoo..,..t•I• (•-· o ....... Mii 1!MJ Mlcnt •I • J1wM1 .... kl, A11tl'I_.,, W , 1• ~l!r•C•I • •••· C••ol•ll Je 1"11 111urm1• w11aur Cono. •oul J""' ond Jt1111 v .. 11110 w1.r.~ur11, C••'"•" '"' of>CI LH liGwl'd W1r1...,, G1r11d ~-and lf:l.,1 It, •uvd. 01,.,.10 L. """ M•'"' """ r. s ... 11,,. M••• '· •11111 CYnTh•I I. H1•1'11t>d11. Autu•I;,.. (. • ..., ''""" J ock...,.. 1t••t H"'-" •Ml Cl'l•lt!ln1 0\I N P1yM. ,annl1 Jeon 111111 Mo•J c.,11r Wll-.. ltflH l'll'IO P .• ,... Jl (li. I>. Triolo". Lllllll• J•" ""I J1mu D•••ll Corti'. Loll°'" I i nti -•I C 8 r1111111. K1h od1'11 P . 11'1<1 Pi ll' w. stt .... Ji .. Do/"GlnY A. '"" HfrMrl '· Pl\111 JtlM JI lmllfl, Jo• G. 1"411 11.,..111 I . Gollll,.., Ntn<Y L . 1NI &1r1ltl IL 5.,-oMlo>. (Ufl" I . ol'lli M1rlht l. M O•Cli.t. (IOlto M. IM It-I C. ltuoh, Horaltl L. """ D..-•llW L. Ptl..,to.&>lr"'· C1t"OIYll J om41 '"" Ou1"' T-.r1 Gr•-· lult G. t nol ltlait •tl C. s.,,.n.,, Jorry w. ,,,. LllWl1 K. P.ut•" l>r!Kttt1 C. 11W1 w on1r 11. Hu"'•" Ju n•• II ...... a ruc1 ••rll••· Oii'""" II:. oNll ltlctot rtl I UION 8111.tl. Pllotli& I . t NI Wlllll J. &Mr•ml, K111\1r!n1 """ """ 1...-..« A M11n 8tlllll"'• M1rl•n1 M ontl 1t in11•t1 II. l..1 P&r!t. tr..,1 i nd OOMl11f< M<MtflUI. M1lvo Dll ond '-!&<"Mll'I Moll lo Hornd..,, Fovo .0., 1/\tl Gt6't l W. 1..vM''" 0 1nl1I M . 1f\d Alm1 J11n 8ttch, Mory A 1f\d •-•• W. Hoyni.. M"!V I , oM Lh!do IC 1Y c-•· Go•• '· ..... 1t111h M . Hll u Md:. Po!rlcl• J , ""' Jor'flmt J, Gr\Nl!lot. De11111 llVCll oNI Th.,,,11 l . Edw1tdo, c,....,.,,.,. f.. •M Gorv W. Grllfllht. DOllM ltudo 111111 TMM'l'll• Eeworlllo, Ctfflorl ... I( .• ,... Gt rv W, C.111. LllWl1 LH ond Ja"'" Altr.0 Httlno, Ml ,. A-t 0t•d G111tn' H•ll ltl&l\1r•o. 0.11 VIGlo 1NI l lllJ W. C•1lna. Cv ..... 11 H•I.., •flll Ootiol• J l n\90 ._., J-\uno l . '"" hUurict I . MtcGr-. "'l•llY M. 1"41 WlN•td '· Oll!Wlla. Oeftlld T. tlWI Miry E llt" Mt"'""'· 11.ullv l)ol..-n 1M1 1!6nolii WUll l "' It.....,. M Orll'•t LH ..... il.,,.ffl .~ .. M1"1 .. ''IMH I nd (llt rlH I . P'ltlr-.., H.it" oM Vlc!o< M. l wift. "'''"" Ott ,. 1..i ii~"'" ~ • .,,, lil"it . P't lrklt """ l'r•n-Cl\1•111 IWTlltLOCUTOlt Y D'ICAl ll 1"1..-ltl J•"' II r--. "1••.,. C. 1fllll Glonn "-· l lkktl, N1nor L• ,,,. P oul J. 9-. C1rll '4. 1NI J""" H. 511fti.,., S.!Wlro -11.GMrl o ..... i.r. (ortl "4. ,,,. '"°"'•o M .:"".,· J1ck Poul onol Der<'111• Ju"• 1 1111,.., Ml•W I" Outl\I 1MI -6"" Mt rlo 111(1111,,., l 1rN r1 #11111 11111 Gffor" Mt rfift 1111,_, 11-C. onol Lindi I WAllT 'Ill ..., L..,ht l • .. •I. IJ.4 Ct ll1 Artfffl, '..ll~nt HlllO. Dllt t i d N "', J~ftl 11. 1f1!. iuNl\lft llv lluoN ""· 'Mlor 0 . ":wot1; 010111. ,, ... s111, ...... , l'lorl••· "rvl""• illllrd••· Jun• 11, 1 •·"'" :>1clfk Vltw Cllt~. l ni.mbmlfll. Porl!lc ·11-M-1•1 ''"'· '•m!lv 111ttn !O 'f>O .. will\1111 i. m1k• momer;o.! c...,,,.. ""''-· 111101 c,...urlbul• 11 "'' ,1,..,.,; . .,.., Conur loclt!V. Poctlic Vltw Mo•· !11r1v, Dlroc .. n . fl:cwal S. Kt rr .0.10 17. e! JOI AvOUClll, ,._..,. -·· 0.11 Ill dllll>. JUN 1•, lfll. -..,,.,.lvN ~ w1!1, PolrlM ; ....,, ...... 11-"• ltUHtl1, W-11! • 11•d ltavm""" '(1,.: "'"" t tu•'"'"· Dlllr .. J. ~ '"" ·-'"°'" ............ ••!"" 1(1,,; ·1-0. (';ortl6. Corl, J otnft o"" P1111 ~; "''"' 1 •11'1C1t l\lltl•.., •Ml "'"'· ..,11'141cl'lll<'l•lfl Grt <tn l.i. •••vie ... iltu ... """ i o"', W•""''"'tor -iol Part. '""''"''"' ....., c.om111nr. \.l"l llllh\11'1 I""" &:; 1..-m•n 1Mt Glo""''''• U · ~""" , .. .,.. 0.11 .,. -"'· 111 ... n. '"'· ........... .., &<t .... , •• Jt•l'I 1 ...... 1 .... Mttt>41 Y. '""" 11. 1 •..,. Poe<llt v i .... c"""' ............. "•<i••( ........ _,,,, "•"' 1'1"410' LOtul'll Bto<~ Mlr1uON. Dl•K· ~·1 • ''"'" . "'""'" ~·· ...... , ....... "' '=""'" MtU Ooll 11! tlo•T~. }O/nl tt. 1'11 .u·~<v•d &~ ....,. W•"'""' L lll un 111. "' ._.,,.. Al'ltt l ... O•t M tro-hill •t l'I, !h<r ,..., 1r11•-trl l'ICIC~llft•1~ l'dv1l1 ''"'' : .. will 111 MIG 01 lh ll 8 <611twl • C~oo· ., )o•Y«I••· !l> Jf .... ' ..... ~ ••• JomH ,,or(\/ {lffl(iol•l'l'll . 1"'°'"''"'· Mo"" Hil! ~.......,. .. ,..., 10111. iM...,. loll 8·-·~ 'IH)""l "'• Di•K •o•• WlllTI T)Ooool~ W, W"'"· l!ll W 1-$l . .. .,,, "'"'" Dtlr (lo! llH lh, J11,. n. 1911. ..,,...1...,i trr .. 111• 1tuth. -· LI•"' • 'V1(11. ti Flo!CNr. Of>i!I ; ....,, ...... ~ .. ,., 'lro. Owlt hl IOotu'\t \ 9 ,_., 111 l ro•· ~I. (l"uo; Mro 1 1,.. !JI ,.,."""' Olun. -.,,,. "'""' Mn . .>et>" l CS-Ill L ..... tit. 5111!11: ""'"· '°"' .... IJllO 11,....M • .,.,....., Arilon11 ... , ...... M l. t M M rt. '\1111..-E W-. Grt nol 1to11Hl1.. Mld ,. •t o"' --... Dtlt """· K11tm1 ..... M l!f>lf<ln '""" l t t •lfltl:llllf •""· ......it", 'ill\l ... V ! "·'°'. l'H.ltlt V-0..Nl '"'-'· P111tic V\-_ ......... l)lr-1"" II~ Poc1tl1 vi-M•l\l•rv. AltBUCKLE I: SON 'W'!';STCLIFF MORTUARY U'I E. 17lll St., c..&. Mua -• BALTZ MOR1'JAIUE!I <Mua de.I Mar • , . 1'11-NH c.a. Me•• , .... IMl-itt.4 • BELL BROADWAY MOR1'JAllY 111 ... 4"•1• Celb Mue LI Wal • McCORMICK LAGUNA B!ACB MOllTIJAllY 1'111 !ApB• en,.. u -u • PAC11'1C VIE'll MDIOIW.L PAll C.mec.try MtrUll lJ' Claptl -Pattfte V..., Drlwe N-ll<adi. Cllllanla -· • PEEll'. r AMIL V COLONIAL FUNERAL 80 .. E ,.. ....... ft. "_ .. _ -• IMITll'I MOll1'JAllY SI Mala k -e .. u..,.. RNcto I Reco r d TllOl'l'I•-· Wt ... 1 l " t ntl T-•• EdWI" Celtlll .... Dil l'l"t Ml•!• "'" •rw••<I J ~llllltL It""' .i. """ .... Rl<lt MI OWi" Dollnt , ,..., •• ., I •"" Hor,. C 1C ln1btM. Jt., sn'""' A. """ Jehn CtrlU .., ... , ... C1r11v .. M .... Arll• D, l•O,,I, A""'"" Gt 1I L Du""••· 1"v1 Morlo •"" l llYo• l ..,,..,,,, .. ,,, L""""' .O.rll1<ir I ncl Cl\orY• '"' ,,,,., ... -. llt>CI• """ o .... Tow>I , Doti-ll•hu t t>d l tlln< l l•w&rlh ltr•-•· J 1Mll on<I fl:ulh A,n11 "'"· w 11110"' E '"" lton• L Ctalt. _,,, Ju!o 11'141 1-ltwlfl C,t,0..,...1>, lt'W4rtl H.,ry o"" ...... ,, ••M l'1..,.on1. lti<f'11rd J. ""' W.ltJev ~. lntll111. ( ..... I• I . 1ne J1'l1t I '-!Joi"" ............ "'" G1rv \.Ulf\W K••f""'· 1t lU11r• Lo<OY oM .. , ..... M MamolN, Loftl1n """ 1!1v I , P llLIAL Ol (ltll l '"'"'" '""' " Mul"U ft, lv""'"' L. olllll WiUil"' C. kf~M"• (1111 J, .... Oenold J c... ... 111. f lit•-.... ,,.. OoMltl l , 1-. l it•-· A""' .... J- ,..~111<'1 l •ont. 11:...,11LI G•"U oNI Mtr ..... J""" Duorl1, Dl•'-1'11 hi. I M M1,.rll ... I . lli<llttr, M•••I L oM lt-1<1 I . ANlotOOft. Jock WUif•"' •1'111 Glerll JOI " l~~ll'I, DLl.,.o~ l , Intl HOUI M. Hiii, Hon,., (ll<1ton UMI l .. fV J. '·'"~· 1"ut1 M••• .... Horry Mt<IYI Amick, M ..... G, .... L-IO w. H"'""'· Oonlot l . t M ltMH D. .J°""''°"• M••l..,11 .<., IMI 1t 1o:1>1rd c..-1 i!lu•t8", Leia It . or>d JOI>" J. \.t,,.•llon, JI Cl '1t liflt i nd ltOllt lll I(, Mt l..,tf. G-" l"dwt •lll Jr. olllll Cu llflt GI•"" Diel.mo ... Jell" It. t nd "11•!!,. Tl\11101 Hom11 ... loNl <t L..,111 Ind l • .... •Mll GOOl!wln Doi•~•. C!ilffl(f Cl'ltlmor tntll o.;i, ,_M •-;"" Mor>fl• l . '"" &rotorv L. l..un•, It••~ L. '"" Potllt C-, VolHll 1M 11-•I W. McC11lo..,,, lteoolil 1M l'lovtl P. 11:-. Mort ltulH t nd l rr1u r l'r1ntll1> sceir, Clfel•n 5111 llMI G .. 1111 w. Pteu!~. 011c1 A. 1NI lton>M £. £1111e<, Frt ncet If. 1MI J oe• G, Crl""· LtulH I . t NI Fri!<! I . Htt11l1Y, Wt Y ... T. 1M Oonn• Jtl~ Beneficiary, Dividends ' Now Lower SANTA ANA -For aoclal 1ecurity beneficiaries 55 and over who have en \l 1ted Mtdicar. insuranet:, monthly dlvidend1 will bt reduced by 30 cent.. beginn in1 July 1. reporlll Wallace S. F&rd, 1ocl1l attUrity manager in Santa Ana . The July checks will have as.ea deducted. instead ol the previous IS.SO to pay the In· creased medical in~urance premium, which helps to pay dol:lor bill! and other med ic11\ ei:pense1 in and out of the hospital. A tp0btm1n for tbe U.!5. .. SAT. AN D SUN. ONLY DAILY . 10 to 10 SUND AY 10 to 7 your budget here! ' COSTA MESA and HUNTINGTON BEACH STORES ONLY ! NYLON IAMAICAS a:;s4 if A K ~ ij REG. $2.G6 SAT. I. SUN. Ladies 100-:;:. nylon ,l11m111ca~ . RP;-ular length Md short 1horts. Assl. ~ty!es and col• ors. Sizes 6-.18. REG. $1.96 KNIT SPORT TOPS $1.44 LUXURIOUS PADDED CHAISE SATURDAY & SUNDAY $18.00 • DPluxl! fj"' ~·hel!'lf'd loun&e 1.1•i lh dteply tufted box-l!dged parf covPrrd \\'Ith colorful vinyl. Contoured arrnL Aluminum frame folds tmarUy. 4 posit inn. ~ ~ ' ~ i ~ ~ t ~ POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS WIDE TERRY-CLOTH PRINTS tr: 2.971YARD 84~ YARD Kn iron finlSh 58 .. x6 .. polyester dou ble knits in j11cquard "'eaves, mini >1.'afOes, crepes, ll••ills. 1'1ach lne "'ash and tumble rlry. PADDED CHAISE LOUNGE :~~~:::: .. &.~.~ro~~,~,~ I num framl'! with fl l)ral prinl pad includ· ~ Pd. Ch11rgl! It. Similar In Illustration. ' A-200 •• MEN'S WATCHES SKIN DIVER & CAL END AR 5.87 ~ l\.1i-n's Sheraton call!'ndar and t kin diVi!r \Va1.er-rl!sistant v.·lten case and cryztal Str11 p t)r Pxp.an~inn b!lnd. Ch&rge it. ._, model w11 tches. remain in tact. Dfp•rtrMDt ol Hulth, F.duea- tkln, and Welf•re (HEW) said the 30-cent premium increa11e for e1ch beneficiary i1 tht: net rault of three Items. '1ll08e three items include an e11timated l!i.7 percent increa~e in phy1icians fee.11, a two per· ctnt inc:ruse in the Utt of phy.siclaT111' 1ervicl'!B, and 1 15 percent increase in the colll (If in9titutional ltJ'ViCM o[fl!red by tht protram. including out- pati ent and independent clinie auvices. :::::::::::::::::::::::::::~;"~::;;~~::-~::'.":"."~'!;;:;:~:~~;';c. o; ~ :• --...,-~· ~.,,,,.,,. i fl\'a»-.J<INPiJF.-• • 't:'MJ:IW "!; ""'3 1 _>}> •• -,.... ·....;._....::w.,1 Al!OO Use Your Kmart Char9e Or BonkAmericard! Fi red Cit y Ga rdener Gets Hearing I'· SANTA A N .-\ -A gar dtner'g complain! !h;l ht wa ~ tht victim 11! racia l discrimination be[or~ he was , firt d by the City of Santa AnA , will bt dtbalt d .!ul)' 7 in Or11ngt Coun~y Superior Cou rt. JudJe Robert Banyard will bt asked to rule on the city',; 1rplment, outlined in a writ of mand•te fll td Tuesday, lh1\ fl() such prejudice eimed 1&a.iftlt· Willlll ~w1nt Timley, '3, and that the city w11 4ienitd • ~•ir he1rin:I in pro- Cffdlng1 bef~ tbt 1t.1ite'1 Fair Employme nt Pr1ctic11 Commis~ion (ff;PC). Tin,;ley. 1 Ntgro 11nd 1n or· dalned m inister. testified th1l he w11 the victim or racial discrimination durina nine monlhl ef employment that tnded Oct. lD. ltet. whtn he w11 fifed by lht city"s De.part· mtnt of P1rk1 Ind Rtcre1tion. An FEPC order fnr Tin1 tey·1 rtln1t11tment i• bein1 held by the comm!Mion pendln& the eotoome If ... Judie Buy1rd'1 rulin1 . Men Be come MOTOR OIL Cj)UAKER ST ATE 20.wt. -30-wt. Buy 1l by lhe ca~e and CHARGE IT! TURTLE WAX _,,~ jusl say Big Los ers ALUMINUM 6 FT • STEP' •oDER ~ TOILET SEAT \ WOOD GAJ\DEN G R OVE Lii ~ ' " ~ I n 22-IN . RO T ARY MOWER ;; t ~'gi>e~ ~:oo $ 44.00 fi ; • ~ PACIFIC ~· ' REDWOOD ~·1 \ STAIN , • ~ • 11nrl ~triit1nn ~n· 1u11n11111Tir rhnk". ., SWEeTSHOT GOLF BALLS • •I I ~ ~ t • r; I, ~ LADIES CANVAS SKIMMERS REG. $2.2 1-$2.33 C\,,ara.nrt> special Assnrted A.~~ortmrnl to choose frnm. $1.00 ~ill!'s, colors and t"t ,v!l!l!. Llr11I! rH(RMns ~:]:_:11 . . 44-QT. THERMOS9 (HEST Our Rog . 12 .88 2 DAYS ONLY Chtst i1 cnamtlltd St«I with txpandtd ~t1d insul t• T1on, impact styrrnc liners, ur eth1ne ·1 nsu larrd lid . l ll'lri rl'lnt1l locking end ht ndlrs. Botflc opcnir. '"-·-~--... .ri·.J. rux••2&r M;;;z: ,_,_ ::r ~ I ~ 99¢GAL. [PACK 'OF 3 Oranac County'• first all·male t REG. $3 .74 l ;:L;.~~~1;:.~;s~,:~ :: ~~tyYS 9 • 9 6 ~ 0~ANYLYS 1. 9 7 1 !; ,! SPECIALS FOR Rl"f. 1.M Bri;:htl"n up YC'lllT 7:30 p.m. •I Ult Weiaht fl"nf',.~nrp11 lin &:gudt>nfur · Rti::. 2 ~. lmr rnvr Yflllr SAT. & SUN . JUNE 26, 27 Watcl'ier1 Center, 1311.1 H1rbor Rl"it. 13.74. DoublP ri\'l'I~. • \Vhil,. or rolCtr~ -h11k"t1 · ..,1 nlturt: 1.1·!1h this Kmart IP"· a.-im,. \\'Ith th"~" Q(l rnn1- 1.82 ·:· ,·. , I ,• '• Bl•d .. 11 ~n to any milt 10 frl'lril "'bl!,("k. Queliry g!urtly ,,ne.m .. 1 r1n1.~h. R 111>t ri•111~111nt I \ t'llll ' prP~~irin h11tl\, \\' h 1 l I' ONLY. pound•°' more overwe11ht. Jj~':"":':'"':':':":":·:::::::::::::;:"~'":':':·~"='~·~·'::"::'":':':':":-::::~~~r.::;:::::::::;::::;;:;:::;;.:':':":"~':":':':':':':"::::::::::::~l ~~:::::::::::::::W::h:i:l•::O::u:•:":':lt:l:•:•~L=•:•:''::::::::::::::::! Al Cutler. dlrecl.tir or the ' • Of$'@.Pl=v: ..... (4 -*+ """'' ' ... Or•nfl County iroup, ~•Id Ille •II-malt cla" i• '" .,. C 0 $TA M E $A I H U NT I NG T 0 N BEACH perlmthl tlf!1 \a n 'd In overconw malt tt.11tancy '" 2200 HARBOR BLVD. 19101 MAGNOLIA attend •tll ht w1k her rla!sts (at Wiison) (al G1rfi1ld) ,,,JU, Wl)men. I 0,000 Couples A Y ea1· Re1narry By L. M. 80\'I) EX.CONV ICTS \\'110 op('n small businesses lo go to work tor themselves do alt right. Oftentimes. anyhO\\·. Their rate of su ccess is superior. F:x-convicts who go to \vork as payroll ern1lloyes under bosse.i n1ore often tJ1an otherv.·isc, they \\ind up back in jail. These recent rind ings \\·ere reported by schola;·s who studied the matter at U.S. Department of U!bor exprnse. Said scholars c oncluded unsurprisingly son1e 111en mu~t b~. absolutely must be their 011 n com111andcrs or they go bad. CLIENT 11\QUIRl::S why 11·omen so rarel~· sing in the bathtub 11·hilc 1ncn so fre· quently do so. Didn't I tell you that? Bath tile m<>Jces a far belier echo ehainber for baritones than for sopranos, that's all . 11\J SOUT H A'1ERICA ·s eastern Colo1nbia live lhe Llano~ They eat toasted ants. Deliciou s, they say. Bul suggest they might try fried hens' eggs and they're apt lo get sick at the notion . Or almost. CUSTO~t ER SERV1CE: Q. "Just how common is it for a husband <'.'1d 11•ife to get divorced. 1h<'n n1arry each other again?" A. Hap pens 11ith 10.000 couples a year here. The matri.monia l st holars checked out a sizable batch of such remarried pairs to find out about half won· deted \v hy they ever bothered to gel married again. Thr.:·s sad. Our Love and \Var man is looking into ii ... Q. "Doesn·t .James Arness. who plays ~1att DiHon on 'Gunsmoke,' actually ha ve blond hair ?" A. That he does. He sprays ii dark before going on camera , . . Q. .. \\'hat's the temperature of oil fresh out of the ground in a gusher~ .. A. Aboul 130 dcgre's F., usually. A ''OUl\G LADY AS KS 11·hat she ought lo do al a formal dinner table \1·hen the fellow sitting next lo hl'.'r touches her knee with his own. That French lo\'c and war ex· pert, l\.1adame Dariaux, also has an opinion on this, fortunatclv. Advises s h c : ··Either }'Oll like it or you don't. In 1he fir st case. you ('an IJlush delicately, lower your eyes. hold your breath, or )'OU c2.·1 return pressure for pressure and accept the en- counter like Ilic sporting person you are. Doth 1nethods ha\'e Lheir charms. In the SC· cond case. you can say, "Ex· cuse me. I think f hit yoi.;r knee by mistake." PREFERRED liquor now amoog \Vashing lon diplon1ats is scotch in a \rash. Among colle;e drinkers. brer and bou rbon. An1ong a i r I in e ste1rardesses. \'odka n1arti;1i.~. Among psychialrisls. cog:11ac nc<.!. AmC111g teen.age Wilie.:5. red \1 ine and soda . A1no11g \'C!crin::iri:ins, straigh1 rye. Among retired house11i1·cs, rum and juice. Or so contends a spirits specialist. • Y o11r qucsiia11s oud. cn1,1 · 111P11/s are 1i·r /co 1nccl and wilt be us ed in CH£Ci{/l-JG l1P 1ch erever p o ssi bl.e. Plcosc udclress yo10-teU l'rs to L. 1\1. Boyd. P.O. Box 1S'i 5. Neivport Bcoch, Calt- fornin 92660. DAILY PllOT // President . Ce.lebrates One Year . . . .. " Of lice • Giiatemala1i in GUATE~IALA IAPl ed the important function of the plar~:· said Arana Osorio, provement in the1 bal.act. of qgressive foreign trade hii pliill lo Increase exports, Preskient Carlos Arana Osorio promoting the socio-economk: "because economic assisUlnce paymenls." ~. ·policy. He said lhe reduct ion but his government will try le ctlebrates his r 1 rs t an-de\•elopment of the country. 10 the farmer-Guatemala is The president aliso aaid ol Guatemala's quot.a in the offset thl.! by consultatiOM niversary in office July 1 and and, al lhe same time, pushed essentiall y an agricultural -~Giiuiiaiiteiimiiiialiiaiiwii1illifioilliiowii. 'ii!!'ioiiceiiii!!Uiii.~li· iisuiigiaiiriimoiiiiriiki•il ii,iaiiiiblioiwit•omiwiiiliih•otheiiiricoiiiiuniiiitrilesiiii. iiiiiiiiiilj feels he has made "constder-tht • diversification of lhe able progress" tov.·ard pacify-private sector." country-w1!1 permit the im· ing strife-torn Guatemala. But The plan includes the l'rea· provement of production in KIRK J.EWELERS "compl ete results cannot be lion of a national development general and the opening of COSTA MESA TIMEX· REPAIR obtained in just on' year," he bank, an institute of com· neiv markets along \\lith the! Harbor. C..t.t-S4S.t4&l added. men:Jalization and 1 national no"' lradilional ones for cof-1 HUNTINGTON , BEACH ,Authorized Orani;:c County The 'president "'a ~ in· export center. ree, cotton and bananas. and) Hinifl .. t•• ee .... r-ltJ.15101 SALES ANO SERVICE terv iewed Monday for the £irst -~·~·T~h~~:_i:is~th~e~sp~i~n~al~co~lu~'~n~n~o~f ~w~l~ll_p<~r~n~1i:1 ~·~·-·~·m~po<~~Je~n~l~i~m-~~!!!!!'!!!!!!'!'!!'!'!'!'!!!!!'!!!!!!i!!!'!'!!!!'!'!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!!!'! ~~~·~rig~his c~~~:s:Od:n~isit~n~ replied lo written questlon-s submitted in advance and also met l·l'ith this correspondent. The governn1ent considers that the so-called guerrillas are doon1ed, and the murders and other sporadic a n d isolated crimes \\'hich they commit art only for 'notoriety and to maintain a false front." Arana Osorio said. '·What is left of lhe broken cells will be 'liminated by action of lhe security forces." Some estimates or the number of deaths from urban terrorisn1 in the past year ex· cecd l,000. For more lhan six n1ont11s Arana Osorio kept the t•o1,1ntry under a stale of siege. s uspending son1<' con· slilution;il guart1111ees as his security force.~ struggled to rnd the bloodshed. But almost daity another body is found on a back road, riddled \~ith bullets. or another busincssn1an is kidnaped. The vio!C'ncc is blamed on C\'/remisls of both !he left and right. .. The enor1nous and con1plcx task of pacification is not the 11·urk of an instant.·· said Arana Osorio. "Th' process of bringing the people to an era of tranquility and cnn1111on good cannot be re;1tized from one day 1o !he nexl. i\S I pro· n1ised during 1ny poli tical can1paign. we are \'.'orking for a pacification which cannot be realized only '.'.'l\h arn1 s, bu!. also by carrying !he changing force of education lo the coun- tryside, by bread and housing for !hose 1~·ho have none, by henlth for all communities, by prosperily creating sources of 1rork and by passing Ja11·s 1rhich protect the 11·orkers.'' He said 1he n a t i on ;i l dcvt·lopment p\<1 n inaugurated by his governn1enl "has fulfill- .. 1 DODGE CAR ·PRICES~ • START AT COLT HOT NEW SUB-COMPACT WITH A HlO-HP PUNCH! Monulactur e r's Suggested Re!oil Price for Dodge Colt 2-door Coupe, with a ll stand ard eau1pmenr, a s sho wn. Price includes dest1no1ion charge s. but does 110 ! incl ude sta te 0 1 local loxes, !itle or license fees, or other Dealer·esta blrshed charges, ii on v. for Dealer·installed eq uipment or ser..,.ices. DESTINATION CHARGES ARE INCLUDED. Come in a nd see !he car with niore of e vervih1ng ! Four Col! models : Coupe !shown I, Hardto p, 4·Door Sedan St ation W agon, a t additional · ' charge. Order yours to day I Bigfoot Visit Set AMERICA'S NO. 1 COMPACT VALUE! The Dodge .Price fig h1e1s· new Demon is sized w dh !he compocts-fJ{K:ed ._ Wtfh the minis I Room '°' five odu!ts. Huge trun k. Choice ol economy engines, Sixes or V8s. Wide choice of option~. loo! Check Demon before you buy any small corl bo1ni1iable Snowrn"n May Be (It OC Fair \Vhcther sampling ho1nemade jams. 1 c a r n in g needlepoint or \l'alching dune buggies at th e upcomin g Orange County Fair. dnn '1 be ~urf>rised if an nbo1ninablc snov.·man si ts ne.~t 10 you . California Bigfoot, I h e rumored creature of the Pacific Northwest, will be the film anti photo feature of one educational booth. And if that booth 's l?elic fs are correct , Rigfaot may 1\'<lnt to enjoy the fai r in person. The fair. July 13·lll , in Costa ~lcsa 1\·ill off~r a 1 aricty of ;i('ti\'1 t1rs for both Bi gfoot and the rnorc common 1•isitor. ac- rorcl1ng to Tin1onthy 1. S1rade r. president, of the Orange Coun1y Fait Board Com rncrcia l and amateu r rxhi bi ts will be di~playcd. Separate buildings 11 i 1 I ,__ ____ _,1 U •'11TED STATES NAT 10 NA I , BA •'1K SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW ortH SATURDAYS •tel r.M. MON.-THU•S. 10·5 P.M. FRIDATS 10·' P.M. 17\.4) 540·5211. lecotord i11: house economics, new pro- ducts, education, agriculture, rtoriculture. Fine arts a11d l ivesto('k. Duncbug gy den1onstrations, a horse show, auctions and entertainrnents 1rill take place in various out- door arc::is. A :\lidway \\'ilh r i de s . motorcycle ra ring. r u r a I ol yn1pics. and ;1 l''"l .rir:~ circus \1·ill br fea1tl r{'d. F:nler- !ainers ap~ari :H\ \ll'I •n(·ltu!e Pat Boone. S!\ilrs ;ird H~n­ d~r~on. La 11rcnce \rcH, ~lars and \hr Boh Bakc1· .\J :.rinnct· tcs. s:.iid Str:it!cr The ho111r rconon11r~ dt•1>:1 r1- menl \\'i ll 11ro1·1Jc t r 1' t' ~amplt>S rind l'!'lipr; o( j,1111~ and Jt'l!it'S 1•.1';i11'1!! ;1 n d flecoratire se11 ing dcn1•111~r rn· lions. d:iily n e e d le p n 1 n I lessons, ;ind displa~ -nf b;~ked goods and 1cxtil~~ \\'n1er hPd<;, land dl·I <'lup· n1e nt. lea!hercrafls. p<1!1erv (fro1n a ",\!c.~iran 1 ill:l,!!r") and counllcss oLher ilern' 11·11 1 be availabll' !Or s;dc ur lor sho\1• in the nc\1' produ cls building. A s~ciJl cl1 ~pl:n· of ~hu11· and movie cars 1\ ill !Jr 0111:;·,!c lhc nc1\' prl}(l\Jcis ;ir;_>11. Th;· Balmobile, John Lr n 11 o n · " Roll s Royce and a rar kn•.l\'11 ai. lhf'_ Phone Booth. all customized by Danny Bonner. can be seen for 50 cen t~. frui1 s and 1·e~c t able" of '\!orks by Orange County residenrs 111 01!, \\':l tercolors. acrylics, collage and charco;il will he housed in the floe arts dep.:irlrnenl. Also included in thal building will be a craft and hobbies di1·ision . a photograhpic rxhibit . and a bee and honr v depar1ment ft'a1ur ing dL'COrati l'e and Food itetns n1ade with hon ey. El sewh~rc . \ isitors can v1e1v pnze·\1·inning animals o r ptirtici pal r in an ;ntclion of blue·ribbon lambs. hogs and hcrf bcg1nr.1ng at I p.m. Fri· d:1\·. July 16. Future Fannrrs of A1n,nca and 4·H nicmbers \l'ill display 1heir own ca\llc. ~heep and 111,l!S throug hout thr !'air. as \\CH as lh::!ir prnJert:: 111 homr economics <1 nd ngr 1cultu re. l'l·op!c \rilh n1u!or 1n1errsts <::on go 10 !hr tr.:f' tlcn1onstra· rion" of dunrr.\'clcs. tluneli uR· ~ies and lot1r.11·hrel clriv' a11to1nohilf•s on a n:11ural ter- ra in track A ~11 i:htlv ll llferrnl typr of lr:111!'•1o1rt;1\\on -lhc horsP - 1v1ll b"' 1e:i1urcll 111 its nv.•n ~lu111· The Jun i1Jr Horse Sho11·, ll'ith ;Ill <'n!rants under 21. 1\·ill he hel d Julv 12·14. Hunters, 111n1pcrs. ;iiid quarterhorscs will be sho1\•n free. Kleis Like IT PROVES "SMALL PRICE" DOESN'T MEAN "SMALL CAR'.' GET A FREE AUTOMATIC TRANSMISS ION WHEN YOU BUY! REPEAT OF A SELLOUT! la51 yeor, 1h1s hardtop broke oil soles records! We sold ovt ! Th is year, our Swinger hardtop ·~ on even be:ter deal. When you buy th.~ soec1o lly eq uipped hardtop, you get th e outomol1c Iro n~· mission FREE Check o ul 1he "~ucce~s sellout" nowt AUTH ORIZED DEALERS co1nn1ercial or curiosi ly \alue TO Ask Andy \\'ill be exhi bi ted in lhe ~-=================:;:============================::::;=================::::--agricultural building. wh ile the[--.---- lloricul!ure buildi ng "' i I l Se. Coo1t P'I•••· Cute Mn• H. M. STOLTE display rut nowers. plants andl flow{'r arrangements. -~ -~ h•n9·ftn hat p•nt s for 9•11 ~.11t1111•1i~•rJ e "'••*•' cltt•f• l f•tllie~ i1lt nd, n•wperl c•"'•r '44.5cno • Choose One of the Many Coast & Southern Federal Offices to Serve You: * MAIN OfftCI:: Ith I Hill, Loa Ang•lu • 623-1351 * WILIHIN.81GRAMI RCY PLACl:39"Wil•hlr• Blvd., L.A. • 3A-1265 LA.CIYICCINTl:R: 2nd I. BrMdw•Y. 628-11 02 * HUNTINGTON BIACH: tl Huntington C.nttr • f714) m -1041 * IANTA ANA l.OAN llfLIVICE AQINCY: 1905 N. M1ln St.• (714) 547-9257 '*' IANTA MONICA: 716 Wllthhw Blvd.• 393-0746 * UH l'!:DAO: 10th & P1clfic • 131·2341 * WEITCOYfNl: Eun1nd Shoppklg Ctr .• 331·2.201 * PANOllAMA CITY: tall V•n Nuyt Blvd .• 892·1171 * TAftZAfr&A: 11751\llMll"8°'11Mrd • 34$-8!1-4 * LONCIRACK:3tdlLoc•l •~7·7411 * OH11Sltlrdlfl-•••l,. .Dt!J)'Hot.r1-9MI04pnl ASSETS OYER $800 MILLION Art Linkletter Shows You a New Way to ·Beat Inflation ... Just Join &'k Insidels Oub With a $2,500 balance In your 11vlng1 account, you are ellglbfe to become a member. Substlnllal "vfng• are available when purchasing many ltemc includlng avtomoblles, fumlture, appli1nces, Jewelry, Plue 1TI11ny free nrvicea -money orders, safe depOtil boxe1, etc. '.~-COAST -l AND SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS 1 . . . --=--~-------.--.- • • Coast & Southern Federal Offers You These Highest Preva iling Rates: CO,,.POUNDED DAILY ANO PAID QUARTERLY! s.00•1 •• s.13 •1. P1Nbook; No Minimum. 5.25o/o.5.39°/o Thrwe Month Certifi cate: No Minimum. 5.75o/•-5.92°/• On•Year Certificate; $1 ,000 Minimum. e.00•1 •• s.ta% T#O-Year C.rtiflClle; SS,000 Minimum. • Ett.ctirf Annual E•rtilnQ r • INSURANCE TO 520,000 " ., I ( t J I I I ' • • Lion•' Choke Carl Hendrikson \Vas recently installed a s president of the Cos ta Me.sa, Newport Harbor Lions Club at the Mesa Verde Country Club. Hendrikaon replaces Dom Raciti of Costa Mesa as head of the service club. Seattle Luring Visitors SEATTLE (UPI) -In an area where paycheck dollars &tt getting scarcer by the day, Seattle's business com· munity is making a con· ct!:ntrated effort to e-0rral the nation's visitor i n d u s t r y Jk>Uar. It js not just tourist money that is sought. That money has beett coming in a I m o s t naturally. What is being punued with vigor is the mone y that conventions bring into the community. In the West. Seattle faces formidable opposition for this money wbich for years almost bas been the private reserve ef San Francisco, Phoenix, Los Angeles, San Diego and the gambling cities of Nevada. But Seattle. ever since it was inoculated v.ith the suc- cess of its 1962 World's Fair, has taken dead aim on th is lucrative business. This year already has gone lnt1t the record books as the best convention year in the city's history, More than 150 meetings a re on the calend ar for Seattle and nearby com- munJLies. And the figure is er- pected to be increased before the year is out. The 1971 firm figure is dou· hie that of 1970 and the estimated $20 million which conventi on delegates are ex- pected to spen d in Seattle dur- ing 1971 is about $7 million more than they spent last year. Alan Ferguson, chairman of the board of the Seatlle-King County Conventio n and :Visitors Bureau, is optimistic about the future. Projections for the next three years, he says, already are ahead of the yearly average recorded since 1958 v.·hen the bureau first v.·as charged with the responsibility ()f aclively seeking the nation's convention business. Based on current figures. 1974 v.·i!I exceed all ex- pectations \\'ith ;i poss ible delegate r e v e n u e of $50 million, said Ferguson, He contrasted this outlook with a recenL San Francisco report , published 1n the weekly magazine "Travel Agent ," whic.h indicated a decline in visitor and convent.ioo acUvtty tn lbat city. Reuont liven for UU. decline in the City by the Golden Gate iDclUdld 1 lack or convention faclllUa, Id of enlertainmlnt Ind blCb prk<a. SeatUe on tbl other hind, has increased Jtl lnftldory of first-clau meetings facilities, hotels and resiautl.llts, which, together v.·ith ils natural en- vironment and mild ?.'Ca ther is making inroads into con- vention business that would go elsewhere, Ferguson says. Ferguson and the bure1tu's general manager, 1-1a r t1 e y Kruger, believe that an ac- celeraled approach to con- vention business i.'J dictated by the limes -times which have seen a terrific rise in the unemployment rate because or a decline in the aerospace in- dustry In the Seattle area. And they have embarked on on one or the most ambitious programs ever undertaken in the visitor industry. With the assistance of proi· ect chainnllln Harry f\ft'Coy and the full support of the 11dvertising •gency McCoy directs. the bureau has marshalled a t.a sk force of 200 volunteers. They currently are in the process or establishing coo· tacts 1,000 representatives of attoelaUons and org11nizations which hold conventions and large meetings. 'lbe gDll of lhe task force ii lo M.tract 500 groopg to Seattle Jn the ne.ar future, thereby aparting an infu.!'llon of .1.76 million Into the economy and crtaUne 31000 new jobs. Frldiy, June 25. 1971 1.IN-8100K American Standards STAINLESS STEEL SINK • 33"x22" sta inleu steel double co mpartment sinli •Self ri mming • Faucet & Strainer not inclu'ded • A ;emaCl eling project that'll reallr. pledse Mom I RI(;. $29.95 Famous Malibu-low Voltage OUTDOOR LIGHTING ln1toll 1 in minutes-toke it along when you move. Includes tron1former, lighls, coble, mounling brackets ond stokes. 3 Light Set REG. $2799 $36.99 (>"ma mental BEAD STRINGS Creole o mor e e xotic environme nt U1e th em lo drape, divide or accent. 6 V1 ft. long $!rings a vailable in mony desig"s & colors. REG. 39c 2Sc 30 Gallon WOW! SAVE $10.001 WATER HEATER Y' Bonded gloss lining Yo': Safe thermostatic controls """ S year warranty. IMMI DIATI INSTALLATION Some doy instollotion if notified by 2 p.m. Normal inllollotion $28.00 REG. $49.99 SAVE! SA VE i SAVEi ROOM DIVIDER Sculptured particle board room divid er in several styles and designs. Includes: floor to ceiling frame, 24".x72" panel ond all ne cessary hardware. REG. $14.95 . $895 SAVI $6.001 While 92 l a stl Complete Do-It-Your1e lf INDOOR-OUTDOOR CARPETING Easy core, long wearing nylon f ibers. Outdoors: it's great for patio or pool area-just hose it off. Indoors it's perfect for kitchen or both. Easy to install with double-faced tape. 6 ft . widths in your choice of colors-we'll cut just what you need. REG. $2.99 Sq. :rd. SAVE 70c Sq. Yd. $ Sele Prices HonorH Thrv Mon., June 21 Sq. . Yd. ANAHEIM .FOUNTAIN VALLEY 2144 Yt'!llNCOl.N (100 TAI.DI U.ST Ot aaOOllHUAIT ) PHONE 774-1300 17200 5. l l OOKHUUT (200 TAIDS SOUTH or WAINll) P'HOHI 968-3311 INDOOR·OUJDOOR DO·lf·YOURSILF! RED I-MIX ·SALE! "Scientifically formulated Mixtures, They Merely Require the Addition of Water by the Do-It-Yourself er!" 90 Lb. Bag CONCRETE MIX ~ust add water and mix . Co vers approx. 8 sq. ft. l" th ick'. REG . 99' SAVE 30- 60 Lb. Bag .::. MORTAR MIX For laying bricb, blocks, etc. You'll fin'd many ways to use th is easy mix. c ~' MIX ii REG . 99' SAVE 20' ~.~I jfifi 60 Lb. Bag ·.;: : ·:·:·:~::::::::.! ::::::.::;::~:::::::::::;:::::::::::::.~. tit. TOPPING MIX For repairing crocks and small holes. fix it your· se lf and sovel REG. 99c SAVE 20c 60 Lb. Bag c ASPHALT PATCH For paving or patchi ng . Make your d riveway l oo~ new again! REG . 51.1 9 SAVE 30' c S Gallon Sale! DRIVEWAY COATING $ 99 No need to thin-it's ready to apply. Make your driveway look new again I REG. $3.99 SAVE $1.001 Thomas Heavy Duty PAINT SPRAYER KIT •America's # 1 for home & shop use • Cuti painti"O time • Quiet • Rugged • Nev•r needs lubrication • 1 yr, war· ranty •Outfit inctud· •• card, air hose, spray gun and power unit. 2 5'' W ide x 19 '' Deep UNILAV PULLMAN Lorge sire, beautifully finished in antique white, Complete with morble-like lop with moulded-in bowl. REG. $42.99 s Gall ons - REG. $3 5.99 $2599 ' ' , • $10.00 Offl SAVE $1 3.001 LIN-BROOK HARDWARE LUMBER r ) ,, . . ANAHEIM 2144 w. LINCOLN 1200 YA ROS fAST Of lftOOKHUllSl j PHONE 774 ~8300 FOUNTAIN VALLEY 17200 $. IROOKHURST (200 TA•DI SOUTH or W.t.•Hfl:J PHONl 968·3311 LIN·8ROOK SAVE 1 Oc PER PACKAGE! FLOWER SEEDS tio n includes zinnias, cornolions, petunias end many more, REG . 1 Sc 'h PRICE SALE! DICHONDRA SEED ·:····· .. ~ • 99.5°/0 pure dichondro -il's absolutely wee d free! • Eosy-to·use shaker co11 . REG. $1.99 WOW! SAVE $1.00 CLOSE-OUT! All La st Ye ar's Models Must Go! ALL METAL SHED ''The Answer To Your Storage Problems!'' •Perfect for storing outdoor furniture, mowers, loolo, bike>. •Deluxe fe atures include: steel wall p a nels, rain gutters, sliding doors and Permo-plote fin is h to prevent rust . 6 ff , wide x 5 ft. deep REG. 164.75 6 Ft. W ide x 7 Ft. deep size White 24 Lost! REG. ss4.7S INSTALL AN UN- DERGROUND SYSTEM-IT ELIMINATES OVER - WATERING & MOVING HOSE . JUST BRING IN YOUR YARD MEASUREMENTS AND LIN-BROOK'S EXPERTS WILL HELP YOU WITH THE PLANNING. WE STOCK EVERY- THING YOU NEED TO DO-IT-YOUR- SELF & SAVE! DO·IT· YOURS£lF! INSTALL-IT -YOURSELF! FREE LAYOUT PLANS AND EX PERT ADVICE IS YOURS FOR THE ASKING AT LIN-!1ROOK! jiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~ PVC PLASTIC c FT. 31411 DIA . GALVANIZED c FT. 3f.i11 DIA. SAVE! GIGANTIC PLANT SALE! Japanese Colorful BLACK Pi NE OLEANDER • A rirocelul otte nt lo• you• ')'(11 rl. • Eo~y to grow·greor for hedges o r windbreak . • Er1s y g1ow, eosy (Ore Caldo,,1<0 • Beautifu l spring and ~ummer flowe r~. fnvor ile-. REG . 99c 1 Cu. Fr. Bag GARDEN BARK For paths, f(ower beds, lo cover bo1e ground anywhere. REG. 89< 69' .. , Long-Handled GARDEN TOOLS Your choice· 3 prong i;:uh · 1votor or lodies ,ho'lel. Well balanced tempered ilcel lools. REG. $1.69 99' .. 2 Gallon SPRINKLING CAN Tough, dutoh!c p/01. t+c const1u cl1on. REG. $1.19 88' I l Gallon i ;~~~~:~_;,, green shrub. REG. 99, 69' 40 Lb. Bag REG . 99, ' STEER MANURE How's the time to lertlllzel """' Cottonseed fed . ,,,.... Composted & aged. """Weed free. REG . 49c 29( WOW! a.g 77G~loo S11e SAVE $7.001 S Cu . Ft. CONTRACTOR'S WHEELBARROW • Deep steel troy of heavy steel 1s securely welded for long life and durability. • Reinforced rolled steel edges. •Heavy steel channel legs . •Boll beorirtg wheels. • Natural hardwood hondles. RfG. $31.99 Monsoons Shaping Battles PREAH PHASAP, Ca111- bodia (UPI ) -1'his once pic- turesque village 14 n1lle3 northeast of Phnon1 Penh is a l>ombed-oul , burned-out shell of a town wi!h only a single advantage to comn1end it: it is on high ground . Withi n weeks. the seasonal monsoon rains wzl! turn the area around Preah Prasap and a string or other small \'illages near it to mud, a nd then lo lakes. l\lorc than 5.000 Can1bo<Jian troops now ha11e the hig!t ground. and they v.·anl to kee11 it. North Vietnamese soldiers, now in the swarnps. neerl. Preah Prasap and its sis!cr villa ges before those lakes ap- pear. The result, si nce June I. has been Ule toughest. most prn· longed fighting of the 15· rnon1h--0ld <..:an1boclian 1var. l\l ilitary officers predict at least another month of hea vy battling ahead. Contiol of !he 1narshcs. they say, is the key to the door of Phnom Penh. Capl. l\1aing ~1aroneL 11 volunteer officer in the Ca rn· bodian army, cnmrnands most of lhe men in three batlalions at Preah Prasap, on the e~­ lrPn1l' no rthern end of thl! n1arshes. next 10 the Mekong Rivrr. "Two weeks ago. aceordi11g lo ou r intelligence sources, Iha North Vietnamese moved 1(10 sampans full of ammunition II> a pagoda near here. They a~ using the pagoda as a storage area and headquarters for tv.·o regin1ents," he said. Use of lhe pagoda. he said. protected I he Comn1unists frorn airstrikcs. Can1bodla11 TIS fighters have bombed close lo the religious buildi ng, but American and South Vietnamese co1nn1ands wil l 1101 allow their pilots within a half a rnile of populated a rea ~. ~1aronel said. 1'he Vietna1n-based j et ~ have suppor ted the govern· n1ent troops SllK'e the batl\r began, officers .<:<iid. But in the field, Con1n1uni~t units h;;vr s1>lil up. and the bombing h.i~ hecn only inarginally er- rective i\.1<ironr! said civ1li11 ns ha vr hcen n1oved out of the are;_1, ;incl across the 1'¥1cknng Rivl"r. "The North V1etnam<'se can't use them as a <:. h i c I rt anymore,'' he said. ''\\'e ha ve a1 least 93 prrcl'n1 vf thr. 1·1vilians wilh the bOvrrn1nent troops now " The battlr. during its f1 r;;t four v.·cek.<:.. has been surpris- ingly httle ground righting _ fnstcad. .<:mall Communist 11nits have poured n1ortar Fire intv six n1;110r Cambodian bases. The high command spokesmen, Lt. Col. Am Ron~. said that several hundred governn1cnt soldiers have been wounded in lhe attacks. The Canibodians, tirrd o( waiting for the Communists tf) attack, pushed out of their bases last Friday, to aUenipt lo sweep the enemy from !he area, spok esmen said. But the Norrh Victnan1esc conl.inucd lo avoid contact during thl'. first five days o( the new operation. Wh ile the marshlands arc ~ traditional Communist con1· rnunicalion line on Ho Chi t\1 inh Trail extensions front Laos to southern Vietnam, the main pu~ of staging thn marshlands ba ttle is simply lo obtain territory. The swamps stretch right In U1e bank or the Me kong River opposite Phnom Penh, a mtle from the downtown area of lhe capital. B y c apluring th & marsh lands. lhe Communisl~ wc>uld tie up huge numbers ot Cambodian lroops, who would have to be held in reserve for a possible a u.ack against the ci ty. If the Comn1unists are pusb- ed back in the next month, residents of the capital will lie able to brealhe elll!y again. Sally Bananas Really 1, . , , Bananas, That Is • \ • I -.. . . -· . . . DAILY ,ILOT fr1d~1. Ju11t 25, 1971 • Legendary Bruin Star l(en Washington Dies LOS ANGELES (AP) Kenny WuhingUln, one of tht great sporta heroes in UCLA history who played foot· hall lhere alongside Jackie Robinson, is: dead . The legendary lailback. who also played with the Los Angeles: Rams, died Thursday rUght, the UCLA Medical Center said. Washington. 52, had been critically ill for mort lttan a year with polyarteritis, thf! inflammation of a number ot arteries in which Ouid built up around hi.! heart and lungs. "I think I'll wh.ip it," he sa.id last year about his illnus. time in Los Angeles. Last yl!.ar about 1.cm friends and ad· mirers from sports, entertainment and government honored him at l he HoUywood Palladium. "Kenny Washington was a two--way athlete,'' actor Eddie Albert told the gathering. "He was a player on and ofl the field, a grand man." 'Vashington, in later years. was a part· time scout for the UJs Angeles Dodgers, a businessman, and e1v1c an d recrea· tiona! leader. In a barely aud ible voice, Wash1nv.trin told a friend last ycor at the UCLA Medical Center . "I 've been in and ou \. nl here so 11uu11' times, J guess rll stay Tier(' this l1n1P un· til it all comes out ... one \\'ay 01 !h1 other." MARTY RIESSEN TAKES A SPILL DURING WIMBLEDON UPSET WIN OVER ARTHUR ASHE. Washington established a UCLA school rerord in 1937-39. rushing for t ,91S yards and throwing for t.300 more. Robinson, who went on to become the first Negro to play in major leagut baseball, was in the 1ame backfield. I Angels Try Sox: Slaton Gets Revenge CHICAGO (AP) -Tile brow beaten California Angels open a series tonighL against the Whi~ Sox here after Milwaukee pitcher Jim Slaton got his revenge. Angels hurler Tom Murphy . 4-8. laces Joel Horlen. 2-4, on the mound. With unaccustomed \'igor. t he Milwau kee Brewer! provided Slaton with Angel SIAlle Alt ••rn•1 .. KMl'C 171'! J.-l! Antel1 al ("k"" J11"• ,. ,.,,...1 •• , C"lc•eo Jwne 1' """•I• at (hlttt<> J<J ... 2' °"'9ell VI. l(f"" ... Cltv I 15 ~ m, ll •IO •m. I• 10 pm I J5 o.m. e five-run fourth inning. helping hi1n ~ast to a 6-0 shutout of the Cafilornians Thursday. Working his fastball to its fulle!t. he held them to one hit in the first seven innings. Slaton said he has been mi!Eed with !hr. Angtols since 1968, when ht was "right out of high school ., ··111ey said they wanled lo draft me:' he related. "Bu t they wouldn "t pay me t'OOUgh money. They said 1 \\'asn"I \\'Orth more beca~ / couldn'I lhrow hard tnough." "From lhtn on . I had a grudge against them." ht cont inued. "and to ld myself l"d gt! even soml! day." Slt1.ton , 21. figured he used hi~ fastbal l go percent of the lime as he 11·cn1 the distance Thursday. allowing four hits. Tht Bte\\'ers lapped Angl!.I southpa1v Clydl!. Wright in the fourth·inning. f111e· run outbursL Milwaukee has had much sadness !rom l!!rt·handl!.d hurlers all season. and Wright's loss was 1he Brl!.\\'ers' first triumph over a lefty since April 14. Mil"'•aukee also beat \\1right Apri l 10 Slat.on said he "tried to be too line and lilatted aiming the ball"' 1n the t igh!h whl!.n the Angels led orl "•th two s1n~les . At the advice of manager Oal'e Br istol he 11aid. he resumed be ing vengeful and decided to "rear back and throw . ending !tie threal. The financial bus1nes~ that ;;nn11~ rr! Slaton lhrte years a~o. be said. invnl\1'S Ille Angels' offer of •·a SJ.000 bonui;. 1n" i.:ludin'! schooling " CALU1011NIA .. .. ,., . ' . . ' . ••• MllWA\.lKll .. ~ •bl ' ' . . ' . ""'""'· lb O'B<l~n. " <'..O~Ullt. (I Ol/Mf\, • JC>/ln1on, II ~·"'· lb MtMYllon. )& c ..... 1,11 ..... ,, "h1rDOr11. c Vlrl•~I. • 511•••1.f, <I TOUI •• 0 0 • • • . ' . • • • ••• • • • ••• ' . " . • • H,,,,., 1~ G11, i~ f>•n•. lb KO'l(O, It Elli<. 11 """'' . Mav. (I O:vb••\, " s111on. • lot•I (.fl, ..... ~;· MlfW•IA<M T-1;05. ,._.,.IJ ... ... ... ... " l.1·1 I ' w ,1.1 t " ' • • ' • • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • " ' • • ' ... ". .. .. ' ' • • • •• • • ' ' • • ' . ' ' " ' ' ' Ex-Pirates Win SYRACUSE, N.Y. -·rwo former Oninge Cout Col\l!.ge rov.·el'!, C()mpeting in the pairs without coxs,vain race. ad · vanced to the finals of their di visk>n in the repechage he1la today in the U.S. rowing trllla lor the Pan-A1nerican Garnes. 1be duo of Bob Newman and Butch Pope finished ahl!.ad of !he Vtsper A boat in one heat to gain the fin als. The Rocberter N.Y. Boat Club and Vesper B ended 1-2 in the other hea t. Newman and Pope: attended Orange Coast in ltlM7 and the:n rov.·fif two yWI at UCLA befon: gradualing. Sikes CLEVELAND (API -First round leader OM SiW tdrnlled he bad •·a little added LnctnUvt aolne this week " In the $150,toD Qevellnd ()pin 1olf tourname111. "A lot. or us are ln the: same posllion."' thrt ~ 1ttorney from Jack~ville, f'la, said 'lburtda)' after firing a sp•rkl· 11111· -·Pat 6'. "We're lrylna: to make Uw Ryder CUp tum and um ii the lalt week for il. ··1 firurt I'•• 1ot to finish first. second • third to mUc it.'' the 4-0-yur-o1d vt.ttr•n aald. LA Skipper Speaks ln 1946 Washington became th e first black to play in tbe: National Football League in 13 years. Alston Turns Back to '51 Says Dodgers Still in It LOS ANGELES -Dodger skipper \\'alter AlsLon was doing the talking and when a guy who can ll'Calher 18 seasons of rnanaging in the nu1jor leagues has thfo floor. one can generally count time ~pent listening as lin1e ·well spent Alston "'as chatting about Richie Allcr1. lhe Dodgers· ch<1nces of 011erhauling the Ctanls and baseball in general. ·~1 !igure we·re still 1n it !the lit\r racel," Alston began. 1'he Ci1ants are GLENl'I WH!TI ------ Jf!HITE JV ASI/ ----- prc!ly sound~~\'illie Mays and .Juan J\larichal are off tn good star!s "And their young players-Bob Bonds. Ken Henderson and Tito f<'uentes-are coming through for them. A lot of things have gone in their favor . too. t1ke beating the Cubs l\'ilh only \\\/O hits :ind scoring Five run s in the \asl or the 9th to be:1l San Diego, 10.9. "But what you don't know is if it 'll go thnl way all year. I slill look back to th;it !951 season before I juincrl the Dodger~. They (Dodgers) were 13 gan1cs ahead or thf' Giants in August ~·et lost lhe pennant. "The longer rm around baseball 1he surer I am tti;1t .vou t:an·t predict anything. Too. in1uriei; t·nn play such a hi!! role in thir1gs ··vau don '! know hu11 !ht loss of \\'11l1P t'-.l«Covl'y 1n1ght aHert them over 11 s<'ason As I see ii. for us lo catrh them !hev ha1·c to hit ano\hPr s!umri and "e h:i~e 10 v.1n our :;hnre 11hen we ~ll:t y them ·'Also . v.t' hil\r \\> hJ\'t' 1\111 :-.1ng1•r healthy and 11·hen lh;it might hr 1:0: something I ran l trl\ 1\£'"11 mis~ pitching rn1at1on fnr a11·h1le-n1Cl~br until after the. All·Star brcnk "."111 you l'illl dn 1.'> 11in fro111 tl<iy \n 1(:111 rloinJ( lhr he~1 ~ou r11n and tile stan(ilnl!<: 11•111 lnke r:i rr of them~clves I can lrll you Lhat JU~! becausr we"ve gone fr om t111e games to eight games back we don't roll over and play dead." And obviously they won't as the Dodgers went out and manhandled hard· hilling St. Louis, 11·4, shortly after the intervie11' Thursday. Switching lo the topic or Rictiie Allen. the reputed inrorrigble rerugee from the Phillie~. Alston said qu ite b Jun t I y, •·Richie has done oothing excep1 break l11 s ..• for me. He's made a hn!f dozen plays in the outfield I never would ha11e expected him to make. "He's played third base as v.·e\1 as anvone-in fact I think rll leave him there a,\·hile. He runs better than mosl people think. His hilling is d0\1"0 because he had a 1ou~h luck start-hit the b3ll "'ell but to someone . ··Then he got depressed and ~larted 11·11ng too hard. i1e's hitting better nov.· I '.!~'l 1 Bes ides. they p11ch around hin1 a 101-don't give him an ything 100 good because he's really all .,.,.,·ve got in the way or a power hitter." Asked about the improvement oF Cra.,..•ford . currently swatting .307 arter hitting. 251. .2~7 and .234 the past three ~rasons with the Dodgers, Alston says a change in batting stance may ha ve done the trick . "\Villie had a terrible spring-so bad lhal ll'C \vanted lo deal him away . But no one 11•anled him. Now they couldn't get him a1~·av from us. He's nne of those kids we alwaYs thought had potential but he jusl couldn't hit or field . "But he worked hard on fielding and hitting. Now he's a good outfielder and stnkcs out about 75 percent less than he 11scd to . As a last resort '''had him open his 1"\ance more and that seerned to help hts hitting. '"He·s probably one nf the club's harde~t 11·orkers " Then th(' ])l)dgers :;kipper paused for a mnrncnt . sat b1;1ck in his chair and added · · \\"e think we'll be hearing from the' you n~ kids on our club. "! th ink !he team has a rhance to be prt"'tlY goort for several )'e11rs if the 111ungsters <Ht' a~ good as 11·e think they <irr Tlien he got up and went out lor a h\\\e f('laxal1on-l1ke v.·atchlng an !1 ·4 born· bardmen\ of the Cards. NCAA , P1·os Ope11 War BOSTON CAP) -A sporls war bet11•een the National Ba!i ketbalt Associa\Jon and the NCAA appeared imminenl today with the NBA 's rel11xing of a :<1o.cal1rd ''fou r .vear rule'' lo pcrn1it ha rdship case collegians to join the pro ranks ·•tt looks as ii the NBA is declaring all· out war against colleges." i;aid Universt· Iv of i\.1assachuse:tts coach Jack Lea1nan, ~·ho reren11y lost junior Julius Ervi1'g lo the American Basketball Assoc.ia lion . .. The col\el!es have been a free minor league sysll'111 for pro basketball. but 1nfl~·be no""' things \\•ill chang(','''t.eaman said. The NBA long has held it would not sign a player until after his class has graduated. However. int~ face of a re· cent C()urt ru1ing and actions by th!!. rival ABA , the board or governors revised lhe U11~orks A 12·man learn will be selected from point standings compiled at the end of !his tournament. The team v;ill play Bri· liin's best in St. Loui~ this fltl l. Sikes, a cons1littnr rnoneymaker bu1 81 non-winner on lhe tour sh'ICI! 196a. cur- rently Is 23rd on the point hst 11:nd n1usl pass II players to m<i kr it. "It would t11:ke a real good finish:· he said, then grinned: "Rut J'vt. got• pretty good •tart I'll it. .. Sikl!.I winner of si.t lit!e.~ in hill 11 ~'r11r.~ on the pro tou r IJrokr fl n1~~s1ve lo~ jazn leagul" rule Thursday at the windup ol 11nnual league meetings. Under the rule change. ll college player who has not completed his educ.-tion may request permission for NBA draft eligibility. Tht player must prov(' he is 11 hardship ease based on \vhat NBA President .I. Walter Kennedy called "financial con- ditions. hi s family, hls academic record or \tick of it. and his ability to obtain employment in another field. "lt"s going to open up a can or bean~." said Vi'illiam L. \\1al\, president of the Na. tiona\ Baskelball Coaches Association. "l"m surprised the NBA would do something like thil\. This will create a lot of greed. A lot of those kids won't be ready for the pros.·· a \\'hen he finished Jett 1n t~ aften)()()n tl the 6.643 yard, par 71 Bttchmonl Country C.1ub course. i':ight players were listed in a Uc for lht. top spot at fi6 when hr took the lead. Therr v.·err seven others ;jt 67. com· pr1s1n~ th!!. most bunched.up field on the tour this year. 1'hc group at 66 v•al'I made up nf scrambling Dave Stockton, who hit only five falrwt1ys but needed only 25 putts, l iene Littler, Mason Rudolph, Bobby 1'fitc.hell. club pro Georgt Btllloo 11nd 1hrec ror1nc.r J\f113tcfs champlonll -nob Washington also played baseball al UCLA, although not at the same lime Robill90n did, hilling .454 in 1937 com· pared to the .097 Robinson batll!d in 1940. lt '>''asn"t until 19SO. at age 31 . thsi t \\'ashington got a try in major league baseball with the New York: Giants. But it was too late for the 6-foot·2 man whose knob by·like knees were a chronic bother because: of the pounding they took in foot· ball. "He ~:as likt Jim Brown. although not as strong,'' recalled Dr. Leslie Horvatti, Ohio State's All-American and Hiesman Trophy ~'Inner \1100 was Washington's tenmmale on th e Rams. Once during a Rams game in th!!. east he scored threl!. touchdowns but on one of !hose runs he was serious ly hurt \vhen swarmed on after the referee blew the play dead. '"It's hell lo be a Negro," he said later lo his friend , quarterback Jim Hardly of the Rams. "I'll nel"er forget the hurt in his eyes." !lardy said. "But his statement v.·asn't one of se!fpi1y by any means. lt \\'as sim ply a social comment, and he \Yas: alone. and there wasn't any way to com· fort him." \\'a!\h ington's most celebrated college passing performance \1·a~ in a loss In Southern California in 1937. Trailinf! IS.0 v.·ith five minutes left, \Vashington thre1v t WO TD pB!l.5e!I in 29 seconds tG Hal Hirshon. One \\'enl 62 ya rds in the air. In 1955. the Helms Athletic Foundation l"Oted \Vashington and USC's Morley Drury the greatest football players of all· Plastic Leg Doesn't Stop You11g Player WEST PAL~t BEACH. Fla. I AP) - "Reing foun h best pitcher in the Bahe- Ruth League isn't so startling un!es!'I yo11're !5-year-0 ld ~tike Perrault pitching \1·ith a plastic leg Last August 1'.11ke"s leg was mangled \\'hen his minibike collided v.'ith a car. He "·11.~ dragged JO feel. Fi1't' months in the hosp11al and a doien npe.r;itions l<iter l\1ike found himself \\'J\h hi.~ right leg amputnted from the knee do11n to.li ke. who \\•ill bf' in U1e ninth grade al . l('flerson Davi~ Junior Hi,11h Sc11ool next fa ll. recalls that he didn't think he'd ever plflv ball again. "My friends told me 1 could miike it ."' hr Sfl id. "My girlfriend, Vikki Oinnarcl. helped a lot too. Silt said she'd be mad •f 1 didn't put down my crutches and play ball." Mike rigures lo improvl!. on I.a s! sl!.ason's fl..2 record and has an impressive I 40 earned run averagt and 24 strikeouts. "Ifs re::i\1y trrrific he's got that much guts." said his coach. Ray Krupa. "I kllllW 1 \\'OU\dn't." Krupa insists f.1ike is throwing harder "·ith more control and authority than bc fnre the accident. "The only thing we taught him wa~ lo bring his right leg around l-0 get set in play high school ball in a year or tv.·o." cflse the ball is hit back to him." Krupa s11id. On the bases ''Miki!. can run. but he hobbles."~ a courtesy runntr stands in for him . Can he fuUUI his dream of becoming a profl!.ssional hurler. "If Mybody rould. this kid could do i1." Krupa said. "I'll bet anybody he could 64 Goalby, G1y Brewer and Gl!.Orge Archtr. Charles Coody, the current Masters king . llld Billy Casper topped the bunch jl\ 57. Ltt Trel'ino. fresh off his victorv iii the Unitro States Open and the pro-'tourney fa\/Oritl!. here. could , manage only 1 70. putting him \veil hnck. "I had it clost all day," Trevino said, ''but I had a lot of trouble with tj)elll!. bf.nt-gr11ss grttns.'1 He mis~d ~ven putts of 10 feet or l('SS JOHN NEWCOMBE ROD LAVER lfi11ibledmi Crow1i Ashe P1·edicts Lave1· Or Newco111he Will Win \VlJli1BLEDON, C:ngland i AP ) Arthur Ashe, eliminated from the \V in1bledon Tennis To urn a men I , predicted today tha1 Corona del f'.1ar rel\· ident Rod Laver or John Newcombe will 11in the title. "But Stan ::iml!h is right lhcre behind ltirn1,'' Ashe said. •·Stan has a gOGd chance because he's pla ying better !han he has ever done before.'' Today Laver struggled a bit to get past To1n Okker of !he Netherlands 6·!'!. .,,, 2·6, 7·5. r\e\vtombe held off Alexander l\1etre· vcli of Russia 9·8, 6·3, 4-6, fi..3 ln his fourU1 round match. Todav Cliff Richey ousted Adrian o Pa. natta Or Italy 6·2, &-2. 6·4. in the third round. J\lrs. Billie Jean Kine of l..-0n g Bcal'h moved up in v.·omen's play with a £.2. 7.5 triumph over Mrs. Christine Janes of Sri· tain in a fourth round match. Smith. "'ho is seeded fourth. n1ovcd f'asily inlG the lasl 16 Thursday by 1l('featini; Andrew Pattison of Rhode<:i ll, 6·3, 6·4. 7·5. 'J'he tall lair-t1aired Cal- 1!11mian i~ on extended lea,·e from the \;,S. Arn1y . Ashe said· ''La\'cr and NPwcomb(', both previous champions. must be fa1·orites to win. I think Ken Ros('Walrs ch:incp ge ls a little slimmer each year. "I "·nul d put Newcombe a little ahead nf Smith at the moment, but only becau~e tie hali more experience. Remember that Stan has never yet won a maior tit Ir., Laver. now 32. \1·011 tile Wimbledon t'ro1vn 1n !961. 1962, 1!'166 and 1960. Nc v:cornbe 11nn ii last year for lhe se· cond tin1e. Rosrwall is 36. He rent'hed the l1nal last year -as he had done as a youngster in 1954 and 19;Ki Ashe was seeded fifth but was upset Thursday by Jli1arty Riessen, of Evanston . Jll.. fl.1. 9·8. 8·9, 6-4. Ashe did include Rie!>sen, his ~lose friend. among his lips for the title. Bui be con1me11t('d: "l\1arty is ce rtainly p!a~·1ng 11 cll I hadn't lost to him !or about f11·(' ~ear~ until lhi s rnatch ·• (lnc of !he ta!kin;:: ro1nts of the tourna· nlent is l..a\•er's service, \\'h1ch doe..:;n·t appear as devastating as it used lo he. Bul the little Australian left·hnndcr 11·as s11!l good enough lo crush another of the United States hopes. Clark Gracbner rir r--.'ew York 'city. 9·8. li·2. 7.;). Smith. R1e~sen , Tc1n1 (;nn11an of S('a l· tle. and Jeff IJ(iro11·i::ik of Berk eley are ;111 in the las! Hi. Tl1e defe11! of llogcr Tavlor. evpry' British fan's hero. C.'.lu<,e<l general rli~tnay. The news even !nlerruptcd lhe Riessen·Ashe malcti lln1pire Laur ie t<.lcCallurn announcl'd "'llh characteristic En;;hsh rl e<:'orum . •·\Vith all due respect In the Ill"() distinguished Amrrican players on !h1 ~ court. 1 am sorry to h11ve In tell you lhal Ri thry has beaten Taylor " The fans ~roaned . R1es5cn and A~hr dtdn·t bat an eyelid, and the lcllru~ started up again ·.~· . •, h Mt"'' S•"•I•• ·:.: Jen~ N•wcn"'"" "'"'''•"•· <1•• •l•·•nd•• /'•!•t-~·•1, Jil u>soo. 9.$. o J. ~.6. 6 J. Jil<lll L•vo<, "U'''~'·~· <l•I fom O>\•r. ';"n"" l•r>(I•. 1 •••. 1, l-6, J.; Mon'• ~·nelr> l~l<O l!ouna JO'ln N~wcornri.-. Jl.u>l••l1• a~! GtrOI~ B"'"·•\ B••t••n. 6 4. • •· 6 ; • O:•·n lln-.w•ll, Aulir~h•, "" J,,,.,,. f .1101. en"• ~ l 6-1, ••• 1101 Emr,.on. Boo tut' l o• "•Q• ••· i t ~ J ••· .. O~•w Parun ! •w lt•••n~, d•I P·r/'t 6••'~rl • F•~»<t, 6-l, •·h ~I . 6.1 .l~•Qu'n lovo-~1~10. "'""'c~. d\! r~e;i·o" Gov•n. Ftoncr. •·6 o 1. •·•. • 6. 6, Cn"n o,o.,,, A.u•lr•ll~. ""' /}<'on". ~.I .Inn &••~"'"la. ).i. ~ o. 6 J. • ~ 10 s lom C.o,m•n, ~t•ITlf d•! •~~I•''"'• ~"'"~nl•. •• ~, 1 \ Tom O••., Ni•t>rrl~r>(I\, ~~I !'•>i ""''• 'l'Y!l<l•la•••, ;H, 6--l, '·' I·•· Dodgers Host San Diego After Lambasting Cards LOS ANGELES I AP) -J im Lefebvre admitted he felt like cutting his throat Wednesday after stnking out ""'ilh the base~ loaded in an extra inning loss. But the Los Angeles infielder thought better of il and instead responded with a home run. two singles and four runs bat· ted in Thursday fl~ the Dodgers buriE'd the St. Louis Cardinals, 11 ·1, at Dodger Stadium. "I wanted to cut my throat," Lefebvre said afterward, rtcalllng the nightmare of tht night before when he fanned with lhe bases loaded in a 3"1 loss IG the Cardinals. Dodger manager. Waller A Is to n , v.·antl!d lo do a little culling. loo. He said he almot rested Lefebvre. ''lie w1s ln the slump and I thougtit a C'ou ple of days off n1ight help,'' Alston .said. adding, "I'm klnd of glad I didn't." Lefeb\lft; hlkl slumped through a two \\'eek period in which he managed only four hits ln 38 times at bat. lie came out or th11t slump in grand styll!. +nursday "I haven't been aggres.o;1ve." he s:11d ''A good hitter gel, hls pitch and then hits ii. I've been geUing the good pitch, al right, but I've been taking lt instead of hilting it. Today I hit .'' Ltfebvre'~ fi(st slngle ~purred an eighl- nin 9econd lnn1nR. matching lhl' f>odger.o;' biggest ,mund of the ytar. and n1ade II easy for Al Oowning lo posl his eighth win 1n 12 decisions. Los Angeles open~ .a four .gan\e 8('ne1 over the W('ekend w11h San Dicgl> tonight 1vhile St. Louis returns hon1e lo meet ~ Chicago. Pitchlng for the Dndgers tonight will hi" young !r.rthander Bobby O'Brien 1vho blanked thr Cartlinal.~ MondAy ntgtit 1n his rirst st.art tn the bl,!! leagues. lle'll be oppost>d by the Padres' !Jave Robcr'ls. O'Brien is 2·1, Hobcrls is S-7. ST. LOU !~ DODGl:RS •• r ~•b• '' r ~''! (~•<l•n•I. •1 • 0 I I w .. 1 •. " I I 1 D M AIQy, (I J 1 1 I (<,iNIO":I• II l I l 1 8•0(,, II 0 1 0 W °"""· r! l I 1 I Torre. lb O o o V•!..,t;nt d 1 t o t $Cl'l0l•fl4•}~ I 0 0 0 llAll•n,Jrh 0 l 0 lltyd\mp, !b 1 0 0 I W ""'-'"'•lb 1 I I l•<"••Y P 0 0 0 0 AIOI•. rt 0 t 0 SHf..-.ore, pl> 1 ! O O S•m•., l o o S"•"•P D OO G \tlHIY•t lb 1 l( !lv•d•• "" I 0 G 0 f\y'"'"'· f1 I 1 J J ... 1,,. 11> 0 I Q l.ll;•no~Q. p j I I I Mt J" .... tnY.< 000Pt<><OP ~000 ~!i"l(ln, C I t 0 ""'""'"·" 100 (lt•Ol•flCI. o • 0 I 0 Arrovo. P 0 O G O "•Y""'°'· P o o o o M•"1•1dtl 0 1 0 I lOt•I .W '•T~I 'I 11 l • 11 St.loon• 11• 001 OJI-I DO~.... • •• JIO oo ~-11 E II All•n. J~vl•• (•• .. •Q•O C.P s l~ ..... I l o• ""O•I•• 1 LOB St lo'''' 11 , LO• AnG•I•• • l ll-· t1owloro, W O• ~.nt~ '"' 111,~~"~' H~ L• l•O•rt jll ~F !lr•ll<~'"'D· M ~·ou crevfltr.a il. 61) ,\.rroyo R !yno'~~ l•(~•·1 ~~•w t))-·~n cw f·ll P•~• j.~··~ "<!<>• Pl! II' " II Ell II S• ! ' I • ~ ) I 1 l ' 1 r 1 l l l ) l I J 1000 1 I )ODO } ' 1 , ' 1 ~ I l I 0 0 C t lj •\"Ntfl~•y f-1 !1 ,\-It 111 ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' •' ~ K /,', ,, ' ' ' 0 0 • " •' " M F • M M ., • ' ., " ' ' • ' ' 0 ' ' • " " M M w '" ,, M• '" • . .. J• .. '" ,, M M' Oo ' ~i~ '" "' O• \V; Mo •• l't ic M' •• 0" ... '" o. ,., ' "' ,, '" M• '" " M• Ju •• ,, .. '" ,, .. ' '" " • '" '" ' " "' ' •• w• ,, " M M '" " w " ' Alamitos Racing Entries SIECONO ",ti(E -.00 v••d• 1 vr•~ 01111. (l•lm1nci. Pur,. l14£!0. (!•lm •ng Pr!crUOOO. lfu!Y ... C.enlr !H•raonqJ K•V•ku lR•ltv) "'"°'' Cll•nl (8•nl"t l •o/\ln!na S ia lL!l>h•ml V1nrwln (An!,.,.,) P1nd•Qua l"'"•lrl frur Grit Ptrn•n Ourrnl• Chtror ((•o•b•l Oon't Loe» 81W.c (M•huoa ) Rrt>el S!reci• !C•rdol•) ., ... f lltlblr 'l•v• T~e Vtt (Aaalf) "' ", '" "' "' '" "' , " '" '" '" THll!D llACE IJO v.-ai 3 •••r fllD• 1na UJ) Cl•lm1no. P u•H Sl)CO. c111mlng prlc• "6000. Mr. Prroon1llTY IPt rnt r) °""'" Tonio IC1rdo1tJ Fo•v Nor1c (Ad1lrl lloo 800 Rocke! !Rll1v) ,.,,, AO•au1t1 (Hirt) Mr. Oulr!l Hiii ll\Oftl m '" "' "' "' "' ". "' ". "' FIFTH ltACll: -400 Yl rd1. l vt1r olll• I nd UD. Fl!lln I ll(! M 1ru . Allowances. l'uru llSGO. Ori MOl.lnl l K1nlil 8 u•om ) (P.,nor) H1nt lel (Ae'1frJ '" ", "' • • • J ' • ,. l l DAILY PILOT Phohl• ll>J' Jl:k~•r~ KHM•r f r!dar. Junt 25, 1971 serntM oAJLY mor ls Hays' Shot Sinks SA Quintet Craig Hays dropped In a field go.al in a sudden-death ()Vertlme period to give Estan- cia High a 50-43 victory over Sanla Ana Thursday night in Costa i\1e~a summer ba!kel· ball Jeagur play. i\lission Viejo also wen an f!vertin1e decision fr em Orange. 60-56 after being tied at 51·51 after regulation pl11y . San Clemente toppltd 1-later Dei. 42·29 in the third game Thursday al Estancia High School. iAH CLfM(trllf !<'II " , • • • • " , • ' • • • •• , • ' ' . . lt 10 ll • " • " • ' • , ' ' • M.t.lftt DI! tU J ,, It , •• , • • .. Cucur.c Pconaor1a11 l(ll•Y OaTI• Rtln lo!al1 Hllf!l..,t : Otl I,, "" ' • • ' ' ' • . , ' . . ' ' . ' 10 • lt 1t' c1...,11111 11. M•!e• 11T.t.HCl.t. Uf) l•rt•t 'P II '°"'"' 0 1 • 11-l>•llo o o O O MOoc• s • t i. In"" 0 1 I t ~ H••• 1 o e1 / 5•"~ • ., 01 19 Fo•<l l l l M•cGcMO• 0 0 0 D. (°"!tr J 11 Tal•I• 14 n 10 ~ L1111r Lldy Floor !CrDObY) Toci D«k Jo•lr /Lh>h1ml Ll dY ... n111l1 (W1honl :I: NEWPORT'S TERRY ALBRITTON SILHOUETTED AGAINST SKY AT REL EASE ••• Hatllome: Eot•ncl• 71, S..n11 "'"" ll. Mtvv111..,,.. ~o. Firu o.T 41!·U . F uw l. Eot•nc;1 Sil. 5an!• A"' OI. "' SIXTH JIACE -lloll v•rd1. 1 Ye1r old .. ~ ' ~~~,k~~ A~l~~·risc~~it.)U•M ~-1!7 l'•D!•"• Goldl /IQOI (K1nl1J lU Jogu1r Rocl<.e! !C1rlloll) 117 Trl1110 c f(<l!Y IH 1rdl119J l!i Tru Trv (H•rO 11• "'"'Ann IPtrnor) 113 61•.iu lLiph1ml 111 Albritton Chasing Records, MISSION \llfJO UO " . . ' . ' No•m•rldle Caro 8 14C<•• l!QNtn Ft•Quo;on Wll••""" ' , • ' ' • ' " ' ' .. ' ll,Quo\'/l (A<Uir) I i. MllO!•h Ol~mond lCrc•llvl 111 Tora1• H•lfhmt : Wartl'tl<'> Oro•m !Dr•r••I 113 ....... Ell·i•" 5urgln's Mi>> !Wll>on llJ K•w11h 61r T<11> (Ortvt rl 117 Min S!1r Ch1M l!(1nh1 '" Thrtt Bir Twl1t 11-1ar11,.1 117 Looking Forward to Football " • HUSKY SHOT PUTTER UNLOADS ANOTHER CLASSY TOSS. l!euu1a1,on: ~l -ll Fln•I: Or1nU• 611, M1nlo" Vlt!e !lo. t 'lrst Nortl1 Vletory SEYEl'ITH IACE -:U0 y1rd1. l v11r eldl. Pu•H SIOOO. Th• J~nny 0 111. J1Yh1wl<.or M<M>n (H1rdl.,.) I l l }\untie Jo !61nk•l 11 1 AnlolCK>e Mlkt (Adair) 115 A>Sur~ C<JPY (W1!1on) 111 Mr Ro•n Man lCrosOY) 111 M;nnl~ Rebel (Harl) lU OVDO'I Dolly (Drover! 111 I '(now TrU Girl lL10~1ml 117 Sir Mur CC1rOoll) UC Yon.o (Pe•n•rl Ill .. 1::~~~0 1!f:W;-rn:~ ~~~::· ~-" Uncl~ Chick !l'<lolr! 111 Di•mnna Sun J~ !PtrMrl 111 IY•IC" Ch« ILIPh•m1 ll"l Mollv•!or !Peg•/ ln ll ul>v AM Gol<I IH•r<ll,,.) l lt R ic•"• Gold IB•nk•f l lt Mis. Parr B•r tH•rll 11' Nuevo MudlachO (Rln•ldil ll' Gola C<>PV CCro11W\ 111 NINTH l.t.CI -ClO v•f"l:IJ. t Yffr el<I<. Cl•lm,r-.g. PutH U«G. Cl•lml"" orlc• uooo. De J udll• (Hardlr-.g) Ca ty (0> (H•r!l Rcvnl loP 81r !Alley) ~:,n,;,'1~ ~!;'8~.!,'~ 'W•hcn) ll•l l•"lc Moon \l'<lnid '~'-D•nav zw !B•nk•! ~~~~J:11I 1~:;,~;:,0•tJornot) Ml<I Pol•• !Llohl!") Aloe l!lltl~i. J11 ,t, "Tone lllelcultlno! "' m "' "' "' ". "' '" "' "' '" By HOWA RD L. HANDY 01 flo1 O•llJ P'llll 11111 Terrv Albritton is a young man With a plan. Included in that plan \\·as a layorr from intensi\·e training for ty,·o v.·eeks following <'On- clusion or the California st.ate high school track and fiel d championships. This week at Orange Coast College he began to pick up the loose ends and embarked on a summer program of shot putting and discus throv.·ing after only two days of practice in weight lifting. His l<iyoff wasn't noticed by his foes in either event. \\'ith one more year of high school Los Alamitos Results lh~riO••· Ju~• 14, itn Cloor & ,_111 ll'll tT l.t.(f ' .. ~·· Gld ~,.,a.ni CIA!M·~· r"''" 11'IOC' Jo·eo !'In•••• !A,<11••1 10 IO J l.'(I 1 10 A rut• l>&<k•t !Co<<lo1&1 I 00 110 (nonce .t.t IM••!ua•l 7 10 l <tr>• -l! J 10 •I.., '"" C•oor> I l ui• Clr>dy't P;1vou. Tl"• T•. "'on""• Moo~ J<t•tcnHI Aovl•!I• (.n,<. Orl"I"" G.rl, D•lla S&~<I•, Tt uOY '• lri11> tfCONO 18(f J.IO v1r<1s J Yt•r old• (l>l m•n• Pur.1 11'00. lle>c•H B•r Bov I C•rcl<>rA I soo 1 10 ~"'""~ T•••• 1111;1on1 Win Goon Bov •(r01h•l T•m•-llJIO ',. ,. ,. •• A"n '"" r a!nom On•. Turi l.., M•n, Go H11•I Hv1h, Tllelt ro°". No 1cr•!cl>t 1. ll'lll'Tl4 ••Cf -HO Y•nn. t y11r 01<11. Cl1lm!n9 Pu• .. SHOO 0 1e'1 DKk !Ll<>111m l 1.116 4.IO J JO Qui"<~ ll•bel IW•1..,,.J 10 00 •I~ 01111•"• Moc 1a.~111) 'l!O l lm• -,II '110 Aloo •on -Nlmt>lt NOit . To'i To••• '"" OelleM1<1, 10.l1m11.,. J•v. No 1cr1lt1>01. 11XTH I AC I -.1SO vt •d1. J v•a• o)111 (l•lmlnt Put1• lll'OO I OYt lt!tl B•own (H•rl) J.OC l :!ll ~ 0 Niki Note t Ptr"••I •.to l.lO SIQull• (WAr~l J .cl l lm~ -II 7'10, Allo ,.,, Sn• llfo~t. S1<1~I~ 1111n•tt, Moon llorov. Siio~ Po~•v. "To ,t, l H , lloo,ln~ lloc•-i llov11 C•ll Jcr1lcll10 -Moriom, Mr. l.1ur. 81tro11 Bl<!. (11V (o<, competition remaining, 7err.v competed in the high school and open compe1i!ion. \Vith the 12-pound shot used by high Sl'hool athletes. he had a y,•inning mark or 60-91·1. i\nrl y,·jth the heavier collegr and open di\•ision 16-pound shot , he merely hllf'led the iron ball 50 feet even. His toss with the heavier shot ga ve him second place in the open competition to lladJey James, a Bio!a College senior \.100 hurled the :;pherc 51~1 'i. 7e11J1 hopes the sumrner road to succl'SS will lead In a \'ictory at the Denver Junior Olympics in August. Secretly, he also has am- bitions to Pcl ipse l11s age group ( 16) standard for 1hc 16-pound shot pu!. evenl sornetime dur- ing the corning year -but ha! no target date . He i~ con1pe11ng on his own as a high school athlt:te for the firs1 t.in1e since finishing sec- ond lo Newport Harbor Hii;i:h teamn111.te ~1ark Stevens in the state shot put al UCLA. The weight lifting program he is currently embarked upon is 1n relation to another sport but this doesn't bother Terry. "l ;un out for football and 11·e are y,·orking with weighls f11·e rlays a y,•cr.k during the surnm<"r." Terry rc1•ea Is. to rome out here wit.hoot any preparation." he said Tuesday night al Orange Coast. .. l'rn really not pointing to anylhing in particular. I just ll"ant 10 keep in the groove and then do my best in the Jun ior Olym pics.'' lfe won the junior division stale title ror 14-15-year-olds a year ago and had a mark that \\·ould have been good enough to y,·in the senior t 1&-17) Junior Olympic shot put tit I"'. The Junior Olympic shot put record ror the 12-pound iron ball for the seniors is around 63-5 according to Terry and he ha.~ done better than lhal on several occasions this past school year. While he has g a i n e d widespread fa me as a shol pu tter this spring, he is en- thusiastically looking ahead lo the fall football se&sOll. At 6-4 arxl 227 pounds. lie will play right side linebacker on defense and strong tackle on offense for NeYt')Xlrt Harbor lligh. .. Our new coach (Don Le nt l and his assistant "'ho is n1v coach (Sid Shue / as 3 lin.ebacker and off en s 1 \" t• tackle. really make ii fun to play football. "Yet. lhr,v arr a.~ srnn11~ abo111. thr gamr a~ riur coach IF.rnif' ,J0hnson1 w;is last season "1"111 reall.v looking forw;ird to the footb;il! sea~on ." B ell Tolls for South, 3-1 TODAY IS YOUR DAY TO OWN A 1971 CADILLAC Ry 1'1111. nos~ DI Ill• OIO IY P\\Ot St•tt Proverbial cr1c.o; such as. "the South w1H rise again." are being heard 1n the southern lier of Orange Coun- ty <1rter Thursday night's 3-1 North victory in the fourth an- nual Kiwahi s county all.st ar baseball battle al Anaheirn·s La Palma Park. The win marked the first lime the Yankees have ever captured the 111!-.~tnr conte~I since its 1968 inception and provided c<tnnoil fodder for next year"s South effort to regain control of the y,·inner·s column. For the Rebels of Boba Grande coach Al llall, one 1~·ou!d bet that the mere lolling 1cir toilin,lo() of a certain Bell d id thl"'m in Ho11t·1·er. in lhi-ll rasc. II Yt<IS Sunny Hi lls r11~h1 h;indC'r Hon Brll who 11 ;i.~ 1n1·ol\·cd Ar11. 11ho's rumon•rt 1o hf. r11r1ing \li!ll a $25.000 txinu~ r nntrat•t to si.i(n 111th lhe P1!1 ~h11ri.,>h l'iralC'~. turn1'1i in a veo1nan rrl1ci Joh for ('n;irh i1 r.\"r I !;1!f1cld's f An :<h<'un I j\nr1hPrlll"r.~ Thr L:inre1· n1ft v (1)1)k nv('r N11rth mound chores frnni win- al bat. La}.1f'ndola unrorked a \rild pitch and Easterling rac· ed home ~11ith the South la Hy. n1ng pitcher Art Castillo or Savanna Uhe SCC'ond Yank hurler of the garne ~ at the Ix-ginning of the ~e\'C'nlh in-'llhe winners accounted for ning and responded by pit· ching three innin~s or perrecl rJJ three of their runs Jn the ball. which included s i x lop of the ~venth by couplin,11; strikeouts. H<' also copped the toge!hcr three singles. two lilt's most valuable honors. walks, a sacrifice fly and a PU.A& CALL !>eO-tlOO Only Nori h hill sta rle r G reg: .~p~a~;~, ~o~f~R:•:b~e~I ~m~l':'~":"~·;;;o;;;.;~ii::iii::iii::iii::iii::i~ii::i:iii~ii::iii::i~ LaMendula of \Vt'stern \l'a.~11 ------ responsible for !he 1ninin1al South cornmuliun as he relin· quished but ;i 1011!"' run nnd just two hits 111 \\'nrk1ng the in- ili:>J three frnrnt•s. A trio of Or;1ni,:1· Coast area performers contributed to a first inning Hebel ra lly v.·hich Jlarnererl !he losE•n; \hf'ir only ru11 of the <"nntest. :'-111\1'pttrl llarbor·s i\1 i kc F.asterling led of the s1anza for thr South hy lrggin!{ 11 !o r1rsl base on an error by the North shortsiop. F.astcrling ;1d vanccd to sr- cond on a fielder"s thoite by Corona del }.1ar '.~ John Palmer and !hen moved lo lhirrl on successivp w?Jk.., issued to Rntsa (irandr ".~ i\111rk l..('nnon ;:ind Crrg Kf's~ler of Laguna Beach. 1\'ilh the bases loaded and Garden Grol'c 's Scott \Vil~on 50th Anniversary CELEBRATION • SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT DIAGNOSTI C CENTER cnarg.-. 111"!1 Alert Jt . ,,,,1..,·1 lo•. t fl!I• S••~. PAI MA,iA. O•Ciol'I v 1n<1. Su 11~"'° -1·n• T<><;k. 0 1••• J1n1, I To Go. P&<r Or<• "ll really cn1h11rras.~es 1nt' s•YIHTH 11.t.Cl-Ho vu a•. J YN • ---------------------------------------,. __ .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;II GOODYEAR TIRE CENTER SERVICE DEPARTMENT PARTS DEPARTMENT BODY SHOP THl~O llACI: -llO Vtrdl. 1 Yl•r old m1ioen1 Cl•lmlnv. P u•,. '1tOCI. (O<.J•t~son !WArdl J JO 7.6(1 1.00 P~to DK~ ( ""•"l J.M> 1 tt! Wltcl'I Cr••• CMc !M•Oan•l<I) l . .O l l"'• -11 1110 AIM> ran -9,;,101 Hiii (hld1, (1,... o•e•" 01...nv. l"•lnc1 lnl<y. J.,," ''"~n<I••. Sl<>rm111 Norm•"· Trut kt ltro. Mos! llOVAI S.Cr•l<l'le<I -L&<lv Lindo Lrtu. GOLF TIPS Wiiii L-Ht ... lc'" ,rletk• At TM oldl .. VP. Citlml~•. Pur•• tl60ll Chiller (l"ornerl T.lO ~ 10 J 00 Ovr 01d 1lon 11'41rll 6.CI ~.JO l"l•l>blor !C.1r<l<>11I J . .O l lm• -.11 11\0 .t.lso ••n -810b~y C~•rtfr, Mldwov D•ndT. Tl"• lrlV>. Kl~tv'< (1-1. Ila." M..,t Cf. 5Crl!Cl>fd -800'1 lltr ~r>d. l lGH"T H IACI -U) ytrlh. ! y11r el!lt & Utt. A ll-•M n . l"ut" lnOO. Solid lloc•.i !IC•"ll) 10 . .0 4,(1) J.-0 OH 111(1<1•'1 l(lc•Pll !DrtyU ) 1.IO l .,, OH·Mltl>le Mon !l"erner! J,00 7.IO Tl"'~ -.II lit ! AllO ron -D••IO J tne. MllP Tiie A,,_ nl1, Go A Miii, Lii ltllv. Slll<IOW Mtn, Y1nt1e llob. Affld'I Tonie. Scrllel"lfd -LIHle Con1ru•. okh & uo. C!t lmln•. Put,.. llSllO. 0 111 llrt ""• CLl..,1ml t.10 •.OC ScoH Mttll•n IP'•t•I lortoml>I fW•h ... I l ime -.11 l f lO. l .10 Also r•n -AP•th• P1 ... um . Ooublt A"ln. Mon• Oi•I, Su" Kl!1tn. G-ol!I Dlt l, Sl•t"PV '""''" Gtnlal Hool. NIWPORTl!R INN PAR 3 OOLP COURSE $1.ff wtr\,ttill.i w..t: ti..,. ~~~~===";'~"~·~·~";··~·~·===============, GET RID OF MESSY SHOWER CURTAINS! Ugue TUB ENCLOSURES CUSTOM ONLY $7995 IN-STALLED / l't<Mry MNIV•911 t lMI I• lltl1911 ..... ,. ........ •t- llrf 11¥l" otltatn Tell'I~ ~ Qlou. ........ Sltlfl il"9Cl!•lnt e vt ll••fo PHONE 833-3694 :u r .. ,.. •"''rtne• IR lwlllt,... C•llt. Ba,seball Standings Ari-fERTCAN LEAGUE Baltimore Detroit Bo~ton Ne""' York Cleveland Washington Oakland Kansa~ City ~1innesola Angtls Chicago 111illl.'3Uket East Division w I. 44 2'.l :19 31 37 :io 32 :17 31 37 24 43 \\'eat Olvl1lon 46 2.1 35 :m 35 35 32 ~' 26 :m 26 ,. Thurl'll V'I llltl~llo Mllw~uk•• I, Antell O l!oltlmo•• i . W~•lllneion 1 Ottrolt J. Clevel~nd ~ O~k l~n<I '' Ml"""'ct1. r11n 0"1• 1•m1• •c~e<l"'""· TO~•Y'I O•Mll Pt'L .'57 .557 .552 .464 .456 .358 .667 .538 .500 .<38 .406 .<00 GB 5 1'? 7 13 13 12 20 9 l llh 16 17 1:.- 18 lleltlmore /Ooboon J .. > •1 l!01!ln rLonborg ,.J). n'1hl Wt1~lnvto11 !l•ol>I'•• 0.0) 11 N~w Yor~ (!(line J .. ). nltht Cl~v•llnd tOunnlr-.g .-ii •I Ott•ol! l~ltrllo ) t l, nltht .t.ntt•• !Mur1hv •·11 t i C~ltltO !Horlfn 1·l ), nlfM Mllwlllke<' !Lockwood 3 .. ) •• Mln~\01• {Co•· bin .. ~I. nl1M IC••••• cnv CMl'Cl lur>d l...rll 11 Oekl1nd tl!!u• IJ.tl. ,j9M NATIONAL t EAGUt.: P1ltsbur11 h 1''e111 'York SI . Louis Chicago Montrelll Philadelph ia East Di vision \\' L 45 26 39 28 39 :14 34 35 " 36 " <{) West Ol vislon San Fr:incisco 48 2!l Dodgers 39 :12 Houston 3.1 37 Cincinnati 32 40 Atlanta J.1 ~2 San Diego 25 47 T~urs••¥'s 111111111 °"'"'" \!. S•. Loult f r.tw Yor> '· Mo"trr1I I Pl·t .fi34 .582 .534 .4!13 .414 .<20 .fif>R .5~9 .471 .444 .4411 .347 l'hllo~fll>~I• J, (1"<1~"•11 1, 10 lnnon11 O"I• ·~"'"' •c,...,ul,.,, ,.,.,.1 011rir• 14 1 ~ " Nfw YO•~ tllY•" 6-4 tl>d 5•dK-( l·'1 •! Mo"• lr••I llltlllOn 0·1 •ro<I 5!rollmt•fr O·! Of' MtGlnn 0.0), 7, two.nl9M Clndnn•ll ISlm•""' l·l end Cl~l"''r 1 •I 11 All•"'" (!'l••-o S·T •n<I K~lifv 1 ll. 1. twl·nl1ht Pltt•l>u••" 1111111 1-Jl .i Phlla!lf'lplll• 18 unn1111 J·l l· nloht S•~ l'••ntl•t~ l l"•"v •·11 11 Hou!!o~ 111;111"t· "•m ).1J, ~lohl (hlC&'IO !Hl"CI$ ... I •t SI. LOU!, !5•nlor1"1 O·l lo nlghl Sin OltOO •Normfn ll-1) 11 o.<11trt CO'ltltn 1· )), "l•hl lSTH ANNIVERSARY SALEll BIGGEST I. BEST YETI DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD ., COSTA MESA Modern & Complete Service & Po1rt1 D•pt. Mocf•rn Body Shop for All Cars 646·9303 540·9468 Oranee County's Largest and Most Modern Toyota and Volvo Dealer OYIRSIAS DILIVIJIY" S,ICIALISTS • DEAN LEWIS !TlOlY(O!T(Al ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS '71 COROLLA SPECIAL $1777 ~ Sii THI ALL NfW TOTOTA CELICA Sl"T. C'l- IMMIDIATI DILIVIRY" VOLVO 1971 DEMO $2998 142 '''""• r•di•, ~••'•'· •uforri•lit tll ft l . ! .... USID CAR SPICIAL $1195 1''' llNAULT 110 ht1!1r, • •lltlf<I. Nlct . fVl(ZlOO! RENT AL LEASING ON EVERY NEW I. USED CAR-TRUCK FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS. 50 GALLONS FREE GAS FREE 4 WEEKEND CAMPER TRIPS PLUS $50 CASH SPENDING MONEY GOODYEAR BLIMP RIDES 50 VALUABLE PRIZES IN ALL COMI IN AND UwlSTH NOTHINw TO IUY NO OILIOATION Theodore Robins • FORD JO YEA"S OF SEllVIC E TO OAANGE COUNTY UNOER SAMI OWNEll SHI!' 2060 HARBOR BLVD. Cott• Mtsa 642-0GlO I I I I j Jf DAI L< PILOT rr1da1. Jull( 25, 1'171 ' .. Start i Edison Your Engines! by Deke Hou/gate .,.,., .. ~ .. et::.~"" • Lasl Saturday night al the Beach was different. For the firsl time In eight years Pappy Ylasn't there, scooting around on his molorcyc:le running the show. . The Beach is v.·hal drag racers and fans _affPCUOOalely c.all Lions Drag Strip. the most fainous and prest1g1ous accelerat_1on speed arena in the \\ortd. Papp_v 1s C. J. Ha rt, the dr~g racmg pioneer who first conct>1ved the idea of making a bus1ne.ss out -0f getting the racers off the street. Jn a policy dispult-with the 18·member board ()f the Asso- ci;ited Lions Clubs of the d.os Angeles-Long Beach! Harbor Area, liar! rcs1gnl't.! as promoter of weekly Lions el'enl~. Bliss- ful in their ignorance, the board 1nembers ·who sa! on their hands \\hen Pappy ~alkcd out do nol ~el realize what kind of a Lalent lhty ha,·e Jost. llart's career parallels the history or drag racing. Before \\lorld War JI .as a hot rodder in Findlay, 0 ., he was the scourge or lhe highways. traveling sometin1es 200 miles to challenge some hot shoe whose reputation had begun to spread. Afler lhe \1•ar, as the operator or an auto repair shop in Santa Ana. Hart was one or the nightly visitors to Baker Street, \\·here the Oran)'.!e Count y street racers used to meet. Ah11avs on !he k•okuut for heller. safer pl ates to race. llart set up the drags on an abandoned Navy airstrip in Fou~tain Valley. known ;is J\1ile Square. (I\ consisted Df a square mile of asphalt ) "We jus! lined up :ind cver~·body raced everybod~·." Hart recalled. "\\'e ran six and seven abreast. Thank goodness nobody got hurt." . !Jla ri11 e~ l~n••d nt 1'1i le Sq11 ar~ One da\' the ~1arine~ landed al r.lile Square. 11d\•ancing on the hnt rodi:ters ~·ith fixed bayonets. Thl'y got the message and departed. Harl cnnlinut d shopping for a place to ra~. Soon afte-r • RTODp of car nul.~ held the fir st organited drag race-at Goleta, Cal., Hart pt>rsuaded the managl'r at Orange Counly Airport to allow dra~ rarers lo use an abandoned run,.·a}'. The-first com- mtrciall}' promottd l'\'ent v.·as put on b~· Hart on Ju~ 19 . 19.>0. Co nditions v.'ert crudt. The cars were nag~f'd off and 1imi n,l' "'a~ by slopv.·atch. Soon Hart had se::!rega1rd tht cars into dif· ft rent classt's to tTeate closer co mpetition -a system Iha! bas be-co me institutionalized today. After nine \'ears HI Santa An a Hart went tn Ri vcrsidt Race· •·ay and nri::a ni1.td dra1tgin1t there (In lhe qu arter and half-milrs, then had a fling at Tafl. fal .. ht fnre taking ovtr as strip man· agl'r flt Lions from l\lickey Thompson in 1963. lro11 ~la11 f'e11t l•!I A llist.tt• Anybody \\'ho perrorrns a i_:rcal r('at of endurance. slrl'ngth or sustained speed 1s haill'd as <tn Iron ~fan. a breed nf alhlC'IC v.·ho has ne:irly vanished a~ condittons in sports have changed. You don't hear about 60-1ninute men in football any mnre. rarely aboul, a Ii-inning pilcher. A boxer never goes more than 1~ rounds. and the four-minule m ilers are a lot better knO\\'n than the marathoners. · One sport that hasn't losl its Iron ~1en is auto racing. and the most rceenl candidate £or the title is Donnie Allison or Hu<'y- to\\·n. Ala. O\'C!' the 1'\<'rnonal Day Wt.'t'kend he drove J.100 miles in two race c:1rs in 24 hours. Donnie's llercule<i n fe<tt \\•as part or an amazing t:>-day per- fonnance that started on to.lay 16 ,.,·ith his victory in the \Vins· ton 500 al Talladega, Ala. In a l~day period he also qualified for the Indianapolis 500. not once but twice, qualified for the Ta1J.1dega race and the Charlot·te World jj(')(), both stock car e venlS. and participa!cd in carburetion tests, 11 driver·.s meeting and victory banquet at Indianapolis. This v.·as his itinerary for thal period. i\f;:iy 12 -He qualJriC'd on the pole for the Talladega race in the \\lood Brothers Purol<ilor tlfercur.v. May 15 -Back al Indy. he qualified A .. /. Foyl"s Purfll;:itor Coyote turbo-Ford on the inside of I.he eighth row, then flew the Allison family plane back to Talladega for the race the next day. to.lay 16 -lie won U1e race in as thrillin~ a finish a.~ could be 1m;igined, as the green Flag si~nalled the track was clear of an ac:cidenl on 1he ''ery la ~I !ap. Donnie outraced Dave Marci~. brolhl'r Bobby and Buddy Baker to lhe checkered flag on that final lap. !\lay 22 -lndl' car ov."ner Fort "'ithdrew Allison's car frnm lhe racl', a \'l'ry ususual move. so Donnie could qualify a baC'k· up C'ar before he cou ld be un<:t>remnniously bumped from the field. Allison "·as clocked in lil.903 m.p.h .. JDth fai;test man in the race, and landed in !he middle or thr: seventh ro"'· ~l ay 26 -[)onnie took part in carhuretinn ttsls al the speed· \\a~·. a commilmf'nl th;~t fort·ed him to fnre~n an alttmpl '" "'In tht: polr: po~iti11n fur lhr (.harlolle rarl'. Thl'n he flev. the famil~· plane hat.:k 1(1 Ch11rlttttl'. ,\1 a~· 2i -lle1'ordlng !ht third Faslei;t qual ii~'ing time In the Cbar1olle NASfAH Granrt 1'\ation1d fitld. Don nie nevertbelr ~~ had to be satisfied with tbt: inside of lht: Se\'f'Dt h row for tht 1tart ol the racl'. Staggers Marina Dave Moh.1' E d J 1 on Oiargers registered a mild upsel Thursday night by defeating Marina's Vikings, 6J..60. in the .second t1jght of the Huntington Beach summer b;iskelball league. Corona dcl Mar 1opped a stubhorn La Qu inta team, 57- 51 . in lhe ether game .at Edison, 1-:1mer Combs' Huntington Beach Oilers ran awBy from Villa Park. 65-31, with Steve Brooks hitting 21 points, Fountain Valley fell victim or Buena Park, 54-52 in the <'loses! game on the schedule. Both games were played in the Huntington Beach gym. Al 1'.tarina, Don Leavey's Wes1 min.ster Lions toppled Rancho Alamitos, 94-75 in .a high scoring <'ontest with Garden Grove defeating Bolsa Grande in the olher game 68- 61. fo:dison·s victory over Marina ...,·as the first ever for !he Chargers over lhe Vikes, nn the hardwoods. Rod Snook \1'3S high poin~ man for the winners with 16 while Mark Harmon had 13 . Cff.,I HI /Mr UT! C.•;a•b~ D••U s., ... " .. JQ<IU C•m''"" Low••H -··-C•thOI' Tc11I• 1-i•llllm•: °'""" JO It ti •I II 1 1 0 J l 0 1 • 1 J • 11 1 10 • 11 I I 0 l 1 ' ' • • 0 0 I ' 0 D 1 101711 SI Co•""• Ori Mi r 71!, LI Fi ... I. (MOf'I <!ti M 1r j7, L1Quln11 ... f 1wn11Jft \11lt.v /U l l9t111i. R''"'' Su.i .. 111 $0/lft\Ot\ W•ddl~ .. ~Ultld eoouc- c ·~""'' T •~~mJ lo:••·· • J • l l J 1 1 I I 0 S 7 ' ' . • ) ) 11 J ! 4 I • • • • • • • • • )I 10 1l 51 Ta••'• f!~lltime. Foun!•ln \follev 211, Buen1 P•r~ il, "'"~'· Buen• F'1r~ l •. Founioln V•I· It• Jl. lcH'°" Ill) It II •I !~ F•'<~ ' ' ' ' $"aa•· ' ' ... .. ~•mon • ' . " "~·~,. • • , ' Z•mmf"""" • ' ' ' w.11i4m1 ' ' ' • l ••lltl ' ' ' ' C•~oun ' • • • MC K<rftf~ ' • ' ' l c111> M1r1n1 .. , :&11\0•l tt n "'i. Ro••ln ' • ' ' "'""'"' • ' . " B0<>01n • • ' " ~ ....... ' • • ' 'WnHe ' • • ' ""'" ' • • ' $w~Mon • ' "' lo1a11 1• u ll "'3 tt1t1!1mf £0 Ml• JO. M1rln1 11. Wo11m1ns1 u ,., " " • .. Mt•"'"""'m .. • ' • " JcnnM>n • ' • " lintel! • • ' " lll•~•llf • ' ' " You•o ' ' • • l'<•l<I> • • • • Coa•,,•I ' • • ' c ••• ' • ' • fol••• • n " .. H•lll<m•· W••l"'insler '" ~""'"" .Al •""'~ " l'•n•l Westmln•l•r ... 111ncno Al•· m!lns IS H<1nt1n11on B11ch till .. " •' " WnH• • ' ' " fl too>' " ' ' " 'Nn• '"~ • ' ' " (run• ' ' ' ' Whltli~•ll ' • ' • ,t,\hlord ' • • • G•d1no ' • ' • l•"'"nce • • ' • A••l•on ' • • ' Tol•I• " ' " M H•ll!lmt· Hi;nhn.ion Be•U. 7', V\1•1 rar~ ... ~lnat HunHneton l!.e<!(h ~-\f111, r.,~ JI. Fisl1 Report HUNTl'IGTOP< •l•CH -6t 1nol1"' :I'll< 11!<11 '''"" ! t11"1<ull1. I hl lib<il ,AllAOISE CO\fl 110 1nol1t<: tl6 ~•••tO O• • • ~lh~t NEWPORT !A•I'• l1ndln•! -11 •nol"'' 1 1>1rr•<ud1, l l>Onho, l1J """ !I •<><• cod. J6 m1c~erpl 101V1¥'• l oc• .. 1 \II """'···· IOI bo«, 1l bcn;to, ! """""•d• 11 ""~ cod IQ m•n:N t l, 1'1 n•uo n4" S•N OIEGO (Munlclp11 Pio•> -~1 &nolt,. I!• VfllO••••ll, I wnllf 1•• b$1•· II b•""'"O•. !• """''"· JIO c1lico '"" \EAL IEACll -1'1 •no1,.,· 11)() """ •I b•.r•c.in•, J h•l•bu• 1 .. q• -)6 •noltfl 11>0 """· JIO IJ<>nOc, ;I'll blf ••<U<M, I n~hbu • OCElNSIOl l" •n<1lors: I b••· "1av ?8 -lie bad lo skip vital practict ror the Charlotte t~cu<l-o. IJ:l/ b~·1• '· h•llbut. • ~AN Cl'l!MeNll 1'0 e'IQltr_, race, bec:iust ht was due at Jnd ianapoli~ for tht traditional 1 1.~o bt11, • bo11•cud•. 1 ~•llt>U•. ~,_ "'"'~"'e' drlverli' meeting. Thal me11nl s nolhl'r t•rossco11ntry flight In the --- Be:aC'h Baron. ~1 ay !! -Af1er drh·ing a steady r are to finish sixlh and I 11tay nu t or all the lrouhle 1he sath annual Indianapolis ~ "·ill I be re mt mbered for. [)onnie hopped the Purolalor executh<e jet 'or th e trip lo (;harlolle. The plant detoured to New 'i'ork lo let off MJme VIP pa~~nger.~. "·hicb meant tbat Donnie didn't hit b\1 motel room lill afltr midnigbt. r.1ay 30 -His l\lett: plaguN v.·ith blistering tireli, Onnnie bad lo n:iakt: tv.·n txtra stops early in the rare, but he bung ln and chargrd "'hilt' othtr drh·er~ v.·err overe11n:it by the stifling heat (Donnie had been relie-\·td in thlii: race due In heat proslra· tion on four prtvious oecaslons himseUI, and at the end he v.·as 5eeond lo brother Bobby. SUMMER FESTIVAL OF CADILLACS ,l l451 CALL Ul-t lM Despile starting ii:tven ro11o·s back of the: winner and losing 1111 lhat extra time with pit slops. Donnie Allison flni~hed on the I same lap •Ith his brother. After thr race Donnie rode the execu- tive Jet back lO lndlanapoli1 victory banquet, where be was a few mlnales late. \;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii""iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~~~~gt1 South, North Nines Clash I See by Today's Want Ads ' ·. " ., \ .. ... .. .. :A ..,.:~ ·.~ .. .. , • • ........ , ' . -·~. ~ ...... ..... t .. -~-,...ef,t_. ~·· _, ~ .... _ ~ /\ I \.. HERE COME SANDLER 'S SIZZLE BOOTS ... NEW SUPERSTARS WITH CITY SHORTS On haughty sole~. Thick ond Sfl ssy. Leading up to o long, leon 5treok of slick leather. Our sinle boots by Sondler of Bo~l on , di stinctively Oei.igned for your city short life. A. The Lacer U ppers. bro wn, whi te, nt"Jvy, 29.00 B. The Mox ie, block, honey, antique, 2S.OO Cosuol Shoes 75 • ' ' ,. . I lC_l_A..__I _l-VVAY HUNTINGTON BEACH 7777 Ed inger Ave. (714 ) 892-3 331 NEWPORT #47 Fas hi on Islan d (714) 644-1212 Br id es "' Share Fame A Most Unusu a l Wedding Day By JACKIE COMBS •I The O•llr I'll•! Siii/ President Nix.on came to Newport Beach last June 27 to attend a wedding. ll v•as 3 big day (or the J{arbor Area - national news coverage, secret service men scaling high sc hool "'rJls and neighborhood streets lined wilh "''ell· \\'ishers. A huge banner draped acros~ the street from the church saluted the OC• casion. It was a blg day for the bride, the President's niece Lawrene 11-1ae Nixon and her husband Thomas EI m er Anlinson. It was also a big day !or three other brides who \Vere married that same d2.y in the same church, SL Andrew's Presbyterian Church, with the same of· ficiant, the Rev . Dr. Charles H. Dier~ tie!d. Now, every little girl dreams that when she grov.·s up she will be the most beautiful bride ever. lt"s a fact. It also is a fact that her wedding de.y wi!l be her ()WO special day -like a royal cor- (Jnation. PR ES IDE NT C0~1ES ll is difficult tg ., co nceive of other brides sharing the '§ltne wedding day but it is even more difficult to imagine that i;ometh.ing as personal as your wedding day could be overshadowed by the Presi· dent coming to lown. fllrs. Owen Michael Kreza of Costa r.1esa. the former Katherine Carol Hill , accepted the announcement as another 8tep in a series of coincidences. After all, she shares a birthdate with the President, Jan. 9. And as a little girl. :;he 'vas photographed as she greeted Nixon the candidate at Los Angeles ln· tcrnational Airport. A recent graduate of California State College al Long Beach and the v>'ile of a Costa Mesa police officer, Mrs. Kreza made the reservation for her late af· ternoon ceremony two years before lhe elate. "For a . v.·hile v.•e were hurt because people kept m2.king such a big thing out of it. They kept saying I might be mist aken for Lawrene by onlookers because \.ve're both dark," recal!ed Mrs. Kreza. "~1y biggest scare was that the minister wouldn't give us as much at- tention." A conference with Dr. Dieren- field erased any prebridal jitters. "Dr. Diercnfie\d said everyone's marriage is a i:pccial day . He constantly told us , 'lt"s your day', ''It's kind of hard to explain how I rel! about it. J mean I never wrote anything in my wedding book ·and never clipped any news stories." Mrs. Kreza was delighted when not one ! ' of the guests mentioned lhe Nixon affair. "l was so excited I completely forgot about it." Not only do little girls dream of being beautiful brides, they promise best friends they can be in the wedding party. Close friends, La\vrene Nixon and Alice Kay f\.1cfadden tried to exchange at· tendant honors but discovered they had chosen the same wedding date. "We kept our engagement a secret. Although we reser\red the church about a yfar ahead, we didn't reveal our engage- ment until six months before the date so ' I l Lawrene had no idea." Married to Robert Charles Partridge, Alice Kay McFadden Partridge is an elementary school teacher like ·Mrs. Anfinson. CLASSJ\1ATES Classmates al Cali fornia High School in \\lhittier, Mrs. Anfinson and Mrs. Part.ridge arc continuing a long-time family tie. "Our parents and our grandparents. old Orlnge C o u n t y fa milies, always have been c J o s e friends ," explained Mrs. Partridge. lt was quite an exchange. Tbe bride'• A yeor 090 the wedd in g of Lo wre ne Nixon on d Thomas Anfinson ottrocted t he attention of t he notio n, for Presid ent Nixon attended his niece's wedding . At left, she is shown os o bride. Above, she is with her two-month- old twins, Re becca ond Kathlee n. rather. James ~1cFadden and her slsler Patricia v;enl to the Nixon wedding in the morning. Then, Mr. and r.1rs. f'. Donald Nixo11, the presidenl's brother, sneaked out of their daughter's wedding reception at the Newporter Inn long enough to at· tend the McFadden-Partridge rite. (See UN USUAL DAY, Page 18) . '\' MRS. ROBERT PART RIDGE ·~:;f c1 ..... Hev1e ;,..,. MR S. OWEN KREZA I ! • OAIL Y PILOT PPllN llr LH Pan. .·; BEA ANDERSON, Edit°' "'" n MRS. l YNN BOYCE .... · Material Gifts No Substitute for Big Offering of Love DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 started 11. letter to you a couple of hours ago. I left ll on my desk after writing only a few lines. My dad walked by and saw it. He 1aid in a half-kidding way, "I see you are writing to Ann Landers. I can't imagine what YOU have to complain about." I didn't answer. At the dinner table he started again -"Don't forget when you crilicJ1,e your parents to Ann Landers, be sure to tell her you have your own telephone, that we remode led your bedroom and put in a stereo. Be sure to mention that we promised you a trip to Europe next summer after graduation." It's funny, I l\'AS going to mention all tho~e things -in a different context. My whole life seems to be things, things , things -and more things. I'd gladly gi\'e up all the THINGS if my parenl.3 would ANN LANDERS only treat me like an adult. I ca11't recall ever having had a real C<Jn versaUon with eilher of them. I guess this is my problem. Ann Landers. Wh at's the solution? -TOO MUCH AND TOO U TILE DEAR TOO: I 1atber yoa •re about 17 -and this is pretty late' to try to lnltl•te your first real conver111ion 1\"ltb your f)lrenl1. FNlm your father'• remark1, I 11sume you two , are operath1& on differ ent wavelengths. I Parenl.8 who believe a 1tereo and a trip lo Europe are where It'• at are a sad }oL Unfortunately, tMy become 1.11.dder as time 1oe1 on and they reallle they have no relationship with their children. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Should I continue to remain fr iendly with a person who is in despeJ"ate need of professional help -even though the relationship iJ threatening my own emotional balance? This person keeps me on the phone for hours and the C-Onversationl!I usually end wi th her screaming and hanging up on me. I feel sorry for her. but T fear for my own mental health. Sometimes, afler a particularly stormy session, it takes days before I am able to regain my sense of balance. If, in your opi nion, I should discontinue the relationship, please tell me how to show this person I wish her well. -A.T.H. DEAR A.T.H.: Yo11 can best belp your friend by 111gge1ting the name1 of two or tbree doctor• who have helped otben. Only 1n txtremely 1tablt person can tol eralt tht ab111e of • alck ptrsoa without feeling burl or resentful. Yoa ohvtnn1ly canno& handle It, and you 1bould not try. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please tell me what is wrong with people who do not answer tellers. I have called friends Jong distance after extended periods of sllence, just to see if they are all right. On the phone they say, "111 put a letter in lhc mail today" -but uiey don'l. This has happened to me so many times I have just about lost my fa ith in people. I enjoy \l.'ritlng letters. To me, It's thf': next best thing to conversation. 1 ct1n't understand why, at this very moment. at least 15 people owe me letters. Why are SO' many people slobs? -A MYSTERY WRAPPED IN AN ENIGMA DEA R WRAPPED: Not all deretlct correspondent• i re 1lobs. Some are \ rather nice folk• who are uture et'a.etr tpelllag, their penmamhlp, or crammar -or tbey reread a letttr •fter Uvlq written tt, and It IOUDd1 damb, ~.,. llllterate, ~ they detldt no letler· at· aB' woald be better than what tbey've written. Re!leM'e )11dgmeat ho ••Y.• beeau1e you aever know why people da't write. Give in or lose him .. , when a 1tiy gives you this line, look out! For lips on how to handle the super sex sale!man. check Ann Landers. Read her boold•t. ''Necking and Pe tting -Whal Are 'iw Limits?" Send your request to Ann Landers in care of the DAILY Plt.O'l", enclosing 50 cenU In coin and a ~ stamped. self-addressed enveklpe. ... -.· . ' JI DAJLV PILOT :.Alumnae ,. ~start New Studies Pertinent study-action torics will be in· troduced during the annua convention of the : American Association of University Woinen. Theme of the conclave, scheduled from Su'lfay, June 'l:l, to Thursday, July I , in DaQas, is Reform, Revolution or Stal\13 Quo, Among topics to be discussed are A Dollar's Worth, a program designed to in~ creise Understanding Of (IUr economic gysitm; We the People, a study of gov:trnment al all levels : Crisis in Publie EdUcation, an aim to increase citizen awireness, understanding a n d in- vol~ement in providing humane and quali - ty : education for all , and Th i _. Beleagured Earth, a study dealing •ith our ·;environment. o,Iegates from the Newport·Costa Mt¥ Branch attending include the Mmes. Kenneth Lewis, C. D. Glassmoyer. wbO is the state recording secretary, and R. t . Arnold, state fellowships chairman, ~presenting other Orange Coast brallches will be the Mmes. Robert Hociier and Miriam Smith, Huntington Beath; Robert Avenatti, Westminster- Fountain Valley, and Gratia Bell and Dr. Pearl Clark, Laguna Beach. Frldl.f, Junt 25, lfln ' • AND, AWAY WE GO -Off to the National AAUW Convention in Dallas are (left to right) Mrs. Ronald K. Arnold, state fellowship chairman; Mr s. Kenneth M. Lewis, president of the Newport-Cos ta Mesa Branch, and 1i-lrs. C. D. Glass· moyer, state recording secretary. Club Gavels Changing Hands Tnslallatlon ceremooies still ate makiflg flews along the Orange Coast as additional groups seat new slates of of- ficers. .SC Town, Gown Mrs. William Hazewinkel <>f Newport Beach is the new pmident (If the 2-year-old OJange County ctiapter of Town and Gown Junior Aux- iliary ol the University of Southern California. Serving with her are the Mmes. Randolph Parker, vice president; Bruce Galey and Bernard Leckie, secretaries; John Cashion. treasurer, and Edward Brumleu Jr., parlia- mentarian. , Also taking office at the in- stallation luncheon w e r e chairmen, the Mmes. James Hewitt, v.•ays and means; 'Cans of Pleas' Jooeph Rose , scholarship; Robert Brownsberger, hospitality; Robert SmHh, Lo! Angeles Jiaison; Doug I as Simpson, meeting; Donald Clarke, ne'N member; Derek Lewis, membership; Mason Fenlon. program: Franklin Fiorentino, social: James Tyler, history, and David Berg, publicity. Se.cretaries ler, secretary, and Does, treasurer. Medea Girls Mlss Iris Outgoing presid~nt Sue Wommack was named girl<if- the-year at the m o t h e r. daughter banquet that con- cluded this year's activities for !l-1edea. a YMCA. sponsored, comn1unify service club for girls at \Vestminster High School. Seventeen initiates joined the club which has visited con· C. Arthur Nisson, president <>f the Orange County Bar Association, addressed the va!cscent homes. raised funds June meeting of the Harbor for the l\farch of Dimes and Area Legal Secretaries aided a needy family at Association. Christmas. New officers introduced by Officer for n ex t vear will Mrs. John Salyer, presid~nt be the Misses Jerry DeVriend, were Miss Dottie De!ltalignon presiden1 : Terry Erlwards, and Mrs. John McKean, vice vice president; Diane \l.'he lan, presidents; Mrs. Ralph Muel-se<::retar.v, and Patti Jennings, treasun>r. Delta Iota vice president; Theodore Mor- daunL and Louis Smith, secretaries; Harold Graves. treasurer, and Do n a I d McCotlam, parliamentarian. The chapter was presented with awards for its educa4 tional program and outstan- ding philan!.hropic work at the sorority's state ronvenlion. Cha pter members chaperone the Young Adult Socia I Therapy Group of the Orange County Epilepsy Society <>n visits lo Southern California tourist att r actions·. Transportation and ticket.s for these excursions are donated by local businesses. John Bo,\'er. treasurer, and Ken Kisthardt. civil defense. Appointed officers are lhe Mmes. Charles Badger, par 1 i am e ntatian; Denis Parker, historian; Jerome Colton. junior past president; Greg Patchen, publicity; John Murray. directory, and Mark DuBordieu, editor. Cinderellas Mrs. Sam Gurley Jr. ac- cepted the gavel and presiden- tial duties <>f the Newport Beach Cinderella Guild, a sup- port group of Orange County Children's Hospital. Also stepping into offit(! Beta Sigma Ph i were the Mmes. Donald M. Gustafson and Dean M . !lfrs. \Valter l!ess of McCann, vice presidents, and Anaheim will lead the West Edwin H. Finst.er and Richard Grol'e Area Council. Beta lI. Robinson. secretaries. Sigma Phi for the coming Mrs. McCann received the year. "glass slipper" award for Other elected officers are out.standing service. and ii the ;o.1mes. Larry Zaruba. vice was announced that the guild Support Solicited r.-1rs. Lol'('n La n1 mer s president ; Dick Mitchell and presented $12,000 to the ~amr president of Delta Harlan Lawson, secretaries; hospital. Iota Chnpter of Epsilon Sigma ;=============='=========.i Alpha lntemalion;il :;orority during .:in installa1ion dinner Fastest in West 4'Cans of pleas '' decorated containers seeking financial aid for the Art Alllance (If California Stale CoHege at Fullerton -have been mailed by the group·s Bu1ine!! and Arts Committee to 700 county businessmen and professional people. Contents of the can request sppport of the al 1 i.a n ce · s cltsigner fashion show schedul· ~ for Oct. 16 at the Hunt- Wesson Foods, Inc. gardens in Fullerton. Dr. J . T. Ric hards, Lido Isle ; Leon Lyon. Newport (k!ach, and J. Edward Eberlt, Utguna Beach, represent the ()range Coast on the newly formed committee in charge Fireworks Earn Funds Fireworks booths are a popular fund·raiser thls month (or Orange Coast organi.z.a lion•. ·Senior Girl Scout Troop 1839 w111 be selling sparklers in a &land at 450 E. 17th St., Costa ~ffsa from Monday, June 28, through July 4 to fliilsh their fund for a ls.day troop camp.- Ing trip in Haw aii. Fourth of July 11Upplies also will be availabl~ at a booth operated by Huntington Beach YMCA lndi3n .Maidens at the comer of Edinger Avenue and Golden West Strttt from 10 a.m. lo I p.m. Monday, June 28 through July 2. of industry's patronage. in the Fishl'rman restaurant. Suy IL ~II IL Try \ht fastest response In the West against your Business members will be Huntington Beach. own clock. Test Oimt·a-Une Ads, where the action Is, In Saturday's invited to lectures, films Also assuming new duties DAILY PILOT. I receptions for artists and. ~-wiie;;ce;;;;thiie._M,.miie~s •. ~J~oh~n--K~oo~n~l~z,;iiiii;ii;ii;ii;ii;ii;ii;ii;ii;ii;ii;ii;ii;ii;ii;ii;ii;ii;~ii;iiiiiiii,I of.her special events. Fundsll raised by the drive will sup- port student scholal1lhips and the alliance's acquisition pro- gram as well as attract art exhibits to the college's public gallery. Students Complain f\1ernbers of Esqui r e' s 1 College Board. meel.ing with IJ1e men who make the ads for one shirtmaker. complained that shirta: in the 11ds look too perfect and ought to have a wrinkle or two. They also romplained about the ''hip'' lang uage copywrilers used in an at- tempt to reach the youth market. The college Joes suggested that the ad makers u.se plain English. They also recom- mended thal the ad contain In• formaUon about what the stl!rt' maker Is doin g for humanity -and to cle11n up pollution, saying tha~ such information might lead them lo buy the shirt. ANNOUNCEMENT FASHIONj ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER SUNDAY SHOPPING Th• following stores ore now OPEN SllNDAYS FROM 12 TO 5 P.M. for your shopping convenience: 1. AT EASE 2. BATH SHOP 3. BOB BURNS 4. B. DALTON BOOKSELLER S. BROADWAY 6. COCO'S 7. EL POCO 8. HAIR HUNTERS 9. HATCH'S HALLMARK 10. ISLAND COFFEE HOUSE 11 . J. C. PENNEY 12. KARLS TOYS 13. MARK SCOTT 14. MEDITERRANEAN IMPORTS 15. MUSIC HALL 16. THE RIGGER 17. RUSSO'S WONDERFUL WORLD OF PETS INC . 18. SEE'S 19. THE SHOWOFF 20. SILVERWOODS 21. VIKINGS FOUR 22. WALTER CLARKE HAWAIIAN SHOP 23. LANZ OF CALIFORNIA SHOP THE OPEN·AIR, OCEAN.VIEW MALL And. In this era of women's lib (from lhe washing chores I among other things) wouldn 't you know -the young men ! uid It would be helpful If the 11d would $11Y how many l wt1.shlngs I.he shlrt would lake ._ ______________________________ .. , i Dr. Dierenfield Says: 'Marriage Works If . • I • By JO OLSON 01 1"-Ol lt\I PllOI Still The Rev. Dr. Ch arles Dierenfield will have perform- ed approximalely 21 wedding ceremonies by the tiine June is over. but to hear him talk you'd think he had only done one. To Dr. Dierenfield, who prcr bahly pronounces more couples .. n1an and wife" lhan any other Orange C o a s t minister each year. each wed----r\1/ll-l-l ding is dilferent and each ill the most important at the tim-e it occurs. "'It's the people who make lhe difference," the tall pastor ~£ii•l; of St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church in Ne\vport Beach says. "No two people are alike." Individuality is so important to Dr. Dierenfield that he personally counsels each cou· pie, explains the Westminster service he uses and rehearses them in the ceren1ony. Each couple al so receives a booklet he has written tilled "Where the Heart Is,'' which describes his philosophy of marriage counseling. Dr. Dierenfield, who says he "married his best friend ," draws on his 18 years of prac- tice with his atlraclive wife, Rachel, for the counseling tips. MET IN SE.l\1JNARY Both the children of Presbyterian ministers, Charles and Rachel met at McCormick Theological Seminary where she earned her MA in Christian educatioo. Rachel served as CE direc· tor in the small churches Dr. Dierenfield pastored before his large church in SL Paul and St. Andrew's, but now limits her church 1vork to teaching Sun- day school. She also has a full- timc job caring for their children, Lili, 161h, Paul, 15, and Tim, 13. Also accompl ished on the organ. Rachel eamed her bachelors degree in music from North Central College in Naperville, 111. Dr. Oierenfie\d, who walks to and from his office and returns home each day for lunrh. does part (lf his "sennonizing" during l he quiet time in transit. He loves being with hi s wife so much that he sils in the same room to read when she sews, and they invite many of lhe church groups to their home so they can stay at home and be together, BIGGEST ASSET Communication is their big- gest asset, along w i t h similarities in backgrounds and value svstems. "f\1any y0ung couples think 'NO NEED FOR WOMEN'S LIB' Dr. Ckarles H. Dierenfield a happy home is autornalic." the yo uth ful n1inister rel'ealed. ··\Ve te ll them everyone has to wcirk for iL" Rachel, he fl'f'ls. is an in- divi dual , not "a light to shine on my rnagnifircnl qualities." ••J\ilany men think about their 1vivcs a<> a possession," Dr. Dierenfield added. '"but in the true Christian ni:irriage there 1.~ no need lor Women's Lib. The 1voman is already !it>erat~d in Chri st." Dr Dierenfield is 1•ery much opposed 1o early marriages. '"Youths haven 't f 1 11 is he d growing up. They will perhaps be different people when U1ey do." He doesn't think that love conquers all, bul is a roman· tlcist as welt as a realist. "Any marriage will work if that is what holh people really want." \\'ORSHIP SERVICE Dr. Dierenfield feels that a v.•edd1ng ceremony JS 11. worship s~rvice and will not use. anything that. cannot be used during a Sunday morning service. No bridal pantsuits arc allowed, and he is very strict on the use of cameras in the chancel. ··The hasic reality Is that it ls il spiritual u n ion.'' he stre.'.;se:>, "God 's the au - dience ." He tries lo 1nakc the couple feel that they are absolutely alone in 1hc church and tries to keep them cairn so they wi!l remember the ceremony. Cf!."ating a favorable climate for weddi ngs is but one job of the 1ninistcr. whose church has tripled in size since he ar4 rived. To achirve the tremcn4 dous ministry. Dr. Dierenfield ··surrounds himself with com· pelent people" and says, '"\Ve "rc all glucrl !ogether by 1 he gr ace or God.·• That glue must be an er- fect1vc one. loo. for it has cemented a beautiful rela- tionship between Charles and Rachel Dierenfield . A new store opening at No. 48 Fashion Island 11nportcd, rare screens. Fine furnitW'c. Porcelain lan1ps. U!lusual acccs:<.orics. Exclusive, custom upholstery. Area rugs. One of a kind classics. Cor~plimentary decorating services. Master Clillgc and BankA.mcrica.rd1 of course. No . .fS Fa~hiou l~bnd in the: Nonh l>iall, Ntwrort CcnttT (714) 644-<4737 I To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white R,lossy phulcr- graphs to the DAILY PILOT \Vomen's De- partment one week before the wedding. Pictures received after that time will not be used. For engagement announcements it is imperative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be sub- mitted six weeks or more before the \Veddin ;::: date. Jf deadline is not rnet, only a story \\•iU be used. To help fill requirements on both \l.1ed· d in~ and engagement stories. forms are ava.ilable in all of the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions wiU be answered by Women's Section staff members a t 642-432.l or 494-9466. 'Model' Bride Not Married For some girls. seeing themselves as a bride is lhe realization of a Ii re · Io n g dream. For Karen Kalanish, il·s all in a day's work. Karen is a highly successfu l Barbizon mtxlcl w h o s e delicate. feminine features and graceful, slim rigure have earned her many coveted assignments as a bridal n1an· nequin. She has modeled For Seventh Avenue de s igne rs and shov.•rooms and has appeared as a bride in fashion shows and on the pages of Brides and P..lodcrn Bride magazines as v.·clt. Docs Karen ever picture herself as a "real"' bride? Her answer is an ernphalic "No!'' At 22 she"s enjoying <111 1·X· citing career \Vilh an equally PXCiting social life. and she prefers lo le<ive all thought s or bridal on the job. Although a top bridal model. Karen·s work is by no means lilnited to this on e area. lier assignments arc q u i l c diversiried and a typica l v.eek niay ,.include a fashion shov.· for Simplicily Pattern Co., a photography .session for a fa shion ad, a trade show al the N.Y. Coliseurn. a 'r V al>' pearanec or an afternoon of photography for a Tov.•n & Country layoul. "I love being a 1nodel. and J"m happy doing every phaS(! of the \\'Ork,., Knren explains. ··But 1f I had lo choose a favorite area it v.·ould be high . fashion photography ·· This is a good choire f(JI' Karen's Lall, v.·illowy 5•9·· sizr. 8 figure is pnr!icularly suited for high fashions. Bul as hrr succes:-de1nonstra1es, she '.-. quite versatile and can do a ,good job in several areas or modeli ng . Karen credits her vcrsat1l11v to !he thorough. profcssion:i l !rai ning shf' h;id 11! rn()(fel1ng school 1vhere every phi1se of the business \1·as taught ··1 think th:il rvcry J!irl no rnat· 1rr \Vhat her 1n1rrc'il'i. C"an profit from go1n~ to mndel1 n~ ~chool . And. 1r she wan!s to bl' a model. it's certciinly the pcrfec·t place to starl ,., Karen J!Ot her r1r~! pro- fl'ssinnal J0h for Prisc!ll:i (if Boston, famous bridal gn1\n From Page 17 OFTEN A BRIDE Karen Kalanish rnanufacturer shortly c.f!rr she v.·as graduated frorn the Barbizon School of J.lodeling. "Jf I hadn't gone to school ," she exclaimed,'"[ 1rould never h<1ve been able to stand up tu th e eompctition. So many gi rls applied for th e job. Bul those girts who h<id professional !t.1in ing , and 'tha 1 look,' \verl' the only ones \\'ho wc:rc hired " "'Thnl wos a co uple uf yc;.irs ~go anrl not an as:-ig nmcnt h:1 ~ l'on1c up In which I 1!1t1n·1 recal l 111y tr:11 ning in ~0111c "ay . ··Si1mct11ne1; \<.h('n 1"111 11ut on a Job." Karen t·o11t 1nue:-. ·and I don"! feel JUSt ri ght. ur the other girls are fantast1« looking. I rPmf'n1l)(>r \I h:i t they used to lr:ich us a l ~chof1I Al v.·ay') ~ay to ~·ours1·U '' 1111 :irr a quern ' And 11 re;illy work~ '"uu :-l<1rl In l!1nf.. :i nd feel ht.·!t rr irn111(•i.11at"h· • }!HI do :i Octlcr Job 1'r1tl ~oll get hooked aga u1 Fur .1 111odrl, dt'V1•lr1p1nA a r l1l'nlt1" ;;nrl hring C"allt'.'d harJ.. f111 .nl d1!1onn l J~~icnn1l·nl s ;i1r ~1 1 very 1n1pOr!.'l n! '' • • Unusual Day "! v.•as so excited about n1y ov.·n v.·edd ing that I really didn"I think about ii (Nixon pubhci ly I tno much. Bul I 11·11~ really happy for La"rf'nr and Tom ,"' i\lrs Pnrlridge said. The rourth bridr of the da v. I.aura Baldorf and her hu·s. band Lynn Boyce had opled for a Christmas ceremony so tha t. his family in f\.1ichigan could make the trip durin~ school vacation. The deci sion lo wail until summer and make Laura a June bride brought thenl lo June 27. The Bo,\ces, both lcacl1l'r~ i11 !he Orange Uni fied Sch(ll1 I D1slncl and Laguna Beach r·cs'.dents. \\'ill ('('lcb ratr their l1rs\ ann11·C'rsar:v a h r o a <l 1rarel1ng lor lhrcc months in ~1ex1ro anrl Central anti South An1erica. \\'hile Laura hopes to delvf' into Indian arl s. music and culture, Lynn v.·ill gather rirst·hand material fnt his sixth grade unil on South America- f nllowing t h c Anf1nsoos' marriage, lhey ::pent ;1 v.•eekentl 1n \Vashington \Vheri> they al!ended 'T'ri cin Nixon's barbecue ;ind ball for Pr1ncr. FAIRY LAND Charles. then cnjoyerl .1n f'X· "The church was absolutely tended Europe:in honeymoon. breathtaking." ::::aid Mrs. Sam Settled in Yorba Linda. they B. Batdorf or Cameo Shores. now are the prourl parents of lhe bride's mother. "People twin girls, Kathleen Elizabeth said they ne11er i:::a"' anything and Rebecca Ann. so gorgeous "''ilh alt those The President m ay hal'e flowers. It was like a come to tov.·n but the brides fairyland.'' alt agree. "It was my day." Mrs. Boyct. a gradua~ or -___ ~- UCI with a fine ar1s major, was unaware of tht Niiton wedding and the possible ap- pearanct ol tht Prtsidcnt un· lil • month befort her "'ed· dill(. "St. Andrew's tried lo keep It very personal." "Laur• was r.o deeply 1n 1ove with her husbi1nd-!()-he that It didn't make any dlf· ferencc to her," Mrs. Batdorf Phone 612-4.321 For Weekender A 11 vc1·tisi H" " s:-1 id. ~----------~ Frld;iy, Junr 25, 19n DAILY PI LOT ffj Horoscope: Confrontation Due for Aquarius - SA TURDAY JUNE 26 By SYDNEY O~IAI°' h:i ve ycl l.u enl·et illl as;tronoint'r who ,. i d t e u It'd ;rs\rulogy ;1fll'r first rnak1nc: a serious study of the subject. I <idl!lll !hat 0 p ('II . Ill In d j> d ;1stronon1crs 11r1· usuall y a~ r:1rc as pc:irt~ 111 oysters - !Jut. nevcrlt1ell0Ss, they do l'X· '" i\IU ES 1~1:irc h 21·AJ)rll 1!1) Acllvl1.\' Is 111lcns1f1t•d ll'ht'Tt ch1Jdrc11 are conct•r11cd J\1ak1' L·xtr:i effort 1u ful fill protniscs Sf'C'k1ng t':<;..:u~t·~ nnw would result in senou~ loss of con· f1dent'l'. 1'1\U llUS (April 2(}.:0.1ay 20): Ue .i sclf·~lar\(•r Depending un '"<1ulhorit1 c,'<" now 11·ould be an error Th,...,e at the top ex· hihit trails of Ul1l'ert ainly and duub! lJo your own persuri<d SUrl'C~'. GE~1 1NI (:\·ln y 21..J unc 20 1· ,Steer l'l('.:1r of 11isput r!> 11 1th nrighbors. relati ve:-;, So1nr arc <il\tn1pt1 ng lo lll'l S(lt11£'1 h1n~ r.1r nolh1ng. Self-c1\nlrol FlClW l'UJI l.J•· 1·our gn'<ih:sl ally. CA.~CEH (Ju ne 21-,lul y 22 1: If .seeking trou ble, make Com· i.s trying to draw you out. rnot1on with male, partne r UHRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): ttboul nl0r 1cy matter This Social \lfe accelerates. Reta· sunply IS not the time lo press t1ons v.·ith opposi~e sex are in· fin ancial i.ssues. Be receptive, tensifled. Pride soars as you Lf.0 (Jul y 23-Aug. 22 l · Op.. receive 1n ea n i n g f u I com· pas1!ion that had been hidden pli1ncnts. You go places, do surges lo forefront Take in· things. itiative, state your needs, SCOHPIO (Oct. 23-NDv. 21 ): oull1ne originol c o n c e pt s , Read between the li nes - 1\repare format. Sense of study fine print. Be aware of dru111/l is lughl1ghted. i1pparent 1ninor details. Key is VIR GO iAug. 23-Sept. 22 ): to be thorough. \Vhat appears Stlmc of your s ttrets could be an obstacle \\'ill work in you r subject Lo exposure. Be fa vor. discreet. Keep (·onfidential SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 22· niauers confidential. Someone Dec. 21 ): Emphasis on change. tra11el and 11ariely. Be analytical . Find out the way of event3. One you lrusl may acl in peculiar manner. It's only sprtng fever. CA PRICORN (lA?c . 22· Jan. 19 ): Check medical, dental ap- pointmenls. Applies also lo family members. You gain most through dip\l"lmatic ap- proach. Some funds \l,"ill be released. AQUA RJUS (Jan. 20.Frb. 18): Where there was inaction, lhcre now is likely to be direct confrontation. BroU1er or .sister is apl to be involved. Some who in.sist arc whistling in the dark. PISCt:S tFeb. 19-March 20): Secrets are in da.nscr of being exposed , Others now may not be as discreet as required. Means associates art talking out of tum. Protect selr in clinches. IF TODAY IS YO U R BIRTHDA Y your emotion~ seldom are halfway; when you decide, H is all the way or nothing. You possess natura1 executive abilities, you can be counteQ on to 68Ve for pier verbial rainy day. HAVE'vou VISITED OUR NEW STORE ATc-,--------------------- 30222 Crown Valley Parkway and Hillhurst in Laguna Niguel FDUNTA IN VALLE I' -ll'IOI MaQnOh• \I •I l allHlrl FOUNT AIN VALL ET -"Ill HarbOr l t•G. •nd Eou19tr EL TONO -El Toro •• llO(kliold llo~a .. UNllNGTON IE4CH -lllll ••• ,~ l lY6. ii 411ant• SANl ... AN4 -lw.t. w. E••nt•• ana l•l•l•I SI. W£~TMIN~TE"' -6111 W•\lmln•ltr a• GOlcl•n Wt•I COST4 MES4 -JlOI H•rMr 11Yd, al WI,_ l! . coif4 MliS4 -JU 5:. ""'SI, NUNTIHGTON IEACH -At•<~'"" •ti ... ..- Vinyl Covered Pod W•ll -con1truc•od '"°'" c-r with comfortahl• foom·l•lled pod, Roll< on ''"ll" whools. Duy row fl ~""r' $12 .. Value! Aluminum Folding Camp Cot hl1u•!cbl• l" olum;r.u,., hom" wnh 4.;io\•lo0'1 h'"d'~"-w~ett-'• ·~­.,.1an1 ...,,.,..,.. p:o\lo(. S74' Deluxe Folding 24" Barbecue $1° Value! Pillow Style Air Mattress B·g ?7 > 7'2" oil- In,.. •l~le ""mo•- "tl• n l u 1onQ ~·n~I a:tro••rvrioc.n, G •to t Int p t>nl, ED $2" 41/2 Foot Inflatable Wading Pool !. I u • d )I o<"ld <olorlul ; "· tlntol:>le poo!, 12. I nc h•• rle~ ... ,.h !.' i<>Ch doo...,,te1. $8" Piggy Back Ice Chests Witt. Go llon Stow Awuy Jug Poloftl" P i o g v •••••• lloc~ocechesl """"'' <ompltt• woth M""1 Sta-· Away ool!eo' jug. l d •ol Vze for family p;,;n!u. $9" "'"' Iebco Fr•1h Water Spin Cost Rod & Reel Set $5tS ''"'1 Metal Adfustable Ironing Boards Adjust s to 14 N ights fw famr. o:oolt r ironi,.g. WkM-tttl..iwi1h """ -•lfp n.bber 1;p..8oked_,- el flni.tl, ••• 1•1 12'11t .. .i..-• "· """"' T.,, ........ 1....,. •• ,. h ll c.MI• ,.,_ ........ lfWf • ''" ,~,. eo .... .., : lt :~:~ :!~:1'...---:.:i -~ • 'It nM ., l'loyl '"' l'l:S, Pll. _. l . :~ ~ .. , ...,, ....... ...,. •Uc 1....., _.. No s.!ldl $333 ~. now 00"1 hau<tohold .-l«Tricol Mi9d1 Ditcour'lf P•octd! Mok. your home ..,alrJ nt11rl $4" Solid State 12 Pocket Radios '1" Precision-Made •ou~ mot, '1 pe. lar<lo; ca.tr ond hd leg. 49' Papel'llltlte Porous Flair Pens fjj) 27c P.tt P•"onollly into .,...,, "and· .. ,,,mg ,..jfh Po· P•.....,i."s flair poroua p•n~ In <hoic• of colon. le911lar 37' ea. FIDllr Sack -~-Dish Towels , ~ 4i$1 HUHTINOTON IEACH -Wl""1" -S,...,..•'- HUNTINlilTOH IEACH -"'I Ad•m• t i lrlOllJWnt S..1 U .04 Y•g•' a..ic. fa:U.io11 Right S!yln -·. ·,·· .- Coal ~-1-cotton shifts ..itt. ·.embroidery trim (r p!"lnt.d ahlft &- V«t .. l'I wilt! .t"at puff "-· ,~ Mony ot'Nr •tylel to dlOOM from., 10-18. 1"• Child's & Toddler's 2 Pc. PermaPress Play Sets 6onl"S Buys! m P.,mo -P~ coo1dino1ed cohott ~u.• for boy. 6 gui,;O-ptltlts. ~"1>9•. <=ii«ks, solkb, -knlti, S.iu l•6J1, 2-J.c.. First Quality Ladies' Canvas Boat Shoes ....._.,,_ ~ -..1 Styled ...m. co nv o1~ ruth;or'lld orchn, ll)Ol'IQ• !Nola (r non.U:Jd .t0lot, In whir., colon. s1" Value! 34x62 Inch Size Beach Towels Jvtr ;., t ime for 1umm•rl Colorful 11uo1;. l"Y !Hoch row- el• .,;tt, fringe '"""Buy"°"'! IJ" Men's & Boys' Popular Style Swimsuits TJ.e .,_,1, 1•od- ing 1tyl•• in ,,.,.. colo r <! Groot "'"""''flfl"e ""l-"•c!Mlln'1S-M-L. ~· 1•u"k• In B-18. Reg. s1" 50 Ft. MonM1nto Top Quality Garden Hose F'1ofur1t fvlt· flow bt"O'$$ coup{. ~ Ouollty _,,,_ '°-Buy,_ ol I _..,., Quart loHI• Duncan Sinclair Scotch Whisky llelllled In Scollud D f ine HoM &-nw!low aeotcto J ' • ..t111kv di.tilled 1o1 1't.e "- ~ H~l<lndtrodll""'. ... ·~ I • ---. ··~ OAILV PILOT Friday J1J.11c ?S l , ~ To p Grads Na 111e,J _i\1 L·vi11c LEGAL NOTlCE NOTICI! 0 1' PUILIC ttEAlllMO I EHllll: TNE CllY COUNCIL 01' l HE CIT'I' OF f OUNlAIN VAllfY ~OllCE 1S HE~EllV GIVEN 11111 on lv••~•Y Jul1 • If/I al I (IQ PM In ""' rO\lntll C~•mM. (1 ~ Ht ll !0200 ~1 .... ~·•n~• F.,.,n11n 11,ii.v Ctllorm• "'e c lV Co.inoi: I w Ii he.Id • wtillC' htl rllUI on 1!101 ... nG • 1 Afl>tll oo f'llftnlof Ctn'<!Olblloft ... D" ••••r<I "' (Ona 1i-.1 U•• P.rm 1 n ,.,~P<"•I lltod bv SMll Oil on LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTI CE LEGAL. NOTICE l.EGA.L NOTICK -----IOIOTIC• 0, TlllUJTe•'I U.LI! ltOTICe INVITIMO •IOt 1------------ 011 ~·· Jut• 11. 1t11, .. n 00 OllOINAHCt NO 11 1• NOTICE ii HE•E&Y C1Vl.N WWII tlle ..... Ul• .... ,..,.-A M~ •I -c;, .... 11r ... 1 IWtill Alf o•DINAHCI! Ofl TMI! CITY o• CO&. '""' gt l•u•I•• et -Cw11 ,_ HOTl(f OP TllUITl!l s U.L• ..,!tone• ro m. (lv)c: C • 11 t t r T4 MalA •10\llOIMO l'Olll IN ll'IUnllY GollNt Ol1trlC1 o1 Orfflff C-1'1 TI 1'110 nM ' ••-' ,_ o '"' ' "' --''' _. ll"t(TIOM Of' f XltlllolO IUILDINel 0 • , •• '''' '' ""'" 1111 rt-· u "' .... y ... TO OITlll.M''' <OM•LIAMll WITM Ctllfol"11l1 '/lflll ·~•I•• Mtltd blo• UP lo " ~u ' -GO O'(lo.;~ AM 0••"<1~ C1llfol'n!1 THE FlllST HA-11 00 1 m M-•• Jul• 11 1911 t i mt II Tilt hO<ll t nftlfKI mtln l<>Cll>Y o1 TlONAL a ... NI( Of" ORANGE COU NT'!' COOlll ANO OllOIM,flN(l!I AND PllO. Purch•ilnt 0...1 of .aid •'P!Olll 11lilllt1 *url!Y l lllt lfllijrfnc:r CotnP•n• ll~ N +or-rl'f' ... ~ THE !"IA~T N ... TIONAL \llOINO l'Oll TNI (Ol l l!CTIOl't 0 1' loc•tt<I II lHO A.d•mi A•Hl<lt (D•lt Bro.d""'' n "'-'CITY 01 $111lf "'n• S1alf l!ANK OF 0 11. ... NGE •• llul~ •-lnlf'l:I ,',',",',~,· ... ,o'•,',N?''.',".,, .. , ,,,, -c.111 ... nl• •I ..... lch ,,... ••Ill to ld• OI C•lll0tnl1 SECUlll lTY lllLE IN lnnlN ullll« Ind ........... ,,, IO o..11 ot ' u 1.. will be fUDlldv Olltfl«I f"<I rHll '°' SUll:.O.N(E COM,ANY • '°'""'"""' II Trv11 dfloct Navoml>o!r ) !Mt t •Kutell OF COSTA MESA OOES HEIU!I Y Ollt LEASE OF OAT.O. p lit 0( ES SING Tru"H unc<'• 11'1e o..d 01 Trull t•ttUlt<I Dy llOIEllT F MOltlltOW el'ld WllllONA OAIN AS FOLLOW1o SOl'TWA.ltl! SYSTEMS l)y l.O,WlllEN(E J KEN0.0.LL ANO LIN A MOii.ROW ""tt>IM tna w!tt I nd SECTION l Tt:t CITY ("""CU OI "'c Cl All ~ICll f rt ro tie In •cc0<<l.,><I wll~ O.o, l KtNOAtl Hu1Mnll 11'1<1 Wlft LEGAL NOTICE CITT Of' COIT& lillU OllANOI COIJNTY CAl.l,OAlllA I rur j!I 1d h~\!' hcu1 11111.! ~ r n \ 11 r " 1 ;inarl llu 11 p Pl~nn "lfl Comm nan • cOO'ICl TlOAI Tor ~PP•~'"' ct cor<111 on•I u .. Pttmll n I<) I><' m t o<otn n~ o< $ff• co olf!IOn lvt•IP<l At It e """'~tdl! C0f""' 01 Htll ~nd B '"" d •-C.,..11..:t 1'-ul1'1' II \Oo, IOI llol:* '11' IY OI Col1I .MIU -""'"°' llna I nd th• lfttlrv<llonl t nd Conal!lonl •nd •IOCDtltoct O.C:"""'' 1' 1910 •• ooc:umrnt Plllt lH OI 0!1lcl1I lllKOl'll1 In lllt Olllc.t declfr• 11'111 11 tlle-n.<~n•t"f trom ~!llc•llont wtilcll •rt now on lllf •<Id no 11ltl lft tJooil; t501 P•~ ••• OI ot 01 "'t C011n1V llt'<Drdi'r ot Or•nM Cw~IY II,,.. lo If,,.. 11 l111P.CI 1tn.ic1urn within m•Y tie iecu•.., In The ollk• at Ille llcl1I lllKOl'd• Ill tM ollltt ol ~ C•l tarnl1 WI LL SELL AT PUI LIC AUC Ille <)IV 10 Otltrmlf\f lntlr CC!t"Pllonc• Purchlol ... Al•nt ol ukl Kt>oal lllilrkl Recotllet at O••n'll• County C•llklrnl1 tlr TION lO HIGl1EST ll!OOER FOllt C...SH wllh l1'lt P•Gvlo-• DI ,,_. Unltorm l!l tll blddtr ,.11,.1 IUbrnll wlltl fll o bid • '"""' OI llel1ult In TM Pl~menl Of ~•••bit M I me o! u lt In l1wlul monev of 8ull01"" COii• •nd tl-1tMI-•~Pllt1tllf l•w• cl.,,ltr • c'-11 ct rlllled di.ck Of told .,.rlorm1nc:1 ot Obi ••lion• Ot'<urt<I ,,.... UnHld 51•!•• •II rllJll! ll!lo 1ncl In end crllln•»«• ai r • bofld molH' P•••~ t 10 "'' order or "'"ti>• lncludl111 ,..., l>reocn v do!aull 1!"111 canvovoct 10 11111 now held bv II Council tiJrlMr !Incl• •nd dtclorn ll!al the Ca.II communl!V Colltoo O!olrl(I t>o!lct ol wnlcll w11 lt'<Ol'dflll Mtrcll 11 und•• ••ld Ottd ol lru11 la !M or-riv •• d r...iu••I '°" lni ... c!I"" m•v come 30,.,., of ltuUtt• In i n amount not lou ltll 11 doxutnonl "" 6~! In boQll. t5'!l 1 luar«I In C '•at Cool• Mew 11 II Coun from • buyer .. lier owntr rtM., 1111n ! r t Ptrttnl (J 'A>l o! 1111 1um b a •• "''' 6M o! 11ld Otllclol ll:~carO• will tv 1nd S1•1• anc• -•• 1,,. ... or otlwr 1>1riw"' or tn! • ~1vin1 111 1 tuot1n1M "'•I lllr b <kl" will tnt~r ln!o ••II •I ""'tlllc •W:llon !or t••h w!lllDIJI "'OTICI UIVITINO I U>5 ~OT1CE 1$ Hl!~EllY GIVEN "'91 W.OI ..ii l>f'-.olo will bf recelvoct bv i... Cl- IV ot C"tt M-11 ttlt otttrc1 of tllo (I- rv Cl1!1! t i ""' City Htll n Fe lt Orlvo Cot!• Mtu C1llfol'nl1 .... 111 ,,.. "°"' OI H 0& • m O<I JlllV U HTl e t -!"' limo "'•Y will tie DPtnod PublldY •nll tllatl •lolld In 1n. C.,.,,,.;h Cl\fmlle•• tor FURNISHING All LAIOR M.O,fEfl:l.O.LS EOUI PMENl TllANSPOlllATION ANO SUCH OTHl!fl: 1' ... ClllTll!! 4S MAY IE REQUlll EO FOllt THI! Pt ANllNG ANO IRR1GAllON FOR MEDIAN ISLANOS ON AOAMS ... Yl:NUE ANO MEAlllMAC WAY BETWEEN H.O.•IOR llOUlEVAll:O .O,NO FA RVIEW ROAD " '' 1, " 1n 111 Sr !~111\ 1 f 1 ~ JI l ( lrl HlC' ! lit j l I 'j \ l II '"' If )I ~ t 1 '' ~ " " "I ,, I lli I lk rn r!UI ! 1h p\ r101 in 1111 c h ltt t:: I 11 H f It Ill! \rt \'I 1 "'"P••I Oft P10•nln1 Com"lln lon •ctlon ,. • .,11+"'1 Cor>dll on11 U11 P••!! I 71 .0,ol>f'•I I •I'd ti~ Mobil 0 I Co l"l!• en e" l'!&"n "~ C<i<nm u on • no o "' o• (n11~1r ~n•I lHr Ptrmlt II to ., t !c ~~·!~C!On(' 'l\e .. <tl!•!On ~ • •Ou "'''! ~u n• al I'> 1rn•r .,nd Luc M l Appftl o• Pt1nn1n9 Commlulan ou o~ retarOlnt Condi! an•I UH P••m! IJ Aon•'' "'d "' H~m l •• 6. I , ~' •~•fd r '1 Pl• n ng Con "'' 0 dt" •I cl l•·bCO S.rv Ct "'on ot ""' '°""'"'t>I co'""' or l •d •dln~t II f' I r1 f~ I>' ,,q Pn>r:•• "<I ot !~ I r Pl&nn "9 L•w• "' I f 1• N Cal •OJ • tr'~' I CO<I• 6S !'(IO •I ' nu tne f'cu~!• n Y••lav lon ng "nente 1nr ?an ng 0 1<1 ••hCe l on ng !• """ 1= n!I\" "•en t e ln Th• r1 ~" ·~ n•:n '""'"' ao'ld ~ P ••~liable .... 1111•1) JuJ tl'tOll r "1\c"l~!n•••Pfll'QSi)~w llhrOlfrn "" oooorl"n i. ro eo so u tu•thtr 1,.. II \!J b I 1.;Uf ~\, t<"•1 ;!~1 ~.:~~:r 1';;' 1!;':!,;"!,m,;:~""or M Ii 1 1..,nl ! "l JI ( r! <l gill l"rm~t on 11 Ot1 rtll •ou mftv (on1ntt tne Pl~nnlM Oeo~ !mtnt at 962 2•2• 011<1 ,.,., 111 thr ;.itll]I} of 111 itcr1rt •o '"" ,,...,, .. ••m• CITY COUNCIL OF THE La! 11 cl Tr1t1 No «IOI 11 fllOWn DI\ eot•!o J~1tr .. 1 !n ,..+11 P•Oll••l'Y rr.. crc1><>ltd CDtllffCI !1 lh• ~•-1, wottontv 11 to I tit oououlan or '" a M~o •~cordod In 6DOll 14 1 P•ttt I lo Cou...: 1 !urlll•r r1na1 ona neclt•n 111•! fwt tdtd 10 h,.,., In lh• even! o! telhirt IO cumbranc•• •no ln1trot1 CM••V,... !o 10111 ,. ot Ml1cell•r-• MIPO rouira1 01 In O<dt• to relmbu'lt 1111 cllv tor limo t nlor ln!o tuch conl••C! 111, prtKNd• DI ltuoltt bV laid tltld o! lruot !n properly Or1ngf C""M• c11 rorn11 ••otr.dtd Jn miklne iucll Jn>Pircllon r• mo c/IKk w 11 M tartell«I 11 In me c•se 1llu&1e In '"" C!1v o! Coua M••• Coun!v E~C•P! n11 •I oil o•• hyllrac1rtx..1 <111111111 •• hue!ot0<e ••' out 1 DI 0 bond tho lull ium tllo•oof w II llfl cl Orft>gf Sl•tt ol C1IUor~l1 .i.1crlbed •v~ ancn •"<I m n4ll • • ti• wll•lf••t roa1on•blt t•t shwlll be char11ed !orfel!<"d ta ••Ill 1c11Q01 ollltkl 11• nam~.>.oown ln Ol'I or tine!•• th• abOvo .O,ccorllln111v S.ctlon 11~ DI Ch•~"' iio b!ddt r m•v wlthllrtw Ml bkl for 1 l ei 1" T"cl 711 •• ""' m•o dP!crllw.:t land l>o!law I dtDlh DI JOO ffff VtH .O,rtlclo I (Olio Mtlo Munl<lPal r>0<lod DI torty llvo (l!J llOVI lllt1 tllf rMDlll«I ln Boo!< JO POOt• ll ID 36 ln- mea>urell v~llC• I• from tllt our1oe• el Code lo horellv •ddt<I 10 rfld I I IOllowl dalo 111 10, ll'le DPtnlno 111, IClf c1u1lvP cl Ml1cell1noou1 M1p1 r..:ord• !ht oroYna but wltnout 1~1 r t M ol •n SECl!ON l lht 11.,.,11 DI 1,11,,,,, reoervr\ lhr of Or•n~ Cau'll• to< I~• ""''POlof or ,,., Ul>Dll •nr PCtllon ol lh• •url•ct OI * l lDI COMPLIANCE ~UllVE'f IN orhrllne DI rtlKI Mg •nr I nd t i bl~· .,, P•Vlng at> !11anono •Kur.a t11 H id O.oct •hr 11round •bO•e • dtolh al 500 lttf tar SPECTION 10 wa...., tnr lrru1111a• t •• .,, 1n DI 1 '"" lh• Pllf-of .... Of 1\11 IOI' borl•ll lloon fKt lD! or • wt lttn rt11u1•1 lot !orm•l 11•• In anv bid Of In Ill• tllll<!lr>t NOTE Tiit "lld'"" ol sod llrODlflY I• m n no dtllll.,g ttmOYfn11 ~alretl no or • comPll•M:t WfYOY lrom 1'>* ownlr SlllnMI ND'l'm&n E W•I"'" l>IJrPO•lrd lo M 9lt Oak Slrf'tl Co>la m••~•I n11 ••Id >ubH•nc•• l<>lleth" i nd oavmt'11 OI lhe IH •~lllt<I Ill• Sec!Y &ol•d DI 1,.,,1fd Mt•• Co ltornl1 ond • o vrn w 11\0UI wl1n •~el"tlut •loM 10 t ••c111r a"• •nd Bu ldlM Off elll mav l~ooKl an t•l•UnG °"""' Julv 11 1911 _1100 1 m I obi ltv •• la lhe carrtttnt " th•reot "11 lta>0• tor Ille Pu•llO•t ol t•lr•d l"' >t•ucluro la I Kt r>•ln lh comallaflC:o Publhfltd Oronge co.ul D• ly Piiot 011"" J"nr 11 1911 or rKDVt rlno ... \d •11b1!1<Kt1 "''" lht pravlslono al lhll Codt t na J"no 1! •nO Ju!Y 7 l9'I 1612 11 5ECUfl:ITY TITLE INSURANCE and commonly known a1 11.SJ T•b•llCI o!lltr a1><>Ut1blt lawi •<Ill ordlni nC<I COMPANY Pl (OU• M••• C111!0tn!• and <lporl hi• llM ln111 In wrltlnt ID 111• a, Cllrl1 lwk•• S•ld 111• wlU M m10t but w l!hout _...,, LEGAL NOTICE ForK1ot11re OePfnmtnl covt n1n1 or worr•ntv c•o•tll or lmpllld Tht 1._ tor conduc1lnt 1 tomot\i nc:o Pllbll•llell Oronoe Ca.11 D• Ir Pllal '""~•ding Ille oo.,eulon or t ncum survt~ of •n ••d"I~ •lnKluro ..,,11 Ml--------~---------I J""t tS uld Julr 1 t ltll Ula.II 11t1nct• la ... ,. rne rffn•lnlng otl,.. Soll JO 'per llXI s<IU~·;. 1e.:1 or fraction ,-4_ c PAI .... m of 11'1• no!1 l t<UTl!d by 11111 '"''"'' OI flOO< .... WI net letl lfll ll ClfltTll'!(.0,TE 0,. I UllNESI LEGAL ~OTICE A o•I DI o!•n1 ll>t'<l!ICol Ml Ind orMr conhacl doc:umenh may be ob • nod ,oi IM <>lllte of Illa Cltv '"''-II Fatr Ot vt Coll• ""••• Coll!orn!a upon • <lto>c! 1 o! SIJ 00 A <h.,ge al II oo will Ot m•~~ 11 h•ndlld by mi ll PLEASE MAL SEPARATE CHECKS Each bid •11111 l>t m•de on lne PrOPOHI 1 ... m ana In !he m•nntr o•o•ldf'd Jn !ht c0<1trae1 llocun 1nt1 •Id U.•11 be •< tomo•n od bY • <•rllfltll or c••hler'• Chtc~ Of I bid bond tor no! leu th•n la ""cent ol Ill• •mount <Ji '"• 11o<1 m•oe PIVOOlr la"'' Clh al Cool• Mua 111 nr CllY OF FOUNTt<IN VAL LEY Oetd OI 1111>1 t<>wlt 1100000 wllh 1,.. 'lJOO l'ICTITIOU$ NAMI! !or~•! !tom No~tml>rr 3 19~f 11 n ulO 5ECTION 3 Tl'I 1 ordlnence ollall la~• The undofll,noct -· ct1Utv lie II tcn·1------------------ NOTICE 1$ FUfllHEA GIVEN lh•I 1ne Cit• Counc I DI oald CU• .... trertlOIOr• 01 lblltned I Pf r~llllnt r1le f nd l<llt O! W&Q•I In •cca•O•nc• wl1h I•"" ID M oalo In tne conttructlon DI Ille obOve entl!ltd In o•ovpmon" Thl 1 ••kl r011 •nd Kai• wa• °"°"'ed b• the Clh Cuunc I b~ Rew1 .. 11on No 10 114 on '"• 2ht day o! O.c•mMr 1910 •<Id It on Ille In "" ol fie• or tht City (lttk o! u ld City Thal ••Ill •fl• •nO .ctle 11 h<rf n rotp"t<I to •nd •-ltd fn "'I• ""'Ice •• tllouDI! 11111~ tl'd <omPlt1Pf'f •et ll>flh htreln atld that told K•le •• MIOD1od bv ••Id ruo1u1 on 11 maet • 01 1 of !h 1 ooHc• by ret.,•ntt Tiie Contr•C10< 1h1!1 In I 11 , J luC1.: u l Hu fi ur pl 1n !(i ;it "d ~r 1l 1JIC ~l:1tnlil 11 the I11! lll11111111~rr \11 \1 lit ,1 I 1rli 1-. <; 1'> I ii 11 I In " ,, II '' 'd PoJjcc (' ~al u a lc G II~•• E Colt C !Y Cltt~ Publ" ..i Ofang, Coa1r O•llY Junr ?I 1911 Piia! 16.»11 -------- no1e provoieci odvancts If 1ny ulldt r mt tlltct •nd bot. In lull farce ll'llrtv (lOI d••• duct1"9 • buolnen •• 10191 Ellz•btlh Ln T n >t• tum1 or ••Ill Ottd of l rull Itel <lllrttl from ttld tfltr 111 P•n•n and .,,111 prl0< 11un1!"91"" llt1cll C111!arnl1 undrr '"" NOTICE TO ,.E•5DNS •nd t>l>t""' ot me lruottt tnd ot !tie to fhe t •olroHon DI I l!Mn CU) ll•Y• from I cl llou1 ll•m name of (ALIFOlltNIA INTl•ESTE O IN TlfE 1r11•!1 croeloll llv ,aid O..oct ot Trull h i PIHi•• be ...,bllo~td once In the IAIL PLAN E5 •~II fh•t l •ld llrm lo com ll.$TATE Of' OIOfl:QE t: EGGl!TT The llonotld arY ulldor 11ld OH<! of Ofl "9t Cooit D•llV PllO! 1 ntw•P•IHtr DI t>oold ot !ht laflowlnt Pt •IDfl WllO.le HOiie• 11 Mr•bv given lo ., 1 persons Tru11 bv """°" or • brt 1cl> o d•I•"" In 11,,,.,,1 clrculalle" orlnl«I •<Id publloM«I ~•me In fu I Ind Plott DI rttllltnct lo•• lnloreo1ed wllol~er •• crtlllla" hol,. ----------1'"" obll1a1lan1 "'"''" I h • r . b v l" tht (Irv OI CO.II Met• ll>llt lt>t r with 1011-· l111al1•I or dt~I•"• In II " e•l•I• <>I ht••tatcrt tAKUled ~nd lltllvrrfd 1a !hr !ht n1mH OI .... member• ol ti\• cu, H Elnor Thot 11),!tt Ellt•belh ltt GEORGE E EGGEn Otc•••P<I WM•• I EGAL NOTICE F tll-i f'!CT llOU\ BUSI NESS ,.t<ME STAlEMENT lo c.., no P< "'"' " ~olno bu1Tnrn LEGAl, NOTICE undtr1lgn«I I wr lltn O.cl1r1tlen el Cwnc!I voll"g lot and •~•In•! !he l•mt ~unl!nllon Stttl'I C•lllorn I Ill eodrtn wao 1n~ B•~•lew Drive Oel1u 1 and Demand lar Sal• and wrll!tn PAS SEO ANO AOO PTEO Thi• llit dl V Oat«! ~JuEen:r ';~, Coron• 11•1 M•r Cal tern I th1t 1•11"" ~h~' ~"nd~' .. ~~Fll•o ·~e11 E~!f~1";,o':.,,~!vi~ o! June c ~~1,;. OF cos l A MESA s1tt~ ~11':..","',"i,', o,•,~·.~.' ~ou, "',• "'''~ :!":~rr;:;~:.;v toa•R DIE:~~l~·~:~~nN "~~· •II >h oa d ....,1 9M on1 and tlltrt a!ttr on 8v ROBERT M WILSON ·~ '' ttutar bv C:ounTV Jud"e 1 Cou•I 1 court M~rch 11 1911 Ille und•'llgnl!d c•u•f'd Mayor Public In •I'd '"" 11 d S!e!o """on1lly or rom?ftenr lurid cllon ol 1ht 51alt or 1ald Net<• of Oo!•ult 1nll Election la be ATTEST IP~•lld fl Eln•r Thor ~nown ta me lo Flcrllla rttorlltd n -9S68 P1gr 2t o1 u ld Of EILEEN p P HINNEV ID lht Dtri.on Wllost namt I• •ubocrlbtd Thet the lo lcw ng pp oon It Indebted ,0 flcl1I ll;eca 111 Cih Clerk to 11!1 with n lntltumonl •nll •<know NU or holding P"'°"•I prooer1v of lh• •• d 0•1t J11ne 1S 1911 STA.TE OF CAl.IFOfl:N IA ) ed ht tKotUl!'d l~o 11m t dttoden! IJNITEO CALIFORNIA BANK THE FI RSl NATIONAL COUN7Y OF ORANG E 'SS IOFFICIAl 5EALI ll~l Eo•I Coa>f H ghwav Ceroni Oel 8.0.NK OF OAANGE COUNTV CITY OF COSTA. MESA. ) Joon l Jobi! M•r Or•nge C...,MIY CalUorn 1 ••••Id Tru1ltt 1 E ILEEN PHINNEY Cll• Cltrk of lhe Not••• Publlc Ct ! torn• lhel tht unllus gMd deilrn lo ftCtl~e Bv fl: E Orlnk11er n Chy ol (Diii Mt •• I nd •~-o!llClo Clerk 01 Prlnclo1I Oltlct In the said ptri.onel P10Pertv or colltcl 11\e \Ile• Pr11 d•n1 Cl Co 1 1 < Ort nte Counrv clolm (1) •nd lo remove that co11ec111<1 ur B• Po!tr A p "Jon !! "'" IV unc I of th" ( '' OI 0'11 Mv Comml11\on E•olru •K•l•td 1 om 111e Sla te of Ct ll!l>fllla 10 .,,,,,,., ''"'' 0 0, ,~ Meu hortl>Y c1r1llv that lhl •bow •nd March l 1913 0 ' ''''' " •· larttalnt O•lllner11:t ND. n 16 wa • In l~t 111 11tle whert lt111" lt11•m1nl1rv • L od Id nd 1 1 b Publ "'"" Or•nu• Co.ti Oollv Prlot 0< of admln ilralioon h•ve l>H n l11utd Pub111n"" Or1nve ca111 01111 "1o1 ;[on u~, ,• ,,9i~· ~~ln~ecot"ns•; ~i1c,. JuM 11 11 :ll •nd Julr 1 n 11 , .. , n All ... ,..,,.. :iavlne claim• 1g1ln'1 the June 11 ll •<Id Jul• 1 Ull 1J.4s.11 cw ncJI on Ille 111! dov DI June 1'/1 ond 1------------------1 d.coocn1 or 1n lnJ•r111 In •1 II t•lat• •nd tlle•t•fl•r ~ned •"" aaoo!ecl ,, 1 whole LEGAL NOTICE wllhln'll la Ob1KI lo •"ch removt l mvi1 o! a •"'1Ul•r metllnt DI ~•Ill CllV Council olvo wrlltt f! no1ic• "' 1ucll Dl>IKllDn lo held on "'" 2111 d•Y DI Jul'lt 1911 by lh• "'' otr""" or H rlOI'.. lndtbltd ID Of LEGA L NOTICE I' nw lallew no roll c•ll vol• I' '"1 l'K>IOlng oenonal P•Of>•rlv DI t1" .,...,.., NOTICE OF l'ICllTIOUS IUSlNl!SS .O.VE~ COUNCILMEN WlllOll Jor111n ,.iCTlTIOUI I UjiN•SS denl Su(h notice rnu>I be 11lven ID IM MARSHALS SALE N.0.ME STAlfMf Nl Pln-lor 51 Cla ir NAME STATEMENT otrson holll nt lht ... ti.onol pr-r!y er r "Alll FS p1v 8 <'NSnN p 1~n"ll ~· The !allOwlno 00,..,.. Ii llDlnt bu•neH NOES COUNCILMEN None T~t lollowlng "'"'°" 11 dOlnt bu1 ntH •tllnll ""'om lhe clolm II m•ll• I I !hp f. HI lOPfl:AHIE BENSON 0 Pltrllan! 11 A85ENT COUNCILMEN ~ammtrf •• eddteu •• ll•!ld •bove wl!h" JC OAYS PORT lO PORT IMPOATS 16S1 B IN WITNESS WHEl'!EOJ' 1 hive ANCHOll APAR TMENT! lH .0,fllt &f1Pr Urst Publlc1llon cl lh I notice t.; d 'i-t•~ f 1 e<1 Newperl Blvd Coll• MtM ~et r -1 tt1V h ...r nd If II !h So•\ I~ t><lf h ll fl<I Cf llfornlt Oetflll J11~t 11 1911 r.?~• ~}"U ~,1t"bvf)~u~c:.,~~uCou~tn Lrl~h A Poricr 21ll Br•Tcl No. 1 ol~ll~ncot:clCD•l:M:H T~ls";,nd:•Ycl Ju~e l M••,. Ill! Pe1rl Btlboe Sl1MdR Eerl Wt"tn ... rlormanct or !ht wm ~ end m P avtmtnh con!orm la t~• Labor (O<lP Of tllf S!&lt DI (ftlltornl1 1nd Olller law• o! !ht S1atp O! CalHorn I aopllcable mr11!0 w th 1111 ezcepllon onlv of ootn ~arl1rlon• dl m•V be •eaulrt<I under th• lntt!a !ld1Ulti oursuenl ro whlcll 0 ,,. <•eel ng1 htttU"dtr ~rt llkfn I nd Wh th h~•• no! betn 1v1>1ro«1td DV !"• ""'' •II On• o! !ht Ltbo• Codt P ele en<t. to •bor •h~ I b1 give only In Ill~ m•nne• provldod bf l•w ll!• Cont •ctor '1<•11 u't on v un manutectvreo m aier 011 PrDduced n lhe Unltea Sia•• •nd onlv me"vfo< urtd moiorl1I• m•nufaciured In 111! Un ttcl 51•1•• 1ubttonll1lli •II trom maier el• prOduc«I In 1ht United $!11t1 In the ptrlorm1nco DI lhl contr•CI No b d ftll ll be con1ld1ttd uni••• I! ll m111t on • bl•nk torm lurnl•ht<I b• T~• Cl!y OI (D11f Mt1• •nd 11 m aoe n ac (O<d•ntt with lh1 orav 1!ont DI 1110 pr<> ODHI rooulrr menh E•c~ blllatr mu11 tie llct n1<'11 11'1<1 115<1 orer:iu1IUIOCI 11 rtoulred by l•w lht c nv CouncH al mt Cl!v ot ca1•1 Mou roMrue1 the r l"'t 10 rtlMI 1•Y or •II blll1 Otlld JUl\I 71 ltl! llY o•oE• OF l HE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF C0 5TA MES.0.. CAL!,OlltNIA l'ubllllled Of•-c .... OtllY P!lol Ju111 IJ lt. 1•11 161 '-ll LEGAL NOTICE b I I 11 COl!nlV , Or~n9~ Sl~!t 01 (al fllfn ~ Co• 0 /It•• Junt 1911 l>iand Cal lo1nla Al E•ocvtor al the E>!alt ~I '.'-r \ I U \ ( !3 t) 1 H Liii [ Dtln ~ 1,.,0 ,,.,.,, •o!•r..i n lavor nl t<nn• Tl'I, Dw•""" ls bt ng conducted bi i n EILEEN P PHINNEY Tn • bu•lftell 11 belno conductrd ti• t n GEORGE E EGGEl f NOTIC• Ofll PUILI( N•AllllNG I Ind vllluel WOOD SCHEB W~ITESELL NO 1n r (' 1rh 1)() Cl! d(p lrl I ~" • nP p.~ nn ~· lJ~qm•nl (lt<I !0< an~ nd • llua! c ,. c_~·~ I nd •• ol!lc.o Jun• L M•e" DllYMON. WARREN l•CE u HEREIY GIVEN 11111 " ~·~\1 en •e• RdY B•"IQ" ~' 1 <Jqm~nl Leon A Pn•!•r Cl•tk.,. lh• C t. Countll Allornoyi All•"' eubl< n•1rln1 wll1 bt htld tlr lh• Ct~ 11 \ • , \ 1 re I nl!H g I 1 c In •l\QW ng " n•1 b~ an<• 01 'lll 00 t 11, ~lal~m•"T J ltll wlln 1ne county of th• Cll• cl Cc•I• MH• Th• •1•!•'1'1•nl !lltd w rn lne Count• Council OI "'* c tv DI Coot• Mo18 "" JulY ' ' ' .".' •o-• 0••••• , .. ,, 0• ,. ''"' C trk cl Ore"'" C:wnto on Mt• 10 "11 llO Soult> lndl•n• AY•nul , ' 1 "' I·' 1,,, ''I Ill" ')C ,,., ,., '' 1 y du~ en '" ~ ullgmpn! on !hf d•le (er~ ct Or1n111 o nh an June 11 1911 , ..., -' p 0 •DX 1305 '1 ol lt>t l>Duf of t Jct "m or •• " 11 ,. I ~ ""'. "' , , "uanco of •aid •••<u! on 1 h~vt !lv Rtvtrly J Maud<>• 0.0l!IY Countv Jun• 7S 911 1619 /I B,r,,:•vt rTV J Maddo• Oooutv Counrv En•I--l'lfridl llJU '"°" lt>trtl,11• •• !l'lt mol!er mt' b• Cl f 1 II' 11l l' ',nlL!\I! r' ~ Y<>Dn dll !h• r oM till• &~d Int~ ••I tlerk , 0 0 , he1rd In 11\t Cwnc: (homllfr 01 tno City I ."."'"'' 0••"'• , .. ,, 0•''' .,,1 Publ thflll Or1ng1r Coe•! 1 ly o '' nl 'd ludvmerl lleb•o n !ht proPo"r!v In P ub Sht<I Or~nge Coat! 0 •11V P let LEGAL NOTICE .. ~ ~ 2S 911 166! 11 H• 11 Ft lr Orlvo Co11a Mn• + 11 ( ! 1ll r h~ c 0nr. cl Oranot Slale o! Col torn a J""" 1.1 and Jul• l 9 !6 1911 UOl.11 June • 1 1! 15 1911 lJ«J 1\ June i nd Jll v 1 9 1 C1I tornla on the tollowlng pel tlan Tor LEGAL NOTICE Wnt hloll E)l.CfPTING """' P1rcu. I .,,. t •-• _..,,,.rtfr 1nttrnl In oll 111. 11•1 hYllro;KatbOno end o-tl'llN /11'- 11 ,._.,ell lfl lht -lrtm Jllflflll M MC(:oM to P...i H I-,_,.,, M. l BtnlDtl ll•lflll Sfolemblf H ltn f nd rK.<lrOl'll I" &oot, ltt •I 111tt 41t el 01 h tl•! R...:orll\ ~--,-P•RCEL ' r~. E1•1 'IO Jett Of !~­ Wt \! 11~ lttl al l•t Soul~ 1•l Fttl o< Int we1 nolf ol 11 • Suull .. ~.1 """'' o< t11e Soull!e••1 ova<lt• ol In• llarthwtll <1y1rter DI lted Gn :1. Townoh!p • S.Oulll R•nll• n Wt1• n me ••nchO loo (DYOI•• (OU '• O! Or1n11t STiii ul Cal rorn/1 •• ... , '""" fOCO<dt<I !n Boelr. ~I PIO• O! M!tc~ll1nrcu1 M•o• In 1111 afllce o• •~• County llf(DrDlf a! 1•ld Ortn•• (ounh P.O.llCEl 1 .0.n ••Hmfnl !Dr n 11"» an<I •trtn to be u>td n (on""'" wt o hl:'f• and '"" pub ic u!lllV o~"''""' ov•• • •I• p ol i.nu ~nlllod on hr Nor!h bv • I"" DI &l•tl IC "'" 1 o !ttt Nor nt•lv lr001 lnr 5our !r ' I ne or 1~, Wtll no ! cl 1110 ~""''""'"'' cuatlor of lhe Sou!llrt>I au1rle ct lh• No.tnwe11 QUiiier of ••16 S1cllon 7• I/Id IX>und"ll on lh• E•U b• • lino .... •I el ID Ind )j9 letl Wt•1ul• ol ". Ea11• Iv I !>t ct oa!d We11 hOll •"" toounaecl .,,, 1ho Wtll b• I lint P•'• ltl lo an~ 160 lf:"'I [&i ttlY al rho WO• trlY II"" n1 ••a We>! ~.u EXCEPTING Hom P1rco' I 1'\d t •bO•t ontDUftltr 1nltfto1 n oll ol O&• nvd a•<:a•bon1 111<1 0111 .. mlntr I • •• '"'"'"I'll ln th~ II~ !tom Jenn e M Mt(•ll IO Paul Ii B•n.,.n •nd M L llen""' d&l«I 'leplt mlltr ll 11:11 ""' ,.roro«I In Boo~ 199 P•llt •i. or 01 I c al AKorD~ PARCEL I All !hal POrl on OI !h~ We11 nail m tnt Sou1nwe1• cv••!or o• lhe Soulnr•ll Duff!" DI tht No•U>,.•11 ouarl•r at St<I on 1• n lawn•lllP • South R•nqe ll Wt!I In t!\o 5!1nch• Lo> CavoT" n Int County or Or.np• STiie er Cal •0<nla •• ptr Mao lhtrro' recorded In ~ool< S pa9e I al Ml..:111a...,ou1 Meo• 1ocord1 ol ••If Oran11e Coun!V dt•cr btd •• !allow• !jpglnn ng Al a po nl n lht E&llttlt I n• of ,~ d w .. 1 h• I d $1anl lllettD'> Ncrlht' ~ 211 !<ti 1 am Tnr ~ou norlv I ne ol •~ d Wt• h•ll !hence we1 • v o• 1 el 1 the Sculntrlr II"" c l ••" Wt>• llal! l'9 tee! 1ntne• Suu!hetlv peral e w rn I o Ee•lerl~ ll11e ot •• r W•" hall lS ••e me e or on to • ~o nl In~• d In• ano 1ht Southerly "' ton• on lht "'' 'h (" PO n! •I 116 l'"T """'ur~d tn.,eon r om 1ne Scv!ne • I"" Cl •• d WU! h• I thence Wt .,err• para ltl !a •• o Scu!h!O'tlY I ne t~ t~ lnle $t er on wl!h 1he W111u Y 1 ~ cl Ill• Ea•1.,1v 1.r1 teer o! ••rt writ 111 1 thenco Soulh•rlY alono •• O WeoleI • I ne ll6 I••• ID 111 I" le••ec1 on .. u11 th• soumttlv I "' of •• d w .. 1 h•I! lhPncf we11tr\1 •Ion~ sad Soutn• IY I"" 10 II• lnttr>•cllan .,..1111 1110 Ee•lt<lv lint al 1ht Wtl!erl• 160 1te1 ol ••a Weil OM h•lll lht l'l<r NorlhPrlv elong 1a II I ne ta 111 In 1er..-c1 on wl1h thr HOl'tntrlt II"" 01 the Soulhtrlv 2•l lttl ol 11ld WI\! MI 1nenct We•1etlY olono.., II line 10 l>et more er It•• ta lht Sout11t•Uer1u <ornt • o! !ll•t cer!f!n oarcli'I ot lond 11~1<• bl'd \n In• deecl la Jo•to~ ODm• 1 w dower reco•dod n Bao~ 1l1 I Pl \rt n • Dt Ott;c o! Retc•d• or 11 II Otd~Q~ CcuntY menc• Northerly 1lont tnt E11•i<•IY In• ot 1ad Oom• land lS '""' 10 ht NOl!h~•lforl>' corn., llioreof 51 d PO n! &I"' be n~ en h• ~OUlhftly I n• ct 11111 ct r!• II Pl •<•I ol 1•nd oroc• b•~ n !nt •tt<I to Jo,.on Ooma • w llowt• recard~d In 8<><'~ ?•ll oogt u of 01! e •I R•corll• ol .a d O • ge t:ovn ; lntn(P E••terlv •lany oa d 50UIM• I• I ne 180 I••! mo t o• , ... IO Int E&•. Ir I"" DI ,. d Wei hall I! ence So.,lhtrlY • on\r 11 II E•• er v I ne ~? i.e1 mcrt or ltn 1~ ti\• l>Qlel cl beg nnlny ( r:idu li:.-:s 11< I !1 111 I a~sr, ~ed11~',,/~\°:} No ~qg "' ohown onl-----L-E--GA_L_N--OTl_C_E-,---I-------,-,-,-.-,------LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ch:~11z'oN'E''P::T1 TION fl: 11 16 M ng lhr r 11~~ l ,or.,1 J ( 1111 11.)I I ~ • N'•P ~(o cied n Bi>olo: 1 I p&ot• 16:1-----------------I Cl•Tll'ICATE OF IUSIN[SS f -------~~-------1·----------~----f oell10n o! Olfnda Vtffl(O lllCI Soo P&ulo J I I T I '' •• f ' fl :1 r I l7 8 19 70 ~nd 71 of M lte l•nfl>ui I' ,,.1 l'ICTITIOUS HAME I' 'llJ CASE NO f'-64SS Avonut P •crnll• tor ottm U on 10 5vb ~O Ta an eo1oment tor lnor• ' • II eg "" a/Id lat Pvbl c ut I •v our1>0••• !a b• ""'d Jr. con mon w I t 111 ,. I u •eco•ll• or O •nve CoYn'> Tn• ~ndertlOn•d 110.• t.,I I• 1he 11 con cr•Tll'IC.O.lE OF co11Po11•TION rnont Pr<><>er!Y 1<><•1•11 •1 l!l~ 8l8 1 1or:ih J, I rli !f I IJ l\ld l 1 f'T ~c;' is HEREBY GIVEtl inar on '~l~'J0~~A~~~'::~s ~~~~:: •c:"i~~~': ·~~~ ,~, 't:,{;i;~, "i;::}~o5u,sATIEU~':NEiS 001;,~T~~.~~fs~A~Nt:OEll =~•ttnll• Avenue Co•!• Me>a !•om R2 to ) \II l('f Titf 1 llhll i II I! \ I' 1, 91 •I in (1(1 0 c oc• A r./ •l Tht lo ow ng ptrian I> 110 ng Ws n•n 1I m namo 01 TELE GEN! a nd !~ii .., d ,1Tno lollowlno Ptrlon 11 do n9 buslnHS ,.HE UNOERSIGNEO CORPORA 110 ,1 NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN tnl! "' o hP • ov•r a l!r ~ or l•nd l>oun<l•d nn 1ne Na !l'I bv a I ne p•r& o! ID •~~ "6 !tel North••• I om tno Sou!horlY Un• o! 1n• Wos! h•lt o! ll!t Sou!hwe•! auo I• o! m .. $out~•••' ""a tor o< !~P Nortnwe•t ·~•'"' c! u d Se-er <>n l • on4 bouno.a o" lne Ee r bV • In• o•rallel to ~nd H9 !rel Wo11er1~ er !I• E&1!tr1r 1 nt cl \.ad Wt'' n11t """ bounded D • •l'lt We" '" • ! fP ~· & Pl lo •nd ion ··~I E•• P•I• " •~e \'.el!trlv I no or ,~Id Woll 11•11 EXCEPl Ng lHFREfll:OM o~• ' ' ' T 1 1 'lf\1 1 I .II 1111 "" n t n"I Cov t 561 Wrll 11 n C Iv or 1' OCEANSIDE MOTEL 16111 C 1 I rm lo cDm<><>•tcl of,,,._ !ollawlnv ooroon GLOBE' ltl.'RALO 110 ll•sl Bay do.• he•eb• cerlll• !hot 11 h condudlnt " $Bid t mo 1no Pl•<• anv ono all ••'on> rn ~ M•'~ cru~" 01 0 ~ngr ~I~ e of 011 who•• ""me n 11111 •nd Plfct or •nl •i •• ''''' •• , 0 '' '''", ,1,,1 bus ntH et S06 Jh! S!rffl N•wP<>rt ln1' el!td m"• """""' 1nd b• htOtd O~ II r If Jl i I I /\I \ h r t"l loto 8 I w 11 •lll •! o~O c dUCI 0'1 lo Ii qhw•Y Seal lltacn C•ll!ornlt dt "<• II Ii IC IOWI ~ no O ' !no ( 1Y (...,ncll o< IMC!>' o1 (c>!o Mo,. 111 • n~nr11 bO~e tot r~\h In l•wtu! June M•••• Bret• 110 Ptarl ll•lboa Ml 11 !HubDardl Evon! 1020 0 1nv~ Cofl! Publ•~ng Company t Beien •11 under •he !Cl!ou• ""me 0 on rno atorementl{lllt <! R.,ont Pet Ion 11 I \\ hl\ 11 1 If lh l\Ld \',I\ l n ~ , 01 ,. u" t•d St" ,, • 1 tne , oM I• •nO Cl t~rnla FullrrTon :IO Co•" Moi a Cah!o n • Cal fc1nl• Ca 00 ot on 3100 we1t B•• SE~ VI SOFT OI OJI ANGE COAST and !flat rio R 1l 16 I I I 1 1 11 t 0 bl lhll bu1lntu • l>t no tonducttd ti• 1n 51,.., Co•U Moia Cal !o ", '1"1611 Ille n1m• cl sl id firm •nll !• Prine P~I r' I " l ( I ll'ld1 r 11(' 1 I "1h~ ~~~~:p~ .. ~. b!11 ~~-;:.~~ ; ~~ ind Yldu•I Oolecl ,1~.7. 'H 1 r~an• T~. bu1ln1•1 II btlng CO'ldVCltll D• • p IC• al D<ltlnen l• •• follow• ~11;E!1~,: oi"~~N~~-y I{\ ~IL l\t;t J 1511 UClJO!la[ m~c~ l~tr"'1! 1$ moY tit nff!>•l'Y to Junt Mvt•• ll rt<f 5ttlt OI C1lllc1nla Otan;t Counh Corr>0<1!1~" .O.ME ll lCAN WAlER PRODUCTS at Co•• NtH <.-1\1\0 \Ad ··~curio~ w•h ~C(IUed n Th i i1111men1 lllM wlll !ht (DYnl~ On Jvnt' 1911 b•lor r mo • Ne••·• JACK If CURLEY CORPORAllON n 9 Va l ido !M;lund Putll•I!"" Orin•• Caalt Ot . p O! 10 1 •nll co 1 C+• k ol Or1ngr Counr. on Mt• I~ H11 Pvbllc In •nd !or ••Id Stat• Ptt1Dn•l1Y v c• Ptf \d'"' ~~d t.:ew110r! B•acn C•lll0<n 1 Junf is 1911 1 ~1111 t;~ •'II ~r Co>t• Mt•• Cal forn 1 Junt Bv l'le•erly J "•<!doz Otpul• County 10~••1'11 M.,11 H Evin• kn<rNn 11 mr 19 G~n• 11 M•~•a• Oel•~ June I 1'11 1------------------ 1 19/1 Cl~' be The .,.,,on "'no .. n•mr It tubi ttlMll Th • tet•m•nl !lt<I wt~ th~ cou~ty AMERICAN WATER PROOUC:TS o O WrlO r""' Pobll"'*" Drong• Coo>1 0• tv Plkl1 lo ll\r wll~ n lnttrllmt nl atld at kfKIWlfllg (l1rk of Oran" CnuntY on J11,... 11 ltll COfl:PORAT\Qll M••lll•I Junr • l\ 11 lS ltll 119f.Jl BY B•vttl• J Middox Deoutv c wn" ~ Jht S!roe• Q '" l I ( \l '.\O f!CL LEG AL NOTICE I------------------1..:1 1he P~tcu!od t~r ••mt ''''' •l•woott Bt•<ll C•lllorn • T 11112 n -<1~•1 Murnt ~al Cou•I 0 • ._., Ccun1V (0FFl(l.O.l 5EALI tERTlricetr OF 1uS!toES~ ltabor Jvllcal 0 •t<1 LEGAL ~QTJCE Na•• E Gald•n Publl•~l'd O'•n11t '°"" Oa !Y P lot l 1<1l1law Redtv SUl'E•IDll COURT 0 1' THE ~ICl tllOU~ I AMI.-Bv II' H Goocle Df~~rr No!lrr Publlc (11 IC>rn • Jun• 'J Ind July 1 ' ll lt/I 16J0.11 Prr ildt nl $TATE 01' CALll'O•NIA FO• ~uMttr n!~rti• n a I oil 11• l'>Ydto <~•1><111• end o hrr m nt •1• •• re~vell ~ lhe llPf'd tom Jenn • M MtCall to P•ul H Brnson 1/ld M l Benson <!&ltd ~~o•ember II 1'1"14 ""~ r•COl'<!ed " llooll. lfll coge •1• of Ot I c al ll;ttOrdt " J ~,.. 11• "I crn ICrlt~ < Wtlou•I p 4 Prlncl<>•I Ol'lk r In ----·1s·•1E: OF (AtlFORNI A l H• COUNlY 0 1' 111v•11~10• ., •• , w '' ,0 ~t Pr •Olf , .O.llo•••v !Of! Or•noo<•••'• LEGAL NOTICE COUNTY O~ ORl.NGE " NO 1:111' " ,.,, ,. Cl!•ltJflCATli OJf I USINl$1 ~ On 11'1 i 101~ lloY al Junr 1'11 t>ttoro NOTICE OF SALi! OF REAL PROPERTY 51 a •t•I atone T• In llt .old •• o ""It ' " ' ! "'" ••d I I~,. l "'" nrrr I• t• !.' Qf T~I QIJA ITY al,~11"'1tarn q ... ~~ ... ~.,\~ " • ' . ' ,. " 1 111 ~~v r l~(t nl '• u."ce $ "~ " '" ' 160 II I\ • • " ' "" ' ' " ' . " ' "' 11('>1 II •• '. '" • " ' 0 ' ' ' ' ,, ' ' 11 1,\T 'l)TJrt F 9\11 rrrlTtCJ~ 111'11 \ l<ftMl \IATlM["T . " " ... :~~~Cl.~ ~•;1~;,no; ;:10~"1 s." !IJ T~t unllr~~~~~IC!~S NA~1E h 1 ~;,;.,"';'.,';'1~1I01~1!'""1'"' 1---------------·lme • Nct1ry Pvbl c In •nll tor I~• •• ~ In Ille Mllltr al tnt E•l•!f er Pt<UL H ~h",~11,,r;:o•;,IJc°';,"'r"~~~ ~~~;~, •• f?ld p ti silt<! 0 ""~· Cout 0• Iv P llOI d !I b ··, c~05; ; 1' ca~ P~tll •h«I Or•n~• c ... ,, 0 11tv Pllo! ,. n•1 Counjv •"d '·1~ <>t r>cna ly """''''" 8ENSON Ot<•a•HI (&I re "~ St•MD I J,n~l5 J"\O:l 9 It/I 161311 UC "9 6 u•ntl f a ma1e 'I~''''' l>ooo ,,,,, '''' ''''' l'ICTIT10US I USI NE S~ bero.-. me L1d1la"' Rid•• ~nnw" IC NO'"' i• ~ER,OV ,.l',,<N !ht t<v• "'1" lnv!on Bo•th Call!otn • urill• , " , NAMf_ ST•O!MENT me la bf l~e Ptel don! ot Int Corpora ~ " O Svb •ct to Cu ttnl '"'"' <<>Vfn~nt• lhf I cl Ila"' I rm n8"'~ ol STONEWt<PE 'Tht lol awing •trl4n• ••• do ,,1 !Ion Ill• e~•cu I'll Ille w lh n ln•rtument Frank 0 M ••• C•ttular ot the W ! ol ! v n Q 1 ons ~!•ct on• r.,e v.i "'" LEGAL NOTICE F t '1J FICll flOU5 BUSI NESS NAME STAl EMENf 1 , 1~ Q"' ng nr••on s do no bu•ln•ll Vl~rA VCROE MOB lHOME SllES !'• ! u !'en~ """ Ccs1a Mua Ca t VI• I I v II It Celfmon 11<1 Pomcna A~• ~ fl•>1 C~l I 9?t'll I \ ti• ne$O I• Ile ng ccnaurted tov ~n I ~~~ I~' "~"'""I 'led w '" Ill• (DI.In!¥ ( • n Ot&nge Caunlv on "'"' Q 1•11 fh I! ~t•I• J Mallllo~ 0.-~ul• Coun1v '. " ' l n"ll O-angr C~l>l • 11 19 ,, 1911 Oft ly LEGAL NOTI C!<; ftll• f !Cl !TIOUS BUSINESS HIME ST-.TEMENT '"'""n~ o• '"" "aooo b ' """" Plt+;Cf'" ro1<1 OA ll v PILOl ' dnd tho1 u d I rm h comPOud or the LEGAL NOTICE ~"' n•,. 11 on behi lt °' rn. CorPo<o!lon 1hortln P•u H Bonson lloce&1od w II ••I •I r '~'' r 9~11 al "'"" 011em•"'' "'"' ·~ lallownll f>••lon Whalt nom& n full tndJ-------~~~-------1 COMMllNIOU£ 1111' Sky Pa~ (ro e named ond ~(kn<)Wt<!gtd lo m~ !hOT orlvl!o ••It ID 1Mt h11hell and l>f:U bd .inv t <Um~""'"' Qf •tcr~ pleco• ol rnld•nct 11 f j tcllow• Ftlll I •lno Col I '1"16.!• <\«~ <C•Po •I on e(r<Uled 1ht '""" Oe under Ille 1ormo ond cond I cn5 T~o !trml an~ cond ! on> ol •• t '" W 11 om ( Qvlrl 110!1 P1lm<!o p FIC llTIOUS lllJ$INESI Cvtl 8r1>11ren flO W Ila t><lf I Vd (OFFICIAL SEt<ll h•rtlnMtor mtnl Ontd I nd $Ub 0<1 lo con Ca>h I" law!ul monov ol Int Un f'd Sl•!•1 f'.ve H B N"ME STATEMENT llOll>Od (f '166• w Jim•o B $C~ol (hr""""' Hollman "'m•10n bV Int ~uoerlor Caurl on Ju"• or Am• co and l•rm< T•n Pe cenl 110•,1 D•1tll J unf I 1911 Tno lo 1ow1ng p~r>on I• de no bu• non ?5.l9 Otnl,. Oronot C• JomP• F ak• Nolor• P b le Col lorn t » 91 •! !ht hQIJr o! 9 lO I m O• T~ttt D' th~ ""'O\J" b d o ~ccompon, lhr. o•!or Wllll~m C Ou!rl •• 1 S05l C:o umb " L" !<uni no•on e~a<h Prfnclo•! OI! er 1n ~I e "' n n lhr llmt a low r d bV law al and lhe 1>a •n<~ la b• 1>• d on co""' S!alt cl C~lllo•nla Or•ngr_ Cwn!v CAIL v PILOT JJO W•it Bir S!rtt.t Tn , t1u1 n• , 1 btlnq conllotlt'll t>• , O ange (mmlv ht oU er of Loul1 M N '"" al1ornfY lo• 1 m~ on •• •i• J • r v Co •I la••• On Junt I 1911 btlor, mt I Nolo•v (a>!• Me!a Ca fcrn1o 'l~)I Lim !td """""''"I" M• Commlu on E•al•r.I rn• Execulor 1 1 \6'!1 W•H Br0<>dw"V Su le enh """' "g ~"d m~ "'""anct ~ Pub t !n A"I !nr ••II 5111• o• oon•ll• Otangt cca•I f'ubll•h ,..; ComPlrlV • Cvrl II roe t " M& ch 7' 1912 O Anah•lm Cal lorn" 111 !ti• r ~t t !lllr pen•~• and ~m wm• on n•u encf " •~oto td W 11 &m C Qui ! k""w" lo me Col fornl" carnl> 11 011 DO Wnl Bov l n , 1!at•m•nt f !•d w !h !ht Co "'' Publ •~d Ot•"oe coe.i oa P 01 and Jn re•esl of oalll dt codt nl In i nd 10 all <•Pl•l>IP 10 •h• ouroh«•• >h• I ~ • •o 11 .. 1 to llt !hr Pf'>an who•• n"m• !J •11bscrib SI•••' Cool• Mt>e c a llornll '26ll (Ir_ ~ ct 0 •nqo Coun v o" Jvne n 191\ June II ls and Jvlv? 9 191) ISJI II !h"I er I•" reel pro1>.,1i • lon!~d " 111~ '"'at tn• Pa• 01 <Ont m• on OI ••I• !ht •II to lht w rn n n11 umrn! and l nl, l>u• no" , l>oln• canducttd b• 1 Bv Bo~rr v J Mlddc~ D••utv CD1Jn!v -----Cll• 01 Slan!cn Cuunlv cl Oranoe Sta e •~0m al on ol !It ~nv t t • n1uronc• •<~nowlodg•~ h• ~v•cvl•d !ht $&me corPori !lon Cit•~ LEGAL NOTICE DI Ca lo•n • and mo ' 01rr t~ •tr dt• •rte d n~ rt ton ev~net ~nd c.c•Dw (OFFICIAL SEALI J.O.CK p CURLEY Pul>l,htcl Orangr (o••I 01 lv Pllo!;f----------------crlb@d •s follows cl>arQ•> •hall bt a tne ~•l>~n>r or •h• J•ftn l Joo'! Vce Pro>dfnt el'l<I Junell 1ndJulv? I 111911 1}Pfl11 LEG•L NOTICE P•OPOSEO PA~CEL I l~• 5ou!h 16 F••I <111>vrch•>f Rrvrnur 1amP•lcl'lfollif••rt ~o:~~,.~~~:~:~;~ n lo n • ln 9 ?1!~:.:~n~~: '~"' w th Int '"ou~tr LEGAL NOTICE NOl IC E ~~·HNEOREE:: J1'tNE~ 1haT the ~~~ ~!::11 "u~!~',.~1 '~i V.:~~1 "~: .. ~~.~~~ ~~ 1~~t coed ~"" 1 b• "' !he "'""n" •I ll'v Comrr" on [•Pru Clrr~ cf Oraroe Coun!"f on Junt 21 ltll Sint• .0.n• C tv Council will ~old • ""DI c uu•r!er o! •h~ NarlhWt•I 0.,1 •• 01 All b II• one ol • • mu•I b• In w Ill"' !Iv Br verl• J Mocdo• o•o~•v County 11 '136 h••• no on t<mttldment Aoplltal Dn ~ft.I S.ct an ~· 'Town"111p • South R&ng" 1 •n<I w 1 bt •<••!<I f t "' Oii <• of March l \9ll C!t I l'ICTlllOU$ BUSINESS om•ndlnt St cllon OIUrlct Mia J ! t •< w .. 1 In 1~t Roncho Loi Coyot•> Coun!• LOU' M N Vf" f!!atn•• 1"' 1 • P u!) •no<l Oranq" (COii 0•11~ .:iC:1 PuDll•hf'd Or1n9e Co••• o . ~ p 1<11 NAM( 5T ATEMENl Carll no '" E•~" I A A 61• A E'n ti I at Ora"Oe $Ille of Cl lo1nl1 •• o•• E<r<u•ar .. , l~I I •1r B G•tl~AY Ill I• 0 Ju"" 11 lt 11 •nd Jul• l 1'11 -'c"_"c'_'c':._'c"c'.c.'c"_"c_:':._':._'c':._'_'_" ___ 'c'c":._"c l~• !allow nu Of•'°" It do .,0 but"'" A A ~·.., generallv lnvolv•• a"""'" m11> .. cardf'd " Boolt !1 oogr I ol ""•he m Co lo n • " m11v ht: t Int -,1 llt•crb«l•$!n•l tr•al«••t<l an tnee11>1 M><••l11n..,.,0Mao1 n l~rofl<e Ol lhe w in ~ C it ~ GI l•t 5~P~ Gr Cw11 • LEGAL NOTICE PILOT PRINl•NG J:IO wen Bay •ldt at Old Grand Slrool t>tt...i•rn Grov• Coun!y llt<ord~• ol ·~ d Or•ng• CounlY a"v 'me ot •• t~p ! t P"D' ca1 en al 1n • LEGAL NOTICE s rorl '""'" Mt la (t i torn• •l6l1 monl 5!ttt! and Santi Cle • .o,v•" • Tiit EXCEPT 1ne E1n" ""' thtrrc! '"'' (• ~"'1 bt!a • ..,., ~~a ·~ d •t i• --------------O•t na• Coo•I Pul>!lil\lno Como•r• o aae! t•nl" OtOOCI nt 10 arr<anr pr®"'" PARCEL l An •~ltm~nl Irr In For lurtntr nlorm•t an ••d b II to1mo ·~" l'ICTITIOUI 8U1 1N(S$ r •ufornl~ CoraorAtlO'I HO Wu• e1v !•om 1h• ,. 1 Olorrru (lft Or•noe County) II tt• •nll •11 '" •lld Public ul 11+. to ilPU,. •I m• au<• or '" d •llorn~v lnr r 1 ~t•e•• Co"" M•ia c~110,., 1 '761' ro th• 11; 1 Olllrlcl h• <1•"'1 n Cflttlm<1" w " 01.,.ri o••• A E fev•~r ' ' ..I ' B••Sr ... I Co'••lt•• C• larn• \""~ Cn~•• I> b \I\ no Cnm~~n• • ' Cr. pn •I nn JIO W~ 8~' f •HI •1CTIT!OUS I USINf:,S ti-ME STAllM[NT 101 ow "o """°"' '" b., no" " GQA~ CD l YP£ Co•~ M••~ ••1 w GO ftO lfl ' °"' ntu 1 Dtlno (Qndu,ltd bY • All "" i.on• n!t re1lell o r~ ~e ~b• • r Po! l1nd llDundtll on th• Nor!ll II' ~( Tht t •ht I• re ••~•a 10 •tel •~• '"~ Ca 00.1 on ncl tied lo a~o••r befort int San!• An• I,,.. PM •ll~I to ~n.d 111 •~•• tlntl!\• I• a tl ~ d• Jl (I( If CURLEY c '" Council .. ~·· '"" " thr rn•TU• TO I om int ~OUl'le • I ne Cl '"" \.'t>I hA I O~!o<I J ~. 1l 1e1• VI<• p tlldo"1 '""" Dt "•Id on !ht 6 ha ... o/ Jul• 1911 ti "" G l~t So.<lh"'C•1 QUI,., or fnP FqANOC 0 '15t"1 f •< (It Gon•ro Men•otr ~C~' o! 1 JO PM In lh• Cc. •C S'I\ ne•11 <lti3r!,,.. of lrl" N~ ""'" LOUIS M NIYEH NIME 51ATEMENT follow nv """an• ••t dong '"• bu n•" •• CRVSlAl CLEll> POOL S£RVIC£ I I 1 \I \OTlt l 0 I> .... UC! .. o 11 i I I " ' " " ' ' ' " l~•t• fie>• C• 1nrn • 0111! t•i ; l>e nQ oncu(I"<! D• • " I• • O ( J I"' Yn J'•Jtnt •rd ~ l ·~~ ~,..,rn ..nw •IOU"' '' O•anQe Coovn • c.n lu , )I • •• y J M•~< , Oeo"'' (o" y Pc I• A • ·~~· •• 711'1 (lih"' ~e Pl I' 0 6 0• U ll C.n•M M••• •1616 C"o• • 1't•• 0 ~nr Bl~dlot Hll! l•• Rena II JorQrn JC'O"""" I• Hum N~"n • L•ou • N gu, "1 1nsb rd Or (01 1 Mtt• 9161& T11' bu• Mn 1 bt n~ tcndvcled b• o '"' b"1lntn ' be n9 tofKlut1td cv an p~r n• '" ~ In~ ~ldu•I Pi; v • I r~o " llenald Jc•v•n Jo gen,.n lh, 11• ~m• ! I •d wl!n 111• Cavn!• '" 1 'a1rm•nl 11e11 Wit~ '"• c~un!Y (Irr• or O onQt <c n' on J no n ltl\ c • ~ .,1 0'•nG• Ceuntv on 'l•Y l 1911 6• Or• .. v J l.\&d9~• OPQU!Y Count• 8v Bt vtfl• J Meddc• OfOUIY County t•·~ (le~ nr« o ~ n• Co~!! O• P P~h ·~•d o an9e c~~·' o~ 1, P c• Pub 1hed O •not Co111 O~Ht " 01 • I Ju ; ~ • 16 1911 ___ '_"_'_' _,_,_"_'_'_'_•_nd JulY 1 o !6 1911 ___ "_'_•_'_';__'_'_"_'~1' '-'-'-~ •nd ~ v 1 1'71 1<'.fl II LEGA L f\OT ICE LEGAL NO I ICE LEGAL NOTICE nl ~.,QllCl •o h•Mvnt~~ COdt OI ROBf~T M WILSON l" 1 ll•le'll~nl 110<! w 1~ th• ("'""' ChAmt>t" Cit> Ho I Ann•• SOO .... ~ •Tn <>u• 1• cf \Aid 5.oct on 7• ""d bound"'1 Allor nt• !or E•e<ulor Cl• " ~r o Ano• Cou!\ • on Jun• 21 1111 ~!eel Son!• t<n• Ca• lorn • on rnt E•< by • Int ~•••I •I o ""~ 1111 Woot Bro•d"''' S" tr o 11. B•••r. J M1aao• Ot~l!IV CDunlv FLORENCE I MALOi1£ 1 .. !••1 Wut••lv of !he E•• "'I' Ir• Anohe m C•IUornlo •zur.r Cl••~ c • ~ o! '"" Ccun<ll 01 •• ~ Wo•I h•ll •nd bounded "" '""I Ttl flf l ) In Ill~ Pvbll•ht<I Or•nO• (OOI! 0 •1, P 01 "lb '""<I 0 1n;e (0111 01 Y P a It I by • I"~ p~ oil• !o I nd llJQ te• Puhl <h•d Qo~n<;~ (G~l 0• f I' Junt 1l '"" Jul• l I 1~ "II lilt 11 Ju"• 15 1911 ~11 I• E••!• • or !n1 W11!p iv I ne nt ••a J.,.,• 18 9 ~j 111 "' I EG A! NOTICE D•OINANCE NO 11 l'O I EGAL NOTICL LEf.A I NOTICE LEGAL NOTI CE ----Fob• ft v n 1960 !n boOk l 01 n~or [lll• "~"""" rn~ ~"' •Mall b• ~ b ~·d •n~ l~roQc nq 0 d "~"er"" I 10 "''' ~ ~10 Off~• R•tnrd• < • n I t ORt\NC.E CO~ST OllL' 'O'>d\otod A"'1 ro~< lo r~ •t c <>\ b, P ARCEL 1 ln1 ~cul~t Iv 100 fret ot PILOT • new•"•P• o! orn• al ~ «ul• I "" "' • •O • "rol "O cl •• l , !Mt Wt•ltr V !00 •el of l at I n I\ cc~IH~~ o nl•~ on<! n hi ne<1 ~ • C tv c {~vnc nn t • I" nAv cl t ~' ~1 , ; .0. 01 Tne Serr• T ~~! C Iv ~! Co''" Co1M "'"!A 100~ "'' w 1n '"~ n~mr1 ol I ""'f"' Pdll•<> a 1a QQ<l!•d "' ~ w"o' Meia 11 1hown on • m•o r~carll•d n tn• ,,. b• • of '"" (Iv Coun< I vnl Q •I n ra ~· <r<"f! nq o• • d CI• (on " ' !'JP' 11~1<(( or TH[ r111 COUN Of l'lE Cll V er CCST • ME~• jfJRr..A ( ~Nr. .. r r 10,. ~r lOT ll TllA(f •ll rl!OM Ml t ~ ( v nl to1!• Ne'~ 0 1•!• ct MAD A 1 MAYO o! lht n ! r C '' P! Co"" Mr•& • "' t\lV Clh o! Co a M.,• the e~ll•• oaull'd 1nd a<loot!'d 11 o wnclt 11 f 1tcul1r mttllnQ o! 1• d Cl!v CO\Jn' I he d on !ht iat II&• or J~n• 1t 11 D• t • loUowlnt tall Cl I vol• AN ORDINANCf_ 01' THf_ CI TY COUN CIL 01' THE CITY OF COSl• MESA. (Alll'Ofl:NIA (HANGING lHI! ION INO 01' l'OllllONS 01' LOTI I ANO 1 0 1' lH( l l!R lltY T•ACT llROM Ml TO Cl (I' l>Q(l~ ' o~o• 6 al M!><t llontovs 1trcord1 !or •~~ -~~ ~11 T~• '"m• I h<:> ~ ~n m. 151 ~~· ~f Ju"• 111 D• I • o! lot Angolu County (1IUotnll PA!-.SEO t<NO ADOPTED IMI 7111 day lo owng rol c•I •o• l~e Cl!v Cc"ncll <11 the C IV ot CaJ11 f.l(CEPTING thttt ltom !l'lo Soul~ 1 or June 1911 A'fES COUNCii ME'1 W 1<0 Jo ' ~ p CP ' ' ' " ' l I •4 r ,. '" ~ ,._ ' " M ' " ""' j I Cf " " ,f Cg I ' ' ' " • " ~ T '"'"' l ru,.~•n• tn ''" n ~• ,.,.~, • • ~"'·~~rd bY m~ •dd to~ ,~. t!o M ht Al IE Sl u1cr ~ r• ~r>cfbtll n 5•t l oll I ~•r!"<I! EILE'EN P PttlNllEY ~t I ON l ln ' Ord n•n<• ~h•ll l••e ( tv ( '" ~· lh~ •!ltd ond b• n '"I lorcr lfllrtv (J'J\ div• C h o! (Q>!• /II"'''" 1n '"'~It I~ oa1•~or •"" 6" ta STATE Of CA LlfORNl•I • • 1 <•I on of I <lten 11$\ efv• from COUNIY OF OllANGE \ SS to ''"" t rnt ~·!lb• '"!l•htd l (llY0f C051AM£~il l ' • I . 01<-C.[ cc-.~ Ot< LY t (ll ((N r l'ltlNNCV Cllv Cltrk o! ! llOT a ne"'•PIDl' o' qontr~I (1<~vi. I~• (lh at Co• a Mn1 111d '' olllelo r nn r n "' 8"~ n bl <i'tll In ll!r Clfl' at Cit II. of !~• Cltv Cwncll OI !ht C!lv o4 Q"> ~ ••~ •r><>rlnf ,... rn lh~ n•" .... n!ICn>i• M~•~ hppby c••tlh !nor !he 8hovr tn• m•mbtr\ ot 111~ C IV CDUn<!I vot1n1 all<! '"'•IPDlnt Ord+noncr No 11 If w11 In Ir ~"'J ~o• •"I In" nm• I odUetll Ind COf'l lOt rtd lt'<llon by '"" ra5S£0 •NO A.DOPTEO 11111 ?hi d•r ll~n at o 1e11u •r mtt!lnf al 11ld Cll vnr 1•11 Council "" Ille Ith dlV al Junt1 lt n '"' / / / ,,,,. I I ;' I g ~---,, /-,-,----'~ .. ... I I I I ~. • / ''-111::-.:i t I.;.;:_ " ~ .......... .. . ... ..... -.. · ·-... _-::----.. LlG[MO ··-_..., .... ·---. I---·-.. -------.. _ .... _ ... _ ..... __ " -· ·- --·--· AYES COUNCILMEN Wl11on Jar d•" Plnll.lev SI (IA NOES COUNCILMEN Nonp l\115ENT COUNCILMEN M~mmtll IN Wl'TNES~ WHEJIE.Of I llevt ~• .. unla 11! my hona atld 1111•«1 !II• Stal ol "''Cl y OI Cm!1 Mtll !hrs Unll llfy ot Ju,,., 1•11 EILEEN P PHINNEY (lly (l.,k ond •• alllCIO (Irr\ al ,,,. (ITV (O...nc:ll of !ht Cllv ol Coth M••• Put111sJ!t<I Or1nn Ca111 01!" P 101 h1nr n 1t1I 161&.11 " • " - CITY or cost• MaA. CALWOANA l'l.•~.>IG OCl'l~TlllllJfl DISTRICTm MAP -· A/4 Mt>• d<ltt ~t•tbV D<dt " 11 tallow• let! 11 canyfytll lo !hf O••"g' (O\!nlv ll:Of!F RT M WILSO'I d~n P l'~ltv St (\~If SECTION I A I lhll POrtlon ol "'e F lcod Control 0 !!rl<I l)y dlt<I f'COtde<l M••o ot '"" t.IOES COUNC 11. E" follow no d••crlb«I reftl oranr rtv " Fri>•"• v 1' 1'60 lft l>DOll 5101 p&De C Iv or Calla M•I• Non• h•,.b• olacf'd •rod lnclull«I "the ClC.P llQ O!lltlal Rt,ord• ATTEST Af;5~NT COUN{ll~ll N Hammr ! l lll"t lo wt SECliON' P""uont fo !he I> avhlon1 EILEEN P PHINNEY I'll WITNESS Ylll(R[O~ h,,1 PARCEL 1 lhr S.t•!l""'IV llXI I•~! of m Sectlen IPllO • of !tit M"n clP•I Codt ol C 1v C t•-or tnr "«Pun•u " mv r•l'<I ""II •" ~~ h t !'." , " lll<>1l • o! lno 11~rrv lroct 11\t Cll• ol Cool• Me•• Olllrlct Mao 0 I Cnv of CoJ11 MP•~ s~.1 o1 1 • c I• r.! Lo•!t M••• 1,., n~d (Uy DI Col!• Mtu •• tfl()Wn on . maa ot '"' Cllv of Co•t• ,.,... .. h herPll• STAI( Of-(ALIFO~N!I\ d•• or Ju (' 19n r..:orn«I I" i-11 ' 0100 6 DI •m•nd"" by lht •ddlllon 1hort1D a! t~e COUNTY OF ORANGE u E l~EE•I p PHl,.NEY Mltct l $nto11• l'!peords al Loi An1rln (l(P I t a <ltlCrtled Ill S•cllon 1 htr.OI (ITV Of' COSlA MESA CI• flt~ and~• ~II lo County (Ol IOfn I SECTION J Thi• Orllln1M• oll•ll l•IO I EILEEN P PHINNEY (lb (INl rl (.l~r• DI t~f C IV Coull< I EXCl:PTIWG tt>e••'••rn !he Sou"' 1 t llKI I nd bf In lull lo•t• !hlrlV fJJ) dAY• !hr Cll• DI Ca.11 Mtlt All<! •• ot• ( 0 I~• ( IY"' (O\t~ MO>• of I•" •J convt vfd 10 '"' O•onet C""nh ''""' •<Id elltr lh o•u•o• •<Id o•llll' to Cl•rl ol thr CllY Counclt cl 1he Cllv ~I "vbl •nod o ~flQ~ cn~•I D• IV Flood (onlrof O!ltrld l)y llt"" roco,d•O !~t e~olrttlon OI l lf1ttn (ISi d•v• !•an-Cot!& Moot htrt'I>• ~erHI~ lnar Th• •bO•~ Ju""]\ 1•11 . " l•l.>11 If LlG[Htl ---... DISTRICTING MAP ·--,... . -... ·1· .. ·· ,_ .. _ • .. ·-·"' . ~ 1 ~ .... ·--I ·1 :::::-;.;"' .. , ................. _, ~-'"-~ ·-""'" ·-- ... .. ., _,_,,, ,_ · 1·· .... -·-....... ~ .. .. ........ --. r. .. -· ....... _ ........... .. ... -~ ....... _ _. .. _, .._ . ..._. -"J ": ... : •• :::..: -: .. :-·~ ·-0/7 1 ,, lo m m du gr co ye le " " m w Sl fl h •b a Co a T r •h rn or c d' le ac as " ba de " 0 m al c B c c ' b 1h I a lo re b '" d d b ' r b l o ' ' DAIL V PILOT _;f You Need Good Program to Figure Economy By NOR~tAN ANDERSON °' "" 0.11• ...... it•ft You just can't ignore these fact.s : From U.S. on Down, No Indicator Can Clarify Picture "According lo our latest data. employn1ent tot a I• reached a 1971-high in eight Sou thern California countle.5 during April." said assistant vice president John H. Owens, administrator of economic research's businPss studies section. -Generally op l i mist i c forecasts for ~l ay business made a month ago ..• did not mat.eriaHze ; -California's total pro- duction of goods and services grew. . . but inanufactures continued to lag behin d the year-ago level. -Despite an unclea r in- ternational n1onetary picture, rising interest rates, con- tinuing hi g h unemploy- ment. .. ; • . Chief e co nomist warned. . . that the United States faces a six percent in· flation rate next year: -Orange County's cost of Jiving took a 1.2 percent hike. -Economists hope the sharpest Increase in the cost of living in 15 months is an ex - ception instead of a new trend. These are all evaluations from reputable, re Ii a b I e business indicators -They are tlaken out of context and elin1inate qualifying phrases -But they seem to lend con- siderable weigbl to a Labor Department report Monday in the DAILY PIUYI' which said : -.. recent claims of victory over inflation may have been premature." And then, of course, there is !he stock market which tells its o\11n story. with its fluc- tuations confirming, denying and qualifying the \\'hole pic- ture. These isolated quotations are lifted from press releases and news stories which come al regular intervals to this and other ne wspapers, from banks, chnn1bers of commerce and business research institutions. They reflect the results of surveys, reviews, co1nparisons of statistics, and a variety of other factors. In few cases does any one risk forecasting the status of the nation"s economy. An~ attempt to do that now just can't be done. Those v•ho view the picture optimistically have much on v•hich to rely : those v.·ho see it pessimistical!y are standing on just as solid ground and both sides reflect the na· lion\.\'ide picture as portrayed by the Ni xon administration this week: "But if the !President's Na- tional Council of Economic Ad11i sers) was cautious. some other administration officials were not " It was the Purchasing 1\1anagement Associatic:i for Orange County which had an optimistic forecast a month ago. That forecast did not, ac- cording lo their next monthly survey, stand up, indeed. the group's projection for June business is just "not en- couraging.'' COl'itPANY R EPORTS They report:' ''Both production and new orders fell cifr in !\1ay. The employznenl intlex worsened_ Inventories of purcha se d 1naterials changed little but prices were up fractionally " But then there co 111 e s another evaluation viewing the scene differently. It is a survey of 12 leadJng tconon11sts and anu!ysts \\'ho make up the econon11c: ad- visory board for the \Vestern business-financial newsweekly 1nagazine. California Business. Almost unanin1ously they in- dicate the national econon1Y is continuing to sho1v a gro"·th trend headed moder al.el y Up\\' a rd. And lending some support to this optimistic outlook 1~ a • _ ..... f . ·--... , "' . ~ . . Lyon Van and Storage Now Allied With Transamerica Transamerica Corporation and Lyon Van and Storage Company ha11e annou nced tile acquisition of Lyon b y Transamerica for 4 I 5 , 0 0 0 i;hares of Transamerica com- mon stock. John R. Beckett. chairman of the board of Transamerica Corporation, tcrn1ed the ad- dition of Lyon a natural ex· tension of the corporation's activilics in the service field. Robert D. Ford \Viii continue as president and chief ex- ecutive officer of Los Angeles- hased Lyon. founded by 11 group of in- dependent California movers T.E. Drunllll To Speak At Mee ting .. Thomas r::. Dr u mm , recently appointed as national ombundsman for husiness. v.·ill make his first publ ic address at lhc Orange Co unty Chamber of Co mmerc e Business 0 pp o rt u nit i es Conference In the Anaheim Convention Center Tuesday. in 1928, Lyon ranks nints in size among Interstate movers, with 4S--.state authority and 1970 revenues of 22.3 million. Over halr the company's revenues are deri ved [rom in- terstate operations a n d specialized packaging services to the aerospace industry. i.yon operates tllrough a netv.·or k of 32 co mpan y facilities and over 500 agents around the world. ·rransamerica ;ind Lyo n first announced their agree- n1enl in princi ple for the ac· quisition in J uly , 1969. The transaction subsequently was approved by the C i v i I Aeronautics Board, which had jurisdiction b e c a u s e of Transamerica 's ownership or Trans lnlernation;il Airlines, a supplemental carrier. and the Interstate Commerce Com- mission, v.·hich regulates in· lerslate movers. Beckett said Lyon will be operated v.·ith the group of companies \11hich report to Dana Leavit t. Transamerica group vice president for finan· cial, title insurance. and relocation services. Leavitt is al so president of Transamerica Title Insurance Company, a major title in· s u re r headquartered i n Oakland. Bond Sales Sho iv R ise During May Sales of Series E and 1-1 Sav· lngs Bonds in California for the month of ~tay 1vere $31,221,252 as compared to $30,327.219 for the san1e month last year. Total accumulated sales for the first five months of the "Take Stock in America '71" campa i gn amount to $159,044,620 -an increase of $6,023.904 over the same period in 1970. Orange County sales con- Hopes Told For We st 111 Trading SAN F RANCISCO (BWI - Trade betv.·een the Fiv e Pacific states and 'ttarld markets is expected to r1-;e 180 percent to $40 billion annually by 1980, \Ve lis Fargo Bank said Thursday. In a new a nd extensive study on F ive \Vestern slates -Alaska, California, Hav.'aii, Oregon and \VashingtOn -the \\'el!s FargC1 report examines in depth their position and in· fl ucnce in v.·orld trade. Harold L. Bun1a , \'ice presi- dent and manager, Economics department, explained that the five states account for 17 percent of the nation's volume of foreign tr ade and J.5 per- cent of the entire \1•orld vo!urne. The report says the greatest potential for trade growth lie!'! \\'!th the Pacific Rini countries of Asia since half the total 1rade or the Paci fic states is already "'ilh this area. The Chinese market in particular could potentially .act as a pov.·erful stimulu s . e11though not iminediatcly. In \\'estcrn Europe and Canada, pros1>ects for trade gains arc also brigh1 since the import potential per person is high <ind rising. Jn Latin America, the report statefi , private in- vestments and political stnbili- ly v.•ill e v c n I u a 11 y be 1 ranslated into i n c r e a s e d foreign trade. 2 Co1np a nies Join Forces Don Koll C<imp.iny . Inc., Newport Beach bu \ 1 de r. developer. known for it s sllc- 1·ess in dcvi•lopinft buih-to-su it properties. and Uniurl Realro. a subsidiary 11f U n i n n Amer ica. lne.. hav e an- nounced a lo11g-rangt'. joint \'enture lo develop. rl't~jn :ind ~ell bu1ld -t(>-su1t industrial and comn1errial fa cihtics C;i!ifornia. Known /'IS Union-t\o!I, lhe California pa rtnership h a s con1plctcd construction of Its first project. the 28,000 square foot r-.fSI building at Fischer and Jt ed Hil l avcnut's in the Irvine Industrial Con1p!e i: in Orange Count y. Drumm, a I o n g l i rn e specialist in international business affairs. ,.,:jlJ discuss MAIN SPEA KER Thom a' E. Orum tributed $994,363 lo the state r----------------------, t he art of doing business with ------------ the federal government during a luncheon for the 500 Orange County businessmen expected lo auend the one·day con· fcrence. The nation·s f i r s t om· bundsman for b11.s1ness \.\"i!\ be lntroducC'd by chamber presi- dent E:dwin ll Finster. The conference program, designed to C1".plore n e w business opponunities in government procurement and foreign trade. as \\'Cll as small business, run~ lro1n I\: 15 a.n1. to 4. p.m. in three co ncurrent sessions. Loca l Airline A ide Na 111ecl SAN FRAi\CISCO -j B\\' l -C:. Robert llrnry, a top rnanagemenl figure for nearly 20 year!'i in the airline in - dustry. has bero1ne a genera! partner in Bea uvals. Robcrl3 and A~sociates, a leading management and t ransporta- !i0n consulling firm based 1n San Francisco and Washington, D.C. Iota! for /\1ay, :iccordlng to Donald P. Kennedy. volunteer county chairman. Last year the same niont h produced $834 .692 in sales and the fi ve· rnonlh total was M,2ll7,386 as cnmpared to M.748.957 record- ed in !he county for this year to date. 01her eneour:ig1ng national ~ales trends v.·ere noted by Kennedy ··series E Bonds alone tallied the highest sales total since 1!'145. and 24 per- cent more than 1n ~lay 1970. t-.loreovcr. E and II redernp- tions, al cost price. \11ere the lowest of any May since 1954. anrl 22 percent less than in fl.1ay 1970," he reported. "The c;ish value of Series E and II Honds ::ind f<'rcedom PT&T Starts Crt1 ck. Do1vn A Pacific Telephone off!c1a l re1>0rts that 1he cornpany Is stepping up efforts to comb<tt tht unlawful Ufil' of u11- ;nHhori1cd cred!l cards or unauthori1.cd lclcphonc numher.'I to avoid chargcl'. Jn Sant<i Ana, div1s1on nuinagl'r Stnnd!ct Knur 1, :.:11d lh:it froin nnw (1n. all new telephone d1rt't:torics 11111 tarrv a 11·arn1ng in !he introductory pages !hat !'.U<.:h 1111.~u~r 41( numbers 1s causr for prosecution. Kautz quoted !he warning a:; saying: "l\n~on1· v1olat1ng Seclion 502 7, C.'.llifornia Penni Code. by allcmpt111g tu <ivoid lawful charges for telephone serv1c.;-may be fine d up !-0 $5.000 and imprison<>d up lo fi~·e years.•· Jn ;1ddi!ion. Kautz said, lhe cnn1pany Is l:ik1ng strp' lo posL th e \1•aming in public phnnl! boo ths. Finster said that Dru1n1n. 11.·ith a!n1ost three <lecades or service in busin ess-oriented federal agencies, is w e 11 qualified to ser11e as a com- municalions interface bcl\.\·een government and the nation's business community. Since 1952, l·lcnry has been, successively: execut ive vire presidenl, Bonanza Air Lines: president, Pacific Air Lines. and president of Air West Inc. Shares out standing at the end '-----------------------'! of 1\1ay reached ;inother ;ill- • time record of $53.4 billion, v.·hich is more th:'.ln 2.1 percent of the privately held po rtion o! !he public dcbl. '' JUST WHAT'S GOING TO BE NEEDED IN THIS -REA? G.n•r•I Telaphon• Off lci•I• Study Aer iel Photo• for Guldallnas Pho11 e Fir1·ns Puslied To A 11ticipute Nee ds By LEROY POPE U"I l u•l,,.H Well.,. NEW YORK (UPI) -\Vhen the telephone company errs in forecasting publ ic demand for service, il's a double cm- barrass1nent. The compa'ly loses re11enue by not being able to supply the phones and ~ervices re· quested. In the process of trying to catch up, overload situations generally develop, re!ulling In poor service and di ssatisfied customers. New York City. for instance. has flad telephone pro';'ems for months. The company ad- mits its failure a few years back to recognize the depth of today's demand aggravated the problem. KEEP AHEAD The answer i! to kttp ahtad or demP.nd through sur vey11 that anticipate the scope of it. General Telephone and Elec· Ironies. biggest of the in· dependents, even bas gone lO the air lo do this. It uses small c11rp lancs, rather than the traditional phy s i c al surveys by automobile. in somr areas. especially rural ones. GTE says aeria l surveys not on:y are more effective in many in- stances bul also 50 lo frO per- cent cheaper. This system. ho\.\•evcr. is use less in a high density area like New York City which has f11r more variations in telephohe use i:tnd services than a small community. Jack Finn. who manages forecasting for New York Tel. ha s a slaff of 50. It make& thrtt surveys a year beCAUSC the demand picture ca n change wi!h dramatic speed in the city. SURVEY EFFECTJVt; On the other h.:ind, Del Moore, Operations vice presi- dent of Gtneral Telephone of the Southwest at San Angelo, Tex .. rinds the nrela l sur11cy tStt PllONES, Pa,e U ) report rrom the nank of California which says lhaL even despite setbacks in many econo 1nic areas, the statc"s l'l'{lnon1ic standing 1s 6.8 per- t'ent ahead of last year. citing specifically that utilities and :>er11ices shoy,•cd strong year - tc~ye11r-growU1 and pointing out tJ1at t-oostruetion has re- bounded in recent months. Additionally the bank points ciut that personal incon1c out- paced inflation. But the report qualifies. it was on!y by a fruction and certainly not to , such an extent as to ouh\'eigh corresponding increases in µersona! tax payments, and consumer interest payments and the general over·all rise in . , . cost of liYing. Perhaps the most pertine nt , from a local standpoin t e11aluation. is that presented by Scctrrity Pacific Nationa l Hank. which concedes thal 1nany national and local in- dicritors suggest an improving 1.-cono1ny, but, the report con- tinues reluctantly, "Southern California's employment antl unen1ptoyment lc11els fail Lo reflect tllis trend. SEASONAL GAI NS Compiled by the bank 's ('Conomic research di11ision. this study shows there have been some seasonal gains in lotril cn1 ployment J eve Is , however, those gains have been far below expectation. Projecting future ernploy- ment trends, Owens explained th<i_t S outhern California'.• economic and employment base will continue its shift to the nonmanufacturing en1ploy- ment sectors : se r11 ic e s, wholesale and retail trade and government. "We can expect a continuing aerospace e mployment dec line throughout 1971, into 1972 .and no marked 1mprovernenl un!il possibly as late as 1973." "Se11ere budgetary pressure on NASA and the Department jSee PROGRAf\1, Pa,11:e 22) Auto Club Picks Mesa Chief Aul~mobile Club of Southern Cali!ornia has named its Costa 11esa office manager, Gilbert Lomeli of lluntinglon Beach, as manager of region IV com- prising eight district offices in Orange County and some 114.000 member-motorists. Beginning his auto club career as Hedondo Beach service representative in 1957. Lon1eli subsequently \Vorked \\'1th the Club's Travel and Emergency !load S e r v i c e div isions before heading th e organization's Costa Mesa of- fice. from 1951 to '54. then attended Pepperdine Colleg~ 1vhere he received his bachclor·s degre!'. A natl11e of Los Angeles, he sen•ed with the U.S. Army A member of Town J-lall er California. Lon1il i is past com- mander of American Legion Post No. 373 and currently holds the rank of captain in U>e California National Guard. He is also a member of tllt Kiwanis Club of Costa A1esa. )'ou m:1y h :1vc }1c:1rd of energy short.1gi.:s -hit tin~ parts of the country. .!:>hortagcs th:1t include 11al u ral gas. c::in jt h appen here? As f:ir .1s your h ome nccJs arc 1c onccrncd, no. We'll be a ble to supply :s=imc West Texas from which we've b rought you gas for nearly 2.5 ycJrs. We're helping finance explorat io n for new gas fields there. But w hcthcr b y pipe or by ship, gas from one or more new sources s h ould be bolstering present supplies within a few years. We've been serving Southern California for over JOO years now. A nd we in tend to goon Iikcthis!or another century or two. 1 :ii! our"firm" custome rs, such as J-iomcs ~nd businesses and most jndustrics. (Since w e don 't h:1vc au c vcr.'.lbu nJ;:incc of g:i s, \'IC m :1y ha vc 10 interrupt de! ivcrics nlo rc of ten to ()ur industrial customers, w ho arc prepared to switch to other fuels whenever •• hrm'' custome rs' • Southern California Gas Company ' " "l..~•odlo•••I ' .. '"" 1'9"""'i CO'Po'O'""' needs requjrc.J J3ut in a few ycars1 ;is Southern California grow~. Clur present sou rces w ill not llC able to keep l ip with the e xpected growth. .i • That's why the G.is Con1p:iny js lining up added su pplies now. We're looking in Alaska. And C an aJa. A nd in Central and South America. T hese p laces offe r huge potential n atural gas deposits. W i th -. problems to m3tch. The 1crrain is either roadless ice and tundra or roadlcss swamp and jungle. To get the gas o ut, w e may . ~~"'"'-~ have to build thousands of miles of : ~ pipeline-being careful to m aintain ~ \ .. the land's d el icate balance of nature ... --.. ~. •• •• Or we may have to build expensive ~ • •••• ~ plants to l iquefy the gas at minus ··-••• ···-••• 258°f, then ship it home in tankers .., •••• ....... ' ~. built like giant thermos bottles. 99§ ..... ., ········~\ Another promising source 1s the -"········· .. ... W«:'re lnw•llnl in tomon'OW. I 1!_DAILY Pll OT ___ S r rrtJ:1 J11nt 25 1"71 PROGllAM NEEDED • • (Continued From f'agt :1 > t.la)' cost of living 1ncreast OVER THE COUNJJER • Commeree Sttreta ry or Defense norrnall} aerospaC'e s m:iJOr eustomers -means that mucti of our ~peciahzed c. O m p I c ~ uf /jtrosp:ice ~ orkers v.: 111 have loo l1tt!e v.ork and nu real promise or sizeable new c in Ii acts u1 the next }Car to pro v1de that v.\1rk he said Jl.1aur1ct Stans beheves The r<1te of 1nrlal1on has now corne w1lh1n controlable boundaries and this has been 11ch1eved '11lhout a m<1Jor dtslocal1on in the nn11on s economy •••-••llw1 In~•~ ouo111i...1 •I 1Hrod"'''"'' t AM 1 .. nt -•50 Pfk9' * .,., ""--,...., .. H "'•••u., ....,,to.wn H t•mm .,...., NASO L11 t1n91 for Thur,.d1y, June 24 1971 I guess lhat means we IJ JUS! have to \\ait until alt ihe au!horilali\e June 1nd1cators are in before we c.:an tell what ha s been rna iorl,1- d1sloc<1ted Uased on various cco1101n1c ndittllors 11 :ippe11rs ur l kely !h:il So u I he r n Cahfornin s :irrosp:icr rn1plo\n1ent 11.U! re r bound to its tur111er le\el n•~••nc• In :lny \ :ist 1 eh;inte or F 111.tn L l6 th:ll one rndu~lrv should not t1r ~~ great 111 1hr futurr as 11 ll1 cr v.:as WallStreet na~1rr •, A .. '" ~ AFA. P S l)l... i\t lhf' same t1n1f' the repolt 1 ( 1l11 H'S 11 hile 1nanul:Jt tun Ill! 11111 prullabl y cont nut to pl.i' a rnaior role in the Southland Cliatter " O n( A.!1~ •nc AVM (~ At>< I nd A.cu•~n Adtn8 AdU "' VI Aav llO• A. • 5 • . "" l mp lo~ men\ its dominJnce _ -~hould gradually g1,e 11a\ to • 1he nnnn1anufactur1ng sec1orS \\lll{h experts ant1C1pa!e \\di pro1 de the future 1n1petus for Southe1 n Cal1 fu1 n1a s Ion g ter 11 employn1en1 gro11th • Albeo o . ~ . B:ink of C:il!forn ta al so 1 e1\s the manufacturing 1n d 1ca1o r s v.:rth gtoon1 spec1f1callv t1!1ng decline in tr 1n~porta11on equipn1ent pro- duction for the ;o,1av dechne but agrering 1here y,as 11\tlr mo1ement any11hcre cl~e in tht fi eld So 1t is clear Iha! not evcn 1hc best of rxpe ts 1n clod ng the go\ ernmenl -ca o chrer anyone up p<irt1curl\ us ng an\ kind of relia ble report or f gures MO\ 11'G UP\\ ARI.> If there is a n v en courager;nent 1l can best be expressed 111 the v.01 ds of a l n led Ca!1forn1a Bank offlc1al who still sees the ec£ nomy moving sharply upward nroderately up\\ard were hi s \Vords and h 1~ en couragtng ouHook \\as shared son1ewhal by H.arold Buma ' ce president and head economist at Wells Fa1 go Bank tn San Francisco ~ho is still very opt1m1sl!c I m pleased with the ;ir lions of the cot suiner and the recent wage seltlernents 1 f th e aluminum industry don ~ iri d1cate to me an esca lation of "age bargaining v.:h1ch all seem to agree v.111 lead to severe 1nflat1on in 1972 A co~-1'\ E\V YORK 4 UPI) -The,. c~n Lb A der> E A (o Lno . " 1,;u rrl'nt market essentially min r('~at its behavior of mid 1965 and the 1967 1968 A u Bo• A. d E<>ul A •n 8•( AM (. rn ptr 1od assuming that 1he cur ~ ~':.n'G." An Bu•P r~nt economic Up-<."\ cle and A El l•b Arn E~P lung term hull market have Arn F n A F n LS not }Ct run their t.ourses ~:;: ~u~1 Spear & Staff says 1f so a :rnM;~ ~: total r.lecl1nt' of 100 points to ~;;'~dw: d ttie 85\l !eve! v.:ith1n a Jong ~~~;~ : te rm market rise 1s likely 1l ~ ~· M~~ adds 1'he extent or the decllne ~ ~X"l rn relation to price and time A na• In A ow H " • ao '~ould depend (,'fl ne1\s events A•P•~ sv A1CC. llol as they unfold spea r observes ~~ ~··scLr BCC l"d rhe market 1n its recent ~: dP~1c dt c hn"~ lias still not done ::.~ 1-1; 1 Be n1 R anvthmg different lrom its Bau•rt F pattern Jn previous bu l I ::~~ Ml< rnarkets according to E r ::•k "'i-i.F Jlut\9n a one lhird puJlback :·b~ ~·1° ?J>0ut \1hat has occurred JS: ~P;0:," of ten reg.arded as t h e 11 c~ lk ]Bcl<l-IS n11n1mum retracement 1 c y 1101u• E lo occur 1n a ma1or advancing :~~.:H phase It says adding that lhe :, ~ •• c. reaction remains wi!h1n the 11 k1 s • confines of a bull market : ~"n•11:;. llu<l<b M Buc~•Y• The long term market pie :~"~'~"' lure is still bulhsh James ~::~s" N Dines and Co believes though Cohn M Cannon 8 the short term picture IS can <>d P " " ' ' ' " ' ' ' '" ' " ,. " • " IN PERSPECTIVE So perhaps the month b} month surveys should be. put in a better perspective and the nation take heed or that ad m1n1stration spokesman ''ho doesn t beheve anyone should push ll)C panic button after the c.:!oud} even slightly negati ve ~:~ r ... ~t odd Jotters ha\e begun to in ~:~ ;:C' crease their selling on balance co • co 111 the last few days for the ~: i" G8: first time s nee tie recent ~!~~o~c.c. decline began and thei r in l~;J" 0 creasing pessimism can onl,y,,'c'c"c'_'c'c'_c_cc_:::::.:-"=-~c...:-·1~ bode \\ell for the niarkel " J)ines adds 10°/o NNN CARE FREE LONG TERM LEASE The aver age per.son appca r" lo havl' adopted a s1del1nej stance and is wailing for the mrirkel lo do sometrng Reynolds and Co observes Others pt obably m o r e astute' are e1!hcr upgrading their portfolios or n1ak1ng selections for p1 esent or future purchases of stock" that :ire selhng quite clearl} 111 upward !rend patterns or ap pear on the verge of a move up fr o n1 tong established ac cu1nula\1ve ba~e rormations tly Co"'pany 0parolMI Chai& 11' 000 ~ llH GOG all colh IRkR 1714) •42 0590 MAZDA ''ROTARY ENGINE'' 111e stocli ma1 ket is r lcarlv se11s1t1~r to the existence ijf the problt m tur rr1 tly racing \\ash1ng1on ~h1(h is no longcr how I 1 st 1r( a boom or bring infl 1t1on under control but 1 al her h 1 to prevent a. {lass c business dcpres:-;1on arcord1ns to llopp1n \'l <t!son and Co 11" cont1nu1ng slug g15ht CS°' In !ht face ( f lllUl"h pess11n1sl1c s e. 1 l 1 rn P n t 111 IJ C<J!f ~ rh ll 1 IS IX'111ng lhf' go11 rnrrH nl will succc-cd the :inah s! adds FOR INFORMATION ON TOYO KOGYO STOCK CALL 639·3131 835·0404 DIVERSIFIED From O ono• Coun , , .. SECURITIES INC NEWPORT SHELTER LTD A C• lo n • l m led Pat"" ah I> I B• ~9 Fo rn•d To Pu ch •!• A N~wpo I 6oo(h OH C• 8u Id "9 400 L MllED l"A.PTOfERHI I" UN TS 0'' WO !A.t " " ""'""' Pu ch ••• l u~ h 9"/o Cumulat1v• Preferred Rat• of Return F .. m l'le nrom• ti th• l"•rln• 111 ~ '• tu lfta lnt••m•• '"••II• ,. ~llt I TER INOllSTRJ F,~ I NC JOO ....... " " O• v• Sw to 1n N''""'' •••<h t16H 7\4/64S 2820 tn od•• r """'" ' n~ ttlP!" "" o e to ,. no a ~Ok a on o An o e to bu¥ o •• U11 h Such oft•• • m••• en!y ~Y II>• Olilrint ( r<ul• lnv.,!menl I m !Id t• Cal"'"• •••kl•"" w Ill annu• lftcomt " t •<•u .. '70 000 an<r • ""' wor!h " '"'"" el lU 000 New J.,.,tle /\II 1111'~ sl\ Jt'f'<; )1111 ng h'rtl S(lkl tl11~ ~nnr u \Cl lllt:nl ;:rpllt'\l!i "~a. n1allrt (f rCf..'OJd onl\ 100,000 Shares ::& WILLARD BOAT WORKS Common Stock Par Value S 10 Per Share Price $4.00 Per Share ("()f)I"" ()f thr ofrrnnJ,:" ('fl"t•nlnr ITlflY hr ohf:-i1 nC'1'1 [ri m 111 111 lr1sfr.nrd nr !IC lrctrd c1r3Jrf':'( • nlv 11 i>lrih'5 wherl t h•, sc s -eur1tlf'5 m y t~ Ji g;u.J ty offcn."d GusT, MERHAB & Co., l Nc Stnta Ana Ctl f PHONES ... 1s true in and C.:al1rorn1a and plans to extend ll !o other slates Moort' s operation rirsl aerial around Dallas square rr. 11 advantage over the car ts that photographs (al\ be -'>ll1d1ed u1 gre 1l det:11l over a period of month~ lor ser\ ice as lion growth !\It.;" RR!Ef f ll !"'S J ,Ir, 1-11• • ' " . ' . JI 11 lll<. 1)i,;. lJ'll ~ . ' MUTUAL FUNDS w• • w"' ~ ~·' ~ 1 11 1 n w~tlf fd •1S '~' W~lf ll 17 lll»w• Fd 111 ""~ ~ 1001 o•s T•n ~f " " "" . ' 190Ab~uF ~19Abblb - AP lh ' ~ \a•• No ~C1 l ""'" Low c ou en~ -A- • • ' " ' " . ~ " ' )91 J • "' • ' • • ' ' . " 'l ' l' ' " ' • " I' • 1~ ~· " ' ' ' • ~ -0 1> . ' ' ,. ' • ll •S> .. ) . ~· ?S " ' " 6] Ill )~ .~. . )) l• "° • ~ '°"• ~ .. ~. ·~: ,) . •71lll ••• ISi: J~ • 3.1'• .. " ) ,, . ' • 71 ' . J 1• ~J , " ,. ' ' ,~: ri ' ' " . " .. ' " I t 7 1 6S ~ • lfl ll • • ]I )t ' '" t i I} , ' " " " • • • " • • ,, " - . •• • ' . ' . • " " " •• ' " • ". m • " " • •• '" '" " .. ,, " " " . " .. ' " • • rn " " " ' " ' " ' • , " • • Complete-New York Stock List •• "' 11 Ult 31 ' .,. -I>-"' . • • n "• ••• •1 ~o • '" ~· 11 ' " . ' " " ' " . "' ' .. s~ 1 ~ ~ 6>o "' " . " " ". , .. " . "" ' " . , ,, '" ' • 181 l l•o ~" 46 Jl ... ' .. ... " '" ~­" . ... I l~I " l! • 7JJ J5 '" ,, . s l .. l 00 i • 6~ 17 • ' . ., w ' ,. ?S 13 ,. :wi,, • ro • 6~ s "' ,~ ~ J 8 ' • •• .. ' " ' ' " . l • IJ ' ' . ,2 1 "" 68 JS ' " 10 •• 110 19t, '" " . ' ' " 16J '16 • . " . ' 61 )6 1 0 08 ?l ~ 0 661 . " HO 6l • . .. ISl 15 ' ' ' " ... " " • . " 3'>6 Jl ., 78 .. ' . , . ?~ ~ ~l l • 29 36 . ' •l •5 • . " ,. . ' " -C-• ' " " " .. ' ' ' " '" • " " " " 27 60 • • . , ' .. • • ,. .. "' " .. • '"' ' ' ' " "' • " • " . " . '" " " •••• ' • " " . ' " .. ' J7 2< • • .. ' ' . 17 ·~ ' ,. " ' ., . ' " . " •• ~! 11 .. ... ,, ,,. • i ' ' " • " " ' • ' • ,) " " • " • • .. " ' . ' . " .. " " ~ • ,. . " ' . "' "'· • " •• " w ,, 19,, ' " • " ro ' ~ ' ' '" .. .. " . '"' ... " '" "• • '" •• • ' " ' . ., . ., " • ... .. " " i " . " ' . lO•• " '" " ,, • , ' "' • ' • " " • .. .. • • , " ' ' . ... ,, 00 " '" • • 'I " . ' ... ' " . ". " . ' . ,, '"\ , " . .. ' . " . " ' ' j: I ... ... ,j " 7•1· ' '" .... 17. \ 71 . -.. ... ~~ ,. " ". '" '" . ·~ I 110 '1 ti "71 •7S ~ Oii '°"' ~ • I 11 ... lJ o •1 .:i•. •1 .. I~ " 1' . ,,, ,. 11 11 o II i. IQ ~ .... •• • 46 1 It I• o ll .. )J 11\o, 11 l l u ll 5 l l Vl 2!5 11• ' ,, 2J 10 ,. •• 18•· )I 1t "" 61 • .: .: . •) 21 " 11 ~· 6 •&lo ~I Sl 100 ' " )J .J(l • ' ]6 • , " ' " , 2 121• ' .. J? 51 69 l1 ~ .. " " ' " •110 16 > l100 2S . " ~9 2 • -EF- :~ ~ ?11 10 , 8 ,.., •1 .. • " . '" . '" . m 6 711-'o " . J1 JO ' 0 . " . 1 JO , 1 J) • g, ~· • JS sa 101 • " . 5) 18 ' ,, . 11 ] • ~ " ' ,. U< 6ol 10 JS , • 28"' . " ~:it l •• I I~ ' " 7!l 11 • 68 lit<. ,, . ' ~I• JI ' ' 7l n ' " lU 42 ' .. 1 78'< l!O I " •II<· l • ~1 • • • o B ' 13 6 • " . ' .. " . ~97 31 • ·~· ~· , . " ' " tl 19 • J 16 • ' . " ' " . ' 2)1 ,, ' . I 1S o l • 1s:>. '1 JS " ' " , 1' 50 • 169 1l Ju \! ~~ • ll X~60 Jl ' " • " . " " , ' " " ., ' ' 1~ '6"' . " ' " ' " ~ 71"\ JI '' o • ~h • ' " . . " 6 Jf • " " IJJ 71 • " . •• 7•, I 11 'J ' " Jll 60';, 16 9 ' 1• JJ ' "' 16 1S JO •1 " ' n n 1 1 ' • lt 15 • -G- "' • • ll~. " , . " ' " • ;:,, ' " " • " " " ' '" .. " '" " " ' ,, .,. n .. ,, • • ". " '" ". • • • ,,. • " . " . . w . ... " " " w . ' . " . '". " • • ' ,,. ' " " '" .. " ' t • " '" • ' " " " " " " " " • ' " ••• .. ., • • " ~ •H ' ' " ' ' " ' ,,. ' ' " " • • " ' .. • .. " ' '" • " • " " ., . .. ' • ' • " .. •• " . '" .. ... • . " . " " ., •• " • ' • " ' • ' .. ' " ' ' . I l~ I ~ ~~ 5~ ,,. • • 7~ . ' ' . . ' 'no Jl '" " ' ' '" .. ' ' • • ... . '~ I• " I~ " ' :)~ 1• " . ' , ,, . ~· .1 1l ' "' " • " • , " • ' " " ' ' • '" • ,. " • " " •1 ~' .. . ' " . " " .. .. :p ·~ ' . l) !~ ' " ' I I O• . " •• 11 . , . ' " n '' ' " " . 5.J(I :n ' ' ' " " l> lO • ' " n1 1~ , " . ~ "} . II 61 • " " •O 11 , . " J IQ> 10 ••• ' " . " 38 1]., " " . ' ' ' • 761' ' ' ~ ' ,~ . 101 I , I] ?1'• l•l 1 " . ' ''"' •JI Jl 87 ••• ' " Tl? ,, 10? '' • '" ' " ' .. ,, 8 • " ' .. .. I~ I~ ' ' ' ' 10 10 ' 0 '" ,,. ' • " • " " ' " " • " " " " . " ". '" " •• •• " " " . '" ' ' " ,. . " ' . "" '" . " . .. " • • " " . " " •• ., . • -HI- ' ' "' • ,. " " " " ,ii " r. "' • ' ' " ~ " " " " " "' ' •• " "" ' ". ' . 1i1 ~· ~.! ... 51(i " "' ". • ·~ H'• " ' n.: ,., " . " , " • . , ,. . .. ' " •• '" ' . ·~· " .. ... ,. , ... •• " . ". "' "' 1~ " ' " ,,. " '" " " . ,. • ,. . ... ~· " ' .. " , . " " . 1)\<o -' " l ~' 1 " . ' " )II "• 66 ., • " . '" • • ~·'· -11 ~ ~ •I ... I 4• " "" , .. " ••• • • '" • ~ ' " ' " ,,, •• , " •• • ' , " " .-. ., ' •• • •• •• " . ... ". •• ., . ' . ' " ' . ' " 81 11 ' 9 ~,,,,. '. " • w. l?I l!P• 15 .... ~ ll l 6 •• 17 l• . " x 1 51 • IJ IJ o I 0 51 l5 79 ' 61 5) 25S J ' . " ' ' . ' ' ,, . ... ' ,, •• 16 JS 11 l ~ 11 • 1l • ' " ' " . " ~) 2• 11 •l • ll l• ' , l•, J. ' ~ ~6 ~~ 1~ ' ,, " ~ ' " l•l ,, 1 11• . " ' .. ,. .. 1• 6• ' , ' " . " 1~ J • 'JW •1 • •J 15 • " . . " -L-• • ' "' • " • • " 11• I • SJ J7 x 1 •O , . ' . 1 , •• . '• ... . ' ' ' " ., •9 • • l~ ... ' " • • 6 J JO • I I I • ' ' 81 SJ '-0 loo , " "OJ 1 9 • ' • " ' " •• • ' . ' " ... 'i~ •l ' • • 111 'i " ' " . •$ 11 • • "" " '" • • .. l1 0 ' ' . '" " " . . , ,, '" " " . ' ,, .. ro ' 19>o " . " . •• " . " " " " . 1J>. " "" "" " • " ' " " " " " '" " • , . '" • .. ••• .. •• "' ,. ' " " " ' " • " • • " '" " "' ' '" • • ~. ' ' " . , . •• " • " • ' ,, •oo " • • • ' ' " .. • •• " • >o " ,. "' " ,, M '" • " • ' '" " , " . •• ' ' .. • • ,,_ " . " ' . " ,,. • . • ' •• 171 8 ' n .. ' n • .. • 1M _, .. ' ' } -1 • ' ' .. .,, , '" ' . ~ i I -M-IT + tj '" ' • 11 • -1' • ... '1 +• • I • • Md"'\ Mltf>l M rt 8r MJnnM .1 nn,.L MU..C M 1~11: • MoP•< Ml'-(.1 ,,.,,,Put>S .,...,, _ .. ,....,h ..... -·~ -·· ~" M<)rlllnll Mon o Mon•an M<><l•I D MctoOIJ Mo ' MON'f MOO Mort• M..,us Mor Hor Mon~ Mt~uo M ~ 1T "" Munio d M 111ua Mu•1 n M ~~y Mn" n lv'u P~ Mu QQ Mv YO M•e !L N J11nt 1911 DA!LV PILOf Thursday's Closing ~rices-Complete New York Stock Exchange Li st • ... " ... '" l~ -,, .. ... ,,. JI .. ~ ~~ • • •5. -" -" > " ' " " " ,.,_ ' lJ \ ~ ... -fi I ·~"' -... ' ' " "' • "' " .. N.Y. Winners and Losers I~ """ I.• 0...-=1 liO 6'lili6'\lo -~ I• fl o 7 ... 11 • -•• I) Joi._ H .. Soi"' I> II 'I 1••• l•"O -11 lll o ~. lBo •• 211 ,. .. 11" -... " ....... .,.. .. -. lll il .......... _l'o ll31'4l1•ll '> ....... •n,,.,~,~-• SlSU!+• IO '1t 71 11i.. .. 11i, ).\ ll IU •H1!.<o -''3ol'loll~ !•l ..... 11 -'I-,.. 11~. ,. • 11 1 111017 1 1 ~ ' .. ll ' '"" !6 14 It I• 11 00 1 I o JJOU l >lll'I • .. ))OJ ~OJ •) I l>O l "-'11""2 ... ~•· ~· ,, ' ,. 11"" l.o • J.I • J.I"> I II ,,,_ •llo I o1.t.. u •l , ~l JI l11'o ll\o tJ t•otJh • ?I 11 I 6 "' li>:i. • • • 11 !t•o "-!WI -UV- • • • • • ... + ,, Market Declines In Light Trading NE\V YORK (UPI) -The stock market declined on relatively light turnover Thursday Richard A Pollack director o( research for Loeb Rhoades & Co said he v.as not alarmed by the setback which he v1e\l.ed as a normal correction from year long advances Newton Z1nder of E F the market s action as llutlon & Co desc ribed very cautious \v1th trader!i showi ng l!ttle in terest I le noted that at this point there 1s nothing to influence tr3d1ng 1n either d1re c lion Near the final gong the Dow Jones Tudustr1al Average was off 2 19 at 877 26 whi le Standard & Poor s 500 stock index shov.:ed a loss of O 28 at 9813 Decli nes topped advances 673 lo 51 1 among the I 617 issues crossing the tape Iv The automotive group generally traded narrow So did most steels chcm1t als rails airlines and atrcrafts Oils and electron1cs poin ted 1n both d1 rec lion."; Active \Vere Cudahy Co Bethlehem Steel f 1rst Na tional City Safeway Sto res An1er1can Telephone Pet In c and Delta <\1r l 1nes Prices \Vere nuxed on moderate ti acting on the American stock exchange Uni! In old Uni MM 1)0 Un NYC r Un!,_ Mn US F dG 1,~ US Pin ~ USF"'S l IH UI Frett 00 'I GV•l'" l U GYP l IO us neu11 IO US Lt11• " 'I "~ h I• u PCh 1i)O u P'Ch "' JV U Shot h us '"'•, '!Sme o J SO U ./.H I 2 .C tl,,,cn~f 1-n unn ur 1 ""' Un U! pl 11 Un UI pt SO ~n ~f'p I= Un\vtl' COl"'IP "/Olln I loll U 1 I la~ .o OjL FE )0 U M •P USM p SO Ult~Cot1 IC u11n PL 1 tl Ill •n -'• O< VCACOP Oii llC/l. (p pl 1G ,_ ~ VoMIOCo '° VFCc o lHI V ftCM'I In vlc1Com1> "< V~E Pw ? VoEP 111 .. VI EP p1n \11 l!&P o J Vo n1dn , ,l;.::o:Al'.l"::•''''''''"-"'"''"""'''"'''"'''-''""-"''''''""'*"''e"w"'''''a"...,_"'"''•"•"'•'"•mt•·•"•-I~~ , f ~ t. ... vw~ uni n .. ~ 11111 .. 1 Mltll\. .. -WXYZ- •• " " • • " • ' • '" • • " ' ' ,,. " , ~ " " .. • • 1111 •J• Jf ,, ' . ll 11 ·~. 1• 1l ' 0 " " 116 ~ • 11 1 j .. 17 I • •l 0 } ., 1•511 • ~ 1J 1.1• 11 1s .. " •• " 71 ,, • • • 19 j1 ll f • • • 100 ~ 61 l• • ... " 13 ,, ~ " , ,~o c ' . . " " ' . " • " ~~. ,, .. .. ., • .. '" • " .. " .. ". ' . • • "" "" " " " " • • ,. . 'l ' ' . " 2/h " . - ' ' ..... Jett ..... , ""~ .. _ c ... , ... Data pa<·, Inc. Joins I rvinc 011t )<il ff < 11ie Y.orld s rge<>l ~upplii:r of rl' td-Only 111tn1 1 H'S for dl'il' dr \t con trolle !i}'!>lcnh h 1s leased a 40 0!11.1 sq 11 bu1ld1n~ on 2 8 atres frou1 tht Irv r n e Industrial Cu1nplex (ktupanc} of tht' bu1td1n~ l<k<it~d at 18872 RE'd Hrll AVenu<' t:ostri Mesa l!I slated for M1dJtrc y,\\h 250 cmp1o)cs Th(' structure 1s presently undergu ng l270 000 w rlh <if unprovernrnls ll provide of iu.:t spate l<eserir<:'h llnd Dc1eloprncnt I abs Spcc1~1 I r v1ronrnental Con1 rn\~ a nil Aulom? ed Production I in Equipment Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List -A·S-• ' " • " " ' • '" J ' " .. ' l ' .. " ' .~ • • "' .. ' 1l'! ,, " " " " .. '" • •• .. .. ,. .... .. • 19~ • .. " "' ' ~ ll • ' .. 1; 1~ ~ ' " ' n • l l ~ . " ' . ' .. ' " • ' ' • " ' .. • .. ' '" ... ,. " "' ' " .. ,., tr: ' . • .. • " " ... • " " ' " "' • .... ,g • ,,. ., " " .. ' . • .. ••• " . 1••• ) ' " -• ' + 1l~ + ,. 1• ' -" , .. ' .. . l• l• 10 '' • ' •11 •11 l .,.. • • " ,. ' .. .. ' . ' " 1 n ~ 16 Jt JI 17 • ' l'• lJ • ,, 10 lO'h • • ~ 1•l'i. IJ 10t1 ' . ,. " -1~ 1l • • , • • " " • ) ' • • " " ' ' )I 1• • 11 1l 11 t • ' " " ... '" ' " • ., ... '" • '" ' • In ' ,., , .. ll " • • 1• H • " ,. 1 J !I 1 l I) . ' " . •• " ' • • ) • ., . ' ' .. • " .. ' • .. " "' ' ... "" " . ii:: • " 11'• '" '"' ,.. • .. .. ,,, ,. • ' ••• .. ' , ' ... " ' " ' ' " " • " ' " ... '" • ,. , ' ' . • " , .. • n•, '" " .. • n ""' •• .,_ ... ' " • ' ' ' , " , " ,. ,. '" " ' 11 . -" ,,. • ,. " ... l• • • I!• I I ' ,. .. II' 1 " ' • • ' • • ' ' .. • ' ' .. "' "' ~- ,,,_ '"• 1' • + ,,. "• -JI• 4-11 • .j. ,,, + 1~" -., " " 't;z j ... 11 '1-... ~· ll'• f, ~ '" Incl • " '" ~ ... "" !llcl1 I M Ill low Cltlt Cll• " . II l~ • l ll .. .1 l~ "° It • ~ " . .. .Sl .... ' ll • 11 t , . " ' . . " . " .. ' ' " ' . • • ' -" . 11 l• ' ,. ~ 6•• 71 l R; " • ~;». ?l 7• • • • 1i n 1S I o , .. . ' ' . 11 n . ' ' . "' ' " l l s • " ll 11 . ' " • " ' ' ' ' • " " ' • • • ' ' " • • " • , • • .. •1l H ~ .! • ~ , .. .. ' • ~ ,. • " " • J l 'i '"' "" '" .. '" • ji~ " '" •• .. l "• \~I.. '" ... ' • • ' •• " • ... ... " " •• .. ~. ' " •• • > 0. " '" " .. ~ ' " , • '" ' " '" ' .. " l••· • ... .. " " . .. . ' ' "' •• " ' " '" ' • '. .. ' ' .. • • , , ,. " "" '" ' " -'" ' ""-111.. - II~-+-' • " .. " • '" " ' " • • ,. . .. • ' • • • ,,. " ' . + ... 1•111 "'" Mltlll l.tw C:IM1 Cll~ Jtl II ' " ' .. ' !JV. " . ' " • • , .. . .. ' . " " " " " " ' • • • " ,. : , .. • • ' 11 ~ . .. ' " " . ~. '"' ... ,. .. J 1 't ; " " . ' • l J ~ . ' • .. 4 ,. !I . " ... J u . 11 "• ' " ' " 3' JI" ' . ' I 6 ]. 6 6 JI ~· " I I ... • • • • ' • " ' ~ • • " ' " • " .u • ' .. • ' .. ' " • 161. " .. " tt 1 10 • ;>t ,,,,, 11 '" ' " U1 I•• ... '" ... ... !Ho • ,. .. " • . .. " ' "r. ~·: ' . '1•• ... ' " '" ~i ,. •• ll•• • " • " " " ' ... " ' .. '" ,,. • ' .. ... ' ' ., ' ''" • -JM- J I o I . ,.,, '• \ • u ., 1J .. ''" ,, . ' ' . t I o IO>~ I I 4 lh . ,.... ,, l! I • I \ l •7 1 o rol~ 0 J ~ •• lJ I~ 1 ,. ~ i~· ~~ : '.! ~,. JJ l\ 'o l!'lo ,,. '• 10,, : H1-o -tt" J 1'1 ,,. I •lo f~o II '"' '"' j " ! " 10 10 '" l''' 1 ... f I... 11 4 ) !~ I !~ • 1: ;j .. ;~ ' 1:1>~ ll\11 11 ,, 1' • l• '°'' It 't .)(I 11, u . 10 • ~ •t-. 10 '"' ?J,, l • It ·~ " l\t l\'o J 111'0 11 1• 2 .. J. •• ~ '!;: 'I• I 111.\ 1f;~ J I'• /It 10l 11.t I ~ ,: ,~~~. J ~I~ 1f: " 11-,tt m: l4 2 " 1!" ,, ' n • J" • I J t l1,;, J ""' • ' j .,,,, lh • 'rn ,,. '~ ,,, ·~ I 1\0 !"" 'i' ,l!~ ll~ f 1 I S~ . ,. l '!:: '" . " ,, '~ '1 • J)'o 11 I I 11ie. Ht! 011b ) Hiil L"' Cllo11 Chi ' " ' ' ' " " " ' ~ " ~ • "' ' • • • • • '" • ' ' . .. . "• " .. ' • '" ,, "' "" ... '" .. '" ... .... ,, .. '" ... '" .,.. ' • x• II!• . .. oil 21 • 11 1<1 /o .. " .. ' ~ " . " . .. " .. . ' ' " ' " ••• .... ' • • •• 2• :n It • " . " ' ". , " . » .. u • . .. 7 l • 6 . ' l! ,,.,. ' . ' , "' ' • .. j • ... ' .. . ,. ,. ' ' ' , . 1 ~1~ " ' . ' . " ,,. •• .. U\• ,,. .. ' . -' ... "' '" .. " " " . • U•o .. "' '" ... "" ... ... .. •• • ' "" '" • .. "" • ' . " " ' . ' . ... • ' ' " ' ll .. ' . " " ' .. ,. " , ' -NO- I ''' s 10.0• I) ... ' ' ,, 1J ' " . ~ ,~. l~ 1: ~ .)(I ll ~ • 11 ~ '' H ' . " ,, " ~ ' ' . I I•~ , ' '° l •• ' .. • ' " • • . .. "" ~· ' ' • .. • ,. ... " • ' ·~ ' " • ' " ' ~ .. " ' • ' " ' m: .~ro • •• ~ • • " ' .. ,: • ~ " • " ' " l • ' • ' " " " • ' "' 1• .. " .. • ... • ,tu. '" •• ii:: • " ~. ' .. .... •• ' "" ' • " " •• Jl•• " H .. " ' . . .. " " " ... '" " .. ,. .. • .. ... • " ' .. .. • • ' ' ' ' I" " • .. " '" >4 " '" '" '" .. • .. ,. J~ ~~ , • • M• " ' • • ' ;; { • ' ' ' ,. " ' • ll~DM l Od ll1ovn Te oc 0 11t fn• 110 ll~m -. '" 10 lle1>M t 80• , JhPM t in "" llo> Ch( !1 .. lh•h I Hl1ll Ltw Cl•n . .. '"' ii •• lhd• J Hl1ll l tW C tit ... ,,. ' ' . ' " H~O '1 . " ' .. " . •• ll I ~ ' .. ll I'> . ' t 1Jlo ' " 1• l • ' .. ' '. • • • n ' ,' • • • I~ JO : • • " • "' " ~ ,: ' " " ' " • ~ " • • ' • ' ' •• .. " " " 1~" • • " ' • • ~ ·~ • ' ' • • • t llO ' " " . " .. ·~ .. . " • ,, .. ' .. ' . • 11\o • " " • " • • ,. • ' ) •• " " . .. • . .. • • 11 }I • • ... " . • " .. .. • r.'' ' • .. , l " " "' ' " " .. ' • ' • " .. • ... " " i ... • " . .. " , .. • '" " ... '" ' . " " • • • 10 I I • 1• 2l 0 11 ?i 11e o •J • • • ' . . JO 11.... ?µ,, • Jn. ,.. ?121 .,1 I I I 6 I , .. U ' ' . J• 11" 77 • J l I I I I <. I ... 1 I ~ I o • 11 ' 11 17 1 , lt1 i1 • ~I'• • 11'll 11 11 ~•16\o -r z- ~Su 80 ' " . ' " ' " . ' " .. '" " •C •• .. I~ J .. , . ' : 16 • ~ ~. ' " . " '" ' " ' ' ' " ' ,' • • 41 _JO " ,. " .. -. " ' '" • " ' • ' •• .. • ' .. ' • , ' ' ' " .. .. • l ,._ . ' ... ' . ' .. . • • •• • " • ~ • • ' " ' ., " ., .. '! " .. " • " ' .. • • .. ' .. • .. ' .. .. .. ' ' . • ' .. I • . : "' ' •• • • " • • ' ' • .. .. • ,(>I· ~ ' ' " ' • .. • • • • l ' ... • .. ". -" . ' • ' • • • " • .. • .. • ,, • ' • ' s 19 - • .. " ' .. .. • ,. • I• ~ ' • • " . .. " " ' . " '" " " • • " ' jJ " • • • • • .. "" ' • " ' • ,. " ' ' ' • f..i..":.iL T • L • ·1 Finance 'J Briefs • I ' • ' '\E\V lOFll\ <CPI) -Thi n1:11 K1 !.s vt r a JI !et!ir11r<.1 l c1 nd l11n " l!I :idua!ly • • • • ,. ' • • 111p1 ~10~ <1r1 rd ni.': Lo E I ll tl1 l1 r fl C Thi? rr )dJJV" vs thrrf' "llnl<: t<1 hf' ~ rnr grnrlu11 J 1rr prO>tn1cnt 1n 1hl r 11 krt s l nd rl~ g !unt n I !>uggc~ts 'Tl r ~t Js nf 1J 1 cw rr1ll) <ire rl( W bcJllj.( ~ I'd) tlln t of ti" rerhn1c;iJ nd1 t 11 ors irr bu!l1 h ! PfJ tn< btllf \{'S rh( lUlllf).'.lJly SflY1 I r rnnr 11 1 ll y ~ 11n1n1n r ac1 umul ti ~ r tcacl1ng 18 ~trrnglh th1 ough thP summer ' ind add~ this ytar promises lo he !ht> ~amc Thi nutlnnk fn r mo~I ~tocks appear~ hrtRhl ovrr thl' next two mtJnlhS l ;indt :iggrCSSI\{' purchases O( ltad1ng prrfQrmer1 tould hr rr\.li:ird1ng TI'O S<IVS S•~• !lo t• • t ~nol lc o ln ~s oh•r"•~o •~ •••tfa ~ d~nd1 ~ h• or"9c no lllb • ,. , a~n..,~( d •hv •tm•nh b•••d en lhO fl n111t ,_ ~ t "' '""'~onnu• ""' • • on S°'c 1 n• ·~ t11 d v dr'l<I• o ""~'"'" • not dlt IJ 'n&•d • eQU" •• (ICn t!I ft IM• IC ,_ n~ '"" no e• 0-A ,0 l~l•O C f~ 11 11-/\ftflUl l r~ 1 t"1o -V,, PIYI ttork div (!trod ~l <IV de n• <j vi 1 -~cl..,(! <l-O.,,l1e<1 or P•cl ro •11111/t 1:1! :!::: , •IO<k d II d•nd ._p. 11 • ! Y•I• 1- , ,Pto "'""~"" "" t •••m•MC•1lo 10• -" .,,. YI ~• on ri II • """" o '''° 1 r blltil>lf J , 11• t o-0.C • •O 111 "' d Ml ltr Mt Jt; '"' h-Dt< • fO or "" d • •r 1+oc111 ' 1 d. dfnd o• •O \IP ~-Drtll "' ot P•ld !J'> " th t Ylt t i> l (C\lm\I • •I 11'YI w tit iJt + !: 11 • <1111d1 l~ ar ti t n Nt.. .,,,. •- t \.; -+ P11d Ml, •e•r dlvi<lol'!d l!ni I"' ~ 1 ' --,.,.,.,. o 1>0 •Cl on t1~on • &• dtvl,,.,.., • 0+1 •1m••lln1 -0.C.. od 0 P• d n 1m ., 11, ~!~ -" • 1 <'(I< <11• 11•"41 1-P1 d n • ox~ dur .,.. 'l' "Ill ti "'" •d t••n •I ut 01'1 ""d vlatl'ltl "-•e<r ""°' 1""16" 0•• ... 1 '• -\• o-S1fu In !y l ~ ~ _ , C~I i.-•-Ee dl•l<1111d •-E• di .... to """" •1>0 1••• 11> I ! ••-d i Ew d1•I .. -" o Dulflln •r-E• • o~' •w-w tll(l\lt .,., .. ~ -+ "' Ill • WW WJ ~ Wf on • ~-W,,.,. di~ • , D\I Id. " WP>tn n utd. nd-NtYf dW ,, dll ., ' '!"~· •-ln h.olh o t•c '"""""'~ • .,,, 1>11 nt "11t1n "" un~• ~. l'llnkNP!t Y •t• or •t«J f •• • wmt<I ~• \It~ '"~ '~ pan " • E• ~ • '" c1-(1 I c1lt• i:: -! Ol-S 1m,..d 1-0tl If> ! I '!-M• \I •• J -n bimd1 nt•o •~I ">' "''" td ev '""'"' , 1 1" nll--k•, dlY dt lvtrY •-1!1 ""1rr1ntt. >'' 1 IOul !II Oro 1• . -. • .--.. '· ·. j. • Starge11, Grant • I 2 Newport Me11 Seek Cup Defe11se Two prominent N e w p o r t 'Beach . yachtsmen have been added to the board ()f directors of the California Intemational Sailing Association, the group ihat is putting together a 12- inetcr !o for a \\1esl Coasl bid for the Arnerica's C u p derense . Thr Newporters are George Sturges and Bober! Grant. both of Newport Harbor Yachl Club. Peter Davis, commodore or NHYC is president of CISA and one of the spearheads to build a \Vest Coa~t 12-meter. find good pC()plc l'lsc1l'here," said Trt·ptC', addi ng that some technical i1eJp n1a y have to con1e fro.n the East Coast . Trepte s;iid Lhe New York Yach! Club"s decision to delay the next A1nerica's Cu p defense until 1 97~ was a ,::real boost to the \\lest Coast efforL. "We d1dn 'l think lh!! request for a de.lay ~·ould have much of a chance But it 's a real bless ing , \Ve're a I w a y s fighting lime." said Treple . , Most From Coast • 69 Boats Vie iri Transpqc .. There will be 69 boats in the 1!171 'l'ranspac race from Los Angeles to Honolulu starting J uly 4, and 39 of them wre built in the Newport-Costa Mesa. area. Ten boats in the race will be Oying the colors of the Newport Harb.or yacht cluhs and will be n1Rnned by lO<'al crews. In addlti1Jn, several other boats In the race will be manned by local crews . There y,·ilJ be 25 Cal boats in the race, 14 of which will be the fained Cal-40s which ha\'e copped -0verall ha n di c <'· p honors 111 the last three •rran&pac races. Cal boats are desigued by C. W i I J i a 1n Lapworth of Nev.•port Beach and built by Jensen Marine or Costa Mesa. that battled down tu the wire Bl Diamond Head in the !9G9 race. be John MdntYre11 69·foot Baruna·f.formerty 72 feet l arrd Larry> Doheny·s· 7>.fOot ketch Kamalii. Local yachts scl)eduled to :;tart in tile race ar~: ALICE .. Cal-39 sloop , Pattl Loveridge, NHYC. BLUE STREAK, c 2. I. :.9 sloop, Gary Myers, NHYC. , DOROTHY 0, Columbi;i-Sf sloup, R ob er t Beauchamp, NllYC. ., E N C 'J R ~; . Columbil·~ sloop. Dick B!atterman, Bill Lawhorn . llerb Hiley. Fred r 111acDona1d, Balboa YC. ~ ' KIALOA ll. 73-fool vaw l, J11n Kilroy , NHYC. LOCO VlENTE 1l, C:olunibia-50 sloop, Jim Seals, B\'C. • Gene Trepte, veteran San Diego yachJ,s1nan h a s been named as manager of the syn- dicate which will monut the potential \Vest Coast def~nder. Tv.·o of the lmrnediate ques- tions racing the group is th~ budget and finding a naval architect. Then co mes con- struction. COAST GUARD RADIOMAN STANDS WATCH AT POINT VICENTE STATION Other locally produced boats \\·ill be nine Columbia, lour Ericsons and one Schock. The other four 7lfooters v.-tlJ be Jim Kilroy·s y~w l Kialoa II!, from J\1ew11c1rt H:irbor. Huey Long·s Ondi11e , Ne York : Tom Clark's cuttrr Buccaneer. New Zealand. ?.11d Loi Kill<im's Graybeard, V<:n- C.'ouver. NALU IV . 48-foot sl0<lPt The facl that has allowed Tre1>te !11 go oulside lhe state F!'ank Rice . NHYC. Treptc. •s. accepted the position at a recent rneeting of the CISA boarr!. raises the naines of such designers as Brillon Chan ce c t Jr. and Bill Tripp. along with oa~ such !oc•al de signers as Gary G11a 1·d La11dl ubbe 1·s Highlight of the race will be the ... ,ticipated duel ror fir•t lo finish between six 73-footCl's, i11c.luding Mark J o h n s o n s \Vindward Passage and Ken DeMeuse's Blackfin, the pair NANIMAH. C:'.l l-40 sloop, Dick Plaan, Bahia Corintbl.?a YC. Pi\C!F!CA. 49.foot yaw}. Edward B. Isett. BCYC. \VARR IOR . 5().£001 cUlt'!r, Al Cassel, BCYC. •·1 am very enthusiastic and encouraged about how it 1s going," said Treple. "We have a lot of mon1entum now. and 1t looks like it v.·ill all come about." Besides the developn1ent of a 12-meter yacht. CJSA is also inl'olved in boating education and Olympic development. Davis said Trepte's n1ai11 function would be recorn· mending a designer a n d builder plus overseeing the campagin which will climax v•lth the !974 eliminations for the Alnerica's Cup. Tlv.:> board has given Trepte the apportunity or g 0 i n g outside the stale to see k help in constructlng the best boat possible. "Up to now ll'e have been looking only in California. Yesterday the board told me '''C have to get the right people lo win and can 't confine !he search kl California if Vi~ can Mull and Bruce King. Chance was the redesigner or the 1970 defender Intrepid. Until recently he wa, repo rted linked lo a Southern syndicate. Trcpte said the C!SA would announce the designer as soo n as possible. '"At this time 1 have to !ind out who is not tied up "'ith another organization," he ad- ded. (Olin Stephens, designer of such defenders as Colum - bia, Conste llat ion and Intrepid, is designing a ne1v boat for the former Intrepid syndicate.) Trepte will be assisted by CISA director Joe Jessop Sr., one of the founders of the proJ- ccL Trepte said a budget has been submitted which ls in line and reasonabl~ 11•ilh past costs. As soon a~ it is ap- prol'ed. the fund-raJsing proj- ect will begin. Mari11a del Rey Race Pla1ined for July 2 \V\ndjammer~ Yacht Club{)[ ti.farina del Rey an d Southv,.estern Yacht Club {)f San Diego have issued in- vitations for the '1th annual Marina de! Ray to San Diego Race which gets under v.1ay July 2. The race will be a restive af· fair From pre-start lo post- finish. Festivities start v.·ith an t>pen house at \Vindjammers Yacht on July 1, featuring refreshments and cocktails. Disposal Units Slate<l For Harbor Tv.·o holding lank durnping stations for boa ters in ~e1.•:port Harbor \1·ill be In· stalied by the County !larbor l>e;ianrnt-nt The dumpi ng stations \I ill ha1e automated p 11 10 ping facili!ies for small craft and !he li.S. Coast Guard 1'esscls in l\·e1l'port llilrbor. Both will br. i'lslallcd al 1hc Harbor Dcpart1ncnt dock a Ion b Ba}·side J)rive. one For use b.v lht' two Coast Guard cutters stationed there . The Coast Guard v.·ill con· tribute $2 .000 toward the total $9.400 cost of the installz.J.ion. A fee lo be charged recrea- tional boat operators For use of the pumping facilities has not been determined . The equipment will make 11 easier for boat owners to co1n- ply with new federal regula- tions that prohibit dumping 'l'<'ISte material into the bay or ocean v.·aters. l::arly on race day \VYC ha~ <'lrranged for a no · h o s t breakfast at the Windjam1n cr Restaurant, South\.\o'estern Yacht Club takes over the festivitic11 alter the fini sh of the race. The clul> will host a sleak·fry Saturday night. Trophy presentation v.·ill be SundRy morning. The finish line this year will be rnovcd lo th(' No. 5 buoy outside San Diego Harbor. thus elin1ina1ing 1he local knoy,·1edge required for racing inside the harbor, Tile race is ope11 to all vachts affiliated with SCY A iind NA YRU vacht clubs. All yachts must tiave valid rating certificates in Ocean Racing JCCA ), !\.10RF, PHRF. or ORCA . CertificRles 1nust be valid as of June 2~. I:;ntries must be ir11he hands nf entry chairman no lalcr than 6 p.m June '.!j , Sun1mer Sun Series Set ·rhe Bahia Corinthian Yac ht Club \\'ill start its annual Sun1- rner Sun Scr'ies of sailboat racing today. 1'he first series will start Friday and continue each ·week through Ju ly 23. These- cond series will start Aug. 6 and continue throug h Aug. 27 . Each series consists of four r;ices ·with one throi,•;out in determining I.he final results. The fleet will be divided inlo Class A, boats 20 feel overall and larger : Class B, boats less tho n 20 feet, and Class C Sahots and Flippers. Starling lime for the fi rst f'\asi; each v.·eek ""ill be at 6 p.ln. Ya~hting Angle Boaters For1n Fish,ing Club Now that the fish(ng season Is rapidly approaching, Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club "'ill hold an organizational meeting Wednesday. June 30 to form an angling club of their own. Beginning al I p.m. in the clubhouse, 1601 Bayside Drive, J ack Ruddis, skipper of the sportfi:sher "Irish Rover," will give a lecture on "Fishing 'T'3ckle and Techniques." Highlight of the lecture will "' fllm1 laken in B a j a , California, showing techniques he uses in catching his marlin. According to Mr. and f\1r!!, l.yJe Sandlin, in charge of the club's special aclivilits: pro- ft!"ram, the film 11lso touches on some of lhe Baja resorts and the city of La Paz. Mrs. Rud- dis will be present to offer her advice and knowledge of lhi.'I great re!l()rt area. Last sum- mer during one week of fishing in the Sea of Cortez. Jack and his firstmate Jean- nelte, tagged a,nd released 27 marlin. F'ollowil)g the lel'1ure und Hln1s. ground v.·ork will be laid fo~ the angling club "·lthin BCYC. As lhls promises to be a well attended event member~ a re urged to call the clubhouse for rcservallon!I'. Point Vicente Crew Plllys Vital Role Two o1her "goldplatcrs" \l'il l By ALfl10N Lt)CKABEY 80111~1 EdltK One usua!ly thinks or a U.S. Coasl Guard sta lion as a spot 1n a busy harbor with plenty (Jf cutters. helicopters. r i x e d aircraft and even 40-fool boats at I.he ready. Would you believe a Coast Guard station on the coast of Southern California wllh nont' of these, and yet plays a vital role in the rnissions {If the toast Guard'! Located at Point VicrnL. just west or Los Angeles Harbor , is a Coast Guard stauon thal has two jobs. (Jut of its cre1v of 36 nien, two are res1}Qnsible for !he upkeep of !he Point Vincent Lighthouse. The rem<Jinder of the trc11·. <.'on1posed p r i 1n a r i J v of rildionien . work the Coast Guard radio station there. When a niarincr disco vers he is 1n troub le and needs the assistance of the CQast GuRrd , he radios a distress ca l! on frequencies 2182 1 ;1111) and 156.8 fvhl). llis t·all 1 ~ rr.cci v- ed by the Coa~L t;ua1·d slation a! Point Vil'entf <1nd is relayl·d lo lhc I 11h Coast Guard District B e s c u e C{)ordlnation Center at L.ong Beach. La st year· lhe Pt. Vicente Radio Station was involved in inore than l.400 Search and Resc ue (SAR I cases. Acl'ording lo !\:Jaster Chief R;idiornan Robert A. Castor, operations in the station arc l·onductcd un an around the elock b<1sis. The day is broken down in10 lh1·ee eight-hour watches. While on wRtch, each n1an has a particular are<'! of responsib1llt.v TIK• areas the 1ncn \Vork :ire referred to as •·positions.·· Three positions ;ire 1nain- tained 24 hours ;i dny and a fourth one is used duri;ig the ((;iytin1e and as a h:ickup u1 !hf' even! of a brrnkdown I The persons manning lhc 1 f1 rs1 position relays distress l 1ness11ges and general traffic hy using the international .~lnrse Cndf' 'l'l1e \\'atch- !>-1nnder in rhe ~('l'Ond posi- tion is responsi ble for relaying 111: same type of n1f's!iage by voic e rather than rode The second position al so puts out five weather broildcast.""' day.I Chief Ca.~tor said Position No. 3 is n_ol nonna!l_v n1anned 1 • 011 a tont1nuous hasi". During hu sy times it helps to relieve lhc v.·ork load of lhe other positions. Jn this area, a voice broadcast is lransnillted two tin1es each day for !he marine ' operator (KOU) on 1natter~ of interesl to boaters in local Wfllers. In the fourth po~ilion. ~he watchstander rela.v.~ rnessages Fron1 1nerchant vessels to the I Automated ti.·lerchnnt Vessel ! Report System ( A fl! VF. R ) headq uarters in New )'ork. Ar-.tVER \Vas initiated so lhat Jnerchant vessels traveling Sl1ip Rock Race Slate<l Ship Rock off the lsthmus of Ca\.alina will be the weather mark in the fl)urth of Newport H arbo r Yacht Club'si Ahmanso11 Ser i cs this v.·eekend. I The 60-mile Ship Rock Ri:ice1 v.·ill st.art at 11 o.n1. Sa turday! off the B:ilboa Pier. The finis.hi v.·ill be off the Newpor~ Pler. I In addition to lh e Ocean l R11cing fleet race around Ship Rock, the Pacifi c H:indicap] anti 1"1idi!et ()('('an Hacing 1 Fleet wi ll !!:Ji\ a 391:1-111ile1 course fr om Ne"'port to Pointl Fl'rmin Rncl return. ti.10RF y,•Jll be sailing for the Elon Brown and Corkett TTQpliies.I and the PHRF will be com·j pttlng for the Dickson Trophy. around the world could be kcpl lr<1ck of by means of a Coast (;uanJ operated i: o m p u le r systern. It processes sail plRns Lhal are subinitted voluntarily b.v participating me r ch a n t vessels. then keeps track of them during their voyages by 1.:ornpuling 1 heir local ions. AMVER also has on record all participating vessels v.•ith a doctor 011 board so that, in an ernergcncy. l ni rn e d i ate assistance might be given. Aside trom lhe v:alch posi- tion s, the station also has lour reletypes thal art' used for the relay of messages to various Coast c:uard units. One. teletype links with the district office In Long Beach, another is an FW1 bRckup link so Lhat if the telephone lines <ire lost, transmittal of n1ess<1ges by teletype could ~till be main- tained. A lhird lelelypc is t <illed the SAR !PAC Sc<irch and Re scue, Pacific -which is hooked up wilh all Coast Guard district offices on the We st Coast. The fourth un it is linked to t.11l CoosL Guard units ashore and afloat in the !Ith DlstricL The teletype systen1 is used for Coast Guard ships , rather than merchant vessels b~·c.iuse merchantrnen haven't gone Jo the teletype system. The commanding officer of the station. \Varrant Officer Patrick J. Fl ynn Jr .. said they may receive •·srnokc letters'' or letters of praise for their efforts in certain cases. Balboa Boat Cre,vs Hosted Skippers and crews o r BcJboa Yacht Cluh's entries in the Honolulu race "'ill · be hosted and toasted Saturday night at the BYC c~:.:bhouse. The BYC entries nre Loco 'v'ienlc JI , owned and skip- pered by .Jini Sea ls, and Encore. co-o\vned by Dick Blatlcrman, Bill Lawhorn and Herb Riley. Another member or the syndicate is Fred MacDonald of Newport Harbor Yacht Club. Loco Vienle 11 is Columbia-50 and Encore is Columbia-43. Give yourself a brake ••• COMPLETE ., BRAKE RELINE ~. "-: __ -~ ; GEHi ' -'. T l~ 95 most American cars HERE 'S WHAT WE DO! e New ll11i119 front & lleor • Rtbulld Art Whul CyUndtrJ • 'ack fro11f WllHI lea1i1141 • Reuirfo'' All Dru nu e lleed·flu1h & Adiu11 Hydro11!k System e Road Te-st Car ~ ~ .~ ~::-.... ' USE GENERAL'S CONVENIENT AUTD·CHARGE PLAN no money down ••• months to pay SMALL CARS & IMPORTS 1395 TIRES :,','; Whitewall OATSUH·TOY OlA OPE l-FlAT 401)112 4no11 1 SI.Oil ] 520r1 ) SUMMER VALUES Blackwalls ( bl efl!• l Belted G78x l S 600xl3 s119~ET 1.56 E78x14 s139~u 2.0J P.S. INDY RADIALS! GENERAL JET RAD AN MAG WHEELS ----FRONT END ALIGNMENT Crooked wheels rob your car of maximum performance. ride, steer- ing a nd tire wear. We correct caster, camber, toe-in, toe-out to you r car manu!aclurer's specifica· tion~. and sa!ety check and adjust your steering. 011/y $8~~ .. St1ndtrd •nrt 'omp~ct /\Mt llCtn ~II .. L!MITED TIME OFFIR TIRES WHITEWALL ISIJqllt llemsl C1dill1c-llulc~-l lncoln -C~ry•!tr-J"a1'11 & M•tcurt Gil 71·15 Hll 71-lS l it 71-15 $299~., Sl .96 TAKE YOUR PICK! USED TIRES IANKAMUICARD MASTER CHARGE Don Swedlund • • • • • • FORD PLYMOUTH DATSUN TOYOTA IPIUI <I P\ •ntl n~h) S-HOLE MAGS AVAILABLE for 14 ion Camper' end Pick-up1, slightly higher. · .• COMPLETE· CAR CARE Since 1959 Hours.: 7:30 to 6:00 Deil.Y PHONE ,, 540-5710·: 646-5033 ·-·" -" • . 'rldaJ, .II.int 25, 1971 DAILY Pilot EEK E DER A Complete Guide ••• Where to go • •• What to tlo • •• . , fl ' . GENE TARDY CALLS THIS CREATION 'AUTOMOBILE FACTORY RECALL' 'THE ULTIMATE ARTIST' MAKES ALMOST ANY ARTIST OBSOLETE Intermission 'Mother Eartli' Hig hlight Of Live Theater Semon By T0~1 TITUS Ol lh• 0•11~ Piiot Sl•fl Another season of living theater has run its course in Orange County -and the 10 months just past have indeed of· fered more significant developments than most comparative periods over the past several years. P ressed for the highlight of I he season, one would be al no loss lo reply. South Coa st Repertory's phenomenally suc· cessful rock-ecology musical, "f\·lother Earth," . clearly dominated the ~n· te.rtainmenl page for its record-breakinJ!: C.Osta r-.tesa run -ancl continues to hold local inlcrest during its professional debut in San Francisco. ''l\-1other Earth'' y,·as the focal point of a fine SCR season that included another wo rld pren1ierc, "Snowman in the Empty Closet .'' and a compelling production of ''Indians." The rompany also made a bid for a \Vider audience by including for the first time, some pl ays previously staged by the co1n1nunity theaters. AROUNO TllE COl\li\IUNITV theater circuit. there was ;i sense of transition. The past season tested the staying ]lO\\'er of tbe five new groups born in early 1970, with the resultant demise of three of them -Huntington Deach's Ensemble anct Nifty theaters a~d . apparentl y, the Tustin Community Theater. The two survivors -the Irvine Com- munity Theater and the Ana-?i-1odjeska Players -lightened their grips on their respective audiences, particularly the more active Irvine group which increased rapidly in popularity as the season pro- gressed. Among the older, more established WEEKENDE R INSIDE F EATURES Friday, June is, 1971 • The motion . pict.ure, "Wild Rov· ers," starring Ryan O'Nea l and \Vllliam Holden. is reviewed in the Weekender today on Page 31. In the Galleries Page H Guide to Fun Page %1 NH Art Museum P11e ic Pearl Balley Page ZI Uppiun Show Pa1e. 21 Wayne King at Park. Pa1e H Gree.k Theater Page. !S Stan Dellpl1ne P11e. Z7 Jam1lc1 Page Z7 Ra Brandt Exhibit Page t7 Steam Train Rkle Pace Z7 Out 'N' About Pages !I • tt Tele"Vl1ion Loi Page 31 Live Tltealer Page 31 Padll1 neater Page 31 ''Wiid Rovers" Pare 31 Zsa Zsa Gabor Party Pip 31 G•kle to Mollies P11e I I groups waves also were being made. The Laguna Moulton Playhouse took a sharp nosedive but righted itself in midseason and now appears to be broadening its au· dience appeal. 'fhe Huntington Beach J>tayhousc took a big step forward with four highly popular productions and plans lo increase its schedule to five next season. The Westminster Community Theater had its. ups and downs. missing the mark v.•ifh 11\'0 comedies. but excelling with a pair of exceptional dramas. TllE Wll\'DS OF' CHANGE v.·cre scented particularly in the areas of Lido Tsle and Santa Ana. The Lido players continued to upgrade their artistic pro- duct ~·ilh two excellent comedies. while the Santa Ana Players. after a less than inspiring .season. revamped their board of directors in an ay,·ards banquet upheaval. 'fhe ~an Clemente Community Theater continued to p!ace its accent on comedy, as did the Costa t.·lesa Civic Playhouse, \\'ilh both groups coming up with at least one big y,•inner. Two north county playhouses. Fullerton's Footlighters and the Ana-Modjeska Players, offered well balanced seasons. The highlights or lhe season~ \Vell, omitting any wh ich might draw conflict of interest charges, lhey were Jrvirlt's "A View From the Bridge." Costa Mesa's ''!Jere Lies Jeremy Troy," Lido's "You Kno\I' t Can't Hear You When the \Vater's Running," San Clemente's "Who'll Save lhe Plowboy?" Huntington Beach's ''Rashomon,'· 'Yestminster's "David and Lisa" and "The Big Knife,'' Laguna's ''Look Homeward, Angel," Santa Ana's ''Doctor Cook's Garden" and Fullerton's "The Sound of Music." Those of tM above which were produced during the 1971 portion of the season (all but 1\1-'0, come to think of it) y,•ill he among the front runners in December when this column picks out lhe year's top 10 and passes out Distinguished Performance a w a r d s . Judging by the early entries, this year'• task may be lhe most difficult of all. Gree k Theater's 'Pinocchio' Set The delighUul musical version of Reuben Burdrow'ii "Pinocchio" comes to the Grtek: 'Theatre on Aug. 16 to run through Sunday, Aug. 22. There will be 1 total or fourtetn,~m•linet ptrfonnances of thi.! childrtn'ii favorite. bringing in 102 life-size magical marionettes for tM occasion. Price..~ for all seat' are $2.00. 'T'tme!I of performances are: Monday -Saturday 11 a.m. and 2 p.m., and on Sunday, 12:Jd p.m. and 3:JO p.m. They're Just for Fun Gene's Machines Turn Students On·: Gene L. Tardy, JS-year-old Golden \Vest College graphic arts teacher, has found .a way lo beat a super:critical, success· oriented society. He builds useless machines. "Nothing machines." he calls them. They whir, buzz. blink . fl ash, grind, din,1.1, and clank. but they have no function ex· cept to amuse their crealor. When Tardy disappears into h1!1 \\'estminster garage y,•orkshop with a crazy idea, there is no telling what y,·ill come ou t. Over the years he has designed and assembled 25 "nothing machines·· simply as a \Vay to relax and un.,,,·ind, a pastime r ornpletely unrelated to the strains and stresses of his job. This spring he exhibited eight of h1!! machines in a mechanical mo\•ement show in the college library, much to the delight. of students. staff and facully. With some arm-t.,,,'isling he \\'ill show them again this summer at South Coasl Plaza. "My re\\'ard is building something that doesn't have to prove a thing. When J'n1 rlone I can throw the darn thing away if I y,•ant to. And the machines are hard for people to criticize because they can't .say lhey don't "'ork right." Tardy slarl.Cd his •·noUiing machines" as a joke when he taught high school. Drafting tc.'.lchcrs discovered they had on the prci niscs a mouse with an insatiable appetite for student drawings. \Vhen they put the problern to Tardy he concocted a device lo trap the pesky visitor. lfe gol a rube and a board. <1nd rigged up bells, red lights. a gauge calibrated in "ratklns," and a deadly harnmcr bobbing up and down over so me select cheese. Al the right n1oment !he hnm1ner was supposed 10 drop. and it was all over. Then an all- clcar siren was to go off. It never \vorkcd. Tardy laughed - ''ui:ver even ~ol close." Another lime, noticing the \ray youngsters in class always handled and touched tl11ngs. he mounted a panic but- ton on an 8 x 11}.-inch box. \\'hen ~tudenls hll the button the box popped open , buzzers went oH, bells rang. and a y,•hole nr r:i y or lights flashed. But Tardy in - corpor.1 ted no "off'' switch. and watching ~tuden l~ frantically trying !o shut it down \\'as really sornelhing. No1 all or his machin es arc useless. lie constructed fr om scratch a dimmer board for a theatrical group. The 9,00(). Y1alt w1il could handle an infinite variety of lighting combinations. The total outlay was $150, but i[ !he group had gone outside to buy it Lhc cost would have been more like $1,500. Tardy never plans whnl the machines ··••ill look like. They JUSt happen. He'll ha ve some odd pieces nnd parl:; and put them together, son1elimes rcnssembling !hem five lirncs. "I liavc no fnilures." he says. "and no harassment to produce." \Ir ha.~ one rule. He cannot go out and buy a parl. He collects old radios, TV sets. loc ks-anything 1ncchanical-and all the parts must come from his stock- pile. One of his most \'aluable source of parts was <in old p1nb:tll 1nachine he picked up for $3.00. Ultim11tely he \vant., to build a large scale "nothing machine'' in his hackyard from old sev:ing ma· chines. typewrit ers and other junk. "It will bt' a monun1ental curiosity piece." he said. "People will come out on the patiu and say, 'what's tha!?' and I'll tell thetn. ·r don t know. Go turn it on.'"' Some of hi.<: mnchines arc genlle b;irb~ at modern society. In h1.<: t:nlden \Vest llhow he ha cl one called "The Unin- former,'' a machine that talked but saicl nothing. He also had "Perpetual r·olot1on TARDY MAKES ADJUSTMENT ON MACHINE THAT WON'T DO ANYTHING ANYWAY Reatletnptcd," The Executive Pencil Sharpener " "Auton1obile Factory Recall." and ''The Ultimate Artist." "Robinson Crusoe's Island 1975'' Is JI jab at the hectic com mercial Ii~ oJ urbanites. All in motion at the same timf' are an oil well, helicopter. bank. freeway, and sweep radar. . •·1t·s great fun." said Tardy. ''Wf:itlt !;Orne people spend hours glued to tbe tube, I putter in the garage, and I've had an unbelievable amount of good leisure ti1ne. ·tr Pilot Discovers Ga rb en stcuigeler l n W es t111inste r r\o sooner had the DAILY PILOT ffung a challenge, carher this week. for readers to build or find garbenstangcl1 for the world's first Build a Belter <';arbenstangel Contest <'Ind Rallye than the genius of c:ene Ta rdy \Vas discovered. Tardy. whose story is told here, has for nearly 10 years been bu i Id in ~ garbenstangels for his own amusement and that of his friends. He calls them do- nothing machines. But any tr ue garbenslangelisl knows a garbenstangel when he sees one. And that's the idea ... lo let everyone see not just one but Tardy's whole cul· lcction. He has been invited to set it up at the great Garbenstangel event whK:h now has been scheduled for the entire week or .July 26 through 31 al South Coast PlaZa in Costa Mesa. Meanwhile. garbcnstangelcrs or lJlt, world are invited to unite behind Tardy's leadershi p and to show their pro1ves.s 'in building garbcnstangels (either like his that do nothing or some that do !1-0mething) for fun and prizes. Some or the prize money may even be American. Details will appear in the DAILY P ILOT as plans shape up. Taradash Again H eads Academy Daniel Taradash has been rMlected president or the Academy of Motion Pie> ture Arts and Sciences for 1'71-72. Taradash, who represents the Writeh Branch of the Academy on tt)e Board cl Governors. will be serving his second year in that oHice. Other officers elected for the comit'I year are Robert Wise (Dir ec to i 1 Braoch ), first vice president; Mlchatl Blankfort (Writer!'\ Branch), v Ic e president; John Green (Music Branch); vice president: Howard W. Koc h (Producers Branch), trtnrnrer. and Arthur R. Piant.adosl (Sound Branch), 5ccretary. ! I I I rr11U1, Junt ZS, 1171 PEARL BAILEY STARS IN 'DOLLY' In Shrine Auditorium St•rting July 6 Guide to F111i Long Beach Hosts Rock Show 'Hair' .. .:~ JUNE 25 -JULY 5 ElfRTH FAIRE -An Earth l"aire is being held weekends lhr'ough July S on the grounds of the Orange Count y Race- ~ay,, near the Laguna Freeway and San Diego Freeway ~unction for the purpose of providing families lhe opportun- lly of examining and exptorin1: widely diffe rent cultural in· fl uences. Working arlisls and craftsmen, ecology experts, nc111 produet!'i . a rnine. children 's theater and service club booths \\Ill bC' aino ng thC' part 1c1pants in the assemblage of 88 geodesic dornc!'i. JUNE 25 -26 KID'S SHOYI' -The ~lilehell ~l11noneUes \\.'Ill perform free Fri .. June 25 al I. 2, .l 4 and 7 30 p m. and on Sat , June 26 n~n. t, 2. J and 4 pm. 111 the mall at Huntington Center, Edinger at Beach Blvd ., HuntinglOn Beach . JUNE 25 -!7 CELF.BRrn' TE N!\'IS -The second annual La Cos ta rn11i- taliona1 .l\lotion P1c1ure Celebr111· Tl'nnis Tournament is !'ichcduled for .June 25 -27 t1l L;1 CoS!a . ne;i r San Diego. (Take La Costa _ turnoff from San Diego Freeway ) Some of lhe stars playiog will include Beau Bridges and his fa ther Lloyd , (icorge Peppard and v.·ire Eli zabeth Ashley, Claudine Longet, Desi Amaz Jr .. Hobert and llosemary Stac k. Abby Dallon, ~Iacdonald Care v, .l\lichael Landon . David Hartman and Elk e Somn1ers. General adrnrss ion . $3 : mil1t<iry and thos e under 18, $1.50. Play S<1t. and Sun. start.~ al 10-30 a.m. JUNE 26 BENEFIT CO~CF.HT -Tony Fllar1in Jr_ and his partner Guy Finley v.·111 be part. or a benl'/1t concerl for HEAR foun- dation at the Pa sadena C1111c Auditoriu 1n . .June 26 Joining the rock group will be Johnny Ray, June \\'i lkinson, 1he Past- Presents and sevl'ral oll1l'r stars. All proceeds wilt go to benefit. de;if :ind de11f-hl1nc1 ,:.oung.~ter~. Tickets may be ob- t:11ncd from l!l'.:AR Found11lnin al 301 E. Del f..1ar. Pasadena. t213i 681-461) .IU"IE 2~ Tt-:t:S DA :\CE -The \\eslm1ns1rr Teen Clu b 1~i!! hold a rl;inte 11nn~t !-,;it night s 1 for tcl·ns 15 through 18 years v.·ho ll1r· 1n l\r.-.1 nun~1er ur :l\tl'nd l:kllsa t;rande, Founlain \lal- lr_\'. L.a Qu int.a nr \\"l'stminstl·r lhgh Sl'honls Aclmission for ni£>nlbf'rS. S! nnn mf'mhrr:-., $! 50 f 'J:1~1ng for dancing on June 2G 1s lht' ''Third Side·· .JUJ'\E 30 -J UI. V 2,1 TRIP TO r-.'OR TH 1'01.b -Tc.,smann Planelanum al Santa Ana Co!lege, 1530 \V 17th S!, Snnla An01, is having a serie.s 11f public st111\l·s cacil \\'ed. al 7 15 p rn anrl i"ri at 7 pm The film, ··srann1ng the Sumn1cr Skies."' will br shov•n June JO through J ul11 The prrfurrn<inces are free hut re serva- \l(ins are requeslcd . l'hone ~4i-9561 JUJ'\E 30 -J liL Y 2~ STORY llf)liR -1'he l.ag1111;:i FlenC'h L1hrarv. 207 ;\', C0<1sl llighwa~·. L:ig11na holds a slur~· hour for ehilclren ench \i.1ec!. ill 10 a !TI J UL\"1 -8 ~TOR\. HOUR -The Costa f\ll:'Sa I.ihrary. 556 Center St, Costa ~lesa. ha s sehcdull'd :-on1e Sumnlcr programs for fhrldren On J uly 1 then' will be a .~lOrv hour at 10:30 a m .. July 8 stor~· hou r and film. "Curious 1;Corge Ride~ a Bike." JUl.V 1-4 llAIR -The Amcril'an trihal-rock musical ''Hai r" will ha ve four-day run at the Long Beach Audilorium. July I · 4. Tic kets on sale al the aud11.or1um and at all ticket agencies. J ULY 1-29 STORY HOUR -A slory hour for pre-school children will be held in the 1\1ariner's Library, 200$ Dover Drive, New· port Beach. each Thursday at 10 a.m. The Corona del Mar Library, 420 ~lnrigold Ave . C'.-Orona del r..tar will hold a story hour for pre-sc hoolers every second and fourth Thurs- day of the rnon1 h at JO a 111. JU L\' S FASHlON ISLAr'\'.0 CO~Cfo:RTS -The t-.-tonday nighl con- cerls at Fashion lslund will return for rile month~ of July and August wit h Henr.11 !ir·andon directing the band. Every. thing from Bachar11tl1 tu Sousa wlll be hea rd . The 9:15 p.m. t;0nccrts wilt s1:ir1 on Ju ly 5, a night which will find all of the st.ores closed lor lhe holiday weekend, bul the concert will go on . Bring a sit -upon and enjoy music under tht sk.ie!. No chMrge. .IUL\' 8 !\URFER. JR. DA r'\'.CES -1"he Westminster Surfer Jr. Tttn Club will hold a dance on the ~nnc! and fourth Friday of thr month for 7th and 8th graders. The 7:30 ID 9:30 dance wll l be in the CommunU y Cen ter, 8200 Westminster Ave. Adm iWon SO cenL~ JUtY I!· 13 l.IPPTZA.N flOKSt.: SllOW -''The Wonderful World or Horses" featuring th(' Uippizans will be .~taged in the Ana· hcim Convt nllon Cente r Arent11. 800 W. Katella. Ana~im, July 12 • ll. Ticket!, St S.S. SG. may be purch11.std at the Arena boI office or from mos t ticket agencies. f or inform•· lion phone 63>51Xkl. , THE VILLAGE WEST f lNl ARTS I CRA~T5 Cl NTEll VISIT YILLAGI: WIST DURI NG THI flSTIYAJ Of A•T1 7tJ L..91111• C1111,011 •••4. L.,,, .. __,, .. '•11!111f-4•4·flf0 Hit Show 'Dolly' Coming "Hello, Dolly!", David Mer· rick'1 newut produclion of the record-breaking musical hit starring Pearl Balley and Cab Calloway, starls • two week engagement at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Allgeles Tu~day, July I al 8:30 p.m. nightly except Sunday, July JI , when the curtain "''ill riff al 7 p.m. Mali~ are scheduled for Thursday and Saturday at 2:30 p.m. Besides Pearl Bailey as the ever glamorous Dolly Levi and Cab Calloway as the ptnny- plnchlng Hor a ce Van- deraelder, the supporting cast include3 Ernestine Jackson, Marki Bey, Tina Andrews, Howard Porter. D a mo n Evans, Jim Watkins , ·Lil Greenwood and Nat Gales. Jn t h e Gallerie1 Ink Works On Exhibit MARINERS SAVINGS -1516 W61\cllll Ori .. , Nrwporl Beach. On ex hibi t regular bu!'iineM hours acrylic and ink work by Barrie Weslon, through June, SHt.:R.~AN FOUNDATION GALLERY -262S E. Coast High- way, Corona del Mar, (Forl1)et'IY Coffee Garden Ga llery.) Hours: JI a.m. lo 3 p.m. ?o.fon-Sat. The Junior League of r\ewport Harbor exhibit features watercolor and oll paintings by Rex Brandt, through July 15. BOWERS l\f'USEUM -2002 N. P.tain St., Santa Ana. Hours: 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tues.-Sal; 1 to 5 p.m. Sun., and 1 to 9 p.m. Wed and Th urs. No charge_ On e{hibit from Ru.satll Bright collection, coins depicting 55 ma jor rulers of Roman Empire, through June "!7. NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK -1090 Bayside Drive, New· port Beach . On exhibit during regular business houri, through June, watercolors by Elsie Lee Ritter, SECURITY PACIFIC BANK -196 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. On eihlbit during regular business boura, oil paintings by Douglas Deane, through June. Oirt>cted and choreographed by Gower Champion, the lon1est running musical in the history of the Broadway theater, has a book by Michael Stewart, based on Thornton Wilder 's ''The Matchmaker," with rowing lyrlc1 and mu.!lc by Jerry Herman . GREAT WHITE LIPPIZAN STA LLIDN COMING TD ANAHEIM Show to Pl•y Convention Center Arena on July 1 :2 ind 13 CORONA DEL MAR UBRARY---420 Marigold Ave., Corona de! Mar. Currently on exhibit during library hours, art work by magazine ilustralors, through June. TRANS AMERICAN TITLE -170 E. 17th St., Co!ta Mesi . On eihlbit during regular business hours, oils and acrylio by Pat Ingram, through June, St:aU are now on sale at the Shrine Auditorium bo.1 effice and all 11encle1. Lipizzaners Return 111ARJNERS LIBRARY -200$ Dover Dri11e, Newport Beach. Ebel\ Club's artists of lhe month, Marvel Coleman and Mary Long, will exhit>it their oil and watercolor pa1nting1, through June, during regular library hours. Art Museum Will Move In Newport Famed Hors es to Star in Anaheini NB CIVIC CEl\'TER GALLERY -3300 Newport Blvd., New- port Beach. CurrenUy on exhibit in city hall during regular business hours, paintings from juried Art Festival , through J uly J. The Newport Harbor Art Muaeum is o:i the mo11e. Mrs. Walter D. K. GibAon, Jr, p.-esi· dent of the boa.rd o( truatees of the Newport Harbor Art Museum .announced that after nine years in the Balboa Pa - v!UoJll tht Museum is mo11ing to 2211 West Balboa Bl vd., Newport Beach. The ne w quarters will have twice cis much space as !he prese nt facility and art.er eitensi~'e renovations during the sum- m~r the Jo.1useum will open its first show of ne1 l season in their new quarters. Schedul ed Qpcning is early Septembtr J971. Over two dozen magnificent White St.all ions of pu r e Lipitz.an stock will headline The Wonderful World o r Horses and Royal Lipizzan Stallion Show due next month for a se ries of perfo rmances iii the Anaheim Co nv en t i o n Center, 800 W, Katella A11e ., Anaheim, July 12 and 13. Now on a year-long lour of the U.S. and Canada, the presentation is the same engrossing spectacula r wh ich played here to packed housl.'s Jasl Jumm~r. In a dd i ti o n lo the Lipiuaners, the show's equine performers include superbly- trained An d a I u li i a n s, Disneyland Se ts Sound Of Big Band Nost.a lg'lc rhythms .. 'h d upbeal iounds of the present highlight Di.sn eyl a n d en- tertainment during the wet'k of June 28 when Wayne King and his orchestra along \l'ith The Be lls prove a .specia l after-dark att raction for Park gues ts. Pa lomino.s, Quarter Horses, Morgans and Amer i ca n thoroughbred jumpers. The lineup of riders reads like a page from a "Who's Who" o{ i n ter n at ion a 11 y-known equestrians. The While Stallions in The Wonderful World of Horses are of the same great Lipiizan breed developed exclusi11ely for the famou11 400 -year -old Spanish Rid ing School in Vien- "'· In the days of I h e Hapsburgs . these horses were l·he property of the Austrian Ro yal Family. Non-e \1•as e1·('r sold or given away . But World War II changed that. Since p = WAYNE KING N•xt Week 11t P1rk 1945, a me re handful of hne colts somehow found thei r way from the Piber Sta bles where Lipizzaoers are bred and out of Austria. Their d i r e c t descenden\s can be seen at ranches in Illi nois and Florida and, of course, performing the diff icult and amazing "Airs a bo11 e I he G r o und '' move ments in The \Vonderf ul World of Horses! Kids' Show F or1nat Told Format and contents oi lhe Chil d ren 's Tc I e111s1on Work shop's new reading st>ries for 7 lo JO.-yea r-olds \\'ill be ex- plained in a one-hour ne\\'S conference to be telecast by KCET Saturday, June 26 at 4:30 p.m., -Monday, June 28 al 5:30 p.m, and Tuesday, June 29 at 10 a.m. on Channel 28. Created by the producers of "Sesame Street.'' the read ing series will hegin Oct. 25 on the public te!e11ision network , Participants who will ex- plain the purpose and goals of the series include Joa n Ganz Coonc.y, president or CTW ; Da vid Connell. vice presiden t and execut ive produce r, and COSTA r-.1ESA LIBRARY -~Center St .. Costa r-.fesa. On exh ibit, during regular li brary hours, painlin&s by Barbara Jenkins, Miriam Wilson and Gail Carpenter, th rough June. MF.SA VERDE LIBRARY -2969 Mesa Verde Drive East, Costa r-,.fesa. Currently on exhibit through June, oil paint- ings by Bernadette Moore. AVCO SAVING -3310 Bristol. Costa Mesa. On exhibit dur- ing regular busines hours, paintings by Edith Scott and Ruth r-.tiller through June. CROCKER CITIZENS BANK -2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa i\1esa. On exhibit during regular business hours through June, paintings by Adele Franks. 00\\'NEY SAVINGS -3lill E. J7lh St .. C'.-Osta Mesa. On U · hibit during regular business hours, paintings by F. R. Ross and Phyllis r-,.1ccarty, through June. Youn g U.S. Conductor To Lead Opera 'To sca' When Puccini's o pe r If dation's American C.Onduclor1 ''Tosca," open!'i the Greek Pro1ect where he wor ked \l'ith 1'heatre summer season 1vith the Baltimore Symphony. Dur· 1hree gala performances, June 25, 29 and .July I, the exciting ing the finals of this com· young Ame rican conductor, petitioo. George Siell , wh!J Ja1nes Levi ne will be on the was on the jury, in11Hed podium. He has just been sign-Levine to come to Cleveland r.d by the Metropolitan Opera :is a member of the Cleveland to make his debut there next Orchestra 's conducting staff. season. This seasoo he will guest The new facility, wh ich previously was occu pi ed by lhe DAILY PILOT, will house a combined Museum art ren- !al and salt's ga!liry and shop v.ilere art. artifacts, books and mi~cel la oeous object.Fi of the highest qua lity w ill be availa ble for purchase. There w[Jl be work shop-storage areas and e ducatio nal rac1lilies for cl asses and lec- tures. \Vith the m ove lhe r-.1useum will begin an aeliv e progra m to increase mem- be rship as well as conduct a 1•igorous dri11e to raise funds for the Inc rease in i\1useum act111ities. The Museum hopes that grea ter visibil ity and rlexibility in their n e w quarters will not only increase !heir stature but will help build membership and public support Appearing-al the Plaza Gardens, King "''ill bring his top-hM'le band into Disneyland on Thursday. July I , for a two- week engagem ent. From 9 p.m. until I a.m. his highly listenable and d 11 n c ea b le music will echo throughout the Park, Samuel G1hbcin, prndu rrr of Fmntierla nd Stage hourly the reading series. from 9 p.m. to midnight. 28-year-old Levine, born in CQnduct the s y m p hon y C1nc1nnat1. began to slu<ly orchestras o{ Toronto, St. piano at the age of four and Louis. Dallas, Oakland and 1nade his debut as !'Oloist wnh Atlanta. He has conducted 01e Cinc1 nna11 Symphony when Tosca lor the Sa n franciscCJ he ll'a.<; ten Hos earecr has Opera, F'idel10 and Don Carlo been a series of highlights for Cle,·eland Co n cer t e l'~r since Associates and Aida and The Sound Ca~t!e Ltd. r 0 e k s Film highlights of the senes, The Newport Jlar'oof Art Tomorro\\·land Terrace from 9 v.·hich has been a year and a p.m. to I a.m .. "'hile the Kaui-half in resl'arch and prcpara- Pono Polynrsians bring the lion. \\'Ill include studio and South Sca!i to Ad11enturela nd's cart oon materia l from le~\ Tahitian Terrace at 7, 8, !I. 10 :i<how.~ now 111 producllon al In 1964 he v.·as scl.£tll'd to Barber of Seville v.1t h the part\c1p:11.e in the For~n-\\'elsh Nationiil Opera. r-.1useurn mem~rsh1 p has now For the ne \\·esl in new reached 1200. i\1embersh1p is sounds, The Bells make their open and il enable~ members sum mer Dis neyl and debut on to attend special pre11iews of June 28. appearing on Tomor- shows: r!iscouo !~ on art books rowland Stage through July 2. from two prominent New Yo rk Known f(lr their single "Fly publishers: discount on lravrl T.itt le \V hi te Dove. Ply," The tours: special lecture series on Bells v•ill ptrform al 9 and J l art by noted art historians and p.m. nightly, and 11 JI !Tl. CT\V. --.--------. __ ~ -'--' -----------.L----,.,-(,fij?--Operating on ils summer ;-J_._ schedule. Disneyland IS open ,. 1 frum 8 a.m lo 1 a.m. daily. Summer Is Here! crttia: bus tours to museums. On Sunday. June 27, Country gall!!rles and private col-Music Jubilee flows from lectlons. But the most exciting Tumorrowland Stage. Coun try- MGM to Fi f 111 ' 'Fir st T ea1n' f ' and V'i gor()Uj part o( mem-we.stern artists Bob LumM MG M has acquired the mo- benhip is th1t it allows one to .end Judy Lynn sing out al $, 7 llon picture rights to Jobn volunteer his services to the d 9 Ball'!'i "'The f irst Team ." a ~ an · p.m. no11el of suspense and intrigue museum in many ways-from The All-Americ an College I.ff. the e•h•.b•'ti to set in Washington, D.C. • !'i ing ons f\1arching Band , made up o( "The First Team.'' to be . helping in the Museum offlct. the 20 fines t ..... Heg e mwicians I H Art .. ., publis hed this fall by Litt e, The Newport arbor io P·-''ru'ted St•tes. eo· d c · II I '" Ibo uc v Brown an ompany, is set in f\.fuse.um Is sti n i.iie Ba a tertalns throughout the Pa rk. the future and deals wilh the Pavilion. Conctrt t•·mes are Thu r!day f d occupation o the Unite Museum hours are Wed.net-through f\.londa y from 1 lo 9 States by a foreign power. day thru SUnday l-6 p.m. p.m. The film version of Ball's Monday night 6-9 p.m. ClMtd Dixieland vibrates through earlier novel ''In The Heat or Mond1 y and Tuesday during the Golden HocJeSboe Monday The Ni ght." won f i ve the day. Admisa.ion is (rtt. through Friday. when The Academy Awards, including Decent lours are allailab\e New Dixie Rebellion takes the Best Picture and Best Actor. Thursdays al l p.m. or by1tiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijjjiiijjjji-iijjjji-iijiiijjiiiiiiiiiiiiiii special appointment. l • .. 1 ' Comic Wes tern HOl.LYWOOD (UPI) - Peh~r Stllers and David Niven will t.c1m up for "Wblch Way Old They Go?'', a comedy west.em to be filmed In Spain, AQUA PD TIO .. ICAL "IHI, 11101, ll:Off"n e Afric•" F•••• . . fff ... HUNTER'S BOOKS THI WIST~ PINIST IOOKSTOUS l'Ol 120 YU.15-SINCI 1111 Lo<1tocf At FASHION SQUARE IN SANTA ANA Phone (7141 543-9343 • z.11,. r.,, •.. , .. , 1;11.H U ,500 ..... & Pop1rt.ecb e White Cl•11ill -, •• l /Sl.H , e l l•ck T•fl• ••• _,, IS1 .IO J2,000 U11 ..... GrHtJ1t9 C.• e 0,01111• '-•11••"'" 2/Sl.le IAlGAINS ••LOlll e ll:oill Pl•lv ••••• -l /S1.H '"' w.._. "•,...,-,_, OPEN EVENI NGS 'TIL 9 f>.111. c.-lllM'lllfil9le '""' w1n1tr , HUNTINITON llACH ••v11ly HUit e L1 Joll1 e rhee11I• e 5111 F1111ci1c• I 146·J1 1J 1•1 .... -....... -. .................... --. ... ... ____ .,,_ And we're rea dy with "all the Goodies" thtit make those delicious FRESH FRUI T SALADS, "W•termeloo B•>kets" lo•ded w;th meloo b•ll• lwe have 5 va~ieties) and sprig s of fresh mint "FREE" to add the Gourmet touch. Here at Newport Produce you get things thtit give you time for the "Betich and Sun ." The salads are "ready tossed," Cole Slaw is made, Carrot St icks, Celery Sticks, Shredded Lettuce , and many many more ! W hy not try these new products in your home or business 7 Call us for more details! THOUSANDS SAVE WITH THESE COUPONS WI Wiii •LOWllll • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • ••• • • • • • • NfW c•o, No. 1 SM ALL • • WtOTI •OSf • • POTATOES • Sus. 13¢ • • • • limb S Lb•- • ALW ATS A FAVOl lTI • DELICIOUS • ICEBERG • Watermelon • LmUCE • • •· 5¢ POUND • 10CEA. • • • Limit OH • • • l imit Fl•• • Wltlo! Ttili C••P•• With Thh c •• ,.. • • With lhh CO•P•ll • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••••••••••••• COUPONS EXPIRE JUNI 30th These rest•ura nts dem•nd th• l inest for th•ir customers. That 's why th•y f••· tur• Newport Produce! Petron i11 th•ml SPAGHml BENDER. Newport; ALLIY WEST, Newport: HOUSE OF PIES, N•wport and Huntington Beath; VILLA SWI .. DEN, Corona del Me r •nd Hu nting tori Beath; GASLIGHT IROILIR, N•wport; 11nd ov•r 255 oth•rs. How 11bout your calling us 7 "Orunge County's f a.st(st Growing Producl: and Flow1r Organization" ~ N~!~Q~! .. f~.~~~~E 2616 Newpot't louleYOrd on the P•ln$Ula ....... 673-11715 67M 711 6714 191 "JS Yeort oj Produc1 K 11010 How'# "Whl:te qualit11 f.f th1 On:Ur of thl: Howe• ' DAil Y PILOT tT Travel Europe Youth Flood Seen Brandt Works on Display Favorite Harbor Ar1,ist S hou;s A rt lit S h erman Gnllery By STAN DELAPLANE PAl~IS -"Copenhagen 1s \\'here it's at this summer.'' That's the \\•ord spreading a1nong the un der-30 kid s. And the D~u1 1sh tourist people aren't sure v•he thcr they like 11 or nol. Passport figures shnv,i that of every teen A1ner· i<'ans co n11ng to Eurpoc 111 the nrxl three tnonths. four \Vilt be under 30. '!'he csl!male is 750.000. Bcard!i, guitars; lots of enthus1as1n, not much rnoney. 'fhis doesn't l'Ot111t the young Europeans ;ind .\ustralians and (:anadians. Britau1is 1'1t\'ING to gel ready for 3 1n1llton of the knapsack cro\vd! * 'fhe rush usually starts in n1id-f\1ay. But !tu:-: vcar the early birds fle\v ovl'r 111 . .o\priL l\1 ost o~ lhe111 are on S200 charters and easual S2 to S5 a day bud- gets. \\'hat can lhC'y expC'el7 llostels \\ith d nublc- bunk beds -but not enough of theni. London is frantically t rying-to Sl't ur a l OOO-bed camp :'il(C. ljrices are running ~1 .20 to $1 .75. Copenhagen open· cd a 230-bed hostel 111 a deserted factory. l)r1cc: SI.90. They've also begu n publishing a ne\rspapcr - ··use It." 'J'ctls young vi sitors about Danish drug 13\\'S and avai!al>le hotels * L;i~l year 1l \\':ls J\111 stcrda1n. One rcaso11 . there \1·as a lot of 1narijuana floating around . 1\nd Dutch police 11'ere sirnply nvcr1vhclrned by the nu1nbcr of young people. \Vhy they·rc n1aking iL Copenhagen. nobody kno1vs. It's one or those things that floats around the student cafes "Copenhagen is 1vhere it's at." * "Our daughter of college age is determined to go to Europe, and we are certainly worried ... " You n1i ghl tell her she'll have a LOT more fun if she goes \r 1th a couple of friends. I t alked to a bunch of kids last s ununer, and they all agreed on that. A loner has a lot or loncsonie limes. 1'hey meet people. but sharing experience -: 1\-ith 1rilh a stranger doesn't ha\'c the lift of being \vith people you kno\\". * '/'he s tudent identification card is li\tPORT1\N'f! Cul·rale excursion rides. Entry ln the theaper slu· dent hostels. J_,ol of free things, like n1useums. T our- ist peo1>le he re say An1cric:<1ns run out of m o ney faster than Europeans. Recause they start \l1ith a "er_v vague idea that things are going to be cheap· er than !hey really arc. Ju11ia,icu Po11ulur Tourist R esort S ]JOt By J\l URllAY J. Rf\O\\'N UPI 1rt••I E~1!or !110;..'TF:GO BAY. Jan1.1ica -J am;iica has {•n1tr~ed a:,; rine of the most pupula r CJrih· ber.n island resort:; r o r American vacationists in re- cent years. For, in acl<litlon to beaches 11long the north coast v.hit·l1 rank among the finest in !he \\'est Indies, Jnn1a1ca has mountains. forests. rivers and a 1\·idc v<1r iety of things to sec and do. One or !hr newest s1gh\sce· ing altr;1clions ls !he rcstnrt1d lrre;>.t. llnusl' 011 the Bo~c I/all Plointation. about 10 miles ra~t of l\1ontego Ba.v . \\'ho.~c da rk history has been prr.serl'<'d over the c1'n!uric" 1n lhc legends or the isl;ind . ITS LAST 1n1strci.-s \\<IS tht' fnramou.i; Annie Palmf'r'. th1· \\'hi!c \\'i!t'h 11ho pr:1c1l<"t'd black 1na_g1t' lcarnrd 111 h~·r early yf'.:irs lrnn1 a \1}1"1110 princess in ll.1111 ancl tcr· rorized lhc <'t•untr)1;11lr l\lth ht>r cr11eJ1y 1\nnic n11inlr;·1•d three t1u~b.1nds ;>nd unc-t•lllll••1t lovers and ~ICJ\'C~ bC'for1· ~h" hl'rS<'lr ll'as dnne in b~ ;i ~1a1 c in her bedroom nnr d:irh n1gh1 iii 1833. Thr frnl·~l rr~idcnf't' on 1h1' 1.~1a11d during tl1e 11ro~p1'rnus pl;1ntatlon dn_v~. 1hC Grr;1L Jlall 11•as left to crurnblc 1n10 ruins. shunned by Jamaic<Jns \1·ho fe<1reO Annie's <hippy. 11r ghost. rclurncrl nightly 10 1hc scene of her bloocly crin1t•s. No1v. thanks to l\mcrir;in 111- dustrialisl John \V. Rotlins rA1d his \\'ife Linda 1rhn S)X'n l alu1osl si:< ~ears and ;i ~1ul $1.S mill ion on rrp:iirs and refurnishings, nose Hall Grcril llousc oncC' ;i,gain 1s one nf the most bc<JutHul bultdlngs 111 J amaica. J atlendcd lhe dcdiC"a11011 cercmonv ;it !he reopening of the RosC Hall lireat House ~"~ a national rnu.~cu1n i n February. The re \\'Crc moments \\'hen 1 -and l'r.i sure some of the u1hcr guests -almost believed in duppies, too. IT HAO BEEN a b<>autiful day -wilh the sun bright 1n lhe clourlless sky ond a soft v.•ind barely r ippling the palms and other trees. Bui even as the clergyman !ilL>pped to the podium for !he benediction, dark clouds blnl - ted QUt 1hc sun and the \1'ind became chill ?.nd freshened until its roar reverberated lik!! thunder through loud speakers set up on the lav.•n. A sllg ht rain began fa lling when Prime ~1 inister Hugh Shearer ad- dressed the more lhan SOO guests from J am11ica and 1hc United Slatrs. Rollins followed Sh ca r c r 11nd. midway in his speech. !he rain fell in torrenL~ and n10!lt of the guesr~ -includin~ myself -sought sheller inside Ifie Grc:-.~ Jlouse. Later. rnv 11 If(' !old inc Shc;irer·s t'h{tlr t111Ja1).~('d u111ler him but hf' \\aS .l.<IVl'd frO!n a raJt IJy others (/fl lhr platrorn1 · Bl::irnc it un !\nnie's dup- py .·· said a Jamaican rrienrl . r couldn·l It'll whether hr w<1s joking or '!ot. EXCEPT FOR \hP lorn1r r sla1·e qu;1r!ers on the bo11on1 IC'vel. 1vhirh has been cun· vcrled into a ph_•ns:int pub. the Gre;'.I I lairs roorn s have been r(•SIOrt'd ;1nd ful'ni.'>hed as au!hC>nt 1cally as possible frn111 old plHns. dra 11:in,1;s ;ind o(J1rr dncu1nc111s dalinc bac k lo the !Ith ten1ury. 5on1e of the furnishings are genu1n~· 3/l· 11qucs collected by '.I! r .~. Bollin.~ during hrr search lhrough .J a m a 1 ca ;1nd clsewhl•re. ,\nothcr n1'w at!r;1ct1•1n 1~ lht' nvrr r111!1n,:: lrip on flu• ,\l<Jrlh~-1. Brae. near F:ilmou1/1 11 h1ch is ;ibout an hour's drl\·r lron1 tl·lonll'gn B<1v or \)chn~ Bills. It's a shortrr trq1 !h:in r!ro11·n lhc Rio Grandt'. :iear Pn11 A11L1101n on tllr cai.-1cr11 end of the isl:ind. \I h1ch I luok 1;1.1.! s1J rnmer -one of niv 1110~1 1n1·rnurahlf' cxpc;·u'ncrs 111 1hc \lest lndrcs. llul l\l:1rtha lir<i(' i·· n1u··h 'ln~t:r lli ,\1(1' Bay and Ocho~ H1v.!--Port Anl onin 1s i1bfiUI fjj 1nilus frorn the hitter and ahnns1 135 rnile:; frorn lhe rnr n1cr, \Vi1h n!her invi1cd tr:-.\·eJ 11 nlcrs and guest~. 11·e ~la,ved ;1l Rose 1/.11! Hul1day Inn. ;111other Ro I 1 i n s enterprise \1·h1eh \\'as form;-illy opened the day a£ter the Great !louse. 1'hcrc :irt ~ rooms 1n seven four-story ll'ings around lhe m;11n building 11·hich houses .1][ n1ajnr public areas rc!>taurants. night c I u b , <·uckta1I lounges .,.,d free-duty shops. THERE ARE a quarter-mile reef-protected v.•hite s a n d bt'ech. a pool v.·ith a bar on an •·isla nd .. in 1he rniddle. v.·<.iter sports and marine ccntC'r. ten· 111s <.'OUr!J. chi l dren 's p I a y gr o u n d and other facil·111es. There 1 s in· c·idcnL<1Jlv , no extra charge for children 'under 12 sharing their pa rents' room and !>2.':ly sitters are availHble. Jcemnking and soft drink machines a r e localed on all floors in the guest v.·ings. The cha1npionship IB·hulc llalf ri.toon-Rose 1-f<ill golf course is about a chip shot away and other land ~.nd sea ucli\'ilies are a v a i I ab I e throughout the island. 'Sk i Ca pc1· llOLLY\\'OOD fliPll r·rancc's Dan ielle Gaubert return ~ lo rhe scrf'cn for the first time Jn two yearJ to eo-- ~tnr with Jean.Claude Killy in .. ThC' GreR1 Ski Caper.'' I t hink it's some sarety fa ctor that !here are so many in that age grou p. Th e tourist o[fices k no\v the dangers. 1'hey're getting ready to forestall them -\\'hen t hey can. One of the Harbor Area's surfboards. The recurrent use ravorite artists is having a of these symbols by Brandt \and now other artists) ap-CJrie-man show at the Sherman pears lo be unique to the * Fot11¥1ation Gallery, 262$ E. Nev.'port Beach area. "Our son says he can hitchhike •round EuroP;-coast tlighv.·ay Corona dcl There is a variety of n1oods on $2 • day, and nothing we can 1•y ch<11nge1 hii r-.tar. Until July 15 ''Hex in "Hex BrandL·s Nc\\·pu rt m ind ... " . Brandt's Ne\\·port Harbor'' !!arbor.'' but the person<Jl1ly J 'vc heard fron1 some OOys \Vho SAID the.Y .d id of Rex Brandt shines throuRh b I l'o·1ll he on view Jro1n 10:30 ii on Sl a day. I t .sounded like pretty are 1v1ng. I hem all. Here is on artist ~n- And prices are al\vays going ~~· I can onJy guess. a 111. to 3.30 p.m. daily eieepl raptured \l'ith his subject. llul I'd say S5 a day would be 1n1n1m un1. Sunday. 111ere is great vilal!ty in his * rht• exhibition has been sunlight and mo ving tides and d' It k 1 his twil ight brings all the nic.>-F1gure Europe is g_o ing t o he: ja mme . . too . gathered from local col ecLors tion of the dav to a ~erene ron· all the juice I could ra1se to get into a Paris hotel and shows many moods and clusion. He c3ptures the scur· today. They arc \\•hack ing US $50 a d ay for l \\'O. ,\,nd-patterns u11iqoe 10 th is aN!a, ry. splash and napping of sails it's a roo1n \'O U couldn't rent for $1 0 al home. 1_ he Jll!erpreted as only Rex coming around the mark. l!e bathtub nee.ds \Vashin!!. ~1ost of the tile is fal\1ni::: has scouped "P the essence of " (( h d h J Brandt can do it. ~!any of the off it. A foot of plaster fell o t e. O?r \~' en. the sea and harbor 1n his opened it. The beds are lumpy. The hght1ng IS mi s· p.iintings have ne,·er been on hands and has spread it out 011 erable. But Paris is cron•ded. It's a seller's maJ"kCL \•1e1v locally and .sC\'Cral arc canva~ and paper for us to rAnd the only game in town, ~la ther.) 1.11nners or top nation a I treasure. * d Brandl says or himself. "I'm awar s. · ·111e [ couldn't gel on an airplane to ~ordeaux. No Over the past 33 years which no Ions-haired artist, ei r srals. It's hard to find a table at a s1d e1valk cafe. Brandt has lived in Corona de! literally or tiguratively, for I'd l l 'd belier ask a couple •1." 1,,., 51.,1• wh>'ch 1,, calls rather comn1unicate idea s If you 1\·an to rcn a car, you ""' • ._ lhan build ivorv towers. J\1y Of \l'Ceks in advance. l'O!ll~JltiC expressionisn1 has fOCUS i.~ on sh3ring my eX· * dC'\'elor1e1t distinclive pictorial perient e with others." He Th ls is going to be true of the most .popul•r dcl'ices in the sha~s iden-fee 1 s t h a 1 . 1 i k e th t: · · f' · Lo d 1 R 111c 'fhe co11ntrys>d e niay 1;0_·,.,, , .. ,·1h sailinu. s11·imming c 1t1e s: ar1s. n o 1. o · ~ " ., Renaissnnce rnan. the artisl b b l t l the St "'attled resorts Lo l .ind surfin" such as triangul ar b c el er -excep a mo · ., today has thre1· responsi il-l d · } t I' tugal a nd ,,,.,,... snorkels. !Jns a nd of rootn in l re an n1 t ie coun ry. or ,, ities: to be creativt>, to serve Spain sho uld be good if you go to t he smaller vii· society and to tr<1i n appren-- lages on the Atlantic coast. The resort p laces-Cost a tices. All of these he has done Brava. southern coast of France -are going to be Lau<.la11 RoJc \'ery well. in1possible for 1valk-in travelers. c01Jecl-0rs v.•ho have loaned * llOLLY\\'OOD <UPI ) their paintings and prints for Tourist offices in the to,vns keep a li st nf hotel i\Iartin Landau, v"ho starred thi~ show are : P.fr. E. Geoe openings. Go there first if you have n? reservat~on. for two years in •·i\fission: Crain, P.t rs. Lester Zillgitl, Th"l''re often in the airport or the railroa d stallon.. P.fr. and i\lrs. James Stoddard. ' lmposs;bte." \\'ill play the_ lead 't H t Bl"rock •t r SMOKED FISH IS A WATERCOLOR 'rhe red cover Guide f\1i chelin for each country ts "rs. e en . 1• • handy in the suitcase. Lists and ra tes hotels a nd role in "Johnny C 0 me s Jerome J\1uller and r..!rs. Joan Rex Brandt Paints Newport Harbor restau rants. ----------~t~lo~m~'~·-"~•'._".m~o~'~;e~-f~or~-~l•~le~'~;,~;o~"~·-l~r~'~;,~g~B'.'.::ra~n=d:'-____________________________ _ Santa Cruz Stean1 Train Expanded Sll.'D!ll 11assc11gcr I r a I n service on Californ1a·s hi:;loric Ho<1ring Can1p <ind Big Trees Narrow-Gauge Hailroad at Felton. Santa Cruz County. h;is heen expanded to a daily schC'tiUll'. J\e('ord1ng to i\:orn)an Clark. pres1dl'n\ of the Roaring Ca1np I.inc. ste<1n1 trains 11 ill de part lrorrr the Hoar lng camr depot lrir Bear fllounta1n every hour, on the hour . II A.f\1 . to 4 P.i\1., on a regular daily basis 1hroughout thr ! um rn c r n1onths. En routr to Bcnr f.1ounlain ste:im trains pass through prin111ive redwood foN!Sls and such riuaint stnlion poi nts as fl ig Trees. Ind ia n Creek, and Cri~7.lv Flals. At Bear tllnun - ta1n Passengers 1n;iy dL•1ra in to hike or picnic, returning on ;J 1;1\er I r:iln. Tl1e line 1s :i descendant of the first narr·ow-gauge r:ulroad organized in America ;!nd tr01ces its origin back lo IRli!t 8C'C<1usc of i1s archaic ec1111pn1enr. lhe RC&oBTNG RH i1;io,; Frrriucnl!y been labeled as "1\ll1cr1r;i s l\lhst Backward H:11 lroad · An cx<'ur..;1on on ~hr aritn1ue rr11troad offers pas~engers the rather rare op- purtunity 10 rehve !hr sigh1s :inrt snunds nf 19\h Century At11l1rlC:I. t ~1 ng 11190 "team !ueornot11·e~ ;ind pas~cr1ger 1·:1r-: nrigin~lly buil1 for 19th t'cnlury /\C"\':Jda rn i n i n g 1·arnµs, the eornp:1ny opcra1cs :-cheduled p11sscn~r r trains on 1\rncrica·s stccpe.'>t railroad gral!c'i over a lratk:ige which runs through lhe heart or rt•d11·ood grove.o:; first pre~erv­ cd for posterity back in 1867 . 111 1970 rnore than 100,000 v1s1tors traveled lo Felton, a 1111y m o u n t a i n rommunity about seventy miles south of Slln Francisco. to ride lhe old stcan1 !rains through the redwoods Visilors planning a trip lo Hoari ng Camp this ~·car can C)bl:iin 11 rree ll nle!abte by \\·riling lo : Roar- in~ Camp and Big Tree~ Nar- rO\\'--Gauge Railroad, f-~cllon, California. Bennett in MGM Film 'Percy' Hy,vel Bennett slats as the rec1oicnt or lhc "ultim:ite tran.splant.. In the British comedy. ··rercy." opening lhis week in theaters and drive-ins all over Southern Califor nia. Denholm Elliott, currenLly 11ppearing al the i\hman~n Theater in "Design ror Liv- ing ," stars in the film as the surgeon who performs the historic operation. Elke Som· mer and Britt 1-~klund guest star as lwo of 1he 1ndoy women In the p11ticnt·s rc- ju1•rn11ted lite. Nnt Cohen pre~11ts the An1do-F.l\.11 film, t11 Betty E. Rox-Halph Thom1J11 Produc- tion, released by MGr--f . T ISE • 'TIL .. ~ ....... _ ......... -. . ~--._ ...... . . ... ' . -. . . . . . . -. . ..... .. The wortd's newest, most magnificent sea going rem br iigs you a magnifice11t new kind of vacation. Your next vacation can be the lhrin of YoUr l1fe1ime. Cruise the newest. m ost lavish ship afloat during its maiden season. Enjoy a dazzling $28,000,000 worth of matchless surround ings, superior service, delig htful entertainme n t as yo u glide ove r tro p ic wate rs to Mexico's most fascinating ports of call. Because the ultra ne w S .S. Fairsea is ~~~:~~::~~~;!i~~~~~~·~~ _ larger and more spacious than curre nt .,., · ~ ":o/ cruise· lo· Mexico ships, it o ffe rs the ~ happy contradiction of more luxury for less money. For example. Three swimming pools. Two n ightclubs. Eight lounges. Two dining rooms plus s pecialty restaurants. No first a nd second seating hassles. Yo u d ine whe n you want to. Soda A·Go-Go teenage c lub. Nurser;:. Spac io us theate r. Eve n a g ard e n . And yo u·u also see Mexico from A to Z. Acapulco to Zihuataneio. Plus Mazalla n and Puerto Valla rta. You don 't just trave l, you vacation a s yo u go. pampere d bey ond be lie f by the m ost doting Italian cre w e ver assembled. Hold o u t for the h appie s t ho liday. Catch lhe Fairsea 1; Sailing Dales from Los Angeles: Dec. 17, 29,Jan.10, 21. ;:~;; f, _'ft-r Fe b. 2, 14. 25. Ma r. 8 ,20,31.Apr.12. 24. May 5 .Additional y 1972 sailing dates on reQuest. Call yo ur travel agent now! SITMAR CRUISES , Th.wcaion)'OU 1-to-,to~ 1000 Wiishire Blvd., Los Angeles. CA SIOOt? Phone (213) 465-8862 Maiden WOJllf! C.ilbcan cruire, 17days fromlldS. Salling from Fort Lauderdale to Los Angelei, Howa1ibcrU. •"' \ 18 DAILY PILOl ' N ' OUT WEEKENDER AB OUT B11 l\'ORJtJ ST Al\' LEY ORANGE COUNTY 'S Sunnner's Her c Toda y kicks off the first big "'eekend or sum- rner. \Vhether sun conditions at the beach deliver the crov.'ning proof or not, the year's fun and re· laxallon season is here having officiall y gotten un· der 'Nay last lt1onday. "f is the llmP., of course, for outdoor bar-Jrcues, outings to the n1ountains and seashore, art festival s and extra ho'iJrS of sailing, guiding visiting relatives through Disneyland and taking off on your own va- cation jaunt to Denver or Detroit. And it's the only possible time to engage in the ultimate leisure-do-nothingness. Those spending mo st of the sumn:er in Eur.ope \\1ill best be forgotten-for the duration, certainly -lest they detect our slightly green coloratio n. Granting them a castle or two along the Rhine, we \\•ho can't stray so far afield for so long can make do with another summertime diversion~ne that'.o; JUSt about as rewarding and is eminently available right here in our backyard. "" ( HIT THE TRAIL This gratifying pastime consists o! hitting the out 'n' abo ut tra il \vhenever feasible from no'v to mid-September. Because the season ·s distinctive <1uality also seems lo st ir a special receptiveness to fine food and entertainn1ent. Orange County offers unlinlited opportunities lo enjoy these plea!'u rc.~ to the fullest. Probably no r egion or comparable sil.e any\\'here in the countrv ha~ a larger nuin ber or top·notch restaurants and cl ubs. VARIETY A PLENTY And the variety is so great out 'n' ahouters can embark on a kind or substitute journey abroad in lieu of actual travel s being made by friend s and relatives. \Vilh on ly a little imagination you too can be catin ~ your \\·ay through Europe's gastronon1ical OUR ALL NEW I Cocktail Lounge IS NOW OPEN H•ppy Hour 4-6 p.m, 0•1ly LIVE ENTERTAINMENT PRlttCE Ot whA(es """"' RICH BRIGGS Guitari1t & Vocalist Frf .• Sat .. Sun. Nlthts RESTAURANT SEAFOOD ind STEAKS ICloi..d Mo11doy1 I 15975 HAl l O" ILWD. ST!AK·LOISTER FISH-SHRIMP • l:!!!! --. 1 SANTA ANA 119-,770 DON JOSE' /\'OH' A PPE,IRl1''G HAYDEN CAUSEY ON GUITAR GARY EARL AND SULTRY SHIRLEY BELLAMY ON VOCALS Enchilada •nd T•co .......... , .... $1 .35 Chili Rell•no · Enchil•d• ....... , ..... $1 .50 S.r'f'ff "'ith l lc.e. ho", Tostoditcn "cf S•I•• fl NEST MEXICAN fOOD AT l fASONAILl PR ICES e COCKTAILS e 9093 E. Adams (at M11gnoli1) Hunt. Be•c:h 962-7911 '· RESTAURANT, NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE deUghts in England, France, Italy and Germany. It's only a short hop in the family flivvtr to delicious Aylesbury duckling (Five Crowns, Corona del Mar) or aromatic bouillabaisse Marseillaise (Ben Brown's, South Laguna). Nor is it far to delectable saltimbocca ltaliana (11atteo's, Corona del 1'1ar) and \vunderbar schnitzel a la Holstein (Berlinf'r, H11u· tington Beach). ~ AMERICAN FARE If you prefer wayfaring closer to home and American fare such as Kan11as City top l!irloin or soulhern fried chicken. an abundance of places of- fer these dishes too. Further, the native accents ot performers entertaining in the area range from Broo klyn to Man il a. \Vhen all or summer's diversions are assessed in the fall . none \Viii be remembered more fondl y lhan th ose logged \Vhile out 'n' abouting. This week- end calls for setting the \1.rhole process in motion. There's a couple o! old maxims \ve've never had occasion to dispute. It's too difficult to 11hoot down basic truths that tell us variety is the spice of li!e and the only permanent condition is change. The accuracy of these proverbial sayings \vas pointed up stronger t han ever the other eve~g­ Evidence came from all directions during an outing to swinging Isadore's in Newport Beach. 9_ rJ ~-,J BIG HIT This .spot scored an immediate hit \Vhen it ar· riv ed on the South Coast about a year and a half ago. Now, thanks to some exciting innovations, it has co1ne up with a breezy new scene unlike any other s ip and sup enterprise around. Change a nd variety, in this instance, don 't ap- pear to have been introduced for the-ir own sake. NOW Al'PIARING-TUE. THRU SAT. PAUL LEMOINE DUO • LAGUNA SUN DAYS JAN DlNIAU TRIO No Cover-No Minimum COCKTAILS 0'5N ,.Vl'N OAYI 1460 S. COAST BLVD. FLEUR DE LIS LAGUNA BEACH SEAFOOD CONVERSATION Everyone i1 t•l~ing •bout our deliciou 1 •f••med c.l 11m• •nd 9 i11nt ! lb-20 0 1.) Austrian Lob1ter l•ih. SUNDAY IRUNCH Served from 10 A.M. -2 P.M. E11terl•inr11•11+ I Oa11cin9 HAPPY HOUR M••· -Prl. S '' 1 p.111. wltlt H1r1 d' .. u•••• I ANqun fACILITIES J17 PAC l,.IC COAST HWY. HUNTINGTON l lACH O,IN I OA'l'I R•1••••lio 11• At~•1>t•d ,., '•r1;fl .i ) ., ..... ,. ''R•I•.., e nd •njoy th a c111uel intim1cy of Ba Ibo• l1le nd1' Ville9• Inn. For Your Dining Ple11ur• NEW SUMMER DINNER HOURS Sun. thru Thurs.-5 to 11 Fri. & S1t.-5 to 12 And, for your 11dd.d c.onv•ni •nc:•, we'r• now ••rvin9 our f11mou1 1t1 .. k 111ndwich, in th• loun91, 11 p.m. to I :lO 11.m. nightly. Instead they seem to s tem from the commendabl e notion that even the most popularly-accepted for· mat offers opportunities for improvement and ex- perimentation. To be sure, Izzy's -as the place was quickly dubbed by regulars -remains first and foremoet the province of the youngish mod set. But that does not mean any oU limits signs bas been posted for any age group. ~'~. Dropping by and mixing, in fact, is high recom· mended for oYer-40's with a yen to investigate the age of rock. They'll gain such insights without any trouble and log some fun-filled hours in the process. AMPLIFIED ROCK If you don't dig the blaring beat o! amplified rock, you'll find it best to do your thing earlier in the evening -especially if your thing happens to be need of a fairly light repast for dinner. Toward this end 1sadore's has j ust instituted a new kind of food service that's a complete departur e from the old 11ystem. Gone is the former process of sitting down and having the waitress take your order fot one of four entrees. Jn its place has come a procedure co1n- bining stl!-service and follow-up waitres11 assist- ance. HELP YOURSELF Customers now go to the back of the restaurant and place 811 order for the sandwich of their choice \Vith the counter man. ~loving down the line it be- c omes a matter of sell-help to take (in any quanti- ty) a variety of salads and pickles attractively set forth in large bo\vls. In addition to the tasty pickles, we sampled a fe \v of the other items in this department. They in - cluded very appetizing macaroni and four-bean sa- lads and sauerkraut. Other th an t he Izzy's 1-lang·Up -a giant com- bination of salamis and cheese offered at $1.75 - all sandwiches are priced uniformly at $1.65. In the 8 ffil~flKO Loacl:aca DJuft Coc\t•ll• ~1drry1 J39 S11.l.(J1 Jlob111, P1s1den1. • 795-7005 33 TO•VD 8: Coootry, Ol'lng!'!. M1-3303 FINEST SEAFOOD AND OYSTER BAR IN THE SOUTHLAND 630 UDO PARK DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH 675-0100 TEMPLE GARDENS Q-flHt:S::~Re~taurant LUNCH&ON & DINNER DAILY Vi sit Our RICKSHA COCKTAIL IUPflT LUNCH 11 :ll·l :JI M•rul•Y thru Frhl1y HA,.~'I' MOUit 4 TO 1 '·""· MOND•T TMau THUllSDAT NOW APPEARING-SUNDAYS ONLY Featuring Exollc 1511 ADAMS (•t Harber) COSTA MllA 1411-1937 5-40· l '2J PEPE VILLA-Gult 1r11t/Vac1ll1t Tropkal Drink! IALIOA ISLAND 67J-45JO 11iiiiiiiiiiii:::::::::iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij Conter of Porli: aM M•rln• 111 WHERE IT'S HAPPENING .'.1.~ IDO ") ,. LO~NG PRESENTS (' ? NOW Jw1t 011e11M f•r A Ll..,ilei E11919er11e11l IJT TIMI IN OlAN•I COUNTY L~.!_. ~·~· J .. c//~;:;~a cfa1p (: NEW,Oll &EACH, (Allf0tNl4 THE BERLINER German Family Restaurant F•rnou1 For SAUERIRATEN w;th POTATO DUMPLINGS SUNDAY, JUNE 27, 4 P.M. Tlrie mo•t unu1u11I p•rty in Huntington leech Wall Breakthrough Cer en1ony Bava1·ian Style e W• Ar• IR ... tl'"I e Oln1 •nd Dene• with the TRIO AUSTRIA Pol~•1, Welh:es, Fox Trots O,.n D•lly For Dinner From .S P.M. CLOSED MONDAY Al•o Viii! DEA I EllLI Nflt DELICATISSlN "i"• lw••p••11 Foo4l l'"11•rle4 lteri I Wi11t 1 11sn llACH ILVD. T•wn & (Mf'ltrf Ctnt•r HUNTINGTON HACH Hl-5100 CMILDAIN'1 MINU IAMtUIT PACILITlb cold offerings these range from ham. turkey, and swi!s cheese combo to that proffering roast beef. lettuce, tomatoes, cheese and sli ced ei:;:g. OUR CHOICES The first of three cold sand"'iches ordered by members of our party v.•as the salami, lettuce, to- mato, sliced egg and an chovy. The others were liverwurst, lettuce, tomato, pickle, red onion: and ham, swiss cheese, lettuce, sliced egg and anchovy. Each was served on a delicious sour bread roll and pronounced excellent. For those preferring something \varm. there's a selection of five hot sand.,,•iches. These are Ita lian meatball with Romano cheese. roast beef, paslram1. bar·b-q baked ham and corned beef. The same bill of £are, incidentally. nov; consti· Lutes Isa dore's daily lu ncheon offerings. Naturally there isn't any rock music to rend the midday air. Rest assured, however. that it comes on in full force each evening at 9 p.m. And when it does a lot of new and young faces suddenly appear in droves to charge the atmosphere with an intensity equal to the music itself. The enthusiasm is directed toward the group that's just launched a return engagement. It's our conclusion that any doubts about follo\Ying: up on the success of their first appearance must certainly have been dispelled by now for the Road Home. \Ve caught this group for an evening's listen- ing more than a year ago. Road's nun1ber has nearly doubled since then -from three to five -'vhile a udience response seems to have tripled. TOP DRAWER They're of such top-rate c;iliber it'5 not hard lo understand ,~·hy former non-believers a re being led Continued on Page 29 ,....,....,_THE FINE SEAFOOD RESTAURANT WITH A SWEEPING VIEW OF BEAUTIFUL NEWPORT HARBOR 673-4633 400 MAIN, BALBOA PENINSULA Th• Dry Dock '"""" TIM MORGON JUNE 2S th•u JULY l THE THREE SOUNDS JULY 4 -S -6 SUNDAY, JULY 4 JAM SESSION 3:00 P.M. CAL TJADll-July 11 thrw 15 Sw11d.,-, Jiiiy 11. J•lll S.Ulo11 1:00 P·'"· EARLY BIRD SPECIAL S to 7 P.M. DAILY DINE AT ONE HALF PRICE (With Pwrc.h•M Of ON At llt11uler Prkel SAT. & SUN. BRUNCH FOR our OF 1111S WORLP Pf:l.IVEltY .SE~\llCli ~ In Newport Bt1eh & Costt MIU '"' 546-7J3f5 I~ Huntincton 8c1c~ M7-1214 • FAMILY PIZZA PARLORS •• PIPING HOT P!U~S (\'11n1 P!ZZAZ') 0EL!VER£0 TO YOU~ DOOR IN MINUTES IN hl[ N l DS SPACE AGE MOBILE OV(NS. ' . . • l lo liic.i gro pop But siti 10 me ha! gui tny po 7: por 0 \\•e en ly, be cio lo ca in do do sp ca . . ' we of l<i ve Co ca sta la ce v in an m Sc w tho Co WEEKENDER Continued from P•g• 28 to see the light of rock. No su ddenly full -blown mu- sicians. their pro!essionalism exhibits a solid grounding in training, practice and long experience. Road's range of nun1bers takes in favorites popularized by all th e leading rock aggregations. But we were just as impressed by original compo-- sitions like "Love)s Gonna ' Get You Anyway." Appearing Tuesday through Saturday. fron1 9 to 1 :30, members or Road Home and their instru- ments are Gregg Shannon, gui ta r ; Rod Coo per, bass; Bill Sprouse. organ-piano: Peter \Vickersham, guitar; Jimmy Sims. drun1s. Gregg, Bill and Jim- my also share vocal s. Isadore's is localed at 333 Bayside Drive. Nev.'- port Beach. There's a SI admission charge after 7:30 p.m .. and a minimum \\Vo-drinks per person policy during entertainment. hours. Oberhansli's Something happens v.1hen. in the space of one '''eek. three poslcards arrive fro1n as 1nany differ· ent friend s vacationing in London . Unfortunate· ly, the precise nature of that ''something" has never been made clear to us. At any rate, and V>'hc lher there's a sub-con s- cious connection or not. one day the follo,ving \\'eek found us in a lo cal place \Nilh a decidedly British cast. And one, speci!ically1 \Vit h London in the title. ENGLISH MEAT PIES This was Costa l\.1esa·s superb shop specializing in Engli~h meat pies to go--Oberhansli's of Lon· don. A one-of-a·kind en1porium operated by Lon- don·born and reared Basil Oberhansli. the house specialties -to the be s t of our k1101\'ledge - can't be topped this side of the Atlantic. As a daytime snack or maln course for dinner. we can't think of anything more tempting than one of Oberhansli's beef steak and mushroon1 or beef kidney pies. Unless it's one of his other pies like veal ham and egg (eaten cold) beef steak, pork, a Cornish pastie or sausage roll. PRICED REASONABLY Aside from the flavorsome eating these deli· cacies provide, they're tagged V.'ilh another out· standing feature. And that's the reasonable price tags ranging from a low 35 cents to a high of 85 cents. In addition lo meat pies, Basil offers a 'vide variety of sandwiches. cold n1eat plates and a cater· ing service for all oecasion s. The later embraces any event from a birthday to a cocktail_ party. This praiSC\VOrthy Orange County establish- ment also carries a fine lin e of imported British, Scottish and Irish foods. In this department are de- rr111"1. J11n1 25, 1971 DAil V PILOT .r;f OUT 'N ABOUT PllMI Ill e SU.l'OOD STIAXS e coc:xr.fJLS OPEN 7 DAYS LUNCH 11 lo 2:30 DINNER 5 to 12 Tliose F11n Kids \Vhen the Arn1strong Brothers hit the Ne\l.1port area last January, they were a breath of fresh comedy and musical talent too good to be true. and they are back aga in at the Reuben E. Lee on the Coast Hi gh,vay at the Upper Bay Bridge. Drop in and have some fun. They do. It's Dick on the left with Brother Bob, '-'ionday through Saturday from 8:30 p.m. lights 5uch as tea. soup mixes, candies, pickles, sauces, pork and bee[ sausage, black pudding, ki p+ pcrs. filet of sole, sausage meats for rolls or patties, porridge. plum puddings. cheese, marmalade and jams, shortbread and biscuits. SEND A POSTCARD Blimey matey, take it from us. Partaking of 1 hese wares prompls one to post a return card to friends in London: ''Eating 1vcll. Wish you were here.'' Open ?11onday through Saturday, from 10 a.m. lo 6 p.n1 ., Obcrhansli's of London is located at 270 E. 17th St reet, Hil!gren Sq uare, Costa '-1esa. 'The Drunkard' Celebrates SUNDil Y BRUNCH FROM 10 A.M. Entertainment Wednesday thru S11nday "The Drunkard " the world'! best 1 known melodramp., marked its 25\h w~k et the Alexandria l~otel vdth the per formance of June 18. Tl) date, more than 4,000 theater-goers have seen the performance in the Palm Court Theater-Restaurant of the historic hotel in downtown Los Angeles. "The DrunkarU ," which ran for 26 consecutive years al the Theater Mart on Vermonl Avenue, oow the home of the Los Angeles Press Club, made Its debut N. the Alexandria Jfotel on New Year's Eve. Produced by \Villiam Jarvis. \\'ho first presented his version of ''The Drunkard" 38 years ago, the melodrama is an adaptation of the 19th century pla y, "Fallen Saved.'' Jarvis first produced the play a! a benefit for the Cr ip pled Children's Society in Albany, N. Y. ALLIY 1111! PRESENTS The Senseti cnel TONY FLORES Guitarist/Vocalist Folk, Classical, Spanish TUE. THRU SAT. GINO LANZI Monday Night• FEATURIN& DINNERS In th• S•n Fr•"ci1co h'i•nn1r lACl OF LA.Ml STU.IS e SEAFOOD S TO 11 NIGHTLY IUSINISSMAN'S LUNCN 11 :00 TO 5 SATURDAY-11 to S LUNCH OR BRUNCH SUNDAY-BRUNCH OPIN IYIRl DAY OM TME OCE.t.H .t.OJ.t.CENT TO HEW,OllT IEACK "lfll 2106 W. OCEAN FRONT NEWPORT IEACH 1 OJ N. IA TSIDI DI., NEWl'OIT lllACH In The Marina Dune• 644-40l1 INTUTAINMINT • 7 Nl&HTS A WIU DANCING * HAP HALL DUO .... ltl Del N•lll .. l11t n..,.,. s... MOH.-TUD.-WID. * Larry Like Sin1er Gultarlst The success or the pro- duction re.suited in the show making its d~ut in 1932 at the Cherry Lane Theater i n Greenwich Village ·where it ran for tv;o years. In 194:;, Jarvis came to lhc West Coast and mel Mildred Ilse, pro- ducer or "The Drunkard" in Los Angeles. Together they wrote a mll.!iical melodrama v.'hich was presented alternately v.11h "The Drunkard" at lhe Theater For Early Risers and Late Players 1'1art for five years. Open Daily From 6 A.M. to 2 AM. Since then , Jarvis hM C1'.ln· Rear.Mesa Th•ater S:uE::e Costa Mae tinued his work w i t h melodrama and has trained'[jr;;;;;:::::"~';;L;;;;';;"';;;;";;·;;';;_,;;;;..,;;;;";;';;"~""';;";;;;-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; many young pt'riormers ap- pearing in the show. Playing the role of Villain Grimes, Jarvis is joined on stage by a ca.<it of nine. Presented on Friday even· ings. lhe doors open at 7 p.m., followed by dinner at 8 p.m., with curtain time at nine. Price of admission is $7 .95 per person, including diMer. ROAST. PRIME RIB OF BEEF AU JUS AMON5 %0 SELICT DINNlll INTlllS MIKE JORDAN DUO NOTHING ON OUR MENU IS OVER $3 . 99 • STEAK & LOBSTER e CHOICI T-Bone STEAK e NEW YOll STRIP ........ . Nothing higher on the menu. Natur11ly .. gec1 U.S.D.A. Choice beef only. Ne tenderiiers. Steak dinners start et $1 .65 ind include 11lad, to1st & potatoes. Baked potatoes from 11 A.M. 'tll 9 P.M. I ''Well · done" steaks cooked with tender loving c•r•, too I SPECIAL CHILDREN"S MENU ALSO: A pewee pl11te fo~ the little T ot1 -29c OPEN DAILY 11 A.M .• 9 P.M. 2267 FAllYllW !AT WILSOHJ COSTA MESA 548·0361 F~~~I This Week l I •11tfJ9fl 11 :JO •'"·Z p'" ti.el 6;00 P'"·l 1 P'" lt•••e 11 :00 a'"·2 a'" 428 E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA 64S-S410 cfiirporter qnn Cf-lo tel •·. MEDITERRANEAN DINING ROOM Ctpl1i,.'1 Ttbl. Coll•• SI.op Ci1ltoret Cocktail La11~ .. INTillTAINMEHT •nf D.t.NCIHO Meetlitt •11d l•111:1111t leoPIM t~7fltl ~1Ar .. 1~T1ll lR Ill vn NJ.;'\'PORT fll:;A1·11 , f',\l.IF. ftlVIEftA llE&TAUllANT Continental Cuisine Cocktails smnno ! LIC7leMcm ond Din11cr ·i~11 throuoh Soturda11. Closed Sundays • We are located ntrl tc th• May Co. in South Coast Pl11a. IJJJ L ln.t.I c........ 140-1140 Treat the Family to Dinner In One of Orange County's Fine Restaurants, SOI JOtli ST. lESllYATIONS NEWPORT llACH 671-0JOO i::===~-:::;:::-:::;~:-:::;:;:::;::;:::;::::;:;::;:::;::;:::;::;:::;:::;:::;:::;::;:::;::=!11 11'e Sertle U.S. Pritne E11J1tern Corn-fed Beet Errlutl.,ely, Per1onaU11 Selected And Aged IH 011r Omn Cooler Real Cantonese f Pod eat here or take home. ST AG CHINESE CASINO 111 21st pl., Newport Beach ORiole 3-9560 01"'• ,.., lre1111'td Delly ll·lZ-Fri. ••d Sat. 'tll J ..... Fhie Italian Cubine Cocktail• 232S E. COAST HIGHWAY 673-8267 a_,-,at1- 0,et1 Dolly -Ii ,.iw. .. 2 •·Ill· CLOSID MONOAT A. Three Generation Family Tradition -Est. 1921 )1yin9 .Gutter DIN Nil SPICIALS .• , 5et>Ted 2 tG l 0 r·'"· w/clioic• of 1oup ar 1eltd, roll ' butler MOHCU1Y •rMI l'ltlO.t.T 1/1 lroastH Chicken, broested potato es ..... _ ....... $1 .49 Tt,IESO.t.Y Fl•h 'N Chips ................................... $1 .19 WEDHIESDAV Hallb1.1t Steak, choic e of potatoes .... . . ....... $1 .49 TMt,lllSCl.i.Y Fll•t of Sol•, choice of po latoe5 ....................... $1 .49 S.i.TUllOAY Salmon Steak, choic • of po+•to111 ..................... $1 .49 St,INO.t.Y Jwmbo Shrimp, choice cf potatoe1 .. ... ...... . . $1.89 Fe•lurlng Th• Flnnt riff l.uth ef 17th Str .. t Speci•I• not 1tr,,1cl 011 Holid•v• or Holi<l•v W11k1,.cl1 3101 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach-Open 24 Hr5. ~r:iAM~URGE~~~ t>' HAMLET -: I EVERY SATURDAY I 2 STEAK DINNERS FOR • French Fries • French Fried Onion Rings • Toued Salad • Roll and Butter Iring • friend! Take adv1nte9e of thi1 cfelicicur din· ner fer 2, at a jvst right price. 1/1 lb. tendar choice steak, cut to Bradfcrd Heu•• specifications. le 9ood to • friend, or meybt tha femily7 Thi1 me•I, i1 a favorltt with all ••• you'll be a winner! -~KNOWN FOR VALUES OpooDolty Men. "'"" .. , • f :JI •·"'-te t ,....... ......, ,. ........ _..... GRANT PLAZA -IROOKHURST A ADAMS -HUNTINGTON BEACH • ' 3e DAILY PILOT Friday Evening Frldly, Junt 25, l971 Saturday Morning JUN[ 25 JUN!: 26 1:m IJ Iii ,..... .i.ny Du1111hJ. 1:00 Cll n 1 a. .... (})AK,._ RtmMr. Smith. J;OOIJ!u111-Se•ntw 0 MIC fllwl TORI Snydtf, Q ~ m To111loeltfJ Show 0 Tiit """" 511111 ([)TV I Ct11V00111 fJ Iii O'tW MIM: (IQ) '11lt m Ut't bp n-.... It~ die World I• • ...., (camtdy) ·u -Tht 7:JO II o..,.. T...no• Three Stqe:s, Ptlt1 rom.11. Cl m H«tll & Wit 0 I 16Cl1't I Sltfttl111t Stm Al· ~ :~ lt11 Is stu-holt of this muslul-n · ([I SumMr s..... ritty hour. Sptdtl llltltl •rt J.yne O"j Ulldf lus.s Meadowl, Irish t'Ollledl1n Mike m Tlllr.otrt>inb "''"'""· :ilnrtr lulu, Tht Jin Bm Bnltllln with tt11l1 hl!ancini •ct. liO fl llp hftnJ/Rwd b1• How ind t1'll fl:um1nl1n 1111.lotul Dine. 0 m Wooctf WDOdpetktr Compeny. 0 Cil11.J LMct1qt Un'l m Tiii mntan. cu CMM-ttie Jnter Q) stir TM CJ lllevle: {C) "RDbln Hotd and Ille fl) An.. '" Jellil /Clmflt'I hi l'!ntn" (Mvtnturt) '60--lu B1r-G fhrhr r11111, ktr. ., .....,. ,. m T.._ ., w.n. r.,, m .,.. v.n., Dir-1;10 o lli m n. 11p1o1s m u ,.... r ... 1111r COii eo...... m Cllt9 KW t!f)Ntn Jlm H1wtllorflt. t:OOt)(JJ S1lu l-1 & lllt Groavlt l ;JO CJ) Nns 8111 Huddy. Gotlle Live Actors Keep Active Theater ~Robards, Warden Avouling Hard Tirn es "The Bf:autlfol People" A William Saroyan comedy on stage at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, v.·esl gate of Orange Lounty f airgrounds, Thurs. -Sl:ll. at 8:30 p.m. through .June 26. Reservations -834 • 5303. "The King and I" ~lusical comedy on stage at the Buena Park Light Opera, Magnolia at Acaderny, Buena Park. Fri· Sat , June 25 • 26. Rescrv a tions--879-4237. "Time Oul for Ginger" family comedy on stage at F oun1 a1n Valley Community Theater in the Community Center, 10200 Slater. Fountain Va lley, al 8·30 p n1 . through .lune 27. Reservations 847·9821. ''Charity's Aunt" Comedy on ~tage at South Coast Repertory. 1827 Ne1o11port Blvd., flt 8:30 p.m . \\'rd.-Suri ., June 25 • Aug. 14. Resetva· lions -646 -J36J. By VERNON SCOTT' Ul'I Hlll,...... (.,.,..,_,., ... HOLLYWOOD H a r d times have hit the aclin g f raternity : too many thespians, too few jobs. But you'd never know It to talk to Jason Robardg and J ack Warden. Both men completed four movies in the past year. Neither wHI ever win a beauty contest. But they are line ac- tors who fit into the character· leading man category. Robards will be seen in "Fools." "Jotinny Got His Cun ," "\\'in'' and "13 Rue !tforgue. ·• \Va rden·s new ones are "Sporting Club.'' "Summer Tree," "Come J oin the Cluh" and •·\Vho is lfarr y Kellerman?'' and I c:ouldn'L taie restrictive hours again. "It's enough <lf a grind when you're working in a Broadway play . Afle.r a long run you find yourself e<>ming lo the theale.r earlier and earlie r because the play i!I always on your mind." ' At the moment Robards has no movie or television show in sight. Nor does Warden. "I'm thinking about two or three picture deals," Warden said. ··The trick to keeping busy acting is to work. yourself into a position v.·here you don't have to push. ''Your entire attitude is dir· ferent and the ronfidence is there for producers to see. If you don"t need the job. chances are better that you·n get It." Robardg doesn 't get uptight v.•hen he's between jobs. that an hour a week. But I've never gone more than six weeks without h a v i n g '°mething in the work.5. "On the other hand I can't go too Jong without work because I have a good many financial responsibilities." Versatllity is the basis [or the constant demands for Robards and Warde n. They can play outright character roles, leading men, comedy, drama, melodrama and farce. "Once my father told me never to be versatile oc I'd never gel anywhere," Robards said. ··That's not true anymore." Warden routdn ·t a g r e e more. CONCHITA AGUILAR AND JULIAN AMAOOR Perform Intricate Dances At Padua Th111ter @ Tnrtlt or ColrttqiMncm 0 ®J m Nit Chlldr-.n's Tlrtatrl (}) C8S Jhwa Walter Crollkltt. 9 MoM; "laron ti Arlnm1" CC:-:C:-:7:-::CO:-C:-:-:CC:-:""":-:-C-:C ®) N9C "'" Dtvld Brinklty, (W8!ttrn) '50--Vincent Price. ··1 think I just happened lo run up a string of lucky castings," Robards said. "J\1aybe I'm in for a dry spell .. , "As of now I don't know "'hat I'll do llell," Robards said. '0J\1aybe I worry about Playwright Give11 Role Mexico 's Sounds, Color Alive on Padua's Stage m 1111 n,1111 Nim 0 CIJ@J'"l lewit Show fill Kod,.,-rt Lodp m A.M. Moviu: ~Loter T1l11 All" If!) S..... n11111 (comedy) '5&--Roulrno Brazzi, Cly· @D D111rt """1 nit Johns. "SIMS of tllt lnvb/blt fID TIA Mlllllttr" (sci·li) '66 -Richard Webb. (()UC """-m Ml!l'Nr. .,Ol&MI' Min Allw" 7:001J CM Nnl W1ltt1 Crnnkite. (ml'J1ert) •55 -0111t Clark. Lit• D g, UC ft ... D1vid Brl"klt)'. Milan. "IOH II' h Killed" {myst'wy) ell Tt T"' 911 lrwttl 'SG--lawrtnce Tierney. 4'•mplct"' 0 'Miil'• M, Unt! (dr1m1) '4(-[dw11d G. RobhlltOl'I. 9 M Y111 D1"1 eJ cwrda r Gulf.Irr• m I t.-LKy CD P1nor1tu Llti11• = ~:r-WHt! . t:30 00 Tliu1n1: Whtdow ti tH Sod fJ @ TIN Doubl~t11 ll) Qrbl dll l.hiq Word 0 Mowle: (C) "51111npt tt Dod11 81 "'-""-"'er-Cttf' (western) 059-Jotl McCr11. a!)JI "'f1n1 Tl (l).lnlb1 el MW aJ ...... CIM 10:001J ([J mil & tti1 hsqcab 7:JO IJ Tiit ll!ttfil1 (Ft) 0 ®) @n H.R. Puf11'1ut (})MIN: (t) -Tiit lloft" (dram•) CJ) RNl Estate R1ntal1 "5'2-Wi111am Holden, CapPlldne. O @ Hat Wtietl1 0 Iii m HIP Ch.,.rral @I) ll<M Libra II Wlfllllla CIPtll Show IO:JO 6 (_{) HtrlM G~ 0 (I) aJ TM lrMy B•ndl (RI 0 112:1 a;, Kirt Come& t~e Gmnp Ci) Mowlt: (90) "Wiid. Wiid 1'ltll· O Mowle: "'Sine Yoo Slnnm" (mu· •t.'" Tony RDuel1, Liu Gt'1onl. slctl) '38 -Bina: Crosby. 0 Miiiion $ Mowle: (C) (2h1) "Thi 0 @ Sky H1wk1 Rlfllllflll M111" (d11m1) '62-l1ur· 11 ;00 t) ({) Arddt'I FunhOUM t not Htrwy, ltt Remick. 0 l1Ql er;, l1lllor league B1stb1n GOLDFISH POND KOi CAA,. LILLIE5 WATER HYACINTHS POND FILTRATION UNITS WE MAYE EVE,RYTH!NG FOii TllE GOi-ClflSM PONO SOUTH SEAS TROPICAL FISH ,,. w. WILSON. co sr ... MES.l {of! ~afroltw Rd,) SM·IHI ff:IS A111nll, HUNTING.,ON BEACH fH ·Olll \Varden said almost the same thing : "Time and luck are re sponsible for all lhe work I've been doing . The pro- ducers just happened to nee d me at the right times ... Few professions offer les~ security than acting. The com· petition is relentless and the bosses are al~·ays looking for new laces. Yet neither Robards or \Varden v.·ould consider other \\'Ork. "Even if I had a guaranteed Income based on my best financial year, I v.·ouldil'I take a 9 lo 5 joh,'. Robards said "I spent seven years in the Na vy m Trwltl er CofiNquonces f.I) Movie: "The Itron ot Ari111111" --m h Ttl!a I 'Oller (western) '50--Vincent Prlce, fD lhippl111 Up ttll W.U 0 CIJ Mot« MouM fl!) t.IMMI JO 0 Mowlt: "Fury 1! Showdln" @ri) ~ MulA'a (western) '57-Jtjic~ Ad1ms. tii) TU f1i) f1tU Msie.111 1:S:t!?!lc..&ii • Stpndos l1:300 (J)Tlll lbrdy Soys l:OO 0 (I) m Nt~llY I t1M ,lofts· al MMI I MIN hftthtft • (R) "Th• PrvdllJ.~ CD IWJ·LI111 GIT•111 t1111 Tntil Afternoon ELMor"" Cl ttM• J Enr1q ui 12:0G IJ Sc:ooby-Dot G:I UdM Ubr. 0 CIJ a) i\Hiu11 l1ndttilld ~ IJ HMdturtlf Gutsls u e singer llylt ind tl'MI Sl1-l!I !lt i!D Niu tf IM ,, .. (R) ttrs l.oYt tro~np. 0 ""° Cl) 8'1-11 O CIJ QJTN ~q.ftllllly (R) QJTwtrt , .... GI n.111 ffM Slltw Gu11ta 1r& Or· 1'ol9 Dnm • Iii S-111a IDl'I Bttn, Morty Gunty. Rnnnie OJ· 12:30 II CJ) nit *'*-'°" ind author Wllli1m Petti ft "'11111 1trJtn 'uldt l l1ty. (]) Mobrll ttotM ·Show m DrllMt D Mowir. (C) ''Slm of Rom•" fZi) Id Jm "G«ft Ammo"'·· (R) (1dvtnturt) '6Z -Guy M1diM1n. E!) P1tttm hw LM111 m Mowit: ..,... Mid' (comedy) 1:00 D Cl) CBS Fr11fry llhWlr. (C) (211r) '3!-lturll & H1rdy. "Dr. r ...... (dr1m1) '68-Rlth· 1:00 B D11t1rdty ' MlltlltJ trd Bwrtoo, [Ullbeth T1ylo1, Ali· (1)Ca111pyi Pftnlt drt.s Ttubtr. @) Cl!tckMtd fl11 0 TIM f1cttm 0 (I) y°""""' I• Mr Hom• 0 (I) aJ Tiret lht (R) @ TV I look1 11 i..1rnint Q) r"°"' Squtlf m Wntrnd Ntwi fD Tiit Worlcl ti WUll1m llt~t al Dttr-.1 cltt M11r11 IID JO Mhllta (D h net .nd tllt Gtnit II) LI OW. IRll C<t.dl 1:30 tJ Tll• ltborri £;) 0 ,_. M Stt!1 lJ) Yolct DI Aifitull1re t-.30 0 C1) Cl) Ci!) Tiii 06d Coll,.&I {R) 1J DfBUT Qct.Botini,. 0 Int.-W1rd Ntw1 ({) '""'."' l o.t11f &J Qltlt 1111' """"'"'" 0 Mo¥it: "Tiit All·Amtriun" IE) NllticMl/l'astoi'1 D.st" (.sporU) '53--Tony CurtJ~. €[l LI er.z cit Mrrb.11 ~ (f) liritrMtlo111I Havr ail S,..llltfl F•tltfl fli11 m Mo.it: "Thunder P1u" {we1l· 10:00 0 lr"RI n:ii Sb''1! --..r1 (R) l rn) 'S.C.--fhnt Cl&rk, Mdy Otvine. "YJ =' rt """" fl) H1rd1 Boy1 0 N1tn Sandtr1/Mo1n1. ::oo IJ Da:ttJ'i TrtthOUM O (})t])tl)Lowt, A11 t dc1n ron •-... f Style (R) "l.J 1%n>U "'~ 11\t l O MlllM: (nir) 'iht l wld Dllt" Q ~It ft1h11t ~!Wit: "Tht De· (oomtdy) '6~Robert Morse, Jone · tertl¥t (m)'3\try) 55--o\lec Guin· th WI 1 nea. Jotn Greenwood, "The B1nd1I m'",~ '.._fl_: /"•~ ti SIMrwood Jorat'' (tdwn!ur•) ·4~ .... n11n1m rl nm tn. --tome w·ld ' l . _ -Al Htmtl l!clsll I 1 e. mt• out~•. .v · (:J Roll« hfiy Ul ~ '11111 lnrtttltll! Thlltrt ®J KllDW Your llblt 1&.ll 8 Mlllt: (lhr 45m) "Vtritty m Mowlt: "Thlewu Hllfl•fJ"' (dr• &lif"' (mutlca!) '47-Bin1 Crolby. mi) '49-Aichrrd Conlt, Cl" ... Bl!I John1 m Sporb World E'*""' H Aftruili•1 ·mv1r1td1i:1t1 Mllktiu ll:GO B (JJ IE,.._, al Hot Wh•lt Cll ~ m ,._. 2:l0 IJ TN l1n1 LMOolr Sllow I]) DtlO Ytnty Dl)'I (}) G1owiRI Gold D (}) m """ 0 TM Urry lln• saw m Mwi1: "IMt tf ·rr1nltntb:la" (JJ Mowit: "Stolt11 FKI. • P111 (llorl'DI") '35--Borh Karloff Htnried, Lir1beth Scott. m .. Hiit Qldr; Cl) Mwie: .. J1Mlce Jtun" (ro. f.D IMlltlts muKt) 'SJ-RtY Mi111nd. 11:15'11 CIN!al J4 (ti ~ a.n.lllf' 11:11 IJ ...., Grlffttrr m WIRp te MNRbrrt e a m MllRllJ c.rton m ., Hnb a rn Cil m Did: emtt Drlfd s:oo a°"' "-'lcn Mllltk.IJ )tlrftap Stelnbtr1 b (IMl1t host. I]) Sk.tdl!Mt (J} Ml* (t) ,idlf( IMS Ht· fJ M.V.l'.-jofll111y a.flth """'" (}IMtr!le) '67 -Debor1h O ..W. "11Mt0d'' ("'s1em) '47 W1,..,., ltm• D1rrtn. -JOl!I McC!tl. ..... : "lacldl·HMI k!Mtdl l@ Sc.itftel Flcdt!i TMIR ...,,.. {IV!lllnot) '4&-Juna HIYll, Q) Mwlt: -T1lt WMdln1 " l.111 11:45 D ~ "lllqlr (dr1m1) ·ss-M1tltnt" fromt!K't) '55--llN D1n- Etnnl G. hbllllOll. NIM roclt. kly, HU(h Md>tnnott. 1Z:Oll 9 Cua:ait111 u Wltk • ~hi•· @l) M.ictlt/Dner l Colllttl lrhf Or, Eftmd st.t!nbroot. 0) Rl'Vlst• Mutltel 11:15 ....... (C) "'Mn Wltfl '#lnra" m"" 111 l'!cW!t {dr11111) 'A-ftld Mrc.Mun-11. R11 CD TMtro 6ll Sabad9 MlllMd. tm Mato1 MOllll 11:.ID ID ..... Dw. ....... Miu . 3:30 fJ R"'"""' Wll'bllop "'a," "'nit ...... 811ci th fly," (I)UllWltdl ...... .,... " Meftr.anlf" i nd n 11111 n..a OIN9lr1 "Tltl ... .... • 0 c.tlrttJ '"""' 1• .... ..,.. .. "" )Wppy" fl!) Cllftlm'1 ........... lc:tmldr) '41-.111"* Stn.rt. Join IE U M"'* lib LM foMalat. ID Tntt ~ WBDCIJlll -Ill...,._ No. I on the Coast Your Hometown Newspaper Is The DAILY PILOT • • • • • • • • • Vlnc tnl Prlc• "Dll.. Pll!IES" (GP) ~·U' • Y1n,~nl Pro'• "BLOOD AND LACE'' IGP! Ptlff O'TMlt ''LAWRliNCI Of AllAl!l" ''Till 1 110 WITll THE CHll.'l'!TAL l'LUMAGl" MATINflf -l;ll 1'.m., l1h1r-dl1 ~""' CMn' "' ......... ~ rr. O••n11 Counr1 ~ ' Prtml•r• 1nw•em•nt1 i • · · ••lillmll 518•1 McQu11n o!lro In "LE M"NS" !GI ~ S•••• McQu••n 1n "THE THOMAS CROWN Al'FAlll "~--­...,,. ... o• ... NGI .... ~ .. .... c ......... ORANG! !WIN •z DAl'll·IN l1••1 ~•7·tl01' All Color E~<lull•t Dean J~qQtr "VANISHING POINT" (Gl'J "'"' • P•ul N~wm~n "IUTCM C.t.SSICIY ,t. Tllf SUNDANCE IUD'' • BU "" r "nn l ............ ......... _, oa1v1 .1N 111 •o>c All Colar p,...,, ••t EnQ•g1monll W•l!~r M•n~.1<1 "l'LA1.t. SUITE " tGl'I "Al'lll;IL l'OOLS" ... -..1 ...• ,, ..... _ .... ,_ !JI Ol4S ~I• Cn.9• F•«" t•e [~~·~·_..,,,, ( .. ~ ~0"''"'' "ZEPPELIN" !C.1 ~lui • Jo~e '\'hvr• ··n11>'J'\'0 ,c,, .............. " .. _ ...... , .. , t.I /U I All Color Faml11 EMerrelnm•nl I J•mn Gerner e Su111nn• Plnllet1t "!UPPOllT YOUR: LO(AL OUHl'IOHTell" ro ) plu• e Dick Ve" D~~t "Cllrt"TY CHITTY I ANO 'ii'"rGC'-' __ , .. ~ ....... I"'""''-$ll IJll Wllll•rn HolCI..,. A1en O'M•el "WILD llOYfllS" !OP) PIUI .,STll.t.NOl!ll llliTUllNS" Undu 17 rmnt l)t wll~ °"'~"' ............ • ,c;... ... 1:_ ··-.. n• 1111 ..PlllTTY MllDS ALL IHA llOW" 0111 "'~ ll1t•, H•.,woHll Rober! Wtl~•' "llOAO TO SALIH•'' l _ ... WoO!o••-1 &11·1U l Under 11 mU11 bl wl11'1 11o11rent "THI SWAl'PIAI" !Ill PIUI ''WEr11:r"n ""'™ '"' 1 AlYtlTT(ll0' !Il l Now Playing ''FREE FORM II'' ~~·~-,.. • -4,.JI.,. \. PERFORMANCES, 7,30 P.M. & 9,30 P.M. RATED !GI All Seat1 52 .SO o ... ,:41 1"~ ... ... .. , .... ""'h•..t• I Str"1klngl" _,.,.,rosi• G•111"''-• tit .. , .. ,~ .. f cou.••••• ""rv•1 s .. ,._,, ,..,s_,_ ;_ JACK NICHOLSON ~-,,_,,. '1VE ERBJ/ Im .. P~~I! -AND- I "Melvyn Douglas is 1 MAGNIFICENT!" --JUDITH CRIST.,· New Yo1k W.Oulne' I Never Sang For My Father ~-~ Fillmore's Last Stand Set on TV An era in the age of rock \\'111 come to an end when New York·s Fillmore theater closes its doors June 27. and KCET's Fanfare series honors the pop culture's f.let by repeating its a cc laimed program, "\Velcome to Fillmore East." Featuring the Byrds. Van r-.1orrison. Albert King. Sh;i- Na-Na, and the Elvin Bishop Group, the program will be broadcast this Sun day al 10 p.m. on Channel 28. The concert. v.·hich was taped last September bc!ore a live nudience at the East Coast Center for rock music also f ea tu res behind-the'. scrncs glimrsrs of Joe's Li,{lhts. the Filln1orc's creative light show. the performers' activities during the concert. and Bill Graham. lhe fnundcr of Fillmores East and \\'est. One of America's foremost rock impresarios. Graham recently decided lo close both theaters this summer for a variety of reasons, including rising production costs and in· crea sin~ difficulties in dealin g v.•ith rock acts and audiences. "\Velcome to f i 11 m ore Eas1" v.•ill be rcoca!C'd on Channel 28 next Tue sday at 7:30 p.m. Jo"' f oncll - °"'tld Swlhtrltncl "KLUTE" I R I Su•. nuv T~uro. 1-f l'rl. a SU. l ·t ·11 Sil. M•ll"t• I · J • s "aYAN'5 DAUGHTfR" HEW LOW PlllC ES FOii Tl4( Wl40Ll FAMILY HO llESl!•Vro SI.I.Ti Mo•. l!hrM Thur•.-l1DO pm f1I. I lo pm Sol. l::IO-l·l::IO S~•. 1~:10-l:llO pm COULD IT BE THE FUNNIEST COMEDY YET> Clf1lRJ~IE'S AUNT ~ J/;utJi Coost ~pcmzy Colt• M .. • (7141 MS-138.3 or 111 Mutu1I Aoe!!Cla Wtd thru Sun °1i:30 In 'Gang' t.Uchael V. Gazzo will play the role of Albie, a mobster "''ith a weakness for porno- graphy, in MGM's screen ver· sion of Jimmy Breslin's "The Gang That Couldn't Shoot S1raight," currently filming 1n New York City under lhe di· recLion of James Goldstone . Gazzo, a playwright and the author of a"A Hatful of Rain." has made one previous screen appearance in "King Creole" for v.·hich he wr ote the screenplay. His play "The Edge'' is scheduled fo r fall production on Broad\vay. In Breslin·s novel. Albie i'i described as an air inspector. one who stands next to the news stand on Coney Island Avenue and breathes the air in and out, white reading such magazines as Sexology and Orgy tl1anual. The film stars Jerry Orbach as Kid Sally. Leigh Taylor. Young as his sister Angela, Jo Van Fl eet as the i r grandmother Big r-.1 a n1 a , Lionel Slander as the mob 's not-always.appreciated lather· figure and Robert DeNiro as a bike racer fron1 Southern Italy. A Charloff-Winkler Pr0tlur. tion, "The Gang That Couldn·t Shoot Straight" has been adapted for the scrren by \Valdo Sall. Irwin \Vinkler and Robert C.:hartoff arr pro- ducing. DON RICKLES NOW thru .lul~ 8 Twn S~o"'s Ptr N1gl1\ 8 p.m.1nd Midn1gllt • COMING ROBERT GOULET July 9 lhfU 16 Am1 rie1'1 'r1al•lt , Yac1tlon l ity. For Reservations ca11; ZEnlth 9·9924 " Kln11s C1s11e lake Tahoe/Nevada i7D2)831·111 1 The !ound and color of Jalisco. i\lexico, r esound;; fr on1 the stage of Padua Jlills Theatre, near Claremont in •·R.on1ancero de J alisco," as autht!nlic fo lk dances. music and costumes are reproduced in two fa st-paced acts through July 24 . famous for their accura!e presen tation of the performing arts of Mexico , the t.1exican Players offer an especially colorful play for summertime at Padua Hills. E a c h performance wiU be fo!lov.·ed by "Jamaica," an outdoor fiesta, in which the theater atJ- dience 1s invite d to participate. Longtin1t patrons, as well as first tiine visitors, \Viii be ~nchanted ~'i!h the ··1rip to r.1e .1:ico" as provided by the year-round folk plays a t Padua l!i!ls. The grounds and buildings also are satisfyingly s imila r to those one would find in various states and regions or r..1exiC{t, Su1ce 1932, the Players at Padua .\lexican I! l 11 s Theatre have been prtfiif!nling pl;iys about the life. cipitoms and folk music of Mex iliq; Now second generations (Jr ~yers appear on stage -pei'jorm· ing. many t1n1es, for 'jccond and third gcneratiotli' fl { patrons who return obtn In enjoy the productlonS .• :Sbout Mexico. :· The lobby of Padua:; llilts Theatre is like the liviDj;room of a large hacienda -: «nd in· ten tionally so. Theater.P.trons are welcomed as visit9fi 1'he luncheon and dinner hbllrs in the Padua Din ing ROdia ar~ set conveniently for thG.<ie V.'h1' wish lo dine before lhe ':;.how. ~lexican and American en· Lrees are offered daily .?x:cept ~londays. . The plays at P:idua: Tlill;; yl'ar·round folk theai,ey 1:trc presented at 8:30 p.qi. nn \Vednesdays thru Satnrdavs ~·ith matinees at t :tz-1 Cn Wednesdays and Satgiday~. Reservations for dinine: room and thea ter arc not :1f.lv.•ays ncccs~f1r_v. !)ut are ·fRconl· mended. (714) 626-1288. Twiggy Turn s to Fi~n In MGM's 'Boy Frie,d' r fwigsy. lhc wo"d famous >nd Boch•" Wiod,,./ l fashion morlel, turns film $\ar Ken Rus sell rece1~ sn to play the lead in Ken AcD demy Award no!J'tinatinn Russell's rilm "The B Q v a~ best director of lri'O for f'riend" fnr tl-tG'°'f. Producllnn ''Women In Love ,'' fo;J:wh ich starts immediately on lncation Glenda Jackson \1·\i((. the in a Porl smouth the<iter. 60 aw;ird nf best actres<.<Sr the miles south of Lond(ln. The in· yeur_ lie has rccentlr;.:com- ternational hit mu sical is lo be pll'ted his fi!m ve~n of filmed 1n Pana1•1s1on anrl col-Aldou s Hui:lcy's "Thc ~vil.5" or. which stars Vanessa ~ra l'e The rilm l'.'i11 be produced and O!iver Reed. ~:; And dircclcd by Russell from His production learn 14r the his own screenpla,v ad;ip!ed film includes li3rry c.:nenn, from the musical by Sandy 'Vilson. ll is a gen!ly sa1irit•al associate prodticcr; p PI er mu sical rclatinR the pcrsnn::1\ ~1axwell D;ivi~. n1u~icc1 ! dif('t'· hl'es of a group of repertory ! n r ; Terr I' G I l h Pr t playf'r~ \1•ho presrnt !heir nwn ch or f' o g r ai)hrr; Sh1rt('_Y prnd11r!ion of "The Ro v B 11~sell. co1=111m~ designer: Friend" · c1nrmfllographer. alifl Tony Tv.·1ggy plays Polly Brn1~nr \\ :ihon, design cons1lltant. In lhi~ li12ht ton~ue-in-chcek 1n-l\cn Russell envl~n~ the 1crprelation. 11 •s 1he fir~! n10!1on pictu re a~ th~ thing<: contemporarv ~<'recn c1·nc:i--a typical •·s1age'~.mus1c:tl tion of a riosta1p:1c v.•avf' nf in· of 1hc r11rntif's: a "ttomag~·· n{l('rnrp in mu ~ i r a 1 f'n· !u 111,... ··t·111rma!1e., n111 sica t 1ertii inment v:hiC'h h;is i;1vrnt f'ln!11s1r ~ nf the past. and ~ Amenc;i during thr pn~t satire on ;il l !hf' "backstage·• season 1.1·it11 thr 1=urr"5~ on m11~ir11ls of all times. staRe of !he rf'Vil'Prl "Nn. No. It h.1~ a 1~ ll'f'ek .11chrrl11le Nanelle." and thr recent .;ind w11l lle fihnrd ;it-tile fi:Ml · ''Follies." ~·1f;M Studio in Lnndael follow· Christopher Gable. rormt'r 1ng the IO<'alion ~ork in Royal Ballet Company dan cer. Porlsmouth. It is lht' lj.rsl prn- appears as Tony Brnckhurst. rl11c1io n for lhe new!~ formed one of the repPrtory company Er-.fJ.r-.1GM Fil m Pr~uclion~ 11clors with '~hom Tv.·i~gy is l.1d and will be :i-ele;iged serre11y in love. Othrrs in the v.·nrldwide hy !\1GM fo r ca5t include r-.1ax Adrian . i\!Ur· rhris!ma.~ 1971 and tj,9 r-.iGM· ray Mel\•in. t.loira fra.~er, E~1 1 F'l1m Distributon: Ldt . In Brian Pringle. Tommy Tune England . :: jaM fonda•cfoMW IUllKrlcand .lut• ~ it dlla'..Ilj ~prodt.ttm .I '~~·~·""'•"''""". ~ ·-1 ___ ... ---.----...... -..... -.... _._ ... __ ~ _.,_.,. ____ .. __ • ___ ......... 1.-J!a _ .... --· --....... ·-~--.. ~·"·~= C:JNll>OMI Zt ~ .,. T111n..--t4 LINCOLN CIUYtlN .t.h t l'1u1 H"""'1n . OUNCI ""'· iMll kt_, ... 11 IN "COOL MANO 1.Ulf -I "'"'"""hi . .., s_.,...t,,._f IU A PA lit o-,,u Sll"M 11 Uf1t JJJ.JJJI 527·1221 :· ... -:· .· ... .. · ... DAIL I PILOT S l Movie R eview 'Rovers' Entertains, Tries Point • By GEORGE LEIOAL Rovers ·• currently playing at Of tlM ~Ir ,.1 .. 1 Hett Blake Edwards' • ' W 11 d Harbor area theaters, is a lat- L NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES .· ~~~~;;;-'I · ·:. : r EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT "\' : .: . ___.., allen' 1 ... JAC<r<Jltl/C, ....... ~b:t s ~ .:: CHAl<llCHK.fl ( ananas" CWll Mletwe· • • f':.Wao ....... .,.,..,, •. 2nd Comedy Hit "THE TWELVE CHAIRS"iGl --._.. .... ,., -......... ,., lO , ... -nMn·J.»"""' ....... -~--.-11JQ. M 11.«I& IMI ~lrr-~i.11 ... .. --~ GWilllam.GffoldeDA '~O'cNeal' GKarlr,Malden ter day western that manages to entertain while updating the sociology of the r&lje war era cowhand. An understated mention <1£ the too frequently exploited cattle-sheep cootroversy is Edwards' springtxwd f o r launching the trailhand odd couple -William Holden and Ryan O'Neal -on their en- trancing, if unsucressful , odyssey lo Mex ico. Somehow . Edwards blends hints of Butch Cassidy and Sundance. Bonnie and Clyde and Midnight Cowboy into one crystal clear travelogue In this M.G.~f. film . O'Neal, whom Hollywood evidently has decided looks good in snow, displays con- siderable .acting ability in a role that could be little more removed from his success in "Love Story." He and Holden give up the unremunerative security of cowpunching opting for the bank robber's life. The bloodless robbery com- EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT NOW PLAYING RATED G ... BUT MAY BE TDD INTENSE FOR YOUNGER CHILDREN. The picture runs 130 minutes! ... The story . covers 96 of the most critical hours in man'.s history! ... The suspense will last through your lifetime ! ·-ARlHURHIU: ll4Vll M ·MS OISllN · KAil HBO ,..,...,.,,°' ., . ..,.,... ~"' r,..,._., f)lro.:,..., _..,. . BORIS LCV£N·NELSON GIDOING ·MICHAEL CRICHTON · ROBERTWJSE·GIL MCtLE I ~-···~· I ml l UNM"""™" NOTE· llO OllllllUlfllA111 ;._ .... ' ... alflP .._. '";....~ nCHNICOUJ:' PMAVISA'.nr ' """" rHl wr II Mllfll1IS. EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMEN 2ND TOI' A ITRACTIDN I Eric Broeden • Suton Clarke -··-···· naoom1111i1111 TIE FOUll PIOJECTi A UltNDSM, PCTUfl[ • T(Qff(Q.Olr Im'! ,, .. ,,,.,.. - bines humor wilh terror and providts a neeesaary conlrut to the violence that later besets lhe cowhanru turned bank robbers. The conlrast is vital lo this film, largely beea~e Edwards has chosen to place great emphasis on contr1st throughout. Y.'e're given the contrasting ages of the unlikely pairing of Holden and O'Neal. O'Neal, &J Frank Post, i! at onee naive -with a fondness for yet to be weaned puppies -and heartleSll. The latter is proved in an exceptionally bloody poker game battle that ultimately is his undoing. Karl Malden as the ranch O\\oller offers calculated suc-cess in the best m a I e chauvinist tradition. His role contrasUI with the sensitivity tempered by hard, ranch liv- ing, displayed by his wife, played by Leora Dana. Maiden's sureness in turn is contrasted by his ne'er do Wt'!\ sons -Tom Skerritt and Joe Don Baker -wholle persistent search for the dastardly duo hints p.1yropat.hia. If the film is flawed, the sketchy drawing of t.h~e two characters must be th e reason. One is a fool you ex- pect to froth at the mou th any momenl. The other is just plain quiet. The latter is driven to capture the pair who've tamiihed the ranch's image. 'Ibe chase continues long after they've learned or tht>ir father's death. The whole of the driven death hunt hard· Jy seems worth Jt, and one wonders why. Technically the film is ex- cellent. Scenery !!hot on loca- tions throughout the wut truly sparkles. The snowy selling for the taming of a wild stallion by 1-lolden and O'Neal's frolicking encouragement is pristine. This scene is a memorable one and ib reprise at the close of the film lends a touch o{ pathos that i! justified. Rachel Robert! as the madam whose house of ill repute serves as a front for the robbery, ade qu atel y handles a not very challt>nging role. The house she runs seems to be little more than one of several script device.! to let the viewer know these are no cowboys who kls.! horses and t!de off into the western sun a lot. That same point was made at the film 's opening as riders galloped out of the rising sun. In all, the film is f!Il· tertaining. It does not overly dwell on sex:, thou gh the lAnguage may not be suited to all ears. And , lt makes some anti·vlolence statements, if on· ly through 1hocking portrayals ol vk>lence. Beats Old St11les Zsa Zsa's Occult Games Keep Parties on Move HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Z.a Zsa Gabor gav e a small party the other night which was dlf· ferent from most such in- timate dinners in that a mo-- lion picture wasn't show after dessert and brandy. Zsa Z.!la doe3 live in Bel Air. must meet Sidney. He is the best palm·reader In the world." The term "palm·reader" v.·as electrirying. Had Zsa Zsa announced she was screening "the last sup· per" with the. original cast her guest.s could not have reacl.ed more favorable . The party was an lmmediate success. Plaza suite. Through its portals pass the world 's most mixed-up mortals. *PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEM ENT NOW AT BOTH THEATRES Please check Guides for 2nd feature And the Bel Air circuit is that group of home projection rooms "·here H0Hyv1ood's elit e see movies before critics. sneak previev.·s or general release. Oftentim~ guests d?ze of£ during the screening. Pa Im -re ader Sidney Rushakoff, who claim! to be part gypsy, is eilher one of the most amazing palm·readers or peychics in the w ~ s t e r n hemisphere or a walking 1-------------------------------- Just as often the guests have seen one another at several parties during the same week. The trick of the. successful hostess is no longer assembl· ing a guMt list, or fin ding a film to keep people awake. Con versation won 't do it because how many times can Anthony Quinn, Kirk Douglas, Steve Allen, J onathan Winters, Jack Carte r et al e:zchange amenties? Parlor games and card tricks are out. Orgies were never really in. Viands. CQmestibles a n d potables vary only so much - although Zsa zsa·s Hungarian dishes rate four stars. ~fost Hollyv.·oodians are on diets anyway. The answer is the occult, the psychic and astrology. Show folk are notoriously superstitious and dote fJn mystics, gurus, seers, fortune tellers and others of that ilk. "Dolllnk," Zsa Zsa told each of her guests, ''you really rese.1rch compuler. He recou.nted long forgotten personal secret.! and facts about the guest!. He told them what vitamins they should take and what the future bod- ed. "He's very accurate," Zsa Zsa a1sured everyone. Rushakoff said he receivl"!d electric vibrations from Tony Quinn's powerful hands. Thi"! big actor appeared skeptical but listened intently to the palm-readers predictions. One of the ladies blushed at something Rushakoff noted, and quickly assured hi m lha t it would remain their litUe secret. Doubters became beHevers and Zsa Zsa's party was a rousing success. Only one thing. Zsa Zsa should have had her pa lm read before her guests ar- rived. Perhaps Rush a k off could have warned her tha t the buffet table supporting the goulash would co llap s e . necessitating a delay while a new batch of the Hungarian speclallty was prepared. T he Best Seller banned 76 years has been made into a motion picture. An INCREDIBLE motion picture! ).lat B. HAUll ,._ MYS Llf NOONIUNDD 11ADNITJ'ID® C.-"1 Do Int ENDS TUESDAY CO.HIT'---.,~ Obscene, Na; Funny, Absalutaly i witltout f~ M ~tittlt (~; . _., .. w. PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT NOW PLATING ••· c~~~~':..!!"v • ,.!! :,l1l~: .:... MElROCClOR ·PANAVISICW' l.IGlo<() .,.,., .. , • •~•Tl••ro• 1uo1 PLUS. ••Tfl F. S1'RANf;ER II ETUlll\'S" v.·ith T ony Anthony CO·HIT AT CINIMA YIUO '"Al'llL FOOLS" 1 r · • "* Ch1tmt W11t 'WATllLOO" • • A ROBfRl WISE PROOUCflO< •• -,.. .... i-. .. MICHAE.L CfUCHTOll =ANl>ROM:DA SlRAIN A UNIVERSAi. PlCTUR[ ·TECHNICOLOR' PANAVlSION' ~ e> &lilWDl llS"f·IRllUlll.1£1Pred.OM JOhw lla~ey & Ray II Ill and * "LOVE STORY" ONE WEEK ONLY AT HARBOR Z • "SUMME R OF '42" ST A RTS WED •• J UNE 30 * 32 DAil V PILOT Friday, Junt 25, 197! CONTINUOUS SHOW DAILY FROM 2 P.M. Prkft U .... 4 P.M. l'011r Guide to the ltlovies 'Le Mans' Stars McQueen llfWf'OIT IUCM • Ol..J-llSO E•t-Show Storn 1 I' M. Co11tl11uou• Show Su11doJ f10111 Z I' M. FIRST RUN Ad11lh Md J..ton Sl .SO CWld 71t PETER O'TOOLE OMAR SHARIFF IN "ONE OF ALL TIME GREAT FILMS WINNER OF 7 ACADEMY AWARDS Editor 's Note: Th is movie guide is prepared by tile films committee of 1-larbor Council PTA. Mrs. Nigel Bailey Is presideTit and Mrs. Bruce Nordland is committee ch.airmau. It i! intended a! a reference in detennini'ng suitable f i I m s for certain age groups o n d will appear weekly. Y our views are solicited. Jfail them to Mo· vie Guide, care of the DAILY PILOT. friend, he quits job as pro-bored schoolteacher-mistress America where he is dragged to Bolivia with lhem. Bank into guerrilla warfare. robberies and gun fights Five Easy Pieces (RI : Son amidst humor and pathos. nf wealthy musical family Burt Bacharach mu s j ca I leaves home to b e c o m e score. other to rind the p r e - revolutionary Jewels hiddnt 1n one of the twelve gold chairs, ~Vaterloo iGJ : llod Steiger, Orson WeJles and (,'hristopher add Guide to the movies Plum111er in the story of Napoleon and th' Duke of Wellington <:1l the Batlle of ~· SHOWN AT 2-5:15-l:JO STARTS NEXT WEO. EXCLUSIVE 1m1 DAYls-llNEST IOl~NINE 'BUNNY O'HARE" * ADULTS Bananas !GP): \Voody Ailen directs, produces and stars in ~atire on modern life. After \1-'ooini; and loosing his girl- itinerant worker. Lives con-Escape From 1'bt Plant! Of tentedly with waitress, drinks The APH' ~UPI Third science and brawls V.'ilh new hillbilly fiction filnl dealing w i I h friends, premise that a planet exi st<> Fools fRn Love drama \11hcre apes rule and captured starring Jason Robards and a.lltronauts are caged for Katharine Ross. Story of a scientific vivisection. I n fo.iay-December romance and a "Escape'' the apes wage war jealous husband set in San on Washinglon, D.C. Francisco. I Never Sang For r.1y Fathrr \Vaterloo. \Ves tside SLory ( C P ) : Natalie Wood and George Chakarls star in haunting slory of Westside gang war· fare. lnterwovefl is a poig· nant Jove story. Leonard Bemstem composed llie-music £o r Jer ome llobbin s choreography. \\"ild ll-0 \•ers (GP): Ex- istentialist v.·estern starring "1ill iam Holden and Ryan . t-" 1 uFisuiA ANDREss • STANLEY BAl'IER .. , · : 1DAVIDWARNER ,, : :'P£Rf'D!"I" FRiDJlY" ALSO ~ ROCK HUDSON t:}' . "~Maids _ all in a row" · ANGIE DICKINSON t:Ol OR 0 TEJ..L'i SAVAJ..A.S @CiJ - "LOVE STORY" is The 0 14'1 and the Pussycat (GPJ : In this story of hatred !R): Barbra Streisand and between a father and a son, George Segal star in film 1'1e\vyn Douglas and Gene \•ersion of Broadway comedy Hackman portray a family having a 1·prosiitute.-wilh·a-caught in the middle of the heart-of.gold" theme. older generation gap. A drama Ptrfect Friday iRJ : Er-of filia l responsibility to the ficient but bored assistant parent v.·ho has become a bank manager engineers plan burden. O"Neal as co"·pokes on Karl /~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ t.lalden's vast i\lonlana ranch.I;:------- Itching to get rich ioo, they rob the local bank. Ali Mac&raw • Ryan O'Neal probably 1hc screen's finest roman1ic stor y since "Seventh Heaven." Ali is the· movies' best instinctive actress sine' Elizabeth ·raylor. And with this. movie Ryan emerges as a major talent!"' ·)d.#ftl B;1ro11, I..~, /It•,,/,,'./"• 11111111r Aljjl;&;;;.lyaRO'Meal :~, ~·~.;;,;;oo.; ~~ AllWJ:'il 6 1MS0·4fllt.li.tl.t!iP'r-0.:. ·," _ _...,..-; lP.D!Sllil .Ul~lll.llJ ·n·· ·· .. .. . . •1*'10 ·-"''"" • • Jobn Marley Hay Iii II and \ ,___i lfil'l ""'::-i= : __ , __ ; CAU THEATRES FOR CO.HIT & SHOW TIMES Cot1ti1111M1 Dslly h• Offit•0,-1 Dslly •16:30 P JA. !DWARDS HARBOR CIN!MA WIST CINEMA II ~'-"-''-''''la.\\\\\\.' l \ '1.'IWll•llll.lll.JJ./,f///1Y.IJ .~~ ~ SPEND A SUMMER'S DAY ON SAFARI E ~ -... --~ ~ ~ ... ... ----~ GO WILD! DRIVE TD AFRICA! -';S" Open ever )' day from 9 a.m, regardless of wealher, to rob his own bank. His La"·rr:nce of Arabia IGPJ . helpers include ban k r up t Four hour film about the nobility and a lovely lady career of a man v.iw becan1e customer, both of which he a legend in the 1'-1 iddle Easl. has affairs y,·ith. Lion In The Winter (GP): Plaza Suite (GPL Screen \Vith romantic love long pasl, version of stage trilogy star· two strong willed monarchs ring Walter Matthau: as a bci1 lle over who will be sul'· highpowered executive wor-cessor. Eleanor of Aquiloine ried about erosion o( sex· won 't forgive King llenry !l's uality; a Hollywood producer philandering and he imprisons trying to seduce an old her ror scheming against him. hometown girlfriend, and as Stars Peter O'Toole and the father of a reluctant bride. Katharine Hepburn. Pretty Maids All iD a Row Love Story (GP): A Ii (R): Rock HuWon portrays MacGraw and Ryan O'Nea l coach-counsellor having af-star in romantic, bittersweet fairs with his pretty students fable or today's college youths while English teacher Angie and the generation gap. Told Dickinson seduces shyest boy in their language. in class. Plot con c e r n s One t.lore Train To Rob i;trangulation of three girls. (GP): George Peppard portrays amiable trainrobbcr t.fATURE TEENS betrayed by his partner, "''ho AND ADULTS returns fron1 prison to get his Andromeda Strain ( G ) : girl back and vie y,·ith his old Suspenseful story of race partner for a shipment nf against time. Scientists in G'hinese gold bound for San FAf\t lLY llow To frame A Figg IG ): Don Knotts stars as inept bu t ambitious local bumpkin v.·ho uncovers corruption at city hal t. He i.~ promoted to ex- ecutive position in order to take rilp for the shady political bosst's. Le l\1ans (GJ : Steve ~lcQueen docs sorne of his own driving in this story v,,·oven arou nd the Le 1'-lans, France auto race. ll1u sic by t.1!chel Legrand is background j for drivers going 200 Al PH in rain, and darkness on city streets. r.tarooned fG): Spacerrien sent to the moon are maroon- ed \Vhen retro-rockets fail lo fir(' for reentry. Gregory Peck, as head of manned space flight program must decide whether to leave them or try daring scheme. * underground desert lab try to Francisco. The letter i1nmediately i so I ate rare d i seas e T w' I v e Ch a i r s G l : after the lille indicates the transported to earth from Humorous tale of greed set in ratiJJfl give1' I.lie picture by another planet. Stars David 1927 Ru ssia. A charming tlie flfotion Picture Code. Wayne. vagrant, a son·ln-law. and a '[he Code A·nd Ratinq pro- Butcb Cassidy and tM Sun· priest smell money in the old grom may be fo11nd on one dance Kkl tGP): Legendary family mansion and race each of the motion picture pages. friendship between the most-;;;;;,_;;;-;....;;;-;;-;;:;;:;;;;;;;;..;;,.__,~;;;;;,_.;;;;;;,;;;....;;;;;;;;;...,..,lll infamous and amiable nfl' Western outlaws who flee the country and take Sundance's MOVIE MTINOS FOR PARENTS AND ~NOPEDPl..E ,,,. ~.,,"" ,..,.,,, ... .,..,,. __ ,,_, .. _ _,"' -4 ~ '°" ....... .,. .,,.,,~. -------------------- BE ON THE LOOKOUT FOR THE FIREMAN'S BALL pres ented by THE ORANGE COUNTY FIREMAN'S ASSOCIATION ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER FRIDAY -JULY 16 -9,00 P.M. • The only weopon he had left was-. revenge! GEORGE PEPPARD ; . "ONE MOBB TBJUN TO BOB'' TAKE Tl-IE We Dore You DOUBLE-FUN! DOUBLE-ACTION ALL NEW FOR EVE RYONE 1~E\VS QUIZ • Every Saturday ' with last car mlo pre serve admitted at 6 p.m. Admis- ... s1on: Adul!s $3.25, children (5 thru 1 ll $1.50, under 5_ ~ fre e. Maingale l1cke!s include adm1!1ance to Satan -S, Camp (entertainment area\ w11h !ree parking. Conver· ~ t1bles not perm1t1ed within pre~erve (sedans are avai- ~ !able for rental ·. Pe1s mu~t be cher~ed into ~erwiel!, ~ Wl1 hout ChMj!e f or lurll\er mt ormJtlOn, tan •}14, 83J. ~ 1200 or \Z \3) 553 26~2. 8LIC>N (C)IJNTl\Y SJIFJIRI EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT• SHOWING NOW AT TWO THEATRES! -J1fRl(J1H WILDLIFE PRESERVE ... ~~~~~-----~~-, Louted en San Diero Fren1y at lltottlo Pam.a,, Lopoa Hills, Oranft County . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . -llil !!!I!! -Ill .. _ .. ,.. ... .............. ...,_.,._<_ ............... , .. ...... -; . ""''..• " . ·;.. ~: " \ Stan;ng Michael York. Elke Sommer 1-;;~ cav;.,·AIH•nclr• Sl•w•rt , ... .._ ''''' Ciarsltn·Anton D;ffrin1·M.11riut Goring·Andrtw K~r l•«lll"""r P'roduc:" I· l<HYld Gt-tty~ .. •"'""'."" 11cH1oo·ir0o.or ~u ......... br Atthvr lowt ,and .ObnMd Churchill Slofv br Owen Crump l'roducfd br Owtn Crump D0•roc'td !Joi-ffl,nnr P'rter ~~l~-:.==:a-1 SECOND BIG HIT AT BOTH THEATRES "(ff I SUM"• John Woyne lox Office Optns at 7:15 ,,M. .......... Shaw Starts ""'°""°'"'' I '"wtr c..,.,,_ •1 l • ...., At Dusk .""37'.'o-J'S --~·~·~·-~,,~,~·........................... . . STEVE McQUEEN . takes you for a drive in the country . The country is France. :\ ~ . The drive is at 200 MPH! l ~~ 1, "LE MANS" .. · .. '·-\ . '\'' ' -. . ~ .~. ·.~.' ' ·-.. '• '•'< ~.,..-,.,._~ \ ·. ". ·.i '; .. •. ..... ' . ' 1 • '··, •, ~ \ · •• -· • . \ i" " ' ( .. \ ,,, ' i . / A CINEMA CENTER FILMS PRESENTATION lritten by HARRY KLEINERMusic by MICHEL LEGRAND-Executive Produce r 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 Jc;·~.~.~:·.-:;:•::'.""° EDWARDS' '.· Friday Junt 25. l'f71 DICK TRACY l y Che ster GCMlld Ll'L ABNER -® ""MOLENE MAc. Wli"M MER SOMEONE, PAfSUllWILV SC..ORN,WMILE SITTING OM A STONE LEDGE IN ~E QUAAllV."" L.11."Z.. WE KN.OW SMES ST~VINC. A.T .JONNY SCOR.N'S. WE'LL RETURN µfR PURSE IN E)(C~AMGI! FOR SOME ANSWERS • roW14UT IFAGA1.. o I& PLAIN? IT DON'T )::;>i,r.1 ,T\.lAl>.1-IAI ITT I ~-~ ~-51..D& TUMBLEWEEDS l'/HAi'S WRONG? . llPN'i ~OU UKE iHE 'tqW GLAMOROUS *9.PH ISTICA'TE~ :· ME1 SUGAR?! .. . . MUTI AND JEFF 8 UTOOC,YoU GOTTA DO SOMETHING TO HELP J EFF· FIGMENTS .:. 11\E Jl;:<ir TI.I\£ 'JU 6ET' ~ IS '· AO( EN.' U? Cl'F 7HE SIDElilAUC ll\6ITT AITTR ITS RAINED! . -·· .... ··.·-~~~ P ICK HE~ llP. SURPR'!Sll! t.OOllY WHO'S JACK!! By Tom K. Ryan By Al Smith By Dale Hale MEAN 'TI-tAT SOMl!:WHAA·· GORDO MOON MULLINS f>RAT ! ! You WORK so HARi> FOF< YOU]< FAVOF<ITI' CHAF<JT'i. .. Tl-IAT'L.l. MARS<-f HER!." -PLAIN JANE By Frank Baginski ANIMAL CRACKERS • -~ . . . HI! COULD YOU \WAIT UNTIL 1 ~ CHAPTER T\l.IO f" .,......_ _____ r--- .. ... ' . . .. . em! n: seo.is nW' PfOPC~ AJ!ri. '50 1VUCH'1 T\ifSl!C C>\<IS l I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by. A. POWER I By Chorles M. Schulz ACROSS - 1 TllOOQ: anlmal 5 Ont who Is (.\Pf'(.il lly q url 'Ouck hunter'' Jt~itt 14 h.trr -: ;Among olhtr tll ings 15 Cullrt 16 Study p1rcr ~music 17 Mav lng no ffrllng5 18 S1 1zr 19 ''nnlt ~trancr : ~words 20 ~l off by ,Urcrry 22 ,'tolupluous 4 malrs 23 "4itensr ~fr,llon lo!-ano\htt 24 Advertising 1"td1um 25 ~Ive t!U!Sfl to 28 Annoyed JZ ·~frt strady ·ftlghl 1g1lnsl 3J iookkerplng "'"' 34 Ch1r1clfrittd • ~i.iilty 3S ·ll:n~ently )lir:.i" ~"'' 37~1• 38 Boy Yt5\t rd1y's Purzlt Sol~'td: PEANUTS 39 Kimf of nois e 40 In 1ecor dalllt wilh stage instn.ctioris: 2 words SQl\EONE 11!110 WOULD SEND ME FLOWERS AND UT1l£ H01ES AND 1HIN65 LIKE 1\lAT - AND 'THEN, ALL Of A SUDDEN, HE WOIJIJ) TELL ME WHO HE lt)AS •• 41 Le1ve ooe 's COIJO\ty 4J M1r\lo -: C.ttman monk 44 Narrow strip of wood · 45 819 time: Sling 6125/il 4b Slerp b Rrduc:e lo 30 Happen 4'l Abus e shreds subs equ!nUy JUDGE PARKER 53 Fle1crness 7 Gilrdener's JI Discourage IF yOtJ'~ SM...R-r ·A.WP kNOW of temper: Implement th10119h fear WMAT~ &EST FOR'. E5p'ry-I OF Informal 8 Sheep 33 E~tlnction ,,US, VOtl WON'r CAL LL #IE ••. 54 Force 'l Rapture Jli F1nti[ralned I JlJST WAil' FOR ME S5 Large group 10 Everlastlng: rock . I TQ CALL YOU, F"-V !. 5li Pis! the pr ime Poet. 37 Hold spellbo.rd 57 i.1 with vi'IOI' l l Clevtt 39 Shatters · 58 UJTelli!.ble 12 ND'Sf God 40 Eject prrson of war 42 Having a smooth 59 Kills . 13 Jap.ane~ lustr01Js 60 Document or coins surface con.,.eya nce 21 Throw 43 End1.1red lil Cotton labf ic 22 Kind of strike 45 Night on 24 Ed na Ftfl:>er the town DOWH noYel: Z wotds 46" Tears 25 -pie 47 Ending ustd 1 First Zit Involuntary with fed anl 1!1 1 mlr;iclr silt Yi,lon 48 CJty of tt.11y i .A1""1""" 21 """'" """' • MISS PEACH ·potassium COl'lpos« '50 Grea t lake su!Jilte 28 Clty of (51 "_., -Calltd 3 Walk with SwlUtrland: Peter": difficulty Var, 2 words 4 Ar109, for ane 19 Fresh-water 52 Novice 5 Groop of r ight fish of the 54 Shell thlt fallS' llnt1 of vrrs1 carp f111lly to nplodr ' I • • j(EttY $0.\00 L L1B~ARY ~> PERKINS 1rn.noa..i-.,..T'fl-•,.._ .J (W).11,u ... ' c - WEL.L? HOW Alli: 'IOU ·OOING, All:TJ.<UR ? t PC>f,lj lNOW •• MAV!iE IN A COUPLE Of: PA.VS •• .IAA.V&E A WEEK! 11: VOU'li!E sr AVIN6 IN TOWN, GET YOURSELF A JOl!S! HERE'S A. FEW BU CKS TO lJPE 'tOll 0VH llMTll. YOU PO! "!HEii \IJU1D NEED ANalHER :5fCRET ADMllW: By Mel By John Mllet I THE STUNG! WO~Ul DAIL V PILOT 3~· ly Al Capp 50Rr DON'T '/O' FEEL. OF-FfMA~AGAL HIM !! l.OOKAMITE -.DATU.£$5 C' :AR? By Gus Arriola ly Fenl Johnso• By Roger Bollen 'DENNIS!' :· . -. . . - .. .. .; '.- .. :l4 DAILY PILOT E' OF THE M:ONTH I . \ "t' '· ·.1:NVEN.:. ·RY,. ~.~ . .. . . . . . .ww.~1.a.•;:QlfLO~DS OP.cHmi.m •'AND rtYMOUM · IY' THI illtft1"1MI Me>Mrit ~-:.IO . ~· W. HA n·s~H11> NICU'TO A 1A111 MIMI· -10 anvCi ;OUl-PUllMT STOCIC. C:HOOSI ROM:4 WIDI SILICnON 0.MIT..0-.AND -IODY·STYll OJI THl ·COMPLll'l ·UNI Of CHllnLR/,' t ·~?ii .. T O •• _·, OT T ••• PL,_,_i HI· AND CllCtti IL · ,_ • • . ' I . • ' • . . ·,· ·-'--··-·· , ... COMrT <4 Oil SID.AN 6 tylincler e n9in~, fj,I. Iv •q11ipp1d, ·•1dio, h11l1r. ! 5Dlili1D) • '66~CllRYSltR JOO .4 Do'dil' HD'J;. ' VI, autom•tic, r1dio, li11t1r, pow1r 1t.1rin9 I br"••· 1ir •c:ondi· tionif't. ITEZ2lll CORONET 500 1 Dr. H.T. VI , ••lo- m1tic, •t dio, .,,,,,,, power lfe1ria9. I PDP· 107) PV•Y iu 4·Dbo• H.T •. va, 1uk>., radio, ~ht,., power 1teeri119,. W SW, •ir conditiOllirtt>l.Y XA. 5611 '1095 '!1195 . . TOWN & COUNTl"f . W19011. VI, ·.,.ulom•· tic, r1dio, h11t1r, pow•r 1l••rin9 I. br4k11,· 1ir c:o11d. IVSXl90l !68 CllEVROtEl . -'VI, 1ulom1lit, "f"ldio, ·h11l1r.· vinyl lop, ••ir •ad :nn1di ln0fl r - {VVV429) '1295 •• 1971 CHRYSLER 2 DOOR HDTP. l'rlct LOADED' V-8, • AUTO. TRANS., • TINTED GLASS, • P/BUCKET SEATS, • VINYL INTERIOR, e P/WIN- DOWS, e AM/FM RADIO. e R/SPEAKER. e VINYL ROOF, e W/S/W, • P/STEERING, e P/DISC BRAKES, e FACT. AIR COND. USED CAR '66 FORD 'ICJlU, TlUCK VI ""'iline, r1tdio ind · li11+1r. IUSJ 101·1 '1295 SERIAL r CH23TIC1S!207 • '68 BUICK S,ICIAL 2 DR. C,I, V!, <111iomAfic, he•ter, wh it1 w~ll1 •~d inore. J l.75cic&1 $1395 '68 FIAT S,ORT"COUl'E ' AM.FM r•dio, h<1eler, fully equipped. I Z"XX- 0111 '68 . MU~lANG . -· ..... VI, 111lom1t\c, r1d1o, h11!1f, pow•• 1t1i""rin9 •rtd :bft.1<11..,vin.yh f/i. 0 p..,. 1WHS0541 • • l .. !PECIAL COUPE A ulom~lic, r.1d io;h .. ,,1. et, power •+eer<ng, whit• ,;de w'elf t ir e1. ( RGU8l6) ?95 '69 OLDSMOBILE tJ795 IMPALA SIJPEll Sl'RT. Co11pe. V8, <>utom<>lic, fddio, he<>t•r, power •'••iintj & br<1~'"· •ir cDtldilioning, buclel ••¥•, WSW, ! RPI. ~6 1) '895 · '68"P.ONTIAC · .. . " ... . '· · .. :· .. . ·: I ! · . ' . . ·- I Pf'ldaJ, Jul'lf: 25, 1971 DAILY PILOT lJI .· .0·. 1·c· :K· WILSON S·AYs IT 1• OUR CONSTANT 'GOAL TO OFFER THE HIGHEST QUAL· :1TY MERCHANDISE AT THI LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES ' I BRAND '71 FORD F250 PICKUP NEW & '71 ELDORADO CAMPER Brand New 1971 EL DORADO flQ}'2 ~:fT. MOHAWK .Cab Over CAMPER $ ComplQ.tely equipped with stove, oven , ice box, toilet, di-· , /:~ ·; nette, wood grain paneling, drapes, plenty of storage and · '•. ~ .. el eclric outlets. (.007767) $2so~~~~ $116 52 PAYMENT MO. EXTENDED FINANCING ' . . . . . .. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY BUY FROM AN AUTHORIZED FACTORY DEALER WHERE YOU RECEIVE THE ·BEST IN · /,:· · .... S··E· R·V1C E . . • .· ....... (!..: .,.·· G· .---~ jS{~ -BRA~~.,~~ 197l~L DORADO AVAILABLE ON TRUCK & CAMPER UNITS . --8' OTTOWA CAB OVER Vocotion_eqpt. with icebox, stove, sink; queen size bed. No. I 1~887. . , . FULL PRICE · IMMIDIATE DELIVERY BRAND NEW 1971 CONTEMPOCAMPERS EASY TERMS AVAILABLE GOOD SELECTION FULL PRICE $ IMMIDIATI DILIVIRY t····snciAL·-····1··9···1···1·l.EASE.AND·····-: useo'71Mustang2 dr H.T. USEo'71Galaxie500 ' : PURCHASES OF . . RENTAL CARS : WITH FACTORY AIR HARDTOP W/FACTORY AIR . • -• VS f t · d ' · · d h Very low mile ege. V8, e ufometic, f•ctor.y . • * GALAXIES * TORINOS * MUSTANGS * PINTOS * MAVERICKS * ' " 0'Y '" '0" '1'0"'"9· '"tomot;,," ;~, •••• ,, pow. ,;,, pow " .... ,;,9, ,;,yJ ;,,.,;O,, ,.d;o, • . • er sfeer1n9, delu){ft wheel covers with wh1+e wall t1re1. heafer. ( b90C BW ) ·M~ny Equipped With y-s. Fac~ory Air: Automatic Trans-: 171 5 CEM J IMMEDIATE I> WWY IMMEDIATE PEUVERY • m1ss1on, Power Steering, Whitewall T1r••· W~ Covers.. $ 2 8 .. · .,8. , , ~.-... 2 .. · .9·.. , 8. 8 : Radios and, Heaters. . · .: : · fP : HUGE SELECTION AT LOWEST PRICES EVER · : · '••••••••••·~··•••!'••••••••••••••••••.••••• FULL PRICE SUPER SALES St'tllALS NEW CAR TRADE-INS CREDIT CORNER ' 66 Y.~.~~-~ .......... ,.$588 '67 ~~;~{~~.~~~~~~$1188 '66 ~.~!,~; \Y,~?,· ..... $788 13' lt•oltr, lcrndou lop. Trani., h1ot1r (WfW-S67) . 171(1Jl5'1! i:0-~~~~~~..,....~~..,,.,,,=--:-::~~~~~-,' 64 ~~~:.:.~ !~?, ... ' $588 '70 ::::.',.~' .. :.',,",'::: .. ,:.: $) 888 '70 ~.~.~~"~~.~s.'A $ wht •ll.(Pl41'11) ing ra e1• rCJ 10• H,('157CEl) htott r, ( IOSS'l4) '66 ~.~,~r.~~~, ....... $68 "'70 ~~~~~!.~~,,..$1··43·s '69 ~:~~~,~.:~?." $23a· a~ ••to. tn1ni .. ,ower il••ri.,, · · -roclto~ heater, white-TORT Alf Ht,lf!tr, r•dio, hHter. !!Sl·IUIC) • , . ,,_111,,(905(~) ·' . XQG.2Ml ' • , '65 C,HEV.WGN.' $688' .. '6:a· .·P ym.Furylll$1188 '67DodgePick.~P ·.$12a ·s· ,, . , ~t AIR, y.1, o•IO. te .. 1.,. · I . YI, fA'CTORT AIR , •t:tt.o. , v1 Ton Y-I, Ion, •o4, _ 1 . ,, stetrino, (PIF.!46.4) I tro~ 1., poW1r 1t1or1111, (V•lSCJ) ~ r1cho, ho•l•r, l(l20J RENAULT 8 lulio,IMcter .c:et1-J plo1, tlDA·•IO) '67 Ford Custom VI, rMllo, llNl•r, ooto. tro111, (TID-JH) I :~ ... :1DRD SUPER ,VA1' £1: l• ~ <t•• •II tl•••Y -.,d u (2'3071) $488 '69 ~M.~'2";~~:.~:!;$2388 '65 ~~,~!,~.~~ ......... $588 •/top• 1ptem. 1661 • h"'''• (MICF47S) .A.TWI • - $69' :~9.!.?~,~.~~~" ~~~"'' $69· n1d io, ht ol1r. licu1~ 612-A I'S. I I Totol Mo.,,..,; $'69 :~~.fh~~.\'.t""' ,;,, ..... $69 . tr1111., rod10, .... ,.,, pow1r lltff· int , !209054) To tel P•. P•t. Totel Me. P•t. $,6' 9 :~;?,1.9.~~·-... ; .. ,,;;. i69 'Or, IAl·Z2l .. \ . Tohll P11. P111t. "Tetol Ma. P•f $69 v.a,,.,._,..,,,,_!,"l~XJ $6 P.,..lor Foirl••• S•riH. Tolol P11. '"''· lefo;I Mo. ANY OF THI ABOVI CARS CAN Bl PURCHASED FOR ONLY •• • io, "'"'' a ... PYflt.-110fl t.;9 ft, to•al mo. pyml, iocl. """"· ira .. 1."'"'ord o11 11-- nc• chorg•• "" _,00t.d '"..m. fa• JO "'"""'"-' h .l-Jw ... ;,.....i. pnco · 7139 incl. all f;....;,,,1<hote••.,tlt1•••, uo~•f•r, ..:11 .,.1j ~"' pav cooll, '-'l!·colh I""°' io $ t'l 16.J9 Ont I. 1oleo lo• 4 trorufor, ' AN NU Al rllCftllT A51 IA Tl 1 J.00 , I I •, \ '\ I . ~ ... ' .... . . :t• OAJL V PllOT Frid•Y. Junt 25 . l'in Everyone Has ·Something That Someone Else Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With " Want Ad ·The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results • General General General GREEN THUMB G:l.rdt•ncr 1$ P\'ldtnl 111 lhi~ tl~ .... iloil"lli ..... ililiiil in1111;u·ul,111• :\l!'S:t •lrl /lln1· ~ MACNAB -IRVINE CALL FOR OUR PICTURE BROCHURE OF CURRENT LISTINGS OFFICE OPEN SAT. & SUN. CAMEO SHORES ESTATE Over 3.000 sq. ft.; 3 BR., 3 baths. al l large roon1s & great ocean vie"'s. Entrv courtyard w/quiet garden. "SUBfi'fiT YOUR ·oFFEH" - $89,500. Al Fink HARBOR VIEW HILLS Popular LaJolla Lusk home. 3 BR's., family room. 21/2 bathi:;, 3 car garage. Pool, vie"'· $79,500. Cathryn 1'ennille OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 3907 TOPSIDE l 1\NE, 1-larbor Vie1Y Jl ills. Ocean ,·ien· fron1 living, dining. breakfast & master bedroo1n. Beamed ceilings, 2lh baths; famiJy roon1 n·/brick fireplace. 3 car gar- age. $69,500. Carol Tatum JUST LISTED, BAYCREST I 707 CANDLESTICK LANE -OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1·5. Jli beams Ivan \Veils 4 bedroom. dining, 21 • ..:2 baths. Large fan1 ily rn1 .: eourt· yard entrance. $78.900. Mary Lou Marion BA YSHORES-PRIVATE AREA Absen tee o\\·ner needs immediate sale! 3 Bdrm. home \Vlhigh beam ceilings; charming decor, + gst. toll.age & ba. in rear. Reduced to $39.750. Gene Vreeland OCEANFRONT- CAMEO SHORES BeauWul home in perfect condition. 3 Bed· rooms. 3 baths & po\\·der room. \\lood J'an· eled library: form al d ining room. \Valle pa· tio w/lf&F pool & fountain. Steps to beach. '225,000. Eileen 1-Iud son NEWPORT ISLAND Let me sho\V yo u this \\'a terfront duplex. Completely redecorated. Ne\v <:pt.. drapes; large dock & boat slip. 3 BR., 2 Ba . up, 2 BR., 2 Ba. dov.11 . $8~,000. l .a\1era Bu rns OCEAN VIEW O~rner anxious. \\'ill sell bclo\\' mkl. 3 BR. + sep. din. rm. · !. ~ep. fam. rm. too -2 baths. Lge. yard. \\'ell landscaped. Reduced to $48 .500 -1-larbor View llills. Art Gordon PIER-SUP-SANDY BEACH OPEN SAT .. SUN. 1·5 -2301 Bayside Dr ., NB. Fee land. A designer's dream. 5 Bed· rooms, 3 baths. Great 2nd story possibilities. Vie\Y of harbor enlrance & main bav. 5 min. lo ocean plus easy access to free,\·a.\'s. $178,500. George Gr upe CHOICE LOT b«!1'00111 hnnu•, l '1·nfr l•I Ol\'Jlt•1~h1p sli.,\\s irlS!Ut• a1Kl l)Ul. '/'hill hon1{' h:1 ~ '11Utf)rnu. lie ~111·<tgt' door o/i.·n<'r, a11 • Fl NE R HOMES eond111un1ng and t.-.:1n1~ 11lu:-SPECTACULAR NEW IVA N WELLS MODEL extra~. Visit this outsta nding new Ivan \VeUs Model $32,950. llome. Breathtaking view, beautiful pool, 5 BR's. 5 Baths. lu xurious FR W/\Yet bar, for- Newport ma! Dr. Open Daily -2006 Galaxy, Dover Shores. •• Fairview 646·88 I I (anytime) Check These Features * l.tJ\'t•ly J~W)l • Bo;i ' yard * Play art•ll * :l l11r11(' bedrooms * ~ fl!'l'f'lat'l•s * Q lllt'I ,.ft'<'l'I * C!oi-;r '" Harbor' High * Co11\'rr111•111 to shopp1ni,: All 1h1~ ;011] 111ut·h niorc•! C11n ha1·,. ffl~I f's<·n1w. 'fry l!l';. •hi\\ n~ Ulff'rf'd al JU~t $3/l,:J()() C111J lor appt. &16-i17l 1-0 THEREAL ,,ESTATERS ' • • 4 ' INCOMPARABLE VIEW Bay & Mountains iron·1 your JO' high ceil· ings in exclusive Dover Shores. Glamour 1nlnt condition hu1ne. elaborately decorated. 4 Bn, 3 bath, PR. lg. F'R, formal DR. gour· met kit. Anthony pool w/Jacuzzi. Owner mov· ing out of tO\\'n. Really exceptional value at ~162,500. May lease or lease option. CaU Bert l•'e hren 675-3 210 for appt. l STAR HOME E verything in top condition. Beautiful large 5 BR -4 bath home. Sparkling oversized pool nestled in a large manic ured garden \v f a parade of flowers. Wet bar -stereo l~roughout. Automatic timed sprinklers. At· tJc storage-more, rnore. m ore -come see! Open Sunday 1·5 p .m. 1315 Santiago, \Vest· clirr. $88,000. LIDO ISLE ESTATE Elegance combined \\'/superb craftsman· ship in this exceptional 10 room residence. Dramatic LR \\'/cathedral ceiling -5 Bfi"s -~---~~~-·· -6 baths -DR -Den -Library -FR . :1. Bcdboa Island car garage. The u lt imate in privacy on 3 Yf'ar 'round v:i1·11tlon ~ ff'W sh!J)S to bl>:11·l1. Enjoy i.:ovcl lushly landscaped lots. An excep tional buy a t ~215 .000. 'l hdrrn. 1'1•1t1g 11·llh •1 :! IKJ. TREMENDOUS VALUE rm. in(·om,. uru1. !'7:,,;m fieautiful Ivan \Veils customized home v.,i/ 675-3000 lovely view & pool. 4 BR's. 3 baths, office, C:dl for "llo1n1•); formal DR, FR \\'/"'e t bar & breakfast area. Fflr Li\'111g·• .\l,1gaz1n<' J-luge. exciting room over garage w/thick shag ca rpeting, panelled n•alls. F'P, wet bar, bathroom & view. Mediterranean archi lec· l ure & decor. $112.500 ------::i II:tllill A 111'.\fll , llEAl:I"\' l;\I'. , LE_\!_--1..!:!_!_ __ 6_7 ~ New Sharp listing No dov,n 10 a Y1•1 or all lf'nns 10 SUI'' Ttus hfllnP ha::; :1 !lo.Ir, ENJOY THE SUNSETS f'rorr1 this Ocea n Vie\v 5 BR family hon1e. Bean1ed ceilings throughout & a fres h, gay de;'or. C.rassy terrac.e. pretty rose garden. !'$8.'l,000 Open Sat. & Suo. 1·5 p.m. 4501 Fair· field. Cameo Shores. la111 il11 1wn1 .t· '2 ha1 1i~ plu:-; a •·h~;r111111b kil•·hi·r1 11 '.'.11 OPEN HOUSE AMID THE TREES pl1 •11111 nf 1 ·11pl>11~11-rl~. flu• 0 l 1. I f J . :i-.11<1 .l1a~ spn11kl,•1"< l1•1nt ,{ n a< e ig ll ll tree 1111ed stre!C'1. A be<1ut1fu l ; ..... r 111u,. .~0.1 ,.r;o l 11,v,.l,\· 4 BR newly decorated home .. r··u11 size yard 11\1•<.1 hrwk 111,1n1f'r~. 11ur1.Y -truly a run p!a~e. Open .Sal . ~-v. Sun. 1-5 on Hii.~ ()nPt Prwt'll 111 just p.m. 1715. Candlestick. Baycrest ~74 .750. $:\0.~.00. Call :,-16-2.l!J, LUXURY AT A PRICE ! 1-0 THE REAL ~ESTATERS ..._ 01 r • • , ~, , The J.!le an1 of polished paneling -the lush v.•armth of red carpels -a re1ninder of the days ~fold ~ailing ships anchored at the tip o_C an island 1n Ne\\"POrl Bay. A truly n1agni· CAMEO HIGHLANDS f1c~nt 5 B!1 hon1e "'/pie r~~ !'!ip. $350.000. \Ve \\'ITh vu·w nll arnund. 3 BR, belleve this to be a buy \\ l1i c_h you \Vil! possi· 3 Hr;11·hr:1 1~·itll kf'y acN'ss. bly never see again. Hf';iut lnY•i•111 .~· rlr11n as ;i 11 111.•'11, .. Sk.i.~t."ti DOVER. SH_ORES BAYFRONT BEST BUY Home Show Realtors A. maJ~Sli c ~ BR hon1e \\''a study & billiard "'Arn1ch:.1r Houschunt1ns,:" sized ll~rary. Din~ by the lights of a 2-story 3.'!35 E. CnRst Hwy., CdM c~and~lier. Beauti ful mansard roof. P ier & In WESTCLIFF. Out or state owner savs sell · sell. Beautiful corner, protected by arChitect· ural appro\•al; Somerset Lane. $25.950. 1-larry F'rederick 67S.7225 Slip will acco1nodate a large boat. $179.500. •1 -D_ail_"y_P_il~ot \Va1rt Ads have Open Sunday 1·5 p .m. 210 Evening Star bargains galore. Dover Shores. ' CAMEO SHORES An exci ting floor plan. i~ this 4 bdrm . 3 1 ~ bath ho1ne \1·11h a n1agn1f1cenl \l'h1te \\'3ll"r \'1e\\'. Pallo \\'ith large, beautiful pool Only steps to private he<irh. S139,500 4 BDRM. TOWNHOUSE Universilv Park -O\\'tier~ n1nli\'a\ed. Pool. tennis. gr.ilf; xln t fam ily hon1e: lo1v 1na1n ten· ance -near all i-chool s 1nrlud1n~ U.('.l. nlove ln for IO\\' pric-e of S3\.900. "Chuck'' I.en"L.s CORONA DEL MAR VIEW Charming 3 BR . 2 Ba .. den. formal d ining -lovely pine kitchen &· nook n.1· f'ee lot. \Valk to shopping & l~i ttle ('nrona. S.79.500. l'.larrt1tt Davie• WHERE COULD YOU FIND - So much room for !'O lilllP $S ~ 1.arge 2-~t ory. 4 BR.. 2lf.t baths. den, form. D.R .• breakfa_!;t nook; palio: F'IP in L. R & n1 str. bedroon1. Big yard~ $41 .900. J\1. C. Ruie IAYCREST-OPEN FEELING Nobody looks do\1•n on this one'. Your back yard is your private retreat & its perfect. You vie w it from every major room in the hou.5e. See this l'Unken living room/loggia , truly unique n1a~t er suite & blg 3-car gar- age. $74,950 -Fee. Bill Comstock OWNER MUST SELL NOW!! f\fake an of.fer on this large 4 bdrm .. fan1 . rm., dln. rm. home in beautiful llarbor View llilJs. Access to private pool & greenbelt lreL This is one or our \'ery be.'i t buvs & will not last at a \ow $63.750. Bud Austin HORSE5--POOL-BEAUTY 5pan.ish hacienda surrounded by t rees, gar· :lens, putting green; 5 bdrm. c uston1 home. bullt 2~ yea.rs ago. U nique stable w/2 stalls. t..ck rm. & studio. Ne\vport I !arbor High Dis- lricl •225,000. Muy Harvey Gener-al BE ABOVE IT ALL A beautiful panoramic ,.;e\1· of channel & bav. 2 BR, 2 bath . all elec1r1c kit. J\'ev,r expensi\,e cpl~. & drapes. l lnderground parkin g hnt pool hf)al slip available Call -67~3"10 s5,_oon. · -· IORE\"I E OL \ON '" R f:lf l r o 11s OJ>E:N 7 DA \'S A WEE:K l ACRE RANCH COLON IAL 4 + DEN + 4 BA "HORSES" WALK TO LAKE BACK BAY AREA INVESTORS TAKE HEED I! (:-1 lot :it 1000 \\!. Ne\1·port. Excellent poten· t1a.I \V /$450 1no. incon1e nO\\i. l block to ne\V "( ann!C'ry Development." Assume Joan. 'PICK A FAVORITE The "13o nita," of The Blu ffs. is the !'harpest. ex.tras-~1lled condo on the market. c.~om pa re this price $42,250-on a beautiful green belt. MACNAB. IRVINE 642-8235 675-3210 tlnbrlif'\'Pl>le ! Quil't 1rrc 901 Do ver Drive 1080 B•yside Drive l in"d SL '" this ~ori::e· Newport Be•ch uus .. ,,h1 \\Orld rhar1n· rr." <l n1R!>sivr bl'clrooms lll?>L-CTbTr ----- ·!-11111:·· 1Janrlt'fl ram1ly -- - - -----W<a<L<al.Wli n·o(ln\ ' 2:.' pi<'t u rr \1·i n. l\;;G;;';;";;";;•;;l;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;G;;;;'";;';;'~·~I :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; do11· 111 ltvin~ nxim "'Ith 11niq11" !lrC'platf", LR1·11;e 250 tlq. f1. rln•111n kih·ll· P11. \\'nll o r Ji!IH~~ o,,...n~ \,i) f'l••v;it('d j•UllO \li!h .<1lf'rlAC'U!11r vir\\., 7.nn"d for hors,.i;. Truly a shov,·. i ]'11'!'". Gr'f'Al arf'n for ~'hlld rt>n. t11usl S(.'11 quick. DIAL 64S.Ol03 -% BAY & BEACH REALTY, Inc. all or-write for-your-fr-H copy four Homes For Living Ml91zine. THE POLLOCK'S CLASSIC Have outgrown ~heir immac. 3 bdrm. plus ConAGE huge den home in close·te>everylhing Wesl· <:li(f. Short walk to schools, a lovely park 1ilc PLUS library. $19.500. BEST BA YFRONT BUY FULHLOGUSUEEST Your one chance to ow11 a fine home on the B1g Bay, for Je ss tha n $100,000. Q\\•ner has ONL y $25,500 moved Jo the desert & is anxious. Call Joday for details. JUST LISTF.D! Su\:M'rb F S l(K·ntion. Trut' 11rlde or I HING IS FINE 011nct!lhlp. 17' mAl!lt .. r At ~.ake Mead, so this 'vaterfront home is 1 ii;uJ tr!I. Gh.-nntic 1llcl ur1P: available. Ou•ner has bought a t Jhe Ja ke & \\'in d o \\ 11,·ini:: rnom. Grn1·1nui'I <llnlni.. A11f'y Offl"rs a custom 3 bdrm. ror $77.500. Includes a.ti.>Hl'l f•)r 1.>011111r1d 1r1111. bayfront cov. patio, priv. slip for 38 ft boat "r. 2 l)('c'ln'll~in 1 h11!h & a good swimming beach. · izu~~l hnusP~ O\·Pn &nd rani.;t-. Pric1'<1 In 11ri1. l lr:=::: General Monticello Condo. m cl>oice 11.duh section, Pnp. ular 2 bedroom balcony mo- del , in ~autitul condit10n. Call now for appt. w see. Asking $22 ,950 2 DELUXE 4-PLEXE S Sl)aC. 3 BR & 2 Ba in choi~ N.B. al't'fl. Owner v.•a11ts quick AAle. Pric-ed below n\kt. NEW 80% loan. 7%% l!Ul'i'Y. lheR \\'On'I lll.5l. $72,500. EACH fijJ§;l;l~lkl RtAL T Y COMPANY 642·1771 Anytime DOG KENNELS HORSES BIG HALF ACH£. 130 F'oot lron1&ge on pr1\'a!e road in Santa Ana Heights. Good '!'11.•u Bdrm. fixer up~r "'i~h large fan1ily room -new roof. F'ou r horSe t'Orrals. tack room ;:ind small hay barn. Thi! properly is noe of lhe Vi'ry It'll' 11'11, And what a price~! Only $24,950 -Set' this. M. i'.:Vf'lllllJ:S Call 54~-326.) Meredith Gardens 3 BR Split-level $40,950 Pril"t'd to sell now, this beau. 11ftU hoint" fPalUrf's a large rorn11d d1n1n.(:' rooni. hui:e \1•fi111ul·p:-1tit'lf.'<I fan1ily room v:ith Pi.t10«: VerdPs stonr lu"t'plaf't', 2-11 b>rth.o. Nir('fy \aodS(:apt><l. sprinkler 11)'11· :1•111, 120 rt . deep lot. t.o. l'.!lh"d rw,1r bt>ach, school~ & shop11ini,: • .for addition11.J info & lu Sl'i', 1ihollt' 5-16-?313. ID ' THE REAL \~ ESTATERS \, ' >I'; 0\ I 1 i ~ 5 BEDROOM Cnlle~e P11.rk 111-ea homl". 11 h;i.<; a "l\"hopp1n,1(' big 1s,q.i ~q ft & 8 \'1\ npprais;i! f'f S31,11Qo. ,July ls1 it wi!l be \'llClHll. \\'h<i'.s f1n;t wJ!h a big fan1i!y? Newport •• Fai rview 646-8811 {anytime) Can1 hri!l1!1' r:s1111rs ll<'ln1p ~ HH . For1nnl thnin~. L.'\~ ra mil:r-• rn.in1 plu~ a t\1n- \t'1'!1hlr llrn, top i\te!oa \'C'l'- ;1.-. lox·:i 111111 l~1r~,. pa!!o • r.11 ~y , ii/•· 1.111d~r•q11nil . A•I· c1111onal off<fr'('('f park1nR anrl m11rh tll•l!f' As~um" 11. S:lll,MO \'A l.>1'1~. Pnc'C'd a! Pf'.~. &16-7171 \:.0' THE REAL \'.:' ESTATERS •I•, r, , , $16,500-FULL PRICE I . i\o liP, i;:r•'at location not too far !ro1n the beach, llURP l:w>droon1 ""Ith ron11rrriblf' <lrn , Lo\'f'ly lllM hath \\'11h JJunken Type tub 11nd showPr. ~pat"ll1f' l;iuntlry !'(l(lm Hui;:" SR rd 60 \'. lf-0. lot"' of 1'1Xln1 To i;iniw. Submit your do11·n payn1rnt after in.spec. 1inn. Walker & Lee 1700 Harbor Blvd. at Adams .s.l5-0465 011C.11 'til 9 Pilt YOUNG LOVERS FHA • GI 3 Sr11cioos bdrm3. !t"atlll'f'll 1ialo~; !'uhmh ,>i:>ur IPrms. MORGAN REAL TY 673-6642 67l-64l9 BEAUTIFUL CUFF DRIVE General * * * * * TAYLOR CO. 'It: Ocean Breeze and Whispering Trees PICTURESQUE CORONA DEL MAR Charm, quality & ocean vu in this custom built 3 bedroom beauty. Dream kitchen & ~ master s uite. Low maintenance ..... $87, "FOUR STAR" SPECIAL See your drean1 home in popular Dover Shores. Brand New 2-story w/4 bdrms, study. sun room & dining rm. Lovely is land kitchen & 3-car garage. A real buy at ...... $105,000. 4JO MORNING STAR OPEN SUN J.5 :30 LJNOA ISL E -$155,000 Spectacular! Brand new 4 BR, 5lf.z ba. home. 1' ... an1. rm, dining rm & study. A real dream kitchen. Carpeted & ready for decorator touch. Many new features. 8 LINDA ISLE OPEN SAT-SUN 1-5 :30 LINDA ISLE -$t4S,OOO Elegance & \Varmth in this fine home on ex- clusive Linda Jsle. 4 Bedrooms, study (or 5th BRJ, fa mily rm & formal dining area. Plumbed for pool. Pier/slip. See broker a t •8. LINDA ISLE -$250.000 l\. 1nost luxurious ho1ne in choice location facing the yacht filled lagoon. Rich decor thruout the S bedroon1s, fam rm & formal DR ., 4 Bath & plush powder rm. Pier/slip. See broker at •8 Linda Isle. A NEW LINOA ISLE CONCEPT! Fabulous 4 BR home \Vilh family rm, study & lge DR. Breathtaking 2-story ceiling in kit· chen whi ch Jias all the latest features. See broker at 8 Linda Isle. FRENCH REGENCY ON LINDA JSLE I A touch of formality from the grand dining area overlooking the huge step-down LR. Ci rcular stair,vay. 4 Lge BR & fam rm. $160,000. See broker at 8 Linda Isle. CAMEO SHORES A rare custom quality in this beauWully de- signed luxury home. 4 BR. den & formal DR all overlook inviting huge patio & pool A real p icture beauty ............... , ...... $175,000 MEDITERRANEAN SPLENDOR -$175,000 Completely remodeled front "'/charming gar- den-patio. Roomy 'i nterior includes 5 bdrms plus maid"s rm. fjarge \\'aterfront patio sur· rounding pool. Pier & slip. CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX -$54,500 A home for you plus sorne income. Front unit: 4 bdrms. beamed ceiling & frpl. Rear unit: 2 BR & 2 baths. Immed. Possess. 515 POINSEITIA OPEN SUN. 1-5:30 THE BLUFFS -$S1 ,SOO Near new "E" plan. 3 Bdrms. formal dining area & fam ily rm. 2 Patios & on green belt. lm1ned1ate possession. Call today! NORTH LAGUNA -$175 ,000 Tremendous vie\v of the surf from this 5 BR oceanfront New England iarm style home of top quality. Your pvt steps to beach. CHOICE LOTS -PRIME LOCATIONS 90' Front, level, Jee ................ $ 27,500 90' Pan. vie'"'· corner. lease ..... , .. $ 31,500 94' View site on Galaxy, lease ...... $ 38.500 57' Waterfront. pier/slip. lease ...... S 49.500 Vu China Cove. bay & ocean. Fee .. S 65.000 45' Linda l s!e, lease ................ S 73.000 45' Linda Isle, lease.SOLD •. , ....... S 75,000 108' Linda Isle, lease ... , ...•....... $125,000 ''Our 26th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hill, Road NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 * * * * * * * General P ete Barrell Reaft'I p1•eJ11nlJ MONEY WELL SPENT LARGE -5 bedroom. din.ing roo 1n & fam· ily room. Big fenced y ard. Exceptional buy for a large and active family. Harbor High- lands. $65,000. DUO-HOMES BALBOA PENINSULA -3 Bedroom with s tudio v iew apartment. Now under construe· tion. 4 models to choose from. Exceptionally designed -v.•ell built. EXCLUSIVE SHORECUFF SPACIOUS VIEW Home -3 Bedrooms, family room, d ining room den and 3 baths air·cond., lovely garden seiting. $115,000. HOME FOR SENIOR CITIZENS OR FOSTER CHILDREN -3 Bedrooms plus large dor1nitory -good also for very large family . $27,500. Office Open Saturday1 & Sunday1 PETE BARREIT REAL TY 1605 WMlcllff Dr. N.I . 642-5200 .\lagn1iwr111 p1n1· lrf'e'll t f'al · i.v .!l't"''n! this sh11 rp New. IJ(n'J \\ •·s1 1 IOl'llf', ~ 8 1'1:1· 1001n,,. :! halh.~. <vrl)('r lo'., _roo)1n /or ho.it ~·nd trailer. 1'hts para111~1· f•Jr kids lS only one rn1lf' 10 th~ hPach. No down lo V~'!.". $32,950. ~COATS ~WA~CE ~ REALTORS Open Evening• • 962-4454 • -[]-INCOME OR IN-LAWS? Delightful 2-hrdnlllin plus 11.n. otht•r 3-b.~clrooin house <>n CORNER 101. Hl'n1 10 In· la'>l's OR ? llas separall" /enced yard. Enjoy goad 11\'. ing and i:;rra! APPRECJA. TJO,.,. 1n 1/\1s l::ASTSIDE lo. cation. TIVO on flNE for th(' 101\' priCT' of only $39,500. <..:all 675-4930. •~'co.I -1 ... ,._MllS•HM SUPER CHARM Picturt' a country silf'd yard J11ll or niany !argp shade tree~. A t11g 12 '-: 2·1 MVPred cabana thar offers a unique 1\•ay 10 en1rrr.11n , This !i bedroom Ba ck Bay homl" 1111~ '.he lar,;('sl Family 1'\JOn1 £'1'er. 11 allnws for mother-in-law quar1cni a nfl or an offlt'f", One bedroon1 hlls a hrt'pla1·c and break· fasl b.-1Jcony. 11 ·~ one ol a kind. $~9.9.X!. &16-7171 1.0' THE REAL \"'-ESTATERS I ' .. ,. Bargain Hunters Attl"ntion n<l do1111 10 Vets or low low down F'HA. Here II is, big:; brdroom on large In:, room fnr boat and cam11· er. l''ull pnc<" only $22.500. \\'alk lo 1111 11cllools. Hurry on this onr. Cali 540.1151 (Open ('\'CS I. ---*CHOOSE FROM_3_* Harbor llighlands, NB 3 BR 2 ba. & den ........ $.13.00'.I 3 BR . 2 ha. lam. nn. pool. tpl. Immac. East Ci\1 $37.oo.'.J J BR. 2 ba. lam. rm. dbl. !pl. E. Cos!a Mesa • $34,750 Ca.11 : 673-3663 6-12-2253 Eves. associated BROKERS--REALTORS 1025 W lalbaa 61J·l66l NEWPORT SHORES BEAUTY 2.i()'! !i.qUllN' ft>rl of Rracious l1\ 1ng 1n !his ~ llt'.>droom, den .r, l)(')nu~ ronn1 IV!usr on ti'le r11na 1. Prir·f'tl 11rlJ a1 $49,500. CAll 67J.8J.'JO. lo · THE REAL \'.:' ESTATERS • "f'• c•',J, •I' NOW-REDUCEO- lly "Big Cnrona" b('ach. NP1••Pst, nic.p~;. \<ilrm & spacious, 3 All. &1 Jam nn, so i-losf' 10 1h1• 11·;i1Pr, J usr r1 11 $.i.00<\ TO $7!1.~. Home Show Realtor• "/\rmchil 1t Jlousrhunting" 3.'ili .!::. Coo~r fi "JI., Cdl\I --~6.ll-7225 $40~95·=-o -I Lrg spl11 lf'\'PI !I br1.l ba Re· public Home. Nr, So. Coe.51 Plaza. Lse or J~e opt. Opm J . .J Sunda,Y. Vac, Nl"h1on Rf'RI E~!ale ~146-5..1*) Investors AttentiGn C·I Lot "'/2 BR. 1\.i ba. house. _l·Blk 10 beach: Great future poten lial! $25.000, George Wiiiiamson REALTOR 673-4:r() 64;..·1 ~ Evet. .WONDERFUL WESTCUFF ()rcot'fl.l('d Wl!h ll prnlesi;IO!'I· al taueh, d1-ep rich ahag lhn1oul. 3 bl'droom &: family 1'00m, double fll"('phltt. \Y<" in\•lte your iMpectloo S48,SOO 646--1171 . \0 THE REAL "I.. ESTATERS m-0100 644-2430 E·Z tc1-rn11. Se(' today!/ 66-0300 Qu;ility construction! Sfre!I · f'd for 2nd atory ""1th plnn~ 111111llable t 11"0Uld hllV(' 2nd ~1ory view!) Truly m1nln\um ca~ yard. N"""POri llf'i1thl1 finl"St J BR . 2 lull baths, l1uge "pool 11:1.ble'' sl~.f' fam. 1ly roon1. Shllm. clesn and ready to n1n11e-inl Offered 111 just S47,£00~ Lr l us llhow '.'-VU th1" ''l'I)' !IP('cial "nne (If a kind hon~ today". Call &l&.7171. .. ------------ Coldwell, Banker 5SO NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.8 . I OHi. \I L OI \0\ 675.3000 ... 675-3000 2407 E. COAST HWY., CdM 'O THEREAL •"I.. LSTATERS 229911""'"· c. .... ""'' /. Time For QUICK CASH 1 .... """''" '" '"" • ""'"' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'·'~'~"...;'~"~>~Y-·_;<1~2_;-"'7::::_:•8c....~- j)~·A 1ro q 1 PILOT CLASSIPllD ORANGE COAST'S IEST SALESMAN •• CASCADING ••a!er"fa!J lnlo 11~k.Jin~ pool, l!f'rludl!d •un df'r,k. 3 OWr.5iZl" beilrooffi!l. M"p. fflm . rm. 11nrt sll term11 $17.500. Bmkt'r 84241,l:i or ~~!·ID Buy !hi!. ne11· stutt DAJLY PILOT :J'1 I~ I _.... I~ I _.... l~I -.. -~ I ---~ G.neral General OPEN HOUSE SAT. 1-S 1~84 Gala:-:y Dr , Dover Shores. Oatstanding \.'JCW. 4 BR, 3 BA . dining room, fmly l'oOl'D. Inner courtyard POOL !112,DOO. IYll WW.S -flllSOOS - OPEN HOUSE SUN. 1-S N Mod I H 1713 Marlu1 Wa y. llaycrest. 3 BR . 3 BA. sep. -e - d1r11og rn1 . !n1I)' r1n. \\"l fireplaee. Quiet street Conte to 200& c.J,u,y ill fwe neighborhood . $62 ,SOO. Dnw, 0o ... er ~. 10 !tt lhJS E'XClUng. lll!W, turrushC«I OPEN HOUSE SUN. J.5 inod<'I, i u'' comp!eled. 1906 Santiago, Dover Shore!i 2 Slv. former Panoramic view of Bay 1nU model. View fro1n e verv room 4 BR 3 BA. Hills. :J Bedrooms. 5 !laths, family room. Profess.· 1<1ndsc~ped. Sss.ooo. .l!armal dining room. M!ak-tast room wuh view. "ery Roy J . Ward Co., Realtors t•ntertainalk Jamily roo111 16'9 WESTCLIFF OR. 646-0lll ... rt.h wet bar. oYerloolting 11\e lr.:;;;:;:;;;;-------"°---,---.::..:.:..:=::...·I pool. 'The lour 1nost wanted General General ll'91urrs au tn or1e . Elexan- ~.v. V ~....-. PcKM and Dowr Shot'l!S. \\'hlic you'n> here "'t"'d also like to show YQll somt: tlilc11lilg \·1ew lo1s on "'h1ch ...,,. can build 10 ~our pu- ucular needs. ' Open Houses THIS WEEKEND Jvan Wells & Sans 1 ""P thb llaMt, difec:h>ry with r• ""-_....., • YO~ 90 .__._. ... 411 tile locations lbte4 Wow lll'e' detieri.,. iJI 9teotw ~off tly o4tatill•t e1-- wllw• M toll•(' DAllT P'tlOT WANT AM. htNM .._.. .. ~,_. hod.•" fOf sole .., to rest 0 ,. ....., .. nv wc.h illf•r.011 ... • tlriil "*"*'"o -" FtW.J. HOUSES FOR SALE {'.2: Br & Fam or Den) 712 Polnsetta. Corona de! ti.tar 673-6510 (Sun day tn7 Antiqua !Ba,yrrest) NB 642-B235 1Sat & Sun) (3 Bedrooms} *592 }i1gh Dr. Laguna Be<1fh 642-5 200 /Sal & Sun 320 Prospecl (Newport Shores) KB 642-0993 iSwi 1-61 *2012 Diana Ln , Ne\vport Beach 646-730 1 tSun 2-6) **124 CrystaJ :\vc. Balboa Island 675-05971 2l3·277-383'l 1Sat & Sun) (.1JST0i\t BUILDERS SlNCJ.'. 192'1 2006 Galaxy Dnv~ &16" l~ Salisbury l<:f' ,I .. ~1--n• *BALBOA ISLAND* REALTORS 644-7270 , COME FOR A VISIT Stay for a lifetime. Inviting 3 bedroom home with a lovely 12'x30' solariuin, 3 baths, car· peting. draperies and 2 stone fireplaces. Nicely decorated and neatly landscaped. Has COMM UNITY POOL. rec hall and put· ting green available. Years of happiness for S59.500. Dover Sho1·es View Home I-land carved imported "BARCELLONA" doors welcon1e you to this absolutely fant.as· tic view borne. \Vith its 5000 sq. fl. Of unique custom features -too numerous to Jnention. 5 Roomy bedroom s. 5 deluxe pWlman baths, Ca1nily room, gracious forinal dining roorn gourmet kitchen, maid's quarters. 4 car gar· age. Exquisitely landscaped. Make an ap- pointment to see this most an1azing home. Priced to sell al $169,000. ON RUBY S:rpi.. lo No. Bay nr. cboicr 1twunmuig I.leach. Cu1'rtorn built • de<'Ora1or·, earprts & dra~s. Gofit-'OUS lsland homt', Garage stressed for ape GRE:/\T POTENTIAL! ON OPAL Nr So. Bay. Nie;> oldrr homl" v.ith rir. 11('1\• quatuy 2 BR. Bpi , for 11ay lrss than l't'- placement t.'OSI .!!· O\Vfll"T w/ carry 1he t1 u.~1 r!t.'('(L ON DIAMOND 2 Bt-drootn housr on lron1 or lo1 v>'1th near nr1v 2 bdnn. apt. over doullle garagr on rear , Offered v.·ay ~low re- placement CO:>ts. S."19,500. LITTLE ISLAND On AbolOfM.•_ Very ni<'t' & neat 11s a pin 2 BR., :? Ba. yrar 'round hunic ph1_s very 1uC'f' 1 BR. apt. Jus! ~uced S7,.:.00• ON GARNET NICT duple:c just redUt•rd Sl0.000 for 1m1nedia1r sale. Thi! 11·itJ nor las1 . call US! CLIFF HAVEN ;,);) KrNGS RI). N"lee 1 Bd· rm ., (l('n ti.o..1se: ownrr r;ays "~!;'ll, sell, 8"11." Drivr by, l'all 10 St't'~ Ail offers will be (.'Onsidered. Salisbury R:eatty :n:1 :\\ARINE AVE. fi1l·6900 RALBOA ISLAND Owners Loss - R••I E1t•I•. •15-6000, 144J E. Co••t Hiqhw•v Coroit• Jel M•r, C•lilorn;• FLORA AND FAUNA'S J·'lora & Fauna's c ute tl1ree bedroon1 home has shingles and shutters on the front and i.'I nestled on a 127 ft . lot in Newport 11eights. The home is brand new, and there 's shag carpeting thruout, a three car garage, and delightful decorators appointments. The builder went to great pains to preserve the existing Flora & Fauna (like trees & birds}~ So while the electric dishwasher hu ms. birds sing in the trees just outside your kitchen win· dow. This is a Bronze l<feda11ion home. Very charrajng~ The Flora and Fauna's home is open Satur- day & Sunday 1 to 5 at 511 Tustin, Newport Beach. Ca ll for dlreclions- UNl()Uf: ti()Mf:S Re•I fol•'•· 615·6000, 2~4J E. Co••I Hiqhw~y. C oro"• J .! M•r, Celilornia '92615 2516 Vista (BayshorcsJ f\1D 642-1833 !Sun 1·3\ 220 Kings Pl. (Chffhaven) NB 'l.'ards ;irl' usually small in NM-J>Orl Bi'ach. t:ru! nol 1hts onr. Tbi.s Por1<1f1110 model h:(:i; PT1Cl\rgh room tor a pool, rlllldn·n·~ pl ay are•, J141tio lor entertaitung, PLUS yard left OYCJ'. H's itl<to pruies- lilOttally df'L'Oraled, 3 Luv,f' bOOroomi; and lots or livins: .1Jr•'b <.'Omplf'lf' the p1elUf?' A!lul\g $.a:!,900. Call lo k'f ~Z313. 644-7270 AtUtUe-Swcid Your Gain! &>autifully appoinll'd "P11.lPr-l 'G~e~ne!l!!r~e~I !l!!!l!!!l!!!l!!!l!!!l!!!l!!G'e~n~e~r~a~l!l!!!l!!!l!!!l!!!lll!!!!I!!~ I mo" home in Harbor Vil'w Jiii /~. ~ y(•ur_s nr1\'. localed I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ I 642-8235 S39.900 1Sal & Sun) (3 8t' & FiMTI or Oen) *1207 Berkshire Ln (\Vesll'liffi 1"13 642·2589 $49.500 !Sat & Sun I ·5) 171 8 Mar lin \Vy . (Ba yrrc.sl J ~rs 64&-0228 /Sun 1·5) 19621 \Vaterbury, I luntington Beach 968--6557 1Sun 2-ti) *418 Ogle. Costa lfesa 968-6257 ISu11 3276 Dakota "\ve. Cosu f\le sa 545-R42<f $31.500 tS.t & Sun 2315 f'~rancisco Dr. Ne"·port Beach 545-8424 $55 .000 tSal & Sun *1225 f\1ottingh.am . Nev.·port Beach 642-4048 1Sun 1·5) 2520 ('J iff Dr. !\'c't.l.port Beach 646-7171 /Sun 14 Bedrooms) tt ~ Linda Isle Dr. (Linda Isle ) NB 644-49\0. Sl55.000. !Sal & Sun 1-5.30) 171 5 Candlestlck !Jl i Bay<:rc~1\ J\'B 642-8235 S74.750 1Sa1 & Swi) (4 Br & F am or Deni 1906 Santiago (Dover Shnre5t l\B 64 6·0228 ISun l -5) *1484 Ga.iaxy Dr (Dover ::;horesl NB 64&-0228 IS.I 1 ·5) 3074 Gibraltar !J.le!'a \'enie) \t.I 54S-5946 rSal & Sun) 1124 Santiago. 1\'e\\·por! Bea-ch 642-5200 IS w1 \-5\ 20082 Beaumont l luntington BcMh 968-6257 tSun 801 O iff Drive. Ne'\1X>r1 Beach 646-71/J S47.!J50 ISat. 1707 Candlest ick l..n (\Vestcltffl NB 833-0700 644-2430 rSal & St1n 1·Sl 3907 Topside Ln rJlarbor View Hills! f'dM 833-0070 644-2430 ~Sw1 1·51 644-4~ l 0 S 1 Q:1J)(Jl1 l'Sun l-5:30l 644-4910 ~1 ~5.00U iSal & Sun 1·5 30J 2051 ('om1nodore fBav('rest1 f\'B 1."-undav &4 2-823.j 5 7 4.:.00 25 12 L11.;hthoU!;C 1.n. ('oron;,i de! f\lar · 644-0903 tSlm (5 Bedroo~l 2301 BJ:o·stde l)r. Nc\rport. Beai ·h P.33-0700 fi.44-2430 1Sun 4501 f airfield 1f:ameo Shorcsl CdM 642-8235 tSat & Sun) (5 Br I F•m o r Den) *2006 C.aL:isy i..>r. !l)over Shores! NB 646-15!)() 1Dail v) **210 Evening ~tar j)}over Sboresl NB 642-8235 $1 .'i-'l.000 iSu nl *2.()()6 GaJal'y 1Dov~r Shores' ~R 64&.1550 *13 \S Santiago (\fc<.:t(·hffl KB 642-8235 SllB.000 /Sunday) HOME AND IN COME 51l-5 1I 1't Jasmine.. \or~n:1 deJ Mer 673-2020 !Daily l ·S) CONDOMINIUM FOR SALE U ldrm5l 403 retit il 'bt ~ul:fsJ !\pl Bea,·h 499-n3!1 /Sal & Sun 1 5) DUPL£XES FOi SAU (J .. & l II<\ 821 Lark!Spur, Coroni det Mar fi7U510 /Sunday 1·5/ 14 II< & 2 11<1 515-5\51"1, PomJielta;, Corona dcl ?\tar 644-4910 SM,liOO •Sat & Swi 1-5 .30) IATFRONT LOTS FOR SALE **Baylridt 0.-botw MJrinc Ave & CdM 642-a35 ISat & Sun) ..... 1,0'THEREAL ~ E:;3T!\. TERS ' BACK TO THE GOOD OLD DAYS ~I ·····-··mJREALTORS 8 (Form.rly Delancy Re.al Estate) 2121 EAST COAST HWY . CORONA DEL MAR , CALIF. •HI 11 11,..,1•ly <.'Omer 101. tyuu O\lll tilt-land l. Thr Oll'll<'l'!i H~ally 11><'111 "all-out" in up 1:rad1ni.:. 11•i!h TffE best quality 111 ""'r•ryth1ni:. Ik· li:::httully landscaped. Sp.1r· 11 ~'OU.!'f' a n E&rly An1er1c11.1' .11.1111que collector. e"'ery!hinJ:: \\ 11! 111 he,,.. Loi~ ol a<kk>d panl•l1nt 11n1t v.·al11J3pers. Thrs la~ 3 bi'droom horrM' has a 1)1~ lan1lly room ~nd hra1•y shakt> roof. Bcaullful !>l'~hborhood Ill :\lC'Sa V('rd<> HIJ;hlandt; on ;o 1:Ul·dr-s111· ~M:'!"L f Al"lT.4.STIC LAJ.\'D- SC1\PL"'JC •••1tl1 ;,;pJi" 1-a1J lirn~. CaU to ~P(' w ti a I SlJ.!i;ill. r•n 5tJl!I bu y'.' "!!!l!!!l!!!!!!!lll!!!!l!!!l!!!l!!!lll!!!!l!!!J!!!lll!!!!!!l!l!!!lll!!!!lll!!!!lll!!!!!!l•l!!!!l / 1011!1 <I bclr. dimni: rm. & G.n.ral General t<11nily room. \l:1n,1, m1ln,1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;,;;;;;;;;;:;;;;,;;;:;;;;./ f'\tr·as. " "'rry sp1•1·1al hornr INTRIGUING AND PtlACTICAL luded. SPAClot:S TH REE I 80~1 .. ~l> &th home nn rnrnrr lo!. fVITOlllldl'ri b,\' J hUgl'.' ;\lyaporum tree.~. Con- ~•'rlli•ntJy lor..atP.fl Ill schools 1 ~nd 5hoppmg in Coslil ~rM 's b<'autiful Collri:i· Parll l!rra. Pnl"f'd a, SZ!f.'.00 l ,.:!"l,,lhlFl1l1All!ol'l"~'~'~'"""llll~;ll[,I F.11rn1ng~ (;o)l ,,:-,;.;:0,1£. I -- 1 Sudden Tr-ofet>! I ;\'<'"A'ly lisrl'd f!llir Ot-druom & 1 itrn homf' !,, rn'll' f1f Nf"'A'T"'rt I nr111-ti :-finf-51 ti"'*'--n us hrin1P IN.t\11'1!' \M>;nrufg,1 nr"' W g r 11rpetin.L largr {)(A'U - ~ palKl. srparalt' (;hiid'1o yard. room tor hoat or ttul- ri-. da11.:; !'Win M<l m&JU' 01hrr feat111'f'l;. PrKJC'd nPJI tnr l'asl ~. Burry on ttu~ -- VIEW! VIEW! VIEW! Front row Bluffs condon1iniu1n. Lavishly decora ted. 'v!th 3 bedroon1s, 2 baths, spacious sunny kitchen & breakfast nook. Even a f·ar- peted patio! The best vie\V available in The Bluffs. $51 .900 PENINSULA BA YfRONT If yo u are looking for a large home ln an elegant setting, with a pier & slip & close to bay & ocean swimming. v.·e have what you are looking for! 5 Bedrooms, S baths, office lvith outside entrance; maid's room: living roam with fabuJ ous stereo system. Nothing finer anywhere. !225,000 UNIVERSITY PARK Conveniently located. 4 bedroo111 1vith fa111ity roo1n. f.l on1e close to recreation & shopring. Beautifully landscaped for "the Green Thun1ber" in the fa1nily. J11 sl. repain ted & ready to go. $39.950 -lO ' 11 OO\Vll PROPERTY MANAGEMENT (Jur management d 1v1ston handles numerous propertie~ in Orange & Los AJ1gele.~ Coun· tics. Our experience & co1nputerized account· ing can save you money & ma ke ynur incon1e property more profitable. Please call ror in· forrnation. HARBOR COMPANY REALTORS "SINCE 1944,. 673-4400 ""' ""·'''" """ ,.._l!ln. I Genecal i Go __ "_._'°_' ______ _ $1)3 000 Bons•ll · F•llbrook ~ ' 111 .. ,~1 by .'ian Lui.~ RC'y SWIM POOL TIME ! Do<A·ns: 11;i0 squn"' rC't't -3 RENT IEATEI SHUFFLEBOARD l>l'd11 1oms lif bafti5 older 3 Bedrooms, % bl1h and din-ranrli lypr Mme ovrrlook· 1 rnr;. All INiHU1ti . doll'itlf. i:r;ar· 4 IDRM. + DEN ini,: San Luis Rey Do"''llll iti;'r. 1·rrt!' & rll'Jlt'. Lo_.. "l'lc11viry hom1•." in prime Val!ry and Ila beautiful PJ"l<'l' rn ~a 111 S19,l'ie. V•-location. Spacious roon1s, raricholi. Situated Ol'1 11. ~r ... nin1, ~ 11nyri"'""· CUI enrry hall, 2 <;tparal<' balhs. le knoll with total 11.creaee :~1 1~,1 10p!on "'"'~' pal'k J1kl' ya rd. brk oP"n of 31• ct1m111icllfly Pt"rf«t Ill!' \'l'!'Y l'i!)('Cia! pcQj>!('. Call f(•l' :\PflQtnlment ru ,·hann 646·7lTI. :o THE REAL '"\... ESTATERS SUNSET BEACH BACHELOR PAD Prrfcct for lh<' o·arefrrt ir1- ,;1•1. Sunkrri 1i..,1ng roon1. llPll\')' OJl('n hram ce11i 111:>'. Co~y he11rrti rirepla~. Pil n- e llt'l'I dining roon1_ Larpe!~. Ti!rd ba1h. Doublr sink. P:1n1ry. •,. hlk 10 t !OO,UIXJ rllannM homes. ACro!-!s St. to i>f'11.ch. Br!tcr hurry, Only $21,.JOO. Call 171~1 962-i'ill.5 IORI.\ 1 [ OL \0\ '" R £1tt T 0RS l!H3t Brookhurst Avt, Hunlin!ltOtl Beach MESA VEROE CORNER O"'fl"r n1ust sell and say!, ~111Jnu1 atl offers. l.oVf'ly :1 El/!, 2 Bii, w\1h hugt' )iv rm. ht'ir·k fpl .. and all <'lr1· hlt1n kt1C'h, f 1'1Jn1 rourt}aNI "1th c>:1t'nsivr ldl'<'pg. ar. ll>rd~ 1h11r trnrd tn fu1d pr1-! 1'111 y • X!111 lo..·. vn 1'\lrntr 1 ](lt. nnly 'I. blOl·kii In ~II i<hopp111g ,1 du1111 V II 01• Jo1v dn !-'!IA 1r1•1ns. Pnce unly S'Z9.9.:.U Call J4G-.)8SO $202. PAYS ALL Everyorl(' quMlif1('l; to a!llfumr thi!I 6'1l> loon or $22,7:!0. Sparkhng J BR. 2 Ba home, dtil firrpJ, frTS"tdy painted. 11«W l'hflg <'fl!lllg and ,l(Jrit rr~ld€'nl11tl 11n>11. ~·orced saJt. •. i;acr1 t1Cf', SJ!,JOO. Call ~t:>-812'1 iopcn eves.) r.;i~~·~~~~ • 'Iii ~f p.111, :)'IQ.1720 acre!I •JI eenlly rolllni,: land. BIG ''D'' I ~ ="=J 1 !A~BELL _!_955 H~bor 1 s:l.i,000 . LUSK PLAN DELUXE TRIPLEX f or lull li"'ing f'llJOYmf'nt -Thi.~ much '°'1gh1 modt'J h1111 -STEPS TO OCEAN-11N>k rnd or rr riremt'nt 5 .f BR .. zt1 he 's., btkr~r rn1., OPEN SAT & SUN 1·5 ;icr,-.~ with a tlC \'f'r t:ntling fonnal dln. rn1 . Den w f JUS~l6L~TEO l'roper1y and ap\)hances. view. A drea1n of a tiny I frJH , & sparklinc 'p11r11uct In 1ip·lop cond\lion. ~rOOm I~ bath home . 111-fir .. lhruottl 3 ~ -Xlnl cand. "53 500 · I · B' OYD R. EALTY CAYWOOD Jt:£At TY <41 , 1raci1\·e ivtng room with fireplace, 1150 11qulll't' feet. 3629 E. C'..oawt Hwy., Cd"'1 63'16 1'1. COil.iit Hwy., ~.E. Acrr11ge I luny planred to 675-5920 ~=---~ 12'0 beautiful aYOCado, lln•~s. DOVER SHORES W~ool l<tngtolos, and •II I~ family View 1'omt. 11"3 SalltlAIO OT'. Rl"!Jll("f'd t1"i0l. .,,.ondf'rkl'I fruit I~. Wwl'lfr motivated Bes! buy . spic. 5 BR . .f ba. ~ '"" ~ s, ~ 1 CUTE AS . lo at11. ~9.000. Ada.pt•bi" floor plan for lr•:in~ ~l. ~ hfrtti f I A Hu1f11: c11r! Lo1s ol trett" BERG-M•cKAY couple or I~. 111.mlly. Nrwly <.oI1}.-r , h~ f,mMJ, 1-.mn ' lush l11d1<,·t1i:. 2 Extra li!d~.~. HEAL TORS t?l·lf f*°t52 dl'Cl'>1·111ct1 Ry app't. $91,000 wffh r"Cn1Kftl:!I r'T'JIW'n'd ~ & 11 11 1n xl11r 1'flnd. ()I.I ncr Hi.1thw,11y '16. BonMll. Calll. 8111 GrUndy, ltealtor i.'-.+ufti pat10 JU<tC ~. 1\''carry Is! 'f.D, Sellln~) IUILDERS &'ll Dover Dr., N.B. 642-4620 Al..,. Pll"rct !)Oft! 'tr8fl,., p,.,ce only s27.;M \\'f'll·Built 2·2 bedroom Du· BAYSHOAES "°1l'lT'llt:I' ltf'ell. Ownrr tniM· CORBIN-111('~ rn1 6.3' x 290' l,iir: a.llcy Reaur . WAlf!rfMJ1t cu~lom 1l'rl"{..:I Qu ick ~. 1lt·et11t.; Room for oi morr home: ( or ~ bdrms. wl (.all ""'"' ~lTI. MA RT IN units \l1,j00, Start now It lge. pool; on 87 (t. lot. Finest ==========:1 '-IA.JI 6~G.7l7t long water vll!W ol m11.tn ChAnnM. S293.750. By app'l. Bill Grundy, Realtor 333 Dovrl' Dr .. N.8. 6'12..4620 Daily Clean Let The Pilot Classified Out The G-.;!lg e i'"a ~I ruulli Ai'f' ju&I a ptiorxo l·~ll A ••Y · '42--::.iil REALTORS 644-7662 GOUU l\IONl,Y ~IAKF'.R ;,.2 RR un11 ~. S6.l~. C'11ll '\il,"JCO H/'.,,LTY 2079 H~rtJrwi·, C 'I &lli-00:1.l r.o · T HE r~F:.1'L .'"\., ESTA TL i<S ;_•' _ Turn tho!e White Elepl\antl lfOUSP. lfunfln(? Watch the lnl.o ca!h thn1 a Dalb PUot OPEN HOUSE column, Dlm,....-llnl!' ~d!J J..~nJa JJ/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 3 Linda Isle Drive Quality construrt.. ne\v 5 BR , 4 '. ~ ba. hon1e ,..,1v.1aterfront \iv. rm. & din rm. Oak panel- ed fan1ily r1n . v.•(frplc . Mstr. BR . '"'fsillin~ area & frplc. . $179,500 26 Linda Isle DriYe Decorator furnished. 5 BR. 5 bath home fac- ing Harbor Island . Jacuu i & sauna. Ready for immed. occ upancy, W/dock ... $200.000 53 Linda Isle D rive l-l o1ne on lagoon. fi BR., 41/2 ba .. ''"14 frplcs., jacuzzi tub, hd,vd. firs .. sep. li v. rm .• din. r1n .. fa in. rm. & brkfst. rn1. , .... , .. $175 ,000 92 Linda Isle Drive Beaut. 5 BR .. 4 ba. hon1e v.·/forma! din. r1n . & fan1 ily rm . 3 F'rplcs. Outside stairway. BuiJt·in gun cabinet & bookshelves. $145,000 Waterfront Lots No. 44: 108 rt. 011 water $125,000 No. 76: 3 Car garage. Reduced 10 $ 77.000 For complete information an all hom•'J & lots, pl•••• c•ll: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 833 Dov•r Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620 REALTORS-ASSOCIATES NE\V LICENSEES * AT HERITAGE , BUSINESS IS GREAT * Second Costa fo.1csa Office now open and in need of several JlC\V staff members. Step ahead. ExceUenl training program for fa st start. * JOIN THE HERITAGE TEAM * Let'1 get togetf'ter for details. C•ll 546-5880, Larry Campe1u or Dave Myhr1. General The Most-Dinn er & For Th• Least Cocktail House 004! or Harbor areas IOJI Jo.. Consickr lfll.'l' ! A blfl /2400 cal ions. sear11 120, piano ·Dar. sg. fl. f 4 bf'd room, ronvcr· building, r1xturf!I'. old llttntw lib!" dPn and l11mlly room & 12 yr it'a!l('·l'IOI percenr-home wllh J balllJI and th' .• ,, 1,.,. , rr...,11,1:...., agr, 0\\'111>r n.-t ir1ng after \0 " '· .,. ..,.. Yl!R.rs, SG.l,000 down, Kermit ahunle hosrd courl. g1111 bar· RI 8 gg5, kr, fl.1&-599Q b-qur. hujje well l'Oll!ln11:t-I-=""==~'"""--,'~=~ '" ~" '"'"" .,. • ,,..., EASTSIDE UNITS thAI look11 Jikt> t~ grrt!n.11 al 3-2 8(1rms. rittiM, heat~ P\!bble ~ach. 111,500. Only pool, Zooect t<:1r 3 mote 10% Down. Call S'fl.fiiO. unit. Agf! 1 yrs_ S5.(Q) dn. O THE REAL "-l:STATf'PS An•-VA Loan 3 Bedroom 2 bath!!, erpt11, drps, la ht,, flttP/, dlsl'I· v·Mtr, bllrw., lmmNI. occu- pant y. Sl!3.00D wlS25.CXK> Gt Joan. 3 Bdrm. Hom. 1% S.1h. oovernd 1>11 110, car- pma., dra~•. quler •t:net, S:li.SOO., Terlll!J Roy Mc.Cerdle Re•ltor 1810 N11wport Blvd .• C.M. S41-772t $49,750. eHOME + INCOMEe 4 Unit, $55,000, $6.llOO Down. Bi.it b:ffirma + f\~1•. LEADERSHIP R.E. 842-~ or 842-4t86 Wari~r & Oak, ltunL Bch. PERSONAL ~allOn.'I r~ Jllrrifi('f" g\(' Of •Xtt'UI!\'~ .~l'lowplttP. Vacant, wUI &nY SlOXI buyL'T01 CD:U. $35,000 11.ll term!. Broktr 1714) 8't~5.'> Collttl. We 'll hfolp you Hll! &42--5671 fo'nr bt'~r rl!"•ul!s~ tifl-561~ M•sa Del Mar 4 BR + POOi: $32,950 Yl's, thr_ 1·up<ion Is corn!Cf! In addition lo 4 bdr. family roon1, :? baths, this homt lf'~tu"'~ • beaulitul llx.'36 Blue lla..,en healed Ir; tiller- ed pool_ F'ully carpeted, ~ rently painll!'d, nict!ly land· ~. sprinkler symtn I otber l'1tlra•. Set' ii now to apPl"('Clllll'. Pbone 546-23:13. • • • • • Pride . of Ownership gOC!I v.•1th 1tiis newty liilfM I bffiroorn. J bath Baycrest hu111e. 1'1aster bf-droom wp.- ar11.1e trom ] large ttar ~. rooins.. AU roon1! look out on ]U!;h J11nclscaping, Larae w.tlk· 1n wrr bar and rormal dining roonl for entertain· ir11;. POOnr /or appoinrment, Arnold & Freud '.188 E. 17th SL, C.l'f. R.EAL TO RS 646. TT$ $150. Down $200 Mo. Bii: .f bedroom 2 bath comer lot F"rerdom Home on 221·02 ~'HA program. ?-fu.t tmve S people or more in ~ kl qualify. F'u/I price $24,000. N°"port •t DOYER SHORES Waterfront Cl-li\R,\1ING ! 'BR, ! BA home. Den. ll't't bar, •lt>arn room. 60x100 lot. Pier .6. 1lip foi· 40 It. boat. Xlnt viev.· . Sll T,9.-1(). Xln!; line. 9vail. 01vner Tracie 11.ccepta'o.lf', ~HS-1936 or 644-4684, $19,950 IS THE PRICE !or th1, 1•ery Jo..,ely J. Md- room, 2 bath ho~. 'Ilie loan 1s high enough 11() )'OU can •ssuin,. \\i\h paym .. nti; or SlfiO per month, which in· c/udf?! atl. !\f~rn buitt-ins, df'l'r> pi!1 carpel.I. 11.i!IO 111111cl11ng drapes. Doublt garagr to boor Calf Walker & Lee 1790 Harbor Blvd. Al Adams f)45.-046:J Opr11 'til 9 PM DUPLEX Out or town ov.'nt'r wanl'1! , 1mmed. sal~. 2 Jarg~. 2 BR ' ·! unit~ • 2 cozy lir'!'pl:•ce&. hrd1vd firs w/crp111, a I I builtin.s and adjacent lo plu!'h grrr n gait ('\')UJ"ft'. \Val k 10 3hopp1ng. C a 11 ~5.-3424 I open e\?.S.) $21,7SO FHA or VA Lar~e lot. plush landscapl1'f, park·hkr wttina, ctiarmi~ 3 BR. 2 Ba, family nn pJu11 bonu.~ rm. Cozy fll'eplare ,. 'l {'{)\'f'N'd patios. f'.:veryone 1JUahl1e.~ lo assu111e th1J1 lo\\' 1ntert'~ loan v.i th pym1s ol SlR'l IJ('r rno., PIT!. Call Ray Gault. ~-1151. Heritagr Real Esta.Ir. $27,950 5 bdrm. + family room Hug" i''amily rm'-f.irepi&C!. rntry hall. d ining room, 5 lx:rm11, built-in range. own & di11hwastlf'r. Pantry •N"A. n:-.tur111 woocl p1u1el in1 . No Oown terms. Open ti1 9 PM. 54()..J12o TARBELL 2955 Harbor REPOSSESSIONS Sparkling cJ~an hOmes, .amt newly pai~ i. carpettd, 2 3, 4 & 5 l:xinns. Some with pools. FHA-VA oonv. renru:, from S20.000 to $40,000, COLLrNs k WATIS me. AM..1 Ad3rns Avr. 962-Ml.1 2-~lory stral, f! nl•sli c bftrg11.i11 of only S27,SOO tn- clucles 4 hugf' bedrooms, 12 x 1:) lamily toon1, 2 be.ths, carpt111 /.: drapes throu1hou1 ph,u1 over 2()00 IMf. tt. No mistakr or mi8prlnt. ACT NOW. Traff( your11. Brokf!r 842-44M. ' FIX 'EM UP l H~,. &: bachelor unll, nt11.r &hopping 4: hollpllal. Exr.t'llr.nt rtntal .n.a Prict • $36.SOo Rt.Jonomlcw Corp. fl!".>-r;tO() Balboa Island Llnle lal•nd Open HooM 12.'> Abelone ATt S.l/Sun 2 lo Gpm BY OWNEA. S<>~IUdPd .. C\t~IOm.iud all f'lf't. l •!¥, 2 &r. 2 8-, l•m rm I df!ck o/look f nr 1tardt-n, w/lar pallo below. i\ta.)or Appln1 Incl. OUettd 11 1 APrJMll~ri/, 613--1000. t ' I I ' .. . •' ... ... DAIL~ PILOT I _ ... _ ' l~I -..... llieJ I _ ...... I~ l...__-_,_~-__JJ~ I _ ..... I~ I ~[ -~.~ ...... ~J~~ie I~, -~ ....... ~J~~ie ['~.~<!!:~~" .. ~~~ ;;;;I ";;;-"';;;""""~i~~iel S•lboe Peninsula Corla Mesa Huntington S.ach Irvine ~~~~~~-1-~~~~~~1...c.;.;;;;.::c.:..;..;:.;.~~-1 4 BR, do~ l b,. '' n.~t"" ME" VERDE LOOK! $49. TOTAL OWNER • B" '° mo" Club & bOal r111np, $59.:-00. D1vorc" fort'l's sa!(', ~ BR 2 Turtlerock.. ~ BR, t•, BA, !\hu~hall Really 67.)-HiOO Ba. f1'ple, cul-de-sac lo!. 4 BEORMS .• BEACH ~.~,,rm.pad!:~,·. rm~ 0'1mriwnp i '. College Park VA a1•prsl . S21.~. No dowu """" "' ._ 10 \l'L O\l•ner %8-0824 . la11dscap1n,. 19-131 Sierra ~ LRG br. 2 bit, t1d11d floors. BY O\\'rlt'r, 3 BR. den, i\h.•stt THAT'S RIGHT! ~ll£•r p.iys Chula Rd. $46,500. *33-37%. 1><·1i>r•rlf•d 1~1 1\u. a,Tf'i.' bo111 dc>I ,1\l1tr tract. Bhns, Cqils. your closing CO!fls • NU Laguna Beach or IJ·lr Iii /1lol'k wall f'nfl. & dqis, S2!!,j(X)_ ~!1218 00\VN! ! S(>8cious • BR's }'1t. \\'alk 10 all ,,i•hool.~ anyt1n11•. :H6-0928 S{i, wirh la~'C, 111.rge 1'00!ns arid EXCELLENT VIEW Assu1n. 1'~',. IC~tn. lhlll('f .\lun/Fr1_ . C'OZy slOtlP tlr•'J1h1cf'. Df.'lUXf' Of Ol't'1111, 1·1ty & hills . .\11111 54J....2810. Pru1<·1pals onl.~ ~t'RE'Cl l Q ki'chcn with bu1l11ns. \Vall nf t'\lnd.; l bdrms., 2 ba1hs, --I~ Wl t lC'r, 3 Bn. 1'~ l BR. Z 61\ E\ll'<l.'. PQOI 11~ ba. rnd unit. 81111, $!Mi n\o glass ro m<1ster pa1r<1. N•'('ds I.gt-1lv1ng & l1tnHly rrns. w/ \'+111.kt" l'orrsl J{tl. $32 . ...00 lo!al pymnts. ) 1J ,!I 0 0 . a lll!le work • htH l'l111nce frpll'. w1·ll planned k1l l'h. 0 111·11er. 5-1;,....(jg:::i Open. :.i:......;J()l to >1.avr many SU. MURHY~ W/load~ of stor11).:c & brk/~i. Coron• del Mar Ve1l'ran buypr~ call rollec-1. bar. Beau11ru!ly tndsepd . e BY Olll'llf'r-3 br, 2 ba. pool, eabana "'/', t>a & "'el bar. i\'u plun1b. .'\!any eusto1n D IAL 89-1· T:>?l 111 1 lgl', v1t>w p.a /10 at<' a . XJ111 Wooded Retreat HlRlST F. OL~N ,,. REALTORS Do you s!I a1Ki <l11yJl't'111n l•·alun•s. )4[},000 546--17-10. abou1 11 ho1ne 111 1hp 1nuun-(·uT~ 3 b-;,--iba, lgt' _yd, nice r11111s -if pllll'f' for c1u11•: p:.!10. Assunw $U!9 mo. 11nrl srclu~l<ln~ Thc-n }OU p}nu11s at $14,GOO &16-81::9. I I I 6-191 Edinger. 11.B. mu~ Sf'~ t 11~ !1\0!'I unusua N/Cf: llonie in 3 i;:ood afY'al oiiii.iiii.iiiiiiiiiii. ... iiiii.. .. d uplr>... 3 bt>t11"\10tns 11 ilh .1 01 c :-,.1 S?~.50o. o . \V c J .s I ' ~f"l"t llfi:Lr1ml'm anrl a I Pc 11 , 6JS.-.5!120 hrdroorn un11 ... U1Toundf'd • a } ' · Macnab-Irvine b d ADULT Condom1ti1um y i.:rrf'nt•ry an 1011rr1ng Hl'ally Con111<in} irN"'. You 1·;1n aln1os1 for· ·ro1vnhous.t'. 2 BR. Iii Barn B.v 01111l'r-&12-9.i>l.G. THE BEST OF g('1 you are-in 1tw lif'art or 1____ MEREDITH a rurrropol1s. 111-1,900 Call CUTE J BR, 2 BA, lgt' :'•u·d, GARDENS 67J.R.150. n1cr pa110. assun1r $18!). n10 , . t . 1 $21000 646-SIJ9 Bf'au11 ful 3 Bil s. -hugt' p1111- 1o ·THEREAL ''"\.. ESTATERS I)' ' • ~ '.' 1 <I " '., .. pay o; a · · '· r l('(f FR nvl'rlook1ng a pool J BR • .I'\ ba. playrm, patio. srzf'rl yai·d 1v/\arg,• covcr,.,d l'ornl'r 101 2 blks rk. :-..cl1ls, paUo. Leading Cal1lorn1a OCC. S2S,9.;,Q, ti ~~ :14)-17~1 Det'Orator moving 10 lari;('r --Garden Setting--BY OV.'NER -Cl,,an ~ horne, mu.":11 sPll. Dr1vp by And a ri1('!U1'f' book /\Omt'. h<t , + .-.ira~ 11 111 as~lsl 200;,1 l\11dJ~nd !he11 r a J I Bii,: viev• 101.? bdrrns .• Jani· \,/finant'lll;!. ;,1i;.....1~1il 67:>-321[} In :.-:~. lly roorn, 2 f1rep!tH"f's. ,\1yst1e !hlis loc, $·1ti,'.JCXI HARD TO FIND Lgr hon1r 1n n(·c11nfront no>1ghborhood. 5 lx]rins. 3 ba's., huge l1v1ng tm. 111/ lrpll". For111al di111ng arr<i. Lgr. "t'l! l''!U•!i'd. k11chrn. Ccn1;.. .. Jty loe:ired N.'Crt'<1tw11 rn1. Ove-r 3.000 sq. rr. on o°'' lf'vrl. Sur!'ounded by n 1 1· t' 11:11rdc11 & palio arcas. A Vf'r"Y funtUOll<tl. \\'Cl! pl:itl· 1wd lion1c. Asking $S7,j()(). FAMILY POOL HOME 4 ~pa.::1ous bd1·ms .• 21., baths. Lgr. living. lan1ily & dinln~ n ns.; ':her.ry k1lch. \1'/lo11ds of cubinrls. Cr1111p. lndsc-ptL. \\/Jgr. lr<'(·s: £'1K'L yard \1•i th J;, x 30 Htd. & f1!1. pool. Nice <leek & pa110 area~. Good neighborhood close to ~c·hools. $49,JOO · y · 1 Oa:ia Point OU JJ 0\IC II' ~~~ 712 Po1n!Wll1a 0Jl(•n Sun 1-';i t YHS nt•w w/0CT''ln V1C'\V. 4 Ll.l::L~ • 642·8235 67S.3210 '>~>=-~ '""'"' * * * * n11n &1:ted HOR\IS. raml-----------' ~~., Outdoor Entertaining? r n1, dbl door FrcHk:1sc11 11 11lf' -~ =.,t<o.~;,::. HcN"'s tilt-ploh.'f> for 11. 4:i f'!. l'nlry. Pool !<II.(' lt!I w/!rlr •TIBURON COND0.9 ---...t- Macnab-Irvine rornrr 101 Dfol1ghliul m01l· sp.ltf'. ~&,,. 7•;, loi\' la.~es, 2 story 3 BR. l..1 01 rm lrn1! * 499-2800 • rrn duplr:-.:. 'i BR .. dC'll, of. S.1~.~iOO. •193-J~iJ. din, W('l bar, shag . !TJllS l--0-PEN suN-:-1~ /11.'('. 2 ba ths plus roon1.\ J. -D-0-.-.-,-Sh-0-,c.c,.::.. ____ I rhr11out, rJ{'(' 2 kn, a1r-conrf, 1667 LOUISE ST. hdrn1. /\pr. t:ov'd pal10, ' car gar. A111J. E:\iERALD TERR,\CE _ \\ilh 621 L!trkspur· ()p(>n S11r1 J.:1 PRIME BAY & MNTN 1800 sq. ft. VA/~'HA 1l'rn1s. f E B bc-sl Vl('W o 'ml'rald ay. University Realty [XC'l.'ll!lvr t."On!rmp, luxury 847-a.-il7/968-4:1TI /96S-lli!t l.a rgp Jam1ly home w1"h .l ::001 F:. C!it. H11·y. 673-0510 VJt'W homf' w/high ceilings. i1<lrrn~ .. 1amlly rm .• 3 ba '11. -CAME-0-SHORES--Lots o! bnck. 11·roughl iron, Clos('-lfl. nn <"Ul 1lr i;11r Beautiful Ocean Vif'w lC'111lct1 w1ndows & Old \Vorld .~!rPf't. N n w rrducr{i 10 Just lllited! 4 BR. & ram. rm. 1·h11rn1. :-,()()() s<J fl. 5 haths. $:1J,llOO. Lagun• Niguel * OPEN * S1\T & SUN ! • .) 1976 IVY GLENN \\'atrh n1uthl'r's t>yt-s "ilt'n shv walk;; 111 !Ins 4 bdrn1. 'J.. b<l. /111nn•, with l'ai·p &· dr;1p- f'S. lndstpd, )·13,:;():) MONARCH BAY Ch'1rn11ng :r1.lrv1>I llU1111• 11 / VI('\\', Cons1~1lllf;" 11! a ll<ll'n1s . on a. ll1g Int. $13'.J,OOo. S BR, & POOL Jn J\1on;;rch liay. nr. tJCi'an: bull! nn 2 lois. AU 1"00!11s arr f'XC<'pllonally l 11 r .i: P. Pool 1~ ovrrs17.rd, Therr arf' !'! bt.Jrn1s. & .. ~ b.llths & a 3 1:sr i;ara.i:r. $179,000 3 ARCH BAY Ot•f'<in l'll'W fr01l1 f'vrry 11--,h1n ~ Af'an1 • ril s .. 1 b!I · t r11~. 1 ba!hs. dl'n: ~rp, 11111. tni: 1·m : has an eh•1 .i I• •r~ ~Si.:-«!. \Viii !rade lor fl.i. w~u profl"rly. RELAX On the '1<'1-r.'lc;·: 1"1r.v for n1\lt•s. \Vf' orf('r 1h1~ :l hdrn1 . :l batll h11nl<', " srp, 1l1n1ng rn1 , .~· l.irnily r111., fur only :5:11.:i00. L aguna N iguel Rea lty' 830..SOSO 496-5791' J'.!UST saenficf' bcaur1f11! n1odl'I h11n1r. oprn be ant. lnltS~lV" frpl, plush eal'f)l'l. 3 P,R. 2 BA. all rl<'c k1t1·hrn. lo!.~ of !!"!"'!'~. A~k1ng S'.l2,fi00 or 1nakr orll'r. -t94-1:i41 bi:'I ti & S prn. L ido Isle Me5• del Mar LAST rh!ln("I" lo ~v·· to\"l'f S:tOOtt. O"n1•r leaving ~t:.h! 11('.~t \\et'k, 4 AH. !]{>\V (·rpls, rh'p~ & dC<"Jr11t1ng. Close.• lo ~1·IKool. Open Sat & Sun ;.:,. ~1 ... :-.nnora. 4 Br, 2 ba. n1any custorn rl'atures_ $31.500. .Assume ;11 ~ FHA. J>rin. 0 II I y ' :~1&-:1.1:.i1 -------Mesa Verde HY owrwr-3 br, 2 ba. Jani rni, 2 frplrs, pal!O. Assun1r ;,~,' • 1'-HA. $19,900. Pnn- l·1pals only. 546-1401. Newport Beach MINI-VILLA THE BLUFFS·$44,900 Transh•rrf>d ownrr hC'ar1sick~ l /n1J1 s ,"7 l)QUl's Qt 1' L.C. plus m;u1y {ff't.'()rator do1!11rs :.po>ut •)n 1h1s t:han111ng :1Jr 1•oo!»d. :: bdrni. 2'2 barn ~pJil-l!'VI'! ho.Jn1f: J y('<ll' youni.: &-barrly rnJOY<'d. Crr-,.,nb<'l1 !1'011\agc, srr~ 10 pr1 .. a1e 1inol. '\Vay tieJ01v to- day'5 Tepl<>t1"'n1cn1 c:osts. Newport Beach * MUST SELL * BY O\\'Nt.:R Braulilul 3000• Bluffs Coodo. Vli'W or v.·atrr &, !igh\S, Gl'l"\'n Belt loc. ~·abu!ous 26xlil fit'n. Asking S.l2,!i00. t-14·Hi00 or 83~-0113, BALBOA COVES WATERFRONT ·rransf .. rrc•d -J\1usi ,,rll! Pnn1" I~. :l BR. 2 ba. h1ngl 1• slory. Nc11·ly det'f)r, Yt'11tt•d yd_ 3o fl. boa! :,lip. $jj,!'J)() Bill Grundy, Realtor 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 6-11...JGllO CLIFFHAVEN , 3 Br, 2 tia, Jrplc. open bram •'<'!lings, bltllS, v1e\Y deck. illANY EXTRAS. fl_y owr.er. 616-9i1·1 or 642..00.W. OPEN. nr-bay -2 h~s ..ti! 116 E. Blly A V('' only SM;'.!)(). El'erctL 11. !\hcharl, ~JJ~ J:.'. BalOOa Blvd, B R I .b•l 11 67:~. CONDO.\·l!NIUM , 1.:an:frre liV"lng Pa rlf L1r!o. No 11•..isc. hold. :: BR. 2 bR, l ~aungc.~. Xtras -pools, SJ J ,.'JOO. (lwn- ('I' 6-l·l·?CJ(). ~n_c_o_m_•_P_,_o;_p_•rtv_:. __ 1_66_ Housas Furnithed 300 8 U111t .apt hst. 2 br, w/w crp1, lint!d drope~, all rtntt>d unlurn1sbed. h:tl· t"hrn~ fu1·n. J n10 old, Spanish tit-sign. Lge-lots. Up !or 11u1ck salt'. Apple Vallt'.)' "tl2-3:'.&'!. PRli\11~~ pn1pcrty on \\lest B"Y :-ii, C: .. \1. Can build 1•1 un11~. :t nldcr renlcd hnuscs + "arai;c~ & sll1rage un S,}:\ 12.'i lo!. Prc~r11t 1nton1c $~~-IO. $38,00IJ by Oll'ncr. 5-l:r-7361 . j57-2S76. General RENTAL FINDERS F re• To Landlords 64S-Ol 11 4 l~ W. 19th. CMt• M-. FREE!! Landlords-Owners \I'.: w1!] rc fl'r tenants to }'1)U 1-'REI:: ol thari::c ..• :\!any desirable-11:11a.n15 on o ur \1•aJliril: 1 1~1. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 St.::-0!.\IER & yrly. rentaJs; Lots for Sale 170 fint>r hun1cs 111 beach area . ::;;__,;;:.;__ ______ Bil! Grundy Rllt. 642"'4620 TRIPLEX -2 blks fro1n beach, $385. 1110 1nro1ne. ):t:.,000. Hurry/by owner.· 5?.&-1674 evr. p RI '11 l'.: :\lounla1n-Oc!'an I Balboa Island V1c1v 101, 1 acre--+, inc.\· elusive res1d. a1-ea in San 2 h1". 2 ha home. Pvl flllllo. J u1111 Capistrano. 1 n cl i> Dsh1\shr. wa~h,.,r, <lrycr. 1111•n1bt-1'!>hlp In fl\'\ t"Orn-&:1uT furn. L.'~· Refs. munHy r1•c, crnter_ SZl,000. ·1!17-18?9. Call 11 1fdy~. 6-1-1---jjJXJ. ~8~c,cb-~-~.~--~I :; r, • a, Pvl patio, M pets. Ranches, Farms, '..I nio lw Scpl \:.-June .U. Grove' 180 213/£7:0.-·1280 all 6. APPLE VALLEY 3 bt', 1 ba, Laguna Bea ch ranch fen<'!', lgl' Joi , horse 3 BR. 1 BA, lam rm, fTpl, bar11, li'i'(';;, c11y 11alt'r. 1Jlt1ns. ot"t'IHI view. TO\\' lights & gas. H1.: !11rn rm. s:~J() yr ];;f•. 531\-~7. dln'g 1•111. kit. liv. l_gf out f NE\\'PORT Shore.\ fr r bltli.:. Furnished. i\1usl st>e to Lido Isle ¥ simplf". Largr h () u 5 l', apprre1a1r. Quit k ~ale by \VATERFRONT 1 Br. 22~ S-12.500. 6-12~?9 ownrr 714/2-12~3388. Via Lido Nnrd. Call fZ13J I ~~~~~llllll~i:i-Real Estate Wanted 184 934-0020 or t 2l:I ~ 2iQ-4:>.17. Real (O~te, J !Jm) CASH BUYER Newport Beach 21M V<.<i< Del Orn '--°'-'-"-''--· * * I --1-Vl-,-TE-_R_R_C-.N-T-ALS--I BLUFFS Cond0-'1 br. 3 ba. Rrdticf'd /or quick ~nle by 011'nt>r $-12.~IOO. &J'1 ... 18fl l /\e11•potl Beach '•••••••• •••• H.cnl Now Avail. $f'p\. I' Don't list your home, iH 1·11~3 64 1-0.'J(lj 1-;vr~. ISO •"U ,.110 u •, • ZBr hse frplc, bea1n ceil. Acreage for sal ft "'"' " Steps to Beach ·--~ Sav .. time, save money, .5200. 20 acres for sale near San '-• 2 Br ovl'r J:llI uhl pd i i!£. imn1ed. finn oiler. Broker 10'; DN.. 0\V1','ER \\!!LI. Luis Rry Do1\'n G•ilf Course • 1 Hr hsc ul!l pct $1i:i. e CAPITAL CAR/tY :!D. T.D. 0111•nrr \Vllh spcetacular VICW of • I Br ('01.Y apt u1il pd $1·15. l111rs oul o! ..tff'a. n1ust ,;ell Palomai· mount:i.ins and INVESTMENTS • AL.A Rf'nlals e 615-3900 r 1;:h1-a-11ay. V~t.:d nl. l.ni· Ol'Can v.•aler. T'owr r & S42-7517 & 5-IO-fi336 11ia<·u!alf' 2 ~tory home, 3 l<'lephone on r :rope r ly. nt-drn1, :.!'~ b;1th, lar~e ni<:t~-S::.000 P1'r ar:rr. Tl'rms 1r·1· bedr111 11•11h firf'plal~'. availablc. Shcltt!r lndustrics f i11aocial ov1·1-:,11.rd l1v. rn1. w/fu"(•p!., (7l•l) &1a.-2820. h!1111~. N1'11o ly d('('Ora1('d, -----GOV'T Land $.) 11~. \Vr1tr: -: w/4 t>a . & pool. 1639 Corha1n •l-('ar gar_ $169,:lJO. 011'nl'r <::::::; ~1;·11$~~~~d~~ ';{1:~1tor ~~~t11~~1:~n11·11. :..is.124!) Walk To Ocean /)~·bod-.-· f' t nr-11• :-hai.:-••rpt~ thrunur. Dbl . .i:arhgt·, Lanrl Packag !', 1185 Ar· 1·0111·l1earl Avt',, San Fran· Business Opportunity 200 J\IOBILI:: home, Lido area, Ne-a rly new l BR + htde-a·brd. Lgr bath, crpts. drps. Yellow bltns, J::nclosrd patio. ~· lo b;-._v &· pool. SllJ mo. yrarly. Adhs, no pets. 673--Ri!l6. • : • ' ~ l s~3 0ov ... r or .. NB 6't!...Jti20 ._......... 3 BR + 2 BA ~ lrS Lachenmyer OPEN HOUSE LIVE LIKE A KING $22,750 SAT-& SUN' 1-S A tx·au11/uJ h()ffit' 111 lhf' {."_) L ~•TAT• T' Off d Nolh1ng to do hcrt', jus1 nl(IV!' Bro•""''-'' II''"°' V," w bluffs ""Ith a pa.rk for a 1me ere "" "' , ir1. 20' x ZY llv rn1 with m1r- H1lls $pan1sl1 slylr, 4 hr. 2'~ 'llackyard. 3 bcctrooms, 1-~~ rorrd \1•alJ, brick Ip!. \l'/1v .~:i:; N. Coa~t J l1";i~. Realtor Call &16-3928 I::vcs_ 673-7575 Oa. lam rm . '2;112 L1ghthous<' b~lhs. Luxurious hving hcrr. erpls & drp~. blrin RIO, l-1r:un11 Bra1:h Liinf', al:"<!. fl.11-0":IO:I ,\Jl rna!fl!f'nanrt' is provid<'d hug" pal10. Subn11t. Ca I ! 494--7518 * A DREAM! BUT REAL ------lor lh(' l11wns and 111,.. coin-817_1 __ 1 1 ---~ ---- OPE:'ll Huus", Dally l·~1 ~~ $29 500 mu11ay poot Brs1 huy ln th" SEYMOUR REALTY , ,, Horn<' &· lnt'on1•' u n 1 ! . Blurt~-' a! S1~.:,oo. ca J J ~1\l-'."1ll 1 ~ Ja~rnl nr, C(\'\I 673_8;,;..o. 17141 R1•aC'h Blvd., Hlgn Heh Vogel Co, Es!I. :lf.61 ~-Open ·111 9 P:\I Coast Jh1·y, C1t:\1 . 6i3--'l020. DOWNTOWN \o ·THEREAL '"\.. ESTATERS '-' ..... c •• i ' . -CAMEOSHORES-" CUs1on1 t·vlla~C', '!. &• <h'n, ,,C"I\' :i hr.:, b<i. 2 "'"t bar, h.t·! pool. )89,500. 673-6051 1.:==========-1 hnhvd Oi·s. ~{I' ' l.iO' 11·,,.. 1--~--------I EI Toro lihadf'tllot,111lt>y <1t·•·forbo11 1 DUPLEX 1----------1 & tr:11Jcr. !Ilk 10 C:1ry park. SOUTH OF COUNTRYESTATE .-i1.i1V.t "" """' '""" Lri.: ruslom tiuil1 ;i br. 2 ba tl'rms. ~M7-&.'i07 HIGHWAY ,,1111.:h styli· horne on 2.s m " z nir1>ly ft1r111.~hf'd uni'( on v1rw 11<". An1rn1tws inC'l •' ,•l!.IJ; f 0 1. 10 • 1 'n : onr Joi, li('fll\rolccl hy lovt>ly IJ<"11m <'Piling, frpl<'. indoor _ l-.l •• 1 •- yard V;,.t·fln<·_y f,tt·1or 1111. lH:3Q. inll'rcon1, bl!1n hut("h, L11'(' Ill onr n•111 lhr 0!111'1· spri11k!1>r sy~trrn 8-· 11001. In Sr<>ps to ai'! ~hoppini.: <uni 1Hld11 1011. lhrrt> 1s a ~t·par. Less Than Rent bf'ach. $.il.7.-iO. Call 673·8.'1.)f). ;11<' "l 1.)1". 1 ba gursl honu•, 11 ~niall r!uhliousr 11 /bath f.· Jn1macuhn c :I bei11'00n1 close 2 storngt> sherls. This pror· 10 San Diego fJ'i'l'1\<1y. Br1ni::: f't1y h<is a Ill', & lacJlilJC-'\ your own spade and plant \-0' THE REAL ·~ESTATERS "-.._ ,,,, r, u',T• '• 1 rl YoUr own back yard. Vrls. for a ('{lmmrr1·111 t dog krn· 1)•'1 n1• 1•n11ld f'a.~il.v ht' t•on-11bot1I $!~18 n10. p;iys nil. 1·,•r1t·d 1111,.. a sn1;il1 hor~r 8(J3.s:iiJ :>t141:-i8 rani·h. J-'rin' :Sl10.000 ... 1 REAL ESTATE J RIO!·ks 10 hl'aeh. 1\lt "-ood r\!f'riur. \\'('IJ ta11d,;caj)f'1I. l{l'a~sy ya1 d \1 1th t.'O"rrrd pa110, Z Bdrm<t , I': baU1s. Call . AO/an REAL ESTATE 1 l!Xi Clennt') N.' ."ir J~l·!Hi,\ .l--19·0.1!6 PLAY GOLF On i-"lg1u1a Nlgu1·1'!> t'OIJ !"sr • an nu1s la11d1ng ~ h<lrm . lion'){•: J3 X 2·, d1n1ng nn., lgP. 11~·11: garden roo111 , 11l:ir· 1-,)0n1. r1 1¥ baths. "20X40 Pnol w/bubble c-over . Lgf', patio & dcek. hi any f'.'<lras l260.IXXI. * DELIGHTFUL * $73 ,500 All 11ll :..,l.inr11llf,: :! !· f!f'I\ 1\llh riirallty «PIJf11ntn1rn1~. Orw nf LicJo's 111ust •·harming honlf'S ...• \il;ikp us [ll'OVI' II. .':IN· rocl"Y· Call no11 . 673-85.j(J 123 Via Nice \\'1•.,(']i/I l'tJ(1I tv.1:111"" 11·11h 11111 11.~ ;,n1~·111111•,, l!lraUy pl.u1nrd f•}r 1nsld1• s, ou1s1dr r•IJO) 1111'1!1. Lat.i:1· <"l'11·errd p;.1110 11 lJ~his l'1r p1n~Pong: <l\ol'r~11.rd [an1ily JYJOn1. ~ h<•ctrooni~: :i ba:h~ plus ol- /Jf'I'; plus pavPd fenerd bout a1"f•a. ,\11 for S:J6,9~i0. 64&-7\il PRIVATE ROAD Jmrnar. J Ell, den. din. r r11. :l halh hnmc on l~c. fr11rrrl Jor. l.igill ;iiry ro1n1s, Fnant· ettrrd Ja11n;; .~· tJC'aut. gar· d o"'n-:; dhl. garag,. & shop. A~,;QC. poo] & purr1 ni; grr,.,n. B\'~I huy 111 aJ'('a. $6-1,500. C';1IJ 612~16'20 for app'I. Bill Grundy, Realtor Cost• Mesa l!•nn,,. For fur!hl'r inlo by McVB y ' Pll'a~r rn!! R E, 1-:nos 11'1!h I==========: E ckhoff & Assoc., Inc. ~lJ.:.ffi:ll ~vP~1knr1~ !l.~!t..!J.l.'l'> ~l'Hll: 1<; bl'lirvin~. l\.1ovc 1n Fountain Valley lhl!; lovely 3 IK'Llt'001)1 !or Turner Associates 11o:i N. Coa.~1 H11•.v. l--i_;.:una 494--1177 ~nyti~ * $38,900 * S.•Jl 'ir lc;i~ ·w/t!pnon V!"'11. eus1nn1 bt1ilt hnrlll' Lo>~·f'I )anl $-patio at'f'.1, X!1\1, clr•,t• 111 l'i.;·ation Pl.f\l"E H l:'."AL T'l• 11!1 !.!JifJ.1 '..".16!1 :-;.o. Cfl,o<t 11 11) . I. B. J11~1 !1 ~r.·d. : Iii .. 2 r .. \. WESTCLIFF /ltJ1111' nn IO" lnl " llo;1t ,1.11 d Br.111J1lull_y lanrl~c«f)('d 3 BM- .;., ~un.!ei-k. lti::.Ot(I roon1. }, Bath. f11n1 nn. Ja r:;:•' T ip of L ido Isle 111111;: 1·111 1.1 lrplt. II.~· r Beilul. ·I BR., ~1 B;1. home ? Anthnny p11ol Ff'r :-11nOlf' The Green House lrplrs. ::i6 It 1\·;itrr lron1rlt!". l>i!. 'h1.,.1 ~1'1. /•1 ;ipp1'f'l't:i'•·' $11.:1() SUPER CLEAN SINGLE STORY Rnotn !or l.1r~c boo1 .-.1111s. ~11 . ..elfl ~ho11n h.\ ilflfll only !'rot'(' s:i00.IJ(I(] -1.::1' lh1n .. r. t"rorn ~ !n 5. A rtf'l1gh1lul ·1 h•"lnoo111. :-pa<' 1ou~ .S.· "~ll!'<'l~ll,\· i.:r~,.n tirc1·n I!·•'" [illl Pf l~·g .. 1i- 1.1~ ,\, 11n ·h1(k A ;1 ti I a "1 t10u ... , . '! h.1H1'", •l111111c n •1111. '} 1·;,1· )::tl".11.;f• "1111 \\ .111 ... •)f <'llhlllf'I~ :-ip1•1t1kit'I' ~-\ '-l•'f\I 1-'llA1VA. Clu-.,p 111 o;cl1<~1I~ &· ~bopping t·••nlt•r. A 111u .. 1 to Sf"f''. 6-16-7171 or ~12-z:i:1.-1 ~HI:. ~ f\1\ ''"tlfl". '11~/ hi'· ~!!::.,~.·~;.: 'd..i-01.i.'i I EMERALD BAf [OT-B il l Grundy, Rhr. I <"all .:l'.1-2!'1.•: aflrr 5 s .. (•f\ i<:t.1 Oo1('r Dr, ,-.;r: b1'..'·11i20 11h•·•,.l 111.'?."i':r . • .-Ill •pl•'!'li<( k1!•lo, 11111111 !11 REAL ESTATE rin 11 111'<'!11. pl•'lH~ 01( '11p-l~1nr<1~ 1'111·,..,1 101• .,1 by McVay S"t~.I)~) 1'..:-<1~1 ~'llA 101111, dhl 1 ........ -----,.. ..... it;ir, upl(r;1<h·d 1·n11~ .~ nrp~. ~ui~·r <'l(•an, SELLING YOUR HOME? 1o ·THEREAL l~ESTATERS l f Fr!'P 11ppra1sal _ \\r l111y rqu1t1cs. Pcrsonnl altcnl1on. :: 962-4471 ( ~:i.) S..6-BJOJ 2_, .Vl'li. !\>,;!H'll!'lll"!' \... • lltJ u•iT1t ~rM ·... DOLL O SE COLLINS & WATTS ; -.-:'l\~~SA-V~~!lDE _•_ *A H U * 96:'.-:i:iZ:: Evr~.f>l2-0.1"27 ;: IDEAi.. hx:a!!on lor j!rowing Si:·n·•·11t'il, L\)vd pittn>' ln1m;ic 1---'C~--'c ___ _ -· fHniilv. :i tilks 1" Elcnirn-l OR 2 fl,\ ('Ol'TI•'r. 1\ll lrrn1~ SEPARATE !ary 8,. Jr Ill sl"houls. 1 blk -1111n 1 lw·a' 'l4'x22' FAMILY RM ,. , " , 10 ~ul)('rv;srd r1t_y p.1rk. 1 HAFFDAL REAL TY with l1rrpliti·" + 3 BR. 1 Bi\ Br nr"ly ,..rpul & n,..1.,1u!!'fl '(_:2-llQ:, Evl's: a.ll-2·14G i.· lur111aJ d1n1ng rin, 01~ly Corner lul ,\/bi:'a111 rn11 1ur" Huntington Beach $15.000. trer~ (,. shrub~. To II<' ll~IPd e 847-8531 e The Real E'tate Mart 111 SJl.900, hul tnr hn11h>rl !1mf' Ol\llf'r rr-a(/)' ! o lll'gQllKle pru·" & l<'rn1., '.'>1,').-.)9)(, Ouf5tanding Localion 4 Or. 'l ba, l~r. i..1t1:ll('nt.hn·1? area. lrrlt". hn1'k p1111Q. tr('("~. 1·ornrr hou~f' "/sidf' y11rd for hoi11 •)r 1r,,llrr. 2 m1nUl('S It! 11u1JOr ~1~·1p'g een11•r. lr('f'1\·11y,, S<"hools, tiO 11rl'f' park. $:11/iOO. ~>f6-3{!.".6 ~:1 c=='-0LL-COE=c=E0--=1,,-,,c.,-_=,.ch-"-"-.-~-I :,: "'"""Pl*' "'""" dooe " ~· 1111. l mmill' 3 l•r. 2 hu, l;1m ~ 1·m. "hugi> t'Ov'rl pntki, 11rnf '· lndscpgn, !lf'llarut<' 1·hild& ~.. plnyyard. ll!f' lol. A . ..X1ng ~ $30.800. 546-1695. v 1 -o-..;.,~~~~°"'""'~=I • ~ • FANTASTIC EASfSIDE. SPANISH CASA CHOICE BEACH AREA .\n ti .. •t f'llll)' 10 rom<in 11• '"nld world ch11r1)1," Sunkrn llvu11.; ruo111 11•11h \'OZ.Y ~IOl!C' f1n•plu1;.-.. Pnv;ito"' dunng \d111 B~~,\.\I CEILINGS. P;in"l<'rf l•all~ flllls lo1ul~ ol 'lur11i;:r. (;111111 21' n1slr. 11uu1• Popul'lr nlr ronl. S!•f'- •ni;: " tM•l<rVln~ • on I y S2ti,900• llUHRY, r111t {'Ollccr DlAl. !194.1521. HIR[ST E Ol.SO:\ ... , ' R£A1. ro 11 s &t91 F.dinirr. 11.8. ~ Charming o1drr 2 BR no •, ru 101. flN"pl. f'O\'d pait0, Less Than Rent :,. I~B-Q. dhl ,l?rtr + "(Irk Pt1)'mrn1s ju~t $178 on llus ;:. 1h0p _. stor111tr rm .+-111un-3 bdrm. 2 h11. homr. Cor- ;. rlry 11 i;:a~ "-221l. $2::.:.00. ner lo1 l\l boitt or tradl'r ,. Bkr. &12-4.1!16. :: ,;pn1:or. l.ri::. fm. rm .. k>vcly ,,. Nf':Afl Jo;vf'rylhlng '.\ RR, 2 lrpl , l}<"lllO, lau11<try rn1. •: Hi\ LJ!, rt'<' rm I.· k1tchrn. hltn. kt Tt1~ 1.11·f'r luw in. ~ ('v"I 1111110. ()rps, t•pt~. {(!f'l'S"I Jtw.i11 I.-ln(!V(" 1n 1m· •' Jll!in~. 1?1\ra11:r $33.:llO. 9.)!I n1f'd1111f'l y. Only $11,500. /\CT ;: Chf'y•·1irH". Open II nus~ F'AS';. ;J.:l9· ;n1 or 892·j~J2. :=-~t-l'un &W,.7036 1111 ,j FOR SALE Olt"l.EASE·Ll!'f' :: FOR SALE 4 hr, ram rn1, hl1n•. ff'!l('f'rl " SY OWNER yll.J'd , •·rrtct t< <1r1)(I. ,,r A~~umt' ~"'''~. !.lkr 1~w. ~ tir 2 lw1. f>1n1 rtl1. {)pt'n ~111 ,. $un 1·1 S'..l!l '.))l'l ,-,1'1-2011.i l)l'erh. VA loa n ~I" pru•" s3~.ooo. LS<" s:r'° mo. A1:i11 ·I Bl>H:'<l . 2 bi!. Gll"n ,,·,;;;:- :-ipa\'. pnld kit. fam. rm . hltn RfO, 1lsh1\~hr. JX1ntl). pnhl. Lv, 1·n1., lrpl .. u11gd t p\. 1lrps. 2 fl!l\1os. lush lands.cp. l!d . loc.. $28.;,oo O\,llf'r. !l!i2·6SZ:1. DUTCH l lAV~:N \1AlfiNA ~ BH. 2 ha. ~·11111. f>al . H1•11:k "11rk. $28,900 On1' IH2,..li2tl Harbor Highlands B't' L)11·1ll'r, :: br1lroo1n & [)(>11. '"'O b11tlls, .Frplr, nt<W "''"' rarJl('t$. \\'alk to Mt1riners Park. 1 1 li r a r .v. ~choot~ &.: shopp1n.:. Oro1~n Sa! 1-:i. Sun 1-:•. '..2100 Do\1r r °'· Irvine SPACIOUS Va 1Klerl>11t ;\loilrl in park- like srn1ni:: ·I bf't:truorn~. 1'l ~thii:. B"autiful 1nl"r\Qr 111•l'h 1111ll111tr11·r !hrougt~Jul 11 n d to111 or f"x!ra!. A 1nlly 1111:i.l- 11y homr 1n pt"•rff'<'I l'Ol1tl1- ! 1<111. $:.6. j()O. (ired hill Hl::.1\l.TY Cn•V. Pl1l'k ('rn!rr , l1v1 1"11' (',ill An~·!imr ~11-().1:20 t illl'~I & 1<11):('~[ \I('\\ J<l[ l!~i Enu•r•d!! J\,11• -R.E , LICENSEES---BAYCREST-- :o-.·ro 111l~'1n p..:rl,·~ li!'J"f' -no Bill Grundy, Rltr. 8.;· Uo\·r1· Dr., ,\'µ1 il•·ar-h 642-4620 1~--'--- Laguna Niguel ~"'OJ !"boards or l1111f' tloc·k.,, 11ork 1rher1 ;; 11·h1•r" Y"ll plf'fl;;r -anywlwr .. 111 C-11111. BP~! c'0111mi.•s11\n 1n ~lill<'. QUINTARD HLTY _ 1,11.~"l':il SA('!llFIC'I'.: -Bc11ut 2 )T '1 V;10·,~111 liil Jl\)(S .... s.1,.1,:00 old, 2 hr, c1 yd. ~ p.1110~. 4 Bn .. \ hn li\J\~l{l .... ~i!"l.:1J11 ~h:ii.: c·p!, tus1on1 dps. IJlln~.13 Bl1. ::•~ hct 1."1.\~.~ •• $!11 ,:il~l pa1wl 1<ar. c'Omm pool. lx:h ·I BR. 1 b11. fl(h;.~R .. $!1~.000 1nbrshp, fantag!i<' \11f'w of LIDO REAL TY INC. 1nls & h ills. $32.~ or list 13377 Via L1rln ti7J-7::o.'.I t!fr. Opcn house Sun. 2~291 Telfair 1C"1111•n Va I l r Y FOR salP hy 1ran<tff'r!'<'rl llighlilnd<;I 49a-UR2.'l. ownf'r -Nf'11ly rf'1lcmralf'rl Call today -Seil tomorrow! Fa.st results with a Daily ""°' Classified Ad • .OW direct 642--567S -NO\V! .1 hr. 2 b11. lnn1 nn. HI' lol $61i.:illfl lull'rf'(tf'd r1u·11r, call ~OS/268-7218~·--~~ Rt:DECOH.AT~;o 3 Br. '? Rl•. homr, lri:: lo!, 111usl lrarlr, 671-71.li.1. sf'll ur •I BJt. !.111111.1 rn1, d111111t;" nn .. !. J,,1, T1i1· ••1111·\. :' frp\o'~. \\'•.!•• Sfl 11.1 . (hi nf'r J.;Oln)l. t·:11'1 fl~k1nt; S".:l.:XXI C ALL 0 '4i.·l 4 \4 IP.¥..~ Nr1r Nt,.por l Pos l Orfif t -OPEN-SAT /SUN:-J:s- 403 FELIZ THE BLUFFS! :: ru:, 11, h:1.: l111rlv ron~lfl On1s .. t·flts, hlt11s: 2 r11r l!"r . pool. l\-1U •"On~1<l"r .-.:1lt•, lt'.\Se •)f l<'i1~1' llJll, n\, m'r 1\.1{1 . 71-1· ·1!19-?llC<. --------• \VESTCLIFF-lmn1acut"t" ;\ hr. Z bf\. 1,1r1?" yartl. r.1usl ~f'll, S.M ,900. 612-20.\'1 $©R4ll~-~£2fS" The Punle with the Bui/I-In Chuckle O l!eorrongs t..l'ter$ cf the lour x101t1h~ words be-ta.... fQ form four Ji1"1Pls WC!"d~. I SAGRIT I VABERI ' I I I' I 1 I INETOFI ' I Is j j' ~ CredH «11d '· II'> a devke _ _ _ _ _ _ that makes people buy somit- .--------~1,hlng they don't need w ith I H 0 K R E S 'money they-·--. i -i> 1--,~,~,--,~.~,~.~,--1 0 Comnlet• lhit di..d1 ... <lUOtM by l•lhng In !he m1arng WOids . you develop lrom step No. J below. f} Pl!INT NUM8[1!fD r lfllf QS I' I' I' I' I' I' 1· I' I I I I I I I· • I I I SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION ~00 ' l"IS(.'O. C11, 1 Acre f11ily 'in1prov1·d un- dr>rgn1ur1d ul 1J. nr Ph()('rux. B.Y owner, $8.fiXI 6·12-90.l l 6 BE/\U·r {!Cr"~. )!'{'('~. Rancho Cr1pislrano. 3j[,ij' rl4 v. JO'; 1~L"' n. !)f;2·1·1::tl TO BUY OR SELL A BUSINESS Houses Unfurn. General HOLLAND BUS, SALES FOR RENT 305 "The Broker 1vi1h Empathy" * 2 BR Home $145 1716 Orange Av<! .• C.~I. i;a:. lcn1·ect /or lo1 k J"lf'I. 6-154170; 540-0608 anytime * 3 BR Duplex $200 \\'c Jl{'Cri salt's f\('Ople 1 2 ba 'h. bltn,. kids ok. Cemetery ·'-~ c_ j * 2 BR Home $170 Lot,/Cry'PtS 156 UPHOLSTERY s,.,,p '' BBQ Jr<• yard Child ok -----'·'------/ul'n11urc s101l'-Do1ng g001! * 1· B"R C ·1 ·SISO FOP. ~alt•, 1lu ublf' Crp! No. 18 husinf'~S_ f.\·C'rylh ing one , .ot age in !\lau.<.0l·~urn or Hl'(>OM". n{'('dS _ iools. niaeint"ry, f'tt :-;r b1·•1 ch. Kid~ joC!S well'. +-rndo--.1nl'nl j"arr ar ,t: i:.ood l('a~"-Qulf"k i;alr. * 2 BR Duplex $150 \\'1•sl n11nstt~r \I" 111 or iii I Villai..:l' t;pholSl<'ry. Arpll' pan•-., ~arai-:c . Tot ok. Park. B1•s1. n!r('r l\'n1r ~\rs. VallL'.Y. By o11llf'r 71 4/ * 3 BR, 2 BA $185 L.R. Jac ts, 1l:i Via La 2.1',1:.J38S. trpli·. ;::ir k ul~1 1w1s. .lolla, /\pin~. Calif. 9.J001 d / * 4 BR ~ 2 BA \23S Laun romat w agency, PACIFIC 'i'1cw ,\'lC'n1. Park, 4 ~· B h !"" 0 -,., /'.10, lrpl, l<Hll <ll' s1ni;:lt.>~. 1~('11po11 t·.te. ~~ .. 1.~•. * s + F ·1 R $350 Gooll 2nd bus1nr:..s or 1nJrk am• Y m <"hOlf"I' lots. Ba.VV•f'W Trr . rat'"· SJ1i.l f'I\ 1$-100 hclov•• 111arlff'! 1•alur 1, 64Z-14:l:.! 158 Commercial Prop11rty __c. ___ _ INllESTMENTS \\!ITl l "i11A.IOR" T ENAJ~TS-LJ-:ASEBACJ\S OFflCC: (':O.\tr.l ERCIAL .~ APT RLD"GS W. R .. DUBOIS, INC. I H E. E \mkcn;) S.1~.!J.1~.; Cond<1miniums for-sale -· WEEK·END RETREAT 160 :l sly. 3 Bath.~. l\r-l Cl voursclf 1,,r :-.;1111 irK'Otnr. BLUE BEACON Own<'r. 837-&11~.-._,_'1--l:::~86J. * 64S-Olll * GOING COFI'f~E S l l 0 P FOR SALE! *"" :~t7-0011i * * Rental-Eastside M I L 240 J hf'droonls. 2 b11ths. f il"f'- --°"-'cY __ o __ •_•_n____ plac<'. <:ar[l{'trd. doubl" car -;.;arnr..:e. $2:.il. Call ~16-29-12.. 1st TD Loan 1~;, lNTERESr 2nd TD Loan T<'rms based on equity, 642-2171 54S.0611 Serving Harbor area 21 yrs, Sattler Mort9age Co. l16 E. 17th Street Ask for r.1rs. Strrcl. LAGUN A • 3 Br. 2 Sa. erp1s, fl rp;.. frplf". 2 car c-ar, kids/pc! $2'lj .\LA Rcn1a1~ • &1~:;900 C111y 1 hrdr11on1 bearh l1111nr c h F I lu,· \\1•·k,·r11k1· .... l!tl•'"•lf'. l as ast. h.ti:.'111•1111'<; Univ ~1·1.!lUO ,\ V/\RDENERS D~LllillT •:;Br. :.i 1311. l;;-nc . .1-d, \Vash· ,.,. dr.1rr s2nn :-h-lrJI .1. ·ii :a,1. .. -.:0·11 ~ha:.: 1st & 2nd Trust Deeds ALA Renta ls • 645-3900 •1 \,, l t"'«r'I!. 'l"h1• ~!··111 o! r-c1·.1-: APP!t,\ISALS "111,,111111·' Costa Mesa Inves tment I lli\:"\UY,\!,\,\I llr\~rEn I S4a.771 I an ' ·,me I • I Hr X Int kw ,o11on, ch1lrl ~ arwin Really, In c. Y ;,nd "-ITl. P"I .~111,,, 21,;;:,i Lln~.i..hur-1, H11r~n Uth · 546--5411 anytime LOJ\:-:S: 1.Q,,_,,,, LOA;-.-.-.;·· 1 ALA Rentals e 645-3900 -·-COOL-CONDOS--\\'c i,:11(' th" n10~1. f'r11·11 1~ -- d1i;11 1r11·d Ut1)'. Jr;ictr•, .~ell: 1 • ~~IH'UJUs 1 .Br ,rrn1·rl yd Ah··111oll "TlBUl\ON" 1~1 rr--i\w;ii· froin Cilv C'f'nlf'r f'n1 !,. gar k1rts fl(", $1 !O . :;al«i1 11r11\· 011 m11rkrl. Xl rtt 212fi·N,,11.rorl, f .\i ALA Rentals e 645-3900 .111air11. 11"'' 2nd 1ion1r nrar Co;1.~1 Pawnlirok•T 612-i\·IO:! LEA:-;1'.:0r Si•ll:-4 Bft. 2-hu, hral•h1·s-. Cull HPsatr Div. o/ Uu·w1n for hr.~1 buys Larwin Rea lty, Inc. :!l . .r!i2 Km<"lkhu1·~1. Hn:i:r1 Bch 54~5411 an_ytime Money Wanted 250 Bllns. Nf'11• rrpt. 12~:1 nio. 16121 1-:v:ins Cirt"le, f.V LEi\01'.:R 11dntrrf. S:l().000 ~O--OS~7 2fld T.D. 10' ~ 1nterl'st. sh11rt ;c•0c,c0cncac-doecl"°'M7'"a-,----I trrn1~. Xlnl Newport pro- Jl('t"l ,V All M'CuriTy . Equity rnnf'f' th:i.n rfr>uhl" !hr loan A rcall.v sound 1nvcsln1cn!. •i1.1111~1G--50f,() Bmkr1• Duplexes/Units sale 162 !\!ES,\ Vcrdf' Duplrx. Ne1v 3 BR, :: RA. frplc. pr1v. yd. 2 BR. 2 BA Pnv. )d. \r/\V c111s 1hrut"•ul & <traJX'd. t\r shopµ1n;:-/.· school~. 3 •':tt i;:11r. lj \t \\'in!f'ri.;n•cn P l., Ap1 B. Do not d isrurb 1cnant in Apl /\. Prine. only Sl!l.!J;-J(). :~l&-2iR7 before 9Ail1 <lr af1f'r 9:30 PM ----DUPLEX -N EVi PORT R~~ACll , l bl', no Vfl<'81lClf'S. $21,:ioo. App!. by owner :1 17-62~!7. Income P roperty 166 Mortgages, Trus t Deed' NEED CASH SIOOO OR ,\JORE 260 SN' Avt'O Thrift for a Hl'lll F:s!;i lr 1'1an. Upon approval u<;r thr monf'y howf'vrr you l1kr. Abo 11sk about our unsccurrrl prrsonal loans. AVCO T!!RJFT 610 Nl'\\.'PCll'I (f'lltf'r Drivc 833-.'\4.W $40.000 lsr TD on C-2 parcel. Solrl <11 .$60,tnl. Slrnng huyf'!' ls L'Onstrurting bldg. frn{'('. ln1ls,·pg. cte Payi; $12!X) qrt1y, incl. 9";. Discount 10', Bkr 4!"1.'\-11',,;:. I~ LOCATED NEAR Barl}flr & G11rdcn Gro\"e f1;1y .• t:lt)!;f' lo \Vt1Jo111•ick (C'n1nrry Club & San!a i\na Colll'i;e. 16 Unirs. 1111 furn. s.1 Bdrm. I.· 8-2 bdrm. :! Buildings. l'()inp. Jrrx.'Cd. l."ln<lSCapC'd 1"0urly11rd & RRQ 11n"a Vrry low \'11.("Hn- cy. Sht:J"s s:ood /'f'!Urn. f.ood romml1n1cn1 $160.000. O"'"· Houses furnished 300 ,..r !Brokcr, inl"i:: Good !..re. 1.,,--..,.------- 3."".:I N. Coost llwy,, Laguna General Bl'arh. ·1!H-7~18 * LAGUNA BEACH *, * MINI HOME $70 7 Units -Sfi2,~ 1ncld~ u11l. tl1ature adulrs. a Untr~. S8il/t00 Cke11nrmm 11 lJni1~ -s11: •. ooo 1 Unl1~ • SZ1:1.M.l f'lthf'r• !n thoo~c !l"<•m PLi\("I·; l'lE,\l.TY 4!14·!l71H * 2 BR Studio i11s J 111 s~. ~1ni:-1,.~. kirls ·rr1'-. BLUE BEACON * 64S.Olll * 3 BR. 2 Bath. all bltn.~, 1n<"lrl-; frr-f'Zrr I ,..,rrig 1 d~h,,,,hr. t·1 pr'1I, <h·p·rf. Gar rf r n e r paid. IX•e;1n ~idc 1)1 li111'Y. $.1.-.0/n10. Yf'a1·1y. fi~>-.'ill9. C1\:\IF~O Highlands. pl 1varc h<'ach. 3 & f11m1ly. Ch1ldrt'n OK, $·1~. n10. yrs lf'11sr. i\\·r1tl i\ug !llh IU1r. 67;}....(i()()O. l BR. 2 B.i. sharp. $.)00~ lf'aS<'. Cllll - Robin Boyd 6i.\.-:J!l:t0 Z Bit arflllt~. T\o Jll"t.~. Ycnr lf'HSt>. 0Jl('n Sun only, 514 01·('h1rl i\l'c. Cd:-.1 s22:i. Costa M e'a l. E:ASt:--OPTJON: VsC'ant, clean, 3 111~1· hf'<lrm~, fan1i- ly rm, 2 bath~. l11rgr 101. Nr. OCC owner fl!t'!iou~ ('lr1vr by 119:-l Boil"f' \\'ay Call for ln- ro. Lar.\·in Rca1 ly Joc . S.~S.111 r.1ESA Vl"llDE: RENTAL H0:\1£ \\"llh l be1!ruom.~. 2 hilth.1<, •>n a quirt sll"N'I Av;iil11bll' July ~th 111 $T.JIJ per mo. CBll Agt. :i1r,_.11,11 . HOUSE in court, 2 Br, c rpt,, patio. 980 W. 17th No. D, C .M . 5-48- 2839. 3 RR. •1chc,-,-1~-,-,~-"-,-,-,•.hoo-1-,•,1 shopping-, S1ovr &.• lrig inrl. sz:r. rtiO Call ;:if1 !r 30. itl. ..... 52:1.'l 3 BH + t':.ni fl111:-r11l"d y1u'rl f'p!~. 1lrp.~. $22\ Av1r.1I _11_1_:.1_1_1 _.;_1_.~_,_1 +1 ! Frldat, June 25, llJn DAJL Y' PJLOT -.. -l~ I ---I~ I _,_ ....... ,~ L ----][!] l .... -. ..... I~ 1--... -lltl I --·-![!JI 1-·-l~J'~:.-~ ....... l~ HouM1 Unfurn. 305 Houws Unfum. l-::--:-:-:-----305 Apt1. Fum. &.Iba.I hlond :U. Apto. Fum. 3'0 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. Co1to M9u Me•• Verde Newport S.•ch Cost• MtM SPACIOUS 3 Br horn,, iam nn, sew. rm, pool rm, llf'w cptg, drpa, bltllli, tned yd S295. 645-1848. , MESA y ~ l ,_ I • 2 BDRMS., lrplc. Priv. patio ' eiue -"'• nea • $300 Yearly incl util :11hady. Avail Jul wlc ol Jul. 2 BR. 2 Ba. &pl., ·,.250 ·yrly l 250 mo. lit, Wl Ir. dep. WU.ton Real Es-tale 61$.-3331 549-"25. 1 BR tum apt, Util paid, POOi, No chiidttn or petm. lel,1 16th SL, N . 8 . .......... FAIRWAY VILLA APTS. BDIL\I, pel'lliioner. $80. 196.l 5-tS-2898. eld,r!y or Newport Be•c:h B•lboe Penln1ul• OCEANFRONT 3 BRIZ Ba, I )T lit'. $325-$375. 1214 \V. 2 &. l BA:'• r.io '"t-"t'ption!; Pa.rsorui SI. EASmLUFt' C.0000 new 4 2 BDRM. trplc, balcony. 315 Oceanfr ont. ti1:r.6000, Private paUo. pool -lndiv. BR 2'' llA I • E. Ba.y. $250 mo. Leue 6i~I4JO I """-· f CLEA NZ Bit. carport, \vat tr pd, PN'fer n1aiw·e couple. No 1*ls. Infant ok. SlJO. mo. NlcP 111ta. 51s--004J · '1 ' am. ri:"· yearly. Inquire at Apt. C. a ..... _, ac. carpet, drape&, pool, tennur, 67l-l5Zl or !>48-7111_ • WINTER RENTALS e Near .Orange Co. Airport I: 1narkct, 1ehool. Lease J uly _ Rent NO\V tor Sept.! UCL Ad11ll.! only. l $38J. includes main!enance OCEAN front 2 br. Quiet ABBEY REALTY 642-JBj() 201.1J Sanla Ana Aw. =';:'~;;ul8l4T:"".ffi,;..-t.;;;;;;Q0;:-3!~0~\<i<~•!',!ro~u~p\~•~·~S~"m~m~tt--oc-l l-BOR.M . furn, y " a r I y Mu. Mrs. Jo1tchim. Ape l-A BEAUT. mod. townhouse. 3 }'l'arly bdis. 67>S7Z2. Uase. i 0Blk. 10 ocean. ~S :: RR. 26...'t2-B Santa Ana. $1~/mo. I BR. ~22-Santa Ana Ave, $105/mo , {Depo~t) :i.1a-1:i-11 2 BR, l Ba. crp!s, lrg, !r.nc. bckyrd. on cul-de-sac. garg. $18.') rno. 6'12-4860 RENT, LF.ASE, SELL. Big ~iousr. 3-5 BR. s 2 6 a . ~&-Q.169 or e11cs: 6-15-5178. 2 BR. Couple, infant ok, no pets Sl~. 233-C AllOCado. :'>18-i·IO:l or 5'18-8Zil. J Br Must>. Older children OK, Cpts, dbl" gar, large yd. $183_ !!62-8131 eve~. E ast Bluff Br, 2~' Ba, f:rplc, patio, Cost• M.1• ABBEY REALTY 642-3850. COUPLES or ooot. 2 <"11.r p r, all bltns,1----------ROOM-f.1ATE~ crpts, drapes. l.e8.'le $295. * SUNNY * 2 BR, ~undet'k, OCf'an J blk, New IUPf'r 2 BR, 2 Bath, (l) ~Zl-4710 or Mfr5991 * ACRES * llt'W !urn. Adlts, no pets. frplc, v.·et hllJ', beamed <:f'il- cves/wknds. * Motel...Apts. * fiOO. Pre! leache!"ll 673-2124 in~s. panelling, Pr iv t. I~ * BLOCK TO BEACH. EX-Studio & 1 Bedroom& lpf. UnfLlrr\. U5 pal.Al, all rec. faci.l. Adults. F.CUTfVE z BR, 2 BA. LOW RATES ----------1 No pets. from SSO pct 125 W k 1100 M Gener•I roomruate. Patio. Sund,ck. Y ea r ly ee -o, le8se. S290-S323. 548--3532. Daily Ratrs Avail. * * tH6-007J • * \\'ATERFRONT l BR. 4 Ba. "• CPooo\W,, PTVool. AT;o"""""bl• VENDOME 1 BR UuplC';o,; w/11ttachN ho ~ garagr ,t, f'rJC'IO!'l'd yard. mf", ne'o\ y l'f"dec .. on iian-e Sound:s IMl\tACULATE APTS! R "d" r or a ! ,. d -Good dy beach, $!,000 Mo. 2376 Newpm-t Blvd ADULT and carpt>1ing. 1 or 2 ch1hlrcn Bill Grundy RJrr. 6-lz-..46J) ~8-9755 ' FAMILY Section OK. No pet~. Pallsadrs Rd NEW 3 BEDROOM NEW OWNER-unrler Cl h ( p k .~ Nf'wpori 11,rt>a, $1~. 2 Ba. lrg tan1 rm, d ining, Nr NE\V MANAGEMEN'r ose to• opp ng, •r ~362 or ~a79. Fa.sh. Isl. SJ90 lease. 644-ll72 '* Spacioiu 3 BR's, 2 ha CASA de ORO • Swim pool, p11t/green LARGE 7 BR. 2 BA. 3 BR + d•". 2•, b•, pool " SU Cal · * Jo"'rpl, Jndlv/lndry fac'la APT. UPSrAlR.I:; ~·/serviCt". S325. 1936 CA AL if. Living i.n a 1145 Anaheim Ave. CHILDREN \VELC0,\1F: T<~·1·1, • -. 642-2318 '"''"· warm Mediterranean a tmos-BA YVl E:\\'-Northbluff BR, l'°=~·=~-~·~~--~·-I phcre. Spacious color co-COSTA MESA 6-12-282-1 All electric Gold /'11eda\\1on 21h BA lo1vnlloust>, rnn1 mr, SPACIOUS 5 Br executive ordinated apb _designed It "'""""""""""""""""'"' ki!ch. !pl, lease $400. 644--027:;. home overlooking country furnished lor :ily)e de com-3 Bll., 2 Ba, $250 per 1no. l yr 2466 Santa Ana Ave. Huntington Beach club. $335 lease. !'>43-Zl'i7. tort • Heated pool e Kitch· new. Drps, sha,c crptg, 642-1131 Afternoon T\\-'O 3 BR's. Walk to beach. ~;, w/ indirect lighting-• tri:nc, di~ rm, dsh·whr , displ, \VEST Ba "21", N'w 2 hr NEIV • B pnv pauo, encl gar. lndry Y . ~ R, 2 BA, lam rm $Dli\lo.ea.,yearly lease. De\uxeR/0 .Adults.No pel.5. Ch.Id k N 1 apl1-pal101 -pool &· w/frplc, crpls. 1.h-ps, bri~k Caywood Rral1y ~HS-1290 I BR.-111:1 furn. rm. 1 ren ° · 0 pe ~. R r fl l Jl 16."182 Golden \V,st Sr. Avail ~-p~-gn~llge. e ine :u 11 palio. l nii 11-0111 oc..,..11n. Sant• An• Heights UTILITIES INCLUDED 71 ~ 962_26,., 11v1ng :n bf"aut atmo~phere. S~OO, 1no, \l'atcr pd . _. 36ii \V. \Vilson G42-19TI .....,, ""· No pf'IS. Jj! E. 21st St. 968--0318. 4 BR. Crpts, Drps, Frplc,l 'ru=RN=~ .. -,~h-,~\,-,_~ .. ~,-m-,-,il-·. DELUXE 3 hr. Owners lrnt &12--4905. 2 son:-.1. near ht'ar h, at-Lg' rncd yard. Children OK, ing, frplc, tub .t. sho"'·er, unir . Bltn, fplc, shag crpSo~.1-~o=u=1 ~E~T~-~N~;c-.-,v~;~.-w~I~ tractive neighborhood. $160 S27:1 mo. 54l-9930 alt 6. di.tiposal, C'rpls. J mm a c. drpr;, patio. gar. Nr, , d Coast Plaza.. 5-l!>-2321. :. Br, rps, nu crptg, Bilker per mo. lease adults . Westminster Respon,, adult only lst & ----------J l-la.rbor ghop'g, Locked gar. ?l3~.'>4 or 536-333.i. last mo + $50 refund8ble 6alboa Island Adults, no ~ll. Sl4.). \\" A~TE:D : t~ndf'r I 0 \.' 1 n g 3 BR. 2 BA. fenef'd. Pet1 OK, de11.ning deposit. S 1 2 5 . 2 Br rear. over Rllra1:,e. Patio 6.f;<;-3515 or 644-0753, c8re fur ll nice 4 bdrm. Nr Iii Sehl. lrrne \Vay, ~93. H BO North H.B. S'll O, John f\rlly, \Vestminsler $210. 531-6541. & sunUrck, bl!n slO\'l' & AR R GREENS The-Real Es1ates 8·12-2~. Hous•s Furn. or GARDEN LIVING rrh·i!:, ci·pis, drp~. FA heat_ GARDEN & STUDIO AM'S U f 310 Qu\et. "u''·· pJe~-~n1. Util Avail July .t:t. Yrly lease-. Bo•h 3 2 l BR'• ~m 1110 2 Br. h I' blk 1 n urn. ...,.,. 6-,,131 ... , ... .., .. • nltSc, ~ s o d H _, I ,,,..'., . ""'00 Pol'•-"" W•y. C.M. hcach. $\7.'l. mo. + ul il. ----------1 pru · eat"" PClO · .. , .~ .. Arlul!s. l.f'a~r. Hrlrrence.s. Huntington Harbour 1 BR. -$145/mo. B•lbot Peninsula 546-0370 ~S--24-li RENT A RESORT 5 br, liv'g ADtn.TS DELUXE fluplf"X -3 Ar/2 Ba, </SPACIOUS.NEW I & 2 Br. N<"\" 2 BR. "-,•-•.12 bl'·-. Jo dock 7.:t W. l8th St-. C.i'.f. J d '" · d t"d L11x Apts. Pool, O/\\', f"ncl "".-. '"' ., ...,, rm, d1n'g rm, 55' -1 !!~""""""!!!!!!""""""""I ne\\• y rp "· pa1ntr . crp . I d 1'1any xtras. 536-2242. I~ Yr's. !eur. Eves/wknds, gar, be!lut. rec rm &: laun-bcach; h 1ns, cpl, rp. l --~-------l l Br duplex S135. New crpt, dry facil. Nr. OC roll''=" & 1109 England 5J6..-7983 Mes• Verde drps .ti paint. Parkli~ •ur-1 _'-""'-"-'---~~--• frwys. Adulls, 110 pell!. NEAR heach. 3 BR., 2 BA, roundings. No pets o r 2 BR, sunde ck, Avail suni-642_4470 b!llns. cJ'pl, dl'ps. Bcout. yd, 3 BR. 2 Ba, din. rm. Pool childn!n. Older pe rm . mer $30J mo. 1 -=-~-~-~-- ' 0\'ered patio. $2-ri. ~2..-Jl2l S273 Unl, $293 Furn. te08nt only. 548--0920. '* 821-7390 *.. J BR duplex $130, New crpt. 6-12..-iOOO or 54&--l:&'>l-=..-==.--0..--.....--1----~------1 drps & paint. P11rklike :sur- • $110 3 Br.1 1, ba. c.-ntsf HOLIDAY PLAZA Coron• del Mer d N .,.. Condominium• roun 1ng.~. o pe!.~ or tll'J>5, Wi!.lf'r sof1 ncr. Near Fu'"· DELUXE Spacious 1 BR children. Olrlrr p, r 01. bench,· 96S-7804 . " 31S furn apt $135. Hea t'd pool. 1 I '--•• •o·• cnari1 on y .. ,.,<>--<>, •v. I BR. Tuw"h~. <O>l•ld<"P•. Loguno S..ch Amp\o P"ki"<· Ad"\~ • no ~;~!_ * THE G_A_B_L-ES-,-- pool, xlnt area. $2Zl a mo, 1 ,-....,.,.-------~ P'1s. 1965 Pon)(lna. C:\f. ..., .. 2 B -· z BR. rum. condo, Adlt.~. Br. 1 ~1 a '-''/ gar. $\:1.1. 6-1:1--'17>73_ only. Sw1111 pool. lovely $18.>-NE\V I br apti:.. Pvt A(tlt.o;., Cpl~. drpl', bl1ns, Ind DR 1 BA 8. patios, garage, pool !· s pa. ON TEN ACRES yd 11/ pal10, \\'tr p1!. 243!1 2rl0 :'-l, d • i;-~lkcrp~ ' q111ct are11. $173 On lease. Adults, no pet~. We~t Bay l & 2 BR. Furn Ir. Unlurn. Orangf" A\'t. r:. 6.'\f....t\20. rps, gar enrr. s m n4: ~99-2238 "21". J;jJ E . 2L~t St. · - tx>ach S\6.l. 536--7003. 6-fl-49():1. Fireplaces f priv. patios, 2BR,I•., hR, t·~1!rp~. H t. 1 H bou Condominiums I--====-~~= Pools Tennis Contnt'J Bkfst. 1>l1n~. R&rh11v.e d 1~p. lnU ry un 1ng on ar r u fu n 320 ** STUNNING GARDEN n r • ~Sea Lane, CdM 644-2&ll rm, gar, na1 10. $14~. '4'tr pd. * WATERFRONT -J Br, 2 General A.Pr'S. Pool. l & l BR's. In-(Ma.cArtbur nr Coa.lt Hwy) Adults, nQ Jlt'\i. 7-,z Scot! Ba. sundeck + boRt dock. !ant or zml pet ok Unf n55 f ~~~!ij!~~~~~!!!J_P~l•~«~.~C~.iM~.j>t~0-~1~8116~. ~; 1.f'a~e or !Pa~" option. S:l50. COSTA Mesa Townhouse, 1 & $175. Furn Sl7:'1 & Sn>. I. *COROLIDO APTS* SPAC 2 Br aprs. $.140. ll!d 01111cr 644-1132 or 644-74:!3. BR, paneJ!ed den & bunk 645-5530. 2 BR Shidios & flreet level~. Pool. p18y yd. Cpts, drp.~. Irvin• rm, cust. drp~. For rent or BUSJN-ES~S~m-e-,-.,-,-,-,-,-; ~.1 Sl.85 & UP, Dshw.~hr. 1-"rplc. Bltru, patio, kids ok. sale. <213} 547-9111 or (7141 wkly rates nnw oUef't'd to Dbl carport. LARGE Pool. J998 Maple-No. 1 !"HS-7660 2 Bdrnis .. 2 Ba's ...... $275 3 BR., 2 Ba 's., acrium .• S32J 3 BR., 21.11 Ba, lan1. rin .• S325 I AR., 211 Ba, lam. rm .• $3.1!1 I BR .• 2~2 Ba. lorn. rm .• $J;')() 1 BR .. 2'~ Ba, lam1\y room Culverdalf' ............ S32J •I BR .. 2~~ Ba .. fnn1. rm .. Turi le Rock, brand nc1~· S363 4 BR. 211;. ba .. family room, r.f'pa.rate hon1e .. S33J.$36.1 .-1Jo~'l 1r lhl. ---'llrullor "Slf\Ct: 1946" lst \\lts!crn 811nk Bldg Un11't'Nil!y Park Days 833-01 01 Nights * SU \11-.fl::K RENTALS * 2 RR. 2 Ba. lnh!'e, 2 mos S32:l 3 BR. 2 Ba. tnh!>e, 3 n1o:; $.375 * 11JllTLI:: ROCK * ~ Brt. 2 B~, ............ $.):.0 ~ BR. 2 Ba ............. SJ:'j • UN!VEns1n· PARK * :i BR, 21,; ha. tnhse ... • $373 4 BR, 2112 bil. tJ1hse •••• $350 .l BR. 2 Ba. !urn ....•• $400 3 BR. 2~ ha ........... · $350 3 BR. 2 Ba. hous, ...... $325 ired hill REALTY Un!v. Park Centf'r, Irvine Call Anylime 833-0820 Legune Eki•ch FOR LEASE 962-3286. everyone. Lo\\' as $36 'vk. <..a.11 673-3378. 221·1 Colleg~ No. 6 646-2287 EASTBLUFF Condominium. Seal.ark r.-totel, 1J01 Npt p R"' I Bl d 64•7 •• T A "' your car & wa k: nr 2 BR apt. No ""Is. Sl:.O \\Iii! N'w • BR. T.n-•-. Pool. 11 · .r-.... :i. ·--,...,. O<."t'an. nr .shop'j!. f\P.\I' Rpts. show Sal & S11n 11ff 11. t;.1>9 $.185. 644-4834 $2S P•r WHk & Up 2 Br, 2 Ba, beam l'1>11. r.-tany Plumer c .M. or ( 213 I BAOIELOR & 1 BR. x 'ra.•. 330-A 7'11lrguerite, 534--0952. Cotta Mes• TV & maid &erv i!\•aiL 675--4~73 or 5'18-798]. --~------- f'OR lease 3 br, 2~1 ba 450 Victo ria, C.~f. ~=-~------12 BR. 111 BA, sharp, cr11r~. 2 BR. Crp1s, drps, stove, drps. 12Xl 1q. ft. Aviulable IO'-''nhouse. Fam rm., pool * QUIET 2 Bdrm Duplex. refrii;, lrplc. 1 11 n fl r> ck. now. $16.l rno. 973 Valenci a, rec t11.cll, l285 mo. (2130) B!tns, garg, pa1io, Elsidf'. Adults only, no r hildren no Apt. No. J, 557-7768. .178-5366. ~lidcl!e age couple, no pets. pet~.~ S225/n10, Ye a r I)'. * BEAUTlF'UL J &: 2 BR. Fount•in V•ll•y 36l-B Ogle St. 642-1298 673-!JT34. Contemporuy Garden Apt~. 3 BR+ large bonu.~ room. LRG sunny 1 Br, nicely NE\V 2 BR .. d1n1ng rm., J Patios, trplc:i , pool. \'I h 1 th 1 Lg !urn., ga r & lndry rm, no ha111!'1, lrpl.-, E:i.;cep1 1onal .Sl:.o-$16.i. Ca!l 546-;)163 us carpe n1011 . e 11.,, 642 _2 •• 0 pool well krp! grounds . f)f'ts. ...,, J J ' \'lf"ll'! S400 Yf"ar ly Ira!"'. * REGENCY * 002..G:i:iit. 546--812'2. \Vinion lteal f~'lt81r 67J--3l:ll 2 Dr, l Ba, crpig/drpK, s~l! Townhous• Unfurn. llS BACHELOR unil -Crpts &. FOR lt>a jc-O.-lu:itr new J\ll clean gas oven. encl gn r, pa------,::--:---I drp~. Ulll paid, Sl20. Cal! r\t"c 2 AR , I BA. tiO!I. 548-3605. 377 \\'. \ViJ90n. Huntington Be•c:h 5-18--3340 or 675-4120 UnobsLrucled v1rw or bay & * TOWNHOUSE * SHARP 2 BR $160 ocean. Adlt~ only. 67:\--6992. 2 Br. 1, B•, _1_,, d~ ... 1,._ J, Br. 1'7 ba, µool & rec -.,,, ~.. ,,.., Drookhurst &. Adam~. sz:iO Htd Pool. Adult~. &12--9~12'0 OCEA:"I VIE\\/ 2 BR, I ~l tin. Acl11!1s. $16(). 140 £. rno, util paid. &15--0565. Huntington Be•ch BA. 1 to1·f'. n>frig, n1'w cpts, (\1e!ocJy Ln. ~,.18-1768 drp~. S2W/mo. 67:...t;J4:, or OEST I N'a modPrn 2 br, Duplexes Unfum. 3.50 646-22!10 arlul•~. nri pets. S150. Call La Quinta Hennosa 2 Br. erp1 ·c1. CLEA;-.. Patio. 11,t sun. 329 cabr1110. arr B. Coron • del Mar SPACIOUS ~ BR, 21Ai BA. all Spanl.~h Country Es late Llv- bl1 n8. Crpts I< drps. Im mac. ing A. Sp8ciou11 Apls, Ter- 64·1--8799. raced p001 : sunken ill.li BBQ >c~.-,~to"M"•-,~.------l unbeliev8ble Livini: -Only ---==-:==~1 1 Br unf $150-furn $17S MESA VERDE RENTAL 2 Br unf $17S furn $210 lfOjl.f E v.•ifh 3 BR 2 BA on AU. UTIL INCLUDED flU)e\ street. Lease o r S~ial Bonu11; a 11lver- monlh--1o-mon1h at $2j(), plated c1.ndlt 1Jnuffer l1 Call Ag!J!l46--4l41. )'OUI'll U you brlna: this ad 2 BR.. Couple only, Small when you visit our mode.la. pri1•. yard, Pr\1 o k . 4 blka S. of San Diego Frwy $12a/mo. call all 5:30. on Beach, l blk W. on Holt 6424157. lo l6lU Pa.rlulde Lane. UNFURN '2 Br. Dupleic . (714) 8!7-Sf.fl SUO/n'IO. Stove & ~-I!':~"!'"'!!"""'".'"""'!!!!!! r~11sLA1dc. Call S48-1732. 1.RG 1 BR reMc, )CtJ'a ~--,.-.8,----ch.----I clolieb, Sl..:l. Pool, patio. N_•w_po_.rt=.,-"--,....,--"I A*> 1 Bech 195. Adult.. BEAUTIFlJL new duplex, 4 536-6TI7. Br, 2 Ba. frpl(', Wlllk to 1'L~.-,-un-•-,8~.-.-.~h---­ Ocean. $375. mo. 547-5667. ~~~~~~~~=~IC!I, 380 LAGUNA BCH ~ SMALL I BR. ut!I pd. bar. g-ar. Adul11. only, no pet&. (':\I ~8-276:;, &12-0261. l..f'a~e. 673--9377. DELUXE I BR. SIJ[i. Nr Co1ta M-s• shopping. Adulti only, Car, -No pt"tj_ 150 E. 21nl. 6-\6--6016. DELUXE APARTMENTS NOW AVAil.ABL!-; l].l :'-1AC. 2 Br, crpt., drp11, Air Cond _ FrplC''s _ 3 Swim-bl1n1 , heam ceiling, Adults, . p 1 11 allh S no petg, From 3150. 1974 ming oo 1 • e pa -\\l&JJ 546-5386 T'nnis Crl!i -Game & Bil-ace. · Jiard Room. 2 BR. Duplex. Ral\ie. e;pt'd, J .r, 2 BEDROO:\I p&tio. No pets. Sl66/mo F'ROM $130. Realtor, 642-2222. MEDITERRANEAN 2 BR. 2 ba, Bltm. G"'''· 2 VILLAGE children, No Jw.Ut. $165. 181-H Del Mar, 54&-8278. 2400 llsrbor Blvd .. C.r-.1. 17]4) 557-8020 RENTAL OfTJCi-; OPEN 10 AM 1'0 7 PM 11-.,MAC. 2 BR, 2 BA, bllins. LAunllty fad. ~1eM Vertie. Sl60. 54:>-7361; 557-2876. 2 BR 1tudio apt, drps, CTpl~. Ptrlt-liQ Surrounding pool, util pd. Nn pets. QUIET -OELUXE 646-1897 Mys/&12-2149. 1-l It 3 BR APfS 3 BR. l ba, lge, avail July 10. Alao Furn. Ba.ch,Jor Adlts. Bltn., c.tillege Park, Pr.> patios * l ltd Pools Sl!>5. 646--4939• G46-l6B9 Nr shop'a: • AdUllJ only AT VICTOHIA Bt:ACH Uruque 3 bd rn1. hotne, lo- c11ted (Tl\ tht' oceftn i;kle of hwy., al Victoria Beach, Oul1itandin.: ocean vie'4·, 21}, Mths, 2 sunken tubs. 2 tire- places, 1 in m.'ltr. bdrm. All red cedar exterior. Antique 11t11.ined glllS5 'lllindow. Color- ed 1k)'JlghlS. Kilc~n w/All c: enter wl lltlachmcnts. b11l1t-ins includin1 Nuton' Deedt:d llCC!I!! In pathway, leads 'o the bt.ach. [ I l V l patkl. '2 min. lo br.ach. $145 ~ar1menti l«Rel'lt . mo. No headll. 497-1153. ;;;;;;;;.;;;~J SUMA1ER. rental, beautitul Aptl. Furn. 360 ocean view, 2 BR. w/poo!. $400 rno. 49'-5666. SHARP 2 8R.$14S Martinique Apts. P .. 1o. b1in., "'°'· Adli•. "' lm Santa Ana Avr., CM E. Bay or 642-9520. YRLY. LEASF. S550 MON'Ilf ~IT5.510N REAL TY 985 So. Coost llwy. Laguna Pl JONE 171·1) 494-0731 Ltgun• Hills NEW, neVtt lived In, beau. ~lng)e film, 3 br, 2 bfl, fam rm, c:pts, fenCf'd. $275 mo. l.n,w1na Hlll~/Mls~i(ln Viej<J o!lt'('a. a40-3571, SJ0...6130 l BR, 2 1>6, D1hwsr, Air ,,,nr1, Cpt~ & drpa:, SZ55 mo, lca.~r 8.l0-ii~l9, General Lido l•lo Mgr. Apt 113 f41.5Ml LRG 2 Br, l ba. adulla, no. *** Rnt BuuUl'UJ "1n!Jture 6 BAYFRONT AptJ, On the LIKE LIVING IN tor &JJ little u beach. Summtt or yearly YOUR OWN HOME ••• ONE MONTH lea1t1. Available now I 2 Br, l~ Ba. unlurn, Cprs, l-Mo. minimum. 1-Bdrm. 1 •· pet1, bltn1 &: tt!Mr , SJ60. 28.1 A Cabrlllo. 54S-2506. EXTREMELY Ira 1 br. 2 ~ in c.IOM:IS, bltna, crpt&/drps, $1ol0. 5t~793. dips, enc . pehu, compl"'• with Bryant Wiest 1Utr. 67>2723 WILSON GARDENS $105-2 BR, 1ar, •tv/ttf, your 100% Newport Buch Apts coop~ or ~ktcriy per10n, no ch Opt Ph. &12-68ll art 1 pm. pe11. 543-1237 att s pm. Pur tM ion MOBILE home, 1.Jdo areo!t , 1 '!l~========l'~~~~M::~;;::~ Jnd. lltm iBtetion. Nearly .. .,,. 1 BR +I' -----z 2 BR, l~ BA. WIW cpl. 14 Hour O.ly. hide-.~. Lri!! bath. ct'tlta, S nish r• drp1, patio. pr, bltnr. CUSTOM o.,,.. Y•Uow bliM, E"'lo"° * pa L10530C8 aduJ". 11'0 mo. M2-<1970. Furniture R..rt•I patlo. so· to bay &: P'IOI. $115 3 BR. fam alie apl, bltn~. 517 w. l91h. C.M. 5tl-3Ul mo, Y'&rly. Adll&, no pea. Qul•t Adult l iving drPtt. w/w cpl, 1ar, nr AMlwlm Tl'-llOO 673-37!16 Shag r.pt • drpt • bltn_. 1h!Jp'1 & achls. 98)...t_llK}, Lalla~ 194-3108\'oc=EA=N~F~R~O~NT~l~B-,-. ~,~ .. -.-1 Dta11Ulu1 Pool e All UW Pd 2 BR new C"1'Pet very 2 BR. Sl70 clran.' 2 kids ok. St4~. mo. Tiit' tutes-t dn.w ln thl West )T !toe. $325-$375.. Good kids Adult. only-no P"\JI 770 Shalimar. 538-47,.t. , •• 1. Dally PUot Ca.uWed .. ~t ok. l214 W. Ocean-1~1 ll \-nclltltt St. M&-0979 I-=~~~--~~~= ~·~'~· !"~'-:'."~7'!_ _____ 1.2'~"'~"~'~"~""'°~~·~"'"~~·~•1~0~. _ _:,.,...,.,..,..,..,..,..,.,,..(We'll help )'O\I 1111! 64l-5fi73 Cost• Mes• e l-'ABULOUS 2 111. l1v rm w/splre..I strs. trpl, 2 Bdrm, I ~; Ba, S185 tropical pool. 14a E. 18th St. 642--4603. $135-2 BR.. nu pe.lnt, bltns, c-p111, gar, tlpper. Adl!s, oo Jl('1!1. Nr. lfarbor t: Ad8n1s. ~S-6357. DOll'NS'TAIRS--lfK J Br. !"• B<i , SJ6j, Crpls, <Ir p :-. , dhwhr, oo prts. 1 rh1ldrf'n ok. Up.\ta1rs apr av1ul Aug. 1. Sl~. 5-t:>-3215 l BH. 2 Ba hunlly A1i1. C1·p1s, rlr11s, pool. 1'.'o Childr.n Walcome 2 Br. Sl~. AU l:'Xlras. Pool. Fun1. avaH, 17,162..A Keel- !iOn Ln, 842-6235. 968-7510. $135 -2 DR. Crpta, drps, d!5posaJ, sro\11'. 7101 Slater, Apt. l. Call 77i-3398 or 53(1....:\682. :! BR, bHns, <"rpt~. drps, Sllj per rno. J chiJd o k . Trad rw i nds Re1l1y , 847-8511. SPAC I Br, quirl. t'rplc, t>rK:I i.iar, 1·p1s. drpj, x1r11. ¥tor. All elec. Adlts. S\45. 8177 pets. SIT:>/mo. J::11r~ "'knds: :>.i7-4057 & G11.rrirlcl 11.8 . 962~5083. 2 RR fa mil} un11~ Sl;'I.)_ Redcc. Con11. l0<:al1on. Villa l\lesa Apt s, 71\I \\•. \\'11.<;<Jn. 6-16-12.)l. J U!'Ji' l\F..\l ODEt.~;11 NOW YOU CAN AFFORD NEWPORT BEACH Enjoy $750.000 health club & spa; 7 pools, 7 tennis courts. Bachelor, 1 or 2 Br'!. Also 2- story townhouses w/ 2 or 3 BR's. Elec. kitch· ens, private balcony or palio. F rom i11s. Subterranean parking, elev, maid service. Full-line food market, dry cleaner. beauty !alon within complex. 7 beau t. model apt!. Y a1n to 6 pm dail y, other times by appt. Jamboree & San Joaquin Hills Rd11 . N .. of Fashion Island. 714 : 644-1900 !or lea.sing info. PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS --------Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. -------Meta Verde Newport Beach 365 , 1 Br !'IOUSf'-S la: .. r.1n~t'-f'\Vf'n, "'at1·r ixt :1--1s H1·r1utrd s1. "A". G:~l~l{l. 2 Br, clf'an & attract. crp1 ~. drps, bl1n5. air-cond, nr. 11<'hoo!1. ~hop'g &. perk. Klds ok. No J.ll'ls. 830-15-18. BEACHBLUFF Ji"PTS. 2 & J BR, 2 BA, pool, patio, tlw. Nr shopping, 842--S-177 or li~7-:19.i7 . DLX 2 a,, 3 BR, ~ Ba . f'rJt·I BRAND NEW J::llr. Sl:.0 & up. Renlal Ofc: Sl::i.l. l BR. Frpl(', !ndonr/ ouccloor k1rcht>n. he8ted pool. -----•t•" 2 BR 2 b• C•pl • D'P :I09:.. f\la.;'f' Avv, 546--103-1. "--...,,,~, S I \ A Nl-:\\'LY DECUILl\T~:J) ,....... ' • "· s,1 ~c-----,--.--,----·I .,.,..-al~IH.> .lllla JM ve, Bltns. Newport Beach or c:a!l 5.i7-0'211 . Z Br 11•/gar. s1:::1. f<'nt·i·d yd ""-' ., -~~-----1 o""-21.,· * ~:ri-:i4!ll s1-.Ac-L17"~· .~ta""' Apts. l W/pa!10. 1\'ilh'I' 11(/. :!228 =~-~~ BREATH T,\l{lf\G V\F'.\\I. r '"' PhiM'nlHl Ai·r __ ··n_·_· tiX_,_120_ 1 BR $12Ii, l.!!s "-:water incl. S2lS. Hugi' J BR apl. Jligh RR . & Rarhelor apt. CrpUt, -\\'/\\' r rp1 s, drps, stove. 8 Orps, bl111s, garb d!spoy_I. SPACIOU~ Of'\u>.r 1 Br. Bltn on 811.1:k ay Blufrs w/ 'J. A1tul1. no po.'IS. ~12--8311.1. b I I ! 'i Ba. Pvt patio. 1~ ran1;f", dshwsllr. rer1·11:, shag I --,=--'--~-~~-· I pv! a con)'S. fl'p c:, l1eated 2 BR, J~I. e<pl~/flrns, I J J r I 1 7•-Ph1cenlh1. A\'t>. Ask about e1·pts, 1lrps, gar. Nr, So. .,.. poo, oac i:. o 1:n11Ps. ~J 2 Coos1 Plaza. 54;....2321. adul1~. roo pct~. 220 12th St. Don1lngo Dr \hy Cd~1 11.S.) our dis<.'Qun!. !HS-268 · ----------1 41 219 15th SI. 64>.1200. For best nosults! 642-5678 l BR. Stovr, z-t>frig, i::a1·, 1 ~---------·I -.~-------- $110. 240 A1U\!ado s1 ., C.~1. Irvin• Apfs., Apts., Call ~-1-8230. Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 SUJ\1.\llR llub!et-Park \Vl"sl --------------------LRG J RR, 1 BA , nriv );hag Ap1s, adu!I s1'1·1io11 a1'llil Costa M••• Cost• Me•• C'rpts, Sl 79/n10. Nl'll'I~· (let·. now thru $f'p1, 1 hr, l'.. ha ,!;====================;! Nr. OCC. Carport. ~1~151 . t!ri•!(,!..~in.I{ rn1 .. ~m. ~rpar111e 2 BR, J•,. Ba sluc:ho. Enrl dln 'g rn1, 111r 1'Qnd, 1111 el~1·, pat\o. End of ('til-tlr-~c. dshwshr. scll-cJear.ing oven. 339 Cabrillo. 6-12--39.1:\. Pool, jacuzzi. lenni~. 1·oilf'y East Bluff ha ll, beaut. Rer. rn1 .. loo<l:s of clo..~f"L~. plenty ol parking, APARTMEN"fi NEWPORT BEACH Villa Granada Apt1. Four bedrooms with balron- ic~ above & !M,olow. Crac;ous Jivin& Ir. q11iet $WT(l11nding for family with !.!hildf'f'n. Near O:lrona dcl Mar High Sc:hooL Fitt'place, Y.'et bar Ir. built-In kitchen appliances. 835 AMIGOS WAY 644-2991 $2 1:rS7~ !WC !M'p. 842-1444 1iys, :k11-:l6Rl f'\.'f'S f., 1\'krKIS. lagun11 Beach * 1.,0VELY GARDEN APTS QUIE'T 1 BR. Ocrari v1r1\', 1 hlork to h<>B-C'h !· to11•n. ,.f'ar lt>asr. $155 I mo. No pets. fllRIUfl' aduHs, 4 g 4 -4 0 2 g d8ys, 494-3839 eveg .t. wknd,. LUXUllY ocr.an front I BR. New carpet~. ell"vator to bfoach &. pool. Vear lse w/op1lon. Sl50 mo. Reis. 499--2f.SS e1·cs & wkf'nd~­ NEJ\ R HEAOl-New I hr. J~i ha. 1)(111!. Adults, Nn pc\~. l.st•. 217:; S. f'fi11sl Hwy l\!\4--44$1 or ~'l8~74:1 a CoJUwrll, Banker & Co. ~1anaglng Agent 5'11-52:!1 = ::z Huntington Beach * FRESH AIR Walk :I hlks 10 Bf'och' Braul . b•1; 2 RR ap1.'. 11 f v.; rrpts. !lrp~, l>l1ni; <>x1·t·111 r<'- ln11:. Sl:.O. No s1ng!f's, no pt'!I. ~J.~6-J7!1 \Vhy not m ove up to apartment living at its finest ? Come and in spect these spa- ciou:o;, beautifully appointed apartments today. MODELS OPEN DAILY 1 & 2 BR. Apts. w /terraces FROM $140 to $295 I.GE dt•c. ~!Ulho, v1•·w. rrpl, hl!1n~. $1~:, l~r. \Vork1ng 11•01111111 only. 4!)4--41:1~ rf'1r1g, \1•ashl.'r/flryf'r, pool. I 7L-.-0-0-.-.~H~i"ll'-,---- Nr i.;hops. Adams l: Lullury Adult Living Clubhouse -Soci11I Lif• Pool -Indoor & Outdoor Sports Brookhur a l . 1 160 .] AH, 2 BA , cpt.,. drpi;, pool 2\l/598-3736. u~r. 11'11•shr. 1lbl gar. ext. MERRIMAC WOODS J BR. 2 ba , d1hwshr. hlln~. rn!n<'f' .in;,. 491\--2661. 7rpl, 1•p1, dps, pvt pat1u. Sl"BF. \Vhy s!ore it In «>e a!Uc 11'1r pd. No J)l'!S $2:-."l Chlld \1•hf'n you can tum It !ntn OK. Avail 711. IM'l-67"7 11r1 mont'y through a DAILY 425 MERRIMAC WAY, COSTA MESA .fi'eatured in Professional Builder'J: Magazine as "SHANGRI LA." :1:30. PILOT W11-11t ,U.. Apts., Apts., Apts., Aph .• Furn. or Unfum. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. Newport Beach Newport B•ac.h FIRST PRIZE , •• TRIP TO LAS VEGAS SECOND PRIZE.., AM FM STEREO EVERYONE IS WELCOME JUNE 26 •nd 27 FROM NOON TO 5 P.M. Newport Be•ch FREE REFRESHMENTS FREE PRl2ES Oesitned espeoclally for you ••• fltautlrul llving 1hat bibies the budpt • lush Wndsapin1 •nd rdreshln1 fountain~ abound lor that so importanl fil'!lt imprtt- aion • A carport for evtry apirrtment makes parking a bfttze ••• Just one mile from the hurt of the Irvine lndUJtrtd Comp/a ••• Shopping and entettairt- ment c'ntel"l aA! dose by for your com-tnlenc::e • Your IJ>'rtmeot ctn bl! a one or two bedroom, two bith, and you chOOff' from four b $hi0nable color sthenm lo make your apartml!lnt uniquely you • £1th 1ll~lectric kitchen hu a bulll·ln n.n1r, oven, dlthWIJher and a refri1eritor for at-ease IMtl l p~,... tlon. A complete laundty facility saves you 1rme and troobte • PriVllt• view p1ti01 and balc:onlti ldjoln each 1pa1"t1Mnt, and 10Und-protlf comtructlon lets YoU do your own thins without botttmns 01hen • for rte«!ttlOfl, «n}QY tM bllliard room wilh rwo lull sire rabies or IO t~ m!u«I routl! pllyln1 Qrds In front of the firq>late. A latae Pl"'Y rootn with kitchen and blrr ham planned 11ctivllies, dlnclng, holiday affairs Of ptthsps your own prfvil~ ~rtf • INu. liful liv!ns can be youn 1t VISTA OIL MESA •.• Jun 11/t mll~ from Ntwp>rt Bach ••• VISTA DllMESA ••• The1p&rtrMnti wilh YOU in mind. Vista del M888. Apanments 1691 MESA DRIVE• (AT TUSTIN AVE.)• SANTAANA• (714) S4S-tBS; 370 I I I :~ I -""'! ( • . . • • ... ' 40 DAIL V PILOT Fr iday, Junt 25, 1~71 •Olf-lce-R•ent-ol--•440•i•F•ound-·(•f,..-,.,-,•) -!JO-Co::Zr 365 Apt. Unfurn. N•wport 8Nch Apt. Unhim. 365 Apt. Unfum. 1--------N•wport Be.ch 365 Apt. Unfurn. S1nt1 An• 365 Apt• .. Furn. Apts., or Unfum. 370 furn. •r Unfurn. 370 N•wport S.ach NEW Waterfront Otlicu WAU.ET found in vie. Lin-CARPENTRY S375 To S435 Month coin Jr. Hi. Qlrona df:I Mar, MINOR REPAIRS. No J Above TM I!llianclet'" pleaae identify 644-%123. Too Small. Cabinet 1n aar- ----------1 i ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; j Co1ta Mesa Y<AfiLY-l..t',. 2 "" 2 B, CAN'T BE BEAT -----;::::::;::-I;;;;:===== S1nt1 AM * Steps to Be1ch * ~ BR. :! ba -· bltns. Ocean \!1f'11 .. \dtlll~ only, No pt"ls. Yl'!y $:!7;,. Avail. July 1~!. ~ * • * • LUXUJlIOU S bay 11· on t duple>: 3 BR . 2 HA. ('flt~. d1°p5. No child1'f'11 or pe1s. S325. 1n~. Reis. -19-l-S008 eve~. Duplt'x, 1 hlk lo Ot:<.\"ln, 1 i @ (Ilk 10 bay. $2451 ino. fii~r-S'l30 SING LE STORY ~ ~-~=--~~ Sout h Sea A1n1osphel·e \\•t-:sfCJ.1~·~· 'l BR, P ~ Ba 2 BR _ 2 BA111 Ufe81i.BJ'IU 21 VILLA MARSEILLES BRAND NEW SPACIOUS 341 Bayside Dr., N'pt. Beach ' • th,. --•-·•-Bill Grundy Rltr. 642-46W FOUND German Shepherd, &8ftl o • o.:a.uo. ..... • • Blk & u · 56-8175 U no amwer leave DESK -"-I .en ~ mo. I ver VIC: space ava.uab e ..,... ace ki •• , .:•o ~o•o msg. at 646-2372. a o. mo, \Vlll pl'(IVkle furnlh.ft par ng "' · ..........,.,.., Anderson. :: BR. 2 b;l.., bOns. ChlldN>n I-----------Twnhse, Ad!1s only-no pets. C;1rPt•ts & <lrp.~ "'eh . ..:tn11• S300 \'r-ar!y. Avall-NOW OPEN 1728 Re<llord Ln .. ">13-1:133. .'\Ir CondtllOned 11.b!e 11-0\\·! ~32 S<!n!a Arla Avt', S.p:it·- l"lllt: 6i3-3663 6~2-2253 J::ves. M'.lU1' 2 BR. 2 BA w frpl\'. 1,1·1. ! BR. ~ ha. dlx., !gt>. nr11 JUl.!JO Loo.d~ ol ClOSf'IS. Hrd. llfll, \(f'll , fpl. pool. l'111'nt1• Paliui'I Jl~:A'ft:D POOL associated pool . $t9~. 5."17-0211 7;1 Ani ign., \\i;i,y ti\!-7t•:t PJ .. n1y of lawn OC',,\N"fi0"'1 'Bt·, ., , .... I --f r .. 1·111w1 &· S1011:1g1> IROKERs-REALTORS %015 W 8alboa 67J0J6•J -r '' -~ ,. VACANCIES Lost rnonf'y' I HlDIJE:-0 VILLAGt:: )1· 1:-.·. S32:...$Ji.i (',()()(I k1t!s J'tf'nt your housr. apl., s!or•· :!iOO South Salla & 1)(•1 ok. 2211 \\'. Ott11n-bldg., f'll.'. thru a Da ily Pilot ~.ui la ,\ria e ~G-\j:lJ ~II id le items now! fro111 ·675--000o. fi7.'i-l~IO. Classified 11.d. ~=""'-----Apt s., Apts., I Apts., !~-F-"-'-"~·-•-•~U-"-"'-'-"-·-3_1_• __ F~"-'-"-·-•_•_U_n_1_u_•_n_,_,~1o :_~F~u:•~n~.~·~·..::.U~n:l:u~rn~.:.,.:37~0:..::c~,~"~'='~'-~~~'~'~'=··=·='::::::::;;:;- Sant1 Ana Santi Ana Santa Ana Santa Ana First Showing So don'! leave your youngsters IH·l1 i11d 11 hen you rome over to inspect ()nu1gc Couuty's glilleriug, new :1parl•ru·11I (•onnnunity -SOUTll COA~T 'ILL.\~. For whifi> you're admiring the ~1 1111pt11011~ private Clubhouse and Jux11rian!ly Jan<l$Caped ,c:ronncls, we have a few goodies tbat1/ clt>ligbt their lillle hearts loo. Lile our $500,000 Cbil<l Care Center :in<l pluyland. SOl.'TU COA!.'T \"ILLAS is \Vhcre hoth A<lulls and t·hilJren have the best of cvc.rytLing. Decor1lor slyled 1. ') & 3-beclroom 1p1rlrne1tl-homl!'J • Centr1 / g 11 refrtgerilled 1ir-<:onclilioning • 8i1lt1nced Power Kitchens • Color-h1rmoniled app/i1nces, including c/iJhwilsher • Pri'flf• 1err1ces •Wilk.in w••drobes • '000-sq. fl. Cfuhhouie with enlert1ining & dining f1ci/i/ies, taun.is, billiards. Cilrdrooms • C1b1n1s, h1rbecue, h1dminlon, shuffleboard • 3 h'a/ed pools ilnd J.icuzzi • Ch ild C1re Center & pl1yf1n d. All this family luxury living irom$14S a month See the elegantly furnished mode! aparlments and re~1eat1on ce11!er -open daily 1 o a m. to 7 p m. /'!('11• Bt>aulllal ·Garden Apan- 111t•n1.~. Pr•ivare Patios, Pool. ~pJ. (;ar11ge. f"urnlshed. L'nru,·n1~hrd. I Mil -.~!.l.J 1 RR -$180 l BR -.~'.1."1:, AUll~. no pets j J:1 I~. :!l~I. C .. \I. 6-12-190;) CLEA:-.-f'l'O!lOrlllL'<il, cloSt! 10 shup'g_ I Bit. SJ:?:, 11~ldg u1 1l. Adlts. no pel'i. 5'~. 5-18--11 :..7. :i~2 Centrr SI., r.Jgr Apt I~. 'l BR. parlly lurn. $100 n10 . ls! & last. cll'an1ng tleposil. July ~). 13;, Albt!Tt Sr, C.1\1. j\lr. \Vhite 213 638-4113, "Vf'5, 714 596-3•120 * l & 2 BR . * $1·10 UP. POOL. I & 2 Bdrm. Apts. Adult Living Furn. & Unfurn. Oishwashl!r • color coordlnat. ed appllanctt • plush shai carpet -cboice ot l color sche1nes • 2 ba ths • stall showers -mirrored ward- robe doorJ -indirect light. Ing Jn kitchen -brea.ldas! bar • huge private fencM patio • plwih landscaping • brick Bar-B-Q's -lar&I! heal- ed pools &: lanai. 3101 So. Bristol St. (~~Mi N. of So. Cout Pla.za) Santi An1 PHONE: 557-1200 Sunset Beach at $5 mo. Answering service BOY'S bike found near available. 316 No. EI Kaiser School. call J: ide:n· EXP ER. re mod e I i n I , Camino Real , San tify. 642-60'JI . cabiMl11, rtpairs, maint. No Clemente. 492-4420 PART Collle malt, vie job too small. R~aa . * NEWPORT BEACH * \Vilson &. Avalon, C.M.1~ ....... =72'J~·=·~~----ol ACT05g tron1 Civic Center. 548-8596. CABINETS £ toom ad· Air-Cr !' Prk' 300 t I~==--------I ditions, remodelin&". p g--g, 0 f'OUND male med IZ. yg. 54S-42W, 646-5219 1000 sq. tL JX. _,1. ... .t.... "-..... , ~-~~o'--~--· I n--~-67., ,.0,.., '"'le • .,pe uu:11-.:>11n .... ego 1: ..,.,..,l.J"l'T * ,,.......,.. F\~:y and Bristol. 646-5346. Cement, Concrete Ava~I for Sub.Leas•. BLK Lab. puppy. vie. Beach Attract iv.-5th noor suite Bh·d &: Slater PATIO Specialis1s. A dd overlooking Newport Bay. · 847_3900 dislinction to your home &12-8980 with a custom patio design-=-==~~~"'.'_~~-,--IFF"EEli:M;;ALEWfidiOog<:", b'blaCK<k~.~a~bo;o;;,;Jt 3 ed especially for your home. •NEWPORT Beach Deluxe months Vic Beach & Quality. Experienc e . View office&. Air-cond. Priv. :r.te-yer Si c ;..f 00,...-729 "·tt'•la<lt'o•. ~ ... , & So°' Ba. 2400 \V. Coast lhvy ' .• . :i ~ • ""'" ~ " s:;.a.:,u · FOUND"'-I --' Coruitruction. 54&-0769. 1670 SAt>.'TA ANA AVE CM ..._.,~mpagl'll!' .co 0•~• l• 300 /fl ,,_ ' fl fen1ale Daisy tlog. Vic. 22nd rom sq """' ~q · SI C 'I "·'"' """'3 675-2464 or 541-5032 · ·1' • .,.......,..., · Business R•nt1I 44.J FOUND-Small grey & white RESID. Concrete Specialists. Father k Son Team . 539-9456 anytimf'. Call &42-2181 API' tor rent on canaJ Sunset ---"""-'-~--h~--1 Beach. J Br, 2 Ba, dsh..,,·hr, Huntington Beac retrig & 11tow, $27i Yearly. fuzzy kitten vie. Kukui &. 1'·0-n-,-,-,-,-,-.-,-2-,-.. -m-,-lu-d•io I Bikini, H •. B 962--0380. e e CONCRETE. Floon, patios, drives, sidewalks, &labs. Rea~. Don 642-851•. CEl\1ENT WORK, no job too small. rea!K>nable. F rf! e Estim. H. Stuflick. 548-8615. PATIOS, 1l'alks, drive, insla11 ne1v la1vns, saw, break, remove. 548-Sf,68 for est. a;pace. Ideal tor cralt.sman, Lost e OCE~N VIE\V-FROl\1 Refs. 1213J 498-1~5. SI~. l Br. furn or unfurn.I~~~~~~~~~~~ weaving or gourmet shoP.1-----------East Cst Hwy. Cd M . LOST 6!17 bro\\11 ~; Boxer. 544--0198 after 5 pm. "'hife chest &. pa1vs, female, CASA PLAYA. 14th &I, \Valnut. C!!-11 536-8367. Rentils 11---1 OFFICE space -1767 "'A:· fb~~i~c:;c~.~dN~~~ ~~~c~ Huntington Beach . Newport Bh·d., C.:\I. Avail ,. R , d ''2-7881 July Lst. 645-3140. 633-2961. ion. e\\ar · ""' · ON BEACH! Rooms 400 . WEDDING rings lost in Industrial Rent1I 450 Newport area June J7th. Cdi\.1, Single room, bath, pvt. NEW INDUSTRIAL Sentimen!al value. Liberal NE\V 2 BR. APTS entran«, Avail J uly, Aug, BLDGS. re..,,·ard! 644-1033. Concrete-Storlt!·Brick No J ob Too Small 642--0478 Free Est. QUALIT·Y Cement Work. l.flt George do it. L I c' d . bonded. 645-169.). 1'~ron1 $230 Se pt, $70 mo. 675-1943 eves * COSTA MESA * \VHT shaggy niale cockapoo Furniture Available only. 1200 _ 15I6 & 1740 sq ft units. \\'/short tail lost 1'hurs in Carpets.drapes-dishwasher PROFESSIONAL Bldg. 4;:..c Private offices, plenty of NB. tNo. 204~) RE\VARD. heated pool.uunas-tennia sq It. Air-eond, crpts, drps, parking. near SD Jo'ree,vay. 642-1923. Child Care rec room-ocean views gtl parking. Xlnt Joe. 3::.o E. C. NATIRESS REALTOR lo8=R=0°1°v"N--00~,.-cboo-k--,-.-,. "" I p-~·-COST • ESA · DAY care l\1on.-rri, my pauv.s-atnp e ,..-,,.u•i 17th St. C.M. PETE BAR-A ,.1 642-1485 tainin< real estalt" info. ,,.,.,,..;! guani home. Spanish spoken. 2152 _, ...... Y s. RETf RLTY 642-4353. FIBERGLASS i\l tgrs & Re1vard $10. 5'1s-4139 or HUNT.INGTON National, C.M. 645-3413. f'U RN slp'g rm, prv Pnt , 1voodworkers \l'elcome. 2Z:«I 646-16i5. ft •. v .. ~ ,1-~--~-----Contractor PACIFIC Gold l\ledallion home. 5 to 8 ~q o.: up. -•Ira + , ... zar LOST Beagle ·sam." Lie. pn1 eves: or II !o 1 wk nds, fire sprinklers. 893-3575. No. OC-33973. SJO. reward . r.1Y \Vay , qu&Jity home 7U OCEAN AVE., It.B. 6-IS--2012. C.:'11. M-1 corner. 1Z7' on 19th For inform a 1 ion cal! repalr. Wall5, ceiling, floors 1714) 536.1487 lc.\c!Aool.E~d"•-,-... -,-,-.,-m-,~,,=. -.-to-I St. 90' on Whittier. 800 sq ft 533-4456 ext 332 or 635-1463. etc. No job too 1mall. Otc open ID ~-6 pm Daily bldg. 1250/mo. 64:Z...34!IO. !147--0()36 24 hr MS &erv WILLIAM WALTERS CO. share turn. 2 br apt Cdi\1. I ~-~~~~~~--=IFEMALE Irish Setter 2 yrs.1 _~~-·--~--· ~-·-I •""""""'"'""""""""""""I Call : Wk/rve 6 4 4 -5 8j1 , R•ntals Want•d 460 1Yh\ spot on c h e 5 t. Additions * Remodelina N.wport B •• ch &14-7387, dys/644-;)633. PLEASE! Call 642-9161. Ger.vick & Son, Lie. ~:;:'.,!::::.;:_.:;~'.'...---,... I 1:;;;;;:c;,;-1X;;;;;:--;;,.,c-s;;: WANTED: 1-'um i.<:bt'd room limmflkiii<.;-;;:itt>-;;:;Jroi: I :·~·;"~°':'~-7·~""",._:>1~0.~21~'111~, LARGE btlnn, near So. \VHITE k' I 'Jh d I ~ or small bachelor apt for Z7 ~-11 en 11'1 re co -LIC'D Constr. Remodeil"" RESORT LIVING Coo.st Plaza, private bath &. year old niale employee of lar. Vic Seashort: Dr. btwn '% Luxury apt l1v1ng w/ SI n1il-,='-"-"-'-"-"-·~""'"~"-·_1_5 ____ lht! Di1ily Pilot, Near ~.D. 48'. & 491h. alt j:30 646-3j77. Addi!i<)ns, Plans, Layout. , -~ Karl E. Kendall , 64:Z...l811. lion recreatibn ... s111mm1ng, Summ•r Rentals 420 fret>11·ay in II u n ti 11 gr on, LOST: June 17. 20" girls 1enn1.~ bi!li11rds, !land vol-I-----------Fountain Valey or Costa ~·ello1v bikr at Thrifty's, Electrical lrvhali. heallh clubs. saunas. CORONA del 1'1ar privaic ,\fesa, if possiblf". j98-W-!7 C.:'11. Rr1n1rrl! 645-57:l4. clubhouse. par!y room. rrs-home. Set·luded 3 ~r1:i1 1 ba, LJC'D Electrician, maint. ..cl" IC"nni.~ pro & pro ~hop romplty _ Jurr1. Childi::n &· \VANTED 2 or 3 BR. house RE\\1,\RD! serv. Ali'rO, resid. indusl.iial. & rrillch morf'. :;ing)('s. 1 & i:iets ?_K. Augus1 $21;>/ll·k. 1v/~ara;:r to cli>an & !L't up. l\Iissing -4 wks, small 642-4t74- :! Hll. Furn/ Unlurn. Rrnts &14-lli1. Call 642-685<1 alt 6. ~ray & \\'ht cat. 642-3444. ELECTRICIAN, licensed, from Sl:t• .•. l\o lea.~r i·e.l;(c'LcEc.AooN~B""'·hc.-,cpct-,-0-,-,cl-pic,-g band~. Small jobs, main!. 11111n•d. ;\loc!<'ls Open Daily 1·n1s. Step!! bch. S7j/11·k & "-------~![ 6'14] I l!J•) k repairs. 548-520.l l(J 10 :-:. up. :ll~i };. Ba lboa Blvd. Announct!men11 ln1truclio11 Gardening 673-99-l:J SOUTH · BAY CLUB _B_E_A_Co.-.-.-A-,-. -,-.-, -. -,-,-('[ CLEA.'l Up s p e c l a I i I I ' iJust tor s111gJP proplc} pal!o. frpl, pnv. ;irra. $:lOO Announcements 500 Schools & hauling odd jobs. ne1v fence Ne11·1K11·1 Bt>a1·11 11·k. 673-j()(jJ or :!1 3: Tll OPEN HOUSE LUAU instructions 575 & repair. Reas. 548-6955. Irvine & 16!11. 6-lj-Ojj() :).3t!7. AL'S GARDENING 1~~=~~--~~~~ 1G!en Haven of NewporL Con-PVT or ramily s1~·1mming fer garden-inf &: smal I BALBOA Island -2 br. ~ ha va!rsccnt Ho.~p. 15.J,J Super-leli-'\Ollll in my pool. Exp'd & landscaping services, call OAKWOOD GARDEN APARTMENTS iresort !ivin(:" for adultsl J-.ell'porl Beach 16th,!,-!rvinr 6~2-8170 NOW'S THE- TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT h O!lll'. BP.a.ut furn, · A NB L 011 "'0--198 eo-• "' ......... Pl 1or vi', 1 · . yle e !<, qualified Red Cros.~ \\'ater .,.. a . .xrvinit ,,e-.,....., 11·ash/dryer, Dshwshr. July, Ad m1n1strator, Public invit-Safety Instructor. !lGS-3170 Cd.i\i", Co.sla 11e.sa, Dover A.ug. 497-1829. cd lron1 6:30 to 9:30, Sat.I ~~~~~~~~~~~[ Shores, \Ve-stcllff. LIDO avail .July. 4 BR, close June.26. Refreshn1ents & en·I ~ ~ * LANDSCAPING* !o t'lub b beach. Call tcrra1nmr111. I s.rwicn and lt•Plin I New la11·ns. sprinklers. ar- 11 kends or ·arr 7 pm. A I I , S2l bo · I all u o r1nsport.at1on ~ patios, ences, w s. 61:i-mi. Lic'd oontr. Master Chargt!. OCE ANF.ROfl;T <-orllt'.'r. JOll Student needs ride to Ana-13 yrs Joe exp. 5.16-12'15 o. h I heim wk<l)'s vie. Euclid & Babysittin .. ""as ore Dr. Dup l'JC . 2 Br • GARDENING, cleanup A- l I · 4 BR L1rn..'Oln, arr. bt:'l\\"1'('11 8 & '-----------! 01l'n : Jlew ups airs -•-COSTA MESA yard main!,nance. Dp col- ' B ,.0 "144 8:30 am, share exp. 4~-5J31 a. ,,...,, · PRE-SCHOOL lege 1tudents. STA\' by Bey. 2B R Furn. Special Summer Program Free Est. 534-1846 ~ rotl age. i\lake re.~ervarions J[t.] 18tt & ,,1onrovla, ~i day + AL'S Landscaping. Tree ~as., Apts., Apts., Apts., I Apts., $7~• wk. 112 \\'. Coast 1-l\\'Y·, ~---•'_'_"_"_'_1' __ .J. .., full day session5. Planned removal. Yard remodeling. Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 37D Furn. or Unfurn. 370 NB. D-S. 1 program. hot lunches. Ages Tra5h hauling, lot cleanup. WANT AD -4 -,-~---,--_,...-----------------------1 • BEACON BAY 2 hr 2-6. hrs 6:30 Ai\f _ 6 P:'.f. Repair 1prinklers. 673-1.1!i6. untington Beadi Huntington Beach Huntington ileach Huntington Beach Huntington Beach ap1-,July $1l:i, Atig $1l j/wk. Personals 530 $18 1vk.COMPARE! P.12-4050 * LAWN SERVICE * lj~::;:;:=========::=;=::;:==========;;; ,;;;;;;;;;;;::========:==:::~;::::=:::;11 6i3-6S~S. * f'UU..Y LJCENSED * NURSERY AIDE graduate, Front yard $10. per month, "•. · ~ ::! FOR rent-turn b a f' he lo r Reno11·ned Hindu Spirituahst 18. \Vhy not lei me give back yani alM. Wetdina:, brach ro11a1-:e. For in· A<lvire on all matters. your chfldren tender loving yard cleanup. 962-$12. formal ion cal! .'.H-.l7.'i~. l,ovr .. l\larriage. Bus1nes!I ca1·r '.' Ref. r x c h an g e :f _ Exper. Japanese Gordener, OEACH houst'. bay fmnl. R<'adings given 1 dayi; a 546--6667. Complete yd service. Keat al'atl July ~ Aug. ~lps 2·6. \\'eek, 10 a .m, to IO p.m. COLLEGE Jt1rl. Seeks po.~. & Re-1i11. f'ree esL 642-4389 'loo/ k , 0 "7,2.. 312 N. El Camino Real, ,. ·'loth•t·'•. ,·,,1 0 • ESE ·" 11· "' up . ......,.. " San Clemente "' , ·' " JAPAN expert g11,uener. BALBOA furn. ot.'o:i::in lron1 492-9l36. -4gz..oo;o bPach-j31-«l6Q Or 673-2459 Cmpl yd ser~ice \\'/ p11-T ' n 11 k "'ic""m:Oi;;o-Toi;;;;:;;;;;;j,"~'~/<~•~le~'~';"'~'~'~· ---~-PqU ip. Frtt e.~l. 6-1:>-1796. Ml fl~rs. rn~0na) r 11f'" · \\"E ~uarantee to incro:iase Jy r.11rs. fi7l-492S. your bust ill lea~! 1 cup i;izc. BABYSlTTING my homf' .Tapanese Gardener NEAR BEACH. J br. J'i ba, f":ib1,ilons l\athy Nls custom large fenced yard. Full or Exp'd. Yard \Vork I di 21., " c 1 bt'' .,, 11-, part t1n1e. i\lesa Verde. Clea~up. Planting 646-0619 poo. A ts. 1·' ..... oos .......... I • ~6-8118 540-279.1 SPENCER'S La\l•n SelVlCC llwy. Lag. 494-4·1RI • .328-67,13 INCRl::ASI-: YOUR BUST 2" . Rentils to Sh.at• 430 or morr \\'/fabulous Tll'ii· VERY reas. ln!an! rare 1n Frcf' PS1 . La1vn earl!, ciean- hl'a. Call oa11-n 4g.t-lOOl my lo1•ely large clean home. ups. Reasonable. 548-5213 WAN'TE.o 3rd girl IT.r321 !o ext. rio~ or :i.15-0487. ' C.\f &16--5.i..17. LA\VN :r.ts\nt. Hauling, new sharr h!;e in 11.B. nc1trp ~~R~E~G~N;ANT~~''.:'.:A~d'.'.'.:o~lc.--l;>HJOTYi'iJiliEE"RRC-.•'i'/ll ~.+h~ildilcw;;;;illl ~~;,;I 1a11'n.~. clean-up. pruninr, beach. l lOO incl u I i I • · P 1 0 11 • 1 hild bo ~ Free e-sl. Call 546-7379 5797 Rbonion, v a !I e ct om y _ c -new rn-., Yr s · I "c::::_:=~:=:.:=:.'-c0--~- 968-1 · roun.~eling l.t information. 64a-nl2 EXPER. Jla\\·aiian Gardentr 3rd responsiblf', •t r a i g ht &12_..,436. l'P"LA,..,.y=n"oo=M""". -01,-0-,-,,-,--,-.rn~ I C..omplete Gardf"Jling Ser· person \\'11nted 10 llhal"t! 3 nd the 1 I E d vlct>, Kamalani. 646-4676 Br. iO\l•nhous• \\'ilh pool. ALCOIIOLICS Anonymooi;. a 0 r P ayma es. a er l-=cc--,,'C'.":CC::-"e:::::::=:-1 Phone 5'12-7217 or .. ~1a 1chool area. 962-2180. Exp. Japanese Gardener NB 64&-5263. ... '" _ _. "· · P.O. Box 1223 Cos!a Mesa. Business Service Complete Y ... u .xrvice BAOiELOR y,•ijl sh111-e ho1nc Free e&tirnate 557-926f. w/same. C.M. area. Call F!C Bkkpr. All phase5 incl af1 5, MG-624j, l[S] fin. stmts. No corp. taxes. JAPANESE: GARDENER. lost and Found MALE or fem&Ir to share P.U. &: deliv. 64Z-1798. any kind of garden {213) 435-5606. t"xcl usive waterfront house.1 ;·~~-;;;;;;;;;;;;;1c~o~r!,,.~t=S~o~rv~I~<~•'.:::=== Ph. 675-8862. '-==~~~-~-,I Found (fr" ads) 550 JOHN'S c ......... , ,. u...i...111tt" .... General Services WOMAl'i & child to !!hare 3 ------------r ''"' ., br rondo 'Y/poot & rec LADY'S v.Tist11·Rtch on •Tun-Oeaner~. Extra Drl facili!il'!. 536-1742. tington City Beach. fi /21. Shampoo free Srotchguard 111INGS by ?.100M"-Lt. •led., plumb, fenc• • tile • Instln11. CfttJl"ntry paint •tc. ~5-~. . (So i t Reta rd ants), MALE or female undrr 2G to ldc111lfy clearly lo claim 216 in \Valnu1. H.B. Degrea.'H!n &:-all color Hauling share apt or house Or11ngt! Co. 839-IW!. \\'OMAN 2,;,-35 !!harr 'l BR , 11~ ba apt It pool. Aft 6:30 - 2190 Colleg,, No. 20. Office Rent1I MODERN OFFICES * COSTA MESA * S7a. A-s110 pc>r mo., So. Ca.lit. Jo'lm National Bank Bldg .• 2.lJ E. l71h St., C.i\1. 642.-1485 DESK ~pece available S50 mo. Will provide fumitutt at $5 mo. Arurwerlng 11ervlce availabl~. 17875 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach. &t.l-4321 DESK space llVRllltble S50 mo. Will provide furniture at $5 mo. An~-erlng service aVllll1ble-. 222 Foresf Ave, Laguna &Reh. 494-9466 3700 NE\VPORT BLVD, NB '*ON THE BAY* 67~2464 or 5-11-5032 brighteners It 10 minute t'OUND llim tan female dog bleach tor 11·hite carpets. YARD, 1a~. p1. collie'.'. Vic. Meu Del Savt! your money by saving Remove trees, J\1ar ~ Presidio Dr. Ci'\!. me extra trips. \ViU .:lean .1 kip Io ad er, ='=J&.=9089~·~~----l llvinr nn dining rm A hill 1~"~7=--~=~~~---1 FOUND-Vic. P a u I a r I no $~5, Any nn $7.SO, couch CLEANUP A Hau1in(, trH School a.rouncl 611, Friend-$10, d1llir $5. 15 yrs. exp. ts trim top remove pragea ly. blk. ma\r pup, white on what count&, not method, I clellnt!d, ' tvy & • fence ebest. ~~13. do "''Ol'k myseU. Good ret. I ::."'omo="",..,~· '~'="'=,....,-="-·--I C-r~E7M~A'L'Eo-c.,-.b'l•c-:&-w-,-hi~lt-oo~lc.1 Sll-01014 • TRASH A Garage clean-up, lie. approx l yr old, toondl-;;D~l&mond==7'~c.~l'P':cc~, ~C~J-,aruna~.-7 day1. $10 a load. Fret est. do w n tow n iua Bc.h. Avg size room $8 Anytime. 548-5031. cleanuPI. dirt, lvy, backhoe. 536-3443. Repatrina .. lnstallaflon! MOVING. prage dean _ up SIAME:SE male-cat with Free Eal 645-1317 A: lite hauling. Reuonable crmSt'd ryes and bent tail, DR!FOAM CARPET CLEAN F'tH eslim11.tes. &IS-1002. Vic Slaler It Beach HB Reasnn11.ble Rllt", HovseclHning 847--0775. Tomlin Svc * 557-9669 Bay A-Beach Janitorial \Vl--ltTE fem11,Jr chihuahua • STEAM KING • "'-'• ;-•-!loo ,~ 1 13 ... .,.., ""' ,,.,., .. -s. rs etc. \'ic ot llunt\ngton Village up lo.....,.. aq I 2.50 Rr1. & Comm'I_ &t&-1401. tr.<ric:t in JIB 846-2261. Guaranteed work 6-45-3189 HOUSECLEANING FOUND Tennis Raclu>t Vic CarJMnter EXP. A REAS. \\'cslclltt 1------------e .....,,, e 54.'i-4!93 ANY~' job. Reaid., Comm"I, ~~~~"'-""'----! Jndu~.. Apl1. AU ~s EXPERIENCED hoUlll!\\'otk. DAILY PILOT tor •cUon! work. Reu. ~ •&t. s:J.!iO hr. Oil! f'\'f'K. Ciill 642-."i678 .l Save! 962-1961 . 348-2.\M [-... --]~ [ I[!] [ . ,,,...,_ I[!] I £1.,1wt HCMJsect .. nlnt COlJ..EGf Glri wl!l do hSl!work Coala Mr g a , N~wport Arr•, t hr 1 , minimum. S2 hr. Call M t. S. 9 pm. !146-4478. ADVERTISING SAJ..£5 New p~auge maa:ai l n~ rweds part time 11111 10 sf!U BRICKLAYER; rood t1 n layout .l all phases of bricll 1lxtc. work. 5'4--7~. Siles Meaa Oeantna Service ~u. Window1, Floor etc. R.Hid. &. Ccmmc'J. Sot&-4lll Painting & advf'rtJ1ing , M u • I be BOY 15-19 IO do yard work, penua1ive " "'ady lo ,co. Good "91'kf'r. ttliabl.r. Call Goof! commiu ion It p • m ilea,,._ Jt a.dri1 u p BOOKKEEPER t fut-HURRY. f'or appl call u l l Pit P.1.ttl!rlOll, 4~1344, chitrRP. Prtopr1re p " J.. I RJG-;,cM or 49&-5791. tirl oftiefc, mu1t type wt.JI. Paperhanolnt AMBULANCE driver, mmt G«d Mnetila It pay, Sencl tl!SUfm' lo P. 0. ~ 1271, Newport Beach. PROF. paintinc , F;xter 1 bl' 21. Exp. pref. l\lusl knnw Oranit COl!!t Are1. Si~!e, •tory, low u ST.25 w/1d Slarl immed. 54S-345fi. BUILD 2nd inc. iw,ll Ba,ic pain!. Avg mi SU. A..trle1s H I olher Shaklee Prod. 1praying arcou,. c:eilin,p, :i ATTRACT. WAITRESS 1860 Newport Blvd. 646-4~ i:oA!s $15. Roy, ~47-1353. Expl'r. Not under TI . NO C,r.t JR. EXEC TRAINING PROGRAM MEN MI LITAR Y WOMEN TO MEET1HE EXPAND, ING NEEDS OF' OUR CO!\\· PANY. WE HA\'t: J UST STARTEn A NEW JR. EXEC. 1'RAlNINC PRO. Supervl•er to $SOO GRAi\1. THf; MEN Wf; ARE II yuu ha ve h11d rxpcr. su- 1.00KIN(f F'OR NEED NOT pi>rv1s1n.: \1'0"1rn th1~ 1~ ao HA VF: ANY PR10R MAN-Xln't opPQr!\lnl!y with 11 AGE,\.1f,'NT t-:XPf:R. OUR I 11. r 11: e l{l'O\\'lnlC N<'WPor t r ROJ EC1' l ON S ARF. Bf'11r h firm_ GREAT, W HERE'S YOUR 48(1 f;, 17th 'al lrv1nr \ CM OPENING f()C rood Srn;ll'i' M1111Ager. Call fur 11.11pt. 1'3S-Jj9;:i, OPt.:RAr=oH~.s-.-,-1-~-.-.. -.. -... -,-,1 fl.1 fg ex!)('r. only, (:ood Pll}'. Stl'arly. 6"2-.147'.! N .11. PART TIME Of't'JCt~ t'Sh1b. co. A In\ o( fliJhlJt' c.-onuu·t. Business JS hol1111 ini;:. S111r! JtR!i. Call ,J r11n flrnwn, ~1,llH•O.i1 COASTAL A\;t.N('Y 2790 ll;irhor Bl II! Ad.1111« P11rl T JrJlP pi);";Jle-1\'orlc.- l:::>.cE"llP nt Potrnl111!'. • ti-1&-4:\!Y.l '" ··~ • -P-A"Sl=E~UP 1\RT!sr:-('~ Tl'I(\!. Ci1ll ,ll\ll!ll\I'. li4f,.011H TELEPHONE RECEPTIONIST ~11 -sT l:!t~ J\BLt. Tfl ni·: J<..:FFl:.(.l'J\'t'.; \\'JTll 1\ 'I l~J..­ ".l'HON,.; t, PilOJ i::CT A I 't,/l.."i01'>,\llL~; I \II\ ti/•; 1·r) OL"ll P~:RSO~:-JF:L. $\IJO, !'!·:It \\EEK /'Lt.:S, e H•lllU!! l1wrnll\'p Pll\u • ,..111! Vnni:r Bl'111'!1t11 • f'IU1>h f'Hf11·1'' i\r11r llon1P • Slart Inirn••rh11t<"ly CALL ( 714) 558-0144 A&k fer Mr. Adam• 1'0\V TR UCK DlllVEn t.·-A-l_N_T_l_N_G_·_. -H-,-,-,-,-,-I PHONE CALl-5, Apply in CHAIRSIDE 11Mi~lant & tuar&nttcd wor.k. Llc'd'. person, Surf &. Sirloin, 5930 preventh1" t:ontrot nurR1>. Loc:a1 t~f'•. Cal! 67~5740 111 ~W=. ="°'~"=",wy~-· ,N,.B_·~-~· I Ch!ir exp. IW'c. ~Pl" 5. AITRACT!VE girl lo work oril'nl~ practiff. 962.--2t36. 1-----------1 \j,.'P4'1«ond~ a' CIL~hif'r. Apply No \V11.snng 111 l22l Fairview Rd, C.M. l O!ll.DREN I A 9, llam- * WALLPAPER * J:JOpm. NP.oed 11tter deaper- CllANCE TO JOIN A U1lN· 642-1470 NrNG TEAM RIGHT t'ROMI!!""!'!!"''"'"''"'"""''"'-Payroll Sec'y 5500 Q,,...r :l1, <'·'I'· pt·rr ,\ C. Au1n, TIIF. BEGINNING. LAO'i': ellpPr. In dn\l\ni: .1/4 I l:.~pc-r. 111 p;iyrHJI, llOlf' t:l•l'd~. 1~~ '!, l<l C'anHno Hr:il. ion piri. up tr11rk rllr mutt> A f> k ~ti S.-in f"lrn1"111r ~~-~-ExPl!rienc,. p~fernd. No •tely, M>4093 afl tpm. Wh,.n you call "Mac" phone cllll! please. PLUSH OF~"ICT.S. t.IR-wnrk. Sht)rl hr~. tnnri r11.v. NEWPORT T Y!'l :-\T-\h111 ,(.Thur"· 12 tn t:RAL ~""'RINGE SENEF"l~. l..11.guna Art>a, C11JI t'r1 Al\l Perionnel Agency ~ lnl<'rn11!1oni1I !'OH 2~02, 54&.1+44 646-lnJ I oiiiiiiiiiiii._iii_iii_iOi COOK, Hooilf'kel'per, lite Ai R Cl k nut5ing du1ie1. Live-Jn, :\ PAINTIN(;, prolesa!l'Jnlll. •r days a wk. t'ri thn..i Sun. 111 DR/VF: 1!171 CAD ILJ..AC, k TUES Ai\I, ~fl6-.fi3fi.'l. &JJ Dover Or., N.8 , '.'.'ri'J~lrt BPill'IL START IMMEDIATEL \', liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 642·3870 e l'l'llO!.-:Tl·~~Jt~Y~S~.,~\{)r' All work f\<arn. Color Min, I yr exper. Spl it l''eit. • day. Agl',. 40-60 only. Spt.(:\a ll 1 t . 96l-'i143, K EYPUNCH OPR. F'ORF:i\1 1\:-.J , rXP 'P, 547-1441. Secretary Rl'f't ttq'd. 61l-l5~. TALENT IS THE SOURCF: "· -" & U •-k COOK FRY OF' STRENGTH Of A NY A 1 lf'a~ 1 yr f'Xf"lf'r. \1' 'IR~I PR 0 FESS l 0 NA L p,·.,, . ....,rson'""' pa.yro uac • • ~ ~I f "'°3 l PROFITABLE COMPANY. 29 &. :19, Alpha numrric tinr-intl!r/exter. Ht1nei l fT'OUuu, -11 ee. Evr. wark. """""J7 STUART FOX lS AO~JEV-T'f'Q'd. M u~ br 11.hlr tn dr- 1\'0rk. Lie. k ira. 548-2759, DATA Systems S ale1 TNG ~-INANC I AL rNDE-velop proi;:rain rard.~ & 645-53:,0, Teller Perm a nent J>Ol!lition . h I X • p,,._1,.. -w ,~'--·' f..lu~ be exptrienc!d. Unlimiterl op.....,rhinity, mp Pf.NDENCK .IN AS.SOCIA-punc & variety or 11pp lc.-11· " • '"' o..fllJ<>l ,.., TION WITH ONt.: o ~-CAI,,-t1on1. teAcher. Exttt/lnter., ft.C-i:ommJision, stock option. If'ORNIA 'S RENOWNED PROFESSIONAL (']('menlf', Cap1"!r;1110 11rra. \\'ork in )Our 1H\11 hn1111'. R1·~1 ,Jr<-1 1 1() t1r1·;•, I 'Ii.our l'l:\:1-1·16:1 hl'!\\'rrn :.t:OO lJ 111, l\nrl tlt'llltl, N E~;llbP. fil2-'~iK\. 11•;111 f001t ~· e<wkla1l~. 1\:! ;.lllfl~ . .Nr:il, d"J"'nd;1 hlr s. ,,,-,ni:f'11111I . t:nnrl hp~ ~lll la ~1"''"111\ H"~lluu· .. 11!, ;,.17 \\' Hllh S!, (' 1\I. OA!lV PILOT 4J l~I'---- (ir11t1s -H r-~\" -llj!f'n Kn~hrr -11 .\V E:-l"r COT l 'r->!111 c11rd, 1• ~ 11 f1••vh·E' 1h.11 1n.1kr'! prr111li• blly Sflllll'- il\HIC: 1111 ')' ilnn·1 tll'f'd \l'llh fllf>/\f'\ /)lf',I H \Vfo:.\'"I' 1;nr. --.-i\'\TlQ°li t:e-- SHOW-SALE J U\ZE 2.4, :!" ~'f.. ·n l\ll 1\n11q1:c r~h 1t>ll~·rs /\11&1\••11n f'1111vc.-n11.,n ,\rrnl\ .~no \\', J\111rll,1, a1·nf~s lnH11 ll1io11f') l11.11rl . 1'hlu·s. Fn, Sar, 1.a1r1\I s un 12.fir_\1, _A_N_'l'_IQI·.-· -,11-,1--.. -BcR'""'A-Sc. ~, B~.u·· ,, /raili;. P 1 "I 1.--.11,111•<1. Xlnl f'l)OI! S~f;', Ill· \f'~IPd/~rll S!IZJ. 4'.l'i-lilXf 7' HARVEST TABLE- Camara1 &. Equipment IOI PHO'r(}(;RAPH IC G a r. a I! !->.1!r Mt & St.1n. IJn1Pga 1)..6 r nl11 r1;:rr, l111.~lbl11d 1XI 111n1 lt!ns, 4x5 view, ':ic5 t;r:111>i1r , :'.\atl\dl'lr ''"'be, >'1110\HI, rlryf'r. Much mor... l\n pink. !~15 E!.*x Ln, NB !1·11!i071, ~'17-56c. -"'=--,---I 0MEGI\ modPI 84 4'nlarttt "''th l··n~ cood ,.n1er• hJ\~'hoRrrl. Al~<1 t1her tel poly1'flnt rasl p11per tiU\e rlarlo-o.~11'1 l'iUJ1pl1E"11. ~~1-&m 1~27 Or1<1le .. Co~IA Me111. :'.1fJJ), .i;i:-.1 S357 Re~eler I Sl\!I. ~;,-.:(·r l . n-.r rnOfi. 1lryPf fur $40. 5'1R-<1120. 110 BIG r~1a1e 1.~ 1>tart1ng sa!I! nr 11 rooms ot rurn. will rncl. JI' v1•l11cl ~ra & ln\'I! ~•!, fnrinal rl1n1ni;: rm JI I! t, h lfl f'-11 -hr1I , lmpor!ed !1·11k"nod 111hll's, orca,ional Appliances 802 rha1r<, brat11 S p an I ah -'-'-----------k1nl1;!111.(' t>l'dl'fl()m 1et, g• .\1AYTA<; 1:11,-<lt')'rr, s·lr roffrp rahlr, 2 PM com- 1"1111.yt111! 1•lr~· f!;yrr. S7ll morlf'~. Al<;ti ~'f'sllnghouse Rolh j,!rnri 1·nnrl. C11;1r ,~. rnlr,r ('()n"olr, f'lr, Will ri!'l!\'rr1•tl Mfi-RG/1, lMi~11.-,. I !llll'Tlfl!'I" :ill. 21.l 44.">-!2;l.1. C0LflSPOT rrl1•1t:rr;i1,,r r o r.1rLE.-rE Nrr of r11t!An frr~·1rr. lrn~llt•ss "tine. I(; 1 rur•n, naui.-:ahyrle ~ n fa, 1•11. 11 I.Ike new. $110. l;1n1hsk1n rui.-:s , l11m ps ,l '.i l)(-AA~17 OllSf. 644-0317. "'"'·ceilin.,.1.a irlesi f'quip. Ship/Rec. Cl•rk Local and Slalewid•. Some y >" A · I R' •. AI. ··.·r·r· ."·J;·'·l''"·"".\\'J\JTRfo:S.C\, o,·1·r 21, ,\l1n 2' • ···-.. t t ~.·,, I ,,., COMMUNlT LEADERS, or rro1n!mPn " ~' ",-.-... ., .. W--k ,, •• -. R•••. 64, .,19 "....,, as ..... ,. . ttAve . t AM -noon. .,.,.. ,.._,. 1-" •·1 ·" n 1 ,, .•• ,, ·• A1 r•t • •' 1··~· I l"'N"t>J1" • ' < u. "'" "'""''-' t'INANCIALINVESTMENT ......u •>11Ustrla\ n.cat1ons r x[lf'nf'nr.,,, 1111a 1<11111 I:•~.~ •. "'· ''' R·,.-.1, \r-., r . .,ryrr • ~n\'r. Stucco Ir EAveg $50. f'rtt/Fee Jobg NN'rwporl ... ~~vd. No, 11!1 ANALYSTS, R.E. BROKER, (714} 494-9401 San Clf'ml'ntr. Xlnt 1.,.,111111 \ot1a~f' ('nff,,r Shup, :iti"2 \\', '.'\tn1 1'flnd, S.'l!J l'a. 646-41\1!1 Collrge ittldents, nn ewporl °'' · DAVJD B. lJ)()KJNGl.AND. ~C"hl'rlulr. Tl'r'111ic 11rf 1r" l!llh :s1 ,, lo.~111 ~l•':-.>1, all Ji r111. DOUBL L herl, new !'>tl\rs -O-Ped 1c: l:\xl3 11101·:ido & blul" 111811; c:rpt; 21.xl:.! avQf'alfo Fortnl 1haa: drinkins. 548-4~>49. NIGUE l PERSONNEL' DELlCATESSEN Man. Mui! TE LON IC lrn·alions, 2-.l JWnplr Jlf'r, n!-\VAITIO.:R<:;, ''Xf"'r. ~lnstlv I ~·or: i;alf'-·-clJc~-cd-<lco-,.-,~.< ACCOUS. Ceilings, Avg . AGENCY be r!liablr., full ti~. See CALL NOW! hrP, . No ~vr~h1~du~~. ~'.HB <lll)'S. Ral11~1 C n r In r h i II (i i:·•f_r:i:_· ~ 10 t'11rli. Goof! l'Onf!. j•rrt. ~~7--06.11. home S70. Abo, inter paint-77Rti Forbe~ Rl'\fld Harold, Hi-Timi" Liquors, 547·6771 Tl11F. HF.Al.f' ... 1~2--~.l \1, Yarf•! f"luh, J~/11 Ri1y~1t!(' fillo--.'dl,~ Bl!:AtlT YRF.ST db! bt1x inf, Frtt K l. 1147-4128. ~<una N•"""I ~95-E. 17th SL C.M. ·l!l&-4664 R~! __ 4!lJ--l hl\. 1\1·, ('ti\! i\1Ji\11 rl/i·'1-.-,1~2--c-,,-~I ,~. ,o;pnn~s. n111ttff'11:t, frame, •· AL RECEPT lndu1trie1 Inc. 1 .. PAINTING/"-""'-18.,..., 131-1477 or 49~0417 DENT -A•k for M r. T•I• L 8 RECPT. \YAlfrt~:SS..:s r.1usi ...,. I':>.-rrlr1),!1'n1tor, )(nod c.-o11rl . $·1j. \flokr ase, hdboan:I, f.'5. ~ ,.. "··k l n... ,_, •guna each ,._,,,. -.. ryp•··. 1-.,1. , ... ,1 ,.1" -,.11. fi-1&--MR'i". in Harbor a1ea. Lie A: ~ on Y-......,nuu ~per. .,M .... '" "'" "' " 1)('nrn1·rit. \111•1or llugo 11111, <> ...--" -,-,,,..-.,.----"7I So "· 1:!.t.-.. Equ11.I Opportunuy Employer l \\' J II p I -~-----~I , bondtd. Ret'1 furn. 6'2.2356 nK'l!st. me ~t.1 . .__....,,. ..oraln(', '1'1\1!' 1 ('r,;oniw !.;i~in.:i Rr;1!'11 . OoNcAN !lu1r!lt u pr 1Ji:11 t 2 'J'"'IN hf>rls, lvix llPfi' .l PAIN -NG/ . JS AUTO SALESMAN <ipeJ., fringe beDf!fll1. H.B. FIBERGLASS f o r e man Agf'ncy, 2().1~ \\'ps11·h11 [)r., l\'Al'l'RF~ssC's 1.,1_ A 1 ln'i'zrr .'\hit c•ind. nia11 $.'Ill ,,ach. :i che11t1 $15 •• papenng. Umven111y 01d,.mobilr in -~ea. 8AM-6PM, 846-JS.40. wanted. Exp'd only. LAD\', mn-smokr.r wfrar, ~'.B. •1· . .-,.2110 ... r •..• ~ ~ r. f'fl _V h 1 \' · H h Li & -" " 11; • •1~ ~·•"' 1•a1• . l ~ 9' rorm1ra din'a: rs. 111 ar or area. c Qma MrM ne~, 11,.ady, 642-91l8:! help my molher <!~""' --=---111 rri:-nn, '..ffi:!:! \V. ('"11 s-t · -·•' ,,..1, ·• bonded. Re!'i furn. 64Z--2356_ DENTAL a•• i ! 1 • n t, ex------------1 '· · · R eceptionist-Sec'y 1111.\., !\' R =-~~--~-nn t11hlc $::oil. fi41-6752 hnn~. de.,n rut. people for .,.. .. ie ........ d , to.r South Lam•na ~EMAN 1 ,__ _. 642-1 217. 8: 30 Io I pn1 1 , 1 1 ,,, . !\'~:\\' Sl11•nl1·~~ Str«I 4' foR cl • I · 1. l . N .-~• '"-" .,.-r '-'"' -..umu•·r yaiu . k I .! bl.11pg, r~prr rr1•f. '.-.1 • .. 1.,,! -* w• S to <l lK k 1 I I I I _.. 1"1U~~r SF.LL :1 mo olcl cru.h· l!an nea pain 1n11 auto 111 f'.'I trit1n1ng. o ,.x. nttiu-, Mon. 1 hr u rri. M u.~t ~ ~x-r •• u.·P!J qua!i 'A' r y~. - .. -.--. . , . nse upv. ~ 1 1' •f'll 1001, 1 n c .u" 1 n ~ 1 1 1 1 . • iolr.rior & r:.!rri(lr. R..-u. perir nce nece11ary. Ir iw-p 0 ~ 1-~'=-c=====~~ l nF.Sf.ltVA I ION & ( nnlnu·1 t)f•i,:_rrf'<t. Jh \'olu<llf', .-.11u,ll rnuT(lt' I, li1:ht $40 :i.411-1'.l~\. rr \'f' l'f' l\'lfll: rm R t X·rays. S#..nd rt'1ume to . . fiP!l Call J im Gorman t!TE HOUSEKEEPl1'0G G t M 1 I , . ~,.,,, ,,,11n<I hll< ,111u~. S<1fa & Jove aeat. rates. Call Dirk. 968-406~. Jec1M we pay you While you Box ••:\ D p · ""'~-~. 1-. t, S1.1pef\'u;10n lnr 2 i:irls 10 & ir · ' UI' >r ·11• •· · r.1r1" 1,;11(\"l"•li:•· \\<lt'f'!l01IM' \\'El't{:E\\'nfl[) 36" ranJ.:f', <" I 'I L . ...,, ' an& Olfl!. ""-' ''"" ,.fl, l)\l{'T 21 . \'Pl"\.' llf'R1 II. 111-C IJ I R fi'i:rRO II * LESCO PAINTING earn. n any bina:e .,.,nef1~. 12 Lido Jslr 642-6.\'!0 "f'lf''11<. ;1 .11. r1n1frr·~ ,rlfl<llr, .J:il. --~-~~~=c l DENTAL 0 r f h oil on Ii c GARDENER TRAINF.E, no . . . . lra1·1 \\/a fl IP 11." 11 n t ~ ,. ,... • l)INJN(', t11h11" ctu1.irs, •1J7 R.'/Ap'-645 2399 eXOOlent Pay, enjoyabll" I ~KING I I I •'l'Nll1•11'1 /\l;f'tl\'Y, ~dn ,11 .. \'111\ ,,.7'.-...li14.'> • "'· -WOTkJ"" __ .,,·,~-. Apply in ch.airside a11t. E J per . ,xprr. l'lf'C.-. X\ol opply. Ph.: .AJU • nr srvrr11 rx-fr)rphnnr 1·oi('f'. F11ll !1n1r , I c-=c llinr!IP 1alllr 310? Draw "& "u'"' "'"" . d 1 1 1.ifl:\ (':11np11~ Hr .• Nrwpor1 ~:1.r:c ·riuH.UX Plaiter, Pitch, R•palr pi?ri.on 10 "Rill .l lloob!'I Gen. pI?.f'f!. Call 842-m 5. bf:lwn JQ.-12 noon only 17141 Pf'rll!'Orf' , mll Urf' <' f'anini;: Phonl' M1.:i·., 54(}.!)t;fi;, "''"i·h. \I a r 11 u 1n •traprry r0ll ~·l. ~8--49tW. M-. Uni-ity Old<nloblle, * 00 YOU WANT A 4'M-~l27. m11tron.~ for h igh .-!rrnand -u--C --------1·lr;o11r r -i\1•11 , \\fi n a~ 1u·1zr. •. .... -GENERAL CLERK rommPrcial b ulld\ni;:, Salesman sed ars $~-, 111r .. 1·i~:! "CARLr: lahlf'~" !nrlOOT>OtJt· PLASTER-Patch-Rm Add11. 2850 Harbor Blvd., CCISta STEADY PART TIME N~wport 11.tt'il. PRrl timr . <!r~'r, vrr~RlllP, rustle. All Aca)Us. cl"ilings, 1t ucco Mes11 . JOB! lnt ... re11t in«i •Uf\'ey Open1na In OUr H.B. olr. JI r•'Pll. ~5.122. I[§] ANTIQl'~: i;:a.~ ''""r, i::rVJi! s11rs. &M-2239 I?.tin. FN'f' '"s I l m 1t. t e 1 . type job from Mmr. NO y0u ..,r,. inte~rf'd in work-Mu'l hr li:'l'~t cl<ii<rr. Ct'r l\I "--M-"_'_"_"_'_;•_• _ _, f.'. l-;_"_"_" __ "_°' __ "_'_h_'_'_'_"_"_'· f'll'NCAN r~•iv"r=,.-•d•'r~tl-1 "" '°31, 54:1--4~00 Alt 5. AUTO SALESMEN SEU.ING. Wrile bril!fiY 1n I · · <1ppor1un11y lnr r1i::h1 m;i n. _ V r..i2-:!ti1'1 · • i n; .,,,.,....,.., """ Jng or• growing imur.tnCP MACHINIST """'-~--• 111!1lr N 6 (hairs. Goorl ("(Ind. * PATCH PLASTERING ()pt-n1ngs for 2 -.le1me.n, eJt-C\&11~ifif'd ad No. 14:> Th, m . wt xtn't Wt:trking conds. & ~ ,~I ••••••••••• 'lliJI ?!ll l All typf's. FI?.I! rstimatei perienced w not. DAi!y Pilo!, 3.l'l W. Bay, benefu,., .S111rl S.1 Prr Hr Antiques 800 : Building Materials 806 ' ·' 1.-·~~~~-~--I Call 540-6825 •Top oomm1s111on CMlll Me1111, C11!if. 926~. C11 JJ PPnionnl'I NIGUEL PERSONNEL :.!JOO Harbor B\vil. ti4:i.CMfi61-----------1 ,\1 ,,rLE hunk bl'fl~. Ne\ll!t • Demo p!an gi\'1ng phonf' numhl'r. 842·7751 AGENCY -.SALEs(;1!11::A.siT:\1r.n nOLI. Tn1• l)ESI\ L1~~:11~:·;,~:,.•·1~;'.1 e,1\~1~l l r~1~1.: u~r•1, M1npl1 ~Pt S\00 Plumbing e H~iWi~ation DR A p ER y l n 11 ta11 er . Unigan:I Insurance f".roup 27'6.1'.> Fnrl)f's Rd St'.11rp, Cnnd ""'If'~ hki,:_rnf1 O~k-1•\i·rl\r11t t"n!111 1 .. 11 r:JO 20, :l\+. ii •IO.·' S ~ \,. "·1 " !l!ill.-!1201 * LEW Takl\s k Soni Plum-• Ine:ura.ntt cu~tom, t xprr. Sal11 ried. 5 Equal Oppor. Em p!oyf!r l.11gi1nA N1i:url ~1"" (o'.itrinprll'ary l<1$hion 4S'" lr•t11.', 43" h1J.:h b7:J-.ICM7, :!..;\;,,1,. $2 ~,11 :i. j1..;lli' $2 '.~I 'ANTIQUE roll-lop de11k, u-- bing repair. repipe. remodel • Prolit-1haring d•-. C•ll lm' lfllPrvW., GIRL fRJDAY ~-I 831-1477 er 49S-0417 ~hl•!l. Xlnl C'lflllOf. Appl), !Jo11. ., " 111.' ' 1'2·' ·1 ~ A'·. l'f'll!\VP--!yp(", 1'>1"11111 cond. ~D .,....""umrn ary •ton r .. -. Fri, \O.!bln1. ··~"' ~ ·~-~'0 "••v -"•I. -, ••I. A.~k for ?-.Ir. RobtttJt Wr'·'·• -,,·-,, ••" "'10. · """""""""""'"''"'"'"'"''"''I " '"" ANTJQt ll' ' r 1· h 1 "·r·c•l•·· s~ «7 ~-..... '-'"' r•-.: ,..,._, ...,. .... -"""""" r1l m produrrr, N~wport APHOPfJ~ ' · Hf)l'~rv· rrn1• lo:"'" lil't 1r11n 1;1>wl'r p1pr. ·"" '' .•• , .. ..,......,,,,, ~340. A!lu Chrysler-Plymouth Bf'aeh, Top oNice 111on~. Male ever-22--1 ~· h11nrl-\1'n\'f'I'\ nrrrtlr & rr!· 2" Clll\'. fl lflP 2·ir fl, 1" 1.'M" ,\10V!N\; mu.'L ii,.-11 R' tola, PLU···lNG REPAIR 2929 Harbor Blvd. ~ DRIVERS * .,. t ·1 ra~lll•!tl 1<. c.-·""· 29, .-11pr1 . 1no JI{ lff'r.11,. nf h u m (Ir, non-WI n r• Ill "•·h 11-r"'un App1·;11~rd $.~l. & m1u·h mnrr. 642-1:,22 niter rrry gnorl ('f)llri. $150. "· ~b 1-•m·" Coeta MHA I · A ~ . " 2 \ " IR • N • '"''"" '-"' 111J N E ri ll'mOkPr, some l r •\I I" I. &a NI f'Xp('l"lf'll<.'1'. llf'•Y HI 111 ' \ nll )\'.,,, o '" ~ ri•n 111! rl11y \\•<>ekrnrl. • ,')4!)..34119 * • t;42-.llt8 e AP'r mane.a•~ • .;;.\''' rl!, for 0 xpe ence R,. • u m ,.. Jialarv. ,,.. pt>r~on lit:1w1•rn ' .r. 7, TI1f' A . BOO A • BOO A · '* SALES * n t 1que1 nt1ques nt1ques COLE PLUMBING 25 unil a-pl, Nt &1t.ch. Necessary! qu irf'm~nls 10 01..,~ili~d "fl lrtl" Id, 2300 \V, Ot·C'11n F·nin1, 24 hr aervice, 645-1161 _c_'1_1_'4>-__ 1'_•0_. _____ _,Muat have clean CaliL drlV-Nn. Iii.\ Dtfly P1lo1, PO. Newpor1. ~·011 Timr. F):prr. Bo,,. ljfj(J 0 Cos!A Me~. Ca.1---'-'-'-------1 Xln't S.1l11ry Comm1si;1nn I.: Roofing BABYSITTER lor ff'aeher'1 Ing record. Nn! under 25. M621i Rrurfl!• C"all for app1. ehildttn. Aftnoonl in July, YELLOW CAB CO. MANAGEMENT T. Guy Rmlina:. Deal Direct. · l8' E !6th St CM ;,10-:~ t:>:.1 .1'l " f/time atarting &f'pt. Own · ·• · · X-'flLlTAR'' O''FlCERS JOSEPH MAGNIN I do my own work. 645-80,-tran~p. ~706. j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-1• ;_ ..... 548-9590. GIRL FRIDAY BE'IWEEN Af;r .. '> '·~-:\0. Equ;d opp'ly r111pln.Y'f'r BARTENDER -full time for Elrctrician IF' YOU HAVE nF:r:F;NT---Sewln9/Alferailon1 pr\vatr rountry club. Mu~I MAINTENANCE Fnr Nf'wporf Bl!ach Ad Ap;en· I.Y RETURNED r R 0 l\t SEC TY. R. E. ICIAN ry Prrs. All !kill' inc.-h1 ri· Srf'rrlur·111.! /ltl.~1!1nn !r! ;i1•11vr EUROPEAN Dtt!sm&k:in&. ~ ,.."<perirnced. Apply in ELECTR ing SH. Sharp looks, Io n& VIETNA,\.1 WE HA VJ<: A h_,,al1t,r's <)lf1tr. Br1u111l1.1I Ex"'"rt!y Custom fittl"d, Ac--per11011, Old Ranch Country Lancl df'velopmen1 co. local-L-.. ,,, """' -r. ""·l'70. JOR THAT YOUH LEAD-.,, ~ k """ ,_. """' lll'W <1tl wr~ in "'""'Pllrt Crn· cur. Rea.'!'.. 673--1849. Club. 3901 Ulmp!IOn Avf'., ed in N~wpnr1 ar.h M"P 'l ~!!!!!"'!'~~'!"!""'"'""!!!!!!~I :F-:RSHrr QUAJ.f rY \\'U,.L irr. ()l•l.!if'ni.ll .~iaff nf nl:i- Al .. r.tlon. -642-l"l lo'c'o'clc"'='c'oh_. ~=====-a-en 'I main!, elf'Cll"'lcian. P(J-HAlRDRE..c;.<;ER w1ntrd tull FIT RIGHT INTO. YOU -· l 1ure Jlf"rSOnnrl, A front nf BE AU TY OPE• 'TORS aitlon I?.<1'1 min. yrs ff'-timr E<por pt'f'f'd. E>•I-WILL ACT A.S A RECRUJT. Neat, accura:~. )) yeUll exp. _,.....,, : Xl 4 fir" 11(>\';1!11111 rt'q lur1nl! ~·'°'! Earn m(lre money rrn! 1!1.tPd uper. n't wap;I'~ blutt'Coif1Ul'ell, 644-1:172. F.R mn A l.ARGF. LAND 1 Til• l)Pnetits w/atahle "°· Call INVESTMENT CO_ INTER-1rlrpho11r vr11Pr, .'11 & IH!\1 llPACf' a t Hair w._ 1 I. Mr~. Sllurwein, ~1 HEALTH Food Stott neP.<b VIEW PEOPLF. \~·Ho RE-J<'.xr1·. <1tlllll•r~. nr~I f'"l:itr CERAMIC Ille nf'W &-!i73-4 \M. L.. 1 AM • 5 PM k yo«o< m11n rnr ""rm nn.::i. r.xnrr1.-1 1•'r "''' r~~1111;U, hu! l o=~=~~~~~~~ n.-twn ~ • ,... ,,--· SPOND TO OUR AP.S remodel. Trre f'~I. Srr,all BEAUTY 0 p ER A, TORS '1llyti. !inn, Apply 107'2 Bay11irl!': Dr , Ci\N.T R~: AVRAID TO h"lflflll. Prl'!f'r )ll•!ni:, n111 r- job11 v.·f'lcome. 536-24:Jfi. nrtdrrt 'A'/rnllowing in C.M, ___ l\'R. MEE1' ORJECTJONS, r ,.,d_ l•l(•al 1·,..,.1rlf't1I F'or 1n• Tree ServJce Hia:he51 comm. 830-1010. DRAPERY HELP! Mot~rl1"11s homr. 3 irr-.n'"' '"II .\I r~. n uhl BILLING clr,,rk, lit'" book· Hl"mm"T . immrd. {)pt!oninr ~m. rh1lf!r,..n llf'1'ri l/lim,. • .S&larv + nnnus Plan \\·,.~ir_v N 'l'Mvlnr {",-, M•l-41!\f'l GENERAL~ Strv. Y1t.rd k · · rt f tr11lntt,.. B'll<'h On!.~ry Y"li: hsrkpr nov.·! N1rr . Pr1J11h OHl•·r~ --SECRETARY Clean-up. Sprin)<ler repair1. 1"eping,pr1tperi,n~ ~.., · ... """'w 11~ c M •· '"h ... , -·.r ,.,." -~n,••. " .. l••, .<II .< <i··· ReAs . fi46-!i848. ff'rrtd. f'rmatlf'nl PQ1111\on .,...rv. """ · '"· · · '"'u~r . nr ""' , ,.~ • .... e fnngE" Rrnrh1,. , · ~, • ·' ,. !or rrllAb lf' li:ir1. ~ 9!i'l-:ilfi!!. e Swt Jmml'l1111irly 111i:: ~kill~ ,\ ·.~ •n h11~!1~h /. Tutoring C.1111 hf'l\l'f'"n'.\1" ~;.'\O only. Eng. Sales HOUSEKF:EPF:R f<>r f'Onrlr Math S;1l11rv S.'i!J(l-S100 tl''- BOOKEEPER-Automohilr L1vP-111, AlllAry up tn S4fll'l CALL NOW 1"'1h!1 ni.: 11 f"'11 t'Xf'l'r Jnh11 SANDPIPE R PR<>- D U CT!ONS prr~"'"'' Am&lf'l.lr MC'lllif' f.1ak"T'· Aug, 9.\~. Ana 16 -20 . Boys/Girl~ 1r11tj,.!\ ~1. Script v.Ti!in;:. r.11m~r11 IJM", g.rt making, lor:Af1(1fl trip•. C..11 ~lfM. Jl.fUSIC les90n~; Ke'}-tlol!.rd • Theory . Beginin1t-Adv~. Onumentatioti k period ln- ll".rp!'f'tation. USC Ir ad . 675-Q79. SPANISH TUTORING AIJ ngr~. 613-2380 --------·- [if .. )hMit ![!] Job WantN~ M•I• 700 HOTEL work wantl!d by ex· perienced hotelman. ~fer night .!Ud it, fronl dr11k, food k BfV. ffill. 67l-1l66. Job WantM, ferNle 102 PRAC. NurM&, Cnmpar.ion~. Hskpr1. Live l.n or oul. Monthly rat'°'· Em-plr pays fl"t. Health • Jo'amily Care Aeency, 111(1.') N. Bro..dwa.y, S. A. M7-fi6Al. SEOtET ARY want a 3 (Ir' S day• \I/Orie Wftk. Alt rifle· trie typewriten, Excellent ref~ttnoes. All oHioe 11dllJ, no bookkllf'p\l\J!. ~22. AIDES TOR CON· V ALESCENCE, 1 1 d • r I y ean ar f&mily c a r 1 , Hnmem111cr.r~. 541.-1 EXPI:R. D1y W(lrk. S1C A d.-y, With Rf'ff'l'f'rttl. Call JJ6..ll6.' Help W•ntocl, M & I' 710 --'---------ACOOVNTS RECl:lV A8LE- lmm,.d optning for ,.xp'tl OPPORTUNITY m(I. MVl'I be ablr: to rin1·,. 547·6771 Rl\1rv '-"'~"' , :itl'JO Nrw. bortkkrrpe_r. ~ut'1 h11vr r 11. AWAI TS YOU rurn1AM>rl rAr for rrnrrry flllrl llh•I. NII i;1,.];1:tl pr-rif'nN 1'J/payf'l'Jl1, ac~t~ $40,000-$75,000 .•hopping. GIYir'I plain eool\ A•k fol" ~*-Sec 'y /Gal-F (iday rl'N>iv;ihlr k JI 11 y 1 l:i I e . Prt'"' p;irly unrl!'r .i:'l M Kent Ad.tms Erl1lnria) I.· ~all'.~ (Hr nppir S&l1J ;yoiwn.5ri11 y wk . fl1AK1'~ YOUR OWN ~F.-w/toorl '11spo511!on. Apply r . ,1•111\~I ,::ro111"g rd1i.·a11n11i.l Ollv, fu>t;~ P(lot1•r CUR.ITV . RENEf"fT FROM in pl"ru:1n hcfori~ 7pm, !il:l2l!M!!!!!!,,,.•"""'"""","""""""""""""-11uf!1nv1~u11l r<• J,vr·~u111 l"t'f\ l-~ Harbrir Rivi!, C.M TilE BE.."1" INVESTMENT 8anllllRO. Do\/Pr Shnre•. * MEN '* r11u·11nns, lnr•. r .o Box 12:.>li, Boys l"l• 5ALES TRAINING. l.F.ARN N.R. &f1--0~71. Lai;:un11 Br11ch, C11, 92ro2. ~ BY ASSOCJATIDN wrrn I "==~o--c---.,-·I t'' 4q.1-'i:.r.~ to deliver p!lpl!:l'I in the SM HSKPRS Emplyr pey1 fer.. I l\'PI • "·. TRAINED, EXPER.JENC. G-• All•· 8,1, .• , ... ft. NEAT APPEARING --S CRET RY Oemente. San Juan C.pi1. ED fNVESTMENT AN· ~--., " rK1 "r" E A _, e . I B< ·• -106-B E. J61h, S.A. II you llre 1in,1r, 19·25 t.· 1· 11 I -• 1 trano &nu ._..p str&no aui AJ.YSTS. JF YOU ARE IN· · J ,,,,1"' "'11 i;~ ar,v, 1:··~1 )fl· a.re11 . TE RESTED IN A PA YING, 547-(13.'l'i. w<IU!ri hke xl11 '1 P11rnini;:~ 10 HlR + ~hnr1hantt. Inca I. C11ll DAILY PILOT PROFESSIONAL POSI-HOUSEKF.F:PER 5 '111 y 11111"1 WI R rapidly growing Lor11inr, l\'t>:t1/rl1 rr l'l'r.~nnrl .92 ••20 w••k. L•"·• 1-_ 1 m w/1111 Of>""r. for 11rlv11nrf'-A-·•·" ..,.,,, W•·r•lrlt D• ...... TION , INVESI'JGATE OUR •' • " "' ou · ,,... ... " • ~'"'·' ·' ~ • · PROGRAM. t:lfltrly coupJ,, 64&-904 !. mrni k r11n hr-lolln irT1mr'1 :-1 R. 61\ 21711 CEMETERY ""'' FUNERAL COUNSELING BHIJl:lfllJ Pacifi" V'if:w Mem- orial Park ia located M ttv hillside owr!ooklna the New. port Bey a.tt•. CrJmettty lo!&, cryn!~ ni<:M, hf'fort nt cha!M! p(an. • A f1111 fT"l'Wil\I company witn complete etrvkf. tadl- irtf'•. Mortuary, O\Aptl. M.\1!90lt'llO'I It Cretn•IOtl' a11 wtth1r1 me ttme'tery. w, wa_nt 2 ,.motionally ma. rutt mf'n. No ~xptr. neco- 11111ry becau1e or our pro~ ... aionll.l trainil'll, Do not pa11 up thta opJM'Jl'1\lnity, PHONE 644-0212 • FU\) f"ri.n.11:r Benehu e P!wh Of~ I • rmm 'd 1971 Cadillac • Start Immediately AS AN ASSOCIATE 01'" flNANClAL TY CO 0 N, COMMUNITV I~ E A D E R, RENOWNED CALIF". R F.. BROKER. DAVID B. LOOK- INGLA NO, Tii.E MONEY YOU E A R N. " THE HEIGHT Ofo' SUCCESS YOU AOllEVE. WILL BE ~LE:­ LY DETERMINED BY YOU. CALL NOWI 547-6771 IMMED. OPENINGS: Young men 6 wnmr:n looking fnr: • Trainlna in your strong· f':RI aptitud~ IU'f'A • Atlvancement, ltOOd PAY Ir fl'l'quem rail",, • Tr11v.-! w/30 dAy1 PAid v1cation e Stt-unty '41/tiw medie11! f'llf"I", Apply IOAM 'til 2PM, 1:.-10 ----·--~~~1 F, f,chr111;rr, Suilr i, S;inta SF::\RETARIAI., s;!rn'I oft•, h<K1kkPl'p111i;:. 1 Gori ore_ An11, CJ1 lif. P1!1mr 4--a hf'!ll ll flay. S3 hr ---w;ARRTE-0 M-A-N 1· -• 0 --• ~1111'111\I:, .. K' ''" nlly~ ,-,.·1•1 No 111:1" limit. Tf\ ~rrvirr rnrr rP SIHl1f' r . 0 Rox 404, So. f'Qlli rmf'nt & le11rn nlhrr l.11 J:una , C11. 9:.!!ii7. worlt. l'oo!ri mr1Jn dnvbl1n,1: ---.~-~-~-·I SJ>;CRE:T Alt\', {)l'p11rlmrn. prr \11()(1~ 1n1'f1me. f;11 r11 1ni:: 1111, Prrm. PMition in npportuni1y s r10. wk. Call Nr l'.1J0rl ((l1tl'r. Jmmril for Pf:~n11! 1n1rrvirw. Flt>-np<"nin.:. f'or Jn!!'r\lirw Call 1wern II Ii 10 A.\.1, 491;.2.,lAJ, r.14-4100 . 11h·i~ion of Con!i0llrl111rd rood~. '"' Sr.c·v--A.~1,.111.nt .T'--USA.f' olf•n lh<!~el-~~--~-----Or thnrl n n1 ill"!. Stntr no.: ~ • M1ture Ho1t•1••S "··~r •• m••y mofl' n11;i)1lit•111inr1" & f'X""r. P. 0 . ,,...,""'" " .. TO INTERVlf;\V ., , .. ~your local UP!llefi Sl•te~ NEW RESIDENTS Bo11 16116, NC\\'l'Orl Brarh . Air F'o~ rtpl'f:M":ntatt\11! for SF"RVJCE St 0 -J -Part Tim~ , · 11. ""'l!iltmrn. df'Hli;,, <1r Call N r • A I I CAR & TYPEWRITEH NEC. fll .. "XflPT. PP Y n ( 714) 646-3466 C•ll 547.3095 P'"''°• 2111) W. "°"" Hwy, ~IM=M~E~D~.~O~P~E~N~l~N~G~l-*-=M EcHANIC-.-l=N~B·=~~~~-~1 s.i,11 .\ l1111tailaHon ae.rvl<"I" [XPf'r. rf"(JuirW in Ule fnllnw-SF.RVtCE 5\111 ,. Salrsm8.n It Ask for Mr. Penney f)l"r"Oll~. 541.,ry -comml1-ln.1t: •learn fittina. plumh-i'nrcharilr. OvC'r 21. Apply •ion. Sehonl teat hl"Nl, col· int . .-fectrie&I work & n111ln· ~ W, Cna~T Hwy, N.R. EXCELLENT typlal with lt'lt" sttJ!'lent1 ~1r. li"ull or !tn11nee ml!ch!lnlct. Good SERVICE Slalll:'ln Attl'nfiAnt. mi5C'. elr rfcaJ dutif'1t tor r /l'!m,, Alek W•ter Ct'lllt'r. Pl.Y & rood beOl!ti11. Exp'd only neerl llpply. S/\rll •m.t.ll buaint11 optor"tion In S'pec\AHRi. in Walt'r ptl41u-Rf:EVES RUBBER JNC. Sta. 17th&. lrvirw. N.B. COit. Mesa. Hourt tlt:tlbl,., nm Cfllltml:, !tM--2188, Cllll 416 Av, Pico, San Clrmcnte -Sew for • Designer Write oa .. ilird atl No. 1n, 1_.,,, __ •cpp0",=;;==.--~·l~"'=>=JcJ.,~i0,7M="'-'·-""-"c"c'-""· rlt1r1ng th" summer monthti • Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, INTERIOR MF.CllANIC or m11rhlni,1, July, Aui: & $f'pt. Call J11"" Co9ta MHS, Cl.hf. 9)626 DECORATOR relired or .11eml tttlrtd. rarl 11 1 675--71~1!) i\1on thMJ F'rl EXPERIENCED fwo tnick E:qier l'M'CttMry. 5tt6-l4119 11m~ •l,.llffy job, C1tll &h II .IO 1n ·I. drlvu • .!OWill 1tatlnn, 171h ar JANITORS, HPl!'r. fl n I y ·1~Qu='·"-"'-"'_,._,_ ... _. ____ Tlm11 !IT='LA~T=H=r.=. -o=r=1':0R~.,-.• AUCTION! SPECIAL CONSIGNMENTS l OV ER SEAS CO NTAI NER LOADS ANDREA'S ANTIQUES 2380 NEWPORT BOULEVARD. COSTA MESA SUN., JUNE 27th-11 A.M. 'til ??? Arrrox. S12.5.000 00 v·alu;ition -/\ 1··1ne <'oHcclion Dealers Bring Trucks Antlqut•s An• 11111P t 11r n11 urr-A• , ·• ~~' '' 1r~ ('lrwkl'-Vlrlnril\n Uph,1l~!1•1y Fratn<'s---'IM Chairs & Rnr krr~. All Sryll'~ 1"1t•t' l\1.i•~-lmp,,rt-l::>;1worl Ct1llf'cl1on Dealer'• Special\ Will be sold at 11 A.M. Sharp F1'f'nC.-h-F.ncl 1 •h-A 11~1 r1<111-S1111 ni"h-Amrn.·nn PAl!TlAl. 1.JSTl'lt; t'"l'\l••f'I V.'11ln111 J)i n1n~ H<101n Talllr-s & Chair~. hl'1111t1f1il b1i,: S1<11·honl1I' 1111!1 110:-.1 1\ln l•1f1.' & IJ1111·h, SP1·vrrs. ~'.!r­ i.:1•rr, l!l'!'llL nlrl ntld Ch11>11 {_)1hitH·t~. ('11rin ('11 h1n1•1s. l\n•1kt·11~.-.-~ 1-\'i lh i.:lri's dnin·~. ••cir! 111111•1d1• top N11<hl Si ands, also 1111.ir.~ ,,f S tanris, JJ3ir <)f L,.1u•~ XV ··111 vf'11 I\''" <'nd Rrfl.~. pair 11f A1 1stri11n T\l•in B<'fl~. m11ny. t!llltl}' (;r,.,qt 1\n11<111>'~. iunrhlr tnp \\'11~h S ln nd~. Rrn!11ond t'ha1rs, lots 11f 1lflrl 111111111.: ('h:iir~. Vi••tnn;in Sr1 trr, Chais<', Parl"r srl, Wi•·krr IJ1<'1·r i<t, r:.wk• r~. 1111• /Jrr ru>l"n>, V1r lort11n Chr~t..~. Ill fl . Hi1ll Mi!Tflr ..... 1th 11111.rhlr 11111 Clw~t Base. Glod s<'ll'clion of old Oak j)l<'l'f'S .,. CL(X:KS -(;r11 nilfa!h,.r1 f'f .()('1\S, S1•h11<\l Cl .tX:l\S. Bra1ilif11 I rnlltfl[' 1\r~k~. p .. rr-••111111 ~ln\o•)oi, t:nc_lls h s1drhn;irrl~. c1 ... 1J1r~ pl'('~<;. 11~.~"rlrri R•o:111'~. fh'f' f'fl'IJJ"J .~;Tf, fflt;NC:ll f,, AUSTP.JA :-1 RED· rlfH/~1 SUTl"F:S 111ith 'I\, lfl l\f'd~. nh:h! i;tAnd~. D!'f'~~Pr k ·rwin At·- t'fl(lirr~. f'hn11ni;:-r11phs, <'IC., 1•tr. Af'C('i;;~11riP5, hundrf'dS of Hrms 100 oumrrou11 to H~t OVER 400 ASSORTED WICKER PIECES. CHAIRS, ODDS AND fNDS, fTC. \V jrkrr pirrr.~. Lil\'(Sf'at.~. lln••krrs, Ch11ir.~. Table~. All \fl et auction WITHOUT RESERVE . Lit1•r11 Hy hundrrd.o;: nf rllhPr orra~lnnal plr('r~ &_ nld 11N"Ps•oriP.~ loll1 rin 'air. TERM•: Approx. 25•;. c•sh upa" aw•rtl of bid. l•lanct on pickup. rtn r.onjunrl. \\'ith Cout AUl'llnn ~ George H. Barclay Co. Auctioneers 2180 Newport llvd., Coshl Mt&e ln1ptKtlon l"lflt• D•fly t• tlmt of sal1. (DOORS O,I N 10 AM.. ,Olt INPO. MJ..4171 - .... ; ' 3 • ManuJ11cturh~ nrm. Harbm' loc•tion. Girt t11p'd In All -ph.ul!s ot A<'eounrs tt0!!1\'· •hl•. Xlnl typiJI A S:.nrt- hand. Pl!nonl'lt'l, p ,Q. &x 12.U, .N"Wpr::!r! 81Ja eh ~- lrvll'lf', Nrwpcrt 8f'ach. P/Hme nlte wnrk In ~n MEN , women & childrt>n TOR, r.-.:p'd. Mu,.\ m11k,. own EXP'd flberrla•1 ftpainr.an. Oemf'nt' a r • • . 1401 wanted f()f A sanrl ~ 11url ,.,.1 .ups. Apply 1'•pn111tlr Clippl"..t Marlnt Corp, l'r:tl I . Kr •, mer, An• h e I m . r.ornmr:rclAI. No 4' :ii; per , l1trp . .114.~ W. J61h Si. N.B. " • - Rltchey, Santa AM.. «.»-!Ml. ~ 1213.J 461-.WiO, ~A-~. For beet fftullll '°""5511 Tar tJVlt !!ml UMf!f' P'J, Sell the old 1tuH BllJ' the f"M' ,c,,.•,-,11~,-m-u--~-,=50~.1 DARREll WARD Buy !hi! ll'!!"' 1tufl try the Penny Pincher ntw •rutI try llMo Penny Pit'!Chr.r -------~ ----~~~~~-~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ·- • -4z OA!tY PILOT Frldiy, JUM '25, 1~71 ........... Jl§J I -ll§J I ll§J L-1 _ ..... _-___.!~ I ll§J .___[ _ ...... _ .... _Ill I ...... -~I --...... •• 'rf?Yl'lt l~:I~[ -~""1'~1 "="-~· Ii~~ Furniture ,"\'EAH new gor:::rou.~ sccr1on· a l l'OSJ SI 100. ->1!H'rif1ce for Jt iO. plus t1r rculon sola & L.C. 61.'.-00.'.6 DRAtJED-l'very1h1ng g<M's. Gr<'al hari;ain~· I! u r ry. I 723'~ \\'. \\'1\sor1 C !\l. ~i).-~jfili. LGE sofa, French P1Y1v1nc1 a\ rl1111r~. 01n"g rn1 H'I, nPw ,\lrcl11 hdr1n ~Cl . misc 11!•n1s. GOO(I •'nnrl. fi.l•l-6!~ COLOP. TV. Dblr BR !<.rl. Sc111ng n1ach1nr, bunk beds, nll~t·. 6.J:.-48:-,S afl j, \\'rd-Sun. FANTASTIC bargains! E:.t:el ()lfK'f' furn, 3x8 table, l D.:inish c ha i r s , P lc. ~'I'll I I II' tl 0 d commode 11/n1irror. L1kr ne11·, i::oll t>quip, n1/w clo1hes. 6-9 Fri. 9-.l Sat_ 31 35 Baysldc Dr. ((l,\! GARAGE .'iALF. Saturd11:.' onl y li/26 10:00 A,!\1. •o 4:00 P .!\I. Copying 1nachine, Pots &. pans, furni!urc T.V. nerds repairs or use !or parts. Handmade Boulique items. 2145 College A1•c. Cos1a. t.1esa. CO>IP & spray gun. Talile sa11. :.'6" l11dder & misc. Thur lhru St1n. 230 Cabrillo, C.;\L Household Gooda 114 !\IOVJt-;G .sale: Counter top cabinet w/m11.ny drawrn & sink openinit. suitable for kitrhfn or darkroom, 26" x 51", $2:'1. Dill<'lle at.I $28. Antique lo0m. Old-fashioned double bed & variou!'I othP.r hnt1Sl'holrl item:1, large & small. Fri & Sat. 571 Graceland Dr, 49-l-8767. M•chin•ry Laguna, 116 3 Linet, 2 TimM, $2.00 AUCTION • • Ill Muskal lnatrumenta m DRUMS Slinrerland, 4 plett. ZildJan Cyltlball, many ac· eeu, JD). CaU &16-6706 eves. _D;.:.!::;1•;_ ____ 154;;:_; lie&!&/ Morino Boat&, S.11 "9 BEAUTIFUL Stalpoi11t .. Equip. 904 alt-• f -~• Sf. Bunard, Lovablt, l yr 1'-1ALIB U outrl1J •r "'"'""" 'Ul&l', k>okinr for old. Blown l white, female. tiIERCURY and V CJ Iv o w/tnilrr. Good u.W. $430 "'SUiar Daddy or a.l,1muiy", w/eood mark11111. Ownu Propt. 50 H.P. and UI H.P. or beat Otltr, See •I play1 l.iU do&'. b.>usetn.ined Lovable. 846-103.l • movinf & cannot keep. Slngle Ll!ver controb. Con· Theodoff Robina Ford, DiO HOUSE Aucrions "very Fri rugh1, 7 pm. 30lj \\'.Warner St., SA I 1''ollow seacC'b light I \Ve bt1y, ·sell & consign. • ~19-2'141 547-77'.il • COMPLETE Drum aet $125. Have all papers -many trol c ab I e 1 instrumen\1. Harbor Blvd. C.01la Mua, 54s-4001. ~1 0THER cat JS de~ndent1, champion3. t l1s noc yet w i n d 1 h i e I d s all new. 6tl-0010. ----------1 lnY 1tcip., I or all . Nd ~n bttd. Pa.kl orirjnally Ba....,.ain 549--0530. ·1~-"-"'--15=·-... ~D~E~R~.,,---24 Pc. Sllnaerla.nd dance set, ho b ~ ... I.JU~ ...,, Ll~ nirw $500. 3 2 lo mes Y S&t. H e 1 P ! $400, -will a>IJ to right family a Outbrd Mercury motors: w/trlr. runnln&" Utes, main t.Uchia:a.11, C.i'll. 546-17116. S40-9'19l SU5. 968-153.t. tu~ 9.8 HP. o~ :Kl HP. Both sheet wincheg, •Ip~ S. ~- \VH. long-haired ma.le & Dlk DALMATIAN-AKC tema.le, l like new. 865 W. Wilaon, Cl\! Days 8 2 7-6 3 3 0 ; Eve1 Offic• furnltu,../ & wh. !em.Me, t wk old kit-yr. Needs large yard. Xlnt B I p 906 714/:xi'l-5:>10 or 213/42'l-ZJ13. Equip. 124 tens ,...,,11133 / h'I~ 0 b d . o• 1, ower LIKE new Pauy Berg goU · "'I<>"" • "' c 1 '"""'"· e J e 11 c • e FINN ~all cut by North club~. bag & AyJ'•y ca.rt 17:1·, LIKE ~w. lwo 60xJ4 walnut FREE small 11•ht. male trained. Re a• on ab l •: f d 1' Brod mut .W2-S004. FLAT bo!tom arag boat, 1 yr ?.;· !11e w er • Sam Sneed golfclt1bs, bag&. desks $15 ea. 4 black arm poodle . I yr. old, lovable. To old lresh engine 4j5 cu in g x3 wndw, gllUll b•tlens. Ayjay c•rl $55; Arnold chair& S25 ea, .I v.:ecutivt 1 ~&ood~_ho_m_•_._<_1_5-6_2!;c_. ___ ADORABLE "'hi~ Peke.a· tfir Chevyl, c~tom lor Like new~-673-7251. Palmer youth clubll, hag & chair f75, 673-400i PART Pf:rsian kittens. Dark JIOOS. Whi1e toy Chihuahua. rac.1ng, injected tu e J t r, 5.l.JP avail, Ne"1>0rl, to 32· l' art $35; C.'Qntemporary SMALL OFFJCE SAFE irray colol'S, Aii;o W)' poodles, brown • Endtrly Jnjeclotl flowed aailin&" 5!oop. Trade ttnl on hanging lamp $30: dbl mat· Good co~ition. $75. 642.Q80 also v.•hite. 642-4813 OI' enrine by J oe R e at h . al.ip tor uae ol bo«L Bob tress & sprirlgll flO; t>olor •644-460011t DARUNG ~~ SWnese. Xlnt c""::.:c·""'=:...::""'"':.:::o· _____ 1 Hli.llcrU t racing s teering, 557-9-l94. TV antenna SlJ; rubber ,1-----------1 ' AFGHANS AKC B-J.t Ca.sale racin.v; rear box,.1---~---~-~~1 boat & oars sn. 54&-0.ljJ BS1>50<. Electric Typewriter, 1empuament "'k!, \\'ill heavy '"ty 0 v err id e , * LIOO lf & dolly • $196 .' 'v• -'--•· ~·" """-' brindles, f1'01ted blacks. 10 ABOT '"'' I"'' """"' ~.,.,,.,... stainles.~ steel hardware, • S ~ • .-.. ,\!OVING oul 01 i;t.ate, nt'\.\' ____ C_•_ll_816-J09-___ 1. ___ 1 2 Reat!y fine mixed Labrador wk!, tine quality, ''eTY rea-Moon tank, cw;tom wood Both race r igged & in ldnt GE 16 cu 11 Ret $22j·· UNDERWOOD Olivet ti 10 females, 8 "'ks old. sonable, tefml!l ok. 830-5178 deck, gold medal flake condition. 673--0884 So!abed $130., Dinrtle $180., k I t»2-ll6.3 BRITTANY Spaniel pups -3 \\'/COr.!.rv>lition orarg• 1n·m. e p EN Q U I N 11 • 5" Chu 11" $.JO. Kingsize bed, e Y n1 an u a • d din i 1----.,,CC:,,::C:.,.-___ Id AKC S .-machine, $45 673-7226. KITTENS-mo 0 • reg. trong By app_t. $ 9 0 0 0 Io f f e c, sailboat-Like new, racing double bed, hi.i n bed:i;, d I h b1--•10· ood o.o <o•< g 12 ' 2 ua c amp ""'-' nes, i '"""""' ...... , · . hardware, trlr. Ideal 1or drcs!Wrs, desk, Ir et ier , Piano1/0rg•n1 126 grey & black h ti 1· n41.~ .. 22 Call 962-3451 un ng inf!, .,_..,,.. · '28 SIS UnWite Fg cruiser bay sailing. $595. 968-1223. portable TV, ch a ir 1, WOULD YOU " vacuum, dishes. ~t i :11c. HALl..OWE'EN bargain. Get inlDWAY KENNELS -everything 1or fishing and Boats Slips/Docks 910 a rti<"les 25c-$5.9Q. 847_13j 6, BELIEVE your bl!!au!. blk kittena German SMpherds. Pet & !ami!y tun. ~fust see. Tool~--·--------I FREE ORGAN LESSONS l!!arly, 7 wks. 546--4897. lho\v lllt!ek, Board a 11 mt1ch equ!p. to Ii~!. $7950, PRIVATE boat slip available * AUCTION * as long ll.'!l you like! No reg-I ~---------breeds. 893-5549. :J.17-6091 t673-l901 eves). July \st. Side till! up. 28"-30' · l Adorable domestie-Pf'l'l!ian Finc Furniture & Appliatl<:f'S Auctio~ Friday, 7:00 p.m. Windy's Auction Barn 2075% Ne\\'POrl, CM 646-8686 Behind Tony's Bldg Mat'I MUST VACATE II Prominent Inter. Decorator mUst liquidate by July 5th, qua.I. furn .. lamps, pic1urei, ttC'l't'SS.; office desks, liles, type\\Titer. 30 To 50'7~ re- ductions~ Open daily l0-J:30 inc. Sun. 1831 \Vestclitl, NB. \\'ASHER, Frigidaire $45, compl king-s2 bed, new $135, recliner $55, tabJr 4 chairs S1'i. Fette."< vacuum $5.i new. 8 pc lire alarm set $100, r.ompll txlnn S2:.i5, Console $85. Call: S-\2-731ii \VATCH Repair Summer Special! $4.50 Clean, adjust, pol ish, standard movements only. Coast Pawn & Jr1ve!ry. 2426 Ne"'porl, &12-8·!02. istralion. No obligation. Just 8 k Id k " GREAT Danes -AKC, e 18' SKI BOAT & 1r;,Her. 675-6415. C M rid 7 w fl 1ttens. Eastblufl, l--~-~~~----1 ome. o ays :30 pm NB 644-l096. female fa1vn pups, Champ T11 in 40 ~1ert.'1i. $895 or Boat Sli p for rent, COAST MUSIC stock, Show qua Ii I Y. reasonable olfer. 638-l377 or iid!! lie up to 30', 642-2851 BEAUTIFUL y,.•hit.e nutty 962--4633. 892--0745. Call 67>1l45 kitte!Ul & l tiger. Good GERMAN s H 0 RT H SALE: New COntlOle piano, homf'. ~ A IR * * 21 ' OffiIS CRAFT SUMM.ER Slip N.B. 23'. Jult walnut $595. Steinway, --------'---I POINTER, l yr, t~emale , W/landem trailer. $1500. & Aug. $811. Call 673-7978 Kawai, Wurlitzer, Allen, DARLING small, blk. fem. AKC, Call (714i_828-8138 morn~ only. Lowrey, C.Onn. From .$.>15. dog, Chihuahua &. toy terr. * * 548-8188 * • l~o. c-~=·"--=~~--~1~=::::._.:._c:.: _____ _ RENT"' o 110/,••o . mix. Spayed. 548-5247 JULY 4 h 19 ;-,eafl1te 120 J\lerc. l/O, Bo•t1, SJMad & Ski 911 ~ "' ---'-'-------I 1 pups. German xlnl cone/ w/trlr. FIELDS PIANO CO. 6 t-.10. old bassel '"'· Sholl!. Miort haired pointers Born •~=<IVI ~·" ,,. 18ll Newporl Blvd. Blk siamese: kitte/"111 shot&, 5/18. AKC. Ke~ n I!! J , ~NT· ED· ,_,, •-~~ CRUISALONG, irboard mil'. Costa ~1e&a 71~/6'1;>-J~ to good home!. 642-7625 642--4424. . ua.uer .,.,. al ft. 224 Via Lido Nord, Lido SALE: New Sp•-t, wal-"I, l,000 Jb. bo ·. Isle: 2'1l:270--4547/9M--O'J20. ..... " 2 KJITENS and mothf<r MALTESE puf>!', AKC, ~1ale * 646-4638 * =·litz~~~in~~~~. K Aal7 ,a~: ;~~~. ~:=roki!!n a nd ~ f~m, ~~ially trnd, 38' PACE!\1AKER: Flush *Evi~~de~la~~it' b-ir~5 V~~ Lowrey. RENTALS. x n qu · · deck, lo hn. Owner: Call dean, !\tany xrras. 5411-421(». FIELDS PIANO CO. 3 Fl_uffy kittens need good GOLDEN Retrieven, ARC afl 6 pm 549-0418. 13. F"'h "' i; k i boat with 1833 N Bl d homes 6 wks Champ line. Show It field ,., ., ewpon v · • · 542-8377 W' Souih Coast, flybridge, cover and trailer. tic:. Costa !'.1esa 714/64~Jal 837-1504 radio &. head. Best otter. sa.cri!ice $135. 64~1628. ALL black kihens, 7 wk.~ old. 2 Beautiful German Shi!!pherd 6-14-2199. HAMMOND, S ! e 1 n w <1 y, Yamaha. Ni!!w 8: u.~ed piaJ'IO!I: ol most makes. Bes! buys in So. Ca!H. at &hmidt f.1usic Co., 1907 N. Main, Santa Ana, Free. Siame~ mo 1h 1! r . puppies, $25 each. ~-~~-~-~~~--116' SKI boat, 75 hp Johnson. 19' Chri5 Craft Runabout '41 lllXXI 833-2051 * * 546--0696 * * . ~----'-'-'---~~I classic. Beaut. C:.'()nd. runs * 531-11928 • BROK.EN c<"ment, even 3ize, excellent for rt. I a i n i ng walls. 644--0047 aJt :J. NE'\\' Home for Jrg. Siamese 110 p a pe r s, Hor••• 156 ""rll. 714 l37-30Cli. 1~~==~~~---·1 FASTEST ski hoat und:.'t BEAUTIFUL ~; A;:;;:-; 27' . DRAKE-Crall Exp. SHXXl. 16' o.b. Powr.red by n years. Carryin& $500 Appy Cru1~er, 27:l hp: Ch r y_s. hp Johnson. 5.11-8928. Joa!_ Must ir.e. $500. TI4 : Hem1-fast. $2,99::.o. 673--694:>. J\lA'flL~.: ,;e\lf'f' & n1att:hinRlc~=~-c-'7--,-,,----, Rrnl chair, S-10. 119 coral, llATCll tablr, blkc, art NEAR new 10 1on line Ian- Bal !s. 67:i-2987. !able, Halicral1ers, bo;it rlom l{fnco stamping press SACRJF"ICE bal'gain, 6' Rat· tan rlivan, ~ pillo1v~ k ma1ching chair. Cost $3.:.0, srll SIOO. \\1orld Book F.ncyc. $2'2."1 value., sell $100. S.K>--1671. CLOSING OUT Brand new \l/uclitzer pianos & org11ns. FantttS'tic deals, * !"147-0681 * housf' cat, £#.0017. ADOHABLE KITTENS, BOXED TRAINED. 968-4:"-06 e '69 BERTRA111 25' Ilylng ~ BE AU TIF"UJ~ Stra1vl'K'rry bridg~, trim ~tabs, 2 radioa. , Tr.1nspor1ation • , ... roan pinto mare: ,,·ell man·1~l;'50~h~'~'·;i;"~2':-"60~~1.;;;;;;-;:;;;;;;-!~· ;;;;;;;;;;;· ~--~~! Garage S ale i::t'a.r, timers. J1d"·re, HD mounted on l2Xl8" 1 bram 812 Bear, con1p. codt. llag srt, ba~. 540-9686 HA:\11110ND organ, model M-111. !\f8.ric Pf'{'j;f'I, 11'R.lnu1 "·/IJark glill. SUOO. Eves: 673-5122. • 968-9202 * nr.rf!rl &. trail'ltd !or English '64 TROJAN JO', twin screw. 3 DIRT hlkf'~. 1111 1•1k. $200. f'IC. 1071i Buck1ngham, NB. Sat-Sun 1(}.5. FURNITURE Ga Io r I'!, !or all. n11'1k. B«l,lw111 ur~a11, Hi' boa!, 111 I SC. I arnp~. soru" 11 nt i q11f'.\, lll&-!1;ifi9 I I I d * * 4.000 lb. CLAHK FORKLIFT, $1'2~i0. Phcne 67H9-li Misceil•n11ou• Ill l Free Fuzzy J<'elines 6 "'ks., box trained, Tlf'l'd .i:ood home!. Call 842-13(18. FREE KITTENS to 11.'d homf'S. 9ffi-6927 plea.sun". 642-7178. Li~e ne\\", fully equipped. C•mperl, S•I•/ Rant 920 HO'R:SES Boarded, $40 mo,1.;'~'500ii7·~p;;'i;l-(-p~ly;,;;S4&-"""'60:::'::-:c: 1---------- ff'f'd incl. First mo. free. 22x9~\o BUILTRITE nu radio. 'SB VW CAMPER 557--062.'i. 84 gal, JO:l hp grey. 3 scoop 2 Saddles & o1her tack. bail, SZ450. 12131 596-9676. 1·c ng. 1\as ier r 'J!f!r ANTIQUE racho-phono. V\\' l'arpP1Lng . i:rc. Fn. S.e1.1 ;;,;~~:;;;~~;;;:~~:;::; {I.II" 111nd, sola, l'hatr5. :o;t111. 106 Collins Ave. Balboa JOHN'S BIKES Nt:\V 10 ~-pd bike. Engli~h. \\'eddinR .v;own, hilnd rm- bro1rlered organl.ll, 1·u~t. madr \\•/ca!hedral "I' i I , br\1les maid drt s sei, 6~1!1. STORY A Clark spine1 pi<1.l)O. Blond linish: xl n1 mnd; \\tu~t M"ll; S44J. &st oHt'r 67a..J307 128 Fr•• C•lico K itten * 5.J7-9359 • '68 17' !JO 1M i\tercu tr Pop-'fop. R & H. S'l100 or ~~~~~~~~~~~I w~:/pv.T trim. ~hrs 0i;; e~g n1ake offer. Complf'tr. 1vith ; Xlnl cond ·J36-63ll renl. Call after Ii pm 1 _ 1ablr. 1n:Lplr hcallboilrd, l s!all<l . ml.'•C. 7·11 l\1a1n St.. H B. l,=-=~~~-~--SAT 10-4. t-urn l tur~. GARAGE &lie -t·n, Sar , ktchnwarr. clothe~. books, :-un. Golf i·Jubs, hlli;: -cart rrcords. H' rlinghy, elrc & misc ilcn1s. :171 B ilryrr, 4 track tape deck. 211 \\"oo<lland Pl. C .\l. !>1S-19i•1 4(1111, NB ~11\PLt; bt-11. girls hikP. hoys Stingray bike, "Tl". &u & Sun, 5~6-4 166, 3\j Vi1!ano1•a, C:'ll GAR/\GE Sa!r, £01' 12th SI, 11.B. f"ri, Sal & St1n. MiJC clothlng, furn, B ~ y t'·lolhrs, Eler gruitar l :io Nt~!Gl-IBO RHOOD ~a r a )'.! r ~f'7"="c'=~:ccc-~o--,-----;­ salr. \Ve havr cvcryth1ni;:. GARAGE :>a!r; r.1an".s (•hr Sat. Sun. JO-J. 16 ~:i 2' S3:i. J{'wclcr's lathe Sl.!O. Sara t~a Ln. H.B. 1!4&-61]6, Antiques, misc:. Sat-S1111. LAl\1PS, chalr5, bc<11ylXJ.1rrl. 10-6. 13U Scacrrst, Cd~I. ping pong !able, ch1Jrlrrns f., 6~4-1311. i.:irls ('lotll"s. mi111y odrls & 'GCA-RCA~G"E~~s.~1.-,--,-,~,-,l end~. Hl07 Anriqua Ci r .. N.B. Jlopelo11n Ln, H B. SU!r1s --~1 0\\'ERS. (';1mrr.,~. noon ~I · misr. baby -NEW- coLuMBIA PREMIUM & STEYR Lgf' ~election of l SJ)':e<I~ a sper.d & 10 spet.'<I bikr.ll' 10 speed ...... S72.50-$119.::.0 ;, s~cls ................ S6.i-t80 J spectls ............ $,17-$61 -USED- 3 SPEEDS * 5 SPEEDS STINGRAYS -REPAIRS- 70" SCREEN Lin!icutar Ra- d111.nr Super Color Master, li ke new, $40. Two 20 l/8xl0 J/8 Hehr ~tationary trailer saMi. safety glass $9 each. 673-3940. MEMBERSHIP BALBOA BAY CLUB Pho.n.-644-1312 Last Notice SE"'ING ~1ACJllNE Unclaimed freight. 40 bra'Pld nl'"' 1911 deln.'< aato, zig-zai S('\\'ing machint>~. Button- holf!, zig·Uli;ts, blind hemll', 1nonogran1S, e1t:. FULL PRICE $35 EA. • 5-i8-96;ig * l II·* l .. . ,3,,, .. , 4 lovely k;ftens-ilsebrkn II. ~~t "'-Boats, Rent/Ch•rt'r 908 • Da~un Cam,.r ShellA e we11~. 6 "·k.5 old, looking c. -------~· -Ji'brgls, alum windows. ium· /or good hol)ies. 540-4900 ••••••••••I Cel 25 + Cetllna 27 mer sale fl7S A: up. AUSTRAL I AN ~rman Gener•I 900 Guaran!ee the }01>.·est rates in 536-7l10. Shepherd, 11 mo old dog. So. Calif. "CaUina cruis--l'1"9"1o'"v~wCC-"o."'1o""'v••,.-~C.,--m-,.-,1 962-799~ hef noon flr 8f! ~. GREAT SAVINGS! ing club". Location Newport \\le .. tfnlia pop top w/tent. DOBERi\tAN puppies lree 10 These new '71 Boats mU!t ll!LCbor. 714/96&-48-lO for info. Am"/Fm. $2!l9J. 5"8-74n · for good hon1e. be sol_d by A_ug. Isl: BL l,J E \I/ ATER YACHT ~.:--~10~,~ .. :--ccc:-c----1 POST 40 :mt-ti.~h cn11ser C>IARTERS ·i cabo.ver, stovc, 1192-9147 alt fi .... 11vn. diesel. . . , ga.~/elrr retr1g, boot {: COCK·A·PDO fre.e to goocl CONCORDE 33' spl·f h hvn Crui~e or fish boats to 40 j11rks. 515-3627. hon1e. Xlnt ll'ilh ~hildrl!!n. · is · day/"'eck res/call &1&-9CMXlll~~.---=oc------I Cash or s111. monthly pay-642-9924 cat diesel. Cycla1, Bikes _C_O_L_L_E_CT_D_R-.s---;i-,-m-,-. -L-.C-.' ment11. Supply limiled. ls! CONCORDE 3.l' !ipi·fish, hvn Bo•ti, S•il 909 Scooters 1 Smith 12 ga, dbl barrel romr. 1st call ba..<ns. Phone. SIAMESE spayed tf'ma.le cat f.letc. cruiser~. 925 shorgun, $70. Elgin pocket Shi PP i n i k Re('t'1v!ng, needs loving adult Dome. ISL.AND YACHT SALES \Vr'll rtpair all makes & ':}1;,..8238 24 hou~. $48-0906 Afl 5:JO. ]:o!S(} Harbor Island Drive SHOCK type f ibe r gla ss 1nodcls, Al!IO have part~. 1vatch, (railroad Uype!, ssa.1 ,s~-~-~~,::_--= San Diego, Cali!. 92101 Sabot, u~ed 4 times. 3250 TMM: 2140 NE\\'POHT BLVD, c :-.1 1_x_1_,_1_ro_..t_._'4_9-0_n_,_· ___ , porting Goods 130 (7!-ll 291•18!l9 Quick sale-Terrific \'alue. HQ•TTlll• Waekday s Open 6-10 pm FOR SALE. open Sal & Sun. [ 11~1 ~8-!936 ... ......._ Sat & Sun 96 pm crtrig, •7J: TV, ml'' ron· \VJLL t111de laroe bi!!lt r.11and5c.lpplie• CAPTAIN 20 .,: • • • • • ' " u vitwrator OR 2 ;Jmost -w ;;;;;;;;~~;; LiCf'n~ -Radar -Loran, JO ' Vi ing sa_ilboa.l. Xlnt •'fRIEDIJNDBr &t5-4720 sole, s2;}: ga~ stOVP, Sl O • •no cond N•w ··•I• & ' '" 000 il 7 7-14 yrar.o. "X. ""rlrn-~~,·1 ., 2 ' _ -· m. 0 or. -'\"11\ Take Tradr-Jns -n11~c. 32;) Po1nsetta, Cd,\\. ""· m e -:>-lH"t'S & " ,... '"L .,.. u $ 000 54 7100 d 67 191fi 673-1%1 rims. FOR good camp1n2 Cats 151 poy,·er. Professional Spon ' ,_ ay, .:r. ,.. RA.QI ..,..,., ., , FAMIL y VACATION 1en1 at lra~j ll-ll. Call ----------F ishing Guide Mexlran & ei·e. 537-6824 e 893-7566 t:LEC ~tovt', vr.ry clran, 11 PlJREBRED s · '" C 'al A 'IALIBU ""''''g '' I d An;il,rim. C,,1. fc•' • .. o., C h' f •1 h A <o, ;;,~7~1 . • Jame~ "'t-en r mrnr.an 11·arcr5. " ., g . g assr 19-0 KAll'A"""I p;i11n ft1r11, n11~r othrt i~~-co~-~--·-·---a in or re nt "ammo1 SJO, !\la>'"' e\t"C . di"'\.·f'r. S~5.1 --c-'--"--::C_::::.:c:_____ 1 .,,....... 90 dtrl k lrn~. Sl5 f"a. Also li«!ns!'d mul1 1-t'f\g1ne hull, nearly new North sail. ,.,.1 • ro1obro11. 1ahlrs. 1n~ ... 'l11~C. lurn11urr. Sf>fa. cha1r!ii, roll- 17:i 1 ~1Lnorca l'I, C ,\l ·I "''7·"~"c'='··~•cl,c'7'-'--~o---~ :>-l:.-~7J I GARAGF. Salr. Refr1g. Pool MO\"ING-\\ a't11n-;: 111 a,. h . tablr. !'"ur n. # ~lis<' 1969 !!rms. l!i\I Tustin Avr, SAT. J0.;1 • Address·O·"'raph, La f'S. See Taho(o, Virginia Tum la\\-n~"wer. SIO, i;· H U~TING Riflt -Rf'mingron uny Chamber l 1ltnn " "' ""' 675-203.1 Commf'rci11J Pl!O'I, 18.nrl & ~1ooring i< trlr $300 · ' ' t." ~1 Sa!..~· Sun !>oai J?l'1lr .t misc 18.905 An-Ci!y, Ro..h,., \\'k $95. ;;31-3374 xtr;i 11·d bbq !bl & ben(:hes, auromatic 30--06, 4 x scope, =~~~~~'-------5"l8-L!l:l0 · illa\'Pricks .r. more. $225. D I •• 11 <l•J " •· "' ""11 S I~ m ~, BUR,, lESE kitten•, gc••I sea. Adminis!rafi\"e l!Xperi-. &I' --"•O. G'\R,'c r .:,.1,. _ ~ll". T''''''' r1och r, n·111,._ ~ ..... 3 2. .~ ur .,...., . ...., · S40. 540-4182 afl 6 carrying ra.~f' •:>"""'"""""' . l crl;f;;c,;;c;-2-.;;;;;:-s:isol;;;";~~~~~;:::cc::c;:-,.--,,-~ L-''"' • ~ ·• II · , -1 f'nce. Brs1 or rererencf'5, I"' 'I 1 -•t 2 ·i -~--LGF r d I 310 TV R d ' HIF' persona tle.s. '""'"e pe-op e. ·> '" e ;; ... , t;a1 ~ S-150 Bl'"E-,_ . f"urn1111rf'. Apr1\11111 r•1'.;. (;An.AGE Salc-20112 S \\', · rrng, I: COfl( : EX ERCYCLE 1vith , •to, 1, £.16-2917 1~·/trailrr. Must see. "'.'I; ""'h\\·inn boy110.spd, Cr!b -Pla,vf.l('n. 1i1rn11' rahlr, Spn1re, San111. Ana Hi;ls. rnb & n1ri 11ress $10; "I'm S""e<lomelcr, o<lometer & Stereo 836 ·125· l'llust sell. &12-8158· to ai;-hke nc1v $51l. 16" ""II"! ,_ s· * LEASING * prec:i11te. 6·1&-818il. ..,., • inisc. ~7-76~ Fn-~at~Suii OTl('n :\Ion 1hru '.'on. talllf + ;. rhnirs $1j, lcnsion controls. u~ed 11 I-----------4 SEAL POTN1' 1ame~ ki!-.l ;C;;°"',,.-""'"-''cc--~I w/tra1n1ng 11·h~! $10. 26" --:14.l-Wl!l. mill's. S.10. !!J,1-2179 lrn.s brerl !or rl1"P· nol 1;how, 'l'i' CHRIS CRAFT (nm-e KITE 12]-Goo<J con d . iloys Columbia \S. 968-3203 V 1\LET, $10. So11111~h l11•rnr GARAGF: .5/lle'. Fri & !'at I c~~--------~~-~--=~~--I STl::REO, 1971 •ior!a imerl Shots, $l::..$20 , &12-'ifi2.'> mandrr 11•/.'llip, fly bridgP, $43.l. 119 Jade Balboa.lo.;;::-;o;:::::::-'c:.,C::._.::::_:::::_ l•rf' scrrt>n. $10. J\11M' l"hld Onl.v 9.1m ·":' 290 Cabnllo, !\"o . .'lO Gal clr1· 1111tcr he11Tcr S.35. ALL like ne\\'-\Vheel chatr lay · away. Garr a rd twin rng. $700. per mo. l ~land. 67;,..~3. ' 160cc Sl!'ef!I mo! tJ re y cl e 11r11is. rrn11i 101"'~11-l~lfi~ I C,C:\I. !1nrcarlf>46-.7677 Heavy du ly po11·rr reel S!IS. \\'Biker Sl:l. Portable lurntebJ~. Ai"/r;\1 sterf'O, BEAtrrlFUl. Siamese Seal· :O..l8-7·16j_ NevP r usrd. CnmplPt e n101\·r r $7.) 8{11h x1n1 ror1d I I , d 111 nd~ & 1·-pl•y•c. A•· poin1 lem11I", 111 1110~ old, ------* KITE No, ~9. XLNT 1v1-,,,,.,.,, B•.•o off••, PORTACnlH, 111er lt11•111111rr S1\T & !'UN, 10AL\1 .. >P~1. 1001 · · ' air <'(A"•cr \\" s an · "' ""~ L 10' Gl 6h J h "' ''' ,., v •• • • • !"16"1-!l"'.8'1 •It '4' 0397 s p r a k I" rs 11·/cro~S-Ol"f'r .~HJ. Killen~ ~Ii 5'18-2:'13R. Rsp11r. P n lli\Qn, CONDITION. Hft.-02611 rrom 9 lo 5. 30 g, nii.~c. 4WI Ondlnr Circlr. I' Cl1ll Dr. N.B. Furn, skis. · '· ==~=·0·=~~-~~--I (leek. strnit & cono,...1~ · · · ' ' H.tg Harhnvr, Sa1 9 In 4 !oy~. clflth1ni;:, DAll:ON "·hirlPQQI ha 1 h, NE\VPORT Beach Tenn\~ .syslem. Still brend nt'w, 0091 85' Si:r.ilot-Sl11n t.liller. f\111 ra~: CA'rAM'6R2.J. N6734818 1JBULTACO 36.'l Mon- newrJ>T 1nodrl ll'/1tuaren1ee. Club family membership, sold for S.11 9 11•/wa1T11 nty. ge.er. 2 !l<lils. 646-22'Y.l. 1 A Ai 13' sailboat. t11drro. Best dual purpose Best offer £.l·l-lO!IR -$41-. 1 tran f J es Pay off balance of $120 or FE!\tALE M Dobe 7 ,,.. Cal Cet "l'.•/trlr, X!nt cond. bike made. Fas!. li73--4Ml *1-~·---·--·-·_·___ :>, inc ser I" ... 111111! payment11. Credit ' r rman. l01i ' FIBERGLS boat, ,.,p $1000/ ti 8477354 * * * * * POOL TABLE, 1 I a te, 644-2281 rlepl, 8S3-050l. rno, ears crop~, had all mnlor, dolly, cAr top ~?J"· 0 er -· KA\\'ASAKI '71 -Almott ,,.--------------------..,,I 10.'/Autom11.1lr rl'hJrn. Good PLANTS: ch 0 i ce aSM'lrl· shors. Gen'Je s:'iO. 5*-5033 rit'r. Almos! new. $27a 3 ~lass sl~ps; Cal . 34, Brand new. Low! Loy,.·! cond. $32:1. j.i7-9499. men!. Sun or shade. Very 1971 ZENm1 It. Admiral AKC Black 1.tandard l yr. 536--4130. Ericson 35, Lion lS. t.tileage. 838-5201 Trader's Paradise lines times .dollars RA GE 36 bl 291 ?3~ S close-out Sall!!, Lo\ve1t *Avco Bkr, fiT::i-8990 * I" . .,--,,,'°'=·-=-=--1 N , " \Ved£'e\\'00d, reasona. e. E. -•v t. pri«~. 3 yr pic•ure. lt1be, I Charnp, stock. PEDAL Boe.t-!leal! 2. duAl e . ~ 69 HONDA ~ 4.~. JO" griddlr, s:i0. 12) Stef"("() C.'I yr part~ & service. Antenna 646--0142 pedal~. fibe-t"X"huis pontoons SABUr, racln& Shock. lorks, pegs, 11ssy bar, ;Gj(). speakrrs, 10", S60. 61~14j. _W_A_._SH_E_R_S_;()_: -,,-,-,-. -.-,-,-,-r I inslailP.d 11·/all consolr~. ~llN . Poodle pup.•, 1 \\"bold, $123. lri&-9076. Red huJI. Xln: rond. No. 557-4923. PORT. Elec:. Organ. J-"ull •t S2:•: 2' Extra long k firm ABC color TV, 9021 Atlanta. mall", CTeam colored. AKC. 2'1' ~fonferPy Clai;.~ic Original 4007· ~5/best ofr. li7l·1345 l1«91;;oo;l!Xk;;;;c,:-;;B'u"L"T"Aoc"o""S1t<~,...-I ~·/11mp Ir (.'11.nyin.v; cll!e. t11•in maHresses $15 ca. H.B. 968-3329. Chan1p !!llf'f'. Sij, 6il-76l3. H ick~ KY-2', 1 cyl ensz. • . ~NOWBIRD No. 467. "S", Good cone/. &ee CaJI ;»8-4218. &45-444.l I cCO.::=IJJ.:_:R.::,TV=~.--So-h_d_S_ta_l,-1 \\"ANTED-loving homr for 4 642-T.m dayt1/646-6625 ''"-n S6ilfin blue, Good concl. ready. $295. 962-4356, POOL Table $1200. JW>W, I yr US. Diver K'\lhA lank I. rep!ljrg, All models. x; mo, apricot male poodle . 3210· 642-2931 '10 TRIUMPH D .. ..,._ .. ~ I I 1 U' RUN ABOtrr, 15 hp o/h, 14, L"-'-...,. ..... _ ......, o d, $600. Xlnl cond. t.fusr Coru;hr f 6 re Ju a Io r ; YeaNJ F..xp. $4.50 Srrvice -'-'-"cP·-'-S25_-c·_S3&-__ 11_66_. ----I trJr. Xlnt cond. Juv-Aqua deck. No. 22:14. ct', 1700 miln. Xlnt CDbd. sell. ~7-6.l86. Yamaha 80. L\1ake oHer. C8ll. 546-7599. LltASA APSO puppiei . 6 $2!1,) ~6 Xlnt c:md. S!M. $950. 494--1224 Belt ~1assai;cer, heavy duty, ~l83S. TWO KUr , modi!! l 2 ·wks, AKC 1\·/puppy •hol.!I. I "lef..;.;;1~, IM~.1~0;,:-&,:TT~ .. Oi;T.1,;,cj,,,_.,,o;;~""~~~-~-;-.,.--,l'-;;·10"'v"AJ~M=AH=A-,,D~S6~.~"'1oo=-·I Trade auhsrantlal f'Qlltly 1n lovely Baycres-1 hotne N.B. ltaa pool & beautiflll 1.:ind- ~plng. Trade for sn11t ller hol.ltl!. j.18-4@.I. Vaeelion lol. 0Ca111. Rogur RJver. PR l'ed n1, UUI~. lxle1 - ln1. Almon IL<;h111R. Wan! lln homr1 1nolull' home, cir ! , 496-19>!0, l!\'CS/\\·krv!~. 1~ .AC fncd X 2 &tal!1. Nr w S Br flQ:e) 2 BR homl'. hl1tlli, cpts. drp.t, bnway, c\1111" • .tew. Rlvton.lde for Org, Cty. 681'-8747. TRADE l!&i ti.1G Mill~rt b Volk:sw•&Pn bua or V111n, 4f1emoOnl al. thr. StuHtd T Shtrt CAfl' in N""''JXlrt Be111ch. lS' PAC'EMAKDt nu!Jl Mcie: for Nl'wport or CM area proptrt}'. Call all Ii pm ·-· * * * \\"ill tradl" S acl'e& w/or 111llK>t1! cabin in Clevelal'ld N11!'l fort's!. 1; mi. oU Or· tega H"Y ror sm. house thi" a.~a. ~>48-4604. 3 BR, :I BA. C.M. Home. S26.95(l .• S.!l.350 equity, Want tra\'t'I van, camper, untta $50. Excellent cond.itlon. BOYS bdrm Mt "''/bunk 1peaker1, ma 1 c h t n g Call ~182 $5(1('1 * 60-555.2 SACRIFICE, 18' A c:lus 3100 milt's $5.'iO • 637-41 :'6 • bedt1, maplt', complr!e. :2 &inlla,y cabinet $450 total. iA~Kii·c~\\;;'ft;;l~TE'i"-:comLLWl~E'PP~UPiP<s I "-2:~~~~~~--1 ce.tamaran, $600. Trir. Incl • S57-fil3!1 • LEAVING 1t8te, ~vf:rything snow tirt~ for T-Bird Ii: 64~76..). 4 mel,11, I ft malf: $40. & Bo.ti, M•lnt./ maorin&: to Au.v; l&I. 646-1)41 '6l TRIUMPH Cub 200. Good mual go. Bar 1tool1, lamp!, m isc Hems. 67~7049. MOORSE <:nniqi!1: , T" re 0 up. ~"6-:U7l Servlc• tol LEHMAN 10 w/trlr, Good cond .. l owner. $225. rug~. <'le. 642-8192'. \VOOD framed, obloni;: bdrm AJ.1/F).1, y,•/bar, Spanish ~SC~O~Tf=ISH="T~,-n-~,.-,-,-"P_P_Y__ cond. Balbo1 Isle Call Call 646-2305 * N.B. TENNIS CLUB mirror, h<!avy S60. rt-pe. tri-stylt. Sl";r(). 557-5894 AKC, male, 3 mo old P REVENTIVE mllin-Collect, (2ll) 784-2-428 1971KAWASKI 175 full mbrshp. 83.1-0720 pie plate sil~e~ .... ~1• $50 or F'OR Salf'. 1-."LH Stereo 111pe \\'/stctl.~. $100. '62-15Xi. lenance--by G!\l d 1 e s • I RACING Sabot e)(~IJent Excellent f:Ondillon $i5(1. -"'='o'c'c"c'o'·c' M::.c.:~_,,,,:.·---k k mechanics. Rrggie'a Diesel condition. $~. ' * STh-3442 * MINI bike, rtiM good, Commercial 26", 4 mower $60. 546-5057 S55. HP •o::: dee A •Pl'• er.11, ./ ''0Rh.1E PUP: Mall!, 4 ~tarlne Servi~. 64.i-4610. • 61,.~~ 10-spttcl bike -: CIU!Sette 644-0.157 mo old, Loves kids. ;.;;;;;;,,;~;;;;;-'"-"-'--1 ,===;.c~~~~,.---1970 YA!\IAHA MX 250. 111PI! deck" It. rw:irdcr. $l:l. * ELECTRO VOtCE 17" Terms Avail. 531-87:27 Boats/M•rlne _. VENTURE, uaed, fully eqpt Strictly dirt. $4$ for quick :ir 1ubmU. Bkr. 646-9666/ e 10 x 12 lr.nt U9ed , , w 499-2978. 1 k •~/~lh Equip. ~ to• -c!o• 1o•-of .__ .... ..,., ,,...., s f!r«I I Jl"R f:n, ~ ..... . AKC Be1gleg s \\'k.~ old ' •• ..... .. x ..... s. -..e . ...,,,......,."" l!.W:!!. NE\VPORT Beach Tennis c..JI 67>6145. male A: fem~le. $3.1 ro s;ai'. w-;;;;:;:;:;;:-;;;;::;~;:::::;:::;l~$l~9~1'~!U-~~965!~,c_-=-,---IGOCART lrame $35. Mini Club fami1!, membt'r!hi.p. TV 12" porl., t!ar ph. Pillow 833-1~. \\'ANTED: \\'e v.ill bu,y your MODEL Sailil'IC SchooMr btke w/Hontl• 90 enc. $65. &12-2221. liml!I, $4.). Coughboy round poo(, 4' 1 ___ c_._11_S4_11-_,._-"-'--- dttp by 18' cir .. pump, fiJ. CA.\tPER fllg 1) ton Pick 1er, ladder A tell kit. Good Up, $150. Old bedroom 1ulte, cond. \VlU tradi!! for utilil)' S50. Call 968--2121 1r11iler or ! 830-0905 HAVE $ID). equily in lot in Cahlomia Chy. Trad~ fOI'" tl'nt frailer, trudt car. Ira· vpl trailrr or ?? l\lu~t trade f11i;t . !J'.K.3'196. Whal do you have to tn~T Ll1t It heAI -In Orans:e Coun1y'1 !Arrest rw:I tred- .,. ,..t.6'2$11 ' * * * RED 1h8j; att• rua. 00', Excellent condition $50. * .. 675-5316 •• PEDAL Boel: Sr.111• 2, du111l pedals, !1!M'J'&'la11 ponloor15 $125. 646-9076. KEN~10RE "'•sher, S20; RwlnR: m11chint, $10: toy• Ar Citme3r 1755 1.Aun•.I SI, F.V. 'VATER Bed S19. Kina: or Qutoen. 5 YI' ,a CIO t )' ruarantN;. 54&-f,G:W. $350. 67:Hll1 . apkr. Superh cond. S6:i/! _G_R_EA_T--D-.,,....--,.-,-k--t-1.:. old boet,1marlne equip i rAdln cont:rnl, ft'ad,y to sail. !llii..527!1. LEATilER contl!m chlir ~.... ...... 1• acee:uorW!a, any c: 0 n d · Best otJ'_ 54~2854. , • p. ' ~r. year,;, t rlmmt'd e • r 1 , CASH. Wrile dasslfied ad 69 Honda CB 350. XI.tu .$500 matching end Ibis. m!Be U::ivable "'· 89l--O&,i.2, CUSJ'O~t KITE No 539 ~I r M ~-u \1em11. 2140 A11er Pl, C.M. No. JM, DaUy Pllot, P. 0 . ' · or or, mt ""' ! l ______ _,[/ I I' coµ.l rE PllPPY·Tri, AKC Box 15ro, Costa Mesa ~lli. ~~u~u. ~. Attl!r fi.1-'-TH43l_,,~·,-,,==c.--..;.,.--·I Mi1cell•neou1 Wanted '20 WANTED: Small dt..llk. 557-i998 Mu1lc•l ln1trument1122 FENDER Str•tocaslcr r'l"finlsMd, ttl\ired, ea1e, 130/? 5364487. '"'· """ _ f~ t. You . nil!' champion QiJc:ka:round. Ol.ITBOARD JohMOn s HP, . '61 HONDA 111 -""'--"-· _,_,.__,,_11_____ Cleian Mins gd See Sat only CoLU~IA l'l, like new. Nff'ds minor ll-1lrk. M.}-18'.lS 3 Lln11, 2 Time&, $2.00 BABY GOPHER SNAKE. lfELP. nirll' be•ulitul cali' and killl!nt. derperalf'ly Med • rood home. Call 847~73. ''2 Ta.Iron. no enrint. c...LI ~2917 ST. BERNARD P\IPJ, AJ.:C 9 to ·.;, 300 iGtil SI, N.B. lmded. Si!!U or In.di!, Own. FOR N<nt, Huntington By the SJIO\V ... PET QUALITY 67l-&').l!I. f'f, NtwpL ,.up, 644•2159· Sf-a, '6!! Kirlol.lJOd, 20x(5. 2 __ c_A_L_L_l-5.14-3 __ , .. c.:..., __ 1DEPTHSOUNDER $00 for AURORA 21' tglJf ~ a/1-: BR, 111b.!.6.l.l-2961. AUSTRALIAN $4~. 11ex!ant V..i, much :· x~~ f~7~P $1800/of· Yam•ha. 80, rt><'f'n!ly 1uned. Shepherd& Puttbred operaUona.I .v;ear at 2>50'i~ er · · r.ontl rond. $175 Paptni Avail. 673-2427 t"nst .. ~7-7572. KITE·TRLR, REAS. 5't()..1\S9 SKYE Terrii!!r Pup&, Champ. FUEL. F'l aw m e I f' r ,, M6-0'20l d,ys/61.)..fTU evn 64 TRIUMPH SX'J sited, AKC. Srunty, '°Y•I. tachometer S75 for J,35. CAL la..LoadM R•c•,. I ~ t1r Mt kp "'1Prf ron1t11.n1. :)j9-2:J47. 3..\1-131"2 $&350. r-;n slip av•ll. 49-i-0451 ~-2-411 allPr ~:30 PM . . . .... -.. DAILY PILOT .{:J. -----------I . Awt.t,., .. l§JI ·--.... l§J ~I Aw_ ..... _ .... .--.Jl§J I ..... ...... l§i~! ·_-... _-~l§J r· ~ ....... l§J l~~_u"'_'"·~l§l i~"""-·"'_ .... ~l§J I 970Autw, lrnflO: lecl f7I Autos. Imported 970 Autoo. Imported 970Autos, Imported 910 Autos, Imported r--~~~DATSUN1~~~ "THE SMALL CAR STANDARD OF QUALITY THROUGHOUT THE WORLD" BELOW IS THE COMPARISON CHART ... Let Costa Mes• D1tsun 1how you the 2-door or ~-door Datsun 510. It 's peeled full of extras .•. ALL AT NO EXTRA COST. Feat ures such as tinted glass, white walls, reclining bucket seats, full carpeting, flow-through fresh •ir system , disc brokes ond fully independent reor •uspension and an OVERHEAD .CAM ENGINE .•. ALL AS STANDARD EQUIPMENT C ome in 11nd test drive now while selection is good A.SI AIOUT COSTA MIS•· DATSUNS ' ' • HIG-Hll TU.DI IN ALLOWANCE 1971 Datsun 510 Sedan Comparison Chart Sl1:1t Whe1tl· E"gln1t Ba11t length Wlitlh H1tlght M11{e Cu. In. HP. lo. lo. lo, lo. DATSUN PL 510 2·DOOR 97.3 " 95.3 160.2 61 .• 55.t 4·DOOR t 7.3 .. 95.3 1152.2 11 .4 55.9 COLT 4-DOOR t7.5 .100 95.3 110.15 151.4 ~3.1 FIAT 12• SPECIAL 18.0 71 95.3 158.8 1•.o 53.1 GREMLIN 199.0 128 .... 1151.3 70.1 51.1 OPEL KADETT NO. 31 155.8 " 95.1 1151.1 151.9 55.4 PINTO 97.15 75 s•.o 163.0 '511.4 50.0 TOYOTA CORONA 4·DOOR 113.4 101 95.7 1615.9 11 .1 55.1 VEGA SEDAN 140.0 90 97.0 1159.7 15.4 51.4 YW SEDAN 96.7 •• 94.5 158.I 11 .0 59.1 SUPER YW 96.7 .. 95.3 1150.6 17.4 511.1 YWTYPE 3 96.7 " 94.5 170.8 13.2 57.t A" •~lor..,111on tio!•o.,dco"•<.t 111'"'" ol prin!1ng. H--•· 1bsolut1 K cu••'Y Clllrl<ll ""1u1r1n!H<1.1no Ill lOf!(.ohCl hDl\5 ••• Wbt~Ct IO 11\.tf>gl .... u ..... : nGI•"· I • 1 MIL( SOUTH OF TH( SAN DllGO FRH WA Y CORNER Of HARIOR & PONDEROSA 540 -6410 Acc1tl. front Overh1t1d Weight 0·150 Ind. Re1r 0!1c Com Lb1. Lb1/HP. Sec. Su1p1n1ion Br1~1t1 Engln • 2050 21 .3 13.5 , ... 21 .7 14.0 2120 2U 13.3 , .. , 25.1 11.3 21533 20.5 15.3 1717 30.I 19.1 2013 25.5 115.5 2170 20.1 13.5 2190 24.3 1U 1808 30.1 18.1 1911 33.0 18.3 222g. 34.2 18.5 YES YES YES YES YES YES NO YES YES NO YES NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO YES YES NO YES YES YES NO NO YES NO NO YES YES NO 'T•o"I tn~in.-fr.,,,l W~tl o., .. 'R•at £ni •ne·R<or Swrng J.•lto and T h en D ecide .'' I Attention Datsun Owners! I Y"r O•ln111, Ill , ••••• i. wortll mo .. "' Ct1I• MHI ()1!JUR, (Try UI I nf lff) FIOW·Thru Tu rning Fre1h Circle .,, Fl. YES 31.4 YES 31.• YES 30.2 NO 35.1 NO 32.8 NO 34.8 YES 31.5 YES 31 .5 YES 33.0 YES 36.0 YES 31.2 NO 36.3 J UST ARRIVED ! 1200 CPE. with l ,,.., e11t.ll'l.tlc tro11M11lulo• •• ,.._ ft1111rl! All THIS AT NO EXTRA COST e Recli"in9 bucket t1t1tf1 e Five-mein-b1t1ttinq '6 HP overh11td cem 1tn9in1t e Up to 25 mil•t per gallon e 0-bO in 14 1ec;ond' e Fully in?•p•ndent r ••r i u1penuon e Front di1c; bra~., e 3 1.4 foot t urn ing ci,cte e Standerd ell-1ynchroma1h 4-i peed tran1mi11ion (optionel aut ometic; a vailable) e Tinted 911t11, whitewalls, flow.through fresh air. 1yit em. • All a t no •xtre c:o1t. s IATSUN "' f ·DOOI SEDAN We are introducing a new h igher trade-in allowanc• during our big expansion pro- gram. DATSUN 510 2-DOOR Winne r of the treacherous East African Safari. + r.~ & Lie.lo & H e SERVICE e AND WE MEAN SERVICE! -To Your Complete Satisfaction At All Times! ONI OF THI MOST r.-pitcted a. r..:.omllle11d1d Oahu" a9r•lc1t deph . I• lou1h1n1 C1t1if. Witt. "'ualifled llc1111.1td foe1or, trained technlcloru. "1HE FINEST OF 240Z MAINTENANCE" ANY QUIS110NS AIOUT 51lVICI CALL THIS SERVICE HOT LINE 540-021 3 8 A.M. TO S P.M. ONLY' A COMPLETE WELL STOCKED PARTS DEPT. Antique1/Cle1slc• 953 Trucks 962 Autos Wanted 9'8 lilll llil .__I _r'""_"°'"_'~o__,j[i] !.___Tm•_•""-'""~ ....__r'_'"""_1'_1;_"__,))r1i)1l,1_~_"_"_''_'"_"'_0__,/l r1il 1940 Forr:I P.U. V·8 fl11the11.rl, '6.J GJ\1C 3/4 ton-heavy duly 'VE PAY TOP DOLLAR Tr1n1por111 ion Cycles, Bikes, good e ngine. Needs v.·ork. v.·/extras. R&ll. 4 + .s pd. fOR TOP USED CARS $300 nr ~~t offer. 1136-5672. S89:i, After 6, 540-51 98. If your C!lr is extra clean, ~S-po-rt~.-.~R"•_<_•_.~R.-od.-1 --;;95~9' 1 ~. ,~ .. ,-;:>.~O~n~o,-;1~0.~"~"~"~'"o"u"'"' r' I see us 1 11·~' tr\lck. $100'.l or be5t offer. Bl\U~R BUICK 935 Moto r Ha mes 940 Mobile Homes 935 Mobile Hom•• Cycles, Bikes, Scooter& Cycles, Bikes, 925 Scooters 925 Scooters NF.:\V 20X52 2 BR, 2 b11., BIKES-Man's lO-spd, also Ready to move in. $11.950. 925 CON TEMPO LAGUNA HILLS ililOTOR Home for 11'n1, Self ron!a1ned, sleeps 6. Air. Reason. rates. S~ $99.'> 837-17:>3. 2.1-l E, 17th SI. Cus101n fi~rgla~11 Gr Costa :i.1csa 5-IS-771\) '70 HONDA SL 350. I-IC cam. Barnet! clutch, wrecked bu1 rr pairable. i\!ake o r fer. S17-J3.'>.l Tt>rm.'I. Greenlea! Park, Chevy, 283, V8 f'ng. 54R-6132 19'10 Ford P.U. y.g fiathe-ad, IMPORTS \VANTED good engine. Needs v.-ork. •THE BIKE SHACK• NEW BICYCLES PARTS e ACCESSORIES EXPERT REPAIRS 3 -spd. 8 o th like new. 3750 \Vhi!tier. C.1\1. 548-1698 673-3..140 or ~!!--8369. Rfl f)pm. Trailers, Travel 945 Trucks 96 2 $300, or best offer. 836-5672. Orani:;e Coun tiP.! TOP S B UYER 1970 TRtUl\1"Pll 650 cc TR6. l"tNc...,~,,~,.~.-,-.-m-"-,-,-,-,,-,,-m-,k~o Xlnl cond, t>tusl sell. $99;;. off('r, Ready for mounta111s 557-Ei036. or river. lOx~. 2 BR, <No. '70 Ka"·asaki 100 Good t•nnd. BY989:?f $3995. f\ew crpl. 1t1a ny xtras. ~lake olfer. \\'f'stern ~l .H. P. e .s a I cs, '6.'i CHEVY Van; 6 slick, nP\V BILL J\IAXE Y TOYOTA '68 GMC lirf'.'I, Jo mi. X!nt ('Ond. $975. 188.Sl Beach BlvrJ. DIRT b ike. HondR 30:1, Xlnl coocl. Custom piprs b ~eat, '69 eni!: .• r.take offer. 968--1228. ON ALL MAKES Op!'n 12-8P:'.11, Sac-sun 10.5 1093 C BAK ER, CM Near F11.hv iPw e 546-·H30 23301 RIDGF: ROITTE DR. \6'2" TRAI LER. S..H <'O n· !Corner of J\1oulton Pkwy) t11inrd. A lm o ~ l new. Preslige adult con1munily, 6-l:HJ.'ll!l. Suburban 497-10~4. H. BPach. Ph. s.11.sj,.)s Carry All Auto s, New 980 Autos, New 980 adjacent lo Le Is u re 1:1~V7A7N=T=E=0~18~.--~20~.~T~;7,-,~,,-., \\lorld, Beauti ful surround-s .t .ll'ond cond. 6-l:J--04~6 or 1ng~. all luxury 1:1ppo1n1-&J.",...:?()26 3 to rhoose-from, all arr \".K l,::::::::====:::::======::::::=::::::==:::::=;,I 1970 HONDA 175 Scran1blr r. New clu1ch b r rre 1.1 01·f'rhau1. $4 00/o l fe r. 644-5-11~. 644-6469. R.19-fil'JO. lo m1le11 &. clean, Grea! for v.·ha!ever. "i O HONDA CB--ij(}. Fairin~ .~ r:xtras. $1199. ,\l~. "i l Po11"eJI Cha lle11gcr S 1 3::,. Both Xln1 rond. 6·1&-:.96~. \\'ANTED: &a1-up P1cktJp. ALL setup in nire park, mrn r~. Thr>rapeulic pool. . . . ~;iuna~. E~r rri.-e l;t'.l·Ol, 4 LI ~~ nr1~'. J!lGR North \\if'sl billiard !ables much, niuch Coach. l.i. S!erps R. $1000. $1995 \\'f't"cked. ruincfi or reiirrd, ma ny xtra~. 1968 2 BR. 11) A~k for Carl 5-;6-jJ92. BA. 12x60 INO. f\V:ill~I. ' Call 1ir1 6 pn1, 5-10-6441. MacHoward 839-9600 OR 131-0608 Co~r 11;1 & H:i rbor Sanlfl Ana For 1hat item under Turn unusect nems lJlto qutc:k S6:?50. \\"esltrn ~t.H . Resales cash. call &lZ-5678 R.1!Hll.;(). mo1Y'' See hl>auL furn moclrls in park-like ~e11 1 n~. 14' travel 1ra1lrr. 1967, all •"!uip. $fi.'ll'l or brsl offer. ('11 I I 117~-:.:;;,1 try the Penny Pincher For best results! 642-5678 1A ·o'u-Ct7o-,,.-, m--,po~r"tc:od7"-.,97Q ( Autos, Imported 970 A~u~,~.,-."'"1m-po-rt-e~d~~9~7~0c l 1 BR + full hath w/pnl'Jo~d crpld cab1:1na. Furn. & draf)f'd. Oldrr pPrso n or rouple. f airviev• 1,_ \\' 1st. S95. ;,.J;)...7361 or 5.J7-~i6 CALL R3(l.Jfl00 or ii.10· i!lOO SANTA ANA ITIOjvlQITIAI DEMO SALE! 1971 COROLLA COUP( Tl>i1 1•11 o,..,., h11 flcin i119, AM •idle, r.~t. •qu lpm111t. Tloi, Dt mo h•• II•~•• h1cl pt rme111nl lit. plal11 111cl i1 1al cl with rt m•inint f1clor>r w•rr1nly. * '69VW NEW CAR TRADE INS ¥~ c1 ... ln•IO. & 011t. IZ0Ttt71 '68 vw L•oln: Oriti ..... IH41y Te ••· IVIL1411 '65 CHEV •• , •. T-.. '· "'"'"· l•••• •··•· • f PIZ061 I '69 DATSUN "',~.";;.~· ... , ..... ,.. '69 TOYOTA c.-..... _... ••·••. ,.... c.iw. Stt.r, & leHy. flDU-«21 LARlil SILI CTION OF N(W TOYOTAS Reu" To R oll * SJ24f10 s 109500 s49500 s 129500 $1695°0 OPIN l 1JO I• • Weekril1y1-·r ;1 ':JO Sit. I s.11. S1rvice 0111t. Op111 Mon, f v11. "Til • SANTA ANA IT!O!v!orrlAI • ' • ~~-1----------MOBILE HOME S 81 ,· t1·a1·i'I 1railrr. ~lps 4. 1----------ll National hra nd. 1vhy pay ill 11~t ~rll. n1'1vini;. niorf', ne\\' 12 1~ld('~. 2 Bft. "* * fi.'lfi.-.1iR~ -.. .. IH. , ____ _ 947 LEASE w/option to buy, all bhn~. $.'16:!0. Dhl wu.!es Trailers, Utility Ail extra~ $.165(). Con1r. 1n adull~ park. C.1\-f. !No. RECREATIO:'I/ CENTER BU64921 Pay like rrnt, \Vr.s!E"r n J\l~h1 lr Hon1f".-;, J21J l·A-R_\_l_Y_T_Y_P<'_J ___ T_I_ RO Y A No. Ha rhor Blvrl ., S.A, for 1,,;,,.. eep r.:u er. C RYER, Inc. S~2'10. '\' e .-; t e r n r.t.ll. th!' deal ol your liff". ~'~'- Resales. 8.19--6.1.'i!, 11.1!1..fiJM _ \\'r takr lrarlr.~ Ca ll ;,.10-11,11.2 1111 fi 2925 }ll\rbor Blvd. ''.':"'~:".,~;:',..'~~~'.:'.l-1r.;,;;;;o;;;;;:;:--;;<c---Costa ~Iesa 546-4444 ADULT PARK · C.~f. '69 n•M'DA 24 60 2 BR U11l11y traller 4x6' L«ncer, 20x52, 2 hr, 2 ha, " " ·" ' + Goo<I Conrl. SS:l "6:1 Ford, 4 whl rlr, winch, h. I d ._, I f Den, 2 BA. Lge porch, ~"' ... ~-9 JOI~' Travel "'·e•"· m•oy n e l\'l•K.101\'!, w r II nr, F II d d .~,.,......_,:. ' "'" " lwo Sx7 storage sheds, fenc· ("llrpor1 , u Y upgra " ex·,~-~-~-~---I xtra.s. J\1us1 ~JI. Sl!rlous of. w yd, lndscp S4:)..-0783 lras, 8f'11utiful v I e w , Auto Service, Parts 949 rers only. 546--0979, or eves ~ndscaf)f'd. Finrsl Adult 496-2012. FAfl-111.Y p&rk, 2 BR, 1970. Park, &low ctr~!~ II I MERCEDES Benr. hotly .\-I ;c;-;c;---;:==--,,----11 All xtras, 20xtl No. 5933. $:?().~'10. (.'ipace95l 5Z5 ~. 1-:1 Tri m parts for pN'-l960 190 19:>:> FORD % ton $7500. \1.'f"slern ~f. H , .., , Pk E , 0 "d , d" pi ckup/lonl!: berl. <I thousand ,.ore 11o·y. s ~Pfl11n. inC'ludini!: t"1nk ltd, 2 Resale~. 8.19-6nel. 11411~ 9'11 miles on rebuilt enR:. Needs ...,. •>' • rr11r lenden, J doorJ., ~me BY owntr -20x60, set up Ill 11.,,_ minor body 11o·ork. $4~. Motor Homes '7'N chron1r, gla~~. w i nd o"' Afl!!r 5 pm. 548-59S6. 11rlult pk ~·/skirtini' &: B\\'n-----------1 mouldi ng~. buckel Iron t 1 ,,0:--.,,.~~~~~~--,· II ing. $6T;iO. 5.J6...0466. CON DOR Sf';111>, door pant):-;. All 1967 Ford P ick Up Tn.ick. 2 BR Mobile tor Mile. Low ff'AMinabJe. A find for FUal clean, Low mileage. 83"'~ 1 4 9 6 4 1 2 3 Sltlll. Call att 4 pm, .space ttnl. ,,....., .. "" eVl'!li & The yacht th!lt'" not 11 boat. r e ~ ore r!li . -' 64Z..5591. all day wk-('nrls. BILL CORWIN FORD Capistrano Beach. -,~~--~--,---II Oninil'e County's Condor Dill-AUTO parls '56 Chev front '68 Chevy no window van TIM! fastes1 draw in the Weal .• a Daily Pilot Cla..ss!tled Ad. 642.-5678 tributor, 230 S. fl.Iain St., enrl '56 Chev doors 4 door Pu!lh button n dio, he1:1fer. Orange. Close to three mR· \\"Rgon t"'O i;tr11ight axles new i plys, Xlnl corn:!. jor freeways. 639-1850 Or pair ol JO Inch t.1ickey $1600. 491-HlS4 Kl 7.1)144_ Thom!IOn tires MS-1690 2201 MUST SELL '62 Ford Van. . Mobile Homes 935 Mobile Homes '35 S. Hickory, Santa Ana. New tltt1, food motor, $7:>0. l!HO V·8 fhlthead enr ine ~ Sant• Ana Ave, C.M. parts. Starter .$10. Gel'lera-646-6833. l&ASUIA 11/LLl~jf •OllLE llO•E IA E .... ----.~' Announces SAL Their · PRE·DPENING Save $$$ On Our SjMclal Ponderosa Mobile Homes 24689 San 01990 FrHway ·Laguna Hlll1 (714) 130.9110 letwwtl II T1tr1t & L.. Pa l1te4h .......,.-c ..... "-wh1tl1t l•~ttl C.-.t ter $10. alum. ~ads $15, for '66 % T. Ford P .U. All Hry pair. Will trade for 40 Ford d ty equip. New tire• &: brk.s, PU. body parts. 8J6.5672 auto trans., air mnd, R.ltH , Hale?! t9n VW Super Bur.1 .,,'",...,",,....•m_<_•~•~· _~_....,10.,......,,­ eni'lne 1600 cc, Dual por1ed '61 Che:v van camper ~ New he11ds. Under 1000 mi'1. en1. brk1. bait, tltt1. Must $450. Tom: 50-3SS8 or alt 7 MU, !nl.de ok. $495. 645--<1933. ll~':::m:;;'.c.,._::::,,:16::1;:'·~~~.,-~ I "61 Chevy P.U. Lookl like FAC, reblt "63 Buick Special new. Blue, rood !!rem, Runs IUIO tr. n I Rehl! '69 cood. $000. 548-2171 . Chrysler or P 1 y mouth 1-----------11 """""m". ~" NOW'S THE vw 40 HP ~NGINE TIMI! POR ~· GOOD "'"'"" ...... ""' QUICK CASH lr11n~. In <"hAssis, $ 4 O, THROUGH A ~,11-t30:i. OVER STOCKED! 3% Over DEALER INV OICE on any of our BRAND NEW MERCURY MONTEGOS. Coup••, 1edon1, hardlOp$--Oll brand new and p riced to 11tlll To ke Invoice ond odd only 3 '"/•I Get a y•ar end·deal now on ony one of our brand new Monte901. Al JOHNSON & SON LINCOLN CONTIN ENTAL • MARK Ill • MERCURY • COUGAR 2626 HARBOR ILVD., COSTA MESA 540-5630 642-0981 ~~--~-~ "'j - \ " --·--· ... ,_ ·. ~ . '. .. ' ... . . . . .. 968 Autos Wanted 9'8 Autos Wanted 961 Autos, Imported 970 Aut .. , lrnportM 970 Autos, lmpomd 970 Au ... , Imported 970 Autoo, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 ANNIVERSARY •SO Pl!\'TO \V I AUTO Trans SS day. Sc mile. THEODOR E ANNIVERSARY •SO AUTOS WANTED Top doUar tor cl~n used cc-rs. ~f' Andy Bm.,.:n. THEODORE ROBINS FORD L'06() HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA &12...fKiJO WE PAY TOP CASH Jor ll&ed can oi tt\100, juat caU us for tree estimates. GROTH CHEVROLET ROBINS FOR D Se!\ idle ft.ems now! Ask for Sa.leg ?.!an&.aer 2060 HARBOR BLVD. Cail &1.2-56'18 & S<.ve! 182ll Beach Blvd. COSTI. l>fESA 642-0010 Huntington Beach Autos, lmportad 970 A utos, Imported 970 847.6087 KI 9-3331 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SPORTS Car-~pnte cir 7 \Vlll p;iy C"ash-S~ maJ(Jmum 641)...213-t alternoon.s or Shock absorber. Autos, Imported 970 AUDI jJ AUDI 1~LS, 2 Dr, auto I !.ran!, lj,QOO m L Recent rune-up. l'tc. Xlnt C'l"nd I S3~~ By o\l•ner. 962-t.369 or 5-l:>-461k:. I AUSTIN HEALEY lf1BDD AUSTIN HEALEY DATSUN '6' A.H. Spnte, New '70 Datsun W11n Pu'l"lli'1. & brks, motor. . . "' • R xl •c75 Att 6. Rado. Healer, like new, un& • ni, .., . . (792AGI) Sl795. "'"-""· MIRACLE MAZDA '6J AUSTIN Meal~ 3000, Xl nt co"'! Top & tonneau, New th't's' & banery. s 9:. o . Home cw1 the Rot.Ary Ensine !1611-!228. 2150 H&rt»r, Costa MeM 64~5700 BMW '61 Datsun Hardtop LOTUS LOTUS AtmtORIZED SALES &: SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Cout Hwy. Newport Be.acb '66 BMW SEDAN 4 °""'· wi.i .. ..;., •1a<k .,. MERCEDES BENZ 1enor. Aulomatlc, radKI l.-o:==·=-.,..=---4 f'!()('lr. Exet>llent condition. heater. !WEW'256J • MERCEDES BENZ body '- (SS .. 4~1 $8%. $1095 trim puts for pre-19(,() 190 MIRACLE MAZDA HIGHLAND MOTORS ...... '""''""' trunk lid., 2145 Harbor Blvd ttar fendera. 3 doora, IOme M& MG Al.mlORIZED SALES • SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. C.OUt Hwy. Ne-;vport &acti • -1111111 ''M6" -HomP 11! the Rotary Enaine Cosra Mesa &15-5404 chrome, tla.M. v..· 1 n do ~1 zt50 Harbor. Costa t.1esa DOT DATSUN m0\Jld1ngs. bucket Ir n ! 117,. ••ACM (HWY.,., 645 5700 ~all!, door panel!. AU 893-7566 e 537..Ql4 ''FRBUNDBr • OPEN DAILY reason11hle. A liM for --------Aulomolive Excellence AND re at ore r • . '96 -41.2 3 ' '68 MGB GT, Candy Apple 0 Red. Mint condition. SUNDAYS Capistrano Beach. $1950. 496-1A9l 111835 Beach Blvd. """-"""" MGB ..,_.,,., "' ..,..., ROY CARVER, Inc. 1964 Dau.un 1500 Canvutihle. 1967 MGB convt·Lo mi, wi.tt wh.ls. Xlnt cnnd. Whit.I price 2925 Harbor Blvd. 1 yr old ttblt eng. tra.ru & Cnsta il-1esa 546-4444 pain t job. Very &ood cond. 557-8717, 549-2440 e '70 BMV.1-Rtd, sunroof, Asking $900 or be.st offer. MAZDA AM/f-;'1-1, !ci m1. Perfec1 Can 5ee .11! ~2 Palisades (:(lnrl. 67~275. Rd. C.il1 . 11rt 7 pm; or leave. :=,,,,,:::;:;::::;:::==1 •71 Mmda R-100 --=-=====,---I mei;r.ag" 11 1 494-~74, '6~ MERCEDES, nu PORSCHE WE BUY USED Porsches DON BURNS PRESTIGE PORSCHE, AUDI 13631 Harbor Blvd .. G.G. IJUfit S. or G.G, J"r.Ny.J "6-2333 '66 PORSCHE 912, 5 1pd. AM/F'.1\1, 11ett0 tape, ~ •.~r/hlk int. Good rond. $2995. 646-1136 PORSCHE lactory apecialisf, 911-912-336 1e:rv:lce/re p1 ir. Peraonal alt., Ed a a r 5.1&-~3. 1960 PORSCHE $1.'lOO. Orig owner, C&U 675--0132 196.2 PORSCHE 1600 N coupe, clean. Must aeU im· med. Be1t offer. 675-1..570. ROVER e 11169 I.And R.o~r 83. Xlnt cond. Needs tires. S2&'i0 ftrm. Aft 5pm, 646-4903 TOYOTA TOYOTA NEW 71 NU DOWN PAYMENT $69.01 MONTH• 36 moa. Def. pay prioe. Pf84.36 or cash pr l c • $2003.55 incl. Tax • Llc A.P.R. 0l4.M9'. SeriaJ No. 134347. •on approved credJt BUI Maxey Tayota lS88l. BEACH BL. M7~ HUNTINGTON BEACH '71 Toyota WCICJon N,......• f"!lr w111,.11nry. Only 5.COJ mil"~· 1!1."1\0RD! Sl9!ri MIRACLE MAZDA I ll'lme M thfo Rn!ary Eniine 2150 H&rbor, CMta MH& 64>-5700 Anniversary Sale 1971 TOYOTA $Im .aDe.oa LP.IN 9 TOYOTA BMWs are bu ilt to crumple, front and rear, at a controlled rate on impact. This absorbs shock out- side, redu ces chance of passen- ger injury. See us for the free booklet, "33 Re aso ns Why BMW is Better." Or ask for the key. You 'll get the message . TEST DRIVE THE ALL NEW SORGWARD l=~==~~~--1 t1res, reblt eng. Very clean R.ot.a.tyroupe. 4~. Radio. --------·l'68 DATSUN XOO Convert. $3500. '62 Peugeot nbtt He11!er (0SK919l $24!6 BORG\\' ARD LOVERS.'. ;,..spd, r.1ag "'heels. Xlnt trans k clutch $300. 642-'4.f69 MIRACLE MAZDA 1966 Harbor, c.r.f. 646-roo.l f or gale ·51 Isabella _ or conrl , $1400. TI4/631)...2185 aJt or 64,)...1J72. 1969 Toyota Cnrona. 4 dr, 4 128 SEDAN willing to tradt for goOt1 6. lc.~ .• ~,..,ME~"RCE="'o"°E"'S-,1'0=-"'<-<1,-..,-Home nr ~ Rotary Engine '64 Alpine ronvl·58,0CKl m l, spd. rk.h, xln'l cond. $10.50. 10-!pd bike. Need5 water 1970 Datsun plck·UP gedan. Xlnt cond w/new 2150 Harbor. Co~ta Mesa. new paint. o'drlve. Mich·X 1..c64_'-_3_768c.·------I Front Wh eel Drive pump. call hefore Sam or Xlnt oond. Lo miles. tires. $1495. 644-7321 or 64.S.5JOO tires. S485. 67>71ll5 You owe rl 10 :;ourself to 11fr 5pm: 548-6583. ~8-7S92 S3&-4575. ---==~--1963 SUNBEAM Alpine, blk 11.'st drive the new '71 f1;i1 I --'----.C.--.A"P"R"'l'--l ---F;;;;;;E;;R;;RA;;a;;R"l--1 1:::965:;.::::M;•'--,..,-.,.-~-~ms=-.~Xl~nl OPEL w/rf':d interior. Look." & at B.J. Sportscar Cf'nter be· -;-;::;;:;:;-;;:;:;;:;;;;;"';,;;;h;~l ---------I cond. many xtras. S~ial run!! good. $5.'il. 54~1842. iore yau buy any car. •n Capri 2000 11uto. a m/lm, 1u~~ru!lon. Orig owner . • '69 OPEL, auto. $1450. or '66 Sunbeam Tiger, xln't All Models Immediate lo mi's.· Private party . FERRARI MZ-17711 offr.r. 1168-70.27 before 11 or nd Delivery Priced From 837-9696. AUTHORIZED 1--=~~-~~~ I 1111 6. co . ' ~11).19ln $1 495 00 SALES &. SERVICE MERCEDES Benz l!lO SL. 1 ~~-------~~.,.-,.--_,-~--DATSUN Xln'I rond. ;1500, 67l-481.8 STEAL '69 R.allye Kariett 1966 Sunbe11m Alpil"lf', ronv. 7 • :1111! 6 PM . SlOO !>Plow lo book. Lo mi. Wire. whetls. good conrt. Biii Jones' ,63 -s M•-'H, ext:ru. 540-5415 or Ml-3873. Make ofter. 548-W70 AUTHORIZED INTERNATIONAL B I SPORTSCAR CTR '70 DATSUN "'"· ""· ~ "~ TRUCK DEALER , • . • Amlfm. ~take Dir. Pvt rood rond. S9'J5. pry: ;,.ig..s:J.12 cir 64&-8440. 67.>-0477 2925 Ha1·hor Blvd. 2'333 Harbor. Cos!/I 1\ltM TIRED of tha! old tu.rruture! 3100 w. Cout Hwy. MG 540-449 J lt'• ~aUy "'' that lwd1 ___ N_•WJ>Ort~i9Be:"ocl>---J·--------Cosla Mesa to replace. Ju~ watch the! FIAT BAVARIAN MOTOR WORKS ROY CARVER, INC. PORSCHE TOYOTA CLASSIC Porsche '70 TOYOTA Corolla Wagon. '""' TRIUMPH TiiE TRIUMPH VB STAG NOW ON DISPLAY C.Ome In for • test drivel FRITZ WARREN'S SPORT CAR CENTER 710 E. lst St .. S.A. 547-D7M Open daily ~9; clo!M Sunday Omli fW'lliture & rn15ce1la.neous '67 MG'S rdstr. x'lnt cond. li!!!!!!'!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!5!!!'!4!!!644!!'!!!!!44!!!'!'!'!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ ~ columns in thtl Oaaslfied1---------ali x 'tr111 lo mi'1 after 5 pin. ~ Section. 54().3393 Autos, New 980Autos Wanted 968 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 ~F-0.fj Gan.p cluttered! Sell )'(ltlJ' roads1er conver1. Xlnt rond. Radio b new 1 1rf'~. Vtry 67.1-2647 clean. Sl5.'i0. 546-4791 aft 1967 PORSCHr; 912, 5 &pd, ~l""P_M"'. ,,',,''cc',,"'-·_1","_,"·cc-=:c Good ronrt. Sl450. '69 CORONA. 4 dr. ~lirk Call 644-6160 1hlft , A-1 mini. $1 ,250 or '63 PORSCHE S-Xlnt cond. make offtr. 67.1-22.'"i!J. '65 TR4A IRS Am/Fm !tereo radio. wire whl!, tonneau, rac gm w/ h;. int. Btw: ti & 9 Mon·Fri 1\73-9605. '59 TR -l $275 644-1692 6& TR GT 6 fa.stbck R 6 H v..ire-whl. 19000 mi. xlnt rond. OR·34643 --'---------------·-------------------lal~ "Eleph&nm" Wt. .call Dai-ly Pilot Ou&ihed now! RAd io, gd tin!5, new paint . Daily Pilot Want Ads ha~ NEW '71 FIREBIRO NOW ONLY Co"'pl1telv !aclcry equipped wi!I. 111 tk• laalur~• vou '"''II '"'""'· l",ul y • be •9ai11 "'ith ~uo;• •av<n91. IM,.-EOI· ATE DELIVERY !Ser, ::21l87 1l600189l SAVE $484 '68 Wildcat W•"' IUto"'""' f;an• "''•1H>r>, M11oPt ,,_.,,.~ ~ ..... , b·~~-.,. ""~'' ••• to'l<!1•to~·..,Q, Mw"' ""'""°w' ~<>!! "'O~ " •~ I vlllVI r<>1>f IZCA i?6 J $2178 '69 Cougar Autr>mtfll' ''""'"'1"-· ~ 1-•lr>g, "''""'! ,,,.,., lectfl"Y "" UlrMll 11onln9 !Y"l'Z 119! '65 Rambler ~t1rtlo11 Wo9011 ""'""'"'" •·•"''""""o~: •~'10 l ~NT*'· l ~l(y. Oii! $588 '67 Malibu W..•r A Poe••o• mw•' •'.,."""· ~u•oml· I·~ ''~'I"''"'~~ "'"YT •Ot>', •• a .... ft«le• (TZN 6111 '65 Catalina 4 Door A'l'""'!"C ''~"'"'''.'"" w"" MWf' \'••··"" N'W•' tl••>M 40<1 j~, tQrv •" I ~1]~9j( 11101 1 I rNI !>UV ti $588 '67 Buick a.. Sob,. W••I> 1uro ... a•..: '''"'"'•\· •-· l><IWt• llN"ro nq. P!lwt• b•~•e-.. ftc•o•v ~I• (0~""'0"'"0• lft'ldou le.. !UOI' 5001 '63 Ford folrla11• Stetlo11 Wo9on .... 8 U'O"'lt"' '"~"\"'" 1ll'" •~<!lo ~ n•"•' (h ~P I~) ~.'."<On<! Cu "'1 1V $588 '69 Firebird j..JMf'd, ••nn•v t •• <"" ""Ion·"~· 1>11-· 1•~· Ina, """'"' br1•e" "'"VI rw1, Llcen..., !lXI! 3Jtl '69 MGB GT Wlll't W"I ..... tol1. j I~ ''""'"'''"""· rl dlO ' ~e,or l•' 1G>-IO•IJ 1~1G1 On•~ $1888 '69 Grand Prix Woll> "''""I toe end 11• carHll!u;onlnq, fl ~ w f • 1r~•l"9 i nd o ow • r b•8•fl, 1>11-wlridOWlo !YWf C}JI $2598 $1588 $1797 $2388 $3288 '69 Chevrolet C•"'PI'' •-V. wl"' I'll"'· ,, §ttoerl"'I, l•ctorv 11• c"""lhO<ll"ll• ' IPffCI l lNI ®') $2698 '65 RIVIERA Au• ..... 911(, ...,,...., tiff" Ing I. b•t~e$. ••d>O. ~''''' IUVlol JO! $888 '68 Chrysler Newp•rt Cu1tom 1111fl-l~O allov! Cl'l"'tfl•I Full OIJW'll', l•""•u ''"'' FMllM '"'''" ((L?JG• B(tHl.lll) Oorl'r mlu tlllt Ott•. 0 fl!V $2089 '66 Mustang l.ut0"'1!'1' tra~111"lu'O", •ldiO. ~HI ... /T BX otJ) $989 '71 PINTO L.t Tiie• 4,000 Mllff ' IPftd trl n• ... luitlft, ••~Ir> I. l'tM t••. C•J'll CllH O"!Y $2188 TEST DRIVE =~ U1od 990 $2){)0/olfer. 1-"\iller 642·140.l. bugairu glllore.. Autos, Used 990 Autos, U1ed 990 Autos, UHd 990 THE ALL NEW 128 SEDAN Front Wheel Drive Yo1.1 o"''e 11 to your!t!.U to te!I drive the new '71 Fiat 11t B.J. Sportscar Center be. lore you b uy ll/\Y car. GIGANTIC USED CAR CLEARANCE All Models Immediate De livery Pric.d From $1,495.00 Bill Jones' B. J. SPORTSCAR CTR. 293.1 H11rbor. CCl!ita Me.sa 540-4491 '69 Electra Custom '69 Cutlass Convert. 4 Dr. H.T. Full pow1" f1c· torv 1i1. "i11vl roof. AM.FM 1t1•t fl, f 1 "t • r y w1trefl~ 1v1il ellle, !YCL2!'1 $3531 '71 Buick Wagon Auto .• redio, ke•l•f. "owt• 1le1rin9. p1>w1r llr t ke1, t•••" wit+. whit1 roof, {744. A,Y) $1998 '69 Chev. Camaro 'l ~-;;:=cc--;;c=-co---ll Sporl "'•9fl"· VI , 1ulo., '.!., P.I .. f•,lo•'f 1i•, lu99191 r 1c~. th'""'' wh1el1. •''· Fett, 1t1vit 1 "'9'· &It. (Ill· 160) Co11•erl. VI, 1ulo., re.lie, hlltl " JIOW•r 1!11ri119, relly 1pod wk 11l1, lnw, lr>w ..,;Jo· 191, I own1• ''" !~~'1244 ) F ' I A T Tlth1k SN "FRIEDLANDER" 1J7!i0 Ill.CH ILYD. I Hwy. J') ~'.}J.7;.66 • ~7-6824 '69 FIAT 124 SERIES S !f"!td. Low Mileage. Sharp' I ZSX\99\ S11!f.i. $4487 '68 Pontiac GTO $2093 '69 Mercury Cougar 2 Dr. H.T. "'' co•,.i ., pow•• •'•••i119. cii1c "''~''· •ulo .. vi11vl •ool. wh<+• w1ll1. I own1•. !6040FC) $2733 '68 Ford Wagon R.11cl• "'•9""• Auto .• r•dio, h •• , •• , JIOW•• "•••i119 I llreli e1, lec;lotv 1ir, lu99•9• '"'~• I Ct P•"•"9''· "'"' •t· diel Ii•••· CWXG40!d $1995 '68 Electra 2 Dr. H.J. Aulo"'1tic. RI H, pow•• sl•••i"t • br1~•1 • wi...dow1 ·111h, 1ir ,,..,dition;n9, vinvl roo l. !247AG).) $2765 '70 Opel Wagon Aulom1!i• '''"'"';.,;on, ••· !lie , h1.le 1, siow •r ci i1c llr•kfl, lu99•9• racl·, low "';1119,. !145...,SJ l $1995 '70 Le Sabre Custom 1 Dr. H.r. 1u+o..,1ti,, pow11 1+1erln9 I b••k11, 1ir corod •• <uilo"' •inv l roof, f•c;lo"f w4H1n+y t vi i1 1lile. (691· ADY J $3693 '70 Opel GT 4 11111d. ••ili•l l ir11. ••di11. h11t11. 11.l with lil 1c~ ;,.. teri11•. t 1,000 "'i!11. IJ64· l[J) $2682 '70 Olds Toronado MIRACLE MAZDA Hrimf' m 1hf. Rnr.ary En11 ne 2150 H11 rhor. Co~ta Me~ 64~5700 VI , 1ulo,..1tic, •1ci;o, "••'••. J10'"''' ,, ...... ,. p .. -•• br 11~••. f1 clorv 1ir 1onoli· 1;,.11 ;119. !WPSJ97 1 $1695 '69 Le Sabre Custom •69 Skylark 2 Dr. H.J. 1 D•. H,l , "'' tonol ., "ow•• Cu1'""' Full IH'"'''· ftclorv 1i1 '011.l ilio .. <119, •uto,..1 +ic, &u1lo'" vi11vt 11>01. low ,.,;1 1- •••· ~••v •"•'II 1uto"!obil1. C 292AOY! $4187 '69 F 1;it ll.50 Spider, lo mi·~. .1.m/lm rarlio. xln't cood. $1400. ll46-61'i7. "69'-' RED 124 Spyder. lm· mac cond. Couu, lo miles. '69 Buick Wildcat •t_mocc· ". ,_'_,4 4oc'cc"'-o·=,.-~-ll 4 Or. H.T. Aule,..,+:,, raolio. e 1961 fiat·~hlt t n(inr, h11t1•. ., • ..,,, ''''''"' I nrw t\r,s. $150, Ca 11 b11~••· ft••· 1ir, ~•nyt reel, 54;,.....4G,)2 f1c+ ... ,,,, • ..., ,.,,;1, IXlC· --~.-===c---ll 7•tl JAGUAR $2793 '68 JAGUAR •'•••in9 • 11••~•1 • '"'•""'· ... ~;i, w11! ti•••· 1ulo"'1lic. !I SVSJ4 ) $2795 '69 Riviera Full pow1r ind l1c!o,.., ,;, co~dilie1tifl9, vi"yl rool, !'fVl671l $3695 VI, •ulo "'•'''· r1d ie, ~1 1 !1r, JIOwl• 1!eetin9. 1ir (Onol .. vi.,vl roof, power 1nl•11na. ( 11 21114 ) $2487 '69 Buick Le Sabre •6•7-0-1.S--·c--• c u.+o .... D •. M.r. Ai• •• iw1 •• • pe port oupe "0w·· ,, ...... , ' 11··~··· • ..,. '"""'" ''" .... ,. . .. ,, R••' ''•"""'" buv. ~lYZ. ,,.of. 1.,1orv ......... 1., , .. ,a. 0161 IYR0112) $793 $2795 1 owner. XKE 2-+2, •utt1, pwr 11•----------------------------------a:tra. F'actory Air D:lind. 01t, Take small down or Will tin- anoe Pvt. pty .. Call ~1100 01 494-7506 Call Ke!! alt 10 •m. '69 X'KE 2+1 w11tiCk. wht w/blk tnte.ri<lr. Air. l3Dl. ~&-8466. JENSEN JENSEN AUTI-IORIZED SALES .'. SER.VIC! NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach KARMANN GHIA '71 KARMANN GhiA ronv, JmrMculAl#, 7.500 mile1. Grtat pttM'nt !or grad. M3--0769. '61 GlilA. aood cond, trouble frtt, 1t1 mile1, I t1WN!r. Bat IN UICK COSTA :MESA BVICK·OPEL·JA6 VA R 234 f. 17th St., Costa Mesa 548-7765 C!lr fi44-1XM IL-----------.-----------:::;~~::;;::::::::::::;;~..JI ' Autos, Imported 1960 TRIU.\1Pll TR~A w/R&ll \\'ire v.'hf't'lh, nC'1\ ll1"t's, IRS. l'r1vil1t• 11<1.rty. 673·9139. -WV BUSES aasn •OPOPTOPCAMPCR -1"' TEST DRIVE THE ONLY EXCLUSIVE VOLKSWAGEN DEALER £l. THIHI 'BT 'YO~O' VOLKSWAGEN e 19i0 DELUXE V\\' BUS. 1\i\l/F,\] n1dlo. 1rlr h11<·1J . l'of'ats or full -l<'nt;th bc-U . i2L10. 6-l'l-57.11 '!)9 V\V \\'t>stfa!ia ... an1[1\'1', Ai\l/F:'-t-f'.-.:trarlor, Pl'rfl'ct concl. $2700. !lGS-:1-19:;, • ·~1 V\V d~lu,,,; bus, new cng1nl', Trane::,,\, !1rr~. $1100 • 962-3~187 .. ·=57~v~,~,~,-,.-1 ~n1:-.-\'-,.,--1-ro~,,­ lllus1 Srll! :'-1..ikr O!fr•r ' 9'i2-Ji)l2 ll<'W -eoinplr!r \\'1lh {al.'1ory 1('111. La:. &-IIDEO ·~CA MPER-B Er\UTJ~~UL! -Eq11ipped \.\'1111 t"Omp!rT£• Sundial 1nrenor. Lit, VUH- 0:11 , 'lifo ni.;s • VER\' Sl!AR.P • N<'w fll('l~lht· grt'('n l1n1sh • Runs fin<'. S1 , .# 1-607. '6:0 CA.'.\1PER • NICE! N£'w nioss gn'C'l1 l1n1s h • Runs Ilk<' nr11· . .<\wnin;:; 1ncilld('t! • P.Q\!107, Harbour V.W. '6.~ \'\\' llug. Nr_" __ -,-.,-,-,-.~, f"lll:. Au· i.:onrt. Xlril rond, lS7J 1 BEACH BL_ l'i·12--1~3:l S6!l9 01· t)('~ ofr. ~162-Z.136. HUNTrNCl'ON BF.1,Cl l ;-66 V\V Squ;1n•bark. 3'.l.000 '61 VW BU G rn i. E:i.crllrnl r on r1 i l lo n. As kin:;; $12:.0. ;ll8-l!IJO. VIV 19.).S CPE S'.!;tJ, runs .i:ood , pr11,a1c par1~, (J:\JA 8!17\ .i:~J-'.{231. ~~~~ "6'.l \'\V, Xlnl 1·(\nd, Rr1!. R,!;H, s11rk sluf1 , 0Th!'l' xtra,~. '.1.»7~1[11;9, '65 VW Sqbk-Xlnt. UQT1'96) 4 SJK'f.!d. $39S HIGHLAND MOTORS '21·\J Harbor Blvd. Costa !\lrsa 64:'1-.:H()-I '67 V\\1-P.'cw pa int, Pors('he r1111s & AM/Ff\1, Nf'W hr11kP~ f,, shocks. S9:JO. S900/vfr. T1111, 4fl!l-1.?,iJ~! 1 --------~9~70.1 Autos, Imported Autos, Imported 910 '66 vw 4 SfX'f'd. radiu, paint. tTSSli:.!.1 1 $995 n {'II' '70 vw BU S Q pass. Cus t<1n1 pa111', 1\·hitro ,;idc 1\·alls. tl).l:.:'- ASl-1\ $2795 iiiiiiiiii '69 vw F'o.i: lig hts, A!\I. F!\I ra- din. m;i~ l\'hf'rls. 1•10~ I rouf. t Xh:U541 1 $1295 '66 vw BUS Cu.,1nrn paint. r u !<. l ll m •n11·1lur. 11 h1t r s1dr 11all ll!'('~. ITRBO-;~, $1 7 95 Th,.sr 1·ar·s hnvr r,n . .;;sr<I 1hr V\V l fi·p•1i11 t sAr1'IY arid p<'rfnrn1t1 nl·•· 1t'">I 11 i~ J11lly f"ll•'l"kcrl and tlu11·- uui::hl,Y l"f'C11ndi11onrd. \Vr \'.;Uarantrr JOfl' ~ 111a1 IVP'll rf'pnir n1· n ·plac·r a ll ffiill<ll' n1rchaniral parl ~ for .10 d;1 ,·s •it" 1000 tnll.--.~. 11hirhPvcr r·nnll'~ f11·~1 •Enginr • Tr11n~n1is~inn • Fr,,n1 Axlr • near A.~ll' Asscml.)lws • Brak1• Syslcm • Electrica l S,Yslrrn. 445 £. Co11st Highw11v At B•v~ide Drlv• N•wpMt lleath Autos, New 1970 Harbor Blvd. Ccsta M!tll 5119-JOJ\ Ext. 66 or 61 TH E ALL NEW 128 SEDAN Front Wheel Drive You 011•c 11 to y')ursclf to le~! dnvr lhf. n(·11• ''j\ Fia t a t B.J. SJK>r!.s.:ar Cl'nter hc- h)IT :;on buy nny c-.ir. All Models Immediate Delivery Priced From $1 ,495.00 Bill Jones' B. J, SPORTSCAR CTR. 293.; Harbor. Co.~1,1 il1l'sa 540-4491 llDBD ·'68 VW CAMPER- Pop. Top. R K-11. S:.'711() nr n1ukc nffr1'. Con1ple1r 1.1.1th 1rnl. C<lll a/~c-r 6 pin l . 737-611:1. REBLT V\V cng1nrs in Shll:k -Rrpa1rs on ;ill V\\l's & Porschcs. Open C'\"C5 U! 10. 642-3625 01· 548-8667 i\lon lhn1 .Sat 8 lo l(l. 'tG \'\\' ltiUOcc ('n~inc, l"C'bu11T April 1:.r. llul!cy 2 bbl. Pors<"he 1hst. & roil, n1ab \\hcrls. custon1 11;1int, ex· haust & lot~ O[ C'X!1·a~. Rest offer or trade for V\V Bus. 5-18+~)~0. '69.;-cv=w =eu--G - IN THE HARBOR AREA THINKING OF A NEW OR USED VW? Lel Harbour Volkswagen Prove To 'l.'ou 1'hal \Ve Apprecialc \'our Business OVER 100 NEW & USE D VW'S TO CHOOSE FROM. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. BRING YOUR TR ADE. OPEN SUNDAY Harbour Volkswagen ,\11U1orl\l;<'d Voll<sv.·agcn DealC'r 18711 BEACH BLVD. 842-4435 HUNTINGTON BEAC!< "FRIEDLANDER" tU.M laA(lt tHWY. "• 89J..75fi6 • 537-6824 Ann iversary Sale 1971 VOL VO $2998 .Deaitlew QP VOLVO l!J.16 Harbor, C.:.t. 646-9;'.;(I;; "69 Vo!\•o 161 ~-cir So..>dan, Air ronl'!, P/S, PIH. A:'-1/Fi'tl. Auro lrans. nntC'd. glai,,.~. lcaihcr uphols.11'f)'. I 011'f}('r, S~'til.'l or hcoi;I ofr. ·19-1-016.-: Autos, uSea 990 • Monte Curio • • '71 Coupe, Full Powcr. fo-act Air. 11Jl a1.1.•ay wh~I. ~port 11'h('f'!s. etr. • ·1 1 COUpt> •• Turbohydro, Yll ct r\1r. Power, etc, less. than JO() n11!e~. • 'iO Coul){', Turbohydro, }'act Air, Po1V\'.'r, etc., only 10,oOO mill's. Sec <it MacHoward 839-~ or :iJ l-0608 Corner lst & Harbor Autos, lmported--970 Autos, Imported 970 Santa Ana VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN ·~1,i:!.:\,i~.-·~:'.'.; • 'i"! V\V bu~. 7.000 nllll's, i\·lusl s!'.'ll. St1n roor, 1\.\1/F:0.1, ovC'rs!ZI' llrcs. \\"ill takl' rl'a~onab!r offrr. 6-1·1-~12 e V\V 'ti9 BUG -A.\1 /F:'-1, sunroof . Xlnt rond. ~l~JO/olll'r. Pvt p I y. 642--0411. '67 VW BUG nad10. u c;itrr. • speed. BUICK <uQ1m• s11s.i --.=--8-ui-·c-k--.--1 MIRACLE MAZDA • '10 Electra 22J Hardtol) Sl!dan !ln1nr nC !he Rolary Engine e '69 Limlle-d Hardtop Sedan 21:-.0 HaYlx>r, Costa. Mesa • 'fill Electra 22:) Hardtop w '01;lg 1vl1ccl,, dlr. iYXU-673-41~~. 645-5700 Coui>e I 7~il -~13~.J fl11l pncc. CaJJ * YELcc\,0=1~v-·=10~v=w~s-u=c~t •65 VW • '69 Riviera GS Hardtop -l ~)J.ii l·I. i,~ooo 1111lcs Coupe 19(~i V\\I \1'/ull 11t•w 1729 CC ~!l·l·'.i81 I aflPr 6:JO Diamond buTlon & tuck inter. All l1ave f'ac tory Warranty •·;1n1, f>ll IO's. Plc, Pors(·i1c '!ii V\\" SUNROOF .J11 s1 rchuiJt 1500, Holley 2 All have Full Po~·er I r 11~:. Spa r(' whl., & n1orl'. nr.hlt cno::. Low nlilc~, ncii· lwl. l".1rb, PoN>Chc t'Oil & All have F ;_1('t Air, etc. , _ 1~·1.:_fl(l2l_or 67::-2.rng. hrakes $l200. f\62_7606 f!1~1. '7:111kc offrr. Ca 11 Sale PriCt'd , i;:1ij •. 1.:,12 or 847.6253. b • ~" 1 C'flb.. Ill'\\/ MacHoward I J:MAI \I\\' ChaSSI(', 11·1th Iran~. '., V\V 'I a11d lank, llr·rnsN!, Pf'rfcct brakes & batt. Good "!iti V\V dbl cab 1uck11p. New fnr rlnnc hug1;y $ I 2 ~. r ond. siri0. 6·!6-::l.lll. lfiOO l'ngin!'.', soft camping 839-9600 OR 53 1-0608 1.i ... th2.~ 1 ---------~ '"10. pninL 4!!7-2097. Co V\V Bug 'liS. Jm11i11 r nl;11r 1 rncr 1st & Harbor 1t't V\\-L! blu~. b!k 1n1, r.\,h, mim'r. Sl~lflO. :l:i1•1-1p111 1·ail VOLVO Santa Ana "Iii (1 1. 21 .;m n1i. Xlnt ;,1s+:,~,~~r1 1·s 1i•:1-:~l(ll1 '66 Sky lark H.T. (""1111 ~!IM ·•11;...;1»<;. J:l6!i V\V l'A:O.IP \lub1lt". 1;e,1 2 Door. Blue \1·i1h blue int., "b2 BU!i. J3•'!'ff'rl lhroughoul, radi.tl tuP~. s:n oo. ·~1 Vnlvo in ~ood l·ond. V8, air cond., po1ver stl?(!r- S>·r fr• ;1pprrc1a!C', $6.'JO Jinn. 611-~792 I 11 /1'fln1 pl 01•rrhaul. Ne11• Jng. (T0tn241 ~lS-:!~1~1 ;ifl :i:::o. 1 --~~ -_ . p11 1t1t & 11rrs. A~king $-150 or $995 'jfl Hrrf .t \rh11P hu~. ' J);•''· h 1 )fr G-16·5ii IS ·s;; V\\" v._.n rol' hil l<". x1t11 nr,1• 1<t« '· brks s .. :-.hi....,_ ·' ' · · , · HIGHLAND M OT ORS rond. :->:1·11' !ll'('s, rrblt 1600 $2100 or f'qly & TOP V(l!.VO '68 PJSOO. Blaupunkt 21 •15 Harbor Blvd. f'tii::. S1200/.,f 1·. f>i-... ~,206 ;i 19--131 I r;i1t10 Xlnt 1·ond. Original Costa i\lcsa &15-5404 TA:'< tii BU):'.. Sil)O or offer. (j•pf>fl n 11H11nJ.: cond. AM/ F :'ll r,·ult••. hr,1rlf'1-.. 611 -l:iOG 980 l~ LT~\'\\' IJ11t: nrr1!s n11·nrr. Rl1-269l. 1969 SPORT \Vagon 400. a goorl hCt1nf'. ("Iran. $1.01)0. '58 VOLVO, $125 Silver w/woocl, trailer tow- C;i.I! :if! 6 .Yii"-'.11 17 :118-0776 ini; pa.ckagf'. i\lany othC"r Auto,, New 980 Autos, New 980 options. i1300 firm. Pvt par- ty. Ph. 4 In 6 rm. 6-M-SJ:r1. DOWN 011 ,l'f~OVIO Cl!Olf CA5H OR EQUITY IN YOUR PRESENf CAR + l AX l LIC. l!l6& BUICK EJC('.tra 225 ·I rlr. Fiirtory air, Pl~. r~1n. good l'nnd. S21~. 193 Yorkto1vn Lane, C. M , 54~3108. '62 Buick \V 1!dC"11I, J>OW<'r, AIC, Lo n11's, pain! Good cnnd. SJ;iO. 6'1R.-Li1.~ DELIVERS ·6s BUICK Sports \\'at;Oll, 6 pa~s. Clran 8.-good ronrl. ZJ.l&--~36.\ 166-1 Tus1in, COii. CADILLAC ANY* BRAND NEW 1971 CHEVROLET IN STOCK!! gasn TEST DRIVE 392 Cars and Trucks 0-c ••• .., .• i..r..1 ~ .... & '-Y 0. DiKount•d to Sav• You Money! ....... _,'". -'-•ll n .......... ~·-· ···~ ........ ,..,, Cc ........ °"'"' .............. ·-·--· .................... ., .... __ Ntw 1970 C hmolet El c:am;oo $JSO DOWN '79" PER MoNTli ' • C-IM. ...... ~ 1"""' •i.., AM ........... t..A., ~II ·-.... •..U ""-" ......... '""' ~ .. '"""_ .. .,._..... ..... , ..... ..,~,... .• ,..,,.n,•.•""' ~&k. --. ........ ..,,.11 <0<'.•-·---............... _ ·Now 1971 Chenol., Pickup SJSO DOWN ' $7833~:~ ................... "*' SM,.. a..-.... c--o.-.._.. ................... --..--. .... YlrrlT.-,~i......-... ........ -.. ..,.-.,....wo ..... _._,.,,...,__.,..._ -.. -............ ""~·-·-·--...... --........ ONLY"" '$1 SO CUM Olt ~AIU.MTT'CHrYIOLlT tf®"' BUT DOWN PAYM!llT IS 11611IR I ....... • New 1971 Chevrolet Caprice $J50DOWN~ •11300 PER ~ MONTH °'' c_,,;<o (...,,_,Soft.I.., TlotH GS-,~ Air C ........ l""'-~,..s, .. M_,l<, r.-S.....I ... 17t r1S _.,. WWl• SW. 'Woh, AM ...... -... t .4!.. C41 '"JllJ. ... ,.,,.,....,.,.,,.., .............. ,,.,,,...,.,.,,._,._.,,,,n~ ..... >« .,... .... ,,..,... ..... ~"""'-----..., ..... ,.,. 100.~ New 1971 Cfi evrolet Monte Carlo $JSO DOWN '105" PER MONTH ...... c.!• c.. ... c-........ ,.., Jofl.t.., -• ._ ..-Air ~. '"""° M,-M..s., Po-~ ., ... ,I~ wi.;,. Slrl1'9 ?bM, All& P-a....,_.,_. c , .... ,_._ . .1Us• . ... .•. .. ............ .. -....,,, , .. .-............. ,,... .. ~ ........ o--........... -............ u-.. .... ,_ """"'" -... ._ ......... _ New 1971 Chevrolet MaliDa $JSODOWN~ '94" ... . -MONTH •1 lololl•• S!of, c.o .... s.tt-11.., ,,.._. Cl.lo, _.-.., ~ '- 11-101• ........ ,_ Dlool/D,.. ltolloo, J<l·H1 T-.i .. 110, '""'° Hr"'•·M...i.. ,_ $-foot. 111>14 ....... '1'01!. $WI ... Tl•.., Foll ¥1 ... 1 ~ .tM ••-1<•11•, f....t 4 I -.. .,,_ ...... •..k YI"" 1-1• .. :Ju•. , •..-1"" "....,, ..... ---.... ~ ... -....... _l,.,U.7, tlr!, ... l ll<, ~·""""~ .................. -.---··-- W19T'9 LARel9T 91RYICI .... ,. 0,.. s.t. I AM -- MON. 7 A.M. to 9 PM. 1W. flnl ftl 7 A.M. TO S P .M. TH E ALL NEW 128 SEDAN Front Wheel Drive You 011'1" it 1o yourself 1o !!'!ii drivr The new '7J Fiat a t B.J , Spor1scar Cf'nlcr be- fore you huy any car. All Models lmmediat• Delivery P riced F rom $1,495.00 Bill Jones' B. J. SPORTSCAR CTR. 293.l llarOOr. Costa t.lcsa 540-4491 llDliJli Largest Selection OF LUXURIOUS CADILLACS in Orange County 1963 thru 1970's ~~~~ """""""' ....... 2600 HARBOR Bl., COSTA l\tESA 540.9100 Open SUnday BEAUT Cordovan Co u pe D.V. 1969, Jull power. beau t 1tereo, ail xtrns. 40.0CO mi, w/new llres, i;hoc:kli. Way under blt1e book, at S4195 or bst ofr. 547--6469. 69 Eldorado, mint cond, n .ooo mi., t1ew titts. $5,IXXI. <194-7133, <194-7796. CA MARO '69 CAMARO 2 Door. Vinyl tnp, 8 cyl., auto. ~tick &hlll. 11lr<0nd.1 w/w tires. comp. equipped, Very clean. One f1\Vr1Pr. !l.~9777 frJday, June 25, 1971 DAILY PILOT 45 !§JI Autos lot" Sai. l§J I A11101 fot S.11 CALL US NOWll PHONE 557·H20 INSTANT CREDIT YOU NEID AND Still SAYE YOU MDNlT 1.lf yoo ore new in Colilomio 3. If yoo ore new on your job 2. If you owt money on your 4. II you hove lillle or no car ' credit '1r. llT Ml TIT TO l l lAME THE CllDIT AMD TUMS YOU W!ID SO THAT YOU MAY Oriw Home Tacloy rt 1ti. corof )Of.If choice!! $131430 FROM FACT. ,_,_ '""· "'", ''""· '°"" SUG. R[TAIL 11 .. n"lfd•)C i>roll!S, po..-or .... ....1o .. 1. ,...,,~ conli~I "' "'"<h, "'"'~ mor e. Ser. r PRICE DH~ollDl.'OLlOO TOTAL 01scouNn Nr: ~i~s MAKE OFFER! LOW MILEAGE '71 DODGE COLT LARGEST COLT INVENTORY IN !MMEDIATE DE~IYERY ORANGE COUNTY! fotr.<q"'PP~d GHt\Klil0\390 BRAND NEW $1974 FULL PRICE NO DEALERS PLEASE! '71 DART DEMON FULL FACT. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY EQUIPPED E:Jii' · FULL SPO RTS COUPE $2198°0 -o --""' PRICE Ser.# ll29B IE120175 I 194" ••••I d• •I'"' 1 •~ '' '""' "" ~y·• • ' ••, II • .,,. i •" ,,,.., •1 ,,.9.,..,r-1 .... , . ..i,,..,.,.,. i ... n.» •• ,,.,,,.n .. 111u .. ,,., PRICE &i.. ... ,, .i••UU,UCINTlGl•AH 11 10'. '70 PLY. Roadrunner 2Dr.HT.V8, """·· '°"" ""' 1898°0 m~. ro;l1a t liMter, $ b.ic•tl le!l!I. air fUU W/S/W IJOAfY PR•{! '69 BARRACUDA v.a oula IMn\., '"" """''· $1198°0 •o~·~. hf'(l!tr, wh" 1ew~ll" fULL BH?~f~B I 77JSQ PRKI 1 Or. HT O~!O, 1ron1.,rod•o, he!lle•, but ke! Slnl!, ten- so le. 8•g V/8 xs1qL9S?4561 Q '69 TOYOTA 1~----~l§l l:;;;--·--~l§Jii;;;;i.-. I ........... l§J I ---1§1,.__I _-_--__,!§]I A"'°" Utod 990 Autos, Used '90 1--C-A_DIUA_...,..,...C,,---1 CHEVROLET . CHEVROLET CORYAIR '69 Coclllac '69 Chevrolet Vacation n-1"" CORVA1R M-- C . " e r tib~. Smooth-5hif~ c-DeY"... apnce '6' Chevrolet Spon Von ... ....,, .vw ,. • ...,,. "'"" F\ll ~. Tact Air, door Top o( ow liDt> Hardtop V.S, Turbo llydro, wtndcrws, weY _ ~ on freeway. ~.Lindau Top, AM/FM roupe with 350 v.1, Turbo set1.ts, tlc, looks A drivts Gf!u 25 ml'" per gallon. """"" Hydro, Powft" Stetting, like new, sJOO or best oUu. Call BiH '69 Dart Conv. VS. Low mlleg. (YQB632J llim MIRACLE MAZDA Radio. ~c. 29,tn> miie car .,_._,,, ~-"-, Landau $2595 wtth tact warnnty. Sale °'"-' .. ..,, nu Schrriber alm-S:Jl p.m. Home r.t !he Rotary Engine """" ,, Top. •IC. -MacHoward ",.!123-449;. 2150 '""""'· c.,,. M ... ........ _ l§J I !§] .__I _ ..... _ ... -____.! ... ~-11 .......... l§J "° -.u...i "° UN COLN MUSTAN~.l- '69 Ford Ranchero •71 Uncola ·69 Musta:n& 1uct...ck-4 'Pd. Cragar megl. dW brakn, C _.. __ __, ALltomatic, ~ Slttring, vntNr..-.... lo mi, Xlnt awld. Best ofter V8. Landl.11 Top, Tonneau Popular 0..UPt with all the owr SIJOO. MM1 • e 11 • cover, extra nice. eJl"tras. nt"W Micl:icl!n X il&-48111 t>ves & wknd~. onty $229S tirn, awtul n1«. Now ody r·,~"'7=~ .. ~u~sr=•~N~G~~..,.~ ... -,-•. ·• Mac. Howard $6295 "•ck """ rop. AM1r.~. $4595 -·· CORVEllE '4S-S7oo Ma &19-9600 °" 531-0608 THEODORE MacHoward cHoward Com" "' • """'°' rANTAsnc 0 .,, ,63 r .r. FORD ROBINS FORD MacH a i r , 4-spd . AM : BJ9.9600 OR 531-Oward =2512; .it <pm Cornerlst& Harbor &J9..9600 or 5.ll~r ~------~--t Santa Ana Corner lst &. llarbor '69 l\fUSTANG, i:rv..·cr disc SJ9-96Q) or a,JJ .()61)1 139-'600 OR 531-0608 Sama Ana sK!e e:di.ausl, mags, lndys, 2060 Harbor Blvd. Comrr I.st &-J-la.rbor C:lmtt 1st & Harbor ONF: O"'NER! 'j6 CllEV. over $4000 invnte<f. Must '63 GAL.AXIE, 4 dr. hdtp. Cost.a Mesa 642-00ID '&I FALCON ~lARD'l'OP. Santa. Ana brakes, AJr-rond, ~ux in. tenOI', Vinyl rop. Peritct cond. 7 14 /)47 -9 1511, TI4/G7l-lm. c-~n •~ Ana Santa Ana Needs 5<>IM work. Body in !lell $1295.. 645--368'.) o r PIS. P/B, R&H, lo mi'a. , •• F'O Jkaut1fu1 yellow, a ir con. ""' -excellent condition. $200. 9283 $~25. &12-n55. "" RD i,.i Ion pick-up, dltioning, new "''El V8" '67 4 DP. CONTINENTAL XI.NT COND, BSJ' OrR. 644-6484, 644-2912 l!lii FLEET\\'OOP . Very '64 IMPALA SS 6.18-5670. _,_ ... __ ·------~ V-8. 3 .sp., body, motor, engine. New au to ma 1 1 c good r unning rond. Call \18, automaric, air cond., r~~=--~-~-=ol"64 Velie <'i>e-~M ()rig mi 1968 FORD W.1gon cune>m tirea good condition, $300. transmiuion, new tin'!, lall Bill, fronl 7 to !i •I poWtt ~tttring, hrll~. win-1963 Chevrolet, less than 300 300 bp, Hpd, A;"\SIFM, Squire. Original 0 w n er, 846-1295. with warraniy) maint.a.intod 7ll/"34~708. dow1, llntr'd g.la5S. IOYM· ~i:1 on eng, Jaed ~..'... 1std map. ~fint cord. Sl.650. _l7t7!l~S·~'"'7";.='~·"',.--=-~=c lv"AN=-:o'6"""J=ro-m-,-, ~.~.~,-. -4-,-pd by auto dealer ror hi!; wife. 6Wl iMJI t. Watt 1~~ ... i:' l~ffi.~~31=1=1.=o--=--;-;cc---:-_,'7 I '6-t Ford Fairlane 2-dr HT, hydro, hi per1orrn. Ouh or Phone 60-!M05 &!k Jor 'ai Lincoln Cont ~ lo mi MUSTANG '69, llJ2 e111. l ong owner. fmrnac,' loaded baJTt'I carb. °'"" brks, Ja C't \\'/xtras. 642-4174. air. r&h, snx>. 830 14da .it, CHEVROLET $195 motorcyc e. 4 '64 VE1TE, Re-Hdtop t spd, 289 eng, vinyl lop, Orig trade for VW. Dan 67S-0106 C $.'iOCi MERCURY H.B. 5.J>-2777. 1961 MUSTANG • Air o..-ond, ----------• auto, Pl~. Green. Ptt-fect HIGHLAND MOTORS COMET new bra.kei & trans. $1200. O\\'llCr. $5:xt. 968-6358. Call before 3 pm. aseyl!S.! G.ALAXIE 21-15 Harbor Bl\'d. Costa MeM. 6-15-5404 ",;'.:;:;;,.-;:::::;:::;-;-.:::;--;:;;; 1· ~.....,~~71~.=~~'""'o---l 'j7 Ford Sta \Vag Ne1\' 4 spd '69 Galaxie JOO 2--dr HT. Full 4 dr, P /steering, P/brakes, GOING oversee.1.1\.IW>I sell COUGAR fran~. xln'I cmKI. SD). Call pwr, a ir. Xlnt rond. Ku Air oood. Radio, heater. '69 IMPALA H.T. '62 M•rcury M.teCK" rond. sum. 6T>-41l1 1. Door Sedan. VI. auto., ra-19ai MUSTANG Fa~badr: V~ "Iii El cam1no • 317 cu in, sharp '66 0Jml.'I, whitP 536-3786 aft 6 pm. tln's. $2200, Pvt Pt y, Body & intenor in good con+ Fact ,,ir, lo\\' n1i., Loaded, 4-spcl, Black leather in-w/blk lop, good t1re11. xlnt '62 ford Comet. 2 dr. HT.. 968--Z'l83. dition. $300 or bttt aUer. ruo, heater. tQUB40t> s. t spd xlnt mnr:1rnon. Cail $295 all 3 p~. 342-5439. dir., Take small do.,.,·n or terior. Pis. P /b, American concL $650. Call 675-:1.117 '69 Cougar gold XR.7. 151-fV, Nice lookin". Like new tin!I c.1968=-F=.~,-,1-.,,.,--500=,-,-8-3-.,-1 549-0114 u.de. Call 540-3100 or magi. $1000. Day1: 642-4546, '6.1 COME"T. Good engine. P /B, PIS, P""T wndwa. air. S3JO, 642~9427 GT, 4-spd, 411 post, ~'<'· =-==-o=c--;;c--,., 04-f;llG. £v('.~: 548-803~ ""Go to work car"' $100 auro trans. Xlnt rond. sz;:oo. ,.,,.. '62 Ford Hdtp; Sharp A·l HIGHLAND MOTORS .,,o MUSfANG.vs •• . 2145 Harbor Blvd "" 1 . ' au .... , pY.r C ta M "'~"' ::o•n• Mttnng. $800 or" bsl otr. C>S esa ~ Call Cindy ~221 an 4 • knd 1963 Country Squire Wrn, $u,,5/ofr. 6·12-5107 mech, 390 auto. Trade lur '64 Dodge Dart $45() or offer. 1967 en<>inf' in a 1955 or Best offer 642--3471 6Tr3193 eves W l! . . & . 1 Ori ·~ atr. new tires · pain . g '67 LTD 2-dr, vinyl top. 1 P U equal value or cuh a..11 5'16-7360, Ext. 81 afl Chevrolet, I owner. Good CONTINENTAL 1969 COUGAR. Vinyl top. o1vncr. $450. 962-5116 t'l\vncr. Xlnt cond. All ex· s4o.-.iri19 . Jo.PM call 64:Z.8192. mecha nical cond. 4 Auto. P IS. New til"e'll/ s·~ E l "C=-oc~=;o;-=-o~- '68 WAGON Col Pk-Air, tape '6.) MUSTANG l spd VS .. de<'k, full p1vr. Pert cond. ce1' $600 • • • ex 892.--9863 or 89&--3051 work. · · 5'19-36e6 lt~!ll!Z~~Qi=E~VY~~N~O~V~A~·Ro°"'b~lt I spE>akel"!i. radio. pr i cc 1---"'.".00'."',,.-"::"..,,.--, I shockl!. Low mi. Must Seil, '65 FORD wgn-Be!it oUa. tra.11. .......... Yell -tM-7081 19&1 GALA.XIE ;,oo, 2 door, ... ,_. .... ,. -""·--'because top dcn!s. 1966 LINCOLN Continental. 626--1310. Final1<'ing ~n be arranged. '11 FORDS: Ga la xi e s , V-8 engine, $.'IOO. MUSTANG '6.i ~lUST <'Onv1--Lt blue, .,----------! r&h. atKo trans, td tire,.. 1966 Mustang, 6 cyl. ~w Orig mmeT' $100. 546-5158. ellllCiDe • "'"" paun, .,., :i. 1'-VU<..~ •=-~ '''' ~.• ~~ 545--5027 RfH, air, full power. Runs .,.._..... .... · Mullfangl, & Torlnos. Hertz 842·2'197 , ~-'°"~==~~--~--r ~=e7.=c-;o-::::;--:;c:c-;: I "'WEED It & ~ap" .. clean Co-. l1lt) 772-05.i:l. I ,,;o--==--~----'• '"51 CH l-:V Bel A.1r. Ne\\' e '69 NOVA 6 cyl, stick. Lo gd. $1000. Pvt ply. 644-6481. out !be treasures & trash -'70 1\1AVERJCK-Auto, de.luxe ... '61 1-'0RD Econoline van, - Ill • b _,.__ mi. Xlnt ooOO. Make ofier. F ast rewltl are i·ust a phone turn into cub thnl a Daily trim. $2000. A good want ad ill a gcod panelled, carpe1ed, p I us • mu eT" rcuu::~. Ca 536 M83 V-.. !).1g....6995, ~7--«162 call away. 642-567S Pllot Oassified ad. 60-5618 ll • Investment xtras, Call 496-7718. pa;m, RJH, Marl< JV "'· OLDSMOllLE excel cone!. 545-5347. 1.,:;..c.-_c,~~---.=l·A"utos,.,----.U"sed.,..----,.990;;;; 'Autos, Used 990 Autos, u.... 990 Autos, Used '90 Autos, IJMd 990 Autos, IJMd DIFFE I • ~OU CAN .BUY THE SAME LOAF. OF BREAD IN ANY GROCERY ~TORE -BUT!!! YOU CAN'T BUY THE SAME DEALER OR THE SAME . USED CAR AT ANY AUTOMOBILE STORE IN THE WORLD - so WHY DON'T YOU! BUY WHERE THE SHARP CARS ARE BUY WHERE THE 100% WARRANTY 990 Autos, UMd IFOR JO DAYS IOTH PARTS AND LAIORI CARS ARI BUY WHERE YOU ARE TREATED LIKE A CUSTOMER IEFORE AND Al'TER SALE COME SEE! . ' ' 1971 Vega Coupe i 10,000 ..,ii••· 1hcwroom fr•1li, • r•die, •11lom•tic, •d••io• mo1a'· :i ... ll7'4826J ' ' ' , $2395 1971 Monte Carlo f Vi11yl ,.,of, po"'•' 1le•ri..,, •ulc j r ... io, pow•• b<•k• .. •ir. N.,, 1MW0 j 1,000 C.•r•f1tl ,.,a.,, :s.Y •. . IOSI CEO I . $3699 1970 Nova · 6 cyl.. ••'"· '''"'·· ~·· •'••" i'"t· Su•t t nic.e ~••-l l l lAUUl $2399 1970 Monte Carlo 5,500 011• cw,.., mite1. G•t thi1 f.c.tc1y w•rr•11fv up fc 50,00( mil t1. Go•9•ou1 ,,i11yl 1oof, ,;,, pow•r 1l•••in9, pow•r br •k•i. ••dio, •ulc. !IJ?BEl'I $3499 1970 Impala SPOIT COUPI W•rr•nfv from Ch•Yrol tl, auto .. po,..•r 1l•••in9, r•dio. ,.;,. - ,,,,,;,., ltr9 t i11, !O S lASV~ $2850 1970 Malibu 1970 Impala Wagon ' P•"·· f ,000 c.•1eful ,..;1.,, •ulo .. redio. pc ... •r 1l••ri119. L+ke n•w. l665CCLI $3399 1969 Impala CU~TOM COUPI ~i9hl mil••· l•clory wt r••nty, t i<. t ufo., pcw•r •'••rin9, rtdio, U11u1ut l 1t•r. !Y~lll l~) $2399 1969 Noya Coupe '4 llll ocr ......... •inyl roof, tulc.. \'-I, P"''"''' •'••rinci , t ulo. fr•n1. pow t r •'••ring, •ir. lcw !cw Lew "'iletq•. t ZNV969) ........ c 11oaox1 $3099 $2099 1969 Mafibu Coupe 1 Or. H•rcltcp, pow•r 1tt •rin9, r•dio, •uto. tt•n•. Specit l tlli1 W••k•nd. !YCMOt.t.l $1899 1969 Impala Sedan .C door, rt dic, •ulc., P"''"''' 1l••ring, •ir. WOW! No mi1t1kt in lhe pri11:1. $1999 1968 Chevy Sedan .C Dr. I owll••-Now tor •••d• ;,., pow •• 1le•ri11q, r1dic, 1uto., .;,. IWVRIC91 $1499 1968 CaprW:e llht bo1t 011•) '4 door h•rdlop 1M•11, ~inyl roof, •ir, r1dio. po .... t r 1f•erin9, .;,, Ch • Ip. IXEWlll I $1799 1968 Camaro Coupe R1dio, pow•• 1l1•ri119, •ulo. Nie•"'''· R.1r gcod iuy. IZOU- 054 ) $1699 1967 Mafibu Coupe 2 a'oo• ~ •• dtGp, ••diG, •ijfc .• po ... •r •••••in,, Yi nyl rcof, I c:•r•ful ow"•'· lVOTOll.71 $1399 1966 Impala SUPll SPORT COUPI ~1dio, power 1t••rin9, •ulo., ,:,, Ni~~. Nit t, buc.k•ll, con· 1ole. ISVZSl.C J $1399 1966 Caprice Wagon • P.u . 1ulo .. pow•• 1l1••in9, r1d ic. Wc,.'t ltol, $999 1965 Corvette fAJTIACll'. COUl'E c ••• ,.,1 111•. 4 sp•ed, )17 "·•, .AM /FM rtdio. N•w fl'lo ondu•I blue itclcr. S11r• h111d1cm• •nd • t t 1I 9cod en•. (WIOSS'l l $1899 1969 Ford Cobra Jet La, .... n.cl N•w. Cc11p•, •fr. pow•r 1l••rin9, r1dio, •ul•., I own er, lcw mil••9•, lik1 br•nd n•w. !ltlAKTI tt,000 ml~ !Low bcok prii<•) $2075 1966 Buick LeSabre 4 1111 .. H.T.. •u•c., r.s .. ,.c:1;., t ir itond. St.0119 "'''· IS IR77•1 $1199 1968 Buick SKYLARK COU"I H•ra'top. '<inyl r•cl, po,..•r 1l•••i .. 9, t ir, •••I 1h •rp, I .,,..,. • ••. r•m•inifl9 Wt ,.•Rfy )6,000 mile•. I VT PCM 21 $2299 '" '69 Olck111obRe 98 Holiclmy coupe, f'ul.J Power fact Air, xtn. n~. low ink.. and factory ...... nmty. only $»9S MacHoward 839-9600 O!' 531·!&1 COI"Jlf'r 1st & Harbor S.... Ana I!J66 CKdl Oi.da.s&, V I , Original o\\·ner. &auty! Tip top mnd. 5'-e i i, drive It. Private pry. M"S--O'i69 . '6& TORDNA.00, like oew, $2Zi0. ~ tr.de *"" lallt 8\0-- del pid: op. 496--3513 '61 Okill M, fib-trdtp, Jo . m.i'1, New tires, Air, f'll-'fl""er, Mu!lll adl, ~ml. 19i0 Cu!lass Supreme-Au k>, a ir, p1\T, stereo. Lo mi $3IXXI. Owner 531Hi697 ~tOVJNG m Ha111a 1i, 1961 Old& l...&at. .edan. power. air, lo milez, Ex. con:!. '"-&Q9 PLYMOUTH -. ..,. "70 CUDA-Unemployed, n1usl selL 340, 4-lpd. can &n-6241 '66 VALIANT, aalD r/h, ttr-w tires, lo mile!!, $1195, a3l6 VW. Udo, A.pl I. Joi A 'fil FURY IU, 4 er hdtp, JHs. p1n, tttc ar, n.$1(). 531-7788 a.ll 6 v.·k ~L PONTIAC 'll GTO Rana Alr, Hpced, Firuto.Cll' \l.'ide oYals. lhazit-d llAa<'k'. Sacrificoir! $90 k iMe over pa~ if6-4665 alter :. &wlll*1t:a1a. '&t BOJIOlEVILLE, Am·Fm. alr/oorid, a.ll power, 01ic ow~. R nHles. Xlm cond. mi. >ti--73711. 1964 ILIL\NS: Bue l eatJ.. eonm»e. au.1n,. VS, p/s. Neill' perf. e5-56TJ. • PONTIAC Vi cro. ·1--spd. p/1, I 01\"fltt. ae-_ ~JJ7l. m.5113 '86 Gro. Tape dPdt, 4-~pd. JJl!'W brakes. Xln1 rond.. De.5p!!nlie-! SYE. ~J.i -:::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ .... ~~~~~~~ .... ~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~1 ·6!1G10~4...-..ypry j, VERY ::!.~SDIDm but V A N, s '70 TE:'-TPEST «IQ T-37 I 3-speed, lift llnl'. Sacrd.ior RARE S213J. «H-lll34 . '69 l'IR.EB:aw, .au-. PIS. TRUCKS '69 GMC 1/1 TON '6' CHEVY '!1 TON • P.U. Radio, r.s .. llUIO. (9()0. 8' :iilepsid" P.U. Air. vs. p s . · 29f') radio, suto. IP".1171 • . • $2699 :-,-,---,-,----. • ' • 'H CHEVY ¥• TON ~I qJ.. stick, radio, • equlpprd. ( 11686D} Hll. $2399 ·~~------·; . ' I 'H E1 CAMINO ~ st.eerini:. radio, auto., a ral sharp dude, ( 4cat:9E) $2499 $2599 '61 CHEVY ¥, TON P.U. VS, ati<:k. H.D .. beauty. Camper spec. {11928C) $2399 '61 CHEVY '11 TON Cust. 1port !ruck, V8 . auto- matk. l 01\•ner new car trade. (16106C l $1899 '67 CHEVY ¥• TON r .u. Radio, VS. slick. Good !ruck. ( U582501 $1799 '67 CHEVY 1/1 TON P.U. VS, s.tick.. new color. (V947801 $1699 '64 CHIVY l/1 TON P.U. 6 cylinder, at1ck. l P83· ""') $1099 CAR "LITTLE OLE LADY - Wt CAN PIOYI IT." 1964 CHEVROLET • IM,AU. J llt H.T. COUl'L ONE OWNER, IM· l'ICCAIU CARI, RADIO, POWD STEUING, A 11 COND. ILUE CAI, llUE IN- TDIOI. AISOLUTELY Oll51NAL. 4%.000 MILi CAI. MUSEUM PllCI IEAL-______________________ .. LT. IOWU460l 'H DODIOI 90" W.L 'la Ion. VS, r11.dio, auto .• air • {P2421 I $2499 '6' ~D 'CONOllNE 108" \VB Van. Radio. VS, stick. CP24201 • $2299 '69 CHEVY 1/1 TON 90" WB 6 cylinder, aticlt van. (1':2'°61 $2199 '68 CHEVY 1/1 TON 11'8" \VB Van.. Radio, 11ulo., 111r. perfe ct to r floriJL tP24381 $2299 '6' CHEVY lN" YAN 6 cylinder, stick. beauty. lP2-137 I $2299 '69 Y.W. CAMPER ln nC'w ca1· condlUon. Cnok, slet~Jro to ivork-nlCO' v&· cation. ~ fi~t. fZKz.166) $2899 ''6 JEEP WAGONm 4 wtwf'I drivr 4 door, radio, 6 cyL ( Rr.z688 1 $1799 .illW traJ:l1. 1 Cl 'Ill' a e t . 8U-06B &ti ' 11."kd.lyi;. '68 PONTit.C U-:\111.m, KM <'Olld. Full}' eqiiipped. $1Jti. Call 6ll--0113. '01 PONTlAC ~ • Cl('ari, "1 mi. ] -'ft!I". )o... cal. $11:it. fir;i.4:Ifa, '67 DOKI 1/a TON YAN llc.68'°'r;;;IREB1RD"",;;;;~4111,;;;:"to11.,,-,,....--./ V8, a utomait1<', clf'an fll9-- "5A) $1899 '67 CHEY. 'I> TON YAN f'M'le rll{bt one. I 6 cyl., auto. tl"Wl&., :1harr. (\f986MJ $1699 lo mi's, De"llll' tirw., ~'t cond. SJ Iii. .ili-UlO. RAMBLER '6.1 RA.\TBl.ER &ta wgn -V(. nt'w ria.int. ~ ~'""" t1on. Jo'nr m " ch a Di c 11 l J f inclined ~ -nrrrls mi n o r •orll . 1 2 2:.. 2131592-57~. 1957 T-BZRD, q awnr,. $600. Sprcia1 ~ pai 50.000 orig mi. ~ em!.. S219a. &~2 -,•T tl , 6T.>-T409. P.tr. 111~ ':lfi T-BIRO Classic. ~ cond. port balu. cant tit. pown-~ $D)(). 6T.>-511i8. 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 546-120 '6:l T·BIRD. hil ,.._.-, •irl cond. $1'00. C.D~ '35 T-BIRD. Nr* ..-It.. $700 or otltt. 673-ll«lor~ '50 T-BllU> SEU. OR. T?lAOE! 548-850& •W:a -. I ' ' NEW MANAGERS' ii"'-EXAMPLE SAVINGS!--------.. Daluxe belts, tinted win dows, vinyl roof, air, rem of e mirror, console, disc brakes turbo, pow er steering, whae! disc, white tires, re dio, pa in t stripe, visor van- ity mirror, bucket seats. Serial •342571Zl242b (212426) NEW '71 CUTLASS SUPREME HARD TOP COUPE WINDOW STKR. $4781 SALE PRICE $3968 DISCOUNT -EXAMPLE SAVINGS!--- NEW 1971 98 LUXURY SEDAN Cruise control, comforfron, all tinted windows, white tires, til t & teles cope whe•I, stereo ra dio, power trunk lid, chrome door moldin gs, power doo r locks, b-way seat, "inyl roof, divided front se at, visor "en• ity mi rror, electric clock, power steering, d isc br<!!kes, re mote mirror, power windows. !M~8S095l CAMPER SALE! '71 KING OF ROAD 8 FOOT t '11h 1.1 Pr camrwr. 1tove. r"fri g, sid!! dinr1 tr, 11·ill t it 1,:, ton J'lickup. Pric" indic.att'd eood \\'ith truck purcha~" only. •6 •'71 LIL KING CAB OVER 8 foot. ~1de dint>lll'. BlPrps four, s\f)\·e. refn~. Solirl 11·alls v.ith 11vn<·adn trim. J'1·ir~ indicated good 11.dU1 truck p11rch11sr onl y.• 19 $795 "71 AN1i!LU5 9'1> FOOT CAB OVER $1495 Slrr>p~ fi-To1 lr>t rnnm, Du~ I .11'1'.~ls .. 40 g11llon 11·1111'1' tank.s. scrP"n dl)t'lr. Prire indicated good \.•;ith trurk purchfl~I' only. #22 . •'71 ANGELUS 81/1 FOOT Cab rivr1· rampcr, stovP, rcfri~rrator, slrcps six. Dual light .... .sidP dinet!P. Price indicated good 11.:ith truck purrha.se only. '*'71 AMERIGO 11 FOOT SIDE DOOR $2295 Sky lic ht, tnilrt room. s lovr & oven. All ji~. glass roof. stainless sterl d oublt' !ink. louv"rE'd v.·indoll'S. Price indicated good v.·\th truck purchase only. MANY MORE IN STOCK l • WINDOW STKR. $6830 SALE PRICE $5430 OVER 120 NEW '71 OLDSMOBILES & GMC TRUCKS DISCOUNTED DURING THIS ALL-OUT SALE $ l' mo11th1 011 opproved credit. lotol ca1h price lncl11dl119 101.s tax a11d 1971 llc ... w fff S1599.72. Def•f1'•d pav,..ent ptk• Including 101, 1lc•n1111 and fi11ane11 chorg.s Sl89J.44. ANNUAi. ,ERCENTAGE RATE 11.91 •/e. BIG SELECTION COLORS VISIT OUR BIG NEW AND USED TRUCK CENTER! NEW '71 HONDA $200 47°!. CASH OR TRADE DOWN 36 MONTHS • the truck people from General Motors From Li9ht Pickups to Heavy Duty Custom Ri9s • OUR TRUCK EXPERTS CAN SERVE YOU BEST • I 1971 GMC % TON CAMPER SPECIAL Tinl•cl 9l•ii -Cuilom Sport true~ with lrilft 11'1ou!din9i, c1lftp1f ,..;, .. ,,,, H.0. S~<>~k , -H.D. Sprin91, S1~bili1e r -bl All'lp. Gin. Aul<>. Tr•n1., P<>wer 5leerin9, Pow1t Oi1c 8r•kt1, 750~11> 8 ply rt•I live c1mp1r truck. Will !.endl1 th1 b;99•1I 1lid1 in Cllftp1r, 1plit rilft1. Aux. btH••Y -Cemp1r Wi1in9 -R•d io, Ht•l11, A Powtr•d bv 2SO hp. -350 V8. Serio! 11209' Fr iday, Junt 25, l97l DAJL V PILOT . Our new man19e~nt team in· vites you to come in and see the ex-citing ehan9es that have been made at University Olds .. mobile. SAVE •xtra CJollars on the new or used car or truck of your choice dur .. ing this all-out "get acquai nted" SALE! 1968 PONTIAC TEMPEST Automatic transmission, overhead cam six with radio. (XEV 375) 1964 CHEVROLET WAGON 6 cylinder, automatic transmission, A $595 good looking good running Bel Air wag· on. ( ONH 5961 1967 OLDS CUTLASS V8, automatic, factory air, power stet.,.· $119 5. ing & brakes. Sharp red w/white v inyl inter. (178 ASN ) 1969 FORD GALAXIE 500 V8, auto., power steering & b rakes, A $19 9 5 'eally clean 2 doo' hudtop. (XXC 641 ). 1968 TOYOTA CUSTOM CROWN $1495 6 cyllnder, 4 speed, f11c.tory air cond. Toyota's best station wagon, • 1967 FORD CUSTOM 4-DOOR VS, automatic, factory air, power steer .. Ing. Nice clean custom 500 4 Door sedan. (651 BEJ) 1967 CHEVROLET 2·DOOR V8, automatic, factory air, A really good transportation car. (UVD 214) 1970 OLDS 88 2-DR. H.T: VS, automatic, factory air, power steer- ing & disc brakes. A sharp SS pr iced right and ready to go. (752 ASH) 1969 OLDS DELTA 88 V8 , automatic, power stearlng & brakes. Beautiful gold custom cpe . with vinyl ,oof. (XXK 1941 1963 OLDS F-85 VS , automatic transmission. Good trans- partation with this station wagon. (OJW- 5021 $895 1964 RAMBLER CLASSIC 770 V8, automatic, power steering & brakes. Good cheap fransportation in a station wagon, (OMJ 981 ) 1969 MERCURY WAGON Custom. V8, auto., factory air, power steering & brakes. A beautiful plumb colored wagon. Extra clean. (ICU 231). $295 l " i ' ' ! ( ' ' • i ·! l ;! ' • . OAll.Y PILOT Frlclif, ~nt 23, 1971 TiwIE ·e ~ Tim. M•&:lne THIODORI Quallty l1r 1081NS Sil. Aword t.r 1 t71 NEW 1971 FORD f · 100 STYLESIDE PICKUP · Cu1tom. VI, t•n9•r pM9., •mp & oil 9au9•1, tool box, crui1om•tic, opt. vacuum boo1ter, AM -FM st•r•o t•dio, power steering, G78 x 15 tire1. 1065 1) Wl~w Stick.,. $4850.JO Anni•.,._., Prlco $3896.70 50 YEARS OF SRVICE TO ORANGE COUNTY UNDER SAME OWNERSHIP. ~ I~H ~~~~'~"~·~"YI SAVE '95310 THIS WEEK ONLY IUND NIW SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT top, power sle1rin9, disc brakes, windows, 1eet, pwr, door locks, auto. temp. con· trol, AM-FM stereo, d lx. wheel covers, etc, ! 128708 J .14561 FREE 50 GAL. GAS TOO! 1971 TORINOS DISCOUNTS ON ALL TRUCKS DIAGNOSTIC CENTER GOODYEAR TIRE CENTER SERVICE DEPARTMENT PARTS DEPARTMENT BODY SHOP • RENTAL LEASING ON EVERY NEW & USED CAR & TRUCK FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS t""~ . 50 GALLONS \' FREE GAS W-Stkr. $6041. Ann lv•ruiry Prlc• $4ff0.50 SAVE '115010 50 GALLONS OF FREE GAS O'fer' ~.5 Big Fords Are • Discounted f>EMONSTRA TOR SALE! -STATION W-S LIZ I 1-llS- TORINOs-MUSTANGS-RANCHEROS HARDTOPS -SEDANS -GT's $500VER 'r;.v~lf1y ON AN.Y TORINO Jn OUR BIG STOCK .BE\ .. SURE TO GET YOUR 50 ' .· (JAliLONS OF .FREE GAS. : BRAND Nl!'W l971 MUSTANG MACH I .C29 R1rn eir •nq ., Sport ln+e•. Grp., C ru i1t'l• rnelic, Cenv. Grp.. P.S., Pwr. Oi1t Br~1., t ill w~1 •I. eir cond., .A M-FM 1l•r110, P,..wifl• dow1. 1100059 ) 106511 w.srtir. 55559 A1111J.,.nory Prlc. 5469!.IO FR :EE SUPER SAVINGS PLUS ANNIVERSARY SAVI •.ss9•0 WEEKEND CAMPER. TRIPS PLUS $50 CASH SPENDING MONEY GOODYEAR BLIMP RIDES SO GAL. FREE GAS CAMPER SALE • EVHY NEW 1970 <;AMl'ER JN STOCK' SLASHED ·TO $50 OVER FACTORY INVOICE ,Ile; HLICTIOll-NO DIALER ADDED CHARGES-15 MODELS TO .CHOOSE FROM. PLUS FREE 50 CAL GAS. 50 VALUABLE PRIZES IN All! Co-111 ollCI R.fbter-Notl!llM) To luy-No Obll9irtlo• --------~ o .... 110 •ital hits for f'911obllfty, ,_,fot'IMllC• hd aofetJ, 111 l•t JO •1118'-, hn w rlftn ,.,.rt l11c.l•'-d. lfSULAR $9.95 SPECIAL $7.50 600DYUl PoL YCJLt.U ClllTOM WIDE TlUDS 500/ OFF FACTOlY SU ... /0 4ilSTID UTA.IL PllCI Pin fed l11c.IM: Tu + tlras off yitir· car All FORD SIUS ALL TIRES DISCOUNTED - MUSTANG SALE 10 to choou from. '65 thru 71 models. Coupes, hardtops, convertible and 2 + 2 Fastbacks. Some with 4 speeds, alao air conditioning and automatic: models with power steering. EXAMPLE : 1970 MUSTANCi _.._ 1w\i_:t ' •-•sn 111 OUR PRrCI $2050 ' We Are The C»anCJ• CoW.ty Show Case Dealer for El Dorado Campen. RENT A CAMPER-Reserve Today for Assured Dates: UIRl r.: BllDY SIJ1P ' .. s15 .!.,!!. MUSTAN• H. T. $89'° YI, evto., P•wet l' M•. ""rlflf, rodlo. a,_,. E11d ~ l•llNT·A·r.ARI WtTH ANY co"JAPLnf PINTO WITH AUTOMATIC TUNS. PAINT ..1011 $5.00 DAY le MILE WITH THIS AO WITH TNll AO A" OJPIRS CONsfDiilD TllADE5 ACCEPTED ___ P~J) _F!»I! !»I! !tt!Tl __ ~~~· '65 OLDS JETSTAR 88 2 Dr. H.T. 4 speed. good miles. (254AUFl ':$ ' 10% OFF Service Specials IXAMPLE: BRAKE ADJUSTMENT $100 OF LIST PfUCI ON ALL ACCESSORIES WITH THIS Ab - FORD-Lm-GAWII-TORINO-WAD SAL£ Many to chooM froml '65 thru '70 Models, Sport Roofs, Formals, 2 door and 4 door Hardtops and Sedans. Full power, air cond i- tioning. Warranties available. IXAMl'll: 1970 FOlD CUSTOM 4 DOOi' Aula.,~~r 'dee•T!"lf'I br•k•1, r•dio, 'i11l•r, c1rp•!1, chrom• tril!I, Good rnili•-Wer• re~ty 1v1;l1b!•. (1'5.1SJI ) ' ._ OUR PRICI $ 1510 , _ , . -_ _ _, '67' PONTIAC GTO S950 ' '71 PLY. BARRACUDA s33501 '69 CHEY. MALIBU ·s2150.., Convertible. 4 i<pePd. ' H_.T. VS. au:o., P.S . R&l-1. 2 Dr. H.T. ~&H. inilo., Air._ ' . , R&H. good miles. tl332971 '64 FORD XL $8501 'Jl DODGE Chollenqer s3350 e1r cond., undPr 5.000 mil"~ 1 P.S., VS. \'1nyl roof. \Varr. 2 dr. H.T. Herd 1o find. Im-' 2 Dr_. H.T. VB. _R&H. eutov , \Varr.,ti.va1Jablf'. l898CXI!! • available. \i'\VT535) , •. •-,-63--F.-L-C_O_N_W_A_G_O_N ______ $_5_5_0-n"~ maeu111tf' rnnd. VS. a uto., R&H. . 4P.~00 .. a1r1con~ .• \·1nyl roof. 'J "" poY.'Pr ~tl'cnniz. 1Z\VA450J --. . .;i 1n1 es. rect. y,·11rr. iH'IU. Rfl.di o, heater. nir cond. ( 54~77 I ,. '68 PONT. FIREBIRD $1850-A'i '69 COUGAR $2160 Good m;J.,, (10X538) • 8 V W BUG 50 '70 FORD PICKUP s' 21-501 2 dr. Ji.T. Auto., R&l-1, I Auto .. R&li. power !lleer-, .• -=--:c:-c--:::=~==-==---~-==->.1 :ully f11c~ory equipped. s10 ' f -100 cq'"'Jn""'. Good miles. ' pov•er steerin1.:. r;ood ing, 11.ir cnnd., good mile&. -r '63 CHEV. WAGON ' PASS. s750· (304BSK) I-"-"'-' miles. fVZS72Gl -~ (XUR196J lmp!l.la. R&li. 11uto., P.S .. good m!lrs. (iS9J7EJ • · ! Exceptlon11J car. (0Dr.I925l ---------- '69 FORD LTD 2 Dr. H.T. V8, auto., R&H. P.S., P.B .. fa.rt air, vinyl roof. (XSR897) '66 CHEV. NOYA 2 Dr. H.T. 6 cyl., auto., R&:H, good miles. (RZX477l Sft50'1 •6s ~!P~lZ6~26~odan>UT~ :~~~~. automau~ '150' ~~,:.~N~~~;,,~;!:~:s , ,sso;~ --~;-~-~,-~~-.~-. ~-:i-,.o'-g;-.~-.~-T $-2'"""3_50_"' · 7 P.B., air cond., vinyl roof. I air eond., 11:ood. mtlcs, (J21AGG) 1671AZG) . ' , I , AM lO f l'M MOM-fRI I AM TO. h Pll '5A T ;. 10 AM TO 6 PM SUN I 11i. P'rlc• eMll f9r n H1111ri. C.t1 I UblMI "' Prior 511&. . .. . r PARTS-SER~l~E HOURS 7 AM to 9 PM MON, • • 'I• 7 ~ To 6'PM TUE-FRI I I PARTS DEPT. ON LY 8 AM to 1 PM SATURDAYS •